February, 1965 Sewanee News THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH SEWANEE. TENNESSEE

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THE Sewan BEST HOPE NEWS by Arthur Ben Chitty Regional peaks of excellence are essential to nationwide intellectual vigor. This assumption The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the was one of several which governed awarding ASSOCIATED ALUMNI of Ford Foundation challenge grants to forty-seven liberal arts colleges between 1961 and the end of 1964. of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennes- Overall purpose of Ford's $218.5 million Special see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee. Program, according to a just-published Report from Foundation, has reach levels of aca- John Guerry, '49, President of the Associated Alumni the been to "new demic excellence, administrative effectiveness, and fi- Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35 nancial support." Ford sees as a distinctive feature of our pre-2000 half century a worldwide commitment Managing Editor Edith Whitesell to education destined perhaps to be the most important Consulting Editor Elizabeth N. Chitty social movement of our time.

A fourth of the nation is in school. Expenditures for Class Notes Peggy Ervin education exceed $30 billion a year as America drives citizen high- Frederick R. Freyer, '29, Fice-President for Bequests; Dr. L. toward the goal of educating every to the Spires Whitaker. '31, rice-President for Capital Funds; Dudley est level of his ability. Undergraduate enrollments in C. Fort, '34, Fice-President for Regions: R. Morey Hart, '34, the nation have risen 40 per cent since 1950. Corres- Fice-President for Church Support; Rev. Tracy H. Lamar, Fice- ponding increase at the graduate level has been 48 President for St. Luke's; W. Sperry Lee. '43, Fice-President for per cent. At Sewanee the student body has increased Classes: William E. Ward III, A'45, Fice-President for SMJ;

James \Y. Gentry. Jr., '50, Fice-President for Admissions; Philip by ^6 per cent in that period. B. Whitaker, '55, Recording Secretary; F. Clay Bailey, '50, The liberal arts college has been subjected to special Treasurer; Executive Director. Arthur Bex Chitty. '35, stress. Individual instruction has been a keystone for

nine-tenths of its history and its disappearance is traumatic. Content of academic disciplines has ex-

CONTENTS panded. Xew knowledge is newly synthesized, radically reorganized. The drive toward specialization pushes 3 1964- Gift Breaks Records downward past the senior year, into the junior and sophomore years. The academic marketplace, long 4 The Jessie Ball duPont Library raided by the wealthier megaversities, now loses shin- from Rags to Riches ing faces to corporations and government as well as 6 Small Classes—Are They Worth It; rival professions. by Arthur Ben Chitty The private institution declines in relative popula- 7-9 On the Mountain tion. In 1900 some 61% of all students were in private (continued on page five) 10 Winter Sports

12 Off the Mountain WASHINGTON DC FEB 19 1965 MR AR- THUR BEN CHITTY EXECUTIVE DI- 14 Class Distinctions RECTOR ALUMNI ASSOCIATION SE- 21 In Memoriam WANEE TENN PLEASED TO INFORM YOU THAT UNI- 23 Gifts by Classes VERSITY OF THE SOUTH HAS BEEN 29 Remembrances of 1964 NAMED TO AN HONOR CITATION (HONORABLE MENTION) AAC ALUMNI 30 Campaign SERVICE AWARD COMPETITION. MORE INFORMATION ON THE AWARD AND ITS PRESENTATION WILL BE SENT BY LET- TER NEXT WEEK. SINCERE CONGRATU- February 1965 Volume 31 Number i LATIONS-

Front Cover: Drawing by Jean Tallec AMERICAN ALUMNI COUNCIL Back Coyer: Photo by Howard Coulson 1964 Gifts Top

$3,000,000 Bishop Frank A. Juhan, '11, at his ravine garden home. Ke is volunteer director of development.

Records fell in 1964 as Sewanee's Campaign for $10,000,000 entered its final quarter. Year- Robert Ayres, '49 117% end gifts brought the total to #5,599,674, leav- Montgomery George Bliss Jones, '27 101% ing $1,900,326 to be raised by August 31. When Ford Greenville Robert Oliveros, '49 100% Foundation matching funds are added, the total (cash Jacksonville Thomas McKeithen, '51 97% and pledges) comes to Adding January $7,466,232. Huntsville/Decatur Merritt Wikle, '56 89% gifts, almost per cent of the goal has been realized. 75 John C. Eyster, '51 Total gift income for 1964 $3,114,345—was far — St. Louis William C. Honey, '54 83% above the previous record of $1,800,000 in i960. The Jackson, Miss. William G. Wills, '24 83% 1964 total includes some gifts to the hospital and to Beaumont Thomas K. Lamb, Jr., '51 76% Sewanee Military Academy which were not matchable. Ken Kinnett, '56 75% and from the Ford Foundation. $395,235 Morgan Hall, '39 The surge of gifts in December, totaling $1,097,045, In total funds raised, the leading areas and their encouraged Campaign leaders more than any develop- respective chairmen are: New York Area (including ment thus far. (December, total: $656,262). 1963, Connecticut and New Jersey), Edward B. Crosland. Some 1.434 g'ft transactions were tallied in December '32 —$40,629; Nashville, Dudley C. Fort, '34—$35,700; alone. As recently as 800 gifts in a full year 1946, and Atlanta, Ken Kinnett, '56 and O. Morgan Hall, was normal. '39—$29,384.

J\.t a recent meeting of the Campaign Executive B attle plan for the Campaign in its final months Committee, a Commencement goal of $6,500,000 was will hinge, for the most part, on two levels of strategy. set. Said Co-chairman Cecil Woods, '21, "Only major Cecil Woods, in overall charge with Bishop Frank effort in many key areas will raise another million A. Juhan, calls for first emphasis on Major Gifts—gifts dollars by June, but to insure success it must be done." of $10,000 and up. Incidentally, gifts in this category Woods urged each Campaign worker to review his accounted for 92 per cent of the final total in Stanford's prospects as soon as possible, and to have a realistic recent $100 million campaign. appraisal of his local situation when queried by Cam- Assisting Woods in the large gift area will be \ ice-

paign staff men in the next few weeks. Chairman Hinton Longino, already with a full travel John P. Guerry, Alumni president and national schedule. Dr. McCrady will also be focusing his chairman for the Alumni and Friends committee, had attention on this area. high praise for his chairmen and workers. With the John P. Guerry will continue as chairman of the

$500,000 goal oversubscribed by approximately 15 per Alumni and Friends campaign, but there will be a :ent. he reported the mid-January standings of the shift in the backstopping. Up to now, the servicing of various A and F areas as follows: twenty-nine organized areas has been done primarily Louisville Ralph Ruch, '35 150% by the Chattanooga office. For the remainder of the George Wagner, '53 Campaign, such help will come from the development

David Gray, '53 office at Sewanee. Since the A and F campaign is al- Nashville Dudley Fort, '34 130% ready 15 per cent over quota, there will be only a few Morse Kochtitzky. '42 new areas opened, but campaigning will continue in

Chattanooga Phil Whitaker, '55 1 19% practically all cities presently organized.

February 1965 Coulson

Corinne Burg, head cataloguer, looks over the new quarters for her department which are larger than the old main reading room. She had been operating fiom part of one desk. The duPont Library PLANS FOR THE MOVING OF THE UNIVERSITY Nashville." Library from its tradition-glamoured but crowd- Planning by William Harkins and, before he came, ed habitat to the splendid new Jessie Ball duPont by John Hodges, now associate librarian, over a period building have a large "If the creeks don't rise" notation of ten years and more will bear fruit in the new struc- on them. A tidy academic hope to make the move ture. Hodges, who was forced by a heart attack to between semesters and not delay the use of the active step aside from the major responsibility for the move collection a single hour was frustrated by the failure but who is able to contribute his experience in his of all the doors to arrive on schedule. The next target present position, looks down from a balcony to the acre date, February 12, was postponed by the repose of a of floor space below and says he feels like Keats' shipment of plastic table tops on a siding somewhere Stout Cortes, Silent upon a peak in Darien. Total in Georgia. A glazier's strike further complicated the floor space covers over three acres, and nine and a "Why librarians get gray" saga. half miles of shelving have already gone in, with plenty

Librarian William Harkins is totally gray, but bears of room for expansion. none the less a cheerful smile, activated, no doubt, by "We plan to offer every important intellectual ac- a glorious dream of things to come all but unpredictable tivity which a student or professor might want." There in Sewanee's past. Once the duPont Library is open will be discussion rooms, audio-visual aids on call, and funds are in hand for the planned expansion of music listening rooms, soundproof typing cubicles, 300 the book collection the University will have to set aside carrells with forty-eight-inch desks, and twenty-eight its long history of broken-field running around ob- locked cubicles for faculty members. A Xerox re- stacles to achieve the first rank, and set about living production room will also provide for photographing, up to reasonable expectations of unhampered ac- developing, and microfilming. Electric outlets every complishment. Sewanee will have a library that in few feet will make it possible for a student to use a some respects any undergraduate college in the country typewriter, tape recorder, and, say, micro-card reader might envy. a'l at the same time. Three seminar rooms and a It has an ultimate capacity for 600,000 volumes. lecture hall are only a beginning. More can be added Librarians' estimate of an adequate collection for when needed. undergraduates is 100,000. There will be more seats The Sarah Hodgson Torian Archives Room has an in the library (1,000) at first than there will be college open fireplace, a molded arched ceiling, and five display students to fill them. One seat for every four students cases where some of the University's treasures will be is considered a good ratio. on view. There is a kitchen to make it possible to "The library at Sewanee," Librarian Harkins says. serve gatherings here. For this purpose the silver "is a community service and a resource for the area, service presented by the alumni to Professor Tudor as well as a priceless foundation for the students. It Long will be available, as will the cups and saucers will be the largest library between Chattanooga and from the old Tuckaway dining room.

The Sewanee News Best Hope

(continued from PAGE TWO)

endowed colleges. By 1950 there were 50% and in 1964 only J7%. Despite the falling percentage the private institutions increased their total enrollment from 550,000 in 1930 to 1.700,000 in 1964.

In the face of these figures, the private institutions stand progressively higher in the quality o! their out- put. Today even those most biased in favor of public education admit that the private university is ot cru- cial importance in our cultural, political, and economic- scheme. The sine qua non of a distinguished uni- versity is distinguished scholarship and that fragile lower withers under political pressures and censorship.

Two great champions rose in the [950's to espouse higher education. They were the foundation and the corporation. The former was an old friend. The earliest modern foundation, the Peabody Education ust after his- Fund, started in 1867, J nve years the toric Land Grant Act. By the turn of the century private foundations led by Carnegie were providing a sizeable fraction of the income of all colleges and uni- versities. The Ford Foundation has far outstripped all other philanthropic agencies with a massive distri- The William D. Cleveland, Jr., Memorial completes the con- nection between Science Hall and Guerry Hall. It will ul- billion, of it in the last ten years. bution of #2.4 most timately be an administrative center, but until a new science The corporation was deterred by laws which con- building can be built it will be used as a physiology labora- tory. The building is the gift of Mrs. William D. Cleveland strued that the stockholder might be able to sue or in memory of her husband, a member of the class of 18i)3. dissolve a company which made gifts to education. Princeton took a test case to the Supreme Court and the way was clear. In the past decade American cor- porations have placed educational philanthropy in budgets and have become in that brief space a their GIFTS THROUGH 1964 major source of nourishment. SOURCES TOTAL SUBSCRIPTIONS Today if a college wishes to raise the salary of a forty-year-old professor $1,000 a year it must be able I. Major Gifts No. Amount see plus an amount necessary to provide to $25,000 Individuals (Alumni) 270 $ 973,o68 retirement. Every time Sewanee goes across the board Individuals (Non-Alumn ) 298 695,962 average increase of per professor (which with an $1,000 Bequests 25 1,203,231 it in half of the last ten years) it must have has done Foundations 48 640,925 about an extra $1,500,000. Corporations 74 256,879 The University of the South stands at a crossroads. Special Projects It will be easy to coast. It will be difficult to make Cobbs Memorial 36 13,062 the transition from regional to national stature. The Eustis Scholarship '4 5,547 path ahead will be disturbing and disruptive. Other Gifts 2 555,300 However, Sewanee has a tradition and a pattern. It TOTAL ~7I9 $4,341,976 has an enviable record. It has a faculty of exceptional diligence and students of demonstrated capacity. It II. Alumni and Friends has an alumni group who respond sacrificially and it is Alumni 2,77i $ 271,855 backed by a Church with a special commitment to Friends 2.683 298,145 education. TOTAL 5454 $ 569,980 In the words of an executive associated with a large III. Church Support $ 619,592 foundation for thirty years, "Sewanee is probably the 3,993 best hope for excellence among smaller institutions of GRAND TOTAL 10,166 £5,531,549 the South."

February 1965 SMALL CLASSES fc?S By Arthur Ben Chitty

Rutledge

THE BENEFIT OF SEMINAR TEACHING IS not deSCrib- If the student is perceptive, one is enough to en- able. It must be experienced. Sparks fly in small gender enthusiasm. If the student is dull, the best that groups of stimulating people. a student, When no can be gleaned from contact is realization on the part matter how bright, is a of a large impersonal member of the teacher of the dullness. Even this knowledge group, he concentrates on receiving the intellectual is, of course, a help to both. and psychical emanations of the gifted speaker. The The human being extended is very much superior same student, amongst six or eight equally bright and to the same human being in routine. A teacher chal- critical fellows, will present an entirely different chal- lenged by a small group of sceptical or zealous in- lenge to the speaker and will derive a different ex-

quirers is a teacher at his best. There is no known I perience from the exposure—to say nothing of the mental stretching which takes place as he—and his substitute for enthusiasm, and this may come from fellows—try to question, or even trip, the teacher. appreciation, or a dare, or from inward lurking de- Several students can in some situations create a bet- mons.

ter atmosphere for learning than one. Since it is obviously not possible to have 780 teachers

If this be heresy—that the student too is important for 780 students, the painful and expensive progression

in "magic" teaching situations—then so be it. to the point of effective tutorial at Sewanee will be by

It is safe to say, however, that the perceptive teacher acceptance of two lectures involving larger numbers will establish closer and closer contact with individuals in exchange for one seminar or tutorial. To this end as the group becomes smaller. When the ultimate of the University of the South, continually striving for one-to-one is reached we have the kind of teaching the overall one-to-ten teacher-student ratio, will in which Aristotle gave to Alexander the Great, or Soc- course after course (as departments and professors rates to Plato. At Sewanee we are moving toward the feel ready for it) substitute two large lectures and a one teacher-one student tutorial, seminar for three medium-sized classes.

The Sewanee News On the

Mountain

SAE—Only the boys and the lion are left. /\.n early morning blaze destroyed the historic

SAE house on February 4. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter at Sewanee was the first in America to own its house, which for years had been considered a na- tional shrine of the fraternity. JL he Provincial Synod may have its face lifted if Built in 1886, the early house was paid for by stu- plans are successful at Sewanee June 8-10. In the dents carrying mail daily from the railroad station to Episcopal Church there are four organizational levels:

offices. In at a reunion four of the ) convention and executive University 1938 ( 1 national, with the general original group returned: the Rev. James G. Glass, '87, council; (2) regional, with nine provinces or synods; Rev. S. B. McGlohon, '87, James W. Spratt, '88, and (3) state or part-state, with its dioceses and missionary General B. F. Cheatham, '88. Among the first seven districts; and (4) the local church—parish, mission, initiates in 1 88 1 were General Edmund Kirby-Smith, or cathedral. then professor of mathematics, and William Alexander Of these the Province or Synod has been the step- Guerry, '84, later bishop of South Carolina. The child. Provinces do not have central offices or perman- house was renovated in 1959 at a cost of $50,000. ent personnel. They meet once or twice between The present chairman of the board of regents, Robert General Conventions. Several of them have been con- G. Snowden, '40, of Memphis, the present head of the sidered by their own members to be ineffective and Ten Million Dollar Campaign, Cecil Woods, '21, and wasteful—not worth the time or money necessary to three generations of the Guerry and Kirby-Smith convene them. Increasingly the national church has families have been members of the chapter. communicated with the diocese without going through the province.

The Fourth Province, called since its establishment in 1914 the "Sewanee Province," has on the whole been more active than most of the others. The synod Frank W. Stubblefield, '65, was one of twenty four this year will meet on the campus of the University of college seniors in the nation tapped for a N3tionai the South immediately after Commencement Sunday Collegiate Athletic Association scholarship to the (on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday) and will try

graduate school of his choice. Stubblefield's award is a new type of intensive seminar.

for $1,000. The Franklin, Tennessee, athlete and Simultaneous sessions will be held for official dele-

scholar is a four-year letterman, alternate captain of the gates selected from the six departmental groups found football team last season and 1964 captain of the base- in each of the fifteen dioceses. These departments ball team. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in his are, with slight variations in name, Christian education, junior year with the no-snap double major of mathe- Christian social relations, finance, missions, promotion, matics and physics. On entrance at Sewanee Stub- and college work.

blefield was awarded a University scholarship. It is The Rt. Rev. M. George Henry of Western North

this general scholarship fund which has been declared Carolina is president of the Sewanee Province and

one of the objectives of the current Ten Million Dol- Charles M. Crump of Memphis is masterminding pro- lar Campaign. gram and arrangements.

February 1965 in December. Arnold Mignery, project director of the forestry research station at Sewanee,

is secretary. Cheston had been serving as vice-chair- man of the section.

The National Science Foundation has awarded $62,980 for the continuation of the Sewanee Summer Institute of Science and Mathematics, coming up for

its iifih season. The present grant was particularly

gr: tifying because it included the notation that future After three years cf polite correspondence, they got vhe grants be awarded without the annual volumi shelves in under the dynamic administration of Dr. T. may Felder Dorn. Books are by University faculty members nous proposal which has hitherto been necessary. The and are given to the E. Q. B. Club collection by the As- requirement is waived only for well established and sociated Alumni. At left are Billy Terrill and Arthur Cbitty from the alumni office, Dr. Dorn, an,d the Rev. C. successful institutes. The Institute's first M.A.T. FitzSimons Allison, '49, of the St. Luke's faculty, author of (master of arts in teaching) degree was awarded last Feor, Love, and Worship. June, and a dozen more students are expected to have Dr. T. Felder Dorn, assistant professor of chemis- completed requirements by the next Commencement, try, was named Man of the Year by the Sewanee including the first two women ever to receive earned Civic Association in December. Dr. Dorn was cited degrees from Sewanee. Dr. H. Malcolm Owen is di- lor "exemplary dedication and energy in civic and rector of the institute, which is part of the National humanitarian service." the As chairman of Sewanee Science Foundation's program to upgrade the quality community chest he was personally very largely re- of secondary teaching in these vital areas. sponsible for the raising of $50,000 for a necessary immediate enlargement of the public school, an un-

precedented achievement. He is a former president; of the Franklin County Association for Retarded Chil- dren, and is currently president of both the E. Q. B. faculty club and the Sewanee chapter of the American

Association of University Professors. He is a former president of the Sewanee chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. He edits the state newsletter of the Tennessee Associa- tion for Retarded Children and Adults.

The latest round of University residences are even pleas- anter than earlier ones. Acting Dean Charles O. Baird is shown in his living-dining room.

In tabulations by publisher A. N. Marquis, church- related colleges were grouped in 1964 in order of their proportionate production of alumni in Who's Who: Students enrolled per Position Denomination alumnus in Who's Who 1st Presbyterian 36

Coulscn 2nd Methodist 37 3rd Baptist 4i Forestry professor and University engineer Charles Edward 62 Cheston, left, Provost Gaston S. Bruton, and Bishop Frank 4th Lutheran A. Juhan, director of development, look over the Malon 5th Roman Catholic 102 Courts dormitory construction. The Episcopalians were not listed as a group but Professor Charles Edward Cheston was named Sewanee's individual average, projected by the same

chairman of the Kentucky-Tennessee section of the formula, placed it far above the best group with 15

Society of American Foresters at a Knoxville meeting students enrolled for each alumnus in Who's Who.

8 The Sewanee News The Rev. William Ralston, '51, assistant professor of philosophy of religion and ethics at the School of Theology, has been named associate editor of the Sewanee Reviezv by editor Andrew Lytle. Salutatorian of his Sevvanee class with a major in Greek, Mr. Ral- ston has S.T.B. and S.T.M. degrees from General Theological Seminary in New York and served as tutct there. He was a Church Society for College Work fellow at Harvard University for a year, chaplain and

instructor in philosophy at Trinity College, Toronto, from 1957 to i960. He was the American fellow at St. Augustine's College in Canterbury, England, from i960 to 1962. He will continue to teach classes at the seminary. A founder and the first managing edi- tor of the Sewanee Review, the Rev. Telfair Hodgson, JO COLMORE, '65 was simultaneously dean of the School of Theology the light of the past but as a history major I don't when the Review was established in 1892. think that's a bad thing to do. Just look at the poli- The winter issue of the Review contains criticism ticians we have turned out—Richard Boiling and by Dr. Robert Daniel, '35, George Scarbrough, '44, Armistead Selden in Congress, Governor Ellis Arnall and verse by Hobart Myers, son of Mrs. George and Senator Harry Cain, Harry McPherson in the Myers and the late School of Theology professor. The State Department, and the new minister to Canada lead article is "Barth's Dream and Other Conjectures," is a Sewr anee man, Joseph Welch Scott." by Fr. Thomas Merton. head of novices at Gethsemani Background for the Newsweek piece was prepared Trappist Monastery. last summer by Joseph B. Cumming, '47, who is chief of their Atlanta bureau. When Newsweek Magazine was preparing its essay on Sewanee which appeared in the December 28 issue it called on the public relations office to collect ver- In Brief . . . batim comments on the University from students. They Jo C. G. COLMORE of Lookout Mountain, Ten- used only one, but among the others there were some nessee, is president of the class of 1965. FLOYD that gave us in the office a young liberal education. EAMON of Durham, North Carolina, is class editor One we were afraid Nezvsweek would think we fabri- and DOUGLAS JOHN MILNE of Jacksonville, cated—but we're not that articulate—was from a con- Florida, secretary-treasurer. . . . PAUL TESSMAN, versation with Ross Moore, '66, editor of the Moun- linebacker from Chattanooga, is captain of the 1965 tain Goat. Ross: "Sure, we're isolated and slow to football team with alternate captains DON UPTON, change, but I think that's a stimulus. We bring a deep DOUG PASCHALL, DALE REICH, and BILL concern with us and the 'long look' of Sewanee gives JOHNSON. . . . PROFESSORS WILLIAM T. us perspective and balance. That's what a liberal edu- ALLEN, DAVID B. CAMP, and GEORGE RAM- cation is all about. We look at the present perhaps in SEUR lecture in Tennessee's secondary schools in the Tennessee Academy of Science's Visiting Scientist

Program. . . . DR. PAUL RAMSEY, new associate professor of English, has poems in recent issues of Lyric and the Southern Poetry Review. His wife '"paints" in needlework on a high professional level.

. . . ALBERT BONHOLZER, '22, University Caril-

lonneur, is offering carillon lessons and practice op- portunities during the Sewanee Summer Music Center

and college summer school periods. . . . PROVOST GASTON S. BRUTON, DEAN JOHN M. WEBB, and physics chairman WILLIAM T. ALLEN report plush red carpet footing at a gathering on the "3-2" program—the combined de- gree in liberal arts and engineering toward which Se- A recent showing in Tuckaway Gallery brought the stu- dents out. The woodpecker paintings are the work of Edward wanee cooperates with Rensselaer and Georgia Tech Dingle and were given to the University by Pete Hanna- as well as Columbia, han, '61.

February 1965 Tank Tussle

Powell Harrison MlCUAEL LAMPLEY

THE SEWANEE SWIMMING TEAM, COached WHEN performance of Sewanee's wrestling team by Ted Bitondo and assisted by Bob Abstein, The through the first half of its season was a pleas- had completed seven of its nine dual meets ant surprise. Coach Horace Moore began with it had a commendable 6-1 record. Three of these vic- only five returning lettermen and a lack of experience tories have been against SEC teams. in some key weight divisions. Three freshmen and

The Tigers journeyed into Kentucky December 4-5 two transfer students were called upon to fill these to swim the University of Kentucky and the University positions and have done so in admirable fashion. The of Louisville. The Tigers maintained a narrow lead Tigers were undefeated on February 8, with four over Kentucky throughout the meet, and by winning victories to their credit. the final event, the freestyle relay, brought the score The starting line-up for the Tigers includes Son to 54-40. Louisville offered no strong opposition as Trask, 123, Carson Carlisle, 130, John Lasky, 137, Sewanee swam over them 65-15. Vanderbilt, after Doug Seiters, 147, Joe Parker, 157, Paul Tessmann, having beaten the Tigers the past three years, fell to 167, Billy McKenzie, 177, Chip Langley or Randy a fired-up team December 9 at Sewanee. Sewanee set Tucker, 191, and John Colby, heavyweight. Parker, four new school records as they upset Vandy 55-40. Tessmann, and McKenzie were undefeated in indi- Tulane University came to Sewanee December 12 vidual matches thus far. with a team led by its strong freestylers. Victory over Sewanee's matmen opened with a crushing 33-6 them was not assured until Sewanee won the freestyle victory over Emory in Atlanta. In this dual meet relay, setting a school record in this event. The Tu- the Tigers won seven of nine matches and six of these lane swimmers whom Sewanee defeated in the final were by pins. relay had consistently and decisively beaten Sewanee The Tigers met Georgia Tech in their second con- in the freestyle events, taking two seconds and all test of the year. Tech, a former member of the SEC, four first places. Superior conditioning and determina- offered the Sewanee grapplers their first real test and tion prevailed, and Sewanee won 53-42. the Tigers were equal to the occasion. After having The Tigers met Emory University in Atlanta Janu- lost the first two matches, Sewanee proceeded to win ary 9 and took first place in every individual event to five straight individual efforts with Randy Tucker's 3-2 win 59-35. A week later Georgia Tech fell 57-38, win deciding the 17-16 thriller. bringing Sewanee's record to 6-0. The record did not The following Saturday the Tigers chalked up the remain unspoiled, however. The swimmers met the third win of the season by defeating Eastern Kentucky University of at Sewanee February 5 and in Richmond by a 17-11 score. Then after the se- lost 57-38. The Alabama team was strong, and proved mester break Maryville fell 20-11 at Sewanee. to be too much in spite of many fine performances by Sewanee swimmers. An important reason for the team's success has been fine leadership displayed by co-captains Parker The Sewanee team is captained by senior freestylers the Joe Jim Thames and Dave Darst. It has been led in scor- and Paul Tessmann and alternate captain Doug ing by junior Al Sherer and freshman John Turpit. Seiters. These boys are not only good athletes but stu- Sherer, against Alabama, turned in the outstanding dent leaders as well. Their willingness to help and performance of the season by winning the 200-yard urge to win have played a major role for the un-

freestyle in a time of 1 :54- 1, breaking the school record defeated matmen. After the Maryville bout Tessmann by eight seconds and the pool record by four. In the had won seventeen regular-season matches in a row. same meet he bettered his own school record in the The matmen had two tough encounters remaining 500-yard freestyle by fifteen seconds, but failed to before the Southeastern Tournament, which begins on take first place. Turpit has lowered the school record February 27. The Tigers were to meet Auburn and in the 200-yard breaststroke on three occasions and Chattanooga, two of the top teams in the South, and the 200-yard individual medley record twice. it would take a tremendous effort to remain unbeaten.

Freshman diver Bryan Starr, a high school ail- American, was undefeated thus far in the season. Sophomore Terry Goodwin set school records in the 100- and 200-yard backstroke, the latter with a time of In 1963-64 the basketball, tennis, football, and golf 2:16.4, against Vanderbilt. Jim Thames broke a five- squads had grades higher than the College academic year-old record for the ioo-yard freestyle. average.

10 The Sewanee News Toss

Coley McGinn is

Tiger cagers have surprised many observers Theby wading through the toughest schedule any

Sewanee team has ever played to an i 1-4 record and a chance at the best season a Sewanee team has had since the [952-53 team posted a 14-5 record. Facing this relatively young team (three sophomores, one junior and one senior comprise the Starting lineup) in December were six road games, three games with teams and a tough tourna- ment in Lakeland, Florida. The Tigers came out of that month with a 6-1 record including two wins over and the Citrus invitational tourney championship.

The wins over Ole Miss represented Sewanee's first cage win over an SEC team since the 1955 Tigers upset Georgia Tech here 67-66. Only mighty Tennessee, one of the nations's top-ranked major college teams, was able to whip the Tigers.

Centre was the victim 76-64 in the opener, and then came the tournament. Rollins fell 76-60, and then a spirited effort carried the Tigers to an upset 61-54 vic- tory over host Florida Southern. Tom Ward and Bob Swisher, at 6-6 and 5-10 the tallest and shortest men on the squad, both made the All-Tournament team (Ward was the Most Valuable Player), and that pair has been battling for the team scoring lead all season.

Following this came Tennessee, and the Vols simply overpowered Sewanee 77-42. But then came Ole Miss, and the Tigers, playing at home for the only time all December, were ready. The result was a 74-62 upset.

The following week Millsaps fell 74-68 and then came Mississippi again, this time at Oxford. Trailing 43-40 with two minutes to play, the Tigers refused to quit and emerged with a 46-44 win.

T,he rest of the season has been somewhat less dra- matic, with one exception. Livingston State, in the first game after Christmas, fell 99-76. But then came Georgia Tech in Atlanta in what was probably Se- wanee's finest performance of the season.

It was the first meeting between the teams since that 1955 game, and the Jackets were out for revenge. They ran out early 39-21, much as expected, looking very much like Tennessee. But before they knew what had happened, the Tigers used some superb ball- handling and outstanding shooting to cut it to 44-37 at the half. Six points was as close as they could ever get, but they gave an excellent account of them- selves in the 84-71 loss. Wack Hyder, Tech's colorful coach, said he had never seen a team shoot so well as the Tigers did that night. They hit 16 of 26 in the first half and wound up with 30 of 55.

February 1965 1 ! Historiographer's Corner

BY Arthur Ben Chitty

M.atthew Fontaine Maury was the man hand- picked by Bishop James H. Otey to become Sewanee'.; first vice-chancellor. The distinguished naval com- mander, the best known American scientist since Ben- jamin Franklin, was a principal speaker at the laying

of the cornerstone October 10, i860. He had achieved

worldwide fame through his research of ship logs filed with the Bureau of Navagation in Washington which when processed by his pre-IBM system revealed the

then incredible existence of great "rivers," i.e. currents, flowing in the Atlantic Ocean. The largest of these was the Gulf Stream. By charting these, and showing Lawson Fields their rate of flow, sailing vessels were able to save HARVEY G. BOOTH weeks of time in trans-Atlantic crossings. During the Civil War Maury was one of the Con- federacy's top representatives in England, where he vainly tried to secure British intervention on the side of the South. When the war was over he was again H arvey G. Booth, former member of the Board approached for the vice-chancellorship by Bishop of Regents and chairman of its finance committee, and Charles T. Quintard but he declined and instead went overall chairman for Church Support for Sewanee, has to teach at Virginia Military Institute, where he died retired as vice-president for public relations of South- in 1873. ern Bell after forty-four years with the telephone com- All of these facts are revealed in a splendid and pany. He will maintain an office and continue his ex- scholarly biography, Matthew Fontaine Maury, Sci- tensive philanthropic and civic activities. entist of the Sea, published after years of research by Frances Leigh Williams, now of Delray Beach, Florida. Mr. Booth survived a severe accident which occurred Brought out in 1963 by the Rutgers University Press, on his return home from the regents' meeting last June. it is an exciting addition to Southern biography. He was hospitalized for several months and achieved a conquest over constant extreme pain.

He came onto the board of trustees in 1958 and has since worked unceasingly for Sewanee. He was re- sponsible for the three movies made for the univer- sity's promotional effort by the Southern Bell Tele-

phone Company, the first of which won the American College Public Relations Association's top award in

its class in i960. The three films have been of ines-

timable value in carrying Sewanee's story to its suo- porters, particularly among church groups. He was made an honorary member of the Associated Alumni in 1959. Mr. and Mrs. Booth plan to do now some of the traveling they have not had time to do.

Dean Robert S. Lancaster got in some licks in Korea, where St. Luke's will be host March 5-7 to a conference he is shown in a pre-election debate with Dr. William L. Strauss, director of the United States Education Commis- on the ministry, sponsored by the Fourth Province sion in Korea (right). The Red Dean (so called because of Department of College Work. Special guest will be the his hair, not his politics) is a Fulbright exchange professor there on his sabbatical. Which side did he take? Well, he's Indianapolis. Very Rev, Peter Lawson of seated at the right of the moderator, isn't he?

12 The Sewanee News Clubs . . .

AFTER a year of the most varied and successful Thad Holt, Jr., '51, moved the Sewanee campaign a activity in its history the Sewanee Club of AT- step nearer launching in WASHINGTON with an LANTA opened [965 with another smashing success. Executive Committee meeting January 28. On January 6 some 120 Sewanee fans turned out for the Georgia Tech-Sewanee basketball game, which Sewanee lost by a score of 74-81 but under very creditable circumstances. After the game eighty-five alumni, friends, and prospective students went to Dr.

J. Homer Dimon's house for a supper prepared by the doctor's wife and a corps of able assistants, the wives of Frank Otway, '54, Louis Rice, '50, Ken Kin- nett, '56, Jack Wall, '51, Morgan Hall, '39, Jack Nichols, '51, and John Ball, C'47, T'58. Lon Varnell gave his usual excellent talk and introduced each member of the varsity basketball team. The prospec- tive students were impressed. This is the first time John Guerry, '49, left, chats with an event of this sort has been planned after an athletic George Wood, A'40, at an SMA contest and it provides a suggestion for the future alumni gathering. which should be helpful. Hall and Wall are president and vice-president of the organization, T. G. Linthicum, '23. secretary-treasurer. February 2, 1965

To All Sewanee Alumni The Atlanta club held its annual Christmas Holi- day gathering on Sunday, December 27, 1964, from I would like to express the appreciation of the 4:00 to 6:00 P.M. at the Piedmont Driving Club. The entire Campaign organization to each alumnus festive occasion attracted over 150 guests, including who has made a financial contribution to Se- students home from vacation and their dates, and a wanee's Ten Million Dollar Campaign. An ad- number of prospective students with their parents. As ditional word of thanks goes to every alumnus usual the occasion was planned and executed by who is working in the Campaign group to raise Tommv and Lucv Linthicum. money. All alumni involved in giving and work- ing are to be congratulated on exceeding the #500,000 goal set for the Alumni and Friends The club had Dean George M. Alex- CHARLOTTE Division by Cecil Woods. This is a wonderful ander of the School of Theology as guest speaker at achievement and all concerned should be proud a dinner meeting in November, at the Coliseum Stork of the present total of some $570,000. Particular Restaurant. Dr. Fred Mitchell, Warren Way, and the thanks go to those areas reaching their assigned Rev. Martin Tilson are club officers, and Stuart Childs quotas—Nashville, Chattanooga, San Antonio, has been active too in the Alumni-and-Friends Cam- Montgomery, Greenville, Louisville. paign. While the alumni should feel highly gratified at this wonderful showing, we must not let up until Some 250 guests attended the annual meeting of the over-all campaign goal of $7,500,000 is reach- the Sewanee Club of NASHVILLE in the Belle Meade ed. This leaves $2,000,000 to be raised and it Country Club on Sunday afternoon, December 27. will be a hard task. Dudley and Pearl Fort were assisted by a large force Congratulations to the alumni on meeting the of helpers in arranging the beautiful party. Visitors Alumni goal! Let us all work hard until the from the Mountain were Senor William W. Lewis, John entire $7,500,000 is raised. B. Ransom, the Rev. and Mrs. Richard Reece (he

is the new chaplain at SMA), Mr. and Mrs. Art John Guerry Cockett, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ben Chitty.

February 1965 11 1923 J. Burton Frierson, PDT, of Chat- tanooga, is first vice-president of the American Textile Manufacturers' In- stitute at Charlotte, North Carolina. He is chairman of the board of Dixie Mer- cerizing Company, a director of Ameri- can National Bank and Trust Company, Volunteer State Life Insurance Com- pany, and Southern Chemical Cotton Company, all in Chattanooga. He is a trustee of the University of Chatta- nooga, Baylor School, and Louisville Presbyterian Seminary. He is vice- president and a director of the Tennes- see Manufacturers' Association, a mem- ber of the Executive Committee of the Tennessee Taxpayer's Association, and director of the Southern Industrial Re- lations Conference, Blue Ridge, North Coulson Carolina. He and his wife, Rowena, The Rev. Canon L. C. Bailey, '38, holds his godson, Peter Fenn, and their five sons, J. Burton III, '57, the son of neighbors (they live only sixty miles away) of his Paul, Carter, Dan, and Jimmy live on parish of Hillston in New South Wales. Left to right are Mrs. East Brow Road, Lookout Mountain. Fern, Canon Bailey, Mrs. Savage of Griffith, N.S.W. (the baby's Tennessee, where he served as mayor godmother), and the Rev. Walter Fenn. from 1952 to 1956. 1926 Edgar Elliott Beatty, PGD, served on the state selection group for Rhodes Glass Distinctions . . . scholarships in South Carolina. Ad- dress: 1224 Wando Avenue, West Oak Forest, Charleston, South Carolina. 1898 1928 The estate of George Clifton Ed- Dr. Harry wards, KS, administered by his son H. Ransom, KS, chancel- lor of the University of , is a George Edwards, who was a Michigan Does anyone have a letter or member of the Commission on White supreme court justice 1956-62 and is letters House Fellows, which will now police commissioner of Detroit, from Dr. Bayard Hale recommend candidates to President Johnson. The has sent the University $1,000. Harvard Jones? If so, Dean George M. purpose of is received a like amount. Among other the program to give the Alexander of of recipients was the Anti-Capital Pun- the School The- fifteen fellows first-hand, high-level experience with the workings of the ishment League of Boston. He was ology would like to see it, or federal valedictorian of his class, took a mas- government and to increase them. He is making a study of their sense of participation in ter's degree at Harvard in 1899, and national returned to Sewanee to study theology the letters. Exact copies will be affairs. but was never ordained. He spent most Paul Tate, PGD, long-time mission- fine, or the dean will have the ary at , of his life in Dallas. Camaguey, and brother of Mrs. Arthur C. Lichtenberger, has 1904 letters copied. They will be re- been appointed Bishop Stephen Bayne's Dr. J. Gant Gaither, KA, is living in turned in or placed the seminary associate director of the Overseas De- retirement at his home in Hopkinsville, partment of the national church. Kentucky. "Retirement" does not mean archives as desired. cessation of mental activity, for he has 1929 only recently submitted a play to an Francis C. Nixon, CP, is a partner agent in Hollywood. "I haven't sold one yet," he said, "but I do not intend We also have a request from to stop trying." Address: 1704 South Miss Elizabeth B. Schadt, 106 Main Street. Morningside Drive, New York 1914 The Rev. Willis P. Gerhart, rector- 27, for information about home- emeritus of the Church of the Heavenly less alumni of Episcopal colleges Rest, Abilene, was presented the Gold- en Deeds Award by the Abilene Ex- now closed—Racine, Daniel Bak- change Club for forty-four years of er, St. Paul's, Long Island; Jubi- service and inspiration to that city. His son Harry Carter, '63, is a student at lee, Keble, and Canterbury. Miss the Wharton School of Business. An- Schadt, a displaced alumna of other son, John, a National Merit Scholar, has been in Tanganyika on a both Canterbury and Keble, pro- Harvard program. poses to organize her fellow 1920 D. A.'s to help support the The Rev. William S. Stoney, SAE, has retired from the Church of the As- present Foundation for Episcopal cension in Hagood, South Carolina, and Colleges which includes Hobart, he and Mrs. Stoney are now living at Saluda, North Carolina, Box 217. Trinity, Kenyon, Shimer, Se- 1922 wanee, Bard, St. Augustine's, and Albert A. Bonhol^er again in the summer of 1965 will offer lessons on St. Paul's in Lawrenceville, Vir- the carillon in Mr. and Mrs. BOWER BARNWELL, Leonidas Polk Shapard ginia. Tower, Sewanee. If playing the big '07, SAE, of Old Lyme, Connecticut, bells has been your secret desire, this just before their fifty-seventh wedding is your chance! anniversary.

14 The Sewanee News —

in the accounting firm Smoak, Davis public with the background that has War II he served from lieutenant (j.g.) and Nixon in Jacksonville, Florida. Af- understandably commanded his interest. to lieutenant commander in the naval ter leaving Sewanee in 1926, he gradu- Blair has recounted the history and reserve. For the last three years he ated from the University of Georgia in described and analyzed the building had been deputy director in the State 1928 with a B.S. degree, later going achievements of the first settlers, con- Department's Bureau of Intelligence back far post-graduate work there and structions which were marked both by and Research. at the University of Florida. In 1941- aesthetic viability and engineering Extraits d'une lettre recue de Ben- 46 he served in the air force, from skill. According to Blair, New Harmony jamin Springfr au mois de decembre which he recently retired with the has been credited by authorities with et addressee a son ancien professeur, rark of colonel. At Georgia he was the following "first's": M. Abbott Martin: "A cette saison j'ai a member of Chi Psi fraternity, which First Kindergarten in America. coutume de reflechir au temps jadis ct has recently opened a chapter at Se- First Infant School in America. particulierement aux amis de mes jours

First Trade School in America. a l'universite. . . . femme et moi wanee. Address: 625 Florida Title Ma ; Building, Jacksonville. First Free Public School System in nous avons pris beaucoup de plaisir 1930 America. pendant notre sejour a Sewanee en First Woman's Club in America. avril. Nous avons recu un acceuil cor- Milton C. Trichel, Jr., was recently First Free Library in America. dial, il faisait temps, et j'ai elected president of the Board of Ev- beau First Civic Dramatic in l'universite ergreen Presbyterian Vocational School Club Ameri- trouve attrayante comme ca. toujours. II a eu des changements. in Louisiara. Well known for his un- y Seat of the first Geological Survey. e'est vrai, depuis jours la, mais ce tiring efforts in behalf of the retarded, mes Blair's work has been encouraged by sont pour la change- he has previously served as president grande partie des

Indiana historian and philanthropic ments pour le mieux. . . . J'espere que of the board of Evergreen and in vari- Eli Lilly. The three volumes are being vous ne trouverez pas mal a propos ous places of responsibility in the Cad- bound by the Associated Alumni and cette lettre-ci de moi en francais. J'ai do-Bossier Association for Retarded will be added to the permanent alumni peu d'occasions de parler francais, et Children. He is presently a director bookshelf in the Jessie Ball duPont e'est seulement en le lisant et en l'ecri- in the National Association for Re- Library. vant je peux soutenir connais- tarded Children. Address: Slattery que ma The Rev. Frank V. D. Fortune, SN, sance faible de la langue. Depuis que Building, Box 1534, Shreveport, Lou- Frances died last February je suis retire des affaires je suis en fait isiana. whose wife 28, has left Elberton, Georgia, to accept encore plus occupe qu'auparavant. Je Members of the class of 1930 and the rectorship of the Church of Saint passe mon temps a lire, a etudier, a thereabouts will recall receivirg a let- Theodore of Canterbury, Seal Beach. regler ma correspondance et a vaquer ter congratulating it on producing the California. His daughter Francy Jo a mes modestes affaires." new Presiding Bishop cf the Episcopal will be lady-of-the-house in his new- 1933 Church, the Rt. Rev. John E. Hines, cure. Robert W. Fort, ATO, is senior vic«- and inviting reminiscerces of their em- Jay D. Patton, ATO, is mastermind- president of Medusa Portland Cement inent contemporary. The response of ing the joint reunion of the Classes Company. Address: P. O. Box 56G8, one of them on the bottom of the sheet of 1932, '33, '34, and '35 set for Com- Cleveland, Ohio. evoked a shocked double-take: mencement June 4 and 5. His whip- Edwin Irby Hatch, ATO, is campaign "Dear Arthur cracking has committees buzzine from general chairman for the United Appeal I was a contemporary of Doc's coast to coast. Address: R.F.D. 2, in metropolitan Atlanta. He is presi- at Sewanee. I regarded him as a Blair Road, Box 423A, Richmond, Vir- dent of the Georgia Power Company non-entity and a first-class louse. ginia 23229. and a Sewanee trustee. If given a re- the Church has him Joseph Welch Scott, ATO, is now 1934 sponsibility it is definite r>roof that United States Minister to Canada. Af- Dudley C. Fort, PDT, was awarded the Church is sustained by a su- ter graduation he was back at Sewanee a citation for "outstanding leadership" per-human power. in 1935-36 as acting assistant professor in the Easter Seal Campaign for 1984 /s/ John E. Hines'' of English and assistant editor of the in the Nashville area. Address: 4109 1931 Hillsboro. The Rev. David Yates, rector of Se- 1935 wanee's Otey Parish, was the subject I. Croom Beatty III is treasurer of of a moving tribute in a recent issue Trinity Church in Mattoon, , '•f The Living Church by the Rev which is working toward parish status Maurice A. Kidder, chaplain of Law- He is still teaching aspiring pilots as rence House in South Hadley. Missis- well as ground school and is offering sippi. Mr. Kidder calls him "the Epis- charter flights. copal Church's secret weapon," and Th? latest in the list of informative says, "I feel duty-bound to make a publications by the Rev. Lee A. Bel- testimony in the n?me of hundreds of ford, DTD. is The Christian and His people who would not be Episcopalians Jewish Neighbor, a twenty-three-page r cr even Christians without the sel - monograph issued by the Executive

emptying ministry of David Yates. . . Council of the Episcopal Church which My prayer as only one of his many begins with the forthright statement, 'sons' in the priesthood is that I may "God, according to St. Paul, has not n?ver forget that only the grace of rejected His people. Christians have." God and the fellowship of the Holy In its brief space it persuasively docu- Snir't, and not programs and gim- ments the widespread existence and micks can feed the sheep." continuation of anti-Semitism and tells 1932 specifically what a practicing Christian Don Blair of New Harmony, Indiana, can do about it. Lee Belford. Ph.D., '32 has written a number of monographs JOSEPH WELCH SCOTT, is associate rector of the Church of the en the unique community where he U. S. Minister to Canada makes his home as an engineer. Blair has illustrated a number of scholarly Sewanee Review. He then went abroad histories of the place that harbored on a Carnegie Fellowship and pursued TOTAL ALUMNI GIFTS two of the most fascinating communi- graduate studies at the University of ties in American history, the Rappitcs London, and later at Columbia Univer- 1963 $ 486.821 who fourded it and the New Harmon- sity and the University of Texas. His 1964 1,531,828 ist followers of Robert Owen who diplomatic assignments took him to bought it in 1824, and has written his Paris, Ankara, Indonesia and on many own publications to acquaint the lay special security missions. During World

February 1965 Giles J. Patterson, Jr., KA, has his own insurance firm in Jacksonville, Florida. He has two daughters and one son. 1938 Richard W. Bolling, PDT, has re- turned to the U. S. House of Repre- sentatives with a landslide against de- termined opposition in western Mis- souri. He is working toward an over- haul of House rules, especially in re- gard to the power of the Rules Com- mittee. The Speaker would have more power than was ever enjoyed by "Mr. Sam" who, it will be remembered, wanted Boiling to succeed him. 1941 The Rev. Canon William L. Jacobs. JUDGE WILLIAM O. DTD, has left his Springfield, Illinois, BEACH, JR., '43 church of fourteen years to become rector of St. Paul's Church in Des Moines, Iowa. Last year Canon Jacobs board of directors. He was the organiz- was made one of two honorary canons ing president of the Montgomery of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul. County group and a founder of the '37 BERTRAM C. DEDMAN, He and Mrs. Jacobs have three chil- guidance center in his native Clarks- ville. After graduating from Sewanee, - dren, Elizabeth, eighteen, William Epiphany in New York City and chair the Lockhart, Jr., fifteen, and John Shan- he served as a B-29 bombardier in man of the department of religious ley, eleven. air force and became a captain in the education at New York University. Francis H. Yerkes, ATO, is consult- reserve. He did a year of graduate The Rev. Charles M. Seymour, KS. ing engineer for Reynolds, Smith and work in English at Vanderbilt, took his formerly rector of Trinity Church in Hills in Jacksonville, Florida. He and law degree there, and began practicing St. Augustine, Florida, is now assistant his wife, Florence Riffe, have four law in 1950. He was general sessions rector of Trinity Church in New Or- children, Neal Rushing, Elsie Anno, judge in 1953-55, city judge in 1957- leans. He and his wife, Kathleen, re- Christopher Riffe, and Mary Frances. 59, and in 1962 he became county judge. St. Charles Avenue, New side at 2344 sales tax His address is: P. O. Box 2797, Jack- He fostered a one-per-cent Orleans. sonville 32203. earmarked for education, sponsored a 1936 county zoning law, a county industrial Col. Edmund Kirby-Smith, SAE, has 1942 park, modern budgetary practices, and been assigned to the military assistance The Rev. Anthony G. Diffenbaugh. a reappraisal of all taxable county advisory group in Viet Nam. His fam- SAE, is still in Norfolk at St. Peter's properties. He is currently president ily will remain at their home in Mem- Church, which he started as a mission of the Tennessee County Judges phis, where he was district engineer five years ago. His son Andrew Pey- Association. Address: Court House, for the army. He has also served in ton is a cadet at Sewanee Military Clarksville, Tennessee. the Mediterran- Academy. His wife is teaching third Washington, D. C; in Chaplain W. Armistead Boardman, ean Theater of Operations, and other grade, his daughter is in DePaul School of Nursing in his ATO, had an eventful year. At Clin- places. Mrs. Kirby-Smith is the form- Norfolk and younger ton-Sherman AFB in Oklahoma with er Maria Gaillard Cortes, daughter and daughter and son are in grade school SAC he has logged 230 flying hours on sister of alumni and a member of the in Norfolk. his way to a commercial pilot's license. Sewanee Brooks clan. William B. Hawkins, DTD, is an en- Son Tom entered the college at Sewa- Richard B. Wilkens, Jr., DTD, was tomologist with the U. S. Public Health nee in September. Daughter Gwynn married to Louise Eugenia Stengel Service in Savannah. He received his enjoyed playing her guitar this summer November 7 in Washington, D. C. They A.B. from Florence State College and at Episcopal Camp Gailor-Maxon in are living in Houston where he is in his M.S. and Ph.D. from the Univer- Monteagle. Wife Ann made a hole-in- the steamship business. sity of Illinois. He and his wife, Vir- one on the Sewanee course on No. 4. 1937 ginia Le May, have a daughter, Genye As we say, it was an eventful year! Bertram C. Dedman, SAE, is associ- Elizabeth. Alfred D. Sharp, Jr., PDT, was pro- ate counsel (No. 2 man) in the legal Dr. Frederic R. Morton, DTD, lost moted to vice-president of the Third department of Insurance Com- his mother, Julia Frances Morton, 83, INA— National Bank in Nashville, Tennessee. pany of North America oldest stork early in January. The Mortons were a — He is in the national accounts division fire insurance company in the country. pioneer family in Central Florida, com- of the business development depart- in the legal de- ing to the area in 1885. She was a life- For two years he was ment. partment of Texaco in Los Angeles. long member of St. Luke's Cathedral, 1944 Prior to that he was special assistant and had served as choir mother for Rev. Shelby Walthall attended to the attorney general in the antitrust twenty-five years. At her death the W. General Convention in St. Louis from division of the department of justice. family requested that contributions in western part of His older daughter Rainsford gradu- lieu of flowers might be made to the Oakland, the extreme diocese of , where he la- ated from Queens College in June 196

16 The Sewanee News S.T.M. thesis was accepted last summer August, 1963, after serving as vice- two years as a medical officer in the and he expects to receive his degree president for business development of United States Navy. the American National Bank and Trust in June. 1951 1946 Company for a number of years. He is Thad Holt, Jr., PDT, Rhodes Schol- C. Caldwell Marks, SAE, is chair- president of the Associated Alumni, ar, was the first alumnus to serd his of the board of Owen-Richards trustee of the University, and chair- man dog to Sewanee. A reluctant rcpovt Companies in Birmingham and Atlanta man of the Alumni and Friends di- reached him in Jaruary that Willi' . of Bearings and Transmissions vision of the Ten Million Dollar Cam- and Dalmatian, hts failed to realize hopes Companies in Mobile, Pensacola, paign. Supply that he might follow in the academic Mississippi. Marks is past and Jackson, Harry C. McPherson, Jr., SAE, as- footsteps of General Kirbv-Smith's Children's Aid So- president of the sistant secretary of state for education- Ned, Dean Baker's Fitz, and Dean Lan- of Jefferson County, Birmingham, ciety al and cultural affairs, frequently men- caster's and Professor Harrison's of the Cross, Trustee of a director Red tioned in the press also as a personal Pearl. Willie attended classes under Hospital and the High- the Children's friend of the President, is a very ac- the personal aegis of Professor White- lands Day School, a Rotarian, and a tive churchman. Recently he delivered sell, but when he broke a window in vestryman of St. Mary's Church. He the Evening Sermon at Williams Col- old Magnolia in an effort to get the his wife, the former Jeanne Vig- and lege and spoke to student convocations jump on the late Hrothcar below he eant, have three children, Randy, Mar- there and at the University of Flori- was suspended on the first day of class Charles. garet, and da. He has given Lenten lectures at with such severity that three freshmen Col. Robert E. Robards, M.D., re- large churches in several cities, as well dropped German. He has since taken ceived his most recent promotion No- as at the Virginia Theological Semi- to off-campus life and has never shown vember 15, 1964, and is stationed with nary in Alexandria. sufficient intellectual promise to war- the air force as physician at the Pen- The Rev. Frederick A. Pope, Jr., is rant re-instatement. tagon. He is manager for the air assistant professor of pastoral care in Cyrus F. Smythe, Jr., ATO, is a force's program on life and behavioral the Episcopal Theological Seminary of member of the department of econom- sciences. His assignments have included the Southwest. He is a candidate for ics at the University cf Minnesota. He Chief of Aviation Medicine, Strategic the Ed.D. in marriage counseling at recently sent via his father a file of Air Command, Wiesbaden, Germany. the University of Pennsylvania. Ad- copies of the Sewanee Review which, He makes the comment that it took dress: 3104 Harris Park Avenue, Aus- according to Mr. Smythe, traveled 8,0C0 about a year after he left the Moun- tin, Texas. miles getting to Sewanee. tain to begin appreciating Sewanee. William L. White, ATO, after doin;^ "Now with each passing year my deep- Ben M. Rawuncs, Jr., PDT, was elected vice-president, business and graduate work in psychology, opened ening respect is beginning to become development, of the Hamilton National a luxury restaurant, the Nine Muses, a fetish . . . don't let up on your lib- in his in Hollywood at 6609 Santa Monica. tradition for therein lies true Bank Chattanooga. He and wife eral arts For four years he has been serving education," he said. Address: 207 De- have three children. They live at 205 continental menus to celebrities. He von Drive, Falls Church, Virginia. Richardson Street, Lookout Mountain. is married to the former Harley Jack- 1947 1950 son of Los Angeles who with him and Frazer Banks, Jr., ATO, is manager State Congressman F. Clay Bailey, son David, a year old, visited Sewa- of commercial development for the Jr., PDT, when not legislating, prac- nee in September. Newport Division of Heyden Newport tices law. This year when a client, Chemical Corporation with headquar- who didn't know Sewanee, asked about 1952 William D. Austin, PDT, is group ters in Pensacola. He has been em- tax-deductible gifts, he told her about sales manager with Sun Life of Cana- ployed by the division since 1962 in re- the University of the South. She was da, in Jacksonville, Florida. He is search, sales and administrative posi- impressed—and the campaign moved married and has one child. tions. $500 nearer its goal! William M. Bomar, SAE, is a part- R. Bland Mitchell, PDT, has left Joel T. Daves III, ATO, has con- ner in the firm of Rotan, and Curacao and has settled in California cluded five and one-half years as coun- Mosle Company, Texas' oldest member of the where two of his daughters are in ty solicitor and is again practicing law school. Address: 1902 Montecito Ave- in the firm of Paty, Downey, Lewis New York Stock Exchange. He has registered representative with nue, No. 2, Mountain View, California and Daves in West Palm Beach, Flori- been a the firm for than four years. He 1948 da. He has been elected to the Flo- more and his wife and three children live The Rev. George C. Estes, Jr., PGD. rida legislature which convenes in at 2153 Swift in Houston. and his wife, Mary Brooke, finished April. language school in San Jose, California, Smith Hempstone, Jr., PGD, has E. Clayton Braddock, Jr., SAE, is late in 1964 and are now at Trinity been the Daily News corres- education editor of the Co?n?nercic/ Appeal in Memphis. is married and Episcopal Church, Apartado Aereo 2391, pondent in Africa since 1961. He is He Cali, Colombia, South America. studying United States and Latin has a seven-year-old son. Thomas E. Wright, SN, is in Mexico American history at Harvard this year The Rev. Edmund Browning, PGD, City writing rarratives and doing back- as a Nieman fellow. He previously won and his wife, Patti, are in language ground research for the Mexican tour- a fellowship from the Institute on Cur- school in Kobe, Japan, before return- ist bureau. He has recently had an rent World Affairs, and a Sigma Delta ing to Okinawa, where they serve un- article published in the London Maq- Chi award for his coverage of Africa. der the Bishop of Honolulu. They have azine. He has written two books, Ajrica: An- four children, Mark, Paige, Philip and 1949 gry Young Giant, and Rebels, Mercer- Peter. Julius P. Barclay, PGD, is chief of aries and Dividends, The Katanga Dr. John P. Vineyard, Jr., KS, has the division of special collections of Story. Address: 55 Loring Road, Wes- a daughter, Catherine Jane, born Sep- the Stanford University libraries. ton, Massachusetts. tember 10. Office: Austin Diagnostic- Kenneth M. Barrett, PGD, a major Dr. W. Shands McKeithen, PDT, is Clinic, Austin, Texas. Home: 2301 in the Florida Army National Guard, in the private practice of obstetrics Bonita. is St. Augustine, Florida. gynecology at St. Petersburg, Flo- stationed in and 1953 His address is 6 Tremerton. rida. He opened his new office at 410 John A. Witherspoon, Jr., PDT, was Dr. Joseph D. Cushman, Jr., SN, a 150th Avenue, Madeira Beach, in June, made "Man of the Year" at the an- of the Florida State Univer- 1964. For the past four years he has member nual dinner of the Nashville Junior sity history department, has been been associated with two other phy- Chamber of Commerce in December. named historiographer of the Diocese sicians and will continue his associa- He is affiliated with Gale, Smith and of South Florida. tion with them in their downtown of- Company. John P. Guerry, SAE, was elected to fices. Dr. McKeithen interned at Uni- the board of directors of the Chatta- versity Hospital, Columbus, Ohio, and 1954 nooga Medicine Company in Septem- had special training at Charity Hos- Clifford Y. Davis, Jr., ATO, direc- ber, 1964. He joined the company in pital in New Orleans. He has served tor of public relations for the First Na-

February 1965 17 tional Bank of Memphis, will edit the children, John Hugh, age seven and publicity and communications section Jane Elizabeth, age five. of the Bulletin, a monthly publication 1958 of the Financial Public Relations A.;- Dr. Dudiey C. Fort, Jr., KA, is an societicn. He and his wife and daugh- irtern at Cincinnati General Hospital, ter, Melissa Dawn, live at 5965 Crest- where he appears to be heading in the view Drive, Memphis. direction of surgery. He has been in- The Rev. Karl C. Garrison, Jr.. if vited to come back for a residency next : do ng graduate work in the sociology year. deoartment at Duke University. Capt. Orlando Wemple Lyle, Jr., SN, The Rev. Robert B. Kemp, KS. and and Rosemary Aragon were married his wife, Barbara, have a daughter, recently in Santa Fe. Address: P. O. Mary Patricia, born December 1. The Pox 4113, Kirtland AFB, New Mexico Kemps, with their six children, live in 87117. Jamaica at 8 Trafalgar Road, Kingston The Rev. Claude Collins came to St. 5. Paul's at Thomasville, North Carolina, R. Bak^r King, SAE, is county solici- on August 1. tor for Duval County. His address is 1959 119 Florida Title Building, Jacksonville. William P. Cranz, Jr., KS, was Florida. elected an assistant trust officer and 1955 assistant cashier of the First National Dr. Sam Albritton, Jr., PGD. is Bank of Fort Worth, Texas. He became practicing dentistry at 1115 N. Wood a trainee in the trust division in 1962. Avenue, Florence, Alabama He and Dr. William Riley Hutchison IV, his wife. Mary Brooks McKenzie, have M.D., KA, was married to Sally Ann named their youngest son, born Au- Ambler September 26. They reside in REV. ROBERT N. ROBINSON, '59 gust 22, William Brooks. Two other Groton, Connecticut. children are Sam Jones III and Kath- Meredith Walter Miracle, KS, was leen Louise. Capt. William R. Stamler, Jr., USAF, married to Gail Anne Gale in Houston this winter. Both are graduates of Rice The Rev. Charles C. Green has left KA, received the Air Force Commen- University. C. Michael Matkin, '59 St. Paul's Church in Chattanooga for a dation Medal for meritorious achieve- ; was a groomsman. year's clinical training in pastoral the- ment during Exercise Polar Siege, The Rev. Robert N. Robinson, KS, is ology in Atlanta. He is one of a team joint U.S. -Canadian training maneuver now the youngest member of the board of six clergymen working under the held near Ft. Greeley, Alaska. He is of governors of Manchester College, interdenominational Georgia Associa- assigned to Sewart AFB, Tennessee. Oxford, named in over one hundred tion cf Pastoral Training. He, his wife, 1957 years. Manchester is an interdenomi- and two daughters, Katherine Marian The Rev. Robert Craig is rector of natioral college which adheres to the and Eleanor Lining, reside in Atlanta. Trinitv Church in Clarksville, Tennes- principle of freely imparting theologi- Lewis S. Lee. PDT, is partner in the see. He has been at the Church of the cal knowledge without insisting upon law firm of Ulmer, Murchison, Kent, Good Shepherd, Lookout Mountain, subscription to any particular party. Ashby and Ball in Jacksonville, Flori- where he was chaplain to the Senior Founded in 1786, it is one of the oldest da. He is married and has four chil- Neighbors, commissioner for the Juve- "free" theological colleges in Europe. dren. nile Court of Hamilton County, and He is also assistant rector of St. James Waring executive director of the Chattanooga McCrady, ATO, son George's Anglican Church, Grosvenor of Vice-Chancellor and Mrs. Edward Area Council on Alcoholism. He and at Wilton, Winnipeg 9, Manitoba, Can- McCrady, was married in his wife have two sons, Robbie and All Saints' ada. Chapel at Sewanee on January 30 to Randy. Donald B. Sanders, BTP, received his Mazie Vogel of Kansas City. Waring is Robert L. Glenn III, PDT, has been M.D. degree from Harvard last June. instructor of French in the College appointed general agent for Pilot Life W. Allen Morrow, KA, is mangger during the sabbatical leave of Dr. A. Insurance Company in Houston, Texas. of Scott Bates. He has had six years' experience in of the mortgage loan department selling and agency development and the First National Bank of Brunswick, The Rev. George S. Plattenburc, has recently completed Pilot Life's Georgia, after spending three years in PGD, is assistant rector of the Church program. served the marine corps. The Morrows have of the Advent in Cincinnati. He gradu- management He has on the board of directors of the Hous- two girls, Mary Beth, four end Melanin. ated from Bexley Hall in 1962. He ton Association of Life Underwriters. three. Address: 2232 Ocean Road, married the former Lydia Plamp in He and his wife and three children Saint S mors Island, Georgia. 1956 and thev have three children. H ; s live at 407 Mignon in Houston. The Rev. Richard I. zumBrunnen is address is 2842 Street, Charle;- East rector of Churchville Parish, Church Place, Cincinnati. David W. Hatchett, SAE, was mar- ried in Houston in October to Mary of the Holy Trinity, Churchville, Mary- 1956 Jo Montague. He represents the Mu- land. William R. Bcling, SN, aside from tual Life Insurance Company in Hous- 1960 his occupat'on as -ssistant vice-presi- ton. I. Croom Beatty TV rnd his wife are dent cf Stockton, Whatley, Davin and The Rev. William R. Senttr III, still at Arden, North Carolina, where Company in Jacksonville, is a member DTD, is the father of Lydia Elizabeth, he is teaching at Christ School. The of the board of directors and executive born November 22. Address: 304 Green- year 1964 was made more exciting for committee of the American Red Cross, field Place, Bristol, Tennessee 37622. them by assorted trips in th-? Croom- president of the Sewanee Club in Jack- Paris Eugene Smith, PGD, has been flown Comanche to Florida, Grand Ba- sonville, and a member of the Board transferred from the New York offices hama, ar.d the Midwest. of Governors of the Florida Yacht Club. of Young and Rubicam advertising James Robert Carter, Jr., DTD, was His address is 2810 Grand Avenue, agency to that firm's San Juan, Puerto critically injured in the automobile ac- t Jacksonville, Florida 32210. Rico, branch as an account executive cident i n which W lltam Craig III The Rev. Coleman Inge is rector of end supervisor. Address: P. O. Box died, but entered Emory Hospital a St. Luke's Church in Mobile, Abbama 9165, Santurce, Puerto Rico. year ago for removal of a pin and He spent three years in Alaska in A. H. Tebault, Jr., SAE, vice-presi- surgical wires and is now taking a charge of a mission at Tanana. He is dent and general manager of the St. course in theology and Greek at Em- married and has two children. Augustine Record, is president of the ory and planning a Mediterranean Henson Markham, Jr., SAE, has left Rotary Club and the American Can- study tour. Grolier, Incorporated, and is associated cer Society in St. Augustine, Florida, Richard Ross Forst^r EI is writing with the firm of Carl Fischer, music and a Sewanee trustee. His wife Nan his dissertation in English at Boston publishers. He lives in Manhattan. Emily Wigginton and he have two University. He did graduate work at

18 The Sewanee News the University of Southern California Corpus Christi branch manager of Dr. Axalla John Hoole, SAE, was Steves Sash and Door Company and married in Sewanee November 14 to with Olivetti Underwood. Alice Alexander Beall, daughter of Thomas S. Tisdale, Jr., is associated the Rev. Olin G. Beall, '33, and Mrs. with the law firm of Hagood, Rivers Beall, who grew up in Sewanee—she and Young of Charleston, South Caro- is the daughter of the late Professor lina. George B. Myers, '07, of St. Luke's. Edwin D. Williamson, SAE, is as- The Rev. Henry Lee Hobart Myers, '51, sociated with the law firm of Sullivan officiated, assisted by the bride's father, and Cromwell, 48 Wall Street, New and Olin G. Beall, Jr., '58, gave his York. He finished New York Univer- sister away. William B. Hoole, Jr., '64, sity School of Law last June and in was his brother's best man. Where is July passed the New York bar exami- Dr. Hoole serving his internship? Why, nation. He and Tom Myers, '62, live at at William Crawford Gorgas ('751 204 East 83rd Street, New York. Hospital in the Panama Canal Zone. 1962 Charles E. Mason, SAE, visited Se- Arthur G. Fort is "leading the force" In- wanee on December 22. He has ter- for the National Life and Accident MET CRUMP, '63 minated three years service in the army surance Company on the West Coast. to get into the South- and is now with the legal department He hopes back of Connecticut General Insurance Com- east before long. rick is in his second year as tutor at pany. Home address: 3 Shades Creek 2nd Lt. David W. Knapp, DTD, was College in Toronto, where he Parkway, Birmingham, Alabama. named for regular status in the U. S. Trinity is working on his doctorate. Robert Potts, ATO, married Mary Air Force on the basis of his perform- William Landis Turner, DTD, works Raum Askew November 21 in Vicks- ance of duty, educational background in the Tennessee Employment Security burg, Mississippi. and potential as an air force officer. He office in Nashville. Address: 2811 West- is a student at the Keesler Technical William R. Turner, Jr., is a cashier Training Center. moreland Drive. with the Pensacola Home and Savings 1st Lt. Edgar A. Uden, PDT, is now Association. He was recently named The Rev. Richard B. Martin was ap- pointed flying out of Sewart AFB. His address treasurer of the newly-formed Pensa- archdeacon of Brooklyn in a is: J-l Sherwood Terrace Apartments, cola Heritage Foundation. Address: 823 December ceremony. He will be Bishop DeWolfe's to Nashville 37204. North Baylen Street. James P. representative fifty-seven churches in Brooklyn. Dr. Anthony Veal, PGD, spent Christ- 1963 Martin is believed to be the second mas fighting the Viet Cong. He was John P. W. Brown and Elizabeth Lee Negro archdeacon in the Episcopal stationed at England AFB in Alexan- Russell were married October 3 in Church whose territory includes both dria, Louisiana, last fall, spent a few Nashville and are at home at 5201 white and Negro congregations. He is days in Hawaii and a week in the Phil- Franklin Road. He continues his medi- married and has two children. ippines en route to the Far East, and cal studies. The bride's father is Fred- Edward M. Moore, KA, received his expected to be back on base in Febru- die Russell, Sewanee's friend and Nash- A.M. from Harvard last June, with a ary. ville Banner sportswriter. major in English. He spent the sum- 1961 Charles Metcalf Crump, Jr., SAE, of mer at Sewanee as editorial assistant Laurence Holcombe Andrus was mar- Memphis, is studying architecture un- for the Sewanee Review. a Rotary Foundation fellowship for ried to Diane Camilla Fields on De- der Thomas E. Myers, Jr., KA, received school year 1964-65 at the Institut cember 27 in Griffin, Georgia. the his M.B.A. degree with distinction from des Hautes Etudes cinematographiques Otis A. Brumby, Jr., KA, will com- Harvard last June. in Paris. Before accepting the Rotary plete studies for a law degree at the The Rev. James A. Patrick is the Foundation fellowship, he was a grad- University of Georgia in March. father of Michael Harris Heaton, born uate architectural student at Harvard Ronald Caballero, DTD, has a son, December 4 in Toronto, Ontario. Pat- University's school of design. John Randolph, born October 15. His address: 540 N.W. 110th Street, , Florida. The Rev. Frank F. Fagan III has adopted a second child, Dorothy Gray. The Fagans have a son, Frank IV, who is three and a half years old. Buist Lucas "Pete" Hanahan, ATC. hes given the University a valuable collection of paintings by the noted nat- uralist and artist Edward Von Siebold Dingle of Charleston. The twenty-four canvases comprising the "Woodpeckers of North America" series were exhib- ited at a special showing October 30 atterded by an overflow crowd of stu- dents and residents. Valued at $1,500, the paintings were declared eligible for Fcrd matching funds. John Thomas Jones, KA, has been affiliated with Plez Lewis & Son of St. Louis, Missouri, since 1961. This is a firm which has in recent years entered the field of building and owning ori- vate residence halls on various college and university campuses. Roy G. Parks, Jr., BTP, is with the social science department at the Col- lege of the Ozarks, in Clarksville, Ar- kansas. Robert W. Steves, PGD, has been named San Antonio sales representa- Dr. and Mrs. Axalla John Hoole, '60, in the study of Rev. George B. Myers, tive for the Gunter Hotel. He has been the bride's grandfather.

February 1965 19 who did something about it. Bill was the University's sports reporter during his undergraduate years, one of the best.

EUGENE (Oregon) REGISTER -

GUARD, Thurs., Dec. 3, 1964 SWEET THANKS — Throughout the football season, the Register- Guard sports desk would get a telephone query each Saturday af- ternoon about the score of the Se- wanee game. Our deskmen soon learned to watch for the score so they would be able to answer. This week, there arrived at the sports department a plate full of Joseph W. Winkelman, '64 William L. Stirling, '64 three varieties of excellent fudge. The accompanying note said: "A very small thanks for so faithfully Dickson, KA, Airman 3/c Eugene M. inary in Austin, Texas and he is tak- obtaining our Sewanee scores for train- has graduated from the technical ing some courses at the University of us during the recent football sea- per- ing course for U. S. Air Force Texas. He spends Sundays assisting at son.—Mr. and Mrs. William A. C. AFB. sonnel specialists at Amarillo St. Stephen's Church in San Antonio Stuart." Texas and has returned to his South helping in the service and making pas- Thanks to you, too, Mr. and unit at Carolina Air National Guard toral calls. The Sotos spent July and Mrs. Stuart. Sports departments Eastover. August working in the Chapel of Todos usually receive only brickbats. In David Edward Emenheiser is secre- los Santos in Miami. fact, when city room inhabitants of tary-treasurer of the Middle Class William L. Stirling, ATO, has gone were told the candy came from the General Theological Seminary, New to Kenya as a Peace Corps volunteer. some "sports fans," several of them York. He trained twelve weeks at the Uni- asked, "Are you sure it isn't poi- soned?" Robert Arnoid Freyer, SAE, is a law v e r s i t y of Wisconsin's Milwaukee Sewanee, by the way, is really student at the University of Florida in branch, spent some time at home in the University of the South, a Gainesville. Columbia, South Carolina, and depart- men's denominational college of Caldwell L. (Hank) Haynes, PDT. ed December 29. Ensign Edwin H. Taylor, grad- some 640 students at Sewanee, spent the better part of the winter on PGD, uated from O.C.S. at Newport, Rhode Tenn. the USS Destroyer Bridget in For- Island, on 21. been mcsan waters. Shortly before Christ- August He has as- Bill wrote: signed to the destroyer U.S.S. Fletcher Coast, . mas he returned to the West . . After the first two or three stationed at Pearl Harbor. bearing as usual a supply of tall tales. games the NBC nationwide College Robert W. Thomas, Jr., is spending In Tokyo he and a group of officers Scoreboard programme began car- this year studying literature in Tubin- were mistaken for Olympic stars and rying the Sewanee scores at the found themselves being photographed gen, Germany. Traveling to Bremen on completion of the Game of the a German freighter, Robert enjoyed the and their autographs collected. Hank Week. So, if the score was in, we luxury and friendliness of did not say whether he was mistaken German wouldn't have to wait for it later hospitality. He is spreading the word for an Olympic wrestler or a cross- to be relayed up the Coast from about Sewanee through showing country runner. pic- San Francisco. The GUARD has tures of the Mountain and his friends assured us they are going to pub- Harwood Koppel is spending the have been favorably impressed. Ad- year' spring in Rome. lish the Sewanee scores next winter and dress: Dr. c/o Heider, 11 Klopstock- You don't suppose it's because A /2c Laurance K. Moore has grad- weg, Tubingen, Germany. they figure it'll be less trouble that uated from the training course for air So many plaintive letters come in to way . . . some 640 students ... I force photographic equipment repair- the alumni office about the difficulty of called the sports editor and sug- at Lowry AFB, California. He is men finding out Sewanee scores in distant gested he secure a more recent now assigned to Paine Field, Washing- parts that we reprint here a clipping copy of the Blue Book! . . . Sin- ton. and letter from William A. C. Stuart, cerely, B. Stuart, '64. H. Phillip Sasnett is a staff forester in the forest analysis department of Gulf States Paper Company. He re- ceived his M.F. from Yale last June. He and his wife, Louisa, reside at 1205 B Seventh Avenue, Tuscaloosa, Ala. In the Air Force 2nd Lt. Ronald R. Zodin, PGD, has been awarded air force pilot wings upon graduation at Reese AFB, Texas. He is assigned to Luke AFB, Arizona.

1964 Warren L. Culpepper, SN, was mar- ried to Suzanne Elizabeth Hooper on JAMES JERRY November 28 in Nashville. Mi K. LARRY Walter B. Hobbs III, KA, is a stu- WIMER, '64 MABRY, '64 dent at Wisconsin State College in Eau Claire. He was married August 22. George Matthews Powell IV, KA, :s entering the Air Force at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, on February 23, 1965 The Powells have a daughter, Carew Lee, born December 26, 1964.

The Rev. Onell Soto is working for a master's degree at the Episcopal Sem-

20 The Sewanee News Joel U. Tompkins, DTD, is a youth counselor for the Tennessee Employ- ment Security office in Nashville. Ad- dress: 1003 North Maple Street, Mur- freesboro. Stephen Edward Walker, DTD, and In iUrmortam Nancy Joanna Suttle were married December 26 in Uvalde, Texas. Joseph W. Winkelman, KS, is one of The Rev. Frederick H. Harding, '97, sippi, with his last cure Trinity Church twenty-nine Peace Corps volunteers PDT, died October 18 in Milledgeville, in Pass Christian before retirement in who went to Tanzania on December 27. Georgia. He was rector of St. Ste- 1952. He served as a trustee of the Most of the group will teach high school phen's, Milledgeville, over thirty years University from Western North Caro- level English, math, science and social and was named rector emeritus on his lina, from South Florida, and from studies; a few will teach junior college retirement in 1954. He served churches North Carolina. He is survived by his math and science. They join over 150 in Charleston and Camden, South Ca- wife, who is arranging to presenl Peace Corps volunteers presently at rolina and the state prison hospital in many of his sermons and personal pos- work in Tanzania. Winkelman studied Milledgeville, was secretary of the dio- sessions to the School of Theology. for twelve weeks at Columbia Teach- cese of Atlanta for twenty-five years ers College. and editor of the Diocesan Record, ard 1965 was twice deputy to the General Con- John Bagster Fretwell, ATO, was vention. He was community chairman married on December 28 in St. Ste- for Milledgeville during Sewanee's Five phen's Church, Coconut Grove, Miami, Million Doltar campaign under Dr. to Hunter. Sharon Jack will be remem- Guerry. Survivors include his widow, bered as the first Sewanee student to Mrs. Rose Dabney Harding, and two be initiated into Phi Beta Kappa in daughters. the hospital. Harbert W. Benjamin, '99, PDT, died Roy L. Malone III, SAE, and Colleen August 5 in Galveston, Texas. He was Virginia O'Bryon were married No- assistant treasurer for American Na- vember 7 in Stockton, California. He is tional Life Insurance Company until now attending the University of the his retirement in 1952. A resident of Pacific while employed as a group su- Galveston since 1928, he was active in pervisor at Juvenile Hall. His address: Grace Church, an honorary lifetime 1240 North Hunter, Stockton. member of the vestry, and a member of Pvt. George C. Thomas, Jr., complet- the Brotherhood of St. Andrew. Before ed a field artillery radar operators' moving to Galveston he was on the course October 5. He was trained in staff of the Porter Military Academy radar screens and message center ope- Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Abbie rations at the army artillery and Cleveland Benjamin, sister of William missile center, Fort Sill, Oklahoma. D. and Alexander Sessums Cleveland, '93, and two daughters. Dr. William Jennings, '02, died Oc- Eight Sewanee students are studying '07 tober 10, 1964, in Augusta, Georgia. A REV. WILLIS GAYLORD CLARK, this year at Virginia Theological Semi- graduate of the University of Georg ; a nary in Alexandria. The new in Judge David Ross Dunham, '07, died men medical school, he served as mayor of November 24 in Gainesville, Florida. the junior class are Martin Luther Augusta. Agnew, '64, BTP; William Hazzafp He had practiced law in St. Augustine Robert Benoist Shields, '04, KA, of Barnwell, '60, ATO; and James Mark- since 1910. The new St. Augustine His- Jacksonville, Florida, died on Septem- ham Sigler, '63. In the middler class torical Society library was dedicated ber 27, 1963. He had been retired for are Charles Edward Kiblinger, '61, to him in August. He was chairman a number of years from his as DTD, and Charles Thomas Midyette, post for Sewanee alumni in St. Augustine Florida road department right-of-way '63. In the senior class are Frank during Dr. Guerry 's Five Million Dol- agent. His widow, Cora, lives at La- Cady Cleveland, '61, BTP; Roland lar campaign. His widow, Mrs. Georgia goon Apartments, Ponte Vedra Beach, Louis Koontz, Jr., '61; and Charlfs Shringer Dunham, lives at 297 St. and two sons also survive—Robert B., Kenry Swinehart, Jr., '62. George Street in St. Augustine. His Jr., and Benjamin Bayard. children, Mrs. Charles Olson, Ross Dr. Robert Lee Sanders, '06, SAE, Dunham, A'45, and Mrs. Alvin Land, internationally known abdominal sur- also survive. geon and founder of Sanders Clinic in Dr. Walter G. Evans, '07, of Dallas, Memphis, died of a heart attack in Texas, died December 2. With his November in Hot Springs, Arkansas. M.D. from the Memphis College of He retired from the clinic in Septem- Physicians and Surgeons, he practiced ber. In addition to being one of the medicine in Dallas, where he was on South's most distinguished physicians the staff of St. Paul's Hospital. For ard surgeons, he was an outstanding the past five years he had been con- Baptist lay reader. He had been on the fined to his bed with muscular dystro- staff of Baptist Memorial Hospital more phy but took occasion on a question- than forty years and had served as naire to evaluate his Sewanee educa- president and chief of staff. He was a tion as "great.'' He is survived by his professor of surgery at the University wife, the former Hilda Grayson, and of Tenressee in Memphis. His first wife, son, Oliver Grayson Evans. Rena Wood Sanders, died some years Henry Berkeley Sparkman, '07, ATO. ego. He later married Mrs. Gladys Lar- died December 12 in Columbia, South son, who survives him. He is also sur- Carolina. He was employed by the vived by his son, Robert Lee, Jr., of Peoples National Bank in Charleston Memphis. until it closed in 1932. From then un- The Rev. Willis Gaylord Clark, '07, til his retirement he was a civilian PDT, died November 21 in Jackson, worker in the Charleston U. S. naval Mississippi, after a brief illness. He shipyard. He was pitcher on Sewanee's had served churches in Alabama. baseball team of 1906. He is survived DR. WILL JENNINGS, '02 North Carolina, Florida, and Missis- by a sister and a brother.

February 1965 21 Dr. Keller Bell Williams, '07, died Clarksville, Tennessee, until last April. July 10 in Dothan, Alabama, following He previously served St. Paul's, Frank- lin, for five years. was an extended illness. He practiced medi- Tennessee, Ray a member of the Sons of the Ameri- cine in Hartford, Alabama, for over can Revolution and the Clarksville Ki- fifty years. He served at intervals as wanis Club. Before entering seminary director, chairman of the board, and he wes a banker. He is survived by president of the old Hartford Bank his mother, Mrs. Mary Shacklett Pay and was also engaged in the drug busi- of Clarksville, and a sister in Memphis. ness. He operated an insurance agency in addition to his medical practice and Dn. Battle S. Searcy III, '59, DTD was active in both until his death. Sur- was killed in an automobile accident vivors include two daughters and two November 20 in north Alabama en sons. r~>ute to Sewanee to a football game. He received h's medical degree from Thomas Augustus Cox, '09, died in 1he Medical College of Alabama and November after a colorful career, the was a resident physician at Veterans mere summary of which fills six close- Administration Hospital. At Sewenee ly typed pages. The son of a Univer- he was editor of the Purple. He is sity trustee, he also served on the survived by his parents, a sister and board from Western North Carolina in a brother, of Tuscaloosa, Alabama. 1948-56. He was a graduate of SMA and from the University he held the The Rev. Paul B. Kelley, OSB, '«5, degree of B.C.E. ("majored in foot- died December 17 in Denver at the ball," he noted in his official dossier rge of thirty. He was recovering nice- for an engineers' society). He also at- ly from heart surgery performed De- THOMAS A. COX, '09 tended in France the Ecole Militaire, cember 3 and his death was not ex- the Ecole Superieure d'Electricite, the pected. He was attached to St. Mich- University of Paris and the Sorbonne. ael's Monastery in Elkhorn, Nebraska, The Rev. Gordon D. Pierce, '21, KS, One of fifteen members of his family and had attended four sessions of the died suddenly at his home in Brad- to be a civil engineer, Cox worked Sewanee Summer Institute of Science ford, Vermont, on October 17, two days with a number of companies as chief and Mathematics. He was scheduled to before his scheduled retirement. He or consulting engineer, the federal gov- complete work and receive his MA.T. was rector of St. Mark's Church in ernment, and the U. S. Army in ca- degree this June. Hammonton, New Jersey. pacities too numerous to list. One of Jesse William Alexander Fears, '66, his famous achievements was the in- John W. Sanford, '23, of Ripley, Ten- died October 28 in Oklahoma City of stallation of the elevator in Chimney nessee, clerk and master at Lauderdale the brain tumor he had lived with dur- Rock in North Carolina. Working in County Chancery Court, died October ing his two years at Sewanee. Though 20. graduated from the Uni- granite, he raised the 258-foot shaft He was unable to return to his classes last fall versity of Tennessee in Knoxville. His from the bottom up without using lad- he continued his studies on his own wife died in 1962. He is survived by ders or timbering. The drilling and almost until his death. The Pur-pln a son, brother and sister. blasting were done from a removable noted: "Jay will be remembered by bucket hoisted by a cable dropped Carl W. Schumacher, '23, SAE, died those who knew him here as one of from the top through a four-inch dia- October 8 in Houston, Texas. He was the best-liked boys on campus, as well mond-drill hole. an officer and director of Parke En- as one of the brightest." He was a Bering-Cortes Cox served in the A.E.F. in World graving Company and of member of the Debate Team, the Aco- Hardware Company before his retire- lytes' Guild, the University Choir, and War I, enlisting as a buck private and is survived going through ranks to a commission ment ten years ago. He by the Association of Independent Men. A Britton planned to as captain of field artillery in 1917. He his wife, Mrs. Mary Schu- sophomore Gownsman, he fought through Verdun, Meuse-Ar- macher, a daughter and a son. enter a seminary if he lived long gonne, and Ypres. He remained in the Percy James Conner, '25, died sud- enough. army in the quartermaster construc- denly in Orlando, Florida, on October tion and engineers' corps until 1945, 30, in the midst of plans for a Sewanee retiring with the rank of major. He dinner there which was to be held on Michael S. Bennett, D.D.S., former once served as interpreter to Mme. 5. His enthusiasm in award- November coach at Sewanee, died at the Edgely, Curie she delivered lectures on when ing the Sewanee Club medals for ex- Pennsylvania, home of his son, Dr. radium to Americans. cellence to high school juniors was un- George P. Bennett, '29, PGD, the day On Cox's death the president of the surpassed. A graduate of the academy after Christmas. Another son, Dr. Asheville, North Carolina, branch of as well as the college, Conner was Michael John Bennett, '27, PGD, was the American Society of Civil Engi- president of the Southern Testing Lab- listed before his death in 1946 in neers, Ronald F. Pearson, wrote, "Ma- oratories after a stint with the gov- Who's Who in America as an endo- jor Cox was admired and respected by ernment's bureau of weights and crinologist. "Coach Mike" was 83. He each of us who associated with him in measures, ran an export-import busi- was head football coach and director his profession. He was always so ness, and was an ardent bicyclist. He of athletics for six seasons, 1923-1928. proud of Sewanee, especially the 1909 is survived by his widow, Alice, son, During this period Sewanee won its 'Champions of the South.' I consider it James, daughter, Alice Lane, and by last victory over Vanderbilt (1924) a privilege to contribute a small per- his mother, Mrs. J. J. Conner, two sis- and played some notable games against sonal donation to such a worthy col- ters and a brother. teams. After Ben- lege in honor of one of its departed Thomas L. Hunt, '25, SAE, of Sewa- nett's two winning seasons of 1923 (5- alumni who so typified these high nee died November 28. A graduate of 4-1) and 1924 (6-4-0) the Sewanee ideals." SMA as well as the College, he had Tigers had only one more winning year He is survived by his widow, Elsie been a Sewanee resident since his ar- (6-3-1 under Harry Clark in 1931) un- B. Cox, and by four children. rival with his parents in 1906. He had til Coach Bill White took over in 1946. Norman P. ("Bee") Davis, '21, SAE, been working at Jackson-Myers air Besides the Vanderbilt victory of 1924, died August 23. He had been associ- field at the time of his death. Survivors Coach Bennett could look back on ated with the Federal Reserve Bank include his sister, Miss Mary Washing- wins over Ole Miss and South Caro- in New York for many years. He ton Hunt, registrar of the Sewanee lina in the same year, Ole Miss again Mrs. graduated from Harvard in 1922, mar- Military Academy, and a daughter, in 1925 (10-9), and Tulane in 1927 (12- ried Martha Waller, and had three William T. Cocke. 6). In Pennsylvania, Dr. Bennett was children, Norman W., Pamela, and The Rev. William S. Ray, '57, died active in politics in behalf of the Re- Martha. Their home was in New Mil- October 12 after a six months' illness. publican party and served in both city ford, Connecticut. He was rector of Trinity Church in council and state legislature.

22 The Sewanee News GIFTS BY CLASSES

(M) Memorial or gift by Dr. Henry J. Savage (M) CLASS PRESIDENT GIFTS PERCENTAGE* AMOUNT widow Lawrence M. Williams (M) 38 $ 46,075 PRIOR (B) Bequest William B. Wilson (M) 1900-01 Bull 25 100 7,213 Prior ro 1893 1902 Carrier 8 57 77 1902 John T. Beckett '82 (B) Phelan Beale (M) 1903 Smith 8 28 41,780 Dr. Edward C. Ellett '88 (B) Howard Crandell 1904 Lewis 5 23 82 Dr. J. H. P. Hodgson '87 (B) Rev. John Goodman (M) 1905 Dabney 3 19 535 Henry A. Jones '80 (B) Rt. Rev. Walter Mitchell 3 14 1,050 1906 Joseph Brevard Jones '88 (B) Ormond Simkins (M) 1907 Barnwell 12 48 2,031 Walter Virden, Sr. '79 (M) Horace Stringfellow (M) 1908 Greer 5 24 18,833 Beverley W. Wrenn '91 (B) Vernon S. Tupper (M) 1909 4 19 62 1893 Dr. Gilman J. Winthrop (M) 1910 Cheape 3 18 55 A. Sessums Cleveland (M) 1903 1911 Juhan 12 46 32,046 William D. Cleveland (M) Robert Barnwell 1912 Green 10 43 735 W. Frank P. Phillips (B) (M) Robert E. (M) 1913 Witten 6 50 5,149 Cowart 1894 Craighill 1914 Gerhart 7 47 693 G. Bowdoin Dr. William Egleston (B) 1915 Holt 9 47 785 John C. James (M) Dr. Robert W. B. Elliott (Mj 1916 Sleeper 13 37 4,398 Richard L. Lodge Joseph C. Fargo (B) Morris 7 20 4,023 Coles Phinizy (M) 1917 George Hamman (M) 1918 Fooshee 13 34 35,684 Herbert E. Smith Dr. George R. Rau (M) 1919 Moore 7 25 444 J. Bayard Snowden Henry T. Soaner 1920 Stoney 22 42 480,477 1904 1895 1921 Burch 19 41 28,031 George W. Croft (M) Rev. John Beean (B) 1922 Helms 8 14 9,900 Capt. William Hine (M) Spruille Burford (B) 1923 Frierson 16 25 2,067 Raymond Demere Knight (M) Rev. Caleb Weed 1924 W. J. Wallace 10 18 4,608 William W. Lewis Dr. R. M. Kirb—Smith (M) 1925 Jones 11 17 1,481 Rev. Harris M^terson (B) 1896 1926. Hamilton 23 27 4,904 1905 Rev. Thomas P. Noe (B) 1927 Turner 19 31 4,420 John Edward Hoge Robert B. Parrott (B) 1928 G. W. Wallace 25 26 5,847 Rev. Prentice A. Pugh (B) Rev. Harold Thomas 1929 Schoolfield 42 34 9,887 Rt. Rev. Hunter Wyatt-Brown Dr. Oscar N. Torian 1930 Parker 18 26 11,752 (M) 1931 Ezzell 25 22 13,898 Dr. William W^ton (B) 1906 1897 1932 Patton 21 19 8,743 Robert M. Brooks (M) (M) 1933 Ames 18 29 3,004 Richard W. Hogue Dr. Marye Y. Dabney (M) 1934 Hart 23 30 2,720 William H. Hurter (B) George V. Peak (B) 1935 Ruch 21 26 4,746 William A. M~r«an (M) 1907 1936 Craighill 20 29 11,773 1898 Bower W. Barnwell 1937 Gravdon 21 29 1,675 Julien B. Adoue (M) Rev. Willis G. Clark (B) 1938 Wilkerson 18 22 5,256 Dr. Robert South Barrett John L. Cobbs, Jr. (B) 1939 A. Guerry 15 20 17,160 George Clifton Edwards David R. Dunham 1940 Snowden 14 18 15,429 Telfair Hodgson (M) Henry M. Gass (M) 1941 DeWolfe 22 29 72.831 Mercer G. Johnston (B) Paul Jones 1942 Kochtitsky 26 28 3,453 Judge Bayard B. Shields (M) Telfair Knight 1943 Lee 38 32 2,957 Rt. Rev. Albert S. Thomas Monro B. Lanier 1944 Sullivan 12 14 1,150 1899 Rev. George B. Myers (M) 1945 Nelson 9 10 435 Harbert W. Benjamin (M) Charles M. Puckette (M) 1946 Karsten 13 19 445 Robert Jemison, Jr. John William Scarbrough (M) 1947 Cate 29 33 11,375 Alexander P. Wooldridge (M) Marcellus S. Whaley (M) 1948 Hughes 17 23 57,000 1900 1908 1949 J. Guerry 40 21 10.160 Milton Bacon (M) John B. Greer 1950 Doss 41 18 2,363 Rev. S. Moylan Bird (M) Rev. Bartholomew Huske (B) 1951 Bartlett 43 21 1,692 Daniel J. Carrison (M) Rev. J. Francis McCloud (M) 1952 Patterson 24 15 758 Chauncey Dewey (M) A. H. Wadsworth 1953 Kerr 28 16 1,470 Henry W. S. Hayes (M) Gen. L. Kemper Williams 1954 Woods 32 14 15.1.33 Bradley B. Hogue (M) 1909 1955 Bozeman 20 12 3,246 Luke Lea (M) Maj. Thomas A. Cox (M) 1956 McGee 24 10 1,598 Lucien Memminger (M) Carev J. Ellis (M) 1957 Palmer 26 15 2,135 Ralph J. Nesbit (M) Dr. B. H. Frayser (B) 1958 Evans 23 11 1,335 David A. Shepherd (M) Cyrus D. Hogue (M) 1959 Upchurch 20 9 1,250 Joseph U. R. Young (M) 1910 1960 Gregg 24 10 1,200 1901 Frederick Cheape 1961 Rust 27 11 1,953 John C. Avery (M) Benjamin D. Lebo (B) 1962 Cullen 25 13 951 Ralph P. Black (B) Edward A. Marshall 1963 DeBlois 26 10 988 Dr. Walter B. Bruce (M) 1911 1964 18 Winkelman 8 2,165 Col. Henry T. Bull Dr. Walter B. Adams LATER 38 11.961 Rev. William S. Claiborne (M) Rev. J. Gaynor Banks (M) TO rAL $1,059,592 George P. Egleston (M) Charles B. Braun (B) HONORARY 54 472,236 Rt. Rev. F. Campbell Gray Judge Benjamin Cameron (M) OTHER GIFTS 1.582,517 (M) Henry C. Cheves, Jr. TOTAL GIFT INCOME FOR 1964 $3,114,345 Rev. G. Hendree Harrison (M) Rosser J. Coke *Number of gifts in proportion to number of living alumni. Rev. Charles W. B. Hill (M) Capt. Greer A. Duncan (M) Of the totals $89,746 are gifts in memory or in honor of Dr. John W. C. Jones (M) Frank M. Gillespie alumni. James T. Mann (M) Rt. Rev. Frank A. Juhan

February 1965 23 Dr. James T. MacKenzie (B) Edward M. Pooley Hugh B. Whaley Rt. Rev. Duncan M. Gray Rt. Rev. James M. Stoney Rev. Jerry Wallace G. Cecil Woods Thomas J. Hebert (M) Thomas P. Stoney 1920 Charles M. Woolfolk Thomas L. Hunt 1912 John Bell (M) 1922 Roland Jones John H. Baskette Harold E. Bettle Albert A. Bonholzer Fred B. Mewhinney J. Edgeworth Beattie John L. Bromberg Charles D. Conway Judge James N. Neff Col. Paul G. Bell Dr. Edgar P. Cardwell J. Rorick Cravens Sylvester G. Willey Gen. Alvan C. Gillem, Jr. James C. Carter Dr. C. Frederick Hard William P. Witsell, Jr. Wilmer M. Grayson Dr. John Chipman Rev. James R. Helms H. Powell Yates Frank N. Green John G. Dearborn Reginald Helvenston 1926 Edwin Lyle Scruggs James E. Deupree B. Allston Moore Rev. J. Hodge Alves Robert N. Staggers W. Dudley Gale (B) John A. Witherspoon George H. Barker Dr. William L. Staggers Dr. W. Cabell Greet 1923 Rev. E. Dargan Butt Jack R. Swain Richmond C. Gresham Rev. W. Meade Brown, Jr. Nicholas Hamner Cobbs 1913 John B. Herring W. Tunstall Cobbs Robert F. Evans Jack Edmund C. Armes (B) W. Howerton Dr. Majl Ewing W. Hollis Fitch Rev. W. D. Bratton (M) Quintard Joyner J. Burton Frierson Ambrose Gerner John W. Durr William C. Kalmbach Rev. Edward B. Guerry Mrs. Thomas Gist D. Stephen P. Farish (M) Lowell Medford Robert E. Harwell Edgar C. Glenn, Jr. Dr. George L. Morelock Charles L. Minor (M) John F. Hunt R. Delmas Gooch Dr. Virgil John E. Puckette L. Payne Dr. H. F. Johnstone (B) Robert A. Haggart 1914 Coleman A. Harwell Posted Ben J. Carter, Jr. Hebert Robert C. Hunt Godfrey Cheshire Gifts from Corporations and Foundations Rev. Willis P. Gerhart Edward C. Isaac, Jr. David B. Griffin Abbott Laboratories Fund Kenneth W. McQuiddy Addressograph-Multigraph Rev. J. Gregory Mabry W. Michaux Nash Ruskin R. Rosborough Aetna Life Insurance Company Thomas P. Noe, Jr. Harry N. Taliaferro The Alcoa Foundation Alex H. Pegues 1915 American Association of Theological Schools Curtis B. Quarles Rev. Ellis M. Bearden American Can Company Foundation Walker Stansell, Jr. William B. Hamilton American Cast Iron Pipe Company George W. Thorogood Rev. William T. Holt American National Bank, Chattanooga Rev. Charles F. Wulf Edward A. Miner American Oil Foundation 1927 William M. Reynolds American Smelting & Refining Company Alfred H. Allen Rev. Henry Clark Smith Anonymous Rev. Richard I. Brown Carl O. Sparkman The Arcadia Foundation Gordon M. Clark (M) R. Lee Tolley The Arkwright Foundation Rev. Francis H. Craighill Dr. F. Lynwood Wren Armstrong Cork Company Rev. Durrie B. Hardin 1916 Atomic Energy Commission Quintin T. Hardtner, Jr. Troy Beatty, Jr. B & G Supply Store W. Laurens Hebert (M) Donald W. Boddy Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation George Bliss Jones Col. Edwin T. Bowden Babcock and Wilcox Company Dr. Henry T. Kirby- Smith Henry C. Cortes (M) Bank of Sewanee Robert Leach, Jr. Maj. Gen. Joe N. Dalton (B) Barrett Foundation, Inc. Ben H. Parrish Rev. Mortimer Glover Norman Bassett Foundation Dr. Andrew B. Small D. Philip Hamilton The Beechlands Foundation Brinkley S. Snowden Edgar L. Jones Benson Printing Company Ralph Speer, Jr. Rev. Turney B. Roddy Biehl and Company, Inc. Arthur Stansel Rev. Claudius A. Ross (B) Brice Building Company Charles E. Thomas Col. John W. Russey Borden Company Foundation, Inc. Andrew L. Todd, Jr. Benjamin R. Sleeper Bowaters Southern Paper Corporation Rev. William S. Turner Rev. H. Nelson Tragitt, Jr. The Bryan Family Foundation Thomas R. Waring Burlington Industries Foundation 1917 1928 The George and Anne Butler Foundation Henry C. Bethea Rev. Alfonso C. Adamz (M) Cain Sloan Company Merlin K. Bruce Ellis G. Arnall Carnegie Corporation of New York Robert D. Farish Lewis C. Burwell, Jr. Elmer S. Holmen Rev. Francis D. Daley Frederick M. Morris Walter D. Duffy Joe M. Scott, Jr. James Y. Perry Rev. John B. Matthews Joe W. Earnest Harding C. Woodall Robert H. Pitner Jack A. Milem Herbert L. Eustis, Jr. (M) 1918 Hateley J. Quincey Dr. Maurice A. Moore Kirkman Finlay Harry E. Clark Lee C. Rountree Roger G. Murray John K. Freeman Rev. Cuthbert W. Colbourne 1921 William B. Nauts Pat M. Greenwood Dr. Robert L. Crudgington Col. William C. Atkinson Edward B. Schwing, Jr. Drayton F. Howe Joseph DeGraffenried Dr. Evert A. Bancker Paul L. Sloan Rt. Rev. Girault M. Jones Col. Neil S. Edmond Brown Burch Rev. Francis B. Wakefield Carl H. Long Frank R. Ellerbe Rt. Rev. Thomas N. Car- 1924 Dr. James Lytton-Smith Cameron L. Gamsby ruthers (M) Seaton G. Bailey Thomas W. Moore, Jr. Rev. Edward B. Harris Walter B. Dossett Greene Benton, Jr. John W. Perkins Dr. George L. Inge D. St. Pierre DuBose Hugh W. Fraser, Jr. Col. J. B. Snowden II (B) W. Groom Leftwich Sterling A. Gates Shockley C. Gammage Rev. Elnathan Tartt, Jr. Niles Trammell Rev. Moultrie Guerry Rev. Robert W. Jackson Paul A. Tate J. Albert Woods (M) William R. Hagan Rev. Ralph J. Kendall James A. Townes Eben A. Wortham Thomas E. Hargrave T. Seymour Long (B) Rev. John C. Turner 1919 James E. Harton, Jr. (M) Marion W. Mahin Gordon Tyler James M. Avent Lyman P. Hoge W. Jo Wallace George W. Wallace Frank Byerley Isaac H. Hollingsworth B. Franklin Ward Henry O. Weaver O. Beirne Chisolm Rev. Capers Satterlee 1925 Thomas A. Young Sidney C. Farrar Calvin Schwing (M) E. Dudley Colhoun 1929 Julien K. Moore Hamilton Wallace Dr. John R. Eggleston Alfred T. Airth

24 The Sewanee News Harry H. Baulch Robert W. Thomas Rev. John H. Soper Rev. Willis M. Rosenthal R. Crawford Bean Rev. H. Neville Tinker Frederick D. Whittlesey Ralph H. Ruch Eh-. George P. Bennett Edwin S. Towle, Jr. Rev. Hedley James Williams Rev. Charles M. Seymour, Jr. Charles E. Berry G. David Walker 1934 Douglas L. Vaughan, Jr. Newell Blab- Dr. L. Spires Whitaker John A. Adair Dr. Cyril T. Yancey Malcolm C. Brown 1932 Emmett R. Anderton, Jr. Rev. Fred G. Yerkes John C. Bruton Carl Biehl John P. Castleberry 1936 Franklin G. Burroughs William A. Blount Thomas A. Claiborne James D. Blair, Jr. Stanyarne Burrows, Jr. Frank N. Bratton John Fain Cravens G. Bowdoin Craighill, Jr. Judge Chester Chattin James E. Butler, Jr. David T. Duncan (M) Richard L. Dabney Harvey W. Clark Rev. James S. Butler Dr. Spencer Fast John R. Franklin John Cleghorn Rev. Wood B. Carper, Jr. Dudley C. Fort James D. Gibson Edward E. Cobbs Edward B. Crosland Guy W. Glass Thomas E. Haile George W. Coulter Dabney H. Crump Rev. George J. Hall Frank Kean, Jr. DuVal G. Cravens, Jr. W. Haskell DuBose Joseph E. Hart, Jr. Edward E. Murrey, Jr. William M. Cravens Berryman W. Edwards R. Morey Hart Alexander H. Myers William H. Daggett Rev. Frank V. D. Fortune William B. Herbert, Jr. Julius F. Pabst Julian R. deOvies Julius G. French John I. H. Hodges Dr. Charles F. Pearson Dr. William B. Dickens Otis Fussell Preston B. Huntley James E. Reynolds (M) Lt. Col. Frederick Freyer Robert F. Hall, Jr. Francis Kellermann Maurel N. Richard William O. Gordon Dan McAlpine, Jr. James P. Kranz, Jr. Henry B. Richardson, Jr. James F. Griswold Rt. Rev. David S. Rose Rev. Jones S. Hamilton Herbert E. Smith, Jr. Keith M. Hartsfield Rev. Louis O'V. Thomas Corporation Gifts at All-Time High Rev. Roscoe C. Hauser, Jr. William H. Wheeler, Jr. John C. Herndon The Cartinhour Foundation Richard B. Wilkens, Jr. E. Hays Jakes Castner-Knott Dry Goods Co., Inc. Rev. Harry Wintermeyer Edwin M. Johnston Chattanooga Medicine Company 1937 Ashford Jones Owen Cheatham Foundation Frank M. Arnall II Dr. Daniel Murphey Chemical Bank New York Trust Company Perry M. Ballenger (B) Francis C. Nixon Chicopee Manufacturing Company Rupert M. Colmore, Jr. Arch Peteet Chitty and Company Dr. William G. Crook William C. Schoolfield Cities Service Harold Eustis Robert P. Shapard, Jr. Cloverland Ice Cream Company Augustus T. Graydon Edgar A. Stewart Concora Foundation J. Calvin Hale Col. John L. Warren Corn Products Company Orville B. Harris Warren W. Way Courtaulds North America, Incorporated Daniel Harrison Henry P. Williams Cowan Stone Company Dr. Walter Moore Hart Jess N. Williams Cypress Gardens Citrus Products, Inc. Theodore C. Heyward, Jr. Dr. Leslie J. Williams Jchn Deere Company Dr. Francis H. Holmes James K. Wright (M) Denning Brothers, Inc. Rev. Jack F. G. Hopper 1930 Devonshire Highlands Estates, Inc. Rev. Norman F. Kinzie Dr. William J. Ball Diamond Alkali Company Foundation Mrs. R. M. Kirby-Smith (M) Walter E. Boyd (M) The Dickson Foundation, Inc. Rev. Cotesworth P. Lewis Clinton G. Brown, Jr. Dow Chemical Company Rev. Erie H. Merriman (M) Willoughby N. Claybrook DuPont E. I. deNemours and Co. Hugh T. Shelton, Jr. Jackson Cross Dutch-Maid Bakery Rev. George R. Stephenson John S. Davidson David G. Ellison Agency Col. Albert W. Stockell Charles C. Dudley The Eagle Foundation Edward B. Vrepland, Jr. Clarence E. Faulk, Jr. Elmendorf & Company, Inc. 1938 Dr. Thomas Greville Employees Liability Insurance Corporation Very Rev. George Alexander Rt. Rev. John E. Hines Entwistle Foundation, Inc. David W. Bywaters John S. King, Jr. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U. S. Jefferson D. Copeland III (M) Daniel T. McGown Esso Education Foundation David E. Cox (M) Dr. Thomas Parker The Farish Fund Norwood C. Harrison W. Emmett Phillips Firestone Tire and Rubber Company William B. Harwell Charles Poellnitz, Jr. First National Bank of Franklin County Rev. W. R. Haynsworth Edward W. Watson W. W. Hazzard Dr. Roger A. Way James W. Hill III Peter D. Young A. Brown Moore Dr. Robert S. Lancaster Marion F. Jackson (M) 1931 Carlisle S. Page, Jr. Dr. Sam M. Powell, Jr. Rev. Arthur L. Lyon-Vaiden Halstead T. Anderson William T. Parish, Jr. A. Blevins Rittenberry William S. McGuire Kenneth T. Anderson Royal K. Sanford Rev. Homer P. Starr Dr. Thomas V. Magruder, Jr. James O. Bass Benjamin Springer Harry C. Templeton Thomas T. Phillips, Jr. Percy C. Blackman Walter Travis Wilson, Jr. Dr. John L. Tison, Jr. James B. Ragland Rev. James W. Brettmann 1933 1935 Dewitt T. Sneed, Jr. David A. Bridewell Dr. Douglass G. Adair Rev. Lee A. Belford Rev. Charles Wyatt-Brown Moultrie B. Burns C. Carlisle Ames Arthur Ben Chitty William N. Wilkerson John H. Cobbs Rev. Olin G. Beall Dr. Robert W. Daniel 1939 George H. Copeland Dr. Randolph C. Charles E. Ragland Dobbins Cmdr. Cyril Best W. Dixon Dossett Bayard M. Cole Frank W. Gaines, Jr. Samuel Boykin John M. Ezzell Rev. Theodore P. Devlin Rev. Edward H. Harrison Archibald Campbell, Jr. Duncan Cameron Green (M) Dr. DuBose Egleston John A. Johnston Henry C. Cortes, Jr. S. Hayden Hamilton Robert W. Fort Samuel C. King, Jr. Rutherford Cravens C. Richard Kellermann Dr. Robert H. Green Rev. Stiles Lines Rt. Rev. James Duncan Dr. R. Nelson Long (M) Edwin I. Hatch Fred Fleming Lucas Alex Guerry Harris G. Lvman Thomas B. Henderson A. Geren McLemore O. Morgan Hall Rev. Alfred St. J. Matthews Harold E. Jackson James H. MacKenzie Lt. Col. Leslie McLaurin Rt. Rev. John A. Pinckney Joe Smith Mellon Dr. Charles S. Miller Richard S. Quisenberry S. Porcher Smith Alexander Postiethwaite, Jr Rev. Julius A. Pratt Thomas A. Rose, Jr. Dr. George A. Sterling G- Marion Sadler Julian P. Ragland Leonard L. Shertzer, Jr.

February 1965 25. E. Hartwell Smith Arthur V. Gaiser, Jr. Dr. William R. Nummy Lt. Col. Walter R. Davis Rev. Russell W. Turner Rev. Stanley F. Hauser Peter O'Donnell, Jr. Dr. Joseph H. Dimon III Dr. George N. Wagnon Dr. Edwin B. Herring Frank D. Peebles, Jr. Dr. Henry B. Gregorie, Jr. 1940 Charles M. Jones, Jr. William P. Perrin John Patten Guerry Rev. William P. Barrett R. Critchell Judd James K. Roberts Rev. G. Edward Haynsworth Walter R. Belford William H. Keys Rev. James Stirling James R. Helms, Jr. Rev. Alfred Chambliss, Jr. W. Sperry Lee Rev. George E. Stokes, Jr. Edward W. Hine William C. Duckworth Dr. David A. Lockhart William G. Vardell, Jr. Lewis J. Holloway, Jr. William M. Edwards Joel Morris Rev. James B. Vaught Pev. William T. Holt, Jr. Haywood C. Emerson Charles G. Mullen, Jr. Irl R. Walker, Jr. °amuel H. Howell Rev. Alexander Juhan J. Howell Peebles, Jr. Dr. John F. Waymouth, Jr. John Kyle Lancaster Dr. Charles W. Lokey, Jr. Richard H. Poellnitz Rev. G. Cecil Woods, Jr. Rev. John R. Lodge Rt. Rev. Iveson Noland Ashley A. Purse 1948 B. Humphreys McGee Robert G. Snowden Harvey E. Ragland Dr. John B. Dicks, Jr. Rev. John S. Martin M. D. Cooper Stockell, Jr. Dr. E. Graham Roberts William B. Elmore Rev. J. Dean Maurer Rev. C. Harry Tisdale Robert B. Rodgers Jett M. Fisher George R. Mende

Arthur D. Whittington Alfred D. Sharp, Jr. Rev. Mason A. Frazell Dr. I. Armistead Nelson Dr. Breckenridge Wing William W. Shaver III William D. Hail Samuel E. Parr, Jr. 1941 Mercer L. Stockell Blackburn Hughes, Jr. Dr. Stephen Elliott Puckette Luther Robert B. Bodfish (M) J. Strange, Jr. Donald M. Johnson Edward D. Putman, Jr. Dr. Lt. Col. Wm. D. Bratton James C. Vardell, Jr. George Q. LangstafT, Jr. John H. Sherman, Jr. Thomas B. Walker, Jr. William E. Cox, Jr. Charles H. Warfield Frank J. Dana, Jr. William T. Watson III Dr. Phillip W. DeWolfe John T. Wetzel Alumni and Others Make Corporate Gifts John H. Duncan (M) James L. Williams Rev. Marshall J. Ellis Florida Educational Foundation James V. Gillespie 1944 The Ford Foundation Nagel Haskin Armour C. Bowen, Jr. Ford Motor Company Fund O. John L. Henderson, Jr. Winston Cameron Fowler Brothers Company Rev. Charles Thomas S. Jordan (B) J. Child, Jr. Gale, Smith and Company, Inc. Clendon H. Lee Rev. Hunley A. Elebash General Electric Foundation Dr. David M. Lide, Jr. Thomas R. Ford General Foods Fund, Inc. Capt. George McCloud William B. McClelland General Motors Corporation Lee McGriff Rev. Roddey Reid, Jr. Georgia-Pacific Corporation Rev. George C. Merkel Rev. Hendry T. Rodman Glendon Land Company Rev. E. L. Pennington (B) Edward K. Sanders Godwin and Beckett, Inc. Alexander W. Robb Robert E. Steiner III Grover Hermann Foundation William M. Spencer III C. Hutcheson Sullivan Gulf Oil Foundation Walker A. Tynes Willard B. Wagner, Jr. Gulf States Utilities Company Robert H. Woodrow, Jr. 1945 Hail Dry Goods Company Francis H. Yerkes Kenneth P. Adler Hamilton Foundation 1942 Douglass McQueen Hat Corporation of Tennessee Dr. Ben F. Cameron, Jr. David L. Maris H. G. Hill Interests Stanhope E. Elmore, Jr. Cary L. Noble Household Finance Foundation Robert M. Fairleigh Rev. Stuart G. Ruth The Hubinger Foundation E. Cress Fox Rt. Rev. William E. Sanders Herbert Humphreys Foundation, Inc. George T. Gambrill III Rev. Thomas J. C. Smyth Ina Foundation Currin R. Gass , Jr. Independent Colleges Fund of America Dr. Harold P. Jackson Wallace Wilson International Business Machines Corporation Dr. Ferris F. Ketcham 1946 International Harvester Company Lt. Col. Ephraim Kirby-Smith Rev. John S. Bigler Jamison Foundation, Inc. Dr. O. Morse Kochtitzky Jack Henderson Blackwell Johnson and Johnson Dr. Bruce M. Kuehnle Dr. Dunklin C. Bowman Eugenie and Joseph Jones Family Foundation Inc. Louis R. Lawson, Jr. Rev. Charles L. Burgreen W. Alton Jones Foundation, James A. Lyle George Gillespie (M) The Jung Foundation C. Caldwell Marks John H. Hall Lehn and Fink Products Corporation Inc. James W. Moody, Jr. Rev. Charles Karsten, Jr. Lilly Endowment, Dr. Frederic R. Morton Rev. Edward B. King Richard B. Park Hunter McDonald, Jr. Fred H. Phillips Rev. Albert E. Pons Dr. Fred N. Mitchell Lt. Cmdr. Robert Thweatt George G. Potts Ernst Rust, Jr. (M) Harold P. Moon Myles L. Vollmer John B. Ransom III Richard Munger Shaeffer William Cosby Morgan (M) Morgan Watkins, Jr. James J. Sirmans Edward M. Steelman, Jr. Dr. Stephen Donald Palmer Warner S. Watkins, Jr. Dr. Albert P. Spaar 1947 Dr. E. Rex Pinson, Jr. Dr. Ben E. Watson Ashby M. Sutherland Rev. John C. Ball, Jr. Thomas B. Rice Rev. J. Philson Williamson Edmond M. Tipton Snowden Boyle, Jr. Rev. Martin R. Tilson Rev. Leslie E. Wilson Dr. Bayly Turlington James G. Cate, Jr. Mrs. William G. Willoughby 1950 Dr. Benham R. Wrigley Rev. Kenneth E. Clarke Dr. Calhoun Winton F. Clay Bailey, Jr. Bedell 1943 John S. Collier 1949 Rev. George C. H. Bennett Alford Rev. Miller Cragon, Jr. Rev. C. FitzSimons Allison Warren Belser, Jr. Bennett Rt. Rev. John M. Allin Joseph B. dimming, Jr. G. Dewey Arnold Rev. Jack M. Dr. Henry A. Atkinson Leonidas Emerson Robert M. Ayres, Jr. Dr. Wyatt H. Blake III William O. Beach Harrold Rae Flintoff L. Graham Barr, Jr. Rev. Fred J. Bush Dr. W. B. Rogers Beasley Dr. Ralph W. Fowler, Jr. Maj. Kenneth Barrett Lawrence E. Cantrell, Jr. Chap. Wm. A. Boardman Neely Grant, Jr. Rev. William O. Boyd Rev. E. Dudley Colhoun, Jr. Rev. Domenic Ciannella W. Moultrie Guerry Walter D. Bryant Richard B. Doss Rev. David Collins Rev. John M. Haynes Stuart R. Childs Leroy J. Ellis III Gentry, Charles L. Dexter, Jr. G. W. Leach, Jr. Dr. William G. Cobey James W. Jr. Dr. H. Hamilton, Jr. John P. Douglas, Jr. Kenneth A. MacGowan, Jr, William P. Cooper, Jr. Edward Horace Dryden John C. Marshall Joseph D. Cushman, Jr. H. Garland Head III Charles George L. Eckles Alfred M. Naff Rev. Lavan B. Davis W. Hunt

26 The Sewanee News Rev. Harland M. Irvin, Jr. Rev. Marion J. Hatchett Edward W. Heath Fred Fiske Maj. John E. Jarrell Thaddeus G. Holt, Jr. Rev. Charles K. Horn Robert F. Gillespie, Jr. Walter W. Kennedy, Jr. George W. Hopper Stanton E. Huey, Jr. John Brooks Gunn Thomas A. Lear James D. Irwin Ben Ivey Jackson James C. Hoppe D. Gilbert Lee O. Lewin Keller, Jr. Rev. John R. McGrory Dr. William C. Kalmbach, Jr Howard H. Logan Thomas K. Lamb, Jr. Joseph L. Orr Dr. A. Joel Lee Robertson McDonald Richard W. Leche, Jr. Windsor M. Price Lewis S. Lee Dr. Walter S. McKeithen. Jr. Rev. Carlos A. Loop Rev. Milton A. Rohane Joseph B. McGrory Dr. John H. Marchand, Jr. Thomas M. McKeithen Thomas J. Tucker James Paschal McHaney Lynn C. Morehouse Dr. Robert M. McKey, Jr. Dr. John P. Vineyard, Jr. Claibourne W. Patty, Jr. Walter B. Parker David L. McQuiddy, Jr. William G. Ward, Jr. Rev. George S. Plattenburg Coleman R. Perry Rev. Loren B. Mead 1953 Robert Reed Webb Rev. F. Stanford Persons John Harmon Nichols Robert J. Boylston Phil B. Whitaker, Jr. Edgar L. Powell Jack P. Pace William K. Bruce 1956 Rev. George L. Reynolds, Jr. James B. Pratt John A. Cater, Jr. Rev. Harry L. Babbit Louis W. Rice, Jr. Harvey Pride, Jr. William B. Dickerson II John Nesbitt Barnett Harvey A. Rogers, Jr. Wynne Ragland Robert L. Durning, Jr. William R. Boling Richard E. Simmons, Jr. Rev. Frank G. Rice, Jr. James N. Finley Edward Turner Bramlitt Sedgwick L. Simons Claude M. Scarborough, Jr. Rev. Austin Ford David S. DuBose Dr. George F. Smith Charles J. Shell, Jr. Ernest B. Franklin, Jr. John E. M. Ellis William T. Stumb Edgar O. Silver Robert M. Fraser Clyde A. Fasick John C. Hall, Jr. Rev. Richard C. Fell Dr. E. Phelps Helvenston Charles S. Glass Businesses Respond to Educational Needs Standish Henning Rev. Robert B. Jewell (M) Lodge Manufacturing Company R. Holt Hogan J. Ackland Jones George W. J. D. Manly Foundation Fund Hopkins Kenneth Kinnett McGraw-Hill, Incorporated William E. Hunter Joseph P. McAllister Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company Foundation Donald M. Irvin Burrell O. McGee Marquette Cement Manufacturing Company Kenneth H. Kerr Robert M. Murray, Jr. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. Dr. W. Henry Langhorne John A. Pedlar Mead Corporation Foundation James H. Mcintosh, Jr. William M. Phillips Medusa Foundation of Portland Cement Company Howell A. McKay Norman L. Rosenthal Mellon National Bank and Trust Company E. Lucas Myers Victor P. Serodino Richard King Mellon Foundation Thomas O. H. Smith, Jr. Capt. Hugh P. Wellford Merchants Bank, Cleveland, Tenn. Thoburn Taggart, Jr. Merritt L. Wikle, Jr. The Merck Company Foundation Rev. W. Bradley Trimble C. Prim Wood, Jr. The Minor Foundation, Inc. George Wagner, Jr. Charles N. Woolfolk, Jr. The Moran Foundation Rev. Philip P. Werlein Rev. James Willard Yoder Mountain Beverage Supply Company Homer W. Whitman, Jr. 1957 National Dairy Products Corporation John A. Witherspoon, Jr. Henry F. Arnold, Jr. National Distillers and Chemical Foundation, Inc. 1954 William H. Brantley III National Merit Scholarship Corporation Alexander Adams Thomas Steele Darnell Neely, Harwell and Co. Dr. Thurman Dee Baker, Jr. Rev. M. W. Glover, Jr. New York Life Insurance Company Rev. Leon C. Balch Louis A. Hermes Nelson Realty Corporation Rev. Edward G. Bierhaus, Jr. Christopher Horsfield A. B. and J. Noyes Foundation Robert H. Bradford Rev. Giles F. Lewis, Jr. Orleton Trust Fund Harry W. Camp Don J. Massey Robert Orr and Company E. Barry Evans Rev. Charles Scott May Parke-Davis and Company Allen Farmer (M) Joseph Douglas Mayson Pennsalt Chemical Foundation Paul J. Greeley Rev. Walter B. Peterson Studios of George Payne, Inc. iCapt William M. Hood Dr. Robert Bruce Pierce Henry A. Petter Supply Company Robert G. Jackson Rev. William Ray (M) Peoples Life Insurance Company C. Charles Keller III Arnold Rose The Pittsburgh Foundation Rev. Christoph Keller Robert D. Scott Pittsburgh Plate Glass Foundation Rev. Robert B. Kemp David H. Smith Plantation Pipe Line Douglass R. Lore Henry W. Smith, Jr. Preferred Thrift and Loan Plan, Inc. George L. Lyon, Jr. Paris Eugene Smith Walter Floyd McGee, Jr. Capt. William Stallings Hart T. Mankin John W. Talley, Jr. Cecil M. Taylor Philip Hardy Smith Gilbert Y. Marchand Rev. James Henry Taylor, Jr. James R. Thul Rev. Furman C. Stough Ted E. Moor, Jr. Alfred H. Tebault, Jr. Rev. Murray Trelease Dr. Bayard S. Tynes William E. Roberts Ralph T. Troy Dr. William G. Webb John N. Wall, Jr. Robert A. Rowland Dr. Norman S. Walsh David G. Wiseman, Jr. Francis G. Watkins William C. Rucker, Jr. William J. Warfel Emmons H. Woolwine, Jr. Arthur A. West William Hamlet Smith Chap. Christopher Young 1951 Rev. George Wharton III J. Haskell Tidman, Jr. 1958 Dr. R. Huston Babcock Russell H. Wheeler, Jr. Roland A. Timberlake Hart W. Applegate Rev. Allen L. Bartlett, Jr. 1952 William D. Tynes, Jr. Rev. Arthur W. Archer Dr. William Reed Bell Clifford V. Anderson Robert F. Weichsel, Jr. Rev. Maurice M. Benitez John G. Bratton William Morgan Bomar T. Manly Whitener, Jr. Charles A. Born III Jess B. Cheatham, Jr. James H. Bratton, Jr. Rev. John Barrington Winn Joe W. Bradley Rev. G. Milton Crum Rev. James C. Buckner John W. Woods James L. Budd George A. Dotson R. Andrew Duncan John H. Wright, Jr. Anderson Carmichael, Jr. Rev. J. Powell Eaton John R. Foster 1955 Lt. Everett J. Dennis George B. Elliott Rev. Charles E. Frederick Francis B. Avery, Jr. Kirkman Finlay, Jr. John C. Eyster Rev. Martin D. Gable Chap. W. Scott Bennett II Dudley C. Fort, Jr. Dr. B. Douglass Frierson, Jr. Rev. Richard W. Gillett Frank C. Bozeman Rev. William Henderson (M) Walter G. Grahn, Jr. Robert T. Cherry William Russell Johnston Earl Guitar, Jr. Dr. George W. Hamilton Talbot D'Alemberte Capt. Orlando W. Lyle, Jr. Charles W. Hall Rt. Rev. William Hargrave Robert L. Ewing Rev. W. Joe Moore Joe B. Hall Rev. Rogers S. Harris Rev. Raymond T. Ferris Harry M. Moorefield

February 1965 27 Frank Kinnett John Holman Dawson, Jr. Procter and Gamble Foundation Edward J. Lefeber, Jr. William Michael Fagan, Jr. C. B. Ragland Co. Lt. W. Duncan McArthur, Jr. Frank Armstrong Green Robertson Foundation Rev. Julian McPhiliips W. Palmer Kelly Scott Paper Company Foundation Rev. Richard E. Mason David Pipes Milling J. W. and Cornelia R. Scarbrough Foundation Rev. Fred L. Meyer Paul John Tessmann Lemuel Scarbrough Foundation Rev. Donald P. Miller Robert G. Urquhart Sears, Roebuck Foundation Rev. Henry J. Miller, Jr. (M) Mark Juel Volk William G. Selby and Marie Selby Foundation Charles W. Morgsn, Jr. Everett John Ward, Jr. Sewanee Silica Company Sewall K. Oliver III Eric J. Whitesell Oscar F. Smith Memorial Foundation Francis J. Pelzer III John Louis Williams Socony Mobil Oil Company, Inc. Gordon P. Peyton Peter Isao Yagura Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company Peter J. Sehlinger, Jr. Christopher Ta-yung Yang Southern Wholesalers, Inc. E. Hayne Shumate, Jr. 1967 Sparks Realty Corporation Sarah McCradv Shumate Thomas T. Balsley Sperry and Hutchinson Company Rev. Arthur H. Underwood Rushton T. Capers Oscar and Marion Straus Foundation Rev. Homer Vanture Christopher B. Carson Strickland Paper Company, Inc. J. Frederich Wunderlich Richard M. Clewis III Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation 1963 Paul T. Frantz Suni-Citrus Products Company Rev. Jack D. Adams, Jr. Feter C. Oleson Carl S. Swisher Foundation, Inc. John Aubrev Ball, Jr. William W. Sheppard, Jr. Teagle Foundation, Inc. Jeffrey Buntin James Steeves Inc. Terry Motors, Wentworth Caldwell, Jr. 1968 Union Carbide Corporation Ewing E. Carruthers Craig V. Bledsoe United States Borax and Chemical Corporation Harry Howard Cockrill, Jr. Barring Coughlin, Jr. United States Steel Foundation, Inc. Fowler F. Cooper, Jr. Honorary Enders M. Voorhees Foundation Michael M. DeBakey Dr. Arthur J. Bedell Vulcan Rivet and Bolt Corporation John A. Griswold Dr. Roger M. Blough Weaks Supply Company, Ltd. James S. Guignard James S. Bonner Donald P. Wells Foundation Rev. Jules F. Haley Harvey G. Booth Werthan Bag Corporation Charles M. Hall Rt. Rev. George Cadigan Donald P. Welles Foundation Rev. Robert Holzhammer Rev. O. Capers Kemper and Leila Williams Fund Sam Charles S. L. Hoover Rt. Rev. Charles Carpenter V. R. Williams and Company Christopher Horsch Dr. Cheatham John M. Wolff Foundation Owen William R. Hudgins Rt. Rev. Edmund Dandridge George E. Lewis II (M) Eric W. Naylor Jerome G. Hall Walter S. Martin Clarence Day Rev. Limuel G. Parks, Jr. Rev. Harold D. Harrison Stephen H. Moorehead Mrs. Alfred I. duPont Rev. Waldo Peterson Howard W. Harrison, Jr. Edward C. Nash, Jr. Hon. James A. Farley Rev. Colton M. Smith Rev. William H. Littleton William W. Pheil Robert E. Finley Gary Lee Smith Lt. Robert T. Owen Ssm Pickering Rt. Rev. Thomas Fraser Harrison R. Steeves III Dr. John P. Patton, Jr. Michael J. Sefton Rt. Rev. Robert Gibson Kenan Timberlake, Jr. Wniam E. Quarterman Murrav R. Summers Rt. Rev. Percy Goddard Halsey E. Werlein Dennis P. Thompson Rev. Robert D. Terhune Rev. Harold C. Gosnell 1959 Walter B. Wilder, Jr. Vance J. Thornton, Jr. Rt. Rev. Robert Gribbin Rev. John Arrington III 1961 1964 Mrs. Alexander Guerry James T. Burrill Rev. Moss W. Armistead Cary Allan Behle Dr. Harold H. Helm Rev. Cham Canon William O. Britt George Reed Calhoun IV Dr. Hugh Hodgson James C. Clapp Walter R. Chastain, Jr. Thomas L. Chamberlain Rt. Rev. T. G. V. Inman Joseph A. Davenport III Ernest M. Cheek Charles P. Donnelly III G. Allen Kimball Lt. Eugene V. Doswell Col. W. K. Dudley Hill Ferguson III Rt. Rev. G. H. Kinsolving (M) Albert M. Frierson David H. Elliott Donald W. Griffis Rt. Rev. Richard Kirchhoffer T. John Gribble Rev. David A. Fort Preston L. Hall Dr. William A. Kirkland John C. Hodgkins William A. Griffis J. Merrill Hartman Capt. Wendell F. Kline Dr. Warren Holland, Jr. Robert Ladley Husted Lacy Harris Hunt II T. Kelsey Lamb Henry Kirby-Smith, Jr. James W. Hutchinson William Crawford Hunt Rt. Rev. Arthur Lichtenberger David Clark Littler F. Paul Inscho William A. McLean Hinton F. Longino J. Waring McCrady John Thomas Jones Edward A. McLellan Rev. Albert H. Lucas Rev. C. Brinkley Morton Rev. Terrell T. Kirk Thomas D. C. Mason Rt. Rev. Arthur McKinstry Rev. T. Hall Partrick Robert C. Kneisly Frederick H. Maull Rt. Rev. C. Gresham Marmion Capt. Robert Dudley Peel Janis S. Lane Edwin H. Taylor Charles Moss Bruce Adams Samson Rev. James M. Lilly William C. Weaver III Rt. Rev. George Murray Dr. Battle S. Searcy III (M) Frank T. Melton Joseph W. Winkelman James C. Oates Robert Dale Sweeney Edward R. Moore Norval R. Yerger Dr. Edmund Orgill Charles F. Voltz, Jr. David C. Perry 1965 Dr. Z. Cartter Patten 1960 Rev. Paul W. Pritchartt Peter Morley Baffaro Rev. William Pollard Rev. Ernest Anderson Rev. James G. Radebaugh John C. Byram, Jr. Rt. Rev. George Quarterman Lt. Alvan S. Arnall Gladstone Rogers III (M) Robert L. Coleman Dr. Henry T. Rowell H. Frederick Brown, Jr. Joseph H. Schley William R. Ehlert Dr. C. M. Sarratt Hugh Hunter Byrd Robert J. Schneider Thomas B. Hall III J. A. Setze (M) Patrick P. Carey K. Wortham Smith William A. Hamilton, Jr. Rev. Massey H. Shepherd James R. Carter, Jr. Barry H. Thompson David Faulcon Holt Rt. Rev. Albert Stuart Benjamin R. Collier Robert H. Wood Harry P. Joslvn III Rt. Rev. Andrew Y. Y. Tsu William B. Craig III (M) 1962 Douglas J. Milne David Van Alstyne, Jr. Walter J. Crawford, Jr. Rev. Otto H. Anderson D. Michael Sava Rt. Rev. John Vander Horst David G. Ellison III Julian R. Beckwith III Charles Wackerman Henderson Van Surdam Rev. George C. Field, Jr. A. Shapleigh Boyd III 1966 Dr. Peter F. Watzek Harry B. Forehand, Jr. Arthur G. Fort II James H. Abernathy, Jr. Rev. Holly Wells Robert L. Gaines Rev. Thomas G. Garner, Jr. Michael A. Campbell Rt. Rev. E. Hamilton West J. Gregory Gould Timothy Jerome Hallett John G. Capers III Victor R. Williams (M) Taylor C. Greenwald W. Harrison Jones, Jr. John Austin Carey Dr. John M. Wolff

28 The Sewanee News Remembrances of 1964

SHIRLEY MAJORS, WALTER BRYANT, HORACE MOORE, CLARENCE CARTER

Bishop Frark A. Juhan, '11, upper left, was named honorary Diegmann csptain of the 1964 football team. At upp?r right are the coaches at the foctbo.Il banquet. CAPTAIN OF THE TEAM LOWER LEFT—Lambda Chi Alpha won the trophy for do- nating most blood to *ho Bloodmobile. The Rev. Richard Reece, '64, SMA chaplain, presents the French fireman's helmet to Richard Powell.

LOWER RIGHT—Diving boards and standards in Juhan Gym dooI were dedicated in memory of Gladstone Rogers III, '61.

LEFT TO RIGHT:—Jim Thames, '65, Chaplain David B. ColLns, '43, Mrs. Gladstone Rogers and the Rev. Gladstone Fogers, Jr., B'shop Juhan, Vice-Chancellor Edward Mc-

Crady, ard Coach Ted Bitondo .

February 1965 29 1

Major Gifts and Alumni-and-Friends Toi

Key Areas State /City Major Gifts Alumni and Friends Grand Total No. Amount No. Amount No. A-mount Alabama Birmingham 14 $ 17,162 H7 $ 14,887 161 $ 32,050 Huntsville/Decatur 5 450 39 4,464 44 4,9H Mobile 5 42,827 32 1,564 37 44,391 Montgomery 1 200 33 3,028 34 3,228 of Rest State 6 I5A7 103 9,9! 5 109 25,562 TOTAL 31 $ 76,287 354 $ 33,859 T85 $ 110,146

Arkansas 1 $ 24,365 90 $ 10,845 IOI $ 35,2n

District of Columbia $. 4i $ 3,645 4i $ 3,645

Florida

Jacksonville 38 $ 511,753 90 $ 10,820 128 $ 522,573 Miami 15 153,982 34 5,947 49 159,929 Pensacola 2 1,500 38 3,398 40 4,898

Tallahassee 5 275 44 i,776 49 2,051 Tampa/St. Petersburg 2 10,846 65 3,759 67 14,605 Rest of State 10 18,700 254 14,151 264 32,851 TOTAL 72 $ 697,056 525 $ 39,852 597 $ 736,909

Georgia

Atlanta 34 $ 247,411 276 $ 3 ,584 310 $ 277,995 Rest of State 26 11,421 168 8,184 194 19,606 TOTAL 60 $ 258,832 444 $ 38,768 504 $ 297,601

Kentucky

Lexington 3 $ 250 21 $ i,740 24 $ 1,990 Louisville 21 39,288 61 12,177 82 5^465 Rest of State 52 5,283 52 5,283

TOTAL 24 $ 39,538 134 $ 19,200 158 $ 58,739

Louisiana

Lake Charles 4 $ 7,882 3 $ 125 7 $ 8,007 New Orleans 24 105,729 82 3,H3 106 108,872 Shreveport 6 27,050 4i 4,3i9 47 31,369 Rest of State 30 22,599 149 9,297 179 3^896 TOTAL 64 $ 163,260 275 $ 16,884 339 $ 180,145

Mississippi

Jackson 1 $ 30,000 36 $ 1,674 37 $ 31,674 Rest of State 15 17,763 "4 9,766 129 27,529 TOTAL 16 $ 47,763 150 $ 11,440 766 $ 59,204

Missouri St. Louis $ 29 $ 4,623 29 $ 4,623 Rest of State 2 15,000 32 4,028 34 19,028 TOTAL 2 $ 15,000 61 $ 8,651 63 $ 23,651

30 The Sewanee News ugh 1964 from Beginning of Campaign

Key Areas State/City Major Gifts Alumni and Friends Grand Total No. Amount No. Amount No. Amount New York Area (Including Connecticut, New Jersey, New York) 43 $ 175, IJ ° 285 $ 41,800 328 $ 216,910

North Carolina Charlotte 2 $ 1,500 41 $ 3,46i 43 $ 4,961

Winston-Salem 3 10,050 9 535 12 10,585 Rest of State 12 35>ooo 157 9,54i 169 $ 44,541

TOTAL 17 $ 46,550 207 $ 13,537 224 $ 60,087

South Carolina Charleston 48 $ 6,913 48 $ 6,913

Columbia 3 1,011 59 5,529 62 $ 6,540

Greenville 5 1,222 19 2,073 24 3,295 Rest of State ii i5>725 148 32,291 *59 $ 48,016 TOTAL "J9 $ 17,958 274 $ 46,807 293 $ 64,765

Tennessee

Chattanooga 53 £ 403,933 154 $ 12,929 207 $ 416,863 Memphis 40 384,425 175 20,189 215 404,614 Nashville 74 728,058 330 46,512 404 774,57i

Sewanee 56 29,835 469 48,255 5 2 5 78,090

Rest of State 5 17,903 243 25,766 248 43,670 TOTAL 228 $1,564,156 h37 l $153,653 1-599 $1 ,717,809

Texas

Beaumont 7 $ 4,100 19 $ 1,968 26 $ 6,068 Dallas/Ft. Worth 6 17,500 104 9,009 no 26,509 Houston 32 3H,590 120 19,430 152 334,020 San Antonio 12 69,558 41 10,861 53 80,419 Rest of State 20 6,099 143 9,776 163 15,876 TOTAL 77 $ 411,849 427 2 5i,045 504 $ 462,894

Virginia 5 $ 75,800 116 $ 9,"9 121 $ 84-919

Total Key Areas 669 $3,613,529 4,754 $499,114 5423 M ,112,643

Other Areas 48 $ i75,H7 690 $ 65,056 739 $ 240,203

National Unallocated 2 $ 553,300 10 $ 5,8io 12 $ 559,uo

GRAND TOTAL 719 $4-341,976 5,454 $569,980 6,i74 34.9H,957

February 1965 31 Coul

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Sewan Tuesday, June 1 NEW5 Opening session of the Board of Regents.

Wednesday, June 2

Regents in session.

The J quarterly by the Thursday, June ASSOC ALUMNI 3 Registration for all visitors, Elliott Hall, all day. Dor- of The I mitory housing opens at noon. Regents in session. see. Second I e paid at Sewanee, Tenne Alumni Council meets with alumni on the Board of Trustees. Bishops on the Board of Trustees lunch lent with Theological Faculty. Tour of the duPont Li- brary. Carillon concert. Opening session of the Board Editor of Trustees with address by the Chancellor, Bishop

Charles C. J. Carpenter, open to the public. SAE- Edith \\ DTD, KA-PDT parties for students and guests.

thing E. Friday, June 4 Trustees meet with Campaign leaders. Beta brunch.

Frederick R. I resident for Bt Dedication of Genesis Window in All Saints' Chapel. Spires Whitaker. '31, Vice-Pi Mai Funds; Dudley Sewanee Woman's Club party for ladies. Dedication irt, '34. ' lent for R l. Morey Hart, '34, acy H. Lamar, Vice- of Joseph Merrick Jones tablet in Guerry Hall. Rib- Sperry Li bon Society parties. Luncheon for ladies. PGD Smor-

kd III, A'45. Vice-President for [ gasbord. Classes of 1932-1935 reunion. Vice-Chancel- James W. Gentj re-President for Ad> Philip lor's reception. KS-Chi-Psi-Independent Men combo 15. Whitaker, etary; F. Clay Bailed Treasurer: Ari party.

Saturday, June 5: Alumni Day Corporate Communion. Annual meeting of the Associ- CONTENTS ated Alumni. Sigma Nu brunch. Sarah Hodgson Torian Archives dedication, duPont Library. Fraternity house corporation meetings. Barbecue at Lake Cheston. ATO 3 Honorary Degrees beach party. Dean Alexander's reception for St. Luke's Associated Alumni to Get National Award seniors and guests. Class reunions: 1915-1916 with Old Timers, 1932-1935, 195 1-1954. Dinner-Dance in 4 Arnold Toynbee Writes Up Sewanee Gailor Hall.

Sunday, June 6 5 The Plight of the Humanities A Special — Baccalaureate and Commencement Day Report Corporate Communion. LCA breakfast. USAF com- missioning ceremony. Baccalaureate service, sermon by

2 1 High Points Bishop Scott Field Bailey. Carillon recital. Commence- ment exercises.

23 Summer at Sewanee

ON THE COVER—This fine aerial photograph is by Howard Cculson of Cowan, whose credit line has appeared on some- thing like 6,000 Sewanee photographs in the nineteen years he has had his studio in the valley. Aerial work frets him less than it does most photographers. He was a flight engi- neer of a B26 bomber for seventy consecutive missions over France and the low countries during World War II. I E. i

Photograph from the White Home

President Lyndon Johnson with Harry McPherson, Jr., '49. McPherson, who maintains his State Depart- ment desk while working closely with the President, attends St. Mark's Episcopal Church, of which Mrs. Johnson is a member, with the Johnsons. McPherson's State Department work includes the di- rection of the Fulbright and other foreign exchange programs. ALUMNI TO BE HONORED

Bishop Bailey will Preach be awarded the D.D. degree. Last year, when the Rock Hill American Legion Post 34 in Rock Hill gave him Baccalaureate Sermon its second annual public service award, he was cited: ". . . he spreads the boundless mantle of a dedicated honorary degrees will be awarded to alum- Five and loving ministry to cover all people of all faiths in ni this Commencement. ." all walks of life. . . A navy chaplain who served Granville Cecil Woods, '21, will become a with combat marines during World War II, he holds doctor of civil law as a fitting recognition of his long the rank of captain in the naval reserve and commands career of extraordinary service to Sewr anee, current!} a company of chaplains in Charlotte. represented by his chairmanship of the Ten Million The Rev. Canon William S. Turner, president of the Dollar Campaign. Chairman of the board of the Vol- class of 1927, is a graduate both of the College and unteer State Life Insurance Company, Chattanooga, he the School of Theology. Rector of Trinity Church in has been an alumni trustee and has helped Sewanee New Orleans since 1945, he was credited with avert- at every juncture. ing a serious riot by his personal heroism when he Harry Cummings McPherson, '49, whose address Jr., stepped between bottle-throwing groups of white and is The White House, Washington, D. C, was widely Negro youths during a turbulent period in his city. He reported as being groomed to succeed Lee White. was Atlanta trustee from 1932 to 1935 and a regent in counsel to President Johnson. McPherson was coun- 1939-1945 and I952-I953- sel to the Senate Democratic Policy Committee when Mr. Johnson was committee chairman and Senate ma- The Associated Alumni of the University of the jority leader. He has held the title of assistant secre- South has been named to an honor citation in tary of state for educational and cultural affairs while the national Alumni Service Award competition, reporting for work each day at the White House. to be conferred at the American Alumni Council's gen- Following the precedent of last year, there will be eral conference in June. The contest entry on which no Commencement Orator. The Baccalaureate Ser- the award is based outlined the extraordinary 1964 mon will be preached by newly consecrated Bishop record of Sewanee alumni in the Ten Million Dol'lftr Scott Field Bailey. Campaign. The Rt. Rev. Scott Field Bailey, suffragan of Texas Named with Sewanee were the alumni associations and Sewanee's forty-ninth alumnus bishop, will receive of Columbia College and Stanford University, joint a doctor of divinity degree. Bishop Bailey is a B.A. winners of the competition; the other recipients of hon- from Rice University in his native Houston, attended or citations are the Alumni Federation of Louisiana the University of Texas law school for a year before State University and Sigma Chi Fraternity. entering the Virginia Theological Seminary, where he Stanford was cited for its conference of continuing tcok his B.D., and earned a master's in sacred theology alumni education; Columbia for its magazine, Colum- from the University of the South's Graduate School of bia College Today, LSU for its efforts in influencing Theology in 1953. legislation for the creation of a student loan program,

The Rev. William W. Lumpkin, '34, rector of the and Sigma Chi for its graduation goal award to en- Church of Our Saviour, Rock Hill, South Carolina, will courage scholarship.

May 1965 !

Arnold Toynbee's Study of Sewanee 1""^ he Beatles, we are confident, would not have made nearly the stir in Sewanee that their countryman Arnold Toynbee, did when he w.°s a duPont lecturer here in February. Guerry Hall was packed for his two lectures, with over a thousand at- tendances each night. In a community with a census population of 1,400, a combined student body of a thousand Apparently Sewanee's interest in Toynbee was re- ciprocated, for a clipping found its way here from the London Observer via reprinting in the Saigon, Viet Nam. Dailx Nezvs giving in four columns his history and impressions of the University of the South, in terms more glowing than the public relations office would ever venture. One paragraph reads: "One of the strong points of

American higher education is its immense variety, and, in this variety, the University of the South stands out, like the plateau on which it has been planted."

The article concludes: "The Old South is becoming a New South, and in this New South, too, Sewanee Coulsou constructive part to play." will have a distinctive and PORTRAIT OF A GENTLEWOMAN is what the Chatta- Mimeographed copies of Mr. Toynbee's two lectures nooga Times aptly titled this painting of Mrs. Alfred I. duPont as a young woman. The picture hangs in the foyer (he prefers to be called "Mr." rather than "Dr." or of the library that bears her name. "Professor," because, he says, in England nobody wants to listen to a professor but if he's just "Mr." they think he might have something sensible to say) are available from the alumni office on request. A fifteen-minute radio program, "Conversation with Ar- nold Toynbee," has also been prepared, in which Dr. John M. Gessell of the School of Theology and Dr. Anita Goodstein of the College history department F elicit some pointed and current remarks on Viet Nam and Red China from their learned guest.

Arnold Toynbee was caught by a Huntsville Times photog- rapher during a conversation at Claramont Restaurant with students, one of many such interchanges. One is a theolog, one a college senior.

Elkins. Huntsville Ti.nfs

-

all i

read receptively th i. pr THE PLIGHT **, HUMANITIES

SPECIAL REPORT

\

Amidst great material well-being,

our culture stands in danger

of losing its very soul. the greatest economic prosperity Withever known by Man; With scientific accomplishments unparalleled in human history; With a technology whose machines and methods

continually revolutionize our way of life: We are neglecting, and stand in serious danger of losing, our culture's very soul.

This is the considered judgment of men and women at colleges and universities throughout the United

States—men and women whose life's work it is to study our culture and its "soul." They are scholars and teachers of the humanities: history, languages, literature, the arts, philosophy, the history and com-

parison of law and religion. Their concern is Man and men—today, tomorrow, throughout history. Their scholarship and wisdom are devoted to assess- ing where we humans are, in relation to where we have come from—and where we may be going, in light of where we are and have been. Today, examining Western Man and men, many of them are profoundly troubled by what they see: an evident disregard, or at best a deep devaluation, of the things that refine and dignify and give meaning and heart to our humanity.

H-ow is it now with us?" asks a group of distinguished historians. Their answer: "Without

really intending it, we are on our way to becoming a dehumanized society." A group of specialists in Asian studies, reaching essentially the same conclusion, offers an explanation:

"It is a truism that we are a nation of activists, problem-solvers, inventors, would-be makers of bet-

ter mousetraps. . . . The humanities in the age of super-science and super-technology have an increas-

ingly difficult struggle for existence." "Soberly," reports a committee of the American Historical Association, "we must say that in Ameri- can society, for many generations past, the prevailing concern has been for the conquest of nature, the pro- duction of material goods, and the development of a viable system of democratic government. Hence we have stressed the sciences, the application of science through engineering, and the application of engineer- ing or quantitative methods to the economic and political problems of a prospering republic." .

The stress, the historians note, has become even competition. As science thrives, the humanities must more intense in recent years. Nuclear fission, the languish—and vice versa. Communist threat, the upheavals in Africa and Asia, 2) There are only so many physical facilities, so and the invasion of space have caused our concern much money, and so much research and teaching with "practical" things to be "enormously rein- equipment to go around. Science gets its at the ex- forced." pense of the humanities. The humanities' lot will be

Says a blue-ribbon "Commission on the Humani- improved only if the sciences' lot is cut back. ties," established as a result of the growing sense of To others, both in science and in the humanities, unease about the non-scientific aspects of human life: such assertions sound like nonsense. Our society, "The result has often been that our social, moral, they say, can well afford to give generous support to and aesthetic development lagged behind our material both science and the humanities. (Whether or not it advance. . . will, they admit, is another question.) "The state of the humanities today creates a crisis A committee advising the President of the United for national leadership." States on the needs of science said in 1960: "... We repudiate emphatically any notion that science research and scientific education are the only

kinds of learning that matter to America. . . . Obvi-

ously a high civilization must not limit its efforts to Tm he crisis, which extends into every home, science alone. Even in the interests of science itself, into every life, into every section of our society, is it is essential to give full value and support to the best observed in our colleges and universities. As other great branches of Man's artistic, literary, and both mirrors and creators of our civilization's atti- scholarly activity. The advancement of science must tudes, the colleges and universities not only reflect not be accomplished by the impoverishment of any- ." what is happening throughout society, but often thing else. . . indicate what is likely to come. The Commission on the Humanities has said:

Today, on many campuses, science and engineering "Science is far more than a tool for adding to our are in the ascendancy. As if in consequence, important security and comfort. It embraces in its broadest parts of the humanities appear to be on the wane. sense all efforts to achieve valid and coherent views

Scientists and engineers are likely to command the of reality; as such, it extends the boundaries of ex- best job offers, the best salaries. Scholars in the hu- perience and adds new dimensions to human char- manities are likely to receive lesser rewards. acter. If the interdependence of science and the hu- Scientists and engineers are likely to be given finan- manities were more generally understood, men would cial grants and contracts for their research—by govern- be more likely to become masters of their technology ment agencies, by foundations, by industry. Scholars and not its unthinking servants." in the humanities are likely to look in vain for such None of which is to deny the existence of differ- support. ences between science and the humanities, some of Scientists and engineers are likely to find many of which are due to a lack of communication but others the best-qualified students clamoring to join their of which come from deep-seated misgivings that the ranks. Those in the humanities, more often than not, scholars in one vineyard may have about the work must watch helplessly as the talent goes next door. and philosophies of scholars in the other. Differences

Scientists and engineers are likely to get new build- or no, however, there is little doubt that, if Americans ings, expensive equipment, well-stocked and up-to- should choose to give equal importance to both the-minute libraries. Scholars in the humanities, even science and the humanities, there are enough ma- allowing for their more modest requirements of phys- terial resources in the U.S. to endow both, amply. ical facilities, often wind up with second-best. Quite naturally, such conspicuous contrasts have created jealousies. And they have driven some persons in the humanities (and some in the sciences, as well) to these conclusions: Thus far, however, Americans have not so 1) The sciences and the humanities are in mortal chosen. Our culture is the poorer for it. ^^^H the humanities' view:

Mankind

is nothing without individual men.

"Composite man, cross-section man, organization man, status-seeking man are not here. It is still one of the merits of the humanities that they see man with all his virtues and weak- nesses, including his first, middle, and 33 last names. DON CAMERON ALLEN should an educated but practical WhyAmerican take the vitality of the humanities as his personal concern?

What possible reason is there for the business or professional man, say, to trouble himself with the present predicament of such esoteric fields as philosophy, exotic literatures, history, and art? In answer, some quote Hamlet:

What is a man If his chiefgood and market of his time Be but to sleep andfeed? a beast, no more.

Others, concerned with the effects of science and technology upon the race, may cite Lewis Mumford: ". . . It is now plain that only by restoring the human personality to the center of our scheme of thought can mechanization and automation be

brought back into the services of life. Until this hap-

pens in education, there is not a single advance in science, from the release of nuclear energy to the isolation of DNA in genetic inheritance, that may not, because of our literally absent-minded automa-

tion in applying it, bring on disastrous consequences to the human race." Says Adlai Stevenson: "To survive this revolution [of science and tech- nology], education, not wealth and weapons, is our best hope—that largeness of vision and generosity of spirit which spring from contact with the best minds and treasures of our civilization."

Tm he commission on the Humanities cites five reasons, among others, why America's need of the humanities is great: "1) All men require that a vision be held before them, an ideal toward which they may strive. Ameri- cans need such a vision today as never before in their

history. It -is both the dignity and the duty of hu- manists to offer their fellow-countrymen whatever understanding can be attained by fallible humanity of such enduring values as justice, freedom, virtue, beauty, and truth. Only thus do we join ourselves to the heritage of our nation and our human kind. "2) Democracy demands wisdom of the average man. Without the exercise of wisdom free institutions and personal liberty are inevitably imperiled. To scholars themselves (who are already convinced), is know the best that has been thought and said in anybody listening? Is anybody stirred enough to do former times can make us wiser than we otherwise something about "saving" the humanities before it might be, and in this respect the humanities are not is too late? merely our, but the world's, best hope. "Assuming it considers the matter at all," says

"3) . . . [Many men] find it hard to fathom the Dean George C. Branam, "the population as a whole motives of a country which will spend billions on its sees [the death of the liberal arts tradition] only as outward defense and at the same time do little to the overdue departure of a pet dinosaur. maintain the creative and imaginative abilities of its "It is not uncommon for educated men, after own people. The arts have an unparalleled capability expressing their overwhelming belief in liberal educa- for crossing the national barriers imposed by language tion, to advocate sacrificing the meager portion found and contrasting customs. The recently increased in most curricula to get in more subjects related to

American encouragement of the performing arts is the technical job training which is now the principal to be welcomed, and will be welcomed everywhere goal as a sign that Americans accept their cultural respon- "The respect they profess, however honestly they sibilities, especially if it serves to prompt a corre- proclaim it, is in the final analysis superficial and sponding increase in support for the visual and the false: they must squeeze in one more math course liberal arts. It is by way of the humanities that we for the engineer, one more course in comparative best come to understand cultures other than our own, anatomy for the pre-medical student, one more ac- and they best to understand ours. counting course for the business major. The business "4) World leadership of the kind which has come man does not have to know anything about a Bee- upon the United States cannot rest solely upon su- thoven symphony; the doctor doesn't have to com- perior force, vast wealth, or preponderant technology. prehend a line of Shakespeare; the engineer will

Only the elevation of its goals and the excellence of perform his job well enough without ever having its conduct entitle one nation to ask others to follow heard of Machiavelli. The unspoken assumption is its lead. These are things of the spirit. If we appear that the proper function of education is job training to discourage creativity, to demean the fanciful and and that alone." the beautiful, to have no concern for man's ultimate Job training, of course, is one thing the humanities destiny— if, in short, we ignore the humanities—then rarely provide, except for the handful of students both our goals and our efforts to attain them will be who will go on to become teachers of the humanities measured with suspicion. themselves. Rather, as a committee of schoolmen

"5) A novel and serious challenge to Americans has put it, "they are fields of study which hold values s posed by the remarkable increase in their leisure for all human beings regardless of their abilities, :ime. The forty-hour week and the likelihood of a interests, or means of livelihood. These studies hold shorter one, the greater life-expectancy and the earlier such values for all men precisely because they are ages of retirement, have combined to make the bless- focused upon universal qualities rather than upon

ng of leisure a source of personal and community specific and measurable ends. . . . [They] help man to concern. 'What shall I do with my spare time' all-too- find a purpose, endow him with the ability to criticize }uickly becomes the question 'Who am I? What shall intelligently and therefore to improve his own society,

[ make of my life?' When men and women find and establish for the individual his sense of identity nothing within themselves but emptiness they turn with other men both in his own country and in the

:o trivial and narcotic amusements, and the society world at large." Df which they are a part becomes socially delinquent md potentially unstable. The humanities are the im- memorial answer to man's questioning and to his leed for self-expression; they are uniquely equipped " for Americans o fill the 'abyss of leisure.' I.S this reason enough educated The arguments are persuasive. But, aside from the to give the humanities their urgently needed support? # The humanities: "Our lives are

"Upon the humanities depend the

national ethic and morality. . . the substance they are made of."

. . . the national use of our environment and our material accomplishments."

. . . the national aesthetic and

beauty or lack of it . . . U # A million-dollar

project without

a million dollars'

crisis in the humanities involves people, Thefacilities, and money. The greatest of these, many believe, is money. With more funds, the other parts of the humanities' problem would not be impossible to solve. Without more, they may well be. More money would help attract more bright stu- dents into the humanities. Today the lack of funds is turning many of today's most talented young people into more lucrative fields. "Students are no different from other people in that they can quickly observe where the money is available, and draw the logical conclusion as to which activities their society con- siders important," the Commission on the Humanities More money would stimulate travel and henc observes. A dean puts it bluntly: "The bright student, strengthen research. "Even those of us who haw as well as a white rat, knows a reward when he sees access to good libraries on our own campuses mus one." travel far afield for many materials essential t< More money would strengthen college and uni- scholarship," say members of the Modern Language versity faculties. In many areas, more faculty mem- Association. bers are needed urgently. The American Philosophical More money would finance the publication of long! Association, for example, reports: "... Teaching overdue collections of literary works. Collections o> demands will increase enormously in the years im- Whitman, Hawthorne, and Melville, for exampli mediately to come. The result is: (1) the quality of are "officially under way [but] face both scholar! humanistic teaching is now in serious danger of de- and financial problems." The same is true of transl teriorating; (2) qualified teachers are attracted to tions of foreign literature. Taking Russian authors a; other endeavors; and (3) the progress of research and an example, the Modern Language Association notes creative work within the humanistic disciplines falls "The major novels and other works of Turgenev: far behind that of the sciences." Gogol, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov are readilv More money would permit the establishment of available, but many of the translations are inferio: new scholarships, fellowships, and loans to students. and most editions lack notes and adequate introduc —

THUS PROFESSOR GAY WILSON ALLEN, One of the editors, describes the work on a complete edition of the writings of Walt Whitman. Because of a lack of sufficient funds, many important literary projects are stalled in the United States. One in- dication of the state of affairs: the works of only two American literary figures— Emily Dickinson and Sidney Lanier—are considered to have been collected in editions that need no major revisions.

torical Association says, "our historians too often have shown themselves timid and pedestrian in ap- proach, dull and unimaginative in their writing. Yet these are vices that stem from public indifference." More money would enable some scholars, now en- gaged in "applied" research in order to get funds, to undertake "pure" research, where they might be far more valuable to themselves and to society. An ex- ample, from the field of linguistics: Money has been available in substantial quantities for research related to foreign-language teaching, to the development of language-translation machines, or to military com- munications. "The results are predictable," says a

>ns. . . . There are more than half a dozen transla- report of the Linguistics Society of America. "On

>ns of Crime and Punishment. . . . but there is no the one hand, the linguist is tempted into subterfuge iglish edition of Dostoevsky's critical articles, and dressing up a problem of basic research to make it me of his complete published letters. [Other] writers look like applied research. Or, on the other hand, he

outstanding importance. . . . have been treated is tempted into applied research for which he is not lly in a desultory fashion." really ready, because the basic research which must

More money would enable historians to enter areas lie behind it has not yet been done." >w covered only adequately. "Additional, more More money would greatly stimulate work in bstantial, or more immediate help," historians say, archaeology. "The lessons of Man's past are humbling needed for studies of Asia, Russia, Central Europe, ones," Professor William Foxwell Albright, one of e Middle East, and North Africa; for work in intel- the world's leading Biblical archaeologists, has said.

tual history; for studying the history of our West- "They are also useful ones. For if anything is clear, n tradition "with its roots in ancient, classical, it is that we cannot dismiss any part of our human hristian, and medieval history"; and for "renewed story as irrelevant to the future of mankind." But, nphasis on the history of Western Europe and reports the Archaeological Institute of America, "the merica." "As modest in their talents as in their knowledge of valuable ancient remains is often per- lblic position," a committee of the American His- manently lost to us for the lack of as little as $5,000." money: that is the great need. But where there were overt difficulties or where an oppor-

Morewhere will it come from? tunity for had opened exceptional achievement," the

Science and technology, in America, report states. "The humanities fit both categories, owe much of their present financial for the potential achievements are enormous while strength—and, hence, the means behind their spec- the troubles stemming from inadequate support are tacular accomplishments—to the Federal govern- comparably great. The problems are of nationwide ment. Since World War II, billions of dollars have scope and interest. Upon the humanities depend the flowed from Washington to the nation's laboratories, national ethic and morality, the national aesthetic including those on many a college and university and beauty or the lack of it, the national use of our

campus. environment our material accomplishments. . . and . The humanities have received relatively few such "The stakes are so high and the issues of such dollars, most of them earmarked for foreign language magnitude that the humanities must have substantial projects and area studies. One Congressional report help both from the Federal government and from showed that virtually all Federal grants for academic other sources." facilities and equipment were spent for science; 87 The commission's recommendation: "the establish- percent of Federal funds for graduate fellowships ment of a National Humanities Foundation to went to science and engineering; by far the bulk of parallel the National Science Foundation, which is so Federal support of faculty members (more than $60 successfully carrying out the public responsibilities million) went to science; and most of the Federal entrusted to it." money for curriculum strengthening was spent on science. Of $1,126 billion in Federal funds for basic research in 1962, it was calculated that 66 percent went to the physical sciences, 29 percent to the life sciences, 3 percent to the psychological sciences, 2 s,uch A proposal raises important questions percent to the social sciences, and 1 percent to "other" for Congress and for all Americans. fields. (The figures total 101 percent because fractions Is Federal aid, for example, truly necessary? Can- are rounded out.) not private sources, along with the states and mu- The funds—particularly those for research—were nicipalities which already support much of American appropriated on the basis of a clearcut quid pro quo: higher education, carry the burden? The advocates in return for its money, the government would get of Federal support point, in reply, to the present research results plainly contributing to the national state of the humanities. Apparently such sources of welfare, particularly health and defense. support, alone, have not been adequate. With a few exceptions, activities covered by the Will Federal aid lead inevitably to Federal control? humanities have not been considered by Congress to "There are those who think that the danger of contribute sufficiently to "the national welfare" to qualify for such Federal support.

"Until they want to,

it won't be done' I.t is on precisely this point—that the humanities are indeed essential to the national welfare —that persons and organizations active in the humanities barnaby c. keeney (opposite page), universit; are now basing a strong appeal for Federal support. president and scholar in the humanities, chair The appeal is centered in a report of the Commis- the Commission on the Humanities, which sion on the Humanities, produced by a group of dis- recommended the establishment of a Federally Humanities Foundation. Will tinguished scholars and non-scholars under the chair- financed National this lead to Federal interference? Says Presiden manship of Barnaby C. Keeney, the president of Keeney: "When the people of the U.S. want to! Brown University, and endorsed by organization control teaching and scholarship in the humani-

after organization of humanities specialists. ties, they will do it regardless of whether there i

"Traditionally our government has entered areas Federal aid. Until they want to, it won't be done."i

.

Federal control is greater in the humanities and the Whether or not Washington does assume a role in arts than in the sciences, presumably because politics financing the humanities, through a National Hu- will bow to objective facts but not to values and manities Foundation or otherwise, this much is cer-

taste," acknowledges Frederick Burkhardt, president tain: the humanities, if they are to regain strength of the American Council of Learned Societies, one in this country, must have greater understanding, of the sponsors of the Commission on the Humanities backing, and support. More funds from private and an endorser of its recommendation. "The plain sources are a necessity, even if (perhaps especially if) fact is that there is always a danger of external con- Federal money becomes available. A diversity of trol or interference in education and research, on sources of funds can be the humanities' best insurance both the Federal and local levels, in both the public against control by any one. and private sectors. The establishment of institutions Happily, the humanities are one sector of higher and procedures that reduce or eliminate such inter- education in which private gifts—even modest gifts ference is one of the great achievements of the demo- can still achieve notable results. Few Americans are cratic system of government and way of life." wealthy enough to endow a cyclotron, but there are

Say the committeemen of the American Historical many who could, if they would, endow a research Association: "A government which gives no support fellowship or help build a library collection in the at all to humane values may be careless of its own humanities. destiny, but that government which gives too much support (and policy direction) may be more danger- ous still. Inescapably, we must somehow increase the prestige of the humanities and the flow of funds. At the same time, however grave this need, we must I-N both public and private institutions, in both safeguard the independence, the originality, and the small colleges and large universities, the need is ur- freedom of expression of those individuals and those gent. Beyond the campuses, it affects every phase of groups and those institutions which are concerned the national life. with liberal learning." This is the fateful question: Fearing a serious erosion of such independence, Do we Americans, amidst our material well-being, some persons in higher education flatly oppose Fed- have the wisdom, the vision, and the determination eral support, and refuse it when it is offered. to save our culture's very soul?

The report on this and the preceding 15 associated with the American Alumni pages is the product of a cooperative en- Council. (The editors, of course, speak for deavor in which scores of schools, colleges, themselves and not for their institutions.) and universities are taking part. It was Copyright © 1965 by Editorial Projects for prepared under the direction of the group Education, Inc. All rights reserved; no listed below, who form editorial projects part may be reproduced without express for education, a non-profit organization permission of the editors. Printed in U.S.A.

DENTON BEAL CHARLES M. HELMKEN ROBERT L. PAYTON CHARLES E. WJTJMAYER Carnegie Institute of Technology American Alumni Council Washington University Dartmouth College

DAVID A. BURR JOHN I. MATTILL ROBERT M. RHODES DOROTHY F. WILLIAMS The University of Oklahoma Massachusetts Institute of Technology The University of Pennsylvania Simmons College DAN ENDSLEY KEN METZLER VERNE A. STADTMAN RONALD A. WOLK Stanford University The University of Oregon The University of California The Johns Hopkins University BEATRICE M. FIELD RUSSELL OLIN FREDERIC A. STOTT ELIZABETH BOND WOOD Tulane University The University of Colorado Phillips Academy, Andover Sweet Briar College

MARALYN O. GILLESPIE JOHN W. PATON FRANK J. TATE CHESLEY WORTHINGTON Swarthmore College Wesleyan University The Ohio State University Brown University *

CORBIN GWALTNEY JOHN A. CROWL Executive Editor Associate Editor High Points

Marriages twenty-six years, and president emeri- tus of the Boy Scout Council. San Antonio called him "Mr. Boy Scout," Roy C. Brown, '55, BTP, to Anne in tribute to its first Scout commis- Matlock on February 20 in New York, sioner. He is survived by Mrs. Mi- where he is a newswriter for the "To- chael, a daughter, and two sons. day" show. William B. Hamilton, '15, SAE, Dr. Robert L. Keele, Jr., '56, BTP, graduate of SMA and the College, died to Karen Ruth Schwantes on March 22 February 3 in Shrevcport, where ho in St. Luke's Chapel at Sewanee. Dr. practiced law until his retirement. For Keele is assistant professor of politi- many years he was a most devoted cal science. Miss Schwantes, a sister of president of the Class of 1915. As a Mrs. Brinley Rhys, has been teaching former national alumni president said, at the Sewanee Public School. "In our work for Sewanee he was al- Rev. William Parkerson, Jr., '60, to ways ready to do his part." His only Mrs. Elizabeth Bettis Kincaid on Oc- son, David, graduated from SMA in tober 8 in Baton Rouge. 1954. He is survived also by Mrs. Hamilton, and a brother, D. Philiu Edward Clark Edgin, '61, to Beverly Hamilton, 16, SAE. Ann Winn in March in Cocoa Beach, Florida, where both are teachers at Thomas L. Hunt, '25, SAE, whose death was noted in the November Se- Coulso.i Satellite Beach High School, he as Eng- lish teacher with MA. from Johns wanee News, was survived by two sis- MRS. ROBERT L. KEELE, JR. Hopkins, and football and basketball ters, Mrs. William S. Stoney and Miss coach. Mary Crockett Hunt, and two grand- sons, in addition to his daughter, Mru. Thomas S. Tisdale, Jr., '61, ATO, William T. Cocke III. For many years to Courtenay Cordes McDowell of he operated the Hunt Dairy near Se- Charleston, South Carolina, on Febru- Births wanee. ary 6 in Charleston. The Rev. Thomas '39, Tisdale, '33, officiated. George M. Colston, died March 30 in Chattanooga. He was owner of Helen Ann Fasick, NSF '62, to Clay- Madoc Godeman, son of Dr. Brinley the Monteagle Court and Restaurant, ton Van Sickle of Ann Arbor, Michi- Rhys, '46, on October 4 in Sewanee, which he had operated with his late gan, on December 27, 1964, in Win- where Dr. Rhys is associate professor father, J. D. Colston, '11. He served chester, Tennessee. She is the daughter of English in the College. in the Air Force in World War II. He of the late Col. C. A. Fasick, '34, of is survived by his wife, two sons, and William Justin, son of the Rev. Fred Sewanee Military Academy. Dickman, '49, KA, on November 30 in a daughter. Tampa, Florida. Donald Swanson, '47, SN, died No- Charles McDonald, IV, son of Dr. vember 21, 1964, at Sheridan, Wyo- Stephen E. Puckette, '49, ATO, en Deaths ming, where he had been dean of men February 11 in Milford, Connecticut, and instructor in speech at Sheridan where Dr. Puckette is spending a leave Arthur M. Michael, '07, died Febru- College. He had served as state presi- of absence from the Sewanee faculty ary 26 in San Antonio. He was active dent of the Wyoming Speech Associa- in study at Yale. Charles, IV, is name- as chairman of the board of Travis tion and as a member of the Sheridan sake of Charles, '07, and Charles, '79. Savings and Loan Association until his City Council. He is remembered in death. He was a former president of All Saints' Chapel with a literature Charles Washington, son of Charles the San Antonio Chamber of Com- rack, through a fund initiated by Al- W. Hall, '51, ATO, on February 23 in '58. Houston, Texas. merce, member of the school board for lan J. Clark, Stephen Laurence Alvarez, son of Laurence R. Alvarez, '59, who is an instructor in mathematics in the Col- lege, at Sewanee, January 22. A daughter, Diane Elizabeth, to Lr. H. Frederick Brown, Jr., '60, KS, March 31 in Bethesda, Maryland. The family will move back to Texas this summer and Papa will enter the University of Houston law school in September. Jonathan Craig, son of Edward B. Harris, '60, ATO, grandson of the Rev. Edward B. Harris, '18, ATO, great- grandson of the Rev. John A. Harris, '83, on March 12 at Smyrna, Georgia. Parker William, son of Richard G. Holloway, '61, SAE, on February 19 in Norwood, Massachusetts. The Hol- loways moved to Jacksonville, Florida, on April 15. William M., son of Lr. William S. Yates, '62, KA, on February 10, grand- son of H. Powell Yates, '25, ATO, and step-great-grandson of Vice-Chancel- Couls,1!i lor Albion W. Knight, '81. Father Bill will wrestle again for the Air Force in Mrs. A. Sessums Cleveland chatting with associate professor Stephen E. the interservice matches and then ex- Puckette, '49, Dr. Oscar N. Torian, '96, the late Dr. Robert W. B. Elliott, '94, pects assignment to Labrador. and Bishop Frank A. Juhan, '11.

May 1965 21 Rev. John D. Chequer, GST '51, died January 11 in White Plains, New York, where he was associate priest of St.An- drew's Church. He entered the minis- try at the age of fifcy-three after a long career in journalism. After his first sermon he asked a former fellow newspaperman in the congregation, "How did I do, George?" "You did fine, Father," said the newsman. 'You al- ways did." He is survived by his wife. Lee B. Sayre, '54, KS, died in Sa- vannah, Georgia, on February 13. He had taught English and history at the Savannah Country Day School there. Thoburn Taggart, '55, has begun a me- morial book fund for the duPont Li- brary, with Professor Abbott C. Mar- tin to make selections in memory of this English major. Mrs. Robert P. Shapard of Griffin. Georgia, donor of Shapard Tower at All Saints' Chapel in memory of her husband, died in March. Mrs. Shapard was the mother of Robert P. Shapard, Jr., '29, and the grandmother of Rob- G. Cecil Woods, '21, Chairman of the Ten Million Dollar Campaign, ert III, an SMA graduate in 1949. It is shown at the April 3 Alumni Council was her custom to make an annual meeting with Fain Cra- vens, '34. Woods will be awarded an honorary doctorate visit to the Mountain and she contin- this Com- mencement. ued a keen interest in the welfare of the University. Ellett N. Shepherd, an Episcopalian who chanced to come to Sewanee for vived by three daughters, Mrs. Dudley the first Cumberland Forest Festival, Sharp, Mrs. C. P. G. Fuller, and Mrs. Honors died in Denver on February 28, leav- William A. Kirkland, whose husband ing the University of the South his recently served on Sewanee's board of principal legatee. A scholarship will be regents. Arthur Ben Chitty, '35, SN, is presi- set up in memory of his parents. He Ellis N. Tucker, lecturer in mathe- dent of the Foundation for Episcopal was a deputy district attorney in Den- matics at Sewanee from 1960 to 1964, Colleges. He will be on leave from the ver. Especially interested in music and died in February in Virginia, where he University 1965-66 to work in New recording, he contributed sound equip- taught at the Blue Ridge School. His York. ment to the School of Theology and more than fifty years as a teacher in- Dr. Calhoun Winton, '48, PDT, as- the Development Office and came near- cluded the acting presidency of St. sociate professor of English at the Uni- ly every summer to visit the Moun- John's University, Shanghai, classes in versity of Delaware, has received a tain, which became, in the words of a a Japanese prison camp in World War Guggenheim fellowship to work on a friend, "his pride and joy." II, and several years at Woodberry second volume of a biography of Rich- Mrs. A. S. Cleveland, donor of Ses- Forest, which honored him shortly be- ard Steele. sums Cleveland Hall in memory of her fore his death. Son and brother of husband, a member of the Class of '93, Episcopal bishops, he had an imposing Cajtain Kenneth L. Barrett, Jr., '58, and of the Pollard fund for the physics but kindly presence and a streak of PGD, has been awarded the fourth oak department, died March 22 in Houston affectionate whimsy which was warmly leaf cluster to the U. S. Air Force Air in her ninetieth year. She was remem- received at Sewanee, where he made Medal for meritorious achievement bered at Sewanee as a devoted sum- his home with his niece, Mrs. P. H. during military flights in Viet Nam. mer visitor for many years. She is sur- Waring Webb. Dr. John C. Stewart, '51, KS, is one of eleven physicists from six countries to win a visiting fellowship in the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astro- Lon Varnell, Sewanee's irrepressible basketball coach, was made an honorary physics at the University of Colorado alumnus at the April 3 Council meeting. James, '65, received the award for for the academic year 1965-66. Dr. his father, who could not be present. John Guerry, president of the Associ- Stewart will be on leave from the John ated Alumni, gave Jimmy the citation. Mrs. Varnell is at the left. Jay Hopkins Laboratory of the General Coulron Dynamics Corporation in San Diego. He is the son of the late Rev. Marshall

? - '); ,'. Bowyer Stewart, director of the Grad- .;:,;::::::,. uate School of Theology and acting professor in the School of Theology, and Mrs. Stewart, manager of St. Luke's book store at Sewanee.

Captain William R. Stamler, Jr., 56. KA, has been awarded the USAF Com- mendation Medal for meritorious r achievement during Exercise Polar id Siege in Alaska. ""*j : A l Allen L. Lear, '65, attended the fifth annual Foreign Affairs Conference at 1 the United States Naval Academy Ad- ril 21-24. Sewanee was one of 100 co'- leges and universities to be invited, and * •a \^ Allen, a political science major who has studied abroad, was selected as it>; representative. He is the son of the late Coates Lear, '36, and the grand- son of the late Dr. Allen Lear, '08. k - _ m '

L41 9*^& %yJJ Jfcfca «

«J Summer at Sewanee 1965

June 8-10 Synod of the Fourth Province. Pre- with nationally prominent artist-teachers. siding Bishop John E. Hines, Bishop Stephen Faculty and student concerts every week-end, F. Bayne, Jr., Bishop Matthew G. Henry, four-day festival to close. Miss Martha and Prime F. Osborn III will address a con- McCrory, director. clave stressing mutual responsibility and 20 14 Institute interdependence. June —August Sewanee Summer of Science and Mathematics for secondary June 11-16 Sewanee Summer Training School. school teachers, sponsored by the National Bishop Bayne will stay over. Headliners Science Foundation. also include Bishop John M. Allin, Bishop Reuben Mueller, Rev. C. FitzSimons Alli- June 20—August 14 College of Arts and Sciences son, Rev. John Gessell, Rev. William Yon, co-educational summer school. Peter Day. June 20—August 14 New non-credit art center. 3 June 1 —July 29 SMA Summer School camp for H. Stanford Barrett, University lecturer and secondary school boys and girls. artist-in-residence, director. June 20—July 25 Sewanee Summer Music Cen- Julv 14—August 18 Graduate School of The- .ter, ninth season. Intensive training session ology.

TVA

Benedict Hall, with each room opening on a central courtyard, is a popular summer dormitory.

May 1965 23 THE SCIENCE BUILDING

Last Target of the Ten Million Dollar Campaign

The first aerial photograph since the completion

of the Jessie Ball duPont Library shows the lo-

cation of the proposed science building, for which

gifts are now being sought. Its completion will be

as dramatic and needed an improvement as the

library's, which upped its available floor space

from 16,000 to 116,000 square feet. At upper

right is Malon Courts dormitory under construc-

tion, on a new lake.

THE PLIGHT OF THE HUMANITIES

A Special Report on Page 5 August, 1965 H^fflS THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH SEWANEE. TENNESSEE

Bishop Frank A. Jiihan, '11 2 1

THE Sewan NEWS

The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the ASSOCIATED ALUMNI of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennes- see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee.

R. Morey Hart, '34 President of the Associated Alumni

Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35

Managing Editor Edith Whitesell

Associate Editor Albert S. Gooch, Jr.

Consulting Editor Elizabeth N. Chitty

James G. Cate, Jr., '47, Vice-President for Bequests; Dr. L. Spires Whitaker, '31, Vice-President for Capital Funds; Dudley C. Fort. '34. lice-President for Regions; John Harmon Nichols, '51, Vice- President for Church Support; William E. Ward, III, A'45, Vice- President for SMA; Rev. Tracy H. Lamar, '42, Vice-President for

St. Luke's: Robert M. Ayres, Jr., '49, Vice-President for Classes; John W. Woods, '54. Vice-President for Admissions; James W.

Gentry, Jr., '50, Recording Secretary; Dr. 0. Morse Kochtitzky, Gentlemen . . . '42. Treasurer; Ben Humphreys McGee, '49, Athletic Board of Control. The Vice- Chancellor

August 24

CONTENTS In these last two weeks of the greatest campaign for capital funds which Sewanee has ever undertaken, 3 Campaign's Successful Conclusion many of us are so completely involved in turning every 4 Faculty in Print, on the Air stone in the search for the last dollars to reach the full goal of #7,500,000 and gain the whole matching fund of 6 The Bishop Retires #2,500,000, that we cannot relax long enough to see

8 Toynbee-Lancaster on Viet Nam the whole three years in proper perspective, and pay the proper credit to those who have been most respon- 1 Seven Important Posts sible for the degree of success attained. It will never 14 On the Mountain be possible to thank adequately the almost innumer- able host of benefactors. 1 6 Summer at Sewanee It now begins to look as if we shall reach the full

1 8 Voices from the Peace Corps goal, and I cannot contemplate that possibility without a feeling of nearly incredulous wonder and profound 22 Club Activities gratitude. The three-year project was ambitious to 23 Class Distinctions the point of seeming unrealistic to some people. The Ford Foundation not only offered us the maximum matching reward on the most difficult matching terms

(i.e., #2,500,000, on condition we raise three times August 1965 Volume 3 Number 3 that much, instead of some smaller multiple such ?s

was required for most of the other colleges); but in (continued on page ON THE COVER: Photo by Franke Keating. See page 6. 31) $8,000,435

Reported on

September 1

J. ALBERT WOODS, 18 G. CECIL WOODS, '21 1897—1964 Campaign Co~C hairmen

Campaign Tops Goal At 11.9th Hour

August 31 Cecil Woods, Co-Chairman of the colleges expressed regret that Sewanee would not meet OxTen Million Dollar Campaign, announced that its over-ambitious goal. the unprecedented effort had been brought to The most crucial meeting was probably that of last a successful conclusion, and that the full amount of Commencement, when it became clear that a last heroic $2,500,000 offered by the Ford Foundation had been drive was needed from the bishops, from the national earned. Full details are being announced as soon as committee, from the alumni. possible to campaign workers and to newspapers. Speaking of the final surge, Dean Robert S. Lan- So ended three years of unremitting labor and care caster said, "Sewanee supporters were simply unwilling on the part of some, and of deep concern and sacrificial to see this University, which had generated so much generosity on the part of many. energy and imagination in the last ten years, fail In The campaign was announced by Dr. McCrady on this effort. The dedication of the last phase of the

June 17, 1962, and on June 28 the Ford Foundation's campaign, dating from the June Commencement, as a challenge grant, part of a distribution "to advance the living memorial to Bishop Frank A. Juhan, who had development of selected private institutions of higher served the University in so many capacities and 50 education as national and regional centers of excel- valiantly for so many years, stimulated the efforts of lence," was made public. Among the twenty-one col- many in several dioceses. Letters of solicitation were leges offered incentive grants at that time. Sewanee prepared requesting gifts from those he had served and was the smallest in enrollment and yet it received the whose lives he had touched. A remarkable response maximum grant, with the most rigorous matching was elicited. ratio, three for one. "Oftentimes we received checks at the rate of 150 a The campaign got off to a flying start, with great da\," Dean Lancaster recalled. "It was the great vol- enthusiasm generated by the first meeting of selected ume of interest that made the campaign as successful campaign leaders at Sewanee. At the end of the first as it was, since no million-dollar gift was ever received. year we were well along toward our goal. Then there I am told that it is considered impossible to put over was something of a lag in the first part of the second a drive of this magnitude without some gifts in that year, with a pick-up at Commencement. For a period bracket. The fact that we have, roughly, 6,000 alumni in the third year the cause looked hopeless, and sister (continued on page 24)

August 1965 3 Faculty in Print | Physics And on the Air 1 Professor Allison in Series Dies BEFORE HIS FORTIETH BIRTHDAY the ReV. C. FitZ- Simons Allison, '49, associate professor of

Church His.ory in the University's School of Theology, will have preached to more people than any other Sewanee alumnus in history.

Fifteen million is the estimated number of persons William T. Allen, associate professor of who will have heard his twelve sermons on the "Par- Dr.physics and chairman of the department of ish of the Air" between July 18 and October 3. He physics, died June 26 in Washington, D. C, has written two books and has a third in process, and of pneumonia following heart surgery, at the age of his radio listeners may expect to hear under all his thirty-eight. provocative discussions the theme he sounds in Fear, Dr. Allen joined the faculty in 1961 as assistant Love, and Worship: "The symbol of Christianity is professor of physics. He was born in Cleveland, not an overstuffed chair, nor a paid-up pension plan Ohio, and was educated in the Lakewood, Ohio, pub- for retirement from life, nor a safe bank vault, but lic schools, at Hamilton and Oberlin Colleges, with a a cross." B.A. in physics from Oberlin in 1948. His M.S. and Subjects to come include September 12, "Why Suf- Ph.D. in physics were from Syracuse University. fering? Christ's Answer"; September 19, "The Hust- From 1948 to 195 1 he was an instructor of physics ler: A Modern Parable"; September 26, "Today's and mathematics at Robert College in Istanbul, Tur- Depravity Drift"; and October 3, "Did Sex Cause key, end from 1952 to 1957 he was on the physics Adam's Fall?" teaching and research staff at Syracuse. In 1957 he- A list cf the radio stations over which Dr. Allison was appointed assistant professor of physics at Frank- may be heard can be obtained from The Parish of lin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the Air, P. 0. Box 11711, Atlanta, Georgia. where he remained until he came to Sewanee in 1961.

From 1959 to 196 1 he made a study of zinc sulfide phosphors on a National Science Foundation grant. Among Dr. Allen's professional publications were Lundin Publishes New Book articles in the Journal the Electrochemical Society of The University may have been slow by the less and a paper before the 1959 World Symposium on timeless standards of the outside world to acquire Luminescence. listed in American of He was Men a professor of psychology, but when it did it got itself Science, Who's Who in American Education, and a honey. Dr. Robert M. Lundin, who came here Who's Who in Electronic Industry. from Hamilton College, has in just one year aroused While at Sewanee Dr. Allen was instrumental in the enthusiasm of the students and enhanced the founding the Sewanee chapter of Sigma Xi scientific prestige of the college. He is the author of four honor fraternity, of which he was president, and he widely used textbooks, one published last June, and also served for a year as secretary of the local chap- twenty-odd articles which have appeared in profes- ter of the American Association of University Profes- sional journals. His early ambition was to be a sors. He administered the university's combined en- concert pianist, and when his father persuaded him gineering program, and was faculty adviser to Chi that he ought to try for a less precarious living, he

Psi fraternity. tied in his musical interest with all his studies. This Dr. Allen's wife, the former Marleen Bengel, con- summer he used the presence of the Sewanee Summer tinues with their two children to make her home at Music Center to demonstrate various of the cross-

Sewanee in the house built by Dr. and Airs. Petry. currents between music and psychology which are his

She is an assistant in the admissions office, and dur- staple zeal, sending classes to watch Roland Johnson ing the past year was president of the Woman's Club. rehearse his orchestra, for instance, as an example of A William T. Allen memorial fund for a scholarship a musician practising psychology to get the utmost out in physics has had 101 contributors, the total on Au- of his players. gust 31 standing at $2,147.10. Principles of Psychopathology, in the Charles E.

The Sewanee News New Men

r aculty appointments include Dr. fames N. Lowe as assistant professor of chemistry. He has been teach- ing at Smith College in \'< rthampton, Mass. Born

in Grand Forks, North Dakota, he earned his P>.S. in chemist!)' in [959 at Duke : ml his Ph.D. at Stanford

I niversity in [964. He was a Woodrow Wilson Hon- orary fellow (1959-60), a National Science Founda- DR. ROBERT M. LUNDIN tion Cooperative Fellow ( 1961-62), and ;. Nicholas Fellow (1961-62).

Dr. Lowe was chosen from among a hundred appli- Merrill International Psychology Series, according :o cants for the post. I lis former major professor at its publishers, "offers a new and modern approach 10 Stanford wrote of him, "Jim Lowe would be an out- the field of abnormal behavior. Concentrating on a standing addition to the chemistry department of a purely psychological approach to the problems of be- liberal arts college with a tradition of high standards. havioral disorders, the book organizes the field in terms Of the students I have known in eighteen years at of an integrated, systematic, psychological analysis. Stanford he is uniquely suited by training, ability and Modern learning theory is introduced at every oppor- motivation for a distinguished career as a teacher and tunity with pertinent examples from both human and researcher in a liberal arts atmosphere." He is twen- animal behavior." ty-eight years old, is married, and has two children. The keynote sounded by the book is: "Abnormal Charles S. L. Hoover, '63, comes back to Sewa- behavior like normal behavior is learned. The differ- nee as instructor in history. He has his bachelor's de- ences lie in the kinds of conditions surrounding and gree from the University of the South his antedating the learning process." and master's in history from Yale University. A Danforth Fellow, he was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and attended the

Shaker Heights Senior High School. He is a contri- Yeatman Studies Artifacts butor to the Official History of Parliament 1660-1690,

to be published in 1968, and is a member of the Anthropology is one of the subject areas that American Historical the University has long wanted to add to its Association.

^ curriculum as soon as it becomes feasible. The Rev. Herbert S. Wentz, newly appointed in- The subject has not been neglected, even without a structor in religion, was born in Salisbury, North formal department. Members of the biology depart- Carolina. He attended the University of North Caro- ment have had it as a strong side interest, and stu- lina and Oxford Lmiversity in England, with both the dents working with them have made a number of B.A. and M.A. from Oxford. He has an S.T.B. from professional-level studies in the field. General Theological Seminary in New York. He was Dr. Harry Yeatman, professor of biology, who has vicar of St. Christopher's in Garner, North Carolina, published a great many wide-ranging articles, has pre- from July, i960, to February, 1962, and subsequently sented his study of a collection of Indian artifacts assistant to the rector of St. Luke's in Atlanta. made by himself and ether members of his family Warren Robertson of Winchester, Tennessee, will over a period of ninety years in the Tennessee Arch- take over the duties of director of Purple Masque dra- aeologist, Vol. XX, Xo. 2. Dr. Yeatman has identi- matic society and Guerry Hall which Dr. Brinley Rhys fied, classified, and summarized a total of 1254 stone has borne so kng, brilliantly, and patiently. Robert- artifacts, all collected on his family's Hamilton Pkce son, a native of Knoxville, has a B.S. from the Uni- near Ashwood, Tennessee. versity of Tennessee and a master's of fine arts (in

This land is of interest for Sewaneeana as well as drama) from Tulane. He is a playwright, taught Eng- archaeolcgy, since it is one of the four Polk tracts lish in Columbia High School at Lake City, Florida, which originally came to Col. William Polk, father of before going to Tulane for graduate work, and in 1962 Sewanee founder Leonidas, in return for his services was a technical writer for Equitable Life Assurance in the American Revolution. He gave one-fourth of Company. He will teach English and coach debating the original estate to each of his four sons. Leonidas as well as direct Purple Masque. His wife is a Win- got "Ashwood," and Dr. Yeatman's great-grandfather chester girl (the daughter of the Sterling Knotts) and got "Hamilton Pkce." they have a two-year-old daughter and an infant son.

August 1965 The Bishop Retires in Triumph

The close of the Ten Million Dollar Cam- boys" who have cleared out swamps, cut underbrush paign ushers in many changes, in tempo, di- from large areas, created picnic grounds and parks rection, and personnel. The University enters where impenetrable scrub was before. a period of consolidation and development of the Ford When someone asked Bishop Juhan what he would Foundation's goal in making its $2,500,000 challenge like most to do now, he said, "Part my hair in the grant—the establishment of the University of the middle and play Vandy." standard liberal arts education. South as a of LANCASTER ASSUMES COMMAND The man who oversaw the campaign and gave of Dean Robert S. Lancaster interrupted his sabbati- himself totally to its achievement, who was responsi- cal year, the first half of which he spent as a Fulbright ble more than any other single individual over the professor at the National University in Seoul, Korea, years for drawing in support to the University, a man to help the Ten Million Dollar Campaign in its last who for half a century has contributed on a measure- critical months. He consented to take another year less scale his labor, spirit, and substance to his alma from academic work, his first choice, to pilot the mater, has retired. development during the coming period of Bishop Frank A. Juhan, volunteer director of de- program major adjustment. velopment since 1956, now hands over those vital reins Dr. Lancaster, professor of political science as well to Dr. Robert S. Lancaster, dean of the College of as dean of the college, has his bachelor's degree Mag- Arts and Sciences, who will serve as acting director ot na cum Laude from Hampden-Sydney, a master of development during the coming year. arts from the University of the South in and a Bishop Juhan, a graduate of West Texas Military 1934, Ph.D. in political science from the University of Mich- Institute and the University of the South, was chap- igan. He studied law at the Andrew Jackson Univer- lain of the Sewanee Military Academy for three years sity in Nashville and was admitted to the Virginia bar before being called to the rectory of Christ Church, in 1938. He has served as instructor at the Gulf Coast Greenville, South Carolina, in 1916. He served there Military Academy in Gulfport, Mississippi, and at the for eight years, when he was elected Bishop of Florida. Sewanee Military Academy, of which he was com- From 1944 to 1950 he was chancellor of the Univer- mandant of cadets from 1941 to 1943. He was a Navy sity. In 1956 he retired as bishop and assumed the air combat intelligence officer during World II, development post without pay. War and practised law for three years in Pulaski, Virginia. In the years since , '11, was selected He has been a Fulbright lecturer in Baghdad, Iraq, for 's honorable mention Ail-American as well as in Korea. He is listed in the current volume center, he has been in there at every football practice of Who's Who in America. session he could make, alongside the coach, backing up Dr. M. Webb, formerly dean of men, will con- the players, staging their celebrations, criticizing the John tinue to serve as acting dean of the college, and Dr. game movies. The only trophy on his office desk is Charles 0. Baird will continue as acting dean of men. that given him by the team of 1964, naming him its honorary captain. He has found jobs for the athletes CHITTY ON LEAVE in the summer, organizing the crews of "Bishop's Arthur Ben Chitty, '35, executive director of the

Associated Alumni and director of public relations, is

on a year's leave of absence, which he is spending in A hazardous listing of Bishop Juhan s loves New York to fortify the Fund for Episcopal Colleges, in order of intensity, aside from God and of which he recently became president. country, family and friends, might be: 1) Se- Mr. Chitty's duties have been largely assumed for wanee, 2) Sewanee students, 3) football, the year by Albert S. Gooch, Jr., as acting alumni 4) Sewanee, 5) hunting, 6) the dry wise crack, secretary. From i960 to 1964 Mr. Gooch was a teach- of which he is a master, 7) Sewanee, and er at the Sewanee Military Academy. For the past fif- 8) fishing. teen months he had been associate editor of the Cov- ington, Tennessee, Leader, In that position he won

The Sewanee News the first prize for local pictures in the annual Ten- nessee Press Association contest. He is a graduate of Mississippi College. Edith Whitesell will continue as managing editor ot the Sewanee News and assistant director of public relations. Mrs. Whitesell, whose husband is Sewanee's

15. professor of German, is a Ph. ( 1934) from the University of Chicago, and did graduate work in English at the Universities of Michigan, California and Wisconsin, serving as a teaching assistant at Berkeley and Madison. She has won several awards in playwriting, has been a stafl writer of radio scripts for the Columbia Broadcasting System out of New York, and a contributor to the Atlantic, the University of Chicago Magazine, and other publications.

%} oiin Irel Hall Hodges, who has served the Uni- versity and its library for thirty-two has been years, JOHN IREL HALL HODGES granted a year's terminal leave before retirement. He. Converted a book collection into a library came to Sewanee in 1933 as assistant to Miss Louise Finley, became associate librarian in 1935 and libra- rian in 1939. In 1962 he stepped aside to the post of duPont Library, the building he conveyed to a reality associate librarian after a heart attack left him un- which all of Sewanee finds nothing short of dazzling. able to carry the full responsibility of the building of He, too, is listed in Who's Who in America. a new library. Another top administrator is lost in the retirement Born in Paducah, Kentucky, in 1911, John Hodges of Melvin L. Southwick as superintendent of Emer- received the A.B. degree in 193 1 from the University ald-Hodgson Hospital. of Kentucky and his master's from Vanderbilt in 193?-. Melvin Leonard Southwick, administrator of Emer- He did further graduate work at Vanderbilt and at ald-Hodgson Hospital since 1950, was born on Febru- Sewanee. During World War II he served as a lieu- ary 17, 1896, and was graduated from Dartmouth tenant in the Navy. He is a member of Delta Tail College in 191 8. He was an ensign in the United Delta and of library honor societies, has been listed States Xaval Reserve for four years and was trained in Who's Who in America, Who's Who in Library in the topographical division of the United States Geo- Science, and International World Who's Who. logical Survey. For thirty years he was an executive William G. Harkins will continue as librarian of the of the Standard Oil Company, stationed for most of

that period in China and India. He was a prisoner of war of Japan for eight months in 1941, and later overcame two serious illnesses contracted at that time. During his service to Emerald-Hodgson Hospital he cleared the institution of debt and succeeded in hav-

ing it accredited by the Joint Commission on Accredi- tation of Hospitals in 1956. He was vice-president and then president of the South Middle Tennessee

Hospital Council and is a personal member of the Tennessee Hospital Association. For four years he served as Chairman of the Sewanee Chapter of the American Red Cross. Mr. Southwick will be succeeded next May by Col.

Joseph Powell, who is well remembered at Sewanee from the years when he headed the Air Force ROTC detachment. Bridging the period before Col. Powell's

return to the Mountain is Col. Grin A. Fayle of the

U. S. Army corps of engineers (ret.), whose home is

in Winchester. He has two sons at the Sewanee Mili- MELVIN L. SOUTHWICK tary Academy. Cleared the hospital of debt

August 1965 Toynbee: You Can't Win In Viet Nam

Coulson ARNOLD TOYNBEE

When Arnold Toynbee was in Sewanee for two zvilling to pay the price in manpower, material, ;n duPont lectures last February, he submitted imagination for ivinning the fight in Viet Nam I don't graciously to many interviews, recorded and know, but to say that you can't win seems to me to unrecorded. At the time a number of us were sorry make a prophecy in history that is difficult to sub- that Dean Robert S. Lancaster, professor of political stantiate. science, was away in Korea, as we were sure that the DR. JOHN GESSELL: (associate professor of pas- dean would have given the dean of historians a lively toral theology, chairman of the duPont lecture com- time. After Dean Lancaster's return, Arthur Chitty mittee) : Recently James Reston quoted Professor talked to him on tape and posed some of Toynbee's C. N. Parkinson as saying in his new book, East and statements to him. Paired excerpts from both tapes West, that Asia is on the ascendancy in terms cf follow. world power and that this has far-reaching implica- TOYNBEE: You can't win in Viet Nam. The tions for the West. Would you agree with this analysis

Asiatics are determined to drive out all traces remain- and what further comment would you make about it? ing of the Western interference from which they TOYNBEE: I would agree and I would say two suffered so much in the last century. You Americans things immediately. First, this is a return to normal. had a very good record in your relations with Asia It has been rather unusual that the peninsula of Asia during the last century. You did not take advantage called Europe, even with its largish annex of two of her when my country and other European countries islands called North and South America, should be did. It's a pity that now you are inheriting the mantle dominant in the world and we are going back to of our mistakes. But the Viet Namese have a lot of normal as Asia becomes dominant. Secondly, it's the determination and a lot of guts and they simply will West's doing because the West got ahead by getting not give up. Most Viet Namese care nothing for a spurt in technology. Technology is hard to invent ideologies but they do care about freedom from inter- but fairly easy to copy. Now Asia is getting tech- vention by either China or the West. I am sorry to nology. When Asia has technology the West's power be so rude, but that is what I think about it. lead will disappear. I hope we have still things to DEAN LANCASTER: When one says, "You can't give to the world but in power Asia's numbers and win in Viet Nam," I take that as the statement of a size will conquer again—as they should. historian who should know better. Many people DEAN LANCASTER: After all, who am I to com- think that we can't win. Other people think that we pete with Mr. Toynbee in making generalizations can win. Winning depends upon how much energy, about history? He is an expert at generalizations. I how much strength, how much willingness a nation think some of his generalizations are very very broad has to expend its resources and its might and its imagi- indeed, and I don't know that anybody has succeeded nation in order to win. Whether the United States is in reducing history to a science. Many historians have

8 The Sewanee News Lancaster: We Surely Must

Keating

DEAN ROBERT S. LANCASTER

mine to wreck on that rock. You may remember TOYNBEE: Xot necessarily to my mind. It de- Oswald Spengler's Decline of the West. / think his- pends very much, I think, on the West—the way the

torically too China enjoyed an ascendancy of power West is going to take this inevitable change because in the East at a time when communications between power is always temporary. If we bite, scratch and East and West simply did not exist. In the modern resist then it will mean the decline of the W^est. If world China until -eery recently has been pitifully we take it gracefully and accept the fact that Asia is

Weak and the prey of the superior technology of the going to have a preponderance of material, we arc West. These "islands" or "peninsulas" have been the going to have a number of immaterial things still to

tails that in modern history wagged the dog. China give to the world as a whole, and then there might be has played a very mean figure in modern world history. some understanding between us, I believe.

Now I agree with Mr. Toynbee that power is on the DEAN LANCASTER: I don't agree with Mr. ascendancy in Asia. I don't agree with him that power Toynbee on this. I wouldn't agree that the great cir.- emerges from a tremendous population. I think the pires of the world or the great states of the world by

tremendous population of, say, joo or 800 million biting and scratching against the invader have suc- people in China is one of the causes of her very great cumbed. I think it is because oftentimes they have weakness. These people have to be fed. This creates lacked the inner vigor, the resiliency required—they a great deal of weakness and tension, because you've have lost their elan vital. / believe the only way thai-

got to feed these people first. Furthermore, China empires can maintain their positions in the world is

simply does not have access to the raw materials pres- through strength. I believe that peace itself emerges ently. She max well in time to come. She has certain only from strength. I can't imagine anything more raw materials, but she does not have many of the horrible than a situation where Asia, misjudging the

strategic materials on which modern technology de- will of the West to resist, would force us to that final pends. I quite agree that power in Asia is on the in- confrontation that would surely result in the combus-

crease. I don't think that this means a decrease of tion of the world, in the tailing of the nuclear bombs. power in the West. Relatively I suppose it does, but (Jut of strength, I think, comes the capacity to settle I don't see in the foreseeable future a China or an disputes. We respect those who are strong and

Asia that overshadows the world in contributing either efficient. Those who are weak and servile, I think, values of their long civilization or in a reasonable usually receive the rewards that are reserved for veeak- approach to a reasonable solution of political prob- ness and servility.

lems. ARTHUR BEN GHITTV: How should we at- DR. ANITA GOODSTEIN {instructor in his- tempt to deal with Red China: Should we attempt to tory): Mr. Toynbee, do you think that Asia's rise deal with them across the conference table: Should we

means the West's decline: (continued ON I' Ml 10)

August 1965 How Should We Deal with Red China?

(continued from pack 9) DEAN LANCASTER: When one speaks of being continue efforts to do that: What is the outlook for "nasty," one has to consider who is being nasty to our being able to deal with Red China? whom and why. We had no reason to suppose that a Communist China would be friendly to us. As Mr. TOYNBEE: Perhaps the remedy is to give China Toynbee noted, we had a long tradition of friendship back her place in the world, as one of the big peoples with China; and if our attitude since she has become of the world. I wouldn't mind China coming to this our avowed enemy can be termed "nasty," tlien I social power. suppose we have been nasty to her. DR. GOODSTEIN: Well, will she, though? We have DR. GOODSTEIN: Will we lose that load of un- heard, recently at least, that China wouldn't accept a popularity simply by moving out of Viet Nam? seat in the UN even if we offered it to her. TOYNBEE: Not simply by moving out. You must TOYNBEE: I think if she were given a position do some positive things, I suppose, in your relations to corresponding to what she feels should be hers, her China. I was in Viet Nam a few days, just after the rightful place in the world, she would accept. Now French had given up their political and military power what her rightful place is would no doubt be subject —they were kicked out, actually, weren't they?—before to discussion and perhaps even bargaining. We do America moved in to take their place. At that time agree her rightful place is a pretty big and important the French had sent in a mission for cultural coopera- one and I would like to try to make an effort anyway tion which was having great success because while the to bring her, not necessarily into the United Nations, Viet Namians hated French rule—they don't like but into cooperation with the rest of the world by American rule either, I suppose—they liked French giving her her due and making her feel as though she culture instead of French gunboats and soldiers. They were no longer being put down. I am afraid that were glad to have that. Isn't that a hint of what American actions toward Red China have perpetuated might be done? what the British and the French and the Japanese did to her in the nineteenth century. It is unfortunate; DEAN LANCASTER: I think the outlook for our

America was the one country in the nineteenth century being able to deal with Red China is very grim at ihe who didn't take advantage of China when she was moment. I think we have been trying very desperately down. to reach the conference table unsuccessfully. I think

it is really because they feel our power position in DR. GOODSTEIN: Do you foresee any possible Viet Nam and other places to be essentially weak. way of our getting through to the Chinese? How can If they thought we were strong there, we were really we make them believe that we are sincere, at least in if wanting to see a peaceful world? That we have no strong there, I think they would be far more willing designs upon their part of the world? to come to the conference table and engage in reason- able conversation, in order to arrive at some compro- TOYNBEE: You may not have any designs, but mise or some composition of our differences. you have been rather nasty to continental China since

she went Communist. She has a right to go Com- MR. GHITTY: You would favor, then, I take it, munist if she chooses, and of course all nations sympa- our strengthening our position in Viet Nam? thetic to her are very suspicious of a comeback of DEAN LANCASTER: We surely must. It's either European or Western imperialism. They can't really Viet today, or the next believe that the West has sincerely given up wishing Nam day the Philippines, or to dominate the rest of the world, so any move like shortly after that, San Francisco. When a great world the Americanization of Southern Viet Nam they think state, such as the United States is at the present time, in. is Western imperialism coming back. . . . And as starts to retreat, the dogs rush Sooner or later

America represents the West she gets all the un- we've got. to meet the challenge, wherever it is. I popularity for what the imperialists have done, my think it's unfortunate that the challenge is being met least, for several country not and centuries past. This in this particular place historically. I can think of is a pretty big load to take over of unpopularity. many better places to engage the Communists than in

MR. GHITTY: Dean Lancaster, would you care Southeast Asia. But we have no choice. We are to comment on Mr. Toynbee's remark that we were engaged there. To disengage would be to lose most of "nastv" to Communist China? our friends in Asia.

10 The Sewanee News New Machines Speed Data

The Universitv now has an electronic data pro- cessing unit, including a type 403 accounting machine to go with a collate r, sorter, summary punch, and in-

terpreter. The main unit is in the treasurer's office, whose personnel have been trained by the IBM com- pany. The treasurer's office is putting all accounts payable, receivable, and payrolls on the system. The Arnold Mignery, director of the U. S. Forestry Research Station at Sewanee, looks over plans for the silviculture treasurer, Douglas Vaughan, says that the continuing laboratory to be built next to the Snowden Forestry Build- growth of the University makes older methods of hand- ing. ling these transactions uneconomical. While he does not anticipate any saving now, the machine will permit almost unlimited expansion without the addition of Congress Approves personnel, and immediate gains will be the ability to get a great deal more information faster. Laboratory A key punch machine to tie in with the main equip- ment is in the development office, where information CongressionT approval has been won on a #190,000 on the sources and uses of all gifts is being recorded. Expropriation for a silviculture laboratory for the U. S. The second broad purpose of the data processing will Forestry Research Station at Sewanee, which has be in the storing and retrieving of data about alumni. worked in University quarters since 1958 in close co- Arthur Ben Chitty, alumni director, says, "More and operation with the department of forestry. more as the University applies for grants or for special The new building will be adjacent to the Snowden

academic recognition it is important to know what the Forestry Building, on the site of the Selden house. Ar- student did as an undergraduate and what he has ac- chitectural plans and specifications have already been complished as an alumnus. Y\ ithin ten years we will prepared with an $18,500 appropriation authorized in be in position to establish a correlation between what 1963. the student did as an undergraduate with what he did In a statement to the Senate Appropriations Com-

in graduate school and that in turn with what he has mittee supporting the project, Senator Ross Bass of

accomplished in his business lite or his civic service. Tennessee said the research program is aimed at im-

"To accomplish its objective the alumni office Will proving the timber on some eleven million acres of land prepare in the next eighteen months a comprehensive on the Cumberland Plateau and Highland Rim area of questionnaire which will enable the data to be placed Tennessee. ''This laboratory will provide for forest into the machine for subsequent collating and averag- service research on timber growth and management,"

ing. It is expected that the completion of these ques- Senator Bass said. tionnaires will become a major task for the Sewanee "Effective seeding techniques for hardwoods and clubs and classes." pines are badly needed in the highlands, where planting Mr. Vaughan says that when the treasurer's office sites and growth conditions often are severe.

has finished establishing its records. i.he system will "forest service scientists are housed in the forestry be made available to the registrar's and admissions building at the University of the South. The university offices. He foresees class scheduling which will put needs this space but has offered a building site next

typed alphabetical lists of the members of each class door.

into the hands of professors the first day. "The I niversity of the South is a major cooperating

It is of interest in this connection that the largest institution in this project." Senator Bass noted. '"The commercial electronic sysiems installation in the coun- project include> primary experimental acres of 10,000

try is in the charge of a Sewanee alumnu>. ('<. Marion acres ol the university land surrounding Sewanee and Sadler, president of American Airlines. It was 2.C00 acres known as the "flattop Experimental Forest' featured in the April, 1964, issue of Fortune magazine. near Birmingham, Alabama."

August 1965 Seven Take Important Posts

GEORGE SXELLIXGS, Monroe, Louisiana, at- Trial Lawyers and a director of the Council of Greater torney, is Sewanee's new chairman for Church Louisiana. He is listed in Who's Who in Commerce

Support, succeeding Harvey Booth of Atlanta, and Industry. He is a member of Grace Church in who suffered a serious accident last year. Monroe, and a Republican. His favorite relaxation is

Mr. Snellings, in accepting what is one of the horseback riding, and his wife was a member of Se- most important la}- posts for the Episcopal Church in wanee's first fox hunt. the South, and certainly one of the most demanding Mrs. Snellings is also a lawyer. She was Miss Marie of continuous effort, said, "I considered it a call of Louise Wilcox of New Orleans, he met her in a the Church." He also said that being a non-alumnus Tulane law school class he was teaching, and there who went to three other colleges (Princeton, Harvard, were fourteen lawyers in their wedding. She is the and Tulane) qualified him perfectly for the job. His only woman on the Tulane board, and was elected remark had more truth in it than he perhaps meant to her school board as a Republican. She is listed i.a at the time. It has been pointed out that a layman Who's Who in America. who can go to his vestry and say, "Look, I didn't go Predecessors of Mr. Snellings as chairmen for to Sewanee, but this is our responsibility, " is in a Church Support have included Allen Kimball, now strong position. chairman of the Board of Regents, Hinton Longino, George Snellings was born in Monroe, Louisiana, vice-chairman of the Ten Million Dollar Campaign, on April 28, 1910, the son of George Marion Snellings, Harvey Booth, vice-president of Southern Bell Tele-

M.D., and Satchie Breard of Monroe. He is a gradu- phone Company, and Edmund Orgill, who has been ate of Ouachita High School, A.B. (Phi Beta Kappa) mayor of Memphis. Princeton 1929, LL.B. Harvard 1932, and M.C.L. A FELLOW LOUISIANIAN and a fellow lawyer Tulane 1933. His college sport was fencing. At Tu- of Mr. Snellings has succeeded Robert G. Snowden as lane he worked on its law review, and was an assistant chairman of the board of regents. G. Allen Kimball professor in the law school from 1933 to 1935. of Lake Charles, who has served Sewanee as one of During World War II he was on the staff of the its most vigorous Church Support chairmen as well as general counsel, War Production Board, and was a trustee and regent, is a member of the firm of Jones, lieutenant in the LT SNR on the staff of Admiral Kimball, Harper, Tete and Wetherill. He is a 1928 Joseph R. Redman. A member of the law firm of law graduate of LSLT, fellow of the American College McHenry, Snellings, Breard and Sartor, he is a director of Trial Lawyers, president of the Louisiana State of Delta Airlines, the Central Savings Bank of Mon- Chamber of Commerce, has been chairman of the roe, and the Louisiana and Southern Insurance Com- Louisiana insurance commission. pany. He is a member of the American College of A prominent Episcopal layman, he has served ns assistant chancellor of the diocese of Louisiana.

His son, George, Jr., was an outstanding SMA grad-

Bishop Girault Jones of Louisiana, left, congratulates uate in 1956. George Snellings of Monroe.

Coiuson PRESIDENT OF THE ASSOCIATED ALUMNI succeeding John Guerry of Chattanooga is R. Morey Hart, '34, SAE, Pensacola business man and civic leader. Permanent president of his class, he has been a trustee from the diocese of Western North Carolina as well as Florida, and alumni trustee. He served a six-year term on the board of regents. His son Ricky, who was graduated last June, was editor of the Purple. Commenting on the election of Hart, Arthur Ben

Chitty said: "In all of my contacts with alumni, I know of no one more devoted to Sewanee. He entered college and had to leave because of financial depriva- tion. He returned and, although not an outstanding student academically, he became a very outstanding leader on the campus. From the time of his gradua- ART ALLIN LUMPKIN SADLER HATCH KIRKLAND

tion until the present, he has kept Sewanee and irs University of Wisconsin and St. Luke's School of needs continually in his mind. Few people have re- Theology at the University of the South, lie has turned more frequently to Sewanee from greater dis- served parishes in Boston, Charleston, and Pittsburgh, tance. \'\-w people have undertaken to do more or and during World War II was a Navy chaplain on

done more. He has given a remarkable example of combat duty with the Second Marine Division '.n public service and civic enterprise in Pensacola, having Tarawa. He attended the Graduate School of The- held nearly every title of responsibility in church and ology and won a Master's in Sacred Theology. The community that one person could hold." University conferred an honorary degree on him last NEW REGENTS are Bishop Coadjutor John M. June; at the same time a son graduated from the col- Allin of Mississippi; the Rev. William \Y. lege with honors. Two more sons will be in the college Lumpkin of Rock Hill, South Carolina; G. this fall. Marion Sadler of Xew York, president of American MARION SADLER, '33, president of Amcri- Airlines; and Edwin I. Hatch of Atlanta, president of C^l J • can Airlines, was an elected alumni trustee be- the Georgia Power Company. They will replace four fore his selection for the board of regents. He is a men rotating off the board with the expiration of their graduate of Baylor School, attended Yanderbilt, and six-year terms: the Rt. Rev. George M. Murray of has an M.A. in English from Duke. A native of Birmingham; the Rev. Charles F. Schilling of Holly- Clarksville, Tennessee, where he jerked sodas in his wood, Florida; Brigadier General L. Kemper Williams father's drug store, he taught school in Huntingdon of Xew Orleans; and the outgoing chairman, Robert and Bristol, Tennessee, and married a fellow teacher. Snowden. He started his career with American Airlines as a Filling out the two years remaining of the term of ramp agent in Xashville in 1941. A son graduated in Harvey Booth is William A. Kirkland, D.C.L. Sewanee, 1963 from Sewanee. 1956, of Houston, who has served as trustee and regent Sadler is a living rebuttal to those who contend that before and has been continuously active in eliciting education and precision in language have a reverse Support for the University. An alumnus of Princeton, correlation to success in business. His English pro- he is a life member of its board, who has also been a fessor at Sewanee, Abbott Martin, recalls that it was Rice I niversity trustee, president of the First City the to-be-corporation-president who introduced him National Bank of Houston and chairman of the Texas to the poetry of T. S. Eliot, and the editor of this Banking Association. His wife is the daughter of the magazine remembers with chagrin that Sadler was the late A. Sessums Cleveland. '93. first to point out a slip in grammar that got by several Bishop Allin was born in Helena, Arkansas, in 1921. vigilant proof readers. He has both his A.B. and B.D. from the University

of the South ('45 and '45)3 and a master's in education EDWIX I. HATCH, '33, president of the Georgia from Mississippi College at Clinton. He served Power Company, was born in Uniontown, Alabama.

parishes in Conway. Arkansas, and in Xew Orleans, He is a graduate of the University of Alabama law and was chaplain to Episcopal students at Tulane and school, joined the power company (first in Alabama)

institutional chaplain for the city of Xew Orleans. after a long career in its law firm. He has served as In 1958 he became rector of All Saints' College, Yicks- chairman of the Montgomery City Planning Commis- burg, Mississippi, and bishop coadjutor of the diocese sion and as a judge of the Montgomery Recorder's in 1961. He has been dean of the Xorthern Convoca- Court, has been chairman of the Atlanta Inked Ap- tion and director of the Sewanee Summer Training peal, a member of the Xational Association of Manu- School. facturers' committee for the conservation and manage- William Lumpkin, rector of the Church of Our ment of natural resources, and ol the Georgia and

Saviour, Rock Hill, S. C, was born in Columbia, Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. His son graduated

South Carolina, in 1910. He is a graduate of the from the college in 1964.

August 1965 n On and Off the Mountain

highway project that would link Sewancc to a tri-state scenic route atop the Cumberland A ridge, the Cumberland Plateau Trail, is in the hopper for Appalachia and is being warmly advocated by Herman Baggenstoss, '-,}{, Tracy City, Tennessee, newspaperman and lumberman. It would start at the Russell Cave national park in Alabama and go along the top into Kentucky and the Cumberland National Forest and as far north along the backbone of the DR. PAUL RAMSEY Cumberland range as desired.

land upon forty-five devoted years at the University Sewanee-connected writers whose work has ap- Press. And it congratulates itself in having had and peared in the Sezvanee Review during 1964-65 include having his skill, integrity and knowledge." (in order of appearance) Keith Fort, '55; Charles The Sewanee News would like to take this occasion Harrison, professor of English; Lawrence Hetrick, to make a special bow, also, to Miss Frances Beakley, former faculty; Robert W. Daniel, '35; Hobart Jef- whose typesetting over the years has been accom- freys Myers, son of the late Rev. George B. Myers plished with patience, skill beyond the call of duty, and Mrs. Myers of Sewanee; J. A. Bryant, Jr., form- and grace; and to Jack Sutherland, who has done a er faculty; Richard Tillinghast, '62; Paul Ramsey, as- good deal of the make-up for our magazine. sociate professor of English; George Scarbrough, '44; and Leonard Trawick, '55. Paul Ramsey, who joined the English department The summer issue of the Review ends with a state- just a year ago, has a list of publications and profes- ment to which the Sewanee Nezvs can only add, re- sional activities for that year that fills two pages. A soundingly, "Us too." book of poems, In an Ordinary Place, is scheduled for "The Sewanee Review congratulates John Suther- publication by the Southern Poetry Review Press this

fall. Single poems have appeared in an LSU Press anthology of Southern writing, in the Southern Poetry Sewanee now boasts an honest-to-goodness fox hunt, which Reviezv, Lyric, The Christian Century, and other peri- makes up in fervor what it lacks in antiquity. Among the riders to hounds, or hound, are Dr. and Mrs. Harry Yeat- odicals. Articles and reviews have been accepted by man, the Rev. G. Cecil Woods. Jr., and daughters, Dr. and the Sewanee Reviezv, Shenandoah, and several anthol- Mrs. Joe Parsons, Mrs. David Camp, Mrs. Maurice Moore, Mrs. Bayly Turlington, and Dean Robert S. Lancaster. Mrs. ogies, including the Princeton University Press's En- Philip Johnson, shown at right, is unhappily a drop-out. cyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics. He has read four Her husband has gone to head the math department at Oakland University in Michigan. scholarly papers, presented a number of readings of Keating his own poetry, and judged the college poetry contest for the Southern Literary Festival.

O ewanee's volunteer fire department was the col- lective hero of the hour last May when the old Parker Hotel in Cowan blazed up. Eight departments co-

operated to put out the $150,000 fire, but one Cowan

resident put it, "Those boys would scamper up where nobody else would."

Two family-affair ordinations this summer involved Sewanee. On June 29 Stephen Gray Alexander, A'58, son of the Very Rev. George M. Alexander, '38, dean of the School of Theology, and Mrs. Alexander, entered the ministry with his father preaching the sermon at Otey Parish church. On July 19 Sollace

A-fitchell Freeman, Jr., A'58, grandson of Bishop Frank A. Juhan, 'u, and Mrs. Juhan, entered orders at St.

H The Sewanee News DR. IRA B. READ

Keating

Dr. A. Scott Bates, French seminar Francis-in-the-Fields Church, Harrod's Creek, Ken- students tucky. Bishop Juhan preached the sermon and the Rev. '40, uncle of the ordinand. Alexander D. Juhan, A poem of A. Scott Bates, "Fable of the Talented was the litanist. As Mrs. Juhan put it, "Frank Mockingbird," was featured on the first page of Poetry the sermon, Sandy read the Gospel, and preached Pilot, a monthly news-sheet published by the Academy Grandma cried." of American Poets. It was selected by the poetry edi- tor for the month, Reed Whittemore, consultant in poetry at the Library of Congress for 1964-5. I ra b. read, instructor in history, has completed re- quirements for the Ph.D. at Emory University. Read, The University of the South will be included in the who came to Sewanee in the fall of 1961, is a graduate America-in-Miniature park now being built in Wash- of Milligan College in Tennessee. His father is a pas- ington, D. C. The cross at the edge of University tor of the Church of Christ in Danville, Illinois. View and All Saints' Chapel will Read's accession to the degree brings to forty-seven both appear in re- plica on the diorama of the nation. the number of Sewanee faculty members to hold doc- torates, out of a total of sixty-eight teaching in T. Edward Camp, St. Luke's librarian, was elected academic fields. executive secretary of the American Theological Libra- rians' Association at their nineteenth annual meeting Dr. John M. Gessell, associate professor of pastoral in June at the General Seminary in York. theology and assistant to the dean of the School of New He will edit the proceedings of the association. During the Theology, offered a seminar on pastoral care this sum- second semester of last year he attended the Vanderbilt mer at the Episcopal Theological College in Edinburgh. Divinitv School. While the two schools have maintained close relation- ships and fostered a student exchange program, this is the first time a visiting professor from either has served the other. In Brief . . .

D'R. WILLIAM B. GUENTHER, associate profes- sor of chemistry, attended a summer meeting on val- ency theories at Tufts University on a National Science Foundation fellowship. He continues to do yeoman service as chairman of the lectures and concerts com- mittee ... DR. DAVID B. CAMP, Who's Who listed chairman of the chemistry department, relaxes by growing vegetables and rare flowers . . . Acting Dean of the College JOHN M. WEBB spoke to the Tennessee Association of Colleges on facultv recruit-

ment last April. . . . The McCRADYS and the Y\ EBBS attended a conference of Southern college presidents and deans in Arkansas, and had dinner Mike Freeman, Rev. Alexander Juhan, Bishop Juhan with Rockefeller. "And grandma cried'' Winthrop

August 1965 iS (§umme

at Sewanee, after years of Summer j proach to full operation of the physica has reached the point where local merchar

have more business than in the winter. Commencement the Synod of the Fourth Province met with five hundred or so attem

milestone resolutions to admit women to and to strengthen the provincial structure! meet here again in 1966.

A Tennessee teachers' sorority, a mach H. Stanford Barrett, artist-in-residence, shows Mrs. Rose Quinn, the reg- ership conference, and a federation of istrar's assistant, the Claibarne-Armstrong collection. Sofa and chairs are covered with Aubusscn needlepoint, the table came from the palace at Versailles.

J\. widely varied gift of antiques and art objects,

the Claiborne-Armstrong collection, has formed a nu- cleus for a permanent art gallery in the section of

Guerry Hall ; djacent to the old library, and Miller Convocation Hall itself (the building which housed the University library before the opening of duPont) is beginning to attract treasures. H. Stanford Bar-

rett, University lecturer and artist-in-residence, is cu-

rator. The gallery is partitioned for display of vari- ous periods, will evenai; lly be a full demonstration, Mr. Barrett hopes, of the history of art and of past modes of life. Traveling exhibits are now on view here instead of in Tuckaway basement, which con- tinues as a working studio. Over two thousand visi- tors have been totted up since the formal opening for the trustees in June.

"Art and the Atom," a traveling exhibit, was on view in the gallery abDve the permanent collection.

UlSOn

1 lHl.|l|y< :!

The Sarah Hcdgson Torian Archives Room in th? duPont Lij ment week end, to the memory of Mrs. Oscar Noel Torian, v| preservation of records and memorabilia for the University. A> The room, set apart by special richness from the rest of th

of Mrs. Torian, shown here as it was unveiled, is the work ol ; the carving that flanks it took a craftsman in that city two yeai liIII! i 16 The Sewanee News at (§ewanee

were among those coming back. The Graduate Schoc] oi Theology, the National Science Foundation-spon- sored institute for secondary school teachers, the Col- lege summer school, the Sewanee Summer Training School for Church workers, the Sewanee Summer Mu- sic Center, ikI ; the Sewanee Military Academy school camp all reported successful seasons. A fledgling, the Sewanee Summer Art Center, was launched, and pai I its way the first year. The interplaj among them was stimulating for all, and we even had good wea- ther.

Rutled re

The verve, devotion, and eminent tutelage which distinguish the Sewanee Summer Music Center inspire sloriss that electrify the Mountain.

The air-conditioned Jessie Ball duPcnt Library was a popular summer habitat.

K

is dedicated during Commence- archivist who established the are invited. d library, has been a project of and sons were members and ze display cases. The portrait ita artist, Katherine Breen, and cute.

August 1965 .

Sewanee Voices from the Peace Corps

Last wittier we wrote to the three newest of Sezva- Although Tabora is just over two hundred miles

nee's ten Peace Corps volunteers, hoping to get their from the equator, the climate is very pleasant. It impressions at the point of maximum impact. We zvere aversges 75 degrees Fahrenheit during the day and not disappointed 40 degrees at night. The reason for the mild tempera-

ture is that we are in the middle of the central pla- teau, 4,000 feet above sea level. We are 525 miles from the Indian Ocean on the east and one hundred miles from the Congo on the west.

The countryside is wild, and if I walk twenty paces

out from my back yard I will be in the bush. I haven't JOSEPH W. WINKELMAN, '64 seen much game yet but a leopard was seen out in back just last month. On one occasion last term they had to chase two elephants out of the lower school quadrangle.

What we have to avoid is an animal called the ano- pheles mosquito. To protect ourselves, we take aralen Tabora School tablets weekly and sleep under a mosquito net. We have to boil our drinking water and cannot swim in P. O. Box 374 Tabora, Tanzania fresh water because of certain diseases we are liable to pick up by contact. February 20, 1965 Joseph Winkelman reasons for joining the Peace Corps are President of the Class of IQ64 many. It is difficult to describe exactly what Mythey are. For me, Peace Corps offered the means by which all of my good intentions could find fruition. I could serve others by taking a skill to them they could use.

By serving others I could show them, by my pres- ence, what American people are like. And, in serv- ing others, I could learn a great deal myself. WILLIAM L. STIRLING '84 There are five of us here teaching in Tabora school from Tanganyika VII project—a boy from the Uni- versity of Illinois, one from the University of Wash- ington and myself, teaching in the government boys' secondary school. A Wellesley girl and a girl from Connecticut College teach in the girls' school across the green. P. 0. Box 54 The English-model curriculum is rigid indeed. To Sotik, Kenya add to difficulties here, the pupils are taking all in- March 7, 1965 struction in English, their second language. The schools are regional and entirely boarding schools. have been in this country for almost two and a There are trimesters with one month between each of I half months and the changing physical aspects the three terms. The school year begins in January of Kenya are as varied as the many moods into and ends in December. Classes meet six days a week. which I am thrown as the result of certain impres-

During the first two years pupils must take Eng- sions. I am working on a settlement scheme in West lish, Swahili, mathematics, geography, history and sci- Sotik which is called Gelegole and settled entirely by ences (biology, chemistry and physics). In the last members of the Pipsigis tribe. These Kalenjin peoples two years some specialization is allowed in either the are the most feared warriors in Kenya and some of arts or sciences. English and Swahili are required them still are not prepared to launch into a domestic throughout all four years. life of farming.

18 The Sewanee News I am living within the sight of a hill onto which which in the very nature ol its being seems to me to merge the borders of three tribes —the famed Masai, be working agains; a stacked deck. The former large the Kips, and finally, the kisii. This closeness of land units of the "lily" white Highlands arc being tribes which are traditional enemies keeps us always broken into smaller plots and then a group of plots alert to the constant full moon watch on settlement is divided into a scheme composed ol one tribe. cattle. The Kips are not an avaricious people who I am working under a Luo Settlement officer who is have furled brows as a result ot the influence of West- in charge of three adjoining Kip schemes. He knew ern civilization, but are rather a people of great talk- less of agriculture and set lenient than I as he was a ers and great charm who much prefer to sit and dis- political appointee of the controversial Red-oriented cuss while sipping the local brew whether it be honey Ogringa Odinga. My S. 0. studied politics and psy-

beer (Dombe) or the potent native gin. chology for three years in East Berlin, ; nd the ground- work for a basic ideological clash was laid even before The Kisii are a Bantu people as are the Gikuyu 1 arrived. Sotik is 6300 feet above sea level and about who make up the most numerous of the some thirty forty-five miles from the Queen of Lakes, Victoria. odd tribes of Kenya. The "Mzee" (President Jomo The only white faces in this area are tea estate man- Kenyatta) is a Gikuyu and most of the key cabinet agers, Settlement staff, and the three young Ameri- posts arc filled by Gikuyu as these were the main cans. Ever since Uhura there has been a chain re- force of the so-called "Man Mau" during the Emer- action among the farming community to flee to the gency. As the Kips are not Bantu, their present in- South and the false security of that "whited sinecure." fluence in the affairs of the new nation is quite neg-

Whenever I meet people and they discover that I ligible. The Kips were supporters of the former mi- come from America, at once they ask about they nority party, KADU (Kenya African Democratic Un- JFK; feel he was a great friend to all Africans. During the ion), which bowed out last fall to give way to the tide day I take time out from my activities on the scheme of support to create a one-party State. The Kips had and I teach English and history for two hours in the favored a more decentralized control with emphasis on afternoon at the cooperative school. Curiosity and un- the regions. quenchable thirst for knowledge and education is pre- Settlement of "Landless," Fantastic valent in every bright face. They seem to have a feeling that an education is the key that will open any Settlement is a fantastic effort to resettle thousands door that may have been barred to their parents. The of "landless" people. On closer inspection I discov- U.S.A. represents a kind and loving friend to almost ered that it was initiated to squelch the restlessness every "man on the shamba" and once experiencing of so many who were not satisfied with just Uhura. this, I am not so troubled by the daily smear of dia- It was a master political stroke to give some stability tribes slandering the U.S.A. in the papers. to this country. It is a most ambitious effort, yet one The Asians (Indians) have a near death grip on the economic pulse of the country. The Africans have

political power and the Africanization of all Kenya is increasing at a rapid pace, yet they have no touch on PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS FROM THE the finances and the bitternesses between Indian and African begin to loom as a greater omen than the UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH Col- onial troubles of old. Harrison Bresee, '34—Nigeria (Back home with My wits and imagination are at a premium daily

Peace Corps bride) and the excitement of a new, developing nation is truly Anthony W. Hathaway, '58—Ethiopia intoxicating. Yet the frustrations of constantly meet- James Slade, '60—Colombia (completed tour) ing a complacent satisfaction with the old weigh heavi- Warner Montgomery, '61 —Thailand ly like a dark shroud. The next eighteen months hold Gordon Wright, '61 —India a great deal in store. Loren Kenneth Hurst, '62 —Peru Harembee! (The cry of the Republic). Blanchard Weber, '62 —Morocco (completed) William L. Stirling, '64 Philip Maggard, '63 —Philippines (killed in plane crash on duty) William Stirling zvas President of the Order of Gowns- Charles Sumners. '63 —Nepal men at Sezvanee. He majored in political science. William Stirling, '64—Kenya A hoped-for article from Jolm Todd. Jr., had to go John Alan Todd, Jr., '64—Guatemala through Washington for clearance and did not arrive Joseph Winkelman, '64—Tanzania in time for this issue. Todd is in an explosive situation in Guatemala.

August 1963 19 New Alumnus

their June meeting the Associated Alumni Atnamed Coach Shirley Majors an honorary member of their body, "in recognition of his New unprecedented contribution to the philosophy and the implementation of the widely acclaimed spoi\s pro- Coach gram of our Alma Mater." Majors, a native of Moore County, Tennessee, and an alumnus of Middle Tennessee State College, came to Sewanee as head coach in 1957, taking over a squad which had won two games in the last three seasons, the worst record in the then ninety-nine-year-okl school's history. The following year the team was

jlsor. undefeated, a feat largely due to Majors and one which he repeated in 1963. He was runner-up Small Gordon E. Warden becomes the newest addition College Coach of the Year in 1963. The '64 season to the University coaching staff this month saw the team take only one defeat, at the hands of when he assumes duties as tennis coach, assist- traditional rivals, the Washington and Lee Generals. ant golf coach and assistant in physical education and Before coming to Sewanee Majors coached at intramurals. Franklin County, Lynchburg, and Huntland, Tennes- He will replace retiring tennis coach Dr. Gaston see, high schools. At Huntknd he wound up an eight- Bruton, who has held the post for nearly forty years year career with a 76-6 won-lost record. and owns an astonishing record of 218 victories against Father of five sons, all outstanding football players Inter- 113 defeats. His teams won the Tennessee (one is the University of Tennessee's 1956 All-Ameri- collegiate Athletic Conference championships sixteen can, Johnny Majors), and one girl, who married a times, and annexed the College Athletic Conference football man, Majors has expressed himself as a firm crown last year. believer in football as a character-builder. Coach Warden began his tennis career at Sewanee Another member of the University's athletic depart- under the direction of Dr. Bruton and became Tennes- ment, basketball coach Lon Yarnell, was similarly see champion and number one man on the University honored by the alumni. He became an honorary teams of 1950 and '51. alumnus at the April meeting of the group. After graduation he became head tennis professional at clubs in Florida, Pennsylvania and Chicago, winning for himself a reputation as one of the top amateur and professional players. He comes to Sewanee after four years as varsity tennis and golf coach at Presbyterian College, Clinton, South Carolina, where he built enviable records. His tennis mark of sixty-five victories against fifteen losses and his golf mark of forty-four wins and seventeen losses were all-time records at Presbyterian. His appointment drew warm words of praise from Athletic Director W alter Bryant: "With the ad- ditional facilities provided by the indoor Charlotte Guerry Courts and the coaching ability which Coach

Varden brings to the Mountain, there is nothing to prevent our competing on the highest level in inter- ollegiate tennis." Coach Warden and his wife, the former Olb'e Matthews, both of Huntsville, Alabama, moved to Sewanee with their four sons early in the summer,

when he assumed duties as teaching professional ?n both golf and tennis at the Sewanee Golf and Tennis COACH SHIRLEY MAJORS Club. New alumnus in familiar role

20 The Sewanee News New Field New Season

THE SEWANEE TIGERS

1965 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE

September 25 Millsaps College Jackson, Miss.

October 2—2:00 p.m. Randolph-Macon CjI Sewanee

OcrcrrR 9—2:00 p.m. Kenyon Co. lege Sewanee

October 16 Austin College Sherman, Texas Ottober 23 Centre College Danville, Ky. October 30 Southwestern Memphis, Tenn. November 6— 1:30 p.m. (Homecoming) Washington and Lee Univ., Sewanee SONNY MONTGOMERY November 13—1:30 p.m. Washington University Sewanee

The University baseball team played its 1965 home schedule on a new field which Walter Bryant calls Tigers, losers "one of the best in the South," thanks to a roommate The Sewanee of only one football of the late Clarence L. (Sonny) Montgomery, '38, a game in the past two seasons, opened their fall prac- former Tiger football star. tice Sepember 1 with fifty-two boys, including sixteen The field was made possible by a $10,000 donation lettermen, reporting. The Tigers will hold two-a-day in memory of Montgomery, who died of a heart attack drills until September 15, then daily practices until at his home in West Memphis, Arkansas, February 26. their September 25 opener against Millsaps College. Coach Shirley Majors directed the work on the field The tetm will be led by captain Paul Tessmann and

and a sandstone marker denoting it as Montgomery alternate captains Dale Reich, Doug Paschall, Don Field was erected before the season opened. Upton and Bill Johnson. Tessmann, a three-year let-

Montgomery Field is located near the intramural terman in both football snd wrestling, is an outstand-

field and, in addition to its well-cared-for playing field, ing defensive line backer and plays fullback on offense. has permanent dugouts, water fountains and adequate

seating space for fans. It was the site of the College Athletic Conference tournament May 7-8, in which Sewanee finished third behind champion Washington Spring Results University.

Montgomery was an outstanding athlete in both Sewanee's Tigers emerged from the third annual high school and college. He was named to the All- College Athletic Conference Spring Sports Festival Memphis baseball and football teams as a prep star with 117/-2 points, to take second place. The festival

and later became a regular starter on Sewanee football was held at Sewanee May 7-8, and included compel i- teams. tion in track, golf, baseball and tennis. He owned and operated two automobile supply The Tigers won titles in golf with John Capers tak- companies in Memphis and was president of Riverside ing the individual title with an even par 144 for thirty- Speedway in West Memphis. He also had large land six holes. As a team, Sewanee won with a 61^5 total. holdings in Marion, Arkansas. nineteen strokes ahead of Southwestern. He was a member of the Baptist Church and of the In tennis the Tigers collected forty-three out of a Vest Memphis Country Club. possible forty-five points in winning seven individual

He is survived by his widow, the former Evelyn titles. Phipps; three sons. C. L. Montgomery III. William B. Sewanee finished second in track, collecting sixty-two Montgomery, a Tulane University student, and Stoney points to ninety-eiidit for Washington, and wound up Montgomery; and a daughter, Evelyn Montgomery. third in the baseball tournament.

August 196^ 21 Cleveland Memorial in the New Opulence

Workman are putting the finish- ing touches on the William Davis Cleveland, Jr., Memorial Building, completing the connective between Walsh-Ellett and Science Halls which had been "unfinished" for fifty years. Mr. Cleveland, a member of one of Houston's pioneer families, was a star athlete at the University in the gradu- ating class of 1893. The building was made possible by gifts from his widow, the late Mrs. A. Sessums Cleveland, widow of his brother and business as- sociate, Sewanee, '93, and other mem- bers of the family. The offices of the admissions direc- tor and registrar have English oak- paneled walls, parquet floors, and clear diamond-pane traceried windows in keeping with the Gothic design of all major University buildings. The ex- terior is of cut Sewanee sandstone. A physiology laboratory has been set up in the basement and has relieved some The admissions and registrar's offices have moved into the William Davis Cleve- of the pressure on the overcrowded land, Jr., Memorial Building, connecting Walsh-EUett, Guerry and Science Halls. Carnegie Science Hall. John Ransom welcomes an applicant below.

Coulsori

22 The Sewanee News Pierre C. T. Beauregard, '47, PDT, has been elected Clubs president of the Sewanee Club of WASHINGTON" suc- ceeding Congressman Richard W. Boiling, '38, PDT.

Beauregard is customer service manager for the Canal

William Schoolfield, '29, is alerting Scwanee alumni Industrial Corporation of Washington and has been and friends in the southwestern states to the Sevvanee active in the Washington campaign, where twelve vol- luncheon and football game in SHERMAN, TEXAS.. unteers under the chairmanship of Thad Holt and October 16. The Tigers will meet Austin College in Leonidas P. B. Emerson spent the spring calling on their fourth game of the season. Alumni and friends eighty prospects. Attendance at a May 1 1 dinner, who are interested in getting a look at the Tigers in featuring Dean Robert S. Lancaster as principal action, in seeing old Scwanee friends and in making speaker, drew twenty-seven Sewanee people. Beaure- new Scwanee friends should get in touch with Bill gard's address is 5225 Duvall Drive, Westmoreland at 5556 Emerson Avenue, Dallas, Texas, 75209. This Hills, Washington 16, D. C. might be a good opportunity to take a prospective Sc- wanee student along. The oldest of the Sewanee alumni groups, the John H. P. Hodgson Chapter in NEW YORK (founded in of South Carolina, The Scwanee Club COLUMBIA, 1878) met on Thursday, May 6, for cocktails at 5:30 is planning a "back to school" party for all freshmen. and dinner at 7:00 p.m. An innovation was the large upperclassmen, alumni and fathers in the area Septem- round table about which all were seated to hear Dean ber 10. Charlie Barron is in charge of arrangements. Robert S. Lancaster talk about his recent experiences in Korea and about Sewanee's academic hopes as he The Sewanee Club of ATLANTA is experiencing views them. Re-elected were President Mercer L. the most active year in memory of its large cadre of Stockell, '43, and Secretary John W. Woods, '54. A new loyal workers. President O. Morgan Hall reports "a officer was Edwin D. Williamson, '61, vice-president. very delightful" spring outing June 5 at the home of Dean Lancaster's talk was followed by a full hour of

Lewis J. Holloway which drew forty-five Sewanee questions and answers. people. Persons responsible for the success of the

June meeting, according to Hall, were Lewis Hollo- The Sewanee Club of KNOXVILLE, organized in way, Frank Otway, Denis Payne, Louis Rice and Jack P'ebruary, plans to hold a Founders' Day meeting

Wall, chairman of the entertainment committee for sometime in October. The club is headed by Dr. Ed- the year. Special thanks went to the ladies, namely ward Hamilton, president, and Dr. George Inge, vice- Mrs. Lewis Holloway, Lewis' mother, and Mrs. Frank president. Otway. Virtually the same enthusiastic group, with Dudley Fort of Nashville, vice-president for regions, the inclusion of Ledlie Conger, were active in the and Art Cockett of the alumni office were at the Feb- Christmas party last year, which was attended by 250. ruary meeting. Fort presided, and Cockett reported The ultimate tribute to the activity of this Georgia "a mixture of alumni, several sets of parents and some group is that it now boasts the largest group of enter- interested Episcopalians" present. ing freshmen and its campaign results have been near the top in the ranking of cities. The CHICAGO Sewanee contingent met in April at the Italian village to hear Arthur Ben Chitty report on campaign progress. W. Oscar Lindholm, '32, had charge of arrangements. All present took pledge cards and agreed to call on fellow alumni. Alumni Council Meeting Set

Members of the Alumni Council should reserve Sixty alumni and friends of the University of the the weekend of October 8-10 for the annual fall South turned out in BALTIMORE for "Sewanee meeting at Sewanee. Associated Alumni Presi- Night" in March. Hosts were the Rev. Homer P. dent Morey Hart visited the Mountain in mid- Starr, his wife, Sue, and son John. The purpose of August to begin making plans for a "different, the steak dinner at the new Winston Club downtown challenging program" which he will unveil at the was to launch the Maryland phase of Sewanee's Ten October meeting. Details and an agenda will be Million Dollar Campaign. Starr has been chairman of announced soon. One highlight of the weekend the Alumni and Friends Division and D. Hcvward will be the Sewanee-Kenyon Hamilton, chairman for Special Gifts. Arthur Ben sirac Saturdav afternoon at Hardee Field. Chitty was speaker and slides of the Sewanee domain were shown.

August 1965 23 Sewanee Over Top In Fund Drive

(continued from page 3) and received more than twice that many individual gifts indicates the kind of support that the University in- spired." On the back of this magazine is reproduced a ci- tation from the American Alumni Council, in- dicating what high regard the Sewanee effort has

evoked in the eyes of the nation. While it is the alum-

ni leadership that was specifically cited, since that is what falls in the sphere of interest of the awarding or-

ganization, Sewanee is keenly aware of and deeply grateful also for the work and gifts of countless non- & alumni. DR. C. BOYLSTON GREEN Many non-alumni worked in our Campaign because they were Episcopalian; others were attracted by the Boylston Green Dies; reputation of the institution for excellence. They knew of the work being done at Sewanee and they were de- voted to the idea for which we stand in American Was Vice-Chancellor education.

Dr. C. Boylston Green, former Yice-Chancellor and An example of the last group was a University of President of the University of the South, died July 23 Chicago professor who had never seen Sewanee and had no connections here, he thought at his home in Saluda, North Carolina, after several but said that months of illness. At the time of his death, he was this kind of college deserved support and sent us a associate professor of English at Wofford College, check. Spartanburg, South Carolina. r ollowing is the nomination upon which the Ameri- Dr. Green was named in to succeed Alexander 1949 can Alumni Council's citation of honor was based: Guerry, who had died in October, 1948, as the tenth "In the year 1964 alumni of the University of the Yice-Chancellor. He announced his resignation on South, organized for a Ten Million Dollar Campaign, August 20, 1, and was succeeded by Dr. Edward 195 iaised $3,114,345 in the single calendar year, or $3,982 Dr. Green held degrees from the University McCrady. for each student enrolled. of South Carolina and 1 ale. "We submit that this effort, supporting the college's He is survived by a son, Halcott, three sisters and commitment to the best education possible for those a brother. best qualified to attain it, is a resounding contribution Dr. Roger A. Way, '30, represented the University not only to Sewanee in particular but to the institu- at the funeral services July 26, leading the processional tion of the small private liberal arts college. It is this of honorary pall bearers. type of college to which many educators look as our best hope for flexible and resilient minds in positions of leadership. The fact that Sewanee's graduates be- Fourth Annual Fly-in lieve in the kind of education it has to offer to the de-

Friday, May 21, airborne friends of the University gree that 6,000 living alumni raised in a single year an of the South converged on Sewanee in private planes average of over $500 apiece for it is a convincing testi-

from all points of the compass, swapped flying yarn?, monial to its effect. and discussed plans for the airport which the Univer- "G. Cecil Woods, '21, of Chattanooga is Co-Chair-

sity operates with the cooperation of Franklin County. man for the Campaign (his brother, J. Albert Woods. Frank K. Smith, executive director of the National '18, served with him until his death last summer). Re- Aviation Trades Association, was the principal speaker tired Bishop Frank A. Juhan, '11, as unpaid director at the banquet that night at Claramont Restaurant. of development for the University, is guiding the effort. A business meeting was held in the new duPont Li- John Guerry, '49, of Chattanooga is president of the brary to discuss airport concerns, followed by a tour Associated Alumni and head of the Alumni-and-Friends of the new library. A barbeque at Jackson-Myers division for special gifts, which has already far sur- Field rounded up Scwancc's fourth annual Fly-in. passed its quota."

24 The Sewanee News 1911 The Rt. Rev. Frank A. Juhan, DTD, was the commencement speaker at Texas Military Institute May 22 in San Antonio. He was a 1906 graduate of the West Texas Military Academy, the forerunner of the present school. 1915 W. M. Reynolds, ATO, of Sumter, South Carolina, enjoyed the alumni get-together at Sewanee during Com- mencement. He took pictures cf mem- bers of the classes of 1915 and 1916. who were guests at parties arranged by the Rev. Ellis M. Bcarden, '15, DTD. 1916 The Rev. Mortimer W. Glover has retired after 29 years at St. James' Church, Wilmington. Churches of all faiths, prominent citizens, and news- paper editors joined in tribute to his civic and religious leadership in Wil- mington. Ben Sleeper, KS, wrote the Rev. Ellis Bearden, '15, to thank him for making his class reunion at com- mencement "such a notable" one. He and his wife, Frances, spent a week in the Bahamas before flying back to The salute's reversed for the first time in four years for Texas. newly commissioned graduates of Sewanee's Air Force 1920 ROTC program. Before the June commencement ceremony The Rev. Charles L. Widney, ATO, in All Saints' Chapel, they saluted their non-commissioned assistant rector at St. Phillip's Church, instructors, but immediately after, it was the non-coms' Charleston, South Carolina, retired turn to "snap to." Sgts. Marion R. Ennis and Dallas J. June 1, but intends to continue to con- Pilcher do the honors for second lieutenant Robert J. How- duct services when called upon. ell while Regent William Lumpkin watches. 1921 The Rev. Moultrie Guerry, SAE, former Sewanee chaplain and profes- sor, retired in June from St. Mary's Junior College in Raleigh, North Caro- Class Distinctions lina. In addition to his duties as chap- lain, he taught Bible to more than 1,600 girls during his eight years at the 1899 his Above the Rim and Other Poems. school. During his retirement he in- tends to study and organize the Robert Jemison, Jr., PDT, of Birming- In thanking Mr. Noe, Arthur Ben ma- terials has taught ham, was featured in the July, 1965, Chitty said, "We are especially grateful he and sermons his tenure at St. issue of the L&N Magazine, which paid for this and every other book written preached during Mary's will continue to examine tribute to him as "the man who likely by an alumnus which we can acquire. and candidates for the ministry. His main has done more to build the city than We are not only glad to have publish- children any other single individual." His firm, ed works but also unpublished manu- interest, however, will be his and grandchildren live in Norfolk, the Jemison Realty Co., has developed scripts written by alumni. These lat- who where and Mrs. Guerry will make some of the major buildings in down- ter we bind and catalogue for use by he town Birmingham, including the Tut- future researchers." Mr. Noe's address their home. wiler Hotel, the Empire Building and is Bath, N. C. 1923 the Stallings Building. It was also re- Carl Stirling is a retired druggist The Rev. Edward B. Guerry, SAE, is sponsible for the creation of Fairfield, in Texas, who has been married 53 the author of The Historic Principle of Alabama, a modern town asked for by years to the former Gene Henderson, the Indissolubility of Marriage, which officials of U. S. Steel. Mr. Jemison remains in good health and plays golf drew these comments in the foreword opened his real estate business in 1903, twice a week—at the age of seventy- from the Rt. Rev. H. St. George Tuck- built his office building in 1921, and seven. He hopes to get back for a visit er, former Presiding Bishop: "... a continued to seek new areas for de- to the Mountain some day. clear and able exposition on the prin-

velopment over the years. He has long ciple of indissolubility of marriage. . . . been a supporter of industrial develop- I heartily commend the reading of this ment in Alabama. thesis to the clergy and laymen of our church." The book may be ordered 1904 *• he large brochure with pur- from St. Luke's Book Store, Sewanee, A poem by the late William Alex- ple cording that was issued when Tenn. 37375. Its cost: $1.50. i ander Percy, ATO, printed was in the the Chapel Completion drive was T. G. Linthicum, PGD, retired Feb- May 1965 Reader's Digest, with j a new launched ten years ago has gone ruary 1 after thirty-five and a half title, "Poem for Spring—Road Song of I years as an employee of the Continen- a 13th Century Page." It credited out of print. If anyone has a I was tal Insurance Companies. His home from Treasury A of Poems for Wor- copy he can spare, we would ap- address continues: 1658 E. Clifton ship and Devotion, edited Charles by preciate having it for develop- Road, N.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30307. He is L. Wallis. Percy is the only Sewanee ment office and University ar- secretary-treasurer of the Sewanee alumnus with a hymn in the 1940 Epis- Club of Atlanta. copal Hymnal, number 437, "They Cast chives. It has a color drawing of 1924 Their Nets in Galilee." the chapel on it, was designed The Rev. Rali-h J. Kendall of Eutaw, 1907 and printed by the Benson print- Alabama, has been appointed historio- The Rev. Alexander C. D. Noe, SAE, ing company in Nashville, and grapher of the diocese of Alabama and has given to the University archives won a prize for them. will continue as secretary of the dio- for the Alumni Bookshelf a copy of cese and a member of the department

August 1965 of finance. He has served St. Steph- lore, republished for the first time en's Church, Eutaw, since 1928. since 1940. It "vividly reminds a gener- 1926 ation obsessed with horsepower of the Hamner Cobbs, SAE, editor of the power of the horse," Time reported. Greensboro, Alabama, Watchman, has 1929 been appointed to the Board of Control The Rev. G. L. G. Thomas had one for Southern Regional Education by son, Mark, on the Sewanee Summer Gov. George C. Wallace. He will re - Music faculty this year and has an- place Dr. Ralph B. Draughon, retir- other on the staff of the Executive ing president of Auburn University. It Council in New York. He is pastor of was at his suggestion that the Cobbs St. Mary's Church in Crestview, Flori- family, which at last count had pro- da, and says he played the All Saints' vided more students at Sewanee than organ when it was on the left of the any other, gave the Genesis window in chancel and had two manuals. the nave of All Saints' Chapel in mem- 1930 ory of Nicholas Hamner Cobbs, first Charles Dudley, PGD, who com- bishop of Alabama. pleted twenty years of service to the Daniel Hey ward Hamilton. KA, has Charlotte, North Carolina, Merchants joined the law firm of Ober, Williams Association, was recently honored at a and Grimes in Baltimore. He served testimonial dinner. He took the job £S chairman for Special Gifts in Se- after being made vice-president of the wanee's fund-raising effort of the area. Morris Plan Bank and "not finding Address: 1640 Maryland National the feeling of jubilation I expected in Bank Building, Baltimore, Maryland the promotion." 21202. The Rt. Rev. John E. Hines, SN, the The Rev. Henry Bell Hodgkins has Piesiding Bishop, received honorary announced his retirement effective De- degrees from Kenyon College, where cember 12 after thirty years as rector he delivered the baccalaureate address, of Christ Church in Pensacola, Florida. and from Seabury-Western Theologi- He has been a member of the standing cal Seminary. Among notables receiv- Edward C. Wilson, '32 committee of the diocese of Florida ing Kenyon degrees was Andrew and a Sewanee trustee and regent. Lytle, A'20, editor of the Sewanee Re- The art work of the late John God- Bishop Thomas Henry Wright, SN, view and lecturer in English at the dard Seitz, PGD, Kansas architect and has completed twenty years as dio- University. artist, will be displayed at the Ells- cesan of East Carolina. He reported to Bishop Hines recently received a ci- worth, Kansas, Museum beginning May his convention in February the largest tation for "Outstanding Achievement" 30, 1966. Seitz was the son and grand- number of confirmations in the history from the editors of Who's Who in the son of pioneer Kansans and portrayed of the diocese, 736 in 1964, an increase South and Southwest. Similar cita- his feeling for the state in his art. of 25 percent. Address: The Bishop's tions went to parents of two Sewanee House, Wilmington. men, James R. Young and Dr. Michael 1932 1927 DeBakey; and to one former resident Clayton Burwell, SN, who as presi- Charles Edward Thomas, SN, is five of Sewanee, Walker Percy, now of dent and general counsel of the In- dollars richer. He won a prize for the Covington, Louisiana. Bishop Hines' dependent Airlines Association in 1960 ". virtually saved the supplemental air- best driving slogan: "Drive with care citation read, . . relentless and fear- line if you care to drive." The whole thing less in his pursuit of justice and dig- industry from sudden death, has joined forces with two other men to was pretty vicarious. Charlie can't nity for all men . . . and (his) abhor- drive. He also won second prize in a rence of hate." form a law firm which will emphasize aviation and transportation law and contest for most succinct comment on 1931 legal representation to federal agencies. a TV program. His comment: "Flint- Charles William Boyd, KA, con- A Rhodes Scholar, he captained the stones are an insult to the human tinues his position as an executive with race." had never Oxford-Cambridge tennis team which He seen the pro- the Layne Wells Company and is cur- became champion of Scotland and Den- gram, but after winning, started rently dabbling in Houston, Texas, real watching. mark and runner-up in France and Finds he likes 'em pretty estate. He recalls his student days at Germany. His list of tennis champion- good. Address: 200 Fairview, Alta Sewanee when both money and Se- ships spans almost a generation. The Vista, Greenville, South Carolina. wanee touchdowns were scarce. There firm offices will be located in the 1928 standing offer of five dollars to was a Federal Bar Building, Washington, Chaplain Francis Daley, SN, who anyone scoring a touchdown, and he D. C. began his career as a reporter with the still feels he is due more money from Col. Orin H. Moore completed three Baltimore Sun, is now head of a Miss- Bill Cravens, '29, who was on the re- years with the Boeing Aircraft Com- ing Seamen Bureau which has record- ceiving end of his touchdown passes. pany and returned to California last ed 12,831 successes in its forty-five Cravens, he recalls, was not always fall to enter the management consult- year existence. The bureau is a ser- anxious to share the reward. vice of the Seamen's Church Institute ant field. of New York. Edward C. Wilson, DTD, a long-time Joe Earnest, DTD, has been appoint- U. S. foreign service officer, has been ed city recorder for Colorado City, A limited number of young appointed counselor for administrative Texas, filling out an unexpired term lawyers will have the opportuni- affairs in the American Embassy at which will run through May, 1967. , Venezuela. He joined the He ty to qualify for direct commis- is a practicing attorney in Colorado foreign service in 1947, and since 1962 sions as lieutenants in the City and headed the county bar as- (j. g.) has been executive director of the Bu- sociation in 1963 when it won an award United States Coast Guard and reau of Intelligence and Research in es the outstanding small bar associa- will be able to discharge their the Department of State. tion in Texas. military obligation while gaining 1933 Frank Hickerson, KA, and Charles The Rev. Joseph Kellerman, KS, di- valuable legal experience. F. Hickerson have formed a partner- rector of the Charlotte, North Carolina, ship, Hickerson and Hickerson, for the To qualify, a lawyer must be Council on Alcoholism, interviews some general practice of law, with offices in between twenty-one and thirty- of the leading men working in the field Winchester and Tullahoma, Tennessee. of alcoholism on one years old, hold an L. L. B. a recently released Dr. Harry Ransom. KS, chancellor of tape, "Alcoholism and Social Responsi- from an accredited institution, the University of Texas, is the co- bility." Consisting of twelve fourteen- editor with J. Frank Dobie and Mody have taken the bar examination, minute programs, the series may be C. Boatwright of Mustangs and Coio and be physically fit. obtained on a loan basis at a cost of Horses, a classic compendium of horse $8.50 from Jefferson Productions, 1

26 The Sewanee News Julian Price Place, Charlotte, N. C. sion where he discovered, "Chaplain Tournament at Kalamazoo, Michigan. 28208. Peterson treats his enlisted men notice- Meanwhile, father Alex was picking Marion Sadler, ATO, president of ably better each day." up honors himself. He recently won American Airlines, recently won a Marshall S. Turner, Jr., PDT, di- the Distinguished Service Award pre- "Man of the Year" award for the city rector of athletics at Johns Hopkins sented by the alumni association of the of New York. The presentation waa University, has a brand new athletic Baylor School for public service as an made at a meeting of the American center, replacing the school's old gym. alumnus of the school. Newspaper Publishers Association. The new center, a two and a half mil- The office of Joshua Bailey, Textile 1934 lion dollar building, was dedicated May Selling Agent, in Atlanta, Georgia, is Augustus Koski is a specialist in the 8. Mr. Turner, a former prep school manned one hundred per cent by alum- language development branch in the teacher and coach, joined the Johns ni—Morgan Hall, SAE, and Frank Division of College and University As- Hopkins faculty in 1946. For the better Otway, SAE, '54, constitute the staff, sistance of the Bureau of Education in part of the past four years he and his staff. Washington. He can be addressed in staff have endured mud, unheated 1940 care of the U. S. Office of Education. rooms and a greatly hampered ath- The Rev. Alfred P. Chambliss, Jr.. The Rev. Homer P. Starr, ATO, is an letic program while the new building ATO, vicar of St. Andrew's Church, accountant with the firm John C. Stal- took shape around the old gym. Darien, Georgia, reports he has organ- forts and Son, for ninety-five years Work the Rev. Hunter Wyatt- ized a new congregation in Hinesville, makers of waxes, polishes, and aerosol Brown, Jr., PDT, began four years agD which, as the fourth mission organized dispensers. He continues his ministry in founding St. Andrew's School for in two months in the diocese, repre- on a supply basis. Address: 1309 Croi- Boys at Boca Raton, Florida, is being sents a recard for growth. In less than ton Road, Baltimore, Maryland 21212. enlarged. His second school sponsored a month, he says, the mission secured Paul Tudor Tate, Jr.. SAE, spent a by the Episcopal School Foundation of and paid for four acres of land, trans- good part of the spring as chairman of Florida is St. Ann's School for Girls, ferred sixteen members with thirty the Mobile area, getting under way the which will open September 29. Th.3 more writing for their letters, had ten Alumni and Friends campaign. The boys' school has had great success in a confirmation class and has recently Major Gifts portion, under the direc- since its founding and has an enroll- baptized four children and two adults. tion of Julian R. deOvies, '29, ATO, has ment of 220 young men, which repre- 1942 been very productive. sents capacity for the present facilities. Dr. Ben F. Cameron, KA, was 1935 There is already a waiting list for six elected to the board of directors of the The Ven. Fred G. Yerkes will have years hence. Southern Education Reporting Service, an area in the Baden-Powell Boy Scout 1939 which was organized to report de- Camp near Keystone Heights named in Commander Cyril Best, SN, has been segregation news shortly after the 1954 his honor. Yerkes has been active in named to the post of executive assist- Supreme Court ruling against school scouting for twenty-five years and has ant to the suffragan bishop for the segregation. organized troops in a number of Flori- armed forces. After twenty-three years E. Cress Fox, SAE, is manager for da communities. of navy service, he assumed his new the Pacific, Far East, and Latin Ameri- Arthur Ben Chitty, SN, made the duties September 1. ca for Central Soya's chemurgy di- dean's list of historians when Merle Zan Guerry, son of Alex Guerry, vision, Chicago. Curti in his monumental The Growth SAE, won his second national sixteen- The Rev. Robert T. Gibson, ATO, of American Thought noted (p. 857): and-under tennis tournament of the preached his first sermon as dean of "Arthur Benjamin Chitty, Jr., Recon- summer August 8, when he defeated Christ Church Cathedral in Houston, struction at Sewanee: The Founding Mike Estep of Dallas in the Golden Texas, August 1. He moved to the of the University of the South, and its Anniversary Junior and Boys Tennis Cathedral after serving as rector of First Administration, 1857-1872 (Uni- St. Clement's Church, El Paso, since versity of the South Press, 1954), is a 1954. He is married to the former charming and brief account of the early Mary Frances Hanes and they have ears of that institution." two children. j announced Samuel C. King, SAE, is president of The White House 1943 the Alexandria, Virginia, Savings and the start of another search foi William S. Moise, PGD, has been Loan Company. He recently took a outstanding young Americans tc painting more than one hundred pic- cruise on the carrier Franklin D. participate in the second annual tures a year since moving to Maine in Roosevelt with a group of distinguish- 1952, and now is working on a book White House Fellows program. ed civic leaders. which will express his ideas on the 1936 The program, open to all occu- methods of art. He has sold several Richard B. Wilkens, Jr., DTD, is pations, offers a year's experience paintings in Sewanee and has won proudly watching his son, Rickey, get- in the Federal government. Fel- numerous awards for his work, in- ting ready to enter the University in cluding the 1964 Gold Medal in the lows for the program began September. Houston, Texas, alumni 1965 Sharon, Connecticut, Creative Arts with assure Rickey that he is to feel no work in the White House, Foundation Annual Exposition, first pressure to equal Dick's record of Vice-President Humphrey and prizes in the 1961, 1962 and 1963 Ban- earning his Phi Beta Kappa key in his with the ten Cabinet officers, on gor, Maine, Art Society shows, and the first three years. Grand Prize at the 1964 Bangor State September 1. In addition tc 1937 Fair. their work, the Fellows will take Bishop Henby I. Louttit of Souih William O. Beach, SAE, holds two Florida, who won a Bronze Star as a part in an intensive educational jobs in Montgomery County, Tennes- chaplain in the Pacific during World program. The program is being see. He's both county judge and criminal War II and rose to the rank of lieuten- financed by the Carnegie Corp- judge, a set-up unique in ant colonel before retiring from the Tennessee government, and guaranteed oration with Fellows receiving service after twenty years' duty, re- by a private act passed by the Tennes- | 1 enlisted recently as a private and was stipends (based upon age) rang- see Legislature in 1870. assigned to reserve duty as assistant ing from $7,500 to $12,000 with Robert Kirk Walker, Chattanooga lawyer, was elected to to Capt. Walter B. Peterson, '57, a an additional $1,500 for a mar- the presidency priest of his diocese. Explains Bishop of the Tennessee Bar Association. He ried man and $500 for each child. Louttit, "I thought I had twenty years took office at the association's June inquiries and re- of service when I retired, but some Nominations, meeting in Nashville. He was also j time ago the army told me the first four quests for application blanks named to the advisory committee of months of my service were not count- should be addressed to the Com- the state's Government-Industry-Law ed, and to get full credit I had to spend Center. mission on White House Fellows, another four months on reserve duty." E. Graham Roberts, SAE, is chief of [ The White House, Washington. I Of necessity, the bishop missed some readers' services at the library of

I of the Sunday drills but made up the Deadline is October 15, 1965. Georgia Institute of Technology in At- time at the summer field training ses- lanta. He has held this post since 1959.

August 1965 27 After receiving his B.A. at Sewanee in 1943, he received his B.S. in Library Science at Emery in 1948 and his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia in 1950. He is married to the former Anna Jean Walker of Durham and they have three children: Galer, thirteen, Ned, Jr., eleven, and John, six. T. Ray Jones is in Sweden to carry on research in hospital management in a number of Swedish and European hospitals. He attended the Interna- tional Hospital Congress meeting in Stockholm and has conferred with officials of the World Health Organi- zation. He has been administrator of the Jackson-Madison County, Tennes- see, Hospital for the past six years. Chaplain W. Armistead Boardman. ATO, became a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force in July and was selected as the only chaplain to attend the ten- month Air War College at Maxwell AFB, Alabama. He spent the month of June on leave at his home, Xanadu, in Sewanee. Son Tommy is a student, in the College. 1944

George Knox Cracraft, Jr., PDT, lay ttanooga News Free Pre is trustee from Arkansas, is son of the '47, to late George Cracraft, '12, also a long- The August 21 wedding of James G. Cate, Margaret West time trustee. But you ought to see the Wheland at the Lookout Mountain Church of the Good Shepherd Sewanee pedigree of his wife. Kath- certainly interested Sewanee alumni. Clippings of the approaching flooded the office all points of the leen Hagan Cracraft is the daughter of marriage alumni from compass Frank E. Hagan, '13, the granddaughter for weeks prior to the ceremony. of the late Alfred M. Hagan, '87, PDT, and the niece of William R. Hagan, '21, PDT. She went to Ward Belmont and Peter O'Donnell, Jr., PDT, has been a position as customer service manager met George at Sewanee. They have named a director in the new-born for Engineering Chemical Processes, no sons but are wealthy with daugh- American Conservative Union. Head- Inc., a company which manufactures ters: Kathy, eighteen; Jean, sixteen; quarters have been set up near the electronic equipment. He had been Susan, fourteen; and Judy, ten. Ad- capitol in Washington, a $400,000 bud- living in Curacao, where he was con- dress: P. O. Box 630, Helena, Arkan- get approved for the first year, and nected with Radio and TV-Caribe. The sas. Birch Society members barred from top Mitchell family are living at 1902 The Rev. Hunley A. Elebash, SAE. leadership. The goal is to build an Montecito Ave. No. 5, Mountain View, has been made executive secretary of "in-depth conservative voice . . . totally California. the diocese of East Carolina and will responsible . . . which will keep the work in Wilmington, directly under 1948 Republican party on the course set at Bishop Thomas H. Wright, '26, SN. James F. Govan assumed duties as San Francisco last July." 1945 librarian at Swarthmore College Leonidas Polk Bills Emerson, KS, June 1, moving from Trinity Univer- The Rev. Archer Torre * is building a is of Office of Opinions and sity, he head librarian retreat in Korea to be known as "Jesus chief the where had been Review of the Federal Communica- since 1961. His appointment at Swarth- Abbey," which is best described as a Washington, D. C. coincides the planning of 'place of prayer and study." Return- tions Commission, more with R. Bland Mitchell, PDT, has taken the school's new library. He holds his ing to Korea in May after nearly a Ph.D. in history Hopkins. year in the United States and England, from Johns is married to the Bright he participated in the consecration of He former Ann of Lookout Mountain, and has four the first Korean bishop. He asks children, three a daughter. friends to address correspondence (es- sons and Dr. E. Rex Pinson, pecially Christmas cards) to P. O. Box SN, has been ap- pointed assistant director of the 17, Hwangji, Kangwondo, Korea. The pharmacological research department Torreys have adopted a daughter, of Pfizer's medical research labora- Yancey Clare Myong-Ja, born May .5, tories in Groton, Connecticut. 1963, in Korea. A specialist in biochemical pharmacology, 1947 he has been with Pfizer since 1951, Josfph B. Cumming, Jr., SAE, of taking the position immediately after Atlanta, writing in the May 3 issue of receiving his Ph.D. from the University Newsweek, said, "The contrast between of Rochester. He met his wife at the smoky Mystic Cafe in Montgomery Pfizer's laboratories, where they were at the end of the march from Selma both employed. Thev have three child- and the golf-tanned young Columbia ren and live at 23 Lloyd Road, Water- businessman talking of new industry ford, Connecticut. is so vast that it's like two different countries with separate languages and 1949 James F. McMullan, KA, has been customs. . . . But both are South, and of the I defy anyone to find a more exciting manager of the Atlanta Agency place to be." State Mutual Life Insurance Company Dr. Jchn Fox has been appointed to for the past year. the faculty of the Bowman-Gray James Rutland Moore, SAE, was School of Medicine as assistant profes- married June 26 to Edith Hacker Ship- Pennsylvania. They sor of anesthesiology. His wife, Dr. ley in Philadelphia, Nashville, Elisabeth J. Fox, has also received a live on Sewanee Road in faculty appointment in anesthesiology. The Rev. Archer Torrey, '45 Tennessee.

28 The Sewanee News Morcan Watkins, ATO, was married J. Burton, both former vice presidents in June to Mary Rogers at the Pulaski, of Liller Neal Battle and Lindsay 3n jjHrmortam Tennessee, First Presbyterian Church. of Atlanta, announce the formation of They are living at Ingleside Farm* the Burton-Campbell, Inc., advertising Athens, Tennessee. and public relations agency in Atlanta, Martin Eugene Morris, SN, an at- with offices at 812 Bankers Fidelity * torney, is admitting his father to prac- Life Building, 2045 Peachtree Road, tice in his firm as soon as his father N. E., Atlanta. Mr. Campbell is mar- gets his law degree. ried to the former Anne Dodd and has Gilbert Gilchrist, KS, associate pro- two daughters, Gary and Lila. fessor of political science at Sewanee, The Rev. Edward H. Eckel, Jr., GST, is adviser to the Fulbright program has had the parish hall at Ti'inity and serves as local representative of Church, Tulsa, named in his honor. the Woodrow Wilson National Fellow- William R. Johnson, KS, has been ship committee. He and his wife, promoted from assistant cashier to as- Mary Rose, have four children, the sistant vice-president of the Union birth of none of whom (the most ob- Bank and Trust Company, Montgom- vious news always being the most easi- ery. He has been with the bank's in- ly passed over) has been noted in this stallment loan department since 1961. periodical. The Rev. Fred J. Bush is archdeacon John P. Guerry, SAE, has been of the diocese of Mississippi, a position named chairman of the United Fund which will have him administering the Campaign for the Greater Chattanoog.. details of the diocesan office, supervis- area to be conducted this fall. He has ing the vacant congregations, co- been active in many phases of the ordinating the diocesan departments, United Fund work before and as cam- and supervising promotion and pub- paign chairman this year will head ap- licity. His office will be located at the The Rt. Rev. James Moss Stoney, '11 proximately 3,000 volunteers who will diocesan headquarters in St. Andrew's solicit funds. Church, Jackson. 1950 John Patrick Walker, KS, has been John M. Ford, '00, SAE, whose ser- Dr. Selden Henry, ATO, and wife appDinted to the faculty of Sewanee vice to the city of Shreveport, Louisi- adopted daughter, their Joan have a Military Academy as a French instruc- ana, spanned nearly half a century, second child, on April 6. She was tor. returns He to the Mountain after died in July, prompting city officials christened Ann Elizabeth June 27 at having taught at the School, Bell Webb to pay tribute to the "man who per- Trinity Church, Gainesville, Holy Buckle, Tennessee. He completed work sonally maintained financial stability Florida. The father is a member of in the for Sewanee Summer School his at city hall for more than thirty-five the departments of social sciences master's degree in education from the years as an elected official." His first and history at the University of Flori- University of Virginia. elective office came in 1908 when he da. 1951 became a city councilman. After that Cothran Campbell, SAE, and J. W. David DePatie, PGD, was a co-win- he became mayor in 1916, and con- ner for the best short subject at the tinued in that position until 1922, when Academy Awards presentation during he entered private business. In 1930 the spring. He was a "lest" member he won the position of finance com- The wedding of Mary Rhea Cravens, of the class of 1951, but the name jar- missioner, a job he held for the rest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William M. red the memory of the Rev. W. L. of his life. He is survived by his Cravens '29, KA, to Jeffrey Arthur Hicks, '49, SN, who was watching the widow, the former Mary Louise Mandel in the garden of her parents show. He looked for DePatie's picture Pearce. home in Winchester, Tennessee, turned in his senior year Cap and Gown but Roger English Wheless, '06, KA, into a Sewanee alumni reunion. The could not find it and wrote the alumni operator of the Alden Plantation in rehearsal dinner was given by Mr. and office to ask if movie producer DePatie Louisiana, died May 25. He had been Mrs. T. D. Ravenel III, '37, SAE, Mr. and University student DePatie were a dealer in lumber and pulp wood be- and Mrs. Fain Cravens, '34, KA, Mr. the same. They were. fore becoming a farmer. The family '39, and Mrs. R. R. Cravens, KA, and The Rev. Marion J. Hatchett has had been prominent in the affairs of Mr. and Mrs. DuVal Cravens, '29, KA, written Music for the Church Year, a Caddo and Bossier Parishes since they bride. all aunts and uncles of the handbook for clergymen, organists and moved to Louisiana in 1895. He is Alumni attending were Mr. and Mrs. choir directors, which may well prove survived by his widow, Mrs. Katherine Morey Hart, '34, SAE, Mr. and Mrs. to be a useful reference for clergy and Breazeale Wheless; a daughter, a son, F. R. Freyer, '29, DTD, Mr. and Mrs. music directors not only of the Epis- a sister and a brother, N. Hobson Whe- '29, Edward Berry, DTD. Mr. and Mrs. copal Church but of other churches as less, '13. Roger Wheless was one of Ezzell, '31, John PDT, Mr. and Mrs. well. The book builds its compilation four brothers who came to Sewanee, Haskell DuBose, '32, ATO, Mr. and of hymns, anthems and organ music two of whom died before he did. They Mrs. Stanyarne Burrows, '29, SAE. around the calendar of the Christian were Wesley, '04, and Eakin, '16. Year, utilizing the Hymnal as the basis The Rt. Rev. James Moss Stoney, '11, for the hymns selected and the ser- DTD, retired Bishop of New Mexico vice music recommended. The book and Southwest Texas, died July 19, in was published by the Sea bury Press. Albuquerque. Bishop Stoney held the Frank Glass, Jr., KS, editor of the B.A., B.D., and D.D. degrees from Se- Dayton Herald, was recently elected wanee and was a member of the 1909 president of the Dayton, Tennessee, championship football team. He was Chamber of Commerce. rector of Grace Church, Anniston, Ala- Phil Smith was recently awarded bama, for twenty-one years before his the Distinguished Service Award for election to the episcopate in 1942. Up- 1964 by the Talladega, Alabama, Jay- on assuming office as missionary bish- ctes. He has practiced law in Talla- op he set forth a ten-year plan to con- dega since 1958, when he graduated vert the district into a self-supporting from the University of Alabama Law diocese. Diocesan status was achieved School. He is presently serving as at the 1952 General Convention. He chairman of the Chcaha District of the retired in 1956 and then wrote Light- Boy Scouts. Chairman of the Tallad;^.i ing the Candle: The Story of the Public Library, and is president of the Episcopal Church on the Upper Rio Talladega County Bar Association. He Grande. He is survived by his widow, is married to the former Catherine the former Nora Louise Green, three Wellbaum and has four children. sons, ten grandchildren, and a brother,

August 1965 29 he Rev. William S. Stoney, '20, SAE. taught at Sewanee Military Academy, I "My father is a great Sewanee man following his retirement from the U. S. and has been so to the very end," the Navy. Rev. James M. Stoney, Jr., '38, wrote (Billy) just before his father's death. William North Wilkerson, '38, in the Missis- I Samuel S. Faulkner, 12, KA, alum- DTD, was drowned nus of College and Academy, died sippi River at Memphis in June. Prob- ' ably in a dazed condition after an ' April 8, of a coronary occlusion, at the Veterans' Hospital in Memphis. He automobile mishap, he walked into the I river called for lived in Wynne, Arkansas. but help which the him. Willis Frierson Armstrong, '13, KA, current prevented reaching He called a "tireless civic leader died June 22 in Nashville. A farmer was and near Columbia, Tennessee, he was a business dynamo" who in four years bought or started than twenty I deacon in the Presbyterian Church. He more

plants with more than 1,200 employees | is survived by his wife and two daugh- but had had financial difficulties. He ; ters. had a distinguished career at Sewanee I The Rev. John M. Nelson, 17, KA, pnd was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. an active minister in the Episcopal He was president of the class of 1938, Church for more than forty years, and during World War II was a captain | died at the age of seventy-seven on in the army. Survivors include a wife July 10 at his home in Chestertown, and three daughters. Maryland. He began his ministry The Rev. James Y. Perry, Jr., '43, after being ordained as deacon by died cf a heart attack June 10 during Bishop Gailor of Tennessee. His first The Rev. James Y. Perry, Jr., '43 vesper services at the boys' camp he assignment was to the Indian tribes in operated at Sky Valley near Brevard, Montana. From there he went to North Carolina. He had recently been Minnesota, to Christ Church Cathedral for the U. S. Senate against Clifford appointed to positions as executive in Louisville, to Indiana as diocesan Case, losing while President Kennedy officer of Appalachia South, Inc., and missioner, to Connecticut and in 1948 won the state. He then propelled form- as president of the Asheville-Bun- to St. Paul's Church in Kent County, er law partner Richard Hughes to the combe Ministerial Association. He hp.d Maryland. He retired in 1959. He governorship in 1962. operated the pioneer camp for boys was president of the ministerial as- William Hadley Leavell, '28, KS, in the Transylvania Mountains for sociations cf Louisville and Kent died February 13, 1965, after suffering eighteen years while attending semin- County and was twice a trustee of the a heart attack. His home was Bastrop, ary at Sewanee and at the Berkeley University representing the dioceses of Louisiana, where he was a Studebaker Divinity School and serving in the Kentucky and Easton. In 1931-32, he dealer. "He always so enjoyed receiv- diocese of Western North Carolina, served as a regent. ing news about his college friends at most recently as executive secretary. "I His survivors include his widow, Mrs. Noel Paton, 18, ATO, retired com- Sewanee," his widow wrote. want Lewellyn LaBruce Perry, a son and mercial photographer and owner of ex- to thank you for remembering to send daughter and his father, tensive Fayetteville, North Carolina, it." James Y Perry, 18, ATO. His mother was the real estate, died May 2. A veteran of William Wallace Anderson Childs, only sister of Vice-Chancellor Alex- World War One, he was awarded the '31, of Pine Acres, Spartanburg, South ander Guerry. From Western North Distinguished Service Cross, two Pur- Carolina, died in May. A mechanical Carolina has come a $25,000 scholar- ple Hearts and the Legion of Valor. engineer, at the time of his death he ship in his memory. served with the Sewanee Ambu- He was an instructor with the Spartan- lance Unit. The funeral service was burg Technical Education Center. He Duwain Hughes, '45, one of the best conducted by the Rev. Roscoe C. Hau- organists in Texas, died had spent many years at Redstone known in ser, Jr., '29, PGD. Mrs. Paton died March at San Angelo, after fighting a Arsenal, Huntsville, Alabama. He is several years ago. of several years against diabe- survived by his wife, a daughter and battle tes. He was organist for Emmanuel two sisters, who married alumni Steph- Charles W. Warterfield, Sr., '23, Episcopal Church en E. Puckette, '06, and the Rev. A. G. and had conducted PDT, vice-president of First American concerts there. B. Bennett, '09. many National Bank, Nashville, and former Dr. Perrin H. Lowrey, '47, was killed city manager and commissioner of the Thomas Miller, '35, died July 27 in June 23 in an automobile accident on city of Belle Meade, Tennessee, died hospital. was technical a New York He the campus of Sweet Briar College, June 21 at Vanderbilt Hospital, where director of the National Gypsum In- where he and his family spent several he had entered a week earlier for sur- dustrial Division and had been Sales summers. He had headed the Univer- gery. Prominent in civic affairs, he was honored for achievement by the com- sity of Chicago's undergraduate Hu- a former treasurer of the Nashville pany in recent years. He was twice manities Section since 1962 and had Area Chamber of Commerce and a serving his second term as a member taught at Vassar and Sweet Briar since member of the official board of the of the session of the Deerhurst United he earned the Ph.D. at the University West End Methodist Church. He is Presbyterian Church. He is survived of Chicago. He was the author of a survived by his wife, a daughter and by his widow, Mrs. Georgia Lester new collection of short stories, The a son, Charles W., Jr., who graduated Beasley Miller, his parents, Mr. and Great Speckled Bird, the title story of from Sewanee Military Academy in Mrs. John S. Miller of Winchester, two which first appeared in the Sewanee 1944. sisters and brothers. two Review. A week before he died he heard to reminisce about Sewanee. Gaston M. Woodward, '23, KS, died Mrs. William L. Ware, FS '38, died was saying that at Chicago he February 6 of a heart attack in Okla- on April 29 in Virginia, where she never had been able to establish a relationship homa City. He was in the insurance lived at Woodstock. A matriculant of with a student comparable to the one business. He is survived by his wife, the Sewanee French School in 1938, he had had with Abbo Martin. is Mrs. Alyne F. Woodward. she was the former Darrell Jervey, He survived his wife, Janet, a son, and Thorn Lord, '26, ATO, was a suicide whose father, Maj. Gen. James P. by a daughter with victim in Princeton, New Jersey, June Jervey, taught mathematics at Se- who was him when his car swerved and wrecked. 17. He was long a power in New Jer- wanee, and whose father-in-law, Dr. sey politics and had been since 19til Sedley L. Ware, was head of the his- chairman of the Democratic party in tory department for forty years. A- T. Grady Head, named an honorary the state. He had been successful in mong many alumni relatives is W. alumnus by the Alumni Council in 1954 in electing Gov. Robert Meyner Porter Ware, '26, present registrar of 1959, presiding justice of the Georgia after the state had had ten years of the University. She lived at Sewanee Supreme Court, died in Atlanta June Republican rule, but proved less suc- most recently in the 1950's when her 7 after an operation to remove a tu- cessful himself in 1960 when he ran husband, Captain William L. Ware, mor.

30 The Sewanee News Gentlemen . . The Vice-Chancellor

(continued from pack 2) the campaign as the Bishop Frank A. Julian Living proportion to size of the institution (its number of Memorial Fund. students and alumni), the Foundation made no other In addition to these three men I must mention Dean proposal so exacting as that to Sewanee. They explain Robert S. Lancaster, who sacrificed part of a Fulbright this on the grounds that they wanted to prod us into Visiting Professorship at Seoul National University, greater effort than we might otherwise make, and they Korea, to return to Sewanee and give his full time to estimated our potential as sufficient for this objective. the campaign during its last six months. In this new If we succeed, as apparently now we shall, our joy and work he has served so well that the Regents have thankfulness should be unparalleled. asked him to continue for a year as successor to Bish-

I hesitate to single out individual names for special op Juhan after the latter*s retirement on August 51. thanks, because I cannot possibly list all who have To all these men we are, and always will be, im- made truly sacrificial contributions to this great cause; measurably indebted. After the campaign has been but surely I can no omit personal tributes to those completed an exhaustive analysis will be prepared and who officially sneered the campaign. Our two Co- published, which will recognize the contributions and Chairmen, the Woods brothers, simply could not have efforts of many more individuals and groups to whom been improved upon. The death of Mr. J. Albert I cannot do full justice in this short account; but be-

\\ ix ds in the midst of the campaign was a tragedy for fore closing I want to acknowledge a special debt of all who love Sewanee. His work on this campaign was gratitude to one group who exceeded all expectations only the last in a life-long series of services to his Alma by such a margin as should never be forgotten. I re- Mater, which will be permanently benefited by his in- fer to the large number of alumni and friends who fluence. Mr. G. Cecil Woods, we are thankful to have individually could not give large amounts, but who still with us; though how he survived the grueling showed their devotion by sending anything from one pace which he set for himself is really hard to under- dollar to a thousand. Originally our planners set a stand. If we had employed him as a full-time profes- goal of $500,000 for this group. When that was over- sional, not possibly he could have worked harder, or subscribed, a new objective of $750,000 was set. A; given more of his time, than he did as a volunteer the time of writing, nearly 4,000 of these donors have (which propably should have been written with a sent in almost $1,000,000, and their checks are still capital while his Y) he continued role of chief executive arriving in every mail. They will each receive acknowl- of a great corporation. \\ ithout his dedicated and edgement, of course, but I shall never be able to thank tireless efforts the campaign could not have succeeded. every one of them in as personal a way as I should Bishop Frank A. Juhan, our Director of Develop- like. I can only say publicly that collectively their ment, his has continued triumphant career as Se- contribution has been magnificent, and that their wit- wanee's most successful money raiser. For many years, ness to Sewanee's importance is inspiring. since his retirement as Diocesan of Florida, he has de- voted his unsurpassed talents freely and wholly to the Most gratefully yours, development of Sewanee. and with such distinguished success that the Trustees in June decided to designate &£vzk4 k$&i.<**£< the gifts to the University in the last twelve weeks of r

August 1965 3i AMERICAN ALUMNI COUNCIL 19G5

In recognition of distinguished service to alma mater

and to education through organized alumni effort,

the American Alumni Council gratefully confers this

Honor Citation for Alumni Service

on cAlumni ^Association oltkUmvmilv oftfteSouth fbvits

cmtsUndin^ record ofsupport oj\Alma iMater

2l ^jJ, President

,5 ' Secretary-Treasurer November, 1965 Sewanee News 1

THE Guerry Hall Events Sewanee Spark Mountain NEWS Concerts Committee: Professors Guenther, Caldwell, Lockard, McCrory, Ralston, Running; Mr. Robert- son; Eric Peterson, '66. The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the ASSOCIATED ALUMNI The University Concert Series of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennes- Sept. 30, 8:15 p.m.—All Saints'. William MacGowan, see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee. Organist Oct. 22, 8:15 p.m.—The Turnau Opera Players R. Hart, '34 Morey Nov. 7, 3:30 p.m.—The Krainis Baroque Trio President of the Associated Alumni Dec. 10, 8:15 p.m.—Victoria de los Angeles, soprano

Jan. 9, 3:30 p.m.—The Juilliard String Quartet Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35 Feb. 13, 3:30 p.m.—All Saints', Michael Schneider, Managing Editor Edith Whitesell Organist

Mar. 6, 3:30 p.m.—Charles Rosen, pianist Associate Editor Albert S. Gooch, Jr. April 1, 8:15 p.m.—Paul Doktor/Yaltah Menuhin, Consulting Editor Elizabeth N. Chitty viola-piano duo

James G. Cate, Jr., '47, Vice-President for Bequests; Dr. L. Spires The Sewanee Cinema Guild Whitaker, '31, Vice-President for Capital Funds; Dudley C. Fort, (All at 8:15 p.m.) '34, Vice-President for Regions; John Harmon Nichols, '51, Vice- President for Church Support; William E. Ward, III, A'45, Vice- Sept. 24: The White Sheik, a film by the director of President for SRIJ; Rev. Tracy H. Lamar, \i, Vice-President for La Dolce Vita St. Luke's; Robert M. Ayres, Jr., '49, Vice-President for Classes; Oct. 8: La Strada, a film by the director of La Dolce John W. Woods, '54, Vice-President for Admissions; James W. Vita Gentry, Jr., '50, Recording Secretary; Dr. 0. Morse Kochtitzky, '42, Treasurer; Ben Humphreys McGee, '49, Athletic Board of Oct. 21: This Sporting Life (sporting life is not quite Control. sporting in this English film)

Nov. 5: Girl with the Golden Eyes, exotic tale from Balzac Nov. 19: Lavender Hill Mob, an Alec Guinness CONTENTS comedy

Dec. 3 : Lazarillo, the picaresque adventures of an 3 Founders' Day urchin in 16th century Spain 6 On and Off the Mountain Dec. 15: Nothing But a Man. The man is a Negro in the South, in this award-winning film. 1 Sports Jan. 14: Seduced and Abandoned, comedy Italian- 1 1 Club Circuit style

12-18 Class Distinctions Feb. *: Red Desert, the latest film by Antonioni of l'Avventura fame 19 Sewanee Books for Christmas Feb. 25: The Overcoat, fine Russian production of the Gogol short story Mar. 14: Orpheus, according to Jean Cocteau April 7: Rules of the Game, subtle French satire November 1965 Volume 3 Number 4 April 29: To Die in Madrid, during the Spanish Civil War May 13: Beat the Devil, with Humphrey Bogart and ON THE COVER: A section of the narthex windows of A;l Gina Lollobrigida Saints' Chapel, from a cut made by the Nashville Banner. The scene took place in March, 1866, when Bishop Charles *Check date in Guerry Lobby. T. Quintard, with the Rev. Thomas A. Morris, the Rev. John A. Merrick, Major George R. Fairbanks, and a few persons The Purple Masque who had stayed on the Mountain through the war held a simple religious service around a twelve-foot cross in the Nov. 11, 12, 13: Rhinoceros, by Eugene Ionesco woods, with Quintard concluding: "I hereby re-establish the University of the South." Mar. 10, 11, 12: Play to be announced —

Renewal on Founders' Day

ADDRESS

BY

ROBERT S. LANCASTER

very university, every school of sound learning, may be easily abstracted. There was the tradition that

is is continuously engaged in a process of evalua- politics worthy of the concern of good men. In the E tion and interpretation. Since institutional lives days of our founders the best men aspired to political are corporate they must inevitably become involved office. The electorate took pride in elevating to high political position the man whom they considered un- in problems of self-identity and personality evolution. common, accomplished, elevated. Both at the national This self-appraisal, this half-conscious introspection, ,s and local levels the words politics and politician were always concerned with history, with status, with style respectable words evoking connotations of talent and and image, with inner fears, with outer confidence, honor. The new states aped the old in seeking out even with fleeting moments of self-gratification. It their own Jefferson or Calhoun. is always the product of mind at work; it is inevitably From the standpoint of political principle and theory colored by the value preferences of those who articu- this Anglican society favored the balanced constitution, late. Out of this dialogue there sometimes emerges, with its emphasis upon local responsibility, feared however, a clearer image and a strengthened will. The centralized power because it knew men were tainted process is perilous, for out of it sometimes comes with original sin and the most easily corrupted of all frustration, disagreement and doubt. Nevertheless, on animals because susceptible to the brain-filling in- this October Founders' Day, boldly we shall partici- toxication of overweening pride, preferred a democracy pate in this process as both a corporate act of piety guided by a parliament rather than a plebiscite and and a personal exercise of interpretation. dedicated to freedom rather than equality. Every Sewanee's founders and early sustainers were men man they knew to be a child of God, but every man of their times and region. They were the products a king, with his own social security number, registra- of the culture which molded them and the ideas that tion number, and finger-printed rather than God-given were then acceptable. But in addition they were the identity, would have been considered not only danger- inheritors of a very old Anglican and Christian way ous but perhaps errant and certainly foolish. Like of life which is still active and potent. The South for Bagehot they believed that the progress of free so- which they expected to build a great university—the cieties was from status to contract, from rights en- University of the South—was at the very peak of in- joyed by virtue of group memberships to rights ob- fluence and powers, proud, self-confident, legalistic, tained by individual agreement. Our founders spoke oratorical, rationalistic and romantic at one and the for a society that had deep respect for hierarchical same time and deeply religious. Our founders ac- social structure. Generations before, their intellectual cepted and articulated the myths and values of their forebears had quite generally supported King and society. Bishop. They resisted the leveling and homogenizing This society had inherited a complex of standards influences of egalitarian social forces. Especially did and values. These they had fashioned to their needs they value the rights of privacy. Surely they would and uses. To abstract them is to help understand have snorted at the idea that private clubs and fra- the peculiar ethos of this University and to realize ternities should be denied the right to select their own that this institutional personality is not a Berea or associates. They insisted on the maintenance of differ- an Oberlin or even a Reed or a Haverford, however ence based upon attainment, education, character, and admirable these colleges mav be. Some of these ideas yes—even birth. Yet they created an operand elite

November 1965 Out of dialogue . . . a strengthened will

poise, a respect for self and others, a sense of human dignity. A decent regard for manner, dress, speech

is surely the symbol of civilized life and in many respects the most striking difference between beast

and man. If a pig in a dinner jacket is incongruous

and absurd, a man in public in his underwear is also. Our founders came from people who loved beauty. Gracious lawns, fine gardens, lovely homes, great one into which men of imagination, energy and talent music, gave them delight and sharpened their might ascend. pride. Good, well-constructed and handsome furniture gave This Anglican and Christian culture placed great satisfaction. Libraries were a necessity, good food value upon the rights of private property both as a of no lesser significance. With all of this went the sure necessary concomitant of character and personality confidence that material standards of success are not development and as a bulwark of freedom. Like enough, that wealth is not enough, that a plutocracy Harrington, to whom a memorial window in this is not only disgusting and sordid but erosive and de- Chapel is dedicated, the men of this culture believed structive of the best aspirations of the human spirit. that political power follows economic power. The No counting-house philosophy motivated their actions; wider the distribution of property the greater the no greengrocer penury marred their humanity. possibility of political participation and political free- dom. They were fortunate, too, because a great A Godly Society continent partially unseized and unpossessed lay be- Finally, this was a godly society. The sweet, fore them. Men of energy might take and hold what ameliorative mission of Christianity was accepted and they could. The holding of property they believed to Christ was worshiped. The jarring impact of science involve responsibility arising from the more complete had scarcely been felt, and mathematical physics had and numerous choices of action made available by the not yet proclaimed the doctrine of reductionism that greater freedom of action afforded. Then, too, they — all things whatever are intelligible ultimately in terms had before thqm the unfortunate spectacle of a class of of the laws of inanimate nature. men who held no property, but were themselves Our founders knew well the advantages of educa- property. Though many were the ingenious argu- tion. Since there were few, if any, universities in the ments for excusing and rationalizing this practice, South that offered first-rate opportunities for their certainly the best and most sensitive minds recognized sons, they sent them to England, to Europe, to our this evil for what it was and looked forward to the eastern universities and to West Point. They desired day when no man might own another as property. for their sons an education that was not narrow and Dominion they knew to be another thing, and they functional but broad and liberal. They preferred knew, too, that slavery takes many and sophisticated scientists who were humanists and humanists forms. who were scientists. Out of a desire to provide in the South We Sprang From a Family Culture a university that could do for their young men in this The culture from which we sprang was a family respect what the great universities of the world did for culture. An emphasis upon family responsibility and their students, came this University. family honor came easily to people whose fortunes As William Porcher DuBose remarked in 1905: "Se-

were bound up with the earth into which we all go. wanee will have more and more a mission all her own,

This family-structured society knew that heritage and and will not be lacking in a constituency of her own, if breeding are important. No special training in genetics she will prepare her best service for those who desire

was necessary to demonstrate the significance of breed- to be educated not for labor, but for life. It used to

ing. Life afforded on every hand a thousand examples. be said that life is lived in the leisure that follows On every side were growing crops and fecund animals labor—not necessarily a leisure divorced from labor, and blooming flowers. for that is not true leisure; but a leisure won by and

This society was concerned with gentility and civility from labor to attend to the higher needs of life, the

and good manners both as an adornment of life and needs of every human soul to know something of the as a means of reducing the friction of human associa- Truth, to have some love of the Beautiful, to do some tion. Manners, dress, speech were important because of the Good that needs to be done in the world." they were outward signs of inner worth. They reflect This then is to me the best of our heritage. If I

The Sewanee News have abstracted what I like best and disregarded the on party week-ends and the indecency of too much

rest, it is because I believe only the best should be freedom. It brings in its train not joy but restlessness, preserved and venerated. A century has passed since vague unease, and actual unhappiness. For this some,

this culture flourished and yet we cannot shed, nor if not all, of us are responsible because we do not face should we, the skin of our beginning. Much has been up to the demands of social discipline. We bend to

changed, something distorted, something overlaid and the breeze as though it were a heavy wind. I think obscured. New men, with new ideas, have sometimes this enthroning of informality, this weakness of spirit,

scorned to do homage, yet if much be lost, much re- violates our best heritage.

mains. Whenever we fail in consideration of the rights Yet I do not wholly despair on account of the new

of others, whenever we are less than gentle, less than age of the mass society. In it I find much that is courageous, less than charitable, we deny this best heartening. For teeth grow smaller and brains grow

heritage. When students descend to the base and the larger. As Mr. Herbert J. Mullcr points out, through ignoble they deny this heritage. Whoever among us most of history the privileged aristocracies and priest- who, like Professor Haddock in the drawing room of hoods had their way. If they are responsible for the Madame Clarence, in speech or act "adds indecorum great cultural achievements, they are likewise re- to awkwardness, and impertinence to incivility, ac- sponsible for the tragic failures. Is it surprising that cumulating incongruities, despising what is respectable ordinary men abuse the first real chance they have had and respecting what is despicable," denies this heritage. in history? Can we not find it encouraging that for the first time in history this mass society has quite gener- Our A^e is Sentimental ally accepted the idea that every man ought to have

I am concerned especially today lest we lose that a fair chance at fulfilling himself? part of our heritage that provided an underpinning for sanity and balance. We live not only in a secular We Have a Role To Play world that provides almost unlimited opportunity for All attempts at evolutionary assessment are in a sensual gratification but also we live in an undisciplined sense frustrating and futile, but we have come a long and hysterical world. Of all ages our own is most way in a single century. As Dr. Loren Eiseley has sentimental. It is an age that "weeps for the assassin put it: and finds his victim unpardonable," an age that is "The student asks you, as a child his mother, 'Where predominantly lawless, that too often seeks to re- did I come from?' 'Son,' you say floundering, 'below balance old grievances by demonstration and violence the Cambrian there was a worm.' Or you say, 'There rather than by the orderly methods of legal change. was an odd fish in a swamp and you have his lungs.'

It is an age that listens, often favorably, to the honeyed Or you say, 'Once there was a reptile whose jaw bones wooings of those who invoke the natural law or a are in your ear.' Or you try again, 'There was an ape supposedly higher law. The danger of this is apparent. and his teeth are in your mouth. Your jaw has

There is no agreement on what the higher law is. As shrunk and your skull has risen. You are fish and a result the measure of individual action becomes indi- reptile and a warm-blooded affectionate thing that vidual conscience operating through arbitrary will. dies if it has nothing to cling to when it is young.

Thus the whole fabric of positive law is strained and You are all of these things. You are also a rag doll torn and its civilizing influence is weakened if not lost. made of patches out of many ages and skins. You

Our society needs discipline. Its style is all too began nowhere in particular. You are really an il- often frowzy, its voice strident and complaining, its lusion, one of innumerable shadows in the dying fires posture weak. In our own corporate life this lack of of a mysterious universe. Yesterday you were a low- self-discipline expresses itself in a general slackening browed skull in the river gravel, tomorrow you may be of the sinews of respectability. It results in excesses a fleck of carbon amid the shattered glass of Moscow

or New York. Ninety percent of the world's life is

' already gone.—The pace is stepping up.' Dr. Robert S. Lancaster, the University's spokes- Yes, all these things may be said, but we may say man for Founders' Day, October JO, 1965, is dean as well, "Son, you are the child of God. At your of the College of Arts and Sciences and acting di- birth the world trembled. Beauty you have known rector of development. He brings to this evalua- and pleasure and pain. When you stumbled you tion a background that includes work as teacher lifted your head. When you fell, you arose. No man and commandant of cadets at the Sewanee Mili- knows your destiny, and upon your right hand is the tary Academy, Navy intelligence officer, lawyer, Lord, your keeper." professor of political science for the University of This Mountain, this Sewanee, is a part of the the South, and Fulbright lecturer in Iraq and Ko- ordered Universe. We have a role to play. So let us rea. be about it like men.

November 1965 s THE WHITE HOUSE On and Off the WAS H I N GTO N

September 20, 1965 Mountain . . .

Final Campaign total was $11,018,634.13 in cash Dear Dr. McCrady: received before the August 31 close, with many -- I want to congratulate you on your great victory thousands more still to come in unredeemed pledges. achieving your goal of matching the Ford Foundation's improve- ment grant. The total number of separate gift transactions reached

the unbelievable, figure of 18,222, with 1,934 receipts In a day when our universities are being tested to produce wise and trustworthy leaders for tomorrow from an enormously made out in August alone. There were about 6,000 expanded student population, the support of excellence in individual donors (the campaign office is preparing a education is a vital public responsibility. It is very heartening has been fully accepted by the breakdown for workers) and 1,062 parishes who con- to know that this responsibility friends of Sewanee. tributed to Church Support during the campaign, ninety-eight of them outside the owning dioceses. Naturally, everyone likes, especially, to see excellence in the part of the world we know best. So I feel an added pride Churches sending advance gifts, that they would in Sewanee's success. normally have made in 1966, 1967, 1968, or even 1969, My best wishes to you. numbered sixty-eight, including one outside the own- ing dioceses. South Florida had 114 parishes con- tributing, the champion number for any diocese, with Tennessee second at one hundred. When over a million dollars came to the gift records office in a single day just before the break of the finish tape, ex- citement in the Development Office and on the campus was all but unbearable. The most exciting experience of his life, Bishop Juhan said, "And I don't bar beating management relations. In excellent condition, given Vanderbilt." away only because the company outgrew it and con-

structed a larger computer center, the giant machine is Since Bishop Julian's accession as the University's stored on the fourth floor of the duPont Library await- director of development in more than $18,000,000 1957 ing an advantageous cooperative arrangement with has been raised for Sewanee, exclusive of the $2,500,000 area industries, a sale or trade. The gift came when incentive grant from the Ford Foundation. Some per- the outcome of the campaign was in suspense, and its spective on this sum may be gained by recalling, as psychological impact was profound, Dean Lancaster Dean Lancaster does, that when he came in the 1949 says. entire endowment stood at $3,200,000. The present figure is $14,300,000. Among many "gifts in kind" was a collection of rare books for the library given by Dr. John Rison Jones, The Tiger's purr at making the ten-million-dollar '49, assistant professor of history at Southern Metho- goal by the Ford Foundation deadline took on en- dist University. The books, appraised at several hanced silkiness when Time Magazine noted the thousand dollars, were lovingly garnered over the years achievement in its September 10 issue with the heading, and included such treasures as first editions of Hobbes' "In Appreciation of Excellence" (p. 45), and the Leviathan, Montesquieu's Esprit des Lois, and Se- First Lady wrote a congratulatory letter (see cut en bastian Brandt's Narrenschiff (Ship of Fools). Opened this page and p. 12 infra). An undergraduate idling to a portrait of Chief Sequoyah, one of the three folio through Time magazine on a London street nearly fell volumes of McKenney and Hall's History of the Indian into the Thames, and even the most skilled and ex- Tribes of North America (1837-44) ' s > n a display perienced quibblers found little to quibble about in case in the duPont circulation lobby. Although part- the piece. The article is being reproduced and will be ing with his beloved acquisitions was a severe wrench distributed to the University's entire mailing list. for Jones, he said he thought the books should be made available to more people than was possible One of the biggest last-spurt gifts was an IBM 705 when they remained in his private collection; and computer from the Genesco Company in Nashville, since he could not do as much for the campaign as he appraised at $460,000, obtained through the good wanted to from a professor's salary, he enriched the offices of John Ezzell, '31, the company's director of library's holdings in this way.

The Sewanee News offiv N The library is also richer by an incunabulum, Augns- tini Opuscula, printed by Andreas de Benetis at Venice

in 14H4, given by Joseph P. Crockett of Alexandria, Virginia, and by a yiio,ooo purchase of books in the

field of chemistry from Dr. C. Prentice Gray, Jr., '28, ir memory of his father, who was a professor of Kayden's chemistry. George Wallace, '28, substantially increased the gift. Work It is hard to pick out any one aspect of the last great days of the campaign as more gratifying than

another, but one very moving note was sounded by Acclaimed Keating of people with no obligation to the number whatever EUGENE M. KAYDEN Sewanee who responded to appeals to help it over the hump. A group of professors at Florida State Uni- versity chipped in after listening to the Rev. Hair/ M. Kayden, professor emeritus of eco Douglas, '48. Sara Jane Lundin, twelve-year-old Eugene nomics, who has devoted his retirement to his daughter of Professor and Airs. Robert Lundin, wrote long-time avocation of translating Russian lit- to a friend of her grandmother's, Mr. Harry Deutsch erature, and whose rendering of poems by Pasternak of Chicago, after hearing that he was disappointed was the only volume of poetry by an American author not to have received his usual birthday card while to appear on Time magazine's "Year's Best Books" summering abroad. Sara Jane said the family was selection for 1959, has a new volume out. concerned that Sewanee might not make its campaign Little Tragedies, four short verse dramas by Alex ijoal and why didn't he send them some money. He ander Pushkin, is one of the volumes of Eugene Kay- promptly sent a check, in Sara Jane's care. den's work being brought out by the Antioch Press.

Mr. Kayden's translations were made in 1922 while Smallest corporate donors, if not of the smallest he was teaching at Yale and remained in his literary gift, were five of the six grandchildren of Professor drawer for four decades. Retrieved in they were and Mrs. Stratton Buck, organized for a talent show 1963, revised and polished for this first publication. in the Vice-Chancellor's living room. Ranging in age Sir Maurice Bowi£, warden of College, from seven to nine, the three children of Dr. Al Wadham Oxford, and a world authority on Russian literature, Reynolds, '52, and Helen Buck Reynolds and the two wrote: "I have read the Little Tragedies with the great- eldest of Dr. Xed, '55, and Sally Buck McCrady sold est pleasure and admiration. Their marvelous tickets among the families at $.10 apiece and gave the sim- plicity i:nd clarity is the hardest thing proceeds to Grandpa McCrady "to be matched by the to recapture in English, but you have done so with great skill Ford Foundation." Total: $2.37, duly boosted by and some of the most famous pieces, like the long speech £.79 from Ford monies. Whether the odd three cents of the Baron in the went into expenses (tickets were printed by Waring Covetous Knight, come out with great dramatic impact. I think and Mazie McCrady) or taxes was not clear at this they are among Push- kin's very finest writing. works. The flawless, classical exterior conceals the most remarkable feelings and ideas and confirms the view that Pushkin understood some of

the strangest corners of the human soul. I am delighted that at last justice has been done to them in English." Bowra, writing in the Spring 196, Sezcanee Review,

had compared Mr. Kayden's earlier tr« nslation of Pushkin's Eugene Onegin favorably with that of Gift Records Vladimir Nabokov. Office The Little Tragedies volume is handsomelv printed September 1, 1965 on heavy white paper and is liberally embellished with woodcuts by the outst; nding Russian artist. Vladimir

Favorsky. Born in [886, Favorsky has illustrated Russian editions of T( lstoy, Dostoevsky, Goethe, Pushkin, Gogol, Shakespeare, and others. His work has been exhibited widely in his country and through-

'. out the world. . . and miles to go before I sleep'

November 1965 Architect's drawing of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sewanee Chapter House

The main floor of the house will contain a combina- SAE Rises Anew tion library and chapter room, living quarters for a student house manager, a game room and a kitchen. Members of Sewanee's SAE fraternity, now housed The basement will have a tap room, rest rooms for in storied Rebel's Rest since a February fire destroyed members and guests, and ample storage space. their seventy-nine-year-old house, are looking forward to Midwinter's weekend, the scheduled date of the opening of their new house. The old house was the first built and owned by a Chitty Hurt in Auto Crash chapter of SAE and was a national shrine. It had Enroute Visit College been remodeled in 1958-59 at a cost of approximately To 340,000. Arthur Ben Chitty, '35, was in a one-car automobile Work has already begun on the new house at the crash on his way to St. Paul's College, Lawrenceville, same location. All that will remain of the original Virginia, October 21, an accident in which the Rt. Rev. structure will be the back patio and a diamond-shaped Bravid W. Harris, retired missionary bishop of Li- keystone with the original construction date, 1886. beria and former president of the Fund for Episcopal The new house was designed by Daniel T. McGown, Colleges, died. Bishop Harris, who was driving, appar- '30, SAE, of Memphis. It will have the same basic ently suffered a fatal heart attack. The car went off design as the former house, but over-all dimensions will the road and hit a tree. Mr. Chitty sustained two be slightly larger and it will contain 5,200 square feet cracked vertebrae and three fractured ribs, and while of usable interior floor space, an increase of more than he was in considerable distress the prognosis was good five hundred square feet over the old house. after early reports when his survival was not assured. The estimated cost of the new house is $82,000, plus He was expected to spend at least two months of con- $12,000 for furnishings, of which $68,000 will be pro- valescence at his Sewanee home before returning to vided by insurance. According to house corporation his New York position as president of the Fund for president Harding Woodall, '17, the remaining $26,000 Episcopal Colleges. Mrs. Harris was also injured in will be raised through SAE alumni. "While the house the wreck. seems like rather an expensive undertaking," Mr.

Woodall says, "there is nothing pretentious or sumptu- Bill Majors Killed in Accident ous about it. We have trimmed down as far as we can to get a good, solid, fireproof house. Building Tragedy struck the nation's foremost football family costs are much higher than they have been even in October 18 when Bill Majors, a son of Sewanee's recent years." Coach Shirley Majors, was killed in an automobile-

Brice Construction Company of Birmingham is build- train crash in Knoxville. ing the house under the supervision of a local con- Bill Majors, an assistant football coach at the Uni- tractor. Robert Snowden, '40, SAE, a former chair- versity of Tennessee, was riding to work with two man of the University board of regents, is acting as other Tennessee assistants when their car was struck over-all supervisor of the project. by a train not far from the Majors home.

8 The Sewanee News Keati:ig

Continuity at Sewanee is satisfyingly attested terdiction of uninoculated dogs and cats. At once, a by our never-failing succession of stray cats self-animated committee of our Gownsmen proceeded

and dogs. At the moment, my wife and I are- to round up Sewanee's stray dogs, have them inocu- in a cat phase; my only regret is that our cats object lated, and provide them with collars. Local officers of to our collecting dogs. The cat in the picture is Jack. the law cooperated generously with this enterprise. My wife picked him up under a rosebush in i960. We We have never had more mannerly, better-fed dogs, know, by syllogism, that he is an Abyssinian. We have than during" this summer ot 1965. read that Abyssinians are the most expensive kind of cats, and it is obvious to us that no cat could be mo'c valuable than Jack.

Last spring was a bad time for animals in Tennes- Oo^U^f see. A serious epidemic of rabies brought official in-

November 1965 Tigers Hold 3-1 Mark at Midpoint

A stunning 29-6 defeat at the hands of Austin College in Sherman. Texas, placed the first blot on the record of the 1965 Sewanee football Tigers and left them at the halfway point in the season with a 3-1 record and with four straight conference games ahead. With the conference foes—Centre. Southwestern. Washington and Lee. and Washington University—all pointing for the Sewanee game. Coach Shirley Majors' team was faced with a struggle to repeat as College Athletic Conference football champions. The Tigers opened against Millsaps College in Mississippi, and recorded a 19-0 win as senior Jackson. 1 - 'u/y tailback Bill Johnson exploded for three first-half oca Times touchdowns to provide the margin of victory. John- Sewanee's Bill Johnson hurdles one Randolph-Macon de- fender and squares cff to meet another in the Tigers' 2S-0 son, a six-foot two-inch 210-pounder. gained 279 yards second game victory. in twenty-five carries against the Majors in one of the finest running performances in Sewanee's history. The following week the Tigers were at home for the first time and smashed previously unbeaten and Bishop's Retirement Ends; untied Randolph-Macon by a 2S-0 count. The game was not so easy as the score indicates. Randolph- Now Athletics Consultant Macon carried the fight to Sewanee early in the game.

It was not until an eighty-yard touchdown run by Bishop Frank A. Julian just won't stay retired. Tohnson that the Tigers assumed command of the He's tried it twice—in 1956 when he retired as Bish- game. op of Florida, a position he had held since 1924; and Tailbacks Charlie Gignilliat. Rusty Adcock and last August when he gave up the position of director Tohnson combined to score the four touchdowns. John- of development for the University after the victory in son had 148 yards in thirty-one carries for the dav, the Ten Million Dollar Campaign. but the biggest item in his personal statistics was his But retirement will not "take" for the Bishop. He's second touchdown, which pushed his career point total now opening an office in the Julian Gymnasium, built to 148. breaking the all-time Sewanee scoring reco rd and named in his honor in 1957. where he will serve previously held by assistant coach Walter Wilder. as Adiletics Consultant. The third game of the season was no contest as the Athletic Director Walter Bryant says the Bishop Tigers rolled over Kenyon 53-0. Again Johnson was is assuming a position he has unofficially held for a the standout offensively, gaining 148 yards in fourteen long time. carries and scoring two touchdowns. Other Tiger scorers in the game were Mike Knickel- Bishop Julian was a standout athlete at Sewanee bine. Paul Tessmann. Doug Paschall. Jim Beene and during his 1907-11 college days. He played center on Tim Hubbard. the football team; earned an honorable mention on the The following week Austin College ended the purple All-America team; won a collegiate middleweight box- Tigers' dream of another undefeated season as the ing championship; held the Southern Intercollegiate Kangaroos swept to the 29-6 victory. Athletic Association mile record; and played baseball, Remembering the 49-0 loss at the hands of Sewanee a game he participated in long after his first retirement. in 1964. the Kangaroos were out for revenge. Led by He coached at the I niversity and the Sewanee Mili- the passing of quarterback Jerry Bishop and the hard tary Academy during the three years he was chaplain running of fullback Mike Maloney. the Kangaroos at SMA. and even after leaving the Mountain for a amassed 490 yards total offense, while the Austin de- parish and later a diocese, he continued to maintain fense held Sewanee's once potent single-wing attack to an interest in Sewanee athletics, sending a steady only 87 yards. stream of athletes its way.

10 The Sewanee Xe\v< Miss Clara^Named Honorary Alumna

Members of the Alumni Council, their wives and special guests —seventy strong—-were in Sewanee October 8-9 for the council's annuai

fall meeting. Principal speaker for the meeting was

Robert Ayres, Jr., '4';. SAE, San Antonio, an alumni

vice-president and a I niversity trustee.

Alumni President Morey Hart, '34, SAE, presided at the dinner and at the business meeting Saturday morning. The feature of the Saturday meeting was the election of Mrs. Clara Shocmatc, Sewanee's gra- cious hostess, to honorary membership in the Associated Alumni and the approval of a citation commending

Thomas Hawkins, a Supply Store employee since 19 18, for his long and close association with the students and alumni of the University. Alumni and friends in Mississippi met for a social hour and The two awards voted by the Alumni Council wee luncheon just before the football Tigers opened their season against Millsaps College in Jackson. presented at a luncheon before the Sewanee-Kenyon

football game. James \Y. Gentry, Jr., '50, SAE, pre- TEXAS, before the Austin College game. More than sented the honorary alumna certificate to Mrs. Shoe- eighty people gathered from Texas, Arkansas, Okla- mate while Stan Burrows, '29, SAE, read Tom Haw- homa and other points west. Another luncheon was kins' citation. held at DANVILLE, KENTUCKY, where the Tigers

helped Centre College of Kentucky celebrate its home- coming.

George G. Clarke, '48, PDT, and Paul Calame, '62, SAE, of MEMPHIS staged a successful gathering in Sewanee Clubs . . . Memphis for the Southwestern game. The luncheon Sewanee Club of JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI, The before the game and the reception after at the Uni- helped the Sewanee Tigers open their 1965 foot- versity Club drew alumni and friends from Memphis, ball season on a successful note, hosting fifty Sewanee West Tennessee, Arkansas and North Mississippi. alumni and friends at a luncheon before the September for the were Glenn H. 19 game. Chairmen event Louis Rice, '50, SAE, was elected president of the Massey, Jr., '43, DTD, president of the club, and J Sewanee Club of ATLANTA September 20 and Stephen L. Burwell. '32, KS. officially took office at the club's annual Founders'

Similar get-togethers have been held at other cities Day Dinner October 8. Other new officers are Lewis in which the Tigers have played. Bill Schoolfield, '29, Holloway, '49, SAE, vice-president; Scott Taylor, '64,

PDT, and Julius French, '32, sponsored a before-the- KA, secretary; Frank Otway, '54, SAE, treasurer. Ken game luncheon for Sewanee people at SHERMAN, Kinnett. '56, SAE, served as chairman of the nominat-

ing committee. O. Morgan Hall. '39, SAE, presided over the meeting, after which coffee and cookies were Miss Clara, Jim Gentry Stan Burrows, Tom Hawkins CouUon served by Mrs. Frisky Freyer, Mrs. Ken Kinnett and Mrs. Morgan Hall. Hall's final triumph as president df the club came at the Founders' Day celebration. Guest speaker was G. Cecil Woods, '21, SAE. and Hall reported that a large enthusiastic group was present.

Lewis S. Lee. '55, PDT. is the new president of the

JACKSONYILLK Sewanee Club and is planning a Founders' Day dinner around the middle of November with Bishop Frank A. Julian as the featured speaker. Other new officers are Ronald Palmer. '37. ATO, vice- president, and Allen Hertzel, secretary-treasurer. Christian Education Day observance of the diocese of Southwestern Virginia in Roanoke. Topic of the talk was "The New Face of Education in the Church." Eugene Harris III, PDT, actor-pro- ducer of New York, produced a ten- week series of plays at Tannersville, Pennsylvania, during the summer. Maurice K. Heartfield, ATO, is as- sistant treasurer of George Washington University in the District of Columbia. He is a member of the vestry of St. David's Church, Washington, and a member of the board of the Rotary Club. Address: 6208 Newburn Drive, Washington, D. C. Thad Holt, PDT, has been named a special assistant to the secretary and undersecretary of the United States Army. The appointment came while he was vacationing at Sewanee from his Washington law practice. 1952 Richard Allin, KS, a general assign- ment reporter with the Arkansas Ga- zette, has been named editor of the Arkansas Churchman by Bishop R. R. Brown. He is the brother of the Rt. Rev. John M. Allin, '43, bishoD coad- jutor of Mississippi. William Morgan Bomar, SAE, is with Rotan Mosle brokerage firm and is enjoying, along with his family, his new home located near the Rice Uni- versity campus in Houston, Texas. The Rev. Richard W. Gillett, PGD, of Holy Trinity Church, Ponce, Puerto Rico, spent a month early in the year at the Chicago Urban Training Center, Lady Bird Johnson and Harry C. McPherson, Jr., '49, SAE, chat a new institution developed and sup- in a White House garden. Long an unofficial advisor to the presi- ported by twelve denominations for dent, McPherson has now been appointed to the White House staff. the training of clergy, seminarians and laity for mission and ministry in Metropolis. The Rev. Claude E. Guthrie, head- master of Christ Church Episcopal School, Greenville, South Carolina, since its founding in 1959, became Glass Distinctions archdeacon of the diocese of Upper South Carolina in June. John G. Scott of Winchester has be- 1949 life. The book is published by More- come associated with the James Mat- Harry C. McPherson, Jr., SAE, long house-Barlow Company. thews Realty and Auction Company a valued aide to President Lyndon B. John G. Bratton, ATO, of Charles- in Cowan, Tennessee. Johnson, and recently on loan to him ton, South Carolina, has accepted a seat Kyle Wheelus, Jr., PGD, has become from the State Department, received on the Regional Export Expansion a full partner in the Beaumont, Texas, appointment to the president's official Council of South Carolina. The coun- law firm of Marcus, Wheller, Wheelus family in August. He is a special as- cil's major responsibility is to en- and Green. Offices are located in the sistant to the president. He has been courage the export business on the Goodhue Building. moving steadily upward in govern- part of domestic producers. 1953 ment circles since arriving in Wash- The Rev. Frank Q. Cayce, PDT, has The Rev. P. Roberts Bailey has ac- ington in 1956. McPherson was awarded been named headmaster of St. Francis- cepted the position of priest-in-charge an honorary degree from the Univer- in-the-Fields Day School at Harrods of St. George's in West Asheville, sity last June. His seven-year-old Creek, a suburb of Louisville, Ken- North Carolina, after serving at Grace daughter, Courtenay (Coco), recently tucky. The school has expanded to Church, Gainesville, Georgia. He was displayed sparkling lady-like courtesy. four grades this fall and will add a at Sewanee for graduations of sons Asked by the President to the White grade a year hereafter. Mr. Cayce Bob at the University and Chris at St. House for Sunday dinner after ser- v/as rector of a parish in Virginia be- Andrew's as well as attending the trus- vices at St. Mark's Church, the little fore his appointment, and before tak- tees' meeting in June. lady said she'd have to ask her mother. ing the Virginia assignment was canon John P. Figh, KA, has been named Mrs. McPherson reminded her of a of St. Mary's Cathedral in Memphis. technical director for textiles as part picnic invitation she had already ac- Jess B. Cheatham, Jr., SAE, has been of an expansion program of the Special cepted, and Coco returned to the Presi- named assistant manager of the Arm- Industry Services unit of Chase Man- dent to decline with a "thank you very strong Cork Company's New York hattan Bank, New York. He joined the much anyway." Building Products Division district bank after two years' service with 1951 office. Prior to his promotion he was Columbus, Georgia, Mills, Inc., as The Rev. G. P. Mellick Belshavv, a resident salesman for Armstrong manager of new product development, DTD, is the editor of Lent with Evelyn products in Houston. He has been technical liaison and industrial sales. Underhill, a collection of devotional with Armstrong since his graduation. He was a chemical engineer with the writings which provide guidance for The Rev. James C. Fenhagen, 3N, Chemstrand Company from 1954-57. those seeking to increase their knowl- director of Christian Education for the Dr. E. Phelps Helvenston, PGD, has edge and understanding of the spiritual Diocese of Washington, spoke at the been named director of research for

12 The Sewanee News Kaliurn Chemicals, Limited, of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. He has been senion inorganic research supervisor for the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Com- pany, which owns Kalium as a subsi- diary. John J. Hooker, Jr., PDT, hinted strongly in a recent speech at Erwin, Tennessee, that he may become a candidate for governor in the state's next election. "I am interested in government . . . and the governor's office," he said, "and I've had a lot of people encouraging me to run." He has a new daughter, Kendall Miles, born in May. The Rev. Floyd C. Medford, rector of St. Michael's Parish at Coolidgu, Arizona, since 1962, h;>s accepted a po- sition as professor of English and re- ligion at Trinity University, San An- tonio, Texas. His Ph.D. is from the University of Texas and his Th.D. from the Southern California School of The- ology. William P. Pardue, Jr., has recently received the highest designation award- ed by the Society of Real Estate Ap- praisers. The designation S. R. E. A. (Senior Real Estate Appraiser) has been granted to less than 250 mem- bers throughout the United States. He is currently serving the Orlando- Win- ter Park Board of Realtors as third vice-president.

Dr. Stephen Elliott Puckette, Jr , ATO, has been promoted from assistant 4 A:"* professor to associate professor of Collins, Chattanooga News-Free l'rc< radiology at the Medical College of South Carolina. The appointment be- Former Associated Alumni President John Guerry, '49, SAE, was came effective July 1. married September 4 to Carolyn Wright of Benton, Tennessee. The Rev. Thomas Adams Roberts, Mrs. Alexander Guerry, Jr., entertained the wedding party with a rector of Christ Church, Lexington, wedding breakfast in the Alexander Guerry Center at the Uni- Kentucky, has received an honorary versity of Chattanooga. doctor of divinity degree from the Episcopal Theological Seminary in Kentucky. office in the Southwest Towers Build- Sigmon Forest Products, Inc. in Monti- Desmond Porter Wilson, Jr., SAE, ing in Houston, Texas. cello, Arkansas. The firm manages has been named assistant professor of William C. Prentiss, ATO, is now a tree farms, planting, spraying, apprais- political science at Emory University. lieutenant colonel and dean of educa- als, timber removal and serves as con- He formerly was an instructor at Mas- tion at Florida Military School and sultant to landowners dealing in all sachusetts Institute of Technology. His College, DeLand. types of lumber and pulpwood. research interests are in the area of William H. Savage, SN, and Rein J. William Temple (Bill) Doswell, defense studies, with particular focus Vander Zee have formed a partnership ATO, head football coach and biology on the substance of national security for the practice of law before the local instructor at the Sewanee Military policy and military strategies. and federal courts, the departments Academy, has just completed the third 1954 and agencies of the United States summer of his pioneer camp for boys The Rev. Stephen W. Ackerman, a government and in the fields of inter- located in the eastern Tennessee moun- former army colonel, now comforts the national law and foreign trade. Offices tains near Reliance, Tennessee. He sick and dying in the garb of an Epis- are located at 1705 DeSales Street, operates two sessions a summer. copal priest as institutional chaplain of Northwest, Washington, D. C. The Rev. Bertrand Honea, Jr.. GST, the diocese of Atlanta. His job is to William H. Smith, SAE, a trustee of succeeded the Rev. John Crocker as visit hospitals, nursing homes and pris- the University, has been elected vice- rector of Groton School in June. Mr. ons to offer help to those in need. president of Wachovia Bank and Trust Honea is only the third rector of the The Rev. Mallie Clark Baker, KA, Company and named officer in charge school, established in 1884 by the rector of Thankful Memorial Church, of the bank at Elizabeth City, North legendary Endicott Peabody, and is the Chattanooga, has a third child, Juli? Carolina. He has been associated with first non-alumnus to fill the position. Rey, born February 18. Wachovia since 1956 and formerly was The Rev. Layton P. Zimmer has been Byron Crowley, KA, has been trans- head of the bank at Morehead City. He named by Bishop DeWitt of Pennsyl- ferred by McKesson and Robbins from is married to the former Roberta vania to be a full-time missioner and Long Island to its Boston North Di- Thomas and they have a son and a consultant to deal with urban and ra- vision, where he is sales manager of daughter. cial problems in the diocese. a territory covering Vermont, Maine, John W. Woods. SAE, has been elect- 1956 New Hampshire and Massachusetts. ed a vice-president of Chemical Bank Larry P. Davis, BTP, and his wife, Charles McCown Lindsay won his New York Trust Company with re- Erla, have become house parents to six Ph.D. degree in mathematics at the sponsibilities for the bank's business in adolescent girls under the auspices of August commencement of Peabody Alabama, Georgia, North and South the Edwin Gould Foundation, a private College, Nashville. Carolina and Virginia. He has been child care agencv in New York. Their Robert J. Lipscomb, KA, has a son, with the bank since 1954 with the ex- address is 100-56 194th Street, Hollis, Joseph Hardy, born May 1 in Jackson, ception of two years he spent in the Long Island, New York 11423. Larry Mississippi, where Robert is an I. B. M. Air Force. received his master's degree from the data processing systems engineer. 1955 New York University School of Social Hart T. Mankin is enjoying his new Glenn M. Cooper, SN, is president of Work in June.

November 1965 J. Henson Markham, Jr., SAE, was and continued research there in bi- married in June to Julia Crosby in San ology, working with monkeys on prob- Francisco. He has been a music editor lems of vision. In April, 1963, he was of Ihe Bjok o, Kn nvledge, Grolier. married at Greeley, Colorado, to Carole Inc. an! is now with the firm of Carl Olsen, who also has a Ph.D. from Cal- Fischer, Inc., music publishers of New teeh, in chemistry. After a summer Yo:k. seminar at Massachusetts Institute of Jchm Ne?f, KA, a winch truck opera- Technology, both Dr. Chuck and Dr. tor f r Florida Power and Light during Carole will be at Stanford University, the week, has lately been described as where Dr. Chuck will te^ch and uo r> yeuno; artist on the way up. The research in physiological psychology. Florida, artist Delray Beach, Sunday Robert Hooker, FGD, is now pro- has evoked such phrases from critics gram director of radio station KTRM, as "crackling wi.h vitality," and "daz- Beaumont, Texas, and lecently wrote zling, yet serene." has no studio, He the alumni office to request a tape of portable easel; and works with a he the University choir. sti etches his own canvas, using a treat- The Rev. Louis E. Toxsmeire accept- ed sail cloth, and prefers canvas to ed the call of the Church of the As- board, feeling it is more responsive. cension, Cartersville, Georgia, and as- HiS work was recently shown at Palm duties in early July. He, Ee n ch Junior College. sumed his his wife and two sons made the move Milton Parker III was married to he had served Frances Lofton Dawsey Milligan en from Sylacauga, where congregations for five years. June 11 in Charleston, Scuth Carolina several Philip H. Whitehead, SAE, He is employed by the Southeastern The Rev. Church, Furniture Company in Charleston. formerly rector of St. Alban's duties Edwin A. Pound, Jr., KA, has been Jacksonville, Florida, began new vice-president at St. Catherine's School in Richmond, promoted to assistant JACK R. MOORE, '58 of the Columbus, Georgia, Bank and Virginia, August 1. Trust Company. 1958 The Rev. Donald McK. Williamson, work among the secret papers of Popes Brettmann, PDT, has been named pilot coordina- The Rev. William S. Clement and John XXII. on a Ph.D. in tor for the Diocese of Tennessee in the ATO, has begun work 1959 new urban program. theology at Vanderbilt University, af- Ronald C. Cornell is a forester with 1957 ter receiving the degrees of S.T.M the Tennessee River Pulp and Paper M.A. W. R. Campbell, ATO, has joined from Yale Divinity School and Company, whose plant is at Counce, address: the accounting management division of from Oxford University. His Tennessee. He is in charge of pro- Oxford Manufacturing Company, At- 3000 Medial Avenue, Nashville, Ten- curement for the state of Alabama. He lanta, after having spent eight years nessee 37215. is married to the former Frankie Stu- with General Motors. New address: The Rev. Craig Walter Casey, DTD. art and they have three boys, ages nine, Williams 1448 Diamond Head Circle, Decatur, was married May 1 to Sally seven, and brand new. Address: Box Chest- Ga. in the Church of the Redeemer, 288, Haleyville, Alabama. couple William B. Griffin, Jr., PDT, has nut Hill, Massachusetts. The John R. Hansen III has joined the been elected assistant vice-president will live in Shelbyville, Tennessee. business development branch of the practic- of the Citizens and Southern Bank in Dr. Richard H. Harb, SN, is Union Bank of Los Angeles, which is Atlanta, Georgia. He began his career ing dentistry on the Knoxville high- the fastest growing bank in the coun- there in 1959 in the operations depart- way near Alcoa, Tennessee. He is mar- try and the thirteenth fastest growing of Gulfporr, ment, moved to the international de- ried to Dannell Ziegler corporation in the United States. He Richard, Jr., partment in 1961, and was elected as- Mississippi, and their sen, was previously district manager for sistant cashier in 1962. is two years old. Meredith Publishing Company, pub- Charles Robert Hamilton, KA, re- Jack R. Moore, SAE, has been named lishers of Better Homes and Gardens. ceived his Ph.D. at the California In- assistant vice-president and western He is married to Pamela Taylor of stitute of Technology in June, 1984. sales director of C. I. T. Educational Winnetka, Illinois, and has two sons, Buildings, Inc., and will establish an John R. IV and Tyler Russell. His office in Chicago. The firm constructs rector in South Pasadena is the Rev. and leases dormitories, dining halls, G. P. Prince, '38. His address: 1715 and relocatable classrooms to schools Ellincourt Drive, South Pasadena, Calif. and colleges. He and his wife and Ke\t Standish Henning, PGD, was four children will live at 124 Cooper married to Sara Adelaide Gump in Place, Lincolnshire Country Club Es- Johnson City, Tennessee, June 9. He tates, Crete, 111. teaches in Ft. Worth, Texas. L. Frank Sharp, BTP, turned out for Jchn Kimpton Honey, SAE, ended a a Sewanee meeting in Baltimore. He ttiBee-year tour of duty with the Air is teaching history at near-by Catons- Force in 1962 and entered a training ville Senior High School. Address. program at State-Planters Bank of °841 North Calvert, Baltimore, Mary- Commerce and Trusts in Richmond. A land. year later he became a manager of one James Edward Smith, KA, is doing of the bank's branches and in Api'l, post-doc lorate work at the Illinois In- 1965, was elected an assistant cashier stitute of Technology, after receiving and commercial loan officer of the main his Ph.D. from the University of Ro- bank. A third child, JayHe Dewling, chester in June. arrived in April to join brother John. Charles Thurman Warren III, SN, Jr., six, and sister Elizabeth, three. was married August 21 to Madelaine Two menths later Kim received a mas- Grcth of Peekskill, New York. Charles ter's degree in economics and com- L teaches li erature at Peekskill Mili- merce from the University of Rich- tary Academy. mond. Reflecting the steadily advanc- Th^ Re-'. J. R. W-icht, BTP, is com- ing career of Kim is the news that the pleting w^rk for his D.Phil, degree at family is moving to a new house. Ad- Ox c ord. He won a fellowship from dress: 4706 Pocahontas Avenue, Rich- the Episcopal Church Foundation and mond, Virginia 23226. will spend another year in Europe do- Pembroke S. H t tckins, SN, is now a ing research which will take him to member of the Drexel and Company JOHN P. FIGH, '53 the Vatican Archives, where he will banking firm in Philadelphia. He was 4 The Sewanee News -

formerly with Smith, Barney and Bangor, Pennsylvania. They have re- make a particularly effective display). Company, also of Philadelphia. He lives turned to Central America, where he Having no choir in his mission, he uses at 50J Glcnmary Lane, St. Davids, Pa. is a missionary. tapes of the Sewanee choir, which, he The Rev. W. Robert Insko, ATO, Richard Crowley, KA, graduated nc.ints out, add to the beauty of the formerly rector of the Church of the from the Emory University School of service, and also educate his flock in Advent, Nashyijle, assumed new duties Medicine in June and is now an intern the liturgy of the Church. On one as assistant professor of pastoral ihe- at the Columbus, Georgia, Medical Sunday he used a Sewanee color film ology at Seabury-Western Theological Center. His wife, the former Inez in place of a sermon. When he finishes Seminary September 1. He is a former- Hare, received her master's degree in reading his Sewanee News, he places president of the Nashville Council on library science from Emory the same it on a table by the door. Religion and Rrco and a former mem- day her husband became a doctor. Dr. William C. Stiefel, Jr., KA, has ber of the Coordinating Council 0:1 The Rev. Douglas P. Evett, KS, has completed active duty with the U. S. Civil Rights. At Seabury-Western, he accepted a post on the staff of Grace Navy dental corps at Camp Lejeune, is also director of the seminary's clini- Episcopal Church, Grand Rapids, Mich- North Carolina. He was graduated in cal pastoral education program. igan. He has moved there from Pent- June, 1963, from Emory University James Waring McCrady, ATO, has a water, Michigan, where he has been School f f Dentistry, and is now prac- son, William Tucker deBerniere, born vicar of St. James' Church. He and tising dentistry in Decatur, Georgia. September 24 at Sewanee. The new ar- his wife, the former Deborah Wilson 1961 rival is the grandchi'd of Vice-Chan- (who is the sister of David Wilson, '61, Otis A. Brumby, been cellor and Mrs. Edward McCrady. KS), have two children, Matthew, age KA, has named assistant to President Brooks P. Smith Waring is a member of the French de- three and a half, and Peter, two. His of the Marietta, Georgia, Daily Jour- partment of the University. older brother, David, '58, KS, gradu- nal, an appointment which drew praise The Rev. William P. Scheel, PGD, ated with a Ph.D. in English literature from several Georgians. One, the edi- has recently become assistant rector of from Harvard and has accepted a post tor of the Cartersville Tribune News, St. David's Church in Minnetonka, on the faculty of the University of called him "one of the most outstand- Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis. Wisconsin. David's two children are ing young men of this section of Geor- Prior to this assignment, he served two Charles, three, and Benjamin, one. gia." and a half years at a preaching station Charles Dwight Cathcart, Jr., on the Redlake Indian Reservation. He KA, was married August 28 to Mary Moore rnd his wife have two children, An- Rinehart at St. Stephen's Church, In- drew and Sarah. Their address is: dianola, Mississippi. are living in 3423 Shady Oak Road, Minnetonka, They Charlottesville, Virginia. Minn. 55343. Robert S. Cathcart, KA, completed First Lt. Edmund B. Stewart, ATO, bis M.D. degree in June at the Medical has been awarded the Air Force com- College of South Carolina and is now mendation medal for meritorious ser- an intern at the University of Pennsyl- vice in Viet Nam. The citation ac- vania Hospital. He is the senior au- companying the award read in part thor of a paper which appeared in the "On numerous occasions Lt. Stewart Journal oj Neuropathology and Experi- \oluntarily subjected himself to hostile mental Neurology, October, 1964, "Cili- fire by the Viet Cong by making field ary movement in the rat's cerebral trips to the combat team locations in ." ventricles. . . He presented the pa- order to survey the installations for per at a meeting of the American So- possible improvement." Lt. Stewart is ciety of Anatomists in Denver. married to the former Carolina War- Walter R. Chastain, Jr., SN, has ing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom bsen promoted to assistant cashier of Waring of Sewanee, has two children 1he Citizens and Southern National and is a candidate for the master's de- Bank of Charleston, South Carolina. gree in economics from the University Dr. David C. Connfr. graduated of South Carolina. ATO, recently from the Kirksville, Missouri, Robert Dale Sweeney won his Ph.D. College of Osteopathy and Surgery and at Harvard in June and is an in- is now interning in Dallas. He is mar- structor in classics at Dartmouth this JOHN KIMPTON HONEY, '59 ried to the former Terry Shackle year. During the past year he was an Ann ford of Quincy, Illinois, and has a instructor in Greek and Latin at The Rev. H. Don Harrison held his daughter, Tracy Lynne, bcrn June 14. Wayne State University in Detroit. His first services as vicar of St. Dunstan's Edward C. Edgin has been appointed edition of the Scholia Statin; is being Mission in Atlanta recently. Prior to to the English faculty of the Sewanee brought out in the B. G. Teubner, undertaking the assignment at the new Military Academy. An outstanding Leipzig, classics series—which with Ox- mission, he was rector of St. Mar- basketball player during his Univer- ford's rates as the world's most emi- in Carrollton and serv- sity career, will the cadet nent. garet's Church he coach ed as chaplain for West Georgia Col- team. He is married to the former Capt. Henry Leland Trimple III, SN, lege as well as instructing in history Beverly Winn. Both previously taught was married June 26 to Sarah Gunn and philosophy. at Satellite High School, Cocoa Beach, Moure at the First Presbyterian Jesse Hill has been elected assistant Florida. He has a son, Edward, Jr., Church, Pensacola, Florida. The Trim- cashier of the Whitney National Bank born September 24, 1965. bles live in Meridian, Mississippi. and Whitney Holding Corporation of Moylan Field Gomila. PDT, was Bob Wayland is nearing completion New Orleans, marking another step in married in June to Marv Dudley of his work for a Ph.D. degree in phys- his advance through the ranks. He Braselton of Ft. Worth. The Rev. Louis ics at the University of Arizona. After began his career with Whitney in F. Martin read the service in St. An- graduation from Sewanee, he attended March 1964. drew's Episcopal Church. The couple the University of California at Berke- The promotional activity of the Rev. are living in New Orleans. ley, tired soon of being "just another George Milam, priest-in-charge of St. Richard L. Harris, DTD, has won a IBM number" and moved to the Uni- Agatha's Church, DeFuniak Springs, Fulbright scholarship for an academic versity of Arizona, where he received Florida, is the equivalent of a check year of study at the University of Ice- his master's degree in 1962, was mar- list for persons who want to help Se- land, where only one Fulbright grant ried, and celebrated the birth of a wanee. During the Spring he ordered is awarded each year. While in Iceland daughter a year later. He is anxious an assortment of brochures which he he is studying old Norse prose litera- to hear from some of the "group that kept "fresh" in his tract rack. He used ture of the thirteenth century in prep- I went through with" at Sewanee. copies of the Newsweek reprint to en- aration of materials for his Ph.D. dis- 1960 close with his personal maiL He tacked sertation at Duke. The Re:v. Nicholas Axbanese was on his bulletin board pictures of Se- Joseph Bernard (Barney) Haynfs, married August 7 to Angie May De- wanee (two of the color pictorial fold- KS, recently graduated from the New Nardo at St. Joseph's Church, West ers placed side by side back-and-front York University law school and has

November 1965 *5 entered the firm of another Sewanee for a master's degree in school ad- graph Company. He nipy'ed to the new alumnus, Malcolm Fooshee, '18, KS. ministration at Furman University, post after having served- as public re-

Ernest Wiley Johnson, KS, and and will be a member of its faculty lations director in the , .'district office Jerry A. Snow, SAE, received medical and coaching staff this year. He plans there since March, 1964: degrees from the Washington Univer- to begin work on a Ph.D. in school Walter Dietrich NoelkX DTD, was sity School of Medicine, St. Louis, in administration at Columbia next year. married August 14 to. .Virginia Hull June and were awarded internships, The Rev. Thomas Gailor Garner has McKimmon in Christ Church, Raleigh, which became effective July 1. John- a son, Thomas Gailor III, born August North Carolina. They are living at son is working on the internal medi- 27 in Richmond. The Garners live in 2614 Delwood Place, Austin, Texas. cine service of Barnes Hospital in St. Charles City, Virginia. Mrs. Garner is The Rev. James A. Patrick is work- Louis, while Snow is on the internal the former Caroline Chobot of Look- ing on a doctoral program at Trinity medicine service of Tufts University at out Mountain, Tennessee. College, Toronto, on a fellowship grant Boston City Hospital. Bradford M. Gearinger, PDT, is a from the Episcopal Church Founda- Frank Thompkins Melton, KA, won member of the Chattanooga law firm tion. After completing his work he in- a master's degree from Vanderbilt and of Gearinger and Vineyard, of which tends to return to Tennessee for three had been working on his Ph.D. at the his father, Harold H. Gearinger, is a years of parish work, and ultimately University of Wisconsin before he was partner. The firm was formed in May. hopes to teach in theology or New selected for a Fulbright fellowship Bradford, a graduate of the Vanderbilt Testament. He is married to the that takes him to the University of School of Law, plans to go on active former Mary Wellford Pringle Smith London for research for his disserta- duty in the Marine Corps this month. and has an eight-month-old daughter, tion. He has an eleven-month-old son he Michael. Robert D. Peel, PDT, iaas been re- hopes will attend Sewanee. Lt. jg. William O. Studeman, ATO, ported a prisoner of war by the Defense John E. Gibbs, Jr., ATO, was a June has a daughter, Kimberley Diane, born Department. He was on a flying mis- graduate of the Medical College of June 14 in Coronado, California. He sion in Viet Nam in late May when South Carolina, Charleston. He has a is aboard the USS Yorktown, which his plane was hit by anti-aircraft fire, has just returned from a seven-month forcing him to eject from the plane and Far East cruise which included much parachute to earth. Another pilot re- time in the South China Sea off the ported seeing him walking after reach- coast of Viet Nam. ing earth. A letter from his mother, Richard Williford Tillinghast, KS, Mrs. Frederick W. Peel, thanking the now a teaching fellow at Harvard Uni- many who have expressed sympathy versity, was married July 10 to Nancy and concern, said, "we are proud of Walton Pringle in St. Philip's Church, the tributes paid our son . . . take com- Charleston, South Carolina. fort in knowing he is God's child, and William Bradley Trimble, PDT, was want to take this opportunity to thank married June 5 to Rebecca Holt John- all of you and ask for your continued stone at Trinity Episcopal Church, Mo- prayers." bile. Welcome Shearer, Jr., PDT, and his Lieutenant Edgar Uden, Jr., PDT, wife, Paula, spent several days at and was recently married to Ann Bronson near Sewanee in July, visiting friends at the Church of the Good Shepherd in from Van Ness days. Welcome has Memphis. He is a member of the U. S. been with the expanding grocery chain, Air Force and is stationed at Sewart Winn-Dixie, since graduation. The AFB. Shearers and two daughters live in Charles Wilburn Underwood, SN, Jacksonville. was married August 21 to the former Sam Spalding Swann, DTD, joined Camilla Knotts in St. Paul's Methodist the staff of Professional Management Church, Orangeburg, South Carolina. Southeast, Inc., in Asheville, North Several alumni were ushers. Carolina, after attending the Graduate 1963 School of Business at the University Allie Milling Blalock, SN, was of North Carolina and serving in the JOHN E. GIBBS, JR., '62 married July 31 to Mary Louise Axel- army intelligence and security corps berg at the Aiken, South Carolina, for three years, part of which he spent daughter, Catherine Randolph, born First Presbyterian Church. He is a in Ethiopia. He lives with his wife August 24, 1965. Address: I6V2 Rut- senior in the University of South Ca- and infant son at 18D Edgewood Knoll ledge Avenue, Charleston. rolina School of Law. Their address: Apartments, Asheville. The Rev. Timothy Jerome Hallett Carolina Gardens Apartments, Colum- Walter Scott Welch, III, BTP, 1st received the B.D. degree Magna cum bia, South Carolina. Lt., USAF, has organized one of the laude from Seabury-Western Theo- Preston Brooks Huntley, Jr., KS, nation's smallest Sewanee Clubs at logical Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. was married August 28 to Lynell Lew- Vandenberg Air Force Base. The other His record there prompted a note of is Basington. member is Richard J. Frye, '63, who is congratulations to the University along Harwood Koppel was married June 5 assigned to the 4392d Communications with a request for similar students. He to Evelyn Elizabeth Queyrouze in the Squadron and was recently promoted is Episcopal chaplain at Mankato Chapel of the Holy Spirit, New Orleans. to 1st. Lt. Welch is assistant director State College, Minnesota, which has George Edmondson Maddox, SAE, of military justice for the 1st Strategic an enrollment of 10,000. Address: Box formerly of Rome, Georgia, is teach- Aerospace Division. Since both are 427, Mankato, Minn. 56002. ing at Harvard Episcopal School in Betas they have organized an alumni Max McCokd, SN, was married North Hollywood, California, where he chanter of Gamma Chi of Beta Theta June 23 to Martha Faust Nabers at St. numbers among his students the son of Pi. " Address: 14 Tah-Vil Drive, Lom- Mary's Church, Birmingham. He is in Gregory Peck. He has already sent poc, California. his third year at the University of one student to the University and re- 1962 Alabama Medical College. They live at ports he plans to keep sending them. The Rev. Tucker Edward Dawson, 1512 Ninth Avenue, South, Apartment His address: 3700 Coldwater Canyon, Jr., was married in February to Mar- 6-F, Birmingham. North Hollywood. gene Rae Sweitzer in St. Paul's Church, Thomas E. Myers, Jr., KA, is an as- Stephen H. Moorehead, BTP, and Tom New Orleans. He is curate and head- sociate of Donaldson, Lufkin and Jen- Wise, PGD, have received M.B.A. de- master of the parish day school. Their rette, Inc., a member firm of the New grees from Wharton Graduate School address: 203 Sixteenth Street, New York Stock Exchange. He is a gradu- of Business Administration in Phila- Orleans. ate of the Harvard Graduate School of delphia, and have accepted positions John Russell Frank, KA, was mar- Business Administration. with Proctor and Gamble, Moorehead ried August 21 to Margaret Ann Mc- T. O. Nickle, DTD, has been appoint- in the advertising department in Cin- Keand in the First Presbyterian ed Oak Ridge, Tennessee, manager for cinnati, and Wise in Nashville. Moore- Church, Nashville. Rusty finished work Southern Bell Telephone and Tele- head and his wife, Martha, live at

16 The Sewanee News 375 West Galbraith Road, Cincinnati. Larkin of Pensacola and has a son, Lt. Paul T. Pandolfi has been Walker IV. awarded U. S. Air Force silver pilot Walter Cowart was honored re- wings upon graduation from the Air cently by the newly formed National Training Command flying school at Honor Society at his prep school, Flori- Moody AFB, Georgia, and will remain da Military School and College. The at the base for specialized aircrew charter members named the society in training. He is married to the former honor of Cowart, a former regimental Barbara Barnes, of Winchester, Ten- commander at the DeLand school. nessee. Michael Kent Curtis was married Scott Rathman has a son, Scott Mar- June 17 to Matilda Kirby-Smith of Se- tin, born June 7, at Philadelphia, Penn- wanee, daughter of Dr. Henry T. sylvania. Scott is in his second year at Kirby-Smith, '26, in St. Peter's Church, Philadelphia Divinity School. Mrs. Fernandina Beach, Florida. They are Rathman is the former Diane Finney living in Philadelphia and attending of Sewanee. the University of Pennsylvania. Franklin Elmore Robson III, ATO, Bill Daniell, BTP, has been elected married in April to Caroline was Pey- treasurer of the Third National Bank ton Buchan in the Mullins, South Caro- Club of Nashville. He joined the bank lina, Presbyterian Church. They live staff in July, 1964, and is a member of in Columbia, where she is a teach- the bookkeeping department. He is er and he continues his studies at the married to the former Nanette Lindsay University of South Carolina School Thomas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. of Law. Frank Thomas of Sewanee. Lt. (j.g.) Warren D. Smith, Jr., Guy R. Dotson, PGD, has been in SAE, became the father of a nine- WALTER COWART, '64 law school at the University of Tennes- pound boy, Warren D. Smith III, July see in Knoxville. His wife and two 5. Lt. Smith is serving aboard a mine children are with him. for pilot training. is sweeper, reports he has put in at ev- Texas, He mar- J. MlDDLETON FlTzSlMONS, Jr., ATO, ery port on the Atlantic coast and ried to the former Virginia Lightfoot was married to Suzanne McFarlane in of never failed to find at least one Se- Winchester, Tennessee. Jacksonville, May 15. wanee man. Address: 2040 Cheraw Robert Williams Rice, KA, was mar- William Whitner Haden is an ensign Drive, James Island, Charleston, South ried to Charlotte LeRoy Carter Sep- in the U. S. Naval Reserve and is as- Carolina. tember 18 at the First Presbyterian signed to the USS Monmouth County Frank Phillips White, SN, has a Church, Winston-Salem, North Caro- (LST-1032). 1 lina. son, Frank III, born at Sewanee on G. Kenneth Henry, SN, now has John M. Richardson, Jr., DTD, is February 19. Phil is an English in- a position on the faculty of Christ in navy, at structor at Sewanee Military Academy. now the stationed the Bu- Church Episcopal School, Greenville, reau of Naval Personnel in Washing- Mrs. is ( White the former Jerry Daven- South Carolina. He made the move ton. is married to Sharon E. R. 1 port. He from the faculty of the Blue Ridge Kellogg, whom he met as a result of 1964 School for Boys, Hendersonville, North the Sewanee Glee Club's trip to Sullins Bruce Winslow Aldrich, DTD, was Carolina. College, where she was a student. They

I married to Jean Elizabeth Norton Au- Lacy Harris Hunt II, KS, is a stu- have a daughter, Elizabeth Rae (Lisa), gust 22 at the First Church of Christ j dent at Wharton Graduate School of born March 18. He is attending the Congregational, Longmeadow, | Massa- Business Administration in Phila- George Washington University.

; chusetts. He is on the faculty of the delphia, Pennsylvania. His youngest Ron Roark, PGD, a junior at the Citadel. brother, William T. C. Hunt, is cur- University of Missouri School of Den- Robert Black, ATO, is a student at rently a student at the University, tistry, led his class of 110 students Trinity College, University of Toronto, | class of '68. last year and was selected to rep- Canada. Larry Majors, PGD, has accepted a resent the school at the Dental Stu- J. Walker Coleman HI, KA, to was teaching and coaching position at the dents Conference on Research in graduate from the University of South- Belles School for boys in Jacksonville, Washington during April. He is also ern Mississippi this fall after an inter- Florida. employed as a night attendant in a rupted education which included a tour Alfred Miller III, PDT, was mar- mortuary. of active duty with the Coast Guard. ried to Mary Ann Harby July 2 at St. Jay Salvage, SN, received his diplo- He is married to the former Debbie Mark's Church, Jacksonville, Florida. ma with distinction from the von Kar- He is in the printing business with his mann Institute in Belgium, where he father in Jacksonville. The bride was studied last year. given away by her uncle, Arthur Ben The first ordination to the priest- Chitty, '35. hood of the Missionary District of Co- Charles W. Minch, ATO, has recently lombia took place when the Rt. Rev. accepted a position with the Knolls David B. Reed ordained the Rev. Atomic Power Laboratory in Schenec- Onell A. Soto August 18 in St. tady, New York, where he will be Alban's Church, Bogota, Colombia. working on fluid systems engineering. Preacher for the ordination was the KAPL is operated by the General Rt. Rev. E. Hamilton West, H'48, Electric Company in cooperation with bishop of Florida, who was in Colom- and under technical direction of the bia to lead a clergy conference. division of naval reactors of the Atom- Johannes Bengston Sylvan III, ATO, ic Energy Commission. He has begun was married to Jane Christine William- part-time work on an M.S. in mechani- son in June at the Highland Park cal engineering at Rensselaer Poly- Presbyterian Church, Dallas. He is a technic Institute. student in the University of Texas Law James Michael Pemberton, SN, was School. married to Nancy Anne Garrett Au- Lee Muller Thomas, SN, was mar- gust 7 at the First Methodist Church, ried to Elizabeth Lumpkin Glenn at Laurens, South Carolina. The couple St. Martin's-in-the-Fields Church, Co- will live at the Carlton Towers, 414 lumbia, South Carolina. The ceremony Forest Park Blvd., Knoxville. was performed by the Rev. William Lt. Georce M. Powell IV, KA, has Austin Thompson and the Rev. Wil- received his commission in the U. S. liam Wallace Lumpkin, '34, a relative Air Force at Lackland AF3, Texas, of the bride. TIMOTHY HALLETT, '62 and was assigned to Webb AFB, John King Young, ATO, was married

November 1965 17 starting his graduate career in ap- '24, PDT, and is currently a student in plied mathematics at Georgia Tech. the College. Biuda is an English major in the Col- Thomas Edward Moody was married lege of Arts and Sciences. August 21 to Marion Lee Turner at All Saints' Church, Atlanta. 1967 Frank Scott Harris, PDT, was mar- 1968 ried April 10 to Ruth Elizabeth Engler Jeffrey Hartwell Walker, SC, was in St. George's Church, Nashville. He married July 30 to Elizabeth Christine is the son of the late Eugene O. Harris, Hall in St. Mark's Church, Houston.

In jftlemortam

JANIS LANE, ELIZABETH MUROLO, The Rev. Charles L. Widney, '20, '65 ATO, who retired in June as acting rector of St. Philip's Church, Charles- ton, South Carolina, died September 22. Services were held September 24 August 21 to Margaret Lanier Moses with burial following in the church- at the Washington Street Methodist yard cemetery. He had been assist- Church, Columbia, South Carolina. ant rector at St. Philip's since 1958. when he left the assistant rectorship of 1965 Trinity Church, Columbus, Georgia, to

Harry Anderson Burns III, SAE, was accept the call. He had previously married to Wendy Weiland June 12 at served the diocese of Tennessee as rec- All Saints' Chapel, Sewanee. tor of St. George's Church, German- Jo Colmore, BTP, who ranked among town, and at Otey Memorial Parish, the top football players in the Sewanee. During his ten years at Otey College Athletic Conference during his the parish became fully self-support- career at the University, returned to ing. Mr. Widney was an Oklahoma Baylor School in Chattanooga this fall, trustee of the University from 1924 to and is teaching and coaching the mid- 1930. Alumnus of college, seminary, get football team. and graduate school, he published a Mrs. Janis Lane of Huntsville, Ala- history of the Sewanee chapter of bama, and Mrs. Elizabeth Murolo of ATO, the only such publication of a Wolcott, Connecticut, were the first of local chapter history at Sewanee. their sex to receive earned degrees He is survived by Mrs. Widney, a from the University of the South. Each son, Charles L. Jr., '49, with the U. S. '25 received a Master of Arts in Teaching State Department in Eeirut, Lebanon, LOUIS C. MELCHER, degree from the Sewanee Summer In- and a daughter. stitute for Science and Mathematics. T. LeMay, '25, KS, an officer Louis September 25, while traveling. He was Herbert Lindsey Little, KA, was firm, was killed of a Dallas mortgage an employee of Capitol Airways. In married to Frances Virginia Balling at Buffalo, in a two-car collision near 1959 he graduated from the National St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Union- 22. native of Sher- Texas, August A School of Aeronautics in Kansas City. town, Pennsylvania. been a Dallas area man, Texas, he had Survivors include his parents, Hirat.t Frederick Howard Maull, LCA, was since 1946. He was a member resident S. Chameerlain III, '38, SN, and Mrs. in June to Jean Stinson in All All Angels' Church married of St. Michael and Chamberlain, two brothers, Thomas L., Saints' Chapel, Sewanee. After the Dallas Mortgage Bankers' and of the '64, and George Ivens, '69, two sisters, performed by University Ken- ceremony, Association. He was an American and his maternal grandmother. Chaplain David B. Collins, the bride's nel Club judge. Survivors include a parents gave a reception at the Lambda brother and a sister. Mrs. Robert Means Brooks, the form- Chi Alpha fraternity house. The Maulls The Rt. Rev. Louis C. Melcher, '25, Philadelphia, he er Amelia Gaillard, died August 28. are living in where died at his home at Pinehurst, North Divinity Her late husband was one of the pro- is attending the Philadelphia Carolina, September 21, following a prietors of P. S. Brooks and Co., and School. nrolonged illness. He had been bishop is re- her family connections went back to Joseph Fleming Parker, SAE, of Southern and Central Brazil for ten Sewanee's earliest days. As a member turning to the Sewanee Military Acad- years before his 1958 retirement. Since cf St. Augustine's Guild, she was for emy as an instructor in English this then he had been minister of the Pine- many years responsible for the altar fall. He was battle group commander hurst Village Chapel, a non-denomi- student and also flowers in All Saints' Chapel. She was at the Academy as a national church, until January 1, when a Mid-South champion wrestler, a member of the Woman's Club and was ill health forced his retirement from excel the Fortnightly and was an editor of a sport in which he continued to that position. Before going to Brazil, the Sewanee Cook Book. as a University student. He is married Bishop Melcher had held parishes in and She is survived by two brothers and to the former Patricia Ruth Moore, Tennessee and in South Carolina. has one son. John Robert Parker. He a sister and, in Sewanee, by four sis- He is survived by his widow, the is Dr. Thomas Parker, '30. ters-in-law, Mrs. Preston Brooks, Jr., the son of former Mary Curry, whom he married Charles Gray Ransom, Jr., PGD, was Mrs. Ephraim Kirby-Smith, Mrs. Jo- while dean of St. Luke's Cathedral in married to Elizabeth Grove Oliver seph Eggleston, and Miss Catherine the Panama Canal Zone. He has two June 26 at Truro Episcopal Church in Brooks. Another sister-in-law is Mrs. daughters and a son, Louis C, Jr., as- Fairfax, Virginia. Henry Cortes of Dallas. sistant rector of the Church of the Mike Speer, SN, Bob Stanford, SN, Mrs. Melinda Hampton Wortham, Hood Shepherd, Raleigh, North Caro- and Jim Bruda, '66, spent the summer wife of Eben Wortham, 18, KA, died lina. working in the development office at October 13 at her home in Nashville. '32, died the University. Their most important Ernest T. Bailey, Jr., ATO, She had been a resident of Nashville in task was assistance in the $10,000,000 of a heart attack at his home New for sixtv years and had been married Campaign. Speer began graduate Orleans July 9, 1965. to Mr. Wortham since 1918. The family studies in history at Ohio State Uni- Hiram Sanborn Chamberlain IV, '61, requested memorial gifts be sent to versity this fall, while Stanford is died in Zimapan, Hidalgo, Mexico, on the University rather than flowers.

The Sewanee News SEWANEE BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS

Class numerals indicate alumni. Andrew Lytic, A'20, editor of the HISTORY AND CURRENT AFFAIRS Where no other notation makes the. Sewanee Review: The Velvet Horn; A point of Sewanee interest clear, it may Novel, A Novella, and Four Stories. Anita Goodstein, Biography of a be assumed that the book is by or Obolensky. (These books must be or- BusiNrss Man, Cornell, $5.75. about a present or past facility mem- dered well in advance but your book ber. store may have a copy or two.) Smith Hempstone, '50, Africa, An- gry Young Giant, Praeger, $7.95. Reb- Allen Tate, The Fathers, Swallow, els, Mercenaries, and Dividends, Prae- MAGAZINE $3.75. ger, $4.95.

The Sewanee Review, ed. Andrew Howard M. Hannah, '50, Comman- Lytle, A'20. Oldest literary-critical BELLES LETTRES dant of the Sewanee Military Academy, quarterly in America. $5.00 a year Confederate Action in Franklin James Agee, Letters of James Acee first subscription, gifts in addition County, Tennessee, University Press of to Father Flye, '37, Braziller, $5.00. $3.00 each. Sewanee, $3.00. Father Flye was the writer's teacher at RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY St. Andrew's School on the Mountain History of Homes and Gardens of and a lifelong correspondent. Tennessee. Reissue includes section on George M. Alexander, '38, Hand- Breslin Tower and Sewanee houses. book of Biblical Personalities, Sea- Updated by Mrs. Bayly Turlington bury, $5.75. ('42) and Mrs. Arthur Ben Chitty, Jr. C. FitzSimons Allison, '49, ('35). Cheekwood, Nashville, Fear, Love and Worship, Sea- $12.50. bury, $2.75. Paperback $1.45. Andrew Lytle, A'20, Bed- Robert R. Brown, '56, bish- ford Forrest and His Critter op of Arkansas, Alive Again, Company. Obolensky, $5.95. based on the parable of the Joseph Parks, General Ed- prodigal son. Morehouse-Bar- mund Kirby-Smith, Louisi- low, $3.95. ana State University, $7.50. John S. Marshall, '42, Leonidas Polk, the Fighting Hooker and the Anglican Bishop, LSU, $7.50. Tradition, University Press of Sewanee, $4.00 clothbound, Calhoun Winton, '48, Cap- $2.50 paper. tain Steele, Johns Hopkins, $5.95. J. Howard W. Rhys, Epis- tle to the Romans, Macmil- lan, $3.50. MISCELLANEOUS GIFT Wilford O. Cross, Prologue "NATURALS" to Ethics, Nashotah, $3.50. Lily Baker, Charlotte Gai- Fleming James, Personali- lor, Rose Duncan Lovell, and ties of the Old Testament, Sarah Hodgson Torian, Pur- Scribner's, $6.95. ple Sewanee, hardback, $3.50, Bayard Hale Jones, Dynam- paper $2.50. ic Redemption, Reflections on the .Book of Common Samuel Gaillard Stoney, '11, Plantations of the Caro- Prayer, Seabury, $3.25. lina Low Country. Carolina Art Association, Charleston, POETRY AND CRITICISM illustration Little Tragedies, translated by Favors ky from $12.50 (boxed). Eugene M. Kayden, trans- EuJene M Kayden. By permission of the Antioch Press. lator, Poems by Boris Paster- Queenie Woods Washington, nak. Second edition, revised H'20, ed. The Sewanee Cook and enlarged, Antioch, $5.50. Book, revised and enlarged Eugene Onegin, by Alexander S. Push- A CHILDREN'S BOOK FOR 1958 by Charlotte Gailor. Favorite kin, Antioch, $5.50. Little Tragedies, ADULTS recipes of a long roster of Sewanee by Alexander S. Pushkin, Antioch, ladies. Sewanee, $3.50. Proceeds to the $3.50. Gant Gaither, Jr., '38, Sally Seal, All Saints' Chapel Completion Fund. the unexpurgated Life of H.R.H. William '04, Love Alexander Percy, Col- Thomas C. Barr, Jr., Caves of Ten- lected the Grand Duchess of Cod-Sardinska. Poems. Lanterns on the Levee, nessee. State of Tennessee, Division Knopf, $5.50. Cartoons. Obolensky, $3.00. of Geology, $6.50. Paul Ramsey, In an Ordinary Placf, Southern Poetry Review Press, Ral- CHILDREN'S BOOKS eigh, North Carolina. Poems. $1.25. These books, as well as a wide assort- Christine Govan, The Delectable Monroe K. Spears, The Poetry of ment of other Sewanee items, may be W. H. Auden, the Disenchanted Is- Mountain, World Publishing Company, ordered from the University Supply land, Oxford, $6.75. $2.95. The author recalls a Sewanee Store. girlhood. FICTION Joan Balfour Payne (Mrs. John B. Dicks, '48), Leprechaun of Bayou Perrin H. Lowrey, '47, The Great Luce, Hastings, $2.95. Magnificent Speckled Bird and Other Stories, Hen- Milo, Hastings, $2.75. Charlie from ry Regnery Company, $4.95. Yonder, Hastings, $3.25.