THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
ALUMNAE NEWS
Gs
AVE ATQUE VALE
OCTOBER 1963 VOLUME FIFTY-TWO NUMBER ONE
THE EDITOR THINKS
THE EDITORIAL BOARD SPEAKS
Elizabeth Yates King
THE PRESIDENT INTRODUCES
Adelaide Fortune Holderness
OF Major Concern to the Board of
Trustees of your Alumnae Association
have been the goals of keeping its membership
aware of the progress of the College as it
moves into another area in education, of re-
flecting the thoughts and purposes of its fac-
ults- and alumnae, and of the renewing of our
minds, our friendships, and our assoaations.
To achieve this end an Editorial Board has
been formed with Mrs. Walter W. King, Jr.
(Elizabeth Yates '36), a member of the .\s
sociation Board, as Chairman. It is with great
pride that we move toward our objective by
securing the services of Miss Vera Largent
as our first editor. Many of you will remem-
ber her as a dedicated teacher of History,
equipped with vision and courage: and she
is already bringing her store of knowledge,
energy and alertness to this new iX)sition.
.\s we move into our first year in the his-
tory of the college as university, it is gratify-
ing to report that our eight Alumnae
Scholars are on the campus as a result of
your response to the Annual Giving Fund.
The twelve new holders of Reynolds Scholar-
ships are also now on the campus, both
groups of students a part of the program of
development.
Now with the Editorial Board and a new
Alumnae News Editor, we begin another step
in the activitv of our Association.
MISS VERA LARGENT
THIS COMMITTEE, which Adelaide and
the Alumnae Board have given the
rather miposing name of Editorial Board, is
designed to advise on policy and content of
the ALUMN.\E NEWS and, in so far as pos-
sible, to reflect alumnae opinion.
Our college enters now upon a new era —
its purpose still the education of young peo-
ple, but its scope a broader one. Our mag-
azine must reflect this broader horizon. It
must stand on equal footing with the alum-
ni magazines of other outstanding univer-
sities. It must inform our alumnae. It must
challenge and inspire them. It must bring to
them not only news of the University of
North Carolina at Greensboro, but matters
of concern and import to our thinking citi-
zens. It is our hope that Alumnae will be-
come so interested and concerned that their
comments — in agreement or disagreement
— will make "Letters to the Editor" a nec-
essary department in our ALUMNAE NEWS.
We are enthusiastic about our industrious
"staff" which consists of our Editor, Miss
\^era Largent, busily retired member of the
History faculty. Miss Largent is comfortably
installed in an attractive office in the Alum-
nae House where she has the part-time as-
sistance of Mrs. David Miller, of Greens-
boro, as secretary.
The Editorial Board will work closely with
Miss Largent and the .\lumnae Board. Ade-
laide, Jane, Barbara, and Miss Largent will
serve as ex officio members. Its appointed
members for this \ear will be:
Dr. Laura Anderton, graduate of
Wellesley; Ph. D. from University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Asso-
ciate professor of Biolog\-, represent-
ing the faculty.
Dr. Elizabeth Barineau, 1936 grad-
uate of University of North Carolina,
Greensboro; Ph.D., University of Chi-
cago; .\ssociate Professor Romance
Languages, representing the alumnae.
Mrs. C. T. Leonard, Jr. (Sue Baxter),
Class of 19t3, representing the alum-
nae.
Miss Lou Anne Smith, B.F..'^., Univer-
sitv of Georgia; M.F.A., the Univer-
sity of North Carolina at Greensboro;
Instructor in Art. representing the
faculty and alumnae.
Miss Phvllis Snyder, Class of 1964,
representing student body of Univer-
sitv of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Vera Largent
PICA, crop, offset, 9 on 10 point, 6 on 6,
Bodoni, Garamond, Electra! What in
the world are they and why in the world
am I, retired to ease and laziness last June,
trying to learn such jargon and to master the
problems they suggest? But I find myself
fascinated by the other side of the problem,
deciding what will interest, challenge, and
give alumnae an understanding of and a feel-
ing of participation in their University. So
here I am, to do the best I can for this year.
This first issue will be keyed to the funda-
mental change that is coming to your Col-
lege in this year and the next. Hence the
"Hail and Farewell" theme, which you will
recognize on the front cover and as you move
from article to article.
It is the plan of the Editor that each
issue shall be focused on one major topic
and that each will contain some discussion
of or even debate on an issue wider in inter-
est than the merely local. This idea is based
on the assumption that you, as college grad-
uates, still grow intellectually, therefore will
welcome information and are willing to be
challenged to think. You will note in this
number the new column NOW on campus,
through which the Editor hopes to keep you
informed on news of the faculty. You will
also note that there is a student member on
the new Editorial Board; one indirect result
of this is the article by Sara Ann Trott.
Twice during the year it is the plan to have
a section of reviews of books by faculty and
alumnae.
And, finally, if I may return to the first
person and the very personal, I should like
publicly to thank Barbara, who has most
generously seen me through this first num-
ber. .\nd to Adelaide and Bibby, who have
been with me at every point with ideas, inter-
est, and words of good judgment, I give
thanks as friend and editor. Lou .'Knne Smith,
faculty-alumnae representative on the Edi-
torial Board gave me invaluable advice,
which I was I'm sure incapable of ap-
plying too successfully. George Hamer's
friendly interest in everything — from the
furnishing of an office to the content of the
magazine — has been ever present. And Chan-
cellor Singletary's good wishes and expecta-
tions, since he got me into this, have been
a spur. Carroll Hilliard, Edith Miller. Evon
Dean, and Brenda Meadows have all helped
with the information I needed every few
minutes and with the tvping; and Judy May
was generously helpful with the mailing.
Even Arthur took me on — an additional wom-
an to "pacify if not satisfy" — as though it
was a pleasure.
.•\nd certainly the numerous letters I've re-
ceived from \ou have given me the lift
which has made me willing to learn enough
about "pica, Garamond, offset," to enable me
to get through to what seems interesting and
important to report to you. Please keep writ-
ing — criticism, comment, ideas, news.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
AT GREENSBORO
ALUMNAE NEWS
October 1963
Volume Fifty-Two
Number One
ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION
Officers
Adelaide (Fortune) Holderness '34
President
Jane (Linville) Joyner '46
First Vice-President
Roberta (Dunlap) White '42
Second Vice-President
Gladys (Strawn) BuUard '59
Recording Secretary
Board of Trustees
Bettv (Crawford) Ervin '50
Nellie (Bugg) Gardner '51
Elizabeth Hathaway '25
Emily Herring '61
Elizabeth (Yates) King '36
Iris (Holt) McEwen '14
Dorothy (Davis) Moyer '63
Martha (Kirkland) Walston '43
Norma (Gofer) Witherspoon '55
Executive Secretary
Barbara Parrish '48
EDITORLAL BOARD
Elizabeth (Yates) King '38
Chairman
Elizabeth Barineau '36
Alumnae
Sue (Baxter) Leonard '53
Alumnae
Lou Anne Smith, M.F.A. '61
Faculty and Alumnae
Laura Anderton, Associate Pro-
fessor of Biology
Faculty
Phyllis Snyder '64
Students
Adelaide Holderness, Ex-Officio
Jane Joyner, ExOfficio
Barbara Parrish, Ex-Officio
Vera Largent, Ex-Officio
EDITOR
Vera Largent, Professor
Emeritus of History
The Alumnae News, published in October, January,
April, and July by the Alumnae Association of the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Printed
by Simpson Printing Company. Second class post-
age paid at Greensboro, North Carolina. Contribu-
tors to Alumnae Gi\ing Fund receive magazine free.
Inside Cover
1 Title Page
2 AVE ATOUE VALE
The President Introduces
The Editorial Board Speaks
The Editor Thinks
Otis A. Singletary
Jane Summerell
Sara- Ann Trott
Ruth M. Collings
Herbert S. Folk
Robert Dick Douglas, Jr.
Lenoir C. Wright
Emily Harris Preyer '39
Barbara Parrish '48
Barbara Parrish '48
4 Six New Emeriti
6 A Student Evaluation
7 The Changing Face of the Health Se^^'icc
10 Rights Under the Constitution
11 Harriet Elliott Social Science Lectures
15 POTPOURRI
16 NOW on campus
18 Annual Giving
19 Alumnae Scholars
20 etc.
21 IN MEMORIAM
21 Pilgrimage
22 Academic Freedom
23 WTiat Right Has This Man?
39 NEWS NOTES
Inside Back Cover Reading List. Justice Goldberg Lectures
Back Cover A HYMN TO TRUTH M. Thomas Cousins
Credits: For all pictures, we wish to thank Mr. Wilkinson and Mrs.
Alspaugh of the NEWS BUREAU. Betty Jane (Gardner) Edwards
was responsible for tlie drawings of the Caduceus (p. 7) and
Justice (p. II ) .
Julia Blauvelt McGrane '26
Josephine Hege '21
October 1963
THE Higher Education Bill enacted during the recent session
of the Legislature might well turn out to be one of the most
significant pieces of educational legislation passed in this state
smce the Act of Consolidation. In restructuring the state's system of
higher education and providing a statutory definition of the University
within that svstcm, steps were taken that were to ha\e an immediate,
and in some cases, drastic effect upon existing institutions. In such a
situation, it was ine\'itable that Woman's College, along with the other
branches of the University, would be caught up in certain currents of
change. It is my opinion that the immediate changes on this campus
will be seen in three specific areas.
The first and most obvious change is the change in name. Effec-
tive July I, 1963, we officiallv became known as The University of
North Carolina at Greensboro. And while there was some feeling about
this, name-changing is nothing new to an institution that was founded
as the Normal and Industrial School, later became the North Carolina
College for Women and in the early 1930's became the Woman's
College of the University of North Carolina.
A second specific bv-product of the current situation is coeduca-
tion. In September, 1964, undergraduate male students will be ad-
mitted to this campus. What the future holds in terms of male en-
rollment, no one can accuratelv predict, given the population projec-
tions for North Carolina. It is mv firm opinion, however, that our ad-
missions standards will serve as a regulator. I do not envision a great
flood of male students coming immediately to this campus; rather, I
expect a moderately slow and orderly growth in their number.
The third and bv far the most subtle implication of these changes
is the e\entual attainment of Universit\' status for this campus, bring-
ing with it changes in the student bodv, the faculty, and the academic
program. The student bodv will undoubtedlv continue to grow in size,
the number of male students will in all likelihood gradually increase,
and such problems as housing, feeding and providing recreational fa-
cilities will become more acute. The faculty will also continue to grow
in size if it is to meet the demands of an increased enrollment. Good
teaching will continue to be recognized and rewarded and wc will see
an increased emphasis upon research, publication and participation in
the affairs of professional and learned societies. In the area of academic
programs, normal revisions will continue to be made as appropriate
and certain changes will be necessan' if we are to adjust the curriculum
to meet the needs of male undergraduates. Pre-professional offerings
will have to be enlarged and a business administration program will
have to be developed. Graduate programs should continue to be ex-
panded as need arises.
Whatever else these facts mean, thcv point to the inescapable con-
clusion that our institution is facing an extremely difficult decade.
Manv problems are already clearly in view and others that have not
been anticipated will doubtless arise. In order not merely to survive
this difficult period but to emerge from it strengthened, it is impera-
tive that we keep a watchful eve; on fundamental things during the
transition. We must continue to recruit and hold a faculty of the first
rank. We must continue to offer the solid, substantial educational
program that has come to be the stock in trade of this institution. W^e
must continue to produce that same high qualitv' graduate,, for which
we are widelv known and of which we are so justly proud.
If we do these things, then I see no reason to doubt that in the
years ahead we will continue to fulfill our historic mission of providing
a valuable service to the people of this state, therebv assuring for The
University at Greensboro a place in the hearts of North Carolinians
equal to that already enjoyed by Woman's College.
AVE
ANOTHER
ERA
BEGINS
Otis A. Singletary
Chancellor SI^'GLETARY wrote this evaluation of the meaning of our new
status for the September edition of The University of North Carolina at
Greensboro News, pubUshed by Dean Taylor's office. We are reprinting it
because it sa\'s exactly M'hat receded to be said as wc "Hail" the new era.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
ATQUE VALE
ME OLD
ERA
SPEAKS
Jane Summerell '10
SHE WAS AN Alumna of some twenty years who had married short-
ly after graduation, had borne six children, had made her home
a center of hospitality in a university city, and now was engaged in
graduate study in that university. I wanted to ask her a question, and
I knew that I would get a thoughtful answer.
"Tell me," I said, "in the perspectixe of years, how you estimate
your education at Woman's College."
She replied slowlw weighing her words with care. "1 don't want to
be maudlin or sentimental, but I am deeph grateful for the education
my Alma Mater gave me."
With this opening we talked at length about Woman's College
— about courses and teachers and college friends ("who feel about
their education just as I do" ) . As I have thought back over that hour,
I find we compassed in the main three areas in which Woman's Col-
lege has achieved distinction.
First, there has been the teaching. Every person who became a
member of the faculty considered the first dut\' to be to the students.
This alumna spoke in glowing terms of challenging lecturers, of
conferences gcnerouslv gi\en and marked bv high illumination, and of
teachers who showed forth the splendor of the intellectual life. Phi
Beta Kappa had put its seal of appro\al on the kind of education here
afforded and had granted a chapter (1934) — the only one to a wom-
an's college in the state and one of the few to women's colleges in the
South, and preceded in the state onlv by Chapel Hill, Duke, and Da-
\'idson. She spoke also of the excellent foundation which had been
laid for her graduate studv. If she had attended the College some five
years later, she would also ha\e known of the Crcati\e Arts Program
that has attracted national figures in writing, music, art, and the dance.
And now in the current vcar she could be proud of the Ph.D. degree
in home economics.
We talked of the enduring friendships between members of the
faculty and students. Photographs of the children with Christmas
greetings are treasured by the college folk; an alumna often asks that
her ad\iser take on the daughter when the latter enters college; a
mother going abroad has been known to designate a former teacher as
agent for her little girl in case there is a crisis while the husband is
briefly out of the country; graduates consult professors about jobs, grad-
uate studw and child care; and at reunions numbers of alumnae find
their way to the homes of their faculty friends.
Lastly, we touched upon one of the finest traditions which the Col-
lege has been gathering to itself — the democratic way of life. Here all
members of the college community are equal; birth, family prestige,
possessions count for little. The premium is placed not on things, but
on brains, character, civic conscience, social responsibility, freedom of
the human spirit. In such an atmosphere student go\ ernment becomes
the effectixc expression of community life; in such an atmosphere the
demands of citizenship are recognized; and responsible freedom is a
\ital concern.
So for se\'enty-one years Woman's College has been a place dedi-
cated to disciplined thinking, the culti\ation of warm personal rela-
tions, and the dcxclopment of civic conscience on all levels.
Miss Summerell, mnner of the Alumnae Sen'ice Award this year, M'as for
many years, until her retirement in 1958, Professor of English at the Woman's
College and from that observation post had ample opportunity to observe and
evaluate the Woman's College.
)ctober 1963
SIX NEW EMERITI
ANOTHER farewell that must be said, though it does not
result from the change from Woman's College, Univer-
sit\' of North Carolina, to University of North Carolina at
Greensboro, is to the six faculty members who retired in 1963,
all among the best known and most \alued by alumnae. At
the same time, thev are welcomed as Emeriti. The length of
ser\ice of these six ranges from 54 to 41 years and their going
leaves gaps in such \aried areas as the Health Service, the
Library, Englisli, and Music.
Dr. Ruth Collings, head of the Health Service, has been
at the College for 58 years. A liberal Arts graduate of Po-
mona College and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, she received
her medical degree at the University of Pennsylvania Medical
School; and since coming here has studied numerous sum-
mers at varied schools. She has also been active in and an
official in the American College Health Association, of which
the Southern section at its most recent meeting paid special
honor to her. Under Dr. Collings, the Health Service has be-
come one of the most modern in the Southeast but, more im-
portant, hundreds of alumnae know her genuine interest in
and concern for the individual and the generosity- and warm
friendliness with which she has spent her time and skill. She
is already deeply engaged in such public service organizations
as the Children's Home Society, of which she is a member of
the Board of Directors, and the Greensboro Mental Health
Society, of which she is President. She is also a member of the
Board of Deacons of the College Place Methodist Church.
And she will do a certain amount of private practice, assisting
a Greensboro physician.
Professor and Mrs. James Painter, pictured here as a
"teaching team," have served the College 57 and 54 years re-
spectively. Among the best known and best loved b\' many
generations of alumnae since 1926 is Mr. Painter, who has
disciplined many a freshman in the art of clear, cogent, and
honest writing and later awakened these same students to the
meanings and beauties of English literature. Never one to be
"awed by the book," Mr. Painter challenged students to ques-
tion, to argue; in other words, to think. He studied at Emory
and Henr\- College, and the Universities of Tennessee, Chi-
cago, and North Carolina.
Mrs. Kathleen Painter, whose classes in vocabulary and
remedial English unnumbered alumnae thank for their later
success and enjoyment of college, in fact in many cases for
their very continuance here, also studied at the University of
Tennessee. The many hours and unusual skill she gave to this
task as well as to the teaching of regular classes will not be
forgotten. And with these multiple activities, the Painters'
home was always open to students, many of whom remember
much learned along with much pleasure and firm friendships
begun there. Tire Painters will in October return to the land
in Lcwisburg, Tennessee, where life should be sufficiently re-
laxed that they will be free to visit son Dick, who with a new
Ph.D. in Mathematics, will be teaching at Colorado State
University at Eort Collins, and his wife Jan, and adored grand-
son ^'Tark.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
Professor George ("Pinky") Thompson, who came to the
College in Fcbruar,-, 192 7, though of course best known to
his many loyal and able students of organ and to other music
students, is known to e\erv alumna until a \ery few years ago
as the leader of the 1 50 ^•oice College Choir and the originator
and director of the beautiful and mo\ing Christmas and
Easter concerts. These brought music lo\ers from Greensboro
and surrounding towns as well as many alumnae who returned
each jcar for them, and who treasure the memories of these
concerts as among their richest experiences. Holding degrees
from Beaver College, Mr. Thompson has studied at \arious
conser\'atories in the United States and for many years studied
with the celebrated organist, Joseph Bonnet, in Paris. The
past two summers he has spent in Europe, attending the lead-
ing music fcsti\als and searching out, studying and playing the
famous and historical organs of Europe. He will return to
Greensboro in No\cmbcr to make his home.
The Libran- is also losing two of the most \alued mem-
bers of the staff: Miss \'irginia Trumper. head Serials Li-
brarian, who came to the College in 1922, and Miss Sue
\'ernon Williams, who came in 1926. Miss Trumper, an
alumna of Denison Uni\ersity, received her lilsrap.' training
in LouisN'ille, Kcntuck\-. She has built the serials collection
from a \ery small one housed — as was the whole library in
1922 — in the basement of Old Mcher to the present \ery
large and broadly representative one, one of the best under-
graduate collections in the South. And she has given to both
students and faculty the kind of personal and generous serv-
ice which is rarely found in colleges of this size. Moreo\er,
she has often held office in professional libran,- associations,
both state and regional; and. with Guy R. Lyle, she was
Editor of A Classified List of Periodicals for the Gollegc Li-
brary, the standard guide on this subject. She plans to remain
in Greensboro, where she will indulge her hobbies of garden-
ing and entertaining and will ha\c time for reading and travel.
Miss Sue Venion Williams recci\ed her Liberal Arts de-
gree from Randolph-Macon Woman's College and her library
degree from Emorv Uni\"ersit\'. No alumna who has e\cr writ-
ten a "source theme," or history paper, or engaged in anv
other project where the needed information was elusi\c will
fail to remember the tireless and always kind help which Miss
Wihiams ga\e. Her interests have been broader than the pure-
ly academic, as is pro\ed by her holding of state office in the-
Business and Professional Women's Club, her writing of.
articles for the Tar Heel W^oman, and her acti\e participation
in affairs of the Methodist Church. Miss \\'illiams will make
her home in Greensboro.
^■^^■^9^^'^^H
"■
n
fci^
On the preceding page are Dr. Callings and
Mr. and Mrs. Painter. From left to right on
this page are I\liss Trumper and Miss Wil-
li .ms md below. Mr. Thompson.
October 1963
A STUDENT EVALUATION
The Government Internship Program and the Woman's College
Sarah Ann Trott
Twentx-one outstanding college students from the State this
summer participated in the Governor's Internship Program.
Now in its second rear the program "was instituted to give
outstanding North Carolina College and unirersity student
leaders a better understanding of state government, while at
the same time to give state government the benefit of their
work." Sara Ann Trott, a sophomore honors student and
prospective history major at Woman's College last year, was
one of three girls in the state chosen for the program. Unfor-
tunatelv. with fire brothers and an offer of a $900 Blanchard
scholarship at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, we
are losing her. This article is excerpted from a letter to the
Editor.
Tins Summer has been wonderful — I think the most
wonderful I've ever spent in many ways. The group of
college students I was with was tops, and I gained much from
the association with them. Tlrere were eighteen boys and
three girls. Most of the bovs were entering their first year of
law school and the girls were both older than I. Adding much
to m\- experience with the interns was the fact that two of
til cm were colored — one boy and one girl. It was a real op-
portunity' to test mv convictions, and I'm thankful for having
been put in such a situation. I'm quite sure that years from
now when this problem of human (not race) relations is
sohed, I'll realize how important this summer was in the
whole mo\ement.
As I probably told you at the end of the year, the 1965
Summer Internship Program in State Government was divided
into three phases: a four-day orientation session, the work
phase in an assigned agency, and a program of seminars and
luncheons on current problems of North Carolina. Don Hay-
man of the Institute of Government was over the orientation
session which began with a discussion of Federalism and then
moved to a detailed discussion of North Carolina and her
government. The work phase of my internship proved most
interesting. I was assigned to the Employment Security Com-
mission, an agency set up to provide a nationwide employment
service and an unemplovment insurance distribution and col-
lection program. I spent three and one-half weeks in the cen-
tral office observing the work going on there in the two divi-
sions of the office: uncmploMiient insurance and employment
ser\ice. I had the Cooke's tour! It was a marvelous oppot-
timity to be as inquisitive as I wanted to as I talked to every-
body 111 the agency from the chairman down to the boys in
the duplicating room. I usually spent a half a day with the
various supervisors or such learning about their work. I spent
two davs in the Bureau of Emplovment Security Research ob-
serving the work there. I also toured the Raleigh local office
to see the policies and programs formulated in the central of-
fice put into practice. After the "tour" of the central office, I
spent one week in interviewer induction training. This is a
week-long program set up for those who work in the local
quoted so often. It is a problem, but a problem which can
Class of 1965
offices throughout the state as interviewers. It included a
studv of the background of the ESC, the legal basis for it, and
such. However, the course dealt mainly with developing those
skills necessarv for a person interviewing people and trying to
help them find jobs.
Following this course, I went to the Raleigh local office
and began working as an interviewer. I had my own desk and
ever\thing! It was quite rewarding — but frustrating — work. I
sec now the meaning behind unemplovment statistics I hear
quoted so often. It is a problem, but a problem which can
onlv be met through improved education. I wish I could take
c\erv high school dropout and set 'em down to listen to some
of these job interviews. Improving the education of the people
here will result in a higher, more sound economy. All of this
will work together to solve this frightening problem facing
.\merica as automation and technology supplement human
unskilled labor. It sounds easy as generalizations are used, but
it is a ven' vast and challenging problem in realit\'. Better get
back to mv storv however! In the local office. I interviewed
people hunting jobs and tried to e\aluate their experience and
training and to then match this with job orders we had in the
office. Howe\er, I came to see that unemployment was a two-
fold problem. There is the unemployed hunting a job. But
there is also often times the .employer hunting a qualified
person to emplov. I had not seen this side of the problem
before.
Now the third phase of the internship was the program
of seminars at night twice a week and the weekly luncheon.
Tliese were on various problems facing North Carolina and
were conducted bv top men in State go\crnment whose job
it was to solve the problems. Our speakers and subjects in-
cluded Thad Eure, the Democratic Party: Shenvood Versteeg,
the Republican Party; Chester Davis and Sam Ragan, the
General Assembly and its work; Dr. Frank Porter Graham,
North Carolina, etc., etc.!
We were the guests of the Go\ernor and Mrs. Sanford
for several luncheons and spent about three hours one night
talking with Governor Sanford about various subjects. We
felt a \er\' intimate connection with what was going on in
North Carolina! I even got to plav "first lady" the last week
we were in Raleigh where we ate at the mansion. The Go\--
crnor and Mrs. Sanford were at the Southern Go\ernor's con-
ference. I kind of like that sort of first lady stuff: my problem
now is to marry me a Governor! No, seriously, I was in charge
of the luncheon that day and had the pleasure of introducing
to our group Raleigh's onlv Negro city councilman who spoke
to us.
JL am really glad I am getting the opportunity to go to Caro-
lina. Chancellor Avcock's son and several others of the boys
in the program spent the summer eon\ineing me that Caro-
lina was more than parties. It's there for those desiring more,
so there's no reason for not going with my scholarship. How-
(Conlinued on page 14)
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
The Changing face of the College Health Service
RUTH M. COLLINGS, M.D.
=s~__,' If this paper is more nostalgic than scientific,
I hope you will forgive me. The subject is of
my own choosing for it seemed to me that after
thirtv-cight \'ears in one Health Service job,
perhaps, I could gi\e a \'alcdictory as I retire in which the
recalling of old experiences in the ^^'oman's College Health
Ser\'ice might be both pleasant to mc and, I hope, interesting
to you.
When I came to this college in 1925 straight out of an
internship in a university' hospital where the most scientific
medicine of that time was practiced, I found at our Infirmary
no laboratory but one microscope, a few test tubes, and a
Bunscn burner, all located in m\' office. \Yc had no phvsio-
therapv of anv kind except one small footbath in the treat-
ment room. I'll ha\e to confess that when we built our new
lnfirmar^•, we forgot to take that footbath with us, and have
regretted it ever since. Only a year ago wc remedied this error
with a whirlpool bath which is so complicated to run that 1
feel like apologizing to the nurse e\er^' time I order its use.
The absence of all these things troubled me, but not the ab-
sence of a psvrhiatrist, because at that time it would nexer
have occurred to me or anyone else that a ps\chiatrist was
needed m a college health ser\ ice.
In describing the 1925 set-up, I am in no wa\- critical of
the Woman's College Health Sen.ice at that time. It was as
good, I am sure, as almost any in the country with the pos-
sible exception of a few large universities with medical school
connections — and better than many of those, \\niile an intern,
I had some experience with the Health Service at the Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania, now one of the best in the country,
which at that time consisted of a ward for the male students
in the Universitv Hospital to which thev were admitted only
when thev were verv ill, and a few beds in the nurses' ward in
the Universit}' Hospital for the women. Speaking of our own
Health Service, while perhaps it is not pertinent to this paper,
in passing, I would like to put on the record that we were
actually one of the first Health Ser\'ices established in a col-
lege in the United States, and that because Mrs. Mclver, the
wife of the founder of the college, insisted that a woman phv-
sician should be on its facultv to care for the health of the
voung women and to teach hvgiene.
I'm sure I am prejudiced but to me this dictum of Mrs.
Mclver, in its wisdom and fonvard look, is almost as impor-
tant as that of her famous husband when he said, "Educate
a man and you educate an individual. Educate a woman and
you educate a familv." Dr. Marian Bitting was thus employed
by the college in its first vear, but left to be married at the
end of that vear. Dr. Anna M. Gove, for whom the Infirmarv
is named, succeeded her the following vear.
Coming as I did, as Dr. Anna M. Gove's assistant, I want
to pay tribute to her as a person who came to the college in
its second year — in 1S94; and by her tact and grace as well as
by her hard New England common sense, established the
Health Service on the sound basis which it has continued to
enjoy. It is a wonderful tribute to her personality that even as
a Yankee woman physician in North Carolina in those years,
she became a favorite and beloved member, not only of the
college community, but of tlie city and state. Those of vou
who remember Dr. Gove will remember her not only as an
excellent, well-trained physician, but as a woman of wit and
wide cultural interest, having traveled and studied in Europe.
Her home was the center of facultv social life, and those of
us who experienced them will never forget her charming din-
ner parties with the "ineffable" Mattie in attendance.
I might borrow from a few of Dr. Gove's experiences as
she told them to me, in order to show some of the changes
that have occurred. For instance, she often told me of stand-
ing at the chapel door — they had chapel everv day in those
davs — on every rainy day and sending back to her room any
student who had ventured out into the elements without um-
zr^ntn
DR. COLLINGS
DR. .\BERNErH
October J 963
brella, raincoat, and rubbers — I believe the\' wore rubbers then
instead of galoshes. This custom had stopped, thank goodness,
before mv time, but it goes to show the cataclysmic changes
that have occurred. Imagine telling students of the 1960's,
tO's, 40's, or c\en 30's to wear anything that wasn't absolute-
ly the mode, or interfering with their freedom of action in
most other wavs.
What ha\e been the changes in the tvpes of illness treated
at the Health Service in the last thirbi'-eight years? Eyen back
in the dark ages of 1925 there was no longer water-borne or
milk-bome typhoid to contend with. Tire college did haye a
serious epidemic of this disease about 1912 with seyeral fa-
talities. The first year that I was head of the department in
1936, one girl had serious typhoid brought about because, al-
though a Christian Scientist, she was, also, a laboratory tech-
nician student and scorning the pathogencticy of bacteria,
sucked up a ic\v in a pipette. Fortunately, she recovered, and
since then we have rigidly enforced typhoid yaccination for
all laboratory technique students — Christian Scientists along
with the rest.
Respiratory infections and gastrointestinal upsets were
then, as now, the most frequent of all the complaints that
came to the Health Service. Pneumonia was less frequent than
now, but more severe — a reflection, I believe, of the experi-
ences of physicians everywhere. Whether the present greater
frequency could, also, be a reflection of the fact that we are
much more permissive than we used to be about allowing stu-
dents to stay out of the Infirmary when they have a slight
temperature and, also, that since medical excuses for upper-
classmen were abolished, many girls do not come to the In-
firmary unless they are quite ill, I do not know. Almost all
of the pneumonia is now of the ahpical or viral type. None-
theless, we treat them with antibiotics, and as of now, have
had no fatalities and not many complications from this illness.
G. I. illness has remained much the same with the excep-
tion of appendicitis. I do not remember that we talked as
much about intestinal flu in those days. I must say that, even
now, I cannot surely diagnose the difference between intesti-
nal flu, nervous tension, indigestion, and over or unwise eat-
ing unless the student is willing to admit to strange and un-
usual diet the night before, or unless the tension becomes
e\ ident at that time or later. I think our experience with ap-
pendicitis is interesting. There used to be so much more of it
than there is now. It is true that after I came to ^^^oman's
College, by doing our own white blood counts, we were able
to reduce the incidence of appendicitis markedly. This was
while the laboratory, as I told you, was a microscope in mv
office. However, even so, we had many more cases of bona
fide appendicitis than we have now. I remember one night
during a flu epidemic when the three general hospitals were
full, that we operated on three cases in one night in a baby's
hospital where there were beds available, and they were all
real hot appendices. Now, we do not average one, let alone
three, appendectomies a month.
The two conditions of which we have many more cases
are mononucleosis and emotional or mental illness. I believe
that the increase in mononucleosis is actual and not just bet-
ter diagnosis on our part, although that may be part of it. It
happened that during my internship at the University of
Pennsylvania Hospital, I had the student ward along with mv
service, and a young man had a severe ease of mononucleosis,
then a yen,- nc-w and rare disease. As a result of this experi-
ence, I was able to obtain great kudos with the physician of
one of our students by making one of the first diagnoses of
mononucleosis ever made in the state of North Carolina. This
small triumph so boosted my ego that I was ever after on the
lookout for this disease, but had no other cases for several
years. Why we have more now, I do not know. It is in all
probability a virus disease and the viruses appear to be about
to take us over. Now we have three to five girls in the In-
firmary all the time with this condition. As it is often a long
and debilitating illness, we regret its increase and cope with
it as best we can. This is one disease which, since college phy-
sicians see more of it than any other doctors, I feel that we
are probably more competent to treat than even the family
doctor, and often advise students to stay at the college for
such treatment unless they are so ill that they will probably
have to withdraw for the semester.
The increase in neuro-psychiatrie illness, far from being
confined to our campus, is one which is well known every-
where in and out of colleges; but has become a major prob-
lem for all college health physicians, psychiatrists, deans,
counselors, and for the students themselves. At the last two
sessions of the Southern Division of the American College
Health Association, at least three-fourths of the program was
devoted to mental health. This is in such marked contrast to
the situation thirtv-eight years ago- or even fifteen years ago
that one cannot help but wonder why. Then, every two to
five years we had one student who had severe emotional or
psychiatric difficulties. Now, a psychiatrist is employed by
the college ten hours a week, and the time is far from ade-
quate to deal with all the students who need and wish to see
him. And for the other physicians easily half of their time
must necessarily be spent with students who are emotionally
disturbed. If this were all left to the psychiatrist, we would
need three or four full-time psychiatrists instead of one man's
ten hours a week. I am sure we are more sensitive to emo-
tional difficulty and having a psychiatrist get the patients to
him more quickly, but that is not the whole story.
As the college has grown, and particularly as our facili-
ties and services have improved, and as I believe and hope,
the students have accepted the services with ever greater con-
fidence, our staff has grown, too. From two physicians, one
nurse, one aide, and a secretary, we have grown to three full-
time physicians, a part-time psychiatrist, six nurses, a labora-
tory technician, a secretary, and a white housekeeper. We
now have a fine, new Infirmary, ten years old, which some of
vou have seen, with good laboratory, x-ray, and physiotherapy.
We have a very heavy service both in the clinic and in the
number of house patients. Being a woman's residence college,
I believe, makes for a heavier service.
So much for differences and services required and given in
the Infirmary. Although, I am afraid this paper is far too long
already, I would like to conclude with a few words about some
other differences which I believe are very much on the plus
side. The first is the ever-growing acceptance bv the students,
of the College Health Senice as a place where they can come,
not only for svmpathetic advice, but for scientific diagnosis
and treatment; in other words, confidence in the service which
they will receive. This is compounded, of course, of several
factors, including, particularly, the experience of other stu-
dents, confidence of parents, and the confidence of the family
physicians. I am sure that fundamentally the only way to
cultivate such confidence is bv the steady, day-by-day practice
of good medicine in an atmosphere which is pleasant enough
so that the students will come to receive it. Tliis, I might say,
has been the alpha and omega of aims to which our Health
Service is pointed. I am happy to say that I can honestly re-
port that, in spite of all the difficulties inherent in health
service practice of medicine, we have accomplished this rea-
sonably well.
Another important development, and one of the most im-
portant, I believe, is our relationship and oneness with the
college as a whole, particularly with the counselling activities
such as those of the Dean of Students and her staff, the
dormiton' counselors, the Associate Dean and Academic
Class Advisors, and general academic ad\isors. I think that
our present college staff in all these areas work together re-
markably well, and that this has been achieved in several
ways. In mv earlv years in the Health Service, Dr. Gove was
certainly a very important part of the college community and
extremely influential in the higher reaches of the adminis-.
tration as well as ^vith individual faculty members. However,
I do not belie\e that the organization of the college at that
time gave her the opportunity to help students as much as
we can today.
Dean Harriet Elliott, whose robe has gracefully fallen on
Miss Katherine Taylor, was able to achieve many changes
during her time at the college. One of her chief texts, and she
was a brilliant exponent of her ideas, was that the college
community was one, dormitories — excuse me. Miss Elliott, —
residence halls. Infirmary, and Academia, and that the com-
mon purpose of us all was the best possible education of the
students entrusted to our care and guidance. Together, she
and Dr. Walter Clinton Jackson, our then Chancellor, not
only pushed and pulled a lot of us out of our own little baili-
wicks, but set up some machiner\' to make it possible. One
of these pieces of machinery is the Academic and Personnel
Committee, which, after some nps and downs, is now a well
accepted ex officio group composed of the Dean of Students,
the Dean of the College, and the Associate Dean, the Regis-
trar, and the four Academic Class Ad\'isors, and the College
Physician. We meet frequently so this is a time-consuming
effort, but I, personally, feel that mv membership on this
committee with its consequent cooperation with the other
members, makes it one of the most \aluable contributions I
can make to the students of the college. Perhaps, the men-
tion of this committee is worthless without further elabora-
tion of the work we do, but I must stop.
Cooperation is, after all, the keyword in this whole matter
— cooperation and understanding in addition to mere com-
munication, which is only one part of the whole structure. It
seems to me now that we really do have it in this important
group. Dean Taylor believes, I am sure, and instills in her
counselors the idea that in medical matters, the Health Serv-
ice is the one and only word, and \ou just don't know how
helpful that is. On the other hand, if she disagrees, we can
discuss matters perfectly amicably and each gi\e a little, if
necessary; and I do' want to stress that this cooperation can
be accomplished while still retaining complete confidentiality
of student communications to the physicians and particularly
to the psychiatrist.
Finally, as I retire, I am happy to introduce to you the new
Medical Staff. Since both 1 and Dr. Helen Deane, who has
been with us again for the last three years, retire this year,
there will be two new doctors. Succeeding mc is Dr. Olivia
Abernethy, a native of Lenoir, North Carolina, who gre\v up
in Elkin, where she did prixate practice. Dr. Abcrnethv has
for the past few years been a member of the Health Ser\ice
of the University of Alabama; so she combines general
clinical experience with knowledge of student health tech-
niques; and 1 am sure will do a \'ery fine job indeed at the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Her sister, Mar-
garet Abernethy Womble, was a member of the class of 1940.
Her medical schools were the Uni\'ersitv of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill and the Medical College of Virginia with both
an internship and residency in Pediatrics at Duke University.
The replacement for Dr. Deane is Dr. Marv G. Smith, a
young English woman trained in London, who has had fine
experience in public health work both in Canada and in New
York City. We considered it a very happy coincidence when
she moved to Greensboro with her husband just as Dr. Deane
was retiring.
To all of the staff both past and present I wish the great-
est success in carrying on the important work of the Health
Ser\ice. In closing may I be permitted to personally thank
Dr. Curtis, Dr. Deane, and all the fine staff of nurses, labora-
tory technician, and secretarv' who have made mv work not
only possible, but because of their loyalty and friendship, a
very heart-warming experience.
\lrs. Julia \X'hite, head nurse, is taking the pulse of Rac
Paige '67 of Larchmont, New York. Below. Sandra Hasiak
'67 of Chatham, -New Jersey, left, and Jane Reed '67
of Greensboro (daughter of Tina Iluggins Reed '34) are
facing the first shot of the year, administered by Mrs.
Jessie Hilliard.
Two Lawyers View the Question
THE HARRIET ELLIOTTt
Rights under
HERBERT S. FALK
Mr. Justice Goldberg's speeches on Rights Under the Con-
stitution are timelv and important because recent opinions of
the United States Supreme Court ha\e upset traditional cus-
toms and practices in race relations, religion, and politics.
Tliere are manv who condemn the Court and few who defend
it. Since la\men do not ha\e the time to read the opinions
of the Court, thev should know more about the fundamental
law and their rights under the Constitution if respect for
constitutional authorit\' is to continue.
The Supreme Court has had the difficult problem of de-
ciding hard cases in\'olving the balancing of the rights of
F'edcral government against State governments, and of bal-
ancmg individual freedoms against the power of both go\ern-
ments; and there ha\e been other periods in its history when
the Court was extremely unpopular. A knowledge of the his-
tory- of the Court is an indispensable aid to an understand-
ing of its place in the life of our countr\-, and the very im-
portant role that it has had in developing our strength.
The Supreme Court is said to be the unique contribution
of America to the political systems of the world, but it is safe
to say that the framers of the Constitution did not envisage
that the Court would e\er assume the powers which it now
commands. Constitutions are designed to co\er a multitude of
unforeseen circumstances, and must be cast in general lan-
guage; and it suffices to sav that the jurisdiction of the Court
is set forth in extremelv simple language in the Consittution.
The real power of the Court, however, has been derived from
this simple language by a long process of construction and
inference, through decisions of the Court from Marbury vs.
Madison and \lcCulloch vs. \laryland to the reapportionment-
decision of the present.
TlTcre are manv who believe that the present Court has
inferred too much. The Supreme Court has defined its own
authority, which is unlimited except as it limits itself. Re-
spectable authorities, such as Mr. Justice Frankfurter, Judge
Learned Hand, and Mr. Justice Harlan, belie\c that the Court
should show more self-restraint. TTiese Judges, aware of the
abuse possible in the exercise of judicial power, feel that the
Court should not impose its own views or prejudices on leg-
islation and freedom. The debate goes on, but the so-called
absolutes seem to be in control at the moment.
The present Court consists of the appointees of Presi-
dents Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, and Kennedy. Mr.
Justice Goldberg, appointed to the Court in August, 1962,
has participated in few of the major decisions which have
caused so much controversy. He therefore brings a fresh \iew
to his judicial office. Justice Goldberg knows that the real
power of the Court stems from the belief of the public in
the dignity of the law, and his views of Rights Under the
Constitution will play a critical part in the formulation of the
(Continued on page 14)
ROBERT DICK DOUGLAS, JR.
The rights of the people, states, and Federal Go\ern-
ment necessarih' infringe on one another. Historically, we
know that the Constitution itself was born of conflict; not
onlv against the tyranny of the English king, but suspicion
and distrust of small states and large states, of city merchants
and pioneer farmers. It took months of argument and com-
promise before c\en the outline of our goxernment was agreed
upon. The Declaration of Independence had explained that
go\ernments deri\ed their just powers from the consent of
the governed, and the federal powers were grudgingly ceded
by states distrustful of central authority.
Article VI of the Constitution makes Federal law the
supreme law, if enacted pursuant to the Constitution. The
Qth Amendment saws the Court does not spell out all the
powers of the people and their states; and the 10th Amend-
ment makes it clear that all powers not delegated to the
United States, or not prohibited to the states, remain in the
people and their states.
So we have the framework of our nation. First come the
inalienable rights of the people given by their Creator; then,
as man for mutual aid, comfort, and protection, gathered into
the societies of cities and states, he yielded some — but not all
— of his rights for the good of society. And each state has
\ielded some — but not all — of its rights to the union of the
states. The Constitution is the rule book, setting the bounds
of people, states and the nation.
Article III says the Supreme Court shall ha\c judicial
power over all cases arising under the Constitution, and early
in its life the Court declared that these words gave it the duty
of interpreting and applying the Constitution. This was revo-
lutionary in its day, but no one now seriously questions this
right to interpret.
But this is also the source of the great questions today.
From the \ast turmoil of modern civilization came problems
nc\cr dreamed of by the men who made the rules of govern-
ment. There is no key to their intention, no congressional
debates, nor committee reports. The answer to these quarrels
between people and states, or conflicts between states and the
United States lies only in constitutional principles.
\\'hat shall the Court do? Shall it say: "This is indeed a
problem, but the power to soh-e it was not delegated to the
Union nor prescribed to the states, and thus it remains in the
people and their states."
Shall it sav: "Tlic \oices of the Founders are silent, but
if they were living today, and had our knowledge and experi-
ence, we know what they^ would say, and we sa>' it for them."
Or shall the Court with no real attempt to interpret the
language of an earlier delegation of power, simply decide how
the problem ought to be solved, in the light of its own
(Continued on page 14)
10
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBOR'
ECTURES: 1963
he Constitution
Justice Arthur Goldberg Explores the Question
The Speaker for the 1963 Harriet Elliott So-
..,,,. ^^^ cial Science Lecture at UNC-G was Justice
4^^^ Arthur J. Goldberg of the United States Su-
""^Z, ,' preme Court. The general topic for the lecture
series was: Rights under the Constitution. The
/ '-■^1 three lectures were: "Rights of the People,"
\'\ "Rights of the States," and "The Judicial
Process." The lectures were gi\en on three suc-
cessive e\cnuigs, October 1, 2 and 5, in Aycock Auditorium.
Overflow crowds composed of students from UNC-G and
nearby colleges and the public responded enthusiastically to
Justice Goldberg's talks on this vital and timelv subject.
The Harriet Elliott Series is given annually in memory
of the late Harriet Elliott, Dean of Women at the Woman's
College for many years, and a distinguished social scientist
and public servant. Last year's Social Science Lecturer was
former Secretary of State, Christian Hertcr, wliile before that
panels of experts were used.
Arrangements for the lectures were made by a facultv-
student committee, with Professor Jordan Kurland of the
UNC-G Department of History as chairman. Miss Gail Pate,
a senior from Clio, S. C, was student chairman and intro-
duced the speaker on all three occasions. Other student mem-
bers of the committee were: Bonnie Caviness, Greensboro;
Peggy Colmer, Greensboro; Karen Haves, Louisville, Ken-
tucky; Linda Logan, Greensboro; Francine McAdoo, Greens-
boro; Pamela Pfaff, Greensboro; Helen Louise Proffitt, Bald
Creek; Leah Smith, Fa\ctte\illc; Jane Teal, Raleigh; and
Jud\' \\'illiams, Reids\illc.
«| iTSMCE Goldberg began his distinguished career as a
law\cr in 1929 following graduation from the law school at
Northwestern University where he was editor-in-chief of the
Illinois Law Revieii'. While engaged in private practice of
law in Chicago in the 1930's he became interested in labor
law and one of his first efforts in this direction was partici-
pation in the successful settlement of the American Newspaper
Guild strike against the Hearst papers. He went on to become
chief counsel for the AFL-CIO and, on December 15, 1960,
was appointed Secretar\- of Labor b\- President Kennedy. His
strong anti-Communist \iews are indicated by the fact that
he assisted Phillip Murray in expelling them from the CIO.
His appointment as Associate Justice of the United States
Supreme Court on August 29, 1962, as a replacement for
Justice Frankfurter, has opened new \istas for him in the
legal world. His first lecture here, it happened, was delivered
exactly one year from the day he took his seat on the Court.
The Reading List prepared for students and guests at the
Harriet Elliott Lectures is printed on the inside of the back
cover, on the assumption that, after you ha\ e read the articles,
you may wish to begin systematic reading on the subject.
LENOIR C. WRIGHT
Although Arthur Goldberg was known as a "lawyer's
lawyer" with a high level analytical capability, he has also
shown a dynamism that has burst the bonds of purely legal
activity. For example, following this appointment as Secre-
tary of Labor, he proved exceedingly effective in exercising
his "good offices" to mediate several crucial strikes, e. g.. the
New York Harbor strike and the strike of the flight engineers
against six major airlines. He also plaved a key role in averting
the strike of the musicians of the New York Metropolitan
Opera.
As "savior" of the "Met," Goldberg was not only per-
forming an official duty but also reflecting his love of music.
His interest extends to the other arts as well. It is reported
that he collects, in a small wav, the works of Picasso,
Matisse and others, and his office walls are decorated with
modern paintings, including some by his wife, an abstrac-
tionist painter. His catholic taste in reading shows a range
from political science to archaeology to detective stories and
his interest extends to the World Series and professional
football. The experience he had in settling the NIetropolitan
Opera strike prompted him to propose the establishment of
a Federal Advisory Commission on the Arts, supported by
Federal funds. As might be imagined, this suggestion was
received with a mixed public response.
THE HO.\OR.\BLE ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG
October 1963
11
The picture of Justice Goldberg that emerges is that of
a man who combines tact, patience and resourcefulness with
stubborness. Although a man of many interests, he has al-
ways been devoted to the law and the principles of the law.
His legal philosophv was expressed in a speech this past
August in Chicago before the American Bar Association, in
which he said in part:
The judicial process assumes peace. It rests upon
unreserved acceptance of and compliance with the
decisions of the Court of last resort. Democratic go\-
ernment cannot endure if the law is defied bv those in
or out of authority.
Decisions in a democrac\- are not immune from
criticism. Thev may be changed by legislation or con-
stitutional amendment, or e\en reconsidered hv the
Court itself. But until and unless so changed, to dcf^-
them or obstruct them is to dcn\ the law itself.
.... the Court's ruling cannot rest upon "it is so
ordered." It must also persuade. Reasoning and not
mere fiat has con\inced the people that judicial review
ensures Goxernmcnt by law and protects them against
arbitrary authority.
J us I ICE .\ND Mrs. Goldberg arrived in Greensboro short-
ly after noon on Oct. 1. At 3 p. m. Mr. Goldberg held a
T.\'. and Press conference in Alumnae House. At the same
time, Mrs. Goldberg, an artist and author of a recent book,
THE CREATR'E WOMAN, was being interviewed bv a
\\'oman's Page Editor and hv an Art Critic of local news-
papers.
At his press conference. Justice Goldberg ga\e a brief
summar\' of some of the important points he intended to
cover in his three speeches. He was then asked a variety of
questions bv reporters present. Although he was forced to
decline to answer some questions, e. g., regarding segregation,
the so-called "gag" law for UNG, etc., for reasons of judicial
propriety, he showed humor and skill in handling a variety of
others dealing with such matters as whether he would be a
candidate for the office of Vice-President of the U. S. (em-
phatie denial); what he felt about compulsory arbitration (as
a private citizen, opposed except in case of a national emer-
gency): whether the Communists have infiltrated the civil
rights movement and labor unions (denied): and the state
of U. S. morals (good but imperfect).
JL OELOvviNG brief comments bv Chancellor Singletarv
commemorating the establishment of the Harriet Elliott So-
cial Science Lectures, Justice Goldberg was introduced to the
first evening capacity audience by Miss Pate. In a speech
that was provocative and informative despite a certain re-
straint imposed because of his role as an active Supreme
Court Justice, Mr. Goldberg dealt with the subject of "Tlie
Rights of the People." He emphasized throughout two funda-
mental principles: (1) Tlie people are the source of our
government's power and legitimacy; (2) The individual has
God-given rights of life, liberty and property and the pursuit
of happiness which cannot be usurped by the government.
Today, we are in a struggle with the Communists who insist
on the superiority of the group over the individual. In the
contest over the newly developing nations we should do more
to "export" the Bill of Rights. Too many Americans, lie
pointed out, have forgotten our heritage. Our ancestors fought
in order that the rights of Englishmen, not then available in
their own country, should be extended to all peoples.
Justice Goldberg then pointed out some special features
of our Constitution: (1) We were the first to have a written
constitution, which, while amended, has never been aban-
doned; ( 2 ) The Constitution is supreme over the legisla-
ture. This is contrary to British practice. The principle is
sustained by judicial review which is not undemocratic as
some have argued. "Democracy," he said, "consists not in
carrying out the will of the majority at the moment, but in
carrying out the will of the majority as it is expressed in our
Constitution." The Constitution savs, for example, in Article
I that "Tlie Congress shall make no law. . . ."; this "Shall"
represents a constitutional limitation on the power of the
Congress; (5) The separation of powers. This is not directly
stated but is to be implied ( and has been so implied ) from
the arrangement of the Constitution; (4) A really independ-
ent Judiciar)'. It is now accepted that there is a power in the
Supreme Court to void legislative and executive actions which
are contrary to the Constitution. There is some debate
whether this power was vested in the Court by the Constitu-
tion or was "usurped" by Chief Justice John NIarshall. There
was no "usurpation," Mr. Goldberg maintained, as will be
shown in tlie third lecture of this series.
Turning now to a discussion of rights under the Constitu-
tion, the Justice emphasized that their source was the people.
The preamble to the Constitution states: "We the people of
the United States. . ." It is nonsense to argue that this is
opposed to the rights of the states. Both state and federal
governments derive from the people. If this is not so, we
would have totalitarianism.
He said that manv of the basic rights of the people under
the Constitution are to be found in the First Amendment
which guarantees freedom of religion, speech and press and
the right peaceably to assemble and to petition the govern-
ment for redress of grievances. Also are academic freedom,
the right of privacy, the right to conscience and belief, the
right to counsel in one's own defense and others that relate
to having a fair trial.
In the discussion of these rights Justice Goldberg pointed
to our complacency with regard to them and compared our
system to that in Russia where there is no freedom of po-
litical choice or freedom of expression in the arts and litera-
ture. Even such a basic right as the Fifth Amendment against
self incrimination has become unpopular because Communists
and criminals ha\e resorted to it. Unless we wish to return to
the tyranny of the "Star Chamber," we must presume a
man innocent until proved guilty. One simple test of whether
a foreign country- has democracy, he noted, is to ask if thev
have the writ of Habeas Corpus; if thev do not, they do not
have a democracy.
In concluding this lecture, Mr. Goldberg cautioned that
Judicial Review which sustains the basic rights cannot itself
be sustained unless the people support it. Sometimes it is
only the complaints of the downtrodden and the dissenters
that preserves our rights.
k^FE.vKiNG to another packed house. Justice Goldberg
focused his second Harriet Elliott Lecture on "The Rights
of the States." A major theme of this talk is to be found
in the follov\'ing quotation: "States are not mere provinces
and have important rights that must be safeguarded, but no
state has the right to claim power to abridge the constitu-
tional rights of the citizens." Both the state and the Fed-
eral governments are subject to the sovereignty of the people.
12
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
It is quite clear that the Bill of Rights (the first 10
Amendments), which was not originally a part of the Con-
stitution, was designed to limit the power of the Federal
go\crnnicnt. The First Amendment, for example, refers ex-
plicitly to the Congress. However, at this time some question
was raised as to whether some of the other amendments,
e.g., the Fourth Amendment, did not have a more general
scope of application. But Chief Justice Marshall declared
shortlv thereafter that these amendments applied onlv to the
Federal government, not to the States. It was not until long
after the passage of the Fourteenth Amendment that the
U. S. Supreme Court ruled that the States also were now
bound by the Bill of Rights, or at least some of them — tlie
extent of coverage is still a matter of adjudication.
The Fourteenth Amendment is prominent in the news
these davs because of the segregation and reapportionment
cases. However, as Mr. Goldberg noted, there are other im-
portant areas involved. Indi\iduals are not protected against
State action (as well as Federal action) in respect to freedom
of speech and the other liberties of the First Amendment, the
taking of propertv without notice and compensation, travel
between states and having a fair trial ("due process" of law).
He was emphatic in dismissing attacks upon the Four-
teenth Amendment. It is sillv, he said, to contend at this late
date that the Fourteenth Amendment is not valid. It has
been repeatedly sustained by the U. S. Supreme Court.
Further, it was ratified and properly promulgated by the Sec-
retar\- of State; this makes it binding. It is equallv untenable,
he declared, to argue that the Fourteenth Amendment must
yield to the Tenth Amendment (reserving power to the
States and to the people) as the former expressly limits the
States. This is not then a question of judicial usurpation.
Moreover, Article 6 of the Constitution is explicit in declar-
ing that the Constitution, and the Laws and Treaties of the
United Staees made in pursuance thereof shall be the su-
preme law of the land.
Although Justice Goldberg insisted that the power of the
States (and the Federal Government) is limited under the
Constitution, he denied that the Supreme Court was hostile
either to the State courts or State officials. He cited the fact
that in the last term the Supreme Court considered 971 cases
on appeal and rexersed only 31. This means that 96.5% of
cases on appeal from the States were affirmed, and even in
some of the cases sent back for retrial, the State prevailed. He
pointed further to the service the U. S. Supreme Court
renders to the States in its power to hear disputes behveen
the States, for example, the recent argument between Arizona
and California o\er water rights. The United States is al-
most unique in the world in settling such issues by law in-
stead of war. The Justice concluded his second lecture bv a
pica for the States to accept the limits of the Constitution
and for all people to abide bv the principle of the rule of law.
J
usricE Goldberg's third and final lecture was entitled
"Judicial Review." This unique concept bv which the Su-
preme Court has the power to re\iew legislative and execu-
tive actions, as well as decisions of the State courts, was
originated in this countn'; its origins, however, go back into
English and our own Colonial history. It has spread to
Canada and Australia and more recentlv to Japan.
Some people, Mr. Goldberg stated, still argue that the
Court usurped the power of Judicial Re\'iew when Chief
Justice Marshall ruled in the famous case of Marbury vs.
Madison (1805) that an Act of Congress contrarv to the
Constitution would be struck down by the U. S. Supreme
Court. He was emphatic in declaring that this was not a
usurpation. He cited his own serious research in the Federal-
ist Papers, declarations of the Founding Fathers, and actions
of the first Congress to show that the new philosophv of
Judicial Review was intended at tlie time the Constitution
was made and adopted.
Some people contend that they do not mind being bound
by the Constitution but do object to being bound by what
some Court says it is. The fallacy in this line of argument,
the Justice noted, is that the Constitution does not interpret
itself. Who then is to do so? Obviously not each individual.
Onlv the Supreme Court can do this as the Constitution is
law, not just moral preachment. This means that everyone
must respect Constitutional construction.
This does not mean that the Court is above criticism —
tlic riglit to criticize is guaranteed in the First Amendment
and now applied to the States by the Fourteenth Amend-
ment. But this is not to say that Judicial Review should be
abolished. If we abolish Judicial Review we would eliminate
a principle deeply imbedded in the Constitution. Justice
Goldberg asked his audience if they were ready to entrust
their liberties to Congress, the State legislatures, the man
who happened to be president at the time, and to the police
forces of the nation. He reminded listeners that businessmen
were quick to ask the Court to review President Truman's
seizure of the steel mills in 1952 (the Court found the seiz-
ure improper) . The Court, appointed at widely varied times
by presidents of both parties and from all parts of the United
States, holds office for life, hence needs pay no political bills.
The Supreme Court is not infallible. It does make mis-
takes but this is sobable. The Court can and has corrected
itself many times. Tliere is also the built in protection against
judicial mistakes afforded bv the amending process. In fact,
the Court has served the country well and offers the best
available alternati\e. The problem of Judicial Review is acute
today because we arc in a period when the Court's decisions
are under attack.
There are those who say that we have a "Government
bv Judiciary." This is not true. While the Court enforces the
Constitution there are many things it cannot do. It cannot
declare war, break diplomatic relations with a foreign coun-
Jordaii E. Kurland, assistant profc.'>sor of History, was chairman of
the Harriet Elhott Lectures Committee, and Gail Pate '64 of Cho,
South Carolina, served as student chairman.
October 1963
try. indict anyone, regulate tariff, etc. The "veto power" of
the Supreme Court operates onlv in limited areas while the
President also can veto acts of Congress, and the Congress
can refuse to pass a law it thinks is unconstitutional. The
Supreme Court acts after the fact and often late after the
fact: therefore it is hard to sustain the argument that \vc
ha\e a "Go\"ernmcnt by Judiciary."
Justice Goldberg's final words to his attentive audience
reiterated the view that our great tradition of Judicial Re\iev.'
has helped to preserve the rights of the people. But in the
final analysis these great rights must be sustained bv the
community at large. If the communit\- does not support the
\iew that we live under the Constitution and the law, tlicn
the judges can not safeguard the Constitution for the peo-
ple, no matter ho \\"\vise the Court.
V,
lEW'ED from almost an\- angle Mr. Justice Goldberg's
\isit to UNC-G must be accounted a great success. In his
public addresses, he brought a message we all need to ponder.
Our great ci\il liberties as contained in our Constitution are
.m essential basis for our democratic way of life. But in tak-
mg them for granted we are in danger of losing them. Of
necessity the Justice was precluded from discussing certain
questions which might later be considered bv the Supreme
Court, but his use of eases as examples and his anahsis of the
operation of the Court and the principle of Judicial Review
were most effecti\c. His audiences were consistenth' en-
thusiastic.
Justice Goldberg also brought a warmth and friendliness
to his informal contacts with students in the several coffee
hours and classes he attended that was most rewarding. Mrs.
Goldberg, an artist in her own name, likewise contributed to
this profitable "give and take." Altogether, the idea of ha\-
ing such a distinguished American "in residence" for the
three day Harriet Elliott Lecture Series provides a fruitful
and refreshing way in which to break the formal barriers of
the learning process.
I^R. Lenoir Wright, who reports on the Forwn. is an Associate
Professor of Hirton' at UNC-G. and Chairman of the Publicity Com-
mittee for the Harriet Elliott Lectures.
Falk IC„nU«u,-d from page 10)
future opinions of the Court. He is speaking to the nation
when he talks at the University of North Carolina at Greens-
boro, and his choice of a forum is a distinct compliment to
the students and facultv of this Uni\crsitv.
Herbert F.\lk is a bii.sv practicing /(/ht't in Greensboro, the hus-
band of Louise (Dannenhaumi lalk. 1929. On the strength of this,
we took courage in hand and asked .\/r. Falk to give time and
thought to his reaction to the subject of the Harriet Elliott Lectures,
reaction before the lectures themselves.
Douglas iCnntinii.d In,,,, pae' 10)
sociological concepts, and announce its decision.
Whichever way the Court speaks, there will be a losing
as well as a winning litigant. In its history the Court has been
called a captive voice of blind conser\atism; and the dan-
gerous unheeding tongue of liberalism. Often some of the
most biting criticism of a majority opinion comes from the
dissent of the Court's own members; and some of them have
urged restraint in the face of the concept of others that there
is no limitation of the Court's authoritv in matters of con-
stitutional interpretation.
Wc must lune a Court or face anarchy. The Court must
lia\c the respect of the people or it cannot function. So
^\•hether a lawyer deplores lack of judicial restraint in a ease
which does not suit him; or whether the non-lawver objects
to legal technicalities in a decision falling short of his notions;
each must remember that even the Court is human, and an
essential part of our go\ernment.
Dick Dougl.\s, another husband of an alumna. Gladys (Neal) Doug-
las. 193i'. and also a very busy lawyer, graciously agreed to fulfill the
same assignment as did Mr. Falk. Their different approaches will,
we hope, furnish food for thought and incentive to turn back to
college texts and memories of class lectures.
TrOtt fC.,„li,„„d lro,n page 6)
ever, as I think you know, I hate to lea\e. Woman's College
was to me manv things. It was those hours I spent in the li-
brary- with my books. It was the satisfaction I felt when the
paper was done or the test returned. It was that cooperative
spirit I felt between the professors and myself as thev helped
open new doors for me and as together we sought new solu-
tions and ideas. Howe\er, aside from the academic facets of
W. C. there were the social and cultural ones. Elliott Hall at
an afternoon tea, the chatter of the girls there, the Soda Shop
and the studv breaks, the dorm and the deep discussions there
which often resulted in deep, lasting relationships. All these
too will come to my mind as I think of W^ C. Abo\'e all, it
was an academicallv respected and learned institution which
challenged its students. It provided an intimate atmosphere in
which to engage the mind in pursuit of higher things. And it
was also an institution which fostered the formation of deep
relationships among its students. Tliese will be the things I'll
remember as W. C.
With the change of name and member [sic] will come new
meanings and memories for the students of the Universib,* of
North Carolina, Greensboro. It was and is a neccssarv altera-
tion \\-hich will result in improxed educational facilities for
North Carolina. Yes, I was at first blinded bv emotion to the
sense and reason behind the change. But when rising abo\e
the self and self's emotion [she had felt so deeply last year
that she suggested a court case under the principles of the
Dartmouth College case!] and bv looking at the change in
terms of how it will affect my three younger brothers' chances
for a college education, I had to agree that it was best.
Looking at the situation now, I would say that the great-
est effect which will be c\idcnt will be a more vital and
meaningful extra-curricular program on campus. I do not re-
fer to the social side of this but to the cultural and political
aspects of college life. Both will be rejuvenated and enriched
as W.C.U.N.C. becomes Univcrsibi- of North Carolina,
Greensboro.
14
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
POTPOURRI
A}! Art/St Accompanies Her Husband
Graduate Fellowships: Class of 1963
The UNC-G campus was fortunate in having had Mrs.
Arthur Goldberg as guest during the October 1-3 period of
the Harriet Elliott Social Science Lectures, when Justice Gold-
berg was the distinguished speaker. Mrs. Goldberg is an out-
standing example of the amazing American woman who com-
bines successfully a full, rich family life with a profession and
volunteer civic work. In her case the profession is art.
Her philosophy of life and her observations concerning
the proper role of women in this complex world have been
charmingly and wittih' set down in her new book. The Cre-
ative Woman (Robert Luce, 1963.). The second half of the
book, "An Artist's Credo," deals spccificallv with the prob-
lems of modern art. She savs.
We are in a period of transition in art. You yourself
know people who were abstractionists a few \ears ago
who now say they were ne\'er really abstract, and some
are saying the abstract is dead. . . . The abstract is not
dead merely because the figurative element is once more
resurrected. That had never died either, at least, not
forever. . . . Nothing stays dead in art. It is per-
petually renewed. . . .
Actually the art that has been called abstract, or non-
objective, is already a part of art history and cannot
be removed from it. The art of any age is a part of
the whole culture of a period, an evolving .... and
to understand the art of a period one must try to know
the philosophy, the science, and the politics of the
time ....
Mrs. Goldberg has been called an artist of the abstraction-
ist school and her paintings have hung in major galleries. A
rc\iewer of her show at the Morris GallePi'' in New York ( De-
cember 22, 1958-June 10, 1959) commented that in her
paintings "Poems, prose fragments, and suggestive words are
brushed, scratched and othenvise worked into the paintings
they presumably suggest. The images Muy from the repre-
sentational to the abstract to the atmospheric."
Of the interesting fellowships for graduate work won by
the members of the Class of 1963, the following are among
the most distinguished.
Woodrow Wilson Fellowships
Mary Ida Hodge, Salisbury
Music, University of Michigan
Rebekah McBane, Pittsboro
English, Tulane University
Marie Dee Moore, Greensboro
Ilistorv, Duke Universitv'
Edwina Sue Snow, Greensboro
German (Deferred, see below)
Fulhright Fellowships
Edwina Sue Snow
German, Austria
Flenry Weil Fellowship
Louise Habicht, Townson, Md. AND Mary Ida Hodge
American Ci\ ilization. Brown University
(Also holds fellowship from Brown)
Consolidated Universitr Fellowship
Sarah S. L. Howie, Florence, S. C.
English, LIni\ersit\ of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
FLEA MARKET
W^eatherspoon Gallery, No\ ember 16-17
Miscellaneous articles for sale for the benefit
of the Art Scholarsliip fund.
Your contributions and rour presence requested.
October 1963
15
NO'W on campus
If the College has this >ear lost b\- retire-
ment a number of its most respected and
best known faculty members, it has in turn
gained a number of new and interesting
persons and others already here ha\-e mo\ed
uito more responsible positions, taking the
places of those who retired. The few who
can be mentioned here are only "samples"
of the changes.
Mr. Gilbert Carpenter comes as Professor
and Head of the Department of Art. filling
the vacancy left by the resignation of Mr.
Gregor\- I\t.- se\'eral \ears ago. A graduate of
Stanford University, he has studied and ex-
hibited widely in this country-, in Hawaii, and
m France. He comes to us from the Univer-
sit%- of Hawaii, where he was Head of the
Department of .\rt. His major fields are paint-
ing and art hsitor.-. Of his paintings he says.
"I paint big paintings for little rooms,' the
mtent being "to use the paintings as you
would a wall." He goes on to say that "they
!ook abstract . . . but are never completely so.
1 recently started from a representational
theme, usually heads." The heads are usually
those of his wife and their two children.
Dr. Olivia Abemathy, who is introduced
elsewhere in the magazine, is the new Col-
lege Physician .
Mr. Peter Taylor returns to the Univer-
sity as Professor of English (Creative ^\'^it-
ing) after eleven years at Kenyon College and
Ohio State University. He is one of the best
known short story- writers in the United
States, contributing regularly to The New
Yorker (most recently "Demons" in the
.\ugust 24 and "Two Pilgrims" in the Sept. 7
issues) and others of the best magazines. His'
latest collection of .short stories, Happy
Families Are All Alike, was published in
1962, and he has also written both novels
and plays. .\s eddence of the esteem in
which his work is held, he has been granted
Fulbright, Ford and Guggenheim fellowships
and in 1950 he received the National Acad-
emy .-\ward for fiction. His wife, Eleanor
Ross Taylor (1940), has been, since her col-
lege years, a busy mother but also a rising
IX)et, whose book. Wilderness of Ladies, was
published in 1960.
Dr. Chiranji Lai Shanna comes as Asso-
ciate Professor of Education. Holding degrees
from .\gra and Muslim Universities as well
as a diploma in Education from the Govern-
ment Teachers' College, Allahabad, India, he
also has earned doctorates from the Univer-
sity of Chicago and the University of Lon-
don. His teaching experience ranges from
Teachers' Colleges and Universities in India
to .\tlanta University in the United States.
His special fields of teaching will be philoso-
phv of education. coniparati\-e educaHon. and
research .
Dr. Daniel Ericourt, Lecturer in Piano, is
a graduate of the Paris Conservatory of Mu-
sic, who has taught at Cincinnati and Pea-
body Conservatories, at the University of
Illinois, and the Conservatory of Music at
Santiago de Compostela, Spain, He is a con-
cert pianist of note, a famed interpreter of
Debussy- and Rav'el, who has gi\en many re-
citals in South .America, gi\-en recitals and
lectures under the auspices of the United
States Information Serv-ice, and he records
as well. He will replace Mr. William Alton,
who will be study-ing in Germany under a
Fulbright grant and who won a very large
and discriminating following during his years
at the Woman's College.
Dr. William H. Poteat, .\ssociate Professor
of Christianity and Culture at Duke Univer-
sity, will this year take over the Junior Hon-
ors Seminar. Dr. Cornelius Kruse, who so
brilliantly and happily developed this seminar
last year, will be this year at the University
of Honda, Gainesxillc. Dr. D. G. Davies,
.\ssistant Professor of Economics, will ad-
minister the Honors program this year.
Mr. Thomas Cousins, formerly composer-
in-residence at Brevard College and the
author of the new- college hy-mn, the words of
which are published elsewhere in this mag-
azine, will join the faculty- as a part-time
lecturer in Music and will conduct the
Greensboro Sy mphony. Mr, George Dickieson,
whose splendid leadership of the orchestra
for the past tweh'e years has created a highly-
professional body-, will this year conduct the
Sinfonia, made up of faculty and students
from University of North Carolina, Greens-
boro. These concerts will be given in the
W'eatherspoon .\rt Gallery in conjunction
w itli current exhibitions on view at the time.
Mr. Dickieson ha.s' studied conducting under
two of the world's most distinguished con-
ductors. Pierre Montcux and Eugene Or-
niandy.
Mr. WilUani Snider, Associate Editor of
The Greensboro Daily News, will join the
English Department to teach a course in
Journalism the first semester.
Mrs. Elizabeth Holder, former member of
the Library staff (1947-1958), will rejoin the
faculty of University of North Carolina,
Greensboro, as Head of the Reference De-
partment, replacing Miss Sue \'emon Wil-
liams. Mrs. Holder has been librarian at
Brevard College from 1958-1963.
Mrs. Marjorie Memory (1948), long time
friend of those y\-ho frequent the circulation
desk at the library or who have e\-er needed
an inter-library loan, has been appointed
Head Serials Librarian to succeed Miss
Trumper.
Miss Anne Powell (1951) Counselor from
1955-1959 and for several summers, has re-
turned as part-time instructor in English and
Counselor in \Mnfield Hall.
Mrs. Tommie Lou Smith, .\ssistant Pro-
fessor of Business Education and Academic
Class .\dviser (Class Chairman) of the Class
of 1964, has been named Associate Dean of
the College, replacing Dr. Laura .•'inderton
who is returning to her teaching in Biology
and to research.
Faculty members who will be absent on
leave for part or all of the academic year
1963-1964 will be: Dr, Leyvis Aiken, Psy-
chology-, who has been granted a National
.\cademy of Science-National Research Coun-
cil research associateship at the Naval Elec-
tronics Laboratory- and San Diego State Col-
lege. California: Dr. Jean Buchert, English,
who is at Harvard Uni\'ersity at work on a
study of William Painter's PALACE OF
PLE.\SURE, which was a source hea\ih
drawn upon by Shakespeare; Mr, Randall Jar-
rell, English, who is in Europe completing a
translation of FAUST; Mr. Robert Partin, Art,
who is \isiting Associate Professor of .\rt at
the Uni\-ersity- of New- Mexico this year; Mrs.
Esther White, Health, who y\-ill this semester
complete work for her Doctorate at the Uni-
\crsity of Louisiana at Baton Roiigse.
.\nd the following faculty members who
ha\e been on lea\-e for the past year or the
last semester will return: Dr. Warren Ashby,
Philosophy, who has been engaged in the writ-
ing of a biography of Dr. Frank P. Graham;
Dr. Owen Connelly, History-, who is complet-
ing a book on Joseph Bonaparte in Spain, and
one on the Satellite States of the Napoleonic
Empire: Dr. Arthur Dixon, who has been at
"i'ale University working y\ith F. .•\. Pottle on
an edition of the correspondence of James
Boswell, the first volume of which is to be
published soon and will include Boswell's
letters to his son. Eventually several volumes
will appear which will be the definitive edi-
tion of Boswell's works; and Mrs. Shirlev
16
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
Whitaker, Spanish, who has been in Spain
this past semester, doing research on the
Spanish theatre.
International recognition has been gi\cn to
a scientific film edited by Dr. Kendon Smith,
head of the Psychology Department, entitled
FRUSTRATION AND FIX.\TION. Tlie
film was judged the winner of First Prize in
Psycholog\' and Pedagogj' by the Jury of the
Second International Festival for Scientific
Films, held at the Uni\'ersity of Brussels.
Miss Ann Shipwash (1959), teaching as-
sistant in the School of Music, has been
granted an International Rotary Fellowship.
She will study at the Royal Danish Acad-
emy of Music and will concentrate on six-
teenth and se\enteenth century brass music.
This is Miss Shipwash's third stay overseas.
In 1957, she toured the Far East with the
"Kids from Home" orchestra and, in 1961,
she studied in Austria under a Fulbright fel-
lowship.
Dr. Lois Edinger, Instructor of Education,
was rccentlj- chosen President-elect of the Na-
tional Education Association, the largest and
most influential professional education or-
ganization in the United States. She will take
office as President in 1964.
Dr. Kenneth Howe, Dean of the School of
Education, has been named a member of a
study team which will carr\' on a research
study on higher education in India during the
month of No\ember. The committee on in-
ternational relations of the American Asso-
ciation of Colleges for Teacher Education is
sponsoring such projects to strengthen the
education of teachers in the field of interna-
tional understanding.
A telecourse. Social History of the United
States since 1865, will be presented o\'er
\VUNC-T\', Channel 4, September 24-De-
cember 17, Tuesdays and Tliursday from 9:30-
10:15 p. m. Tlic instructor is Dr. Richard
Bardolph. While it is now too late to reg-
ister for the course, it is not too late to listen.
A four \ear program leading to a Bachelor
of Science in Home Economics with a major
in interior design has been approved. It, like
the B.F..\., will provide the base for the al-
ready flourishing Master's degree in that field.
For the first time in 1963-1964, two Lib-
eral .\rts department (English and Histor, )
will offer Masters' Degrees and in the Fine
Arts a Master of Applied Music will be of-
fered, the only one now offered in the State.
There has, of course, for a number of years
been a Master of Fine Arts (1949), based on
the widely known and excellent Bachelor of
Fine .^rts (1946). So we shall begin to see
more and more graduate assistants and fel-
lo\\s, witnessing the fact of our University
status. All told, a total of 109 graduate
courses are listed on the P'all schedule at
UNC-G this rear.
Summer school this year had the largest at-
tendance on record, 1,241 students, almost
equally dhidcd bet\\een undergraduates and
graduate students. In addition, some 3,000
others attended a variety of institutes, work-
shops, and conferences which lasted from sev-
eral days to a month. Especially notcworth\
uas the Science Training Program for out-
standing secondary schools students conducted
by Dr. Anne Lewis, Mathematics, and Miss
Marguerite Felton, Chemistrj'. Because of its
high reputation, at least one excellent student
chose this instead of the Governor's School.
1'he College chapter of the American Asso-
ciation of University Professors this summer
through its officers added its protest to those
of University officials against the recently en-
acted Communist speaker ban b>- means of
a letter addressed to the leaders of the Legis-
latixe .\ssembly.
The two shiningly new and very beautiful
new "high rise" (8 stories and basement\
residence halls on the campus, one pictured
on the front of this magazine, should be seen
by all. Located at the end of College Ave-
nue, they have been literally "set into" Pea-
bod\- Park, so that the lucky residents will this
month look into the dogwoods and oaks at
their Fall best, and will be distracted from
study and lulled b;- the creek which continues
its untroubled course under the windows. At
present, without names beyond East-\\'est
and North-South, they will soon be gi\en of-
ficial names, which we are sure will please
the alumnae.
The one-time Soda Shop-Snack Bar has
been nio\ed to the old Post Office area in
Elliott Hall and also there is now a restau-
rant on the ground floor of Elliott Hall,
augmenting the eating facilities which should
attract alumnae back to the campus.
The National Repert()r\- Theatre
opened its nation-wide tour in Aycock
Auditorium on October 10 with a per-
formance of Chekho\'s Ihe Seagull .
ntnvlv translated bv and starring E\a La
Gallienne. The company is "in resi-
dence" on the campus of UNC-G for ten
davs: as I write I hear mixed sounds of
.singing and other rehearsing floating
down the hall from the Virginia Dare
Room! Miss La Gallienne, her compan-
ion, and a miniature Yorkshire are hon-
oring the alumnae by their "residence"
in Alumnae House during her stay here.
Opening night was made more mem-
orable b>' a telegram from President
Kennedy which arri\cd just before cur-
tain time. In part it said: "The National
Repertory Theatre Foundation is one of
a significant group of undertakings which
promises to give the American theatre
new distinction. ... I am particularly
pleased with efforts ... to bring theatre
as a \ital and mo\ing experience to uni-
versities and student bodies, thus assur-
ing future generations that the theatre
will continue to enrich their understand-
ing of man and his destiny."
Could This Remind Yon?
.\cRoss the registration table, a freshman
faced a professor already weary with a day of
"keeping schedules balanced and sections
even." She was offered a Tuesday, Thursday,
Saturday class. With horrified expression, she
said, "But I can't have any Saturday classes!"
"And why?", asked the professor patiently.
"Oh, I have to go to Davidson every Satur-
day", she replied cheerfully and confidently.
W'ith this the weariness broke through the
patience of the professor, but the expression
and tone were dead-pan, "I wonder why then
you don't enroll at Davidson rather than
here? " .\fter some thought the quite serious
answer came, "I don't believe I could pass
their physical exam." Guess when her class
comes!
October 1963
17
Alumnae Business
ANNUAL GIVING
Emily Harris Preyer '39
OX JULY IS at 10:50 A.M. the Alumnae Annual Giving
Council held its first annual meeting in the Administration
Building Conference Room of the Uni\ersity at Greensboro
and I thought you would be interested in ha\ing me sum-
marize for you the actions of the Council.
The first item on our agenda was a rc\ iew of the detailed
annual gi\ing report which appeared in the July issue of THE
ALUMNAE NEWS. It was the opinion of the Council that
this report is a story of outstanding accomplishment and re-
flects great credit upon the College and its alumnae. There
were expressions of gratitude for those who so generously sent
gifts and for those who worked so enthusiastically as Area
and Class Agents.
Among the responsibilities assigned the Annual Gi\ing
Council under the By-Laws of the Alumnae Association is
the following: "The Council shall also review and approxe
the Chancellor's recommendations in regard to the expendi-
ture of those funds raised beyond the actual cost of the cam-
paign." This is a great responsibility and it consumed much
of our time and thought. The results we present with excite-
ment and pride.
After making provision for the cost of the Annual Gi\ing
Campaign (53,870.98) and the costs of the Alumnae Associa-
tion formerly taken care of out of the Alumnae Fund ($5,600).
the Alumnae Scholars Program was allotted $4,000 and a re-
ser\e of $2,000 was set up for the Scholars Program. These
funds made it possible to increase the number of annual
Alumnae Scholars to eight and it is planned that four more
will be added in each of the next two years, bringing the total
to sixteen.
Knowing that the heart of a university is its faculty and
feeling that our alumnae would like to show appreciation for
the benefits they recei^cd as students, allotments were made
for (1) an Alumnae Distinguished Professorship ($3,000), (2)
t\vo Alumnae Teaching Excellence Awards ($500 each) and.
(5) a Faculty Fund to assist with travel of faculty members
to learned society meetings.
Additional benefits for the students were provided for by
a gift to the Friends of the Library ($1,000) and by establish-
ing an Alumnae Lecture Series ($3,000). Books will be pur-
chased which would not otherwise be available and at least
three distinguished speakers will be brought to the campus.
It is hoped that alumnae and friends of the Universitv' will
also take advantage of these lectures.
The editing and publishing of THE ALUMNAE NEWS
four times a year is a time consuming assignment which has
infringed upon the time of the Alumnae Secretan,-. It was
felt wise, therefore, to allocate 51,600 so that a magazine
editor could be employed on a part-time basis. An additional
sum of 51,350.00 was provided to equip an office for the new-
editor and 5650 was provided for help to assist with t>'ping.
Many alumnae during the past few years have pointed
out the need for additional furnishings in the Alumnae House.
This beautiful building is the setting for many important
meetings and is looked upon as one of the .showplaccs of the
campus. It was the opinion of the Council that $1,500 should
be assigned to the Trustees of the Alumnae Association to be
used as tlicy see fit in lielping to maintain the attractiveness
of the Alumnae House.
Each year the Chancellor is called upon for funds to meet
needs that ha\-e not been foreseen. Some of the needs have to
do with students and some are related to the total Uni\ersity
program. In either case, being able to give assistance at the
time a need arises is of vital importance. The Council, there-
fore, set aside $1,278 for the Chancellor to use at his discre-
tion for the betterment of the Um\ersity.
It was with much pride and pleasure that we were able
for the first time to allocate to the Universit)' on behalf of
the alumnae sizeable gifts to help with programs and activi-
ties not covered by State appropriations.
The remaining time at our meeting was gi\en o\er to
making plans for another year of Annual Giving. It was felt
that a greater effort should be made to reach more alumnae
through personal visitation. This method proved successful
in nine communities during the campaign just ended and on
this basis an objective of twent}' area organizations was set for
the new year. It was also decided that this part of the pro-
gram .should be scheduled to begin on October 1 5 in order
not to interfere with the work of the Class Agents in the
spring.
This report has been made possible by the loyal work of
the following Council members:
Mrs. Sam H. Beard (Libby Bass '47)
Mrs. Leon Ellis (Pollv Tarleton '25)
Mrs. Samuel I. Er\in,' III (Bettv Crawford '50)
Mrs. M. L. LeBauer (Carohn Weill '36)
Mrs. Ralph S. Morgan (Ruth Dodd '50)
Mrs. Samuel S. Tolcr. Jr. (Charlotte \\'ilkinson '32)
Ex-Officio Members
Otis A. Singletan-. Chancellor
Julia B. Barrett "'42
Mrs. Howard Holdcrness (Adelaide Fortune '34)
Barbara Parrish '48
George W. Hamer. Director of Development
The Council agreed that it is the persistent organized
work of the Area Chairmen and the Class Agents which really
has made this past year's and will make future year's programs
a success. The Area Chairmen are: ASHEVILLE — Mrs.
Henr^• L. Ausband '44; FAYETTE\TLLE— Mrs. Arthur C.
Jenkins. Jr. '39; GREENSBORO — Mrs. Claibournc H.
Darden '37 and Mrs. Robert F. Carlson '53; GREENX^LLE
—Mrs. V. C. Fleming. Jr. '40; HIGH POINT AND JAMES-
TOWN — Mrs. John R. Haworth '49; MORGANTON —
Mrs. Sam J. Er^'in, III '50; RALEIGH— Mrs. Bern F. Bullard
'59; WILMINGTON — Mrs. Herbert Bluethenthal '12;
WINS1X)N-SALEM— Mrs. \V. H. Averette, Jr. '52.
18
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
This report on the Alumnae Giving Campaign must end
with our warmest thanks to Mr. George Hamer, without
whom none of this could ha\c been accomplished. "George"
came to the campus last year and immediately and totally
identified himself with the College and especially with the
Alumnae Association. He was ne\er too busy to go to Manteo
or to Murphy if it ga\e him the opportunity to know more
alumnae and to present the cause of the College. We all join
in saying "thank you" to a new friend.
After the meeting was adjourned, it was a pleasure to
have the members of the Council at our home for lunch. No
report of the Annual Gi\ing Council would be complete
without the dc\otcd work of the "girls" who did the founda-
tion work for the whole program. Thank you again one and
all, for your wonderful support.
Emily II.\rris Preyer, President of Student Government in 193S-
39, has been a worker in even' other possible area of the Alumnae
Association (President J 955-57), as well as in almost every other civic
enterprwe in the State.
Alumnae Business
ALUMNAE SCHOLARS
Barbara Parrish '48
FIRST there were four Alumnae Scholars: Mar}- Ellen Guffy,
Barbara Logan, Carolyn Parfitt, and Joan Sharp. They came
last September as freshmen in the Class of 1966. That their
selection had been wise was increasingly substantiated dur-
ing the year.
Tlirce participated in the Freshman Honors Seminar.
Their first semester reports were commendable: one made all
A's on her academic subjects; two made A's and B's; the
fourth, B's and C's. Collectively, their academic work im-
pro\ed during second semester: the same one made all A's
again on her academic subjects; one made A's and B's; two
made all B's. To one was awarded another substantial scholar-
ship by a Greensboro professional organization during the
year.
One of the Scholars was elected secretary of the Fresh-
man Class. Another was elected by the class to ser\'e as one
of the group's two representatives to Student Government
Legislature. Still another was elected to Legislature by the
girls in her residence hall. This year one of our Scholars is
president of the Sophomore Class.
NOW there are eight. Joining the first four this September
are four more Scholars, members of the Class of 1967: W^anda
Holloway, Janet Hunter, Linda Lockhart, and Judy Mc-
Donald.
Each has come with high recommendation from her high
school. Each has been invited to participate in the Univer-
sity's Freshman Honors Seminar.
THE ALUMNAE ha\'e every reason to be proud of the first
one-half of the Alumnae Scholars contingent. The successful
selection of the first eight recipients of our alumnae scholar-
ships should ghe added impetus to our efforts to provide con-
tinuing scholarship assistance for these students and should
increase our determination to pro\ide for eight additional
Scholars during the next two years.
Lower roir. left to right. Sophomores: Mary Ellen Guffy of Norwood, foan Sharp of Faycttc\illc, and
Carolyn Parfitt of Durham. (Missnig is Barbara Logan of Mooresboro). Upper row. Freshmen, fudy Me
Donald of Jacksonville, [anet Hunter of ^\"lnston Salem, \\anda -\nn Holloway of Monroe, and Linda
Lockhart of Oreland, Pennsyhania.
October 1963
19
Alumnae Business
etc.
Barbara Parrish '48
DIDNT I TELL YOU that come fall we
« ould have an honest-to-goodness editor who
would publish this magazine on time? It is
hard to belie\'e, I know ... an October issue
in October. But it is true.
And Miss Largent has done it. From the
moment that she accepted the editorship in
mid-summer, she has been dedicated to her
new assignment. No one could have worked
harder to master a job than has she with this
one. .\nd no one is as grateful for or as
appreciative of her work as am I.
The seventeen years which ha\e followed
m\- studying United States historj- under Miss
Largent's direction had almost brought for-
giveness for her "discuss the continuity of
histon,- from Adam and his wife Eve to
Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor" questions.
Her acceptance of this magazine assignment
for us alumnae and for our branch of the
University has brought complete forgiveness
on my part.
Evon goes . . .
.\fter t\\'ent>' years Evon Dean decided that
it was time for a change, and so in July she
moved from the Alumnae House across Col-
lege Avenue to the Development Office.
Since her completion of the Commercial
Course in 1942, Evon had worked in the
.\lumnae Office, sening so ably Miss Byrd,
Betty Jester, and me as secretar.' and assist-
ant. \\'ithout question she knows more of the
alumnae and more about the alumnae than
anyone else. We can take some small conso-
lation in the fact that, although she is miss-
ing from the Alumnae Office's immediate
scene, she will be of very valuable assistance
in the Development Office's ferreting out of
alumnae money for the Annual Giving Pro-
gram.
Carroll comes . . .
Finding a replacement for Evon Dean was
a sobering assignment. Because no one could
possibh- know as much as she about "our
business." we had to find someone who would
really busy herself about learning "the busi-
ness."
Mrs. Robert W. Ililliard, who was Carroll
Gray before her marriage, accepted the posi-
tion, and since early August she has been
frantically learning. A native of Winston-Sa-
lem, she was graduated from Greensboro Col-
lege in 1947. She was editor of the G. C.
newspaper during her senior year.
Since her college graduation, in addition to
mothering six children, she has held several
positions which have gi\en her good back-
ground experience for our alumnae position.
As a part of her secretarial responsibilities for
the Vick Chemical Company, she edited the
company's industrial publication. During a
two-year i^eriod she was associated with the
\\'oman's Department staff of the Greens-
boro Daily News. For a time she worked
with bulk mailings in the office of John
Harden .Associates and with general office pro-
cedures in the office of the Ebenezer Lu-
theran Church here in Greensboro.
As we reluctantly wave farewell to Evon,
we gratefully welcome Carroll to our midst.
Nominations are in order . . .
Tlie nomination of candidates for office in
the .\lumnae Association precedes actual of-
fice-taking by more than a year. During this
fall candidates for First Vice-President of the
.\ssociation and for four positions on the
.\lumnae Board of Trustees will be nominated.
Election will follow next May, and after an
"in-sen'ice training" period of some six
months, the elected will take office at the
Midwinter Meeting during the 1964-65 ses-
sion.
.\cti\e members of the Alumnae .Associa-
tion are invited to suggest possible candidates
for these positions. The First Vice-President
fulfills the duties of the President in her ab-
sence. To the Board of Trustees is delegated
the control and management of the Associa-
tion between annual meetings.
Candidate-suggestions may be sent to the
Chairman of the Nominating Committee in
care of the .Mumnae Office.
ASA suggestions are in order, too . . .
.\t its mid-winter meeting, which will be
held after the first of the New Year, the
.Mumnae Board will consider nominees for
the fifth Alumnae Service Award. Members
of the Alumnae ^Association may make nomi-
nations for the award by writing to the Chair-
man of the Alumnae Service Award Commit-
tee in care of the Alumnae Office. Statements
substantiating the nominations should be in-
cluded.
The award is presented to alumnae who by
their unselfish and faithful service have made
outstanding contributions to the advancement
of the University at Greensboro.
Recipients of the award ha\e been Laura
fWeill) Cone '10, May (Lovelace) Tomlin-
son '07, Emma Lewis (Speight) Morris '00,
and Jane Summerell '10.
May seems remote, but . . .
It is never too early for one to begin plan-
ning to come to her class reunion.
The dates for Commencement and Reunion
Weekend for this, the 1963-64 session, have
been set for May 29, 30, and 31 (Friday
through Sunday).
Tliese classes will be having reunions: Old
Guard, 1914, 1918, 1919, 1920, 1936, 1939,
1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1954, and 1959.
A second way to help . . .
In addition to contributing financially to
the .\lumnae .Annual Giving Fund so that
our .Alumnae Scholars Program may continue,
the alumnae may assist the Program, the
University, and the promising high school
girls in their respective communities by see-
ing that these girls apply for an alumnae
scholarship. An announcement about the
Scholars Program will be sent to the high
schools in North Carolina, but the personal
concern of the alumnae, each in her own
community, will be far more effective than
an imi^ersonal announcement. Alumnae liv-
ing out of North Carolina should take par-
ticular note of the fact that out-of-state stu-
dents are eligible for Alumnae Scholars com-
petition.
The names of young women who may be
potential Alumnae Scholars may be sent to the
Alumnae Office and application blanks will"
be sent directly to them. Or, the high school
senior, herself, may be directed to write to
the .Alumnae Office, requesting an applica-
tion form.
A "liappiest" moment . . .
Mixed in with the myriad of things which
have happened — good and bad — during the
years which have passed since my coming to
work in the Alumnae Office are a goodly
number of happenings which are remembered
as especially happy and satisfjing. Of them
all, though, the privilege to sit with the Alum-
nae Annual Giving Council when it met dur-
ing the summer to decide with Chancellor
Singletary how the annual gi\'ing contribu-
tions could best be spent for our branch of
the Uni\'ersity was the happiest and most ex-
citing experience.
Never before had the alumnae banded to-
gether to contribute such an amount of money
with so few incumbencies and restrictions
tied to it. At last there was a chance for some
real "splashes." At last our University had
the chance to do some things and have some
things which had never before been possible.
Most exciting of all to me was the fact that
we alumnae — gixing each according to her
own means and dictates — had made such a
chance and time possible.
Thank you for making this "happiest" mo-
ment real for me and for our University.
Confidently, we shall look forward to similar
moments year after year after year after jear.
20
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
IN MEMORIAM
Celestia (Gill) Young 1897
Helen (Suncrson) Chandler 1930C
Margaret Graham (Thompson) Long
1898
Mattibelle (Eraley) Rankin 1931
Mattie Jennie (Hackett) Cranor 1905
Lola (Lasley) Dameron 1909
Elizabeth (Horton) Tliomson 1916
Lalah Irene (Perkins) Isley 1922
Helen Nora (Sherrill) Monahan 1926
Lucy Gray Buie 1927
Edith (Morrow) Henderson 1932
lone (Perry) Nicholson 1934
Marietta (Muller) Smyre 1938
Louise (Talley) Adams 1944C
Anne (Oueensbury) Ste\cns 1944
Sounea (Benbow) Miller 1927C
Ola (Chitty) Duncan 1946
Mildred (Candler) Gudger 1930
Dorothy Elizabeth Pcrr}- 1946
Edna Estelle (Hackney) Ballard 1930
Lorene (Thomas) Johnson 1953
PILGRIMAGE
Julia Blauvelt McGrane '26
In days less storm beset we lia\e remembered
Fall's first red leaf aflame on Spencer lawn,
New green returning to the park in April,
Clatter of mowers then as May came on.
Ivy on buildings, drone of girls at mealtime,
Electric clang of gong, or the old bell
Pulled by a rope, and warning, always warning.
These were our memories when all was well.
But now like children in the dark returning
To words forgotten, seeking some new plan.
We reach the hearthstone of our life together.
Its deeper memon,' long to understand.
Here we were equal, purposeful, and happy.
In this place tolerance was truly known.
Race, creed, possessions, feathers in the balance;
Our triumphs and our failures all our own.
Here we cried young unmellowed logics.
Exchanged extremes, and fashioned something strong
From clash of thought on thought and the clean \igor
That, unselfseeking, flails the right from wrong.
We ha\e forgotten much in the slow pressure
Of day on day, desire to be, to own.
What inequalities of race, or creed, or station
Has waning ardor shifted to condone!
But in this hour clearly we remember,
Renew the vision, marking on our charts
Our College, symbol of all things we fight for.
In air, on land, and sea, and in our hearts.
As one known well and taken much for granted
In crucial hour wears glory all can see,
No\^• in the daih- face of Alma Mater
Behold the features of democracy!
This poem, written in commemoration of the Fiftieth An-
niversan' of the Woman's College, was included in
Alumnae Miscellany, edited by Alonzo C. Hall and Nettie
S. Tillett and published b>- the ^^'oman's College, Univer-
sity of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, 1942.
October 1963
21
ACADEMIC FREEDOM
JOSEPHINE HEGE '27
THE PAGES following this statement were prepared by a
sroup of outstanding alumni editors for exelusive publica-
tion in alumni magazines. Beeause the subject of this study.
Academic Freedom, is vital to the integrity of any institution
of higher learning, it is of as great concern to thoughtful
alumni as it is to faculty members, administrati\e officials,
and students in course at all institutions.
Alumnae of the University of North Carolina at Greens-
boro who would like to assess the status of academic freedom
at their own Alma Mater in the light of this study will find it
helpful to keep in mind the major official polic\- statements
on the subject and the major agencies established to imple-
ment these policies at this University.
\\'hether or not practice has alwavs matched the promise
of these guarantees is not the point here. Instead, this is in-
tended, for the information of alumnae who wish to make
their own judgment on this, to state briefly, the published
official guarantees regarding academic freedom at the Univer-
sitv of North Carolina and pro\isions for their implementa-
tion today.
FROM THE UNIVERSITY CODE (Appro\ed by Board of
Trustees for incorporation in Uni\erstiy Code, May 25, 1959)
1 . Academic Freedom
a. Academic freedom is the right of a faculty member to be
responsibly engaged in efforts to discover, speak, and
teach the truth. It is the policy of the University to
maintain and encourage full freedom, within the law, of
inquiry-, discourse, teaching, research, and publication and
to protect any member of the academic staff against in-
fluences from within or without the University, which
would restrict him in the exercise of these freedoms in
his area of scholarly interest.
b. The University recognizes that in his role as citizen, as to
matters outside the area of scholarly interest, the facult\
member has a right to enjoy the same freedom as other
citizens, without institutional censorship or discipline,
though he should avoid abuses of these freedoms. He
should recognize that accuracy, forthrightness, and dig-
nity befit his association with the University, and his
position as a man of learning. He should not represent
himself as a spokesman for the University. '
2. Tenure
a. Academic tenure refers to the conditions and guarantees
that apply to a faculty member's professional employment.
In according tenure, the purpose is to protect the aca-
demic freedom of faculty members, while providing them
with a reasonable degree of economic security ....
b. Procedures for suspension and discharge of faculty mem-
bers are given; and provisions for appeal and defense by
the faculty members so affected, defined. (H.ANDBOOK
FOR FACULTY)
FROM THE INSTRUMENT OF GOVERNMENT FOR
THE FACULTY OF THE W^OMAN'S COLEGE (Re-
\ised 1962)
1 . Pro\ isions for a democratically-based Faculty Council
to act as "legislative body for the faculty;" composed
of all professors, instructors of two years service, policy-
making administrati\e officials, and those with rank of
librarian.
2. Pro\isions for the election by the Faculty Council of a
majority of the members to ser\e on Major Com-
mittees.
a. .\cadeniic Policies Committee: to advise the Chancellor
on matters of policy including salaries and promotions.
h. Curriculum Committee: to originate proposals for un-
proving the curriculum and to recei\e departmental pro-
posals and make recommendations to the Faculty Council.
c. Committee on Due Process (composed of professors
only): to conduct hearings and render judgments on ap-
peals from administrative decisions involving tenure.
FROM THE REPORT OF THE VISITING COMMIT-
TEE OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES (1960)
Comment ufwn "The Academic Freedom Document":
"... The approval of this historic document by unani-
mous vote of the Board of Trustees identified the University
of North Carolina as a family of institutions in which scholar-
ship and learning might flourish unhampered by the shifting
winds of popular opinion."
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNI\'ERSIT^' PRO-
FESSORS
In addition to the above mentioned safeguards promised
for academic freedom, there is on the campus an active chap-
ter of the American Association of University Professors.
To be sure, the effecti\eness of these guarantees depends
upon the good faith of all who are involved. It depends part-
ly upon the responsible exercise of academic freedom by each
member of the faculty; partly upon the attitude of the ad-
ministrative officials; and to a large extent upon the attitude
of informed alumnae who respect the University, and work
to create a "climate of opinion" generally favorable to
Arademic Freedom, the primary condition for the advance-
ment of learning.
foSEPHiNE Hege, President of Student Government in 1 926-27,
was the winner of the Vi'eil Fellowship, the most coveted academic
honor in her time. She has been at Woman's College, first as Coun-
selor and later as teacher of History, since 193-f'. She is now Associate
Professor of History at UNC-G.
22
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
WHAT
RIGHT
HAS
THIS
MAN...
HE HOLDS a position of power equaled by few occu-
pations in our society.
His influence upon the rest of us— and upon our
children — is enormous.
His place in society is so critical that no totali-
tarian state would (or does) trust him fully. Yet in
our country his fellow citizens grant him a greater
degree of freedom than they grant even to them-
selves.
He is a college teacher. It would be difficult to
exaggerate the power that he holds.
► He originates a large part of our society's new
ideas and knowledge.
► He is the interpreter and disseminator of the
knowledge we have inherited from the past.
► He makes discoveries in science that can both
kill us and heal us.
► He develops theories that can change our eco-
nomics, our politics, our social structures.
► As the custodian, discoverer, challenger, tester,
and interpreter of knowledge he then enters a class-
room and tells our young people what he knows— or
what he thinks he knows— and thus influences the
thinking of millions.
What right has this man to such power and in-
fluence?
Who supervises him, to whom we entrust so
much?
Do we the people? Do we, the parents whose
children he instructs, the regents or trustees whose
institutions he staffs, the taxpayers and philan-
thropists by whose money he is sustained?
On the contrary: We arm him with safeguards
against our doing so.
What can we be thinking of, to permit such a
system as this?
W
Copyright 1963 by Editorial Projects for Education
Having ideas, ^^ disseminating them, is a the production, testing, and acceptance of ideas; yet
risky business. It has always virtually all great ideas were opposed when they were
been so— and therein lies a strange paradox. The march introduced. Their authors and teachers have been cen-
of civilization has been quick or slow in direct ratio to sured, ostracized, exiled, martyred, and crucified—
usuaUy because the ideas clashed with an accepted set Even in the Western world, although methods of pun-
of beliefs or prejudices or with the interests of a ruler ishment have been refined, the propagator of a new
or privileged class. idea may find himself risking his social status, his poUti-
Are we wiser and more receptive to ideas today? cal acceptabihty, his job, and hence his very Uvelihood.
For the teacher: special
risks, special rights
NORMALLY, in our society, we are wary of per-
sons whose positions give them an oppor-
tunity to exert unusual power and influence.
But we grant the college teacher a degree of
freedom far greater than most of the rest of us
enjoy.
Our reasoning comes from a basic fact about our
civiHzation:
Its vitality flows from, and is sustained by, ideas.
Ideas in science, ideas in medicine, ideas in poli-
tics. Ideas that sometimes rub people the wrong
way. Ideas that at times seem pointless. Ideas that
may alarm, when first broached. Ideas that may be
so novel or revolutionary that some persons may
propose that they be suppressed. Ideas — all sorts—
that provide the sinews of our civilization.
They will be disturbing. Often they will irritate.
But the more freely they are produced — and the
more rigorously they are tested — the more surely
will our civilization stay alive.
THIS IS THE THEORY. Applying it, man has de-
veloped institutions for the specific purpose of
incubating, nourishing, evaluating, and spread-
ing ideas. They are our colleges and universities. As
their function is unique, so is the responsibility with
which we charge the man or woman who staffs them.
We give the college teacher the professional duty
of pursuing knowledge — and of conveying it to oth-
ers— with complete honesty and open-mindedness.
We tell him to find errors in what we now know.
We tell him to plug the gaps in it. We tell him to
add new material to it.
We tell him to do these things without fear of the
consequences and without favor to any interest save
the pursuit of truth.
We know — and he knows — that to meet this re-
sponsibiUty may entail risk for the college teacher.
The knowledge that he develops and then teaches to
others will frequently produce ground-shaking re-
sults.
It win lead at times to weapons that at the press
of a button can erase human hves. Conversely, it
wiU lead at other times to medical miracles that
will save human Hves. It may unsettle theology, as
did Darwinian biology in the late 1800's, and as did
countless other discoveries in earlier centuries. Con-
versely, it may confirm or strengthen the elements
of one's faith. It will produce intensely personal
results: the loss of a job to automation or, con-
versely, the creation of a job in a new industry.
Dealing in ideas, the teacher may be subjected to
strong, and at times bitter, criticism. It may come
from unexpected quarters: even the man or woman
who is well aware that free research and education
are essential to the common good may become
understandably upset when free research and edu-
cation affect his own livehhood, his own customs,
his own beliefs.
And, under stress, the critics may attempt to
coerce the teacher. The twentieth century has its
own versions of past centuries' persecutions: social
ostracism for the scholar, the withdrawal of finan-
cial support, the threat of poHtical sanctions, an
attempt to deprive the teacher of his job.
Wherever coercion has been widely applied — in
Nazi Germany, in the Soviet Union — the develop-
ment of ideas has been seriously curtailed. Were
such coercion to succeed here, the very sinews of our
civilization would be weakened, leaving us without
strength.
WE RECOGNIZE these facts. So we have de-
veloped special safeguards for ideas, by
developing special safeguards for him who
fosters ideas: the college teacher.
We have developed these safeguards in the calm
(and civilized) realization that they are safeguards
against our own impetuousness in times of stress.
They are a declaration of our willingness to risk the
consequences of the scholar's quest for truth. They
are, in short, an expression of our belief that we
should seek the truth because the truth, in time,
shall make us free.
What the teacher's
special rights consist of
THE SPECIAL FREEDOM that we grant to a
college teacher goes beyond anything guaran-
teed by law or constitution.
As a citizen like the rest of us, he has the right
to speak critically or unpopularly without fear of
governmental reprisal or restraint.
As a teacher enjoying a special freedom, however,
he has the right to speak without restraint not only
from government but from almost any other source,
including his own employer.
Thus — although he draws his salary from a col-
lege or university, holds his title in a college or
university, and does his work at a college or uni-
versity— he has an independence from his employer
which in most other occupations would be denied
to him.
Here are some of the rights he enjoys:
► He may, if his honest thinking dictates, expound
views that clash with those held by the vast ma-
jority of his fellow countrymen. He will not be
restrained from doing so.
► He may, if his honest thinking dictates, pub-
Ucly challenge the findings of his closest colleagues,
even if they outrank him. He will not be restrained
from doing so.
► He may, if his honest thinking dictates, make
statements that oppose the views of the president
of his college, or of a prominent trustee, or of a
generous benefactor, or of the leaders of the state
legislature. No matter how much pain he may bring
to such persons, or to the college administrators
entrusted with maintaining good relations with
them, he will not be restrained from doing so.
Such freedom is not written into law. It exists
on the college campus because (1) the teacher claims
and enforces it and (2) the public, although wincing
on occasion, grants the validity of the teacher's
claim.
WE GRANT the teacher this special freedom
for our own benefit.
Although "orthodox" critics of educa-
tion frequently protest, there is a strong experi-
mental emphasis in college teaching in this country.
This emphasis owes its existence to several in-
fluences, including the utilitarian nature of our
society; it is one of the ways in which our institu-
mm
tions of higher education differ from many in
Europe.
Hence we often measure the effectiveness of our
colleges and universities by a pragmatic yardstick:
Does our society derive a practical benefit from
their practices?
The teacher's special freedom meets this test.
The unfettered mind, searching for truth in science,
in philosophy, in social sciences, in engineering, in
professional areas — and then teaching the findings
to milhons — has produced impressive practical re-
sults, whether or not these were the original ob-
jectives of its search:
The technology that produced instruments of
victory in World War II. The sciences that have
produced, in a matter of decades, incredible gains
in man's struggle against disease. The science and
engineering that have taken us across the threshold
of outer space. The dazzling progress in agricultural
productivity. The damping, to an unprecedented
degree, of wild fluctuations in the business cycle.
The appearance and application of a new architec-
ture. The development of a "scientific approach" in
the management of business and of labor unions.
The ever-increasing maturity and power of our
historians, Uterary critics, and poets. The gradua-
tion of hundreds of thousands of college-trained
men and women with the wit and skiU to learn and
broaden and apply these things.
Would similar results have been possible without
campus freedom? In moments of national panic (as
when the Russians appear to be outdistancing us in
the space race), there are voices that suggest that
less freedom and more centrahzed direction of our
educational and research resources would be more
"eflScient." Disregard, for a moment, the fact that
such contentions display an appalhng ignorance
and indifference about the fundamental philosophies
of freedom, and answer them on their own ground.
Weighed carefully, the evidence seems generally to
support the contrary view. Freedom does work —
quite practicaUy.
Many point out that there are even more im-
portant reasons for supporting the teacher's special
freedom than its practical benefits. Says one such
person, the conservative writer Russell Kirk:
"I do not believe that academic freedom deserves
preservation chiefly because it 'serves the commu-
nity,' although this incidental function is important.
I think, rather, that the principal importance of
academic freedom is the opportunity it affords for
the highest development of private reason and im-
agination, the improvement of mind and heart by
the apprehension of Truth, whether or not that de-
velopment is of any immediate use to 'democratic
society'."
The conclusion, however, is the same, whether the
reasoning is conducted on practical, philosophical,
or religious grounds — or on all three: The unusual
freedom claimed by (and accorded to) the college
teacher is strongly justified.
"This freedom is immediately apphcable only to a
Kmited number of individuals," says the statement
of principles of a professors' organization, "but it is
profoundly important for the public at large. It safe-
guards the methods by which we explore the un-
known and test the accepted. It may afford a key to
open the way to remedies for bodily or social ills, or
it may confirm our faith in the familiar. Its preser-
vation is necessary if there is to be scholarship in
any true sense of the word. The advantages accrue
as much to the public as to the scholars themselves."
Hence we give teachers an extension of freedom —
academic freedom — that we give to no other group
in our society: a special set of guarantees designed to
encourage and insure their boldness, their forth-
rightness, their objectivity, and (if necessary) their
criticism of us who maintain them.
MM
The idea works most
of the time, but . . .
I IKE MANY good theories, this one works for
most of the time at most colleges and uni-
versities. But it is subject to continual
stresses. And it suffers occasional, and sometimes
spectacular, breakdowns.
If past experience can be taken as a guide, at this
very moment:
► An alumnus is composing a letter threatening to
strike his alma mater from his wiU unless the insti-
tution removes a professor whose views on some
controversial issue — in economics? in genetics? in
politics? — the alumnus finds objectionable.
► The president of a college or university, or one
of his aides, is composing a letter to an alumnus in
which he tries to explain why the institution cannot
remove a professor whose views on some controver-
sial issue the alumnus finds objectionable.
► A group of Hberal legislators, aroused by reports
from the campus of their state university that a
professor of economics is preaching fiscal conserva-
tism, is debating whether it should knock some
sense into the vmiversity by cutting its appropria-
tion for next year.
► A group of conservative legislators is aroused by
reports that another professor of economics is
preaching fiscal HberaUsm. This group, too, is con-
sidering an appropriation cut.
► The president of a college, faced with a budget-
ary crisis in his biology department, is pondering
whether or not he should have a heart-to-heart chat
with a teacher whose views on fallout, set forth in a
letter to the local newspaper, appear to be scaring
away the potential donor of at least one million
dollars.
► The chairman of an academic department, still
smarting from the criticism that two colleagues lev-
eled at the learned paper he delivered at the de-
partmental seminar last week, is making up the new
class schedules and wondering why the two up-
starts wouldn't be just the right persons for those
7 a.m. classes which increased enrollments will ne-
cessitate next year.
► The educational board of a rehgious denomina-
tion is wondering why it should continue to permit
the employment, at one of the colleges under its
^Sf^A.
control, of a teacher of religion who is openly ques-
tioning a doctrinal pronouncement made recently
by the denomination's leadership.
► The managers of an industrial complex, worried
by university research that reportedly is linking
their product with a major health problem, are won-
dering how much it might cost to sponsor university
research to show that their product is not the caxose
of a major health problem.
Pressures, inducements, threats: scores of exam-
ples, most of them never publicized, could be cited
each year by our colleges and universities.
In addition there is philosophical opposition to
the present concept of academic freedom by a few
who sincerely beheve it is wrong. ("In the last
analysis," one such critic, WiUiam F. Buckley, Jr.,
once wrote, "academic freedom must mean the
freedom of men and women to supervise the educa-
tional activities and aims of the schools they oversee
and support.") And, considerably less important
and more frequent, there is opposition by emotion-
ahsts and crackpots.
Since criticism and coercion do exist, and since
academic freedom has virtually no basis in law, how
can the college teacher enforce his claim to it?
In the face of pressures,
how the professor stays free
IN THE mid-lSOO's, many professors lost their jobs
over their views on slavery and secession. In the
1870's and '80's, many were dismissed for their
views on evolution. Near the turn of the century, a
number lost their jobs for speaking out on the issue
of Free Silver.
The trend alarmed many college teachers. Until
late in the last century, most teachers on this side
of the Atlantic had been mere purveyors of the
knowledge that others had accumulated and written
down. But, beginning around 1870, many began to
perform a dual function; not only did they teach, but
they themselves began to investigate the world
about them.
Assumption of the latter role, previously per-
formed almost exclusively in European universi-
ties, brought a new vitality to our campuses. It also
brought perils that were previously unknown. As
long as they had dealt only in ideas that were clas-
sical, generally accepted, and therefore safe, teach-
ers and the institutions of higher learning did little
that might offend their governing boards, their
alumni, the parents of their students, the public,
and the state. But when they began to act as in-
vestigators in new areas of knowledge, they found
themselves affecting the status quo and the inter-
ests of those who enjoyed and supported it.
And, as in the secession, evolution, and silver con-
troversies, retaliation was sometimes swift.
In 1915, spurred by their growing concern over
such infringements of their freedom, a group of
teachers formed the American Association of Uni-
versity Professors. It now has 52,000 members, in
the United States and Canada. For nearly half a
century an AAUP committee, designated as "Com-
mittee A," has been academic freedom's most active
— and most effective — defender.
THE AAUP's defense of academic freedom is
based on a set of principles that its members
have developed and refined throughout the or-
ganization's history. Its current statement of these
principles, composed in collaboration with the As-
sociation of American Colleges, says in part:
"Institutions of higher education are conducted
for the common good and not to further the interest
of either the individual teacher or the institution as
a whole. The common good depends upon the free
search for truth and its free exposition."
The statement spells out both the teacher's rights
and his duties:
"The teacher is entitled to full freedom in re-
search and in the pubhcation of the results, subject
to the adequate performance of his other academic
duties . . .
"The teacher is entitled to freedom in the class-
room in discussing his subject, but he should be
careful not to introduce . . . controversial matter
which has no relation to his subject . . .
"The college or university teacher is a citizen, a
member of a learned profession, and an officer of an
educational institution. When he speaks or writes as
a citizen, he should be free from institutional censor-
ship or discipHne, but his special position in the
community imposes special obUgations. As a man of
learning and an educational officer, he should re-
member that the public may judge his profession
and his institution by his utterances. Hence he
should at all times be accurate, should exercise ap-
propriate restraint, should show respect for the
opinions of others, and should make every effort to
indicate that he is not an institutional spokesman."
How CAN such claims to academic freedom be
enforced? How can a teacher be protected
against retahation if the truth, as he finds it
and teaches it, is unpalatable to those who employ
him?
The American Association of University Profes-
sors and the Association of American Colleges have
formulated this answer: permanent job security, or
tenure. After a probationary period of not more than
seven years, agree the AAUP and the AAC, the
teacher's services should be terminated "only for
adequate cause."
If a teacher were dismissed or forced to resign
simply because his teaching or research offended
someone, the cause, in AAUP and AAC terms,
clearly would not be adequate.
The teacher's recourse? He may appeal to the
AAUP, which first tries to mediate the dispute with-
out publicity. Faihng such settlement, the AAUP
conducts a full investigation, resulting in a full re-
port to Committee A. If a violation of academic
freedom and tenure is found to have occurred, the
committee publishes its findings in the association's
Bulletin, takes the case to the AAUP membership,
and often asks that the offending college or univer-
sity administration be censured.
So effective is an AAUP vote of censure that most
college administrators will go to great lengths to
avoid it. Although the AAUP does not engage in
boycotts, many of its members, as well as others in
the academic profession, will not accept jobs in cen-
sured institutions. Donors of funds, including many
philanthropic foundations, undoubtedly are influ-
enced; so are many parents, students, alumni, and
present faculty members. Other organizations, such
as the American Association of University Women,
will not recognize a college on the AAUP's censure
list.
As the present academic year began, eleven insti-
tutions were on the AAUP's list of pensured admin-
istrations. Charges of infringements of academic
freedom or tenure were being investigated on four-
teen other campuses. In the past three years, seven
institutions, having corrected the situations which
had led to AAUP action, have been removed from
the censure category.
Has the teacher's freedom
no limitations?
How SWEEPING is the freedom that the college
teacher claims?
Does it, for example, entitle a member of the
faculty of a church-supported college or university
openly to question the ejcistence of God?
Does it, for example, entitle a professor of botany
to use his classroom for the promulgation of political
behefs?
Does it, for example, apply to a Communist?
There are those who would answer some, or all,
such questions with an unqualified Yes. They would
argue that academic freedom is absolute. They
would say that any restriction, however it may be
rationalized, effectively negates the entire academic-
freedom concept. "You are either free or not free,"
says one. "There are no halfway freedoms."
There are others — the American Association of
University Professors among them — who say that
freedom can be limited in some instances and, by
definition, is limited in others, without fatal damage
being done.
Restrictions at church-supported
colleges and universities
The AAUP- AAC statement of principles of aca-
demic freedom impUcitly allows religious restric-
tions:
"Limitations of academic freedom because of re-
Hgious or other aims of the institution should be
clearly stated in writing at the time of [the teacher's]
appointment ..."
Here is how one church-related university (Prot-
estant) states such a "limitation" to its faculty
members:
"Since X University is a Christian institution
supported by a religious denomination, a member of
its faculty is expected to be in sympathy with the
university's primary objective — to educate its stu-
dents within the framework of a Christian culture.
The rights and privileges of the instructor should,
therefore, be exercised with discretion and a sense of
loyalty to the supporting institution . . . The right of
dissent is a correlative of the right of assent. Any
undue restriction upon an instructor in the exercise
of this function would foster a suspicion of intoler-
ance, degrade the university, and set the supporting
denomination in a false light before the world."
Another church-related institution (Roman Cath-
ohc) tells its teachers:
"While Y College is operated under Cathohc aus-
pices, there is no regulation which requires all mem-
bers of the faculty to be members of the Catholic
faith. A faculty member is expected to maintain a
standard of life and conduct consistent with the phi-
losophy and objectives of the college. Accordingly,
the integrity of the college requires that all faculty
members shall maintain a sympathetic attitude to-
ward CathoHc behefs and practices, and shall make
a sincere effort to appreciate these behefs and prac-
tices. Members of the faculty who are Catholic are
expected to set a good example by the regular prac-
tice of Cathohc duties."
A teacher's "competence"
By most definitions of academic freedom, a teach-
er's rights in the classroom apply only to the field in
which he is professionally an expert, as determined
by the credentials he possesses. They do not extend
to subjects that are foreign to his specialty.
". . . He should be careful," says the American
Association of University Professors and the Asso-
ciation of American Colleges, "not to introduce into
his teaching controversial matter which has no re-
lation to his subject."
Hence a professor of botany enjoys an undoubted
freedom to expound his botanical knowledge, how-
ever controversial it might be. (He might discover',
and teach, that some widely consumed cereal grain,
known for its energy-giving properties, actually is of
httle value to man and animals, thus causing con-
sternation and angry outcries in Battle Creek. No
one on the campus is likely to challenge his right to
do so. J He probably enjoys the right to comment,
from a botanist's standpoint, upon a conservation
bill pending in Congress. But the principles of aca-
demic freedom might not entitle the botanist to take
a classroom stand on, say, a biU dealing with traflBc
laws in his state.
As a private citizen, of course, off the college cam-
pus, he is as free as any other citizen to speak on
whatever topic he chooses — and as hable to criti-
cism of what he says. He has no special privileges
when he acts outside his academic role. Indeed, the
AAUP-AAC statement of principles suggests that
he take special pains, when he speaks privately, not
to be identified as a spokesman for his institution.
HENCE, at least in the view of the most influen-
tial of teachers' organizations, the freedom of
the college teacher is less than absolute. But
the Umitations are estabhshed for strictly defined
purposes: (1) to recognize the rehgious auspices of
many colleges and universities and (2) to lay down
certain ground rules for scholarly procedure and con-
duct.
In recent decades, a new question has arisen to
haunt those who would define and protect academic
freedom: the problem of the Communist. When it
began to be apparent that the Communist was not
simply a member of a pohtical party, wiUing (Kke
other pohtical partisans) to submit to estabhshed
democratic processes, the question of his ehgibihty
to the rights of a free college teacher was seriously
posed.
So pressing — and so worrisome to our colleges
and universities — has this question become that a
separate section of this report is devoted to it.
The Communist:
a special case?
SHOULD A Communist Party member enjoy the
privileges of academic freedom? Should he be
permitted to hold a position on a college or
university faculty?
On few questions, however "obvious" the answer
may be to some persons, can complete agreement
be found in a free society. In a group as conditioned
to controversy and as insistent upon hard proof as
are college teachers, a consensus is even more rare.
It would thus be a miracle if there were agree-
ment on the rights of a Communist Party member
to enjoy academic privileges. Indeed, the miracle
has not yet come to pass. The question is still
warmly debated on many campuses, even where
there is not a Cormnunist in sight. The American
Association of University Professors is still in the
process of defining its stand.
The difficulty, for some, Kes in determining
whether or not a communist teacher actually propa-
gates his beliefs among students. The question is
asked. Should a communist gym instructor, whose
utterances to his students are confined largely to
the hup-two-three-four that he chants when he
leads the calisthenics driU, be summarily dismissed?
Should a chemist, who confines his campus activities
solely to chemistry? Until he overtly preaches com-
munism, or permits it to taint his research, his
writings, or his teaching (some say) , the Communist
should enjoy the same rights as all other faculty
members.
Others — and they appear to be a growing num-
ber— have concluded that proof of Communist
Party membership is in itself sufficient grounds for
dismissal from a college faculty.
To support the argument of this group. Professor
Arthur O. Lovejoy, who in 1913 began the move-
ment that led to the establishment of the AAUP,
has quoted a statement that he wrote in 1920, long
before communism on the campus became a lively
issue:
"Society ... is not getting from the scholar the
particular service which is the principal raison
d'etre of his calling, unless it gets from him his
honest report of what he finds, or beheves, to be
true, after careful study of the problems with which
he deals. Insofar, then, as faculties are made up of
men whose teachings express, not the results of their
own research and reflection and that of their fellow-
speciahsts, but rather the opinions of other men —
whether holders of pubHc office or private persons
from whom endowments are received — just so far
are colleges and universities perverted from their
proper function ..."
(His statement is the more pertinent. Professor
Lovejoy notes, because it was originally the basis
of "a criticism of an American college for accepting
from a 'capitalist' an endowment for a special pro-
fessorship to be devoted to showing 'the fallacies of
socialism and kindred theories and practices.' I
have now added only the words 'holders of public
office.' ")
Let us quote Professor Lovejoy at some length,
as he looks at the commmiist teacher today:
"It is a very simple argument; it can best be put,
in the logician's fashion, in a series of numbered
theorems:
"1. Freedom of inquiry, of opinion, and of teach-
ing in universities is a prerequisite, if the academic
scholar is to perform the proper function of his
profession. / —
"2. The Communist Party in the United States
is an organization whose aim is to bring about the
establishment in this country of a poHtical as well
as an economic system essentially similar to that
which now exists in the Soviet Union.
"3. That system does not permit freedom of in-
quiry, of opinion, and of teaching, either in or
outside of universities; in it the political govern-
ment claims and exercises the right to dictate to
scholars what conclusions they must accept, or at
least profess to accept, even on questions lying
within their own specialties — for example, in philos-
ophy, in history, in aesthetics and literary criticism,
in economics, in biology.
"4. A member of the Communist Party is there-
fore engaged in a movement which has already ex-
tinguished academic freedom in many countries and
would — if it were successful here — result in the
abolition of such freedom in American universities.
"5. No one, therefore, who desires to maintain
academic freedom in America can consistently favor
that movement, or give indirect assistance to it by
accepting as fit members of the faculties of uni-
versities, persons who have voluntarily adhered to
an organization one of whose aims is to abolish
academic freedom.
"Of these five propositions, the first is one of
principle. For those who do not accept it, the con-
clusion does not follow. The argument is addressed
only to those who do accept that premise. The
second, third, and fourth propositions are state-
ments of fact. I submit that they cannot be honestly
gainsaid by any who are acquainted with the
relevant facts . . .
"It wiU perhaps be objected that the exclusion of
communist teachers would itself be a restriction
upon freedom of opinion and of teaching — viz., of
the opinion and teaching that intellectual freedom
should be abohshed in and outside of universities;
and that it is self-contradictory to argue for the
restriction of freedom in the name of freedom. The
argument has a specious air of logicality, but it is
in fact an absurdity. The believer in the indis-
pensabihty of freedom, whether academic or politi-
cal, is not thereby committed to the conclusion that
it is his duty to facihtate its destruction, by placing
its enemies in strategic positions of power, prestige,
or influence . . . The conception of freedom is not
one which implies the legitimacy and inevitabihty
of its own suicide. It is, on the contrary, a concep-
tion which, so to say, defines the Hmit of its own
appUcability; what it implies is that there is one
kind of freedom which is inadmissible — the freedom
to destroy freedom. The defender of liberty of
thought and speech is not morally bound to enter
the fight with both hands tied behind his back. And
those who would deny such freedom to others, if
they could, have no moral or logical basis for the
claim to enjoy the freedom which they would deny . . .
"In the professional code of the scholar, the man
of science, the teacher, the first commandment is:
Thou shalt not knowingly misrepresent facts, nor
tell lies to students or to the public. Those who not
merely sometimes break this commandment, but
repudiate any obligation to respect it, are obviously
disquahfied for membership in any body of investi-
gators and teachers which maintains the elementary
requirements of professional integrity.
"To say these things is not to say that the eco-
nomic and even the political doctrines of commu-
nism should not be presented and freely discussed
within academic walls. To treat them simply as
'dangerous thought,' with which students should
not be permitted to have any contact, would give
rise to a plausible suspicion that they are taboo
because they would, if presented, be all too con-
vincing; and out of that suspicion young Commu-
nists are bred. These doctrines, moreover, are his-
torical facts; for better or worse, they play an
immense part in the intellectual and political con-
troversies of the present age. To deny to students
means of learning accurately what they are, and of
reaching informed judgments about them, would
be to fail in one of the major pedagogic obUgations
of a university — to enable students to vmderstand
the world in which they will Uve, and to take an
intelligent part in its affairs . . ."
IF EVERY COMMUNIST admitted he belonged to the
party — or if the pubhc, including college teachers
and administrators, somehow had access to party
membership lists — such a policy might not be diffi-
cult to apply. In practice, of course, such is not the
case. A two-pronged danger may result: (1) we may
not "spot" all Communists, and (2) unless we are
very careful, we may do serious injustice to persons
who are not Communists at all.
What, for example, constitutes proof of Commu-
nist Party membership? Does refusal to take a
loyalty oath? (Many nore-Communists, as a matter
of principle, have declined to subscribe to "dis-
criminatory" oaths — oaths required of one group
in society, e.g., teachers, but not of others.) Does
invoking the Fifth Amendment? Of some 200 dis-
missals from college and university faculties in the
past fifteen years, where communism was an issue,
according to AAUP records, most were on grounds
such as these. Only a handful of teachers were in-
controvertibly proved, either by their own admission
or by other hard evidence, to be Communist Party
members.
Instead of relying on less-than-conclusive evi-
dence of party membership, say some observers,
we would be wiser — and the results would be surer —
if we were to decide each case by determining
whether the teacher has in fact violated his trust.
Has he been intellectually dishonest? Has he mis-
stated facts? Has he published a distorted bibli-
ography? Has he preached a party hne in his class-
room? By such a determination we would be able
to bar the practicing Communist from our campuses,
along with all others guilty of academic dishonesty
or charlatanry.
How can the facts be established?
As one who holds a position of imusual trust, say
most educators (including the teachers' own or-
ganization, the AAUP), the teacher has a special
obligation: if responsible persons make serious
charges against his professional integrity or his in-
tellectual honesty, he should be willing to submit
to examination by his colleagues. If his answers to
the charges are unsatisfactory— evasive, or not in
accord with evidence — formal charges should be
brought against him and an academic hearing, con-
ducted according to due process, should be held.
Thus, say many close observers of the academic
scene, society can be sure that justice is done —
both to itself and to the accused.
Is the college teacher's freedom
in any real jeopardy?
How FREE is the college teacher today? What
are his prospects for tomorrow? Either here
or on the horizon, are there any serious
threats to his freedom, besides those threats to the
freedom of us all?
Any reader of history knows that it is wise to
adopt the view that freedom is always in jeopardy.
With such a view, one is likely to maintain safe-
guards. Without safeguards, freedom is sure to be
eroded and soon lost.
So it is with the special freedom of the college
teacher — the freedom of ideas on which our civiliza-
tion banks so much.
Periodically, this freedom is buffeted heavily. In
part of the past decade, the weather was particular-
ly stormy. College teachers were singled out for
Are matters of academic freedom easy
Try handling some of ttiese
You are
a college president.
Your college is your life. You have
thrown every talent you possess into
its development. No use being mod-
est about it: your achievements
have been great.
The faculty has been strength-
ened immeasurably. The student
body has grown not only in size but
in academic quality and aptitude.
The campus itself — dormitories, lab-
oratories, classroom buildings —
would hardly be recognized by any-
one who hasn't seen it since before
you took over.
Your greatest ambition is yet to
be reahzed: the construction of a
new Ubrary. But at last it seems to
be in sight. Its principal donor, a
wealthy man whom you have culti-
vated for years, has only the techni-
calities— but what important tech-
nicalities!— to complete: assigning
to the college a large block of secur-
ities which, when sold, will provide
the necessary $3,000,000.
This afternoon, a newspaper re-
porter stopped you as you crossed
the campus. "Is it true," he asked,
"that John X, of your economics
department, is about to appear on
coast-to-coast television advocating
deficit spending as a cornerstone of
federal fiscal policy? I'd like to do
an advance story about it, with your
comments."
You were not sidestepping the
question when you told the reporter
you did not know. To tell the truth,
you had never met John X, unless
it had been for a moment or two of
small-talk at a faculty tea. On a
faculty numbering several hundred,
there are bound to be many whom
you know so slightly that you might
not recognize them if they passed
you on the street.
Deficit spending! Only last night.
your wealthy library-donor held
forth for two hours at the dinner
table on the immorality of it. By
the end of the evening, his words
were almost choleric. He phoned this
morning to apologize. "It's the one
subject I get rabid about," he said.
"Thank heavens you're not teaching
that sort of thing on your campus."
You had your secretary discreetly
check: John X's telecast is sched-
uled for next week. It will be at
least two months before you get
those library funds. There is John
X's extension number, and there is
the telephone. And there are your
lifetime's dreams.
Should you . . .?
You are
a university scientist.
You are deeply involved in highly
complex research. Not only the
equipment you use, but also the
laboratory assistance you require,
is expensive. The cost is far more
than the budget of your university
department could afford to pay.
So, like many of your colleagues,
you depend upon a governmental
agency for most of your financial
support. Its research grants and
contracts make your work possible.
But now, as a result of your
studies and experiments, you have
come to a conclusion that is dia-
metrically opposite to that which
forms the official policy of the
agency that fin&nces you — a policy
that potentially affects the welfare
of every citizen.
You have outlined, and docu-
mented, your conclusion forcefully,
in confidential memoranda. Re-
sponsible ofiicials believe you are
mistaken; you are certain you are
not. The disagreement is profound.
Clearly the government will not
accept your view. Yet you are con-
vinced that it is so vital to your
country's welfare that you should
not keep it to yourself.
You are a man of more than one
heavy responsibiUty, and you feel
them keenly. You are, of course, re-
sponsible to your university. You
have a responsibihty to your col-
leagues, many of whose work is
financed similarly to yours. You are,
naturally, responsible to your coun-
try. You bear the responsibiUty of a
teacher, who is expected to hold
back no knowledge from his stu-
dents. You have a responsibihty to
your own career. And you feel a
responsibihty to the people you see
on the street, whom you know your
knowledge affects.
Loyalties, conscience, lifetime fi-
nancial considerations: your di-
lemma has many horns.
Should you . . .?
You are
a business man.
You make toothpaste. It is good
toothpaste. You maintain a research
department, at considerable ex-
pense, to keep it that way.
A disturbing rumor reached you
this morning. Actually, it's more
than a rumor; you could class it as
a well-founded report. The dental
school of a famous university is
about to publish the results of a
study of toothpastes. And, if your
informant had the facts straight, it
can do nothing but harm to your
current selling campaign.
You know the dean of the dental
school quite well. Your company,
as part of its policy of supporting
good works in dental science, has
been a regular and substantial con-
tributor to the school's development
fund.
It's not as if you were thinking of
suppressing anything; your record
to solve?
problems.
of turning out a good product — ^the
best you know — is ample proof of
that. But if that report were to
come out now, in the midst of your
campaign, it could be ruinous. A
few months from now, and no harm
would be done.
Would there be anything wrong
if you . . .?
Your daughter
is at State.
You're proud of her; first in her
class at high school; pretty girl;
popular; extraordinarily sensible,
in spite of having lots of things to
turn her head.
It was hard to send her off to the
university last fall. She had never
been away from the family for more
than a day or two at a time. But
you had to cut the apron-strings.
And no experience is a better teacher
than going away to college.
You got a letter from her this
morning. Chatty, breezy, a bit sassy
in a delightful way. You smiled as
you read her youthful jargon. She
delights in using it on you, because
she remembers how you grimaced
in mock horror whenever you heard
it around the house.
Even so, you turned cold when
you came to the paragraph about
the sociology class. The so-called
scientific survey that the professor
had made of the sexual behavior of
teen-agers. This is the sort of thing
Margie is being taught at State?
You're no prude, but . . . You know
a member of the education com-
mittee of the state legislature.
Should you . . .? And on the coffee
table is the letter that came yester-
day from the fund-raising ofiice at
State; you were planning to write a
modest check tonight. To support
more sociology professors and their
scientific surveys? Should you . . .?
special criticism if they did not conform to popular
patterns of thought. They, and often they alone,
were required to take oaths of loyalty — as if teach-
ers, somehow, were uniquely suspect.
There was widespread misunderstanding of the
teacher's role, as defined by one university presi-
dent:
"It is inconceivable . . . that there can exist a true
community of scholars without a diversity of views
and an atmosphere conducive to their expression
. . . To have a diversity of views, it is essential that
we as individuals be willing to extend to our col-
leagues, to our students, and to members of the com-
munity the privilege of presenting opinions which
may, in fact, be in sharp conflict with those which
we espouse. To have an atmosphere of freedom, it is
essential that we accord to such diverse views the
same respect, the same attentive consideration, that
we grant to those who express opinions with which
we are in basic agreement."
THE STORM of the '50's was nationwide. It was
felt on every campus. Today's storms are
local; some campuses measure the threat to
their teachers' freedom at hurricane force, while
others feel hardly a breeze.
Hence, the present — relatively calm — is a good
time for assessing the values of academic freedom,
and for appreciating them. The future is certain to
bring more threats, and the understanding that we
can build today may stand us in good stead, then.
What is the Ukely nature of tomorrow's threats?
"It is my sincere impression that the faculties of
our universities have never enjoyed a greater lati-
tude of intellectual freedom than they do today,"
says the president of an institution noted for its
high standards of scholarship and freedom. "But
this is a judgment relative only to the past.
"The search for truth has no ending. The need to
seek truth for its own sake must constantly be de-
fended. Again and again we shall have to insist
upon the right to express unorthodox views reached
through honest and competent study.
"Today the physical sciences offer safe ground for
speculation. We appear to have made our peace
with biology, even with the rather appalling im-
plications of modern genetics.
"Now it is the social sciences that have entered
the arena. These are young sciences, and they are
difficult. But the issues involved — the positions
taken with respect to such matters as economic
growth, the tax structure, deficit financing, the laws
affecting labor and management, automation, social
welfare, or foreign aid — are of enormous conse-
quence to all the people of this country. If the critics
of our universities feel strongly on these questions,
it is because rightly or wrongly they have identi-
fied particular solutions uniquely with the future
prosperity of our democracy. All else must then be
heresy."
Opposition to such "heresy" — and hence to aca-
derhic freedom — is certain to come.
IN THE FUTURE, as at present, the concept of aca-
demic freedom will be far from uncomphcated.
Applying its principles in specific cases rarely
will be easy. Almost never will the facts be all white
or all black; rather, the picture that they form is
more likely to be painted in tones of gray.
To forget this, in one's haste to judge the right-
ness or wrongness of a case, will be to expose oneself
to the danger of acting injudiciously — and of com-
mitting injustice.
The subtleties and complexities found in the gray
areas will be endless. Even the scope of academic
freedom will be involved. Should its privileges, for
example, apply only to faculty members? Or should
they extend to students, as well? Should students,
as well as faculty members, be free to invite con-
troversial outsiders to the campus to address them?
And so on and on.
The educated alumnus and alumna, faced with
specific issues involving academic freedom, may
well ponder these and other questions in years to
come. Legislators, regents, trustees, college ad-
ministrators, students, and faculty members will be
pondering them, also. They will look to the alumnus
and alumna for understanding and — if the cause be
just — for support. Let no reader underestimate the
difficulty — or the importance — of his role.
Illustrations by Robert Ross
"What Right
The report on this and the preceding 15 pages is the product of a cooperative endeavor in which
scores of schools, colleges, and universities are taking part. It was prepared under the direction
11 Tk» 1 o HA *» M O " °^ *^® group listed below, who form EDrroRiAL projects for education, a non-profit organization
naS I mS IVian . associated with the American Alumni Council. Copyright © 1963 by Editorial Projects for
Education, Inc. All rights reserved; no part of this report may be reproduced without express permission of the editors. Printed in U.S.A.
JAMES E. ARMSTRONG
The University of Notre Dame
MARALYN O. GILLESPIE
Swarthmore College
JEAN D. LINEHAN
FRANCES PROVENCE
Baylor University
FRANK J. TATE
The Ohio State University
RONALD A. WOLK
The Johns Hopkins University
DENTON BEAL DAVID A. BURR DAN ENDSLEY
Carnegie Institute of Technology The University of Oklahoma Stanford University
L. FRANKLIN HEALD CHARLES M. HELMKEN KEN METZLER
The -University of New Hampshire American Alumni Council The University of Oregon
JOHN I. MATTILL JOHN W. PATON ROBERT L. PAYTON
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Wesleyan University Washington University
ROBERT M. RHODES STANLEY SAPLIN VERNE A. STADTMAN
The University of Pennsylvania New York University The University of California
CHARLES E. WIDMAYER REBA WILCOXON DOROTHY F. WILLIAMS
Dartmouth College The University of Arkansas
ELIZABETH BOND WOOD CHESLEY WORTHINGTON
Sweet Briar College Brown University
Simmons College
CORBIN GWALTNEY
Executive Editor
'00
'04
NEWS
NOTES
At this point, the Editor wishes to thank
the many who so generously rephed to her
letter asking heh) for these pages. The
name published at the head of each class
is that of the official class reporter, to
whom you are all urged to send news, not
necessarily only of births, marriages, deaths,
but also of other worthwhile and news-
wortliy actiWties. If no name appears, it
means that no reply has come from the
Everlasting President or tliat no one has
been secured to act as clearinghouse for
your class. This office and the Aluniuae
Office are, of course, always glad to get
the news directly. We trust that before
the January issue the list of reporters will
be complete.
97
Celestia Gill Young died at the age of 86
after a long, busy, and useful life. She had
been active in civic, educational, and reli-
gious offices in Henderson, and she was
an authority on the history of Vance
Z!ount\'. Her sun-ivors include a son, t\\'o
laughters, nine grandchildren, and eight great-
;randcliildren.
Her friends will be sad to learn that lola
ixum has suffered a stroke. Although she is
ible to be moved, into a wheel chair for an
lOur at the time, most of her day is spent in
ler bed at the Gatewood Nursing Home.
lOOS W. Kenan Street. Wilson.
'98
Margaret Graham Thompson Long ("Miss
Daisy") died at her home in Haw River
at the worthy age of 95. She had given
freely of time and energy to the Presbyte-
rian Church, the Eastern Star, and the
Daughters of the American Revolution. The
vidow of John Archie Long, she is survived
)y a granddaughter.
Mrs. Wade Barrier (Mittie Lewis)
929 Marilyn Drive
Raleigh, N. C.
Mittie Lewis Barrier says that having lived
thirteen years right on the ocean, she has to
visit the seaside at least once a year, so she
spent two weeks at Wrightsville Beach in
September.
Emma Lewis Speight Morris' son Lewis of
Greensboro has been appointed a senior vice
president of Cone Mills Corporation. He has
charge of all fabric manufacturing operations
for the company.
Bertha Nichols coaches students in her
liomc town of Roxboro.
01
Bertha Sugg McCullen is doing quite a bit
of travehng. She visited in California from
last March until July. This fall she is with
her granddaughter in Jacksonville, Fla., and
will sr>end the winter with her daughter in
Harpers Ferry, W. Va.
'02
Mrs. R. D. Douglas (Virginia Brown)
512 ComwaUis Drive
Greensboro, N. C.
\'irgiuia Brown Douglas, whose hobbies
are birds and flowers, demonstrated perfect
bird watching technique on a jaunt to Iceland
last summer. She spotted a whirlybird flying
low overhead and who should wave to her but
our president, J. F. K.. Virginia says she "is
accomplishing nothing of note but sitting
back bragging of my grandchildren, for most
of the 15 are outstanding ." But she tells
of traveling twice around the world on the oc-
casion of visits to her daughter, Heleir Doug-
las Shoobridge ('41C) of Tasmania, Australia.
Then. "In June of this year 1 joined a nat-
uralist group for bird study in Iceland. I
.shan't try to describe the wonders — a most in-
teresting group of people in an exciting land
of vast contrasts. I extended my stay overseas
to visit Scotland, Wales and Ireland and alone
went on to England — Now I ha\e memories
of charming and exceedingly kind people as
well as of rare places." Isn't this an enchant-
ing way of doing nothing?
'03
Genevieve Jennings Hammer of Palmetto,
Florida, spent most of the summer in Lake
Junaluska, although she visited for a time in
Greensboro. In early October she attended
the Florida Division Convention of the UDC.
She is an honoran' life jjresident of the divi-
sion. Last June she went to .\tlanta to a
meeting of the National Society of the South-
ern Dames of America, of which she is a
founder charter member. Also in June she
was present at Emory University for the
graduation of her grandson Murray Harrison,
who married Ann Rossnian of Bradenton, Fla.,
later that month. She takes j^articular pride
and joy these days in three great-granddaugh-
ters and a great-grandson.
Mrs. S. G. Winstead (Kate Barden)
418 Lamar Street
Roxboro, N. C.
Kate Barden Winstead, upon receiving a
letter from the editor asking her to con-
tribute class news, wrote: "Your letter in yes-
terday's mail gave me a lift. In fact it prodded
my rh\Tning instinct: 'To be called Everlast-
ing President, Of the Class of 1904, At the
ripe old age of 80, Is Fortune enough I
know.' I'm celebrating my birthday tomor-
row (August 24)." Kate stays busy trying to
keep up with her 20 grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren.
'05
Mrs. Ethel Harris Kirbv
160 Church Street
Henderson, N. C.
Mattie Jennie Hackett Cranor died on
July 27 after an illness of one year. The
widow of Hugh A. Cranor, lawyer and
former member of the State Legislature,
she had taught in Wilkes and adjoining
counties for many years. Her survivors include
two sons.
Bessie Heath Daniel not only manages her
farm but conducts weekly radio programs of
interest to Person County farmers.
Lettie Spainhour Hamlett spent several
months this summer at Laguna Beach. Calif.,
where her son Peter lives. While she was
there, his paintings were displayed at a local
art festival.
Claude Poindexter is at L\nu Haven Nurs-
ing Home in Mocksville.
'06
Mrs. J. R. Bennett (Josie Doub)
126 S. Harris Street
Rocky Mount, N. C.
Cornelia Beems, who has just been ap-
pointed as assistant to the dean of women of
East Carolina College, is daughter of Helen
Hieks Beems of Hickory, housewife and fond
mother.
'07
Marv Exum
Snow Hili, N. C.
Mary Exum of Snow Hill had a bad fall
which left her with five broken ribs and pre-
vented her from attending the wedding of
her nephew, Jim Exum, in Greensboro during
the summer.
Winnie Harper of Snow Hill, who has re-
tired, gave twenty acres of land for Greene
County High School, which has been in op-
eration for about two vears.
May Lovelace Tomlinson and her sister,
Edwina Lovelace Wells '16, both seasoned
European travelers, have sailed to those shores
again on a tour that is short on sight-seeing
and long on leisure time and special attention
to particularly well-liked places.
October 1963
39
09
Next )
Lola Laslc> Daiiieron of Burlington died
at her home on July 13. She had been an
acHxe worker in the Front Street Method-
ist Church for more than fifty years. Of
her immediate family, her husband.
Judge E. S. W. Dameron, Sr., and two sons
sumve.
14
Mrs. J. H. McEwen (Iris Holt)
P. O. Box IIH
Burlington, N. C.
Iris Holt McEwen spent the summer at
.\tlantic Beach.
To Annie Lee Webb Moore, whose brother
died on July 25, we extend sympathy. Annie
Lee is living on Route 2, Chapel Hill.
Rosa Blakeney Parker has been appointed
by Governor Sanford to the Board of Gov-
ernor's SchooL and she says that .she is thor-
oughly enjoying working with a group of pro-
fessionals on public school problems. She was
elected vice-president of the board.
To Frances Summerell Stickney, whose
mother died on Julv 13, we extend sincere
svrnpathy.
Edwina l^o\elace Wells and her sister. May
Lovelace Tonilinson '07^ have sailed to Europe
on a tour to \isit particularly well-liked places.
10
15
Jane Summerell
606 foyner Street
Greensboro, N. C.
To Annie Moring Alexander, whose hus-
band died on September 20, we extend our
sincere sympathy.
Clara Lambe Craven still lives in Siler City
close by her two sisters.
To Jane Summerell, whose mother died on
Juh 13, we extend sincere sympathy.
12
Next reunion i
Annie Moore Chertv
Enfield, N. C.
Hattie Burch of Florida spent her summer
vacation with ner niece, Mrs. Anna McCar-
son, in Durham.
To Annie Cherry, whose sister, Mrs. Bessie
Cherrv Holliday. died on September 29, we
extend sincere sympathy. Since her retire-
ment from Flora Macdonald College in 1961,
.\nnie has been living in Enfield with her
familv. .\nd since last fall she has been help-
ing her sister, Ernestine '15, and her brother,
Frank, recuperate from severe injuries sus-
tained in an automobile accident. Annie was
honored by the students at St. Andrews Col-
lege last year "for her outstanding work in
education." She was chosen as the first hon-
orarv member of the St. Andrews chapter of
the Student National Education .Association.
Our svmpathv is extended to Ethel Skinner
Philips in the death of her husband, Henr\
H\man Philips, on September 4 in Tarboro.
'13
An apology to Louise Crawford Johnson
and the Class of '13 is definitely in order.
Louise was enoneously listed as a member of
the Class of '10 in the Alumnae Annual Gi\-
ing Report in the last issue of the magazine.
Properly adding her name gives '13 a total of
22 contributors.
Clara Booth Bvrd, president of the Histori
cal Book Club of North Carolina, which has
membership of 165 in 28 places of the state,
extended welcome to members and guests at
the club's 1 6th Annual Town Meeting on
Books held on October 8 at Greensboro
College.
Edith Haight
P. O. Box 68
Lake Junaluska, N. C.
The Class of 1915 has been ha\ing yearly
"get-togethers" since 1960. This past June
the class had a luncheon meeting at Tangle-
wood Park near Winston-Salem. The follow-
ing were present: Hallie Beavers AUred, Julia
Bryan Futrell, Martha Decker Kanipe, Mamie
Eaton Fleming, Lena Glenn Pratt, Edith C.
Haight, Ruth Harriss Tvson, Mazie Kirkpat-
rick Gainev, Pauline Shaver Moore, Cora
Belle Sloan Caldwell, Ethel Thomas Aber-
nethy, Louise A\'hitley Rice, and Bessie
^^'right Ragland.
Janie Stacy Gwynn and Margaret Linker
Wyatt were pre\ented by illness from attend-
ing. Janie is much better, but Margaret is
still m the Salisbury hosipital. Gay Holnian
Spivey could not come, because she was visit-
ing a sister in Arizona. Gertrude Carraway
was attending some meetings in connection
with Tnon Palace. Ernestine Cherry was
still recuperating from the automobile acci-
dent of last year. However, she spent July at
Lake JunaJuska and is looking very well. Both
Ruth Gaither McLeod and Mabel Cooper
Adams could not come, because they were
attending their husbands' reunions.
Next June the class is planning a slumber
part\' at Louise Whitley Rice's home in
Badin. Her husband retired this past spring,
and they have moved back to North Carolina
from Pennsylvania.
Our s\mpathy is extended to Ernestine
Cherry on the death of her sister, Mrs. Bessie
Cherry Holliday, on September 29.
17
16
Mrs. Kemp Funderburk (Annie Beam)
511 Mclver Street
Greensboro, N. C.
Elizabeth Hoi1:on Tlionison died on
.\ugust 21 at her home in Austin, Texas.
Born and reared in Asheville, she was the
widow of an army officer and as a result
had lived in many places. She is survived
by one son, who lives in Austin.
Our sympathy is extended to Sadie Mac-
Braver McCain whose brother, Lewis B. Mac-
Braver of Greensboro, died in August. Sadie
has recently moved to Pine Forest Apart-
ments, Raleigh Road, Wilson. Her youngest
daughter, Jane Todd Reagan, Jane's husband,
and three children have just returned to
Janan after their first furlough in the states.
They work for the Southern Presbyterian
Board.
Mrs. Frederick L Rxpins (Ruth Roth)
613 Woodland Drive
Greensboro, N. C.
To Naomi Joplin Gideon, whose husband
died in mid-June following an automobile
accident, we extend sincere sympathy.
Ouida Watson Sheppard is living with her
daughter, Sara Sheppard Landis, 300 Broad-
way. Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., and her three
grandchildren, Susan, 14, Timmy, 11, and
Maggie, 6.
18
Mrs. W. B. Richardson, Jr. (Marie Lineberger)
524 Maple Avenue
Reidsville, N. C.
Ehza ColUns did Y. W. C. A. work in
Ohio and New York for several years after
graduation and later taught high school Eng-
lish. Since 1951 she has been an occupa-
tional therapist at Pinebluff Sanitarium, Pine-
bluff, N. C". She also has a craft shop and a
cabin, where she li\es alone except for a i5ara-
keet, "Pretty Boy." A snapshot of Liza
showed that time has been very kind to her,
and her letter showed that she is still the same
delightTul person.
To Eva Gamble Futrell, whose brother
John died in early August, we extend sym-
pathy.
Martha Blakeney Hodges and her husband,
U. S. Commerce Secretary- Luther Hodges, j
were on hand at Manteo airixirt during
August to greet Sir Howard Beale, Australian
ambassador to the LTnited States, and Lady
Beale, arriving as honored guests of the Lost '
Colony. The Hodges were spending their
vacation at Kill Devil Hill with their c-liildren
and grandchildren. In June Secretan- Hodges
was commencement speaker and receixcd the
honorary degree of doctor of laws at Florida
State LIniversity.
Margaret Matthews Raiford and her luis
band Ikuc retired to 1705 A\enue D, North
Fast, ^\'intcr Haxen, Fla.
Marie Lineberger Richardson writes, "\\'e'\e
been 'out' so long that we ha\c lost contact —
what with bi-focals, creaky joints, arthritis,
and other old age infirmities, we aren't a very
active group . . . \\'e'\e reached the retire-
ment age. All of us have passed 65!" But
Marie, as Everlasting President of her class,
took pen in hand and passed on quite a bit of
information to us about her classmates.
Linda Trogdon is living at the Prcsb\ tcriau
Home. High Point, N. C".
40
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
19
Next reunion in 1964
Ezda Devinev
Julian, N. C.
To lone
died on July
Mebane Mann,
11, we extend
whose brother
sympathy.
'21
Next reunion in 1968
Sarah Poole Cartlaiid nnd ^^'ilsoll Stuart
Mitchell were married this summer in IXivrtle
Beach, S. C. Mr. Mitchell is president of
Merrimon Insurance Agency, Inc., here in
Greensbpro. Their address is 112 W. Besse-
mer Avenue.
'22
Ne
\-t reunion in 1968
Lalali Irene Perkins Isley died on July 24
at her home in Greensboro. She was a
|-)ioneer in garden club work, having with
her mother founded the Iris Club. In
addition to her work at the Woman's
College, she had done graduate work at Co-
lumbia University. Among her survivors is
Lalah Isley Mercer '55.
Our sincere sympathy is cxieudcd lo Helen
Dunn Crciisy Hunter, whose husband died on
August 2.
To Margaret Mebane Rothroek, whose
brother died on July 1 1. we extend sympathy.
23
Mrs. Arthur H. Lathrop (Virginia Terrell)
4 Woodliuk Road
AsheviUe, N. C.
The North Carolina Press Association
elected its first woman president in August
and also elected Stella Williams Anderson of
the "Skyland Post," West Jefferson, to a one-
year term as director of the association.
The Sunday. August 18, edition of the
"Greensboro Daily News" included a full
page spread complete with charming jMctures
of a house here at 609 Magnolia Street which
Molly Matheson Calder has restored. It was
home for 4^ years of one of Molly's friends,
and she felt so friendly toward it, that she
intended rcno\ating it for her own use. How-
ever, some other folks, believing that houses
which are loved make the best homes, offered
to buy it and did before Molly could move
in. Molly was her own architect and "her
professional and personal interest in restoring
old houses and gardens and drawing them to-
gether as a unified living space had a chance
to mesh at the Magnolia Street address."
Wilma Kirkpatrick Deal dropped us a note
saying she was sorry to ha\e missed reunion
and extending an invitation for "any who
journey along the Blue Ridge Parkway to stop
off at Little Switzerland." She can usually
be found in her Craft Shop or at least within
"hollering distance."
To Mary Teresa Peacock Douglas, whose
nu)ther died in e;irly July, wc extend sincere
s\niDathy.
Mary Sue Beam Fouville felt all the ar-
rangements for reunion were "iust wonder-
ful." She had a few days at Wrightsville
Beach before she began teaching sociology
and economics in summer school.
Pearl Taylor Irvin enjoyed sexen weeks
abroad during the summer and visited 11
different countries. In Wiesbaden she was
with her son. Dr. John Irvin, an orthodontist,
stationed at the U. S. Air Force Hospital,
and his family. Both her grandchildren cele-
brated their birthdays while she was berthed
with them. Dorothy Ann was 3, and John
Jr., 1 year old. In Luxemburg Pearl in the
company of friends had a private audience
with Prince Jean.
Our belated condolences are extended to
Agnes Stout, whose mother died last winter.
Agnes is professor of English at Western
Carolina College, Cullowhee.
Nell Craig Strowd is presently serving as
president of the M'omen of the Chapel Hill
Presb\tcrian Church.
'24
Mrs. Waite Lambert (Julia Ross)
430 Sunset Avenue
Asheboro, N. C.
Our belated sympathy is extended to Helen
Anderson Acton, whose husband died last
February. Helen came to North Carolina
from her home in Connecticut this summer
to visit her daughter and family at Fort Bragg,
where her dentist son-in-law was stationed,
and to see Julia Ross Lambert in Asheboro.
Back home in September, Helen was hostess
to Mary Collins Powell, who is dean of
Wheelock College in Boston.
To Elizabeth Webb Buice, whose brother
died on July 23, wc c\Uiiil s\uipathy.
To Nell Folger Glenn, whose father died
on July 19, we extend sympathy.
Margaret Martin Graham's son, Thomas
Graham, M.D., is working at present in a
children's hospital in Boston.
Julia Ross Lambert is particularly jubilant
these days o\'er her new granddaughter, child
of Julia Ross Lambert Thayer 'SI. Little
Julia Ross Thayer was born July 1 7 in Mor-
ganton.
Velma Beam Moore has retired after 50
years service as teacher of Home Economics
in the schools of North Carolina and in home
demonstration work as a member of the ex-
tension division of N. C. State. She may be
reached at Box 93, Hayesville, N. C.
To Blanche Hedgecock Owen, whose sis-
ter died on August 2, we extend sincere
sympath,v.
'25
Next
Irving E. Carlyle of Winston-Salcm, N. C,
has been appointed to the Board of Trustees
of East Carolina College by Governor Sanford.
He is husband of Mary Belo Moore.
Lorna Thigpen David has been named pro
fessor of nursing and director of research in
nursing at Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.
Lorna received her Ph. D. at University of
Pittsburgh, and her M. N. at Emorv's School
of Nursing.
Elizabetli Duffy, professor of psychology
here, attended in August the International
Congress of Psychology in Washington and
the annual meeting of the American Psycho-
logical Association in Philadelphia, where she
read a symposium paper on "'The Nature and
Dexelopmcnt of the Concept of Activation."
Dorothy Allen Duncan has moved from
Riilcigh to Marion, where she receives mail at
Box 284.
Rosalynd Nix Gilhatt was "the subject "
for a lengthy feature in a Shelby newspaper
not many weeks ago. Her life as a wife,
mother, bridal consultant for her husband's
floral business, community and state civic
leader, and handicraft enthusiast and expert is
exceedinglv busy. Of special interest and ex-
citement to her at the present time is her
apnointment by Governor Sanford to his com-
mittee for the Prevention of Youth Crime and
Juvenile Delincjuency.
Lorena Kelly has returned from .\frica to
live at Route 1 , Mooresville.
'26
Marjorie Hood
Library, UNC-G
Greensboro, N. C.
Helen Nora Sherrill Monahan died on
August 5. She was librarian of the Char-
lotte Medical Society. Her daughter,
Helen Stroud Monahan, is now a sopho-
more at UNC-G, and to her we extend
deep s\nipath\'.
To Elizabeth Geiger, whose mother died on
September 8, we extend sympathy.
To Mary Polk Gordon, whose mother died
on August 8, we extend symijathy.
Our sincere sympathy is extended to Annie
Lula Marine Wilson, whose husband, Peter,
died early fhis year at their home in Tas-
mania, Australia. Annie Lula spent most of
the summer just past visiting in the United
States. Her daughter, Isabel, is studying at
the University of Tasmania, as is her son,
Peter, who is enrolled in law school.
'27
Mrs. Archie Shaftesbun- (Catherine Cox)
315 Tate Street
Greensboro, N. G.
Word has been received from the Ran-
dolph County Chapter of the Alumnae
Association that Lucy Gray Buie died dur-
ing the summer. No other information
is available.
Sounea Benbow Miller (commercial) died
on July 1 after an illness of six weeks. Born
and receiving her early education at Oak
Ridge, she had, since her marriage, lived
in Albemarle and Salisbury. She led a life
of dedicated ser\'ice in many cultural and
humanitarian movements and in the Presby-
terian Church. Tlie only person in North
October 1963
41
Carolina to receive the National Distinguished
Senice Award by the Cerebral Palsy organiza-
tion, she sened on its board for eight years.
.\:nong her sur\i\ors. in addition to her hus-
band, are a daughter. Diana Miller '61. and a
sister, ^^'illo^v Way Benbow Terrell '3S.
To Elizabedi Mcbane Reese, whose brulher
died on Julv 11. we extend sympathy.
Lillian Sullivan Self, who has two college-
age sons, has h\cd ni Clearwater, Florida
(1656 Parkside Drive), since the death of her
husband se\eral vears ago. She teaches in the
Clearwater schools.
Frances Spratt teaches in the field of
\pparel Design nt Cornell University in
Ithaca. X. Y. '
'28
Mrs. Bovdston Satterfield (Frances ■■Gibb\ " Gibson)
2900 Nanc> Creek Road. N. ^^^
Atlanta, Ga.
To Grace Gilreath Flledge, whose brother
Fred died during Inly, wc extend sympathy,
Constance G^^altney Huntsbeiry has nioxcd
to 816 South Main Street. Reids\ille.
Our sympathy is extended to Frances Gib-
son Satterfield whose mother. Mrs. M. R.
Gil)son of Raleigh, died on June 20 after a
short illness. "Gibby" has been busy this
fall getting her youngest. Karen, ready for
her senior year at Dana Hall School in Welles-
lev'. Mass. Her son. Neil, and his wife, the
former Marion Duckworth of Ashex'ille of the
class of '55, have two children, Suzi, 5, and
Scott, "almost 2." With her elder daughter
Lenore. who was the "first '28 baby."
"Gibbv" flew^ to South America last April.
Thev visited \^enezuela. Brazil, Uruguay, and
.\rgentina. She writes. "Such contrasts I have
never seen; horrible poverty, yet the most
beautiful conteniporary architecture, the best
hotel service and marvelous food. Wc liked
best of all our bus tours with the natives —
^\'e didn't run into any hostility to .^me^i-
cans. and did our best to w'in friends." Be-
sides this — Frances is regional chairman and
member of the National Board of Directors
of Girl Scouts U. S. A. She will attend the
national council meeting in Miami in October.
'29
odist Church and of the .\merican Association
of University ^^■omen. Among her survivors
are her husband. Lacy H. Ballard, and a son.
Helen Simerson Chandler (commercial) of
Salisbury died on June 21 after a very
long illness. She was serving as secretan-
of the First Baptist Church in Spencer at
the time of her death. .Among her sur-
vivors are her husband, R. C. Chandler, and
a daughter.
I Mildred Candler Gudger died at her home
in Candler on .\ugust 24 after a brief ill-
ness. For many years she had taught in
the elementary schools of Pikesville and
Candler. She is survived by her husband,
Harry F. Gudger, and a son.
To Dorothy Peacock Carrigan. whose
mother died in early July, we extend sincere
svmpathy.
John Foster of Green,sboro. lursband of
Jessie Bridgers, has been chosen as a member
of the new governing body for the Guilford
Industrial Education Center at Jamestown.
Mr. Foster is president of Odell Mill Supply
Co., and a former chairman of the Greensboro
Board of Education.
Minnie Mclver Land has moved from
Brevard to Shelton Apartment 1-3, 20 Mayo
Street. Raleigh.
During July Margaret Leonard McDaniel of
541 Keene Road. Clearwater. Fla.. paid her
first visit to the campus in 35 years. She was
very impressed with all the additions and
especially the "new" Alumnae House.
To Evelyn Mebane Odum, whose brother
died on July 11. we extend sympathy.
To Edythe Reid Sapp, whose sister died
on September 6, wc extend sympathy.
To Pauline Loy Schoenemann, whose
mother died on July 4, we extend svinpathy.
Gladys Spencer Thomas lives at 642 Park-
view Street, Asheboro.
'32
Katie Ebon Cutting's address h.is ehaiigcd
to 2514 N'anderbilt Avenue, Raleigh, N. C.
27607.
To Sallie Deans Gilbreath, whose husband
died during Julv^we extend sincere sympathv.
To Marie Rich Rowe, whose son died on
.•\ugust 23, we extend sincere sympathy.
'30
Edna Estellc Hackney Ballard died in
'niomasville on August 1 1 . Born in Ch,it-
ham County, she had taught in various
places, retiring from a position in the
Thomasville High School in 1962 because
of ill health. She was a member of the Meth-
'31
Mrs. Carlton Jester, Jr. (Bettv Brown)
2202 W. Market Street
Greensboro, N. C.
Mattibelle Fraley Rankin died at her home
ill Statesville on .\ugust 27. She had
taught school for a number of years.
,'\mong her survivors are her husband, J.
Edgar Rankin, and a son.
To Delia Boren .Arthur, whose husband
died on September 9, we extend sympathy.
Ruth Abbott Clark and Anne Wall Thomas
'49 displayed art work this summer at a local
shopping center. Ruth's works were abstract
oils which had broad fields of color offset by
surprises of colors and shapes.
Lucinda Molitor has moved to Carriage
House, .Apartment D5. Red Bank and Ever-
arccn Avenues, \\'oodbury, N. J.
To Mary Fowle Perry Vance, whose sister.
lone Perry Nicholson '54. died on June 24.
extend sincere sympathy.
To Mathilda Geiger Wolfe, whose mother
died on September 8. we extend sympathy.
Edith Morrow Henderson died suddenly
on September 5. She had taught in the
high schools of Greensboro and Laurin-
burg, where she w-as living at the time of
her dc-ath. She is survived by her husband,
Ray Henderson, a son. and three grand-
children.
To Cornelia Montgomery Blair, whose
brother died during the summer, we extend
svmpathy.
Edna Cole Brown of Memphis, Tenn., has
three grandsons now. Her husband has a job
in Regional office of Boy Scouts of America.
Rachel Bradsher Brown of Roxboro teaches
ninth grade English in high school. One
daughter, Mrs. 'Ted Hale, teaches in Glade
\ 'alley; her other daughter, ^^'^ay. entered
Meredith College this fall.
Grace Coppedge has accepted a new posi-
tion as supervisor of Yadkin County Schools, j
which will entail working with nine schools
and 209 teachers. She has been teaching in
Mt. ,\irv' for 16 years and most recently has
been principal of North Main Street School
there. She received state-wide recognition in
1960 when she was one of 17 educators se-
lected by the State Board of Education to
conduct a two-year study of Teacher Evalua-
tion, Rating and Certification.
To Katherine ^Yalke^ Johnson, whose
daughter Katherine died on July 29, vve ex-
tend sincere svmpathv.
Anna ^^'instead Murray of Roxboro is quite
a golf enthusiast these days and a loyal mem-
ber of Circle Two, Long Memorial Method-
ist Church.
In mid-September Sue Horner Sample
()]icncd a branch of her photographic studio
in a shopping center in Statesville. She will
continue to operate from her home-studio at
320 Oakwood Drive as well. This home-studio
has been recently equii^ped with one of the
most modern sets of electronic studio lights
available for photography. Holder of the
highest degree nresented for professional ex-
cellence of work and service by the Profes-
sional Photographers of North Carolina, she
is an officer in the state organization, and she ,
also serves on two nation.al committees.
'33
Mrs. Harold J. Smith (Mildred Bnint) i
1305 \\'estmoreland Road I
Falls Church, Va.
Helen Thayer Bowling is librarian at Broad
Street Junior High School, Burlington. Mail-
ing address: P. O. Box 245. Gibsonville,
N. C.
Claire Hartsook Boyce's daughter. Lynn,
was married on September 8 to John Wes-
ley Purdie. Jr. .\ftcr graduating from St.
Aiary's Junior College, Lynn completed the
one-v'car commercial course at the University
at Green.sboro.
Billie Crumpton Carver teaches school in
Bethel Hill. Her son Charles was married
in September to Virginia Costner of Ra-
leigh. Son Bill will graduate from N. C.
State in January. Tommy finishes at Rox-
42
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO ■
boro High School next June. George hml a
wonderful high school record and was chdscn
valedictorian of his class.
Elizabeth Langford Davenport, afkr sen
ing for two vears as president of the Board
of Education of Binghamton, New York,
has been appointed by Gov. Nelson A. Rocke-
feller to the N. Y. State Woman's Coiuicil.
Tlie Gouncil is an advisory grouj) of the
state's "key women in business, industry and
the iirofessions" who guide the State Com-
merce Department in its program, which is
med toward women of the state who seek
to market home products, open or exjiand
1 business, or slart a ne\\' business of Ihcir
;)wn .
Mary Lowder Goodman has been pro
moted to the rank of assistant professor in
the department of English of East Carolina
College. Having received her master's degree
from East Carolina, Marv has also done
graduate study at Clemson College and has
participated in workshops at Columbia Uni-
versity.
Our sincere sympathy is extended lo Julia
Watson Maulden, whose husband died on
August 50.
'34
lone Perr)- Nicholson died on June 24 at
Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem, her
home, after an illness of three weeks.
.Among her survivors are her husband,
Frank C. Nicholson, a son and a daugh-
ter, and a sister, Mary Fowle Peny Vance '31.
To Margaret Spencer Clare, \^hose fallier
died on September 10, we extend sympathy.
Asenath Cooke was elected second vice-
president of the Leadership Training Work-
sho]) at a July meeting in Chapel Hill.
Rachel Lipscomb Graves was \isited se\
eral times this summer by her three-year-old
grandson, Edward Lipscomb Graves, Jr. With
a trio of grandmothers in Greensboro, little
Ed calls one "Granny", one "Nanny", and
Rachel is "Sis." Rachel says he is the image
of son Ed, and may become .a second Pade-
re«'ski, because she ga\e him a small |)iano
and he one-fhigeredly follows a tune.
Adelaide Fortune Holderness' father. Dr.
A. F. Fortune, retired as active head of Pied-
mont Memorial Hospital in Greensboro, a
position he had held since 1925, and became
president of the hospital's board of trustees.
Sallie Davidson Johnson of 7425 South
Shore Drive, Chicago 49, 111., is an his-
tologisl with General Biological Supply House
there.
To Carrie Moore Nash McDonald of Rae-
ford, whose husband died on September 23.
we extend sympathy.
Laicile Ward Mosback has moved from
Ocean.side, N. Y., to Rose Hill, N. C. Her
hu.sband, Charles, has recently retired as
Oceanside High School principal because of
his health, and they are happy to be "back
home." Tliey have a daughter Ruth Ann. a
senior at Grinnell College, Grinnell, Towa;
and a son Bobby, ten years old.
Helen Strickland Nygard is with the Die-
letic Service, \'eterans Administration Hos-
pital, Oteen.
To Ruth Gamble Turner, whose brollier
John died in early August, we extend smu-
pathy. Ruth, who lives at 110 Kreswell Circle
in Spartanburg, S. C, teaches in the State
School for the Blind and Deaf. Her onlv
sou is a junior at Clemson College.
To Margaret Young Wall, whose mother
died during July, we extend sincere sympathy.
Mave liiand Wiustead is a teacher at Mt.
Tirzali. Her sou Clement is at Christ Church
School in N'irginia this fall.
'35
To Frances Folger, whose falhei died iiii
July 19, we extend sympathy.
Lorrahie Borden Redden is teaching and
lues at 3U0 North Milford Drive, Salisbury.
Susanne Ketchum Sherman's husband.
Commander Roger Sherman of the Naval
Air Reserve, has been named commanding of
ficer of a military intelligence unit which
meets in Norfolk. He is general manager of
the Jamestown Corporation, which produces
"Common Glory." Susanne was the costume
designer for this Paul Green outdoor pro-
duction. Thev live in Williamsburg.
'36
Lois Edmmidson Bland li\es al i Pine
crest Terrace. Pease .\ir Force Base, New
Hampshire.
Elizabeth Yates King has a new "son" who
arrived in August. He is Jnrgen Dalim of
Regensburg, Bavaria, Germany, who is
Greensboro's first foreign exchange student
in the public schools. He is a member of the
senior class at Page High School with the
Kings' son, Winburne. ITie Kings' daughter.
Libby, is a Page sophomore and another son,
Charles, is a fifth grader. Jurgen's year in the
States will be sponsored by the local Soropti-
mist Club through the American Field Scr\'ice
in New Y'ork.
fDoroth>' Poole Naveaux is still making
news at the Market Street Neighbor-
hood House in Louisville. Kentucky.
vf She is director of the Llouse and its
program. She is an administrator, with
a staff of four full-time, five part-time, and
more than 150 xolunteer workers. But she
"pitches in" herself to do anything which
must be done — from sweeijing the street in
front of the House to directing singing groups.
Tliat she has endeared herself to the people
in the "neighborhood" and in Louisville since
she began her work in 1956 is graciously
\'oiced in the following statement made about
her by the executive secretary of Louisville's
Health and Welfare Council: "Mrs. Naveaux
should have a 10-ston' agency to go along
with her heart and her professional goals for
the people of the neighborhood. She is for-
e\'er reaching out to newcomers, the shy ones,
the parents as well as the children without
roots who make up so many homes in down-
town Louisville. Y'ou feel that she is truly
proud to be on a first-name basis with the
poor and that her greatest satisfaction is in
standing beside these people against their
troubles."
Jane Gaw Ragland lives at 3461 San Jose
Boulevard, Jacksonv'ille 7, F'la.
Our sympathy is extended to Sehna White-
head Robbins, whose husband died last De-
cember. She and her three children li\e at
222 Shelia Street, San Antonio, Texas.
Two graduates graced Eloise Taylor Rob-
inson's family in June. Dick finished law
school at New Y'ork University on a Root-
Tilden scholarship (he was a Morehead
Scholar at Carolina), and daughter Ann got
her B. S. in nursing from the Medical Col-
lege of Virginia. Dick and his wife of a year
are living in Los Angeles, where he joined
the firm of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher.
Nell Stallings has been promoted to the
i;ink of full professor in East Carolina Col-
lege's department of liealth and ]>hysical
education. Nell joined the college's facultv
in 1943.
'37
lo I'.diia C^arpenter Baker, whose mother
died oil .AiignsI 4. wc cnIcikI sincere s\-m-
palhy.
Justine LUlricli Capps and lier Imsbaud are
running the Thunder Bin! Molor Lodge at
Virginia Beach, Va.
Geraldinc Bonkenieyer Daiden's husband,
Claibourne, who is president of Caterers,
Inc., in Greensboro, has been elected to the
Greensboro board of North Carolina Na-
licmal Bank.
Mary Elizabeth Sanders Harris Ii\es in
k'.lkin. Her son R. L. Harris 111 attends
N. C. State and her daughter Helen. Greens-
boro College.
Mary Frances Hester hap]5eiis to be one
of only four secretaries in North Carolina
who received a Certified Professional Secre-
larv Certificate this year. This CPS rating
hinges on passing of extensive examinations
prepared by the CPS Institute, of which Na-
tional Secretaries Association is a sponsor.
Mary Frances works for Dow-Corning Coni-
liany here and is a member of O. Ilenrv
Chapter, NSA,
Jane Goodwin Lavving and faiiiih left
Greensboro in August for 5612 Enderly Road,
Baltimore, Md. Roy has become president of
National Plastic Products located in Oden-
tou. Md. Children are Jeannie, 17 years old,
Jim, 12. and Katherine, 15.
Margaret DeVany Winstead teaches piano
to a good many pupils in Roxboro, and is
organist at the Slebane Memorial Presby-
terian Church. She also finds time for her
favorite hobby, ceramics. Her only daughter
Charlotte graduates next June from DNC-
CH, where she is cheerleader. Son Charles
(Butch) is a junior at UNC-CH. Sons Sam
and Fenton are in Roxboro High. Fenton
won state Championship in both singles and
doubles at the recent tennis tournament in
Greensboro.
'38
Mrs. S. J. Keker (Lue\ Spinks)
3203 Rolling Road
Chevy Chase, Md.
Marietta MuUer Smyre died at her home
in Gastonia on August 4. Born in Dillon,
S. C, she was from her high school days
a leader academically, and at Woman's
College she was May Queen in her senior
year. She taught for two years before her mar-
riage, and since she had been a leader in reli-
October 1963
43
gious and cultural activities in Gastonia.
Among her survivors are her husband. Fred
L. Sni\re. Jr.. a son. and a sister. Octavia
Mullcr W'ilkins '30.
I ditli Edniondson Anderson has a teen
.lae dauchter and son. Thev live at Route
i; Box '1:1. Grimesland. Edith has taught
lioth pnlilic school nnisic and nrixatc piano
lessons.
Ruth Jenkins Best of LouisbuiL; is leach
)ng school.
Grace Parker Hout«ell li.is .m .iddicss
change: Aff of Sl.\. ,\PO S56. N. Y.. N. Y.
Margaret Hajkrader Harris teaches fifth
grade in Roxboro. Her daughter Margaret
has been elected president of the student
body of Saleni .\cadeiny. Other childieu:
Ibick. ]()hn, Letitia and Katherinc.
Lucy Spinks Keker says "please repoit that
Ihe Kekers are finally to get that Kuroiiean
trio_. ^^ e'\e been talking about itJor so long
Ihat I'm sure our friends will be glad «e
finalb- made it!" They left in September.
Marie Neikirk Nonneiit has mo\-ed from
New Orleans to 472 s North Rock Spring.
.\rlington. ^'a.
Mary Lee ^^'llitley Pennington resides at
2S22 South Mebane Street, Burlington.
Gladys Meyerowitz Stem has a new niail-
iuf address: 2705 Ross Road, Chcvv Chase,
Md
To ^^'i]lo^v Way Benbow Terrell, whose
sislcr. Sonnea Benbow Miller '27C, died on
Inb 1. we extend sincere sympathy.
'39
Mrs. L. Richardson Preyer (Fniiiy Harris)
605 Sunset Drive
Greensboro, N. C.
Man- Cochrane Austin has ino\ed from
Slatcs\'ille to 117 West Sixth Street. Newton,
N. C. 28698.
Chancellor William B. Aycock of UNC-
CII, husband of Grace Mewborn, received an
honorar}' Doctor of Laws degree at the Duke
I 'iii\ crsity commencement exercises in June.
In July he announced his resignation as chan-
cellor effective in the fall of 1964. When he
accepted this post in 1957, he said he would
eventually return to teaching.
.\ new address. 6803 Madrid .\\cuuc,
|acks()n\illc 7, Fla., for Frances Horner
Brown.
Blanche I'uten Dudley has an address
change: Box 181. F.nglehard.
Maxine Gamer has gathered a good deal
of information about India, where she spent
111 months doing research in Eastern re-
ligions under a grant from the .Xmerican
Institute of Indian Studies, to pass on to her
students at Sweet Briar College. A professor
of religion, Maxine traveled over all India,
but her hcad(|uarters was Poona. the "Ox-
ford and Cambridge of India." She also took
an around-the-world swing that included the
Orient. Middle East, and Europe.
To Beverly \n\\ Sjiarpe Griffin, whose 9-
dav-old grandson died on .-\iigust 1 5, we ex-
tend sincere sympathy. The baby's mother.
Becky Griffin Giles, lives in Lynchburg, Va.
Doris Hutchinson is newly elected treas-
urer of the Greensboro Soroptomist Club.
F'niily Harris Preyer's husband. Rich, has
annomiced that he will be a candidate for
Governor of North Carolina in the Demo-
cratic Primary in Mav. .Mong with this ex-
citing political news Emily's latest contribu-
tion to the cultural life of Green.sboro must
be noted: during the summer she was one of
the judges for a "Tarzan-Yell Contest" at a
local comnuinity center.
To Octavna i\Inllcr Wilkins, whose sister.
Marietta Muller Sniyre '38, died on .\ugust
4. we extend sincere sympathy.
Two boNS and two girls make up Gretchen
.\vcock Willev's fami]\. rhc\ li\c in Gates.
N. C. ■ ■ ■
'40
FUen Griffin
Dept, of Physical Education, UNC-G
Greensboro, N. C.
Dr. Marv Gill Clarke is clinical ps\chol
ogist at Memorial Ilo.snital, Chapel Hill. She
lives at Timberlake Estates. Route 1 .
Grace Evelyn Loving Gibson wrote I'.ditor
Largent: "My news is that, most unexpect-
edly, I'm going to teach two college Eng-
lish classes at St. .Xndrcws the first semester.
Since this will be m\ initial venture into
college teaching. ;ifler ;i lapse of 20 \ears
since getting tlie M.\., 1 kiiow that it will
take all the liuic I can wrest awa\ from
the house, husband, and three bo\s. and I
will ha\e lo forego outside activities for the
present."
Frances Hinit Hall has left UNC-CH for
the Unixersity of Chicago, where she is ref-
erence librarian in the L.aw School Libran-.
Address: 1121 E. 60th Street, Chicago 37,
Illinois. During the smnmer, Frances \isited
Anne Pike Howes in Birmingham. Mich.
.\nne "hasn't changed a bit." llcr husband
works for Ford.
To Mildred Haugli, whose mother died in
September, we extend sympathy. Mildred's
address: 61 N. Milwaukee .\venue. Wheel-
iuL', Illinois.
Valerie Powell Jones writes iIkiI she had
a delightful trip during the summer. She
picked up her son, Jeffrey, who w:is ;;t
Camp Sequovah near A.sheville. ,uul ilmve
to 0"cean City. N. J.. \ia Greensboro. She
was impressed with improvements on our
cam|)us. and is looking forward to the time
when an alumnae chapter can be started
in her hometown of New Orleans, since four
New Orleans girls are entering UNC-G this
fall.
fMargnerite McCoUum Mulhern is the
chairman — and the only member —
of the board of the Goodwill Indus-
tries Center in Winston-Salem. Since
Jul\ -a-year-ago she has been a part-time
caseworker, serving as "a sounding board" for
problems of the Goodwill employees who are
all handicapped i;i some way. Guided by the
social histories of the workers, she strives to
be alert to any svinptoms of trouble in each
individual and/or in his production at the
Center. The resources of her graduate train-
ing in social work at the Universitv at Chapel
Hill and at Richmond Professional Institute
and of her years as welfare and family-and-
child-service-agency caseworker are proving
very valuable in this "Goodwill" responsi-
bility. Marguerite's hu.sband is an engineer
with \\'estern Electric, and they have two
children.
Mary Overman of 65 LaSalle .\venue.
Hampton. \'a.. works as an accountant at
Langley Field.
Fthcl Cnnnpler Pierce has moved to Route
4, Burlington.
.\rriwona Slioaf Powell of 308 Magnolia
-\venue. I'Yostproof. Fla., paid us a visit dur-
ing .\ugiist. She brought her son and daugh-
ter to sec the campus. Her nine year-old
daughter wants to be a concert pianist and
was particidarly interested in the nmsic build-
ing.
Rnbv Morgan Sheridan, who is the man-
ager of the cafeteria at the Sears Mail Order
plant m Greensboro, is presently serving as
a district Lt. Governor of Pilot International.
To Kathleen Seles, whose father died on
September 18, we extend sympathy.
tAlma Kirstein Spicer was the subject of
a "W Oman of the Week" feature in
the .\SHE\'1LLE CITIZEN-TIMES
in early September. Current president
of the League of Women \'oters in
Brevard, she continues to put her belief "that
women should take more interest in govern-
ment, particularly local government" into ac-
tion. Her political interests and the League
take "a lot of time," but she has not forsaken
her interest m music, which was her college ;
major. She still teaches piano part-time, and
she sings in her church choir. PTA and scout-
ing come in for a share of her time. too. Her
husband is a supervisor with Olin Mathieson
Chemical Corporation, and they have two
children: Elzine (15) and Steve (11).
Eleanor Ross Taylor and her familv (hus-
band Peter and children Kathy and Petey)
have moved back to Greensboro. Peter has
rejoined the UNC-G faculty to teach creative
writing. The address: 114 Fisher Park Circle.
'41
1966
Mrs. Thomas N. Brafford, Jr. (Elizabeth Patten)
1 41 2 Hatha wav Road
Raleigh, N. C.
, Carolyn Wolfe Ashcraft was aw arded
doctor of philosophy degree (Ph.D.)
U by George Peabodv' College for Teach-
Vj ers at commencement exercises on
.\ugust 17. Her major field of study
was psychologv-, and the subject of her dis-
sertation was "the Relationship between Con-
ceptions of Human Nature and Judgments of
Specific Persons." Carolyn lives at 5029
Brevity Lane in Nashville. Tennessee.
Jennie Stout Case, her husband, and four
children have moved to 406 S. W. 4th
Street, Hickory. Mr. Case will be adminis-
trator of the new Catawba County Hospital.
Jean Church lives at Route 2, Princeton.
111.
Margaret Coit, now teaching at Iviirleigh
Dickinson LIniversity in New Jersey, fared
prominently in the August 10 issue of "Sat-
urday Review." "The Adams Papers: Series
II, Family Correspondence" received a two-
page review, and she was identified as co-
author of two forthconung volumes of .\meri-
44
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
:an history, "The Growing Years" and "The
Jweep Westward."
Our sympathy is extended to Carolyn Willis
lunninghani in the death of her father, Mr.
3. S. Willis of Ralejoh, in July. Carolyn has
new address: 5323 Alamance Dri\e, Ra-
eigh.
Elva Estelle Evans recei\ed the master of
ts degree in special education from George
'cabody College for Teachers, Nashville,
rcim.. on .August 17. Residmg at 2020
-•eachtree Road, she is director of the oral
chool in the Atlanta, Ga.. Speech School.
Nelson Tucker Greyban has mo\ed to
loute 3, Big Rapids. Mich.
To Aline Thompson Harcum (commercial),
vhose father died on .\ugust 27, \\c extend
mpathy.
To Esther Tliaxton Jessup, whose father
lied on July 8, we extend sympathy.
Margaret Parker Jones lives at 1337 Shep-
frd Street, South Boston, \'a.
Eugenia Kearns Kirkman of Raleigh has a
■ 'lan^liter Margaret who is a junior at UNC-
!', this year. She is a music major and
jrcsidcnt of the hiter-Faith Council. Eu-
;eiiia's son Harry is entering N. C. State
Ins fall, and son Benson is a junior at
?r(iughton High.
Carolyn Langston is teaching second grade
It Cdiie School here.
New address for Virginia Farnsworth Web-
iter: 453 North Park\ic\\ Road. Baton
lougc. La.
'42
Martha Frances Charnock has joined the
acuity of .\she\ille-Biltmore College as as-
;istant professor of physical education.
Martha received the M. S. degree in 1948
roni the University of Wisconsin.
Mailing address for Beatrice Goldman
fisher is 112^5 Par 4 Circle, Kalamazoo.
IVIich., 49001.
Jessie Brunt Nichols lives at 985 Pierpont
5trect^ Rahway, N. J.
Anne Parham, secretary to the Guilford
Dounty Board of Commissioners, attended
he 56th annual convention of the N. C.
Association of County Commissioners in
\sheville during August.
Josephine Stewart Starbuck has mo\ed to
Kleiststrasse 31. ^^'olf.sbnrg, h'cderal Repub-
ic of Germanv.
43
Mrs. L. D, Coltrane, III (Phyllis Crooks)
87 Edgewood Avenue
Concord, N. C.
Louise Aycock has moved to 7003 Cum-
berland Avenue, Apartment E-12, Springfield,
^'^■,
I To Bettie Chitty Chappell, whose sister,
pla Chitty Duncan '46, and her family were
billed in an automobile accident in early
\ugust, we extend sincere sympathy. Bettie's
new address is 4228 Hermitage Road, \'irginia
Beach, Va.
(This note is written against the express
lomniand of Phyllis; but I thought >ou
should know of her fine family. Ed.) Phyllis
Crooks Coltrane has a faniih- of two bo\s —
Mike, 18, a busy all-around boy and a stu-
dent aspiring to Davidson next year; and
Danny, 15, a perfectionist academically and
one who manages to do everything else
besides; and one girl, Gaj-, in the seventh
grade, who is all-girl, likes people, and talks
as much as mother. The family is obvioush'
a close one, for all do much together — from
church activities to water skiing. Bub, Phyllis'
husband, is also \'ery active in ci\ic and
religious affairs. This year he is the president
of the Concord Chamber of Commerce.
Betsy Hammer Finnegan writes that she
has mo\ed from New York state to 5001
A\'yandot Court, AYashington 16, D. C.
Kathryn Wanda Fritts and Charles Buren
Garner were married in Lexington on August
3. Charles is self-employed as lumberman and
farmer. Kathr>n is on the faculty' of Grimes
Elemenary School in Seagro\e. "Their address
is Route 2. Seagro\e.
Jean Yates Fuquay has left Greensboro for
262U Salisbur\ Boulevard, Winter Park, F"la.
Gajnelle Hqgan has moved to 1034
Nichols Drive in Raleigh where she is con-
sumer marketing specialist with the N. C.
Agricultural Extension Service. She has been
working in Greensboro as consumer marketing
agent for Guilford County, and she plans to
continue writing a food column for the
GREENSBORO RECORD.
Marion Middleton Johnson is now state
director of county libraries. She has iiuned
from .\lbemarlc to 1303 Lorinicr Road,
Raleigh.
Marjory Wilson Johnson is living at 150(i
Euclid Road. Durham, N. C. 27707.
Mary McLean Johnson is at home at 2013
\Mieat Street, Rockingham,
Carolyn White Southcrland li\cs at 1202
North Rotary Drue. High Point.
Margaret Hunt WaUace may be reached at
5 5 Quaker Lake Terrace. Orchard Park, N. Y.
Mary Allison Wilson lives at 1030 Catawba
Street, Kingsport, Tcnu.
'44
Mrs, A. W, Thomas, Jr. (Betty Dorton)
96 Glendaie Avenue
Concord, N, C.
Mrs. J. H. Evans (Scott Tvrec)
1408 Lafavette Street
Rockv Mount, N. C.
Mrs. Walter West, III (Nancv Kirbv)
3352 Willow Oak Road
Charlotte, N. C.
I Louise Talley Adams (commercial) died in
Greensboro on July 22 after an illness of
three months. She is sur\i\ed by her hus-
band, Herman H. Adams, Jr., two sons,
and her father.
I Anne Queensbury Stevens died of leu-
kemia on July 11 in Bethesda, Md., after
a year and a half of illness. Before her
marriage in 1945 to Dr. Donald K. Ste-
vens, who is now the Director of the U. S.
Atomic Energy Commission's Division of Re-
search, she worked as a research assistant at
the Naval Research Liiboratory in Washing-
ton. The many members of the Class of 1944
and of the groups who were friends of Anne
will remember her vivacity, her purposeful-
ness, her loyalty, her basic integrity, and her
real liking for people. Among her survivors.
in addition to her husband, are a daughter
(16) and a son (5) and a sister, Musa Queens-
bury Hogan '46.
Josephine Collins Beamer has two children,
a bo\' and a girl. They li\c at 19 Lawrence
Brook Dri_\c, East Brunswick, N. J.
To Dorothy Snyder Brand (commercial),
whose father died on September 12, we
extend sympathy.
Caroline Morrison Garrett has moxed to
1895 Moor Mont Drue, Salt Lake Citv.
Utah, 84117.
To Jean Gregory, whose father died several
months ago, we exjjress belated sympathy.
Lucy Corbett Hamlin mo\ed in July from
Cincinnati to 38 Palmer .\\enuc, Scarsdale,
N. Y.
I'o Frances Chitty Hinnant, whose sister,
Ohl Chitty Duncan '46, and her family were
killed m an automobile accident in early
,\ugust, we extend sincere sympathy.
Toni Lupton Hires, her husband, and
daughter toured Europe during the summer.
In Paris they rented a car for a tour of Italy
and Rome. They enjoyed every place so much
that they "hated to move on."
By appointment of Governor Terry
' Sanford, Betty Dorton Thomas is Char-
lOtte College's first woman trustee. In
niid-)uly after her appointment was an-
nounced, she was the subject of a fea-
ture stor\- and interview in the CH.*\RLOTTE
OBSERX'ER. Said she: "I don't have any
(feelings on policies) except a genuine inter-
est in education for all children." Betty lives
in Cabarrus County (Concord), the county
with the second largest enrollment (after
Mecklenburg) at Charlotte College. She in-
\isions the rapidly de\'eloping commuter col-
lege as a promising opportunity for young
married students. Betty's civic and social ac-
tivities are many and varied. Currently she is
serving a second term as president of the
Cabarrus Democratic Women's Club, which
she was instrumental in organizing. She and
her hu.sband, who has a Chevrolet dealership
in Concord and Reids\ille and who is on the
Concord City Board of Education, have three
children: Tina (10), Terre (8), and Tom-
my (4).
Suzanne Carroll Truesdale is h\ing at 1500
Turford Place, Cliariotte.
'45
Diane Page Bench writes that she and her
husband and four sons spent their vacation
at a beach on the Mediterranean just below
Barcelona in Spain. \Vhile living in that
country, the family has visited in France and
Germany. They had some excitement this
summer when the Little League baseball
team to which two of her sons belong came
within two games of coming back to the
states for the Little League World Champion-
ship, but were defeated in the semi-finals by
a team from Naples. Last winter Diane had a
phone conversation with Nena Barr Sheperd,
who lixes in Paris with her .Army husband
and two children.
pctober 1963
45
To Helen Phillips Cothran, whose father
died on Julv IQ, we extend sympathy.
To Anne Glass Covington, whose mother
died on August 3, \\e extend sympathy.
EUzabeth A^'ebster Crockett of 208 North
\\'est ?6 Drive. Gainesville. Fla.. teaches at
Unnersitv of Florida.
Man JBunis Detgen has a bab\ daughter
born on August 28 in Greensboro.
To MjTtle Soles Erck, whose father died
on September IS. we extend sympathy.
Hemiiiie Gardner Forsyth li\es at 412 Uni-
\crsitv Boule\ard. lacksonville. Fla.
To Lois Hohn Futrell. whose husband died
on September ^ following a heart attack, we
extend sincere s\Tnpathy.
Ann Long Hendrix is serving as president
of Sherwood Forest School's PTA in Winston-
Salem. She belie\es the main purpose of PT.\
IS "to secure the best possible education for
our children. A PT.A organization should help
sujjply some of the 'extras' that a public
school svstem necessarily cannot afford." Ann
and her husband ha\-e three children, Ann
Kvle. S, a student at Sherwood Forest School;
Kllcn. 4, and Lee, 3.
Lois Smith Livingston writes that she has
kft W ashington state and now lives on Route
1. (Box 388). Lacombe, La., 70445.
Nannie Cushwa McFaydeu is helping her
doctor husband m his office. She has two
daughters; Nan and Lynn.
Coline Tliies McGchee \\rote us in -\ugust
that she had moved to 5506 Nina Lee Lane.
Houston 18. Texas.
Julia Taylor Morton's husband, Hugh, has
liccn named president-elect of the UNC
General Alumni Association, with presidential
duties to begin m June 1964. Mr. Morton is
noted for his photographs of scenic attrac-
tions m the State. He is a realtor and owner
of Grandfather Mountain in the western part
of the State.
Irene DiUingliam Richards has been in Ger-
many for three years. Her mailing address is
Box 3589, Alconburv .\merican School, .\?0
238. New York, N. Y.
lean Rosenast was married to \\ illiam
Harold Stachel during the summer. Mr.
Stachcl was graduated from Upsala College in
New lersey, and he attended graduate school
at Drexel "institute of Technology in Phila-
delphia. He is presently associated with Atlas
Supply Company in Newark, and he and
lean are living at 21 Tro\- Drive in Spring-
field, New Jersey.
Jan Cox Speas and her new book "The
Growing Season" were honored at an auto-
graphing party by Straughan's Book Shop in
Greensboro on .\ugust 30.
To Margaret Alexander Stevens, whose
father died on September 20. we extend sin-
cere sympathy.
I Dorothy Peny died on September 18 at
her home in Winston-Salem where since
1955 she had been Executive Director of
the Pilot Area Scout Council. She had
been active in physical education areas
since her college days, believing strongly in
the potentialities of the young who could be
encouraged to good citizenship by group ac-
tivities. She was also active in the work of
the Methodist Church. Dot received her
master's degree from Ohio State University,
and she had taught at \'assar College and at
the Unixcrsity of Georgia, .\mong her sur-
Mvors is a sister. Jane Pern Marshall '49.
Jean Morrison Beaner has left Louisiana
and now lives at 2302 Rosebud Street, "Vic-
toria. Texas.
Hellen Rouse Boyd is wife of an Air Force
captain and mother of two children, Laura 6,
and BiU-,- Ir.. 5. The family has recently
returned from a three-year-stay in England
and German)- and reside at 30 Meadovvbrook
Drive, Hampton, Va.
Marge Burns has done it again! On Sep-
tember 20 she won the North Carolina A\'om-
cn's Golf Association tournament for the
eighth time. This last one makes three vic-
tories in a row.
Betty Sarratt Cowan is art teacher in the
elementary schools in Jacksonville, Fla. Jane,
her 15 year old, wants to make the jaunt
with Mama to the reunion here in the spring
to look o\er the campus with the eyes of a
prospective student. Betty's boys. Tommy and
Bobbv, are 6th and 7th graders, and both
play Little League baseball. Her husband is
an insurance special agent and travels north
and. central Florida.
To Hazel Soles Harrelson, whose father
died on September 18, we extend sympathy.
Martha Koontz Hearn has an all-male
family. Latest little hero is Andrew Wrenn
Hearn who arrived in -\ugust to join Mar-
shall, 11; Pete, 8, and John, 17 months.
To Musa Queensbury Hogan, whose sister,
Anne Queensbury Stevens '44, died on July
11, we express sincere sympathy.
Marjorie Wvatt Howie lives at 1600
Park Terrace West. Atlantic Beach, Fla.
To Jessie Gregory Lutz, whose father died
several months ago, we express belated sym-
pathy.
.\ "Chio" (that's his nickname) off the
block arriv'ed Julv- 27 for Myrtle York Mc-
Aulay and her husband. Charles Thomas
iqins .\\, 14, George, 12, and Betsv . 9, in
their Mt. Gilead home.
Janice Lee Norris is teaching eighth grade
general science and living at 1207 Hvatt Ave-
nue. Columbia, S. C, 29203.
'46
Ola Chitty Duncan and her husband, Lt.
Commander J. Murphy Duncan, and their
three daughters were tragically killed in
an automobile accident near Custer, South
Dakota, in early .August. Ola and Murphy
were active members of the Baptist Church
in Oxnard, California, where they were sta-
tioned. Among Ola's survivors are Bettie
Chitty Chappell '43, Frances Chitty Hinnant
'44, and Pat Chitty Gurganious '49.
'47
Ruth Brawley Callison is now living at
4040 Marianna Road, Jacksonville 17, Fla.
To Jeanne Bales Cosner, whose father died
on August 12, we extend sympathy.
Doris Smith Feltrup has forsaken California
for 4256 92nd Street South East, Mercer
Island, Wash.
Lois Smith Goewey is living at 6752 .'\my
Avenue, Garden Grove, Calif., 92640.
Mary Lois Howard Harrison has moved to
827 East River Drive. Temple Terrace, Fla.,
33617.
Jean McArn Horton has two children
l,aura Jean is two and Robert is one year old.
Her husband is attorney for a mining com-
pany in one of the historic mining areas of
Nevada. Tl-ieir address is P. O. Box 261,
Pioche, Nev.
To JuUa Alexander Kaufman, whose father
died on September 20, we extend sincere sym-
pathy.
Dacia Lewis King has returned from Colo-
rado and is living at 710 Craven Street, New
Bern.
Emma Wooteu Melero's husband is sur-
geon at Person County Memorial Hospital.
They have a young daughter, Mary Margaret.
Julia Farham Powell may be reached at 131
Palm Drive, Marlin, Texas.
Margaret Wilkerson Thurston, husband
Bob, Bobby Jr., Elizabeth and Dannie were
visiting in Greensboro for most of the month
of June. One week they spent at Topsail
Beach, before a rus'h return to Dallas, Texas,
in time to move bag and baggage on the
Fourth of July to 6313 Blanche'Street, New
Orleans, La. Bob will be regional superin-
tendent of agencies for Pan American Life
Insurance Company.
Marilyn 'Vincent of 901 ^^'est Jefferson
Street, Apartment A-22, Tallahassee, Fla., is a
student at Florida State University. She ex-
pects to receive her Ph. D. next April.
Betty Miller York's husband, Frank, has
been elected president of Richardson Realty
Inc. in Greensboro.
'48
Mrs. H. H. Strandberg, Jr. (Betsv Bulluck)
P. O. Box 1335
Rocky Mount, N. C.
Beverly Bell Annfield and her husband are
building a new home here in Greensboro. He
travels extensively for Western E^lcctric.
Daughter Ellen is in the seventh grade and
Laurie in the fourth.
Ruth Murjihy Blaylock teaches sixth grade |
at Braswell School in Rocky Mount. She has
a daughter. Sherry, who is a fifth grader.
"\ Dress Is Born," .'\ugust article in the
GREENSBORO RECORD, tells the story- of
Tanner of North Carolina and their two-fold
contribution; to the dress industry (in the
classic sportswear field) and to the develop-
ment of N. C. industry itself. Dottie Rabey
Brantley's husband is pictured as assistant sales
manager of the Rutherfordton company.
Barbara Ruth Clegg was married to .Vlonzo j
.-Ufred Hinton lune 15 here in the .\lumnae
House. Mr. Hinton received a degree in '
chemical engineering from N. C. State and is
em|3loyed by Nuclear Division, Union Car- ,
bide Conipanv of Oak Ridge, Tenn. Address:
The Hamilton House, Apt. 12M, 1400 Kene-
saw Drive, Knoxville, Tenn.
Alice Ingram Coulter teaches physics in ,
the high school in Salem, \'a. Her husband
teaches English and dramatics and is working
on his doctorate at Roanake College. They
have two children.
Jane Brady Daniel likes her work at the
Chariotte NJedical Clinic. She also greatly
enjovs the stage shows and musical attractions
that come to Chariotte frequently. She still
pursues her hobby of photography and took
beautiful colored slides during her summer
vacation in Georgia and Florida.
Judy Vann Edwards is still in Raleigh,
where husband Ipe is assistant manager of the
office of United States Fidelity Insurance
Conipanv. Her children are Chris 9, \'ann, 6,
and Mitch, 5. Judy is taking up golf and
46
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
threatens Marge Burns with keen competi-
tion.
lo Helen Hunter Fidler, whose father died
(in August 2, we extend sincere smypathy.
I'atsy Bailey Johnson of Newport News,
\ a., lias a daughter, Ann 8, and a son Bob, 4.
I K r husband works in shipbuilding. Patsy
sinus HI her church choir and for many wed-
dings in a solo capacity, and is president of
her garden chib.
Elizabeth Budlong Johnston of Charlotte
has a new son. Bill, born last February 25.
Her daughter Marsha is a sixth grader.
Daphne Thigpen Lovelace has a new home
in Rocky Mount. She works with liuslxmd
Jack in his insurance adjustment office and
is very active in Girl Scouts. She is troop
leader for both daughters Diane. 1 1 , and
Debbie, 8.
Marjorie Coble McDaniel made light of
our being late with the last issues. "You're
mixed up? Wlio noticed? With four small
children 1 am hardly aware of such things!"
She has moved to 20865 Mesarica Road, Co-
Wna, Calif., 91722.
Josephine Griffin McGee teaches at Rocky
Mount Senior High School. Jo and her hus-
band built a home about three years ago in
the ^^'estridge section of town. They ha\e
three boys.
We concocted the theme of "continuous
open house" as title of Martha Allen Mur-
dock's last year's Christmas card. Mop and
Chad had \isits from a charming school
teacher from Finland, friends on leave from
AMC^V work in Tokyo, a niece who spent
her siiring vacation, a nephew with a broken
leg ("an impediment which sometimes got us
to the front of lines and in free"), and a
former boarder, the Polish-Italian artist Alex,
who was on his wa>' back to Italy from the
west coast and intrigued them with tales of
ihis beatnik travels. Mop's folks also paid
them a nice xasit, but the "\isit to top them
all «as when Mop's sister and brother-in-law
arri\cd with 15 Girl Scouts to spend four
.da\> — ." Chad is still enjoying his choral
society. Mop is hillbilly specialist as one-
' fifth of a group called the Song Spinners,
who put on shows for shut-ins and scouts.
Keith. 6, and Neil, 5, are still mistaken for
1 twins, but Keith has the edge now. because
he can read while Neil listens in awe. Other
events: "a litter of kittens born in Keith's bed
while Keith was in it, — applying blacktop
coating to 200 feet of driveway and assorted
I children, and our first family camping trip."
Emnialene Thomas Parrish is teaching in
\\'aco, Texas, where she lives at 0222 \corn
Street.
Elaine Penninger, former assistant professor
at UNC-G, has accepted a position as assist-
ant professor of English at ^^'esthampton
College, the woman's division of the Univer-
sitv of Richmond.
Jean Massengill Pickard is teaching and
lives at 2352 Ardmore Court, Jacksonville 11,
Fla.
Joyce Posson became the bride of Dr.
Lindley Murray Winston on August 3 in New
York City. Dr. ^^'inston is in practice in
Philadelphia, associated with the Institute of
Pennsylvania Hospital and Eastern Pennsyl-
vania Psvchiatric Institute. He is a graduate
of Hampden-Sydney College in X'irginia and
the University of Pennsylvania Medical
School. Tliey are at home 2129 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
To Ruth Gregory Proctor, whose father
died several months ago, we express belated
sympathy. Ruth and her husband Con, who
is associated with Rea Construction Company
in Charlotte, ha\e two sons and a daughter.
Ruth has been very actixe in Gray Lady work
at Mercy Hospital.
Faye Roberts attended the con\ention of
.\l))ha Delta Kappa, international order of
women educators, in Pittsburgh during
August. Faye is chapter president of .\lpha
Alpha in Leaks\'ille.
Marjorie Smith Sniithey, husband Hamil-
ton, and children Allison, John, and Lewis,
are enjoying all the room in their "new" old
house at 2501 Rosalind Avenue South \\'est.
Roanoke, \'a. Tlie entire family enjoys fre-
quent camping-out trips.
Jane Pruitt Stephenson of Rockingham vis-
ited Jo McGee recently. Jane is librarian of
the Richmond County Schools and has three
children.
Betsy Bulluck Strandberg and famih' hope
to get into the new house they are building
in Rockv Mount bv mid-No\eniber. Daughter
Betsy is 10, Howard III, 8, and Buckley, 3.
Betsy Sr. is organist and choirmaster for her
church, and will ser\e as president of the
Coastal Plain Heart Association this fall.
Sarah Jane White Taylor is li\ing at 3045
Cambridge Road, Birmingham, Ala., 35223.
Barbara O'Brien Tiniberlake teaches at
Frances Lacy School in Raleigh. Her Susan
is in the second grade and David in the
fourth. Husband Jim is manager of the furni-
ture and carpet departments of Ivey's.
Audrey Shelley Wescott lives at 1 Thoni]]
son Street, Annapolis, Md.
Jane Gay White is chairman of the com-
mercial department at Rocky Mount Senior
High School. Her daughters are Gay, 11, and
Susan, 8.
Gail Tennent Whitehurst has moved from
Garner to 1323 Brooks .\venue, Raleigh.
N. C. 27607.
'49
Jane Paton Bradsher is tne typical diligent
doctor's wife and mother of three: Arch, Don
and Tori.
Sara Howell Eagling is homemaking at 36 t
Gil Bias Road, Danville, Calif.
\^irginia Wood and Cdr. Worth Gregory
may be reached through the Dental Depart-
ment, U. S. Naval Academy, .\annapolis. Md.
To Pat Cliitty Gurganious, whose sister,
Ola Chitty Duncan '46. and her family were
killed in an automobile accident in early
.■\ugust, we extend sincere sympathy.
Niartha Fowler McNair forwarded us the
letter from Martha Shrode and said she
thought reunion was "absolutely niar\'elous,"
and it gaxe her enough momentum to mo\e
through the long hot summer when all her
angels were out of school and underfoot.
To Jane Perrv Marshall, whose sister Doro-
thy '46 died on September 19, we express
sincere s\'mpathy.
"Joe can no longer tease me about having
gone to college at WXYZ," write Peg Good-
man Rothschild from Memphis, Tenn., on
the subject of our name change. Joe is the
new president of the Memphis and Shelby
County Pediatric Society (maybe she can
"initial" this to get back at him). Her chil-
dren spent a good deal of their summer in
camp. Eddie is 12; Jill, 11; Jan, 9, and
Susan, 6.
Martha Regener Shrode writes that she has
purchased a home at 3810 37th Avenue South
\\'est. Seattle 6, Wash. Pete is working at
the Boeing Company (and "loves it") as sec-
retan' in the department of business systems
and management problem sohing, so says her
Economics background is coming in quite
handy. She invites all you '49ers who get to
the west coast to drop in for a visit.
Virginia Fiel.ds Sykes has a new son, born
on September 15 in Greensboro.
Anne Wall Thomas and Ruth Abbott
Clarke '31 had art work on display at a local
shopping center during August. Now on the
art staff at the University of Georgia, Anne
uses tile technique of serigraphy, an arrange-
ment of small tight geometries, which has re-
gained popularity during the last 10 years.
Eleanor 'Van Poole and Dr. Thomas Vin-
cent announce the birth of a son, [ohn Stuart,
born August 16. Their older children are
Tommy, 5, and Billy, 3. Dr. Vincent is a
fellow in surgical pathology at Barnes Hos-
pital in St. Louis, Mo., wdiere the family re-
sides at 8933 Wrenwood Lane (Zone 63144).
Next July they plan to return to Denver,
where Dr. X'incent will join the faculty at
the University of Colorado Medical School.
Barbara Brown AMieliss' address is Route
6, Lead Mnie Road. Raleigh.
'50
Nancv Porter
Dept. of Physical Education, tjNC-G
Greensboro, N. C.
June Bost Derbv has nio\ed to S Overdale
Road, Rye, N. Y. '
Joan Ferguson Hornaday's new address in
Massachusetts is 38 Damien Road, Wclle.sley
Hills.
W. A. Leonard, husband of Lillian Rosen-
berger, has been appointed to an assistant
actuarial position with Jefferson Standard Life
Insurance Company here.
Martha Rose Miller McKiiight has "retired"
from teaching so th.it she uia\ devote more
time to home and family. Sou Nicky attended
the class for gifted fifth-grade students at
Western Carolina College during the summer
and reported that "he wished all schools were
like that." Daughter Sarah who's 9 and a
fourth-grader, has some talent for dance
which, says her mother, "I. as a Physical Edu-
cation major, could surely have used."
Eleanor Rigney spent the greater part of
the summer as a graduate student and Coe
Foundation Fellow at Willamette University
in Salem, Oregon. With a friend she drove
back from Oregon 'cross country, arriving at
Huntersville, where she is teaching, in time
to move into a new apartment. Now that
school has begun her "excess" time is spent
in working on plans for a second North
Mecklenburg High School Symposium: "The
Role of Literature in Man's Quest for Truth."
Planned for October 17, svmposium panelists
include: Harry Golden, Frances Gray Patton,
Bernice Kelly HarriSj^ Tliad Stem, and Legette
Bh the. Eleanor's address: Box 676, Hunters-
ville, N. C.
Betty Jane Teague Taylor and her family
have tied themsehes down at 2207 Carlisle
Road in Greensboro. Her husband. Dr. Sha-
hane R. Taylor, Jr., has joined his father in
the practice of opthalmology. Her children
are Shahane III, Ann, and Mary Hooker.
'51
Inza Abemathy is the new manager of the
campus store at Greensboro College.
October 1963
47
Bulow Bo^^man is nt Longwood College.
Fannville. ^^l.
Ann Cragan said her \o\vs with L. Eugene
Johnston in June of this year in Sanford. He
is assistant superintendent-elect of \\'inston-
Salem ,' Fors\1:h Count\- Schools. Mr. John-
ston is a graduate of .\ppalachian State Teach-
er's College. Boone, and received his M.A.
degree from the Unixersity of North Carolina.
Chapel Hill. -\nn is on the faculty of South
Park School, and their home address is 2S27
Lvdlington Drive. ^^'inston-Salem.
"Paul Ronald Dinkier is his name, July 6
is when he came; seven pounds is what he
\\eiehed. and these arc the parents with whom
he stayed": Len and Elizabeth Outlaw Dink-
ier. (Preceding poetry purloined from little
Dinkler's birth announcement.)
Shirley Sharpe Duncan and her husband
are at Ferry Farms, .\nnapolis, Md.
Joanne McLean Fortune and William an-
nounce the birth of Miss Muanda Wardlaw
Fortune on June H. llie Fortune address:
7^6Q-B W". North .\venue. River Forest. 111.
Marilea Roberts Grogan served as director
of the workshop on "Creative Activities for
the Preschool Child." which was held on
campus during July.
.\nne Powell nia\- be addressed at \\ infield
Hall. UNC-G. She is residence hall counselor
and part-time freshman-English-teacher.
.\melia Hunter Roddey, who moved to
Boston during the summer of '62, has a new
soii Oliver Hunter. Dr. Roddey is doing
teaching and research after a year of practice
with Dr. Sam Ravenel in Greensboro. The
Rodde_vs have a Cape Cod cottage on IVz
acres of land located at Weston on the Boston
Post Road.
Millicent Rollins of 2333 Randolph Road,
Charlotte, is secretary for the Celanese Cor-
poration there.
Carol Byrd Sellars and husband welcomed
a new daushter to the family on July 24.
Little Julia Ross Thayer, granddaughter of
Julia Ross Lambert '24, and new daughter for
Julia Lambert Thayer, arrived July 17. Julia's
bovs are Cle\e. 8. and Lawrence, 4.
'52
Mrs. Don Gallamore (Scottx- Kent)
2233 Wenslcv Road
Charlotte 9, N. C.
Bette Hufham Ainsworth is homemaking at
1172 Catalina West. Jacksonville 16, Fla.
Her husband, who finished at Grady Hos-
pital in Atlanta in June is an ophthalmologist.
They have two sons and one daughter.
Richard and Doris Huffines Bernhardt ha\e
a babv son born Juh IS.
Martlia Hurtacker Bledsoe of 2239 Forest
Drive, Charlotte, has one son, Louis III. Her
husband is an attorney.
Charlene Thomas Dale began new duties
this fall as elementary school supervisor in
the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system.
Charlene, who received her master's degree in
education here in 1956. and her husband
and three daughters live at 3005 Hampton
.\vcnue, Charlotte.
Anne Whittington McLendon now makes
her home at 609 Blair Street, Greensboro,
27401 .
To Miriam Davis Rose, whose father died
on .August S, wc extend sympathy.
Doris Miller Ryan has returned from the
Philip])ines and resides at 5316 .Mien Road
East, Charlotte.
Mail Ann Barlow Scarborough's family,
numbering four children (Ben 8. Paul 7,
Paul 5-)-, and Ann, who's only 2 months
oldV must really keep her hopping around
"the homestead" on Route 1 out of Hook-
crton.
Lillian Gravely Sheets has mo\ed to Route
1. IdlcNxood .\\enue, Taylors, S. C.
Jane Sarsfield Shoaf has a new address,
10b West Gale Street, Edenton. Most im-
portant of all she has a new son, Andrew
Dix, born July 15. She says he looks like his
two brothers and two sisters but not like
cither his ma or pa. Her husband is pastor
of Edenton Methodist Church of about 300
members who gaxe them a royal welcome.
Martha Lohr Smith, formerly of Decrfield.
111., is now at Winsor Lane, Topsfield, Mass.
Eddie Jean Harris Stroupe is living at 407
West Church Street, Dallas, N. C.
Virginia Steele Wood's first-born is a son.
Jeremiah \'an Wood, who arrived on Sep-
tember 5. His father, Mr. Ralph \'an Wood,
Jr.. is in administratixe work in the Lincoln
Laboratory at Mas.sachusetts Institute of
Technology. The family lives at 18 Bates
Street, Cambridge 40, Mass. In the summer
of '62 Virginia and her husband made a trip
abroad.
'53
Lorene Thomas Johnson passed away at
her home in Harrisonburg, \'irginia, on
September 6. She is survixed by her hus-
band, W. H. Johnson, a young daughter,
and her parents.
Elt/,ibeth Ann Bennett Anltonelli of 3
Ilulvey Terrace. Alexandria, Va., has a baby
girl ten months old. Her husband is a lawyer.
Carolyn Miller Blount teaches physical edu-
cation and health at Boyden High School in
Salisbury, where the family makes their home
at 715 Maple Avenue. Her husband is a
heating and air-conditioning engineer. They
have a girl, 9, and a boy, 8.
A change of address for Alice Mae Young
Buckhout: " Apartment 205. 6908 Millbrook
Boulevard, University City 30, Mo.
Cenieth Elmore has joined the Campbell
College music faculty and will instruct in the
areas of piano, theory, and music appreciation.
Frances Armstrong Evans is a housewife
and lives at 816 Parkwood Road. Shelby.
Valinda Butler Feather writes that her hus-
band received his master's in education from
the Universitv of \'irginia in August, and thev
are now at 2D9 Ashby Place, Fairfax. \'a. He
is teaching general science at Fairfax High
School.
New address for Ruth Sevier Foster: 3819
Conntrv Club Road, Winston-Salem, N. C.
27104.'
Mary Gaitlier is living in Apartment 3. 518
South Mendenhall Street. Greensboro. 27403.
Marlene Muller Gillikin has moved to 1 31 5
\Vvnd\bro\\ Dri\e, Chesapeake, Va.
Sarah Jones Hambleton has returned from
Canada to live at 9425 Skvros Drive. Davton
24. Ohio.
Lvdia Moody's address is P. O. Box ^42,
Slier City.
Dot Call Nahory of 811 Manhasset Road.
Charlotte 9, has a new addition in the family.
Martha Myers Robbins has moved to 3297
.Shallovvfnrd Road, Chamblee, Ga.
Hazel Duval Stone has new mother duties
at her home, 2101 Briarcliff Road North East,
.\])artmcnt E, Atlanta 6, Ga. Her husband is
an engineer for LL S. Department of Public
Roads.
Ruby Taylor is assistant professor in the |
business department of Campbell College,
Buies Creek. For the past four years she had :
taught in Morehead Citv High School, where
her FBLA Club won the Gold Seal Award
for being one of the best in the nation. Her ,
FBLA members ha\e served as state president j
and vice-president, and national president.
Carolyn Junker Yewell is living at 3807]
Noble .Avenue, Richmond Va., 23222.
"54
Nancy Benson of 4 University Road, Cam-
bridge 38, Mass., is teaching French at!
Swamjiscott High School. She was in sum-
mer school at Besancon, France.
Patricia Farrell Byrd of Ladysmith, \'a.,
teaches school. Her husband is a Baptistl
minister.
A new address for Janie Edwards Gibson is:
Middle Street. Loui.sburg.
Eunice Silliman Heilig's present address isi
Collinwood Drive in Burlington.
Roger .Man Hood. Jr., joined daddy and
mama Katherine Keller Hood on Julv 13.
They live at 2901 S. Dinwiddie Street,
.\rlingtoru Va.
It's a second daughter for Wendell and
Anabel Adams Hooper. Tracy Lyn, born
July 18, joins txvo other juveniles in the fam-
ily: Scott, 5, and Karen, 3.
To Anne Johnson Lanning, whose sister
died on July 29, we extend sympathy.
Patricia Latta is at Brooke General Hos-
pital, Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
Barbara Bragj; McCiillough has mo\ed to
2313 Codding Drive. Modesto. Calif., where^
she is teaching third "rade. Her husband is
jiiirchasin^ agent for Simpson-Lee Paper Com-
|)an}'. They visited in N. C. during the sum-
mer with their two boys. Bill, 8, and
Charles, 6.
Jeanette Houser Mitchell mentions everj'
chance she gets a main event — arrival of a son
on .August 7.
.Mice Griffin and Bennett Myers ha\e trav-
eled to Yankee territor}- according to .\ugust
post card. Bennett is pleased with his new
jilacement as a osychiatric social worker in
the New Hampshire Child Guidance Clinic.
Tlicv live at 12 Essex Street, Concord. N. H..
03^01.
Bcttv Stancil Segal has left Tuscon. .Ari-
zona. :ind li\es at 1423 East Rock Spring;
Road North East, .Voartment 3, .Atlanta;
6. Ga.
'55
Mrs. H. G, Strader (Helen Ha^nes):
104 Woodhaven Drive-
Lexington, N. C
Sor\ Guthery Bowers of 3426 Bradley
Pl.icc, Raleigh, has two daughters, Lisa audi
Susan.
Carol S. Bradford and Gerald Edward*
Staningcr were wed in Huntersville this sum-
mer. Carol is home economist for Florida
Power and Light Co. in Bradenton. Her hus-
band is a graduate of the University of Florida.'
His fraternity is Delta Tau Delta. He is credit;
manager of General Electric Credit Corpora-
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
tion., and tliey will live at 3611 West Tampa
Circle, Tampa, Fla.
Mary Herring Bryant lives at 928 Litchfield
Road, Baltimore 12, Md. She has two chil-
dren.
Diana Chatham Calaway is now at 176
Oak Street, Batavia, N. Y. '
Frances Alexander Campbell of 9^70 \\'il-
low ^^'ood Drive, Clarence, N. Y._. 14031, is a
housewife, student and mother of two. She
expects to complete work for her Ph. D. this
year.
Bilh- Gray Clodfelter, husband of Carolyn
Gravely, has been elected to membershii^ in
N. C. Association of Certified Public Ac-
countants. He is with the firm of A. M.
Pullen and Company, Greensboro.
Children's views should be considered along
with the parents' in a final famih' decision,
Ernestine Hall Frazier told the \'ocational
Home Economics Conference meeting here
on campus in August. Ernestine, who is state
FI1.\ adviser, discussed "Future Homemakers
of .\mcrica — An Integral Part of Home Eco-
nomics" and explained that the national objec-
ti\e of the FHA is to foster the development
of creative leadership in home and commu-
nity. Ernestine received her master's in Home
Economics here in '59.
Joel Barlow Jones is kept busy at 708 12th
Avenue. N.\\'.. in Hickory by her two young-
ones: Stuart 64- and Susan 3+-
Ruth 'Walker Maynard has mo\ed to 268
Buckncll Street in Claremont, Calif.
To Lalah Isley Mercer, whose mother,
Lalah Irene Perkins Isley '22. died on July
24, «c extend sincere sympathy.
Sarah Sherrill Raney has moved, from Illi-
nois to 4 Rebel Road, Louisville. Kv.
Jan Cnthrell Ridge lives at 1205 Clinton
Street. Westview, Virginia Beach, Va. She
has two sons.
Barbara Steelman married William Groce
Jr. of .Mbemarle last winter. He is a UNC-
CH graduate and a Sigma Nu. Barbara is
teachina. They live at 415-.\ Wakefield
Drive, Charlotte.
FcTitli Wu wrote that she has address-
chanqed to 1 5, Kou Wah New \'illage. Laicli-
ikok, Kowloon, Hong Kong. She would wel-
come news.
'56
Mrs. Alton Glenn Ross (Fran Turner)
34 Hamilton Road
Chapel Hill, N. C.
I Anne Braddock Bogley had her second
I daughter. Deirdre Braddock, on May 24.
Deirdre joins two-year-old Elizabeth Schoen-
I born. Their daddy is currently working on
his master's degree in electronic engineering
at George Washington University. The fam-
ily is living at 4519 Dabnev Drive, Rockxille,
Md.
B.orn to Joyce Long Ferris and her hus-
band. Rev. Neal Ferris, a son. David Paul, on
April 15. The Ferris address: 385 Ben Avon
Street, Meadville. Pa.
Marjorie Leder Harris hails from the low-
lands of South Carolina now. She's ensconced
in Summerville (P. O. Box 628) and proud
possessor of a house, which follows a series of
apartments over the vears. and a job as "medi-
cal secretary-receptionist and jack-of-all-trades"
for her husband. Dr. Donald, whose shingle
is finally out for medicine and surgery. Her
two children, Jonathan, 5, and Lynn, IV2,
like the new set up very much.
Lucinda Adelaide Lanning and Edwin B.
McDill were married in July at StatesxiUe.
Lucinda has been employed as librarian by
Statesville Public Library. Her husband,
graduate of Spring Hill College, Alabama, re-
ceived his master of library science degree
from Louisiana State University, Baton
Rouge. He is reference librarian for Holy
Cross College, \\'orcester, Mass. Residence
address: '^l June Street, Worcester 2, Mass.
Shirley Curran Lublin and her husband
have returned to Penn State University after
two years in Europe. Both were teaching
psychology for the European Division of the
University of Maryland. Now Shirley is i:)lan-
ning to complete her Ph. D. dissertation, and
her husband will work as a clinical psycholo-
gist in the area of State College, Pa., where
they live at 520 Sunset Road.
Patricia Paulson McManus, her husband,
and young son .Alan are living at 24 Avenue
Charles Floquet, Paris 7, France.
Johanna Gorter Markwood has moved from
.\labama to 5614 MurrayhiU Drive, Charlotte.
Ann Hoke Paschal and husband Jimmy are
building a beautiful new house in Columbia.
S. C. They're real excited about moving in,
and also about the ribbons their dog Brum-
mel is winning lately at dog shows.
Frances Carol Turner is now Mrs. Alton
Glenn Ross, married in Winston-Salem
.\ucust 24. Mr. Ross is a graduate of East
Carolina College and obtained his M. S. in
chemistry from UNC-CH. He is a research
chemist in infra-red spectroscopy for the
Chemstrand Research Center at the Research
Triangle Park, Durham. Fran, who is finish-
ing up her work for an M. S. in chemistry at
UNC-CH, is research chemist for the Re-
search Triangle Institute in Durham. .\t
home. ^4 Hamilton Road. Chapel Hill, N. C.
'57
Barbara Alley is subject of a sewing com-
panv's current circular. The company, think-
ing the time and motion of a woman's world
of cooking, cleaning, and sewing had too long
been ignored, turned to a top industrial engi-
neer and asked him to study ladies sewing —
applying principles used to improve industrial
operations. Four women made the same dress
with the engineer timing each motion, ob-
serving methods and working conditions, and
checking interruptions. He voted Barbara,
who is in New York pursuing a television
career, as having the best sewing area. Three
])ictures are nrint^d showing the sewing set-
up in her apartment and how attractive she
looks modeling her finished garment.
Jobyna Smith Batchelor is living in Greens-
boro at 1229 Pamlico Drive.
Lu Stephenson Bloeh and Fran Turner Ross
'56 got together in August at Lu's mother's
Saluda home. Lu, her husband Felix, and 2
daughters are between assignments in the
Foreign Service and expect to leave the States
for their new post in Nox'ember. Lu's two
daughters are Kathy, almost 2. and Andrea,
born July 21 .
Mary Ledbetter Cole is working as nutri-
tionist with the Dairy Council in W'ashing-
ton. D. C. She and her husband are li\ing
at i266 Maris Avenue, Alexandria, Va.
Frances Crews has a new job at the Essex
County Overbrook Hospital, Cedar Grove.
New Jersey. She is an art intern, doing diag-
nosis of art therapy.
Our belated sympathy is extended to Har-
riet Conrad Crutchfield whose father, Samuel
P. Conrad, died last December. The Crutch-
fields mo\ed to a new home at 1009 Belmore
.-\\enue in Staunton, \'a., last fall, and in
March welcomed their second child — Russell
Conrad.
Therry Nash Deal, UNC-G doctoral fellow
and faculty member, was a lecturer for the
workshop on "Creative Activities for the Pre-
school Child," which was held here on
cam)3us during July.
To Mary Henrie Arthur French, whose
father died on September 9. we extend sym-
pathy.
Elaine Johnson has nio\ed to 51 Desmond
.^xenue, Bronxville, N. Y.
On June 15 in Weldon, Mary Dell Johnson
was married to Archibald Cree Gay, Jr. The
bridegroojn is employed in Charlotte by the
North Carolina Department of Revenue. Mr.
Gay is a graduate of Fork Union Military
School in \'irginia and UNC-CH. Mailing
address is 3540 Sloan Street, Charlotte.
Eleanor Crossley Lynch lives at 516 Gales
.\\enuc, Winston-Salem.
Marguerite A. Mann is teaching abroad.
Her address: American Dependent School,
7310th Air Base \\'ing. .\PO 57, N. Y., N. Y.
Eliziibeth Tuggle Miller has moved to
6501 Burlwood Road, Charlotte, N. C.
Jane Rae Cranford Schwarz has been ap-
pointed to the Methodist College Library
staff as acquisitions librarian. Her husband is
physical education instructor in the Fayette-
\ille college. They ha\'e a one year old
daughter.
Anne Roberts Teer is living at 351 Glen-
lirook Road in Glenbrook. Connecticut.
.■\ ceremony in Fayetteville, August 10,
united in marriage Joyce Anne Turlington and
Franklin Lewis Kiser. Mr. Kiser attended
N. C. State, Ringling School of Art and
.\magansett School of Kit, Sarasota, Fla. He
is emnloxcd in Lincolnton in the U. S. Post
Office. Home address: 618 E. McBee Street,
Lincolnton.
"Mom and Dad were making guesses,
w hether I'd wear pants or dresses, so I thought
I'd come and end the mystery' — ." Her name
is Hannah Lee. She came June 23, and dad
and mom are George and Blanche WiUianis
Willoughby.
Eleanor Tatum Young has moved from At-
lanta to 1520 Carol Lane, Falls Church, Va.
To Mary Louise Toler Zinrmernian, whose
mother died in early July, we extend
SMTipathy.
•58
Joan \\'illianis Ash was married to Robert
Walker Jones in Iladdon Heights, N. J., on
.\ugust 17. She is here on campus as kinder-
garten sunervisor and instructor in the School
of Education. The bridegroom attended
UNC-CH and entered Greensboro College
this fall majoring in DS\chology. Tliey will he
at home at 504 Forest Street.
Miriam Wilson Austin has mo\ed to Route
1, Box 413, Lexington.
Charlotte Ridinger Battino lives at 5718
South Kenwood Street. Chicago 37. 111.
Louise Saunders Campbell has mo\ed to
308-.^ West Lexington Avenue, High Point,
and is teaching there this year.
Claire Cannon is teaching and lives at 8304
.Atlantic Avenue, Virginia Beach, Va.
A new address for Barbara LaMar Carrubba:
608 Stratford Road, Baldwin. L. I., N. Y.
Mary Schulken Costner has mo\ed to 1443
Sprucewogd Lane, Charlotte, N. C. 28210
October J 963
49
Claudette Butler Daughtn" has mo\ed to
41 "^ Jackson Street. Roanoke Rapids.
Man- Lou Martin Gentr>' has a new ad-
dress: 104 5 -\rdmore Dn\e. Lynchburg, \'a.
Tiilia Bryant George married Donald Jen-
nings in Durham on August 31. He is assist-
ant professor at Grove City College, Grove
Cit\-, Pa., where the couple lives at 325
Woodland Avenue. Julia is also on the college
facult^•.
Pattie Pittman Gilliam is living at 520
Carohn Drive m L;ikeland, Florida, where she
IS teaching a first grade.
Betty Sue Cash JHayes is back in the states.
Her captam husband is stationed at Walson
-\rniy Hospital. Fort Dix. N. J.
To Patricia Myrick Houser (connncrcial),
whose father died on July 27. wc extend
s\mpath\'.
Martha Lineberger has mo\ed back north:
from Columbia, SOUTH Carolina to 404 N.
Ridge\\a\' in Greensboro. She is a member of
the Curr\- School facult\'.
Lorraine Wallace McCain is presentK en-
gaged in housewifely duties at 4526 June
.\\cnue, Oldtown. Winston-Saleni.
Jean Mincey married John Stuart Fletcher
1 1 (Jock) on February 15. A rising third year
law stud'ent at UNC-'CH, Jock is the grandson
of noted author Inglis Fletcher. Jean has been
working on her master's in Guidance and
rcrsonnel at UNC-CH, but this fall will be-
t:iii teaching in the Durham Countv School
S\stein. Her address: No. 3 Cooper Apart-
ments. Old O'xford Road, Chapel Hill. N. C.
Carolyn Young Oglesby has a new address
m New Orleans. La.: 6520 Avenue A.
Susan Patnian was married on Sei^tember
14 to John Allen Reniling. The groom, a
graduate of Franklin and Marshall College
who completed Na\y service in January' with
the rank of junior lieutenant, is a group rep-
resentative for Connecticut General Life In-
surance Compan}' in New York. M home:
463 Millburn .\\enue. Millburn, New Jersey.
Dorotliy Richmond Reeves of 76-10 34th
.\\enue. Apartment IP. Jackson Heights 72,
N. Y., is a psychologist with a vocational
service agency.
.\ son was born on July 23 to Coy Hicks
and Reba Furches Robertson.
.\nn Harris Rogers and Jud> Drake Rogers
'(i2 lia\e a new nephew born to Mrs. Helen
Rogers of Lancaster, Calif., wife of their late
brother-in-law, Frank James Rogers, Jr., who
died earlier this year in an automobile acci-
dent. .\nn lives at 1703 Madison Avenue
here.
Lois Barlow Rowc, her husband, and two
children (Bruce 4 and Dave 2| li\e at 139
31st .\ venue, N.W"., m Hickory.
Thomas V. Thoroughnian is assistant pro-
fessor of History at Carolina Wesleyan Col-
lege this year._ He is husband of Grace White-
hnrst, who has done graduate study in social
service at UNC-CH. She is working with the
Nash County ^^'elfare office.
Major Charles E. and Jan Rankin Toole
ha\c announced the birth of a daughter on
.\ugust 4 at the .\riiiv Hospital in Ft. Sill,
Okla.
'r(
Filmmie Lou Teal Boone is teaching in
Raleigh, v/herc she lives at 2529 Country Club
Court.
Emilie Cannon has joined the faculty of
East Carolina College to teach Spanish. She
is living in Farmville i400 E. Church Street)
now after having been in Cleveland. Ohio,
last year as a member of the John Carroll Uni-
\ersity facultv'.
Frances Krider Carlton is now living at 106
Ferson Loop. San .-\ntonio 36, Texas.
Patricia Clifton is teaching third grade in
.\tlanta. Ga., where .she lives at 1685 Briar-
cliff Road North East.
Carol Couric Cordle has moved to 1912A
Cedar Hill Road, Charlottesville, Va.
Shirley Gales Dean of 22 Sinnott Circle,
Parkwood, Durham, is teaching this year.
Evchn Atkinson Ellis is li\ing on Okinawa
with her .-'^ir Force husband, and a daughter,
born July 19, 1961^ at Maxwell Air Force
Base, .\labama. They expect to return state-
side at the end of this vear. Their address:
Box 306 498th Tac. Msl. Gp., APO 239,
San Francisco, Calif. Evelyn is also working
as secretary in personnel serx'ices.
To Gilbertine Maulden Glass we extend
sympathx' on the death of her father on
.\ugust 30 and congratulations on the birth
of a son, Kenneth Patrick, on August 3. Mr.
Glass has taken a position as nuclear engineei
with General Electric in Cincinnati. The
faniilv is living at 381 Da\ id Lane, Mason
Ohio:
Elaine Jarman is a graduate student it
clinical psychology at UNC-CH.
Nancy Jones has left her Camp Lcjeuna
teaching post and planed to Germany where
she will teach primarv grades in the Air Force
Deijendents School. She knows a good many
students abroad who were with their parents
at Lejeune with the mihtar\' exchange pro-
gram. She will visit one in England and one
in Naples during the year and plans to visit
the Holy Land at Christmas. Her mailing ad-
dress is: Civilian Personnel Office, 7101, Air
Base Wing, APO 332, New York, N. Y.
Nancy Allen Lupton is lullabying a new-
son born in .\ugust.
Patricia Ann Martin began duties as Execu-
tive Director of The Dairy Council of Roa-
noke on August 19. She had been vocational
home economics teacher in Sali,sbur^\ . N. C.
since graduation.
Evelyn Bruton Monroe and I^r. Monroe
will be moving to Germany soon. They ha\e
,1 xdimg son 17 months old.
Nancy Harner Morris has mo\ed from
.Mexandria to 7508 Greshani Street iii Spring-
field. \'irginia.
Rebecca Ann Owens and Ralph Edward
Causby were married on August 25 in Lex-
ington. For the past four years the bride
t:uinht home economics in Glen Alpine. The
(ouplc is livinj in Knoxville, Tenn., where
Rebecca is teaching in the city schools and
the bridesroom is eniplo\ed bv Tennessee
School for the deaf as an audiologist. He is
a graduate of Lenoir Rhyne, College, Hickory,
and on August 22 received a master of science
degree from the L'niversity of Tennessee,
Knoxville.
Grace Winchester Peacock is busy with
two children, a spn and a daughter, .\ddress:
Box 415, Oxford.
Betty Rowe Penny has moved to 128
Ridgecrest Circle, Florence, S. C.
Mary Anne Peter is a medical technologist
at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, and attends
Southern California University evenings. She
lives at 10908 Crenshaw Boulevard, Apart-
ment 2, Englew'ood, Calif.
Helen June Peterson was married to Wil-
liam Stanley Benson on August 18 in Svlva.
June received the master's degree in educa-
tion from Western Carolina College, Cullo-
whce, where the couple will live. Mr. Benson
is presentlv a student there.
Barbara Philbeck has accepted a new posi-
tion as state isrobation officer and may be
reached at Box 1597, Statesville, N. C. She
will serve Iredell, Stokes, Forsyth, Davidson,
Rowan, Davie, Yadkin, Surry, Ashe, Alle-
ghany, ^^'ilkes and Alexander counties.
Ann Earnhardt Robbins ma>' be reached at
1036 Long .\venue. Rocky Mount.
Becky Geddie Rowe and familv are li\ing
at 2721 Harrison Street, Wilmington. Her
husband is with the legal firm of Hogue and
Hill.
Carl Scheer, husband of Marsha Krieger,
has become a partner in a Greensboro law-
firm. The firm name will be Fonnan, Zuck-
erman and Scheer. Mr. Scheer graduated from
the University of Miami School of Law in
1961 and became a member of the North
Carolina bar in August, 1962. Tlie Scheers
(including a young son) live at 3005 New
Hanover Drive.
Mary Lou Smith has accepted an executive
post with the Hornets Nest Girl Scout
Council. She is in charge of the council's
district I — which includes the eastern part of
Mecklenburg County and all of Union
County. She'll have supervision of about 3,000
girls. Mary Lou was formerly director of
health and recreation at Baltimore's Central
YWCA.
Patricia Terrell Smith has a two year old
son, Christopher. Her husband is executive
director of their regional development com-
mission. Address: Box 49. Rocky Mount, \'a.
Jack and Marietta Harris Stebor selected an
announcement which read: "To let you know
the stork was here, .'Knd left us someone
sweet and dear." He is Benjamin John Stebor
I\', born July 12.
Karen Black Stevens mav be reached at
P. O. Box 3411, Cocoa, Fh.
Jane McGee Taylor, P. O. Box 73, Ilarrells-
villc. N. C, is Hertford County Home Eco-
nomics agent.
Kay Lee Watson plans to attend the Uni-
versity of Alabama Graduate School this fall.
She has been teaching in the elementary
grades for four years. In writing to Editor
Largent, she says, "Ev-en though I did not
major in history, I love it, too, and try to
make it alive and meaningful to the bright-
eved youngsters who come to my class room
each vear."
Carolyn White is living at 408 Overlook
Street, Greensboro.
Janet Pratt Wiley of University Gardens,
Apartment F-6, Emmet Street, Charlottes-
ville_, Va., is teaching art.
Jane Cheek Williamson and her husband
have a new address: University of Alabama
Medical Center. Birmingham 5, Ala.
'60
Mrs. Gary R. Smiley (Sandy Margolis)
5 Lanark Road, Glen Lennox
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Lclia Moseley Beeson of Route 1, Sophia,
teaches at Randleman High School.
.A ceremony in Asheville this summer
united Angela Marie Brown and Albert Hugo
Miotto. Their new address in A\'ashington,
D. C. is 4107 W. St. N. W., Apt. 302. Both
are employed in Washington; she with the
Government and he with Deigert and Yerkes
Associates. Tlie bridegroom is a graduate of
the school of architecture of Catholic Univer-
sity of .'\merica, Washington.
Barbara Bush was married .\ugust 25. 1962,
to William B. Lcaman, Jr. Thev- are living at
50
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
Route 2. Red Bank Road, Germanton. Bar-
bara is counseling at the Domestic Relations
Court in Winston-Salem.
Evelyn Hicks Cantrell is living at 3800B
Bond bnve, Kingsport, Tenn., and working
as a secrctar\-.
Fave Canada Collins lias nio\ed to 25 Lake
View Mobile Court, Route 2, Chapel Hill.
Patricia Edwards Colnianares of 2488 \\'il-
lianis Lane, Decatur. Ga., is head of the Eng-
lish department of the local high school.
Effie Ruth Dorsett and William Lam O
Teen McLain 111 were married on August 10
in Annapolis. Md. The couple lives in Au-
burn, Ala., where Mr. McLain will continue
at Auburn Universitv as a phvsics major.
Shop talk has it that Shirley- Smith Gee
visited her sister-in-law in England this sum-
mer. Shirley is living in Bauhmolder, Ger-
many, where her husband Milton is militariK'
enmeshed with the U. S. Armored Division.
Shirley's bo>' Carlyle is two years old. The
[Gees expect to return state-side next March.
I Doris McGill Gentrv has mo\ed to Rougc-
'mqnt_. N. C, 27572.
I Patricia Queen Gilliam, who li\es at 808
jTarpon Drive, Birmingham, Ala.. 35215, has
ji son Mauri Ned born August 7. He joins
idaughtcr Yeona to make a family of four.
'liic wedding of Mary Hester Greene and
Robert Lee Lively took place in Henderson
luly 28. Mary teaches in Henderson High
School. The groom is a 1961 graduate of
Virginia Pohtechnic Institute where he re-
eivcd his B. S. in electrical cnsineering. He
is with the Carolina Power and Light Com-
pany in Henderson, where they make their
home at 140 West Young Avenue.
Patricia Miller Hodges li\es at 115 West
jHqward Street, Apartment 2, Boone, where
|ihe works for Shadowline, Inc., as administra-
Itive secretary.
1 Sarah Liddleton Jobe has a new son. born
iSeptember 1 3 in Greensboro.
i In North \\'ilkesboro on Jul\- 1 1 Paula
Agnes Lendemian and Billy Bruce Bumgar-
ner were married. After a trip to Spain, Por-
ugal, Italv, Greece, Switzerland, England and
Germany the couple is living in Roanoke, Va.,
.vhere the bridegroom is president of the
Russell Transfer Company. Paula taught one
'ear at Southern Seminary Junior College,
Buena Vista, \'a., and was an airline hostess
or Trans-World Airlines.
Diane Laughon Nalley of 2067 Ben Hill
(load. East Point, Ga., is reservationist and
issistant branch manager for The Hertz Cor-
30rati;)n, Municipal Airport, Atlanta, Ga.
Sarah Fisher Pearlman is playing with a
lew baby daughter who was born on August
14. The Pearlnians are living in Greensboro
it 1 1 3 West Avondale.
Karen Pfeiffer is mathematical cost control
employee for Rogers Foam Corporation, Bos-
on. Mass.. where she lives at 200 Common-
vealth A\enue.
Emplmjed by Wadley Research Institute,
3allas. Texas, Carolyn Davis Pohlkotte is a
esearch assistant. Her husiband, '63 graduate
5f N. C. State, is with Ebasco Services, Inc.,
Dallas. The counle lives at 2834 Wells Road,
Irving, Texas, 75060.
To Margie Acton Poole, whose father died
n Februan.-, we extend belated sympathv.
Uargie and her family. Dr. Peter and daugh-
ers Leslie and Lori, have recently moved to
'voryton, Connecticut, where Peter has begun
1 dentistry practice.
Sue McCarthy Richmond rates some hoo-
ahs. Reason is little Laine Sue, born July 7,
n Columbus, Ohio, where the Richmonds
ive at 299-.^ South Ashburton Road.
Virginia Crawley Sample of 20142 Pacific
Drive, Cupertino, Calif., has a son, Robert
Clifton II, born December 20, 1962.
Bettve Davis Tillman Sanders is living at
240 Hamilton Street North West, Apartment
3. Washington, D. C, 20011.
Janet Schnable was married last December
29 at \\'estport. Conn., to Bruce John Sea-
burg of Fairfield, Conn. They are living at
481 Bronson Road, Southport, Conn. Janet
teaches art at McKinley School in Fairfield.
Mr. Seaburg attended Upsala College, East
Orange, N. J., and is a communications con-
sultant for Southern New England Telephone
Company.
Camilla Simpson ma\ be reached at
\\\'C.\. Jacksonville, Fla.'
Sandy Nlargolis Smiley is li\ing at 5 Lanark
Road, Glen Lennox, Chapel Hill, after two
vears in Florida. Her husband is in the school
of orthodontics at UNC-CH.
Mary Sparger has married Donald Lester
Davis. TKey are living at White Plains, N. C.
Mar\- is caseworker for Surry County Depart-
ment of Public Welfare.
.'\ddress for JuUa Hudson Sugg: 338 West
Kivett Street, Ashcboro. She is a high school
English teacher.
Avis Svlvia has iiioxed to Webster .\\cnue.
Bradford, R. I.
Martha Allen Thomas and her dentist-hus-
band ha\e begun a three-year Air Force
assignment in Madrid_. Spain. The mailing ad-
dress is: Capt. and Mrs. Robert E. Thomas.
Box 4054, 3970th USAE Hosp. SAC, APO
283, New York, N. Y.
-Martha Harris Thompson has a new ad-
dress: EMMHP. Lot 18, Fort Eustis, Va.
Keith Jones Turrentine and her husband.
Will, have T\\'0 new things: a daughter,
born on September 3, and a new house at
2312 Danbur\- Road in Greensboro.
Mary Linda Wall was united in marriage
this summer to Dr. Dawson Emerson Scar-
borough. Jr., in Green,sboro. Dr. Scarborough
graduated from UNC-CH and UNC-CH
School of Medicine. He served his internship
at the Medical College of \'irginia and is a
physician with Caswell Training School in
Kinston, where they live in ,\partiiicnt 1-A
Kinston .Apartments.
Paulette Peters Weisner has moved to 284
Wilson Road, Wadsworth, Ohio.
Sue Winstead is teaching abroad. Address:
Bamberg American Schools, APO 139, N. Y.,
N. Y.
.\ military ceremony united Doris Caroline
Wiseman and Capt. Icrr\- D. Boulton, USMC
in Plumtree. S. C, on August 2. Doris is
teaching in Beaufort, S. C, where the couple
makes their home. Capt. I3oulton is a gradu-
ate of Iowa State LInivcrsitv.
'61
Emily Herring
Dept. of English
Wake Forest College
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Phyllis Cole Andrews is working on her
master's dgeree in librarv science at UNC-
CH.
Ardith Hay Beadles has mo\ed to 61 50
Springhill Drive, Apartment 301, Grecnbelt,
Md.
Helen Brown Blakely lives at 2600-A Wed
dinrtpn Avenue, Charlotte.
Kay LaFemey Bowman and Jim proudly
announce the birth of their first child: a son.
James Scott, on August 5. Kay is delighted
with her role-change from teacher and class-
room to full-time housemaker and mother at
720 Greensboro Avenue in Sanford.
Nancy Fay Broda and Milton Gary Wood-
lief were married September 1 in Beaufort.
They will live at 1403 Cherry Avenue in
Charlottesville, Va., where the bride is em-
ployed as a home economist and the bride-
groom as an industrial power representative
for the Virginia Electric and Power Com-
pany. He is a graduate of N. C. State.
Dot Hull Busick is teaching in Greensboro.
Husband Ken is attending Guilford College.
Mary Alice Carson and Olen Alexander
Sisk were married on September 21 in Ruth-
erf ordton. The bridegroom attended Western
Carolina College and is now serving in the
.\ir Force.
Brenda Williams Carter, whose address is
Box 468, Whiteville, is working as a secretary.
Martha Yoder Choate of 326 East Water
Street. Lincolnton, is a case worker for the
welfare department there.
Linda Gamer Clapp is to be congratulated
on the birth of a baby son, .\ugust 30.
Jane Cochran heads the Dairy Council in
Columbus, Ga. She works closely with the
schools and is a favorite speaker with various
community groups.
Christa Lei, new daughter for Hazel Taylor
Cruikshank^ arrived May 24 at Triplar Hos-
pital, Honokilu, Hawaii. Their address. 309 5-B
Forrestal Avenue, NAS Navy 14, FPO San
Francisco, Calif., 96707.
Jo Ann Davis is living at 1315 Randall
Court, Madison, Wisconsin. She has a teach-
ing grant in the English department of the
University of Wisconsin. On June 9 she re-
ceived an M. A. degree from Pennsylvania
State University.
Suzanne Marie Devinant is teaching art in
the Greensboro schools.
Sue Gettvs Ford has moved to Ai)artnient
1.115 Birch Street, Redwood City, Calif.
Mary Aan Gaskins Foreman is teaching in
the Elizabeth City Schools.
Paula Franklin is now Mrs. John S. Reep
and lives at College Village, Apartment 18-1,
\\'inston-Saleiii; where she teaches in the city
schools.
Jennie Marlev Fn' is living at I 37-C Pure-
foy Road, Chapel Ilill.
Sandra Green Frye and husband Ken have
a new son born the weekend of reunion, and
named for his father. The Fryes have an
attractive new house at 127 Mar\wood. High
Point.
Claudia Haynes has mo\ed to 43 Ambler
Road, .'Xshevillc.
Glenda Humphries has entered the Univer-
sity of Tennessee as a graduate student to work
on a master's degree in Home Economics. Her
major w ill be home management with minors
in textiles and the related arts.
Diana Evans Jenson is a graduate student
and living at 320 Roosevelt Street, Blooming-
ton. Indiana.
Dorothea Johnson is a part-time assistant
to the Director of Elliott Hall and a part-
time graduate student at UNC-G, where she
lives in the North Spencer Annex.
Estelle Carabateas Kandara of 624 Bellview
Street. \\'inston-Salem, is teaching in the
schools there.
Louella Kidd is teaching first grade in Ger-
manv this vear. Address: Bamberg American
Schools, APO 139, N. Y., N. Y.
Theresa Knudson is a fifth grade teacher
and fixes at 4429 Butterworth Place North
West, ^^'ashington, D. C, 20016.
)pctober 1963
51
Barbara Little plans to finish work on her
Ph. D. in English at the University of Penn-
s^■l\■ania this year.
.\licia Conrad Long is teaching twelfth
grade at ^\"alter Williams High School in
Burlington. She stays busy supervising ex-
tra-curricular school activities and taking care
of a new Dobemian pinscher pup.
Mar. Elizabeth Manning was married in
Raleish on June It to Marvin Longworth
Slate ~lr. of High Point, who was graduated
cum Uiude from Wake Forest College and re-
ceived his master's in June from the Univer-
sit\- of Wisconsin. He entered the .\nTiy in
Julv as a second lieutenant. The coui^le is liv-
ing at 2538 Naylor Road South East. Apart-
ment 203, Washington 20, D. C.
Carol Christopher Mans has moved to
1036 Jamieson Road. Luthenille, Md.
To Diana Miller, whose mother, Sounea
Benbow Miller '27C. died on July 1, we ex-
tend sincere s\Tiipathy.
Martha Nahikian has moved to 6S Galax
Street, .\she\ille.
Julia Gardner Pindell and husband Jack are
living at 2 North 23rd Street, Wilmington,
now'that he has finished his master's degree
in music at East Carolina. Julia is housekeep-
ing, and Jack is junior high school band
director.
Sue Reid is a graduate student at UNC-CH
and lives at 714 Greenwood Street, Chapel
Hill.
Margaret Elizabeth Sikes has taught ele-
mentan- school in \\'ilmington for the past
two vears. This past summer Libb\- worked as
a secretary for S'tation WECT, Wilmington.
Jon Graham Smith has a new house on a
lovelv lake site in Gainesville, Ga. The
Smiths are the proud parents of a young son.
Linda Daniels Soderquist lives in Apart-
ment 1, 1221Q Pacific .\\enuc, Los .\ngeles
66, Cahf.
Linda Thornbcrg is attending High Point
College preparatorv to teaching. Her address:
P." O. Box 4145. .\rchdale Branch. High
Point.
In Hillsborough on Jul\- 6. Carolyn Ruth
West became the bride of John Charles
White. Both have been graduate students in
histon- at Duke University. Presenth- their ad-
dress is the Department of Social Sciences.
Clemson College. Clemson, S. C.
Elinor Brandt ^^'inn is working as secretary
in the hospital of Cordova, Alaska. Husband
Billv works for the Northern Pacific Airlines.
Punt's mother visited them and her two
grandchildren this past summer. Cordova is
rebuilding after a million dollar fire. Billy
helped as a volunteer fireman with the other
townsmen in the small fishing village.
The First BapHst Church of High Point
was the scene of' the wedding of Sue Frances
Winn and Linvvood Alton Harris on .August
17. Both are emploved this year on the fac-
ulty of .Allen Jav School, High Point. The
groom received his education at High Point
College, has recently complete six vears of
military service witli the 230th Supply and
Transportation Company of N. C. National
Guard at Greensboro. Address: William-Mary
.\pts. 37-C, High Point.
Elva Kenyon Wood is now Mrs. Irvin Ray-
mond Bonnin, since their ceremony in New
Orleans, La., June 15. Elva is dietitian for
the Tulane Cancer Clinic-al Research Unit.
Her husband is a graduate of McNccse State
College, Lake Charles, La. Named to the na-
tional collegiate Who's Who, he is a senior
at Louisiana State University Medical School,
where he is a member of Phi Beta Pi medical
fraternity. Home address is 1210 .\nielia
Street, New Orleans 12, La.
52
'62
Mrs. Johnnv Lee Smith (Sarah Cooke)
Route 3, Box 160
Greensboro, N. C.
Gail \'incent .\braham is living at 10430
Ambassador Drive. Rancho Cordova, Calif.
Katlierine Lynne Aliff married Francis De-
Lornie Roche in .\ugust in Roanoke, Va.,
where the couple will live at 2229 Denniston
.Avenue South ^^'est. Katherine is secretary
to the solicitor of the law department at Nor-
folk and \\estern Railway Company. Mr.
Roche was graduated from the Universitv- of
South Carolina, Columbia, with a degree in
business administration. He joined Kappa
Alpha fraternity and was once a page in the
S. C. Senate. He is currently employed with
Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.
Katherine Almond became the bride of Lt.
Thomas Wayne Robison in Albemarle on
-■\ugust 2. For the past three summers the
bri3e has worked here on campus in the cir-
culation department of the librar>-. Lt. Robi-
son received his degree in biology from the
University of Georgia, .Athens, Ga. He re-
ceived army training at Ft. Lee, Va., and is
stationed at Fort Bragg. He will make a
career of the Army. Until Jan. 10, 1964,
when they plan to be sent to Okinawa, their
address will be 227 Hillside Avenue, Fay-
etteville.
Mary Inez Arnold was married to Ens.
^\'alter \'ance Roberts, Jr., of the Na\y and
.\sheboro on .August 3 in Rocky Mount.
The couple is living in Norfolk where the
bridegroom is stationed. He received his
bachelor of science degree in business ad-
ministration from UNC-CH, where he joined
Sigma Pi Fraternity and Delta Sigma Pi, busi-
ness fraternity.
Jean Lucille Arthur and Patrick David
Hoey pledged their marriage vows in Wash-
ington, N. C, on August 24. They are living
at 1 59-A Taylor Avenue^ Colonial \'illage.
East Brunswick. N. J.
Annette Tarleton Bivens and Kenneth
Leon Oliver were married on June 30 in
Charlotte. Mr. Oliver is a graduate of Duke
University, vvhree he was president of his
sophomore class, a member of Beta Omega
Sigma honorary fraternity, and elected to
Who's Who Among Students at American
Colleges and Universities. He is presently a
student at Bowman Gray School of Medi-
cine, where he is a member of Phi Chi
medical fraternity. .Annette is teaching third
grade at Moore Elementary School, Winston-
Salem, where they are living at 408 Lockland
.\venue.
The ceremony of Mildred L. Blake and
William Charles Barrett. 111. took place in
Chadbourn this summer. The bride is teach-
ing this fall in elementary school at Sulli-
vans Lsland, S.'C, where they make their
home. The groom has entered the Pharmacy
School of the Medical College of Charles-
ton, S. C. He fonnerly attended Campbell
College and St. Andrews Presbyterian Col-
lege.
.\ ceremony in New Bern on June 1 ^
united Gladvs Sessonis Blanford and Pfc.
Hal Scott Jenkins. The bridegroom grad-
uated from Guilford College with a degree
in economics. He has just completed a course
at the /Air Defense School in Ft. Bliss,
Texas. The couple is living in Shreveport,
La., where the groom is stationed.
Linda Irene Brackett is now Airs. Leonidas
John Jones of 131 OF Leon Street. Durham.
Nancy J. Brunton became the bride of
Robert Howell Cox, Jr.. June 1 5 in \V'est-
field, N. J. The groom attended UNC-CH
and Los Angeles City College in California,
and received his degree in psvchology from p
Guilford College. He joined Sigma Chi Fra
ternity while in Chapel Hill and Phi Delta i
Psi Fraternity in California. He has entered
military service. The bride is at 903 W. Bes-
semer Avenue, Greensboro, where she will
teach at Archer School for the second year,
Blanca Calvo is now at Fordham Univer-
sity, New York Citv, in the Department of I
Bacteriology.
Kav Thompson Carpenter has a new
daughter, Kara Lisa, born May 16 at Shaw
-Air Force Base Hospital. Sumter, S. C. Ad-
dress: Lot :^22, Shady Grove, Broad Ex-
tension, Sumter.
Gwen Currin of 2227 Oak Hill Drive,
Greensboro. 27408, is teaching at Page Sen- j
ior High School.
Mrs. George Hayes Barr was formerly i
Linda Belle Denny before her marriage in i
Pilot Mountain on June 29. Mr. Barr is|
presently employed with J. P. Stevens audi
Co. in Roanoke Rapids, where the couple j
is living at 425 Jackson Street. He graduated]
from Chowan College at Murfreesboro. I
I'riedland Moravian Church, \\'inston-Sa-
lem, was setting for the wedding of Sarah
Elizabeth Ebert and W'illoughby Scott Brent,
Jr., on July 27. Mr. Brent, as well as his i
bride, is teaching in Winston-Salem. He re-j
ceived a degree in history and social studies I
from UNC-CH. Home address: Monticello!
.Apartments, 730 .Anson St. I
On June 15 in Raleigh. Linda Louise Ely]
was married to Arthur Ray Price. They arej
living in Apt. 2-D, Edgewood Knoll, Ashe-j
ville, where the bridegroom is employed by!
Calder and Crawley as a certified public ac-i
countant. Mr. Price received a degree in busi- 1
ness administration from UNC-CH. where ll
he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Pearl Fu, w'ho has been a case worker for
the Guilford County \\'elfare Department in
Greensboro, is studying at Tulane University:
this fall under a grant from the North Caro-
lina State Board of Public ^^'elfare.
Betty Jane Gardner said vows with Ervin
Bovd Edwards .\ugust 10 in Raleigh. Both
are employed with North State Engraving
Co., Greensboro. Mr. Edwards attended the
University of Manland extension program
while stationed with the U. S. .\niiv- in
Poitiers. France. New address: Box 405.
Route 9, Greensboro.
Bowling Green State University in Ohio
is retaining Jann Graham as a member of its
faculty. Working under a $2000 teaching
scholarship there, she completed the require-
ments for a master's degree at the end of
sumnier school, and she was promptly em-
ploved as an instructor in the speech depart-
ment with supervisor}- responsibilities in the
student tape recorder lab.
Patricia Annette Hall is now Mrs. Arthur
E. lacobson. Box 2782—962 AEWTC, Otis
.\ir Force Base, Mass., 02542.
Sp. 4/Sherrill Edsel Griffin, Anny, took
as his bride on June 1 5 in Peachland Flora
Faye Helms. She is an English teacher in
Grimsk^v High School, Greensboro, where
they are living.
Nancy Hewett, who has been with the
State Department for a year, left in Septem-
ber for a two-year assignment in Calcutta
India, where she will be working in the
consulate general's office.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
Judy Rhodes Hollis and her husband have
moved to 245 Parklawn Boulevard, Cohimbus
,13, Ohio. He is doing research for Bell Tele-
phone Laboratories.
I Judith Hubbard was married to James Da-
jvis Matthews in North Wilkesboro on June
j8. Mr. Matthews is a graduate of Wake
IForest College and is taking graduate work
in chemistry at the University of Tennessee.
New home is 136 Taliwa Court in Knox-
villc. Judith is home economist for the Utili-
Ities Board.
! Guilford County now counts Carolyn
Johnson as assistant home agent. She is li\-
in^ at 105 .'\dams Street here.
Rosa Johnston is now Mrs. David Elder
McCombs and is living in Germany for a
vear. .\ddress: E Company, 126th Maint.
jBn., .\PO 696, N. Y'., N. Y.
i Martha Alice Miles is working as a cub
';opywriter in Cambridge, Mass.
' On June 29 in the Alumnae House Diane
iPfaff was married to Herman \\'illeni
jPrakke. Diane is working on her doctorate
'it UNC-CH. Her husband graduated there
this spring with an economics degree. He
joined Delta Upsilon Fraternity and played
|i'arsit\' soccer. He expects to enter the .■\rm\
for discharge of his military obligation.
Dukette Daniels Phillips is married and
[living at 28930 Naranja Road, Leisure Citv,
Ra.
I Kermit Ann Ratledge has received a so-
tial worker scholarship from the state health
department. She plans to take a two-\ears
paining program which leads to a Master of
pocial Work degree at UNC-CH. During the
IMSt year she was employed as ju\enile
•rounselor with the Forsyth County Domes-
tic Relations Court in '\\'inston-Salem. Her
liew address is 112 Estes Drive, Chapel Hill.
' Mrs. Larr\' Gene Slawi:er was Courtney
\nne Roane before her marriage this sum-
jner in Greensboro. Mr. Slawter is a student
jit High Point College where he joined Pi
&ppa Alpha Fraternity. He is a member
)f the Air Force Reserve, and is assistant
uanagcr of Frank A. Stith Co., High Point,
vhere they live at 1711 Cedrow Drive. The
iride is teaching at Ferndale Junior High.
Judy Drake Rogers and Ann Harris Rogers
58 have a new nephew born to Mrs. Helen
logers of Lancaster, Calif., wife of their
ate brother-in-law, Frank James Rogers Jr.,
vho died earlier this year in an automobile
ccidcnt.
Shirley Scott has married Ilomcr N. Simp-
on. The couple is li\'ing at .\bcrton Dri\e.
juilford College.
Margaret Mover Sink and Da\id William
itzijatrick were married Julv 6 in Greens-
wro. Mr. Fitzpatrick received a bachelor of
rts degree in modern languages from Col-
ege of the Holy Cross, ^^''orcester, Mass.,
vhere he was on the Dean's List, the campus
lewspaper staff, and the Student Congress.
They are living at 6010 Emerson Street,
51adcnsburg, Md.. where both are employed
)y the U. S. Department of Defense as
nalysts.
Rudeen Smith and her husband Dewe\'
imith are living at lll-.\ .\rmstrong Drive,
lampton, Va.
Sylvia Ann Smith became the bride of
•Villiam Edgar Brown, Jr., in Kerncrsxille
September 7. Tlie bride is a registered nurse
nd is employed in Chapel Hill by the North
Carolina Memorial Hospital. Mr. Brown is
senior at UNC-CH. where he is in the
>re-law curriculum and is a member of the
Sonogram club. New address: Apt. 12, Max-
ell Street, Chapel Hill.
\'ows were solemnized for Carole Ann
Smither and Frederick William Greene in
Camden, S. C, on June 22. Mr. Greene is
a graduate of Guilford College, where he
maiored in economics. He is a member of
the Society for the Advancement of Man-
agement. He is currently sening in the .Air
F'orce.
Marilyn Lett SuttcUffe is now living at
931 Spring Lane #202, Bailev's Cross Roads,
\'a.
Nancy L. Swicegood became the bride of
William Eugene Reid in Tarboro on June
29. The groom attended Elon College and
is a second lieutenant in the New Jerse\'
National Guard. He is presently employed
by the Charms Co. in Asbury Park, N. J.
Thcv are making their home in Arbor Ter-
race Apartments, 73 5 Greens .Xvenue, Long
Branch, N. J.
Katie Jo Torrence has moved to 163 ID
Northwest Boulevard, \\'inston-Salem, N. C.
Nancy Trivette, a-wondering if we were
hit b\- an a-bomb which kej>t us from getting
out the a-lumnae magazine this past year, is
moving back to North Carolina and can be
reached at SOI Bellview Street, Winston-
Salem, N. C.
\'ows were solninized for Ellen Charlton
Walker and Dr. Lewis John Turner in Nor-
folk, Va._, on August 10. Dr. Turner pre-
pared for college at Randolph-Macon Mili-
tary' Academy; graduated from Duke Univer-
sity, Durham, where he joined Pi Kappa Chi
Fraternity, and in June from the School of
Medicine. University of \'irginia, Charlottes-
ville. He also belongs to Phi Chi medical fra-
ternity. .Vddress: 1015 Redgate Avenue, Nor-
folk, Va.
Tlie w edding of Jo Anna Watkins and Dan
Morrissette Averett took place August 10 in
Oxford. Mr. Averett graduated from Wake
Forest College where he was president of
Kappa Siania fraternity and president of the
Interfraternitv Council. He was named to
\\^io's Who in American Colleges and Uni-
versities. He has entered the School of Den-
tistrv at UNC-CH. The couole is at home,
9 5 Hamilton Road, Chapel Ilill.
Jane Hancock Wilson wed Harold .\llcn
Curren on .\ugust 24 in Kannapolis. Both
are graduate students at UNC-CH this fall.
Mr. Curran, a graduate of Washington and
Lee University, was a Robert E. Lee Re-
search Scholar and a Stephen's Scholar. Thev
live at Route 3, Smith Level Road, Chapel
Hill.
'63
Pegg^ Jean Alderman of 31 B Cameron
Court, Raleigh, is teaching fifth grade at
Wilev School there.
Frances .Alexander is teaching school in
Winstou-Salcm, where she lives at 165 IK
Northwest Boulevard South West.
Flora Green Allen and Needham Clifford
Crowe, Jr., of Raleigh were married on June
22 in New Bern. They are Jiving at 616-C
Glenbrook, Raleigh, where the bridegroom
is a student at N. C. State and is employed
by the N. C. State Highway Commission.
Judy Lee Allen is a medical technician in
the department of Physiology of UNC-CH.
She lives at 114 Henderson Street, .Apart-
ment 9, Chapel Hill, N. C, 27514.
Mildred Allen of 2210 Hope Street, Ra-
Icieh, is an interior decorator.
Kathr>n Allmond is teaching in the \'ir-
ginia Beach school system.
Pamela Apple and John Scoggin Crutch-
field were married on June 1 5 in Reidsville.
They are living in Miamisburg, Ohio, where
Mr. Crutchfield is employed as health phy-
sicist for Mounds Laboratory of Monsanto
Research Corporation. He received a bache-
lor of science degree in physics from N. C.
State, where he was a member of Delta Sigma
Phi Fraternity and the American Institute of
Physics.
Linda Armstrong is a secretary at Tennessee
Eastman Company, Kingsport, Tenn., where
she lives at 621 Broad Stret.
Sandra Ashford is teaching and lives at
2953 St. Andrews Lane, Chariotte 5.
Jane Barker of 928 Graduate House, Lafay-
ette, Indiana, is a graduate student doing
research in the area of microbiology at Perdue
University.
Mary Anne Battling was married to 2nd
Lt. Loyd George Brinson, Jr., of the Marine
Corp on September 1 in New Bern. They
live at 5 1 -.A Melrose Drive, Melrose Garden
Apartments, Triangle, Va. The bride will
teach the fifth grade in the Fairfax County,
Va., schools. The bridegroom is stationed at
Quantico. \'a. He received his bachelor of
art's degre in political science from Duke
University, Durham, where he joined Phi
Kappa Sigma Fraternity.
Joan Weinick Bates is living at 121 Nut
Bush Road in Greensboro.
Barbara Batts is now Mrs. Roger Tedder.
She is teaching fifth grade and living at 4011
Persimmon Street, Columbia.
Caroline Link Beach and Gary William
Bradford of Hudson were married on August
31 in Lenoir, where they are living at 115
Hibritten Street. Mr. Bradford graduated from
UNC-CH, where he joined Delta Sigma Pi
Fraternity. He entered the army last month.
Myrna Joann Beck of Route 1, Box 124,
Clarendon, is teaching vocational home eco-
nomics at Enfield Graded School, Enfield.
Gail Bennett has married Patrick Hill
Rupertus. Tlic couple is living at 615 Bau-
blits Drive, Navy Point, Warrington, Fla.
Gail is working as a secretary-receptionist.
Bonnie Bergren is teaching. She lives at
4050 Conshohocken Avenue, Philadelphia 31,
Pa.
Judith Bemath of 158 Buckingham Road,
Winston-Salem, is teaching.
Office clerk for 'Tliis Week" magazine is
new job for Lynda Biddv, who is living at
310 West 79th Street, Apartment 9EB,
N. Y., N. Y. _
Mary Biddy's address is 612 South Menden-
hall Street. Greensboro.
Peggv Black is now Mrs. Harold Jackson of
4024 North .Ashland Avenue, Chicago 13,
111.^^60613. Mr. Jackson received his bachelor
of arts degree in busines administration from
UNC-CH. He is employed by Iselin Jeffer-
son Company in Chicago.
Betty Jane Blake and Carlton Andrews
Baird said their marriage vows on June 22 in
Raleigh, where the bride will teach in the
city schools, and they will live at 1302 Gor-
man Street. Mr. Baird is a special agent for
the N. C. Fire Insurance Rating Bureau. He
graduated from N. C. State.
Mildred Blakey Greeson is homemaking at
46-A Melrose Avenue, Triangle, Va.
Judith Bock is a student at New York Uni-
versitv and lives at 40 Ingram Street, Forest
Hills 75. N. Y.
Mav Bonev is secretarv to Chancellor Wil-
liam B. .\vcock of UNC-CH and lives at 612
North Street, Chapel Hill.
Shirley Bosta is living at home, 1 2 Lake-
wood Drive, Hampton, \'a.
Margaret Ann Bostian was married to Cov
pctober 1963
53
Dean Fink on September 7 in Salsiburj-. The
couple is li\-ina at Denton's Trailer Court.
Can.-. The bride is employed in the note
department of ^^■achovia Bank in Raleigh,
where Mr. Fink is a rising senior at N. C.
State, wheie he is majoring hi chemical en-
gineering and is a member of the .\merican
Institute of Chemical Engineers.
PhvUis Bostic of If^ie Belvedere Drive.
Charlotte >. is teaching in the elementary
schools there.
.\ student tour through Central Europe
was on Anne Bourne's summer schedule. In
September she reported to Maxwell .-Mr Force
Base. -\la.. to begin basic training as an
.\nierican Red Cross hospital recreation
worker.
Peggy Bowen is now Mrs. Odell F. Fulk
and lives at 2512 Glenn .■\\enue, Winston-
Salem, where she is employed in the market-
ing research department of R. J. Reynolds
Tobacco Company.
Linda Bradshaw is teaching at: .\xton Ele-
nientan.- School, .\xton. \'a. Her residence is
\partment 2. 812 Jefferson Circle. Martins-
ville. \'a.
Betsv Brausa is now Mrs. Paul Erhardt.
111. of' 59 Market Street. Salem. \. ].
Aliene Breazeale is employed by the De-
partment of Public \\'elfare in Greenxille.
S. C where she lives at Route 7, Jervev
Road.
Rebecca Jean Brewer is teaching in the
elementan- schools in High Point, -where she
n-ia\ be reached at 1114 \\"est Ward .-\venue.
Brenda Britt is Mrs. Michael O. W'MeU:
of 610 \\"ashington Street, Raleigh, whree
she is employed as statistician in the Agri-
culture Economics department at N. C. State.
Carol Broadwell is a \-ocational home eco-
nomics teacher and li\cs at 506 Dall Street.
Madison.
Jean Broadwell of 110 West 5 5th Street.
.\]xirtment 7B, New York 20, N. Y.. is em-
ployed by an architectural firm.
Anita Brown is a secretar\- in Senator
Everett Jordan's office in ^^"a.shington, D. C
where she li\-es at ,\nartment 410. Capital
Plaza. 55 E Street North West.
Dee Brown is teaching eighth grade at
KuiL'htdale High School in Knightdale, where
she lives at the Teaeheragc on Hester Street.
Dorothy Brown is living at 2401 Ansle>-
Court. Charlotte, where she is teaching sixth
grade.
Judith Anne Buchanan and Robert Ra>
Harris were married in Raleigh during Juh .
The bride is teaching English in the city
schools there this fall. Mr. Harris, a graduate
of Atlantic Christian College, where he was
a member of Alpha Sigma Phi fraternitv, is
new- emploved b\- the State Highw-a\- Com-
mission. Thev are living at 2502 Bernard
Street. Raleigh.
Mar.- BuUock is a medical technician in
tern and lives at Route 2. Box 454. Greens-
boro.
Mary Helen Burcli is teaching home eco-
nomics at Glen Alpine High School.
Marie Bumette is minister of music and
education at First Baptist Church in Kerners-
ville and is continuing her work toward the
master of music degree here at UNC-G.
Lillie Carper of 2117 Cowper Dri\e. Ra-
leigh, is working toward her master's in bac-
teriology at N. C. State.
Mattj'c Cairaway of Route 1, McColl,
S. C, is doing her student teaching at St.
Andrews Presbyterian College. Laurinburg.
Jannette Carrineer is living in Greensboro
at 211 North Cedar Street, Apartment 37.
She has received a Graduate Assistantship
for $1,000 for this year awarded from the
Department of Historj- of UNC-G. She is
working toward a master's in .American His-
tory.
Nuptials took place in Thomasville during
June for Linda Anne Carter and Glenn Ra\
Miller, who is a graduate of Fair Grove
School and works at James Inc. in High
Point. Tlie bride is a member of the faculty
of the citv schools in High Point. The couple
li\es at 1002 Unity Street, Thomasville.
Mar>- Lea Carter of Route 2, Ellerbe, is
teaching fifth grade this year.
Rebecca Cash is teaching second grade at
W'rightsboro School \\'ilmington.
Suzanne Cato is now Mrs. S. L. Dilda. Jr..
of Route 1, Box 57, Fountain. N. C.
Mrs. David E. Peacock, the former Emily
Louise Chalk, is living at 521 West 6th
Street, .Xoartment 1, Topeka, Kansas.
Anne Chandler li\-es at 106 54th Street,
\'irgmia Beach, \'a., and teaches third grade
there at ^^'. T. Cooke School.
Jane Chandler has married Don Daxis and
li\cs at 5 52 North .\venue, Rock Hill, S. C.
Nanc>- Chew- is a graduate student in the
department of biochemistry of Bowman Gra\
School of Medicine. Winston-Salem.
Beth CUnkscales is a \-isiting teacher for
the Richmond Public Schools. She and
Teinpie Outlaw are apartment-mates, but we
do not ha\-e their address as yet.
Judith Clodfelter Canadv and her husband
Kenneth S. Canady are living at 65 Biscayne
Dri\-e North \\'est. Apartment 17, .-Atlanta
9, Ga. The bride is teaching at Belmont
Hills School, Smyrna. Ga.
Patricia Clontz is teaching at Smith High
School, Greensboro, where she Ines at 2227
Oak Hill Drive.
Nancy Cobb Smith and her husband Ens.
Olen Brown Smith Jr. of the Navy are li^'-
ing at 216 Birmingham •\venue. Norfolk
5.A'a.
Nellie Coble and Da\ id Ray Jones were
married on June S in Liberty. Tliey are li\--
ing at Route 3, Mebane. where the bride is
teaching fourth grade at South Elementary.
;md the bridegroom is engaged in farming.
He is a Mav graduate of N. C. State.
Jean Cochrane and Clyde Thomas Tunstall
exchanged marriage vows during July and
may be reached at Box 123, Garner, where
the bride is teaching at Vandora Springs
Elementary School. Mr. Tunstall is a graduate
of Campbell College, Buies Creek, where he
was cocaptain of the baseball team. He is
employed by Carolina Pow-er & Light Com-
pan\-. Raleigh.
Mrs. J. G. \'anno\- of 107A Student .-Apart-
ments, Wake Forest Collesre, ^^'inston-Sa-
lem. is the former Delide Coleman. She is
teaching fourth grade this fall.
Mildred Coleman is a system co-ordinator
for NCR Compan\- and lives at 2826 Monu-
ment .\\-cnue, .Apartment 6. Richmond. \'a..
25221.^
Camille Collins Ritts has a new son. Dean,
and is living at 5778-A Erne .\venue, EWA
Beach. Hawaii, 96707. Ensign Frederick Ritts
is serving three years Na\'\- duty in the Pa-
cific area.
Eleanor Cooke, mathematician for
N. .\. S. A. at Langlcy Research Center, is
living at 737 .-\dams Drive. Aoartment 5B.
Newport News. Va.
Lynn Cooper Powell is living at 306B .\sli
land Dri\-e, Greensboro.
Elizabeth Cordle is living at 2904 ^^'est
Cornvvallis Drive, Greensboro.
Brenda Cottinghani may be reached at 305
West Mountain Street, Kernersville
Sallie Covington is teaching and li\-es at
169 Baycliff Dri\'e, Rochester, N. Y.
Mary Ann Creech Lane li\-es at 2605 Bel-
mar Street, Greensboro, 27407. Her little girl
was two years old last April 13.
Diane Cuthbertson of 1848 Lynwood
Drive. Charlotte, is secretary in the adver-
tising department of Belk Stores Services.
Jeanne Davant is living at 511 Kenan Hall,
UNC-CH, where she is a graduate student.
Diana Ingram David married Gerald Tliom-
as Kilpatrick in Pinebluff during August. He
is a graduate of UNC-CH and currently a
student at Emory University School of Medi-
cine. They are living at 1525 Shoup Street,
Decatur. Ga.
Cvnthia Anne Davis Gutlirie is living at
1803 House .-V venue, .\partment 4B, Duke
and Duchess .\partments, Durham, where she
is secretary- at Duke University.
Dorothy Davis wed Joseph Sidney Moye,
Jr.. on September 7 in Greenville. They are
livine at 331 \\'est Rosemary Street, Chapel
Hill, where the bridegroom is w-orking toward
the master's degree in business administra-
tion at UNC-CH. He recei\-ed his bachelor
of arts degree from UNC-CH, where he
joined Sigma Nu Fraternity. Dorothy is
working with the psycholog\- research project
at Duke Universit\ School of Nursing in
Durham.
Elizabeth Davis is now- Mrs. Phillip H.
Shearin and Incs at 426 ^^'est Duke Circle,
Rocky Mount, where she is teaching.
Janice Dawson is doing graduate work here
at UNC-G.
Donna Denning is secretary in the office of
Congressman David Henderson in Washing-
ton, D. C. where she hves at Apartment
410, Canital Plaza, 55 East Street North
West.
Sara Derr and Thomas Phelps Gordon were
married on June 29 in Raleigh. They are
living at 513 Longxiew- Drive, ^^'aynesville,
and she is teaching second arade at Clyde,
N. C. Mr. Gordon attendecT Christ School
for Bovs. .\rden, and is currenth- a student
at ^^^estern Carolina College. Cullowhee
He serxed four xears in the Naxy and \\-as
aboard the .(Mrcraft Carrier USS Randolnh
when it recovered Astronaut Glenn after his
orbits of the earth.
Mary Jo DeYoung is now Mrs. Larr\- Leon
Leonard of 1232 Fort Bragg Road, Favette-
\-ille.
Sandra Dilday of 5605 Parkwood Drive.
.\partment -\. Greensboro, is employed
secretary by Southern Life Insurance Com-
panv.
"Mus" Donohue has enlisted in the Air
Force officers training school and been as-
signed to Lackland .\ir Force Base, San An-
tonio. Tex., for basic training.
Judyth Douglas of 908 Salem Street.
Greensboro, 27401, is teaching this fall.
Margaret Drunimond is teaching in the
iniblic schools of \'irginia Beach. \'a., where
she lives in .\Dartment 5, Blue \\'ater .-Xpart
ments, 207 12th Street.
Joyce Dunagin is teaching business sub-
iects at Northeast High School here in
Greensboro, where she lives at 909 West
^^'endover Avenue, 27408.
Carol Duncan is an interior designer with
.Man L. Ferrv Designers, 34 llth Street
North East, Atlanta 9, Ga,
Lois Easterling of 820 North Eugeng
Street. Greensboro, is teaching orchestra in
the citv schools.
Brenda Eddins is Mrs. W. S. Taylor ol
Box 4579. South Alston .-\venue, Durham:
where she is teaching.
Anne Eddy Daughtridge of 301 South
Mendenhall Street. Grec-nslMro. 27405. i
54
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
raduatt' student and assistant in the Eng-
sh department of UNC-G this fall. In June
■ was announced that she was awarded the
"annv Fav Wood Poetry Prize by the Acad-
my of American Poets. The prize, offered
3 a student of the Consolidated UniversitVj
/as for two of her poems. "Month of Snows"
nd "Dreams." She received SlOO and an in-
itation to enter a collection of her verse in
ompetition for the annual Lamont Poetry
ward. She is one of only 20 students in the
ountrv to be so honored this year.
Faith Edwards is living at Route 3, Lei-
ester. N. C.
Judv Ellenburg is teaching 11th grade Eng-
ish at New Hanover High School in W'il-
nington.
Nancy Jo Ellis teaches first grade at Craxen
elementary School, Greensboro, where she
ives at 838 West Bessemer Avenue.
Jean Evans is living at 45 Roxbun- Street,
A'orcester 9, Mass.
Ann Everett has an assistantship here at
JNC-G this year and is working on her
master's in child development.
Becky Lou Everhart married James Ed-
nund Spence III of Siler City on June 22
n Lexington. The bridegroom attended Wake
^'orest College, Winston-Salem, where he
oincd Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity. He
graduated from Pfeiffer College, Misen-
;ieinicr. and is in the real estate business in
Mler Citv. where the couple's address is
3ox 346.'
Carohn Everidge Tilley is teaching and
ives at' 519 Lockland .'\ venue, ^^'inston-Sa-
em.
Jacqueline Farmer, now Mrs. Eric Deaton,
ives at 528V2 Ashland Drive, Greensboro,
'-7403.
I Nanc>' F'errcU is a graduate student in the
iichool of Music here.
Gertrude F'innian of 2947 Forest Park
privc, Charlotte, 28209, is teaching.
' Mrs. Paul Bjorneboe, the former Marie
jFisher, mav be reached at Box 493, Hunters-
pile.
I Jean Flanagan is teaching physical educa-
lion at Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pa.
I Cleve Fletcher of 621 Broad Street, Kings-
port, Tenn., is secrctan" for Tennessee East-
|Tian Company.
I Marian Floyd is teaching at North Meck-
lenburg Hicrh School in Charlotte, where she
jives at 3909 Tuckascegee Road.
I Counselor at Industries for the Blind is
Martha Ford's new occupation. Her mailing
iiddrcss is Box 559, Greenville.
Jiidv Foreman is doing secretarial work
md may be reached at Box 350, Route 4,
kVashington.
I Dorothy Foster Sutton li\es at 1807
KV'alker Ax'cnue in Greensboro.
Joan Foster is now Mrs. W. Del Craft,
ir., of P. O. Box 126, Rural Hall. She is in
jhe marketing research department of R. J.
■ ilevnolds Tobacco Company.
I Judy Franklin is living in Apartment 21
jZIollege \'illage. ^^'inston-Salem, where she
leaches second grade.
, I Carol Freeman is teaching art in Spaugh
lunior Hi^h School, Charlotte, where she
: lives at 3741 Audrey St., Shamrock Garden
, Apartments.
Mar>' Anne Freudendorf is teaching fourth
; j;rade at Statcn Island .\cademy in New York.
r i Bettv Gail Fuller is a graduate assistant at
Dnc-ch.
i I Ann Jean FuUerton spoke her wedding
J I'ows with Douglas Edward White of Ahoskie
in August 10 in Charlotte. Their mailing
j liddress is P. O. Box 39, Wrightsville Beach.
iean is teaching English at Lake Forest Jun-
ior High School, Wilmington, where the
bridegroom is employed by N. C. State High-
wav "Commission. He is a graduate of N. C.
State, where he was chaplain and recorder
of Sigma Nu Fraternity.
Caroline Furey wed Loyd Thomas Powers,
Jr., on June 29 in Ashe\nlle. The bridegroom
is cmplo\ed bv the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board in the division of examination
and was transferred to Greensboro, where the
couple is living at Apartment 55, Starmount
X'lllage, 209 Revere Drive. He is a graduate
of \'PL where he was a member of Pi
Omega Pi honorary fraternity and Alpha
Kappa Psi professional business fraternity.
Caroline is employed as systems service rep-
resentative by International Business Ma-
chines.
Lvnn Ganim is teaching 10th grade Eng-
lish in High Point and lives at 311 Otteray.
Sallv Gav is living at 3110 Jersey Avenue,
Norfolk. Va., where she is home economist
with \'irginia Electric and Power Company.
Daphne Gentrv is doing graduate work
here at UNC-G this year.
Louisa Godwin is an analyst with the De-
fense Department and lives at 13013 Old
Stase Coach Road, Apartment 1916, Laurel,
Laura Golding is now Mrs. Fred L. Ilirsch
of 776 North East 87th Street, Miami, Fla.
Jeannie Gooden is teaching at Oakdale
Elementarv in Charlotte, where she lives at
2834 Chelsea Dn\e.
Pamela Anne Graham and Raymond Bart-
Ictt \\'arren were married on August 3 in
Keruers\ille. Tliev are living at 128-B Pure-
fov Road, Chapel Hill, where Mr. Warren
h4S entered dental school at UNC-CH.
Pamela is employed by Hospital Savings As-
sociation there.
Nancv Rose Gregory of Box 746, Brvson
Citv, has been teaching in Waynesville Jun-
ior High School.
To Beckv Griffin GOes, whose 9-day-old
son died on .\ugust 13, we extend siiicere
s\Tnpathv Beckv and her husband are living
in Lexington .Apartments (#10), Rivermont
\\cnue, L\nchburg, Va.
Bett\- Griffin Robertson lives at 2306 Mc-
Mullan Circle, Raleigh.
Dorothv Griffin is a secretary in Char-
lotte, where she lives at 1550 South Trv'on
Street. ^, ,
Patricia Griffin is mathematician at Naval
Research Laboratory and lives at 6202 Dallas
Place Apartment 204, Washington, D. C.
20031.
Susan Griffith is teaching and lives at ^02
Kensington Road, Greensboro, 27403.
Charles Holder Jackson and his bride of
August 10, Gwendolyn Lee Guffy, are liv-
ing in Raleigh at Fincastle Apartment B-S,
3109 Hillsboro Street. Gwendolyn is teach-
ing and Mr. Jackson is attending N. C. State,
wiiere he is majoring in forestry manage-
ment. He formerly attended Campbell Col-
B. If?'^
Nancv Gunn and Theodore Michael Chop-
lick of Islip, Long Island, N. Y.. were mar-
ried in Danville, \'a.. on June 23. The cou-
ple is living at 17 Smith .Wenue, Bay Shore.
Long Island, where the bridegroom teaches.
He is a graduate of State University, One-
onta, N. Y., where he joined Sigma Tau
Mpha Frateinitv.
Carole Lee Guv is now Mrs. John Howard
Dovle of 1 1 6 Bagley Drive, Chapel Hill. She
is teaching Spanish'and home economics at
Southern High School in Durham.
Elizabeth Hahn Martin is living at 130
Nisson Road, Tustin, Calif.
Carol Jo Hall of 726 Oak Summit Road,
Winston-Salem, is teaching second grade there
at Spcas Ivlementarv School.
Judith Hiurell is Mrs. Tommy Hand of
1218 Pamlico Drive, Greensboro, 27408.
Anne Hardison is living in Apartment 10,
Crew Apartments. Roanoke Rapids, and
teaching.
A public welfare worker for Lee County
Welfare Deiiartment in Sanford. Judith Har-
rington lives at 804 Park Drive there.
Janice Marsha Harris and Ira Gilbert Ber-
lin were married on June 9 in Chariotte.
The couple made a six-week trip through
Europe and are now living at 412-A North
17th Drive, Phoenix 7, Arizona, where the
bridegroom is attending graduate school of
the American Institute for Foreign Trade. He
is an alumnus of UNC-CH, where he grad-
uated in June with a degree in international
studies and was a meijiber of Tau Epsilon
Phi Fraternity.
Nettie Hartsell is nutrition instructor at
Cabarrus Memorial Hospital in Concord.
Marv Hassell is teaching art at Smith Jun-
ior High School in Chariotte, where she lives
at 245 Scoficld Road.
Mildred Hatley is now Mrs. H. Milton
Helms, Jr.. of P. O. Box 523, Gary.
Lollie Hawkins of 1214 North Pasteur
Street. New Bern, is teaching piano.
Mrs. diaries Talman, the former Carole
Haves, IS living at 133 Main Street, Waynes-
ville and teaches in the Hanvood County
schools.
Caroline Chapman Heffner is teaching at
Joyner Elementary School in Greensboro and
lives at 304-D Ashland Drive.
Nancv Hefner is a graduate student here
at UNC-G this year.
Marv Ross Henley is Mrs. Cleaton Lind-
sey of '201 West Salisbury Street. Pittsboro.
Dav Heusner's address is Box 176, Route
1, Durham.
Gayle Hicks and Terry La \'erne Fripp
were united in marriage on August 10 in
Henderson. Tliey are living at 1559 Walker
.\venue, Greensboro, and Gayle will continue
her graduate study "here. The bridegroom is
employed as an electrical engineer for Bur-
lington Industries. He is a graduate of The
Citadel and served in the Air Force for five
years. , „
Lura High is Mrs. John Gabriel Brecken-
ridge Regan III of Bikini Ai^artments #6,
55 Tenth Street, Atlanta Beach, Fla. Ens.
Regan is a graduate of UNC-CH, where he
joined Chi Phi fraternity.
Address for Carolyn Hildebrand is 109
Liberty Lane, Greensboro. 27410.
Anne Hinnant is teaching business subjects
in Buriington, where she lives at Apartment
6, Stafford Hall. Hall Avenue.
Donna Hinnant is a graduate student in
the field of education for the deaf at Gal-
laiidct College, Washington 2, D. C.
.\raininta Hobbs became Mrs. Wdlis Har-
vey Bell II in an August 31 ceremony in
Durham. Mr. Bell of Indiana, Pa., is a
fourth \'ear student in the Duke University
School of Medicine and will begin intern-
ship there in January. He was graduated from
Harvard University in I960. Araminta is pres-
ently employed as an interior decorator with
Claude M. Nlav, Inc., of Durham, where the
couple is living' at 605A Maplewood Avenue.
Mary Ida Hodge was announced during
July as the winner of a distinctive national
music award. The award is the national Sen-
ior Achievement .\ward given annually by
Mu Phi Epsilon national honorary music
sorority. It is given to the one outstanding
senior music major chosen from among the
80 collegiate chapters in the United States.
■ 'October 1963
55
This fall Man- Ida has enrolled as a grad-
uate student at University of Michigan. Her
address: 520 Madison Avenue, Apartment Q.
Ann Arbor. Mich.
Sammy Lee Hodges is teaching third grade
at Hillandale School in Durham.
Patricia Ebert of 2645-204 N. Van Dorn.
Bradlee Towers. Alexandria. \'a.. is teaching
fifth grade at Pimmit Hills Elementary
School.
Sarah Howie is a graduate student at UNC-
CH. where she lives in Kenan Dorm.
Elizabeth Hood Campbell lives at 620 Ihii-
versitj.' Drive in Greensboro.
Home Economist with \'irginia Light and
Power Compan\- is Rebecca Horn's new em-
ployment. She lives at 50i Duke Drive,
Chesapealce, \'a.
.\nn Howard is teaching at Earl Bradsher
School in Roxboro.
Gail Hudeins' address is ^IS W'oodrow
Drive, c/o Mrs. L. E. Tinslcy. High Point,
where .she is teaching.
Margaret Ruff in Humphrey was married
to Second Lt, William )ohn Owen of the
Army and Pl\ mouth. Pa., on June 15 in
Greensboro. The couijle is living at 36 Mathe-
son Road, Columbus, Ga. The bridegroom
is stationed at Fort Benning, Ga. Margaret
is teaching tenth grade at Muscogee County
School. Lt. Owen graduated in June from
the United States Military .\cademy, \^'est
Point, N. Y., where he was a member of
the fencing team, pistol and French clubs,
an athletic representati\e and a cheerleader.
Suzanne Humphrey of 803 Twyclcenham
Drive, Greensboro, is teaching.
Betty Hunt of 1 1 2 East Bayshore Boule-
vard, Jacksonville, N. G., 28340, is teaching
at Blue Greek Elementary School there.
Barbara Hurley, winner of a National De-
fense Foreign Language Fellowship, is study-
ing for the master's degree in Russian Lan-
guage and Literature at Cornell Universitv.
She lives at 19 Dome Lane, Wantagh, N. Y.,
11794.
Sara Jane Ison of 355 Eastover Road,
Charlotte 7, is teaching.
Mrs. James Donald Everhart, tlie former
Sharon Ivester, lives at 605 \\'est Market
Street in Greensboro. The bridegroom is at-
tending Greensboro College. He has com-
pleted four years in the Air Force.
Linda Jacobs says we have to wait until
Thanksgi\ing for her BIG news. Right now
she's teaching second grade at Virginia
Beach, where she lives at 106 54th Street.
Patricia Lynn Jerome is Mrs. Robert Allan
Bovd of 1311-D'\\''alker Avenue, Greensboro,
where she is working for Shelby Mutual In-
surance Company.
Linda Rose Jessup was married to Lester
Jackson Daniels of \\'inston-Salem on August
4 in Guilford College" The bridegroom at-
tended N. C. State for two years and is em-
ployed bv R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
in W'inston-Salem, where the couple lives
at 2560 Owen Drive. The bride is teaching
sixth grade at Lowrance Elementary School.
Carolyn Johnson Mundv lives at Route 1,
Mount Holly, and is employed as a secretary'.
Lucv Johnson is Mrs. Wilbur llildebrand
of 230 South Park Drive, Greensboro, 27401,
and is working as a secretary.
Joy Joines, research assistant at the Fed-
eral Reserve Bank of Richmond, lives at 2826
Monument .Avenue, Apartment 6.
Address for Anita Jones is 112 Plantation
Road, Fayetteville.
Gwendolyn Ann Jones is a graduate stu-
dent and teaching assistant at Kent State
Universitv, Kent, Ohio.
Gwendolyn Faye Jones was married to
Wiljiam Mike York, Jr., of Ramseur on
June 8 in Smithfield. Mr. York graduated
in 1962 from E]pn College, where he joined
Kappa Psi Nu Fraternity, The couple's ad-
dress is c/o Mr. E. C. Jones, 106 Parker
Street, Smithfield.
Juanita Jones is teaching public school mu-
sic, grades one through six, at Harvvinton
(Conn.) Consolidated School. She lives at 524
Prospect Street., Torrington, Conn.
Nancy Sue Jones is a graduate student at
Uni\ersity of Tennessee, Knowillc, on a
National Institute of Mental Health scholar-
ship.
Patsy Jones is teaching second grade at
Jamestown School and lives at 2227 Oak Hill
Drive, Greensboro, 27408.
Susan Mercer Jones and W . T. Casper,
Jr., were married on August 31 in Swans-
boro. Mr. Casper is attending East Carolina
College and served six months with the U. S.
Coast Guard last winter. Susan is a case-
worker with the Department of Public Wel-
fare in Tarboro, where they li\e at '?03
Main Street.
Claire Kalin is Mrs. Richard Sa\itt of 233
West End Avenue, Apartment 15-A. New-
York, N. Y. She is working as an employ-
ment interviewer.
Jeanne Kausch is teaching eighth grade
English m Hanover, N. J. Her address: c/o
Mrs. H. .\. Hess, 24 Morris Place, Madison,
N. J.
Patricia Keol is teaching French at South
Mecklenburg Senior High School in Char-
lotte, where she li\cs .it .\partmcnt 4. 2436
McClintock Road.
Cecilia Keist Anderson has a son, Charles
Calder Anderson III, born April 19. She
lives at 134 McCaskill, Fort Bragg.
Jeanette Kellenberger is a student at Bow
man Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Sa-
lem.
Dorothy Keller is living in Greensboro at
617B Fifth A\enuc and teaching.
Mrs, Ronald .\. Phelps, the former .Mieia
Kelly, lives at 1"01 Wilson Road, llcnder-
son\'illc.
Emilv Kellv is teaching English at Forest
Hills I-iigh School and li\es at 30=^ Maurice
Street, Monroe.
Katherine Kimrey married Michael Thom-
as Clayton on June 30 in Haw River, where
the couple's address is Box 383. The bride-
groom IS a graduate of Catawba College and
is employed by Caswell County School Sys-
tem as football coach and teacher.
Emily Kirby is Mrs. Gene Sellers of Sup-
ph', N. C where she is teaching.
Sandra KUng Windley of 422 .\ntlers
Dri\e, Rochester 18, N. Y., is teaching.
Ardena Klock is a student medical tech-
nologist at Moses H. Cone Memorial Hos-
pital in Greensboro. She li\'cs at 11 Spring-
dale Court.
Carolvn Kohler Friedberg li\cs at 943
High School Way, Mountain X'lcw, Calif.
Virginia Koonce is a graduate stiulcnt at
Columbia University in N. Y".
Martha Rose Lambeth married Ned Alex-
ander Gibbs, Jr., in a June 8 ceremony at
Thomasville. TTiey are living at 3751 Audrey
Street, Charlotte, where both are teaching.
Mr. Gibbs is a current graduate of David-
son College, where he joined Phi Delta Theta
Fraternit\-: was a member of Omicron Delta
Kappa, national leadership fraternity; a mem-
ber of Scabbard and Blade, militar>' hon-
orary; and was selected for listing in the na-
tional collegiate Who's Who.
Mary Lander is a stenographer for .Ameri-
can Oil Companv. She lives at 224 The
Prado North East.' .\tlanta, Ga., 30309.
Frances Lang became Mrs. Richard Dixon |
during the summer. Her husband is a grad- (
uatc of Duke University, and is a first-year
law student at UNG at Chaoel Hill, where
the couple resides at 91 Ma\"well Road, and
the bride teaches.
Clandette Leatherman of Route 4, Box
243, Franklin, is teaching at Franklin High '■
School.
. Myma Lee is teaching art in the public'
schools in Charlotte, where she lives at 1350 !
Mulberry Street.
Rebekah Lee is teaching in Lincolnton.
where she lives at 329 East Congress Street.
Jean Lewis and Norian Denny Fordham,
Jr., were married during the summer in Win-
ston-Salem, where thc>' are living at 237 Sun-
set Drive North West. Jean is teaching fifth i|
grade at Sherwood Forest School. Her hus- ]
band graduated from Mars Hill College and i
\\'ake Forest College. He had six months!
active duty in the .^rmy and is employed by I
Duncan Music Company as a salesman. '
Marilyn Linkhaw is teaching sixth grade;
at Claxton Elementary School in Greens-
boro, i
Jovce Lockhart is doing graduate study
here at UNC-G this year.
Nelle Gwynne Lowry and \\^allace Daniel
Rountree were married on June 23 in Pine-
ville. They live at 3910 Primrose Avenue
in Greensboro. Mr. Rountree, a graduate of
Duke University, served in the Army, acti\'e
.\ir Force Reserve, and is now in the inac-
ti\e Air Force Reserve. He is a member of;
the Greensboro Optimist Club and assistant;
manager for Thalhimcr-Ellis Stone's fashion
floor in the local store.
Ruth Luck's address is 1611 West W'.ud
.\vcnue. High Point.
Edna Mc.Aulav is teaching and lives in
HuntcrsMllc, N. C.
Rebekah McBane has a Woodrow Wilson
Fellowship and is studying at Tulane Uni
\crsit\ this year.
Carole McCuiston Meeks of 219 Kensing
ton Road in Greensboro is working as a
medical technologist.
Katherine McEwen is teaching fourth grade
and lives at 231 West 25th Street, Apart
ment 3-G. New York 1 , N. Y.
Gloria Mclntyre is teaching at Seversvilk
Elementarv School, Charlotte, where she
li\es at 3909 Tuckascegee Road.
Gwendolyn McLaurin and Alonzo Clyde
Edwards were married on June 30 in Fay-
etteville, where their address is Route 1.
Box 167. Mr. Edwards attended East Caro-
lina College, Greenville, and is self-emploved
as a constructionist. Gwendolyn is teaching
home economics in the Fayette\illc City
Schools.
Marion Kelly Mcleod and John Malcoln-
Coble were united in marriage on August 24
Thev are living at 3512 North Sharon-.Xmity
Road, Charlotte, where Marion is teaching
social studies at EasUvay Junior High anc
Mr. Coble is a member of the faculty o'
South Mecklenburg High School. He at
tended \\'ingate Junior College and grad
uated from UNC-CH. He taught last yea:
at West Stanly High School. j
Nancy McLeod was married to Boyti
Wavue Coggins of Sanfprd and the Army oi:
September 7 in Carthage. The bridegroom
a 1961 graduate in business administratioi
of UNC-CH, is stationed at Ft. Gordon
Ga., and before entering the .\rm\' he wa
emplovcd bv Dan Ri\cr Mills Corponition
Dan\illc, \'a.
Laura Elizabeth McMeans was married t'
Neil Carson Benson on .\ugust 17 in .-Xsht
\ille. Thcv arc living at 123 Mcl\ cr Stret
56
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORC
in Greensboro, where the bride is a graduate
assistant in the Enghsh department and work-
[ing toward a master's degree here at UNC-G,
and the bridegroom is employed by Pilot
Life Insurance Company. He attended N. C.
State and graduated from Guilford College
with a degree in economics.
Marilou Martin of 3805 Country Club
Road, \\'inston-Salem, is teaching.
! Susan Marvin of 1004 Minerva Street,
Durham, is teaching nursery and kindergar-
ten.
JoAnne Matthews is now Mrs. M. F.
Starling of Route 1, Autryville, N. C. She
is teaching home economics at Stcdm.m High
School, Stedman, N. C.
Ellen Mavo receives mail at her parents'
address, 1401 Heather Lane, Charlotte 9,
but she is working in New Haven, Conn..
jat the present as a supervisory trainee for
IConnccticut General Life Insurance Com-
pany.
j Carol Meadows is Mrs. Everett Blake, Jr.,
iof 1119 Raleigh Road, Wilson.
Mary Merritt was married on August 18 at
lM>rtle Beach .Air Force Base Chapel to
ICapt. James A. Hankins of Roswell, N. M.,
jand the Air Force. Thev live at 730.\ Hem-
jlock Street on the Base,' Myrtle Beach, S. C.
|Mar\ taught at Fayettcville Senior High last
l)"ear.
j Julia Miller was bride of Bruce Harden
'Kernodle of Graham on August 24 at Lin-
Icolnton. Tliev are living at lllOVi Hope
Street_, Raleigh, where Julia is employed as
an inferior designer by Raleigh Office Com-
pany, and the bridegroom is a rising senior
majoring in electrical engineering at N. C.
iStatc. He is a member of Pi Kappa Phi Fra-
jternity and Phi Eta Sigma, honorary fra-
ternity.
I Mildred Millner has entered the Lhnver-
:sity of Mar\land for graduate study. During
the suuinicr she worked at Danimasch State
Hos|)ital, \\'ils()n\ille, Oregon.
I Martha Ruth Mills was married to Rich-
lard Langdou Olive of Summit, N. J., on
August 17 in Richlands. Thev are living on
'Route 1, Box 30A, Baskmg R'idge, N. J. Mr.
iOlix'c graduated from the Law School of
UNC-CH this year. He also did his under-
graduate work there and joined Chi Psi Fra-
ternity and Delta Theta Phi legal fraternity.
He plans to practice law.
Beverly Mitchell Elmore is li\nig at 921
East Maron Street, Shelby, where she is
teaching at Shelbv Junior High.
Judith Mondy'of 750 Clifton Way North
East, .\partmcnt G-5, .Atlanta, Ga., is teach-
ing first grade at Midway Elementary School
in DcKalb County.
Mary Margaret Moore of 1208 Park A\e-
nue, Goldsboro, is teaching math at Clayton
High School in Johnson County.
Attendance Counselor for Elizabeth City
Schools is Madge Morris' new employment.
She li\es in the citi^ at Apartment 7, 605
West Main Street.
Kay Mull has enlisted in the Air Force
officers training school and been assigned to
Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex.,
for basic training.
Lois Myers is teaching first grade at
Latham Elementary School, Winston-Salcni,
where she lives in .-Xiiartment 21-B, College
^'illage.
Linda Nelson is a computor programmer
for J. P. Stevens and Company, Greensboro.
Cara Ellen Neville is home service agent
for UEPCO, Suffolk, Va.
I Geraldine Murray Newton and Charles
jMax Fox were married on July 21 in Bur-
llington, where they live on Route 6. Mr.
Fox attended Burlington Industrial Educa-
tion Center and is employed in Greensboro
as branch manager bv George Washington
Life Insurance Company.
Emma Nichols O'Steen lixes at 1007 North
Elam Avenue in Greensboro.
Chloe Nicholson Myers lives at 1203 Sum-
mit Avenue in Greensboro. Her husband is
in the service.
Kemp Norman is employed as a legal sec-
retary in Richmond, \'a., where she lives in
Apartment 6, 2826 Monument Ave.
Nancy Oakley has been temporarih- teach-
ing at Drcwry Alason High School in Ridge-
way, \'a.
Tempie Outlaw is teaching in Richmond
and sharing an apartment with Beth CUnk-
scales, but we do not have their address
as yet.
Carol Overstreet Zimmerman lives at 227' 2
Kensington Road here.
lane Page of 309 West Union Street,
Morganton, is a vocational home economics
teacher.
Elizabeth Park is a laboratory assistant with
Celanese Corporation. Address her at 3120
Darien Drixe, Raleigh.
Edith Parker is temporarily working as a
secretan-. Her address is 102 Mallette Street.
Chapel' Hill.
Sally Parkins li\cs at Route 2, Box 482.
Brown Summit.
Inez Parks Crisiiens of 1712 King Moun-
tain Road, Charlottesville. \'a.. has three
boys. 6. 9, and 1 1 years old respectively.
Her husband is a phamiacist and travels for
Eli Lilly Company.
Andre;! Parsons is a U. S. Government cm-
plo\ee and lives at 5409-G Ri\erd:ilc Road,
.\partment 5, Riverdale, Md.
Wilma Patrick of 617-B Fifth .\\enuc.
Greensboro, is teaching.
Karen Patton and Charles Stuart Poehlein
exchanged marriage \'0ws on July 1 3 in Ashe-
ville, where the couple is lix'ing at 25 How-
land Road, Apartment C-4, and the bride is
emploxed by Wachovia Bank and Trust
Company. The bridegroom, a graduate of
UNC-CH, is employed at Sears, Roebuck
and Company.
Betsy Perdue Neese is living at 2211 Pmc-
croft Road here.
Carolyn Perkins and Phillip Ray Graham
were married on June 15 in Yadkinville.
They are living at 143 Marshall Terrace,
Apartment 4, Danville, Va., where Mr. Gra-
ham is a management trainee at Dan River
Mijls. He is a graduate of N. C. State, where
he received a bachelor of science degree in
textile management in 1962. He is a mem-
1xT of Phi Psi textile fraternity.
Dorothy Perry married Darrell Brown Kelly
on July 13 in Durham. The couple lives in
Brookwood Garden Apartments IB, Burling-
ton, where Dorothy is teaching seventh
grade at Turrentine Junior High, and the
bridegroom is employed by ^^'estern Elec-
tric. He was graduated in 1959 from N. C.
State with a major in mechanical engineering.
Reba Penr is vocational home economics
teacher at Surry Central High, Dobson.
'Virginia Petkas is a decorator for Maximes
and lives at 301 Robin Hood Road North
East, Atlanta 9. Ga., 30309.
June Petree of 206 South Chapman Street
is teaching instrumental music in the Greens-
boro Public Schools.
Mina Philipps DuPre lives at 207 Spring
Street. Charleston, and is teaching.
Alice Phillips of 1321 Romany Road.
Charlotte 3. is an interior designer for Dor-
sey's Inc.
Janice Pickett married E. Dannv- Watson
on July 14 in Burlington. They are living
at 109 Herndon Avenue. Apartment A,
Mobile. Ala., where the bridegroom is em-
ploved by Air-Mark Inc., distributors of
Mooney Aircraft in Alabama and Florida.
He received a degree in business and junior
accounting from Danville Technical Institute
in N'irginia.
Mailing address for Lynda Pickup: c/o
Mrs. Thomas Basd, 1704 Cedar Park Road,
.\nnapolis, Md. Lynda is teaching third
grade.
Linda Pitts of 614 North Main Avenue,
Newton, is a furniture d.esigner and con-
sultant.
Susan Poe has married Lt. \\illiam F.
Tamplin, Jr., and thev arc stationed at Fort
Bragg, where they live at 105 McCu.skill
Place. Susan is teaching school.
Carolyn Ponzer, who lives in Greensboro
at 1104 Briarcliff Road, has begun a one
year internship in medical technology at
Cone Hospital.
Margaret Poteat is teaching and lives in
.\partment 201. Cimarron .Apartments. Park
Road. Charlotte.
Brenda Potter married \\'illiain Brothers
Harris during the summer. They are living
at 3701 Hester Circle. Colewoocl Acres. Ra-
leigh. Brenda is teaching. Mr. Harris attends
N. C. State, where he is a member of Delta
Sigma Phi Fraternity.
Martha Jane Preston was married to Her-
man Lee Blackburn on August 24 in Belews
Creek. The couple is living at 700 Anston
Street, Winston-Salem, where the bride is
employed as a secretary by R. J. Reynolds
Tobacco Company. Mr. Blackburn, a grad-
uate of Walkertown High School, completed
six months of active duty vv'ith the Army Re-
serve and is cmploved in the office of Caro-
lina Garage, Inc.
Linda Price and William Butler Brown
were married on Aiigust 24 in Goldsboro.
They are living at 2521 Palisades Avenue,
Riverdale. N. Y. Mr. Brown is with Chubb
and Son Insurance Companv in New York
Citv. He is a graduate of UNC-CH.
S'arjh Ellen Proffitt of 428 Westwood
Drive. Chapel Hill, is a graduate assistant at
UNC-CH.
Martha Pyatt has begun a year of medical
technology training at Gone Hospital in
Greensboro.
Judy Ramsey is teaching in Charlotte,
where she lives at 3761 .Audrey Street.
Christina Rankin's address is 212 Overman
Avenue, Salisbury.
Martha Carolyn Ray and Franklin Murphy
.\veritt, Jr., were united in marriage during
June in Fayettcville. The bride is teaching
at Philo Junior High in ^\'inston-Salem,
where the couple is living at Apartment F24,
Monticello .Apartments, 700 Anson Road.
Mr. Averitt is a graduate of Wake Forest
College, where he received a B. S. degree in
biology. He is a member of Kappa Sigma
Fraternity.
Barbara Reid Byers' son is almost two
vears old. The familv lives at 806 Demcrius
Street, .\partmcnt T-3. Durham.
Suzanne Rice of 1 306 Hinmau Avenue,
Evanston, 111., is physical education teacher
at New Trier Townshio High School. \\'in-
netka. 111.
Grev Riley is graduate assistant in our
School of Music this year.
\'irginia Rilev Rinuner's address is Route
1, Hurdle Mills'. N. C.
Elizabeth Ripley and .^rch Kerper Schoch
I\' were married on June 22 in Hinh Point.
The couple lives in Towne House Apart-
mentSj Chapel Hill, where the bridegroom
(lOrtoter 1963
57
will be in his final year of UNC-CH Law
School. He attended the University of \ir-
ginia and received his bachelor of arts and
laws from UNC-CH. where he made Phi
Beta Kappa, joined Sigma Chi Fraternit>-
and is a member of Phi Delta Phi legal fra-
ternity. He is on the staff of the North
Carolina Law Review.
Jeanette Roderick is a student in the
School of Social \\'ork at UNC-CH.
Patricia Rogers' address is 1111 Henderson
Street. Apartment Q. Chapel Hill.
Bett>- Anne Rogerson is teaching at Kcllam
High School. \'irginia Beach. \'a.
Nancv Jo Ross li\es at Pleasant Garden.
N. C.
Naiicv Roth of 2713 Rittenhousc Street
North ■S\"est. Washington 1^, D. C, 2001 S.
is an anahst with the Department of De-
fense.
June Rubin is teaching and lives at 3^)28
Madison Avenue in Greensboro.
Patricia Ann Rudisill Knowles' address is
Box 156, Cherr\\ ille. N. C. She is nursing
at \\'atts Hospital. Durham.
Patricia Russell is Mrs. Edgar ]. Curtis, Jr..
of Apartment E-4. Carolina Gardens. Co-
lumbia. S. C. where she is teaching at Hand
Junmr High.
Martha Rutledge is teaching third grade
and lives in Apartment 208. Cimarron Apart-
ments^ 5126 Park Road, Charlotte.
Peggy Sadler is Mrs.. Lee \'aughn of
Route 2, Burlington, where she teaches at
\\'estern High School.
Judith Salko Murray lives at f)l 5 Hill Street
in Greensboro.
Patricia Sanders is second lieutenant in the
U. S. Marine Corps Reserve and has been
stationed in Quantico, Va.
Lois Gaylor SandUn is home service repre-
sentative for Duke Power Company in
Greensboro and lives at 838 West Bessemer
.\\enue.
Carleton Savage and Thomas Peter Maury,
Jr., were married on September 21 in Ra-
leigh. Mr. Maury of Nassau, Bahamas, where
the couple is living, was graduated from
Staunton Military Academy and later at-
tended UNC-CH. He is associated with his
father in the import and export business.
Barbara Scott is teaching at Jamestown Elc
mentan- School. Jamestown, N. C.
Carolyn Scott married James Lyman
Hughes of Richmond, Va., during the sum-
mer. They are living at 619-A Williams
Street, Fredericksburg, \'a. Carolyn is taking
education courses at Mary Washington Uni-
versity. Mr. Hughes is a 1961 graduate of
^^'ashington anf Lee LIniversity, where he
was named to Phi Beta Kappa. He was a
A\'oodrow Wilson Fellow at UNC-CH last
year.
Carol Self is Mrs. M. Ray Williams of
2720 Evergreen Drive, Greensboro, 27408.
Rebecca Sharpe Heath's mailing address is
Box 385, Durham Road. Chapel Hill, where
she is a technician in the Hematology Lab-
oratory' at Memorial Hospital.
Quinelle Shipp Skelton lives at Oil North
Cliurcli Street, Spartanburg, S. C.
Marion Shook is a junior high school teach-
er and lives at 1121 West End Boulevard,
Apartment 3, Winston-Salem.
Address for Rose Marie Sidbury: Box
178-B, Route 4, Greensboro. She is teaching.
Virginia Sikes is junior and senior high
school band and choir director in Morence.
S. C.
Linda Silver is teaching history in Nyack,
N. Y.
Penelope Slacum is a student at Indiana
Unixersity. Bloomington, Ind., where she
lives in the Graduate Residence Center.
Carole Slaugliter is teaching at Sedgefield
Junior High, Charlotte, where she lives at
1225 Ideal \\'av.
Ann Smith of 296 South Mam Street,
Highland Falls, N. Y.. is teaching music at
West Point Elementary School.
Eleanor Smith is teaching eighth grade
art at Corkran Junior High, Glen Burnie,
Md,
India Smith married Philip Littleton dur-
ing the summer. Thev are living at 31 Lake
\"iew Mobile Court, Route 2, Chaix:l Hill,
where India is working as a clerk in Me-
morial Hosoital. and her husband is attend-
ing med school at UNC-CH.
Jovce Smith Fulk of Route 2, Dobson, is
teaching first grade.
Lois Smith 'of 948 Hill Street in Greens-
boro is teaching.
Martha Anne Smith became bride of Lt.
(j. g.) Alexander Howard Decker of Greens-
boro and the Navy on June 8 in Albemarle.
Tlie>' are li\'in£ at 41 1 Fort Worth Avenue,
Apartment I, Fforfolk, Va., where the bride-
groom is stationed and Martha is teaching
fourth grade at Virginia Beach. Lt. Decker
graduated from UNC-CH. where he was a
member of NROTC.
Mary SmoUen of 410 Brookside Drive,
Greenwich, Conn., is technical editor for
The Manson Company. Stanford. Conn.
Ha\ing been awarded a Fulbright Scholar-
ship to study Austrian Literature at the Uni-
\ersit>' of X'ienna. Edwina Snow left for
^'ienna, Austria, in September.
Elaine Sowers was married to Virgil Daw-
son Strider on August 10 in Advance. They
are lixing at Apartment 202-B, Lindley Park
Manor, Ashland Dri\'e, Greensboro, where
the bride is teaching at Irving Park School,
and the bridegroom is credit manager for
W. I. Anderson, Inc. Mr. Strider is a 1961
graduate of UNC-CH, where he was vice-
president of Delta Sigma Pi Fraternity his
senior year. He is a member of the Coast
Guard Reserve.
Dorothy Spoon and Howard \\'ayne Hum-
ble were married on July 6 in Liberty. They
are living at 1036 North Mebane Street,
Burlington, where the bride teaches. Mr.
Humble completed a two-year machinist
course at Burlington Industrial Education
Center and is employed in Greensboro by
Duplicon Company.
Peggy Stanley is a caseworker for Colum-
bus Countv Welfare Department, White-
ville.
Gwendolyn Starling is teaching and lives
at 138 Spilth Main Street. Apartment 1.
Randleman.
Joan Stass is li\'iug at 614 Northridge
Street, Greensboro, 27403, and is a student
in medical technology at Cone Hospital. She
received the following faxorable editorial
comment in the Greensboro paper during
August: "It's the beautiful, clear soprano
voice of Joan Stass, so suited for folk music,
that we're hoping to hear lots of in the fu-
ture. Joan is one-third of the Gate City
Singers, the other two-thirds being singer
Steve Garrett and guitar accompanist Tommy
Tom]jkins."
Edna June Staton is Mrs. Da\id Stallings
of P-112, M. S. H., N. C. State. Raleigh,
where she is a research assistant in the soil
science department.
Rebecca Anne Steohens' mailing address
is 209 East "F" Streef, Erwin.
Jean Stone is teaching in the Charlotte-
Mecklenburg Schools.
Anne Straughan is liusincss education
teacher at \'irginia High School, Bristol, \'a.,
where she lives at 504 Euclid Avenue.
Berta Albright Stroud and David Wood
Swain were married on April 14 in Faison.
Tliey are living at 2225 Bernard Street, Ra-
leigh, where the bride is teaching in the city
schools, and the bridegroom is attending
graduate school at N. C. State as holder of
a National Science Foundation Fellowship.
He is a member of Kaopa Epsilon Fraternity
and several honoraries including Phi Kappa
Phi and Phi Eta Sigma.
Anne Sullivan is teaching fifth grade in
Devon, Pa.
Mary Ann Sutton is teaching high school
and lives at 313 Camden Street, Wadesboro.
Ann Sutton's address remains Box 144,
Franklin. She is teaching.
Gayle Sutton and Roy Harris Badgett were
married on August 1 1 in Thomasville. The
couple lives in Garner, where the bride is
teaching. Tlie bridegroom is a rising senior
at N. C. State, where he is majoring in
textile technology'.
Carol Stutts of 804 Crescent .\\enue,
Shelby, is teaching school.
Margaret Swart is teaching at Mineral
Springs Junior High and living in the Monti-
cello Apartments in Winston-Salem.
Assistant in sales research for Retail Credit
Compan\\ Atlanta, Ga.. is Eugenia Sykes'
new employment. She lives there at 247 The
Prado North Fast.
Pave Tart's permanent address remains
Route 1, Newton Gro\e.
Anne Taylor Warner is li\ing in Nash
ville. Tenn., and teaching art in high school.
Her husband is going to graduate school.
Their son Philip is four years old.
Rena Terrell is teaching sixth grade at
\'irginia Beach, Va., where she lives on 58th
Street.
Janet Thomas lives at Beachcomber Motel,
Atlantic Beach. N. C.
Janice Thomas is going to graduate school
this year and lixes at 4204 Lone Oak Road.
Nashville, Tenn. Next year she plans to study
in Rome, Italy.
Barbara Thompson of 230 West Market
Street. Salisbury, is teaching at Boyden High
School there.
Sue Thompson is teaching in \\'inston-
Salem .
Toni TTiompson lives at 2005 Pine Bluff
Street m Greensboro.
Lea Tiller Ross is living at 215 Batson
Road, Brevard, 28712. Her daughter Kath-
leen Patricia is nine months old.
Anna Tinkham of Route 10, Box 36^,
Charlotte, is teaching first grade.
Elizabeth Toth is secretary for London
Records and lives at 337 East 21st Street.
N. Y. 10, N. Y.
Sylvia Tucker teaches at Montrose School
for Girls, Reisterstown, Md.
Ruth Turner is home economist for Pub-
lic Service Gas Compan\', Raleigh, where she
lives at 1425 Dunlin Road.
Ridley Tyler "Smith of 5909 Ballinger'
Road, Guilford College, is teaching.
Diana Underwood Davis' address remains:
2510 Pecan Drive. Favetteville, because she
and her Xa\'>' husband arc on the ino\e about
even- two months.
Carolyn \'aughn Gilbert lives on Bass,
Lake Road. Amston Lake. Ainston. Conn.
Dale Vaughn is employed as a secretary]
and lives at 231 North Colonial Homes
Circle North West, Atlanta 9, Ga.
Linda Vernon of Box 1 50, Stokesdale, is
working in display adv'crtising.
Denise Vick is assistant home economici
agent and lives at 306 East Sth Street,
58
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
Greenville.
Edith Vortretflich Sloan lues at 3808
Kirby Dri\e in Greensboro.
Alma Waters i.s in graduate school at UNC-
CH.
Jean ^^'atts Berlin may be reached at P. O.
Box 796. Cheyenne, \\'\Q. Jean and her hus-
band are running the Chevenne Countr\
Club.
Carol \\'ebb Incs at 428 Cnroluia Circle.
Durham.
Linda Webster has accepted a position
with Dr. Samuel To\e, research professor
with N. C. State, as bio-chemical research
technician. She is living at 1S06 Nichols
Drive, Raleigh.
Deborah Weinstein Miller is living at 209
Revere Drive, Green.sboro. 27407.
Carol Weir is home economics teacher at
! T. C. Roberson Hiah School, Buncombe
County. She lives in Asheville at 1741 Hen-
dersonville Rd.
Nelda A\'elborii Pool of 118 State Street.
j Marion, is teachinti.
[ Barbara Welch Poovey lives in Bluegrass
.\partments #121, 1 S S S Chestnut Street,
I Bowling Green, Ky.
! Jeanne Westbrook Pope's address is
Drewryville, Va.
I Ila Jean ^^'idenhouse, who married Silas
I Ted Christenburv last Februarv, is living at
I 2473 Perring ^ianor Road, Baltimore 34,
I Md.. where Sir. Christenbury is employed as
an engineer for Aero-Space Division of Mar-
I tin-Marietta Company and is doing graduate
I work at Drexel Institute of Technology. He
1 is a 1961 graduate of N. C. State, where he
I majored in nuclear engineering and joined
! Sigma Pi Fraternity.
.-\fter her .August 30 return from .\frica
I Judith Wiggins married Thomas Edward
I Plott in Bryson City on September 7. Their
address is Box 542. Jacksonville, N. C, where
Mr. Plott is employed by Onslow County
Department of Health. He is a graduate of
' Western Carolina College, Cvdlowhee, where
I he majored in business administration.
] Janet Wiggs McLeod lives at 1425 Sum-
I niit Avenue, Fayetteville.
I Charlotte Williams teaches at Boston A\e-
i nue School. DcLand, Fla.
i Jeaneane ^^'illiams is teaching English at
I Southern .Mamance High School, Graham.
i Lois Williams is physical education teacher
I at North Bethesda Junior High School m
I Montgomery County, Md., and lives at 8804
I Bradford Road, Apartment 5, Siher Springs,
i Md.
I Virginia Williams became Mrs. R. Grad\'
I Love on August 17. They arc living at Co-
I lumbia Seminar.', Decatur, Ga., where the
j bridegroom is a student.
• Carolyn Williamson Mathis li\es at Route
1 1, Clinton.
I Beth Wilson is teaching at Kempsville
I Meadows Elenientar>' School in \'irginia
Beach, Va.
Brenda Joy Wilson Hartsell is li\ing in
Bel Meade .\partments, 2431 Drake Street,
1 Richmond 34, \'a.
I Connie Wilson Short lives at 1450 Acad-
emv Street, Charlotte 5.
! Thelma Elaine ^^'ilson lives in Greensboro
I at 2006 Liberty Drive. She is teaching.
i Brenda Winstead ma\- be reached at Route
I 6, Sanford.
! Address for Elizabeth Withers: 1621 Rus-
1 sell Street. Charlotte 8.
I Joyann Wohlbruck is working temporarily
I in New York but her niailina; address rc-
' mains: Route 1. Box 382, Matthews, N. C.
Mar\' Womble Mooring's address is Box
~. Nashville, N. C. She teaches in Rocky
Mount Cit\- School System.
Brooks \\'oodard's address is 411 North
Bloodworth Street, Raleigh, 27604.
Sylvia Wright lives at 1701 Dilworth Road
East, Charlotte.
Judy Wurst is teaching in Seminole Coun-
ty, Fla. Her address: c/o Mrs. J. E. Brook-
sliire. Star Route, Sanford, Fla.
Ehzabeth W^che is secretary to district
sales manager of Kool-Aid Division of Gen-
eral Foods. She lives at 4607 Sleaford Road,
Bethesda, Md.
Sarah Yarborougli Tripp li\es at 1040 Ful-
ton Street. San Francisco, Calif.
Frances Yost married Paul Dewey Proc-
tor, Jr., in Rocky Mount during June. They
are lj\ing on T3alljnger Road, Guilford Col-
lege, where the bride and bridegroom both
teach at Guilford Public School. He is a
gradaute of N. C. State.
'63 Commercials
Julia Allen is working as a secretary for
Wachovia Bank and lives at 1806 Birming-
ham Street, Durham.
Susan Andreas is secretar\ for John Cros-
land Company in Charlotte, where she lives
at 4519 Wedgewood Drive.
Linda Ann Austin married Bilh- Joel Mor-
row on August 31 in Charlotte, where the
couple is living at 3515 Rcni;ird Street. Mr.
Morrow is a graduate of North Mecklenburg
High School and attends King's College.
Linda is secretary for the firm of Dockery,
Ruff, Perry, Bond and Coble.
Virginia Aycock is secretary in Child Psy-
chiatrv LInit of Memorial Hosnital, Chapel
Hill, where her address is P. O. Box 1184.
Susan Bagnal is Mrs. Jerry Norris Essie
of 2917 Windsor Road, Winston-Salem.
Teresa Beck is emDlo\ed as a secretary and
li\es at Route I, Wavnesville.
Barbara Biser, legal secretary for Smith.
Moore, Smith, Schell, and Hunter, lives at
1121 Rustic Road in Greensboro.
Kathleen Blunie of 2015 Edgewatcr Dri\e,
Charlotte, is sccrctan- to Mr. Smith of Adon
Smith Associates Insurance Company here.
Sheila Bostian's address is Box 65, Moorcs-
ville. She is working as a secretarj'.
Virginia Mae Bratton is working for Rock
ingham Mills in Rockinaham.
Grace Ann Brim Ward li\cs at 1 404
Princess Street, Wilmington.
Roberta Brown's address is 547 Main
Street, Hamlet.
Carolvn Carter Willard li\es at 106 Lake-
field Drive in Greensboro and works at
North Carolina National Bank.
Mar^- Carter is secretarv and receptionist
with the Institute of Government, Chapel
Hill.
Carole Cattelona of 3116 Holden Street.
Durham, is a \\'achovia Bank secretarv.
.Address for secretary Belinda Cline: 401
North Mcndenhall Street, Apartment 2.
Greensboro, 27401.
Jean CqUins works for Jack's Cookie Cor-
poration in Charlotte, where she lives at
Route S_.. Box 173F.
Madora Alice Coltrane li\es at 803 Ellis
Road. Durham, and works at the Research
Triangle.
Cynthia Craven Fouts is pursuing house-
wife duties on \\'ilson Street in Thomasville.
Dottie Davenport of 1100 Hicks Court,
.■\partment H, in Greensboro is working for
Burlington Industries.
Mary Depaola is secretary' for an insurance
company and lixes at 511 Nelson Drive,
Jacksonville, N. C.
Martha Dixon and Charles Monroe Hatch
were married on June 16 in Sanford. They
are living at 922 College \'iew Apartments,
Green\ille. where the bride is employed at
East Carolina College, and Mr. Hatch has
started his junior year at the college. He
comoleted two vears in business administra-
tion'at UNC-CH.
Carole Jean Dodson is employed at the
Lawndale Branch of N. C. National Bank
in Greensboro. She li\es at 604 Courtland
Street.
Peggy Dorsett of P. O. Box 171, Yadkin-
\ille, is working in Winston-Salcin at Se-
curity Life and Trust Co.
Patricia Estridge of 1100 Sylvan Boule-
\ard, Hendersonville, is working for the legal
firm of Prince, Youngblood, Jackson, and
Massagee.
Angeline Carmen Farmer is a teller at Duke
Power Company in Wiuston-Salem, where
she is living at 2519 Miller Park Circle,
.\partnient D.
Janet Ferrell is secretary in Placement Of-
fice of the School of Agriculture of N. C.
State and lives at 1505 Chester Road, Ra-
leigh.
Anne Carole Fortenberry of 1330 East-
\iew Extension, Shelby, is secretary in the
insurance department of J. L. Suttle, Jr., and
Company there.
Margaret Graliani French is secretary in
the public relations department at Burling-
ton Industries in Greensboro and lixes at
1S04 Friendlv Road.
Joan Carol Freund is cmplo>ed as secrc-
tan b\ Pilot Life Insurance Company and
lives at 908 Honeysuckle Drive in Greens-
boro.
Judy Glasgow of 320 Daniels Street, Ra-
leigh, is a secretary at N. C. State.
Gayle Graves is working as a secretary. Her
address is Route 6, Box 374, Burlington.
.\ Wachovia Bank employee, Linda Gray-
.son is Mrs. Charles E. Noggle, Jr., of 302-F
Boyleu Apartments, Raleigh.
'\\'orking as a secretary at N. C. National
Bank in Wiuslon-Salem, Patricia Ann Harpe
lives on Route 2. Mocksville.
.'\nne Hartsook of 41 5 East Hendrix Street
ill Greensboro is working as secretary at
^^'. P. Ballard Com])auy.
Judv Carolvn Hatley is secretary at Caro-
lina Power and Light Comnanv in Raleigh,
where she is living "at 102 East North Street.
Jewel .\nne Henderson of 4901 Fieldview
Road. Cliarlolte 11, is secretarv at S. F.
Factors Corporation.
Linda Henderson is secretary at Lever
Brothers in New York Citv. Her address:
c/o Daniele's. 200 East 15th Street, Apart-
ment I.. N. Y. 3. N. Y.
Helen Hobson of Route 1, Box 262, Rae-
ford, is bookkeeper in the accounting de-
partment of Belk-Hensd:ile Suburban Com-
]5any. Favetteville.
Judith Ann Hollingsworth is emploved at
Pat Brown L.iunber Company in High Point.
Loui.se Holloway is cm]5lo\ed as a secre-
tary. Her address: Route 3, Box 254, Hen-
derson.
Betty Carolyn Holt of 409 Holt Asenuc
in Greensboro is secrelarv for the legal firm
of McLendon. Brim, Hoklerness and Brooks.
Judv Holt Price is bookkeeper in the treas-
urer's department at Wake Forest College.
Winston-Salcni, where she and her husband
li\'e at 113 ^^'ake Forest Student Apartments.
Carolyn Lee Hooks of 204 East Drewrv
October 1963
59
Lane, Raleigh, is secrelary al Carolina Power
and L.iglil Company.
'I'rudy Iliighey and Richard Charles Spake
were married on September 1 4 in Liberty.
Trndv is employed in Greensboro by the
N. C. State Highway Commission. Mr.
Spake is a senior at High Point College and
is an instructor at the High Point YMC.\.
\'irginia \\'ells Killiau is with Citizens and
Sonthem National Bank in Atlanta, Ga.
Jean Carol Kinirey is secretary and book-
keeoer for Guilford Memorial Park. She lives
at 4004 South Main Street, High Point.
Martha Alice Kivett of 119 Memorial
Street, .\sheboro, is secretary at General Elec-
tric Company there.
Judv Khittz lives at Route 1, Box 54i,
Salisbury, ;S144.
Jacqueline L;iMarr of 3606 Groometown
Road is secretary for Burlington Industries in
Greensboro.
Payroll clerk at Hatteras Yacht Company
ill High Point is Cheryl Ann Lassiter's new
employment. She lives there at 210 Linda
Drive.
Pli>llis Kay La«sou of King is working as
secretary at R. ). Reynolds Tobacco Com-
pany in Winston-Salem.
Sheny Lynn Lawsoii is secretary-bookkeeper
at Glasco Business Machines and lives at 812
Park .\veiiue, Sanford.
Harriet Hazlett Long of 618 Belhaven
Street. Garner, 27529, is secretary for the
N. C. State School for Deaf and Blind in
Raleigh.
Mary McCoy of 105 Placer Lane, Oak
Ridae_, 'Tenn., is secretary at Oak Ridge Na-
tional Laboratory.
Patricia McDowell Smith of 114 Rice Llall,
Southern Baptist Seminary, Louisville, Ky.,
is working as a secretary there.
Elicla Jane Bare McEntire is a student at
Lenoir Rlniie College in Hickory, where she
lives at 1631 3rd Street North East.
Lucy ^\'illiains Mcliityre is employed at
Woods' Inc and Ten \\'arehouse in Rock-
ingham.
Carol Ah'ee Mastin is employed by North-
western Bank in North Wilkesboro.
Catherine Brenda Maxwell of 524 Willow-
brook Dri\c in Greensboro is secretary at
Uniicd Secuiitics Company.
Afary Sue Michael of Route 3, Box 58,
Lexinglon, is secretary in the engineering de-
partment of Wcnnonali Cotton Mills there.
Linda Monsccs Hood is secretary at Siler
Citv Mills in Silcr Citv. .\ddress her at
Box 352.'
Betty In Moore of Route 1, Raleigh, is
employed there by Raleigh Savings and Loan
Association.
Gweii Moore is uniking in Greensboro as
secrelary for Grain Dealers Mutual Insur-
ance Coinpam- and lives at 2809 Alcott
Road.
Sandra Louise Moore of 3227 Sharon \'iew
Road. Charlotte, 28210, is a secretary for
]<',. B. Slouc Finance Gomiiany.
Jnaiiita Carolyn Murray is a secretary for
Richardson Realty at Green.sboro and lives on
Route 2. Box 389, Brown Summit.
Cynthia Boyd Nash works in the depart
ment of corrcsnondence and extension at
UNC-Cll in Cfuii)el Hill.
Stenographer at Burlinston Industries is
new employment for Diana Dawn Neal of
3001 \\'ildwood Drive in Greensboro.
June Edens Newton is secretary for Can-
trell and Cochrane in Charlotte, where she
lives at 5814 \\'intercrest Lane.
Bank clerk and recorder is Rosalie Ann
Nimetz's job. She lives at 1001 Watson .^ve-
mie. \\'inston-Salem.
Carol Celeste Osborn of Route 1, Sum-
mcrfield, is accounting clerk in the trust de-
Ijartnient of N. C. National Bank in Win-
ston-Salem.
Joyce Page is secretary for the legal firm
of Brooks. McLendon, Brim and Holderness
in Greensboro. She lives at 1100 Hicks Court,
Apartment H.
Willene Jane Partridge of Kill Devil Hills,
N. C is temporarily working as clerk-
stenographer with the National Park Senice.
Linda Nanette Pate is employed in the
sales department of The Salem Company.
Her address is 1143 Bank Street, Winston-
Salem.
Tommy Wilson Payne is Mrs. Dennis
Car'ton Roberts of 530 South Aycock Street,
Greensboro. She is secretary at Jefferson
Standard Life Insurance Company
Mirtha Marceline Petsche is a stenographer
at the National Science Foundation in Wash-
ington. D. C. She lives in .\partment 301,
2408 Gwhton Drive, Silver Spring, Md.
Elizabeth Bailey Pickard is secretary for
Dr. Evans of the UNC-CH Dental School.
Her address is Apartment 6, 40 Davie Circle,
Chapel Hill, 27514.
Anita Elizabeth Pickett is bookkeeper for
A. C. Monk and Company in Farmville.
Glenda Pickle Ozment of 1 5 West Jones
Street, Savannah, Ga., is a clerk in the of-
fices of Prudential Insurance there.
Carol Presgraves is a teller at First Citizens
Bank in Greensboro and lives at 200 Revere
Drive in Apartment 6.
Joan Pruett of 525 North Blounl Sliecl,
Raleigh, works there for Wachovia Bank.
Barbara Jean Purgason is employed as sec-
retary at Pilot Life Insurance in Greensboro
and lives at 2208 Reynolds Road.
Bobbie Carolyn Reynolds is secretary to
the town attornev of Sparta, where .she lives
on Route 2, Box 221.
Patricia Ward Roberts Billings is secretary
at Carolina Power and Light Com|5any in
Raleigh, where she lives at Ai>artineut G-24,
McKimmon Village, N. C. State.
Sandra Kay Sale of 667 Flk Spur Street.
Elkin, is secretary for Chatham Manufac-
turing Company.
Anne Currie Shankle is employed at the
Raeford ^^'orsted Plant in Raeford.
Linda Dianne Shaw is a secretary at
Strand, Skees. Jones and Company in Greens-
boro and lives at 1 208 West Market Street.
Elizabeth Ann Sherrod lives at 1223 Buck-
ingham Road in Greensboro.
Lloyd Smith is' Mrs. E. R. Mason, Jr., and
has a temporary address: c/o Robert E. Mavs,
Route 1 , Box 5, Westnoint, Ky.
Deanna Sprinkle is Mrs. Ronald D. Jester
of 3490 West Polo Road, Winslon-Salem.
where .she is secretary for Ernst and Ernst,
an accounting firm.
Peggy Jean Spronse is slcuogra]iIier at
Hennis Freight Lines in Wiustou-Salem.
Martha Jean Steed is living at 101 Ervvin
Street in Greensboro and working in the
accounting department of Dillard Pajxr Com
P.uiy.
Jane Stixnipe is sccietan .il DiiPoul Cor-
poration and lives at 1108 Meadow Lane,
Charlotte 3.
Jo Ellen Swaini is secretary in the research
department of the School of Medicine of
UNC-CH. She lives at #6 Pierce Apart
ments. 40 Davie Circle, Chapel Hill.
Anne Hamilton Tart's address is 1508
^\'llmington Road, Clinton.
Anne Ferree Tate became the bride of
John Oman Christopher on September 7 in
Greensboro. Tliey are living at 309 Shepherd
Street, Raleigh, where the bride is an ac-
counting clerk at Carolina Power and Light
Company, and the bridegroom is a junior!
at N. C. State. He is a graduate of Greens-;
boro High School and is majoring in me- i
chanical engineering at State.
Willie Jane Thornton of 2703 Alamance'
Road. Burlington, is secretary for Carolina !
Biological Supply Company. I
Connie Thrasher of 303 Hollis Road, !
Charlotte 9, is secretary at First Union Na-|
tional Bank there. ';
Ann Turk is secretary to the vice-presi- j
dent of First Union National Bank in Char- !
lotte, where the residence is 762 Montford j
Drive, 28209. I
Virginia Diann Turner is Mrs. Robert j
Small of Route 7. Burlirngtoii. She is not)
working. '.
Marj Carter N'aiiNoppen is emploved at i
UNC-CH. i
Brenda Ann N'auglian of 304 College ;
Street, Henderson, is secretary to the vice- i
president of Citizens Bank there.
Evanna Lee (Ann) Vaughn, is secretary i
for Colonial Motor Freight Lines in High !
Point. Her address there is 220 Landsdown I
Street. !
Katlierine Joan Waddell is secretary for '
Southern Oxygen Company in Greensboro.
Nancy Jo Walters is Pilot Life Insurance
Conipanv secretarv and lives in Greensboro
at 401 North Me'ndenhall Street.
Lynn Helen Wehner of 2374 Rosewood
.\venue, Winston-Salem, is not working.
Laura White of 831 -A Daniels Street. Ra
leigh, is secretary in the main office of Ra-
leigh Public Schools.
Carolyn Willard is working in the trust
department of N. C. National Bank m
Green,sboro.
Carol Williams is with Beautyguard Manu-
facturing Company in Greensboro.
Carol Faye Wilson is Mrs. Larry S. Dunn
of 3012 Kivett Drive, High Point, where she
is secretary in the trust department of Wa-
chovia Bank.
Glenda ^^'iIsoll Lippard of 1703 Curtis
Road, Chapel Hill, is secretary in the Uni-
versity Testing Service of UNC-CH.
Martha Wilson is working at Burlington
Industries and lives in Greensboro at 1100
Hicks Court, Apartment H.
Rebecca Wilson is Mrs. Allen Rierson of
1400 Mayfair Avenue in Greensboro. She is
secretarv- for Kavanaugh-Sniith and Companv'.
Mary Jane Yandell married Sammie Lee
Reavis during August in Winston-Salem.
They are living at 112 East Devonshire
Street, Winston-Salem, where the bride is
secretary for Duke Power Company, and the
bridegroom has been employed by R. J.
Reynolds Tobacco Company. Mr. Reavis
has attended Guilford College. He is a stu-
dent at Wake Forest College this fall.
Secretarv for F. B. Stone Finance Com-
pany is Elizabeth Young's employment. She
lives at 3523 Driftwood Drive. Charlotte, ,
28205.
60
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
Rights under the Constitution
THE SUPREME COURT TODAY
Bickel, Alexander M. The least dangerous- branch: the Supreme Court at the bar of poUtics. N. Y. Bobbs-Merrill, 1962.
Frank, John P. Marble p>alace: the Supreme Court in American life. N. Y. Knopf, 1958.
McCloskey, Robert G. The American Supreme Court. Chicago. University of Chicago Press, 1960.
Rodell, Fred. Nine men; a political history of the Supreme Court from 1790 to 1955. N. Y. Random House, 1955.
Schwartz, Bernard. The Supreme Court, constitutional revolution in retrospect, rev. ed. N. Y. Ronald Press, 1957.
Svi'isher, Carl. The Supreme Court in modem role. N. Y. New York University Press, 1958.
RIGHTS UNDER THE CONSTITUTION
Black, Charles L. The people and the Court: Judicial review in a democracy. N. Y. Macmillan, 1960.
Douglas, William O. A living Bill of Rights. Garden City. Doubleday, 1961.
Hand, Learned. The Bill of Rights. Cambridge. Harvard University Press, 1958.
Mason, Alpheus T. The Supreme Court in a free society. Englewood Cliffs. Prentice-Hall, 1959.
I RIGHTS OF THE PEOPLE
IBlaustein, Albert P. and Clarence C. Ferguson. Desegregation and the law: the meaning and effect of the school segregation
j cases. New Brunswick. Rutgers University Press, 1957.
iChafee, Zechariah. The blessings of liberty. Philadelphia. Lippincott, 1956.
iFraenkel, Osmond K. The Supreme Court and civil liberties. N. Y. Oceana, 1960.
jGellhorn, Walter. American rights; The Constitution in action. N. Y. Macmillan, 1960.
i Harris, Robert J. The quest for equality: the Constitution, Congress and the Supreme Court. Baton Rouge. Louisiana State
University Press, 1960.
iKonvitz, Milton. Fundamental liberties of a free p>eople: Religion, speech, press, assembly. Ithaca. Cornell University Press, 1957.
Pfeffer, Leo. The liberties of an American: The Supreme Court speaks. Boston. Beacon Press, 1956.
Spicer, George W. The Supreme Court and fundamental freedoms. N. Y. Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1959.
RIGHTS OF THE STATES
Gellhorn, Walter, ed. The States and subversion. Ithaca. Cornell University Press, 1955.
U. S. Commission on Civil Rights. 50 State report. Washington. Superintendent of Documents, 1961.
RIGHTS OF THE NATIONS
I
iCarr, Robert. Federal protection of civil rights. Ithaca. Cornell University Press, 1947.
JMendelson, Wallace, ed. The Constitution and the Supreme Court. N. Y. Dodd, Mead, 1959.
I Murphy, Walter F. Congress and the Court: A case study in the American political process. Chicago. University of Chicago
j Press, 1962.
Pritchett, C. Herman. Congress vs. the Supreme Court 1957-1960. Minneapolis. University of Minnesota Press, 1961.
I Mrs. E. W. Carr of the Library Staff is to be thanked for
making this List.
THE LIBRARY
A HYMN TO TRUTH words and Music by M. THOMAS cousin;
Commissioned and Presented the College by the Class of 1963
The song of triumph ends all too soon,
And truth is born in the heart.
In the quiet of the lonely night,
And the glory of the morning sun;
From the great forest,
Scarred by man's inhumanity,
To the noise and clatter of the city,
With screaming sirens and choking dust;
Across the vast range of human thought and emotion
The hymn of truth rises slowly, yet eternally.
If victory be fleeting.
And joy a vain illusion,
What of us?
Despair too shall pass.
For hope stems from truth.
And truth comes onlv from God.
Reprinted bv permission of M. Thomas Cousin;
and Brod't Music Company (Copyright 1963