February, 1963 Sewanee News

E SOUTH SEWANEE, TENNESSEE

SEWANEE MOVIE-MAKERS

(See Page 15) THE Gentlemen . . . Sewan The Vice-Chancellor NEWS we are now on the verge of starting the biggest The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the Associated Alumni developmental program we have ever undertaken of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennessee. Second since the days of the Founders. The Ford matching Class postage paid at Sewanee. Tennessee. offer alone is as great as the entire Endowment Fund was in 1950. We are no longer struggling for sur- vival; we are setting out to establish ourselves among Editor Arthur Ben Chitty. '3=; the strongest and best educational institutions any-

where. This we can do. The opportunity is here and Issue Editor Edith Whitesell now. In a few weeks we shall announce the organi-

Associates Florence McCrory, Elizabeth Chitty zation and the first steps which we have already taken Peggy Ervin, Sue Wunderlicu in the Ten Million Dollar Campaign.

Robert P. Hare, IV This opportunity could not have presented itself at this time without the successes of the last ten years.

Because we raised nearly fourteen million dollars in that time the Ford Foundation judged us to have

the potential to meet its challenge. We should all be CONTENTS deeply thankful for the work of Bishop Juhan and Air. Chitty, the whole Development Office, the re- 3 The 1962 Gift gents, the trustees, the Episcopal Church, the alumni and friends, who have contributed to this achievement. 4 The Decade's Gift We must also realize that this opportunity could 6 Scholars and Scholarships not have presented itself at this time without the aca- demic prestige to command such support; and for this 8 On the Mountain we are indebted to the faculty and students who have

9 Mrs. duPont Honored earned for Sewanee the scholastic reputation which it now enjoys on a national scale.

1 3 Here and There The latest evidence of Sewanee's national reputa- 15 New Movie tion was published in the Winter, 1963, issue of The journal of the Association of College Admissions Coun- 18 With Sewanee Clubs selors (Volume 8, Number 3; pages 11-13). Dr. Wil- 21 Class Distinctions --: liam Warntz reports there that the colleges which have » the highest proportion of their graduates listed in 21^ Alumni Donors (CONTINUED ON PAGE 31)

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February 1963 \ OLUME 29 Number 1

ON THE COVER—In an Atlanta recording studio in Janu- ary, putting the sound track on Sewanee's new movie (see p. 15 ff.), were intently gathered Bishop Frank A. Juhan, left, and seated clockwise Arthur Ben Chitty, director of public relations, Edith Whitesell, script writer, Alva Lines, director of Southeastern Films, Vice-Chancellor Edward McCrady, Leigh Kelley, director-photographer of the film, and Dean Robert S. Lancaster. Standing in the picture at the right, thouph not shown on the cover, is Hinton Longino. Atlanta, host of the Sewanee contingent. Julian Maddox of Southern Bell, the film's producer, snapped the photographs.

* GIFT FOR '62 TOTALS $1,762,481

$650,000 To Be Matched by Ford Foundation

JL or the tenth straight year the University of the In the first two categories, the leading dioceses in South has received over a million dollars in total gift gift-per-communicant to Sewanee were Tennessee, income. The final total of $1,762,481 ranked third South Florida, Louisiana, Atlanta, Florida, and Ala- highest in Sewanee history. This impressive figure was bama. No diocese reached a dollar-per-communicant, achieved without any bequest while the two though a number of parishes did. Parish figures will better years, i960—$1,851,406 and 1961 —$1,804,195, shortly be distributed to area chairmen and other in- each included approximately a million dollars in be- terested persons. quests. Projections in the Ten Million Dollar Campaign re- The 1962 record was led by an advance of $655,000 veal that an average of $1.60 per communicant per from the Ford Foundation on its $2,500,000 matching year must come from the owning area for the churches grant. A total of $197,508 came from the Episcopal carry Church. Some $505,000 came from alumni, almost half to their pro-rata share in the major fund-raising in the honorary classification. Corporations gave effort. All money received from parishes or dioceses $88,532 and foundations other than Ford $142,356. In- earmarked for the college or seminary or unrestricted dividual non-alumni contributed $174,024. Approxi- will be matched one dollar for three by the Ford Foun- mately $650,000 of the income above was received af- dation.

ter September 1 and is eligible for the Ford matching grant of one dollar for every three.

The largest alumni gift in dollar value came from

Bishop Frank A. Juhan's class of 191 1, followed by DIOCESES IN ORDER OF TOTAL GIVEN IN 1962 president C. Brown Burch. Leading in per- 1921, J. SEWANEE-IN THEOL. EDUC. TOTAL centage of donors was 1894 with only one of five pos- THE-BUDGET OFFERING Tennessee $19,409 $23,020 sible donors not on the list. Of the larger classes 1929 $3,611 South Florida 9,612 5,661 15,273 outdistanced all others with 48 percent, a record made Louisiana 11,852 3,064 14,917 possible by the determined effort of Fred Freyer, who Atlanta 11,638 3.044 14,683 Fiorida 8,798 4,081 12,880 a offer. made personal matching check Alabama __ 10,486 1,969 12,455 North Carolina The largest number of donors came from the class 5,481 3,524 9,006 Texas 8,490 413 8,906 of 1929, with sixty-three contributors, followed by the Kentucky 6,411 1,434 7,845 Misrissippi large class of 1950 (251 members, forty-two contribu- 4,469 3,251 7,720 Dallas 4,571 2,680 7,251 tors). A complete listing of alumni gifts by classes Arkansas 6,047 802 6,849 West Texas 6,227 188 6,415 is on page 31. Upper South Carolina 3,914 1,853 5,767 Church Support South Carolina 3,154 999 4,153 Georgia 1,897 1,311 3,208 Sewanee's Church Support program is divided into Lexington _. 2,700 245 2,945 Northwest Texas 1,519 1,096 2,615 three divisions: (1) Sewanee-in-the-Budget, (2) The- East Carolina 1.467 1,132 2,600

ological Education Offerings, (3) other gifts (hospital, West North Carolina . _ 1,205 1,078 2,283 Missouri 255 1,269 1,524 theological housing, etc.), and (4) gifts from outside the owning dioceses.

February 1963 Ten Tears — $13.6 Million

The University of the South's gift record of the past Mrs. Louis W. Alston, whose three quarters of a mil- decade—over a million dollars each year—was a major lion dollars went to the endowment of the School of factor in the decision of the Ford Foundation to include Theology. Sewanee in its program for twenty-nine significant col- The Episcopal Church in the past decade has given leges which were capable of continuing regional lead- to Sewanee more than $2,500,000, which is coinciden- ership. Sewanee, while the smallest in enrollment on tally the amount of the Ford matching grant. The the list, received the largest amount of challenge funds. church gifts came primarily through the annual pro- What were the University's leading sources of gifts? gram for Sewanee-in-the-Budget and the Theological

The total for 1952-1961 was #13,635,000 from all Education Sunday offering, but there also were large organizations and individuals. Nearly $5 million came gifts to the All Saints' Chapel Completion Fund. There from individual donors who were neither matriculants was $100,000 from the national Episcopal Church nor members of the boards of regents and trustees. The through the Builders for Christ program, and gifts to principal benefactor of the University, not only in this theological housing from Alabama, followed by Flori- period but in its first century, was Mrs. Alfred I. da, South Florida, Upper South Carolina, Louisiana, duPont. Some other very generous donors included and Tennessee.

Mrs. A. S. Cleveland of Houston, Texas, who built A. Foundations were responsible for nearly two million Sessums Cleveland Hall in memory of her husband, dollars in benefactions. Some of the larger foundation who had been alumnus, regent, and trustee; Mrs. gifts included the George F. Baker scholarships, the Frank P. Phillips of Columbus, Mississippi, who made final $150,000 from the General Education Board on the Nurses' Home at Emerald-Hodgson Hospital a me- the Guerry A^emorial campaign, anonymous gifts for morial to her husband, an alumnus of the Class of George T. Hunter Hall and the Alexander Guerry Me- 1893; and the anonymous donors who were responsi- morial Building, grants from the Rockefeller Founda- ble for the Sewanee Inn development. In the decade tion to the Seivanee Review, and more than $400,000 the Robert P. Shapard family completed their gift for from the Ford Foundation. Shapard Tower. Living alumni and members of the governing boards The next largest source of gifts, more than $3 mil- together gave one million dollars in the decade. They lion, came through bequests from alumni and friends. greatly influenced other gifts which were credited to The smallest was less than fifty dollars; the largest their widows or family foundations. was more than a million dollars from the estate of Miss Sewanee has not had the response of some institu- Georgia Wilkins of Columbus, Georgia, who endowed tions from industry and corporations; only one-third scholarships to enable Sewanee to admit outstanding of a million dollars has come from this source. freshmen every year. Bequests of more than $50,000 During the decade Sewanee received less than came from Dr. Theodore Pruning of New Orleans, $200,000 from governmental units, primarily for the whose brother was an alumnus of the Sewanee medi- airport, science, and the county construction of roads cal department; Miss Ursula Grosvenor of Southern on the domain. Pines, North Carolina, whose bequest of more than More than $5 million was given for buildings. Nearly $200,000 was the largest which had been received by $5 million was given for endowment. Funds generally the School of Theology at the time of her death; Dr. unrestricted totaling $2,305,000 were given for "edu- Edward C. Ellett, '88, whose gift of nearly a quarter cational and general purposes." Nearly a half million million dollars was used to renovate Walsh-Ellett Hall; went into scholarship funds. About one million went Mrs. Crawford Johnson of Birmingham, whose hus- to the hospital, airport, Sewanee Military Academy, band was the donor of Johnson Hall; and Dr. and and other causes.

The Sewanee News Students Dig

Lost Cove • 1 m 1 Patrick C. Hartney, '62, has con- ducted a scientific exploration of Lost Cove, which made newspaper A ! headlines in the past year because of m its rabid bats. Hartney published in the Spring, % a 22-page account 1962, issue of Tennessee Archaeolo- gist of excavations by himself and j^^-> 1 other Sewanee students in Peter Cave, one of the three entrances of Couls Lost Cove Cave, during the aca- J. Bayard Snowden of Memphis (right), shakes hands with Clarence Day of demic years 1959-61. Hartney ac- Columbus, Mississippi, a major donor to the Snowden Hall of Forestry. Charles knowledges the financial aid and Edward Cheston, processor of forestry, is next to Day and with his father is Robert G. Snowden, chairman of the board of regents. sympathetic support of Sewanee professors H. Malcolm Owen, Harry C. Yeatman. and T. Felder Dorn Snowden Building Dedicated (sciences); Bayly Turlington (clas- sical languages); and James M. Three dozen of those most re- ing that the Snowden Building owed Grimes (history). sponsible for a new forestry build- its existence primarily to him. Dr. Hartney concludes that Peter ing were among the two hundred McCrady said that Cheston per- sonally envisioned, planned, pro- Cave offers the archaeologist much who braved a zero-ish snowstorm moted, and raised the money for his the same rich storehouse of shards, to see the structure dedicated on artifacts, projectile points found model building. and December 11. The man for whom in Russell Cave a few miles across Conservationists and lumber firms it was named, J. Bayard Snowden, the Alabama line, so highly publi- from all over the South had a part was present from Memphis and the cized by the Smithsonian and the in making possible the new build- two largest benefactors had parts in National Geographic. ing, and their representatives were the ceremony. present for the ceremonies. Among Clarence Day of Columbus, Mis- them: Victor Sutton of Bowaters sissippi, whose #25,000 gift started Southern; Ray Johnson of Hunt- the fund last year, presented the land, Tennessee; Robert Cockroft; building on behalf of the donors. John T. Striplin and William G.

Bishop Frank A. Juhan, who Rogers of U. S. Plywood; 0. I. matched Day's gift, pronounced the Bratton of Memphis. Also present dedicatory sentences. At a luncheon were Mr. and Mrs. G. Everett Other students assisting Hartney honoring out-of-town visitors, Vice- Farmer of Signal Mountain, whose in the excavations and processing Chancellor Edward McCrady hon- son, Allen Thompson Farmer, '54, were Eugene Carrow, '63, Front ored Charles Edward Cheston, Se- is memorialized in the Forestry Royal, Virginia; Ross Clark, '63, wanee's professor of forestry, say- Club Room. Oak Ridge, Tennessee; David El- phee, '60, Cleveland, Ohio; Charles Coulson

Seymour, '62, St. Augustine, Florida, and Knoxville, Tennessee; Edward Reynolds, '62, Atlanta, Georgia; Ed- ward de Bary, '61, Norfolk, Vir- ginia; Robert Schneider, '61, South Bend, Indiana; John Mitchell, '62, Elmira, New York; Curtis Peterson, '63, Gainesville, Florida; and Kem- ble Oliver, III, '62, Columbia, South Carolina.

February 1963 .

SCHOLARS AN

Douglas Pagchall of McKenzie, Tennessee; Waldemar Rhodes, Root-Tilden . . L. Prichard, Jr., of Inverness, Mississippi; Peter 0. Sewanee now has its fifteenth Rhodes Scholar. Jos- Smyth of Charleston, South Carolina; and Thad H. eph L. Price, known as Joel, chemistry major from Waters of Hammond, Louisiana. Meridian, Mississippi, was informed in mid-December One of the most coveted honors for upperclassmen is of his selection to study at Oxford University in Eng- the Charles Pollard Marks Memorial Scholarship, which land on funds bequeathed by Cecil Rhodes. No honor goes to the junior Gownsman selected by the faculty to a student has aroused more professorial satisfaction as "the outstanding man in personal honor and in- than this to young Price. His major professor, Dr. tegrity, moral character, leadership, friendliness, of David B. Camp, says of him, "Mr. Price is not only democratic attitude and good scholarship." This year brilliant; he is modest, courteous, and genuinely in- the Marks scholarship is held by Robert L. Brown, son terested in others." And Dr. Charles T. Harrison of of Bishop Robert R. Brown of Arkansas. the English Department reacted to the news, "It makes Among holders of other named scholarships in the one think that a little justice remains in the world." college are: Atlee Heber Hoff, Atlee Henkel Hoff, and Louis George Hoff scho'.ars, Eugene H. Hawkins The ink wasn't dry on our modest boast that Se- and Stephen Morehead; Telfair Hodgson scholar, Pey- wanee was second in the nation in the per capita out- ton Splane, III; James Edward Harton scholar, M. L. put of Woodrow Wilson Fellows before it was brought Agnew, Jr.; John G. and Fannie F. Ruge scholar, to our attention that there is one fellowship area in Michael V. Thomason; Margaret E. Bridgers scholaF, first in the nation, can omit the which we are and we William S. Wade; William 0. Baldwin scholar,. Harry "per capita." Five Sewanee graduates are now Root- A. Burns, III; William G. and Marie Selby scholars, Tilden Scholars in law at New York University, and Kenneth D. Gilbert, Marion L. Dudley, Frank Dieg- that is more than any other college anywhere of any mann, Fred Diegmann, William J. Mims, and Evans size, geographical area, or complexion can claim. Tied E. Harrell. for second place are the University of Southern Cali- fornia and Holy Cross.

And the Woodrow Wilson Foundation has an- nounced that a Sewanee man, Robert Dale Sweeney,

'59, is one of nineteen former Woodrow Wilson bel- lows to receive Dissertation Fellowship awards. The nineteen expect to complete their doctorates in four years or less, and funds provided by the Ford Foun- dation will assure them complete financial independ- ence while finishing work for the Ph.D. Sweeney is working in classics at Harvard.

High Character, Academic Competence Recipients of the Georgia M. Wilkins scholarships, made possible by a bequest from Miss Georgia M. Wil- kins of Columbus, Georgia, "must demonstrate high character, a sense of responsibility, leadership, and academic competence." This year's Wilkins Scholars are Jeffrey Bragg of Vicksburg, Mississippi; David K.

Brooks, Jr.. of Jackson, Mississippi; John H. Dawson Coulson of Sumter, South Carolina; Alan Darlington of Bloom- Rhodes Scholar Joel Price and his major professor David B. ington, Illinois; Ian Gaston of Chickasaw, Alabama; Camp.

The Sewanee News CHOLARSHIPS

"New Vista of Educational Opportunities'

South Pulls More Top Men

John B. Ransom, director of admissions, spoke

for the South at a convocation of fifty private schools

and thirty southern, midwestern, and western col-

leges on October 30. Williston Academy in Massa- Grace Mahl Baker chusetts called the conference in order that private "Unfailing concern" eastern schools and the colleges might better under-

stand each other and know what each has to offer.

Less and less, private secondary schools are prepara- Loan Fund Meets Need tory schools for the big name eastern colleges, in par- ticular the Ivy League schools, and more and more A student loan fund has been set up at the Univer- their alumni are going south and wdsti sity of the South in memory of the late Mrs. George Williston says that this trend arises from a con- M. Baker. "The Grace Mahl Baker Loan Fund" with stantly increasing number of boys who want to go to a corpus of #10,000 will appear in next year's catalogue college, especially the prestige schools in the East, in honor of the wife of Sewanee's beloved Dean-Emeri- to tus of the college. but also from the rapidly climbing standard of edu- line of the Instigator and largest contributor to the fund was cation south of the Mason-Dixon and west schools that are just beginning, Ralph Speer, Jr., '27, who began in 1958 rallying his Appalachians. New classmates for the project. When the total this year and older institutions that are reviving and expanding, reached #9,000, Dr. Baker himself asked to give the are very definitely challenging" the top flight eastern

tenth thousand. schools in both intellectual opportunity and achieve- This fund meets a serious need. Scholarship aid for ment. Former Ivy League teachers are leaving for

students is always budgeted so closely that no emer- better positions and better pay elsewhere. Univer-

gencies can be provided for. Dr. Baker recalls scores sities, supported by a new generation of successful of students during his thirty-one years as dean who, alumni and huge foundations, are broadening their in an unexpected financial reverse, could have been curriculums and their facilities. The result is that these kept in college if such a loan fund had been available. schools offer new and unique opportunities to their No interest will be required of any borrower until he undergraduate bodies. In many fields they rival the has become gainfully employed, even if this means best eastern schools. The Williston Conference was waiting until he has finished graduate school or in- intended to open up this new vista of educational op- ternship. portunities to New England private schools. The catalogue will note that Mrs. Baker "won the Kenyon College, also affection and admiration of countless students for her Speaking for the midwest was gracious entertaining, her unfailing concern, and her an Episcopal school, and for the west was Claremont Christian example." College.

February 1963 On the Mountain . . .

A faculty husband and wife have each had a book A paper on radioactivity and soil types on the Cum- published last year, which must be some sort of record, berland Plateau has been written as a joint project of cautious as we are about making superlative claims. the chemistry, biology, and forest service groups at Last July the Cornell University Press brought out Sewanee. Students worked on the preliminary analy- economics professor Marvin E. Goodstein's Pace The ses, and results are being published as a U. S. De- and Pattern Philippine Economic Growth: IQ38, of partment of Agriculture bulletin: James Burton, H. 1948, and ig$6. This was Data Paper Number 48 in M. Owen and W. B. Guenther, 1962. Radioactivity in the Southeast Asia Program, Department of Asian Tennessee Soils. Studies, at Cornell. On October 26 Mrs. Marvin E. Goodstein found in Dr. Harry C. Yeatman, professor of biology, has the mail box a bright, shiny author's copy of Anita published results of his marine studies, including a Shafer Goodstein, Biography of a Businessman—Henry Woods Hole Oceanographic expedition, in Crustaceana, W. Sage, 1814.-1891. This too was published by the Vol. 4, Part 4. His paper, which is Woods Hole Con- Cornell University Press. tribution No. 1206, is entitled, "The Problem of Dis- Both members of this busy couple are now Ph.D.'s. persal of Marine Littoral Copepods in the Atlantic since Dr. Marvin made it last year. Dr. Anita, who Ocean, Including Some Redescriptions of Species." will teach her subject, history, in the college this se- mester during the sabbatical absence of Dr. James Three Sewanee professors were named by the Ten- Grimes, antedated her husband by several years. nessee Academy of Science as Visiting Scientists for Dr. Anita Goodstein will also be on the faculty of 1962-63. They are Dr. H. Malcolm Owen, chairman the Sewanee Summer Institute of Science and Mathe- of the department of biology; Professor Charles E. matics this year, offering a course in the history of Cheston, chairman of the department of forestry; and science. Dr. William T. Allen, assistant professor of physics Under this program eighty professional scientists, mathematicians and engineers will be available to sec- Professor Arthur Butler Dugan of the department ondary schools in Tennessee to discuss scientific topics, of political science served as chairman of the Region projects and problems with science teachers and school VII Selection Committee for the Woodrow Wilson Na- administrators. The Visiting Scientist Program is sup- tional Fellowship Foundation. A former Rhodes schol- ported by the National Science Foundation and is pre- ar, Professor Dugan also is a member of the district sented in cooperation with the Tennessee State De- selection committee for Rhodes Scholarships and a partment of Education. local Fulbright program adviser.

Chemistry professor T. Felder Dorn with three other men published "Radiocarbon Dating at the University of Washington" in Vol. 4 (1962) of the scientific journal Radiocarbon. These studies were made pos- sible in part by grants from the National Science Foundation and the Petroleum Research Fund.

Dr. A. Scott Bates, associate professor of French, had published in France last summer an article, " 'Les

collines,' dernier testament d'Apollinaire," in Guillaume Apollinaire, 1962, edited by Michel Decaudin.

The University now has a Sigma Xi Club, the first branch of the national scientific honor society in an undergraduate college in Tennesse. Dr. William T. Allen (left), president. Dr. McCrady, and Dr. George S. Ramseur (right) secretary, receive the charter from Dr. Louis F. Fieser of the Harvard chemistry faculty, installing .

Coulson

The Sewanee News Aurea

Condit Willard Stewcrt

Bishop Horace W. B. Donegan (Hon. '50), invests Jessie Ball duPont (Hon. '45). with one of Christendom's rarest honors. Saecula

Order of St. John Conferred on Mrs. duPont

M rs. Alfred I. duPont. Sewanee's most generous civilian form of the George Cross, one of the highest benefactor and honorary alumna of the University, has British military honors. Formal ceremonies conferring received one of the oldest and most venerated honors the two distinctions in absentia were performed on Jan- that the western world has to offer. uary 6 in the Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the At her home, Nemours, in Wilmington, Delaware, on Divine in New York City. The personal presentation January 12 Mrs. duPont was invested as an associate was later made because illness confined Mrs. duPont commander with the designation of sister in the Ven- to her home. erable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem. The University of the South conferred the honorary This British order was established in the Eleventh Cen- degree of doctor of civil law on Jessie Ball duPont in tury. Its members have been variously known as "hos- 1945, citing her as the "guiding hand of large and va- pitallers" and as the of Rhodes or the Knights ried enterprises ... a gracious woman, whose Chris- of Malta. Mrs. duPont's election, in recognition of tian character, whose unselfishness, whose concern fot her hospital philanthropies and gifts of food and cloth- the welfare of others, and whose generosity have served ing to Britons during World War II, was approved by cur country and the common good." Sewanee was the Queen Elizabeth II, sovereign head of the order in first institution of higher learning to confer an hon- England. The only other person ever connected with orary degree on Mrs. duPont.

Sewanee to receive this honor was its first Vice-Chan- During the celebration of the University's Centen- cellor, the Rt. Rev. Charles Todd Quintard, second nial, Mrs. duPont was presented with a medallion cast bishop of Tennessee, who was a medical doctor before in gold from Vice-Chancellor McCrady's design, in- entering the ministry, and who served in-the Civil War scribed with a quotation from Virgil, "Aurea Condit as a chaplain and doctor. Saecula." This has been freely translated as, "She At the same time Mrs. duPont was awarded the founds golden centuries."

February 1963 1

Record Crowd Expected for Alumni Week

Commencement 1963 falls as late Friday, June 14 hop Frank A. Juhan, '11, and its as it can under the present ordi- Corporate Communion. Campaign members will also be feted by the — President nances "the Monday following meetings. Church Support area Old Timers under Ken- the first Friday in June." When chairmen, Class presidents, Club neth Lyne. the graduates leave the Mountain presidents. The next reunion groups will in- on Monday, June 10, there follows clude the classes of 1921-24 and a week of assorted alumni, trustee, Saturday, June 15 the war classes 1940-43. By far the and Episcopal laymen's activities. Laity sessions, alumni and wives biggest reunion group will be that Here is the outline: welcome. Barbecue at noon. Alumni of the giant classes of the past four golf tournament. Evening dance Tuesday, June 1 years. Leaders of these classes with orchestra at Claramont. A Regents meet all day. Alumni have decided to come to Sewanee surprise is in the cards for this day. Council Tuesday night. during Senior Weekend, June 7-

1 0, since three of the four reunion Wednesday, June 12 The class reunions scheduled for classes had one or more years in Alumni Annual Meeting. Trustees 1963 will feature mid-week ses- college with the current graduates. begin two-day session at 4:00 p.m. sions of social and business activity It was decided, despite the necessity with an open invitation to remain Thursday, June 13 of rooming in SMA barracks, the through the weekend. Alumni-Trustee Corporate Com- fellowship would be closer than if munion. Trustees meet all day. The fifty-year group, the class of they met the following week with Class Reunion parties. Alumni 1913, holds the record for the high- the older alumni. This juxtaposi- Dinner Dance, buffet with orches- est percentage (25 percent) of its tion of four reunion classes with tra. Episcopal Laymen convene at members in Who's Who in Amer- the senior class will not occur again Claramont for supper. ica. It will be entertained by Bis- for fifty years.

Summer Heads

Miss Martha McCrory, assistant profes- Dean John M. Webb heads the College Dr. H. Malcolm Owen, professor of bi- sor of music, is the new director of the summer session, entering its third year ology, once again directs the Summer Sewanee Summer Music Center. She with new status as a permanent ces- Institute of Science and Mathematics, is fondly remembered as its cellist and sion of the University. It was recently its grant from the National Science business manager. on an experimental basis. Foundation renewed for the third year.

10 The Sewanee New? Music from the Mountain

Tape Recordings Offered

Sewanee is now pleased to announce that it is in a position to share the sacred music of Dr. William W. Lemonds on the new Casavant Freres organ and the University Choir, the bells of the unsurpassed Polk Memorial Carillon, and other top flight offerings in

the world of sound with its owning churches and friends everywhere.

The Christmas program by University singers was played by forty odd radio stations around the country last year and this, including giant WLW of Cincinnati. The request from 45 stations out of 102 queried the first time round stimulated the office's faculty for im- provisation almost beyond bearing. A series of thir- Coulson teen programs was run in its entirety by four stations, Student James Taylor records a bit for the new movie in Sewanee's studio in Guerry Hall. Edward Dudley is the in part by half a dozen more. technician. Now we have a good recording studio and the ser- vices of a professional technician to enhance the qual- Glee Club to Tour ity and range of the offerings and smooth their repro- duction and distribution. The Sewanee Glee Club under the direction of Dr. William W. The Development Office at Sewanee welcomes re- especially grateful Lemonds, who last year won many quests and suggestions. It will be friends for themselves and Sewanee, for the opportunity to serve parishes and missions that enrichment. will again spend their spring vaca- are in need of recorded musical tion on tour.

The itinerary is shaping up as folloWS; The concert Glee Club is chosen from the University Choir. March 22 Nashville

March 24 St. Louis March 25 Kansas City March 26 Miami and Tulsa, Okla- homa March 27 Oklahoma City March 28 Durant, Oklahoma March 29 Dallas or Fort Worth, Texas (Uncertain) March 30 Houston, Texas March 31 Free time in Xew Or- leans, Louisiana Detailed information or addi- tional performances may be re- quested by writing to Glee Club. The University of the South, Se- wanee, Tennessee.

February 1963 ri

Here and There

The new scale model of the campus, made by Ed- Dean Robert S. Lancaster has completed the record- win Keeble, '23, and his architectural associates, had ing of thirteen radio programs on the general subject, its exhibition debut when Arthur Chitty took it to the "You and the Law," at the request of Educational Tennessee diocesan convention in January. Keeble's Productions. Lessons covered are "The Nature of firm, who did the Southern landmark Life and Casu- Law," "Ancient Law," "Anglo-American Legal Institu- alty Tower in Nashville, is working on plans for a new tions," "The Development of Equity," "Our Court dormitory, McCrady Hall, next to Gailor, and Clara's System," "Problems of Constitutional Law," "Juris- Castle at Natural Bridge. prudence and the Judicial Process," "Criminal Law." "Torts," "Contracts," "Wills The model has a miniature Shapard Tower carved and Real Property," "In- ternational Law," and "Makers of the Law." The from lucite which lights up, and from it, thanks to the entire series is available to any radio sporadic magic of the tape recorder, emanate Sewa- station by ar- rangement with Educational Productions, Daytona nee's bells and other characteristic sounds including, Beach, Florida. briefly, the dulcet promotional tones of Arthur Chitty.

New trustee James R. Rash, Jr., postmaster of The University of the South received recently a be- Henderson, Kentucky, has made a fast start on a par- quest of #130,000 from the late Mrs. Robert C. Alston ish'-by-parish contact in the western part of his diocese. of Atlanta. Half went to the permanent endowment for Veteran trustee William E. Bessire is handling the scholarships of the School of Theology and half went Louisville area. for college scholarship endowment. Mrs. Alston's father, the late Fleming Grantland duBignon, was Sewanee's Sewanee Military Academy's Gorgas Guard, des- Commencement orator in 1895. An attorney and legis- cribed by the Times-Picayune as one of the finest pre- lator in Georgia, he received a D.C.L. degree from Se- cision drill units in the country, performed for eighty wanee in 1896. (In those days, the orator did not thousand at the Sugar Bowl on New Year's Day. Be- necessarily receive a degree.) Her husband, also an fore the Guard was out of the stadium it had invita- Atlanta attorney, received a Sewanee D.C.L. in 1918. tions (a) to return or (b) go to the Cotton Bowl next when he was Commencement orator. He also served on P. Hare, master- year. Alumni Director Robert IV, the board of regents. minded the arrangements.

Nine lettermen return to this year's edition of the The thought of the planning committee of the board

Sewr anee wrestling squad. Included in this group arc of regents, as expressed in recent sessions, has been 123 lb. Southeastern champion Hank Haynes and that the present college of arts and sciences should

Southeastern runner-ups Jay Paty in the 147 lb. ultimately be restricted to 650 students or less. A weight class and Frank Pinney in the 167 lb. class. new college for men, of approximately the same size, Along with the lettermen are fifteen returning squad- should be located in the area beyond the Kappa Alpha men and freshmen. It may be difficult for the Tigers house and across from Claramont. The nearly-com- to match last year's record of five wins and one loss in pleted Benedict Hall will probably be a part of the six dual meets and second place in the Southeastern new college complex. The new library, located be-

Intercollegiate Wrestling Tournament but it should be tween the Phi Delta Theta house and the cemetery, an interesting season and barring injuries the grap- will lie directly between the two college campuses. The plers could once again have an outstanding year. more distant future holds the prospect of a graduate school of 150 located in the Louisiana Circle area and a college for 350 young ladies at Green's View. The order in which benefactors become interested in the

projects could alter the order in which they are listed here.

GREEK ATHLETICS 206 has won the nation's attention from the Time notice in November. Here Ted Bitondo, before tak- ing off for Brazil to coach U. S. divers in the Pan-American Daniel A. McKeever, elected to the board of trus- games, gives Westervelt Ballard a few pointers, assisted by Met tees last year, has divided the diocese of Atlanta with Crump's blow-up of a line drawing depicting the Discus Thrower himself. Discus was cast in concrete to ancient specifi- John II. Nichols in a systematic solicitation on behalf cations by Richard Whitesell. A'65. Coulsu;! of Sewanee-in-thc-Budget.

February 1963 —

The new recreational lake on the former University he had ever tasted and left a standing order to have farm behind the milk processing plant has been offi- one sent to him every Christmas. cially named Lake Chcston. Its name honors Charles Edward Cheston, head of the department of forestry, Probably the last dormitory to be constructed on whose ingenuity and enthusiasm gave Sewanee eleven the present college campus will be called McCradv lakes. The new residential lake around which eight Hall in honor of the long association of the McCrady homes have been or are being built, halfway between family with Sewanee. It is being designed by Edwin the Woodland area and the golf course, will be called Keeble, S'23, and will occupy the old McCrady lease- by the original name of the area on old maps. Run- hold, held by the family since the 1880's. It will be nine; Knob Hollow Lake. directly across the street from the new Snowden for- estry building. Future dormitories will be constructed

on the new college site. Bowaters Southern Paper Corporation at Calhoun.

Tennessee, is one of two plants operated in the United

States by the giant international British-controlled Sewanee was gratified to learn thai its own professor firm. In the decade it has been locating, building, and emeritus of economics Eugene M. Kayden was chosen opening in Tennessee, its higher managerial staff has as the translator of Pasternak's poems to be presented kept in touch with Sewanee's forestry department. A on the BBC's Third Programme, over five other men week after Bowaters' president attended the dedica- who have translated the Russian poet, four of them tion of the Snowden building, he notified the Univer- British. Mr. Kayden's work was included in a special sity that Bowaters would pledge #5,500 to the cam- commemorative broadcast for Pasternak, who died on paign, all to be paid in time to qualify for the Ford May 30. The Antioch Press has announced four books matching grant. by Mr. Kayden for publication soon: translations of Pushkin, Lermentov, and an expanded edition of Pasternak poems. Guerry Hall performer Gerard Souzay, who has been called the finest interpretive soloist in the world, showed that he also has extra-musical discrimination. Eating Seaton G. Bailey, long-time trustee from Griffin and at Claramcnt Restaurant, Souzay, after the fashion of now a hard-hitting volunteer in the Church Support the French gourmet, ordered the specialty of the house program, spent hours and hours of December glued to which, after a huddle with Miss Clara, it was decided a telephone. He was calling churches in Georgia for was chess pie. He sent for a second piece and then the year-end rally toward a record Sewanee-in-the- a third. He pronounced it the best morsel of its kind Budget. The goal $1 per communicant.

Sewanee at Oxford. Left to right, first row: Allston, Jim, Chris Allison; Margaret, Ellen, and Kathy Woods. Second row. Evie Patterson, Martha Allison holding Browny Patterson, Marion Stoney, her sister Carol Tilley, Marie and Cecil Woods. Third row: Brown Patterson, Joe Pugh, Bill Stoney. Purposes cf English residence: Allison sabbatical, Woods and Patterson doctoral studies, Pugh chaplaincy of Oxford College, and Stoney fellowship in surgery. Allisons are now back in Sewanee.

Allisr.-i:

14 The Sewanee New? if"/, New Movie

HARVEY G. BOOTH, regent

ol the University and its chair- man For Church Support, decided

that Sewanee < ught to have a new movie, one especially de- signed to implement the ten mi - I* lion dollar campaign to claim the Lawson Fields Ford Foundation grant.

Mr. Booth, who is Southern Bell's vice-president foi public relations, was the initial r and donor of the movie Sezvanee, which won an American College

Public Relations Association first prize in i960; and the five-minute supplement. Building Sezvanee, made to show All Saints' Chapel completed.

The third movie has been created by the same vet- eran crew responsible for the earlier prize-winner, but this time the narration will boast the all-star cast of Bishop Frank A. Julian, Vice-Chancellor Edward

McCrady, and Dean Robert S. Lancaster.

Designer and producer of the film is Julian Madclox, Southern Bell photographic supervisor and prominent Atlanta artist. His collaborator, who did most of the photcgraphy himself, is Leigh Kelley, vice-president of Tucker \\ ayne advertising agency. Script write)

(with liberal help from the illustrious narrators) is Edith Whitesell, who before coming to Sewanee had won a $1,000 Avery Hopwood award n playwriting at the I niversity of M chigan and had worked as a s.aff script writer for CBS New York. Music, largely b)

Sewanee's organist and ch irmaster Dr. William W . Lemonds. his cantata singers and the University band, has been soundtracked and final processing done by Southeastern Films, Atlanta.

The meat of this movie is a "chalk talk" between D r ^'iCrady and Bishop |uhan discussina Sewanee' needs, animated with figures, inset illustrative shots, doodles, an original painting by Julian Madd* \. and

the Edwin Keeble sca'e model i f the University. T'ti brass-tacks package is gift-wrap] ed with brilliant in- terpretive close-ups ol Sewanee The whole film w:\\ * run fifteen minutes, is in color and sound (16 mm 1 like its two predecessors. When producer Julian Maddox was casting abou for a name for the opus at a Claram nt dinner ccn 'I 1 ' ference, Bishop [uhan responded, "What's in a name This caught Maddox's fancy, and he built the film s. around that title. PFhafs

Subtle Influences

To have soi

The Sewanee Review—symbol of excellence

To have some knowledge of the truth . . . Stills are from the movie. Photographed by Leigh Kelley and Julian Maddox. The film will be in color.

16 The Sewanee News the Name e^o^te^

beautiful We have had clergymen trained at St. Luke's in every diocese.

lings small as well as great make up all value.

The name Sewanee must continue to mean close personal intimacy between the guiding and the guided.

February 1963 WITH THE

A "Louisiana quartet" cf eight Negro voices ren- dered beautiful spirituals—and later on jazz, blues, and bop— from the circular stairs. By ten everyone was

dancing and— well— it had to be experienced to be believed. Dr. Yaughan Howard from New Orleans said, with mist in his eyes, "We were born a hundred and twenty-five years too late." No one dissented.

ATLANTA has recently elected Kenneth Kinnett, '56, president for 1963, succeeding Hcmer W. Whitman,

Louisiana Quartet Jr., '53. Sam M. Weyman is vice-president and T. G. Linthicum, '23, will serve as secretary-treasurer. The executive board will be announced at a later date.

Magnolia CHATTANOOGA alumni entertained with an aperitif party and dinner at the Chattanooga Golf and Country Club December 10. Professor William T. Cocke spoke By Arthur Ben Chitty on the recent news from Sewanee and Mr. Cecil Woods, '21, talked to the club about the Ten Million Dollar Campaign. Phil Whitaker, '55, was installed N othing like it ever happened before. as the new president; Guy Beatty, '49, vice-president; It was an unlikely idea to start with. No one be- Rupert Colmore, '37, secretary; and Jimmy Whitaker. lieved it would come off except Margaret (Mrs. Lee) '52, treasurer. Shaffer of Ardoyne Plantation, Houma, Louisiana. When that resourceful lady made a pilgrimage to Se- wanee with her newly graduated son, Lee, Jr., she in- John Bratton, A '47 C'51, is the new president of the vited Dean Robert S. Lancaster to come to South COASTAL CAROLINA chapter succeeding Henry C Louisiana for a gathering of Sewanee alumni and Hutson. Other officers elected at the December meet- friends. ing are Robert S. Cathcart, III, '61, vice-president; The meeting, she alleged, could be held at Magnolia Plantation, an ante-bellum mansion built in 1834 and for about a century owned by Shaffers. It was re- cently inherited by young Lee from his great-aunt. More from faith than conviction, the alumni office at Sewanee sent out invitations to Louisianians. To the astonishment of everyone except the Shaffers, there were over a hundred reservations. The party was held Saturday evening, December 6 Three hours early some thirty persons had come to inspect the Southdown sugar mill's cane grinding. By visitors were strolling through the beautifully 5 p.m. trimmed grounds under moss-hung oaks. By six the cocktail hour hex ted by the Shaffers was undervvav. At seven the buffet of baked chicken was attacked and by eight the visitors were seated in the high ceiled hall to be welcomed by their host, Milhado Lee Shaffer,

Jr., to hear Dean Lancaster, and to see color slides oi Sewaiue narrated by Arthur Ben Chitty. Before nine the official proceedings were over but nearly every- Mrs. Lee Shaffer with her son, Lee, Jr., and Dean Robert S. one remained until nearly midnight. Lancaster (right).

Tin: Sewanee News ANEE CLUBS

Francis G. Middleton, '61, secretary; and William H. Barnwell. Ill, '60, treasurer. A Christmas party at Walker Coleman's on December 20 honored Dr. an;' Mrs. McCradv and the Charleston students.

MOBILE had William T. Cocke, '51, assistant profes-

sor of English, as speaker for a meeting and reception

at St. Paul's Church in Spring Hill, Alabama, Decem-

ber 28. He made an inf. rmal talk and showed slides on

Sewanee to about twenty-five prospective students and

their parents. The Rev. William S. Brettmann, '58,

T'62, and the Rev. William S. Mann. '39, planned Tennesse.ir

Seated: Mrs. Eugene O. Harris, Jr., Mrs. John Witherspoon. the meeting. Mr. Mann has a son, William S.. Jr., Standing: Harding Woodall, Mr. Witherspoon. In Nashville. who is now a member of the sophomore class of the

University and another son who is a prospective stu-

dent. Mrs. Polly Ladd (sister of John Turner, '63) NEW YORK alumni will have their annual dinner at and Mrs. Jchn Peat served refreshments. the Harvard Club on Tuesday evening, February 20, at 7:15 p.m. John W. Woods, '54, alumni trustee of the L^niversity and president of the New York chap- NASHVILLE was host to over 300 people at a recep- ter, will be in charge cf arrangements. The speaker will be Cecil Woods, '21. president of the Volunteer tion at the Belle Meade Country Club December 30 State Life Insurance Company of Chattanooga, and Alumni, clergy, faculty members, students, prospective cc-chairman of the Ten Million Dollar Campaign. students, and friends of the University were present. Walter D. Bryant, Jr., '49, Sewanee director of ath- A'32, president of the Nash- E. E. Murrey, Jr.. C'36, letics, will also be on the program in his first appear- ville club, Dudley Fort, '34, and John M. Ezzell. ance before the New York group.

'31, national president of the Associated Alumni, were

in charge of the party. Sewanee residents attending were Bishop and Mrs. Frank A. Juhan, '11, Dr. and Mrs. Edward McCrady, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ben

Chi'tv, '35, John Ransom. '42. director of admissions,

Professor Abbott C. Martin, Artist-in-Residence anj

Mrs. H. Stanford Barrett. Dean and Mrs. Robert S.

Lancaster, '34. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bryant. '49. and

Hard iilt C. Woodal!. '17.

MEW ORLEANS was host to alumni and parents 0?

cadets in the Cre< le Room of the Roosevelt Hotel honoring the Gorgas Guard in the eve of their Sugai Bowl pre-game performance. Approximately seventy-

five to a hundred alumni from both the Academy and the University were present. Governor James A. Noe Tcnnessean of Monroe. La., and Mr. Earl G. Bateman of New Or- leans assisted Robert P. Hare. A'34, C'39, in planning Seated: Mrs. Dudley Fort, Mr?. Frank A. Juhan, Mrs. Robert S. Lancaster. Standing: Mr. Fort, Bishop Juhan, Dean Lan- the party. caster. Another center of gaiety in Nashville.

Febri ary 196^ 19 W. Dudley Gale Dies

W. Dudley Gale, III, '20, alum- das Polk Carillon, whose fifty-six nus of the University and of the bells weighted by the 7,500-pound

Sewanee Military Academy, trustee, bourdon make it the third largest in regent, notable benefactor, and de- the world in range. The set has scendant of the principal founder wen the admiration of experts for ol his alma mater, died January 19 its unsurpassed tone. When ques- in Nashville. His friend Bishop tioned at one time about his choice

Frank A. Juhan conducted the ser- of a gift, he said, "Sewanee is the vice. ideal place for beautiful bells." William Dudley Gale, III, was Other benefactions of Mr. Gale's descended from Bishop and General have included Leonidas Polk's silver W. Dudley Gale Leonidas Polk through the bishop's service given in his last year, and daughter, Katherine, and her hus- at least twenty scholarships to the band, William Dudley Gale, who college with the stipulation that he ber of the board of directors of the served on Polk's staff in the Army be unknown to their recipients. YMCA, a member of the board of of Tennessee. Their son, William Dudley Gale interrupted his col- the Children's Museum, president

Dudley Gale, Jr., was a student at lege career to serve as a first lieu- of the Nashville Kiwanis Club, seu- Sewanee before he entered his tenant in America's Expeditionary ior warden of Christ Church, and lather's insurance business in Nash- Force in France during World War at one time treasurer of the Epis- ville. He served the University for I. He was prominent in Nashville's copal Diocese of Tennessee. He was twenty years as trustee and for ten civic and religious as well as busi- credited with being the person most years as regent until his death in ness life, having been chairman of responsible for the converting ol 1921. ihe Davidson County Community the slum area surrounding the state In honor of his illustrious an- Chest, vice-president of the Nash capitol into one of the most beauti- cestor William Dudley Gale, III, ville Museum of Art, trustee of its ful urban renewal sites in the coun- gave to Sewanee in 1959 the Leoni- public library, president and mem- try.

Married December 29 in All Saints' Chapel: Virginia Kathleen Jones, daughter of Bishop Girault M. Jonest, '28, of Louisiana, to Pled Duncan Callicott of Nashville. The bride is shown on the arm of her uncle, the Rev. Cecil B. Jones, '33, of Columbus, Mis- sissippi, a member of the University's board of trustees, who gave her away. The Bishop performed the ceremony. Afterward the Polk Carillon rang the Peal Extraordinaire and a gala reception was staged at Claramont.

wi j

/ gas ^M w¥ t 1

^V it «o» JL ^H 1 f B jfi B ^B

Lt. Col. William Flinn Gilland, the University's first Air Force head was retired from the active Air Force at

Shaw AFB. He is registrar and direc- tor of admissions at the College of Charleston. fl W ' '«'P m 1 1m a Class Distinctions .

1894 story. Johnnie Clem survived the Civil M I. T. faculty. During World War Guilford Cade McIntosh died on De- War and stayed in the Army. In 1903 II he headed the metallurgy section of cember 14, 1962, in McCormick, South he sent his son, John Lincoln Clem, the Manhattan project. He holds mem- Carolina, at the age of ninety. He en- Jr., to Sewanee in a class which in- bership in the Ame.ican Academy of tered Sewanee in 1890. He had been cluded Frank Gumm, the father of Judy Arts and Sciences and the National living in retirement on his farm near Garland. John Clem, Jr., served in Academy of Sciences. Bordeaux, S. C, for a number of years. World Wars I and II and was once a 1921 trustee the He is survived by his wife. of University from West Class Reunion—June 12-15, l'J33 Texas. He visited the Mountain on 1895 President J. C. Brown Burch several occasions before his death in The Rev. Caleb B. K. Weed, PDT, is 2261 Washington Avenue 1958. in quite good health considering his Memphis, Tennessee 1911 ninety-two years. He enjoys his Se- 1922 Dr. Jap;es Rias Brown died June 27, wanee correspondence. Address: 4510 Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 1962, of a heart attack. He had beer. 5. Prieur St., New Orleans. President Rev. James R. Helms retired from medical practice for quite 2909 Hope 1898 a while due to poor health. His home Huntington Park, California Major Arnold M. Reeve, U. S. Army was in Northport, Alabama. Among his (ret.), PDT, died November 21, 1962, survivors is a son, Cameron. Dr. William J. Sheridan is current in Detroit, Michigan. He retired from 1913 president of the Tennessee State Medi- the Army in 1934 after serving for Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 cal Association. He served as presi- thirty-six years. He is survived by his dent of the Chattanooga medical so- wife, Ida, son, Arnold, Jr., daughter, ciety in 1941. Gertrude Winkler, and six grandchil- dren. RETIREMENT OPPORTUNITY 1923 The Rt. Rev. Albert Sidney Thomas, Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 who was ninety years old on February The Peace Corps has places for 3,000 President J. Burton Frierson, Jr. men and women planning to retire 6, 1963, was the senior member of the c/o Dixie Mercerizing Company Epircopal Church's House of Bishops during the next twelve months. They Chattanooga, Tennessee meeting in Columbia last November. especially request teachers on all lev- els, health workers (doctors, dentists, He is living in retirement in Columbia. J. Burton Frierson, Jr., PDT, of nurses, laboratory technicians, etc.), Chattanooga, Tennessee, represented 1904 skilled technicians, engineers of all cotton Raymond Demere , KA, died the southeastern side of the kinds, co-op and building and loan or- kingdom on the panel to select the 1963 in Jacksonville, Florida, on November ganizers, lawyers, geologists, foresters, Maid of Cotton. He is president and 20, 1962, after a brief illness. He prac- city planners, and social workers. director of Dixie Mercerizing Company ticed law in Jacksonville from his ad- Interested persons are asked to in- and chairman of the public relations mission to the bar in 1907 until shortly dicate interest, skill field, and country committee of the American Textile before his death. He was senior part- of preferred assignment Manufacturers Institute. is a trustee ner of the firm of Knight, Kincaid to PEACE He r CORPS, of Baylor School and the University of "°oucher and Harris. He was ormer SENIOR MANPOWER RE- Chattanooga. chancellor of the diocese of Florida, CRUITMENT, WASHINGTON 25, D. brochure, "Older Volun- 1924 president of the laymen, chairman of C A teers in the Peace Corps," a Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 the board of Bolles School, and director and questionnaire form will be sent on re- President W. J. Wallace, Jr. of banks and business in Jacksonville. quest. 200 Lynwood Boulevard He is survived by his son, a sister, and Nashville, Tennessee a brother, Admiral Telfair Knight, '07.

1905 1917 The University of South Florida Dr. Urban Philo Hackney, dean cf The Rev. Douglas Bagwell Leather- Episcopal Student Center has been Texas radiology and head of the radi- bury, rector of St. Mark's Church in named in memory of The Rt. Rev. Wil- ology staff of Samuell Clinic for forty Jacksonville, Florida, from its begin- liam Francis Moses, KS, Suffragan years, died November 29, 1962. His M.D. ning in 19?2 ur.til his retirement last Bishop of South Florida from 1956 to from was the University of Maryland. May, died December 10 at his home. He 1961, when he died. He had done graduate at Johns work served in the infantry in 1925 Hopkins and the Mayo clinic. He is and then was ordained. During his Guilford Slaughter Ligon, KS, is survived his r by wi e, two sons, and ministry he presented ten priests for postmaster at Mt. Pleasant, Tennersee. four grandchildren. ordination, including five Sewanee men. He and his wife have two daughters. Dr. Eugene Wallace Hawkins died In 1949 he received the doctor of di- Jeanne, twenty-two, a math major who November 23, 1962, in Marlin, Texas. vinity degree from Sewanee. He is received a B.S. degree from Southern He had been with the Health Texas survived by his widow, a son, Douglas Methodist University in May, 1962, and Department as director of several coun- B Leatherbury, Jr., '49, DTD, a daugh- is now doing research work for the ties, and also practiced in Carnegie, ter, and five grandchildren. Graduate Research Center of the Oklahoma, and at Marlin, where he re- 1920 Southwest in Dallas, Texas, and Donna tired four years ago. He served in the Dr. John Chipman, DTD, former head Fcrt, seventeen, who plans to enter col- Philippines during the Spanish-Ameri- of the department of metallurgy, Mas- lege in 1963 and further her study of can war and then in China during the sachusetts Institute of Technology, has organ music. Boxer Rebellion. He is survived by his been named as 1963 recipient of the 1926 wife, two daughters, four grandchil- Benjamin F. Fairless Award of the Cameron M. Plummer, SN, is con- dren, and one great- grandchild. American Institute of Mining, Metal- fined to an oxygen tent in his home. 1906 lurgical and Petroleum Engineers. He 109 Churchill Drive, Mobile. He wrote The Walt Disney production of was cited for his "brilliant career in a cheerful letter in December congratu - "Johnny Shiloh" on NBC for two Sun- teaching and research." He retired this lating the University on the go~d news days in January is based on a real year after twenty-five years on the of the forthcoming campaign. His

February 1963 21 1932 George Mallory Buford, SAE, died September 24 in Washington, D. C. He had a brain hemorrhage about two weeks previously and never regained c nsc'ousness. He spent many years with the Navy Bureau of Yards and Docks. Then he was in the Housing Agency of the government. He is sur- vived by his wife, Isabelle, with whom he visited the Mountain last spring. 1933 Herman E. Baggenstoss, editor and publisher o" the Grundy County Her- ali, and a tree farmer, has been ap- pointed to serve on the national For- estry Research Advisory Committee. He also received the Cartter Patten award for outstanding conservation ac- tivities at the Tennessee Conservation League meeting last year. Mallory Buford, '32 Charles A. Weishampel, SN, was presented a thirty-year service award daughter, now seventeen, has heen ac- by the U. S. Public Health Service in Cincinnati, Ohio. is supervisory cepted at Wellesley for next year. He a Fabian Bachrath illustrator in the Graphic Arts Activity Nick B. Williams, KA, is editor of of the Los Angeles Times. at the Taft Engineering Center, Cin- W. N. Wilkerson, '38 1928 cinnati. He entered the federal service in 1931 as a draftsman with the U. S. Herbert Eustis, ATO, is head of to the perpetual diaconate. Second son, Corps of Engineers. Inc., Greenville, Mississippi, Farmers, of Tommy, is now a Sewanee student. 1935 dealers in farm supplies, petroleum Richard B. Wilkens, Jr.. DTD, is Col. Fountain F. Beattie, PDT, has products, etc. His daughter is a fresh- president of The Pilot Club, which is been assigned U. S. Army duty in Ha- man at Southwestern in Memphis. He made up of steamship people in the waii as chief of the plans and opera- also has a son, age twelve. Houston-Galveston, Texas, area. tions division. His wife, is with Hurlbut Anton Griswold, SAE, is Eva, 1937 in his third two-year term as mayor of him. Dr. Walter M. Hart, SN, has been Fishkill, N. Y. He owns and operates The Rev. Lee Belford, DTD, has been elected president of the board of trus- the Fishkill Boxe Shop and Coffee Bar in Delhi, India, participating in a Con- tees of the Church Home for Children there. For eleven years he owned the- ference on International Understanding, in York, South Carolina. Secretary of atres for summer stock, serving also with an American group sponsored by the board is the Rev. Giles F. Lewis, as producer. New York University and financed by of Laurens. Seven of twenty members Dr. Harry Ransom, DTD, is chancel- the State Department. of the board are Sewanee men. lor of the University of Texas. He Sam C. King, SAE, is executive vice- The Rt. Rev. Henry I. Louttit, DTD, pointed out the hazards of intellectual president and a director of the Alex- Bishop of South Florida, was honored dogmatism in an address to a Southern andria Savings and Loan Association in November by the Greater Miami Association of Colleges and Schools and is active in the development of Chapter of the American Jewish Con- meeting. are in the South," he leal estate in Alexandria, Virginia. He "We gress for his "outstanding contribu- said, "but we are also in a world so has recently been made a director of tions to intergroup understanding." contracted by communication, trans- the Virginia Savings and Loan League. portation and new universals that the Eugene Williamson Maner, Jr., KS, 1938 Dr. Daniel Roger Gray, Jr., has whole globe, in effect, is smaller than died in Paris, Kentucky, November 19, in private practice of general the early confederacy of Southern 1962, a victim of cancer. At the time been the of his death he was in the employ of surgery in Columbia, Tennessee, since states. . . . We must bring into being 1952. and his wife, Gaither Frier- a new confederacy of intellectual and the Kentucky Department of Revenue He son, four children, fourteen. social confidence." in the sales tax division, as field man have Dan, 1929 and investigator. He was honored by Daws, thirteen, Rainey, eight, and Jeff, four. The family vacation in Wellfleet Warren S. McDonald died in No- the government for his work with Ar- on Cape Cod, where they would wel- vember, 1962, in Tyler, Texas. He is my intelligence in New York, North Sewanee visitors. small farm survived by his wife, Gertrude, who Africa and Italy. He directed a private come A near Columbia provides hunting and writes that his days at Sewanee were firm in the exporting of military air- fishing. Dr. Gray has served as senior always spoken of with joy and appreci- craft during World War II. He was a of St. Peter's Church in Co- ation. He was a lawyer and one-time correspondent and photographer for warden county attorney. the Lexington, Kentucky, Leader for lumbia. Wilkerson, is 1931 many years. His hobbies were flower W. N. DTD, doing an important job in building industry Halstead T. Anderson, KA, execu- gardening, antiques, fishing and dogs. for the Mid-South area. is chair- tive vice-president and treasurer or He is survived by his parents. He The Bankers Health and Life Insur- 1936 man of the board and president of Industrial Management Corporation ance Company of Macon, Georgia, has Hiram Chamberlain, SN, is associ- organizes, been named a director of Quaker City ated with Investment Securities Cor- which finances and manages industries in Life Insurance Company of Philadel- poration in Chattanooga, Tennessee. He new the South. phia, Pennsylvania. He was in the in- is a prominent layman and communi- 1939 vestment business before joining the cant of the Church of the Good Shep- The Rev. James P. DeWolfe, Jr., DTD, Bankers Company in 1934. He is a herd, Lookout Mountain, a Rotarian, a is one of nine Episcopalians chosen to member of the city and county plan- member of the Cherokee Council Boy discuss church union with the Metho- ning commission and past chairman of Scouts executive board, treasurer and dists, United Presbyterians, the United the board of deacons of the First Pres- director of the Tennessee Camp for Church of Christ, and the Disciples of byterian Church. Diabetic Children, and treasurer of the Christ. He is currently a Sewanee The Rev. Charles D. Snowden Experiment in International Living, trustee. stopped in for a short visit when in Chattanooga Council. He and his wife Alex Guerry's son, Zan, is ranked Sewanee registering his son in this have five children, ages six to twenty- second and first nationally in boys' year's freshman class. three. He is a candidate for ordination fourteen-under tennis singles and dou-

22 The Sewanee News bles, in rankings released by the United October. An attorney, he has served child—a girl —named Jane Lawrence States Lawn Tennis Association. on the board since 1955. Mitchell. Since we are for 2 as far Pride Tomlinson, Jr., KA, has been 1943 as boys are concerned I can't, to date, elected president of the Maury County Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 look forward to having a son at Se- Bar Association, a position once held President W. Sperry Lee wanee. Therefore I urge the Univer- by his father, retired Associate Justice 4323 Forest Park Road sity to get busy on the girls' division Pride Tomlinson, '13, KA, of the Ten- Jacksonville 10, Florida i f the University. It should be ready nessee Supreme Court. 1944 in at least seventeen years! Bill Cobev 1940 The Rev. Charles J. Child, Jr., has agrees with me 100 percent." — 12-15, Class Reunion June 1963 been elected to represent the Diocese Dr. Rex Pinson, Jr., SN, visited the President Robert G. Snowden of Newark at the Pan-Anglican Con- Mountain in August. He is a chemist 4277 Park Avenue gress to be held in Toronto in 1963. wih Pfizer and Co., in Connecticut. The Memphis, Tennessee Tom Sloane has been teaching school Pinson family includes wife Betty, sons r in Pelham, Georgia, for twelve years. Matthew, four and a hal , Thomas, one, Chaplain (Lt. Col.) William P. Bar- He teaches tenth grade physics, chem- and Martha, two and a half. rett, staff formerly chaplain, Yukon istry, and biology, and has a BA. from The Rev. Thomas J. Talley, curate Command, USARAL, is now a gradu- the University of Florida and MA. at Trinity Church, Garnerville, New ate student at the School of Govern- from F. S. U. York, will begin this semester at Nasho- ment, Business, and International Af- 1945 tah House as assistant professor of fairs, George Washington University, The Rev. Archer Torrey and his wife liturgies. Washington, D. C. write from St. Michael's seminary in 1949 The Rev. Richard Kirchhoffer, SAL, Korea that their building program has Dr. Reed Bell, ATO, is a pediatrician sent his news from St. Timothy's included a faculty home, student dor- in Pensacola, Florida. He and his wife, Church in Hawaii. He is working at mitories, new staff quarters and a new Nell Ann Hamm, have six children, Waimano Home, the state institution dining hall—all with electric service Billy, ten, Mitzi, eight, Terry, seven, for the mentally retarded, and at the and running water. They are planning Kenny, five, Lance, four, and Brian, two new mission in Waipahu, as well as now for a chapel and library. There years. St. Timothy's. He and his family spent are a dozen students at the seminary, Joseph D. Cushman, Jr., SN, received a wonderful vacation last August on and a new professor, an American of his Ph.D. degree from Florida State the island of Maui, camping in a crater! Korean birth. University last August. He will con- 1941 1947 tinue at FSU as a member of the his- — 12-15, Class Reunion June 1963 Frazer Banks, Jr., ATO, has joined tory faculty. His new degree is based President Dr. Phillip W. DeWolfe the commercial development group of on research on the history of the Epis- 201 N. Henry Street Newport Industries Division, Heyden copal Church in Florida. He and his Leaksville, North Carolina Newport Chemical Corporation, in Pen- wife, Mary Susan Livingstone, have sacola, Florida. He and his wife have two children, David, six, and Clay- Charles Marshall Crumbaker, DTD. two children. brook, eleven months. is manager of the Li'e and Group De- The Rev. Charles H. Blakeslee, SAE, The Rev. Fred Dickman, KA, is rec- partment of Hutchinson, Rivinus and has a new son, born in November Mr. tor of St. Andrew's Church of Tampa. Company in Philadelphia. Blakeslee is chaplain at St. Martin's Florida. He has been doing graduate 1942 School, New Orleans. study at the University of Florida for Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 The Rev. John M. Haynes, DTD, an- a doctorate in education. He was the President Dr. O. Morse Kochtitzky nounces the birth of a second son, Wil- Episcopal chaplain o f the University of Hampton Avenue liam Biddle, on September 15, 1962, in South Florida and the University of Nashville, Tennessee Live Oak, Florida. Tampa. He and his wife, Lucie Per- 1948 due, have a son, Stephen Frederick, Dr. Ferris F. Ketcham is a physician The Rev. John A. Benton, Jr., and age one. and ophthalmologist in Seattle, Wash- Helen Gene Duncan were married in The Rev. Robert L. Evans has for ington. He and his wife have three Florida in June. He is working for his the past seven years served as chap- children, Michael, fourteen, Faye, elev- doctor's degree in counseling at the lain to St. Luke's Hospital in Denver, en, and Jan, eight. He does extensive University of Florida, while serving which has 800 persons on the staff. welfare work at three clinics in Seattle, St. John's Church, Newberry, Florida. The Rev. Robert B. Hall is the new but has time for swimming, flowers, and John Gass, PDT, finished second in rector of Holy Comforter Church in photography. Son Michael also hopes the championship flight of the fifth an- Miami, Florida. For the past six years to be a physician. nual Silver Sard Dollar tournament at he has been rector of St. Luke's Par- Caldwell Marks, SAE, chairman of Ponte Vedra, Florida, sponsored by the ish in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He and the board of directors of Owen-Rich- Mortgage Bankers Association, with his wife have two children. ards Co., Inc., is the new chairman of members attending from all over the Harry McPherson, SAE, is general the Committee of 100, Birmingham's country. He is assistant vice-president counsel of the Senate Democratic Policy widely known industry-seeking or- of the Volunteer State Life Insurance Committee. ganization. Company in Chattanooga. The Rev. Frederick A. Pope, Jr., was Laurence O.'H. Stoney, ATO, was Fred N. Mitchell, M.D., from Char- honored by St. Andrew's Church and named vice-chairman of the school lotte, North Carolina, wrote: "On No- the St. Barnabas' Guild for Nurses in board in Charleston, South Carolina, in vember 6 Judy and I had our second Greenville, South Carolina, before

B. Humphreys McGee, graduate of SMA in SMA '36, of the SMA staff. Elected to the board

1942 and the College in 1949, was elected presi- of governors for six-year terms were George T. dent of the Sewanee Military Academy Alumni Wood, '40, Chattanooga and Lionel M. Bevan. '43, of Gordon, Texas. Mr. Cherry will fill Association en October 20, succeeding the Rev. Jr., an unexpired teim. Remaining en the board are Robert Cherry, '50, who has three Sewanee di- Charles G. Mullen. '38, of Tampa, Dr. Charles plomas. Vice-president of the SMA group is Lokey, '36, Birmingham, and Ranny Whitney,

Harding C. Woodall, SMA '13, of Sewanee. Re- '58, of Coral Gables. Robert P. Hare, IV, is

cording secretary is Capt. George McCloud, alumni and publicity director.

February 1963 23 leaving to study at the University of Peabody, Scarritt, Vanderbilt, and Har- Pennsylvania. vard. He hopes to become licensed to 1950 practice psychology in June. The Rev. James T. Alves, curate at The Rev. John Paul Jones is new the Church of the Holy Comforter, assistant rector and head of the Day Gadsden, Alabama, and his wife have School (enrollment 190) for Grace-St. a daughter, Mary Beth, born Septem- Luke's Church, Memphis, Tennessee. ber 14, 1932. He had been rector of Thankful Me- F. Clay Bailey, PDT, is the father of morial Church in Chattanooga for the William Winston, born September 18, past five years. He and his wife have and named for his late uncle, who was three children, Dev, eleven, Rebecca, a member of Sswanee's class of 1952. nine, and Clarkson, six. Mr. Bailey is a Nashville attorney. Kenneth H. Kerr has left his super- Wade Cothran Campbell, SAE, has visory post with Western Union to be- been named a vice-president by Liller, come branch manager for the New Nsal, Battle and Lindsey, Inc., adver- Bern Avenue Branch of the First Fed- tising and public relations agency, with eral Savings and Loan Association in headquarters in Atlanta. He and his Raleigh, North Carolina. Address: 270(5 wife, Anne Dodd, are the parents of a Bedford Avenue, Ra'eigh, N. C. two-year-old daughter. James H. McIntosh, Jr., PDT, is n The Rev. E. Dudley Colhoun, Jr., full-time cattle farmer at Florence, ATO, and his wife, Sarah Hill, an- Alabama, following naval service in nounce the birth of their third son, the Mediterranean, a semester of grad- Thomas Fox, born December 3. Dud- uate work at Duke University, and ley is rector of St. Paul's Church in several years with a pool equipment Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He was service. He and his wife, Cornelia elected alumni trustee last June. Belle Ladd, have one son, Henry Ladd, Leroy J. Ellis, SN, is the father of Rev. John David Hall, '53 age three. Leroy Ellis, Johnston IV, born on July Captain Robeson S. Moise, USAF, is 2 in Nashville. Father Leroy teaches 1952 presently stationed in South Vietnam, weekly in the YMCA Law School, and Robert D. Fowler, KA, is editor of as a pilot advisor to the Vietnamese Air is president of the Circle Theatre, dra- the Marietta, Georgia, Daily Journal. Force. His wife, Aileen Mary Litchock, matic group. The Rev. Claude E. Guthrie is head- and son, Glenn Robeson Moise, born The Rev. George L. Reynolds, Jr., master at Christ Church Episcopal September, 1961. remained in the United ATO, has been appointed associate sec- School in Greenville, South Carolina. States during this assignment. He has retary in the leadership training di- The school has been accredited by the been in the service ever since graduat- vision of the Department of Christian National Association of Independent ing from Sewanee and had two years Education of the Episcopal Church. Schools after four years of operation. near Paris. Also in his unit are Cap- The Rev. William Breese Watson, The school employs twenty-three full- tain L. Samuel Waymouth, '56, SN, SN, and his wife, Barbara Anne Linn, time teachers and seven part-time and William P. Kernan, '55, DTD. announce the birth of their first child, teachers for 348 students from primer 1954 William, Jr., on September 7, 1962, in through ninth grade. Ross B. Clark, II, PGD, is now as- Lander, Wyoming, where Mr. Watson The Rev. Lewis Hodgkins is at Belle- sociated with the law firm of Rubert is rector of Trinity Church. vue Hospital in New York doing clini- and Ewing in Memphis, Tennessee. 1951 cal pastoral training. He will return to Robert G. Jackson has been appointed The Rev. G. Milton Crum, Jr., is Anchorage, Alaska, after March 29. An supervisor of the international analy- chaplain of Holy Trinity Parish, the important part of his work has been sis section on the finance staff of Ford Episcopal church on the Clemson Col- at the Alaska Native Hospital. Wife Motor Company. He and his wife, Jane lege campus. Barbee and kindergartner Mary Faye Dunn, have three children—Lee, six, William D. Haggard, SAE, is a mem- accompanied him to New York. Lynn, five, and Beth, three. They live ber of the U. S. Equestrian Olympic Windsor Morris Price, PGD, was at 9339 Tecumseh in Detroit, Michigan. Team now in training for the Pan- elected in October to the board of di- He had a Fulbright Scholarship at the American Games in Sao Paulo, Brazil, rectors of Morris Machine Works, Bald- University of Manila, before receiving in April, 1963. He won the U. S. E. T. winsville, New York, manufacturer of an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. trials in June, 1962. centrifugal pumps and hydraulic dredg- The Rev. Christoph Keller, Jr., is ing equipment. He is assistant to the the new rector of St. Andrew's Church, president of the firm. Jackson, Mississippi. He, his wife and Thomas Hazlehurst Setze, SN, was six children have been living in Harri- married on June 23, 1962, to Virginia son, Arkansas, where he has been rec- Ann Cochran in Stonewall, Georgia. tor of St. John's Church. His oldest Edward Pinkney Speer, Jr., SAE, died daughter, Carline, nineteen, is presently on January 10, 1962, in Dallas, Texas. attending the Sorbonne in Paris as His B. A. degree was from Southern part of Sweet Briar's exchange pro- Mehodist University. gram. Gordon Edward Warden, Jr., SN, is The Rev. Robert B. Kemp, KS, and teaching, coaching tennis and directing his wi fe received their best Christmas physical education at Presbyterian Col- gift four hours late. Lebbeus Cotten. lege in Clinton, South Carolina. He their second son and fifth child, was and Olive have three adopted boys and born on December 26, 1962. Notifica- have recently taken into their home an- tion to Sewanee came via Professor other youngster. Address: 403 Chest- Abbott Cotten Martin. nut Street, College View, Clinton, S. C. Dr. Walter E. Nance, SN, is studying 1953 human genetics at the University of The Rev. John David Hall, KA, is Wisconsin on a National Institute of dean of students and instructor in psy- Health fellowship. Next year he will chology at Bethel College in McKen- return to Nashville to join the Vander- zie, Tennessee. His wife, Peggy Evans, bilt medical faculty. is instructor in health and physical Rolf Spicer, DTD, is working toward education there. He is working on his his master's degree in English and his dissertation for an Ed.D. in clinical psy- secondary teacher's credentials at San Robert G. Jackson, '54 chology, having done graduate work at Diego State University. He decided to

24 The Sewanee News leave the Marine Corps, but is main- 1956 ator stationed with the Airborne Early taining his "ready reserve" status and Bert A. Anglea, SAE, has been ap- Warning Barrier Squadron Pacific at may go back after he gets his degree. pointed suggestion investigator at Ford Barbers Point, Hawaii. He has not married and is living near Motor Company's glass plant in Nash- The Rev. James L. Johnson of Ber- the campus. ville, Tennessee. He and his wife, Patsy nardsville, New Jersey, has a new John Harrison Wright, Jr., BTP, is Johnson, have one daughter, Sherry daughter, Elizabeth Hartley, born Janu- English teacher and dean of the faculty Beth, age two. ary 8. at Chatham Hall in Virginia. His Dr. David Nunnally, ATO, assistant The Rev. Alian Mustard, SN, is serv- specialty is linguistics. For two years professor of biology at Vanderbilt Uni- ing All Saints' Church in Charleston, he was a Fulbright teacher in Modeno, versity for the past three years, has South Carolina. Italy, and in 1960 he directed a semi- received a grant from the National In- The Rev. Colton Smith, BTP, is the nar for Arab teachers at Makassed Col- stitute of Health for a three-year study new vicar of the Church of the Medi- lege, Beirut, Lebanon. on enzymes. ator, McComb, Mississippi. He and his wife, a native of Coventry, England, 1955 have been in Jackson where he was Dr. Lucien E. Brailsford, SN, a resi- assistant curate at St. James Church. dent in general surgery at the Medical Charles Todd Quintard Wiggins, III, College of South Carolina, has been SAE, is probably the youngest news- awarded a clinical fellowship by the paper editor in the Sewanee alumni American Cancer Society for special group. He has been named to that post study and research in diagnostic meth- for the Memphis Market News, pub- ods and treatment of cancer patients. lished by the promotion departments of The Rev. H. Hunt Comer and his wife the Memphis Press-Scimitar and the announce the birth of their first child, Ccnnmercial Appeal. In the four-page Eleanor Ann, on October 23. He is tabloid-sized monthly he writes of va- presently at Grace Church, Asheville. rious products being advertised in the North Carolina. two dailies. The Rev. Raymond T. Ferris and his The Rev. Cham Canon has been family are now in Essex, England, priest-in-charge of St. Paul's Episcopal where he is working at St. John's Murfreesboro, Tennessee, Church, Southend on Sea, on the Church at its stage. church Wates-Seabury Exchange Plan. during mission The is eligible to become a sel f -sup- Charles Haddon and his wife, Blanche now porting parish church after its stew- Myers, are the parents of a baby girl, ardship campaign. Lisa Kay, born on October 5, 1962, in Dallas, Texas. They are living in 1959 Memphis, Tennessee. Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 The Rev. Warren Haynes was given President Charles M. Upchurch twenty-day trip to a the Holy Land by 4770 Princeton Road a member of his congregation who Memphis, Tennessee termed the trip an investment in Mr. Haynes' ministry during his younger The Rev. Gordon Bernard is the new years, so that his entire priesthood rector of St. Luke's Church in Cleve- might be enriched. Rev. Christopher B. Young, Navy '57 land, Tennessee. He and his wife, The Rev. George Smith Plattenburg, Jayne Lewis, have two daughters, PGD, was ordained priest on Decem- P. Wellford, SAE, has been Peggy, who is a freshman at the Uni- ber 15 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Hugh promoted to the rank of captain, U. S. versity of Missouri, and Martha, a high The Rev. Richard N. Walkley is the Air Force, and is assigned to McClellan school junior. Mr. Bernard replaced the new priest-in-charge of Trinity Church Air Base, Sacramento, California. Rev. Ellis M. Bearden, 15, DTD, who in Demopolis, Alabama, after several 1957 retired as rector and is now at Sewa- years in Alaska. his He and wife have nee. a daughter, Elisabeth. James B. Gutsell, ATO, is now in London doing research for his doctoral James Franklin Gilliland, KS, was dissertation. He recently saw Rhodes married October 27 to Ann Owens Scholar John Fleming, '58, BTP, in Cochran in Fort Worth, Texas. They London. are living at 5209 Wosley Drive. Robert P. Hare, IV, is the Carl Mee, III, BTP, has been a gradu- PDT, father ate student at the University of Vir- of a third son, Donald Candler, born ginia since his release from the Air Force as a first lieutenant in August, 1962. Before his service he worked as a mathematician. He married Dorothy Lynda Wood on July 8, 1961, and his wife teaches school. The Rev. William R. Senter, III. DTD, is the new priest-in-charge of St. Columba's Church, Bristol, Tennes- see. He was ordained in April, 1962. - The Rev. Christopher B. Youn : writes from his frozen post at the South Pole, Antarctica, that he recently was on the first plane to the pole station since February, 1962. His sacramental wine froze solid after the short walk across the surface of the 9,700-feet deep snow of the Polar Plateau to the un - der-snow warmth o f the camp. 1958 Lt. (jg) Stephens Kent Ebbs, PGD. and his wife, Helen Evans, have a son, Stephens, Jr., born October 9, 1962, in Bert Anglea, '56 Honolulu, Hawaii. Ebbs is a naval avi- C. T. Quintard Wiggins, III, '58

February 1963 25 November 27, while his frustrated Se- eval literature at Notre Dame and he wanee News issue editor daddy had the hopes to complete the master's program page with his class year on it coming by the end of the year. off the press. The Rev. Harry W. Thompson last 1960 summer turned out a double win- Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 ner in his Morganfield, Kentucky, Little President Robert C. Gregg League team, the "Giants." First they 2107 Briar Glen, Apartment 6 topped the league in regular season Houston 27, Texas play and then won the playoff in thre<; straight games. Mr. Thompson, who Croom Beatty, IV, is the father of bad offers of tryouts as a pitcher with Peter Tannahill, born September 17. major-league baseball teams when he Croom is teaching ancient and modern graduated from high school in Okla- European history at Christ School, Ar- homa, coached a Little League team den, North Carolina, where he coaches while a college student at the Univer- tennis, jv soccer, and advises the year- sity of Louisville. At Sewanee ne book. helped for a time with the varsity bas- Lt. (jg) H. Fred Brown, KS, recently ketball team and with the "C" team graduated from a seven-month course at St. Andrew's, as well as the tract in U. S. Navy Underwater Demolition Rev. Harry Thompson, '61, and friends team there. He is priest-in-charge of Team training. Brown is at present a St. John's Church, Morganfield, presi- platoon commander in Underwater De- dent of the Morganfield Ministerial As- ried on September 15, 1962, to Linda molition Team 22 at Little Creek, Vir- sociation, and an advisor to the young Jill Price of Cleveland, Ohio. The ginia. people of the diocese of Kentucky. Mrs. couple are at home in Willoughby. Robert L. Gaines, KS, is a student at Thompson was a member of the Alum- the University of Virginia Graduate Richard Scott Dezell, PGD, was mar- ni Office staff while he was in semi- School of Business Administration. ried on October 27, 1962, to Tamara nary. Magill Smith of New Orleans. Mrs. De- The Rev. H. Don Harrison and Mrs. James H. Trousdale, III, is chief clerk zell is a granddaughter of the late Mrs. Harrison announce the birth of a son, for the Missouri Pacific Railroad at St. C. A. Sanborn of Sewanee. Michael Tisdale, on September 17, 1962. Joseph, Missouri. He is serving St. Margaret's Church, Fred K. Ellis, PGD, was married last 1962 Carrollton, Georgia, at present. September to Joan Evelyn Herrschaft Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 Fred A. McNeil, Jr., ATO, has been of Ridgefield, New Jersey, at the Eng- President Charles Cullen promoted to Lt. (jg) and is communi- lish Neighborhood Church in Ridge- 415 S. Palo Alto cations officer aboard the U.S.S. Hart- field. They are making their home in Panama City, Florida ley. Fort Lee, New Jersey. Fred is employed Lt. Don Ormsby, BTP, is presently by the Home Insurance Company in The Rev. Thomas Gailor Garner, Jr., in the Air Force, but is looking for- New York. his wife, Caroline to entering fall. and Chobot, an- ward Nashotah next Lt. Frederick R. Freyer, Jr., SAE, re- his nounce the birth of a daughter on Oc- He and wr°e, the former Christi ceived his master's degree in business tober 28, 1962, in Columbia, Tennessee! Tallec, have two sons, David and Jay administration from Emory University Alan. The Rev. John Ernest Gilchrist is in June, 1962. He received a commis- First Lt. William Craig Stewart, the new priest-in-charge of St. Mat- sion in the Army Medical Field Ser- BTP, and his wife announce the birth thias' Church in Summerton, South vice, and is now stationed at Fort Mc- of a son, William Eric, on November 20, Carolina, and St. Mark's in Pinewood. Pherson, Georgia, where he is adju- 1962. He and his wife, the former Barbara tant to the Commanding Officer, U. S. Alice Blank, and their son make their 1961 Army Hospital. Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 home in Summerton. William Evans Hannum, II, ATO, President Robert N. Rust, III Walter H. Jones, LCA, has been was married to Susan Hathaway White 301 N. Edgewood Street commissioned a in of New York. Their wedding was pic- Arlington, Virginia the United States. Air Force. He is as- tured in the October, 1962, issue of signed to Libya a transportation Town and Country. as Paul Harris Bailey, BTP, was mar- officer. James D. Lazell, Jr., was co-author Bill Kracke, DTD, is in his first of an article, "A New Stygian Sala- year's study of medicine at Baylor Uni- mander from the Cumberland Plateau,'' versity in Houston, Texas. in the July, 1962, issue of Copeia. In The Rev. Joseph L. Nutt is the father the six-page illustrated piece, he and of Jennifer Lee, born December 5 in his ^ellow scientist described Gyrino- Enterprise, Alabama. philus palleucus necturoides taken from S. Kemble Oliver, III, KA, is on the the Big Mouth-Big Room cave system faculty of Texas Military Institute this near Pelham, about four miles down year. He teaches eighth and ninth the mountain from Green's View. He grade English. and SMA student John Alexander, son Gordon Pickett Peyton, Jr., DTD, of Dean and Mrs. George M. Alexan- was married on June 9, 1962, to Mar- der, '38, spent the summer on a pro- jorie Gifford Parish, Sewanee's Home- ject in the Caribbean, collecting snakes coming Queen in 1960. Chaplain David near the West Indies for the Academy Collins performed the ceremony in of National Science, Philadelphia, and Christ Church at Cambridge, Massa- the Harvard Museum of Comparative chusetts. Gordon is attending Duke Zoology. Law School on a full tuition scholar- Warner Miller Montgomery, Jr., KA, ship and Marj, who graduated from and Nonie Trexler were married De- Wellesley on the same day Gordon cember 2, 1962, in an internationally graduated from Sewanee, is a research flavored ceremony in Christ Church, chemist with Liggett & Myers in Dur- Bangkok, Thailand. They are both ham, North Carolina. Peace Corps Volunteers and will both Ted Stirling, ATO, has now entered be assigned to Cholburi as English graduate school at Northwestern Uni- Army teachers. versity. Robert J. Schneider is progressing Richard E. Vogel is a law student at Lt. Frederick R. Freyer, Jr., '61 well, he reports, in his studies in medi- the University of Michigan.

26 The Sewanee New? Newly elected officers of the class of 1963 pictured in Thompson Union are (left to right) Stephen H. Moorehead, class editor: Caldwell ("Hank") Haynes, secretary; and Gerald DuBlois, president.

Alumni Donors in 1962

(M) Memorial Ralph J. Nesbit (M) Rt. Rev. Hunter Wyatt-Brown Lt. Gen. Alvan C. Gillem, Jr Ormond Simkins (M) (W) Wilmer M. Grayson (W) Gift by Wife David A. Shepherd (M) 1906 Frank N. Green Dr. John E. Wilkinson Robert M. Brooks (W) James (B) Bequest N. Owens Joseph Young (M) Lt. Col. William G. deRosset Edwin L. Scruggs 1901 James F. Finlay (M) Robert N. Staggers prior to 1894 John Campbell Avery (M) 1907 Dr. William L. Staggers Stephen A. D. Crump, '80 (M) Ralph P. Black (B) Bower W. Barnwell Jack R. Swain Rev. Alfred R. Taylor, '81 (M) Preston S. Brooks, Jr. (W) David R. Dunham Edward P. Vreeland Isaac Ball, '91 (W) Col. Henry T. Bull Ford P. Fuller (W) 1913 '91 Rt. Rev. J. Craik Morris, William S. Claiborne (M) Henry M. Gass (W) Edmund C. Armes (M) (M) George P. Egleston (W) Monro B. Lanier William DuBose Bratton A. Sessums Cleveland, '93 (W) Rev. G. Hendree Harrison (M) Rev. George B. Myers (M) Dr. George L. Morelock Frank P. Phillips, '93 (W) James T. Mann (M) Thomas D. Odom John E. Puckette 1894 Dr. James T. Williams, Jr. John J. Shaffer (M) N. Hobson Wheless Dr. William C. Egleston (B) Lawrence M. Williams (M) Henry B. Sparkman Allison R. Williams Dr. Robert W. B. Elliott 1902 1908 Col. George W. B. Witten Joseph Chester Fargo (B) Howard F. Crandell Rev. Dominick A. Cassetta 1914 Henry T. Soaper Rev. John C. Goodman (M) John B. Greer Ben J. Carter, Jr. 1895 Rt. Rev. Walter Mitchell Rev. Bartholomew Huske (B) Godfrey Cheshire Spruille Burford (B) Horace Stringfellow (M) Sorsby Jemison (M) Dr. Beverly Woodfin Cobbs Dr. R. M. Kirby-Smith (M) Vernon S. Tupper (M) Rev. J. Francis McClcud (W) Rev. Willis P. Gerhard Rev. Caleb B. K. Weed Dr. Gilman Winthrop (M) Rt. Rev. R. Bland Mitchell (M) Ruskin Raymond Rosborough 1896 1903 Gen. L. Kemper Williams Harry N. Taliaferro

William C. Pickens (M) • Robert W. Barnwell, Jr. 1909 1915 Dr. O. N. Torian Robert Cowart, Jr. (M) Maj. Thomas A. Cox, Jr. Rev. A. J. Gaynor Banks (W) 1897 G. Bowdoin Craighill, Sr. Cyrus D. Hogue (W) Pat C. Dinkins Dr. John H. P. Hodgson (B^ Richard L. Lodge Kenneth McDonald Lyne John J. Gillespie Richard W. Hogue (W) John Peter Neff 1910 Rev. William T. Holt 1898 Coles Phinizy (M) Benjamin D. Lebo Edward A. Miner Telfair Hodgson (W) Herbert E. Smith Edward A. Marshall William M. Reynolds Judge Bayard B. Shields J. Bayard Snowden Dr. Charles S. Moss R. Lee Tolley Rt. Rev. Albert S. Thomas 1904 Stanley R. Swanson 1916 1899 George William Croft (M) 1911 Troy Beatty, Jr. Clarkson Galleher (M) Capt. William J. Hine Dr. Walter B. Adams, Sr. Rev. Paul D. Bowden Robert Jemison, Jr. Raymond D. Knight (M) Dr. Henry Grady Callison Henry C. Cortes (W) Henry G. Seibels William W. Lewis Judge Ben F. Cameron Rev. Glenn B. Coykendall Rev. Harold Thomas Rev. Harris Masterson (B) Jefferson Monroe Colston Roland W. Doty Alexander P. Wooldridge, Jr. Jesse L. Suter (M) Frank M. Gillespie Edgar L. Jones (M) 1905 Rt. Rev. Frank A. Juhan Col. John W. Russey 1900 Thomas Ewing Dabney Rt. Rev. James M. Stoney Benjamin R. Sleeper Milton R. Bacon (M) William N. Gilliam Thomas P. Stoney Dr. H. Nelson Tragitt, Jr. Rev. S. Moylan Bird Rev. Emile S. Harper 1912 1917 James A. Bull (M) Rev. H. Leach Hoover John Baskette Merlin K. Bruce Bradley Hogue (M) James M. Hull Col. Paul G. Bell Louis Cash Capers Dr. Jonas J. Moyer Rev. Prentice A. Pugh Eugene Field Col. Leicester C. Chapman

February 1963 27 Elmer S. Holmen Edward B. Schwing, Jr. 1929 1931 George E. Mclver Rev. Francis B. Wakefield, Jr. Alfred T. Airth Halstead T. Anderson Frederick M. Morris 1924 Minor Alexander Kenneth T. Anderson Joe R. Murphy (M) Seaton G. Bailey Jack S. Autin Charles F. Baarcke Rev. John M. Nelson James A. Elam Wright W. Bailey Rev. F. Bache (W) Joe M. Scott Hugh W. Fraser, Jr. Harry H. Baulch Charles H. Barron Wilmer J. Thomas Rev. George H. Harris Rev. James W. Brettmann Malcolm D. Beatty Harding C. Woodall Hunter S. Kimbrough Moultrie B. Burns Dr. George P. Bennett 1918 Marion W. Mahin John M. Ezzell Charles John C. Bennett, Jr. Rev. G. Gladstone Rogers E. Berry C. Richard Kellerman Theodore O. Buchel W. Joseph Wallace, Jr. Robert A. Binford Edward Nash Dr. Robert L. Crudgington 1925 Charles M. Boyd G. Archibald Sterling Malcolm C. Malcolm Fooshee Rt. Rev. Duncan M. Gray Brown Robert W. Thomas Cameron L. Gamsby Rev. Jesse Roy Gregg (M) John C. Bruton George David Walker W. Groom Leftwich Thomas L. Hunt W. Chauncey Bryant Dr. L. Spires Whitaker Niles Trammell Roland Jones Franklin G. Burroughs Rev. David W. Yates Rev. Joseph R. Walker Fred B. Mewhinney Stanyarne Burrows, Jr. 1932 Very Rev. Paul F. Williams H. Powell Yates Judge Chester C. Chattin Carl G. Biehl J. Albert Woods Harvey Witherspoon Clark 1926 Bratton Eben A. Wortham John H. Cleghorn Frank Newman Rev. J. Alves, Jr. Hodge Donald H. Clement Stephen L. Burwell 1919 George Henry Barker George W. Coulter, Jr. Rev. James S. Butler James M. Avent Dr. Arthur N. Berry Rev. Francis H. Craighill, Jr. Rev. Wood B. Carper O. Beime Chisolm Butt Rev. E. Dargan William M. Cravens Dr. William B. Connolly Louis S. Estes N. Hamner Cobbs Charles F. Cushman Dabney Hull Crump, Jr. Julien K. Moore Gilbert Dempster B. William H. Daggett William Haskell DuBose Rev. Val H. Sessions (W) Robert F. Evans Julian R. deOvies Berryman W. Edwards Elliott D. Evins 1920 Dr. William B. Dickens Rev. Frank V. D. Fortune W. Hoi lis Fitch William M. Barrett William Osceola Gordon Julius G. French R. Delmas Harold E. Bettle Gooch James G. Griswold, Jr Otis N. Fussell Miss Elizabeth A. Haynes Louis D. Carruthers T Beverly Grizzard William T. Parish, Jr. Postell Hebert Dr. John Chipman, Jr. Howze Haskell Jay D. Patton Van W. Knox, Jr. John G. Dearborn Rev. Roscoe C. Hauser, Jr. Royal K. Sanford James C. Moores W. Dudley Gale John C. Herndon J. Morgan Soaper W. Michaux Nash Judge J. Roy Hickerson (M) Dr. Thomas F. Huey, Jr. Dick Taylor, Jr. Holton C. Rush Quintard Joyner E. Hays Jakes Daniel D. Schwartz 1933 Charles Vernon Lyman Edwin McClellan Johnston Walker Stansell, Jr. Rev. Olin Gordon Beall Dr. Dean B. Lyman Ashford Jones W. Porter Ware Dr. Randolph C. Charles Hateley J. Quincey B. Walter Landstreet, Jr. Cleveland R. Willcoxon Bayard Mcintosh Cole Dr. Bailey B. Sory, Jr. Earl Lemmon Rev. Charles F. Wulf Fred T. Cooke Rev. William S. Stoney Dr. Frank H. Lyell Robert W. Fort 1927 Ralph H. McBride 1921 Harry L. Graham Rev. Canon Richard I. Brown Dr. Evert Abram Bancker Thomas O. McDavid Frederick H. Bunting Dr. Robert Holt Green J. Brown Burch Dr. William McGehee Gordon M. Clark (W) Thomas B. Henderson Rt. Rev. Thomas N. Carruth- Rev. Frederic A. McNeil Robert P. Cooke Alonzo H. Jeffress ers (M) Edward N. Merriman Rev. Francis H. Craighill, Jr. Alexander L. Postlethwaite, Walter B. Dossett Benjamin B. Monaghan George C. Cunningham Jr. D. St. Pierre DuBose Rev. John W. Mutton Quintin T. Hardtner, Jr. Rev. John H. Soper Rev. Moultrie Guerry Francis C. Nixon W. Laurens Hebert William R. Hagan Arch Peteet, Jr. 1934 Rev. Orin G. Helvey Thomas E. Hargrave George R. Riley John A. Adair George Bliss Jones James Edward Harton (M) William C. Schoolfield Rhett Ball Dr. Henry T. Kirby-Smith Lyman P. Hoge Dr. George D. Schuessler John P. Castleberry Reynold M. Kirby-Smith Rev. Capers Satterlee Robert P. Shapard, Jr. Thomas A. Claiborne Nan Torian Owens Calvin Schwing (W) John T. Simms, Jr. Kenneth Kirby Clark Ben H. Parrish Hamilton Wallace Dr. Curtis H. Sory J. Fain Cravens Dr. Andrew B. Small Hugh B. Whaley Edgar A. Stewart Rev. Charles H. Douglass Brinkley S. Snowden G. Cecil Woods Gwilym L. Thomas Dr. William Spencer Fast Dr. James R. Sory Charles M. Woolfolk Mark M. Tolley (B) Dudley C. Fort Ralph Jr. Speer, Col. John L. Warren Guy Glass 1922 Charles Edward Thomas Warren W. Way Joseph E. Hart, Jr. Albert Bonholzer Rev. Canon William S. Turner Ira G. White, Jr. R. Morey Hart Charles D. Conway Thomas R. Waring, Jr. Jess N. Williams John I. H. Hodges J. Rorick Cravens 1928 Dr. Leslie J. Williams Preston B. Huntley William B. Cuningham Dr. Ralph L. Collins William R. Wilson Francis Kellermann C. Sprigg Flower (M) Rev. Francis D. Daley Dean Robert S. Lancaster Dr. Frederick Hard 1930 Joe William Earnest Rev. William Reginald H. Helvenston W. Lumpkin John K. Freeman Dr. William J. Ball A. Blevins Rittenberry John A. Witherspoon Dr. C. Prentice Gray, Jr. Nash K. Burger Rev. Charles F. Schilling 1923 Pat M. Greenwood Willoughby N. Claybrook, Jr. Rev. Homer P. Starr W. Tunstall Cobbs Dr. H. Gordon Heaney Frank S. Coyle Dr. John Tison, Jr. J. Burton Frierson, Jr. Rt. Rev. Girault Jones William B. Craig, Jr. Rev. Edward B. Guerry John W. Perkins John S. Davidson 1935 John F. Hunt Paul A. Tate Clarence E. Faulk, Jr. I. Croom Beatty, III Marvin McCullough James I. Teague Dr. Thomas N. E. Greville Rev. Dr. Lee Archer Belford Rev. John B. Matthews Vernon Tupper, Jr. Rt. Rev. John E. Hines Arthur B. Chitty, Jr. Jack A. Milem Gordon Tyler John S. King, Jr. Dr. Robert W. Daniel Alcorn F. Minor, Sr. George W. Wallace, Jr. Virginius S. Lane (M) Walter Harding Drane B. Allston Moore Henry O. Weaver Dr. Lance C. Price Rev. Edward H. Harrison Roger G. Murray Robert R. Wood Milton C. Trichel, Jr. John A. Johnston Gordon S. Rather Thomas A. Young J. Homer Williams John G. Kirby

28 The Sewanee News Eev. Stiles B. Lines E. Hartwell K. Smith 1944 Joseph D. Cushman, Jr. Quincy B. Love Rev. Russell W. Turner O. Winston Cameron Rev. Lavan B. Davis Fred Fleming Lucas Dr. George N. Wagnon Edward W. Carpenter Lt. Col. Walter R. Davis James H. MacKenzie Dr. T. Glyne Williams Rev. Hunley A. Elebash Dr. Joseph H. Dimon, III Dr. Charles S. Miller 1940 James H. Giehler (M) Rev. Donald H. Feick Dr. Hume L. Mitchell Dr. Jo C. Anderton C. Dwight Hall Henry B. Gregorie, Jr. Phillips John Peter R. Lt. Col. William P. Barrett William B. McClelland Patten Guerry Julian P. Ragland Shubael T. Beasley Niel W. Platter Edward West Hine Rev. Willis Rosenthal Walter R. Belford Rev. Roddey Reid, Jr. Samuel H. Howell H. B. Ralph Ruch William C. Duckworth Lt. Edward K. Sanders Humphreys McGee Rev. Charles M. Seymour, Jr. William M. Edwards C. Hutcheson Sullivan James Franklin McMullan Paul T. Tate, Jr. Harry C. McPherson, Jr. John William Jourdan, Jr. Albert Woods Dr. James E. Thorogood George R. Mende Rev. Richard A. Kirchhoffer 1945 Douglas L. Vaughan, Jr. Clifton H. Morgan Charles W. Lokey, Jr. Dr. Cyril T. Yancey Rev. George D. Clark Lester S. Parr Robert G. Snowden Robert M. Cook Rev. Fred G. Yerkes, Jr. Dr. Breckinridge W. Wing Rev. Robert Roy Parks Rev. Eric S. Greenwood Samuel E. Parr, Jr. 1936 1941 James R. Miller Dr. Stephen E. Puckette Hiram S. Chamberlain, HI Rev. Richard S. Corry Houston Yost Mullikin William T. Richter George Price Cooper, Jr. Dr. David P. Dyer Charles H. Russell, Jr. Rev. Gregory A. E. Rowley Richard L. Dabney Rev. Marshall J. Ellis Rt. Rev. William E. Sanders Rev. Robert S. Snell H. Thomas Ferguson James V. Gillespie Rev. Archer Torrey Jack L. Stephenson Thomas E. Haile Winfield B. Hale, Jr. Silas Williams, Jr. Rev. J. Rufus Stewart Frank H. Kean, Jr. Nagel Haskin 1946 Warner S. Watkins, Jr. Col. Edmund Kirby-Smith Clendon H. Lee Dr. Ben E. Watson Edward E. Murrey, Jr. Edwin L. Bennett Rev. George C. Merkel Rev. J. Philson Williamson Rt. Rev. David S. Rose deRosset Myers Franklin Gilliam John Hopkins Hall Herbert E. Smith, Jr. William M. Spencer, III 1950 Rev. Clyde L. Jardine Britton D. Tabor Robert H. Woodrow, Jr. F. Clay Bailey, Jr. Rev. Jr. Rev. Louis O. V. Thomas Francis H. Yerkes Charles E. Karsten, Dr. Wyatt H. Blake, III Richard B. Wilkens, Jr. Richard Munger Shaeffer Rev. George C. Bedell 1942 Rev. Harry Wintermeyer Rev. Frederick J. Bush Theodore DuBose Bratton 1947 Lawrence E. Cantrell, Jr. 1937 H. Harris Brister O'Neal Bardin Rev. E. Dudley Colhoun, Jr. Frank M. Arnall, II Dr. Ben Cameron Pierre G. T. Beauregard Joel T. Daves, III John P. Binnington William C. Chitty Snowden Boyle Rev. John L. Denny Robert Lee Bird William C. Coleman Capt. Gaston S. Bruton (M) Richard B. Doss Richard W. Boiling Robert G Donaldson James G. Cate, Jr. Charles P. Garrison Rupert M. Colmore, Jr. Stanhope E. Elmore, Jr. John S. Collier James W. Gentry, Jr. Currin R. Gass Rev. Kenneth E. Clarke Dr. William G. Crook Howard M. Hannah Harold Eustis Dr. John A. Hamilton Rev. Miller M. Cragon, Jr. Smith L. Hempstone Augustus T. Graydon Richard D. Higginbotham Tom P. Frith Dr. George Selden Henry, Jr. Zadok D. Harrison Rev. Luther O. Ison Neely Grant, Jr. Lewis H. Hill, III Theodore C. Heyward, Jr. Dr. Harold P. Jackson Jerome B. Johnson Henry C. Hutson Dr. Francis H. Holmes Dr. Morse Kochtitzky Grady W. Leach, Jr. Wayne T. Jervis, Jr. Rev. Jack F. G. Hopper Dr. Bruce M. Kuehnle Dr. William R. Nes Walter W. Kennedy, Jr. Rev. Cotesworth P. Lewis Louis R. Lawson, Jr. Dr. William R. Nummy Thomas A. Lear Theodore D. Ravenel Richard R. McCauley Peter O'Donnell, Jr. Rev. John Harry Lembcke, Hugh T. Shelton, Jr. James C. McCrea, Jr. William P. Perrin Jr. Rev. George R. Stephenson C. Caldwell Marks W. Joe Shaw, Jr. Capt. Michael V. McGee Albert W. Stockell Dr. John S. Marshall Rev. James Stirling W. Shands McKeithen, Jr. J. Lewis Thompson, Jr. James W. Moody, Jr. Rev. George E. Stokes, Jr. Dr. John H. Marchand, Jr. Marshall S. Turner, Fred H. Phillips Irl R. Walker, Jr. Jr. Leonard B. Murphy George G. Potts Richard L. Wallens Rev. F. Stanford Persons, III 1938 John B. Ransom, III Dr. John F. Waymouth Very Rev. George Edgar L. Powell M. Alexan- Armistead I. Selden, Jr. Charles A. Wiley Fitzhugh K. Powell der Dr. Albert P. Spaar, Jr. Rev. Cecil Woods, Jr. Rev. George L. Reynolds, Jr. Robert Lee Coleman Robert J. Stone 1948 Horace L. Rhorer, Jr. Herbert S. Ephgrave, Jr. Ashby M. Sutherland William B. Elmore Rev. Harold Franklin Shaffer Frank M. Gillespie, Jr. Edmond M. Tipton Rev. George C. Estes, Jr. Richard E. Simmons, Jr. William B. Harwell Dr. Bayly Turlington Rev. Mason A. Frazell Sedgwick L. Simons Rev. Waties R. Haynsworth Thomas K. Ware Rev. Arthur L. Lyon-Vaiden William D. Hail J. Austin Sperry 1943 Dr. Thomas V. Magruder, Jr Blackburn Hughes, Jr. Dr. William S. Stoney, Jr. Dr. W. B. Rogers Beasley Thomas T. Phillips, Jr. George Q. Langstaff James R. Thul Chaplain William A. Board- Dr. Fred N. Mitchell Rev. William A. Willcox, Rev. James E. Savoy man Jr. Rev. Guy S. Usher Edwin K. Myrick, Jr. Emerson C. Winstead Claude Cunningham William N. Wilkerson Thomas B. Rice David G. Wiseman, Jr. John P. Douglas, Jr. Rev. Charles Wyatt-Brown Capt. Eugene D. Scott Emmons H. Woolwine, Jr. Berkeley Grimball Dr. Wilson C. Snipes Rev. John C. Worrell 1939 Robert Critchell Judd Mrs. Michael Sterner Douglas M. Wright, Jr. Paul Dr. Stoddard Amos C. Macon T. Kirkman Rev. Martin R. Tilson Rev. Richard Young Henry C. Cortes, Jr. W. Sperry Lee Dr. Calhoun Winton Rutherford R. Cravens Dr. David A. Lockhart 1951 Rev. James P. DeWolfe, Jr. Arthur L. Major, Jr. 1949 Rev. Allen L. Bartlett, Jr. Ben P. Donnell Charles G. Mullen, Jr. Rev. C. FitzSimons Allison Fred H. Benners Wallace H. Gage E. Graham Roberts G. Dewey Arnold John G. Bratton William Given, Jr. William W. Shaver, m Robert M. Ayres, Jr. James M. Cunningham Alexander Guerry, Jr. Frank M. Walker Dr. William Reed Bell George A. Dotson O. Morgan Hall William T. Watson Walter D. Bryant, Jr. George B. Elliott Lt. Col. Leslie McLaurin, Jr. James L. Williams William C. Buck John H. Haggard Edwin M. McPherson Frontis S. Winford, Jr. Lamar B. Cantelou Thad G. Holt, Jr. Thomas A. Rose, Jr. Rev. Milton L. Wood Dr. William G. Cobey Dr. O. Lewin Keller, Jr.

February i<;6} Allan C. King William E. Roberts Rev. Colton M. Smith, III Charles T. Cullen Thomas Kelsey Lamb, Jr. Robert A. Rowland John Christian Thompson Col. Wolcott K. Dudley Robert M. McKey, Jr. William Clinton Rucker, Jr. Rev. Clyde M. Watson, Jr. James Andrews Elkins, Jr. Rev. Loren B. Mead Ray G. Terry Halsey E. Werlein Rev. Thomas Garner John H. Nichols William D. Tynes, Jr. 1959 Rev. Jules Haley Jack Peyton Pace Rev. Murray H. Voth Laurence R. Alvarez William Harrison Philips Herbert A. T. Manly Whitener, Jr. James M. Avent, Jr. William D. McArthur, Jr. Wynne Ragland William S. Wire Carroll Erwin Brown Winston B. McCall, Jr. Stevens Rev. Gladstone H. Leonard N. Wood James T. Burrill Gordon P. Peyton Furman C. Stough John W. Woods Rev. Cham Canon Edward Howell Reynolds John Newton Wall, Jr. John H. Wright, Jr. Wayne H. Crathorne Allen C. Satterfield West Arthur Alexander 1955 Robert D. Gooch, Jr. Murray Rudulph Summers Fred Wolf, Jr. Rev. S. Rev. C. Rev. Edward W. Conklin Joseph W. Griffin Homer Vanture Richard E. Vogel 1952 Robert L. Ewing Robert P. Hare, IV Taylor Malone Wray Clifford V. Anderson Robert F. Gillespie, Jr. John C. Hodgkins Rev. George Y. Ballentine, Jr. Rev. Bertrand N. Honea, Jr. Lt. J. Kimpton Honey 1963 James G. Beavan Lt. William C. Kalmbach, Jr. Hardie B. Kimbrough David M. Beyer William M. Bomar Lewis Swift Lee David Clark Littler Allie M. Blalock James H. Bratton, Jr. Edward G. Piatt, Jr. Lt. James R. McElroy Willard N. James, Jr. Hugh C. Brown Robert R. Webb William M. Marks O. Wayne McGregor, Jr. Rev. James C. Buckner Richard L. West Rev. C. Brinkley Morton Brian Kenneth Pierce Rev. John Q. Crumbly 1956 Robert Mars Ross, Jr. Robert Vernon Weston R. Andrew Duncan William R. Boling Bruce Adams Samson John W. A. Woody, Jr. Dr. Prentice G. Fulton, Jr. Rev. Leroy D. Soper Lt. John P. Bowers 1964 Stapleton, Jr. Rev. Martin Dewey Gable Capt. Bradner, III Rev. Archie C. James W. J. Franklin Gelzer Rev. Sanford Garner, Jr. Cole Earl W. Stewart, Jr. Frederick MacKay Donald Griffis Coleman Goatley Ralston L. Taylor W. Rev. James M. Coleman Michael Hall Moisio Edward W. Heath Rev. Coleman Inge John Moss Warren Hartwell D. Hooper L. Noiand Pipes Rev. Robert B. Jewell (W) 1960 Bernard Wolff Rev. Charles K. Horn W. Kenneth Kinnett I. Croom Beatty, rV Ben Ivey Jackson Burrell O. McGee Hugh Hunter Byrd 1965 McClain Dr. J. Howard Chaplain John Arthur Pedlar James Robert Carter, Jr. Bruce B. MacWilliams L. C. McFaddin, Jr. James William H. Porter William B. Craig, III (M) John C. Saunders, Jr. Joseph L. Orr Chaplain George H. Quarter- Walter J. Crawford, Jr. 1966 William B. Patterson, Jr. Rev. man, Jr. Rev. John A. Dirks, Jr. Thomas Taylor Balsley Rev. William E. Pilcher, III John G. Seiler, Jr. David G. Ellison, III Sam Hatten Eskew Windsor M. Price Rev. Alfred H. Smith, Jr. Harry B. Forehand, Jr. Eugene H. B. McFaddin B. Reynolds Dr. Albert Capt. William R. Stamler, Jr. Hugh Edward Gelston, Jr. Rev. Robert L. Saul HONORARY 1957 Robert L. Gaines Thomas H. Setze Robert C. Alston (B) Henry F. Arnold, Jr. Paul D. Goddard Dan D. Stewart, Jr. Dr. George M. Baker William R. Campbell Robert Clark Gregg Johnson Bransford Wallace Dr. Arthur J. Bedell E. Marvin Compton, Jr. Taylor C. Greenwald Jr. James S. Bonner Kyle Wheelus, Robert Lee Haden, Jr. Dawson Crim Harvey G. Booth 1953 Jerome G. Hall Robert Lee Glenn Rt. Rev. Martin J. Bram (M) Rev. P. Roberts Bailey, Jr. Howard W. Harrison, Jr. Charles R. Hamilton Rt. Rev. Robert R. Brown Austin Cater, Jr. George Milam, Jr. John Lawrence G. Heppes Rev. Sam O. Capers Julian R. deOvies, Jr. John Choon Jai Rhee Christopher Henry Horsfield Rt. Rev. Charles C. J. Car- Fletcher James B. Richardson Rev. John C. Leftwich Dodge Kimbrough penter Rev. Austin McNeil Ford Dennis P. Thompson Willam A. Kimbrough, Jr Rt. Rev. Randolph R. Clai- Rev. Duncan M. Gray, Jr. Rev. Harry W. Thompson Rev. Giles F. Lewis, Jr. borne, Jr. S. Caywood Gunby Rev. Herbert J. Vandort Rev. Charles Scott May Rt. Rev. Edmund P. Dandridge Dr. E. Phelps Helvenston Rev. John T. Morrow 1961 (M) Standish Henning III Thomas H. Peebles, Capt. Roy C. Allen Mrs. Alfred I. duPont R. Holt Hogan Capt. Heyward B. Roberts, Jr. Paul C. Alvarez James A. Farley William Chipman Honey Arnold Rose Rev. Lee S. Block Robert E. Finlay J. Hooker, Jr. John Dr. William Harrison Rucker, Todd T. Breck Dr. George Aired Garratt William E. Hunter Jr. Rev. A. Stanley Bullock, Jr. Rev. Willis P. Gerhart Dr. W. Henry Langhorne James Jerry Slade Waller Thomas Burns, II Rt. Rev. John J. Gravatt, Jr. E. Lucas Myers Rev. Francis X. Walter Walter R. Chastain, Jr. Rt. Rev. Walter H. Gray Rev. George H. Schroeter William J. Warfel Col. Maxwell Cornelius Rt. Rev. Robert E. Gribbin Sam P. Strother, Jr. 1958 Lt. Edward O. deBary Mrs. Alexander Guerry Thoburn Taggart, Jr. Harvey W. Allen George W. Freeman, III Rt. Rev. Oliver J. Hart Bradley Trimble Rev. W. Hart Applegate Joseph J. Gee, III Justice T. Grady Head George J. Wagner, Jr. Olin G. Beall, Jr. Rev. John E. Gilchrist Rt. Rev. Hamilton H. Kellogg Rev. Philip P. Werlein Edmund Berkeley, Jr. M. Feild Gomila Dr. William A. Kirkland Bertram Wyatt-Brown Anderson B. Carmichael William A. Griffis, III Capt. Wendell F. Kline 1954 Lt. Everett J. Dennis Robert Ladley Husted Rt. Rev. Arthur Lichtenberger Rev. Stephen W. Ackerman Capt. William Temple Dos- Lt. David C. Johnson (W) Harry W. Camp well, III Rev. Terrell T. Kirk Hinton F. Lingino Capt. Paul D. Edwards William J. Echols, Jr. Robert Edward Libbey Rev. Albert H. Lucas Allen T. Farmer (M) David H. Evett Sterling Rayburn Rt. Rev. Arthur R. McKinstry Robert N. Hall Kirkman Finlay, Jr. John K. Rothpletz Rt. Rev. C. Gresham Marmion Rev. Robert B. Kemp, Sr. Walter A. George, III John H. Schley, Jr. Rt. Rev. C. Avery Mason Charles M. Lindsay Rev. William D. Henderson Robert J. Schneider Z. Cartter Patten Douglas Lore J. Stephen Lord E. Gray Smith, Jr. Rt. Rev. Noble C. Powell Walter F. McGee, Jr. Lt. John McCaa, Jr. K. Wortham Smith Dr. Charles M. Sarratt Rev. Frank B. Mangum Michael R. Richards Marion G. Tomlin Rt. Rev. Albert R. Stuart Gilbert Y. Marchand Luther Franklin Sharp, Jr. Danny E. Woods Rt. Rev. Andrew Yu Yue Tsu Dr. Walter E. Nance Rev. Harry W. Shipps 1962 Rev. Holly W. Wells Rev. Clarence C. Pope, Jr. Alfred Parker Smith A. Shapleigh Boyd, III Victor R. Williams (M)

30 The Sewanee News AMI. CLASS PRESIDENT NO. DONORS PERCENTAGE GIVEN PRIOR Soaper 6 75 $ 3,342 1894 Soaper 4 80 2,635 1895 Weed 3 43 1,033 1896 2 50 2,459 1897 1 25 30 1898 Shields 3 33 500 1899 Jemison 5 41 107 1900 Bull 10 58 115 1901 Bull 10 58 5,581 1902 Carrier 6 35 75 1903 Smith 8 21 4,480 1904 Lewis 6 17 239 1905 Pugh 7 24 243 1906 3 11 124 1907 9 24 565 1908 Greer 7 29 12,788 1909 Lyne 3 10 190 1910 Cheape 4 17 97 1911 Juhan 8 20 18,678 1912 Green 12 38 1,140 The V. C. with Provoft Gaston Bruton, left, and Treasurer 1913 7 50 2,602 Douglas Vaughan, right, eye the first $655,000 from the Fold 1914 Gerhart 6 40 720 Foundation incentive grant. 1915 Hamilton 7 28 387 1916 9 26 173 1917 Morris 11 27 1,616 1918 Fooshee 11 23 2,895 "Time is Ripe" V-C says 1919 Chisolm 5 15 125 1920 Stoney 13 19 7,825 (COTINUED FROM PAGE 2) 1921 Burch 16 27 13,809 Who's colleges 1922 Helms 8 12 1,730 Who In America are also the which 1923 Frierson 13 14 615 have the broadest geographical distribution in their 1924 Wallace 8 13 251 student bodies. Sewanee was high in both lists. 1925 Jones 6 9 134 1926 Hamilton 21 22 1,422 His own words are: 1927 Turner 21 28 9,362 1928 Wallace 17 27 1,685 1&29 Schoolfield 63 48 2,102 As one moves up the gamut of colleges from the 1930 Brown 14 16 7,017 most local to those colleges with less and less of 1931 Ezzell 15 14 1,935 a local surplus of students, one finds demonstrated 1932 Patton 17 15 715 convincingly that larger and larger proportions of 1933 Ames 11 13 1,525 1934 Hart 21 25 507 their alumni have gone on not only to positions of 1935 Ruch 24 30 2,780 leadership and responsibility in public and private 1936 Craighill 14 18 1,360 life, but also in advanced academic pursuits. 1937 Graydon 19 27 1,015 "In fact," he says, "there is a group of thirty- 1938 Wilkerson 13 15 1,370 one institutions which consistently rank near the 1939 Guerry 16 21 5,598 1940 Snowden 10 13 213 top of every one of the half dozen indices exam- 1941 DeWolfe 12 15 195 ined. With only two percent of the nation's un- 1942 Kochtitzky 30 29 850 dergraduates, these thirty-one colleges have pro- 1943 Lee 18 15 420 duced thirty percent of the nation's established 1944 Sullivan 11 13 440 1945 Nelson 9 10 146 leaders and nearly one third of its advanced 1946 Karsten 6 16 55 younger scholars, even though proportions and 1947 Cate 24 27 6,883 not total quantities are the important measures." 1948 Hughes 14 17 345 1949 Guerry 33 18 1,880 Dr. Warntz then lists the thirty-one colleges 1950 Doss 42 17 1,814 by name 1951 Bartlett 22 10 521 and points out that "the lone southern representative 1952 Patterson 29 27 580 is the University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee." 1953 Wyatt- Brown 22 12 261 It is with this background of national recognition 1954 Woods 24 12 962 both for academic excellence and financial success that 1955 Bozeman 9 5 224 1956 McGee 15 6 299 we now set out upon our most ambitious development 1957 Palmer 20 10 152 program. There is almost no limit to what we can ac- 1958 Evans 22 17 415 1959 Upchurch 23 18 299 complish if we set ourselves a sufficiently great task. I960 Gregg 22 9 2,292 The time is ripe for a mighty cooperative effort and we 1961 Rust 26 9 423 1962 Cullen 16 7 515 must be about it. Later Classes [19] -- 1,680 Cordially yours,

Total 1,001 16 $147,565 Honorary 38 357,496 d&xez-W k<$&i^u£y Grand Total 1,039 $505,061

February 1963 31 «*& S4£S>9C*~*S .

THE UNIVERSITY DF THE SOUTH SEWANEE, TENNESSEE 21 St

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iF* - ' — —

THE COMMENCEMENT 1963 Phase I Graduating Seniors

Sewan Friday, June 7 Reunion Classes of 1959, i960, 1961, 1962 invited to NEWS share in Senior Activities. Dormitory Housing opens for Families of Seniors. Beta Brunch, ATO Beach Party, Jazz Concert, Dance sponsored by PDT, DTD, and Independents. The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the Associated Alumni of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennessee. Second Saturday, June 8 Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee. Sigma Nu Breakfast, Phi Gamma Delta Smorgasbord, Kappa Sigma Lawn Party, Senior Dinner-Dance. Highlander, Wellington, Ribbon Societies. Sunday, June 9: Baccalaureate Sunday Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35 Baccalaureate Service, Sermon by Bishop Vernon Inman of Natal. Issue Editor Edith Whitesell LCA Breakfast, Dean Alexander's Open House foi Theological Seniors and Families, Vice-Chan'cellor's Reception, Chaplain Collins' Dinner for Clergy receiv- Associates Peggy Ervin, Sue Wunderlich ing S.T.M. Degrees, Choir and Carillon Concerts. SAE and KA Farewell Party. Art: Back cover, Jean Tallec; Juhan Gym, Monday, June 10: Commencement Day Mrs. Massey Shepherd Corporate Communion. Commencement Exercises, Address by Harold Holmes Helm. Air Force and Marine Corps Commissioning.

Phase II Alumni Week including Regents, CONTENTS Trustees, Alumni and Provincial Laity Monday Afternoon, June 10 Opening Session of the Board of Regents. 3 $10,000,000 Campaign Dormitory Housing opens for Trustees and Alumni, Registration at Elliott Hall. 6 Scholarships Tuesday, June ii 8 Theolog's Work in Royal Palace Regents' Meetings, Corporate Communion.

1 Belles Lettres Wednesday, June 12 Registration for Trustees and Alumni, Elliott Hall. Re- 1 2 Sermon and Song gents' Meetings. Meeting of Executive Committee of 13 Fly In Associated Alumni. Annual Meeting of the Associated Alumni. Luncheon for Trustee Bishops and Theologi- 14 Ecce Quam Bonum cal Faculty. Bus Tour. Alumni Officers' Meeting with Alumni on Board of Trustees. Trustees' Meetings.

1 to the Mountain 8 Mohammed Class Reunion Cocktail Parties.

20 Sports at Sewanee Thursday, June 13 Dedication of Henry D. Phillips Tablet, William 22 On the Mountain B. Craig, III, Memorial Books. Woman's Club Party and 25 Class Distinctions Art Exhibit. Trustees' Meetings. Cornerstone Laying for duPont Library. Vice-Chancellor's Luncheon. 31 Summer at Sewanee Ladies' Luncheon. St. Luke's Alumni Business Session. Registration for Provincial Laity Conference at Tucka- way. Buffet Dinner for Laity, Opening Session. Reunion Dinners. Vice-Chancellor's Reception.

May 1963 Volume 29 Number 2 Friday, June 14 Alumni Corporate Communion and Memorial Service. Campaign National Committee Meeting. Dedication of Florida Bay in All Saints' Chapel. Laity Confer- ence. Fraternity Luncheons. Class Reunions. Alumni Dinner-Dance

Saturday, June 15 Sue and Fred Wunderlich, '62, caught in ON THE COVER— Business Meetings, Laity Conference. the annual idyll o r Abbo's Alley by Fred's delayed exposure. Noon — Barbecue and Evening Dance for Everyone. $10,000,000

The biggest news stories in Sewanee history are tional years he served as president of the alumni and in the making. The men who will determine as trustee.

"how big" and "when" are brothers J. Albert He told how in 1938 Alexander Guerry had returned Woods, '18, and G. Cecil Woods, '21, co-chairmen for to Sewanee to find an accumulated deficit of $406,968 the effort. with the endowment book value standing at #1,801,694 Phase One of Sewanee's campaign for $10,000,000 but the portfolio actually worth much less. In 1947 was completed on George Washington's birthday, Feb- when he and the Vice-Chancellor turned over the man- ruary 22. At that time it was announced that one mil- agement of the University's stocks to a New York in- lion, not including bequests or money from the Ford vestment adviser, the amount transferred was only $1,250,000.

Today, Albert Woods continued, the endowment !? worth approximately $14,000,000. During the time this increase took place, the following buildings, valued at $7,232,884, were erected or completed: All Saints' Chapel, Juhan Gymnasium, Guerry Hall, Hunter and

Sessums Cleveland Halls, St. Luke's annex, Walsh- Ellett, the Phillips Nurses' Home, the Snowden For- estry Building, and numerous homes for faculty, staff and students. "It was Guerry," he said, "who restored the securi'.y and financial integrity of the institution. It has fallen to McCrady to carry out those plans and that vision.

When the final history is written, it may well be that our present Vice-Chancellor may be known as Mc- Coulson Crady the Builder as well as scholar, scientist, artist Albert and Cecil Woods and musician." Never have so few been privileged to seek so much.

Foundation, was in hand. Phase Two will be con-

cluded at Commencement. 1963, at which time it is hoped that an additional $2,500,000 will be in sight. Charting the campaign course at the February 22 meeting was Cecil Woods of Chattanooga, chairman of the Volunteer State Life Insurance Company, and co-chairman of the campaign. He called the assembled

group of fifty leaders probably "the most far-reaching and strongest team ever put together in any fund-rais- ing effort of the University." In addition to the forty- eight national committeemen appointed to date, others will bring the total to an eventual 200 names. Albert Woods, recently retired chairman of the Board of Courtaulds North America, also present at the February 22 meeting, made the after-dinner ad- dress. He turned the spotlight on Sewanee's immedi- ate past and told a story of the remarkable accomplish- Coulson ment which he saw during the twelve years he served John Ezzell and Dr. McCrady at Campaign as regent four of as chairman and the addi- — them — meeting

May 1963 Always called upon. Bishop Frank A. Juhan, Michaux Nash, William Kirkland

Phase Two, launched on February 22 and whose

organization is scheduled for completion at Commence- Coulson ment, is "the most important single activity of all," Woods said. "People who eventually give substantial

sums of money do not make up their minds all too rap- Campaign idly. . . . The gifts we are talking about will not be made final by the Commencement deadline. But dis-

cussions must be started. . . . We want to have in good Discussing the "Gift Table," co-chairman Cecil sight the sum of an additional $2,500,000."

Woods said that it is normal for campaigns of this kind Phase Three will start on Labor Day. In this period to raise between percent and percent of the total 75 93 we will solicit "all other gifts." Area organization will in gifts of $10,000 and over. These figures are based on not be confined to the thirty cities in which half of our the experience of other institutions such as Harvard, alumni are located but a large part of our work will Yale, M.I.T., Princeton, and Stanford, which had (or be done in them. Phase Three will be expected to raise have) goals ranging from $6,000,000 to $83,000,000, 15 percent of the total. A special committee will be "This was a revelation to us," said Woods. "We set up for foundations, corporations, and to seek be- have to find about persons (including foundations 150 quests. and corporations) who will give us from $10,000 to $1,000,000 each." The gifts needed for success are: Size of Gift Minimum No. Minimum Amt. The executive committee issues an open invitation to Needed Needed alumni and friends wishing to work in the campaign $1,000,000 plus 2 $2,000,000 effort to address to one of the co-chairmen a letter 100,000 plus 10 1,500,000 offering their services.

10,000 plus 150 3 ,000,000 1,000 plus 230 500,000 Under $1,000 all others 500,000 Meantime the Sewanee Campaign Office in Room

Thus, Woods pointed out, a minimum of 412 major 928 of the Volunteer Building in Chattanooga has pro- duced major materials. First there study, gifts and special gifts are needed for a total of some was a "The Resources of the University." Following this $7,500,000. To phrase it differently, as and when the have Solicitation of top 162 gifts are made, Sewanee will have reached more come "Advice Concerning Major Gifts" and "Tax Considerations in Planning Gifts to than 85 percent of its total. the University of the South." handsomely printed Ever since early fall, an executive committee has A been meeting frequently to screen and assess the names preliminary statement, with photographs, is a 16-page Million Dollar of potential benefactors and the names of those who brochure entitled "Sewanee's Ten Cam- paign." All of these are being sent to those alumni and will call on them. "The committee is a fine cross-sec- "sign for active service in the big ef- tion of the leadership needed to conduct this cam- friends who up" fort. newsletter will be sent regularly to all workers, paign," the co-chairman said. The administration is A represented by Dr. McCrady, the development office reporting on current progress. by Bishop Juhan, the regents by Robert G. Snowden, Both Cecil Woods and Albert, who has been in Eu- the alumni by John M. Ezzell, and the church support rope during the spring, have had highest praise for their program by Harvey Booth. With the two co-chair- co-workers on the executive committee. Paraphrasing men, these five comprise the executive committee. Churchill, Cecil Woods said, "Never in higher educa- In Phase One, the "official family" of the Univer- tion have so few been privileged to seek so much." Of sity—the faculty and staff, the residents of Sewanee, Bishop Juhan he said, "He is always called upon and, the trustees and regents—participated nearly 100 per- God bless him, he always responds. His work througii cent. "They have responded wonderfully," Woods the years has been magnificent, unselfish, and effec- said. tive."

The Sewanee News The Jessie Ball duPont Library has been started. The regents voted in March to name the central academic build- ing after the most generous benefactor in the hundred-year history of the University of the South. The contract was won by Brice Building Company of Birmingham on a bid of $1,500,000, the largest construction job ever started at Sewanee. The total value of the building, when finally equipped with books, will be $4,000,000. James Godwin of Atlanta was the architect.

The McCrady Family, with its long and strong Sewanee ties, will be honored in the name of the newest dormitory, now rising on the site of Miss Katheen McCrady's house. Edwin A. Keeble, '23, of Nashville, is the architect. Bene- dict Hall, on University Avenue, is almost ready for occupancy. It will house visitors during Commencement and Alumni Week

May 1963 Scholarships

Once again Sewanee has made a most impressive national record in Woodrow Wilson Fellowship awards. Seven Sewanee seniors won the grants for graduate work leading toward college teaching. In proportion to enrollment, Sewanee ranked third in the nation among men's colleges in the number of awards for 1963. Only Haverford and Harvard Colleges had more. After Sewanee came Wesleyan, Amherst, Prince- Louise Sheridan. Mobi'o Mighell, ton, Hamilton, and Yale. Among all colleges Sewanee Joseph R. Mighell, b. 1850 Joseph R. b. 1946 was eighth, after Haverford, Swarthmore, Reed, Bryn Mawr, Newcomb, Carleton, and Harvard; and followed by Wesleyan, Amherst, Chicago, Hamilton, and Yale. A scholarship fund in the amount of $33,500 has The Sewanee seniors who achieved the distinction been set up at Sewanee by Mrs. Ingersoll Moffat of were Walter P. Brooke, English major from Atlanta. A4obile 3 Alabama. The income from the fund will help Georgia; Robert L. Brown, English major, of Little future college students from Christ Church, Mobile, Rock, Arkansas; Harry H. Cockrill, Jr., zoology major, primarily, and from the Alabama diocese, as a me- also of Little Rock; Charles S. L. Hoover, history ma- morial to the donor's father, the late Joseph Richard jor, of Shaker Heights, Ohio; Stephen H. Moorehead, Mighell, and her great nephew, J. Richard Mighell, IV. economics major, of Cocoa, Florida; Harry C. Mullikin, The young man died last year at the age of sixteen in mathematics major of Georgetown, Kentucky; and an accident at his father's summer home in North Caro- Thomas T. Wilheit, physics major from Gainesville, lina. As a summer camper at Mountain Lake near Georgia. Tracy City, he had visited the University of the South's Charles S. L. Hoover was also winner of a Danforth campus. Mr. Mighell (pronounced Mile) was for many Graduate Fellowship, one of 104 seniors chosen from years senior warden of Christ Church, Mobile. In the 1265 candidates nominated by more than five hundred correspondence connected with the transfer of bonds, colleges throughout the nation to be so honored. These the Rev. Leighton P. Arsnault, '47, was Mrs. Moffat's awards are made to students "selected on the basis of advisor. The gift will be matched by approximately intellectual promise, personality congenial to the class- $11,000 from the Ford Foundation. room, integrity, genuine interest in religion, and high potential for effective college teaching," according to the Danforth Foundation's announcement.

is Fellow. Hoover Sewanee's eighth Danforth Seven seniors and two juniors were elected to the Sewanee Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, oldest of the

1 American scholastic honorary societies. New members include seniors Joseph L. Price, Robert L. Brown. Samuel F. Pickering, Webb L. Wallace, Evans E. Har-

rell, Charles S. L. Hoover, Thomas T. Wilheit, and juniors Robert G. Dillard and David G. DeVore. Six of the seniors among this year's initiates have received major awards for graduate study. Price won a Rhodes Scholarship; Brown, who was a Rhodes runnerup, received a Woodrow Wilson award; Picker- ing declined a fellowship at Virginia in favor of Cam- bridge in England; Harrell received honorable men- tion in the Woodrow Wilson competition and two other awards from Emory and Florida; Hoover a Wilson and Danforth, and Wilheit a Wilson. The only other sen- ior member of the society, Stephen H. Morehead, who Coulsoi) was elected last year, won a Wilson as well as fellow- Stephen Moorehead gets the news of his Woodrow Wilson ship offers from Wheaton and the University of Chi- Fellowship from Dean Robert S. Lancaster and Professor Gilbert Gilchrist. cago.

The Sewanee News COMMENCEMENT ORATOR Oil June IO Will be Harold Holmes Helm, chairman of the board of the Chemical Bank. New York Trust Company of New York City and chairman of the board of trus- tees of Princeton University. The Baccalaureate Ser- mon on June 9 will once again be delivered by the Rt. Rev. Thomas George Vernon Inman, Bishop of Natal, who was warmly received in that function dur- ing the 1958 Commencement.

Dr. McCrady has also announced recipients of six honorary degrees besides the one traditionally awarded to the Commencement speaker (Bishop Inman already has an honorary doctorate from Sewanee).

Four of the men who will be honored are Sewanee alumni. The D.C.L. degree will be conferred on the Harold Helm Hon. Richard Walker Boiling, '37, Congressman from the 5th District of Missouri; and on Frank Mor- gan Gillespie, '11, chairman of the board of Gil- lespie Motor Company of San Antonio, Texas. Boiling, president of the Sewanee Club of Washington, has received the Congressional Distinguished Service

Root-Tilden Scholars. Alan Kohn, New York University Award from the American Political Science Associa- newsman, writes: "I was astonished and delighted to dis- tion. In 1962 he was elected an alumnus member of cover, after diligent personal research, that your contention about Sewanee having the world's largest current collection Phi Beta Kappa by the Sewanee chapter and was 1962 of Root-Tilden scholarship winners is absolutely correct, Commencement speaker at SMA, where he taught although the University of Southern California trailed you J Gillespie has been prominently active in » by only one. I enclose a photograph of the LARGEST col- 937"39- lection of Root-Tilden Scholarship holders extant." Back church, civic, and philanthropic as well as business row, left to right: John Rothpletz, '61, Edwin P. Williamson, affairs. He has served as trustee since 1929 and his '61, Dennis R. Thompson, '60. Front row, J. Bernard Haynes. '62, Anthony C. Gooch, '59. three sons were Sewanee men.

The degree of Doctor of Divinity will be conferred on the Rev. Edmund Dargan Butt, '26, associate pro- fessor of pastoral theology at Seabury-Western Theo- logical Seminary in Evanston, Illinois; the Rev. Eric

Sutcliffe Greenwood, '45, rector of the Church of the Holy Communion in Memphis; and the Rev. Edward Gordon Mullen, rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, Florence, Alabama. The Rev. Kenneth John Wooll- combe, professor of dogmatic theology at General Theological Seminary in New York City and Principal- elect of the Scottish Episcopal Theological College in Edinburgh, Scotland, will receive the degree of Doctor of Sacred Theology.

The Alfred I. duPont Awards Foundation in the

field of radio-television and allied science has an- nounced scholarship grants to two students, Charles

Ryall Wilson, Jr., '64, of Coleman, Texas; and Edward L. McGuire, III, '65, of Shreveport, Louisiana. In a

letter to Dean Lancaster the secretary of the founda- tion said, "We are very much impressed by these ap- plicants, and are pleased beyond words to be able to

NYU Luigi Pelletticr help them."

May 1963 Marsh called his likeness of the Shah and Empress, was Theolog's Work 22 inches wide and 31 inches high, cut from black va- lour, matted on a background of metallic gold and en- Wins Royal Favor cased in a frame of burnished gold and black lacquer. The work was done from a single sheet of paper ex- cept for two jewel inserts in medals worn by the Shah. Odd jobs of odd sorts have helped put students How to bring the work to the attention of the Iran- through the seminary at Sewanee, but cutting ians? Marsh had meanwhile enrolled in the School of up paper dolls looks to be a new one. Cer- Theology of the University of the South, in accordance

tainly Ralph Marsh is the only first-year student to with a long-cherished plan. At Thanksgiving he caught sell the product of his cutting to the Iranian govern- a ride to Washington with a fellow-theolog. Marsh

ment and have it hung in the marble palace at Teheran. stayed with his sister there and got her to drive him

The rewarding hobby was born just a year ago last to the Iranian embassy. He asked to see the cultural October, in Johnny Reb's restaurant in Atlanta. Marsh, ambassador. As it happened, the regular receptionist after a full stint as a high school teacher, worked there was ill that day and the substitute somewhat confusedly at night as maitre d'hotel. Not one to enjoy idleness, let Marsh in. She tcld him afterwards that five men as should be abundantly apparent, during a slack hour had been waiting three months to see the man. he found himself just gazing at the hilly, bushbrowed The cultural ambassador was so taken with the sil- profile of the restaurant organist. The man was Graham houette that he called the ambassador and interrupted Jackson, the Negro musician who was a protege of President Roosevelt. The face was rich with years of living and demanded, of Ralph Marsh, a record. Marsh picked up a menu and a scissors and began to cut. What emerged was an amazing likeness in an art form that has rarely achieved the status of an art form. Marsh continued cutting, widening his range of sub- jects to include animals, flowers, ships, trains—experi- menting with background color and textures, still for his own entertainment. He made a pair of roses for his wife, and she liked them so well that she asked him to have them framed. The framer, a prominent

Atlanta art dealer, asked if he had ever had this work

appraised. Why no, Marsh said, wondering if the

gentleman had all his marbles. But when the dealer said that he personally could get a hundred dollars for him for the roses, Marsh was jolted into regarding his intricate doodling in a new light. Last summer, again while teaching, Marsh supple- mented his income at night as a janitor for a commer-

cial cleaning service. (He has turned his hand to so Too sumptuous for an embassy many occupations on his road to the ministry that a

friend once remarked that if he saw him at Five Points in downtown Atlanta selling pancakes and martinis he wouldn't give a second look, would just ask how's busi- ness.) While cleaning an office Marsh saw on a client's desk a small photograph showing in profile the Shall of Iran and his Empress. He recognized this at once as ideal grist for his mill, picked up the phone and

asked the owner of the magazine if he might have it. The startled business man said for goodness' sake yes.

Only then did it occur to Marsh that midnight was an unconventional hour for the transaction. The portrait was begun in July and finished in Oc- tober, just a year after Graham Jackson materialized out of a restaurant menu. "Silhouette in Filigree," as

- The Sewanee News an executive conference to show it to him. He came How did Marsh come by his gift? He knew of no back and told Marsh that the ambassador liked it very family forerunners until he nearly jumped out of his much, but thought it was too sumptuous for the em- chair one day while browsing through an encyclopedia, bassy. Marsh's heart sank with the weight of his fallen when he ran across the statement that one of the best hopes, but looking around at the stark beauty of his portraits of George Washington was a silhouette cut surroundings, in the bare-walled tradition of Islam, he by his stepdaughter. Ralph Marsh is a direct descen- saw that his Excellency had a point. dant through his mother of Martha Washington and "However," the cultural ambassador went on, "it her first husband, Park Custis. would be just right for the Shah's own residence, the Ralph Marsh's wife, the former Miss Frances Bryan marble palace at Teheran. We are going to recom- of Atlanta, and their two sons, Kyle, eight, and Kevin, mend its purchase." seven, arc making their home at present with Marsh's Negotiations continued, with long-distance calls flut- parents in Fort Myers, Florida, but they plan to join tering the St. Luke's telephone, and at last "Silhou- him in Sewanee this summer. ette in Filigree'' was definitely purchased. Mrs. Marsh has a complaint that will have a familiar, Marsh finds men to be by far his most trying sub- ring to many wives. She never did get her roses, nor jects. "They won't believe they have bumps on the any other of her husband's work. "We can't afford back of their heads." me yet," he says.

Lower left:

Marsh tries

his hand at

Julie Spears

Left : Large picture. Some

of Marsh's

work a I an

Atlanta exhibit ion.

Thurston Hatcher. Atlanti James Agee, Pulitzer prize winner post- humously, wrote many letters to his one- time teacher at St. Andrew's School near Sewanee. The publication last year of Letters of James Agee to Father Flye sparked the 'Belles £ettres following self-explanatory exchange of letters. The first appeared in Time Maga- zine, August 17, 1962.

Sewanee, Tennessee In the project of publishing those letters I was not August 1962 3, looking for any publicity for myself, and would have Dear Editor: been quite willing to have any degree of anonymity possible. The title of the book was the selection of Around here, from Jumpoff to Tickbush and from the publisher. What would have been an excellent one Lost Cove to Thumping Dick Hollow, we thought your was that pre-empted last year in the publication of feature on the James Agee letters to Father Flye mag- Letters to a Friend by Rose Macaulay. This is James nificently done. It was a tribute well deserved by them Agee's book, not mine. I had been aware of the quality both. and value of those letters from the time they were re- Nothing was said, however, of any letters Father Flye might have written to James Agee. Hereabouts we considered Father Flye the greatest correspondent since the 18th century. Something might have been said of Father Flye's special mission in teaching. His life was dedicated to gifted boys. On the edge of our mountain here, over- looking the majestic slopes of Crow Creek Valley, stand the ruins of Father Flye's great dream, a school for gifted children.

What a pity it is that the Father Flye Academy never opened, but what a glory it is that he lived to see one of his boys achieve the recognition that Time and Pulitzer have accorded.

Sincerely yours, Arthur Ben Chitty

St. Luke's Chapel Trinity Parish 487 Hudson Street New York 14, New York

August 25, 1962

Dear Mr. Chitty:

However any accomplishment in my life is to be assessed—and often that rating has seemed to me very low— I have had in generous measure one of the great- est blessings and sources of real joy that life can bring,

in devoted friends; and if I needed to be reminded of that fact, your recent letter to Time Magazine would do Father Flye this.

I gasped a bit at this mirrored picture, yet was deeply

touched by such a tribute and from a source the quality ceived, and after his death I felt that they should by

of whose judgment as well as friendly affection I honor. publication be shared with others than the few friends

The area there on the Sewanee Mountain is to me, as to whom I might occasionally cite or read some passage

you know, one of very dear ties and associations, and from them. I knew James Agee's stature, but he was

to be if not a prophet yet not without honor in his own not well known at the time of his death, and indeed

country is something for which one may be humbly until this year I imagined that if a book of his letters

appreciative. was published it would have a very limited sale. I had

10 The Sewanee News not realized the degree to which he has come to be known and recognized. A good deal of this is due to David McDowell's devoted friendship and interest and appreciation of James Agee's quality as a writer and 'Delectable ^Mountain David's competence in assembling and putting into publication the manuscript material that James Agee

had left, and thus bringing out and making known A By Arthur Ben Chitty Death in the Family, and then the two volumes of Agee on Film.

I thought it better for the book of letters to center Everything Christine Govan writes is lovely but ycu on Agee and be just his letters. Some of mine James ought to read Delectable Mountain\ It's the story of I would say were good and might be of some interest, her own arrival at Sewanee a half century or so ago. but it would seem better not to divide the focus. And Actually she was only four and a half at the time but in any case, most of mine were not available. I don't in the book, which is designed for sub-teens, she is think Jim ever intentionally destroyed anything he had eight or ten. written, or perhaps things written to him or that he had She tells enchantingly of the long train trip from collected; but with various circumstances of living and New York with her young widowed mother and her of moving, and conditions not conducive to order with train-sick little brother. They had just buried her writings and papers, much was at one time or another father, Stephen Edward Noble of Anniston, '86, ATO. lost—his writings and other things. And that was the All names of people and places south of The City are case with most of my letters to him. . . . fictitious but it doesn't take a Sewanee historian to In warm regard and with all my good wishes to you recognize Coaltown as Cowan and Arcady as Sewanee. always, The little family of three moves into Miss Fanny James Harold Flye Elmore's dormitory where Carnegie Science Hall now stands in the quadrangle.

P.S. There are in the book of letters of James Agee a Later they move to Miss Sada Elliott's cottage near few typographical errors, mostly minor, but one thing Tuckaway. There young Christine's mother is courted that irked me. On p. n, 4th line from bottom of the and won by a young professor. In the interval the page, the word I wrote and wanted was "piosity." girl learns to love the uncity-like campus and the adja-

Somehow, unauthorized, there was substituted for this cent woods, into which indulgent students let her tramp the silly word "piousness." Bah! That should be cor- along with them just as they allowed the small fry to rected. peek in at the dances in Old Forensic.

You might mention this. Joe Riley, under an assumed name, is in the book. Christine (or Tracy as she calls herself) loved him be-

cause he would let her climb up on the horses while he waited for her mother making a round of calls. Dr.

Ramage is there, but not Flora Fairbanks, or Miss Llewellyn, whose love for pets extended to the point of going to Chapel with new-hatched chicks in her shirt front to keep them warm.

She doesn't tell in her book of the little colored boy Marcus who contracted leprosy but to this day Chris-

tine Govan's first act on receiving a royalty check is to send a gift to the lepers. She loved those days and her

book reveals it. Even though in recent years Mrs. Gilbert Govan has suffered much in her Lookout Mountain home with arthritis, she got herself on the "Mountain Goat Special" last year which took Chattanooga's railroad enthusiasts through the Cum- Sam and Christine Noble She found the Mountain Delectable. berland Tunnel, up the Mountain, and on to Tracy City.

The 187-page book was printed last year by World Publishing Company in Cleveland and sells for $2.85 at Mr. Thomas Hawkins' University Supply Store.

May 1963 11 Sermon and Song

Most of the income derives from the sale of season tickets which give admission to eight concerts, thirteen films of the Sewanee Cinema Guild, and the plays cf Purple Masque. At $10 for a general admission ticket (many faculty members and residents choose to pay the somewhat higher "patron" rates to help support the growing enterprise) the series has been voted by

consumers as the bargain of the year. It is noteworthy that students buy tickets voluntarily and two-thirds of them have done so each season.

V April 28, the second Sunday after Easter, was cele- DINAH SHORE brated throughout the country as National Christian She sang with the boys. College Day. Church-related colleges cooperated in presenting from pulpits and church bulletin boards the merits of Christian education under church sponsor- ship. The eight members of the new Foundation for On the special invitation of Dinah Shore, the Sewa- Episcopal Colleges made presentations. For Sewanee nee Glee Club sang with the Tennessee-born songstress Dr. Edward McCrady was invited to speak from the on April 28. The occasion was a benefit performance pulpit of St. Luke's Church in Atlanta. Invitations were for the Siskin Memorial Foundation's Operation Cross- mailed in advance to Sewanee alumni in the area and roads, rehabilitation center for the physically handi- the University flag was carried in the procession. capped. A contingent of a hundred journeyed to Chat- Sewanee also prepared radio programs to mark the tanooga from Sewanee for the show. day. They were run on fifteen stations. In correspondence with the University's public re- Dean George M. Alexander of the School of The- lations office over a period of several years, Miss Shore ology and the University Choir, under the direction of had repeatedly shown a soft spot for Sewanee. Recall- Dr. William W. Lemonds, were invited by the Colum- ing Sunday excursions up the mountain with her family bia Broadcasting System to participate in their "Church as a child, Miss Shore named her television company of the Air" program, a national hook-up series, on May

"Sewanee Productions." 5. Arrangements were made by the Rev. D. Williams The Glee Club's performance with Dinah Shore McClurken, executive secretary of the Division of Ra- topped off the organization's triumphant spring tour dio, Television and Audio-Visuals for the National through Oklahoma, Texas, and points east. In Dallas Council of the Episcopal Church. station KRLD-TV took a video tape of the Glee Club's performance and ran it on April 6. The sad note running through these happy excur- sions was that they marked a farewell to Dr. William Lemonds, the group's director, who leaves his post as organist and choirmaster at the end of the academic year to join the faculty of Emory University.

The second season of concerts, films and plays in

Guerry Hall is topping the first, financially. Artistic comparisons cannot be made, as both seasons were emi- nent. Last year's deficit of $1,000 promises to be substantially reduced, and there may be no deficit at all, Dr. William Guenther, energetic and efficient chair- man of the University Concert Committee, reports. Winograd Van Vactor

12 The Sewanee News Conductor of the Sewanee Summer Music Center tions, and the Church and other conferences who gather orchestra this year will he Roland Johnson of at Sewanee throughout the summer. Madison, Wisconsin. For the past two years he has been music director of the Madison Civic Sym- For the thirteenth year the Fourth Province phony, Madison Civic Chorus and Civic Opera. In Church Music Conference will return to Monteagle. addition, he is supervisor of music for Madison's voca- July 16-25. Designed primarily for organists, choir- tional, technical and adult schools. masters, choristers, and clergy, the daily courses will

Martha McCrory, director of the five-week intensive include such subjects as the hymnal, chanting, organ training center for gifted young musicians, has an- technique, etc., once more under the direction of Adolph Steuterman, Mus.D., F.A.G.O., of Calvary Church, nounced in addition two guest conductors, each of Memphis. An outstanding faculty has been announced. whom will spend a week in Sewanee coaching and in- structing students as well as making concert appear- ances. The two are David Van Vactor, music director of the Knoxville Symphony, and Arthur Winograd, In music director of the Birmingham Symphony. Fly

The conductors will be backed by a rounded faculty A second fly-in by the Airborne Friends of Sewanee of performing and teaching artists. Among them Se- convened at Jackson-Myers Field on Alay 10 and ir. wanee will welcome back Herbert Levinson, violin in- In the absence of Chairman George Haddaway of Dal- structor, who is concertmaster of the Birmingham Sym- las, honors were divided between Vice-Chairman Wil- phony Orchestra and director of the Birmingham liam E. Kelley of King Radio in Olathe, Kansas, the Chamber Music Society; and William Bommelje, brass airfield's managing colonels Don Curton of McLean, instruments man from the Chattanooga Symphony. Virginia, and Leslie McLaurin of Sewanee, with airfield Other faculty members come from professional musical founder Captain Wendell F. Kline never very far away. aggregations around the country, including the St. Local arrangements were handled by Major Mary Lou Louis Symphony, the National Gallery Orchestra of Chapman of the Civil Air Patrol and Bob Hare of the Washington, D. C, the Rochester Philharmonic, and Sewanee Military Academy. the Indianapolis Symphony; and from the music fac- Big news for the summer will be a fly-in of the Kan- ulties of American University in Washington, the Uni- sas City Aero Club under the direction of Bill Kelley versity of Alabama, the University of Indiana, Oberlin on the weekend of August 23-25. College, DePauw University, and the University of the South. The Airport and Lake O'Donnell as seen by Fly-In visitors

Miss McCrory, director of the center, is a cellist who has played in the Rochester Philharmonic, San Antonio, Tulsa, Nashville, Knoxville and Chattanooga Sym- phonies and has been business manager for the Chatta- nooga Symphony and for the Sewanee Summer Music- Center for a number of years.

The Sewanee Summer Music Center will open its seventh season on June 24 and continue until July 20.

It is now affiliated directly with the University of the South, but talented young people at any academic level are eligible. Week-end concerts give the hard-working students a chance to perform solo and in groups, and they also have the rare chance to work side by side in the Sewanee Summer Music Center Orchestra with the distinguished adult musicians of the faculty.

They arc a hard-playing as well as hard-workine lot,

and no group is better represented at Sewanee's lakes

and mountain trails, or in the caves.

Appreciative audiences are recruited from the Sewa- nee Summer Institute for Science and Mathematics, the college and SMA summer schools, German scientists from the area's space and aeronautic research installa-

May 1963 13 Ecce Qi

R. P. Mooro

Rev. James Patrick, architect, and Dean Robert S. Lancaster at opening.

Sewanee's oldest organization has a new hom?. The ground floor of the split-level building is oc- The E. Q. B. faculty and residents' (MALE!) cupied by the Southern Regional office of the College club, founded in 1870, has moved into its Sewa- Entrance Examination Board, headed by Dr. Ben nee sandstone, peak-glassed structure near the Supply Cameron, '42, former director of admissions for the Store. Though Sewanee has not yet fallen into the University. The rent from this occupancy pays off the uxorious ways of Princeton, whose New York club will E.Q.B. mortgage and a good bit of the operating cost

not now allow unescorted men in its main dining room, besides, and who says professors are impractical?

enough females got a peek into the interior at an open The main business of the club, which is a fortnightly house in mid-February and another in April, and by discussion meeting, goes on uninterruptedly through

disguising themselves as delivery boys, etc., for suffi- all the changes of background. The group first met in cient vital data on the decor to be reported. 1870 in the home of Major George Rainsford Fair- "E.Q.B." stands for Ecce Quam Bonum, "Behold banks, the University's first commissioner of buildings

How Good!" and indeed all observers are unanimous and lands. The house, "Rebel's Rest," still stands

in acclaiming the quiet beauty and comfort of the new across from St. Luke's Hall, and is occupied by the clubhouse. Theology-student (now fellow and tutor- founder's granddaughter, Mrs. Rainsford Glass Dud- in-residence) architect James Patrick designed the ney. For almost a decade the club met in the homes building and a commitee headed by the Rev. William of its members, with an occasional excursion to old Griffin, assistant professor at St. Luke's, supervised Forensic Hall. The wives of the hosts, although ex-

the furnishing. The structure is supported by three cluded from other participation, contested to provide laminated wood beams. A wall of glass punctuated by elegant collations. The well-being of the E.Q.B. inner wood becomes a triangle under the roof, and exposed man, incidentally, seems to flourish inversely to his rafters and willow paneling add warmth to the bright- outer prosperity. A recent notice from the luxurious ness of the glass. Rough-textured, sun-pierced drap- new headquarters states, "On our present budget, only eries in the same v/arm buff as the wood complete the meager refreshments will be served at club meetings." effect, and bas-relief sculptures accent rather than About 1880, according to Fairbanks' History, the cover the wood. A massive two-sided stone fireplace E.Q.B. built a small cottage, now the home of theologi-

opens on both the main lounge and the bar. cal librarian T. Edward Camp. The little clubhouse

Coffee is available to members at strategic hours, was then located behind the Thompson Union about

promoting the stately academic conversation to which where the movie theatre is now. men limit themselves when women are not present. When, in 1889, a new University Supply Store was

Complete protection from feminine intrusion is afforded built, the club moved into its second floor. The Supply by the absence of a telephone. A library invites stu- Store had a fire in April, 1899, and E.Q.B. lost not only dious use of the haven. Included in the library is a its quarters but its minutes, kept then as now with collection of books by past and present faculty mem- scrupulous coverage of papers and criticisms, which, if bers, a gift from the Associated Alumni. preserved, would constitute a priceless record of the

•4 The Sewanee News Bonum Behold how good and

how pleasant it is for

brethren to dwell to-

gether in unity . . .

fibre and the views of the early faculty. and on roses, SMA admissions director Frank Thomas In [907 the club built a new house. Some fifteen recently led an illuminating side trip into New York's years later, finding it "too far away" in its location garment district, and the presentation of Mohammed- two hundred feet from the present Supply Store on anism excerpted in this issue is by a physics professor. what is now the central campus, the organization sold The full quotation from the 133d Psalm which gives the house to the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and went the University its motto and the club its name is, "Be- back to the original practice of meeting in members' hold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to homes until Sewanee's Claramont Restaurant was dwell together in unity." It is good indeed, but the opened in 1958. E.Q.B. then availed itself of Miss sentiment might be altered for its offspring to note

Clara's gracious provision, an arrangement that con- unity in diversity. After the "lead" paper is read, it tinued to the present renewed self-sufficiency. has been the custom to appoint one or more "followers" The fortnightly meetings have throughout pursued to present a prepared criticism of the offering, and an established and still viable pattern. A member is then ensues a decorous but strictly knockdown and chosen to "lead" with a prepared paper, preferably one drag-out batting about of all the ideas in the air. outside his area of professional specialization. English The Sewanee classroom is a home for ideas, and the professor Charles Harrison has spoken on Schubert new E.Q.B. clubhouse is their home away from home.

Professors David Camp and Harry Yeatman emerge.

Couls

May 1963 Snack bar. R. 1\ Mooic

%«WF" j&m I

• i Above upper center. P) / dent David Collins, '4M lectern. Lectern was mad butternut wood by Profe Fritz Whitesell.

Above right. Grill roon

Right. After the meetm

Mtf/« l lounge. At left is the 17]/>-by-9 /2 foot tapestry, believed to have been designed by Jean Foucquet (1415 1 485), given to the Uni-

versity by Charles E. Thomas, '27 . The tapestry was moved to the new E. Q. B. Club from the ambulatory of All Saints' Chapel, where space was too narrow for best display. Dudley

16 The Sewanee News Dudley

May 1963 17 Bringing Mohammed to the Mountain

From an address to the E. Q. B. Club ernment is that of the theocratic state, that "real jus- on December 6, 1962, by William T. tice" is that handed down by a Caliph. This is in Allen. Dr. Allen, assistant professor of spite physics, was a student counsellor in a of the fact that the last Caliph who was also the Sultan dormitory for three years at Robert of Turkey was banished in 1923 during the Turkish College in Istanbul, Turkey. Revolution.

The word "Islam" means in Arabic submission to, or having peace with, God. The most important aspect

of Islam is its extreme monotheism. The daily confes-

sion of faith begins : "There is no god except God and

Mohammed is the apostle of God." The importance

of this phrase cannot be overemphasized. In its original

Arabic, which is poetic, the structure of the sentence

is such as to build up the emphasis to a climax at

the second word "God." There is no god except GOD

and Mohammed is his prophet. The emphasis is so great that the average Moslem tends to look at a Chris- tian as polytheistic.

The Koran is a very poetic and yet a very ascetic

book. Its message is interpreted by all Moslems as

the direct word of God. It is not by any means com- plete. Mohammed described in an unofficial manner

a way of life and as long as he was living and was a temporal as well as religious ruler of a small but grow- ing kingdom, there was no difficulty in interpreting his every wish. But Mohammed died and the tradition,

i.e., rules of living and laws not prescribed in the Ko- ran, were subjected to varying interpretations. So, soon after his death, his followers made up a col- lection of sayings, anecdotes, and philosophical state-

ments of the Prophet. This collection is called the

Sunna and although it is not supposed to be the re- Aller vealed word of God, it is perhaps more important as There are over four hundred million Moslems in a Moslem handbook. In it lie all the elaborations of the world—not quite as many as Roman Catho- Koranic teachings necessary to establish Islam as a lics, but just about twice as many as there are true world religion. Protestants. Whereas American missionaries have been Mohammed at one point made the statement: "My active in the Moslem countries for about 130 years, community will never agree in an error." This state- and whereas their contribution to these countries has ment leads to the feeling held by Moslems that any been enormous in terms of education and public health, belief held by a majority of Moslems over a long period precious few converts have been made. of time must therefore be true and can be believed Mohammed, and those who followed him, had politi- without question. This concept is called Ijma and cal ideas which are diametrically opposed to ours. Mo- gives Islamic teachings a sense of authority. hammed established in Arabia a model theocratic state. Koran, Sunna, and Ijma are called the three foun-

Today all western Moslem countries have parliamen- dations of Islam: the divine inspiration, the human tary governments—practically everyone in these coun- interpretations and the authority. tries gives at least lip service to democratic ideals. But There is a safety valve attached to Ijma. A-Ioham- still people tend to harbor the feeling that "real" gov- med said: "The difference of opinion in my community

18 The Sewanee News )

is a divine mercy." This prevents intolerance arising Christians and Moslems. The teachings of Christ are within the community and splitting it. In this way, sec- practically without exception accepted and He is cer- tarianism has largely been avoided. tainly regarded as number two man in Islam. The

It should be noted, however, that there are two main virgin birth is accepted without question except that sects within Islam. There are the Sunnites, who are it may definitely not imply that Christ is in any way considered to be the norm because of their greatly su- divine. perior numbers, and the Shiites, who live mostly in Now the Crucifixion is another problem. The Ko- Persia (Iran). The division arose out of a family ran says that another, possibly Judas Iscariot, was sub- squabble in the first century after Mohammed. stituted for Jesus, and this man suffered the full brunt

Personally I am prejudiced against the Shiites and of the hostility which was intended for Christ. It in favor of the Sunnites. The Shiites take their re- must be remembered that Noah, Abraham, Moses, Da- ligion much more violently than the Sunnites. In my vid and Mohammed all saw their enemies defeated or trip to Iran, I was warned many times by Persians confounded, and they were before their deaths com- not to set foot in a mosque. An American consular pletely vindicated in the eyes of their fellow men. It h official had been stabbed doing just that in 1926. They inconceivable to a Moslem that God would let his don't like Christians or Westerners. While snapping number two prophet die in ignominy. It is ironical, a picture in a bazaar, I looked up surprised to see three but quite accurate, to say that the Moslem holds Jesus shopkeepers coming after me and trying to seize my in too high regard to believe in the Crucifixion. camera. I managed to get out of there, but I had to Islam is, to any Christian who has encountered it di- run. rectly, a mighty force in the world. To those who pro-

It is the Shiites who generally give the bad name fess its beliefs, it is fully as compelling as is Christi-

Islam has had in the Western world. They have fath- anity to a Christian. Surely its amazing impregnability ered countless small sects, such as the Assassins, the to the assaults of Christian evangelism illustrates that

Druses, the Fatimites, and the Ismaelites. Shiism has within its own frame of reference it is logically sound, always encouraged persecution of non-Shiites. and emotionally satisfying. What does a Moslem think about us as Westerners and Christians? In some Moslem countries, particularly

Turkey, there is a reservoir of respect for Americans Dr. William T. Allen, assistant professor of physics because: in the college, was selected as one of seventy profes-

1) We are a strong nation. sors throughout the country to attend a conference on 2) We are anti-Russian. relativity at Cornell University August 5-23. The pro- ject is sponsored by the National Science Foundation. 3 We have been successful in recent wars. 4) Our experience with Middle Eastern politics is not enough for them to criticize us, and

5) Our educational institutions have done an amaz- ing job in training their leaders and professional people.

However, when they think of Americans or British or French, they do not associate with us the word

"Christian/' Christian is a word reserved for Armen- ians and Greeks who have lived there for thousands of years and have maintained their own schools, culture, and language. Generally these people have lived in an atmosphere of tolerance, but not always, and history is full of "incidents." There have been movements for independence. So to the Moslem, the word "Chris- tian" is very close to the word "traitor." And it is for this reason that proselytization is illegal in all Middle Eastern countries. A missionary coming to a street corner or village square and preaching some sort of dynamic Christianity is thought to be dangerous by Moslems.

The Koran says, "God does not beget and is not be- gotten." Actually to believe otherwise would go against ." the creed that "There is no other God but God. . . The Rt. Rev. T. G. V. Inman This is indeed the largest theoloeical barrier between Commencement Preacher

May 1963 19 Our athletic program at Sewance is divided into three parts: intercollegiate, intramural, and SPORTS A physical education. Each of these plays a dis- tinct role in providing a well-rounded plan of athletics. A healthy balance among the three phases of our pro- gram concerns us constantly. by Wa

Intercollegiate Athletics

Varsity schedules are conducted in football, basket- ball, swimming, wrestling, track, baseball, tennis, and Now a word about our new College Athletic Con- golf. Approximately twenty-five percent of our stu- ference. The members are Centre College, South- dent body participates in intercollegiate athletics. The western, Washington and Lee, Washington University, 1962 football team posted the sixth straight winning and Sewanee. Our football team finished second to season under Coach Shirley with a record of Washington and Lee with the following boys being

4 wins, 3 losses, and 1 tie. The basketball team ended named to the All-Conference team: M. L. Agnew, jun- the season with a record of 8 wins and 9 losses. The ior tailback from Meridian, Mississippi; John Turner.

swimming team posted a record of 4 wins and 5 losses. senior tackle from Mobile, Alabama; and Bob Davis,

The wrestling team won 4, lost 2, and finished third junior end from Golf, Illinois. Lon Varnell's cagers in the Southeastern Wrestling Tournament. Coach finished third in the Conference Tournament held in Horace Moore had three boys win Southeastern cham- the Juhan Gymnasium with two boys making the All- pionships. They were Hank Haynes, senior from Conference team: John Smith, senior forward from Jacksonville, Florida, in the 130 pound class; Paul Nashville, Tennessee; and Bob Swisher, freshman Tessman, freshman from Chattanooga, Tennessee, in guard from Chattanooga, Tennessee. the 167 pound class; and Frank Pinney, senior from All the members are looking forward to the Confer- Yorktown, Virginia, in the 177 pound class. Pinney ence Spring Sports Festival to be held at Washington was runner-up in his division at the N.C.A.A. College and Lee on May 10th and nth. At this time tourna- Division Wrestling Tournament held at State College ments will be conducted in golf, tennis, track, and of Iowa in Cedar Falls. baseball.

Walter D. Bryant, Jr. '49, di- rector of athletics at the In versity o~ the South since 1953, has been elected for a three-year term to the executive council of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. This council controls the general polcy of the association and includes eigh- teen members, of whom Bryant is one of seven members-at-large. He was also elected to serve as the southeastern representative on the College Division, which represents the interests of smaller institutions in the affairs of the NCAA.

This article parallels a talk that Coach Bryant made to the Char- lotte Club on February 15. Painting by Gabriella Shepherd, photo by Coil

20 The Sewanee News WANEE

Jryant

A large locomotive bell donated by the Norfolk and Western Railroad will go to the school winning the

overall Conference Championship. This is determined

by a point system which considers first, second, third,

fourth, and fifth places in each sport. This is a travel-

ing trophy and will never be retired.

While our Conference is young and as yet has not

received much publicity, we feel that it is going to add

a great deal to our varsity athletic program. The pres-

tige schools that make up our Conference along with Coulson our amateur philosophy in intercollegiate sports will, I Haynes, Pinney believe, bring us nationwide recognition before too many years.

Intramural Athletics

From the standpoint of participation, intramural Freshman Thad Howard "Ted" Waters, Jr., of

athletics is the most important phase of our program. Hammond, Louisiana, set a new Sewanee record

Even though the glamour and publicity that surround for the javelin throw at Hardee Field with a

intercollegiate sports are missing, the interest among heave of 179 feet, 7 inches, breaking the 179 foot our students is extremely high. Each year approxi- toss of Frank Carter in 1952. mately sixty percent of our student body participates in the intramural program. The Athletic Department

is aware of the important role intramurals play in the lives of our students and is constantly trying to im- Physical Education prove. Coach Ted Bitondo continues to improve our physi- The following sports are conducted in our intramural cal education program. Under his diligent leadership

program: and hard work, physical education at Sewanee is de- veloping into a well-rounded program. Coach Bitondo September and October—Touch Football, Cross Coun- conducts courses in tennis, bowling, and handball. He try, and Swimming also offers an instructor's course in swimming. Stu- November and December—Volleyball and Wrestling dents completing this course are prepared to teach be- January and February—Basketball ginning swimming and lifesaving. Many of them have been able to secure summer jobs as a result of this March—Handball, Badminton, and Track training. April and May—Softball, Tennis, and Golf In conclusion, I want to say this of my colleagues. Spring sports begin immediately following the spring They arc the most able, devoted, and hardworking

holidays. Athletic activity is at its peak during April group of men in their profession that I know. Each

and May with golf, tennis, track and baseball all going feels that the development of the body is vital and

at the same time. Dr. Bruton's tennis team is again that his particular specialty is the most important expected to defend successfully the state championship aspect of the whole range of physical training. Both

in the T.I.A.C. Tournament held here on May 2nd and Sewanee and its students benefit from their enthusi- 3rd. asm.

May 1963 21 On the Mountain

Sewanee Review Vice-Chancellor Edward McCrady's speaking en- gagements around the country have become too numer- ous to chronicle, but at random among them: the Wis- consin Symposium series on "Science and the Modern Life" at the University of Wisconsin on February 26, and an observance of National Engineers' Week at Arnold Engineering Development Center near Tulla- homa, Tennessee, on February 18. Dr. McCrady told the engineers, "I urge that we try to encourage engi- neers to be as interested as possible in pure science and also encourage the pure scientist to be as interested

as possible in his work as it is related to the real world.

It looks as if it doesn't really matter where you start in the field of learning; everything seems to run into

Carmichael something else."

Andrew Lytle, Editor Best criticism

Seven Sewanee professors went to the March meet- ing of the Tennessee Philological Association in Mem- first The thirty years' issues of The Sewanee Review phis, four of them presenting papers, all of them in- are being reprinted by the Kraus corporation of New volved in the proceedings. Papers from the language York to meet the constant demand of libraries for departments were by Dr. Stratton Buck, Dr. A. Scott bound copies, in this country and overseas. The first Bates, and Charles Binnicker. From the School of fifteen years— 1892-1907—were reprinted and the sale Theology, the Rev. William A. Griffin presented "The was so great that the next fifteen years are now in Salt Covenant." T. C. Lockard, French, and William process. T. Cocke, III, '51, English, served as moderators. Dr.

Two short stories from The Sewanee Review were Bayly Turlington, '42, rotated out of office as secretary- included in the Best American Short Stories of IQ62, treasurer and T. C. Lockard was elected treasurer. edited by Martha Foley and David Burnett. They are "The Vindication of Doctor Nestor," by E. Lucas Myers, '53, and "The Old Army Game," by George During the spring recess the Rev. William A. Griffin Garrett, A'46. Peter Taylor's "At the Drugstore" has was a guest lecturer at Hofstra College, Long Island, already been selected for the next volume. and at Adelphi College in Garden City, New York. His Seven short stories of "violence in character and cir- subject was "Passover: an Interpretation of History." cumstance" appear in the Spring issue. Most of the writers are young and some are publishing for the first time. The issue has a translation of a Pasternak poem Grade averages for the first semester in the College, by Eugene M. Kayden, professor emeritus, and a poem released by Dean Webb's office, show a steady climb by Ewing Carruthers, '62, titled "My Father's Shad- during the last five years, moving up from 2.286 to the ow." Other contributors include professors from the present level of 2.417. University of London and King's College there, and The leading fraternity in average grade is Alpha Tau from University College, Dublin. Omega, with a 2.735. Active members came out 2.861 In the Winter issue of Twentieth Century, a review and pledges 2.567. Other fraternities bettering the all- published in London, Allan Rodway of the University men's average are Phi Delta Theta with 2.616, Sigma of Nottingham has this to say: "The best criticism of Alpha Epsilon, 2.536, and Kappa Sigma, 2.425. Actives the English-speaking world is undoubtedly to be found of nine organizations, including the Association of In- in Essays in Criticism, in England, and the Sewanee dependent Men, were above the 2.417 figure for the and Kenyon Review, in the States." College as a whole, but pledges in each case lowered the record.

22 The Sewanee News i '/?

V i if S i /

I V *

II ? wmxi

mSL^ uM, Mrs. Telfair (Medora Cheatham) Hodgson keeps open house Coulson nearly every afternoon. As founder of the Sewanee chapter of the Association for the Preservation of Tennessee Antiqui- Canon Bryan Green, English evangelist, ties, she recently offered her home for the spring meeting brought Sewanee out in force in February. of the group which is now headed by Mrs. Bayly Turlington.

Purpiv-

Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Parsons She just missed Miss America

Dr. Joseph Lawrence Parsons, formerly of Birming- ham, has been appointed health officer for the Univer- The University of the South has recently ac- sity of the South. quired a likeness of one of its most generous benefactors, Edward Disney Farmer. In 1930, at Dr. Parsons is a graduate of the University of Ala- the age of 72, he died and left a most unusual bama in Tuscaloosa and of the University of Alabama will. The wealthy bachelor stipulated that his estate 1 2 of approximately Si , million should Medical Center in Birmingham. His internship at the be administered by his old friend, George Beggs, University of Virginia (1958-59) was followed by a as executor, and that it should be divided among charities considered by Beggs to be worthy. At- two-year enlistment as a health officer in the United torney Beggs selected the Diocese of Dallas, St. States Air Force. Before coming to Sewanee, Dr. Par- Andrew's Episcopal Church and the University of the South as the principal beneficiaries, dis- sons was a general practitioner as well as doing surgery tributing some monies to the sister and to some and orthopedics on the staff of the Monterey County distant relatives of the deceased in Ireland and England. At the time of his death Edward Dis- Hospital in California. ney Farmer was the largest taxpayer in Tar- Dr. Parsons is married to the 1957 Miss America rant County (Fort Worth) and newspaper edi- runner-up, Anne Ariail of Birmingham. They have torials at the time of his death credited him with being the most generous public-spirited citizen two daughters, Lauren, 4, and Heather, 1. of Fort Worth.

May 1963 23 Sewanee and the literary world mourn Mrs. Andrew Lytle, who died April 26 after a long illness. Surviv-

ing arc her husband, who is editor of The Sewanee Review, her mother, and three daughters, Mrs. James Law of New York, Katherine Anne, and Lillie Langdon.

Grace Episcopal Church in Paducah, Kentucky, has again led the diocese in parish contributions to Sewa-

nee. This church, whose rector is the Rev. J. F. G. Hopper, '37, gave in 1962 $1,592.87, which amounts to $2.76 per communicant.

Trinity Church of Columbia, South Carolina, has is- sued a broadside with three targets, of which Number

Two is: "To supply funds for construction of a duplex house to accommodate married theological students at the LT niversity of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee."

Charles M. Jones, Jr., '43, has taken charge of the Church Support program for the Albany area in Georgia. Coulson

Sewanee Chapel Guides. These young men stand by at all times to conduct visitors through All Saints' Chapel. Left The art gallery of the University of the South con- to right: Tom Midyette, Jim Callaway, John Griswold, Tom Farrar, John Eiggins, Jim McDonald, Sam Mason, Bob tinues to add to its permanent collection. Last fall it Thomas. received from Joseph Cantor, a collector of Carmel, Indiana, "Golden Dreams," a 15 inches by 11 inche.-; canvas by the Cuban artist Rene Portocarrero, known for his sensitive abstractions. The gift was appraised at $200, according to H. Stanford Barrett, artist-in- residence. A midnight fire caused the deaths of two of Sewa- nee's most generous benefactors on March u in New Orleans. Joseph Merrick Jones, a great-grandson of One of the many trips of Chaplain David B. Collins Bishop Leonidas Polk, and his wife, the former Eugenia this year was to Jacksonville, Florida, where he made Elizabeth Penick, were alone in their Metairie resi- a Lenten address at the Church of the Good Shepherd- dence when the fire was noticed by a passing motor- There was a dinner, well-attended, followed by Chap- ist. Firemen found Mrs. Jones unconscious on the lain Collins' talk and a discussion period. He was in- floor of her bedroom. Herhusband, not badly burned, troduced by the Rev. L. Valentine Lee, D.D. (Honor- was taken to the hospital where he died of a heart at- ary '47) who has the distinction of being one of the tack on being told of her death. few men in history to send five sons to Sewanee.

Mr. Joseph M. Jones visited Sewanee in i960 and subsequently pledged $100,000 to the University which Associate Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg was used with his permission in the construction of addressed the Sewanee Club of Washington and their Guerry Memorial Hall. Pie was also a generous donor wives April 26 at the Women's National Democratic- to Tulane University, of which he was an alumnus and Club in Washington, D. C. His topic was "The Im- whose board he served as chairman. He was active portance of a Liberal Arts Education in the Century of in all phases of New Orleans social, business, and civic Science." The program, given after cocktails and din- life and one New Orleans editor compared the contri- ner, also included Dean Robert S. Lancaster, who pro- butions of the Polk and Jones families to those of vided greetings from Sewanee. Congressman Richard Lorenzo the Magnificent in Renaissance Florence. Boiling was in charge of the meeting and surprised the Mr. and Mrs. Jones are survived by three married guests with a jazz program by Billy Taylor, Jr., and children and by his mother, Mrs. Hamilton Polk Jones. his trio.

The Sewanee Newt. Class Distinctions . . . .

1893 saying he had delivered about 3,000 Maj. Arnold Melville Reeve, U.S.A., babies, many of whom were named for Ret., PDT, died at his home in Detroit, him, including Ezzard Charles, former November 21, 1962. He had served iri heavyweight champion. He was a mem- the army for 36 years, retiring in 1934. ber of the First Methodist Church and He was a Golden Legionnaire of Phi a Mason. Survivors include his wife, Delta Theta. one son, and five daughters. 1898 1906 James C. Baird died January 8, 196:i, Miss Bessie Brougher died recently and was buried in Columbus, Missis- after an extended illness. For many sippi. Among his survivors is a grand- years she lived in Monteagle, Tennes- son who is presently a student at Se- see, and served as Public Health Nurse wanee, James Catchings Baird, III. for Grundy County. She received her Edwina Dakin Williams, daughter of nurse's training under the Sewanec the late Rev. Walter Edwin Dakin and Medical School faculty. mother of Tennessee Williams, has 1910 written her autobiography in collabora- G. Wilson Baltzell, SAE, will retire tion with Lucy Freeman. The book, Re- on June 30 after thirty-one years of to Tom, is published service with the Florida State Board of member Me by Edward M. Pooley Putnam's. Health. Since the days when he was 1899 University organist (1907-10) he re- Robert Jemison, Jr., PDT, president tained his interest in music. Address: of the class, is active in the firm he 1287 Avondale Avenue, Jacksonville 5, organized in 1903—Jemison Real Estate Florida Fort House, built by his grandfather in D. Lebo, lived at and Insurance Company. He has been Ben who Sewanee 1868, which is now a museum in Waco. president for sixty years. His firm is as a child, died in a veterans' hospital At Sewanee he was a back on the foot- dedicated to building a better Birming- in New York on February 26, 1963, fol- ball teams of 1913 and 1914 and all his ham through industrial and residential lowing several years of poor health. The life followed Sewanee sports with zest. developments, sales, leases, appraisals high point of each year for him was his His enthusiasm for hunting and fishing and insurance. He was married to Vir- annual visit to Sewanee for Commence- never failed; he enjoyed a fishing trip ment. ginia Earle Walker in 1901. She died Some years ago he turned over the day before he died. He is survived in 1953. Their children are Mrs. Rob- his principal financial asset to the Uni- by his wife, a brother, and a sister. ert M. Goodall, Robert HI, and William versity. He is survived by a brother. The Rev. Douglas B. Leatherbury, W. There are twenty-one great grand- 1911 retired priest of the diocese of Florida, children. Mr. Jemison has held many Jefferson Monroe Colston, of Mont- died December 10, 1962, in Jacksonville civic and educational responsibilities. eagle, died in January in Chattanooga. He was later rector of St. Mark's John Leonard Ruef died February 28 He was a former president of Hiwassee Church there for forty years. In 1949 at the age of 84 in Sheffield, Alabama, College and an alumnus member of the Sewanee gave him an honorary degree. after four years of illness. He is sur- Sewanee chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. Survivors include his wife, Sarah Lea- vived by his wife. He had owned Monteagle Motor Court therbury; a daughter, a son, Douglas, 1901 since 1940. Surviving are his wife, one Jr., '49, and five grandchildren. Dr. Cyrus Nathan Keatts died daughter, two sons, George, '39, and 1918 March 30 at the age of 86 at Dover, Robert, and seven grandchildren. Niles Trammell, KA, has opened an Tennessee, where he had for many Samuel Gaillard Stoney, DTD, is office in Miami, Florida, as a general years been physician to the Indian the author of a new book, Plantations business consultant. He is a former Mound Community. He served as of the Carolina Low Country (Carolina president of National Broadcasting chairman of the Stewart County Board Art Association, Charleston, South Company. of Education for many years and was Carolina, $12.50). The book contains J. Albert Woods, SAE, retired April president of the Farmers Bank and photographs, plans, and full page draw- 2 as chairman of the board of Cour- Trust Co., a member of the Stewart ings in addition to the text. taulds North America. On April 10 he County Farm Bureau, and of the staff 1912 left with Cornelia on a flying trip at the Clarksville Memorial Hospital. Quincy C. Ayres, KA, received the around the world, expecting to land on His wife, the former Lillian Lucy Iowa State University Faculty Citation American soil again June 9. He then Smith, and three daughters survive him. in June, 1962. The citation noted Pro- plans to fly to Sewanee where, as co- Dr. Henry J. Savage died January fessor Ayres' service as a teacher and chairman of the campaign, he will be a 17 in Gadsden, Alabama. Dr. Savage administrator and commended him for key figure on "campaign day" —Friday, received his M.D. at Tulane and started leading the way in developing special June 14. He will retain a directorship on his practice in Gadsden in 1912. He courses in the Department of Agricul- the Courtaulds board and on ten others. served as chief of staff at Holy Name tural Engineering. It also recognized New address: 430 Park Avenue, New of Jesus Hospital, having been active him as the leading spirit in developing York 22. in private practice until shortly before University policy on patents and in ad- 1919 his death. He participated in many ministering patents resulting from re- Edward M. Pooley, KS, editor of the civic organizations in Gadsden and had search on the campus. El Paso Herald-Post for the last twen- served on the vestry of the ol" 1913 Church ty-six years, retired February 4, on his the Holy Comforter where he was also Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 65th birthday. He rose through the senior warden. Mrs. Florence B. Sav- John Almon Rosenberg died Decem- ranks in the Scripps-Howard organi- age, two nephews, and several nieces ber 10, 1962. He had been living in zation. Over the years his typewriter survive him. Garden City, New York. shaped municipal, county and even 1903 1917 state affairs. He has been described as Dr. Webster Pierce Ezzard died Jan- Walter V. (Johnny) Fort, PDT, died one of the last successful practitioners uary 29, 1963. He was a general prac- March 22 of a heart attack at the age of personal journalism, when he was titioner in Forsyth County and Law- of 68. He was a lifelong resident of named Newspaperman of the Year by renceville, Waco, Georgia, for almost 60 years. Texas, following his father in the Dallas journalists. He is married to Several years ago he was quoted as insurance business. He was born in Ruth Underwood.

May 1963 25 —

1920 1922 ficiating at his funeral service were the Dr. John Chipman, DTD, has been Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 Rev. William V. Kegler, '59, and Rt. elected to the newly-established grade President Rev. James R. Helms Rev. R. Earl Dicus, '36, of San Antonio. o r Fellow of the Metallurgical Society 2909 Hope Pallbearers were S. P. Simpson, '26, of the American Institute of Mining, Huntington Park, California William Hollis Fitch, '26, and Alex Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers. Milton Elmer Nollau, PGD, valedic- Spencer, '28. Surviving are his wife, He is the recently retired head of the torian of the class of 1922, died Janu- one daughter and two grandchildren. department of Metallurgy at the Massa- ary 14, 1963, in Fort Worth, Texas. He 1928 chusetts Institute of Technology. His moved to Fort Worth four years ago The Rev. John C. Turner, SAE, was citation as fellow read: "One of the when he retired from the U. S. Army married on January 25 to Mrs. Mabel outstanding metallurgists and educators Supply and Maintenance Command, in Thruston Anderson. Following the in the world. From a research stand- St. Louis. ceremony the couple left for a month's point, he has become the Father of Alexander C. Sessums, SAE, recently visit to South America. He is rector Metallurgical Thermodynamics." joined the staff of the Traffic Institute of the Church of the Advent in Birm- John W. Ellis, KA, died March 17 of Northwestern University. He is di- ingham, Alabama. in Keystone Heights, Florida, at the rector of a newly organized publications 1930 age of 65. Among his survivors are division. He came to this position from Keith D. Heineman died December his wife and two sons, Donald, '47, and the Philip Lesly Company, Chicago, 26, 1962, in Falls City, Nebraska, at the Ralph, A'46. where he was employed for seven years. age of 56. He had been in failing health Dr. Dean B. Lyman, ATO, retired Earlier he was with Lever Brothers since 1958. He had been residing at June 30, 1962, as professor of English Company. He has been associate edi- his farm in Verdon, where he was born emeritus at Adams State College in tor of Finance magazine, an editor with and lived most of his life. Surviving Colorado. His address is 209 Edgemont both the U. S. Information Agency and are his wife, one daughter and two Boulevard, Alamosa, Colorado. the Office of War Information, and an sons. 1921 editor with the New Orleans Times- 1932 Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 Picayune. Carl Biehl has been elected to the President J. C. Brown Burch 1923 board of directors of the Houston Bank 2261 Washington Avenue Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 and Trust Company, Texas. He is presi - Memphis, Tennessee President J. Burton Frierson, Jr. dent of Biehl and Company, steamship Cecil Woods, SAE, in February was c/o Dixie Mercerizing Company agents, and is a resident of Galveston. named chairman of the board by Vol- Chattanooga, Tennessee The Rev. Wood B. Carper, SN, writes unteer State Life Insurance Company. Robert H. Mitchell, PGD, died March Professor Abbott Martin that he is on He was president of the firm for 24 3 after an apparent heart attack. He sabbatical in Italy, Syria, Greece, Spain, years. He will also serve as chairman had lived in Atlanta for twenty-five and Portugal. In June he returns to of the board of the Volunteer subsidi- years. He was a certified public ac- New York, where he is a professor at ary, United Life Insurance Company. countant, a member of the Cathedral General Theological Seminary. For four years he was mayor of Look- of St. Phillip, and a past governor of Jack Cole, SAE, president of the Jack the out Mountain. During World War II Georgia Kiwanis Clubs. He is sur- Cole Company of Birmingham, Ala- he was Tennessee's war finance chair- vived by his wife and three sons. bama, announced the purchase by his man. He now is co-chairman of Se- 1924 trucking firm of Dixie Highway Express wanee's $10,000,000 campaign. Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 in a multi-million dollar deal. The ac- President W. J. Wallace, Jr. quisition puts the Cole company in the 200 Lynwood Boulevard top twenty-five nationwide trucking Nashville, Tennessee firms. J. McKintmey Smith, ATO, died in John B. Wilson died April 6 from a Tallahassee, Florida, on January 1, 1963. sword wound inflicted in his Nashville He is survived by his wife, a brother, home. His wife has stated the death end a sister. was accidental. He is survived by a 1925 daughter and two stepchildren, Holly H. Powell Yates, ATO, is third vice- and William J. Cochrane. president, insurance and public rela- 1933 tions, of Metropolitan Life Insurance The Very Rev. Francis Campbell this minis- Company. His address is 368 Elm Road, Gray was again year guest Briarcliff Manor, New York. ter for Religious Emphasis Week at 1926 Brenau College. He is dean of the William Porter Ware announces the Cathedral Church of St. Luke in Or- marriage of his daughter, Mary Dab- lando, Florida. rey, to Joseph Earl Scarry, Jr., on 1934 John P. Castleberky's son, John Jr., September 1, 1962, in Tijuana, Mexico. in in Shel- Mr. Ware is acting registrar of the Uni- age sixteen, died February versity. byville, Tennessee. 1927 Thomas A. Claiborne, KA, recently The Rev. Charles B. Romaine died moved his family, wife and children March 3 in Clinton, Louisiana, as a re- Thomas, Jr., a student at the Univer- sult of injuries suffered in a traffic ac- sity of Texas, Sherry and Rob—to cident near there. He was a priest at Nashville from Houston. Their new Clinton. He was a former rector in home is on West Hillwood Drive. Greeneville and Union City, Tennes- The Rev. Charles F. Schilling is rec- see, and Brownsville, Texas. Surviving tor of St. John's Church, Hollywood, are his wife, two sons, William and Florida. His new address is 17th Ave- 320. Charles B., Ill, '59, one daughter, and nue at Buchanan Street, P. O. Box three grandchildren. He had planner! 1936 to retire soon. The Rt. Rev. C. Alfred Cole, SN, Henry J. Sanford, PGD, died sud- bishop of Upper South Carolina, died denly January 13 in Guanajuato, Mexi- April 11, following a heart attack in co, while on a trip with his wife. He February. He had been bishop since had retired as general manager for 1953 and received a Sewanee D.D. in American Smelting and Refining Co. in 1954. He entered the School of The- Agenc Mexico and was acting privately as a ology in 1933 following his graduation survived by Mrs. Hartzell Dake in Tokyo mining and industrial consultant, resi- from Duke. He is Prepares Exhibits dent in Muzquiz, Coahuila, Mexico. Of- Cole and six children.

26 The Sewanee News In connection with the recent inter- nessee, to devote tull time to private est in fifty mile hikes, the Chattanooga law practice. He was graduated in 1951 Times pointed out that twenty-five from Yale University law school. Dur- years ago David S. Rose, SAE, walked ing World War II he served in the the 180 miles from Sewanee to Atlanta army counter intelligence corps. He Is without a single stop of more than an mErried to Ruth Robinson and they hour. The then "divinity student" is have a daughter, Harriett, age three now suffragan bishop of Southern Vir- and one-half. ginia. 1949 1938 The Rev. and Mrs. C. FitzSimons Jefferson Daniel Copeland, III, PDT, Allison, SAE, and children have re- died April 2 in Charleston. He was a turned to Sewanee after sabbatical lifelong resident of Bamberg and di- leave in England, where he lectured at rector of the Bamberg County Bank, St. Augustine's College, and Barbados, president of Restland and South End where he completed a manuscript for Cemetery Associations, secretary and publication by the Seabury Press. treasurer of Bamberg Industries, and Robert M. Ayres, Jr., SAE, was owner of the Riley & Copeland Insur- elected to the board of trustees of the ance Agency. The Rev. Thomas S. University by the diocese of West Tex- Tisdale, '33, conducted the funeral ser- as. He is the president and a director vices. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. of Russ and Company, investment Catherine L. Copeland, three daugh- bankers. He is a member of National ters, one son, his mother, a sister, and Association and San Antonio Chamber two aunts. of Commerce. 1940 Lt. Col. Walter R. Davis, LCA, as- Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 sumed command of the 3rd Howitzer President Robert G. Snowden Battalion, 30th artillery, at Fort Sill on 4277 Park Avenue February 20. He transferred from in- Dr. Memphis, Tennessee Clement B. Sledge fantry to artillery in 1958 after service H. William Brawley is presently exe- in the Mediterranean theatre during cutive assistant to World II, at Alfred Democratic National left All Saints' Church in Atlanta in War University in Chairman John M. Bailey. 1960 he has been in Macon as execu- ROTC, in Maryland, Korea, and Ha- waii. Capt. Leslie R. Darr, Jr., KS, has re- tive director of the Appleton Church Mrs. Davis is from Massarosa, tired Italy. Their from the Marine Corps after Home for girls. three children are Angela, twenty years of service. He saw action 1946 Peter, and Paul. on Okinawa and in Korea and earned Sam L. Felts, Jr., SN, will be the Dr. J. H. Dimon, SAE, made a trip to eleven decorations. He and Mrs. Darr new circuit court judge in Davidson Haiti last winter to do orthopedic sur- and their three children live at 259 County. He has been practicing law gery on children at a mission station in Florida Avenue, Portsmouth, Virginia. in Nashville since 1958. His father is the Haitian mountains. He lives in At- Chaplain (Capt.) James W. Emerson, on the state Supreme Court and his lanta, Georgia. U. S. Army, ATO, writes from his post wife's father is now chief justice of James Helms, SN, is practicing law in Munich, Germany. He says his work that court. He graduated from Vander- in his own firm of Jones and Helms in is interesting and varied. He plans to bilt law school. Arcadia, California. He has three remain in Munich for the next three The Rev. Arthur Freeman has re- daughters, ages six, four, and one. He or four years. cently resigned as rector of St. James' is past Exalted Ruler of the Elks there Theodore DuBose Stoney, ATO, in Church, Fremont, California. He was and is state vice-president of that or- February was sworn in as first judge of there from 1947 to 1962 and in that ganization, and is a major, operations the Charleston, South Carolina, County time the Church grew from sixty-fivs and training, of an infantry reserve Court. He and his wife, Lois Middle- to 430 communicants. A parish hall unit. His address in Arcadia is Se- ton, have three children: Ted, twelve, and church school building were wanee Lane. Richard, ten, and Beverly, seven. erected. He is now vicar of St. Mat- Martin Eugene Morris, SN, is prac- 1941 thew's Church, San Ardo, California, ticing law in McLean, Virginia, near Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 and St. Luke's Church. Washington. President Dr. Phillip W. DeWolfe 1947 Dr. Stephen Elliott Puckette, II, 201 N. Henry Street The Rev. Charles H. Blakeslee, SAE, ATO, and his wife Upshur announce Leaksville, North Carolina has accepted the position of assistant the birth of a daughter, Emily Eliza- Lee McGriff, Jr., PDT, is president St. Martin's Parish, beth, on March 15 in Athens, Georgia minister of Me- ; of one of Alabama's largest general in- tairie, Louisiana. He will assume his where he is a member of the mathe- surance agencies, Fowlkes, McGriff and new duties in June. matics faculty this year on leave from Seibels, in Birmingham. The firm was Kenneth A. MacGowan, Jr., SAE, Sewanee. formed in April by the merger of two has a new address, 925 Parkside Ter- James A. Rogers, SN, is with the companies founded by McGriff's father race, Fairfax, Virginia, and a newly- Metropolitan Insurance Company in end H. G. Seibels, '99, KA, whose son, built house. He is a Washington attor- Danville, Virginia. Henry, Jr., is an SMA alumnus. The ney. 1950 younger Seibels is a vice-president in Maj. Dick J. Ovington, USAF, is The Rev. John H. Bull has been rec- the new organization. being reassigned as assistant deputy tor of St. James' Church, Knoxville, 1942 commander for services at Loring Air Tennessee, since 1955. The six-hun- Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 Force Base, Maine. He and his wife, dred-communicant parish has a newly President Dr. O. Morse Kochtitzky Pauline Peyton of Sewanee, have five enlarged building. Father Bull J5 Hampton Avenue children. chairman of the diocesan department Nashville, Tennessee 1948 of missions and Church extension. 1943 Charles M. Gray, ATO, was promoted 1951 Class Reunion—June 12-15, 1963 to president of the Industrial Savings The Rev. G. P. Mellick Belshaw, President W. Sperry Lee Bank, 411 Morgan, Tampa, Florida. He DTD, has been elected one of four 4323 Forest Park Road is a former vice-president of the In- clerical delegates from the Diocese of Jacksonville 10, Florida dustrial Savings Bank of St. Peters- Delaware to the next General Conven- The Rev. Milton LeGrand Wood, KS. burg. He and his wife have four chil- tion of the Episcopal Church to be held has been appointed canon to the ordi- dren. in St. Louis. nary, a new position created by the Robert J. Warner, Jr., KA, resigned William T. Cocke, PDT, and his wife, council to free the bishop of Atlanta in February as assistant district attor- the former Claudia "Lulie" Hunt ot of some administrative duties. Since he ney general of Davidson County, Ten- Sewanee, announced the birth of their

May. 1963 27 Mrs. Fisher announce the adoption of a son, Michael Andrew, born February 6, arrived in Benton, Arkansas, Febru- ary 12. Dr. Edward Henry Hamilton, Jr., Sigma Chi, is practicing orthodontia in Knoxville. He and his wife Jane, who came to dances with him at Sewanee, have three children: Edward Jr., seven, Mary, four and one-half, and Beverly, two. Address: 1011 Cedar Hill Road, ivnoxville 19. Gilbert Yaeger Marchand, PDT, is a CPA in the employ of Price-Water- house in Houston, Texas. Following his graduation, he attended Naval OCS and in 1958 left the Navy as a Lt. (jg) to attend Wharton School at the Univer-

sity o!: Pennsylvania where he received his MBA degree in 1959. He is married and has two children. Dr. Walter Nance, SN, will become associate professor of medicine at Van- derbdt University in 1964 in a new de- partment of medical genetics. On March o, 1962, he was signally honored with a Markle Foundation Scholarship. In 1961 he received a National Science Foundation fellowship to do research in genetics. In his senior year at Harvard Wings for. Captain Moise Medical School he won the Boylston Prize for a paper on "Twinning," which was later published in the journal second son on September 7, 1962, Tho- if every state is free to decide which Medicine. mas Lawrence Hunt Cocke. federal laws she will obey and which 1955 The Rev. James C. Fenhagen is the she will not." The Ven. Robert F. Cowling has been new Director of Christian Education for David M. Kippenbrock, DTD, has be- appointed Director of the Southern the Diocese of Washington, D. C. He come assistant to the city editor of the Parish Training Program, which is a is married to the former Eulalie Swin- Augusta Chronicle. He is very pleased summer program offering supervised ton McFall. to be getting back into newspaper work. field work for seminarians. Southern 1952 Capt. Robeson S. Moise, ATO, has headquarters are in Valle Crucis, North Hartzell Dake, PGD, is the United received Viet Nam air force wings be- Carolina. States Information Agency exhibits of- cause of his contribution to the Viet- ficer in Tokyo, where he has served for namese fight against communist aggres- The Rev. James B. Jeffrey is the rec- tor of St. the past three years. Prior to this as- sion. He flies C-47 cargo aircraft. Luke's Church, Eastchester, York. is also signment he was in Santiago, Chile. Be- George J. Wagner, Jr., SN, has for New He working towards a fore joining USIA, he served five years ten years been in the food manufac- master's degree at Union Theological in the U. S. Navy. turing business with his father under Seminary. The Rev. Sanford Garner and his the firm name Torbitt and Castleman Anthony Joel Lee, SAE, is now prac- wife, Mary Cox, announce the birth of Company. They manufacture syrup ticing medicine in Franklin, Tennessee, their second son, James Allen, Febru- and corn products. Address: 10th and after receiving his M.D. from the Uni- versity of Tennessee of ary 9, 1963. He is the rector of St. Magnolia, Louisville, Kentucky. College Medi- cine in 1958 serving Matthew's Church in Kenosha, Wiscon- The Rev. Hallie D. Warren is rector and a year of in- ternship sin. of Grace Church, Waycross, Georgia. at Baptist Memorial Hospital Windsor Morris Price, PGD, and his He has done considerable study of the in Memphis. He spent three years as a flight surgeon in the air force. wife announce the birth of a daughter, problems alcoholics face and is a grad- He is married and the father of Elizabeth Seiner Price, born August 5, uate of the Yale School of Alcoholism two daugh- 1962. He has been a member of the diocesan ters and a son. Address: Carters Creek Pike, Dr. Clement R. Sledge, SN, former committee on alcoholism and adviser Franklin, Tennessee. chief orthopedic resident at the Massa- to the Peace Haven Rest Home for al- John R. Malmo, SAE, has been ap- chusetts General Hospital, and Harvard coholics. pointed assistant advertising manager L. Teaching Fellow in Orthopedics, has The Rev. Phillip G. Clarke, Jr., is the of E. Bruce Company with execu- been awarded a three-year fellowship new rector of the Church of the Holy tive offices at Memphis, Tennessee. He by the Medical Foundation, to begin in Communion, Allendale, South Carolina. joined the Bruce advertising depart- July, 1963. He will be doing research He and his wife, Anne, have two chil- ment two years ago, after experience with agency advertising and on bone in Strangeways Laboratories dren: Philip, 5, and Anne Trezevant, news- in Cambridge, England, and at Massa- 22 months. papers. He is a graduate of the Boston chusetts General Hospital. He lives at The Rev. John Wooley and his wife University school of public relations 33 Stonybrook Road in Marblehead, announce the birth of their third and communications. with his wife and two-year-old daugh- daughter, Louise Hall, on October 26, 1956 ter. in Statesboro, Georgia, where he is vi- Edward T. Bramlitt, SN, received his 1953 car of Trinity Church. They also have Ph.D. in nuclear chemistry from the The Rev. Duncan M. Gray, rector of a son. University of Arkansas on January 26, St. Peter's Church, Oxford, Mississippi, 1954 1963. He has been employed as a senior was presented the "Speaker of the Year The Rev. John Broome, BTP, and his chemist with Atomics International Award" by the Tau Kappa Alpha na- wife, Mary, announce the birth of a since September, 1962, living in Van tional speech honorary society, April 9, daughter, Laura LaRogue, on January Nuys, California. 1963. The award cited him for his "in- 26. Larry P. Davis resigned his position telligent and responsible" statements in Harry W. Camp, PGD, is an attorney of executive director of Clinton Square two sermons during the Ole Miss riots with Camp and Camp in McMinnville, Neighborhood House in Albany, New last fall. Said Gray in his sermon: Tennessee. York, to resume graduate studies in so- "We cannot long survive as a country The Rev. Robert Fisher, KA, and cial work.

28 The Sewanee News The Rev. Nathaniel E. Parker has Bruton, '29, and Mrs. Bruton. He is this semester at the University of accepted a call to serve as rector of looking forward to the class reunion in South Carolina. He spent the first part St. Jude's Church in Smyrna, Georgia. June and writes that he sees many- of this year working for a radio sta- The church has advanced from mission people connected with Sewanee in one tion in Berkeley, California. Previous- to aided parish status. Mr. Parker way or another. ly he spent three years at Oxford where served as St. Jude's vicar for the past W. Anthony Gray is an account exe- he earned another BA. and completed eighteen months, after serving as Epis- cutive with Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fen- a year's work and residence for a BLitt. copal chaplain at the University of ner and Smith in Jacksonville, Florida. William G. Huffman, KA, has beer, Georgia. Aaron D. Knight, SAE, is manager commissioned second lieutenant in the air force graduation 1957 of the Gallatin, Tennessee, Goodyear upon from Officer Service Store. He and his wife, Betty Training School at Lackland AFB, Tex- Henry Frank Arnold, Jr., ATO, will Ann, are making their home at 1010 as. He is being reassigned to Goodfellow English at the University of the teach Edgewood. AFB, Texas, as a communications South beginning this fall. He is pres- Rev. Limuel Parks is rector of St. analysis officer. He has a law degree ently completing the thesis for his Ph.D. Peter's Church, Conway, Arkansas. He from the University of North Carolina. degree at Harvard, where he has held also is vicar for Trinity Church in The Rev. John J. Lohmann, KS. was a teaching fellowship since 1958. He Searcy and chaplain for Episcopal stu- ordained priest in January in Lexing- and his wife, the former Ann Ellis, have dents at Hendrix College and Arkansas ton, Kentucky. He is curate at Christ two children, Thomas, 5, and Catharine, State Teachers College in Conway. He Church there. He and his wife have one 22 months. will be chairman of the division of child. Brother Christopher (Karl Donald camps and conferences for the Arkan- John H. Nichols, Jr., PGD, and his Gladden, BTP), after serving two years sas diocese. wife, Mary Ann, announce the birth [in the army, joined the Order of the Michael R Richards, BTP, has joined of a son, John Hatley III, in Austin, Holy Cross in 1959. He does some trav- the English faculty at the University Texas, on August 27. John represents sling and also lectures and is jack-of- of Chattanooga. He is working toward Scientific Products there. lall-trades at Calvary Mount Monastery. his master's degree at Duke. For the Battle S. Searcy, III, DTD, formei Santa Barbara, California. past three years he taught at McCallie editor of the Purple, is a senior at the Dr. Hoyt Horne will shortly com- School in Chattanooga. He is married Medical College of Alabama. He has plete his internship in internal medi- and has two children. been appointed fellow in medical jour- ine and will enter the air in force Alfred Parker Smith, Jr., and his nalism by the Journal of the American September, 1963. He received his M.D. wife announce the birth of a baby Medical Association for the spring aca- from the University of Florida in 1961. daughter, Elizabeth Jane, on January 8. demic quarter. He will spend approxi- His wife is registered a nurse and the;' mately twelve weeks in the Journal 1959 have two sons, Don and John, both headquarters in Chicago. jnder two years of age. Address: 5330 Class Reunion—June 7, 3, 1963 1st Lt. Edmund B. Stewart, ATO, has >J. State Street, Jackson, Mississippi. President Charles M. Upchurch been reassigned to Shaw AFB, South Heyward Bradford Roberts, Jr., PDT, 4770 Princeton Road Carolina, following graduation from s at present passenger and air freight Memphis, Tennessee communications training in Mississippi. afficer on active duty with the Air The Rev. Benjamin F. Binkley and R. Dale Sweeney has a dissertation Force, Air Goose Base, Labrador. He his wife announce the adoption of a fellowship from the Woodrow Wil- s married to the former Peggy House Sally, 19. daughter, on December He son Foundation beginning next fail if Winchester, Tennessee. Ten- is at Trinity Church, Winchester, to enable him to complete his disserta- The Rev. William Robert Senter, III, nessee. tion on a Latin epic poet. He will do DTD, and Linda Ann Howard assistant were The Rev. Harald K. Haugan, research in Europe in the fall of 1963. narried in February in Lake Provi- at St. Andrew's Church, Jacksonville, Address: 210 Richards Hall, Harvard dence, Louisiana. They are living in Florida, priest-in-charge of St. and University, Cambridge 38, Massachu- Bristol, Tennessee. James' Church, Macclenny, has gone setts. Edwin Hudson Trainer, KS, is teach- "on record" in behalf of St. James' 1960 ng at Thiel College in western Penn- which burned down recently. His 12" Class Reunion—June 7, 8, 1963 sylvania and finishing his thesis for his long-playing disc entitled "Whitey Sings President Robert C. Gregg Ph.D. Following his graduation from Camp Weed" is the vicar's contribu- 2107 Briar Glen, Apartment 6 Sewanee, he entered Emory University tion. He accompanies himself on his Houston 27, Texas n 1957 and received his there in guitar he sings songs in at the MA. as use Ensign Heyward Burnet Clarkf, .958. During 1960-61 he was in Paris summer sessions of Camp Weed, the SAE, was graduated March 8 from Of- pn a Fulbright Scholarship. He is mar- diocese of Florida's camp and confer- ficer Candidate School at the Navai ried to the former Ann Chisholm and is ence center. Base, Newport, Rhode Island. He will ihe father of Kimberlie Anne, born De- Benjamin B. Dunlap, KA, is teaching report to Little Creek, Virginia, for fur- cember 15, 1962. ther training. 1958 The Aetna Life Insurance Com- Frederick D. DeVall. ATO, has been

I The Rev. Lorraine Bosch has arrived promoted to special agent for the In- back in the States from South Africa pany of Hartford has an incentive surance Company of North America in He serves at St. Matthew's Church in grants program for colleges in which New Orleans. i-ouisville, Kentucky, as assistant rec- The Rev. Canon Robert Estill was it will match the contribution made !or. selected as one of six clerical delegates Anderson Carmichael, PDT, recently by any of its employees to his alma to represent the Episcopal Church at pad an exhibit of photographs at Hunt- the National Conference on Race and mater. As an extra inducement to er Gallery in Chattanooga. He turned Religion held in Chicago in January. lis hobby into a profession, free-lancing greater participation by alumni the Representatives of Protestant, Roman In Nashville. He has had one-man Catholic and Jewish faiths came to- Aetna increases its gift by twenty- (hows in Nashville and Louisville. gether in the first such meeting of its The Rev. Alva George Decker is vi- five percent if the institution is one kind ever held in this country. He was par of the Church of the Incarnation in of those few in America which has again honored on February 19 by the West Milford and the Church of the Lexington Chapter, National Council of hall ol its alumni Good Shepherd in Ringwood, New Jer- more than con- Christians and Jews, as the Fayette ley. He is a graduate of Fairleigh tributing. The University of the Countian who contributed most to bro- Dickinson University and Berkeley Di- therhood during the past year. South was forced to confess to tin- vinity School. He and his wife, Mary Ensign Clayton H. Farnham, PDT, is

f ! ane Wilson, have several children. Director of the Aetna Fund thai operations officer on board the U.S.?.

I| Kirkman Finlay, Jr., ATO, is Desoto County, an LST operating prac- Sewanee could not qualify for the with ticing law in Columbia. South Caro- the Atlantic Fleet. During the early ina, in a firm which includes John C. extra twenty-five percent. spring his ship put into Savannah for

May 1965 2Q repairs and Clay took leave and came Christ Church and of Immanuel Church, home in Long Beach, California. Arthur to Sewanee, bringing his young cousin Ripley. will be a staff manager for National Dick Pierce to look over the Univer- Patrick J. McGowan, PGD, is now a Life and Accident Insurance Company. sity. Clay described his ship-board tutor on the staff of the Kagumo John Ernest Gibbs, Jr., ATO, and quarters "as being very much like a Teachers Training College, Nyeri, Ken- Ann Gibson Gressette were married college dormitory room." He still uses ya. This is a post-secondary school December 22. They are at home at 16M: his home address, 9 Olcott Street, Mid- providing professional training for Rutledge Avenue in Charleston, South dlebush, New Jersey. secondary school graduates who are Carolina. John attends the Medical John Perry Patton, III, ATO, re- preparing to teach in the intermediate College of South Carolina. ceived the M.D. degree March 17 from schools of Kenya. His subject is Eng- Patrick C. Hartney, who is study- the University of Tennessee in Mem- lish as a foreign language. He is a ing anthropology at the University of phis. He will intern one year at Metho- part of the "teachers for East Africa," Chicago, brought two other students dist Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. a joint program sponsored by the U. S. from his class to Sewanee March 16-23. 1st Lt. William C. Pitner, Jr., Chi through A.I.D., the British government, All three boys camped at Peter Cave Phi, married Stephanie Gale Chaix op and the national governments of Ken- and worked for a week extracting February 23 in Roswell, New Mexico. ya, Uganda, Tanganyika and Zanzibar. pieces of pottery and flints. Their most Lt. Pitner graduated from the Air He has found life extremely interest- important find was a large base of a Force electronic warfare office course. ing and has traveled over a good part piece of pottery. Hartney reports that He is assigned to the Strategic Air of East Africa. they will continue digging as time and Command at Fairchild AFB, Washing- Ensign B. D. McNutt, Jr., DTD, money permit. He hopes to do his dis- ton. graduated from Naval Officer Candi- sertation on Peter Cave. The Rev. Gerald Carter Robertson is date School at Newport, Rhode Island, 2nd Lieutenant Grover E. Jackson, curate of St. John's Church, Massena, KS, is a regular officer in the United New York. He and his wi"e, Mary Mil- States Air Force. He previously held lord Griffiths, have two children, Fran- i, USAF reserve commission. He is now cis Jeffery, and Delva Marie. He re- assigned to Goodfellow AFB, Texas, as ceived a doctorate in education from a student in the 6940th Technical St. John's University in 1963. Training Wing. James J. Slade, III, PDT, is teaching Lt. Walter Harrison Jones, LCA, English at a university in Colombia, the was married on March 23, 1963, to Pa- republic in South America, on his two- tricia Ann Bradley of Huntington, West year Peace Corps assignment which Virginia. started in January. Duncan McArthur, PDT, stopped in 1961 Sewanee on March 2, 1963, en route Class Reunion—June 7, 8, 1963 from Charleston to San Diego, where President Robert N. Rust, III he will have mine sweeper's duty in 301 N. Edgewood Street Japan. He is an ensign operations offi- Arlington, Virginia cer, on the USS Vireo. Address: MCS Walter Ralph Chastain, Jr., SN, re- 205, FPO San Francisco. ceived his master's degree in business S. Kemble Oliver, III, KA, and his administration from the University of wife announce the birth of a son, Kem- South Carolina in January, 1963. He is ble McKinnon, on January 15 in San continuing U.S.C. Antonio. He is teaching at Texas Mili- at as a member of the Philip Maggard faculty, instructing tary Institute. in accounting. Killed in Peace Corps Edward O. deBary has been pro- William S. Yates, KA, was married moted to first lieutenant in the air force. on March 8. He will be at the Naval September 1, 1962, to Hilda Mae Edson He is chief of administrative services in Supply School in Athens, Georgia, for at Windsor, Vermont. the 516th Troop Carrier Wing. the next six months. Also at Athens is 1963 Robert Ladley Husted, KA, and Ensign Charles H. Turner, '62, SAE. Philip Walter Maggard was killed in Christine Lawry Anderson of South Joseph H. Schley, Jr., PDT, will re- an airline crash on March 2. A Philip- Weymouth, Massachusetts, were mar- ceive his LL.B. degree in May from pine Airlines DC-3 crashed into a ried February 9 in St. Matthew's Southern Methodist University Law remote jungle-covered ridge near the Church, Fairbanks, Alaska. Robert is School. He represents the Law School city of Davao on the island of Min- stationed with the army in Fairbanks. on the Student Senate and he was se- danao. Phil had been in the Philip- The Rev. Brice Wayne Kinyon and lected for Who's Who in American Col- pines since last September 12 working Alice Elizabeth Henry were married leges and Universities. with the Peace Corps as an elementary January 12 in Knoxville. They are James R. Stow, BTP, has been school teacher in a small logging vil- making their home in Brownsville, Ten- awarded a Rotary Foundation Fellow- lage called Linagua Bay. He had plan- nessee, where he is priest-in charge oc ship for International Understanding. ned a career in the ministry. While at He will study economics at the Euro- the University of the South he was a pean Institute of Business in Paris. He student carillonneur, and he was me- is now a candidate for the master of morialized by a special concert on the business administration degree from the Polk Carillon. Wharton School of Finance at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. Mrs. Walter Hullihen, wife of m 1962 former dean of the college of the Uni- Class Reunion—June 7, 8, 1963 versity of the South, died in October, President Charles Cullen 1962 in Wilmington, Delaware, at the 415 S. Palo Alto age of 81. She lived at Sewanee from Panama City, Florida 1912 to 1920 while Dr. Hullihen held The Rev. Robert DuVall is in charge the deanship following the death of of St. Stephen's Church, Ridgeway, John Bell Henneman and before the South Carolina. He will also serve St. appointment of George Merrick Baker. Peter's Church in Great Falls. The Rev. Franklin C. Ferguson and Miss Frances Kirkland, sister of the his wife announce the birth of a son, late Rev. Robert MacDonald Kirkland, Luke Franklin, on October 16. Franklin who for 22 years was a member of the is deacon-in training at Grace Church, faculty of St. Luke's, died in January Chattanooga. in Fairhope, Alabama. She was buried Arthur Fort and his wife Mary left in the University Cemetery, with the Patrick Hartney Tennessee in January to make their Rev. James W. Brettmann officiating.

3° The Sewanee News —

Summer at Sewanee

fuNE 7-0—Senior Week End June 24 July 2N—Sewanee Summer Music Center

k m: 10—Commencement June 24-AuGUST 17—Sewanee Summer Institute of Science and Mathematics

' 1 m 10-15 —Alumni Week June 24-AuGusT 18—College Summer School UNE 15-16— Fourth Province Laity Conference July io-August 14—Graduate School of Theology UNE 16-22—Sewanee Summer Training School August 22-28—College Youth Conference [ink [6-August 10—Sewanee Military Academy School Camp September 6-8—Tennessee Lavmen

Concerts

SEWANEE SUMMER MUSIC CENTER—CON- FF.STIX AL: Five concerts July 25-28 will conclude the CERTS EVERY WEEK END—JUNE 29-JULY 28 1965 season.

Saturday Afternoons at 5 CST. Student Programs. All concerts in (iuerry Hall. Season Tickets will be Solos and Chamber Music. available for the Saturday Evening and the Sun-

day Atternoon Series. All other concerts are 1 pen Saturday Evenings at 8 CST. Faculty Chamber Music. to the public free of charge.

Sunday Atternoon Series at 5 CST. Sewanee Sym- phony, with Roland Johnson, Conductor, and CONCERT ON THE LEONIDAS POLK CARIL- featuring guest artists from the faculty and guest LON EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON: Albert conductors. Bonholzer, '22, Bellmaster SEWANEE SUMMER MUSIC

JUNE 24 - - JULY 28 VJ-

,.;...» fa/*ec- ^_ August, 1963 Sewanee News THE UNIVERSITY DF THE SOUTH SEWANEE, TENNESSEE 1

THE Sewan NEWS

The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the Associated Alumni sf The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennessee. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee.

Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35

Issue Editor Edith Whitesell

Associates Peggy Ervin, Elizabeth N. Chitty

Art: Jean Tallec

CONTENTS

2 Vice-Chancellor's Page

3 The New Library

4 The Alumni Director Reports Keating

5 Campaign—an Open Letter to Alumni

6 Appointments

7 On the Mountain Gentlemen . . .

8 New This Summer The Vice- Chancellor

1 Here and There The larger colleges and universities have become, the 1 Class Distinctions more they have been inclined to become impersonal, 14 Deaths and the more they have tended to abdicate any or much responsibility for the morals, manners, and amenities

of life of their students. Imparting objective informa- tion in an impersonal atmosphere, and measuring the degree of success which the student achieves in memo- August 1963 Volume 29 Number 3 rizing so-called facts, is about as much as many col- leges feel that they can accept responsibility for. In contrast to this Sewanee has always believed that gentility of manners, integrity of character, and refine- ment of tastes are not minor matters to be left irre- sponsibly to others. They must be cultivated assidu- ON THE COVER—Librarians John Hodges and William ously and in each individual. They can best be de- Harkins (right) dream at the site of the new Jessie Ball duPont Library. veloped in the intimacy of family life; and it is impor- tant for colleges to try to extend or project the influence

of the home and the Church into the academic life.

A NEW PHOTOGRAPHIC credit will be noted under the Vice-Chancellor's In a conscious effort to make Sewanee a home away picture, above. Franke Keating, who came to Sewanee on assignment from from home, the University originally required all of Holiday magazine last year, fell so fond of it that she volunteered to cover the campus and make her negatives a gift to the college. Her portraits anc! the students to live in the homes of faculty members. studies are going into brochures and other permanent university publications, Every professor's home was large enough to and will enrich the Sewanee News from time to time. made take in ten or twelve students, who dined at his table and To Howard Coulson, as always, go our thanks for never-failing competence and cooperation. (continued on page 15) Every Service -

the duPont Library

in played. A campaign What we have tried to incorporate this build- to build this room initiated ing is every service which in any way might by Phi Delta Theta, for whom Mrs. Torian was a further the education of the student or aid the collective godmother, invites sponsors. icsearch of the faculty member," Sewanee's long- In amicable partnership at the head of the burgeon-

headed, unruffled new librarian sums up the planning ing program are William Harkins, an experienced li- effort of co-librarian John Hodges, architect James brary expander who was drawn to Sewanee largely by Godwin, and himself. Not content even with that, this very challenge, and John Hodges, whose discrimi- William Harkins and fellow planners are making the nating selections over thirty years kept Sewanee's pres- building arrangement flexible enough to adapt to any tige high through poverty and cramped quarters, and recommended change during the building's career. who retired from sole direction of the library only be- There will be room for an eventual 600,000 books, and cause he was slowed down by a heart attack. "Each of study space for the proposed new colleges. us does what suits him best," Mr. Harkins says. When The Jessie Ball duPont Library, scheduled for readi- he is not selecting and sowing intellectual seed, the ness in the fall of 1964, has had its planning stage and new librarian hopes to be coaxing hybrids to flourish beginning construction financed by the first installment in his garden. His wife, happily, is a flower arranger of the Ford Foundation matching grant, and hoped-for of note. additional large gifts will enable sights to be kept high. For those who sigh at the passing of landmarks we

For a library is the very mainspring of any educa- have the reassurance that the present library building, tional enterprise, and upon its quality depends not only one of the most gracious on the campus, will see service the reputation but the accomplishment of a college. as long as its stout beams hold. It will continue its Experts in these matters estimate that a good liberal originally planned and uninterrupted function as Con- arts college library needs at least 300,000 well selected vocation Hall, the meeting place for the board of trus- volumes, and Sewanee means to have them as soon as tees, and the other 364 days of the year will be an art possible. gallery, with a passage through to Guerry Hall. For optimal use of the books, individual study carrels will be available throughout the building, most of them in the stacks. Twenty-eight faculty research cubicles 3re planned, with more to be added as needed. Quick: copy facilities, microphotography equipment, sound- proof typing areas, record-listening rooms, discussion and recreational reading space, and a hundred-seat auditorium with movie and slide projectors are among the aids which will backdrop the general plot of boy- rneets-book. An unusual feature will be a large study room and smoking lounge that can be kept open after the rest of the library is closed, so that a quiet study area can be available twenty-four hours a dav if need be.

One of the handsomest chambers to arise out of the blueprints will be the Sarah Hodgson Torian Archives Coulso.'i Room, memorializing the vital lady who gave her ser- The parents of William B. Craig, III, '60, who was killed vices as University Archivist. Here will be preserved in an automobile accident last year, have given $5,000 to the and made available to scholars documents of Sewanee University Library for a memorial book collection in English literature. Shown at the dedication are Rufus Craig, '63, Mrs. r.nd Church history, and bibliophile treasures dis- William Craig, William Harkins, and William Craig, '30.

August 1963 The Director Reports

By Arthur Ben Chitty

Excerpted from the annual report to report on the work of the last year must con- the Associated Alumni at the June sider first the shift to a campaign status. From meeting by ite executive director. A the time of the Ford challenge offer, announced last June, the first emphasis of our whole establish- Perhaps the most important single activity of the ment has been to serve that vital enterprise. Informa- iorthcoming year in our alumni work will be the Se- tion from our records and the manner in which we were wanee Clubs. For the success of the campaign we must able to classify it brought high praise from the mem- have effective local organizations in approximately bers of our advisory firm. Specifically we were told fifty cities. These will have to be built upon the frame- that they had never worked for an institution which work of clubs now in operation or recently active. In had a better organized body of necessary information some places we will have to start entirely afresh. The ?bout its constituency. most important appeal I could make at this time would be for Let me touch upon the more mechanical aspects of each alumnus to offer his services to the local our office and its operation. We have added this year Sewanee Club officers and if there are none, write our office a new addressing system which is adequate for our here for the "Sewanee Club Kit." It tells how needs for the foreseeable future. The old Elliott sys- to activate an organization. tem, the best in the business thirty years ago, has fallen I would be remiss if I closed without paying tribute behind the Addressograph company in its moderniza- to the alumni officers of the past year. In particular t'on and today we now have in full operation the metal I congratulate John Ezzell on his truly outstanding plates for our address files rather than the fibre stencils. leadership. Few know of the hundreds of hours he has given To make the change we embossed 30,000 names and to this University as alumni president and as member of addresses on the new plates and then transferred some the campaign executive committee. I also extend ^50,000 separate bits of coded information from the warmest thanks and congratulations to John old stencil frames to the new metal tabs. Guerry, particularly for the way in which he has sparked the This enables us to draw from our master files the meetings of the Alumni Council in the fall and spring various classifications of lists we need. Thus if you which have had such an invigorating effect want an address list of the academy alumni in the state en alumni work. of Louisiana who have contributed to Sewanee in the

past ten years, we can furnish it in about fifteen minutes. We can give you in a matter of hours the names of all the people in our file who have made John Guerry Heads Alumni gifts of $1,000 or over or the names of those who gave us something three years ago but nothing in the John P. Guerry, '49, was elected national president past two years. The price of being able to do this is c.l the Associated Alumni at its June meeting. Treasur- not low, but it yields hundredfold dividends in the kind er is F. Clay Bailey, '50; recording secretary Phil cf support we are now receiving and expect to increase. Whitaker, '55; vice-president for bequests Frederick R. Freyer, None of this would have been possible had not a suc- '29; for capital funds I. Rhett Ball, III, '34; cession of alumni officers, executive committees, and for regions Dudley C. Fort, '34; for Church support R. alumni councils had the faith to back and support and Morey Hart, '34; for classes W. Sperry Lee, '43; and blazing trails. for guide an office which was admissions James W. Gentry, Jr., '50. SMA alumni On our present combined development, alumni, picked Ben Humphreys McGee, '49, as their repre- public relations, and gift records staff we have fourteen sentative vice-president, and St. Luke's the Rt. Rev. full-time persons. An important addition to our staff John M. Allin, '43.

this year was Arthur Cockett, recommended to us by The new alumni president had a distinguished under- Bill Cravens. Cockett has completely justified the graduate career at Sewanee, including membership on

1 igh expectations held for him. He will take on sharply the football team and in Phi Beta Kappa. Since gradu- increased responsibilities in office administration in ation he has taught at Baylor, returned to the army Airs. for a coming months. Frederick Whitesell, our assist- second tour of combat duty, and has been \n ant director of public relations, will be able to spend business, most recently in the family Chattanooga

more time on her specialty, the audio-visual materials Medicine Company. He has been president of his which 'we now furnish in ever larger quantity to radio class since graduation and has recently been vice-presi- and TV stations, Sewanee clubs, and church groups. dent for classes for the national alumni organization.

The Sewanee Newsi The letter which follows will be sent to each Sewanee Alumnus in the near future, and is reprinted here Campaign because of its importance. G. Cecil Woods (A 'i-j, C 21) and Albert Woods (C 18) are Co-Chairmen of Sewanee's Ten Million Dollar Count Up Campaign. Bishop Frank A. Ju-

lian ( C '//, T 'u, DD '25) is Di- rector of Development.

To Every Alumnus of the University of the South : Sewanee has already produced a remarkable record of accomplishment in its Ten Million Dollar program. At Commencement 1963, campaign receipts in casn and pledges came to well over $2,500,000, against the total fund-raising objective of $7,500000. This means that we are one-third of the way towards success; and thus we have earned approximately $833,000 in match- ing funds from the Ford Foundation. Included in these receipts were many truly outstanding five-figure and .six-figure gifts from our Alumni, but also scores of much smaller ones.

We have always recognized that the role of the Alumni in this Campaign will be a key factor in gain- ing success. It is a well-known fact that persons will- ing and qualified to make substantial gifts to the

University use one criterion above all others. They want to know how strongly Sewanee's own "family" Bishop Frank A. Juhan got up in the air for the first time at the May Fly-In. The Bishop's own caption: "Bishop in feels about Mater, and exactly this feeling Alma how orbit during the count-down for the count-up." has been translated into financial support for capital endeavors. It matters to such persons whether Saturday, October 5, has been set as the Kick-Orf individual gifts are large ones or small ones; but their Date for campaigning. Your presence on the Campus real test is whether 20 per cent of Alumni have made at that time is a vital necessity, if you are a Club or gifts, or whether 80 per cent have done so. Numbers a Class Officer, in order to hear and discuss the plans Ire just as important as dollar amounts. being made. If appropriate, please put this date on

During the last few months, while we have been your calendar and let Sewanee know that you will laising so-called "Major Gifts" of $10,000 or more, we come. lave been receiving many inquiries from Alumni who Sewanee's role in education, religion, and indeed in wanted to make gifts immediately. It became obvious society, is often judged by the quality of its Alumni to us that the time was fast approaching when an z nd by their contributions to the modern world. The organized effort on behalf of the Alumni must be inauguration of formal Alumni participation in the Ten created. And indeed, such an effort was needed to Million Dollar program becomes an opportunity for attract "outside" funds. each Alumnus to re-evaluate his links to Sewanee. are confident that, singly and collectively, the Accordingly, members of the Campaign Executive We Alumni of the of the Committee have been meeting with John Guerry University South will respond to this call, as they have done on so occasions in Arthur Chitty. and various officers of Associated many the past. place ourselves at your service in tlvs Alumni to discuss ways and means of setting up this We great effort. effort. Any organization must be both efficient and in- expensive to operate. We honestly believe that the structure we are creating will fill these specifications. as a first step, we have been exploring possible cam- paign structures in Atlanta. Chattanooga and othe." <^*c^i~(2^L, cities which are close to home. Our experience in these places tells us that a functional Campaign organization This is the first in a series of letters. In succeeding issues of the Sewanee is feasible—one which will permit every Alumnus to News, the President and other demonstrate the strength of his convictions, in good officers of Associated Alumni will time, and in the right fashion. discuss specific plans and methods.

August [963 Hail and Farewell

Anew headmaster for SMA and college faculty Coming as assistant professor of Spanish is Col. members in music, English, Spanish, French, Donald B. Webber (U. S. Army Ret.). Col. Webber and biology are coming to Sewanee this fall. received his bachelor of science degree from the United

The Sewanee Military Academy's new headmaster, States Military Academy in 193 1, and his M.A. from the Rev. James R. McDowell, comes from a similar Duke University in June. post at the Lovett School in Atlanta. He hails originally The new assistant professor of French, Kenneth R. from Pitcairn, Pennsylvania, was educated at Ran- Wilson-Jones, comes from the LSU faculty. He re- dolph-Macon College in Ashland, Virginia and Sea- places Allen Whartenby, who goes to Clark University. bury-Western Theological Seminary, where he received Wilson-Jones was awarded the B.A. cum laude by his B.D. in 1954. Davidson College and the M.A. and Ph.D. by the Uni- The large gap left by the departure of William W. versity of North Carolina. In 1951-52 he studied at Lemonds, music chairman, organist and choirmaster the University of Dijon in France on a Fulbright to Emory University, will be filled by Joseph Martin scholarship grant. Running, head of the School of Music of Centenary Charles W. Foreman, who will be associate profes- College in Shreveport, Louisiana. Mr. Running was sor of biology, took his bachelor's at the University of educated at St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, North Carolina in and his M.A. and and did graduate study in music at the Philadelphia 1949 Ph.D. at Conservatory, Stanford University, and Western Ken- Duke University. He has been teaching at Pfeiffer tucky State College. He has completed most of the College in Misenheimer, North Carolina. work for a doctorate in music at Florida State Uni- On temporary appointment are Samuel B. Carle- versity. r on, '59, who will be instructor in classical languages

The community is eager to welcome back Henry F. while Charles Binnicker is on leave of absence, and

Arnold, Jr., '57, who will be an instructor in English. Richard J. Corbin, '53, instructor in English during the

After graduating optime merens from Sewanee he sabbatical leave of Brinley Rhys, who is leaving for went to graduate school at Harvard. He was a teach- Greece in October. ing fellow there, won his master's in a year and will The appointment of Dr. Anita S. Goodstein as in- take his doctorate soon. structor in history has been extended for another year.

"Wg T:

Three-fifths of the musical Runnings.

The Sewanee News On the Mountain

kJecllsion settled like a comfortable cloud on the New Phi Beta Kappa officers are Arthur Chitty, '35, Sewanee quadrangle this spring. During the last president; Robert G. Dillard, '64, vice-president, with

months, for the first time in forty years, the University dean emeritus George M. Baker and Professor Bayly campus was not on an arterial highway. 'lurlington, '42, re-elected secretary-treasurer and as- Ever since the "Old Dixie" was paved up the moun- sociate secretary-treasurer. tain in 1922, motor traffic has increased on University A telegram from Senator Estes Kefauver shortly Avenue. First there was the rattling of the model T before his death confirms congressional approval of and the squealing of two-wheel brakes, then the musical an $18,500 appropriation for the planning of a new horn (remember how incongruously it competed with building for the U. S. Forest Service Sewanee Project, the chapel organ:) and finally the tractor and semi- Arnold Mignery, director. The new home of this trailer. Nearly every Commencement orator since government station which works in close cooperation World War II has heard the mighty blast of diesel ex- with the University's forestry department will be next haust rattling the windows of All Saints' during gradu- to the Snowden Forestry Building, on the site where ation. the house occupied by Col. W. K. Dudley now stands.

. But now no more.

Sewanee is peaceful again. Dogs have only the local A National Science Foundation grant of #42,000 cars to chase. Trucks take the by-pass, saving them- assures the continuation of the independent study pro- selves a mile and a half. The longest sustained effort gram in mathematics. Fifteen promising undergradu- in the history of the Sewanee Civic Association was ates from six colleges—Antioch, Carleton, Kenyon, ended. In 1949 that group had appointed a long-range Knox, Oberlin, and Sewanee—are at work here this planning committee to develop (1) an airfield. (2) a summer under the guidance of Sewanee's professor lake, and (3) a highway cut-off. Wendell F. Kline Stephen E. Puckette, '49, and Kenyon's Dr. William deserves almost all the credit for the #125,000 Jackson- F. Transue. Independent study in chemistry under

Myers Field. Charles Edward Cheston merits the the direction of Dr. David Camp is also underwritten in thanks of Sewanee visitors for not merely one but part by the National Science Foundation, angel for eleven lakes. The road project was a team effort in- the Sewanee Summer Institute of Science and Mathe- volving the most adroit politicking with a succession matics. of governors. The road was finally built in the admini- The Sewanee Summer Music its stration of Governor Buford Ellington, for whom the Center wound up seventh season, its first under the direction of Sewanee district did not deliver a majority, but for Martha McCrory, with larger audiences, students whom, should he run again, there might be a different more this year), feeling. (seventy and greater enthusiasm than ever. Cognoscenti say it now ranks with any festival any- The three-lane, limited-access thoroughfare extends where. High spots: the premiering of a new work for 1.47 miles from Brooks' store to a fork near the written for the occasion by David Van Yactor, "Se- University gates on the St. Andrew's side. The cost wanee Suite Number One"; the re-gluing of Melvin cf #245,352 includes four blocks of sidewalk, a dozen Ritter's #20,000 Guarnerius del Gesu violin by his major culverts, and excellent grading on both sides. pianist wife, using glue she boiled in a baby food can The village community is transformed and a score of set in an electric coffee maker. business and residential sites made accessible. Sollare M. Freeman, commissioner of leases, served as the Valedictorian for 1963's class of 154 was Joseph University's liaison with highway officials during ne- levering Price, Rhodes Scholar from Meridian, Missis- gotiation and construction. sippi, and salutatorian Stephen Harold Moorehead of Cocoa, Florida. Winners of special awards included

S. L. Hoover of Shaker Heights, Ohio; George The Henry Disbrow Phillips C04) memorial tablet Charles of Mamaroneck, York; was dedicated Commencement Week. Mrs. Phillips Charles B rower New Lacv II, Houston; Walter Bruce Gibson of was attending the dedication of the Bishop Phillips Harris Hunt, of Robert L. Brown of Little Memorial Conference Center near Marion. Virginia, Stamford, Connecticut. I. Hatch of Atlanta. Georgia: but representing the family were Frederick Freyer. Rock, Arkansas; Edwin Preston B. Huntley, Jr.. of Cheraw, South Carolina: '29, nephew of the late great Sewanee chaplain, with Rev. A. Patrick of Nashville; and Harrill Mrs. Freyer and graduating son Robert. the James C. McGinnis of Nashville.

August 1965 Benedict Hall was opened to students for the first time when it housed all the men of the College Summer School.

Above right: Lake Cheston re- places Lake O'Donnell as a water sports and picnic area. The high goes past wav cut-off ( see p. 7 ) O'Donnell.

Benedict lounge at right.

The Sewanee News 3\(ew Ms Rummer

Above right: Summer school students o. k.'d the new retreat for mountain men.

mont Castle, an inn and hne restaurant restored Warriner mansion overlooking Cove, adds to the mountain's capacity iie luxurious entertainment of visitors. Sewanee Inn and Claramont Restaurant, un by "Miss Clara" Shoemate. Unlike unterpart, which has a warm contempor- ecor, the Castle has an authentic antique A. seventeenth-century mantel and two ries old clocks, one of them a bequest TW- Miss Dora Colmore, set the key for the 3 or, which is carpeted with real Oriental * The architect of the renovation, Edwin - - t le, has also designed a new unit in keep- - -. 0* r

Photographs by Howard Coulson

August 1963 Here and There

When the Ven. John A. Pinckney, '31, was elected bishop of Upper South Carolina on May 7, he was one of fifteen Sewanee men nominated for the post. He is the forty-seventh Sewanee man to be named bishop. Archdeacon of the diocese, he has served churches in the two South Carolina dioceses and has been chaplain to Episcopal students at Clemson College. He attended the College of Charleston and the DuBose Memorial Church Training School at Monteagle before entering

St. Luke's in 1928. He has held many positions of responsibility in South Carolina and from 1942 to 1950 directed conferences at Kanuga, the conference center in North Carolina. He has been a trustee of the Uni- versity of the South since i960. His consecration has been set for September.

The trustees elected four new regents in June, to Thomas W. Floyd, '64, ATO, from serve six-year terms. Bishop Robert H. Brown of An- dalusia, Alabama, won the Air Force Arkansas, who has filled out the unexpired term of the ROTC Commandant's Award at his training late Bishop Theodore Barth of Tennessee, will now summer unit, in competition with 141 other cadets from 23 different serve a full term. The Rev. E. Dudley Colhoun, '50, colleges and universities. of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, will succeed the Rev. Capers Satterlee, '21, of Spartanburg, South silver Revere bowl was presented by W. Porter Ware, Carolina. New laymen on the board are Eugene Orr "26, to Thomas G. Linthicum, '23, who will re-present of Jacksonville, Florida, and Henry 0. Weaver, '28, ol it to retiring president Homer Whitman, '53. Houston. The Atlanta Club's scholarship this year went to Terry Daniel Payne of Avondale Estates, Georgia. Regents in June instructed the admissions office to enlarge the student body to 750 this year, and at the New alumni trustees are the Rt. Rev. David Shep- same time examined Edwin Keeble's topographical herd Rose, '36; Edward B. Crosland, '32; and George

scale model projection of a proposed new college site. Marion Sadler, Jr., '33.

Further study is going on, but a split-off to a new

college on the Oxford plan is definitely in sight. Keeble Breaking ground in May for the Lambda Chi Alpha house were (left to right) Assistant Chaplain James Brettmann, '31, is the architect of McCrady Hall dormitory, now under Professor of Air Science Major Frank R. Murray, Professor construction across from the new library foundation. of Philosophy Dr. John S. Marshall, and Chapter President Michael V. Thomason, '64. Approved by the regents and readying for fall are new housing and a football field for SMA.

Admissions director John Ransom is getting his 225 entering freshmen from 1500 final applications sent out.

This is the brightest bunch yet on college board scores and high school records.

Doug Seiters, '64, from Chattanooga won letters in

football, wrestling, and track while maintaining a 3.8 academic average. Sewanee's only three-letter man this year, he was a member of the mile relay team which won the College Athletic Conference meet race

in the time of 3 125.5.

The Sewanee Club of Atlanta, Ken Kinnett, '56, president, was 1962-63 winner of the Dobbins Award for outstanding Sewanee club activities. The sterling 3n jfflrmortam Class Distinctions

1911 Ben F. Cameron, KA, judge of the United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Judicial Circuit, was the subject of a recent Times-Picayune roto feature. His Circuit includes six states—Texas, Lou- isiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Florida—and the Panama Canal Zone. He was appointed in 1955, the first Republican from Mississippi to be named to a Federal judgeship in fifty years. 1917 The Rev. William S. Stoney, SAE, spent fifty-seven days April, May, and June, 1963', exploring England's cathe- drals. 1920 James E. Nash, PGD, has retired from his position as freight traffic manager with the St. Louis, San Francisco and AT and N railroad after more than thirty-eight years of service. 1923 J. Burton Frierson, PDT, is the new second vice-president of American Tex- tile Manufacturers Institute. He is president of Dixie Mercerizing Com- pany in Chattanooga, Tennessee. 1926 Edgar Elliott Beaty, PGD, was mar- ried June 19 to Agnes Hamilton Bur- gess in Charleston. She is a graduate of Columbia College and a teacher. He is attorney advisor for the southeast di- vision of the Navy's Bureau of Yards and Docks. N. Hamner Cobbs, SAE, was recently elected president of the Alabama His- torical Association. Mr. Cobbs, a Se- wanee trustee, has been named a dele- gate from the Episcopal Church to the General Assembly of the National Council o f Churches. Nashville Ttnnfs.wcn Eli Rayner Turley, Jr., PDT, rep- resents the Alcoatings company in the His calls were legend. Memphis area, sellling a line of water repellent coatings. 1933 Major Lawrence M. Fenwick has re- tired from the Air Force and is in resi- Dr. Prentice Pugh, '05, beloved minis- he visited over forty people. In 1953 dence at St. Paul's Rectorv, Jackson- ter and ardent alumnus, died July 19. he was instrumental in starting a school ville, Florida. He had been admitted to Vanderbilt for the mentally retarded. "Dr. Pren- The Rev. Duncan M. Hobart, KA, Hospital for a hernia operation, but tice Pugh Day" is an annual event at rector of St. James' Church in Jackson, his heart failed as the anesthetic was Al Menah Shrine Temple, where he was Mississippi, has received an honorary administered. He had an unusual rec- chaplain for thirty-four years. He was degree, S.T.D., from General Theologi- ord as a priest, spending almost his one of two "trustees emeritus" noted cal Seminary. entire ministry in only two parishes. in Sewanee's records. 1936 He saw the membership of Holy Trin- Dr. Pugh took seriously his duties as Hiram S. Chamberlain, SN, has been ity Church, Memphis, grow from 23 president of the class of 1905 and his appointed account executive with J. C. to 423 in ten years. He served the membership on the Alumni Council. A Bradford and Company in Chattanooga. Church of the Advent in Nashville principal interest was encouraging his 1941 from 1916 until his retirement in 1955, classmates and friends to put Sewanee Alan C. Hinschelwood is a senior when he became rector emeritus. The in their wills. He regularly sent in electronics technician at Eglin Air communicant list grew in these years names of persons to whom he had force Base, concerned with miniaturi- from 160 to 1,000. A dozen men from spoken on the subject. An autobiogra- zation of complex control systems. He his parish entered the ministry. phy of Dr. Pugh was published shortly has a ham radio installation with the His hospital calls became legend before his death. call letters W4BVE. Address: 3208 among the medical profession and the A bachelor, Dr. Pugh is survived by Test Group, Labs Division, Eglin AFB, people of Nashville. On a typical day a sister, Mrs. Thomas C. Baskette. Florida.

August 196, 11 1942 1951 The Rev. W. Brown Patterson, BTP, William Cooper Chitty, SAE, has John G Bratton, ATO, is a newly has a daughter, Evelyn Byrd, born on been named general agent of the Na- appointed vice-president of Palmetto March 19 in Oxford, England. His son tional Trust Life Insurance Company Shipping Company in Charleston, South is two years old. Brown has spent a of America. He will live in Winter Carolina. third year on his Rhodes Scholarship Park and will continue to be president Dr. Angus W. Graham, Jr., KA, his in connection with his Ph.D. thesis. of Over-Seas Imports, Unlimited. He wife Wylene, and his three children This fall he will be assistant professor continues to be stockholder of Chitty have gone to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. of history at Davidson College. and Company, wholesale food distribu- Dr. Graham is senior pediatrician oi 1953 tors of Orlando and Jacksonville. the Arabian American Oil Company. James H. McIntosh, Jr., PDT, has a Horace E. Dryden's architectural firm William Haggard, III, BTP, received son, James Douglas, born on May 8. in Dallas designed the Otes Engineer- a team gold medal as a member of the The Rev. Joe M. Routh is rector of ing plant which Factory Magazine United States Equestrian Team at the St. Philip's Church, Palestine, Texas. named one of the "Top Ten" manu- 1963 Pan-American Games held in San His oldest daughter Jane is the wife facturing plants completed during 1962. Paolo, Brazil. and daughter-in-law of two other Wesl 1943 Francis Gettys Watkins, ATO, has Texas clergymen. Dr. David A. Lockhart has a son, a daughter, Anna Stephens. The Rev. William P. Zion received Malcolm Wright, born on June 2 jn 1952 his Ph.D. from Harvard University in Concord, North Carolina. Grandfather The Rev. Martin Dewey Gable has June. He will be assistant professor of was the Rev. Malcolm W. Lockhart, '09. a second child, Martin Gregory, born divinity at Bishop's University, Len- The Rev. Henry W. Havens, Jr., an- on May 29 in Columbus, Georgia. noxville, Quebec. nounces the birth of a third son and The Rev. Richard W. Gillett, PGD, 1954 fourth child, Michael Macmillan, on is on the staff of Holy Trinity Church. Thomas W. Clifton, DTD, is adminis- March 30, in Halifax, Virginia. Ponce, Puerto Rico. trative assistant to the President ot 1945 Coleman Goatley, PGD, has a son, Amarlite Corporation, treasurer of Clif- Dr. Kenneth Paul Adler joined the Thomas Lee, born on April 9. Coleman ton Investment Company, and secre- U. S. Information Agency in 1962 as is with Radiation, Inc., of Melbourne, tary-treasurer of Walter Clifton Foun- a social science analyst in the Survey Florida. dation in Atlanta. He is married to Research Division. He and his family Almonese Brown and has three chil-

(wife Alice, four children) reside fit dren: Deborah, Nancy, and Brad. 8721 Susanna Lane, Chevy Chase, The Rev. Paul Edwards, GGD, Maryland. former chaplain at Sewanee Military 1947 Academy, has been appointed super- The Rev. Cecil Woods, Jr., SAE, has visor of the rehabilitation program of a daughter born July 1 at Great Mil- Episcopal Community Service, San ton, Oxfordshire, England, where Mr. Diego, California. Woods is on leave from St. Luke's. John W. Woods, SAE, has been 1949 elected assistant vice-president o f John P. Guerry, SAE, has resigned Chemical Bank New York Trust Com- as vice-president of the American Na- pany. He is with the bank's National tional Bank and Trust Company to be- Division, working in Alabama, Georgia, come the secretary of the Chattanooga North and South Carolina, and Vir- Medicine Company. John is the first giinia. He has been with the bank Guerry to be national president of Se- since 1954, except for a leave of absence wanee alumni (see p. 5) in a family for military service. He is married to which has provided one vice-chancellor, the former Lori Chisolm. two chaplains, and five trustees. 1955 The Rev. Edward F. Ostertag, SAE, is Chaplain W. S. Bennett is in Korea the father of Emily Babette, born March on a thirteen month tour with the U. S. 6 in Fort Collins, Colorado, where he is Infantry. His family remained in Wash- lector of St. Luke's Church. ington. 1950 John W. Boult, ATO, is an associate The Rev. Edward C. Rutland, DTD, with the law firm of Shackleford, Far- has a son, Thomas Edward, born on rior, Stallings, Glos and Evans, Tampa, February 4 in Independence, Kansas. Keve.l Florida. He was graduated from Van- His daughter is six years old. First Republican in fifty years derbilt, served in the navy and with

Above center is Judge Ben F. Cameron of Meridian, Mississippi. Below, wearing dark cap in front row, is first baseman Ben Cameron of Sewanee's 1910 baseball team. Top row, middle, i? young Frank Juhan, '11, manager of the team. An extra sub- scription to the Sewanee News is herewith offered to the alumnus who can most completely identify the others.

12 The Sewanee News the department of justice. He is mar- John G. Horner, DTD, has a son, John ried to the former Jimmy Lou Foster George, III, born on April 15 in Syra- of Scottsboro, Alabama, and they have cuse, New York, where Jack is with two children, John, Jr., and Alison the credit department of the Merchants Elizabeth. National Bank and Trust Company. Paul Fontaine Nash, KS, is associ- Michael S. Ingram, KA, is associated ated with a law firm in New York City. with the law firm of Dean, Adams and He was graduated from Duke Law Fischer in Miami, Florida. He received School in 1961. his LL.B. from Tulane in May, 1962. 1956 \960 Joseph Phelps McAllister, BTP, has Albert Earl Elmore, ATO, and Mary a son, John Lawrence, born April 28 Wallace Hollingsworth were married in Nashville. February 3 in Folkston, Georgia. She Robert Mason Murray, Jr., SAE, was was graduated from Birmingham- married June 29 to Norene La Follette Southern College. He was graduated Morris in Knoxville, Tennessee. She with a B.A. degree in English from was graduated from the University of Millsaps College. They are both teach- Tennessee. They will be at home in ing in Titusville, Florida. Nashville where he is connected wiih Parker F. Enwright, SN, is assistant the Metropolitan Welfare Commission. dean of men at the University of Pitts- The Rev. Alfred H. Smith, Jr., BTP, burgh. has a daughter, Deborah Virginia, born The Rev. Paul D. Goddard, BTP, is on May 8 in Fairbanks, Alaska. He the new assistant minister of St. John's is at St. Timothy's Mission, Tanacros-;. Church, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, fol- 1957 lowing theological studies at the Gen- M. Dickinson Bransford, PDT, has n eral Seminary. Last summer was spent fourth son, Christopher Dudley, born in Costa Rica at a mission. on June 7 in Nashville. Robert Lee Haden, Jr., ATO, was Quincey C. Ayres died in May. 1958 married June 4 to Mary Anne Barnes Robert G. Hooker, PGD, has a son, Easterling in Columbia, South Carolina. Marshall Craig, born May 10 in Hous- She is a graduate of the University of ton. South Carolina. He is a student at the Lawrence Ralph Isacksen, ATO, was Virginia Seminary. married and has two children, Mary married on June 22 in St. Mark's Epis- Bruce S. Keenan, ATO, is president Louise, born March 19, 1962, and Bruce copal Church, Islip, Long Island, to Lu- of this year's senior medical class at Stone, born May 4, 1963. Lt. Frederic A. McNeil, cinda Amelia Dost of Smithtown. the University of Pennsylvania. He is (jg) ATO, Orlando Wemple Lyle, Jr., SN, spent U. S. Naval Reserve, has been on south- the summer at the University of Colo- ern patrol with the Atlantic fleet out of rado in the department of physics. He Key West. He served a year on board r rederick M. "Caesar" Mor- expects to transfer to the Air Force the U. S. Hartley. He came to Sewa- '17, Weapons Laboratory in New Mexico in ris, has written a letter to his nee in June on his way to the west the fall. classmates about Sewanee-in-the- coast where he will be aide and flag lieutenant to the commandant of th-:- Arthur L. Speck, DTD, received an Will. It deserves to be quoted. M.D. from the University of Texas in 9th Naval district. "Some people," he says, "put June. He and his wife, Nancy Lee Charles Austin Powell, DTD, has off making their wills. It brings Carter, have a child a year old. leceived a Woodrow Wilson Terminal Harrison R. Steeves, III, PDT, re- up the unpleasant thought of Doctoral Fellowship (the second for Se- ceived his Ph.D. from the University of death. This brings to my mind," wanee), and continues his Carnegv; grant the University of Oregon. Virginia, in June. 1963. says Morris, "our old professor at 2nd Lt. Halsey Werlein, ATO, is B. Walter Wilder, ATO, has a son, Tabby Xauts, who could find now at Ft. Benning, Georgia, in the Steven Todd, born June 28. He is now humor in the unlikely Office of Advanced Studies, U. S. Army most assistant director of admissions at Se- Infantry School. He plans to study- places. Speaking of curious wanee. philosophy at the University of Munich Latin expressions, he came up 1961 Lt. Harry Brown Bainbrido:, after he leaves the Army in September. with—Memento Mori—remem- (jg) The Rev. J. Robert Wright, BTP, is III, USNR, BTP, was married June 30 ber death. Literal translation, re- returning to Oxford University to com- to Katherine Lawrence Turnbull in plete his doctorate which he began on member to die. Wilmington, Delaware. The couple will a Fulbright Fellowship. He was grad- "Having turned seventy my- live in Norfolk, Virginia. William O. Britt, KA, and his wife, uated from General Theological Semi- self—the Biblical three score nary with the degree of S.T.B. cuv. Judy, now live in Nashville, Tennessee, years and ten— I realize that, if laude and awarded the Alumni Prize where he is employed by Genesco. They I have left any important thing in ecclesiastical history and the Sutton were married in Sewanee in February. Prize for most valuable S.T.B. thesis. undone, I must remember to do David A. Elliott, ATO, has a third 1959 it now. I had occasion last win- child, Duncan Rawlings, born on May Lt. C. D. Cooper. S. 24, joining David Augustus, IV, three, (jg) U. Navy, ter to revise my will and I named BTP, is stationed on Formosa, Repub- and Cynthia Street, one. David is affili- Sewanee in it. . . . Each of us lic of China. ated with Meyer and Rosenbaum, Inc., should give this matter a Benjamin Bernard Dunlap, Jr., KA, thought insurance agency in Meridian, Missis- was married June 8 to Anne Johnson now." sippi. Boyd in Columbia, South Carolina, The new alumni vice-president Frank Paul Inscho was married De- where he taught last semester at the cember 27. 1962, to Barbara Sue Pickel for bequests is Frederick R. University of South Carolina. in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. He teaches Freyer, '29. His address is Anthony C. Gooch, KS. was married 743 at Princeton High School in Prince May 27 to Elizabeth Melissa Ivanoff. in Jeronimo Drive, Coral Cables, ton, New Jersey. This summer war. Belmont, Massachusetts. He was award- Florida. He succeeded James his third and her second in the Sewa- ed the Senior Prize at nee Institute of Science and Mathe- New York Uni- Moody, Jr.. 42. There is no versity's law school and has a two- matics. more important office on the year Ford Foundation fellowship for Lt. Robert Craig Kneisly, USMC, Alumni Council. study in Common Market legal pro- KA, and Margaret Jeanne Spruiell were blems. ABC married June 22 in Leeds, Alabama.

August 196" Charles M. Seymour, in, was mar- ried in December, 1962, to Helen De- 3n jfflemortam Ritter of Glen Rock, New Jersey. Both Dr. Roland K. Smith, '00, died in work in the registrar's office at Colum- in Charleston, South Carolina. bia University. June He practiced in Charleston, in Riceboro, 1963 Georgia, and Savannah and Bluffton, Nathaniel Ingraham Ball, III, KA, South Carolina until 1962. Survivors was married June 1 to Jane Hamer are a son and a grandson. Brooks in Charleston, South Carolina. The Rev. Lyttleton E. Hubard, '07, She attended the University of South died June 7 at the home of his sister in Carolina, where he is also a student Hampden-Sydney, Virginia. He was in the School of Business Administra- rector of St. John's Church, Newark, tion. Jersey, for thirty-six years prior W. Philip Brooke, ATO, has a New to his retirement in 1949. He is also daughter, Ann Amelia, born at Sewa- survived by a brother, three nieces and nee on May 19. Richard Stockton Brush, PGD, and three nephews. Dr. J. Travis, '09, died 18 at Ann Belin Kane were married June 11 W. May his in Grafton, Virginia. in Nashville. home West He began his medical practice there in 1910 Ewing E. Carruthers, KS, is the au- He is survived by his wife. thor of a poem, "My Father's Shadow" Quincy C. Ayres, '12, KA, a graduate which was published in the Spring is- of the University of Mississippi and sue of the Sewanee Review. He is now processor of agricultural engineering on the staff of the Nashville Tennes- Ed. Forstner Studios sean. and patent manager of the Iowa State MRS. ERVIN HAYNE SHUMATE, JR. John Derr Patterson, PGD, and Peg- University Research Foundation, died in May. He specialized in soil and water gy Louise Estes were married in June Possibly the first College Summer conservation, the author of books, in Uvalde, Texas. They are both grad- was School romance to blossom into a wed- bulletins, technical articles, and uates of the University of Texas and and ding was that of Sarah Heath McCrady, listed in American Men Science. reside in Houston. was of SS'61 and '62, to Hayne Shumate, A'57, Scott Stephen Rathman was married Survivors are his widow, Anne, a son SS'62, of Fountain Inn, South Carolina. and daughters. June 11 to Margaret Diane Finney at two Mrs. Shumate is the daughter of Vice- Elliott D. Evins, '26, died at his Otey Memorial Church in Sewanee. home Chancellor and Mrs. Edward McCrady. in Tompoc, California on February 5, They will live in San Francisco, where The groom's father is a former com- of heart attack. retired from he will teach school. a He had mandant of the Sewanee Military Acad- Webb Lindsley Wallace, PDT, was the army after twenty years of service. emy and Hayne taught at SMA this He had never married. married in June to Carol Ann Donno- summer. The wedding was on August Herbert Eustis, Jr., '28, died hue in Perkins Chapel, Southern Meth- ATO, 15 in All Saints' Chapel. in his sleep at his home in Greenville, odist University. She was a June 19. is survived by his wife, a Warner M. Montgomery, Jr., KA, and graduate of SMU. He will begin grad- May He daughter, and a son. of his bro- his wife, Nonie Trexler, are in the uate studies at Stanford University this Two thers are alumni, Harold, '37 and Or- Peace Corps and are working at Mc- fall. '35. Kean Leprosy Hospital in Chiengmai, 1964 vtlle Frank Glen, '30, KA, died April 17 in Thailand. Dwight E. Ogier, Jr., SAE, has a California. been for George Henry Roerig, KA, was mar- daughter, Robin Courtney, born April Burlingame, He had years an overseas pilot with Pan- ried July 3 to Patricia Gene Gabriel 28 in Jacksonville, Florida. many American. is survived by Mrs. Glen in Coral Gables, Florida. She attended Lidia Ester, a second daughter, was He William S. Jordan, '30, KS, died April the University of Miami. George will born to Onell Soto on June 28. illness. had return to the University of Miami in Robert Vernon Weston, ATO, was 17 after many years of He retired from the city engineer's office the fall for a degree in industrial en- married July 21, 1962, to Stephanie Ann in Miami. is survived by Mrs. Jor- gineering. Stull of Asheville, North Carolina. He Milhado Lee Shaffer, Jr., SAE, and dan, the former Mary Katherine Rog- Marie Therese Lapeyre were married ers of Sewanee. in May in New Orleans. The couple Hugh C. Manford, '32, SN, died early reside at 7025 Freret Street. in June. He is survived by his wife. James R. Stow, BTP, will attend the He was city marshal of Missouri City, European Institute of Business in Paris Texas. on a Rotary Foundation Fellowship. He The Rev. William Landless Shannon, received his M.BA. in finance from the '42, died April 7 in Casa Grande, Ari- University of Pennsylvania in May. zona. He received his B.S. from Okla- 1962 homa A. and M. and his B.D. from Yale. 1962. Edward C. Edgin is an intern in the He retired from the ministry in Master of Arts in Teaching program at He served a number of parishes in Johns Hopkins. Texas, California and Arizona. He is Robert Keith Goodman was married survived by his wife, a son and a daughter. November 2, 1962, to Esther Jean Ste- phens of Sewanee, at Christ Episcopal Thomas K. Ware, '42, ATO, died May Church, in Tracy City with the Rev. 28 at his country place in Connecticut. William L. Sharkey, '60, officiating. He was vice-president and director of They live in Rogersville, Tennessee, an investment firm, Clark, Dodge and where he works with the Tennessee Di- Company of New York. He was a vision of Forestry. member of Phi Beta Kappa and an William Kumpe Porter, ATO, mar- alumnus of the Harvard School of ried Ruth Davenport King on July 5 Business, and was one of Sewanee's at Alliance, Ohio. She was graduated most devoted alumni in the New York from St. John's College and attended area. Survivors include Mrs. Ware and a daughter. the Katharine Gibbs School. He is cur- rently serving in the six months' re- James M. Fourmy, Jr., '48, KA, died his in serve program of the U. S. Marine suddenly at home Louisiana in Corps and expects to return to Se- July. The Rev. Frank Robert, '41, con- wanee. JOHN W. WOODS ducted the services.

14 The Sewanee News The V-G on the Christian Gentleman

He is tender toward the bashful, gentle towards the distant,

and merciful towards the absurd. . . .

(continued from page 2) evil which he dare not say out. From a long-sighted prudence, he observes the maxim of the ancient sage, became in a significant way members of his household. that we should ever conduct ourselves towards our The lady of the house felt responsible for their man- enemy as if friend. has ners and their morals just as she did for those of he: he were one day to be our He too much good sense to be affronted at insults, he is own children. It was she who saw that the new boys too well employed to injuries, too indo- paid their party calls and observed the usual ameni- remember and dames of that lent to bear malice. ("Indolent" here must be taken ties. It is told of one of the grandes — period that she always secretly arranged to have the in its medical sense "not giving pain"—rather than its pejorative sense of "lazy.") is patient, forbear- boy' with the poorest table manners sit nearest her, so He that he could see what she did. And then when she ing, and resigned, on philosophical principles; he sub- mits to pain, because it is inevitable, to bereavement, felt it necessary to correct him, she accomplished it by it is destiny. If controversy a magnificently tactful indirection. By private agree- because his he engages in ment with her own son, she always corrected the latter of any kind, his disciplined intellect preserves him from the blundering discourtesy of better, less edu- for what the stranger had really done. Her son, of though course, never gave her away, but accepted her rebukes cated minds; who, like blunt weapons, tear and hack instead of cutting clean, who mistake the point in ar- as if he had actually deserved them. The stranger was thus never embarrassed, but had full opportunity to gument, waste their strength on trifles, misconceive learn what he should and shouldn't do. their adversary, and leave the question more involved Though we cannot house our present student body than they find it. He may be right or wrong in his in faculty homes, we do continue to have ladies living opinion, but he is too clearheaded to be unjust; he is in the dormitories and sitting at the heads of tables as simple as he is forcible, and as brief as he is decisive. in the dining room. Nowhere shall we find greater candour, consideration, Among the books which many generations of Sewa- indulgence: he throws himself into the minds of his opponents, nee students have been required to read is John Henry he accounts for their mistakes. He knows the its Newman's Idea of a University; and the description weakness of human reason as well as strength, of a gentleman contained therein has been the subject its province and its limits." of perennial discussion and debate. I am sure that it In his preface Newman says, "some may anticipate has influenced many Sewanee men immeasurably; and that an academical system, formed upon my model, will result in better it seems to me worth while to quote a considerable por- nothing or higher than in the pro- duction of that variety tion of it here. The comments in parentheses are my antiquated of human nature own. and remnant of feudalism, as they consider it, called 'a gentleman.' '' "It is almost a definition of a gentleman to say he And indeed, the Irish to whom the above is one who never inflicts pain." (One professor sug- discourse was addressed, did not welcome his attempt gested that Newman should have said "never inflicts to "turn out an Irish replica of the English gentleman." But what I want to say is that whether it be an anti- pain unintentionally" 1 but I have always argued that would be said more in admiration of "savoir faire" than quated variety of human nature and remnant of feu- of charity.) "He has his eyes on all his company; he dalism or not, a gentleman is exactly what we do want to is tender toward the bashful, gentle towards the dis- turn out at Sewanee—an educated Christian gentle- tant, and merciful towards the absurd; he can recollect man. I to whom he is speaking; he guards against unseason- do not mean, of course, that we guarantee to pro- able allusions, or topics which may irritate; he is sel- duce unblemished examples without fail. We fail as dom prominent in conversation, and never wearisome. all mortals must. The ideal described by Newman is He makes light of favours while he does them, and obviously unattainable, as is Christ's command that love seems to be receiving when he is conferring. He never we our neighbors as ourselves. What is impor- speaks of himself except when compelled, never de- tant is that Sewanee has always recognized the proper fends himself by a mere retort, he has no ears for goal toward which to strive, and' keeps that objective steadfastlv slander or gossip, is scrupulous in imputing motives to in sight. those who interfere with him, and interprets everything for the best. He is never mean or little in his disputes, never takes unfair advantage, never mistakes person- &&4**jtkj&^ ^&r alities or sharp sayings for arguments, or insinuates

August 1963 15 to ^ A THIS A ATTACV^ S ^VJ

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n//s 7£//*< November 19< Sewanee News u SEWANEE. TENNES5EE

mni Council

38 Course

THE TEN MILLION DOLLAR CAMPAIGN SPREADS OUT

THE Sewan ALUMNI ENTER NEWS CAMPAIGN

The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the ASSOCIATED ALUMNI Under the Chairmanship of President John P. of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennes- Guerry, the Alumni Council met at Sewanee see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee. on the weekend of October 4 and 5 for a com- prehensive review of Campaign plans involving the Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35 alumni. Campaign Co-Chairman Cecil Woods and Bishop Frank A. Juhan outlined the steps by which Issue Editor Edith Whitesell alumni will participate as workers and donors. Associates Peggy Ervin, Elizabeth N. Chitty The first phase of the Campaign is well under way. Art: Jean Tallec Major Gifts, those of $10,000 or more, have been the

prime concern of the National Committee. It is now time for the alumni to organize themselves into Area CONTENTS Committees, with the objective of raising gifts in lesser amounts. A new category called Special Gifts has been 4 Computer Widens Horizons established—those ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 5 Library Growing each. Obtaining this kind of gift will require a highly 6 Alumni Council personal approach on the part of top leadership ap- 7 Testimonial Dinner for Alex Guerry pointed by alumni in local areas. A system of team captains and committeemen will be utilized to solicit 1 Books the remainder of alumni, with a pledge of $150.00 over 12 Memorials three years expected as a minimum from each alumnus. 13 St. Luke's Day This amounts to less than $1.00 a week. 14 On the Mountain Campaign headquarters at 928 Volunteer Building in 15 The College 1963 Chattanooga will be responsible for staffing the opera- 20 Summer School tion, with the Sewanee Development Office and Alumni 21 With Sewanee Clubs Office acting as resource personnel and advisers. 23 Class Distinctions Twenty key cities of heavy alumni concentration 30 In Memoriam have been selected for organization before December 31 Where Are They Now? 51. Among these, representatives were present at the

October 5 meeting from Atlanta, Nashville, Chatta- nooga, Memphis, Birmingham, Houston, Dallas, November 1963 Volume 29 Number 4 Jacksonville, Charlotte and Shreveport. Group officers in Charleston, Columbia, Louisville, San Antonio, New Orleans, Miami, St. Louis, Tampa, Little Rock and Jackson, Mississippi, have been approached since Oc-

tober 5, to determine the possibility of organizing area ON THE COVER—G. Cecil committees. Woods, '21, and J. Alberl Following the organization of the twenty cities, it is Woods, '18, co-chairmen of the Ten Million Dollar planned to extend the opportunity to participate in Campaign, go over the ge- the Campaign to all alumni and all friends of the Uni- ographical apportionment of versity prior to Commencement, 1964. calls with Bishop Frank A. central theme of the presentation and discussions Juhan, '11, director of de- A velopment. on October 5 was that a university is often judged by the extent of alumni participation in a capital cam- paign. Cecil Woods pointed out that corporations and foundations often use this as a guide in determining Photo by Chattanooga Ntws-Ftet Press what they will contribute for capital purposes.

1 November 1963 NEW TOOL

m m T hen the University acquired an IBM 1620 %/V computer late in September it would seem " * that it had enrolled the ideal student; but it

lurns out that not only can it remember only 20,000 bits of information at a time, far less than the human

train, but it talks back.

It can play blackjack, and this is the favorite demon- stration program of Dr. William T. Allen of the physics department, the sleek active baby's godfather. First Professor Allen puts on the proper tape and presses a

number of buttons, then the lights blink on and off in approved science fiction fashion. "It's reading now,"' Dr. Allen explains. "These are the rules of the game."

When the machine has read its fill, its typewriter starts

typing out instructions unaided. This is all electronic, of course, but we on the humanistic side prefer to be- lieve in something more understandable, like ghosts. Coulson "Clear all typewriter stops," the machine tells us. "Set Professor William T. Allen, Bob Stanford with the 1620 tabs at following stop points. SWi must be off." And

so on. When the computer tells Dr. Allen to push —that is, it may take seconds instead of thousandths start, he pushes start, and it deals cards by typing out of a second to do an operation that would occupy a

their description (we got 5-D and Q-H). Then it asks man for months—but it can do almost everything they

if you want another card. We said yes and got 10-D, can.

Lust. The computer got a total of 18 and won that The possibilities of what it will do are limitless. It

round. We owe it a dollar. is already in active use in the advanced physics and

If you don't answer "yes" or "no" when it wants chemistry courses. When we happened in two senior

to know if you want another card, but respond with students were taking fifty measurements of one sample

some whimsy, it gives you three chances to mind. The ol radioactive material, computing mean and standard

first time it says politely, "Please enter yes or no." The deviation. Dr. Allen is working out some research,

second time it firms up. "Enter yes or no, forget the relativity problems involving matrix manipulations

rest of the jazz." If you persist in deviation it tells which have never been fully investigated. you, "Last chance. It is either yes or no." Once more It is expected that many departments—mathematics, and you get, "You have had it." A red light goes on, languages, philosophy, unpredictable ones—will find and the machine won't play. that the computer can help them solve problems or

But if you conform, your tractable playmate will go perform otherwise impossibly tedious tasks. The first

on playing forever, or until you order it to forget it and step, Dr. Allen says, is to teach the use of the computer do something else. It automatically shuffles after every to the students and get a number of them versatile : n

blackjack, and remembers everything it has read in its programming; then they can help anyone who wants

myriad-magnetized-doughnuts of a mind. to use it. It is intended as a university tool, not just a The computer, used 21 months and reconditioned, physics department adjunct. A theoretical study of

cost the University $23,000 plus #85 a month rent for the logic of computers is an area in which students from

a reader and punch which will no longer be used if a the sciences and humanities can meet on common

card-system accessory is acquired, as is hoped. There ground. The professorial imagination is in for some

is also a $1,000 a year maintenance contract. The 1620 stretching in seeing ways in which the computer can

is somewhat slower than the largest digital computers help push back horizons in any field at all.

1 Can you read this ;

• ••••• < • • • • • '•••••••••••••••••••A ••• • •• • • #• ••

>••••••••••••• • • • ••• • • • •• •••• •• ••••• • •• •• ••• • • ••••• • • • The Sewanee News Staff Changes

T he new assistant director of admissions is Byron Walter Wilder, '60, who will be remembered as the star tailback of 1958, Sewanee's last undefeated football season. He has been teaching and coaching in the Sneeds, Florida, High School. A new position, administrative assistant to the Dean of the School of Theology, will be filled by the Rev. John M. Gessell. In addition to a part-time professor- ship in pastoral theology, Dr. Gessell will concern him-

self with gifts, conferences, St. Luke's alumni activities, DR. ERIC NAYLOR, '58 DR. BRINLEY RHYS and administration of the clinical training program. Four professors in the College attained Ph.D. degrees this The University Library has added a new man, Steven year: Charles Baird and Henry Smith in forestry, Brinley Rhys in English, and Eric Naylor in Spanish. This brings W. Gahagan, Jr., of Metairie, Louisiana, who comes to 43 the number of faculty members who have the Ph.D. from the Louisiana State University library. He will or its equivalent. be in charge of serials acquisitions and the organization of government documents. The theology library will have a special assistant, Rev. Frank Robert, '41, who Library Looks Ahead while serving as a parish clergyman has been taking library science at Louisiana State University and plans Library has announced that its acquisitions The to do theological library work after his year of ap- for the past year were more than double the pre- prenticeship under T. Edward Camp at Sewanee. Mr. vious year's—a jump from 4,280 to 8,985 volumes. \s Robert's employment was made possible by a gift from the prospect of the new Jessie Ball duPont Library Mrs. Calvin K. Schwing, whose late husband was a building affords hope of where to put it all, the goal is member of the class of 192 1, and who in her own right 20,000 volumes a year until the collection numbers is a library authority (see p. to). 300,000 to 350,000. Considering that the amount of published information in every field is doubling every ten years, no library plan can be too ambitious. Although the numbers and dollars involved are be- ginning to sound beyond the specific imagining of people with the sort of mind that can deal with num- bers only in moderation, it should be hastily said that a library is one place where a little goes a long way. People of large means find a library an ideal vehicle tor large purposes. People of small means find that

I book can be an investment that may pay off a thousandfold, or rather incalculably, in human divi- dends. A number of small memorial gifts have greatly enriched the library's collections over the years. Each book carries a descriptive bookplate, so that the per- son remembered has a material immortality as well as a renewed life of the spirit when each student who reads the book is touched by who knows what wingbrush ef forever. Larger gifts are used for larger purchases, generally.

'J his year's doubling which has set off professorial hearts to extravagant joy was mainly made possible by foundation gifts—notably from I*. S. Steel and Esso. A gift of stock from Mrs. George P. Egleston bought the first books for the new building. To be purchased i>ve two important reference sets, English Catalogue i\ Books, 1801-iQjQ (2iv.) and Nouvelle Biographic

Generate (46V.), one of the most comprehensive Keatins international biographical encyclopedias published. Librarians John Hodges, William Harkins

November 1963 Alumni Shape Plans In a typical area with three hundred prospects there are needed one general chairman, two vice-chairmen, The basic document for the alumni effort (Phase seven team captains, and thirty-five committeemen III) of the Campaign is now available. It was Vone for every six or eight prospects). Prospects for produced by the Chattanooga staff under the each city will be supplied by headquarters. Initial direction of the co-chairmen Albert and Cecil Woods. steps are to:

The 25-pagc, red-bound manual is called "Handbook 1. Review lists and set geographical boundaries of for Area Chairmen." It spells out, step-by-step, the soliciting area; procedures for local organization, showing precisely 2. Set size of committee structure needed;

what should be accomplished at the first organizational 3. Select and assemble local executive committee;

meeting, the second, and the third. 4. Select and assemble team captains for organiza- The responsibility for the "Alumni and Friends tional meeting; and

Effort"—Phase III— is in the hands of the president 5. Follow reporting system in handbook. and two vice-presidents of the Associated Alumni Help from Headquarters John Guerry, '49, Dudley Fort, '34, and Sperry Lee, '43) who will concentrate in early stages on twenty J\t every stage in the organization, assistance will be

key cities and areas, representing about one-third of made available from Chattanooga. Preparation of the the alumni and friends. local "Gift Table"—showing how many gifts are needed These cities are Atlanta, Birmingham, Charleston, in each category to attain quota—and actual instruc- Charlotte, Chattanooga, Columbia, Dallas, Houston, t : on sessions for the workers will be staffed at the Jackson, Jacksonville, Little Rock, Louisville, Memphis, proper time.

Miami, Nashville, New Orleans, San Antonio, St. Louis, Raising ten million dollars is big business and there Shreveport, and Tampa. Alumni in other cities are will be nothing slapdash about the materials, the plan- invited to join the Campaign by writing Sewanee ning, or the execution of the Campaign. Headquarters, 928 Volunteer Building, Chattanooga, which coordinates all phases of the campaign. Timing Council Action

I t is hoped that all cities above will be organized by \J ne jury capable of deciding relative values of the end of the year and assignments made. Target for a college curriculum would be the alumni. Presumably completion of solicitations is March 29, Easter Day. these former sudents would be able to look back upon The three months remaining until Commencement 196^ their formative stages and spot those facets of will be used for covering other areas and "cleanup" their total education which seemed to possess in thee in the key cities. perspective of years a special value. Prospects With this in mind the Alumni Council in 1962 ap P pointed a committee to study the traditions of the A ersons or corporations thought able to give $10,000 University and their value from the viewpoint of the

01 more (major gifts prospects) will be removed from alumnus. Former Regent R. Morey Hart, '34, whose

the assignment cards of the Phase III organization for son Ricky is now a junior in the college, is chairman of handling by the National Committee (now consisting the Traditions Committee. This resolution passed ct eighty men). Those "rated" between $1,000 and unanimously. $10000 (special gifts prospects) also will be handled Because of our devotion to our Alma Mater, our by a separate organization. The Phase III effort then gratefulness for what it has meant to us, and our will be directed toward that larger number of alumni interest and concern for its future, we respectfully submit the following statement: and friends not in the major or special gifts categories.

It is construed that anyone interested at all can give or 1. That the word Christian is co-equal with the pledge $1 per week, $50 per year, or $150 for the word Education in the concept of the University of the South, and that adherence to the require- Campaign. ments of both is the responsibility of each mem- Face-to-Face ber of the Administration, the Faculty and the Student Body.

1 he Alumni and Friends effort is predicated on 2. That those traditions, customs and rules of con- personal discussions about Sewanee between a member duct which have been adopted and which are con- sidered valid and meaningful should be enforced of the soliciting organization and the prospect. Many and not compromised. hundreds of volunteers will be needed to make the calls. 3. conduct, tradition Quotas for cities will be negotiated after consultation That the rules of and customs should be made clear to and accepted by all prior and rating of prospects. to their affiliation with the University.

The Sewanee News Church Support

R, Morey Hart, '34, is serving his second term as alumni Vice-President for Church Support. In his re- port to the Alumni Council, Hart stressed the impor- tance of this type of dependable, unrestricted income "irom the grass roots" available for operating expenses. The goal, #1 per communicant per year, will bring Coulson ^400,000 per year, equal to the income on $10,000,000 Left to right: Irl R. Walker, Jr., George Clarke of Memphis, of endowment. At present the budgeted income and and Dudley Fort of Nashville at Alumni Council meeting. offerings from parishes and dioceses add up to about

RESOLVED, That a copy of this statement be half the desired figure. Tennessee is thus far the sent to the Board of Trustees, the Board of Re- only diocese consistently to exceed the goal. gents, the Vice-Chancellor and the Editor of the Sewanee Purple, and also that this statement be Hart outlined plans for an alumnus in each diocese made a part of the Minutes of this Alumni Coun- to serve as a keyman to work with the diocesan trus- cil Meeting of October 5, 1963. tees. The essence of the problem is to get Sewanee's A.N articulate presentation of the needs of Sewanee message effectively presented to some 1,500 vestries

Military Academy is being made by its president, B. and councils. Very few groups will decline, experience Humphreys McGee, and by its national chairman for has shown. When the Sewanee movie or Sewanee the "SAIA Centennial Fund," Temple Tutwiler of slides-and-record are heard by a vestry, the opportunity Birmingham. The first direct result of their enthusi- of their church's educational center becomes clear to asm has been the adoption by the regents at their June most groups of laymen. The organizational problem, meeting of a support program which envisions a low- however, is formidable. Alumni are needed who are pressure appeal for three years and then a major effort willing to speak for Sewanee to Episcopal vestries.

( 1966-68) at the conclusion of the University's Ten Write Mr. Hart at 402 First Bank Building, Pensa- Million Dollar Campaign. cola, Florida.

At the October 5 meeting the following was adopted:

BE IT RESOLVED, That the Alumni Council of the University of the South hereby commends the work Regions of the S.M.A. Alumni organization in its past per- formance, and lends its moral support to endeavors to bring the Academy into balance with the other ice-President for branches of the University, hoping that this can be v Regions Dudley C. Fort, '34, done in the near future. made one of the most important reports at the fall Alumni Council meeting. Fort said that the Sewanee Classes Clubs would shoulder principal responsibility for Phase III of the Ten Million Dollar Campaign. T he Vice-President for Classes W. Sperry Lee, Fort, who has been instrumental in the activities of '43, presided at the Alumni Council luncheon Saturday, two of Sewanee's most productive groups (Atlanta and October 5. Using the theme "Keep contemporaries Nashville), made three vital points: communicating," he emphasized the supporting role of 1. The "Sewanee Club Kit" is a must for local c'ass officers in the campaign. Ideally every class since organizations, with its ideas and suggestions, with its 1920 should have an editor and a secretary to assist specific information about the services furnished by the president. To date about fifteen have made these the alumni office at Sewanee. appointments. The class president directs class activi- 2. ties, organizes reunions, and is responsible for cohesion The new "Handbook for Area Chairmen" is now of the class. ready and will give step-by-step instructions for Phase The editor assembles information for and distributes III, the solicitation of those alumni and friends not in class letters, keeping contemporaries in touch with each ''Major Gifts" or "Special Gifts" categories. other. The secretary is essentially a financial secretary, 3. Activity in twenty cities is an immediate goal but keeping track of gifts made by classmates, recognizing activity in other areas is waiting only for local leader- particularly generous gifts and encouraging others. ship. Volunteer efforts are invited and will be promptly The alumni office at Sewanee furnishes mechanical aids assisted from Chattanooga and Sewanee. Questions where needed. If an editor prepares a book about a may also be directed to Fort at 4109 Hillsboro, Nash- class the alumni office will print and distribute it. ville.

November 1963 Guerry Feted At Testimonial Dinner

took a Newcomen Dinner to reveal details of Itone of ihe remarkable careers in Sewanee alumni

circles. It was J. Albert Woods' painstaking re- search, produced in the introduction of his honoree, which acquainted his fellow citizens with what Alex- ander Guerry, Jr., has been doing these last forty-five years—and why.

The Newcomen Society in North America is an organization which for two score years has de-

voted itself to research in and recognition of American business, industry, and education—the material progress of mankind as distinguished from political'progress.

Alex Guerry, Jr., was principal speaker at a formal ALEX AND JOHN GUERRY affair attended by three hundred and fifty business and civic leaders in Chattanooga including three dozen who Legion of Merit, the Distinguished Flying Cross with came from all parts of the country to pay tribute to four clusters, and the Air Medal with two clusters. his leadership among what he described as "small" companies of the proprietary drug business. His ad- As vestryman in two parishes, as member of the dress, a fifty-page book, has been printed to become Bishop and Council, and as two-time president of part of the archives of the society. Episcopal laymen in Tennessee, he exerted leadership Woods recalled that he had known four generations in the church of which his grandfather was a bishop. of the Guerry family, including the chddren of the His civic service includes presidencies of the United establish, the Chattanooga speaker. Of Alex, Jr., he said, "At an age when most Fund, which he helped and men are just beginning to assume positions of great Tennis Patrons Association. leadership, our guest of honor has a record of ac- He is or has been a director of the Chamber of complishment behind him that would more than satisfy Commerce, the Chattanooga Manufacturers Associa- most men." tion, the American National Bank and Trust Company, Woods related how Guerry had been valedictorian and the Interstate Life and Accident Insurance Com- at Baylor School in 1935 and at Sewanee in 1939, re- pany. He has been chairman of the Community ceiving his master's degree in business and economics Chest drive and numerous other organizations of civc ai Chapel Hill in 1941. While at Sewanee his honors significance. He is a trustee of Baylor School, the Uni- included Phi Beta Kappa presidency of fraternity and versity of Chattanooga, and the University of the o! class. South. The introducer commented on the tennis tradition In 1945 he became assistant secretary of the Chatta- in the family. Alex, Jr., has been Tennessee junior nooga Medicine Company founded in 1879 by Zeboim champion, Tennessee inter-collegiate champion twice, Cartter Patten, his mother's great-uncle. It was the Tennessee men's doubles champion, Chattanooga city nephew of that Patten, Zeboim Charles Patten, who tennis champion ten times, and city doubles champion bequeathed to the University of the South a trust fund, eleven times. Woods also mentioned that Alex's son still growing, whose value at present exceeds $750,000. Zan recently won the national under-fourteen tennis The original founder's son was the Z. Cartter Patten title. who received the honorary degree Doctor of Civil Law

In World War II, Alex flew 123 combat missions ; n at Commencement in 1962 in recognition of his record the Pacific, becoming a lieutenant-colonel at twenty- as Tennessee historian, state Senator, and generous s'x, commanding four squadrons. He won presidential participant of Sewanee's whole development program. unit citation with four clusters, the Silver Star, the Among the best known products of the Chattanooga

The Sewanee News Medicine Company are Black Draught, Cardui, Men- thacol, Soltice, Bufferin, and Rolaids. During World A.tlanta was a happy selection for Demonstration War II, the firm manufactured practically all the City for the Ten Million Dollar Campaign. When aiomatic spirits of ammonia used by the U. S. Army alumni officers were seeking a Sewanee Club in which and more K-rations than any other firm in the country, Phase III could be launched as an example for other borne 105 million meals. Five times it received the Sewanee Clubs, Atlanta was a logical choice.

Navy "E" for excellence. President Kenneth Kinnett, '56, succeeds a long list Probably the most outstanding characteristic of the of able officers who have made this key city the most firm was the way in which its successive heads furn- vigorous of all in support of the University. Atlanta ished civic and philanthropic leadership in Chattanooga. led in giving Episcopal laymen who had not attended At one time during the depression when "good busi- Sewanee the opportunity of serving their Church's ness" would have dictated a reduction in community educational center, electing three non-alumni to the giving, president Patten approved the usual generous club presidency. Atlanta sponsors its own scholarship gift saying, "They need it worse than we do." award, makes its Founders' Day banquet and its Alex succeeded to the presidency of the Medicine Christmas party events of social significance in the city. Company in 1958, and his brother John recently re- Atlanta pioneered admission of ladies to full member- signed as vice-president of the American National Bamc ship in Club activity. in Chattanooga to become secretary for the family Kinnett reported to the Alumni Council some of the experiences in organizing business. John is national president of the Associated encountered the alumni and Aumni. friends for Phase III. The new "Handbook for Area Chairmen" is a product of Atlanta's leadership. A highlight of the dinner at the Read House was the introduction by Coca-Cola's DeSales Harrison of the ladies connected with the business, among them Mrs. Alexander (Charlotte Patten) Guerry, wife of the late Vice-Chancellor of the University, Alex' father.

Ezzell Honored

1 nscription on a silver punch bowl presented at the recent Alumni Council meeting:

In appreciation for devoted service to the cause of higher education and for tireless zeal in his duties as national president of The Associated Alumni of the University of the South, the Alumni Council presents to JOHN MORAN EZZELL, '31 this tangible evidence of its thanks to him and to his partner Peggy. Congratulations! Retiring alumni president John Ezzell greets Sewanee, Tennessee. October 5, 1963 honorary alumnus Clarence Day of Columbus, Mississippi.

Left to right at Newcomen dinner speakers' table: Bishop Frank A. Juhan. J. Albert Woods, Alexander Guerry, Jr., DeSales Harrison, G. Cecil Woods, Dr. Edward McCrady.

November 1963 Books — a catholic bag

J ust out is Using Theological Books and Libraries, bv Ella V. Aldrich and Thomas Edward Camp. Ella V. Aldrich, who uses the maiden name under which she wrote the standard Using Books and Libraries (in its

fourth edition, 150,000 copies sold to date), is the widow of Calvin K. Schwing, '21. T. Edward Camo

is theological librarian of the University of the South. A pre-publication review by the Rev. Merrill A. Stevens, chaplain of the Episcopal Foundation at the University of Maryland, says: "I state categorically

that I fully intend to be among the first buyers of this

book. It is concise, ks clarity is beyond reproach and

its careful preparation is everywhere evident."

The chief of the Descriptive Cataloging Division of DR. MONROE K. SPEARS the Library of Congress, Lucile M. Morsch, says, "Con- Intellectual power matched gratulations on a beautiful job." The dean of Co- lumbia University's School of Library Service, Jack

Dalton, says, "I have learned a number of things I On October 3 1 the Oxford University Press published one of the significant books of the year. didn't know about types of material available to these

It was written by a Sewanee faculty member. Allen boys. And what a handsome format! . . . Another good job." Tate says Monroe K. Spears's The Poetry of W . H. Auden: The Disenchanted Island "is the best book A review by Decherd Turner, Jr., Librarian of the by anybody about a living poet. The immense versa- Perkins School of Theology of Southern Methodist

tility of this great poet has met its match in the scholar- University, says in part: "It provides a roadmap for ship and intellectual power of his critic." the beginner in theological education. And, if that beginner follows Aldrich-Camp, he will not be a be- Dr. Spears, professor of English in the college, and

ginner for long. . . . The writers have set the bibli- editor of The Sewanee Review from 1952 to 1961, has ography of theology in the wide context of the humani- also matched his large critical acumen and minutely ties, and have judiciously introduced a few of the highly accurate scholarship with readability. From the first critical theological tools." headpiece that informs us that Auden's favorite dish Using Theological Books and Libraries was published of literature in 1961 was an article on cleaning shrimps by Prentice-Hall, sells for $1.95, and may be ordered to the final indexed reference to "Yesierski, Ania" from the St. Luke's book store in Sewanee. (Auden wrote an introduction to his Red Ribbon on a

White Horse) the book is crammed with attractive bits. Auden helped, and Professor Spears has been able to lay at rest a number of hard-dying canards that the

[.oet, hitherto indifferent to what might be written about him, had allowed to be copied from one sup- posedly reliable source to another.

Dr. and Mrs. Spears were flown by the grateful Oxford Press to New York for a publication party, postponed until November 7 so that W. H. Auden could get there from Austria.

Monroe Spears is the editor, with H. Bunker Wright, of the two-volume Literary Works of Matthew Prior, also published by the Oxford University Press. He has already contracted for a third work under their im- print, this one to be on Interpreting modern poetry. The Poetry of W. H. Auden: The Disenchanted Island is on sale for $6.75 at all book stores. If they T. EDWARD CAMP

haven't got it they'll order it for you. A theological roadmap

10 The Sewanee News —

k

GANT GAITHER

4*~"1 'nimortauiEO GANT t-JATTHl-.W. A children's book jor adults only

glamorous visitor this summer was Gant Gai- A ther, '38, who spent a few days with his class- mate Col. Leslie McLaurin in his new house on Run- ning Knob Hollow lake. Gaither was on his way back home to Hollywood from a visit to his publisher. Obolensky, in New York. GIRARD BROWNLOW

Obolensky is bringing out Gant Gaither's first car- in time to liven Christmas. Sally Seal—the toon book pugs, Caligula and Poppeia (they are the subjects of gated Love Story H. I. H. the Grand Duch- vnexpur of his third cartoon book), and two parakeets, Money and ess Cod-Sardinska is a comedy of manners, Ed- of Penny. "That's family enough for me," he claims. wardian manners in the grand style, and its creator calls it a children's book for adults only. J\, publishing phenomenon of the sixties is the metro- second cartoon book. The Sleep-Ins and Outs, A politan magazine. There are thirty of them now It is scheduled probes the servant problem in America. burgeoning in larger cities and Sewanee is particularly for April of 1964. interested in two. One is the slick, svelte Saint Louis

Gant Gaither took up drawing just three years ago whose publisher and president is Girard Polk Brown-

as relaxation from the serious business of writing and low, Jr., '50, and the other is Nashville, of which Tup-

producing Broadway shows and then movies. He had per Saussy is an editor.

painted a little as a child, but not since. He went 10 Because St. Louis, Missouri, is one of the largest Hollywood two years ago under contract to Paramount cities in the twenty-one owning dioceses and because as an executive producer and proved to be the last of Brownlow joins one of Sewanee's most distinguished that breed. He made for them the Debbie Reynolds alumni classifications—the editor-publisher category picture, "My Six Loves." He now has an independent a salute is in order. company, Gant Gaither Productions, with Paramount The 74-page first issue breathes the luxury of the having first choice for distribution. His latest effort. times with interest in everything from the art gallery for which he was writer-producer, is "The Girl in the to the Playboy bunny. The ads are as interesting as the Blue Suit," a United Nations story. She falls in love features. The literate and lively journal promises with a delegate from the Middle East. patrons who write to 1212 Big Bend Boulevard that Gaither commutes between New York and Holly- they will hear more of mid-America's people, politics,

wood, where he has a home on the edge of a cliff above business, art, music, education, philosophy, fashion, The Strip, also above the smog. He lives on this history, and blueberry pie. Yearly subscription is mountain away from the Mountain with two Chinese £6.00. Our Vol. I, No. 1 is not for sale.

November 1963 I [ Coulsot:

Geza Zelenka puts finishing touches on the third choir window in All Saints' Chapel, completing the series on the life of Christ. The three high windows are the gift of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Little of New York in memory of Mrs. Little's three brothers, Marye Beattie Trezevant, an Academy alumnus; Stanley Hamilton Trezevant, '05; and Roy Hayne Trezevant. ^Cemorials

Several families, some by private fund raising efforts Greensboro, Alabama, is chairman for the Cobbs among their members, have established memorials in family project. All Saints' Chapel. The Bratton family designated one of the Bishops' Chairs in memory of Theodore Uewaneem alumni and friends in Greenville, Missis- Bratton, third Bishop of the Diocese of Mis- DuBose sippi, are planning a memorial scholarship fund at Se- sissippi. Members of the Green family similarly es- wanee for Herbert Lee Eustis, Jr., '28, ATO, who died tablished a memorial to the fourth Bishop of Missis- unexpectedly on May 19. Herbert was the older

sippi, William Mercer Green. Members of the McCradv brother of Orville B. Eustis, '35, ATO, and Harold family joined to make possible two of the academic Eustis, '37, ATO. windows. Three on the Epistle side are memorials to Attorney 0. Burrell McGee, Weinburg Building, three members of the Barrett family. Greenville, is chairman for the memorial effort. Pie recalls that Herbert said, "I owe more to Sewanee than Another family, famous in Sewanee history, is now any other group or institution." McGee feels that engaged in raising a memorial to their distinguished Eustis, for many years manager of the supply firm ancestor, the Rt. Rev. Nicholas Hamner Cobbs, first Farmers, Incorporated, was a splendid example of an Bishop of Alabama. As far as the Alumni Office is alumnus conscious of civic responsibility. Eustis was able to determine, more members of the Cobbs family an active Rotarian but was always particularly in- have enrolled as students at the University of the South terested in the work of St. James' Church, serving on than have members of any other family. The memorial the vestry for many years. will be the first clerestory window in the nave, on the "Everyone knew Herbert's word could be counted on. south side, above the Alabama flag. The cost of the His integrity set a high standard for business activity window is $10,000.. Editor Nicholas Hamner Cobbs of in this area," McGee said.

12 The Sewanee News umphs in the Nashville advertising world; Arthur ^Programs Chitty's "Tour of the Domain" with carillon back- ground, which now has a companion program covering

JL he public relations office was busy over the sum- new construction; and his reading of the perennially mer and early fall revising audio-visual material, and beautiful chapter on Sewanee from William Alexander is now in position to offer a fine range of program aids. Percy's Lanterns on the Levee.

'I he tapes for radio stations have been replaced or in A new program that should have wide and deep the case of two or three very popular items, updated. interest is a discussion of the nature of the Christian The slide show has been carefully overhauled and now college by Dean Robert S. Lancaster and Chaplain has an accompanying narration by Arthur Chitty on David B. Collins. This started out as a National

^ ii LP disc. The sacred music tapes for church use Christian College Day feature, but when the two men are being replaced as new material seems an improve- got together on this thought-provoking subject they ment over the old, and new offerings requested by said some things that anyone ought to be interested clergymen are being added. The general music tape in hearing any time, so it was added to the standing list, which overlaps the sacred music series to some list. extent, is in preparation. A new Christmas music program is ready this year.

The slide show is designed with the idea of intro- Its predecessor was played over forty-odd stations each ducing any type of audience to Sewanee. It supple- December and this one, technically at least, is the best ments the Southern-Bell-made color and sound movie yet. ''What's in the Name Sewanee," which stressed the lord grant and the current Ten Million Dollar Cam- paign, and hence may be too specialized for a group, Saint Lukes Day say, of young people approaching college age. The radio programs have been much improved. We By Robert J. Brown, T'64 have always been proud of the content of these offer- ings, and the dozens of stations who used them made T he Saint Luke's seminary community celebrated no complaints, indeed had some very nice things to the day of its patron this year with a varied program say; but with a studio Concertone as well as our of worship, academic discourse, and merriment quite in portable Ampex, Altec and Electrovoice microphones keeping with the memory of the venerable physician. and an experienced technician the technical quality gets The celebration, held a day early on October 17 for better and better. the convenience of returning alumni, began with Holy Mrs. Brinley Rhys selected and edited music from Communion in St. Luke's Chapel, in which the faculty this year's exciting Sewanee Summer Music Center, :

Choir and Glee Club, the Cantata Singers, Chamber Toronto, delivered a series of lectures, "Studies of St. Orchestra, organ, brass, harpsichord, and carillon. Augustine of Hippo." Dr. Fairweather challenged Former favorites that have been updated and sup- many of the constructions which have been placed plied with new signatures include "Jazz a t Sewanee," upon Augustinian theology by subsequent generations. with the trio led by Tupper Saussy, '58, who has gone Seminarians are anxious to read the text of these far-

on to widening fame in this field along with his tri- reaching conclusions when it is published later in the year. Quartet, Sewanee Summer Music Center Rutledge Sung Evensong at the Chapel was followed by the traditional "Junior Skit" in Guerry Auditorium. The Juniors, fresh from their harrowing introduction to

seminary life in the Greek program were particularly successful in buffooning Professors Rhys, Turlington, and Ralston. No doubt the wealth of material characteristically offered by these gentlemen contri- buted to the success of the comedy. After this enter- tainment the group retired en masse to Clara's where Miss Clara had done herself proud by preparing a sumptuous repast. The rest of the evening was spent in visiting with friends and dancing to an excellent combo. All told, a very successful day. St. Luke en-

ioved it too!

U On The Mountain

A contract for plans for a new U. S. Forest labora

tory has been let to Selmon T. Franklin Associates, architectural firm in Chattanooga. The experiment station here, which works in close cooperation with the University's forestry department and has shared

its quarters for seven years, will continue under the direction of Arnold L. Mignery, and will be staffed

Mrs. F. F. Guntherberg, proprietor of the last cedar faucet eventually with eight research scientists specializing factory in America, presented a collection of hardwood in silviculture and soil. bungs and faucets to the University of the South through public relations director Arthur Ben Chitty. Widow of a founder of the plant at Bean's Creek, Tennessee, Mrs. Gun- therberg is the mother of two alumni sons. The collection Newly elected officers of the St. Luke's Alumni As- is now in a display case in the Snowden Forestry Building, sociation are the Rev. Tracy H. Lamar, '42, of and Charles Cheston, professor of forestry, predicts that T some day these specimens of a dying craft may be worth Knoxville, president; the Rev. Robert E. Ratelie, T '47, more than the building. of Alexandria, Louisiana, vice-president; and the Rev. Julian L. McPhillips. T '62, of Montgomery, Alabama, secretary.

Fifteen members of the undefeated football team of 1958 were back for Homecoming bringing a total of eleven wives. Walter Wilder, now assistant coach as well as assistant director of admissions, welcomed his team-mates.

Sewanee's gowns were the subject of a photo feature in the last issue of Friends magazine. The photographer was Don Rutledge of Murfreesboro.

Life on The Mountain took a leap toward luxury Tom Hawkins' book department now has elbow room in a when blacktopping was laid over most of the side roads newly expanded and modernized University Supply Store. that support any considerable amount of traffic.

Founder's Day speaker Dr. Maurice A. Moore, '23, A total of 159 men out of the 231 freshmen and professor of English, picked up the theme of the twenty-three transfer students pledged fraternities at Christian gentleman sounded by the V. C. in his August the end of rush week. Alpha Tau Omega pledged 14, column, a theme which, he said, has run "like a golden Beta Theta Pi 18, Delta Tau Delta 20, Kappa Alpha thread through the fabric of Sewanee." Dr. Moore io, Kappa Sigma 12, Lambda Chi Alpha 18, Phi Delta noted changing concepts of the gentleman reflected in Theta 21, Phi Gamma Delta 14, Sigma Alpha Epsilon literature from the Renaissance on, and concluded with 23, and Sigma Nu 9. a definition of the gentleman in America by Professor

E. H. Cody: "What is a gentleman? A gentleman is a man whose inner balance of sensibility, good-will, and Since the Sewanee public relations office has always integrity issues in moral dependability ... in courtesy been assiduous in collecting "first's," "most's," and

. . . and in the excellent performance of some good ''foremost's," it does not complain about a recent one, social function. Or it is anyone who is sincerely trying though undeserved. Allison Sanders, Houston Chron- to be a gentleman." icle columnist, credited us with being "the catfish capital of the world." An anguished correspondent Vice-Chancellor Edward McCrady has been named ibjected that this did not accord with her image of to the board of trustees of the Institute for American Sewanee, and Mr. Sanders made a gracious retraction, Universities in Aix-en-Provence, France, for a term apologizing to the slighted worms of Savannah, Tennes- which began on July 1. see.

T4 Tiif Sewanee News ^^B

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. ,*

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The Provost looks a

THE COLLEGE—'6

/* Turn page Cap and Gown They still like to hear from home. The best faculty we can get is still Even the stu our first aim.

The professors have good office space now.

Our building program i<

Except as noted all photographs including that of Dr. Gaston S. Bruton on precedinc page, are by Franke Keating.

The Sewanee News l6 illy have a good word about the food.

out.

The freshmen make higher college board scores every year.

Religion is still a prescribed course in the College

November 1963 T7 —

1963 team joins UNDEFEATED immortals of 1898, 1899, and UNTIED 1958

Sewanee 27, Millsaps quarterback John Semmer pulled down Sewanee's third pass interception on the Tiger 32-yard line. In the season debut at Jackson Sewanee racked up 204 yards on the ground and connected with six of nine pass attempts for another 117 yards in rolling up eigh- Sewanee 39, Austin College 19 teen first downs to the Mississippians' six. The redoubtable M. L. Agnew, scoring three of Se- Millsaps was unable to penetrate the Tiger forty, wanee's six touchdowns, connected on two of his three and their quarterbacks had three of their eight pass pass attempts for forty-nine yards and racked uo attempts picked off by the alert visitors, managing be- another 128 rushing. But Agnew was by no means tween them but eighteen yards in aerials. alone in the honors department. The versatile Senior tailback M. L. Agnew on the other han.l Majors checked in with the longest run of the after- connected with five of his six attempts for 105 yards noon (seventy yards) as he ground out 127 yards rush- and accounted for another eighty-one yards rushing ing, picked off the only errant Austin aerial the Tigers more than the entire Millsaps backfield gained on the could get their hands on, and hit on his one pass at- ground collectively. tempt for twenty-six yards—and a TD. The first Tiger tally came on a fifteen-yard pass play Bill who was on the receiving irom Agnew to wingback Bill Johnson; the second on Sophomore Johnson, of Majors' aerial, also another catch to a thirty-five yard aerial from Agnew to end Bob end TD had his credit a fifty-five yard paydirt jaunt 1:0 Davis, captain of the 1963 team. Early in the third and notched Condra's three out of four con- ouarter Agnew swept the right side for thirteen yards :ound out, with Phil 1 scoring. and another marker. In the afternoon's final score, ersions, the Tiger

tailback Harrell Harrison romped across to make it successful 27-0 with sophomore Phil Condra's three Sewanee 48, Randolph-Macon conversions. For Homecoming the Tigers hit on ten of thirteen passes for 128 yards and collected another 327 yards Sewanee 49, Hampden-Sydney rushing. With Agnew and junior fullback Dan Davis The Purple amassed 468 yards on the ground and the only men to cross into paydirt during the first half a little slow another sixty-five on six Agnew aerials with each of Sewanee was getting under way, but came with full of Sewanee's seven touchdowns scored by a different cut a head steam for the second. An eleven-play drive saw tailback Harrison toting the gridder—making sophomore Phil Condra the high-point complete to en-.l man with a perfect seven for seven in the point-after pigskin on ten of them and passing kicking department. Frank Stubblefield for twenty-two yards on the last play. Fullback Tucker romped over from five The first Tiger marker came on a twenty-five-yard Ray yards out for a score that had been set up by Dan sweep by Agnew. Fullback Dan Davis made it 13-0 interception with a twenty-two-yard jaunt early in the second Davis with a pass return. ouarter. The third Tiger TD came on an eleven-yard Larry Majors was next with a two-yard burst fol pass from Agnew to end Jo Colmore. The final Se- lowed shortly by an Agnew-to-Reich TD aerial. The wanee score in the first half was a six-yard aerial from final Tiger tally was made by Harrison, and Phil Agnew to wingback Bill Johnson. Fullback Ray Condra added the last of his six conversions for the Tucker, in the first Tiger play of the second half, took cay. the ball on a draw and galloped sixty-two yards in the

afternoon's most dazzling run to make it 34-0. Fleet Sewanee 35, Centre 7 wingback Larry Majors scored from six yards out in the -losing minutes of the third quarter. Tailback Harrell Senior tailback M. L. Agnew was once again the

Harrison rounded out the scoring in the fourth with a big offensive gun as he chalked up 131 yards total

five-yard dash. Just before the final gun went off. offense, a thirty-eight-yard kickoff return, a TD aerial.

The Sewanee News Left to right: Danny Thornton, Jim Stewart, Wilbur Wood, Bill Bertrand, Jim Cof

;ind a dazzling forty-seven-yard pass interception re- ton and Lee eighteen. Phil Condra added the first turn to the Colonels' one-yard line which set up the cf his perfect five for five in the extra point department.

[trst Sewanee marker. Larry Majors directed the The capacity plus crowd had scarcely resettled in their drive which saw fullback Ray Tucker plunge over seats before wonderman M. L. Agnew connected with

from a yard out to make it 14-0 at the half with the Davis on a thirty-yard aerial and sprung loose mom- second of Phil Condra's five for five points after touch- ents later for a thirty-nine-yard TD jaunt. In the down. Junior fullback Dan Davis burst from under- fourth quarter the Tigers put together another touch- neath a host of would-be tacklers on a fifteen-yard down combination when from one yard out Tucker paydirt jaunt which Chattanoogan Jo Colmore's fumble burst through the W and L forward wall for his second recovery had made possible. touchdown. With ten minutes to go Agnew snared an It was Dan Davis who set up the fourth Tiger TD errant General pass and less than a minute later Ma- with an eighteen-yard pass interception return to the jors zipped off thirty-five yards on a wingback trap for Centre nineteen. Harrell Harrison went over the right the Tigers' fourth marker. For the final six-pointer tide from five yards out for the score. In the closing Agnew returned the General kickoff to his thirty where sixteen seconds two touchdowns were made, one by ivlajors took over with a flashy wingback reverse good Centre and then on the first play after kickoff, Agnew for fifty-nine yards. With a four-yard aerial from

hit end Colmore for a fifty-three yard pass and Jo. Agnew tucked safely away, the little speedster zipped whose father and grandfather were Sewanee football into the end zone three plays later. captains, raced over the double line as the whistle blew.

Sewanee 14, Washington University 13 Sewanee 28, Southwestern

A standing-room-only crowd had its hair stood on In the first half Southwestern led in just about end by the season's final thriller, clinching the cham- everything but scoring: rushing, passing, and first pionship of the College Athletic Conference and downs. Late in the first quarter a beautiful forty-two- rounding out a perfect season, the fourth in Sewanee yard punt started the play for an Agnew touchdown history. and for the first half that was about it. The second W. U. scored in the first quarter on a two-yard was a different story altogether. With plenty of sweep by John Mars, a conversion making it 7-0. Coach protection from up front Majors zeroed in on wing- Shirley Majors' gifted boy Larry went over in the pack Bill Johnson for a forty-eight-yard TD aerial. second from nine yards and Phil Condra's toe made With the chores alternating between Agnew and it 7-7. A scoreless third quarter left thousands of Tucker, the latter blasted his way through the right finger nails bitten to the quick, then with only 5:27 left side from two yards out for the third Tiger marker. in the game the Missourians' Claude Frazer ran over With Tucker's two-point conversion, the final Tiger to make it 13-7. The Tigers mounted a drive with tally capped a fourth Agnew-directed sixty-nine-yard Ray Tucker carrying 14 yards in two tries after an drive with Majors going over for the six points and offside penalty. M. L. Agnew hit Bob Davis with a Condra splitting the goalposts dead center to make it 22-yard pass, the only Sewanee completion of the game. 28-0. Then with the ball at the 19 Agnew made thirteen yards behind a hard charging line and covered six Sewanee 35, Washington and Lee 7 more for the touchdown that tied it up. Condra's Early in the first victory over the Generals since point after came with 2:47 left. The victory-margin 1959 fullback Ray Tucker bulled his way over from kicker ended the season with thirty-three out of thirtv- two vards out after a recovered fumble on the Washing- six successes.

November 1963 '9 during the year, better students can finish handily in three years and two summers; and even the average*

student will have no trouble with three years and

three summers. The trend everywhere is toward full- SUMMER time operation and earlier graduation. With sixty percent of Sewanee graduates now going on to ad- vanced degrees and professional careers, the advantages of saving a year are obvious. An attractive overall

SCHOOL saving in money is involved, too.

It is hoped that more students from other colleges CHARLES BAIRD will take advantage of the chance to study under different professors in a different environment, always

r. stimulating experience. In the Middle Ages, from which our universities hark, students went about from

place to place all over Europe to get an education. summer school for 1964 is in its vigorous There were lots more bandits and wolves on the way promotional stage under the new directorship to Paris then than there are between Sewanee and A of Dr. Charles Baird, associate professor of Chattanooga. A young man as well as a young lady forestry. A wider curriculum will be offered, it is who goes to a large state university during the year hoped that tuition will be lowered in the expectation can use the summer to soak in the atmosphere of a of attracting more students, and several new categories small college. ci matriculants are looked for to round out the Along with the small college, which Sewanee hopes character of the summer enrollment. always to be, summer gathers diverse groups of people. Course offerings will be almost doubled. Two new Ihe Graduate School of Theology brings practising iields, education and psychology, will enable teachers clergymen. The National Science Foundation's sum- riid prospective teachers to get these necessary credits. mer institute draws fifty highly selected secondary Two years in at least one of the modern languages and iichool teachers. The Sewanee Summer Music Center possibly in the others will be available. Popular courses leavens the dignity with its complement of volatile in contemporary literature and political science, prob- young artists, performing as it is hard to imagine such ably, are expected to attract area residents and sum- young people can perform. The music center faculty mer visitors as well as students from other colleges of eight to ten outstanding musicians give concerts too, looking for educational enrichment. during five weeks of unbeatable summer music. Church In the past most summer school students have conferences are scheduled throughout the season. naturally come from the ranks of Sewanee men making Sewanee was established with regular sessions run- L'p needed credits. Last summer, also, a number of ring through the summer, Dr. Baird points out, and boys hoping to enter this fall were allowed to offer evi- one of the reasons for selecting its location was its dence of work done here to win admission; and this pleasant summer climate and beautiful environs. We aspect of the program proved to be quite successful. have lakes now, too, which the founders didn't envision. Some doubtful-looking cases, judged on their high school records, did well and the admissions officers The regents' decision last spring to re-inforce and were persuaded they were good risks. promote the summer program was based on many factors. college's obligation to its While these groups are of course still welcome and A extend advantages indeed expected, other prospects are being strenuously to as many young people as possible was no doubt one apprised of a place for them in the summer program. of them. The sheer practicality of spreading the fixed charges of dormitories, classrooms, dining hall and At the top of the list are the girls. There's nothing athletic plant over more units was another. bring- like a dame. Dr. Baird is circularizing al! the women's By ing more prosperity to the local community a summer colleges as well as a selected list of men's. Summer offers an opportunity for the co-educational experience -chool can help the university's good friends in business which many of our best colleges, Sewanee among them, and services to stay here. By increasing a professor's have elected not to embark on during the regular aca- possible earnings, the university has a strong drawing demic year. card to get the best men it can. Dr. Baird also urges freshmen of 1964 and their A brochure on the summer school will be ready parents to consider starting the summer before regular shortly after the first of January. Anyone interested entrance on an accelerated program, allowing them to may have one by writing to Dr, Charles Baird, Se- graduate in three years. By taking some extra work wanee, Tennessee.

20 Tbe Sewanee News With Sewanee Clubs

Lots of fun was had before, during, and after the Sewanee-Austin College game in Sherman, Texas. Score: 39-19.

Despite heavy competition from the S M U - Oklahoma game thirty - four people turned up for the luncheon.

Gathered in Sherman, Texas, on October 12 were left to right, front row: Julius French, Houston; Tom Lamb, Beaumont; Bill Schoolfield, Dallas; Joe Earnest, Colorado City; Bill Mount, Roy Flynn, Roger Whitehurst, Dallas. Middle row: G. M. Woodward, Oklahoma City; Robert Nash, Kaufman, Texas; Sylvester Willey, Oklahoma City; Rev. J. Powell Eaton, Ft. Worth; Martin Joy, Bonham, Texas; Walter B. Parker. Back row: Michaux Nash, Dallas, Charles Dexter, Jr.; Robert L, Donald. Jr., Ft. Worth; Michael Veal, Ft. Worth; Capt. James Bradner, Lawton, Oklahoma, Henry Cortes, Dallas; John Morgan Aiken, Ft. Worth; Walter Bryant, Sewanee; Rev. Fred Wolf, Greenville, Texas; Rev. Tate Young, Sherman; Rev. Jack Cole, Ft. Worth. Senior alumnus present was Martin A. Joy, A'10, who hadn't seen Sewanee since he left. JACKSONVILLE had its election of officers and a Sewanee report by Arthur Chitty on August 27 in the Wilmington Room of the new Atlantic Coastline

Building. William R. Boling, '56, is the new presi- dent; William D. Austin, '52, vice-president; the Rev. Harrison Rucker secretary-treasurer. Directors arc

Francis Nixon, '29, Dr. Ensor Dunsford, '45, Rev. Gladstone Rogers, '24, and Rev. Robert Snell, '49. The new slate got up a thumping Founders' Day dinner ARTHUR McCANN, A'34, Atlanta Chej October 15, with the largest attendance ever for one of these events there— 114 persons. The assemblage ATLANTA followed its summer cook-out with a were impressed with Dean Robert S. Lancaster's talk, founders' Day dinner October u that attracted 137 and they even made money on it. Forty dollars. people. The dinner was held at the Druid Hills Golf Club, and the speaker was Chaplain David B. Collins The second gathering of LOUISIANA friends of Se- from Sewanee. Other Sewanee migrants were Dr. and wanee is scheduled for Magnolia Plantation at Houma Mrs. Edward McCrady. Mrs. Telfair Hodgson, Mrs. Saturday evening December 14. Professor Abbott C. Hunter Wyatt-Brown, and Registrar and Mrs. W. Martin will be the speaker from Sewanee, and a num- Porter Ware, '26. Kenneth Kinnett, '56, is president ber of others are expected to drive from the Mountain. and T. G. Linthicum, '23, is secretary and treasurer. Lee Shaffer is handling arrangements with the help of his bride. BIRMINGHAM, whose Bill Tynes came to Sewanee ior the October Alumni Council sessions, has had 5 MEMPHIS has had several meetings at the executive eeveral briefings for the alumni engaged in major gifts level with alumni organizations in the care of George planning. Clarke, '48, who attended the October 5 meeting for indoctrination. Andrew Lytle, editor of The Sewanee Review, will be the speaker November 19 at a joint meeting of the In MIAMI a major meeting scheduled for late Novem- COASTAL CAROLINA chapter of the Associated ber had to be postponed until January because of con- Alumni and the Sewanee Club of CHARLESTON at flicts. Niles Trammell, '18, is in charge of arrange- the St. Philips' Parish House. ments.

Dr. Fred Mitchell and Robert O'Neal came to Sewanee MOBILE was represented at the Alumni Council meet- from CHARLOTTE for the October 5 meeting. Back ing by Paul T. Tate, who with Julian DeOvies will home they will rely on Stuart Childs, Theodore C. spearhead the alumni drive there. Heyward, Jr., and the Rev. Martin Tilson for cam- paign organization. The group had a Founders' Day TEXAS alumni from a half dozen cities converged on meeting on October 11, signaling the start of fall Sherman October 12 to witness the rout of Austin Col- ?ctivity. lege, 39-19. William C. Schoolfield from Dallas and Julius French from Houston were the organizers re-

DALLAS is planning a buffet cocktail party at Peter sponsible for what director of athletics Walter Bryant O'Donnell's house in honor of Dr. McCrady and Cecil called the finest pre-game luncheon of Sewanee alumni

Woods. Plansman is Charles L. Dexter, Jr. lie had ever attended.

Dean Robert S. Lancaster was the speaker for the Club presidents or their representatives who attended HOUSTON Founders' Day dinner October 24 in the the October 5 Alumni Council meeting in Sewanee were Fiesta Room of the Houston Country Club. William William K. Bruce, '53, HOUSTON; George Clarke, '48, K. Bruce president, reports newly elected officers: Hart MEMPHIS; William M. Cravens. '29, FRANKLIN T. Mankin, president; Rev. Robert Kemp, vice-presi- COUNTY; Charles Dexter, '43, DALLAS; Dudley C. dent; William C. Buschardt. secretary; and Richard T. Fort/34, NASHVILLE; R. Morey Hart. '34, PENSA- Dozier. treasurer. COLA; Kenneth Kinnett, '56, ATLANTA; W. Sperry Lee, '43, JACKSONVILLE; Humphreys McGee. '49,

JACKSON, Mississippi, had a small luncheon at the GREENVILLE, MISSISSIPPI; Dr. Fred N. Mitchell, Robert E. Lee Hotel on September 28 preceding the '48, CHARLOTTE; Dr. Thomas Parker, '30, GREEN- Millsaps game. Glenn Massey was elected president VILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA; Paul Tate, '35, MO- of the club, which expects to move shortly on the BILE; William D. Tynes. '54, BIRMINGHAM; and <"lumni phase of the Campaign. Phil Whitaker, '55, CHATTANOOGA.

22 The Sewanee News- Glass Distinctions

1890 1916 1925 Alexander G. Blacklock, SAE, who The Rev. Herbert B. Morris, ATO, Percy James "Pat" Conner, KS, ha.s came to Sewanee from the English has retired from the active ministry. provided a boost to the Sewanee Club community at Rugby, Tennessee, to be- He was diocesan missionary in West of Central Florida. He is servicing the come one of Sewanee's finest athletes Texas and for nineteen years secre- "Sewanee Club Award for Excellence" and scholars, is now past ninety. He is tary of the diocese. He married Mary —a handsome medal-and-citation—in recovering from a knee injury sus- Mack Smith and they have two sons. high schools of his area. Conner, tained when he fell off a golf cart. He He has served various churches in who is president of the Southern Test- opines motorcycles are less dangerous. Oklahoma, Minnesota, and Texas. ing Laboratories, combines hobbies and Address: Pass Christian, Miss. The Rev. Canon Anthony R. Parsh- businesses in a fascinating career with ley, PDT, has resigned from his post his son as partner. Using his experi- 1901 of rector of the Church of the Good ence with the bureau of weights and Col. T. Henry Bull, SAE, president Shepherd, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. measures of the Department of Agri- of the class and of his brother's class He continues as administrator of the culture as a basis, he has established of 1900, visited Sewanee with Mrs. Bull Episcopal Conference Center in Pas- methods for testing weight capacities last spring. They live in Santa Bar- coag, as diocesan youth adviser and as for road surfaces, stresses which can bara, California. editor of the Rhode Island Churchman be withstood by beams in steel and until his retirement concrete buildings. has also 1905 next year. He set up an international trading firm which of- One of the choir windows in All fers to export or import anything to Saints' Chapel has been given as a me- or from anywhere except behind the morial to the late Stanley H. Treze- Iron Curtain. He is continually fas- vant, SAE, by his sister, Mrs. E. H. cinated by being in daily contact with Little. merchants all over the world. He does 1906 not object to the world-travel this en- Stephen E. Puckette, ATO, was tails. However cycling is with Pat in elected class president at the October a class by itself. He has been national 5 meeting of the Alumni Council. vice-president and a director of the Amateur Bicycle League of America, 1908 has timed the national races, and in John B. Greer, KA, Laurence "Fish" 1960 went to Europe as a member of Markley, SAE, and Henderson Van the Olympic Cycling Committee. Ad- Surdam were portrayed in a handsome dress: Box 1068, Orlando. Judd photograph given by "Coach Van" 1926 to the University Archives. They were The Rt. Rev. T. H. Wright, SN, was the captain, coach, and manager of the made a chief of the Bandi Tribe in Li- 1908 football team. Classmates, please beria recently, along with Bishop remember the archives at Sewanee Brown, Coadjutor of Liberia. Bishop when disposing of old letters, diaries, Wright of East Carolina is chairman photographs, and scrapbooks. of the National Council's Overseas De- Kenelm R. WrNSLOw, PDT, and his partment. wife visited Sewanee in September. 1927 Both were on the staff of the New York Dr. Henry T. Herald-Tribune when they retired in Kirby-Smith is the Keating author of a poem, "Perm R.R.," in Antigua, where they live at the Mill tht October Sewanee Review. Reef Club. DR. HENRY T. KIRBY-SMITH Poet Charles Edward Thomas, SN, has 1909 been elected an honorary member of The Rev. A. G. Branwell Bennett, L'Ordre de Bon Temps, America's old- SAE, was honored October 13 when St Benjamin R. Sleeper, KS, was elect- est social club. He was notified of his Timothy's Church, Columbia, South ed class president at the October 5 election by the Governor General of Carolina, named its parish hall, Ben- meeting of the Alumni Council. Canada, the present Grand Master. The nett Hall. The rector emeritus served 1919 order was founded by Samuel de St. Timothy's for thirty years. Julten K. Moore, KS, was elected Champlain, explorer, colonizer and class president at the October 5 meet- writer, in 1606, at Port Royal, Acadia 1911 ing of the Alumni Council. now Nova Scotia. Mr. Thomas's hand- Samuel Gaillard Stoney's Planta- some membership shingle is signed by 1923 tions of the Carolina Low Country, a the Premier of Canada and by the Horace Lee Stevenson is teaching book of photographs, plans and draw- Minister of Trade and Industry. history and is director of intramural ings, is now on the market. 1928 sports at Jacksonville State College, Bishop James M. Stoney, DTD, last In August the Houston Chronicle Jacksonville, Alabama. June celebrated the fiftieth anniver- magazine section studied the work of sary of his ordination. He was praised Dr. Harry Huntt Ransom, chancellor by his successor, Bishop C. J. Kinsolv- of the University of Texas and the ing, for his passionate devotion to the Reunions in 1964 system of professional schools and underprivileged and his establishing other institutions which have grown up missions in the slums. Notable achieve- 1955 1936 1917 around it. He accepted half-salary to ments of recent years were securing go there in 1956 1937 1918 1935 as English instructor elevation of his missionary district to on the gamble that he could make the status of diocese in 1952 and publica- 1957 1938 1919 most of that school's unlimited oppor- tion of a scholarly history of his dio- tunities. He has turned down any cese last year. Address: 3209 Mon- 1958 1939 1920 number of attractive offers and remains terey Drive, S.E., Albuquerque, New at the University still building. His Mexico. 1914 50th Reunion — formula for the success there is

November 1963 23 —

as senior vice-president. The top-level dent of the Vulcan Rivet and Bolt Cor- shift (former president was moved tc poration in Birmingham. the chairmanship of the board) was 1937 described as a move to increase the H. Lloyd Brown, Jr., KS, is dean of management depth of the big electric students and mathematics teacher at utility. Hatch had been executive vice- Cumberland College, Lebanon, Tennes- president of the Alabama Power Com- see. He has been at Protestant Epis- pany since 1955. Prior to that he had copal School at Alexandria, Virginia, a long career as a member of that and at Castle Heights Military Acad- company's law firm. He is active in emy. civic and professional circles and is a Dr. William G. Crook, PDT, associ- director of Georgia Power and South- ate pediatrician at the Children's Clinic ern Electric Generating Company. His in Jackson, Tennessee, and former fac- son, Edwin, Jr., the A. S. Sulli- won ulty member of the Southern Pediatric van character award in Sewanee's Seminar, has had his book, Answering Class of '63. Parents' Questions, published as a 1934 practical aid to pediatricians in office Dudley C. Fort, PDT, was awarded practice. He describes how teaching the honor and silver cup that goes with aids and a lending library can be in- "best supporting actor" at the annual corporated into the office practice of Theater Nashville awards for his per- any physician. Charles C. Thomas, formance as Beauregard Jackson Pick- Springfield, Illinois, is the publisher. ett Burnside in "Auntie Mame." The Rev. Robert Emmet Gribbin, Jr, 1935 DTD, is Episcopal chaplain to the Uni- Dr. Isaac Croom Beatty, III, is KA, versity of Alabama. He has recently vice-president of the National Pilots had published a biography entitled The Association. is still operator of He a Rt. Rev. Henry C. Lay, Pioneer in the private flying service at Mattoon, Illi- Southwest. The pamphlet is one of a nois. He recently served president PAT CONNER as series of Pioneer Builders in the of the Illinois Airport Operators As- Church's work. Bishop Lay was the sociation. With wife and son, he at- first secretary of the board of trustees tended the "Fly-In" of air borne "dreams and hard work." His dream of the University of the South. friends of Sewanee, May 10-11. of opening the way for the brightest Dr. Walter M. Hart, SN, attended Dr. Robert W. Daniel, PDT, profes- Texas students to go as far and fast the Anglican Congress in Toronto Au- sor of English at Kenyon College, has as they can led to such innovations as gust 13-23, representing the diocese of written an "afterword" for a new edi- the university's Plan 2 and Junior Upper South Carolina. He is a pedia- tion of Trollope's Barchester Towers, Fellows program. His dream of mak- trician in Florence. published in July by the New Ameri- ing Texas a world center for scholarly James Tucker Mackenzie, SAE, is can Library. research leads him to strive for monu- the managing director of United States Ralph H. Ruch, PKP, has qualified mental libraries and manuscript col- Steel International (Overseas) Ltd., a for the Million Dollar Round Table lections. Last year the University of consolidation of a number of USS ope- (life insurance) every year for ten Texas acquired over $1,500,000 worth of rations which will progressively as- years. He received his C.L.U. desig- rare books and manuscripts—move sume responsibilities for all the cor- nation in 1942. He is connected with than Harvard. On the 4th floor of the poration's activities outside the West- the Mutual Life Insurance Company new library is a scholar's paradise, the ern Hemisphere. Offices are in Lon- in Louisville, Kentucky. He has eight Academic Center Library, with first don. Tucker MacKenzie, whose father children. editions and manuscripts of many of was a member of the class of 1911, 1936 the Twentieth Century's great master- started with Steel's Export Company The Rt. Rev. R. Earl Dicus, PDT, pieces. His dream of bringing the Uni- (now absorbed in U. S. Steel Interna- has been elected president of the San versity to unquestioned eminence has tional) as a sales engineer in 1946. He Antonio Ministers Association. He now caused him to entice top scholars and was assigned to cover Central and has two sons at Sewanee. researchers onto its faculty. Harry Southern Europe, and came back to Herbert E. Smith, Jr., PDT, is dis- Ransom has earned the respect of his New York in 1950 as special assistant trict governor for Rotary. He is presi- peers in educational administration and to the operations manager. He moved a national reputation as a daring ex- up through managerial posts and in perimenter. 1959 was made director of raw ma- sales. In 1961 appointed 1929 terials he was present post of general manag3r The Rev. Frank Dearing, ATO, Lady to his for overseas sales. Claire and Peter, age 16, were given a trip to England this summer. They 1938 had two months to wander over Eng- The Rev. James E. Savoy, D.D., KS, land with side trips to other coun- resigned his post as rector of the tries. He is at St. Mary's, Jackson- Church of the Advent, Nashville, last ville, Florida. May after eight years. He is married 1930 to the former Susan Montgomery Wil- Charles C. Dudley, PGD, was clinic liams, and they have one son, Richard coordinator for the fifteenth annual Gardner. They are living in New York Southern Consumer Credit Clinic in City, where he was supply curate for Charlotte, North Carolina, in Septem- St. Luke's Chapel over the summer. In ber. August Dr. Savoy appeared in Survey 1931 Magazine. Milton C. Trichel, Jr., attorney in 1939 Shreveport, Louisiana, has been elected Walter McGoldrick, DTD, has moved to the Board of Directors of the Na- from San Francisco to Honolulu. Still tional Association for Retarded Chil- with Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, pub- dren for a three year term. lishers, his duties are expanded to in- 1933 clude college, school, and trade publi- cations. since leaving Se- Edwin I. Hatch, ATO, is the new Each move president of the Georgia Power Com- wanee has taken him farther west pany. He joined the company in 1962 j. tucker Mackenzie Dallas, Palo Alto, and now Honolulu

24 The Sewanee News New address is 1684 Halekoa Drive. Newark. He is the rector of St. Bai- Honolulu, Hawaii. tholomew's Church in Ho-Ho-Kus, Major Jack A. Whitley, PDT, his New Jersey. wife, and three sons are in Germany Joseph C. Fuller, KA, has entered at a little town called Speyer, neai the ranks cf Sewanee editors. In the Luxembourg border. His daugh- September, 1963, there came off the ter, Judy, returned to Florida State for press Volume I, Number I, of the Flo- her senior year. His address is: 49'.h rida Herald Democrat which, in his Tac. Fighter Wing, Box 1062, APO 123 words, says, "We won't give our Re- New York, New York. publican friends as much favorable at- tention as give ourselves." Fuller 1941 we is administrative assistant to state Col. William D. Braxton, SAE, re- Democratic chairman Warren Good- turned to the United States in June af- rich. His address is 5000 18th Ave. . ter a tour of duty in Korea. W Bradenton. Florida. Lt. Col. James D. (Dan) Cotter, The Rev. Alvin L. Kershaw became U. S. Air Force, DTD, has been re- rector of Emmanuel Episcopal Church. assigned to the Pentagon after four Boston, on September 1. He was form- years of ROTC duty at Clemson. He erly rector of All Saints Parish, Petei- will be chief of the education career United Nations Photo borough, New Hampshire. branch in the personnel training divi- sion. In Archer Torrey's Korea 1945 The Rev. Marshall J. Ellis, SAE, Dr. D. Albert Sullivan, Jr., SAE, rectcr of the Church of the Holy Com- member of the surgery teaching staff munion, Tacoma, Washington, an- South Carolina, where he is currently of the University of Minnesota medi- nounces the adoption of a son, Mar- working toward his Ph.D. cal school for the last fifteen years, shall William, born June 6. The Ellises William H. Lawton is assistant pro received the annual Distinguished have three other children, Linda, Mark, fessor of education at Rhode Island Teaching Award on Recognition Day, and Monty, who have lived with them College and vice-principal of its lab- June 14. The award, a citation and a as foster children for three years. oratory school. He serves as organr;!. cash prize of $1,000, is given by the 1942 and choir director in the Church of Minnesota Medical Foundation, and the The Rev. Dr. Frank N. Butler, SAE St. Michael and All Angels '- Rum- student body of the medical school resigned as rector of St. Luke's Church ford, Rhode Island. joins in selecting the faculty member. in Jackson, Tennessee, to become rec- Dr. Stephen B. McIntosh, KA, is as- The Rev. R. Archer Torrey, princi- tor of Grace Church at Jefferson City. sociate professor of education at West- pal of St. Michael's Theological Semi- Missouri, on August 1. His wife is the ern Carolina College, Cullowhee, North nary, Seoul, Korea, suffered a setback former Elizabeth Paine. Carolina. when his year-old house burned in Lt. Col. Roy T. Crownover is the James Howell Peebles, Jr., is a re- February. The people in Seoul re- new commander of the 1st Battalion. search scientist on rocket re-entry pro- sponded with clothes, linens, Korean 115th Field Artillery, a unit of the blems at AEDC in Tullahoma. language books, and food. St. Luke's Tennessee National Guard's 30th Ar- Ashley A. Purse, SAE, has been ap- Missionary Society, Sewanee, has sent mored Division at Winchester. His ci- pointed Phoenix area supervisor by the a set of new pumps for the water sys- vilian occupation is clerk of Franklin Southern Arizona Bank and Trust tem at the Torrey home, funds for County Court. Company in Tucson. He is vice-presi- which came from an anonymous Flo- E. N. (Nick) Zeigler, DTD, has dent there. He will also serve as a rida donor and the Society. The So- been credited with much of the suc- member of the institution's executive ciety also contributes $1,500 a year to cess of the Pee Dee Big Brothers As- committee. He moved to Arizona from a seat in the Seminary in Korea. sociation in Florence, South Carolina, Chattanooga in 1958. 1947 first such organization in the South Harold E. Steed is promotional sales Gus Baker is an artist-teacher at the and in a small town area. Founded at manager with Plywood Supply, Incor- Tennessee Nashville Center and also the request of a local judge, the as- porated, in Kenmore, Washington, near teaches private classes. sociation in ten years has graduated Seattle. He graduated from the Steed Matlack C. Crane, DU, is the father more than 600 boys who have had College of Technology in Johnson City, of Mary Ann, born September 1, 1963. guidance and companionship from the Tennessee, after his release from the Ben M. Rawlings, Jr., PDT, has join- volunteer "Big Brothers." Only two of service in 1946. In 1955 he moved to ed the Hamilton National Bank in the boys have been on the delinquency Washington. He is married to Dolores Chattanooga, in the correspondent list. Zeigler is an attorney. Deal and has two small boys, Brad bank department. He and his wife, 1943 Edwin and Scott Deal, who are five Margaret Caldwell Fred, have a daugh- Vaughn D. Brink is manager of and six years old. ter, Margaret Fred, and two sons, Tho- training and safety of the Kansas City L. Fricks Stewart was re-elected mas Walter and Burkett Miller. Power and Light Company. His new election commissioner for Franklin Donald Clarence Swanson, SN, is address is: 10412 Lee Boulevard, Lea- County, Tennessee. He is a Winches- chairman of the speech and drama de- wood, Kansas. ter attorney. partment and dean of men at Sheridan Berkeley Grimball, ATO, has been David Tallichet in five years has College in Wyoming. He writes rec- elected president of the new Porter- started five major restaurants and a ommending prospective students for Gaud School in Charleston, South Ca- $10 million recreation and tourist com- admission to the University and send- rolina. Presently he is owner and plex and made a success of each one. ing good wishes to his friends on "that headmaster of The Gaud School for His successes are attributed to atmos- fabulous Mountain." Boys. This school and Porter Academy phere and location. Each is on a water- 1948 and Watt School will consolidate in front or an inland location with a big The Rev. John Crumbly is pastor of July, 1964, and form a new country view, all following a Polynesian theme St. John's Church in Winnsboro, South day school, with future plans for in and around Los Angeles, California. Carolina. He and his wife, Meda Lamh boarding. A student body of 500 and He spent eleven years with the Hil- Crouch, are both native South Caro- grades one through twelve are plan- ton hotel system. linians. ned. 1944 Dr. John B. Dicks, SN, is the first William H. Hanckel. Jr., has been The Rev. William M. Bayle is rec- faculty member hired by the Univer- made a member of the history depart- tor of the Church of the Transfigura- sity of Tennessee for the Tennessee ment at the Citadel in Charleston, his tion in Buffalo, New York. He and his Space Institute at the Arnold Engi- native heath. He holds a B.A. from wife have two children. neering Development Center at Tulla- the College of Charleston and since The Rev. C. Judson Child was a dele- homa. He has been a lecturer and receiving his B.D. from Sewanee has gate to the Pan-Anglican Congress in consultant at AEDC for the past two earned an MA. at the University of August, representing the diocese of years in addition to his duties as as~

NOVEMBER I963 25 sociate professor of physics at Sewa- John D. Crews, KA, has completed nee. two years of graduate study at the Uni • The Rev. Harry Douglas, SAE, vicai versity of Virginia toward his Ph.D. of the of the Church Advent, Talla- He is taking a year off from his studies hassee, Florida, is vice-president of the to teach English in the engineering local ministerial association. Married, school there. he lives with his wife Grace chil- and The Rev. Francis W. Fowler is rec- dren, Susan, nine, Frances, eight, and tor of Holy Trinity Church, Midland. Frank, seven, at 815 Piedmont. Texas. He and his wife, Dorothy, have Alfred S. Lowery, PGD, has been three children, Jody, Martie and Jamie. appointed public relations director for Henry Hutson, ATO, is now teach- the Pitluk Advertising Company in San ing at Christ School in Arden, North Antonio, Texas. He began his career Carolina. Croom Beatty, IV, is teach- eighteen years ago in an Austin radio ing there also. station and his experience includes Ralph Mehlman Roscher, Jr., DTD. staff and management positions with sent his old professor Abbo Martin a several Texas agencies and five years post card of the statue to U. S. Grant as owner of his own firm. He finished in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Mr. Mar- his college career at the University of tin sent word, "See me about this." Ros- Texas. cher's new address: 7614 96th West ; 1949 Overland Park, Kansas. Dr. W. Reed Bell, ATO, was awarded Richard Clendinen Smith, PDT, has in July a post-doctoral fellowship by been named assistant vice-president of the National Institute of Health. He the commercial loan department of the will work for an academic year at the Mortgage Investment Corporation of Duke University Medical Center in re- San Antonio, Texas. search primarily in the field of meta- 1951 bolic and genetic diseases, viral infec- The Rev. Loren Mead, ATO, rector of tions, and study of cellular functions. CLIFFORD Y. Holy Family Church, Chapel Hill. wife, DAVIS, JR. His Nell, and their six children North Carolina, goes to England this will accompany him. In 1956, Dr. Bell fall to exchange parishes for about one served twelve months as fellow in en- and self-supporting community organi- year with the rector of Christ Church, docrinology at Baylor University's Col- zation. He moderated the Council's Esher, Surrey. lege of Medicine. In 1959, he was Sunday television program, "Point of Allen H. Swasey has resigned his elected fellow in the American Acad- View," for six years, giving it up two position as director of the business and emy of Pediatrics. He plans to return years ago. He is co-author of Discov- technology department of the Houston to Pensacola in June, 1964, to continue ering Modern Poetry. This year's se- Public Library System to become as- his pediatric practice. nior class at UC accorded him its high- sociated with his brother in the S. & R. William F.'Brame, DTD, is full time est gift, the award of the Ivy, tradi- Oil Refining Company. organist-choirmaster of St. Mary's tionally presented to the instructor William L. White, ATO, and his wife, Church in Kinston, North Carolina, deemed to have made the greatest con- Harley Jackson, have a son, David El- while continuing his pipe organ con- tribution to the University. lis, born September 3, 1963. He re- sultation work. He and his family Dr. Henry Baker Gregorie, Jr., KA, cently opened a large restaurant, The (four boys) reside 102 at E. Highland has moved his offices from The Medi- Nine Muses, on Santa Monica Boule- Avenue. cal College Hospital to 158 Rutledge vard, Hollywood. George Coleman Connor is head of Avenue, Charleston, South Carolina, 1952 the University of Chattanooga's English for the practice of general and thoracic Windsor M. Price, PGD, is assistant department. When the Adult Educa- surgery. to the president and a member of the tion Council was established in 1952, The Rev. Robert Hall was selected board of directors of Morris Machine supported by the Ford Foundation, he as having the most beautiful poinciana Works in Baldwinsville, New York. He became director of the local organiza- tree in Miami, as a part of the tradi- and his wife, Kay Seiner, have a tion. It is the only one of the original tional Royal Poinciana Fiesta there. He daughter, Elizabeth. twelve to survive as an independent and wife Marjorie, daughter Alex, and The Rev. Edward S. Shirley is vicar son Ross live at 1600 Tigertail Ave- of St. Thomas' Church in White Sul- nue. He is rector of Holy Comforter phur Springs and of Emmanuel Church. Church in Miami. Oakhurst, West Virginia. He has been Dr. Oliver Leonard, SN, is president teaching in the philosophy department of the Greater Pensacola Dental So- of Hiram College, Hiram, Ohio. ciety. At the Fiesta De Luna parade 1953 he appeared as a British knight, repre- John A. Cater, Jr., SAE, formerly senting King Arthur. This colorful associated with the McEvoy Oil Weil pageant marked the 404th anniversary Equipment Company, has been pro- of the landing of the first Spanish set- moted to an executive position in the tlers in Pensacola. parent company, The Houston Cor- James F. McMullan, KA, has receiv- poration. ed the designation of Chartered Life The Rev. James H. Douglass has re- Underwriter. He is with the Charles turned from six years as a missionary G. Bethea agency in Atlanta. priest in the Dominican Republic to Dr. Ben E. M. Watson, SN, has com- become rector of Christ Church, St. pleted his specialty training in internal Joseph, Louisiana, and priest-in-charge medicine and has entered private prac- of Grace Church, Waterproof. tice in Lexington, Kentucky. He, his Dr. Edward Phelps Helvenston, PGD wife, Mildred Conover, and their daugh- received his Ph.D. at the University ter, Kathleen Louise, age five, will re- of Texas and is now working for the side at 1732 Rosecrans Drive. Dr. Wat- Chemical Division of Pittsburgh Plate son has both M.D. and Ph.D. degrees Glass Company at the Corpus Christi from Tulane. plant. He developed a new process for 1950 his firm, which was tried experimen- The Rev. Robert F. Cherry, PDT, is tally at the Toronto plant under his assistant rector of Trinity Church in supervision. He is now principally in REV. JOHN W. ARRLNGTON, IH Columbia, South Carolina. management rather than research. He

26 The Sewanee News Dr. Clarence Bruce Marsh was mar- Christopher Charles Ashton, born Sep- ried October 5 to Vicki Greulach of tember 15. John continues in his po- Boston and Chapel Hill, North Caro- sition as Command Publications Edi- lina. He has entered medical practice tor for the U. S. Air Forces in Europe, with his father in Chattanooga after a located in Wiesbaden, Germany. year at Boston's Lahey Clinic. Address: David Rogers Mogill, ATO, received Crestwood Drive, Dallas Crest, North the bachelor of electrical engineering Chattanooga. degree from Georgia Institute of Tech- 1955 nology in June. He is working for Chaplain Winfield Scott Bennett,. Motorola, Inc., in Phoenix, Arizona. who is serving a thirteen-month unac- Carroll J. Savage, SN, received his companied tour in Korea, was recent- LL.B. degree from Harvard in June. ly promoted to major. He also received Victor Pierre Serodino, Jr., BTP, is the Army Commendation Medal for his the father of Elizabeth Michelle, boni work while at Ft. Lewis, Washington, August 18 in Chattanooga. from September 1960, to June, 1963. Captain William R. Stamler, KA, His new address is: Hq 36th Engineer graduated from the United States Air Group (C), APO 358, San Francisco, Force's Squadron Officer School Au- California. gust 2. He has been reassigned to Roy Christian Brown, BTP, has Sewart AFB, Tennessee. taken leave of absence from the New Peter Wright is personnel manage- York Times in order that he may re- ment specialist in the Office of the treat to the mountains and write. He Secretary of the United States Depart- can be reached by forwarding mail ment of Agriculture. He is listed in from his address, Abingdon, Virginia. the 1963-64 Who's Who in the South H. Talbot D'Alemberte, ATO, was and Southwest. Address: 601 Belmont married to Diane Winter on Septem- Boulevard, Lorton, Virginia. ber 7 in Altoona, Pennsylvania. He is 1957 with a law firm in Miami, after study Richard Elliott Adams, Jr., has John W. McWhirter, Jr., '54, (right), as at the University of London, the Uni- moved from Oklahoma City to Lind- executive secretary of the Florida As- versity of Florida, where he was presi- say, Oklahoma. He, his wife and two sociation of Realtors, witnesses the dent of the law students, and three children, Marilyn and Stephen, reside signing by Governor Farris Bryant of years in the navy. Mrs. D'Alemberte at 419 Francis Avenue. He is still em- the installment land sales act. was once a private secretary to former ployed by Cities Service Petroleum Ambassador and Mrs. Joseph P. Ken- Company. nedy. Harry T. Edwards, Jr., KS, has be- has two sons, Edward Phelps, II, age Steson Fleming, III, KA, and his come associated with the firm Horn- 4, and Merritt Clemens, age 2. His wife wife, Hatsy Knox, live on Whitney blower and Weeks, Commerce Title is the former Sara Lee Clemens of Street in Augusta, Georgia. He has Building, Memphis. The firm deals in Dallas, distantly related to Mark Twain recently gone into business for himself securities and is a member of the prin- John Jay Hooker, PDT, Nashville at- as a certified public accountant. cipal stock exchanges. His home ad- torney, has indicated that he might run Paul Nash, KS, has accepted a po- dress is: 7125 Highway 64, Memphis 8. for governor of Tennessee in 1966. Al- sition on the staff of Senator Keating Tennessee. ways interested in government, he was of New York. He may be addressed Louis A. Hermes, PDT, is connected an active campaigner for President in Washington in care of the Senate with the firm of Davis, Skaggs and Kennedy and says he will support him Office Building. Company, members of the Pacific Coast again. He regards reapportionment as James Thomas Williams, III, SAE, of Stock Exchange, 111 Sutter Street, San a must for his state and also would Chattanooga has an infant daughter, Francisco. He recently was instru- repeal the new utilities tax. Elizabeth Donelson. mental in the transfer of a gift of Charles L. Jennings, SN, has been J. James W. Yoder, M.D., is a resi- $1,500 in stock from a benefactor to selected as a recipient of a special Car- dent in orthopedic surgery at the Uni- the University. negie Incentive Fellowship for gradu- versity of Tennessee Memorial Re- Dr. (Capt.) Hoyt Horne has com- ate study at the University of North search Center and Hospital in Knox- pleted the orientation course for offi- Carolina. He is working toward his ville. He and his wife Katharine are cers of the United States Air Force Ph.D. in English. at home in Knoxville at 232 Green- Medical Service. His instruction was Howell A. McKay, KA, is an ac- wood Avenue. in specialized aerospace medical sub- count executive with March and Mc- 1956 jects. He is assigned to Clinton Sher- Lennan insurance brokerage firm in Sterling M. Boyd, KS, was awarded man AFB, Oklahoma. Tampa, Florida. He and his wife, Joan a master of fine arts degree in art and The Rev. . Johnson, Jr., and Hedrick, have a son, John Howell, two. archaeology from Princeton University Mrs Johnson (Wynena Walker, '46), McKay is secretary of the vestry at this year. He has an MA. from Ober- announce the birth of a daughter, An- St. Andrew's Church. lin. na Renee,, August 6 in South Bend, Thoburn Taggart, Jr., BTP, spent a Larry P. Davis is working on his Indiana. Their sons are Michael and week in Sewanee this summer. He is master's degree in social work at New Timothy. on the staff of the library of the Uni- York University. He hopes to continue Leftwich Dodge Kimbrough, PDT, versity of Wichita. beyond that for a doctorate. Address. was married to Ursula Eitner on Oc- H. W. Whitman, Jr., ATO, is assist- 56 Pike Street, Garden Apartment, New tober 12 in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. ant cashier with the First National York, New York 10002. George S. McCowen, DTD, is the Bank of Atlanta. He has set a record Captain Stephen D. Green, U. S. Air father of Cecily Elizabeth, born Sep- for signing the most new members to Force, ATO, graduated from Squadron tember 18. George is in the history Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. Officer School at the Air University. department at Wofford College in Spar- 1954 He and his wife, the former Cheryl G. tanburg, South Carolina. The Rev. Ralph Banks, KS, is as- Bradley, live in Florida now, where he The Rt. Rev. Theodore H. McCrea, sistant to the chaplain at the Chapel is assigned to Tyndall Air Force Base. suffragan bishop of Dallas, received an of the Holy Spirit, Tulane University, J. Ackland Jones, SN, received his honorary doctorate in June from Gen- New Orleans. MA. degree from The University of eral Theological Seminary. Clifford Y. Davis, Jr., ATO, is di- Virginia and has accepted a position Ronald L. Palmer, ATO, will be dis- rector of public relations for the First in the biology department at Parsons charged from the Air Force November National Bank of Memphis. He is mar- College in Iowa. He has two first cou- 27 and will return to Jacksonville, ried to June Hargie and they have a sins at St. Luke's this year. Florida, to practice law with the firm year-old daughter. John A. Lever has a second son. of Bedell, Bedell and Dittmar.

November 1963 27 1959 James D. Abernathy, SAE, is the father of Anne Warner, born July 31, He is a salesman with Tennessee Ply- wood Corporation in Memphis. The Rev. John W. Arrington, III, is now rector of Holy Trinity Church in Clemson, South Carolina. He was president of the Spartanburg Minis- terial Association while in charge of St. Matthew's there. He and his wife. Jane Taylor, have two sons and two daughters. Robert P. Hare, IV, PDT, has left Sewanee Military Academy's alumni office for the advertising department of Florida Trend magazine, produced by the Florida Grower Press in Tam- pa. It is the only publication of its kind in the state of Florida, a busi- C. QUINTARD WIGGINS, III ness and financial magazine. Charles New SMA Alumni Director Mullen, '43, ATO, is president of the HARRISON R. STEEVES, III Florida Grower Press. Benjamin S. Harrell, Jr., entered the Stanford Graduate School of Business Force on October 1. He is presently this serving in the physics branch of the fall. Air Force Weapons Laboratory, Kirt- Dr. Norman E. McSwain, Jr., SAE, received land AFB, New Mexico. He received a recent appointment to the house staff of an M.S. in physics at the University North Carolina Baptist Hospital of Colorado this year. and the Bowman Gray School of Medicine. He is serving an intern- The Rev. Charles S. Rice has joined ship in surgery. the Rev. Thomas H. Carson, Jr., in sn Robert Dudley Peel, PDT, and experiment in team ministry at St. Mary Elizabeth McDonald were married Au- Peter's Church in Chattanooga. He is gust 3 in Cambridge, England. is chairman of the division of camps for She teaching at Alconbury-Hunts Air Force the Diocese of Tennessee. He is mar- ried and has three children. Base in England, where Lt. Peel is stationed. They reside in Huntingdon- A body who wants to pyramid his shire. money had better buy a piece of Tup- per Saussy, KA, now before he goes The Rev. J. E. Sturtevant is rector y \ of St. Michael and All Angels' any higher. We kept telling you to get Church O. WEMPLE LYLE in Columbia, South Carolina. his first LP platter Jazz at Sewanee. He and his wife, Mary Withington, have four It's $25 if you can find anybody will- children, Joe, a freshman at Sewanee, Kenan Timberlake, SN, has formed ing to sell. Now he has another one Tom, Barratt, and Sarah Blythewood. a new law partnership in Huntsville, called Discover Tapper Saussy which Charles M. Upchurch, SAE, received Alabama. He received his law degree Dave Brubeck describes as "great tal- an M.D. degree June 3' from the Bow- from Vanderbilt. He and his wife live ent." The eleven tracks include seven man Gray School of Medicine. He be- at 2521 Gunnison Lane, N.W. of his own compositions, all on piano, gan his internship at University Hos- 1st Lt. William S. Turner III, U. S. accompanied by combo. He has pur- pital and Hillman Clinic in Birming- Air Force, DTD, has been to India. chased half ownership in the adver- ham, Alabama, on July 1. Pakistan, Greece, Turkey, France, the tising agency, McDonald and Saussy, James Earl Philippines, Laos, Hong Kong, and in Nashville. Tennessee, with which he Winn, PGD, was mar- ried June 15 in New York to Mary other places with the air force. He is creative director and vice-president. Elizabeth Smith. She attended Pine is now stationed at Sewart, near Nash- He is a director of Nashville Arts Manor Junior College and graduated ville. Council and a member of Belle Meade from the University of Texas, did 1958 Country Club. He and his wife, Lola as Mr. Winn. They will their Dr. Harvey Allen, DTD, was gradu- Haun, have a new daughter, Melinda make home in Houston. ated from Baylor University College of Cavanaugh, born April 12 at St. Tho- Dentistry in Dallas on May 27. He wiil mas Hospital. 1960 continue his education in oral surgery The Rev. Harry Woolston Shipps Robert L. Gaines, KS, received his on the graduate level at Baylor. has become vicar of Holy Apostles' M.B.A. from the University of Virginia The Rev. William Sims Brettmanj.- Church, Savannah, Georgia, succeed- in June and is working for Compton was married September 14 in Mobile ing the Rev. Francis X. Walter, '57, Advertising Company in New York. He to Lelia Gordon Shearer. Mr. Brett- who has gone to an inter-city parish is an assistant account executive for mann is curate of Trinity Church in in Jersey City. Ivory Soap. Address: 166 East 61st Mobile. Mrs. Brettmann is a graduate The Rev. Ralph H. Shuffler, II, PGD, Sat, New York 21. of Vanderbilt. is minister-in-charge of the Church of Jerome Hall and his bride, Margaret The Rev. Duff Green, ATO, is rec- the Good Shepherd in Tomball, Texas. Dimon Nash, stopped at Sewanee on tor of St. Paul's Church at Athens, He received his B.A. from Southwest- their wedding trip through Sewanee Tennessee. He and his wife, Alice ern University, did some graduate work and Williamsburg. His new address is Sawyer, have three daughters, Natalie, in English at Utah State, and received 7003 State Road, Apartment 101, in four, Karen, two and Kathryn Elaine, s B.D. in May from the Seminary of Parma, Ohio, where he is teaching. born February 10, 1963. the Southwest with the faculty award 1st Lt. William C. Stewart, U. S. The Rev. Hartselle H. Gray, Jr., is as "best prepared for the oarish min- Air Force, BTP, received a regular a special counselor to young people istry." commission in the United States Air seeking marriage licenses in Houston, Harrison R. Steeves, III, won his Force. He was selected in competi- working in the office of the county Ph.D. last June from the University of tion with other reserve officers on the judge. He has been serving St. James'. Virginia. basis of his performance of duty (sup- Houston. The Rev. J. Robert Wright, BTP, has ply officer in the 3rd Weather Squad- O. Wemple Lyle, Jr., SN, was pro- re-entered Oxford University after ron), educational background and po- moted to captain by the U. S. An graduation from the General Seminary. tential as an Air Force officer.

28 The Sewanee News The Rev. James Warrington has be- Susie Lane Clark were married Octo- come assistant minister at the Church ber 5 at the U. S. Army Chapel, La of the Atonement at Tenafly, New Jer- Chapelle-St. Mesmin, France. Her fa- sey. He came to the Church of Atone- ther is a colonel in the U. S. Army. ment from St. John's Church, McLean. Paris Eugene Smith, '57, PGD, served Virginia, where he was assistant minis- as his brother's best man. Following ter. a honeymoon in France, Switzerland, The Rev. Bertram N. Herlong has and Italy the couple will be at home at beeen called as canon to St. John's 221 Merrie Way in Houston, Texas, Cathedral in Jacksonville, Florida. He where he is employed by the T. J. is married to Barbara Vickers, and Bettes Company. they have two children. W. Scott Welch III, BTP, is presi- William H. Littleton The Rev. Dr. dent of the University of Mississippi Decatur's Holy Trinity is rector of Law School student body this semes- Church, Georgia. He and his wife and ter. He wll graduate in January, 1904. three daughters are in temporary resi- He is a member of Phi Delta Phi Legal 619 Sycamore Street until the dence at Fraternity and of the Moot Court Boulevard has been rectory on Vidal Board. He won the Phi Alpha Delta redecorated. Holy Trinity has 1,100 Award last, spring for winning the Fi- communicants. nal Moot Court Competition before Norman McSwain, SAE, gradu- Dr. the Supreme Court of Mississippi. He ated from the Medical College of Ala- is also an instructor in political science bama in June and is now an intern at st the University of Mississippi. North Carolina Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem. 1962 1st Lt. William A. Veal, U. S. Air Chattanooga Times Force, is reassigned to England AFB, Charles T. Cullen, ATO, is teaching Louisiana, following his training for F- history and political science at Averett Averett SARAH AND WILLIAM 100 Super Sabre pilots. He is now College in Danville, Virginia. KIRBY- SMITH "combat ready" as a supersonic jet is a two-year college for women, fighter. founded in 1857 by the Baptist Church. Cullen received his master's degree in 1961 William W. Kirby-Smith, '64, KS, and history in August from Florida State Lt. A. Adams, S. Air Sarah Barnwell Elliott Howe were mar- 2nd David U. University in Tallahassee and began Force, graduated from the flying ried August 31 in All Saints' Chapel at BTP, teaching at Averett in September training course for C-124 pilots at Sewanee. The Rev. Thomas G. Garner now has Tinker Air Force Base, Oklahoma. He Mrs. Kirby-Smith is a great-grand- is reassigned to Hill AFB, Utah. His the Church of the Holy Comforter at daughter of Charles McDonald Puck- at wife, Mary, is the daughter of Mr. and Monteagle and St. James Church ette, '79, a granddaughter of Charles wife year- Mrs. Cletus M. Brown of Cherokee, Midway. He and his and McDonald Puckette, '07, a great niece live Monteagle. Alabama. old daughter in of John Elliott Puckette, '13, and Ernest Martin Cheek, is the PGD, Philip George, ATO, is vice-presi- Stephen Elliott Puckette, '06, a niece of father of a son, John Wilson, born dent of the sophomore class at Wash- Dr. Stephen Elliott Puckette, '49, a cou- September 13. ington University School of Medicine. sin of Dabney Otey Elliott, '12, John Bradford Morris Gearinger is work- Barnwell Elliott, '91, and John Barn- Yerger Johnstone, PDT, was married ing toward his LL.B. degree at Van- well, Jr., '18, a great-great niece of the Chamberlain on September II derbilt University School of Law. He to Eve Rt. Rev. Robert Woodward Barnwell in Mobile. was married June 22 to Diana Jeane Elliott, '73 (Hon.), a great niece of Sarah Beck. Buck and Diana are living in John B. Smith was married at Se- Barnwell Elliott (Hon.), a cousin of Nashville at 1111 17th Avenue, South. wanee in St. Luke's Chapel on Octo- Stephen Habersham, '85, a second cou- William E. Hannum II, ATO, re- ber 12, 1963. His wife is the former sin of Francis Gettys Watkins, '51, and ceived his MA. from the University of Catherine Findlay of Anderson, South a second cousin of Morgan Watkins. Virginia in June. Carolina. Jr., '49. Dr. Robert W. B. Elliott, '94, is Lt. Robert Craig Kneisly, U. S. Ma- the senior member of the clan and is Edwin Murdoch Stirling, ATO, was rine Corps, KA, was married June 22 in residence at Sewanee. to Margaret Jeanne Spruiell in Leeds, married to Deborah Grace Whittier on Mr. Kirby-Smith is a great grandson Alabama. The bride is a graduate of September 14 in Overbrook, Pennsyl- of Sewanee's early professor of mathe- Auburn University. They reside in vania. matics, General Edmund Kirby-Smith, Quantico, Virginia. a second cousin of Edmund Kirby- Pvt. Robert P. Likon, U. S. Army, 1963 Smith, A'17, a nephew of Col. Edmund PGD, has been assigned to the 502nd Harvey Hill Luce, Jr., was married Kirby-Smith, '36, a great nephew of Engineer Company in Germany. A ra- August 12 to Mary Tallulah Culpepper Ephraim Kirby-Smith, '06, a second dio operator, he was previously sta- in Tallahassee, Florida, where he is now cousin of Ephraim Kirby-Smith, '42, tioned at Fort Jackson, South Caro- a student at Florida State University. and of Hayden Kirby-Smith, '27; son lina. of Dr. Henry T. Kirby-Smith, '27, bro- David M. Lindsey. is instructor Charles Maillot Martin, PGD, rms in thel of Henry Tompkins Kirby-Smith. Spanish at Mercer University in Ma- a son, Charles, Jr., born September 9 Jr., '59, nephew of Dr. John S. Kirby- con, Georgia. He received his mas- in Dallas, Texas. Smith, '35, great nephew of Dr. Joseph ter's degree from the University of Edward Howell Reynolds, PDT, was Kirby-Smith, '03, grandson of Dr. Rey- Wisconsin. married to Susan Beatrice Grey o'i nold Kirby-Smith, '95, nephew of Rey- Raymond Clarke Mensing, Jr., is September 14, in Asheboro, North Ca- nold M. Kirby-Smith, Jr., '37, great working toward a Ph.D. in history at rolina. They are at home at 1850 Myr- nephew of William S. Kirby-Smith, '92. Emory, where he taught a history tle Drive, SW, Apartment 1, Atlanta cousin of David Clough, '63, and ne- course this summer. He received his 11, Georgia. phew by marriage of Harry Clark, '18, M.A. in history in 1962 from Emory. and a nephew and namesake of William The Rev. Charles Edward Reeves, Jr.. Charles Quintard Wiggins III is '38. r Woolverton, is rector of St. Paul's, Augusta, Georgia. alumni director of the Academy. He i , The dog Nietzsche has no alumni an- He is married to Darline Jackson and a descendant and namesake of Sewa- they have two sons, Charles Edward, nee's first Vice-Chancellor, Bishop cestors, but plans to send his descend- ants to Sewanee. III, age six, and Randolph Jackson, age Charles T. Quintard, and its fifth Vice- two. Chancellor, Dr. Benjamin Lawton Wig- Mrs. Kirby-Smith works in the alum- Kayler Wortham Smith, PGD, and gins. He is married to Lynrie Ruth Lais. ni office.

November io/m memorial fund is being raised in the Indiana University Foundation to cre- jht iUrmflriam ate a Ralph L. Collins Lectureship in Drama and Theatre. After receiving his A.B. from The Rev. S. Moylan Bird, '00, died died May 25 of a heart attack. A plaque Sewa- nee he went on to a Ph.D. from in Brenham, Texas, in September. He is being installed over the entrance Yale bad suffered a heart attack some days to the Church of the Ascension in Mont- in 1933. He taught at the University previously. He attended Academy, gomery, Alabama, where he was past of Tennessee before joining the Indi- College, and Seminary at Sewanee and senior and junior warden, treasurer, ana University English faculty in 1935. was organist for seven years. He was lay reader, crucifer, vestryman, and He was director of the Writers' Con- ference 1941 to 1948 varsity rector emeritus of St. Peter's Church sponsor of the acolytes. He won the from and tennis of Brenham, and served as an active Croix de Guerre for his service in the coach from 1940 to 1945. He was a of Phi Beta priest in Texas for fifty-two years. Ambulance Corps in World War I in member Kappa. Dr. is Both he and his father were Texas France. He was chief construction Collins survived by his wife, the former Dorothy Ellen Craig, trustees of the University. He is sur- coordinator for the State of Alabama and vived by his wife and two daughters. when he died, having been in the con- their son, David H. Collins, who is a student at Arizona State University. Dr. J. Edward Wilkinson, '00, died struction business most of his life. He in June after an extended illness. He is survived by his wife and daughter Minor Alexander, '29, PDT, was had practiced medicine in Prattville, Frances. killed in August when his car over- Alabama, for more than fifty years. He Robert Marion, '20, died August 17 turned near Abilene, Texas, where he and his father operated a Prattville aboard a train while returning home was inspecting a deer hunting lease. drugstore for more than seventy-two from a vacation trip to New Orleans The prominent rancher and member years. He was a steward of the First with his wife. He was engaged in of a pioneer family had extensive oil Methodist Church. Surviving are his farming in St. Stephens, South Caro- and ranch holdings in West Texas and wife and a daughter. lina. Survivors include his widow, one New Mexico. Survivors include his John C. James, '03, died September daughter, one son, and three grand- wife, Ruth, one son, James, and two 29 in Sierre Madre, California. For children. daughters. twenty years he was manager of the William Marvin McCullough, '23, Coates Lear, '36, SAE, died October Arrow Rock Company there. PGD, died of a heart attack on Sep- 6 at his home in Washington of a self- Dr. J. O. Duhon, '04, a physician of tember 4. He had just returned home inflicted gunshot wound after a period Lafayette, Louisiana, died June 3'. He to his cattle farm near Lexington, Ken- of ill health. He was born and reared was coroner there for forty years. tucky, with his wife, the former Julia in Sewanee and went all the way Marye Yeamans Dabney, M.D., '00, Benedict, after a Labor Day week end through SMA and the College. His ATO, of Birmingham died September at Sewanee. While here they visited father, Dr. Allen Lear, '08, was one of 21. Bom in Tchula, Mississippi in 188 i, the new dormitory named in honor of the best loved men in the Sewanee he went from Sewanee to further stu- Mrs. McCullough 's parents. area. As a member of the Emerald- dies at the University of Virginia and Shepherd Spencer Neville, Jr., '23, Hodgson Hospital staff he gave him- the University of Chicago, where he PDT, died June 9 while visiting in Wa- self tirelessly to the healing ministry. received a Ph.B. in 1908. His M.D in co, Texas. He was buried on his own An outstanding aviation lawyer, 1912 was from Johns Hopkins. He was Giles Plantation in Mississippi, where Coates Lear was a member of the firm chief of gynecology at the Hillman Hos- four generations of his family are bur- of Lear and Scoutt. He had a masters pital in Birmingham and associate edi- ied. He first came to Sewanee to at- degree from Harvard Business School, tor of the Southern Medical Journal tend SMA, where he won a silver cup and was president of that alumni club His alumni Personal History sheet, as "model cadet." He left the Uni- as well as the Sewanee Club of Wash- filled out in 1941, has the comment: versity to manage his father's business ington, his wry humor enlivening many U N.B. The most inspiring man I was when he died, and has continued in an occasion. His law degree, in 194U, ever under at any college was Dr. John that work. He was a life-long mem- was from George Washington Univer- Bell Henneman of Sewanee." ber and senior warden of St. Paul's sity, where he later gave lectures on John R. McClung, '13, SAE, died Episcopal Church of Meridian, Missis- government. He was a member of the in February in San Jose, California. sippi. Survivors are his wife, a daugh- Advisory Board to the Presidential Born in Jewell City, Kansas, he took ter, and a son, Shepherd Spencer Ne- Task Force on National Aviation Goals. his B.S. at Kansas State College and ville, A'63. His former teacher and professional went on for an M.A. at Sewanee. While Walter E. Jervey, Jr., '26, ATO, cf associate, now Secretary of the Air working on the degree he taught at Marietta, Georgia, died July 27. He Force, Eugene M. Zuckert, says of him, SMA, and later was on chemistry fac- was secretary-treasurer of the Glover "Coates Lear was the rare combination ulties of Kansas State and Texas Chris- Machine Works. Survivors are his of fine scholar of the law and brilliant tian University. He served in World wife, three sons, and four granddaugh- protagonist. He thought and felt deep- War I and then went into the insur- ters. ly, and expressed his intellectual be- ance business. He was a Certified Life William Laurens Herbert, '27, died lief with eloquence and honesty. His Underwriter. He is survived by his recently in Memphis while playing attainments of mind, and his fine inde- wife and a son. bridge with friends, apparently after a pendence of spirit, represented the best Patrick C. Dinkins, '15, SAE, died heart attack. He entered the University production of an education such as Se- September 23 in Atlanta. He was presi- from Plaquemine, Louisiana, and be- wanee seeks to provide. He took great dent of the Dinkins-Davidson Hard- came a member of Phi Beta Kappo. pride in Sewanee, and Sewanee can " ware Company in Atlanta and was a He was employed by Union Planters well be proud of his accomplishments member of Second Ponce de Leon National Bank in Memphis. He is sur- Coates Lear is survived by his wife. Baptist Church. He was active in the vived by his brother, Postel, '26, with Rose Marie, his daughter, Sandra, his Sewanee Alumni Club there. He is whom he lived. son, Allen Lawrence, '65, now abroad survived by his son and three grand- Ralph L. Collins, '28, KS, vice- in the junior-year-in-France program, children. president and dean of faculties at Indi- and his mother. John J. Gillespie, 15, PDT, died ana University, died October 12 of a Neal McCalla Speake, Jr., '50, SAE, September 5 in New York, where he heart attack. He was Indiana's repre- died from injuries sustained when had lived for thirty years. He was in sentative in the Committee for Insti- struck by a car in Columbus, Georgia, business there and served as president tutional Cooperation, executive direc- on July 17. He had been working of the International Fire Equipment or of the Indiana Conference on Higher part-time on research data analysis at Corporation. During World War I he Education, a member of the executive the Auburn Experiment Station while was an army captain. He is survived board of the Commission on Colleges working toward his Ph.D. at the Uni- by two sisters and a brother, Frank and Universities of the North Central versity of Michigan. He was a Phi M. Gillespie, 11, PDT, of San An- Association, and a member of the Com- Beta Kappa at Sewanee. He is sur- tonio. mission on Teacher Education of the vived by his brother, Daniel W. Speake, Rogers Bethune Tullis, 19, DTD, Association of American Colleges. A '51, SAE.

30 The Sewanee News WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

jested below are names of classmates and friends whose present whereabouts are unknown. Please advise the Alumni Of- fice of any information about the lost Alumni. In case the Alumnus is deceased, let us know if possible the exact or approxi- mate date and place of death.

Class of 1900 Harry L. Fleming William Burrows III Elmer E. Bowman Dr. George M. Floyd George C. Collom Murray T. Brown Lindley C. Herrington Austin Cooke Clarence W. Cowper William T. Hickman William L. Dunn John W. Decker Ethyl L. Humphrey Robert E. Duvergey Joseph I. Dougherty Dr. William A. N. Jones William L. Edmundson, Jr. Joseph B. Durant Dr. Hubbard Lindley G. B. Edmondson Edwin S. English Dr. Robert L. McReynolds Philip Burett Ezell, Jr. Walter Griffin Dr. Isham W. Pittman Joseph F. Green, Jr. Leidy S. Hagerty Dr. Robert J. Shelton James K. McLean Carl R. Hallstrom Dr. Sam Stein Randolph A. Moore William A. Hamilton George W. Taylor James W. Morgan William W. Henegar Dr. Owen H. Taylor Richard Penn Andrew J. Isham Dr. Harvey P. Vaughn Claude W. Smith, Jr. Louis H. Kaha, Jr. Albert Van Buren Vines Harry M. Williams Thomas S. Kennedy Dr. Claude J. Walker Class of 1932 James R. W. Kerr James B. Wise James C. Fanning Peter M. Kusmo Class of 1912 Bernard Gause Albert C. Lancaster Clarence M. Burnett John Gordon Gomila Charles R. Lawson Ernest A. Coker James Lewis Harrison Silas B. Lawson Frank Graves Craig John Walter Hawkins Fred B. McGarvey Albert Percy Hartley Robert Lee King Alexander C. Miller Charles C. Howard Kenneth G. McDonald Phillip E. Mock Roscoe T. Jester John I. McRee, Jr. Fred S. Nelson Joseph S. Lyons Mark A. Merrill Joshua C. Oates Charles B. Murphy Andre Brown Morris Michael Ostrowsky Dr. Charles P. Murphy Richard Anthony Morris Walter E. E. Southard Walter Nelligan Ernest William Perry Ralph S. Steensen George Riley Pilcher Carl Haralson Phillips Richard H. Tutt Guy Thorpe Reid Joseph B. Snoddy Fletcher M. Vick John Calvin Runyan E. J. Walker, Jr. Samuel D. Wall William Thomas Speare Class of 1936 Charles H. Wentz Robert Lee Summers George D. Flood James M. Wiley William I. Yopp Preston H. Griffith John E. Wood Class of 1916 Fisher A. G. Horlock Class of 1904 Col. Edwin T. Bowden John C. Long Herbert B. Brewton Henri William Coulson Gerhard Russell George D. Cureton John Cecil Curran Class of 1940 Charles S. Eberhardt, Jr. Ancel C. Curry Noel Carpenter Benjamin Friedman Jesse G. Fanning Comdr. John L. Holmes James L. Griffin William S. Heyward Jarvis Parnell Jones Wilbern J. Griffis Ray Palmer James O. McDougal William H. Guerlnger Tom Turney Roger L. Miner Frank Hildebrand Leroy G. White Paul E. Short Lafayette C. Hix John W. Wilson Frank Smith John T. Kennedy Class of 1920 Class of 1944 Armstead A. Lain Joseph M. Brownlee Grover Alison, Jr. Charles S. Lewis Thomas P. Cope, Jr. Edwin D. Allen John E. McCreery William De Bruyn Kops, Jr. Samuel L. Grier Gardner A. Marable William Y. King George C. Horsley James H. Melvin Angus Edward McGannon Stanley Koopman Charles K. Miller Winfrey M. Palmer Glenn O. Lucas Peyton P. Nottingham Akira Suyekuni John D. McFarland C. C. Parish Class of 1924 Clayton P. Myer John W. Price Bruce Cabot Theodore R. Nicholson Milton C. Ragsdale Charles H. Carr William M. Reece Isaac T. Rand The Rev. John Jefferson Cobb Hugh F. Smith, III Watura Sakakibara John C. Collins Clarence C. Wiley Benjamin F. Stroder John Wm. Cooke William C. Young James T. Stroder John W. Elliotte Class of 1948 Sam E. Swimmey William M. Foster, Jr. Joe C. Byars Morris Weinberg James T. Grescom Carl A. H. Higgins John T. West Jack Leas Hatfield Thomas A. Horsley, Jr. James A. White Francis D. Kendall, Jr. James W. Rountree Class of 1908 Carl W. McCrory Class of 1952 William Smith Carver George L. Snowden, Jr. Delma M. Bonham Laurence S. Costelle John Haskins Sutherlin Edward E. H. Devany Dr. Thomas Jefferson Dean Ephraim S. Totten Harry G. Dinwiddie William Lewis Epps Merritt A. Wimberley Cecil D. Harper, Jr. Dr. Aziz Benjamin Fam Class of 1928 Stanley P. Lachman Dr. Manuel D. Fernandez y Silva Robert Boyd Brandau Walter T. Lea, Jr.

November 1963 31