Board of Visitors minutes June 11, 1928 | ||
TENTATIVE BUDGET
Estimated Income | ||
Fees | $ 2,000.00 | |
Contributions | 15,000.49 | |
Estimated Expenditures | ||
10 Round Table Leaders | $ 3,500.00 | |
30 Speakers at Round Tables | 1,000.00 | |
Secretaries for Round Tables | 1,000.00 | |
10 Speakers at Forum | 750.00 | |
10 Speakers at General Sessions | 2,000.00 | |
Clerks and Office Help | 1,500.00 | |
Salary-Director | 800.00 | |
Printing | 2,500.00 | |
Supplies | 500.00 | |
Entertainment | 500.00 | |
Traveling | 500.00 | |
Communication | 200.00 | |
Advertising | 250.00 | |
Incidentals | 2,000.49 | |
$17,000.49 | $17,000.49 |
A resolution from the Professorial staff concerning an increase in the
salary schedule was presented, and on motion, the Committee consisting of Messrs.
Hull, Buchanan, and Carson was appointed to study the whole question of the
salary scale and report to the Rector and Visitors at as early a meeting as it
is practicable.
The New Buildings Committee submitted the following report:
The New Buildings Committee met on this date at the Colonnade
Club at 3 o'clock with Messrs. Rinehart, Scott, McIntire, Hull, and
Williams present. There were also present Mrs. Munford and Judge
Carson, and President Alderman.
The Architects presented preliminary plans for the proposed
dormitories and academic building, which were examined and discussed,
after which the whole group visited the proposed sites for the
respective buildings.
The Committee then held a meeting for further consideration of
the plans and locations, when the following action was taken:
RESOLVED, That the locations selected for the proposed
dormitories on the western slope of Monroe Hill and for
the academic building on the site of the Mallet House, be
and are hereby approved, subject to minor changes in
location.
RESOLVED, That the plans for the dormitories be approved
in general, and the architects are requested to submit
final plans after a further detailed study, to the Committee,
for approval and adoption.
RESOLVED, That the preliminary plans for the academic
building be approved in general, with the understanding
that a further study be made of the needs for offices and
lecture rooms, submitting final plans to the Committee for
approval and adoption.
Secretary.
On the foregoing report the following action was taken:
RESOLVED, That as soon as the final plan for the new
dormitories and academic building are received and approved by the
New Buildings Committee, they are hereby authorized to secure bids
for the erection of the same and if they be within the sum appropriated
for the respective buildings, they be empowered to let the
contracts therefor and proceed with their erection.
With respect to building sites heretofore allocated to fraternities
on which to erect chapter houses, which sites have now been taken up in the
proposed locations for the new dormitories, the following motion duly made and
seconded was adopted:
Whereas, This Board had allocated certain parcels of
land for erection of fraternity buildings, located on the
Towles and Barracks Roads on the northwest side of the Monroe
Hill, and
Whereas the locations for the proposed dormitories will
take up the sites for the fraternity houses, therefore be it
Resolved, That the said sites be withdrawn and that the
Buildings & Grounds Committee be requested to investigate
other suitable sites for fraternity houses and report to this
Board for action.
In the matter of creating the office of Business Manager of the University
and the filling of the position, the President presented the following
After mature reflection upon the proposal to create the
office of Business Manager of the University of Virginia, I have
formed the judgment that, at least for the immediate future, it is
the part of wisdom to vest the duties of this officer in the person
of the Assistant to the President.
There are many reasons in support of this judgment, which I
will give if called upon, but I think it particularly important in
view of the fact that time is essential in order to more clearly
and accurately define the duties of this proposed new officer.
The Assistant to the President would assume responsibility
under the President for the supervision of the Superintendent of
Buildings and Grounds, the Superintendent of the Hospital, the
Superintendent of the Cafeteria, and such other managerial duties
as the President or the Rector and Visitors may from time to time
delegate to him.
I beg to recommend for the consideration and the action of
the Rector and Visitors the following resolutions:
Resolved first, that J. L. Newcomb, Assistant to the
President be and is hereby directed to
assume on July 1, 1928, the managerial duties outlined
above.
Resolved second, that he he and is hereby directed to
employ a Superintendent of Buildings
and Grounds as a successor to Dr. W. A. Lambeth, at a
salary not in excess of $4,000 per annum.
Resolved third, that on account of these added duties
his salary as Assistant to the President
be increased from $1500 to $3000 per annum.
Resolved, fourth, that the Assistant to the President
he, and he is hereby directed, to make
a report to the President for transmittal to the Rector
and Visitors of his managerial duties after one year of
service. In the report he should make recommendations
concerning a more accurate definition of the duties of
a business manager.
Mr. Scott, Chairman of the Finance Committee, presented a report as of May 25, 1928, which was received and ordered read.
REPORT OF THE FINANCE COMMITTEE
TO THE BOARD OF VISITORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
As of May 25th, 1928
The Annual Report of the Bursar for the Session 1926-27 shows in detail the securities held on June 30, 1927. At that time there was uninvested cash with the depositories |
$ 9,792.00 |
We have since July 1, 1927 received from maturities and sale of $228,000 bonds, notes, etc. |
228,645.00 |
From the sale of Rossia Ins. Co. Stock held in the Austin Estate Fund |
2,586.00 |
From sale of lands in Kansas held in the Coffinbury Estate Fund | 8,700.00 |
Addition to the Gordon Library Fund | 2,175.00 |
Gift of the Clan McGregor Society | 1,200.00 |
And there has been added to the Sinking Fund | 4,347.00 |
Making a total of cash coming into our hands of | $ 257,445.00 |
During the year we have made the following investments: $216,600 Bonds, notes, etc. costing |
$ 211,489.00 |
2 shares Rossia Ins. Co. subscribed to @ 90 per share | 180.00 |
25 shares N.Y. N.H. & Hart. 6% Pfd. subscribed to @ 100 per share |
2,500.00 |
$ 214,169.00 | |
Leaving a cash balance with the depositories uninvested of | 43,276.00 |
The largest single maturing investment included above, was an item of
$103,600 School & College 6% Certificates which were called for payment by the
State of Virginia at par on January 1, 1928. $100,000 of these were held in the
Corcoran Fund. To replace this large investment at a time when high grade bonds
were selling at prices which returned lower yields than for many years past, of
course, worked a hardship upon the University. It was necessary to accept a
lower return in order to obtain anywhere nearly commensurate safety.
Investments sold and matured during the year netted us a profit of
$2,886.83 over their book value to us. Of this amount the largest item $1,656.45
was a profit on the sale of 12 shares of Stock of the Rossia Insurance Company.
Ten shares of thos stock was taken over by us from the estate of Arthur W. Austin
at the then market price and the remaining two shares we subscribed to under
rights issued to us as holders of the above ten shares.
We have received during the year in securities the following additional
donations and bequests:
Security | Fund | Depository |
7 shares Southern Ry. Co. Common Stock |
Andrew Fleming Prize in Biology |
Peoples Nat'l Bank |
Total endowment funds under our direction in the various funds at their
book value (i.e. cost to us or market price at the time they were given to the
University) are $2,108,000. These holding have a present market value of
$2,392,000. or $284,000 greater than their cost.
The funds are invested as follows:
Book Value | Market Value | |
In Bonds, Notes & Mortgages | $ 1,605,586 | $ 1,628,435 |
Stocks | 459,325 | 720,440 |
Cash | 43,276 | 43,276 |
$ 2,108,187 | $ 2,392,151 |
The current income is $117,412.50 which is a return of 5.6% on the cost
price or $4.90% on the market value of the endowment.
We have been most fortunate in recent years in receiving several large
bequests in the form of excellent investment stocks. While we would not have felt
justified in buying this class of security for the funds, it has seemed wise to
hold the stocks thus given us and we have been rewarded by material advances in
the value of many of them. The University has thus been able to participate in
the fruits of the country's industrial prosperity.
Finance Committee.
Mr. Robert B. Tunstall, Treasurer of the Alumni Board of Trustees of
the University of Virginia Endowment Fund, communicated to the Board the following
resolutions, adopted by his Board at a meeting held April 24, 1928, to be
considered by the Rector and Visitors. They were read and on motion duly made
and seconded were unanimously adopted.
RESOLUTION PROPOSED FOR THE BOARD OF VISITORS OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA AT ITS MEETING ON JUNE 11, 1928.
WHEREAS, the Alumni Board of Trustees of the University
of Virginia Endowment Fund held its annual meeting, as provided by
law, on the 24th day of April, 1928, being the day preceding that
fixed by this Board to determine its expenditures for the succeeding
year, and
WHEREAS, the said meeting was attended by three members
of the said Board, and had before it the resignations of two other
members, and
WHEREAS, under the section of the certificate of incorporation
of the Alumni Association of the University of Virginia
relating to the said Alumni Board of Trustees it is provided that
under certain circumstances votes may be given in writing, and under
the impression that said section was applicable, the three members of
the Board present proceeded to hold the meeting, and the minutes of
their action have been submitted to and approved by the two remaining
members of the Board, and have thus received the unanimous approval of
all the members of the Board at the time said meeting was held, other
than the two resigning, and
WHEREAS, the said section of the certificate of incorporation
further provides that votes by mail may not be cast at the
annual meeting, and that four affirmative votes are required to support
the action of the Alumni Board of Trustees; and
WHEREAS, the said section further provides that in the
event the Alumni Board of Trustees fails to hold its annual meeting on
the day preceding that fixed by the Board of Visitors to determine the
expenditures for the succeeding year, the net annual income of its fund
shall be expended as the Board of Visitors of the University may direct;
and
WHEREAS, it is the desire of the Board of Visitors that
the intention of the Alumni Board of Trustees, evidenced as aforesaid,
be carried out;
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, by the Board of Visitors of the
University of Virginia that it approves and hereby re-enacts and adopts
as its own resolutions, the resolutions taken and adopted by the three
members of the Alumni Board of Trustees at the meeting held by them on
April 24, 1928, which resolutions are in the words and figures following,
to-wit:
RESOLVED, That the net income from the Centennial
Endowment Fund, for the fiscal years 1928-29, over
and above expenses of administration, handling and accounting,
and any amounts which may be set aside for the
purpose of amortizing the premiums of any securities
purchased at a premium, be and the same is hereby appropriated
as follows:
1. To the Alumni Association of the University
of Virginia, to be paid as and when authorized by the
Treasurer, the sum of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000).
2. To the University of Virginia for its
general purposes, the sum of Twenty-two Thousand Dollars
($22,000), payable in equal quarterly installments.
3. To the University of Virginia to provide
for the special purposes designated by certain donors to
the Centennial Endowment Fund, Three Thousand Dollars
($3,000), or so much thereof as may be necessary.
4. The entire balance of the net income,
including any unexpended balances from the appropriations
herein before made, is hereby appropriated for such purposes
as may be determined upon by the President of the
University, and is to be paid out by the Virginia Trust
Company from time to time on the written instructions of
of the President, provided that at the next annual meeting
the President shall make a report to the Board of the
purposes or purposes so determined upon by him, and the
amounts expended therefor.
RESOLVED, that the net income from the Jefferson
Memorial Fund (the old Endowment) for the fiscal year 1928-29,
over and above expenses of administration, handling and accounting,
and any amounts which may be set aside for the purpose of amortizing
the premiums of any securities purchased at a premium, be and the
same is hereby appropriated as follows:
1. To the Virginia Quarterly Review, the sum of
One Thousand Dollars ($1,000), payable to the
Business Manager of the said Review, at his
request.2. To Miss Rosa T. Bilisoly, for services rendered
the Treasurer, the sum of One Hundred Dollars
($100), payable in cash.3. The entire balance of said net income to the
University of Virginia, payable in quarterly
installments, from which the University shall
make and provide for the following special
allocations of said income:(a) To the support of the Walter Reed School
of Pathology, The James Madison School of
Law, The James Monroe School of International
Law; The James Wilson School of
Political Science and Economy; The Edgar
Allen Poe School of English, the Andrew
Carnegie School of Engineering, the income
arising from $500,000 of the securities
held in said fund.(b) For the Curry Memorial School of Education,
The Barbour Page Lecture Fund, the Isaac Cary
Scholarship, the income from the securities
held in these funds respectively by the
First and Merchants National Bank, or so much
of said income as may be necessary.(c) For such other purposes as may be specially
designated by the donors, the income arising
from the gifts made by these donors, respectively.(d) For the augmentation of the salary of the
President of the University, the sum of
Five Thousand, Five Hundred Dollars ($5,500).
The President stated that for a number of years he had been interested in
having established here a plan for old age annuities for professors, instructors
and administrative officers, but not until this year had he been able to find the
necessary funds with which to carry out the plan. Funds now being in hand for the
purpose, he presented the following resolution, which, on motion, was unanimously
adopted:
A RESOLUTION PROVIDING FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT IN THE UNIVERSITY OF
VIRGINIA OF A PLAN FOR OLD AGE ANNUITIES FOR PROFESSORS, INSTRUCTORS
AND ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS WHO HAVE ENTERED THE SERVICE OF THE
UNIVERSITY SINCE NOVEMBER 17, 1915.
RESOLVED, That the following plan for the establishment of old
age annuities for the professors, instructors and administrative
officers of equivalent rank, devoting their entire time to the service
of the University of Virginia, who have entered its service since
November 17, 1915, be and is hereby adopted:
1. Any professor, instructor, or administrative officer of
equivalent rank in this University, devoting his entire
time to the service of the University in such position, may become
entitled to the benefits of the annuities hereby established, by
agreeing to contribute annually, in monthly installments five per
cent of his salary toward an old age annuity.
2. The University will contribute annually in monthly installments,
during the period of employment, an amount equal to
five per cent of the annual salary of each member making contributions
as provided in Section 1.
3. The deferred Annuity Policy, Teachers Retirement Plan, of
the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America,
is made the basis of the annuity plan of the University. The
contract provides, ordinarily, for a monthly deferred annuity to
begin at the age of sixty-five, the amount of the annuity being
determined, in accordance with the policy, by the amount and number
of the contributions paid. The contract provides also alternate
methods of settlement, with the effect that the member controls the
date at which the annuity may begin and may, at the time of retirement,
choose that form of annuity best adapted to his needs. The
various forms of annuity available to a member at retirement, either
upon the life of the member or upon the joint lives of himself and
wife, or with a possible return to his estate, are fully stated in
the policy.
4. Should the holder of such a contract die before payment
of the annuity has begun, an amount equal to all contributions
on his policy paid by himself and by the University, with
compound interest at three and one-half per cent, and any additional
interest that may be voted by the Trustees of the Association,
will be paid to his wife, or other designated beneficiary,
or to his estate, in one hundred and twenty equal monthly installments.
Should the annuitant so request, this amount may be paid
in a single payment. Should his wife or other beneficiary of the
immediate family so request, it will be paid in the form of an
annuity covering her life. A member leaving the service of the
University to go to a university, college, or other institution
devoted primarily to education or research may continue his annuity
accumulation upon such terms of joint contribution as he may arrange
with that college or university, or continue his contributions
independently, or allow the contributions already made to accumulate
without further contribution, or he may begin the receipt of his
annuity at once. Should he withdraw altogether from the work of
teaching or research, he will remain the owner of his policy; he
will be entitled to the full benefit purchased by the contributions
already made, and, if he so desires, he will have the privilege
himself to continue the accumulation by the payment of premiums at
the rate stated in the policy, but without reduction on account of
a preferred occupation. Or he may allow the accumulation to continue
without the payment of further premiums, or he may begin the receipt
of his annuity at once.
5. The amount contributed by each member shall be deducted
monthly from the salary of such member, and, together with
the monthly contribution of the University on his or her account, shall
be paid direct to the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association.
6. Any member desiring to make contributions in excess of five
per cent of his salary has opportunity to do so in accordance
with the terms of the deferred annuity contract. Such contributions in
excess of five per cent will not be duplicated by the University.
7. The University will assist those of its members who desire to
secure the convenient privileges of monthly payments of premiums
on individual annuity contracts or on life insurance contracts by arranging
for the automatic deduction of their premiums from salary and their payment
direct to the Association.
8. The University reserves the right to modify, amend, or repeal
this plan as experience may prove desirable. Any such changes,
however, shall not affect any benefits acquired prior to the adoption of
these changes, except upon specific agreement between the members concerned
and the University.
The President presented certain resolutions of the Virginia League of
Woman concerning the establishment at the University of a co-ordinate college for
women, and the construction of a dormitory for women. After some discussion of the
matter it was the sense of the Board that there was not sufficient time at this
meeting for an adequate discussion of the matters, whereupon, on motion, the question
was deferred to the next meeting of the Board.
The following resolution presented by Mr. Scott, Chairman of the Finance
Committee, was unanimously adopted:
RESOLVED, That the Rector be and is hereby authorized,
on behalf of the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia,
to sign certificate for stock subscription right of the American
Telephone and Telegraph Company for sixty-six and two-thirds shares,
either for sale or for subscription, as may be determined by the
Chairman of the Finance Committee.
The following resolution entering into a lease to the Peoples National
Bank for the rental of a room in the Entrance Building was adopted
RESOLVED, That the Rector be and is hereby authorized to
execute, on behalf of this Board, a lease with the Peoples National
Bank of Charlottesville, Va., for the rental of the entire room and
basement thereof instead of for a portion of the banking room only
as now occupied, in the Entrance Building. Said lease to be made
at a monthly rental of $125.00, to be dated when the room is ready
for occupancy, and to expire March 1, 1933, without the privilege
of any renewal.
Application of the Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity for a building site was
referred to the Buildings and Grounds Committee of the Board for action and report
back to the Board.
A special committee consisting of Messrs Williams, Rinehart and Scott
was appointed to confer with the Committee of the Faculty to consider the question
of establishing a broadcasting station at the University.
The following instructors, assistants, scholarship and fellowship holders
were appointed for the session 1928-29:
ARCHITECTURE: | |
Lawrence B. Anderson | Instructor |
ASTRONOMY: | |
Sten Askloef, Ph.D. | Instructor and Vanderbilt Fellow |
Dirk Reuijl | Instructor and Vanderbilt Fellow |
BIBLICAL HISTORY & LITERATURE: | |
W. F. Stinespring, B. A. | Assistant |
BIOLOGY: | |
Elton C. Cocke | Assistant |
Edmund Ruffin Jones | Assistant |
John M. Robeson, Jr. | Assistant |
William L. Threlkeld | Assistant |
Jeanette S. Carter (Mrs. M. E. Carter) | Assistant |
John Thomas Stewart | Assistant |
Henry Fairfield Butt | Assistant |
Richard T. Baker | Assistant |
William Clark Barrett, Jr. | Assistant |
Lewis W. McIlhany | Assistant |
Clayton B. Ethridge | Assistant |
Conrad K. Warren | Assistant |
CHEMISTRY: | |
James Montrose Graham, Jr. B. S. | Teaching Fellowship |
Robert Francis Selden, B. S. | Teaching Fellowship |
Carlisle Monroe Thacker, B. S. | Teaching Fellowship |
Whiting Faulkner Young, M. A. | Teaching Fellowship |
Richmond T. McG. Bell, B. S. | Graduate Assistantship |
George Lewis Cunningham, B. A. | Graduate Assistantship |
Leonard Chapman Drake, B. S. | Graduate Assistantship |
Lowrey Love, Jr., B. A. | Graduate Assistantship |
Edward Leland Stewart, B. A. | Graduate Assistantship |
Carey Meridith Swann, B. S. | Graduate Assistantship |
Robert Joseph Taylor, B. A. | Graduate Assistantship |
Thomas Aubrey White, B. S. | Graduate Assistantship |
Floyd Henry Wirsing, B. S. | Graduate Assistantship |
John Hulon Mote, M. S. | du Pont Fellowship |
COMMERCE & BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: | |
Archer S. Campbell | Instructor |
W. G. Muncy | Instructor |
A. J. Eastwood | Instructor |
F. L. Hoback | Assistant |
L. H. Carter | Assistant |
L. A. Motley, Jr. | Assistant |
ECONOMICS: | |
A. B. Biscoe | Teaching Fellowship |
Archer S. Campbell | Teaching Fellowship |
A. B. Biscoe | Instructor |
H. A. Teass | Instructor |
Ewing F. Simpson | Assistant |
ENGLISH: | |
Nathaniel P. Lawrence, M. A. | Instructor |
Majl Ewing, B. A. | Instructor |
Malcolm Lorimer McLeod, B. S. | Instructor |
George Wellington Smith, M. A. | Instructor |
Joseph Lee Vaughan, M. A. | Instructor |
Francis Claiborne Mason, M. A. | Instructor |
Robert Anderson | Assistant |
Edgar Duffield Brooke, B. A. | Assistant |
Allen B. Cook, U. S. N. A. | Assistant |
Martin S. Curtler, B. A. | Assistant |
Jack William Evans, B. S. | Assistant |
George P. Leckie, B. A. | Assistant |
Julien Meade | Assistant |
Dayton M. Kohler, B. A. | Assistant |
John Sherwood Widdicombe (Half time) | Assistant |
George Wellington Smith, M. A. | Rector and Visitors Fellowship |
Joseph Lee Vaughan, M. A. | Rector and Visitors Fellowship |
Francis Claiborne Mason, M. A. | John Y. Mason Fellowship |
H. F. Baugh, B. A. | College Fellowship |
Daytom M. Kohler, B. A. | College Fellowship |
Robert W. Severence, B. A. | College Fellowship |
GEOLOGY: | |
Charles R. L. Odor | Assistant |
Benjamin Gildersleeve | Assistant |
Raymond S. Edmundeon | Assistant |
HISTORY: | |
Charles Lunsford Ayres | Assistant |
Francis Murray Phillips, Jr. | W. Cabell Rives Fellow |
LATIN: | |
R. R. Thompson | Instructor |
Robert de Jarnette Ruffin | Instructor |
MUSIC: | |
Winston Wilkinson | Instructor |
PHILOSOPHY: | |
George G. Leckie | Instructor |
Alvin G. Wood | Instructor |
Dwight Todd | Assistant |
Chas. C. Rodeffer | Assistant |
W. O. Bristow | Assistant |
PUBLIC SPEAKING: | |
Howard Hayward Hackley | Assistant |
POLITICAL SCIENCE: | |
Fred Quarles, Jr. | Assistant |
A. A. Williams | Assistant |
PHYSICS: | |
L. B. Snoddy | Teaching Fellow |
J. C. Street | Teaching Fellow |
D. R. Stevens | Teaching Fellow |
ROMANIC LANGUAGES: | |
Richard Cecil Garlick, Jr. | Board of Visitors Fellow in French |
Henry Thompson Holladay | Board of Visitors Fellow in French |
Thompson Brooke Maury | Assistant in French |
Frederick Arthur Johns | Assistant in French |
Martin Stuart Curtler | Assistant in French |
Frederick Henry Allen | Assistant in French |
Robert Ramsey Black | Assistant in French |
John Overton Henderson | Assistant in French |
Thomas Atkinson McEachern, Jr. | Assistant in Spanish |
Nathan Bennett Kaminsky | Assistant in Spanish |
Maurice Laiken | Assistant in Spanish |
Hugh Boswell Featherston | Assistant in Spanish |
Magda Celsa Piccone Rinetti | Assistant in Italian |
BLANDY EXPERIMENTAL FARM: | |
L. M. Dickerson, B. A. | Research Fellowship |
S. R. Hall, B. A. | Research Fellowship |
Hiram M. Showalter, B. A. | Research Fellowship |
Walter S. Flory, Jr., B. A. | Research Fellowship |
T. W. Whitaker, B. S. | Research Fellowship |
ENGINEERING: | |
E. G. Simpson | Assistant |
O. S. Petrescu | Assistant |
D. G. MacDonald | Assistant |
R. L. Gildea | Assistant |
E. F. Joachim | Assistant |
G. V. Moore | Assistant |
C. M. Wilkinson | Assistant |
L. R. Quarles | Assistant |
W. G. Brown | Assistant |
A. H. Reed | Assistant |
R. E. Lee | Assistant |
A. C. Thompson | Assistant |
G. L. Quarles | Assistant |
PHYSICAL EDUCATION: | |
Robert N. Hoskine, B. S. | Instructor |
W. M. Hobson, B. S. | Instructor |
J. T. Elsroad | Instructor |
Henry Ayres | Assistant |
Lester Bowman | Assistant |
Plunkett Beirne | Assistant |
MEDICINE: | |
Anatomy: | |
J. P. Baker, Jr. | Assistant |
Tayloe Gwathmey, Jr. | Assistant |
Robert E. Payton | Assistant |
Pathology: | |
J. B. Graham | Instructor |
Clinical Diagnosis: | |
Oscar Swineford, Jr. | Instructor |
J. R. Myers | Assistant |
W. A. Brumfield, Jr. | Assistant |
MEDICINE: | |
Diseases Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat: | |
Ellis C. Moore | Assistant |
Histology & Embryology: | |
S. B. Grimes | Assistant |
SCHOLARSHIPS AND FELLOWSHIPS: | |
Charles W. F. Smith | Miller Scholar |
Edmund Ruffin Jones, Jr., B.S., B.A. | Elizabeth B. Barrett Fellowship (Biology) |
Thurman C. Scott, M. A. | Bennett Wood Green Fellowship (At Princeton University) |
George Budd Dillard, M. A. | Bennett Wood Green Fellowship (At Italian University) |
Edgar Duffield Brooke, B. A. | Henry Coalter Cabell Scholarship |
James G. McManaway, M. A. | Henry Coalter Cabell Scholarship |
Jed Hotchkiss Irvine | Whitehead Scholarship |
W. H. Roper | Whitehead Scholarship |
W. A. Barker | Whitehead Scholarship |
C. C. Cooley | Whitehead Scholarship |
A. Chester Stutsman | Virginia State Medical Scholarship |
Ben Steingold | Virginia State Medical Scholarship |
M. B. Payne | Sanitary Inspectorship |
C. S. Groseclose | Sanitary Inspectorship |
H. Fairfield Butt | Skinner Scholarship |
Walter William Clem | Skinner Scholarship |
B. B. Comer Lile | Skinner Scholarship |
Charles W. F. Smith | Skinner Scholarship |
Richard Reynolds Beasley | Skinner Scholarship |
Beverley Tucker White | Skinner Scholarship |
Thomas P. Simpson | Skinner Scholarship |
Thomas C. Andrews | DuPont Scholarship |
J. Alfred Austin | DuPont Scholarship |
Charles L. Ayres | DuPont Scholarship |
M. Early Barksdale | DuPont Scholarship |
H. G. Bass | DuPont Scholarship |
Edgar D. Brooke | DuPont Scholarship |
James DeF. Burch | DuPont Scholarship |
Francis Burks | DuPont Scholarship |
Thomas Burnett | DuPont Scholarship |
R. P. Butler | DuPont Scholarship |
J. L. Cabaniss | DuPont Scholarship |
W. D. Cabell | DuPont Scholarship |
R. H. Chilton, Jr. | DuPont Scholarship |
A. J. Coin | DuPont Scholarship |
Arthur L. Cooke | DuPont Scholarship |
R. N. Cooley | DuPont Scholarship |
M. U. Dixon | DuPont Scholarship |
N. B. Early, Jr. | DuPont Scholarship |
Thomas G. Faulkner | DuPont Scholarship |
H. J. Franklin | DuPont Scholarship |
A. C. Gilliam | DuPont Scholarship |
Isadore Gordon | DuPont Scholarship |
H. H. Hackley | DuPont Scholarship |
Victor Harris | DuPont Scholarship |
Albert A. Hays | DuPont Scholarship |
F. S. Hoback | DuPont Scholarship |
A. R. Hutchings | DuPont Scholarship |
E. V. Jones, Jr. | DuPont Scholarship |
Isham Keith | DuPont Scholarship |
D. S. Kelly | DuPont Scholarship |
A. U. Krebs | DuPont Scholarship |
L. Laforce | DuPont Scholarship |
Thomas C. Lawford | DuPont Scholarship |
Miss Vivian Lupton | DuPont Scholarship |
Carl H. McConnell | DuPont Scholarship |
W. O. McDaniel | DuPont Scholarship |
J. H. Massie | DuPont Scholarship |
W. A. Moomaw | DuPont Scholarship |
Miss Maud Orndorff | DuPont Scholarship |
W. H. Paine | DuPont Scholarship |
John C. Palmer | DuPont Scholarship |
Harold L. Price | DuPont Scholarship |
William O. Purdy | DuPont Scholarship |
T. Edgar Reeves | DuPont Scholarship |
Chas. G. Reid, Jr. | DuPont Scholarship |
Chas. W. Rieber | DuPont Scholarship |
T. Turner Rose | DuPont Scholarship |
George V. Scott, Jr. | DuPont Scholarship |
M. M. Scott | DuPont Scholarship |
John K. Sloan | DuPont Scholarship |
W. T. Sowder | DuPont Scholarship |
H. W. Swertfeger | DuPont Scholarship |
Horace A. Teass | DuPont Scholarship |
Vernard Thompson | DuPont Scholarship |
D. W. Thornton | DuPont Scholarship |
C. V. Turner | DuPont Scholarship |
Clarence W. Tyndall | DuPont Scholarship |
Thomas L. Wade | DuPont Scholarship |
Robert Watson | DuPont Scholarship |
R. Lomax Wells | DuPont Scholarship |
G. B. Wilkes, Jr. | DuPont Scholarship |
B. B. Young | DuPont Scholarship |
George P. Young | DuPont Scholarship |
William R. Robins | Richard Eppes Memorial Scholarship |
R. W. Plummer | Bartlett Roper Scholarship |
Miss Belle Dale | Southern Women's Educational Alliance Scholarship |
Eugene Ferris | Thompson Brown Scholarship |
Fred S. Palmer | Valentine Birely Scholarship |
SCHOLARSHIPS AND FELLOWSHIPS: Cont'd | |
E. Leroy Phillips | Ryan Scholarship First District |
Jake Jacobson | Ryan Scholarship Second District |
J. H. Scherer | Ryan Scholarship Third District |
R. B. Starke | Ryan Scholarship Fourth District |
H. D. McCormick | Ryan Scholarship Fifth District |
A. G. Wood | Ryan Scholarship Sixth District |
Thomas R. Leachman | Ryan Scholarship Seventh District |
W. A. Moncure | Ryan Scholarship Eighth District |
J. H. Greene | Ryan Scholarship Ninth District |
Chas. R. Smith | Ryan Scholarship Tenth District |
J. N. Bowden | Rinehart Scholarship |
John W. Lynch | McCormick Scholarship |
R. Faber Martin | Humphrey Scholarship |
L. G. Dawson | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
Wesley Fry | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
T. J. Humrickhouse | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
Robert A. G. Jones | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
L. A. Motley, Jr. | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
Charles L. Savage | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
L. St. C. Thorne | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
Claude C. Sutherland | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
James W. Beverage | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
W. L. Thomas, Jr. | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
H. R. Holt | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
Frederick P. Whitney | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
Miss E. M. Le Suer | Rector and Visitors and McIntire Scholarships |
On motion the meeting then adjourned.
Rector.
Secretary.
Board of Visitors minutes June 11, 1928 | ||