University of Virginia Library

Architects Honored
By AIA Fellows

Two graduates of the School of
Architecture and a current faculty
member of the University are
among 64 members of The American
Institute of Architects who
have been elected to the AIA
College of Fellows.

The lifetime honor bestowed for
outstanding contributions to the
profession will be received by
Floyd E. Johnson, AIA, of Charlottesville's
Johnson, Craven &
Gibson Architects; William B.
O'Neal, AIA Chairman of the
Division of Architectural History at
the University; and J. Everette
Fauber, Jr., AIA, who heads his
own Lynchburg firm.

Formal investiture ceremonies
for the new Fellows will highlight
the 1970 AIA Annual Convention
to be held in Boston, June 21-25.
Fellowship is the highest honor the
Institute bestows on its members
other than the Gold Medal, which
may be presented to a single
architect from any part of the
world. Of the almost 24,000
members in the national professional
society, only 957 have been
advanced to Fellowship.