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Sewanee News, 1966

Ld Q W Ld u o u

Id ^ THE ONCE UPUN A-TIME (on the Cover)

Sewanee A fine photographer likes to explore unfamiliar NEWS aspects of familiar objects. What could be more familiar than the clock on Brcslin Tower? So The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the Joque Soskis, '66, photographed it from inside. ASSOCIATED ALUMNI The clock—which is really the Douglas clock, of The University of the , at Sewanee, Tennes- given by George W. Douglas of Tuxedo Park, see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee. , in memory of his mother, Charlotte Ferris Douglas of Rochester, and the clock's curator, Professor of German Fritz Whitesell (below), feels quite strongly about this—has had February 1966 Volume 32 Number 1 many extollers, none more lyrical than Thomas Dabney, 1905: "More than sixty years had passed since Breslin's hortation had made me R. Morey Hart, '34 jump while preparing for my degree, and here President of the Associated Alumni were these same bells talking to me in the same old tones, a symbol of Sewanee's permanence and Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35 the clanging vigor of its ideals and purposes."

Managing Editor Edith Whitesell Dr. Whitesell's kibitzer is Thomas L. Rust, '66.

Associate Editor Albert S. Gooch, Jr. (See also p. 4, col. 1)

Soski: The Triumphant Year

Over $5.5 Million in Gifts 180

140 By Robert S. Lancaster

' on De remembered -g f\ f ?* may o by ^t§~*\^\ Sewanee alumni and friends. The -*- V>^V_/ ^ ycar produced an astonishing 60 $5,507,470.15 of new funds for the University. The 1964 total gift income of $3,114,345 was itself unprec- edented, but 1965 exceeded this figure by the huge rppp rrr sum of $2,393,125. The year marked the successful II 'II s i completion of the three-year $10,000,000 campaign. 95° 1957 1950 '959 i960 1961 1962 1963 1964. 1965 Beyond money, and the Jessie Ball duPont Library, CHURCH SUPPORT IN THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS and the Malon Courts dormitory, and all of the other THE GRAY BARS REPRESENT THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION SUNDAY achievements, including new recognition for academic OFFERINGS, THE RED BARS SEWANEE-IN-THE-BUDGET. excellence, lie the united effort and the ceaseless ener- Church support for the University consists of Sewanee- gy and generosity of our alumni and friends who gave in-the-Budget and the Theological Education Sunday Offer- themselves and prodded others into giving and tri- ing. The progress of a decade is here presented for both umphed. in thousands of dollars. Of great significance is the soaring rise in 1965. The owning dioceses and A comprehensive report on the three-year campaign the Church at large were unwilling to see Sewanee fail in her campaign to has been prepared and mailed. A study of this report match the Ford Foundation offer. We hope the coming dec- will reveal that from 6,400 alumni nearly 4,000 gifts ade may see this support which goes each year into the were received. In many instances a single alumnus operational budget rise even above this high level. The gave many times. goal is $l-per-communicant-per-year from each parish in the owning dioceses. This small sum from each communi- If Sewanee were to achieve her long-cherished first- cant giving through his church can assure the continual century goals of a gracious and modern plant, as a set- development of the University of the South. ting for her academic excellence, and a certain mini- mum financial security, it was necessary that the Ford matching campaign succeed. It did succeed, and it has office or the registrar's office in the Cleveland Memo- added a new dimension to our corporate life. The rial without realizing this new dimension? Or drive library alone opens up opportunities for growth and along the faculty circle by Running Knob Hollow Lake service never before possible. One cannot enter it without feeling an exquisite exhilaration of new ac- without realizing the coming of a new age, not neces- complishment? sarily better, but with more potential and greater in- The new century is before us. In its initial years stitutional freedom. Who can enter the admissions must come the new college to keep us small whiie growing, to preserve the intimate best of the old Se- Robert S. Lancaster is dean the College Arts of of wanee, and a new and yet old method of tutorial in- and Sciences and acting director of development. He struction to liberate and sharpen our scholars' minds is teaching a course in his department of political sci- and make them powerfully articulate, and still keep ence this semester, possibly to get out of his character them aware of the mission of civility. Almost immedi- as development director, who has been generically described: ately must come the new science building. All of this will require courage and generosity and administra- "A single-minded chap, his task tive talent and sure support. A foundation has been Is but to ask and ask and ask."* laid; a success has been achieved; but the future will •From GOING AROUND IN ACADEMIC CIRCLES by require a constant effort of the kind that made 1965 Richard Armour. Copyright by Richard Armour. Used 1965 the triumphant year. by permission of the McGraw-Hill Book Company.

February 1966 16th Rhodes Scholar—Other Honors THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF SeWANEe's SIXTEENTH Rhodes Scholar sounded the first note in the 1966 tattoo of graduate honors. Douglas Duane Paschall of McKcnzie, Tennessee, a scholar-athlete squarely in the tradition of Rhodes selections, will go

to Oxford in the fall. An alternate captain of the foot- ball team and president of the Order of Gownsmen, he also was one of twenty-two men in the nation to ' Rt. Rev. Frank y\. Juhan, i i, retired bishop The win a $1,000 post-graduate scholarship awarded by of Florida, former undergraduate athlete, SMA the National College Athletic Association. The Uni- chaplain, Chancellor, director of development, and versity of the South was the only college to win NCAA present athletics consultant for the University, was scholarships in both of the two years since the grant named Sewanee's Man-of-the-Year by the commu- was initiated. Last year's honoree was Frank Stub- nity's Civic Association in December; was to be in- blefield, Phi Beta Kappa end. ducted, with Sewanee football coach Shirley Majors, into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame February 24; t\. twenty-year study by the Woodrow Wilson and was still in the running for the national Football Foundation on fellowships awarded with a view to Hall of Fame, as one of four finalists in the senior college teaching showed Sewanee, with fifty fellows division. between 1945 and 1965, in seventh place among all Young played center on the team of the colleges and universities in the nation in percent- 1909, which whipped all its age rated against number of liberal arts degrees opponents and lost only to Princeton. granted in the year 1961-62. In the same analysis "The only problem about declaring Bishop Juhan Sewanee was first in the South and fourth among the Sewanee's Man-of-the-Year," Vice-Chancellor Mc- nation's men's colleges. Crady said when the honor was conferred, "is the Thirteen of Sewanee's fifty winners were actively diifficulty of deciding which year. engaged in college teaching and another twenty-one "Bishop Juhan's association with Sewanee began were in graduate school working on higher degrees in 1907, fifty-eight years ago, when he enrolled in the with that end in view.* University. From that day to this he has been iden- tified with this institution and this community in so O ther national graduate scholarships as well as many ways that it would be difficult to find a more the Woodrow Wilson fellowships entered into a sur- representative Sewanee man." vey made for the American Council on Education, in which Sewanee, ranking ninth, was the only southern X he Commencement preacher as well as featured institution among the top twenty colleges and univer- speaker for the second Sewanee Synod meeting of the sities in the nation. Fifteenth Province will be the Primate of Canada. *The thirteen men already engaged in the profession are: Archbishop of Rupert's Land, the Most Reverend Joseph Righton Robertson, Jr. '54, Ph.D. Emory, assistant Howard Hewlett . A graduate of the Univer- professor of history, University of Maryland; F. Ar- nold, Jr. '57, Ph.D. Harvard, instructor in English, Univer- sity of Toronto, he has been awarded twelve honorary sity of the South; John Maurice Evans '58, M.A. Yale, in- doctorates. Born in Macleod, Alberta, in 1903, he structor in English, Washington and Lee University; David Hal Evett '58, Ph.D. Harvard, assistant professor of English, spent five years in the insurance business before enter- University of Wisconsin; Eric Woodfin Naylor '58, Ph.D. ing theological training. The Synod, meeting June 8 Wisconsin, instructor in Spanish, University of the South; Robert Dale Sweeney '59, Ph.D. Harvard, instructor in and will also hear the 9. Rt. Rev. Francisco Reus- classics, Dartmouth College; Jan Alan Nelson '60, Ph.D. Froylan, Bishop Coadjutor of Puerto Rico. North Carolina, instructor in romance philology, State Uni- versity of Iowa; Charles Austin Powell '60, M.A. Emory, assistant professor of political science, Temple University. Robert James Schneider '61, D.S.M. Notre Dame, assistant professor of classics, University of Southern California; Robert Judson Snell, Jr. '61, M.A. Columbia, instructor in French, State University of New York, Albany; Jerry Brine Johnson '62, instructor in philosophy, Southern University; William McGowen Priestly '62, M.A. Princeton, instructor in mathematics, University of Kentucky; Charles Stephen Little Hoover '63, M.A. Yale, instructor in history, University of the South.

Soskis L 111 fifth annual Fly-In of Sewanee's Airborne

Friends is set for May 13-14 at Jackson-Myers Field.

Dinner, barbecue and Call tales as usual are prom-

ised by Lt. Col. Leslie Mcl.aurin (I S A I' retired), '39, airport manager.

Volunteer assistant to Col. McLaurin is William K. Kcishner, a writer on aviation subjects who has made

his home at Sewanee. He is author of the StuderU Pilot's Flight Manual as well as other textbooks in the

field, and is a contributor to a number of flight maga- zines.

Dr. Charles Foreman, associate professor of biology, has received a $20,000 research grant from the Na- tional Science Foundation to pursue his studies in

comparative biochemistry. This is the fourth grant Dr. Foreman has received for the work he has been DOUGLAS PASCHALL engaged in for the past seven years—comparing the In the Tradition proteins of red blood cells in closely related mammal?.. He has published several articles on the subject in journals of comparative physiology and genetics, in- J\_ Sewanee summer fine arts center will join the cluding one in the British journal Nature, and is established Sewanee Summer Music Center, the Col- working on another article at present. lege of Arts and Sciences Summer School, the Sewa- nee Summer Institute of Science and Mathematics, Hodding Carter, H'53 and one of the nation's out- the Graduate School of Theology, the Sewanee Sum- standing newspapermen as well as a writer of fifteen mer Training School for church workers, and the Se- books and countless magazine articles, was invited by wanee Military Academy school-camp for a rounded the St. Luke's Society to speak at Sewanee February 7. "Vacation with a Purpose" on the Mountain for the Carter was one of a series of guest speakers asked entire family. to present views of particular interest to men on their The fine arts center, under the direction of H. way to the ministry. His topic, "What's Going On in Stanford Barrett, artist-in-residence at the University the South," was regarded as a valuable background and director of its art gallery, will offer courses in for work in southern parishes. sculpture, commercial art layout, photography, draw- ing and painting, and art theory, with flexible com- The current series of radio programs from Sewa- binations arrangeable, under established artist-teachers nee will be heard over FM radio station WPLN, Nash- in each area. Asked if he will offer pop and op art, ville, Friday evenings at 7:30 P.M. starting March Mr. Barrett said, "We will be glad to work with any- 4. The programs, which include interviews with Arnold body on anything. My only personal prejudice among Toynbee, , and Andrew Lytle as well as the masters is in favor of top art." music by the Sewanee Summer Music Center and the The only entrance requirements for the non-credit Tupper Saussy Trio, have also been scheduled by courses are that the applicant be over sixteen and KDFK, Los Angeles; WNYC, New York; stations in under ioo years of age and interested in art. Tuition Pocatello, Idaho, and Honolulu and many points be- for periods of less than the full five weeks (June 19- tween. July 25) will be prorated. City News Bureau. Washington

Walter Bryant, '49, director of athletics, with Congressman Richard Boiling, '37, represented Sewanee at the National Collegiate Athletic Association Diamond Jubilee Luncheon in Washington. Doug Paschall, '66, won the organization's coveted post-graduate scholarship award.

February 1966 Review Honors T. S. Eliot

The Winter, 1966, issue of the Sewanee Re- Land," the work that catapulted Eliot to fame and viezv is a memorial to T. S. Eliot by his friends, controversy and broke ground for new directions in

that is to say, by chosen statesmen in the Es- twentieth-century literature. tablishment of Anglo-American letters. The literary-history-making issue has strong Sewa- The double issue of 400 pages includes critical es- nee roots. T. S. Eliot himself was a Review contribu- says, personal memorabilia, and poetry. "This kind of tor over the years and repeatedly praised the quarter- publication, of that size and quality, to be done by ly. Allen Tate, in the course of his career as a fore- our University Press, is a publishing feat," the editors most American poet, novelist, and critic, was editor say. of the Sewanee Review and professor of English at the Allen Tate, guest editor of the issue, was a long- University of the South from 1944 to 1947. The Rev. time close friend as well as professional associate of William Ralston is an alumnus, class of 1951. Eliot, whom he regards as his master. The idea of Stephen Spender, currently poet-in-residence for the the project was born full-blown, with the inevitable , will lecture at Sewanee in the

selection of Tate to guide it, in the head of Andrew spring in the duPont series.

Lytle, permanent editor of the Sewanee Review. It The Review has printed the, for it, large run of evolved in many friendly, informal discussions be- 4,500 copies. The expected increased demand will be tween the two men. met by publication in book form—rights have already "Allen was the one man in the world that we knew been bought by Chatto and Windus in England and to be able to get the right people to agree to do it," Seymour Lawrence, Inc., in Boston. Collectors might

Lytle says. take note that the Eliot issue of the magazine is bound The "we" includes the Rev. William Ralston, asso- to be a rare one. Even normal-operation copies of old ciate editor, who teaches half time in the School of Sewanee Reviews continue to be sought at increased Theology. It was he who pulled the issue together, prices. There are subscriptions from 58 countries, in- and his amiable erudition undoubtedly contributed to cluding a sizable block that the U. S. Information Ser- the conviviality of those meetings on the literary vice buys for foreign libraries.

Olympus. Sewanee Mountain, as it happened. State Department-sponsored visitors from India and The "right people"—the twenty-seven contributors Italy have journeyed to the Mountain to meet the who worked on facets of the monument to T. S. Eliot- editors. include I. A. Richards, Sir Herbert Read, Cleanth In the course of one of the visits that germinated Brooks and Stephen Spender, among the most readily the T. S. Eliot issue, a conversation between Andrew

recognized names. wrote a brief jotting Lytle and Allen Tate was recorded (this is one of the on his friend and mentor. C. Day Lewis, one half of current series of Sewanee radio programs). The two whose split personality is a popular detective story men touched on the role of the quarterly in general writer, has sent a poem, "At East Coker." and the Sewanee in particular. Why so much thought Helen Gardner, principal of St. Hilda's, Oxford, was and work for 4,500 copies? recently married and wrote her contribution, "The "The quarterlies should not even attempt to ap-

Comedies of T. S. Eliot," on her honeymoon. John peal to a mass audience," Tate said. "Their role is to Crowe Ransom's piece was delayed but will appear in maintain the highest possible standards, and even the spring. though they may have few readers, those few

The lead essay is by T. S. Eliot himself, on Ameri- might be what Matthew Arnold called the saving can literature and the American language. It is printed remnant." through the courtesy of Mrs. Eliot, concurrently with The quarterlies must depend on university support, its appearance in his last collection of essays. Tate and Lytle agreed. "Perhaps it's part of a uni-

Another reprint of great interest is 's versity's duty to subsidize them. The liberal arts never

"An Anatomy of Melancholy," which was the first make anybody any money anyhow, and the quarter- serious review of Eliot's long poem, "The Waste lies are extensions of the old liberal arts program."

The Sewanee News Trustees

Among the men who work the hard- est for the University of the South, with perhaps the least recognition, are its trustees. We want to thank these five men who finished terms in Janu- ary, the first four after six years and the fifth after three years, and all the others whom we hope to introduce in future issues. Chancellor CARPENTER

The Rev. Charles T. Chambers, Jr., '47, T'50, from the diocese of Missis- sippi, is rector of St. George's in Clarksdale. A native of Little Rock, he was educated in its public schools and the University of before coming to Sewanee. He served par-

ishes in Hope, Magnolia, and Arkadel- •* phia in Arkansas and at Rolling Fork O and Hollandale in Mississippi before coming to St. George's in 1958.

The Rev. J. Rayford McLean, '49, an Arkansas trustee, is rector of St. Mary's parish in El Dorado. He was Vice -Chancellor born in Goldonna, , was McCRADY graduated with a B.S. degree from Northwestern State College in Natchi- toches, and worked for five years as superintendent of the Valley Electric Corporation before entering the School of Theology at Sewanee. He has two Holly, Tennessean sons, both at Sewanee—one in the ALLEN TATE School of Theology and one in the It's the best quarterly review in the English language. College.

The Rev. Robert S. Snell, '49, T'52, Andrew Lytle referred to Tate as the Sewanee Re- from the diocese of Florida, is rector view's most valuable editor and adviser, but Tate of St. Andrew's parish, Jacksonville. He was educated in the public schools countered, "I don't believe that. I think the Sewanee of Pensacola, majored in English at CHAMBERS Review right now is better than it has ever been since Sewanee, where he was captain of the football team, on the executive com- it was founded in 1892.—It's the best quarterly review mittee of the Order of Gownsmen, be- in the English language. There is nothing in England longed to Blue Key and Omicron Del- ta Kappa leadership fraternities and that can rival it." Alpha Tau Omega social fraternity.

Andrew Lytle, editor of the Sewanee Review and The Rev. Robert C. Witcher, rector lecturer in English at the University, was the subject of St. James' Church, Baton Rouge, o of a tribute by in his introduction has been a member of the Louisiana group. He was born in New Orleans to Flannery O'Connor's last book, Everything that in 1926, was educated in its public Rises Must Converge: "Literary criticism in general schools and was graduated from Tu- lane in 1949 with a B.A. degree. His was not close to Flannery's heart, but one essay that B.D. is from Seabury-Western. He we all read and liked was Andrew Lytle's classic piece earned an MA. in 1960 from Louisi- Mclean ana State University and is a candi- on Caroline Gordon." The story "Revelation" in that date for a Ph.D. there in the field of collection was first published in the Sewanee Reviezo. American history. He has served as president of the East Baton Rouge Lytle's collected are essays being brought out by Ministerial Association. the Louisiana State University Press, scheduled for

August. He was a speaker for the Mrs. Harold Van- The Rev. Robert Elliott Johnson, derbilt Symposium on Modern Literature at Vander- rector of All Saints' in Gastonia, North Carolina, has served for three years as bilt last fall, was on a similar mission to Purdue Uni- a trustee from the diocese of Western versity, will go to Tuscaloosa in April for the South- North Carolina. He was born in - ville, , received a B.A. ern Literary Festival. He suffered a fire at his home in rJe^rree from the University of North Monteagle "the Monday after Homecoming" but is Carolina in 1950 and a B.D. degree from Theological Seminary in now back in the cabin, reasonably shipshape. 1959. WITCHER

February 1966 Sports

Winter Teams Excel

Paced by four veteran starters and a surprising freshman, the basketball team held a 7-3 mark when exams began.

Coach Ted Bitondo checks the stop watch as co-captain Senior guard Bob Swisher, in his third year as cap- Terry Goodwin congratulates captain Al Sherer on his tain, teamed with juniors Tom Ward, the team's top swimming performance. Sherer is a member of the 400 med- ley relay team and the freestyle relay team, both of which scorer and rebounder, Larry Cunningham, and Ed have broken University swimming records this year. Grant to give Coach Lon Varnell a strong nucleus for his eighteenth team at Sewanee. While searching for a fifth man, the Tigers dropped the time Sewanee's three winter athletic teams two early-season games, but in the second, a 74-71 Bytook a mid-January examination break, they had loss to David Lipscomb, Sam Carroll, an unheralded built a combined record of seventeen victories against freshman from Jackson, Tennessee, came off the bench four defeats, and Coach Ted Bitondo's swimming team to pace a Sewanee rally which won for him a starter's was still undefeated. berth. In picking up eight straight victories, the swimmers With their record at 2-2, the Tigers raced to four had recorded stunning upsets over the University of straight victories before falling to Florida Southern Florida, 53-42, and Eastern Kentucky, 61-34. Othtr 65-60, but a decisive 72-52 win over King College fol- victims were Union College 58-37, Vanderbilt 58-36, lowed before exams began. Georgia Tech 56-39, Louisville 51-31, and Emory by scores of 56-38 and 53-41. Coach Horace Moore's wrestling team started its Remaining on the schedule were dual meets against season on a winning note, blanking Emory 46-0 Alabama, Kentucky and Tulane and the College Ath- as seven men won their matches by pins, but four letic Conference meet at Lexington, Virginia. days later the team lost a heartbreaker to Georgia The squad was led in scoring by freshman John Tech in Atlanta by a 20-19 count. Colmore who had 63^ points and also had set school They rebounded from that setback, however, to win records in the 50 and 100 freestyle events with times the University of Chattanooga Invitational Tourna- of 23.1 and 51.4. Bob Couch had lowered the 500 ment championship, with 87 points, beating Chatta- freestyle by nine seconds to 5:32.6. nooga, Milligan and Maryville. Other record holders were John Olofson, 100 back Four Tigers—Tee Parker, Jack Baker, Jim Hey and stroke 1:01.1; John Turpit, 200 individual medley, Paul Tessmann—emerged from the tournament cham- 2:16.4; R' c k Clewis, 200 butterfly, 2:23.0; Paul Hoch, pions in their weight divisions. Hey and Tessmann 200 breaststroke, 2:30.4; the 400 medley relay team also preserved their unbeaten record for the season. of Olofson, Hoch, Pete Fogg and Al Sherer, 4:00.8 High point of the season for the wrestlers will be and the freestyle relay team of Colmore, Turpit, Sher- the Southeastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association er and Couch, 3:27.8, Tournament to be held at Sewanee February 25 and 26.

S The Sewanee News —

The Southern Senior Men's Indoor Championships Paschall Heads '66 Tigers and the Southern Professional Indoor Championships, played in Pcbruary, and the Southern Men's Indoor Championships, scheduled March 4-6, drew advance Paschall, an All-College Athletic Con- David registration from many of the South's top tennis play- ference defensive halfback, will captain the ers. [966 Sewanee football team, with Chip In addition to the winter tournaments, Sewanee will Langley and Richard Dolbeer serving as alternate host the National Collegiate Athletic Association Col- captains. lege Division Championships and the Southern Junior They were elected by the members of the 1965 team Closed Championships this summer. at the annual football banquet in January. Other awards went to Langley as most improved lineman: Johnson Signs Contract Dale Reich as most improved back; Jim Beene and Carl Sims as most valuable freshmen backs; and Win- Bill Johnson, who re-wrote Sewanee's football ston Sheehan as the most valuable freshman lineman. record book during the 1965 season, capped a Letter awards went to seniors Phil Condra, Dale sparkling collegiate athletic career in November when Reich, Doug Paschall, Bruce Mulkey, Sam Ladd, Den he signed a contract to play professional football with Upton, Bill Johnson, Price Stone, Lynwood Pueschel, the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League. Paul Tessmann; juniors David Paschall, Chip Lang- Johnson learned his football at Sewanee, playing twe

ley, Richard Dolbeer; sophomores Mike Knickelbine, years at the Sewanee Military Academy before join- Joe Guess, Ernest Kirk, Tom Pope, Alike Underwood, ing Coach Shirley Majors at the University for the Charles Gignilliat, Rusty Adcock; freshmen Tim 1962 season. In four seasons with the Tigers John- Mitch, Tim Hubbard, Dan Callahan, Art Mallory, son played wingback, fullback and tailback while Winston Sheehan, Don , Jim Beene and Carl setting five University football records. Sims. In scoring he set the record for most points in a The Tigers posted a 7-1 record for the season and single season at 86, and for most points in a career won the conference championship for the third straight at 190. He also has gained more yards in a single time with a 4-0 mark. game, 279, than any other Tiger and he holds the They had to overcome big obstacles in the last two yards-gained mark for a season at 1043 and for a ca- games to claim the title. Washington and Lee, which reer at 1996. had beaten the Tigers in 1964, proved almost as stub- During his career the Tigers had one undefeated born this year before falling 6-0. season, 1963, and two in which they lost only one Washington University then came to the Mountain game, 1964 and '65. for a game which—as it had twice before—would de- Gene Cronin, head scout for Atlanta, said of John-

1 cide the confereence championship. Despite building a son: "At six feet, two inches and 210 pounds, he has

I top-heavy edge in the statistics the Bears managed both the size and speed to become one of the best ball only a second-quarter field goal which stood until the carriers in the National Football League." i Tigers scored a touchdown and extra point early in the third period.

Then in a brilliant display of defensive courage the Tigers stopped Washington on four straight downs i the last three times from the one— in the final minute of the game to claim the title. Don Upton and Bill Johnson were named to the of- fensive unit of the All-CAC team while David Pas- chall, Dale Reich, Bruce Mulkey, Paul Tessmann and Chip Langley made the defensive unit. Honorable mention recognition went to Doug Paschall, Mike Knickelbine and Sam Ladd.

Sewanee Hosts Tennis Play

Three major indoor tennis tournaments have been

scheduled for the Charlotte Guerry Courts this winter, Bill Johnson ended a sparkling collegiate athletic career professional football player marking another step in an ambitious program to but began a new career as a when he signed a contract to play for the Atlanta Falcons make Sewanee a focal point for southern tennis. of the National Football League.

February 1966 Clubs . . .

The Sewanee Club of ATLANTA had its annual Christmas party for members and potential stu- dents December 19. Club officers were happy with the attendance of sixty-one high school seniors but they were happier with the help they got from present stu- dents who spent their time at the party talking to the interested high schoolers. The ATLANTA Club planned a party for Sewa-

nee's wrestling team after its January 12 match with

It also Georgia Tech. planned a dinner February 17 Warren, Nashville Banner for prospective students and then will bring a group The Dobbins Trophy, awarded annually to the most active to the Mountain for a first-hand look at the Univer- Sewanee Club, was the focal point of the Christmas Party sity. sponsored by the Sewanee Club of Nashville. From left the bulwarks of the Nashville Club are Dudley Fort, Mrs. ForT, Morse Kochtitzky, Mrs. Kochtitzky, Mrs. Army Nelson, The home of Mrs. C. T. Graydon once again pro- Army Nelson. vided the setting for the annual Christmas party of Other Sewanee Clubs with get-togethers planned the Sewanee Club of COLUMBIA, SOUTH CARO- soon were the Sewanee Club of NEW YORK, where

LINA. The party, planned by David Ellison and Arthur Chitty is a member-on-loan, the Sewanee Club Kirkman Finlay, drew more than 150 alumni, friends, of WASHINGTON, D. C, the Sewanee Club of prospective students and their parents. One potential CHATTANOOGA, and the Sewanee Club of CHAR- student attended the party, but it may take some time LOTTE. for him to be admitted. He was six-week-old David

Ellison IV, whose parents had him properly dressed Dean Robert S. Lancaster, Mrs. Lancaster and Al in a Sewanee Tiger shirt. Gooch were Sewanee representatives at the November Dean George Alexander of the School of Theology Founders' Day Dinner of the Sewanee Club of BIR- spoke to a January 10 meeting of the club. MINGHAM. Arranged by retiring president Tommy Thagard, the party was held at the Birmingham The Dobbins Trophy, awarded each year to the Country Club and had a hundred Sewanee people in most effective Sewanee club, held center stage at the attendance. Dean Lancaster, speaking to the group, Sewanee Club of NASHVILLE's Christmas party. invited them to "come to see the fine work your in- Held the day after Christmas, the party had over 200 terest has made possible in Sewanee." people in attendance. Chief greeter was Bob Finlay, Caldwell Marks is the new president of the club. who promptly guided prospective students to repre- sentatives of the University who were in Nashville for Frank Middleton is the new president of the Coastal the party. Carolina Chapter of the Associated Alumni and the A highlight of the evening was an impromptu birth- Sewanee Club of CHARLESTON. Other officers are day party for Andrew Lytle, which came at the con- Thomas Tisdale, Jr., vice-president, Major William clusion of a dinner for the Sewanee people who were Cuthbertson, A'47, secretary, and Walter Chastain, in Nashville. The lights were dimmed and as a waiter treasurer. Directors are Dr. Harry Gregorie, the re- brought in a chocolate cake adorned with one candle, tiring president, Berkeley Grimball, the Rev. David Dudley Fort, Morse Kochtitzky and Army Nelson, Barney, and G. Sims McDowell III. officers of the Nashville club, led the group in singing happy birthday to a surprised Andrew Lytle. A group of JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI alumni met January 12 for a luncheon to discuss club projects

Bishop Frank Juhan's mid-November trip to ad- with Al Gooch of the alumni office. Of the twenty in- dress the Sewanee Club of JACKSONVILLE was a vited by Bishop John M. Allin, fourteen were present. pleasant assignment for him. "The record of oar Those attending were club president Glenn Massey,

campaign will show that JACKSONVILLE is truly a Jr., Bishop Duncan Gray, the Rev. Frederick Bush, Sewanee town," he told the 100 persons attending the Lon A. Wyatt, Stephen L. Burwell, Lloyd G. Spivey, dinner. "We are grateful to you for your help in the Jr., James R. Pettey, the Rev. Duncan M. Hobart,

campaign and for your continued interest in Sewa- Catchings B. , Robert J. Lipscomb, Charles II. nee," he said. , Jr., and William G. Wills, Jr.

10 The Sewanee News Glass Distinctions . . .

1893 The Rev. David E. Holt, KS, retired Courts and Company, an investment last July from the active ministry al- banking firm organized in July, 1925, ter forty-three years' service. Since by Richard W. Courts, SN, has cele- his June, 1922, ordination in All Saints' brated its fortieth birthday. The firm Chapel, he has served in several south- now has seventeen partners and 384 ern and southwestern cities. The past employees, with offices in sixteen eight years have been spent at St. southeastern cities and in New York. John's Church, Gulfport, Mississippi. Malon Courts Hall, Sewanee's newest His present address: 1419 Dufossat St., dormitory, is named for a son of Rich- New Orleans 70115. ard Courts. 1921 1895 Harold Council, KA, was married A letter written by the late Rt. Rev. April 10, 1965, to Mrs. Mariamne Henry J. Mikell in 1937 and sealed in Prewitt Barnes in Greenville, Missis- a time capsule until 1965, the centen- sippi, where they make their home. nial celebration of the founding of 1922 Kappa Alpha fraternity, was read at Alberrt Bonholzer, carillonneur of ELLIS ARNALL, '28 the fraternity's August convention. the University, has been elected to ". . . To belong to a great Order is a membership on the board of directors man's noblest heritage . . . we must of the Guild of Carrillonneurs of North ." live up to that heritage . . the bish- America. He also holds membership on The Rt. Rev. Thomas H. , SN, op wrote. the Emerald-Hodgson Hospital board Bishop of East Carolina, 1903 was awarded at Sewanee. an honorary degree in June by the G. Bowdoin Craighill, KA, and G. Bob Phillips, PGD, sports editor and University of North Carolina. He holds Bowdoin Craighill, Jr., '36, have a columnist for the Birmingham Post- other honorary degrees from Sewanee new name for their Washington, D. C, Herald, was guest speaker for the and Virginia Theological Seminary. law firm. It is Craighill and Aiello, 725 Jackson, Mississippi, Touchdown Club Fifteenth Street, N.W., 20005. during the football season. His column 1928 1905 "On the Roof runs four days a week Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 L. S. Munger, KA, was the subject in the Birmingham newspaper. One George W. , president of a newspaper profile in Abilene, was devoted almost entirely to Sewa- Point Circle , recently. The occasion was the nee Athletic Director Walter Bryant, Hixson, Tennessee 37343 opening of the membership drive for '49, and the University's athletic pro- Ellis Arnall, KA, who served a the Abilene Philharmonic Association. gram. term as governor of Georgia eighteen Munger, however, is such an enthusi- 1923 years ago, is thinking about making astic civic supporter that the newspa- J. Burton Frierson, PDT, new presi- another race for the office. An Atlanta per said it could have chosen any num- dent of the American Textile Manu- newspaper editorialized: "Arnall is an ber of other events as appropriate oc- facturers Institute, is predicting even excellent campaigner and will be a casions to do a story on him. better business for the textile indus- force to be considered in the race." try in the future. He is chairman of 1914 Kirkman Finlay, PDT, of Columbia, Dixie Yarns, Inc., in Chattanooga. The Rev. Willis Gerhart, KS, trav- South Carolina, has won a seven-state Edwin A. Keeble, with his wife, sales campaign of the Northwestern eling in Italy and Greece, wrote to Alice, has returned from a trip around Mutual Life Insurance Company of classmate Ben Sleeper: "Travel is a the world. Milwaukee. The prize was a trip to lot of trouble and burdensome worry, 1926 Roaring North Carolina, for but you are repaid a thousand times Gap, a Edgar C. Glenn, KS, has been ap- company gathering. over in seeing the great masterpieces." pointed to the South Carolina Wildlife The Rt. Rev. Girault M. has 1915 Resources Commission by Governor edited a new book, The Word on the William Therrel Holt, The Rev. Donald Russell. He now lives on Lady's Air, which includes works by Arthur PDT, celebrated half-a-century of ser- Island. LlCHTENBERGER, H'52, HENRY I. LOUTTIT, vice as an Episcopal clergyman De- When Coleman A. Harwell, KA, at- GST'37, the late Theodore N. , 15 with a service of Holy Com- cember tended the Alumni Council meeting in H'48, and the late Edwin A. Penick, munion in Trinity Cathedral, Sacra- October, he hurried away Saturday af- '08. The book may be ordered from California. Fellow-clergymen mento, ternoon before the Sewanee-Kenyon the Episcopal Radio-TV Foundation, and other friends from the twenty-six football game. The reason for his Inc., 2744 Peachtree Road, N.E., At- counties in the diocese attended the speedy departure was the imminent lanta. service and the luncheon which fol- birth of his third grandchild, Coleman Henry O. Weaver, SN, and William lowed. Mr. Holt, now retired, is a Alexander Harwell . A. Kirkland, H'56, were presented with former chaplain and teacher at the Se- Al Mennell has a new job as as- Sewanee captain's chairs by the Hous- wanee Military Academy. He and Mrs. sistant manager of the Sewells Point ton contingent, in gratitude for the Holt live at 2750 Montgomery Street, | Virginia. Golf Club in Norfolk, He leadership they provided in the Ten Oroville. son, the Rev. William T. A moved to that position after spending Million Dollar Campaign. Holt. Jr., T'49, is rector of St. Timo- twelve years as director of progress 1929 thy's Church, Signal Mountain, Ten- control at the United States Naval nessee. Academy. During his career he has Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 William Schoolfield, 1920 been a close friend of former naval C. president 5556 Emerson Avenue Dr. John Chipman, DTD, emeriti's officers, many of whom have been in Dallas, Texas 75209 professor of metallurgy at the Massa- the public light. His correspondents in- chusetts Institute of Technology, gave clude such people as astronauts Alan Stanyarne Burrows, Jr., SAE, as the twelfth annual N. Lewis Shepard, John Glenn, and Walter president of the Metropolitan Council Memorial Lecture at the Berkeley Schirra, the late President Kennedy, for Community Service in Chattanoo- campus of the University of California and Navy football quarterback Roger ga, is waging a campaign to inform recently. Staubach. citizens of the financial crisis facing

February 1966 n the city's and Hamilton County's hos- 1936 pitals, health department and other Dr. Raiford E. Sumner is professor agencies which rely on public funds. of political science at Mary Washing- The Chattanooga Times in an article ton College, Fredericksburg, Virginia. on Burrows said: "It is the opinion of His wife, Dr. Laura V. Sumner, is pro- Burrows that if a problem is studied, fessor of classics there. He serves as and if the facts are delivered in a fair, head of the Salvation Army and of the clear and calm manner, a way can be Civil War Centennial committee which found to solve it. But if the problem observed such anniversaries as the bat- isn't easily and finally solved, it isn't tles of Fredericksburg, Chancellors- because Burrows didn't try." ville and the Wilderness, and received 1930 many awards for its imaginative work. Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 He formerly headed the Mental Health Dr. Thomas C. Parker, president Association in the city, and his wife is 24 Highlands Drive currently a member of the Fredericks- Greenville, South Carolina 29605 burg City Council. They have a young Charles Dudley, PGD, executive son, Bennett. vice-president and general manager of 1937 the Charlotte, North Carolina, Mer- Z. Dan Harrison, SAE, a captain in chants Association, was named an the U. S. Public Health Service, has award winner by the American So- been transferred from Anchorage, Alas- ciety of Association Executives. The ka, to Jacksonville, Florida, after a award was presented at the group's two-year tour. He has a fourteen- at White Sulphur annual meeting month-old grandson. He is pleased Springs, West Virginia. with the new assignment in his home The Rev. James Haggart, minister of state. the Fall River Mills, California, Metho- dist Church, spent part of 1964 and JAMES HAGGART, '30 1939 1965 as an exchange minister in Tor- Lt. Col. Leslie McLaurin, PGD, quay, England, from which he returned manager of the Sewanee Flight School one of the best-informed Americans on since 1963, has trained twenty-five pi- the British Methodist system. He is lots—fourteen under Air Force con- 1933 optimistic about the possibility of a tract—during that time. His graduates Herman E. Baggenstoss, editor and union between the Church of England include Jim Dozier , '65, Harry publisher of the Grundy County Her- and the Methodist Church and says Brooks, '64, Craig Morrison, '65, and ald, claims to be the only newspaper that when this becomes a reality, the Bob Wallace, '65, all of whom are now man in Tennessee who grows his own same type of conversations will begin Air Force pilots. paper. He owns forest land in Grundy between the American churches. The 1940 County which he has leased to a news- concept is simplified, he says, because Rev. print manufacturing concern. The William P. Barrett is the the Methodist Church already has bish- Robert W. Fort, ATO, has been new rector of St. Paul's Church, Wil- ops in its structure, and the only re- mington, Carolina. is elected president of the Medusa Port- North He a re- quirement would be to bring them in- land Cement Company in Cleveland. tired lieutenant colonel in the chap- to the Apostolic succession. He had been senior vice-president lain corps of the U. S. Army. He is married to the former Ida Belle Arm- 1931 since 1963 and had been vice-president strong and children, for finance prior to that. has two William Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 P., Jr., and Martha. Edwin I. Hatch, ATO, president of Ezzell, president John the Georgia Power Company, has been The Rev. Dick Kirchhoffer, SAE, 731 had vicar of St. Box elected to the board of directors of who been Timothy's Nashville, 37202 Aiea, Tennessee the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Church, Hawaii, has accepted a Edward C. Nash, DTD, celebrated call St. for a three-year term, which began to John's-by-the-Sea in a small the fiftieth anniversary of the founding area called Kahaluu. His new address: January 1. of the Farmers and Merchants Nation- 47-074 Lihikai Drive, Kaneoke, Hawaii The Rev. Hedley J. Williams, rector al Bank in Kaufman, Texas, of which 96744. of St. George's Church, Arlington, is president. He has also been called Lt. Col. Smith retired he Virginia, was honored by his congre- Frank was Kaufman's most dedicated churchman. the States Air gation in November on the occasion of from United Force and 1932 his twentieth anniversary as rector. presented the first oak leaf cluster to The Rev. Frank V. D. Fortune, SN, The celebration drew two bishops, the is rector of St. Theodore of Canterbury Rt. Rev. David S. Rose, '36, coadjutor Parish, Leisure World, Seal Beach, of Southern Virginia, and the Rt. Rev. California, and counts as two of his Frederick D. Goodwin, retired bishop most helpful parishioners Dr. V. O. of Virginia. Ward, professor emeritus of the School Gifts which Mr. Williams received of Theology, and Mrs. Ward. included a three-month sabbatical, two The Rev. Ellwood Hannum was fea- thousand dollars and an electric wrist- tured on the cover of the August, 1965, watch. Episcopal Churchman, the publication of the diocese of Dallas. He was pic- 1935 tured baptizing a new member of St. Arthur Ben Chitty is back at his Augustine's Church. He is executive desk in New York as president of the director of the department of Chris- Fund for Episcopal Colleges, after a tian Social Relations for the diocese. severe automobile accident October 21. Two sons are Sewanee graduates. He is on leave of absence from the The Rev. Fred A. Thompson, KS, was University, where he is director of ordained to the priesthood in 1964 and public relations and executive director has since been at the Church of Our of the Associated Alumni. Merciful Saviour in Kaufman, Texas. Fred F. Lucas has been named to Before becoming a clergyman he was the board of trustees of Montgomery an army officer, retiring with the rank Bell Academy in Nashville. He is own- of major after duty in this country er and president of Shawnee Coal and in Japan and Korea. Company. New faculty members an- Edward C. Wilson, DTD, is the ad- nounced at Montgomery Bell include ministrative officer of the State De- William Noble, '62, and Samuel F. '40 partment's office in Caracas, Venezuela. Pickering, Jr., '63. FRANK SMITH,

12 The Sewanee News the Air Force Commendation Medal in October. He has begun a new career as director of development at Monti- cello College, Godfrey, Illinois. He is married and has twin sons, Ted and Tom. 1941 The Rev. Frank Robert, KA, has been appointed head reference libra- rian at the Joint University Libraries of Vanderbilt University, Peabody and Scarritt. He moved to the new posi- tion from Sewanee, where he had been assistant librarian at the School of Theology. 1942 Cress Fox, SAE, has been featured in Albert Pick Hotel advertisements in national magazines. He and Mrs. Fox are smiling in the ads, thereby indi- cating they are happy with the ser- vice. Dean Robert T. Gibson, PGD, of Christ Church Cathedral, Houston, Texas, had a lot expected of him re- cently. A note to Kiwanis Club mem- bers stated: "The club will be honored with the presents of Dean Robert T. Gibson." A Houston newspaper col- umnist wondered if they were gift- wrapped and entitled the squib "Pen- nies from Heaven?" Armistead I. Selden, Jr., SAE, of Alabama, sponsored a resolution in the Robert M Ayres, Jr., '49, SAE, president of the board of trustees of the House of Representatives of the United Texas Military Institute and vice-president for classes of the Associated States which proclaimed the right ot Alumni of the University presented a silver pitcher to TMI's famed alum- the United States or any other Ameri- nus, Bishop Frank A. Juhan, 11 last May. The occasion was the commence- can republic to intervene, with "armed ment dinner at the Texas preparatory school and Bishop Juhan was present force" if need be, "to forestall or com- to deliver the commencement address. bat" Communist subversion or aggres- sion wherever it may occur in the Western Hemisphere. The resolution passed, in September, 312-52. pus, at a reception honoring Andrew of trustees of the University of the 1943 Lytle, who was in Charleston for a South. Dr. Billy Rogers Beasley, DTD, and speech to the alumni club. 1947 his wife were honor guests during the The Rev. Henry W. Havens, Jr., is Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 August, 1965, meeting of the Tennes- the new assistant rector of St. Paul's James G. Cate, president see House of Young Churchmen at Church, Norfolk, Virginia. He is the Lee Highway DuBose Conference Center, Monteagle. first assistant rector this seventeenth- Cleveland, Tennessee 37311 Having spent two extended tours of century church has had in recent From Norman Shavin's column in duty in Liberia, they were credited years. the Atlanta Constitution: "Newsweek with making that country come alive Dr. Charles H. Knickerbocker, ATO, bureau chief Joe Cumming was sail- for the young people. has written his third novel, The Hos- ing along just fine, offering a rompish The Rev. David B. Collins, KS, pital War, published in January by introduction to former Governor Ellis chaplain of the University since 1953, Doubleday and Company. Gibbs Arnall, '28, at the Atlanta Press has accepted a call to become dean of 1945 Club. 'He was literate and classically the Cathedral of St. Philip, Atlanta, The Rev. John W. Drake, Jr., KA, educated,' Joe warmed up, 'maybe be- succeeding the Very Rev. Alfred reports from Holy Trinity South cause he went to Sewanee—and he has Hardman, '46. He will be the fourth Shore Vicarage that (a) the Lancastri- the piney woods touch, maybe be- Sewanee alumnus to hold the post in ans of northern England are straight- cause he went to Mercer.' It was a an unbroken succession since 1927. He forward, honest, hospitable, and flavorful note but it didn't match Joe's holds B.A. and B.D. degrees from the church-going, and (b) the local clergy windup wherein he bloopered: 'The University and as far as is known he displays great admiration for his color- once and future governor of Georgia. " is the only man in the history of the ful S.T.M. hood from Sewanee. He is ... I give you Mr. GillisV Arnall al- University to be valedictorian of both on pulpit exchange from St. Paul's, lowed that he might introduce Cum- his college and seminary classes. Greenville, North Carolina. His ad- ming some day. Berkeley Grimball, ATO, is head- dress: 1 Windermere Road, Blackpool, Jesse Phillips, SAE, is a free-lance master of -Gaud School in Lancashire, England. editor in Menlo Park, California, who Charleston, South Carolina. The school, The Rt. Rev. Henry I. Louttit, H, specializes in giving manuscripts a fi- which represents a merger of Porter has been named a recipient of the an- nal polishing before Dublication. Military Academy and the Gaud nual Keble Award for distinguished 1948 School for Boys, of which Berkeley service to God and Church. His cita- Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 was headmaster, is located on a new tion stated that "he has administered Blackburn Hughes, Jr., president campus at Albemarle Point. In Octo- his diocese with a sacrificial expendi- St. Andrew's School ber the cornerstone of the chapel was ture of energy during a time of phe- Middletown, Delaware 19709 laid, and dedication ceremonies were nomenal growth." The Rev. John Albert Benton is di- conducted by the Rt. Rev. Gray Tem- The Rev. Thomas J. C. Smyth hss rector of the Episcopal Counseling ple, H'61, of South Carolina, chairman been appointed Episcopal chaplain to Center established by St. Andrew's of the board of trustees, and the Rt. the students and faculty of the Uni- Church. Tampa, and jointly sponsored Rev. John A. Pinckney, '31, of Upper versity of North Carolina at Greens- by the diocese of South Florida. Clients South Carolina. The Grimballs were boro and at Greensboro and Guilford c>me from Tampa and as far away as hosts, in their new home on the cam- Colleges. He is a member of the board Miami.

February 1966 13 1949 The Rev. George J. Kuhnert, SN, ac- Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 cepted the invitation of the Church of John P. Guerry, president the Advent, Nashville, and held his Chattanooga Medicine Company first services at his new church Sep- Chattanooga, Tennessee 37401 tember 5. He directed the college The Rev. C. FitzSimons Allison, band while at St. Luke's and then was SAE, and his wife, Martha, are parents a staff member at St. Mary's Cathedral, of their third son and fourth child. Memphis. He is married to Lethea John de Saussure was born in Sewa- Kays of Chattanooga and has two chil- nee on January 10. dren, George, Jr., and Donna. Harry F. Hall, of South Pittsburg, Thomas Francis Pickard, PGD, re- Tennessee, has been named salesman ceived a master's degree in guidance of the year by the Holt, Rinehart and and counseling from Middle Tennessee Winston textbook publishing firm. He State University at the August com- also received the J. annual Carl Strang mencement. He teaches at the Tennes- Award for selling more than a million see Preparatory School in Nashville. dollars' worth of textbooks. Wife Mary Rose has a new folk song Martin Eugene Morris, SN, has been record, Just Passin' Through: Songs appointed associate county court judge by Rose, produced by Echo Records of of Fairfax County, Virginia. He has Nashville. been practicing law in McLean, Vir- Horace Rhorer, ATO, is economic ginia, for the past seven years and officer in the State Department's office U. S. Army p'.iutx lives with his wife and two daughters in Manila. at 1116 Theresa Ann Street, McLean. '51 The Rev. and Mrs. Paul Shields THAD HOLT Judge Morris is one of four judges in Walker, PGD, have a fourth child, the Fairfax County Court. their first daughter, Julia McAndrew The Rev. Fred W. Sutton, Jr., PGD, Walker, born November 3. He is rec- has been elected rector of Christ land, '51, is one of his Birmingham tor of Holy Trinity Church, Memphis. Church, Brooklyn, New York. He is friends. David G. Wiseman, Jr., has a daugh- only the ninth rector in the 130-year The Rev. James C. Fenhagen II, SN, ter, born October 21. Mrs. Wiseman is history of the church and goes to the Director of Christian Education for the the former Lorean Glasner. new assignment after experiences in diocese of Washington, has returned rural and urban parish work, and as 1951 from a trip to Japan. The trip was de- a teacher at Texas Southern Univer- Charles Bailey, DTD, of Mobile, signed to help implement a companion sity and chaplain at the University of has developed cataracts on both eye.% relationship between his diocese and Houston. has had an operation on one eye, and the diocese of Tokyo. Charles L. Widney, Jr., ATO, has though he must "wear a lens that The Rev. Alexander Fraser is vicar been named representative of the looks like the bottom of a coke bot- of St. Stephen's, Ridgeway, and St. Chase Manhattan in Beirut, Bank Leb- tle" he is overjoyed at the results. An Peter's, Great Falls, South Carolina. anon. holds a graduate He degree from operation on the other eye is planned Address: Box 246, Ridgeway. the Fletcher School of Law and Di- in two years. The cataracts, however, Frank Elmore Glass, Jr., KS, editor plomacy and has attended the Uni- did not keep him from killing a nice of the Dayton Herald, is president of versity of Strasbourg, France, as a Ful- fat turkey gobbler in the spring. the Dayton, Tennessee, of bright scholar. Chamber Edward R. Ball, ATO, has joined Commerce. 1950 the staff of Middleton, Ingle and Com- Class reunion June 3-4, 1966 Dr. Angus Graham, KA, has le- pany, insurance, in Charleston, South Dr. Richard B. Doss, Jr., president turned with his family to Arabia for Carolina. He has bought and remodeled 769 Foxdale Avenue another two-year period after visiting an old home in the city. Address: 112 Winnetka, Illinois 60093 in the United States. One Sewanee Beaufain Street. The Ingle part of the Forbes deTamble, GST, is man he visited while in the States was firm is J. Addison Ingle, '50. teaching sacred studies, drama and Dr. Robert McKey, '51, Coral Gables, Bell, is rector shop at the Cathedral School in Or- The Rev. James PDT, Florida, who has a pediatric practice lando, Florida. of St. Christopher's Church, San Lo- and also teaches at the University of Chester E. Flavin, DTD, has joined renzo, California. Miami School of Medicine. the law firm of Ross and Ross in The Rev. G. P. Mellick Belshav/, Charles W. Hall, ATO, has a son. Springfield, Massachusetts. The firm DTD, is the new rector of St. George's- Charles III, born on his mother, specializes in patent, trademark and by-the-River Church in Red Bank, Mary's, birthday, February 23, 1965. copyright law. Chester, with his wife New Jersey. The Rev. Lacy Harwell, BTP, a Se- and three children, resides at 134 Mal- Barron Bethea, PGD, is finishing his wanee Presbyterian, has been returned lowhill Road. first term in the Alabama legislature to school by his Philadelphia congre- and will not seek re-election. The gations, who "felt they had better en- gross business of his office furnish- roll me fast for a little remedial the- ings company has doubled in the past ological education." He is at Union two years, prompting his observation Theological Seminary on a Danforth that "It is easier in this Johnsonian Foundation grant. prosperity to attain volume than it is Thad Holt, Jr., PDT, beecame dep- to make a profit." uty undersecretary of the Army for Jess B. Cheatham, Jr., SAE, has international affairs on December 20. moved from Houston to 37 Riverda'e He was a Rhodes Scholar at Christ Street, Hillsdale, New Jersey 07642. Church, Oxford, holds a B.A. and an His family includes wife, Elizabeth, MA. degree from Oxford as well as and three children, Cathy, Buzz and an MA. from Yale and an LL.B. from Betty. Harvard Law School. He is married Walter Cox, PDT, is economic offi- to the former Waring Inge and has cer in the State Department's office two children. in Beirut, Lebanon. Dr. Lucian Jones, who holds a the- George Elliott, PDT, has a new ad- ology degree from Sewanee and a doc- dress: 3336 East Briarcliff Road, Birm- torate in clinical psychology from the ingham. He had a reunion at Sewanee University of Houston, has set up an last August with these classmates and agency to minister to the spiritual and fraternity brothers: Willie Cocke, Dr. emotional needs of clergymen and Snow Bayard Tynes, Jack Wall, Carter their families, as well as laymen. It GEORGE POPE, '55 Smith, and John Eyster. Wynne Rag- is called the Episcopal Pastoral Caie H The Sewanee News Center and is located in Houston's William A. Burt, SN, is chairman Palmer Memorial Church Autry House. of the science department of St. An- The agency provides counseling in drew's School, Boca Raton, Florida. He many areas to clergymen, many of married Barbara Woolley in 1957 and whom have been too busy helping taught biology in Connecticut for live others to consider their own needs. years, moving to Florida in 1962. Dr. O. Lewin Keller, is "" a PGD, man The Rev. Ralph E. Cousins, Jr., has alone in his field—prodactinium re- been appointed executive secretary for search. recently

• continental menus to celebrities at his Exchange and a voting shareholder in wife, Grace Yancey, while he was on i Nine Muses restaurant, 6609 Santa his company. He is a former member the faculty there and she was a teacher Monica Blvd., Hollywood, California. of the University's board of trustees. at St. Mary's School. He is survived by her and by three children, Mrs. Don 1953 Gottschalk, Christopher Bird, '61, and The Rev. Edwin Cabaniss Coleman Jennifer Bird. He had been a farmer has been named rector of St. Michael's in West Tennessee since leaving the Church, Charleston, South Carolina. A Mountain in 1937. native of Jackson, Mississippi, he for- 3fn jfHcmortam The Rt. Rev. John James Gravatt, merly was rector of St. John's in Col- H'39, bishop of Upper South Carolina lege Park, Georgia. from 1939 until B. Randolph Shaffer, ATO, an alum- his retirement in 1953, died in Lexington, Virginia, in Octo- David M. Kippenbrock, DTD, is the nus of both the Sewanee Military

1 ber. He was an honorary member of new editor of the Jamestown Church- Academy, '99, and the University, '03, the University's of i board man, the publication of the diocese of who lived in West Palm Reach, died trustees.

1 E. Watson Moore, '39, Southern Virginia. He has been a copy recently. a former ma- yor of Winchester, Tennessee, and a I eeditor for the Norfolk, Virginia, Dr. Granville Eastham, M'04, a re- Ledger-Star. funeral director there, died October 26 tired Culpeper, Virginia, surgeon, died The Rev. Thomas Adams Roberts, in Franklin, Kentucky, after a heart November 5 at eighty-two. He had rector of Christ attack. He is survived by his widow I Church, Lexington, re- been surgeon for a the Virginian, the and a daughter, Mrs. Winston Moore ! ceived an honorary degree from the Southern and the C and O Railways Episcopal Theological Puckett, SS'63. , Seminary in and served in the medical corps during Kentucky in The Very Rev. Alfred Hardman, T'46, i May. World War I. He was a former chair- The Rev. Robert H. Steilberg dean of the Cathedral of St. Philip, became man of the Culpeper board of health. Atlanta, died December 7. He had been I rector of St. Michael's Church, Bon He is survived by two sons, a daugh- Air, Virginia, in dean of the Cathedral since 1952 and | January. He made ter and a brother. had been chairman of the board of i the move from Trinity Church, South Henry T. Bouchelle, '11, ATO, died Lovett School since 1963. past i Boston. He is married to the former He was December 30 in Jackson, Mississippi, president Isabel B. Fourqurean of South Boston and secretary of the dioce- after an illness that began Christmas and has two children. san standing committee, and as dean day. He came to Sewanee from Boli- was administrative priest to the Rt. The Rev. E. Jerome Zeller is dean of gee, Alabama, where his family had Rev. Randolph Claiborne, men at Emory University, Atlanta. He R. H'49. He settled before Alabama became a state. is survived received his theological degree from by his widow, the former He was manager and owner of Sono- Ann Robinson, three Sewanee and was a Fulbright scholar daughters and a tone of Jackson. He is survived by a son, the Rev. '48. in Cairo, Egypt. His experience in- Samuel R. Hardman, son, Dr. Henry Bouchelle, and a cludes service as Episcopal chaplain daughter, Mrs. David Blood. at the University of Florida, rector of John Simms, Jr., '29, St. Catherine's Church, Jacksonville, SAE, co-owner Mrs. William B. Hall, widow of the and of St. Mark's Church, Palatka. He and operator of Simms Lumber Com- University's seventh Vice-Chancellor, pany in Mineral Wells, Texas, has been serving as vicar of the Church died died in Selma, Alabama, December 23. September 23. jf the Advent, Austell. He is married Survivors include his The former Irene Ellerbe, she and "Dr. his to the former Joan Dean, has three widow, parents and a son, John Billy'' are recalled with affection and children and lives at 1393 Harvard Simms III of Houston. gratitude by many generations of Road, N.E., Atlanta 30306. Quincy B. Love. Jr., '35, ATO, died alumni. Dr. Hall, '85, SAE, served the 1954 at his home in Huntsville, Alabama, University almost continuously from The Rev. Ralph A. Banks, KS, is a November 24. He had been city clerk 1893 to 1934 as professor, health officer, member of the faculty of St. Andrew's; and treasurer of Huntsville from I960 dean of the College, alumni trustee School. He returned to the Mountain until February of 1964, when he re- and regent. He was vice-chancellor after having served as Episcopal chap- signed because of ill health. Survivors from 1909 to 1914. Mrs. Hall is sur- lain to students and faculty at Tulane include his widow, Mrs. Mary Mc- vived by a daughter, Miss Lucy Lan- University. Crory Love, two daughters and two don Hall of Sclma.

February 1966 15 Gifts by Classes

(Including gifts in memory or in honor of alumni) (M) Memorial or gift by Col. Henry T. Bull widow George P. Egleston (M) CLASS PRESIDENT No. GIFTS PERCENTAGE AMOUNT (B) Bequest Rev. G. Hendree Harrison PRIOR 41 $ 18,367 (M) 1900-01 Bull 24 5,399 PRIOR TO 1893 Rev. Charles W. B. Hill (M) 1902 Carrier Isaac Ball '91 (M) 9 2,075 Dr. John Walker Jones (M) 1903 Smith 8 35 80,055 John T. Beckett '82 (B) James T. Mann (M) 1904 Lewis 7 Dr. Edward C. Ellett '88 (B) 36 1,215 Lawrence M. Williams (Ml 1905 Dabney 6 37 Dr. Rufus E. Fort '91 (B) 8,681 William B. Wilson (M) 1906 5 26 450 Judge Hiram M. Garwood '83 Joseph U. R. Young (M) 1907 Barnwell 12 54 1,006 (M) 1902 1908 Greer 7 35 62,351 William C. Gorgas (M) Phelan Beale (M) 1909 3 20 537 Rt. Rev. Wm. A. Guerry '85 Otis W. Bullock 1910 Cheape 2 23 36 (M) Albert A. Carrier 1911 Juhan 9 32 118,704 Dr. William B. Hall '85 (M) Rev. John C. Goodman (M) 1912 Green 10 39 1,075 Dr. J. H. P. Hodgson '87 (B) Rt. Rev. Walter Mitchell 1913 Witten Henry A. Jones '80 (B) 5 33 1,260 Ormond Simkins (M) 1914 Gerhart 6 40 770 Frank Purnell '91 Horace Stringfellow (M) 1915 Holt Robert Nichols Sims '91 (M) 8 44 832 Vernon Tupper (M) 1916 Sleeper 11 31 5,114 Walter Virden, Sr. '79 (M) '91 Dr. Gilman Winthrop (M) 1917 Morris 7 21 3,878 Beverley W. Wrenn (B) 1903 1918 Fooshee 17 45 77,509 1893 Robert W. Barnwell 1919 Moore 8 28 451 A. Sessums Cleveland (M) Robert E. Cowart (M) 1920 16 31 12,391 William D. Cleveland (M) G Bowdoin Craighill 1921 Burch 19 43 64,580 Rev. Wilmot Stuart John C. James (M) 1922 Helms 14 25 32,072 (M) Richard L. Lodge (M) 1923 Frierson 21 35 5,514 Frank P. Phillips (B) Coles Phinizy (M) 1924 W. J. Wallace 13 23 11,858 1894 Dr. Herbert E. Smith 1925 Jones 13 20 23,265 William Egleston (B) Dr. J. Bayard Snowden 1926 Hamilton 23 27 9,253 Robert W. B. Elliott (M) Joseph C. 1904 1927 Turner 20 33 15,314 Fargo (B) Henry T. J. Daniel Copeland (M) 1928 G. W. Wallace 29 31 30,334 Soaper George W. Croft (M) 1929 Schoolfield 44 36 27,392 1895 Rev. John Raymond D. Knight (M) 1930 Parker 12 17 1,400 Beean (B) Spruille William W. Lewis 1931 Ezzell 28 25 18,119 Burford (B) Dr. R. M. Rev. Harris Masterson (M) 1932 Patton 24 22 6,012 Kirby-Smith (M) 1896 Jesse L. Suker (M) 1933 Ames 21 25 6,123 Rev. Thomas P. (B) Wesley E. Wheless (M) 1934 Hart 24 31 4,475 Noe Rev. Canon Harold 1905 1935 Ruch 23 28 8,113 Thomas Dr. William Rev. Emile S. Harper 1936 Craighill 21 31 26,130 Weston (B) 1897 John Edward 1937 Graydon 29 42 9,020 Hoge Richard James M. Hull 1938 23 28 12,172 W. Hogue (M) William H. Hurter (B) Rev. Prentice A. Pugh (B) 1939 A. Guerry 18 23 21,782 1898 Stanley Trezevant (M) 1940 Snowden 18 24 1,605 South Barrett (B) Rt. Rev. Hunter 1941 DeWolfe 22 28 2,518 Dr. Robert Wyatt- Clifton Edwards (B) Brown (M) 1942 Kochtitzky 31 33 5,170 George Telfair (M) 1906 1943 Lee 52 43 32,528 Hodgson Mercer Johnston (B) Robert M. Brooks (M) 1944 Sullivan 26 30 1,370 G Rt. Rev. Albert S. Thomas Lt. Col. William G. deRosset 1945 Nelson 16 19 1,590 1899 George Peak, Jr. (B) 1946 Karsten 20 28 2,045 Harbert Benjamin (B) Rev. J. Lundy Sykes (M) 1947 Cate 43 50 53,398 W. Rev. William S. Claiborne Roger E. Wheless (M) 1948 Hughes 31 43 79,090 (M) 1907 1949 J. Guerry 57 30 31,027 Joseph Barton Elam (M) Bower W. Barnwell 1950 Doss 63 27 4,920 Clarkson Gallaher (M) William D. Bratton (M) 1951 Bartlett 57 27 5.433 Robert Jemison, Jr. Willis Gaylord Clark (M) 1952 Patterson 42 25 3,081 Henry G. Seibels John L. Cobbs, Jr. 1953 Kerr 35 20 5,141 1900 Ford P. Fuller (M) 1954 Woods 46 15 5,504 Milton Bacon (M) Henry M. Gass (M) 1955 Bozeman 43 27 1,833 Rev. S. Moylan Bird (M) Telfair Knight 1956 McGee 40 16 2,406 James A. Bull (M) Monro B. Lanier 1957 Palmer 34 17 1,340 Daniel Carrison (M) Rev. Alexander C. D. Noe 1958 Evans 33 16 2,515 Richard P. Daniel Robert T. Phillips (M) 1959 Upchurch 36 15 12,600 Chauncey Dewey (M) Charles McD. Puckette (M) 1960 Gregg 48 20 2,647 Henry W. S. Hayes (M) Marcellus S. Whaley (M) 1961 Rust 58 23 4,464 Bradley Hogue (M) 1908 1962 Cullen 37 20 6,661 Lucien Memminger (M) Rev. D. A. Cassetta 1963 DeBlois 55 23 6,916 Ralph J. Nesbit (M) John B. Greer 1964 Winkelman 44 19 8,181 David A. Shepherd (M) Rev. Bartholomew Huske (B) 1965 Colmore 26 9 2,298 1901 Rev. J. Francis McCloud (M) LATER 90 22,186 John C. Avery (M) Rt. Rev. R. Bland Mitchell TOTAL 1,743 $1,043,651 Ralph P. Black (B) (B) HONORARY 54 425,384 Preston S. Brooks (M) Gen. L. Kemper Williams GRAND TOTAL 1,797 $1,469,035 W. B. Bruce (M) William Miller Wilson (M)

16 The Sewanee News 1909 Rev. Edward B. Harris Edwin A. Keeble Charles E. Thomas Judge Carey J. Ellis (M) Dr. George V. Harris Thomas G. Linthicum Andrew L. Todd, Jr. F. Clifton Hillyer W. Groom Leftwich Rev. John B. Matthews Rev. Canon Willian S. Turner Kenneth M. Lyne Dr. Henry W. Pearce Jackson A. Milem Dr. Thomas R. Waring, Jr. Ruskin R. Rosborough Dr. Maurice A. Moore 1910 1928 Niles Trammell Roger G. Murray Frederick P. Cheape Rev. Alfonso C. Adamz (M) Rev. Joseph R. Walker William B. Nauts Benjamin D. Lebo (B) Ellis G. Amall J. Albert Woods (B) (M) Gordon S. Rather Lewis C. Burwell, Jr. 1911 Eben A. Wortham Edward B. Schwing, Jr. Rev. Francis D. Daley Dr. Walter B. Adams Paul L. Sloan, Jr. 1919 Joe W. Earnest Charles B. Braun (B) Charles Warterfield (M) James M. Avent Herbert L. Eustis (M) Benjamin F. Cameron (M) Claud Wilkes Frank Byerly Kirkman Finlay Frank M. Gillespie O. Beirne Chisolm 1924 John K. Freeman Rt. Rev. Frank A. Juhan Louis S. Estes Seaton G. Bailey Dr. C. Prentice Gray, Jr. Dr. James T. MacKenzie (B) Sidney C. Farrar James Russell Baird (M) Pat M. Greenwood Burkett Miller Julien K. Moore Greene Benton, Jr. C. Frank Hickerson Rt. Rev. James M. Stoney Laurence B. Paine Hugh W. Fraser, Jr. Drayton F. Howe Thomas P. Stoney Val N. Sessions (M) Eugene O. Harris, Jr. (M) Rt. Rev. Girault M. Jones 1912 Rev. George H. Harris John T. Jordan 1920 John H. Baskette Rev. Ralph J. Kendall Dr. James Lytton-Smith William M. Barret J. Edgeworth Beattie Tudor Seymour Long (B) Rev. Eldred C. Simkins Harold E. Bettle Gen. Alvan C. Gillem, Jr. Marion W. Mahin Col. J. B. Snowden II (B) Wilmer M. Grayson Louis L. Carruthers Rev. Gladstone Rogers Paul A. Tate Frank N. Green James C. Carter George A. Shook James Ike Teague Dr. Chipman, Albion W. Knight (M) John Jr. Joseph B. Stickney, Jr. George W. Thorogood Dr. James N. Owens W. Dudley (B) William Joseph Wallace James A. Townes Dr. Robert N. Staggers W. Cabell Greet Vernon S. Tupper Rev. 1925 Dr. William L. Staggers David Holt Rev. John C. Turner E. Dudley Jack R. Swain Quintard Joyner Colhoun Gordon Tyler Dr. William C. Kalmbach John R. Eggleston Joe L. Virden 1913 Dr. Dean B. Lyman, Jr. Rt. Rev. Duncan M. Gray George W. Wallace Edmund C. Armes (B) William J. James Y. Perry Hamilton Henry O. Weaver Dr. George L. Morelock Thomas L. Hunt Lee C. Rountree (M) James A. T. Wood John E. Puckette Louis Dr. Bailey Brown Sory, Jr. LeMay (B) (M) Thomas A. Young N. Hobson Wheless Rev. William S. Stoney John Marvin Luke (M) Allison R. Williams Rev. Charles L. Widney (M) Fred B. Mewhinney 1929 Judge N. Alfred T. Airth 1914 1921 James Neff William Shaw Minor Alexander (B) Ben J. Carter, Jr. Col. William C. Atkinson W. Henry R. Singeltary R. Crawford Bean Godfrey Cheshire Dr. Robert W. Ball Dr. George P. Bennett ,Rev. Willis P. Gerhart Dr. Evert A. Bancker W. DuBose Stuckey H. Powell Yates Charles E. Berry David B. Griffin Frederick D. Brown, Jr. Rev. Robert A. Binford John G. Mabry J. C. Brown Burch 1926 Theron Myers Charles M. Boyd Rt. Rev. Thomas Carruthers Rev. J. Hodge Alves Maurice V Brooks (M) 1915 George H. Barker Malcolm C. Brown Walter B. Dossett Rev. Ellis M. Bearden Rev. E. Dargan Butt John C. Bruton Sterling A. Gates Nicholas Hamner Cobbs i Gen. Nicholas H. Cobbs Franklin G. Rev. Moultrie Guerry Rev. Warner L. Forsyth James McD. Dick (M) Stanyarne Burrows, Jr. William R. Hagan Rev. William T. Holt Robert F. Evans Judge Chester C. Chattin Thomas E. Edward A. Miner Hargrave W. Hollis Fitch Henry W. Clark Lyman P. Hoge William M. R. Delmas Gooch John H. Cleghorn John H. Marable, Jr. :Dr. Henry Clark Smith D. Heyward Hamilton, Jr. Edward E. Cobbs Rev. Capers Satterlee ! Dr. F. Lynwood Wren Coleman A. Harwell George W. Coulter, Jr. Calvin Schwing (M) Miss Elizabeth Haynes DuVal G. Cravens, Jr. 1916 Hamilton Wallace Rev. Henry B. Hodgkins William M. Cravens jJohn Morgan Aiken Hugh B. Whaley Mrs. Louise Mcllhenny William H. Daggett Col. Edwin T. Bowden G. Cecil Woods W. Michaux Nash Rev. Frank P. Dearing, Jr. Rev. Paul D. Bowden Charles Woolfolk M. Thomas P. Noe, Jr. Julian R. deOvies Henry C. Cortes (M) 1922 Alex H. Pegues Dr. W. Byrom Dickens Rev. B. | Glenn Coykendall Albert A. Curtis E. Quarles Benjamin C. Eastwood Maj. Gen. Joe N. Dalton (B) Bonholzer Charles D. Holton C. Rush Frederick R. Freyer D. Philip Hamilton Conway William B. Walker Stansell, Jr. Sam W. Frizzell Rev. Claudius Ross (B) Cuningham Dr. Philip George W. Thorogood John Champlin Gay Benjamin R. Sleeper G. Davidson, Jr. Dr. Frederick William Porter Ware William O. Gordon Rev. Horatio N. Tragitt C. Hard Rev. Rt. Rev. Thomas H. Wright James F. Griswold Bruce Edward Wallace James R. Helms Reginald Helvenston Rev. Charles F. Wulf T. Beverly Grizzard 1917 Rev. Eugene N. Hopper Keith M. Hartsfield 1927 Leicester C. Chapman Mrs. L. John C. Herndon Vaughan Howard Alfred H. Allen Robert D. Farish B. Allston Moore Edwin M. Johnston Rev. Canon Richard I. Brown , Elmer S. Holmen Malcolm L. Ashford Jones Payne Gordon M. Clark (M) Frederick M. Morris Robert Phillips Arch Peteet, Jr. Rev. Francis H. Craighill Rev. John M. Nelson Jesse D. Ragan John A. Witherspoon George Cunningham Joe M. Scott, Jr. William C. Schoolfield Emmons H. Woolwine (M) Fred H. Dearborn Harding C. Woodall Robert P. Shapard, Jr. (M) Earl Guitar 1923 Edgar A. Stewart 1918 Leighton H. Collins Rev. Durrie B. Hardin Rev. Gwilym L. G. Thomas Col. John C Bennett, Jr. Rev. James M. Dick (M) Quintin T. Hardtner, Jr. Warren W. Way Rev. Cuthbert Colbourne John T. Douglas George Bliss Jones Ira Gillis White Dr. Robert Crudgington Dr. Majl Dr. Henry T. Kirby-Smith Ewing Henry P. Williams Joseph S. DeGraffenried J. Burton Frierson, Jr. Robert Irvine Nash Leslie J. Williams i Col. Neil S. Edmond Rev. Edward B. Guerry Ben H. Parrish Malcolm Fooshee Robert E. Harwell Dr. Andrew B. Small 1930 Cameron L. Gamsby John F. Hunt Brinkley S. Snowden Dr. William J. Ball Col. Lee B. Harr Dr. Henry F. Johnstone (B) Ralph J. Speer, Jr. Willoughby N. Claybrook

February 1966 17 Jackson Cross Rutledge J. Rice Orville B. Eustis Richard B. Wilkens, Jr. Dr. John S. Davidson G. Marion Sadler Frank W. Gaines, Jr. Rev. Harry Wintermeyer Charles C. Dudley Rev. H. Harrison Rev. John H. Soper Edward 1937 Edward R. Finlay Rev. Hedley J. Williams John A. Johnston Sam L. Allen Dr. Thomas Greville Samuel C. King Frank M. Arnall II Charles A. Poellnitz, Jr. 1934 John G. Kirby Hon. Richard W. Boiling Dr. Lance C. Price John A. Adair F. Rupert M. Colmore, Jr. Milton C. Trichel, Jr. Emmett R. Anderton, Jr. Fred Lucas Dr. William G. Crook Dr. Roger A. Way John P. Castleberry Charles S. Miller Bertram C. Dedman Mrs. Harry E. Weir Thomas A. Claiborne Peter R. Phillips John Fain Cravens Rev. Julius A. Pratt A. Travers Ewell (M) 1931 Augustus T. Dr. William S. Fast Julian P. Ragland Graydon Kenneth T. Anderson Rev. R. Dudley C. Fort Paul T. Tate, Jr. Emmet Gribbin, Jr. Charles H. Barron Orville B. Harris Guy W. Glass Lawrence F. Thompson Joe S. Bean Z. Daniel Harrison Rev. George J. Hall Dr. James E. Thorogood Percy C. Blackman, Jr. Dr. Walter Moore Hart Joseph E. Hart, Jr. Douglas L. Vaughan, Jr. Rev. James W. Brettmann R. Morey Hart Dr. Cyril T. Yancey Theodore C. Heyward David A. Bridewell Dr. Francis H. William B. Herbert, Jr. Rev. Fred C. Yerkes, Jr. Holmes Moultrie B. Burns Rev. Jack F. G. Hopper Chauncey W. Butler, Jr. Rev. Cotesworth P. Lewis Rev. Thomas D. Byrne Rt. Rev. Henry I. Louttit John H. Cobbs J. Tucker MacKenzie George H. Copeland Mrs. Hugh I. Mainord W. Dixon Dossett Corporations Are Generous Rev. Benjamin A. Meginnis John M. Ezzell Acadian Foundation Theodore D. Ravenel III Rev. George W. Goodson Aetna Life Insurance Company John E. Scott, Jr. Charles L. Hawkins Ambrose Printing Company Hugh T. Shelton, Jr. Rev. William H. R. Jackson American Airlines Rev. George R. Stephenson C. Richard Kellermann American Can Company Foundation Albert W. Stockell Rev. Peter W. American Investment Company Foundation Samuel B. Strang, Jr. Harris G. Lyman American National Bank & Trust Company Mrs. J. Lewis Thompson, Jr. Rev. Alfred St. J. Matthews American Oil Foundation E. Wray Edward C. Nash American Smelting & Refining Company Rev. Hunter Wyatt-Brown, C. Porcher Smith American Telephone & Telegraph Company Jr. George A. Sterling Arthur Anderson & Company 1938 Hugh M. Thompson Arkwright Foundation Sam T. Rev. H. Neville Tinker Adams Armco Foundation Rev. George M. Dr. L. Spires Whitaker Alexander Armour & Company Miss Corinne Byrd Waldo Wilson Armstrong Cork Company Herbert Ephgrave, Jr. Rev. David W. Yates ARO, Inc. George A. Fox Atlas Chemical Industries 1932 Gant Gaither, Jr. B & Supply Store Rev. James D. Beckwith G Norwood C. Harrison Mary Babcock Foundation John M. Bennett, Jr. Reynolds William B. Harwell Baird-Ward Printing Company Frank N. Bratton Rev. Waties R. Haynesworth George T. Baker Foundation James E. Butler, Jr. James W. Hill III Pearl Dixon Balthis Foundation Rev. James S. Butler Rev. Arthur L. Lyon-Vaiden Bank of Cowan Rev. Wood B. Carper, Jr. William S. McGuire Bank of Sewanee Edward B. Crosland Dr. Thomas V. Magruder, Jr. Benson Printing W. Haskell DuBose Company Hendree B. Milward Rev. Frank V. D. Fortune Benwood Foundation Dr. James M. Packer Blue Bell Foundation Julius G. French Walker N. Pendleton, Jr. Booth Ferris Foundation William Oscar Lindholm Thomas T. Phillips, Jr. Bowaters Southern Paper Corporation A. Brown Moore Clofton O. Prince, Jr. Col. Orin H. Moore Brice Building Company James B. Ragland Supply Company William T. Parish, Jr. Brooks Welding Miss Caroline G. Richardson Foundation William G. Priest Brown Rev. James E. Savoy & Anne Butler Foundation [Houston, Texas] Royal K. Sanford George Mrs. William L. Ware (M) Drayton B. Smith George W. Butler Foundation[River Forest, Illinois] Rev. Charles Wyatt-Brown J. Morgan Soaper Cabot Foundation Harvey M. Templeton, Jr. Cain-Sloan Company 1939 Rev. Fred A. Thompson Paul Stoddard Amos John R. Walton Charles E. Berry Alfred P. Ward, Jr. Cmdr. Cyril Best Kyle Wheelus, Jr. Samuel Boykin Preston B. Huntley 1936 Jack P. White Archibald R. Campbell, Jr. Francis Kellermann James D. Blair, Jr. George Colston (M) 1933 III James P. Kranz, Jr. Hiram S. Chamberlain Henry C. Cortes, Jr. Dr. Douglas G. Adair Dr. Robert S. Lancaster G. Bowdoin Craighill, Jr. Rutherford R. Cravens C. Carlisle Richard Ames Rev. William W. Lumpkin L. Dabney Rt. Rev. James L. Duncan Herman E. Baggenstoss Rt. Rev. Richard E. Dicus WiUiam W. McKee William M. Given, Jr. Rev. Olin Beall John R. Franklin G. A. Blevins Rittenberry Alexander Guerry, Jr. Dr. C. Benton Burns Thomas E. Haile Rev. Homer P. Starr O. Morgan Hall James D. Campbell Frank H. Kean Harry C. Templeton Walter L. McGoldrick Dr. Randolph C. Charles John S. Kean, Jr. John L. Tison, Jr. Col. Leslie McLaurin Bayard M. Cole Col. Edmund Kirby-Smith Thomas C. Vaughan Richard S. Quisenberry Rev. P. Devlin E. Jr. Theodore Alexander Wellford Edward Murrey, Edwin H. Reeves Robert W. Fort Julius F. Pabst Leonard L. Shertzer, Jr. 1935 Very Rev. Francis C. Gray Maurel N. Richard Dr. T. Glyne Williams Edwin I. Hatch I. Croom Beatty III Henry B. Richardson, Jr. Thomas B. Henderson Rev. Lee A. Belford Rt. Rev. David S. Rose 1940 Harold E. Jackson Arthur Ben Chitty Herbert E. Smith, Jr. Dr. Jo C. Anderton Joe Smith Mellon Verne Daily William B. Sparkman Rev. William P. Barrett Ewing Young Mitchell III Dr. Robert W. Daniel Sam Trigg Speakes, Jr. Walter R. Belford Braxton B. Provine, Jr. E. Ragland Dobbins William H. Wheeler, Jr. Rev. Alfred P. Chambliss, Jr.

18 The Sewanee News Rev. David S. Crumley William T. Donoho, Jr. Rev. Milton L. Wood Thomas H. Horton William C. Duckworth John P. Douglas, Jr. John H. Yochem Douglass McQueen, Jr. William M. Edwards Horace Dryden David L. Maris 1944 Haywood C. Emerson George L. Eckles Houston Y. Mullikin Capt. Philip W. Evans Robert W. Emerson Reginald Bedell Dr. Lyle S. Powell, Jr. Joseph E. Ferguson, Jr. Rev. J. Daniel Gilliam Howard G. Betty Charles H. Russell, Jr. Rev. Alexander D. Juhan William C. Grayson O. Winston Cameron Rt. Rev. William E. Sanders Rev. R. A. Kirchhoffer, Jr. Berkeley Grimball Rev. Charles J. Child, Ji Mrs. J. Bruce Smith, Jr. Rt. Rev. Iveson B. Noland Rev. Stanley F. Hauser George K. Cracraft, Jr. Roy T. Strainge, Jr. M. D. Cooper Stockell, Jr. Dr. Edwin B. Herring Rev. W. Russell Daniel Wallace Wilson Arthur D. Whittington John S. Hoskins III Rev. Hunley A. Elebash 1946 James P. Willis Rev. Irwin Hulbert, Jr. Dr. Thomas R. Ford Richard R. Banks, Jr. Dr. Breckinridge W. Wing Comdr. Donald Jarrell Dr. John P. Fort, Jr. Jack H. Blackwcll Dr. Richard H. Workman Charles M. Jones, Jr. James H. Giehler Rev. Charles L. Burgreen Robert Critchell Judd Joel J. Hobson, Jr. 1941 Rev. Alfred S. Christy Warden Sperry Lee Fred M. Jackson III Rev. Willam Asger Mrs. DuVal G. Cravens, Jr. Dr. David A. Lockhart William P. Jackson Lt. Col. William Bratton Robin L. Dahlberg James T. McKinstry William Ellis Kelley Frank J. Dana, Jr. William B. Ferguson III Rev. Marshall J. Ellis A. Franklin Gilliam, Jr. James V. Gillespie John H. Hall Winfield B. , Jr. Very Rev. Alfred Hardman John L. Henderson, Jr. "(M) Rev. William L. Jacobs Gifts from Foundations Soar Rev. Charles E. Karsten, Jr. Thomas S. Jordan (B) Capitol Engraving Company Rev. Edward B. King Rev. Robert C. Kilbourn Cathedral Foundation Hunter McDonald, Jr. William Howard Lancaster Cavalier Corporation Austin S. Parker Dr. Brinley Clendon H. Lee Chemical Bank New York Trust Company Rhys Jr. Bruce David M. Lide, Chrysler Corporation Fund M. Roberts McGriff, Jr. Ernst Rust, Jr. (M) Lee W. Citizens & Southern National Bank Fund Rev. George C. Merkel Richard M. Shaeffer Citizens Bank of Warrenton, N. C. Rev. L. (B) Rev. Warren H. Steele Edgar Pennington Walter Clifton Foundation Rev. Frank Robert Edward M. Steelman, Jr. W. Cloverland Ice Cream Company Robert M. Smith Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of South Pittsburg 1947 William M. Spencer III Colonial Coffee Company O'Neal C. Bardin Walker A. Tynes Commercial Nursery Company Pierre Beauregard Robert H. Woodrow, Jr. Herman Cone Family Foundation Rev. Charles H. Blakeslee Francis H. Yerkes Conn Memorial Foundation B. Snowden Boyle, Jr. 1942 Container Corporation of America William L. Carpenter Theodore D. Bratton Corn Products Company James G. Cate, Jr. Harvey Brister (M) Courier-Journal & Louisville Times Foundation Rev. Kenneth E. Clarke Dr. Benjamin Cameron, Jr. Courts Foundation John S. Collier William C. Coleman Crescent Company Rev. Miller M. Cragon, Jr. Stanhope E. Elmore, Jr. William F. Crome Company Joseph B. Cummings, Jr. E. Cress Fox John Deere Foundation Leonidas Emerson Currin R. Gass Deering Milliken Foundation George K. Evans Very Rev. Robert T. Gibson Denbo Iron and Metal Foundation John D. Ewing, Jr. Rev. Luther O. Ison Dent Foundation Dr. Willis H. Fowle III Dr. Harold P. Jackson Diamond Alkali Company Foundation Dr. Ralph W. Fowler, Jr. Col. Ephraim Kirby-Smith Dixie Theatres Corporation Jesse W. Fox, Jr. Dr. O. Morse Kochtitzky Dixie Warehouse & Cartage Company Roy F. Francis Dr. Bruce M. Kuehnle Domestic & Foreign Missionary Society Rev. Paul Hawkins, Jr. James A. Lyle Duke Charitable Foundation Rev. John M. Haynes C. Caldwell Marks Dutch Maid Bakery G. W. Leach, Jr. Dr. John S. Marshall Eagle Foundation Rev. Moultrie H. Mcintosh Rev. Donald P. Miller Episcopal Foundation of Western North Carolina Lamar McLeod II James W. Moody, Jr. Equitable Life Assurance Society Kenneth A. MacGowan, Jr. Dr. F. Rand Morton Equitable Securities Corporation John C. Marshall Richard B. Park Elizabeth & Tom Evins Foundation Alfred M. Naff Fred H. Phillips Exum Company Peter O'Donnell, Jr. George G. Potts Billups P. Percy John B. Ransom III William P. Perrin Armistead I. Selden, Jr. Rev. Robert E. Ratelle James J. Sirmans Dr. Earl C. Risbeck Richard B. Mindlin William A. McKinney Dr. Albert P. Spaar, Jr. James Keith Roberts William Moise Dr. William Meleney Laurence O. Stoney Maurice J. Shahady Charles G. Mullen, Jr. John C. Petkovsek Ashby M. Sutherland W. Joe Shaw, Jr. Jr. Rev. Jr. Edmond M. Tipton J. Howell Peebles, Roddey Reid, Bertrand Stevens Y. Perry, Jr. (M) Edward K. Sanders Dr. Bayly Turlington James Rev. James Stirling Richard H. Poellnitz Orland C. Smitherman Dr. Benham R. Wrigley Rev. George E. , Jr. William F. Quesenberry Robert E. Steiner III Maj. Stanley R. Swanson 1943 C. Hutcheson Sullivan Edward Graham Roberts William G. Vardell H. Bennett Alford Robertson Franklin O. Wicks Heard Rev. James B. Vaught Rt. Rev. John M. Allin H. Scott III Thomas R. Wilkinson Mack Irl R. Walker, Jr. Dr. Henry A. Atkinson Alfred D. Sharp, Jr. Rev. David J. Williams Dr. John F. Wavmouth William O. Beach William W. Shaver III Dr. Percy H. Wood, Jr. Charles A. Wiley Dr. W. B. Rogers Beasley Frederick R. Shellman Rev. G. Cecil Woods, Jr. Rev. William Boardman Mercer L. Stockell 1945 Guerney H. Cole, Jr. Claude B. Thomas Dr. Kenneth P. Adler 1948 Rev. David B. Collins Dr. James C. Vardell, Jr. Rev. George D. Clark Rev. Knox Brumby III Dr. H. Brooks Cotten Robert I. Vreeland Dr. Frederick F. Converse George G. Clarke Claude Cunningham Frank M. Walker Robert J. Destiche Rev. Harry B. Douglas, Jr. i Paul C. Deemer, Jr. Thomas B. Walker, Jr. Rev. John W. Drake, Jr. William B. Elmore Charles Dexter, Jr. James L. Williams William T. Hankins, Jr. Rev. George Estes

February 1966 19 Jett M. Fisher Rev. Philson Williamson David Gilbert Lee Henry D. Bull, Jr. Rev. William J. Fitzhugh Lyle T. McConnell Jess B. Cheatham, Jr. 1950 James M. Fourmy, Jr. (B) Robertson McDonald William T. Cocke III Rev. Mason A. Frazell John M. Abernathy, Jr. Capt. Michael McGee Walter R. Cox John Gass John W. Arnold Dr. Shands McKeithen, Jr. Rev. Milton Crum, Jr. James F. Govan F. Clay Bailey, Jr. Dr. John H. Marchand, Jr. James M. Cunningham Dr. Hiram G. Haynie Rev. George C. Bedell Leonard B. Murphy Robert Glenn Donald Rev. William F. Hays William W. Belser, Jr. Walter B. Parker Rev. J. Powell Eaton Brannon Huddleston Rev. Jack M. Bennett E. Branch Patton George B. Elliott Donald M. Johnson Charles M. Binnicker, Jr. Rev. F. Stanford Persons Rev. W. Thomas Engram George Q. Langstaff, Jr. Dr. Wyatt H. Blake III Rev. George L. Reynolds, Jr. Franklin E. Glass, Jr. Rev. Hugh C. McKee Rev. Elmer M. Boykin Horace L. Rhorer, Jr. Earl B. Guitar, Jr. James T. McKinstry Rev. John H. Bull Louis W. Rice, Jr. John H. Haggard Dr. Fred N. Mitchell Rev. Fred J. Bush H. Robert Scivally Charles W. Hall Harold P. Moon Wade C. Campbell Rev. Harold F. Shaffer Rev. Marion J. Hatchett Edwin K. Myrick, Jr. Rev. Robert F. Cherry Richard E. Simmons, Jr. Maurice K. Heartfield, Jr. Carter Nicholas H. Creason Clayton Sedgwick L. Simons Thaddeus G. Holt, Jr. Rev. Johnson H. Pace, Jr. Rev. E. Dudley Colhoun, Jr. Dr. George F. Smith George W. Hopper Dr. Stephen D. Palmer James D. Irwin Thomas B. Rice Stanley G. Jones H. Kelly Seibels Dr. O. Lewin Keller, Jr. Dr. Wilson C. Snipes Allan C. King Rev. Martin R. Tilson Sewanee is Grateful for Gifts Thomas K. Lamb, Jr. Robert J. Warner, Jr. Richard W. Leche N. Wartman William Stamps Farish Fund Rev. Carlos A. Loop Dr. Calhoun Winton Farrar Constuction Company Thomas M. McKeithen Firestone Foundation L. McQuiddy, Jr. 1949 David Firestone Tire & Rubber Company Mrs. Daniel C. MacKinnon Thomas E. Adams First Mortgage Company of Tuscaloosa, Alabama Rev. Loren B. Mead Rev. C. FitzSimons Allison First National Bank of Decherd, Tennessee Rev. John A. Messinger C. Dewey Arnold, Jr. Florida Educational Foundation Rev. M. C. Miller, Jr. Robert M. Ayres, Jr. Ford Foundation John Harmon Nichols Julius P. Barclay Ford Motor Company Fund Jack Peyton Pace Maj. Kenneth Barrett Dr. Rufus & Louise Clark Fort Charitable Fund Harvey Pride, Jr. Rev. Roy C. Bascom Fund for Episcopal Colleges Wynne Ragland Walter D. Bryant, Jr. Gale, Smith & Company Rev. William H. Ralston, Jr. William C. Buck George E. Gans Educational Fund Col. Heyward B. Roberts Stuart R. Childs General Electric Foundation Claude M. Scarborough, Jr. Dr. William G. Cobey General Foods Fund Charles J. Shell, Jr. John N. Corey, Jr. General Motors Corporation Cyrus Field Smythe, Jr. Dr. Joseph D. Cushman, Jr. Genesco Rev. Furman C. Stough H. Darrach, Jr. Edward Glendon Land Company Paul K. Uhrig Rev. Lavan B. Davis Godwin & Beckett, Inc. John N. Wall, Jr. Lt. Col. Walter R. Davis Hix Green Foundation Francis G. Watkins Dr. Joseph H. Dimon III Gulf Oil Corporation Foundation Lyman W. Webb Harry F. III Dodge Halliburton Education Foundation Rev. David D. Wendel, Jr. Rev. L. Robert Evans Hamico, Inc. Arthur A. West Roland C. Gardner Hamilton Foundation Rev. George F. Wharton III Dr. Gilbert F. Gilchrist Hamilton & Shackelford Russell H. Wheeler, Jr. J. Neely Grant, Jr. Martin A. Hayes & Company Dr. Henry B. Gregorie, Jr. Herbert Humphreys Foundation 1952 John Patten Guerry Hercules Powder Company Clifford V. Anderson Rev. Charles L. Henry Highland Enterprises Rev. James W. Anderson Edward W. Hine H. G. Hill Interests William Morgan Bomar Lewis J. Holloway, Jr. Honey Locust Foundation Rev. Robert H. Bonner Samuel H. Howell Houston Endowment Dr. Edwin A. Bowman Rev. Roderick H. Jackson INA Foundation James H. Bratton, Jr. Dr. John Rison Jones, Jr. Independent College Funds of America Hugh C. Brown John Kyle Lancaster Independent Life & Accident Insurance Company John B. Davis Rev. John R. Lodge International Business Machines Corporation R. Andrew Duncan B. Humphrey McGee John R. Foster Rev. J. Rayford McLean Rev. Martin Dewey Gable Harry C. McPherson, Jr. Rev. Sanford Garner, Jr. Rev. J. Dean Maurer Coleman Goatley George R. Mende, Jr. Robert E. Connor, Jr. Joseph Austin Sperry Dr. George W. Hamilton Martin E. Morris Francis C. Currie Dr. William Stoney, Jr. Rt. Rev. William L. Hargrave Dr. I. Armistead Nelson Rev. Charles J. Dobbins William T. Stumb Rev. Rogers S. Harris Rev. Edward Ostertag Richard B. Doss Rev. Murray Trelease John E. Haselton Very Rev. Robert Ray Parks Rev. Edward H. Eckel Augustine W. Tucker Edward W. Heath Lester S. Parr Leroy J. Ellis III Dr. William G. Webb Rev. Charles K. Horn Samuel E. Parr, Jr. Lloyd E. Franklin, Jr. Thomas A. Whiteside Ben Ivey Jackson Rev. Frederick A. Pope, Jr. Charles P. Garrison David G. Wiseman, Jr. Stanley P. Lachman Dr. Stephen E. Puckette James W. Gentry, Jr. Emmons H. Woolwine, Jr. Charles D. McDavid Robert L. Rice Rev. Lee Graham, Jr. Rev. John C. Worrell Rev. Donald Mitchell, Jr. William F. Rogers Dr. Edward H. Hamilton, Jr. Robert G. Mullen 1951 Bryce F. Runyon Dr. G. Selden Henry Frank C. Nelms C. Richard Alfred Rev. Robert S. Snell Lewis H. Hill III Rev. W. Brown Patterson Jack Stephenson Charles W. Hunt Rev. Elmer L. Allen Windsor M. Price Rev. J. Rufus Stewart J. Addison Ingle, Jr. Dr. R. Houston Babcock Rev. Walter D. Roberts J. Randolph Tucker, Jr. Rev. Harland M. Irvin, Jr. Charles B. Bailey, Jr. Rev. Milton Alan Rohane Morgan Watkins, Jr. Maj. John E. Jarrell Rev. Allen L. Bartlett, Jr. Rev. Robert L. Saul Warner S. Watkins, Jr. Wayne Jervis, Jr. Dr. William Reed Bell Thomas H. Setze Dr. Benjamin E. Watson Walter W. Kennedy, Jr. Rev. Mellick Belshaw Rev. Edward S. Shirley Elbert Watson Thomas A. Lear John G. Bratton Dr. Clement B. Sledge

20 The Sewanee News Rev. Allen T. Sykes J. Righton Robertson, Jr. Charles Brandon Guy John Ackland Jones George M. Thurmond William C. Rucker, Jr. Rev. Bertand N. Honea, Jr. Dr. Robert L. Keele, Jr. Thomas J. Tucker William Hamlet Smith James C. Hoppe Kenneth Kinnctt Samuel W. Van Leer Rolf Lewis Spicer James B. Jeffrey Charles T. Kneeland J. Bransford Wallace Charles E. Tomlinson Rev. William L. Kctcham John Aston Lever William G. Ward, Jr. William D. Tvnes, Jr. James Payton Lamb Joseph P. McAllister James W. Whitaker T. Manly Whitener, Jr. Lewis Swift Lee John Byrd MacGowan Rev. Jonas E. White, Jr. Rev. John Barrington Winn Edward McCrady III David Rogers Mogill Robert J. Woodson William S. Wire II James Paschal McHaney Sheldon Alexander Morris Leonard N. Wood Rev. Charles McKimmon, Jr. Robert M. Murray, Jr. 1953 John W. Woods Claibourne W. Patty, Jr. Albert W. Nisley Rev. Allister C. Anderson John H. Wright, Jr. George M. Pope William R. Norsek Edwin E. Benoist, Jr. Gerald A. Prieskorn Rev. Nathaniel Parker, Jr. 1955 Rev. Thomas D. Bowers Rev. Wallace C. Shields Howard P. Pritchard Robert J. Boylston Dr. Sam Jones Albritton, Ji Dr. Fletcher S. Stuart Rev. George H. Quarterman, Albert S. Briggs John David Alden Robert R. Webb Jr. -'! William K. Bruce Francis B. Avery, Jr. Dr. Richard L. West Adams Reynolds, Jr. John A. Cater, Jr. Rev. W. Scott Bennett Phil B. Whitaker V. Pierre Serodino, Jr. William J. Crawford Capt. William R. Stamler, Jr. Francis R. DeBray Carl B. Stoneham Robert L. Durning, Jr. Thomas W. Thagard, Jr. James N. Finley Richard A. Wilson Ernest B. Franklin, Jr. Many Helped Sewanee in 1965 Carrol Prim Wood, Jr. David W. Gray Peter Wright Dr. Edward P. Helvenston International Harvester Company Foundation 1957 John J. Hooker, Jr. International Nickel Company Capt. Kenneth L. Barrett, Jr. Charles A. Howell III Jackson Coca-Cola Bottling Company Campbell William E. Hunter Jamison Foundation William Robert Donald M. Irvin Jones -Cox Mortgage Company Stanford H. Chambers Rev. David George Jones W. Alton Jones Foundation Thomas S. Darnall, Jr. James Irvin Jones Keith-Simmons Company Joseph M. Dawson, Jr. Dr. W. Henry Langhorne Kelley Press Charles R. Hamilton Lt. William B. Hamilton II James H. Mcintosh, Jr. James S. Kemper Foundation Louis A. Hermes Howell A. McKay Kendall Company Foundation Robert C. Hooker Capt. Robeson S. Moise Koppers Foundation Christopher Horsfield E. Lucas Myers Laney Charity Foundation Oliver W. Jervis David C. Nash Lehmann & Company Capt. Laurence C. Johnson John D. Prince, Jr. Lewis State Bank of Tallahassee, Florida Leftwich D. Kimbrough Dr. Stephen Elliott Puckette, Lilly Endowment Harvey C. Koch, Jr. Jr. Lodge Manufacturing Company Giles F. Lewis, Jr. Albert B. Reynolds Luttrell's Appliance Company Rev. H. McCrea Wilson W. Stearly McGraw-Hill Rt. Theodore Rev. Franklin Martin Thoburn Taggart, Jr. Manchester Recreation Commission Rev. John T. Morrow Rev. William B. Trimble Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company Foundation Dr. William H. Murrey George J. Wagner, Jr. Marquette Cement Manufacturing Company John Harvey Rev. Philip P. Werlein Matheson Scientific Owen Harry P. Wright Mead Corporation Foundation Dr. Robert B. Pierce Capt. Heyward B. Roberts, Jr. 1954 Medusa Foundation Merchants Bank [Cleveland, Tennessee] Arnold Rose Alexander Adams Merck Company Foundation Rev. Alfons F. Schwenk (M) Fred C. Alcorn Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith James Jerry Slade Thad Andress II R. Microcard Foundation David H. Smith Dr. T. Dee Baker Miller-Smith Hosiery Mills Henry W. Smith, Jr. Rev. Leon C. Balch Paris Eugene Smith John W. Barclay Minge Floral Company Minor Foundation Capt. William Stallings John Edward Bell, Jr. Missouri Grain Company Ven. James Henry Taylor, Jr. Rev. Edward G. Bierhaus, Jr. Rev. Louis E. Tonsmeire Harry W. Camp Morgan Guaranty Trust Company Mountain Beverage Supply Capt. William S. Turner HI Dr. Henri deS. Clarke National Biscuit Company Rev. Thomas M. Wade III Edward S. Criddle, Jr. National Dairy Products Corporation William J. Warfel Rev. Paul Edwards Rev. John Fargher 1958 Allen Thompson Farmer (M) David Ray Anderson Paul J. Rev. Arthur W. Archer Capt. William M. Hood George Z. Bentz Robert N. Wright Olin G. Beall, Jr. A. Boney Charles A. Born III Lt. Cmdr. C. Charles Keller Rev. Samuel 1956 III Dr. Lucien E. Brailsford Rev. Lorraine Bosch Rev. Harry L. Babbit Rev. Christoph Keller, Jr. Robert T. Cherry Joe W. Bradley John Nesbitt Barnett Rev. Robert B. Kemp Rev. Edward W. Conklin James L. Budd Charles M. Lindsay Glenn M. Cooner William R. Boling Anderson Carmichael, Jr. Douglass R. Lore H. Talbot DAlemberte Lt. John P. Bowers Allan J. Clark George L. Lyon, Jr. Rev. David Damon Sterling M. Boyd Dr. F. Ellison Conrad Rev. Willis B. C. McCarty James Elton Dezell, Jr. Dr. Dick D. Briggs, Jr. David H. Evett John McWhirter, Jr. John Pickett Dismukes Donald R. Crane Kirkman Finlav, Jr. Rev. Frank B. Mangum William T. Doswell III Irvin C. Dunlap, Jr. Dudley C. Fort, Jr. Hart T. Mankin Chap. Walter D. Edwards, Jr. Rev. Wade Wright Egbert Dr. Thomas B. Flynn Gilbert Y. Marchand Robert L. Ewing Dr. Clyde A. Fasick Rev. William D. Henderson Rev. James E. Marshall Rev. Raymond T. Ferris Starkey S. Flythe, Jr. Jack Gilman Hinds Dr. George W. Matthews, Jr. Dr. Francis M. Fesmire John W. Fowler William Russell Johnston Dr. Walter E. Nance Frederick Fiske Charles S. Glass Albert Wade Jones Frank S. Otway III Keith Fort Peter M. Horn Harry R. Jones, Jr. Rev. John Ralph Patston Robert F. Gillespie, Jr. Dr. William B. Hunt Capt. Orlando W. Lyle, Jr. Rev. Clarence C. Pope, Jr. Alan W. Graning, Jr. Rev. F. Coleman Inge Rev. Limuel G. Parks, Jr. William E. Roberts Rev. Charles C. Green Rev. Robert B. Jewell (M) Robert C. Rice, Jr.

February 1966 21 Michael R. Richards William E. Quarterman Rev. John E. Gilchrist 1962 James B. Roberts James Brice Richardson M. Feild Gomila Rev. Otto H. Anderson, Jr. Fred E. Sales Howard H. Russell, Jr. Rev. C. Gilford Green A. Shapleigh Boyd III F. Tupper Saussy Rev. Benjamin Shawhan, Jr. William A. Griffis III Waller Thomaas Burns II Rev. Harry W. Shipps Jerry C. Stedman Ens. William W. Haden Paul Calame, Jr. Christopher L. Sholes Dr. William C. Stiefel, Jr. William E. Hannum II Charles L. Croneberger, Jr. Rev. Colton M. Smith Dennis P. Thompson F. Paul Inscho Charles T. Cullen Dr. Harrison R. Steeves III William R. Turner, Jr. John G. Keck Rev. Tucker E. Dawson, Jr. Kenan Timberlake, Jr. Fred Turpin Rev. Wayne Kinyon John Russell Frank Michael B. Veal Dr. Herbert J. Vandort Rev. Terrell T. Kirk Rev. Thomas G. Garner, Jr. Charles T. Warren III J. Alexander Vaughan, Jr. Robert Craig Kneisley William A. Griffis III W. Anthony Veal Mrs. William R. Lane Rev. Timothy J. Hallett 1959 James M. Warrington Lt. Robert E. Libbey L. Stephen Holzhalb III Dr. Laurence R. Alvarez B. Walter Wilder, Jr. Lt. Beverly Daniel McNult, Frank C. Jones Rev. John Arrington III William G. Jr. W. Harrison Jones, Jr. M. Avent, Jr. Womack James Frank T. Melton Rev. Edward B. Jordan Rev. John E. Banks, Jr. 1961 Edward Rutledge Moore Frank Kinnett James T. Burrill Capt. Roy C. Allen Kenneth A. Morris, Jr. Edward J. Lefeber, Jr. Rev. Arnold Bush Lt. W. Duncan McArthur Rev. J. Daryl Canfill Max W. McCord Rev. Cham Canon J. Robert McKissick Samuel B. B Carleton Rev. Julian L. McPhillips J. A. Davenport III Donald Patton MacLeod, Jr. Lt. Eugene V. Doswell Educational Needs Are Met Major, Jr. Dr. Ward Page Faulk Henry J. Miller, Jr. (M) Dr. Andrew G. Finlay, Jr. National Distillers & Chemical Foundation Edward M. Moore Porter Halyburton (M) National Life & Accident Insurance Company Thomas E. Myers, Jr. Robert P. Hare IV National Merit Scholarship Corporation S. Kemble Oliver III John C. Hodgkins Navarre Corporation Gordon P. Peyton Dr. Warren F. Holland, Jr. News-Star World Publishing Corporation William M. Priestley P. Scott Huckins New York Life Insurance Company James Scheller Rev. Benjamin H. Hunter Olin Mathieson Charitable Trust Peter J. Sehlinger, Jr. David M. Johnson Parke-Davis & Company E. Hayne Shumate, Jr. James Waring McCrady Pennsalt Chemicals Foundation William Landis Turner Rev. C. Brinkley Morton Peoples Life Insurance Company Rev. Arthur H. Underwood Allen H. Myers J. L. Perry Company Rev. William D. Walker Rev. Morgan C. Nichols Henry A. Petter Supply Company Fred Wunderlich Capt. Robert Dudley Peel Phillips Petroleum Company Lt. William S. Yates Robert R. Richards Pittsburgh Foundation Dr. Charles B. Romaine, Jr. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Foundation 1963 Battle S. Searcy III (M) Provident Life & Accident Insurance Company Nathaniel I. Ball III Curtiss S. Scarritt Radio & Appliance Distributors Peyton D. Bibb, Jr. Rev. Archie C. Stapleton, Jr. Reader's Digest Foundation Scholarship Fund Joseph A. Brittain, Jr. Marston H. Tuck Red Food Stores Lt. William O. Brown Charles F. Voltz, Jr. Research Corporation Richard S. Brush Robert F. von Allmen Robertson Foundation William R. Burgess (M) J. Robert Wayland, Jr. Rountree Olds-Cadillac Company Wentworth Caldwell, Jr. Halsey E. Werlein Russell's Department Store Lawrence B. Cheston Ward W. Wueste, Jr. S and H Foundation Lt. David C. Clough, Jr. Henry J. Scheirich Foundation Harry Howard Cockrill, Jr. 1960 Scott Paper Company Foundation Charles M. Crump, Jr. Rev. E. N. Anderson Sears-Roebuck Foundation Michael M. DeBakey Lt. Alvan S. Arnall William G. & Marie Selby Foundation Berryman W. Edwards, Jr. Lt. David P. Arnold Sentinel Star-Martin Anderson Foundation Charles E. Ellis, Jr. William H. Barnwell III Sewanee Silica Company Thomas A. Gaskin III Croom Beatty IV Shell Company Rev. W. Gedge Gayle, Jr. R. Clark Becker M. L. Sigmon Forest Products John A. Griswold Rev. Robert J. Boyd, Jr. Singer Company Foundation Rev. Jules F. Haley Rev. John K. Bush Oscar F. Smith Memorial Foundation Evans E. Harrell Walter J. Crawford, Jr. Socony Mobil Oil Company Eugene H. Hawkins, Jr. David G. Ellison III Ens. Caldwell L. Haynes Rev. David T. Elphee Mrs. Roy Hickerson (M) Douglas P. Evett Charles S. L. Hoover Rev. George C. Field, Jr. Christopher J. Horsch Harry B. Forehand, Jr. Rev. Moss Armistead Mrs. Frederick L. Murolo W. Robert Hudgins Robert L. Gaines Alan A. Bergeron Robert P. Nesbit Preston B. Huntley, Jr. Paul D. Goddard Rev. Charles A. Bledsoe Rev. William R. Oxley Miss Christina B. Johnson Taylor C. Greenwald Rev. Lee Sampson Block William A. Powe III Rev.. Ralph E. Kelley Rev. Robert L. Haden, Jr. Lt. John F. Borders Rev. Paul W. Pritchartt William Kirby-Smith Jerome G. Hall Todd Tebbetts Breck Rev. Sterling Rayburn George E. Lafaye III Charles S. Hamel William O. Britt Rev. Gordon P. Roberts George E. Lewis II Rev. Harold D. Harrison William C. Broadhurst Gladstone Rogers (M) Warren G. Lott Vernon T. Kalmbach Otis A. Brumby Rev. Roger B. Rollins O. Wayne McGregor, Jr. Capt. Robert Kane, Jr. Rev. A. Stanley Bullock, Jr. Lt. Joseph H. Schley, Jr. Rev. Victor V. McGuire, Jr. Dr. Bruce S. Keenan Thomas A. Byrne Robert J. Snell, Jr. Francis R. C. Marbury Robert B. McManis Walter R. Chastain, Jr. Rev. Larry K. Sullivan R. Stanley Marks Duncan Y. Manley Paul Cosby Park E. Ticer, Jr. Rev. McAlister C. Marshall William M. Marks Lt. Edward O. deBarry Marion G. Tomlin Laurance K. Moore Watts Leverick Miller Richard S. Dezell Ens. Anthony P.. Walch Peter M. Moore Charles W. Moody, Jr. Col. W. K.. Dudley Rev. Jack Lee Watson Dwight H. Oglesby Robert E. O'Neal, Jr. William S. Ebert Edwin D. Williamson Preston V. Phelps George D. Ormsby David A. Elliott III James R. Wisialowski Sam F. Pickering, Jr. Robert T. Owen Rev. Frank F. Fagan Robert H. Wood Wallace R. Pinkley Lt. Clayton E. Parham Rev. Franklin C. Ferguson Gordon Wright FrankL. Pinney III

22 The Sewanee News M. Whitson Sadler Rev. Philip E. Weeks James Maddox Brittain John Wayne Bryson, Jr. James C. Sanders III Robert A. Bruce, Jr. David Roscoe Buttrcy, Jr. 1966 H. Phillip Sasnett Francis Richard Burnham II Robert W. H. Byra Charles Allen, Jr. Bruce A. Smith Wilbur Welles Campbell John Norton Cabell Peter F. Gerald H. Summers Best John D. Canale III Douglas G. Caverly Murray Rudulph Summers Thomas W. Broadfoot Carson C. Carlisle, Jr. William S. Cawthon Rev. Robert D. Terhune James G. Callaway III Andrew D. Crichton Werner Dellmeier, Jr. F. Phillip White, Jr. Richard M. Clewis III Thomas W. H. Fisher Roy Oscar Elam III Thomas T. Wilheit, Jr. William Henry Elliott Paul T. Prantz William Larry Goodman Thomas R. Wise II William M. Fagan, Jr. Edwin S. Gardner, Jr. Ralph Jack Hickman Lt. Ronald R. Zodin Kenneth Gilbart, Jr. Ben W. Gibson III T. W. Crawford Hunt Frank Armstrong Green Donald Robert Goeltz John Martin McDonough, Jr. 1964 Robert T. Greenland Frank B. Gummey III John Pervis Milnor III Rev. Hugh W. Agricola James William Gwinn, Jr. John M. Hisey Conrad B. Myrick Rev. Peter H. Beckwith Stacy Allen Haines III Charles A. Holt Edward Curtis Nichols, Jr. Thomas L. Chamberlain Burr Powell Harrison III Robert G. Hynson Herbert Lee Oakes, Jr. Rev. Robert J. Brown Joseph Morgan Harrison Frederick W. Kratz III John Picton William C. Davis, Jr. Robert Porter Harry, Jr. James C. Lott Stephen N. Roberts Charles P. Donnelly III C. Howard Rossbach K. Robert Dormeyer John L. Turner IV Randy L. Ewing Terry O. Ewing 1969 Rev. W. Bowlyne Fisher Richard Whitesell Thomas W. Floyd Robert E. Giannini Businesses Helped Reach Goal Rev. Charles B. Hoglan, Jr. Honorary South Florida Growers Association Lacy Harris Hunt II Rt. Rev. Richard H. Baker Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph John L. Janeway Company Dr. Arthur J. Bedell Southern Nursery & Landscape Company A. Waldo Jones, Jr. James S. Bonner Southern Wholesalers Chris Kirchen Martin J. Bram Talbot T. Speer Gresh Lattimore Foundation Rt. Rev. Robert R. Brown John C. Stalfort & Stuart McDaniel Sons Rev. Samuel O. Capers William B. Stokely Foundation Edward A. McLellan, Jr. Rt. Rev. Charles C. J. Strickland Paper Company Thomas D. S. Mason Carpenter Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation Daniel B. Murray Mrs. Alf-ed I. duPont Suni- Citrus Products Company Dwight E. Ogier, Jr. James A. Farley Donald C. Swanson Memorial Fund J. M. Pemberton Robert E. Finley Robert W. Rice Target Rock Foundation Rev. Harold C. Gosnell Teagle Foundation John Mason Richards Rt. Rev. John J. Gravatt, Jr. Willard P. Rietzel Tennessee Wholesale Drug Company Rt. Rev. Robert E. Gribbin Terry Motors, Inc. Robert J. Sanders Mrs. Alexander Guerry Paul Benjamin Roberts Bill Terry's, Inc. Dr. Harold H. Helm Texaco Alfred C. Schmutzer, Jr. Rev. John Heuss Times-Picayune Publishing Corporation Philip O. Sheridan Rt. Rev. John C. Hines Trans World Airlines Charles Edward Steele, Jr. Dr. Hugh Hodgson Ens. Edwin H. Taylor Union Carbide Educational Fund Rt. Rev. John L. Jackson (M) United Gas Corporation Robert W. Thomas, Jr. Rt. Rev. Everett H. Jones Michael Thomason United States Steel Foundation G. Allen Kimball Urania Lumber Joseph F. Trimble Company Rt. Rev. Richard A. Kirch- Stephen Walker Volunteer State Life Insurance Company hoffer Allen M. Wallace Vulcan Materials Company Dr. William A. Kirkland Corporation Robert V. Weston Vulcan Rivet & Bolt Capt. Wendell F. Kline David E. Whiteside Warner Wells Insurance Agency T. Kelsey Lamb David H. Wiltsee Westend Foundation Hinton F. Longino Joseph W. Winkelman Wheless Foundation Rt. Rev. Henry I. Louttit Bernard W. Wolff R. H. White Foundation Rev. Albert H. Lucas Company Arthur E. Woods V. R. Williams & Rt. Rev. C. Gresham Mar- John M. Wolff Foundation mion, Jr. 1965 William C. Woolf Foundation Rt. Rev. C. Avery Mason Jim Dozier Adams, Jr. Young & Rubicam Foundation Rev. Erie Merriman (M) Westervelt T. Ballard Lt. Gen. Troy H. Middleton Stephen H. Barber Charles Moss Francis M. Bass Rev. William C. Munds Rev. James R. Borom Rt. Rev. George M. Murray Rev. Robert L. Burchell Otto F. Haslbauer, Jr. William Noble McKeachie Edmund Orgill E. Banks Clark Ingersoll Jordan Harry E. Nelson Hon. Z. Cartter Patten Rev. Thomas F. Eamon George McDaniel Peter C. Oleson William G. Pollard Bingham D. Rt. Rev. Noble C. Powell Edwards Eugene McFaddin Edward Frost Parker, Jr. William R. Ehlert Rt. Rev. J. Miton Richardson Edward H. Russell, Jr. Albert S. Polk, Jr. Pickens Very Rev. Lawrence Rose Noble Freeman Donald Shannonhouse Ralph Douglas Porch III Dr. Henry T. I B. Hall III Rowell Thomas Ian Francis Spaar Bruce C. Rodarmor William A. Hamilton Horace Russell Beverly R. Tucker III William W. Shcppard, Jr. Richard Dr. C. Madison Sarratt E. Israel Mark Juel Volk Edward Lewis Steenerson Wyatt James Rev. Wilson W. Sneed Everett John Ward II James Alston Steeves Joseph T. Johnson Rt. Rev. Marshall Stewart Warner Wells III David Barco Veal Rev. Edward L. Landers, Jr. (M) Eric J. Whitesell Thomas Reid Ward, Jr. Rev. Rt. Rev. Albert R. Stuart W. Cherry Livingston Philip A. Wilheit Daniel T. McGown, Jr. 1968 G. M. Thorogood John Louis Williams III Edward L. Robert Lee Bailey Rt. Rev. Andrew Y. Y. Tsu McGuire III Paul Talbot Wilson Rev. Ralph O. Marsh Henry L. Bethea Rt. Rev. John Vandcr Horst Frederick H. Maull 1967 Craig V. Bledsoe Dr. Peter F. Watzek Douglas John Milne Paul T. Abrams Robert Lee Bobbit III Rev. Hollv W. Wells Morgan Exum Price Conrad P. Armbrecht Jeffry S. Bruner Rt. Rev. E. Hamilton West Dudley S. Weaver Henry Francis Beaumont John P. Bryan, Jr. Dr. John M. Wolff, Jr.

February 1966 23 2.5 Ur

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ALUMNI CHURCH CORPORATIONS OTHER SUPPORT AND FOUNDATIONS* GIFT CATEGORIES IN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS includes $1,500,000 from Ford Foundation May, 1966 ewanee News THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH SEWANEE, TENNESSEE THE Commencement 1966 Sewanee NEWS Thursday, June 2 Opening session of the Board of Regents. The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the KA, PDT, DTD party for students and guests. ASSOCIATED ALUMNI Friday, June 3 of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennes- Registration for all visitors, Elliott Hall, all day. Dor- see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee. mitory housing open for guests. Regents in session. Beta brunch, PGD smorgasbord, for students and guests. Alumni Council meeting. Ribbon society par- ties. Reunion dinners, classes of 1928-31, 1947-50, 1956, 1960-61. Vice-Chancellor's reception for all visitors, students, faculty and residents (black tie preferred). R. Morey Hart, '34 KS, SAE, CHI PSI combo pa,rty. President of the Associated Alumni Saturday, June 4: Alumni Day Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35 Corporate Communion and annual memorial services. Managing Editor Edith Whitesell Dedication of memorials. Annual meeting of the As- sociated Alumni. Sigma Nu brunch. Open House and Associate Editor Albert S. Gooch, Jr. Sewanee Woman's Club coke party, Gallery of Fine Arts. Student exhibitions. Barbecue at Lake Cheston. ATO beach party at Lake Cheston. Dean Alexander's reception for seniors of the School of Theology and James G. Cate, Jr., '47, Vice-President for Bequests; Dr. L. Spires their guests. Open House at Fulford Hall for seniors, Whitaker, '31, Vice-President for Capital Funds; Dudley C. Fort, parents and their guests. Reunion parties for classes '34, Vice-President for Regions; John Harmon Nichols, '51, Vice- of 1928-31, 1947-50, 1956, 1960-61. Barbecue for President for Church Support; William E. Ward, III, A'45, Vice- School of Theology seniors at the home of Rev. and President for SMA; Rev. Tracy H. Lamar, '42, Vice-President for Mrs. William A. Griffin. Dinner dance at Gailor Hall St. Luke's; Robert M. Ayres, Jr., '49, Vice-President for Classes; (black tie). John W. Woods, '54, Vice-President for Admissions; James W.

Gentry, Jr., '50, Recording Secretary; Dr. 0. Morse Kochtitzky, Sunday, June 5 '42, Treasurer; Ben Humphreys McGee, '49, Athletic Board of Control. Baccalaureate and Commencement Day

Corporate Communion. LCA breakfast. USAF com- missioning ceremony. Baccalaureate service, sermon by the Most Rev. Howard Hewlett Clark, Primate of All Canada. Carillon recital. Commencement exercises.

CONTENTS Monday, June 6 Opening session of the Board of Trustees. Chancel- lor's address. Luncheon at Gailor Hall for Trustees, 3 Canadian Primate to Address Commencement Regents, members of the faculty and University ad- and Synod ministration. Luncheon for ladies at Sewanee Inn, honoring wives of Trustees. 4 On and Off the Mountain

6 Sports Tuesday, June 7

8 Trustees Meeting of the Board of Trustees. Open House and Sewanee Woman's Club coke party, Gallery of Fine 9 Down by the Sewanee Campus Arts. Student exhibitions. Bishops on Board of Trus- tees meet with members of the faculty of the School 25 Class Distinctions of Theology at lunch, Gailor Hall. 30 In Memoriam

31 Summer Schedule ON THE COVER—One of the many spring scenes and other studies made as a gift to the University by Franke Keating. Mrs. Keating's work illustrated an article by her husband, Bern Keating, on the Cajun country, in the March National Geographic. This is one of the latest of a long series of ma- May 1966 Volume 32 Number 2 jor works by the illustrious team of photo- journalists. Commencement and Synod

Will Hear Canadian Primate

The Most Rev. Howard Hewlett Clark, Arch- bishop of Rupert's Land and Primate of All Canada, will be the Commencement preacher and featured speaker to the Synod of the Fourth Pro- vince, which convenes at Sewanee June 7-9. His Grace, the Primate, occupies a position in Cana- da .comparable to that of the United States Presiding

Bishop. As his title indicates, the Canadian Church does not ask its head to resign his diocesan post when he assumes the national one; he remains in his dio- cese, taking the title of Archbishop, and assumes the duties of Primate as well. The Primate will be awarded an honorary degree from the University at Commencement, bringing to fourteen the number of such degrees he is entitled to write after his name. An honorary degree will also be conferred on the Rt. Rev. Theodore Harper McCrea, suffragan bishop of Dallas since 1962. Commencement will follow the condensed pattern ARCHBISHOP CLARK of the last two years, with the exception that the trus- tees will meet on the two days following instead of be- fore. Degrees will be awarded on the afternoon of Monteagle, six miles from Sewanee, and married a Baccalaureate Sunday, with no additional outside Memphis girl whose physician father had come to speaker. Albert S. Gooch, Jr.. acting director of alumni Monteagle to practice medicine. affairs, will be Commencement coordinator. The Synod, begun last year as something of an ex- periment in strengthening organization between the diocesan and the national level, has already proved SECOND SEWANEE SYNOD its worth. The training of diocesan leaders is regard- ed as its major function. In addition to its bishops,

The Synod of the Fourth (Sewanee) Province, con- each diocese sends to Synod its six department chair- vening at its name base for the second time June 7-9, men, the corresponding Churchwomen's department draws its speakers from contrasting climes. chairmen, and six additional persons active in or as- Appearing with the Primate of All Canada, the signed to these departments. closing speaker will be the Rt. Rev. Francisco Reus- Skilled regional and national specialists who cannot Froylan, S.T.D.. who was installed last year as the visit each diocese will be on hand to listen to and coun- first indigenous Bishop of Puerto Rico. sel with diocesan leaders.

Bishop Reus has strong ties with Tennessee. He The Sewanee public is invited to participate, Charles studied at the DuBose Memorial Training School in Crump of Memphis, lay chairman, emphasizes.

May 1966 I L On and off the Mountain

SEWANEE LOSES COLLINS FAMILY

Two of Sewanee's most devoted alumni and indis- pensable staff members—putting to a severe test the dictum that nobody is indispensable—are leaving the Mountain for, if not greener fields, pastures new and larger. DEAN-ELECT COLLINS The Rev. David Browning Collins, '43, chaplain of the University for thirteen years, has accepted a call as dean of the Cathedral of St. Philip in Atlanta, suc- no credit for that. But to select the daughter of an ceeding the late Very Rev. Alfred Hardman, '46. Alumnus from the very considerable number of Collins, whose chaplaincy was one of the longest in — daughters in the world who are not shows rare dis- Sewanee history (the Rev. William Alexander Guerry — cernment." beat him by one year, 1893-1907), was born in Hot Springs, Arkansas, received both his B.A. and B.D. Mrs. Collins was Maryon Virginia Moise, daughter from the University of the South, where he was a of Lionel Moise, who played with Football Hall of member of Kappa Sigma. His departure rocks not Fame's Bishop Frank A. Juhan on the great team of only the All Saints' pulpit, but the local ranks of dili- 1909. gent club officers (he is president of the English- The trustees are faced with the task of choosing Speaking Union, a member of the community council, Chaplain Collins' successor in June. past president of the Sewanee Civic Association and E.Q.B. faculty and residents' club). He will be sorely GHITTYS MOVE TO NEW YORK missed as a painter and actor, wit, cyclist, intramural player of softball and volleyball, and ardent baseball If Breslin Tower took a notion to walk off the fan. Mountain one morning, Sewanee would hardly be When Mrs. Collins' acting and singing, production more baffled, shaken and disoriented than it has been since of the annual Variety Show, P.T.A. presidency and in- the announcement that Arthur Ben Chitty, '35, director of numerable community services are recalled, the depri- public relations, executive director of the vation looms as staggering. Associated Alumni, historiographer, editor of the Se- ". wanee News for twenty years, adviser to Sigma Nu, Arthur Chitty, also departing, said in a letter: . . trumpeter, conscience, David, casting aside all Arthurization and Chittilation bulwark, horizon-stretcher and man-of-all-work for the I want to say this. In achieving familiarity of sorts University of the South, has chosen to remain in with nearly 20,000 biographical folders I don't know New York to strengthen the nas- cent organization of the of any one which I would place above yours in terms Association of Episcopal Col- leges, of he is president. of the exemplification you give, the witness if you will, which of what Sewanee is trying to do. As far as I know you Here too the loss on the distaff side is grievous. Eliz- are the only person to have been valedictorian of both abeth Nickinson Chitty has worked unbelievably hard your college class and your seminary class. Your career and well through the years as her husband's memory, as a deck officer adds luster. Marrying a Gorgeous prodder, editor and fellow-companion to the great and Creature from Broadway was just luck—I give you sustainer of the humble. In her own right she has

The Sewanee News served as co-editor of the monumental Alumni Direc- Swarthmore, 5) Sewanee, 6) Wabash, 7) Antioch, 8) tory as well as the Sezvanee News, coordinator of Com- Kenyon, 9) Grinnell, 10) the University of Chicago. mencements, dedications and entertainments, presi- A new gathering is added to the list of the Uni- dent, like Mrs. Collins, of the P.T.A. and servant in versity of the South's services to its Church when the capacities of the community, managing countless other Sewanee Consultation on Religion in Education con- hand-holder to editor of the Setvanee Reviezv, and venes June 12-18. The conference, under the direction another person might more distressed students than of the Rev. John M. Gessell and the Rev. William R. stick want to shake a at. Merrill of the St. Luke's faculty, will bring together Since they are what they are, Scwanee expects the persons of acknowledged competence who will inter- Chittys to help the University more in absentia than pret some of the issues in education and religion and would in residence. Chitty retains his un- many people their relationship to all teaching. Included among the paid position of historiographer. He says he is avail- leaders is Professor Charles Harrison, chairman of able for consultation to all eight of the Episcopal col- the College of Arts and Sciences' English department. are all equal in the sight of the leges, and while they Teachers, headmasters, principals, and board mem- national organization, Sewanee expects to be regarded bers of both elementary and secondary church-related than the rest. as a little more equal schools have been invited to attend. The often-repeated question, "Who will take Arthur Dr. George Ramseur, associate professor of biolo- Chitty's placer" can only be answered, "No one can." at the University, has been selected by the Depart- Albert Gooch and Edith Whitesell will continue to gy ment of Education of the government of India to serve divide his responsibilities as best they are able, with as a consultant in their 1966 summer institute pro- Dean Robert S. Lancaster in charge of the operation gram to teach college teachers of science and mathe- as acting director of development until the regents ap- matics. The program is financed by the United States point a replacement that will free him to resume his Agency for International Development. Dr. Ramseur duties as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. is the author of a number of articles in scholarly jour- nals in the field of botany.

SEWANEE IN TOP TEN AGAIN The Charlotte, Charleston, and Jacksonville Se- wanee clubs entertained the University Choir on its As it has consistently been during the entire twenty- spring tour, and the Miami club was host to the golf one-year history of the award, Sewanee is once again it played in the University of Miami tour- among the ten leading colleges and universities of the team when nament. nation in the percentage of its graduating class to re- ceive Woodrow Wilson fellowships. This year there Dr. McCrady has stirred up wide interest with a were nine fellows and two honorable mentions, placing number of talks around the country on student revolts. the University of the South fifth. We hope to have his comments for an early issue of The top ten: i) Reed, 2) Haverford, 3) Rice, 4) the Sezvanee News.

Arthur Ben Chitty (seated), president of the Association of Episcopal Col- leges, is shown with the presidents of all eight of the member institutions, at the annual meeting March 5 in Raleigh.

A distribution of $33,000 was made at that time.

Left to right, standing, are Drs. Earl

McClenney of St. Paul's, Edward Mc-

Crady of the University of the South,

James E. Boyer of St. Augustine's, Al- bert C. Jacobs of Trinity, F. Edward

Lund of Kenyon, Louis Hirshson of

Hobart, Reamer Kline of Bard, F.

Joseph Mullin of Shimer, and Albert

E. Holland, president-elect of Hobart.

May 1966 Sports

SPRING TEAMS GAINING MOMENTUM

The four spring sports teams got off to a slow start, but an 1 1-4 baseball victory over Vanderbilt and sparkling individual performances turned in by two ath- letes gave promise of improvement as the season pro- gresses. The brightest spot on Coach Horace Moore's track squad has been the pole-vaulting of Robert Harding, a Greenville, Mississippi, freshman, who set a new school record at 13 feet, 10 inches while handing

Southwestern's vaulter the first defeat in his collegiate career. John Capers shot a 292 in the University of Miami invitational golf match and finished ninth in a field of two hundred collegiate golfers. The golfers had a 4-2 mark in early April, while the tennis team, playing the opening meets on its schedule in the Guerry indoor Co-captain Tom Ward and Captain Bob Swisher display the courts, had a 3-5 mark. College Athletic Conference basketball championship tro- phy. The Tigers won the conference title for the first time All four teams were taking dead aim on the College after being upset in the two previous tournaments. Athletic Conference spring sports festival scheduled for Washington University in St. Louis May 13-14. With championships in football and basketball giving shooting from both the floor and the free-throw line in Sewanee a ten-point lead in the race for the over-all the tournament and also was named to the all-confer- conference championship, the Tigers are anxious to ence team. better last year's record of titles in tennis and golf, a Tom Ward was the leading rebounder, Ed Grant was second place in track and a third in baseball. tabbed by Varnell as the mainstay of the team throughout the season, freshman Sam Carroll paced in and Ashton Hollo- TWO MORE BELLS the team free-throw accuracy, way—the team's sixth man—led the Tigers in shoot- Sewanee's winter athletic teams added two more ing from the floor. College Athletic Conference championship bells to the In addition to these, Varnell awarded varsity letters University's growing collection in February with vic- to Rupert Walters, who ended a four-year career as a tories in the CAC basketball tournament and swimming Tiger eager, Mark Armstrong, Ron Shelton, Frank meet. Stanback, Joe Galloway and Henry Vruwink. Coach Lon Varnell's basketball team capped a 12-6 Bob Couch, an eighteen-year-old freshman from An- season record with an 82-61 upset victory over Wash- niston, Alabama, won the 200-, 500- and 1650-yard ington University in the finals of the conference tour- free-style races in the College Athletic Conference meet nament—a victory Varnell calls "one of the greatest and was named the meet's most outstanding swim- of my eighteen-year career at Sewanee." mer. He was also the team's leading scorer with 12434 The swimmers piled up 173 points in the first CAC points for the season. swim meet to outdistance host Washington and Lee Others won conference championships in their with 148 and Washington University with 83. Because events. Diver Bryan Starr finished the season unde- the two other members of the conference do not have feated and closed out his collegiate career with an swimming teams, points for the swimming champion- amazing record of twenty victories and only one loss. ship will not count in determining the over-all confer- John Colmore won the conference 100-yard freestyle ence champion. and Roger Way topped the field in the 100- and 200- Outstanding performances on the part of individual yard breaststroke events. Doug Baker, while failing members of both teams led to the championships. Bob to win in the meet, won three second-places—losing Swisher, the only man to captain a Sewanee basket- only to fellow-Tiger Bob Couch. ball team for three years, was the team's top scorer The team, dominated by freshmen, was good enough and won a berth on the all-conference team. Larry to break every school record except one. Holding an Cunningham established new conference records for 8-0 record when mid-January exams rolled around,

The Sewanee News the team returned to action with a 61-34 victory over Biggest upset of the three tournaments came in the the University of Kentucky, but then left on a two- Southern men's indoor action when Zan Guerry, the meet road trip and lost to Alabama 51-44 and Tulane nation's top sixteen-year-old and number three ranked 49-46 on successive days to end its dual meet schedule man in the South, beat Bitsy Harrison of West Point,

with a 9-2 mark. New York, for the title. Zan, who is still in prep school,

Other lettermcn were John Turpit, Paul Hoch, Pete is the grandson of Charlotte Patten Guerry, for whom Fogg, Terry Goodwin, Rick Clewis, Al Sherer, Lloyd Sewanee's indoor courts are named, and the late Vicc- Moore, Rick Dent, John Olofson and John Magrath. Chanccllor, and the son of alumnus Alex Guerry of Chattanooga. The doubles title was won by the FORTY-FOUR STRAIGHT VICTORIES Mississippi State University team of Bob Brien, Syd- ney, , and John Edmond, Edinburgh, Scot- Paul Tessmann captured his fourth straight 167- land. Thirty-six players from fifteen states and four pound Southeastern Intercollegiate wrestling cham- foreign countries entered. pionship (thus becoming the only man in the history Bryan "Bitsy" Grant, currently of the meet to win a championship four times in the senior division na- tional champion same weight division) and ended a phenomenal career and holder of a string of twenty-five national titles, won the Southern senior indoor at Sewanee with a 44-0 record. men's title, with the doubles His ten consecutive victories this season led the Ti- championship going to Frank Thompson and Randy Gregson. Alex ger wrestlers to a 4-2 record and the championship Wellford, '34, was an entrant. of the University of Chattanooga invitational meet. The Tigers, hosting the Southeastern meet this year, The Southern professional indoor championships

finished fifth, with Tessmann winning the only individ- drew sixteen of the South's leading professionals. Dell

ual title. Sylvia of Knoxville won the singles title, and the team Joining Tessmann as champions in the Chattanooga of Jack Rogers and Crawford Henry of Atlanta, the meet were Jack Baker, Tee Parker, and Jim Hey. doubles. Billy McKenzie was a runner-up in the Southeastern meet with Parker earning a third place and Hey a BISHOP JUHAN IN HALL OF FAME fourth. The year was and Sewanee was en route to a Other lettermen were John Colby and Randy 1909 nearly perfect season that would be climaxed by a 16- Tucker, who each finished fourth in the Southeastern victory over Vanderbilt and the championship of the meet, David Cameron, Hiram Langley, Lon Gilbert, 5 Southern Don Cameron, Larry Roberts and John Laskey. Intercollegiate Athletic Association. One of the stars of the team was a sapling-thin but tough TENNIS FOCUSES ON SEWANEE Texan who came to Sewanee as a back but had been convinced by Coach Henry Phillips that he was needed Sewanee became the center of interest for the na- as a lineman. tion's tennis fans in February and March, hosting He gave up his ideas of backfield stardom for a po- three Southern men's indoor championship tourna- sition in the center of the line, and when the Tigers ments, which drew many of the top players in each di- went on defense, he often pulled out of his position to vision. roam behind his entrenched teammates, thus becom-

ing one of football's first linebackers.

He gave credit for this idea to Coach Phillips.

"Henry Phillips taught me all I knew about playing in the line," he often said.

Both men were marked for greatness. Both became bishops of the Episcopal Church, each serving his dio- cese with distinction. Both maintained an interest in sports. When Henry Disbrow Phillips' election to the Na- tional Football Hall of Fame came posthumously, Bishop Frank A. Juhan accepted the plaque on be- half of the University of the South and the Phillips family. Bishop Juhan made the trip to New York again in Co-captains Al Sherer, right, and Terry Goodwin accept the first College Athletic Conference swimming championship April to accept another plaque, this one naming him trophy from athletic director Cy Twombly of Washington a member of the Football Hall of Fame. and Lee.

May 1966 Trustees

Dr. Henry T. Clark, Jr., of Chapel was born in Ridge Spring, South Caro- and B.D., Virginia Theological Semi- Hill completed his trusteeship for the lina. He was graduated from Porter nary, D.D. (H) the University of the diocese of North Carolina in Febru- Military Academy in Charleston in South. At Princeton he was captain of ary. Born in Scotland Neck, he has his 1921. He has been a church school the wrestling team and won an inter- A.B. from the University of North teacher, superintendent, vestryman and collegiate heavyweight wrestling cham- Carolina and M.D. from the University warden of the Church of the Resur- pionship. He served parishes in of Rochester School of Medicine. He rection in Greenwood. His hobbies are Georgia and was archdeacon of that served as director of Vanderbilt Uni- working with Boy Scouts and hunting. diocese before moving to the Church versity Hospital from 1948 to 1950, A son, Walter Craig Stuckey, is in the of the Advent in Birmingham in 1936, when he became administrator for the College. becoming bishop in 193'8. He was an in- division of health affairs at the Uni- From the diocese of Tennessee, Alex- fantry lieutenant in World War I, has versity of North Carolina. In 1957 he ander Guerry, Jr., '39, has gone off the been a member of the Air University's was appointed by the governor of board. President of the Chattanooga board of visitors. North Carolina to the Nuclear Energy Medicine Company, he is the son of The Rt. Rev. George Mosley Mur- Advisory Committee and in 1964 to the the late vice-chancellor of the Univer- ray, Suffragan Bishop of Alabama, was Medical Center Study Commission. He sity and Charlotte Patten Guerry, born in Baltimore, Maryland, but grew is a past president and present secre- grandson of the late Bishop William up in Bessemer, Alabama. He was tary-treasurer of the North Carolina Alexander Guerry of South Carolina, graduated at the head of his class from Tennis Foundation. one-time chaplain and professor of the University of Alabama school of

^,34^

BECKHAM CLARK GUERRY POLLARD

Upper South Carolina named three theology at Sewanee. He is a graduate commerce in 1940, served during World neiv men in February. The following of the Baylor School in Chattanooga War II as torpedo and gunnery officer three rounded out their terms at that and has an MA. from the University on a submarine, with the rank of lieu- time. of North Carolina. Phi Beta Kappa, tenant, senior grade; earned a B.D. valedictorian of his class, and tennis degree cum laude from Virginia Sem- The Ven. William A. Beckham, arch- champion, he emerged from World inary in 1948; is a D.D. (H) of the Uni- deacon of the diocese, was born in Co- War II service in the Army Air Force versity of the South. His whole minis- lumbia, South Carolina, in 1927, re- with the rank of lieutenant colonel try was spent in the diocese of Ala- ceived a B.S. from the University of and the Legion of Merit, the Silver bama, including a period as chaplain South Carolina in 1951 and a B.D. Star, the Distinguished Flying Cross of students for the University of Ala- from Virginia Theological Seminary. with three clusters, and the Air Medal. bama. He was elected bishop at the He was ordained to the priesthood in He is prominent in Chattanooga's civic age of thirty-four. 1955 and served several parishes in life and is president of the Chatta- The Rev. William G. Pollard, Sc.D. South Carolina, was dean of the West- nooga Plan for Corporate Investment '52, a trustee since 1955, has the latest ern and then the Eastern Convocation in Higher Education, which attained in in a long series of publications in the before becoming archdeacon in 1964. its first year the goal it had set for fields of science and religion recently Samuel Boykin, '39, of Camden, itself for three years in securing cor- issued by the Seabury Press, Physi- Southern manager of advertising sales poration support of colleges. cist and Christian: A Dialogue between for Reader's Digest, was born at Boy- the Communities. An A.M. and Ph.D. kin, South Carolina. He attended the All bishops of the twenty-one own- in physics of Rice University, he has Citadel for a year before entering the ing dioceses are trustees of the Uni- been executive director of the Oak University of the South. During World versity. Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies War II he was a major in the USAAF The Rt. Rev. Charles C. J. Carpen- since 1947 and is priest-in-charge of air transport command, served in thir- ter, Bishop of Alabama, has been St. Alban's Church, Clinton, Tennes- ty countries on six continents. Chancellor of the University and see. The new book is hailed as a "dis- Walter DuBose Stuckey, '25, of president of the board of trustees cerning, controversial, and widely ac- Greenwood, an officer of Greenwood since 1961. Born in Augusta, Georgia, claimed study of atom-age relation- Mills, a firm he has served since 1938, in 1899, he is a B.A. from Princeton ships."

8 The Sewanee News Rodarmor

Down by the Sewanee Campus

by Arnold Toynbee Down by the Sewanee Campus

by Arnold Toynbee

After Arnold Toynbee, eminent British historian, spent jour days in Sewanee last year as a duPont lecturer, he wrote an article about the University for the London Ob- server and its foreign service. That article is reprinted here.

I N the Southeastern United States, an altitude of 2,000 feet gives the climatic optimum. This altitude takes the sting out of the summer heat with- out making the winter cold un- Couls comfortably severe. They selected the Sewanee plateau. In the days before the appli- cation of modern public health measures, the heat sting in the Andrew Lytle, editor of the Sewanee Review and lecturer in English, with a student on the quadrangle. COASTAL DISTRICTS OF THE OlD Keating South was deadly. Yellow fever, as well as malaria, took its toll. These hygienic considerations were decisive in the minds of Leonidas Polk and his fellow- Southern Episcopal bishops when, in the eighteen-fifties, they selected the sewanee pla- TEAU, in Eastern Tennessee, as THE SITE FOR AN EPISCOPAL UNI- VERSITY of the South. Sewanee was healthy, it was rural, and it was central for the location of a university that was to serve the whole section of the united states to the south of the mason and Dixon Line. Moreover, a local coal-mining company gave the (please turn page) Sewanee was healthy, it was rural, and it was central.

Keating new university io,000 acres of land; and the founders' presi- dent THOUGHT TO REALIZE THAT A UNIVERSITY CAMPUS'S NEED TO EX-

PAND IS VIRTUALLY UNLIMITED.

Bishop polk, the moving IN THIS FAR-SEEING EDUCA- TIONAL ENTERPRISE, WAS AN UNUSU- AL PERSONALITY. The PROMINENT Southern family from which he came was agnostic-minded. Le- onidas went to West Point and distinguished himself there, as his family had expected he would. He then surprised them by having a sudden religious conversion and going, not into the United States Army, but in- to the Episcopal Church. Here his abilities carried him to the episcopate, and higher education became his foremost concern. Having come to the conclusion that the episcopal Church in the South needed a university of its own, he did Keating some systematic and thorough PREPARATORY WORK. He INSPECTED the Universities of Paris, Ox- ford, Cambridge, and Heidelberg. He explored the highland dis- tricts of the South to find the ABOVE, NEAR RIGHT: John Ransom, director of admissions, strolls with ideal location. In launching his one of the chosen. The ratio of freshmen to applicants is about one to five. plan, he had his church behind him, and there was no difficul- ty over the raising of the money BELOW: Lake Cheston, used for swimming and picnicking, is one of twelve man-made lakes on the for the endowment. Mountain. (please turn page)

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1*. Before the Civil War the rich section of the united States was the South, with its rapidly developing plantations, not the North, whose indus- tries WERE THEN STILL IN THEIR infancy. The Southern bishops had raised their money and had started to build when they were overtaken by the clvil War. For the University, as for the South itself, the war SPELLED CATASTROPHE. LeONIDAS Polk now became a soldier after all—a Confederate one, of course. President Jefferson Da- vis made him a general. (He Cap and Gown could hardly have offered a lower rank to a bishop who had The educational center at Sewanee is composed of three units, the a military education.) School of Theology (above), the College of Arts and Sciences, and the Sewanee Military Academy (below). Poor Polk did not survive the war. a cannon-ball hit him in the chest (the death that, a At right a theology student practices a sermon before his professors and critical peers. (Kioto by Don Rutledge of Black Star) few years before, had overtaken the British aide-de-camp who Keating had blunderingly ordered the charge of the llght brigade). The UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS DID NOT survive the war either. they were burned down, in a fit of irresponsible vandalism, by a jun- ior officer in the united states Army after Sewanee had been occupied by the union forces. Such wanton destructiveness, (please turn page)

BEYOND THE DEMANDS OF MILITARY

NECESSITY, IS ONE OF THE INCIDEN- TAL EVILS OF WAR AND ONE OF THE MANY EVIDENCES OF THIS EVIL IN- STITUTION'S DEMORALISING EFFECT.

W HEN the Civil War was over, the Episcopal University of the South had to start again FROM THE BEGINNING. PoLK WAS gone, the money was gone (the Southern planters were now ruined). The 10,000 acres, how- ever, were indestructible and THEY WERE STILL IN THE UnIVER- sity's POSSESSION. The TORCH WAS picked up by Bishop Quintard. He went to England to appeal to his fel- low-Episcopalians there and he met with a generous response. The Archbishops of Canterbury and York and the Vice-Chancel- lors of Oxford and Cambridge sponsored a money-raising cam- paign; AND, WITH THIS ENGLISH financial help, the university of the South made its second start. This was in 1867, only two years after the end of the WAR. (please TURN page) LEFF: Woodrow Wilson Fellows in a bumper year. Sewanee has ranked among the top ten colleges and universities in the nation through the years in these awards in relation to enrollment. It has had sixteen Rhodes Scholars, and con- sistently far more than its numerical share of ali graduate grants.

BELOW, LEFT: The Jessie Ball duPont Library was planned to serve at least one college in addition to the pres- ent one. Unusually abundant carrels, study desks and read- ing islands bring student intimately to book.

BELOW, RIGHT: Professor and Mrs. Charles Harrison, like most faculty couples, open their homes to students every Sunday night and at many in-between times.

Rutledge

Keating l/uring the century that has passed since then, the uni- versity has cone from strength to strength. for an english visi- tor today, when america has done so much for britain, it is a happy discovery that, once upon a time, his own country proved itself a friend in need for an American institution that was determined not to die and that has shown, by its subsequent per- formance, that it deserved to LIVE. If the English visitor hap- pens TO HAVE AN ANGLICAN BACK- GROUND, HE WILL FIND THE ATMOS- PHERE AT SEWANEE FAMILIAR AND congenial; but HE DOES not need to be either Anglican or Eng- lish to find this university in- teresting. The English and the American systems of university education are fruitfully com- bined WITH EACH OTHER HERE. The objective of a Sewanee un- dergraduate's ambition is to earn

THE RIGHT TO WEAR A GOWN. He // the English visitor happens to have an Anglican background, he will HAS TO EARN THIS BY GOOD CON- find the atmosphere at Sewanee familiar and congenial. DUCT AND BY HARD INTELLECTUAL WORK, AND HE HAS TO KEEP IT BY Newcum THE CONTINUING PRACTICE OF THE SAME VIRTUES (HE WILL LOSE HIS GOWN IF HE SLACKS OFF). (please TURN page) Newcum

The Rev. William Ralston, left, assistant professor in the School of Theology and associate editor of the Sewanee Review, was an American Fellow at St. Augustine's College, Canterbury, England. With him is Dr. Hugh Caldwell, associate professor of philosophy in the College of Arts and Sciences. But, so long as he is a gowns- man, HE IS TREATED AS BEING IN- TELLECTUALLY ADULT. For IN- STANCE, HE IS NOT REQUIRED TO AT- TEND LECTURES. It IS FOR HIM TO DECIDE, AT HIS PERIL, WHETHER HE WILL ATTEND THEM OR NOT, PEND- ING THE DAY OF JUDGMENT WHEN HE WILL BE EXAMINED. On THE other hand, the undergraduate who fails to win a gown, or who wins one but fails to keep it, remains under the detailed discipline and is given the intel- lectual spoon-feeding that are characteristic of the regimen in many American universities— a regimen that seems to euro- pean observers to be more like the secondary school stage than like the university stage of a European higher education. One of the strong points of American higher education is ABOVE: Coaches Horace Moore, Shirley Majors, Clarence Carter. its immense variety, and, in this variety, university of the the Sewanee belongs to the College Athletic Conference, whose members award South stands out, like the pla- no athletic scholarships. In 1958 and again in 1963 the football team was un- defeated, and most recent teams have been of a calibre to make even the IT HAS BEEN teau ON WHICH giants of 1899 proud. The other varsity sports have comparable records. A PLANTED. vigorous intramural program draws in three-fourths of the students, in a college which supports athletics for what it can do for its men, and does not look to it for income.

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The University of the South stands out, like the plateau on which it has been planted. Rodarmor Coulson

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Coulson

Arnold Toynbee chatting with Vice-Chancellor Edward McCrady before one of the historian's Sewanee lectures. The two addresses he made at that time will appear in a forthcoming book. An interview with him is available on request by radio stations from the public relations office of the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee 37375. Class Distinctions . . .

1929 lanta. He has just returned from a tour John H. Cleghorn, KS, has been pro- of duty in Viet Nam, and received the moted to vice-president of advertising Legion of Merit for exceptionally and public relations for Holiday Inns meritorious service there. of America. He worked as a reporter 1938 for the Commercial Appeal in Mem- William B. Harwell, KA, has been phis after graduation from Sewanee. elected president of Neely, Harwell has worked in broadcasting and has and Company, a wholesale dry goods owned an advertising agency. He is firm in Nashville, succeeding the late vice-president of the Public Relations Robert E. Harwell, '23, KA, who died Society of America, Memphis chapter. February 14. He has filled positions in '49 Julian R. deOvies, ATO, was named the company for thirty years, serving harry c. Mcpherson, jr., 1965 Mobilian of the Year at a dinner as vice-president since 1948. He has sponsored by the Mobile, Alabama, a son, William, Jr., '68, PDT, who is Civitan Club. The annual winner of the a student in the College. members of the panel included a juve- award is named by representatives 1940 nile officer of police, a director of the from more than 120 organizations with H. W. Erawley has resigned as exec- county child welfare service, and the a total membership of about 30,000. utive assistant to the national chair- editor of the local newspaper. 1933 man of the Democratic Party to be- Eugene N. Zeigler, DTD, has an- Harry League Graham was married come vice-president of Genesco for nounced his candidacy for a seat in to Mary Pauline Martin February 18 at national and international relations. A the South Carolina state senate. Joplin, Missouri. They live at 3333 former assistant postmaster general, 1944 Grand, Des Moines, Iowa. he was Southern manager of the 1964 Fitzgerald Atkinson, Jr., SAE, a Edwin I. Hatch, ATO, president of national election campaign for the three-term Davidson County represen- the Georgia Power Company, has Democratic Party. tative in the Tennessee state legisla- been named to serve also as the com- Robert G. Snowden, SAE, has been ture, in April elections became vice- pany's chief executive officer, the elected a director of a growing move- mayor of Metropolitan Nashville and ment to replace the commission form Davidson County. of city government in Memphis. The 1948 election took place in a town-hall type The Rev. George C. Estes, PGD, and PLACEMENT SERVICE of meeting. Twenty-five directors were his family are in Cali, Colombia, South chosen. America, where he serves Trinity Walter Wilder, '6o, is director 1942 Church. He remarks that the city is a of a new University placement The Rev. Tom Turney Edwards, rec- beautiful one, and from their home service available to all alumni. tor of St. Paul's Church, Chestnut Hill, they have a view of the Andes Moun- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, recently tains and the valleys below. The chil- Coordinated with a nation-wide took part in a panel discussion entitled, dren are Marv Hunter, Matthew, and computer system, resumes of the "If Johnny Can, Why Can't I?" Other Gee. candidate's qualifications now can go to all prospective em- ployers speedily and without re- peated efforts by the applicant. Write to Walter Wilder, director of placement, Sewanee, Tennes- see.

utility's board of directors has an- nounced. The action became effective February 1. He is a member of the board of regents of the University. 1934 Alex Wellford, SAE, was a partici- pant in the southern senior men's in- door tennis championships played on the Charlotte Guerry indoor courts at Sewanee in February. Accompanying him to Sewanee for the tennis week- end was his wife, Peggy. 1935 The Rev. Julius A. Pratt has been chaplain at the Greene Valley Hospital and School, Greeneville, Tennessee, since April, 1965, and the impact he has had on the life of the residents has been amazing. He has helped es- tablish a "Gold Door" clothing room manned by volunteers, and an adop- tive friend program which has been very successful. 1936 Col. Edmund Kirby-Smtth, SAE, has been named deputy engineer of the Coach Gordon Warden, '52, congratulates Zan Guerry, son of Alexander South Atlantic division of the Corps Guerry, '39, on his victory in the Southern men's indoor tennis tourna- of Engineers. He has his office in At- ment held in the Charlotte Guerry indoor courts in March.

May 1966 25 -

Young Giant and of Rebels, Merce- office is in the State Health Building naries and Dividends—The Katanga in Atlanta. Story. James C. Hoppe, KA, has a third 1951 child, Melissa Henderson, born Octo- Jess B. Cheatham, Jr., SAE, has ber 15. She joins sister Lynda, five, been named manager of Armstrong and Jim, Jr., two. He is an assistant Cork Company's district office in St. cashier at the First National Bank in Louis. He joined Armstrong in 1951 Tampa. He is married to the former and prior to his promotion he had Joan Henderson. Address: 4521 Brook been assistant manager of the New wood Drive, Tampa, Florida 33609. York district office. Dr. William C. Kalmbach, Jr., KA, The Rev. Milton Crum will join the of Shreveport, was installed as a Fel- faculty of the Virginia Theological low of the American College of Ob- Seminary in September. He has served stetricians and Gynecologists at the as chaplain to Episcopal students at annual meeting May 2-5 in Chicago. since 1960. George M. Pope, SN, has been ap- 1952 pointed district forester at Rocking- Edward G. Nelson, PDT, a vice- ham, North Carolina, for the Catawba president of Commerce Union Bank, Timber Company. His area covers Nashville, has been named chairman of eight counties. He is active in Scout- the Davidson County Easter Seal cam- ing and Episcopal Church youth work. paign committee. He is married and has one daughter. The Rev. Thomas H. Whitcroft was Dr. Fletcher S. Stuart, ATO, has a instituted in January as rector of St. new address and a new child. The Mary's Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- child, the family's fourth, is named vania. Margaret and arrived November 2. The SMITH HEMPSTONE, '50 1953 address: 98 Lynbrook Drive, Brev- Dr. Peter S. Irving, SN, was mar- ton, Alabama. J. Thomas Williams III, SAE, a 1949 ried to Virginia Ezell in September. member of the Chattanooga News- Dr. They live at 106 Gatehouse Drive, C. FitzSimons Allison, SAE, Press editorial staff for past North, Apartment J, Metairie, Louisi- Free the professor of church history at the ten years, has joined the Lookout ana 70001. He is a physician, special- Ad- School of Theology, delivered the Ed- izing in internal medicine in New Or- vertising Agency as head of the firm's win A. Penick Lectures at the Univer- leans. newly expanded public relations di- sity of North Carolina at Greensboro. Dr. Bertram Wyatt-Brown, PDT, vision. Established in 1950 in honor of the late a position assistant 1956 Bishop Penick of the diocese of North has accepted as professor of history at Western Reserve William R. Boling, SN, a member Carolina, the series has had many dis- University, Cleveland, Ohio. of the mortgage loan department of tinguished theologians as guest lec- the Jacksonville office of Stockton, 1954 turers. Whatley, Davin and Company, has Hart Mankin is a new member of Harry C. McPherson, Jr., SAE, new- been named manager of the firm's Mi- special the President, the national council of the Brother- counsel to occu- ami office. of hood of St. Andrew, an Episcopal lay- pies a position in the second ring Larry P. Davis, BTP, is the new men's organization. power surrounding the President, ac- executive director of the area mental The Rev. William S. Noe is assistant cording to a chart produced by the health center in Garden City, Kansas. professor of German at Randolph-Ma- National Observer. Those nearer to the He has been involved in social work con College and has a part-time posi- President include the Secretary of in New York for a number of years tion as priest-in-charge of the Church State, the Secretary of Defense and and has initiated a residential treat- of Our Saviour, Montpelier, Virginia. Bill Moyers, a long-time personal ad- ment program for drug addicts. He He was married to the former Anita visor. McPherson's position is described has also lectured at the University of Moritz in November, 1964. Performing as being very close to that of Vice- Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Fi- the ceremony were the Rev. A. C. D. President Humphrey. nance in the department of sociology. Charles C. Shaw, KA, has been ad- Noe, '07, SAE, and the Rev. Jesse S. He is married to the former Erla J. Sparks, T'58. He will be in charge of mitted to partnership in the law firm Cleaves of Bar Harbor, Maine. a European study-travel program spon- of Matthews, Maddox, Walton and Robert Barr Dugger, ATO, has been sored by Randolph-Macon College this Smith in Rome, Georgia. appointed to the board of directors of summer. 1950 Hill Bible School, a private The Rev. David Fort is the new rec- The Rev. J. Ralph Patston, DTD, is tor of Trinity Church, Yazoo City, now assistant director of Cathedral Mississippi. Shelter, an agency for underprivileged Charles P. Garrison, KA, has been men. He is also working with men of named vice-president and loan analyst the Halfway House, for the benefit of of the First Federal Savings and Loan alcoholics in the diocese of Chicago. Association of St. Petersburg. He has His address: Cathedral Shelter, 207 been with First Federal of Tampa South Ashland Boulevard, Chicago since 1953. He is married to Anne Ash- 60607. ton of Tampa and has two children. A 1955 member of St. Andrew's Church in Dan S. Abbott, BTP, of Abilene, is Tampa, he has been president of the assistant county attorney for Taylor men's club. County, Texas, with responsibility for Smith Hempstone, Jr., PGD, has prosecution of misdemeanors and for written his first novel and third book, civil representation for the county. A Tract of Time. Published in March The Rev. M. Clark Baker, KA, is by Houghton Mifflin Company, the book curate of Christ Church, Whitehaven, has as its setting Viet Nam before and Tennessee. Address: 4506 Ernie Drive, during 1963. Hempstone spent the sum- Memphis 38116. mer of 1963 in southeast Asia on as- The Rev. Hunsdon Gary, Jr., GST, signment for the Chicago Daily News. was recently honored on the twenty- Most of his work on the novel was fifth anniversary of his ordination. He done while he was a Nieman Fellow is rector at St. John's Church in at Harvard during 1964-65. He has re- Youngstown, Ohio. cently re-joined the staff of the Wash- Edward T. Hall, Jr., has joined the ington Star as a foreign correspondent. staff of the Georgia water quality con- KINNETT, '56 He is the author of Africa, Angry trol board as an aquatic biologist. His KEN

26 The Sewanee News When the Sewanee Tigers were in Texas to play Austin College last fall Sewan.ee alumni gathered from all points of the Southwest to furnish a cheering section. From left, front row, they are: William T. Bird, Jr., '50, James T. Ettien, '63, Kenneth K. Clark, '34, William C. Schoolfield, '29, Sylvester G. Willey, '25, John D. Stephens, '44, James F. Gilliland, '59, Rev. John A. Messinger, '51, John Rison Jones, Jr., '49, Kent S. Henning, '59. Second row: Julius G. French, '32, John M. Aiken, '16, Rev. W. Tate Young, '26, Robert L. Donald, Jr., '58, Michael B. Veal, '58, Rev. Fred A. Thompson, '32, Reginald H. Hel- venston, '22, William A. Kirkland, H'56, Charles L. Dexter, Jr., '43, Roy M. Flynn, '61. Third row: Capt. Dennis P. Thomp- son, '60, William M. Mount, '58, Rutherford R. Cravens II, '39, Ralph M. Roscher, '50, Edward W. Heath, '52, Thomas K. Lamb, Jr., '51, Sidney C. Farrar, 19, George R. James, A'08, James H. Edmondson, A'51, Dr. W. Andrew Hibbert, '53. Back row: Lt. Joseph F. Trimble, '64, John K. Rothpletz, '61, Donald W. Griffis, '64, Johannes B. Sylvan, '64, Dr. John Pendleton Vineyard, '52.

school in Florence, Alabama, with en- diocese of Erie. He served as rector now expanded to college level. The rollment from kindergarten through of St. Clement's Church, Greenville, Rev. Archie Stapleton, Jr., T'59, is co- the twelfth grade. Pennsylvania, for six years before tak- principal of the school. ing Rev. Philip Dr. Harold Gosnell, rector of St. the new position. The Hoyle Whitehead, Mark's Church, , was one 1957 SAE, has become the first full-time Carleton Jr., chaplain St. Catherine's School, of three men to be honored at a testi- S. Cunningham, PDT, at monial dinner sponsored by the Na- has been promoted to assistant vice- Richmond. His duties include teach- tional Conference of Christians and president of the Hamilton National ing religion, counseling and conduct- Bank, is ing services. to Jews in San Antonio. He serves as ex- Chattanooga. He a member of He moved the new po- sition from St. amining chaplain and a member of the Grace Church and the American In- Alban's Church, Jack- stitute of sonville. board of trustees of the diocese of Banking. He and his wife, Nelia, their children live in 1958 West Texas and as a member of the and two Edmund Berkeley, Jr., board of regents of the University. Shepherd Hills Apartments. KS, is senior The Rev. Walter G. Fields, GST, is assistant in the manuscripts division Ken Kinnett, SAE, has been elected priest-in-charge of St. Thomas' of the University of Virginia library. vice-president of the London Agency Church, Elizabethton, Tennessee. He has published an article in the in Atlanta. The firm has grown in Robert Hooker, PGD, and wife, Ann, Virginia Cavalcade, the publication of seven years to become one of the larg- have a boy, Robert Clark Hooker, Jr., the Virginia state library, and has est special risk writers operating in born September 15. They live at 113 written another which will be pub- the United States. Ken joined the Rosine, Beaumont, Texas 77707. lished soon. Address: 2708 Jefferson agency in 1960. He and his wife, Loyd, The Rev. Charles May joined the Park Avenue, Charlottesville 22903. have three children—Brian, David and staff of Trinity Church, Columbia, Allan J. Clark II, BTP, is complet- Ann. Their address: 1193 Angelo Court, South Carolina, as assistant rector in ing work on his M.A. in history at N.E., Atlanta 30319. He is an active February. He had been rector of St. the University of South Dakota. He member of the Sewanee Club of At- Paul's Church, Newport, Arkansas. has been appointed a graduate assist- lanta. Dr. Robert B. Pierce, SAE, is the ant in European history. His address: Joseph P. McAllister, BTP, has been pediatrician at the U. S. Marine Corps 214 Prospect, Vermillion, S. Dak. promoted to second vice-president and Air Station, Cherry Point, North Car- Dr. Dean B. Ellithorpe, PDT, has associate actuary of the National Life olina, and his wife, the former Myra received a commission as captain in and Accident Insurance Company in Hughes, is practicing general medi- the U. S. Air Force Reserve (Medical Nashville. A Phi Beta Kappa, he holds cine and pediatrics in Newport, North Corps) and began active duty in Feb- a master's degree in mathematics from Carolina, just a few miles away. He ruary. His address: 328th U. S. A. F. the University of North Carolina and is the co-author of Dextran Therapy Hospital, Richards-Gebaur Air Force formerly taught math at the College of Purpura Fulminans, which appeared Base, Missouri 64031. before joining the insurance com- in the New England Journal of Medi- Louis Parker, Jr., SN, is still associ- pany in 1959. He is chairman for the cine. Address: 915 Greenfield Boule- ated with the Arlington, Virginia, of- tenth reunion of the class of 1956, vard, Havelock, N. C. 28532. fice of Auerbach Corporation as a which will be held Commencement William Henry Scott, GST, an- member of the technical staff. His ad- weekend at Sewanee. A second son, nounces that St. Mary's School, Saga- dress: 4201 S. 31st Street, Apt. 1023, Joseph Andrew, was born October 10. da, Mountain Province, Philippines, Arlington 22206. The Rev. Warren L. Starrett, Jr., has advanced from forty-ninth place The Rev. Limuel G. Parks, Jr., vic- has been appointed canon theologian in the list of Philippine schools in 1959 ar of St. Peter's Church, Conway, and diocesan consultant for college to twenty-third in 1960 and to ninth Arkansas, was married in December work and Christian education of the in the last government exams, and has to Laura Lilian Bailey.

May 1966 27 —

A biological encyclopedia has been many doing research on German elec- added to the duPont Library collec- tions for his dissertation. tion by the Delta Tau Delta fraternity Choon Jai Rhee received his Ph.D. as a memorial to the late Battle in mathematics from the University of Searcy, M.D., DTD, who was a ma- Georgia in 1965 and is now an assist- jor in the department of biology. He ant professor at Randolph-Macon. He was killed in an automobile accident is married to Young-Nahn Chi of en route to Sewanee in November, Seoul, Korea. 1964. Captain William C. Stewart, BTP, Joel Thomas Strawn, PGD, is a mem- and his wife have a daughter, Tracy ber of the law firm of MacMillan, Ne- Elizabeth, born October 9. The Stew- witt and Adams in Delray Beach, Flo- arts live at 4403 Newcome Drive, San rida. He received his law degree from Antonio 78229. the University of Florida law school. 1961 He was married in June, to 1963, Anne The Rev. Paul E. Cosby has been Lawrence of Johnston, Rhode Island, appointed assistant to the Rev. Robert and has a son, Lawrence MacMillan, Appleyard, rector of the Episcopal born July 1965. 8, Church of Bethesda by the Sea, Palm Ward W. Wueste, Jr., PGD, has Beach. He moves to the new assign- joined the law firm of Smith, Rose and ment after serving '63' as headmaster of RICHARD BRUSH, Finley in San Angelo, Texas. is He Grace Church Day School, Ocala, Flo- married to the former Carol Black- rida. stone and has two daughters. Address: James L. Hutter III, DTD, has a new 2787 University, San Angelo. Tupper Saussy, KA, has composed address: 185 East 24th No. 1, Eugene, an exciting symphonic tale based on 1960 Oregon 97405. Mr. and Mrs. David Ellison III, the Grimm fairy-tale "The Bremen ATO, The Rev. and Mrs. B. Wayne Kin- have a son, David IV, born early in Town Musicians." Tupper's version is yon have a second daughter, Allison November. He made an appearance at entitled "Beast with Five Heads" and Elizabeth, born November 9. He is vic- the was performed in March by the Nash- Sewanee Club of Columbia, South ar of Immanuel Church, Ripley, Ten- Carolina, ville symphony orchestra especially Christmas party, and was nessee. proudly displayed parents, for children between the ages of four by grand- Robert E. Libbey has a son, Robert, parents, and great-grandmother and ten. Tupper narrated the story for Mrs. Jr., born October 12 in Charleston, the children at the premiere perform- South Carolina. ance. Randolph Parker, KA, completed John M. Stuart, Jr., ATO, has a three years with the United States Air new address: 2616 Whitesburg Drive, Three new Sewanee names Force and attended a six-months' Huntsville, Alabama. course in conversational German at the will appear in the thirty-fourth John C. Thompson, KA, vice-presi- Defense Language Institute, Monterey, volume of Who's Who in Amer- dent of Stewart-Sneed-Hewes insur- California. He is serving with the office ance company, has been named a mem- ica, to be published soon. The of special investigations in Germany. His address: OSI District ber of the advisory board of the Gulf men are the Rt. Rev. John 70, CMR Box 19, APO New York, N. Y. 09332. National Bank in Gulfport, Mississippi. Adams Pinckney, Bishop of Up- At twenty-nine, he was the youngest Air Force Lieutenant Robert D. per South Carolina; Harry Cum- Peel, of seven members appointed to the PDT, shot down last May while board. mings McPherson, Jr., special on a mission over North Viet Nam and counsel to the President; John reported in July, in a news dispatch 1959 from Tokyo, as possibly captured by Witherspoon Woods, vice-presi- Adolph E. Anderson III, DTD, has a North Viet Nam ground forces, has son, Adolph IV, born August 18. He dent of Chemical Bank New written his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred has just moved back to Houston from York Trust Company. Peel, to let them know that he sur- Corpus Christi. Address: 4302 Coyle vived and is in good health. The let- Street, Houston 77023. ter, received in February, was the Catharine Alleen, third child and first definite proof that he was alive. first daughter of James M. Avent, Jr., As a prisoner of war, he is allowed to PDT, was born October 26 in Jackson, Henry Disbrow Phillips, wife of the receive one letter a month, but only Tennessee, where Jimmy is manager late Bishop Phillips, '04, a member of from his parents and his brothers for J. C. Bradford, stocks and bonds. the Football Hall of Fame. Major Fred Peel, Jr., A'43, and Capt. Dudley Peel, '59, PDT. Samuel Hurt Fowlkes, PDT, is as- The Rev. W. Thomas Fitzgerald has sociated with IBM in Birmingham. Ad- been appointed rector of the Church Joseph H. Schley, Jr., PDT, was dress: 2229 Talbrook Road, Birming- of the Redeemer in Sarasota, Florida. promoted to captain August 9, and on ham 35216. Dr. John P. Patton, ATO, has been September 1 left for a three-year tour of duty as judge advocate of Alcon- Dr. Joseph W. Griffin, PGD, has selected to direct the base medical bury, RAF, England. He and his wife, identical twin sons, Marshall and Mat- services at Chaumont Air Force Base, France. His wife, the former Joyce Carolyn, have a son, Bryan Taylor, thew, born October 23, 1965. He is a born May 15. dentist in Damariscotta, Maine. Jeter, and two sons, John Perry IV , and Joel David, are with him in Robert J. Schneider has earned the John Hodgkins, SN, and his wife, France. He will return to the Univer- Doctor of Scientiarum Mediaevalium Nancy, have a daughter, Margaret, sity of Tennessee medical school at degree from Notre Dame and is now born in January. John is telegraph Memphis in 1967 to complete a resi- an assistant professor at the Univer- editor of the Pensacola News. dency program in radiology. sity of Southern California, teaching Dr. James Spearing Mayson, DTD, Charles A. Powell, DTD, completed classics. Address: Classics Department, was married to Angela Bryan at St. work on his Ph.D. degree at the Uni- University of Southern California, Los Paul's Lutheran Church, North Holly- versity of Oregon during the summer Angeles 90007. wood, California, in January. They of 1965 and is now a faculty member Wortham Smith, PGD, and his wife, will make their home in New London, of the political science department at Susie, have a son, Clark Wortham, Connecticut. Temple University in Philadelphia. His born September 3. They live at 221 Don Sanders, BTP, graduated from wife, Linda, is writing her thesis for Merrie Way, Houston, Texas. Harvard Medical School in 1964 and a master's degree in journalism. Both Thomas S. Tisdale, Jr., ATO, has is in residency training in neurology Powells were Phi Beta Kappas and been sworn in as a lieutenant j.g. in at the University of Virginia Hospital spent a year in Germany as Fulbright the Naval Reserve. He is associated at Charlottesville. He married Polly scholars in 1961. Their daughter, Me- with the law firm of Young, Clement Ann Sandridge, November 26, and vis- lissa, was born in Switzerland in 1963 and Rivers of Charleston, South Caro- ited Sewanee on his honeymoon. while Charles was there and in Ger- lina.

28 The Sewanee News Alfred M. Waddell, Jr., SAE, has Thomas M. Carlson, KS, a cum been accepted at Harvard Graduate laude graduate of the University w!io School of Business and will begin holds a master's degree from the Uni- study there in September. He has been versity of North Carolina, has been employed by IBM since his graduation named to the faculty of Augusta Col- and is now manager of the Greenville, lege in Georgia as an instructor in Mississippi, office. English. 1962 Michael M. Cass, KA, married Mary Julian R. Beckwith III, KA, has Lynn Stovall of Douglas, Georgia, in been appointed assistant professor of July and is now enrolled in the grad- forestry and will teach wood anatomy uate school at Emory University. Ad- and properties at the George Foster dress: 2151 Lenox Road, N.E., Apt. C-l, Peabody School of Forestry of the Atlanta 30324. University of Georgia, Athens. Carl Cundiff, SN, is a member of the office of the director general of the Philip G. George, ATO, will receive United States State Department. the M.D. degree in June from Wash- Michael DeBakey, PDT, is living in ington University School of Medicine, Lima, Peru, and has formed his own where he was awarded the Lange company, Inter-American Develop- Medical Publications Award for gen- ment Representatives. The company eran excellence in scholar-ship. He will serves as a management consultant for intern in surgery at the Barnes Hos- North American and European coni- pital, St. Louis. Ward Oakshott has accepted a oanies in Latin America. Frank DeSaix, KS, captain of the teaching position at Pacific High 1963 Sewanee track team, left for DeSAIX, '63 School, Port Orford, Oregon. FRANK Kenya January 3 to begin a term of Gordon Pickett Peyton, Jr., DTD, duty as a Peace Corps volunteer. He has opened an office for the general will be part of a group which will practice of law at 103 South St. Asaph former Baptist minister, he attended teach English, mathematics and science Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22313. the Virginia Seminary and was associ- in secondary schools throughout the Francis Joseph Pelzer III, ATO, was ated with St. Timothy's Cathedral in country. married to Cornelia Elliot Hines on Washington. Before this new assign- September 25 in the Church of the ment he was associate rector at St. Good Shepherd, Lookout Mountain, John's Church, College Park, Georgia. Tennessee. They live in New York Three Sewanee men have 1st Lt. Daniel F. Tatum, Jr., KS, is City, where he is a financial analyst been selected for inclusion in in Vietnam as supply services opera- with Esso International. for the Pacific Air Forces, the current edition of Outstand- tions officer Richard Tilunghast, KS, and his which provides offensive-defensive air- bride, the former Nancy Pringle, live ing Young Men of America. They power for the United States and its al- Cambridge, at 1 Walker Court, Massa- are: Victor Pierre Serodino, lies. He is the son of Colonel and Mrs. chusetts, where he is working at Har- Jr., '56, BTP, of Serodino, Inc., Daniel Tatum of Sewanee. vard on a Ph.D. degree. He has passed a riverboat firm in Chattanooga; Webb L. Wallace, PDT, is a mem- his orals and is now starting on his ber of the Bradley Investment Com- thesis. of his have been pub- Dr. Walter E. Nance, '54, SN, pany in Dallas and has a son, Michael lished in the Sewanee Review, Parti- associate professor of genetic Rhodes, born December 1. He gradu- son Review, Yale Review, Poetry, medicine at Yanderbilt Univer- ated from Stanford's Graduate School Southern Review. He will be teaching sity; III, of Business in June and since joining creative writing course at Harvard and F. Tupper Saussy a Bradley has been "traveling quite a during the summer. '58, KA, a partner in the adver- bit, and running into Sewanee people Charles Wilburn Underwood, SN, tising firm of McDonald and everywhere I go." was married to Camilla Knotts Au- Saussy, Nashville. gust 21 at St. Paul's Methodist Church, 1964 Orangeburg, South Carolina. Ushers at M. L. Agnew, BTP, little All-Ameri- the wedding included Lamont Major. can on the 1963 undefeated Sewanee Jr., '62, James B. Coursey, '35, and Eugene M. Dickson, KA, is in Co- football team, is now a student at Vir- Thomas R. Moorer III, '62. Charles is lumbia, South Carolina, working in the ginia Theological Seminary, but he is a graduate of South Carolina Lav/ planning and development office of the still playing football, as a member of School and is on the staff of Senator Broadcasting Company of the South. the Annapolis Sailors, a team in the J. Strom Thurmond. He spent a year in graduate study at North League. He David Wright is teaching German Boston University and while there was was the subject of a sports column by and Russian at Georgia State College. a producer on the staff of WGBH. George Clifford which appeared in the Chairman of the division is Shubael The Rev. Carl Jones has accepted Washington Daily News October 22. Beasley, '40. a position as chaplain of St. Dunstan's Tim Hughes, KS. is a representative 1963 Chapel at Auburn University. He for Bartlett Tree Company in Orange Richard S. Brush, PGD, has joined formerly had been rector at the Church County, New York, and is also teach- the staff of Lederle Laboratories as a of the Messiah in Mayodan, North ing a class in lawn, tree and shrub medical representative in the Nashville Carolina. care at the Orange County Community district. His address: 3702 Brighton Edward C. Nash, Jr., has been ap- College, where his father is associate Road, Nashville. pointed vice-president and loan officer de?n of the evening division. He was John W. Buss, BTP, is now living of Empire State Bank in Dallas. His married recently to Judy Pane of Mici- in Recife, Brazil, where he is employed father, Edward, '31, DTD, and two dletown. New York, and lives at 135 by the First National City Bank of uncles, Michaux, '26, DTD, and Rob- South Street. Middletown. New York. He completed training in ert, '27, DTD, preceded him to Sewa- John L. Janeway, KA, is teaching the bank's overseas division in October nee. Enelish at the Baylor School and the and then departed for his first foreign M. Whitson Sadler. ATO, was mar- University of Chattanooga. He was assignment with the bank. Address. ried March 5 to Susan Elizabeth Kumm married August 11 to Linda Ann Falk First National City Bank, Recife, Bra- in the chapel of the Congregational at St. John's Church, Warrington, Flo- zil. Church of Manhasset, Long Island. rida. The Rev. and Mrs. A. Charles Can- Whitson is the son of G. Marion Sad- Edward McLellan, KS, is a student non have a new son, Michael, bom ler, '33, SAE, a member of the Uni- at the Louisiana State UniversiU in Union, South Carolina, where versity's board of regents. graduate school of landscape architec- taught "new Charles is rector of the Church of the Dr. Henry J. Stokes. Jr., GST, is ture. He had previously Nativity. Michael arrived October 25 the new full-time vicar of the Church math" in a public school in New Or- and joins a sister and two brothers. of the Advent, Austell, Georgia. A leans.

May 1966 29 William B. Lee, LCA, is doing re- control school at Sioux City, Iowa. He search at Rice University with plans is married to Rebekah Ann Allen. to win a Ph.D. degree. His work has Frank Stubblefield, BTP, spent last been concentrated upon the technical summer at the computer center of Ge- and chemical structure of the atom. nesco in Nashville. Address: 9711 Riddlewood Street, Apt. James Taylor, Jr., has been studying 13, Houston 77025. German at the Goethe Institut in Alexander H. Lumpkin, ATO, spent Grafrath, Germany, and is preparing last summer working in the quality for graduate work in international control laboratory of Celanese Corpo- trade. ration in Charlotte, North Carolina. H. Ray Tucker is attending the William S. Mann, Jr., ATO, is at- School of Forestry at Duke University. tached to the aircraft carrier Forrestal He was married September 5 to Susan as an ensign. Roberts of Selmer, Tennessee. G. Simms McDowell III, KA, worked 1966 a short time for the Charleston Coca- John Carey, with Douglas Porch, Cola Company before beginning six '67, and Mrs. Harry Bainbridge ('61 months' active duty in the Navy on and T'67, BTP), teaches remedial January 31. He has served as a mem- reading at the Pelham, Tennessee, pub- ber of the board of directors of the lic school. John is now trying to work Coastal Carolina Chapter of the As- up adult education in Pelham that will sociated Alumni. bring in other members of the Univer- Terrence C. Poe, studying in Lyons, sity community as assistants. France, as a Fulbright scholar, plans to enter Brandeis University in the 1967 fall. Robert Fenton Stevenson, LCA, was g. simms Mcdowell hi, '65 Alvord Stone, Jr., spent last sum- married August 28 to Condict McCur- mer as a chef in a New Jersey restau- dy Saint at St. David's Church, Roland rant and is now attending weapons Park, Maryland. Daniel Buntin Murray, KA, was married in January to Nancy Jane Do- zier at Trinity Church, New Orleans. He is a student at the Wharton School of Business Administration. Robert W. Thomas, Jr., son of May- 3n JUlrmortam or R. W. Thomas, '31, SN, of Ridge- way, South Carolina, has returned from a year in Europe and is publish- Dr. Everette P. Coppedge, M'07, died ing excerpts from his diary in the December 29 in Cleveland Heights, Winnsboro, South Carolina, News and Ohio, where he made his home. Ac- Herald. companying a gift in his memory from Thomas M. Trabue, Jr., PDT, was his sister-in-law was the note, "He married August 7 to Evelyn Calmes always enjoyed recalling his student Klaus at her home, Macon Plantation, days at Sewanee and looked forward to receiving Macon, Mississippi. Tommy is a sec- news of the University ond-generation Sewanee alumnus, fa- through the Sewanee News." ther, Tommy, being a member of the Robert E. Harwell, '23, KA, presi- class of 1934. Address: 2502 Chestnut dent of Neely, Harwell and Company, Street, New Orleans. Nashville wholesale dry goods firm, James K. Yeary, BTP, is assistant to died February 14 while visiting his the director of the physical plant of son, Robert E., Jr., a faculty member West Georgia College, Carrollton. He at Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, Mass- was married to Frieda Chandler Sep- achusetts. Mr. Harwell's business in- terests di- tember 4. He hopes to enter seminary were varied and included at Sewanee in 1966. rectorships of the First American National Bank, Nashville, the G. M. 1965 McKelvey Company, a department Robert Howard Cass, KA, was store in Youngstown, Ohio, and Phil- named a Joseph Wharton Fellow at lips and Quarles, hardware firm of the University of Pennsylvania School Nashville. He was an ardent fox- of Finance and Commerce. He is spe- hunter, was past president of the Eng- cializing in marketing. lish-Speaking Union of Nashville and ROBERT E. HARWELL, '23 Daniel M. Davis, SAE, is a member a member of the advisory committee of the Memphis office of Merrill Lynch, of the Middle Tennessee Boy Scout '60, a teacher at Christ School, Arden, Pierce, Fenner and Smith, and was Council and of the Rotary Club. Sur- North Carolina. married in July. vivors include his wife, the former Captain Howard E. Phillips (U. S. John B. Fretwell, ATO, is a Ful- Jane McKelvey, three sons, Robert, Army), '56, SAE, was killed January 31 bright student at the Christian Al- Jr., Jonathan, and Coleman II, and a in action in Viet Nam when the heli- brechts University in Kiel, Germany. brother, Coleman A. Harwell, '26. copter he was piloting was hit by G. Patrick Guiteras is attending the Jackson Allen Milem, '23, SN, died small-arms fire. He is survived by his University of North Carolina Medical in January. He is survived by his widow, his mother and a brother. A School. widow, Dorothy. He made his home in native of Scottsboro, Alabama, he was Joseph H. Hilsman, KA, has been Leucadia, California. a star athlete and a member of the named city editor of the Waycross, John J. Cobb, '24, DTD, died Janu- freshman football team at Sewanee. Georgia, Journal Herald. He spent the ary 3 in Biloxi, Mississippi, and was summer and fall of 1965 traveling and buried in Atlanta. He was a Mrs. Arthur B. Dugan, wife of the working in Europe and held positions minister in the Cumberland Presby- University's political science depart- in Munich and in Copenhagen. terian Church. ment chairman, died at Sewanee in Robert E. Lee, BTP, is in law school Dr. I. Croom Beatty III, '35, KA, December after a long illness. The at the University of Florida and was was killed February 8 in an airplane former Tempe Burwell Boyd of War- married August 20 to Nancy Etheredge. crash near Mattoon, Illinois, where he renton, North Carolina, she was a fav- Their address: 1402 S.W. Tenth Ter- operated a flying service. He is sur- orite hostess of a long procession of race, Gainesville. vived by a son, I. Croom Beatty IV, Sewanee men.

30 The Sewanee News 9 ———

£ewanee

Rummer

1966

The Road to Learning

June 7— mentalists offers a stimulating program of orchestra Synod of the Fourth (Sewanee) Province. The training, chamber music and private study, as well

Most Rev. Howard Hewlett Clark, Primate of All as a regular concert series by its musicians and Canada, and the Rt. Rev. Francisco Reus-Froylan, guest artists. Miss Martha McCrory, assistant pro- Bishop of Puerto Rico, featured speakers. fessor of music, director. Roland Johnson, director of the Madison, Wisconsin, Symphony Orchestra, j UNE 9_12 Sewanee Summer Training School. For Clergy and conducts the Sewanee Symphony. Lay Families of the Province of Sewanee. The Rev. June 20 August 13 Albert T. Mollegen of the Episcopal Theological Sewanee Summer Institute of Science and Mathe- Seminary faculty, keynoter. matics. Supported by the National Science Founda- June 12—18 tion, this is a sequential program for selected second- Sewanee Consultation on Religion in Education. A ary school teachers leading to the degree of Master teacher-training institute on general education in a of Arts in Teaching. Dr. H. Malcolm Owen, chair- Christian perspective. Dr. John M. Gessell, School man of the University's biology department, director. of Theology of the University of the South, director. June 20 August 13 June 12—July 29 College of Arts and Sciences Summer School. Serves Sewanee Military Academy Summer School-Camp. regular students in the University who wish to Secondary school courses designed to remedy de- shorten their time in college or gain additional ficiencies, improve credit standing, and to increase credits, and offers an opportunity for educational proficiency in continuing subjects. Girls welcomed experience at Sewanee to students who are pursuing as day students. their college work elsewhere during the normal school year. Courses in education recognized June 19—July 24 for Sewanee Summer Fine Arts Center. A co-educa- certification by the Tennessee State Department of tional, non-credit, creative vacation, offering courses Education are now available. and studio workshops in commercial art layout, July 13 August 17 sculpture, photography, drawing and painting, and Graduate School of Theology. Offers an opportunity art Stanford Barrett, the University's theory. H. for practicing clergymen to refresh their studies artist-in-residence, director. during vacation time or to pursue courses leading June 19—July 24 to the degree of Master of Sacred Theology. Dr. Sewanee Summer Music Center. In its tenth sea- Massey H. Shepherd, professor of liturgies at the son, this training center for talented voung instru- Church Divinity School of the Pacific, director. Roland Johnson, director of the Madison, Wisconsin, civic orchestra, will conduct the Sewanee Symphony again.

Week-end concerts by the Sewanee Summer Music Center, June 1 9-July 24. August, 1966 ^M THE UNIVERSITY DF THE SOUTH SEWANEE, TENNESSEE

-

-. ^ THE Sewanee NEWS The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the ASSOCIATED ALUMNI

of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennes- see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee.

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

Editor Edith Whitesell

Associate Editor Albert S. Gooch, Jr., Keating Acting Executive Director "The key to all future expansion. of The Associated Alumni

Art Consultant George Falk

. . . Dr. L. Spires Whitaker, '31, Vice-President for Capital Funds; Gentlemen Dudley C. Fort, '34, Vice-President for Regions; Rev. Tracy H. Lamar, '42, Vice-President for St. Luke's; William E. Ward III, The Vice-Chancellor A'45, Vice-President for SMA; James G. Cate, Jr.. '47, Vice- Presi- dent (or Bequests; Robert M. Ayres, Jr., '49, Vice-President for Perhaps the most important decision made at Classes; John Harmon Nichols, '50, Vice-President for Church the last meeting of the board of regents was to Support; John W. Woods, '54, Vice-President for Admissions; dedicate all of the unallocated surplus James W. Gentry, Jr., '50, Recording Secretary; Dr. 0. Morse from the Ten Athletic Kochtitzky, '42, Treasurer; Ben Humphreys McGee, '49, Million Dollar Campaign to the memory of J. Albert Board of Control. Woods, who died in the midst of the campaign of which he, with his brother Cecil, was co-chairman. It was also decided that the memorial would be a new

science complex to be called the J. Albert Woods Sci- CONTENTS ence Laboratories. Since he himself was a leading executive in chemical industry this seems eminently 2, 3, 16 Science Building appropriate. 4 On the Mountain Albert Woods was a student at the University of 8, 9 Hail and Farewell the South when the first World War whisked him 10 DuBose on Sewanee away as a marine in the AEF. After the war he rose 12 Summer in Pictures rapidly in the ranks of executives of Armour Ferti- 14 Clubs lizer Works, Chilean Nitrate Sales Corporation, W. R. 15 Sports Grace and Company, Wilson and Toomer Fertilizer 17 Trustees and Regents Company, Commercial Solvents, and finally Cour- 18 Class Distinctions taulds North America, Inc. 22 Deaths His reputation was international. The Chilean 23 Valedictory 1966 government conferred the Order of Merit on him; and when he resigned from the presidency of Com- August 1966 Volume 32 Number 3 mercial Solvents, he was so well known in England that his former principal competitor, the British firm

of Courtaulds, persuaded him first to be their consult- ON THE COVERS—This issue of the Sewanee News is greatly indebted to the summer Fine Arts Center. A contest ant and then to take full charge of all of their work for summer-at-Sewanee subjects was won by David Sparks in North America. was vice-president or director of Fountain Inn, South Carolina, a student in Bryant He Moore's photography class, and his winning print graces the of too many firms to be listed here. But during all of front. The back cover ad stems from George Falk's com- his extremely active career he never forgot Sewanee, mercial art layout class and is the work of Kornelia Ilgner, a Manchester, Tennessee, artist. That class and its instruct- and was never too busy to take time to work for her. or's supervisory eye have looked over the shoulder of this entire issue and, we hope, will inform future ones. (continued on page 16) Science Building

Named for J. Albert Woods

Construction of the J. Albert Woods Science Lab- any one time. It is important to note that this ar- oratories on Alabama Avenue, across from the rangement, although less economical to operate than Jessie Ball duPont Library, will proceed as soon as large single laboratories, will insure a degree of closer details of the final plans have been worked out and intimacy between professor and student. Indeed, the

contracts let. entire planning of the building has been motivated by the concept of for the individual. will For the past three years all academic ranks of the concern There small inter- faculty in sciences have concerned themselves with be ten seminar and quiz rooms, and four mediate-size classrooms. the laboratories planning a new science building to serve the foresee- Many of able needs of two colleges in the arts and sciences. have adjacent quiz rooms where the professor and one The heads of the departments of biology, chemistry, or two students may meet together. mathematics, physics and psychology have served as Each of the departments in the laboratory sciences will have teaching laboratories for advanced (200-400 a building committee, with Dr. Malcolm Owen, head level) courses. has provided for future of the biology department, as chairman. This com- Space been mittee has integrated the ideas, proposals, and sug- expansion of course offerings, e.g., microbiology, as well as for students in existing gestions which were derived from some thirty separate increased numbers of and formal meetings. Dr. Owen has furnished the courses. Closely associated with these laboratories there will be ten specifically designated faculty and following details as of primary interest to alumni and student research laboratories. The design of these friends of the University. laboratories has been to provide space for the individ- The building will encase 62,000 square feet, with ual researcher to work without the interruptions outside dimensions 251 feet by 151 feet, and will be which are so frequently experienced in multiple-use rectangular in shape. The central core will consist of laboratories. a 300-seat lecture hall and a spacious open court con- The teaching laboratories and the research labora- taining a fountain and fish pond in the center of a tories will have adjacent animal rooms and storage botanical garden. The teaching and research labora- rooms. To a large extent, each laboratory will be an tories, classrooms and quiz rooms, offices and service independent unit under the supervision of the profes- rooms will be on the perimeter of the two and one- sor responsible for a particular course or research pro- half floor building. The south half of the building will ject. follow the natural slope of the terrain, which will al- The building will be air-conditioned. low for three floors without any rooms below grade. Dr. Owen concludes, ''The planning of the science The building will contain 130 separate rooms rang- building to this point has been a cooperative, demo- ing in size from three-foot-square closets to the fifty- cratic, 'give-and-take' effort between academic de- lecture room. eight- by sixty-five-foot partments and the administration that represents the There will be seven laboratories which have been very best principles of striving for excellence within specifically designed for the elementary (100 level) the limitations of a budget and the need for the con-

courses in the sciences. Each of these laboratories will sideration of the non-science disciplines in the Uni-

accommodate a maximum of twentv-four students at versity."

August 1966 3 *r f\ r*^ On and Off the Mountain f V^j GIFTS

Million Dollar Bequest

An estate believed to be in the neighborhood of a million dollars has come to the University as residual by George Reynolds Parker of legatee of a bequest Politics Lexington, Kentucky, on the death of his sister, Miss Fore

Nettie E. Parker, last February at the age of ninety- Anybody who thinks Sewanee is isolated from the eight. grubby arena of politics should have been here this Mr. Parker, a tobacco buyer and investment se- summer. Lon Varnell, doughty basketball coach and curity officer, was a trustee and regent of the Univer- entrepreneur, is state campaign manager for Gover- sity in the 1920s. He died on August 20, 1930. His nor Frank Clement's bid for the United States Senate. widow added her estate to his in the trust which has Varnell got his man through the primary against the now come to Sewanee. The late Henry T. Soaper, '94, incumbent, Senator Ross Bass, who defeated Clement has been credited with interesting the Parkers in the by a large margin the last time around.

University. In the opposite corner is Dean Robert S. Lancaster, Other notable gifts include the deeding of Claramont coregional chairman for Howard H. Baker of Hunts-

Castle to the University by Mrs. Thomas Shoemate ville, Tennessee, the Republican who will take on Cle-

(see p. 9). Her gift of the Castle is valued at ment in the fall. Baker was at Sewanee during World £158,218. War II on the Navy's V12 program.

Two bequests of about £30,000 each have come in One of Sewanee's sons, John J. Hooker, Jr., '53, of from the estates of Ellett Shepherd of Denver and Lee Nashville, made a valiant try for the governorship of

Howell, Jr., of Evansville, Indiana; and £25,000 from Tennessee, but was defeated in the primary by former the estate of Leon Cheek of Jackson- governor Buford Ellington.

ville. Scholarship funds have been es- Another Sewanee son, Ellis G. Arnall, '28, is in the

tablished in the School of Theology race for the governorship of Georgia, an office he has held in the past. If he doesn't win we will borrow by Henry J. Miller of Atlanta in mem- from the Atlanta Journal and Constitution a play on ory of the Rev. Henry J. Miller, Jr., T'62, and by Trinity Church in Co- the title of his book, first named The Shore Dimly lumbia, South Carolina, in honor of Seen and now re-issued as The Shore Clearly Seen— u Dean George M. Alexander, '38; in The Scene is Shorely Dim." the college by the Sewanee Club of Atlanta.

AT LEFT—"Miss Clara" Shoemate and Claramont Castle. Built fifty years ago by the Warriner family, the mansion is of cut Sewanee sandstone with a Spanish tile roof. At the time Mrs. Shoemate acquired the property four years ago she engaged architect Edwin Keeble, SS'23, who achieved a masterly adaptation in keeping with the origi- nal quiet sumptuousness of the estate, adding cottage units as well as reno- vating and providing accommodations for meal service. Coulion ?i of each year. Century Club members will be es- Needlepoint pecially honored each year by the Sewanee News and each member will receive an appropriate symbol of membership.

In speaking ol these undertakings Dean Lanca tei

s.'.id, "ThrotiL'li ilu'sc two organizations the energy and zeal ol Sewanee alumni and friends can be channeled

toward providing the University with what it needs

for its day-to-daj operations. Funds from these donors in Place along with Church Support could enable Sewanee to keep her financial house in order while pursuing her Second Century goals." Thousands of hours of work and planning by women

in all the owning dioceses have resulted in a set of unique needlepoint kneelers and cushions for the sanc- tuary of All Saints' Chapel. The project of making the needlepoint was initiated Oldest Building To Be Restored and organized by Mrs. Calvin K. Schwing of Plaque- mine, Louisiana, who also largely financed the under- taking. Mrs. Schwing, the widow of an alumnus, class of 192 1, in whose memory she also gave the All Saints' altar, was prevented from attending the dedi- cation by ill health and the deadline on a new edition of her widely used book, Using Books and Libraries. She has given special recognition to Mrs. John Webb and Mrs. W. N. Porter of Sewanee for their handling of the exacting task of mailing canvases. Designs were made by the American Needlework Ison Center in Washington, D. C. Following the example of early Christian art in the Holy Land, which used Rebel's Rest, built for the Fairbanks family in 1866, was completed just after Bishop Quintard's Fulford Hall next the plants and animals of Galilee in church decoration, door. When Fulford burned in the 1890's, it became the some of the trees, foliage, blossoms, and flowering oldest residence at Sewanee. plants of Sewanee are sewn into the All Saints' pat- terns.

The regents of the University at their June meet- ing authorized the restoration of "Rebel's Rest," the

last remaining and the most historic of the early Vice-Chancellor's Society homes on the campus. This spacious and lovely house was built in 1866 of sawn logs by Major George R. At the meeting of the regents and trustees in June Fairbanks, one of the founders and a long-time trus- the formation of a Vice-Chancellor's and Trustees' So- tee of the University'. ciety and a Century Club for Sewanee was formally Here was held the first meeting of the board of approved and endorsed. Before this the Alumni As- trustees after the War. At this meeting the decision sociation had given their approval of these projects. to proceed toward the realization of the pre-war plans Membership in the Vice-Chancellor's and Trustees' w : as made even though the economic, cultural, and

Society is open to those who will pledge themselves political life of the region offered little hope for im- to give or raise, while reasonably able to do so, $1,000 mediate success. per year for the University. The names of these bene- The action of the regents was made possible by factors will be perpetuated on a special scroll to be the gift of the remaining term of the original lease by kept in All Saints' Chapel. Each year the Society will the granddaughters of Major Fairbanks, Mrs. Rains- be honored at a Vice-Chancellor's and Trustees' dinner. ford Glass Dudney and Mrs. Frank S. Appleby.

The Century Club is an organization of alumni and The restored house will become a guest house of friends who have each given or pledged $100 each the University and an historic shrine memorializing year to Sewanee. Already there are more than 100 mem- the courage and energy of the founder-. bers of this club. Membership is open until December —Robert S. Lancaster

August 1966 Commencement 1966 sent off two men with hon- orary doctorates and 185 with earned degrees. The Most Rev. Howard Hewlett Clark, Primate of All Canada, the Commencement preacher, and the Rt. Rev. Theodore Harper McCrea, suffragan bishop of Dallas, were made doctors of divinity, honoris causa. One hundred fifty-two men received bachelor's de- grees from the College of Arts and Sciences; there were one M.S.T., twenty B.D.'s and three licentiates from the School of Theology; and nine students of the Summer Institute of Science and Mathematics, WINTERS sponsored by the National Science Foundation, were awarded the master of arts in teaching. Seven of the 152 graduates of the college won Woodrow Wilson Fellowships (in addition to two win- ners from earlier classes),* one a Rhodes Scholarship . . . On the Mountain (Sewanee News, February 1966), and a number not The Rev. Charles L. Winters, associate professor yet tabulated received highly competitive graduate of dogmatic theology in the School of Theology, was scholarships from individual universities. Two interest- approaching the necessary two-thirds concurrent ma- ing awards that happen to have come to our notice jority necessary to elect a suffragan bishop for Ten- were from the fledgling art department. Charles nessee when he withdrew, saying, "I do not believe I Wheatley has a fellowship to Harvard University and could conscientiously accept any call that would take Beverley Randolph Tucker III a three-year grant me out of seminary teaching." Dr. Winters, who con- from the Australian government. Tucker also had the cerns himself consistently with community problems, opportunity to attend the national art school in Flor- served last year as chairman of the community action ence, Italy. board of the Elk River Development Agency, working Salutatorian of the class was William George Mun- on the area's poverty program. selle and valedictorian, John Dawson. The valedictory

was so good and so short that we are printing it al- 9 Andrew Lytle, editor of the Sewanee Review, has most in toto, by request of the Associated Alumni been awarded a $7,500 grant for creative writing by 23)- the National Foundation of the Arts and the Humani- (P-

ties for the coming year. He will work on his current *The nine young men who placed Sewanee among the top ten novel, while the Rev. William Ralston, associate edi- colleges and universities of the nation once again in its percentage of these national awards were Joseph M. Harrison, YVilliam D. tor of the magazine, moves from the School of The- McArthur, Jr., William N. McKeachie, Marshall E. McMahon, William G. Munselle, Douglas D. Paschall (who also ology to the English department to assume his duties. won a Rhodes Scholarship), Samuel F. Pickering, Jr., Peter 0. Smyth, and Mark J. Volk. % , a former Sewanee Review Fellow and one of the quarterly's advisory editors, who won a National Book Award this year, was the subject of a profile as oncoming-est American poet in the July 22 issue of Life magazine. Life noted that his first payment for a poem, $28.50, was from the Sewanee Review.

Charles Edward Cheston, chairman of the di- vision of forestry and engineering, attended the World Forestry Congress in June 3-18 and joined a foresters' study tour of France and the Tyrol for the following week.

Sixteen graduates of the University of the South received Ph.D. degrees during the calendar years 1964 and 1965. There were three in mathematics, two in physics, two in the humanities, and one each in biolo- English, Latin, forestry, French, history, chemistry, gy, Coulson psychology, and political science. CHESTON

The Sewanee News Couls DAWSON

Dr. Stratton Buck, professor of French, is the

author of a hook on Gustave Flaubert in the Twayne's World Authors Scries, published this summer. The purpose of this series, according to Twayne Pub- lishers, "is to survey the major writers of the nations of the world. The intent of each volume is to present a critical-analytical study of the works of the writer; to include biographical and historical material that may be necessary for understanding, appreciation, and critical appraisal of the writer; and to present all ma- terial in clear, concise English—but not to vitiate the scholarly content of the work by doing so." In the judgment of his colleagues, Dr. Buck has done just that, and has written the best book on Flau- bert available to the general reader. The book, which is written in English, may be purchased through the Uni- Israclson, USAF versity Supply Store for #3.95, plus $.15 for mailing. ABOVE TOP: Mrs. Dale Luchsinger, left, and Miss Isabel 9 Dr. A. Scott Bates has written a book on the Howell are valuable additions to the duPont Library staff. Miss Howell, archivist, had been director of the Tennessee French poet Apollinaire for the same series. It is in State Library, library division. Mrs. Luchsinger holds mas- process of publication. ter's degrees in zoology and library science. 9 Dr. Eric W. Naylor, '58, assistant professor of ABOVE: Mrs. William Campbell pinned gold bars on son Michael, '66, when he was commissioned into the U. S. Air Spanish, is the co-author of a 686-page book, Libra Force at Commencement. Lt. Col. Campbell, former head de Buen Amor, published in Madrid last year. of the Sewanee AFROTC unit, beamed. 9 Dr. Harry C. Yeatman, professor of biology, has had published two articles in scientific journals during an article published in the Canadian Journal of Mathe- the past year, bringing to twenty-seven the total of matics last winter, and Dr. John Edwin Rush, Jr., as- his wide-ranging published studies. Dr. Laurence R. sistant professor of physics, has read three papers in Alvarez, '59, assistant professor of mathematics, had his field before the American Physical Society. Dr. Rush was a visiting assistant professor at Vanderbilt University during the summers of 1965 and 1966. % The College will open with approximately 830 students in September, according to figures from the

admissions office. This represents no increase from

the opening goal for last year, in accordance with the decision to hold the line until the new science buildine

is ready. The freshman class of 250 men has been selected from over 700 completed applications. "The 'average' new freshman,'" John Ransom, di- rector of admissions, says, "will rank at least in the top fourth of his class and will have college board

scores that place him in at least the top ten per cent of the nation's high school seniors." The group has won a total of 405 letters in varsity sports, and 480 participations in other extra-curricular BUCK activities are listed.

August 1966 gr ., ^r Vjfll « ^m ^r ^^^^^^k^S HAIL AND . . . f^ ^^^^ ^B t>iM

* /^^^l

THE REV. JOEL W. PUGH DR. JAMES H. STODDARD COL. JOSEPH H. POWELL

Acting chaplain for 1966-67 is the Rev. Joel Wil- College in Tennessee and has also worked in indus- son Pugh II, '54, T'57. Mr. Pugh, who is re- trial research. Dr. Lorenz was born in Atlanta in 1924, placing the Rev. David B. Collins, '43, now dean of is married to the former Estelle Krakau. They have the Cathedral of St. Philip in Atlanta, has been as- two children. sistant chaplain for University College at Oxford for Arthur M. Schaefer, coming as assistant professor the past four years. During one of these years he was of economics, was born in Mobile in 1928. He has his acting chaplain, the first American to hold the chap- B.A. and M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania lain's post in the history of the British university. and has submitted a doctoral dissertation to that uni- Like his predecessor, Mr. Pugh was born in Arkan- versity on presidential intervention in labor disputes. sas (Little Rock, in 1932) and is a Kappa Sigma. He He has taught at Muhlenberg, Middlebury, and Po- won the Guerry Medal for English on his graduation. mona Colleges. His wife, the former Jacqueline Thi- While at Sewanee he served as president of the Pan- bault, is a Frenchwoman with a doctor's degree in Hellenic Council, was a member of Blue Key, and was English literature from the Sorbonne in Paris. She is included in Who's Who in American Colleges. an assistant professor of French at Carleton College in In the School of Theology, the Rev. Stiles B. Minnesota. The Schaefers have a boy, aged two and Lines, '35, will be associate professor of Church his- a half. tory and applied Christianity. Dr. Lines had his S.T.B. The mathematics department will have a as- from General Theological Seminary and then did new sistant professor, Dr. James H. Stoddard, who was graduate work at Union and at Columbia University, born in Saginaw, Michigan, in earned his B.S. was accorded the Ph.D. by Columbia in i960. He has 1930, in engineering mathematics at the University of Michi- served parishes in Louisiana, Virginia, and South Ca- gan in and his Ph.D. there in mathematics in rolina, with his most recent assignment as rector of 1952, 1961. He has been assistant professor of mathematics St. Paul's Church, Delray Beach, Florida. At Sewa- at Syracuse University since 1962, held the same rank nee Dr. Lines was initiated into Delta Tau Delta fra- for the preceding year at Oakland University in Michi- ternity, was editor of the Purple, president of Neo- gan. From 1952 to he was a lieutenant and graph and Pi Omega, a member of Blue Key and 1956 mathematician in the U. S. Air Force, from 1957 to ODK. Mrs. Lines is the former Margaret McLeod 1961 a teaching fellow and instructor at the Univer- van Buren of Williamsburg, Virginia, and Versailles, sity of Michigan. His wife Garland. Kentucky. They have three daughters. was Nancy They have two children. A new associate professor of physics has been ap- pointed: Philip Jack Lorenz, Jr. A Ph.D. from Syra- Sewanee welcomed back one of its most popular cuse University in New York, he has been on the and helpful families when Lt. Col. Joseph H. Powell physics faculty of that university since 1961. He has became administrator of Emerald-Hodgson hospital his B.S. from Oglethorpe, 1949, and his master's from August 1, succeeding Melvin L. Southwick, who re- Vanderbilt, 1952. He has taught at Upper Iowa Uni- tired last year, and Lt. Col. Orin Fayle (USAF ret), versity, Kentucky Wesleyan College, and LeMoyne who served as an interim administrator.

8 The Sewanee News ' AREWELL

Dr. James E. Thorogood, professor of economics and former chairman ot the department of eco- nomics, died on May 4. The trustees' memorial reso- lution noted: "Born in Tracy City, Tennessee, in

1907, he spent his boyhood in Cowan, lie received his 15. A. in 1935 and his M.A. in [937 from the Univer- sity of the South, where he was a member of the Phi C'amma Delta fraternity. In [948 he was awarded the Ph.D. degree by the University of Texas. His teaching career at Sewanee began in 1936, and he was made a full professor in 1949. He was a member of the board of trustees, representing the college faculty, DR. JAMES E. THOROGOOD from 1957 to i960. His chief scholarly work, A Fi- nancial History of Tennessee, published by the State of Tennessee in 1950, was accorded a joint resolution of appreciation by the state legislature. His participa- tion in the lite ol Franklin County and Sewanee was The Rev. William R. Merrill, instructor and tutor based on intimate, personal knowledge and genuine in the School of Theology since 1963, has accepted the concern. He served as a member of the Franklin post of chaplain to schools and colleges in the Winston- County board of education and as a justice of the Salem, North Carolina, area. A gifted amateur of peace in Franklin County, thereby being a member the theater, he directed major productions of the Se- of the county court. His wife, his daughter, his father, wanee Community Theater and narrated the new docu- and his brother survive him." mentary movie on Sewanee.

Dr. Stephen E. Puckette, '49, associate professor One of the most beloved figures in Sewanee his- o! mathematics and chairman of that department, has tory has retired. Mrs. Thomas Shoemate, restaura- accepted a challenge to direct the undergraduate teur and innkeeper known affectionately as "Miss mathematics program at the University of Kentucky, Clara" to the many academic generations of students including education and engineering. Puckette was to whom she was friend in need and in gaiety since valedictorian of his class and his family has been she opened her first small stand in Monteagle at the bound by many ties to Sewanee (his father was age of eighteen, has given up the management of Clara-

Charles McDonald Puckette, '07, general manager of mont Castle on the bluff and gone to Atlanta to join the Chattanooga Times). He was a post-doctoral fel- her son, Thomas Shoemate, A'56. In poor health for low at Yale University, where he had received his some time, she had already turned over the reins of Se- Ph.D., has taught at the University of Georgia on wanee Inn and Claramont Restaurant, on the campus. leave from Sewanee. was largely responsible for the Miss Clara has repeatedly been the subject of features six-college program of independent study in mathe- in area newspapers, one headline in the Nashville

matics in the summer, is acknowledged as a brilliant Banner noting, "Sewanee Not the Only Institution on proponent of his discipline and has been one of Se- the Mountain—There's 'Miss Clara.' : wanee's most respected professors. He and his family In [965 she was made an honorary member of the plan to visit often and to work for the Sewanee Club Associated Alumni. The citation recording this read in of Lexington. part, "A catalogue of her contributions to our com-

fort and well-being is too long to tell, but we are the Dr. Paul Ramsey, associate professor of English, richer for her little, nameless, unremembered acts of has left to be poet-in-residence at the University of kindness and of love that make up the best portion of Chattanooga. He had taught at the University of a good man's life." Alabama, Elmira College, and at Raymond College in California, has had poems and articles widely printed. George II. Barker, '26, president of his class and His wife. Bets, has made a considerable mark as an star quarterback of the team that beat Vandy in [924, a ; rtist in "stitchery," machine needlework from her own has retired as assistant treasurer of the University, highly creative designs. position he had held since 1049.

Ai'cust 1966 The Romance and Genii

BY WILLIAM PORCHER DUBOSE

Compare this projection by one of the world's great theologians and possibly the most influential professor the University has ever had, first printed in The Sewanee Review in 1905, with that of one of her youngest sons, on p. 23.

When we speak of what Sewanee is to those grave, dignified and noble military courtesy of Gen- who know it, what sense or sentiment the eral Gorgas which left an indelible impress upon all

very word itself conveys to so many when who were long enough under him to receive it. Influ- they hear it, we speak not of the things which belong ences such as these would not have been permanent to it in common with other places or institutions; we if they had not been in keeping with an environment mean something which differentiates it from all other the most favorable and material the most susceptible places and institutions. to them. But the point is just this: that Sewanee is

And the question is, What is that? It is not wholly fitted by constitution and situation to attract the pa- something which was put into it by its founders. It is tronage and to exert the refining influences that are something, too, which has developed out of the action best suited the one to the other. "Manners maketh and reaction of itself and its conditions. It is the re- man" is an apothegm that has both its truth and its sultant of all that has shaped it so far, and is going use. If Sewanee is specially fitted to become a centre to shape it further. If we can find the equation of and source of social culture, of noble courtesy and re- its curve so far, we can determine its motion further fined manners, it has even in that a function to dis- and expend our efforts on its behalf on that predes- charge for our people which it is easier to undervalue tined line. than to overestimate.

I have sometimes said, not wholly in sport, that if But such a social culture as can with propriety con-

I were going to speak of the true internal makers of stitute one of the aims of a literary and educational

Sewanee—the actual Sewanee whose making I ha\e institution must be only part of a larger and more been watching so long— I should mention first in point general culture which must be intellectual also. Per- of time, Barbot the tailor and General Gorgas the haps in this there is only one respect in which Sewa-

Headmaster. I have put together here something that nee can compete with other institutions with an ad- may seem very little and something that is, in my vantage peculiar to itself. It is in a position to repre- estimation, very great. I wish to illustrate the fact sent with a peculiar effectiveness the value and claim that it is things small as well as great that go to make of culture for culture's sake—culture as a bonum or up all totalities of value. honestum in itself and not merely as a utile. When I came to Sewanee in the third year of its The only argument for higher education now likely new existence, it was only a grammar school, and it to be listened to is that which demonstrates by was already known, wherever the boys went through statistics that it is the university graduate who is also the South, by two marks: the elegant fit of their dress the most successful in the competitions of secular busi- and the peculiar courtesy of their manner. Their tailor ness. The tendency to rule out as useless everything was fresh from Paris, and there was something in the that cannot be turned to immediate practical account

10 The Sewanee News 1

a University will inevitably continue for a long time to affect the aims and ideals of educational institutions. Sewanee will never compete successfully in turning out the ready-made supply to such popular demands, in fur- Mercer Green Johnston, '98, nishing mechanical, industrial, educational or other presented the gift at a "Du- WftLIAN POUCHES OUW experts for the various businesses waiting to employ Bose reunion," circa 1916. them. ) IXi m' i tmtmt" nm emit* But Sewanee will have more and more a mission jwyWfc A state marker commemorat- of V\i ft*: —Tied— all will not lacking in her own, and be a constituency ing Dr. DuBose was unveiled Wmr. He wm lector In of her own, if she will prepare her best service for at Winnsboro, South Carolina JJJ"«*< on June 12, by the Fairfield those who desire to be educated not for labour but County Historical Society. Vn»er*ty ot ffce »«?*« n for life. It used to be said that life is lived in the V«mm. Ten*. He dted * leisure that follows labour,—not necessarily a leisure divorced from labour, for that is not true leisure, but a leisure won by and from labour to attend to the BISHOP THOMAS higher needs of life, the needs of every human soul to know something of the Truth, to have some love of the Beautiful, to do some of the Good that so needs to be done in the world. DuBose Given State Marker Its whole intention is to be just the opposite of sectarian, but it cannot afford to avoid that ac- BISHOP ALBERT SIDNEY THO- cusation by being nothing in particular or everything MAS, a former student of Dr. DuBose in general. It must needs be some one thing, and at Sewanee, took part in the dedication ceremony of the marker, for which that frankly and positively. The best it can do in '.he Bishop John A. Pinckney, '31, gave effort to be Christian without being sectarian, is to see the address. to it that the one thing it is, is as near as possible to Bishop Thomas, now in his ninety- the most central truth of Christianity expressed in the fourth year, is the oldest member of most universal form of worship. If the strictly com- the House of Bishops, and may be the oldest living alumnus of the University of the South. mon Christianity of the world could be brought to ex- He came to Sewanee in 1899 in order to "sit under press itself in a simple and universal form, it is that Dr. DuBose," his life-long inspiration. Bishop Thomas form in which it is the highest aim of Christianity at now says, "My first interest in the ministry came at Sewanee to clothe itself. St. Stephen's, Ridgeway, Dr. DuBose's first parish, and The situation, the constitution, the traditions, the my theology from Dr. DuBose's interpretation of St. Paul's Gospel at Sewanee." influences, the genius of Sewanee all combine to en- Bishop Thomas now has in his library in Columbia able it to invest education there with an atmosphere a complete set of Dr. DuBose's published works. I [e and to fill it with the spirit of a larger and finer and recently had them rebound because they were so worn fuller culture than we are all in danger of lapsing into from constant use. "When I can't sleep at 2:00 or today. Who would have the Oxford of old England 3:00 a.m.," Bishop Thomas says. "I read The Soteri- ology for relaxation." to modernize and commercialize herself to meet t he The bishop's life-long hobby has been wood-working. demands of the transient present? higher demands The Many South Carolina churches have altar rails, cred- of the soul and the life shall come back again, and ence shelves and tables, kneeling desks, and even altars blessed shall she be whom they shall find faithfully made by the bishop's own hands. The last piece of furniture in his shop before he closed his waiting to minister to them. made home at Rockville on Wadmalaw Island several years ago to Let Sewanee know herself and be true to her higher move to Columbia was a pulpit-lectern for his home calling, will far off all and the day not be when the parish, St. Stephen's at Ridgeway. He made this a poetry and the sentiment, all the aspirations and the memorial to Dr. DuBose. hopes, that cluster around the very word Oxford will be found attaching themselves to and glorifying her own no less euphonious name.

August 1966 1 Rummer at

Coulson The college summer school enjoyed classes in the air-conditioned duPont Library seminar rooms.

Summer at Sewanee, i 966, took a new leap for- ward when a fine arts center got off to a running

start. The Sewanee Summer Music Center in its tenth

season was better than ever—it has become standard

that each year the music is better than the year be- fore—and the same kind of far-into-the-night joyous

purposiveness that has always characterized it ap- peared from the start to mark the fine arts center too. The courses in drawing, painting and theory, sculpture,

photography, and commercial art layout were all not- ably successful. H. Stanford Barrett, the University's artist-in-residence and director of the summer non-

credit fine arts center, plans to continue all these next summer and add printmaking. The gallery in Guerry Hall, also under his direction, was a consistent attrac- tion to students and visitors, with special exhibits aug- menting the permanent collection.

The Synod of the Fourth Province had its second Sparks conclave here in June, filling all dormitories after Sculpture class kept them working. Commencement and bringing an awesome array of V.I.P.'s. The Graduate School of Theology, the Se- wanee Summer Training School, the National Science Foundation-sponsored Institute of Science and Mathe- Kathleen, daughter of theology assistant pro- matics, the college summer school, and the SMA fessor G. Cecil Woods, Jr., '47, and Earnest Harrison, oboe teacher in the music center. school-camp added up to a diversified season and the Coulson imprinting of Mother Mountain on widening memo-

ries.

Malon Courts dormitory, on the second college site. Coulson anee

Brv.iiit M'i'ii

Anita Gardner

Cheston drew them all in. RuiIccIl'c of Bhuk Star

•ji 'flV^, ^-\* Clubs . . .

The Charleston Club scored with the choir when they got them dates on tour. From left, Rhodes Scholar Doug Paschall with date, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Tisdale, '61.

President William C. Schoolfield heads a new slate Ben Chitty, who was in Washington while on a trip of officers for the Sewanee Club of DALLAS, which for the Association of Episcopal Colleges, of which has mapped out an ambitious program for the com- he is president. ing year. Beginning with a luncheon meeting on June meetings with din- 6, the club plans monthly luncheon Officers of the Sewanee Club of MOBILE are John ner parties being scheduled once every three months. W. Turner, president; Charles Bailey, president-elect; Luncheon meetings will be held at the Dallas Bar Club William Kimbrough, secretary; Wythe Whiting, treas- at 11:45 on tri e first Monday of each month. Wel- urer. Directors are Julian deOvies, H. Eldon Scott, along with all alumni of the College, School of comed Jr., the Rev. Ben A. McGinnis and the Rev. William Theology and Academy are prospective students, pres- S. Mann. ent students, parents, and friends of Sewanee, says James Edmondson, club vice-president. Other officers The Sewanee Club of ATLANTA, winner of the are Rave Collier, secretary, and William Mount, Dobbins Trophy for 1965-66, was host to a number of treasurer. high school students at a dinner in February at the Cathedral of St. Philip. Football stars Doug Paschall, Dr. Charles Harrison spoke to a record attendance winner of a Rhodes scholarship, and Bill Johnson, who at the spring meeting of the Sewanee Club of CHAR- will play for the Atlanta Falcons this fall, spoke to the North Carolina, at the Red Inn. LOTTE, group. President Stuart Childs was responsible for arrange- ments for the meeting and for a party in honor of the Dr. E. R. Pinson is the new president of the Hodg- touring University Choir later in the month. son Chapter of the Associated Alumni of NEW YORK CITY. He succeeds Mercer Stockell, held Dean Robert Lancaster and Albert Gooch attended who had the office for several years. Dr. Edward McCrady and the meeting of the Sewanee Club of GREENVILLE, Dr. John Webb, acting dean of the college, attended Mississippi, in early May. Under the direction of presi- the meeting held ft the Harvard Club on April 12. dent Harold Eustis, the dinner party attracted more Dr. Webb was the principal speaker. than fifty alumni and friends, including visitors from as far away as Jamaica and South Africa. President Eustis announced that the Eustis Scholarship Fund of Sewanee club meetings have already been scheduled the Greenville Club (in memory of Herbert Eustis) in numerous cities as the fall program of the Associ- stood at $7,872.92. Ben Humphreys (Ug) McGee ated Alumni begins to get under way. Listed are the was elected president for the coming year. cities where meetings are scheduled, the dates and the person in charge of arrangements. More complete in- Dr. Richard Harb has been elected president of the formation is being prepared by the alumni office for Sewanee Club of KNOXVILLE, succeeding Dr. Ed- each area. ward Hamilton. Sewanee alumni and friends from the Memphis September 7 George Clarke Knoxville area, including Bishop and Mrs. William E. Columbia, S. C. September 8 Sanders, attended the meeting at the City Club on December 9 David Ellison III Charlotte September 9 Stuart Childs March 21. Albert Gooch, presented the Sewa- who Chattanooga September 14 Phil Whitaker nee slide show, and Dean Robert Lancaster, who made Atlanta October 7 Louis Rice a brief talk, provided the program. Kennedy Craig Nashville October 6 was elected vice-president of the club, and with Dr. December 17 Dudley Fort Pensacola October 10 Lavan Davis Harb has begun work on a program for the fall. Jacksonville October 18 Ronald Palmer Knoxville November 2 Richard Harb The Sewanee Club of WASHINGTON, D. C, heard Virginia Area Tay athletic director Walter Bryant speak on Sewanee's at Lexington November 5 D. Patton St. Louis Area November 12 Villiam C. Honey athletic program at its annual meeting May at the 5 Charleston November 17 fhomas S. Tisdale Presidential Arms. Pierre G. T. Beauregard is presi- Birmingham September 27 Caldwell Marks dent of the club. An unexpected guest was Arthur Dallas November 16 William C. Schoolfield

14 The Sewanee News 1966 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE

All home games start a t 2:00 p.m. Septemeer 24

Millsaps College . . Sewanee

October 1 Sports Randolph-Macon Ashland, Va. October 8 Kenyon College Gambier, Ohio October 15 {Homecoming] Austin College Sewanee October 22 Centre College _ Sewanee October 29 Soutliwestern . „ Sewanee November 5 Washington & Lee _ Lexington, Va. Alumni Plan Events November 12 Washington Univ. _ St. Louis, Mo. Around Football

Shirley Majors' tenth season as head coach will open September 24 on Hardee Field, with Millsaps College furnishing the opposition. Seating capacity at Hardee

Alex Guerry, '39, and his Field has been increased to 3,500 with the summer son Zan won the United construction of new stands on either side of the stone States Father and Son Clay stadium. Future plans call for the new stands to be Courts Tennis Champion- enclosed in stone, as arc the original ones. ship at Cynwyd, Pennsyl- vania, July 4. Alumni and friends of Sewanee will play a key role in the 1966 football season. Alumni get-togethers are scheduled for the final two games of the season, No- vember 5 at Washington and Lee and November 12 at St. Louis, where the Tigers will meet Washington University. At home the Tigers will play at least two games Golf Gets a First before large groups of returning alumni. The home- coming date has been changed from the October 22 at The Sewanee golf team repeated as champions game against Centre College to October 15 against sports festival the College Athletic Conference spring Austin College, and the fall meeting of the Alumni in St. Louis, but Washington University captured Council has been planned to coincide with the home- titles in baseball, track and field and tennis to take coming weekend. the Presidents' Trophy for competition in all sports The biggest planned celebration will take place on with 125 points to 120 for Sewanee. October 29 when the Tigers battle cross-state rival In the year-long competition, points are awarded on Southwestern. Special guests of the University at that the basis of twenty-five for a championship with each time will be all Sewanee men who played football from succeeding team receiving five points less. The Tigers 1898 to 1926. As a special feature of that program, were second in track and field, third in tennis and Fred Russell, sports editor of the Nashville Banner fourth in baseball while Washington University fin- and chairman of the honors court of the National Foot- i>hed fourth in golf, the only sport it did not win. ball Hall of Fame, will present a certificate naming Sewanee held championships in football, basketball Bishop Frank A. Juhan to the Football Hall of Fame and swimming (swimming, however, did not count in during the half time of the football game. all schools did the Presidents' Trophy race because General Alvan C. Gillem, Jr., a teammate of Bishop not compete) before the spring sports festival began. Juhan's, has accepted the chairmanship of the 1898- Four Sewanee athletes won five individual cham- 1926 reunion and will supervise the mailing of invita- pionships. Ted Waters captured the discus and jave- tions and the work of key men who will be asked to lin titles with record distances of 145 feet 10 inches help build attendance. and 179 feet 9^2 inches, while Robert Harding topped One of the three survivors of the 1899 football team. the CAC pole vaulters at 13 feet 6 inches, another con- Herbert F. Smith of Birmingham, has already indi- ference mark. Joe Harrison repeated as number two cated that he will be present lor the program, which singles champion in tennis and John Capers won the will begin with tours of the Universitj domain on Fri- conference golf championship for the second straight day afternoon. vear. Jay D. Patton of Richmond and William C. Honey of St. Louis are chairmen for the programs at Wash- Tennis and golf coach Gordon Warden won a ington and Lee and ;.t Washington University. Both salute from World Tennis Magazine as the person will be built around pre-game luncheons and informa- primarily responsible for the overwhelming success of tion is being prepared tor mailing to alumni in wide- the five major tennis tournaments at Sewanee. areas surroundinu Lexington and St. Louis.

August 1966 15 V-C Hails Woods Laboratories

(continued from page 2) has become the key to all future expansion. The situ- lie served as trustee, as president of the Associated ation is, indeed, so critical that we have called a halt Alumni, as regent, chairman of the board of regents, to all other advances until this hurdle is cleared. chairman of the finance committee, and finally as co- In the two-college plan it was long ago decided that chairman of the Sewanee Ten Million Dollar Cam- science laboratories would be central university fea- paign. tures, not appurtenances of the separate campuses, as When Dr. Woods died in the midst of the campaign the duplication of the most expensive laboratory ap- many of his admirers made gifts to the University in paratus such as telescopes, computers, etc., would be his memory, and now that the regents have assigned a foolish expense. Accordingly we have chosen a site all of the undesignated campaign surplus to this same directly across from the main library and equally ac- memorial we have in hand more than a million dollars cessible for both campuses, on which we will build toward the great new building which will bear his facilities for mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, name. and psychology. Forestry, of course, is already separ- The importance of these laboratories to the Uni- ately housed within a hundred yards of that spot. All versity at this stage of its development can hardly members of the science faculties have collaborated in be exaggerated. The first really large project in our the preparation of the plans which ought to represent centennial development program was the completion the latest and best thinking about the needs of their of a worth}- spiritual center for the University, which respective departments. About 62,000 square feet of was provided in All Saints' Chapel in 1958. The sec- floor space will be provided, compared to 24,000 in the ond great need was a truly adequate book collection present Carnegie Science Hall, and we expect a total and research building, the latter of which we obtained cost of perhaps one million three or four hundred in 1965 in the duPont Library. Meanwhile, athletic thousand dollars. This means that in addition to the facilities, dormitories, faculty homes, etc., were added money already assigned to this project, we shall have

to fit the needs of the growing student body and staff, to find an additional three or four hundred thousand until new in 1966 the only part of the University dollars. We are earnestly seeking that money now in

which is cramped for floor space is the science build- the hope of being able to get construction started in

ing. the fall. It is the most important objective on our pres-

Only a few years ago the science professors and ent horizon; and I rejoice that it will memorialize one students were more luxuriou:ly provided for than any of Sewanee's finest sons.

other group; but that is decidedly not the case today. We have been fortunate in obtaining gifts for unusu- ally fine equipment; but we haven't room enough to ^Sftc-^t*^ H^u^di^ house it, and the building of a new science complex

Faculty Expresses Elation

Members of the science faculties, discussing what Dr. Camp: "We will really welcome that air con-

the new J. Albert Woods Science Laboratories would ditioning. One day this summer it was so hot during mean to their work, made comments ranging from the an experiment that the fractional degree thermometer jubilant to the frivolous. (Remarks in the latter cate- wouldn't register." gory may be forgiven in the context of the plus 90 Dr. Yeatman: "I have to keep my salamanders in non-air-conditioned temperatures in which they were my garage at home in the summer and in the attic in made). Some of the reactions are noted verbatim: winter." Dr. David B. Camp, professor of chemistry: "I Lmidentified: "We won't have to smell the odors wont have to transport bottles of chemicals up two of mice in the labs and offices. They will be in animal flights of stairs any more." rooms." Lnidentified: ''Harry, you'll be able to get all your "Those nutty psychological mice won't come into students in one lab." Dr. Harry Yeatman, professor of biology: "That's contact with Charlie Foreman's."

the absolute truth. And they won't have to sit in the "That's not fair. Bob Lundin isn't here to defend windows any more." his mice."

16 The Sewanee News Trustees and Regents

The Rt. Rev. Robert R. Brown, H'56, of the Church of the Good Shepherd serving trustees, he was on the board has been bishop of Arkansas since and has rotated on and off the vestry from 1937 to 1940, 1944 to 1946, and re- 1956, having served a year as coadju- since 1935, holding at various times gent the following year, was elected an tor of that diocese. He is a member of the posts of junior and senior warden. alumni trustee in 1952 and has again the board of regents. Born in Garden He has been assistant chancellor of the represented his diocese of Alabama City, Kansas, in 1910, he attended Tex- diocese of Louisiana and was chair- since 1961. as Military Institute and received his man for Church Support for the Uni- Joe William Earnest, '28, has been B.A. from St. Mary's University and versity from 1957 to 1961. Speaking of on the board of trustees from North- his B.D. from Virginia Theological him in that capacity, Bishop Frank A. west Texas for a total of twenty-three Seminary. He served parishes in Texas Juhan, then director of development, years, has been unflagging in his work until 1947, when he became rector of said, "Kimball's efforts have been equal for Sewanee. A lawyer in Colorado St. Paul's in Richmond, where he re- to the income on five million dollars City, he was named last year as city mained until his election to the Epis- of endowment." He is a fellow of the recorder, has also been county attor- copate. He has been a trustee of the American College of Trial Lawyers, ney. At Sewanee he was a Delta Tau Seminary of the Southwest in Austin, president of the Louisiana State Cham- Delta, a member of Blue Key, editor Texas, and of All Saints' Episcopal ber of Commerce, and has been chair- of the Mountain Goat, and a depart- School in Vicksburg, Mississippi. He man of the Louisiana insurance com- mental editor of the Cap and Gown. is the author of several books. A son, mission. In addition to his law degree from the Robert L. Brown, '63, is an alumnus Herbert E. Smith, A'98, C'03, H'56, of University of Texas he holds a mas- of the College. Birmingham has been a trustee from ter's in English from Columbia Uni- The Rt. Rev. Randolph R. Claiborne, his diocese of Alabama since 1929. Born versity and taught English there while Jr., H'49, was suffragan of Alabama in Houston, Texas, in 1880, he went working for the degree. He recently before assuming the bishopric of At- to Birmingham on his graduation from suffered a painful dislocation and has lanta in 1953. Born in Farmville, Vir- Sewanee and, starting as a clerk, be- been hospitalized. ginia, in 1906, he moved with his fami- came one of the leading industrialists New alumni trustees, nominated by

KIMBALL CLAIBORNE BROWN DUGAN TURLINGTON SMITH

ly to Marietta, Georgia, in 1913, at- of the South, holding the presidency ballot by the Associated Alumni last tended high school there. He received and then chairmanship of the board spring, are the Rev. David Browning an A.B. from the University of Vir- of the Vulcan Rivet and Bolt Corpora- Collins, '43, former chaplain of the ginia in 1928 and a B.D. from Virginia tion. At Sewanee he played football University and now dean of the Ca- Theological Seminary in 1931. He serv- on the legendary teams of those years, thedral of St. Philip in Atlanta; James ed parishes in Georgia and from 1938 was captain of the baseball team of G. Cate, Jr., '47, secretary of the Bo- to 1949, when he became suffragan, he 1903. He was a major in the U. S. waters Southern Paper Corporation in was rector of the Church of the Na- Army Reserve. He was cited for the Calhoun, Tennessee, and Associated tivity in Huntsville, Alabama. honorary degree of doctor of civil law: Alumni vice-president for bequests; The chairman of the board of re- "No one has served this institution and John W. Woods, '54, vice-presi- gents is G. Allen Kimball, H'59. The more valiantly, continuously and un- dent of the Chemical Bank New York Lake Charles, Louisiana, attorney was failingly than he." Trust Company, Associated Alumni born in Clio, Louisiana, and was grad- As this issue was going to press, vice-president for admissions and sec- uated from Hammond High School in Mr. Turner (following item) retary of the Sewanee Club of New 1923. He attended Louisiana State Uni- died, on August 30. York. versity at Baton Rouge, graduating in The Rev. John C. Turner, D.D., C'28, Faculty trustees replacing Arthur 1928 with a bachelor of laws degree. T'31, rector of the Church of the Ad- Dugan and Dr. Bayly Turlington are A prominent Episcopal layman, in vent in Birmingham, was recovering Dr. Gilbert F. Gilchrist, '49, and Dr. Lake Charles he has been a member from eye surgery. Among the long- A. Scott Bates.

August 1966 17 Glass Distinctions . . .

'04 preciation of his twenty-year ministry with them. A portrait of Dr. Gant Gaither, KA, was unveiled in a new wing of the '26 Jennie Stuart Hospital in Hopkins- Walter G. Green, ATO, a Burlington, ville, Kentucky. The new addition to North Carolina, attorney, won the Re- the hospital is named in honor of Dr. publican nomination for the state Gaither, who has retired after many senate and will try to unseat the years' service as physician and sur- incumbent in the general election fall. geon. this A Phi Beta Kappa, he holds a law degree from Oxford University. '14 Coleman A. Harwell, KA, a news- paper publisher in Cookeville and stained glass window, depicting A Sparta, Tennessee, has been named the parables and miracles of Christ, chairman of the board of Neely, Har- was recently dedicated at the Church well and Company, a wholesale dry of the Heavenly Rest, Abilene, Texas, goods firm of Nashville. The appoint- as tribute to the continuing ministry ment was made during a reorganiza- of Dr. Willis P. Gerhart, KS, retired tion of the firm after the death of rector of the church. Robert E. Harwell, '23, KA. Designed by Clement Chen The Rt. Rev. Thomas H. Wright, SN, '21 conducted the ninth annual conference Cultural Trade Center of the Anglican Fellowship of Prayer

j Robert S. Carney, ATO, has been by Clement Chen 53 in St. Paul's Cathedral, Detroit, in president of the National Iris Society, March. Bishop Wright is chairman of As the Communist regime spread whose spring meeting in Memphis at- the Mutual Responsibility and Inter- over the mainland of China in the late tracted iris devotees from as far away dependence Commission of the Episco- 1940's, St. John's University of Shang- as South Africa and Australia. pal Church. hai, supported by the Episcopal Church, '27 attempted to get a number of good '23 students out of China ahead of the Colonel Edward M. Mize, KS, Sixth Communist take-over and into Ameri- Leighton H. Collins, DTD, editor U. S. Army chaplain, was honored at can colleges. On the recommendation and publisher of Air Facts magazine a retirement parade at the Presidio, of Ellis Tucker, acting president of the and recently named Airman of the San Francisco, California, recently. He university (who taught math at Se- Year by the Flying Physicians Associ- had earlier received the Legion of the admissions ation, was presented a citation of ap- wanee from 1960-1964), Merit decoration. office accepted Clement Chen and Ar- preciation by the Alumni Council of Montgomery Payne, KA, Winterville, thur Yu on short notice, without any the University of the South at the fifth Mississippi, planter, is the new presi- transcripts or records of their former annual Sewanee Fly-In during the dent of the seventeen-county Delta work or any assurance that they would spring. Council, an organization dedicated to able to pay tuition, room or board. be The Rev. Edward Brailsford Guer- the development of that predominant- The accomplishments of both students ry, SAE, and his wife were given a ly farming section of the state. He is have justified the confidence the Uni- summer trip to the Holy Land by a former state extension forester and versity placed in Mr. Tucker's recom- communicants of St. John's Church, was one of the organizers of the Bra- mendation. John's Island, South Carolina, in ap- zilian forestry commission. Clement Chen has submitted a plan for a proposed Chinese Cultural Trade Center, to be built in San Francisco, which has drawn wide acclaim from critics. The center will be built around a 450-foot tower with a design com- bining clean, modern upswing and Oriental connotation and is sure to be- come a key symbol of San Francisco's skyscape and the city's status as a gateway to the Orient. Mr. Chen has a long record of awards for his de- signs, which include honor awards by the American Institute of Architects for his design of the United States pa- vilion at the Brussels World's Fair and of the San Mateo, California, mu- nicipal court building. Dr. Arthur Jun-Shen Yu has a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Pennsylvania and is now with the Thi- okol Chemical Corporation, doing re- search on solid fuel for rocket propel- lant. As senior section supervisor in the research division, he heads a group of eight chemists and manages an an- nual budget of about $180,000. He has published four papers, has twelve pat- ents and has begun work on a book. of the Episcopal Mission inspecting an F-105 He is married to a Chinese girl, has a Clergy Okinawa three Se- family, is a naturalized citizen of the Thunderchief at Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, included '52, Fur- United States. He credits his educa- wanee men: Captain John R. McGrory, Jr., at left; Rev. '51, Browning, tional start at Sewanee for much of man Stough, third from left; and Rev. Edmond his success. '52, right of center.

18 The Sewanee News Thomas R. Waring, ATO, editor of the Charleston, South Carolina, News and Courier, has retired as a member of the board of the Southern Educa- tion Reporting Service. He had been h member since the inception of the organization in 1934.

'28

A portrait of Bishop Charles Clinc- man, H, retired Bishop of Kentucky, was presented to the Church of the GA1THER WARING RUCH

story appeared in the Sewanee News appeared in the April 29 issue of of August, 1961. Time magazine He was commended for his work with his clients and for '31 his efforts in recruiting employees for the company. Paul Homer Merriman is probably one of the few men— if not the only '38 man—living in the United States who own both a steam locomotive and a The Rev. Charles Wyatt-Brown, real steamboat. President of the Ten- FDT, became rector of Palmer Me- nessee Valley Railroad Museum, which morial Episcopal Church, Houston, on has some 150 members, Merriman's August 1. A trustee of the University, projects include steam locomotive ex- he has also served two terms on the cursions from Chattanooga to Cleve- executive board of the diocese of land and to other points of interest. Texas as secretary. He had been rec- tor of St. Mark's Church, Beaumont, '32 since 1948 and had seen the parish grow from 650 to more than 1400 com- Frank N. Bratton, PKP, has received municants. the Individual Award of Merit, regard- ed as the most esteemed honor which '42 can be given by the Tennessee Bar Association. Mr. Bratton, an Athens Paul B. Kennedy, Jr., has been ap- attorney, was presented the award at pointed field representative of the Bu- the annual banquet of the association reau of Apprenticeship and Training Bishop Thomas H. Wright, '26 for his leadership and dedication in of the United States Department of the activities of the organized bar, the Labor in Salisbury, North Carolina. welfare of the community and in im- Park H. Owen, Jr., PGD, has been proving the administration of justice named vice-president in charge of the in Tennessee. He is serving a three- commercial department of Dobson and year term as chairman of the Tennes- Johnson, Inc., a Nashville real estate see Bar Association special joint com- and mortgage banking firm. He joined mittee on court modernization. the firm in 1961 and was the first real- The Rev. Ellwood Hannum has ac- tor associated with it to sell more cepted an appointment as headmaster than one million dollars' worth of real of the Episcopal School of Oak Cliff in estate in one year. Dallas, which was founded in 1965. Eugene N. Zeigler, DTD, has been Two of Mr. Hannum's sons, William, named chairman of the South Caro- '61, and Ellwood, '65, are at present lina state inter-agency council on arts doctoral candidates, and the third son and humanities by the governor of is a junior at St. Mark's School of South Carolina. The agency will ad- Texas. Mrs. Hannum is consultant in minister federal grants in these fields. Christian education at the Church of St. Michael and All Angels, Dallas. '43

'33 The Rt. Rev. John M. Allin, KS, was invested May 31 as the sixth bish- Edwin I. Hatch, ATO, president and Rev. and Mrs. Edward Guerry, '23 op of Mississippi at St. Andrew's Ca- chief executive officer of the Georgia thedral in Jackson. Fourteen southern Power Company, has been elected a bishops attended the ceremony, as did Advent in Birmingham, where he member of the board of directors of Governor Paul B. Johnson and leading served for twelve years before his the Home Insurance Company. He is churchmen of the state, including two election as Bishop of Kentucky. Rob- a member of the board of regents of Roman Catholic bishops, as well as ert Jemison, Jr., '99, senior warden the University. Protestant, Greek Orthodox and Jew- emeritus of the church, represented Uncle Dudley Fort, PDT, Associated ish leaders. Bishop Allin served in Ar- the family at the ceremony, which took Alumni vice-president of regions, con- kansas and Louisiana before becoming place in the Clingman Commons of the tinued the tallyho pepped up by his president and rector of All Saints' parish house. Commencement fox hunt at Sewanee College in Vicksburg, Mississippi. He with a Fourth of July ride in Nash- was elected bishop coadjutor in 1961. '30 ville, featured in the Tennessean. Lt. Col. William A. Boardman, ATO, Milton Trichel is the author of a has graduated from the Air War Col- '35 Handbook for Parents of Retarded lege and has completed all require- Children—Guardianship, Wills and The Rev. William S. Lea, PGD, has ments for a master's degree in inter- Trusts. The Shreveport attorney has been made chaplain of the Anglican national affairs, which he will receive long devoted himself to the study and Guild of St. Bride, an order instituted from George Washington University in aid of retarded children. The present and confirmed by Edward III in 1375. September. He began a three-year as- volume includes a pictorial report on Ralph Ruch, PKP, appeared in an signment in July as staff chaplain of his son David entitled "A Mongoloid advertisement for the Mutual Life In- the Pacific security region, with head- Child Grows Up at Home." David's surance Company of New York which quarters in Hawaii.

August 1966 19 '47 The Rev. and Mrs. Jonas Ewing White Gus L. Baker, a Nashville artist who have a third son, Alexander Timothy, recently was commissioned to create born March 27. They live at stained glass windows in the Thomas 201 North Washington Street, Tiffin, Ohio. W. Phillips Memorial Building in Nashville, was an exhibitor in the first annual arts and crafts exhibit and '53 sale . . . Glas of the Franklin County Artists' Guild Don Arthur, ATO, is the new sys- in Winchester. George D. Falk, on the tems coordinator in the life department faculty of the Sewanee Summer Fine of Provident Life and Accident Insur- Arts Center, and Joan Balfour Payne ance Company. A Phi Beta Kappa, he (wife of John B. Dicks, '48) were also is a member of St. Timothy's Church, represented in the June exhibit. Chattanooga, the Data Processing Dr. John W. C. Fox, assistant pro- Management Association and the Pri- fessor of anaesthesiology at the Bow- vateer Yacht Club. He and his wife man Gray School of Medicine, pre- and three children live at 222 sented a paper Pali- on "Neuroleptanalgesia sades Drive, Signal Mountain, the Tennes- m United States," which describes see. a new type of intravenous anaesthetic William F. Low, Jr., technique, has been elected at Versailles, France, in assistant treasurer June. The of the Camden paper, co-authored by his Trust Company and became manager wife, Dr. Elisabeth Fox, was presented of the bank's Haddonfield office on at the French National Congress of June 1. He lives with Anaesthesia and his wife and Resuscitation. son at 119 Ardmore Avenue, Haddon- Mrs. Richard P. Williams III (Joan field, New Jersey. Beauregard, SS) is recovering from Dr. Robert C. Mumby, ATO, has been an auto accident which resulted in two chcsen Outstanding Flight Surgeon of hundred stitches about the face and the Year in the Tactical Air Command head. Address: 4109-49th St., N.W., of the U. S. Air Force. He was selected Washington, D. C. for the command-wide honor for his Frank Bratton, '32, receives law trophy. outstanding professional skill in the '48 field of aerospace medicine. Dr. Wilson C. Snipes, ATO, has Dr. Bertram Wyatt-Brown, PDT, has been named head of the department published a paper, "The Civil Rights of English at Virginia Polytechnic Act of 1875," in the December, 1965, In- don Agency, Atlanta, to enter the stitute. He moves to the issue of the Western Political Quar- new position School of Theology at Sewanee in Sep- after serving as English terly. professor at tember. He is the University's chair- Mercer University and as dean of the man for Theological Education sup- college of '54 arts and sciences of Con- port. verse College. Clifford Y. Davis, Jr., ATO, director of public '49 relations and advertising for '57 the First National Bank of Memphis, William George S. McCowen, DTD, assistant T. Richter, KA, will leave has been elected a vice-president of his duties professor of history, Wofford College, as assistant to the general the bank. At 33, he is one of the bank's Spartanburg, South Carolina, received manager of the Delta Electric Power youngest vice-presidents. He joined his Ph.D. degree from the Association in Greenwood, the Institute of Mississippi, staff in 1961 and became director Liberal to enter the Arts of Emory University in School of Theology in of public relations two years later. He June. The title of his dissertation was September. Active in civic affairs in and his wife, the former June Hargis, "The British Occupation of Charles Greenwood, he was chairman of the and two children live at 5695 Crest- Town, 1780-1782." March of Dimes this year, and in 1957 view Drive. was Ronald Palmer, ATO, is now asso- Greenwood's Outstanding Young Michael Fullerton, ATO, has re- ciated with the law firm of Matthews, Man of the Year. He is a past state ceived his Ph.D. in geophysics from Osborne and Ehrlich, 1530 American director of the Junior Chamber of New Mexico Institute of Mining and Heritage Life Building, Jacksonville. Commerce. Technology and has accepted a posi- He is the new president of the Sewa- tion as an assistant geophysicist at the '51 nee Club of Jacksonville. Cloud Physics Observatory in the Ha- Paris Eugene Smith, PGD, is head of Dr. O. Lewin Keller, Jr., waii Institute of Geophysics. He is PGD, a the account executive department in member of the chemistry division of married to the former Jane Wyatt, a the Amsterdam, Holland, office of the Oak Ridge National well-known El Paso artist. Laboratory, Young and Rubicam advertising agen- has been appointed acting Lt. Comdr. Constantine Charles director of cy. He assumed his new duties July the transuranium research laboratory. Keller III, USN, DTD, is director of 1, after serving with the firm in Puerto The Rev. and public relations for Mrs. David Wendel, SN, the Supreme Al- Rico and in New York. have a daughter, Jane Chase, lied Command Atlantic in Norfolk, Vir- their William J. Warfel, PDT, has a third child, born June 1 ginia. in Toledo, daughter, Ashley Margaret, born April Parana, Brazil. 3. He is general manager of Beaver '55 Clearing, '52 Inc., the largest utility line Baxter Hicks Harwell, BTP, has clearance company based in Alabama. Charles J. Hughes, KA, auditor for been elected president of the South He and his wife, Jacqueline, live at the First National Bank of Miami, Carolina Junior Chamber of Com- 4229 Antietam Drive, Birmingham. spoke to the eastern regional conven- merce. He is a lawyer in Florence. tion of the National Association of Mr. and Mrs. James Payton Lamb, '58 Bank Audit Control in Jacksonville, ATO, have another daughter, Gloria John M. Evans, Florida, recently. KA, has been pro- An editorial in the Marie, born March 17, 1966. She joins moted from instructor to assistant pro- American Banker commended him for sisters Jeanne, Susan and Margaret. the fessor of English at Washington and enthusiasm and sense of responsi- The Lambs live in Beaumont, Texas. Lee University. He was scheduled to bility demonstrated in the speech. Mrs. Phil Whitaker, SAE, has a second receive his Ph.D. in English from Yale Hughes was featured in the April is- son, his third child, Charles Newton, University in June. sue of Redbook. Entitled "Redbook born April 22. Dr. John V. Fleming, BTP, a mem- Readers in Fashion," the pictorial fea- ber of the English faculty of Prince- ture covered her selection of '56 clothes ton University, has for sports, been named to a party, shopping and eve- Ken Kinnett, SAE, will leave ning his three-year term as a bicentennial pre- events. position as vice-president of the Lon- ceptor. The program is designed to 20 The Sewanee News Distinctions

LITTLETON McSWAIN BOARDMAN

'64 Raydon Alexandef! will be doing graduate study at the University of North Wales this fall. He had been teaching English and Latin at San An- tonio Academy of Texas. Richard Bynum Dobbin, KS, was married to Natalie Pogue Morrison in the Church of the Advent, Cincinnati, en January 29. Ushers included Se- wanee alumni Robert Greenland, '66, BORDERS EVANS FLEMING Michael Sava, '65, and Langdon Mor- rison, '67. The couple lives in Chapel Hill, where Richard is in law school of the University of North Carolina. honor outstanding young faculty mem- in DaNang, Viet Nam, serving as com- Michael Flachmann, PDT, is teach- bers. munications officer with the third Ma- ing freshman English at Southern Illi- Dr.. Thomas B. Flynn, KA, has a son, rine amphibious force. His address: nois University, Carbondale. Rhys Bradford, born June 10. He is Captain John F. Borders, 082290, H and Lt. (j.g.) William W. Haden is op- the second son and third child. S Co., CEO Section, III MAF, FPO San erations officer aboard the USS Mon- Francisco, California 96602. mouth County, on duty in the South '59 Fred R. Freyer, Jr., SAE, has a son, China Sea. B. Gresh Lattimore, Jr., PDT, re- Dr. Norman E. McSwain, Jr., SAE, Frederick Reese III, born June 1 in is ceived a master of arts degree from is a captain in the U. S. Air Force and Atlanta. Grandfather Fred R. Frey- the Fletcher School of Law and Di- has a surgical assignment. He was er, '29, of Coral Gables. Fred is in the plomacy, Tufts University, in October married in June, 1964, to Martha Skip- acreage sales department of the Adair and in March was commissioned an per of Foley, Alabama. Address: 328th Realty and Loan Company. ensign in the U. S. Navy. USAF Hospital, Richards-Gebaur AFB, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gee III, SAE, Missouri 64030. have a daughter, Katharine Riese, born '65 Bruce Adams Samson, KA, was mar- in December. Ernest William Gosnell, Jr., ATO, William Evans Hannum II, ATO, ried to Adajean Lott at St. John's and Allen Lawrence Lear, DTD, have April 2. will begin teaching at Bates College, Church, Tampa, on received the master of arts Lewiston, Maine, in September. Dur- degree from the Fletcher School of and Di- '60 ing the past school year he lived in Law plomacy, Tufts University. Lear is the Charlottesville, Virginia, with his wife, Todd Tebbetts Breck, PDT, was mar- son of the late Coates Lear, '36, Susan, and two-year-old son, Teddy. and ried to Marcia Wendel at West Palm grandson of Dr. Allen Lear, who for Beach on October 2. Sewanee alumni '62 many years practised medicine in Se- present were Clayton Farnham, '61, James Heyward Harvey, Jr., KA, was wanee, where his widow now makes Talbert Cooper, '63. professional and A married to Fredrica Elizabeth Bremer her home. engineer, Breck owns the Design Engi- in St. Mary's Roman , William Alvin Hamilton III, PDT, neering Company and is president of Charleston, South Carolina, in May. He was married to Cecelia Louise Wade the Coaming Corporation. Address: on January 5 in is a member of the law firm of Harvey Kings'and, Georgia. Box 65, Montchanin, Delaware 19710. and Harvey in Charleston. Scott Jackson Lej: v/as married to The Rev. William H. Littleton has Sarah McCrady (SS) and E. Hayne Diane Lewis Jor>es v.t Trinity Presby- published a new book, Good Morning Shumate, Jr. (A'57, SS) have presented terian Church, Atlanta, in March. Forever. A review said: "From the David Geor^ Shulman married the Vice-Chancellor ri granddaughter, was Advent season ... to the season of recently the couple's first child, Anne Dowling, to Rebekah Alexander of Fort the Trinity, Dr. Littleton recaptures born July 9 at Fort George Meade, Worth. She is a niece of President the spirit of each of the great days of Johnson. (Her Maryland, where Hayne is stationed. mother, Mrs. Birge the Christian calendar." He is rector Alexander, is the President's sister, i of Holy Trinity Church, Decatur, '63 The couple attend the University of Georgia. Jack Finney Lane. Jr., was married Texas. The Rev. Henry I. Louttit, Jr., ATO, to Kathryn Ann Appel on June 11 at '66 has been named for the second time the post chapel, Fort Myer, Arlington. Richard M. Flynn, KA, was to the board of managers of the Over- Virginia. He holds a law degree from married June 11 to Janet Potts in the seas Mission Society. He is vicar of Ihe University of Virginia, Charlottes- Lee Ely- sian Fields Methodist Church, Or- Trinity Church, Statesboro, Georgia. ville, where the couple will reside. New leans. He is teaching at the Columbia, Donald Porter was married in the Daniel F. Tatum, KS, on duty in Tennessee, Military Academy. spring to Diane Douglas Lunt of Ro- Viet Nam, found time to teach Eng- chester, New York. The wedding took lish to a family in Bien Hoag three '67 place in Shiraz, Iran, where he was a nights a week. In a letter to Senor Virgil Cox Shutze, KS, was married teacher at the University of Shiraz and Lewis he says. "Isn't that something, to Elizabeth Edwina Chambers on Ap- she was serving as an English teacher teaching oP Dan Tatum English?" He ril 4 in Florence, Alabama. with the Peace Corps. also includes two of the statements of the year: "Viet Nam would be ideal '69 '61 if there were no war going on," and William Booth Davis was married John F. Borders, DTD, is a captain "Traveling now is just the least bit to Sharon Stark Fitzmorris January 8 in the U. S. Marines and is on duty hazardous." at Columbia, Tennessee,

August 1966 21 two daughters, Mrs. David F. Caldwell, Jr., and Mrs. Ralph Kelly; and nine grandchildren. Mrs. Gray was the sis- ter of Dr. Edward McCrady, vice- chancellor; Mrs. Mary Chaney, matron of McCrady Hall at Sewanee; Mrs. J. H. Peebles, Mrs. G. C. Gardner, Mrs. R. C. Price and John McCrady.

Drayton Beecher Smith, '32, KS, head of the industrial arts department of Sherwood Junior High School, Mem- phis, died February 23. He is sur- 3fn Jtlcmortam vived by his widow and three sons.

Miss Katharine Emeline Tighe, '38, FS, died April 30 in Asheville, North Carolina, where she had been a teacher Bishop Gray at Lee Edwards High School since 1930, with the exception of a five-year period she spent as professor of French at Queens College, Charlotte. An award Henry Turner Soaper, '94, PDT, died Viet Nam, two sisters and two grand- to be presented annually to an ad- on May 30 at the age of ninety-three. sons. vanced French student at Lee Edwards The trustees' resolution in his memory Edmund H. Martin, '18, ATO, of has been established in her memory. said: "He was undoubtedly among our Ocala, Florida, died on March 31. He most loyal alumni and among the un- is survived by a sister, Mrs. Mary M. The Rev. John Heuss, H'51, thirteenth failing succession of benefactors of Robertson of Charleston, South Caro- rector of the Parish of Trinity Church, this institution. For more than forty lina, and a brother, William E. Mar- New York, died March 20. He was the years he served his church as senior tin of Moncks Corner, South Carolina. father of William B. Heuss, T'68, a stu- warden and vestryman. Seven times Prior to his retirement, he had been dent in the School of Theology. Last he represented his diocese, Lexington, a veteran's service officer for Marion October at Seabury-Western Seminary Kentucky, as deputy to General Con- County, Florida. he delivered the Hale Memorial Ser- vention. Many years he served also as mon, which has been printed under the title "The of a delegate to the Provincial Synod. The Rev. Francis Hopkinson Craig- Implications the Toronto Manifesto." For forty-four years he was trustee hill, '25, PGD, died June 29 following from his of this diocese University. Mr. open heart surgery in Texas. He had Soaper was a sincere Christian gentle- served churches in Georgia, South man carrying his religion into every Carolina and New York City before Mrs. Thomas P. Lloyd died in Shreve- relationship of life, and an enthusias- becoming rector of historic Bruton port on May 17. Member of a family tic churchman, intensely and vitally Parish, Williamsburg, Virginia, from long prominent in cultural, religious interested in everything that would ad- which he retired in 1956. He had lived and educational affairs of the South, vance the interest of the Church and at Hendersonville, North Carolina, she the daughter of late Dr. his University. He was the very per- was the since retirement. His wife, Catherine, B. Lawton Wiggins, former vice-chan- sonification of the ideal for which Se- died three years ago. Mr. Craighill had cellor of the University, and the grand- wanee seeks to stand. His death is an been instrumental in bringing Dr. and daughter of Bishop Charles Quintard immense loss to our Sewanee family, Mrs. Charles Harrison to Sewanee, an of Tennessee, former chancellor and and we beg to express our sincere accomplishment which ranks as one vice-chancellor. sympathy to his son, who succeeded of his most important services to the him as trustee, and to his family." University. Arthur Edward Nimitz, former com- missioner of buildings and lands and Prentiss Tucker, '97, DTD, died Feb- The Rt. Rev. Duncan Montgomery then University architect and engineer, ruary 12 at Modesto, California. He Gray, '25, KA, fifth bishop of Missis- died March 19 at the age of 71. He had been in excellent health until sippi, died in Jackson on June 25. His spent his boyhood in South Carolina, about a year before his death. in Born death followed by less than a month attended Clemson College, received a 1875, spent life he most of his in Cali- that of his wife, the former Isabel B.S. degree from the Citadel, and later fornia. Denham McCrady, who died unex- studied architecture at the Massachu- pectedly on May 31. Elected bishop of setts Institute of Technology. He came George M. Feild, '10, PDT, a Dallas Mississippi in 1943, Bishop Gray had to Sewanee in 1958 as supervisor for attorney, died March 19. been formally seated in the cathedra the University's architects, Godwin and of the newly-erected St. Andrew's Ca- Beckett, then joined the University's The Rev. Canon Anthony R. Parsh- thedral in January by Presiding Bishop staff and continued to supervise con- ley, '15, PDT, died last fall. He had John E. Hines, '30, SN. He retired on struction until his retirement in 1965. been living since his retirement in Pas- June 1 and was succeeded by the Rt. Many of the principal buildings on the coag, Rhode Island. He had been edi- Rev. John M. Allin, KS, '43. Under campus were constructed under his tor of the Rhode Island Churchman, Bishop Gray's direction the diocese of aegis, including the Chapel, duPont Li- administrator of the Episcopal Confer- Mississippi grew from 10,334 to 17,350 brary, Guerry Hall, the Walsh-EUett ence Center and diocesan youth ad- baptized members, the communicants renovation, Benedict, McCrady, and visor. He had formerly been rector of from 8,293 to 13,067, while the church Malon Courts dormitories, the Snow- the Church of the Good Shepherd, school enrollment experienced a growth den Forestry Building, and the Wil- Pawtucket. from 2,749 to 6,111. Through his lead- liam Cleveland Memorial Building, as ership and personal example forty men well as over forty faculty and student W. Groom Leftwich, '18, DTD, senior answered the call to the ministry, all housing units. Dr. McCrady recalls: partner of Leftwich, Ross and Crisler, of whom were admitted to the priest- "His pleasant manners were proverbial. an investment banking firm of Mem- hood by him, and eighteen of whom He was courteous and agreeable to a phis, died March 26. He was a former remain in the diocese. Bishop Allin, in very high degree. He loved to hunt president of the Memphis Cotton Car- succeeding Bishop Gray, said: "He had and fish, and often brought back veni- nival. A football player at Sewanee, he qualities which made him an easy man son and fish from the Charleston area, scored seven touchdowns in one game to work with and a difficult one to fol- his old home, for his friends at Sewa- against Cumberland during his 1914- low. He was a man of few words, but nee." He generously advised fraterni- 16 career. He is survived by a son, they were always meaningful." Bishop ties and private persons on building Major William G. Leftwich, Jr., re- and Mrs. Gray are survived by a son, projects. Three brothers and one sister cently returned after a year's duty in the Rev. Duncan M. Gray, Jr., T'53; survive him.

22 The Sewanee News Valedictory 1966

By John H. Dawson, Jr.

hope to fill this inevi- and habits of living persons. Irreverence, table pause in the surg- the kind of irreverence which demands clear • • • • JL ing tides of this class thinking, straight answers, and the recog- with a few fond recollections and observa- nition of quality which is quality, mystery tions about Sewanee, which we may all which is mystery; this kind of irreverence share to some degree. For there are many is itself 'in the tradition.' old themes which arc happily recurrent at The sense of tradition at Sewanee is not Sewanee. an anachronism. To be aware of the past is

to exploit it in the Sewanee is away from the glitter of the not merely order to curse present, or in order artificial light, 'in the sticks,' if you prefer. merely to pay homage A thoughtless attempt to entrench a garish to the present. An awareness of the past, neon sign in the heart of the University do- which is an awareness of heroism against a main provoked one of the most exhilarating background of frailty, order against a back- and unanimous student uprisings of recent ground of chaos; this kind of awareness is impossible except it be attached to a sensi- memory. Sewanee is infolded by the land, land that takes your breath away, land that tive appraisal of the present. This kind of exhausts the adjectives of the most descrip- awareness implies a sympathy with an af- firmation of the past which prevents us tive writer, land that makes you a little em- barrassed to be an inhabitant. Sewanee from being seduced by those who would men, even the least curious of us, are often merely exploit it. He is impoverished who confronted with an unpaved, nonsterilized cannot affirm his past or honor his father remnant of a vanishing wilderness. To re- and mother in that larger sense. For his turn from spring break by way of the Sher- past is a key to his identity and to his wider kinship with the world. wood road is an unique privilege of the Se- wanee man. That sense of the past, which is sensitivity to the present, the sense of continuity and We are not dependent upon some text- tradition, is at Sewanee largely in the book abstraction of nature, or some propa- hands of her faculty. I feel that this class gandized notion of nature as a competitive has been blessed and that Sewanee is pres- jungle of unmitigated brutality. The natural ently blessed by nothing less than a great world fades and blooms about us. The rhy- faculty, a diverse assemblage of learned and thm of seasonal change, which is so appar- learning men and women. To live and study ent here, induces a certain serenity, a cer- with these men and women is to be both tain priceless wonder. continually appalled and continually excited are afflicted by winters of unbearable We at our own ignorance. starkness. It is then that self-absorption in- With pride we refer to ourselves as a vites like warm cover and suffocates as easi- community of faculty and students. There ly. We are bathed in the mystery of spring, is an undeniable congeniality within the Se- effulgent spring, beckoning spring, spring of wanee classroom, an undeniable accessibili- twilight creatures wistful emotions. and We, ty about the Sewanee professor. The Uni- at Sewanee, infolded by the land, possibly versity is still centered around persons rath- possess a keener awareness of our animali- er than punch cards. ty, which is a condition of our wider kin- To be sure, our community often seems ship with the world. fragmented. We are subject to that inter- The land hovers about us at Sewanee; personal barbarism which is perhaps char- and so does the past, even though we treat acteristic of most all-male institutions. Our

it with rare irreverence. An undergraduate fraternities often seem to be more divisive once complained that Sewanee 'was so drip- than fraternal. But in spite of our flaws, ping in manufactured tradition' that he there is at Sewanee a rare opportunity for could not even refresh himself at a water men to compete as gentlemen and meet as fountain without bumping into a plaque of friends. In this, I believe, lies the essence

some sort. Our irreverence is not without of education at Sewanee. value. Who has not heard that tradition is Sewanee is beautiful, and there are many most surely effective when least talked beautiful persons here. Sewanee is no mere about, least conjured up to gloss over pres- way station between high school and the ent infirmities? Living tradition expresses 'world of affairs." Sewanee is a good place itself and can be judged by the life-styles to spend the prime years of one's life. Sewanee to have tour of E

Here's Our Itinerary

July 17 New York to Paris July 18 Paris July 19 Paris to Lucerne July 20 Lucerne July 21 Lucerne to Como July 22 Como to Florence July 23 Florence July 24 Florence to Rome July 25 Rome July 26 Rome to Riccione July 27 Riccione to Venice

July 28 _ Venice July 29 Venice to Innsbruck

July 30 . . Innsbruck to Heidelberg July 31 Heidelberg to Coblenz

August 1 . . Coblenz to Amsterdam August 2 Amsterdam to Copenhagen August 3 Copenhagen

August 4 . . Copenhagen to London August 5 London

August 6 _ London st 7 London to New York

The Sewanee European Alumni Tour scheduled for next tour duration), most meals, sight-seeing, entrance fees, and summer, for alumni, parents, faculty and friends, leaves ftuidc services. New York on July 17 and returns 22 days later on August 7. Our tour is being handled by a professional travel agency The escorted tour will visit France, Switzerland, Italy, which has had years of experience in handling tours—es- Austria, Germany, Holland, Denmark, and England. The pecially alumni tours. We hope many people with Sewanee round-trip tour price is S895 per person. This includes as a common interest can join us on this exciting trip. all transfers and transportation in Europe, first class hotels When you return the card you receive with a special an- with twin-bedded rooms (private bath for 75 per cent of nouncement about the tour, you will be sent a folder des- cribing the jaunt in detail. THE Sewanee November, 1966 EWS

"•• mmu:

?^£vP 68

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

Couls R. Morey Hart, '34 President of the Associated Alumni £oming Events Editor Edith Whitesell

Associate Editor Albert S. Gooch, Jr., At Sewanee Actinp Executive Director o November 1-29—The Art of Charles McKinley. Exhibition of The Associated Alumni in Gallery of Fine Arts, Guerry Hall. November 17—Drew Middleton, "De Gaulle's France," Artist George Falk duPont lecture. November 18—Cinema Guild film. Emphasis this year is on old classics. Dr. L. Spires Whitaker, '31, Vice-President for Capital Funds; December 2—Cinema Guild film. Dudley C. Fort, '34, Vice-President for Regions; Rev. Tracy H. December 11—Christmas Choir service. Lamar, '42, Vice-President for St. Luke's; William E. Ward III, January 6—Cinema Guild film. A'45, Vice-President for SMA; James G. Cate, Jr., '47, Vice-Presi- January 8-28—Gustav Vigeland, Norwegian sculptor. Ex- Bequests; Robert M. Ayres, '49, Vice-President for dent for Jr., hibition in Gallery of Fine Arts. Classes; John Harmon Nichols, '50, Vice-President for Church January 13—John Browning, pianist. University Concert Support; John W. Woods, '54, Vice-President for Admissions; Series. James W. Gentry, Jr., '50, Recording Secretary; Dr. O. Morse February 1-21—Three Eyes Art Society. Exhibition in Gal- Kociititzky, '42, Treasurer; Ben Humphreys McGee, '49, Athletic lery of Fine Arts, Guerry Hall.

Board of Control. February 9—Harrison Salisbury, "China Report," duPont lecture. February 10—Cinema Guild film.

CONTENTS On the Air

September 11—November 27. The Rt. Rev. John E. Hines, 3 Valedictory from the Acting Director of '30, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church in Ameri- Development ca, is speaker on the Episcopal Series, broadcast weekly 4 On and Off the Mountain over radio stations in 530 cities. Last year's speaker was C. FitzSimons Allison, '49, associate professor in the 6 Curiosities in Wood School of Theology.

7 The Psychology Laboratory November 15—February 15. Programs from Sewanee are scheduled on the following radio stations (please con- 3 Symbolism in Wagner's Ring sult local listings for date and time) : KAPR, Douglas, 1 Books Arizona; KLMO, Longmont, Colorado; WSLC, Clermont, 12 A Camera Eye on the Domain Florida; KINS, Eureka, California; WHCU, Ithaca, New York; WYSE, Inverness, Florida; KWXY, Cathedral 14 The Ghost of Morgan's Steep City, California; KICO, El Centro, Caifomia; WRUB- 15 Trustees and Regents FM, Madison, Wisconsin; KETO, Seattle, Washington; WEHW, Windsor, Connecticut; KVIO, Cottonwood, Ari- 1 Sports zona; WMPS-FM, Memphis, Tennessee; KOCV-FM, Odessa, Texas; WRPN, Ripon, Wisconsin; KRCK, Ridge- 1 Class Distinctions crest, California; WPIC-FM, Sharon, Pennsylvania; 22 Deaths WSBF-FM, Clemson, South Carolina; WDHA-FM, Do- 23 Sewanee Books for Christmas ver, New Jersey; WAMC, Albany, New York; KLOA, Ridgecrest, California; WJIG-FM, Tullahoma, Tennes- see; WSVS, , Virginia; WAPL-FM, Appleton, Wis- consin; WSNW, Seneca, South Carolina; WRJR-FM, November 1966 Volume 32 Number 4 Lewiston, Maine; KBTA, Batesville, Arkansas; WLKR, Norwalk, Ohio; KBZZ, La Junta, Colorado; WKMK, Blountstown, Florida; WSWN-FM, Belle Glade, Florida; KFMM-FM, Tucson, Arizona; KPOF, , Col- ON THE COVERS—Captain David Paschall (48) of Bradford, orado; WBFM, Seneca, South Carolina; WCDR-FM, Tennessee, is flanked by alternate captains Richard Dolbeer (60) Cedarville, Ohio. of Jackson, Tennessee, and Chip Langley (66) of Chattanooga, in front of the new stands. These programs of discussion and of music by the Sewanee The photograph is by Howard Coulson. Summer Music Center are narrated by Professor Brinley The back cover is from a photograph by Bruce Rodarmor, '67. Rhys and directed by Mrs. Rhys.

The Sewanee News WANTED: The Energy of a Water Buffalo

1 BY Mrs. Bobbie Summers (left) is receptionist and Mrs. C. Lamar Ervin is secretary for Dean Lancaster in his emergency role of development director. ROBERT S. LANCASTER

First of all, let us remember that the Campaign is REASON DEVELOPMENT DIRECTORS are SO hard ONE over. It was successful. Not all of our objectives were to find is that there are relatively few with realized. To realize our goals we must constantly be experience and reputation. The field is new, campaigning, sometimes at low, sometimes at high and aside from those men who have gravitated from pitch. Every college in the country is constantly en- the academic profession into this work and the people gaged in fund raising. At Sewanee we need money for trained in the fund-raising corporations, there are few Sewanee Military Academy, which did not share the really good men available. funds made available by the Ford challenge grant. Be- Any good administrator with tact and the ability to yond that we need funds for the operating budget, say, "Will you give us #50,000?", the energy of a water since no student pays more than about half the cost of buffalo the skin of rhinoceros can easily make and a his education. We must build and endow the second the transition from academe to fund raising and public college to enable us to become smaller and more per- relations. He will need energy to travel, to write, to sonal while growing somewhat larger and to enable us imagine; he will need the tough skin to take the inevi- to preserve what is distinctive and best in our inheri- table criticism that comes when, for reasons over which tance. he have little control, gift income declines. If he may All of this requires a faithful and earnest and gen- is heir to a windfall he is simply lucky; he easily may erous constituency, an energetic, well directed and be a hero one and a villain the next. January properly staffed development office, and the realization Nevertheless there are compensations: the thrill of that this office must have the vigorous support of fac- an unexpected large gift, the knowledge that what he ulty and administration. does is absolutely vital, the opportunity to participate Unfortunately, because of its location, this office is in planning for the future, the certainty of meeting somewhat isolated. Its situation removes it from easy significant and intelligent people, the chance to have communication with the Yice-Chancellor, Provost, and his say, to work with regents, trustees, alumni. faculty. On this account every effort should be made My own short experience as acting director of de- to incorporate its activities more intimately into the at satisfying. velopment Sewanee has been happy and life of the University. One thing is certain. If we are I the At least have learned what goes on in place to grow and prosper, if we are to realize our goals for through which the money comes. I wish every ad- the second century, if we are to remain free and flexi- ministrator and every faculty member might have this ble, master in our own house, we must have a strong, exposure to the responsibility of fund raising. To suc- vibrant, imaginatively operated and superbly staffed ceed a man like Bishop Juhan, who has wide experi- office of development. ence, powerful reputation, secure place and demon- I shall resume my duties in the office of the dean of strated ability to produce, is a little frightening. To the College with some satisfaction but with an added have his steady help, wise counsel and continual bless- awareness of the challenge and responsibility of de- ing, however, steadies the nerve. Fortunately, I have velopment and with deep appreciation for the loyalty had all of these along with the support of faculty, and devotion to Sewanee of the splendid people who alumni, regents, trustees and campaign leaders. work in this enterprise.

Before I leave the office of development to return For the opportunity to serve the University, for the to my regular work as dean of the College, reflection support of administration, faculty, Campaign loaders, on my experience leads me to several observations. alumni and friends, I shall forever be grateful.

November 1966 On and Off the Mountain

GIFTS

William G. Harkins, University librarian, reports that 17,622 volumes were added in 1965-66, compared to 4,280 in 1961-62, with 7,693 of last year's total com- ing to the duPont and St. Luke's libraries as gifts. Mr. Harkins points out that many of these gift vol- umes came in former years when staff and space were Coulson too limited to allow for the processing of more than Founders' Day speaker was the Rev. William H. Ralston, Jr., very selective additions. '51, acting editor of the Sewanee Review. Shown in the pro- cession are (from left) Vice-Chancellor Edward McCrady, "All donations to the University Library are highly Thomas R. Ward, Jr., '67, president of the Order of Gowns- appreciated and are significant in strengthening the men, Mr. Ralston, and Provost Gaston S. Bruton. book resources of the University," Mr. Harkins says. in jurisprudence in memory of her husband ('36), and Two collections of note contained about 1,200 and from Michael R. Richards, '58, for books in English volumes respectively. The former came as an 1,634 literature in memory of his mother, Mrs. Grace gift through T. Gibson, a anonymous Mr. Herbert Richards Sarre. West Palm Beach attorney and father of Herbert C. Gibson, '67. Among the books, most of which are Other Gift Notes standard works of English and American literature, The diocese of Mississippi has given a house for are many autographed first editions. The most unusual married students, valued at #11,678. Another heart- book in the collection is Galileo's 77 Saggiatore, printed warming note in the area of Church Support comes at Rome in 1623, only nine copies of which are known from the Rev. A. E. F. Anderson, rector of St. An- to be in American libraries. drew's Church in Louisville, Kentucky, who writes: The other collection was donated by Joseph P. "While I had not anticipated, in view of our contribu- Crockett, a native Tennessean but longtime resident tion of last year ($2,525), we would be able to sustain of Washington, D. C, where he is fiscal consultant to our giving, here is $1,000." the Pan American Union. Mr. Crockett's library re- flects his interest in Southern biography, Civil War history, public finance, and Latin-American history and literature. The two most outstanding volumes in the collection are Opiscula Plurima, attributed to St. Augustine and printed by Bonetis at Venice in 1484; and the Metamorphoseos of Apuleius, published by the famous Aldine Press of Venice in 1521. Only two other copies of Opiscula Plurima are listed in the Li- brary of Congress National Union Catalog as being in the United States. Significant donations of funds came from Mrs. Cal- vin Schwing for the purchase of books for the School The Mississippi House is occupied by the Benjamin F. Bell of Theology library, from Mrs. Coates Lear for books family of Vicksburg.

The Sewanee News ALEXANDER GESSELL

Kcatinj May Prove a Pace Setter The director of admissions with one of his admitted.

Dr. John M. Gessell, associate professor of pas- toral theology and assistant to the dean of the School of Theology, has contributed a chapter to the book The Episcopal Church and Education, published in October by Morehouse-Barlow and edited by Ken- dig Brubaker Cully, dean of the New York Theologi- cal Seminary. In the chapter entitled "The Church School: Heri- Williamson tage and Prospect," Dr. Gessell outlines briefly the history of the Sunday church school in the Episcopal Church and makes some specific suggestions for the SAE Rises Anew development of the church school as an effective edu- the location on University campus cational arm of the Church. At same the where the old house burned to the ground in Febru- % The Very Rev. George M. Alexander, '38, dean of a chapter the School of Theology, was one of the candidates ary, 1965, the SAE's have completed new house. nominated to succeed the Rt. Rev. James A. Pike as house, slightly larger than the old one, is bishop of California. He withdrew his name from con- The new sandstone from plans drawn and con- sideration after the second ballot. built of Sewanee Daniel T. McGown of Memphis, an % Dr. Edward McCrady, Vice-Chancellor and tributed by '30. struc- President of the University, was the capstone speaker alumnus of the chapter in the class of The Brice Building Company of Bir- in the freshman orientation program at Lyndon State ture was built by College in Vermont. Dr. Robert E. Long, president mingham. president of the house of that college, explained his invitation: "I wanted our Harding C. Woodall, '17, the investment in the structure young men and women, on the threshold of their col- corporation, said that and the furnishings and lege experience, to meet and to hear a man who, in has amounted to #90,000 including certain gifts my opinion, represents the happiest combination of equipment will cost #9,750, not of services, materials, and equipment. 'the scholar and the gentleman.' He is as near to a with the help of Robert G. Snowden, '40, modern Renaissance man as any I have met." Woodall, '29, Chatta- An interview with Dr. McCrady, summarizing of Memphis and Stanyarne Burrows, of undertaken the job of raising the neces- his plans for the second college at Sewanee, was fea- nooga, has sary funds, in cash and pledges, from SAE alumni and tured in the Christian Science Monitor September 17. supplement the recovered from the % The Sewanee Club of Birmingham sponsored a friends to $69,000 insurance on the old house. They are still short about college admissions seminar September 27, and more their effort to complete the undertaking, Mr. than a hundred people with a large preponderance of #4.500 in says. note-taking parents turned out for a program that may Woodall chapter was established at Sewanee in well prove a pace-setter for other groups who would The SAE and the original house, the first owned by any like to serve their communities as well as the Univer- 1S81 chapter in the country, was completed in 1886. sity. From Sewanee John Ransom, '42, and Walter SAE the charter members were Confederate Gen- Wilder, '60, of the admissions office went, with Walter Among eral Kirby-Smith, who at that time was a Bryant, '49, director of athletics, and Albert Gooch, Edmund professor in the University, and Alex- director of the Associated Alumni. Ben Gibson repre- mathematics Guerry, later chaplain of the University and sented the Sewanee-based southern regional office of ander of South Carolina. the College Entrance Examination Board. Episcopal Bishop

November 1966 Of Flying Fish

and Rings . .

Two Corners for the Curious in the

Do you know what Snowden Building a wood impossibility is? Have you ever seen a rewarewa napkin ring? Can you name a tree that grows hard, Harold Nogle with some of his treas- medium, and soft ures, now on display in the Snowden : wood at the same forestry building. At upper left are some "impossible" carvings, plus a to- time? What is the bacco jar of hardwoods. hardest of all woods? Gooch

These and many other questions find fascinating on Pitcairn Island after the Bounty mutiny. A large answers in the Snowden Forestry Building, where turtle is from the same carver. Harold Nogle of Port Arthur, Texas, has added to the A sample of crucifixion thorn, or Holacantha emoryi, collection of 6,500 wood specimens that bears his name was found by Mr. Nogle in the Arizona desert after an array of intricate carvings, novelties, and rarities a fifteen-year search. The tree has no leaves and the that are bound to appeal strongly to visitors on the thorns are its foliage. This is a very hard wood, Mr. Mountain as well as confirmed devotees of wood. Nogle says, and polishes beautifully. Mr. Nogle, who celebrated his seventy-second birth- A gavel that was presented to Speaker Sam Ray- day last month, has harbored a passion for in all wood burn in Texas and saw heavy use in legislative battles its manifestations since he turned his first rarity in high is made of Texas hardwoods. school. He founded the Wood Collectors' Society, and Harold Nogle first came within the Sewanee orbit has seen it spread around the world as a focus for pro- when Nickey Brothers of Memphis bought his collec- fessional and amateur collectors, students, and carvers tion of wood specimens and gave it to the University. of wood—"botanists, dendrologists, hobbyists and Mr. Nogle explains that he offered the 6,500-item ag- craftsmen," the masthead of its newsletter says. gregate, one of the most complete anywhere, for sale to Mr. Nogle, a lean, alert Texan with a fine head of anyone who would give it to a university or museum. healthy white hair, stopped over in Sewanee one day Each drawer and each drawer-pull in the cabinet hous- in early fall to bring, at the request of Professor ing the catalogued samples of wood from all over the Charles Edward Cheston, forestry department head, world is made of a different specimen, lovingly crafted and T. K. Lamb, H'55, of Beaumont, a carload of his and polished by Mr. Nogle himself. treasured acquisitions. The University will give them Mr. Nogle, whose photograph and biographical a permanent home and advantageous display. sketch are framed in the bright corner room of the Most puzzling of the "wood impossibilities" was a Snowden Building where his work is displayed, is the barrel dovetail of concave pieces inside convex ones, circulation manager of the Port Arthur News. is which even when explained offers a staggering example He of intricacy and ingenuity. Mr. Nogle has occasion- scheduled to retire in January and can then devote ally made these as conversation pieces for executive full time to wood, wood collecting, and his Wood Col- desks. The going price is fifty dollars. lectors' Society.

A beautiful flying fish, a striking example of what P.S. According to Mr. Nogle, urundi is the hardest appears to be typical Polynesian art, was made by the wood and is the tree that yields wood in three ranges great-great-grandson of Fletcher Christian, who settled of hardness.

The Sewanee News and Rats

1 St.

Coulson Dr. Robert Lundin and Dr. Kenneth C. Spatz shock a student.

the second member of the two-year-old department, which now boasts twenty-one majors, one of the larg- est groups in the University. "Students will work in pairs in the lab, and will get a chance to play the role of both the experimenter and HAS LEARNING ABOUT RATS got tO do With WHAT the subject," Dr. Spatz explained. "This gives them people:" a broader picture of experimentation. To answer this question, occasionally heard in con- "Although much of what we will be learning is nection with the new experimental psychology labora- purely for the sake of knowledge, such as our experi- tory in the Snowden Forestry Building, Dr. Robert ments on rats, worms, fish, and—hopefully pigeons, \V. Lundin, head of the psychology department, says: — the students will be required to apply principles they "In the new lab we show the student how the meth- have learned to a subject in which they're interested, ods of science are applied to psychology. We deal and will have to design and carry out an experiment. with natural phenomena just as the biologist or any For instance, one might work on the effect of radio scientist does, and this knowledge is basic to human playing on study and retention. psychology just as the study of amoeba—seemingly "We are interested in teaching proper experimental remote from people—is basic to medicine. methodology. This is excellent preparation for gradu- "We study behavior because it is part of the natural ate school work, which many of our majors are inter- world, and it may or may not have immediate appli- ested in, and is also helpful in the evaluation of any cations." scientific facts." The lab is stocked with such equipment as color mixers and color wheels which allow for experiments The latest of Dr. Robert Lundin 's major books is a to see how the eye can differentiate colors; a rotary revised edition of An Objective Psychology of Music, pursuit apparatus which was formerly used in the se- scheduled for publication early in ig6y. Other works lection of U. S. Air Force flyers; and different types of include Personality: an Experimental Approach mazes. (Macmillan iq6i) and the widely used textbook, Prin- Animal experiment equipment includes the visual ciples of Psychopathology. Twelve articles in techni- cliff box. which simulates depth to test animals' re- cal journals include such intriguingly diverse titles as spect for height, and the Skinner box, in which hungry "A Technique for 'Training Perfect Pitch" and "The animals are taught by pushing levers to feed them- Effect of Alcohol in Reaction 'Time in the White Rat." selves or avoid shock. Professor Lundin came to Sewanee from Hamilton The new lab has been made possible by funds from College just two years ago. He has his bachelor's de- the University's budget and a grant from the National gree from De Pauw University, his master's and doc-

Science Foundation. A permanent laboratory is torate from Indiana University, is a member of Sigma Xi scientific fraternity, Phi Mu Alpha music frater- planned in the new J. Albert Woods science building. nity, and Alpha Tau social fraternity. Dr. Kenneth C. Spatz, Jr., who taught at Domini- Omega can College and at Tulane University, where he For a glimpse of Psychologist Lundin s alter ego, earned his M.S. and Ph.D. in psychology, has become please turn the page.

November 1966 ^^} Symbolism

the Rhine maidens by Alberich, the dwarf and one of the Nibelungen. £^b When the gold is taken from Al- berich by Wotan, Alberich places a curse upon it. From his gold Alberich has An E.Q.B. lead paper had made for himself a ring that by confers on the possessor power over Couls the world and the Robert W. Lundin ring passes into the possession of one of the giants, Fafner. Wotan's problem during the three later evenings of the "Ring" is to ensure that the ring There is no special secret about symbolism does not come into the possession of someone who will use when it is incorporated in a work of art. Sym- it as Alberich would, were he to gain pos- bols are session of it, for merely one variety of a way of com- the destruction of the gods. The de- vious ways munication with which we are all familiar. As mem- by which this is brought about constitute the rest bers of the human species we share many symbols in of the story of the "Ring" cycle. common; in myths, fables, folklore, rituals, and doc- "Das Rheingold" trines, in all branches of art, in dreams and fantasies. The first of the four operas, "Das Rheingold" The Oxford English dictionary defines the word repre- sents in some ways the exposition section of symbol as "something that stands for, represents or a great symphony. The main motives, psychological denotes something else, especially a natural object and musi- cal, are here set forth to be worked out in when it represents something immaterial or abstract." detail in later movements, blended, contrasted The Swiss psychiatrist Dr. Carl Jung made a further and at last brought distinction triumphantly to their logical conclusion. between sign and symbol. A sign is some- Wagner wrote to Franz Liszt regarding the thing that stands for something else, whereas a symbol prelude to "Das Rheingold" is an in 1853 as follows: outward expression of an inward psychic fact. "Mark my new poem well; it holds the world's beginning A musical motive is a symbolic image. It occurs to and its destruction." the composer because certain archetypes are active in The primordial his inner chaos of the world's origin is experience. The music is a product of the regu- larly depicted in creation myths as a artist's psychological experience just as the archetypes waste of waters from are which the self-generated gods emerge as waiting for the opportunity to get themselves ex- they es- tablish some foothold pressed in symbols. on solid ground. In a psycho- logical sense, the prelude is symbolic of the origin The Ring Cycle of consciousness as well. For consciousness, Twenty-six nothing ex- years elapsed between Wagner's first ists until we know it exists. Unconscious conception experience, of the Ring of the Nibelung and its final like eternity, is timeless in just such completion. a sense as the Wagner had been interested in various prelude to "Rheingold" suggests. Scandinavian, German and Icelandic sagas. As was Musically, the prelude consists of a persistent sound- his temperament, he took what he liked, selecting, ing of bars 136 of the tonality of E flat. Wagner meant dovetailing and piecing. He started writing the poem it to suggest the Rhine River with a grand swell, or libretto then "Siegfried's Death" in 1848. This eventually heavy waves, then lighter and still became "Die Gotterdammerung" lighter waves. or "The Twilight of At about the 130th bar, the curtain rises revealing the the Gods," the last of the four operas. depths of the river, and Alberich, the dwarf, hiding in Still feeling the action was not complete or entirely a chasm. clear, he added a prelude to his trilogy, "Das Rhein- Being submerged and swept away by a, torrent of gold." Wagner referred to this as the "fore evening" water is also a rebirth symbol. This is expressed or "short evening." in the When played without interruption surging arpeggios. In John III, Jesus says, "Except it lasts a mere two hours, whereas the others last from a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of four to five hours, not counting intermissions. God. . . . That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and The central motive of the "Ring" cycle is Wotan's that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." love The flesh re- for power. To consolidate his power, he had a lates to the state of nature and the great spirit relates to castle, Valhalla, built for him by two giants. The the transformation of nature by consciousness. ultimate payment of the giants' wage he entrusted Symbolically, Alberich the dwarf represents the more or less to luck. When the time comes for payment darker side of all of us. Carl Jung referred the giants are to it as finally satisfied with the gold stolen from our shadow, where exist not only our basest in-

8 The Sewanee News sociated with him, in particular the motives of the in Wagner's Ring magic fire music. Fire is symbolic of the energy of life, the libido, the energy which runs the personality, for without energy there could be no personality. stincts, our animal nature, but the archetype of evil With the change of scene we hear the orchestral in the personification of the devil himself. Just as passage known as the "Descent into Nibelheim." Adam fell, we all have his sin upon us. Having learned Wotan and Loge descend into the earth through a from the Rhine maidens of the power the gold bestows sulphurous crater. In Xibelheim live Alberich and the on its possessor, Alberich decides to steal the gold and other dwarfs known as the Nibelungen. With the power vanishes. of the ring Alberich has enslaved the other dwarfs.

Just as the prelude symbolized the ascent from tin- The Root of Evil consciousness, so the descent is symbolic of the reverse In the gold find the as we symbol of money the root process. The going down deep into the earth is our

all evil. is of Cold traditionally associated with vio- collective unconscious where reside all our basic im- lent deeds; gold represents the of evil, the power true pulses, the shadow and the evil associated with it. poison of love. We have in Alberich's forsaking of In the final scene, after Wotan wrests the ring from for gold, after the maidens repel love Rhine him, a Alberich and Alberich's curse is put on it, Erda, the projection of Wagner's own life, for in 1853 he wrote earth mother, emerges, warning Wotan to give up the to Franz Liszt, ''I have come to my thirty-fifth year ring. In Wagner's own words, Erda is "the eternal I before realizing that up to now, have not loved at woman possessed of all the earth's wisdom." Erda is all. I have never yet enjoyed the true happiness of one aspect of mother nature, her instinctive wisdom. love." It is questionable whether he ever did. She appears in the "Ring" cycle only at moments of

Gold, of course, is traditionally associated with many profound uncertainty and desperate need. other symbols: the light of the sun, and thus with The Super-Do-Gooder consciousness, just as silver is associated with the The earth mother is one of the most significant sym- moon. Gold is often associated with fire and the bols for all of us. It is a dominant archetype in the bringing of energy to life. collective unconscious of everyone. The earth mother of the gold he steals from the Rhine maidens Out represents not only our potentiality for wisdom, but Alberich has the ring crafted. ring is a circle, a con- A compassion and kindness. In a lead article a few years tinuous flow with neither beginning nor end; the circle ago on Jung's psychology, Time magazine referred to Psychologically, stands for perfection. the ring sym- Erda as the "super-do-gooder." bolizes the self, as the most important of all the sys- When at last Wotan has heeded the warning and tems which make up the human personality. The at- given up the ring, and the way is clear for the fortress, tainment of selfhood is the ultimate aim of life. It is he sufmons Donner, the god of thunder. His hammer the integrating principle of all forces within the per- stroke is heard on the rock and there is a tremendous sonality. psychological As we reach maturity and clap of thunder followed by a rainstorm. The spiritual self evolve from a biological to a man, the brightens and a rainbow bridge appears whereby the emerges from unconsciousness to take the center po- gods enter the fortress of Valhalla. sition of the personality structure. Because no one of Thunder and lightning are very powerful symbols. us is perfect we never completely achieve self-actuali- Lightning has always symbolized the descent of the zation, but we constantly strive towards that goal. spirit. It terrifies, it electrifies. Rain stands for the ring includes pos- Getting possession of the getting gentler aspects of the spirit, descending as healing session of our own experience. Unless the gods can do grace after the manner of a baptism and likewise im- this, wielded the bringing power now by shadow pregnating new life. In Norse mythology Donner (Alberich), they will never extricate themselves from wields the thunderbolt. This is, in general, a symbol their immediate peril. of male virility, including male aggressiveness, asser- At this point in the action, Alberich has stolen the tiveness and anger. Donner's thunderstorm represents

gold and had a ring made from part of it, giving him what generates the energy to create a between the power over the world. Subsequently, the two giants present condition of the gods and the condition into appear to Wotan to claim their reward of the gold which they are about to pass, in the next phase of their promised by Wotan for building the fortress, Valhalla. development.

Not possessing the gold and having no immediate so- The rainbow has its own symbol in the pledge of

lution to the problem, Wotan summons the crafty Loge hope. The gods are now full of hope and it will carry to get him out of the predicament. them a long way until the inherent vulnerability of

Loge, the god of fire, has a number of motives as- Valhalla becomes evident.

November 1966 ECC IKS

"Editor of the Sewanee Review, the nation's oldest lit- erary quarterly, descended from Indian fighters, from Confederate defenders of your native Murfreesboro,

and from a lady who had an apple shot from her lips by a Yankee sniper, you joined forces with our be- loved John Crowe Ransom when you protested against the politics of spiritual undernourishment in the Agrar- ian symposium, I'll Take My Statid. Since then, you have never ceased to oppose mindless bureaucracy, federal controls, and the dehumanization of mankind. In Parisian French, sourmash Tennessee American, and polished editorial English, you have acted, edited, taught, and written. Biographer, historian, farmer, novelist, editor, and educator, you have resisted cen- tralization, the extinction of the past, and bad modern Coulson prose. To you, a rustic educated on the back porch is v/orth a dozen suburbanites fattened on elegant ab- stractions. You love the countryside, poor folks, ani- Better than the Best mals, students, and tall tales. "Now here you stand. We are proud to honor you The Hero with the Private Parts, the first collection today for your defense of human dignity, intellectual of Andrew Lytle's non-fictional writing, is just out freedom, and literary excellence." State Press. Priced at from the Louisiana University The publisher notes: "An excellent manifestation of $6.00, this book by the editor of the Sewanee Review Lytle's critical credo and technique, this collection also is a major work in the examination of the creative serves as a model of critical style. Vigorous, incisive, is also lively reading to constitute process and enough and impeccably clear, Lytle's style is barren of jargon the level an appreciated gift to a person on Sewanee and is marked by the facility for clarifying in a pre- as well as a tribute to his discernment. cise, and often unusual, phrase, a complex idea or A foreword by Allen Tate places these essays in the meaning." field points out: with Henry James's Prefaces, and The pieces included first appeared in Daedalus, the ''The practicing novelist who sets forth this awareness Southern Review, and the Sewanee Review. The dedi- his art art of of own has something to say about the cation is to Charles Trawick Harrison, Lytle's col- the novel that even the best professional critics cannot league in the University's English department, and is know. . . . Andrew Lytle brings to the analysis of itself a flashing example of Lytle's penetration, com- works by other writers the same insight that enables pression, and grace: "Who Cannot know How Dark him to write his writes about own. He about Madame the Corridor is, because of his own light." D ovary as if he had written Flaubert's masterpiece.

This criticism is entirely original: Lytle is not inter- ested in what the professional critics have written An Apology for Poetry about Tolstoy, Flaubert, and Faulkner; it is not a pro- liferation of other criticism. And it is universal Lermontov, Mikhail, The Demon and Other Poems. criticism that takes its stance in a particular place at Translated from the Russian by Eugene M. Kayden. a particular time." (The Antioch Press, 1965.) Introduction by Sir Maurice Andrew Lytle is by almost any consensus a tower- Bowra. ing literary figure for our time. An original member I am not writing a review of my own translations. of the Agrarian movement that centered around Nash- However, I am often asked by Sewanee alumni why I ville, he is the author of four novels on an unflagging am not taking my retirement years "easy" and what level of artistry, and his discussion of the making of good do I see in poetry anyhow. In reply, I usually the best known of these, The Velvet Horn, appears in speak of the humanities, the education of our youth, the present volume to illumine the path of writers who art, or my hope that before long poetry will be in are not looking for an easy out. favor again with readers, old and young. On grounds

When Kenyon College awarded him the honorary of strict reason and utility, I like to argue that litera- degree of doctor of letters last year, he was cited as ture, especially poetry, is the key to understanding

10 The Sewanee News other nations, that cultural exchange is our greatest from an address made at Harvard Law School by need today for the sake of peace in this war-torn Edward A. Weeks, of the Atlantic. The Russian people, world. he said, "have much more reverence for the poet than

Students of modem civilization are in general we do. Literature tor them is a light, a flame, a lamp agreement that within a century Russia has made the with which to hold unto the entire nation a realization greatest strides as a spiritual and intellectual power in of its patriotism and sense of destiny." literature, music, and science. It is said that the key I hope that these statements coming from leading to the understanding of Russia is found in her litera- men in the Western world of art and science and jour- ture, particularly in her poetry, that political and eco- nalism may speak convincingly to the minds and nomic studies are not enough in themselves, that we hearts of Sewanee alumni —and others, who have a need to understand Russia on many levels of culture concern about the use ot power in the world, peace, in our tragically small world, for the sake of our own the coming together of nations as one brotherhood, survival and general prosperity. Let others, then, and the future of our civilization. speak for this great need in our modern society of —Eugene M. Kayden many nations. Professor of Economics, Emeritus

Maurice Baring, late professor of English litera- Other books of Russian poetry translations by Mr. ture at Oxford University, wrote as follows: "It is in Eugene Kayden: Russian poetry that the cultural quality of realism is perhaps most clearly made manifest. What the Rus- Pasternak: POEMS sian poets did ... in a manner that gives them an Pushkin: EUGENE ONEGIN unique place in the history of the world's literature, Pushkin: LITTLE TRAGEDIES was to extract poetry from the daily life they saw around them and to express it in forms of incompar- The above titles arc published by the Antioch Press, College, Springs, Ohio. able beauty. . . . Russian poetry has qualities which Antioch Yellow are widely different from anything that is to be found

in Greek literature . . . qualities which only came to Lost and Found the world with Christianity."

The Lost Letters of Jenny Lind is a charming addi- Sir Maurice Bowra, former Yice-Chancellor of Ox- tion to new books from Sewanee authors. Victor Gol- ford, now Warden of Wadham College, writes that lancz, Ltd., of London (14 Henrietta Street, London, Russian literature "has responded with extraordinary W. C. 2) is the publisher. effect to impulses from abroad . . . that in almost every This collection of handwritten letters by Jenny Lind case they have created something quite new ... a herself has been painstakingly translated from the higher standard of craftsmanship and a greater emo- German by Professor Thad Lockard of the German tional range than Western models." I am pleased department. Mr. Porter Ware, registrar of the Uni- that my book carries Sir Maurice Bowra's essay on versity, owner of the manuscripts, worked hand in Lermontov. hand with Professor Lockard in providing links be- Significant, too, is the statement made by the first tween the letters and commentaries to them. The re- president of Czechoslovakia, Thomas Masaryk, in his sult of this two years' scholarly collaboration is a book The Spirit of Russia, vol. 2, page 470. It reads: neatly organized survey of Jenny Lind's whole life cen- "In Russia far more than in Europe, poets are the tering around her relationship with the recipient of her true educators of the people. Pushkin, Gogol, Turge- letters, Amalia Wichmann of Berlin. Frau Wichmann r.ev, Dostoevski, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Gorki these are — was the friend whom Jenny Lind admired most, and the thinkers of Russia. It is the thinker as poet, not these letters reveal over a period of more than thirty the thinker as of science, to whom Russia listens." man years an intimate and very human side of the singer's confirmed an English biologist, Eric Ash- This was by nature which hitherto had been hidden from the pub- by, during World War II: '"The foreigner in the lic eye. S. S. R. has soaked himself in nineteenth-cen- U. who In this slender bul very revealing volume, the inti- tury Russian fiction and poetry finds himself among mate details of Jenny Lind's family life are published familiar people. The Russian personality colours sci- for the first time in any language. All former devotees in the Soviet as surely as it colours poetry ence Union of "The Swedish Nightingale" as well as those who are or politics." less familiar with her unique career as a singer are

Finally, let one of America's greatest editors speak sure to find these personal revelations of refreshing

his findings after a summer in Russia. I am quoting interest.

November 1966 11 Jfave Ton ^een ..J

Coulson The filter plant from above?

What happened to the old library? It is in afjj coach Ted Bitondo helps orient students.

The forestry cabin lake? Camping parties may be accommodated here on application to the forestry department.

Coulson

. - i

•-•

The new silviculture Arnold Mignery, wor) Coulson Mrs. Maxwell Cornelius and Mrs. Robert Degen working on the new alumni survey?

Coulson use as a lecture hall, with office space in the tower. Here swimming

ftl **v. -

The latest University residences on Faculty Drive? This is the home of Professor Brinley Rhys and h family.

The catalog drawers in the duPont Library? Cap and Gown AfL

Coulson iratory of the U. S. Forestry station? The center, directed by close collaboration with the University's department of forestry. Coulson

The Ghost of Morgan's Steep

by Arthur Ben Chitty, '35

Don't remember whether I got it from Jack Morton gave Bishop Polk the large sum of forty thou- sand dollars to establish a Professorship of Agri- or Dick Sturgis but the first legend I heard as a cultural Chemistry in the University of the South. freshman in 1932 was about General Morgan jump- This truly munificent donation completes the sub- Morgan's Steep. It was probably ing his horse off scription required by the charter, five hundred the best-established tale of the Mountain, the one thousand dollars, though the trustees have no idea everybody heard. Scores of times I retold it, to house of stopping here. students, and to busloads of tour guests, prospective The necessity of getting this into print and of laying

it wasn't true it was as trau- groups. When I learned to rest Sewanee's most charming and persistent ghost Claus or that George matic as finding out about Santa became urgent with the publication of another in the the cherry tree as Par- Washington did not cut down long line of reprints of this Morgan myth. On page son Weems had told us. 105 of the just-published Ely (an autobiography by first clue came when I read in an old reprint of The Elisha Green, Seabury Press, $4.95), the Sewanee- "our bene- early University papers a reference to born Negro who assisted Willie Six some sixty years I came upon a map factor Judge 0. J. Morgan." Then ago attributes this to his grandfather, Ned Green, the Morgan's of Sewanee, drawn in 1859, which named garbage man and privy cleaner of the campus: named Steep. Why, one might inquire, would a view be "Grandpa told me that General Morgan had jumped to commemorate for a general before he was a general off that rock. His horse was killed but the general got established a deed before it was done: I had meantime away. He said, "The Yankees almost caught him. He the great the fact that General John Hunt Morgan, and his bushwhackers gave them Yankees hell around

clear up into Indiana during : cavalry raider who went these canyons. That rock is named after him.' The War, had actually died in Greenville, Tennessee, The testimony of Grandpa Ned Green is hard to clad in his nightshirt, shot by perfidious Yankees who confute but all it actually proves is that he heard a did not understand romance. This did not clinch the memorable story in Sewanee's very earliest days. case, for Morgan might have jumped off Morgan's 'Tis time we honored a significant benefactor Judge Steep during the strategic withdrawal of 1863 and still — Oliver J. Morgan—who had nothing to do with the lived. Obviously more was needed. Finally it arrived. ghost of a Confederate raider. Browsing through the Washington (D. C.) Intelli- gencer of September 13, 1859, I found jumping out at Mr. Chitty, former director of public relations and me this item: executive director of the Associated Alumni, is now resident in New York as president of the Association Hon. Oliver Morgan, of Carroll Parish, Louisi- J. of Episcopal Colleges. He is still historiographer of the ana, who is now spending his third summer at University. Beersheba Springs, on Saturday, August 20th, H The Sewanee News Trustees and Regents

son Union was named, in 1935 and they have two children. He majored in O'DONNELL WEST GOSNELL WEAVER economics and commerce at Vander- bilt, lettered in baseball, and was a member of Phi Delta Theta and the The board of regents, executive arm Berkeley Divinity School. He married Ace Club. He was a World War II of the board of trustees, met in Octo- Marjorie Adams in 1932 and they have lieutenant commander in the U. S. ber, as it does three times a year, to two children. He served parishes in Naval Reserve, serving as senior in- hear and vote on the Vice-Chancellor's New York State and Nebraska before telligence officer for the Guam base. recommendations and initiate its own going to St. Mark's (3.400 communi- He was president of Knight, Orr and action for the University within the cants) in 1948. He has been chairman Company in Jacksonville from 1941 to framework of the trustees' policy. The of the department of Christian social 1960, when he became chairman of its board is composed of twelve men in relations of the house of deputies of executive committee. He was named a addition to the Chancellor and Vice- the General Convention and a mem- Florida trustee in 1957, became a re- Chancellor ex officio. Seven of these ber of the executive board of the dio- gent in 1963, has served as Church men of utmost significance to the life cese of West Texas. He was a Navy Support chairman for a three-state of the University have been briefly chaplain in World War II with the area. He is also a trustee of Jackson- presented in previous issues of the Se- rank of commander, the rank he holds ville University and a member of the wanee News: G. Allen Kimball, chair- in the U. S. Naval Reserve. He has Vanderbilt alumni association's board man, in August, 1966: Bishop Robert been very active in San Antonio civic of directors. R. Brown in August, 1966: Bishop life, serving as president of its Rotary Henry O. Weaver, '28, vice-president John M. Allin in August, 1965; the Club in 1953-54 and on the executive of the Western Natural Gas Company Rev. W. W. Lumpkin in August, 1965; committee of the Good Government of Houston, was born in Nashville in William A. Kirkland in August, 1965; League. He was the University's bac- 1907. At Sewanee he was a member of G. Marion Sadler, Jr., in August, 1965; calaureate preacher in 1956 and was Sigma Nu, a , and was on the and Edwin I. Hatch in August, 1965. awarded the degree of doctor of di- varsity football and track squads. He The Rt. Rev. E. Hamilton West, vinity at that time. married Margaret Warren in 1941 and H'48, bishop of Florida since 1956 and The Rev. E. Dudley Colhoun, Jr., '50, they have two children. A regent coadjutor for the previous eight years, rector of St. Paul's Church, Winston- since 1963, he has been very active in has been on the board of regents since Salem, North Carolina, was born in Houston on behalf of Sewanee. Earlier 1961. He was born in Birmingham, Lynchburg, Virginia, in 1927, son of this year he and William Kirkland, Alabama, in 1906 and took his bache- E. Dudley Colhoun, '25. He was grad- H'56, also a regent, were presented Se- lor's degree from Birmingham-South- uated from Virginia Theological Semi- wanee captain's chairs by the Houston ern College in 1926, his bachelor's of nary in 1953, married Sarah Hill Lang- club in appreciation of their leadership divinity in 1931 from Virginia Theo- horne in 1954, and they have three in the Ten Million Dollar Campaign. logical Seminary, and an M.A. from sons and a daughter. At Sewanee he Diocesan trustees named this year in- the University of Idaho in 1934. He was a member of Alpha Tau Omega, clude the Rev. John C. Ball, Jr., '47, holds honorary doctorates from Bir- lettered in football, basketball, and of Atlanta; the Rev. W. Harrison mingham-Southern and Virginia Theo- tennis, was a proctor, was chosen for Beste, '39, Frank A. Hoke, and William logical Seminary as well as from Se- Who's Who in American Colleges, was C. Schooffield, '29, of Dallas; the Very wanee. He married Charlotte Matthews graduated optime merens. During Rev. Robert R. Parks, '49, and Lewis and they have three children, includ- World War II he was a seaman first S. Lee, '55, Jacksonville, for Florida; ing Edward Hamilton West, '58. His class in the Navy. Before going to St. Edwin McC. Johnston, '29, of St. Louis parish ministry included service in Paul's he served churches in Virginia for Missouri; William A. Goodson, Jr., Sandpoint, Bonner's Ferry, and Mos- and in Atlanta. He was chairman of of Winston-Salem for North Carolina; cow, Idaho; and in Augusta, Georgia. youth work for the diocese of South- Dr. Randolph C. Charles, '33, of Ben- He was chaplain at the University of western Virginia and was on the At- nettsville for South Carolina; Albert Florida from 1936 to 1941. His service lanta diocesan executive board and Roberts III, '50, of St. Petersburg for to the Church includes the chairman- chairman of its department of Chris- South Florida; J. Ernest Walker, Jr., ship of the department of Christian tian education. He was trustee from of Monteagle for Tennessee; the Rev. education of the Executive Council, the the diocese of Atlanta 1960-62 and in Joseph E. Sturtevant, '56, and Kirkman presidency of the Florida Council of 1962 was elected alumni clerical trus- Finlay, Jr., '58, of Columbia and Tho- Churches, and the chairmanship of the tee, resigning in 1963 to join the board mas H. Pope of Newberry for Upper House of Bishops' committee on can- of regents. He was elected secretary South Carolina; and the Rev. Robert ons. of the Sewanee Club of Atlanta in L. Haden, Jr., of Kings Mountain for The Rev. Harold C. Gosnell, H'56, 1959. Western North Carolina. rector of St. Mark's Church, San An- R. Eugene Orr, an investment banker Among those who completed terms tonio, Texas, has been a regent since in Jacksonville, Florida, was born in as trustees in May was Peter O'Don- 1961. He was born in Syracuse, New Hartselle, Alabama, in 1909. He has a nell, Jr., '47, of Dallas, investment York, in 1908, is a graduate of Syra- B.A. from Vanderbilt University counsellor, one of the University's out- cuse University and Episcopal Theo- (1930), married Glenn Thompson, standing benefactors, after whom Lake logical Seminary, having also attended daughter of the man for whom Thomp- O'Donnell was named.

November 1966 *5 Couls

They Tried Hard in '66

Millsaps 40, Sewanee 28 The Yellow Jackets threatened once more in the third period, but Sewanee's defense stiffened and held At halftime of their fierce, fast-moving September the opponents four downs within the four-yard line. 24 football opener, the Sewanee Tigers led the Mill- saps Majors 28-20, but the Majors threw up a stouter Defense was indeed the outstanding feature of the defense in the second half, while keeping their offen- Sewanee team. Coach Shirley Majors, using many sive attack in gear, and beat the Tigers 40-28. freshmen in the game, got good performances from The offensive attack for both teams worked remark- several—Pete Enwall and Dell Weible at tackle, Todd at ably well in the first half. Sewanee scored first with Shelton end and Bubba Owens and Curtis Smith as Ernest Kirk going over from the one-yard line and, linebackers. Majors also commended Chip Langley for their after Milkaps had knotted the count at "]-"] shortly and David Oakley defensive play. thereafter, Charles Gignilliat put the Tigers ahead Sewanee 41, Kenyon 12 14-7 at the end of the first quarter on a similar one- yard plunge. Sewanee got into the victory column in the third of the season with a 41-12 victory the The other two Tiger scores came on a 32-yard pass game over Ken- College from Gignilliat to end Mike Knickelbine and on a yon Lords at Gambier, Ohio. one-yard run by Jim Beene late in the second period. defense played a key role in two of Se-

Alike Underwood kicked all four extra points. wanee's touchdowns. Chip Langley blocked a Kenyon The Tiger defense, while unable to contain the Ma- punt early in the game to give Sewanee the ball at the jors' Troy Lee Jenkins and Danny Neely, did recover Kenyon seven-yard line and then, in the fourth period, two Millsaps fumbles and both of those recoveries led lorn Pope recovered a Kenyon fumble at the two. to Sewanee touchdowns. Junior tailbacks Charles Gignilliat and Rusty Ad- cock accounted for five of the Tigers' six touchdowns. Randolph-Macon 7, Sewanee Gignilliat, the team's leading rusher in the game with

Sewanee lost its second game of the season the fol- 80 yards, ran for three touchdowns while Adcock lowing week by 7-0 to Randolph-Macon in a heavy scored one and passed to Marshall Boon for another rainstorm at Ashland, Virginia. on the last play of the game.

Randolph-Macon scored the game's only touchdown Adcock, who completed four of six passes for 66 with 2:57 remaining in the first period on a 27-yard yards and rushed for 46 yards, was praised for his of- drive set up by a fumbled snap from the Sewanee fensive play. In the final drive he moved the Tigers center on a fourth-down punting situation. 71 yards in 59 seconds for a touchdown. Ernest Kirk scored the other touchdown for the FOOTBALL PROGRAMS WANTED Tigers and Mike Underwood became the team's third leading scorer by converting on five of six extra-point Miss Isabel Howell, archivist of the Jessie Ball duPont Library, requests alumni and friends to attempts. search their attics and souvenir drawers for old Sewanee football programs, especially any before Austin 22, Sewanee 1940. They will have permanent safekeeping Austin College and a heavy fog spoiled Sewanee's and be available for ready consultation at any homecoming game. The Kangaroos beat the Tigers time. 22-0 with a running attack built around Mike Maloney

16 The Sewanee News LEFT—Team members from 1898 to 1926 were at hand when Bishop Frenk A. Juhan, '11, was presented his Na- tional Football Hall of Fame certificate Coulson by Fred Russell, sports editor of the Nashville Banner at half time of the Southwestern game. Three former coaches—Harvey H a r m a n, Bernie Moore, and Harry E. Clark—were in- troduced as well as the following play- ers: Herbert E. Smith, '03, Eric Cheape, '10, Gen. Alvan Gillem, '12 (reunion chairman), William T. Holt, '15, Hard- ing Woodall, 17, Eben Wortham, 18, J. C. Bennett, 18, Dr. R. L. Crudging- ton, 18, Niles Trammell, 18, Frank Byerley, "19, and J. M. Avent, 19. From the '20s were Dr. Virgil Payne, '20, Capers Satterlee, '21, Brown Burch, '21, Charles D. Conway (who came from Puerto Rico), '22, Amos Kent, '24, Greene Benton, '24, Joe Wallace, '24, George Barker, '26. Robert F. Evans, '26, Buck Haynes, '26, Orin Helvey, '27, Robert Nash, '27, A. L. Todd, '27, and Bill Cravens, '29. and an alert defensive secondary, which picked off five point in the Tigers' season was the October 29 game Tiger passes. when Sewanee's youngsters came from behind to up- Austin made good use of time, scoring one touch- set favored Southwestern 18-14, and thus retained pos- down just seconds before the half and its third in the session of the Edmund Orgill trophy for the sixth final seconds of the game. Two Kangaroo scoring straight year. threats ended inside the five when the Sewanee de- The Tigers lost the services of Charles Gignilliat in fense stiffened. the Southwestern victory, but Rusty Adcock and Jim Freshman Nathaniel ("Bubba") Owens was the of- Beene took over and directed the Tigers to victory. fensive leader for Sewanee with 42 yards, followed by Adcock ran for one touchdown and passed to Marshall Charles Gignilliat with 40. Marshall Boon caught four Boon for the deciding score. Beene scored the second passes for Sewanee as he upped his lead in that de- Tiger touchdown and was responsible for key runs in partment of Tiger statistics. Sewanee offensive drives.

Centre 27, Sewanee Final Scores: Centre College's Colonels wrecked Sewanee's third Washington and Lee 13, Sewanee 10 Field victory, beating the Tigers 27-0 bid for a Hardee Washington University 38, Sewanee 3 on October 15. Behind the offensive drive of halfback Tom Ear- Dr. Gaston Bruton, provost of the Univer- hardt, who rolled up 139 yards in 18 carries and scored sity and tennis coach for thirty-six of the forty years preceding his retirement as coach one touchdown on a dazzling 66-yard punt return, the in 1965, has been selected for charter mem- Colonels piled up as big a lead in statistics as they did bership in the Tennis Hall of Fame of the in points. They outgained Sewanee 405-172 in total Helms Athletic Foundation. offensive yards. He was one of four collegiate tennis Goal line defense was a bright spot for the Tigers. coaches selected for initial membership. He will receive a Hall of Fame award and will Thrice inside the 10 the Colonels were stopped. An- have his name developed on the Tennis Hall other time they were forced to try for a field goal of Fame trophy which will be located in when the Tiger defenders stopped them short. Helms Hall, Los Angeles. Dr. Bruton's 36-year record as tennis coach Sewanee 18, Southwestern 14 was 219 victories, 113 losses and 13 ties. What many hoped would become a major turning

November 1966 17 '34 Alexander White Wellford, SAE, has been featured in the July issue of The Wooden Barrel, a publication of the Associated Cooperage Industries. Glass Distinctions He is a director of the organization and is president of Wellford Brothers and Klepzig, Inc., Memphis. '35 '91 grand marshal at parades because of After 29 years with the Owen-Parks The William Thomas Manning his skill as a horseman. Me- Lumber Company, Charles B. Mc- morial Wing was dedicated on Ascen- Dowell, SN, has retired because of a sion Day, 1966, as part of Trinity Par- disability. His new address: 15951 ish, York, the Rt. Rev. New by Horace FREE ALL-EXPENSES- Braepark Street, Whittier, California. W. B. Donegan. Dr. Manning was rec- tor of Trinity Parish from 1908 to 1921, PAID TOUR OF EUROPE! '37 and of to bishop New York from 1921 The University will award a The Rev. R. Emmet Gribbin, Jr., DTD, 1946. Plans for the Manning Wing chaplain at the University of Alabama, free three-weeks tour of Europe were begun by the late Rev. John received the honorary L.H.D. degree Heuss, H'51, rector of Trinity until his with a Sewanee alumni-and- from the University of Alabama in death in March. friends group July 17 to August June. '99 7 to the alumnus who is instru- '39 Henry Seibels, G. KA, and the Se- mental in bringing the most new Cary Cravens, daughter of Mr. and wanee football team of 1899, of which money to Sewanee between now Mrs. Rutherford R. Cravens, was mar- he was captain, were the subject of a ried to Thomas Lee Doggett in August, April sports feature story in the Birming- and 1, 1967. in Houston, Texas. ham News in August. The writer noted New money is defined as con- The Rev. Francis C. Lightbourn, li- that Seibels would celebrate his nine- tributions from persons, organi- brarian of the University Club, Chica- tieth birthday on August 22. zations, parishes, foundations or go, was awarded the MA. degree in '26 library science from Rosary College. corporations who have not be- Nicholas Hamner Cobbs, SAE, was He is a former book editor for the the subject of a newspaper column fore given to the University of Living Church. appearing in the Birmingham News in the South. Insurance policies Lt. Col. Ephraim Ktrby-Smith, ATO, July. special officer El Toro "Hamner Cobbs might be likened naming the University as bene- service at the unto a modern-day Irvin S. Cobb, Marine Air Station, Santa Ana, Cali- ficiary will count at their face with a dash of Henry Watterson and fornia, has been nominated by the Uni- a touch of the late Grover C. Hall Sr. value, and designation in wills versity of the South for the Siler An- and a dab of the spirit of William will be included for the amount niversary All-America Award, given Allen White. is annually Sports Illustrated But he mostly Ham- named. Gifts in kind of stocks, by maga- ner Cobbs, the like of which you'll zine. A golf, track and football varsity bonds, books, art objects, etc., find no other place in the world ex- athlete, he joined the Marines in 1942 cept in the editor's office of the Greens- will be assigned their current and served in the Pacific and later in boro, Alabama, Watchman," the col- market value. the Korean war as an officer in intelli- umnist, Walling Keith, wrote. Gifts may be unrestricted or gence and helicopter commands. The '31 Silver Anniversary All America Award marked for any division of the Dr. Spires Whitaker, DTD, thoracic winners will be announced at the end University or any specified surgeon and medical director of Pine pur- of the year. Breeze Sanatorium, has been desig- pose. Just send the money or in- '43 nated "Excellate" by the American formation yourself or request the G. H. Cole, Jr., DTD, has been ap- personnel Academy of Tuberculosis Physicians. donor to mention your name. pointed assistant director of "Excellate" designates the highest pro- relations for Armco Steel Corporation ficiency attained by a doctor of medi- and will be responsible for the corn- cine in his chosen field of tuberculology and ancillary medical problems. Dr. Sky King's Ewing Mitchell, '33 Whitaker has been a member of the American Academy of Tuberculosis Physicians since 1931. He is Associated Alumni vice-president for capital gifts. The Rev. David W. Yates, ATO, rec- tor of Sewanee's Otey Memorial Par- ish since 1959, became rector of St. Timothy's Church, Columbia, South Carolina, on October 1. Members of the Sewanee parish established the David W. Yates Scholarship at St. Mary's School, Sagada, the Philippines, in grateful memory of his ministry at Sewanee. He was also awarded an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters by St. Augustine's College, Raleigh, North Carolina, in June. He is a former member of the board of trustees at St. Augustine's, a former member and sec- retary of the board of trustees of the University of the South. '33 Ewing Mitchell, PDT, who portrays Sheriff Mitch Hargrove on the TV series Ski/ King, lives at Rancho Santa Fe, California, where he raises thor- oughbred race horses. He is in increas- ing demand in the Southwest as a * *•*» T ^^

Henry G. Seibels, '99 W. Brown Patterson, 52 Rev. David Yates, '31

Robert E. Steiner, '44 Dr. L. Spires Whitaker, '31 W. Cothran Campbell, '50

pany's employee insurance, pensions Roland Carlos Gardner, Jr., DTD, search in the era of the English Civil and other employee benefits. publisher of the Hickman, Kentucky, War. '44 Courier, is the new mayor of Hick- '53 Clinton Herschel Montgomery, N, is man. The Rev. John C. Fletcher, PDT, will an attorney in the firm of Brown, Cecil James Rutland Moore, SAE, has a fill the newly created post of assistant und Montgomery in Houston. Address: son, James West Estes Moore III, born professor of church and society at the 10035 Briarwild Lane, Houston 77055. September 18. He is the grandson of Virginia Theological Seminary. He has Robert E. Steiner III, PDT, is the the late J. W. E. Moore, Jr., '09. The been studying at Union Seminary and new president of the Alabama State Moores also have a new address: 1155 working in a mission to the medical Bar Association. A member of the Sewanee Road, Nashville. profession in association with St. Montgomery law firm of Steiner, Crum '50 James' Church, New York City, since and Baker, he has been chairman of W. Cothran Campbell, SAE, a part- 1964. His translation of Dietrich Bon- Fall the grievance committee of the associ- ner and chairman of the board of hoeffer's Creation and was pub- ation since 1962. He is also a lecturer lished in 1959. Burton-Campbell, Inc., is chairman of at the Jones Law School, Montgomery, the graphic arts division of the Atlanta H. W. Whitman, Jr., ATO, assistant teaches review courses for the Ala- United Appeal drive. vice-president of the First National bama bar examinations and is a con- Bank of Atlanta, has been appointed '51 tributing editor to the Alabama Law- chairman of the real estate division of yer. He holds an LL.B. from Harvard The Rev. Courtney Lynn Carpenter, the Atlanta United Appeal drive. Law School. KA, was married to Olivia Munson The Rev. Roland J. Whitmire, Jr., '48 Bartlett at Grace Cathedral, San Fran- rector of the Church of the Redeemer, cisco, in June. The bride's father, dean Brannon Huddleston, SAE, assistant Shelby, North Carolina, for the past of the cathedral, celebrated the nup- trust officer of First American National twelve years, has been appointed chap- tial mass. The Rt. Rev. James A. Pike Bank, Nashville, has been named sen- lain for Episcopal students at Clemsor. officiated at the communion service. ior warden of St. Ann's Church. He University and has joined the staff of The Rev. Robert J. Snell, GST, has received a law degree in 1953 and is a the Clemson Holy Trinity Church. He Castles member of the Nashville and Tennes- a new address: Mountain is married to the former Mildred Apartment, 3fl0 Haywood, see Bar Associations. He has three South Felder of Asheville, and they have two Carolina 28786. children, Michael Brannon, Rebecca Waynesville, North He daughters, Anne, twelve, and Louise, the ministry on October 1. Lois, and Robert Jeffrey. Address: 4512 retired from nine. Carlton Drive, Nashville 37215. '52 '54 '49 Hartwell D. Hooper, BTP, has ac- The Rev. Ralph A. Banks, Jr., KS, of St. Philip's Church, Joseph D. Cushman, Jr., SN, is the cepted a position with Scripto as di- became curate author of A Goodly Heritage, a history rector of industrial relations and has Coral Gables, Florida, on September 1. is instructor of the Episcopal Church in Florida, just finished the task of moving his He a former chaplain and 1821-92. The book, published by the family to 1364 Sheridan Road, N.E., in at St. Andrew's School. University of Florida Press, uncovers Atlanta. The Rev. Edward G. Bierhaus, Jr., the story of how Florida Episcopalians W. Brown Patterson, Jr., BTP, be- PGD, was a winner in a nation-wide television play-writing contest in June. helped the church get its start in Cuba came the father of twin daughters Title of his play: Smite Friendly. in 1883. It deals with the story of the in January and received his Ph.D. Me Guthrie, Jr., church in Florida until the division of in history from Harvard in June. He The Rev. David Vance the diocese and the creation of the is an assistant professor of history at BTP, is serving as academic dean and missionary jurisdiction of Southern Davidson College and during the sum- instructor in political science and re- college in Florida in 1892. mer spent time in England doing re- ligion at a new community

November 1966 19 Classes

Lexington, North Carolina. He is also assisting at St. Mary's Church, High Point. Address: 725 Florham Drive, High Point 27260. '56 Paul Nilson Andress, DTD, was married to Barbara Louise Bailey on August 13 at St. Luke's Church, Bea- con, New York. He is associated with the Third City National Bank, Clear- water, Florida. They are living in Lar- go, Florida. The Rev. Richard Rodney Kirk, SAE, has been granted a two years' leave of absence from the diocese of Western North Carolina to accept a Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation scholarship at Union Theological Seminary. He will be studying for a master's degree in sa- i Coulson cred theology in the psychiatry and religion program at Union. He has EWING CARRUTHERS, '63, is working for the University's public relations been rector of Epiphany Parish, New- office while doing some writing of his own. ton, North Carolina, for seven years, director of youth work in the diocese and a member of the executive coun- vote full time to the operation. His the Georgia-Pacific Corporation's hard- cil. His new address: Union Theologi- new address: 3939 Glenwood Avenue, board and plywood sales department cal Seminary, 3041 Broadway, New Apartment 864, Raleigh, North Caro- in Portland, Oregon. York 10027. lina 27609. The Rev. William L. Sharkey is the Richard R. Spore, Jr., has been ap- Michael B. Veal, PGD, has a son, new priest-in-charge at the Church of pointed brokerage consultant at the Michael Boynton II, born May 25. The the Epiphany, Jacksonville. Memphis brokerage office of Connecti- Veals have a three-year-old daughter, '61 cut General Life Insurance Company. Kimberley Anne. He is senior engineer He is married to the former Melba with General Dynamics Corporation in Ernest M. Cheek, PGD, is part- Cullum, has two children and lives at Ft. Worth and his duties concern navi- owner of Laurel Trails Campground, 2956 North Trezevant, Memphis. gation systems for advanced aircraft just off highway 56 near Monteagle. The '57 and spacecraft. He and his wife, An- area has fifty prepared camp areas for tourists with mobile sleeping units. Dr. Norman S. Walsh, SN, has just gela, are planning a trip to Spain next Charles E. Kiblinger, DTD, received completed a general surgical residency summer to visit his brother, Capt. W. a B.D. from Virginia Theological Semi- at the Medical College Hospital, Anthony Veal, '60, who, with his nary in May. Charleston, South Carolina. For the family, is stationed in Madrid. Ad- Robert N. Rust III, PDT, graduated next two years he will be with the dress for Michael: 1704 Saxony Road, from Vanderbilt Law School and is United States Air Force in Bitburg, Ft. Worth 76116. now with Genesco in York. Ad- Germany. The Rev. J. Robert Wright, BTP, is New dress: Apartment H2, Building 2, '58 instructor in church history at Epis- copal Theological School, Cambridge, Wildwood Gardens, Port Washington, Anderson Carmichael, Jr., PDT, has Massachusetts, this year. Address: 99 Long Island, New York 11050. exhibited a selection of his photo- Brattle Street, Cambridge 02138. Robert J. Snell, Jr., is a doctoral graphic work at the fine arts gallery of candidate at the University of Wiscon- the University of the '59 South and has sin this fall. He has been an instructor Robert Porter Moore II was awarded had other exhibits at Vassar College, in French at the State University of degree from Temple Univer- the Parthenon Gallery, Nashville, and the BFA New York in Albany. the Hunter Gallery, Chattanooga. He sity in August, 1966. He is now em- is managing the family farm, the High- ployed in the Philadelphia school sys- '62 land Rim Charolais Cattle Farm in tem as an instructor in art. Ronald Bruce Caballero, DTD, has Roark's Cove near Sewanee. The Rev. Robert N. Robinson, KS, is a second son, Ronald Bruce, Jr., born The Rev. and Mrs. Craig W. Casey, now Anglican chaplain to Brandon Col- June 24. Address: 540 North West 110 DTD, have a son, Craig Alexander. lege and is assisting the dean of St. Street, Miami, Florida 33168. They live at 117 Oenoke Ridge Road, Matthew's Cathedral, Brandon, Mani- Thomas H. Greer, Jr., received a doc- New Canaan, Connecticut 06840. toba, Canada. tor of medicine degree from the Uni- Louis T. Parker, Jr., SN, has been The Rev. William P. Scheel, PGD, versity of Mississippi Medical School named director of the North Carolina has been appointed history master at recently. He is interning at Chatham computer orientation project by the Shattuck School, Faribault, Minnesota. County Memorial Hospital, Savannah, board of higher education of North He was previously assistant rector of Georgia. Carolina. He is the first person to de- St. D a v i d's Church, Minnetonka, W. Robert Harrison, DTD, has been Minnesota. named an instructor of English at Mur- JOEL NICHOLAS, '65, LCA (left '60 ray, Kentucky, State University. He foreground) was an ensign in flight Alvan Arnall, KA, is on active duty received a master of arts degree from prep at Saufley Field, Pensacola, in with the United States Marines in El the University of Florida, where he July. Toro, California. He recently returned was a graduate assistant. from a tour of duty in the Far East. The Rev. Julian McPhillips has Gary Wendell Davis was married to been named Peace Corps Eastern Re- Suzanne Dolores Runkle in Quinton, gional Director in India, and assumed New Jersey, on August 27. The couple his new position in Calcutta in late shared their wedding day with the sis- September. He is taking a leave of ab- ter of the bride, who was married in sence from his duties as rector of St. the same ceremony. Address for Mr. Luke's Church, Birmingham. and Mrs. Davis: 79 Edgemoor Road, Gordon P. Peyton, DTD, has been Clifton Park Manor, Wilmington, Dela- appointed assistant city attorney of ware. Alexandria, Virginia. He has been in William L. Nichols, PGD, has joined private practice in Alexandria since 1

SNELL, '6 McPHILLIPS. '62 NICHOLS, '60 SUMMERS, '63

the Good Shepherd, Wareham, Massa- chusetts. The Rev. R. Channinc Johnson, GST, chaplain of Hobart College for the past four years, has been named dean oi the college by Dr. Albert Holland, the new president of Hobart and William Smith Colleges. The Pennsylvania State Alumni Cor- poration of Alpha Tau Omega has elected the Rev. Derald W. Stump, SS, chapter advisor. Gerald H. Summers, PGD, has re- ceived his degree in law from the Uni- versity of Tennessee and has been ap- pointed assistant district attorney in Chattanooga. As a student at the Uni- RUST, '61 CUNDIFF, '63 HANNUM, '61 versity of Tennessee he was selected the most outstanding lawyer in the moot court program. Address: 1115 January. His office is located at 103 Harry Gerhart, BTP, is an ensign on Fernway Road, Chattanooga. South St. Asaph Street. the USS Mahan. Thomas Turner Wilheit, Jr., DTD, Fraser Snowden and Mrs. The Rev. John Alan Griswold, KS. was married to Mary Catherine Ches- Snowden have a second daughter, Ju- is the new curate of the Church of ton at All Saints' Chapel, Sewanee, on liet Fraser, born July 25 in New Or- August 27. She is the daughter of Se- leans. He is working toward a Ph.D. wanee forestry department chairman in philosophy at Tulane. 1967-1968 Charles Cheston. Tom is doing grad- The Rev. Charles Henry Swinehart, WHITE HOUSE uate work in plasma physics at Mas- Jr., was married to Carol Sue Young sachusetts Institute of Technology and at St. James the Less Church, Madison, FELLOWS PROGRAM she is doing graduate work in art at Tennessee, on April 3. They are living The White House has an- Boston University. Address: 90 Glen- at 505 Houghton Street, ville Avenue, Boston (Alston), Ontonagon, nounced the start of another na- Mas- Michigan. sachusetts 02104. tionwide search for outstanding The Rev. Homer S. Vanture is on 1st Lt. Ronald R. Zodin, PGD, is in active duty as a major in the chaplains' men and women, aged 23 to 35, Viet Nam serving as a pilot in the Air corps and has been at Fort Polk, Lou- to serve as White House Fellows. Force. isiana, since August 10. Open to college graduates from '64 J. Rufus Wallingford, BTP, was all fields, the White Fel- Franklin Gorham Burroughs, Jr., married to Anne Katharine Tapers in House KS, was married to Susan Hay in St. July. He is a law clerk for U. S. Dis- lows program was established by Mary's Church, Barnstable, Massachu- trict Judge Ben C. Connally and she is the President to give rising setts, in August. They will live in Cam- a staff attorney for the Houston Legal leaders one year of "first-hand, bridge, Massachusetts, where he is a Foundation. They live at 3601 Allen Parkway, Houston. high-level experience with the graduate student at Harvard Univer- sity and she is employed by the At- J. Fredrich Wunderlich, PDT, re- workings of the Federal govern- lantic. ceived the master of arts in teaching ment and to increase their sense John Philip Frontier, SAE, was mar- degree from the University of Chatta- of participation in national af- ried to Judith Williams on May 14 in nooga in August. He is a member of fairs." Stipends arc based on age Ridgewood, New Jersey. the faculty at McCallie School, Chat- f,r A. Jones, Jr., tanooga. and o up to #15,000 for the Waldo has received a diploma from the Schofield Barracks year. '63 Army Language School for completing Douglas Dillon, former Secre- John Aubrey Ball, Jr., was married 266 hours of study in the Vietnamese to Mary Elizabeth Owings on August tary of the Treasury, serves as language. His class of eight men made 20 in Laurens, South Carolina. Chairman of the Commission the highest record ever attained at the school. Since April Waldo has been at Allie Milling Blalock, SN, received and other members include Har- a Juris Doctor degree from the college Cu Chi, Viet Nam, the base camp ot ry Ransom, '28, Chancellor of of law of the University of South Ca- the 25th Infantry Division, serving as rolina in June. the University of Texas. company interpreter. Carl Copeland Cundiff, SN, has For further information and The Rev. Walter Glen Norcross is the new rector of Trinity Church, been named a foreign service officer of application forms write: Direc- the United States. He was sworn in at Winchester, Tennessee. tor. Commission on White House a ceremony held last summer in Wash- Richard Anderson Rhame was mar- ington and is being assigned to a po- Fellows, T h c White House, ried to Rita Scott Chandler in July in sition with an embassy or consulate in Washington, D. C. 20500. Dead- Columbia, South Carolina. The couple one of the 113 is living on Calvert Avenue in Clinton, countries with which line for mailing applications is the United States maintains diplomatic South Carolina. January 6, 1967. relations. He holds an M.A. from the Charles Pressley Roberts Tisdale, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. ATO, was married to Josephine Rainey

November 1966 21 . . . Classes

Evans on June 12. The couple is liv- ing in Princeton, New Jersey, where he is working on a doctorate in Eng- lish. '65 The Rev. W. Robert Abstein was married to Roberta Warren in St. John's Cathedral, Jacksonville, on Julv 1. Howell E. Begle, Jr., KS, has been offered a candidacy for an editorial position on the Michigan Law Re- view, the highest distinction offered a second -year student at the University of Michigan Law School. Allen Frederick Hainge, PGD, is teaching Shakespeare to students in the English department at St. John's Episcopal School, Houston, Texas. Ad- dress for Allen, wife, Diane, and daugh- ter, Kelly: 3614 Beliefontaine Street, Houston 77025. James Alfred Koger, PDT, was mar- ried to Mariel Montina Franklin at the Peachtree Road Lutheran Church, At- lanta, in June. He is a graduate stu- dent in English at Rice University. REV. C. '28 Douglas John Milne, PDT, was mar- THE JOHN TURNER, ried to Susan Lynn Slaughter at the First Methodist Church, Jacksonville, on June 18. Herndon Murray, KA, has a daugh- ter, Jennie McCall, born August 4 in Deaths New Orleans, where he is a junior medical stuent at Tulane University. Ernest Arnold Wehman, Jr., KA, was married to Sue Ellen Temple at Grace Robert S. Carnes, A'Ol, C'05, PDT, a at Oxford, and held a D.D. from Birm- Church, Charleston, on September 3. Tampa, Florida, realtor and an organ- ingham-Southern. Since 1939 he had They are living in Pensacola, where he izer of Ye Mystic Krewe of Gasparilla, been rector of the Church of the Ad- is an ensign in the United States Navy. died in July. Under his direction the vent, Birmingham. Few clergymen Krewe became one of Tampa's fore- have had greater impact on their cities '66 most civic-social organizations and its or on the crucial issues of their times. Joseph Morgan Harrison, ATO, was annual celebration was a nationally He worked with leaders of other faiths married to Panchita Heyward Gaud in known event. He entered the real es- toward racial solutions and in many St. Michael's Church, Charleston, on tate business in 1922 and remained in common interests and had close on- June 3. it until his health failed several months going ties with a number of denomi- Roby B. McClellan, Jr., SAE, was ago. He was president of the Tampa nations. Among the tributes paid him married to Glenna Elaine Wilcox at the Board of Realtors in 1948-49. Survi- was that of a Birmingham rabbi, Mil- First Presbyterian Church, Dutch Neck, vors include his wife, the former Laura ton Grafman, who said: "No member New Jersey, on August 6. Deatrick, a son and two daughters. of the local clergy had more friends Joseph Cheshire Webb, SN, was mar- or was better liked than John Turner. J. Edgeworth Beattie, '12, a sales ried to Joyce Charlene Gross in Floris- He radiated warmth and friendship. He engineer of Greenville, South Carolina, sant, Missouri, August 27. was a true shepherd to his flock. He died on August 8 after a two-weeks' '67 was, however, above all a real human illness. A communicant of Christ being with a profound love of his fel- Henry Francis Beaumont, LCA, was Church, he was a former vestryman. low man. Our community has suffered married to Margaret Elizabeth Baggen- He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Dorothy an irreparable loss." Survivors include stoss in Christ Church, Tracy City, on Hooper Beattie, two sisters, two nieces his widow, five daughters, and a bro- August 28. The Rev. William L. and two nephews. He loved Sewanee ther, Canon William S. Turner, '27, of Sharkey, T'60, and the Rev. J. Howard very much, his widow says, and in re- New Orleans. W. Rhys were the officiating clergy. cent years had her read the Sewanee Frederick Kratz III is helping boost News to him from cover to cover. The Rev. Heber Williamson Weller, the economy of poverty-stricken Nava- '28, a retired priest of the diocese of Robert H. Barnes, A'13, C'17, DTD, a jo Indians in Shonto, Arizona, as a Louisiana, died in Natchitoches, Lou- hardware merchant of Montevallo, member of V.I.S.T.A. (Volunteers In isiana, in June. He was ordained to Alabama, died on March 8. Service To America), an organization the priesthood in 1928 and served par- designed to implement the anti-poverty Roger S. Bingham, '20, KS, died April ishes in several dioceses. He had re- war. 13 in Birmingham. A retired attorney, tired from Trinity Church, Natchi- Alex Wilburn Pate, PDT, was mar- he had lived in Key West, Florida. He toches, in 1949. He is survived by his ried to Gayle King Richardson on June was a native of Talladega, Alabama, wife, Mary E. Foster Weller. 24. Address of the couple: 212 East and had been postmaster there. His law The Rev. Herbert Ward Jackson, South Street, Athens, Alabama. degree was from Harvard University. GST '61, rector of Trinity Church, Survivors include a sister, Mrs. E. T. '68 Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, died on Castleberry of Talladega. Brian B. King, a summer reporter August 6. He had served churches in for the Charleston, South Carolina, The Rev. John C. Turner, C'28, T'31, New York and Kentucky before going Evening Post, has been named winner SAE, trustee of the University during to Trinity in 1965. He had also been of a top prize in the second annual four terms and regent 1946-47, died un- a member of the faculty of the Epis- intern prize competition sponsored by expectedly in his sleep on August 30. copal Seminary in Kentucky. He is the Newspaper Fund of the Wall Besides Sewanee, he attended the Cita- survived by his wife and two chil- Street Journal. del, Furman University, Christ College dren.

22 The Sewanee News SEWANEE BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS

Class numerals indicate alumni. Andrew Lytle, A'20, The Hero pany, $2.95. The author recalls a Where no othher notation makes With the Private Parts, Louisiana Sewanee girlhood. point Sewanee interest clear, State University Press. Essays. $6.00. the of Joan Balfour Payne (Mrs. John it may be assumed that the book is B. Dicks, '48), Leprechaun of Ba- by or about a present or past jac- FICTION you Luce, Hastings, $2.95. Magnifi- ulty member. cent Milo, Hastings, $2.75. Charlie MAGAZINE Smith Hempstone, '50, A Tract from Yonder, Hastings, $3.25. Pan- of Time, Houghton Mifflin, $4.95. cur Ban, Hastings, $3.75. Elus. May The Sewanee Review, ed. Andrew Justus, A New Home for Billy, Lytle, A'20. Oldest literary-critical George Garrett, A'46, In the Hastings, $3.25. quarterly in America. $5.00 a year Briar Patch. Stories. University of first subscription, gifts in addition Texas Press, $3.75. $3.00 each. Allen Tate, The Fathers, Swallow, HISTORY AND CURRENT RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY $3.75. AFFAIRS George M. Alexander, '38, Hand- William Alexander Percy, '04, Richard Boiling, '37, House out book of Biblical Personalities, Sea- Lanterns on the Levee, Knopf, of Order, Dutton, $4.95. Paperback, bury, $5.75. $5.50. $1.45.

C. FitzSimons Allison, Anita Goodstein, Biogra- '49, Fear, Love and Wor- phy of a Business Man, ship, Seabury, $2.75. Paper- Cornell, $5.75. back $1.45. The Rise of Howard M. Hannah, '50, Moralism: The Gospel Confederate Action in from Hooker to Baxter, Franklin County, Tennes- Seabury, $9.00. see, University Press of Se- Robert R. Brown, '56, wanee, $3.00. bishop of Arkansas, Alive Andrew Lytle, A'20, Bed- Again, based on the para- ford Forrest and His Crit- ble of the prodigal son. ter Company. Obolensky, Morehouse-Barlow, $3.95. $5.95. John S. Marshall, '42, Joseph Parks, General Hooker and the Anglican Edmund Kirby-Smith, Lou- Tradition, University Press isiana State University, of Sewanee, $4.00 cloth- $7.50. Leonidas Polk, the bound, $2.50 paper. Fighting Bishop, LSU, Fleming James, Person- $7.50. alities of the Old Testa- J. Frank Dobie, Mody C. ment, Scribner's, $6.95. Boatwright, Harry H. Ran- som, '28, Mustangs and Bayard Hale Jones, Dy- Cow Horses, Southern namic Redemption, Reflec- Methodist Universitv Press, tions on the Book of Common Prayer, Seabury, $7.50. $3.25. With Edward L. Par- One of Joan Dicks' illustrations from her latest book, MISCELLANEOUS s o n s, American Prayer Pangur Ban. Book, Scribner's, $4.95. GIFT "NATURALS" POETRY AND CRITICISM BELLES LETTRES Elisha Green, Ely. Autobiography of a Sewanee childhood. Seabury, Eugene ,M. Kayden, translator Stratton Buck, Gustave Flaubert, $4.95. Poems by Boris Pasternak. Second Twayne, $3.95. Lily Baker, Charlotte Gailor, Rose edition, revised and enlarged, Anti- Duncan Lovell, and Sarah Hodgson James Agee, Letters of James och, $5.50. Eugene Onegin, by Alex- Torian, Purple Sewanee, hardback, Agee to Father Flye, '37, Braziller, ander S. Pushkin, Antioch, $5.50. $3.50, paper $2.50. $5.00. Father Flye was the writer's Little Tragedies, by Alexander S. Queenie Woods Washington, H'20. teacher at St. Andrew's School on Pushkin, Antioch, $3.50. Lermontov, ed. The Sewanee Cook Book, re- the Mountain and a lifelong cor- the Demon and Other Poems, Anti- vised and enlarged 1958 by Char- respondent. och, $4.50. lotte Gailor. Favorite recipes of a long roster of Sewanee ladies. Se- A. Scott Bates, ed., 1967 Peace A CHILDREN'S BOOK FOR wanee, $3.50. Proceeds to the All Calendar and Appointment Book. ADULTS Saints' Chapel Completion Fund. Poems of Peace. War Resisters T. C. Lockard and W. Porter League, $1.50. Gant Gaither, Jr., '28, Saily Seal, Ware, Lost Letters of Jenny Lind. George Garrett, A'46, The Sleep- the unexpurgated Love Life of Victor Gollancz, London. ing Gipsy. Poems, University of H.R.H. the Grand Duchess of Cod- These books, as well as a wide as- Texas Press, $2.50. Abraham's Sardinska. Cartoons. Obolensky. sortment of other Sewanee items, may Knife. Poems. University of North be ordered from the University Sup- Carolina Press, $3.50. CHILDREN'S BOOKS ply Store. Please add three per cent Allen Tate, Poems 1922-1947, Christine Govan, The Delectable sales tax in Tennessee plus twenty- Scribner, $4.50. Mountain, World Publishing Com- five cents for postage. / / / / / J n It

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sou*?.