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XXJMNI   NEWS 


NIVERSITY  OF  NORTH  CAROLINA 

AT  **,„ 


REENSBORO 


» .   Uf^ 


% 


■'i'ie. 


Jkiliiml  (J<\^w^ 


THOUGH  the  fomiat  and  name  of  the  Ahiuini  News 
have  changed  during  its  52  year  hfetime,  the  purpose 
remains  virtually  the  same  as  when  Julia  Dameron 
wrote  in  January,  1912:  "The  News  has  the  two-fold  pur- 
pose of  letting  the  alumnae  know  what  is  happening  at 
the  college  and  of  keeping  them  in  touch  with  one 
another." 

Of  these  two  purposes,  the  first  looms  a  good  deal  the 
larger  as  Editor  Emerita  Vera  Largent  demonstrated  this 
past  >'ear.  While  it  is  important  for  alumni  to  keep  in  touch 
with  one  another,  the  most  important  function  of  this 
magazine  is  to  interpret  the  university  and  its  work. 
Probably  at  no  time  in  the  past  has  interpretation  been 
more  important.  University  status  has  brought  a  change 
in  name  and  the  addition  of  male  undergraduates,  but  the 
greatest  change  b\'  far  is  in  the  area  of  the  academic 
program. 

University  status  means  an  expanding  Graduate 
School,  and  in  this  issue  Dean  James  Ferguson  discusses 
this  expansion,  the  five  major  programs  already  added 
and  others  in  prospect.  He  also  explores  the  Three-Year 
Master's  Program,  aimed  at  interesting  college  women  in 
a  career  in  college  teaching.  This  program  will  help  fill 
the  need  for  able  teachers  for  the  comniunit\-  college 
movement,  considered  the  most  important  movement  in 
20th  century  education. 

University'  status  means  new  research  and  training 
grants  to  enrich  the  academic  program  and  push  the  uni- 


versitv  to  a  position  of  leadership  among  ins.iaitions  of 
higher  learning.  Research  grants  amounting  to  S309,830 
have  been  received  for  the  current  academic  vear,  more 
than  three  times  the  amount  ($95,282)  awarded  last  year. 
Two  of  these  grants  are  revie\\'ed  in  this  issue  bv  Dr. 
Kendon  Smith  and  Dr.  Hildegarde  Johnson. 

Both  faculty  member  and  student  benefit  from  the 
close  relationship  while  working  under  such  grants,  which 
hopefully  can  be  a  return  to  the  tutorial  method  of  teach- 
ing. One  professor  (Dr.  Laura  Anderton)  relates  her 
summer  research  experience  with  a  student  (Cynthia 
Blythe)  who  presents  a  student's  view  of  her  gains  as  a 
summer  scientist. 

Gifted  students  are  inspired  by  such  teaching  methods, 
and  also  by  the  Honors  Program  which  Dr.  David  Davies 
writes  about  in  another  article.  Under  the  Honors  Program 
students  learn  to  think  in  new  areas  and  receive  a  lively 
intellectual  experience  beginning  as  a  freshman  and  con- 
tinuing through  the  senior  year.  This  "nourishing  of 
excellence"  points  up  former  school-teacher  Lyndon 
Johnson's  recognition  of  student  brain  power  as  the 
United  States'  most  precious  resource. 

University  status  indicates  new  directions,  but  the 
basic  philosophy  of  education  at  UNC-G  remains 
unchanged.  It's  the  same  Aristotelian  philosophy  that 
Dean  Harriet  Elliott  held  dear,  that  Dean  Katherine 
Taylor  continues  to  promulgate  today:  education  is  the 
haiTnonious  development  of  all  the  faculties.  D 


The  Cover: 

Tlte  professor  and  student  working 
closely  together  on  a  research  project 
are  an  example  of  the  new  dimension 
in  education  provided  by  research 
grants.  Biology  Professor  Laura  An- 
derton and  Cynthia  Rutli  Blythe  '65 
are  recorded  at  work  by  the  sensitive 
photography  of  Carol  Martin. 


FALL  1964 

VOLUME  FIFTY-THREE 

NUMBER  ONE 

THE    UNIVERSITY    OF    NORTH    CAROLINA   AT    GREENSBORO 


My  Life  with  Luther  Hodges Mrs.  Luther  H.  Hodges  2 

The  Expanding  Role  of  the  Graduate  School Dr.  James  S.  Ferguson  4 

The  Honors  Program Dr.  David  G.  Davies  6 

Lessons  from  the  Laboratory Dr.  Laura  Anderton  8 

Cynthia  Ruth  BIythe  9 

Undergraduate  Research  in  Psychology Dr.  Kendon  Smith  10 

Automated  Education Dr.  Hildegarde  Johnson  12 

Research  and  the  University 13 

National  Repertory  Theatre  Returns  to  Campus 14 

The  First  Coeds Burke  Davis  17 

First  Speech-Hearing  Clinic Charlotte  Perkins  19 

Campus  Chronicle 20 

Bookshelf 24 

In  Memoriam 26 

News  Notes 27 

Alumni  Business 40 


THE  ALUMNI  NEWS  is  published  in  October, 
January,  April  and  July  by  the  Alumni  Association 
of  the  University  of  North  Carolina  at  Greensboro. 
Alumni  contributors  to  the  Annual  Giving  Fund 
receive  the  magazine.  Non-alumni  may  receive 
the  magazine  by  contributing  to  the  Annual  Giving 
Fund  or  by  subscription:  $2  per  year;  single 
copies,  50  cents.  Member  of  the  American 
Alumni  Council.  Second  class  postage  paid  at 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Alumni  Association  Board  of  Directors:  Jane  Linville  Joyner  '46,  President;  Susannah  Thomas  Watson 
'39.  First  Vice  President;  Mary  Shue  Jonnson  '59.  Second  Vice  President;  Billie  Upchurch  Miller  '44, 
Recording  Secretary;  Doris  Huffines  Bernhardt  '52;  Susan  Green  Finch  '18;  Nellie  Sugg  Gardner  '51; 
Helen  Lichtenfels  Gumpert  '33;  Emily  Herring  Wilson  '61;  Adelaide  Fortune  Holderness  '34;  Elizabeth 
Yates  King  '36;  Nell  Mcleod  '57;  Judy  Rand  '64;  Martha  Kirkland  Watson  '43;  Barbara  Parrish  '48, 
Executive  Secretary.  Editorial  Board:  Elizabeth  Yates  King  '36.  Chairman;  Louise  Dannenbaum  Falk  '29, 
Elizabeth  Barineau  '36,  Sue  Baxter  Leonard  '53,  Ann  Weeks  Bonitz  '60.  Laura  Anderton  (faculty).  Galena 
Herring  '65.  Jane  Linville  Joyner,  Barbara  Parrish,  and  Gertrude  Walton  Atkins,  ex  officio.  Editorial  Staff: 
Gertrude  Walton  Atkins  MFA  '63.  Editor;  Barbara  Parrish.  News  Notes;  Carroll  Hilliard.  Class  Notes; 
Judith  May,  Circulation. 


Fall  1964 


From  Blount  Street  to  Blair  House 


A  most  famous  alumna  writes  about  life  as  North 
Carolina's  First  Lady  and  as  tlie  wife  of  the  U.  S. 
Secretary  of  Commerce. 


by  Mrs.  Luther  H.  Hodges 


FORTY-TWO  years  as  the  wife  of  Luther  Hodges 
could  never  be  boring.  It  ahvays  has  been  busy  and 
interesting,  and  often  exciting. 

I  don't  take  an\'  credit  for  his  accomphshments.  It  has 
all  been  through  his  own  hard  work,  his  great  ability, 
and  his  love  for  his  State  and  Nation.  For  me,  it  has 
been  fun  to  stay  in  the  background  and  watch  his 
career  develop.  j 

For   the   past   twelve   years,   his   work   has   been   in 
government:   first  as  Lieutenant  Governor,  then  for  sLx    j 
years  as  Governor  of  North  Carolina,  and  now  as  the    ! 
United  States  Secretary  of  Commerce. 

During   these    years    we   have    had    many   rich    and 
rewarding  experiences.  Entertaining  and  getting  to  know 
many  great  and  near-great  men  and  women  has  been 
a  privilege  and  a  pleasure.   I   remember  especially  the    | 
thrill  of  sitting  with  the  Queen  of  England  and  Prince    ; 
Philip  at  the  North  Carolina-Mar>land  football  game  at    i 
College  Park,  Md.  I  tliink  the  Prince  really  enjoyed  the    | 
game"  The  Queen  simply  remained  dignified  and  lovely 
without   showing   any   emotion.   Governor   McKeldin   of 
Nhiryland    gave    her    several    historical    documents    and 
mementos  to  recall  her  visit,  but  I  think  she  was  most 
pleased  with  our  gift,   a  small   statuette  of  Sir  Walter 
Raleigh. 

L\DY  Astor,  who  was  born  in  Virginia  but  became  the 
jfirst  woman  member  of  the  Rritish  House  of  Com- 
mons, was  a  visitor  who  amused  us  with  her  ready  wit. 
She  always  had  been  outspoken  and  when  we  walked 
in  the  front  door  of  the  Mansion  at  Raleigh,  I  asked 
her,  knowing  she  was  in  her  eighties,  if  she  would  like 
to  take  the  elevator.  Her  reply  was:   "Poppycock  —  No! 


Alumni  News 


^*' 


My  Life  with 
Luther  Hodges 


I  want  to  go  up  this  beautiful  stairway."  Later  she  asked 
for  and  was  given  some  North  Carolina  sorghum  to  take 
to  the  Queen. 

President  Truman,  a  natural  home-loving  person,  gave 
me  good  advice  when  he  came  to  the  Governor's  Mansion. 
He  told  me:  "Take  it  easy  and  have  fun." 

Some  embarrassing  moments  also  have  occurred,  such 
as  the  time  when  our  important  guest,  the  Speaker  of 
the  House,  didn't  get  a  piece  of  ham  for  breakfast.  The 
Governor  had  insisted  that  we  have  country  ham  in 
addition  to  eggs,  bacon,  grits,  fried  apples,  hot  biscuits 
and  jelh'.  We  were  having  all  the  Legislators  for  break- 
fast, and  knowing  how  expensive  coimtn'  ham  was,  I  had 
said:  "One  slice  of  ham  per  person  will  be  enough."  The 
Speaker,  who  was  sitting  on  the  left  of  the  Governor, 
didn't  get  any  ham  —  and  I  haven't  heard  the  last  of  that. 

ENTERTAINING  many  wonderful  organizations  in  North 
Carolina  was  a  great  pleasure.  I  had  no  difficulty 
with  the  arrangements.  Mrs.  Laura  Reilley,  our  hostess 
at  the  Mansion,  ran  them  all  with  ease. 

Once,  however,  when  I  was  arranging  flowers  in  the 
hall  of  the  Mansion,  I  fell  and  broke  my  arm.  It  was  an 
inconvenience,  but  it  didn't  last  long.  I  continued  to 
arrange  flowers,  except  on  ver\'  special  occasions.  It  was 
a  big  job,  but  one  I  enjoyed. 

Another  pleasant  job  was  helping  to  improve  the 
furnishings  of  the  Mansion.  With  the  aid  of  Miss  Eliza- 
beth Thompson,  we  obtained  some  beautful  chandeliers 
to  replace  some  that  had  to  be  placed  in  Tryon  Palace. 
This  official  home  of  one  of  North  Carolina's  colonial 
governors  was  presented  to  the  State  during  Luther's 
term.  We  were  proud  and  delighted  to  have  it  opened 


Luther  HartwcII  Hod<^cs,  United  States  Seerctary  of 
Commerce,  gave  the  annua]  Mclvcr  Lecture  at  the  72nd 
Founder's  Day  convocation  Monday,  October  o,  //!  Aycock 
Auditorium.  Prior  to  Mr.  Hodges'  address  on  "The  Great 
Society,"  ChanceUor  Otis  A.  Singletary  conferred  the 
honorary  degree  of  Doctor  of  Laws  on  the  Secretary, 
noting  liis  leadership  as  businessman,  textile  executive, 
political  leader,  and  educational  .statesman,  "a  positive 
and  effective  force  in  our  .state,  in  our  region,  in  our 
nation."  The  article  on  these  pages  was  written  by  his 
wife  of  22  years,  Martha  Blakeneu  Hodges  'IS,  with 
whom,  as  a  staff  member  observed,  "he  talks  things  over. 
She  tells  him  what  she  thinks:  he  values  her  opinion  — 
and  makes  up  his  own  mind." 

as  a  showplace  for  North  Carolina.  It  was  also  a  joy  to 
have  the  North  Carolina  Art  Museum  opened  when  we 
were  in  Raleigh. 

The  most  challenging  feature  of  the  Mansion  was  the 
prisoners  who  worked  as  maids  and  in  other  capacities. 
How  Miss  Reilley  and  I  worked  to  help  rehabilitate 
these  people  would  make  a  long  story. 

I  remember  one  evening  while  waiting  for  guests  to 
arrive  for  dinner,  I  wanted  to  hear  some  music.  I  asked 
one  of  the  maids  to  bring  me  an  album  of  Beethoven 
s\inphonies.  The  closest  she  could  approximate  that 
from  her  background  was  to  return  with  my  "beige-open 
shoes." 

BOTH  Luther  and  I  enjoyed  ti-aveling  throughout  our 
beautiful  State  for  various  functions,  but  the  time 
came  for  us  to  leave.  Someone  asked  me  what  I  would 

(Plca.^e  turn  to  page  18) 


Fall  1964 


University  Status 


The  Expanding  Role 

of  the  Graduate  School 


by  Dr.  James  S.  Ferguson 


'7;i  tJte  conditions  of  modern  life  the  rule  is  absolute: 
the  race  which  does  not  value  trained  intelligence  is 
doomed.  Not  all  your  heroism,  not  all  your  social  charm, 
not  all  your  tvit,  not  all  your  victories  on  land  or  at  sea,  can 
move  hack  the  finger  of  fate.  Today  ice  maintain  ourselves. 
Tomorrow  .science  will  have  moved  forward  yet  one  more 
step,  and  there  will  he  no  appeal  from  the  judgment 
which  will  then  he  pronounced  on  the  uneducated." 

Alfred  North  Whitehead. 


THE  elevation  of  Woman's  College  to  university  status 
has  affected  all  educational  activities  on  the  Greens- 
boro campus  to  some  degree,  but  none  more 
extensively  than  the  Graduate  School.  Along  with  recog- 
nition as  a  university  has  come  increased  responsibility 
for  helping  train  specialists  and  scholars  sorely  needed  in 
state  and  nation.  As  a  result  an  e.xpanding  role  for  the 
Graduate  School  is  envisaged. 

According  to  the  American  Council  on  Education,  the 
three  principal  functions  of  graduate  schools  are  (1)  to 
train  research  workers  and  to  carry  on  basic  research; 
(2)  to  prepare  experts  for  service  in  such  fields  as  business, 
industry,  government,  agriculture,  and  public  welfare; 
and  (3)  to  prepare  men  and  women  for  careers  in  college 
teaching. 

The  graduate  program  at  Greensboro,  dating  back  to 
the  1920's,  has  encompassed  all  three  objectives  to  some 
extent.  Up  to  1962,  however,  the  emphasis  under  the 
Consolidated  University's  allocation-of -function  principle 
was  on  the  training  of  professional  personnel  such  as  home 
economists,  public  school  teachers,  directors  of  physical 
education,  and  musicians.  Most  curricula  culminated  in 
the  Master  of  Education  degree  and  stressed  the  extension 
of  professional  knowledge  rather  than  the  development 
of  research  skills.  There  were  other  degree  offerings,  to  be 
sure,  but  the  heaviest  traffic  was  in  study  for  the  M.Ed, 
degree.  In  1962  the  Master  of  Science  degree  in  one  form 
or  another  v/as  offered  in  three  fields,  the  Master  of  Fine 


Arts  in  four,  The  institution's  one  Ph.D.  program  (in  child 
development  and  famih-  relations)  was  established  in  1960 
in  the  School  of  Home  Economics. 

These  professional  programs  are  of  great  value, 
especially  in  their  service  to  North  Carolina's  primary  and 
secondary  schools,  and  it  is  anticipated  that  they  will  be 
retained  in  undiminished  strength. 

THE  year  1962  brought  a  modification  of  emphasis  in 
the  graduate  program  at  Greensboro.  In  April  of  that 
year  the  Graduate  Executive  Council  of  the  Consolidated 
University  approved  the  establishment  at  the  Woman's 
College  of  master's  degree  programs  in  the  liberal  arts, 
looking  toward  the  preparation  of  college  teachers  and 
the  stimulation  of  research. 

SubsequentK',  Master  of  Arts  programs  have  been 
initiated  by  four  departments  (English,  history,  biology, 
and  psychology),  and  one  has  been  proposed  by  the 
Department  of  Romance  Languages.  Seven  M.A.  degrees 
were  granted  in  the  1964  commencement.  Three  of  the 
recipients  now  hold  college  teaching  contracts  and  at  least 
three  others  have  entered  doctoral  programs  in  other 
institutions.  Further  extension  of  graduate  offerings  at 
Greensboro  came  through  the  establishment  in  1963  of 
the  Master  of  Music  degree,  designed  in  part  for  the 
preparation  of  college  teachers. 

In  adopting  a  program  for  the  training  of  college 
teachers,  the  University  is  responding  to  a  national  need. 


Alumni  News 


Dr.  Fergtison  was  appointed 
Dean  of  the  Graduate  School  in 
July,  1962.  He  is  chairman  of  the 
Committee  for  the  Three  Year 
Masters  Pros.rau]. 


Whereas  college  enrollments  now  stand  at  approximately 
4,800,000,  careful  studies  suggest  that  by  1970  this  figure 
will  reach  7,000,000,  It  is  estimated  that  the  period  from 
1959  to  1970  must  produce  346,800  new  teachers  to  staff 
the  colleges  satisfactorily. 

It  would  be  good  to  fill  these  positions  with  Ph.D.'s, 
but  a  sufficient  supply  simply  is  not  available.  In  the  last 
decade  on  the  average  less  than  10,000  persons  received 
doctorates  each  year,  and  only  two-thirds  of  them  went 
into  college  teaching.  It  is  obvious  that  institutions  of 
higher  learning  in  the  coming  years  must  rely  on  master's 
degree  programs  to  provide  a  substantial  number  of  their 
faculty  members. 

WITH  the  development  in  North  Carolina  of  a  new- 
system  of  community'  colleges,  the  need  for 
adequately  trained  teachers  will  be  especially  acute.  In 
the  light  of  this  need,  it  becomes  almost  mandatory  to 
utilize  fully  the  resources  for  graduate  study  at  the 
University  in  Greensboro. 

But  if  the  master's  degree  is  to  be  considered  appro- 
priate preparation  for  college  teaching,  it  must  be  treated 
as  something  other  than  an  insignificant  roadmark  along 
the  journey  to  the  doctorate  or  a  consolation  prize  for 
those  who  cannot  earn  the  more  advanced  degree.  The 
master's  program  must  possess  a  logical  coherence  built 
around  a  set  of  stated  objectives. 

The  graduate  student  must  master  a  defined  body  of 
subject  matter,  it  is  true,  and  he  must  gain  a  comprehen- 
sive knowledge  of  the  literature  of  his  field.  But  he  must 
go  beyond  these  points  to  the  development  of  powers  of 
analysis  and  criticism  that  can  be  produced  most  effect- 
tively  through  research  e.xperience.  A  graduate  program 
must  emphasize  those  activities  that  place  the  student  at 
the  growing  edge  of  scholarship,  making  him  aware  of 
the  methods  by  which  knowledge  is  extended  and  com- 
municated. In  most  master's  programs  the  most  satisfac- 
tory device  for  achieving  these  objectives  is  the 
requirement  of  the  thesis,  to  be  written  under  the  guid- 
ance of  a  senior  teacher-scholar.  The  new  M.A.  programs 
at  Greensboro  follow  this  philosophy. 

SPECIAL  note  should  be  taken  of  a  project  on  the  Greens- 
boro campus  known  as  the  Three- Year  Master's 
Program.  This  plan  links  the  last  two  undergratuate  years 
with  a  fifth  year  of  study  in  order  to  produce  a  master's 
degree  of  unusual  strength. 

The  University's  undertaking  is  modeled  after  a  plan 
of  Dr.  Oliver  C.  Camiichael,  a  veteran  educator  and 
resident  of  Asheville,  who  wished  to  promote  the  master's 
degree  as  appropriate  training  for  college  teachers.  He 
interested  the  Ford  Foundation  in  his  plan  and  by  1964 
that  philanthropic  agency  had  made  grants  to  more  than 
forty  institutions,  including  the  University  of  North  Caro- 


PHOTO  BY  CAROL  MARTIN 


lina  at  Greensboro,  in  order  to  encourage  the  establish- 
ment of  three-year  programs. 

Under  the  tliree-year  plan  at  Greensboro  participants 
are  recruited  from  the  Honors  Program  at  the  beginning 
of  the  junior  year.  Provision  is  also  made  for  late  entry  by 
students  whose  records  justify  admission.  Identification 
with  the  program  is  regarded  as  an  expression  of  interest 
in  college  teaching  as  a  career.  Consequently,  the  persons 
selected  are  designated  "Ford  Career  Scholars." 

Plans  envisage  a  highly  personalized  program,  for,  as 
Hans  Rosenhaupt  of  the  Woodrow  Wilson  Foundation 
says,  graduate  work  at  its  best  emphasizes  faculty-student 
relationships.  Each  Career  Scholar  is  assigned  an  adviser 
who  helps  to  plan  and  subseciuently  directs  the  student's 
work  through  the  fifth  year. 

Since  enrichment  is  the  emphasis  of  the  first  three  years 
of  the  Honors  Program,  acceleration  will  be  stressed  in  the 
fourth  and  fifth  years.  It  is  hoped  that  in  manv*  cases 
master's  theses  will  be  outgrowths  of  senior  Honors  papers. 
Many  Career  Scholars  will  eventually  enter  doctoral 
programs;  therefore,  they  are  urged  to  master  the  foreign 
languages  that  will  be  needed.  Indeed,  it  is  to  be  expected 
that  this  program  will  move  participants  much  closer  to 
the  completion  of  a  Ph.D.  degree  than  the  usual  master's 
course  of  study.  (Please  turn  to  page  25) 


Fall  1964 


The  Honors  Program 


The  Honors  Program  is  designed  to  commit  students  to  that 
overworked  term,  EXCELLENCE.  Its  first  reflection  is  in  the 
academic,  but  under  the  University's  Honors  Program  students 
venture  into  the  peripheral  areas  of  music,  art,  drama,  athletics, 
forensics  and  a  host  of  others  which  must  he  integrated  to  have 
a  totally  good  college  experience. 


by  Dr.  David  G.  Davies 


A  panel  diacmsion  and  hamburgers  mixed  at  the  Piney 
Lakes  outing  for  the  Fresiiman  Honors  Group  in  Septem- 
ber. Supervising  the  grill  are,  left  to  right,  Lemira  Ann 
Guffij  of  Norwood,  Kathnjn  Ritchie  of  Raleigh,  Betty 
Ann  Benbow  of  Greensboro  and  Barbara  Ann  Innes  of 
Scarsdale,  New  York. 


W  yiTH  the  encouragement  of  Chancellor  Otis  A. 
\1L/Singletary  and  aided  by  a  sizable  grant  from  the 
▼  T  Ford  Foundation,  the  University  established  a 
full  four-year  Honors  program  during  the  1962-63  aca- 
demic year.  Prior  to  that,  honors  work  was  limited  to 
independent  study  and  an  honors  thesis  undertaken  at 
the  senior  level. 

The  expanded  honors  program  now  includes  three 
two-semester  seminars  during  the  freshman,  sophomore 
and  junior  years,  special  accelerated  and  enriched 
courses  taken  at  the  freshman  and  sophomore  levels  and 
independent  study  in  the  preparation  of  a  senior  honors 
thesis.  In  addition,  during  each  academic  year  outstand- 
ing scholars  are  invited  to  the  campus  to  deliver  lectures 
on  a  level  appropriate  for  the  gifted  students. 

Students  are  admitted  to  the  program  by  invitation 
sent  to  those  of  demonstrated  ability,  one  criterion  of 
which  is  an  overall  B  average.  Students  may  drop  from 
the  program  if  they  feel  it  is  too  demanding  or  enter  it  as 
late  as  the  fall  semester  of  the  junior  year.  One  attractive 
feature  is  the  extreme  flexibility  in  spite  of  the  formal 
structure.  Rules  and  regulations  are  waived  when  they 
prove  obstacles  to  superior  students. 

THE  major  objective  of  honors  work  is  to  provide  the 
gifted  student  with  a  challenge  that  will  both  tax 
and  develop  superior  abilities.  This  challenge  t>'pically 
takes  the  fonn  of  acceleration  in  the  fundamentals  of  a 
course,  a  greater  use  of  primary  as  opposed  to  secondary 
source  materials,  and  a  shift  in  the  burden  of  class  work 
from  teacher  to  student,  i.e.,  less  lecture  and  more  dis- 
cussion in  the  classroom. 

Honors  seminars  are  extremely  informal,  interdiscipli- 
nary and  are  far-ranging  in  terms  of  subject  matter.  For 
example,  the  freshman  honors  seminar  is  divided  into 
groups  of  not  more  than  eight  students  with  each  group 
under  the  direction  of  a  faculty  member.  During  the 
current  academic  year,  freshmen  will  investigate  the 
creative  process  in  the  sciences  and  the  humanities  and 
will   read  such  books   as   .Arthur  Koestler's   The   Sleep- 


Alumni  News 


Dr.  John  P.  Sedf^wick  of  the  Art  Department  direets 
a  group  of  sophomore  Iwnors  candidates  in  one  of  sev- 
eral spceial  hhie-ribhon  sections  open  to  honors  students 
only.  Freshmen  and  sophomores  elect  sections  in  one  or 
more  of  the  standard  courses  required.  ^ 


walkers,  C.  P.  Snow's  Two  Cultures  and  Jacob  Bronowski's 
Science  and  Human  Values.  Group  work  will  be  supple- 
mented by  panel  discussions  and  lectiues  by  visiting 
scholars. 

The  seminar  for  juniors  is  the  most  challenging  and 
alwa\s  is  directed  by  a  master  teacher  with  a  well- 
established  international  reputation  for  scholarship,  such 
as  Dr.  Cornelius  Kruse,  Professor  of  Philosophy  at 
Wesleyan  University,  who  directed  the  first  seminar,  and 
Dr.  William  Poteat  of  the  Duke  Di\inity  School  who 
guided  the  second. 

During  the  senior  year  the  student  applies  what 
critical  and  analytical  abilities  she  possesses  to  the 
solution  of  a  problem  in  her  major  field.  She  receives 
both  a  written  and  oral  examination  on  the  relevant 
literature  and  is  expected  to  defend  an  honors  thesis 
before  a  facult}'  committee. 


IT  is  too  early  to  evaluate  the  results  of  honors  work, 
and  as  a  member  of  the  faculty  committee  resf)onsible 
for  the  program,  I  am  disqualified  as  an  objective  eval- 
uator. 

For  example,  how  does  one  evaluate  the  results  of 
the  junior  honors  seminar  directed  b\'  Dr.  Knise?  Dr. 
Kruse,  by  almost  any  standard,  overworked  his  students 
in  preparation  for  a  seminar  which  met  for  three  hours 
every  Wednesday  evening.  In  the  first  semester  alone, 
in  addition  to  writing  numerous  papers,  his  students 
read  Homer's  Odyssey,  Sophocles'  Oedipus  Rex  and 
Antigone,  Jean  Anouilh's  Antigone,  Plato's  Republic,  the 
Book  of  Job,  Archibald  MacLeish's  J.  B.,  and  Dante's 
Divine  Comedy  in  an  attempt  to  leam  something  of  the 
histor}'  of  man's  quest  for  self  knowledge  and  life's 
meaning. 

The  second  semester  was  equally  demanding.  Stu- 
dent enthusiasm  was  such  that  physical  illness  could  not 
keep  them  away.  Dr.  Kruse's  enthusiasm  for  his  students 
was  such  that  he  retiuTied  to  campus  last  year  to  direct 


an  extracurricular  evening  discussion  of  the  controversy 
raging  over  Bishop  Robinson's  book.  Honest  To 
God.  The  same  students  undertook  the  same  elaborate 
preparation,   this   time  without  academic   credit. 

Similarl)',  it  is  impossible  to  evaluate  the  results  of 
the  seminar  directed  b\-  Dr.  Poteat  last  year.  While 
pushing  his  students  to  the  verge  of  tears  in  a  criti- 
cal study  of  Kierkegaard's  Eitlier/Or  and  Hannah 
Arendt's  The  Human  Condition,  he  established  an 
an  extremely  productive  and  seldom  achieved  student- 
teacher  relationship. 

What  was  the  impact  of  student  meetings  last  year 
with  scholars  like  Dr.  Bell  Wiley,  Sir  Herbert  Read 
and  Michael  Polanyi?  Student-faculty  outings  at  Piney 
Lake  and  monthly  meetings  of  freshmen  seminar  group 
in  faculty  homes  provide  other  dimensions  to  the  honors 
program  which  defy  evaluation. 

In  retrospect,  perhaps  the  only  statement  that  can 
be  made  with  a  degree  of  certainty  is  that  we  have  made 
a  start,  through  the  Honors  Program,  in  the  implemen- 
tation of  what  Pere  Teilhard  dc  Chardin  called  the  process 
of  hominization  —  the  better  realization  of  the  student's 
intrinsic  possibilities.  Few  students  realize  more  than  a 
tiny  fraction  of  their  capacities,  or  enjoy  but  the  most 
meager  degree  of  possible  intellectual  satisfaction  and 
self-fulfillment.  The  Honors  Program  provides  additional 
opportunities  for  self-fulfillment,  enjoyment  and  the 
humanization  of  the  student's  life.  D 


Dr.  David  G.  Davies,  assistant  professor  of  economics, 
directs  the  Honors  Program.  He  is  chairman  of  the  Honors 
Council  which  is  composed  of  seven  faculty  members 
appointed  by  the  Chancellor  to  administer  the  honors 
program. 


Fall  1964 


Lessons  from  the  Laboratory 


A  Professor  Speaks 


bv  Dr.  Laura  G.  Anderton 


A  new  emphasis  on  tlie  individual  student  was  a  vital 
and  gratifying  part  of  the  National  Science  Foundation 
summer  research  program  in  the  biology  department. 
It  gave  me  additional  respect  for  the  University's  emphasis 
on  research  and  hope  for  a  counter-balance  to  the  large 
lecture  sections  which  increased  enrollment  necessitates 
in  state  universities. 

Ever  since  tlie  instigation  of  lecture  sections  of  150-200 
students  in  Introductory  Biology,  I  have  recognized  them 
as  a  challenge,  and  in  many  ways  I  have  enjoyed  teaching 
them.  However,  there  is  always  the  regret  that  I  cannot 
know  each  student  individually. 

This  summer,  under  the  NSF  grant  in  biology,  one  or 
two  students  worked  closely  with  each  professor  in  a 
tutorial  relationship  on  a  problem  closely  allied  to  the 
professor's  summer  research  program.  In  this  way,  the 
student  was  instructed  in  the  facts,  theories,  reading  and 


ETTY  JANE  GARDNER  EDV 


Dr.  Anderton  received  one  of  the  first  two  "Alumni 
Teaching  Excellence"  Awards  in  May  at  the  Annual 
Honors  Convocation.  The  research  project  with  which 
Cynthia  assisied  this  summer  was  a  study  of  changes  in 
human  chromosomes  observed  in  tissue  cultures. 


techniques  within  the  professor's  competence  while  help- 
ing the  professor  in  two  distinct  ways. 

First,  to  the  professor  the  student  was  an  exti-a  pair  of 
hands,  an  extra  pair  of  eyes  for  microscopic  work  and 
reading  and  another  mind  to  look  at  a  problem  from  a 
slightly  different  perspective.  On  one  occasion,  the  student 
questioned  the  reason  for  a  stylized  technique.  The  only 
plausible  reason  was  that  it  had  always  been  done.  Thus, 
for  the  first  time,  tliat  teclinique  was  questioned  and 
resulted  in  a  new,  more  efficient  procedure. 

Secondly,  the  student  was  a  special  stimulus  to  the 
professor  in  listening  and  communicating  in  his  highly 
technical  field.  The  student  also  was  encouraged  to 
develop  independence  in  formulating  related  questions 
and  creating  new  ways  to  answer  them. 

Working  with  two  students,  Patricia  Hopper  '64  of 
Shelby  and  Cynthia  Blythe  '65  of  Charlotte,  on  my  central 
research  problem  this  summer  revealed  aspects  of  the 
teaching-learning  processes  often  overlooked  in  mass  edu- 
cation, namely,  the  development  of  personal  traits  related 
to  good  scholarship,  such  as  self-reliance,  self-confidence, 
self-discipline  and  imagination. 

Under  a  tutorial  arrangement  concentration  in  personal 
development  was  possible  and  led  to  a  personal  interest 
in  and  respect  for  each  student.  Soon  I  found  myself 
inviting  the  students  to  my  home  for  dinner,  music  and 
stimulating  conversation  in  a  manner  I  once  had  known 
at  my  Alma  Mater. 

Perhaps  the  emphasis  on  research  has  brought  to  our 
campus  a  revival  of  close  facultv-student  relationships 
in  a  new  dimension,  especially  during  the  junior  and  senior 
years.  Tliis  fact  is  confirmed  by  a  look  at  our  student 
research  programs  throughout  the  campus  in  tlie  Honors 
Program,  in  the  individual  research  courses,  and  in  the 
creative  endeavors  in  the  arts,  all  of  which  are  run  on  a 
tutorial  system  which  focuses  attention  on  the  individual 
student.  D 


Alumxi  News 


1 


Research  and  training  grants,  many  of  whicli  are  avail- 
able only  to  universities,  provide  students  with  an  oppor- 
tunity to  enrich  their  education  witlt  a  genuine  research 
experience.  They  work  closely  with  a  professor  in  what 
almost  is  a  return  to  the  master-apprentice  method  of 
learning. 


A  Student's  View 


bv  Cvnthia  Ruth  Blvthe  "65 


While  participating  in  a  National  Science  Foundation 
undergraduate  research  program  this  summer,  I  began 
to  imderstand  for  the  first  time  the  meaning  of  the  temi 
"education."  This  intellectual  experiment  in  research, 
which  challenged  me  to  contribute  to  and  to  criticalh' 
evaluate  the  existing  knowledge  of  ni}'  own  field  of  science 
and  other  areas  of  endeavor  as  well,  now  has  become  an 
integral  part  of  my  living  and  learning  processes. 

My  education  over  the  past  15  years  seems  to  have 
been  a  mere  acquisition  and  parroting  of  facts  rather  than 
a  creative  questioning  and  integrating  of  these  facts  into 
a  meaning  whole. 

But  this  summer's  experience  in  critical  analysis  and 
independent  thinking  would  have  been  much  less  stimu- 
lating, if  not  impossible,  had  it  not  been  for  the  close 
association  with  my  director  throughout  the  entire  learn- 
ing experience.  Working  in  close  contact  with  Dr. 
Anderton  gave  me  a  greater  insight  into  the  method  by 
which  an  educated  mind,  cognizant  of  pertinent  facts, 
searches  and  finds  the  answer  to  problems.  In  addition, 
this  type  of  relationship  encourages  the  interjolay  of  differ- 
ing ideas  and  enables  the  individual  student  to  feel  that  his 
ideas  may  be  useful  in  the  faculty-dominated  area  of 
research. 

For  the  first  time  during  my  education  I  was  called 
upon  to  gather  and  to  integrate  independently  ideas  and 
isolated  facts  in  order  to  formulate  a  problem,  to  find  its 
solution  and  to  construct  a  theor>'.  Stimulated  and 
challenged  by  someone  for  whom  I  have  the  greatest 
admiration,  I  learned  to  explore  my  own  potential  for 
creativity,  initiative  and  self-expression  in  an  atmosphere 
of  intellectual  freedom  and  honest\'. 

In  addition,  these  circumstances  provided  me  with  an 
exciting  opportimity  to  learn  more  about  m>'  professor  as 
a  personality  who  loves  life  and  all  the  ideas,  people  and 
experiences  of  which  it  is  composed. 

No  other  experience  has  been  as  great  a  challenge  or 
offered  as  valuable  a  reward.   Only  if  students  realize 


9ETTY  JANE  GARDNER  EDWARDS 


that  in  college,  education  is  to  be  found  outside  the  strict 
academic  structure  in  independent  tliought  and  study, 
will  they  be  able  to  seek  it  in  later  years  when  that  frame- 
work is  no  longer  an  immediate  force  within  their  lives. 

As  a  delegate  to  the  17th  National  Student  Congress 
in  July,  I  was  impressed  by  the  quiet  but  growing  dis- 
content of  college  and  university  students  across  the 
nation,  a  discontent  summed  up  as  follows:  "In  the 
haste  to  bring  more  education  to  more  people,  and  as  a 
residt  of  the  change  in  the  methods  of  education  from 
academic  achievement  to  social  adjustment,  the  individ- 
ual, the  center  of  the  educational  process,  has  been 
forgotten."  The  undergraduate  research  program  places 
the  individual  in  the  center  of  the  educational  process 
and  assures  he  will  not  be  forgotten.  D 


Cynthia  Blythe  of  Charlotte  is  president  of  the  Golden 
Chain  and  vice  president  of  the  Senior  Class.  After  June 
graduation  she  plans  to  enter  Graduate  School 
to  work  towards  a  Masters  degree  and  ultimately  receive 
her  doctoral. 


Fall  1964 


Undergraduate  Research 


In  Psychology 


by  Dr.  Kendon  Smith 

Head  of  the  Dcptirtincnt  of  Psychology 


When  the  students  return  to  UNC-G  this  fall,  two  of 
them  will  embark  on  personal  adventures  iii  research. 

They  are  Patricia  Lawless  of  Charlotte  and  Teresa 
Martin  of  Shelby,  senior  majors  in  psychology.  Each  of 
them  holds  an  Undergraduate  Research  Stipend,  in  the 
amound  of  $600  for  the  academic  year,  provided  by  the 
National  Institute  of  Mental  Health.  Each  also  has  addi- 
tional funds  provided  for  research  expenses.  The  only 
obligation  for  either  is  that  she  conduct  a  project  in 
ps\chologica]   research  of  her  own   choosing. 


Miss  Gallowaij  instructs  Lynda  Martin  of  Lawsonville 
in  an  experiment  related  to  her  research  project  in  the 
area  of  division  of  attention. 


The  research  stipends  are  not  new.  The  academic  year 
of  1964-65  will  be  the  third  one  in  which  one  or  two 
stipends  have  been  awarded.  According  to  the  arrange- 
ment which  has  been  in  force,  the  faculty  of  the  Psycho- 
logy Department  designates  outstanding  students  for  the 
awards;  and  the  awards  are  financed  by  the  NIMH. 

Each  winner  of  an  award  works  closely  with  a  member 
of  the  psychology  faculty.  She  may  fit  herself  into  a 
responsible  position  in  a  research  project  already  in 
progress.  Alternatively,  she  may  choose  to  invent  her  own 
project,  in  an  area  in  which  she  has  some  special  interest. 

An  example  of  the  latter  kind  of  project  is  the  one 
carried  out  by  Miss  Mildred  Millner,  in  1962-63.  Miss 
Millner,  a  native  of  Charlotte  who  is  now  doing  graduate 
work  in  psychology  at  the  University  of  Maryland,  was 
especially  interested  in  the  way  in  which  people  learn 
mathematical  concepts.  Working  with  Dr.  William  S.  Ray, 
she  developed  an  elaborate  experimental  design  which 
eventually  made  use  of  many  undergraduates  as  experi- 
mental subjects.  Each  subject  occupied  a  single  cubicle, 
where  instructions  and  signals  came  to  her  b)'  loudspeaker 
and  by  electrical  timer.  Rigidly  controlled  periods  of 
practice  on  pre-planned  drill  materials  were  combined 
with  special  instructions  and  explanations.  In  the  end, 
Miss  Millner  was  able  to  reach  conclusions  about  the 
effects  of  explanation  and  of  drill  on  mathematical  skills 
and  mathematical  understanding. 

Another  example  of  a  research  project  which  satisfied 
personal  interests  is  the  experiment  pursued  by  Miss 
Melissa  Galloway  of  Badin  in  1963-64,  under  the  direction 
of  Dr.  Kendon  Smith.  Miss  Galloway,  interested  in  how 
the  individual  can  control  the  "direction"  of  her  attention, 
also  worked  with  undergratuate  subjects.  Ever\'  subject 
in  her  study  was  named  "Linda"—  because  the  girl's  name 
was  important  to  the  experiment,  and  this  aspect  required 
control. 


10 


Alumxi  News 


A  primary  aim  of  undergraduate  fellowships 
in  psijchologij  is  the  training  of  students  in  the 
use  of  research  tools.  This  training  especially  is 
valuable  in  view  of  a  new  masters  of  arts  degree 
in  psychology  which  the  Department  added  this 
year. 


Miss  Martin  and  Dr.  Dunham  examine  some  of  the 
cards  wliicli  uill  he  used  in  a  research  project  related  to 
fJic  psychological  effects  of  school  integration. 


Actvially,  "Linda"  sat  alone  in  a  soundproof  room, 
attempting  to  perform  a  difficult  visual  task:  as  a  small 
light  flashed  off  and  on  in  front  of  her,  she  had  to  decide 
which  flashes  were  especially  long  and  to  press  the  key 
to  signify  her  decision: 

While  she  was  busy  at  this  job,  she  was  also  listening 
to  a  very  faint  series  of  words  being  played  by  tape 
recording  into  the  room.  Mostly  the  words  were  insignifi- 
cant; but,  occasionally,  one  of  them  was  her  own  name  — 
"Linda",  of  course.  Experimental  results  were  not  con- 
clusive, but  Miss  Galloway,  who  is  now  doing  graduate 
work  at  the  Universit>-  of  Illinois,  satisfied  her  own 
curiosity. 

A  final  example  is  that  of  Miss  Carol  Furey,  who 
(along  with  being  President  of  the  student  body  at  the 
time)  carried  out  her  work  in  1962-6'3.  Miss  Furey  became 
part  of  a  larger  research  project  carried  out  by  Dr.  Frances 
Dunham. 

Miss  Furey  administered,  or  supervised  the  admini- 
stration of,  tests  to  1,000  third,  fourth,  and  sixth-grade  chil- 
dren in  the  Jamestown  school  district.  The  students  were 
given  a  tedious  task,  in  an  effort  to  test  their  persistence. 
Systematically,  some  of  the  students  were  praised  as  they 
went  about  their  work,  others  were  censured  (members  of 
the  latter  group  were  praised  at  the  end,  also).  Admini- 
stered to  the  students  and  to  their  mothers  was  a  c^ues- 
tionnaire  about  the  mother's  handling  of  disciplinan,' 
problems  with  the  child.  The  data  obtained  are,  as 
indicated,  still  under  analysis  as  part  of  a  larger  program 
of  research.  The  indications  are  that  the  kind  of  discipline 
to  which  a  child  is  subjected  affects  his  ability  to  under- 
take and  complete  demanding  tasks. 

This  year's  scholars,  Miss  Martin  and  Miss  Lawless, 
will  work  under  Dr.  Dunham  and  Dr.  Charles  D.  Noblin, 
respectively.  There  is  still  much  to  plan.   Miss  Martin 


Miss  Lawless  receives  iuslrtictioii  from  Dr.  \ohlin 
in  use  of  apparatus  in  her  project  concerning  the  effect 
of  certain  personality  characteristics  on  the  process  of 
learning. 


expects  to  work  in  the  general  area  of  social  psychology, 
perhaps  that  of  the  psychological  effects  of  school  integra- 
tion. Miss  Lawless,  who  has  held  an  undergraduate 
research  appointment  sponsored  by  the  National  Science 
Foundation  in  the  UNC-CH  Department  of  Psychology 
this  summer,  will  undertake  probably  a  laboratory  experi- 
ment on  the  effect  of  certain  personality  characteristics  on 
tlie  process  of  learning.  D 


Fall  1964 


11 


Automated  Education 


Revolutionary  Idea  Explored 

through  New  Research  Grant 


by  Dr.  Hildegarde  Johnson 


T]jc  Home  Economics  Education  Department  has 
received  a  $84,788  contract  from  the  Cooperative 
Research  Branch  of  the  U.  S.  Office  of  Education  for 
support  of  a  project  in  the  area  of  Programmed  Instruc- 
tion. The  three  and  one-half  year  project  will  he  carried 
out  by  Dr.  Jolmson,  Miss  Barbara  Clawson,  Mrs.  Sarah 
Sljoffner  and  two  graduate  assistants. 


AUTOMATED  education,  or  programmed  instruction, 
is  undoubtedly  the  most  revokitionary  idea  to  come 
,_to  the  field  of  education  in  recent  years. 

The  psychological  theor\-  back  of  this  new  kind  of 
teaching  emphasizes  the  importance  of  sequence  in  the 
learning  process,  of  small  steps,  of  active  response  on  the 
part  of  learners,  of  immediate  reinforcement  of  correct 
responses  and  of  the  student  working  at  his  own  pace. 
A  student  teaches  himself  when  self-instnictional  mate- 
rials are  used. 

Programed  learning  may  be  used  in  the  school  of  the 
future,  not  as  a  substitute  for  traditional  teaching,  but  to 
supplement  it  or  as  a  foundation  for  learning  guided  by 
the  teacher.  One  of  the  unsolved  questions  with  which 
educators  are  concerned,  is  the  relative  efficiency  of  pro- 
gramed learning  versus  conventional  teaching  methods 
as  a  foundation  for  cognitive  learning  which  goes  beyond 
recall  and  understanding. 

Research  has  shown  quite  conclusively  that  pupils  can 
learn  facts  more  efficiently  from  a  good  self-instructional 
program  than  from  the  teacher  in  the  average  classroom. 
There  is,  however,  much  more  to  learning  than  the 
memorization  of  facts  which  later  may  be  recalled  in  a 
testing  situation. 

Educators  agree  that  it  also  is  important  for  students 
to  learn  to  apply  their  learnings  to  new  situations  and  to 
engage  in  higher  processes  of  thinking  such  as  s>'nthesis, 


analysis  and  evaluation.  Educational  psychologists  call 
this  teaching  for  transfer  and  teaching  for  the  attainment 
of  higher  level  objectives. 

Answers  to  a  number  of  questions  are  sought  in  the 
research  project. 

Is  programed  instmction  as  effective  as  learning  under 
the  guidance  of  teachers  who  were  selected  as  exception- 
ally successful? 

How  does  the  combination  of  programed  learning  and 
the  laboratory  method  compare  with  the  demonstration 
and  laboratory  methods  as  taught  b>-  highly  skilled  and 
by  randomly  selected  teachers? 

Can  students  more  successfully  transfer  their  learning 
to  a  new  task  after  programed  learning  than  after  learn- 
ing in  the  conventional  classroom? 

Self-instructional  programs  in  home  economics  will 
be  used  in  the  search  for  answers  to  the  above  questions. 
Findings  will  have  implications  for  classroom  learning  in 
other  disciplines. 

The  self-instructional  programs  will  be  developed  by 
local  staff  members  under  the  guidance  of  members  of  the 
staff  of  the  American  Institute  for  Research  in  Pittsburgh, 
Pennsylvania.  A  sub-contract  with  this  Institute  provides 
for  a  two-week  training  course,  conducted  on  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  at  Greensboro  campus  in 
September,  a  one-week  workshop  bi-monthly  for  a  period 
of  one  year  and  continuing  review  of  materials  prepared. 

A  number  of  self-instnictional  programs  and  evalu- 
ation devices  will  be  developed  during  the  first  phase  of 
the  project.  Later,  a  field  experiment  will  be  conducted 
in  which  programed  learning  will  be  combined  with  the 
laboratory  method.  The  combination  of  the  two  methods 
then  will  be  compared  with  the  laborators'  and  demon- 
stration methods  as  they  are  used  by  highh'  skilled 
teachers,  and  the  laboratory  and  demonstration  methods 
as  they  are  used  by  randomly  selected  teachers.  D 


12 


Alumxi  News 


Research  and 
The  University 


There  was  a  time  when  research  was 
an  esoteric  activity.  Today  it  is  an 
integral  part  of  a  university. 


AMAJORITY  of  research  grants  are  for  scientific  projects  in  keeping  with 
the  new  thrust  in  scientific  education  that  followed  the  lofting  of  the 
first  Soviet  sputnik. 

One  grant  often  attracts  another  as  in  the  example  of  Dr.  James  F.  Wilson, 
a  Ph.D.  from  Stanford,  who  received  a  National  Science  Foundation  award 
of  $45,800  for  the  current  academic  year.  Under  previous  grants  from  the 
NSF  and  the  National  Research  Council's  Committee  on  Developmental 
Biology,  Dr.  Wilson  has  perfected  a  "surgical"'  operation  on  a  plant  cell  which 
he  puts  into  daily  use  in  his  laboratory. 

The  maneuver  is  so  delicate  that  tlie  tip  of  a  hypodermic-like  glass  needle 
penetrating  the  cell  wall  cannot  be  seen  clearly  even  under  a  microscope. 
The  procedure  is  the  equivalent  of  trying  to  put  a  microscopic  hole  in  a  tube 
half  the  diameter  of  the  finest  human  hair  by  using  a  tool  a  tenth  of  a  hair's 
diameter  and  having  a  point  tapering  to  100  thousandths  of  an  inch.  Dr.  Wilson 
can  repeat  the  operation  20  times  an  hour. 

Besides  perfecting  the  cell  surger\'  technique.  Dr.  Wilson  had  to  make  his 
own  tools,  a  procedure  hardly  less  delicate  and  ingenious  than  the  plant  cell 
operation  itself. 

Dr.  Wilson  has  published  technical  reports  on  his  techniques  and  two  more 
are  in  the  press.  With  researchers  eager  to  unveil  more  mysteries  of  the  plant 
cell  which  heretofore  have  defied  routine  micrurgical  examination,  the  pro- 
cedure developed  by  Dr.  Wilson  offers  a  new  technical  approach. 


Research  grants  buy  books,  build  research  laboratories,  attract  and  hold  a  fine  faculty, 
enable  undergraduates  to  learn  in  the  laboratory  working  directly  vvidi  a  faculty  member, 
and  ultimately  may  inspire  a  student  to  original  research  himself.  Grants  awarded  UNC-G 
for  die  academic  year  1963-64  total  $309,8.30,  three  times  last  year's  total  and  nearly  four 
times  the  amount  awarded  in  1962-63.  This  represents  only  new  grants  and  does  not  include 
tliose  carried  over  from  previous  years. 


National  Science  Foundation 

Educational  Services 

In-Service  Science  Institute 
(Mollis  Rogers) 

$25,850 

Biology  Institute 
(Bruce  M.  Eberhart) 

Institutional  Grant 

(Administered  by  Mereb  E.  Mossman) 

16,502 

National  Institute  of  Mental  Health 

Micrurgical  Investigation 

(James  F.  Wilson) 
Undergraduate  Science  Education 

(Bruce  M.  Eberhart) 

45,800 
6,580 

Undergraduate  Psychology  Research 
Program 
(Kendon  Smith) 

Undergraduate  Science  Education 

3,640 

Public  Health  Service 

(Harriet  J.  Kupferer) 
Genetic  Control  in  Neurospora 
(Bruce  IVI.  Eberhart) 

30,600 

Traineeship  Grant— Migrant  Health 
Problems 
(Arthur!.  Rubel) 

American  Philosophical  Society 

Equipment  for  Research 
(Paul  E.  Lutz) 

900 

State  Board  of  Public  Welfare 

Group  Care  of  Infants 
(Irwin  V.  Sperry) 

$74,000 


1,620 


2,150 


15,000 


Department  Health.  Education,  Welfare, 
Office  of  Education 

Programmed  Instruction 
(Hildegarde  Johnson) 


Vocational  Rehabilitation  Administration 

Speech  and  Hearing  Clinic 
(Herman  D.  Middleton) 


2,400 


13 


National  Repertory  Theatre 
Returns  to  Campus 


by  Dr.  Herman  D.  Middleton 


THIS  opens  up  whole  new  worlds  ...  I  think  books 
will  be  written  about  it."  The  speaker  was  Peggy 
Wood,  president  of  the  American  National  Theatre 
and  Academy.  The  occasion  was  a  press  conference  in 
Greensboro  September  9  when  Governor  Terry  Sanford 
and  Chancellor  Otis  A.  Singletarv  jointly  announced  the 
second  period  of  in-residence  of  the  National  Repertory 
Theatre  on  the  campus  of  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina at  Greensboro. 

The  NRT  is  sponsored  by  the  American  National 
Theatre  and  Academy  as  a  contribution  to  American 
cultural  life,  since  it  regards  NRT  as  a  move  to  provide 


in  the  United  States  the  equivalent  of  the  Old  Vic  Theatre 
in  England  and  the  Comedie  Francaise  in  France. 

The  uniqueness  of  the  paitnership  was  pointed  up  in 
the  Governor's  statement  which  was  read  to  over  100 
members  of  the  press,  radio,  and  television  by  Hargrove 
Bowles,  Jr.,  Director  of  the  North  Carolina  Department 
of  Conservation  and  Development;  "By  establishing  the 
two-week  stay  of  NRT  on  its  campus  last  fall,  the  Univers- 
ity of  North  Carolina  at  Greensboro  recognized  this  value 
and  led  the  entire  countiy  in  pioneering  a  relationship 
between  education  and  the  fully  professional  theatre.  .  .  . 
The  tour  which  began  here  went  on  to  take  the  entire 


TJtc  challenge  of  repertury  is  reflected  on  the  faces:  of 
stars  and  feature  plaijers  as  tJieii  confer  with  Eva  he 
Galienne  (hack  to  camera).  Clockwise  around  the  table-. 


are  Signc  llasso,  Adrienne  Hazzard,  Paula  Bauersmith, 
Thayer  David,  Patricia  Guinan,  Herbert  Foster,  Elizabeth 
Council,  Dolores  Stdton  and  Farley  Granger. 


Alumni  News 


Farley  Granger  studies  his  scri)>t  on  a  laun  near 
Aijcock  Auditorium,  leaning  againat  a  tree  trunk  scarred 
with  generations  of  initials  of  students. 


country,  even  to  Broadway  itself,  ample  proof  that  North 
Carolina  fosters  and  furthers  the  cause  of  the  arts  in  edu- 
cation and  the  community  at  large." 

Chancellor  Singletary  noted  that  "What  we  at  first 
regarded  last  year  as  an  interesting  artistic  experiment  has 
proved  an  educational  and  cultural  experience  of  highest 
order.  We  welcome  the  retiun  of  NRT." 

Why  is  it  "educational"  for  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  at  Greensboro  to  have  the  National  Repertory 
Theatre  in-residence?  Isn't  it  frivolous  and  tremendously 
expensive  for  an  institution  of  higher  learning  to  foster 
such  a  program?  UNC-G  doesn't  think  so.  Students  being 
educated  to  be  theatre  artists  in  its  Department  of  Drama 
and  Speech  and  students  being  educated  to  be  responsible 
citizens  and  leaders  in  its  other  disciplines  must  see  the 
finest  plays  performed  by  the  finest  players.  There  is  no 
better  way  for  their  imaginations  to  be  awakened,  their 
hearts  touched,  and  their  lives  influenced  by  the  noblest 
thoughts  of  man. 

These  opportunities  will  be  insured  by  seven  perform- 
ances of  three  fine  plays  which  will  climax  the  month's 
period  of  in-residence.  "Liliom"  by  Ferenc  Molnar  will  be 
presented  on  October  9,  10  and  16.  It  will  be  followed  by 
"Hedda  Gabler"  by  Henrik  Ibsen  on  October  15  and  17 
and  "S/ie  Stoops  to  Conquer"  on  October  14  and  17 
( matinee ) .  The  entire  company  of  60  will  be  in-residence 
from  September  20  through  October  17,  1964. 

During  the  four-week  period  of  in-residence  the 
impact  of  the  artistic  stature  of  the  company  will  be  felt 
at  all  levels  of  campus  life.  Of  course,  the  sharpest  impres- 
sion will  be  made,  as  it  was  last  fall,  when  students  attend 
the  performances.  An  effort,  however,  to  integrate  the 
additional  educational  opportunities  inherent  in  this 
project  with  the  curricula  of  the  University  also  proved 
very  successful  last  year.  Since  the  company  is  on  campus 
for  a  much  longer  period  this  year,  these  opportunities  will 
be  better  realized. 


Miss  Hasso,  Swedish  stage,  movie  and  television  star, 
left,  and  Peggy  Wood,  president  of  American  National 
Theatre  and  Academy,  remembered  for  her  "I  Remember 
Mama"  portrayals,  pose  with  Chancellor  Singletary  at  a 
press  reception  in  Greensboro  announcing  NRT's  return 
to  campus. 


Since  such  a  University-Repertory  Theatre  relation- 
ship has  never  existed,  the  natine  of  these  opportimities 
needed  to  be  discovered  and  activated.  Cunently  working 
on  this  area  of  the  project  is  a  steering  committee,  chair- 
maned  by  the  Dean  of  the  Faculty,  Mereb  E.  Mossman, 
and  including  as  members  Dean  Naomi  Albanese  of  the 
School  of  Home  Economics,  Dean  Lee  Rigsby  of  the 
School  of  Music,  Dr.  Joseph  A.  Bryant,  Jr.,  of  the  Depart- 
ment of  English,  Gilbert  Carpenter  of  the  Department  of 
Art,  and  Dr.  Hennan  Middleton  of  the  Department  of 
Drama  and  Speech. 

NRT's  influence  on  UNC-G  deeply  penetrates  into 
a  wide  area  of  campus  life.  During  the  two-week  period 
of  in-residence  last  fall,  they  gave  l4  lectures  in  six  depart- 
ments and  schools.  Students  in  drama  and  speech,  natur- 
ally have  the  greatest  opportunities  under  this  in-resi- 
dence program.  They  assist  the  professionals  backstage 
during  the  period  when  productions  are  being  set-up  on 
the  Aycock  stage,  obsei-ve  technical  and  dress  rehearsals, 
and  talk  with  actors  about  interpretation  and  with  produc- 
tion personnel  about  scenery,  properties,  lighting,  and 
costumes. 

No  other  University  has  the  educational  opportunities 
represented  by  a  fully  professional  repertory  theatre.  Why 
not?  Largely  because  of  the  enomious  expense  and  the 
complexit}'  involved  in  producing  repertory  theatre.  To 

(Pleii.se  turn  to  page  25) 


Fall  1964 


15 


1932  .  .  .  the  year  that  Richard  HaUihurton 
came  to  campus,  and  George  Sokolsky,  Martha 
Graham  and  Vicki  Baiim.  That  year  a  group  of  75 
male  students  made  a  kind  of  history  when  they 
became  the  first  coeds  to  register  at  Woman's 
College.  The  doors  were  opened  as  a  depression 
measure,  hut  The  Vine  Needles  of  that  year 
happily  predicted,  "It  is  believed  now  that  co- 
education will  be  a  permanent  fixture  on  campus." 
The  prediction  was  slow  to  realization,  and  32 
years  luere  to  pass  before  male  undergraduates 
again  matricidated. 


16 


Alumni  News 


That  Wonderful  Year:  1932 


The  First  COEDS 


bv  Burke  Davis 


THE  first  coed  infestation  of  the 
UNC-G  Campus  (it  was  then 
newly  Woman's  College  and 
universally  still  called  NCCW) 
occurred  in  that  dank  era  when  the 
Cake  Eater  and  the  Lomige  Lizard 
were  passing  from  the  national  scene. 

It  opened  a  little  over  a  month 
before  the  election  of  Franklin 
Roosevelt  and  closed  lamely  the  next 
spring,  after  a  disorderly  course 
which  diverted  student  attention 
from  the  Bank  Holiday,  the  end  of 
Prohibition,  the  Reichstag  Fire,  the 
NRA,  the  Lindbergh  Kidnapping  and 
many  another  dire  event. 

In  those  days  our  intrepid  inter- 
lopers thought  \\'e  had  established 
new  records  of  Bohemian  living  in 
North  Carolina,  —  but  that  was 
before  the  coining  of  such  watch- 
words as  teen-age  hoodlums  and 
juvenile  delinquency,  and  so  it  is 
likely  that  our  bouts  of  intemperate 
behavior  would  pale  in  comparison 
with  modern  efforts. 

At  least,  we  opened  new  fields  of 
endeavor.  The  good  professor  of 
plant  histology,  for  example,  never 
dreamed  that  his  rapidly  dwindling 
supply  of  the  purest  eythl  alcohol, 
allegedlv  dexoted  to  the  making  of 
slides  for  his  microscopes,  had  been 
blithely  wedded  to  the  fragrant  juice 
of  juniper  berries,  judiciously 
diluted,  and  become  the  mainstay  of 
the  local  gin  supply  for  a  band  of 
appreciative  consumers. 

Except  for  a  few  stray  parents, 
more  alert  than  most,  the  community 
never  discovered  the  high  jinks  tak- 
ing place  in  "fraternity  rooms"  in  the 
heart  of  downtown  Greensboro, 
where  there  was  more  gaiety  above 
than  in  the  music  store  below. 


That  downtown  club,  frequented 
by  men  and  women  from  the  campus, 
had  many  a  near  squeak  when 
fathers  conducted  personal  laids 
(and  once  necessitated  the  dropping 
of  several  fruit  jars  of  Truth  Serum 
onto  the  sidewalk  below)  —  but  there 
\\as  never  a  call  from  the  cops.  A 
mark  of  pride,  this,  to  the  member- 
ship, ever\-  inan  of  \\'hom  had 
belonged  to  a  fraternity  elsewhere, 
before  the  Great  Depression  finally 
struck  home. 

Earh-  in  that  \'ear  of  1932-33,  Mrs. 
Eleanor  Roosevelt  appeared  in 
Aycock  Auditorium.  She  was  fresh 
from  her  justly  famed  pronounce- 
ment on  The  Southern  Problem,  in 
which  she  described  we  all  as  slioe- 
less,  sliiftless  and  generally  witless, 
and  she  faced  a  moody  audience  in 
Aycock.  She  was  hooted  by  a  few  of 
the  braver  coeds,  —  some  of  whom 
\\'ere  given  their  walking  pa^Ders  by 
the  administration,  the  first  diminu- 
tion of  that  band. 

I  am  told  by  a  faculty  friend  that 
college  records  bear  no  testimony  to 
some  of  these  expulsions  indicating 
only  that  we  had  failed  to  meet  the 
academic  requirements  of  that  da\' 
and  age  (which  probably  weren't 
high  by  today's  standards  —  though, 
unaccoimtably,  we  were  expected  to 
be  able  to  read  and  write).  However 
records  were  posted  for  posterity, 
some  of  us  will  bear  to  our  graves 
the  memory  of  the  stem-faced  Dr. 
Julius  Foust,  trying  liis  level  best  to 
comprehend  the  reckless  youths  who 
appeared  before  him  on  some  charge 
or  other,  while,  in  the  background, 
there  gazed  upon  the  tableau  the 
amused  faces  of  young  ladies  of 
some  student  government  authority. 


more  than  one  of  them  veterans  of 
fratcrnit\"  frolics  and  other  such 
amusements  of  oiu-  Year. 

A  great  many  of  the  crimes  went 
mercifully  imdetected  by  those  in 
pow  er,  and  the  years  have  undoubt- 
edly magnified  our  impressions  of 
wickedness,  but  it  is  certain  that  most 
of  us  enjoyed  ourselves  as  never 
before,  and  that  the  year  passed  as 
something  of  a  marathon  Roman 
Holiday,  without  the  grapes. 

Many  members  of  that  coed  class 
have  gone  on  to  remarkable  success 
in  a  variety  of  fields,  and  in  informal 
reunions  of  the  old  sinners  in  recent 
years  we  have  concluded  that  dis- 
sipation and  unbridled  youthful  vigor 
are  perhaps  the  finest  fundamental 
and  ungirding  for  success  in  life. 

At  any  rate,  the  jollity  of  that  year 
is  almost  all  that  comes  back  in  my 
failing  memoiy.  There  was  surely 
some  classroom  work  performed,  but 
not  by  this  representative.  There 
were  some  attractive,  able  and  deter- 
mined faculty  members  at  hand,  and 
under  other  conditions  some  would 
have  been  inspiring  even  to  such 
wayward  youth  as  we  were,  or 
thought  we  were.  But  by  and  large 
there  were  too  many  girls,  and  too 
few  boys,  with  many  of  both  parties 
titillated  by  the  unique  aspects  of 
oiu-  situation.  And  so,  I  fear,  we  were 
largely  heedless,  and  accomplished 
(Please  turn  to  page  26) 


Burke  Davis,  leading  novelist  and  bio- 
grapher of  sucl)  eminent  figures  as  Robert 
E.  Lee  (THE  GREY  FOX),  Jeb  Stuart 
(THE  LAST  CAVALIER),  Stonewall  Jack- 
son (THEY  CALLED  HIM  STONEWALL) 
and  Lt.  Gen.  Lewis  B.  "Chesty"  Puller 
(MARINE),  has  forsaken  his  native  Greens- 
boro for  Colonial  Williamsburg. 


Fall  1964 


17 


Luther  Hodges 


Ct'titinucd  from  Page  3) 


miss  most.   1   onK'  could  reply;    "The  high  ceilings,  my 
many  friends,  and  a  chauffeur." 

^^'e  were  read>'  to  move  on  to  a  pleasant  life  in  Chapel 
Hill,  but  instead  we  arrived  in  \Vashington  for  the 
Kennedy  Inauguration. 

Life  in  Washington  has  been  ver\'  different.  We  knew 
President  Kennedy  during  the  campaign,  had  entertained 
him  at  the  Mansion,  but  I  didn't  know  him  well  or 
appreciate  his  greatness  until  we  came  to  Washington. 
His  alert  and  brilliant  mind  impressed  me  most  of  all. 

Never  shall  I  forget  the  sad  and  mournful  flight  back 
to  Washington  after  we  heard  the  tragic  news  of  his 
death.  We  were  on  our  way  to  Japan  with  five  other 
Cabinet  members,  their  wives.  White  House  assistants 
and  aides.  ^Ve  were  stimned  and  worried.  The  hours 
seemed  endless. 

THE  days  that  followed,  when  we  participated  in  an 
official  way,  were  sad,  tense  and  dramatic.  The  great 
man  was  gone.  But  he  had  given  hope  and  courage  to 
the  world  and  had  set  our  course  for  another  great  man 
to  follow.  How  fortunate  we  were  to  ha\'e  L\Tidon 
Johnson  to  carry  on  in  a  noble  wa\'  the  work  President 
Kennedy  had  started. 

In  these  vears,  we  have  been  to  the  White  House  for 
man\-  happier  occasions.  I'm  thrilled  each  time  I  go 
there.  Yes,  I've  danced  with  President  Johnson!  He  is  a 
tireless  worker  and  at  the  same  time  he  wants  to  give 
others  pleasure. 

One  Sunday  we  went  to  the  Christian  Church  with 
the  President  and  Mrs.  Johnson.  One  woman  at  the  door 
of  the  church  remarked  to  the  President:  "Isn't  it  nice? 
You've  brought  your  friends.  I  bet  you  are  going  to  take 
them  home  for  dinner."  The  President  said:  "Yes."  And 
that  informal  Sunday  dinner  in  their  private  living 
quarters  was  unforgettable. 

PERH.\PS  the  most  interesting  meals  served  in  Wash- 
ington are  in  the  various  Embassies.  You  usually  get 
typical  meals  of  the  country,  and  there  is  always  an 
opportunity  to  broaden  your  knowledge  of  the  land  and 
the  people.  We've  been  to  many  interesting  Embassy 
dinners  but  Luther,  in  spite  of  protocol,  usualh'  manages 
for  us  to  leave  early. 

While  in  Wa.shington,  I've  been  President  of  an  Inter- 
national Neighbors  Club.  The  membership  is  composed 
of  Cabinet  wives,  other  wives  of  top  government  people, 
wives  of  Ambassadors  and  wives  of  Congressmen.  There 
are  about  60  members. 

We've  had  most  interesting  meetings  about  the  dif- 
ferent departments  of  our  government  and  the  countries 
represented  by  the  wives  of  the  .^Embassadors.  An  extra 
special  meeting  was  planned  for  this  year.  The  wife  of 
the  -Embassador  of  Turkey,  Mrs.  Menemencioglu,  invited 
all  of  us  and  our  liusbands  for  a  real  Turkish  dinner  with 
artists  from  Turkey  providing  entertainment.  Two  days 
before  the  scheduled  dinner,  she  called  in  a  distressed 
\-oice  and  said:  "We  can't  have  the  dinner."  It  was  the 


Cyprus  situation,  very  critical  with  the  hint  of  possible 
war.  Of  course,  I  assured  her  that  we  would  all  under- 
stand why  the  dinner  had  to  be  canceled. 

The  Cabinet  wives  have  sponsored  an  organization 
called  the  Hospitality  and  Information  Service.  Its  pur- 
pose is  to  help  the  hundreds  of  people  from  the  112 
Embassies.  For  this  organization,  at  my  suggestion,  the 
Commerce  Depailment  put  on  a  travel  program  in  order 
to  show  their  embassy  people  something  of  our  country 
and  where  they  could  take  their  vacations.  Talks  were 
made  by  the  Director  of  the  Travel  Service,  at  the  time 
V(5it  Gihnorc  of  Southern  Pines,  and  by  the  head  of  our 
National  Park  Service,  Conrad  Wirth.  Many  states  sent 
exhibits,  birds  from  Florida,  flowers  from  Hawaii.  It  was 
a  colorful  occasion  with  many  of  the  embassy  people 
wearing  their  native  costumes.  One  does  get  an  inter- 
national outlook  living  in  Washington. 

Ox  various  occasions,  the  Cabinet  wives  simply  have 
met  for  limcli.  At  these  informal  gatherings  we've 
talked  of  families  and  experiences  in  traveling  with  our 
husbands.  It's  a  great  group  of  friendly  women.  We've 
attended  art  lectures  together  at  the  National  Gallery, 
and  all  of  us  continually  are  called  upon  to  sponsor,  be  a 
patron,  or  be  an  honorary  chainnan,  of  manv,  many 
charit}'  benefits.  That  means  using  your  name  and  help- 
ing out  financially,  or  in  whatever  other  way  you  can, 
such  as  standing  in  receiving  lines  or  pouring  tea. 

When  we  first  came  to  Washington,  all  the  Cabinet 
wives  agreed  to  abandon  the  long  established  rule  of 
formal  calls.  These  calls  usually  meant  just  leaving  cards. 
Washington  social  life  is  endless  and  there  isn't  time  or 
energy  for  everything.  You  soon  learn  to  pick  and  choose. 

In  order  to  promote  the  arts,  the  Cabinet  has  spon- 
sored some  excellent  entertainment.  These  events,  at 
which  a  member  of  the  Cabinet  is  the  host,  have  in- 
cluded: Robert  Frost,  Carl  Sandburc,  Marion  Anderson, 
Claudio  Aaran,  and  from  England,  "The  Hollow  Crown" 
and  the  Royal  Shakespearean  Company  in  "A  Comed}' 
of  Errors." 

It  has  been  great  fun  to  take  many  trips  on  the 
Potomac  in  one  of  the  President's  Yachts.  We've  enter- 
tained foreign  visitors.  Congressional  people  and  many 
personal  friends  this  way.  We  go  to  Mount  Vernon  and, 
as  we  pass  the  beautiful  home  of  George  Washington, 
an  impressive  ceremony  takes  place.  "Taps"  is  played 
and  then  "The  Star-Spangled  Banner."  Always,  we  are 
thrilled  to  pay  our  respects  to  the  Father  of  our  Country. 
.After  leaving  Mount  Vernon,  dinner  is  served  and  then 
we  are  back  in  Washington. 

There  are  so  many  things  I  could  write  about,  but  I 
must  finish  mv  needle  point.  Each  of  the  Cabinet  wives 
is  doing  one  for  the  dining  room  chairs  at  Blair  House, 
the  President's  guest  house. 

We've  all  been  interested  in  getting  that  lovely,  old 
house  refurnished.  Whatever  the  domestic  or  foreign 
crises,  the  deadline  for  finishing  the  needle  point  is 
September  15th.  D 


18 


Alumni  News 


First  Speech -Hearing 

Held  on  Campus 


A  federal  grant  from  the  Office  of 
Vocational  Rehabilitation  to  the 
Department  of  Drama  and  Speech 
made  it  possible  for  the  University  to 
offer  three  weeks  of  intensive  therapy 
to  adults  and  children  with  speech 
and  hearing  handicaps. 

Nineteen  graduate  students, 
enrolled  in  the  Clinical  Practicum 
course  in  the  department,  worked  in 
the  clinic  from  July  20  through 
August  7  under  the  supervision  of 
visiting  professor.  Dr.  Sidne\'  Goda 
of  White  Plains,  New  York. 

A  total  of  120  people  from  Greens- 
boro  and   surrounding   communities 


Mrs.  Perkins,  instructor  in  the  Depart- 
ment of  Drama  and  Speech,  administered 
the  first  hearing  and  speech  clinic  held  on 
campus  this  summer. 


bv  Charlotte  Perkins 


were  interviewed.  From  this  group, 
50  children  and  adults  were  chosen 
to  give  the  graduate  students  an 
opportimity  to  work  with  a  varietv' 
of  speech  and  hearing  disorders. 

Therap)'  was  conducted  in  tht^ 
speech  laboratory,  eight  small  rooms 
equipped  with  tape  recorders, 
mirrors,  audiometers,  and  auditory 
training  tmits.  Three  of  the  rooms 
connect  with  two-way  vision  mirrors 
so  that  observation  was  possible 
during  the  entire  day  from  nine  in 
the  morning  until  five  in  the 
afternoon. 

Graduate  students  taking  the 
course  are  public  school  therapists 
or  are  preparing  for  such  a  career. 
The  clinic  served  as  on-the-job  train- 
ing for  a  number  of  these  students 
who  also  received  credit  toward  cer- 


tification in  the  American  Speech  and 
Hearing  Association,  a  professional 
organization  of  speech  pathologists. 

Many  of  the  children  in  tlie  three- 
weeks  program  were  referred  to  the 
clinic  by  public  school  therapists  who 
felt  that  daily,  individual  therapy 
during  the  summer  would  be  a  valu- 
able adjunct  to  their  work  during  the 
regular  school   year. 

The  pre-school  children  and  adults 
who  profited  from  the  sessions  (647 
hours  of  therapy)  made  strong 
requests  for  continuing  therapy.  At 
the  present  time  tliere  is  no  clinic 
program  during  the  regular  school 
year  although  the  University  is  con- 
sidering plans  for  such  a  program. 
There  were  more  requests  for  inter- 
views than  could  be  met  during  the 
short  period.  D 


Dr.  Goda  intcnicus  yoiiiii^  Lindlnj  Ivcy  of  Gihson- 
ville,  one  of  50  persons  receiving  thcrapij  at  the  clinic 
on  the  UNC-G  campus. 


Mrs.  Perkins  discusses  the  use  of  puppets  as  motivation 
for  speech  correction  with  Mrs.  Elciine  Barbour,  public 
school  speech  therapist  of  Winston-Salem. 


Fall  1964 


19 


Campus 
Chronicle 


new  laculty 


Tlir  I'niwrsity  opened  its  73rd  session 
witli  54  ne\\'  faculty  members,  including 
two  who  will  head  departments  and  a  new 
director  of  extension. 

Dr.  Walter  H.  Puterbaugh  of  Green- 
ville, Pa.,  has  been  appointed  professor  of 
chemistry  and  head  of  the  department  of 
chemistr\'  succeeding  Miss  Florence 
Schaeffer  who  retired  as  department  head. 
Dr.  Puterbaugh  is  a  magna  cum  laude 
graduate  of  Duke  University  where  he 
received  his  Ph.D.  in  1953.  He  was  pro- 
fessor and  department  chairman  of  chemis- 
tr>-  at  Thiel  College  prior  to  coming  to 
Greensboro. 

Dr.  Curtis  S.  Booth  has  been  named 
acting  head  and  lecturer  in  the  Department 
of  Philosophy-  while  Dr.  Warren  Ashby 
is  on  two-year  leave  of  absence  serving  with 
the  .American  Friends  Service  Committee 
in  Southeast  Asia.  Dr.  Booth  graduated 
from  Georgetown  College  and  received 
liis  Ph.D.  degree  from  the  Uni\ersity  of 
North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill.  He  comes 
to  the  University  from  Bradley  University 
at  Peoria,  111. 

Dr.  Joseph  E.  Bryson  succeeds  Clarence 
O.  Shipton,  recently  appointed  Dean  of 
Men,  as  director  of  extension  and  associate 
professor  of  education.  Dr.  Bryson,  a 
Greensboro  native  and  graduate  of  Elon 
College,  received  his  Master  of  Education 
degree  from  Woman's  College  and  the 
Doctor  of  Education  degree  from  Duke 
University.  He  was  at  Appalachian  State 
Teachers  College  before  returning  to 
Greensboro. 

Kennis  R.  Grogan,  Greensboro  Certified 
Public  Accountant,  has  been  appointed 
director  of  accounting.  A  native  of  Mayo- 
dan,  Mr.  Grogan  is  a  graduate  of  the 
School  of  Business  Administration  at  UNG 
at  Chapel  Hill. 


enrollment  increases 

A  record  enrollment  of  4,251,  nearly  14 
per  cent  more  than  last  year's  total,  has 
been  announced  by  H.  Hoyt  Price,  Regis- 
trar. The  figure  is  even  larger  (by  252)  than 
the  usually  accurate  "predicted  enroll- 
ment," due  to  tlie  higher  holding  power 
of  last  year's  freshman  class  which  resulted 
in  larger  sophomore  and  junior  classes. 

Male  enrollment  of  282  was  close  to  the 
number  of  men  expected.  Most  of  die  male 
students  are  from  Guilford  Count>'  or  are 
commuting  from  nearby  areas.  Living  quar- 
ters for  approximately  15  men  were  found 
in  homes  and  other  facilities  near  the 
campus. 

The  breakdown  includes:  freshmen, 
1205,  sophomores,  882;  juniors,  681;  sen- 
iors, 596;  commercial,  134;  nursing,  72; 
special,  89;  and  graduate,  592. 


en  absentia 


Peter  Ta\lor,  professor  of  English  and 
widely  known  short  stor\'  writer,  no\elist 
and  playwright,  has  been  appointed  to  a 
visiting  professorship  at  Harvard  during 
the  fall  semester.  He  will  return  to  campus 
for  the  second  semester. 

Dr.  Daniel  F.  ,Hobbs,  Jr.,  associate  pro- 
fessor of  home  economics,  has  begun  a 
post-doctoral  research  fellowship  at  the 
University  of  Florida  in  Gainsville  for  a 
year.  Research  will  be  done  on  die 
"decisions  of  husbands  and  wives  about  the 
wife  continuing  to  work  after  the  first  child 
is  born."  Dr.  Hobbs  and  Dr.  Elaine  Burgess 
were  two  of  the  25  persons  in\-ited  by  the 
North  Carolina  Fund  in  June  to  e\aluate 
the  prospects  supported  by  die  Fund. 


Also  absent  from  the  campus  scene  is 
the  beard  of  Randall  Jarrell,  although  the 
nationally  known  poet  critic-novelist  is 
present  in  person  as  professor  in  the  English 
Department.  Mr.  Jarrell's  English  version 
of  Chekho\'s  The  Three  Sisters  ended  a 
most  successful  Broadway  engagement  at 
the  Morosco  Theatre  about  the  time  Tlje 
Alumni  News  went  to  press.  An  Actors 
Theatre  Studio  production  under  the  direc- 
tion of  Lee  Strasberg,  the  drama  originally 
was  scheduled  for  a  short  run  but  was  so 
enthusiastically  received  by  press  and 
public,  the  engagement  was  extended  into 
fall. 


Dr.  Frankhn  D.  Parker,  professor  of 
history  currently  teaching  at  the  University 
of  the  Andes  in  Bogota,  Colombia,  under 
a  Fulbright-Hayes  Act  grant,  writes  to 
congratulate  Vera  Largent  on  the  July 
Ahimni  Neics  and  adds  a  personal  note  of 
interest  to  friends. 

".  .  .  We  drove  our  car  to  Panama  City 
in  June  (19  days'  trip,  16  on  the  road,  three 
resting)  and  then  flew  to  Bogota;  ex-pect  to 
reverse  that  operation  in  December  and 
January.  We  like  Bogota  very  much, 
though  our  daily  temperatures  are  gen- 
erally from  about  39  to  66  Fahrenheit,  and 
we  have  no  central  heating  (neither  does 
anyone  else!)  .  .  .  Though  we  relax  more 
(go  more  often  to  the  movies,  for  example  — 
there  are  so  many  fine  ones  here  for  25<f:  to 
40('  from  all  over  the  world  —  and  spend 
quite  a  bit  of  time  sightseeing),  1  have  had 
to  earn  my  way  here  in  a  fashion  I  never 
did  in  Peru.  I  have  been  teaching  in  four 
separate  institutions,  all  of  them  more  seri- 
ous in  nature  by  far  than  any  I  met  with 
down  there.  In  two  of  them,  I  am  ex-pected 
to  give  examinations  and  grades.  And  the 
whole  operation  in  Spanish!  I  lo\'e  it  really, 
especially  the  contacts  with   the  students. 


The  USIS  has  asked  me  to  travel  to  other 
cities  in  Columbia  to  conduct  question-and- 
answer  sessions  on  our  elections.  .  .  ." 


Madeleine  McCain,  assistant  professor  of 
health,  is  a  teacher  turned  student  for  a 
season  as  a  member  of  a  study  group  tour- 
ing Europe  under  aegis  of  the  UN's  World 
Healdi  Organization.  As  one  of  a  group  of 
29  doctors,  nurses,  teachers  and  nutritionists, 
she  is  visiting  hospitals,  clinics,  laboratories, 
dental  and  school  health  programs  in  more 
than  a  dozen  cities  to  observe  teaching  of 
health  workers.  It  was  under  \\'HO  aus- 
pices that  she  served  as  consultant  to  the 
health  ministry  of  Indonesia  from  1957-59. 


20 


Alumni  News 


construction  notes 


Dr.  Joseph  F.  Shea,  manager  of  the 
ApoUo  Spacecraft  Program  which  may  put 
man  on  the  moon  within  this  decade,  will 
address  the  Natural  Science  Foundation 
(111  campus  December  2  and  3.  Prior  to  hi-t 
present  appointment  to  the  NASA  Manned 
Spacecraft  Center  in  Houston,  Texas,  Dr. 
Shea  was  Space  Program  Director  for  the 
Space  Technology  Laboratories  in  Los 
Angeles  and  Deputy  Director  (Systems)  of 
NASA's  Office  of  Manned  Space  Flight. 
A  New  York  City  native,  Dr.  SItea 
attended  the  University  of  Michigan  where 
he  received  his  Bachelor  and  Master  of 
Science  degrees  and  Ph.D.  in  Engineering 
Mechanics. 


campus  caterers 


A  positi\c  step  toward  impro\ing  the 
quality  of  food  on  campus  was  taken  this 
fall  with  die  appointment  of  A.R.A.  Slater 
School  and  Food  Ser\'ices,  pioneers  in  die 
field  of  college  catering.  Under  the  direc- 
tion of  Wayne  Shroyer,  Slater  Food  Serv- 
ice plans,  prepares  and  serves  all  meals 
in  the  four  main  dininghalls  and  in  the 
Dogwood  Restaurant  and  Soda  Shop  in 
Elliott  Hall.  They  also  cater  luncheons 
and  special  parties  such  as  the  reception 
for  new  faculty  in  September. 

With  40  years  e.xperience  in  the  field. 
Slater  now  caters  to  280  schools  and  col- 
leges in  the  United  States  and  Puerto  Rico 
including  Wake  Forest,  Guilford,  Elcn, 
N.  C.  State  of  the  University  of  North 
CaroUna  at  Raleigh,  Davidson  and  the 
l^niversity   of   Soudi   Carolina. 

Three  of  the  four  dininghalls  have  a 
new  look  this  semester  following  the 
extensive  refurbishing  undergone  diuing 
the  summer. 


Physical  improvements  are  receiving 
concentrated  attention  on  campus  in  an 
effort  to  meet  the  needs  of  a  rapidly  grow- 
ing student  body. 

Construction  of  a  $1,480,000  addition  to 
the  Fine  Arts  Center  has  been  delayed,  but 
.ground-breaking  should  take  place  before 
the  end  of  the  year.  Plans  now  call  for 
three  separate  buildings  with  courts  be- 
tween, including  a  600-seat  theatre,  an 
addition  to  the  Music  Building,  a  television 
studio  and  an  addition  to  Mclver  Building 
which  will  permit  the  Art  Department  to 
be  housed  in  one  building  for  the  first  time 
in  many  years. 

Enlargement  of  Rosenthal  Gymnasium 
pool  to  Olympic  size  is  well  underway.  The 
deep  end  of  the  pool  is  being  widened  to 
form  an  L  with  new  offices  and  a  men's 
locked  room  to  be  added  at  an  overall  cost 
of  $318,000. 

A  SL\-year  $433,000  program  to  renovate 
water,  electric  and  steam  systems  is  in  pro- 
gress, as  well  as  a  $340,000  addition  to  the 
power  plant. 

Remodeling  of  North,  South  and  West 
ilining  halls,  most  of  which  took  place  last 
simimer,  cost  S200.000  including  equip- 
ment. 

Bath  facilities  in  four  freshmen  dormi- 
tories, which  were  not  refurnished  two 
years  ago,  were  improved  during  the  sum- 
mer and  a  men's  room  was  installed  in  each 
at  a  total  cost  of  $270,000. 

A  new  Home  Management  house  to  re- 
place two  in  use  on  West  Market  Street 
soon  will  be  built  adjoining  the  existing 
Home  Management  house  on  Mclver 
Street. 

Other  construction  includes:  a  $40,000 
addition  to  the  Nursery  school  to  enable 
it  to  accept  toddlers  from  one  and  a  half  to 
diree  years  of  age  and  a  $200,000  instal- 
lation of  an  air  conditioning  system  to  the 
library  building. 


editor  emerita 


She  accepted  the  job  as  editor  for  one 
year,  and  no  amount  of  persuasion  from 
alumni  and  the  administration  could  make 
her  change  her  mind.  Therefore,  \'era 
Largent,  Professor  of  History  Emerita  and 
Editor  Nonpareil,  put  away  her  pica  rule 
and  type  book  in  July  and  refused  to  take 
them  up  again. 

Except  for  sleeping  late  (sometimes  until 
8:15  a.m.)  and  catching  up  on  her  reading. 
Miss  Largent  in  retirement  is  as  busy  as  she 


always  has  been.  She  continues  to  work  as 
a  Gray  Lady  at  Wesley  Long  Hospital  and 
now  is  recruiting  for  the  campus  United 
Funds  campaign.  She  was  in  and  out  of 
town  during  July  and  August:  Richmond, 
die  mountains,  Charlotte  and  Raleigh.  By 
the  time  this  issue  goes  to  press,  she  will  be 
taking  a  "color"  tour  of  New  England  with 
Bernice  Draper,  also  a  professor  of  history 
emerita. 


opera  tlieatre 


The  Opera  Theatre  has  been  selected  to 
tour  the  Caribbean  Command  next  spring 
to  entertain  military  personnel. 

The  company,  including  14  performers 
and  Director  Paid  Hickfang,  will  perform 
in  West  Indies,  Bahamas,  Puerto  Rico, 
Cuba,  Canal  Zone  and  Trinidad  for  four 
weeks.  The  package  show  will  be  presented 
for  Piedmont  audiences  in  March  prior  to 
departure. 

Hickfang  directed  the  first  Opera  Insti- 
tute in  August  on  the  campus  of  Asheville- 
Biltniore  College,  in  cooperation  with 
Boris  Goldovsky,  creator  of  the  famous 
Goldsovsky  Opera  Theatre.  Twenty  singers 
from  North  Carolina,  South  Carolina, 
Virginia  and  Florida  enrolled  in  the  two- 
week  institute. 


Lois  Edinger,  on  leave  of  absence  from 
the  University  faculty  this  year  to  serve  as 
president  of  the  National  Education  Associ- 
ation, poses  with  North  Carolina's  NEA 
President  Maie  Sanders  '24  of  Wilmington 
during  July  installation  ceremonies  in  Seat- 
tle, Washington.  Dr.  Edinger  represented 
the  NEA  at  a  world  confederation  organi- 
zation of  the  teaching  profession  in  Paris 
in  July  and  is  now  busy  about  her  presi- 
dential duties  as  head  of  the  largest  (900,- 
000)  professional  society  in  the  world. 


Fall  1964 


21 


CAMPUS 
CHRONICLE 

theatre  bill 

One  of  die  greatest  musicals  of  the 
centuo',  Lerner  and  Loewe's  Mtj  Fair 
Ladij,  \vi\l  open  tlie  41st  season  of  die 
Theatre  of  UNC-G  widi  perfoniiances  set 
for  December  10,  11  and  12.  Dr.  Herman 
Middleton,  head  of  the  Department  of 
Drama  and  Speech,  will  direct,  and  James 
Rose,  also  of  that  department,  will  tie 
designer  and  tectmical  director. 

The  theatre  liitl  for  the  season  also  will 
produce  East  Lynne.  a  classical  melodrama 
by  Ellen  Price  Wood,  to  tie  presented 
Marcti  18.  19  and  20.  and  Desire  Under 
the  Elms,  a  Eugene  O'Neill  drama,  on 
.\pril  6,  7  and  8.  Katliryn  England  wilt 
direct  East  Lynne,  and  Maynard  French 
will  direct  the  O'Neill  drama. 

The  PLxie  Ptayliouse,  sponsored  by  the 
Greensboro  Junior  League  and  the  Theatre 
of  UXC-G,  will  produce  three  plays  for 
children  during  the  season,  all  directed  ti\ 
Ralph  Kems  who  joined  die  department's 
staff  diis  ye;ir  as  the  first  full-time  children's 
theatre  director.  The  plays  are:  Beautij  and 
the  Beast  by  Nora  Macatday,  Niccolo  and 
Nicollette  by  Alan  Culten  and  My  Popper's 
Penguins  bv  Albert  Mitchell. 


alumni  lectures 


Christmas  print  tair 

Prints  for  presents  wilt  be  offered  at  ttie 
\\'eattierspoon  Gallery's  Christmas  Print 
Fair,  sponsored  by  the  Weadierspoon  Guild 
December  6  ttirough  18.  A  fund-raising 
project  under  the  direction  of  Ann  Weelcs 
Bonitz  '60,  the  fair  will  feature  prints  by 
North  Carolina  artists  along  with  a  wide 
selection  from  the  Ferdinand  Rotcn  Gallery 
in  Baltimore. 

The  Fair  will  be  opened  to  the  public 
at  an  afternoon  tea  Sunday,  December  6. 
Prior  to  that  date  Guild  members  will  invite 
their  friends  for  special  preview  showings. 
Gallery  hours  are  10  a.m.  until  5  p.m.  daily 
and  2  until  .5  p.m.  Sunday. 

Two  new  art  faculty  members,  Jo;m 
Gregory  and  Joseph  Strottiers,  and  Robert 
Partin,  who  was  on  leave  of  absence  last 
year  to  teach  at  the  University  of  New 
Me.\ico,  have  an  e.\tiibit  of  paintings  and 
collages  in  Weathcrspoon  Gallery  through 
October  .31.  For  November  Curator  James 
Tucker  has  arranged  for  a  special  exhibit 
of  younger  British  painters  which  is  being 
brought  to  this  country  by  the  North  Caro- 
lina Museum  of  Art  in  Raleigh. 


Roger  W.  Shattuck,  professor  of  Romance 
Languages  at  the  University  of  Texas,  will 
open  the  Alumni  Lecture  Series  Wednes- 
da>-,  November  IS,  according  to  an 
announcement  from  Dr.  James  S.  Ferguson, 
cliaimian  of  the  committee  on  Ahunni 
Lectures.  Noted  as  both  art  critic  and 
scholar.  Dr.  Shattuck  is  author  of  two 
books:  T/ic  Banquet  Years:  The  Arts  in 
France  1885-1918  and  Proust's  Binoculars: 
A  Study  in  Memory  Time  and  Recognition. 

Hannah  Arendt,  audior  ;md  political 
scientist  on  the  Universitv-  of  Chicago 
facult\-,  will  deliver  the  second  lecture 
Wednesday,  Februray  17.  A  naturalized 
citizen  bom  in  Hanover,  Gemiany,  Dr. 
Arendt  is  internationally  famous  as  the 
author  of  Eichmann  in  Jerusalem. 

The  lecture  series,  established  with  funds 
provided  by  the  Alumni  Association  from 
its  Annual  Giving  Campaign,  is  designed 
to  bring  to  the  university  campus  noted 
scholars  in  the  humanities,  social  sciences 
and  natural  sciences. 


tirst  lady  visits 


The  red,  wliite  and  blue  "Lady  Bird 
Special"  pulled  to  a  halt  on  the  Southern 
Railway  tracks  adjoining  the  south  side  of 
Curry  School  soccer  field  on  the  morning 
of  October  7,  and  the  First  Lady  appeared. 
Greeted  by  a  tumultuous  ovation,  Mrs.  Lyn- 
don Johnson  walked  clown  a  specially  built 
wooden  ramp  to  a  platform  where  she 
spoke  to  thousands  who  had  been  gather- 
ing since  early  morning  to  see  the  First 
Lady. 

Her  decision  to  accept  Coraddi  Editor 
Melinda  Holder's  invitation  to  visit  the 
UNC-G  campus  had  historic  reason  behind 
it.  A  spokesman  for  Mrs.  Johnson  said  she 
saw  it  as  an  opportunity  to  give  students  a 
glimpse  of  what  may  be  the  last  of  the  big 
time  whistle-stop  trains,  as  well  as  the  first 
one  on  which  the  chief  campaigner  was  a 
president's  wife.  Mrs.  Johnson  apparently 
took  20-year-old  daughter  Lynda's  advice 
that  she  would  be  much  more  appreciated 
on  a  college  campus  ff  she  spoke  during 
school  hours  so  students  can  get  away  from 
class.  Mrs.  Johnson's  speech  was  scheduled 
at  8:30,  smack  befween  the  first  two  classes 
of  the  day. 

ps  to  "the  first  coeds" 

No\'('Hst  Burke  Da\is'  stor>'  on  "The  First 
Coeds"  (on  page  17)  refers  to  the  members 
of  that  class  who  "have  gone  on  to  remark- 
able success  in  a  variety  of  fields."  The 
tnith  of  his  statement  is  borne  out  by  some 


detective  work  done  by  Mark  Stewart,  a 
member  of  the  class,  who  is  now  a  Greens- 
boro realtor  and  democratic  nominee  for 
county  register  of  deeds  in  November.  With 
a  reunion  of  the  class  tentatively  scheduled, 
Mark  has  names  and  addresses  of  about 
half  of  diose  in  the  picture  accompanying 
Burke  Da\is'  article.  He  found  that  most 
of  them  were  bom  in  Greensboro  where 
many  live  today,  such  as  Charles  Hagan, 
attorney,  and  Ed'win  Sink,  realtor,  both 
of  whom  were  class  officers  widi  John 
Lindeman,  who  now  lives  in  England  but 
has  many  friends  in  the  Greensboro  area. 

Others  who  have  moved  away  but  still 
have  Greensboro  connections  are  chemist 
Leslie  Lane  and  physicist  Herbert  Mont- 
gomery, both  of  whom  work  for  American 
Cyanamide  in  St;mford,  Connecticut;  Edgar 
Landrcth,  a  chief  production  engineer  li\- 
ing  in  Ridgewood,  New  Jersey;  and  Walton 
Moffitt.  a  leading  Baptist  minister  in  upstate 
New  York. 

Other  Greensboro  residents  are  Marvin 
Sykes,  newspaperman;  Robert  Moore,  men's 
store  manager;  Robert  Anderson,  life  insur- 
ance company  executive;  Clewell  Surratt, 
certified  public  accountant;  C.  A.  (Pete) 
Wyrick,  paper  company  official;  HasseU 
Griffin,  roofing  company  president,  and  Neil 
Jennings,  plumbing  contrac-tor.  Postal 
employees  in  Greensboro  are  Lloyd  Thomp- 
son, Richard  Wilson  and  Edward  Robbins, 
now  retired,  who  operates  a  recording 
studio. 

Joe  Knight  is  a  distributing  company 
official,  and  his  twin  brother,  John,  is  widi 
a  Durham  electronics  fimi.  James  Wither- 
spoon  is  a  bank  officer,  and  Jack  Wimbish 
runs  a  Clinton  department  store.  Richard 
Wharton  is  a  magistrate,  Hadley  Hayes  a 
judge  and  Walter  Blue  works  for  the  tax 
department.  J.  Harris  Mitchell  is  on  the 
University  of  Georgia  faculty,  and  Barney 
Gilmer  who  lives  in  Southern  Pines  is  a 
purchasing  agent  for  the  textile  industry. 


ERRATA  -  July  Issue 

1.  Page  24,  line  8;  Add  "originally" 
at  end  of  line.  Of  course,  Spain  is 
now  a  member  of  United  Nations. 

2.  Page  42,  line  32:  Delete  last  sen- 
tence in  death  notice  for  Elizabeth 
Cobb  Russell  '32.  She  is  not  the  sis- 
ter of  Dr.  Winfleld  Cobb,  formerly 
of  our  mathematics  staff.  His  sister, 
Elizabeth  Cobb,  graduated  in 

3.  Page  9:  WAR  BABY  NHSSING, 
as  the  mother,  Mrs.  James  R.  Minton 
(Bobbie  Lee  Clegg  '41),  who  is  in  our 
Admissions  Office,  vigorously  point- 
ed out  to  retiring  Editor  Largent. 
Anne  Starr  Minton,  bom  in  1943  in 
Miami,  Florida,  is  very  much  a  war 
baby  and  very  much  with  us  as  a 
music  major  '65. 


Alumni  News 


CAMPUS 
CHRONICLE 

briefly  noted 

Cornelius  Kruse,  Wesleyan  University 
Professor  Emeritus  who  was  visiting 
lecturer  in  Pliilosophy  on  campus  in  1962- 
63  and  last  year's  commencement  speaker, 
was  a  key  participant  in  the  Fourth  East- 
West  Philosophy  Conference  on  "The 
World  and  the  Individual  in  East  and 
West"  which  was  held  in  Honolulu,  Hawaii, 
June  29-August  8.  Dr.  Kruse  was  chairman 
of  a  panel  on  Ethics,  a  lecturer  and  served 
as  master  of  ceremonies  at  the  hanquet  and 
closing  session. 

university  sinfonia 

University  Sinfonia,  under  the  leadership 
of  George  Dickieson  of  the  School  of 
Music,  will  present  four  concerts  for  the 
1964-65  sea.son  in  the  Recital  Hall  of  the 
Music  Building.  Dates  are  November  22, 
March  14,  May  2,  and  June  5. 

Beta  Szilagi 

Bela  Szilagi,  New  York  concert  pianist 
who  has  been  appointed  to  the  piano  fac- 
ulty of  the  School  of  Music,  will  be  heard 
in  public  recitals  on  December  1  and  Feb- 
ruary 19  in  the  Recital  Hall  of  the  Music 
Building.  Mr.  Szilagi,  who  made  his  Car- 
negie Hall  debut  at  the  age  of  1.3,  was  a 
finalist  this  past  season  in  the  world-famous 
Queen  Elizabeth  of  Belgium  Competition. 


nurses  graduate 


A  group  of  21  young  nurses  graduated 
Sunday,  October  3,  at  the  sixth  annual 
commencement  of  tlie  UNC-G  Nursing 
Education  Department  in  Elliott  Hall. 
Chancellor  Otis  A.  Singletary  was  com- 
mencement speaker,  and  Alice  Boehret, 
nursing  education  chainnan,  spoke  for  tiie 
department.  The  class  has  completed  two 
years  of  academic  training,  plus  practical 
and  laboratory  training  at  Moses  H.  Cone 
Memorial   Hospital  in  Greensboro. 


a  new  sound 


A  new  FM  radio  station  with  the  call 
letters  WUAG  for  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  at  Greensboro  began  regular 
programming  Monday,  September  24,  at 
S9.9  at  the  top  of  the  radio  dial.  WUAG 
will  broadcast  from  11  a.m. -11  p.m.  Mon- 
day through  Friday  witli  education,  enrich- 
ment and  entertainment  as  program  goals. 

The  new  station  is  using  equipment 
presented  to  WUNC-TV  by  WFMY-TV 
and  ^VBIG  Radio  in  Greensboro.  At  pres- 
ent the  station  only  can  be  heard  in  the 
Greensboro  city  limits  but  will  go  from  10 
to  3,000  watts  when  the  university  radio 
and  television  moves  into  its  new  building 
to  be  located  on  the  present  UNC-G  Music 
Building  parking  lot. 

Emil  Young,  UNC-G's  director  of  radio 
and  television,  is  director  of  the  station, 
assisted  by  Janet  Hamer,  a  June  graduate 
of  UNC-G  and  daughter  of  Development 
Director  George  Hamer. 

Plans  are  going  ahead  for  the  iirst  pfiase 
of  e.xpansion  of  educational  TV  throughout 
the  state,  according  to  Director  Young.  The 
e.xpansion  was  authorized  by  the  last 
General  Assembly  and  over  a  million  dol- 
lars was  allocated  for  the  purpose. 


William  Lane  Kerr  MFA  '.53,  Greensboro 
News  assistant  cit>'  editor  and  education 
editor  in  which  capacity  he  covers  UNC-G 
events,  and  Nancy  Lane  Downs  were 
married  August  1  in  Greensboro.  Nancy, 
who  was  a  television  personality  at  WUNC- 
T\'  on  campus  and  WSJS-T'V  in  Winston- 
Salem,  is  now  home  fumisliings  editor  of 
the  Greensboro  Record.  They  live  at  2403 
Sylvan  Road. 


Students  design  home 

A  house  designed  and  decorated  by  22 
potential  brides,  all  students  last  spring  in 
Edward  Loewenstein's  design  class,  will 
be  featured  in  the  January  issue  of  Bride's 
Magazine.  The  two-story  contemporary 
home,  designed  by  Pauline  Colville  '64  of 
High  Point  for  the  Herbert  G.  Greene 
family  of  four,  was  imder  the  professional 
guidance  of  Mr.  Loewenstein  and  John  R. 
Taylor  of  Loewenstein  and  Atkinson.  Mem- 
bers of  the  class  with  Mrs.  Smith  selected 
paint  samples,  fabric  swatches  and  furni- 
ture, working  within  a  budget.  A  number 
of  the  class  worked  during  summer  school 
to  finish  the  project  by  August  when  it  was 
opened  for  public  inspection  at  3307 
Rowan  Road  in  Sedgefield. 


new  editor 


With  pride  and  pleasure  your  Editorial 
Board  presents  with  this  issue  of  the  Alumni 
News  your  new  editor,  Mrs.  Emmet  Atkins. 
Those  of  you  who  attended  Commencement 
had  an  opportunity  to  see  her  then.  Others 
of  you  have  seen  her  on  campus  where 
she   has   been   at   work   since   midsiunmer. 

Mrs.  Atkins  (nee  Gertrude  Walton)  is  a 
native  of  Salisbury,  North  Carolina.  She 
was  graduated  in  1946  from  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill  and 
received  her  Master  of  Fine  Arts  from  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  at  Greensboro 
in  1963.  Her  training  and  experience 
eminently  qualify  her  for  the  position  she 
now  holds.  She  worked  with  the  United 
States  Infomiation  Service  in  London, 
Munich  and  Stuttgart  from  1948-50.  From 
then  imtil  1952  she  edited  an  American 
weekly  for  Atlas  Constnictors  in  Casa- 
blanca, French  Morocco.  After  her  marriage 
in  1953  she  did  public  relations  work  for 
The  Children's  Home  Society  of  North 
Carolina  in  Greensboro.  She  also  has  done 
reportorial  and  feature  writing  for  The 
Associated  Press  in  Raleigh  and  the  Greens- 
boro Daily  News. 

Trudy  and  her  husband,  Emmet,  who 
is  a  magazine  publisher,  have  two  children, 
Trudi,  age  eight,  and  Emmet  lU,  almost 
four. 

We  are  fortvmate  to  have  Trudy  working 
widi  us  as  editor  of  the  Alum.ni  News,  and 
we  look  forward  to  a  continuation  of  the 
kind  of  magazine  we  feel  our  alumni  want 
and  are  entitled  to  have. 

Elizabeth  Yates  King  '36 
Chairman,  Editorial  Board 


Fall  J964 


23 


Alumni  -  Faculty  Bookshelf 


THE  EDGE  OF  THE  WOODS,  by 
Heather  Ross  Miller  (New  York:  AtlKueum, 
1984.)  Heather  Ross  Miller  '61.  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  and  an  editor  of  Coraddi,  lives  icitli 
}\cr  Imsband  and  two  .i-mall  cliihh-cn  at 
Singletary  Lake  State  Park  in  Bladen 
County.  The  reviewer.  Xancy  Kirby  West 
'44,  a  busy  mother  in  Charlotte,  has  written 
poems  and  articles  for  the  North  Carolina 
Catliolic,  American  Scholar  and  other 
magazines. 

The  young  wife  Anna  Marie  describes 
herself  as  a  child:  ".  .  .  very  impressionable, 
like  wann  wax."  The  burden  of  fierce  im- 
pressions calls  forth  the  girl's  storj'  to  her 
husband. 

Set  in  the  Uwharrie  hOls  of  North  Caro- 
lina, Heather  Ross  Miller's  first  novel  is  the 
sad  and  terrible  story  of  the  end  of  inno- 
cence. The  sensiti\c  heroine  and  lier 
\ounger  brother  spend  much  of  their  child- 
hood with  their  grandparents.  Miss  Jen. 
gi\"en  to  organ-playing  and  sad  stories,  and 
Paw  Paw,  possessed  b\'  an  iron  will  of 
unpredictable  bent.  Progressively  darker 
shadows  fall  across  the  hapless  spirit  of 
Anna  Marie.  When  she  has  grown  up  root- 
less and  marked,  there  is  onK-  her  husband 
to  save  her  from  her  pa.st. 

Mrs.  Miller,  Class  of  1961,  comes  from  a 
well-known  writing  family  and  has  already 
published  poetry.  In  her  first  no\el  she 
achieves  what  most  writers  never  achieve: 
the  abilitv'  to  express  the  truth  of  life  as  she 
sees  it.  The  style  she  thus  brings  forth  is 
stark  beauty.  What  a  treat  it  wUl  be  to  see 
such  a  talent  further  unfold!  Just  now  the 
view  of  life  is  in  dark,  dark  hues:  at  birth 
"the  deadly  arrows  ha\e  been  drawn  upon 
us  and  the  heavy  bow  is  bent." 


ANDRE'  MALRAUX:  TRAGIC 
HUMANIST,  by  Charles  D.  Blend  (Ohio 
State  Univer.iity  Press,  1963).  Dr.  Blend, 
head  of  the  Department  of  Romance 
Languages,  e-i'pecially  is  interested  in  the 
modem  French  novel.  The  reviewer,  Sara 
Toenes  '60,  was  a  junior  year  Phi  Beta 
Kappa,  siudied  in  France  on  a  Fulbright 
award  at  the  University  of  Bordeaux,  and 
received  her  Mas-ters  in  1962  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  Wisconsin.  After  a  summer  of 
study  in  Canada,  she  is  teaching  again  at 
DeKalh  University  in  Illinois. 

As  De  Gaulle's  Minister  of  Culture, 
Andre  Malraux  currently  is  attracting  con- 
siderable attention  as  he  goes  about  his 
task  of  preserving  and  enhancing  the 
French    cultural    image.    Time    Magazine 


recently  predicted  that  Malraux  may  one 
day  be  remembered  as  the  "tastemaker  of 
the  Fifth  Republic." 

Be  that  as  it  ma>',  his  present  post  is 
merely  another  phase  of  a  long  and  varied 
life,  almost  equally  divided  between 
political  acti\'it}'  and  writing;  like  his  own 
heroes,  Malraux  has  been  both  a  man  of 
action  and  a  man  of  contemplation.  He 
was  perhaps  the  first  French  novelist  to 
describe  the  revolutionary  activity  of  this 
century,  viewed  at  first  hand;  The  Con- 
qucrors  and  Man's  Fate,  which  utilize 
Malraux's  experiences  in  the  Orient,  deal 
with  the  Canton  strike  of  1925  and  the 
Shanghai  insurrection  of  1927,  respectively; 
a  third  major  novel,  Man's  Hope,  describes 
the  first  year  of  the  Spanish  Civil  War, 
drawing  from  the  author's  experience  as 
a  squadron  commander  on  tlie  Repviblican 
side. 

Dr.  Blend  does  not  dwell  for  long,  how- 
e\er,  on  biographical  aspects,  but  mo\es 
quickly  to  his  basic  concern,  a  consideration 
of  the  philosophy  which  has  led  Malraux 
from  revolutionary  activity,  allied  with 
Communism,  to  detached  art  criticism,  to 
his  present  alliance  with  De  Gaulle  for  the 
preservation  of  French  glor>-. 

Malraux  has  said  that  a  man's  complete 
works  are  implicit  in  everything  he  writes. 
Dr.  Blend's  study  very  ably  demonstrates 
the  truth  of  diis  statement  for  Malraux 
liimself,  by  showing  how  certain  themes, 
grouped  around  the  general  topics  of  ethics, 
art,  the  absolute,  tlie  individual  versus  the 
earth,  etc.,  recur  and  develop  through 
Malraux's  works. 

The  first  chapters  deal  witli  the  ideas  of 
humanism  and  of  tragedy,  a  combination  of 
which,  in  the  audior's  \iew,  forms  the  core 
of  Malraux's  thought.  According  to  Mahaux, 
traditional  humanism  is  no  longer  possible, 
for  all  previous  images  of  man  and  his 
progress  have  been  destroyed  by  the 
inhumanity  of  this  centur>'.  Nhm,  deprived 
of  any  definite  image  or  purpose,  is  left 
only  with  the  awareness  of  his  human  con- 
dition, and  the  will  to  carry  on  a  never- 
ending  struggle  against  a  universe  which 
does  not  take  him  into  account. 

Malraux's  view  of  tragedy  reflects  his 
interest  in  the  Greek  writers  and  their 
interrogation  of  destiny.  In  Malraux's  own 
interpretation  of  destiny,  man  must  remain 
insignificant  on  the  universal  level,  but  by 
his  actions  he  may  attain  a  meaningful 
existence  within  the  human  .sphere.  Thus, 
Mahaux  gradually  approaches  what  will 
be  the  supreme  value  of  his  system,  fra- 
ternity, or  the  sacrifice  of  oneself  to  achieve 
the  dignity  of  all. 


There  are,  however,  ethical  problems 
in\ol\ed  in  any  action  designed  to  achieve 
human  dignity,  for  the  use  of  force,  even 
to  rectify  social  ills,  is  difficult  for  Malraux 
to  justify,  especially  after  liis  Spanish  Civil 
War  experiences.  It  is  in  this,  the  longest 
chapter  of  the  book,  that  the  chronological 
presentation  of  themes  works  to  best  ad- 
vantage, enabling  the  reader  to  see  the 
motives  behind  Malraux's  move  toward, 
then  away  from,  revolutionan.'  activity  and 
Communism. 

Closely  linked  with  ethical  preoccupa- 
tions are  Malraux's  ideas  on  art,  for  gradu- 
ally he  came  to  accept  art  rather  than 
action  as  the  best  response  to  tlie  problem 
of  how  to  combat  destiny.  For  Malraux,  the 
artist  is  die  rival  of  creation;  he  is  engaged  I 
in  a  struggle  to  give  human  significance  to  I 
the  foniis  of  the  universe,  forms  which,  like 
destiny,  deny  man.  Malraux's  philosophy 
of  art  is  far  too  complex  to  be  summarized 
in  a  fevx'  lines:  however,  the  basic  thread 
of  the  struggle  against  destiny  reappears, 
triimiphant  but  ne\ertheless  tragic,  for  art 
itself  is  subject  to  an  uncertain  fate  in  time. 

The  chief  elements  of  Malraux's  thought 
liave  been  woven  togedier  into  a  \ery  satis- 
fying unity;  the  reader  leaves  the  book 
convinced  that  Malraux's  basic  ideals  have 
remained  imchanged  in  spite  of  the  con- 
tradictorv'  demands  of  his  Viuied  political 
activity.  The  book  is  highly  readable,  in 
spite  of  the  complexity  of  tlie  subject,  and 
its  format  would  indicate  tliat  it  is  intended 
for  the  interested  layman  rather  than  for  the 
specialist.  All  quotations  are  in  English, 
either  taken  from  standiud  translations  or 
translated  by  Dr.  Blend,  and  there  are 
almost  no  footnotes,  and  indeed  relati\ely 
few  references  to  outside  soiuces  other  than 
Malraux  himself. 

As  a  French  student,  I  would  lia\e  pre- 
ferred to  ha\e  the  original  text  of  all 
ijuotations,  with  the  translation  in  a  foot- 
note on  the  same  page,  or  the  English  trans- 
lation in  the  body  of  the  text  and  the 
original  French  in  a  footnote. 

For  the  benefit  of  those  interested  in  one 
particular  work  of  Malraux,  I  would  add 
an  index  giving  page  references  to  each 
work  and  character  discussed,  since  the 
audior's  technique  of  presentation  requires 
that  these  be  scattered  tliroughout  the  book. 

I  found  die  bibliography  of  Malraux's 
works  quite  interesting,  especially  the  sec- 
tion on  articles,  prefaces,  and  reviews  b>' 
liim.  Anyone  desiring  additional  informa- 
tion on  Malraux  or  on  trends  in  contempor- 
ary French  hterature  and  art  criticism,  or 
anyone  looking  for  food  for  thought  on  a 
wide  range  of  contemporary  issues  will 
find    this    book    intellectually    stimulating. 


24 


Alum-m  News 


National  Repertory  Theatre 


(Continued  from  Page  15) 


make  possible  this  extended  period  of  in-residence,  several 
North  Carohna  foundations  were  approached  by  the 
Universit}'  and  were  asked  to  help  finance  it.  The  Z.  Smitli 
Reynolds,  the  Br\'an  and  the  Richardson  Foundations 
responded  favorably,  and  it  is  because  of  their  financial 
support  that  the  project  is  possible. 

The  company  of  60  includes  many  who  were  in 
Greensboro  last  fall.  This  is  usual  with  a  repertory  com- 
pany since  the  distinguishing  feature  of  this  kind  of 
theatre  is  its  belief  that  the  best  theatrical  productions 
result  when  the  same  artists  work  together  over  a  period 
of  many  years. 

Co-founders  and  co-producers,  Frances  Ann  Cannon 
Dougherty  (a  North  Carolina  native)  and  Michael  Dewell, 
gathered  the  leaders  of  NRT  together  five  years  ago:  Eva 
Le  Gallienne,  director  and  actress;  Jack  Sydow,  director; 
Peter  Larkin,  scene  designer;  Tharon  Nlusser,  lighting 
designer;  and  Alvin  Colt,  costume  designer.  They  are  still 
the  guiding  forces  of  the  organization.  Each  has  achieved 
distinction  in  his  particular  specialty  in  theatre. 

The  quality  of  their  work  together  was  marked  in  the 
spring  of  this  year,  while  the  company  \\'as  perfomiing  on 
Broadway,  when  Miss  Le  Gallienne  on  behalf  of  the 
National  Repertory  Theatre  received  an  Antoinette  Perry 
Award,  Broadway's  most  highly  regarded  honor.  Richard 
Burton  who  made  the  presentation  to  Miss  Le  Gallienne 
pointed  out  that  it  was  for  NRT's  distinguished  contri- 
bution to  theatre  in  the  United  States. 

Starring  in  the  1964-1965  repertory  are  Farley  Granger 
and  Signe  Hasso.  Both  have  acted  in  past  seasons  with 
NRT.  ^^^.  Granger  played  leading  roles  in  "Tlic  Crucible," 
"Ring  Round  the  Moon,"  and  "The  Sea  GuU"  last  season. 
Miss  Hasso  was  seen  as  Mar\'  Stuart  opposite  Eva  Le 
Gallienne  in  its  initial  season's  production  of  "Mary 
Stuart."  This  year  Miss  Hasso  has  returned  from  Sweden 
to  star  in  the  title  role  in  "Hcdda  Gabler"  under  Miss  Le 
Gallienne's  direction.  Mr.  Granger's  longest  roles  this  year 
are  as  Liliom  in  Molnar's  play  of  the  same  name,  and  as 
the  hero  —  a  man-about-London  who  finds  country 
wenches  much  to  his  taste  —  in  "S/ie  Stoops  to  Conquer." 

While  this  project  of  NRT  and  UNC-G  is  of  most  value 
to  the  campus,  it  caused  extreme  excitement  among 
citizens  tliroughout  the  state  last  year.  It  is  expected  that 
many  more  than  the  thousands  who  saw  the  performances 
last  year  will  attend  this  year.  Such  support  is  a  major 
asset  in  continuing  it.  As  Mrs.  Dougherty  says,  "We  hope 
North  Carolina  will  remain  one  of  our  10  permanent 
homes  in  future  seasons.  These  cities  are  chosen  on  the 
basis  of  regional  distiibution,  audience  support,  and  local 
funding.  On  all  three  counts.  North  Carolina  is  a  prime 
contender,  along  with  such  cities  as  Los  Angeles,  Boston, 
Philadelphia,  Chicago,  St.  Louis  and  Washington.  But  of 
all  these  places.  North  Carohna  has  a  special  place  in  our 
hearts:  not  just  in  mine  —  I'm  prejudiced,  being  a  Nortli 
Carolinian  myself  —  but  in  every  one  of  the  60  theatre 
artists  who  came  to  Greensboro  last  year.  It  is  here  that  we 


enjoy  working  to  create  that  special  magic  which  only  the 
living  theatre  can  have." 

Following  the  four-week  period  of  in-residence,  the 
company  embarks  on  a  .36-week  tour  of  10  major  cities, 
beginning  in  St.  I^ouis  and  ending,  early  in  April,  on 
Broadway  in  New  York  City. 

What  began  in  the  spring  of  196.3  as  an  idea  of  the 
Theatre  and  the  Lecture-Entertainment  Series  of  the 
University  has  developed  into  an  unusual  artistic  experi- 
ence which  is  overflowing  the  campus  and  penneating  the 
state.  This  is  evident  from  the  response  of  the  state's 
newspapers,  radio  stations,  and  television  stations  follow- 
ing the  press  announcement  of  the  second  period  of 
in-residence.  The  project  has  evidently  opened  "whole 
new  worlds, "  as  Peggy  Wood  phrased  it,  to  North  Caro- 
linians; and,  who  knows,  some  day  some  one  may  even 
chronicle  it  all  in  a  book.  Meantime,  the  National  Reper- 
tory Theatre  is  here  for  all  of  us  to  enjoy!  D 


The  Graduate  School 


(Continued  from  Page  5) 


Students  completing  this  program  should  be  prepared 
for  effective  teaching  in  the  colleges  and  universities, 
especially  at  the  freshman  and  sophomore  levels. 

Thus  far,  the  emphasis  of  the  University  has  been 
placed  on  the  development  of  the  Honors  Program  as  a 
basis  for  the  three-year  plan.  The  graduate  phase  is  being 
implemented  in  1964-1965  for  the  first  time.  Seven  rising 
seniors  have  been  chosen  as  Career  Scholars.  Selections 
at  the  junior  level  will  be  made  in  October. 

The  Graduate  School  has  experienced  a  sharp  rise  in 
enrollment  in  the  last  two  years.  The  increase  is  to  be 
attributed  in  part  to  development  of  the  new  programs. 
Primarily,  however,  it  is  a  result  of  tlie  admission  of  men 
beginning  in  September,  1962.  From  a  total  of  214  for  the 
first  semester  of  1961-1962,  graduate  registration  climbed 
to  397  in  September,  1962,  and  then  to  509  diu'ing  the 
spring  of  1964.  Male  registrants  at  the  latter  time  num- 
bered 180,  or  .35.4  per  cent  of  the  total.  Many  of  those 
studying  were  in-service  public  school  teachers  taking 
work  on  a  part-time  basis,  but  by  Februaiy,  1964,  full- 
time  equivalent  enrollment  moved  close  to  300. 

It  is  likely  that  the  growth  will  continue.  In  the  United 
States  as  a  whole  in  1963  there  were  413,000  students 
working  toward  advanced  degrees,  an  increase  of  99,000 
or  31  per  cent  over  a  four-year  period. 

The  needs  of  the  nation  for  graduate  education  are 
great.  Correspondingly,  the  LTniversity's  opportrmities  for 
sendee  are  increased.  In  the  years  ahead  the  Graduate 
School  shoidd  have  a  growing  significance  in  the  program 
of  the  University  and  in  the  educational  life  of  North 
Carolina.  D 


Fall  1964 


25 


IN  MEMORIAM 


On  Tune  10.  1964,  the  University  of 
Xorth  Carolina  and  the  Greensboro  com- 
munit>'  lost  an  esteemed  professor  and 
citizen.  Rene  Hardre  passed  away  after  an 
illness  of  two  years.  He  was  a  member  of 
the  Romance  Language  department  for  33 
years,  serving  as  associate  professor  from 
1925  to  1952  and  as  full  professor  from 
1952  until  1958. 

He  was  bom  on  March  2,  1890,  in  Par- 
nay,  France.  He  received  degrees  from  the 
Ecole  Normale  at  Angers  and  from  the 
Universities  of  Rennes  and  Paris,  and  did 
ad\anced  work  at  the  Universities  of  Caen, 
London  and  Edinburg. 

During  World  War  I  he  served  in  the 
French  infantry  and  received  for  outstand- 
ing bra\ery  the  Croix  de  guerre  and  the 
Legion  d'honneiu.  It  was  during  tiiis  period 
that  he  met  Paul  Moody,  an  American 
Anny  chaplain  and  later  president  of 
Middlebury  College  in  Vermont.  This 
acquaintanceship  brought  him  to  this 
country  in  1922  to  the  famous  Middlebury 
French  School  and  subsequently  to 
Woman's  College  in  1925. 

Ever  an  inspiring  and  energetic  teacher, 
admired  equally  by  students  and  faculty. 
Professor  Hardre  also  participated  in  col- 
lege dramatic  productions,  supported 
musical  organizations  and  was  an  influential 
link  between  "town  and  gown."  During  the 
"thirties"  he  founded  the  Alliance  Francaise 
de  Green.sboro  and  became  its  first  pres- 
ident, a  post  which  he  held  for  25  years 
until  his  retirement  from  the  college  in 
1958. 

During  World  War  II,  at  which  time  he 
became  an  American  citizen.  Professor 
Hardre  was  in  great  demand  as  a  speaker 
on  France  and  the  European  situation,  giv- 
ing generously  of  his  time,  energy  and  rich 
background. 

He  was  also  a  scholar.  This  was  revealed 
in  his  teachings  as  well  as  in  his  numerous 
pedagogical  and  literary  articles.  Two  of 
his  textbooks,  written  in  collaboration  with 
his  colleagues.  Dr.  Meta  Helena  Miller  and 
Dr.  Malcolm  K.  Hooke,  are  still  in  wide 
use. 

He  was  a  founder  of  the  North  Carolina 
chapter  of  the  American  Association  of 
Teachers  of  French,  for  which  he  served  as 
vice  president  and  president.  He  was  a 
member  of  the  South  Atlantic  Modern 
Language  Association,  the  American 
."Association  of  University  Professors  and  the 
.\ational  Education  Association. 

For  outstanding  services  to  Frencli  cul- 
ture, tjie  French  government  recognized 
his  merit  by  awarding  him  successively  the 


Rene'  Hardre' 


decorations  of  Chevalier,  and  later,  Officier 
of  the  Ordre  des  Palmes  Academiques. 

Survi\ing  him  are  his  widow,  Josefina 
Escajeda  Hardre  (2512  Walker  Avenue), 
four  children  by  a  former  marriage:  Dr. 
Rene  Hardre,  Jr.,  Sacramento,  California; 
Dr.  Jacques  Hardre,  University  of  North 
Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill;  Yvette  Hardre, 
Paris,  France;  and  Pierre  Hardre,  Austin, 
Te.xas;   and  seven  grandchildren. 

Students  who  ha\'e  been  privileged  to 
study  under  Professor  Hardre  and  we  on 
the  faculty  who  ha\e  worked  with  him 
all  bear  testimony  to  the  kind,  intelligent, 
earnest  and  devoted  teacher  and  friend 
that  he  was. 

William  N.  Felt 
Associate  Professor 
Romance  Language  Department 


The  sympathy  of  faculty  and 
alumni  is  extended  to  Dr.  Helen 
Barton,  formerly  head  of  the  Mathe- 
matics Department,  and  to  her  sister, 
Dr.  Vola  Barton  of  Baltimore,  in  the 
sudden  death  of  their  brother,  Allen 
Barton   of  Baltimore. 


the  first  coeds 


{Continued  from  Page  17) 

little  save  to  perfect  the  minor  skill.s 
of  sipping  from  Mason  jars  in  the 
nunble  seats  of  flying  Model  T's,  or 
performing  the  intricacies  of  the 
Shag  or  the  Big  Apple,  innocent 
ancestors  of  the  Twist  and  the  Bird 
and  kindred  modern  aberrations. 

One  of  us  lost  an  election  bet  on 
Herbert  Hoover  that  fall,  and  was 
obliged  to  attend  classes  in  female 
attire,  providing  sufficient  merriment 
for  the  day  in  that  simple  time. 

(Ed.  Note:  It  is  necessary  to  note 
that  the  author  himself  was  the  one 


who  bet  on  Hoover  and  lost.  The 
Pine  Needles  of  that  year  records 
him  for  posterity  photographed  in 
female  attire  with  the  exception  of 
shoes.  The  story  goes  that  he  was 
able  to  get  otitfitted  in  hat,  coat, 
dress,  everything  except  shoes  for  his 
exceptionally  long,  exceptionally  nar- 
row feet.  In  desperation,  he  finally 
approached  the  largest  girl  on 
campus  who  timred  him  away  with 
considerable  indignation.  The  only 
small  thing  about  her  was  her  feet, 
and  she  was  overweeningly  proud 
of  them.) 

We  fielded  the  first  Woman's  Col- 
lege football  team  in  history,  a  tag 
team  directed  by  that  sterling  former 
UNC  quarterback,  Pete  "Wyrick. 
Some  of  us  bear  scars  of  it  to  this  day, 
but  the  season  was  a  dazzling  suc- 
cess, though  probably  not  of  record. 
We  beat  somebody  or  other,  and  tied 
a  team  from  Guilford  College.  The 
sequence  of  athletic  miracles 
involved  escaped  me  long  ago. 

In  short,  the  year  is  a  right  smart 
of  a  blur  to  this  sun'ivor,  who  hardly 
knew  what  was  going  on  at  the  time, 
nor,  in  truth,  cared  whether  or  no 
school  kept,  as  we  used  to  say.  We 
learned  to  avoid  deans  and  campus 
limbs  of  the  law,  as  generations  of 
campus  \'isitors  have  before  and 
since,  and  though  we  were  as  much 
on  the  campus  by  night  as  by  day, 
casualties  in  that  general  field  of 
activity  were  slight. 

The  campus  newspaper  editor, 
whoever  she  was,  turned  out  to  be 
a  young  woman  of  sense.  After  a  few 
days'  exposure  to  the  coed  crop  she 
flicked  her  editorial  lash  upon  our 
backs,  and  said  the  lot  of  us  should 
be  dragged  home  and  given  old-time 
spankings.  She  was  right  as  far  as 
she  went,  and  her  treatment,  if 
administered,  might  have  prevented 
later  outrages  we  perpetrated  on  the 
campus,  and  off,  in  then-remote  dis- 
tricts near  the  little  town  of 
Greensboro. 

So,  about  all  we  did  was  to  live 
through  it,  and  quite  obviously  the 
college  did,  too,  and  has  moved  on 
into  higher  ground,  and  even  grand- 
em-.  But  I  have  noted  over  the  years 
that  there  is  a  persistent  coolness 
between  the  Succeeding  Administra- 
tions and  Our  Class.  We  don't  even 
get  tlie  chance  to  contribute  to  the 
alumnae  fund.  D 


26 


Alumni  News 


NEWS     NOTES 

little  stories  about  a  lot  of  alumnae  and  a 
big  welcome  to  our  netv  ones 


'64 


Some  '64  fledglings  have  flown  far  and 
wide  'tis  true,  but  we're  glad  to  say  N.  C. 
can  claim  more  than  a  few.  Here's  the 
results  of  where  we've  found  them  this 
faU.  Elizabeth  Abell  is  teaching  elemen- 
tary grades  at  Virginia  Beach,  where  she 
lives  at  539  S.  Atlantic  Blvd.  Carol  Adams 
Harrington  is  living  at  506  University  Dr., 
Greensboro,  where  she  is  director  of  a 
kindergarten.  Betsy  Allen  Carrier  is  a 
social  worker  in  Greensboro  and  lives  in 
Westover  Apts.,  1519  Whilden  Place. 
Donnalea  Allen  Flynt  of  538  Overlook  St., 
Greensboro,  is  in  med  tech  training  at 
Cone  Hospital.  Martha  Allen  is  teaching 
second  grade  in  Charlotte,  where  she  lives 
at  553C  Wakefield  Drive.  Bettie  Anderson 
has  recently  returned  from  a  European 
tour.  Claire  Barry  is  living  at  3606  Pacific 
Ave.,  Virginia  Beach,  where  she  is  teach- 
ing. Ann  Batten  was  married  to  Charles 
Raymond  Woodall,  Jr.,  on  June  6  in  Smith- 
field,  where  they  are  living  at  209  S. 
Third  St.  Both  are  teaching.  The  bride- 
groom received  a  bachelor  of  arts  degree  in 
history  in  1963  from  Atlantic  Christian 
College.  Hinda  Bershtein  Berkelhammer 
is  working  as  an  interior  decorator  and 
lives  at  201  Revere  Dr.,  Apt.  5,  Greensboro. 
Patricia  Bescher  Austin's  address  is  107  S. 
Lindell  Rd.,  Greensboro,  where  she  is 
teaching. 

Margaret  Brown  is  living  at  4808 
Wellington  Dr.,  Chevy  Chase,  Md.  She  is 
a  management  trainee  with  Woodward  and 
Lothrop  in  Washington.  Patricia  Byrd  is 
third  grade  teaching  in  Yadkinville.  Jane 
Carraway  was  married  to  David  Lee 
Lawrence  on  June  27  in  Washington,  N.  C. 
They  live  at  408  N.  Tremont  Dr.,  Greens- 
boro, where  the  bride  is  a  home  service 
representative  for  Piedmont  Natural  Gas 
Co.,  and  the  bridegroom  is  employed  by 
NCNB.  He  attended  Guilford  College  and 
served  with  the  National  Guard.  Elizabeth 
Carriker  is  working  as  assistant  to  the 
director  of  Elliott  Hall  at  UNC-G.  Laura 
Ann  Carson  is  teaching  distributive  edu- 
cation at  West  Mecklenburg  High  in 
Charlotte,  where  she  lives  at  427  Berkshire 
Rd.  Jane  Carter  is  assistant  home  economics 
agent  for  Vance  County  and  is  living  at 
146  Belle  St.,  Henderson.  Kay  Chandler 
married  David  Clay  Madison  on  June  13 
in  Greensboro.  The  couple  is  living  at 
6466  84th  Ave.,  N.,  Pinellas  Park,  Fla., 
near  Tampa,  where  Airman  Madison  is 
stationed  at  McDill  Air  Force  Base.  He 
ilttended  State  College.  Kathleen  Clark 
Futrell  is  in  graduate  school  at  UNC-CH. 
Peggy  Clark  Camp  is  teaching  and  lives  at 
906  Sycamore  Rd.,  Graham.  Eleanor 
Clarke's    address    is    1301    Pinemont    Dr., 


Columbia,  where  she  is  working  toward 
her  master's  in  history  at  the  U.  of  S.  C. 
Rebecca  Clemmer  is  teaching  third  grade 
at  Huntingtowne  Farms  School,  CharloLte. 
Sara  Collins  is  junior  high  English  teacher 
at  Virginia  Beach.  Margaret  Colmer  is  a 
graduate  student  in  the  school  of  social 
work  at  UNC-CH. 

Mitzy  Combs  was  married  to  Cecil  Lee 
Page  on  June  27  in  Gibsonville.  Mr.  Page 
attends  Alamance  Teclinical  Institute, 
where  he  is  studying  electronics  and  is  also 
engaged  in  farming.  They  are  living  on 
Rt.  2,  Elon  College.  Sandra  Cottrell 
Simmons  is  secretary  to  a  plastic  surgeon 
at  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital,  Chapel  Hill, 
where  she  lives  at  A-3,  Colony  Apartments. 
Dixie  Couch  and  John  Edwin  Couch  were 
united  in  marriage  on  June  27  in  Kelson. 
The  couple  is  at  home  at  1203  Ruffin  St., 
Durham,  where  the  bridegroom  is  em- 
ployed by  General  Telephone  Co.,  and 
the  bride  is  home  sei-vice  representative 
for  Public  Service  Co.  Mr.  Couch  attended 
State  College.  Esther  Coward  was  married 
August  18,  1963,  to  John  R.  Hooten.  They 
hve  in  Apt.  V-3B,  Cameron  Court,  Raleigh. 
Marion  Crawford  is  a  med  tech  student  at 
Watts  Hospital,  Durham.  Betsy  Cress  is 
executive  assistant  at  Watson's  Poultiy 
Plant,  Raleigh,  where  she  lives  at  2759-D 
Milbemie  Rd.,  along  with  Janice  Cress, 
who  is  working  as  a  secretary  at  State 
College.  Sally  Ann  Grumpier  was  married 
to  Warren  Y.  Jobe  on  June  6  in  Burlington. 
After  a  trip  to  Nassau  the  couple  has  lived 
at  2322-A  Sharon  Amity  Road,  Charlotte, 
where  the  bridegroom  is  an  accountant.  He 
is  a  graduate  of  UNC-CH,  where  he  was 
treasurer  of  Delta  L^psilon  Fraternity.  On 
July  26  in  Oxford  Judith  Currin  married 
John  Edgar  Parker,  who  is  a  graduate  of 
UNC-CH,  and  presently  employed  as  a 
programmer  by  J.  P.  Stevens  &  Co., 
Greensboro,  where  the  couple  lives  at 
300-A  Ashland  Drive.  Roberta  Daniel 
Johnson  is  teaching  at  Radford  College  and 
lives  at  601   S.   Main  St.,  Blacksburg,  Va. 

Linda  Davis  and  Kenneth  M.  Kriegsman 
were  married  on  June  17  in  Myrtle  Beach 
and  are  living  at  1006  Elwell  Ave.,  Greens- 
boro, where  the  bridegroom  is  in  the 
wholesale  music  supply  business.  Sandra 
Dover  is  teaching  at  Cochron  Junior  High 
in  Charlotte.  Andrea  Drum  is  teaching  7th 
grade  in  Winston-Salem.  Marion  Duck- 
worth Satterfield's  address  is  2634  Cham- 
blee-Tucker  Rd.,  Doraville,  Ga.  She  is 
teaching  kindergarten.  Judith  Edwards  is 
teaching  in  a  junior  high  school  in  Anna- 
pohs,  Maryland.  Mary  Edwards  is  teaching 
at  Clarence  Poe  School,  Raleigh.  Nancy 
Edwards  McCollum  is  teaching  in  Winston- 
Salem,  where  she  lives  at  Lot  31,  Wake 
Forest  Trailer  Park.  Ruth  Ennis  was  mar- 
ried to  David  Wheeler  AUred  on  May  31 


in  the  chapel  of  Southeastern  Seminary  at 
Wake  Forest  College.  The  bridegroom  is 
pastor  of  Jonas  Ridge  Baptist  Church.  He 
received  his  bachelor  of  arts  degree  from 
Wake  Forest,  where  he  was  president  of 
CuUom  Ministerial  Conference  and  exten- 
sion director  of  the  Baptist  Student  Union. 
Mary  Etchison's  address  is  Box  1599,  East- 
West  Center,  Honolulu,  Hawaii.  She  is 
holder  of  a  Center  Scholarship  at  the  U.  of 
Hawaii,  where  she  is  working  toward  a 
master's  in  Asian  history  and  studying  the 
Mandarin  language.  Dot  Fitts  Johnson  is 
teaching  4th  grade  at  Leasville  Elementary 
School  in  Lynchburg,  Va.,  where  she  lives 
at  1173  Timberlake  Drive.  Jean  Freeman 
is  at  the  Americim  Nicaraguan  School,  c/o 
American  Embassy,  Managua,  Nicaragua. 
Carolyn  Furr  GrilEn  lives  at  7706  Law- 
yers Rd.,  Charlotte.  Harriet  Sue  Garrison 
became  the  bride  of  Charles  Bruce  Ballard 
in  Weaverville  on  June  6.  They  are  Uving 
at  387  Beaucatcher  Road  (wliich  should  be 
reserved  for  spinsters  instead  of  newly- 
weds  seems  to  us)  in  Asheville,  where 
Mr.  Ballard  is  a  hardware  salesman.  He  is 
a  graduate  of  Asheville-Biltmore  College. 
Oliver  Gilbert  Hoffner  is  teaching  in  Salis- 
bury. Her  address:  Box-wood  Lodge, 
Mocksville.  Rebecca  Goodwin  Huggins  of 
202C  Ashland  Dr.,  Greensboro,  is  teaching 
1st  grade  at  Mclver  School.  Carolyn 
Graves  married  Baron  Brown  Russell  on 
June  3  in  Seagrove.  They  are  living  at 
3  Parker  Trailer  Park,  N.  Cannon  Blvd., 
Kannapolis.  The  bride  is  a  welfare  case 
worker.  Mr.  Russell  attended  UNC-CH  and 
is  employed  in  Mooresville  by  Burlington 
Industries.  Elizabeth  Carol  Harris  is  teach- 
ing high  school  level  physical  education 
in  Wilson.  She  was  a  counselor  at  Camp 
Alleghany  in  West  Virginia  during  the 
summer.  Margaret  Harrison  Steifel  is  a 
social  service  worker  and  lives  at  406y2 
Chamberlain  St.,  Raleigh.  Joyce  Hawkins 
married  Henry  Clifton  Norris,  Jr.,  on  June 
20  in  Reidsville.  He  is  assistant  manager  of 
the  Catalog  Sales  Desk  at  Sears,  Roebuck 
&  Co.,  Greensboro,  where  the  couple  lives 
at  1007  Hill  Street.  Martha  Holt  and 
Hubert  Wendell  McGee  were  married  on 
July  12  in  Rockingham.  They  live  at  308-B 
73rd  St.,  Newport  News,  Va.,  where  he  is 
employed  in  tlie  testing  laboratory  of 
Newport  News  Shipbuilding  and  Drydock 
Co.  He  graduated  from  State  College, 
where  he  was  a  member  of  Theta  Tau 
Fraternity.  Patricia  Hopper  is  a  graduate 
student  at  State  College.  Celia  Howell  be- 
came the  bride  of  Henry  F.  Starling,  Jr.,  on 
June  21  in  Greensboro,  where  they  are  liv- 
ing at  1107-E  Olive  St.  She  is  in  med  tech 
training  at  Cone  Hospital.  Mr.  Starling  is 
in  his  senior  year  at  East  Carolina  College, 
where  he  is  majoring  in  business  admin- 
istration. Lynn  Huberman  Shapiro's  ad- 
dress is  4  Bala  Ave.,  Bala-Cynwyd,  Penn- 
sylvania. Martha  Hunt  is  decorator  at 
Weaver's  Textiles,  Raleigh.  Eleanor  Jarrell 
is  now  Mrs.  Don  A.  Ray  and  is  living  at 
3304  Martin  Ave.,  Apartment  C,  Greens- 
boro. 

Edith  Ray  Jolley  was  June  bride  of 
Stephen  Hill  Dobbins.  They  are  living  at 
1305  Duplin  Rd.,  Raleigh,  where  Edith  is 
research  technician  and  Mr.  Dobbins  is  a 
member  of  the  senior  class  at  State  College. 
Marlis  Jones  Jordan  and  her  husband  will 
be  at  3501  Sandershausen,  Kassel,  Fried- 
hofsweg  16,  West  Germany,  for  the  next 
year.   Nina  Kennedy   married   William   B. 


Fall  1964 


27 


Starr  on  August  22  in  Greensboro,  where 
he  is  president  of  ABC  Jalousie  Company. 
They  are  h\ing  at  5505  E.  Lake  Dr.,  Gurl- 
ford  College.  \'ianne  Keener  and  Edward 
Anthon\'  Pajne  were  married  on  July  7 
in  a  pri\'ate  ceremon\'  at  the  home  of  the 
bridegroom  at  15  Bessemer  Court  in 
Greensboro.  At  a  light  buffet  afterwards 
the\'  greeted  a  host  of  friends,  especialh' 
members  of  the  Greensboro  Cricket  Team 
of  which  Mr.  Pa>ne  is  a  member,  and 
"showed  oft"  their  unusual  abode  which 
was  built  just  for  two  and  tagged  "honey- 
moon house."  Mr.  PajTie,  originally  from 
England,  was  educated  at  the  Hall  Prepar- 
ator>'  School  in  London.  He  is  now  associ- 
ated with  Grand  Rapids  \'amish  Company 
as  a  color  consultant,  with  studios  in  High 
Point.  Mar>'  Glenn  Kiker  became  the  bride 
of  James  Nelson  Poovey  on  May  9  in 
Chapel  Hill.  Mar\-'s  fatlier  perfoi-med  the 
ceremony.  Mr.  Poovey  is  a  student  at  the 
L'\C-CH  dental  school,  where  he  is  a 
member  of  Psi  Omega,  professional  dental 
fratemit>-.  They  are  at  home  at  413  Pat- 
terson Place,  Chapel  Hill.  Patricia  Kinsey  is 
teaching  2nd  grade  at  Highland  School  in 
Charlotte.  Nancy  Lamar  Anderson  is  liv- 
ing at  #4  Mikado  Apts.,  3610  Emerald, 
Torrance,  California.  Janet  Lambeth  is 
teaching  in  Greensboro,  where  she  lives  at 
610B  Stirling  Street.  Jane  Latham  is  teach- 
ing 3rd  grade  in  High  Point.  Janet  Leazer 
is  now  Mrs.  Phillip  B.  W'ise  and  is  living 
at  4238  Warm  Springs  Rd.,  Columbus,  Ga., 
\\here  her  husband  is  stationed  with  the 
Army.  Kay  Lindley  is  teaching  at  Pro.ximity 
Junior  High  in  Greensboro.  Mary  McMillan 
is  research  analyst  at  Wachovia  Bank  in 
W'inston-Salem.  Brenda  Marlowe  is  em- 
ployed as  an  artist  for  Travelers  Press, 
Winston-Salem.  Linda  Martin  is  working 
in  the  Ph>siolog>'  department  and  studying 
for  her  master's  at  L^NC-C. 

Eve  Mazoly  of  2215  Vail  Ave.,  Charlotte, 
is  reservations  agent  for  Eastern  Airlines 
there.  Jennie  Middlebrook  is  social  worker 
in  Ale.xandria,  Va.,  where  she  lives  at  914 
Enderby  Drive.  Linda  Moore  married  Don- 
ald Keith  Dixon  on  June  28  in  Kings  Moun- 
tain. They  are  hving  in  Charlotte,  where 
Mr.  Di.\on  is  employed  in  the  bookkeeping 
department  of  \'ictory  Che\Tolet.  Elaine 
Morgan  is  teaching  pulilic  school  music  in 
Elizabeth  City.  Bobbie  .Mullis  is  teaching 
junior  high  grades  in  Albemarle.  Lealan 
Nunn  was  summer  intern  at  N.  C.  Museum 
of  Art,  Raleigh,  where  she  gave  gallery 
talks  on  featured  exhibits.  Jo  Ann  Parker 
is  case  aide  worker  for  the  Red  Cross  in 
Raleigh.  Patricia  Parrish  is  teaching  at 
Asheboro  High  School  and  lives  at  640  E. 
Kivette  St.  there.  Gail  Pate  is  at  1215  N. 
Fort  Myer  Dr.,  Robin  Towers  #204,  Arling- 
ton, Va.  Joyce  Payne  and  John  Thurston 
Kelly  were  married  on  July  12  in  Greens- 
boro. Mr.  Kelly  attended  Mars  Hill  and 
Wake  Forest  College  and  is  now  employed 
by  a  linen  service  in  Newport  News,  Va., 
where  the  couple  is  living  at  141  Henry 
Clay  Road.  Mary  Payne  is  teaching  English 
at  Pyle  Junior  High  in  Bethesda,  Mary- 
land. Rebecca  Peele  is  teaching  and  lives 
at_  .3606  Pacific  Ave.,  Virginia  Beach. 
Priscilla  Pinkston  Shoemaker  is  living  at 
207-A  Center  Ave.,  Carrboro.  Rosemary 
Piatt  is  working  towards  her  master's.  Her 
address  is  1.509  E.  Country  Club  Dr.,  Talla- 
hassee, Florida. 

Susan  Reece  Jenkins  lives  at  1521  Mon- 
n*    Ave.    S.    W.   Apt    29-J,    Birmingham, 


Alabama.  Judith  Renfro  is  teaching  at 
Needliam  Broughton  High  in  Raleigh. 
Ellen  Jean  Rochester  married  Elwood 
Parker  on  June  7.  Frances  Ross  is  teaching 
in  Cumberland  County.  Lynda  Rowe  spent 
the  summer  traveling  all  over  the  U.  S.  and 
highlight  of  this  trip  was  her  work  at  the 
Republican  National  Convention  in  Frisco 
for  2  weeks.  This  fall  she  is  teaching  at 
Decatur,  Ga.,  where  she  lives  at  1608  Briar- 
cltft  Rd.,  Apt.  5.  Reta  Sain  married  Heniy 
Odell  Beck,  Jr.,  on  August  1  in  Morgantoii. 
Mr.  Beck  attended  Mars  Hill,  and  gradu- 
ated from  tlie  School  of  Pharmacy,  UNC- 
CH,  where  he  belonged  to  Pi  Kappa  fra- 
ternity. He's  pharmacist-in-training  at  Cone 
Hospital  in  Cireensboro,  where  the  couple 
is  living  at  #C-5,  1137  Church  Street.  Reta 
is  assistant  in  the  Biology  department  at 
UNC-G.  Sharon  Sharpe  married  Edgar  C. 
Troutman  of  the  Army  on  July  25  in  Har- 
mony, where  she  is  teaching.  Linda  Sloop 
is  teaching  in  the  Home  Economics  depart- 
ment of  Asheboro  High  School.  Paulette 
Smith  is  recreation  director  with  American 
Red  Cross,  Clubmobile  Service,  Head- 
quarters Stl-i  U.  S.  Army,  APO  301,  San 
Francisco,  California.  Mary  Soyars  and 
Thomas  Crawley  Cartwright  were  mar- 
ried on  August  15  in  Wytheville,  \'a.  They 
are  living  at  .3310-E  Mordecai  St.,  Durham, 
where  the  bridegroom  is  in  his  last  >'ear 
of  law  school  at  Duke  U.,  and  where  he 
has  joined  Phi  Delta  Phi,  law  fraternity. 
He  was  graduated  with  honors  in  political 
science  from  UNC-CH.  Marjorie  Spangler 
was  married  to  Hugh  Omega  Porter,  Jr.,  on 
August  2  in  Shelby.  They  are  living  at 
1050  Hill  St.,  Greensboro,  where  the  bride- 
groom is  employed  by  Western  Electric 
Co.  as  a  development  engineer,  and  the 
bride  teaches.  Mr.  Porter  is  a  graduate  of 
Duke  U.,  where  he  joined  Lambda  Chi 
Alpha  fraternity.  Pi  Mu  Epsilon,  mathema- 
tics honorary,  and  Alpha  Kappa  Psi,  com- 
merce and  business  fraternity. 

Jean  Spencer  married  Edwin  Eugene 
Willett  on  May  23  in  Morganton.  They  are 
living  at  698  Dresden  Dr.,  Apt.  1-B,  New- 
port News,  Va.,  where  Mr.  Willett  is  em- 
ployed in  the  engineering  department  of 
Newport  News  Dry  Dock  and  Shipbuilding 
School,  from  which  he  graduated.  Jean  is 
teaching  and  is  a  member  of  the  Newport 
News  Symphony.  Iris  Starling  Burriss  is  liv- 
ing at  4929  Wagner  Ave.,  Riclunond,  Va. 
Janet  Starnes  Mueller's  address  is  320-C 
Ashland  Dr.,  Greensboro,  where  her  hus- 
band is  employed  by  Sears  Catalog  Order 
Plant.  Judith  Stone  Miller  is  living  at  502 
Nottingham  Dr.,  Greensboro.  Nancy  Stump 
Smith  is  a  kitchen  designer  and  lives  at 
207  Carr  St.,  Carrboro.  Gloria  Sutton  of 
2109  Richlands  Rd.,  Kin.ston,  is  teaching. 
Sue  Swindell  married  Artiiur  Wade  Martin, 
Jr.,  on  June  20  in  Gary.  They  made  their 
home  in  Columbia,  S.  C,  where  the  bride- 
groom was  employed  by  Columbia  Product 
Co.  until  August'  when  he  entered  the 
Army  as  a  second  lieutenant.  He  was  grad- 
uated from  N.  C.  State  witli  a  degree  in 
industrial  engineering.  Elaine  Tare  of  326 
Dogwood  Dr.,  High  Point  is  working  as  a 
secretary.  Willa  Tate  Greene  is  teaching 
4th  grade  at  Valley  Springs  School,  Ashe- 
ville.  Harriet  Thompson  became  the  bride 
of  Samuel  Walter  McNairy  on  August  1 
in  Greensboro.  They  are  living  at  418-C 
Wakefield  Dr.,  Charlotte,  where  Mr.  Mc- 
Nairy is  employed  by  Haskins  &  Sells  Ac- 
counting Firm,  and  the  bride  is  teaching 


at  South  Mecklenburg  High.  The  bride- 
groom graduated  in  June  from  UNC-CH 
with  a  business  administration  degree.  He 
made  Phi  Beta  Kappa  and  Beta  Gamma 
Sigma,  was  named  the  outstanding  student 
in  accounting,  and  was  a  member  of  the 
golf  team.  Gail  Thomson  is  studying  Ger- 
man literature  at  the  U.  of  Vienna  under 
a   Fulbright  scholarship. 

Rosalie  Tripp  has  married  Fillmer  C. 
Ruegg.  They  are  at  Apt.  E-1,  Toledo  Ter- 
race, Hyattsville  Md.  Rosalie  is  a  Woodrow 
Wilson  Fellow  at  the  U.  of  Maryland, 
where  the  bridegroom  is  also  studying.  He 
is  with  the  Bureau  of  Standards.  Charlotte 
Vestal  has  been  awarded  the  $1,000  an- 
nual Consohdated  Scholarship  and  is  doing 
graduate  work  in  history  at  UNC-CH. 
Antoinette  Foster  is  abroad.  Leslie  Holt 
married  Charles  J.  Johnson  on  July  25  in 
Gastonia,  where  they  are  living  at  1774 
Boston  Circle.  Mr.  Johnson  graduated  from 
Evans  Business  College  and  is  employed  by 
Akers  Motor  Lines  in  Charlotte.  Linda 
Logan  is  now  Mrs.  John  B.  Kennedy  of 
11  IB  Sue  Anne  Court,  Carrboro.  She  is 
attending  the  School  of  Social  Work,  UNC- 
CH.  Clar>'  Stimson  has  moved  to  #8  HoUy 
Hill  Apts.,  Mount  Holly,  where  she  is 
teaching.  Dorothy  Warren  has  been  named 
assistimt  home  economics  agent  for  Ala- 
mance Count>-.  Helen  Washburn  married 
T.  Albert  Yamada,  and  the  couple  is  living 
at  Bowl-Mor  Apts.  #14,  N.  Hanover  St, 
Elizabetlitown,  Pa.,  where  she  is  teaching 
5th  grade.  The  bridegroom  graduated  from 
Elizabethtown  College  in  Pennsylvania. 
EInora  Williams  Stuart  is  teaching  and  hv- 
ing  at   2110   Crestridge   Rd.,   Greensboro. 

Jewel  WilUams  is  a  grad  student  at 
UNC-CH.  Ann  Williamson  was  married  to 
Norman  Wayne  Hutchins  on  June  29  in 
Cerro  Gordo.  Both  are  teaching  at  Chase 
Cit>'  High  School  in  Rutherford  County, 
where  NIr.  Hutchins  has  already  had 
a  year  of  teaching.  He  is  a  graduate  of 
Duke.  Judith  Wilson  Turner  of  4222-F 
Oakland  Ave.,  Greensboro,  is  teaching. 
Edith  Winecoff  is  teaching  kindergarten  in 
Greensboro.  Carolyn  Thomas  is  teaching 
English  after  her  personal  encounter  with 
tlie  Bodleian  Library  at  O.xford  University, 
where  she  had  a  si.x-weeks  scholarship  to 
study  17th  centuiy  literature  during  the 
summer.  Joanna  Bobbins  is  working  toward 
her  doctorate  in  medicine  at  the  U.  of 
Tennessee.  Lura  Winstead  is  at  Bowman 
Gray  Medical  School,  Winston-Salem. 
Mattie  Wilkerson  is  attending  UNC-CH 
med  school.  Jean  Abernethy  married 
Thomas  H.  Boston  on  August  23  in  David- 
.son.  They  are  living  at  8207  Cedar  St., 
Silver  Spring,  Md.,  where  the  bride  is  a 
mathematician  with  the  National  Security 
Agency,  and  Mr.  Poston  is  teaching  at 
Bullis  Prep  School  for  Boys.  He  is  a  1964 
grad  of  l5avidson  College,  where  he  be- 
longed to  Tau  Kappa  Alpha,  national 
forensic  society.  Joanne  Allen  is  at  319  Bel- 
ford  Dr.,  Denver  21,  Colorado,  where  she 
is  teaching.  Libby  Auten  is  teaching  typing 
and  shorthand  at  McLean  (Va.)  High 
School.  Bett>'  Baker  has  a  graduate  assist- 
antship  at  Clemson,  where  she  is  working 
toward  her  master's.  Anne  Barrett  is  teach- 
ing at  Madison-Mayodan  Junior  High. 
2nd  Lieutenant  Jo  Anne  Bartlett  is  at  the 
Medical  Field  Service  School,  Brook  Army 
Medical  Center,  Fort  Sam  Houston,  Texas, 
where  she  is  a  dietetic  intern.  Sharon  Beck 
is  studying  at  the  U.  of  Connecticut.  Susan 


28 


Alumni  News 


Beyer  is  attending  graduate  school  at 
UNC-CH. 

Patricia  Biggard  of  7  W.  14th  St.,  New 
York,  N.  Y.,  is  systems  trainee  with  Chase 
Manhattan  Bank.  Berta  Epstein  is  sharing 
the  apartment  with  Patricia  Biggard  in 
New  York.  Jacqueline  BischoEE  is  Mrs. 
Philip  Tremain  of  605  Dogwood  Lane, 
Guilford  College.  She  is  teaching  5th  grade 
at  Millis  Road  School,  Jamestown.  Angela 
Blanton  Russell  of  136  Hamilton  Rd., 
Chapel  Hill,  is  music  supervisor  for  Dur- 
ham County  Schools.  Penny  Buchanan  is 
teaching  6th  grade  in  Asheville.  Margaret 
Burbage  is  teaching  4th  grade  at  James 
Island  (S.  C.)  Elementary  School.  Vera 
Butner  is  Mrs.  Charles  Frank  Klotzberger 
and  is  working  as  a  secretary  at  the  U.  of 
Virginia.  Betty  Ann  Caloway  became  the 
bride  of  A-2C  David  Bolton  Ehle  on  June 
15  in  Oakley.  They  are  living  at  635 
Thompson  St.,  Bossier  City,  Louisiana.  The 
bridegroom  attended  Western  Carolina  Col- 
lege and  the  U.  of  Tennessee  and  is  pres- 
ently in  the  I'SAF  at  Barksdale  Air  Force 
Base,  La.  Angela  Carpenter  is  teaching 
high  school  math  in  Charlotte,  where  she 
resides  at  1402E  Green  Oaks  Apts.,  East- 
crest  Drive.  Clara  Causey  is  interior  de- 
signer for  Blackwelder  Furniture  Stores  in 
Elkin.  Diane  Cheek  is  research  analyst  for 
the  Defense  Department  at  Ft.  Meade, 
Marj'land.  Lacy  Coble  Starr  of  3407  Kirby 
Dr.,  Greensboro,  is  teaching  1st  grade  at 
Joyner  Elementary.  Pauline  Colville  is  an 
interior  designer  with  R.  S.  Ras  Co., 
Albany,  N.  Y.  Anne  Cordle  is  teaching  at 
Gordon  Elementary  in  Atlanta,  Ga.  Mary 
Ann  Crocker  is  auditing  assistant  with 
Wachovia  Bank  in  Winston-Salem.  Jean 
Crossley  is  cost  accountant  for  Pi-udential 
Insurance  in  Jacksonville,  Fla.  Linda  Culler 
Teague  has  joined  her  husband  in  Baum- 
hoder,  Germany,  where  he  is  stationed  with 
the  Army.  Jo  Ann  Curtis  is  teaching  in 
Franklin.  Carol  Daugherty  is  now  NIrs. 
Craig  Bruton  of  183  Dunstana  Rd.,  Ashe- 
ville. Joanne  Davis  is  living  at  103  Elaine 
Court,  Apt.  X-2,  Laurel,  Md.,  and  working 
with  the  Department  of  Defense.  Louise 
Davis  is  teaching  public  school  music  and 
lives  at  5  N.  Meadow  Dr.,  Country  Club 
Estates,   Glen  Bumie,   Md. 

Peggy  Davis  has  been  working  temporar- 
ily with  the  purchasing  office  of  J.  P.  Stev- 
ens in  New  York.  Joan  Decker  reported  to 
Maxwell  Air  Force  Base  on  August  31. 
She'll  be  a  recreational  worker  with  the 
Red  Gross  in  military  hospitals.  Lynda 
Dodson  Williams  worked  for  Sun  Oil  in 
Greensboro  during  the  summer  and  was 
expecting  to  teach  this  fall.  Celia  Donald- 
son Putnam  teaches  at  Mooresville  Junior 
High.  Joan  Dorsey  is  with  Georgia  Power 
Co.,  P.  O.  Box  1220,  Columbus  Ca. 
Rebecca  Douglas  married  Kermerly  Scott 
Thomburg  on  August  22  In  Gastonia.  They 
are  living  at  962  Grafton  Rd.,  Apt.  #7, 
Newark,  Ohio.  Gail  Earnhardt  is  new 
assistant  home  economics  agent  for  the 
State  College  Extension  Service  in  Stanley 
County.  Sara  Ann  Edge  is  with  the 
Cumberland  County  Welfare  Department. 
Billie  Jean  Edwards  Nichols  of  216  N. 
Valley  Rd.,  Colonial  Heights,  Va.,  is  teach- 
ing. Barbara  Eshenbach  is  employed  as  a 
research  statistician  and  is  living  at  1850 
Columbia  Pike,  Arlington,  Va.  Nancy  Faul- 
coner  is  at  3030  Old  Decatur  Rd.,  Bar- 
celona Apts.  #A115,  Atlanta,  Ca.  Frances 
Fickling   is   teaching   art   at   Ashley    High 


School,  Gastonia.  During  the  summer  she 
taught  crafts  at  Camp  Seafarer,  Arapohoe. 
Mary  Alice  Fidler  is  teaching  commercial 
subjects  at  Statesville  Senior  High.  Bess 
Forshaw  is  teaching  1st  grade  in  Dilworth 
School,  Charlotte. 

Sylva  Fortner  is  home  service  represent- 
ative for  Carolina  Power  &  Light  Co.  in 
Asheville.  Melissa  Galloway  of  1010  West 
Green,  Room  396,  Urbana,  111.,  is  doing 
grad  work.  Selma  Gentry  is  teaching  2nd 
grade  at  Emma  Blair  School,  High  Point. 
Shirley  Goodman  graduated  from  LINC- 
CH  as  a  medical  technician  on  October  2. 
Linda  Grubb  Johnson's  address  is  1772 
Kenilworth  Dr.,  Clearwater,  Fla.,  where 
she  is  home-making.  Janet  Hamer  is  on  the 
staff  of  WUNC-TV.  Nancy  Hannah  is 
teaching  French  at  Nordi  High  in  Winston- 
Salem.  Martha  Haibison  is  3rd  grade 
teacher  at  Westlawn  Elementary  in  Falls 
Church,  \'a.  Betsy  Harris  is  teaching  Eng- 
lish at  Falls  Church  High.  Patricia  Harris 
is  teaching  home  economics  at  Indian  Land 
High  School  in  Fort  Mill,  S.  C.  Marilyn 
Haufler  is  an  elementary  teacher  in  her 
home  town  of  Watchung,  N.  J.  Roxanne 
HefFner  Maffitt's  address  is  lllA  White  St., 
Lexington,  Va.  Clu-isty  Henkel  is  employed 
in  the  laboratory  at  Burlington  Industries 
in  Greensboro.  Candace  Hill  James  is  in 
the  research  marketing  department  of 
Re>nolds  Tobacco  in  Winston-Salem.  Tina 
Hillquist  is  a  graduate  assistant  in  the  Eng- 
lish Department  of  the  U.  of  Kentucky, 
Lexington,  Ky.  She  wrote  on  her  "tracer" 
that  she  has  3  dogs  and  3  cats  but  drew 
us  a  picture  of  a  tiger,  which  we  hope  will 
not  be  added  to  the  menagerie.  Shari  Hoen- 
shell  is  widi  U.  S.  Testing  Co.,  Hoboken, 
N.  J.  Martha  Jo  Hoover  is  studying  in 
Germany,  where  she  hves  at  Stauffenberg- 
strasse  36,  79  Uhn/Donau.  Elizabeth 
Ingraham  is  in  the  research  deoartment  of 
Duke  Medical  Center.  Ann  Johnson  Will- 
son  is  lab  a.ssistant  at  State  College.  Jean 
Ellen  Jones  is  teaching  in  Atlanta,  Ga. 

Karolyn  Jones  is  in  ofBcers  training  with 
USAF.  Her  address:  WAF,  SQ  WAFRON, 
Class  65-B,  Medina  Base,  San  Antonio  27, 
Texas.  Michale  Karnes  is  a  graduate  stu- 
dent at  UNC-G.  Ann  Kluttz  wed  Theodore 
Hoffman  on  August  22  in  Greensboro, 
where  their  reception  was  held  at  the 
Alumnae  House.  They  are  living  at  331-B 
Field  St.,  Caiy.  Ann  is  working  at  National 
Art  Interiors,  Raleigh,  where  her  husband 
has  begun  his  fifth  year  of  a  six-year  course 
in  product  design  at  State  College.  He  is 
secretary  of  the  symphonic  and  marching 
bands.  He  has  had  three  years  in  the  Army. 
Margaret  Knox  is  teaching  elementary 
grades  in  Greensboro.  Lynn  Lachman  is  in 
government  service  in  Washington,  D.  C, 
where  she  lives  at  2406  19di  St.  N.  W., 
Apt.  #3.  Susan  Lane  is  now  Mrs.  James 
Michael  Guthrie  of  17-B  Dunbar  Apts., 
Asheville.  Sue  Latham  Stevenson  lives  at 
402  Lockland  Ave.,  Winston-Salem.  Joan 
Leonard  has  married  John  Allen  Ingle. 
Their  address  is  P.  O.  Box  218,  Skyland. 
Carol  Lilliendahl  of  Green  Oaks  Apts., 
Charlotte,  is  teaching  art.  Julia  Lupton 
married  Robert  B.  Pittman,  Jr.,  on  August  2 
in  Oriental.  Thev  are  living  at  433-B  120 
St.,  Rockaway  Park,  N.  Y.,  N.  Y.  Mr.  Pitt- 
man  is  stationed  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  with 
the  U.  S.  Coast  Guard. 

Linda  McManus  is  teaching  2nd  grade 
at  Winterfield  School,  Charlotte.  Gail 
McNeill  became  the  bride  of  Thomas  L. 


Griffin  on  September  19  in  Greensboro, 
where  the  couple  is  living  at  500  University 
Drive,  and  where  the  bride  is  secretary  in 
the  Trust  department  of  Wachovia  Bank. 
Mr.  Griffin  attended  downtown  Guilford 
College  and  is  cniiilo^ed  by  Western  Auto 
Supply.  Meredith  McNeill  is  teaching  3rd 
grade  in  Walkcrtown.  Toi  Mackethan  is 
.studying  at  Gomell  U.  Mary  Ellen  Maness 
is  working  in  the  fabric  development  divi- 
sion of  Burlington  Industries  in  Burlington. 
Carolyn  Marlowe  lives  at  319  W.  Univers- 
ity Dr.,  Chapel  Hill,  where  .she  is  a  medical 
research  technician.  Frankie  Medlin  is 
teaching  at  William  Street  School  in  Golds- 
boro.  Mary  Louise  Meed  has  been  at  the 
Peace  Corps  Training  Center,  U.  of  Wis- 
consin, Milwaukee,  and  e.xpects  to  be  sent 
to  India  this  fall.  Sandra  Miller  is  teaching 
1st  grade  at  Bush  Hill  Elementary  School, 
,\lexandria,  Va.  Susan  Mitchell  Thrower  is 
a  social  case  worker  in  Greensboro.  Judy 
Mock  is  doing  graduate  work  at  UNC-G. 
DeeAnne  Moore  is  working  on  text  books 
for  Houghton-Mifflin  Publishers  in  Boston. 
Emily  ^ioore  is  at  Apt.  #5,  1806  Briarcliff 
Rd.,  Decatur,  Georgia.  Elizabeth  Morrison 
is  teaching  1st  grade  in  Winston-Salem, 
where  she  lives  at  1608-F,  Northwest  Blvd. 
Linda  MuUinax  married  Ronald  Wayne 
F\'e  on  June  7  in  Newton.  They  are  living 
at  Apt. 'A-4,  1545  Ga.ston  St.,  Winston- 
Salem,  where  the  bride  is  teaching  and  the 
bridegroom  is  employed  by  Wachovia 
Bank.  He  is  a  graduate  of  Lenoir  Rhyne 
College,  where  he  joined  Rau  Kappa  Epsi- 
lon,  and  has  served  in  the  Army. 

Sharon  MuUins  is  teaching  at  Quail  Hol- 
low Junior  High  in  Charlotte.  Judith  Mun- 
hall  is  secretary  in  the  Chemical  Propulsion 
Division  of  Hercules  Powder  Co.,  Wilming- 
ton, Del.  Margaret  Murrell  toured  Europe 
and  the  Scandinavian  countries  during  the 
summer.  Sandra  Myers  is  teaching  1st 
grade  in  Chapel  Hill,  where  she  lives  at 
E-10,  Colony  Apts.  Judy  Nixon's  February 
marriage  to  John  Clinton  Griswold  was 
announced  in  July.  The  couple  is  living  at 
3745  Wabash  Dr..  Old  Town,  Winston- 
Salem.  The  bridegroom  is  a  graduate  of 
Christ  School,  Arden,  and  UNC-GH,  where 
he  joined  Delta  Sigma  Pi.  Norma  Nuttall 
and  Lt.  (jg)  Edward  Dean  Brown,  Jr.,  were 
married  on  August  1  at  the  Naval  Air 
Station  Chapel  in  San  Diego,  Calif.,  where 
they  are  living  at  5110  Clairemont  Mesa 
Blvd.,  Apt.  #314.  Norma  is  a  research 
assistant  with  Scripps  Research  in  La  Jolla. 
The  bridegroom  graduated  from  Notre 
Dame  with  a  degree  in  mechanical  engi- 
neering and  is  a  jet  pilot  stationed  at  Mira- 
mar  Naval  Air  Station.  Margaret  Ogilvy 
participated  in  the  Music  and  Art  Festival 
Tour  in  Europe  during  the  summer.  She  is 
studying  this  fall  at  UNC-CH.  Mildred 
Overton  is  teaching  and  lives  at  1111  By- 
num  St.,  Wilson.  Carolyn  Owen  Kriegsman 
is  living  at  564  Overlook  Dr.,  Greensboro. 
Randi  Passamaneck  has  been  studying  at 
UNC-CH. 

Mary  Love  Poole  has  been  in  training  for 
the  Honduras  Peace  Corp  Program  at  St. 
Louis  (Mo.)  LI.  Brenda  Powell  of  Hartnett 
Hall,  1426  21st  St.,  N.  W.,  Washington, 
D.  C.,  is  emplo>'ed  as  a  secretary'  in  the 
Department  of  Labor.  Wanda  Presson  is 
teaching  6th  grade  in  Asheboro,  where  she 
lives  at  301  Cliff  Road.  Janice  Pruett  is 
teaching  math  at  Rabun  County  High 
School  in  Clayton,  Ga.  Geraldine  Rasmus- 
sen  Nielsen's  address  is  1838  Brantley  St., 


Fall  J964 


29 


Winston-Salem.  Linda  Rees  is  teaching  in 
Sherwood  High  School,  Sandy  Springs,  Md. 
She  took  a  painting  course  at  American 
U.,  ^^'ashington,  D.  C,  during  die  summer. 
Julia  Renegar  and  Oscar  Whitfield  Broome, 
Jr.,  were  married  on  June  14  in  Monroe. 
They  are  living  in  Urbana,  where  both  are 
graduate  students  at  the  U.  of  Illinois.  A 
graduate  of  Duke,  Mr.  Broome  is  also  on 
the  teaching  staff  of  the  Accountancy  de- 
partment of  the  university-.  Patricia  Roberts 
Wolfe's  Air  Force  husband  is  now  stationed 
at  Clark  Field  in  the  Philippines.  Address: 
A'lC  T.  M.  Wolfe,  AF14690136,  405th 
APRON,  Box  138,  APO  74,  San  Francisco, 
Calif.  Betsy  Rogers  is  teaching  in  Raleigh. 
Eloise  Ross  and  Glen  Gardner  Anderson 
were  married  on  June  14  in  Pleasant 
Garden,  where  their  address  is  P.  O.  Box 
364.  He  has  served  3  years  in  the  \avy 
and  is  now  employed  by  Southern  Bell  in 
Greensboro,  where  Eloise  is  assistant  man- 
ager of  the  new  Prago-Guves  Plaza  Branch 
store.  Judich  Sanford  of  1802  W.  Market 
St.,  Greensboro,  is  teaching  English  in  the 
Pleasant  Garden  High  School.  Linda  Shaw 
is  teaching  English  in  Charlotte,  where  her 
address  is'4943  Park  Rd.,  Apt.  512.  Dianne 
Shoe  is  5th  grade  teacher  at  Derita  School 
in  Charlotte.  Ellen  Smith  of  89-91  N.  Van- 
derveer  St.,  Queens  Village  27,  N.  Y.,  is 
training  as  a  diplomatic  secretary.  She's 
attending  the  Latin  American  Institute  this 
year  and  will  then  be  sent  to  Spain.  Patricia 
Smith  is  teaching  1st  grade  in  Charlotte, 
where  she  lives  at  1519  Green  Oaks  Apts., 
Eastcrest  Drive.  Ida  Smyer  lives  at  924 
Arco  Dr.  #3,  Jacksonville,  Fla.,  where  she 
is  teaching  9th  grade  civics.  Myra  Starnes 
Helms  of  Box  55,  Indian  Trail,  is  teaching 
7th  grade  English.  Diane  Strieker  of  1104 
Magnolia  St.,  Apt.  6,  is  doing  social  work  in 
Greensboro.  Carol  Strickrott  Ling's  address 
is  IC  Townehouse  Apts.,  Chapel  Hill. 
She's   teaching  1st  grade  at   Snow  Camp. 

Brenda  Toney  Ennis  is  teaching  at  Coul- 
wood  Junior  High  in  Charlotte.  Susan  Towe 
Hagood  lives  at  318  Brown  St.,  Martins- 
ville, Va.,  where  her  husband  is  employed 
by  Leggett's  Department  Stores.  She  is 
teaching  Special  Education  classes.  Martha 
Trexler  is  now  Mrs.  Ben  Newlin  of  Apt. 
lB-51  W.  68di  St.,  N.  Y.,  N.  Y.  Catherine 
Tucker  is  teaching  at  Aycock  Junior  High, 
Greensboro.  Ann  Vanderburg  is  teaching 
madiematics  at  Mount  Pleasant  High 
School.  Charlotte  Van  Zant  Schneider  is 
working  at  the  Duke  Marine  Laboratory  in 
Beaufort  where  she  is  research  assistant. 
Isabel  Walker  of  240  N.  Colhngwood  Ave., 
Syracuse,  N.  Y.,  hopes  to  enter  UNC-CH 
as  a  graduate  student  this  fall.  Carolyn 
Walters  is  director  of  the  new  weekday 
kindergarten  of  Asheboro  Street  Baptist 
Church  at  the  new  facilities  on  Friendly 
Road  in  Greensboro.  She  has  another 
teacher  and  tivo  assistants  on  her  staff. 
Judith  Lee  Wearne  is  in  med  tech  training 
at  Duke  Hospital  and  lives  at  Apt.  C7, 
Colony  Apts.,  Ephesus  Rd.,  Chapel  Hill. 
Gay  Wells  is  teaching  at  the  American 
Xicaraguan  School,  c/o  American  Em- 
bas.sy,  NIanagua,  Nicaragua.  Hannah  White 
is  teaching  U.  S.  History  at  James  Fenni- 
more  Cooper  School  in  McLean,  Va.  Irene 
White  expects  to  be  working  with  a  pub- 
lishing firm  in  New  York  City  soon.  Karen 
Whitley  of  1613  Granville  St.,  Burlington, 
is  teaching  7di  and  8th  grades  at  Gibson- 
ville.  Lyda  Wicker  married  Joseph  Mead 
Tyson  on  July  25   in   Sanford  where  she 


is  teaching  at  Central  High.  Their  address 
is  Box  283,  Pittsboro.  Mr.  Tyson  studied 
automotive  electronics  at  Lee  Counh'  In- 
dustrial Education  Center,  ser\'ed  four 
years  in  the  Navy,  and  is  employed  in  Apex 
bv  Heldmold  Motor  Co.  Barbara  Wilkinson 
is'  now  Mrs.  J.  A.  Cornell  of  320  Clark  St., 
Durham.  Svlvia  Williams  is  Mrs.  David  C. 
McGuirt  of  1103  W.  Franklin  St.,  Monroe. 
Lura  Winstead  is  a  student  at  Bowman 
Gray  School  of  Medicine,  and  lives  in  Apt. 
D7,  Medical  Foundation  Apts.,  Winston- 
Salem.  Barbara  Wrenn  of  1909  Varina 
Ave.,  Apt.  C,  Petersburg,  Va.,  is  teaching. 
Brenda  Wyrick  is  working  as  an  artist  with 
Traveler's  Press  and  living  at  1550  Haw- 
thorne Rd.  S.  W.,  Winston-Salem. 

Ann  Yarborough  is  assistant  home  dem- 
onstration agent  of  Cleveland  Count>'.  Her 
address:  724  W.  Warren  St.,  Shelby.  Anna 
Yelton  Loven  is  a  case  worker  with  the 
Buncombe  County  Welfare  Department. 
Annette  Barker  became  the  bride  of  David 
William  Lopp  on  July  26  in  Lexington. 
They  are  living  at  Apt.  9-B,  Colonial  Park 
Dr.,  Fayetteville.  The  bridegroom  is  2nd 
lieutenant  with  the  Army  Medical  Corps 
;md  stationed  at  Fort  Bragg,  where  Annette 
is  teaching  6th  grade  on  the  post.  Lt.  Lopp 
graduated  from  Davidson  College,  where 
he  was  selected  for  listing  in  national  col- 
legiate Who's  Who,  received  the  distin- 
guished military  student  award,  served  as 
an  officer  of  Phi  Gamma  Delta  fraternity, 
was  a  member  of  the  honor  court  and  track 
and  football  teams.  Linda  Bernard  is 
teaching  and  living  at  1123  Georgia  Ave., 
Bristol,  Tenn.  Alberta  Clark  of  1100 
Colonial  Ave.,  Alexandria,  Va.,  is  informa- 
tion receptionist  in  Science  and  Technology 
Division  of  the  Library  of  Congress.  Carol 
Eiserer  is  teaching  at  Belt  Junior  High  in 
Wheaton,  Md,  Glennette  Frye  is  working 
as  a  medical  technologist  and  living  at 
1400  Lyon  Court,  Charlotte.  Janet  Harper 
is  also  in  Charlotte,  at  1901  Crestdale  Dr., 
and  teaching  high  school  history.  Joan 
Harris  Rosensweig  has  moved  to  833  Cen- 
tral Ave.,  Apt.  I-N,  Far  Rockaway,  N.  Y. 
Jean  Harriss  of  1009  Latham  Rd.,  Greens- 
boro, is  teaching  2nd  grade  at  Ii-ving  Park 
School.  Betty  Lea  James  was  married  to 
Bill  Robert  ^laness  on  August  23  in  Bur- 
lington, where  they  are  living  at  33-D 
Brookwood  Garden  Apts.  The  bride  is 
teaching  2nd  grade  at  Eastlawn  Elemen- 
tary School  and  is  secretary  of  the  Burling- 
ton Association  for  Childhood  Education. 
The  bridegroom  expects  to  graduate  in 
January  from  Elon  College  with  a  degree 
in  business  administration.  He  is  a  member 
of  Iota  Tau  Kappa  fraternity,  and  is  em- 
ployed by  Central  Motor  &  Tire  Co.  Bar- 
bara Kallenbach  has  received  her  degree 
in  medical  technology  from  UNC-CH  and 
is  employed  by  Wesley  Long  Hospital  in 
Greensboro.  Vienna  Kern  has  married  Allan 
M.  Heilig.  Their  address:  186  N.  Union, 
Concord.  Lynda 'Lane  of  Rt.  2,  Stantons- 
burg,  is  teaching  home  economics.  Nancy 
McClure  is  teaching  mathematics  at  Myers 
Park  High  School,  Charlotte. 

Charlotte  Mclntyre  is  teaching  in  Roa- 
noke, Va.,  where  she  hves  at  2020  Brandon 
Ave.  S.  W.  Candace  Malone  is  flight  at- 
tendant for  Eastern  Air  Lines  and  lives 
at  1038-A  Bo.xwood,  Club  Living,  Mount 
Prospect,  111.  Carolyn  Medlin  Mason  of  P. 
O.  Box  338,  Yadkinville,  is  administrative 
secretary  at  Wachovia  I3ank  in  Winston- 


Salem.  Frances  MoUen  has  moved  to  5002 
Corley  Rd.,  Apt.  B-3,  Baltimore  7,  Md. 
Anne  Rogers  Slorgan  is  home  economist 
with  \'irginia  Electric  Power  Co.  Bonnie 
Moses  is  teaching  in  Atlanta,  Ga.,  where 
her  address  is  1676  Briarcliff  Rd.,  N.  E., 
Apt.  4.  Rosalind  Ratchford  of  12-D  Green- 
wich Towers,  105  W.  13th  St.,  New  York, 
N.  Y.,  is  working  in  the  textile  certification 
division  of  U.  S.  Testing  Co.,  Hoboken. 
Patsy  Routh  Stephens  is  teaching  high 
school  history  in  Charlotte,  where  her 
address  is  Apt.  3,  2330  N.  Sharon  Amity. 
Barbara  Shaver  has  married  Jack  R.  Cal- 
vert. Thev  are  living  at  10872  Bogie  Lake 
Rd.,  Rt,  3,  llnion  Lake,  Mich. 

Susanne  Somers  was  married  to  Augus- 
tine Francois  Quilici  on  June  20  in  WiLkes- 
boro,  where  they  are  living  at  113  South 
St.,  and  the  bride  is  a  case  worker  for 
Wilkes  Counts'  Department  of  Public  Wel- 
fare. The  bridegroom,  a  graduate  of  Appa- 
lachian State  Teachers  College,  is  teaching. 
Rachel  Spradley  of  847  6th  St.,  Apt.  E, 
Winston-Salem,  is  teaching.  Tanya  Up- 
church  married  John  Wesley  Nix  on  June  1 
in  Durham.  They  are  living  at  316  Aycock 
St.,  Greensboro,  where  Mr.  Nix,  a  gradu- 
ate of  State  College,  is  employed  as  a 
textile  chemist  for  Burlington  Industries. 
Mary  Waters  is  living  at  Apt.  512,  Hamil- 
ton House,  4943  Park  Rd.,  Charlotte,  and 
teaching  art  in  the  elementary  grades. 
Susan  Williams  is  research  laboratory  assist- 
ant at  Johns  Hopkins  U.,  Morgenthaler 
Bldg.,  Baltimore,  Md.  Patricia  Ann  Morgan 
married  Joseph  Curtis  Deaton,  Jr.,  on 
August  22  in  Wilmington.  Mr.  Deaton  was 
1963  recipient  of  the  Youth  Service  Award 
given  in  Greensboro,  and  graduated  in 
June  from  Wake  Forest  College,  where  he 
majored  in  English  and  was  on  the  wrest- 
ling and  track  teams.  During  the  summer 
he  attended  Southern  Baptist  Theological 
Seminary,  Fort  Worth,  Texas,  to  prepare 
for  the  ministr)'.  Pictures  of  the  house 
which  Pauline  Colville  designed  when  she 
was  a  member  of  the  architectural  design 
class  last  year  was  pictured  and  described 
in  the  August  21  Greensboro  morning 
newspaper.  Marcia  Taylor  Fountain  of 
Greensboro,  cellist  and  member  of  Alpha 
Xi  chapter  of  Mu  Phi  Epsilon,  has  received 
the  Sterhng  Achievement  Award  and  medal 
given  to  the  most  outstanding  senior  mem- 
ber of  this  sorority  for  the  year  1964.  This 
fall  she  has  gone  to  Northwestern  U.  to 
study. 

Rebecca  Allen  is  staff  writer  for  the 
Durham  Morning  Herald.  Anne  Prince  is  a 
graduate  assistant  in  mathematics  at  Ohio 
State  U.  Pricilla  Caudle  is  working  at  the 
Librar)'  of  Congress.  Lois  Doggett  is  at- 
tending Tobe-Cobum  School  in  New  York 
City.  Linda  Elkins  is  doing  grad  work  at 
Southwestern  Baptist  Seminars',  Fort 
Worth,  Tex.  Willa  Fuller  is  executive 
trainee  at  Rosendale's,  N.  Y.,  N.  Y.  Carol 
Grayson  has  a  research  assistantship  grant 
for  experimental  psychology  at  Lehigh  U., 
Bethlehem,  Pa.  Sarah  Hair  is  teaching  at 
the  dependents'  school  in  Fort  Bragg.  Eliz- 
abeth High  is  teaching  kindergarten  at 
Parkwav  Baptist  Church  and  attending 
UNC-G.  Sandra  Hesketh  is  teaching  Eng- 
lish at  Favetteville  Senior  High. 


30 


Alumni  News 


'63 


Wedding  bells  must  be  about  wearing 
out  what  widi  all  the  pealing  provided  by 
pretty  '63ers  aisle-traipsing.  The  marriage 
of  Linda  Ellen  Jacobs  and  William  Ken- 
neth Jenkins  was  solemnized  on  July  6  at 
Temple  Ohef  Shalom  in  Norfolk.  Both  are 
teaching  at  Thoroughgood  School,  Virginia 
Beach,  where  they  live  at  4624-A  Coronet 
Avenue.  The  bridegroom  is  a  graduate  of 
William  and  Mary  College,  where  he 
belonged  to  Sigma  Chi,  social  fraternity. 
Joyce  Irene  Lockhart  was  married  to 
Dr.  Roger  Helweg  Schlapkohl  on  May  30 
in  Greensboro.  He  studied  two  years  at  die 
U.  of  Florida  and  graduated  in  June  from 
the  School  of  Dentistry  of  UNC-CH,  where 
he  joined  Sigma  Chi  fraternity  and  Psi 
Omega,  dental  fraternity.  They  are  living 
in  El  Tore,  Calif.,  where  die  bridegroom  is 
stationed  as  a  lieutenant  in  the  Navy. 
Julia  Lee  Richardson  and  Don  Andrew 
McClenahan  were  joined  in  marriage  on 
Tune  20  in  Thomasville.  Tliev  are  living 
at  300  Cential  Ave.,  Glen  Bumie,  Md.  The 
bridegroom  received  his  master's  degree  in 
education  from  Pennsylvania  State  U. 
Denise  Vick  married  James  Graydon  Ren- 
frow  Jr.  on  March  22  in  Lucama.  They 
are  living  at  2401-A  E.  3rd  St.,  Greenville, 
where  Mr.  Renfrew  is  sales  representative 
for  Coates  &  Clark  Sales  Corp.  He  attended 
Oglethorpe  U.  Denise  is  assistant  home 
economics  e.xtension  agent  in  Pitt  County. 
Carol  Broadwell  became  the  bride  of 
James  Lee  Sliull  on  June  28  in  Fuquay 
Springs,  and  they  are  residing  on  Pineland 
Avenue  in  Madison,  where  Carol  teaches 
home  economics  at  Madison-Mayodan 
High  School,  and  her  husband  is  ceramic 
engineer  with  Pine  Hall  Brick  &  Pipe  Co. 
He  graduated  from  Clemson  College  in 
1961  and  served  for  two  years  as  a  lieu- 
tenant with  the  Army  Ordnance  Corps  in 
France.  Lois  Kathryn  Easterling  and  Jan 
Gay  Hensley  were  united  in  marriage  in 
June  in  Greensboro,  where  they  are  living 
at  529  Woodland  Drive.  She  teaches 
orchestra  in  the  city  schools,  and  he  is  on 
the  administrative  staff  of  Wesley  Long 
Hospital.  A  graduate  of  Mars  Hill  Junior 
College,  he  attended  Wake  Forest  College, 
where  he  joined  the  Purple  Mask  and 
Alpha  Psi  Omega,  honorary  drama  socie- 
ties. He  was  discharged  from  the  Navy 
June  11  after  two  years  of  active  sei-vice. 
Nancy  Sue  Jones  wed  Gordon  Luther 
Schramm  on  May  29  in  Kno.wille,  Tenn. 
He  was  graduated  from  die  U.  of  Wash- 
ington. Sue  is  doing  field  work  at  the 
Memphis  Mental  Health  Clinic  as  she 
begins  her  second  year  of  graduate  school 
on  a  National  Institute  Stipend.  The  bride- 
groom is  in  the  School  of  Social  Work  at 
the  university.  Lollie  Hawkins  and  Ensign 
William  Lawrence  Schwabe  were  married 
on  June  3  in  New  Bern.  Thev  are  living 
at  143  Moultrie  St.,  Charleston,  S.  C, 
where  the  bridegroom  is  stationed  with  the 
Navy.  He  received  a  bachelor  of  arts  de- 
gree from  Vanderbilt  U.  On  May  30  in 
Greensboro  Julia  Pickard  and  Donald  Car- 
roll Martin  married.  They  live  at  3304-B 
Martin  Ave.,  Greensboro,  where  the  bride 
is  a  staff  nurse  at  Cone  Hospital,  and  Mr. 


Martin  is  assistant  manager  of  G.  A.  G. 
Finance  Corporation.  He  attended  Elon 
College  and  sei^ved  in  the  Nav\'.  Sarah 
Ellen  Proffitt  and  Odis  Charles '  Pender- 
graft,  Jr.,  married  on  July  5  in  Bald  Creek. 
They  are  living  at  79  Haviland  Dr.,  New- 
port News,  Va.  The  bridegroom  received 
a  degree  in  mechanical  engineering  with 
an  aeronautical  option  from  N.  C.  State. 
He  served  with  the  Air  Force  and  is  em- 
ployed as  an  aerospace  technologist  by  the 
National  Aeronautics  and  Space  Adminis- 
tration at  Langley  Field  in  Hampton,  Va. 
A  June  7  ceremony  in  Winston-Salem 
united  Barbara  Ann  Scott  and  Barry  Gw\'n 
Carroll,  and  the  couple  is  living  at  541 
Overlook  Dr.,  Greensboro,  where  the  bride 
is  teaching  third  grade  at  Jamestown  Ele- 
mentary School,  and  Mr.  Carroll  is  em- 
ployed by  Burlington  Industries  as  an 
industrial  engineer.  He  graduated  in  June 
from  UNC-CH,  where  he  joined  Delta 
Sigma  Pi,  professional  fraternity. 

Let's  travel  overseas  now  with  Anne 
Birely  Bourne,  who  has  been  transferred 
(sailed  on  May  12)  to  hospital  recreation 
duties  at  ARC-USAF  Hospital,  Wiesbaden, 
APO  220,  New  York,  N.  Y.  09220.  And 
for  some  "really  big  news"  Gail  Bennett 
Rupertus  and  husband  Pat  announce  the 
birth  of  daughter  Heather  Elizabeth  on 
June  2  in  Krngsville,  Texas.  A  month  later 
Pat  received  his  wings  as  a  USMC  pilot, 
and  the  couple  is  at  their  new  duty  station 
at  Cherry  Point.  Carole  Guy  Doyle  writes 
that  her  husband  is  a  news  staff  announcer 
with  WSB  Radio  in  Atlanta,  where  they 
moved  in  Tune  from  Chapel  Hill,  and  are 
living  at  1576  W.  Peachtree  St.,  N.  W., 
Apartment  91,  and  be  sure  and  add  20209 
for  Mr.  Zip,  of  whom  the  mail  room  down- 
stairs wishes  they  had  never  heard. 

Back  to  that  Fab  feeling.  June  Rubin, 
true  to  her  name,  married  on  the  22nd 
of  that  month  Irwin  Saul  Levy  in  Greens- 
boro. The  couple  is  living  at  50  Trow- 
bridge St.,  Cambridge,  Mass.  The  bride  is 
teaching  art  in  Wellesley  and  working 
toward  her  master's  at  Boston  U.  Mr.  Levy, 
who  teaches  culturally  deprived  children 
in  Boston  public  schools,  received  a  degree 
in  business  administration  from  Texas 
A  &  M,  and  a  master's  from  State  College, 
Boston.  He  plans  to  begin  doctoral  studies 
in  the  fall  at  Boston  U.  He  served  four 
years  in  the  Mediterranean  with  the  Navy. 
A  five  week  tour  of  Europe  was  wedding 
trip  for  Joyann  Wohlbruck  and  Forrest 
James  Becher,  Jr.,  after  their  June  27  cere- 
mony in  Charlotte.  They  are  living  on 
Hothorpe  Lane,  Villanova,  Pa.  He  gradu- 
ated from  Ohio  Wesleyan,  where  he 
joined  Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon,  and  is  now 
associated  with  the  Mead  Corp.  in  Phila- 
delphia. Ann  Winchester  married  E.  Pres- 
ton Earle  on  June  7  in  Greensboro,  and 
her  parents  entertained  at  a  reception 
afterwards  at  the  Alumnae  House.  The 
couple  spent  the  summer  in  Cincinnati, 
Ohio,  where  the  bridegroom  was  employed 
by  Proctor  and  Gamble  as  a  chemical 
engineer.  This  fall  they  returned  to  Clem- 
son College,  from  which  Mr.  Earle  was 
graduated,  and  where  he  now  has  a  U.  S. 
Public  Health  Service  Fellowship  to  work 
on  a  master's  degree.  Camrose  Dr.,  Char- 
lotte, is  new  address  for  Marion  Shook  and 
Danny  Rogers  Gwaltney,  who  were  mar- 
ried on  July  5  in  Statesville.  The  bride- 
groom received  a  degree  from  Wake  For- 
est College  and  is  a  counselor  at  the  N.  C. 


\'ocational  Rehabilitation  Center.  Kathryn 
AUmond  maiTied  Walter  Camathan  Shanks, 
Jr.,  on  July  18  in  Thomasville.  They  live 
at  313  Annapolis  Rd.,  S.  E.,  Glen  Bumie, 
Md.  Mr.  shanks  graduated  from  Penn- 
sylvania State  U.,  and  is  employed  by 
Westinghouse  Electric  Corp.,  Baltimore, 
where  he  edits  manuals  for  the  installation 
of  radar  equipment  in  government  jet 
planes. 

Linda  Deborah  Silver  and  Gordon  Jap 
Lipson  were  married  on  August  2  in 
Charlotte.  The  newlyweds  are  living  on 
East  Mt.  Airy  Ave.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  where 
the  bridegroom  is  attending  the  U.  of  Penn- 
sylvania Law  School.  He  graduated  from 
Hamilton  College.  Patricia  Clontz  married 
Charles  Hardin  West,  Jr.,  on  August  8  in 
Lenoir.  They  are  living  at  1812  Colonial 
Ave.,  Greensboro,  where  the  bride  teaches 
at  Ben  L.  Smith  High  and  is  faculty  sponsor 
for  the  Junior  Jaycettes.  The  bridegroom 
attended  State  College,  where  he  joined 
Sigma  Chi  fraternity,  and  served  on  the 
judicial  board.  He  is  vice-president  of  West 
Realtj'  Co.  Brenda  Winstead  became  the 
bride  of  Thomas  Kendall  Spence,  Jr.,  in 
Sanford  on  August  1,  Their  address  is  Box 
12,  Lawrenceville,  Va.,  where  the  bride- 
groom was  ordained  and  installed  as  pastor 
of  Lawrence  Presbyterian  Church  on 
September  6,  and  where  Brenda  is  teaching. 
Mr.  Spence  graduated  from  Davidson 
College  and  I'nion  Theological  Seminary. 
Janet  Thomas  married  Gaiy  Plough  last 
March  14.  They  are  living  at  Beachcomber 
Motel,  Atlantic  Beach.  Clara  Phyllis  Bostic 
married  Jack  Alexander  Watson  on  August 
9  in  Red  Springs.  They  are  living  at  515 
Martine  Rd.,  Fayetteville,  where  the  bride 
teaches  in  the  city  schools,  and  the  bride- 
groom, a  graduate  of  Flora  Macdonald 
College,  is  employed  by  Fitzgerald  and 
Ammnns,  an  accounting  fiiTn.  Nancy  Hefner 
and  John  Alden  Holmes  were  married  on 
July  26  in  Hickory.  Their  address  is  1100 
Hicks  Court  Apts.,  Greensboro,  where  the 
bride  received  her  master's  in  September 
and  is  an  instructor  in  the  Home  Economics 
department  of  UNC-G.  Mr.  Holmes 
graduated  in  1963  from  UNC-CH,  where 
he  was  president  of  Theta  Chi  Fraternity, 
and  where  he  is  now  doing  graduate 
study  in  personnel  administration. 

Ardena  Klock  was  married  to  Jackie 
DeWayne  DeSpain  on  August  23  in 
Greensboro.  They  are  living  at  30  Lyne'te 
Apts.,  Canyon,  Texas,  where  the  bride- 
groom is  a  student  at  West  Texas  State  U. 
Dorothy  Keller  and  Cyril  B.  Busbee.  Jr., 
were  united  in  marriage  on  June  27  in 
Cayce,  S.  C.  They  are  living  at  1910 
S.  Cobb  Dr.,  Apt.  31C,  Marietta,  Ga., 
where  Mr.  Busbee  is  employed  by 
Lockheed-Georgia  Go.  He's  a  1960  grad- 
uate of  Clemson  College.  Sue  Snow 
and  Thomas  F.  Harmon,  Jr.,  were  mar- 
ried in  Vienna,  Austria,  on  June  26  at 
the  end  of  a  Fulbright  year  for  both.  This 
fall  they  are  both  studying  at  Washington 
U.,  St.  Louis.  Sue  has  a  Woodrow  Wilson 
Fellowship.  Mr.  Harmon  is  assistant 
organist  for  the  University'  while  working 
toward  a  Ph.D.  in  college  teaching  of  music 
and  conducting.  Ann  Everett  married 
Mickey  Alexander  Herrin  on  August  8  in 
Farmville.  After  a  wedding  trip  to  Nassau, 
they  moved  to  26  Mason  St.,  Apt.  B, 
Columbus,  Ga.,  where  Ann,  who  has 
received  her  master's  in  child  development 
at  UNC-G,  is  teaching  kindergarten  at  Fort 


Fall  1964 


31 


Benning.  Mr.  Herrin,  a  graduate  of  Guilford 
College,  is  technical  representative  for 
General  Aniline  and  Film  Co. 

Congratulations  to  Chlce  Nicholson 
M>ers.  \\hose  bab\-  son  arrived  August  9. 
Suzanne  Humphrey,  who  left  for  a  Euro- 
peiin  tour  on  July  3,  had  to  leave  her  tour 
group  and  fl>'  to  Greensboro  where  she  ar- 
rived on  August  26,  in  order  to  report  at 
facult\'  meeting  for  Jo>'TLer  School  the  next 
morning.  She  did  the  eastward  crossing  by 
ship  and  saw  a  good  sample  of  England, 
Scoriand,  France,  Italy,  Austria,  Germany, 
the  Scandinavian  countries,  etc.  Pamela 
Graham  Warren  is  service  representative 
at  the  I'niversity  Service  Plants  in  the 
Utilities  Division  at  Chapel  Hill.  Linda 
Webster  of  1086  Nichols  Dr.,  Raleigh,  is 
research  technician  at  S;atc  College, 
Berta  Stroud  Swain  has  moved  from 
Raleigh  to  Apt.  1609  Westgate,  Cambridge, 
Mass.  Martha  Smith  Decker  has  returned 
to  her  fatlier's  home  in  Albemarle,  while 
her  hu.djand.  Lt.  (j.g.)  Decker,  is  rn  a 
Mediterranean  cruise.  Judy  Foreman  has 
been  appoin'.etl  an  instnictor  in  the  music 
(lepartment  of  Mount  Ohve  College. 
Mildred  Hatley  Helms  writes  that  she  is 
working  for  tlie  N.  C.  State  Department 
of  Agriculture  as  a  chemist.  Her  husband 
is  in  the  Industrial  Engineering  School  of 
State  College.  Their  daughter  Mandee  is 
almost  three  years  old.  Rebekah  McBane 
has  accepted  an  assistantship  at  Tulane 
University,  New  Orleans,  La.,  where  she 
is  a  first-year  graduate  student.  She  will 
teach  two  courses  in  English  in  the  H. 
Sophie  Newcomb  Memorial  College  at 
Tulane.  Lou  Godwin  writes  that  she  has 
moved  to  larger  apariment  quarters  in 
Laurel  Md.,  so  that  Minette  Clarke  '64. 
formerly  her  UNC-G  roommate,  could  be 
with  her.  They  are  both  employed  by  the 
Department  of  Defense.  Nancy  Ferrell, 
graduate  student  at  UNC-G,  was  named 
a  winner  in  auditions  bv  the  Green.sboro 
Symphony  Orchestra  and  was  featured  as 
a  soloist  in  the  orchestra's  annual  Youth 
Concert  last  May.  During  August  .she  was 
accompanist  for  trumpeter  Anne  Shipwash 
'.59  at  a  recital  at  the  World's  Fair.  Grey 
Riley  gave  her  graduate  voice  recital  on 
Tune  16  at  UNC-G  and  finished  work  for 
her  master's  in  music  education  on  July  10. 
She  is  now  music  director  at  Brcughtrn 
Hospital,  Morganton,  where  she  will  work 
with  all  types  of  patients  on  all  wards. 

"Arrived  according  to  plan;  Name: 
Julian  Asbuiy  III;  technical  data:  July  10; 
Potential  energy  unpredictable.  Darling 
from  any  angle;  A  perfect  equation  = 
Infinite  happiness;  Engineered  by  Judy 
Coats  and  Julian  Blankinship."  Congratu- 
lations to  them.  Barbara  Gwcn  Dobbins  is 
an  interior  designer  with  Country  Furniture 
Company  of  High  Point.  Mary  Ida  Hodge 
has  moved  to  813  E.  Ann  St.,  Apt.  2,  Ann 
Arbor,  Mich.  She  has  begun  work  this  fall 
on  a  doctor  of  musical  arts  degree  in  organ 
performance  at  the  U.  of  Michigan.  Edith 
'Vortrefflich  Sloan's  son,  Frank,  was  one  of 
24  seniors  at  Oberlin  College  awarded  a 
Woodrow  Wilson  Fellowship  for  1964-65. 
Judith  Wiggins  Plott  writes  that  she  and 
her  husband  have  moved  to  Rt.  2,  Box 
57,  Bryson  City,  and  that  they  have  a  new 
member  of  the  family:  Angela  Dee,  bom 
August  6.  Welcome,  Angela.  Juanita  Jones 
writes  that  she  spent  last  winter  teaching 
public    school   music   in    Connecticut    and 


the  summer  at  home  in  Hendcrsonville. 
In  Sei^tember  she  began  work  on  her 
master's  in  Christian  education  at  the 
Presbyterian  School  of  Christian  Education 
in  Richmond,  Va.  Marvene  Early 
Williamson  is  with  U.  S.  A.  Recruiting 
NLiin  Station,   Raleigh. 


'62 


Nancie  Rorie  of  Southeast  High  School 
in  Guilford  Countv'  was  one  of  13  North 
Carolina  secondary  school  teachers  award- 
ed a  certificate  for  successful  completion  of 
a  summer  fellowship  program  in  economic 
education  sponsored  by  the  University  of 
Nordi  Carolina  and  the  R.  J.  Reynolds 
Tobacco  Go.  Frances  Robinson  Hollar  is 
teaching  3rd  grade  in  die  Newton  (N.  C.) 
Elementary  School.  She  taught  last  year 
in  the  Charlotte  City  School  System.  Rae 
Walker  Phillips  of  2610  Immanuel  Rd., 
Greensboro,  has  a  new  baby  boy  bom  last 
April  whom  we'd  like  to  welcome.  Sue 
Williams  spent  the  summer  in  New  York 
doing  college  text  book  editing  and  is  now 
at  Michigan  State,  where  she  has  an  assist- 
antship, to  begin  graduate  study  for  her 
master's  in  English,  She  teaches  Enghsh 
as  a  foreign  language  —  to  foreign  students. 
Becky  Heyward  is  teaching  at  Wilmington 
College  for  the  second  year.  Linda  Harri- 
son Cannon  is  living  at  628-A  Hibbard  St., 
Chapel  Hill,  where  her  husband  is  a  law 
student.  Linda  teaches  1st  grade  at  Hollo- 
way  Street  School,  Durham.  Irina  Nikitin 
has  moved  from  Ram.seur  to  Apt.  11-A,  158 
High  St.,  Orange,  N.  J.  She  is  teaching  at 
Scott  High  School  as  a  foods  instructor. 
Cynthia  Mantiply,  stewardess  with  Amer- 
ican Airlines,  has  moved  to  123  California 
Ave.,  Apt.  205,  Santa  Monica,  Cahf. 
Dukette  Daniels  Phillips  writes  that  she  is 
teaching  5th  grade  in  an  elementary  school 
located  right  outside  Homestead  Air  Force 
Base,  where  her  husband,  Lt.  Phillips,  is 
assigned.  Their  address:  29001  Kentucky 
Rd.,  Leisure  City,  Fla.  During  the  sum- 
mer her  hu.sband  had  temporary  duty  in 
Turkey,  and  Dukette  was  at  her  parents' 
N.  C.  home. 

A  book  to  be  published  this  month  by 
Bobbs-Merrill  of  New  York,  Brave  Ship, 
Brace  Men,  is  authored  by  Arnold  S.  Lott, 
retired  lieutenant  commander,  and  father 
of  Marilyn  Lott  Sutcliffe  of  Bailey's  Cross 
Roads,  'Va.  It  is  a  95,000  word  non-fiction 
account  of  the  destroyer  Aaron  Ward  dur- 
ing one  day  at  Okinawa  in  1945  when  it 
was  attacked  by  10  kamikaze  planes.  Of 
particular  note,  Sylvia  Jean  Wilkinson, 
English  and  Art  instructor  at  Asheville- 
Biltmore  College,  has  received  a  grant  of 
SIOOO  from  the  Eugene  F,  Saxton  Memor- 
ial Trust  to  enable  her  to  finish  a  novel 
which  will  be  based  on  stories  her  grand- 
mother told  her. 

Nina  Overton  is  teaching  at  New  Han- 
over High.  Her  address:  Box  694,  Wrights- 
ville  Beach.  Mary  Lee  Hardin  and  Joyce 
Ann  Creech  are  both  staff  nurses  at  N.  C. 
Memorial  Hospital  in  Chapel  Hill.  Patricia 
LaMar  has  married  John  Hossenlopp.  They 
lived  in  Ft.  Devens,  Mass.,  until  this  fall, 
when  they  planned  to  move  abroad.  Mary 
Katherine  Beam  became  the  bride  of 
Bobby  Goode  Austell  on  August  9  in 
Shelby,   where   the  bride  is   employed  by 


the  city  schools.  Mr.  Austell  attended 
Catawba  College,  served  4  years  in  the 
Navy,  and  is  now  manager  of  Number 
Three  Township  Egg  Producers  Co-op  Inc. 
Janet  Hawkins  married  Andrew  William 
Routh  on  August  15  in  Charlotte,  where 
they  are  living  at  227  N.  Dotger  Ave., 
Apt.  E-15.  The  bride  is  kindergarten 
teacher  at  Myers  Park  Presbyterian 
Church.  The  bridegroom  attended  Char- 
lotte College  and  is  employed  by  Industrial 
Piping  and  Supply  Co.  Carolyn  Cole  mar- 
ried Kenneth  H.  Simmons  on  August  1  in 
Cocoa  Beach,  Fla.,  where  the  couple  is 
living  at  738  S.  Atlantic  Blvd.,  Apt.  27, 
and  where  the  bride  teaches  at  Cocoa 
High  School.  The  bridegroom  has  just  fin- 
ished service  in  the  U.  S.  Air  Force  and  is 
employed  at  J.  M.  Field's  Co.  there. 

Patricia  Catherine  Wheless  married  Jolm 
Collins  Sykes  Jr.  on  August  2  in  Rocky 
Mount,  where  the  couple  is  living  at  506 
Darden  Court,  and  the  bride  is  teaching  at 
R.  M.  Wd.son  Junior  High  School.  Mr. 
Sykes  graduated  from  East  Carolina,  where 
he  joined  Theta  Chi  fraternity  and  Phi  Mu 
Alpha  music  society.  He  is  a  band  instructor 
at  George  R.  Edwards  Junior  High.  On 
June  27  in  Clinton  Helyn  Elizabeth  Bost 
was  married  to  Holt  dcRaismes  Robinson, 
Jr.  They  are  livin,g  at  611  N.  Park  Ave., 
Dunn,  where  the  bridegroom  is  collection 
manager  for  First-Citizens  Bank  and  sec- 
retary of  the  Javcees  there.  He  is  a  gradu- 
ate of  UNC-CH,  where  he  joined  Phi 
Gamma  Delta  fraternity.  Danforth  Chapel 
on  State  College  campus  was  scene  of  the 
June  10  marriage  of  Elizabeth  Louise 
Hedden  and  Barry  Newbold  Frazelle,  who 
is  a  graduate  of  the  college,  and  is  now  a 
civil  engineer  with  the  U.  S.  Department 
of  Agriculture  in  Hot  Springs,  Arkansas. 
Mary  Jane  McNeill  was  married  to  Second 
Lt.  Russell  Lowell  Holman  in  Lumberton 
on  June  6.  He  is  a  graduate  of  Tulane  V. 
and  is  stationed  with  the  Marine  Corps  in 
Quantico,  Va.  Their  address  is  49  Davis 
Court,  Graham  Park  Ave.,  Triangle,  Va. 
A  double  ring  ceremony  united  Gail 
Young  Funderburk  and  Boyd  Melvin 
Beasley  in  Aberdeen  on  June  21.  The  cou- 
ple is  living  at  602  Emul  St.,  Greenville, 
where  Mr.  Beasley,  a  graduate  of  King 
College,  is  employed  by  Wachovia  Bank. 
Margaret  Rene  Pegues  became  the  bride 
of  William  Light  Kinney,  Jr.,  on  March  21 
in  Monroe.  Their  address  is  Box  632, 
Bennettsville,  S.  C,  where  Mr.  Kinney  is 
managing  editor  of  Marlboro  Herald- 
Advocate.  He  is  also  editor  of  the  McCoU 
(S.  C.)  Messenger.  A  graduate  of  Wofford 
College,  where  he  was  a  member  of  Phi 
Beta  Kappa,  Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon  and 
president  of  the  student  government,  Mr. 
Kinney  did  postgraduate  study  at  the  U. 
of  S.  C.  and  served  two  years  in  the  U.  S. 
Army.  Janice  Faye  Lowman  and  William 
Huston  Tanksley  III  were  married  on  June 
6  in  Morganton.  They  are  living  at  911  W. 
Bessemer  Ave.,  Greensboro,  where  Janice  is 
employed  by  Burlington  Industries  as  a 
staff  artist  and  Mr.  Tanksley  is  a  field 
representative  for  furniture  lines.  He  is  a 
graduate  of  Alabama  Polj-technic  Institute, 
where  he  majored  in  advertising  and  joined 
Phi  Kappa  fraternity-.  Alice  Mae  Garrison 
and  James  Howerton  Lewis  were  married 
on  June  13  in  Greensboro,  where  they  are 
living  at  3700-C  Parkwood  Dr.,  and  the 
bride  teaches  in  the  city  schools.  Mr.  Lewis, 
a  graduate  of  the  U.   of  Virginia,  is  em- 


32 


Alumni  News 


ployed  by  IBM  on  its  branch  office  admin- 
istrative staff. 

Susan  Temple  Collins  became  the  bride 
of  1st  Lt.  Robert  Thomas  Gamer  of  the 
Army  last  March.  They  are  living  at  16-L 
Mills  Road,  Clemson,  S.  C,  where  they  are 
both  working  on  their  masters'  in  zoology 
at  Clemson  College.  Susan  has  a  research 
assistantshii3.  Nancy  Allen  was  married  to 
Leslie  Irwin  Larsen,  Jr.,  on  June  21  in 
Rockingham.  They  are  now  at  576  Syca- 
more St.,  Oakland,  Calif.,  where  the  bride- 
groom is  a  Presbyterian  minister.  He  is  a 
graduate  of  Millikin  U.,  where  he  joined 
Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon  fraternity,  and  Pacific 
School  of  Rehgion.  Nancy  Kay  Kemp 
married  Herbert  Famham  on  May  31  in 
Greensboro.  They  live  at  5212  32nd  Ave., 
Washington,  D.  C,  where  both  work  in 
the  Naval  Research  Laboratory.  Mr.  Fam- 
ham received  a  bachelor  of  science  degree 
in  mathematics  from  Mississippi  College, 
and  had  graduate  courses  at  U.  of  Mary- 
land and  U.  of  Michigan,  as  well  as  serv- 
ing 4  years  with  the  Navy.  When  Rita  Kay 
Griffin  married  Michael  J.  E.  Campbell 
last  March  in  Dre.xel,  she  wore  a  bridal 
gown  which  was  a  gift  of  the  bridegroom 
and  brought  by  him  from  Hong  Kong  upon 
return  from  a  world  cruise.  They  are 
located  at  2821  Kalmia-Lee  Court,  Apt. 
302,  Falls  Church,  Va.  Rita  is  employed 
as  a  secretary  for  the  U.  S.  government 
in  Washington,  where  her  husband  is  with 
British  Overseas  Airlines  Corp.  He  is  a  grad- 
uate of  Bishop's  Stortford  College  in  Eng- 
land. Doris  McLaurin  and  Jon  Thomas 
Caudle,  who  were  married  in  Kannapolis 
on  August  22,  honeymooned  at  Montego 
Bay,  Jamaica.  They  are  now  living  at 
1510-E  Eastcrest  Dr.,  Charlotte,  where 
Mr.  Caudle  is  promotion  manager  of 
WSOC  Radio  and  TV.  He  is  a  graduate  of 
UNC-CH.  The  bride  is  teaching  at  J.  W. 
Cannon   Junior   High   School. 

Congratulations  to  Sandra  MacDonald 
Dean  of  Greenville  on  the  birth  of  a 
daughter  on  August  28. 


'61 


"Because  I'm  someone  very  new,  I'll 
introduce  myself  to  you,"  announces  Laura 
Kate,  who  was  bom  on  July  5,  and  whose 
mom  and  dad  are  Walton  and  Julia  Fowler 
Moore.  Carolyn  White  is  teaching  in  Fair- 
fax County,  Va.,  after  gahvanting  all  over 
Europe.  She  spent  last  Easter  in  Russia. 
Carole  Dunagan  Lupis  and  her  husband 
are  both  teaching  in  Hyattsville,  Md., 
where  they  live  at  6407  Lamont  Drive. 
A  cmise  to  the  Bahama  Islands  was  wed- 
ding trip  for  Joyce  Wanda  Burris  and 
Joseph  Norman  Myers  after  their  June  20 
ceremony  in  Winston-Salem.  Their  address 
is  P.  O.  Bo.x  482,  Sparta,  where  Mr.  Myers 
is  assistant  production  manager  of  The 
Sparta  Smoking  Pipes,  Inc.  He  is  a  grad- 
uate of  UNC-CH,  where  he  joined  Chi  Psi. 
Emily  Louise  Herring  was  married  to  Dr. 
Edwin  Graves  Wilson  on  July  5  in  Colum- 
bus, Ga.  They  are  living  in  Winston-Salem, 
where  the  bridegroom  is  Dean  and  profes- 
sor of  English  of  Wake  Forest  College. 
He  received  his  bachelor  of  arts  degree 
there  and  was  a  member  of  Phi  Beta 
Kappa,  Kappa  Sigma,  and  Omicron  Delta 
Kappa,  leadership  honorary.  He  has  M.A. 


and  Ph.D.  degrees  from  Harvard,  served 
three  years  in  the  Navy  with  the  rank  of 
lieutenant,  junior  grade,  and  was  fomierly 
president  of  the  Winston-Salem  Gallery  of 
Fine  Arts.  Emily  is  teaching  at  Salem 
College. 

Sarah  Ann  Long  became  the  bride  of 
William  Vaughn  Witherspoon,  Jr.,  on 
August  15  in  Winston-Salem.  The  couple 
lives  at  3830  Tuckaseegee  Rd.,  Charlotte, 
where  tlie  bride  teaches  Spanish  at  Coul- 
wood  Junior  High,  and  where  Mr.  Witlrer- 
spoon,  who  is  a  graduate  of  Wofford  Col- 
lege and  a  member  of  Kappa  Alpha  Order, 
is  employed  by  Goodyear  Tire  and  Rub- 
ber Co.  Ann  Pickel  married  William  Lee 
McAlister  on  June  20  in  Clemmons.  They 
are  living  at  Apt.7,  Brookdale,  31831  Grand 
River  Ave.,  Farmington,  Mich.  The  bride 
is  teaching  physical  education  in  die  ele- 
mentary schools,  and  her  husband,  a  gradu- 
ate of  U.  of  Colorado  and  a  member  of 
Tau  Kappa  Epsilon,  is  attending  a  graduate 
training  program  at  Livonia,  Mich.  Anne 
Ricks  was  married  to  Edward  Turner 
Cheshire  on  July  11  in  Mount  Olive.  Their 
address  is  #323,  Park  Terrace  Apts.,  Booker 
Rd.,  Martinsville,  Va.,  where  Anne  is  teach- 
ing at  Patrick  Henry  Elementary  School. 
Mr.  Cheshire  is  assistant  secretary  and 
branch  manager  of  Piedmont  Trust  Bank 
there.  Betty  Lou  Barefoot  and  Dr.  Archie 
Telpher  Johnson,  who  is  serving  a  resi- 
dency at  Charlotte  Memorial  Hospital, 
were  married  on  July  25  in  Benson.  They 
live  in  Aj^t.  406,  1540  Garden  Terrace, 
Charlotte,  where  the  bride  teaches.  Dr. 
Johnson  graduated  from  Georgia  MOitary 
Academy,  Davidson  College,  and  Medical 
College  of  Virginia.  Joyce  Stephens  was 
married  to  Lauren  Martin  Miralia  in 
Raleigh  on  August  29.  They  live  at  Haw- 
thorne Gardens,  Mamaroneck,  N.  Y.  The 
bride  who  did  graduate  work  at  UNC-G 
and  taught  2  years  at  Annapolis,  Md.,  is 
teaching  in  Rye,  N.  Y.  Mr.  Miralia,  a  grad- 
uate of  Duke  U.,  where  he  joined  Pi  Kappa 
Alpha  and  Alpha  Kappa  Psi,  honorary  busi- 
ness fraternity,  completed  in  June  a  tour 
of  active  Navy  duty  as  a  lieutenant  (j.g.)  at 
the  Naval  Academy.  He  is  now  employed 
by  White  Weld  &  Co.,  investment  bankers 
in  N.  Y.  City. 

To  Julia  Ann  Gardner  Pindell  of  Wil- 
mington and  Betty  Jane  Gardner  Edwards 
'62  of  Greensboro  we  extend  sincere  sym- 
padiy  in  the  death  of  their  father  Dillard 
S.  Gardner  in  Raleigh  last  April.  Joy  Noah 
McMillan  received  a  master  of  educatiori 
degree  in  August  from  Women's  College  of 
Georgia.  Shirley  Bemau  has  graduated 
from  American  Airlines  stewardess  college 
in  Fort  Wordi,  Texas,  and  with  New  York 
as  home  base  has  been  assigned  flight  duty 
out  of  La  Guardia  Airport.  Joyce  Burris 
Myers,  who  teaches  Enghsh  and  French, 
has  joined  the  faculty  of  Glade  Valley 
(N.  C.)  School.  Louella  Kidd,  who  has  been 
teaching  in  Germany,  is  now  teaching  at 
General  Greene  School  in  Greensboro. 
Suzanne  Devinant,  French  teacher  in  tlie 
Greensboro  schools,  made  a  sentimental 
journey  to  her  native  Belgium  during  the 
summer.  Nancy  Neill,  who  received  her 
master's  in  fine  arts  from  UNC-G  last  May, 
has  gone  to  Red  Springs  to  teach  art  at 
Vardell  Hall.  A  belated  but  big  welcome  to 
Master  Walter  Anderson  Hill,  Jr.,  bom 
April  12,  1963,  to  Estelle  Pickel  Hill  of 
Route  9,  Winston-Salem.  Juha  Swaim  Hut- 
son's  husband,  Richard  M.  Hutson  III  of 


Greensboro,  was  one  of  two  law  clerks 
appointed  to  the  staff  of  the  chief  judge 
of  U.  S.  Middle  District  Court  on  Au- 
gust 31.  Mr.  Hutson  graduated  from  UNC- 
CH  and  took  his  law  training  at  Wake 
Forest. 


'60 


Welcome  to  4  "new"  offspring!  Daugh- 
ter Christie  was  bom  to  Derenda  Gulledge 
Garris  on  November  21,  1961.  Derenda  is 
teaching  at  L.  J.  Bell  School,  Rockingham. 
An  eight-month-old  son  is  the  somebody 
new  for  Joanne  Yundt  Calvert  of  309  Oak- 
dale  Rd.,  Baltimore,  Md.  Patsy  Draper 
Ai-mistead's  son,  Robert  Leon  Jr.,  was  bom 
last  March  25  in  Norfolk,  Va.,  where  the 
family  lives  at  822  Westmoreland  Ave.  And 
David  Page  Dillard  Jr.  made  #2  for  Lynn 
Painter  Dillard  of  Greensboro.  His  sister 
Madge,  2,  is  riding  horseback  already,  a 
matter  of  pride  for  her  parents  who  did 
much  of  their  courting  through  member- 
ship  in   die   Sedgefield   Hunt. 

During  the  summer  Vivian  Tucker  was 
appointed  assistant  home  economics  agent 
for  Wake  Count>'.  She  will  work  primarily 
in  the  4-H  Club  program.  Prior  to  this,  she 
held  a  similar  position  in  Robeson  County 
for  4  years.  Eleanor  Warren  Harper  writes 
that  her  husband  is  in  graduate  school  this 
year  at  Emory  U.,  Atlanta,  Ga.,  where  they 
are  living  at  Apt.  2,  1420  Rock  Springs 
Terrace  N.  E.  Marian  Dean  Jones  has  been 
appointed  to  die  faculty  of  Muskingum 
College,  New  Concord,  Ohio.  An  instructor 
of  English,  Marian  received  her  master's 
from  L'NC-CII  diis  year.  Jacqueline  Hen- 
drix  Quigley  of  2016  Cooper  Dr.,  Cocoa, 
Fla.,  is  teaching  in  die  school  system  of 
Brevard  County,  where  Cape  Kennedy  is 
located.  Sally  Haney  returned  this  summer 
from  Chateauroux,  France,  where  she 
taught  for  two  years  in  the  U.  S.  Air  Force 
dependents'  school.  She  visited  other  Euro- 
pean countries,  some  under  Communist 
control.  After  a  few  weeks  with  her  par- 
ents in  Morganton,  she  left  August  II  for 
Tokyo,  Japan,  where  she'll  also  teach  in 
a  dependents'  school.  Susan  Outlaw  Kidd 
has  moved  to  Greensboro  from  Athens,  Ga., 
where  her  husband  received  a  degree  in 
veterinary  medicine  from  the  U.  of  Georgia 
in  May,  and  where  Susan  had  been  church 
organist  and  operated  her  own  piano  stu- 
dio. With  son  Allan,  almost  2,  they  have 
set  up  housekeeping  at  1821  Colonial  Ave. 

To  Sarah  Sharpe  Britt  of  Greensboro, 
whose  father  Charles  Vaughn  Sharjie  of 
Burlington  died  on  August  6,  we  extend 
our  sincere   sympathy. 

Newly-weds  include  Mary  Moore  Up- 
church  who  has  married  Mack  N.  Ballard, 
Jr.  The  couple  lives  at  2031  Sharon  Forest 
Dr.,  Charlotte.  Etta  Ruth  Burke  married 
James  Griffith  Brown  on  July  19  in  Gibson- 
ville,  where  they  are  hving  at  811  Spring- 
wood  Avenue.  The  bride  is  teaching  at 
Monticello  High  School,  and  the  bride- 
groom at  Gibsonville  High.  He  is  a  gradu- 
ate of  Guilford  College.  Julia  Patterson  and 
William  S.  Love  III  were  married  on 
June  5  in  Atlanta,  Ga.  They  are  making 
their  home  at  2020  Vineville  Ave.,  Apt  8, 
Macon,  where  Mr.  Love  is  sales  repre- 
sentative for  W.  R.  Grace  Co.  Peggy  Lou 
Furr   and   Robert  Woodrow   Wilson  were 


Fall  J964 


33 


united  in  marriage  on  July  18  in  Albemarle. 
The  bride  received  a  master's  in  education 
from  UXC-CH  in  June  and  is  director  of 
guidance  at  Holton  Junior  High,  Durham. 
Mr.  ^\■ilson,  a  graduate  of  Catawba  Col- 
lege, where  he  was  president  of  his  sopho- 
more and  senior  classes,  a  member  of  Sigma 
Pi  .\lpha,  and  Usted  in  Who's  Who,  is  now 
in  his  third  \-ear  of  dental  school  at  UNC- 
CH.  The  couple  lives  at  207-A  Carr  St., 
Carrboro. 


'50:  Ann  Rogers  married  E.  Carter  Harris, 

Jr.,  on  June  6  in  Durham,  where  they  are 
hving  at  215  Monmouth  Ave.  Ann  is  sec- 
retar>'  in  the  political  science  department 
of  Duke  U.,  where  her  husband  received 
liis  bachelor  of  arts  and  law  degrees.  He 
is  a  practicing  attorney.  Sara  Debnam 
Caliri  of  Wayne,  N.  J.,  sent  us  a  picture 
of  her  new  "little-bit"  Paul  David,  who 
joined  Donna,  3,  and  Linda,  5.  Joanne 
Branlley  Craft  deserves  congratulations  on 
ihe  birth  of  her  seventh  child,  a  son,  on 
August  11.  Barbara  Sternberger  Cone  is 
serving  as  cochairman  of  the  newly  organ- 
ized Greensboro  Symphony  Guild.  Malynda 
Hiott  Knight,  who  has  been  in  Heidelberg, 
Germany,  with  die  U.  of  Maryland  Euro- 
pean Division,  has  returned  to  the  states 
after  sLx  years  abroad.  She's  living  in  War- 
renicn,  Va.  Lt.  Cmdr.  Becky  Lloyd's  new 
assignment  is  at  Coronado,  Calif.,  as  comp- 
troller of  the  U.  S.  Naval  Amphibious  Base 
there.  Previously,  she  served  in  Yokohama, 
Japan,  and  as  a  hobby  studied  Kamakura 
borii  (bas  relief  carving  in  wood),  and 
traveled  to  Thailand,  the  Philippines,  Hong 
Kong,  etc. 

'51:  Faye  Quinn  Williams  received  her 
master's  from  East  Carolina  on  June  4  and 
is  teaching  at  James  Kanan  High  in  War- 
saw. Jaylee  Montague  Barley,  who  is  do- 
ing research  on  the  atmosphere  of  Mars  at 
Goddard  Space  Center,  was  a  guest  on 
CBS-TV's  "To  Tell  The  Truth"  on  July  30. 
She  spent  a  week  in  Arizona  attending  an 
Astronomical  Society  meeting  in  June  and 
was  expecting  to  go  to  Greece  in  September 
to  participate  in  a  NATO  course.  Anne 
Grier  Isley's  husband  Major  George  has 
been  assigned  to  ROTC,  Soutli  Dakota 
State  College,  Brookings,  S.  D.,  where  they 
moved  in  August.  Congratulations  to  Car- 
olyn Pickel  Lynch  of  Whiteville  on  the 
birdi  of  Lucy  Carolyn  on  April  9.  She 
joined  Richard,  3  and  Celia  Ann,  2.  An- 
odier  welcome  to  Linda  Anne,  born  Feb- 
ruary 15,  to  Betty  Lathan  .Nlorgan.  Our 
sympathy  to  Waldeen  Kearns  Lawrence 
and  Evelyn  Kearns  Harris  '43,  whose 
mother  died  last  spring;  and  to  Betty  Loyd 
Swofford,  whose  mother  died  in  July. 
Betty's  husband  is  serving  as  minister  of 
St.  John's  Methodist  Church  in  Greensboro. 
They  have  3  children. 

'52:  June  Rainey  Honeycutt  has  moved  to 
4842  Melbourne  Rd.,  Baltimore,  Md., 
where  her  huband  has  been  transferred  by 
the  U.  S.  Department  of  Agriculture  as  an 
agricultural  commodities  grader.  "In  lay- 
man's language,  he  inspects  fresh  fruits  and 
vegetables.  Guess  who  comes  home  from 
supermarket  with  the  poorest  selection  of 
fruits    and    vegetables! '    says    June.    Her 


Betsy,  almost  4,  seems  to  like  her  new 
home.  Katherine  Miller  Morsberger  writes 
that  her  husband  has  accepted  a  position 
as  an  adviser  in  tlie  Michigan  State  Uni- 
versit>-AID  Advisoiy  Group  at  tlie  U.  of 
Nigeria  for  a  year.  Janie  Smith  Archer  of 
Mt.  Olive  has  a  new  daughter,  Elizabeth 
Jane,  bom  Febmary  10,  whom  we'd  like 
to  welcome.  She  joined  Harry  HI,  4.  Hazel 
Virginia  Steele  Wood  and  9-month-old  Jer- 
emiah of  Cambridge,  Mass.,  visited  Vir- 
ginia's mother  in  Greensboro  this  summer. 

'53:  Eugenia  Jarvis  Phillips,  her  husband, 
the  Rev.  Gene  Phillips,  and  dieir  children, 
Mark,  John,  Beth  and  Paul,  had  quite  a 
surprise  waiting  for  tliem  when  they 
stepped  into  dieir  new  Green.sboro  home. 
It  was  full)'  furnished  —  courtesy  of  friends 
and  area  Baptist  churches.  They  had 
bought  the  house  sight  unseen  while  in 
Rhodesia,  where  they  had  served  4  years 
as  missionaries,  and  where  they  will  return 
after  a  year  here.  Eugenia  has  worked  on 
adapting  church  books  written  in  Enghsh 
to  be  translated  into  Rhodesian  dialects. 
Congratulations  to  Mary  Brumley  Parlier 
on  the  birdr  of  her  second  child  recently; 
to  Lois  Mclver  Winstead  on  the  birth  of 
her  tliird  child,  Alexander,  last  February 
10;  and  to  Nancy  Joan  Cornelius,  whose 
daughter  arrived  July  11.  Sally  James 
Crowe  is  new  distributive  education  coordi- 
nator for  Laurinburg  High.  Harriett  Whit- 
more  McAllister  married  James  E.  Harring- 
ton, Jr.,  on  June  10  in  Charlotte.  They  are 
living  on  Midland  Rd.,  Pinehurst,  where  Mr. 
Harrington,  a  graduate  of  V.  M.  I.,  is  sec- 
retaiy-treasurer  of  Pinehurst  Corp.  Miriam 
Winterling  Hungate  has  married  Thomas 
Quayle  Stevenson,  and  diey  live  at  355 
Douglas  St.,  #3,  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah.  Mr. 
Stevenson  is  studying  for  his  master's  in 
chemistry.  Patricia  Anne  McGougan  Jones's 
husband  has  recently  been  ordained  to  the 
diaconate  by  the  Episcopal  Diocese  of 
North  Carolina.  He  has  been  assigned  to 
churches  in  Mayodan,  Walnut  Cove,  and 
Gemianton.  They  have  4  children,  Carl, 
Jr.,  S;  Matthew,  7;  Elizabeth,  3;  and 
Stephen,  2  months.  To  Dorothy  Kendall 
Kearns  of  High  Point,  and  to  Katherine 
Joyce  Tabor  of  Charlotte,  both  of  whom 
lost  their  fatliers  during  the  summer,  we 
extend  sincere  sympathy. 
B  Nellie  Ivey  Nunziato  died  on  Septem- 
ber 7  in  Montclair,  Calif.,  where  her 
husband,  the  Rev.  Joseph  S.  Nunziato, 
serves  as  minister  of  Montclair  Methodist 
Church.  For  two  years  she  was  afflicted 
with  progressive  muscular  atrophy  and  had 
been  confined  to  a  wheel  chair  for  a  year. 
Her  courageousness  diroughout  her  illness 
was  an  inspiration  to  all  her  family  and 
friends.  Survivors  besides  her  husband,  who 
so  dioughtfully  wrote  this  office  about  her 
death,  include  her  father,  a  brother,  and 
two  sons,  Bobby,  6,  and  Tommy,  3.  To  each 
of  them  the  alumnae  extend  their  deepest 
sympathy.  ' 

'54:  To  Louise  Easterling  Philips  of  Birm- 
ingham, Mich.,  whose  mother  Mrs.  T.  R. 
Easterling  died  in  June  in  Rocky  Mount, 
we  extend  sincere  sympathy.  Marion  Duck- 
worth Satterfield  writes  that  she  earned 
her  A.B.  degree  this  spring,  and  husband 
Neil  received  his  master's  in  social  work 
from  die  U.  of  Tennessee.  This  fall  he  is 
assigned  to  the  Emory  Psychiatric  Clinic, 
so  they  (plus  Suzan,  6,  and  Scott,  2%)  have 
moved  to  Doraville,  Ga.  Marion  has  an  ex- 


citing kindergarten  job.  Julia  Deskins  Vook 

celebrated  her  birthday,  August  26,  at 
Mozart's  birdiplace.  Her  husband.  Dr. 
Richard,  who  is  part  of  Philadelphia's 
Franklin  Research  Institute,  was  invited  to 
read  a  paper  before  an  international  meet-  , 
ing  of  physicists  in  Prague,  and  the  couple  | 
toured  a  good  deal  of  Europe  for  pleasure. 
Elizabeth,  3,  Kathy,  5,  and  Richard  Stuart, 
IV2,  grand-parent-sat.  Gertrude  Bass  Enge- 
lund's  son  Walter  will  be  a  year  old  No- 
vember 25.  Her  husband  is  personnel  man- 
ager of  Lawrence  Radiation  Laboratory  at 
the  U.  of  California.  Emmalen  McLeod 
Smith  is  medical  technologist  widi  U.  S.  , 
Public  Health  Service  in  Atlanta,  where  her  | 
husband  is  intemmg  at  Georgia  Baptist 
Hospital.  Betty  Beauford  Mooney's  hus- 
band was  made  a  vice-president  of  Madi- 
son Throwing  Co.  in  July.  Dot  Davis 
Moye's  husband  finished  his  work  at  UNC- 
CH  diis  summer  and  is  management 
trainee  for  a  trucking  concern  in  Winston- 
Salem,  where  they  live  at  Apt.  A-3,  1545 
Gaston  St.,  and  where  Dot  will  be  in  mar- 
ket research  for  Reynolds  Tobacco  Co. 

Congratulations  to  Barbara  Mallard  Ole- 
wine,  whose  daughter  Rebecca  was  born 
last  May  9.  Anne  Fetzer  married  Capt. 
Thomas  Gregory  Hopkins  of  the  Air  Force 
in  Reidsville  on  July  26.  They  live  at 
Richelieu  Apt.  24-B,  535  McDorough  St., 
Montgomery,  Ala.,  where  die  bridegroom 
is  a  tactical  jet  fighter  pilot  at  Maxwell 
Base.  He  is  a  graduate  of  UNC-CH.  Anne 
recently  returned  from  die  Philippines, 
where  she  worked  for  Wycliffe  Bible  Trans- 
lators. Earlene  Vestal  Ward  is  president  of 
Asheboro  Commercial  College,  which  held 
open  house  at  its  new  quarters  in  August. 
Terrill  Schukraft,  who  received  her  master's 
from  Boston  U.,  last  year  purchased  the 
Provincetown  Bookshop  at  Cape  Cod, 
Mass.,  and  ran  it  for  the  first  time  this  past 
summer  with  her  partner.  Fleta  Joyce  Bate- 
man  is  teaching  associate  in  die  School  of 
Business  at  Indiana  \J.,  Bloomington.  Maud 
Gatewood  has  joined  the  art  department 
of  Charlotte  College. 

'55:  Mary  Bell  Fitzgerald  has  a  new 
daughter  Anne  Tunstall,  bom  in  Kinston 
on  June  28,  whom  we'd  like  to  welcome. 
The  same  applies  to  Arthur  Lining  IV, 
second  son  for  Unni  Kjosnes  Burnet  of 
Long  Island,  N.  Y.,  who  was  bom  June  24; 
and  to  John  Kenneth,  bom  Easter  Sunday, 
who  joins  Lenore,  6,  at  mama  Carolyn  Hol- 
lis  Meadow's  house  in  Morehead  City;  ditto 
to  Karen  Lee,  who  debuted  April  9,  and 
whose  daddy  is  business  niiinager  of  the 
Dental  Research  Center  in  Chapel  Hill, 
and  whose  mother  is  a  ver>'  pleased  Frances 
Dalton  Thomas.  Nannette  Starling  Craig 
has  moved  to  1851  Colland  Drive,  N.  W., 
Atlanta,  Ga.,  where  she  is  home-managing 
for  husband  Charles,  Catherine,  2,  and 
Charlotte,  4  months.  Shirley  Olds  Dean's 
husband,  Capt.  Ernest,  is  being  sent  by 
the  Air  Force  to  the  Panama  Canal  Zone. 
Until  .she  can  join  him  in  about  10  mondis, 
Shirley  made  her  9th  move  in  9  years  — 
to  2119  Yorktown  Dr.,  Ann  Arbor,  Mich., 
where  she  will  work  toward  her  master's 
in  public  health  nutrition  at  the  University. 
She  received  a  USPHS  training  grant. 
Children,  Elizabedi,  7,  and  Andrew,  4%, 
are  looking  forward  to  a  snowy  winter. 
Barbara  Blue  Greer  of  Aberdeen  was 
chosen  as  teacher-coordinator  of  the  newly 
introduced  distributive  education  program 
at   Union   Pines   High   in   Moore   County. 


.34 


Alumni  Ne-ws 


Katharine  Childs  married  Robert  Melvyn 
Helms  on  July  26  in  Wadesboro.  They  live 
at  500  Beechway  Circle,  Charlotte,  where 
tlie  bride  teaches  at  Lakevievv  School,  and 
Mr.  Hehns  works  for  Henderson  Motor  Co. 
Nancy  Revelle  married  Noi-man  M.  John- 
son in  Conway  on  June  13.  They  are  living 
in  Davidson,  where  the  bridegroom  is  his- 
tory instructor  at  Davidson  College,  from 
which  he  graduated.  He  has  done  graduate 
work  at  Johns  Hopkins  and  is  now  work- 
ing on  his  Ph.  D.  through  UNC-CH,  as  is 
Nancy. 

'56:  Shirley  Reid  married  S.  Jackson  Web- 
ster, Jr.,  on  June  21  in  Mayodan.  They  Uve 
at  535  Sunset  Ave.,  Madison,  where  the 
bride,  after  receiving  a  master's  in  educa- 
tion from  UNC-G  in  May,  is  on  the  faculty 
at  Madison  Elementary.  Mr.  Webster,  a 
graduate  of  High  Point  College  and  Wake 
Forest  Law  School,  served  as  a  captain  with 
tlie  U.  S.  Air  Force  in  Korea.  He  is  now 
a  partner  in  tlie  law  firm  of  Scott,  Folger, 
ElUngton  and  Webster.  Dorothy  Dixon, 
French  teacher  at  Myers  Park  High  in 
Charlotte,  chaperoned  22  students  to  a 
summer  school  program  in  France  during 
the  summer.  Edith  Foster  Baxter's  husband 
has  been  appointed  assistant  professor  in 
the  U.  of  Maryland  School  of  Medicine. 
Bonnaleta  Coxwell  Malone's  husband  is 
assistant  manager  of  the  Atlanta,  Ga.,  air- 
port, where  they  and  their  French  poodle 
live.  "Noisy,  but  exciting,"  .she  writes.  Carol 
Pittard  Anello's  husband  Mike  is  teaching  in 
tlie  school  of  education  at  Boston  College. 
Patricia  Godwin  Hurley,  husband,  and  son 
have  moved  to  Tallahassee,  where  Patricia 
has  received  a  scholarship  to  work  toward 
her  doctor's  degree  in  interior  design  at 
Florida  State  U.  Lucinda  Lanning  McDill 
and  her  husband  wanted  to  come  back  to 
the  south  and  he  has  accepted  a  position 
witli  the  Greensboro  Public  Library.  Edna 
Forester  Burke,  and  husband.  Dr.  Gene,  of 
Los  Angeles  have  one  child,  Barbara  Ellen, 
3%.  Dr.  Mary  Michal  is  a  pediatrician  in 
Denver,  Colo.  Last  year  she  had  a  psychi- 
atric fellowship  at  Vanderbilt  U.  Mary  Falls 
is  now  Mrs.  R.  B.  Moody,  Jr.  She  teaches 
at  Northeast  High  in  Guilford  County.  Ann 
Harrell  Stigal  is  assistant  to  the  director  of 
music  at  Myers  Park  Presbyterian  Church 
in  Charlotte. 

^^^    '57:  Barbara  Alley  is  serving  as  a 
"^^^    staff  announcer  in  the  close-circuit 
I'       color   television   operation   run   by 
^       RCA  at  the  World's  Fair.  Seen  by 
V        thousands   of   fair-goers    everyday, 
she's  interviewed  400  plus  outstanding  vis- 
itors, and  handled  hourly  reports  of  Fair 
news  and  weather-casts.  Besides  this  ven- 
ture, Barbara  has  been  a  ski  instructor  in 
Vermont,  a  mountain  climber  in  Switzer- 
land,   a    sjMrts    parachutist,    water    skiier, 
pianist,   and   hula   dancer.   Currently  she's 
taking    singing    and    dramatic    lessons    to 
further  her  television  career. 

Mona  Rae  Crotts  is  now  Mrs.  Donald 
Wayne  Sprouse  of  6242  Brooks  Circle  N., 
Jacksonville,  Florida.  Margaret  Sanders 
Wright  has  been  elected  president  of  the 
Hampton  Roads  (Va.)  Jaycettes  for  the 
1964  year.  Joan  Thompson  Trotti  wrote  in 
June  that  her  husband  received  both  his 
Ph.  D.  in  Old  Testament  from  Yale  and  his 
masters  in  library  science  from  UNC-CH 
during  that  month.  Then  they  moved  to 
1209  Bedford  Ave.,  Altavista,  Va.,  where  he 


has  assumed  duties  as  pastor  of  the  Presby- 
terian Church.  Joan  loves  being  "preacher's 
wife"  and  taking  care  of  Beth,  5,  and  Meg, 
3.  Martha  Ann  McBrayer  became  the  bride 
of  Claude  Higginbotham  on  June  27  in 
Winston-Salem,  where  they  live  at  Colon- 
ial Arms  Apartments,  and  die  bridegroom 
is  a  vice-president  of  Wachovia  Bank  and 
president  of  Goodwill  Industries  Rehabili- 
tation Center.  He  is  a  graduate  of  David- 
son, where  he  was  a  member  of  Pi  Kappa 
Phi  fraternity,  and  Stonier  School  of  Bank- 
ing of  Rutgers  University.  Martha  Watts 
Throop's  husband  has  a  new  job  in  Wash- 
ington, D.  C,  and  they  are  living  at  12105 
WhipporwiU  Lane,  RockviUe,  Md.  Their 
children  are  Katy,  2;  and  Thomas,  bom 
May  2  of  this  year,  and  whom  we'd  like 
to  welcome.  Pat  McCauley  Monacella,  her 
husband,  and  daughter  Anne,  almost  2, 
have  moved  into  their  new  home  at  506 
Hideaway  Rd.,  Fairfax,  Va. 

Congratulations  to  Martha  Elizabeth 
Smith  FerreU  on  the  birth  of  a  daughter 
Martha  Ann  on  June  7  in  Greenville.  Her 
husband  received  his  Ph.  D.  in  history 
from  the  U.  of  Virginia  diat  same  day. 
He  is  presently  assistant  professor  of  liis- 
tory  at  East  Carolina  College.  Carohne 
Hayes  Bentley's  husband  has  been  awarded 
a  two-year  residency  fellowship  in  pedi- 
atrics by  Wyetli  Laboratories.  They  are 
living  at  2632  Charlotte  St.,  Durham. 
Tamara  Osikowska  Holzapfel  was  awarded 
her  Ph.  D.  degree  at  State  U.  of  Iowa  on 
August  5.  Margaret  Lachot  Banner's  hus- 
band has  assumed  a  Baptist  pastorate  in 
Taylorsville,  where  they  and  dieir  daugh- 
ters, Laura,  5,  and  Meredith,  5  months, 
moved  into  the  parsonage  last  May.  First 
Lt.  Gretchen  Kelly  has  been  reassigned  to 
die  United  Kingdom  Communications  Re- 
gion as  executive  officer  widi  offices  in 
London.  Laura  Lyle  Kallam  of  4  Brewster 
Dr.,  Taylors,  S.  C,  has  a  new  son  David, 
born  last  February,  who  joined  Tim,  now 
3.  Jeanette  Leonard  Regan  of  Annandale, 
Va.,  has  a<lded  the  tliird  son  to  her  family. 
Mary  Conrad  Cresimore  of  Raleigh  was 
an  alternate  delegate  and  her  husband  Jim, 
a  delegate,  to  the  Republican  Convention 
in  San  Francisco.  They  flew  out  separately 
to  assure  safe  return  to  their  three,  Jimmy, 
Jeimtfer,  and  Joe. 

Patsy  McDaniel  nianied  Robert  Donald- 
son in  Key  Biscayne,  Fla.,  on  June  20.  He 
received  his  Ph.  D.  from  M.  I.  T.  earlier 
that  month.  They  are  living  at  1700  Spruce 
St.,  Apt.  1,  Berkeley,  Calif.,  where  Patsy  is 
visiting  Spanish  teacher  in  3  elementary 
schools  and  her  husband  is  professor  at 
the  University.  Gwendolyn  Harrington 
married  William  Otis  Bland  on  July  18  in 
Lewiston.  They  hve  at  15-F  Brookwood 
Garden  Apts.,  Burlington,  where  the  bride- 
groom, a  graduate  of  UNC-CH,  is  an  offi- 
cer widi  Wachovia  Bank.  Gwen  is  teaching 
English  at  Western  High  in  Alamance 
County.  Sally  Pickett  Wargo,  her  husband 
(who's  a  patent  lawyer  in  Springfield, 
Ohio),  with  daughters,  Julie  and  Cindy,  vis- 
ited Sally's  Greensboro  parents  this  sum- 
mer and  made  a  special  stop  at  WUNC-TV. 

'58:  Emily  Ryals  received  her  master  of 
science  degree  from  Pennsylvania  State 
University  last  spring.  Her  tliesis  was  en- 
titled: The  Development  of  Endurance  in 
Adult  Women.  She  is  teaching  physical 
education  at  Trenton  (N.  J.)  State  College. 
Sylvia  Shelton  Grogan's  husband  has  been 


named  manager  of  the  Leaksville  branch 
of  Gate  City  Savings  &  Loan  Association 
which  opened  October  1.  Barbara  Funder- 
burk  Giles's  husband,  formerly  assistant 
city  attorney  in  Greensboro,  has  joined  the 
law  firm  of  Hoyle,  Boone,  Dees  &  Johnson. 
They  have  one  daughter,  Mary  Elizabeth. 
Aim  Scripture  Rady  has  been  named  wel- 
fare director  of  Carteret  County,  where 
she  has  been  a  case  worker.  Prior  to  this 
employment  she  was  with  the  Norfolk 
pubhc  welfare  department  for  4  years.  In 
November  1962  she  and  her  husband 
moved  to  Morehead  City,  where  he  owns 
the  Dairy  Queen.  Phyllis  Kistler  Corbin's 
husband  has  opened  an  office  for  the 
practice  of  general  dentistry  in  Greensboro, 
where  the  couple  and  a  daughter  and  son 
have  moved  to  3225  Wilshire  Dr.  After 
1962  graduation  from  UNC-CH,  Dr.  Cor- 
bin  served  2  years  as  a  lieutenant  in  the 
Navy,  stationed  at  Parris  Island,  S.  C.  Jan 
Rankin  Toole's  husband.  Major  Charles, 
has  been  ordered  to  Viet  Nam  for  a  tour 
of  duty,  and  Jan  and  small  daughter  Holly 
are  established  as  1306  Quail  Dr.,  Greens- 
boro, until  his  return.  Ellen  Spielman 
Acker's  husband  has  recently  won  world 
wide  recognition.  Dr.  Acker,  a  podiatrist, 
has  a  new  technique  for  making  the  cure 
of  corns  and  callouses  easier.  He  won 
second  prize  among  the  research  awards 
given  by  the  American  Podiatry  Associ- 
ation at  its  annual  convention  in  New  York 
during  August. 

Congratulations  to  "Corky"  Goodnight 
Golphin  of  Wilmington  on  the  birth  of 
her  son  July  29.  Rose  Leonard  Baker  writes 
that  she  has  a  year-old  son,  Albert.  Rose 
is  teaching  5:h  grade  at  Irving  Park  School, 
Greensboro.  Pansy  Burleson  Gallimore  and 
Donald  Ray  Coltrane  were  married  on 
August  22  in  Brown  Summit,  where  they 
are  living  on  Route  1.  Pansy  has  done 
graduate  work  at  Duke  L'.  and  State  Col- 
lege and  is  now  a  counselor  in  the  Greens- 
boro School  System.  Mr.  Coltrane  attended 
Appalachian,  is  a  member  of  the  National 
Guard,  and  is  employed  as  assistant  cashier 
of  First  LInion  National  Bank.  Barbara  Lee 
Rosser  and  Capt.  Jack  Allen  Murfin  were 
married  on  June  27  in  Fayetteville,  where 
they  lived  until  July  when  Army  duty  took 
them  to  Munich,   Germany. 

'59:  Dr.  Carolyn  Hair's  address  is  Box  204, 
John  Sealy  Hospital,  Galveston,  Texas.  She 
received  her  M.D.  degree  from  George 
Washington  University  Medical  College  in 
June  of  '63.  Ann  Henderson  Barry  and  her 
husband  plan  to  be  at  the  U.  S.  Naval 
Mission  in  Valparaiso,  Chile,  until  next 
May.  Welcome  to  the  little  daughter  (bom 
last  February  23)  of  Alma  Dykstra  Homola 
of  Ann  Arbor,  Michigan.  Patricia  Strickland 
Moll  received  her  master's  in  chemistry 
from  Washington  L'.,  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  in 
June  at  their  103rd  commencement.  She 
completed  her  academic  work  last  August. 
Martha  Hardy  Johnson  was  married  to 
Wyatt  Richard  Stallings  on  June  13  in 
Fountain.  They  are  living  at  1120  West- 
ridge  Rd.,  Greensboro,  where  the  bride- 
groom is  a  safety  engineer  for  Liberty 
Mutual  Insurance  Co.  He  is  a  graduate  of 
State  College.  Leah  Miller  and  Dr.  M. 
Lawrence  Berman  were  married  on  June  7 
in  Greensboro.  They  live  at  79  Ma.xwell 
Rd.,  Chapel  Hill,  where  Dr.  Bemian  is 
interning  in  pathology  at  N.  C.  Memorial 
Hospital.  He  holds  master  and  Ph.D.  de- 


F\LL  1964 


35 


grees  from  the  U.  of  \Vashington,  and  a 
bachelor  of  science  from  the  U.  of  Con- 
necticut. He  is  a  captain  in  tlie  Air  Force 
Reser\e.  Leah  is  employed  by  Chemstrand 
in  the  Research  Triangle.  Peggy  Duncan 
;ind  Julian  P.  Lawson  were  luiited  in  mar- 
riage on  April  4.  The\'  arc  living  at  D-5, 
4119  Warner  Ave.,  Hyatts\ille,  Md.  Kath- 
erine  Harrell  and  Henr\-  Mayo  Fl)nn,  Jr., 
spoke  their  \ows  on  July  25  in  Goldsboro, 
where  they  are  living  at  306  William 
Street.  The  bridegroom  attended  the  U.  of 
Maine,  graduated  from  the  U.  of  Virginia, 
and  ser\'ed  as  a  lieutenant  in  the  U.  S. 
Xavy. 

Wanda  Fishel  and  Lt.  Charles  Howard 
Hutcliison  were  married  on  July  19  in 
\^'inston-Salem,  where  the  bride  had  been 
eniplo\-ed  as  home  service  advisor  for 
Duke  Power  Co.  and  participated  in  a 
weekly  WSJS-TV  pi-ogram,  "Foods  on  Pa- 
rade." The  couple  is  now  living  at  Apt.  6, 
2905  David  Ave.,  Pacific  Grove,  Calif.  A 
graduate  of  Duke  U.,  where  he  belonged 
to  Theta  Chi  fraternity  and  the  Naval 
ROTC,  the  bridegi'oom  is  serving  in  the 
Xaxy,  assigned  to  study  Weapons  Systems 
Engineering  at  the  Naval  Postgraduate 
School  in  Monterey.  Betty  Ann  Cagle  mar- 
ried Charles  Wallace  Dougherty  on  July  17 
in  Hendersonville.  They  are  making  their 
home  at  4426  Memorial  Dr.,  Route  6, 
Raleigh,  where  the  bride  is  employed  by 
N.  C.  State  School  of  Te.\tiles  in  the 
research  division,  and  the  bridegroom  by 
Te.xaco,  Inc.  He  is  a  graduate  of  VPI. 

Congratulations  to  Carolyn  Alston  Russ 
whose  baby  son  was  bom  August  27.  Seems 
Marjorie  Engelhard  Dittmer  and  daughter 
Kristen  of  Tucson,  Arizona,  appeared  on 
the  1963  National  Red  Cross  poster.  Billie 
Hamilton  of  Supply  is  Bnmswick  County 
Home  Economics  agent.  Patricia  Brintall 
Swan  has  moved  to  Apt.  7,  2297  Standish 
St.,  St.  Paul,  Minn.,  where  she  is  doing 
biochemistry  research  at  the  U.  of  Min- 
nesota. Jane  Cheek  Williamson  had  six 
recipes  printed  in  tlie  Birmingham  Post- 
Herald  last  May.  Just  listen:  Consomme 
Rice  Casserole,  Chicken  in  Orange  Sauce 
with  Mushrooms,  Far  East  Celery,  Butter- 
milk Cake,  Te.xas  Chocolate  Cake  and 
States  Rights  Supreme  (a  concoction  of 
marshmallows,  white  grapes,  pineapple,  al- 
monds, heavy  cream,  etc.).  Several  of  them 
were  passed  on  to  lier  by  her  Greensboro 
mama.  Jane  has  been  teaching  in  the  Birm- 
ingham Schools.  Her  husband.  Dr.  Ivey 
Williamson,  was  for  a  year  at  HiUman 
Clinic  there  as  chief  of  stafp.  Now  he  has 
opened  his  practice  in  Mobile. 

Mu  Phi  Epsilon,  international  music 
sorority,  regards  Anne  Shipwash's  musical 
talent  so  highly,  that  she  was  chosen  to 
share  honors  with  a  pianist  to  play  a  con- 
cert on  August  28  at  the  New  York  World's 
Fair  for  Mu  Phi  Epsilon  Day.  Arme  played 
her  trumpet  before  2,000  listeners  in  the 
U.  S.  Pavilion.  She  was  accompanied  by 
Nancy  Ferrell  '63  of  Raleigh.  They  also 
took  part  in  a  color  television  show  taped 
by  RCA  at  the  RCA  Pavilion  and  shown 
over  more  than  200  closed  circuit  sets. 
Last  year  Anne  was  a  student  at  the  Royal 
Danish  Conservatory  of  Music  in  Copen- 
hagen, Denmark,  on  an  International 
Rotary  fellowship.  Having  recently  com- 
pleted her  master's  at  UNC-G,  Anne  is 
assistant  band  director  of  Page  High 
School,  and  teacher  of  band  at  Proximity 
and  Porter  Schools  in  Greensboro. 


The  marriage  of  Sadye  Anne  Boyd  and 
Olin  Harvin  Broadway,  Jr.,  was  solemnized 
on  August  8  in  Raleigh,  where  they  are 
living  at  109  Ramblewood  Dr.  The  bride 
teaches  stringed  instruments  in  the  city 
schools.  Mr.  Broadway,  a  1959  graduate 
of  Wake  Forest,  taught  4  years  at  Brough- 
ton  High,  and  is  now  with  Waddell  and 
Reed,  Inc. 


DURING  its  reunion-meeting  on  May  30, 
the  members  of  tlie  Class  of  1959  estab- 
lished a  memorial  fund  to  honor  their 
classmate,  Judy  (Knowles)  Moore,  who 
died  last  April.  Two  members  of  tlie 
class  who  live  in  Greensboro  were 
appointed  to  serve  as  Co-chaimien  of 
the  memorial  fund  project:  Anne  Sloan 
(1001  N.  Eugene  Street)  and  Mrs.  James 
E.  Bradsher,  who  was  Virginia  Bass 
(1701  Independence  Road).  Contribu- 
tions to  the  fund  may  be  sent  to  Anne 
or  \'irginia  or  to  the  Aimnni  Office. 


Forties 


'40:  Eunice  King  Durgin  and  her  husband 
sailed  to  Japan  during  the  summer  to 
visit  the  area  where  he  lived  as  a  boy. 
Jean  Hartsook  Murphy  and  husband  Kermit 
flew  to  California  in  June  to  visit  business 
friends.  Eleanor  Ross  Taylor's  hu.sband  is 
visiting  professor  at  Harvard  for  the  fall 
semester.  To  Emily  White  Smith  of  Massil- 
lon,  Ohio,  whose  husband  died  unexpect- 
edly during  the  summer,  we  extend  sincere 
sympathy.  To  Jean  Dewey  Spicer,  whose 
father  died  in  August;  and  to  Mary 
Simmons  Jones  and  Martha  Simmons  Ray 
'44,  whose  brother  died  in  August,  we 
also  extend  sympathy. 

'41:  Vijginia  Lee  Rebalko  received  her 
master's  in  social  work  from  Florida  State 
U.  at  the  April  Convocation.  Mayme  Jones 
Prevost  wrote  from  Panama  about  die  riots 
in  January  and  her  work  at  die  evacuation 
center.  Her  husband  had  spent  some  time 
on  a  mission  in  Peru.  Mayme  is  teaching 
at  Balboa  High  School,  where  daughter 
Marsha  graduated  in  June,  and  where  son 
Rick  is  a  senior  this  year.  Elizabeth 
Pleasants  Foster  with  children,  Mary 
Carolyn,  Jean,  Anne,  Robert,  Kay,  Sue 
and  William  came  from  Topeka,  Kan.,  to 
visit  Elizabeth's  mother,  Bessie  Townsend 
Pleasants  07,  in  Greensboro  in  August. 
Elizabeth  Fatten  Brafford's  husband  is 
serving  as  president  of  N.  G.  Association 
of  Certified  Public  Accountants;  Sallie 
Cobb  Andrews's  husband  has  been  named 
vice  president  for  production  at  Carolina 
Steel  Corii.,  Greensboro.  To  Elizabeth 
Teague  Wood,  whose  husband  died  in 
March,  we  extend  our  sympathy,  Susan 
Hunter  Petree,  who  lost  her  husband  in 
March,  '61,  writes  that  the  former  City 
View  Elementary  School  in  Winston-Salem, 
which  he  served  as  principal,  has  been 
re-named  for  him.  She  has  3  sons,  David, 
Jr.,  14;  Keith,  9;  and  Lewis,  who  was  born 
shortly  after  his  father's  death,  is  3. 


■  Frances  Kerner  McCoy  died  in  Kerners- 
ville  during  June  from  a  cancer  illness. 
She  had  been  teaching  at  East  Forsyth 
High  School  and  had  previously  taught  at 
Walkertown.  She  was  an  active  member 
of  the  Moravian  Church  and  the  Joseph 
Kemer  Chapter,  DAR.  Her  daughter 
Cherie,  14,  has  joined  her  married  sister 
Sheryl  McCoy  Smith  at  her  home  in  Win- 
ston-Salem. Frances  is  also  survived  by  her 
modier;  two  brothers;  a  grandchild;  and 
two  sisters,  one  of  which  is  Dorothy  Kemer 
Fer-Lee  '53  of  Atlanta.  To  all  of  her  family 
we  extend  our  heartfelt  sympatiiy. 

'42:  Maude  Middleton,  who  had  served 
as  a.ssociate  home  economics  extension 
agent  in  Mecklenburg  County  for  15  years, 
began  duties  on  July  1  as  extension  agent 
in  Guilford  County.  Sara  Anderson,  who 
has  taught  for  10  years  at  Madison  College, 
Harrisonburg,  Va.,  received  her  doctor's 
in  education  degree  from  LI.  of  Indiana  in 
June.  Ruby  Anderson  Cloninger  has  a  new 
granddaughter,  bom  to  her  son  Kenneth, 
Jr.,  and  his  wife  in  late  July.  Baby  arrived 
at  the  U.  of  Maryland  Hospital,  where  her 
daddy  had  just  completed  a  residency  in 
surgery.  Rhea  Sikes  has  been  in  Pittsburgh, 
Fa.,  since  1955  with  WQED,  the  com- 
munity's educational  TV  station.  The  Pitts- 
burgh paper  has  credited  her  with  starting 
"the  first  instructional  or  basic  television 
courses  in  the  world."  In  1955  die  channel 
had  20  classrooms  on  the  air;  today,  more 
than  10,000.  Eleanor  Southerland  has  been 
assigned  to  Iran  in  a  home  economist 
extension  program.  Blanche  Woolard 
Haggard  has  been  appointed  acting  admin- 
istrator of  the  Asheville  Regional  Blood 
Center.  Mary  Eppes  Turner's  daughter 
Janet  attended  the  international  Girl  Scout 
encampment  in  Switzerland,  and  also 
joined  her  troop  for  a  trip  to  Canada  and 
canoeing  in  the  far  north  to  complete  an 
adventuresome  summer.  To  Nancy  Idol 
White,  Margaret  Idol  Potter  '39,  and  Mary 
Idol  Breeze  '53,  we  extend  sympathy  in 
the  death  of  dieir  mother  in  June.  To  Lois 
Frazier,  whose  mother  died  in  August;  and 
to  Georgie  Bell  Hagood  and  Coan  Bell 
Hanson  '51,  whose  father  died  in  August, 
we  extend  sincere  sympathy. 

'43;  Betty  Dahlin  Colby  of  Wayne,  Pa., 
writes  that  she  is  teaching  junior  high 
level;  her  son  Terry  was  accepted  at 
UNC-CH  this  fall;  and  diat  she  and  her 
husband  took  all  four  children  to  tour 
seven  European  countries  diis  summer! 
Nancy  Calloway  Stancil  became  assistant 
home  economics  agent  for  Buncombe 
County  on  August  17.  Elise  Rouse  Wilson 
is  serving  as  vice-president  of  the  Home 
Economics  Foundation  of  LINC-G.  Ada 
Braswell  Dalla  Pozza  has  been  named  as 
Northeastern  District  home  economics 
agent  for  N.  C.  Agricultural  Extension 
Service  at  State  College.  Her  territory  io- 
cludes  18  counties.  "To  Gladys  Sessoms 
Elmore,  whose  son  William,  Jr.,  10,  was 
tragically  killed  on  July  13  in  a  traffic 
accident,  we  extend  our  sincere  sympathy. 
We  were  privileged  to  read  the  article  in 
the  Presbyterian  magazine  Action,  by  Mary 
Beard  Sherrod  and  her  husband.  Rev.  Roy 
T.  Sherrod,  about  their  son  Chris,  12,  who 
has  been  jiaralyzed  since  birth,  but  has 
shown  remarkable  courage,  as  have  his 
parents.  Always  cheerful,  he's  most  popu- 
lar with  his  school-mates  and  his  brothers 


Alumni  News 


and  sisters.  His  father  is  minister  of  the 
First  Presbyterian  Church  in  Waco,  Texas. 

'44:  Betty  Halligan  Moebes's  husband, 
photographer  for  the  Greensboro  Record, 
got  rather  "wrapped  up"  in  his  work  a 
couple  of  months  ago,  when  his  tie  caught 
in  a  fast  printing  machine.  Operating  hke 
the  old  wringer-type  washers,  the  machine 
gobbled  up  the  tie  as  far  as  the  knot,  and 
its  wearer  was  a  trifle  indignant  and  un- 
comfortable when  rescued  by  a  fellow  em- 
ployee. Frieda  Boger  Lane  of  New  York 
City  writes  that  daughter  Barbara  is  at- 
tending State  U.  of  N.  Y.,  and  son  George 
is  still  "making  the  junior  high  school 
scene."  Her  husband  has  been  promoted  to 
Third  Vice-President  of  Metropolitan  Life 
Insurance  Co.,  and  Frieda  is  serving  on  the 
district  school  board  and  a  community 
planning  board.  To  Kathryn  Rentz  Hutch- 
erson,  whose  father  died  on  August  28,  we 
extend  sympathy. 

'45:  Martha  Hipp  Henson  has  added  an 
"adopted"  son  to  her  six:  Per  Ame  Skjaeve- 
land  of  Norway,  who  will  attend  high 
school  in  Greensboro,  the  second  foreign 
student  sponsored  by  the  school's  Interact 
Club,  whose  parent  organization  is  Rotar\'. 
An  item  about  Martha's  pediatrician  hus- 
band has  caught  our  eye.  He  serves  on  the 
"stacked  board"  of  First  Union  National 
Bank,  along  with  spouses  of  Jane  Wharton 
Sockwell  '31,  Emma  Avery  Jeffress  '40, 
Janice  Hooke  Moore  '44,  and  Eleanor 
Dickey  Green  '47.  A  double  welcome  to 
Rebecca  and  Bethany,  twin  daughters  of 
Dorothy  Arnett  Dixon,  who  celebrated 
their  first  birthday  in  September.  They  are 
so  identical  that  one  of  Becky's  toenails  is 
painted  red  for  identification.  They  joined 
Dottie  Sue,  10,  and  Arthur,  Jr.,  6.  To 
Mary  Anna  Sharpe  Dedowitz,  whose  father 
died  on  July  9,  we  extend  sincere  sym- 
pathy. 


A  lot  of  alums  will  remember 
with  pleasure  their  treats  at  the 
Tate  Street  bakery  with  the  Her- 
man J.  Israels  as  hosts.  This  sum- 
mer Mrs.  Israel  had  a  "treat,"  a 
visit  from  her  sister  and  brother- 
in-law  all  the  way  from  the  coun- 
try of  Israel.  Separated  as  small 
children  in  Russia,  the  sisters  had 
not  seen  one  another  in  40  years. 
After  three  months  in  Greensboro, 
die  Barshis  planned  to  visit  the 
Israels'  daughter,  Ilene  Israel 
Beron  '45,  in  New  York  City. 


'46:  Florabel  Hazelman  Cooper  moved  in 
August  to  Ft.  Leavenworth,  Kansas,  where 
her  husband,  U.  S.  Army  Major,  "will  at- 
tend the  Command  &  General  Staff  Col- 
lege, our  8-year-olcl  daughter  will  attend 
3rd  grade,  our  4-year-old  daughter  will  at- 
tend nursery  school,  and  I'll  attend  the  golf 
course."  Florabel  and  her  husband  both 
received  master's  degrees  from  the  U.  of 
Oklahoma  in  July.  Ten  pages  in  September 
House  Beautiful  are  devoted  to  Virginia 
Ford  Zenke's  100-year-old  restored  house. 
Celeste  Ulrich  taught  at  U.  of  Illinois  dur- 
ing the  summer.  She  has  been  named  pres- 


ident-elect of  National  Association  for 
Physical  Education  of  College  Women.  To 
Ruth  Causby  Dameron  of  Bessemer  City, 
whose  husband  Major  Fred  Dameron  died 
on  June  28,  we  extend  our  heartfelt  sym- 
padiy.  To  Lorraine  Fogleman  Grant  and 
Jean  Fogleman  Bolton  '53,  whose  father 
died  in  May,  we  also  extend  our  sympathy. 

'47:  Marianne  Smithson  and  James  Kytle 
Williams,  Jr.,  were  united  in  marriage  on 
August  8  in  Asheville.  They  live  at  4630 
S.  W.  13th  St.,  Miami,  Fla,,  where  the  bride 
teaches  at  Citrus  Grove  Junior  High.  Mr. 
Williams  is  a  graduate  of  the  U.  of  Florida. 
Mary  Young  Butts  has  married  G.  H.  Hen- 
dershott,  and  they  are  making  their  home 
at  2075  S.  Lake  Gannon  Dr.,  Winter 
Haven,  Fla.  Mary  Matheson  is  bursar  at 
Mitchell  College,  Statesville.  "Weezie" 
Vann  Tronnes  has  brought  us  up  to  date: 
her  second  girl  was  bom  May  7,  1963,  and 
first  son  arrived  July  28  of  this  year.  Ruth 
Watson  Harmon  of  Charlotte  sent  us  a 
picture  of  Harold,  3,  and  Billy,  10,  at  the 
piano,  where  they  "help"  mama  practice. 
Roslyn  Nicolas  MacDonald's  huband  is  an 
engineer  at  Western  Electric  in  Winston- 
Salem.  They  have  2  children.  Julia  Mc- 
Lean Brossman  of  Washington,  D.  C,  and 
her  husband  have  had  a  book  published 
on  Origami.  Their  son,  Marty  HI,  is  5.  To 
Elizabeth  Jones  Cease,  whose  father  died 
in  August,  we  extend  our  sympathy. 

'48:  Page  Coleman  Mehta  wrote  in  July 
that  she  and  the  children  were  visiting  her 
husband's  parents  in  London.  Her  hus- 
band's father  has  been  made  Indian  High 
Commissioner  (ambassador)  in  London. 
They  were  to  attend  a  Buckingham  Palace 
garden  party  among  other  exciting  events. 
Page  is  due  in  the  States  this  month  to  see 
the  World's  Fair  and  hopes  to  get  to 
Greensboro  around  Thanksgiving  time.  Pat 
Waldrop  Billingsley  dropped  by  in  June 
to  sa\'  her  husband,  formerly  an  Episco- 
palian minister,  has  enrolled  at  die  U.  of 
Texas  to  work  toward  a  Ph.  D.  in  history. 
Pat  lias  a  step-son  and  a  daughter.  "Tink" 
Johnson  Altvater's  husband  is  beginning  a 
residency  in  pathology  at  Baptist  Hospital, 
Winston-Salem.  Gladys  Rowland  Pickerel, 
Donna,  12,  and  Gloria,  7,  spent  a  tropical 
island  vacation  this  summer  at  Nassau.  To 
Jean  Ferguson  Porterfield,  Sybil  Matthews 
Edwards,  and  Barbara  White  Smith,  whose 
fathers  died  during  the  summer,  we  extend 
our  sincere  sympathy.  Nan  Kendall  Wailes 
has  returned  to  South  Rhodesia  after  a  long 
leave  in  the  States  and  Great  Britain. 

'49:  Congratulations  to  Helen  Powell  Prof- 
fitt  on  the  birth  of  a  daughter  on  August  26, 
antl  to  "Lee"  Stephens  Griffin  on  the  birth 
of  a  son  on  January  16.  Elizabeth  McKoy 
McCauley's  husband  is  a  Major,  and  they 
with  their  4  are  stationed  at  Bldg.  2133, 
Apt.  372,  Randolph  Air  Force  Base,  Texas. 
Julia  Gabai  Ripps  has  moved  to  larger 
([uarters  at  42  Sylvan  Way,  West  Caldwell, 
N.  J.  Clarence  Boren  Jones's  husband  has 
been  named  an  executive  vice-president  of 
Boren  Clay  Products.  To  Virginia  Rabil 
Mansour  of  Goldsboro,  we  extend  sym- 
patliy  in  the  death  of  her  father  in  July. 
Barbara  Westmoreland  has  been  operating 
Adirondack  Realty  Co.  in  Dolgeville,  N.  Y., 
for  the  past  8  years,  but  in  September  en- 
tered the  Law  School  of  Wake  Forest. 


Thirties 


'30:  Ruth  Watson  Scarborough  has  been 
elected  to  serve  a  second  1-year  term  as 
president  of  the  N.  C.  American  Legion 
Auxiliary.  She  is  the  fourth  person  in  the 
44  year  history  of  the  auxiliary  to  serve 
a  second  time.  During  her  first  term  she 
achieved  her  goal  of  $400  for  a  special 
scholarship  loan  fund.  Mabel  Holland 
Wright,  who  is  serving  as  president  of 
UNC-G  alumnae  for  the  Greater  Washing- 
ton area,  has  a  daughter  Kathlee  entering 
UNC-G  diis  fall;  daughter  Mabel  Jr.  is  in 
high  school;  Ola,  a  rising  junior  at  Duke; 
and  her  son  Bryan  is  at  U.  of  Virginia 
in  law  school,  after  graduating  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  from  UNC-CH  last  June.  Jo  Mann 
Torpy,  science  teacher  in  Alexandria,  Va., 
was  one  of  five  to  be  presented  the  Con- 
servation Achievement  Award  by  Gov. 
Harrison  at  the  Governor's  Conference  in 
Riclimond  last  spring. 

f'31:  Sallie  J.  Mooring  of  Raleigh 
has  been  acclaimed  "Member  of 
the  Year"  of  the  North  Carolina 
Dietetic  Association.  This  award 
was  the  first  of  its  kind  in  NCDA. 
Popular  with  members  of  her  profession, 
Sallie,  who  is  consulting  dietician  with  the 
State  Board  of  Health,  earned  this  recog- 
nition through  years  of  service  and  devo- 
tion to  her  profession  and  her  colleagues. 
Augusta  Raymond  Britt  of  Franklin,  Va., 
has  a  daughter  Rachel  on  the  faculty  at 
UNC-G.  Rachel  received  her  master's  here 
in  June.  Her  younger  daughter  Mary  Eliz- 
abeth will  be  a  senior  piano  major  here  this 
year.  To  Evelyn  Rives  Brown  of  Elon  Col- 
lege, whose  father  died  on  August  17,  we 
extend  our  sympathy. 

'32:  Kate  Tucker  Allmond  writes  that  she 
has  just  completed  10  years  as  social 
studies  teacher,  debate  coach  and  senior 
class  advisor  at  Thoma.sville  Senior  High. 
Her  younger  daughter  Margaret  entered 
UNG-G  as  a  freshman  this  fall,  and  daugh- 
ter Kathryn  '63  married  Walter  Shanks  on 
July  18  and  is  living  in  Baltimore.  Avery 
McConnell  Hood's  daughter  Eva  Margaret 
married  J.  L.  Baracli,  Jr.,  on  July  11  in 
Charlotte.  To  Edna  Henley  Man  of  Cold- 
water,  Mich,  whose  mother  died  last  May; 
and  to  Margaret  Sledge  of  Weldon  whose 
brother  died  in  August,  we  extend  our 
sympathy. 

'33:  A  new  riding  star  has  been  bom  in  the 
person  of  Claire  Hartsook  Boyce's  daugh- 
ter Joan,  who  has  been  taking  ribbons  from 
horse  shows  "all  over."  To  Mary  Hoyle 
Underwood  of  Clinton  and  Nannie  Hoyle 
'15  of  Carthage,  whose  brother  T.  C. 
Hoyle  Sr.  of  Greensboro  died  in  July,  we 
extend   our   sympathy. 

'34  Elizabeth  Guy  Calhoun  has  moved  to 
Route  1,  HaiTnony,  and  is  teaching  at 
Davie  County  High.  To  Pearl  Rosser  Chin- 
ners  and  Grace  Rosser  Sloan  '39  we  extend 
sympathy  in  the  death  of  their  father.  To 
Geneva  Weaver  Clark,  whose  sister  died 
in  August;  and  to  Emily  Boger  Richards 


Fall  1964 


37 


and  Major  Martha  Boger  '36,  whose  mother 
died  in  August,  we  also  extend  sincere 
s\mpathy. 

'35:  May  Lattimore  Adams's  son  ^\'illiam 
Jr.  is  one  of  11  winners  of  the  1964  Aubre\' 
Lee  Brooks  Scholarships  to  the  Consoli- 
dated Universit>'.  He  was  chosen  for 
Greensboro's  "Brains  Team,"  last  year  and 
dris.  Frances  Cla>'pool  Royster's  husband, 
editor  of  the  Wall  Street  Journal,  was 
elected  vice-president  of  ASNE  at  the 
Washington  convention  last  spring.  Alma 
Sneed  Peebles's  daughter  Ellen  Elizabeth 
married  David  Lariy  Thrower  on  August 
15  in  Greensboro.  Susanne  Ketchum  Sher- 
man's daughter  Bonnie  ^vas  married  on 
-August  1  in  Williamsburg,  ^'a.,  to  the 
Rev.  Milton  King  Wright,  who  is  serving 
as  assistant  to  the  rector  of  Christ  &  St. 
Luke's  Church  in  Norfolk.  Mar>'  Tyler 
Thornton's  daughter  Patricia,  senior  at 
Oberlin  College,  visited  in  Greensboro  dur- 
ing die  summer.  Man.'  is  still  active  aca- 
demicalK'.  as  she  works  witli  her  husband, 
professor  of  biolog>-  at  Michigan  State  U. 
in  East  Lansing. 

'36:  Martha  Ogbum  Goodson's  husband, 
Dr.  Kenneth  W.  Goodson,  has  been  elected 
as  a  bishop  of  the  Methodist  Church's 
Southeastern  Jurisdiction,  and  they  have 
moved  to  2731  Shades  Crest  Rd.,  Vistavia 
Hills,  Birmingham,  Ala.  Mildred  Vann 
Godwin's  husband  has  been  chosen  pres- 
ident-elect of  the  N.  C.  Bar  Association. 
Margaret  Xeister  Hosea's  husband  has 
been  elected  comptroller  of  Liggett  & 
Myers  Tobacco  Co.  Blanche  Hardy  New- 
some  has  resumed  work,  although  her  eye- 
sight is  not  yet  normal.  Jessie  Belle  Lewis 
has  served  for  die  second  summer  on  the 
English  faculh'  of  the  Governor's  School 
for  Gifted  Children.  A  John  Hay  Fellow 
at  the  U.  of  Chicago  for  1959-60,  she  is 
teaching  in  the  Chapel  Hill  High  School. 
To  Eloise  Taylor  Robinson  and  Rachael 
Taylor  Shields  '35,  whose  father  died  on 
June  25;  and  to  Xliriam  McFadyen  Scott, 
whose  father  died  on  June  22,  we  extend 
sincere  sympathy. 

'37:  Isabelle  Moseley  Fletcher's  son  Paul 
Jr.  is  now  on  UNC-G  campus  as  a  grad- 
uate assistant  in  the  biology  department. 
He  may  have  a  claim  to  fame  as  the  first 
son  or  grandson  of  an  alumna  to  be  en- 
rolled here.  His  grandmother  was  the  late 
Sallie  Parrott  Moseley  '10:  his  aunts:Leah 
Moseley  Proctor  '41  and  Sally  Moseley 
Lowe  '46.  To  Eloise  Efiand  Watson,  Mary 
Efland  '35,  Margaret  Efland  Howard  '35, 
Maxine  Efland  Weber  '40,  and  Flora  Efland 
Cheshire  '47,  whose  mother  died  in  August, 
we  extend  sincere  sympathy. 

'38:  Marie  McNeely  Stone  of  Greensboro 
and  husband  Leon  celebrated  their  silver 
wedding  anniversan.'  in  July  \^-itli  a 
Puerto  Rico-Virgin  Island  cruise.  They 
have  four  daughters:  Jean  '63  teaches  in 
Charlotte,  Carole  attends  High  Point  Col- 
lege, 12-year-old  Janet  holds  down  the 
home-front;  and  Anne  Stone  Wliitfield 
takes  care  of  her  own  progeny,  Roy,  who 
is  4.  Georgia  Amett  Bond's  husband.  Dr. 
A.  B.  Bonds,  Jr.,  is  president  of  Baldwin- 
Wallace  College  in  Berea,  Ohio.  They  and 
Iheir  four  offspring  spent  most  of  die  sum- 
mer in  Europe,  where  Anabelle,  the  eldest, 
remained  to  study  at  the  Sorbonne.  Bryan 
III  has  entered  Cornell.  Sandy  is  14  and 
Sfpphcn,      8.      Evelyn      Kemodle      Pratt's 


daughter  Penny  married  Clay  Barham  in 
July.  The  Pratts  have  since  moved  to 
Wilmington.  To  Bemice  Hefi^ner  Hoover, 
whose  father  died  last  spring,  we  extend 
sympathy. 

"39:  Mary  Cochrane  Austin's  husband  has 
assumed  duties  as  administrative  assistant 
to  the  Guilford  Count>'  superintendent  of 
schools.  Mary  is  teaching  in  the  Greensboro 
city  schools,  and  they  are  living  at  809 
Montpelier  Dr.  Bertie  Patterson  is  teach- 
ing in  the  Marine  Corps  Schools,  Quantico, 
Va.  She  did  graduates  work  at  I'NC-CH 
during  '62-63,.  Claudeline  Lewis  is  Chief 
Psychiatric  Social  Worker  at  N.  C.  Me- 
morial Hospital,  Chapel  Hill.  Sue  Thomas 
Watson's  son  Ilany  was  chosen  for  Greens- 
boro's "Brain  Team."  Jean  Anthony 
Middleton,  Southern  Baptist  missionarj'  of 
Santiago,  Chile,  was  in  Greensboro  during 
June  for  the  wedding  of  her  daughter 
Linda  '65  to  Myron  R.  Williams,  senior 
at  State  College.  Helen  Kirk  Graham's 
husband  is  our  new  N.  C.  Commissioner 
of  Agriculture.  Their  daughters  are  Alice, 
18,  who  is  at  UNC-CH,  and  Connie,   12. 


Twenties 


'20:  An  era  ended  for  Reynolds  High  in 
\\^nston-Salem  when  Annie  Preston  Heilig 
Fearrington  retired  from  its  faculty  in 
June.  She  was  the  last  of  the  faculty  that 
taught  during  the  school's  first  full  year  of 
operation,  1923-24,  and  had  taught  there 
e\'en,'  school  term  since  and  for  30  of  the 
summers.  Her  students  from  41  \'ears  of 
French  classes  (and  occasionally  Spanish 
and  Latin)  often  report  to  her  on  their 
progress.  She  has  served  as  president  of 
the  National  French  Honor  Society.  Katie 
King  Williams  of  Wilmington  retired  in 
1942  from  New  Hanover  High,  where  she 
had  been  head  of  the  science  department 
and  chemistn.'  teacher  since  1927.  She  re- 
ceived her  master's  from  L^NC-G  in  1926. 
Her  husband  is  also  retired.  Katie  is  still 
active  in  civic  affairs.  To  Rachel  Haynes 
Dufiield  and  Mary  Lou  Haynes  McMaster 
'28  we  extend  s\'mpathy  in  the  death  of 
their  brother. 

"21:    ■    Margaret  Stroud   Powell,  member 

of  one  of  Greensboro's  oldest  families,  died 
on  -August  29  at  her  home  following  a 
heart  seizure.  She  contributed  her  musical 
talents  to  the  choir  of  First  Baptist  Church 
for  many  years.  Her  husband,  son,  two 
grandchildren,  and  two  brothers  survive. 
To  them  we  extend  our  sincere  sympathy. 
Sarah  Poole  Mitchell's  son.  Bill  Cart- 
land  of  Cocoa  Beach,  Fla.,  is  lead  mechan- 
ical engineer  at  the  rocket  launch  complex 
at  Cape  Kennedy.  He  was  an  important 
cog  in  making  the  successful  moon  probe. 
Sarah  and  her  husband  are  recently  back 
from  a  European  tour.  Mar>'  Stearns  Deck 
of  Pelham,  N.  Y.,  visited  her  daughter 
Jean  Deck  Symmes  '46  in  Greensboro  this 
summer.  To  Annie  Williams  Jones,  whose 
brother  died  in  July,  we  extend  our 
s\mpatliy. 

'22:  Rena  King  has  "stepped  down"  after 
29  years  of  continuous  service  in  Johnston 
County  schools.  She  was  the  first  woman 
to  hold  the  position  of  high  school  super- 
visor in  the  county  system,  and  pioneered 


in  education  in  the  county  by  being  the  first 
woman  principal  of  an  accredited  second- 
ary school. 

'23:  Nell  Craig  Strowd  is  fuU  of  news  from 
the  Democratic  National  Convention.  To 
Mollie  Matheson  Boren,  whose  brother 
died  last  February,  we  extend  sincere 
s\mpathy.  Virginia  Terrell  Lathrop's  hus- 
band retired  June  1  as  director  of  trans- 
portation for  American  Enka  Corp.  in 
Asheville.  He  began  work  with  Enka  in 
1929  and  organized  the  company's  traffic 
department.  A  leader  in  the  field  of  indus- 
trial traffic  management,  he  has  been 
widely  active  in  the  development  of  this 
phase  of  industry'  on  local,  state  and  na- 
tional  levels. 

f'24:  Maie  Sanders  was  elected 
without  opposition  last  February 
to  serve  as  president  of  the  North 
Carolina  Education  Association. 
More  than  26,000  teachers  and 
other  public  school  leaders  cast  ballots  in 
the  election.  She's  an  energetic  member 
with  an  always  ready  smile  of  the  faculty 
of  New  Hanover  High  in  Wilmington, 
where  she  teaches  algebra. 

To  Walker  Woodley  Derr  and  Vysta 
Woodley  Rempson  '27,  whose  mother  died  j 
in  April,  we  extend  sympathy.  Walker's  son 
Jonathan  has  been  awarded  the  N.  C. 
Scottish  Rite  Masonic  Foundation  Fellow- 
ship for  graduate  study  in  the  School  of 
Government  at  George  Washington  Uni- 
versity. To  Elizabeth  Simkins  of  Westmin- 
ster, Md.,  and  Annie  Simkins  Mixon  '27  of 
Gold-sboro,  whose  mother  died  last  May, 
we  extend  our  sympathy.  To  Evelyn 
Mendenhall  Thompson,  Helen  MendenhaU 
Blankenship  '27,  Margaret  Mendenhall 
Johnson  '28,  and  Ruth  Mendenhall  Burton 
'33  we  extend  .sympathy  in  the  death  of 
tlieir  sister. 

'25:  Mozelle  Jackson  Undervvood's  daugh- 
ter Nancy  is  serving  as  vice-president  of  the 
student  body  at  Stratford  Junior  College 
and  has  been  awarded  a  S500  scholarship. 
Her  daughter  Ruth  Underwood  Weiss  '52 
of  Hingham.  Mass.,  with  Lisa,  4y2,  Laura, 
3,  and  Lucie,  5  months,  .spent  several  weeks 
with  Mozelle  in  Greensboro  this  summer. 
Elizabeth  Etheridge  Duke  has  a  new 
granddaughter,  Katherine  Barbara  Seaman, 
bom  in  Greensboro  on  July  31.  To  Beatrice 
McCracken  Hall  of  Summerfield,  whose 
husband  died  last  April,  we  extend  sym- 
pathy. Thettis  Smith  Hoffner  and  her  hus- 
band have  spent  the  summer  world-trotting 
with  end  result  of  their  trip,  (which  began 
with  the  World's  Fair,  a  jet  flight  to  Copen- 
hagen, stops  through  Europe,  several 
weeks  in  India)  a  visit  to  Euline  Smith 
Weems  '17,  a  missionan-  in  Seoul,  Korea. 
Fuline,  a  widow,  is  an  ordained  Methodist 
minister.  She  does  .supervisor}'  work  among 
the  Korean  churches. 

fThe  mayor  of  Rockingham  pro- 
claimed September  1  as  Mary  (Hol- 
\  land)  Phillips  Day.  Mary  retired  as 
y  choral  director  and  music  teacher 
/  at  Rockingham  High  School.  One 
of  her  choral  groups,  the  Eight  O'Clockers, 
gave  a  concert  that  night  in  her  honor. 
During  her  24  years  as  music  teacher  she 
created  a  tremendous  interest  among  young 
people  in  the  field  of  good  music,  and  her 
groups  won  a  number  of  superior  ratings 
in  State  Choral  contests. 


38 


AluiMni  News 


'26:  ■  Pace  Barnes  Abbitt  died  on  Au- 
gust 21  at  Granville  Hospital  in  Oxford. 
She  is  survived  by  two  brothers,  to  whom 
the  Alumni  Association  extends  sincere 
sympathy. 

Elizabeth  Rollins  Wallace  had  a  special 
visitor  at  her  Durham  home  a  few  months 
back.  About  20  years  ago  Elizabeth  sent 
a  CARE  package  to  a  French  teen-ager, 
who  dien  began  corresponding  with  her, 
and  also  dreaming  of  visiting  the  U.  S. 
In  1963  Maud  Blanket  entered  a  contest 
in  Paris  —  and  won  a  job  with  the  U.  N. 
She  arrived  in  New  York  in  February  of 
tiiis  year,  and  spent  a  long  week-end  with 
her  Wallace  friends  this  summer.  Nellie 
McSwain  Matlock's  "foreign"  visitors  this 
August  were  her  son,  who  is  a  political 
officer,  his  wife  and  children,  who  have 
lived  in  Germany,  Austria,  Moscow,  and 
now  Ghana.  We  extend  sympathy  to  Jeter 
Bui'ton  Holt  of  Burlington  in  the  death  of 
her  husband  in  May;  to  Elizabeth  Morisey 
Dunning  and  Emma  Morisey  Slater  '36  in 
the  death  of  their  brother  during  July;  and 
to  Katherine  Wolff  Brandon  and  ^iuriel 
Wolff  White  '30  in  the  death  of  their 
brodier  during  August.  Katherine  and  her 
husband  spent  the  summer  on  the  Win- 
chester, England,  excavation  project  which 
her  son-in-law  directed. 

'27:  Phoebe  Baughan  Barr  contributes  con- 
tinuously to  the  Universit>'  of  Alabama. 
She  is  serving  as  president  of  die  Univers- 
ity's Women  s  Club.  Frances  Spratt,  asso- 
ciate professor  of  textiles  and  clothing  in 
the  N.  Y.  State  College  of  Home  Economics 
at  Cornell  U.,  was  elected  as  an  outstand- 
ing professor  by  the  student  body  and  rec- 
ognized during  the  annual  honors  day 
luncheon  last  April.  To  Lloyd  Merriman  of 
Oak  Ridge  whose  mother  died  in  August; 
to  Madeline  Copeland  of  Durham  whose 
mother  died  last  winter;  and  to  Mary 
Council  Carroll  of  Mt.  Airy  whose  hus- 
band died  on  August  7,  we  extend  our 
sincere  sympathy. 

'28:  ■  Ruth  Linney  of  Roaring  River, 
newspaper  columnist  and  former  teacher, 
died  unexpectedly  on  June  12  after  a  heart 
attack.  Considered  an  audiority  on  North- 
west North  Carolina  history  and  genealogy, 
she  wrote  a  colunm,  "Rambling  with  Rutli," 
for  the  Journal-Patriot  of  North  Wilkesboro 
for  more  than  25  years.  Her  only  close  rela- 
tive is  a  half-sister,  and  to  her  the  alumnae 
extend  sincere  sympathy. 

'29:  Virginia  Hassell  Grier  of  Raleigh  is 
new  administrative  officer  for  the  State 
Board  of  Public  Welfare.  She  had  been 
executive  secretary  of  the  N.  C.  Conference 
for  Social  Service  for  18  years,  and  has 
been  serving  as  President  of  die  Wake 
County  Tuberculosis  Association.  Louise 
Dannenbaum  Falk's  husband,  Herbert  S. 
Falk,  Greensboro  attorney,  received  the 
1964  Brotherhood  Award  from  the  local 
chapter  of  die  National  Conference  of 
Christians  and  Jews.  Margaret  Smith  Wil- 
liams was  subject  of  a  salute  printed  in 
the  monthly  journal  of  the  Bethesda  (Md.) 
Presbyterian  Church  for  her  years  of  out- 
standing Christian  service  in  the  work  of 
the  church.  "Her  organizing  abilities  are 
phenomenal,  yet  unlike  most  gifted  organ- 
izers she  also  stays  busy  doing  the  actual 
details  which  make  her  projects  so  success- 
ful." Margaret's  son  Donald  is  a  high  school 
student.  Son  Bob  and  his  wife  are  in  Chapel 


Hill,  where  he  is  a  dental  student  at  UNC- 
GH.  To  Edith  Causey  of  Liberty,  whose 
father  died  in  August,  we  extend  sincere 
sympathy. 


Teens 


'16:  Frances  Summerell  Stickney  and  her 

husband  sailed  from  New  York  City  on  May 
1  for  a  "do-it-yourself"  world  trip.  Frances 
planned  the  personalized  trek  for  a  year. 
She  read  43  books  on  Africa,  even  gave 
herself  a  course  in  geography  and  learned 
about  wind  systems.  They  had  passage  on 
a  freighter  and  planned  for  3  weeKS  in 
Capetown,  a  visit  to  Kimberley  Mines,  Vic- 
toria Falls,  and  a  night  in  the  famous  "Tree 
Tops"  in  Kenya,  on  to  the  Nile,  and  home 
by  way  of  Singapore,  Japan,  Hawaii,  etc. 
Claire  Henley  Ad<isson  attended  the  30di 
"birthday  party"  of  Rachel  Caldwell  Chap- 
ter, DAR,  in  Greensboro.  She  was  the  chap- 
ter's first  and  organizing  regent.  To  Mary 
Jane  Dorrity  Stimson  of  Morganton,  whose 
brother  Chester  A.  Dorritj'  died  during  July 
in  Goldsboro,  we  extend  our  sympathy. 

'17:  During  National  Library  Week  last 
spring  the  High  Point  Enterprise  featured 
Frances  Morris  Haworth  as  its  High  Pointer 
Of  The  Week,  For  approximately  25  years 
she  has  been  a  valuable  member  of  the 
board  of  the  city's  public  library  and  has 
held  all  four  of  the  leading  offices.  In  addi- 
tion to  those  duties,  she  is  active  in  Friends 
Meeting,  local  and  national  committees  of 
the  Red  Gross,  the  Communit}'  Chest,  the 
YWCA  and  the  Junior  League.  Although 
injured  in  a  car  wreck  last  November,  she 
attended  her  pet  functions  on  crutches,  and 
is  now  much  improved. 

f'18:  The  Home  Economics  Foun- 
dation of  our  Universits'  in  Greens- 
.,  boro  presented  its  first  distin- 
Or  guished  service  award  in  May.  The 
y  citation  reads:  "The  University  of 
North  Carolina  at  Greensboro  recognizes 
with  appreciation  the  distinguished  and 
outstanding  service  of  Mrs.  Sue  Ramsey 
(Johnston)  Ferguson  as  President  of  the 
Home  Economics  Foundation,  Inc.,  April 
1948  -  April  1964,  and  acknowledges  that 
through  her  thoughtful  leadership  the  re- 
sources and  development  of  Home  Eco- 
nomics have  been  strengthened  and  ad- 
vanced by  the  continuing  support  provided 
by  die  .  .  .  Foundation  .  .  .  ." 

Susan  Green  Finch's  granddaughter  is  — 
you  guessed  it  —  our  lovely  Miss  Nordi 
Carolina. 

'19:  Anne  Banks  Cridlebaugh  is  acting  as 
librarian  for  the  Friends  Meeting  in  High 
Point  and  is  a  member  of  AAUW  there. 
She  retired  from  Montclair  State  College 
in  1961  after  32  years  on  the  librar>'  staff. 
She  drew  up  the  first  plans  for  the  new 
college  library  which  opened  in  September, 
1963.  Since  her  retirement  she  has  visited 
in  Florida  and  N.  J. 


Guard 


'97:  Irma  Carraway  is  a  patient  at  Gate- 
wood  Nursing  Home.  Route  2,  Wilson. 
'00:   To   Lelia   Tuttle,   who   is   at   Brooks- 
Howell    Home    in    Asheville,    and    whose 
brother,  John  M.  Tuttle  of  Lenoir  died  on 


July    25;    and    to    Miriam    MacFadyen    of 

Presbyterian  Home,  High  Point,  whose 
brother  the  Rev.  Henry  Richard  McFadyen 
died  on  June  22,  we  extend  our  sympatliy. 
Elizabeth  Howell  Clifton  of  Louisburg  was 
honoree  when  her  two  daughters  enter- 
tained last  spring  on  the  occasion  of  her 
85th  birthday. 

'03:  ■  Mary  Bridgers  died  on  July  20  at 
age  82  at  Willow  Haven  Nursing  Home  in 
Greensboro,  where  she  had  lived  several 
months.  Up  until  that  time  she  had  been  a 
lifelong  resident  of  Tarboro,  where  she  was 
a  former  principal  of  die  Bridgers  Elemen- 
taiy  School.  She  was  a  school  teacher  for 
42  years.  To  her  only  survivor,  her  niece 
Jessie  Bridgers  Foster  '30,  we  extend  our 
sincere  s>mpadiy. 

■  Ida  Hankins  died  on  March  20  of  this 
year  according  to  correspondence  from 
her  niece.  She  was  living  in  the  Catherine 
Kennedy  Home  in  Wilmington.  To  her 
survivors  the  Alumni  Association  extends 
sympathy. 

■  News  has  just  reached  the  Alumni  Of- 
fice of  die  death  of  Gerti-ude  Bryan  Toon 
of  Whiteville.  We  regret  we  have  no  fur- 
ther information. 

Sallie  Lewis  Early  of  Windsor  is  in  ex- 
cellent health  and  writes  that  her  daughter 
Ann  lives  with  her  and  is  a  clerk  in  the 
Post  Office  there.  Her  younger  daughter 
Eleanor  is  married  and  lives  in  WiUiam- 
ston.  Sallies  husband,  a  former  superin- 
tendent of  Bertie  County  Schools,  died  in 
1948.  Genevieve  Jennings  Hammer  cele- 
brated her  (S2ncl  liirth<Iay  on  May  6.  She 
and  her  danglitcr  Josephine  attended  the 
2nd  assembh-  of  National  Society  of  South- 
em  Dames  of  Aiiicrica  in  Washington,  D.  C, 
last  spring.  Bettie  Land  is  living  in  a  nurs- 
ing home  in  Greensboro,  so  that  she  can  be 
with  an  older  sister,  who  is  feeble.  Bettie 
herself  is  still  well  and  cheerful,  and  says 
she's  thankful  for  the  42  years  of  happy 
living  she  had  as  a  teacher.  Sudie  Harding 
Latham  writes  diat  her  grandchildren  and 
4  great-grandchildren  love  to  play  on  the 
mile-wide  beach  in  front  of  her  home,  situ- 
ated on  the  river  outside  of  Washington, 
N.  C.  She  has  2  granddaughters  at  UNC-G. 
Berta  Albright  Moore  of  Elizabethtown 
lives  widi  her  daughter  and  takes  part  in 
many  social  activities,  although  she's  a  bit 
arthritic.  Christine  Snyder's  special  interest 
is  cultivating  roses  at  her  Newark,  N.  J., 
home. 

"04:  ■  Margaret  Burkett  Brawley  died  in 
September  at  age  85  at  Friendly  Rest 
Home,  Durham,  where  she  had  resided  for 
about  three  years.  She  had  lived  in  Durham 
since  1906  and  served  as  one  of  the  first 
presidents  of  Granville  Presbyteiy,  of 
which  she  was  a  life  member.  Her  survivors 
include  2  sons,  5  grandchildren,  4  great- 
grandchildren, and  a  sister,  to  whom  we 
extend  our  sympathy. 

'05:  To  Emma  Sharpe  Avery,  whose  broth- 
er David  S.  Sharpe  of  Durham  died  on 
Jidy  9,  we  extend  sincere  sympathy. 
'07;  Mary  Exum  spent  the  summer  in  Ful- 
lerton,  Calif.,  some  30  miles  from  Los 
Angeles,  with  her  nephew  and  his  family. 
'11:  To  May  Vickery  Faucette  of  Brown 
Summit,  and  to  Emma  Vickery  McFarland 
'12,  of  Rutherfordton,  we  extend  our  sym- 
pathy in  tile  death  of  their  brother,  Milas 
A.  Vickery  of  North  Wilkesboro  who  died 
last   Januarj'. 


Fall  1964 


39 


Business 


ANNUAL  GIVING.  Emily  Harris  Preyer 
'39,  chairman.  By  now  each  of  you  has  re- 
ceived a  copy  of  the  1963-64  Alumni  An- 
nual Giving  Honor  Roll  in  which  is  re- 
corded the  good  news  about  our  campaign 
last  session.  Since  the  Annual  Giving 
Council  is  delegated  the  responsibiUty  of 
allocating  the  annual  giving  funds  by  the 
By-Laws  of  the  Alumni  Association,  I  wel- 
come this  opportunity  to  tell  you  about 
the  Council's  second  annual  meeting  in 
early  July  and  the  decisions  which  were 
made  concerning  the  allocation  of  our  col- 
lective contributions. 

Although  July  is  not  looked  upon  as  a 
good  montli  for  meeting,  all  except  two  of 
the  Council  members  were  able  to  come 
for  our  meeting,  one  traveling  all  the  way 
from  Binghamton,  New  York.  The  new 
members  whose  terms  officially  begin  tJiis 
fall  were  present  to  observe  the  Council 
at  work.  Such  devoted  leadership  on  the 
part  of  Council  members  has  contributed 
greatly  to  the  success  of  the  program,  and 
we  are  indebted  to  them. 

Our  first  matter  of  business  was  the  de- 
tailed report  of  the  1963-64  campaign 
which  was  mailed  to  you.  The  total  amount 
of  gifts  and  givers  ($51,405.52  was  received 
from  4409  alumnae)  represents  an  in- 
crease over  the  preceding  year  of  $18,- 
498.18  in  the  amount  contributed  and  1282 
in  the  number  of  alumnae  sending  gifts. 
Such  an  outstanding  record  of  accomplish- 
ment did  not  just  happen.  There  were 
more  than  400  alumnae  who  helped  to 
organize  and  conduct  the  campaign  by 
serving  as  Area  Chairmen,  Area  Agents, 
and  Class  Agents.  We  are  grateful  to  these 
alumnae  for  their  invaluable  assistance  as 
well  as  to  all  of  you  who  so  generously 
sent  gifts  to  the  University. 

With  the  report  in  hand  the  Council's 
next  item  of  business  was  the  allocation  of 
the  annual  giving  funds.  It  was  witlr  a  fuU 
realization  of  the  imi^ortance  of  our  re- 
sponsibility under  the  By-Laws  that  we  ar- 
rived at  a  final  decision. 

At  the  outset  it  was  decided  that  the 
Alumni  Scholars  Program  would  be  the 
primary  objective  of  Annual  Giving.  Ac- 
cording to  our  original  plan  the  number 
of  alumni  scholarships  was  increased  from 
8  to  12  for  the  1964-65  session,  and  $6,000 
was  allocated  for  these  scholarships.  In 
addition,  funds  were  provided  (in  the 
amounts  shown)  for  the  other  ijrograms 
which  were  started  last  year:  Alumni 
Teaching  Excellence  Award  ($1,000), 
Alumni  Lecture  Series  ($3,000),  Alumni 
News  Editor  ($3,000),  the  Alumnae  House 
($3,000),  Faculty  Travel  Fund  ($2,000), 
the  Alumni  Association  ($20,000),  Alumni 
Distinguished  Professorship  ($250),  Alumni 
Collection  for  the  Library  ($750),  the 
Chancellor's  Discretionary  Fund  ($488.52), 
cost  of  the  Annual  Giving  Campaign 
(S5,000),  and  restricted  gifts  to  scholarships, 
the  Alumnae  House,  etc.  as  requested  by 
donors  ($6,917). 


The  Council  again  was  proud  on  your 
behalf  to  help  the  University  meet  some  of 
its  many  needs  by  allocating  the  1963-64 
Annual  Giving  contributions  in  the  above 
manner.  It  is  our  hope  that  every  alumna 
who  participated  in  tliis  program  wiU  ex- 
perience, as  we  did,  a  great  personal  satis- 
faction in  being  able  to  provide  this  much 
needed  assistance. 

Plans  for  another  year  of  Annual  Giving 
got  imderway  with  tlie  election  of  Adelaide 
Fortune  Holdemess  '34  as  our  chairman 
for  1964-65.  Under  her  able  leadership,  I 
am  sure,  the  program  will  continue  to  grow 
and  become  increasingly  effective  in  its 
service   to   the   University. 

Thank  you  for  giving  me  tlie  privilege 
of  serving  as  your  chairman  during  the 
past  two  years.  It  has  been  a  wonderful 
experience,  and  I  am  grateful  to  every 
alumna  whose  generous  response  to  our 
request  for  assistance  made  it  possible  for 
our  efforts  to  meet  with  .success. 


PEOPLE.  Basic  to  the  success  of  the 
alumni  program  are  people,  and  a  report 
about  Our  Business  cannot  be  divorced 
from  them.  It  takes  the  involvement  of 
many  people  .  .  .  many  more  than  we  can 
ever  name  in  these  columns  ...  to  carry 
on  the  affairs  of  our  30,000-member-organ- 
ization.  It  is  very  necessary,  though,  that 
certain  people  be  identified  at  certain  times 
so  that  all  alumni  may  know  "who  may  be 
contacted  about  what"  and  may,  by  con- 
tacting designated  committee  members, 
actively  participate  in  the  affairs  of  the 
Alumni   Association. 


A  MONTH  OLD.  Before  this  issue's  nam- 
ing begins,  it  is  important  that  you  remem- 
ber that  tliis  report  about  Our  Business  is 
being  written  in  mid-September.  The  print- 
ing process  dictates  that  a  montli  must 
elapse  between  our  writing  and  your  read- 
ing. By  the  time  that  this  magazine  is  de- 
livered to  you,  many  other  people  will 
have  accepted  Alumni  Association  assign- 
ments. Their  names  will  have  to  wait  for 
another  magazine. 

OFFICE  NOMINATIONS.  The  nomina- 
tion of  candidates  for  offices  in  the  Alumni 
Association  precedes  the  actual  oflSce-tak- 
ing  by  more  than  a  year.  It  is  time  now  for 
the  names  of  possible  candidates  for  the 
offices  of  President  and  Second  Vice-Presi- 
dent and  for  four  positions  on  the  Alumni 
Board  to  be  sent  to  the  members  of  the 
Nominating  Committee.  It  is  important  that 
you  make  your  suggestions  about  candi- 
dates to  the  Committee  before  December 
I,  1964,  although  the  alumni  who  are  suc- 
cessful candidates  for  these  positions  in 
next  spring's  election  will  not  actually  take 
office  until  a  year  from  this  coming  January. 

Please  note,  'too,  that  our  revised  By- 
Laws  stipulate  that  on  the  final  slate  which 
the  Nominating  Committee  will  prepare 
"two  nominees  for  President  and  Second 
Vice-President  shall  be  presented.  When 
the  votes  are  tallied,  the  candidate  receiv- 
ing the  highest  number  of  votes  shall  be 
elected  President,  and  the  one  receiving 
the  second  highest  number  of  votes  shall 
be  elected  Second  Vice-President." 

Mrs.  Wilham  W.  McLendon  (Ann  Whit- 
tington  '52)  is  chairman  of  the  Nominating 


Committee.  Her  address  is  609  Blair  Street 
in  Greensboro. 

The  members  of  the  committee  who  will 
be  working  with  Ann  and  their  addresses 
are  as  follows:  Mrs.  A.  D.  Shaftesbury 
(Catharine  Cox  '27),  315  Tate  Street, 
Greensboro;  Mrs.  J.  G.  Thomas  (Blossom 
Hudnell  '24),  117  S.  Tremont  Drive, 
Greensboro;  Mrs.  H.  E.  Vaughan,  Jr.  (Sarah 
Daniel  '30),  710  E.  Lake  Drive,  Greens- 
boro; Mrs.  Louis  C.  Stephens  (Agnes  War- 
ren '14),  214  W.  Comwallis  Drive,  Greens- 
boro; Mrs.  Everette  L.  Martin  (Jane  Mar- 
lette  '57),  1507  Delk  Drive,  High  Point; 
Mrs.  Erling  Tronnes  (Louise  Varm  '47),  508 
Parkway,  High  Point;  Mrs.  Donald  R.  Chis- 
hohn  (Carolyn  Shepard  '56),  618  Parkview 
Street,  Asheboro;  Mrs.  James  H.  Hatley 
(Sadie  Suggs  '45),  217  Trail  8,  Grove  Park, 
Burlington. 

Mrs.  A.  G.  Fearrington  (Annie  Preston 
Heihg  '20),  640  N.  Spring  Street,  Winston- 
Salem;  Mrs.  Clyde  Young,  Jr.,  (Mary 
Frances  Crawley  '56),  Route  6,  Box  49, 
Morganton;  Mrs.  Paris  L.  Yelton  (Donnis 
Gold  '30),  312  Belvedere  Street,  Shelby; 
Mrs.  Carl  S.  Hedberg  (Clara  Morris  '54), 
2830  Sunset  Drive,  Charlotte;  Mrs.  Hugh 
C.  McLauchlin  (Jule  Hurst  '45),  3510  Fox 
Place,  Greensboro;  Mrs.  Miles  J.  Smith,  Jr. 
(Katharine  Harrington  '52),  115  S.  Ellis 
Street,  Salisbury;  Mrs.  E.  Joseph  Edwards 
(Judy  Vann  '48),  2817  Claremont  Road, 
Raleigh;  Mrs.  Charles  S.  Hubbard  (Mercer 
Reeves  '35),  1206  Branch  Street,  Wilson; 
Mrs.  W.  B.  Congleton  (Dorothy  Schwab 
'28),  904  W.  Haven  Blvd.,  Rocky  Mount; 
Mrs.  Joseph  Hohnan,  Jr.  (Jean  Smith  '42), 
Box  641,  Wilmington;  Mrs.  J.  W.  Griffin 
(Grey  Manning  '36),  109  S.  Watts  Street, 
Wilhamston;  and  Mrs.  Joseph  M.  Ward 
(Patsy  Blalock  '54),  406  Elizabeth  Street, 
Greenville. 


AWARD  NOMINATIONS.  At  its  January 
meeting  the  Alumni  Board  will  consider 
nominees  for  the  sixth  Alumni  Service 
Award.  Members  of  the  Alumni  Association 
may  make  nominations  for  the  award  by 
writing  to  a  member  of  the  Alumni  Serv- 
ice Award  Committee  before  December  1, 
1964.  Statements  substantiating  the  nomi- 
nations should  be  included. 

The  award  is  presented  to  alumni  who 
by  their  faithful  and  unselfish  service  have 
made  outstanding  contributions  to  the  ad- 
vancement of  the  University  at  Greensboro. 
Recipients  of  the  award  have  been  Laura 
(Weill)  Gone  '10,  May  (Lovelace)  Tomlin- 
son  '07,  Emma  Lewis  (Speight)  Morris  '00, 
lane  Summerell  '10,  and  Clara  Booth  Byrd 
'13. 

It  should  be  noted  that  one  of  the  Serv- 
ice Award  Committee's  working  principles 
is  that  nominees  who  have  been  .suggested 
in  past  years  but  who  have  not,  as  yet, 
been  selected  for  the  award  are  reconsid- 
ered each  year  along  with  nominees  whose 
names  have  been  submitted  for  the  first 
time. 

The  members  of  the  Alumni  Service 
Award  Committee  (all  of  whom  live  in 
Winston-Salem)  are  Mrs.  Edwin  G.  Wil- 
son (Emily  Herring  '61),  10-A  Wake  For- 
est Apartments,  chairman;  Mrs.  Irving  E. 
Garlyle  (Mary  Belo  Moore  '25),  101  Belle 
Vista  Court;  and  Mrs.  C.  Jackson  Sink 
(Marilib  Barwick  '44),  2227  Buena  Vista 
Road. 


40 


Alumni  News 


NORTH   CAROLINA 
ALUMNI  DISTRICTS 


ALUMNI  DISTRICT  COUNCIL.    One  of 

the  most  exciting  of  the  additions  made  to 
the  By-Laws  of  the  Alumni  Association  hist 
spring  is  the  provision  for  the  creation  of 
an  Alumni  District  Council,  an  organiza- 
tion which  will  work  to  augment  and  co- 
ordinate  University  and   alumni  activities. 

The  map  shown  here  indicates  the  di- 
visional districts  in  North  Carolina.  (In 
time,  out-of-state  districts  will  also  be  or- 
ganized.) District  Chaimien  will  coordinate 
the  work  of  individual  District  Committees 
whose  membership  will  include  especially- 
appointed  representatives  from  each  cmmt\' 
within  the  district,  the  members  of  the 
Alumni  Board  and  the  alumni  members  of 
the  Consolidated  University  Board  who  li\e 
within  the  respective  districts,  and  the 
chairmen  of  the  Alumni  Chapters  in  each 
district. 

The  Council  and  its  ten  supporting  Dis- 
trict Committees  were  invited  to  meet  for 
a  two-day  session  on  the  campus  in  Creens- 
boro  in  early  September  to  discuss  the  first 
year's  program.  The  Annual  Giving  Coun- 
cil and  the  Personal  Visitation  Chainr.en 
were  invited  to  join  the  Council  in  discuss- 
ing plans  for  publicizing  the  University's 
scholarship  programs,  recruiting  promising 
students,  coordinating  alumni  chapter  ac- 
tivities, encouraging  interest  in  continuing 
education,  seeking  support  for  the  Uni- 
versity's legislative  program,  stimulating 
continuing  interest  in  the  Development 
Program,  helping  to  keep  alumni  informed 
about  new  developments  and  future  plans 
for  the  University,  and  marshaling  the 
strength  of  the  alumni  in  supporting  the 
University. 

The  following  alumnae  are  representing 
their  counties  on  the  District  Committees: 
District  1:  Bobbie  Holland  Metcalf  '39 
(Buncombe),  Velma  Beam  Moore  '24 
(Clay),  Jane  Walker  Cathey  '4f  (Haywood), 
Meg  Grant  Ramsey  '45  (Jackson),  Ruth 
Dennis  Gregory  '37  (Madison),  Cynthia  Cox 
Moore  '47  (Swain),  Alma  Kirstein  Spicer 
'40  (Tran.sylvania).  Mary  Charles  Alexander 
Griffin  of  Asheville  is  District  Chairman. 


District  2:  Clarine  Oliver  Cockerham 
'47  (Ashe),  Margaret  Corbin  Gartner  '47 
(Aveiy),  Anne  Harrelson  Stames  '59 
(Burke),  Elizabeth  Putnam  Hamrick  '54 
(Cleveland),  Margaret  Honeycutt  House  '48 
(McDowell),  Clara  Banner  Griffith  "51 
(Rutherford).  Betty  Crawford  Ervin  of 
Morganton   is   District   Chairman. 

District  3:  Elizabeth  Jordan  Lane\'  '44 
(Alexander),  Emogene  Choa'e  Por'er  '48 
(Alleghany),  Jennie  Stout  Case  '41  (Ca- 
tawba), Mary  Delia  Rankin  Jarman  '31 
(Gaston),  Irene  Hamrick  Whisonant  '32 
(Lincoln),  Polly  Northrup  Barnett  '45 
(Mecklenburg),  Emma  Rice  Merritt  '33 
(Surry),  Helen  Bumgarner  Bell  '39  (Wilkes), 
and  \Iary  Joe  Curry  Zachary  '39  (Yadkin). 

District  4:  Mary  Elizabeth  Friddle  Gib- 
son '46  (Stokes),  Martha  Moring  Lauten  '47 
(Rockingham),  Anne  Watkins  Pemberton 
.37  (Caswell),  Susanna  Ray  Gwyn  '45  (For- 
syth), Mary  Elizabeth  Doggctt  Beaman  '44 
(Guilford),  Irene  Horn  Young  '.39  (Davie), 
Jane  Isley  Lisk  '47  (Randolph).  Betsy  Ivey 
Sawyer  of  Winston-Salem  is  District  Chair- 


District  5:  Ann  Little  Masemore  '23  (An- 
son), Miriam  Bull  Friday  '49  (Cabarrus), 
Margaret  Black  Dickson  '40  (Hoke),  Myrtle 
York  McAulay  '46  (Montgomery),  Mary 
Idol  Breeze  '53  (Richmond),  Billie  Nifong 
Albright  '44  (Rowan),  Virginia  Cowan  Con- 
nell  '47  (Stanly),  Doris  Funderburk  Morgan 
'46  (Union).  Miriam  Goodrum  Tuttle  of 
Kannapolis  is  District  Chairman. 

District  6:  Lois  Mclver  Winstead  '53 
(Person),  Sterling  Moore  Jones  '51  (Vance), 
Emma  Lou  Taylor  Traylor  '47  (Warren), 
Hilman  Thomas  Watkins  '47  (Durham), 
Margaret  Holt  Roberts  '47  (Wake),  Helen 
Moody  Buckner  '.50  (Chatham),  Jane  Swin- 
dell Barringer  '51  (Lee),  Lane  Siler  '43 
(Harnett),  Margaret  Stallings  Hobgood  '.33 
(Franklin).  Libby  Ba.ss  Beard  of  Raleigh  is 
District  Chairman. 

District  7:  Susan  Darden  Harrell  '46 
(Northampton),   Katherine   Johnson   Rogers 


'44  (Halifax),  Frances  McClure  Peters  '47 
(Edgecombe),  Mary  Bailey  Shreve  '52  (Wil- 
son), Jane  Austin  Cunningham  '46  (John- 
ston), Loui.se  Davis  Thomson  '19  (Wayne). 
Sadie  McBrayer  McCain  of  Wilson  is  Dis- 
trict Chairman. 

District  8:  Evelyn  Case  Corbett  '41 
(Bladen),  Kathleen  Barber  Barnes  '41 
(Bnniswick),  Carolyn  Pickel  Lynch  '51 
(Columbus),  Rachel  Evans  Wilson  '45 
(Cumberland),  Beatrice  Lanier  Quinn  '51 
(Duplin),  Polly  Keith  Sheats  '51  (New  Han- 
over), Nancy  Young  Taylor  '38  (Pender), 
Jane  Powell  Tudor  '35  (Robeson),  Ann  Ty- 
son Turlington  '52  (Samp.son).  Ann  Flack 
Boseman  of  Wilmington   is  District  Chair- 


District  9:  Hazel  Scssoms  Fowler  '49 
(Bertie),  Ann  Elliott  Dowdy  '42  (Camden), 
Cornelia  Jones  Privott  '20  (Chowan),  Laura 
Powers  Hooper  '44  (Dare),  Blanche  Eure 
Rountree  '49  (Gates),  Dorothy  Periy  Owens 
|47  (Pasquotank),  Anna  Catling  Harmon 
'61  (Perquimans),  Leslie  Darden  Highsmith 
'.36  (Washington).  Thelma  Cetsinger  Bar- 
den  of  Plymouth  is  District  Chairman. 

District  10;  Hester  Bizzell  Kidd  '51 
(Beaufort),  Mildred  White  Corbett  '53 
(Craven),  Blanche  Tuten  Dudley  '39 
(Hyde),  Ann  Winslow  Brock  '51  (Jones), 
Sara  Henderson  Cox  '36  (Lenoir),  Sue 
Smith  Applewhite  '46  (Onslow),  Mary 
Bailey  Williams  Davis  '33  (Pitt).  Lib  Kit- 
trell  Proctor  of  Greenville  is  District  Chair- 
man. 


TO  alumnae  bridge-players  within  rea- 
sonable driving  distance  of  Greensboro: 
the  Greensboro  Alumni  Chapter's  an- 
nual Benefit  Card  Carnival  has  been 
scheduled  for  the  evening  of  Novem- 
ber 11.  Detailed  information  about  the 
affair  which  will  benefit  the  chapter's 
scholarship  fund  may  be  obtained  from 
the   Alumni   Office. 


THE  LIBRARY 
COLLEGE 


The  University  Calendar 


OCTOBER 


3  CONCERT:  Lois  Marshall,  Greens- 
boro Civic  Music  Association,  A\- 
cock  Auditorium,  8r30  p.m. 

4  NURSES'  COMMENCEMENT, 
Cone  Ballroom,  Elliott  Hall,  3  p.m. 

4-24  ART:  Paintings  by  Joseph  Strothers 
and  Robert  Partin,  Sculpture  b\' 
Albert  Vrana,  W'eatherspoon  Gal- 
lery. 

.5  FOUNDERS'  DAY:  Address  by 
Luther  H.  Hodges,  U.  S.  Secretary 
of  Commerce,  Aycnck  Auditorium, 
8  p.m. 

9-10  NATIONAL  REPERTORY  THE- 
ATRE: Molnar's  "Liliom,"  Aycock 
Auditorium,  8:30  p.m. 

9-30  ART:  Modern  Spanish  Paintings 
Elliott  Hall. 

10  SENIOR  RECITAL:  Anita  Patter- 
son, piano.  Recital  Hall,  Music 
Building,  8  p.m. 

14  NATIONAL  REPERTORY  THE- 
ATRE: Goldsmith's  "She  Stoops  To 
Conquer,"  Aycock  Auditorium,  8:30 
p.m. 

1.5  NATIONAL  REPERTORY  THE- 
ATRE: Ibsen's  "Hedda  Gabler,"  Ay- 
cock Auditin-ium,   8:.30  p.m. 

16  NATIONAL  REPERTORY  THE- 
ATRE: Molnar's  "Lihoni,"  Aycock 
Auditorium,   8:30   p.m. 

16  SENIOR  RECITAL:  Carol  Thacker, 
piano,  Recital  Hall,  Music  Building, 
8  p.m. 

17  NATIONAL  REPERTORY  THE- 
ATRE: Goldsmith's  "She  Stoops  To 
Conquer,"  2:30  p.m.;  Ibsen's 
"Hedda  Gabler,"  8:30  p.m.,  Aycock 
Audi.oriui.i. 

20  WADE  R.  BROWN  RECITAL 
SERIES:  John  Meacham,  flute,  Re- 
cital Hall.  Music  Building,  8  p.m. 


23  ARCHEOLOGICAL  LECTURE: 
"The  Art  of  Bactria  and  the  No- 
mads," Dr.  Richard  D.  Barnett, 
British  Museum,  Librar\'  Lectiue 
Hall,  8  p.m. 

24  FOLKSINGER:  Leon  Bibb,  Cone 
Ballroom,  Elliott  Hall,  8:30  p.m. 

27  WADE  R.  BROWN  RECITAL 
SERIES:  Paul  Hickfang,  baritone. 
Recital  Hall,  Music  Building,  8  p.m. 


NOVEMBER 


1-30  ART:  Francis  Speight,  Elliott  Hall. 

4  RUSSIAN  FILM:  "Peter  the  First," 
Part  II.  Libraiy  Lecture  Hall,  4  and 
7:1.5  p.m. 

5-26  ART:  Japanese  Prints  from  North 
Carolina  Museum  of  Art,  Weather- 
spoon  Gallery. 

5  JUNIOR  SHOW,  Aycock  Auditor- 
ium, 7:.30  p.m. 

5  ILLUSTRATED  LECTURE:  Wal- 
ter H.  Berlet,  "Northwest  to  Alaska," 
Piedmont  Bird  Club,  Library  Lec- 
tiue Hall,  8  p.m. 

6  WADE  R.  BROWN  RECITAL 
SERIES:  Daniel  Ericourt,  pianist, 
Aycock  Auditf)rium,  8  p.m. 

7  ELLIOTT  HALL  BALL,  Cone  Ball- 
room,  Elliott   Hall,   8:30  p.m. 

10  CONCERT:  Little  Orchestra,  8  p.m. 

11  ALUMNAE     BENEFIT    BRIDGE, 
Cone  Ballroom,  Elliott  Hall,  8  p.m. 

13  MUSICALE:    Mu   Phi   Epsilon,   Re- 
cital Hall,  Music  Building,  8:30  p.m. 

13-14  PIXIE  PLAYHOUSE:  "Beauty  and 
the  Beast,"  Aycock  Auditorium,  4 
and  7:30  p.m.  (Friday),  10:30,  1:.30 
and   3:30   (Saturday). 

1.5-16  FALL  CONFERENCE:  North  Car- 
olina Music  Educators,  Aycock  Aud- 
itorium. 
IS  ALUMNI   LECTURES:    Dr.    Roger 
Shattuck,  Elliott  Hall,  8  p.m. 

18-22  PIXIE  PLAYHOUSE:  State  Tour. 


20-21  UNIVERSITY  OPEN  THEATRE:  ] 
Menotti's  "The  Medium,  "  Recital  j 
Hall,  Music  Building,  8:30  p.m.  I 
22  CONCERT:  University  Sinfonia,  1 
Recital  Hall,  Music  Building,  8:30 
p.m.  J 

25-29  Thanksgiving  Holidays.  •] 


DECEMBER 


2-  3  NATURAL     SCIENCE     FORUM: 
Dr.  Joseph  Shea,  Apollo  Spacecraft 
Program. 
4  GRADUATE      RECITAL:      Nancy 
Ferrell,   piano.   Recital   Hall,   Music 
Building,  8  p.m. 
6  CONCERT:  Glee  Club,  Elliott  Hall, 
7  p.m. 
6-18  ART:   Christmas  Print  Fair,  Wcath- 
erspoon  Galler>'. 
9  RUSSIAN  FILM:  "Eugene  Onegin," 
Libraiy   Lecture    Hall,   4   and   7:15 
p.m. 
10  CHRISTMAS  PARTY:  Faculty-staff 
children.  Game  Room,  Elliott  Hall, 
4  p.m. 
10-12  MUSICAL    THEATRE:    "My    Fair 
Lady,"  Theatre  of  UNC-G,  Aycock 
Auditorium,  8:30  p.m. 

12  CHRISTMAS   DANCE:   Cone  Ball- 
room, Elliott  Hall,  8:30  p.m. 

13  CHRISTMAS  CONCERT:  Univers- 
ity Choir,  Aycock  Auditorium,  3  p.m. 

18  Christmas  Holidays  begin,  I  p.m. 


JANUARY 


4-25  ART:   Maholy-Nagy,  Elliott  Hall. 
4  Instruction  Resumes,  8  a.m. 
14-15  DRAMA:     Laboratory     Theatre     of 
UNC-G,    Aycock    Auditorium,    8:30 
p.m. 
16  CONCERT:    Cincinnati    Symphon>-, 
Greensboro  Civic  Music  Association, 
Aycock  Auditorium,  8:30  p.m. 
19  CONCERT:  Little  Orchestra,  8  p.m.