Potpourri - Tulane University

POTPOURRI
An Assortment of Tulane's People and Places
researched, edited, and compiled by
BEATRICE M. FIELD
assisted by Mary S. Ingraham
August 1983
additional research, edits and compilation of material by
AMANDA R. RITTENHOUSE
August 2002
web publishing by
JENNY DAIGLE BENOIT
2
.. The general, the statesman, the man of affairs all pass away and are forgotten, but to have
builded oneself into the structure of an undying institution, to have aided the development of
these priceless agencies of civilization, is to have lived not in vain, but is to have lived in
perpetuity.
-- Elihu Root
3
CONTENTS*
Preface I
Preface II
Beatrice M. Field
I.
Introduction to the University
A. The Founding of the Medical College of Louisiana
B. Biographical Sketches of the Founders of the Medical College of Louisiana
C. The Establishment of the Tulane University of Louisiana
D. Paul Tulane’s Burial Site
E. Histories of Schools and Colleges
F. Significant Dates in Tulane's History
II.
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12
14
15
16
29
Administration
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
J.
K.
L.
M.
N.
O.
Administrators of the University of Louisiana
Presidents and Chairs of the Board of Tulane
Board of Tulane
Emeritus or Advisory Members of the Board of Tulane
Presidents of the University of Louisiana and Tulane University
Biographical Sketches of Presidents of Tulane University
Vice Presidents
Provosts
Secretary-Treasurers of the Board of Tulane
Deans of:
1. Admissions
2. Architecture
3. Business
4. Dentistry
5. Engineering
6. Graduate School
7. Law
8. Liberal Arts and Sciences
9. Medicine
10. Newcomb
11. Pharmacy
12. Public Health and Tropical Medicine
13. Social Work
14. Students
15. Tulane College
16. University College
Chancellors of the Medical Center
Presidents of Newcomb College
Board of Governors of the Tulane Medical Center
Board of Visitors
President's Council
32
33
34
36
37
38
43
48
49
50
50
50
50
51
51
51
52
52
52
53
54
54
54
54
55
55
56
57
58
60
62
4
III. Honorary Degrees
A.
Recipients of Honorary Degrees Awarded by Tulane
67
IV. Student Life
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
V.
Student Body Presidents
Rhodes Scholars from Tulane
Tulane Law Review Editors
Jambalaya Editors
Homecoming Queens
Homecoming Kings
77
79
80
81
83
84
Alumni
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
Presidents of the Tulane Alumni Association
Directors of Alumni Activities and Alumni Affairs
Total Numbers of Degrees Awarded by Individual Schools and Colleges
First Graduates of Individual Schools and Colleges
Tulane Alumni and Fundraising
Alumni Fund Figures
Homecoming Chairs and Games
College Club Presidents
1. Engineering
2. Medicine
3. Newcomb
4. University College
I. Honored Alumni:
1. "University Distinguished Alumnus" Recipients
2. "Outstanding Alumni" of Schools and Colleges
3. Pulitzer Prize Recipients
4. The Times-Picayune Loving Cup Recipients
5. Kings and Queens of Carnival
6. Governors of Louisiana
86
88
89
90
92
93
95
98
98
98
99
100
101
101
101
105
105
105
106
VI. Athletics
A. Directors of Athletics
B. Coaches of:
1. Football
2. Basketball
3. Baseball
4. Track
5. Tennis
6. Golf
7. Soccer
8. Volleyball
9. Swimming
109
110
110
110
111
111
111
111
112
112
112
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C. Outstanding Athletes
1. All Americans
2. National Football Foundation Hall of Fame
3. Sports Illustrated Silver Anniversary Award
4. Louisiana Athletic Hall of Fame
5. T Club
6. Professional Athletes
D. Tulane's Participation in Bowl Games
113
113
113
113
114
114
117
125
VII. Buildings**
A. Buildings Occupied by Academic Departments
B. Medical Buildings
C. Off-Campus Research Centers
D. Newcomb Buildings
E. Student Life Buildings
F. Athletic Buildings
G. Other University Buildings
H. New Construction Since 1983
Index
128
132
134
135
138
141
142
144
146
*An asterisk next to a name denotes alumnus or alumna.
**Additional information for this section came from Tulane’s online campus map and the “Uptown
Campus Design Strategy,” August, 1999 prepared by Tulane’s Office of Campus Planning. Updated
information about medical buildings came from Earl Bihlmeyer, senior associate vice president,
Facilities Services.
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PREFACE I
The purpose of Potpourri, An Assortment of Tulane's People and Places is to bring together into one
publication information which has been scattered in a variety of places. Many files, periodicals, and
books, beginning with the year 1834 and continuing through the present time, have been researched.
Although a great deal of the information contained herein was extracted from our own files, many
missing ingredients of Potpourri were provided by others.
Special thanks should be given to Mrs. Doris Antin, University Archivist, who has always been
available with enthusiastic support. Her vast knowledge of University history and records has been of
invaluable assistance. We are also grateful to Miss Kathryn Davis, Assistant to the President Emeritus,
M. L. LaGarde, Sports Information Director, George Sweeney, author of The Green Wave, Ken
Symonette and members of the Physical Plant staff, Miss Mary Gibbons of ADIS's Biographical
Records, Mrs. Kathy Cain of University Relations, staff members of other University departments, and
former Tulane athletes who have supplied information based upon their own recollections.
Very special recognition is given to Andrea Hill Brigalia, who has been involved in this endeavor since
its onset and has rendered outstanding assistance in researching and organizing materials.
Additional thanks are due Leigh Ann Wall, Melissa Long, Brenda Lee, and Bridget Meyer.
We trust that this booklet may be of use to the staffs of the University and to many others who share our
affection for and interest in Tulane.
- Beatrice M. Field, August 1983
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PREFACE II
Until I began this project, I knew very little about Beatrice McMillan Field. I knew she had been a director of
Tulane Alumni Affairs and that her portrait hangs in the Alumni House. But I had no idea of the depth of her
commitment to the university. Bea Field graduated from Newcomb College in 1928 and taught Latin for 10
years in her hometown of Lake Charles. After receiving a graduate degree from Tulane in 1942, Bea assumed
the position of director of Alumni Affairs, where she stayed until 1977.
During her retirement and after a great deal of time, commitment and energy, Bea completed Potpourri: An
Assortment of Tulane’s People and Places in August 1983. By painstakingly compiling information dating back
to 1834 from the university’s various schools and colleges, departments, archives and other sources, Bea created
an invaluable resource for those who want to learn more about the university and to reference its history and the
people who have contributed so much to it.
There are no university rooms or buildings named after Bea, but her mark can be found in the hearts of so many
colleagues and alumni who were fortunate enough to know her. I never had the opportunity to meet Bea before
her death in 1986, but Potpourri speaks loudly of her dedication to this university and the preservation of its
history. Even today, Bea is still working toward that goal. She left money in her will for Potpourri to be
updated. And through the direction of another of Tulane’s treasures, Charlotte Travieso, current director of
Alumni Affairs, I was brought onboard to work on the project. Even in death, Bea is still touching the lives of
those in the Tulane community. I hope you will take the time to read the article about her that follows. Bea
truly was a remarkable woman.
In the process of updating Potpourri, I have contacted numerous people within the university to obtain
information. I was overwhelmed by how helpful and excited everyone was about the project. But extra special
thanks must go to Charlotte Travieso, director, Alumni Affairs; Julie Nice, assistant vice president, Institutional
Advancement; Winnie Burmaster, recording secretary, Tulane Board; Ann Case, assistant archivist, University
Archives; Nicole Labadot, senior assistant, Alumni Affairs and the late Leon Trice, whose notes from his work
of updating Potpourri in the early 1990s were invaluable.
I would also like to thank the following people for their assistance and direction: Jeff Bush, director, Annual
Fund; Patsy Copeland, chief of Information Services, TUHSC; Rhonda Earles, director, External Relations;
Cynthia Hayes, director, TUHSC Alumni Relations/Annual Giving; Barbara Hogue, program coordinator,
School of Engineering; Eva Martinez, manager, Institutional Advancement; Nell Nolan, social columnist, The
Times-Picayune; Cathy Ryan, alumni relations coordinator, School of Architecture; Mike Strecker, assistant
director, Tulane University Public Relations; Diane Sussman, assistant registrar; Peggy Williams, administrative
secretary, TUHSC Public Relations and my friends at the Office of Alumni Affairs.
Finally, I would like to thank my husband, Wiley Rittenhouse, for being my personal and technical support. He
was crucial in the process of converting Bea’s work from hard copy to an electronic version, which makes it
simpler for future updates and readily accessible to so many more people through the Alumni Affairs web site.
He helped me over every technical hurdle that arose in wielding such a huge document. I’m very thankful for
his loving support.
May this book be a valuable resource for administrators, faculty, staff, students and alumni, and serve as a
hallmark of Bea Field who poured her heart, mind and soul into Tulane University.
- Amanda R. Rittenhouse, August 2002
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I. INTRODUCTION TO THE UNIVERSITY
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THE FOUNDING OF THE MEDICAL COLLEGE OF LOUISIANA
It may be said that it all began on an island off the South Carolina coast-- an island called Folly.
For it was on this small, remote island that the seeds were planted for the founding of a medical
college in New Orleans, which would be the ancestor of Tulane University.
In October 1832, Dr. Warren Stone, a young physician who received his medical degree from the
Medical School of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, was one of 108 passengers aboard an ill-fated brig,
the Amelia, which set sail from New York to New Orleans carrying valuable cargo. On the
fourth day out, a terrific storm occurred; the passengers were put below and the hatches were
battened down. When the storm lifted, it was discovered that twenty-five passengers were in
advanced stages of cholera. On October 30, the Amelia attempted unsuccessfully to make the
Charleston harbor. Leaking badly, she was beached on Folly Island and had to be burned. Her
passengers were made as comfortable as possible.
Charleston Port authorities quarantined the island and put a young physician, Thomas Hunt, in
charge of the situation with Dr. Stone as first assistant. The experiences shared by the two young
doctors brought them into a friendship, which lasted throughout their lives. They were on Folly
Island for three weeks, during which time Dr. Stone ignited the imagination of Hunt with the
great medical possibilities in epidemic-ridden Louisiana. It is said that these two kindred spirits
discussed plans for a medical college in New Orleans.
After several weeks the quarantine was lifted, and Warren Stone departed for New Orleans while
Hunt returned to his home in Charleston, accompanied by an attack of cholera. Hunt resolved to
join Stone in New Orleans as soon as possible.
When Dr. Stone arrived in New Orleans, he found the city plagued with epidemics of yellow
fever and cholera. He immediately accepted a position at Charity Hospital, which had just been
completed. When Hunt later reached New Orleans, he also joined the staff of Charity Hospital,
all the while cherishing his dream of a medical college in the city. In addition to resuming his
friendship with Stone, he also became associated with other young physicians: John Hoffman
Harrison, Thomas Ingalls, Charles A. Luzenberg, James Monroe Mackie, Augustus Cenas, and
Edwin Bathurst Smith. Men of vision, energy, and determination, all were graduates of reputable
medical schools. Realizing the need for educated physicians in the South, they visualized the
growth of a medical school in New Orleans built around the clinics of Charity Hospital.
When Dr. Hunt was ready to begin the project of which he had long dreamed, he turned to Drs.
Stone, Luzenberg, and Harrison. "These four pooled their resources, making a sort of informal,
unchartered stock company, chose the other doctors to help, [and] divided up the fields of
instruction...”1 A Prospectus was published in The Bee (September 1834), written by Thomas
Hunt and bearing the signatures of Drs. Hunt, Luzenberg, Harrison, Mackie, Cenas, Ingalls, and
Smith. The daring, optimistic Prospectus stated that the young doctors hoped to "...advance the
cause of science, and to disseminate rational principles so as to remove or alleviate human
suffering..."2 Although the Prospectus was received with catcalls rather than enthusiasm, the
young physicians' determination remained undaunted.
1
2
Chapter II, p. 8, Lang-Swearingen history of Tulane (unpublished)
Chapter II, p. 2, Lang-Swearingen history of Tulane (unpublished)
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At the opening of the College on January 5, 1835, Thomas Hunt, who had been named Dean
of the College, addressed the audience of students and townspeople, personifying Medicine as
"...marching with the banner of reason in her hand"3 and stating his hopes that Medicine "...will
go on achieving victories, until her empire shall be coextensive with the physical world.”4 With
these statements the Medical College of Louisiana was born.
3
Opening remarks of Thomas Hunt's first lecture to students and townspeople at the
Congregational Church on St. Charles Street (January 5, 1835); see Tulanian, Vol. 33,
September 1959
4
Tulanian, Vol. 33, September 1959
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF THE FOUNDERS OF
THE MEDICAL COLLEGE OF LOUISIANA
Thomas Hunt:
To Thomas Hunt must go the credit for conceiving the idea of creating a Medical College,
organizing a group of doctors into a faculty, and writing the Prospectus.
Born of a prominent family in Charleston in 1808, he was first educated in the Law, but at the
age of twenty-one he received a medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania. He then
studied in Paris for a year and a half. In the new Medical College of Louisiana, he served as first
Dean and as Professor of Physiology and Pathological Anatomy. He also served as President of
the University of Louisiana from 1865 to 1867, during the trying years that followed the Civil
War.
In 1860, his brother, Theodore Hunt, served as President of the Board of Administrators of the
University of Louisiana. Another brother, Randell Hunt, was Dean of the Law Department from
1850 to 1862 and served as President of the University of Louisiana from 1867-1884. Thomas
Hunt's son, Carleton, also served as Dean of the Law Department from 1872 to 1883.
John Hoffman Harrison:
Born in Washington, D. C. in 1808, Harrison was the son of a United States Naval surgeon.
Harrison received his medical training at the University of Maryland, graduating in 1831. From
1833 to 1836, Dr. Harrison was residing surgeon at Charity Hospital in New Orleans, having
replaced Thomas Hunt when Hunt resigned. Harrison was the originator of the New Orleans
Medical and Surgical Journal and editor from 1843 to 1849. At the Medical College he served
as Professor of Physiology, Anatomy, Materia Medica, and Pathology. He was Dean of the
College from 1842 to 1844 and died in 1849.
Charles Aloysius Luzenberg:
Dr. Luzenberg was born in Verona, Italy while his father, an Austrian Army officer, was
stationed there. He went to Weissemberg College in Alsace. He and his father moved to
Philadelphia in 1819. He received his medical degree from Jefferson College in 1829 in that city,
after which he departed for New Orleans and was immediately attached to the staff of Charity
Hospital. He, along with Hunt and Harrison, was twenty-six years old when the College was
founded. Many of Dr. Luzenberg's descendents have graduated from Tulane and Newcomb,
including the family of Mrs. Eleanor Luzenberg Pratt of New Orleans.
James Monroe Mackie:
A pioneer in medicine, James Monroe Mackie was born in Charleston, South Carolina in 1808
and graduated from the Medical College of South Carolina in 1830. At the new Medical College
of Louisiana, he was Professor of Theory and Practice of Medicine, Materia Medica, and
Therapeutic Medicine. He resigned in August 1838.
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Augustus Cenas:
Dr. Cenas was born in New Orleans of Spanish descent, thus being the only Creole on the faculty
of the new Medical College. He was awarded his medical degree by the University of
Pennsylvania. A man of great reputation in the city as a successful practitioner, he served on the
faculty for twenty-seven years as Professor of Midwifery (Obstetrics) and was Dean of the
College in the 1844-1845 session. He died in 1875.
Thomas Ingalls:
Little is known regarding Dr. Ingalls, who was one of the signers of the Prospectus. He was a
member of the first faculty of the Medical College, serving as Professor of Obstetrics, Diseases
of Women and Children, and Chemistry. He was not a native of Louisiana.
Edwin Bathurst Smith:
As in the case of Dr. Ingalls, little information is available regarding Dr. Smith, other than the
fact that he, too, was a young man who was not a Louisiana native. He resigned before the
College opened and was replaced by Dr. Edward H. Barton, a native of Virginia and a graduate
of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Barton is said to have been a pioneer in medicine.
Dr. Warren Stone:
(not one of the seven physicians who founded the College but an important individual in its
founding)
For some unknown reason, Stone's name does not appear on the Prospectus nor does it appear
among the original teachers of the College. It is on record that Dr. Harrison was unable to
undertake his first year's work by reason of ill health and that his duties were taken over by
Stone, who remained on the faculty until the middle of the 1836-1837 session. Although Stone
was not a founding father of the College, he was an outstanding faculty member and was the first
doctor in New Orleans to use ether as an anesthetic. He must, most importantly, be credited with
influencing young Thomas Hunt to venture to New Orleans and to found a Medical College.
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THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA
The Tulane University of Louisiana is named in honor of Mr. Paul Tulane, its generous
benefactor. Born on a farm in Cherry Hill, New Jersey (just outside Princeton), he later resided
in New Orleans, where he amassed a great fortune as a merchant and in real estate.
To this man must go the credit for rescuing a University in deep financial trouble - the University
of Louisiana - and giving it renewed life in a private, nonsectarian institution of great promise.
However, that was not his original intention; he wished only to contribute to a better educational
environment for the young men of New Orleans and other parts of Louisiana.
It was characteristic of Paul Tulane to act promptly once he reached a decision. After Tulane
decided to make a generous educational contribution, he and General Randall Lee Gibson soon
discussed the proposed donation and its possible uses. Upon General Gibson's recommendation,
Mr. Tulane set up a self-perpetuating Board of Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund.
The Board was composed of leading citizens of New Orleans and was given the authority to
administer the donation.
In a letter to the Board, dated May 2, 1882, Mr. Tulane stated his intention of donating to the
Board of Administrators "by an act of donation intervivos, all the real estate I own and I am
possessed of in the said city of New Orleans, State of Louisiana, for the promotion and
encouragement of intellectual, moral and industrial education... to foster such a course of
intellectual development as shall be useful and of solid worth, and not be merely ornamental or
superficial... conducive to immediate practical benefit rather than theoretical possible
advantage..."
Instead of setting up a new institution, the Board desired to take over the failing University of
Louisiana and change its name to the Tulane University of Louisiana. This was accomplished by
Act 43 of the Louisiana General Assembly in 1884. The University of Louisiana was ceded to
the Tulane Board, and the Tulane University of Louisiana was formally established.
A debt of gratitude is due to that outstanding scholar, statesman, General, and alumnus, Randall
Lee Gibson; it was he who counseled Mr. Tulane and advised him to set up a self-perpetuating
Board of "wise and good men". General Gibson served as the first President of the Board of
Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund.
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Paul Tulane’s Burial Site
The Civil War forced the University of Louisiana to close. After the war, the university reopened in
financial trouble. Total assets, excluding buildings, totaled $4,570.39 in 1866. In the early 1880s, Paul
Tulane, a businessman, provided a solution to the money problems by donating more than $1 million
“for the promotion and encouragement of intellectual, moral and industrial education.” A native of
Princeton, N.J., Paul Tulane had made his fortune in New Orleans before returning to his hometown; his
gift expressed his appreciation to this Southern city on the Mississippi River.
-Tulane University, A Brief History
After making his fortune in New Orleans, Paul Tulane returned home to Princeton, New Jersey. He died
in 1887 and was buried in the Princeton Cemetery owned by the Nassau (formerly First) Presbyterian
Church. Tulane was known for his philanthropy to not only Tulane University but also to the First
Presbyterian Church, and numerous other charitable causes. In 1878, Tulane donated more than four
acres to the cemetery.
To see a layout of the Princeton Cemetery and the location of Tulane’s burial site, go to
http://www.princetonol.com/groups/cemetery/map.html and see #48.
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HISTORIES OF SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
(from the history section of the School’s web site)
In 1894, Tulane University offered the first courses in architecture leading to a degree in
architectural engineering. At this time, only about a dozen schools of architecture had been
established in the United States. A full four-year professional curriculum in architecture, leading
to the bachelor's degree, was established in the College of Technology (Engineering) in the
1907-1908 academic year. In 1912, Professor Nathaniel Cortlandt Curtis was appointed head of
the newly independent Architecture Department; his successors were Professor John Herndon
Thompson in 1921 and Professor Buford L. Pickens in 1946.
At the conclusion of the Second World War, the faculty and enrollment increased to
accommodate returning veterans. The school continued to grow throughout the next two
decades. John Ekin Dinwiddie was appointed dean of the School of Architecture in 1953;
Professor John William Lawrence succeeded him in 1960. In 1971, the School of Architecture
renovated and moved into its present facility, the Richardson Memorial Building, and
experienced another increase in enrollment that continued throughout the seventies. Professor
William Kay Turner became the dean in 1972, and in 1975 a small graduate program was
initiated, offering a course of study leading to the Master of Architecture II as a second
professional degree. In 1981, after beginning his service as dean the previous year, Professor
Ronald Coulter Filson established the Architectural Coalition for professional research and
practice by faculty and students. Professor Donna V. Robertson succeeded Dean Filson in 1992.
Upon the resignation of Dean Robertson in 1996, Professor Donald F. Gatzke was appointed
acting dean. After a year-long search, Dean Gatzke was appointed dean in 1997.
In the summer of 1990, the School began a program offering a Master of Architecture I as a first
professional degree for students with undergraduate degrees in other disciplines. The program
awarded its first degrees in 1993 and was granted accreditation in 1994. In the fall of 1997, the
School initiated a Masters in Preservation Studies Program with a first-time enrollment of ten
students. Also in 1997, a supplemental Certificate in Preservation Studies was offered to
undergraduates for the first time. Commencing fall 1999, the School began offering a five-year
Master of Architecture I (professional degree) to students who have not earned a bachelor
degree.
A. B. FREEMAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
(from About Freeman on the School’s web site)
In 1914, Tulane University's business school was founded as the College of Commerce and
Business Administration. The school quickly made its mark a short time later when it became
one of the 14 founding members of the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business
(AACSB), the nation’s accrediting body for business schools. In 1940, the school achieved
another milestone as it offered the Master of Business Administration degree for the first time.
During the years that followed, the School continued to grow as a prestigious learning institution,
first launching the Doctor of Philosophy program in 1976 and the Executive MBA program in
1983. The school assumed its current name, A. B. Freeman School of Business, in 1984, in
17
honor of a leading New Orleans businessman. Two years later, the school moved from
Norman Mayer Memorial Hall, one of the oldest buildings on Tulane's campus, to its present
home, Goldring/Woldenberg Hall. Since its relocation, the School has broadened its curriculum
to include a professional MBA program and a variety of educational programs taught in
countries around the world.
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
(from The Catherine and Henry Boh Lecture in Civil Engineering, Oct. 6, 1993,
presented by Robert H. Boh, former chairman of the Tulane Board)
The concept of a School of Engineering began with the first Board of Administrators of the
Tulane Education Fund. The Board was founded through the efforts of Paul Tulane and
Representative Randall Lee Gibson, for the express purpose of developing an educational
institution in New Orleans. The Board held its first meeting in April 1882, with General Gibson
serving as the first president of the Board.
In November of 1882, the Committee on Education of the Board of Administrators identified as
one of the objectives in the development of the new University the establishment of a Manual
Training School and Polytechnic Institute. The Polytechnic Institute was to provide technical
instruction in the application of theoretical studies to the industrial pursuits of life. The minutes
of the Board of Administrators meeting of November 20, 1882 specifically identify a demand for
practical instruction in “Civil, Mechanical, and Mining Engineering and Architecture.”
It is noted that at the time of the November Board meeting there was no physical plant, there was
no College of Technology, there was no Tulane University. It was later, in December of 1882,
that Paul Tulane proposed to place the sum of $125, 000 subject to the order of the president of
the Board of Administrators, for the purchase of suitable property and buildings. With the new
funds, the Board was able to move ahead with the plans for the new University.
In 1883, William Preston Johnson was elected by the Board to serve as the first president of the
University. By July of 1884, Paul Tulane had increased his original endowment of $125, 000 by
an additional donation of $350,000. In his address to the Board, President Johnston stated his
conviction that the scientific side of instruction must constitute the chief addition to the
University for some time to come. He regarded the proper development of an Industrial and
Mechanical Department as one of the most helpful fields for the educational advancement for the
City of New Orleans.
To take charge of this new department, Johnston chose Professor John M. Ordway, dean of the
faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. At its meeting on July 29, 1884, the Board
unanimously adopted a resolution to create an Industrial and Mechanical Department and to
negotiate with Professor Ordway to take charge of the proposed new department.
In January of 1886, Ordway gave a series of six Wednesday evening lectures at Tulane Hall on
the nature and use of the metallic element Iron. Brown Ayers, a physicist and one of the
University’s most distinguished and versatile professors, gave a series of six Saturday evening
lectures on the characteristics of Light. The lecture hall seating 500 persons was filled for each
of the lectures. A special course identified as Electrical Engineering was offered in June of
1891. A special course in Mechanical Engineering was offered in October of 1893.
18
In May of 1893, the Board of Administrators passed resolutions based on President Johnston’s
request that the Board establish a College of Technology with a faculty including professors of
physics, chemistry, applied chemistry, mathematics, mechanical engineering, English, French,
German, history, political science, psychology and drawing. He also requested that Professor
Ayers be appointed the dean of the College of Technology. It was intended by President
Johnston that the University offer courses in Civil, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, as
well as Agriculture, Chemical Engineering, Sugar Chemistry and “some others.” Johnston also
requested that Mr. William H. P. Creighton be appointed as professor of Mechanical
Engineering. Creighton was a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and had been responsible for
the organization of the Mechanical Department at Purdue University.
In the Tulane University Bulletin for 1894, the announcement was made that two colleges had
been established: the College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Technology, which was
housed in the Mechanical and Electrical Laboratories Building. Classes began in the new Civil
Engineering Building on October 1, 1894, signaling the beginning of the Tulane School of
Engineering.
Four courses were offered: Mechanical Engineering (including Electrical Engineering),
Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering and Architectural Engineering. Each of the four
courses extended over four years, and each led to the degree of Bachelor of Engineering. There
was opportunity for graduate study offered in each of the four courses, leading to the
Engineering degree.
In 1920, the College of Technology became the College of Engineering. Then name changed
again, in 1953, to the School of Engineering.
Today the School of Engineering offers four-year undergraduate programs leading to the
Bachelor of Science in Engineering or Computer Science. Also available are programs leading
to the Master of Engineering, Master of Science in Engineering, Master of Science in Computer
Science, Doctor of Science and the Doctor of Philosophy.
GRADUATE SCHOOL
(from Tulane University History on the School’s web site)
Graduate work was first provided at Tulane University in 1883-1884. Under several different
names and forms of administration, graduate work continued to develop. Four students received
Master of Arts degrees in 1885, and the first Doctor of Philosophy degree was conferred in 1887.
In 1925, the Faculty of Graduate Studies became the Graduate School.
The Whole Story:
The University's history can be traced back 150 years to the founding of the Medical College of
Louisiana in 1834, the Deep South's first medical school. Classes were first held the next year
when 11 students and seven faculty members met in a rented hall; students paid for instruction
by the lecture. The school, born of the desperate need for competent medical care in this region
and the founders' dedication to study and treat "the peculiar diseases which prevail in this part of
the Union,” quickly gained firm footing.
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Soon the Medical College merged with the public University of Louisiana in New Orleans. A
law department and an academic department (the forerunner of the College of Arts and Sciences)
were added. Already, the University made significant contributions to the world of education
and research. Professor of chemistry J. L. Riddell, for example, built the first successful
binocular microscope in 1852. Public addresses by medical department faculty encouraged the
movement for improved public health and sanitation. And in 1857, an early graduate of the
Academic Department and the Law Department was appointed chief justice of the Louisiana
Supreme Court.
The Civil War forced the University to close. After the war, the University reopened in financial
trouble. Total assets, exclusive of buildings, totaled $4,570.39 in 1866. In the early 1880s, the
crisis was resolved when Paul Tulane established a fund of more than $1 million "for the
promotion and encouragement of intellectual, moral and industrial education." Tulane, a wealthy
merchant who had made his fortune in New Orleans before returning to his native Princeton,
New Jersey, made his gift in appreciation of the business success he had enjoyed in New
Orleans.
The 17-member board authorized to administer the Tulane Educational Fund concluded that
revitalizing the struggling University of Louisiana was preferable to founding a new institution.
Tulane concurred, and in 1884 the Louisiana State Legislature gave the University of Louisiana
to the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund. Thus the Tulane University of Louisiana,
a private, nonsectarian institution, was born.
The University's new strength manifested itself in many ways. The Department of Philosophy
and Science, today the Graduate School, was created, and courses were initiated in both
engineering and architecture. In 1886, Mrs. Josephine Louise Newcomb founded Newcomb
College as a memorial to her daughter Harriott Sophie. Newcomb was the first degree-granting
women's college in the nation to be established as a coordinate division of a men's university. It
became a model for other such colleges, including Barnard and Radcliffe. Newcomb's founding
is also linked to the World's Industrial and Cotton Exposition which opened in Audubon Park in
1884; several artisans who came to the New Orleans exposition to exhibit their own work and
see the works of others stayed to establish an arts program which became part of Newcomb. By
the early 1900s, Newcomb pottery won a bronze medal at the Paris Exposition, its fame had
spread across a nation, and young women were engaged in the then-unusual task of earning an
independent living.
In 1894, Tulane moved to its present campus on St. Charles Avenue, five miles by streetcar from
its former site in downtown New Orleans. For a quarter of a century Newcomb College was
located on Washington Avenue in the Garden District. In 1918, it moved to its location adjacent
to the other divisions of the University.
During these decades, Tulane's curricular offerings grew as several new professional schools
were established, including the Deep South's first schools of architecture, business, and social
work. The College of Technology, later to be renamed the School of Engineering, was
frequently consulted by city officials on construction techniques and soil conditions.
Engineering alumnus A. BaldwinWood designed the famous Woodscrew pump, which helps
keep New Orleans dry. The first student yearbook, Jambalaya, and the first Tulanian were
published. The Alumni Association was founded with 800 members. And significant financial
contributions to the University allowed for new buildings, library holdings, and research
facilities.
20
The University continued to expand in the twentieth century. The Middle American Research
Institute, founded in 1924, did pioneer work in Central American archaeology and anthropology,
excavating and restoring the Mayan village of Dzibilchaltun in the Yucatan. As early as the
1890s, Tulane had offered free lectures and classes to the New Orleans community, but this
commitment to community service was formalized in 1942 with the opening of University
College, which offers adult education and sponsors the annual Summer School.
After World War II, Tulane's Graduate School and professional programs continued to grow.
The University's distinction was noted by its election to the Association of American
Universities, a select group of 58 universities with "preeminent programs of graduate and
professional education and scholarship research." The Medical Center, which is once again
located downtown, was reorganized in the late sixties to include the School of Medicine, the
School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, and the Tulane Medical Center Hospital and
Clinic. The Medical Center also administers the Delta Regional Primate Research Center and
the F. Edward Hébert Riverside Research Center, each with its own campus. The last decade has
witnessed continued expansion, including the construction of a new home for the School of
Business, the Goldring-Woldenberg Hall; the foundation of the Lindy Claiborne Boggs Center
for Energy and Biotechnology; and the opening of new Tulane community facilities like the
Reily Student Recreation Center.
SCHOOL OF LAW
(taken from the School’s 2002 American Bar Association Self Study)
The origins of the Tulane School of Law go back to December 1847, when the Medical College
merged with the state-operated University of Louisiana and added a law department. The Tulane
School of Law thus celebrated its sesquicentennial in 1997, making it the 12th oldest law school
in the United States.
From 1847 to 1906, the School of Law was housed in a series of inadequate facilities in the
central business district of New Orleans. In 1906, the School of Law was finally able to follow
the University to its uptown location, taking quarters in Gibson Hall, its fifth home to that point.
In Gibson Hall, the School of Law came of age, adopting the Socratic case method in place of
lectures, hiring full-time professors and conducting classes in morning hours over 30 weeks,
rather than late afternoon and early evening classes for only 20 weeks.
In 1910, the School of Law became one of two law schools in the South on the accredited list of
the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, ranking 18th in the United States. In
1911, the Tulane School of Law became a member of the Association of American Law Schools
(AALS). It was placed on the approval list of the American Bar Association (ABA) in 1925.
One of the first chapters of the Order of the Coif was awarded to the Law School in 1936.
A new era began at the School of Law in 1927, with the appointment of Rufus C. Harris as dean.
Dean Harris had been dean of Mercer Law School and eventually became president of Tulane
University. By 1935 the faculty had grown to nine full-time professors. As Judge John Minor
Wisdom, perhaps Tulane Law School’s most distinguished graduate, commented: “Dean Harris
improved the curriculum so as to provide more common law courses, but at the same time
managed to encourage a balanced interest in the civil law and a comparative law approach in
21
teaching.”5 Dean Harris started the Tulane Law Review in 1929, renaming the existing
Southern Law Quarterly. He was succeeded as dean by Paul Brosman (1937-42 and 1945-51),
Robert J. Farley (1942-45), Clarence James Morrow (acting dean 1951-52), William Ray
Forrester (1952-63), Cecil Morgan (1963-68), Joseph M. Sweeney (1968-78), Robert Force
(acting dean 1978-79), Paul Verkuil (1979-85), Harvey Couch (acting dean 1985-86), John
Kramer (1986-96), Edward Sherman (1996-01) and, as of July 1, 2001, Lawrence Ponoroff.
Gibson Hall was refitted and enlarged as the School of Law grew but there was not enough
space. In the spring of 1928, the Law School moved to Dinwiddie Hall and in 1941, to the F.W.
Tilton Memorial Hall. It remained there until 1970, when it outgrew that seventh site and had to
take over and renovate the University’s library, changing it into Joseph Merrick Jones Hall.
In December 1994, the School of Law finally moved into the first home of its own, John Giffen
Weinmann Hall. The largest building on campus, it contains 160,000 square feet, comprising 23
classroom/study/consultation rooms, 67 offices for faculty and 55 other offices for professionals,
staff and student organizations. It offers more than 100 student work spaces equipped with
computers, nearly 500 carrel, table and lounge seats for students in the library and 68 other
student office and clinic workstations.
LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES
(from Dean Teresa Soufas’ message at the LAS web site)
The Liberal Arts and Sciences is the largest unit on Tulane's uptown campus. The LAS faculty
was formed in 1988 when the separate members of the H. Sophie Newcomb College faculty and
the College of Arts and Sciences (now Paul Tulane College) faculty were joined.
Today, the LAS faculty consists of over 280 members who teach not only the core curriculum of
the university but also the wide variety of classes chosen by students as they pursue majors in 22
academic departments and 15 Programs. Individual faculty achievements in scholarship have
been recognized by Guggenheim and Fulbright awards, fellowships from the National
Endowments for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the National
Academy of Sciences. Sponsored research awards from the National Science Foundation, the
National Institutes of Health, the Department of Energy, and private foundations and
corporations provide opportunities for undergraduates to engage in research.
Students in the Liberal Arts and Sciences are enrolled in either H. Sophie Newcomb College or
in Paul Tulane College. Drawn to Tulane from all over the country and all over the world, they
number approximately 3,600. Their individual achievements have been nationally recognized by
Rhodes, Marshall, Goldwater, and Truman awards, and most go on to study in the most highly
competitive graduate and professional schools.
5
See Judge John Minor Wisdom, A Piquant History of the Tulane Law School, Tulane Lawyer, Spring
1979, at 7-8. Much of the material in this paragraph is taken from Judge Wisdom’s lecture.
22
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
(from “Tulane University, A Brief History”)
The University's history can be traced back to the founding of the Medical College of Louisiana
in 1834, the Deep South's first medical school. Classes were first held the next year when 11
students and seven faculty members met in a rented hall; students paid for instruction by the
lecture. The school, born of the desperate need for competent medical care in this region and the
founders' dedication to study and treat "the peculiar diseases which prevail in this part of the
Union,” quickly gained firm footing. Soon the Medical College merged with the public
University of Louisiana in New Orleans. Public addresses by medical department faculty
encouraged the movement for improved public health and sanitation. Medical School students
gained clinical experience treating patients in Charity Hospital.
The Civil War forced the University to close. After the war, the University reopened in financial
trouble. Total assets, exclusive of buildings, totaled $4,570.39 in 1866. In the early 1880s, the
crisis was resolved when Paul Tulane established a fund of more than $1 million "for the
promotion and encouragement of intellectual, moral and industrial education." Tulane, a wealthy
merchant who had made his fortune in New Orleans before returning to his native Princeton,
New Jersey, made his gift in appreciation of the business success he had enjoyed in New
Orleans.
The 17-member board authorized to administer the Tulane Educational Fund concluded that
revitalizing the struggling University of Louisiana was preferable to founding a new institution.
Tulane concurred, and in 1884 the Louisiana State Legislature gave the University of Louisiana
to the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund. Thus the Tulane University of Louisiana,
a private, nonsectarian institution, was born.
Today, the School of Medicine is ranked as one of the nation’s top medical schools. It is the
nucleus of the Tulane University Health Sciences Center.
*See also Founding of the Medical College of Louisiana and The Establishment of the Tulane
University of Louisiana.
NEWCOMB COLLEGE
(from Newcomb College History on the College’s web site)
In 1886, Josephine Louise Newcomb wrote to the Tulane Board of Administrators about her long
considered memorial to her "beloved Daughter, H. Sophie Newcomb." Sophie had died in 1870
at the age of 15, and since that time, Mrs. Newcomb had given much thought to what would
make a lasting memorial to her daughter. A college for other young girls and women, a "work of
the spirit" that would look "to the practical side of life as well as to literary excellence..." were
her conclusions.
Her funds assured Newcomb College a secure foundation for its early years. Indeed, Newcomb's
gift made the College the most secure of all southern women's colleges. Newcomb's donation
also brought about an unusual arrangement for the education of women with the creation of the
first degree-granting college for women to be founded within a university in America. Several
colleges later adopted this model, including Barnard College of Columbia University.
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Newcomb's specifications for the College made available to young women the same
opportunity for a liberal education that was being offered to young men through Tulane's College
of Arts and Sciences and, at the same time, provided an environment in which men and women
did not attend classes together.
New Orleans seemed quite ready for this arrangement. The Louisiana Cotton Exposition, held in
New Orleans in 1884, brought prominent women leaders to the city. They urged New Orleans
women to produce handcrafted artifacts. Upon this advice, William and Ellsworth Woodward,
professors of art at Tulane University and Tulane High School, organized free art classes at the
Exposition, and later, Ladies Decorative Art League of New Orleans Art Pottery to the
community. Many of these women were very soon students in the first classes at Newcomb.
For the position of president of the College, the Tulane Board recruited Brandt Van Blarcom
Dixon. Dixon remained as Newcomb's president until 1919, establishing a high school (1888 to
1920), watching enrollment climb, and at the same time, overseeing strict graduation
requirements. In the early years, though students in any given class might number 50 to 100,
only a dozen or so might be allowed to march at commencement. About half of these early
graduates received higher degrees after leaving the College.
With a beloved early campus within and around the Robb-Burnside Mansion, a grandiose Italian
villa on Washington Avenue, the campus resembled the isolated academies and convents that
served day students in other southern cities. Here the College flourished academically gaining
national and even international respect. Two departments particularly distinguished themselves.
One of these was the Department of Physical Education. Its first chair, Clara Baer, is considered
one of the early pioneers of the physical health movement. In 1895, she published "Basketball
Rules for Women and Girls,” in which she described two shots, the one handed and the jump
shot, that were not adopted in men's basketball until 1936. She also invented and marketed a
game called "Newcomb Ball" and became an advocate in securing employment for Newcomb
graduates in local schools.
Perhaps even more noteworthy was the success of the Newcomb Pottery. Ellsworth Woodward's
introduction of the pottery had an overwhelming appeal to Dixon as well as to students. The
Newcomb Pottery was an experiment, or model industry, to provide employment for women in a
milieu where few opportunities existed. Dixon hired Mary Given Sheerer, who was associated
with the Rockwood Pottery in Cincinnati, to begin this venture.
Over 70,000 pieces of pottery were produced before the pottery closed in 1939. The art program
also was enlarged in these years to include many other arts and crafts. Examples can be found of
illustrated bookplates, jewelry, embroidery and hand bound books, often embossed leather
covers and elaborate clasps—all of which were crafted and sold by Newcomb students and
alumnae.
While these early curricular developments made Newcomb an institution that distinguished itself
among southern women's colleges, its location in the city of New Orleans also made Newcomb
unique among its counterparts. Because the urban environment provided a large body of
potential students, the majority of early Newcomb students were day students from New Orleans.
Furthermore, Newcomb differed by having a more diverse student body than other women's
colleges. The large number of scholarships offered to local girls insured that students came from
a wider variety of economic backgrounds. The large Catholic and Jewish population of New
Orleans provided diversity in religious orientation. These factors, along with the lack of a
24
particular religious affiliation, the College's early association with the progressive movement,
and the unusual labor of the women associated with the pottery resulted in an atmosphere that
was less stringently filled with rules and regulations and more open to the possibilities of
women's varied lives.
When Newcomb moved to its Broadway campus in 1918, it emerged as a leader among southern
women's colleges, with a student body that considered itself more serious and sophisticated than
students at other southern schools such as Agnes Scott, Randolph-Macon and Sweet Briar. The
move to the Broadway campus brought full access to a collegiate life, both socially and
academically. And yet, acorns from the original oak trees of the Washington Avenue campus
were transplanted to the new campus and traditions such as class ring ceremonies, the wearing of
caps and gowns, Field Days and other rituals of the single sex campus were continued.
At the same time, the move to Broadway also symbolized less independence for Newcomb
within the University. Dixon was to be Newcomb's only "president" and his successor in 1919,
Pierce Butler, was named "dean". Butler inherited a rich and successful College and also one
which merged more with the University. Tulane offered Newcomb women the opportunities for
advanced study and access to a bigger library. Newcomb offered Tulane men access to its
outstanding art and music programs and the chance for coeducational activities.
The school grew—with new buildings and increased enrollment figures. Frederick Hard (19381943) and later Logan Wilson (1943-1951) succeeded Butler. In these years, further
developments cemented Newcomb's place in both the community and the University. The
World War II years witnessed Newcomb students, for the first time, as leaders in Tulane
publications and extracurricular activities. The Newcomb Library, the Howard Library and the
Tilton Library were also merged during these years into a building that was located on the
Newcomb side of the campus.
During these mid-century years, Newcomb also raised its standards, implemented new programs,
increased enrollment and required college entrance board exams for the first time. Programs
such as the Newcomb Junior Year Abroad (established in 1954-55) that allowed male students
during its second year of existence and Tulane's growing graduate program—these made the
coordinate college a place with appeal to students from all over the U.S. Thus, Acting Dean
Anna E. Many (1951-53) and Dean Jack Hubbard (1953-65) oversaw an increasingly diverse
student body. In 1963, Newcomb admitted its first African American student.
During these years, Tulane and Newcomb students also responded to other changes in society
and the political climate of the times. Deans Charles Hounshell (1966-69), James F. Davidson
(1969-76), and Acting Deans Francis Leo Lawrence (1976-78) and William Smither (1978-79)
saw Newcomb students protest the incursion of American armed forces into Cambodia. Students
also agitated for other concerns that would not have been thought possible in years past:
coeducation housing, the elimination of curfews, the need for increased safety in an urban
environment. Another important force of that era, the women's movement, also brought more
varied campus opportunities to Newcomb students. Varsity athletics and Title IX funds brought
nine athletic scholarships to Newcomb in 1976. Newcomb students became involved in courses
designed to increase their entrance into such male-dominated fields as medicine, law and
politics. In 1975, the Women's Center, later the Center for Research on Women developed to
promote research into the lives of women and to maintain the College Archives. A single
curriculum for Newcomb and the College of Arts and Sciences was adopted in 1979.
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Later deans, continuing until today, have molded these changes to reflect an updated role of
Josephine Louise's original and dual mission: to provide the benefits of a women's college set
firmly within a major research university. Following the 1987 affirmation of a separate identity
for Newcomb and Tulane undergraduate colleges—each with its own student body, dean and
staff, but with a shared faculty—the College has continued to find increased enrollment and
exemplary students.
At graduation today, the Daisy Chain and the accomplished graduates both reflect on this dual
mission. The Daisy Chain, a tradition since the early days of the college, consists of over 1,000
daisies assembled on commencement morning by outstanding juniors. Earlier chains were made
from clover, oleander, magnolia, or daisies and were collected from campus gardens and
neighbors yards. Newcomb has one of the few remaining chains in the country. Newcomb
graduates themselves have led outstanding lives, receiving recognition in the many fields
including art, law, medicine and community service. The rich legacy of an education both
literary and practical is found among these graduates.
SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND TROPICAL MEDICINE
(from the PH&TM brochure)
The study of public health in Louisiana began in the last century, when New Orleans suffered
from endemic malaria and almost yearly epidemics of cholera and yellow fever. Attempts to
control tropical diseases led to the establishment of the Medical College of Louisiana in 1834.
The founders, a group of young practicing physicians, issued a prospectus which emphasized the
lack of knowledge of these diseases and the necessity for studying them in the environment in
which they occurred. In 1881, formal instruction in hygiene was offered for the first time. The
name of the medical college was changed to Tulane University of Louisiana, College of
Medicine, after the Civil War when Paul Tulane bequeathed funds to establish a new university.
A School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine was first established in 1912 as a separate entity
within the College of Medicine. This arrangement continued until 1919 when the School ceased
to be an independent unit and was merged with the College of Medicine.
In 1947, the Departments of Tropical Medicine and Preventive Medicine were merged to
establish the Department of Tropical Medicine and Public Health in the School of Medicine.
Instruction at the graduate level was expanded to a full academic year with programs leading to
the degrees of master of public health and master of public health and tropical medicine. A
program of study for the degree of doctor of public health was approved in 1950 and the first
doctoral degrees were awarded in 1953.
With the rapid expansion in public health and tropical medicine, and the participation of other
departments of the School of Medicine in educational activities, an administrative division of
graduate public health was created in 1958. In 1961, the administrative division was redesigned
as the Division of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Programs leading to degrees of master of science and doctor of science in hygiene were
instituted providing a wide range of preparation for public health careers. In June 1967, the
Division of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine became the School of Public Health and Tropical
Medicine. The School is a separate component of the Tulane University Medical Center allied
26
with the School of Medicine, Tulane National Primate Research Center and Tulane University
Hospital and Clinic.
Currently, the school is organized into seven academic units: community health and sciences,
biostatistics, epidemiology, environmental health sciences, health systems management, tropical
medicine and international health and development. School-wide centers include the Center for
Cardiovascular Health, Institute for Health Services Research, Tulane-Xavier Center of
Excellence for Women’s Health and Environmental Diseases Prevention Research Center.
SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK
(from the history section of the School’s web site)
The Southern School of Social Sciences and Public Services was the first training program for
social workers in the Deep South. Under the sponsorship of the Kingsley Settlement House, a
group of Tulane social science faculty offered the first classes in social welfare in 1914.
Sponsored by grants from the American Red Cross, a formal one-year program was implemented
in 1921.
By 1927, with funding from a Rockefeller grant, the school became a separate program with a
two-year curriculum, qualifying students for the Master of Arts. In 1935, the University
established the degree of Master of Social Work. The School has awarded the Master of Social
Work degree to more than 4,700 students from all 50 of the United States and over 30 other
countries.
Since 1927, the first year of national accreditation, the School of Social Work has maintained
full accreditation status. It is a charter member of the Council on Social Work Education, which
is the standard-setting and accreditation body in the field of social work education. Tulane
School of Social Work is accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE).
The School added a doctoral program with an advanced curriculum in 1961. This program,
awarding a Doctor of Social Work degree, was designed for further development of social work
researchers, teachers and policy consultants. This program was changed to allow students to
achieve a Doctor of Philosophy in Social Work Degree in 1998. All students who have received
a Doctor of Social Work degree can apply to change the DSW to a Ph.D.
TULANE COLLEGE
(from the history section of the College’s web site)
In 1847, the state of Louisiana enacted the legislation that founded the College. The University
of Louisiana was founded in that year by the Louisiana state assembly. The already-existing
Medical College of Louisiana, which had been founded 13 years earlier, became the Medical
Department of the University; the!other two departments envisioned were law, which today is the
Tulane Law School, and letters and natural sciences, which today is Tulane College.
Tulane College, the 1850s
Four years after its founding, in 1851, the College formally opened as the University's
"Collegiate Department," with 12 freshmen and two sophomores and a faculty of seven, who
27
taught such subjects as chemistry and mineralogy, classical languages and literature,
commerce, French language and literature, geology, Hebrew and Oriental languages, and
mathematics and natural philosophy. The College awarded its first Bachelor of Arts and Science
degrees in 1857. At that time, the University's campus was located on Common Street in
downtown New Orleans and consisted of a central, Grecian-style building, which housed the
Medical Department, and matching east and west wings, which housed the Collegiate and Law
Departments.
The College was closed during the 1860s and '70s as a result of the dislocations caused by the
American Civil War. When it reopened, it was relocated from the complex of buildings on
Common Street to the Mechanics Institute Building, around the corner from the main campus on
Dryades Street (now University Place).
Paul Tulane
In 1884, as a result of the gift of millionaire philanthropist Paul Tulane, the Administrators of the
Tulane Educational Fund assumed responsibility for the University of Louisiana, which was
privately endowed at that time and named the Tulane University of Louisiana. At the same time,
the College was named Tulane College, and the Mechanics Institute Building was renamed
Tulane Hall. The faculty of the old Collegiate Department of the University of Louisiana
continued as the faculty of Tulane College, and in October of 1884, 73 students registered in the
newly-named College. With the change in name came important changes in the academic
program as well. Students were permitted to elect a particular course (classical, commercial,
literary, mathematical, mechanical, or natural scientific), but within each course, the
requirements were fixed. The classes were divided into the familiar freshman, sophomore,
junior, and senior designations, and the undergraduate degree program was set at four years.
Gibson Hall
In meetings of the Board of Administrators throughout the late 1880s, the inadequacy of the
Common Street campus was!regularly discussed, and in 1891 and '93, the Administrators began
the purchase of the property that today is the uptown campus along St. Charles Avenue. At the
same time, the Administrators resolved to reorganize Tulane College. Courses in engineering
and applied science were removed from the curriculum of the College, and a separate College of
Technology, now the School of Engineering, was established; concurrently, Tulane College was
renamed the College of Arts and Sciences. In 1894, the College was relocated from the
downtown campus on Common Street to Gibson Hall, originally the Arts and Sciences Building,
which had been constructed specifically for the College and is now the University's main
administration building.
In the early twentieth century, the Colleges of Arts and Sciences and Technology were
consolidated for a brief period into the Academical Colleges; in 1911, they were again separated
into independent divisions.
Robert C. Cudd Hall
In 1988, the separate faculties of the College of Arts and Sciences and the H. Sophie Newcomb
Memorial College, the University's liberal arts college for women, which had been founded
toward the end of the nineteenth century, were merged, and the Faculty of the Liberal Arts and
Sciences was created. Men and women now attend class together and are taught a common
28
curriculum by a single faculty. In 1989, the College's administrative offices were relocated
from Gibson Hall to the Social Sciences Building, one of the oldest buildings on the uptown
campus, constructed in 1901 as the original refectory, or commons, recently restored and
renamed Robert C. Cudd Hall. In 1993, the Administrators voted to restore the College's latenineteenth-century name and change its formal name to "The Paul Tulane College.”
In the 150 years since its founding, the College has continued to subscribe to a few basic
principles: above all, a conviction about the enduring value of the liberal arts curriculum and a
justifiable pride in the College's distinction, its long and celebrated history and in the
accomplishments of its students and alumni.
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
(taken from About UC on the College’s web site)
As early as the 1890s, Tulane had offered free lectures and classes to the New Orleans
community, but this commitment to community service was formalized in 1942 with the opening
of University College, which offers adult education and sponsors the annual Summer School.
Today, University College serves the New Orleans community by offering university course
work and a variety of degrees to part-time and full-time students. Its open admissions policy,
low tuition rates, degree programs and courses answer the needs of students who seek academic
and professional advancement. University College has five campuses: Uptown, Downtown,
Elmwood, Biloxi and North Shore. It offers morning, afternoon, evening, and Saturday morning
classes.
29
SIGNIFICANT DATES IN TULANE'S HISTORY
1834
The Medical College of Louisiana was founded in New Orleans by seven young doctors.
1845
A State University in the city of New Orleans was authorized by the State Constitutional
Convention.
1847
The University of Louisiana was established by the State Legislature (Act #49).
1847
The Medical College of Louisiana became the Medical Department of the University of
Louisiana.
1847
A Law Department was added to the University of Louisiana. It was the twelfth such in
the United States.
1851
An Academic Department for men opened; it was the forerunner of the College of Arts
and Sciences. Its first students were enrolled - twelve freshmen and two sophomores.
1861
The University closed its doors because of the Civil War. Classes resumed in 1865.
1882
Mr. Paul Tulane donated extensive real estate in New Orleans for the support of
education. A Board of Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund was appointed and
held its first meeting. The Board decided to support and incorporate with the University
of Louisiana rather than found a separate institution.
1884
The Legislature of Louisiana passed a bill transferring the University of Louisiana at
New Orleans to the control of the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund, thus
creating the Tulane University of Louisiana, a private, non-sectarian university.
1885
A Graduate Division was established, later to become the Graduate School.
1886
Newcomb College was established within Tulane University. It was the first coordinate
college for women in the United States. The college was the result of gifts of Mrs.
Josephine Louise Newcomb in memory of her daughter, Harriott Sophie Newcomb. Mrs.
Newcomb's gifts exceeded more than $3,626,000.
1894
A College of Technology was organized, the forerunner of the School of Engineering.
1894
The University moved to its uptown campus on St. Charles Avenue, five miles by
streetcar from downtown New Orleans.
1898
The Tulane Alumni Association was founded.
1907
An Architecture Department was organized within the College of Technology.
1908
The Schools of Dentistry and Pharmacy were created. Dentistry was discontinued in
1928, and Pharmacy was no longer taught in 1934.
30
1914
The College of Commerce was established. It was the forerunner of the School of
Business. It was the first Business School in the South.
1925
The Graduate School was formally established.
1927
The School of Social Work was established - the first in the Deep South.
1942
The University College was founded as Tulane's Division of Continuing Education,
replacing the Division for Teachers and the evening division of the College of Commerce
and Business Administration.
1950
The Department of Architecture separated from the School of Engineering and became
the School of Architecture.
1967
The School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine was established.
1976
A 300-bed teaching hospital and ambulatory clinic, Tulane Medical Center, was opened.
1987
The Board of Administrators dedicated $2 million to the Newcomb Foundation.
1993
The name of the College of Arts and Sciences changed back to the name Paul M. Tulane
College and is referred to as Tulane College.
1995
Tulane University Medical Center and the Columbia HCA became partners, and
Columbia buys 80% of Tulane Hospital.
1996
The Board of Administrators dedicated $11.9 million of the University’s funds to
function as endowment to Newcomb.
1998
Scott S. Cowen named 14th President of Tulane.
1999
Tulane receives $18 million bequest from the estate of West Monroe, La. resident Lallage
Feazel Wall.
2001
The Tulane Center for Gene Therapy, the first major center in the U.S. to focus on
research using adult stem cells, is established.
2002
Tulane is named by Kaplan/Newsweek’s college guide as one of nine “Hot Schools” in
the nation.
31
II. ADMINISTRATION
32
ADMINISTRATORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA
(Predecessors of the Board of Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund)
1847-1855
1847-1855
1847-1855
1847-1855
1847-1855
1847-1855
1847-1855
1847-1855
1847-1856
1847-1855
1855-1855
1855-1855
1855-1856
1855-1856
1855-1856
1855-1856
1855-1856
1855-1856
1855-1856
1855-1856
1855-1859
1855-1860
1855-1860
1856-1856
1856-1856
1856-1857
1856-1859
1856-1859
1856-1860
1856-1860
1857-1860
1857-1866
1859-1860
1859-1860
1859-1866
1860-1860
1860-1860
1860-1861
1860-1866
1860-1866
Maunsel White
Isaac T. Preston
William C. Micou
Levi Pierce
W. P. Hort, M. D.
Preston W. Farrar
Robert Carter Nicholas
Isadore Labatut, M. D.
M. M. Cohen
Christian Roselius
Stephen D. McNeill, M. D.
Warren Stone, M. D.
Albert G. Blanchard
J. O. Bradford
Newton Richards
Howard Smith, M. D.
J. S. Copes, M. D.
Greer B. Duncan
James Robb
J. W. Walker
P. E. Bonford
William Alexander Gordon
W. Newton Mercer, M. D.
Edward Briggs
Pierre Soule
J. S. Copes, M. D.
Edmond J. Forstall
Charles Genois
Isadore Labatut, M D.
Newton Richards
William C. C. Claiborne
G. W. Race
Daniel Edwards
F. W. Grivot
F. W. Tilton
J. Adolph Rozier
J. A. Maybin
Samuel Smith
John Pemberton
Theodore Gaillard Hunt
Robert J. Ward
1860-1866
1860-1866
1860-1866
1860-1872
1866-1867
1866-1867
1866-1872
1866-1872
1866-1872
1866-1872
1866-1872
1866-1872
1866-1872
1867-1868
1867-1872
1868-1872
1872-1875
1872-1875
1872-1877
1872-1877
1872-1877
1872-1877
1872-1877
1872-1877
1874-1877
1875-1884
1875-1884
1877-1879
1879-1879
1877-1879
1877-1880
1877-1883
1877-1884
1879-1880
1879-1880
1879-1884
1880-1881
1880-1882
1880-1884
1881-1884
1882-1884
1883-1884
William R. Miles
J. C. Seymour
Edward Rawle
Newton Richards
J. N. Lea
William H. Holcombe, M. D.
B. H. Mose, M. D.
Thomas Sloo
Carleton Hunt
George S. Lacy
John Quincy Adams Fellows
P. Hickey Morgan
Josiah Cole
J. Adolph Rozier
John H. Ilsley
Edward Rawle
William H. Hunt
Charles H. Thompson
Hugh J. Campbell
Michael Hahn
William G. Brown
William Wirt Howe
Harry T. Hayes
Louis Alfred Wiltz
James Longstreet
D. C. Labatt
John Hanson Kennard
Thomas A. Adams
William B. Eagan
Nicholas Henry Rightor
Alfred Mouton
William B. Seymour
John B. Lafitte
J. Walker Fearn
Cornelius Beard, M. D.
E. F. LaVillebeuvre
Alfred Roman
J. Hampden Lewis, M. D.
Thomas L. Macon
Albert Baldwin
R. S. Howard
Benjamin Rice Forman
33
PRESIDENTS AND CHAIRS OF THE BOARD OF TULANE
(formerly the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund)
Presidents:
Randall Lee Gibson*
Charles Erasmus Fenner
Robert Miller Walmsley
William Ratcliffe Irby
Esmond Phelps*
Joseph Merrick Jones*
1882-1892
1893-1906
1907-1919
1920-1926
1926-1950
1950-1963
Chairs:
Darwin Schriever Fenner*
Harry Bartlett Kelleher*
Edmund McIlhenny*
John G. Phillips *!!!!!!!!!!!!
William Boatner Reily, III *
Robert H. Boh *!!!!!!!
John G. Weinmann *!!!!!
John E. Koerner III *!!
Catherine D. Pierson*
1963-1968
1968-1973
1973-1978
1978-1983
1983-1988
1988-1993
1993-1998
1998-2003
2003-
Honorary Chair:
Charles Rosen*
1950-1954
34
BOARD OF TULANE
(formerly the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund)
1882-1892
1882-1906
1882-1914
1882-1892
1882-1897
1882-1922
1882-1892
1882-1902
1882-1884
1882-1882
1882-1893
1882-1932
1882-1900
1882-1920
1882-1895
1882-1919
1882-1884
1883-1887
1885-1891
1885-1903
1889-1892
1892-1903
1892-1894
1892-1930
1893-1896
1893-1900
1894-1927
1894-1909
1895-1941
1898-1905
1898-1908
1901-1932
1903-1912
1903-1904
1903-1910
1904-1954
1904-1906
1905-1910
1906-1914
1908-1920
1908-1913
1910-1926
1910-1932
1911-1923
1914-1960
1914-1926
Randall Lee Gibson*
Charles E. Fenner
James McConnell
Tobias G. Richardson
Edward DouglassWhite
Edgar Howard Farrar
Pascal Neilson Strong
Benjamin Morgan Palmer
Hugh Miller Thompson
Charles Augustus Whitney
Samuel Horton Kennedy
Walter Robinson Stauffer
Cartwright Eustis
Henry Ginder
John Timmons Hardie
Robert Miller Walmsley
William Oscar Rogers
William Forrest Halsey
John Nicholas Galleher
Joseph Chandler Morris
Charles Morgan Whitney
George Quintard Whitney
Leonard Matthews Finley*
John Baptist Levert
Charles Jasper Bickham
Walter Chew Flower
Charles Janvier
Ashton Phelps
Walker Brainerd Spencer*
Beverly Ellison Warner
Walter Denis Denegre
John Dymond, Jr.*
Daniel C. Scarborough*
John Westley Castles
Gustaf R. Westfeldt
Charles Rosen*
Ernest B. Kruttschnitt
Beverly Ellison Warner
Frederick William Parham*
Alfred Raymond*
James Hardy Dillard
William R. Irby
Abraham Brittin
John Callan
Ernest Lee Jahncke*
Joseph Arsenne Breaux*
1914-1946
1915-1950
1920-1936
1920-1961
1920-1922
1922-1951
1922-1938
1925-1927
1926-1960
1926-1940
1927-1935
1927-1947
1932-1943
1932-1939
1933-1947
1936-1959
1936-1946
1936-1951
1938-1952
1940-1952
1941-1955
1944-1955
1944-1959
1947-1967
1947-1963
1948-1968
1948-1968
1951-1968
1951-1961
1951-1958
1953-1973
1953-1973
1954-1971
1955-1968
1955-1972
1959-1972
1960-1975
1960-1968
1960-1977
1961-1982
1968-1979
1963-1975
1967-1976
1968-1979
1968-1973
1968-1983
Marcus Johns Magruder*
Esmond Phelps*
Paul Hill Saunders
Samuel Zemurray
Arthur Devereaux Parker
Florence Dymond*
Chauncey French
Frederick William Parham*
Jules Blanc Monroe*
James Pierce Butler*
John Barnwell Elliot
George Elliott Williams*
S. Walter Stern*
Charles Allen Favrot
Joseph Wheadon Carroll
Charles L. Eshleman*
Charles S. Williams
Joseph Woodruff George*
Albert Barnett Paterson
Bernard Henry Grehan*
Samuel A. LaBlanc*
Alfred Bird Freeman
Edgar B. Stern*
Joseph W. Montgomery*
Joseph Merrick Jones*
George A. Wilson*
Joseph McCloskey*
Clifford F. Favrot*
Mrs. George Snellings, Jr.*
George S. Farnsworth*
Darwin S. Fenner*
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*
Isidore Newman II*
Leon Irwin, Jr.*
Ashton Phelps*
Richard West Freeman*
Gerald L. Andrus*
Jacob Segura Landry*
Edgar B. Stern, Jr.
Arthur L. Jung, Jr.*
Sam Israel, Jr.*
Harry Bartlett Kelleher*
Charles G. Smither*
Edmund McIlhenny*
Clayton L. Nairne*
John W. Deming*
35
1968-1982
1968-1983
1971-1982
1971-1986
1972-1977
1972-1988
1973-1976
1973-1982
1973-1988
1975-1990
1975-1991
1976-1994
1977-1991
G. Shelby Friedrich *
Arthur J. Waechter, Jr.*
William B. Monroe, Jr.*
Mrs. Edward M. Simmons*
Frederick B. Ingram
Charles H. Murphy, Jr.
Ford M. Graham
Alden J. Laborde
Floyd W. Lewis*
Erik F. Johnsen*
William Boatner Reily III*
Robert H. Boh*
John G. Phillips
1977-1992
1978-1990
1979-1994
1979-1991
1980-1993
1980-1988
1980-1995
1980-1986
1981-1996
1981-1991
1981-1991
1982-1984
1982-1998
1983-1987
1983-1992
1984-1999
1985-1993
1985-1995
1985-1990
1986-2000
1986-2001
1987-1993
1988-
Louis M. Freeman*
Henry E. Braden
Brooke Helm Duncan*
Robert Edmund Flowerree*
George Denegre*
Harry Blumenthal, Sr.*
Peter Aron*
John F. Bookout
Sybil M. Favrot*
W. Kennon McWilliams*
John G. Weinmann*
Avron B. Fogelman*
Louis L. Frierson*
John Phelan
Edmund M. Reggie*
Donald J. Nalty
Charles R. Sitter
Samuel Z. Stone
Margaret P. Wilson*
H. Mortimer Favrot, Jr.*
William Goldring*
Robert L. Turchin*
Virginia N. Roddy*
198819881990-2000
1990-1995
19901991-1996
19911991-2000
1991-2000
1992-1992
1992-2000
1992-2000
19921993-1998
199319941994-2002
19941995199519951996-2000
199619981999199919991999200020002000200020002000200120022002-
James W. Wilson, Jr.*
Sandra L. Robinson*
Sidney W. Lassen*
Edwin A. Lupberger
William E. Mayer
Robert E. Young*
William A. Slatten*
H. Leighton Steward
Martin D. Payson
Milton H. Ward
Mortimer L. Curran*
Joyce F. Menschel*
Frank B. Stewart*
John G. Weinmann*
Charles C. Teamer*
John E. Koerner, III*
Philip J. Carroll*
Carol D. Cudd*
Lawrence J. Israel
Richard W. Freeman, Jr.
Catherine D. Pierson*
Robert B. Acomb, Jr.*
James M. Lapeyre, Jr.*
Alison Stone Golcher*
James H. Clark
Philip Greer
Scott S. Cowen
C. Berdon Lawrence*
Phillip J. Fagan, Jr.*
Douglas J. Hertz*
Joseph L. Parkinson*
Wilmer R. Bottoms*
James J. Reiss, Jr. *
Robbert W. Vorhoff*
Martha W. Barnett*
Linda S. Wilson*
Robert M. Devlin*
36
EMERITUS OR ADVISORY MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF TULANE
(formerly the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund)
1958-1976
1959-1976
1967-1977
1968-1989
1968-1989
19681968-1982
1968-1987
1971-1981
1971-1978
1972-1985
1972-1983
1973-1979
1973-1986
1973-1989
1975-2000
1975-1997
1976-2000
19771979-1982
1979-1991
1982-1991
198219821983-1996
1983-2001
1986-1990
1986-
George S. Farnsworth*
Charles L. Eshleman*
Joseph W. Montgomery*
Clifford F. Favrot*
Leon Irwin, Jr.*
Jacob S. Landry*
Joseph McCloskey*
George A. Wilson*
Isidore Newman II*
Mrs. George Snellings, Jr.*
Richard West Freeman*
Ashton Phelps*
Darwin S. Fenner*
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*
Clayton L. Nairne*
Gerald L. Andrus*
Harry Bartlett Kelleher*
Ford M. Graham
Edgar B. Stern, Jr.
Sam Israel, Jr.*
Edmund McIlhenny*
G. Shelby Friedrichs*
Arthur L. Jung, Jr.*
William B. Monroe, Jr.*
John W. Deming*
Arthur J. Waechter, Jr.*
Lanier A. Simmons*
John F. Bookout*
19871988-2002
19881990-1994
19901990199119911991-1998
19911992-1993
199219921992199319941994199519951995199619961998199819992000-2001
20002001-
John J. Phelan, Jr.
Charles H. Murphy, Jr..
Floyd W. Lewis*
Henry E. Braden
Erik F. Johnsen*
Margaret P. Willson*
William Boatner Reily, III*
Robert E. Flowerree*
W. Kennon McWilliams, Jr.*
John G. Phillips
John G. Weinmann*
Louis M. Freeman*
Robert L. Turchin*
Charles R. Sitter
George Denegre*
Robert H. Boh*
Brooke H. Duncan*
Edwin A. Lupberger
Samuel Z. Stone
Peter A. Aron*
Robert E. Young*
Sybil M. Favrot*
Louis L. Frierson*
John G. Weinmann*
Donald J. Nalty*
Mortimer L. Curran*
H. Mortimer Favrot, Jr.*
William Goldring*
37
PRESIDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY
Presidents of the University of Louisiana:
Francis Lister Hawks
Theodore Howard McCaleb
(University closed; war)
Thomas Hunt
Randell Hunt
1847-1849
1850-1862
1862-1865
1865-1867
1867-1884
Presidents of Tulane University:
William Preston Johnston
William Oscar Rogers (Acting President)
Edwin Anderson Alderman
Edwin Boone Craighead
Robert Sharp (Acting President)
Robert Sharp
Albert Bledsoe Dinwiddie
Douglas Smith Anderson* (Acting President)
Robert Leonval Menuet* (Acting President)
Rufus Carrollton Harris
Maxwell Edward Lapham (Acting President)
Herbert Eugene Longenecker
Francis Sheldon Hackney
Eamon M. Kelly (Acting President)
Eamon M. Kelly
Scott S. Cowen
1884-1899
1899-1900
1900-1904
1904-1912
1912-1913
1913-1918
1918-1935
1935-1936
1936-1937
1937-1960
1960
1960-1975
1975-1980
1980-1981
1981-1998
1998-
38
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF THE PRESIDENTS
William Preston Johnston: (First President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane University from 1884 to 1899; born, January 5, 1831, Louisville, Kentucky; LL.D.,
1853, University of Louisville; attended: Centre College at Danville, Kentucky; Western Military
Institute at Georgetown, Kentucky; Yale University; son of Confederate General Albert Sidney
Johnston, who was killed at the Battle of Shiloh; colonel and personal aide-de-camp on President
Jefferson Davis' staff in the Civil War (Johnston was captured with Jefferson Davis in Georgia at the end
of the war and was imprisoned for several months at Fort Delaware); brought by Robert E. Lee to
Washington College (Washington and Lee), 1866, to teach history and English literature; president of
Louisiana State University prior to accepting the first presidency of the new Tulane University in 1884;
during his administration the faculty and budget doubled in size, student body increased, and there were
many changes in the physical plant; instrumental in the founding of Newcomb College in that on several
occasions he advised Mrs. Josephine Newcomb regarding the establishment of the coordinate women's
college;
William Oscar Rogers: (Second President of Tulane University, Acting)
Acting president of Tulane University from 1899 to 1900; born, April 12, 1825, New York City; died,
December 17, 1919; attended the Academy of Charles Bartlett, College Hill, in Poughkeepsie, New
York; attended New York University for two years; also attended Williams College, where he was
incapacitated by a riding accident a few months before graduation; LL.D., 1886, University of Ohio;
professor of mathematics and English literature, Miss Hull's Academy, New Orleans; superintendent,
New Orleans School District; officer in the Confederate Army; general superintendent, City Schools
from end of Civil War until 1870; principal, Sylvester Larned Institute, 1870-1877; charter member of
the Board of Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund; served as secretary of the Board and
secretary of the University; Tulane librarian;
Edwin Anderson Alderman: (Third President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane University from 1900 to 1904; born, May 10, 1861, Wilmington, North Carolina;
died, April 29, 1931, Connellsville, Pennsylvania; B. A., 1882, University of North Carolina; D.C.L.,
1891, University of the South; LL.D., 1899, Tulane University; LL.D., 1902, Johns Hopkins; professor
of pedagogy, University of North Carolina; professor of history and philosophy, 1893, Tulane
University; served as president of three Southern universities in a period of five years: North Carolina,
Tulane, Virginia; greatly concerned with the cause of education, particularly in the South; believed in
education for all; brilliant, persuasive speaker; during his administration the curriculum was revised and
liberalized, the faculty was strengthened, the financial resources of the University were increased, and
the Tilton Library was acquired; Alderman Library at the University of Virginia is named in his honor;
Edwin Boone Craighead: (Fourth President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane University from 1904 to 1912; born, March 3, 1861, Ham's Prairie, Missouri; B. A.,
M. A., Central College, Missouri; advanced study at Vanderbilt University, Leipzig, and Paris; LL.D.,
University of Missouri; D.C.L., University of the South; professor of Greek, Wofford College, South
39
Carolina; first president of the South Carolina Agricultural College at Clemson, 1893; president,
Central College, Missouri, 1897; president, Missouri State Normal College, 1901; president, University
of Montana, 1912; three main objectives at Tulane: 1) continue upward trend of standards, 2) centralize
the loose federation of units of the University, 3) insist upon financial aid from the Legislature on the
basis of the character of the University; contended that Tulane was a state institution; his administration
at Tulane was productive but also turbulent; Craighead failed to get state support; drew together all parts
of the University except Newcomb; University Council was established during his administration with
representatives from all faculties; standards were raised under his administration;
Robert Sharp: (Fifth President of Tulane University)
Acting president of Tulane University from 1912 to 1913; president of the University from 1913 to
1918; born, October 24, 1851, Lawrenceville, Virginia; died, January 23, 1931, New Orleans; B. A.,
Randolph Macon; A. M., Randolph Macon; Ph.D., University of Leipzig; LL.D., Tulane; professor of
English, Tulane, 32 years; dean, Graduate Department, Tulane; noted scholar of English literature
(edited volumes with comment and criticism on Beowulf, Merchant of Venice); taught at the University's
Common Street campus and saw the University moved to its present location; also saw the changing of
the University's name from University of Louisiana to the Tulane University of Louisiana; as president,
he stressed high standards, set up a new system of scholarships; has been said to have been a new type
of executive (not the oratorical sort); Sharp said, "No man changes a University radically... Things are
always shaping themselves and taking form..." (When Dr. Sharp was named president of Tulane, he was
in Richmond at a conference. Upon his return to New Orleans, he was met at the train by students and
alumni with a brass band. He was escorted to Richardson Memorial Building, where there were
speeches and a huge bonfire.)
Albert Bledsoe Dinwiddie: (Sixth President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane, University from 1918 to 1935; born, April 3, 1871, Lexington, Kentucky; B. A., M.
A., and Ph. D., University of Virginia; studied Greek and mathematics at Gottingen, 1902-1903; LL. D.,
Southwestern Presbyterian; taught at Southwestern Presbyterian University; dean, College of Arts and
Sciences and director of the summer school, Tulane; engineered first large fundraising drive in Tulane's
history (1920 Endowment Drive); goals: 1) confine Tulane to its strongest departments and excel there,
2) tell public about Tulane's finances, equipment, accomplishments, 3) have a definite and progressive
internal financial system, 4) let instructors know where they stand in terms of salary expectations;
administration was a period of great progress and chronic crisis; School of Social Work and the Middle
American Research Institute were established under his administration;
Douglas Smith Anderson: (Seventh President of Tulane University, Acting)
Acting president of Tulane University from 1935 to 1936; born, September 6, 1871; died in May 1940;
A. B., Washington and Lee University, 1890; M. A., Tulane University, 1892; D. Sc., Washington and
Lee, 1933; LL. D., Tulane University, 1937; professor of physics and electrical engineering, Tulane;
director, School of Vocational Training for Disabled Veterans; dean, College of Engineering; named
acting president of Tulane, January 22, 1934; first alumnus of the University to serve as president;
40
Robert Leonval Menuet: (Eighth President of Tulane University, Acting)
Acting president of Tulane University from 1936 to 1937; born, May 21, 1879; died, May 9, 1943; son
of a planter and merchant; B. E., 1900, Tulane University; L.L.D., 1938; professor of mathematics,
Tulane; named acting president, September 1, 1936; reappointed professor of mathematics, 1937; title
changed to the W. R. Irby Professor of Mathematics, 1938;
Rufus Carrollton Harris: (Ninth President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane University from 1937 to 1960; born, January 2, 1897, Monroe, Georgia; B. A.,
Mercer University; LL.B., Yale University, 1923; J. D., Yale University, 1924; Litt. D., University of
Miami, 1958; other honorary degrees from: Birmingham Southern, Mercer, University of Alabama,
William Jewell College, University of Maine, University of Chattanooga, University of Pueblo,
Northwestern University, Louisiana State University, Tulane University, University of Hawaii; dean of
the Law School, Mercer; dean of Law School, Tulane; president, Mercer University; chancellor, Mercer
University; named president of Tulane in 1937; emphasized quality and not size, selection and limitation
of students, strengthening of undergraduate work, emphasis on graduate education and research,
expansion in the field of Latin America, extension of service over a wider geographic area, intensive
efforts to augment the financial resources of the University, selection of outstanding deans and
administrative officers;
Maxwell Edward Laphan: (Tenth President of Tulane University, Acting)
Acting president of Tulane University from April 1 to August 31, 1960; born, December 25, 1899,
Newfane, New York; B. S., M. D., University of Pennsylvania; LL. D., 1967, Tulane University;
instructor of obstetrics, University of Pennsylvania; dean of the School of Medicine, Tulane; professor
of medicine, Tulane; professor of obstetrics, Tulane; W. R. Irby Professor of Obstetrics, Tulane; military
(Navy), 1943-1945; retired as captain; returned as dean of the Medical School in 1945; named acting
president of the University in 1960; provost, 1963-1965, Tulane; director of Internship Program,
American Association of Universities; established international programs in Colombia, South America;
member, National Council on Health Research Facilities;
Herbert Eugene Longenecker: (Eleventh President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane University from 1960 to 1975; born, May 6, 1912, Lititz, Pennsylvania; B. S., 1933,
M. S., 1934, Ph. D., 1936, Pennsylvania State University; D. Sc., Duquesne University, 1951; Litt. D.,
University of Miami, 1972; LL. D., Loyola of Chicago, 1963; faculty member, University of Pittsburgh,
1938-1955; dean of research in the natural sciences, 1944-1945; dean of the Graduate School,
1946-1955, vice president in charge of the Chicago Professional Schools, 1955-1960, University of
Illinois; during his Tulane administration, the University was engaged in suits involving the admission
of blacks; he supported the improvement of scientific facilities of the University; during his
administration, the Tulane Medical Center Hospital and Clinic were conceived and developed, intensive
efforts to augment the resources of the University were undertaken, and the local, regional, and national
moral and financial support of the University were greatly increased; he dealt capably with the problems
presented to the University by the militant students of the 1960's and handled the integration of the
University in an effective manner;
41
Francis Sheldon Hackney: (Twelfth President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane University from 1975 to 1980; born, December 5, 1933, Birmingham, Alabama; B.
A., Vanderbilt University, 1955; United States Naval Academy, 1959-1961; ensign and lieutenant,
United States Navy, 1956-1959; M. A., 1963,Yale University; Ph. D., 1966, Yale University; History
instructor, 1965-1966, Princeton; assistant professor, 1966-1968, associate professor, 1968-1972,
provost and professor of history, 19721975, Princeton University; on staff and later director, Princeton
Cooperative School Program; James Madison Bicentennial Preceptor, Princeton, 1968-1971; Board of
Editors, Journal of Southern History, 1972-1975; named president of Tulane University in 1975; very
interested in the students, held frequent meetings and conversations with them; maintained an
"open-door" policy with students; during his administration the University acquired new computer
capabilities, enjoyed salary increases, saw the establishment of the Chair of Judeo-Christian Studies,
received increased gifts and grants, and achieved a balanced budget;
Eamon Michael Kelly: (Thirteenth President of Tulane University)
Acting president of Tulane University from 1980 to 1981; president of Tulane University, 1981-1998;
born, April 25, 1936, New York City; B. S., Fordham University, 1958; M. S., Columbia University,
1960; Ph. D., Columbia University, 1965 (all degrees in the field of economics); instructor, 1961-1965,
Fordham University; assistant professor, 1965-1968; Pennsylvania State University; director of Policy
Formulation Division, Economic Development Administration (U. S. Dept. of Commerce), 1968;
special assistant to administrator, 1968-1969, U. S. Small Business Administration; officer-in-charge,
Office of Social Development, Ford Foundation, 1969-1973; officer-in-charge, Program Related
Investments, Ford Foundation, 1974-1979; executive vice president, Tulane University, 1979-1980;
senior fellow, Charles H. Murphy Institute for Political Economy; acting vice president for
Development; named acting president of the University in 1980; named president of the University in
1981; since 1980, gifts to Tulane almost tripled, gains in admissions were noted in spite of general
decline in the numbers of college-age students, faculty salaries increased, the university’s budget was
balanced with surplus; Kelly committed himself to assuring "...Tulane's primacy among independent
universities in the South..."; concentrated his efforts on securing excellent students and outstanding
faculty, increasing philanthropic support, and managing resources prudently;
Scott S. Cowen: (Fourteenth President of Tulane University)
President of Tulane from1998 to present; born July 27, 1946 in Plainfield, New Jersey; B. S., 1968,
University of Connecticut; MBA, 1972, DBA, 1975, The George Washington University (both degrees
in business administration); assistant professor of management, 1974-76, Bucknell University; Eleanor
F. and Philip G. Rust Visiting Professor, 1982-83, Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business
Administration, University of Virginia, assistant professor, 1976-78, associate professor, 1978-82,
professor of accountancy 1982-1998, associate dean for professional and undergraduate programs, 197982, vice dean 1983-84 and dean and Albert J. Weatherhead, III Professor of Management of
Weatherhead School of Management, 1984-1998, Case Western Reserve University; named president of
Tulane in 1998; also holds joint appointment as the Seymour S. Goodman Memorial Professor of
Business in Tulane's A.B. Freeman School of Business and Professor of Economics in the Faculty of
Liberal Arts and Sciences; initiated a strategic plan that focuses on 1) building a distinctive undergrad
experience, 2) strengthening Tulane’s research and graduate programs (especially in the sciences and
engineering), 3) expanding the university’s partnerships (community, regional and international), and 4)
42
further developing its technology infrastructure, including its distance learning capabilities and library
system; since 1998, undergraduate applications have increased 50 percent, student enrollment and
quality have been at all time highs, total private giving to the University has doubled; the University has
received a record level of research awards and was named by Kaplan/Newsweek’s college guide as one
of the nine “Hot Schools” in the nation; member of the Board of Directors of Newell Rubbermaid Inc.,
American Greetings Corporation, Jo-Ann Stores, Inc. and Forest City Enterprises Inc.; co-author of four
books and has published more than 60 articles in academic and professional journals on issues dealing
with corporate governance, strategic planning and the development of financial management systems;
honors and awards include the Torch of Learning from Hebrew University, 1991, the Torch of Liberty
from the Anti-Defamation League, 2001, School of Business Hall of Fame at the University of
Connecticut (the only academic inductee),1995, The George Washington University Distinguished
Alumni Scholar for 1998-99;
43
VICE PRESIDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY
Joseph Chandler Morris*
Vice President for Endowment
Vice President for Board of Visitors
1948-1953
1954-1968
Robert Warren French
Vice President for Development
1953-1956
Fred Carrington Cole
Academic Vice President
1954-1959
Clarence Scheps
Vice President and Comptroller
Executive Vice President
Vice President for Business (Acting)
1957-1966
1966-1979
1979-1980
Fred Ray Cagle
Vice President for Institutional Development
1963-1968
John Joseph Walsh, M. D.*
Vice President for Health
Executive Vice President for Health Affairs
1969-1978
1978-1981
Donald Moore
Vice President for Student Services and Dean of Students
1976-1984
Albert J. Wetzel*
Vice President for Alumni and University Affairs
1977-1978
Jesse Berry Morgan*
Vice President for Business
1977-1979
Laurence Peterson
Vice President for Finance
1977-1980
Gary Bayer
Vice President for Development and
University Relations and Alumni Affairs
1977-1980
Paul McFarland
Vice President for Health Affairs
Vice President for Business and Finance
1978-1980
1980-1981
Eamon Michael Kelly
Executive Vice President
1979-1981
Stephen Frederick Starr
Vice President for Academic Affairs
1980-1981
44
Richard Edwards
Vice President for Health Affairs
1981-1983
Warren Johnson
Vice President for University Relations and Resources
Vice President for Development and Alumni Affairs
1981
1981-1984
Erling William Hanmarstrom
Vice President for Business and Campus Development
1981-1995
Ron Green
Vice Chancellor/Vice President/Director of Tulane
Hospital and Clinic/Clinic Affairs
1982-19??
Charles B. Knapp
Senior Vice President for Operations
1982-1987
Francis Leo Lawrence*
Academic Vice President and Provost
1982-1990
Clifford E. Woodruff
Vice President for Computing/Telecommunications
(title change) Vice President for Information Systems
1984-1989
1989-1993
Michael Halter*
Vice President for Health Affairs
1984-1985
Martha H. Sullivan*
Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students
1984-
Judith Ecklund
Vice President for Development and Alumni Affairs
1984-1987
Linda Asay
Vice President for Public Affairs
1985-1990
Robert Alsobrook
Vice President for Development, Tulane Medical Center
1985-1987
Patricia Reardon*
Acting Vice Chancellor/Vice President/Director of
Tulane Hospital and Clinic/Clinic Affairs
1985
Charley O. Trimble
Vice Chancellor/Vice President/Director of Tulane
Hospital and Clinic/Clinic Affairs
1985-1987
Ruben Arminana
Vice President
1987-1988
45
Stuart Applebaum
Vice President for Development and Alumni Affairs
1987-1989
Marcia Bromberg
Vice President for Budget and Long Range Planning
Vice President for Finance
1987-1990
1990-1991
Paul Nelson
Executive Vice President
1987-1990
Ronald Mason, Jr.
Vice President and General Counsel
Senior Vice President and General Counsel
1987-1990
1990-1998
Toby Bethea
Vice President for Development and Alumni Affairs,
Tulane Medical Center
1988-1989
J. Grant Morey
Acting Vice President for Development and
Alumni Affairs, Tulane Medical Center
1989-1990
Joseph E. Gordon
Acting Vice President for Development and
Alumni Affairs
1989
Bronson C. Davis
Vice President for Development and Alumni Affairs
1989-1990
Julia Walker*
Vice President for Institutional Advancement
1990-1998
Emily J. Clark*
Vice President for Public Affairs
1990-
Gene A. D’Amour
Vice President for Government/Agency Affairs and
Institutional Program Development
1991-2002
David Fine
Vice Chancellor/Vice President/Director of Tulane
Hospital and Clinic/Clinic Affairs
1991-1995
Patricia C. Mason
Vice President for Health Sciences Advancement, Tulane
Medical Center (previously called Vice Chancellor
for Development and Alumni Affairs)
Interim Vice President for Institutional Advancement
1991-2000
1998-1999
46
Evola Bates
Vice President for Human Resources
1993-2000
Paul L. Fine*
Vice President for Finance and Treasurer
1993-1994
Richard Whiteside
Vice President for Enrollment and Institutional Research
1993-
Anthony P. Lorino
Senior Vice President for Operations and
Chief Financial Officer
1994-
William Bertrand*
Vice President for Institutional Planning, Research and
Innovation
1994-1998
Yvette M. Jones*
Vice President for Finance and Operations
Senior Vice President for Planning and Administration
Acting Vice President for Human Resources
Senior Vice President for External Affairs
Robert H. Miller*
Vice Chancellor/Vice President for Clinical Affairs,
Tulane University Health Sciences Center
Julianne Nice*
Interim Vice President for Institutional Advancement
John E. Diem
Vice President for Computing/Information Systems/
Technology Infrastructure Services/Chief
Information Officer
1996-1998
1998-2002
2000-2001
20021997-2000
1997
1998-2002
Jane S. Bickford
Vice President for Institutional Advancement
1999-2002
Paul K. Whelton
Interim Senior Vice President for Health Sciences
Senior Vice President for Health Sciences
1999-2000
2000-
Alan Miller
Vice Chancellor/Vice President for Clinical Affairs,
Tulane University Health Sciences Center
James J. Corrigan, Jr.
Vice President, Tulane University Health Sciences Center
Paul L. Barron
Interim Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs
2000-
20002000-2001
47
Hugh Lester*
Vice President for Academic Affairs
2000-2001
Lester A. Lefton
Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost
2001-
Andrew B. Heck
Vice President for Human Resources
2001-
John Lawson
Vice President for Information Technology and
Chief Information Officer
2002
48
PROVOSTS
Fred Carrington Cole (Academic Vice President)
Robert Mayer Lumiansky
Maxwell Edward Lapham, M. D.
David Russell Deener
Robert Bocking Stevens
Frank Thomas Birtel (Acting Provost)
Frank Thomas Birtel
Francis Leo Lawrence* (Acting Provost)
Francis Leo Lawrence*
James F. Kilroy (Acting)
James F. Kilroy
Eamon M. Kelly (Acting)
Martha W. Gilliland
Lester A. Lefton
1954-1959
1960-1963
1963-1965
1967-1976
1976-1978
1978-1979
1979-1981
1981-1982
1982-1990
1990-1991
1991-1996
1996-1997
1997-2000
2001-
49
SECRETARY/TREASURERS OF THE BOARD OF TULANE
(formerly the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund)
SECRETARY-TREASURERS
1892-1911
1911-1952
1952-1976
Joseph Anatole Hincks
Lawrence Andre Wogan
Anthony Percy Generes
SECRETARIES
1976-1990
1991-
Clarence Scheps (Secretary)
TREASURERS
1976-????
1982-1990
1990
1991-1994
1997-1998
1999-
Rolf Dlugos
Louis H. Katz*
Louis H. Katz* (Vice President for Administration and Treasurer)
Paul L. Fine*
Jules Nunn
R. Brent Andrus*
50
DEANS OF SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
DEANS AND DIRECTORS OF ADMISSIONS
Forrest Unna Lake (Dean)
Cliff Waldron Wing* (Director)
Edward Ale-der Rogge (Director)
John L. Martinez* (Dean)
Fred Zuker (Director)
Jillinda Joaker (Acting Director)
Jillinda Jorker (Director)
Lois Conrad (Dean)
Nancy G. McDuff (Acting Director)
Richard Whiteside (Dean)
1945-1956
1956-1965
1965-1976
1976-1979
1979-1981
1981-1982
1982-1986
1986-1992
1992-1993
1993-
DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Nathaniel C. Curtis (Head)
John H. Thompson (Head)
Buford Lindsay Pickens (Head)
Buford Lindsay Pickens (Director)
John E. Dinwiddie (Dean)
John W. Lawrence* (Acting Dean)
John W. Lawrence* (Dean)
William Kay Turner (Dean)
Ronald Coulter Filson (Dean)
Donna Virginia Robertson
Donald F. Gatzke (Acting)
Donald F. Gatzke
1916-1921
1921-1946
1946-1950
1950-1953
1953-1959
1959-1960
1960-1971
1972-1980
1980-1992
1992-1996
1996-1997
1997-
DEANS OF THE A.B. FREEMAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
Morton Arnold Aldrich
Leslie James Buchan
Robert Warren French
Paul Victor Grambsch (Associate Dean)
Paul Victor Grambsch (Acting Dean)
Paul Victor Grambsch (Dean)
Howard Graham Schaller
Charles Jackson Grayson, Jr.*
Clinton Adam Phillips (Associate Dean)
Clinton Adam Phillips (Acting Dean)
Charles Jackson Grayson, Jr.
Peter Arthur Firmin
James Murphy (Acting Dean)
Harper Boyd
James Murphy (Acting Dean)
1914-1939
1939-1949
1949-1955
1954-1955
1955-1956
1956-1960
1960-1963
1963-1964
1963
1963-1964
1964-1968
1968-1974
1974-1976
1976-1978
1978-1979
51
Walter Oscar Spencer
James Murphy (Acting Dean)
Meyer Feldberg
Walter Burnett (Acting)
James W. McFarland
1979-1980
1980-1981
1981-1986
1986-1988
1988-
DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY AND DIRECTORS OF THE DENTAL CLINIC
Andrew G. Friedrichs*
Wallace Wood, Jr.*
Alfred Archinard Leefe* (Acting)
Alfred Archinard Leefe*
Alfred Archinard Leefe* (Director of the Dental Clinic)
Walter Clarence DeRouen, Jr.* (Dir. Of the Dental Clinic)
1909-1914
1914-1922
1922-1925
1925-1928
1928-1930
1930-1933
DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
Richard Henry Jesse
Brown Ayres
James Hardy Dillard
Walter Miller
William Henry P. Creighton
Douglas Smith Anderson*
James Marshal1 Robert*
Lee Harnie Johnson
Samuel Foster Hulbert
Hugh Allison Thompson*
William C. Van Buskirk
Michael Lynch (Acting)
Nicholas J. Altiero
1878-1884
1893-1904
1904-1907
1907-1911
1911-1919
1919-1937
1937-1950
1950-1973
1973-1976
1976-1991
1991-1998
1998-2000
2000DEANS OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL
Brown Ayres (Vice Chm. of the Faculty of the Graduate Dept.)
James Hardy Dillard (Vice Chm. of the Faculty of the Graduate Dept.)
Robert Sharp (Dean of the Grad. Dept.)
Alcee Fortier (Dean of the Grad. Dept.)
Pierce Butler* (Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies)
John Madison Fletcher (Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies)
John MacLaren McBryde
Roger Philip McCutcheon
Robert Mayer Lumiansky
John Leslie Snell
David Russell Deener
Richard Lumsden*
Frank Thomas Birtel (Acting)
Frank Thomas Birtel
1900-1904
1904-1908
1908-1912
1912-1914
1914-1919
1919-1923
1923-1937
1937-1954
1954-1963
1963-1966
1966-1976
1976-1978
1978-1979
1979-1981
52
Francis Leo Lawrence*(Acting)
Francis Leo Lawrence*
James F. Kilroy (Acting)
Susan Davis Allen
Michael Herman
1981-1982
1982-1990
1990-1992
1992-1996
2002DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF LAW
Henry Adams Bullard
Randall Hunt
Christian Roselius
Carleton Hunt*
William Francis Mellen
Henry Carleton Miller
Harry Hinkley Hall
Eugene Davis Saunders
Dudley Odell McGovney
Charles Payne Fenner*
Rufus Edward Foster*
Rufus Carrollton Harris
Paul William Brosman
Robert J. Farley (pro-tem)
Paul William Brosman
Clarence James Morrow*(Acting)
William Ray Forrester
Cecil Morgan
Joseph Modeste Sweeney
Robert Force (Acting)
Paul R. Verkuil
John Kramer
Edward F. Sherman (Acting)
Lawrence Ponoroff
1847-1850
1850-1862
1865-1872
1872-1883
1883-1888
1888-1897
1897-1906
1906-1913
1913-1914
1914-1920
1920-1927
1927-1937
1937-1942
1942-1945
1945-1951
1951-1952
1952-1963
1963-1968
1968-1978
1978
1978-1986
1986-1996
1996-2000
2001-
DEANS OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES
James F. Kilroy
William Cooper
Teresa S. Soufas
1988-1990
1990-1996
1996DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Thomas Hunt
Charles A. Luzenberg
Edward H. Barton
John Hoffman Harrison
James Jones
John Hoffman Harrison
Augustus H. Cenas
1834-1835
1835-1836
1836-1840
1840-1841
1841-1842
1842-1844
1844-1845
53
William M. Carpenter*
Alexander J. Wedderburn
James Jones
Gustave A. Nott
Thomas Hunt
James Jones
Tobias G. Richardson
Stanford E. Chaille*
Isadore Dyer*
Albert B. Dinwiddie (Acting)
Charles Cassidy Bass*
Maxwell Edward Lapham
Hiram Watkins Kostmayer*
Maxwell Edward Lapham
Charles Cameron Sprague
Oscar Creech
Robert D. Sparks (Acting)
John Joseph Walsh*
Robert D. Sparks
John Joseph Walsh (Acting)
William Gentry Thurman
James Turner Hamlin III
Blackwell B. Evans (Acting)
Vincent A. Fulginitti
James J. Corrigan, Jr. (Acting)
James J. Corrigan, Jr.
Paul K. Whelton (Acting)
Ian Logan Taylor
1845-1846
1846-1848
1848-1849
1849-1852
1852-1862
1865
1865-1885
1885-1908
1908-1920
1920-1922
1922-1940
1940-1942
1942-1945
1945-1963
1963-1967
1967
1967-1968
1968-1969
1969-1972
1972-1973
1973-1975
1975-1987
1987-1989
1989-1993
1993-1994
1994-2000
2000-2001
2001DEANS OF NEWCOMB COLLEGE
Brandt Van Blarcom Dixon (President)
Pierce Butler*
Charles Frederick Hard
Anna Estelle Many* (Acting)
Logan Wilson
Anna Estelle Many*
John Randolph Hubbard
Charles David Hounshell
James Francis Davidson
Francis Leo Lawrence* (Acting)
William J. Smither* (Acting)
Susan Wittig
Raymond Esthus (Acting)
Sara Chapman
Mary Ann Maquire (Acting)
Emily H. Vokes (Acting)
Ann H. Die
Beth A. Willinger (Acting)
1887-1919
1919-1938
1938-1943
1944
1944-1951
1951-1953
1953-1966
1966-1969
1969-1976
1976-1978
1978-1979
1979-1981
1981-1983
1983-1985
1985-1987
1987-1988
1988-1992
1992-1993
54
Jeanie Watson
Valerie D. Greenberg (Acting)
Valerie D. Greenberg
Cynthia Lowenthal (Acting)
Cynthia Lowenthal
1993-1997
1997-1998
1998-2000
2000-2001
2001-
DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
John Felicien Simon*
1931-1934
DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND TROPICAL MEDICINE
Grace Arabell Goldsmith*
Joseph Diehl Beasley*
Frank Moore (Acting)
James E. Banta
J. Thomas Hamrick (Acting)
Harrison C. Spenser
Ann M. Anderson (Acting)
Paul K. Whelton
Ann M. Anderson (Acting)
1967-1973
1973-1974
1974-1975
1975-1987
1987-1991
1991-1996
1996
1997-1999
1999-2002
DEANS OF THE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK
Garrett Pelhemus Wyckoff (Director)
Elizabeth Wisner* (Director)
Elizabeth Wisner* (Dean)
Walter Lewis Kindelsperger
Fred Morris Southerland*
Helen Cassidy (Acting Dean)
Margaret M. Campbell
Suzanne England
Ronald E. Marks (Acting)
1927-1937
1932-1939
1939-1958
1958-1973
1973-1980
1980-1982
1982-1994
1994-2001
2001-
DIRECTORS AND DEANS OF STUDENTS AND STUDENT ACTIVITTES
Albert Elliot Holleman* (Dir. of Student Activities)
Frederick Hewitt Fox (Dir. of Student Activities)
John Barkley (Manager of Student Activities)
Calvert De Coligny* (Grad. Mgr of Student Activities)
John H. Randolph Feltus* (Grad. Mgr. of Student Act.)
Maurice H. Born* (Grad. Mgr. of Student Activities)
Kendall Hutchinson Cram* (Grad. Mgr. of Student Act.)
Beatrice McMillan Field* (Grad. Mgr. of Student Activities)
Claude Simons, Jr.* (Director of Student Activities)
John Henry Stibbs (Director of Student Activities)
1926-1929
1929-1930
1930-1932
1932-1935
1935-1937
1937-1938
1938-1942
1942-1948
1948-1949
1949-1951
55
John Henry Stibbs (Dean of Students)
Donald Robert Moore (Acting Dean of Students)
Annette TenElshof
Donald Robert Moore (Vice President for Student
Services and Dean of Students)
Martha H. Sullivan (Vice President of Student Affairs and
Dean of Students)
1951-1975
1975-1976
1976-1978
1978-1984
1984-
DEANS OF TULANE COLLEGE
(formerly the College of Arts and Sciences)
Claudius Wistar Sears
Richard Henry Jesse
James Hardy Dillard
Brown Ayres
James Hardy Dillard
Walter Miller
Albert Bledsoe Dinwiddie
Edward Ambrose Bechtel
Marten ten Hoor
George Evans Simons (pro-tem)
Fred Carrington Cole
William Wallace Peery
Joseph E. Gordon (Acting)
Joseph E. Gordon
James F. Kilroy
Alan J. Avery-Peck (Acting)
Anthony M. Cummings
T.R. Kidder (Acting)
1850-1860
1878-1884
1893-1900
1900-1904
1904-1907
1907-1911
1911-1918
1918-1937
1937-1944
1944-1947
1947-1955
1955-1964
1964
1964-1984
1984-1989
1990-1992
1992-2002
2002DEANS OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
Roger P. McCutcheom (Director)
Ross M. Trump (Director)
Thomas T. Earle (Acting Director)
John P. Dyer (Director)
John P. Dyer (Dean)
Robert Clifton Whittemore (Dean)
Wayne Shaffer Woody* (Acting Dean)
Wayne Shaffer Woody* (Dean)
Louis Barrilleaux
Richard A. Marksbury (Acting)
Richard A. Marksbury
1942-1946
1946-1947
1947-1948
1948-1952
1952-1968
1968-1978
1978-1980
1980-1981
1981-1996
1996
1996-
56
CHANCELLORS OF THE MEDICAL CENTER/
SENIOR VICE-PRESIDENTS FOR HEALTH SCIENCES
(The Center’s name changed to Tulane University Health Sciences Center in 2000,
and the chancellor position was renamed senior vice president for health sciences.)
John Joseph Walsh*
Neal A. Vanselow
John C. LaRosa
Paul K. Whelton (Interim Senior Vice President)
Paul K. Whelton (Senior Vice President)
1973-1989
1989-1994
1994-1999
1999-2000
2000-
57
PRESIDENT OF NEWCOMB COLLEGE
Brandt Van Blarcom Dixon
1887-1919
58
BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE TULANE UNIVERSITY
HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER
(The Center’s name changed from the Tulane Medical Center in 2000.)
Jack R. Aron
C. C. Clifton, Jr.*
Vanda A. Davidson*
J. A. Blaine DeJoie
John W. Deming*
George Denegre*
Brooke H. Duncan*
Murray C. Fincher
Robert C. Hills*
Frederick B. Ingram
Erik F. Johnsen*
Herman Kohlmeyer, Jr.*
Gustave L. Levy*
Floyd W. Lewis*
Harry McCall, Jr.*
Joseph McCloskey*
A. Louis Read
John Smallpage*
Mrs. John N. Stewart III*
John G. Weinmann*
H. Hunter White
Mrs. Leon Wolf*
Emanuel B. Benjamin III*
Mrs. Killian Huger, Jr.*
Walter S. McIlhenny
Ernest N. Morial
Norman N. Newhouse
John G. Phillips
Lawrence J. Israel*
1969196919691969-1970
196919691969-1980
1969
19691969-1977
1969-1975
19691969-1976
1969-1973
1969-1983
1969-1973
196919691969-1978
1969-1981
1969-1975
1969-1981
19711971-1974
1971
19711971-1975
1971-1976
1972-1976
Mrs. F. Monroe Labouisse*
Henry E. Braden III
Alden J. McDonald, Jr.
Mrs. Jack J. Reynolds*
Robert W. Brown*
Joseph C. Canizaro
Carl M. Corbin*
Mrs. Oliver H. Havens
Mrs. Frank H. Sellars III
Louis L. Frierson*
Robert L. Pettit, Jr.
Hon. Morey L. Sear*
McDonald L. Stephens*
Charles E. Dunbar III*
Lester E. Kabacoff
Harry Bartlett Kelleher, Jr.*
E. James Kock, Jr.*
Frank B. Stewart, Jr.*
Gerard W. Barousse*
Mrs. Charles Schwartz, Jr.*
Sidney Barthelemy*
James M. Cain*
James Bean
Prieur J. Leary, Jr.*
Donald J. Nalty
Eli W. Tullis
Walter M. Vannoy
Frank Friedler, Jr.
197219731973-1978
19731975197519751975-1976
197519761976-1980
19761976-1977
19771977-1978
1977197719771978197819791979198119811981198119811983-
(The following list is the current information on the Board as of July 2002.)
Walter C. Flower III, chair*
Peter A. Aron*
Michael M. Christovich*
Edward L. Diefenthal*
Paul L. Fine*
Ronald J. French, MD*
Richard Freeman, Jr.*
Reverend Willie Gable Jr.
Thomas L. Harrison
Mrs. Lawrence J. Israel
Jerry D. Jackson
Victor F. Kirschman
Angela Bowder Koch
E. Theodore Laborde
M.L. Lagarde III*
H. Merritt Lane III
Sidney W. Lassen*
Julius L. Levy II, MD*
Mrs. Michael J. Marsiglia*
Martha W. Murphy
Mrs. Robert M. Murphy
Mrs. Donald Nalty
M. Cleland Powell III*
John C. Reynolds*
59
Reverend Hill C. Riddle
Sandra L. Robinson, MD*
Joe D. Smith, Jr.
Steven W. Usdin
David R. Voelker
Robert T. Weinmann*
Leonard Vance Wormser
John R. Young, MD*
ADVISORY MEMBERS
Herschel L. Abbott, Jr.
Gerard W. Barousse
James Bean
Emanuel V. Benjamin III
Robert W. Brown, M.D.
James M. Cain
Carl M. Corbin
George Denegre
Louis Frierson
Harry Bartlett Kelleher, Jr.
Herman S. Kohlmeyer, Jr.
Sam A. LeBlanc III
Jonathan C. McCall
Hunter Pierson
Mrs. Jack J. Reynolds*
Edward Rosen
Hon. Morey L. Sear*
Frank B. Stewart, Jr.*
Eli W. Tullis
EX OFFICIO MEMBERS
Scott S. Cowen, President, Tulane University
Paul K. Whelton, M.D., Health Sciences Senior Vice President
Alan Miller, Ph.D., M.D., Vice President and Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs
Susan P. Bennett, President, TUHSC Auxiliary
60
BOARD OF VISITORS
(The Board was an advisory group that was abolished in the early 1980s.)
Chester Barnard
Stanhope Bayne-Jones
Bruce K. Brown
William Hodding Carter*
Benjamin C. Dawkins*
George S. Dinwiddie*
William H. W. Fitzpatrick*
Douglass V. Freret*
G. Shelby Friedrichs*
Parrish Fuller
Ben Goldsmith*
Mrs. Benjamin Gore*
1954-1955
1954-1964
1954-1964
1954-1962
1954-1955
1954-1964
1954-1964
1954-1968
1954-1954
1954-1982
1954-1960
1954-1961
1974-1982
Frederick Hard
1954-1979
Miss Etta Hodgins*
1954-1958
Arthur L. Jung, Jr.*
1914-1954
Robert A. Lambert*
1954-1956
Monte M. Lemann*
1954-1959
Jesse Littleton*
1954-1955
Mrs. Robert C. Lynch*
1954-1960
Norris C. McGowen
1954-1955
Armand Mercier*
1954-1957
Cecil Morgan
1954-1962
Miss Lillie Nairne*
1954-1960
Isidore Newman II*
1954-1954
Ashton Phelps*
1954-1955
LeDoux R. Provosty*
1954-1964
Robert L. Simpson*
1954-1960
Earl P. Stevenson
1954-1974
Mordelo L. Vincent, Jr.
1954-1960
1970-1974
Langbourne Meade Williams 1954-1960
Woollen H. Walshe*
1955-1966
David B. H. Chaffs, Jr.*
1956-1956
A. Watson Chatman*
1956-1960
Lawrence R. Hafstad
1956-1961
1964-1977
Jacob S. Landry*
1956-1957
Gustave L. Levy*
1956-1976
Francis Cameron Payne*
1954
Hollis H. Crosby
1957-1964
Harry P. Gamble, Jr.*
1957-1958
Caryl P. Haskins
1957-1982
Mrs. James J. Meyers*
1957-1957
John C. Baine*
1958-1959
1961-1963
Charles G. Smither*
1958-1958
1963-1967
Leonard Carmichael
1959-1967
Mayo L. Emory*
1959-1961
Charlton H. Lyons, Sr.*
1959-1968
L. Julian Samuel*
1959-1959
Jack R. Aron
1960-1982
Ernest B. Mason*
1960-1962
Whitney J. Oates
1960-1963
Vance M. Strange*
1960-1961
Arthur J. Waechter, Jr.*
1960-1963
Detlev W. Bronk
1961-1974
Marion J. Epley, Jr.*
1961-1977
Frank C. Fisher
1961-1967
John C. Hodges*
1961-1964
James R. Killian, Jr.
1961-1969
E. Patrick McCloskey*
1961-1962
Howard K. Smith*
1961-1963
William M. Haile*
1962-1971
J. E. Jonsson*
1962-1977
Lawrence A. Kimpton
1962-1977
Earl McGowin
1962-1982
J. E. Wallace Sterling
1962-1975
Vernon F. Taylor
1962-1970
Donald J. Russell
1963-1977
Mortimer Silvey*
1963-1967
Logan Wilson
1963-1982
James J. Hicks*
1963-1969
William O. Baker
1964-1982
Rev. C. Julian Bartlett*
1964-1982
James McMillan Gibson
1964-1966
William Homer Turner
1964-1982
John W. Deming*
1964-1968
Gayle L. Dalferes*
1965-1970
Michael DeBakey*
1965-1982
Streuby Lloyd Drumm
1965-1965
Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh l965-1969
Emanuel Rubin Piore
1965-1974
Herman B. Wells
1965-1982
Louis Booker Wright
1965-1976
Murray F. Cleveland*
1966-1970
Marshall L. McCune
1966-1975
Ethan A. H. Shepley
1966-1972
Aiken W. Fisher
1967-1971
Fontaine Martin*
1967-1973
James McCormack
1967-1975
61
Percival Stern*
Harold A. Timken, Jr.*
Thomas C. Wicker, Jr.*
Turner Catledge
Floyd W. Lewis*
Edwin Vennard*
Howard R. Bowen
Waldemar S. Nelson*
Harold Stream*
Thomas C. Wells, Jr.
John F. Bookout
Patrick Hanley*
Mrs. Alvin H. Howard*
Charles H. Murphy, Jr.
James F. Oates, Jr.
Clarence L. Barney*
1968-1975
1968-1975
1968-1969
1969-1982
1969-1971
1969-1971
1970-1971
1970-1974
1970-1978
1970
1971-1980
1971-1976
1971-1973
1971-1972
1971-1972
1972-1976
1980-1982
C. Murphy Moss, Jr.*
1972-1978
Lup Quon Pang*
1972-1982
Shepard F. Perrin, Jr.*
1972-1977
Vernon R. Alden
1973-1982
William B. Johnson
1978-1982
Arthur G. Kleinschmidt, Jr.* 1973-1980
Lucius P. Gregg, Jr.
1974-1982
Joseph D. Hughes
1974-1979
Gilbert Vorhoff*
1974-1979
Robert Mayer Lumiansky
George D. Nelson
William M. Rees
Daniel Ryan Sartor, Jr.*
Mrs. Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.
James Moreau*
Melvin S. Newman
Mrs. Roger Thayer Stone
Clarence L. Barney*
Thomas Ehrlich
Sherman M. Mellinkoff
Robert H. Young*
Wiley H. Sharp, Jr.*
Armande Billion*
William A. Clebsch
Paul B. Firstenberg
Mrs. Nancy McLarty*
Jerrold M. Michael
Kurt Mislow*
Roger L. Stevens
Robert E. Young*
Alexander Heard
Henry Armand Millon*
Mrs. Margaret P. Willson*
Stewart J. Kepper*
1975-1982
1975-1982
1975-1982
1975-1982
1975-1977
1976-1981
1976-1980
1976-1982
1977-1979
1977-1982
1977-1978
1977-1982
1978-1982
1979-1982
1979-1982
1979-1982
1979-1992
1979-1982
1979-1982
1979-1982
1979-1982
1980-1982
1980-1982
1980-1982
1981-1982
62
PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL
(Beginning in 1984, term lengths are incomplete due to unavailable records.)
Donald M. Alstadt
Jay P. Altmayer*
Peter A. Aron*
Mrs. Lindy Boggs*
Herbert J. Bremermann, Jr.
Edward M. Carmouche*
Mrs. Hodding Carter*
L. S. Close*
Gayden Derickson*
DuVal F. Dickey*
Thorne B. Donnelley*
Thomas J. Feehan*
James Hardie Fenner*
Robert E. Flowerree*
Joseph A. Grazier
Edgar J. Hagstette, Jr.*
Judith Hernstadt*
George H. Heyman, Jr.
Burt Henry Keenan*
Henry F. Le Mieux*
Philip A. Masquelette*
John L. McLucas*
C. Murphy Moss, Jr.*
Johnie M. Ouzts
Tony Owen
Shepard F. Perrin, Jr.*
A. Lane Plauchè*
Ledoux Provosty, Jr.*
Harold A. Rosen*
Jack B. St. Clair*
Maridel Saunders*
Martin F. Schmidt*
Howard K. Smith*
Samuel A. Stern
Arthur W. Stout, Jr.*
Harold A. Timken, Jr.*
Harry T. Whitley*
J. Luckett Yawn, Jr.*
Robert H. Young*
Robert M. Haynie*
Harry McCall, Jr.*
Mrs. Margaret P. Willson*
1976-1983
1976-1980
1992-1996
1976-1988
1976-1996
1976-1984
1976-1980
1976-1985
1976-1985
1976-1983
1976-1984
1976-1985
1976-1985
1976-1981
1976-1980
1976-1981
1976-1985
1976-1983
1976-1984
1976-1987
1976-1985
1976-1981
1976-1983
1976-1978
1976-1980
1976-1983
1976-1983
1976-1996
1976-1987
1976-1991
1976-1985
1976-1983
1976-1996
1976-1976
1976-1981
1976-1984
1976-1984
1976-1980
1976-1980
1976-1984
1977-1993
1977-1985
1977-1981
1982-1994
John G. Phillips
1977-1978
Hamilton Farrar Richardson* 1977-1985
William Ruder
John Edwin Kyle, Jr.
Mrs. Anne Armstrong
Peter Victor Guarisco
Mrs. Virginia Kyle Hine*
Lawrence J. Israel*
Norman R. Kerth
Willard L. Marmelzat*
William B. Tanner
Gilbert H. Vorhoff*
1977-1979
1977-1981
1977-1980
1977-1981
1977-1981
1977-1994
1977-1996
1977-1989
1977-1983
1977-1978
Sybil M. Favrot*
Jerry Heymann
Norman L. Johnson*
Arthur G. Kleinschmidt, Jr.*
William Boatner Reily III*
James H. Stone
Harold Stream*
1978-1983
1978-1994
1978-1984
1978-1980
1978-1983
1978-1986
1978-1988
Thomas S. Farmer*
Richmond B. Galbreath*
W. Kennon McWilliams, Jr.
Saul A. Mintz*
Daniel Ryan Sartor, Jr.*
1979-1987
1979-1987
1979-1981
1979-1996
1979-1980
Dawn Hebert Duhe
Henry H. Haizlip, Jr.*
James R. Moffett*
James A. Moreau*
Robert L. Turchin*
Virginia Eason Weinmann
Frank Williams
1980-1984
1980-1984
1980-1984
1980-1981
1980-1987
1980-1996
1980-1988
Jean Firstenberg
Avron B. Fogelman*
Gale L. Galloway
F. Rivers Lelong*
Early B. Lokey*
John J. Phelan
Edmund M. Reggie*
Ralph B. Rogers
Aaron Selber, Jr.*
Wilmer J. Thomas, Jr.*
Philip H. Alspach*
Darwin C. Fenner*
William A. Graham
Killian L. Huger, Jr.*
1982-1985
1982-1983
1982-1985
1982-1989
1982-1990
1982-1983
1982-1984
1982-1983
1982-1989
1982-1985
1982-1990
1982-1996
1982-1986
1982-1984
63
Meredith Mallory, Jr.*
William McCollam, Jr.
Samuel H. Pielet
Ben Weiner*
Bob F. Wright*
1982-1996
1982-1986
1982-1986
1982-1996
1982-1986
Jack R. Aron
Parrish Fuller
Mrs. Benjamin Gore*
Lucius P. Gregg, Jr.
Earl McGowin
Mrs. Doris Stone
Robert Braswell
Thomas G. Rapier*
E. Ralph Lupin
1983-1994
1983-1986
1983-1996
1983-1987
1983
1983-1994
1983-1987
1983
1983-1994
D. Kenneth Broadwell*
Arthur Q. Davis*
H. Mortimer Favrot, Jr.*
T. R. Fiddler
William Goldring*
L.W. Gray
Eiro Iwamura
Sidney W. Lassen*
Martin C. Miler
Seizo Ota
Martin D. Payson
Michael J. Rapier
Leo M. Walsh
1984198419841984198419841984198419841984198419841984-
Glenn J. Ballenger*
Robert F. Bland*
Henry J. Bodenheimer*
Robert C. Cudd, III*
Evalyn Stolaroff Gendel*
Henry J. Lartigue, Jr.*
Ray Marshall
J. Patrick Michaels, Jr.*
Donald R. Mintz*
Louis A. Newitt*
Sandra L. Robinson*
19851985198519851985198519851985198519851985-
Darryl D. Berger*
Bertie M. Deming
Gay Noe McLendon
Paul P. Selley
Robert F. Shapiro
Robert Tucker, Jr.*
Ernest L. Williamson
James W. Wilson, Jr.*
19861986198619861986198619861986-
Rutledge C. Clement, Jr.*
Carol Downes Cudd*
Louis L. Frierson*
Fredric J. Graber
Edwin Lupberger
Sybil Haydel Morial
Evelyn C. Sherer
Robert E. Sherer
Carol G. Wyllie*
198719871987198719871987198719871987-
William G. Baker, Jr.*
Francis E. Brown*
Albert H. Cohen*
Gerald L. DeBlois*
Max H. Durham, Jr.*
Mrs. Montine Freeman*
John A. Georges
Robert L. Howard
Carmel Carrington Marr
Joyce Frank Menschel*
Edward B. Poitevent*
Mary Ella Sanders
William A. Slatten, Sr.*
1988198819881988198819881988198819881988198819881988-
Robert B. Acomb, Jr.*
Mortimer Leslie Curran*
Regan A. Forrester*
Dana Zale Gerard*
Jerry M. Greenbaum*
William E. Mayer*
Elridge W. McMillan
Randolph C. Read*
Frederick R. Weisman
198919891989198919891989198919891989-
Sheila Bosworth*
Wilmer R. Bottoms*
James Cain*
Polly Phelps Durham*
Harry Bartlett Kelleher, Jr.*
E. James Kock, Jr.*
Wayne J. Lee*
Thomas S. Mabon
Louis P. Mattis*
Jacquelyn Mitchell
Andrew G. T. Moore II
H. Leighton Steward
Harold Sylvester, Jr.*
Edna G. Treuting*
Milton H. Ward
199019901990199019901990199019901990199019901990199019901990-
64
Henry E. Braden IV
Martha W. Murphy
David R. Burrus
Clive S. Cummis*
John A. Heyman*
Dorothy S. Jacobs*
Andrea Jefferson
Dermot McGlinchey*
James R. Nieset*
Edith Levy Rosenblum*
Harriet Barry Schupp*
Hans J. Sternberg
Paul R. Verkuil
Yasuhiro Yagi
19911991199219921992199219921992199219921992199219921992-
Charlotte Travieso*
1991-2000
Herschel Abbott, Jr.*
Karen Deener Depp
Zhou Guangzhao
Bruce Hagan*
1993199319931993-
Merryl Aron
Alison Stone Golcher
Patricia Greene*
Grady S. Hurley*
Victoria Reggie Kennedy*
Larry L. Murray*
Mrs. Cecilia J. Weatherhead
1995199519951995199519951995-
(The following list is the current Council information as of August 2002.)
Darryl D. Berger, Chair*
Herschel L. Abbott, Jr.*
Merryl S. Aron
David H. Berg
The Honorable Lindy Boggs*
Henry E. Braden IV
Minette H. Brown
James M. Cain*
Joseph C. Canizaro
William Cavanaugh III*
Martin Cohen
Clive S. Cummis
John Dane III*
Robert M. Devlin*
S. Stewart Farnet, Sr.*
Darwin C. Fenner*
George A. Fertitta*
L. Ronald Forman
Louis M. Freeman, Jr.*
J. Kent Friedman*
John D. Georges*
Matthew B. Gorson*
Joseph J. Hoagland*
Walter S. Issaacson
Ann R. Israel
Dorothy S. Jacobs*
Andrea Green Jefferson
Norman R. Kerth
Jeffrey L. Korach
J. Wayne Leonard
Meredith Mallory, Jr., M.D.*
Michael F. McKeever*
Saul Mintz*
Sybil Haydel Morial
Robert M. Moses*
Marlene Eskind Moses*
Martha W. Murphy
Elizabeth S. Nalty
James R. Nieset*
Seizo Ota
A. Lane Plauchè*
Brad Roller*
Edith L. Rosenblum*
Lawrence M. V. D. Schloss*
Martin F. Schmidt*
S. Andrew Schwartz, M.D.*
Bertie Deming Smith
Carroll W. Suggs
Harold Sylvester, Jr.*
Paul R. Verkuil
Virginia E. Weinmann
Charles B. Wilson, M.D.*
EX OFFICIO MEMBERS
Scott S. Cowen, President, Tulane University
Walter C. Flower III, TUHSC Board of Governors*
65
Jeanne C. Olivier, Associates Board of Directors*
Heather Rittenberg, Newcomb Alumnae Association Board of Directors*
Richard K. Schmidt, Tulane Alumni Association
66
III. HONORARY DEGREES
67
HONORARY DEGREES
Recipients of Honorary Degrees Awarded by Tulane University
YEAR
DEGREE
NAME OF RECIPIENT
1836
Honorary Doctor of Medicine
Honorary Doctor of Medicine
Honorary Doctor of Medicine
Honorary Doctor of Medicine
Doctor of Laws
Charles Barnes
Benjamin Owen Carpenter
Thomas O. Meux
Benjamin R. Hogan
Randell Hunt
Honorary Doctor of Medicine
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
John W. Mallet
Carleton Hunt
George Washington Custus Lee
Richard Henry Jesse
Jacob Cooper
Howell Edmond Jackson
William Lyne Wilson
Stephen Dill Lee
William Porcher Miles
John Henninger Reagan
Thomas Duckett Boyd
Thomas S. Maxey
Hannis Taylor
Thomas Nelson Page
Woodrow Wilson
Edwin Anderson Alderman
James Lane Allen
Edward Douglass White
Nicholas Murray Butler
Stanford Emerson Chaille*
Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry
William Rainey Harper
Hilary Abner Herbert
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
David Franklin Houston
Francis Tillou Nicholls
Robert Curtis Ogden
Edward Morse Shepard
Charles Betts Galloway
James Albert Harrison
James William Nicholson
Walter Hines Page
Brown Ayres
Beverly Ellison Warner
John Huston Finley
George Gessner
Benjamin Morgan Harrod
Edward Hughes Randolph*
1839
1845
1866
1868
1880
1887
1891
1895
1896
1897
1898
1899
1901
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
68
1908
1909
1910
1911
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1922
1925
1927
1928
1930
1931
1933
1934
1935
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
James Hardy Dillard
Charles William Eliot
Lewis Samuel McMurtry*
Henri Vignaud
John Barrett
William Augustus Evans*
William Wilson Finley
John Carlisle Kilgo
William Crawford Gorgas
Frederick Ludwig Hoffman
Baron d' Estournelles de Constant
Edgar Odell Lovett
Grace King
Ruth McEnery Stuart
Walter David Hunter
William Benjamin Smith
Ferdinando di Savoia
Enrico Arlotta
Marquis Luigi Borsarelli
Guglielmo Marconi
Augusto Ciuffelli
Francesco Saverio Nitti
George Soule
Robert Sharp
John Clinton Futrall
Amando Diaz
Ferdinand Foch
Archibald Henderson
Ernest Sidney Lewis*
Warren Stone Bickham*
Frederick William Parham*
Charles Edmond Kells
Elizabeth Meriwether Gilmer
Aristides Agramonte
Rudolph Matas*
Henry Donald Campbell
Brandt Van Blarcom Dixon
Montefiore Mordecai Lemann*
William Monroe White*
William von Phul*
Henry G. Hester
Ellsworth Woodward
Isaac Monroe Cline
Charles Edward Clark
Charles E. Dunbar, Jr*
Edward A. Filene
John Miller Turpin Finney
Rufus Edward Foster*
Edwin Francis Gay
Miss Marion Talbot
69
1935 cont.
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1944
1945
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Charles Joseph Turck*
George Hoyt Whipple
James Monroe Mason*
John Francis Coleman
Cyril Glennon Melville
Louise Jonas Nixon
Henry Tilton Lummus
Roscoe Pound
Ralph J. Schwarz*
Alice Hamilton
Douglas Smith Anderson*
H. Claude Horack
Herschel Whitfield Arant
Sophonisba Preston Breckinridge
Harmon White Caldwell
Alfred Chester Hanford
Robert Maynard Hutchins
Robert Lincoln Kelly
Waller Smith Leathers
Robert Leonval Menuet*
Marion Edwards Park
Alexander Grant Ruthven
Alphonse Mary Schwitalla
Arthur T. Vanderbilt
Edward Ambrose Bechtel
John Barnwell Elliott, Jr.*
Albert James Harno
William Elgin Wickenden
Howard Mumford Jones
James Bryant Conant
Albert Baldwin Wood*
Antonio Sanchez De Bustamante
Leopold Mortimer Favrot*
Robert MacDonald Lester
Harold Willis Dodds
James Ross McCain
Frank Murphy
Edith Abbott
Pierce Butler *
Ross T. McIntire
Louis Joseph Fortier*
Jean Paul Clayton*
Alfonso Reyes
Mildred Helen McAfee
Joseph Adolphus McClain, Jr.
Lewis Hill Weed
Jacob Casson Geiger*
Thomas Wayland Vaughan*
Theodore Henley Jack
Forrest Unna Lake
70
1945 cont.
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Music
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Civil Law
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Honorary Master of Arts
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Armand Theodore Mercier
Charles Franklin Craig
Emil Novak
Raymond Bernard Allen
Hugh Aiken Bayne*
Marcus Johns Magruder*
Chester William Nimitz
Oliver Cromwell Carmichael
Frank Area Godchaux
William Hamilton Nes
Edward James McShane*
John Johnston Parker
William Lynn Ransom
Wesley Alba Sturges
Mark Foster Ethridge
Katharine Fredrica Lenroot
Harold Shepherd
Hiram Watkins Kostmayer*
Robert Archibald Lambert*
Charles Austin O'Niell*
Robert Gordon Sproul
Harold Walter Stoke
Ida Weis Friend
Joseph Chappell Hutcheson, Jr.
Louis Booker Wright
Henry Carrington Lancaster
Massimo Freccia
Warren Robinson Austin
Thomas Vernor Smith
Paul Howard Douglas
Avery Odelle Craven
William McChesney Martin, Jr.
Shields Warren
Logan Wilson
Joseph Lawton Collins*
Herbert Felix Jolowicz
Charles Harold Fisher
Huntington Cairns
Marguerite Dagmar Renshaw
Pierre Donzelot
Carmelite Janvier*
Everette Lee De Golyer
George Washington Corner
Charles Frederick Hard
Anna Estelle Many*
Warren Abner Seavey
Andrew Jackson Warren*
Howard K. Smith, Jr.*
Stanhope Bayne-Jones
Walter Pope Binns
71
1956 cont.
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
Doctor of Music
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Bachelor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Alexander Hilsberg
Victor Lloyd Butterfield
Ernest William Goodpasture
George Crews McGhee
Doris Zemurray Stone
Charlotte Helen Napier Towle
John Franklin Enders
Harold Raymond Medina
Troy Houston Middleton
Leonard Carmichael
Robert De Blois Calkins
William Larkin Duren, Jr.*
Rolla Eugene Dyer
John Samuel Land
Jose Joaquin Pardo
John Hellums Tucker, Jr.
Thomas Keith Glennan
Roger L. Stevens
Arthur Lehman Goodhart
Bell Irvin Wiley
Lloyd Viel Berkner
Stephen Coburn Pepper
Ernest Carroll Faust
Elizabeth Wisner*
Glenn Theodore Seaborg
Earl Place Stevenson
Mario Carvajal
Theodore August Distler
Marion Spencer Fay*
Dexter Perkins
Gordon Norton Ray
William Campbell Binkley
Christian Archibald Herter
Luther Leonidas Terry*
Michael Ellis DeBakey*
Rufus Carrollton Harris
Edward William Alton Ochsner
Susan Benton Keane
Lawrence Alpheus Kimpton
Henry Richardson Labouisse
Maxwell Edward Lapham
Felix Webster McBryde*
Deane Montgomery
Erwin Nathaniel Griswold
Jefferson Caffery*
Constantinos Apostolos Doxiadis
Aaron Mayer Altschul
Marian Anderson
Edouard Morot-Sir
Turner Catledge
72
1969 cont.
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1979
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Music
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Master of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Medicine honoris causa
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Albert Walter Endt
Gustave L. Levy*
Cleanth Brooks*
George Peterkin Meade
Hardy Cross Dillard
Urban Tigner Holmes, Jr.
Robert King Merton
Louis Isadore Kahn
George Alexander Kubler
John Eric Sidney Thompson
John Theodore Krumpelmann*
Werner Torkanowsky
Martha Gilmore Robinson*
Barbara Harrisson
Richard Kui Chi Lee*
Cicely Delphine Williams
Leonard Victor Huber
Jack R. Aron
Anna Jane Harrison
Willem Johan Kolff
Kurt Martin Mislow*
Harold Alvin Rosen
John Hope Franklin
Eudora Welty
John Minor Wisdom*
Clifford Ambrose Truesdell III
Robinson Miller Upton*
Harold Newton Lee
Aaron Copland
James Kern Feibleman
Tatiana Proskouriakoff
Lester James Reed*
Clarence John Laughlin
Walker Percy
Andrew Victor Schally
Corinne Claiborne Boggs*
Anne Armstrong Legendre
Joseph John Spengler
Mitchell Franklin
John Bookout
Katherine Van Winkle Palmer
Charles L. Dufour*
Darwin Schriever Fenner*
Lillian Hellman
Aldo Van Eyck
Russell Billiu Long
Cecil Morgan
John R. Brown
Carlos Melendez Chaverri
George Rufus Brown
73
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humanities
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humanities
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humanities
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctors of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Benjamin R. Viviletti
Norman Christopher Francis
Juanita M. Kreps
Moon Landrieu
Joseph A. Ewan
William H. Foege
Jack B. St. Clair*
Marjorie Glicksman Grene
Sam Israel, Jr.*
Ruth Rogan Benerito*
Mohamed A. El Alamy
Clifford Freret Favrot*
John Erik Jonsson
Isadore M. Singer
William Russell
Ferdinand F. Stone
Alfred H. Clifford
Ronald S. Rivlin
Jorge Luis Borges
Robert Mayer Lumiansky
Ayrub K. Ommaya
Richard West Freeman*
Robert H. Barrow*
Robert Solow
Alvin M. Weinberg
John Canaday
Betty Werlein Carter*
Eleanor Burnham Adams
McGeorge Bundy
Archbishop Philip M. Hannan
Harry McCall, Jr.*
Jerrold M. Michael
E. Lucille Smith
Archie Carr
Alexander Heard
Robert G. Heath
Vernon E. Jordan, Jr.
Gala Plaza Lasso
Hazel Barnes
Donald P. Jacobs
J. Bennett Johnston
Rosa Keller*
A. O. Lucas
Jarsolav Pelikan
Chauncey Starr
Dave Warren
Benjamin W. Yancey*
Bruno Bettleheim
Willard Carlisle Butcher
Merle Greene Robertson
74
1987 cont.
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Sciences
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Sciences
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Letters
Doctor of Science
Mitchell Svirdoff
Ann Hartmann
Earl Elmer Bakken
Marian Wright Edelman
Shirley Mount Hufstedler
Eiro Iwamura
Daniel J. Boorstin
Purnell W. Choppin
Jacob Lawrence
Mary McCarthy
John J. Phelan
Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
John E. Sawyer
L. Diane Bernard*
Mathilde Krim
Constance Baker Motley
Amartya Sen
Giorgio Soave
Samuel Wilson, Jr.*
Robert Coles
Gerald M. Edelman
Thomas S. Foley
Mary Lowe Good
Charles C. Sprague
Ray Forrester
Lamar Alexander
William Julius Wilson
C. Vann Woodward
Harold Howe, II
Roger F. Murray
Werner W. Boehm*
Abner J. Mikva
Jacob Neusner
John G. Phillips
Ralph B. Rogers
Milton R. Stern
Linda S. Wilson*
Woodrow Borah
Peter R. L. Brown
Fred W. Friendly
James P. Grant
Susan Solomon
Edgar B. Stern, Jr.
Leon H. Sullivan
Edgar Miles Bronfman
Elizabeth Catlett
Robert A. Derzon
William L. Fash, Jr.
Ernest James Gaines
Harold Samuel Ginsberg
75
1995 cont.
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctors of Laws
Doctor Humane Letters
Doctor of Engineering
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Humane Letters
Hanna Halborn Gray
F. Ray Marshall
Henry Armand Millon
Henry Clement Pitot
William Boatner Reily III*
Lord Asa Briggs
Robert H. Boh*
Pascal J. Imperato
Lynn A. Margulis
Louis W. Sullivan
Charles B. Wilson
Harry Bartlett Kelleher, Sr.*
Joel Conarroe
James Marston Fitch
R. L. Kirschstein, M.D.*
John T. Scott
Houston Alfred Baker, Jr., Ph.D.
Ian James Alastair Graham
William Hugh Kenner, Ph. D.
William B. Monroe, Jr.
Donna Edna Shalala, Ph. D.
Roger Wood Wilkins
Henry W. Blackburn, Jr. M.D.
Sylvia Molloy, Ph.D.
Nafis Sadik, M.D.
Hon. Morey L. Sear
Thomas Peter Ruffell Laslett
Alan Lomax
Louis J. Ignarro
Sadako Ogata
Bernard Pecoul*
Robert Ader*
Rosabeth Moss Kanter
76
IV. STUDENT LIFE
77
ASSOCIATED STUDENT BODY PRESIDENTS
(The Associated Student Body (ASB) split into a bicameral system of governance in 1999, with both undergraduates
and graduates having their own student government. The ASB is now the collection of senators from the
Undergraduate Student Government (USG) and the Graduate and Professional Student Association (GAPSA).)
1914-1915
1915-1916
1916-1917
1917-1918
1918-1919
1919-1920
1920-1921
1921-1922
1922-1923
1923-1924
1924-1925
1925-1926
1926-1927
1927-1928
1928-1929
1929-1930
1930-1931
1931-1932
1932-1933
1933-1934
1934-1935
1935-1936
1936-1937
1937-1938
1938-1939
1939-1940
1940-1941
1941-1942
1942-1943
1943-1944
1944-1945
1945-1946
1946-1947
1947-1948
1948-1949
1949-1950
1950-1951
1951-1952
1952-1953
1953-1954
1954-1955
1955-1956
1956-1957
Sidney M. Oriol*
Jonathan J. Peters, Jr.*
Sumter P. Cousin*
Eugene D. Saunders*
Lewis F. Wakeman*
William Parkerson*
George T. Madison*
William N. Johnson*
Harold E. Meade*
Spencer B. McNair*
Albert E. Holleman*
Virgil A. A. Robinson*
Walter O. Moss*
Gerald L. Andrus*
Albin P. Lassiter*
Charles E. Webb*
Edward H. Gessner*
Charles B. Odom*
C. Girard Davidson*
John F. Wilson*
John B. McDaniel, Jr.*
Keith M. Pyburn*
Wiltz C. Ott*
Robinson Miller Upton*
John W. Sims*
Paul G. Krueger*
Conrad Meyer III*
James P. Ewin, Jr.*
James Erwin, Jr.*
Timothy A. Crain*
Leonard M. Finley, Jr.*
Henry M. Yonge*
John R. Derrick*
Richard L. Page*
George B. Hall*
Floyd W. Lewis*
Warren A. Mix*
Dabney M. Ewin*
John G. Weinmann*
George T. Swain, Jr.*
Hainon A. Miller*
H. Edwin McGlasson, Jr.*
Donald L. King*
J. Walter Ward*
1957-1958
1958-1959
1959-1960
1960-1961
1961-1962
1962-1963
1963-1964
1964-1965
1965-1966
1966-1967
1967-1968
1968-1969
1969-1970
1970-1971
1971-1972
1972-1973
1973-1974
1974-1975
1975-1976
1976-1977
1977-1978
1978-1979
1979-1980
1980-1981
1981-1982
1982-1983
1983-1984
1984-1985
1985-1986
1987-1988
1988-1989
1989-1990
1990-1991
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993-1994
1994-1995
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-1998
1998-1999
1999-2000
John A. Mmahat*
Wilton McCay, Jr.*
Gerald D. Horowitz*
Henry E. Blake*
Wilbert L. Argus, Jr.*
Harlan Schmidt*
Gano D. Lemoine, Jr.*
Tucker H. Couvillon III*
Thomas H. Ries*
John P. Fullilove III*
George J. Barlow*
Henry H. Harnage*
Larry Rosenblum*
Grey F. Ferris*
Walter E. Blessey, Jr.*
Ralph E. Wafer*
Bruce L. Feingerts*
Robert W. Thompson*
Jerry E. Clark*
Scott K. Wagman*
Grady S. Hurley*
Constantine D. Georges*
Jennifer L. Brush*
Robert M. Timperlake*
Christopher E. Austin*
David H. Young*
David R. Schneider*
Andrew D. Werth*
J. Bradford Schur*
William S. Rippner*
Edward J. Heffernan*
Lorien A. P. Smith*
William A. Schoel III*
Alan S. Weintraub*
William F. Lombard III*
Jude Ann White*
Scott Adam Shapiro*
Jill S. Kaiser*
Lee A. Samango*
Jacqueline A. Holmes*
Josie Lewis*
Jeremy Shaffer*
Ford Graham*
Jered Bocage*
78
2000-2001
2001-2002
Simeon Wildman*
Jay Meehan*
2002-2003
Justin Steinschriber*
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESIDENTS
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
Burdette B. Huffman*
Nate Hole*
Jay Meehan*
2001-2002
2002-2003
Ashley Schneider*
Matt Pang*
GRADUATE AND PROFESSIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION PRESIDENTS
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
Megan Eisenberg*
Allen Boudreaux*
Rachel Wintterle*
2001-2002
2002-2003
John Michael*
John Pint*
79
TULANE RECIPIENTS OF RHODES SCHOLARSHIPS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
Ralph Conover Many*, A. B. 1904
Charles Franklyn Zeek, Jr.*, A. B. 1907
John Andrew Rice, Jr.*, A. B. 1911
Philip Prentiss Werlein*, A. B. 1914
Philip Harold Jones, Jr.*, M. D. 1920
Cleanth Brooks, Jr.*, A. M. 1912, L.H.D., 1929
William Willeroy Wells*, B. A. 1933
Marshall Ballard, Jr.*, B. S. 1933
Howard Kingsbury Smith, Jr.*, B. A. 1936, LL.D. 1955
Hamilton Farrar Richardson*, B. A. 1955
John Ludwig Deutsch*, B. S. 1959
Bruce Kalman Rubin*, B. S. 1975, M. E. 1977, M. D. 1979
Clifford Raymond Larson*, B. A. 1980
Keith Green*, 1984
Kelley Kirklin*, 1984
Peter C. Muller*, 1985
Victoria Phillips*, 1986
Wen-Son Hsieh*, 1988
Noam Scheiber*, 1998
80
EDITORS OF THE TULANE LAW REVIEW
1929-1930
1930-1931
1931-1932
1932-1933
1933-1934
1934-1935
1935-1936
1936-1937
1937-1938
1938-1939
1939-1940
1940-1941
1941-1942
1942-1943
1943-1944
1944-1945
1945-1946
1946-1947
1947-1948
1948-1949
1949-1950
1950-1951
1951-1952
1952-1953
1953-1954
1954-1955
1955-1956
1956-1957
1957-1958
1958-1959
1959-1960
Wood Brown*
James J. Morrison*
Fred E. Inbau*
George A. Wilson*
Clarence J. Morrow*
Robert E. Friedman*
Fontaine Martin, Jr.*
Haywood H. Hillyer, Jr.*
Fred Zengel*
Allain D. Favrot*
Charles Janvier*
Leonard H. Rosenson*
Tom Bell*
James W. Bean*
Carey J. Ellis, Jr.*
Robert Jeter, Jr.*
Marjorie Lynch Jackson*
Katherine L. Brash*
Dorothy Dowling*
Jack L. Simms*
Ford W. Hall*
Edgar Corey*
Conrad Meyer III*
Ford W. Hall*
James C. Senter, Jr.*
Hugh L. Stone, Jr.*
H. Martin Hunley*
Aubrey L. Moore*
Gilbert L. Hetherwick*
Thomas C. Wicker, Jr.
George H. Robinson*
Robert E. Johnson*
Edward B. Benjamin*
Edward B. Benjamin*
Leslie L. Inman*
Ralph Slovenko*
Michael W. Hogan*
Walter J. Wadlington*
Daniel Ryan Sartor, Jr.*
Ewell P. Walther, Jr.*
John M. Duhe, Jr.*
William M. Clark*
John M. McCollam*
Malcolm Stevenson*
1960-1961
1961-1962
1962-1963
1963-1964
1964-1965
1965-1966
1966-1967
1967-1968
1968-1969
1969-1970
1970-1971
1971-1972
1972-1973
1973-1974
1974-1975
1975-1976
1976-1977
1977-1978
1978-1979
1979-1980
1980-1981
1981-1982
1982-1983
1983-1984
1984-1985
1985-1986
1986-1987
1987-1988
1988-1989
1989-1990
1990-1991
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993-1994
1994-1995
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-1998
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
2001-2002
Jacques L. Wiener, Jr.*
Thomas M. Bergstedt*
Campbell C. Hutchinson III*
Jerry L. Mashaw*
Louis Y. Fishman*
John J. Barcelo III*
John J. Barcelo III*
Thomas J. Wyatt*
Glen G. Magnuson, Jr.*
Arthur R. Philpott*
D. Corley*
William E. Brown*
C. Wes Shinn*
Walter B. Stuart IV*
Michael Braunstein*
Harvey D. Wagar III*
Robert D. Albergotti*
Charles F. Thensted*
Claude E. Johnston*
Eric C. Okerson*
Victor V. Pohorelsky*
D. Jean Veta*
Andrew Rinker, Jr.*
Walter Smith*
Marjorie Neufeld*
M. Brinkley Morse*
Robert Louis Theriot*
William Holcombe Pryor, Jr.*
Dane S. Ciolino*
Harri Johannes Haikala*
Janine M. Schwartz*
Louis L. Plotkin*
Luke P. LeVasseur*
Marcy V. Massengale*
Thomas G. Macauley*
Douglas A. Nichols*
M. Kelly Lanning Turner*
Ugo A. Colella*
Michael B. North*
Colin L. Black*
Anthony A. Pastor*
Sean A. O’Neal*
Thomas P. Owen, Jr.*
Joshua P. Fershee*
81
EDITORS OF JAMBALAYA
(The publication’s last volume was 1995.)
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
Albert Phelps*
R. S. Vickers*
George H. Terriberry*
J. Blanc Monroe*
George S. Westerfield*
R. M. Murphy*
P. Jorda Kahle*
Henry P. Dart, Jr.*
George W. Robertson*
John L. Many, Jr.*
Joseph Hughes Bres*
John Gayle Aiken, Jr.*
Pendleton S. Morris, Jr.*
Thomas T. Frantz*
J. Woodruff George*
Samuel Levine*
Lloyd E. White*
Robert Taylor Ingram*
John Devlin*
Solis Seiferth*
William A. West, Jr.*
R. C. Bauer*
George C. Walshe*
Lorenzo N. Dantzler, Jr.*
Fred A. Wulff, Jr.*
Prentice L. Smith*
Stephen D'Amico*
Harold Moses*
Frank J. Matthews, Jr.*
J. Hamilton Basso*
Louis B. Claverie*
Gayle Aiken Smith*
John B. Sanford, Jr.*
Bernard J. McCloskey*
Charles B. Henriques*
Harry Souchon*
James M. Robert, Jr.*
J. H. Randolph Feltus*
J. H. Randolph Feltus*
Allen Little, Jr.*
John W. Sims*
Buckner Chipley, Jr.*
Robert Blum*
John R. Thistlethwaite, Jr.*
Woodley C. Campbell*
Pat F. Bass*
William H. Wallace*
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
Paul C. Pottharst*
Rufus C. Harris, Jr.*
Murphy Moss*
William Brownson*
Sid Pate*
Dusty Anderson*
Edmund B. Martin, Jr.*
James J. Plauche, Jr.*
Steve Ellis*
Harris Copenhaver, Jr.*
Carl J. Schumacher, Jr.*
Rudy Eason*
Walter Spence*
Clyde T. Turner, Jr.*
Robert E. Thompson*
F. L. "Shorty" Fraenkel*
Herb Weil*
Melvin Mathes*
Jacques L. Weiner*
Jerry Cohen*
Lewis Barney Barnum*
Jerry Anthony*
John Combe*
Neal Mangold*
Harlan Schmidt*
Hans Jonassen*
Danny Schwartz*
Bill Pitts*
Jim Saalfield*
Sylvia Dreyfous*
Woody Norwood*
Ralph Wafer*
Neil Howard*
Matt Anderson*
Matt Anderson*
Thomas M. Lee*
David Ellis Blinderman*
Richard Scott Paddor*
Gordon Darrel Sokoloff*
Stan Thomas Mulvihill*
Michael Walther*
Mike Mannis*
Bob Kottler*
Bob Kottler*
Jennifer Juge Dunn*
Ed Esposito*
Suzanne Saussy*
82
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
Darren S. Lyn*
Blaze Stevens*
Darren S. Lyn*
Marcey L. Dolgoff*
Mark R. Freid*
Nickie Denick*
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
Scott Hetrick*
Elana Beiser*
Missy Barrilleaux*
Missy Barrilleaux*
Aline Reel*
83
HOMECOMING QUEENS
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
Edna Angle*
Jane Hochendel*
Laura Williams*
Carolyn Robbert*
Betty Bethea*
Elsa Hoehn*
Louise Nelson*
Dorothy Ecuyer*
Jacqueline Labry*
Lillian Hammond*
Betty Pourciau*
Sally Foster*
Betty Ratcliffe Gray*
Violet Whitehead*
Jeannine McGee*
Sara French*
Joan Morrison*
Diane Greenslit*
Mignon Faget*
Nancy McIver*
Lillian Anne Roach*
Ruth Milner Harper*
Jean Wiggins*
Pat Van Scoy*
Judith O'Brien*
Joan Girot*
Jane Cheney*
Sandra Noble*
Dianne Helene Potin*
Florence De Froscia*
Susan V. Clark*
Jane Rush*
Gay Claire Yellen*
Laurie Jean Fuge*
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Regan Alford*
Beverly Bennett*
Darlene Hildreth*
Mary L. Plauche*
Joan Anderson*
Emily White*
Heidi Junius*
Shawn D. Cook*
Bowman Turlington*
Ginja Mexic*
Debbie Cunningham*
Suzanne Smith*
Barbara Bauman*
Maori Rodriguez*
Caroline Stevens*
Cassie Steck*
Lisa Truly*
Robyn Cohen*
Allison Markesbury*
Tammy Fohner*
Jodi Gup*
Dru McGovern*
Deann Blanton*
Gwen Svoboda*
Tanya Hawkins*
Jenina Pierre*
Jennifer Woods*
Rachel Reed*
Karna Green*
Ginny Pope*
Jody Cimbalo*
Anita Sadwani*
Ashley Schneider*
Brooke Barbera*
84
HOMECOMING KINGS
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Scott Shull*
Vipul Kapoor*
Ezana Azene*
Michael R. Tiger*
Garnette N. Cadogan*
Hamilton Simons-Jones*
Jay Meehan*
Jason Gant*
85
V. ALUMNI
86
PRESIDENTS OF THE TULANE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
1898-1901
1901-1903
1903-1904
1904-1907
1907-1910
1910-1911
1911-1912
1912-1914
1914-1915
1915-1917
1917-1918
1918-1919
1919-1921
1921-1923
1923-1925
1925-1927
1927-1928
1928-1930
1930-1932
1932-1934
1934-1936
1936-1938
1938-1939
1939-1940
John Dymond, Jr.*
N. O. Attorney
Johnston A. Armstrong*
N. O. Attorney
Charles Rosen*
N. O. Attorney
William M. Perkins*
N. O. Physician
I. I. Lemann*
N. O. Physician
Warren B. Reed*
N. O. Engineer
J. Blanc Monroe*
N. O. Attorney
Douglas S. Anderson*
N. O. Educator (Eng.)
George H. Terriberry*
N. O. Attorney
Frank William Hart*
N. O. Attorney
Michel B. Provosty*
N. O. Attorney
J. Phares O'Kelley*
N. O. Physician
Henry W. Robinson*
N. O. Attorney
J. Birney Guthrie*
N. O. Physician
Charles E. Dunbar, Jr.*
N. O. Attorney
Lucien H. Landry*
N. O. Physician
S. Walter Stern*
N. O. Attorney
Rudolph J. Weinmann*
N. O. Attorney
Cuthbert S. Baldwin*
N. O. Attorney
Edmond L. Faust*
N. O. Physician
Louis Rosen*
N. O. Attorney
Joseph L. Killeen*
N. O. Advertising Executive
Clifford F. Favrot*
N. O. Engineer/Bus. Exec.
Walter M. Barnett, Jr.*
1940-1941
1941-1942
1942-1943
1943-1944
1944-1945
1945-1946
1946-1947
1947-1948
1948-1949
1949-1950
1950-1951
1951-1952
1952-1953
1953-1954
1954-1955
1955-1956
1956-1957
1957-1958
1958-1959
1959-1960
N. O. Attorney
Alva P. Frith*
Lake Charles Businessman
Edward S. Bres*
N. O. Engineer/General in
the military
Frank S. Cannon*
Clinton, Miss. Businessman
Richard O. Baumbach*
N. O. Port Authority and
Businessman
George T. Walne*
Chicago Businessman
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*
N. O. Attorney
Walter O. Moss*
Lake Charles Physician
Eldon Claggett Upton, Jr.*
N. O. Insurance Executive
A. Watson Chapman*
Chicago Engineer and
Researcher
Clayton L. Nairne*
N. O. Utilities Executive
Francisco L. Figueroa*
Havana, Cuba Attorney
Gerald L. Andrus*
N. O. Utilities Executive
Arthur E. Hoge*
Ft. Smith, AR
Physician
G. Shelby Friedrichs*
N. O. Investment Executive
Jesse Littleton*
Corning, NY Inventor
and Business Executive
D. B. H. Chaffe*
N. O. Engineer
Jacob S. Landry*
New Iberia Attorney
Harry P. Gamble, Jr.*
N. O. Attorney
John Chalmers Baine*
St. Louis, MO
Utilities Executive
Mayo L. Emory*
N. O. Physician
87
1960-1961
1961-1962
1962-1963
1963-1964
1964-1965
1965-1966
1966-1967
1967-1968
1968-1969
1969-1970
1970-1971
1971-1972
1972-1973
1973-1974
1974-1975
1975-1976
Vance M. Strange*
San Francisco Physician
Ernest B. Mason*
N. O. Telephone Executive
Arthur J. Waechter*
N. O. Attorney
John C. Hodges*
Knoxville, TN
Educator
Woollen H.Walshe*
N. O. Attorney
Mortimer Silvey*
Baton Rouge Physician
Douglass V. Freret*
N. O. Architect
James J. Hicks*
Birmingham Physician
Gayle L. Dalferes*
N. O. CPA and Accounting
Executive
William M. Haile*
New York Business Executive
Thomas C. Wicker, Jr.*
N. O. Attorney and Judge
Fontaine Martin*
New York Attorney and Oil
Company Executive
Waldemar S. Nelson*
N. O. Engineering Executive
Harold Timken*
Rockville, ME
Business Executive
Patrick Hanley*
N. O. Physician
Shepard F. Perrin, Jr.*
1976-1977
1977-1978
1978-1979
1979-1980
1980-1981
1981-1983
1983-1984
1984-1985
1985-1986
1986-1987
1987-1988
1988-1989
1990-1991
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993-1994
1994-1995
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-1998
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
2001-2002
2002-2003
2003-2004
Baton Rouge Business Exec.
C. Murphy Moss*
N. O. Attorney
Gilbert Vorhoff*
N. O. Banker
Arthur G. Kleinschmidt*
N. O. Physician
D. Ryan Sartor*
Monroe Attorney
James Moreau*
N. O. City Gov’t. Official
Robert Young*
Dallas Business Executive
Wiley H. Sharp, Jr.*
Hammond, LA. Banker
Robert E. Young*
Margaret P. Willson*
Robert C. McIntyre*
Rutledge C. Clement, Jr.*
Max H. Durham, Jr.*
Edna G. Treuting, R.N.*
Charlotte Travieso*
Dermot S. McGlinchey*
J. Bruce Hagan*
Robbert W. Vorhoff*
Grady S. Hurley*
Gregory M. Eaton*
Karen Deener Depp*
W. Thomas Hopkins*
Ann Farmer*
Eric Weimers*
Richard K. Schmidt*
Richardson K. Powell*
John Williams*
88
DIRECTORS OF ALUMNI ACTIVITIES AND ALUMNI AFFAIRS
1923-1924
1924-1927
1927-1930
1930-1934
1934-1937
1937-1940
1940-1941
1941-1942
1942-1977
1977-1978
1978-1979
1979-1981
1981-1982
1982-1989
1989-1992
1992-1995
1995-1998
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
2001-
Lewis Farrington Wakeman* (Alumni Secretary)
John Randolph Foote* (General Manager and Alumni Secretary)
George Frederick Lamprecht* (Alumni Secretary)
Francis Xavier Armstrong* (Alumni Secretary)
Charles Hurrah Rucker* (General Manager)
Thomas Hale Boggs* (General Manager)
Thomas Hale Boggs* (Director of Alumni Activities)
Kendall Hutchinson Cram* (Director of Alumni Activities)
Beatrice McMillan Field* (Director of Alumni Activities)
Colonel Albert J. Wetzel* (Vice President for Alumni and
University Affairs)
Arthur Smith* (Acting Director of Alumni Affair.)
B. Frank Smith* (Director of Alumni Affairs)
Cherry Phillips* (Acting Director of Alumni Affairs)
Christian A. Steed* (Director of Alumni Affairs)
Megan Seielstad (Director of Alumni Affairs)
Joanne Bachman (Assistant Vice President for Alumni Affairs)
Emile Deith (Executive Director of Alumni Affairs and Annual Fund)
Claude Mason* (Director of Alumni Affairs)
Leslie H. Arbuthnot (Interim Director of Alumni Affairs)
Charlotte Travieso* (Interim Director of Alumni Affairs)
Charlotte Travieso* (Director of Alumni Affairs)
89
TOTAL NUMBER OF DEGREES AWARDED BY
INDIVIDUALSCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
Architecture
Business
Dentistry
Engineering
Graduate School
Law
Medical
Newcomb
Pharmacy
Public Health and Tropical Medicine
Social Work
Tulane College
University College
1,179
5,352
586
4,735
7,312
6,502
12,555
10,010
403
3,246
13,720
2,853
68,453
Fall ’83 –
Summer ’02
1154
7568
3528
3619
6799
2775
7809
1624
1889
6303
2386
45,454
Total
2333
12,920
586
8263
10,931
13,301
15,330
17,819
403
1624
5135
20,023
5239
113,907
Information for degree totals as of the 1983 Fall semester was compiled from data obtained from the Registrar’s Office.
90
FIRST GRADUATES OF INDIVIDUAL SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
MEDICINE 1836 (M.D.)
GRADUATE SCHOOL Cont. 1885
William M. Carpenter*
R. S. Delatulle*
Alphonse B. Delavigne*
Walter Fosgate*
George Edward French*
Alexander Hart*
Albert Simeon Koski*
Ogden D. Langstaff*
John Hampden Lewis*
John C. Lawhon*
Francis Jean Baptiste Romer*
Cornelius Traweek*
John Frederick Groenvelt*
Arthur Seaver Wheeler*
PHARMACY 1839 (M.Ph.)
Jean Sarre*
LAW 1848 (LL.B.)
Henry Charles Castellanos*
William E. I. Griffith*
Charles Augustus Kellogg*
David Ker*
David Cohen Labatt*
William Mosby Mercer*
Ayres P. Merrill*
Anthony A. Peniston*
Hipolite Alfred Perrilliat*
William L. Perrilliat*
E. J. Reine*
John B. Smith*
Charles Wilson*
M. R. Young*
ENGINEERING 1889 (B.S.)
Charles Robert Churchill*
Henry Joseph Malochee*
NEWCOMB 1890 (B.A.)
Nettie Stratton Byrne*
Penelope Chaffe*
Elizabeth Hill Forman*
Adeline Patti Israel*
Margaret G. Powers*
Adelin Elam Spencer*
Fannie Amelia Wilson*
Jessie Emily Wright*
GRADUATE SCHOOL 1897 (Ph.D.)
Charles Grandison Gill*
DENTISTRY 1900 (D.D.S.)
Horace John Arledge*
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE 1908 (B.A.)
Belle Randolph Van Horn*
Isabel Warner*
ARTS AND SCIENCES 1857 (B.A.)
ARCHITECTURE 1910 (B. Arch. in Eng.)
Joseph Arsenne Breaux*
Richard Koch*
GRADUATE SCHOOL 1885 (M.A.)
Robert George Urquhart Borde*
Charles Grandison Gill*
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION 1918
(B.B.A.)
E. Davis McCutcheon*
91
SOCIAL WORK 1936 (M.S.W.)
Marjorie Lee Bordelon*
Fred Hanover*
Katherine Hardesty*
Mary Elizabeth Land*
Dorothy Philomena Haywiser*
Mathilde Carolyn Marks*
Claire Lydia Morhlenbrock*
SOCIAL WK. CONT. (1936)
Mildred Gaudy Pratt*
Frances Ellen Shannon*
Marjorie Wilson*
TROPICAL MEDICINE 1948 (M.Ph.)
Carlos Andersen*
92
TULANE ALUMNI AND FUNDRAISING
In 1898, the Tulane Alumni Association was incorporated, dedicated to the broad principles of service to
the University. In addition to serving the University in innumerable ways, alumni have played
significant roles in its fundraising programs as leaders, workers, and donors.
In the early days of the Association, attention was concentrated on giving financial assistance to student
activities and athletics. A Bequest Insurance program was initiated in the 1930's. Some other organized
fundraising efforts of alumni have been evidenced in the first Tulane Gymnasium on Freret Street (now
the Navy Building) and the first concrete stadium (present site of parking lot adjacent to the Navy
Building). In connection with the Stadium Drive, a "Realization Day" was held in downtown New
Orleans in which alumni, students, and friends participated. Alumni worked diligently in the 1920
Endowment Drive, which had as its slogan "Keep the Doors Open". In the 1920's, Newcomb alumnae
conducted the Dixon Hall Drive. Other later alumnae projects were the Newcomb Dormitory Drive
(addition to Warren House) and the renovation of the Caroline Richardson Building. Medical alumni
have participated in a number of campaigns of benefit to the Medical School. Many alumni of all
schools played important roles as workers and contributors in the Tulane Educational Advancement
Program.
The Tulane Student Center was the result of a fundraising project in which the Alumni Association was
involved, as were the Alumni House on Willow Street, the Monk Simons Memorial Swimming Pool,
and the Monk Simons Athletic Complex. The Field House was constructed with funds given by an
alumnus of the University.
In 1946, the Executive Committee of the Tulare Alumni Association inaugurated an annual giving
program called "The Tulane Alumni Fund" as a "practical means whereby the mass of alumni might
make possible for others the benefits which they themselves have enjoyed.” The first year's Fund was
conducted on a very limited basis. However, the experiment was deemed successful, and thus launched
a program which continues to the present time. For most of the years, annual giving was conducted
under the auspices of the Tulane Alumni Association; however, it is presently a part of the University's
annual giving program under the aegis of Tulane Annual Fund.
93
ALUMNI FUND FIGURES
The following figures demonstrate the extent to which alumni have supported the University since the
inauguration of the Alumni Fund. The Alumni Giving category from 1946-1984 represents all alumni
gifts to the University, including the Alumni Fund, with the exception of the first two Funds. The
figures from 1984-2002 reflect unrestricted donations to the Annual Fund only.
YEAR
1946-1947
1947-1948
1948-1949
1949-1950
1950-1951
1951-1952
1952-1953
1953-1954
1954-1955
1955-1956
1956-1957
1957-1958
1958-1959
1959-1960
1960-1961
1961-1962
1962-1963
1963-1964
1964-1965
1965-1966
1966-1967
1967-1968
1968-1969
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979-1980
1980-1981
1981-1982
1982-1983
1983-1984
NUMBER OF
FUND
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
FUND CHAIRMAN
ALUMNI GIVING
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*
Richard O. Baumbach*
Eldon Claggett Upton, Jr.*
Eldon Claggett Upton, Jr.*
G. Shelby Friedrichs*
Dr. Mayo L. Emory*
Dr. Mayo L. Emory*
Arthur L. Jung, Jr.*
Arthur L. Jung, Jr.*
Gayle L. Dalferes*
Gayle L. Dalferes*
J. Robert Rombach, Jr.*
J. Robert Rombach, Jr.*
John C. Baine*
Dr. Mortimer Silvey*
Dr. Mortimer Silvey*
Harry S. Kaufman, Jr.*
Harry S. Kaufman, Jr.*
Woollen H. Walshe*
Woollen H. Walshe*
Dr. John W. Deming*
Waldemar S. Nelson*
Waldemar S. Nelson*
Waldemar S. Nelson*
Waldemar S. Nelson*
Judge Thomas C. Wicker, Jr.*
Gilbert H. Vorhoff*
Gilbert H. Vorhoff*
William E. Rooney, Jr.*
Stewart J. Kepper*
Robert E. Young*
Wiley H. Sharp, Jr.*
Robert C. McIntyre*
Robert C. McIntyre*
H. Mortimer Favrot, Jr.*
Robert Acomb, Jr.*
Max Durham*
$12,457.92**
$34,680.31**
$107,747.
$103,932.
$176,525.
$455,534.
$340,296.
$225,654.
$314,890.
$454,807.04
$418,361.07
$3,568,474.
$2,417,725.
$3,071,491.77
$917,054.38
$759,124.95
$1,624,773.42
$979,956.04
$1,137,534.30
$5,056,000.
$811,258.
$655,170.
$842,419.90
$996,606.
$1,417,048.
$1,216,005.
$1,808,985.
$1,702,289.
$2,538,806.
$3,234,431.
$1,715,419.
$2,233,300.
$2,221,487.
$2,921,426.
$5,140,159.
$11,443,630.
$6,532,847.
$2,914,460
** Alumni Fund Only
94
1984-1985
1985-1986
1986-1987
1987-1988
1988-1989
1989-1990
1990-1991
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993-1994
1994-1995
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-1998
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
2001-2002
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
Annual Fund
$3,309,286
$2,441,270
$4,006,076
$3,214,164
$3,262,303
$3,429,122
$3,606,786
$4,564,709
$4,362,666
$4,230,200
$3,884,955
$3,848,588
$3,918,615
$4,133,489
$3,979,183
$4,052,370
$5,259,508
$5,431,813
95
HOMECOMING CHAIRS AND GAMES
1925
Abe Goldberg*
Tulane 14, Sewanee 0
1942
Eldon Claggett Upton, Jr.*
Miss. State 7, Tulane 0
1927
Tulare, 6, Sewanee 12
1943
Murray Cleveland*
Georgia Tech 33, Tulane 0
1928
R. G. Robinson*
Tulane 41, Sewanee 7
1944
Harry Gamble, Jr.
Tulane 16, Auburn 13
Clayton L. Nairne*
Notre Dame 32, Tulane 6
1929
R. G. Robinson*
Tulane 40, Sewanee 0
1945
1930
Abe Goldberg*
Tulane 25, Georgia 0
1946
Gerald Andrus*
Notre Dame 41, Tulane 0
1931
William West*
Tulare 33, Georgia Tech 0
1947
J. B. Sanford*
Ole Miss, 27, Tulane 14
1932
Stanley Morris*
Tulane 6, South Carolina 0
1948
Merwin Jamieson*
Tulane 9, Miss. State 0
1933
Al Wachenheim*
Auburn 13, Tulane 7
1949
Royal Bastian*
Tulane 21, Navy 21
1934
Harry Stiles*
Tulane 20, Georgia Tech 12
1950
W. Ford Reese*
Tulane 42, Virginia 18
1935
Louis Hammett*
Tulane 14, Colgate 6
1951
Howard J. Smith*
Kentucky 37, Tulane 0
1936
Richard O. Baumbach*
Georgia 12, Tulane 6
1952
Edward D. Finley, Jr.*
Tulane 16, Vanderbilt 7
1937
Richard O. Baumbach*
Alabama 9, Tulane 6
1953
Eads Poitevent*
Tulane 0, Army 0
1938
Harry Kaufman*
Tulane 27, Miss. State 0
1954
Nolan Kammer*
Tulane 0, Alabama 0
1939
Dr. John Menville*
Tulane 18, Ole Miss 6
1955
Albert Terkuhle II*
Tulane 27, Auburn 13
1940
Clifford F. Favrot*
Tulane 21. Georgia 13
1956
Ernest Mason*
Alabama 13, Tulane 7
1941
Lester Lautenschlaeger*
Ole Miss 20, Tulane 13
1957
W. "Pat" Richardson*
Georgia Tech 20, Tulane 13
96
1958
1959
1960
1961
Arthur J. Waechter*
Ole Miss 19, Tulane 8
1974
Douglass V. Freret*
Mrs. Douglass V. Freret*
Georgia Tech 21, Tulane 13
Michael Robertson*
Mrs. Lindy Boggs.*, hon. chm.
Kentucky 30, Tulane 7
1975
Andrew L. Weir*
Georgia Tech 23, Tulane 0
Woollen Walshe*
Tulane 40, William and Mary 8
1976
Job. Hulse IV*
Tulane 23, Army 10
Pat McCloskey*
Georgia Tech 35, Tulane 0
1977
Stewart Kepper*
Mrs. Stewart Kepper*
Tulane 16, Cincinnati 13
1978
Robert E. Young*
Mrs. Robert Young*
TCU 13, Tulane 7
1979
Michael Rapier*
Mrs. Michael Rapier*
Tulane 49, Ole Miss 15
Max Durham*
Mrs. Max Durham*
SMU 31, Tulane 21
1962
J. Hubert Walker*
Virginia Tech 24, Tulane 22
1963
Charles G. Andry, Jr.*
Georgia Tech 17, Tulane 3
1964
James Moreau*
Tulane 26, VMI 6
1980
1965
H. Mortimer Favrot*
Vanderbilt 30, Tulare 0
1966
Tom Wicker*
Tulare 10, Miami of Fla. 10
1967
Fred Cassibry*
Tulane 23, Georgia Tech 12
1968
John Jackson*
Tulane 28, Boston College 14
1969
John Jackson*
Notre Dame 37, Tulane 0
1970
Julian Brignac*
Tulane 31, Miami of Fla. 16
1971
C. Allan Favrot*
Vanderbilt 13 , Tulane 9
1972
1973
Carl Dailey *
Tulane 18, Kentucky 7
Wilbert. L. Argus , Jr.*
F. Edward Hebert*, hon. chm.
Tulane 17, Navy 15
1981
Rutledge Clement, Jr.*
Mrs. Clement
Tulane 14, Maryland 7
1982
Philip Claverie*
Mrs. Philip Claverie
Southern Miss. 22, Tulane 10
1983
Tulane 17, USL 15
1984
Kentucky 30, Tulane 26
1985
Vanderbilt 24, Tulane 17
1986
Tulane 42, USL 39
1987
Tulane 57, Virginia Tech 38
1988
Louisville 38, Tulane 35
1989
Tulane 38, Memphis 34
1990
Tulane 49, Cincinnati 7
97
1991
Tulane 34, Navy 7
1998
Tulane 28, Louisville 22
1992
Boston College 17, Tulane 13
1999
Tulane 48, UL-Lafayette 32
1993
Tulane 27, Navy 25
2000
Southern Miss 56, Tulane 24
1994
Navy 17, Tulane 15
2001
Tulane 48, TCU 22
1995
Memphis 23, Tulane 8
2002
Tulane 51, Navy 30
1996
Louisville 23, Tulane 20
1997
Rice 30, Tulane 24
98
COLLEGE CLUB PRESIDENTS
PRESIDENTS OF THE SOCIETY OF TULANE ENGINEERS
1951-1952
1952-1953
1953-1954
1954-1955
1955-1956
1956-1957
1957-1958
1958-1959
1959-1960
1960-1961
1961-1962
1962-1963
1963-1964
1964-1965
1965-1966
1966-1967
1967-1968
1968-1969
1969-1970
1970-1971
1971-1972
1972-1973
1973-1974
1974-1975
1975-1976
James Erwin, Jr*
Waldemar Nelson*
J. Robert Rombach, Jr.*
J. Bres Eustis*
Rev. Bernard A. Grehan*
Joseph R. Mooney*
Lyman L. EIlzey*
Edward A. McLellan*
A. J. Brodtmann*
Henry L. E. Vix*
Stanley G. Dinkel*
Henry E. Markel, Jr.*
John F. Vogt*
Roy E. Johnson*
Nestor D. Knoepfler*
DeWitt L. Morris*
John Coles*
Frank S. Foster, Jr.*
Jay Oppenheim*
Claude J. Kelly, Jr.*
William R. LeCorgne*
John L. Niklaus*
Daniel E. Kirkley*
Lawrence C. Grundmann,
Jr.*
George A. Swan, III
1976-1977
1977-1978
1978-1979
1979-1980
1980-1981
1981-1982
1982-1983
1983-1984
1984-1985
1985-1986
1986-1987
1987-1988
1988-1989
1989-1990
1990-1991
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993-1994
1994-1995
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-1998
1998-2000
2000-2002
Frank Denton*
Tom Jackson*
Roy Perrin*
George C. Kleinpeter, Jr.*
John W. Holtgreve, Jr.*
Dan W. McCarthy*
Larry Perrin*
Oliver S. Delery, Jr.*
Marina E. Gregorio*
Richard K. Blum*
Buddy Lang, Jr.*
Bill Giardina, Jr.*
Gerard J. Gillen III*
Richard Metcalf*
Pierre E. Conner III*
John Hardey*
Kay Erwin*
Leonard Quick*
Carrie Haydel*
Alfred Freudenberger*
William T. “Skip”Chandler*
Robert S. Curran*
Rebekah Henson Kraus*
Tommy Meehan*
PRESIDENTS OF THE TULANE MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
1968-1969
1969-1970
1970-1971
1971-1972
1972-1973
1973-1974
1974-1975
1975-1976
1976-1977
1977-1978
1978-1979
1979-1980
Patrick Hanley, M. D.*
Thomas J. Parks, M. D.*
Marshall L. Michel, Jr.,
M. D.*
Joseph D. Calhoun, M. D.*
Friedrichs H. Harris, M. D.*
Mortimer Silvey, M. D.*
John C. Weed, M. D.*
George Sackett, M. D.*
Woodward D. Beacham,
M.D.*
Leslie Lukash, M, D.*
Samuel Logan, M. D.*
C. D. Taylor, Jr., M. D.*
1980-1981
1981-1982
1982-1983
1983-1984
1984-1985
1985-1986
1986-1987
1987-1988
1988-1989
1989-1990
1990-1991
William H. Harris, Jr.,
M. D.*
Charles V. Menendez,
M. D.*
Thomas E. Benefield, Jr.,
M.D.*
Ronald J. French, M.D.*
Edna G. Treuting, Dr.P.H.*
Robert A. Little, M.D.*
William L. Geary, M.D.*
Howard A. Nelson, Jr.,
M.D.*
Jack Hyman, M.D.
Hyman C. Tolmas, M.D.*
Richard J. Field, Jr., M.D.*
99
1991-1992
1992-1993
1993-1994
1994-1995
1995-1996
1996-1997
Oliver H. Dabezies, Jr.,
M.D.*
K. Barton Farris, M.D.,
M.P.H.*
George R. Cary, Jr., M.D.*
Robert L. Hewitt, M.D.*
Julius L. Levy, Jr., M.D.*
Frank E. Schmidt, M.D.*
1997-1998
1998-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
2001-2002
2002-2003
John E. Hevron, Jr., M.D.*
Edward S. Lindsey, M.D.*
Burr D. Ilgenfritz, M.D.*
P. Michael McFadden, M.D.*
Rene Koppel, M.D.*
Paul D. Pace, M.D.,
F.A.C.S.*
PRESIDENTS OF THE NEWCOMB ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION
1893-1906
1906-1908
1908-1912
1912-1914
1914-1916
1916-1918
1918-1920
1920-1922
1922-1924
1924-1925
1925-1929
1929-1930
1930-1932
1932-1934
1934-1938
1938-1940
1941-1942
1942-1944
1944-1946
1946-1948
1948-1949
1949-1950
Mrs. A. W. McClellan*
(Helen DeGrange)
Mrs. James W. Armstrong*
(Abbie Richmond)
Florence Dymond*
Lydia Frotscher*
Mrs. John C. Ransmeier*
(Viola Sirera)
Mrs. Henry W. Robinson*
(Elizabeth Hurt)
Anna E. Many*
Fannie Fulham*
Mollie Palfrey*
Anna E. Many*
Minna F. Koch*
Mrs. Dotard Ritter*
(Jeanne Langhetee)
Mrs. Robert H. Polack*
(Miriam Lemann)
Mrs. J. Hodge Alves*
(Laura Josephine Fry)
Mrs. Charles H. Day*
(Aimee de LaV. Hyman)
Mrs. Ernest H. Riedel*
(Beatrix Meyering)
Miss Anne Delie Bancroft*
Mrs. Charles K. Raymond*
(Ethel Bauer)
Mrs. Errett C. Albritton*
(Rietta Garland)
Mrs. Sumter D. Marks, Jr.*
(Berthe Lathrop)
Mrs. Ralph A. Conselya*
(Adele De Leon Parsons)
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Freret*
(Elizabeth Hughes)
Marion L. Nash*
1950-1951
1951-1954
1954-1956
1956-1958
1958-1960
1960-1962
1962-1964
1964-1966
1966-1968
1968-1972
1972-1974
1974
1974-1976
1976-1978
1978-1981
1981-1983
1983-1985
1985-1986
1986-1987
1987-1988
Mrs. Douglas M. Warriner*
(Anna Jane Dohao)
Mrs. Arthur Davenport*
(Dorothy Nungesser)
Mrs. Frank H. Davis*
(Tolley Cook)
Mrs. Henry J. Read*
(Peggy Roemer)
Mrs. W. R. Williamson, Jr.*
(Adele Redditt)
Mrs. Frank Riess*
(Jane Kelleher)
Mrs. Francis L. Miller*
(Myrtle Gastrell)
Mrs. Richard G. Verlander*
(Ethelyn Everett)
Mrs. Charles S. Prosser, Jr.*
(Louise Peterman)
Mrs. Louis G. Davis*
(Carolyn Robbert)
Mrs. D. Ryan Sartor, Jr*
(Olive Moss)
Mrs. Gilbert Vorhoff*
(Nadine Robbert)
Mrs. Frank Riess*
(Jane Kelleher)
Mrs. Robert W. Willson*
(Margaret Bosshardt)
Mrs. D. Blair Favrot*
(Sybil M. Muths)
Mrs. Donald R. Mintz*
(Susan Rosenthal)
Karen Oser Edmunds*
Carolyn Goldsby Kolb
Winifred M. Delery Hills*
Carol Downes Cudd*
100
1988-1990
1990-1992
1992-1993
1993-1995
1995-1997
Regan Alford Forrester*
Polly Phelps Durham*
Harriet Barry Schupp*
Karen Deener Depp*
Tricia Greene*
1997-1999
Andrea Arons Huseman*
1999-2001!!!! Martha McCarty
Kimmerling*
2002 –2004 ! Heather Pelofsky Rittenberg*
PRESIDENTS OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE ALUMNI CLUB
(After 1991, the Alumni Association ceased to exist. The Deans Council was established.)
1951-1953
1953-1955
1955-1957
1957-1959
1959-1961
1961-1963
1963-1965
1965-1967
1967-1969
1969-1971
William Decker*
Carol Bailey*
Matthew J. Kreller, Jr.*
Dorothy Boucher*
John R. Murphy*
Bertha M. Jenson*
Elmo C. Waltzer*
Altha D. King*
Harry F. Wiegel*
Edith G. Girard*
1971-1973
1973-1975
1975-1977
1977-1979
1979-1981
1981-1983
1983-1985
1985-1987
1987-1989
1989-1991
Kenneth M. Evans*
Charles L. Kenney, Jr.*
Audrey M. Cullen*
Harold F. Parker*
Henry T. Renz*
Fred C. Huff, Jr.*
Ann Rebstock*
Jo Ann Harris*
Lorelle Deichmann*
Mercedes Hernandez*
101
HONORED ALUMNI
"UNIVERSITY DISTUINGUISHED ALUMNUS" RECIPIENTS
(as selected by the Alumni Awards Committee in conjunction with the individual colleges)
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
Clifford Favrot*
Michael E. De Bakey*
Richard West Freeman*
Gerald L. Andrus*
Jack B. St. Clair*
Robert E. Flowerree*
Edgar Hull*
David C. Treen*
Harry McCall, Jr.*
G. Shelby Friedrichs*
Floyd W. Lewis*
J. Bres Eustis*
Corinne Claiborne Boggs*
Howard K. Smith, Jr.*
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
2000
2001
2002
Angela Gregory*
John Minor Wisdom*
Harry Bartlett Kelleher, Sr.
John W. Deming*
Mary Louise Christovich*
Robert W. Brown, MD
Harold A. Rosen*
Betty Werlein Carter*
Arthur Q. Davis, Sr.*
Robert L. Livingston*
Joe H. Stroud*
Peter A. Aron*
Martha Walters Barnett*
John G. Weinmann*
OUTSTANDING ALUMNI OF INDIVIDUAL SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
(as selected by the Alumni Awards Committee in conjunction with the individual colleges)
Architecture:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1979
1980
1981
1982
John J. Desmond*
Dr. Henry A. Millon*
Samuel Wilson, Jr.*
A. Hays Town*
Mary C. Hogg*
Solis Seiferth*
Arthur H. Feitel*
Angela Gregory*
Arthur Q. Davis*
Nathaniel C. Curtis, Jr.*
1983
1984
1985
1986
2001
Collins C. Diboll*
Bernard Lemann*
H. Mortimer Favrot, Jr.*
David L. Perkins, Sr.*
S. Stewart Farnet*
August Perez III*
Arthur Q. Davis*
Benedict Cimini, Jr.*
T. Sellers Meric*
Tulane College (Arts and Sciences):
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
Howard K. Smith*
William M. Haile*
W. L. Duren, Jr.*
Kurt Mislow*
Fred E. Inbau*
1979
1980
1981
1982
Edward James McShane*
Hamilton Farrar Richardson*
Lester James Reed*
James J. Coleman*
102
A.B. Freeman School of Business:
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
George S. Dinwiddie*
John W. Gladson*
Robert L. Simpson*
John B. McDaniel, Jr.*
Eben Hardie*
Laurence Claud Turner*
Richard West Freeman*
Carlos Jose Canessa*
Gerald L. Andrus*
Joseph P. Henican, Jr.*
Ernest B. Mason*
Norton M. Bedford*
Eldon Claggett Upton, Jr.*
George Shelby Friedrichs*
Gayle Lindor Dalferes*
Harry T. Whitley*
Richard O. Baumbach*
E. Davis McCutchon*
Alfred Jay Moran*
Floyd W. Lewis*
Victor L. Klinker*
Burt Henry Keenan*
Albert H. Cohen*
Michael H. Mayer*
Walter James Amoss, Jr.*
John D. Jackson, Jr.*
Erick F. Johnsen*
F. C. Payne, Jr.*
Edward S. Reed*
James F. Pinner*
Robert C. McIntyre*
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Duval F. Dickey*
Darwin C. Fenner*
Wiley H. Sharp, Jr.*
Harry J. Blumenthal*
William B. Burkenroad, Jr.*
Robert L. Turchin*
Francis L. Fraenkel*
Aaron Selber, Jr.*
Kenneth Broadwell*
Richard W. Freeman, Jr.*
William A. Goldring*
Frank B. Stewart, Jr.*
Martin F. Schmidt
James M. Cain*
William J. Baker, Jr.*
J. F. Seinsheimer, Jr.*
Sidney W. Lassen*
Louis P. Mattis*
Paul S. Rosenblum*
John E. Koerner III*
Ricardo B. Salinas*
James J. Reiss, Jr.*
John W. Barter*
Winslow Chadwick*
Berdon Lawrence*
Hugh M. Durden*
George A. Rizzo, Jr.*
James M. Lapeyre*
C. Ray Nagin*
Regina Benjamin*
Engineering:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
Clayton L. Nairne*
Jack B. St. Clair*
Waldemar S. Nelson*
Henry F. Lemieux*
Thomas J. Feehan*
Walter E. Blessey*
Harold A. Timken, Jr.*
Pierre E. Holloway*
Gayden Derickson*
Robert F. Bland*
James S. Janssen*
Robert H. Boh*
1986
1988
1989
1990
1991
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Gerald M. Haydel*
George A. Heft*
Richard F. Brunner*
James O. Gundlach*
Walter F. Ramirez*
Clarence Lewis, Jr.*
James Boone*
Robert N. Bruce, Jr. *
Harold Rosen*
Robert Englekirk*
Joseph F. Boston*
William Cavanaugh*
103
1999
2000
G. Joseph Sullivan*
George C. Kleinpeter, Jr.*
2001
David R. Filo*
Graduate School:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
F. E. Vandiver*
Harold Cummins*
J. L. McLucas*
Robert E. Gordon*
Cleanth Brooks*
1979
1980
1981
1982
Sander L. Gilman*
Pierre E. Conner, Jr.*
Ruth A. Falcon*
Gilbert H. Vorhoff*
1979
1980
1981
1982
Walter J. Wadlington*
John M. Duhe, Jr.*
John Allen Dixon*
John J. Hainkel, Jr.*
Law:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
E. A. Carrere, Jr.*
Benjamin W. Yancey*
Fred Cassibry*
H. J. Bremermann, Jr.*
A. Lane Plauchè*
Medicine:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983!
1984!
1985!
1986!
1988!
Merrill O. Hines, M.D.*
George E. Burch, M.D.*
Luther L. Terry, M.D.*
Hiram W. Kostmayer, M.D.*
Joseph S. D'Antoni, M.D.*
Joseph D. Calhoun, M.D.*
Leslie Lukash, M.D.*
Wallace H. Clark, Jr., M.D.*
Marshall L. Michel, Jr., M.D.*
Vincent J. Derbes, M.D.*
Charles B. Wilson, M.D.*
Robert W. Brown, M.D.*
Woodward D. Beacham, M.D.*
Henry C. Pitot, M.D., Ph.D.*
1989!
1990!
1991!
1992!
1993
1994!
1995!
1996!
1997!
1998!
1999!
2000!
2001!
2002!
Norman C. Nelson, M.D.*
George M. Haik, M.D.*
Max Dale Cooper, M.D.*
Samuel Eichold II, M.D.*
Dorothy Ford Bainton, M.D.*
Henry W. Blackburn Jr., M.D. *
Harold S. Ginsberg, M.D.*
Stephen Katz, M.D.*
Alston Callahan, M.D.*
John L. Ochsner, M.D.*
Gerald S. Berenson, M.D.*!
Michael E. DeBakey, M.D.* !
Barry J. Maron, M.D.*
Ronald Busuttil, M.D.
Newcomb:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
Elizabeth C. Wisner*
Bessie Margolin*
Corinne Claiborne Boggs*
Lucile Smith*
Ida Kohlmeyer*
Ruth Rogan Benerito*
Betty Warlein Carter*
Lanier Allingham Simmons*
Mary Louise Christovich*
Odaline de la Martinez*
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991!
1992!
1993!
Evalyn Stolaroff Gendel*
Betty Stevens Sherrill*
Hilda Arndt*
Lynda Benglis*
Rosa Freeman Keller*
Martha Crenshaw*
Marion J. Siegman*
Barbara Y.E. Pyle*
Deirdre Melessa Phillips, M.D.*
Vivian Gussin Paley*
104
1994! Lois E. DeBakey*
1995! Eugenie Ricau Rocherolle*
1997! Susan Gold Willard Schorin*
1998! May Hyman Lesser*
1999 Martha Walters Barnett*
Public Health and Tropical Medicine:
1974
1975
1976
Julie S. Sulianti, Dr. P.H.*
John B. Dunbar, Dr. P.H.*
George W. Newborn, Jr., M.D.,
M.P.H.*
1977 Joe R. Held, M.P.H.*
1978 Pascal J. Imperato, M.P.H.*
1979 Tom D. Y. Chin, M.P.H.*
1980 Somsak Varakamin, Dr. P.H.*
1981 Jonathan Roberts, Dr. P.H.*
1982 Alton Cobb, M.P.H.*
1983! Jerrell Mathison, M.D., M.P.H.*
Joyce Mathison, M.D., M.P.H.&
T.M.*
1984! Donald C. Kaminsky, M.P.H. &
T.M.*
1985! Mary Rosalie Klein, Dr.S.* !
1986!
1988!
1989
1990!
1991!
1992!
1993!
1994!
1995!
1996!
1997!
Jerry L. Weston, M.P.H.*
Charles N. Kahn, III, M.P.H.*
James G. Wetrich, M.P.H.*
David McNeeley, M.D., M.P.H.* !
Louis Trachtman, M.D., M.P.H.*
Ralph R. Frerichs, D.V.M., Dr.P.H.*
Lee A. Bland, M.P.H.* !
Louise M. McFarland, Dr.P.H.*
Miriam H. Labbok, M.D., M.P.H.*
Eric T. Baumgartner, M.D., M.P.H.*
Patrick Morgan, D.V.M., M.P.H.,
Dr. Ph.*
1998! Sambe Duale, M.D., M.P.H.*
2000! Bernard H. Eichold II, M.D.,
Dr.P.H.*
2001! Maurice L. Lagarde III, M.P.H.*
Social Work:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
Edna Pearson Wagner*
Corinne Howell Wolfe*
Clarence L. Barney*
L. Diane Bernard*
Eula S. O'Donnell*
Gary Arthur Lloyd*
H. Herschel Saucier*
Werner W. Boehm*
Eugenie C. Schwartz*
Edna H. Hughes*
June B. Ellis*
Mary Margaret Carr*
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1997
Sidney S. Barthelmey*
Salvator Caruso*
Helen Cassidy McGrail*
Leon Ginsberg*
Riva Wiseman*
C. Michael Moreau*
Alice F. Clark*
Teresa Adams*
Betty McCullough Spencer*
Therese Weil Lansburgh*
Frank B. Raymond III*
University College:
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
Kenneth M. Evans*
Harold F. Parker*
Elmo C. Waltzer*
Clarence B. Giarrusso*
Douglas C. Augustin*
1979
1980
1981
1982
Jeannette K. Laguaite*
Ford Rowan*
Myldred M. Costa*
Malcolm F. Rosenberg, Jr.*
105
TULANE ALUMNI WHO WERE AWARDED
THE PULITZER PRIZE
Fiction:
Shirley Ann Grau*
John Kennedy Toole*
The Keepers of the House
A Confederacy of Dunces
1965
1981
Editorial Writing:
Hodding Carter*
William H. W. Fitzpatrick
Ira Harkey
1946
1951
1963
TULANE ALUMNI WHO WERE RECIPIENTS OF THE
TIMES-PICAYUNE LOVING CUP
1923
1927
1930
1935
1936
1940
1941
1947
1948
1949
1951
1953
1954
1956
1957
1960
1963
Simon Schwartz*
J. P. Butler*
Edgar B. Stern*
Walter Kearny*
Nicholas Bauer*
Dr. Rudolph Matas*
Charles E. Dunbar*
Mrs. Charles F. Buck, Jr.*
Charles E. Fenner*
Mrs. James Weaks Rally*
Harry McCall*
Mrs. Ernest A. Robin*
Carmelite Janvier*
Clifford F. Favrot*
Captain Neville Levy*
Martha Gilmore Robinson*
Percival Stern*
1965
1968
1969
1970
1972
1974
1977
1979
1980
1984
1985
1986
1989
1995
1999
2001
Darwin S. Fenner*
Harold Salmon, Sr.*
Mrs. Edwin H. Blum*
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*
Clayton Nairne*
William B. Burkenroad, Jr.*
Richard West Freeman*
Harry McCall, Jr.*
James J. Coleman, Sr.*
Rosa Freeman Keller*
Bryan Bell*
Michael J. Molory, Jr.*
David F. Dixon*
Anne M. Milling*
Herschel L. Abbott*
Waldemar S. Nelson*
TULANE'S KINGS OF CARNIVAL
1899
1913
1914
1915
1931
1934
1935
1940
1941
1947
1951
1953
Walter D. Denegre*
Hugh McCloskey*
Crawford H. Ellis*
Ernest Lee Jahncke*
Edward E. Soule*
Charles Whitney Bouden*
Garner H. Tullis*
George H. Terriberry*
Charles E. Fenner*
George Westfeldt*
George Janvier*
Charles C. Crawford*
1954
1955
1957
1958
1959
1960
1962
1964
1965
1968
1969
1970
Leon Irwin, Jr.*
Darwin S. Fenner*
Clifford F. Favrot*
Joseph Herrick Jones*
Richard West Freeman*
Gerald L. Andrus*
Eben Hardie*
Clayton L. Nairne*
Harry Bartlett Kelleher*
Ernest C. Villere*
Hughes Philip Walmsley*
Ashton Phelps*
106
1971 Brooke H. Duncan II*
1974 Eads Poitevent, Jr.*
1975 Harry McCall, Jr.*
1977 Ulisse M. Nolan*
1978 Edmund McIlhenny*
1979 Laurance Eustis*
1981 John Sims*
1982 William Boatner Reily III*
1983 John C. Phillips, Chm. of
the Board of Administrators)
1984 Edward B. Poitevent*
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1993
1994
1995
1996
George Denegre*
William Waller Young, Jr.*
John D. Charbonnet*
Beauregard L. Bassich*
Dr. John L. Ochsner*
Erik F. Johnsen*
R. King Milling*
James M. Cain*
Louis Frierson*
John Giffen Weinmann*
NEWCOMB 'S QUEENS OF CARNIVAL
1898
1911
1912
1927
1930
1933
1934
1936
1937
1939
1940
1941
1946
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1955
Noel Forsyth*
Rose B. West*
Lois Janvier*
Mildred Brown*
Shirley Cordill*
Mary Frances Ruck*
Laura Fenner*
Cora Stanton Jahncke*
Jessie Wing Janvier*
Charlotte Hardie*
Katharine Phillips*
Delphine Clark*
Emmy Lou Dirks*
Elizabeth Lee Nicholson*
Dolly Ann Souchon*
Mary Brooks Soule*
Ann Simpson*
Eugenie Penick Jones*
Adelaide Wisdom*
Harriett Smither*
1956
1957
1959
1963
1966
1967
1974
1975
1977
1980
1982
1984
1985
1987
1991
1995
1998
1999
2002
Patricia Charbonnet Henican*
Charlotte Sutherland Parker*
Flora Sanders Fenner*
Helen Josephine Grace*
Christine Phillip. Westfsldt~
Suzanne C. Dupuy*
Anne Cameron Kock*
Margaret Pratt*
Mary Jane Sanders Fenner*
Elizabeth Westerfield Burke*
Katherine Waters*
Laura Freeman*
Mary Stewart Smallpage*
Adair Draughn Freeman*
Elizabeth Shaw Nalty*
Margaret Louise Eastman*
Sidonie Swoop Villere*
Mary Louise Phelps*
Kathryn Lee Reily*
GOVERNORS OF LOUISIANA WHO ATTENDED TULANE
1.
Michael Hahn*, LL. B. 1851
1864-1865
2.
Francis T. Nicholls*, LL. D. 1903
1877-1880
3.
John McEnery*, LL. B. 1853
1873
4.
Murphy J. Foster*, LL. B. 1871
1892-1900
5.
Newton Crain Blanchard*, LL. B. 1870
1904-1908
(actually attended
Univ. of Louisiana)
107
6.
Jared Young Sanders*, LL. B. 1893
1908-1912
7.
Luther Egbert Hall*, LL. B. 1891
1912-1916
8.
Oramel H. Simpson*, LL. B. 1893
1926-1928
9.
Huey P. Long (attended Tulane as a special student)
1928-1932
10. Alvin O. King*, LL. B. 1915
1932
11. Richard Webster Leche*,
1936-1939
12. David C. Treen*, B. A. 1948, J. D. 1950
1980 -1984
108
VI. ATHLETICS
109
DIRECTORS OF ATHLETICS
1910-1913
1915-1922
1922-1945
1945-1946
1946-1948
1948-1952
1952-1960
1961-1962
1963-1975
1976-1985
1985-1987
1987-1988
1988-1991
1991
1991-1996
1996
1996-1999
1999-2000
2000-
Appleton Ada, Mason
Clark D. Shaughnessy
Wilbur C. Smith
Horace C. Renegar
Claude Simons, Jr.*
Horace C. Renegar
(Director of Public Relations)
Richard O. Baumbach*
Horace C. Renegar (Acting Director)
Rix Nelson Yard
Hindman Wall
Mack Brown
Wright Waters
Chet Gladchuk
Tom Peters
Kevin White
Sandy Barbour/Ian McCaw (Interim)
Sandy Barbour
Scott Devine (Acting)
Rick Dickson
110
COACHES
FOOTBALL
1893-1894
1894-1895
1895-1896
1896-1897
1898-1899
1899-1900
1900-1902
1902-1903
1903-1904
1904-1905
1905-1906
1906-1907
1907-1909
1909-1910
1910-1913
1913-1914
1914-1915
1915-1921
T. L. Bayne
Fred Sweet
T. L. Bayne
H. W. Baum
John Lombard*
H. H. Collier
H. T. Summersgill
Virginius Dabney
Charles Eshleman*
T. Berry and
J. Jarnvier
J. Tobin and
H. Ludlow
John Russ
Joe Curtis
Buster Brown
A. A. Mason
A. C. Hoffman*
E. R. Sweetland
Clark Shaughnessy
1921-1922
1922-1927
1927-1932
1932-1936
1936-1942
1942-1946
1946-1952
1952-1954
1954-1962
1962-1966
1966-1971
1971-1976
1976-1980
1980-1982
1983-1985
1985-1987
1987-1991
1992-1996
1997-1998
1998-
Myron Fuller
Clark Shaughnessy
Bernie Bierman
Ted Cox
Lowell Dawson*
Claude Simons, Jr.*
Henry E. Frnka
Raymond Wolf
Andy Pilney
Tommy O'Boyle*
Jim Pittman
Bennie Ellender*
Larry Smith
Vince Gibson
Wally English
Mack Brown
Greg Davis
Buddy Teevens
Tommy Bowden
Chis Scelfo
MEN’S BASKETBALL
1905-1906
1912-1913
1913-1914
1914-1915
1915-1918
1918-1920
1920-1928
1928-1930
1930-1931
1931-1933
1933-1938
1938-1942
Silas Hickey
A. A. Mason
Carl Hanson
R. T. Sweetland
Clark Shaughnessy
M. A. Moencki
Claude Simons, Sr.
Bernie Bierman*
Claude Simons, Sr.
George Rody
Ray Daubar*
Claude Simons, Jr.*
1942-1945
1945-1963
1963-1964
1964-1971
1971-1973
1973-1 976
1976-1981
1981-1985
1985-1989
1989-2000
2000-
Vernon Haynes*
Clifford Wells
Ted Lanhardt
Ralph Padersen*
Dick Longo
Charles Moir
Roy Danforth
Ned Fowler
NO TEAM FIELDED
Perry Clark
Shawn Finney
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
1975-1980
1980-1981
1981-1985
Karen Womack
Avie Bridges
Julia Yeater
1985-1990
1990-1994
1994-
Joline Matsunami
Candi Harvey
Lisa Stockton
111
BASEBALL
1894-1895
1896-1897
1899-1900
1900-1901
1906-1907
1911-1918
1919-1920
1923-1924
1924-1928
1928-1929
1930-1931
1932-1933
1937-1938
Jack Dowling
T. L . Bayne
F. B. Morris
H. T. Summersgill
"Home Run" Smith
J. Richard
Bruce Hays
John Gondolfi
Bruce Hays
Claude Simons, Sr.*
Peggy Flournoy*
Ted Bank
Ted Bank
Bill Vegan*
1938-1942
1942-1943
1943-1950
1950-1952
1952-1955
1955-1958
1958-1959
1959-1960
1960-1962
1962-1964
1964-1967
1967-1974
1975-1993
1993-
Claude Simons, Jr.*
Robert F. Kellogg*
Claude Simons, Jr.*
John Reed*
Dennis Vinzant
Ben Abadie*
Mel Parnell
Bob Whitman*
Jack Orsley*
Doug Hafner
Ben Abadie*
Milton Retif*
Joe Brockhoff
Rick Jones
TRACK
1904-1905
1907-1908
1911-1912
1912-1913
1915-1920
1920-1923
Rev. H. W. Foote
Charles Eshleman*
A. A. Mason and
M. J. White
Tad Gormley
Clark Shaughnessy
Claude Simons, Sr.
1923-1925
1925-1959
1959-1978
1879-1980
1980-1995
1995-
Bernie Bierman
Forrest E. Oakes*
John Oelkers*
Lenny Cullickia
Danny Thiel
Ron Bazil
MEN’S TENNIS
1929-1933
1933-1942
1943-1945
1945-1973
1974-1975
Mercer Beasley
Emmett Parè
Ernest Sutter*
Emmett Parè
Roy Bartlett*
1976-1977
1978-1980
1981-????
1993-
Duane Bruley
Crawford Henry*
Peter Curtis*
Robert Klein
WOMEN’S TENNIS
2000-
David Schumacher
MEN’S GOLF
1930-1931
1934-1935
1936-1942
1942-1969
1970-1976
Frederick Hard
George Simmons
George Turpie, Jr.
Innes Millar
Jim Hart*
1990-1994
1994-2000
2000-
Mike Dirks
Chris Donielson
Tom Shaw
112
WOMEN’S GOLF
1989-1991
1992-
Lois Pruski
Sue Bower
WOMEN’S SOCCER
1996-1998
1998-2000
Carla DeSantis
Eliot Perkins
2000-
Betsy Anderson
WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL
1975-1979
1980
1981-1987
Kay Metcalf
Sandy Paternostro
Kathy Trosclair
1988
Dorothy Franco
1989-1998
Sonya Hanson
1999- Betsy Becker
SWIMMING
(The Swim program was terminated in the mid-1980s.)
1960-1966
1967-1968
1968-1969
Lowell Damonte*
Robert Watts
Paul Clifford
C. Richard Bower
1978-1979
1979-1980
1981-
Robert Groseth
Peter Orschiedt
Scott Hammond
113
OUTSTANDING ATHLETES FROM TULANE
ALL-AMERICANS
Consensus All-Americans
(as listed in the official NCAA College Football All-Time Record Book):
1931
1932
1939
1941
Jerry Dalrymple*, end (unanimous selection)
Don Zimmerman*, back
Harley McCollum*, tackle
Ernie Blandin*, tackle
Other players named to All-Americans First Team:
1925
1929
1930
1931
1934
1938
1939
1940
Charles Priestly Flournoy*, back
Willis Banker*, back
Jerry Dalrymple*, end
Don Zimmerman*, back
Claude Simons, Jr.*, back
Ralph Wenzel*, end
Harley McCollum*, tackle
Tommy O’Boyle*, guard
Tommy O'Boyle*, guard
1943
1944
1948
1949
1950
1955
1960
1973
1987
Lester Gatewood*, center
W. A. "Dub" Jones*, back
Paul Lea, tackle
Edward "Eddie" Price*, back
Jerome Helluin*, tackle
Tony Sardisco*, guard
Tommy Mason*, back
Charles Hall*, tackle
Marc Zeno*, WR
NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION HALL OF FAME
Jerry Dalrymple*, end
Bernie Bierman, coach
Clark Shaughnessy, coach
Claude Simons, Jr.*, back
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*, back
Willis Banker*, back
John Green*, guard
Eddie Price*, fullback
inducted in 1954
inducted in 1955
inducted in 1968
inducted in 1968
inducted in 1975
inducted in 1977
inducted in 1989
inducted in 1982
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED SILVER ANNIVERSARY ALL-AMERICAN AWARD
Eldon Claggett Upton, Jr.*
Miller Upton* (1962)
(1962)
114
LOUISIANA ATHLETIC HALL OF FAME
Alex Athas*
Bill Banker*
Bernie Bierman (coach)
Jerry Dalrymple*
Peggy Flournoy*
Tad Gormley (coach)
W. A. "Dub" Jones*
Lester J. Lautenschlaeger*
Tommy Mason*
Max McGee*
Emmett Parè (coach)
Mel Parnell (coach)
John Petitbon*
Richard Petitbon*
Eddie Price*
Ham Richardson*
Clark Shaughnessy (coach)
Claude Simons, Jr.*
Don Zimerman*
T CLUB HALL OF FAME
1977
1981 cont.
Bill Banker*
Bernie Bierman
Jerry Dalrymple*
Lester Lautenschlaeger*
Emmett Parè
Warren Perkins*
Eddie Price*
Hami Richardson*
Clark Shaughnessy
Claude Simons, Jr.*
Clifford Wells
Henry Franka
Charles Hall*
Jim Kerwin*
Eddie Khayat*
Harley McCollum*
Milton Retif*
Dalton Truax*
1979
Alex Athas*
Bobby Brown*
Brother Brown*
Warren Brunner*
Charles Eshleman*
F. Edward Hebert*
Don Joyce *
Fred Lamprecht*
Herman Neugass*
Forrest Oakes*
Tommy O'Boyle*
Jack Tuero*
1981
Jose Aguero*
Warren Bankston*
1978
Paul Bienz*
Vince D'Antoni*
Peggy Flournoy*
Ellis Henican*
Tommy Mason*
Eddie Morgan*
John Oelkers*
Claude Simons, Sr.
Cliff Sutter*
Ernest Sutter*
Bill Svoboda*
Don Zimmerman*
1980
Johnny Arthurs*
Ernest Blandin*
Lowell Dawson*
Bobby Duhon*
Harry P. Gamble, Jr.*
Ron Holmberg*
115
1980 cont.
1985 cont.
Robert "Bobby" Kellogg*
Rick Kingrea*
Carl "Hooks" Lind*
Max McGee*
Richard Petitbon*
Jack Pizzano*
Douglas Watters*
Richard G. Fugler II*
Cary D. Livingston*
Melvin E. Payton*
John Scafide*
1982
“Hal” Cervini*
Ted Cox
Vernon “Lefty” Haynes*
Cameron B. Gamble*
W. A. “Dub” Jones*
Steve Mura*
“Bubba” Porche*
Tony Sardisco*
1983
Patrick W. Browne, Jr.*
Howard L. “Bucky” Bryan*
Charles L. Dufour*
Stephen J. Foley*
Crawford Henry*
Ray W. Hester*
Bernard D. Mintz*
Linda Tuero Paul*
Jim Pittman*
1986
Francis X. “Ike” Armstrong*
Doyless L. Hill*
Roch B. Hantas*
Barton W.B. Jahncke*
Milton L. “Irish” Levi*
James R. Riffey*
David Stokes*
1987
Pierre Gauden*
Stanley C. Kottemann*
Eddie Murray*
L.E. “Lou” Thomas*
Chris P. Winter*
1988
Joel B. Bullard, Jr.*
Fred J. Cassibry*
Terry L. Habig*
Ralph Wenzel*
Frank Wills, Jr.*
1989
1984
Joseph A. Ernst, Sr.*
Edmond L. Faust, M.D.*
Beatrice McMillan Field* (special)
G. Shelby “Buddy” Friedrichs, Jr.*
Harry C. “Wop” Glover, Jr.*
Jerome Helluin*
Phillip J. Hicks*
W. Kennon McWilliams* (special)
Ben Weiner* (special)
1985
Patrick W. Browne*
Joseph L. Curran, Jr.*
Gaston Bourgeois, Jr.*
Joseph M. Brocato*
John R. Espensheild*
T. Eugene Newton*
Millard D. White*
1990
Al Andrews
John Dane III
Bernard Derrè
Nollie C. Felts*
Rodney Holman*
Paul Lea*
Lloyd “Preacher” Roberts*
116
1990 cont.
1996
Paul Thompson*
Ben Abadie*
Frank Burge*
Terrence Jones*
Margaret Kelly
Eric Lane*
E.C. “Tick” Upton*
George “Sunny” Westfeldt*
1991
Roy “Chief” Ary*
Dick Brennan*
Jack Green*
Eric Laakso*
Einar N. Pedersen*
Andy Pilney*
Ronald Quillian*
Robert L. Turchin*
1992
Barry Butera*
Arthur G. Kleinschmidt*
Mark Olivari*
Theard “Terry” Terrebonne*
T. Semmes Walmsle*
James W. Wilson, Jr.*
1993
David Abercrombie*
Rusty Chambers*
Lurlyn Fitzpatrick* (special)
Kenny Francinques*
Jaime Garza*
Stacy Gaudet*
Paul Krueger*
Ralph Pedersen*
1994
Billy Fitzgerald*
George Haik*
Lester Kennedy*
Dan Rogas*
John Sutter*
1995
Norman Buckner*
George Kinek*
Joe Loftin*
Ed Poitevent*
Harold Sylvester*
1997
Anthony “Reggie” Reginelli, Jr.*
Emmanuel F. “Tookie” Spann, Jr.*
Daniel Wagner*
Lionel Washington*
Marc Zeno*
1998
Burnell J. Dent*
Lester Gatewood*
James A. Gueno*
W. Spencer Johnson*
Eamon M. Kelly (president, ’81-’98)
Peter P. Mailhes*
Anthony Reed*
Sharon Fuqua Retif*
1999
Joe Brockhoff*
Carl “Nickie” Hall*
Richard Harvey*
G. Turner Howard*
Peter Mandich*
2000
Steve Barrios*
Robert C. Cudd III* (benefactor)
John P. Foto*
M. Neal Jones*
Donald J. Maggs*
Michael D. Romano*
2001
Claude “Boo” Mason*
117
2001 cont.
Frank Robinson*
Samuel R. Williamson*
Gordon “Doc” Wilson*
Buddy de Monsabert (administation)
John Owen*
PROFESSIONAL ATHLETES FROM TULANE
Football
Jeff Alexander*
Denver Broncos
Alton Alexis*
Cincinnati Bengals, Calgary Stampeders
Marvin Allen*
New England Patriots
Marcus Anderson*
Chicago Bears, Chicago Blitz
Curtis Baham*
Seattle Seahawks, Saskatchewan Roughriders
Royal Bailey*
Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Jerry Baker*
Denver Broncos
Willis "Bill" Banker*
Memphis pro team
Warren Bankston*
Oakland Raiders, Pittsburgh Steelers
Steve Barrios*
WFL
Roman Bentz*
New York Yankees, San Francisco 49ers
Wayne Blair*
Toronto Argonauts
Ernie Blandin*
Cleveland Browns, Baltimore Colts
Maury Bodenger*
Portsmouth Spartans, Detroit Lions
Jim Boyle*
Pittsburgh Steelers
Paul Brock*
British Columbia Lions
James Campen*
New Orleans Saints, Green Bay Packers
Joe Caravello*
Washington Redskins, San Diego Chargers
Russell Chambers*
New Orleans Saints, Miami Dolphins
Harry Comer*
Buffalo Bills
118
Bernard Darrè *
Washington Redskins
JaJuan Dawson*
Chicago Bears
Burnell J. Dent*
Green Bay Packers, Detroit Lions
Corey Dowden*
Green Bay Packers, Baltimore Ravens,
Chicago Bears
Brian Douglass*
USFL
Max Druen*
Saskatchewan Roughriders
Robert Duhon*
New York Giants
Steve Foley*
Denver Broncos
Nolan Franz*
Boston Breakers, Green Bay Packers
Dick Fugler*
Pittsburgh Steelers, Chicago Cardinals
Wilbert Gilmore*
Birmingham Barracudas
James Glisson*
Philadelphia Eagles
Fred Gloden*
Philadelphia Eagles, Miami Seahawks
Gus Gonzales*
Toronto Argonauts, Montreal Alouettes
Jim Gueno*
Green Bay Packers
Charles Hall*
Jacksonville Express
Nicky Hall*
Green Bay Packers, Winnipeg Blue
Bombers
Ruffin Hamilton*
Green Bay Packers, Atlanta Falcons
Richard Harvey*
New England Patriots, Buffalo Bills, New Orleans
Saints, Oakland Raiders, San Diego Chargers
Jerry Helluin*
Cleveland Browns, Green Bay Packers,
Houston Oilers
Ray Hester*
New Orleans Saints
Rodney Holman*
Cincinnati Bengals, Detroit Lions
Bill Hornick*
Pittsburgh Steelers
119
Pete Johns*
Houston Oilers
W. A. "Dub" Jones*
Miami Seahawks, Cleveland Browns,
Brooklyn Dodgers
Terrence Jones*
Calgary Stampeders, Ottawa Rough Riders,
Shreveport Pirates
Don Joyce*
Chicago Bears, Baltimore Colts,
Minnesota Vikings, Denver Broncos
Ken Karcher*
Denver Broncos
Bobby Kellogg*
Chicago Cardinals
Eddie Khayat*
Philadelphia Eagles, Washington
Redskins, Boston Patriots
George Kinek*
Chicago Cardinals
Shaun King
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Ellsworth Kingery*
Chicago Cardinals
Rick Kingrea*
Cleveland Browns, New Orleans Saints
Eric Laakso*
Miami Dolphins
Paul Lea*
Pittsburgh Steelers, Calgary Stampeders
Marvin Lewis*
New Orleans Saints
Donald J. Maggs*
USFL, Houston Oilers, Denver Broncos
Lonnie Marts*
Kansas City Chiefs, Tampa Bay Buccaneers,
Tennessee Oilers/Titans, Jacksonville Jaguars
Tommy Mason*
Minnesota Vikings, Los Angeles Rams,
Washington Redskins
Howard McAfee*
Detroit Lions
Harley McCollum*
New York Yankees, Chicago Rockets
Tim McCray*
Ottawa Rough Riders, Saskatchewan Roughriders
Walt McDonald*
Miami Seahawks, Brooklyn Dodgers,
Chicago Hornets
120
Max McGee*
Green Bay Packers
Sylvester McGrew*
Green Bay Packers
Martin Mitchell*
Bombers
Philadelphia Eagles, Winnipeg Blue
Eddie Murray*
Detroit Lions, Kansas City Chiefs,
Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Dallas Cowboys,
Philadelphia Eagles, Washington Redskins, Minnesota
Vikings
Ed Neal*
Green Bay Packers, Chicago Bears
Phil Nugent*
Denver Broncos
Richard Petitbon*
Chicago Bears, Los Angeles Rams,
Washington Redskins
Chuck Pitcock*
Los Angeles Express, Tampa Bay
Buccaneers
Eddie Price*
New York Giants
Mitchell Price*
Cincinnati Bengals, Phoenix Cardinals
Ronald Quillian*
Toronto Argonauts, Ottowa Rough Riders
Freeman Rexner*
Chicago Cardinals, Boston Yanks,
Detroit Lions
Jeff Roberts*
Saskatchewan Roughriders
Frank Robinson*
Saskatchewan Roughriders, Winnipeg Blue,
Bombers, Toronto Argonauts, Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Dan Rogas*
Detroit Lions, Philadelphia Eagles
Tony Sardisco*
Washington Redskins, San Francisco 49ers,
Boston Patriots
John Scafide*
Boston Redskins
Leroy Schneider*
Brooklyn Dodgers
Joe Shinn*
Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Joe Silipo*
Montreal Alouettes, Buffalo Bills,
Denver Broncos
121
Wilfred Simon*
Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Treg Songy*
New York Jets
Jerald Sowell*
New York Jets
Bill Svoboda*
Chicago Cardinals, New York Giants
Leonard Teeuws*
Los Angeles Rams, Chicago Cardinals
James Thibaut*
Buffalo Bills
Eric Thomas*
Cincinnati Bengals, New York Jets
Ron Tilton*
Washington Redskins, New York Jets
Dalton Truax*
WFL
Elton Veals*
Pittsburgh Steelers
Hal Waggoner*
Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Toronto Argonauts
Mike Walker*
New Orleans Saints, British Columbia
Lions, Toronto Argonauts
John Washington*
Saskatchewan Roughriders
Lionel Washington*
St. Louis Cardinals, Los Angeles/Oakland
Raiders, Denver Broncos
Clinton Wenzel*
USFL
Jeff Wenzel*
Philadelphia Eagles
Ralph Wenzel*
Pittsburgh Steelers
Marty Wetzel*
New York Jets
Emmett Zelenka*
Montreal Alouettes
Marc Zeno*
Calgary Stampeders, British Columbia Lions
Basketball
Johnny Arthurs*
Milwaukee Bucks
Jeff Cummings*
(Italian pro team)
122
Phil Hicks*
Chicago Bulls, Denver Nuggets, and
Houston Rockets
Jim Kerwin*
Warren Perkins*
St. Louis Hawks
Craig Spitzer*
(French pro team)
Paul Thompson*
Cleveland Cavaliers
Women’s Basketball
Janell Burse
Minnesota Lynx
Grace Daley
Minnesota Lynx, New York Liberty
Barbara Farris
Detroit Shock
Baseball
Gerald Alexander*
Texas Rangers
Sam Amarena*
Baltimore Orioles
Eddie Bernard*
Kansas City Royals
Bryan Brown*
Boston Red Sox
Robert (Bobby) Brown*
New York Yankees
Barry Butera*
Boston Red Sox
Brian Butera*
Minnesota Twins, Boston Red Sox
Robert Dearrah*
New York Yankees
Todd Dyess*
Baltimore Orioles
Billy Fitzgerald*
San Francisco Giants, Atlanta Braves,
Oakland A's
David Flettrich*
Cleveland Indians
Kenny Francinques*
Minnesota Twins
Wayne Francinques*
Chicago White Sox
123
Jimmy Gaudet*
Kansas City Royals
Gene Harris*
Montreal Expos
Eric Lane*
Texas Rangers, San Francisco Giants
Carl Lind*
Cleveland Indians
Tommy Little*
Seattle Mariners
Mark Maher*
Minnesota Twins
Ron Marigny*
Detroit Tigers
Tommy Mathews*
St. Louis Cardinals
Chuck Melito*
Cleveland Indians
Brian Migliore*
California Angels
Kevin Mmahat*
Texas Rangers
Eddie Morgan*
Cleveland Indians
Steve Mura*
San Diego Padres, Chicago White Sox,
St. Louis
John Olagues*
Cincinnati Reds, Cleveland Indians
Rick Parker*
California Angels
Marty Posey*
Texas Rangers
Joey Purcell*
Baltimore Orioles, Toronto Blue Jays
Steve Riley*
Minnesota Twins
Mike Romano*
Toronto Blue Jays
Steve Rowley*
Texas Rangers
Larry Schneider*
Cleveland Indians
David Smith*
Minnesota Twins
Jackie Snell*
Chicago Cubs
Tookie Spann*
Seattle Mariners, Detroit Tigers
124
David Stewart*
Philadelphia Phillies
David Stokes*
Minnesota Twins, Texas Rangers
Joe Tkac*
Milwaukee Brewers
Daniel Wagner*
Chicago White Sox
David Welch*
Cleveland Indians
Frank Wills*
Kansas City Royals
John Zelenka*
Kansas City Royals
Curtis Zimmerman*
Cleveland Indians
Ivan Zweig*
Texas Rangers
125
TULANE'S PARTICIPATION IN BOWL GAMES
Rose Bowl
On January 1, 1932, the Tulane football team played the University of Southern California for the
national championship in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. Tulane lost by a score of 21-12 but
made twice as many first downs, gained more yardage from scrimmage, completed more passes, and had
a better punting average than their opponents. Berni Bierman was Tulane's coach, and "Wop" Glover
was the game's most outstanding player.
Sugar Bowl
(1)
On January 1, 1935, Tulane opposed the Temple Owls in the first Sugar Bowl game. Tulane's coach was
Ted Cox, and the Temple coach was "Pop" Warner. "Little Monk" Simons was the hero of the game.
Tulane won, 20-14.
Sugar Bowl
(2)
On New Year 'a Day, 1940, Tulane again was invited to play in the Sugar Bowl with Coach Homer
Norton's Texas Aggies their opponents. Lowell "Red" Dawson was the Green Wave's coach. The final
score was a heartbreaking 14-13 in A&M’s favor.
Liberty Bowl (1)
On December 12, 1970, a cold Saturday afternoon, Tulane met the Colorado Buffaloes in the Liberty
Bowl at Memphis, Tennessee. Although the underdogs, the Tulane team won by a score of 17-3, a
fitting ending to "The Year of the Green". David Abercrombie was voted the Most Valuable Player. This
was the last game coached by Jim Pittman, who resigned shortly thereafter.
Bluebonnet Bowl
Coming off a 7-1 season, the Tulane Green Wave met the Cougars of the University of Houston in a
post-season game on December 29, 1973 in the Astrodome. This was the Bluebonnet Bowl, which
Tulane lost by the devastating score of 47-7.
Liberty Bowl (2)
Larry Smith’s 1979 Tulane team was pitted against Joe Paterno’s Nittany Lions in Tulane’s second visit
to Memphis and the Liberty Bowl on December 22, 1979. The day was cold and rainy, which resulted
in a defensive struggle throughout. The final score was 9-6 (all field goals) in Penn State’s favor.
Hall of Fame Bowl
Coach Vince Gibson’s Green Wave team met the Arkansas Razorbacks on a freezing Saturday night,
December 27, 1980 in Birmingham. The final score was Arkansas 34, Tulane 15.
126
Independence Bowl
Coach Mack Brown’s Green Wave ended their 1987 season in Shreveport at the Independence Bowl.
On December 19, Tulane squared off against the University of Washington. The final score was
Washington 24, Tulane12.
Liberty Bowl
(3)
For a third time, Tulane was invited to Memphis, Tennessee for the Liberty Bowl. Coach Tommy
Bowden’s Green Wave took on Brigham Young’s Cougars on December 31, 1998. The final score was
Tulane 41, BYU 27.
Hawaii Bowl
Chris Scelfo’s Green Wave spent Christmas 2002 in Honolulu battling the University of Hawaii
Warriors. In the opening play, Tulane recovered an onside kick, and despite their underdog status,
continued to gain momentum against the Warriors, who lead the nation in passing and had lost only one
game out of 11 in Aloha Stadium. Tulane cornerback Lynaris Elpheage had two long punt returns, and
Tulane quarterback J.P. Losman ran for two touchdowns in the second half and completed 20 of 39
passes for 240 yards. Tulane finished the game with a 36-28 victory over the Warriors.
127
VII. BUILDINGS
128
BUILDINGS OCCUPIED BY ACADEMIC DEPARTMENTS
High School Building, Medical Building, and Law Building (1847)
On Common Street downtown; Greek Revival; occupied by the University of Louisiana from
1847-1894; buildings comprised the first campus of the University of Louisiana; property was sold to
the Grunewald Hotel (predecessor of the Roosevelt, now Fairmont Hotel) in 1894 when the campus was
moved to the uptown site on St. Charles Avenue; Fairmont Hotel currently occupies the site downtown;
Tulane Hall (acquired by the University in 1883)
On Dryades Street (University Place) at the present site of the Fairmont Hotel; purchased in 1883 by the
University with funds provided by Paul Tulane; formerly called the Mechanics Institute Building;
renamed Tulane Hall in honor of Mr. Tulane; housed the Academic Department of the University of
Louisiana; University sold it in 1903 to Grunewald Interests to expand its hotel (originally Grunewald,
then Roosevelt, and currently Fairmont);
Gibson Hall (1894)
On circular drive facing St. Charles Avenue (6823 St. Charles); Harrod and Andry, architects; Thomas
Nicholson and Company of Chicago, builders; cost, $117, 849; Richardsonian Romanesque; stone over
brick, slate roof with dormers, four floors; originally called Academic Building; renamed Gibson Hall in
honor of Randall Lee Gibson (Confederate General, U. S. Senator from Louisiana, and first President of
the Board of Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund) before the turn of the century; has housed
Administrative Offices, classrooms, Museum, Alumni Office, Law School, Bookstore, College of
Commerce, etc.; currently houses Liberal Arts and Sciences, Administrative Offices, Admissions,
Registrar, Financial Aid, Graduate School, Mathematics, Mathematics Library, University College;
Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Work Shops Complex (1894)
In Engineering complex behind Gibson Hall; Harrod and Andry, architects; Richardsonian Romanesque;
brick; has been used for classrooms, laboratories, drawing rooms, workshops (metal work, pattern
making, carpentry, blacksmithing, foundry work); additions and modifications in 1949; currently used in
a renovated state for Mechanical Engineering;
Civil Engineering Building (1894)
In Engineering complex behind Gibson Hall; Harrod and Andry, architects; cost, $42, 406; brick
exterior, two floors; originally housed the College of Technology; currently houses Civil and
Environmental Engineering;
Richardson Building (1894)
In Gibson quadrangle opposite F. Edward Hebert Hall; Harrod and Andry, architects; Andry and
Bendernagel, architects in 1908; cost, $44, 553; brick exterior, three floors; named for Tobias G.
Richardson, Dean of the Medical School; originally called the Chemistry Building; has housed the
Chemistry Department, classrooms, and laboratories; formerly housed offices of Records and the
Registrar; currently serves as Computer Center;
129
F. Edward Hebert Hall (1894)
In Gibson quadrangle, opposite Richardson Building; faces due south "to take advantage of sunlight and
to enhance the precision of magnetic instruments"; Harrod and Andry, architects (supervised by Brown
Ayres, Physics professor); cost, $35, 651; Richardsonian Romanesque; Egyptian pressed brick with trim
of Bedford stone, three floors; originally called the Physical Laboratory (first exclusively Physics
laboratory in the South); renamed for F. Edward Hebert (Tulane alumnus, U. S. Representative) at
dedication on October 13, 1979; formerly housed Latin American Studies, Development, and University
Relations; (renovation of the building was made possible by contributions from the F. Edward Hebert
Foundation); currently houses History, the Payson Center for International Development and
Technology Transfer, and the Hebert Foundation;
Tilton Memorial Library Building (1902)
West of Gibson Hall, corresponding to Dinwiddie on the east; Andry and Bendernagel, architects; cost,
$49, 999; Richardsonian Romanesque; rough stone veneer and brick, Tiffany windows; named for
Frederick W. Tilton, prominent importer of railroad irons, whose wife, Mrs. Caroline Tilton in 1900
gave the University $50, 000 for a library in her husband's memory; in 1906 Mrs. Tilton gave an
additional $25, 000 for expansion; has housed the University Library, Law School, Arts and Sciences
classrooms, Business School Library, Philosophy, and Public Policy Studies; currently houses
Economics, the Murphy Institute, and the Amistad Research Center;
Social Sciences Building (1902)
Between F. Edward Hebert Hall and Social Work Building; Andry and Bendernagel, architects; Glover
and Sicard, contractors; cost, $14, 941; English Renaissance; brick; has served as: 1) Refectory (food
service), 2) Biophysics Laboratory, 3) Bruff Commons (dedicated as such on June 9, 1942, named for
Richard K. Bruff, former Registrar); formerly served as the Social Sciences Building, housing
Sociology, Anthropology, and Political Sciences; renovated in 1999; named for Robert C. Cudd;
currently houses Tulane College;
Social Work Building (1902)
Between Social Sciences Building and Fortier Hall; Andry and Bendernagel, architects; Toledano and
Wogan, contractors; cost, $33, 311; English Renaissance; brick exterior, three floors and attic; originally
called Richardson Dormitory (first Tulane dormitory); later designated Social Sciences building, then
used for Arts and Sciences classrooms; currently houses Social Work;
Richardson Memorial Building (1908)
In Gibson Quadrangle between Dinwiddie and Richardson Buildings; Andry and Bendernagel,
architects; George J. Glover, contractor; cost, $158,962; Richardsonian Romanesque; rough stone
veneer and brick, five floors; named for Dr. Tobias G. Richardson, Dean of the Medical Department
from 1865-1885, whose wife, Mrs. Ida Richardson donated $140, 000 for the benefit of the Medical
Department; originally housed laboratories and classrooms for the first two years of Medical School;
(probably the first building in the United States built entirely for the instruction of medical students) site
of traditional ivy planting by medical students; later housed Arts and Sciences classrooms; currently
houses School of Architecture;
130
Alcee Fortier Hall (1908)
Between Social Work and Stern Science Building; DeBuys, Churchill and Labouisse, architects; cost,
$40, 179; Italian Renaissance; brick, three floors and attic; named for Professor Alcee Fortier, who was
a renowned Tulane Professor of Romance Languages; renovated in 1998; originally served as a
dormitory for medical students; later converted to athletic dormitory and to Navy dormitory; also housed
University College, Summer School, Foreign Language Department, Air Force ROTC and Education;
currently houses Environmental Sciences;
Stanley Thomas Hall (1911)
In Engineering complex between Richardson Building and Theatre and Speech Building; Andry and
Bendernagel, architects; George J. Glover, contractor; cost, $101, 279; Richardsonian Romanesque;
brick and concrete, four floors (fourth floor added in 1929 under the supervision of J. Herndon
Thomson, Professor of Architecture and John O' Brien, contractor); named for Stanley 0. Thomas
(attorney, President of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange), he bequeathed to Tulane $60, 000 for a
University building; the Board decided to designate funds for a facility for Architecture and
Engineering; formerly housed Biomedical Engineering; currently houses Computer Science and
Electrical Engineering;
Dinwiddie Hall (1923)
East of Gibson corresponding to Tilton on the west; Moise Goldstein and Associates, architects; cost,
$182, 553; Elizabethan; Alabama limestone, brick, concrete, four floors; originally called Science
Building; renamed for Dr. A. B. Dinwiddie (Professor of Mathematics and President of the University
from, 1918-1935) in 1936 after his death; houses Arts and Sciences classrooms, Middle American
Research Institute, MARI museum, Geology; annex built in 1927 housed Law, Sociology, German,
Journalism, MARI; largest and most enduring memorial to any Tulane president; currently houses
Liberal Arts and Sciences, Geology, Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology, Coordinate
Instrument Facility, and Middle American Research Institute;
Thomas F. Cunningham Memorial Observatory (1941)
Next to McAlister auditorium on McAlister Drive; Favrot and Reed, architects; round, red brick, domed,
two floors; first floor houses lecture room (seating 100), offices, and workrooms; second level houses
Pickering telescope, gift of Mrs. Samuel Zemurry, Jr. whose father had owned it previously; named for
Thomas H. Cunningham, President of the Mississippi Shipping Company from 1919-1937; used as a
teaching facility for Astronomy;
Joseph Merrick Jones Hall (1941)
On Freret Street between Central Building and Howard-Tilton Library; Moise Goldstein and Assoc.,
architects; R. P. Farnsworth, contractor; cost, $730, 000; classic; brick, two floors; built to house the
merger of the downtown Howard Memorial Library with the Tilton Memorial Library on the Tulane
campus; served as University Library until the new library was constructed in 1968; renamed for Joseph
M. Jones (Tulane alumnus and President of the Board of Administrators) after his death; formerly
housed the School of Law until 1994; returned to library and academic use in 1998; houses the Special
Collections of Howard-Tilton Library, the Stone Center for Latin American Studies and the departments
of Classical Studies and Jewish Studies;
131
Norman Mayer Memorial Building (1942)
In Gibson quadrangle between Tilton and Hebert Hall; Diboll, Kessels, architects; cost, $106, 224;
Romanesque (built to conform to the style of early campus buildings); Bedford limestone, brick, three
floors; named for Mr. Norman Mayer, New Orleans cotton broker, whose wife donated the funds to
construct a building in his memory to be used by the College of Commerce and Business
Administration; in addition to the gift for construction, Mrs. Mayer provided an additional gift for the
maintenance of the building; dedicated February 27, 1942; the second section of the building was added
in 1949; formerly housed the School of Business; currently houses English and Political Science;
Theatre and Speech Building (1948)
Between Engineering and Stern Science Buildings; cost, $142, 000; wood frame, stucco, brick, one
floor; has housed cafeteria, History, Purchasing; formerly housed Accounts Receivable, Credit Union,
Arena Theatre;
New Engineering Buildings (1950)
In Engineering complex behind Gibson quadrangle; Goldstein, Parham, and Labouisse, architects; cost,
$56, 552; two floors; dedicated May 10, 1950; houses Engineering offices, classrooms, and laboratories;
Howard-Tilton Memorial Library (1968)
Corner of Newcomb Place and Freret Street; Nolan, Norman and Nolan, architects; cost, $900,000;
modern, brick, four floors and basement; houses collections of the Howard Memorial Library of New
Orleans, the Tilton Library of Tulane, and the Newcomb Library; also Southeastern Architectural
Archives, Jazz Archives, Music Library, Special Collections Division, Louisiana Collections, Latin
American Library, Government Documents, etc.; one of 123 research-level libraries in North America
belonging to the Association of Research Libraries;
Percival Stern Hall (1971)
Occupies land facing Freret Street from Law Road to Engineering Road; Curtis and Davis and
Thompson B. Burk and Associates, architects; Pittman Construction Company, contractors; cost,
$6,800,000; reinforced concrete with walls of pre-cast concrete, five floors; named for Mr. Percival
Stern (B.E. 1899) who pledged $3,000,000 to the construction of a Science Building; building dedicated
October 8, 1971; the construction of this facility necessitated the removal of the Student Center;
currently houses Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Psychology;
132
MEDICAL BUILDINGS
Medical Building (first home of the Medical Dept. of the University of Louisiana) (1843)
Occupied present location of the Fairmont Hotel (on Common near Philippa, which is now University
Place); brick, yellow stucco, Greek Revival, three floors; one of three Greek Revival buildings occupied
by the University from 1847-1894; the faculty and Board of Administrators raised $15,000 toward its
erection; (Prior to the move to this building, the classes of the Medical Department were held in the First
Congregational Church on St. Charles Street downtown and in other downtown locations. The pastor of
the Congregational Church was the controversial, notorious Rev. Theodore Clapp, who was considered a
heretic at the time.);
Medical Building (second home of the Medical School) (1893)
On Canal Street, located on a square bounded by Robertson, Villere, Canal, and Custom House (now
Iberville); renamed Josephine Hutchinson Memorial in 1906; opened for the 1893-1894 session;
occupied by school until 1929;
Hutchinson Memorial Medical Building (1929)
1430 Tulane Avenue; Favrot and Livaudais, architects; George Glover, contractor; cost, $1,048,294;
brick exterior, ten floors (including mezzanine); named for Mr. Alexander Charles Hutchinson, who in
1906 left the residue of his large estate to the Medical Department -- litigation followed, but was finally
settled in behalf of the Medical Department; building was completed some 25 years after the gift was
made, bearing the name of the man who made it possible; currently houses Medical School,
Administrative Offices, Rudolph Matas Library (named for Dr. Rudolph Matas, renowned surgeon,
Tulane alumnus, who bequeathed $1,000,000 for the support of the Medical Library);
Libby-Dufour Memorial Medical Building (1954)
Addition to the Hutchinson Building; cost, $7,000,000;
Burthe-Cottam Medical Building (1963)
Addition to the Hutchinson Building; Mathes, Bergman, and Assoc., architects; McKee Construction
Company, contractors; cost, $5,917,236;
Columbia Building (occupied by the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine in 1966)
150 South Liberty; houses four departments of the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine;
building formerly served as a distribution center for Columbia Pictures in the Film Row area; building
was removed in 1994 and the land is part of what is now the a parking garage serving the Tulane
University Hospital and the Health Sciences Center;
1304 S. Cleveland Building
Corner of 1304 S. Cleveland and 211 S. Saratoga; houses Dean's office of Public Health and Tropical
Medicine; Epidemiology, Computer Center, classrooms, Admissions; building was removed in 1989 and
the site has become part of the land upon which the Reily Pavilion of the Tulane University Hospital
was built;
133
Hawthorne Hall (acquired by the University in 1966)
1300 Canal Street; brick; acquired as a residence for medical students; formerly the New Orleans Hotel;
dedicated May 27, 1966; named for Dr. Julian Hawthorne of New York, Tulane alumnus who
established scholarships in the School of Medicine; building sold to private developer in 1998 and is
currently functioning as a hotel;
Laboratory for Environmental Medicine (1968) (Environmental Sciences Building)
1700 Perdido Street downtown; Brooks, Barr, Graeber, and White, architects; houses Laboratory for
Environmental Medicine;
Tulane Medical Center and Hospital (1976)
Across Tulane Avenue from Hutchinson Memorial Medical Building; Claudell, Rowlett, and Scott of
Houston, architects; Perez Company and Blitch Company, local architects; J. A. Jones Construction
Company, contractors; cost, $45,000,000; groundbreaking ceremony, December 1, 1973; dedicated
October 28, 1976; entrance pavilion given by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Aron of New York; Chapel given by
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Weinmann; a bond issue of $37.5 million was sold to finance the expansion of the
Medical School facilities; a parking garage was constructed attached to the building with Claudell,
Rowlett, and Scott, architects, in association with Kessels, Diboll, and Kessels; serves as teaching
hospital; ambulatory care facility; 300 beds; building was expanded with the addition of the Reily
Pavilion, an approximately $20,000,000.00 addition that houses two of the major clinics and several
other components including the hospital laboratory, outpatient surgery, an expansion of the surgical
suites, the surgical intensive care unit (SICU) and other support services; this expansion made possible
through a major contribution from the Reily Foundation;
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OFF-CAMPUS RESEARCH CENTERS
National Primate Research Center (1964)
Covington, Louisiana; established in 1962, construction completed in 1964; five concrete buildings for
laboratories, cages, administrative offices, and maintenance; 500 acre tract near Covington; secluded
field for radiation studies; two outdoor observation field cages; administered by Tulane University; one
of seven in the United States; established through grants from the U. S. Public Health Service; financed
entirely by the federal government;
F. Edward Hebert Center (1964) (Riverside Research Laboratories)
Belle Chasse, Louisiana; 550 acre tract; property had been naval ammunition and ordnance depot during
WWII; named in honor of Rep. F. Edward Hebert, Tulane alumnus, who was successful in effecting the
transfer of the site; contains 26 buildings of heavy concrete or brick construction and hundreds of acres
of heavily wooded areas and landlocked ponds; some buildings were extensively remodeled and are in
use for a variety of sponsored research programs as well as the housing or important biology resources
and literature; the adjacent land areas were adapted for use as a research facility (facilities are
collectively known as the Riverside Research Laboratories); houses U.S.-Japan Research Laboratories,
Center for Environmental Sciences, Experimental Nuclear Physics Laboratory, Developmental Biology
Laboratory and other specialized research programs. Additionally, several components of the University
use buildings as long-term storage of a variety of equipment and materials, one building is used for
neutralizing and storage of controlled materials, and one building is used as a casework production and
finishing shop for cabinets and casework used in laboratory construction and renovation throughout the
University.
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NEWCOMB BUILDINGS
Brownstone House at Lee Circle (first residence of Newcomb College)
Camp Street at Howard Avenue and Lee Circle; large private dwelling, brownstone; occupied by
Newcomb College from 1886-1891;
Burnside Place/Robb Mansion/Washington Avenue Campus (second residence of Newcomb College)
1200 block of Washington Avenue, in square bounded by Washington, Camp, Chestnut, and Sixth;
James Freret, architect; built for Mr. James Robb, member of the Board of Administrators of the
University of Louisiana, who desired to create a palatial home in the swampy area now called the
Garden District; purchased by the Board in 1890 from Mr. Burnside, a subsequent owner of the home
for use as a High School (never actually was used for this purpose); subsequently purchased by Mrs.
Josephine Newcomb from the Board as a home for Newcomb College; Italian Renaissance structure;
occupied by the College in January, 1891; three adjacent residences were acquired in 1903 for use as
dormitories; campus included: 1) Academic Building (College Hall), 2) Pottery Building (added in
1901-1902), 3) Chapel (with Tiffany windows taken from the Lee Circle residence), 4) dormitories
(including Josephine Louise House, named for Mrs. Newcomb, founder of the College), 5) Arcade;
occupied by the College from 1891-1918;
Newcomb Dean’s Residence (1908)
#43 Newcomb Place; built in 1908, sold to Tulane University in 1909 as a facility for the Music
Department; Paul Andry architect; Beaux Arts; stucco, two floors; house was designed by the architect
for his own use; currently serves as residence for the Dean at Newcomb College and is used for student,
faculty, and alumnae functions;
Newcomb Hall (1918)
1229 Broadway; James Gamble Rogers, architect; George Glover, contractor; cost, $323,549; Italian
Renaissance; brick and stone, four floors and attic; named in honor of the family of Mrs, Josephine
Louise Newcomb, benefactress; site was purchased in 1908 but was occupied by the college in 1918
after the move from the Washington Avenue campus; currently houses Newcomb Programs, Newcomb
Senate, the Newcomb Honor Societies, Newcomb Alumni Affairs, and the Newcomb Dean’s office, as
well as the departments of Philosophy, Communication, Sociology, and all foreign languages;
Newcomb Art School (1918) (see Woldenberg Art Center (East Wing))
Across Newcomb quadrangle from Dixon Hall on Newcomb Place; James Gamble Rogers, architect;
Paul Andry, local supervising architect; George Glover, contractor; cost, $213,365; Italian Renaissance;
brick, four floors and attic; has housed Newcomb pottery facility, art classrooms, studios, and galleries;
formerly housed Art Department and Gallery; one of the first three "new" Newcomb buildings (the other
two were Josephine Louise House and Newcomb Hall); renovated into the Woldenberg Art Center in
1996;
136
Structures adjacent to Newcomb Art School
1. Woodward Way: (1933) between Art School and Gymnasium; erected in honor of Professor
Ellsworth Woodward, who introduced Newcomb pottery;
2. Statue of St. George: marble statue adjacent to Art School; trysting place for Newcomb girls and
their escorts; there is no information on its disappearance;
Newcomb Swimming Pool (1923) (see Woldenberg Art Center (West Wing))
On Newcomb campus; Frank G. Churchill, architect, cost, $50,752; brick exterior; gift of Mr. William
R. Irby, member of the Board of Administrators; renovated to become the Woldenberg Art Center in
1997;
Newcomb Gymnasium (1923) (see Woldenberg Art Center (West Wing))
In Newcomb quadrangle adjacent to Art Building; Frank C. Churchill, architect; cost, $111,880; Italian
Renaissance; brick and stone, three floors; accommodates physical education facilities of Newcomb
College; renovated to become the Woldenberg Art Center in 1997;
Dixon Hall (1929)
In Newcomb quadrangle adjacent to Howard-Tilton Library; Emile Weil, Inc., architects; R. F.
Farnsworth and Company, contractors; cost, $287,106; Italian Renaissance; brick, two floors; named for
Dr. Brandt Van Blarcom Dixon, first and only President of Newcomb College; dedicated June 7, 1979;
project of the Newcomb Alumnae Association; houses music classes, music faculty offices, practice and
listening rooms, auditorium;
Caroline Richardson Building (1958)
On Newcomb campus next to Newcomb Art School; Robert Cummins, architect; Quinn Construction
Company, contractors; cost, $336,266; two floors; named for Caroline Richardson, B. A. 1895, M. A.
1905, Professor of English at Newcomb, who headed the WWI Newcomb Relief Unit, which served
overseas; Anna Many Lounge and Newcomb Women's Center; dedicated March 12, 1976 (Anna E.
Many, dean of the College and outstanding alumna and teacher); Newcomb alumnae sponsored
fundraising project for renovation as Women's Center; houses Newcomb College Center for Research on
Women, Newcomb Food Service, Newcomb Post Office boxes;
Newcomb Nursery School (1958)
7103 Plum Street; John Dinwiddie (Dean of the School of Architecture, 1953-1959), architect; Gervais
Favrot, contractor; cost, $73,870; two floors;
Myra Clare Rogers Memorial Chapel (1976)
Corner of Broadway and Zimple; Douglass V. Freret, original architect; John Desmond, architect who
replaced Mr. Freret after his death; cost, $285, 548; brick, roof tiles; main assembly room seats 200;
offices; windows from old Newcomb campus are included (Tiffany windows -- rose window); named
for Myra Clare Rogers, B. S. 1896, M. A. 1898, whose brother, Mr. James M. Rogers, left a bequest to
the University for the construction of a chapel in memory of his sister; also included in the chapel is a
137
pipe organ, given by Mrs. Katherine Briede Gore in memory of her mother; used for religious
services, lectures, musical events, weddings, etc.;
138
STUDENT LIFE BUILDINGS
Navy Building (1912) (First gymnasium)
Corner of Freret and McAlister Drive; cost, $19, 572; brick exterior, two floors ; originally served as
gymnasium; became Navy building in WWII; V-12, V-5, ad ROTC students were trained there;
currently serves as Navy ROTC Building;
Josephine Louise House (1918) (Dormitory)
Corner of Broadway and Plum Street; James Gamble Rogers, architect; cost, $ 359, 144; Italian
Renaissance; brick, four floors; named for Josephine Louise LeMonnier Newcomb, founder of
Newcomb college; serves as a girls’ dormitory; (the Washington Avenue campus, occupied by
Newcomb College from 1891-1918, also had a dormitory called Josephine Louise House);
Doris Hall (Old and New) (1925) (1958) (Dormitories)
1925 (Old Doris Hall); Newcomb Place; Francis J. MacDonnell, architect; Lionel Favret, builder; cost,
$59, 808; brick and stone, three floors; named for Doris Zemurray, the daughter of Samuel Zemurray,
the donor who funded the dormitory; housed Navy students during WWII; New Doris Hall; 1958;
addition to Old Doris Hall; Ricciuti and Associates, architects; Quinn Construction Company,
contractors; cost, $560, 000; dedicated at Homecoming, October 24, 1959; financed by a federal loan;
serves as girls’ dormitory;
Warren House (1928) (Dormitory)
Faces Newcomb Place opposite Woldenberg Art Center and Caroline Richardson Building; Diboll and
Owen, architects; (Richard Koch, architect of 1951 addition); cost, $167, 411; cost of addition,
$650,000 ($200,000 of which was raised by Newcomb alumnae); concrete faced with brick (built to
conform to Newcomb campus style), three floors; built as a girls' dormitory; named for Warren
Newcomb, husband of the founder of the College, Mrs. Josephine Louise Newcomb; addition was
opened in September, 1952;
Student Center (1940)
On site now occupied by Percival Stern Science Building; Douglass V. Freret, architect; cost, $76, 999;
Georgian Colonial; spiral stairways in and out, brick walls, two floors and attic; originally housed
offices of Graduate Manager of Student Activities, the Alumni Association, Student Publications; also
included game and lounge rooms, dance floor, soda fountain; served as social center for Navy students
in WWII; later housed Admissions and University College; dedicated at Homecoming, November 15,
1940; funds raised by Alumni Association; razed in 1969 to make way for Stern Science Building; (the
game room on the third floor was in memory of Robert Williams, deceased Tulane student);
Zemurray Hall (1949) (Dormitory)
Sides on Willow Street, facing Phelps House (location was originally a baseball field); Herbert Benson,
architect; cost, $309,138; three floors; named for Samuel Zemurray, Jr., alumnus and outstanding
athlete, who was killed in WWII; originally used as athletic dormitory; building was financed through
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surplus gate receipts from the intercollegiate athletic program; ceased to be an athletic dormitory in
1952; currently serves as residence hall;
Paterson House (1951) (Dormitory)
Between Robert Sharp and Zemurray Halls; Koch and Wilson, architects; Farnsworth Company,
contractors; cost, $469,689; red brick with galleries, three floors; named for A. B. Paterson, former
member of the Board of Administrators and president of New Orleans Public Service; serves as
residence hall; dedicated May 5, 1953; renovated in 1996; Koch and Wilson, architects;
Phoenix Playhouse (1953)
McAlister Drive (next to Bureau of Administrative Services); wood frame, stucco exterior;
Phelps House (1954) (Dormitory)
Corner of McAlister and Willow; Freret and Wolf, architects; cost, $703, 229; named for Esmond
Phelps (B.A. 1907, LL.B. 1909), president of the Board of Administrators from 1926-1950; serves as
residence hall; dedicated May 10, 1955;
Irby House (1954) (Dormitory)
Next to McAlister Auditorium toward Willow Street; Freret and Wolf, architects; cost, $703, 229;
named for William R. Irby, member of the Board of Administrators and one of Tulane's important
benefactors; serves as residence hall and houses the Residential Life Office; dedicated May 10, 1955;
Johnston House (1955) (Dormitory)
Across quadrangle from University Center toward Willow Street; Freret and Wolf, architects; cost,
$381, 850; named for William Preston Johnston, first president of Tulane University and the only
Tulane president who also served as president of Louisiana State University; residence hall; three floors
and basement;
Rosen House (1959) (Residence Hall)
6440 S. Claiborne Avenue; Goldstein, Parham, and Labouisse, architects; J. A. Jones Construction
Company, contractors; cost, $2, 335, 195; brick exterior, eight floors, 168 units; named for Charles
Rosen, 50-year member of the Board of Administrators; residence hall for married students and
temporary residence for new faculty;
University Center (1959)
On McAlister Drive; Curtis and Davis, architects; Farnsworth and Chambers, contractors; cost,
$2,373,351; reinforced concrete, glass, brick, three floors; financed by federal loan of $1.5 million to be
paid by the University from tuition fees; includes: bookstore, Food Services, Student Affairs, Career
Services Center, Hullabaloo, WTUL, faculty dining room, lounges, offices, Monk Simons Memorial
Swimming Pool (see Athletic Buildings); Kendall Cram Room (dedicated in 1960; named for Kendall
Cram, former director of Student Activities and Alumni Activities who was lost in WWII), Imogen
Stone Room (dedicated in 1960; named for Imogen Stone, English professor at Newcomb); Einar
Pedersen Lounge;
140
Robert Sharp Hall (1960) (Dormitory)
Between Paterson and Monroe residence halls; Koch and Wilson, Diboll, Kessels, and Assoc.,
architects; Farnsworth and Chambers, contractors; cost, $1,796,096; named for Robert Sharp, president
of the University from 1912-1918; residence hall for students; north wing, 4 floors; west wing, 7 floors;
J. Blanc Monroe Hall (1963) (Dormitory)
Adjacent to Sharp Hall; Diboll, Kessels, architects; Koch and Wilson, associate architects; coordinated
by Harold Pique, Tulane resident architect; cost, $2,000,000; J. A. Jones Construction Company,
contractors; twelve floors; residence hall; formerly men’s only, currently co-ed by wing; named for J.
Blanc Monroe, B. A. 1901, member of the Board of Administrators from 1926-1960;
Pierce Butler House (1963) (Dormitory)
Corner of Willow and McAlister; Burk, Lebreton, Lamantia, architects; Keller Construction Company,
contractors; cost, $931,046; eight floors; Tulane’s Honors Residence; named for Dr. Pierce Butler,
Tulane alumnus and dean of Newcomb College from 1919-1938;
141
ATHLETIC BUILDINGS
Stadium (1909) (First Tulane stadium)
In quadrangle behind Gibson Hall; later moved to athletic field; wooden grandstand;
Stadium (1917) (Second Tulane stadium) (Telephone Exchange Building)
On McAlister Drive behind Navy Building; cost, $32,932; reinforced concrete; stucco exterior;
dedicated October 27, 1917; Realization Day was held to raise funds for its construction; currently
houses the Bureau of Administrative Services, Telephone Exchange;
Stadium (1926) (Third Tulane stadium)
On Athletic Field in the 6400 block of Willow Street opposite Phelps House and Butler Hall; cost, $295,
968; concrete and steel; seating capacity, over 70,000 after enlargement aided by Mid Winter Sports
Association; temporary seating increased capacity by several thousand; dedicated at Auburn game,
1926, to the 1925 football team and Coach Clark Shaughnessy; first professional football game in New
Orleans was played here;
Superdome (1975) (Fourth Tulane stadium)
Curtis and Davis; Nolan, Norman and Nolan; Edward B. Silverstein and Associates; Sverdrup and
Parcel; architects; Huber, Hunt, and Nicholls, Blout Brothers Corp., contractors; used for home football
games since 1975; downtown;
Favrot Field House (1957)
Between Willow Street and S. Claiborne Avenue; Paul Charbonnet, Jr., architect; Gervais Favrot,
contractor; corrugated asbestos and brick; cost, $356, 004; named for Clifford F. Favrot, B.E. 1919,
principal donor; used for intramural sports; dedicated April 26, 1958;
Monk Simons Memorial Swimming Pool (1959) (See University Center)
Located in the University Center; funds were raised by alumni and friends of Mr. Simons; campaign
slogan, “Last Lap for Monk”; dedicated October 24, 1959 at Homecoming; alumni and friends of Mr.
Simons (popular athletic coach at Tulane) raised $57, 000, an insufficient amount to construct the pool;
the University completed the cost of its construction; currently the pool is covered to accommodate the
present bookstore;
Monk Simons Athletic Complex (1979)
Located next to Favrot Field House on back campus; named for Monk Simons, Jr. (Tulane alumnus and
outstanding athlete and coach); fundraising campaign organized by his friends; houses offices of
coaches, Sports Information; Sizeler and Mullar, architects;
Basketball facilities (see Navy Building and Central Building)
142
OTHER UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS
President’s Home (#2 Audubon Place) (acquired by the University in 1963-1964)
1907; corner of Audubon Place and St. Charles Avenue; Toledano and Wogan, architects; William T.
Jay, builder and first owner (first generation American whose parents immigrated from England;
wealthy lumber businessman); occupied by Mr. Jay from 1907-1917, when he sold the mansion to
Samuel Zemurray, United Fruit Company exec.; constructed of dark brown press brick and Bedford
stone; three floors; fluted Ionic columns supporting an entablature with carved rosettes; house was
painted white in 1963; bequeathed by Mr. Zemurray to the University in 1962 with usufruct for his wife,
who in 1963 donated her half interest in the home to Tulane; occupied by the Longeneckers in 1964, at
which time it was designated the home for the presidents of the University;
Physical Plant Building (1918)
At the back of the Newcomb campus; Emile Weil, architect; cost, $21, 365; originally served as
Newcomb boiler room; converted to Physical Plant in 1929;
Central Building/Fogelman Arena (1933) (Gymnasium)
Freret Street; Armstrong and Koch, architects; Burk, Lebreton, and Lamantia, renovating architects;
cost, $211, 403; brick; originally served as a gymnasium; housed V-12 students in WWII; currently
houses Men’s and Women’s Basketball, Women’s Volleyball, and Accounting;
McAlister Auditorium (1940)
On McAlister Drive at its intersection with the U.C. quad.; Favrot and Reed, architects; Gervais Favrot,
builder; cost, $261, 954; Art deco; seating capacity, 1, 951; one floor, round, domed roof and ceiling,
faced brick and limestone; funds for building were bequeathed by Mrs. Amelie McAlister Upshur;
building is memorial to her mother, Mrs. Armantine Reynaud McAlister; the world’s largest selfsuspended concrete dome; dome "breathes" to prevent cracking; dome dimensions: 110 feet in diameter,
3" thickness at top, reinforced with three tons of steel; dedicated April 2, 1940; used for concerts,
speakers and premieres;
Veterans Housing (1946)
Located at several sites on campus; surplus WWII buildings; wood frame and weatherboards;
approximately 400 units were erected; some were demolished as late as 1980; housed some faculty,
University offices (AFROTC, Army ROTC, Psychology, Security);
Alumni House (acquired by the University in 1951)
6319 Willow Street; built in 1941; acquired by the University November 10, 1951; formerly the home of
Mr. and Mrs. William Howland (Mrs. Howland, B.A. 1921); Charles Roberts, architect; Mr. C. Bott,
contractor; Colonial, red brick, white trim, two floors and attic; cost of house and renovation $108,700;
houses Alumni offices; dedicated at Homecoming, 1952; architect for addition, George Leake (B. Arch.
1941); the Alumni Association allocated money from the Alumni Fund toward the purchase and
renovation of this building;
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Health Service Building (1959)
Willow Street; Lebreton, architect; Keller Construction Company, contractors; cost, $339, 992; brick,
three floors; serves as student infirmary;
Nydia Boathouse (1961)
At the back of the patio of the University Center; Harold Pique, architect; Landis Construction
Company, contractor; cost, $12,180; houses the Nydia, beloved sloop of Baldwin Wood, B. E. 1899, D.
E. 1939; Mr. Wood left a large bequest to the University on the condition that the Nydia be housed on
campus for 99 years; a brick and glass structure adjacent to the University Center presently houses the
boat; Mr. Wood died aboard the Nydia while sailing along the Gulf Coast; ironically, he died on May
10, Paul Tulane's birthday; a prominent engineer, Mr. Wood designed the pumping system which still
drains New Orleans;
Bruff Commons (1963)
McAlister Drive; John M. Lachin, Jr., architect; H. M. Favrot, Jr., associate architect; Pittman
Construction Company, contractors; cost, $620,146; brick, two floors; named for Richard K. Bruff,
former Tulane registrar; houses Bruff Commons Dining room, Post Office, "Bruff Stuff" store, Bursar's
Office, Card Services, and Laundry Services; (The Social Sciences Building was called Bruff Commons
at one time -- dedicated as such in 1942);
Power Plant (1958)
Between Plum and Willow Streets; Paul Charbonnet, architect; cost, $900,000;
Office of Annual Fund (acquired by the University in 1969)
2510 Calhoun Street (Millard Clark property); adjoins property occupied by Alumni House and grounds;
acquired by the University at the request of the Executive Committee of the Alumni Association in 1969
for use as an Alumni Fund Office; presently houses the Office of Annual Fund;
144
NEW BUILDINGS AND RENOVATIONS AS OF AUGUST 1983
Lindy Boggs Center for Energy and Biotechnology (1987)
Located on the west edge of the front quad at its Freret Street side; Waldemar S. Nelson and John
Desmond and Associates, architects; makes reference to architectural elements used on the older campus
buildings, but simplifies the detail and omits the middle scale elements; cost, $12 million; named in
honor of Corinne “Lindy” Claiborne Boggs, graduate of Newcomb College, elected to her late husband
Hale Boggs’ U.S. House of Representative seat after he disappeared in a plane over Alaska in 1972,
served nine terms in the U.S. House, first woman from Louisiana elected to the U.S. house, first woman
to receive a Tulane University Distinguished and Outstanding Alumni Award; houses the School of
Engineering and 27 state of the art laboratories;
Merryl and Sam Israel, Jr. Environmental Science Building (1999)
An addition to Percival Stern hall; located on the east edge of the front quad at its Freret Street side;
Wilson Architects and Payette Associates, architects; cost, $15 million; houses cell and molecular
biology, chemistry, engineering and ecology, evolution and organismal biology;
John Giffen Weinmann Hall (1993)
Easternmost edge of campus on Freret Street; Hartman and Cox, architects; named in honor of John
Giffen Weinmann, graduate of Tulane University, former U.S. Ambassador to Finland, former Chief of
Protocol for the White House, Commissioner General of the U.S. Government for the 1984 Louisiana
World Exposition; home of the School of Law;
Goldring-Woldenberg Hall (1985)
On the east side of McAlister Drive near the intersection with Freret Street; Concordia Architects,
architects; home of the A.B. Freeman School of Business;
A. B. Freeman School of Business Graduate Building (2003)
Construction began in April 2002 and will be completed for fall 2003 classes; located between
Goldring/Woldenberg Hall and McAlister Auditorium; will house the graduate programs; three-story,
60,000-square-foot building, will feature a 130-seat lecture theater, theater-style classrooms, a simulated
trading room and state-of-the-art information systems and telecommunications technology;
Dixon Performing Arts Center (1984)
Dixon Hall annex; Leake Associates, architects; one of only three buildings constructed on the
Newcomb campus since the 1920s; designed to supplement the spaces used by the music department in
Dixon Hall and to accommodate a small performing space for a theater;
Ellenora P. McWilliams Hall (1995)
Next to the Dixon Performing Arts Center; Waggonner & Ball, architects; first complete project to be
planned and designed with the guidance of the Office of Campus Planning and the Steering Committee;
houses Theater and Dance;
145
Katherine & William Mayer Residences (1997)
At the northwest corner of McAlister Drive and Drill Road, south side of Butler Quad.; Perkins & Well,
architects; named for Board of Administrators member William Mayer and his wife, Katherine Mayer, long-time
supporters of the University; 248-person building featuring suite-style living with either two singles or two
doubles sharing a bathroom;
Goldring Tennis Center (1991)
On the south side of the Wilson Athletic Center on Ben Weiner Drive; Wayne Troyer, architect;
Wilson Athletic Center (1989)
On Ben Weiner Drive in the back campus; Hellmuth, Obata and Kassabaum and I. William Sizeler, architects;
designed for Athletics and houses offices and other support spaces such as locker rooms and training facilities;
houses Tulane Green Wave Spirit Shop;
Turchin Stadium (1990)
North end of the back campus; I. William Sizeler, architect; constructed around and existing baseball field; home
of Tulane Green Wave Baseball team;
(The following buildings are located on the former site of Tulane Stadium.)
Willow Street Dormitory (1999)
At the northeast corner of the intersection at Willow Street and McAllister Drive; Scogin, Elam & Bray,
architects; residential community consisting of three buildings; houses 318 students in four separate communities:
Leadership Village, Global Village, river Village and Urban Village;
Aron Student Residences (1985)
On the north side of Willow Street between McAlister and Ben Weiner Drives; Lyons and Hudson, architects;
apartment style dormitory for upperclassmen; named for the philanthropist Jack Aron and his family;
Collins Diboll Memorial Complex (1993)
On the back campus on Ben Weiner Drive; Kessels, Diboll, Kessels, architects; houses Center for Workforce
Effectiveness, Conference Services, Human Resources and Public Safety;
Reily Student Recreation Center (1987)
On the back campus extending from Ben Weiner Drive almost to the west property line; Hellmuth, Obata and
Kassabaum and S. Stewart Farnet Associates, architects; houses an indoor track, pool/weight room, Olympic
sized indoor pool and spinning room; largest employer of students;
Woldenberg Art Center
East Wing (1996) - formerly the Newcomb Art School; Hartman Cox, architect
West Wing (1997) - formerly the Newcomb Swimming Pool; Hartman Cox, architect
The renovated buildings house classrooms, several art studios, a large gallery for student and faculty
exhibitions and the Pace-Willson Glass Studio. On display for the first time since the beginning of the
century are the Tiffany stained glass windows from the original Newcomb campus.
146
A
Abadie, Ben, 111, 116
Abbott, Edith, 69
Abbott, Herschel L., 105
Abbott, Jr., Herschel L., 64
Abbott, Jr., Herschel L., 59, 64
Abercrombie, David, 116, 125
Acomb, Jr., Robert B., 35, 63, 93
Adams, Eleanor B., 73
Adams, Teresa, 104
Adams, Thomas A., 32
Ader, Robert, 75
Agramonte, Aristides, 68
Aguero, Jose, 114
Aiken, Jr., John Gayle, 81
Albergotti, Robert D., 80
Albritton, Mrs. Errett C., 99
Alcee Fortier Hall, 130
Alden, Vernon R., 61
Alderman, Edwin A., 37, 38, 67
Aldrich, Morton A., 50
Alexander, Gerald, 122
Alexander, Jeff, 117
Alexander, Lamar, 74
Alexis, Alton, 117
Alford, Regan, 83
Allen, James L., 67
Allen, Marvin, 117
Allen, Raymond B., 70
Allen, Susan D., 52
Alsobrook, Robert, 44
Alspach, Philip H., 62
Alstadt, Donald M., 62
Altiero, Nicholas J., 51
Altmayer, Jay P., 62
Altschul, Aaron M., 71
Alumni House, 92, 142, 143
Alves, Mrs. J. Hodge, 99
Amarena, Sam, 122
Amoss, Jr., Walter James, 102
Andersen, Carlos, 91
Anderson, Ann M., 54
Anderson, Betsy, 112
Anderson, Douglas S., 37, 38, 39, 51, 69, 86
Anderson, Dusty, 81
Anderson, Joan, 83
Anderson, Marcus, 117
Anderson, Marian, 71
Anderson, Matt, 81
Andrews, Al, 115
Andrus, Gerald L., 34, 36, 77, 86, 95, 101, 102, 105
Andrus, R. Brent, 49
Andry, Jr., Charles G., 96
Angle, Edna, 83
Anthony, Jerry, 81
Applebaum, Stuart, 45
Arant, Herschel W., 69
Arbuthnot, Leslie H., 88
Argus, Jr., Wilbert L., 77, 96
Arledge, Horace John, 90
Arlotta, Enrico, 68
Arminana, Ruben, 44
Armstrong, Francis Xavier, 88, 115
Armstrong, Johnston A., 86
Armstrong, Mrs. Anne, 62
Armstrong, Mrs. James W., 99
Arndt, Hilda, 103
Aron Student Residences, 145
Aron, Jack R., 58, 60, 63, 72, 133, 145
Aron, Merryl S., 64
Aron, Peter A., 35, 36, 58, 62, 101
Arthurs, Johnny, 114, 121
Ary, Roy “Chief”, 116
Asay, Linda, 44
Athas, Alex, 114
Augustin, Douglas C., 104
Austin, Christopher E., 77
Austin, Warren R., 70
Avery-Peck, Alan J., 55
Ayres, Brown, 17, 51, 55, 67
B
Bachman, Joanne, 88
Baer, Clara, 23
Baham, Curtis, 117
Bailey, Carol, 100
Bailey, Royal, 117
Baine, John C., 93
Baine, John Chalmers, 60, 86
Bainton, Dorothy Ford, 103
Baker, Jerry, 117
Baker, Jr., Houston A., 75
Baker, Jr., William G., 63
Baker, Jr., William J., 102
Baker, William O., 60
Bakken, Earl E., 74
Baldwin, Albert, 32
Baldwin, Cuthbert S., 86
Ballard, Jr., Marshall, 79
Ballenger, Glenn J., 63
Bancroft, Anne Delie, 99
Bank, Ted, 111
Banker, Bill, 114
Banker, Willis, 113, 117
Bankston, Warren, 114, 117
Banta, James E., 54
Barbera, Brooke, 83
Barbour, Sandy, 109
Barcelo III, John J., 80
Barkley, John, 54
Barlow, George J., 77
Barnard, Chester, 60
Barnes, Charles, 67
Barnes, Hazel, 73
Barnett, Jr., Walter M., 86
Barnett, Martha Walters, 101, 103
Barney, Clarence L., 61, 104
Barnum, Lewis Barney, 81
Barousse, Gerard W., 58, 59
Barrett, John, 68
Barrilleaux, Louis, 55
Barrilleaux, Missy, 82
Barrios, Steve, 116, 117
Barron, Paul L., 46
Barrow, Robert H., 73
Barter, John W., 102
Barthelemy, Sidney, 58, 104
Bartlett, C. Julian, 60
Bartlett, Roy, 111
147
Barton, Edward H., 13, 52
Basketball facilities, 141
Bass, Charles C., 53
Bass, Pat F., 81
Bassich, Beauregard L., 106
Basso, J. Hamilton, 81
Bastian, Royal, 95
Bates, Evola, 46
Bauer, Ethel, 99
Bauer, Nicholas, 105
Bauer, R. C., 81
Baum, H. W., 110
Bauman, Barbara, 83
Baumbach, Richard O., 86, 93, 95, 102, 109
Baumgartner, Eric T., 104
Bayer, Gary, 43
Bayne, Hugh A., 70
Bayne, T. L., 110
Bayne-Jones, Stanhope, 60, 70
Bazil, Ron, 111
Beacham, Woodward D., 98, 103
Bean, James, 58, 59
Bean, James W., 80
Beard, Cornelius, 32
Beasley, Joseph D., 54
Beasley, Mercer, 111
Bechtel, Edward A., 55, 69
Becker, Betsy, 112
Bedford, Norton M., 102
Beiser, Elana, 82
Bell, Bryan, 105
Bell, Tom, 80
Benefield, Jr., Thomas E., 98
Benerito, Rugh R., 73, 103
Benglis, Lynda, 103
Benjamin, Edward B., 80
Benjamin, III, Emanuel B., 58
Benjamin, Regina, 102
Bennett, Beverly, 83
Bennett, Susan P., 59
Bentz, Roman, 117
Berenson, Gerald S., 103
Berg, David H., 64
Berger, Darryl D., 63, 64
Bergstedt, Thomas M., 80
Berkner, Lloyd V., 71
Bernard, Eddie, 122
Bernard, L. Diane, 74, 104
Berry, T., 110
Bertrand, William, 46
Bethea, Betty, 83
Bethea, Toby, 45
Bettleheim, Bruno, 73
Bickford, Jane S., 46
Bickham, Charles J., 34
Bickham, Warren S., 68
Bienz, Paul, 114
Bierman, Bernie, 110, 111, 113, 114, 125
Billion, Armande, 61
Binkley, William C., 71
Binns, Walter P., 70
Birtel, Frank T., 48, 51
Black, Colin L., 80
Blackburn, Jr., Henry W., 75, 103
Blair, Wayne, 117
Blake, Henry E., 77
Blanchard, Albert G., 32
Blanchard, Newton Crain, 107
Bland, Lee A., 104
Bland, Robert F., 63, 102
Blandin, Ernest, 113, 114, 117
Blanton, Deann, 83
Blessey, Jr., Walter E., 77
Blinderman, David Ellis, 81
Bluebonnet Bowl, 125
Blum, Mrs. Edwin H., 105
Blum, Richard K., 98
Blum, Robert, 81
Blumenthal, Harry J., 102
Blumenthal, Sr., Harry, 35
Bocage, Jered, 78
Bodenger, Maury, 117
Bodenheimer, Henry J., 63
Boehm, Werner W., 74, 104
Boggs, Corinne Claiborne "Lindy," 62, 64, 72, 96, 101, 103, 144
Boggs, Thomas Hale, 88, 144
Boh, Robert H., 33, 35, 36, 75, 102
Bonford, P.E., 32
Bookout, John, 35, 36, 61, 72
Boone, James, 102
Boorstin, Daniel J., 74
Borah, Woodrow, 74
Borde, Robert George Urquhart, 90
Bordelon, Marjorie Lee, 91
Borges, Jorge L., 73
Born, Maurice H., 54
Borsarelli, Marquis L., 68
Bosshardt, Margaret, 99
Boston, Joseph F., 102
Bosworth, Sheila, 63
Bottoms, Wilmer R., 35, 63
Boucher, Dorothy, 100
Bouden, Charles Whitney, 105
Boudreaux, Allen, 78
Bourgeois, Jr., Gaston, 115
Bowden, Tommy, 110, 126
Bowen, Howard R., 61
Bower, C. Richard, 112
Bower, Sue, 112
Boyd, Harper, 50
Boyd, Thomas D., 67
Boyle, Jim, 117
Braden, Henry E., 35, 36
Braden, III, Henry E., 58
Braden, IV, Henry E., 64
Bradford, J.O., 32
Brash, Katherine L., 80
Braswell, Robert, 63
Braunstein, Michael, 80
Breaux, Joseph A., 34, 90
Breckinridge, Sophonisba P., 69
Bremermann, Jr., Herbert J., 62, 103
Brennan, Dick, 116
Bres, Edward S., 86
Bres, Joseph Hughes, 81
Bridges, Avie, 110
Briggs, Edward, 32
Briggs, Asa, 75
Brignac, Julian, 96
Brittin, Abraham, 34
Broadwell, Kenneth, 63, 102
Brocato, Joseph M., 115
Brock, Paul, 117
Brockhoff, Joe, 111, 116
148
Brodtmann, A. J., 98
Bromberg, Marcia, 45
Bronfman, Edgar M., 74
Bronk, Detlev W., 60
Brooks, Cleanth, 72, 103
Brooks, Jr., Cleanth, 79
Brosman, Paul, 21, 52
Brown, Bobby, 114
Brown, Bruce K., 60
Brown, Bryan, 122
Brown, Buster, 110
Brown, Francis E., 63
Brown, George R., 72
Brown, John R., 72
Brown, Mack, 109, 110, 126
Brown, Mildred, 106
Brown, Peter R. L., 74
Brown, Robert, 122
Brown, Robert W., 58, 59, 101, 103
Brown, William E., 80
Brown, William G., 32, 64
Brown, Wood, 80
Browne, Jr., Patrick W., 115
Browne, Patrick W., 115
Brownson, William, 81
Brownstone House at Lee Circle, 135
Bruce, Jr., Robert N., 102
Bruff Commons, 129, 143
Bruff, Richard K., 129, 143
Bruley, Duane, 111
Brunner, Richard F., 102
Brunner, Warren, 114
Brush, Jennifer L., 77
Bryan, Howard L. “Bucky”, 115
Buchan, Leslie J., 50
Buck, Jr., Mrs. Charles F., 105
Buckner, Norman, 116
Bullard, Henry A., 52
Bullard, Jr., Joel B., 115
Bundy, McGeorge, 73
Burch, George E., 103
Burge, Frank, 116
Burke, Elizabeth Westerfield, 106
Burkenroad, Jr., William B., 102, 105
Burnett, Walter, 51
Burnside Place/Robb Mansion/Washington Avenue Campus,
135
Burrus, David R., 64
Burse, Janell, 122
Burthe-Cottam Medical Building, 132
Busuttil, Ronald, 103
Butcher, Willard C., 73
Butera, Barry, 116, 122
Butera, Brian, 122
Butler, James P., 34, 105
Butler, Nicholas M., 67
Butler, Pierce, 24, 51, 53, 69, 140
Butterfield, Victor L., 71
Byrne, Nettie Stratton, 90
C
Caffery, Jefferson, 71
Cagle, Fred R., 43
Cain, James M., 58, 59, 64, 102, 106
Cairns, Huntington, 70
Caldwell, Harmon W., 69
Calhoun, Joseph D., 98, 103
Calkins, Robert D., 71
Callahan, Alston, 103
Callan, John, 34
Campbell, Henry D., 68
Campbell, Hugh J., 32
Campbell, Margaret M., 54
Campbell, Woodley C., 81
Campen, James, 117
Canaday, John, 73
Canessa, Carlos Jose, 102
Canizaro, Joseph C., 58, 64
Cannon, Frank S., 86
Caravello, Joe, 117
Carmichael, Leonard, 60, 71
Carmichael, Oliver C., 70
Carmouche, Edward M., 62
Caroline Richardson Building, 136
Carpenter, Benjamin O., 67
Carpenter, William M., 53, 90
Carr, Archie, 73
Carr, Mary Margaret, 104
Carrere, Jr., E. A., 103
Carroll, Joseph W., 34, 64
Carroll, Philip J., 35
Carter, Betty W., 73, 101, 103
Carter, Hodding, 105
Carter, Mrs. Hodding, 62
Carter, William H., 60
Caruso, Salvator, 104
Carvajal, Mario, 71
Cary, Jr., George R., 99
Cassibry, Fred, 96, 103, 115
Cassidy, Helen, 54
Castellanos, Henry Charles, 90
Castles, John W., 34
Catledge, Turner, 61, 71
Catlett, Elizabeth, 74
Cavanaugh, III, William, 64
Cavanaugh, William, 102
Cenas, Augustus, 10, 13, 52
Center for Research on Women, 24, 136
Central Building, 130, 141, 142
Cervini, “Hal”, 115
Chadwick, Winslow, 102
Chaffe, D. B. H., 86
Chaffe, Penelope, 90
Chaffs, Jr., David B. H., 60
Chaille, Stanford E., 53, 67
Chambers, Russell, 116, 117
Chandler, William T. “Skip”, 98
Chapman, A. Watson, 86
Chapman, Sara, 53
Charbonnet, John D., 106
Chatman, A. Watson, 60
Chaverri, Carlos M., 72
Cheney, Jane, 83
Chin, Tom D. Y., 104
Chipley, Jr., Buckner, 81
Choppin, Purnell W., 74
Christovich, Mary Louise, 101, 103
Christovich, Michael M., 58
Churchill, Charles Robert, 90
Cimbalo, Jody, 83
Cimini, Jr., Benedict, 101
Ciolino, Dane S., 80
149
Ciuffelli, Augusto, 68
Civil Engineering Building, 18, 128
Claiborne, William C.C., 32
Clark, Alice F., 104
Clark, Charles E., 68
Clark, Delphine, 106
Clark, Emily J., 45
Clark, James H., 35
Clark, Jerry E., 77
Clark, Jr., Wallace H., 103
Clark, Perry, 110
Clark, Susan V., 83
Clark, William M., 80
Claverie, Louis B., 81
Claverie, Mrs. Philip, 96
Claverie, Philip, 96
Clayton, Jean P., 69
Clebsch, William A., 61
Clement, Jr., Rutledge, 63, 87, 96
Clement, Mrs., 96
Cleveland, Murray, 60, 95
Clifford, Alfred H., 73
Clifford, Paul, 112
Clifton, Jr., C. C., 58
Cline, Isaac M., 68
Close, L.S., 62
Cobb, Alton, 104
Cohen, Albert H., 63, 102
Cohen, Jerry, 81
Cohen, M.M., 32
Cohen, Martin, 64
Cohen, Robyn, 83
Cole, Fred Carrington, 43, 48, 55
Cole, Josiah, 32
Colella, Ugo A., 80
Coleman, James J., 101
Coleman, John F., 69
Coleman, Sr., James J., 105
Coles, John, 98
Coles, Robert, 74
Collier, H. H., 110
Collins Diboll Memorial Complex, 145
Collins, Joseph L., 70
Columbia Building, 132
Combe, John, 81
Comer, Harry, 117
Conant, James B., 69
Conarroe, Joel, 75
Conner, III, Pierre E., 98
Conner, Jr., Pierre E., 103
Conrad, Lois, 50
Conselya, Mrs. Ralph A., 99
Cook, Shawn D., 83
Cook, Tolley, 99
Cooper, Jacob, 67
Cooper, Max Dale, 103
Copenhaver, Jr., Harris, 81
Copes, J.S., 32
Copland Aaron, 72
Corbin, Carl M., 58, 59
Cordill, Shirley, 106
Corey, Edgar, 80
Corley, D., 80
Corner, George W., 70
Corrigan, Jr., James J., 46, 53
Costa, Myldred M., 104
Couch, Harvey, 21
Cousin, Sumter P., 77
Couvillon III, Tucker H., 77
Cowen, Scott S., 30, 35, 37, 41, 59, 64
Cox, Ted, 110, 115, 125
Craig, Charles F., 70
Craighead, Edwin B., 37, 38, 39
Crain, Timothy A., 77
Cram, Kendall Hutchinson, 54, 88, 139
Craven, Avery O., 70
Crawford, Charles C., 105
Creech, Oscar, 53
Creighton, William H. P., 18, 51
Crenshaw, Martha, 103
Crosby, Hollis H., 60
Cudd, Carol D., 35, 63, 99
Cudd, III, Robert C., 63
Cullen, Audrey M., 100
Cullickia, Lenny, 111
Cummings, Anthony M., 55
Cummings, Jeff, 122
Cummins, Harold, 103
Cummis, Clive S., 64
Cunningham, Debbie, 83
Curran, Jr., Joseph L., 115
Curran, Mortimer L., 35, 36, 63
Curran, Robert S., 98
Curry, Jabez L. M., 67
Curtis, Joe, 110
Curtis, Jr., Nathaniel C., 101
Curtis, Nathaniel Cortlandt, 16, 50
Curtis, Peter, 111
D
D’Amour, Gene A., 45
Dabezies, Jr., Oliver H., 99
Dabney, Virginius, 110
Dailey, Carl, 96
Daisy Chain, 25
Daley, Grace, 122
Dalferes, Gayle L., 60, 87, 93, 102
Dalrymple, Jerry, 113, 114
D'Amico, Stephen, 81
Damonte, Lowell, 112
Dane III, John, 64, 115
Danforth, Roy, 110
D'Antoni, Joseph S., 103
D'Antoni, Vince, 114
Dantzler, Jr., Lorenzo N., 81
Darrè, Bernard, 118
Dart, Jr., Henry P., 81
Daubar, Ray, 110
Davenport, Mrs. Arthur, 99
Davidson, C. Girard, 77
Davidson, James F., 24, 53
Davidson, Vanda A., 58
Davis, Arthur Q., 63, 101
Davis, Bronson C., 45
Davis, Greg, 110
Davis, Mrs. Frank H., 99
Davis, Mrs. Louis G., 99
Davis, Sr., Arthur Q., 101
Dawkins, Benjamin C., 60
Dawson, JaJuan, 118
Dawson, Lowell "Red", 110, 114, 125
Day, Mrs. Charles H., 99
150
De Bustamante, Antonio S., 69
De Coligny, Calvert, 54
de Constant, d' Estournelles, Baron, 68
De Froscia, Florence, 83
De Golyer, Everette L., 70
de la Martinez, Odaline, 103
de Monsabert, Buddy, 117
Dearrah, Robert, 122
DeBakey, Lois E., 103
DeBakey, Michael E., 60, 71, 101, 103
DeBlois, Gerald L., 63
Decker, William, 100
Deener, David R., 51
DeGrange, Helen, 99
Deichmann, Lorelle, 100
Deith, Emile, 88
DeJoie, J. A. Blaine, 58
Delatulle, R. S., 90
Delavigne, Alphonse B., 90
Delery, Jr., Oliver S., 98
Deming, Bertie M., 63
Deming, John W., 34, 36, 58, 60, 93, 101
Denegre, George, 35, 36, 58, 59, 106
Denegre, Walter D., 34, 105
Denick, Nickie, 82
Dent, Burnell J., 116, 118
Denton, Frank, 98
Depp, Karen D., 64, 87, 100
Derbes, Vincent J., 103
Derickson, Gayden, 62, 102
DeRouen, Walter C., Jr., 51
Derrè, Bernard, 115
Derrick, John R., 77
Derzon, Robert A., 74
DeSantis, Carla, 112
Desmond, John J., 101
Deutsch, John L., 79
Devlin, John, 81
Devlin, Robert M., 35, 64
di Savoia, Ferdinando, 68
Diaz, Amando, 68
Diboll, Collins C., 101
Dickey, DuVal F., 62, 102
Dickson, Rick, 109
Die, Ann H., 53
Diefenthal, Edward L., 58
Diem, John E., 46
Dillard, Hardy C., 72
Dillard, James H., 34, 51, 55, 68
Dinkel, Stanley G., 98
Dinwiddie Hall, 130
Dinwiddie, Albert B., 27, 39, 53, 55, 130
Dinwiddie, George S., 60, 102
Dinwiddie, John Ekin, 16, 50
Dirks, Emmy Lou, 106
Dirks, Mike, 111
Distler, Theodore A., 71
Dixon Hall, 92, 135, 136
Dixon Performing Arts Center, 144
Dixon, Brandt Van Blarcom, 23, 53, 57, 68, 136
Dixon, David F., 105
Dixon, John Allen, 103
Dlugos, Rolf, 49
Dodds, Harold W., 69
Dohao, Anna Jane, 99
Dolgoff, Marcey L., 82
Donielson, Chris, 111
Donnelley, Thorne B., 62
Doris Hall, 138
Douglas, Paul H., 70
Douglass, Brian, 118
Dowden, Corey, 118
Dowling, Dorothy, 80
Dowling, Jack, 111
Doxiadis, Constantinos A., 71
Dreyfous, Sylvia, 81
Druen, Max, 118
Drumm, Streuby L., 60
Duale, Sambe, 104
Dufour, Charles L., 72, 115
Duhe, Dawn H., 62
Duhe, Jr., John M., 80, 103
Duhon, Bobby, 114
Duhon, Robert, 118
Dunbar III, Charles E., 58
Dunbar, Charles E., 105
Dunbar, John B., 104
Dunbar, Jr, Charles E., 68, 86
Duncan, Brooke H., 36, 58
Duncan, Greer B., 32, 35
Duncan, II, Brooke H., 106
Dunn, Jennifer Juge, 81
Dupuy, Suzanne C., 106
Durden, Hugh M., 102
Duren, Jr., W. L., 101
Duren, Jr., William L., 71
Durham, Jr., Max H., 63, 87
Durham, Max, 94, 96
Durham, Mrs. Max, 96
Durham, Polly Phelps, 99
Dyer, Isadore, 53
Dyer, John P., 55
Dyer, Rolla E., 71
Dymond, Florence, 34, 99
Dymond, John, Jr., 34, 86
E
Eagan, William B., 32
Earle, Thomas T., 55
Eason, Rudy, 81
Eastman, Margaret Louise, 106
Eaton, Gregory M., 87
Ecklund, Judith, 44
Ecuyer, Dorothy, 83
Edelman, Gerald M., 74
Edelman, Marian W., 74
Edmunds, Karen Oser, 99
Edwards, Daniel, 32
Edwards, Richard, 44
Ehrlich, Thomas, 61
Eichold, II, Bernard H., 104
Eichold, II, Samuel, 103
Ellzey, Lyman L., 98
Eisenberg, Megan, 78
El Alamy, Mohamed A., 73
Eliot, Charles W., 68
Ellender, Bennie, 110
Ellenora P. McWilliams Hall, 144
Elliot, John B., 34
Elliott, Jr., John B., 69
Ellis, Crawford H., 105
Ellis, Jr., Carey J., 80
151
Ellis, June B., 104
Ellis, Steve, 81
Emory, Mayo L., 60, 86, 93
Enders, John F., 71
Endt, Albert W., 72
England, Suzanne, 54
Englekirk, Robert, 102
English, Wally, 110
Epley, Jr., Marion J., 60
Ernst, Sr., Joseph A., 115
Erwin, Jr, James, 77, 98
Erwin, Kay, 98
Eshleman, Charles L., 34, 36, 110, 111, 114
Espensheild, John R., 115
Esposito, Ed, 81
Esthus, Raymond, 53
Ethridge, Mark F., 70
Eustis, Cartwright, 34
Eustis, J. Bres, 98, 101
Eustis, Laurance, 106
Evans, Blackwell B., 53
Evans, Kenneth M., 100, 104
Evans, William A., 68
Everett, Ethelyn, 99
Ewan, Joseph A., 73
Ewin, Dabney M., 77
Ewin, Jr., James P., 77
Eyck, Aldo V., 72
F
F. Edward Hebert Center, 134
F. Edward Hebert Hall, 128, 129
F. Edward Hébert Riverside Research Center, 20
Fagan, Jr., Phillip J., 35
Faget, Mignon, 83
Falcon, Ruth A., 103
Farley, Robert J., 21, 52
Farmer, Ann, 87
Farmer, Thomas S., 62
Farnet, S. Stewart, 101, 145
Farnet, Sr., S. Stewart, 64
Farnsworth, George S., 34, 36
Farrar, Edgar H., 34
Farrar, Preston W., 32
Farris, Barbara, 122
Farris, K. Barton, 99
Fash, Jr., William L., 74
Faust, Edmond L., 86, 115
Faust, Ernest C., 71
Favrot Field House, 141
Favrot, Allain D., 80
Favrot, C. Allan, 96
Favrot, Charles A., 34
Favrot, Clifford F., 34, 36, 73, 86, 95, 101, 105, 141
Favrot, H. Mortimer, 96
Favrot, Jr., H. Mortimer, 35, 36, 63, 93, 101
Favrot, Leopold Mortimer, 69
Favrot, Mrs. D. Blair, 99
Favrot, Sybil M., 35, 36, 62
Fay, Marion S., 71
Fearn, J. Walker, 32
Feehan, Thomas J., 62, 102
Feibleman, James K., 72
Feingerts, Bruce L., 77
Feitel, Arthur H., 101
Feldberg, Meyer, 51
Fellows, John Quincy Adams, 32
Felts, Nollie C., 115
Feltus, J. H. Randolph, 54, 81
Fenner, Charles E., 33, 34, 105
Fenner, Charles P., 52
Fenner, Darwin C., 62, 64, 102
Fenner, Darwin S., 33, 34, 36, 72, 105
Fenner, Flora Sanders, 106
Fenner, James H., 62
Fenner, Laura, 106
Fenner, Mary Jane Sanders, 106
Ferris, Grey F., 77
Fershee, Joshua P., 80
Fiddler, T.R., 63
Field, Beatrice McMillan, 6, 7, 8, 54, 88, 115
Field, Jr., Richard J., 98
Figueroa, Francisco L., 86
Filene, Edward A., 68
Filo, David R., 102
Filson, Ronald Coulter, 16, 50
Fincher, Murray C., 58
Fine, David, 45
Fine, Paul L., 46, 49, 58
Finley, John H., 67
Finley, Jr., Edward D., 95
Finley, Leonard M., 34, 77
Finley, William W., 68
Finney, John M. T., 68
Finney, Shawn, 110
Firmin, Peter A., 50
Firstenberg, Jean, 62
Fisher, Aiken W., 60
Fisher, Charles H., 70
Fisher, Frank C., 60
Fishman, Louis Y., 80
Fitch, James M., 75
Fitzgerald, Billy, 116, 122
Fitzpatrick, Lurlyn, 116
Fitzpatrick, William H. W., 60, 105
Fletcher, John M., 51
Flettrich, David, 123
Flournoy, Charles Priestly, 113
Flournoy, Peggy, 111, 114
Flower, III, Walter C., 58, 64
Flower, Walter C., 34
Flowerree, Robert E., 35, 36, 62, 101
Foch, Ferdinand, 68
Foege, William H., 73
Fogelman Arena, 142
Fogelman, Avron B., 35, 62
Fohner, Tammy, 83
Foley, Steve, 115, 118
Foley, Thomas S., 74
Folly Island, 10
Foote, H. W., Rev., 111
Foote, John Randolph, 88
Force, Robert, 21, 52
Forman, Benjamin Rice, 32
Forman, Elizabeth Hill, 90
Forman, L. Ronald, 64
Forrester, Ray, 74
Forrester, Regan A., 63, 99
Forrester, William Ray, 21, 52
Forstall, Edmond J., 32
Forsyth, Noel, 106
Fortier, Alcee, 51
Fortier, Louis J., 69
152
Fosgate, Walter, 90
Foster, Jr., Frank S., 98
Foster, Murphy J., 106
Foster, Rufus E., 52, 68
Foster, Sally, 83
Foto, John P., 116
Fowler, Ned, 110
Fox, Frederick H., 54
Fraenkel, F. L. "Shorty", 81
Fraenkel, Francis L., 102
Francinques, Kenny, 116, 123
Francinques, Wayne, 123
Francis, Norman C., 73
Franco, Dorothy, 112
Franka, Henry, 114
Franklin, John H., 72
Franklin, Mitchell, 72
Frantz, Thomas T., 81
Freccia, Massimo, 70
Freeman, Adair Draughn, 106
Freeman, Alfred B., 34, 41
Freeman, Jr., Louis M., 64
Freeman, Jr., Richard, 35, 58, 102
Freeman, Laura, 106
Freeman, Louis M., 35, 36
Freeman, Mrs. Montine, 63
Freeman, Richard West, 34, 36, 73, 101, 102, 105
Freid, Mark R., 82
French, Chauncey, 34
French, George Edward, 90
French, Robert W., 43, 50
French, Ronald J., 58, 98
French, Sara, 83
Freret, Douglass V., 60, 87, 96
Freret, Mrs. Douglass V., 96
Freret, Mrs. Elizabeth H., 99
Frerichs, Ralph R., 104
Freudenberger, Alfred, 98
Friedler, Jr., Frank, 58
Friedman, J. Kent, 64
Friedman, Robert E., 80
Friedrichs, Andrew G., 51
Friedrichs, G. Shelby, 35, 36, 60, 86, 93, 101, 102
Friedrichs, Jr., G. Shelby “Buddy”, 115
Friend, Ida W., 70
Friendly, Fred W., 74
Frierson, Louis L., 35, 36, 58, 59, 63, 106
Frith, Alva P., 86
Frotscher, Lydia, 99
Fry, Laura Josephine, 99
Fuge, Laurie Jean, 83
Fugler II, Richard G., 115
Fugler, Dick, 118
Fulginitti, Vincent A., 53
Fulham, Fannie, 99
Fuller, Myron, 110
Fuller, Parrish, 60, 63
Fullilove III, John P., 77
Futrall, John C., 68
G
Gable, Jr., Willie, Rev., 58
Gaines, Ernest J., 74
Galbreath, Richmond B., 62
Galleher, John N., 34
Galloway, Charles B., 67
Galloway, Gale L., 62
Gamble, Cameron B., 115
Gamble, Jr., Harry P., 60, 86, 95, 114
Garland, Rietta, 99
Garza, Jaime, 116
Gastrell, Myrtle, 99
Gatewood, Lester, 113, 116
Gatzke, Donald F., 16, 50
Gauden, Pierre, 115
Gaudet, Jimmy, 123
Gaudet, Stacy, 116
Gay, Edwin F., 68
Geary, William L., 98
Geiger, Jacob C., 69
Gendel, Evalyn S., 63, 103
Generes, Anthony P., 49
Genois, Charles, 32
George, Joseph W., 32, 34, 41, 42, 64, 81, 142
Georges, Constantine D., 77
Georges, John A., 63
Georges, John D., 64
Gerard, Dana Z., 63
Gessner, Edward H., 77
Gessner, George, 67
Giardina, Jr, Bill, 98
Giarrusso, Clarence B., 104
Gibson Hall, 20, 21, 27, 28, 128
Gibson, James M., 60
Gibson, Randall Lee, 14, 17, 33, 34, 128
Gibson, Vince, 110, 125
Gill, Charles Grandison, 90
Gillen, III, Gerard J., 98
Gilliland, Martha W., 48
Gilman, Sander L., 103
Gilmer, Elizabeth M., 68
Gilmore, Wilbert, 118
Ginder, Henry, 34
Ginsberg, Harold S., 74, 103
Ginsberg, Leon, 104
Girard, Edith G., 100
Girot, Joan, 83
Gladson, John W., 102
Glennan, Thomas K., 71
Glisson, James, 118
Gloden, Fred, 118
Glover, Jr., Harry C. “Wop”, 115, 125
Godchaux, Frank A., 70
Golcher, Alison Stone, 35, 64
Goldberg, Abe, 95
Goldring Tennis Center, 145
Goldring, William, 35, 36, 63, 102
Goldring-Woldenberg Hall, 20, 144
Goldsmith, Ben, 60
Goldsmith, Grace A., 54
Gondolfi, John, 111
Gonzales, Gus, 118
Good, Mary L., 74
Goodhart, Arthur L., 71
Goodpasture, Ernest W., 71
Gordon, Joseph E., 45, 55
Gordon, Robert E., 103
Gordon, William A., 32
Gore, Katherine Briede, 137
Gore, Mrs. Benjamin, 60, 63
Gorgas, William C., 68
Gormley, Tad, 111, 114
153
Gorson, Matthew B., 64
Graber, Fredric J., 63
Grace, Helen Josephine, 106
Graham, Ford, 36, 78
Graham, Ian J. A., 75
Graham, William A., 62
Grambsch, Paul V., 50
Grant, James P., 74
Grau, Shirley Ann, 105
Gray, Betty Ratcliffe, 83
Gray, Hanna H., 75
Gray, L.W., 63
Grayson, Jr., Charles Jackson, 50
Grazier, Joseph A., 62
Green, Jack, 116
Green, John, 113
Green, Karna, 83
Green, Keith, 79
Green, Ron, 44
Greenbaum, Jerry M., 63
Greenberg, Valerie D., 54
Greene, Patricia, 64
Greene, Tricia, 100
Greenslit, Diane, 83
Greer, Philip, 35
Gregg, Jr., Lucius P., 61, 63
Gregorio, Marina E., 98
Gregory, Angela, 101
Grehan, Bernard A., Rev., 98
Grehan, Bernard H., 34
Grene, Marjorie G., 73
Griffith, William E. I., 90
Griswold, Erwin N., 71
Grivot, F.W., 32
Groenvelt, John Frederick, 90
Groseth, Robert, 112
Grundmann, Jr., Lawrence C., 98
Guangzhao, Zhou, 64
Guarisco, Peter V., 62
Gueno, James A., 116, 118
Gundlach, James O., 102
Gup, Jodi, 83
Guthrie, J. Birney, 86
H
Habig, Terry L., 115
Hackney, Francis S., 37, 41
Hafner, Doug, 111
Hafstad, Lawrence R., 60
Hagan, Bruce, 64, 87
Hagstette, Jr., Edgar J., 62
Hahn, Michael, 32, 106
Haik, George, 103, 116
Haikala, Harri J., 80
Haile, William M., 60, 87, 101
Hainkel, Jr., John J., 103
Haizlip, Jr., Henry H., 62
Hall of Fame Bowl, 125
Hall, Carl “Nickie”, 116
Hall, Charles, 113, 114, 118
Hall, Ford W., 80
Hall, George B., 77
Hall, Harry H., 52
Hall, Luther Egbert, 107
Hall, Nicky, 118
Halsey, William F., 34
Halter, Michael, 44
Hamilton, Alice, 69
Hamilton, Ruffin, 118
Hammett, Louis, 95
Hammond, Lillian, 83
Hammond, Scott, 112
Hamrick, J. Thomas, 54
Hanford, Alfred C., 69
Hanley, Patrick, 61, 87, 98
Hanmarstrom, Erling W., 44
Hannan, Philip M., 73
Hanover, Fred, 91
Hanson, Carl, 110
Hanson, Sonya, 112
Hantas, Roch B., 115
Hard, Charles F., 53, 70
Hard, Frederick, 24, 60, 111
Hardesty, Katherine, 91
Hardey, John, 98
Hardie, Charlotte, 106
Hardie, Eben, 102, 105
Hardie, John T., 34
Harkey, Ira, 105
Harnage, Henry H., 77
Harno, Albert J., 69
Harper, Ruth Milner, 83
Harper, William R., 67
Harris, Friedrichs H., 98
Harris, Gene, 123
Harris, Jo Ann, 100
Harris, Jr., Rufus C., 81
Harris, Jr., William H., 98
Harris, Rufus C., 20, 21, 37, 40, 52, 71
Harrison, Anna J., 72
Harrison, James A., 67
Harrison, John Hoffman, 10, 12, 13, 52
Harrison, Thomas L., 58
Harrisson, Barbara, 72
Harrod, Benjamin M., 67
Hart, Alexander, 90
Hart, Frank William, 86
Hart, Jim, 111
Hartmann, Ann, 74
Harvey, Candi, 110
Harvey, Richard, 116, 118
Haskins, Caryl P., 60
Havens, Mrs. Oliver H., 58
Hawaii Bowl, 126
Hawkins, Tanya, 83
Hawks, Francis L., 37
Hawks, Louis, 122
Hawthorne Hall, 133
Haydel, Carrie, 98
Haydel, Gerald M., 102
Hayes, Harry T., 32
Haynes, Vernon “Lefty”, 110, 115
Haynie, Robert M., 62
Hays, Bruce, 111
Haywiser, Dorothy Philomena, 91
Health Service Building, 143
Heard, Alexander, 61, 73
Heath, Robert G., 73
Hebert, F. Edward, 96, 114, 129, 134
Heck, Andrew B., 47
Heffernan, Edward J., 77
Heft, George A., 102
154
Held, Joe R., 104
Hellman, Lillian, 72
Helluin, Jerome, 113, 115
Helluin, Jerry, 118
Henderson, Archibald, 68
Henican, Ellis, 114
Henican, Jr., Joseph P., 102
Henican, Patricia Charbonnet, 106
Henriques, Charles B., 81
Henry, Crawford, 111, 115
Herbert, Hilary A., 67
Herman, Michael, 52
Hernandez, Mercedes, 100
Hernstadt, Judith, 62
Herter, Christian A., 71
Hertz, Douglas J., 35
Hesburgh, Theodore M, Rev., 60
Hester, Henry G., 68
Hester, Ray, 115, 118
Hetherwick, Gilbert L., 80
Hetrick, Scott, 82
Hevron, Jr., John E., 99
Hewitt, Robert L., 99
Heyman, John A., 64
Heyman, Jr., George H., 62
Heymann, Jerry, 62
Hickey, Silas, 110
Hicks, James J., 60, 87
Hicks, Phil, 122
Hicks, Phillip J., 115
High School Building, 128
Hildreth, Darlene, 83
Hill, Doyless L., 115
Hills, Robert C., 58
Hills, Winifred M. Delery, 99
Hillyer, Jr., Haywood H., 80
Hilsberg, Alexander, 71
Hincks, Joseph A., 49
Hine, Mrs. Virginia K., 62
Hines, Merrill O., 103
Hoagland, Joseph J., 64
Hochendel, Jane, 83
Hodges, John C., 60, 87
Hodgins, Etta, 60
Hoehn, Elsa, 83
Hoffman, A. C., 110
Hoffman, Frederick L., 68
Hogan, Benjamin R., 67
Hogan, Michael W., 80
Hoge, Arthur E., 86
Hogg, Mary C., 101
Holcombe, William H., 32
Hole, Nate, 78
Holleman, Albert E., 54, 77
Holman, Rodney, 115, 118
Holmberg, Ron, 114
Holmes, Jacqueline A., 77
Holmes, Jr., Urban T., 72
Holtgreve, Jr., John W., 98
Hopkins, W. Thomas, 87
Horack, H. Claude, 69
Hornick, Bill, 118
Hort, W.P., 32
Hounshell, Charles, 24, 53
Houston, David F., 67
Howard Library, 24
Howard, G. Turner, 116
Howard, Mrs. Alvin H., 61
Howard, Neil, 81
Howard, R.S., 32, 135
Howard, Robert L., 63
Howard-Tilton Memorial Library, 131, 130, 136
Howe, II, Harold, 74
Howe, William Wirt, 32
Hsieh, Wen-Son, 79
Hubbard, Jack, 24
Hubbard, John Randolph, 53
Huber, Leonard V., 72
Huff, Jr., Fred C., 100
Huffman, Burdette B., 78
Hufstedler, Shirley M., 74
Huger, Jr., Killian L., 62
Huger, Jr., Mrs. Killian, 58
Hughes, Edna H., 104
Hughes, Elizabeth, 99
Hughes, Joseph D.. See
Hulbert, Samuel F., 51
Hull, Edgar, 101
Hunley, H. Martin, 80
Hunt, Carleton, 12, 32, 52, 67
Hunt, Randell, 12, 37, 52, 67
Hunt, Theodore, 12, 32
Hunt, Thomas, 10, 11, 12, 13, 37, 52, 53
Hunt, William H., 32
Hunter, Walter D., 68
Hurley, Grady S., 64, 77, 87
Hurt, Elizabeth, 99
Huseman, Andrea Arons, 100
Hutcheson, Jr., Joseph C., 70
Hutchins, Robert M., 69
Hutchinson III, Campbell C., 80
Hutchinson Memorial Medical Building, 132
Hutchinson, Alexander Charles, 132
Hyman, Aimee de LaV., 99
Hyman, Jack, 98
I
Ignarro, Louis J., 75
Ilgenfritz, Burr D., 99
Ilsley, John H., 32
Imperato, Pascal J., 75, 104
Inbau, Fred E., 80, 101
Independence Bowl, 126
Ingalls, Thomas, 10, 13
Ingram, Frederick B., 35, 58
Ingram, Robert Taylor, 81
Inman, Leslie L., 80
Irby House, 139
Irby, William R., 33, 34, 40, 136, 139
Irwin, Jr., Leon, 34, 36, 105
Israel, Adeline Patti, 90
Israel, Ann R., 64
Israel, Jr., Sam, 34, 36, 73, 144
Israel, Lawrence J., 35, 58, 62
Israel, Mrs. Lawrence J., 58
Issaacson, Walter S., 64
Iwamura, Eiro, 63, 74
J
J. Blanc Monroe Hall, 140
155
Jack, Theodore J., 69
Jackson, Howell E., 67
Jackson, Jerry D., 58
Jackson, John, 96
Jackson, Jr., John D., 102
Jackson, Marjorie L., 80
Jackson, Tom, 98
Jacobs, Donald P., 73
Jacobs, Dorothy S., 64
Jahncke, Barton W.B., 115
Jahncke, Ernest L., 34, 105
Jahncke,. Cora Stanton, 106
Jambalaya, 19
Jamieson, Merwin, 95
Janssen, James S., 102
Janvier, Carmelite, 105
Janvier, Charles, 34, 70, 80
Janvier, George, 105
Janvier, Jessie Wing, 106
Janvier, Lois, 106
Jarnvier, J., 110
Jefferson, Andrea Green, 64
Jenson, Bertha M., 100
Jesse, Richard H., 51, 55, 67
Jeter, Jr., Robert, 80
John Giffen Weinmann Hall, 21, 144
Johns, Pete, 119
Johnsen, Erik F., 35, 36, 58, 102, 106
Johnson, Lee H., 51
Johnson, Norman L., 62
Johnson, Robert E., 80
Johnson, Roy E., 98
Johnson, W. Spencer, 116
Johnson, Warren, 44
Johnson, William B., 61
Johnson, William N., 77
Johnston House, 139
Johnston, Claude E., 80
Johnston, J. Bennett, 73
Johnston, William Preston, 17, 37, 38, 139
Jolowicz, Herbert F., 70
Jonassen, Hans, 81
Jones, Eugenie Penick, 106
Jones, Howard M., 69
Jones, James, 52, 53
Jones, Joseph Herrick, 105
Jones, Joseph M., 33, 34
Jones, Jr., Philip H., 79
Jones, M. Neal, 116
Jones, Rick, 111
Jones, Terrence, 116, 119
Jones, W. A. "Dub", 113, 114, 115, 119
Jones, Yvette M., 46
Jonsson, Erik J., 73
Jonsson, J.E., 60
Jordan, Jr., Vernon E., 73
Joseph Merrick Jones Hall, 21, 130
Josephine Louise House, 135, 138
Joyce, Don, 114, 119
Jung, Jr., Arthur L., 34, 36, 60, 93
Junius, Heidi, 83
K
Kabacoff, Lester E., 58
Kahle, P. Jorda, 81
Kahn, III, Charles N., 104
Kahn, Louis L., 72
Kaiser, Jill S., 77
Kaminsky, Donald C., 104
Kammer, Nolan, 95
Kanter, Rosabeth M., 75
Karcher, Ken, 119
Katherine & William Mayer Residences, 145
Katz, Louis H., 49
Katz, Stephen, 103
Kaufman, Harry, 95
Kaufman, Jr., Harry S., 93
Keane, Susan B., 71
Kearny, Walter, 105
Keenan, Burt Henry, 62, 102
Kelleher, Harry Bartlett, 33, 34, 36, 106
Kelleher, Jane, 99
Kelleher, Jr., Harry Bartlett, 58, 59, 63
Kelleher, Sr., Harry Bartlett, 75, 101
Keller, Rosa Freeman, 73, 103, 105
Kellogg, Bobby, 119
Kellogg, Charles Augustus, 90
Kellogg, Robert "Bobby", 115
Kellogg, Robert F., 111
Kells, Charles E., 68
Kelly, Eamon M., 37, 41, 43, 48, 116
Kelly, Jr., Claude J., 98
Kelly, Margaret, 116
Kelly, Robert L., 69
Kennard, John Hanson, 32
Kennedy, Lester, 116
Kennedy, Samuel H., 34
Kennedy, Victoria R., 64
Kenner, William H., 75
Kenney, Jr., Charles L., 100
Kepper, Mrs. Stewart, 96
Kepper, Stewart, 96
Kepper, Stewart J., 61
Ker, David, 90
Kerth, Norman R., 62, 64
Kerwin, Jim, 114, 122
Khayat, Eddie, 114, 119
Kidder, T.R., 55
Kilgo, John C., 68
Killeen, Joseph L., 86
Killian, James R., Jr., 60
Kilroy, James F., 48, 52, 55
Kimmerling, Martha McCarty, 100
Kimpton, Lawrence A., 60, 71
Kindelsperger, Walter L., 54
Kinek, George, 116, 119
King, Altha D., 100
King, Alvin O., 107
King, Donald L., 77
King, Grace, 68
King, Shaun, 119
Kingery, Ellsworth, 119
Kingrea, Rick, 115, 119
Kirkley, Daniel E., 98
Kirklin, Kelley, 79
Kirschman, Victor F., 58
Kirschstein, R. L., 75
Klein, Mary Rosalie, 104
Klein, Robert, 111
Kleinpeter, Jr., George C., 98, 102
Kleinschmidt, Arthur G., 87, 116
Kleinschmidt, Jr., Arthur G., 61, 62
156
Klinker, Victor L., 102
Knapp, Charles B., 44
Knoepfler, Nestor D., 98
Koch, Minna F., 99
Koch, Richard, 90, 138
Kock, Anne Cameron, 106
Kock, Jr., E. James, 58, 63
Koerner, III, John E., 33, 35, 102
Kohlmeyer, Jr., Herman, Jr., 58, 59
Kohlmeyer, Ida, 103
Kolb, Carolyn Goldsby, 99
Kolff, Willem J., 72
Koppel , Rene, 99
Korach, Jeffrey L., 64
Koski, Albert Simeon, 90
Kostmayer, Hiram W., 53, 70, 103
Kottemann, Stanley C., 115
Kottler, Bob, 81
Kramer, John, 21, 52
Kraus, Rebekah Henson, 98
Kreller, Jr., Matthew J., 100
Kreps, Juanita M., 73
Krim, Mathilde, 74
Krueger, Paul, 77, 116
Krumpelmann, John T., 72
Kruttschnitt, Ernest B., 34
Kubler, George A., 72
Kyle, Jr., John E., 62
L
Laakso, Eric, 116, 119
Labatt, David Cohen, 32, 90
Labatut, Isadore, 32
Labbok, Miriam H., 104
LaBlanc, Samuel A., 34
Laboratory for Environmental Medicine, 133
Laborde, E. Theodore, 58
Labouisse, Henry Richardson, 71
Labouisse, Mrs. F. Monroe, 58
Labry, Jacqueline, 83
Lacy, George S., 32
Lafitte, John B., 32
Lagarde, III, Maurice L., 58, 104
Laguaite, Jeannette K., 104
Lake, Forrest U., 50, 69
Lambert, Robert A., 60, 70
Lamprecht, Fred, 114
Lamprecht, George Frederick, 88
Lancaster, Henry C., 70
Land, John S., 71
Land, Mary Elizabeth, 91
Landrieu, Moon, 73
Landry, Jacob S., 34, 36, 60, 86
Landry, Lucien H., 86
Lane, Eric, 116, 123
Lane, III, H. Merritt, 58
Lang, Jr., Buddy, 98
Langhetee, Jeanne, 99
Langstaff, Ogden D., 90
Lanhardt, Ted, 110
Lansburgh, Therese Weil, 104
Lapeyre, James M., Jr, 35
Lapeyre, James M.,102
Lapham, Maxwell Edward, 37, 40, 48, 53, 71
LaRosa, John C., 56
Larson, Clifford R., 79
Lartigue, Jr., Henry J., 63
Laslett, Thomas P. R., 75
Lassen, Sidney W., 35, 58, 63, 102
Lassiter, Albin P., 77
Lasso, Gala P., 73
Lathrop, Berthe, 99
Laughlin, Clarence J., 72
Lautenschlaeger, Lester, 34, 36, 86, 93, 95, 105, 113, 114
LaVillebeuvre, E. F., 32
Law Building, 128
Lawhon, John C., 90
Lawrence, Berdon, 102
Lawrence, C. Berdon, 35
Lawrence, Francis Leo, 24, 44, 48, 52, 53
Lawrence, Jacob, 74
Lawrence, John William, 16, 50
Lawson, John, 47
Le Mieux, Henry F., 62
Lea, J.N., 32
Lea, Paul, 113, 115, 119
Leary, Jr., Prieur J., 58
Leathers, Waller S., 69
LeBlanc, III, Sam A., 59
Leche, Richard Webster, 107
LeCorgne, William R., 98
Lee, George W.C., 67
Lee, Harold N., 72
Lee, Richard Kui Chi, 72
Lee, Stephen D., 67
Lee, Thomas M., 81
Lee, Wayne J., 63
Leefe, Alfred A., 51
Lefton, Lester A., 47, 48
Legendre, Anne A., 72
Lelong, F. Rivers, 62
Lemann, Bernard, 101
Lemann, I. I., 86
Lemann, Miriam, 99
Lemann, Monte M., 60
Lemann, Montefiore M., 68
Lemoine, Jr., Gano D., 77
Lenroot, Katharine F., 70
Leonard, J. Wayne, 64
Lesser, May Hyman, 103
Lester, Hugh, 47
Lester, Robert M., 69
LeVasseur, Luke P., 80
Levert, John B., 34
Levi, Milton L. “Irish”, 115
Levine, Samuel, 81
Levy, Gustave L., 58, 60, 72
Levy, II, Julius L., 58
Levy, Jr., Julius L., 99
Levy, Neville, Cpt., 105
Lewis, Ernest S., 68
Lewis, Floyd W., 36, 58, 61, 77, 101, 102
Lewis, J. Hampden, 32, 35, 90
Lewis, Josie, 77
Lewis, Jr., Clarence, 102
Lewis, Marvin, 119
Libby-Dufour Memorial Medical Building, 132
Liberty Bowl, 125, 126
Lind, Carl, 115, 123
Lindsey, Edward S., 99
Lindy Claiborne Boggs Center for Energy and Biotechnology,
20, 144
157
Little, Jr., Allen, 81
Little, Robert A., 98
Little, Tommy, 123
Littleton, Jesse, 60, 86
Livingston, Cary D., 115
Livingston, Robert L., 101
Lloyd, Gary Arthur, 104
Loftin, Joe, 116
Logan, Samuel, 98
Lokey, Early B., 62
Lomax, Alan, 75
Lombard III, William F., 77
Lombard, John, 110
Long, Huey P., 107
Long, Russell B., 72
Longenecker, Herbert E., 37, 40
Longo, Dick, 110
Longstreet, James, 32
Lorino, Anthony P., 46
Lovett, Edgar O., 68
Lowenthal, Cynthia, 54
Lucas, A. O., 73
Ludlow, H., 110
Lukash, Leslie, 98, 103
Lumiansky, Robert Mayer, 48, 51, 61, 73
Lummus, Henry T., 69
Lumsden, Richard, 51
Lupberger, Edwin, 35, 36, 63
Lupin, E. Ralph, 63
Luzenberg, Charles A., 10, 12, 52
Lyn, Darren S., 82
Lynch, Michael, 51
Lynch, Mrs. Robert C., 60
Lyons, Sr., Charlton H., 60
M
Mabon, Thomas S., 63
Macauley, Thomas G., 80
Mackie, James Monroe, 10, 12
Macon, Thomas L., 32, 39
Madison, George T., 77
Maggs, Donald J., 116, 119
Magnuson, Jr., Glen G., 80
Magruder, Marcus J., 34, 70
Maher, Mark, 123
Mailhes, Peter P., 116
Mallet, John W., 67
Mallory, Jr., Meredith, 63, 64
Malochee, Henry Joseph, 90
Mandich, Peter, 116
Mangold, Neal, 81
Mannis, Mike, 81
Many, Anna E., 24, 53, 70, 99, 136
Many, Jr., John L., 81
Many, Ralph C., 79
Maquire, Mary A., 53
Marconi, Guglielmo, 68
Margolin, Bessie, 103
Margulis, Lynn A., 75
Marigny, Ron, 123
Markel, Jr., Henry E., 98
Markesbury, Allison, 83
Marks, Jr., Mrs. Sumter D., 99
Marks, Mathilde Carolyn, 91
Marks, Ronald E., 54
Marksbury, Richard A., 55
Marmelzat, Willard L., 62
Maron, Barry J., 103
Marr, Carmel C., 63
Marshall, Ray, 63, 75
Marsiglia, Mrs. Michael J., 58
Martin, Fontaine, 60, 87
Martin, Jr., Edmund B., 81
Martin, Jr., Fontaine, 80
Martin, Jr., William M., 70
Martinez, John L., 50
Marts, Lonnie, 119
Mashaw, Jerry L., 80
Mason, A. A., 110, 111
Mason, Claude, 88, 116
Mason, Ernest, 60, 87, 95, 102
Mason, James M., 69
Mason, Jr., Ronald, 45
Mason, Patricia C., 45
Mason, Tommy, 113, 114, 119
Masquelette, Philip A., 62
Massengale, Marcy V., 80
Matas, Rudolph, 68, 105, 132
Mathes, Melvin, 81
Mathews, Tommy, 123
Mathison, Jerrell, 104
Mathison, Joyce, 104
Matsunami, Joline, 110
Matthews, Jr., Frank J., 81
Mattis, Louis P., 63, 102
Maxey, Thomas S., 67
Maybin, J.A., 32
Mayer, Katherine, 145
Mayer, Michael H., 102
Mayer, William, 35, 63, 145
McAfee, Howard, 119
McAfee, Mildred H., 69
McAlister Auditorium, 139, 142
McBryde, Felix W., 71
McBryde, John M., 51
McCain, James R., 69
McCaleb, Theodore H., 37
McCall, Harry, 105
McCall, Jonathan C., 59
McCall, Jr., Harry, 58, 62, 73, 101, 105, 106
McCarthy, Dan W., 98
McCarthy, Mary, 74
McCaw, Ian, 109
McCay, Jr., Wilton, 77
McClain, Jr., Joseph A., 69
McClellan, Mrs. A. W., 99
McCloskey, Bernard J., 81
McCloskey, E. Patrick, 60
McCloskey, Hugh, 105
McCloskey, Joseph, 34, 36, 58
McCloskey, Pat, 96
McCollam, John M., 80
McCollam, Jr., William, 63
McCollum, Harley, 113, 114, 119
McConnell, James, 34
McCormack, James, 60
McCray, Tim, 119
McCune, Marshall L., 60
McCutcheom, Roger P., 55
McCutcheon, E. Davis, 90, 102
McCutcheon, Roger P., 51
McDaniel, Jr., John B., 77, 102
158
McDonald, Jr., Alden J., 58
McDonald, Walt, 119
McDuff, Nancy G., 50
McEnery, John, 106
McFadden, P. Michael, 99
McFarland, James W., 51
McFarland, Louise M., 104
McFarland, Paul, 43
McGee, Jeannine, 83
McGee, Max, 114, 115, 120
McGhee, George C., 71
McGlasson, Jr., H. Edwin, 77
McGlinchey, Dermot, 64, 87
McGovern, Dru, 83
McGovney, Dudley O., 52
McGowen, Norris C., 60
McGowin, Earl, 60, 63
McGrail, Helen Cassidy, 104
McGrew, Sylvester, 120
McIlhenny, Edmund, 33, 34, 36, 106
McIlhenny, Walter S., 58
McIntire, Ross T., 69
McIntyre, Robert C., 87, 93, 102
McIver, Nancy, 83
McKeever, Michael F., 64
McLarty, Mrs. Nancy, 61
McLellan, Edward A., 98
McLendon, Gay N., 63
McLucas, John L., 62, 103
McMillan, Elridge W., 63
McMurtry, Lewis S., 68
McNair, Spencer B., 77
McNeeley, David, 104
McNeill, Stephen D., 32
McShane, Edward J., 70, 101
McWilliams, Jr., W. Kennon, 36, 62
McWilliams, W. Kennon, 35, 115
Meade, George P., 72
Meade, Harold E., 77
Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Work Shops
Complex, 128
Medical Building, 128, 132
Medina, Harold R., 71
Meehan, Jay, 78
Meehan, Tommy, 98
Melito, Chuck, 123
Mellen, William F., 52
Mellinkoff, Sherman M., 61
Melville, Cyril G., 69
Menendez, Charles V., 98
Menschel, Joyce F., 35, 63
Menuet, Robert L., 37, 40, 69
Menville, John, 95
Mercer, Newton W., 32, 40
Mercer, William Mosby, 90
Mercier, Armand Theodore, 60, 70
Meric, T. Sellers, 101
Merrill, Ayres P., 90
Merryl and Sam Israel, Jr. Environmental Science Building, 144
Merton, Robert K., 72
Metcalf, Kay, 112
Metcalf, Richard, 98
Meux, Thomas O., 67
Mexic, Ginja, 83
Meyer III, Conrad, 77, 80
Meyering, Beatrix, 99
Meyers, Mrs. James J., 60
Michael, Jerrold M., 61, 73
Michael, John, 78
Michaels, Jr., J. Patrick, 63
Michel, Jr., Marshall L., 98, 103
Micou, William C., 32
Middle American Research Institute, 20, 39, 130
Middleton, Troy H., 71
Migliore, Brian, 123
Mikva, Abner J., 74
Miler, Martin C., 63
Miles, William Porcher, 67
Miles, William R., 32
Millar, Innes, 111
Miller, Alan, 46, 59
Miller, Hainon A., 77
Miller, Henry C., 52
Miller, Mrs. Francis L., 99
Miller, Robert H., 46
Miller, Walter, 51, 55
Milling, Anne M., 105
Milling, R. King, 106
Millon, Henry A., 61, 75, 101
Mintz, Bernard D., 115
Mintz, Donald R., 63
Mintz, Mrs. Donald R., 99
Mintz, Saul, 62, 64
Mislow, Kurt, 61, 72, 101
Mitchell, Jacquelyn, 63
Mitchell, Martin, 120
Mix, Warren A., 77
Mmahat, John A., 77
Mmahat, Kevin, 123
Moencki, M. A., 110
Moffett, James R., 62
Moir, Charles, 110
Molloy, Sylvia, 75
Molory, Jr., Michael J., 105
Monk Simons Athletic Complex, 92, 141
Monk Simons Memorial Swimming Pool, 92, 139, 141
Monroe, Jr., William B., 35, 36, 75
Monroe, Jules B., 30, 34, 40, 81, 86, 140
Montgomery, Deane, 71
Montgomery, Joseph W., 34, 36
Mooney, Joseph R., 98
Moore, Andrew G.T., II, 63
Moore, Aubrey L., 80
Moore, Donald, 43, 55
Moore, Frank, 54
Moran, Alfred Jay, 102
Moreau, C. Michael, 104
Moreau, James, 61, 62, 87, 96
Morey, J. Grant, 45
Morgan, Cecil, 21, 52, 60, 72
Morgan, Eddie, 114, 123
Morgan, Jesse B., 43
Morgan, P. Hickey, 32
Morgan, Patrick, 104
Morhlenbrock, Claire Lydia, 91
Morial, Ernest N., 58
Morial, Sybil H., 63, 64
Morot-Sir, Edouard, 71
Morris, DeWitt L., 98
Morris, F. B., 111
Morris, Joseph C., 34, 43
Morris, Jr., Pendleton S., 81
Morris, Stanley, 95
Morrison, James J., 80
159
Morrison, Joan, 83
Morrow, Clarence J., 21, 52, 80
Morse, M. Brinkley, 80
Mose, B.H., 32
Moses, Harold, 81
Moses, Marlene E., 64
Moses, Robert M., 64
Moss, C. Murphy, 81, 87
Moss, Jr., C. Murphy, 61, 62
Moss, Olive, 99
Moss, Walter O., 77, 86
Motley, Constance B., 74
Mouton, Alfred, 32
Muller, Peter C., 79
Mulvihill, Stan Thomas, 81
Mura, Steve, 115, 123
Murphy, Frank, 69
Murphy, James, 50, 51
Murphy, John R., 100
Murphy, Jr., Charles H., 35, 36, 61
Murphy, Martha W., 58, 64
Murphy, Mrs. Robert M., 58
Murphy, R. M., 81
Murray, Eddie, 115, 120
Murray, Larry L., 64
Murray, Roger F., 74
Muths, Sybil M., 99
Myra Clare Rogers Memorial Chapel, 136
N
Nagin, C. Ray, 102
Nairne, Clayton L., 34, 36, 86, 95, 102, 105
Nairne, Lillie, 60
Nalty, Donald J., 35, 36, 58
Nalty, Elizabeth Shaw, 64, 106
Nalty, Mrs. Donald, 58
Nash, Marion L., 99
National Primate Research Center, 20, 134
Navy Building, 92, 138, 141
Neal, Ed, 120
Nelson, George D., 61
Nelson, Jr., Howard A., 98
Nelson, Louise, 83
Nelson, Norman C., 103
Nelson, Paul, 45
Nelson, Waldemar S., 61, 87, 93, 98, 102, 105, 144
Nes, William H., 70
Neufeld, Marjorie, 80
Neugass, Herman, 114
Neusner, Jacob, 74
New Engineering Buildings, 131
Newborn, Jr., George W., 104
Newcomb Art School, 135, 136
Newcomb Dean’s Residence, 135
Newcomb Gymnasium, 136
Newcomb Hall, 135
Newcomb Nursery School, 136
Newcomb Pottery, 19, 23, 135, 136
Newcomb Swimming Pool, 136
Newcomb, Harriott Sophie, 19, 22, 29
Newcomb, Josephine Louise, 19, 22, 29, 135, 138
Newcomb, Warren, 138
Newhouse, Norman N., 58
Newitt, Louis A., 63
Newman II, Isidore, 34, 36, 60
Newman, Melvin S., 61
Newton, T. Eugene, 115
Nice, Julianne, 46
Nicholas, Robert Carter, 32
Nicholls, Francis T., 67, 106
Nichols, Douglas A., 80
Nicholson, Elizabeth Lee, 106
Nicholson, James W., 67
Nieset, James R., 64
Niklaus, John L., 98
Nimitz, Chester W., 70
Nitti, Francesco S., 68
Nixon, Louise J., 69
Noble, Sandra, 83
Nolan, Ulisse M., 106
Norman Mayer Memorial Hall, 17, 131
North, Michael B., 80
Norwood, Woody, 81
Nott, Gustave A., 53
Novak, Emil, 70
Nugent, Phil, 120
Nungesser, Dorothy, 99
Nunn, Jules, 49
O
O’Neal, Sean A., 80
Oakes, Forrest E., 111, 114
Oates, Jr., James F., 61
Oates, Whitney J., 60
O'Boyle, Tommy, 110, 113, 114
O'Brien, Judith, 83
Ochsner, Edward W. A., 71
Ochsner, John L., 103, 106
Odom, Charles B., 77
O'Donnell, Eula S., 104
Oelkers, John, 111, 114
Office of Annual Fund, 143
Ogata, Sadako, 75
Ogden, Robert C., 67
O'Kelley, J. Phares, 86
Okerson, Eric C., 80
Olagues, John, 123
Olivari, Mark, 116
Olivier, Jeanne C., 65
Ommaya, Ayrub K., 73
O'Niell, Charles A., 70
Oppenheim, Jay, 98
Ordway, John M., 17
Oriol, Sidney M., 77
Orschiedt, Peter, 112
Orsley, Jack, 111
Ota, Seizo, 63, 64
Ott, Wiltz C., 77
Ouzts, Johnie M., 62
Owen, John, 117
Owen, Jr., Thomas P., 80
Owen, Tony, 62
P
Pace, Paul D., 99
Paddor, Richard Scott, 81
Padersen, Ralph, 110
Padres, Diego, 123
160
Page, Richard L., 77
Page, Thomas N., 67
Page, Walter H., 67
Paley, Vivian Gussin, 103
Palfrey, Mollie, 99
Palmer, Benjamin M., 34
Palmer, Katherine V., 72
Pang, Lup Q., 61
Pang, Matt, 78
Pardo, Jose P., 71
Parè, Emmett, 111, 114
Parham, Frederick W., 34, 68
Park, Marion E., 69
Parker, Arthur D., 34
Parker, Charlotte Sutherland, 106
Parker, Harold F., 100, 104
Parker, John J., 70
Parker, Rick, 123
Parkerson, William, 77
Parkinson, Joseph L., 35
Parks, Thomas J., 98
Parnell, Mel, 111, 114
Parsons, Adele De Leon, 99
Pastor, Anthony A., 80
Pate, Sid, 81
Paternostro, Sandy, 112
Paterson House, 139
Paterson, Albert B., 34, 139
Paul, Linda Tuero, 115
Payne, Francis C., 60
Payne, Jr., F. C., 102
Payson, Martin D., 35, 63
Payton, Melvin E., 115
Pecoul, Bernard, 75
Pedersen, Einar, 116, 139
Pedersen, Ralph, 116
Peery, William W., 55
Pelikan, Jarsolav, 73
Pemberton, John, 32
Peniston, Anthony A., 90
Percival Stern Hall, 131
Percy, Walker, 72
Perez, III, August, 101
Perkins, Dexter, 71
Perkins, Eliot, 112
Perkins, Sr., David L., 101
Perkins, Warren, 114, 122
Perkins, William M., 86
Perrilliat, Hipolite Alfred, 90
Perrilliat, William L., 90
Perrin, Jr., Shepard F., 61, 62, 87
Perrin, Larry, 98
Perrin, Roy, 98
Peterman, Louise, 99
Peters, Jr., Jonathan J., 77
Peterson, Laurence, 43
Petitbon, John, 114
Petitbon, Richard, 114, 115, 120
Pettit, Jr., Robert L., 58
Phelan, John J., 35, 62, 74
Phelan, Jr., John J., 36
Phelps House, 138, 139
Phelps, Albert, 81
Phelps, Ashton, 34, 36, 60, 106
Phelps, Esmond, 33, 34, 63, 139
Phelps, Mary Louise, 106
Phillips, Cherry, 88
Phillips, Clinton A., 50
Phillips, Deirdre Melessa, 103
Phillips, John G., 33, 35, 36, 58, 62, 74, 106
Phillips, Katharine, 106
Phillips, Victoria, 79
Philpott, Arthur R., 80
Phoenix Playhouse, 139
Physical Plant Building, 142
Pickens, Buford Lindsey, 16
Pielet, Samuel H., 63
Pierce Butler House, 140
Pierce, Levi, 32
Pierre, Jenina, 83
Pierson, Catherine D., 33, 35
Pierson, Hunter, 59
Pilney, Andy, 110, 116
Pinner, James F., 102
Pint, John, 78
Piore, Emanuel R., 60
Pitot, Henry C., 75, 103
Pittman, Jim, 110, 115, 125
Pitts, Bill, 81
Pizzano, Jack, 115
Plauchè, A. Lane, 62, 64, 103
Plauche, Jr., James J., 81
Plauche, Mary L., 83
Plotkin, Louis L., 80
Pohorelsky, Victor V., 80
Poitevent, Edward B., 63, 95, 116, 106,
Poitevent, Jr., Eads, 106
Polack, Mrs. Robert H., 99
Ponoroff, Lawrence, 21, 52
Pope, Ginny, 83
Porche, “Bubba”, 115
Posey, Marty, 123
Potin, Dianne Helene, 83
Pottharst, Paul C., 81
Pound, Roscoe, 69
Pourciau, Betty, 83
Powell, III, M. Cleland, 58
Powell, Jr., Lewis F., 74
Powell, Richarson K., 87
Power Plant, 143
Powers, Margaret G., 90
Pratt, Margaret, 106
Pratt, Mildred Gaudy, 91
President’s Home, 142
Preston, Isaac T., 32
Price, Edward "Eddie", 113, 114, 120
Price, Mitchell, 120
Proskouriakoff, Tatiana, 72
Prosser, Jr., Mrs. Charles S., 99
Provosty, Jr., Ledoux, 62
Provosty, LeDoux R., 60
Provosty, Michel B., 86
Pruski, Lois, 112
Pryor, Jr., William Holcombe, 80
Purcell, Joey, 123
Pyburn, Keith M., 77
Pyle, Barbara Y.E., 103
Q
Quick, Leonard, 98
Quillian, Ronald, 116, 120
161
R
Race, G.W., 32
Rally, Mrs. James Weaks, 105
Ramirez, Walter F., 102
Randolph, Edward H., 67
Ransmeier, Mrs. John C., 99
Ransom, William L., 70
Rapier, Michael, 63, 96
Rapier, Mrs. Michael, 96
Rapier, Thomas G., 63
Rawle, Edward, 32
Ray, Gordan R., 71
Raymond, Alfred, 34
Raymond, III, Frank B., 104
Raymond, Mrs. Charles K., 99
Read, A. Louis, 58
Read, Mrs. Henry J., 99
Read, Randolph C., 63
Reagan, John H., 67
Reardon, Patricia, 44
Rebstock, Ann, 100
Redditt, Adele, 99
Reed, Anthony, 116
Reed, Edward S., 102
Reed, John, 111
Reed, Lester J., 72, 101
Reed, Rachel, 83
Reed, Warren B., 86
Reel, Aline, 82
Rees, William M., 61
Reese, W. Ford, 95
Reggie, Edmund M., 35, 62
Reginelli, Jr., Anthony “Reggie”, 116
Reily III, William Boatner, 35, 62, 75, 106
Reily Student Recreation Center, 20, 145
Reily, Kathryn Lee, 106
Reine, E. J., 90
Reiss, Jr., James J., 35, 102
Renegar, Horace C., 109
Renshaw, Marguerite D., 70
Renz, Henry T., 100
Retif, Milton, 111, 114
Retif, Sharon Fuqua, 116
Rexner, Freeman, 120
Reyes, Alfonso, 69
Reynolds, John C., 58
Reynolds, Mrs. Jack J., 58, 59
Rice, Jr., John A., 79
Richard, J., 111
Richards, Newton, 32
Richardson Building, 92, 128
Richardson Memorial Building, 16, 129
Richardson, Caroline, 92, 136
Richardson, Hamilton Farrar, 62, 79, 101, 114
Richardson, Mrs. Ida, 129
Richardson, Tobias G., 34, 39, 53, 114, 128, 129
Richardson, W. "Pat", 95
Richmond, Abbie, 99
Riddell, J.L., 19
Riddle, Hill C., Rev., 59
Riedel, Mrs. Ernest H., 99
Ries, Thomas H., 77
Riess, Mrs. Frank, 99
Riffey, James R., 115
Rightor, Nicholas Henry, 32
Riley, Steve, 123
Rinker, Jr., Andrew, 80
Rippner, William S., 77
Rittenberg, Heather Pelofsky, 65, 100
Ritter, Mrs. Dotard, 99
Riverside Research Laboratories, 134
Rivlin, Ronald S., 73
Rizzo, Jr., George A., 102
Roach, Lillian Anne, 83
Robb, James, 32, 135
Robb-Burnside Mansion, 23
Robbert, Carolyn, 83, 99
Robert C. Cudd Hall, 27, 28
Robert Sharp Hall, 140
Robert, James M., 51
Robert, Jr., James M., 81
Roberts, Jeff, 120
Roberts, Jonathan, 104
Roberts, Lloyd “Preacher”, 115
Robertson, Donna V., 16, 50
Robertson, George W., 81
Robertson, Merle G., 73
Robertson, Michael, 96
Robin, Mrs. Ernest A., 105
Robinson, Frank, 117, 120
Robinson, George H., 80
Robinson, Henry W., 86
Robinson, Martha G., 72, 105
Robinson, Mrs. Henry W., 99
Robinson, R. G., 95
Robinson, Sandra L., 34, 35, 59, 63
Robinson, Virgil A. A., 77
Rocherolle, Eugenie Ricau, 103
Roddy, Virginia N., 35
Rodriguez, Maori, 83
Rody, George, 110
Roemer, Peggy, 99
Rogas, Dan, 116, 120
Rogers, James M., 136
Rogers, Myra Clare, 136
Rogers, Ralph B., 62, 74
Rogers, William O., 34, 37, 38
Rogge, Edward A., 50
Roller, Brad, 64
Roman, Alfred, 32
Romano, Michael D., 116, 123
Rombach, Jr., J. Robert, 93, 98
Romer, Francis Jean Baptiste, 90
Rooney, Jr., William E., 93
Rose Bowl, 125
Roselius, Christian, 32, 52
Rosen House, 139
Rosen, Charles, 33, 34, 86, 139
Rosen, Edward, 59
Rosen, Harold A., 62, 72, 101, 102
Rosen, Louis, 86
Rosenberg, Jr., Malcolm F., 104
Rosenblum, Edith L., 64
Rosenblum, Larry, 77
Rosenblum, Paul S., 102
Rosenson, Leonard H., 80
Rosenthal, Susan, 99
Rowan, Ford, 104
Rowley, Steve, 123
Rozier, J. Adolph, 32
Rubin, Bruce K., 79
Ruck, Mary Frances, 106
162
Rucker, Charles Hurrah, 88
Ruder, William, 62
Rush, Jane, 83
Russ, John, 110
Russell, Donald J., 60
Russell, William, 73
Ruthven, Alexander G., 69
S
Saalfield, Jim, 81
Sackett, George, 98
Sadik, Nafis, 75
Sadwani, Anita, 83
Salinas, Ricardo B., 102
Salmon, Sr., Harold, 105
Samango, Lee A., 77
Samuel, L. Julian, 60
Sanders, Jared Young, 107
Sanders, Mary E., 63
Sanford, J. B., 95
Sanford, Jr., John B., 81
Sardisco, Tony, 113, 115, 120
Sarre, Jean, 90
Sartor, D. Ryan, 87
Sartor, Jr., Daniel Ryan, 61, 62, 80
Sartor, Jr., Mrs. D. Ryan, 99
Saucier, H. Herschel, 104
Saunders, Eugene D., 52, 77
Saunders, Maridel, 62
Saunders, Paul H., 34
Saussy, Suzanne, 81
Sawyer, John E., 74
Scafide, John, 115, 120
Scarborough, Daniel C., 34
Scelfo, Chis, 110
Schaller, Howard G., 50
Schally, Andrew V., 72
Scheiber, Noam, 79
Scheps, Clarence, 43, 49
Schloss, Lawrence M.V.D., 64
Schmidt, Frank E., 99
Schmidt, Harlan, 77, 81
Schmidt, Martin F., 62, 64, 102
Schmidt, Richard K., 65, 87
Schneider, Ashley, 78, 83
Schneider, David R., 77
Schneider, Larry, 123
Schneider, Leroy, 120
Schoel III, William A., 77
Schorin, Susan Gold Willard, 103
Schumacher, David, 111
Schumacher, Jr., Carl J., 81
Schupp, Harriet B., 64, 99
Schur, J. Bradford, 77
Schwartz, S. Andrew, 64
Schwartz, Danny, 81
Schwartz, Eugenie C., 104
Schwartz, Janine M., 80
Schwartz, Jr., Mrs. Charles, 58
Schwartz, Simon, 105
Schwarz, Ralph J., 69
Schwitalla, Alphonse M., 69
Scott, John T., 75
Seaborg, Glen T., 71
Sear, Hon. Morey L., 58, 59, 75
Sears, Claudius W., 55
Seavey, Warren A., 70
Seielstad, Megan, 88
Seiferth, Solis, 81, 101
Seinsheimer, Jr., J. F., 102
Selber, Jr., Aaron, 62, 102
Sellars, III, Mrs. Frank H., 58
Selley, Paul P., 63
Sen, Amartya, 74
Senter, Jr., James C., 80
Seymour, J.C., 32, 41
Seymour, William B., 32
Shaffer, Jeremy, 77
Shalala, Donna E., 75
Shannon, Frances Ellen, 91
Shapiro, Robert F., 63
Shapiro, Scott Adam, 77
Sharp, Jr., Wiley H., 61, 87, 93, 102
Sharp, Robert, 37, 39, 51, 68, 140
Shaughnessy, Clark, 109, 110, 111, 113, 114, 141
Shaw, Tom, 111
Shepard, Edward M., 67
Shepherd, Harold, 70
Shepley, Ethan A. H., 60
Sherer, Evelyn C., 63
Sherer, Robert E., 63
Sherman, Edward, 21, 52
Sherrill, Betty Stevens, 103
Shinn, C. Wes, 80
Shinn, Joe, 120
Siegman, Marion J., 103
Silipo, Joe, 120
Silvey, Mortimer, 60, 87, 93, 98
Simmons, George, 111
Simmons, Lanier Allingham, 36, 103
Simmons, Mrs. Edward M., 35
Simms, Jack L., 80
Simon, John F., 54
Simon, Wilfred, 121
Simons, "Little Monk", 125
Simons, George E., 55
Simons, Jr., Claude, 54, 109, 110, 111, 113, 114
Simons, Sr., Claude, 110, 111, 114
Simpson, Ann, 106
Simpson, Oramel H., 107
Simpson, Robert L., 60, 102
Sims, John, 77, 81, 106
Singer, Isadore M., 73
Sirera, Viola, 99
Sitter, Charles R., 35, 36
Slatten, William, Sr., 35, 63
Sloo, Thomas, 32
Slovenko, Ralph, 80
Smallpage, John, 58
Smallpage, Mary Stewart, 106
Smith, "Home Run", 111
Smith, Arthur, 88
Smith, B. Frank, 88
Smith, Bertie D., 64
Smith, David, 123
Smith, E. Lucille, 73
Smith, Edwin Bathurst, 10, 13
Smith, Gayle Aiken, 81
Smith, Howard, 32
Smith, Howard J., 95
Smith, Howard K., 60, 62, 101
Smith, John B., 90
163
Smith, Jr., Howard K., 70, 79, 101
Smith, Jr., Joe D., 59
Smith, Larry, 110, 125
Smith, Lorien A. P., 77
Smith, Lucile, 103
Smith, Prentice L., 81
Smith, Samuel, 32
Smith, Suzanne, 83
Smith, Thomas V., 70
Smith, Walter, 80
Smith, Wilbur C., 109
Smith, William B., 68
Smither, Charles G., 34, 60
Smither, Harriett, 106
Smither, William, 24, 53
Snell, Jackie, 124
Snell, John L., 51
Snellings, Mrs. George, Jr, 34, 36
Soave, Giorgio, 74
Social Sciences Building, 28, 129, 143
Social Work Building, 129
Sokoloff, Gordon Darrel, 81
Solomon, Susan, 74
Solow, Robert, 73
Songy, Treg, 121
Souchon, Dolly Ann, 106
Souchon, Harry, 81
Soule, Edward E., 105
Soule, George, 68
Soule, Mary Brooks, 106
Soule, Pierre, 32
Southerland, Fred M., 54
Sowell, Jerald, 121
Spann, Jr., Emmanuel F. “Tookie”, 116, 124
Sparks, Robert D., 53
Spence, Walter, 81
Spencer, Adelin Elam, 90
Spencer, Betty McCullough, 104
Spencer, Walker, 34
Spencer, Walter O., 51
Spengler, Joseph J., 72
Spenser, Harrison C., 54
Spitzer, Craig, 122
Sprague, Charles C., 53, 74
Sproul, Robert G., 70
St. Clair, Jack B., 62, 73, 101, 102
Stadium, 92, 141, 145
Stanley Thomas Hall, 130
Starr, Chauncey, 73
Starr, Stephen F., 43
Statue of St. George, 136
Stauffer, Walter R., 34
Steck, Cassie, 83
Steed, Christian A., 88
Steinschriber, Justin, 78
Stephens, McDonald L., 58
Sterling, J.E. Wallace, 60
Stern, Edgar B., 34, 105
Stern, Jr., Edgar B., 34, 36, 74
Stern, Milton R., 74
Stern, Percival, 61, 105, 131
Stern, S. Walter, 34, 86
Stern, Samuel A., 62
Sternberg, Hans J., 64
Stevens, Blaze, 82
Stevens, Caroline, 83
Stevens, Rogers L., 61, 71
Stevenson, Earl P., 60, 71
Stevenson, Malcolm, 80
Steward, H. Leighton, 35, 63
Stewart, David, 124
Stewart, Frank B., 35
Stewart, III, Mrs. John N., 58
Stewart, Jr., Frank B., 58, 59, 102
Stibbs, John H., 54, 55
Stiles, Harry, 95
Stockton, Lisa, 110
Stoke, Harold W., 70
Stokes, David, 115, 124
Stone, Doris Zemurray, 63, 71
Stone, Ferdinand F., 73
Stone, Imogen, 139
Stone, James H., 62
Stone, Jr., Hugh L., 80
Stone, Mrs. Roger T., 61
Stone, Samuel Z., 35, 36
Stone, Warren, 10, 13, 32
Stout, Jr., Arthur W., 62
Strange, Vance M., 60, 87
Stream, Harold, 61, 62
Strong, Pascal N., 34
Stroud, Joe H., 101
Stuart IV, Walter B., 80
Stuart, Rugh M., 68
Student Center, 92, 131, 138
Sturges, Wesley A., 70
Sugar Bowl, 125
Sulianti, Julie S., 104
Sullivan, G. Joseph, 102
Sullivan, Leon H., 74
Sullivan, Louis W., 75
Sullivan, Martha H., 44, 55
Summersgill, H. T., 110, 111
Superdome, 141
Sutter, Cliff, 114
Sutter, Ernest, 111, 114
Sutter, John, 116
Svirdoff, Mitchell, 74
Svoboda, Bill, 114, 121
Svoboda, Gwen, 83
Swain, Jr., George T., 77
Swan, III, George A., 98
Sweeney, George, 6
Sweeney, Joseph M., 21, 52
Sweet, Fred, 110
Sweetland, E. R., 110
Sweetland, R. T., 110
Sylvester, Harold, 116
Sylvester, Jr., Harold, 63, 64
T
Talbot, Marion, 68
Tanner, William B., 62
Taylor, Hannis, 67
Taylor, Ian L., 53
Taylor, Jr., C. D., 98
Taylor, Vernon F., 60
Teeuws, Leonard, 121
Teevens, Buddy, 110
Telephone Exchange Building, 141
ten Hoor, Marten, 55
TenElshof, Annette, 55
Terkuhle II, Albert, 95
164
Terrebonne, Theard “Terry”, 116
Terriberry, George H., 81, 86, 105
Terry, Luther L., 71, 103
Theatre and Speech Building, 130, 131
Thensted, Charles F., 80
Theriot, Robert L., 80
Thibaut, James, 121
Thiel, Danny, 111
Thistlethwaite, Jr., John R., 81
Thomas F. Cunningham Memorial Observatory, 130
Thomas, Eric, 121
Thomas, Jr., Wilmer J., 62
Thomas, L.E. “Lou”, 115
Thompson, Charles H., 32
Thompson, Hugh A., 51
Thompson, Hugh Miller, 34
Thompson, John E. S., 72
Thompson, John Herndon, 16, 50
Thompson, Paul, 116, 122
Thompson, Robert E., 81
Thompson, Robert W., 77
Thurman, William G., 53
Tilton Memorial Library Building, 24, 129
Tilton, F.W., 32, 38, 129
Tilton, Mrs. Caroline, 129
Tilton, Ron, 121
Timken, Harold, 87
Timken, Jr., Harold A., 61, 62, 102
Timperlake, Robert M., 77
Tkac, Joe, 124
Tobin, J., 110
Tolmas, Hyman C., 98
Toole, John Kennedy, 105
Torkanowsky, Werner, 72
Towle, Charlotte H. N., 71
Town, A. Hays, 101
Trachtman, Louis, 104
Travieso, Charlotte, 64, 87, 88
Traweek, Cornelius, 90
Treen, David C., 101, 107
Treuting, Edna G., 63, 87, 98
Trimble, Charley O., 44
Trosclair, Kathy, 112
Truax, Dalton, 114, 121
Truesdell, III, Clifford Ambrose, 72
Truly, Lisa, 83
Trump, Ross M., 55
Tucker, Jr., John Hellums, 71
Tucker, Jr., Robert, 63
Tuero, Jack, 114
Tulane Alumni Fund, 92
Tulane Hall, 17, 27, 128
Tulane Law Review, 21
Tulane Medical Center and Hospital, 133
Tulane stadium, 141
Tulane, Paul, 14, 17, 19, 21, 22, 25, 27, 28, 29, 128, 143
Tulanian, 11, 19
Tulare Alumni Association, 92
Tullis, Eli W., 58, 59
Tullis, Garner H., 105
Turchin Stadium, 145
Turchin, Robert L., 35, 36, 62, 102, 116
Turck, Charles J., 69
Turlington, Bowman, 83
Turner, Jr., Clyde T., 81
Turner, Laurence Claud, 102
Turner, M. Kelly Lanning, 80
Turner, William Homer, 60
Turner, William Kay, 16, 50
Turpie, Jr., George, 111
U
University Center, 139, 141, 143
Upton, E.C. “Tick”, 116
Upton, Jr., Eldon Claggett, 86, 93, 95, 102, 113
Upton, Miller, 113
Upton, Robinson Miller, 72, 77
Usdin, Steven W., 59
V
Van Buskirk, William C., 51
Van Horn, Belle Randolph, 90
Van Scoy, Pat, 83
Vanderbilt, Arthur T., 69
Vandiver, F. E., 103
Vannoy, Walter M., 58
Vanselow, Neal A., 56
Varakamin, Somsak, 104
Vaughan, Thomas W., 69
Veals, Elton, 121
Vegan, Bill, 111
Vennard, Edwin, 61
Verkuil, Paul R., 21, 52, 64
Verlander, Mrs. Richard G., 99
Veta, D. Jean, 80
Veterans Housing, 142
Vickers, R. S., 81
Vignaud, Henri, 68
Villere, Ernest C., 106
Villere, Sidonie Swoop, 106
Vincent, Jr., Mordelo L., 60
Vinzant, Dennis, 111
Viviletti, Benjamin R., 73
Vix, Henry L. E., 98
Voelker, David R., 59
Vogt, John F., 98
Vokes, Emily H., 53
von Phul, William, 68
Vorhoff, Gilbert, 61, 62, 87, 93, 103
Vorhoff, Mrs. Gilbert, 100
Vorhoff, Robbert W., 35, 87
W
Wachenheim, Al, 95
Wadlington, Walter J., 80, 103
Waechter, Arthur J., 35, 36, 60, 87, 96
Wafer, Ralph, 77, 81
Wagar III, Harvey D., 80
Waggoner, Hal, 121
Wagman, Scott K., 77
Wagner, Daniel, 116, 124
Wagner, Edna Pearson, 104
Wakeman, Lewis Farrington, 77, 88
Walker, J. Hubert, 96
Walker, J.W., 32
Walker, Julia, 45
Walker, Mike, 121
Wall, Hindman, 109
Wallace, William H., 81
165
Walmsle, T. Semmes, 116
Walmsley, Hughes Philip, 106
Walmsley, Robert M., 33, 34
Walne, George T., 86
Walsh, John Joseph, 43, 53, 56
Walsh, Leo M., 63
Walshe, George C., 81
Walshe, Woollen, 60, 87, 93, 96
Walther, Jr., Ewell P., 80
Walther, Michael, 81
Waltzer, Elmo C., 100, 104
Ward, J. Walter, 77
Ward, Milton H., 35, 63
Ward, Robert J., 32
Warner, "Pop", 125
Warner, Beverly, 34, 67
Warner, Isabel, 90
Warren House, 92, 138
Warren, Andrew J., 70
Warren, Dave, 73
Warren, Shields, 70
Warriner, Mrs. Douglas M., 99
Washington, John, 121
Washington, Lionel, 116, 121
Waters, Katherine, 106
Watson, Jeanie, 54
Watters, Douglas, 115
Watts, Robert, 112
Weatherhead, Mrs. Cecilia J., 64
Webb, Charles E., 77
Wedderburn, Alexander J., 53
Weed, John C., 98
Weed, Lewis H., 69
Weil, Herb, 81
Weimers, Eric, 87
Weinberg, Alvin M., 73
Weiner, Ben, 63, 115
Weiner, Jacques L., 81
Weinmann, John G., 33, 35, 36, 58, 77, 101, 106, 133, 144
Weinmann, Robert T., 59
Weinmann, Virginia E., 62, 64
Weintraub, Alan S., 77
Weir, Andrew L., 96
Weisman, Frederick R., 63
Welch, David, 124
Wells, Clifford, 110, 114
Wells, Herman B., 60
Wells, Jr., Thomas C., 61
Wells, William Willeroy, 79
Welty, Eudora, 72
Wenzel, Clinton, 121
Wenzel, Jeff, 121
Wenzel, Ralph, 113, 115, 121
Werlein, Philip P., 79
Werth, Andrew D., 77
West, Jr., William A., 81
West, Rose B., 106
West, William, 95
Westerfield, George S., 81
Westfeldt, George, 105, 116
Westfeldt, Gustaf R., 34
Weston, Jerry L., 104
Wetrich, James G., 104
Wetzel, Albert J., 43, 88
Wetzel, Marty, 121
Wharton, Jr., Mrs. Clifton R., 61
Wheeler, Arthur Seaver, 90
Whelton, Paul K., 46, 53, 54, 56, 59
Whipple, George H., 69
White, Edward D., 34, 67
White, Emily, 83
White, H. Hunter, 58
White, Jude Ann, 77
White, Kevin, 109
White, Lloyd E., 81
White, M. J., 111
White, Millard D., 115
White, William M., 68
Whitehead, Violet, 83
Whiteside, Richard, 46, 50
Whitley, Harry T., 62, 102
Whitman, Bob, 111
Whitney, Charles A., 34
Whitney, Charles M., 34
Whitney, George Q., 34
Whittemore, Robert C., 55
Wickenden, William E., 69
Wicker, Jr., Thomas C., 61, 80, 87, 93
Wicker, Tom, 96
Wiegel, Harry F., 100
Wiener, Jr., Jacques L., 80
Wiggins, Jean, 83
Wildman, Simeon, 78
Wiley, Bell Irvin, 71
Wilkins, Roger W., 75
Williams, Charles S., 34
Williams, Cicely D., 72
Williams, Frank, 62
Williams, George E., 34
Williams, John, 87
Williams, Langbourne M., 60
Williams, Laura, 83
Williamson, Ernest L., 63
Williamson, Jr., Mrs. W. R., 99
Williamson, Samuel R., 117
Willinger, Beth A., 53
Willow Street Dormitory, 145
Wills, Frank, 115, 124
Willson, Margaret P., 36, 61, 62, 87
Willson, Mrs. Robert W., 99
Wilson, Logan, 35
Wilson Athletic Center, 145
Wilson, Charles, 64, 75, 90, 103
Wilson, Fannie Amelia, 90
Wilson, George A., 34, 36, 80
Wilson, Gordon “Doc”, 117
Wilson, John F., 77
Wilson, Jr., James W., 35, 63, 116
Wilson, Jr., Samuel, 74, 101
Wilson, Linda S., 74
Wilson, Logan, 24, 53, 60, 70
Wilson, Margaret P., 35
Wilson, Marjorie, 91
Wilson, William Julius, 74
Wilson, William Lyne, 67
Wilson, Woodrow, 67
Wiltz, Louis A., 32
Wing, Cliff W., 50
Winter, Chris P., 115
Wintterle, Rachel, 78
Wisdom, Adelaide, 106
Wisdom, John M., 20, 21, 72, 101
Wiseman, Riva, 104
Wisner, Elizabeth, 54, 71, 103
166
Wittig, Susan, 53
Wogan, Lawrence A., 49
Woldenberg Art Center, 135, 136, 145
Wolf, Mrs. Leon, 58
Wolf, Raymond, 110
Wolfe, Corinne Howell, 104
Womack, Karen, 110
Wood, A. Baldwin, 19, 69, 143
Wood, Jr., Wallace, 51
Woodruff, Clifford E., 44
Woods, Jennifer, 83
Woodward Way, 136
Woodward, C. Vann, 74
Woodward, Ellsworth, 23, 68, 136
Woody, Wayne S., 55
Wormser, Leonard V., 59
Wright, Bob F., 63
Wright, Jessie Emily, 90
Wright, Louis B., 60, 70
Wulff, Jr., Fred A., 81
Wyatt, Thomas J., 80
Wyckoff, Garrett P., 54
Wyllie, Carol G., 63
Y
Yagi, Yasuhiro, 64
Yancey, Benjamin W., 73, 103
Yard, Rix Nelson, 109
Yawn, Jr., J. Luckett, 62
Yeater, Julia, 110
Yellen, Gay Claire, 83
Yonge, Henry M., 77
Young, John R., 59
Young, David H., 77
Young, Jr., William Waller, 106
Young, M. R., 90
Young, Mrs. Robert, 96
Young, Robert E., 35, 36, 61, 87, 93, 96
Young, Robert H., 61, 62
Z
Zeek, Jr., Charles F., 79
Zelenka, Emmett, 121
Zelenka, John, 124
Zemurray Hall, 138
Zemurray, Doris, 71, 138
Zemurray, Jr., Samuel, 138
Zemurray, Samuel, 34, 138, 142
Zengel, Fred, 80
Zeno, Marc, 113, 116, 121
Zimmerman, Curtis, 124
Zimmerman, Don, 113, 114
Zuker, Fred, 50
Zweig, Ivan, 124