The
Woman's College
of the University of North Carolina
Alumnae
News
". . . a time for the open mind"
Managers of the University
October, 1938
^-IJfV
Progress Report
The Alumnae Fund
1958
1958
January
597 contributors
$2,911.50
February
357 contributors
$1,785.00
March
204 contributors
$1,024.00
April
134 Contributors
$588.00
May
384 Contributors
$1,970.50 '
June
250 Contributors
$1,134.00
July
62 Contributors
$249.00
August
56 Contributors
$288.50
September
41 Contributors
$193.00
October
November
December
O
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O
sO
O
c
o
O
The
The Alumnae Association
Julia Watson Maulden '33
President
Marjorie Hood '26
First Viec-President
Celeste Ulrich '46
Second Vice-President
Sarah Carter Womble '51
Recording Secretary
Susan Borden '27
Trustee
Ezda Deviney '19
Trustee
Gloria Paschal Gordon '58
Trustee
Martha Moring Lauten '47
Trustee
Carolyn Jones Maness '46
Trustee
Patricia Markas '53
Trustee
Mary Alice Robertson Poor '26
Trustee
Nancy Porter '50
Trustee
Cora Stegall Rice '45
Trustee
Barbara Parrish '48
Executive Secretary
For the first time since its erection,
the statue of Dr. Charles Duncan
Mclver on front campus stands
alone. Its old Mclver Building-back-
ing is gone; the site of the new
Mclver Building-backing is level
now awaiting the first turn of the
construction shovel.
Woman's College
of the University of North Carolina
Alumnae
News
Vol. XL VII, No. 1
October, 1958
Contents
". . . a time for the open mind"
3
Dr. Frank Porter Graham
"Managers" of the University
5
Virginia Terrell hathrop
The Challenge of Education
8
Betty Barrett
Dacron and Dirt
9
Campus Facts, Faces, Figures
10
These Decisions are Yours
11
Chapter-ly Speaking
13
Chapters and their Chairmen
14
"universally known"
15
In Memoriam
19
News Notes
19
Sympathy
32
Calendar of Events
33
The Alumnae News
Barbara Parrish
Editor
Evon Welch Dean
Assistant Editor
Mildred DeBorde Jackson
Circulation Manager
Published four times a year (October, January, April, July) by
the Alumnae Association of the Woman's College of the Univer-
sity of North Carolina, Greensboro. Admitted as second-class
matter at the post office in Greensboro. North Carolina, June
29, 1912. Single copies, 50 cents.
■:- ..,- .
fc
. i*%
In
*--
The Man in the Middle is Dr. Frank Porter Graham. The students with
him art: front, left to right, Sally Wolfe (daughter of Mamie Smith Wolfe
11) of Mount Olive. Neal Morgan of Chapel Hill, Mary Wolfe (daughter
of Mamie Smith Wolfe) of Mount Olive, and Susan Greulach of Chapd'Hill.
Second row: Sarah Eskndge of Hillsboro, Leta Corpening (daughter of Suz-
anne Stroup Corpening '29) of Hendersonville, MadalinV Polhemus of Fram-
ington, New Jersey, and Betty Blanton, Wallace.
Roy Matherly, photographer
Greensboro Daily News
An abstract: The Mclver Lecture
T,
HE crisis for the freedom and survival of pub-
lic education in the southern states, and the crisis
for the freedom and survival of the family of man
on the earth, confront the American people with re-
sponsibilities as heavy and perplexing as any ever car-
ried by any people in human history. This is no
time for inflexibility, defiance, hysteria, or glibness
on either local or global fronts. It is a time for
prayerful soul-searching and the open mind for un-
derstanding, without appeasement of lawlessness and
violence at home or tyranny and aggression abroad,
but with the will for the next difficult and feasible
step forward in equal freedom in America and a
just peace in the world.
In America the calling-out of the state troops
against obedience to the law of the land caused the
calling-out of federal troops in support of the law.
State troops cannot repeal a federal law. Federal
troops cannot open or run the public schools. The
filling of the jails or the use of federal bayonets and
bombs will open no schools but will tend to close
more minds, stiffen more wills, and in some states,
cause more "massive resistance," which resorts to
the closing of the schools so that the law would not
apply to be disobeyed.
rr. . . a time for the open mind. . . "
by Dr. Frank Porter Graham
Dr Graham, presently a United Nations represent-
ative and formerly President of the University of
North Carolina and United States Senator from
North Carolina, delivered this first Mclver Lecture
at the sixty-sixth anniversary of the founding of the
Woman's College on October 6th.
The ultimate alternatives are not now, and
should not be, immediately complete integration in
all states or abolition of the public schools in some
states or civil conflict in any state. In line with the
spirit of the initiative on the part of a governor in
the Deep South, the need is for the joint initiative
and conference of the President, the Governors, the
spokesmen of the Congress, the leaders of both
races, North and South, and representatives of re-
sponsible local, state, and federal agencies. The co-
operative effort to correct some of the misinforma-
tion and remove some of the emotionally sincere
fears which underlie some of the demand for closing
the public schools is not to surrender cither to
demogogic nullification or to the defeatist's accep-
tance of the closing of the public schools. The pro-
posals coming out of such a conference could not
be misused for delay as a way of evasion or a tactic
of nullification, but should develop a consensus of
OCTOBER, 1958
good faith and wisdom in the stages of time and
place, step by step, for the progressively sincere
obedience to the law of the land in further fulfill-
ment of the American dream deep in the spiritual
heritage and democratic hopes of the people in all
the states.
In North Carolina, if confronted with the al-
ternatives of no integration or no education or pri-
vate privileged education of the few or public equal
education of all, the people of the states of Murphy,
Wiley, Aycock, Alderman, Mclver, Moses, Noble,
Joyner, Brooks, the Foust brothers, and their peers
and living successors, will vote for the children
whose only schools are the schools of the people.
The land of liberty and the pilgrim's hope, the
haven of the dissenters and disinherited, and the
home of a great faith in the time of its infant weak-
ness, must not become the home of a mighty fear
and a stronghold of a faithless intolerance in the
days of its vast power. The people of America must
make clear to themselves and to the world that their
historic heritage and Bill of Rights are not only the
past source but are also the living source of Ameri-
ca's faith in herself, the world's faith in America,
and America's influence and moral power among the
nations of the world.
T.
HE General Assembly of the United Nations,
as the world forum of nations, has been the moral
force which has pulled the nations back from the
brink of global catastrophe. More than once the
United Nations has given the nations time to meet
the imperative need for working out co-operative
programs for the effective control of atomic power,
progressive and effective disarmament, economic de-
velopment, and an international police force.
With the necessary decentralization of authority
for instant decision against a surprise attack, a sub-
ordinate commander, as has been emphasized by
medical experts, might break under the strain of re-
sponsibility and anxiety and then trigger the suicide
of the human race. The time bombs with their burn-
ing fuses of colonialism, racialism, militarism, and
despotism, can blow the world to pieces. The alter-
native to international annihilation is more effective
international co-operation within a more adequate
United Nations.
The time is short. The forethought is little. The
nations, over the decades and centuries, were able to
muddle through and make belated adjustments to
the great commercial revolution and later to the
great industrial revolution, and advance to the
higher ground of enlightenment and opportunity-. To
delay and muddle through the atomic revolution is
not possible without the hazards of swift and global
tragedy of human extinction. The electromagnetic
nature of the earth and the needle of the mariner's
compass, the latent nature of heat and the power of
the engine, and the atomic nature of the atom, have
made all the nations parts of one commercially, in-
dustrially, and fatefully interdependent world. With
all the need for new advances in science and tech-
nology, science in this imperilled world must be-
come more deeply a part of the humanities in the
educational curriculum and less dangerously a part
of the barbarities of modern society.
The Americas are situated between the Euro-
pean-African and Asian worlds, in which live over
two-thirds of the people of the earth, one-half of
whom are unaligned with either power bloc. There
can now be no isolation from the skies above, the
oceans around, or the continents beyond. In this
strategic and critical geographic and moral position
stand the American people in both peril and hope.
What the people of America do about the colored
people in their midst helps to determine what the
colored people of the world will do about America
and freedom in the world. Respect for the equal
freedom, dignity, and opportunity of all people, and
obedience to the law of the land, are foundations of
our heritage and hope.
Alternative to universal annihilation is interna-
tional co-operation through the United Nations with
increasing emphasis on: (1) The effective control and
humane use of thermonuclear force so as to trans-
form its momentum in the world's drift down the
desperate road toward universal annihilation into the
momentum of the people's yearnings and struggles
up the hopeful road of more effective international
co-operation for the conquest of disease, the im-
provement of the soils, more abundant industrial
production for the democratic liberation, enlighten-
ment, well-being and creative expressions of the
human spirit of the people in all lands. (2) Respon-
sible self determination of the remaining colonial
peoples, East and West. (3) The inauguration of a
boldly enlarged long-range program of technical as-
sistance and economic development through the
United Nations in co-ordination with bilateral and
multilateral programs in all regions and on all fronts
of most urgent human needs.
(4) Responsible, effective, and progressive steps
in disarmament of conventional weapons and the
means of mass destruction so that the old vicious
circle of fear, armaments, war, and annihilation will
be progressively supplanted by a new circle of faith,
economic development, disarmament, and interna-
tional co-operation for peace, education, health, wel-
fare, and the equal freedom, dignity, and opportun-
ity of all people.
(5) An international police force to be organized
and directed by the United Nations, not only to deal
with but to prevent catastrophe, in the interests of
international peace and security. (6) Jurisdiction of
the United Nations over the international problems
of the polar regions and outer space. (7) Increasing
reliance on the moral power of recommendations
made by a two-thirds majority of the General As-
sembly of the United Nations.
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
"Managers" of the University
by Virginia Terrell Lathrop
Who are the Trustees of the University of North
Carolina? And what do they do? In answer to these
questions, Mrs. Lathrop has written this article.
D.
'ESPITE the fact that the Consolidated University
of North Carolina and its Board of Trustees are now
twenty-seven years old, there is still some confusion among
the citizens of the State as to the membership of the
Board, who they are, how they are elected, when they
meet, and what they do.
The Board of Trustees of the Consolidated University
came into being in 1931 by the Act of Consolidation as
passed by the General Assembly. This Act provided that
the then existing Boards of Trustees of the three institu-
tions merged in the consolidation: the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, the North Carolina State Col-
lege of Agriculture and Engineering at Raleigh, and the
North Carolina College for Women at Greensboro, would
be succeeded, on July 1, 1932, by a new Consolidated
Board of Trustees.
By this same Act of Consolidation the North Carolina
College for Women changed its name, for the third time,
and became the Woman's College of the University of
North Carolina.
This new Board of Trustees consists of 100 elected
members, the State Superintendent of Public Instruction
(ex-officio), and the former governors of the State, who, at
the expiration of their term of office, become honorary
members. The incumbent governor of the State serves as
chairman of the Board and as chairman of its Executive
Committee.
The Board is unique in several ways.
It serves as trustee for an institution spread over three
campuses, located over a total of eighty miles in length.
The campus at Chapel Hill is more nearly the center,
with the Woman's College some fifty miles to the west
of it and State College at Raleigh some thirty miles
southeast, affording trustees ample opportunity for stretch-
ing their legs and their homework.
The Board is one of the larger Boards of Trustees of
institutions of higher learning in the country. In a study
of 1900 such institutions it has been found that Boards
of Trustees, Boards of Regents, Boards of Directors, or
Boards of Managers, as they are variously called, range in
size from five to 100 members.
The Board of the Consolidated University, by virtue
of its creation in 1931, is younger than any of its com-
ponent institutions. The University at Chapel Hill was
opened in 1795, and is therefore 136 years older than its
present parent. North Carolina State College of Agricul-
ture and Engineering was opened (as the North Carolina
State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts) in 1889;
and the Woman's College opened (as the North Carolina
State Normal and Industrial School) in 1892. The two
younger children of the Consolidation are respectively 42
and 39 years older than their parent.
The Act of Consolidation specified that of the 100
elected trustees, at least ten should be women. At present
there are thirteen women members, eleven of them alum-
nae of the Woman's College. The other two women
members are Mrs. Oscar Barker, who attended the Uni-
versity at Chapel Hill, and Mrs. Charles W. Stanford,
who attended East Carolina College and the University.
This is 13% for the distaff side of the North Carolina
Board as against a 3.4% national average for university
governing boards.
Many people assume that the membership of 100 rep-
resents the counties of the State. This is not true. During
the present biennium there are 61 counties represented
on the Board. One county, Guilford, has five trustees;
three counties: Wake, Mecklenburg, and Durham, have
four; five counties: New Hanover, Wilson, Cumberland,
Forsyth, and Edgecombe, have three; sixteen counties
have two each. This means that, by the process of elimi-
nation, 36 counties are represented by one trustee each,
and 39 counties have no representation.
Members of the Board of Trustees are elected by the
General Assembly, in joint session of the House of Rep-
resentatives and Senate near the end of each legislative
session, to assume office on April 1 of the year of their
election.
A joint committee of the House and Senate, the Com-
mittee on University Trustees, receives nominations for
the posts vacant at the time. Election is for a term of
eight years, and the terms are staggered so that 25 vacan-
cies occur every two years.
The full Board meets in regular session twice each
year. On the fourth Monday in February the meeting is
held in the halls of the Legislature in Raleigh. On the
OCTOBER. 1958
Alumnae Members of the Board of Trustees
Nol pictured: Stella Williams Anderson
Mebane Holoman Bunjwyn
Grace Taylor Rodcnbough
Gladys Avery Tillett
Elise Rouse Wilson
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
'Managers'
continued
fourth Monday in May it meets alternately on the
campuses of the three units of the University. These
meetings are open to the public and often draw a large
attendance of the press and other interested persons. Spe-
cial sessions may be called by the governor and by the
secretary at the written request of not less than twenty
members.
The Executive Committee has full power to act for
the Board of Trustees except that it shall not have the
power to alter any order, resolution, or vote of a regular
or special meeting of the Board, and it does not have the
power to elect any of the officers mentioned as the power
and duty of the Board. The Committee reviews the
budgets of the three units of the University and approves
or disapproves all appointments to the faculties and staffs
of the institutions which arc proposed by the President
and which are for a term of more than one vear.
The Board operates under the University Code which
was first drawn up at the request of President Frank Por-
ter Graham in 1939. The Code is divided into two parts:
(1) Statutes concerning the University and the powers and
duties of the Board of Trustees, and (2) Resolutions of
the Board of Trustees conferring powers on the Executive
Committee.
The Code gives the Trustees the power to make such
rules and regulations for the management of the Univer-
sity of North Carolina as they may deem necessary and
expedient, not inconsistent with the Constitution and the
laws of the State.
The Trustees have the power of selecting a President
of the University and, on recommendation of the Presi-
dent, a Provost, Finance Officer, Business Officer and
Treasurer, an Assistant to the President, the Chancellors,
the Business Managers, and such other professors, tutors,
and other officers of the University as to them appear
necessary and proper. Likewise, the Board may remove any
of these persons for misbehavior, inability, or the neglect
of duty.
The Trustees have the power to approve or disapprove
the awarding of honorary degrees at the three component
institutions; they may make such rules and regulations and
adopt such ordinances governing the use of streets, drives,
and parking areas of the campuses as are not inconsistent
with the statutes of North Carolina; they have the power
to appoint from time to time one or more fiscal agents,
and to enter into such contracts with them as may be nec-
essary.
Because of the size of the Board much of its work
is done by committees. The most active of these is the
Executive Committee, consisting of twelve members, who
are elected for eight year terms, to take up their duties
on the July 1 following their election. This Committee
meets on the second Monday of every other month in
the office of the governor in Raleigh. At present the
Executive Committee has two women members, both of
them alumnae of the Woman's College: Rosa (Blakeney)
Parker and Virginia (Terrell) Lathrop.
Usually present for the Executive Committee meet-
ings, besides the regular members, are: the President of
the University and his staff; the three Chancellors and
the three Business Managers; the Secretary of the Board
and the Committee, Arch T. Allen of Raleigh; and Miss
Billie Curtis, who has been for many years secretary to
the Board and the Executive Committee.
The Visiting Committee, composed of twelve mem-
bers, visits the campus of each of the component institu-
tions at least once each calendar year to survey and study
the needs and problems of each institution. Their report
is printed and mailed to every member of the Board be-
fore the regular winter meeting.
The other twelve standing committees of the Board
are: the Finance Committee, Building Committee,
Escheats Committee, Committee on Real Property, Com-
mittee on Naming Buildings, Committee on Honorary
Degrees, Committee on the O. Max Gardner Award,
Committee on Memorials, Committee on Health Affairs,
Committee on Home Economics, Committee on Agricul-
ture, and the Advisory Admissions Committee.
Special committees are often functioning, as, for in-
stance, recently completed is the work of committees on
selecting a President of the University and new Chan-
cellors for the University at Chapel Hill and the Wom-
an's College, and on installing all three of these officers.
Many of the committees operate as a single one for
all three units of the University. However, the Building
Committee, the Committee on Naming Buildings, and,
often, the Visiting Committee are divided into sub-com-
mittees assigned to each of the three units.
Membership on committees is well divided among the
100 members of the Board. All of the thirteen women
serve on one or more committees, and alumnae of the
Woman's College are actively carrying out their trustee-
ship: Mrs. Ed M. Anderson (Stella Williams '23), Visiting
Committee and Committee on Home Economics. Mrs.
John G. Burgwyn (Mebane Holoman '35), Visiting Com-
mittee, Building Committee, and Committee on Honor-
ary Degrees. Mrs. J. W. Copeland (Nancy Hall Sawyer
'38), Admissions Advisory Committee, Committee on
Home Economics, and Committee on Naming Buildings.
Mrs. J. B. Kittrell (Elizabeth Hinton 19), Visiting Com-
mittee, Committee on Home Economics, and Commit-
tee on Naming Buildings. Mrs. Albert H. Lathrop (Vir-
ginia Terrell '23), Executive Committee and Building
Committee. Mrs. P. P. McCain (Sadie McBrayer '16),
Committee on Honorary Degrees. Mrs. B. C. Parker (Rosa
Blakeney '16), Executive Committee and Building Com-
mittee. Mrs. L. Richardson Preyer (Emily Harris '39),
Committee on the O. Max Gardner Award. Mrs. Stanley
L. Rodenbough (Grace Taylor Rodenbough '52ME),
Committee on Real Property. Mrs. Charles W. Tillett
(Gladys Avery 'IS), Finance Committee. Mrs. George D.
Wilson (Elise Rouse '43), Committee on Home Eco-
nomics.
OCTOBER, 1958
Twelfth Annual Social Science Forum
The Challenge to American Education Today
by Betty Barrett '58
* £-; -:M, Be
Salisbury
Counts
Larson
THREE authorities on the subject
of education will participate in the
annual Social Science Forum at the
Woman's College on November 13 and 14.
The program, which is twelfth in a series
of annual Harriet Elliott forums, will take as
its topic "The Challenge to American Higher
Education Today." Featured speakers will be
Dr. Arthur Bester, professor of history at the
University of Illinois and author of The Res-
toration of Learning; Dr. George Counts,
professor emeritus of education at Columbia
University and author of The Challenge of
Soviet Education; and Mr. Harrison Salis-
bury. New York Times correspondent and
author of the newly-published book The
Shook-Up Generation.
Dr. Arthur Larson, director of the re-
cently-established World Rule of Law Cen-
ter, will moderate the two-day event.
The Alumnae Invited
Alumnae chapters throughout the State
have received special invitations to attend
the forum. Invitations have also been issued
to more than 450 alumnae who received
their degrees in the social science field within
the last ten years, and to all members of
the Alumnae Association who attended the
College-Alumnae Conference in September.
All alumnae who attend the forum are in-
vited to an informal coffee hour which will
be held in Elliott Hall following the open-
ing session on Thursday evening.
The forums, named for Dean Harriet
Elliott, were originally sponsored jointly by
the College and the Alumnae Association,
the first two events in the series being held
in February and November of 1948. The
original theme, concentration on events in
the field of social science, has carried over
to the present college-sponsored program.
Approximately 95 colleges in North Caro-
lina and ten near-by states have been invited
to send student groups to the forum. Invi-
tations have also been sent to high school
principals and men's and women's service
clubs in the vicinitv of Greensboro.
The Speakers
Dr. Arthur Bester received his education
at Yale University and Oxford University. He
has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellow-
ship, the Newberry Library Fellowship, the
Albert J. Beveridge Memorial Award, and
the John Addison Porter Prize. A former
president of the Council for Basic Educa-
tion, he has held teaching positions at Ox-
ford, Yale, Columbia, Stanford, and the Uni-
versity of Wsiconsin. He now serves as presi-
dent of the Central Mississippi Valley chap-
ter of the American Studies Association, and
in addition to The Restoration of Learning,
he has written Educational Wastelands and
Backwoods Utopia.
Dr. George S. Counts, winner of the
American Library Association Liberty and
Justice Book Award, was educated at Baker
University and the University of Chicago. He
received the ALA Award for his book The
Challenge of Soviet Education. Before his
retirement as professor emeritus from Co-
lumbia, he had taught at the University of
Washington, Yale University, and the Uni-
versity of Chicago, as well as at Columbia.
In the past he has served as associate direc-
tor of the International Institute, and he is
now a member of the National Committee
of the Civil Liberties Union. Among the
books which he has written are Decision-
Making and American Values in School Ad-
ministration and Education and American
Civilization.
Mr. Harrison E. Salisbury, correspondent
for United Press for thirteen years and at
present Moscow correspondent for the New
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
York Times, was graduated from the Uni-
versity of Minnesota. He was the recipient
of the Distinguished Achievement Medal
awarded by the University of Minnesota.
Following his return from a Moscow assign-
ment in 1953, he wrote a series of articles
for the New York Times entitled "Russia
Re-View," on which was based his selection
as Pulitzer Prize winner for international cor-
respondence. He is author of Russia on the
Way, America in Russia, in addition to The
Shook-Up Generation.
Dr. Arthur Larson, who will serve as forum
moderator, received his education at Augus-
tana College, the University of South Da-
kota, and Oxford University. He has served
as professor of law at Cornell University, as
dean of the School of Law at the Univer-
sity of Pittsburgh, as director of the United
States Information Agency, and as special as-
sistant to the President. He is the author of
Towards World Prosperity, Economic Se-
curity of Americans, Know Your Social Se-
curity, and What We Are For.
The Forum Committee
Miss Vera Largent, professor of history, is
serving her second year as faculty chairman
of the Social Science Forum Committee, in
conjunction with student chairman Jacque-
line Long, a senior history major from Rocky
Mount. The Social Science Forum is one of
the few campus-wide events planned and ef-
fected by the co-ordinated efforts of students
and faculty members.
The following student committee members
will moderate the Friday afternoon round-
table discussions: Peggy Duncan, history
major from Fairborn, Ohio; Greta Henrick-
sen, history major from Durham; and Jacque-
line Long, student committee chairman.
The committee is composed of students
and faculty members from six departments.
Others serving on the committe are History
Department: Dr. Lenoir C. Wright and
Louise Gooch of Hallsboro, Betty Barrett of
Charlotte, and Maria Lampranakos of Ashe-
ville.
Sociology Department: Dr. Lyda Gordon
Shivers and Sue Williams of La Grange,
Georgia, Mary Louise Coleman of North
Wilkesboro, Betsy Klein of Swannanoa, Caro-
lyn Steele of Cleveland, and Betsy Stark of
Amelia, Virginia.
Psychology Department: Anne Memory of
Randleman and Barbara Bush of Ruxton,
Maryland. Economics Department: Dr. John
Kennedy and Mrs. Alice Irby, and Catherine
Haynes of Burgaw. Dr. Edna Arundel (geog-
raphy). Dr. Eugenia Hunter (education), and
Mrs. Lucy T. White (residence hall staff) are
also members of the committee.
Dacron and Dirt
THE popularity of the relatively new
Dacron and cotton blends for wash-
wear garments has not come about
without some concern of the consumer.
There is no doubt that these new fabrics
have been successful in combining the com-
fort and attractive appearance of cotton with
the easy maintenance qualities of Dacron.
Consumers, however, have wondered how
satisfactorily the washability of these fabrics
compares with similar all-cotton fabrics.
Do white fabrics tend to become discol-
ored after laundering?
Do these fabrics soil more readily than
cotton?
Can the soil be removed effectively?
What types of detergents are most effec-
tive— soaps or synthetic detergents?
Three graduate students in the School of
Home Economics have completed research
on these subjects as part of their graduate
work in clothing and textiles.
These studies, each part of a larger project
sponsored by the North Carolina Agricul-
tural Experiment Station, compare the effects
of selected commercially prepared soaps and
synthetic detergents upon the whiteness re-
tention and the removal of soil from Dacron
and cotton fabrics and similar all-cotton
fabrics. The six fabrics selected were laun-
dered 50 times according to a standardized
procedure using soft water.
The changes in light reflectance were
measured after the first, second, fifth, 20th,
35th and 50th launderings and the per cent
whiteness retention and the per cent soil re-
moval were calculated from these statements.
Jane Edwards, of Red Oaks, comparing
the effect of four synthetic detergents on
the whiteness retention of the two types of
fabrics, found only a slight difference be-
tween the whiteness retention properties of
the Dacron and cotton and the all-cotton
fabrics. The per cent whiteness retention of
the Dacron and cotton fabrics was slightly
higher at each testing period.
Under the laundering conditions used,
soaps were more effective in maintaining the
whiteness of the Dacron and cotton fabrics
and the synthetic detergents were more effec-
tive on the all-cotton. It seemed to make
little difference whether the soaps or syn-
thetic detergents were of light or heavy duty.
To determine the effectiveness of soil re-
moval from these two types of fabrics, a
standard soiling preparation consisting of car-
bon black. Carbon Tetrachloride and lubri-
cating oil was applied to each of the six
fabrics. The same soaps, synthetic detergents
and laundering procedure used in the study
of whiteness retention were used in launder-
ing soiled fabrics.
Mrs. Lawrence H. Buchanan of 3110 Col-
lier Drive, Greensboro, who used the four
synthetic detergents — two light duty, two
heavy duty — found that the percentage soil
removed from the Dacron and cotton fabric
was greater than that removed from the all
cotton fabrics.
She also found that there was little differ
ence in the effectiveness of three of the syn-
thetic detergents. Only one of the four — a
heavy duty detergent — showed any unusual
soil removal properties.
Alice Dixon Jackson of Godwin, working
with the four soaps — two light duty and two
heavy duty — found that they were much
more effective in removing soil than were the
synthetic detergents. At the conclusion of the
10th laundering the results of this portion
of the study were comparable with the per
cent removal using the synthetic detergents
at the conclusion of the 50th laundering.
There was little difference in the per cent
soil removed from the Dacron and cotton
fabrics and the all-cotton fabrics. She also
found little difference in the effectiveness of
the four soaps.
Research in Textiles
From the results of these studies, it may
be concluded that some of the concern ex-
pressed by consumers in regard to the soiling
behavior of Dacron and cotton fabric and
the properties of loss of whiteness during use
is valid in only one respect. The Dacron and
cotton fabrics did seem to have a slightly
greater affinity for soil than the all-cotton
fabrics.
However, it was not true that the Dacron
and cotton fabrics hold soil more tenaciously
than the all-cotton fabrics. Slight differences
were noted in the soaps and detergents used.
However, they were not necessarily in accord
with the advertising claims made for the
specific products or the types of detergents
used.
Dr. Pauline Keeney, of the home eco-
nomics faculty, is director of research in tex-
tiles.
OCTOBER, 1958
WOMAN'S COLLEGE is seriously
concentrating on programs of study
for the more intellectually advanced student,
Miss Mereb Mossman, dean of the College,
told a meeting of special students during
Freshman Orientation Week. These students
were "special" in that they represented the
top five per cent of their class in college, and
in their high school records fell into the top
quarter of their classes.
Miss Mossman explained to the students
that they would be allowed to take pro-
ficiency examinations on second semester's
work in some of the freshman courses so
that the better prepared students might ad-
vance to more complicated study. A guid-
ance program and a beginning honors work
program for the direction of special interests
and abilities were outlined to these fresh-
man.
MR. DALE F. KELLER, who was grad-
uated from Appalachian State and has a
master's degree from the University of North
Carolina, has been appointed to succeed Mr.
James D. Wordsworth as College personnel-
purchasing officer. Mr. Keller was director of
the audio-visual activities in the Greensboro
schoo's from 1947 to 1953, and he was con-
sultant in the same field for Guilford County
from 1953 to 1957. In addition to further
graduate training at Indiana University, he
has a diploma in electronic engineering from
Columbia University and from the Capital
Radio Engineering Institute in radio and tele-
vision engineering.
YOU should have seen the giant pink sea
shell through which the members of the
Elliott Hall Organization and their escorts
stepped during the figure presentation of the
student union's sixth Birthday Ball. The
shell, a part of the "Reflections: Sand and
Sea" decorations, was taffeta-covered and was
constructed by the students with assistance
from the College Department of Buildings
and Grounds.
Nancy Moore of
Littleton will reign
as beauty queen at
the annual Junior-
Senior Ball in the
spring. Joan Backat
of Rocky Mount,
runner - up in the
election, will be
maid - of - honor.
"Class Beauties"
elected to reign with Nancy and Joan in-
clude: Sally Wolfe of Mount Olive, senior
class; Betty Taylor of Charlotte, junior class;
Alice Conrad of Bethania, sophomore class;
Janctte Biven of Charlotte, freshman class;
and Kay Smith of Rcidsville, commercial
class.
Campus Facts, Faces, Figures
ABRAHAM LINCOLN'S face is as familiar
as the penny or the five-dollar-bill. Every
American has some idea of what he looked
like. And yet it is not easy to visualize Lin-
coln as he actually was. — These are the
feelings of Dr. Richard N. Current, head of
the History Department, whose latest book
THE LINCOLN NOBODY KNOWS was
released on October 15. In the book Dr.
Current "plumbs the mysteries of Lincoln's
life and discloses the facts and fallacies of
the Lincoln legend about his birth, his atti-
tude toward slavery, his marriage, his respon-
sibility for the Civil War, and his religious
views."
PRESBYTERIAN students have a new ac-
tivities center. A house on Forest Street,
right across from Elliott Hall's back door, has
been purchased and is the headquarters for
their organized group, the Westminster Fel-
lowship.
TWO off-hour classes, arranged for the con-
venience of teachers and other people who
are unable to enroll in earlier classes, are be-
ing taught during this fall semester. From
4-6 p.m. each Wednesday, Mrs. Madeleine
B. Street is teaching Advanced Home Man-
agement; and from 7-9 p.m. each Wednes-
day, Dr. I. V. Sperry is teaching a course in
Contemporary Home Life. Both professors
are members of the School of Home Eco-
nomics faculty.
GOLDEN CHAIN recognized the outstand-
ing leadership and service record of a dozen
juniors and seniors when new members
were tapped this fall: Denny Shea of Cam-
den, Maine, Nancy Moore of Littleton, Sally
Haney of Morganton. Margery Davis of Con-
cord, Jackie Long of Rocky Mount, Margaret
Martin of Charlotte, Mary Smith Wolfe of
Mount Olive, Margaret Helms of Charlotte,
Wish McLeod of Lumberton, Mary Louise
Coleman of North Wilkesboro, Betty Bar-
rett of Charlotte, and Peggy Warlick of
Statesville.
BISHOP STEPHEN F. BAYNE, JR., of
the Episcopal Diocese of Olympia, Wash-
ington, delivered the eighth annual series of
Penick Lectures, which are sponsored at the
College by Episcopal students and faculty
members. At the recent Lambeth Conference
in London, Bishop Bayne was the only
American in charge of a major commission;
he was head of the commission which
studied "The Family in Contemporary So-
cietv."
TWO-THIRTY PM is the time, and No-
vember 6 is the date when contractors' bids
on the construction of the new Mclver
Building will be opened. The bids will cover
general construction, electrical, plumbing,
heating, ventilating, and other facilities. Ap-
proximately one million dollars has been as-
signed for the new structure which will be
built on the now-leveled site of the old class-
room building.
SUGGESTING that teachers themselves
should take the leadership in making them-
selves prepared for their profession. Dr. Ken-
neth Howe, dean of the School of Educa-
tion, told the classroom teachers attending
the North Central District of the NCEA
convention in early October in Winston-
Salem, that although today's children have
their eyes on the sky and their hearts in
space, they are being taught by a generation
of earth-bound teachers. These children will
be living in the 21st century. Are we giving
them today what they will need in 2010,
2030, and so on? he asked.
Margaret Helms, a
senior from Char-
lotte and recipient
of the 1955 - 56
Alumnae Scholar-
ship, was crowned
Consolidated Uni-
versity Queen dur-
ing CU Day fes-
tivities in Chapel
Hill on September
20. This is the third consecutive year in
which the Woman's College has claimed the
CU queen, whose selection from among can-
didates nominated by the three units of the
University is based on poise, beauty, person-
ality, and intelligence.
A marked increase in the number of
students taking mathematics courses
has been reported by Dr. Helen Barton, head
of the Mathematics Department. Increases
over mathematics enrollments a year ago
show a rise of 16.3 per cent in beginning
courses and 35.5 per cent in second year
courses.
The comparison with mathematics classes
of five years ago shows even greater increases.
This fall's beginning courses show an increase
of 32.8 per cent over 1953, and the second
year courses show an increase of 68 per cent
over five vears ago.
io-
TIIE ALUMNAE NEWS
THE facts released by the Southern Regional
Education Board concerning the problems in-
volved in the training of the South's 180,000
mentally-handicapped children are an added
indication of the Special Education need
which the College is helping to relieve
through a newly-initiated program. 12,000
trained teachers are needed to teach these
mentally-retarded children, and at the pres-
ent time not one in ten teachers responsible
for this special kind of instruction is con-
sidered qualified. Through a program in Spe-
cial Education, begun in the 1958 Summer
Session and continuing this fall. Woman's
College is training teachers for this special-
ized undertaking. Classes are scheduled at
special hours (late afternoon, early evening,
and Saturday morning) for the convenience
of teachers in service.
Dr. B 1 u m a B.
Weinei, associate
professor in the
School of Educa-
tion is coordinating
this Special Educa-
tion program.
Teacher and pro-
gram director for
mentally - retarded
children for over 20
years, Dr. Weiner, during the past year, com-
pleted her doctoral studies at the University
of Illinois Institute for Research on Excep-
tional Children.
THE first woman to occupy a chair on the
faculty of the Union Theological Seminary
and one of the first to hold a full professor-
ship in any American theological school, the
Rev. Dr. Mary Ely Lyman, delivered the
first University Sermon of the 1958-59 ses-
sion on October 26. A former dean of Sweet
Briar College, Dr. Lyman began her teaching
career at Vassar College. She was ordained
by the Congregational Christian Church min-
istry in 1949.
OF the 4,200 entries in the 1958 Ford In-
dustrial Arts Competition, the entries of 22
students at Curry School took 27 awards,
three of them Outstanding Achievement
Awards and four of them first places. This
winning record was unprecedented in the his-
tory of the competition which involves en-
tries of furniture making, woodwork, wrought
metal work, and leather work. Interesting is
the fact that only 44 students take indus-
trial arts at Curry; 50 per cent of them won
in national competition.
THE DEPARTMENT OF ART has been
chosen as one of the 25 outstanding depart-
ments of art in the country. It will be in-
cluded in a study of college art education to
be made by the head of the Department of
Art at Eastern Michigan College.
DR. DONALD B. ANDERSON has joined
the staff of the Consolidated University of
North Carolina as Provost. A former winner
of the O. Max Gardner Award, Dr. Ander-
son, until he was granted leave to serve as
program director in science education for the
National Science Foundation, was dean of
the Graduate School and head of the Divi-
sion of Biological Sciences at State College.
As Provost, he will be concerned with edu-
cational matters affecting the three institu-
tions of the University.
A grant from the National Foundation
has made possible the establishment
of an In-Service Institute in Biology at the
College for the current session. Designed to
increase the effectiveness of the teaching of
science in the secondary school, enrollment
for the institute (the only Biology one in
North Carolina similarly sponsored) is lim-
ited to 30 science teachers in a seven-county
area. The Foundation is paying all tuition
fees; participating students will be reim-
bursed for transportation expenses; two hours
of graduate credit may be earned each
semester.
Dr. Hollis J. Rogers and Dr. Victor M.
Cutter, Jr., of the College Biology faculty,
are institute director and instructional head,
respectively. Mr. Voigt F. Morgan of Leaks-
ville, husband of Margaret Wagoner '43 and
research assistant for Fieldcrest Mills, is sen-
ior assistant. Jacqueline McMahan, a senior
Biology major from Swannanoa, is instruc-
tional assistant.
AS a part of the College's special program
for the better prepared members of the fresh-
man class, two specially-structured courses are
being offered for the first time: in mathe-
matics, two semesters' work (introduction to
college mathematics and algebra and plane
trigonometry) will be done in one semester;
in general chemistry, an advanced section is
being taught.
A surprising volume of inquiries, many from
industrial engineers and institutional tech-
nicians, preceded the beginning on October
6 of a "sunrise" (6:30 a.m.) course in atomic
physics, designed to aid public school science
teachers by bringing them up-to-date on the
rapidly advancing field. The widely-publi-
cized course, taught principally by Dr. Harvey
E. White of the University of California, is
being telecast coast-to-coast through the fa-
cilities of the National Broadcasting Com-
pany. Some viewers are registered for aca-
demic credit (involving regularly scheduled
seminars at the College and a final examina-
tion); some are serious auditors seeking no
credit; and some are following the course
casually for its information value. The half-
an-hour course will continue Monday through
Friday throughout the academic year.
TELEVISION classroom instruction
results topped conventional instruc-
tion in North Carolina schools during
the past year, according to the Educa-
tional Testing Service of Princeton, New Jer-
sey. Reporting to Mr. C. W. Phillips, direc-
tor of the North Carolina educational tele-
vision experiment, its evaluation of the 1957-
58 tests that compared progress in factual
learning of the television classes with paired
non-television (control) classes, the testing
service revealed that three of the four tele-
vision-taught courses produced a marked
learning increase rating over their paired con-
ventional classes: eighth grade arithmetic,
American history, and general science. In
the fourth course (world history), the results
were nearly equal, but with the conventional
classes turning in a fractionally higher rating.
Announcement of these results of the In-
School Television Experiment came almost
simultaneously with an announcement that
the Ford Foundation has granted the Uni-
versity of North Carolina $95,000 for the
1958-59 classroom television program that
will reach some 70 schools and 13,000 chil-
dren.
AGAIN this year the Theatre of the Wom-
an's College and the School of Music and
the Department of Physical Education
(dance) are combining their talents and fa-
cilities to present a Rogers and Hammer-
stein musical. This year's successor to "Okla-
homa" will be "The King and I." The show,
which requires a cast of more than fifty, will
be presented on November 5 through S.
2329 students (72 more than last year)
registered for the fall semester, according
to the Registrar's Office which directed
registration procedures. Freshmen total
642; commercial students, 193. Included
in the total are 103 graduate students.
2054 students are living in residence halls
on the campus. Not included in the total
figure are 113 students registered in grad-
uate extension classes M'ho come to the
campus for instruction once or twice a
week.
OCTOBER, 1958
11
These Decisions are X OUf S
O
UTSTANDINGLY significant among the
business which the Alumnae Board of Trustees
transacted at its Commencement meeting in May
was their decision to establish an ALUMNAE
SERVICE AWARD.
The award will be made "to an alumna who by
her unselfish and faithful service has made an out-
standing contribution to the advancement of the
Woman's College ... in such years as a qualified
nominee is presented."
Nominations for the award should be sent to
the Alumnae Service Award Committee by Decem-
ber 1.
The members of the Alumnae Service Award
Committee, who have been appointed by Alumnae
President Julia Maulden, are:
(1) Mrs. Richard L. Rice
(Cora Stegall '45)
1525 Canterbury Road
Raleigh, North Carolina
(2) Judy Barrett '42
833-A Daniels Street
Raleigh
(3) Mrs. L. L. Miller
(Frances Newsom '42)
820 Lake Boone Trail
Raleigh
Nominations may be presented by alumnae chap-
ters, the Alumnae Board of Trustees, or individuals
who are active members of the Alumnae Associa-
tion. The individual or group making a nomination
should itemize the reasons for their choice.
The Committee will present the nominations
which it receives and a brief summary of each nomi-
nee's service to the College and to the Alumnae
Association to the Alumnae Board of Trustees at its
Midwinter meeting on January 23, at which time a
final selection of the recipient will be made.
The identity of the recipient will be kept secret
until Commencement.
J_ RELIMINARY to the Midwinter meeting of the
Alumnae Association on January 24, a slate of officers for
1959-1961 service must be prepared by the Nominating
Committee. This group, representing all areas of the State,
will be working on this project during November and
December. Anyone of them (listed below) will accept your
suggestions of nominees for the offices of president, sec-
ond vice-president, and the Alumnae Board of Trustees.
Mrs. L. D. Coltrane, III, chairman
(Phyllis Crooks '43)
87 Edgeworth Avenue
Concord, N. C.
Mrs. A. K. Moore, Jr. (Janice Hooke '44)
605 Blair Street
Greensboro, N. C.
Mrs. Arthur O. Cooke (Ruth Whalin '38)
11 10 Corawallis Drive
Greensboro, N. C.
Ruth Thompson '43
Guilford County Home Demonstration Agent
Box 2619
Greensboro, N. C.
Mrs. Eugene C. Few, Jr. (Dorothy Ennis '47)
3502 Lawndale Drive
Greensboro, N. C.
Mrs. Kemp Alexander (Annie Moring '10)
4415 Sunset Avenue
Asheboro, N. C.
Dorothy Perry '46
2550 Forest Drive
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Mrs. Wiley G. Clary, Jr. (Nell Jones '50)
811 East Farris Avenue
High Point, N. C.
Mrs. James K. Proctor. Jr. (Elizabeth Kittrell '48)
105 N. Harding Street
Greenville, N. C.
Mrs. Robert M. Jones (Ann Holmes '44)
6122 Lansing Drive
Charlotte, N. C.
Mrs. Carl C. Shores (Rachael Draughon '39)
11 Jefferson Apartments
Rockingham, N. C.
Mrs. Allen Iseley (Clyde Norcom '33)
Route 4
Burlington, N. C.
Mrs. Alton B. Gibson (Grace Evelyn Loving '40)
709 McLean Street
Laurinburg, N. C.
Mrs. William J. Peeke (Dorothy Gaskins '38)
29 King Street
Asheville, N. C.
Mrs. John M. Yount (Dorothy Furr '43)
Box 129
Leaksville, N. C.
Mrs. W. M. Gardner (Nellie Bugg '51)
Box 633
Warrenton, N. C.
Mrs. C. P. Soruill, Jr. (Julia Cherry '20)
338 Tenney Circle
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Mrs. C. H. Bias (Thelma Jackson '24x)
1106 South Fulton Street
Salisbury, N. C.
12
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
Chapter-ly Speaking
ATTENTION has been called to the
fact that here, as we begin the
1958-59 "chapter saga," we must
back-up a bit. Last April 26 the Atlanta,
Georgia Chapter met at Frances (Gibson)
Satterfield's home, and husband Satterfield
provided the program ("Iris in Atlanta").
Winnie Yount '46 was elected chairman of
the group; and Bootsie (Webb) Smith '47,
Irene (Barwick) Altmaier '26, Nancy (Cross)
Gibson '52, and Mary Lou (Mackie) Bryant
'42 were elected to serve with her. All was
going well until, during the summer, both
Winnie and Nancy had to move from At-
lanta. Now re-organization is under way.
During the summer the Mecklenburg
County Chapter picnicked and elected Ray
(Williams) Betts '42 to succeed Eleanor
(Kershner) Campbell '39 as chairman at the
group's fall meeting. There was no planned
program, but there was delicious roast beef
and much chatter when a thus-far-unorgan-
ized-group in Washington, D. C, met on
August 13 at the Water Gate Inn. Anne
Buie '56 initiated and executed plans for the
gathering which included fourteen alumnae,
five of whom were Congressional secretaries.
'More will be heard from this group, we are
assured. The newly-organized Richmond
County group (Rachael Draughon Shores '39,
chairman) entertained both alumnae and
students to be enrolled at the College in the
fall at a Coke Party in Rockingham on
August 29.
Two chapter planning sessions were also
held in August. On the 20th Betty (Nance)
Smith '48, Louise (Bell) Moffitt '36, and
Nancy Sechrest '47 met to map-out the High
Point Chapter's year. And on the 27th
Greensboro Chapter chairman Gladys (Ses-
soms) Elmore '43 invited her fellow-officers
for a "let's get ready" session. What both
groups planned will be told as the year un-
folds.
A series of acquaintanceship parties, spon-
sored by alumnae groups (chapterized or un-
chapterized) began on September 30 when
Emily (Russell) Davis '32 initiated the idea
in Bryson City.
FALL'S first chapter meeting was in
Winston-Salem: the Forsyth County
group met in the YWCA for din-
ner; heard Dr. Celeste Ulrich '46, second
vice-president of the Alumnae Association
and College faculty member, discuss "stress
and anxiety;" and made plans for an ac-
quaintanceship party and a scholarship-fund-
benefit bridge party and fashion show.
On October twenty-third
Chairman Helen (Daughtry) Duke '47 an-
nounced that Margaret (McManus) King '31
is chairman of the later project.
The Up-State New York Chapter (which
numbered fifteen at a spring meeting in
Syracuse) had a Founder's Day Eve luncheon
at Elizabeth (Langford) Davenport's home in
Binghamton, New York. We haven't heard
directly from chairman Juanita (McDougald)
Melchior 17 as yet, but Laura (Wliisnant)
VanNortwick '43x, who is organizing a sub-
group in Buffalo, attended (and we quote) "a
most enjoyable luncheon and meeting."
Inez (Shuford) Starnes '39 was our contact
for the planning of an acquaintanceship party
in Hickory on October 8. And word has it
that interest is renewed and that there may
be a revival among the Catawba County
chapter-ites.
Chancellor Gordon Blackwell and Barbara
Parrish attended a joint meeting of the
Martin and Washington Counties Chapters
at the Roanoke Country Club in William-
ston on October 14. Ellen (Taylor) Thigpen
'44, Martin chairman, who presided, and Sue
Underhill '30, the Washington leader,
planned this meeting of the first alumnae
group east of Raleigh to whom Dr. Black-
well had spoken. Particularly impressive to
the visitors was the rousing and interested-
sounding rendition of The College Song, for
which Iris (Nelson) Cooke '32 was the ac-
companist.
To Mary Jo (Curry) Zachary '39 the Col-
lege is indebted for October 1 5's acquaint-
anceship party in Yadkinville.
Elizabeth (Glascock) Owen '28 told about
her travels in Europe when the Columbia,
South Carolina Chapter met on October 16
at Alice (Fulton) Green's. Chairman Lucile
(Sharpe) Long '32 planned a supplementary
service project for the meeting: a White Ele-
phant Sale. Service was rendered to the chap-
ter members who were able to rid them-
selves of at least one of their "elephants"
and to the chapter's Scholarship Fund,
which profited monetarily from the sale.
Day before yesterday (the 21st) amid ar-
rangements of fall flowers and fruit at Madge
Matthews 'home in Winston-Salem, the For-
syth County Chapter "received" more than
forty prospective students. Then yesterday
(the 22nd) the High Point alumnae, aided
by Chancellor and Mrs. Blackwell and faculty
member Ellen Griffin, entertained girls from
their high school and the Jamestown High
School at Eleanor (Younts) McCall's home.
The success of both of this week's parties
cannot be attributed in any part to the
weather . . . foggy and rainy, to put it
mildly.
AND what's coming up? On October
29 Dr. Lyda Gordon Shivers, head
of the department of Sociology, will
speak at the annual fall dinner meeting of
the Wake County Chapter in the State Col-
lege Union. Word from chairman Undine
(Nye) LeGrand '42 adds another program
note: "Deepie" (Severance) Griffin '44 will
sing, and Helen (Morgan) Harris '41 will ac-
company her.
Chancellor and Mrs. Blackwell and Bar-
bara Parrish will travel with the ghosts and
goblins to Wilson County on October 31
for an after-dinner "trick or treat" meeting.
8:30 is the time which chairman Laura (Sex-
ton) Davenport '53 has set for the gathering
at the home of Martha (Kirkland) Walston
... a little later than usual in order to al-
low alumnae mothers to accompany their
door-bell-pushing "off-springs." Greene Coun-
ty alumnae will join the Wilson-ites for this
meeting.
Long and detailed planning by chairman
Mary Bailey (Williams) Davis '33 and secre-
tary Patricia (McNutt) Adams '49x is pre-
ceding the annual luncheon meeting of the
Pitt County Chapter. Members of the
County General Assembly delegation and
alumnae-husbands have been invited to join
the group and the Blackwells and Barbara
Parrish in the Jarvis Memorial Church's Fel-
lowship Hall in Greenville at 12 noon on
November 1.
This November 1 will really be a BIG
alumnae day. In addition to the Pitt County
gathering, two other groups are scheduled to
meet. In Charlotte the Mecklenburg County
Chapter will meet for lunch at the Park
Road S & W Cafeteria to hear Alumnae
President Julia Maulden. And chairman
Thyra (Black) Wood '31x has arranged for
a Richmond, Virginia Chapter luncheon in
the Clover Leafe Room to launch that
group's program for the year.
November 6 promised to be a big day.
too. Durham County alumnae have been in-
vited by chapter chairman Augusta (Reece)
Hockaday '45 to meet and hear Chancellor
Blackwell at dinner in Harvey's Cafeteria.
And thirty minutes after the Durham group
gathers, Cumberland County alumnae will
do the same in Fayetteville. Chairman
Josephine (Hunter) Deem '53 is arranging to
have this meeting at the Highland Country'
Club, and Julia Maulden will be the speaker.
The Forsyth County Chapter's scholarship
will be "benefited" by bridge and a fashion
show on this day, too.
Plans are already being made by Rowan
County chairman Ruby (Lyerly) Morris '38C
and by Iredell County chairman Christine
(Rutledge) Rickert '13 for Dr. Blackwell to
meet with the alumnae in their respective
chapters. The Rowan date has been set for
December 8 in Salisbury. Only the month
is definite for the Iredell meeting: January
. . . this promises to be 1959's first "Chap-
ter-ly Speaking."
OCTOBER, 1958
13
In-State (North Carolina)
Buncombe County: Mrs. David P. Harris,
Jr., Christ School, Arden, N. C.
Chatham County: Mrs. D. K. Buckner,
206 N. Third Avenue, Siler City, N. C.
Cumberland County: Mrs. Fred B. Deem,
322 Circle Drive, Fayetteville, N. C.
Durham County: Mrs. Dennis W. Hock-
aday, 215 East Markham Avenue, Durham,
N. C.
Forsyth County: Mrs. B. T. Duke, 942
Lockland Avenue, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Guilford County: Greensboro, Mrs. W. E.
Elmore, Jr., 1512 Independence Road,
Greensboro, N. C.
Guilford County: High Point, Mrs. Wil-
liam D. Smith, 914 Marion Avenue, High
Point, N. C.
Harnett County: Miss Ophelia Matthews,
Dunn High School, Dunn, N. C.
Iredell County: Mrs. R. M. Rickert, 739
N. Center Street, Statesville, N. C.
Martin County: Mrs. Joseph H. Thigpen,
Woodlawn Drive, Williamston, N. C.
Mecklenburg County: Mrs. Dwight B.
Betts, 1723 Beverly Drive, Charlotte, N. C.
Nash-Edgecombe Counties: Mrs. John
Weeks, 471 East Duke Circle, Rocky Mount,
N. C.
New Hanover County: Mrs. V. W. Her-
levich, 3627 Stratford Blvd., Wilmington,
N. C.
Onslow County: Mrs. Thomas W. Patton,
523 Henderson Drive, Jacksonville, N. C.
Pitt County: Mrs. Thomas M. Davis, 610
Oak Street, Greenville, N. C.
Randolph County: Mrs. Robert R.
Walker, Jr., 328 Oakmont Drive, Asheboro,
N. C.
Richmond County: Mrs. Carl Shores, 11
Jefferson Aprs., Rockingham, N. C.
Rowan County: Mrs. Eugene Morris,
Route 5, Box 649, Salisbury, N. C.
Scotland County: Mrs. John F. McNair,
III, Elizabeth Drive, Laurinburg, N. C.
Wake County: Mrs. Harry E. LeGrand,
1422 Chester Road, Raleigh, N. C.
Washington County: Miss Sue Underhill,
Box 656, Plymouth, N. C.
Wilson County: Mrs. Charles Davenport,
Box 1258, Wilson, N. C.
Chapters and their Chairmen
Out-of-State
Delaware, Wilmington: Mrs. Robert W.
Wakefield, Lancaster Court Apts., 56 Court
Drive, Wilmington, Delaware.
Florida, Jacksonville: Mrs. Dudley O'Brien,
3932 Marianna Road, Jacksonville 7, Florida.
Georgia, Atlanta: Mrs. Carl L. Altmaier,
22 Collier Road, N. W., Atlanta, Georgia.
New York (Up-State): Mrs. William Mel-
chior, 301 Comstock Avenue, Syracuse 10,
New York.
South Carolina, Columbia: Mrs. Oren
Long, 1400 Medway Road, Columbia, South
Carolina.
Virginia, Richmond: Mrs. W. P. Wood,
Jr., 4802 Charmian Road, Richmond, Vir-
ginia.
14
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
"universally
known
and
respected'
/\.T the airport in Zurich last June my traveling companion and I were accosted
three times in less than an hour by strange men: a symphony orchestra conductor, an
internationally-known lecturer, and a grizzled character whose name and vocation we
never clearly understood. It was not (Alas!) our fatal charm that drew them, hut
rather the handsome green uniform of the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., which we were
wearing — spit and polish — down to the last white perfect glove.
We had been surprised and happy to find that everywhere we traveled, while in
uniforms, it was ever thus: two ordinary garden-variety females were metamorphosed
into a symbol of something universally known and respected. It was to the uniform,
and not to us, that adults and children alike beamed friendly greetings and directed
curious glances. We glowed with the simple joy of "belonging."
A healthy number of Woman's College alumnae are among the wearers o' the
green. Are you? With no divining rod other than a few quick glares at alumnae and/or
Girl Scout registration files, I'll wager that a good fifty per cent of you are somehow,
in some way, involved with the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. Won't the rest of you come
along with us?
President of the Alumnae Association
Editor's note: Our attention was directed by the National Branch Office of the Girl
Scouts of the U.S.A. in Atlanta to the large Woman's College alumnae representation
among their ranks of volunteer and professional workers. We were interested by this
directive, and we asked the Atlanta office and the Girl Scout National Headquarters
in New York to help us take a closer look "at ourselves in Scouting." We found that
alumnae are active in every phase of the Movement. As we recognize one of you in
each position, we salute (a three-fingered-one) all of you who are fulfilling "our motto
SERVICE" in the field of Girl Scouting.
National Board Member
Troop Leader
OCTOBER, 1958
Julia (Watson) Maulden '33
JULIA has long been active in Girl Scout work in North Carolina. As a member of
the National Board and of the Organization and Management Committee, she helps
formulate National Girl Scout policies and supervise the administrative processes which
keep the Movement growing.
Formerly a troop leader, camp counselor, chairman of the program, member of the
training and public relations committees, and president of the former Rowan-Cabarrus
Girl Scout Council (now Tarheelia G. S. Council in Kannapolis), she brings to her
present position a vast knowledge of all phases of Girl Scout activities. She works
with other outstanding Girl Scout adult volunteers on the Regional Committee of
the Juliette Low Region (named after the founder of the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A.).
This area includes North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, and Georgia.
During the past summer Julia did Girl Scout work in England with women from
seven other countries, including the Countess Bernadotte, chairman of the World
Committee of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts.
Her interests have also included other organizations: she has been a district presi-
dent of the North Carolina Federation of Women's Clubs; a member of the Alliance
Francaise in Charlotte; and a member of the P-TA. At present she is a member of the
Recreation Commission of North Carolina, the YMCA (Women's Department), and
the Garden Club. For some seven years she has worked with forty-one churches in a
program for the teaching of Bible in the Kannapolis public schools. She is well known
throughout the Carolinas for her inspirational talks and Bible teaching.
Ora Cornelia (Matlock) Waynick '40
ON most questionnaires, Cornelia lists her occupational information as "housewife
and Girl Scout leader." She is proud of her seven years' work with the Girl Scouts —
and her two Curved Bar Girl Scout daughters.
She has also been a director of a Girl Scout Day Camp. And she was elected as a
delegate from her council to the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. National Convention in
1957.
"My most satisfying experience as a troop leader," she mites, "was our first primitive
camping trip. We lived out-of-doors for a weekend with tents for our shelter and an
open fire for our stove. The girls even improvised an outdoor shower that was 'the life'
of our trip. They worked hard and were proud of their work, and at the same time
they had a grand time — the perfect combination."
At Woman's College she earned a bachelor of science degree in Secretarial Admin-
istration, and she applied her knowledge while working for her C.P.A. father for four
years. An active community worker, she participates not only in Girl Scouts, but the
Red Cross, her church, P-TA, Lady Lions, and the Garden Club.
15
Council President
L
Regional Committee Member Frances (Gibson) Satterfield '28
A S chairman of the International) uliette Low Regional Committee, Frances (here-
after referred to as "Gibby") enjoys "being able to have a very small part in helping
to stimulate more girls and adults in Scouting to explore our international program;
sharing the thrills of those who are fortunate to have a 'person to person experience
with Scouts of other countries, overseas and here in the United States; and being
more and more convinced that knowing and understanding peoples of other countries
is the way to peace!"
"Gibby," too, has held many other jobs in Girl Scouting, including being the
leader of an Intermediate troop for four years, and chairman of the Public Relations
and Juliette Low Committees, and president of the Atlanta Council. She has been a
free lance writer (with articles published in many leading magazines) and a regular
correspondent for several trade journals.
This interest in writing is natural for one who earned a bachelor of literature degree
in Journalism at Columbia University, was chairman of the Creative Writing group
of AAUW, a member of the Atlanta Branch of the National League of American
Penwomen, and reporter-managing editor-and editor of the CAROLINIAN at Woman's
College. Gibby, like Julia, has served as president of the Alumnae Association.
Working with practically every community drive in Atlanta, the P-TA, the League
of Women Voters, Nurses Aid for Red Cross, and as secretary in the junior department
of her church, Gibby feels she is living up to the credo taught her by Woman's Col-
lege's Harriett Elliott, who was the first person to stimulate her "to look wider still,"
as Juliette Low urged, too.
Carolyn (Warren) Sumner '46x
CAROLYN was recently elected president of the Pioneer Area Council in Gastonia.
Her most satisfying experience in this position was at a regional meeting in which
presidents and vice-presidents met to discuss their council problems.
"It was then I came to realize," she says, "how really big our problem is, and how
important each of our parts becomes."
In addition to having been a Girl Scout herself for six years and enjoying four
years of experience at Girl Scout camps, she was leader of an Intermediate troop for
three years.
"The only job I've ever had is that of being a housewife," says Carolyn. This
modesty belies the fact that she has been active on the Scout Committee, secretary
of the Woman's Society of Christian Service at her church, and secretary of the
Memorial Hospital Auxiliary.
Neighborhood Chairman Patsy (Fordham) Myrick '45
To illustrate the satisfaction she gets in her job as Neighborhood Chairman in the
Guilford-Randolph Girl Scout Council (Greensboro), Patsy tells this story: "Late last
spring, our neighborhood leaders and troop committees worked in conjunction -with
our sponsoring P-TA to put on a Bake Sale to raise money for additional books for
the library of our new Elementary School. The Brownies and Intermediates worked like
beavers preparing posters to advertise the event. It was gratifying to see parents and
children working together for a good cause, and we were all thrilled when we learned
that we had raised well over $200 to buy new books."
Prior to assuming her present position, Patsy was a Troop Committee chairman
and chairman of a Transportation Committee. She enjoys every' job in Scouting and
is grateful to it "for all it offers our children in the area of character building and
human relations." With three children of her own, these values are increasingly
important.
While at Woman's College, majoring in Spanish, she served as secretary of her
Junior Class, vice-president of Town Students, Junior marshal, and May Court at-
tendant. Her present community activities include the Junior League, P-TA Board,
and being assistant chairman of her church circle.
Sarah (White) Stedman '42
AS chairman of District IV, Guilford-Randolph Girl Scout Council, Sarah helps
make Girl Scouting possible for many young girls.
"It is most rewarding," she says, "to see the girls grow and develop as the years go by."
Sarah's background in Girl Scouting includes being on the Program Committee
and serving as an assistant leader and a Troop leader. Prior to this volunteer work,
she taught Home Economics in the Gastonia High School and at the Alexander
Graham Junior High School in Charlotte. She was president of the Home Economics
Club and a marshal during her senior year at the College.
After marriage and motherhood, she confined her activities to P-TA committees
and women's work with her church . . . and to a term as chairman of the Randolph
County Chapter of the Alumnae Association.
District Chairman
\gt
16
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
Alumnae in Girl Scouting
Regional
Field Adviser.
Committee Member Sue Ramsey (Johnston) Ferguson '18
ALTHOUGH she is an important member of her Regional Committee, Sue Ramsey
enjoys keeping in touch with the girls and continues to lead a Girl Scout troop in
Taylorsville. Last summer she took four of her U. S. Girl Scouts and four Japanese
Girl Scouts to visit the Juliette Low Birthplace in Savannah, Georgia. She enjoyed
being a hostess for these visiting Japanese girls who were guests of the Mecklenburg
County Girl Scout Council.
She has served on various committees and the Board of Directors of her local Girl
Scout Council. Her work on the Regional Committee includes visiting Girl Scout
camps to study their organizational efficiency. Her master of arts degree from Teacher's
College, Columbia University, is in Household Arts Education. She was formerly a
hospital dietitian, home service director, and instructor in foods and nutrition under
the State Department (working with Women's Clubs).
She continues to be active in local organizations: Woman's Club, TB Association,
Cancer Society, Association for Crippled Children, and the Alexander County Hospital.
She is a member of the State Democratic Executive Committee.
Sue Ramsey, like Julia and Gibby, has served as president of the Alumnae
Association.
North Atlantic Girl Scouts in Heidelberg, Germany Nancy Campbell '49
LIFTER eight years of Girl Scout work in North Carolina as Field Director and
Executive Director of the Keyauwee Council in High Point, and Executive Director of
the Pisgah Council in Asheville, Nancy found herself on a foreign assignment. Here
is her reaction:
"Having directed camps in the wooded hills and mountains of North Carolina, I was
a little apprehensive when I heard upon arrival on my new job this past spring that I
was to direct a camp on the grounds of an Italian villa near Verona. What a wonderful
assignment this turned out to be! Maybe we didn't have all the space and trees North
Carolina has to offer, but we had a staff that really gave our camp an international
flavor. In addition to our American adults who came from various parts of Europe, we
had four Italian Guide leaders, two French college students, and a German teacher
who served as counselors. For the 135 girls who came to Camp Novare from various
U. S. military installations in Italy and Ismir, Turkey, this will be a summer to
remember long after they return to the 'States' and for the director, a never-to-be-
forgotten experience in international living."
Living cheerfully with all types of people is merely an extension of her gregarious
college days when her student activities included YWCA, Daisy Chain, Boot 'n Spur
(president), Recreation Association Board, and Student-Faculty Curriculum Committee.
She puts her bachelor's degree in Sociology to good use abroad, and with such
home organizations as her church, AAUW, Red Cross, YWCA, and wherever there
is one, a Woman's College Alumnae Chapter.
Program Specialist (National Headquarters)
Marian Weller '47
OCTOBER, 1958
MARIAN brings an unusual background to her position as a Program Specialist for
groups for handicapped and "hard-to-reach" girls. She has had experience with organi-
zations for the blind, the deaf, and the emotionally disturbed.
With a bachelor of arts degree from Woman's College, she went on to get a master
of arts degree in Clinical Psychology at the College of the City of New York. She
worked for two years as a social studies teacher and school librarian in Corfu, New
York, after which she taught at the Children's Village in Dobbs Ferry, New York.
This is a school for emotionally disturbed boys, and Marian served on the school
guidance committee.
For five years she was with the American Foundation for the Blind in New York,
where she did research planning, had in-service training at the Iowa School for the
Deaf, and was a Psychological Consultant working with Deaf-Blind children.
Being in the Girl Scout Program Department seems to foster one "satisfying
experience" after another for her. After participating in a recent workshop for leaders
working with handicapped youngsters at the Edith Macy Girl Scout Training School
in Westchester County, New York, Marian wrote:
"I'm still under the spell of Macy Magic. Our Workshop was a thrilling experience
from beginning to end. I have never seen a group whose members were so consistentlv
thoughtful of each other and whose willingness to share mth and eagerness to learn
from each other so typified the giving and receiving that is Macy. No wonder that Girl
Scouting is such a worthwhile experience for both girls and women — with leaders such
as these, one can't go wrong."
17
Council Adviser, Field Department (National Staff) Alice Suiter '40
WHEN Alice became Council Adviser for the Juliette Low Region, she was on home
territory. For five years she had been the Executive Director of the Guilford-Randolph
Council in Greensboro, and she was friendly with all the volunteers in this area.
A Physical Education major, she was president of her Freshman Class, House
President, a member of Judicial Board, and a member of the Honor Board at the
College. She received her master of arts degree in recreation administration from New
York University just before going to work for the Girl Scouts. She has served as a
member of the Board of Trustees of the Alumnae Association.
J N describing her feeling about her present job, Alice says: "As I work with men and
women in many communities in North and South Carolina, the thing that impresses
me most is the amount of time and energy given by many of our outstanding citizens
in doing their part to provide a worthwhile program for our youth."
Executive Director
District Director
Camp Director
s s»
18
Mary Katherine Claiborne '47
POLLY started her Girl Scout career as a Field Director in Greensboro. From there
she went to Worcester, Massachusetts, and later she became the Executive Director
of the Girl Scout Council in Mineola, New York.
For three years, until she assumed her present position as Executive Director of
the Council in Atlanta, she was a Council Adviser on the National Girl Scout Field
Staff.
Active in church work and in many community theatre groups, she feels that Girl
Scout work gives vent to her "flare for dramatics." At the College where she received
a degree in Sociology, she was a member of the Playlikers, the Sociology Club, and
the Camp Counselors Club.
Todav she is a member of the Atlanta Branch of AAUW, the Association of Girl
Scout Professional Workers, and the North Georgia Chapter of the National Associa-
tion of Social Workers.
THE greatest satisfaction I have found in any of Cirl Scouting, including my present
job as Executive Director of the Girl Scouts of Atlanta, is that of working with people.
It is rewarding to see growth and satisfaction come to people as they strive to work for
something that they feel is vitally important to the girls of their community. It is
rewarding to see that whatever the challenge of a job, a person can achieve personal
growth through the experience. It is exciting to see people of varied backgrounds,
experience, and interests, giving so much of themselves and adapting their ways of
work to each other. Each contact with a new person in a job such as this is a new
and exciting experience in human relations.
Mary Grace Grady '51
1 N her current position, "Grade" works with a district made-up of 111 Girl Scout
troops, supervises another professional worker, and is director of an established camp.
Hers is the Metropolitan Council of the Houston and Harris County Girl Scouts in
Houston, Texas.
"I enjoy my present job very much because of the opportunity of working with such
a large group of people — both professional and volunteers — who are so vitally interested
in Scouting and who devote so much time to it," she informs us.
While at the College earning her degree in Recreation, she belonged to the
YWCA, the Sociology Club, the Radio Workshop, the Recreation Association and its
Cabinet, Dean's List, the Camp Counselors Club, and she was president of the
Recreation Major's Club in her Senior year. She has done some graduate work at the
University of Houston.
Ida Jane Johnson '55
1 DA JANE received her bachelor of arts degree in Elementary Education not too
many years ago. She has taught sixth grade at the Johnson Street School in High Point
for three years, and she is working on a master's degree in Education at the Woman's
College.
5 HE was the seasonal director this past summer of an established camp owned by
the Keyauwee Girl Scout Council. "My most satisfying experience at camp has been
the joy of seeing girls who could not afford camp take advantage of the opportunities
offered by interested organizations and people of the community through the local
Girl Scout Council."
In college Ida Jane was treasurer of her Junior class, member of the Student
Government Legislature, and an everlasting officer of her class. During the summers,
she has worked on the staff of Camp Navarac in Saranac Inn, New York.
She is currently doing volunteer work for the American Red Cross. And she is
actively interested in the newly-revived High Point Chapter of the Alumnae Association.
Editor's postscript: That seasonal camp directing has done it! 'Word has just reached
us that Ida Jane is the new Executive Director of the Keyauwee Council, based in
High Point. She is our candidate for the newest Girl Scout professional "convert."
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
In Memoriam
News Notes
Mary (Battle) McDearman
Class of 1897
Flora (Anthony) Gladstone
Gussie (Judd) Campbell
Class of 1898
Cora (Lentz) Hoover
Class of 1901
Lucy Neal (Jones) Brooks
Class of 1904
Jessie Lawrence
Class of 1905
Nelle Hoskins
Class of 1907
Virginia (Stover) Coble
Class of 1908
Minnie Garrison
Class of 1912
Ada Joyce
Class of 1914
Genevieve Campen
Class of 1916
Mabel Lippard
Class of 1917
Eleanor Starr Taylor
Class of 1921 '
Ruth Basden
Class of 1922
Eugenia Catherine Woody
Class of 1924
Julia Lillian Doby
Class of 1925
Virginia (Rodgers) Brown
Class of 1926
Louise Rotha
Class of 1928
Virginia (Ipok) Mclnnis
Carolvn (Simmons) Maver
Class of 1929
Cornelia (Weaver) Dickson
1930 Commercial
Sarah W. Stewart
1937 Commercial
Mary (Partin) Edwards
' Class of 1939
Virginia (Sloop) McCraw
Class of 1943
Helen (Fales) Miller
Class of 1947
Anne (Sutton) Hester
Class of 1952
Lela Morris
Class of 1955
00
Next reunion in 1959
_ Johnsie Coit's address is Route
I, Sautee, Georgia.
Mittie (Lewis) Barrier and her daughter,
katherme Lewis Barrier, spent three "delight-
ful weeks" in the British Isles in May, visiting
England, Scotland and Ireland. Mrs. Barrier
declares that she wants to go back everv year.
'05
Next reunion in 1959
Man- E. Coffey has retired from
the teaching profession and lives at 219 West
Avenue, Lenoir.
Kate Finley is a patient at Presbvterian
Hospital, Charlotte.
'10
Next reunion in 1960
Laura (Weill) Cone, Greensboro,
and her son, Edward, an associate professor
of music, Princeton, toured Europe during
the summer.
'16
Next reunion
1960
Sadie (McBrayer) McCain, re-
tired dean of women of Flora Macdonald
College, now living in Wilson, began a year-
long trip around the world on September 14.
She will represent North Carolina at the
International Conference of Social Welfare
at Tokyo, Japan, in December. She will also
visit Southern Presbyterian Missions in Korea,
Formosa and Iraq.
'17
Next reunion in 1960
_ w Euline (Smith) Weems, for
some 20 years a missionary in Korea, is on
a year's furlough after 5 years at Seoul under
the Methodist Mission Board. She is an
ordained minister, engaged in evangelistic
work, and will do some lecturing and attend
some conferences during her stay in this
countrv. She is visiting members of her fam-
ily, including: Thettis (Smith) Hoffner '25,
Greensboro, and Parinne (Smith) Coffin '32,
Asheboro.
18
Next reunion in 1959
Elizabeth (Crawford) Fogarty,
Greensboro, received a Certificate of Superior
Service and a cash award, given by the Fed-
eral Trade Commission in recognition of long
sustained above-average performance of duties
as an employee of the FTC.
Elizabeth (Rountree) Simpson of Gaines-
ville, Fla., writes: "My daughter, Margaret
Yates, who spent her freshman year at Wom-
an's College, was graduated with the A.B.
degree, cum laude, and with voice major,
from Florida State University last June. In
January, 1958, she won the title of 'Jeannie
With the Light Brown Hair' at the Stephen
Foster Memorial in White Springs, Fla.,
against considerable competition. This carried
with it a $500 scholarship to be used in
further music study."
'19
Next reunion in 1959
Rebecca Svmmes, formerly of
New York, lives at 7 W. Fayetteville St.,
Wrightsville Beach.
'20
Next reunion in 1959
Ruth (Martin) Cross, class of
'20, lives in Clinton, Mel. She has seven
grandchildren.
'21
Next
reunion in
1959
Dr. A. B. Huff, Jr., son of Mrs.
A. B. Huff, class of '21. of High Point, has
opened an office for practice in Greensboro.
Dr. Huff is a chiropodist.
'22
Next reunion in 1963
Sudie (Rhodes) Frink lives at
117 Mill Avenue, Jacksonville.
'23
Next reunion in 1963
Mary Sue (Beam) Fonville has
been named head of the Social Science
Department, Needham Broughton High
School, Raleigh.
Anne (Cantrell) White, woman's editor of
the Greensboro Daily News, spent her annual
vacation, which she shares with her readers
through her daily column, in Florida. She
visited and saw many Woman's College
alumnae.
Elizabeth (Robinson) Earnhardt has moved
to 3834 Warrington Drive, Charlotte 7.
Frances (Watson) Bell has received word
that Craig Air Force Base. Alabama, has
named one of its two athletic fields in
memory of her son, 1st Lt. James "Andy"
Bell, who was killed in a jet plane crash last
year.
Stella (Williams) Anderson, West Jeffer-
son, has been named president of the Ruther-
ford County Publishing Company and presi-
dent and treasurer of radio station WBBO
in Forest City. The posts were held by her
husband at the time of his death during the
'24
Next reunion
1963
Dr. Elford C. Morgan, Dean of
Administration, Converse College, has been
granted a nine months leave to serve as
director of a special project for the Southern
Association of Colleges. The program is a
cooperative one sponsored jointly by the
Commission on Colleges and Universities and
the Southern Regional Education Board. Pur-
pose of the project is to initiate a new process
of accreditation for Southern Colleges and
Universities in their institutional self-studies.
He will also direct the beginnings of a new
system of periodic visitation of colleges and
universities now members of the Association.
Dr. and Mrs. Morgan (Martha Hamilton) are
living in Atlanta, Ga.
OCTOBER, 195S
19
—One of 300-
Rosa (Meredith) Humphrey '27 was one
of 300 teachers from throughout the
country selected this year hy the General
Electric Educational and Charitable Fund
for science and mathematics fellowships.
The selection of these teachers was based
on their demonstrated interest and ability
in science and mathematics; they must be
experienced junior or senior high school
teachers who expect to continue teaching.
As a science fellowship recipient, Rosa
studied six weeks during the summer at
Union College in Schenectady, New York,
one of six colleges participating in this
program.
'29
Next reunion in 1961
Man' Elizabeth Avent, instruc-
tor in education at Cum- Training School,
Woman's College, received a master of arts
degree from George Peabody College for
Teachers in August.
'25
Next reunion in 1962
Rosalvnd (Nix) Gilliatt, Shelby,
first vice president of the State AAUW,
spoke to the Greensboro branch of the
AAUW during October. Rosalvnd is the onlv
woman on the State Board of Correction and
Training.
A — ^ j^v Next reunion in 1962
amd i Agnes Norine Coxe to Basil
Manlv Watkins, June 12, Red Springs The
bride received a master's degree from Colum-
bia University, New York City, and was on
the Woman's College Home Economics
faculty for more than twenty-five years. Mr.
Watkins received his B.A. and law degrees
from Wake Forest College, and is an attor-
ney in Durham. At home, 1415 N. Mangum
Street, Durham.
Hiawatha (Neal) Cagle was Asheville's
Woman of the Week in June She is now
vice president general of the Daughters ot
the American Revolution. She served three
vears as state regent during which time she
travelled 36,000 miles. The Cagles live at ZS
Elk Mountain Scenic Highway.
■ Nationally Endorsed
THE Grolier Award ($500 and a special
citation) of the American Library Associa-
tion, given annually to a librarian who has
made unusual contribution to the stimu-
lation and guidance of reading by chil-
dren and young people was presented for
1958 to Mary (Peacock) Douglas '23. The
school and children's librarians of the
State nominated Mary for this honor; her
nomination was endorsed by library and
education teachers throughout North Car-
olina and the United States. The award
was accepted by a proxy in August while
Mary, library supervisor in the Raleigh
schools, was in Honolulu, teaching at the
University of Hawaii's summer session.
'28
Next reunion in 1962
who was born to Mr. and Mrs. Milo Aber-
crombie, Danville, Va., during July. Mrs.
Abercrombie is the former Henrietta Bell.
30
Next reunion in 1961
Sarah (Daniel) Vaughan and her
husband, Herbert E. Vaughan, Jr., were hon-
ored at the opening of the school year at a
reception given bv the Curry P.-T.A. in hon-
or of Mr. Yaughan's tenth year as principal.
They were presented with a walnut coffee
table made by David Rigsby, supervisor of
industrial arts at Curry.
Glenn MacDougald, who taught in an
American Dependents School in Germany
last vear, is back at her home in Greensboro.
She 'is teaching history and geography at the
Caldwell School.
Minnie (Middleton) Hussey, retired from
the Woman's College library staff, is working
this vear in the library at Brevard College,
Brevard. Mrs. Elizabeth Holder, a former
librarian at Woman's College, is librarian at
Brevard.
Laura (Oliver) Martin is homemaking in
Roanoke, Va.
Ruth Sikes teaches in Greensboro at Stern-
berger School. Last year she was an exchange
teacher in London. The Greensboro Chapter
of American Business Women is sponsoring
Ruth for the title of American Business
Woman of the Year. She holds a master's,
degree from Woman's College, has done
graduate work at Columbia and also at Julli-
ard School of Music. She sings in the choir
of the First Presbyterian Church, is on the
board of Euterpe, active in the oratorio so-
ciety and member of the Civic Music Asso-
ciation. Other interests include photography,
birds and travel.
Grace (Wolcott) Kouns lives in Asheville.
She was married to Mr. Kouns nearly a year
ago.
Constance (Gwaltney) Hunts-
berry, Fort Hamilton. Brooklyn 50, N. Y.,
visited the Woman's College campus during
the summer. A student guide from the Alum-
nae Office thoroughly enjoyed touring the
campus with this alumna.
Estelle (Reece) Harrelson teaches in Or-
lando, Fla.
20
'31
Next reunion in 1961
'33
., _ . Lucy Powers Blake, who was
district home demonstration agent in the
east central district in Virginia for ten years,
has been named assistant director of the
Virginia Agricultural Extension Service. She
received her master's degree from Columbia
University.
Netta (Robertson) Patterson, Com. '31.
lives in Madrid, Spain, where her husband,
an Air Force Chaplain, has responsibility for
the Protestant services at the United States
Forces Chapel. The Pattersons have two sons,
Bill 17 and David, an eighth-grader.
'32
Next reunion in 1961
Next reunion in 1965
Lillie (Bradshaw) Little has re-
signed her job as Home Demonstration
Agent, Pitt County, effective November 30,
when she will move to Raleigh. Mr. Little
has been transferred there. Helen (McDon-
ald) Mohay '55 is succeeding Margaret
Stevens '56 as assistant home agent. Margaret
resigned to be married.
Margaret Johnston is Rockingham County
librarian, Leaksville. She is also president of
the State Business and Professional Woman's
Club.
34
Next reunion in 1959
. , Mary (Dudley) Culbertson has
moved from Iowa to 5428 Southwood Drive,
Memphis 17, Tenn.
Lois V. McClure is now Director of Chris-
tian Education for an American church, the
Balboa Union Church, Balboa, Canal Zone.
She worked for 15 years with the National
Council of Churches.
Water Borne Sitter
, Alyce (Fuller) Blanton was re-
cently chosen Marion's Woman of the Week
and was subject of a feature story in the
Asheville Citizen. She has one son. Walker.
Jr., who was graduated magna cum laude
from Woodberrv Forest School and is a
junior Morehead Scholar at the University
of North Carolina. Her daughter, Alyce
Diane, is a senior in the high school at St.
Mary's Junior College.
Rebecca (Rabun) Bell, Greensboro, has a
granddaughter. Elizabeth Cade Abercrombie,
SOMETHING new in the way of baby-
sitters developed in Asheville during the
summer in the form of a water borne
sitter, Grace (Hankins) Darsie '29. And it
seems that "the sitter, the sittees, and the
sittees' mothers" found the arrangement
"hard to beat." It all started when Grace
was asked to teach swimming; the hour
or so she planned to teach each day
turned into at least half the day at times.
Word spread about "her swimming pool
service," and at the end of the season she
"graduated" some 70 beginners and inter-
mediates. "She's much better than any
baby sitter," said one mother of four who
patronized her business.
'35
Next reunion in 1960
Grace (McClenny) Lee works
with the Welfare Department. Sum-, Va.
Sara Boyd (Pickett) Atkins lives at 409
Wharrie Street, Asheboro.
Anna Wills, who after two years in Alaska
as a crafts shop director for the military, is
now in southwest Germany as a supervisor,
with two crafts shops under her direction on
the vast Baumholder Post near Kaiserslauten.
'36
Next reunion in 1961
Irby (Shaw) Walker, of Greens-
boro, administrative director of Farm Bureau
women's activities and permanent member of
the Women's Regional Advisory Council to
the Office of Defense and Chilian Mobiliza-
tion, was one of four North Carolina women
attending a meeting in Washington on
women's role in Civil Defense.
Frances (Upchurch) Myers and her family
now live at 2520 Canterbury Avenue, Cin-
cinnati 13, Ohio. Mr. Myers is a lawyer for
the Veteran's Administration.
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
193 3 Special
DESPITE the fact that some Eve months
have passed since the reunion of the Class
of 1933, the Alumnae Office would like
to pass-on to the members of the class
the sincere regret of president Mildred
(Brunt) Smith that she was unexpectedly
prevented from "reuning" with them. Her
plans for coming had all been arranged;
a week before departure-time she de-
veloped some contact-lense-difficulty, and
her doctor advised her "to stay-put." Had
she come. Mildred would have extended
greetings from the following classmates
who were also unable to come: Ruth
(Wolcott) Barfield, Helene (Coogan)
Phelan, Margaret (Watson) Trahan, Bella
Shachtman, and Alice (Reid) Whitmore.
'37
Next reunion in 1962
Mary Ruel (Capel) Homey lives
in Greensboro, where she does part-time
secretarial work at the Children's Home
Society.
Wilfred (Schlosser) Seager of Greensboro,
a new member of the Greensboro Tubercu-
losis Association's board of directors, has been
named to represent the association on the
Greensboro Community Center's health divi-
sion. She will attend health division meetings,
serve in its work and report back to the
association board. The liaison is for a closer
relationship between all agencies interested
in community health problems.
'38
Next reunion in 1963
Montien (McKaughan) Hiatt is
a homemaker in Kittrell.
i)y ja
Next reunion in 1959
Jane (Dupuy) Stitt, her husband.
Dr. David L. Stitt, president of Austin The-
ological Seminary, Austin Texas, and their six
children, from 6 to 1 5 years of age, visited
Jane's family in Greensboro during the sum-
mer. They were guests of Betsy (Dupuy)
Taylor and her family.
Born to Mr. and Airs. Charles Lokey Faller
(Martha Floyd), a second child, a son, John
Lokey, August 23, Hammond, La.
Dr. Maxine Gamer, professor of religion
at Sweet Briar College, Sweet Briar, Va.,
conducted a seminar on religion and the
public schools at the Woman's College dur-
ing the summer.
Judge L. Richardson Preyer. husband of
Emily (Harris) Preyer, represented the North
Carolina trial justices at the annual conven-
tion of the American Bar Association, Los
Angeles, Calif., during August.
'40
Next reunion in 1962
Jean (Cooney) Moniot, 401
Maple Avenue, Haddonfield, N. J., writes: "I
recently completed two years part-time work
at Rutgers with a nine-week full-time, prac-
tice teaching stint at Haddon Heights High
School. In addition to receiving my N. J.
teacher's certificate, I have changed my
'major' from business to history. I am plan-
ning to enter the Graduate School at the
University of Pennsylvania in the fall to get
my master's in history. I would rather shoot
the works for a doctorate, but the speaking
knowledge of two foreign languages is a little
too ambitious for the present. I enjoyed the
practice-teaching, but finished a sadder but
wiser woman. I am thoroughly disillusioned
about the quality of public education today.
To the point that my 8th grade graduate son
will enter a private preparatory school in the
fall. I spent two weeks in Puerto Rico in
February and had a lovely visit with Margot
(Phalen) Lacey, class of '41, and her family-
near Fajardo. They have since returned to the
States and are now living in Arlington, Va."
Annie Lee (Knox) Mitchell has three sons
and one daughter. They live at 159 Pendle-
ton Road, Clcmson, S. C.
Mary Elizabeth (McBryde) Tovey has
moved from Illinois to Nampa, Idaho.
More Fund-
'41
Next
reunion in
1962
Emma Neal (Black) King's
husband is a member of the faculty at
Teacher's College, Statesboro, Ga. He has
been working toward his doctorate in instru-
mental music at Peabody.
Valda (Davis) Dark was "Finer Carolina
Chairman" for Siler City, which was one of
the three first-prize winners in the state. The
city received $1,000 as first prize award.
Man' Lou (Hoyle) Gibson is homemaking
at 124 Westover Street, Lakeland, Fla.
Virginia Anne (Lee) Whitmire's husband.
Major W. T. Whitmire, has been transferred
from Maxwell AFB in Alabama to Hampton,
Va., where they are living. The Whitmires
have five children.
Dr. Virginia (Sanford) Mangum and her
husband, Dr. Vernon Mangum, both Duke
Medical School graduates, have opened a
clinic for pediatric practice in Hamlet.
'42
Next reunion in 1960
Martha Lee (Grayson) Hipps
has moved from Winston-Salem to Rocky
Mount.
Blanche (Woolard) Haggard has moved
from Washington, D. C, to Don Patricio
Drive, Route 4, Box 15-A-6, Tallahassee, Fla.
Binder Business
Charlotte (Van Noppen) White '30 and
her husband "are following the classic
model of small business success." For
years Mr. White has been searching for
the ideal type of ring notebook: a com-
bination of the qualities of the looseleaf,
the clipboard, and the spiral binders. He
kept making models of his ideas, and last
spring Woman's College market research
students ran performance tests on them
at the College. They concluded that the
"White binders" are "as near as possible
to what the girls want," even down to
their bright red covers. Even though
Charlotte continues her work as a speech
therapy teacher in the Greensboro schools,
during her "off hours" she joins her hus-
band and their three employees in their
small, binder making and binding work-
shop.
BECAUSE a College loan made her grad-
uation possible, Edna (Williams) Curl
'33, now of Seattle, Washington, has
established a loan fund in honor of Miss
Grace Van Dyke More. Gratitude for
her Woman's College opportunities, for
the advantage of having a college educa-
tion, and for the "fine leadership, in-
spiration, and personal friendship" of Miss
More prompted Edna's gift to the Col-
lege.
First in 14
WHEN Elizabeth (Langford) Davenport
'33 was appointed on July 1, 1957, by
the mayor of Binghamton, New York, as
a member of the town's Board of Edu-
cation, she became the first woman to
serve on the board in fourteen years. Four
vears of her term and feminine influence
'43
Next reunion in 1960
Virginia Dare (Cox) Rodgers
teaches at the Albert J. Hill School, Rich-
mond, Va.
Betty (Hopkins) Sherman's husband is a
cardiac-thoracic surgeon and has recently es-
tablished private practice in Fullerton, Calif.
Thev live at 2578 E. Chapman Street there.
The Shermans have two children, Barbara 9
and Douglas 6.
September is strictly a Family Month for
the John R. Lowes of Greensboro. Mrs.
Lowe is the former Dorothy Matthews. The
four Lowe daughters have September birth-
days: Marcia was 10 on the 9th, Teresa was
2 on the 16th, Barbara reached 6 on the
22nd, and Sandra became a teen-ager, 13. on
the 3rd. The Lowes also celebrated their
wedding anniversary September 11.
Esther (Moore) Kilcrease lives at 14 Cres-
cent Road, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. They have
five children.
Ellanor (Patterson) Ballard is a homemaker
at 363 Sedgefield Road, Charlotte.
Margaret Ratterree teaches a class of gifted
children in Greensboro.
Mary Jo (Rendleman) Bankoff became ex-
ecutive director of the Sycamore Girl Scout
Council, Terre Haute, Ind., in July. She is
also working toward her master's degree in
social studies at Indiana State Teachers
College.
Lydia (Watkins) Kozik received a doctor
of philosophy degree from Ohio State Uni-
versity, Columbus, Ohio, in June, and is now
an assistant professor of home economics at
Carnegie Institute of Technologv, Pittsburgh,
Pa.
Laura (Whisnant) Van Nortwick lives at
231 Niagara Falls Blvd.. Buffalo 26, N. Y.
She has two children, Jackie 12 and Karen 9.
Laura attended Woman's College for one
vear and three years later received her R.N.
degree from Monmouth Memorial Hospital.
During the war she served in the Army Nurse
Corps. She is active in P.-T.A., Scouting and
other community activities, as well as the
Alumnae Chapter. Her husband is in the real
estate business.
OCTOBER, 1958
21
• the only woman
Mary L. Boney '38. Ph.D. and associate
professor of Bible at Agnes Scott College,
has been appointed to a special committee
to draw-up a new statement of faith for
the Presbyterian Church in the United
States. Mary is the only woman on this
twelve member committee, made-up of
personnel from eight states.
Two Time Winner
Aimee N. Moore '39, who received the
Mary Swarz Rose Fellowship for graduate
study in nutrition or allied fields in 1956,
has again been awarded the fellowship.
Presented the award of $1,000 when she
began her studies for a Ph.D. degree,
Aimee has received it this second time so
that she may complete her research and
obtain her degree. Associate professor of
Institution Management at the New York
State School of Home Economics at Cor-
nell University, she is a member of the
American Dietetics Association, under
whose auspices the award is made.
'44
Next reunion in 1960
Anne (Buckley) Bachman's hus-
band has been transferred by Western Elec-
tric Company from Man-land to Buffalo, N.
Y.. where the family expects to move soon.
The Bachman's children are: Kay 10, Paul 8,
Bobby 5, Andy 3, Mark 2, and David 1.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Roberts
(Barbara Davis), a daughter, Nancy Davis,
July 31, Warwick, R. I. They have two sons.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kenlan (Jean
Dickey), a daughter, Kay, September 20, St.
Petersburg Beach, Fla. Their other daughter,
Jean is 2.
Rachel Dickson Herring to David Len
Bowen, May 24, Goldsboro. Mr. Bowen is
a graduate of State College, Raleigh, and is
an entomologist for the U. S. Department of
Agriculture.
Betty (Johnson) Dowling's husband, a cap-
tain with the USAF, is stationed at Stewart
AFB, Newburgh, N. Y. Betty is homemaking
and caring for five sons.
Elizabeth (Jordan) Laney's husband is now
county agent in Alexander County and they
are living in Taylorsville.
Helen Sullivan, counselor in Winfield Hall
at Woman's College last year, is an advisor
with the Y.W.C.A. in Winston-Salem.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Yntema
(Lucy Taylor), a daughter. Christine Davis,
July 30, Newton Square, Pa.
Hazel (Williams) Evans' address is c/o
Maj. S. M. Evans, AO 1534725, 86th TAC
Hospital, APO 65, New York, N. Y.
'45
Next reunion
1960
Imia (Estes) Magner's husband.
Associate Professor Thomas F. Magner, chair-
man of the University of Minnesota Depart-
ment of Slavic and Oriental Languages, was
one of 12 Minnesota educators selected to
spend the month of September in Russia as
recipients of a research grant from the Hill
Family Foundation in St. Paul. The trip was
for on-the-spot exchange of ideas with the
people of Russia in furthering the educators'
previous study of problems related to the
Soviet Union.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Pope
(Charlotte Hume), a son, September 26,
Greensboro.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stuart Perry (Jean
Ann More) have adopted a daughter, Kim-
berly Ann, who was born January 8. They
live in Pacific Palisades, Calif.
Barbara (Smallwood) Nellis, class of '45,
received a Ph. D. degree in psychology, Uni-
versity of Texas, Austin. Her husband is a
graduate student in nuclear physics at the
University of Texas.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Darnell
(Jane Wharton), a daughter, Lynn Merrick,
July 11, Greensboro. Mr. Darnell is a mem-
ber of the School of Music faculty at Wom-
an's College, where Jane formerly taught.
'Mr. Baruch" Wins
'46
Next reunion in 1959
Susan (Darden) Harrell is a
homemaker in Jackson.
Janet (East) Albrecht's husband is serving
a two-year tour of duty in Frankfurt, West
Germany, where the family is living. They
have four sons.
Betty (Lyda) Martin, Hartselle, Ala., has
three children, Betty Wear, Susan, and
Jimmy.
Catherine (Sanders) Craig is a homemaker
in Gastonia. During the summer she teaches
retarded pupils.
Helen (Sanford) Wilhelm writes from
Zurich, Switzerland: "On November 14 we
will fly by Swissair to Calcutta and from
there with an Indian air line to Kathmandu,
Miss NC and Friends
THE fact is that Lelah Nell Masters '38
(left) and Emily (Harris) Preyer '39 (cen-
ter) seldom "miss a trick." The non-
alumna (seated right) is 1958's Miss
North Carolina (Betty Lane Evans of
Greenville). It seems that while Lelah
Nell and Miss NC were breakfasting on
a home-bound trip (via the train) from
New York, along came Emily, who'd been
in the same city seeing her sister off to
Europe. While the three were eating, a
photographer happened by.
Lelah Nell, a member of the Cone
Mills Corporation's public relations staff,
accompanied Betty Lane to New York in
August to pick-up the clothes which she
would wear in the Miss America Pageant.
Cone Mills furnished Miss NC's major
costumes for the pageant.
BY the vote of more than 100 book re-
viewers throughout the country, Margaret
Coit '41 won the Fourth Book Award of
the National Council of Women of the
United States. The award is given to the
outstanding book by a woman of any na-
tionality published during the year, and
Margaret's Mr. Baruch was declared "it"
for 1957-58. Previous award winners have
included: Gift from the Sea by Anne
Morrow Lindbergh (1955), The Edge of
the Sea by Rachael Carson (1956) and
The Nun's Story by Katheryn Hulme
(1957).
Nepal. Rolf, my husband, is to serve as leader
of the Swiss technical assistance team in
Nepal. This means that he will handle rela-
tions with the government, coordinate the
whole Swiss program, make plans for the
future development of Swiss work there, etc.
We are really excited at this opportunity to
live and work in a semi-feudal country which
only opened its doors to foreigners about
eight years ago. Rolf was in Nepal last spring
for about six weeks, so knows a little of what
to expect. He found it a fascinating land,
but we know that it will be difficult to ac-
complish anything in the area of technical
assistance and economic development, espe-
cially because the government itself is so dis-
organized. However, the Swiss program is on
a very practical level (cheese-making — a nat-
ural for Swiss!, dairying and a workshop for
Nepali trainees), which makes it a bit easier
to accomplish something. Geraldine (Mor-
rison) Medlin '56 spent the year in
Zurich. Her husband studied under a
National Science Foundation scholarship at
the famous Federal Institute of Technology.
Although we graduated in the same year, I
had never met Gerry before. It was fine to
get acquainted here and I was sorry when
they left in August." Helen's new address is
Ekanta Kuna, Jawalakhel, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Marjorie (Self) Wallace's husband has been
transferred to Atlanta, Ga., where he is Ter-
minal Manager for Hennis Freight Lines.
They live at 2283 Glenwood Avenue, Atlanta.
Angela (Snell) Homme is a clinical psy-
chologist, Pittsburgh, Penna.
Dorothy (Spears) Tally has moved to 515
Maple Street, Warren Woods, Fairfax, Va.
Zoe Swecker teaches at Winona State Col-
lege, Winona, Minnesota. During the sum-
mer she taught European, Russian and Far
Eastern History at the University of Chicago,
where she also did work toward her Ph.D.
degree.
Marceline Alice Weathers to George Ben-
jamin Wood. June 7. Winston-Salem. The
bridegroom attended Piedmont Bible College
and sen-ed with the Army in Italy. He is
district salesman with Western & Southern
Life Insurance Company, Winston-Salem,
where they are at home.
Mary Elizabeth (Willard) Ryan writes:
"We have recently moved to Berlin, Ger-
many, and find it a lovely city. Our area is
quiet and pleasant and seems far removed
from the newspaper reporting. This past week
we attended the parade in honor of the
Queen's birthday, in the British sector of
course. The entire ceremonv was beautiful.
22
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
Our address is U. S. Army, RSG (7971),
APO 742, c/o PM, New York, N. Y."
Winnie Yount is a furniture manufacturers'
representative, Statesville.
'47,
Next
reunion in
1964
Jean (Adams) Mabry lives in
Winston-Salem. The Mabrys adopted a son,
Jimmy, a year ago. Mr. Mabry works with
Archer Aluminum Division of R. J. Reynolds
Tobacco Company.
Nancy (Bowman) Wagoner is in Japan,
where her husband is with the Public Works
Dept., Marine Corps Air Facilitv. Her address
is: Navy No. 955, FPO, San Francisco, Calif.
Nancy is teaching there.
Mary Lois (Howard) Harrison has moved
from Columbia, S. C, to 149 N.E. 16th
Avenue, Boynton Beach, Fla.
Ruth (Hyatt) English's husband is Super-
intendent of Public Welfare, Swain County,
Bryson City. Ruth teaches home economics
at the Cherokee Indian School, Cherokee.
The Englishes have three sons, Jimmy 5, Lee
3Vi, and Tommy 1V4. Ruth is working on
her master's degree at Western Carolina
College.
Mary Lee (Lambert) Cooper's husband is
teaching at Appalachian College, Boone,
where he is studying toward his doctorate.
They have a daughter, Catherine Lambert 1.
Betty Reaves (Leonard) Thacker's husband,
a member of the research team for Astra Inc.,
which is delving into use of atomic power
for industrial usage, has returned to North
Carolina after several years in South Carolina,
Texas, and Los Alamos, New Mexico. The
Thackers have four children and are currently
living at 316 Morrison Avenue, Raleigh.
Jean McArn is Mrs. T. David Horton,
1230 N. Quinn Street, Arlington 9, Va.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. P. T. Hines, Jr.
(Frances Mann), a fourth child, a daughter,
Helen Marie, July 13, Columbia, S. C.
Elizabeth Morrison is working on her de-
gree in Library Science at the University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Thurston
(Margaret Daniel Wilkerson), a daughter,
August 16, Greensboro.
Frances Lee Wolfe to James Carlyle Lillo,
August 16, Bessemer City. The bridegroom
is a research mathematician at the University
of Kansas. At home, 1026 Hilltop Drive,
Lawrence, Kansas.
'4U
Next
reunion in
1964
Katharine Arrowood to Jack
Holand Hicks, August 16, Linden. Mr. Hicks
was graduated from Virginia Polytechnic In-
stitute and is now a design engineer for Bab-
cok & Wilson Company, Lynchburg, Va.,
where they are living at 319 Arlington Street.
Mary (Berry) Bames, class of '48, and her
son. Bill, Jr., 7-month-old, who was born in
Lima, Peru, visited Mary's mother, Mary
(Strudwick) Berry '07, in Greensboro during
the summer. In September Man- went to
London where she met her husband for a
two months vacation in Europe. Young Bill
is with his Greensboro grandmother.
Minor (Boring) Elson lives at 2728 Porter
Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. She has
been teaching first grade in Montgomery
Countv, Md.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Alan W. Cone
(Emily Bundy), a third child, a son, Septem-
ber 8, Greensboro.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dan Martin (Gladys
Chambers), a third son, Paul Dwight, August
23, Chapel Hill.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McGinn
(Marjorie Chapman), a daughter, July 1,
Greensboro.
Page (Coleman) Mehta and her two sons
of Bombay, India, are visiting her father in
Glouchester, Va., until Thanksgiving. Page's
husband is an accountant with the Standard
Vacuum Refining Company in Bombay.
Hilda (Cranford) Hamrick is homemaking
at 335 Hampton Lane, Kev Biscavne, Miami,
Fla.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. William H. Johnson
(Louise Davis), a second daughter, Karen
Leigh, September 16, Greensboro. Louise was
secretary in the News Bureau at Woman's
College for ten years.
Martha Ann (Hull) Comer and her son,
Chad, are living in Jacksonville, Fla., where
Martha Ann is teaching first grade.
'Congresswoman"-
'49
Next reunion in 1959
THE Congress on Better Living, spon-
sored as a public service by McCall's
Magazine, invited an alumna and a cur-
rently enrolled graduate student, Jerry
(Hicks) Feldman '42, as one of ten mod-
erators for its annual session. In its three
day session in Washington, D. C, during
October, Jerry and 99 other women from
all over the country studied what the
American woman wants in housing, fur-
nishings, and equipment. Woman's Col-
lege's "congresswoman", who lives in
Winston-Salem, heads a business of her
own: Jerry Feldman, Housing Design and
Furnishings Consultant.
Patsy (Ingram) Wright is a homemaker at
Momosa Street, Charlotte.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt B. Whitcomb
(Vance McAdams), a daughter, August 2,
Greensboro.
Geraldine McKinney received a master's
degree in social work from the University of
Chicago during the summer. She is now on
the case work staff of the Chaves County
child welfare division of the state department
with headquarters in Roswell, N. M.
Gertrude Osborne, class of '48, is Mrs.
Donald D. Carter, 2901 Seventh Avenue N.,
St. Petersburg 13, Fla.
Carolvn (Pleasants) Harris lives at 134 B
Iris Circle, Shaw AFB, S. C.
Alberta (Swain) Elliott lives at 231 Green-
field Street, Hartford, Conn. "Aside from
tending household duties and a precious two-
year-old daughter. I'm teaching music at the
Connecticut Institute for the Blind — most
challenging — most rewarding!"
Gaillard (Tennent) Whitehurst lives at 9
Buckingham Court, Asheville. She has two
children, Anne 5L2 and David 18 months.
Born to Mr .and Mrs. David
Elliott Hipp, Jr. (Mary Stewart Barnhardt),
a son, David E., Ill, September 8, Greens-
boro.
Frances (Barwick) Cole is receptionist.
Campus Studios, University of Washington,
Seattle. Her husband is studying there in the
School of Music.
Audrev Blackburn to Richard M. Schell,
May 16, New York City. Mr. Schell holds
degrees from the Universities of Illinois and
Indiana. At home, 3014 Evergreen Avenue,
Baltimore 14, Md.
Marge (Cameron) Holcomb, class of '49,
has two children, Billy 3'/2 and Kathy \V*.
They live at 11434 Marine View Drive,
Seattle 66, Washington.
Cleo Cannady to Robert DeWitt Hennon,
July 19, Greensboro. Mr. Hennon received
his bachelor's and master's degrees from the
University of Indiana. For three years he was
an instructor in drama and technical director
of the Theater of Woman's College. They
spent the summer at Gatlinburg, Tenn.,
where he was lighting director for the out-
door drama, "Chucky Jack." They are now
living in Bloomington, Ind., where Mr. Hen-
non plans to complete requirements for his
doctorate in speech and theater from the
University of Indiana. Cleo did graduate
work in the School of Sociology at the Uni-
versity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Evelyn (DeWitt) Juster lives at 6 Flower
Lane, New Hyde Park, N. Y. "I am exhibit-
ing silver jewelry with Long Island Crafts-
men's Guild. Have written several children's
books." (She adds: "know any publishers?")
Gay Dickerson has been promoted to the
post of executive director of Central Branch
YWCA, which is the downtown Baltimore,
Md., and the main unit. She spent some
time during the summer with her parents
near Greensboro. Gay had paintings to be ex-
hibited by Baltimore's Peale Museum last
year.
Gabrielle Goode is a Lieutenant (j.g.) in
the U. S. Navy, now stationed at Communi-
cations, Unit 6, USN Shipyard, Charleston,
S. C. She recently completed a tour of duty
at Pensacola, Fla.
Dr. Dorothy A. Hahn has been named
instructor in pediatrics and assistant director
of the Polio Respiratory Center, Medical
College of Georgia, Augusta, Ga.
Born to Dr. and Mrs. Walter H. Moore
(Marilyn McCollum), a third son, Robert
Hopkins, May 13, Reidsville.
Tom Wicker, husband of Neva (McLean)
Wicker, is editorial writer for the Winston-
Salem Journal. Author of several books, Tom
appeared on the Town Meeting on Books,
sponsored by the Historical Book Club,
Greensboro. Clara B. Byrd ' 1 3 is president of
the club.
Willis Ann (McLeod) Martin is the
mother of two boys and one girl. They live
in Tonawanda, N. Y.
Sallie (Wingfield) Hughes and her husband
have two sons and four daughters. Mr.
Hughes is field engineer for The Iron Works
of Honolulu. Their address is Box 56,
Waimanalo, Oahu, T. H.
'50
Next reunion in 1960
Ina Joyce (Albert) Le Kachman
is a homemaker in Ehnsford. N. Y.
OCTOBER, 1958
23
Nancy (Dickey) Dickinson lives at 8304
Braddoch Drive.' University City 14, Mo.,
and writes: "Last Easter Louise Burgess '51
spent some time with me. We had a grand
time talking about \V. C. and all that has
happened between then and now. Louise is
teaching in Milwaukee."
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Oliver J. Beaman
(Peggy Gillikin, Com. '50), a third child, a
daughter. August 6, Greensboro.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. John W. Evans
(Lee Mahan), a daughter. Tamlvn, October
10, Rocky Hill. Conn.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Seymour M. Levin
(Helen Mamber), a son August 7, Greens-
boro.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Henry
Stocks (Melrose Moore), a second child, a
daughter, Catherine Carter, July 2, Winston-
Salem.
Margaret Mae (Redman) Rodgers is a
hoinemaker in Roxboro. They have two little
girls.
Muriel (Vail) Shea has three boys and one
girl. They live at 22 Vitalook Lane, Levit-
town, Pa.
-Child Typist-
'51
Next
reunion in
1961
Born to Mr. and Mrs. James M.
Heldman Jr. (Nancy Atkins), a daughter,
Julia Elizabeth, August 5, Durham.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Randolph M.
Kabrich Jr. (Nancy Bogart), a son, June 11,
Greensboro.
Sater (Clay) Ryder, 5075 Norwaldo Ave-
nue, Indianapolis 5, Ind., received a BA de-
gree from William and Mary and did gradu-
ate work at New York School of Social
Work. Columbia University. She married an
attorney and thev have two children, David
Clay 3Vz and Sarah Page 1.
Cecelia (Cone) Walker's address is 2107
Monticello Drive, Tallahassee, Fla.
Josephine (Cusick) Bond is teaching hous-
ing and furnishings. Extension Service, N. C.
State College. Raleigh.
Marilyn (Dunn) Roberts teaches special
class of mentally retarded children in Rose-
boro.
Betty Alice Godwin to William Charles
Ulrich, June 21, Oak Ridge, Tenn. The bride
received her master's degree from the Univer-
sity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Mr.
Ulrich received his degree from the Univer-
sity of Louisville. He is with the Union
Carbide Nuclear Company at Oak Ridge,
Tenn. At home. Knoxville.
Elizabeth (Outlaw) Dinkier, who was last
year an assistant director of Elliott Hall,
Woman's College, has moved to Dunedin,
Fla., where her husband was transferred.
Nan Preas is dietitian of Leaksville Town-
ship Schools.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. DeAn-
gelis (Mary M. Ritchie), a daughter, Barbara
Gene, August 8, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Eleanor Vann Rose to Samuel Lewis
Booke, Jr.. August 16, Franklinton. The
bridegroom was graduated from the Univer-
sity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, served
as an officer in the U. S. Navy, and is now
associated with A. M. Pullen and Co.,
Winston-Salem. At home there.
Patricia Sanderford to Ira Dempsey Gruber,
September 13, Cary. Pat is studying at Duke
University toward a Ph.D. degree in English.
MARY ANN, nine-year-old daughter of
Anne (Julian) Cress '47, can type 25
words a minute without making an error.
Unlike most nine-year-olds, Man- Ann
begged for a summer typing course for
her April birthday present, and she got it.
A fourth grader this winter, she was dur-
ing the summer the youngest student that
the Salisbury (NC) Business School had
ever had. According to her teacher, the
main problem in working with young chil-
dren is that their concentration span is
not mature enough; so often they get dis-
couraged and quit. Not Mary Ann: sitting
on a cushion to elevate her to the proper
typing level, she accomplished what she
set out to do. She learned to type.
The bridegroom is a graduate of Duke Uni-
versity, where he is studying for a Ph.D.
degree in History. At home, 503 Compton
Place, Durham.
Ann (Winslow) Brock works with the
Jones County Home Demonstration Program,
Trenton.
Elizabeth Jane (Young) Calhoun is home-
making in High Point. She formerly lived in
Richmond, Va.
'53
Next reunion in 1963
tJ^ Ja
Next
reunion in
1962
Jannie (Atwood) Anderson lives
at 200 Wardman Road, Kenmore 17, N. Y.
Sarah (Bennett) Garrett is a homemaker in
North Syracuse, N. Y. She has a daughter,
Ruth Anne.
Evelyn (Boone) Willey is a vocational
home economics teacher at Gatesville.
Betty Bullard is co-ordinator of Distributive
Education, Lee Edwards Hi School, Asheville.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Oehler, Jr.
(Tempe Hughes), a third child, a daughter,
Cvnthia Margaret, June 9, Mvrtle Beach,
S.'C.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hogoboom
(Mildred Newitt), of Trucksville, Pa., an-
nounce the adoption of a son March 26.
"His name is David Andrew but we call him
'Andy'. He was born November 19, 1957."
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Aimar H. Benton
(Joan Roberts), a son, Edward Garner, July
25, Augusta, Ga.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Shoaf (Jane
Sarsfield), a third child, a daughter, Hillary
Lynn, August 7, Durham.
Nancy (Smith) Hooke's husband received
his doctorate from Princeton University and
is now with the Forrestal Research Center,
Princeton, N. J.
Shirley (Smith) O'Brien has a son, Joseph,
Jr., nearly a vear-old. Tliev live in Kerners-
ville.
One of 4 and 73
Mary (Kirkman) Routh '46, assistant
home demonstration agent for Forsyth
County, was one of four North Caro-
linians and one of 73 home agents from
all over the United States to be recog-
nized for 1958 Distinguished Sen-ice
Awards during the annual meeting of the
National Home Demonstration Agents
Association in Chicago.
Valinda (Butler) Feather lives at
308 King's Highway, Alexandria, Va., where
her husband teaches in the Francis C. Ham-
mond High School.
Pat (Clement) Nave, class of 53, lives in
Waynesville, where her husband is assistant
county farm agent. They spent a year in
Africa. Their daughters are Lynn and Rachel.
Jean (Denny) Ashley works in the Manu-
script Department, Duke University, Durham.
Mary Gaither is living in Japan, where she
is teaching in an American Dependents
School.
Lois (Herring) Edgerton lives at 500 Mil-
ford Road, Charlotte.
Jean Hollinger to William J. Dant. June
14, New York. The couple honeymooned in
Europe. Mr. Dant is associated with Air
France and Jean teaches art and English at
Baldwin School in New York. She is also
painting.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Money
(Ruth Idol), a son, John Michael, September,
Doraville, Ga.
Polly (McDuffie) Hall's husband is pastor
of Linwood and Tyro Methodist Churches,
Linwood. They have a son, Mark, and daugh-
ter, Cameron.
Pat Markas, formerly with the Girl Scouts
in Kannapolis, is now with the Bright Leaf
Girl Scout Council, Durham.
Sarah (Newton) Sommers is homemaking
in Asheville. She has two children, Sally 3
and Ricky IVi.
Elizabeth (Phillips) Drummond, 5932 Bel-
mont Avenue, Cincinnati 24, Ohio, has three
sons, Frank 4, John 15 months, and Robert
3 months.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davenport
(Laura Sexton), a second son, September,
Wilson.
Dorothy (Snider) Muhlenburg, 739-A Penn
Avenue, West Reading Pa., has one daughter,
Sarah.
Jean (Tandy) Cook's husband is an obste-
trician and practices in Lynchburg, Va. They
have two sons.
Emma Lou (White) Taylor lives at 602
Goldfinch Street, S.E., Knoxville 20, Tenn.
Mildred Boyles (White) Corbett lives in
New Bern, where her husband is Area Man-
ager for Riegel Paper Corporation.
Ann (Woodall) Wilkinson's husband is
stationed at Scott Air Force Base, where he
is a surgeon in the base hospital. At home,
629 Devonshire Drive. Belleville, 111.
Nancy (Yelverton) Bennett lives at 606
Myers Lane, Greensboro.
'54
Next reunion in 1959
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. W. P.
Hooper (Anabel Adams), a son, Scott McKin-
ley, July 13, Asheville. Mr. Hooper was grad-
uated in June from Georgia Tech and is now
an electrical engineer with Litton Industries,
College Park, Md. At home 2629 Nicholson
Street, Apt. 203, W. Hyattsville, Md.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. B. Stanley Williams
(Dorothy Barrett), a son Richard Stanley,
July 1, Graham. Dorothy teaches a first grade
in Graham.
Nancy (Barrow) Abbitt lives at Oak Ridge.
24
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
Emily Butnei to Dr. Edwin Andrew Wal-
lace, June 21, Winston-Salem. Dr. Wallace
was graduated from Lehigh University and
received his M.D. degree from the University
of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. He has in-
terned at Saint Luke's Hospital at Bethlehem,
Pa., and served as ship doctor on the S. S.
Constitution. He is now serving a surgical
residency at Saint Luke's Hospital. Emily
teaches physical education at Moravian Col-
lege. At home, 557 West Third Street,
Bethlehem, Pa.
Sarah (Carpenter) Scarborough is a house-
wife and mother and lives at 3903 McGregor,
Columbia, S. C.
Winifred Cates to Harold Jones Snider,
August 2, Ramseur. Mr. Snider, vocational
teacher in the Liberty High School, was
graduated from State College, Raleigh. He
served two years in the Army and is now
also engaged in farming.
Margaret Crawford is teaching in the Art
Department at Russell Sage College, Troy,
N. V. During the summer she took courses
in philosophy at the University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Lorraine Helen Decker to Dr. Albert Spen-
cer Hale. Jr., June 7, Winston-Salem. Dr.
Hale was graduated from Wake Forest Col-
lege and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
He is now serving an internship at Grady
Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Ga. At home
there.
Freda (Echols) Elliott lives at 3615 Yo-
semite, Houston 21, Texas.
Nancy Carolyn (Evans) Cooney lives at
85 Grozier Road, Cambridge 38, Mass.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thatcher Townsend,
Jr. (Marian Faison), a son Thatcher Lovejoy,
III, July 14. Winston-Salem.
Geraldine (Fish) Mackin lives at 7460
Northlea Way, Citrus Heights, Calif.
Anne Scott Ford to John Hammond Geis,
Jr., July 12, Charlotte. Mr. Geis attended
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute and received
a bachelor of science degree in mechanical
engineering from Cornell University, where
he also received a master's degree in industrial
engineering. He is an industrial engineer for
Leeds & Northrup in Philadelphia. Anne
received her master's degree in home eco-
nomics in June from Cornell, and is now in
charge of the Fidelity Life Insurance Com-
pany's dining room in Philadelphia, where
they are at home.
Rebecca Freeman to Paul McRae Wagon-
er, June 21, Star. Mr. Wagoner was graduated
from State College, Raleigh, served two years
in the Army, and is now power use adviser
with Blue Ridge Electric Membership Corp.,
Lenoir.
Nancy Jean Hill to Aubert Cabin Snow.
August 23, Greensboro. Nancy Jean received
a master's degree in speech from Northwest-
ern University, Evanston, 111., in August. Mr.
Snow was graduated from Mars Hill College
and from the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. He is a reporter and columnist
on the Raleigh Times. At home, 1-3 Raleigh
Aprs., Raleigh.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Paige S. Welker
(Billie Hughes), a son, Harold Collins, Sep-
tember 29, Greensboro.
June (Long) Trivette teaches in Hickory.
Marianne E. McDonald was graduated
from the School of Physical Therapy, Medi-
cal College of Virginia in June and is now
working at McGuire Hospital. Richmond, Ya.
Emmalen (McLeod) Smith is a medical
technologist. Veterans Administration Hos-
pital, Atlanta, Ga. Mr. Smith is with General
Motors, Chevrolet Division.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dave W. Coolcv
(Diane Miller), a daughter, Elizabeth, May
24. Ilcndersonville. The Cooleys' other chil-
dren arc: Ann 3Vi and David, Jr. \Vi.
Clara Faye (Pugh) Herner is a social work-
er in Tallahassee, Fla.
Carol (Selzer) O'Brien, 97 Harrington
Avenue, Rutland, Vt, writes: "My husband
is a medical student and I am caring for our
two children. My husband expects to begin
a Naval internship in July."
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank John Soucek,
Jr. (Jo Smith), a daughter, Tina Carroll, May
30, Williamston.
Laura (Sprinkle) Alsing lives at 29 Broad-
moor Circle, Savannah, Ga. Mr. Alsing is
branch manager of General Cable Corp.
Margaret (Staniev) Haves teaches in
Raleigh.
Peggy (Strother) Rogers lives in Florida,
where her husband is stationed with the Air
Force at Patrick AFB.
Josephine (Tilton) Berte, 251 Tacoma
Street, Worcester, Mass., has a son, Joel
William, nearly one. Dr. Berte received his
M.D. from Georgetown University School of
Medicine in June and is now serving his
internship at St. Vincent Hospital in Massa-
chusetts.
Mildred Whitaker Warren to John Howard
Salver, July 19, Benson. The bridegroom
attended the University of Kentucky prior to
entering the U. S. Coast Guard with which
he is now stationed at Alexandria, Va. He
will resume his college studies in January.
Rebecca (Whiteside) Miller is a home-
maker in Columbus, Ga. "We have just re-
turned from Augsburg, Germany, where my
husband served as a Captain in the U. S.
Medical Corps." Dr. Miller has begun a one-
year residency in Columbus, Ga. They have
one daughter.
<T^«3
Next reunion in 1961
Sarah Holt Allen completed her
work for her master of science degree in
home economics at Woman's College last
year. She is now Assistant Girls State 4-H
Club Agent in South Carolina, with head-
quarters in Clemson.
Carole (Altman) Milling is living in
Columbia, S. C, while her husband com-
pletes work for his degree at the Medical
College of South Carolina. They have a
daughter, Deborah Marie, born last April.
Emily Jean (Baucom) Lewis lives at Home-
wood, Prince George, Ya.
Recordings
THE following recordings may be ob-
tained from Mr. J. Edward Robbins, 310
North Spring Street in Greensboro: (1)
Last spring's concert by the Woman's
College Choir and the Davidson College
Chorus, with the Greensboro Symphony
Orchestra, (2) last Christmas' Woman's
College Choir concert, and (3) the 1958
Junior Show.
Carmen (Bolick) Sasser teaches first grade
in Raleigh. She has a daughter [Catherine
Marie.
Maitland (Broadwell) Bvrd is homemaking
in St. Pauls.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. E. Ray Calaway
(Deanie Chatham), a daughter, Kathryn Ann,
July 21, Salisbury.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Herman N. Pickett,
Jr. (Charlotte Collson), a daughter, Septem-
ber 5, Greensboro.
Peggy Crow is teaching this year at the
Josephus Daniels Junior High School, Raleigh.
Zora Fay Daniel to Herbert M. Bunin,
June 29, Durham. The bridegroom was grad-
uated from the Norfolk Division of Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and is employed as an
engineer by Western Electric, Burlington.
Franda (Dobson) Pedlow lives at Cameron
Court, Chapel Hill, where her husband is
attending the graduate school at the Univer-
sity of North Carolina. They have a son, Del,
a year old. Franda teaches in the Durham
City Schools.
Marian (Hunter) Andrews lives at 520 B
Wakefield Drive, Charlotte. She has a daugh-
ter, Miriam Hunter.
Lalah (Islev) Mercer has moved from
Suffolk, Va., to Winnficld, La.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cash (Ellen
Kjosnes), a daughter, Lisa Brennan, Septem-
ber 18, Winston-Salem.
Patricia Muller is secretary in the Physics
Department, Duke University, Durham.
Jeanne Nostrandt of Danville, Ya., toured
Europe during the summer.
Sara (Sherrill) Raney's husband is an in-
dustrial engineer with the Du Pont Co.,
Charleston, W. Va.
Ellen (Straw-bridge) Yarborough and her
son, Mark, born last December 20, live in
their trailer at Pine Grove Trailer Park, Lock-
land Avenue, Winston-Salem, while husband
and father serves in the U. S. Army as a
chaplain's assistant in Germany. Ellen is adult
education director at the YWCA in Winston-
Salem.
Velma Thomas to Donald Bradford Sims,
June 21, Cameron.
Ann Kav Winstead to Kenneth Wilson
Wall, August 3, Wendell. Mr. Wall is a
veteran and attended State College, Raleigh.
He is an office engineer for Ebasco Services.
The bride is teaching in Lamara, S. C.
Phyllis Jean (Wolfe) Colter lives at 1611
Heron Avenue, Sunnyvale, Calif.
Joanna (Woodson) Parrish's husband is
teaching and studying at Emory University.
At home, Atlanta, Ga.
°>
56
Next
reunion in
1260
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Koone (Shirley Brown), a son, Mark Judson,
June 1 5, Ft. Leonard Wood. Mo. The
Koones returned to North Carolina in
September.
Anne Buie was chosen as "Girl Friday"
during May on Capitol Hill. Anne is secre-
tary to Rep. Alton Lcnnon of North Caro-
lina. She was the subject of a feature article
in the Washington Post and Times Herald
on May 23.
OCTOBER, 1958
25
Ann (Carlton) Wylie lives in Durham,
where Mr. Wylie works with Wright Ma-
chinery. They have a daughter, Robin Leigh,
nearly 1.
Sarah Jane Cole to Robert Byrd Jordan,
111 June 21, Raeford. Mr. Jordan was gradu-
ated from State College, Raleigh, and is now
employed bv Jordan Lumber and Supply Co.,
Mt. Gilead. At home there.
Jane Deans is an Intervarsity Christian
Fellowship staff member and works with the
colleges for women in North Carolina, South
Carolina, and Virginia.
Born to Rev. and Mrs. H. R. Montgomery
(Martha Fulcher), a son, September 26,
Greensboro.
Rosa Kellv Godwin to Paul Edward Hard-
in" Jr. July 5, Wilmington. At home, 1017
South Quebec Street, Apt. 4, Arlington, Va.
Born to Dr. and Mrs. George T. White
(Joan Josack), a second child, first son,
Thomas Rav White, II, Waynesboro, Va.
Dr. White is a research chemist at Du Pont.
Lucinda Lanning is doing graduate work
in the School of Library Science, the Uni-
versity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Virginia (Lawler) Stepanek's new address
is 620 W. Elder Street, Fallbrook, Calif. Mr.
Stepanek teaches science and Virginia is a
substitute teacher. "My college roommate,
Tina (Baty) Smith '56 and her husband, Dr.
Vonnie Smith, are living in San Diego with
their baby daughter, Sara. Dr. Smith is serv-
ing with the U. S. Navy."
Peggy Marie (Mabe) Hampton teaches in
Elizabethton, Tenn.
Anne Misenheimer to Patrick Adamson,
Julv 6, Concord. Mr. Adamson was graduated
from Iowa State College, where he majored
in electronics engineering. He is an engineer
at Convair Astronautics in San Diego, Calif.
At home, 4353 Kansas Street, San Diego 4,
Calif.
Mary Jane Moring to George Walter
Montgomery, June 15, Greensboro. The
bridegroom was graduated from the Univer-
sity of South Carolina and served three years
in the Coast Guard.
Jane Winbome Olds to Arthur Jacobin
Tobier, July 4, New York City. The bride-
groom studied at Hunter College and Colum-
bia University and served as a lieutenant in
the U. S. Marine Corps. He is a reporter for
the Patent Trader, a newspaper in Mt. Kisco.
Jane works for The New Yorker magazine.
Carol Pittard to Michael Anello, August
23. Mr. Anello is a graduate student in the
School of Education at Cornell University.
Carol is teaching. At home, 125 Catherine
Street, Ithaca, N. Y.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. John David Wray
(Marion Lois Prescott), a son, David Butler
Wray, May 12, Ft. Eustis, Va.
Cynthia Anne Reed to Benjamin Ross
Wrenn, June 21, Reading, Pa. Mr. Wrenn
was graduated from Wake Forest College,
where he is now a second year student in the
Law School.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hyman (Judy
Rosenstock), a second son, Mark Edward,
July 24, Greensboro.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. James D. Worths-
worth, Jr. (Mary Elizabeth Scott), a son,
James Eric, August 20, High Point. Mr.
Wordsworth was formerly personnel and
purchasing officer at Woman's College. He
is now purchasing officer for Alderman Photo
Company, High Point.
Marv Ann Sides to Hugh T. Wallace,
September 13, Winston-Salem. Mr. Wallace
was graduated from Wake Forest College and
is now a junior medical student at the Bow-
man Grav School of Medicine, Winston-
Salem. Marv Ann teaches in the Winston-
Salem City' Schools. At home, 312 Grove
Park Avenue, Winston-Salem.
Joann Stone, Com. '56, to James C. Lud-
wig, August 30. Mr. Ludwig is a draftsman
with Erwin G. Fredrick, architect and plans
to complete his work for a degree at the
University of Illinois during the year. At
home, Chicago, 111.
Cvnthia (Tavlor) Malone teaches French
and English, Chicago, 111. They live at 12446
Maple Avenue, Blue Island, ill.
Gerotha (Thompson) Gentry teaches in
Homestead, Fla. Her husband served a six-
month's tour of duty in Morocco and ex-
pected to return to the States in September.
Ann Elizabeth Thunberg to Wayne Min-
ton Yelverton, June, Fayetteville. Mr. Yelver-
ton is connected with radio station WKIX in
Raleigh. At home, Garner.
Shirley (Wilson) Boatman and her hus-
band, who works with the N. C. Insurance
Commission, spent the summer in New
York. Shirley worked at the Henry Street
Settlement House Camp for Girls, Echo Hill
Farm, Yorktown Heights, N. Y.
Joyce Young, stewardess for Trans-Texas
Airlines, lives at 243 Santa Fe Drive, Houston
17, Texas.
fj 4 Irene Abernethy to Bernard
Harold Strasser, July 26, High Point. The
bridegroom attended Marietta College in
Ohio and was graduated from Arizona State
College. A veteran of the Korean War, he
holds a master's degree from Wharton School
of Economics and Finance. He is an instruc-
tor in the Economics Department, Duke Uni-
versity, Durham, where he is also a senior
law student. At home, 2209-B Elder Street,
Durham.
Joan Ackerman to Jesse Ralph Swoap,
September 20, Nutley, N. J. Mr. Swoap is
a graduate of Redlands University, Calif.,
and is doing graduate work at the University
of Chicago, working toward a master's de-
gree in chemistry. Joan is also attending the
University there, working toward a master's
degree in social work.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Scott Busic
(Norma Alderman), a daughter Brigitta Da-
nise, August 20, Sanford. The Busies have
returned from a year in Pine Bluff, Ark.,
where Norma taught fifth grade and her hus-
band was an engineer at Pine Bluff Arsenal.
At home, 213 A East Weatherspoon Street,
Sanford.
Ben Nita Black, Greensboro's 1958 Miss
Citv Beautiful and who last year worked in
Chancellor Blackwell's office, is working as
a receptionist with the law firm of Morrison,
Gardner, and Rogers, Washington, D. C.
Julia Mae Black to Harold Lee Long,
August 30, Charlotte. Mr. Long attended.
Charlotte College and works at Southern
Friction Materials Co., Charlotte. At home
there.
Lucy Catherine Blue to Roger LeRoy Mor-
row. September 27, Sanford. The bridegroom
was graduated from Fishburne Military
Academy and from State College, Raleigh.
He is employed by Burlington Industries. At
home, Asheboro.
Lorene Brown teaches in Ray Street
School, High Point.
Marv Johns Cameron to John Garland
Mills, III, August 3, Southern Pines. Mr.
Mills is a graduate of Wake Forest College
and is now a law student there.
Katherine Ann Carlson to Charles Robert
Patterson, Jr., June 21, Greensboro. Mr.
Patterson was graduated from State College,
Raleigh, and is employed in Leaksville bv
Fieldcrest Mills. At home 300V2 W. Bridge
Street, Apt. C, Leaksville.
Nancy Jo Doggett to Richard Norris
Rigby, jr., High Point. Mr. Rigby was grad-
uated from Williams College, Williamstown,
Mass. He served with the U. S. Army and
they are now living in High Point.
Margaret Rosalie Dukes to James Robert
Callison, August 16, Ahoskie. Mr. Callison
was graduated from the University of Wash-
ington and is business manager for Pacific
Vita Craft Corp., of Inglewood, Calif., where
they are at home.
Jane Elizabeth Elder to Grover William
Moore, June 22, Burlington. Mr. Moore at-
tended the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. At home', 217 Markham Street,
Burlington.
Martha Ellis teaches sixth grade at the
Emma Conn School, Raleigh.
Shelbv Anne Faircloth to Jay Crowther
Kline, Jr., May 31, Clinton. The bridegroom
is a graduate of the University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, where he received his
B.A. and M.E. degrees in education. He is
teaching in Durham and is working toward
his Ph. D. degree in history at the University
of North Carolina.
Janet Ann (Hamor) Rhule teaches in
Junction City, Kansas.
Ann (Harris) Sumrell teaches home eco-
nomics in New Bern.
Dorcas Larene Hill is a chemist. State Col-
lege, Raleigh.
Ann Holton teaches home economics,
Bethany High School, Bethany.
Barbara (Hudgins) Edwards teaches in
Athens, Ga.
Jerry Ann (Jervis) Allred worked at Wake
Forest College during the summer. She and
her husband are studying at Emory Univer-
sity, Atlanta, Ga.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Winslow, Jr.
(Shirley Jones), a daughter, Katherine Ann,
June 15, Durham.
Lucille Jordan to Dick Koontz, June 28,
Albemarle. The bridegroom was graduated
from the University of North Carolina and
is vocational agriculture instructor at New
London High School. At home, New Lon-
don.
Stella (Lambeth) Pleasants is a homemaker
and mother in Guilford College.
Born to Rev. and Mrs. J. Robert Regan,
Jr. (Jeanette Leonard), a son, Randall Regan,
August 30, Alexandria, Va.
Lou Anne Lundy to Fred Harwood Poole,
July 13, Statesville. Mr. Poole owns and op-
erates a barber shop in Harmony, where they
are living.
Doris June McCraw is secretary to the
vice president in charge of advertising and
public relations, Duke Power Company,
Charlotte.
Doris (Moore) Ashton is a biochemist.
Bell Research Laboratory, Durham.
Elizabeth Moore teaches at Stratford Jun-
ior High. Arlington, Va.
Martha Ann Moore has been named as-
sistant professor of English at Lander Col-
26
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
lege. Greenwood, S. C. She received her mas-
ter's degree at the University of North Caro-
lina, Chapel Hill.
Mary Jo (Myrick) Michie is a homemakei
in Tryon.
Beverly Jean Nance to John McManus
Hough, jr., August 24, Winston-Salem. The
bridegroom was graduated from Wake For-
est College and received a master's degree
from the University of North Carolina.
Chapel Hill. He is now teaching at Gray
High School, Winston-Salem. The bride
works for R. J. Revnolds Tobacco Company
there.
Julia Ann Parsons to Nash Eugene Hardv,
Jr., August 23, Charlotte. The bridegroom
was graduated from Elon College and re-
ceived a master's degree in education from
the University of North Carolina. He is as-
sistant principal and seventh grade teacher at
Whitaker School. Winston-Salem. The bride
teaches at Ardmore School there.
Nancv Jo Paschall is a physical therapist
at The Miller Clinic, Charlotte.
Alice Elizabeth Winfield Paul, Com. '57,
to Thomas Hamilton Sloan, September 20,
Washington, N. C. The bridegroom was
graduated from the University of North Car-
olina, Chapel Hill, and is employed by the
High Point Enterprise. At home, High Point.
Catherine Priest completed the secretarial
course at Katharine Gibbs and is working for
American Cvanamid Company' in New York
City.
Anne Carrington Roberts to William
Walter Teer, Jr., August 16, Hillsboro. The
bridegroom is a graduate of State College,
Raleigh, and is employed by Dan River Mills,
as sales representative. At home, 2826 Mc-
Clintock Road, Charlotte.
Lt. Caroline Anne Sevier's address is P. T.
Clinic, BAH, Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
Martha Elizabeth Smith to Henry Clifton
Ferrell, Jr., September 6, Gastonia. The
bridegroom was graduated from Duke Uni-
versity, where he received a bachelor's and
master's degree in history. He expects to
enter military service soon. The bride is a
medical technologist at Cone Hospital,
Greensboro.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. H. Kenneth Alley
(Kay Speas), a daughter, Karen Sue, August
11, Greensboro. At home. Box 221, Pleasant
Garden.
Gladys Marie Stamper to Francis Glenn
Jones, July 12, Walnut Cove. The bride-
groom is employed by Western Electric in
Winston-Salem. The bride is assistant home
demonstration agent in Stokes County and
they will live near Walnut Cove.
Janet Stanton teaches second grade. Long-
view Gardens Elementary School, Raleigh.
"I am living with Blanche Williams and
Martha Ellis, both '57's."
Emily (Stone) Redding lives in Asheboro.
She has a son. Shannon Stone, born March
17.
Elizabeth (Tuggle) Miller lives at 3625
Eastway Drive, Charlotte. Mr. Miller is a
certified public accountant. They have one
son, David Wilson, \\h.
Frances Westmoreland to James Lee Win-
stead, Jr., August 3, Tabor City. Frances is
teaching science in O'Keefe High School,
Atlanta, Ga.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zimi
Hockett, Jr. (Kate Wharton), a daughter,
Les'.ie Katherine, September 14, Spottsdale,
Arizona. Kate is the daughter of Kate (Har-
rison) Wharton '33.
Blanche Williams is teaching at the Sher-
wood Bates School, Raleigh.
Jewell Dean Williams to Airman Lester
Emmett Collier, Jr., August 2, Winston-
Salem. The bridegroom is a graduate of Mars
Hill College and is stationed by the Air Force
at Savannah, Ga. At home 7-A Chelsea Apts.,
Savannah.
'58
Next reunion in 1959
Betty Dove Adams, graduate
work, Columbia University, where she is also
doing library' work.
Patricia Elizabeth Addison, teaching,
Greensboro.
Janet Burnett Agnew, math, Aycock
School, Greensboro.
Jessie Alexander, business teacher, Ramey
Air Force SAC Base, Puerto Rico.
Marjorie Allen, teaching, Charlotte.
Joyce Ann Alston, mathematician, Hamp-
ton, Va.
Joyce Ann Alston, Langley Field, Hamp-
ton, Va. She went to Europe during the
summer.
Betty Sue (Amnions) Crumpton, Alamance
County Welfare Dept, Burlington.
Joan Ash, kindergarten, Tenafly, N. J.
Mary Margaret Atwell, math. Pleasant
Garden High School, Greensboro.
Raoula Bach, assistant purchasing agent,
New York City.
Jean Baird, teaching, Avery County,
Newland.
Sarah W. Baldree to Robert L. Hunt, July
12, Black Creek. Mr. Hunt was graduated
from East Carolina College. Sarah is a case-
work assistant, Wilson County Welfare
Department. At home, Stantonsburg.
Carolyn Faye Baldwin, serving internship
as medical technologist, Moses H. Cone
Memorial Hospital, Greensboro.
Edith Balentine to James W. Redmond,
Jr., June 7, Greenville, S. C. Mr. Redmond
was graduated from Duke University. Edith
is teaching health and physical education,
Blair Junior High, Norfolk, Va.
Lois Barlow to Michael Bruce Rowe, June
29, Hickory. The bridegroom is a senior at
State College, Raleigh, and Lois teaches in
the primary grades there.
Mary Anne (Bass) Upchurch, secretary to
Ernie Williamson, Educational Foundation,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Her husband is a student in the School of
Dentistry there.
Nancy Jean Bateman, physical education,
Greensboro.
Dorothy Nell Beard to Carston Rochelle
Wagner, August 17, Hillsboro. The bride-
groom is a senior at Elon College. At home,
Burlington, where Dorothy teaches English
in the City Schools.
Titsa Beleos, student medical technologist,
Camden, S. C.
Thelma (Bender) Edmundson, homemak-
ing and caring for son, Pollocksville.
Mary Elizabeth Berrier to Ralph William
Garvin, June 21, Lexington. Her husband is
with the City of Cocoa, Fla. Police Depart-
ment. She teaches there.
Cecelia Ann (Black) Neal, junior techni-
cian at Textile Laboratory, Cone Mills,
Greensboro.
Martha Jon Blackwelder, recreation direc-
tor, Cherryville.
Annie Lou Blalock to Everett Alncy Rob-
inson, Jr., June 21, Kings Mountain. Her
husband was graduated from Mars Hill Junior
College and attended State College, Raleigh.
Shirley Blankenship, ninth grade, Reidsville
High School, Reidsville.
June (Blanton) Madison, secretary, School
of Public Health, University of North Car-
olina, Chapel Hill.
Ann Foster Blevins, research assistant in
botany and editor of the Elisha Mitchell
Journal, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill.
Geraldine Blevins, librarian, N. Wilkesboro.
Elizabeth Boling, merchandising trainee.
Woodward & Lathrop, Washington, D. C.
Annette Boyette, order office. Library,
Woman's College, Greensboro.
Patsy Boyle to James Henry Phillips, Jr.,
July 25, Lenoir. Mr. Phillips served four years
in the Navy and is a junior at Elon College.
He is employed by Western Electric Co.,
Burlington, where Patsy is a secretary.
Elizabeth Stowe Braddy to Joshua Tayloe,
III, August 8, Washington. Mr. Tayloe grad-
uated from the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, and is attending Medical School
there.
Polly Gray (Bradshaw) Norris, homemak-
ing, Wallace.
Marlene Beverly Braver, teaching, Norfolk,
Va. During the summer she toured Europe.
Mimi Brewer to John Elwood Shackelford,
June 15, Rocky Mount. The bridegroom was
graduated from the University of Wisconsin,
served his military duty in Panama, and is
now a law student at the University of North
Carolina. Mimi is an artist for Medical Illus-
tration Department, Memorial Hospital,
Chapel Hill.
Barbara Bridgers, caseworker, Wayne
County Welfare Department, Goldsboro.
Rutisha Brigmon, decorating consultant,
Sears Roebuck Company, Charlotte.
Elizabeth Ann Brooks, home economics,
Stanfield High School, Stanficld.
Barbara Ann Brown, medical technician
trainee. Cone Memorial Hospital, Greensboro.
Patricia Ann (Broyhill) Hudson is tempo-
rarily at home in Chapel Hill.
Beverly Jean Bryant attended summer
school at Radcliffe College.
Judy (Burch) Beaver, at home, 214 Edge-
worth Street, High Point.
Millie Clayton Burch, piano teacher,
Smithfield.
Sandra Burke, sixth grade, Mooresville.
Janelle Burleson, teaching, Albemarle.
Annie Maude Bums, secretary, Raleigh.
Dorothy Burns, teaching, Lumberton.
Frances Emmaline Burris, home economics,
Gastonia.
Joy (Burwell) Averett, teaching, Greens-
boro. Her husband is completing work for
his degree at Wake Forest College.
Betty Jean Busby, teaching, Sunbury.
Elnora Calloway. Park Hills Elementary
School. Spartanburg, S. C.
Claire Cannon, Hardbarger Business Col-
lege, Kinston.
Billie Jean (Cansler) Holt, homemaker,
Rcnton. Washington.
OCTOBER, 1958
27
Patricia Jean Cardcn, graduate study,
Columbia University.
Jane Carpenter is Mrs. Robert M. Graper,
111 Westview Road. Upper Montclair, N. J.
Sallie Ann (Carroll) Park, advertising de-
partment, Ellis Stone, Durham.
Marv Miller Carson, physical education,
The Beard School, Orange, N. J.
Sarah Elizabeth Carter to George Turner
Johnson. June 20, Asheville. The bridegroom
was graduated from Western Carolina Col-
lege and is a manager-trainee with J. C.
Penney Co., Asheville.
Bettv Sue Cash to Lt. James Hamilton
Hayes,' July 12, Rockv Mount. The bride-
groom was graduated from Wake Forest Col-
lege and is now stationed with the Army at
Ft. Bragg. Bettv Sue is teaching in the Bow-
ley Primary School, Ft. Bragg.
Dorothy Ann Caton to Harry B. Holding,
August 30, Concord. The bridegroom was
graduated from the University of North Car-
olina. Chapel Hill, and is employed in the
sales division of Riegel Textile Corp., New
York City.
Barbara Ann (Caudle) Gitter, at home. 92S
Oakland. Ann Arbor. Mich.
Tini Rae Chambers, fifth grade, Lincoln's
Elementary School, Fairfax County, Alexan-
dria, Ya.
Nancv Childress to Charles Murry Reid,
August 2, Chew Chase, Md. The bridegroom
was graduated from Wake Forest College and
is emploved bv Wachovia Bank and Trust
Co., Charlotte'. At home, 418-C Wakefield
Drive, Charlotte.
Kav (Congleton) Hedgepeth, secretary to
Director of N. C. State Personnel Depart-
ment, Raleigh.
Frona Conn, second grade, Wellwood Ele-
mentary School, Pikesville, Md.
Ownership
Statement required by the Act of August 24, 1912
as amended by the Acts of March 3, 1933. and
July 2, 1946 (Title 39. United States Code, Section
233) showing the ownership, management, and cir-
culation of THE ALUMNAE NEWS, published Jan-
uary. April. July, and October at Greensboro, North
Carolina.
1. The names and addresses of the publisher,
editor, managing editor, and business managers are:
Publisher, The Alumnae Association. Woman's Col-
lege. UNC, Greensboro, N. C, Editor, Barbara
Parrish, Greensboro. N. C.
2. The owner is: (If owned by a corporation, its
name and address must be stated and also immedi-
ately thereunder the names and addresses of stock-
holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of
total amount of stock. If not owned by a_ corpora-
tion, the names and addresses of the individual
owners must be given. If owned by a partnership
or other unincorporated firm, its name and address,
as well as that of each individual member, must be
given.) The Alumnae Association, Woman's College,
UNC. Greensboro, N. C.
3. The known bondholders, mortgagees, and other
security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or
more of total amounts of bonds, mortgages, or other
securities are: None.
4. Paragraphs 2 and 3 include, in cases where
the stockholder or security holder appears upon the
books of the company as trustee or in any other
fiduciary relation, the name of the person or cor-
poration for whom such trustee is acting: also the
statements in the two paragraphs show the affiant's
full knowledge and beliel as to the circumstances
and conditions under which stockholders and se-
curity holders who do not appear upon the books
of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities
in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner.
5. The average number of copies of each issue of
this publication sold or distributed, through the
mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the
12 months preceding the date shown above was:
(This information is required from daily, weekly,
semiweekly, and triweekly newspapers only.)
BARBARA PARRISH. Editor.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this third day
of October, 1958.
(Seal) RUTHE SHAFER. Notary Public.
(My commission expires February 26, 1959.)
Edith (Conrad) Teague has been living in
Radcliffe. Ky., but expected to return to
Greensboro.
Barabar Marian Cooper, caseworker, Nor-
folk, Va. She plans to be married on Novem-
ber 30.
Meetta (Carlton) Lampert, teaching, Spot-
sylvania County Public Schools, Fredericks-
burg, Ya.
Wilma Fave (Cooper) Reese, at home, 401
Parker Street, Rocky Mount.
Winnie Roberson Costello toured Europe
during the summer, and is now working for
the Mecklenburg County Public Welfare
Department, Charlotte.
Carolyn Anne Cotchett, Assistante de
Langue Angaise au Lycee de Jeunes Filles,
de Reims, France.
Mildred Ardella (Coxe) McNeill, house-
wife, Raleigh.
Sandra Elizabeth Craddock, English, Guil-
ford High School.
Joanna Carol Crawford at home 1111
Ragsdale Road, Greenville.
Carole Lynette (Crowder) Lattimore's hus-
band is in Sen-ice and she was uncertain
about her future work when she wrote to the
Office.
Patricia Crumpacker, teaching, Charlotte
City Schools.
Roxanne Dark, High School English,
Yirginia Beach, Va.
Bette Lee Davis was at home, 8009 Duns-
more Road, Richmond 26, Va., when she
wrote.
Carolyn Jane Davis, vocational home
economics, Southern High School, Durham
County.
Carrie Davis to Reginald W. Ponder, July
20, Pikeville. The bridegroom was graduated
from State College, Raleigh, and is a student
at Duke Divinity School, Durham. Carrie
teaches at Hope Valley Elementary School
there.
Norma (Davis) Poole, homemaker, Greens-
boro.
Claudette (Butler) Daughtry has been
doing secretarial work, School of Nursing,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
where her husband is a student in the School
of Dentistry.
Carolyn Hemrick Denny, graduate study.
Phyllis J. DeYoung, advertising department,
Meyers Department Store, Greensboro.
Gavle (Dobson) Connor, teaching, Patuxent
River, Md.
Laura Frances Doby, teaching, Ashley Park
School, Charlotte.
Irene Dodson, secretary for District Solici-
tor, Greensboro.
Rebecca T. Doughton, secretary, American
Commercial Bank, Charlotte.
Edna Dowdy, teaching, Portsmouth, Ya.
Johnnie DuFour, seventh grade, Ports-
mouth, Ya.
Margaret Dunlap, art, Tileston Junior High
School, Wilmington.
Patricia Anne Eason, first grade, Raleigh
City Schools.
Doris Jean Edwards, secretary, Greensboro.
Mary Ann Ehle, teaching, Baltimore City
Schools. During the summer she toured
Europe.
June Carolyn Eudy, fifth grade, Merry
Oaks School, Charlotte.
Adele Frances Evans, mathematics,
Moundsville, West Va.
Ruth Diane Farv, Physical education.
Portsmouth, Va.
Janet Finch, teaching, Annapolis, Md.
Mary Lewis Floyd to Robert Clyde Suggs,
June 21, Thomasville. Mr. Suggs attended
Edwards Military Institute and is a senior at
High Point College.
Joan Forester, dietetic internship, Army
Medical Specialist Corps.
Reva Pauline (Ingram) Fortune lives in
Greensboro. Her husband is serving with the
Army in Tokyo, Japan. Their daughter, Julee
Kim is 4V2.
Julia Ann Fox, first grade. Forest Hills
School, Danville, Ya.
Game Freeman, homemaking teacher,
Junior High School, Mt. Clemens, Mich.
Jean (Fuller) Moffitt, homemaking, Law-
ton, Okla.
Betty (Funderburk) Berryhill, art, Greens-
boro.
Reba Ann Furches to Coy Hicks Robert-
son, August 24, Mocksville. The bridegroom
was graduated from Mars Hill Junior College
and from Wake Forest College. The bride
teaches home economics. Gray High School,
Winston-Salem.
Sylvia Irene Galloway, kindergarten, Char-
lotte. During the summer she toured Europe.
Nancy Carol Gamer, teaching. High Point.
Emily Sue (Garrett) Little, bookkeeper,
Elon College.
Carolyn Gaskill, secretary, Duke Divinity
School, Durham.
Eileen (Gerringer) Owen, commercial sub-
jects. Bessemer High School, Greensboro.
Elizabeth Garvie, director of religious edu-
cation, Holy Trinity Episcopal Church,
Greensboro.
Julia George, physical education. Grove
City College in Pennsylvania. She replaces
Jane (Snipes) Morris '56, who resigned.
Gloria (Gilmore) Walden, homemaking
and caring for son, Greensboro.
Cordelia (Goodnight) Galphin, English
and journalism. New Hanover High School,
Wilmington.
Julia Bryant George, physical education.
Department of Physical Education for
Women, Grove City College, Pa.
Suzzanne Bell (Glenn) Lucas lives at 4943
Buckingham Court, St. Louis 8, Mo.
Peggy Jean Grady, assistant home agent,
Wilson County, Wilson.
Patricia Ann Griffin, Berryhill School,
Mecklenburg County, Charlotte.
Meda (Grigg) Howell, church secretary,
Greensboro.
Joan Griggs, commercial subjects, More-
head High School, Spray.
Patricia (Grubb) Wakefield, teaching,
Spokane, Washington.
Leslie (Hall) Paynter, piano, Chapel Hill.
Martha Ellen Harbison, primary education,
Virginia Beach, Ya.
Rebecca Anne Hardin, assistant home
agent, Yadkin County, Yadkinville.
Elizabeth (Hardy) Hubble, teaching, Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
Ellen Harris, home service representative,
Carolina Power & Light Co., Henderson.
Rebecca (Hatcher) Kurtz, homemaker.
North Augusta, S. C.
Frances (Haynes) Campbell, teaching, Tay-
lorsville. Her husband is an attorney there.
Helen M. (Heck) Mitchell, secretary,
Greensboro.
2S
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
Patricia Helgesen, teaching, Charlotte.
Madeline Herman, instrumental music,
Lenoir.
Wanda (Hester) Henley, teaching, Guil-
ford College.
Harriet Hodgin, first grade, Annadale Ele-
mentary School, Fairfax County, Va.
Jane Hoke, graduate study, Duke Univer-
sity, Durham.
Sybil Holshouser, graduate study, School
of Social Work, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill.
Carolyn Jean Hon to Lt. Roger William
Herrmann, June 21, Fayetteville. The bride-
groom was graduated from Wake Forest
College and is now stationed at Ft. Mc-
Clellan, Ala. At home there.
Valerie Honsinger to Ens. J. Darrow Kirk-
patrick, August 24, Chevy Chase, Md. Val's
temporary address is: Box 764, 1408 Strand
Street, Neptune Beach, Fla.
Anna Neese (Huffine) McGowan, home-
maker. Greensboro.
Virginia K. Huffman, Gastonia City-
Schools.
Georgia Hulac 58MA, is an instructor in
physical education, Wellesley College,
Wellesley, Mass.
Faye Hyatt, Joyner School, Greensboro.
Claire Jacoby to Lt. Charles Edward Davis,
III, August 30, Greensboro. The bridegroom
was graduated in August from the University
of South Carolina, received his commission
in the U. S. Marine Corps and is now sta-
tioned at Quantico, Va. At home, Dumfries,
Va.
Martha Sparks (Jester) Mader, reporter,
Greensboro News Record, Greensboro.
Patricia (Jernigan) Rose, dietetian. El Paso,
Texas. Her husband is stationed there.
Jane Johnson to C. Garland Young, August
23, Randleman. Mr. Young was graduated
from High Point College and is working
toward his bachelor of divinity at Duke
Divinity School, Durham.
Sara Jo (Johnston) Jackson, assistant case-
worker. Public Welfare Department, Hen-
derson.
Norma Elizabeth Jones, second grade,
Newport News, Va.
Patricia (Jones) Lindell, home economics,
Lincolnton.
Frances Jordan to Hurdle Haywood Lea,
Jr., September 7, Asheville. Mr. Lea is a
senior at State College, Raleigh, where he
is employed in the research department of
the College. Frances is a legal secretary.
Sandra (Kalfin) Slosman, homemaker,
Asheville.
Genelda Kepley, assistant to the Rev.
Robert Ellis with Episcopal College students
at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore.
Barbara (King) Moss, homemaker. Char-
lottesville, Va.
Elizabeth Ann King, medical technician,
Durham.
Janelle King to Roy Murray Wall, June 21,
Chapel Hill. The bridegroom attended the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
and is now a sergeant in the U. S. Marine
Corps. At home, Beaufort, S. C.
Barbara (Kleinert) Martin, homemaker,
New Bern.
Margaret (Lacher) Woodward, graduate
student, University of Chicago, 111.
Barbara LaMar, Actuarial Department,
Equitable Life Insurance Society, New York
Citv.
Joy Hunter Lambert to Henry Gerard, III,
June 14, Raleigh. The bridegroom graduated
from the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, and is a medical student there.
Joy is secretary in the School of Public
Health at the University.
Sue (Lanning) Vovles, teaching. Savannah,
Ga.
Marv Fenton Larson, home economics,
Shelby.
Anne Leach, teaching, Lowell.
Nancy Rose Leonard, elementary grades,
Greensboro.
Martha J. Leonard, instrumental music,
Greensboro.
Peggy Lewis, English, Jonesville. During
the summer she did secretarial work in the
Alumni Office, Duke University, Durham.
Martha Lineberger, graduate work, Uni-
versity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Janice C. Little, eighth grade. High School,
Concord.
Jean Little, secretary to Superintendent
City Schools, Charlotte.
Lois Yvonne Lominac to Thomas C.
Amico, Jr., June 7, Asheville. The bridegroom
was graduated from Elon College.
Frances Helen (Long) Johnson, home-
maker, Raleigh.
Marv Ruth Long, Director, Teen-Age
Program, YWCA, Raleigh.
Evelyn Lowe, elementary grades, Lexington.
Mary Ann Lucas, clerk-stenographer. Insti-
tute of Government, Chapel Hill.
Julia Ann McCaskill attended summer
school at Woman's College, working toward
a teacher's certificate.
Ila Grey McIUwean, assistant home demon-
stration agent, Perquimans County, Hertford.
Barbara Lee McKeown to Frank M. Rem-
bert, June 2, Asheville. The bridegroom was
graduated from the University of the South,
Sewanee, Tenn., and is now a student at
Washington Medical School, St. Louis, Mo.
Barbara is teaching nursery school.
Joyce McRorie, teaching, Rutherfordton.
Janice Manning to John Robert Browning,
July 6, Williamston. The bridegroom was
graduated from Atlantic Christian College,
Wilson, and is now studying for the ministry
at College of the Bible Seminary, Lexington,
Kv. Janice teaches public school music in
Butler, Ky.
Gloria Anne (Maready) Bowman is on the
staff of the library, University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Katherine Marsh to Joseph Raymond
Montgomery, Jr., July 3, High Point. The
bridegroom was graduated from the Univer-
sity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. At
home. High Point.
Ann (Marshall) Snider, at home, Box 167,
Lancaster, Mass.
Ida Ruth (Martin) Walker, homemaker,
Ronda.
Marv Lou Martin, stenographer, FBI,
Charlotte.
Joanne (May) Heath, planned to teach in
Raleigh.
Virginia Juliene Metters to James Clay
Fulp, June 14, Statesville. The bridegroom is
studying at the N. C. Vocational Textiles
Training School in Belmont. He is employed
by Burlington Industries.
Norma Faye Mills to Lewis Bert Smith.
June 14, Greenville. Both are teaching in the
Lee Countv Schools. Cameron.
Jean Lea Mincey, personnel work. North
Carolina Memorial Hospital, University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Betty (Mixon) Daughtry, second grade,
Goldsboro.
Barbara Jane Moore, Milford Mill School,
Baltimore, Md.
Katherine Moore, graduate study, Duke
University, Durham.
Margaret Moore to Jesse Edwards Milliken,
June 21, Pittsboro. Mr. Milliken attended
Duke University, Durham, and is with the
Boling Chair Company, Siler City. Margaret
is teaching English in Siler City.
Marilyn Neerman, executive trainee, At-
lanta, Ga.
Glenda Noble, home economist, Carolina
Power and Light Company, Raleigh.
Esta Mae Nobles, Clarkton High School,
Clarkton.
Mary Louise Noice, Mecklenburg County
Schools, Charlotte.
Peggy Jan Oakley, fourth grade, Winston-
Salem.
Elizabeth Oden, Princess Ann High School,
Virginia Beach, Va.
Nancy (Overton) Croft, homemaker, Talla-
hassee, Fla.
Joyce (Owen) King, teaching, Greensboro.
Shirley Ann Owen, teaching, Winston-
Salem.
Mary Phyllis Pake, staff artist and techni-
cian, Science Department, State College,
Raleigh.
Judith Ann Parker to Lloyd Harvey Rob-
ertson, Jr., June 28, Salisbury. The bride-
groom was graduated from Woodberry Forest
School, Davidson College, and is a third year
medical student at Duke University, Durham.
At home, 860 Louise Circle, Apt. 19-B,
Durham.
Ruth Parks, fifth grade. Holt School,
Lexington.
Norma Parrish is employed by R. J. Reyn-
olds, Winston-Salem.
Gloria (Paschal) Gordon, secretary, Denver,
Colo., where her husband, a lieutenant in the
Air Force, expects to be stationed until
March, 1959.
Phyllis Passes to Arnold Yale Kapiloff, June
29, Winston-Salem. Phyllis is teaching in
Arlington, Va.
Susan Patman has been travelling in
Europe.
Carey (Patterson) Montague, homemaker,
Burlington.
Ruth (Pearman) Thomas, teaching, Stokes-
dale.
Shirley Anne Pearman to Richard Lewis
Hunter. August 16, Summcrfield. The bride-
groom was graduated from Duke University,
Durham, and is employed by Allied Chemical
Corp. of New York City and is attending the
graduate school of New York University.
Shirlev is teaching history, Plainfield High
School, Plainfield, N. J.
Geraldine Pfaff to Gerald I. Cohen, August
30, Winston-Salem. She is a chemist with
American Cyanamid, Stamford, Conn.
Donnis Philbeck, social caseworker, Shelby.
Eula Eloise Phillips, teaching, Robbinsville.
Noel Faye Pinner, music education, Bel-
haven.
Pattie W. Pittman, first grade, Grove Park
School, Burlington.
Millie Ann Pitts, first year medical student.
Johns Hopkins Hospital. Baltimore, Md.
Yvonne Potts, primary grades, Spencer.
OCTOBER, 1958
29
Barbara Rankin, teaching, Mecklenburg
County.
Lois Privette to Charles Lee Boggs, August
9 Ilillsboro. The bridegroom is a graduate
of the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill, and is now a chemist for International
Paper Company, Georgetown, S. C. Lois is
teaching there.
Sarah (Pullen) Kellv, teaching. Chapel Hill
Her husband is a senior in the Medical
School at the University.
Martha Doub Rainey, working for National
Geographic Magazine, Washington, D. C.
Jan Rankin, Plantation School. Ft. Lauder-
dale, Fla.
Barbara Rash, Charles Ellis School, New-
ton Square. Pa.
Linda Lee Reece, teaching, Jonesville.
Anne Reid, secretary, Belk's Buying Service,
Charlotte.
Barbara Rhvmer, Hamlet City Schools.
Hamlet.
Dorothy Richmond, graduate study in clin-
ical psychology. University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. '
Mary (Robeson) Hunter, homemaker, Cul-
peper, Va.
Linda (Beach) Rogers, tenth and eleventh
grade English, Alhambra, Calif.
Lenna Elizabeth Rose, art, Ludbrook
Junior High School, Pikesville. Md.
Barbara Lee Rosser, civil service work. Ft.
Bragg.
Lurlei (Routh) Woodward, homemaker,
Greensboro.
Phyllis Runyon, instructor and graduate
student. University of Montana, Missoula,
Montana.
Emily Ryals, teaching. Rocky Mount.
Virginia Sabiston, English, Thorogood
School, Princess Anne County, Virginia
Beach, Va. She is living with Sylvia Whitley
'58 and Roxanne Dark '58.
Patricia Ann Satterfield to James Earl
Gentry, June 28, Roxboro. Mr. Gentry at-
tended the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, and is an accountant for the
Collins and Aikman Corp., Roxboro.
Virginia Scarborough, teaching, Asheville.
Mary Sandra Schulken, primary grades,
Winston-Salem.
Marilyn Lee (Scott) Cook, teaching,
Burlington.
Svlvia Shelton, English. Newport News,
Va.
Quinelle (Shipp) Skelton, homemaker,
Spartanburg, S. C.
Pat Shore, secretary. Senator Sam Ervin's
Office, Washington, D. C.
Sarah Shuping, legal secretary, R. J. Reyn-
olds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem.
Rochelle Frances Simon, Lincolnia School.
Alexandria, Va.
Betty Sue Simpson, assistant home demon-
stration agent, Stokes County, Walnut Cove.
Sue Sigmon to L. Neil Williams, Jr..
August 23, Charlotte. The bridegroom was
graduated from Duke University, Durham,
and is a student in the Law School there.
Sue is a librarian at Duke University.
Marie (Sizemore) Butler, at home, 401 N.
Edgemont, Gastonia.
Rascha Sara Sklut to Robert Marvin
Kriegsman, June 8. Winston-Salem. Mr.
Kricgsman was graduated from the University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and is a
student in the School of Dentistry, University
of Maryland, Baltimore.
Mary Jane Smiley to Charles Jefferson
Thompson, June 22, Salisbury. Mr. Thomp-
son was graduated from the University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and studied on
a Fulbright Scholarship at the University of
Aix-en-Provence, France. Mary Jane is a
statistician. Bureau of Census, Social Statistics
Department, Suitland, Md.
Bettie Jeanne (Smith) Dupree, teaching,
Varina.
Louise Clifford Smith to Airman Frederic
Nash Wilkenloh, August 10, Morganton.
The bridegroom attended Davidson and Guil-
ford Colleges before enlisting in the Air
Force. He served in Korea and is now sta-
tioned at Frances E. Warren Air Force Base,
Chevenne, Wvo. At home, Encampment,
Wyo.
Marjorie (Smith) Handy, research techni-
cian. Chapel Hill.
Quwatha Valentine Smith, mathematician
for N.A.C.A., Langley Field Air Force Base,
Hampton, Va.
Ellen (Spielman) Acker, studying toward
master's degree in Drama, University' of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Margaret Diana (Stampley) Walden, home-
maker, Orlando, Fla.
Jessie Ann Stanzel, teaching, Westfield,
N. J.
Gail Steacy, physical education. Page High
School. Greensboro. Gail, along with several
other members of the class, enjoyed a NSA
Tour last summer.
Barbara Jane Stewart to Donald McCown
White, June 14, Roxboro. Mr. White is em-
ployed by Norfolk and Western Railway
Company, Halifax, Va. Barbara teaches com-
mercial subjects in the Halifax County High
School.
Miriam E. Storey, Princess Anne High
School, Virginia Beach, Va.
Mary L. Story, fifth grade, Portsmouth
City Schools, Va.
Susan Caroline Stout, graduate study, Uni-
versity of Illinois. During the summer she
was a camp counselor.
Billie Joan Stubblefield, casework assistant,
Greensboro.
Evelyn (Suggs) Harris, homemaker, Thom-
asville.
Priscilla Swindell, teaching, Greensboro.
Dorothy Marie Tavlor, mathematician,
N.A.C.A., Hampton, Va.
Eleanor Taylor, distributive education co-
ordinator, Patterson Park High School, Balti-
more, Md.
Doris Jane Teeter, assistant home demon-
stration agent, Iredell County, Statesville.
Nancy (Tharrington) Boyd is working in
the Library, Woman's College, Greensboro.
Evelyn Anne Tice to Robert Bennett Mor-
ris, June 7, Wadesboro. Anne is teaching in
Arden Elementary School, Columbia, S. C.
Margaret Jean Tillett, eighth grade Amer-
ican History, Thorogood School, Princess
Anne, Va.
Margaret (Timmerman) Hardegree, home-
maker. Greensboro.
Geraldine Trull, English, Westfield.
Betsy Uzzle, assistant home agent, Durham
County, Durham. Most of her work is with
4-1 1 Club girls.
Kay Henry Vaughn, secretary, Gastonia.
Elaine Voss, math statistician. Bureau of
Census, Washington, D. C.
Lt. Hilda Walker, physical therapist. Army
Medical Specialist Corps, Fort Sam Houston.
Texas.
Lorraine Wallace, food production man-
ager, Wake Forest College, Winston-Salem.
Jacqueline Wallace to Jack Hubbard Varn-
er, August 2, Edenton. The bridegroom is
employed by Burlington Industries, Greens-
boro, where they are living. Jacqueline teaches
in Greensboro.
Jo Ann (Waller) Dilworth, teaching,
Winston-Salem.
Mary Ann Ward, chemist, Dow Chemical
Co., Newport News, Va.
Mary Jo Warren, secretary, Raleigh.
Mary Irene Waters to Tommie Joe John-
son, June 22, Pinetown. The bridegroom is a
senior at State College, Raleigh. Irene is
assistant county agent, Martin County,
Williamston.
Loretta Lee Weatherlv, teaching, Virginia
Beach, Va.
Anna (Webb) Sermons, nursery school
teacher, Victory Village Dav Care Center,
Chapel Hill.
Jane Graves Wharton to Edward Andrew
Shackelford, III, June 12, Richmond, Va.
The bridegroom attended Richmond Profes-
sional Institute and is employed as a drafts-
man. Jane is a secretary. Alley' Travel Agency,
Richmond, Va.
Janelle White, assistant home demonstra-
tion agent, New Hanover County, Wilming-
ton.
Katherine White, physical education. Uni-
versity of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, Puerto
Rico.'
Peggy Mae White, Travelers Insurance,
Charlotte.
Sydney (Whitener) Stancil, vocational
home economics, Cherryville.
Sylvia Whitley, sixth grade, Woodstock
School, Virginia Beach, Va.
Sara (Whitlock) Smith, homemaking,
Raleigh. Her husband is teaching at State
College, where he is working toward a mas-
ter's degree.
Sandra Wilkerson, piano, Lexington.
Barbara Williams, high school English,
Churchland, Va.
Sarah Kathryn Williams, Cameron Elemen-
tary School, Fairfax County, Alexandria, Va.
Shirley Williams, secretary-bookkeeper,
Zionville.
Miriam Wilson, home economics, Albe-
marle Senior High, Albemarle.
Margaret Ann Winkler, secretary', Gastonia.
Jo Anne Woosley to Robert Kennedy Jar-
rett, July 19, Winston-Salem. The bride-
groom is employed by Hobart Sales & Service,
Greensboro. Jo Anne is teaching home eco-
nomics in Gibsonville, where they live.
Candle Te-
OF interest to alumnae within driving
distance of Winston-Salem is the fact that
the Moravian Candle Tea in the historic
Brothers' House on Salem Square will be
open to the public this year for three
successive days and, for the first time, an
additional night: Wednesday night, De-
cember 3 (7:00-9:00), and Thursday, De-
cember 4, through Saturday-, December 6
(2:00-9:00). Hostesses in early Salem cos-
tumes will guide visitors through the
candle-making room, the old kitchen
where sugar cake and coffee will be served,
and the two rooms in the Sub-Basement
where the Putz will be on display.
30
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
Martha Lee York, assistant home demon-
stration agent, Halifax County, Roanoke
Rapids.
Carolyn Young to Earl Randolph Oglesby,
Jr., June 28, Taylorsville. The bridegroom was
graduated from Edwards Military Institute
and from the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. He is doing graduate work at
the University, where Carolyn is a secretary
in the Psychology Department.
Polly Mozelle Young, dietetic intern, H. C.
Moffitt Hospital, University of California
Medical Center, San Francisco, Calif.
So
Commercials
Ann Adams, secretary, Belk
Stores Services, Inc., Charlotte.
Ann Marie (Alexander) Lemon, secretary,
Prestige Chair Corporation, Newton.
Barbara Barger, secretary to Wholesale
Marketing Manager, The Atlantic Refining
Company, Charlotte.
Roberta Maie Barrow, secretary, Charlotte.
Janice Belk, secretary, Charlotte.
Phyllis Bennett, secretary. Security Savings
& Loan Association, Durham.
Shirley Bernhardt, secretary. Security Life
.and Trust Company, Winston-Salem.
Lou Ann Best, secretary, Wachovia Bank
& Trust Company, Goldsboro.
Carol Black, IBM operator, Aker's Motor
Line, Gastonia.
Sara Elizabeth Blackman, secretary. Office
of Joint Chiefs of Staff, Pentagon, Washing-
Ion, D. C.
Nancy Blackwelder, secretary, Charlotte.
Ann Blalock, secretary, Duke Hospital,
Durham.
Ann Gail Brooks, living in Lexington.
Janice Nell Burke, clerk-typist, Raleigh.
Peggy Jean Byrd, secretary, Mt. Gilead.
Gail Canup to Walter D. Hinson, June
19, Charlotte. Her husband is stationed with
the Air Force in San Antonio, Texas, where
they are living.
Glenda Fair Cardwell, secretarial work,
Burlington Industries, Greensboro.
Betsy Yvonne Carpenter lives at 3902
Palma Drive, Orlando, Fla.
Jean Chadwick, bookkeeper, Morehead
City Shipbuilding Corp., Beaufort.
Gwendolyn Chappell, Sears, Roebuck,
Rocky Mount.
Gwendolyn (Church) Eason, Remington
Rand-UNIVAC, St. Paul, Minn.
Melvina Clifton, stenographer, Jefferson
Standard Life Insurance Company, Greens-
boro.
Barbara Jane Coble, secretary. Maritime
Building, Washington, D. C.
Diana Cobb, bookkeeper and secretary,
Simpson Printing Company, Greensboro.
Annyce Coe, at home, Salisbury.
Caren Lee (Cole) Bryant, receptionist,
Kernodle Clinic, Elon College.
Gail Cooper, secretary. Chamber of Com-
merce, Sumter, S. C.
Marjorie Ellen Cowell, stenographer, Char-
lotte.
Pelham Curlee, at home, 9^ Buffalo Street,
Concord.
Mary Annelle Culpepper, secretary, Greens-
boro.
Glenda (Dameron) Leonard, secretary,
Leonard Wholesale Company, Greensboro.
Rose Marie David, secretary, Fayetteville.
Sandra DeLappe, office work, High Point.
Linda Sue Dickson, secretary, Western
Electric Co., Winston-Salem.
Sarah Beth Dye, secretary, Wachovia Bank
& Trust Company, Wilmington.
Glenda Eavenson, secretary, Wayncsvillc.
Jane Fleming, bookkeeper, Astoria Braid
Mfg. Co., Inc., Boonville.
Patricia Forehand, secretary, Burlington.
^ Carolyn Foster, steno-clerk, P. H. Hanes
Knitting Co., Winston-Salem.
Sylvia Anne Fountain, secretary, Depart-
ment of Chemistry, University of North Car-
olina, Chapel Hill.
Hilda (Garrett) Galloway, homemaker,
Greensboro.
Carolyn Gardner, at home, Dunn.
Martha Jan Gentry to Bill McRacken, Sep-
tember 13, Maxton. At home, Albuquerque,
New Mexico.
Janet Gay Ghirardini, at home, Charlotte.
Ruby Eleanor (Gray) Rutherford, secre-
tary, Thomasville.
Joan (Plummer) Hanner, secretary, Ran-
dlcman.
Gavle Lee Hart, Belk's Buving secretary,
Charlotte.
Margaret Ann Hart, secretary, law firm,
Kinston.
Mary Kathleen Hatcher, bookkeeper,
Laurinburg.
Jane Kay Hawkins, at home, Greensboro.
Mary Helen Hawkins, Wachovia Bank,
Candler.
Betty Louise Hiatt, clerical work, J. P.
Stevens, Charlotte.
Nancy Carole Hinson, secretary, Lilesville.
Connie Elizabeth Hobby, private secretary.
Pentagon Building, Washington, D. C.
Martha Sue Jarrett, secretary, Earle-Chcs-
tcrfield Mill Company, W. Asheville.
Brookie Lou Jernigan, bookkeeper, Dunn.
Jackie Jessup, secretary, Sales Office, Blue
Bell, Inc., Greensboro.
Barbara Sue Jones, stenographer, Jefferson
Standard Life Insurance Company, Greens-
boro.
Peggy Julian, secretary, Jefferson Standard
Life Insurance Company, Charlotte.
Jane Edgerton Kearns, at home, 600 Hill-
crest Drive, High Point.
Mary Frances Kindley, assistant secretary
and teller, Lexington State Bank, Lexington.
Patricia Evelyn Lee, secretary, Smith-Doug-
las Company, Inc., Kinston.
Anna Jean Liner, secretary, Biltmore.
Jove Ann London, accountant. Champion
Paper & Fiber Company, Canton.
Andrea Lane Long, stenographer. Gastonia.
Sunny McCool, secretary. Cannon Mills,
Kannapolis.
Judith McRee, Riegel Textile Corp., Con-
over.
Leah Suzanne Martindale, U. S. Treasury
Dept., Internal Revenue, Greensboro.
Ola Geraldine Matherly, American To-
bacco Co., Ruffin.
Barbara Jean Matthews, Carolina Power &
Light Company, Raleigh.
Linda Leah Maynor, secretary. Durham.
Myra Jean Meeks, at home, Leaksville.
Loretta Dawn Melton, secretary, Carolina
Power & Light, Asheboro.
Nancy Carol (Miller) Ratledge is living in
San Antonio, Texas.
Rosalie Monsour, secretary, Fayetteville.
Jean Carol Morgan, legal stenographer.
Rural Hall.
Valeria Ann Morgan, secretary, ). P.
Stevens, Greensboro.
Ann Click Morris, Veterans Administra-
tion, Winston-Salem.
Linda Kay Myers, secretary, Cone Mills
Corp.. Greensboro.
Bonnie Myers, bookkeeper. First National
Bank, Thomasville.
Patricia Alice Myrick, stenographer, Jeffer-
son Standard Life Insurance, Greensboro.
Jan Nail, secretary, Odcll Hardware Com-
pany, Greensboro.
Mary Alice Nesbit, secretary, Pleasant
Garden.
Patsy Lou Newsome, secretary, Long-
Haymes Advertising Agency, Winston-Salem.
Margaret Nicholson, secretary, Chapel Hill.
Nancv (Davis) Norman, homemaker, East
Bend.
Betty Shelton Oakley, at home, Hender-
son.
Deris Ann (O'Bryant) Strickland, home-
maker, Reidsville.
Anne Peace to Ronald Martin, October 1,
High Point. Anne is a secretary, Robb
Plumbing & Heating, High Point.
Suzanne Perry is working at The Hospital
Care Association District Office, New Bern.
Joyce Allin Petree, R. J. Reynolds To-
bacco Company, Winston-Salem.
Julia Ann Petree, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco
Company, Winston- Salem.
Jane C. Pickett, secretary to Dr. L. S.
Weaver, President of Methodist College,
Fayetteville.
Sally Pierce, at home, Salisbury.
Kay Anne Pinkston, Wachovia Bank, Salis-
bury.
Eleanor Gayle Powell, secretary, Otis Ele-
vator Company, Charlotte.
Ann Prevost, at home, Hazelwood.
Betty Jean Price, credit stenographer, Dur-
ham.
Alice Ann Prince, stenographer, Wachovia
Bank & Trust Co., Durham.
Barbara Jean Pullen, at home. Rocky
Mount.
Marie Ann Purvis, assistant bookkeeper.
Carthage Production Credit Association,
Carthage.
Phyllis (Pyatte) Hutchins, secretary, Swan-
nanoa.
Barbara Belle Redding, bookkeeper. High
Point.
Martha Roberts, secretary to Director of
Admissions, Graduate School, Duke Univer-
sity, Durham.
Judith Joan Royce, secretary, Philip Mor
ris. Inc.. Charlotte.
Flora Aim Sally, secretary, Durham.
Julia Anne Schwerin, private secretary,
Agriculture Department, U. S. Government,
State College, Raleigh.
Rebecca (Schweistris) Etheridge, at home.
Winston-Salem.
Shelva Jean (Sechriest) Musselwhite, sec-
retary, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Win-
ston-Salem.
Catherine Jane Secrest, secretary. Monroe.
Barbara Shaw, secretary, Asheboro.
Patricia Ann Short, secretary, Charlotte.
Barbara Howard Simpson, clerk-stenog-
rapher, Federal Housing Administration,
Greensboro.
OCTOBER, 1958
"1
Linda Kay Skeen, secretarial work, Denton.
Patricia Kay Slade, secretary, Greensboro.
Davetta Ann Smith to Johnnie Joseph
Williams, Jr., August 17. Rocky Mount. The
bridegroom is a student at Guilford College,
where he is preparing for the ministry. Da-
vetta is secretary, Burlington Industries,
Greensboro.
Jean Smith, secretarv, Douglas Aircraft
Co., Charlotte.
Virginia (Hurt) Sneed, secretary, Publica-
tion Department. Colonial Williamsburg,
Va.
Cynthia Jane Sowers, secretary, Depart-
ment of Historv, University of North Caro-
lina. Chapel Hill.
Alma Sparrow, secretary, Greensboro.
Nancy Spencer, secretary to Congressman
Ralph Scott, Washington, D. C.
Sally Dolores, secretary. New Bern.
Nancy E. Stimpson, secretary, Merchan-
dising Department, Western Electric, Win-
ston-Salem.
Linda (Stinson) Johnson, secretary, Boon-
ville.
Nancy Jane Sugg, secretary to recreation
chief. Veterans Administration Hospital,
Salisbury.
Molly Summers, accrual accountant. Audit-
ing Department, First Union National Bank
of N. C, Charlotte.
Janice Swing, secretary. Southern Railway,
Greensboro.
Linda G. Talbert, medical secretary, Duke
Hospital, Durham.
Colista Jean Taylor, secretary, Borden
Chemical Company, High Point.
Kathleen Turtle, secretary, Law School,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Ellen Regis Vickers, at home, Winston-
Salem.
Norma Dean Walker, secretary, Mitchell
Distributing Company, Charlotte.
Wisdom Lambeth Walker, secretarv, Bur-
lington Mills, Greensboro.
Amy Adelaide Warner, secretary, law firm,
Raleigh.
Doreen Watts, secretary, Fayetteville.
Martha Rebecca (Wayne) Reddeck, at
home, Charlotte.
Swannie Louise Weisiger, secretary,
Greensboro.
Martha Aleen Whitted, secretary for in-
surance firm, Candler.
Lois Williams, legal stenographer, Greens-
boro.
Judy (Dodson) Williams, legal secretarv,
North Charleston, S. C.
Martha Jean Williams, at home, Robbins,
Mary Alice (Williams) Carter, secretary
for a real estate agent, Portsmouth, Va.
Mary Louise (Wilson) Wilkerson, recep-
tionist, Link-Taylor Corporation, Lexington.
Virginia Lee Wynn, secretarv, Wachovia
Bank & Trust Co.. Charlotte.
Linda Jane Young, secretary. Hickory.
Clara Gail Yount, secretary-bookkeeper,
Lexington.
Donna Williams, secretary-stenographer,
Greensboro.
Sympathy
'60
Sally Ackerman to Matthew
Jackson Gay, September 20, Nutley, N. J.
Mr. Gay was graduated from the University
of Georgia and they are now living in St.
Louis, Mo.
Miss Alice Abbott, associate professor of
Spanish, in the death of her father, Walter
Abbott, October 9, Mocksville. He had made
his home in Greensboro with Miss Abbott
for several years.
Annie Petty, retired faculty member, in
the death of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Herbert
C. Petty, September 10, in an automobile
accident, near Toms River, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Baldwin, in the death
of their five-year-old daughter, Mary Celia,
who was killed in an automobile accident
August 9, near Yadkinville. Mr. Baldwin
teaches geography at Woman's College.
Sudie (Middleton) Thorp 1899, in the
death of her son, A. P. Thorp, Jr., during
the summer, Rocky Mount.
Margaret (Patterson) High, class of '05,
Margaret (High) Sturm, class of '32, Kath-
arine (High)) Bames '29, and Mary Berton
(High) Darst, class of '33, in the death of
their husband and father, Alfred B. High,
during the summer, Greensboro.
Hallie Anthony, Com. '13, in the death of
her sister, Mrs. Flora (Anthonv) Gladstone,
class of 1898. May 30, High Point.
Louise (Crawford) Johnson '13, in the
death of her husband, Grover C. Johnson,
July 30, Goldsboro.
Lochie Stover, class of '13, in the death of
her sister, Virginia (Stover) Coble, class of
'08, summer, Greensboro.
Marguerite (Campen) Frazier, class of 16.
in the death of her half-sister, Mrs. Elizabeth
C. Rice, April 27, Wilmington.
Mary (Garrison) Burgin, Com. '16, in the
death of her sister, Minnie L. Garrison, class
of '12, June 3, Gibsonville.
Beulah (Logan) Dobbins '18, Anne Mil-
dred (Dobbins) Fowlkes '42, Grace (Dobbins)
Yeager '43, Nancy (Dobbins) Haigwood '46,
and Ruth (Dobbins) Shermer, class of '55,
in the death of their husband and father,
Nelson Dobbins, June 15, Yadkinville.
Carol (Shelton) Mabrey, Com. 18, Gray
(Shelton) Marshall, class of '28, in the death
of their brother, Phillip Alphin Shelton,
August 22, Greensboro.
Hazel (Edwards) Conkwright, Com. 19, in
the death of her husband, Douglas Conk-
wright, August, Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Elizabeth (Thames) Gamble '19, in the
death of her brother, Dr. Francis C. Thames,
September 9, California, Md.
Stella (Williams) Anderson '23 and Billie
Anderson, class of '58, in the death of their
husband and father, Ed M. Anderson, June
24, Brevard.
Eloise (Hedrick) Conrad, Com. '25, in the
death of her husband, Arnold Hill Conrad,
Greensboro.
Eliza Jane Doby '27, in the death of her
sister, Julia Lillian Doby '25, September 8,
Durham.
Louise (Brooks) Lowdermilk, Com. '28, in
the death of her husband, Talton F. Lowder-
milk, September 10, Asheboro.
Mary Louise (McDearman) Holzapfel '28
and Nancy (McDearman) Yeatman '34. in
the death of their mother, Man- (Battle) Mc-
Dearman, class of 1897, October, Raleigh.
Mabel F. LaBarr '30, Myrtle Ellen LaBarr,
class of '26, and Violettemae (LaBarr) Hasty
'29, in the death of their father, LaVern
Judson LaBarr, July 4, Raleigh.
Waverly (Thomas) McLeod '32, in the
death of her husband, Dr. Junius H. Mc-
Leod, April 24, Fayetteville.
Charlotte (Barber) Whitehead, class of '33,
in the death of her husband, Dr. Seba
Whitehead, July 12, Asheville.
Jo (Kiker) Avett '35, York Kiker '39, and
Hazel (Kiker) Bridges '41, in the death of
their father, Paul J. Kiker, July 23, Wades-
boro.
Elizabeth (Sloop) Gabriel '36, in the death
of her sister, Virginia (Sloop) McCraw,
March 23, Mooresville.
Margaret Ann (Weaver) Sanders, Com.
'36, in the death of her sister, Cornelia
(Weaver) Dickson, Com. '30, September 9,
Wilmington.
Lucy Neal (Brooks) Harrell, Com. '37, in
the death of her father, Frank A. Brooks,
August 5, Greensboro.
Alice Ryan '37, in the death of her father,
September, Greensboro.
Laura Cline '41, in the death of her
father, Robev R. Cline, August 18, Ashe-
ville.
Beda (Carlson) Calhoun, class of '42, and
Laurinda (Carlson) Schenck, Sp. '44, in the
death of their father, Dr. Carl I. Carlson,
October 23, Greensboro.
Ruth (Highfill) Mills, Com. '42, in the
death of her mother, Mrs. Mattie Belle High-
fill. Greensboro.
Selene (Parker) McAdams '42, in the death
of her husband, George Mell McAdams, Sep-
tember 3, Winston-Salem.
Wilma Morton '43, Joyce (Turner) Mor-
ton, Com. '57. and Rose (Morton) Sayre '48,
in the death of their father and father-in-
law, M. Hamilton Morton, October 8, Win-
ston-Salem.
Charline Rotha '43, in the death of her
sister, Louise Rotha '28, September 13,
Waynesville.
Helen (Sutton) Stanton, Com. '46, and
Jean (Sutton) Vamer, Com. '37, in the death
of their sister, Anne (Sutton) Hester, August
20, Elizabethtown.
Martha (Guion) Meredith '49, in the
death of her father-in-law, Dr. C. O. Mere-
dith, September 12, Guilford College.
Nancy (Kendall) Wailes '49, in the death
of her mother, Mrs. Carl G. Kendall, during
the summer, Middlesboro, Mass.
Esther Samuelson '50, in the death of her
mother, Mrs. Karl J. Samuelson, during the
summer, Hyattsville, Md.
Betty Carroll (Wimbish) Warner '51. in
the death of her mother-in-law, Mrs. Daniel
O. Warner, July 7, Greensboro.
Beulah (Yates) Collins '51, in the death
of her father. Ira Clarence Yates, Sr.. Sep-
tember 29, Elkin.
Lelia Ruth (Edmondson) Bondurant, Com.
'53, in the death of her mother. Mrs. Paul
B. Edmundson, October 20, Goldsboro.
_ Betty Lou (Kennedy) Dougherty, class of
'54, in the death of her father, Woodford
A. Kennedy. May 11, Charlotte.
32
THE ALUMNAE NEWS
Fifteen original paintings from the Cone Collection of the Baltimore Museum
of Art will be exhibited in Elliott Hall from October 29 through November
23. The exhibit will be open on Monday through Saturday from 9:00 a.m.
until 10:00 p.m. and on Sunday from 2:00 until 10:00 p.m. Included in the
exhibit will be paintings by Courbet, Rouault, Matisse, Picasso, Pisarro,
Renoir, Robinson, Sisley, Utrillo, Vallotton, and Vlaminck.
Calendar of Events
... of interest to Alumnae
November 5-8 8:00 p.m. Theatre of Woman's College Aycock Auditorium
"The King and I"
10_jl g.30 p n, Broadway Production Aycock Auditorium
"Diary of Anne Frank"
13-14 Harriet Elliott Social Science Forum
16 11:00 a.m. University Sermon Aycock Auditorium
Rev. Gustave A. Weigel
Woodstock College, Woodstock, Maryland
J7 g.QO p.m. Concert Aycock Auditorium
All-State Orchestra
18 4 & 8 p.m. Marvin McDonald Series Aycock Auditorium
Ballet Russe
20 8:00 p.m. Lecture-Entertainment Series Aycock Auditorium
Little Singers of Paris
23 8:15 p.m. Concert Aycock Auditorium
Greensboro Symphony Orchestra
24 8:30 p.m. Theatre of Woman's College (sponsor) Aycock Auditorium
"Tunnel of Love"
Mona Freeman and Eddie Bracken, starring
26-30 Thanksgiving Holidays
December 5-6 Convention
N. C. Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation
7 3:30 p.m. Concert Elliott Hall
Woman's College Chorus
10-12 8:00 p.m. Theatre of Woman's College Aycock Auditorium
"Stage Door"
14 5:00 p.m. Christmas Concert Aycock Auditorium
Woman's College Choir
December 20-January 4 Christmas Holidays
January 2-3 8:30 p.m. Broadway Production Aycock Auditorium
"Lil Abner"
14 8:00 p.m. Civic Music Series Aycock Auditorium
Benno Moiseiwitsch, pianist
1 *~" Final Examinations
24 12:30 p.m. Midwinter Meeting of the Alumnae Association
Season tickets for the Woman's College Lecture-Entertainment and Theatre series and single admission tickets may be secured at the box office in
Aycock Auditorium or from Mrs. Kathleen P. Hawkins at the College.
Calendar Inside
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