Library of
The University of North Carolina
COLLECTION OF
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VOL. X, No. 9
JUNE, 1922
Alumni Review
The University of North Carolina
PINEV PROSPECT
ALUMNI DAY FEATURES COMMENCEMENT
SENATOR GLASS SPEAKS TO THE GRADUATES
ALUMNAE HOLD REUNION BANQUET
TRUSTEES PLAN FOUR-YEAR MEDICAL SCHOOL
PHARMACISTS HAVE GALA OCCASION
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A large, up-to-date banking institution
privileged to be of State-wide service,
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of North Carolina, its faculty, student-
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their banking matters.
JULIAN S. CARR, President
W. J. HOLLOWAY, Vice-President
CLAIBORN M. CARR, Vice-President
SOUTHGATE JONES, Cashier
W. J. BROGDEN, Attorney
The Trust Department
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By means of an Endowment Insurance Policy*? The volume
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CAPITAL $1,000,000.00
Walter Murphy, '!)2, Presidi nt
D. L. Grant. '21, Secretary
A Call to Alumni Service
Fellow Alumni :
As a tree is judged by its fruit, so is the University
judged by its alumni. The strength, power, influence
and rank of any institution is graded by its product
— its alumni. To-day I am making an appeal to the
most loyal body of men in the country, the alumni of
the University of North Carolina. An appeal which
is based upon the knowledge of your loyalty and de-
votion to Alma Mater. I am asking for the hearty co-
operation anil loyal, unselfish support of each of
you in making the effort to help build the University
into the finest, best and most respected institution of
learning on earth. An institution which in its in-
fluence and sphere of action and achievement will
reach into the lives and homes, hearts and hopes of
every man, woman and child in North Carolina. A
center of learning which will be the pride of the
State and the controlling power and basic influence
in making our State the finest commonwealth of the
Union and its people a contented, educated and happy
democracy. — Walter Murphy, '92.
The University produces nun. These men in turn
produce a greater University than that which produced
them. Thus, an unending cycle enlarging, enriching
and deepening the lives of both the University and
her alumni at its every revolution.
Ten thousand of us have been giving unstinted
support to our alma mater with only the urge of a
profound devotion. But there has inevitably been lost
motion, however loyal we may have been. There has
been a lack of concerted effort.
Public service, accomplished through fine men, is
the first and great mission of every educational insti-
tution. Our alumni group is the connective between
the University and the public. If we are to enable
the University to continue to serve the State and its
people in strains that are in keeping with its century
and a quarter of loyal service, then there must be no
lost motion. There must be a channel through which
the little loyalties of each of us can be expressed.
And so the call today is to the ten thousand men
whose mecca is Chapel Hill, whose love is for the
University, and whose passion is for a greater service
to North Carolina, to come together in a concerted
effort, allowing the loyalty and devotion of each of
us, however small and seemingly unimportant when
left alone, to mingle into a veritable torrent thai .ill
of us together shall turn back into the University of
North Carolina enabling it to maintain its high pres-
tige in the nation, and to turn out year by year gener-
ations of greater and greater men. — D. L. Grant. '21.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Volume X
JUNE, 1922
Number 9
OPINION AND COMMENT
The 127th Commencement
The 127th commencement has gone down in his-
tory— the sort of history that should cheer every
alumnus and spell greater things for Alma Mater and
the State which she serves.
Just what the record contains may be hazy in the
minds of some, but certain facts stand out prominent-
ly. (1) The largest number of graduates (192) ever
sent out into the life of the State marched out of
Memorial ball with their diplomas on June 14. (2)
The note of sincerity in baccalaureate sermon and
address has rarely sounded clearer than in the utter-
ances of Lacy and Glass, the commencement speakers.
(3) Never has there been more unity of purpose on
the part of faculty, trustees, and alumni to make the
University a great commanding power among the in-
stitutions of higher learning. (4) And never have
alumni who left home and office and pressing engage-
ments to revisit the Hill spent a happier day than
Alumni Day, June 13. Time may have been when
13 was an unlucky number, but this time the alumnus
played in hard luck who stayed at home rather than
the one who made the pilgrimage back to the Hill
DDD
Alumni Day
Elsewhere the story of Alumni Day is told in glow-
ing fashion. But the editor cannot pass the day by
without sa,ying one word about it, namely, that in his
experience of twenty-two years, it was the up-stand-
ing, out-standing, top-notcher of its kind. The class
of '21, skilled in making it short and snappy, spilled
the pep all around. Classes like '97 and '02, with
the coeds and pharmacists, came back in landslide
numbers. Colonel Cox, presiding genius, kept the
wheels turning in the direction of SOMEWHERE!
The menu servers spread a peach of an alumni ban-
quet unmarred by long-winded speech-making. Prank
Winston, conductor par excellence of class reunions,
and Frank Graham, generalissimo of stunts on the
athletic field, were mirth-providers of the right sort.
Marshal "Bob" Hanes and Acting-Secretary Rankin,
handy men with the lubricating can. kept the whole
program perfectly oiled. And the reception on the
lawn at twilight, the reunion banquets from 7 to 9,
and the performance of the Playmakers from 9 to
11, filled out a day fit for a king.
But the finest thing of nil was the getting together
of the group into a welded, fighting organization. A
constitution that will work was adopted. A president
and a secretary who will lead the Association to finer
aehivement were elected, and a command, clear-ring-
ing and compelling, was issued — alumni, forward !
DDD
Your New Officers
Walter Murphy, '92, president; C. L. Weill, '07,
first vice-president ; R, II. Wright, '97, second vicf-
president ; Dan Grant, '21, secretary — there, fellow
alumni, are the officers of your choice for 1922-23.
We do not know how they look to you, but to us
they are of the real hand-picked variety. "Pete"
Murphy has a record of thirty years of brilliant
service to Alma Mater. "Charlie" Weill, as presi-
dent of the Chamber of Commerce of Greensboro in
1920-21, was a wheel-horse in the higher educational
campaign of 1921. "Bob" Wright, captain of the
varsity in '96, begins a second quarter of a century
of service to Carolina and the State. "Dan" Grant,
editor of the Tar Heel, 1920-21, student leader, inter-
collegiate debater, director of the campaign for stu-
dents throughout the State in 1921 and 1922, cherisher
of the spirit of Alma Mater and visualizer of her
future, dedicates himself to her service and calls upon
you to a man to rally to her cause.
There they are, a splendid quartet of leaders. And
leadership, fellowT alumni, if successful, means, in this
instance, ten thousand united, purposeful followers !
DDD
Alumni Program
Although no formal alumni program has been an-
nounced for the coming year, it is abundantly evi-
dent that the new administration of the Alumni
Association will put its hand to at least three dis-
tinctive undertakings.
First and foremost of these is the erection of the
Graham Memorial building. Plans are now being
drawn for the building and $50,000 in additional sub-
scriptions is immediately needed together with the
unpaid amounts already subscribed, to insure the
construction of the first unit.
The second major undertaking is the building of
the new hotel. From 1000 to 1500 alumni will be
asked to contribute a minimum of $100 to insure
membership in the club feature of the program,
thereby securing from $100,000 to $150,000 to put
into the building.
The material enlargement of the Alumni Loyalty
Fund constitutes a third objective. Insurance poli-
cies written in the interest of the fund will be en-
couraged, and the alumni group as a whole will be
called on to contribute to this splendid cause.
□ □□
Keeping Up
All of which calls for another word. The Trustees,
particularly through their Building Committee which
has met for da.vs and days each month in projecting
the building program, have set a fine example in sus-
tained thought and application to duty. The admin-
istration and facidty, in similar way, have resolutely
met the thousand problems whether educational or
otherwise, which have confronted them. The student
body, subjected in 1918 to the rigors of the S. A. T. C,
and cramped since then almost beyond endurance
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
247
through sheer lack of physical quarters, has main-
tained and passed on to the succeeding classes the
fine ideals of the University. In putting their hands
to the tasks enumerated in the preceding paragraphs,
the alumni, the fourth constituent part of the Uni-
versity, have shown their determination to keep up
with the three other members and thereby do their
full part iu supplementing and enriching the life of
the campus.
□ □□
Beautifying the Grounds
Another undertaking which enlisted the interest of
the alumni during commencement was the beautifica-
tion of the University grounds. At the meeting of
the Alumni Association Dr. W. II. Atkinson, of
Washington, spoke for the appointment of a perma-
nent committee to have charge of the matter, and at
the reunion meeting of at least one of the classes —
'97, we believe — the matter received further consid-
ration.
Unquestionably Carolina has a campus of unusual
natural beauty. It has also been demonstrated that
artistic planting and careful attention to shrubs and
walkways yield beautiful results as in the case of the
Aboretum. We recommend the suggestion most
heartily anil trust that out of it, through alumni
assistance, will emerge what Dr. Atkinson happily
termed the "campus beautiful."
□ □□
Trees and Flowers and Running Brooks
In this connection, however, we have one further
suggestion — let the beautification take the form of
trees and flowers and running brooks, or, in lieu of
running brooks, beautiful walks. Somehow or other
there is a "failing" on the part of a lot of us for
monuments or seats or other formal, cold inanimate
things. These, doubtless, have their place, but they
can well afford to follow after the trees and flowers
and walkways have been provided.
DDD
Gifts During the Year
From time to time, The Review has mentioned
various gifts received during the year. Among the
donations we recall at this moment are : the Graham
Kenan Foundation in Philosophy; the gift of John
Sprunt Hill of the hotel site and $10,000 in money
to advance the hotel project ; the gift of $1000 by the
same person to continue- the upbuilding of the North
Carolina collection of the Library ; gifts of files of
North Carolina papers from Dr. James Sprunt, Mrs.
Henry A. London, W. W. Scott; gifts of manu-
scripts, books, and papers from J. A. Warren,
Mrs. Julia Graves, James C. Taylor; the establish-
ment of the Marvin Carr Medal by Gen. J. .S. Can-:
the addition of $1000 by the class of 1912 to the
Alumni Loyalty Fund; the presentation of a portrait
of President Graham to the Di Society by a group of
alumni under the leadership of Archibald Henderson,
George Stephens, lieu Cone and C. -J. Williams, etc,
etc. Unfortunately The Review does not have the
complete list at hand. But it makes appreciative
mention here of the thoughtfulness which prompted
these and all the other gifts received.
This it does and something more. It stops long
enough to commend the people, who, while still liv-
ing, take from their possessions to make Carolina to
abound in those things which enrich the lives of the
students who pass this way.
The record, we think, is a fine one. But we still
wait to chalk up the name of the alumnus or friend
who will put a real piano in Gerrard Hall, or the
proper sort of pipe organ in Memorial Hall, or buy
the second collection of musical works or the first
collection of colored prints for the Library, or give
any one of the fifty or hundred or thousand other
things of which the campus is today in need.
The other day we heard that President Burton, of
Michigan, had urgent need for $5000 to underwrite
some special program on the Michigan campus. Not
having it in hand, he turned to his radio battery and
sent out the word to the alumni, with the result that
in three minutes some alumnus who happened to be
listening in, said that the check for the amount de-
sired would reach the University on the morning mail.
Something like that is what we have in mind.
DDD
Ten Years of The Review
With this issue The Review completes its tenth
year.
If, at the end of these ten years, The Review may
say one word about itself, it is this: In spite of all
our faults and handicaps here, your solid support,
fellow alumni, has put The Review in a position to
be adjudged "among the foremost alumni journals
in the country. "
A second word is this. For all our faults, we know
that for the ten years, day in and out, we have
striven for the unity of alumni activity, for the
evolving of an alumni program, for the bringing into
existence, through the informed support of Carolina
men, a greater, finer University. We have labored
that we might be the common rallying point from
which all the forward-looking sons and daughters of
Alma Mater should go forth to do battle in her name.
Although the pioneer alumni journal among the
universities of the South, The Review has much
pioneering yet to do. Without your continued solid
support, it will fail in its great responsibility to you
and the University. Its answer to the challenging de-
cades ahead rests in no uncertain quarter. It rests
with you !
DDD
About Pictures and Things
There is another word we wish to say before we
turn to the new decade in which your support of us
is going to lie tiuer and more intelligent than in the
past. It is a word about the members of our staff.
As we look forward to the greater challenge ahead,
we are thinking of those members of the editorial
staff who, during the ten years passed, whether at
home, in camp, on the battle's front, always, with the
thought of binding Alma .Mater and her sons more
closely into one greal common service, have done their
editorial hit.
And at this particular moment we are thinking of
that silent member of the stall' who, in the ten years,
lias probably not written ten printed lines, but whose
annual giving in that time for pictures of campus
scenes to stir and warm your hearts — his check for
$100 for this purpose in 1921-22 now lies before us
— runs well nigh up to four figures!
248
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
To these men, for their unceasing, fine endeavor,
for their unfailing, high devotion to the cause both
yours and ours, we say for you and us — here's to
them !
□ □□
Two Fine Agencies for Enhancing
the University's Reputation Established
Two matters in which all friends of the University
can justly take pride are the incorporation of the
University of North Carolina Press and the establish-
ment of The North Carolina Law Review. Both
undertakings, descriptions of which are to be found
elsewhere in this issue, have long been needed, both
should receive the heartiest support of the alumni,
and should go far to enhance the scholarly reputation
of the University.
DDD
The Year in Athletics
Athletically, 1921-22 has been a most unusual year
for Carolina. Championships in basketball, baseball,
and tennis have been splendidly won, and, barring the
loss of the game to A. & E., the football record was
of the most satisfying sort.
Viewed in another light, the year has also been
unusual. Never has the campus been thrown into
greater turmoil than at Thanksgiving by the contro-
versy between the University and her ancient rival ;
and rarely has there been more interest shown in the
question of eligibility standards than that recently
aroused by the passage of a rule, later rescinded, by
means of which the faculty hoped to lessen the evils
of summer baseball.
Other distinctive features have been the direction
of all athletic activities by the Petzer brothers; the
entrance of the University into the Southern Con-
ference ; the placing of track athletics on a new basis ;
the resignation of Dr. Charles S. Mangum from the
chairmanship of the faculty committee on athletics
after years of devoted service, and the appointment
of Dr. A. W. Hobbs, of the department of Mathe-
matics, as his successor.
DDD
Do the Trustees Meet Frequently Enough?
Two comments were on the lips of all alumni who
returned for commencement : The first expressing
amazement at the vastness of the change wrought in
the physical aspect of the campus ; the second express-
ing commendation of the Building Committee through
which the change had been effected.
A third comment, or rather question, raised fre-
quently enough to justify consideration here, was Do
the Trustees Meet Frequently Enough? The thought
lying back of the question is easily discernible.
Prom 1850 to 1900 two meetings a year were cer-
tainly enough to take care of an institution which
erected one building, say, in every ten years. Pos-
sibly two meetings annually sufficed during the period
1900 to 1920 when one building a year, approxi-
mately, was projected.
But what about an institution that spends from
$600,000 to $700,000 annually for maintenance, draws
plans for seven new buildings in a biennium, and at
the same time witnesses the projection of two churches
and the Graham Memorial Building on its front, of
another church on its flank, and of a 40-room hotel
at the west gate of the campus ?
Here, it would seem to many, is a situation which
rightly demands more frequent meetings of the direc-
torate of the institution, and certainly a more defi-
nite contact (such as the Building Committee has)
which can only be acquired by actual presence on
the campus.
It isn't our question, but we recognize it as a good
one and pass it on !
DDD
L. A. Williams Goes to California
It is with sincere regret that The Review records
the resignation of Dr. L. A. Williams, professor of
School Administration in the School of Education
since 1913, who goes to the University of California
in September to fill a like position in that institution.
During the ten years of his stay in Chapel Hill, Pro-
fessor Williams has contributed to the development
of the School of Education and the Summer School,
has promoted various activities in the Division of
Extension, has been a constant contributor to the
High iSchool Journal, and has made a number of
important surveys of educational situations in North
Carolina communities. Altogether his service has
been of the most constructive sort, and the University
and the teaching profession of North Carolina will
suffer a distinct loss in his going.
DDD
Fallen on the Foreign Field
In the death of William Hoke Ramsaur, '10, the
University has lost a noble son, the North American
Student Movement a crusading volunteer, and the
Christian civilization of the west a torch bearer who
counted it an opportunity to lay down his life among
the black folk of Africa. Hoke Ramsaur came to the
University from China Grove in 1906. He was a boy
of character, spirit, and shining face, marked from
the beginning for spiritual heroism. As president of
the University Y. M. C. A., as general secretary at
Alabama, as secretary of the North American Student
Volunteer Movement, as ordained Episcopal clergy-
man in a Philadelphia mission center, and as mis-
sionary to Africa, Hoke Ramsaur had compressed
noble and intense service within the years of his de-
voted youth. In him the University and religion
have been extended and vindicated in heroic propor-
tions. The class of 1910 has lost a man honored and
loved among all who knew him.
DDD
Class Records to the Fore
That a finer alumni enthusiasm is moving among
the classes and groups which return to the University
for Alumni Day, that the bond between former class-
mates here under the oaks is the sort of thing which
the alumni show an increasing desire to strengthen
and intensify, is strikingly evidenced in the Record
of the Class of 1902, issued by Louis Graves, secretary
of the class, and the Handbook of Women Students
in the University of North Carolina, 1897-1922, is-
sued by Miss Louise Venable, '20, chairman of the
reunion committee of the Woman's Association of
the University.
Both publications are full of the sort of information
that brings to mind days on the campus in former
years, and they add definitely to the permanent in-
formation which the University has of these two
bodies of honored sons and daughters.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
249
ALUMNI DAY FEATURES COMMENCEMENT
Certain high standard events mark every com-
mencement such as President Chase's report of the
year's work, Professor Horace Williams' farewell to
the seniors, Parson Moss' vesper valedictory under
the oaks, and Dr. Archibald Henderson's presenta-
tions for honorary degrees. The commencement of
1922 is marked off with distinction by virtue not only
of these but also because of Dr. Ben Lacy's fighting
baccalaureate, the Honorable Carter Glass' clear ex-
position of the Federal Reserve, Judge Winston's
emergent wit, Jack Apple's keenly humorous
class statistics, Miss Nina Cooper's triumphant
prophecjr, Biwant Brown's Mangum Oration and
victorious plea for the faith and idealism of the shat-
tered Wilson and the lamented Graham, the trustees'
resolution to build a soldier memorial hospital and
four-year medical college at Chapel Hill, the quarter
of a century anniversary reunions of women and
pharmacists, and most of all by an Alumni Day that
featured commencement with a bang.
Tuesday, June 13th, the alumni took over the Uni-
versity. Prom the morning moment when Chief
Marshal Robert M. Hanes, '12, gathered the cheer-
ing, singing, shouting reunion classes into Gerrard
Hall for the general alumni meeting and demonstra-
tion right on through reunion responses, alumni
luncheon, games, stunts, reception, and banquets, until
the curtain fell on the last delightful scene in "Dog-
wood Bushes," the alumni stirred the University with
the livest day of the year.
President Cox Keynotes and President Chase
Reports
The general alumni meeting was directed with dig-
nity, grace and despatch by President Albert L. Cox,
who in his presidential address struck the alumni key-
note of optimism and progress. President Chase in
his clear-cut annual report summarized the year's
building achievements: fourteen dwelling houses,
railroad extension from Carrboro to the new build-
ings, Memorial Hall converted into a usable and
adequate auditorium, power plant improved, new
class athletic field, four new dormitories almost com-
pleted, history building begun, plans finished for
language and law buildings. "But," he continued,
"this is just the beginning. Our hands must not
slacken nor our spirit fail until the task is done.
"It is not only sound business, ' ' he said, ' ' but it is
essential if the University is to keep abreast of the
demands upon it. This year, during the regular ses-
sion, our enrollment has been 1,688. This growth has
been steady since the low-water mark of 1917-1918,
when, because of the war, only 855 students were in
attendance. The University is double its size in
1917-1918.
"There are no indications whatever that the growth
is to be checked. You need only recall how the high
schools in your own communities are growing, how
they are crowded, needing expansion, to realize that
the sources of supply are steadily increasing. Check
the increase in your own high school, multiply that by
several hundred, and you will realize something of
the task we are up against."
President Chase told of the plan to start work soon
upon the Graham Memorial building, which is to be a
student center. Something over $100,000 has been
collected and pledged for this, but it is necessary to
raise $50,000 more.
"If you saw here, day by day, as some of us see,
what such a center would mean to the place," the
speaker said, "in terms of friendship and unity and
social life, I believe every man of you would go as
deep in his pocket as he possibly could to make this
building adequate to its purpose.
Faculty to Aid Freshmen
"As for personal contacts of a somewhat more
systematic sort, we are taking an important step next
fall, in installing a system of faculty counsellors for
freshmen. 1 need not remind you how critical is a
man's first year in college, nor what a readjustment
it often involves. A plan looking to the division of
the freshman class into small groups, each with a
counsellor on the faculty, a man who will maintain in-
timate human relationships with his group, was pre-
sented to the faculty the other day, and already
enough volunteers have agreed to undertake the work
to insure its success for next year. The plan differs
in several respects from that tried several years ago,
and I am confident will produce valuable results.
"Again, a great deal of hard thinking has gone this
year into the question of revising our whole educa-
tional plan, in ways that will send out the student
thoroughly equipped to face the new and more com-
plex life of today and tomorrow. Such work takes
long and patient thought, but I do want you to know
that we are all alive to what after all is the center
and core of our responsibility, and that thinking about
educational problems is going forward systematically
and in a promising way."
L. R. Wilson Reports on Memorial Building
Dr. L. R. Wilson, reporting for the committee on
the Graham Memorial Building, said that the I'ni-
versity Inn site had been chosen as the place for the
building, that $123,000 had been subscribed and of
this $63,000 collected, that one unit of the building
was to be erected now at a cost of $150,000, and other
units to be added as need developed. Dr. Wilson
said the people had magnificently come to the sup-
port of the University, that the students had bridged
over the breakdown between war and peace, and that
the building of a student center building was now
the distinct responsibility to be coveted by the alumni.
Miss Mary Henderson Responds for Women
For the alumnae returned to celebrate the twenty-
fifth year since women were admitted into the Uni-
versity, .Miss .Mary Henderson of Salisbury pledged
their loyalty and affection for alma mater. In their
name and in the name of the increasing number of
women students she called for a worthy woman's
building. Miss Henderson's charm of address and
wit, and her stories of the experiences of women siu-
deiits here made the hit of the general alumni meet
ing.
I. W. Rose Represents the Pharmacists
For the alumni of the Pharmacy School, eighty -five
of whom were back to celebrate the twenty-fifth anni-
250
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
versary of the founding of the department of Phar-
macy, I. W. Rose, '06, president of the State Phar-
maceutical Association, brought greetings to the Uni-
versity and the general alumni on the occasion of the
first reunion of the Pharmacy alumni.
New Officers
For the committee on official election returns
H. M. Robins reported the results as follows: Presi-
dent, Walter Murphy, '92 ; first vice-president,
Charles L. Weill, '07 ; second vice-president, Robert
H. Wright, '97. President Cox introduced the offi-
cers-elect amid great applause.
Charles L. Weill for the committee appointed to
choose a full-time general secretary reported the
nomination of Daniel L. Grant, '21, who was
immediately elected by acclamation. In answer to
an enthusiastic demonstration led by the class of 1921,
Mr. Grant made a happy address of acceptance. The
manner of his acceptance of the responsibility vouch-
safes the alumni's acceptance of him.
Report on the War Memorial
At the call of Chairman Joseplms Daniels and in
the absence of Dr. Hamilton, Louis Graves reported
for the committee on the war memorial to the Univer-
sity men who died in service during the world war,
that the committee recommended a memorial tablet, a
memorial record, and a memorial grove.
Other important business transacted was the adop-
tion of the new constitution and the passage of a
resolution eloquently proposed by Dr. Wade Atkin-
son of Washington (whose son graduated with the
class of 1922) that a committee be appointed and an
endowment be raised for permanent beautification of
the campus. President Cox appointed on this com-
mittee Dr. Wade H. Atkinson, of Washington, D. C. ;
A. H. Patterson, of Chapel Hill ; and Lionel Weil, of
Goldsboro.
Class Reunions
At this point President Cox called to the chair
Judge Francis D. Winston, presider extraordinary
and introducer plenipotentiary. Judge Winston was
never happier and never wittier as he snapped the
meeting along and moved from class to class and
speaker to speaker who in quick succession made
talks now serious, now humorous, and now eloquent,
but all shot through with fighting loyalty and affec-
tion. Bobbitt, '21, winner of the Mangum Medal last
commencement for his masterly oration, ' ' Edward K.
Graham, Builder of the New University", came from
his Charlotte law office to make Gerrard Hall ring
again with words that plighted the faith of the class
of 1921. S. I. Parker, '17, whose reckless Avounds
won the D. S. C. in the Argonne Forest, voiced in
simple words the spirit of the University men who
left class room for training camp. Fred Drane spoke
for the class of 1912 and incidentally brought cheer-
ing news from a University mission front in Central
Alaska. John Johnston Parker, '07, whom Judge
Winston introduced as a man who could be intro-
duced to any North Carolina audience without com-
ment and who could speak without the five-minute
limit, in eloquent words paid tribute to the spirit of
the University and its influence in North Carolina.
R. R. Williams, '02, varsity football player, intercol-
legiate debater, overseas captain, and speaker in the
citizens mass meeting before the appropriations com-
mittee on behalf of state institutions last March ;
David Baird Smith, '97, first intercollegiate debater
to represent the University and brilliant speaker;
Walter Murphy, '92, of that famous eleven whose
record of five games and no substitutes in one week
is unbroken on the American continent, champion
of the University, state institutions, and public edu-
cation at all times and against all comers; Charles
Worth, '82, known in college and the forty years since
The Class of 1862 Holds Its Sixtieth Year Reunion
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
251
as a modest man of good deeds; and Major T. S.
Webb, '62, reported killed in the battle of Shiloh and
to whom a memorial tablet now stands in Memorial
Hall — all these men responded for their classes and
made the reunion gathering one of the feature occa-
sions of a feature day.
The Class of 1862
The boys of 1862 who rushed from a peaceful Uni-
versity retreat into the thick of the greatest war that
ever shook the western world were the constant pride
of the men of 1922. When they came into Gerrard
Hall and were ushered to the platform by Chief
Alumni Marshal Han.es, the alumni body rose as one
man and made the old hall shake with the thunder of
their cheering tribute of honor to these men who by
their valor made the name of the Confederate soldier
forever honored among brave men and whose re-
demption of a shattered civilization is today an ex-
ample and a challenge to a world broken and in ruins.
Besides Major Webb, Col. W. B. Fort of the Con-
federate Navy, and Hon. Sylvester Hassell, a pioneer
educator in the resurrection of the south, made ad-
dresses, reminiscent and advisory.
The Alumni Luncheon
The Alumni Luncheon was attended by a crowd
that taxed the hall. It went off with delightful de-
spatch. Col. Cox was at his best in keeping things
moving. Short talks compressed with the philosophy
of that old Roman "Sawney Webb." the connotations
of character in the voice and words of J. C. B. Ehring-
haus ; the ringing tribute of Major and Solicitor-elect
L. P. McLendon to Francis Preston Venable, inventor
of the Bunsen Burner and promoter of science,
scholarship, and sound learning as the solid founda-
tions on which President Graham carried the Uni-
versity to the people; and the fighting words of two
fighting men, R. R. Williams and Walter Murphy, all
junctured in a luncheon enjoyable for its compact
talks, its efficient service, and its pleasing music.
The talk of "Sawney" Webb caught the alumni. His
character, service, and thought spoke to them as they
had spoken to generations of youth whom he trained
and inspired for their work of building a great new
civilization beyond the Appalachians. "You talk of
present day progress," he said, "but you'll find that
the foundation is laid in one age and the superstruc-
ture comes at a later time. When I was here in col-
lege they didn't teach us to hear speeches in Pitts-
burgh and Chicago but they tuned our minds to the
cadences of Homer and Virgil, and bless the memory
of the old gentlemen who turned our minds to loga-
rithms and parabolas. In that day they laid the
foundations for this splendid progress. No building,
no material progress can ever substitute for genuine
manhood and the University gave men in those days
as it must today."
Enter Emerson Field
The alumni then marched to Emerson Field.
Three ball games were played: 1921 vs 1917; 1912
vs 1902; 1922 vs faculty. Bob Winston knocked a
home run, Joe Cheshire caught three flies in right
field, Ivey Lewis relieved "Railroad" Williams but
the slaughter by '12 continued, and Paul Green pitch-
ed with both hands, terrible with either. But the
games lively as they went, were merely the racks on
which were hung the events and stunts of the after-
noon. Umpire Xathan, 300 pounds plus, was der-
ricked to give place to an umpire who was more cir-
cumspect with his telescopes. But the new uraps
got in bad with t lie class of 1922 who bodily knocked
his props from under him while George Watts Hill
The Class of 1892 Celebrates Its Thirtieth Year Reunion
252
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
majestically drove upon the field with a two-horse
hearse to encompass what remained of him.
Standing on the hearse and facing the two stands
Garland Porter delivered such a classic funeral ora-
tion over the late umpire that Mark Antony was
moved to wish that Julius Caesar had been a real
umpire instead of a mere would-be emperor. Cy
Thompson was rushed on the field as emergency wia-
pire on a step-ladder de luxe.
The Black Brigade
Out of the woods and behind the hedge fence to
the south emerged a dark cloud that soon strung out
in a single file march of negroes long known and
loved by University men. Around the field they
swung, cadenced to the band that welcomed them
across. The three wagons which led the procession
drew up alongside, the marchers advanced in perfect
step carrying broom, basket, tray, shoes, axe, shovel,
saw, wheelbarrow, scythe, and other signs of trade
and vocation. The proud black line formed a semi-
circle from stand to stand. The line opened and into
its center came the triumphant truck bearing a seri-
ous and a familiar figure. It was a colored man
known to the large body of the alumni present who
all became silent and still in tribute to him. He was
presented in these words to Col. Albert L. Cox, Presi-
dent of the Alumni Association, who had also
mounted the large truck for the presentation occasion.
"Mr. President, we have the honor to present a
dusky son of the Old South and a loyal janitor of the
Old East and West, a man known and loved
by more alumni than any colored man in North Caro-
lina. We present him in the name of the long line
of University men whose clothes he washed, whose
rooms he swept, whose water he brought, and whose
sleep he broke. Though he waked us, yet have we
loved him. Greater love have no men than this that
they love the man who waked them on wintry morn-
ings. Bill McDade has waked more white men than
any colored man in the history of North Carolina.
He has waked more sons of the University than any
other man save the bugle boys who sounded their
reveilles to sleeping armies. Never fear, Bill, the
bugle times of war have gone and in these piping
times of peace your record as the champion waker of
University men will remain unbroken until Gabriel
blows his horn and wakes a sleeping world for the
great tomorrow.
"Here today, Mr. President, in the presence of the
sheltered sun to whose setting he is resigned without
quitting, with his hand on the job but with his faithful
face set toward waking on the morrow morn, we pre-
sent him by virtue of his honesty, his courtesy, and
his loyalty as a Carolina man, for the honorary de-
gree of broom master-of-arts, honored by his own folk,
loved by Carolina folk— Bill McDade.'"
President Cox thereupon with solemn graciousness
inducted Bill into the noble order of the basket and
presented him with the marks of the knighthood of
the broom. Bill, with tears streaming down his face,
in a few deeply grateful words spoke the loyalty and
personal affection of a life for more than forty years
devoted to his Universiy boys. The gates opened and
the black men passed out to do better their day's
work for this recognition of their part and their
worth.
The Chariot Race
To the marshalling of Bob Hanes ten chariots gath-
ered and the charioteers came forth into the arena.
The chariots were the mud scrapers from the new
athletic field. The spirited steeds were most muley
C. L. Weill, First Vice-President
R. H. Wright, Second Vice-President
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
253
The Class of 1902 at Its Big Twenty-Year Come-Back
The Class of 1897 Celebrates Its Quarter-Century Reunion
^&
Pharmacy Alumni of Classes Ranging from 1897 to 1922 Stage a Great Celebration
254
THt ALUMNI REVIEW
mules. The charioteers were volunteers from the
classes from 1922 to 1862—1862 by proxy, Fron-
eberger '23, who soon proved that he is a mule driver
as well as a cheer leader. In the mad race across
the field and back, Wiley Hassell Mann Pittman,
'07, who still holds the Carolina record in the shot
put, put his team of mules across in record time.
Crown the winners: Pittman!!! Barker!! Fron-
eberger! (by courtesy of the class of 1862).
Then the Rest
The class of 1902 adjourned a ball game sine die
to have a picture taken. The faculty tied the seniors.
The class of 1921 rushed on the field with its captured
bull, threw a helpless victim astride and raced around
the field in gleeful triumph. Emerson Field gave
way to the faculty reception on the green under Davie
Poplar — may it always be there !
The rest of the day belongs to the class banquets,
the mammoth barbecue of Dean Howell's to the
Pharmacy alumni, the Pharmacy banquet at the
Cafeteria pepped along by Toast-master Norman
Lynch, and the women's banquet celebrating the
twenty-fifth year since Mary MacRae of Fayetteville
entered the University of North Carolina, the Hinton
James of the new era. Mary MacRae, now Mrs. R.
L. Gray, still the record pupil of the Fayetteville
schools, was toastmaster and laughmaster of the even-
ing. Talks were also made by Mrs. M. H. Stacy,
adviser of women, Miss Adeline Denham, Miss Mary
Henderson and Miss Kathrine Robinson. A treasur-
ed souvenir of the quarter of a century anniversary of
woman's entrance into the University is a booklet
prepared by Miss Louise Venable, chairman of the
committee, of all the names, addresses, and records
of women who have attended the University. The
keynote of the reunion was the need of a woman's
building. Already it is rising from the hearts of the
people.
Curtain Fall
Banquets over, then the Carolina Folk-plays and
community chorus by which a notable Alumni Day
made a worthy and delightful exit into commence-
ment history.
At twilight, under the Davie Poplar, Rev. W. D.
Moss, of the Presbyterian church, conducted the final
vesper service of the year.
B. R. LACY, JR., PREACHES BACCALAUREATE
SERMON
Injecting the same youthful vigor and enthusiasm
into his baccalaureate .sermon which he injected into
his connection with the 113th Field Artillery in
France, where he won the title of "Fighting Parson,"
Rev. B. R. Lacy, Jr., of the Central Presbyterian
Church of Atlanta, 6a., told the capped and gowned
candidates for degrees at the 127th commencement
of the University how to steer a successful course
through the deep water of spiritual unrest.
Taking for his text the statement of Paul, "This
one thing I do, forgetting those things which are be-
hind and reaching forth unto those things which are
before, I press toward the mark of the prize of the
high calling of God in Christ Jesus," Mr. Lacy called
upon the members of the class to take their places
among those who follow the Christ and advance His
kingdom however hard the fight might prove. Mr.
Lacy was introduced by President Chase, and the
invocation was offered by Rev. Walter Patten, of the
Methodist church.
CLASS DAY EXERCISES HELD
Calling his classmates together at 9 :30 Monday
morning, June 12, for the final prayers, James
Phipps, president of the class of 1922, set in motion
exercises which were to terminate the class' domi-
nance of the campus and pass on its control to the
members of 1923. Professor Horace Williams was
the speaker and his theme was the passion for truth
and religion.
Following the chapel exercises, President Phipps
delivered his farewell address to the class and Presi-
dent Chase conducted the Mangum oratorical contest
of which Bryant C. Brown, of Jacksonville, was the
wanner. The four members of the class contesting
and their subjects were : Leonard Epstein, of Golds-
boro— "The University and the State"; T. L. War-
ren, of Lenoir — "The Old University and the New";
Bryant C. Brown, of Jacksonville — "A Struggle for
Self Defense"; and Felix A. Grissett, of Lenoir —
"Woodrow Wilson."
At 5 :30 the final exercises were held under the
Davie Poplar. The program consisted of "Class
Statistics," by J. L. Apple; "Class History," by
Felix A. Grissett; "Class Prophecy, " by Miss Nina
Cooper: "Last Will and Testament," by G. B. Por-
ter; "Class Gift," by T. L. Warren. "The pipe of
peace went the rounds for a final smoking; C. U.
Smith, Miss Adeline Denham, C. H. Ashford, How-
ard Holderness, R. G. Koontz, C. L. Moore, and Miss
Mary Yellott were initiated into Phi Beta Kappa ;
and Garland Porter, president of the student body,
lowered the flag, turning the campus over to his suc-
cessor, J. O. Harmon, and the class of '23. At 4
o'clock the class had been the guests of President and
Mrs. Chase at an afternoon reception.
SUMMER SCHOOL HAS BANNER
ENROLLMENT
The thirty-fifth session of the University Summer
School, with Acting-Dean N. W. Walker, of the
School of Education as director, opened on June 20th
with the largest enrollment in its history. At the
close of registration on Monday, the 26th, 1327 stu-
dents were in attendance, of whom more than 200
were registered in the Graduate School. All of the
dormitories on the campus, including B and C recent-
ly finished, are occupied by women, and the town is
running over with men who were not admitted to the
campus. A large faculty is giving instruction and
the work of the School promises to be the most suc-
cessful in its history.
NEW BUILDINGS NAMED
Names for the new buildings now being completed
or under construction were recommended by the
Building Committee and adopted by the Trustees are
as follows : Law building — Manning hall : Language
building — Murphy hall; History and Social Science
building — Saunders hall; Dormitory B — Grimes;
Dormitory C — Manly ; Dormitory D — Mangum ;
Dormitory E — Ruffin. Dormitory B (Grimes) was
used by alumni at commencement and Dormitory C
(Manly) will be in use for the summer School.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
255
SENATOR GLASS SPEAKS TO THE GRADUATES
In an address, admittedly unusual in its subject
matter, but exceedingly informing in its content,
Carter Glass, chairman of the committee on banking
of the House of Representatives during the early part
of Woodrow Wilson's administration, later Secretary
of the United States Treasury, and now a member of
the United States Senate, explained to the 192 men
and women who received their degrees on commence-
ment day, June 14, the way in which the Federal
Reserve system was brought into existence in the
United States, and with a sincerity rarely equaled in
a commencement address, called upon them to ex-
emplify in their lives the high virtues of honesty
and patriotism.
Honorary Degrees Conferred
Dr. Archibald Henderson, chairman of the faculty
committee on public occasions, was spokesman in the
conferring of six honorary degrees. In fitting phrase,
he presented for the degree of doctor of laws Cam-
eron Morrison, Governor of North Carolina ; David
Franklin Houston, Secretary of Agriculture and of
the Treasury under Woodrow Wilson ; William Rob-
ert Webb, headmaster of the Webb School and former
United States Senator from Tennessee ; W. P.
Bynum, chairman of the executive committee of the
American Bar Association ; for honorary doctor of
pharmacy E. V. Zoeller, chairman of the State Board
of Pharmacy; and for doctor of divinity, Charles E.
Maddry, '02, Corresponding Secretary of the State
Board of Missions of the North Carolina State Bap-
tist Convention.
Features of the Day
Other features of the day which made it notable
were a brief address to the graduating class by Gov-
ernor Morrison, the awarding of twenty-eight ad-
vanced degrees by the Graduate School ; the announce-
ment by President Chase of the establishment of the
School of Engineering (consisting of the departments
of Civil and Electrical Engineering) under the direc-
tion of Dean G. M. Braune ; the recommendation by
the Trustees of the establishment at Chapel Hill of a
four-year medical school and memorial hospital; the
donation of the Graves property and $10,000 in cash,
by Mr. John Sprunt Hill, for the erection of a Uni-
versity hotel; and the establishment of the Marvin
Carr medal in Chemistry by General Julian S. Carr.
The exercises were preceded with the usual aca-
demic procession from Alumni building to Memorial
hall, and the invocation was offered by Rev. Walter
Patten of the local Methodist church. At the con-
clusion of Senator Glass' address, President Chase
made the following announcements:
Changes in the Faculty
Dr. George Howe, for three years dean of the College of
Liberal Arts, resigned to devote his full time to the depart-
ment of Latin, lie is succeeded by Dr. .lames Finch Royster,
of the department of English.
Resignations — L. A. Williams, Professor of School Admin
istration; J. II. Mustard, Professor of Electrical Engineering;
II. 15. Anderson, Associate Professor of Pathology; J. B.
Woosley, Assistant Professor of Economics; J. J. Davis, Assist
ant Professor of Romance Languages; N. M. Paull, Assistant
Professor of Drawing; Albert Bachmann, Instructor in Ger-
man; C. D. Beers, Instructor in Zoology; J. 15. Davis, In-
structor in Mathematics; H. G. Baity, Instructor in Mathe-
matics; Carl Weigand, instructor in Music; John II. Brad-
ley, Jr., Instructor in Geology; P. R. Plournoy, Assistant Pro-
fessor of History; G. K. G. Henry, Assistant Professor of
Latin; I. V. Giles, Instructor in Chemistry; II. P. Latshaw,
Instructor in Latin.
Promotions in Kank — Kent J. Brown, from Associate Pro-
fessor of German to full Professor; C. T. Murchison, from
Associate Professor of Business Economics to full Professor.
Leaves of Absence
The following men return on September first from a year 's
leave of absence: H. M. Wagstatf, Professor of History, on
leave on the Kenan Foundation; 11.. II. Staab, Associate Pro-
fessor of Romance Languages.
The following men are recommended for leave of absence
for 1922-1923: G. A. Harrer, Associate Professor of Latin,
leave on the Kenan Foundation, for the purpose of studying
Roman Civilization in Europe; Oliver Towles, Professor of
French, leave on the Kenan Foundation, for the purpose of
studying in France; Kent J. Brown, Associate Professor of
German, for the purpose of studying in Germany; J. B. Linker,
Instructor in Mathematics, for the purpose of studying Mathe-
matics; F. II. Koch, Professor of Dramatic Literature, for
the fall quarter of 192:2-23.
Additions to the Faculty
Robert Ervin Coker, B. S. Ph.D., Professor of Zoology;
Alanon Rex Trabue, A. B. Ph.D., Professor of Education;
Henry Dexter Learned, A. B. Ph.D., Associate Professor of
Romance Languages; Edmund Brown, Jr., A. M. Ph.D., Asso-
ciate Professor of Transportation and Marketing; Floyd Henry
Allport, A. B. Ph.D., Associate Professor of Psychology; Roy
Bowman McKnight, A. B. M. D., Assistant Professor of
Pharmacology; Macon Reed, M. A., Assistant Professor of
Latin; Albert A. Shapiro, A. B. Ph.D., Assistant Professor of
Spanish; Corydon P. Spruill, A. B. B. Litt., Assistant Pro-
fessor of Economics; Ernest T. Browne, Assistant Professor
of Mathematics ; Charles R. Bagley, A. B. A. M. B. Litt.,
Instructor in French; Frederick James Hurley, A. B., In-
structor in Spanish; T. M. McKnight, A. B., Instructor in
Spanish; William B. Harrell, A. B., Instructor in Economics;
Gerald McCarthy, A. B., Instructor in Geology; David L.
Sheldon, Instructor in Music.
Medals, Prizes, and Fellowships
Medals and prizes were awarded as follows:
The William Cain prize in Mathematics, not awarded in
1922; the Eben Alexander prize in Greek, A. F. Raper; the
Early English Text society prize, A. T. Johnson; the (alia
ghan scholarship prize in Law, C. L. Nichols; tho Ledoux fel-
lowship in Chemistry, not awarded at this time; the Kerr
prize m Geology, B. E. Lohr; the Bradham prize in Pharmacy,
Beatrice Averitt; the Hunter Lee Harris medal, Vasuo Take-
tomi; the Ben Smith Preston cup, C. J. Parker, Jr.; the
Julian S. Carr fellowship, C. C. Poindexter; the Burdick
prize in Journalism, B. S. Pickens; the Stauton-Byrd-Mclvin
lion memorial medal in freshman English, J. O. Bailey; tin-
Mildred Williams Buchan scholarship in Philosophy, W. W.
Stout; the William .1. Bryan prize in Political Science, F. M.
Green; the Archibald Henderson prize in Mathematics, M. A.
Hill; the Graham Kenan fellowship in Philosophy. Awards
from the fund (1922), P. E. Greene, Adeline Denham, T. C.
Taylor. For travel in Europe (1922 1923), P. E. Greene; the
American Law Book company prize in legal research, • '. L.
Nichols; the Bingham prize, Victor Young; the Mangum
medal, B. C. Brown.
Elected to membership in the Phi Beta Kappa society, 1922:
Calvin [Jpshur Smith, president; Adeline Denham, secretary;
Charles Hall Ashford, Howard Holderness, Rufus Gwynn
Koontz, Clifton Leonard Moore, Mary Traill Vellott.
Elected to associate membership in the Society of Sigma XI,
1H22: Charles Dale Beers, William Darby Glenn, Jr., Harry
I'lanklin Latshaw.
Certificates: Geology — 'J'. G. Murdock; German ( '. E.
Howard; History I>. J. VSThitener; History and Governmenl
W. J. Barefoot, C. G. Lee, Jr., S. M. Whodboc; Latin — Sallie
Allen; honors in Language and Literature — G. B. Porter.
Degrees in Course
The following degrees in course were awarded:
Bachelor of Arts — Sallie Allen, James Hobart Allred, Wil-
liam Puryear Anders Jackson Lafayette Apple, Wade
Hampton Atkinson, Jr., .Inhn Glenn Barden, Benjamin Hume
Bardin, Robert Malcolm Bardin, William Jefferson Barefoot,
Katherine Galloway Batts, Robert Edwin Boyd, James Neve-
256
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
land Brand, Jr., *James Craig Braswell, Jr., Joseph Beaman
Brewer, Bryant Council Brown, "Emerson Leroy Carter, John
Wiley Coker, Nina Horner Cooper, Harold Cochran Corpening,
Walter Vance Costner, Robert Alexander Davis, Adeline Den-
ham, Frederick Mast Dula, Benjamin Owens Dupree, Clayton
Edwards, *McIver Williamson Edwards, John Oglethorpe El-
lington, Jr., .Robert Haines Frazier, Alice Lee Gattis, *Mack
Cutehin Gorham, Felix Alexander Grissette, Henry Clayton
Harris, Annie Bell Hill, Ellen Booth Lay, Charles Gaston Lee,
Jr., Samuel Ralph MeOlurd, Joseph Altira McLean, "Gene-
vieve MacMillan, Robert Franklin Marshburn, Edward Bruce
Mewborne, Thomas Glenn Murdock, Charles Leslie Nichols,
Julian Granbery Nixon, "Irwin Wallace Oestreicher, Wyatt
Andrew Pickens, Garland Burns Porter, Mildred Price, Rob-
ert Wright Proctor, Lina Tucker Pruden, Ennnett Gladstone
Rand, Henry Ashby Rankin, Paul Jones Ranson, Exam Allen
Rogers, George Dewey Shore, Elliott Walker Stevens, Leo
Deatou Summey, Sanfjord Brogdyne Teu, Frank Thornber
Thompson, Ralph VanLandingham, Jr., Thomas Lafayette
Warren, Silas Martin Whedbee, Daniel Jay Whitener, Alger
Bright Wilkins, Claude James Williams, Lawrence Girard Wil-
son, Thomas Ewell Wright, Mary Traill Yellott.
Bachelor of Arts in Education — tFred Monroe Arrowood.
Bachelors of Science in Chemistry — John Alpheus Bender,
Clyde Kenneth Brooks, * Thomas Pugh Dawson, John Worth
Guard, Earle DeWitt Jennings, Joe Levy McEwen, Ernst Otto
Moehlmann, Joseph Harley Mourane, William Brittingham
Smoot, Nelson Whitford Taylor.
Bachelors of Science in Civil Engineering — Frank Robbins
Bacon, "Herman Glenn Baity, James Pool Clawson, Louis
William Fischel, "Nathaniel Perkinson Hayes, Luther James
Pliipps, Joseph White Taylor, James Sims Wearn.
Bachelors of Science in Electrical Engineering — Roy Madi-
son Casper, Gordon Turner Finger, Paul Milton Gray, Marshall
Kdgar Lake, Ernest James Mecum, "Leon Vincent Milton,
Joseph Lowry Pressly, Reginald Archibald Tillman, Robert
Morrison Wearn, Dare Abernethy Wells.
Bachelors of Science in Geology — Robert Edward Lee Car-
son, "Charles Worth Fowler.
Bachelors of Science in Medicine — "Daniel Greenlee Cald-
well, Joseph Lindsay Cook, Norman Albright Fox, Willard
Coe Golcy, Paul Todd Martin, Manly Mason, Allen Alexander
Miner, Nathan Anthony Womack.
Bachelors of Science in Commerce — Charles Dorian Blair,
Stuart Osborne Bondurant, William Eugene Cornelius, Robert
Baker Crawford, Jr., Howard Hugh Doggett, "John Dewey
Dorsett, Leonard Epstein, John Haywood Hardin, Jr., George
Watts Hill, William Edwin Horner, David Benther Jacobi,
Andrew Ellerson James, Rufus Manfred Johnston, Floyd Alex-
ander Martin, Abram Haywood Merritt, William Cannon
Murchison, Marion Wesley Nash, John Norwood, John William
Oden, Edwin Fuller Parham, William Grady Pritchard, Collier
Bryson Sparger, Thomas Warwick Steed, Benjamin Louis
Susman, Jr., Edward Martin Sweetman, Jr., Earl Hinson
Thompson, Jack Warren, George Curtis Watson, Robert Ben-
jamin White, Woodward White Williams, Walter Efroymson
Wolf, Junius Cheston Woodall, Sterling Dillon Wooten.
Bachelors of Arts and Laws — Clarence Garnett Ashby, Wade
Anderson Gardner, Joseph Granbery Tucker.
Bachelors of Laws — William Durham Harris, David Wesley
Isear, Benjamin Bailey Liipfert, Charles Leslie Nichols, John
Ernest Norris, Neal Yates Pharr, Edwin Earle Rives, William
Tolman Shaw.
Graduates in Pharmacy — Beatrice Averitt, Addie Lee Brad-
shaw, Ellie Burton Bristow, Harry Thomas Hicks, John Palmer
Horton, Ralph Edward Langdon, Ernest Edward Moore, Ed-
ward Stuart Pugh, Grady Cornell Siske, Wilbert Lawrence
Stone, John Albert White, Robert Moore Willis.
Pharmaceutical Chemists — John William Harrell, Jr., Wil-
liam Allen Prout.
Mast lis of Arts — Herbert Victor Bailey, Charles Dale Beers,
* Henry Spurgeon Boyce, John Nathaniel Couch, Jonathan
Worth Daniels, James Allen Dickey, "Calvin Ransoine Edney,
William Darby Glenn, Jr., Fletcher Melvin Green, Thomas
Hoffman Hamilton, Hubert Crouze Heffner, Michael Arendell
Hill, Jr., Levi Haywood Jobe, Ida Belle Ledbetter, Robert
Newton Ledford, Burgin Edison Lohr, Walter Frederick Me-
Canless, Roland Price McClamroch, John Holman McFadden,
"James Bennett Miller, Arthur Purefoy Sledd, Mary James
Spruill, Wilbur White Stout, Tyre Crumpler Taylor, Miles
Hoffman Wolff.
Masters of Science — Frederick Philips Brooks, Burnette Nai-
man.
Doctors of Philosophy — Isaac Vilas Giles, Thesis: Para —
Cymene Studies IV. Chlorination of 2 — Amino — P — Symene.
"Absent by Permission.
ALUMNAE HOLD REUNION BANQUET
The alumnae present in Chapel Hill to celebrate
the twenty-fifth anniversary of the admission of
women to the University, together with those of the
girls now in college who stayed through commence-
ment, wound up the festivities of Alumni Day, June
13, with a dinner at Russell Inn. In addition to the
attractive hand-painted place-cards, there was at each
plate a copy of the booklet issued for the occasion by
the Woman's Association and containing the first
published roster of women students in the University
from 1897 up to the present time. Another distinc-
tive feature was the serving of the dinner by six
pretty Camp Fire Cirls dressed in white.
The success of the evening was in great measure
due to the presence of the "first coed," Mrs. Robert
L. Gray, who acted as toastmistress and gave a de-
lightful account of her experiences during that first
year. One of the interesting things brought out in
Mrs. Gray's talk was the fact that during the year
the one woman in the senior class, Miss Sallie Stock-
ard (now Mrs. Magnes), held the balance of power
in the election of senior president. The class was
divided evenly and each side tried to persuade her
to give it her proxy, but she insisted on doing her
own voting and after due consideration cast the de-
ciding vote.
Other speakers were Miss Adeline Denham, retir-
ing president of the Woman's Association, who wel-
comed the alumnae; Mrs. M. II. Stacy, who followed
Mrs. Gray's account of the first year with a resume
of events of the past session and plans for the future ;
Miss Kathrine Robinson, who spoke of women in the
professions; and Miss Mary Henderson, who talked
of the present political status of women and the pos-
sibilities for the future.
Since at the meeting of the General Alumni Asso-
ciation Miss Henderson had voiced their plea for a
woman's building at the University, the alumnae
considered it unnecessary to pass any resolutions in
regard to this proposition, though the best means of
furthering it were discussed and much appreciation
and enthusiasm were shown over the promise made
at the Alumni Luncheon by the newly-elected presi-
dent of the Alumni Association, Hon. Walter Murphy,
to give it his active support in the next legislature.
Those attending the dinner were Misses Sallie Al-
len. Mabel Bacon, Elizabeth Branson, Cordelia Camp,
Marie Clegg, Mary Cobb, Nina Cooper, Lillie Cutlar,
Adeline Denham, Martha Doughton, Mrs. Arthur D.
Rees, Mrs. I. II. Manning, Mrs. R. L. Gray, Mrs. M.
II. Stacy, Mrs. A. P. Russell, Mrs. H. C. Heffner,
Mrs. Lee J. Shine, Mrs. II. F. Latshaw, Misses Annie
Duncan, Dorothy Foltz, Marguerite Ghent, Dorothy
Greenlaw, Mary Henderson, Annie Bell Hill, Ellen
Lay, Frances Gray, Elizabeth McKie, Rennie Peele.
May Belle Penn, Nell Pickard, Minna Pickard, Vera
Pritchard, Lina Pruden, Annie Pruitt, Nellie Rober-
son, Kathrine Robinson, Dorothy Russell, Lou Shine,
Mary Spruill, Alma Stone, Laura Thompson, Jane
Toy, Pauline Uzzell, Vallie Uzzell, Frances Venable,
Louise Venable, Lillie Whitaker, Ida Ledbetter,
Grace Duncan, Ernestine Kennette, and Mary Yel-
lott.
Greetings to the other alumnae and regrets at their
inability to come to the reunion were received from
Miss Julia Alexander, Mrs. L. L. Brinkley, Miss Mary
Amburgey, Mrs. Elizabeth Babbitt, Miss Harriet M.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
257
Berry, Dr. Cora Corpening, Miss Julia Dameron,
Mrs. J. A. McRae, Mrs. T. II. Partriek, .Misses Julia
Harris, Winnie McGlamery, Anna Forbes Liddell,
Helen L. Odoni, and Bessie L. Wbitaker, and l\Irs. J.
Ravenel Smith.
PHARMACISTS HAVE GALA OCCASION
Back on the Hill in numbers and pledging their
loyalty to Alma Mater, alumni of the School of
Pharmacy joined in with the other suns and daughters
of the University to make Alumni Day notable and
particularly to celebrate in fitting fashion the 25th
anniversary nf the founding of the School.
Two events other than participation in the meet-
ing of the General Alumni Association featured the
day. At 4:30 in the afternoon Dean E. V. Howell
\\;is host to the visitors on his lawn. Barbecue a la
Foy Baker, Brunswick stew, slaw, pickles, Freoel
bread, and lemonade were served; college yells were
given ; a group picture was taken; and the party end-
ed in a happy dance.
At nine o'clock in the evening the scene shifted
to the University cafeteria where Norman W. Lynch,
'05, of Charlotte, presided as toastmaster over the re-
union banquet. Beatrice Averitt, '22, welcomed the
visitors, J. W. Ilarrell, Jr., '21, spoke for the School,
and Almond P. Westbrook, '23, spoke for the William
Simpson Pharmaceutical Society. N. D. Bitting. '114,
spoke for the alumni who have become physicians;
W. C Bateman, '04, spoke for the druggists who are
traveling salesmen in the interest of drug firms; and
I. W. Rose, '06, spoke for the alumni druggists.
Other speakers were Polk 0. Gray and R. T. Gregory,
members of the first class matriculating in pharmacy
in 1897; Roger A. McDuffie, 15, Dorothy Foltz, '20,
Addie L. Bradshaw, '22, C. D. Bradham, O. M. An-
drews, '07, Kelly E. Bennett, '12, Sam Welfare, '05,
J. E. Turlington, 'Hi, F. W. Hancock, Secretary-
Treasurer, North Carolina Board of Pharmacy, E. V.
Zoeller, President of the Board of Pharmacy, who was
awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Pharmacy
on Commencement Day. J. G. Beard, '09, in behalf
of the students in Pharmacy this year presented to
Dean Howell an Elgin watch and chain with the in-
scription : To Dean Howell, from the classes of
1921, 1922, 1923, for faithful service 1897-1922.
About one hundred were in attendance at the re-
union, and resolutions were passed to make it a bi-
ennial affair. The following alumni and members of
the School were present:
Sam E. Welfare, Winston-Salem, '05; A. M. Gib-
son, Gibson, '21; W. A. Prout, Webster, Kv. '21;
E. B. Bristow, McColl, S. C, '22; G. W. Waters, Jr.,
Goldsboro, '11; Kelly E. Bennett . Bryson City, '12;
Norman W. Lynch, Charlotte, '05; J. W. Harrell, Jr.,
Beaufort. '21; J. Albert White, Belhaven, '22; E.
Deb. Ledbetter, Charlotte, '17; I. W. Rose, Rocky
Mount, '06; J. D. Brown. Warsaw. '05; R. W. Jerni-
gan, Durham, '15, and Mrs. Jernigan ; J. C. Brantley,
Raleigh, '00, Mrs. Brantley, and J. 0. Brantley, Jr.;
C. M. Andrews, Ilillsboro, '07, and Mrs. Andrews; R.
II. Andrews, Burlington, '14; E. V. Zoeller, Tarboro;
A. V. Baucom, Apex, '06, and Mrs. Baucom ; R. E.
Langdon, Coats, '22: Almond P. Westbrook. Dunn.
'2:i; T. I'. Lloyd, Chapel Hill, '20; 1). L. -Ionian,
Clayton, '21; C. II. Beddingfield, Clayton, 'Hi, and
Mrs. Beddingfield; Robert R. Berring, Oxford, '08;
Roland L. Gooch, Oxford, '17; S. C. Hall, Oxford,
'23: Polk C. Gray, Statesville, '99; Roger A. McDuf-
fie, Greensboro, '15, and Mrs. McDuffie; C. II. Gates,
Burlington, '03; D. D. Hocutt, Henderson, '20; II.
W. Walker, Norlina, '20; C. D. Rosenbaum, Hender-
son, '15; J. E. Turlington, Durham, 'Hi, and Mrs.
Turlington; R, T. Fulghum, Kenly. '06; J. G. Heard.
Chapel Hill, '09; Beatrice Averitt. Payetteville, '22;
mi ( i \ss oi L921 ai lis Firsi Reunion
258
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
N. D. Bitting, Durham, '04; I. L. Zuckerman, Dur-
ham, '11; A. L. Hogan, Ellerbe, '23; R. M. Willis,
Southport, '23; \V. D. Patterson, Chapel Hill, '04,
and Mrs. Patterson; R. T. Gregory, Stovall, '99;
Dorothv Foltz, Winston-Salem, '20; T. R. Burgiss,
Elkin, '23 ; C. T. Durham, Chapel Hill, '18, and Mrs.
Durham; E. S. Pugh, Windsor, '22; C. R. Wheeler,
Durham, '18 ; E. E. Moore, Granite Falls, '22 ; W. L.
Stone, Kittrell, '22; II. M. Gaddy, Raleigh, '10; D.
F. Warner, Ellerbe, '23; W. C. Bateman, Raleigh,
'04; F. W. Hancock, Oxford, and Mrs. Hancock;
J. P. Horton, North Wilkesboro, '22; Addie Lee
Bradshaw, '22, Lenoir; W. P. Baker, Durham, '22;
T. G. Crutchfield, Raleigh, '21; P. J. Melvin, Fay-
etteville, '20 ; F. M. Patterson, Concord, '20 ; H. Ger-
ald, Pine Level, '23 ; M. L. Jacobs, Morrisville, '20 ;
E. V. Howell, Chapel Hill; C. D. Bradham, New
Bern; G. K. Grantham, Dunn; G. K. Grantham, Jr.,
Dunn,- '23; W. S. Hicks, Raleigh, 15; H. T. Hicks,
Raleigh, '22; and G. C. Siske, Pleasant Garden, '22.
COMMENT ON THE CAMPUS MAP
Dr. J. M. Booker has handed The Review the fol-
lowing letter received by him from James A. White,
supervising architect of the University of Illinois,
concerning the map of the campus which appeared in
the May issue. Coming as it does from a man who
has in hand the development of the campus of an
institution which contemplates ultimately the instruc-
tion of 30,000 students (the number is now between
8,000 and 10,000) it is extremely suggestive.
I have chanced to see the May Alumni Review which con-
tains your suggested plan for the development of the Uni-
versity of North Carolina. Having been directly connected
with the development of our campus for thirty years, I am
of course very much interested in knowing of people who are
thinking along these lines. You are to be congratulated in
having McKim, Mead and White associated with you on your
campus work, because they have probably had more experience
in this class of planning than any other firm in the country,
and the development suggested by them as shown in your plan
is good. May I suggest to you some conclusions which we
have come to in connection with our development here? "
First, we agree with you that classroom buildings should be
fairly standardized, which is also true of science buildings,
and we now are preparing plans for a standard classroom
building, having a 300' frontage, which we shall expect to
repeat with enough modifications in exterior design to avoid
monotony, at several points on our campus.
We are not zoning our campus by colleges. That has been
our practice but we have come to feel that it is more necessary
to zone the campus with reference to instructional subjects
rather than with reference to colleges. We do not know when
a new college or school will be added and we cannot lay out
a plan which will provide specific areas for future colleges,
but we can say that all general subjects taught to all stu-
dents in their freshmen and sophomore years can be taught
in a central group of buildings, eliminating the loss of time
to these students in traveling between more distant groups of
buildings. We can then in a zone around this group provide
for instruction in subjects programmed for longer class periods;
and finally, in an outlying zone we can provide special build-
ings where senior and graduate students may devote a half
or a whole day at a time to specific work. In other words,
as we expand we find that the making up of the program is
a far more vital consideration than the keeping of all the
work of a college together.
We are just starting to build on a 60 acre tract, joining our
main quadrangle on the south. We are arranging our build-
ings so they cover about 25% of the ground area, and we are
using rather large buildings. The buildings will average four
stories in height and therefore the gross building area will
be equal to the ground area. At present we have in class
and laboratory buildings 135 square feet of floor space per
student.
We are going to build standard buildings on this GO acres
except for the new Library and the Administration building,
and we are simply flowing southward over this area, filling
new buildings to their capacity as rapidly as they are finished,
grouping the work of the departments as closely together as
possible but ignoring very largely any grouping of colleges.
We are segregating men and women in our dormitory plan
by putting the women's dormitories on the east side of the
campus, and are planning for the men 's housing on the west
side where all of the fraternities are now located.
I have never felt that the Library properly belonged in the
middle of a campus. Its location should be where the maxi-
mum number of students will pass it going from their home to
their academic buildings, making it convenient for them to
drop in, and also making it much more accessible for night
study, which is going to be more and more necessary as our
institutions expand.
I, of course, know nothing of your problem and I am not
undertaking to criticise, but merely desire to present some
thoughts which have come to my mind in reading your com-
munication and in studying the plan presented therewith.
Yours very truly,
James M. White, Supervising Architect.
GRAHAM MEMORIAL BUILDING UNDERWAY
Plans approved by the Trustees at commencement
provide for the location of the Graham Memorial
Building on the west edge of the old Inn lot, with
the main front looking across the campus towards the
Vance-Pettigrew dormitories and a formal entrance
on Franklin street. The T. C. Atwood organization,
together with Mr. Kendall, of McKim, Meade, and
White, are drawing the preliminary sketches, and the
committee is calling for the payment of all subscrip-
tions now due and is soliciting new subscriptions in
order that the entire $150,000 required for the erec-
tion of the first unit may be immediately in hand.
The building, which will be a two-story structure
of colonial style, will contain a large lounge and
reading rooms, offices for the student publications,
musical organizations, county clubs, class groups, and
other bodies, and facilities for serving group ban-
quets and other features essential to the social life
of the student body.
As stated, the first unit is to cost $150,000 of which
$123,000 has been subscribed and $63,000 is in hand.
The remaining $60,000 is being called for now, and
the committee in charge is seeking an additional
$50,000 in new subscriptions.
The building will admit of almost unlimited ex-
pansion either along the east and west walk way be-
tween the Inn and Alumni hall, or it may be extended
in the form of a quadrangle towards the Barbee
property on the east. The grounds surrounding it
are to be treated as a formal garden, and it will
permanently define the east entrance to the campus.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
PRESS INCORPORATES
The formal incorporation of the University of North
Carolina Press on Monday night, June 12, brings into
being an agency that will do much to enhance the
prestige of the University as well as to provide a
medium of publication to scholars whose work would
not otherwise receive recognition.
At present the Press is an institution without finan-
cial resources. It is to be hoped that this fault will
be cured before long. To visualize what such an
organization may mean to the University it is neces-
sary only to recall what other university presses,
such as those at Yale, Princeton, Harvard and Chi-
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
259
cago, have accomplished. Toward the latter end of
his presidency of Yale. Mr. Hadley declared that he
regarded the development of the Yale Press as the
greatest single achievement of his administration.
Those who are not familiar with the character of
a University Press are apt to think of it as a printing
concern. It is not this at all, but a publisher. It
may have its own printing equipment, if it is for-
tunate enough, but it may have its printing done out-
side just as some magazine and book publishers do.
The Elisha Mitchell Journal , Studies in Philology,
The High School Journal, and other publications of
the University are to be issued in the name of the
University of North Carolina Press.
The incorporators include three Trustees, Zeb. V.
Walser, Alfred M. Scales, and Leslie Weil ; President
H. W. Chase, and the following nine members of the
faculty who are intimately connected with Universi re-
publications: W. C. Coker, Louis Graves, Edwin
Greenlaw, J. G. de R. Hamilton, L. P. McGehee, II.
W. Odum, C. D. Snell, N. W. Walker, and L. R. Wil-
son.
L. P. McGehee is temporary chairman of the Board
of Governors, pending permanent organization in the
fall. Edwin Greenlaw is chairman of an emergency
committee, to unction this summer, charged with de-
ciding upon the publications that shall bear the name
of the Universitv of North Carolina Press.
THE NORTH CAROLINA LAW REVIEW
The North Carolina Law Review, published by the
faculty and students of the School of Law of the Uni-
versit}1, made its initial appearance on Thursday,
June 8th. This Review is the only periodical of its
kind in the Carolinas, aud shares with the Virginia
Law Review the distinction of being one of the two
in the south. It will appear regularly in November,
January, April, and June, of each school year.
The Review is devoted to the discussion of import-
ant problems of law of interest to North Carolina
lawyers and judges. The bulk of the material deals
with the significance of recent decisions of the su-
preme court of North Carolina and of the supreme
court of the United States. Particular attention will
be paid to matters of legislation and to the relation-
ship between the social sciences of economics, political
science, and sociology, and the science of law.
The first number consists of sixty pages of reading
matter and four pages of advertising, bound in a soft
French grey paper cover. In the size of the pages
and in the arrangement of the material, the Ri vit w
represents a departure from the stereotyped form of
legal periodicals. Six hundred copies of the first
number have been printed. These are being distribu-
ted to the students of the School of Law, to a number
of the lawyers and judges of North Carolina, to the
law schools that are members of the Association of
American Law Schools, ami to tin; Legal periodicals
with which the Review will be exchanged. The sul>-
scription price is two dollars a year, or fifty cents a
copy.
The editorial staff consists of Professor M. T. Van
Ilecke, editor-in-charge, and Professors L. P. McGe-
hee, A. C. Mcintosh. 1'. II. Winston, and R. II. Wet
tach, as associate editors. The student editors for
this number, selected by the faculty for excellence in
scholarship, were: Clarence G. Ashby, Robert II.
Prazier, Wade A. Gardner, David W. Isear, Benjamin
Bailey Liipfert, Fred B. McCall, Ralph M. Moody,
Charles L. Nichols, Neal Y. Pharr. Richmond Rucker,
William T. Shaw, and Granberry Tucker.
The leading articles of the current issue are as fol-
lows : Statute Law and the Law School, by W. F.
Dodd, of the Chicago Bar; Changes in North Caro-
lina Procedure, by Professor A. C. Mcintosh; Trade
Associations and the Sherman Act, by Professor
Homer Hoyt ; Shares of Stock Without Par Value, by
J. H. Pou, of the Raleigh Bar. Editorial notes and
comments comprising twenty or more short articles
by various members of the faculty and student body
are found in the issue under the two headings "Edi-
torial Notes" and "Comments."
DRURY PHILLIPS MAKES SUGGESTION
Drury M. Phillips, of the class of 1908, who lives at
1701 yth St., Port Arthur, Texas, writes as follows:
I have one suggestion with regard to the present
organization of the General Alumni Assoeiatiou. I
uotice that all the officers and all the members except
one of the executive committee are residents of North
Carolina at this time. It is of course eminently prop-
er that the large majority of them should be residents
of the State, but it has recently seemed to me advis-
abl for a broader field of representation.
The University of North Carolina is now a national
institution; its alumni live in every state and in many
foreign lands; its students come from wide-spread
areas ; its activities are all embracing. Would it not
be helpful to Carolina if her sons in New York,
Georgia, Texas, and Alaska, for instance, kept closer
to her .' And woidd not more active participation in
the great ideals of the General Alumni Association
help both the institution and the individual?
My suggestion is this — five more members of the
executive committee, one each from the northeastern,
southeastern, southwestern, central western and ex-
treme western regions of the United States. Even if
members from far away places could attend meetings
only rarely, they could be kept more closely in touch
with alumni affairs and could in turn serve the scat-
tered Carolina men in their regions.
WOMEN LEAD THE PHARMACISTS
At the examination of the North Carolina Board
of Pharmacy held at Raleigh June 15 and 16 the fol-
lowing graduates of the School of Pharmacy of the
I Diversity were successful in obtaining their license:
.Miss Beatrice Averitt, Fayetteville : Miss Addie L.
Bradshaw, Lenoir; G. C. Siske, Pleasant Garden; M.
L. Jacobs, Morrisville; Ernest E. Moore, Granite
Falls; and W. L. Stone, Kittrell.
It is interesting to note in this connection that the
only two women passing the examination were the
two coeds who graduated this year from the School
of Pharmacy and that these two made the highest
general averages of all the applicants for license,
Miss Beatrice Averitt being awarded the Beal Prize
for making the highest grade received.
For the first time the new pharmacy law exacting
graduation of all applicants becomes effective, so that
at the recent examination only those who had com-
pleted the college course of training were eligible to
go before the board.
260
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
TRUSTEES RECOMMEND FOUR-YEAR
MEDICAL SCHOOL
One of the most interesting steps taken by the
Board of Trustees at their June meeting was the
passing of a resolution authorizing the organization
and location of a four-year medical school, with nec-
essary hospital facilities, at Chapel Hill. The move-
ment contemplates the addition of two years to the
present medical course and the erection and equip-
ment of a 200-bed hospital to cost $750,000 in mem-
ory of North Carolinians who died in the service.
The action followed the submission of a report pre-
pared on the subject by a committee appointed some
time ago, and brings to a head a matter which has
recently received the widest sort of consideration on
the part of North Carolina physicians.
Some of the most important considerations on which
the action is based are: (1) That North Carolina is
sadly under-equipped with both physicians and hos-
pitals. At present the State has only one physician
and one hospital bed for 1600 and 761 people re-
spectively, while the averages for the country as a
whole are 720 and 340. (2) That owing to the lim-
ited capacity of the medical colleges of the country,
many of the students who complete in North Caro-
lina the two-year medical courses experience great
difficulty in finding room in medical colleges in other
sections. (3) That the cost of from four to six
years of study and internship in medical schools and
hospitals located in large cities entails a total ex-
pense of from $5000 to $7000 which cannot be met
by the physician who is to serve a rural section.
In the absence of Governor Morrison, Major John
W. Graham presided over the commencement meet-
ing of the Board of Trustees which was held at 4
o'clock, June 13, in Chemistry hall. The following
members, in addition to President Chase and Mr.
Woollen, were presenl :
B. L. Banks, Thos. II. Battle, Kelly E. Bennett, W.
II. S. Burgwyn, Perrin Busbee, B. Cameron. Julian
S. Carr, Fred J. Coxe, Burton Craige, W. R. Dalton,
Josephus Daniels, J. L. DeLanev, Claudius Doekery,
William Dunn, Jr., A. II. Filer, R. O. Everett, W. N.
Everett, J. T. Exum, John W. Fries, E. L. Gaither,
Jno. W. Graham, A. H. Graham, G. K. Grantham, J.
Bryan Grimes, L. T. Hartsell, C. F. Harvev, John
Sprunt Hill, W. L. Hill, Geo. A. Holderness. W.
Stamps Howard, Maxcy L. John, Chas. A. Jonas, J.
C. Kittrell, B. K. Lassiter, Richard II. Lewis, Stable
Linn, II. M. London, A. G. Mangum. J. II. McMullan,
Jr., Walter Murphy, Henry A. Pace. J. J. Parker,
Haywood Parker, J. H. Pearson, Jr., W. M. Person,
A. II. Price, James D. Proctor, R. B. Redwine, A. M.
Scales, A. Alex Shuford, Geo. Stephens. W. F. Taylor,
Dorman Thompson, E. J. Tucker, Leslie Weil, ("has.
Whedbee, B. B. Williams, J. K. Wilson, Francis D.
Winston, Graham Woodward, A. E. Woltz, and Clem
G. Wright.
LIBRARY RECEIVES NEWSPAPER FILES
Through the addition of two collections of files of
North Carolina newspapers to the University library,
the source of material for the use of present and fu-
ture writers of North Carolina history has been defi-
nitely enlarged. The eighty-four volumes which
comprise the two collections are the gifts of Mrs.
Henry A. London, of Pittsboro, and Dr. James
Sprunt, of Wilmington.
Mrs. London is the giver of 39 volumes of The
Chatham Record, edited by the late Major Henry A.
London, and the set is supplemented by volumes forty
to forty-two issued under the editorship of her son,
Henry M. London, legislative reference librarian, of
Raleigh. The period covered is from 1878 to 1920,
the file being particularly rich in the field of civil
war data contributed by Major London from his inti-
mate knowledge of the Confederacy,
The collection presented by Dr. Sprunt contains 42
volumes and covers a period of forty-seven years as
follows: The Wilmington Journal (weekly) 1846-
1868; The Daily Journal, 1853-76; and the Daily
Reviciv, 1876-1890.
All the volumes are splendidly bound and are be-
ing made available to the students and writers of his-
tory. Their acquisition at this particular time is
most fortunate as they will advance materially the
work of a number of investigators and particularly
that of Dean M. C. S. Noble, of the School of Educa-
tion, who, under the direction of the North Carolina
Historical Commission, is writing the history of
education in North Carolina from 1840 to 1920.
AUGUSTUS VAN WYCK IS DEAD
Augustus Van Wyck, former supreme court justice
of the state of New York, and brother of the late
Mayor Robert Van Wyck, of New York, died at
Hahnemann hospital on June 9, after an illness of
several months.
He was a descendant of a Dutch family which set-
tled in King's county in 1665. He graduated from
the University of North Carolina in the class of 1864
and while still in his twenties was elevated to the
bench.
He was president of the New York Holland society,
the Southern society, the North Carolina society, the
New York Alumni Association of North Carolina Uni-
versity and grand master of the Zeta Psi fraternity
of North America. In 1898 Judge Van Wyck as the
Democratic nominee for governor ran against Theo-
dore Roosevelt, and was defeated by a majority of
only about 20,000 votes.
PITTSBORO ROAD ABOUT COMPLETED
Alumni and automobilists will rejoice to know that
the north and south highway between Chapel Hill
and Pittsboro will be completed within a few weeks,
thereby making Chapel Hill easily accessible from
points to the south. Recently a large number of cars
en route from Florida to northern cities have passed
through, and travel to Southern Pines, Sanford,. and
( 'harlotte is regularly passing over this route. As
now located, the road runs through the campus, be-
tween Peabody hall and the Graves property on
which the new hotel will be built.
DENTAL SCHOOL ASKED FOR
At the meeting of the Board of Trustees at Com-
mencement a committee was appointed to confer with
a committee from the North Carolina Dental Society
concerning the establishment by the University of a
School of Dentistry.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
261
THE QUARTER CENTURY REUNION OF '97
Lawrence MacRae, of Greensboro, who served as
chairman of the '97 reunion committee, writes as fol-
lows concerning the twenty-fifth year reunion of this
class held at commencement:
Twenty-seven loyal '97 men enrolled at our special
headquarters in the Y. M. C. A. Building and were
assigned to dormitory B, one of the recently com-
pleted tire proof homes for students. Each '97 man
was furnished with a '97 hat hand, blue and white,
and a lapel streamer on which were pinned the class
colors, red and black.
Our headquarters were in charge of a young student
worker, who acted as registrar, information clerk, and
general utility man. Hellenians of the 90's were at
hand and the headquarters were made a place of in-
terest and comfort.
Twelve of the hoys appeared at the preliminary
meeting Monday night, which lasted until a late hour.
'.'Old time days were not forgotten," neither were the
absent hoys, especially those from whom we had re-
ceived greetings and regrets.
Tuesday morning at eleven we lined up behind
President D. 15. Smith and our '97 banner and march-
ed into the alumni meeting where our cheers outrang
even the snappy '21 youngsters. We must do better
in 1927 and I believe we are set for it. At our class
dinner served by Jim Stroud, successor to past worthy
fcedsters of the Hill, at the "Coop" (the chickens got
away so we had steak), we had "Pete" Murphy
and Bill (short for Adolphus) Mangum, son of
Dolph, as our guests.
The eatfeast was followed by a real talkfeast, al-
most a talk-fuss, for Vick McAdoo wanted to do it all
and so did Tobe Connor. Vick's life is now an open
book with '97 and Tobe's philosophy is known of all
men.
D. B. finally got peace and Billy Carmicbael was
elevated from the ranks to president of the class, and
by chance or through the wisdom of some unknown
seer a hanker was made treasurer and secretary.
This worthy is our old reliable and dependable
Archie Long of Haw River.
Each one of us present agreed to send him three
dollars as an operating fund, and we spoke for the
class — send him your check. He and Billy Carmi-
chael and Lionel Weil have some plans they expect to
unfold to you soon, which will indicate we have se-
lected the right hunch to put '97 across and in line
with the advanced classes.
All this is addressed particularly to the '97 hoys
who were "out of luck." including Billy Myers, suc-
cessor to Woodrow Wilson at Princeton, who could
not he with us and revel for a while in the past.
We got Billy's wire and, also, greetings from
"Skeets" Xewby, now of LOS Alleles ; 1 1 1 ■ 1 father of
six; and many other messages of good feeling and
regret.
Tlies,. are they who can testify: P. J. Haywood,
I. X. Howard, W. W. Boddie, D. W. Carter, V. C.
.McAdoo. \V. .1. Homey, W. A. Crinkley, R. R. Ragan,
W. I). Carmichael, Robt. II. Wright. L. J. P. Cutlar,
•I. A. Long, -I. L. Everett, I). 15. Smith. W. D. Crimes,
.1. II. Andrews. Dr. P. R, McFadyen, A. T. Alien. YV
c. chirk. W. 1). Leggett, W. S. Howard, P. II. Bailey,
II. (I. Connor, Jr., S. B. Shepherd, Burton Craige,
Lionel Weil. Lawrence MacRae. Dolph Mangum was
recuperating at Watts Hospital, Durham, at the lime
of the reunion.
NEW HOTEL ASSURED
Carolina inn, the proposed new hotel for Chapel
Hill, is marked down as a certainty as the result of
the acceptance at commencement by the University
of the offer of Mr. John Sprunt Hill to donate the
Graves property and $10,000 for that, purpose.
According to the plans of the committee in charge
of the undertaking, it is proposed to erect a 40-room
building to cost approximately $150,000, with $25,000
more spent, in furnishings. Special alumni quarters
are to be included and the kitchen anil dining room
are to be so arranged as to provide for additional
numbers who may come in from the outside.
The building will be of colonial design and broad
piazzas and a garden of palms are also to be dis-
tinctive features.
Plans for the building are now being drawn by
the T. C. Atwood organization and within a few days
the method by which alumni can subscribe for stock
in the enterprise will be announced. All financial
arrangements for the building are to be completed by
October 12, and the building will be begun and push-
ed to completion as rapidly as possible after that
date.
ENGINEERING SCHOOL ESTABLISHED
The following resolution, presented by the Visiting
( 'ommittee of the Trustees, and adopted by the full
Board, is self-explanatory:
Resolved, That in view (1) of the great develop-
ment of the engineering profession in this State, and
the pressing need for better Itrained men in all
branches of the engineering profession, and (2) for
more efficient administration of the work in engineer-
ing at the University, it be recommended to the Board
of Trustees that the department of Civil Engineer-
ing and the department of Electrical Engineering,
which have been functioning as parts of the School
of Applied Science, be set apart to constitute the
School of Engineering, with a proper organization of
its own to take care of the problems of present-day
engineering education ; and further that this division
shall date from the time of adoption of this resolu-
tion.
As a result of this action, the School of Engineer-
ing, under the headship of Dean G. M. Braune, is
now being organized, and will be in effective operation
at the beginning of the fall term.
CHURCH PLANS GO FORWARD
Announcements concerning the plans of the Bap-
tist, Methodist, and Episcopal churches of Chapel Hill
are not unlike text books in science — they are scarcely
made before they have to be made over again. The
latest reports, however, are that the Baptist church
is now well up above the first floor; the Methodists
have purchased the entire S. M. Barbee property
which they are adding to their present lot; and Mr.
W. A. Erwin, of Durham, has given $50,000 for the
erection of a new Episcopal church to be located on
the east half of the A. S. Barbee meadow adjoining
the present church. Plans for the new buildings for
the Methodists and Episcopalians are being drafted
by James (Iambic Rogers ami II. B. Upjohn, respec-
tively, architects with home offices in New York, ami
the buildings will be gotten underway within the next
twelve months.
262
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Issued monthly except in July. August, and September, by the Gen-
eral Alumni Association of the University of North Carolina.
Board of Publication
The Review is edited by the following Board of Publication:
Louis R. Wilson, '99 Editor
Associate Editors: Walter Murphy, '92; Harry Howell, '95; Archibald
Henderson, '98; W. S. Bernard, '00; J. K. Wilson, '05; Louis
Graves, '02; F. P. Graham, '09; Kenneth Tanner, '11; Lenoir
Chambers, '14; R. W. Madry, '18.
E. R. Rankin, '13 Managing Editor
Subscription Price
Single Copies $0.20
Per Year 1.50
Communications intended for the Editor and the Managing Editor
should be sent to Chapel Hill, N. C. Ail communications intended for
publication must be accompanied with signatures if they are to receive
consideration.
OFFICE OF PUBLICATION, CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Entered at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill, N. C, as second class
matter.
VAN HISE AND GRAHAM
In the Journal of the Proceedings of the National
University Extension Association, published in 1922,
is the following report of the committee on resolutions
presented by H. P. Mallory, of the University of
Chicago, former president of the National Associ-
ation.
"Whereas, Since the last meeting of the National
University Extension Association, two educational
leaders, President Charles R. Van Hise, of the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin, and President Edward K. Gra-
ham, of the University of North Carolina, who have
contributed so materially to the development of the
university extension movement, have passed from
their labors, this body wishes to place, on record an
expression of its sense and loss."
Then follow two paragraphs compact of the dis-
tinguished services of these pioneer leaders in a cause
"the significance of which it is impossible yet to
measure. ' '
"Coming to an old institution, which by theory
and tradition had in common with other southern
universities remained aloof from direct contact with
the public, President Graham caught a vision of a
broader service which the American university, and
particularly the state university, is called upon to
render. Under his inspiring leadership the Univer-
sity of North Carolina responded heartily to the call
to make its boundaries state-wide, and as a result the
whole extension movement in the south has been
powerfully stimulated. During the war President
Graham went still further. He realized with excep-
tional clearness the true function of the university as
an ideal leader of a nation fighting in an ideal cause,
and his efforts contributed in no small degree to the
making of the noble war record which has done so
much to heighten the prestige of American institu-
tions of higher learning as a result of the great crisis
through which the nation passed."
OUR SCHOOLS
rich men's sons though supported by the taxes of the
people at large. Its enrollment was limited and its
field of operation rather narrow. Under the direction
of the lamented Graham the University was democra-
tized. Its course was extended to cover the needs of
all classes. The patronage of the school was greatly
enlarged. Under that wise policy the University is
fast becoming what it should always have been — the
school for all classes and conditions of our people;
and its appeal for appropriations has been tremen-
dously strengthened. It reaches out now in every
direction for the general betterment of our people as
a whole and not for the benefit of a favored class.
Our denominational colleges have heretofore been the
people 's colleges. Hence the outstripping of the Uni-
versity in furnishing leaders in our public life of these
smaller colleges. But the position of our colleges is
being exactly reversed. There is and will always be
a great field for usefulness for our smaller colleges
supported by the churches, but they must find their
patronage from a select class. Their enrollment will
be and ought to be limited. Wake Forest ought not
to enroll more than 500 boys ; and this should be the
limit for the other church colleges of the State. The
faculty ought always to stand close to the students,
which they cannot do in a mass of thousands. The
personal element must not be lost in our denomina-
tional schools, for this gives them their chief value.
These smaller institutions will continue to exert a
powerful influence upon the life of the State. But
they must be generously endowed in order to live and
do their work. Trinity College is safe. Wake
Forest, Davidson and the others must have larger
financial backing if they are to hold their own in the
realm of education. We must endow our colleges or
let them die. — Charity and Children, March 23.
BUILDING COMMITTEE REPORTS
Just twelve months ago the University, through its
Building Committee, let the contract for the carry-
ing out of the building program authorized bv the
legislature of 1921. At the meeting of the Board of
Trustees on Tuesday, June 13, the committee re-
ported progress as follows:
Completed work — Convict camp, labor camp, 16
dwelling houses, dormitory B, one and one quarter
miles of railroad constructed, alterations in Infirmary,
Medical building, Power house, Memorial hall, sew-
age disposal plant, emergency water supply, class
athletic field, and seven tennis courts.
It was also reported that dormitories C, D, and E
would be completed by August 10, that the History
and Social Science building would be completed by
September 15, that plans for the Language and Law
buildings were completed", and that bids had been re-
ceived on the heating system for the uncompleted
buildings.
The position of our institutions of higher learning
is being exactly reversed. In old times the Univer-
sity was supposed to cater to the elite. The charge
has often been made that it was the institution for
DR. ARCHIBALD HENDERSON HONORED
Dr. Archibald Henderson, of the department of
Mathematics, received the honorary degree of doctor
of laws from Tulane University at the recent com-
mencement of that institution.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
263
ESTABLISHED 1916
Alumni Loyally fund
Council:
A. M. SCALES, '92
LESLIE WEIL, '95
L. R. WILSON, '99
A.W.HAYWOOD. 04
W. T. SHORE, 'OS
J. A. GRAY, 08
One for all, and all for one"
THE CLASS OF 1912
Speaking On Alumni Day
PLEDGED $1000
TO
The Alumni Loyalty Fund
Follow this Splendid Example and send your check to
J. A. WARREN, Treasurer,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
264
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Union National
Bank
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Capital $200,000.00
Surplus & Profits $252,000.00
Resources $3,000,000.00
We cordially invite the
alumni and friends of the
University of North Carolina
to avail themselves of the fa-
cilities and courtesies of this
hank.
D. P. TILLETT
Cashier
Southern Mill
Stocks
All recent reports show an
improvement in money condi-
tions and in returning demand
for cotton goods.
Just now is a good time to buy
SOUTHERN MILL STOCKS
We have several very good
offerings indeed at this time,
at prices which should show
good profits as the mill business
becomes adjusted again.
Send for special list.
F. C. Abbott & Co.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
INVESTMENTS
Phone 238 Postal Phone
Long Dist. 9957
GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA
Officers of the Association
Walter Murphy '92 President
D. L. Grant, '21 Secretary
WITH THE CLASSES
1862
— Major T. S. Webb, of the law firm of
Webb and Baker, Knoxville, Tenn., made
the response for his class at its sixtieth
year reunion on Alumni Day. Major
Webb had not returned to Chapel Hill
since he left to join the Confederate
Army in 1861. He attained the rank of
major in active service for the Confed-
eracy.
— Judge J. H. Estes lives at Ripley,
Tenn. His daughter writes as follows:
"At the age of eighty years my father
manages a large plantation and is chair-
man of the county court for Haywood
County. He drives twelve miles alone
twice a week to his office and rides horse-
back. We think him quite wonderful. ' '
1880
— Rev. R. B. John, Methodist minister,
recently retired from the presidency of
Carolina College at Maxton.
1881
— John M. Walker is a member of the
firm of Walker and Youngman, counsel-
ors in federal taxation, with offices in
the Continental Building, Baltimore.
1884
— Jas. L. Little is president of the
National Bank of Greenville. F. G.
James, '79, is vice-president and Chas.
James, '04, is assistant cashier.
1885
— Former Senator Marion Butler with
his associates, Frederick E. Engstrum,
president of the Newport Shipbuilding
Cii., and General George W. Goethals,
builder of the Panama Canal, have sub
mitted :i bid for the great Muscle
.Shoals water power. Senator Butler is
much interested in the production of
cheap nitrates for fertilizers by the fix
ation of atmospheric nitrogen, and
claims that the proposal of his company
will produce more fertilizers and sell the
same .-it. less cost than the proposal made
by Henry Ford.
— Dr. Max Jackson is president of the
Middle Georgia Sanatorium, at Macon,
Ga.
1886
— Congressman Edward W. Pou, of
Smithfield, was renominated for Con-
gressman from the fourth district in the
The Fidelity Bank
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The Fidelity Bank
Durham, N. C.
Chas. Lee Smith, Pres. Howell L. Smilh, Sec'y
Wm. Oliver Smilh, Treas.
Edwards and Broughton
Printing Company
Raleigh, N. C.
Engraved Wedding Invitations. Christmas
Cards, Visiting Cards and Correspon-
dence Stationery
Printers, Publishers and
Stationers
Steel and Copper Plate Engrave rs
Manufacturers of
Blank Books and Loose Leaf
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THE ALUMNI REVIEW
265
Independence Trust
Company
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Capital & Surplus, $1,600,000
Member Federal Reserve System
All departments of a well-
regulated bank are maintained,
among which are the Commer-
cial, Savings, Collections, For-
eign Exchange, and Trust,
and we cordially invite free
use of any of these depart-
ments.
J. H. LITTLE, President
E. O. ANDERSON, Vice-Pres.
E. E. JONES, Cashier
Fashion Park
Clothes
Manhattan Shirts
Stetson Hats
We always carry a largo
stock for the young man
HINE-MITCHELL CO., Inc.
"The Style Shop"
WINSTONSALEM, N. C.
primaries of June 5, defeating former
State Senator W. M. Person, '87, of
Louisburg.
— N. A. Sinclair, lawyer of Payetteville,
received the nomination in the primaries
of June 5 for judge of the ninth judicial
district. Mr. Sinclair was for two terms
solicitor of his district.
1887
— Rev. C. P. Smith, formerly rector of
Grace Church, Lynchburg, Va., is now
general missioner of the diocese of South-
western Virginia. He is located at 1139
First St. S. W., Roanoke, Va.
— R. N. Hackett, lawyer of North Wilkes-
boro, is general counsel for the North
Carolina Railroad Co.
— R. T. Burwell is manager of the New
Orleans department of the Hartford
Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance
Co. His (.Hires are in the Hibernia
Building.
1888
— R. L. Holt is president of the Glencoe
Mills, cotton manufacturers of Burling-
ton.
— S. Porter Graves, lawyer of Mt. Airy,
was renominated for solicitor of the
eleventh judicial district in the primaries
of June 5.
1889
— Lake Moore is now located at 1528
Wood Avenue, Colorado Springs, Colora-
do.
1890
— Jno. D. Bellamy, Jr., '90, and Mars-
den Bellamy, '99, practice law together
under the firm Dame of Bellamy and
Bellamy at Wilmington.
— W. S. Battle, Jr., is general claim
agent for the Norfolk and Western Rail-
way Co., at Roanoke, Va.
1891
— Shepard Bryan, president of the class
of '91, is senior member of the law
firm of Bryan ami Middlebrooks, with
offices at L203 Candler Building, At-
lanta, Ga.
Judge Robert Vv\ Bingham, of Louis-
ville, Ky., formerly mayor of the city,
is owner and publisher of the Courier-
Journal ami the Louisville Times.
V,. R. MeKeitlian was recently re-
elected mayor of Payetteville.
—Dr. R. I). V. Jones, '91, ami Dr. J. F.
Patterson, '03, are owners of St. Luke's
Hospital at New Hem.
1892
Rev. \V. E. Rollins is head of t.h.. de
partment of church history in the Vir-
ginia Theological Seminary, Alexandria,
Va. Mr. Rollins was [.resident of his
idass in its senior year.
— P. L. Willcox' practices law in the firm
Save Your
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Buy bonds and protect your
own and your family 's future.
Bonds are safe and marketable
and can be obtained to yield up
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Consult your banker regarding
the bonds this company sells.
HENDERSON-WINDER
COMPANY
INVESTMENTS
Greensboro National Bank Bldg.
Greensboro, N. C.
The Yarborough
RALEIGH'S LEADING
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266
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
THE BANK of
CHAPEL HILL
Oldest and Strongest Bank
in Orange County
Capital $25/000.00
Surplus and Profits 55,000.00
We earnestly solicit your Banking
business, promising you every service
and assistance consistent with safe
banking. "It pleases us to please
you."
M. C. S. NOBLE. President
R. L. STROWD, V.-President
M. E. HOGAN. Cashier
Vanstory 's
Snappy Clothes
for the
College Man*
Antrtg Srm& (Umbra.
cOanstory Clothing Co.
C. H. McKnight, Pres. and Mgr.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
of Willcox and Willeox at Florence, S.
C. He is one of the leading lawyers of
the Palmetto State.
— Judge Geo. W. Connor, of Wilson, was
renominated for judge of the second ju-
dicial district in the primaries of June 5.
1893
— A. G. Mangum, '93, and E. B. Denny,
'19, practice law together under the
firm name of Mangum and Denny, at
Gastonia. Mr. Denny is president of the
recently organized Civitan Club of Gas-
tonia.
— L. I. Moore, '93, and Wm. Dunn, Jr.,
'04, practice law together at New Bern
under the firm name of Moore and Dunn.
— Rufus L. Patterson is a capitalist of
New York, located at 511 Fifth Avenue.
— J. F. Hendren practices his profession,
law, at Elkin.
1894
— G. R. Little is trust officer of the Caro-
lina Banking and Trust Co., at Elizabeth
City.
— S. A. Hodgin is associated with the
Farquar Heating and Ventilating Co., at
Greensboro.
1895
— M. H. Yount, lawyer of Hickory, was
recently elected mayor of the city.
— H. E. C. Bryant is a well-known Wash-
ington correspondent, handling news for
the Charlotte Observer and the New York
World.
1896
— M. B. Aston, of Goldfield, Nevada,
writes: "Our honored old alumnus, the
late Judge Adolphus Leigh Fitzgerald,
'62, has been remembered very con-
spicuously by his masonic brethren of
Nevada and in the very fashion that
would most have appealed to him. The
Scottish Rite bodies of masonry in
Nevada have given the University of
Nevada two scholarships to be known as
the Adolphus Leigh Fitzgerald scholar-
ships. The world knows how well, he de-
serves this tribute.
"For many years Judge Fitzgerald
and I were the only Carolina alumni
dwelling in Nevada, and until the first
day of March I had felt much alone in
this respect since the Judge 's death.
Thus it was a most pleasant surprise on
that day to meet Dr. George A. Carr,
'01, formerly of Durham. Returning
from a business trip to California, I
had stopped at Reno for a day, and im-
pelled by an annoying tooth I sought a
dentist, and dropped right into his of-
fice, literally into his arms, as it were.
Each eyed the other with the feeling
that his fare was familiar until I asked
1 1 i in whether he was not from North
Carolina, and then all was soon made
clear. At least one was happy and I
The Young Man
who prefers (and most young men do)
styles that are a perfect hlend of
novelty and refinement has long since
learned the special competency of this
clothes shop.
Pritchard-Bright & Co.
Durham, N. O.
Asphalt Roads
and Streets
Durable and Economica
If you are interested in streets or
roads we invite you to inspect our
work. See the Asphalt Highways built
by us recently : Rocky -Mount-Nash-
ville Highway, Raleigh-Cary Highway,
Durham toward Hillshoro, Durham
toward Roxboro, Greensboro to High
Point, Guilford County, Gibsonville
Road, Guilford County, Archdale Road,
Guilford County, Thomas ville Road,
Guilford County, Guilford Station Road
and many others. This work speaks for
itself.
A representative will visit you and
supply any information or estimate
desired.
Robert G. Lassiter & Co.
Engineering and Contracting
Home Office: Oxford, N. C.
327 Arcade Building Norfolk, Va.
1002 Citizens Bank Building
Raleigh, N. C.
American Exchange National Bank
Building Greensboro, N. O.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
267
Our Summer
Styles
in men's clothes are now com-
plete. CAROLINA men are
given a cordial invitation to
call in and inspect our offer-
ings of latest models and fine
textures from fashionable
clothes makers. A full line of
gents' furnishings is always
on hand.
Sneed-Markham-
Taylor Co.
Durham, N. C.
KODAK FINISHING
As Qood as the Best
Anywhere
Over eighty per cent of our busi-
ness is mail order
May we send you a price lisl?
R. W. FOISTER
BOX 242
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
think two were. Dr. Carr is enjoying a
good practice with evident happiness in
his western home. "
—Dr. W. C. Smith is dean of the Col-
lege of Liberal Arts and Sciences of the
Ninth Carolina College for Women, at
Greensboro.
— F. M. Laxton is at the head of the
engineering and contracting firm of
Tucker and Laxton, Charlotte. lie holds
the golf championship of the Carolinas.
— R. W. Blair is a member of the firm
of Blair and Rothrus, federal tax at-
torneys and accountants, at Detroit,
Mich.
Geo. Stephens, '96, is president and
Chas. A. Webb, '89, is vice-president and
treasurer of the Ashcville Citizen.
— A. H. London is secretary and treas-
urer of the J. M. Odell Mfg. Co., cotton
manufacturers of Fittsboro.
— J. Guy Rankin is engaged in banking
at Campobello, S. C.
— Jas. A. Gwyn is with the Pyralin di-
vision of the DuPont Co., located at Wil-
mington, Del.
1897
— Joe S. Wray, formerly superintendent
of the Gastonia schools, is general agent,
located at Gastonia, for the Reliance Life
Insurance Co.
— Dr. R. H. Wright, president of the
East Carolina Teachers College, Green-
ville, was elected second vice-president of
the General Alumni Association at com-
mencement.
— Ralph H. Graves, Sunday editor of the
A < w York Times, is in Europe on a
business trip for the Times. He has
been ill in Germany but is now on the
road to recovery.
— D. W. Carter is a merchant and farmer
of Cumberland County, located at Jerome.
1898
— H. S. Hall is with the Grinnell Co.,
408 Society for Savings Building, Cleve-
land, Ohio.
— R. II. Lewis, Jr., is secretary and
treasurer of the Oxford Cotton Mills, at
Oxford.
1899
11. M. Wa<; staff, Secretary,
CI,;, pel Hill, X. C.
B. B. Lane is connected will, the St;, I.'
department of public instruction of
Florida as recording secretary of the
board of examiners, locale, I at Talla-
hassee, lie is a men, her of tin' (ac-
uity in the summer session of the Uni-
versity of Florida.
— R. G. Kittrell, '99, and B. II. I'erry,
'06, practice law together at Henderson
under the firm name of Kittrell and
Ferry.
Rev. \V. 10. Cox is rector of the Church
Smoke
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We extend a special invita-
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what's new in Spring and
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Fashion's very latest styles
in Coats, Suits, Dresses and
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Beautiful Silks and Woolen
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home of Lady Ruth, Crown,
Modart and Binner Corsets.
Centemeri Kid Gloves and
Ashers Knit Goods.
Mail orders promptly filled.
Rawls-Knight Co.
Durham, N. C.
268
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Premier Quality
Equipment
for all
ATHLETIC SPORTS
Alex Taylor & Co.
INC.
26 E. 42nd St., New York
BOOK EXCHANGE
TAYLOR AGENCY
DRINK
Delicious and Refreshing
Quality tells the difference in
the taste between Coca Cola and
counterfeits.
Demand the genuine by full
name — nicknames encourage sub-
stitution.
Get a bottle of the genuine
from your grocer, fruit stand, or
cafe.
Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Durham, N. C.
of the Holy Comforter, 2110 Grove
Avenue, Richmond, Va.
— Dr. S. C. Ford is a dentist of Frank-
linton and is also mayor of the town.
1900
W. S. Bernard, Secretary,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
— Following his graduation from the
University in 1900, Dr. J. B. Massey en-
tered Union Seminary at Richmond, Va.,
from which institution he was graduated
in 1903. He served as a pastor in Vir-
ginia for several years and then became
pastor of the First Presbyterian Church
of Wilson. From Wilson he went to
Ilampden-Sidney, Va., where he holds the
chair of Bible and Philosophy in Hamp-
den-Sidney College. Washington and Lee
University gave him the degree of Doc-
tor of Divinity. He preached the bacca-
laureate sermon at the recent commence-
ment of the North Carolina College for
Women.
— W. D. Siler, '00, and Wade Barber,
'lti, practice law together at Pittsboro
under the firm name of Siler and Barber.
1901
J. G. Murphy, Secretary,
Wilmington, N. C.
— Dr. Jos. E. Avent was elected in June
president of Martha Washington College,
Abingdon, Va. Dr. Avent has been in
school work since his graduation from
the University. He was once at the head
of the Morganton schools and later at
the head of the Goldsboro schools.
More recently he held the chair of sec-
ondary education in the Virginia State
Normal College, Farmville, Va. The
past year he spent at Columbia Univer-
sity.
— Donald L. St. Clair and Miss Hattie
Ross were married in June at Sanford.
Mr. St. Clair is editor of the Sanford
Express.
— R. W. Jordan is secretary and treas-
urer of the Greensville Mfg. Co., box
manufacturers, at Emporia, Va.
— W. M. Stevenson practices law in the
firm of McColl and Stevenson, at Me-
Coll, S. C.
1902
Louis Graves, Secretary,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
—J. C. Exum, '02, and J. T. Exum, '05,
are members of the firm of J. Exum and
Co., dealers in general merchandise at
Snow Hill. J. C. Exum is president of
the First National Bank of Snow Hill.
J. T. Exum represents Greene County in
the General Assembly.
— S. J. Everett, Greenville attorney, is
the nominee of the democratic party for
the State Senate from his district.
— J. E. Swain, Asheville attorney, re-
ceived the nomination on the democratic
HICKS-CRABTREE
COMPANY
THREE MODERN DRUG STORES
RALEIGH, NOETH CAROLINA
Eastman Kodaks and Supplies
Nunnally's Candies
The place to meet your friends when
in the Capital City
GILBERT CRABTREE, Mgr.
Cross 8 Linehan
Company
Leaders in Clothing and
Gents' Furnishings
RALEIGH, N. C.
A. A. KLUTTZ
CO., Inc.
Extends a cordial invitation
to all students and alumni of
U. N. C. to make their store
headquarters during their stay
in Chapel Hill.
Complete Stock
of books, stationery and a com-
plete line of shoes and haber-
dashery made by the leaders of
fashion, always on hand.
A. A. KLUTTZ CO., Inc.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
269
Perry-Horton Shoe Co.
Special Agents for Nettleton and
Hurley Shoes for Men, and
Cousins and Grover Shoes
for Women
MAKE OUR STORE HEAD-
QUARTERS WHILE IN
DURHAM, N. C.
Dermott Heating
Company
Durham, N.C
HEATING SYSTEMS
Steam, Hot Water or Vapor
Durham Home Heating
Systems
Engineers and Contractors
COOPER'S
MONUMENTS
Communicate with me re-
garding your needs for monu-
ments or tombstones. Will
gladly forward catalogue upon
request.
W. A. COOPER
RALEIGH, N. C.
BLUE RIBBON BRAND
ICE CREAM
SHERBERTS
FANCY ICES
PUNCH
•Durham Ice Cream
Co.
Durham, N. C.
ticket for solicitor of the nineteenth
judicial district in the primaries on June
5.
— G. L. Jones practices law in Asheville
as a member of the firm of Bourne,
Parker and Jones.
— E. K. Gulley is engaged in the prac-
tice of law at Sylvester, Ga.
— E. D. Sallenger is engaged in the
wholesale business at Florence, S. C.
1903
N. W. Walker, Secretary,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
— Thos. S. Fuller is a member of the
legal firm of Xicoll, Anable, Fuller and
.Sullivan, with offices at 61 Broadway,
New York City.
— J. V. Cobb, of Pinetops, is a director
for the Tobacco Growers Co-operative
Association.
— T. B. Foust is manager of the C'larks-
ville Foundry and Machine Works,
Clarksville, Tenn.
—Mr. and Mrs. Earle P. Holt have an-
nounced the birth on April 10 of a son,
Earle, Jr.
1904
T. F. Hickebson, Secretary,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
— In the primaries on June 5 Jno. G.
Carpenter, lawyer of Gastonia, received
the nomination on the democratic ticket
for solicitor of the fourteenth judicial
district. Mr. Carpenter was formerly a'
member of the State Senate and was for
several years chairman of the county
democratic executive committee.
— Dr. E. E. Randolph is in the faculty
of the A. & E. College at West Raleigh.
He is in charge of the industrial division
of the chemistry department.
— Nash S. Cochran is located at Mat-
thews, where he is cashier of the Bank
of Matthews.
— D. F. Giles, of Marion, has received
the democratic nomination for the State
Senate from his district.
— W. G. Craven is secretary ami treas-
urer of the recently organized City In-
dustrial Bank of Charlotte.
— Dr. R. A. Herring holds the chair of
preventive medicine in the medical de-
partment of the University of Georgia,
at Augusta.
— G. G. Thomas is engineer of bridges
for the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co.,
.it Wilmington.
Alfred W. Haywood practices his pro-
fession, law, ;it 61 Broadway, New York
City.
1905
W. T. Shore. Secr<t<ti u.
Charlotte, N. C.
— Dr. Stroud Jordan is chief chemist for
Henry Ileide and Co. His address is
352 Parkside Ave., Brooklyn.
HUTCHINS DRUG STORE
Winston-Salem, N. C.
A drug store complete in all respects
located in the heart of Winston-Salem
and operated hy CAROLINA men,
where up-to-the-minute service is main-
tained, and where Alumni and their
friends are always especially welcome.
JAS. A. HUTCHINS, Manager
The Royal Cafe
University students, faculty mem-
bers, and alumni visit the Royal
Cafe while in Durham. Under
new and progressive management.
Special parlors for ladies.
DURHAM'S MODERN
CAFE
Budd-Piper Roofing Co.
Durham, N. C.
Distributors of JOHNS-MANSV1LLE
Asbestos Shingles and Roofing
Contractors for Slate, Tin, Tile, Slag
and Gravel Roofing
Sheet Metal Work
ACENTS.FOR
eMSi
BROADWAY CAFE
WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU
TO VISIT OUR CAFE WHEN
YOU ARE IN GREENSBORO
Excellent Service
Courteous Treatment
GREENSBORO, N. C.
270
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
J. F. Pickard Store
HEAVY AND FANCY
GROCERIES
Opposite Campus
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
The Selwyn Hotel
CHARLOTTE, N. 0.
Fireproof, Modern and Luxurious
IN THE HEART OF EVERYTHING
H. C. Lazalere, Manager
WELCOME TO
STONEWALL HOTEL
A. D. GANNAWAY, Manager
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
c ^
Campbell-Warner Co.
FINE MONUMENTS
REASONABLE PRICES. WRITE US
Phone 1131
RALEIGH, N. 0.
i- 1
CHAS. C. HOOK, ARCHITECT
CHARLOTTE, H. C.
Twenty years ' experience in
planning school and college build-
ings.
The Peoples National Bank
WINSTON SALEM, N. C.
Capital $150,000 U. S. Depository
J. W. Fries. Pres. W. A. Blaie, V.-P.
N. Mitchell, Cashier
J. M. Dean, Assistant Cashier
Dillon Supply Co.
Machinery, Mill Supplies
RALEIGH, N. C.
f, =j^
R. BLACKNALL & SON
DRUGGISTS
Norms and Huyuer's Candies
G. Bernard, Manager
Corcoran Street Durham, N, C.
v h
— I. C. Wright practices law in the firm
of Wright and Stevens at Wilmington.
— R. W. Perry is refinery manager for
Gunn's Limited at Toronto, Canada.
1906
J. A. Parker, Secretary,
Washington, D. C.
— Dr. H. B. Hiatt is a physician of High
Point.
— Hubert Hill is in the faculty of the
University of West Virginia, at Morgan-
town. He is in the department of
chemistry.
— Walter B. Love, lawyer of Monroe and
president of the class of '06, is the
nominee of the republican party for
Congress from his district.
1907
C. L. Weill, Secretary,
Greensboro, N. C.
— Kay Dixon has resigned the vice-presi-
dency of the United States Trust Co., at
Jacksonville, Fla., and has returned to
his home city, Gastonia, where he is
associated with his father and brother
in the management of the Dixon Mills,
Inc. and the Trenton Cotton Mills. He
is vice-president of the recently organized
Civitan Club of Gastonia.
— Dr. Henry L. Sloan is a member of
the firm of Drs. Matheson, Peeler, Sloan
and Shirley, specialists in diseases of the
eye, ear, nose and throat, with offices in
the Independence Building, Charlotte.
— T. Holt Haywood is at the head of the
T. Holt Haywood department of the
cotton goods commission firm of Fred-
erick Vietor and Achelis. His address
is 65 Leonard St., New York City.
— O. Max Gardner is president of the
recently organized Kiwanis Club of
Shelby. The board of directors includes
in its membership C. R. Hoey, '00. and
Paul Webb, '98.
— G. S. Attmore, Jr., is with the Mead-
ows Co., fertilizer manufacturers of New
Bern.
— W. H. Duls is connected with the legal
department of the Southwestern Bell
Telephone Co., at Dallas, Tex.
— J. H. D 'Alemberte is vice-president of
the Realty Corporation of Pensaeola, at
Pensacola, Pla.
— W. D. McLean is a member of the
firm of Horton, McLean and Co., dealers
in stocks and bonds, at Anderson, S. C.
1908
M. Robins, Secretary,
Greensboro, N. C.
— T. L. Simmons is a member of the
firm of Simmons and Redmond, insurance,
loans and rentals, at Rocky Mount.
— Major D. C. Absher of the medical
corps of the U. S. Army is stationed at
Main Street Pharmacy
LEADING DRUGGISTS
Durham, N. C.
Huffme Hotel
Quick Lunch Counter and Dining
Room
Rooms $ 1 .00 and Up Near the Depot
Greensboro, N. C.
J. R. Donnell, Prop, and Manager
ANDREW'S CASH STORE
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Students and Faculty Headquarters
for Cluetts, and E. & W. Shirts, Ral-
ston and WalkOver Shoes, Sure-Fit
Caps, Hole proof and Phoenix Hose.
M. Moses Tailored Clothing, General
furnishings.
SKKYUM']— QUALITY STYLES
JACK ANDREWS' DEPARTMENT
Olje University "press
Zeb P. Council, Mgr.
Printing, Engraved Cards
QUALITY AND SERVICE
CHAPEL HILL, N. O.
PATTERSON BROS.
DRUGGISTS
Agency Norris Candy The Rexall Store
Chapel Hill, N. O.
Gooch's Cafe
Anything to Eat
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
DURHAM BUSINESS SCHOOL
Offers exceptional opportunities to thoso
desiring training in the fundamental
principles of business.
Write for catalogue and full partic-
ulars to
Mrs. Waltf.r Lee Lednum, President
DURHAM, N. C.
HOTEL CLEGG
Greensboro, N. C.
OPPOSITE STATION
Rooms $1.50 and Up
Cafe in Connection
CAROLINA MEN WELCOME
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
271
The Carolina Man's Shoe Store
Carr-Bryant
High Grade Shoes with Snap
and Style
Carr-Bryant Boot 4" Shoe Co.
106- W. Main Street Durham, N. C.
(p
W. B. SORRELL
Jeweler and Optometrist
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Model Laundry Co.
DURHAM, N. C.
Expert Laundry Service
Eubanks Drug Co.
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Agents for ISnnnally's Candies
PRIDGEN & JONES COMPANY
We carry the beat shoes, Edwin
Clapp, Howard and Foster, and Hey-
wood's.
Expert fitters — A cordial welcome
awaits you.
107 W. Main St. Durham, N. C.
NEW LOCHMOOR HOTEL
DURHAM, N. C.
Invites the patronage of CAROLINA
Alumni and assures them of a hearty
welcome. Excellent service at reason-
able rates.
A. E. Lloyd Hardware
Company
DURHAM, N. C.
All
finds of hardware, sporting
goods,
and college boys' acces-
sories.
Geo
. W. Tandy, Manager
the headquarters of the 81st Division, in
Knoxville, Tenn.
— W. H. S. Burgwyn, lawyer of Wood-
land, has received the nomination for
representative of Northampton County in
the General Assembly.
1909
O. C. Cox, Secretary,
Greensboro, N. C.
— Dr. W. H. Strowd is chief chemist for
tin- Wisconsin department of agriculture
at Madison.
— Joseph L. Murphy and Miss Jessie
Donaldson were married on April 29 in
Morristown, Tenn. They make their
home in Hickory, where Mr. Murphy is
engaged in the practice of law.
— E. C. Byerly is located at Lexington
as superintendent of public welfare for
Davidson County.
— W. F. Strowd is with the Buck Creek
Cotton Mills, at Siluria, Ala.
1910
J. R. Nixon, Secretary,
Edcnton, X. ( '.
— Lindsay Warren, lawyer of Washing-
ton, has been nominated on the demo-
cratic ticket for the State House of
Representatives from Beaufort County.
Mr. Warren was formerly president pro
tern of the State Senate.
— Jno. M. Reeves is a member of the
firm of Reeves Bros., dry goods commis-
sion merchants, 55 Leonard St., New
York City.
— John H. Boushall is trust officer for
the Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Co.
— D. M. Williams is associated with
('has. 10. Waddell, consulting engineer of
Asheville.
— C. O. Robinson is manager of the C.
II. Robinson Co., wholesale dry goods
merchants of Elizabeth City.
— R. A. Urquhart is a member of the firm
of Urquhart and Garris, farm supplies
ami produce, at Woodville.
— S. S. Nash, Jr., has returned from New
York City, where he lived for several
years, and is now located at Tarboro.
— T. D. Hose is with the Capo Fear
Bonded Warehouse Co., ;it Fayetteville.
— L. T. Avery is witli the Export Loaf
Tobacco Company, at Greenville.
— I. P. Davis is manager of the Duplin
Real Estate and Insurance Co., at War-
saw.
1911
I. ( '. Mosi i:. Si en tary,
Asheboro, \. C.
— The spinners Processing Co. is the
latest addition to the group of textile
plants under tin- direction of K. 8. Tan
nor, at Spindale. In addition to mer-
cerizing yarn this plant will be equipped
to furnish bleached, dyed and gassed
MARKHAM-ROGERS
COMPANY
Clothiers, Tailors, Furnishers and
Hatters
ALL THE NEW FALL
STYLES AT REASONABLE
PRICES
DURHAM, N. C.
ODELL/S, ,nc.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
China, Cut Glass and
Silverware
General line Sporting Goods
Household Goods
Dependable goods. Prompt
Service. Satisfactory
Prices
=^J
H. S. STORR CO.
Office Furniture, Machines and Sup-
plies. Printers and Manu-
facturers of Rubber
Stamps
RALEIGH, N. C.
Whiting-Horton Co.
Thirty-three Years Raleigh 's
Leading Clothiers
Snider-Fletcher Co.
WATCHES. DIAMONDS. AND
JEWELRY
110 W. Main St. Durham, N. O.
Flowers for all Occasii
cations
DURHAM FLORAL
NURSERY
Chapel Hill Agents: EUBANKS DRUG COMPANY
272
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
yarns. K. S. Tanner is secretary of the
corporation. E. H. Johnston, '12, of
Charlotte, is vice-president. Included on
the board of directors are J. Leak
Spencer, '00, and John Tillett, '11, both
of Charlotte.
— C. L. Williams, Sanford attorney, won
the democratic nomination in the pri-
maries of June 5 for solicitor of the
fourth judicial district, defeating Wal-
ter D. Siler, '00, of Pittsboro, incumbent.
— F. G. Whitney is now located in
Charlotte. For several years past he
was engaged in legal work in New York
City.
— E. C. McLean is cashier of the Morris
Plan Industrial Bank of Greensboro.
1942
J. C. Lockhart, Secretary,
Raleigh, N. C.
— L. P. McLendon, of Durham, won out
over S. M. Gattis, '84, of Hillsboro, in-
cumbent and one time speaker of the
House of the North Carolina Legislature,
in a close race for the democratic nomi-
nation for solicitor of the tenth judicial
district.
— Augustus Washington Graham, Jr.,
and Miss Mary Edmonson Webb were
married on June 20 in the First Baptist
Church of Oxford. They live at Oxford,
where Mr. Graham is engaged in the
practice of law.
— H. B. Marrow, of Smithfield, has be-
come superintendent of the Johnston
County schools.
1913
A. L. M. Wiggins, Secretary,
Hartsville, 8. C.
— Geo. Carmichael is cashier of the Com-
mercial Bank and Trust Co., Franklin-
ton.
— Rev. W. G. Harry is pastor of St.
Paul 's Presbyterian Church, New Or-
leans.
— Marvin Lee Ritch and Miss Lois Wilson
were married on April 27 at Dallas.
They live in Charlotte, where Mr. Ritch
practices law.
— Capt. C. B. Wilson is assistant mili-
tary attache with the American Embassy
at Constantinople.
— Dr. Karl B. Pace and Miss Lida Tay-
lor were married on June 8 in St. Paul 's
Methodist Church, Greenville. They live
in Greenville where Dr. Pace practices
medicine.
— Ira W. Hine is secretary and treasurer
of the Hine-Mitchell Co., Inc., clothiers
and furnishers of Winston-Salem.
1914
Oscar Leach, Secretary,
Raeford, N. C.
— J. G. Feezor, superintendent of the
Stem schools, writes that all the boys in
his graduating class, six in number, will
enter the University in the fall. Also,
he says that one of the six girls in the
class expects to finish her college course
at the University.
— DeWitt Quinn is engaged in the cotton
manufacturing business at Shelby, with
the Ella Cotton Mills.
— Dr. Percy Bethel Stokes of Ruffin ami
Miss Mary Lyall Lane of Siler City were
married on May 25.
— Wm. C. Lord is with the Kingsport
Color Corporation, at Kingsport, Tenn.
— F. L. Webster practices law in Winston-
Salem with offices in the Wachovia Bank
Building.
— W. J. Long is engaged in farming in
Northampton County, at Garysburg.
— H. A. Pendergraph is connected with
the firm of Henry L. Doherty and Com-
pany, located at Athens, Ga.
— William B. Campbell is engaged in the
practice of law at Wilmington. He has
been located in this city since leaving the
University.
1915
D. L. Bell, Secretary,
Pittsboro, N. C.
— F. D. Phillips, lawyer of Rockingham,
was high man on the democratic ticket
for solicitor of the thirteenth judicial
district in the primaries on June 5. Mr.
Phillips served in the world war as a
first lieutenant of infantry and received
several citations for gallantry in action.
— Dr. Hugh Smith is located at Green-
ville, S. C, where he is engaged in the
practice of internal medicine. His office
address is 328 N. Main Street.
— Thos. C. Boushall is located in Rich-
mond, Va., where he is president of the
Morris Plan Bank of Richmond.
— George F. Taylor is associate physicist
in the agricultural department at Wash-
ington. He lives at 1226 North Carolina
Ave., N. E.
— Rev. J. Reginald Mallett has taken up
his duties at rector of St. John's Church,
Wilmington. Formerly he was located
at Walnut Cove.
— Dr. C. L. Johnston is now located at
Ringgold, Ga., where he is engaged in
the practice of medicine. Formerly he
was located at Wind Rock, Tenn.
— E. J. Lilly, Jr., is a captain of in-
fantry of the U. S. Army. He is sta-
tioned at 315 Peerless Bldg., Milwaukee,
Wis.
— G. Allen Mebane is vice-president of
the L. Banks Holt Mfg. Co., cotton
manufacturers of Graham.
— J. Shepard Bryan is principal of the
Wilson high school.
1916
F. H. Deaton, Secretary,
Statesville, N. C.
— W. J. Hoover is located at Memphis,
Tenn., where he is connected with Wilson
and Co., packers. During the world war
Mr. Hoover saw service overseas as a
captain in the air service. He shot
down four German planes and was decor-
ated several times.
— Capt. Marshall McDiarmid Williams
and Miss Lucy Pearl Lazenby were mar-
ried on April 26 at Waco, Texas. They
are at home at Fort Sam Houston, Tex.
— A. T. Castelloe, lawyer of Aulander, is
the nominee of the democratic party for
the State Senate from his district.
— Roy M. Homewood is with the engi-
neering and contracting firm of Robert
G. Lassiter and Co., at Oxford.
— B. A. Credle is engaged in the general
mercantile business at New Holland.
— F. C. Jordan is with the Keystone
Paper Box Co., at Burlington.
— Clyde L. Fore is located at Siler City.
He was married recently.
— Charles L. Coggin has received the
nomination on the democratic ticket for
county solicitor of the Rowan County
court.
— Dr. E. C. Herman practices medicine
at LaGrange, Ga.
— Clyde Lathrop Fore and Miss Ruth
Madeline Edwards were married on
March 18 in Siler City.
— J. C. Harper is associated with the
Harper Furniture Company at Lenoir.
— R. E. Parker, who was formerly in the
faculty of the University of Minnesota,
is now professor of English in Des
Moines University and is located at
Highland Park, Des Moines, Iowa. Mr.
Parker served overseas as a captain of
infantry in the 81st Division.
— Herman Cone and Miss Louise Wolff
were married on March 20 at the Plaza
Hotel, New York City. They live in
Greensboro, where Mr. Cone is connected
with large textile interests.
— J. M. Cox is in the sales department
of the Universal Portland Cement Com-
pany. He writes that he is kept on the
run most of the time and that lately he
saw Capt. E. J. Lilly, '15, in Chicago,
and Dr. Ralph Spence, in Dallas, Tex.
His headquarters at present are at Lex-
ington, Ky.
— Charles E. Lambeth is joint manager
with his brother, Walter Lambeth, '12,
of the insurance department of the
American Trust Company, Charlotte.
He is also at the head of the Charles E.
Lambeth Motor Company, sales agent for
Dodge cars.
1917
H. G. Baity, Secretary,
Raleigh, N. C.
— James William Pless, Jr., and Miss
Marjorie Kirby were married at the
First Methodist Church of Marion on
June 16. They make their home in
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
273
Marion, where Mr. Pless practices law
in the firm of Pless, Winborne arid Pless.
— Capt. C. S. Harris is in the coast artil-
lery corps of the U. S. Army, stationed
at Fort Washington, Md.
— J. E. Harris has received the award
of an American Field Service Fellowship
for French Universities for the year
1922-23. His specialty is romance
languages. He has been in the faculty
of Columbia University.
— E. L. Spencer is engaged in the lumber
business at Loachapoka, Ala.
— -John Bright Hill practices law at Wil-
mington with offices in the Southern
1 milling.
— A. C. Forney is assistant office man-
ager of the firm of Earle Brothers, 66
Broad Street, New York City.
— Bobert Dale has opened a new drug
store at Kenansville.
— John M. Peirce is manager of the J.
H. Peirce Manufacturing Company, lum-
ber manufacturers, at Warsaw.
— D. B. Hill is in the cotton and lumber
business at Warsaw.
— H. L. Stevens, Jr., is engaged in the
practice of law in the firm of Stevens,
Beasley and Stevens at Warsaw.
—Arthur B. Corey, '17, and S. 0. Worth-
ington, '21, are engaged in the practice
of law at Greenville.
— D. N. Edwards is in the sales depart-
ment of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Com-
pany at Winston-Salem.
— C. H. Gryder is county superintendent
of schools in Alexander County.
— L. P. Gwaltney is in charge of the
service department of the White Motor
Corporation at Charlotte.
— D. E. Eagle completed his medical
course at Johns Hopkins University this
year.
— W. C. Wright, Jr., is manager of the
firm of W. C. Wright and Company, a
leading shoe store of Winston-Salem.
Mr. Wright is especially well remembered
on the Hill by reason of liis musical
work during college days.
— The engagement of Miss Elizabeth
Anne Seipp, of Baltimore, and Mr. Ely
Jackson Perry, of Kinston, has been an-
nounced. Mr. Perry is a member of the
Kinston bar.
— Charles W. lliggins is captain of
Sound Ranging Company No. 1, coast ar-
tillery corps, Camp Eustis, Va.
— Press dispatches carried the informa-
tion lately that district attorney, Irvin
Tucker, Law '01, and E. K. Proctor,
'17, would practice law at Whiteville.
— T. O. Wright is a member of the fac-
ulty of the Pleasant Garden high school.
In service he was a second lieutenant in
the quartermaster corps.
— John Harvey and Miss Helen Harrell
were married February 26 in St. Mary's
Episcopal Church, Kinston.
— M. B. Fowler is business manager of
the Durham city schools.
1918
W. R. Wunsch, Secretary,
Monroe, La.
— Ray Armstrong and Miss Sarah Korne-
gay were married on June 27 in St.
Paul's Methodist Church, Goldsboro.
They live in Gastonia, where Mr. Arm-
strong is principal of the Gastonia high
school.
— I. V. Giles has resigned as instructor
in chemistry in the University to enter
industrial work in Philadelphia. He re-
reived his Ph.D. degree last commence-
ment.
— Frank B. John, for several years in the
faculty of the Salisbury high school, is
now principal of this high school.
— Basil McGee and Miss Inez Abernet hy
were married recently in Mount Holly.
They make their home in Gastonia.
— E. R. Warren, Gastonia attorney, was
lately elected chairman of the Gaston
County democratic executive committee,
succeeding John G. Carpenter, '04, re-
signed.
— Dr. Cora Z. Corpening, Med. '18, is as-
sistant diagnostician in Lakeview Hos-
pital, Suffolk, Va.
— Dr. A. C. Banner is engaged in the
practice of medicine in his home city,
Mt. Airy.
-C. H. Herty, Jr., is now located at
338 Summer Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
— Rev. S. Leslie Reid is located thirty
miles up the Hudson from New York
City at Haverstraw, N. Y., where he is
pastor of the Central Presbyterian
Church. Mr. Reid won the Worth prize at
Carolina and at Yale, where he later
studied, he also won high honors. He
was married last summer.
— H. F. Makepeace was lately elected
commander of the Sanford post of the
American Legion.
— R. M. Stockton is engaged in furniture
manufacturing at Winston-Salem.
—Curtis Crissman is superintendent of
the Battleboro schools.
1919
II. G. West, S< <•/■. tary,
Thoniasville, N. C.
Reid Atwater Maynard and Miss Grace
Moore were married on June 111. Thr\
make their borne in Burlington, where
Mr. Maynard is assistant cashier of tin'
First Savings Hank. Mr. Maynard was
in service in the world war as a first
lieutenant of coast artillery.
— J. C. Bynum is with the A. Sherman
Lumber Co., manufacturers and whole-
salers of lumber, at Potsdam, N. Y.
— J. C. MeLeod, of Florence, S. ('., was
graduated from the medical department
of Cornell at the recent commencement
at the head of his class.
— C. M. Farmer is director of extension
for the State Normal School at Troy,
Ala.
— B. W. Sipe is editor of the Cherokee
Scout, at Murphy.
1920
T. S. Kittkell, Secretary,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
— Charles Anderson Kivette and Miss
Sally May Russell were married on June
15. They live at Carthage.
— Miss Kate Meares is in the faculty of
Columbia College, Columbia, S. C.
— J. E. Dowd and A. Z. Travis are en-
gaged in the real estate business in Char-
lotte as salesmen with W. E. Thomas.
— W. F. Lewis is in the faculty of the
Oak Ridge Institute.
— C. R. Joyner is in the faculty of the
Winston-Salem high school.
— Lyn Bond, lawyer of Tarboro, has
been elected judge of the recorder's
court for Edgecombe County.
1921
C. W. Phillips, Secretary,
Greensboro, N. C.
— R. O. Deitz is with the Mecklenburg
County Highway Commission, Charlotte.
— C. R. Harris is instructor in chemistry
in Tulane University at New Orleans.
— A. C. Lineberger, Jr., is engaged in the
cotton manufacturing business at Bel-
mont.
— F. P. Brooks goes to Clemson College
as associate professor of chemistry.
— W. H. Bobbitt received license to prac-
tice law in the January examination con-
dueled by the State supreme court. He
is connected with the firm of Stewart and
McRae, at Charlotte.
— Hubert Heffner and Miss Ruth Penny
were married in Battle's Park on April
8. The wedding took place at a romantic
spot known as Stone Seat. The mar-
riage was performed by Dr. W. D. Moss.
— F. D. Bell is with the Green River
Manufacturing Co., cotton manufac
turers at Tuxedo.
— J. D. Morris is located at Roxboro
where he is in the telephone business.
1922
L. J. Phippb, Si eretary,
Chapel Hill, N. C.
— John Dewey Dorsett, and Miss Mi-
nerva .Jenkins, were married on June 14
at Siler City. They make their home in
F'ittsboro, where Mr. Dorsett serves as
clerk of Superior Court for Chatham
County. Mrs. Dorsett is the daughter of
J. J. Jenkins, '86, banker of Siler City.
— Allen Harold Sims, Jr., and Miss Anne
Sloan Rankin, both of Gastonia, were
married on June 14. Mr. Sims is with
274
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
the Citizens National Bank of Gastonia.
— M. A. Sledd, who received his M. A.
degree at commencement, will teach
chemistry in the Wilmington high school.
— E. D. Jennings will teach chemistry in
the Greensboro high school next year.
NECROLOGY
1861
— Capt. William Robert Bond, A.B.
1861, died on June 20 at his home in
Scotland Neck, aged 82 years. Capt.
Bond entered the service of the Con-
federacy immediately after graduation
ami served with gallantry in the four
years' hard struggle. When the war
was over he returned to his home and
entered upon the pursuits of a planter.
He wrote a number of articles concern-
ing North Carolina's part in the Civil
War. His pamphlet "Pickett or Petti-
grew" is perhaps the best known of his
writings.
1891
— Benjamin Thorpe Green died suddenly
at his home in Franklinton on May 10,
aged 51 years. He was a student in the
University from 1887 until 1891. He
was held in high esteem as a. citizen and
moving spirit in his home town. He is
survived by his wife, three daughters
and one son.
1894
— Thomas Christian Wooten died on
June 4 at his home in Kinston, 62 years
of age. He was a law student in the
University from 1802 until 1894. He
had been engaged in the practice of law
since leaving the University.
1907
— Dr. Arthur Flournoy Jackson, a mem-
ber of the medical class of 1907 in the
University and a former secretary of
the University Y. M. C. A., died October
6, 1921, at Philadelphia.' Dr. Jackson re-
ceived the M.D. degree from the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania in 1909. His
life was brilliant with accomplishment
and his standing among his colleagues
was high. While in the University he
registered from West Point, Ga.
1910
— Rev. William Hoke Ranisaur, A. B.
1010, died on May 29 in Liberia, where
lie had served since 1918 as missionary
of the Episcopal Church. Mr. Ramsaur
survived his wife by only four months,
her death having occurred in January of
this year. He was president of the Y.
M. C. A. in his senior year in the Uni-
versity and was the first secretary of the
class of 1910 after the graduation of
this class. He was achieving high suc-
cess in his chosen field of work. News
of his death came as a great shock to his
many devoted friends.
1911
— Walter Watson Cook died December 6
in Fayetteville, his home city, where he
had been engaged for several years in the
practice of law. He was a student in
the academic department of the Uni-
versity in 1907-8, 1908-9, 1909-10, and
studied law in 1913. He served overseas
in the 119th Infantry of the 30th Di-
vision.
1917
— Harriss Percy Alderman died at Wil-
mington on February 3. He had made
his home at Wilmington since leaving the
University and was in service in the
world war.
—Dr. Fred Robert Farthing, A.M. 1917,
died February 20 in Philadelphia, aged
26 years. Dr. Farthing received the
M.D. degree from Jefferson Medical
College in 1921, and at the time of his
death was serving as an interne at a
Philadelphia hospital.
— Charles Mortimer Fleming died Feb-
ruary 21 at his home in Wilson in his
twenty-seventh year. He was a student
in the University in 1013-14. He was
engaged in the tobacco business. Dur-
ing the world war he served in the U. S.
Navy.
n=
(Tulture
Scholarship Service
THE =
Self-Support
^tortl) (Tarolina (Tolkgefor^Pomen
Offers to Women a Liberal Education, Equipment for Womanly
Service, Professional Training for Remunerative Employment
The College offers four groups of studies lead-
ing to the following degrees: Bachelor of Arts,
Bachelor of Science, and Bachelor of Music.
Special courses in Pedagogy; in Manual Arts; in
Domestic Science, Household Art and Economics; in
Music; and in the Commercial Branches.
Teachers and graduates of other colleges provided
for in both regular and special courses.
Equipment modern, including furnished dormitories,
library, laboratories, literary society halls, gymna-
sium, music rooms, teachers' training school, infirm-
ary, model laundry, central heating plant, and open
air recreation grounds.
Dormitories furnished by the State. Board at
actual cost. Tuition free to those who pledge them-
selves to become teachers.
Fall 'Ccrrn Opens in September
Summer T>erm Begins in June
For catalogue and other information, address
JULIUS I. FOUST, President, Greensboro, N. C.
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Where Go To College?
There are three major considerations that
determine the greatness, or the potential
greatness of an educational institution.
These are :
1. The plant, including grounds, library,
classrooms, laboratories, and apparatus;
2. The faculty; 3. The student body and
it- democratic standards.
In addition to the twenty-seven build-
ings already on the campus of the Univer-
sity of North Carolina, the State of North
Carolina is this year putting $1,490,000
into new buildings and equipment. The
library of lOswiOL) volumes is spending
$24,000 annually for hooks and periodicals.
Eight thousand volumes were received in
1921, and 1,005 magazines and learned
journals were received on subscription.
The faculty numbers 115 of the country's
besl scholars.
Speaking of the student body of the
University, Mr. Sherwood Eddy, of Yale
University, who has spent the major por-
tion of his life studying in four continents,
said that, with one exception, it was the
most seriously thoughtful and democratic
group of students he had ever known.
Registration for fall quarter, September
26-27'. 1922.
For further information address,
The Secretary to the President
The University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill
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