Board of Visitors minutes June 15, 1925 | ||
The Annual meeting of the Rector and Visitors was held
on this date at 9:30 a.m. with the Rector, C. Harding Walker,
Visitors Hall, Hart, Hull, McIntire, Rinehart, Scott and
Williams, and President Alderman Present.
The Minutes of the previous meeting were approved.
The Rector announced to the Board that it had come
to his attention the presidency of the University of Georgia
had been tendered to Dr. Alderman and that he had declined,
whereupon the following motion was unanimously adopted:
The Rector and Board of Visitors of the University
has learned that President Alderman has been
tendered the Chancellorship of the University of
Georgia and after consideration has declined in order
to continue his work as President of this University.
RESOLVED, first; That the Rector and Visitors
is conscious of the distinct recognition which has
so justly come to President Alderman,
RESOLVED, second; That the Rector and Visitors
appreciate in the highest degree the decision of
President Alderman to remain at the University.
His distinguished service to the University and through
it to the State and to the nation is fully recognized
by the Board.
The Rector and Board, therefore, records its
great satisfaction that President Alderman has declined
this distinct honor and will continue his
constructive service for this Institution.
The Rector presented the following letter from Miss
Emilie W. McVea with respect to her resignation as a member
of the Board.
Rector of the Board of Visitors,
University, Virginia.
I am today sending to Governor
Trinkle my formal resignation as a member of the
Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia.
express to you and the other members of the Board
my heartfelt appreciation of the delightful way in
which you welcomed me and made me so completely one
of yourselves. I value more than I can tell you
the association in so high a duty with men like those
on our Board. The meetings have been a pleasure and
a privilege.
I wish that my health had permitted
me to continue my work at Sweet Briar and on the
Board. I am going to be well again, but the process
is slow.
The University will always have my
deepest interest and I trust that in the future I
may find some practical way of evincing that interest.
With sincere regard for every
member of the Board, I am,
Following the reading of the foregoing communication
from the Rector appointed Messrs. McIntire, Williams, and
Hall a Special Committee to prepare and send to Miss McVea
a resolution setting forth the Board's appreciation of her
service to the University, the same to be spread upon the
minutes.
RESOLVED, That the Rector and Visitors having
learned with regret, of Dr. Emilie W. McVea's ill
health and resignation, deeply sensible of the loss
to the Board, and appreciating her many kindnesses
and courtesies, have appointed the undersigned committee
to express their sincere hope that she will speedily
recover her health.
The President announced the attendence and gifts, as
follows:
Total enrollment for the year 1946.
From the estate of Katherine B. Blackwood, of New York,
the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000), to the University
to be known as the "E. S. Blackwood Memorial Fund".
From Col. Jefferson Randolph Kean, of Washington,
D. C., to the Law Library of the University, Chancellor
George Wythe's own copy of Wythe's reports, the first
folio edition published in 1795.
From former students and other friends, a portrait
of Dean W. M. Thornton, of the Engineering School, painted
by Mr. Charles Hopkinson, a distinguished artist of Boston,
Mass.
Through the generous gift of Mr. William Andrews
Clark, Jr., alumnus, of Los Angeles, Calif., the University
has been made a sustaining member of the American Academy
in Rome. $250.00 annually is the gift. This provides
our art graduates opportunity in advanced work without
cost of tuition:- (use of libraries and studios and instruction
in fine arts. — music, painting, sculpture, architecture,
archaeology, and classical studies).
From the Seven Society the sum of Seventy-seven
dollars and seventy-seven cents, to be used for the
University as the President thinks best.
From Mr. Iredall Jenkins, of Norfolk, Va., about
one hundred Operas (Piano and Vocal scores) old and
valuable editions; seventy-five Oratorios and Cantatas;
several Light Operas; seventy volumes of miscellaneous works
for the piano and Song Collections, to the Department of
Music.
When the appointments were being made to sundry
scholarships, list of which will be found spread in these
minutes, there were certain worthy applicants who could not
receive appointments and, in order that further aid be
afforded the following gifts were announced by the respective
donors:
Mr. Rinehart announced it his intention to endow a
scholarship by a gift of $5,000 in either cash or bonds
to provide an annual income of $300; the said scholarship
to be known as the RINEHART SCHOLARSHIP, to be awarded
to a needy boy of Albemarle County or the City of Charlottesville.
Mr. McIntire stated that if the Board would establish
two additional Rector and Visitors Scholarships for the
session of 1925-26 with remission of University fee and
tuition in any department of the University, he would donate
holders. Such action was taken by the Board and will be
found spread in these minutes.
Mr. Scott announced that in view of the uncertainty
of the income for the Woodrow Wilson Scholarship to be
established by the Virginia Division of the Daughters of
the Confederacy with an annual income of $500, being
received during the session of 1925-26, he would guarantee
said sum for the session.
The President was authorized to express the thanks of
the Board to the foregoing donors.
The resignation of Prof. L. Tucker Jones was presented
and accepted in the following motion, adopted:
RESOLVED, That the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia accept with regret the resignation
of Mr. Leigh Tucker Jones, Associate Professor
of Physical Education. Mr. Jones has discharged his
duties in the Department of Physical Education with
great ability and devotion to duty.
The promotion of Asso. Prof. Albert W. Giles and Instructor
Charles Newton Hulvey, being recommended by the
President, were made in the following motions adopted:
RESOLVED, That Albert W. Giles be and is hereby
promoted from Associate Professor of Geology to
Professor of Geology, to take effect with the session
of 1925-26.
RESOLVED, That Charles Newton Hulvey be and is
hereby promoted from Instructor to Assistant Professor
of Commercial Law in the school of Commerce and Business
Administration, to become effective with the session of 1925-26.
Upon the recommendation of the President, the following
were elected to the teaching staff of the University, in the motions, adopted:
RESOLVED, By the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia, That Dr. Homer W. Smith be and
is hereby elected Acting Professor of physiology in the
University of Virginia for the academic year 1925-26,
at a salary of $4,500, incumbency to begin September 1,
1925.
RESOLVED, by the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia, That Mr. Keener Charman Frazier
of Political Science in the University of Virginia,
to take the place of Dr. Bruce Williams on leave for
one year, at a salary of $2,500, incumbency to begin
with the session of 1925-26.
RESOLVED, by the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia, That Dr. Joseph Russell
Branham be and is hereby elected Assistant Professor
of Chemistry in the University of Virginia, at a
salary of $2,000, incumbency to begin with the
session of 1925-26.
RESOLVED, By the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia, That Mr. Lawrence T.
Ludwig be and is hereby elected Assistant Professor
of Physical Education in the University of Virginia,
at a salary of $2,400, incumbency to begin with the
session of 1925-26.
The President stated in connection with filling the
position of Dean of the Department of Medicine that he
was in correspondence with Dr. Waller S. Leathers with a
view to offering him the chair of Professor of Public
Health and the Deanship of the Department, at a salary of
$5,000. The President was empowered by the Board to make
the appointment in case Dr. Leathers could be secured.
On motion, duly made and seconded, the following
Special Appropriations were made for the fiscal year
1925-26:
For work done in Physiology following the death of Dr. Theodore Hough, by Dr. J.A. Waddell and Dr. Alfred Chanutin |
$900.00 |
For survey of Medical Education (Payable in 5 annual installments) |
250.00 |
For fitting up no. 2 West Range for Women students | 200.00 |
For Research Fellowship in Sociology | 300.00 |
For increase in salary of Prof. A.W. Giles, from $2,750 to $3,000 |
750.00 |
For Assistant Prof. of Education | 1,500.00 |
For Assistant Professor of Geology | 2,200.00 |
For the Charlottesville Band in appreciation of its gratuitious services |
400.00 |
Towards the construction of a building at the Hospital for the Children's Clinic |
1,500.00 |
For teaching staff in Physical Education | 150.00 |
The Committee from the Medical Department appointed
by the President to formulate rules and regulations for
awarding the Dr. J. Shelton Horsley Memorial Prize in
Medicine presented its recommendations which, on motion,
duly made and seconded, were adopted as follows:
THE JOHN HORSLEY MEMORIAL PRIZE.
University of Virginia.
This prize was established in February, 1925, by
Dr. J. Shelton Horsley of Richmond, Virginia, a
distinguished alumnus, as a memorial to his father,
Mr. John Horsley of Nelson County, Virginia.
The Prize consists of two years' interest on
$10,000 in 5% bonds and will therefore be presumptively
$1,000. It is to be awarded every two years
by a committee of the Medical Faculty of the University
of Virginia for a thesis upon some subject in
general surgery. The term "general surgery" is used
in a broad way and includes the specialties commonly
associated with general surgery such as orthopedic
surgery, urology and gynecology but not the specialties
of the surgery of the eye, ear, nose and throat which
have developed along lines which differentiate them
markedly from general surgery.
The object of the prize is to stimulate an
interest in the scientific aspects of surgery. In
the past there has been some tendency to glorify
the mechanical technic of surgery, and perhaps some
neglect of its underlying scientific features. The
donor wishes particularly to stimulate an interest
in the underlying biologic principles with the hope
that surgeons may not become mere operators but be
imbued with a scientific spirit which will contribute
to the advancement of surgical knowledge.
With this view the essay should be on surgical
problem, the solution of which depends solely or in
large part upon research work, (preferably original
research) in some branch of pathology, bacteriology,
physiology, biochemistry or embryology.
All graduates of the Medical Department of the
University of Virginia of not more than fifteen
years standing are eligible for this prize and are
committee the prize may be awarded for work done by
a medical graduate of the University of Virginia
in collaboration with a non-alumnus of this institution
but in such case the award will be given to the Virginia
graduate alone.
The prize is to be awarded bi-ennially at the
final exercises of the University of Virginia, by a
committee consisting of the Dean of the Medical
School of the University of Virginia, the professor
of surgery, the professor of pathology, the professor
of physiology, the professor of biochemistry and the
professor of histology and embryology. The decision
will be made by a majority vote. In no instance shall
a thesis be awarded a prize unless it contains work
that is deemed worthy. If no essay is considered
worthy the prize shall not be awarded and the accumulated
interest will be added to the principal. After two
years theses will again be examined for an award but
it is not at present intended that the prize shall exceed
one thousand dollars.
The theses must be submitted to the committee
in typewritten form and work that has not been previously
published will be preferred. If the work
has been previously published it must be presented
in a new form. The committee will make suitable
arrangements for the publication of the theses.
All theses entered in this competition must be
in the hands of the committee on February 1st, of the
year in which the prize is to be awarded. They should
be addressed to the Dean of the Medical School of
the University of Virginia
The prize is to be awarded for the first time in
June 1927, therefore the theses should be presented
not later then February 1st, of that year.
Upon the recommendation of Dr. W. A. Lambeth, Director
of Physical Education the following was adopted:
RESOLVED, That beginning with the session of 192526
a fee of $1.00 be charged for lockers at the
Memorial Gymnasium, which fee shall not be returnable.
Applications for sites for fraternity houses by the
Omicron Chapter of Beta Theta Pi; the Beta Chapter of Sigma
Nu, and the Delta Sigma Phi were referred to the Committee
on Buildings and Grounds.
Petition of the Kappa Alpha Fraternity for an extension
of one year from June 15th, 1925 in which to raise the
required $25,000 to fulfill the requirement of the University
for site for its chapter house, was granted.
The report of the Bursar on his investigation of the
two tracts of land and the deed of trust belonging to the
Coffinberry Estate bequeathed to the University of Virginia,
having been presented and considered it is
RESOLVED, That the report be received and filed
and that upon the delivery of the said estate to the
University, the Bursar's recommendations contained
therein be adopted and that he be directed to communicate
with the J. T. Silver Real Estate Agency at
Minneapolis, Kansas, placing the tract of 160 acres
located near that town with the said agency for sale
at $60 per acre, and that until sale is made the said
agency be employed to look after the interest of the
University in leasing the land and collecting the
rentals at their charge of 10% on the cash received
from said rentals.
That the Colorado land be not sold until further
orders from the Board, and pending such time, G. A.
Austin, of Crook, Colo., be engaged at $25 per year
to look after leasing the land, collecting the rent,
etc.
That in the matter of the deed of trust secured
on land at Peabody, Kansas, the debtor, J. E. Tressler
be given until January 1, 1926 to effect sale of the
property, after which he shall have same made over to
the University of Virginia, if deemed advisable by
the Chairman of the Finance Committee and the Attorney
for the University.
The Committee appointed by the President to formulate
plans of co-operation between the University of Virginia
and the Charlottesville Public Schools with reference to
professional matters in the field of Education, submitted
its report which, on motion, duly made and seconded
was adopted in the following form:
The Committee is of the opinion that there should
be two types of co-operation between the University
of Virginia and the Charlottesville School Board, one
with reference to practice teaching and observation
for students in education and the other with reference
to co-operation between the city school authorities
and the professors of education at the University
concerning professional matters.
I. Practice Teaching and Observation.
1. An officer to be in charge of directed
teaching and observation from the Department of
Education of the University of Virginia in the
Charlottesville City Schools and to act as supervisor
School.
2. Said officer to be selected through the
joint action of the Board of Visitors of the University
of Virginia and the Charlottesville School Board,
the chosen officer to be elected by the Board
of Visitors as an Assistant Professor of Education
with a salary of $1,500 and to be elected by the
Charlottesville School Board as a Supervisor of Instruction
in the Charlottesville High School at a
salary of $1,000.00.
3. The duties of said officer to be a matter
of agreement between the University of Virginia
and the Charlottesville City School Board. The
committee would suggest that said officer be held
responsible for the following duties;
(a). To teach Education Bill (Directed Teaching)
to all candidates for baccalaureate degrees who expect
to apply for state certificates to teach in Virginia
secondary schools. This of course will involve
arranging schedules for observation and teaching
for these students.
(b). To co-operate with the instructors of the
various sections of Education B10 (Methods of teaching
High School Subjects). This will involve the arrangement
of schedules for observation in the secondary
schools in order that the students may observe instruction
in their major academic subject.
(c). To co-operate with the high school principal
in general supervision of high school work, plans for
this phase of the work to be agreed upon in conference
and approved by the City School Board.
II. Co-operation suggested for the Charlottesville Public Schools and the Schools of Educational Psychology, Secondary Education and School Administration.
1. Educational Psychology:
The Professor of Educational Psychology, (1)
upon request of the school authorities, to study and
report upon problems of the school system which present
psychological aspects, and (2) to examine children referred
to him by the school authorities, with a view
to diagnosing their abilities or disabilities.
(To carry out No. 2, an examining room should be
provided in one of the school buildings, and the work
would probably be facilitated if the Professor of
Educational Psychology were officially designated
Special Examiner of the Schools.)
The work of the Professor of Educational
Psychology in the schools to be attended and participated
in by advanced students of spychology, at his direction,
with a view to training such students in psychological
methods.
2. Secondary Education:
Permission for and plans of co-operation with school
authorities with reference to the program of studies
in the Charlottesville High School. Professional
students in Secondary Education should have the opportunity
of carrying on research studies in the city
schools that meet with the approval of the Superintendent
of Schools and the Professor of Secondary
Education.
3. School Administration:
It should be of advantage to the School of
Educational Administration to co-operate with the
public schools of Charlottesville in acquainting
the students in Education with the technical
aspects of the administration and management of the
city school system. Likewise, it should be of advantage
to the city school system to confer and
advise with the School of Educational Administration
concerning these matters. Professional students in
school administration should be afforded an opportunity
of carrying on research studies in the city schools
on such problems of administration and supervision as
the city superintendent from time to time wishes studied
4. Summer Quarter:
It is agreed that the foregoing general plan of
co-operation applies also to the Summer Quarter.
The Committee to which was referred the proposed changes
in the registrations concerning registration as a Virginia
student, submitted its recommendation in the following, which,
on motion, duly seconded, was adopted:
RESOLVED, That the regulations now carried in the
catalog with reference to registering as Virginia students
be amended to read as follows:
In order to be considered a Virginia student, it
is necessary that the applicant's parents be domiciled
in the State if he be under twenty-one years of age;
or if he has attained his majority, that he himself
be domiciled in said State; and that either his parents
or the applicant for admission shall have been bona
fide taxpayers in the State of Virginia for at least
two years prior to said application.
The President submitted statements for Dr. Lambeth and
Prof. Hudnut concerning reconstruction of Medical Building.
Following a general discussion of the matter, the following
motion, duly made and seconded, was adopted:
RESOLVED, That a Special Committee consisting of
Messrs. Rinehart, Newcomb and Lambeth be appointed
to investigate the condition of the old Medical Hall,
and if in their judgment the building can be made
safe at a cost not to exceed $3,000, they be and are
hereby empowered to have the necessary work done,
and report to the Board.
The question of providing fire escapes at Cabell
Hall was referred to the above special committee for report.
The suggestions by Dean Maphis of the Summer Quarter
for Convocation or Graduating Exercises at the close of the
Summer Quarter, as embodied in the following motion, duly
made and seconded, was adopted:
RESOLVED, That the following plan for Convocation
or Graduating Exercises at the close of Summer
Quarter is approved for the session of 1925-26:
1. That the President request authority from the Board
of Visitors to hold such Convocation for the conferring
of degrees completed in the Summer Quarter.2. That the President be empowered in case of his absence
from the University to authorize the Dean of the Summer
Quarter to confer the degrees.3. That each applicant for a degree in the Summer Quarter
be required to submit for approval to the proper
committee on Degrees in the Summer Quarter the program
of work leading to the degree sought, not later than
April first of the year in which the degree is to
be obtained. If the committee approves the program,
it should be submitted to the proper faculty for
recommendation to the general faculty and finally
approved by the general faculty at the meeting at90
which the other degrees are approved.4. The Convocation should be a dignified exercise to
which all of the members of the regular faculty
in residence at the time as well as all members
of the faculty of the Summer Quarter should be
expected to be present.The details should be worked out and agreed upon
by the Dean of the Summer Quarter, the Dean of the
University and the Dean of the Graduate Department
acting as a committee for this purpose.
The following communication received from Dr. W. E.
Brown, was considered and on motion, duly made and seconded,
the suggested division of the appropriation heretofore made
to the Blue Ridge Sanatorium was approved:
President, University of Virginia,
University, Virginia.
At the forty-ninth meeting of the
State Board of Health Committee for Blue Ridge Sanatorium,
held at Blue Ridge Sanatorium, Charlottesville,
Virginia, February 4, 1925; the following resolution
was adopted:
"Moved by Dr. Smith, duly seconded and carried,
that after February 1, 1925, the Blue Ridge Sanatorium
Committee decline the $3,000 annually appropriated
by the University of Virginia for the instruction of
students of the University in tuberculosis work with
the understanding that the University shall pay
Dr. William E. Brown, Medical Director of Blue Ridge
Sanatorium, $700 annually for his services as instructor,
and $300 annually for transportation expenses of students
to the Sanatorium; and, with the hope that the remaining
$2,000 of this fund be given by the University for the
development of the children's clinic by Professor
Lawrence T. Royster."
It is my understanding that it was the intent of
the Committee that the $300 per year for transportation
be made in monthly payments directly by check to Blue
Ridge Sanatorium and that the $700 set aside as compensation
for giving instruction to the medical students
be made payable to me in monthly payments.
Supt. & Medical Director.
On motion, duly made and seconded, the following was
adopted:
RESOLVED, That the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia accord to Miss Mary Eppes the
privilege of naming the incumbent of the scholarship
established by her and her two sisters, in 1921,
in memory of her father, and to be known as "THE
RICHARD EPPES MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP". It is understood
that the incumbent of this scholarship is to come from
Hopewell, Virginia.
The Rector and Visitors renew their expression
of appreciation to Miss Eppes for her contribution of
five thousand dollars to the Centennial Endowment
Fund.
Petition of Mr. Russell Bradford, Secretary of the
Collonnade Club, to be allowed to buy a lot in the University
Cemetery was granted.
The Rector read a letter which he had received from
Mrs. Josie W. Rhodes in which she again asserted her claim
to some further payment on account of her services as Manager
of the University Cafeteria. The letter was tabled and
ordered filed.
The Rector stated that a friend of Mrs. Theodore Hough
had approached him in the matter of further payments to her
on account of Prof. Theodore Hough's salary. The President
advised the Board that the salary of Prof. Hough had been
continued to his widow for four months from November 30,
1924, the date of Prof. Hough's death, which it was thought
would be fair and just. Following some discussion of the
matter the following motion, duly made and seconded, was
adopted:
RESOLVED, That it is the sense of the Board that
it will give due consideration to any request or petition
presented by Mrs. Hough through the President with
reference to further payments on account of her husband's
salary.
W. Allen Perkins, Attorney for the University, reported
that leases had been prepared with Mrs. Elizabeth Glinn
for the two houses for use as nurses Home, in accordance with
the resolution of the Board at the meeting April 19th, 1925,
them for two years.
Mr. Perkins called attention to the fact that the
statute laws effecting the University of Virginia, prepared
by Mr. Berkeley Minor and his son, Jas. F. Minor,
were now ready for printing, whereupon the following
motion, duly made and seconded, was adopted:
RESOLVED, That the "Statute Laws Effecting the
University of Virginia". prepared by Mr. Berkeley
Minor and his son, Jas. F. Minor, be printed as an
issue of the Extension Bulletin.
The President was requested to prepare a resolution
of appreciation of the services of the State Nurses Association
in raising a fund to endow a chair of Nursing at
the University of Virginia.
Upon motion duly made and seconded, and after discussion
it was
RESOLVED, That the Rector is hereby authorized
to execute and acknowledge, and the Secretary is hereby
authorized to attest for and in behalf of the Rector
and Visitors of the University of Virginia, a certain
waiver appended to a certain Deed of Gift dated
October 22, 1924 by and between H. C. Stuart and
Emory and Henry College, said waiver being in the
words and figures following, to-wit:
"The Rector and Visitors of the University
of Virginia, a Corporation, hereby release and waive
any and all rights, if any, that they have or may
have under and by virtue of a certain Deed of Gift
dated June 14, 1922, by and between H. C. Stuart of
Elk Garden, Virginia, and Emory & Henry College, a
Corporation, said Deed of Gift being of record in the
Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of Washington
County, Virginia, in Deed Book 103 page 159, and being
also of record in the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court
of Albemarle County, Virginia, in Deed Book 182
page 64, to which deed so of record reference is here
made."
Upon the recommendation of the Chairman of the Finance
Committee that a further loan be granted the Chi Phi Fraternity
to complete the financing of its chapter house located on
the grounds of the University, the following, being duly
seconded, was adopted:
RESOLVED, That an additional loan of $4,000
be made to the Alpha Home Association for the completion
of the financing of the erection of the
Chi Phi Chapter house; said loan to be made for a
term of ten years with the privilege of payment at
any interest date upon 30 days notice of their
intention to so pay the debt, and that the attorney
for the University be directed to draw a supplimental
lease covering the additional loan, and that
the Rector be and is hereby authorized to sign same
on behalf of this Board.
The Chairman of the Finance Committee stated to the
Board that in the B. W. Green Estate and the R. L. Parrish
Estate there were five lots of bank stock aggregating
602 shares with book value of $116,580, the present market
value of which is $135,415 with a profit to the said funds
of $18,835, and that in his judgment the said stock
should be disposes of and the proceeds reinvested in bonds,
whereupon it was
RESOLVED, That the Chairman of the Finance
Committee be and is hereby authorized to dispose of
the following bank stock belonging to the B. W.
Green Estate and the R. L. Parrish Estate, and that
the Rector be and is hereby authorized to transfer
same on behalf of the Rector and Visitors of the
University of Virginia:
300 shares | Citizens Bank of Norfolk, Va. |
175 shares | Norfolk National Bank, Norfolk, Va. |
28 shares | Trust Company of Norfolk, Norfolk, Va. |
74 shares | Covington National Bank, Covington, Va. |
25 shares | Peoples National Bank, Lynchburg, Va. |
The Attorney for the University was authorized to
prepare a new lease covering a site granted to Zeta
Psi Fraternity on Fugby Road made necessary by certain
changes in its plans for construction of the chapter house.
On motion, duly made and seconded, the following was
adopted:
RESOLVED, That there be established for the
session of 1925-26 two additional Rector and
Visitors scholarships, with remission of University
Fee and Tuition in any department of the University.
The following Instructors, Assistants, Scholars and
Fellows were appointed for the session 1925-26:
ASTRONOMY: | |
Piet van de Kamp | Instructor |
Alexander Vyssotsky | Instructor and Vanderbilt Fellow |
Michael Kavalenko | Vanderbilt Fellow. |
BIBLICAL HISTORY AND LITERATURE: | |
F. E. H. McLean | Assistant. |
BIOLOGY: | |
Edwin M. Betts | Assistant. |
James B. Looper | Assistant. |
Joseph R. Mundie | Assistant. |
Robert P. Carroll | Assistant. |
CHEMISTRY: | |
Carl Peter McNally, M.S. | Instructor |
Joseph Clifton Eigin | DuPont Fellow. |
James Marshall Cole | Fellow. |
Eugene Beverly Ferris, Jr. | Fellow. |
Paul Hamilton McAlpine | Fellow. |
Harold Bertrand Friedman | Fellow. |
Raymond Dean Cool | Fellow. |
Edwin Carlyle Markham | Fellow. |
Walter B. Johnston | Fellow. |
Thomas Aubrey White | Assistant. |
ECONOMICS AND COMMERCE: | |
H. W. Stouffer | Teaching Fellow and Instructor |
J. W. Mathews | Teaching Fellow and Instructor |
Charles Louis Knight | Phelps-Stokes Fellow. |
R. L. Hinds | Instructor in Economics |
O. A. Kirkman, Jr. | Instructor in Economics |
W. D. Bogue | Assistant in Economics |
G. M. Weems | Assistant in Economics |
E. I. Carruthers | Instructor in Commerce |
L. P. Nickell | Instructor in Commerce |
J. W. Mathews | Instructor in Commerce |
L. Altschul | Assistant in Commerce |
H. M. Eubank | Assistant in Commerce |
G. W. Hess | Assistant in Commerce |
B. M. Steele | Assistant in Commerce |
RURAL ECONOMICS AND RURAL SOCIOLOGY: | |
L. P. Nickell, M. A. | Instructor. |
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE: | |
Chester R. Wilson, B.A. | Instructor. |
Joel P. Snider, B.A. | Assistant. |
James N. McPherson | Assistant. |
Charles Lambert Davis, B.A. | Assistant and Board of Visitors Fellow. |
Howell Holmes Gwin, B.A. | Assistant and Cabell Scholar |
Clyde Arthur Lucky, B.A. | Assistant |
Launcelot Dent, B.A. | Assistant |
Lurton Blasingame, B.A. | Assistant and Board of Visitors Fellow |
GEOLOGY: | |
C.E. Bass | Assistant |
J. T. Murfee | Assistant |
M. Lewis II | Assistant |
E. W. Williams | Assistant |
E. T. Holland | Assistant |
J. W. Cowhig | Assistant |
GERMANIC LANGUAGES: | |
Sylvia Petrovia Faulkner | Assistant |
GREEK: | |
B. M. Peebles | Instructor |
G. W. Shirely | Instructor |
HISTORY: | |
C. T. Loutham | Assistant |
P. K. Hennessy | Rives Fellow |
LATIN: | |
Ralph Thompson | Instructor |
Bernard Peebles | Instructor |
LOGIC: | |
W. P. Sandridge, Jr. | Assistant. |
R. N. Crockett | Assistant. |
PHILOSOPHY: | |
L. Dent | Instructor. |
F. F. Swertfeger | Assistant. |
PHYSICS: | |
P. B. Carwile | Teaching Fellow. |
W. D. Street | Teaching Fellow. |
F. W. Moore | Assistant |
Mrs. L. K. C. Carwile | Assistant |
PUBLIC SPEAKING AND LAW: | |
W. P. Sandridge | Assistant |
POLITICAL SCIENCE: | |
John Minor Botts Lewis | Assistant |
John Ritchie III | Assistant |
Fred Hundley Quarles, Jr. | Assistant |
PSYCHOLOGY: | |
T. C. Scott | Instructor |
ROMANIC LANGUAGES: (French): | |
William Taber Jarvis | Board of Visitors Fellow. |
Joel Permania Snider | Assistant |
Lemuel Emil Altschul | Assistant |
Lauffer Truby Hays | Assistant |
Robert Catesby Taliaferro | Assistant |
Robert Panlet, Jr. (Spanish): |
Assistant |
Thomas Atkinson McEachern, Jr. | Board of Visitors Fellow. |
David Rice Groome | Instructor |
Oscar A. Kirkman, Jr. | Instructor |
William Ashley Knight | Assistant |
Thomas Atkinson McEachern | Assistant |
John Crispin Murphy | Assistant |
Henry Hamcock Lee Smith | Assistant |
SOCIOLOGY: | |
E. W. Gregory, Jr. | Instructor |
MEDICINE. | |
ANATOMY: | |
A. M. Smith | Instructor |
BACTERIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY: | |
Roy A. Gregory | Instructor |
CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS: | |
S. M. Davenport | Instructor |
T. P. Haney | Instructor |
PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOCHEMISTRY: | |
Dr. H. W. Angell | Instructor |
ENGINEERING: | |
D. W. Hesser | Assistant |
R. L. Hawkins | Assistant |
W. S. Walker | Assistant |
S. Arakelian | Assistant |
LAW: | |
Chas. N. Hulvey | Graduate Assistant |
William A. Carter | Assistant |
LeRoy Cohen | Assistant |
Henry Savage | Assistant |
Parounak Vartanian | Assistant |
J. Gray Williams | Assistant |
John Dabney Carr | Asst. Law Librarian. |
PHYSICAL EDUCATION: | |
Virginius Watkins | Instructor |
J. P. Baker, Jr. | Instructor |
Lionel Levy | Instructor |
F. T. B. Boyer | Assistant |
T. K. N. Sterling | Assistant |
E. S. Groseclose | Assistant |
C. H. Smith | Assistant |
H. C. Burnett | Assistant |
SKINNER SCHOLARSHIPS:
Maurice Dunbar Ashbury
John Marshall Goldsmith
Henry Heaton
Drayton Campbell Mayers
(Newly appointed)
Richard Reynolds Beasley
Dudley Archer Boogher
John Trimble Marshall
John Moore Redden
Beverly Tucker White.
RECTOR AND VISITORS MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIPS:
William R. Jordan (Four years beginning 1924-25.)
William L. Lacy (For 1924-25 only.)
Joel W. Baker (For three years beginning 1925-26.)
WHITEHEAD SCHOLARSHIPS:
Thelma F. Brumfield.
H. C. Turner.
THOMPSON BROWN SCHOLARSHIP:
J. Gray Williams.
ISAAC CARY SCHOLARSHIPS:
A. Pharo Gagge.
Paul C. Richards, Jr.
SAMUEL MILLER SCHOLARSHIP:
Samuel Butler Grimes.
RECTOR AND VISITORS SCHOLARSHIPS:
R. L. Marshall
J. A. Calhoun
W. L. Myers
JOHN Y. MASON FELLOWSHIP:
Peyton N. Rhodes.
JESSE PARKER WILLIAMS SCHOLARSHIP:
Waller D. Brown, Concord, N. C.
McCORMICK SCHOLARSHIP:
Wesley Fry.
WOODROW WILSON SCHOLARSHIP:
J. Summerfield Andrews, Roanoke, Va.
JAMES RUFUS HUMPHREY SCHOLARSHIP:
J. Robert Adams.
THOMAS FORTUNE RYAN SCHOLARSHIPS:
1st District | W. C. Brann |
2nd District | L. P. Guy |
3rd District | Oscar Swineford, Jr. |
4th District | J. B. Saunders |
5th District | R. D. Meade. |
6th District | George Leckie |
7th District | John Justice |
8th District | Julius E. West |
9th District | D. McL. Baker |
10th District | S. Beverage. |
RINEHART SCHOLARSHIP:
W. H. Aylor
LOUIS BENNETT SCHOLARSHIP:
Ambler H. Moss
DANIEL HARMON SCHOLARSHIP:
E. H. Copenhaver.
On motion the meeting then adjourned to Wednesday
evening, June 24th, 1925, when the resignations of Professors
Lefevre and Pott and Dr. Howze would be the special order of
business.
(Rector.)
(Secretary.)
Board of Visitors minutes June 15, 1925 | ||