VOLUME 33
NUMBER 1
Medical College of Virginia
Alumni Association of
Virginia Commonwealth University
I
Board of Trustees Election Issue
Medical College of Virginia Alumni Association
of Virginia Commonwealth University
OFFICERS
Dr. George J. Oliver, Jr. (M.D. '47), president
1308 Mount Vernon Drive
Williamsburg, VA 23185
Dr. Alton E. Hodges, Jr. (D.D.S. '56), president-elect
203 Doverland Road
Richmond, VA 23229
Dr. Charles O. Watlington (M.D. '58, Ph.D. physiology '68), immediate past president
17Q7 Park Avenue
Richmond, VA 23220
Dr. Harry I. Johnson, Jr. (M.D. '53), vice-president
1315 Second Street, Southwest
Roanoke, VA 24016
Dr. J. Wilson Ames, Jr. (D.D.S. '62), vice-president
Box 147
Smithfield, VA 23430
Mr. L. Preston Hale (B.S. pharmacy '72), vice-president
Route 3, Box 12
Gordonsville, VA 22942
Mrs. Dorothy S. Crowder (B.S. nursing '74, M.S. nursing '77), vice-president
1729 Stuart Avenue
Petersburg, VA 23803
Mr. John A. Booth (M.S. physical therapy '80), vice-president
3907 McTyres Cove Road
Midlothian, VA 23113
Dr. Hermes A. Kontos (Ph.D. graduate studies '67), vice-president
740 Wadsworth Drive
Richmond, VA 23235
Mrs. Marianne R. Rollings (B.S. pharmacy '63), secretary
306 North Mulberry, Apartment 3
Richmond, VA 23220
Mrs. Frances W. Kay (B.S. nursing '59), treasurer
504 Kilmarnock Drive
Richmond, VA 23229
Dr. Edward James Wiley, Jr. (M.D. '56), assistant treasurer
8803 Bellefonte Road
Richmond, VA 23229
TRUSTEES
Term Expires December 31, 1984
Dr. David W. Branch (M.D. '52)
1232 Persinger Road, Southwest
Roanoke, VA 24015
Mr. John F. Harlan, Jr. (M.H.A. '52)
University of Virginia Hospital
Charlottesville, VA 22904
Dr. M. G. Martin (M.D. '53)
Box 576
Hillsville, VA 24343
Mrs. Patricia B. Moore
(B.S. occupational therapy '77)
2251 Winterfield Road
Midlothian, VA 23113
Dr. George J. Oliver, Jr. (M.D. '47)
1308 Mount Vernon Drive
Williamsburg, VA 23185
Dr. Alton R. Sharpe, Jr. (M.D. '54)
201 Wood Road
Richmond, VA 23229
Mrs. June Hudnall Turnage
(B.S. nursing '59, M.S. nursing '71)
Route 2, Box 395
Mechanicsville, VA 23111
Term Expires December 31, 1985
Dr. William W. Crittenden, Jr. (D.D.S. '56)
Box 490
Gloucester, VA 23061
Dr. Ruth Torvik Friedman (B.S. medical
technology '59, Ph.D. physiology '68)
204 Kent Avenue
Fredericksburg, VA 22401
Dr. Edith L. Hardie (Ph.D. physiology '69)
300 West Franklin Street
Richmond, VA 23220
Miss Edna Morgan (B.S. nursing '54)
3520 Hanover Avenue, Apartment 104
Richmond, VA 23221
Dr. Robert T. Mosby, Jr. (M.D. '61)
1449 North Alanton Drive
Virginia Beach, VA 23454
Dr. Harold 1. Nemuth (M.D. '39)
2012 Monument Avenue
Richmond, VA 23220
Mrs. Mary Beth P. Pappas
(A.S. radiologic technology '77)
2321 Kenmore Road
Richmond, VA 23228
liss Harriette A. Patteson (B.S. nursing '32)
27 Malvern Avenue, Apartment 3
Richmond, VA 23221
Dr. Edward H. Radcliffe (D.D.S. '58)
6720 Patterson Avenue, Suite A
Richmond, VA 23226
Mrs. Bertha C. Rolfe (B.S. pharmacy '47)
4000 Monument Avenue
Richmond, VA 23230
Mr. Miles C. Saunders, Jr. (B.S. pharmacy '67)
Box 45
Deltaville, VA 23043
Mrs. Mae Belle L. Smyth (B.S. nursing '51)
P.O. Box 906
Kenbridge, VA 23944
Dr. Alfred J. Szumski
(B.S. physical therapy '51, M.A. '56, Ph.D. physiology '64)
Box 144, MCV Station
Richmond, VA 23298
Dr. Philip A. Wilson (D.D.S. '58)
Doctor's Building
Danville, VA 24541
Term Expires December 31, 1986
Mrs. Jean Cerny Dise (B.S. occupational therapy
1406 Green Pasture Road
Sandston, VA 23150
Mrs. Kendall W. Kellum (B.S. pharmacy '75)
2509 Beafont Avenue
Virginia Beach, VA 23455
Dr. Barry V. Kirkpatrick (M.D. '66)
Box 276, MCV Station
Richmond, VA 23298
Dr. John B. Lapetina (D.D.S. '56)
9601 Granby Street
Norfolk, VA 23503
Mr. Nick G. Nicholas (B.S. pharmacy '52)
1821 Westover Avenue
Petersburg, VA 23805
73) Mrs. Dorothy M. Shepard (B.S. nursing '57)
9117 Reddington Drive
Richmond, VA 23235
Mrs. S. Jean Moye Shepard (B.S. nursing '58)
46 Barclay Road
Newport News, VA 23606
Dr. E. Randolph Trice (M.D. '47)
4204 Kingcrest Parkway
Richmond, VA 23221
Dr. David L. Via (D.D.S. '59)
5218 Brookhill Shopping Center
Richmond, VA 23227
CHAPTER OFFICERS
Delaware Valley Chapter
President-Mrs. Emily H. Baxter (B.S. nursing '52)
White Pine Lane, Moylan, Rose Valley, PA 19065
Secretary treasurer-Miss Cindy Elizabeth Andrew
(B.S. medical technology '75)
Kanawha Valley Chapter
President-Dr. C. Carl Tully (M.D. '47)
4530 Springhill Avenue, Charleston, WV 25309
V/ce-presidenf-Dr. Jerrill D. Cavendar (M.D. '52)
Secretary-Treasurer-Dr. James L. Mangus (M.D. '59)
New York Chapter
President-Dr. Edwin C. Weiss (M.D. '69)
75 Arleigh Road, Great Neck, NY 11020
North Carolina Dental Chapter
President-Dr. James H. Edwards (D.D.S. '46)
3137 Essex Circle
Raleigh, NC 27603
North Carolina Medical Chapter
President-Dr. Wiley H. Cozart (M.D. '49)
302 Pine Street
Fuquay-Varina, NC 27526
Northern Virginia, Washington, and Southern Maryland Chapter
President-Dr. Wesley C. Bernhart (M.D. '53)
11217 Bellmont Drive, Fairfax, VA 22030
Vice-president-Dr. Robert E. Ware (M.D. '53)
Peninsula Chapter
President-Dr. Oscar W. Ward, Jr. (M.D. '42)
15 South Mallory, Phoebus, VA 23663
President-elect-Dr. William H. Traynham, Jr. (D.D.S. '38)
Puerto Rico Chapter
President-Dr. Hilda Garcia De la Noceda (M.D. '49)
108 Betances Street, Hato Rey, Puerto, Rico
Richmond Chapter
PresidentDr. Diane R. Goodloe (D.D.S. '75)
26 Crickett Court, Richmond, VA 23229
Vice-president-Mrs. Marianne R. Rollings (B.S. pharmacy '63)
306 North Mulberry, Apartment 3, Richmond, VA 23220
Secretary-treasurer-Mrs. Ann D. Broaddus (B.S. nursing '59)
4325 Shirley Road, Richmond, VA 23225
Roanoke Valley Chapter
Chairman, Medicine-Dr. Harry R. Ivey, Jr. (M.D. '74)
4124 Falling Creek Drive, Vinton, VA 24179
Chairman, Dentistry-Dr. J. Richard Svitzer (D.D.S. '73)
414 South Polland Street, Vinton, VA 24179
Chairman, Pharmacy-Mr. Benjamin W. Powell (B.S. pharmacy '51)
329 Union Street, Salem, VA 24153
Chairman, Nursing-Mrs. Patricia Sharpe Eby (B.S. nursing '69)
3504 Old Town Road, S.W., Roanoke, VA 24018
Tidewater Chapter
President-Mrs. Ann K. Taylor (B.S. nursing '64)
1657 Baypoint Drive, Virginia Beach, VA 23454
Valley Chapter
President-Mr. Gary H. Silverstein (M.H.A. '81)
235 Cantrell Avenue, Harrisonburg, VA 22801
President-elect-Mr. Ward G. Layman (B.S. pharmacy '70)
270 High Street, Dayton, VA 22821
West Virginia Chapter
President-Dr. Robert D. Hess (M.D. '58)
204 West Philadelphia Avenue
Bridgeport, WV 26330
Life Trustee
Mr. R. Reginald Rooke (B.S. pharmacy '21)
5100 Monument Avenue
Richmond, VA 23230
The Scarab is the official publication of the Medical
College of Virginia Alumni Association of Virginia
Commonwealth University and is published in
February, May, August, and November.
В© 1984 Medical College of Virginia Alumni Associa-
tion of Virginia Commonwealth University, 1105
East Clay Street, Richmond, VA 23219
(804) 786-0434
W J SES Wi \
FEBRUARY 1984
VOLUME 33
NUMBER 1
Medical College of Virginia
Alumni Association of
Virginia Commonwealth University
2 Capsules
5 MCV Alumni Association of VCU 1983 Contributors
11 Candidates for the Board of Trustees
16 Ballot
17 1984 Reunion Weekend Reservations
19 Schedule for Reunion '84
20 'Round the Circuit
22 Newsmakers
24 Alumni Update
30 Lest We Forget
Executive editor: Mrs. Frances W. Kay
Editor: Cynthia McMullen
Manager, VCU publications: Ed Kanis
Cover illustration: Jay Johnson
Editorial committee:
Mrs. Frances W. Kay, chairman
Mrs. Marianne Rollings
Dr. Charles O. Watlington
MCV Alumni Association of VCU staff:
Mrs. Franklin B. Stone, executive director
Ann M. Grubbs
Lynn Merrick
VCU PUBLICATIONS 83-84
Capsules
Nursing
leadership
Dr. Barbara Mark, assistant
professor and director of the
graduate program in nursing
administration, will implement
the university's Executive Nurse
Leadership Program in May. The
program, established by a grant
from the Commonwealth Fund, is
designed to enhance strategic
management capabilities of nurse
executives with senior manage-
ment potential. The 1984 pro-
gram, which will run May 21-
August 10, provides a variety of
seminars, workshops, field trips,
practicum experiences, and small
group discussions along with
academic work.
Mark will coordinate the
program with MCV Hospitals
through Myles Lash, executive
director, and Patricia Cushnie,
director of nursing; with the
School of Business through Dr. D.
Robley Wood, associate professor
of management; and with the
Department of Health Adminis-
tration through Jerry Norville,
director, graduate program in
health administration.
VCU is one of three universities
selected in a nationwide competi-
tion to implement the Executive
Nurse Leadership Program.
MCV Foundation
grant announced
An endowment of $500,000 has
been made to the MCV Founda-
tion by the Ethyl Corporation in
Richmond. Floyd D. Gottwald,
Jr., chairman of Ethyl Corpora-
tion, presented a check to Dr.
Edmund F. Ackell, VCU's presi-
dent, during a brief ceremony at
Ethyl's headquarters. The check
represents the first of five pay-
ments in support of the univer-
sity's Massey Cancer Center. Also
present at the ceremony were
Joseph C. Carter, Jr., president of
the MCV Foundation, and S.
Douglas Fleet, immediate past
president of the MCV Founda-
tion.
Ethyl's gift constitutes a perma-
nent endowment fund which will
be held, invested, and managed
by the MCV Foundation with the
annual income benefiting the
Massey Cancer Center.
Oliver leads into
new year
Dr. George J. Oliver, Jr. (M.D/47)
of Williamsburg has assumed the
presidency of the MCV Alumni
Association of VCU for 1984.
Officers and Board of Trustees
of the alumni association expect a
busy year. Discussions between
the officers of the association and
university officials concerning the
alumni facility have progressed to
the point that the planning for an
alumni center will culminate in
1984.
While the board works with
projected plans for a new facility,
the staff will try to repeat the 1983
events at chapter, state, regional,
and national meetings without
exceeding 1984 budget restric-
tions, says executive director
Franklin Stone. All alumni living
in the area of a convention city
will be invited to attend the
functions when they are held in
conjunction with professional
meetings. Those in attendance
can receive updated information
on the school and alumni repre-
sentatives, says Stone, will share
the fact that the MCV Alumni
Association of VCU is well,
active, and proceeding coopera-
tively within the guidelines
outlined in the 1979 agreement
with Virginia Commonwealth
University.
Officers of the association are
working actively with the Office
of University Advancement to
encourage alumni to support the
VCU Annual Fund and thus help
the university to assist with high
level priorities, basic needs, and
program support not funded by
the state. Officers assure alumni
that the university will honor
contributions to the VCU Annual
Fund designated to benefit
schools or departments located on
the MCV Campus.
Alumni are asked to work
together in a spirit of genuine
loyalty to the university and with
interest in promoting the welfare
of the institution as it seeks to
educate, to research, to preserve,
and to restore health.
Reunion weekend on May 11-13
will follow the Dental Homecom-
ing on April 6-8. Many alumni
will return for five-year reunions.
Pooled Income
Fund established
Alumni, according to MCV
Foundation's executive director,
David Bagby, have made the
difference in the organization's
success. The Foundation's pro-
gress, he says, has been substan-
tial because of generous gifts and
bequests received from alumni.
Many alumni may be interested in
helping but defer making gifts
because they need to retain
income-producing assets.
"Our new Pooled Income Fund
could be the answer," says Bagby.
A donor can make an immediate
gift to the Foundation without
giving up current income, and
will continue to receive a good
income on all money or securities
transferred to the Pooled Income
Fund. Substantial tax benefits are
also provided to encourage gifts
to the fund.
Basically, the Pooled Income
Fund is a trust maintained and
controlled by the MCV Founda-
tion. It has been approved by the
Internal Revenue Service and the
Virginia State Corporation Com-
mission. Donors contribute assets
irrevocably to the fund. Each
contributor retains income inter-
est for his or her life or for the life
of a beneficiary. The gift is
commingled and invested with
similar gifts made by other
donors, and the commingled
funds are invested by Capitoline
Investment Services with United
Virginia Bank serving as the
trustee. .
All income is divided among
the participants. Essentially, in
exchange for a gift, units of the
fund are allocated. Those units
then determine how much of the
fund's net income the donor will
receive each year. It functions
much like an income-oriented
mutual fund. In addition, the full
present value of the remainder
interest in the Pooled Income
Fund is immediately deductible
for income tax purposes. The
amount of remainder interest
depends upon the value of the
asset transferred to the fund and
the donor's age.
For additional information call
or write David Bagby, Executive
Director, MCV Foundation, Box
234, Richmond, VA 23298-0001,
(804) 786-0734.
Celebrating
growth
Over 1,000 Richmond employees
of A. H. Robins Company took
time from work November 1 to
express appreciation to E.
Claiborne Robins, chairman of the
company's Board of Directors, for
his leadership over the past 50
years.
Robins, who received a B.S. in
pharmacy from MCV in 1933,
joined the company later that
year. At that time the company
had only three employees and
annual sales of just $4,800. By
blending his pharmaceutical
training with the marketing skills
he developed during his early
years with the company, he
guided A. H. Robins step by step
to its present position as a diversi-
fied multi-national corporation
with more than 5,600 employees
and sales that will exceed $500
million this year. During the
ceremony Robins was given a
collection of 14 gold coins from
countries in which A. H. Robins
facilities are located. Several long-
service employees participated in
the presentation.
Cancer
conference
Gynecologic oncology is the
subject of the 18th annual Student
Cancer Conference presented by
the Massey Cancer Center and
made possible by a grant from the
American Cancer Society, Virginia
Division, Inc.
Topics and speakers include:
"Herpes Simplex Virus II in
Cervical Cancer, An Update" by
Dr. Laure Aurelian, associate
professor, Department of Com-
parative Medicine, School of
Medicine, Johns Hopkins Univer-
sity; "Papilloma Virus and Cervi-
cal Neoplasia: New Concepts" by
Dr. Christopher P. Crumm,
assistant professor of pathology
and co-director, OB-GYN pathol-
ogy and cytology, Columbia
University College of Physicians
and Surgeons; and "Treatment
Options in Cervical Intraepithelial
Neoplasia" by Dr. Daniel L.
Clark-Pearson, assistant professor
of gynecologic oncology, Duke
University Medical Center.
Dr. Dean R. Goplerud, univer-
sity professor of gynecologic
oncology, will serve as moderator
for the program.
New direction
John Schaeffer has been ap-
pointed director of support
services at the MCV Hospitals.
Schaeffer has been associated
with MCV Hospitals since June,
when he began an internship to
complete requirements for his
master's degree in health care
administration.
Schaeffer holds a bachelor's
degree in biology from Dartmouth
College in New Hampshire and
two graduate degrees from Tulane
University in New Orleans. The
second is a master's degree in
business administration.
As director of support services,
Schaeffer will oversee various
hospital departments including
dietary, housekeeping, transpor-
tation, and materials manage-
ment, which includes general
stores, linen, and central supply.
Acting medical
dean
Dr. Leo J. Dunn, chairman of the
Department of Obstetrics and
Gynecology since 1967, has been
appointed acting dean of the
School of Medicine.
Dunn fills the vacancy created
by Dr. Jesse L. Steinf eld's selec-
tion as president of the Medical
College of Georgia. Dunn will
remain as chairman of the Depart-
ment of Obstetrics and Gynecol-
ogy and will continue his clinical
practice at MCV Hospitals.
As president of the American
Board of Obstetrics and Gynecol-
ogy, Dunn is the ninth person to
be appointed to that position
during the organization's 52-year
history. A member of the Ameri-
can Association of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists, Dunn also
serves as the president of the
AAOG Foundation and is active
on several AAOG committees.
Health care and
the elderly
Two major grants totaling
$668,000 have been awarded the
university's Department of Health
Administration for the evaluation
of experiments being conducted
on the role of competition in
financing Medicare and Medicaid
services.
The experiments involve
looking for ways to foster compe-
tition for Medicaid and Medicare
patients among health care
providers, including health plans
like health maintenance organiza-
tions.
Dr. Louis Rossiter, associate
professor of health administra-
tion, is a co-investigator of the
projects. The grants are part of $6
million awarded by the federal
Health Care Financing Adminis-
tration for evaluation of the
experiments.
An alumnus
recognized
For his studies of hepatitis,
rubella, and measles, culminating
in the development of the hepati-
tis B vaccine, Saul Krugman
(M.D. '39) received a 1983 Albert
Lasker Public Service Award.
Krugman, professor of pediat-
rics at New York University,
received the award presented by
the Albert and Mary Lasker
Foundation in November. The
Honorable Lowell P. Weicker, Jr.,
was keynote speaker, and Dr.
Michael E. DeBakey served as
chairman of the awards jury.
In the early 1950s Krugman and
his associates set out to combat
infectious diseases in children. He
discovered in 1960 that children
could be protected against mea-
sles through the use of a live
attenuated virus vaccine and in
1969, he confirmed the effective-
ness of the first vaccine against
rubella. Rubella is now virtually
unknown in this country and
measles is a medical rarity since
95 percent of U.S. children are
vaccinated against it.
Krugman' s most far reaching
achievement, however, involves
viral hepatitis. He was able to
prove that infectious (type A)
hepatitis and the more serious
serum (type B) hepatitis were
caused by two immunologically
distinct viruses. He also discov-
ered that heat-treated serum from
a chronic carrier of hepatitis B
could bring out protective anti-
bodies in persons susceptible to
the disease without actually
causing the disease. His discovery
provided a basis for the develop-
ment of various hepatitis B
vaccines now licensed for use
throughout the world.
Awarding
achievement
Dr. William J. Frable, director of
surgical cytopathology at MCV
Hospitals, has received the
George N. Papanicoloau award
for his achievements in the areas
of pulmonary cytology and needle
aspiration biopsy.
Frable was honored with the
award, named after the physician
who developed the cancer-
detecting Pap smear, at the
American Society of Cytology's
annual meeting in Denver.
Frable has been instrumental in
popularizing the use of needle
aspiration biopsy to diagnose
tumors. The technique allows
pathologists to analyze suspect
growths without the patient
undergoing major surgery or even
local anesthesia in some cases.
MCV Hospitals has performed
800 to 1,000 needle aspiration
biopsies of lymph nodes, thyroid
glands, breasts, and lungs in the
past year.
Dental
scholarship
The Edmond Theodore Glenn
Memorial Scholarship has been
perpetuated by an endowment
gift to the MCV Foundation,
given by Glenn's wife, Lorena
Lawrence Glenn. The scholarship
will be awarded annually to a
junior or senior dental student
who, in the opinion of the faculty,
shows evidence of future leader-
ship and exemplifies the ethical
standards of the dental profes-
sion. The 1984 award will be
$2,000, in honor of the 50th year
of Glenn's graduation from the
School of Dentistry on May 29,
1934.
Glenn practiced in Smithfield,
North Carolina, five years before
returning to his hometown of
Boone, North Carolina where he
was active in church and civic
affairs. The scholarship commem-
orates his love for the university,
38 years of dedication to the
dental profession, and is to help
deserving future dentists.
Men About
Town
"Virginia Hospitality" is the
theme of the 10th annual Men
About Town fashion show spon-
sored by the Medical College of
Virginia Hospitals Auxiliary of
Virginia Commonwealth Univer-
sity.
The show will be held April 3 at
7 pm in the Miller and Rhoads Tea
Room in Richmond. All proceeds
will be used to help renovate
MCV Hospitals' Hospitality
House.
A champagne dinner will be
served during the fashion show
which features Richmond area
men chosen for exemplifying
traditional Virginia hospitality.
For reservations call Mrs. Donald
L. Appich at (804) 741-2666.
Medical College
of Virginia
Alumni Association of
Virginia
Commonwealth
University
1983 CONTRIBUTORS
Persons who became members of the
MCV Alumni Association of VCU
during 1983 are listed below. Those
persons are thanked for their interest,
cooperation, and support of the
association.
1912
Lewis J. Friedman (M)
1913
Glenn B. Updike, Sr. (P)
1916
J. L. Hamner (M)
Alex F. Robertson, Jr. (M)
F. P. Sutherland (M)
1917
Basil B. Jones (M)
1920
Etta D. Felvey (N)
Mazie T. Rogers (N)
1921
Mary Sue Bell (N)
W. E. Clark, Sr. (D)
Delia F. Franklin (N)
R. R. Rooke (P)
1922
Charles M. Caravan' (M)
L. V. Morgan (P)
Florence C. Schwab (N)
1923
Harry Lyons (D)
1924
Linden O. Alexander (D)
James L. Blanton (M)
Robert F. Freeman (D)
1926
Lois F. Arundel (N)
Maude L. Fox (N)
I. D. Harvey (P)
Emily M. Morton (N)
Edward Myers (D)
H. L. Townsend (M)
1927
Seth Gayle, Jr. (M)
J. Warren Hundley (M)
Leo L. Jacobs (M)
Eliot W. Johnson (M)
Charles L. Newland (M)
1928
George W. Easley (M)
W. C. Elliott (M)
Antonio G. Gandia (M)
1929
Elizabeth Caperton (A)
A. C. Chandler (M)
Samuel L. Cooke (M)
William L. Cooke (M)
Verna T. Darlington (N)
A. Ray Dawson (M)
Rachel H. Hughes (N)
Anne F. Mahoney (N)
Minnie P. Oldham (N)
Frances L. Pickard (N)
Virginia M. Porter (N)
H. A. Shaffer (M)
Lillian G. Winston (N)
1930
Hazel W. Bouldin (N)
M. Foscue Brock (M)
Clyde L. Crawford (M)
Helen H. Crossley (N)
Paris B. Ewart (N)
Mary L. Floyd (N)
Lillian M. Gardner (N)
James R. Gudger (M)
W. C. Knott (M)
Leslie E. Morrissett (M)
Matthew M. Ralsten (M)
Frank F. Ramey (M)
H. M. Richardson (M)
Lloyd R. Shaw (M)
James N. Williams (M)
S. Glenn Wilson (M)
1931
Roy M. Beard (P)
Herman E. Becker (P)
John E. Collier (M)
L. B. Copenhaver (M)
James E. Fulghum (M)
R. O. Glenn (M)
Carl W. Lafratta (M)
H. J. Lukeman (M)
E. Cotton Rawls (M)
Sabra S. Russell (N)
Marie J. Showalter (N)
Leon Slavin (D)
1932
May V. Blackburn (N)
Alexander M. Cox (M)
Charles A. Easley, Jr. (M)
R. H. Fowlkes (M)
Maurice Kamp (M)
Robert E. Long (D)
Lillian D. Moseley (N)
Harriette A. Patteson (N)
Walter A. Porter (M)
Beecher L. Smith (M)
Harriet F. Suits (N)
J. Marshall Winkfield (M)
1933
Mary S. Bloxom (N)
Susie M. Brown (N)
Ernest P. Buxton, Jr. (M)
Charles W. Copenhaver (M)
H. D. Fitzpatrick (M)
Allen N. Fore (P)
Wilhelm Haag (P)
Virginia J. Hickman (N)
Charles F. James, Jr. (P)
Mary E. Johnston (M)
Alice McKenzie (N)
Juan Mimoso-Raspaldo (M)
R. B. Nutter (M)
E. W. Perkins III (M)
E. Claiborne Robins (P)
Lucy Washington (N)
George C. White (P)
1934
Heath S. Altsman (N)
Wilber V. Bradshaw, Jr. (M)
Henry A. Brown (M)
Anna M. Copenhaver (N)
C. B. Freeman (P)
John W. Gallagher, Jr. (P)
Wilhelmina B. Johnson (N)
John J. Kohout(D)
Edwin L. Palmer (M)
M. G. Stutz (M)
Dorothy K. Thomson (N)