Southern Gothic Style Tradition and learning blend on Tennessee's Sewanee mountaintop The school's official name is the Univer- sity of the South, but it's known among friends as Sewanee. The nickname has nothing to do with the Swanee River cele- brated by Stephen Foster and Al Jolson; rather, it represents the 2,000-foot moun- tain in rural Tennessee on which the college stands and the community that grew around it. The university literally owns the town as well as a splendid 10,000- acre domain of forest, lakes, bluffs, water- falls and trails. In spring dogwoods ruffle the campus in pink and white; in the fall poplars, maples and black-gum trees blaze yellow, orange and deep red. With its Gothic spires often wreathed in fog, Sewanee looks more like Oxford than any university in or of the South. The re- semblance is intentional. Founded by the Episcopal Church in 1857, then destroyed during the Civil War, the school was re- opened after Tennessee Bishop Charles Quintard raised funds in England, and Ox- ford and Cambridge donated 1,800 books. Sewanee has maintained a prideful Eng- lish heritage ever since. Here is preserved the Oxonian tradition of the Order of Gownsmen: 20 percent of the nearly 1,100 undergraduates earn grades high enough for membership, which entitles them to wear academic gowns to class, take unlim- ited class cuts and enjoy first priority in housing and registration. Sewanee also preserves the "Matron System," in which an older woman presides over each dorm, and a haphazardly enforced dress code that requires women to wear skirts and men to wear ties to class. No nerds: The most notable of Sewanee's traditions are academic. It strictly enforces an honor code. Its graduate school of theol- ogy has trained 11 percent of the Episcopal clergy in the nation. The undergraduate college of liberal arts has produced 21 Rhodes scholars and such alumni as White House chief of staff Howard Baker. "There's a lot of support for -doing your work here," says senior English major Jen- ifer Bobo, editor of the student newspaper. "You're not a nerd if you do well." The most popular major at Sewanee is English, not surprising for the home of the 95-year-old Sewanee Review, the nation's oldest liter- ary quarterly. Circulated in 65 countries, er""UT" b""'"LI"^" """"DV Prideful English heritage: All Saints Chape beckons beyond the classroom, outing clui 16 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUSO OCTOBER 1987