The Woman's College
University of North Carolina
The LIBRARY
Ol
Nftfep
_1259_
c.2
COLLEGE COLLECTION
III I If III 1L
B LB 111 III Ell 111 IIS
■ ill Til it
III1" 4 111 #" W «1 i ' III ill § Ill
It A.. I 1 1 ■ fe ,* I >■ llllli, IIP I Ill
| |
III III % II 111 I % % 111 All AC B 1:
I""" I 111
■ m J •§
III
■Hi I E1 •!'
Ill111 L IE m
THE AMMAL l'illlllllLIICAilT'llllllll IIP
THE (■•ill(IIL4IIIU'S CIILLECI IIP THE
1111 llli III V' C IP1' «C III ""I"11 lSi ilfc F lllll illlli' 1111' "I1111 U IP1"" 4 II' ill1' I III 111 /
11 11 III ▼ t-lli,jl I 1 iPr III IP II. I H liiii'AllliiJilPblfllllllii
4 lllll" F W lilllli K 111!' Ill III1' ill! llllllli I IIP11' I II 4 4 1111" lllll I III lllll A
linn' Ilk fe fc 111 J) Ill' lllll' Ilii,.!!!!1 | w llliii, I H liinr Am lllllk lllll1 Mm III lllll A
FOREWORD
N 2Gp
133 9
t.Z
The history of the forty-sixth year of life at Woman's Col-
lege is presented in a book typical of the school itself, the 1939
volume of PINE NEEDLES. Because it is representative, it
presents the college and its personalities in the light to which we
are most accustomed. The book does not, therefore, confine
itself to any one phase of college life, no matter how important
that one phase may seem It portrays the school not only during
its working hours but its playtime as well — a composite picture
of many activities.
In recalling for you the extensive programs of the student
and organizations of the Woman's College we realize that noth-
ing is more outstanding than our democratic way of living.
Woman's College is a democracy in which is bound up the spirit
of the pioneer state, the dynamic activity of the present, and
the purposeful planning of a state of time to come.
Because we believe that today the ideal of democracy is
more important than ever before in the history of the world, we
have chosen that ideal as the theme of our year book. From
Paul Green's dramatic story of the beginnings of the colonization
in our own state, "The Lost Colony," we have selected quota-
tions of representative verse to give to you that significant
spirit of the hope and the life of the commonwealth of North
Carolina and the community of Woman's College of the Univer-
sity of North Carolina.
or here once u/alked the men of dreams.
The sons of hope and pain and wonder,
Upon their foreheads froths bright diadem.
The light of the sun in their countenance.
*4nd ~Hieir lips singing a mur song _
A song for ages cjet unborn.
For us the children that come after them_
"i new and mightg taorld to be I
They sang.
""• land majestic, free .unbounded !
I! I II E It I! F P" III!!: B % E IhTAT III II III
, II III 11 1 % T IIIUVI" III » III
€>■ L a% S ..IS* E .S
till:1,.!. Ill llZ^ III CI 111 V
FEJfHIIItEJS
ATHLETICS
VI II I I I Ell PC
352275
Educator, counselor, believer in youth, Miss Minnie L. Jami-
son has served the college and the state since her graduation.
Her work has been as distinctive for excellence as for length
of service. Her personality has influenced generation after
generation of college girls.
To Miss Jamison, who has shown herself to be the peerless
friend of young womanhood, her "last class of Spencer girls" and
the Class of 1939 feel honored to dedicate this volume of PINE
NEEDLES.
Vedicatiei
MISS MINNIE L JAMISON
1"' III III
II LBS 11939
Remodeled Entrance to North Spencer
Eight
Ruins of the Old Training School
RHBBmi
The Bridge
Home Economics Buildinc
Administration Building from the Front Campus
Alumnae House as Seen from the Post Office
Eleven
Front Entrance to Mclver Building
Twelve
Anna M. Gove Infirmary
Thirteen
h ii ivlr iMm
I haue a dream _ so let it be, but" still
it coiW persist until I die There is an
ancient raying that if a tree ajoald
groaj great it must send its roots deep
and ujide . In its shade the lesser trees
ujill die. %o it is xaith nations, so ujith an
idea, or bu uour leaue , a dream.
Fijteen
IN MEMORIAM
This page is dedicated with devoted
appreciation by the students of the
Woman's College of the University of
North Carolina to the memory of
Charles Thomas Woollen, University
of North Carolina 1905, Controller of
the University of North Carolina, who
worked for the upbuilding of the
Woman's College "with all his heart,
with all his soul, and with all his mind."
F. P. G.
GOV CLYDE ROARK HOEY DR. FRANK PORTER GRAHAM
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA
EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE
CLYDE ROARK HOEY, ex officio, Chairman.
HENRY MAUGER LONDON, ex officio, Sec-
refary.
*1940: JOHN SPRUNT HILL, WALTER
MURPHY, JOHN J. PARKER.
::4942: MRS. LAURA WEILL CONE, MISS
EASDALE SHAW, HAYWOOD PARKER
"1944: JOSEPHUS DANIELS, CLARENCE POE,
IRVIN B.TUCKER.
*1946: CHARLES WHEDBEE, WILLIAM D.
FAUCETTE, LESLIE WEIL.
"Term expires.
The College became a part of the University of North Carolina in 1931,
when the General Assembly of North Carolina passed an act to consolidate
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the State College of Agricul-
ture and Engineering at Raleigh, and the North Carolina College for Wom-
en, into the University of North Carolina. By the provisions of this act, the
North Carolina College for Women on July 1, 1932, became the Woman's
College of the University of North Carolina. At that time, also, the Board of
Trustees chosen by the General Assembly assumed control of the new univer-
sity, and a few months later they elected Dr. Frank Porter Graham its presi-
dent.
riii
IILES 1939
BUILDING PROGRAM
MEMBERS OF BUILDING COMMITTEE
MRS. LAURA W. CONE, Chairman
DR. W, C. JACKSON
MISS HARRIET W. ELLIOTT
MR. C. E. TEAGUE
MR. T. C. HOYLE, JR.
There is an extensive and interesting building program in progress
on this campus. Beginning with the renovation of Spencer Hall, which
is now an exquisite and modern building, we have been carrying out a
program in cooperation with the Federal Government. The North Wing
of Spencer which was not remodeled last year, will be completed during
the spring. A large increase in the enrollment has made the construction of two new residence halls nec-
essary. These halls, which are to be in effect one building, are to be of Georgian style of architecture and
are to be located at the north end of the Quadrangle. They will house approximately three hundred
students.
A Science Building, costing approximately $300,000, is already under construction on the old Athletic
Field and will house the Biology, Chemistry, and Physics departments. A small sum of money has been ap-
propriated for the remodeling of Mclver Building. A new dining hall is being constructed, completing the
original plan of four dining rooms surrounding the central kitchen and service departments. All of the
construction work in progress is supposed to be completed by September, 1939.
MRS. LAURA W. CONE
•
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS
DR. WALTER CLINTON
JACKSON
DEAN OF ADMINISTRATION
The government of the College is based upon the principles to be found in any well-organized com-
munity. The Faculty and the students have integrated their ideas in the formation of the Constitution. The
law-making authority resides in a representative body from the student group and the Faculty. All student
officers are chosen democratically. The student organization works in close cooperation with the Dean of
Women and the Counselors who have charge of the residence halls.
There are three divisions of the student government machinery: the Judicial Board, the Legislature,
and the House Organizations, serving in their various capacities.
It is understood that to the Faculty and the Executive Officers is reserved the handling of such matters
as affect academic questions, matters relating to the health of the college community, the control of
property, and of special cases of discipline which are outside of student jurisdiction.
W ^i^J
MISS HARRIET ELLIOT
DEAN OF WOMEN
I11" III III
II LBS III §3!)
ADMINISTRATIVE
OFFICERS
DR. JULIUS I, F0US1
PRESIDENT EMERITUS
MISS LAURA H. COIT
SECRETARY OF THE COLLEGE
MR. E. J. FORNEY
TREASURER
MR. CLAUDE EDWARD TEAGUE
ASSISTANT COMPTROLLER
MR. C. W. PHILLIPS
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC RELATIONS
MISS MARY TAYLOR MOORE
REGISTRAR
DR RUTH M. COLLINGS
PHYSICIAN
MR. GUY R. LYLE
LIBRARIAN
Twenty
HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS
ART
GREGORY D. IVY
B.S., MA
Associate Professor
Central Missouri State Teachers College, B S., 1928; Columbia Uni-
versity, MA, 1932.
BIOLOGY
JOHN PAULGIVLER
Ph.B., MA.
Professor
Hamline University, B A., 1906; MA, 1912; Columbia University.
CHEMISTRY
FLORENCE LOUISE SCHAEFFER
BA, MA.
Professor
Barnard College, BA, 1920; Mount Holyoke College, M.A, 1922; Yale
University.
CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION
CHARLTON C. JERNIGAN
M.A, PhD.
Assistant Professor
Duke University, BA, 1925; MA, 1926; PhD., 1935; University of
Chicago.
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
GEORGE M. JOYCE
BS, M.S.
Assistant Professor
Indiana State Teachers' College, B S., 1930; Indiana University, MS,
1935.
ECONOMICS
AND ACTING HEAD
SECRETARIAL SCIENCE
ALBERT S. KEISTER
MA, Ph.D.
Professor
Otterbein College, BA, 1910; Columbia University, M.A, 1911; Uni-
versity of Chicago, PhD, 1927.
EDUCATION
JOHN H.COOK
MA, Ph.D.
Professor
Ohio Northwestern Un.versity, B.S., 1908; Miami, B.A., 1912; Columbia
University, MA, 1917; PhD, 1925.
ENGLISH
WILLIAM C. SMITH
Ph.B., L.H.D.
Professor of English Language and Literature
University of North Carolina, Ph B, 1896; L H D., 1920
GERMAN
CAROLINE B. SCHOCH
Ph.B., MA
Professor
University of Chicago, Ph B , 1907; University of Marburg, 1907-H
University of Wisconsin, MA,, 1919.
GIVLER SCHAEFFER JERNIGAN
JOYCE KEISTER COOK
jH urns ■fti f]
2
riu in
IILES 1939
Twenty-one
COLLI NGS
KENDRICK
EDWARDS
BARTON
ALTVATER
ROSINGER
COLEMAN
WARFIELD
HIGHSMITH
BARNEY
JOHNSON
HEALTH
Medical Division
RUTH M. COLLINGS
B.A., M.D.
Physician and Professor of Hygiene
Pomono College, B A., 1919; University of Pennsylvania, M.D., 1923.
HYGIENE
VICTORIA CARLSSON
MA, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Columbia University, B.Sc, 1922; M.Sc, MA., 1923; Ph.D., 1929.
HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
BENJAMIN B. KENDRICK
MA, Ph.D.
Professor
Mercer University, B.S., 1905; MA, 1911; Columbia University, Ph.D.,
1914.
HOME ECONOMICS
MARGARET MESSENGER EDWARDS
B.S., MA.
Professor
Montana State College, B.S., 1912; Columbia University, MA, 1920;
Cornell University; University of Chicago.
MATHEMATICS
HELEN BARTON
M.A., Ph.D.
Professor
Goucher College, BA, 1913; Johns Hopkins University, MA, 1922; Ph D ,
MUSIC
H. HUGH ALTVATER
BA., Mus.M.
Professor of Music and Dean of the School of Music
University of Michigan, B.A., 1920; Southwestern College, Mus.M., 1925;
University of Michigan, Mus.M., 1929.
PHILOSOPHY
KURT EDWARD ROSINGER
MA., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
University of Michigan BA, 1923; M.A., 1924; Harvard University,
PhD, 1928.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
MARY CHANNING COLEMAN
B.S.
Professor
Columbia University, B.S, 1917; Wellesley College.
PHYSICS
CALVIN N. WARFIELD
MA, Ph.D.
Professor
Johns Hopkins University, BE, 1923, MA, 1925, PhD, 1926.
PSYCHOLOGY
JAMES ALBERT HIGHSMITH
MA, Ph.D.
Professor
University of North Carolina, BA, 1910, MA, 1915; George Peabody
College for Teachers, Ph.D., 1923.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES
WINFIELD S BARNEY
MA, Ph.D.
Professor
Dartmouth College, B.A., 1905; Hobart College, MA, 1911; Syracuse
University, PhD., 1916.
SOCIOLOGY
GLENN R. JOHNSON
BA, MA
Professor
Reed College, B.A, 1915; Columbia University, MA, 1916.
Twenty-two
IN MEMORIAM
During the past year the College lost one of Its most beloved and valuable faculty members. Miss Etta
R. Spier, who died on October 29, 1938, has been associated with the College from its beginning. She en-
tered the College as a student when it began its first session in 1892, was graduated in the class of 1895,
and, save for interruptions to teach in the public schools and to study, was a member of the Education Fac-
ulty of the College until her death. The services of Miss Spier to this College and to all who knew her
were so long, so varied, so effective, and so valuable that she earned our respect and won our admiration.
It is with a sense of deep loss that the College pays tribute to her memory.
Twenty-three
THE FACULTY
OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION
Frank Porter Graham, MA, LL D , D.C L, D.Litt, President of the University.
Julius I. Foust, Ph.B., LL.D, President Emeritus
Walter Clinton Jackson, B.S., LL.D , Dean of Administration
Harriet Wiseman Elliott, BA, MA, Dean of Women.
Laura H. Coit, Secretary of the College
Mary Taylor Moore, Registrar.
Claude Edward Teague, B A , Assistant Controller.
E. J. Forney, Treasurer.
Ruth M. Collings, BA, M D., Physician.
Guy R. Lyle, BA, B.S., MS, Librarian.
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION
ART
Gregory D. Ivy, B.S., MA, Associate Professor.
Elizabeth Mclver Weatherspoon, Associate Professor
Mollie Anne Peterson, Ph B , MA, Associate Professor.
Robert M Skelton, B S., MA, Instructor.
Hermione Homlett, BA, MA, Instructor.
Sidney G. Warner, B A., Instructor.
Dorothy S. Mcllvoine, B.F.A, MA., Instructor.
ASTRONOMY
Cornelia Strong, BA, MA, Professor.
BIOLOGY
John Paul Givler, Ph.B., MA, Professor.
Earl H. Hall, B.S., MS, Professor of Botany,
Inez Coldwell, BA, Associate Professor.
Archie D Shaftesbury, B A , Ph D., Associate Professor of Zoology.
Helen Ingraham, BS, MS, Associate Professor,
Moude Williams, BA, MS, Associate Professor of Physiology.
Lila Belle Love, BS, MS, Associate Professor of Physiology
Albert Frederick Thiel, B A , MA , Ph D , Associate Professor of Botany
Lowrence S Ritchie, BA, MA, PhD, Instructor.
Edna Arundel, BA, MA., Instructor in Geography.
Mary Elizabeth Brummitt, B A , Assistant.
Madeline Heffner, B A , Assistant
Elizabeth Anderson, B A., Assistant.
CHEMISTRY
Florence Louise Schaeffer, BA, MA, Professor,
Mary M. Petty, B.S., Professor,
Elvo Eudora Barrow, B A , MS Associate Professor
Martha E, Smith, B A , MA, Ph D , Assistant Professor.
Kate F Wilkms, BA, MA, Instructor.
Florence V Olson, BA, MA, PhD, Instructor.
Mary Welsh Parker, B A , Assistant
CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION
Charlton C. Jernigan, BA, MA, Ph.D., Assistant Professor.
Marie B Denneen, B A , MA, Associate Professor.
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
George M. Joyce, B.S., M S., Assistant Professor.
Mary Ellis Marley, Instructor.
Mary Harrell, BA, Instructor.
Barbara A. Perecinic, BA, Instructor.
ECONOMICS
Albert S Keister, B A , MA, PhD , Professor.
Claude Edward Teague, B A, Professor.
George M. Joyce, BS, M.S., Assistant Professor.
Harry M Douty, B A , MA, Ph D,, Assistant Professor.
Charles Anderson, B A., M A., Assistant Professor.
EDUCATION
John H Cook, B.S., BA , MA, PhD, Professor.
Ruth Fitzgerold, B.S., MA, Professor.
George Anselm, BA, MA., Ph D., Professor.
Oliver Perry Clutts, B.S., MA., Professor.
Herbert Kimmel, B A., Ph M , Ph.D., Associate Professor.
Marie B. Denneen, B A , MA , Associate Professor.
J. A. Smith, B.Ed., M.S., Associate Professor.
Miriam MocFadyen, BS, MA, Associate Professor
Anna M. Kreimeier, Ph B , MA , Assistant Professor.
Betty Aiken Land, B , M A., Assistant Professor.
Anna Reger, B A , B.S., Assistant Professor and Librarian, Training School.
Mary Fitzgerald, BA, Assistant Professor
Harriett Mehaffie, Ph.B , Assistant Professor.
Ruth Gunter, B A, MA, Assistant Professor.
Helen Krug, B S , MA, Assistant Professor.
Margaret Flintom, BA, MA, Instructor
EDUCATION
Eugenia Hunter, BA, Instructor.
Ruth Agnes Shaver, BA, MA, Instructor.
Ina Woestemeyer, BS, MA, Ed D , Instructor.
Dorothy Allen, BA, MA, Instructor.
Marguerite Conyne Ogden, B.A., MA, Instructor.
Cothleen Bell, BA, B S. in L.S., Librarian, Training School.
ENGLISH
William C. Smith, Ph.B, LHD, Professor of English Language and Literature
Alonzo C. Hall, B A , MA, Professor.
William Raymond Taylor, BA, MA, Professor.
Leonard B. Hurley, B.A., MA, Ph.D., Professor.
J. Arthur Dunn, BA, MA, Professor
Allen Tate, BA, Professor.
Caroline Gordon, BA, Professor.
George P. Wilson, BA, MA, Professor,
Mildred Rutherford Gould, BA, MA, Associate Professor.
Abigail E. Rowley, BA, MA, Associate Professor.
Nettie S. Tillett, B.A., MA, Associate Professor.
James W. Painter, BA , M A , Associate Professor.
Jane Summerell, BA, MA, Associate Professor
Marc Friedlander, BA, MA, Ph.D., Associate Professor.
John E. Bndgers, Jr., BA, MA, Associate Professor.
May Dulaney Bush, B.A., MA, Instructor (On leave of absence).
Charlotte Kohler, BA, MA, PhD., Instructor.
Margaret Virginia Shields, BA, MA, Instructor.
Morion Tatum, B.A., Assistant in Dramatics.
Wilbur Dorsett, B.A., MA, Assistant in Dramatics.
Mrs. James Painter, BA, Substitute in English.
GERMAN
Caroline B Schoch, Ph B , MA, Professor
Lasine Elizabeth Von Westen, BA, MA, PhD, Instructor.
HEALTH
MEDICAL DIVISION
Ruth M. Collings, B A., M.D., Physician and Professor of Hygiene.
Anna M. Gove, M.D., Physician and Professor of Hygiene.
Helen M. Deane, B.A., BS, B.M., M.D., Associate Professor.
HYGIENE
Victoria Carlsson, B.S., M.Sc , MA, Ph D , Associate Professor.
Mildred Pearl Harris, BA,, M A., Assistant Professor.
Anne Shamburger, Instructor.
HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
HISTORY
Benjamin B Kendrick, B S , M A , Ph D , Professor.
Alex Matthews Arnett, BA, MA, PhD, Professor.
Clarence D Johns, B A , MA, Professor.
Magnhilde Gullander, BA , MA, Associate Professor.
Vera Largent, B A., MA, Associate Professor.
Bernice Evelyn Draper, BA, MA, Associate Professor.
Josephine Hege, B A., Instructor (On leave of absence).
Eugene E Pfaff, B.A, MA, PhD., Instructor.
Kathleen T. Pfaff, BA, Instructor.
Jane Lohrer, BA,, Instructor
Catherine Strateman, BA, MA, Ph.D., Instructor.
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Harriet Wiseman Elliott, BA, MA, Professor.
Louise Brevard Alexander, BA, Associate Professor.
HOME ECONOMICS
Margaret Messenger Edwards, B S , MA, Professor.
Mabel Campbell, BS,, MA, Professor.
Viva M Playfoot, BS., M A., Associate Professor.
Blanche Tansil, B.S, MA, Associate Professor of Institutional Management.
Flora White Edwards, B.S., M.S., Assistant Professor.
Madeleine Blakey Street, B.S., MA, Assistant Professor.
Twenty-jour
HOME ECONOMICS
Bess Naylor Rosa, B.S., MA,, Assistant Professor.
Harriet Alice Naumann, B.A., MS., Assistant Professor.
Agnes N. Coxe, B.L, B.S., MA, Assistant Professor.
Lucile McMackin, B.S., M.S., Assistant Professor.
Bernice Allen, B S., M.S , Field Teacher Trainer.
Evelyn Howell, B.S., Instructor.
Martha Elizabeth Hathaway, B.S., Instructor.
Elizabeth C. Cook, B.S., Assistant.
Frances Forbes, B.S., MS, Instructor.
Mabel G Bowers, B.S, Instructor.
MATHEMATICS
Helen Barton, B.A, MA, Ph.D., Professor.
Cornelia Strong, B A,, MA,, Professor.
Emily Holmes Wafkins, B.A, MA., Associate Professor.
MUSIC
H. Hugh Altvater, BA., Mus.M., Professor of Music and Dean of the School of
Music.
George M. Thompson, B Mus ., M Mus , Professor of Organ
Alleine Richard Minor, B.S., Associate Professor of Piano.
Mary Lois Ferrell, Associate Professor of Piano.
Grace Van Dyke More, B Mus , M.S., Associate Professor of Public School Music.
Ruth Hannas, B A , MA, Ph D , Associate Professor of Music Theory.
Birdie Helen Holloway, B.S., M.S., Assistant Professor
Paul B. Oncley, BA, B.M., MM, Assistant Professor
Dorthy Lee Clement, BS, Instructor (On leave of absence first semester).
George E, Henry, BM, MM., Instructor.
Alma Marie Lissow Oncley, BM, MM, Instructor.
George W. Dickieson, BM, Instructor.
Harper Stephens, BA, Instructor.
Elizabeth Drake, B.S., Assistant in Music.
PHILOSOPHY
Kurt Edward Rosinger, B A., MA, Ph D , Assistant Professor.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Mary Channing Coleman, B.S, Professor (On leave of absence first semester).
Hope Tisdale, BA, MA, Assistant Professor (On leave of absence).
Ethel L Martus, B.A., M S., Assistant Professor.
Christine White, B S., Assistant Professor
Dorothy Davis, B A , MA, Assistant Professor.
Edith Vail, BS, Instructor.
Herbert W. Park, Instructor.
Henrietta Thompson, BS, M.S., Instructor.
Miriam A Shelden, B.S, MA, Instructor
Cloire Hartsook, BS, Assistant
PHYSICS
Calvin N Warfield, BE, MA, PhD, Professor.
John A Tiedeman, B S , M.S., Ph.D., Assistant Professor.
PSYCHOLOGY
James Albert Highsmith, BA,, M.A., PhD, Professor.
William Woodrow Martin, Ph.B., M.A, Professor.
Elizabeth Duffy, B A , MA, Ph D , Professor.
Key L Barkley, B A , MA, Ph.D., Associate Professor.
Wilton P. Chase, BA,, MA, PhD., Assistant Professor.
Bennie Lee Craig, BA, Assistant.
ROMANCE LANGUAGES
Winfield S. Barney, B.A, MA, PhD, Professor.
George A, Underwood, B A , MA, Ph D ., Professor.
Malcolm K. Hooke, BA, D. de I'Univ, Professor.
Meta Helena Miller, BA, MA, PhD, Professor.
Jessie C. Laird, BA, M.A., Associate Professor.
Rene Hardre, Prof des E.N., Associate Professor.
Augustine LaRochelle, BA, MA, Associate Professor.
Alice Katherine Abbott, BA, MA, Assistant Professor.
Helen Frances Cutting, B.A,, MA, Assistant Professor.
Virginia Christian Farinholt, BA, M.A., Ph.D., Assistant Professor.
Katherine Taylor, B.A, MA, Assistant Professor.
SECRETARIAL SCIENCE
Patty Spruill, B.S., B.A, MA, Assistant Professor.
Maude L. Adams, B.A., MA, Assistant Professor.
G. H. Parker, B.S., M.A , Assistant Professor.
Vance Littlejohn, B.A, BS, M.Ed., Instructor.
SOCIOLOGY
Glenn R. Johnson, B.A, M.A., Professor.
Lyda Gordon Shivers, B A., LL B., M.A, PhD., Associate Professor.
Mereb E Mossman, B.A, MA, Assistant Professor.
THE LIBRARY
Guy R. Lyle, B.A., B.S., M.S., Librarian.
E Elizabeth Sampson, B.S., Head Cataloguer.
Virginia Trumper, In Charge of Periodicals
Sue Vernon Williams, B A, MA, Reference Librarian
Marjorie Hood, B.A., BA.in L.S., Head of Circulation Department.
Minnie Middleton Hussey, B.A., Readers' Adviser.
Treva Wilkerson, B.A., Circulation Department.
Ruth Worley, BA, BA.in L.S , Assistant Cataloguer.
Sarah Bowling, B.A,, B.A in L.S., Order Assistant and Secretary to the Librarian.
Anna M. Urban, BA, MA, B A in L.S, Reference Assistant and Instructor in
Library Use
Alice L Boyd, BA, MA,, B S in LS, Reserve Librarian and Circulation Manager.
PUBLIC RELATIONS
Charles Wiley Phillips, B A, MA, Director of Public Relations.
Virginia Terrell Lathrop, B.A , Publications Office.
COUNSELORS
Helen Burns, BA, MA, Counselor in Anna Howard Shaw Hall.
Anne Fulton Carter, B A., Counselor in South Spencer Hall
Annie Beam Funderburk, BA, MA., Counselor in Mary Foust Hall.
lone H. Grogan, B A., MA, Counselor in East Hall.
Martha Elizabeth Hathaway, B S, Counselor in Hinshaw Hall.
Hazel Clark, BA, MA, Counselor in North Spencer Hall
Anne Pleasants Hopkins, B A., Counselor in Kirkland Hall
Mabel Swanson, B.S., M.S., Dietitian.
Edna A Forney, B A , Assistant Treasurer.
Mary Alice Tennent, BA, Assistant Registrar
Estelle Boyd, Supervisor of Dormitories.
Clara Booth Byrd, B A , Alumnae Secretary
Jessie R. McLean, R.N , Nurse.
Ethel Haskin Hunter, Counselor in Gray Hall
Minnie L. Jamison, Counselor.
Nancy Duke Lewis, BA, M.A, Counselor in Bailey Hall.
Evelyn Martin, BA, Counselor in West Hall.
Mary Welsh Parker, BA, Counselor in Woman's Hall
Rebecca Cole, BS, MA., Counselor in Cotten Hall.
Katherine Taylor, B.A., MA, Counselor in New Guilford Hall.
OTHER OFFICERS
Cora Jane Staton, R N , Nurse
Bessie Doub, Assistant Dietitian.
Sara Sue Cassell, B A, Assistant Dietitian.
Mary Proctor Adderton, B A , Manager of Book Store.
Janette Stout Turner, B.A, M A, Manager of Post Office.
J. M. Sink, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds.
SECRETARIES AND OFFICE ASSISTANTS
Hallie Anthony, Department of Public Relations.
Frances Foster, Office of the Alumnae Secretary.
Elizabeth Gant, B S., Office of the Dean of Music.
Margaret Haigler, Office of the Secretary of the College
Edith Harwood, B L , Office of the Registrar.
Mary Hasty, Department of Public Relations.
Kathleen Pettit Hawkins, Office of the Secretary of the College
Sara Henry, B.A., Office of the Treasurer.
Annie H Hughes, Office of the College Physician.
May Lattimore, Office of the Dean of Women.
Mary Betty Lee, Office of the Principal of Curry Training School.
Edythe Orrell Leslie, Department of Home Economics
Lilian Mebane Lovings, Mimeographing Department.
Eva Cox Melvin, B.L., Department of Education.
Mildred P. Newton, B A, Office of the Registrar (On leave of absence first
semester)
Helen Pickard, Office of the Assistant Controller.
Katherine Sherrill, BA, Office of the Dean of Women (On leave of absence).
Elizabeth Yates, B A,, Office of the Dean of Administration.
Frances Howell, Office of the Registrar.
Lucy Spinks, B.S.S.A., Office of the Class Chairmen.
Betty Brown Jester, B.A , Manager of Book Store.
I"' III III
■"LBS 1939
Twenty-five
COUNSELORS AND RESIDENCE HALL LIFE
Each of the thirteen residence halls on the Woman's College campus is a home for approximately one hundred
and thirty students from September until June with a Counselor as an official hostess. It is to these Counselors that
the students feel most free to go to for advice on personal, social, and academic problems. The deep feeling of friend-
ship and loyalty which exists between the Counselor and the students of her residence hall is one of the most basic
aids in creating an atmosphere of responsible freedom on our campus.
MISS BURNS
MISS HATHAWAY
Twenty-six
MISS MARTIN
MISS PARKER
MISS TAYLOR
t 111 I
is mi
*\ 1 J
MISS LEWIS
The social life of the whole campus circles around the social life in these thirteen halls. Each hall has, or is ac-
quiring, a game room for ping pong, dancing, games, and parties. Tea dances, informal parties, out-door activities,
and teas play their part in rounding out a college program in which all students are urged to participate.
fill III
II LBS B039
Twenty-seven
COUNSELORS
MRS. FUNDERBURK
MISS COLE
m
MISS CLARK
MRS HUNTER
MISS HELEN BURNS Shaw Hal
MRS. ANNE FULTON CARTER South Spencer Hal
MISS HAZEL CLARK North Spencer Hal
MISS REBECCA COLE Cotten Hal
MRS. ANNIE BEAM FUNDERBURK Mary Foust Hal
MISS IONE GROGAN East Hal
MISS MARTHA ELIZABETH HATHAWAY Hinshaw Hal
MISS ANNE PLEASANTS HOPKINS Kirkland Hal
MRS. J. S. HUNTER Gray Hal
MISS NANCY LEWIS Bailey Hal
MISS EVELYN MARTIN West Ha!
MISS MARY WELSH PARKER Woman's Hal
MISS KATHERINE TAYLOR New Guilford Hal
Twenty-eight
i ill < iiiiiii f Ail iiiiiiii i iiiiiii ill > t iirii tin • i
Twenty-nine
EMILY HARRIS
PRESIDENT
STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
We live together here on our campus in an atmosphere of responsible freedom, and
we are all working toward the same goal — to strengthen our characters, our minds, our
personalities. This is the individual goal; we stand united in one purpose — to do our
part in building a Greater University.
Our setup offers an opportunity for self-government, and the success and spirit of our
association depends just as much upon the individual student as it does upon the student
officers. The Woman's College of the University of North Carolina stands for all that is
vital, honorable, and real in life. Our Student Government Association has as its funda-
mental aim to contribute always to the academic and social achievement of our college.
GERTRUDE RAINEY
VICE-PRESIDENT
RUTH GILLMORE
SECRETARY
ELIZABETH PATTEN
TREASURER
Thirty
LEGISLATURE
The Legislature has as its chair-
man the Vice-President of Student
Government Association and is com-
posed of the President of Student
Government, Treasurer of Student
Government, the President of the
Town Students' Association, the
House Presidents, three members
from each of the four classes, two
members from the first year com-
mercial class, and three members
from the faculty. The Legislature, as
a representative group, strives to
keep its finger on the pulse of the
entire student body. All legislation
that is passed is designed to follow
and interpret the needs of the cam-
pus.
Members from the classes: SENIOR: Betsy
Wharton, Leah Smirnow, Frances Crockett.
JUNIOR: Joy Carman, Rose Pully, Sophie
Schaetfer. SOPHOMORE, First Semester:
Alice Colder, Betty Prevette, Elizabeth Falls.
COMMERCIAL, First Semester: Katherine
Godwin, Miriam Soloman.
JUDICIAL BOARD
The College Judicial Board is com-
posed of the President of the Stu-
dent Government Association, the
Secretary of the Student Government
Association, five members of the
Senior Class, and two members of
the Junior class. This Board elects
one member from the faculty to serve
in an advisory capacity. This Judicial
Board, in cooperation with the Hall
Judicial Boards, handles all the mat-
ters of discipline on the campus
which are not' specifically delegated
to other authorities. The whole pur-
pose of this Board centers around its
efforts to GUIDE and HELP students,
rather than to punish and restrict
them.
Members: Jeanne Carey, Mary Cochrane,
Sarah Virginia Dunlap, Ruth Gillmore, Emily
Harris, Mildred Haugh, Mary Elizabeth Pur-
vis, Mary Elizobeth Taylor, Ann Tillinghast.
Faculty Advisor: Miss Louise Alexander.
I"" III II!
II' LBS 1939
Thirty-OKI
HOUSE PRESIDENTS
Each residence hall has its own House President who serves as the student adviser, and presides ovei
the Hall Board of her particular hall. These girls are elected in the spring of the year from the incoming
junior and senior classes. The juniors serve in freshmen houses while seniors act as the Administrative
officers of Student Government in each of the other halls.
ANNA HOWARD SHAW HALL, Dorothy Rosse-
land; BAILEY HALL, Eleanor Kerchner; COTTEN
HALL, Louise Crowell; EAST HALL, Muriel Qua;
GRAY HALL, Wilhelmina Efird, HINSHAW HALL,
Eleanor Horner; KIRKLAND HALL, Helen Book;
MARY FOUST HALL, Marian White Fisher, NEW
GUILFORD HALL, Charlotte Michlin; NORTH
SPENCER HALL, Ceiia Durham, SOUTH SPENCER
HALL, Alice Suiter, WEST HALL, Grace Mewborn;
WOMAN'S HALL, Miriam Gault.
HALL BOARDS
The Hall Boards, consisting of the House
President of each residence hall and four
girls chosen by the members of each hall,
are in charge of all disciplinary matters of
their own group which come under their jurisdiction In the Commercial and Freshmen halls the Boards
consist of the House Presidents and the Hall Proctors; thus the constituency of these Boards changes each
six weeks period. Individual consideration and treatment of each case with guidance rather than punish-
ment as the chief concern is the principle of these Boards.
ANNA HOWARD SHAW
DOROTHY ROSSELAND, President
MEMBERS
Edith Winborne, Nancy Walthall, Hazel Kiker, Elizabeth Phillips.
BAILEY
ELEANOR KERCHNER, President
MEMBERS
Dorothy Brown, Mory Ruth Cochran, Virginia Boger, Celia Hall.
COTTEN
LOUISE CROWELL, President
MEMBERS
Nancy McManaway, Jeon Church, Minnie Lou Parker, Angela Ham-
mond.
KIRKLAND
HELEN BOOK, President
MEMBERS
Helen Rankin, Hester Toler, Esther Ann Quinn, Peggy Dean.
MARY FOUST
MARIAN WHITE FISHER, President
MEMBERS
Edna Cartwright, Lois Barnes, Jean McDonald, Jane Zimmerman.
NEW GUILFORD
CHARLOTTE MICHLIN, President
MEMBERS
Margaret Wyatt, Elinor Henderson, Jean Hodges, Margaret Woodson,
NORTH SPENCER
CELIA DURHAM, President
MEMBERS
Mamie Grace Smith, Virginia Ritter, Mary Louise Riddick, Bobbie Jean
Love.
WEST
GRACE MEWBORN, President
MEMBERS
Elizabeth Falls, Pearl Chamness, Matoaka Torrence, Helen Forrester.
WOMAN'S
MIRIAM GAULT, President
MEMBERS
Isabel Palmer, Valerie Powell, Dorothy Coley, Helen Weitzel.
Thirty-two
FINANCE BOARD
The Finance Board supervises the
financial policies of the student or-
ganizations participating in the bud-
get, and decides upon the allocation
of the student activities fee among
these organizations. It also aids and
guides the four classes in the han-
dling of their funds.
Chairman, Gertrude Rainey, Secretary,
Virginia Ambrose, Treasurer, Miss Nancy
Lewis. Leah Smirnow, Celia Durham, Mr
Claude E. Teague, Dr. Albert S. Keister.
HONOR BOARD
The Honor Board is composed of
the President of the Student Govern-
ment Association, three members of
the Senior Class from the College
Judicial Board, and the three faculty
members appointed by the Dean of
Administration. This Board handles
all cases of dishonesty within the col-
lege community, and it strives to
help the students see that their
honor is the strongest obligation they
owe to the University.
Members: Emily Harris, Mary Cochrane,
Sarah Virginia Dun'ap, Mary Elizabeth Purvis,
Miss Harriet Elliott, Miss Virginia Fairnholt,
and Dr. Malcolm R. Hooke.
I"" 111 III
II LIS 1939
Thirty-three
m I C|r •''' JIIIIH" c
in' I ill ,a» # f ' j>
or as we keep faith unfh them , 50 shall
uje keep faith u/ifh ourselves and arith
futare generations Tjaho demand of exs
that a nation of liber tq and free men
shall continue on the earth..
Thirty-lour
Thirty-jive
€11111 II III 1#S
Thirty-six
Thirty-seven
MASCOT AND CHAIRMAN
HAMPTON TEAGUE
MASCOT OF CLASS OF 1939
Miss Bernice Draper has the distinction of being the first class
chairman to guide her class from the beginning of their freshman year
until their graduation. She was most effective in that fine art of inter-
preting the college to the new student and the new student to the col-
lege. Of the abundance of energy she has lavished upon them, members
of the Class of 1939 are deeply appreciative.
Thirty-eight
SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS
JPF
GRACE MEWBORN PHYLLIS KEISTER FRANCES HORNER SARAH VIRGINIA DUNLAP
SARAH VIRGINIA DUNLAP President
GRACE MEWBORN Vice-President
PHYLLIS KEISTER , Secretary
FRANCES HORNER Treasurer
HILDA WALKER Cheer Leader
MISS BERNICE DRAPER Class Chairman
CLASS SONG
Seeking beauty, strength, and wisdom
In a never-ending quest,
We, the Class of Thirty-nine,
Cherish ideals pure and fine,
Seeking, giving of our best,
As we march toward Life's bright crest.
With all the zeal of our courageous young hearts,
With all the loyalty they hold,
We'll look to God to guide as forward we go,
We'll ever strive to reach our goal.
Oh College dear, may we bring honor to you.1
Thirty-nine is loyal to you!
We're strong to dare and do1
FLOWER Red and White Rose
COLORS Red and White
MOTTO "Esse quam videre"
I1'! Ill
iilis ■'§;;*§
Thirty-nine
DORIS ADAMS
WARRENTON
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian; Basketball (1); Hockey (1);
Athletic Association (1, 2); Varsity Base-
ball (2); Clogging Club (2, 3, 4); Arch-
ery Club (3, 4); Life Saving (3); A. A.
Camp Committee (4); Riding Club (4);
College Band (2, 3, 4); Publicity Chair-
man (4); Inter-racial Committee (4)
Sophomore Pageant (2); Art Club (3, 4)
CAROLINIAN Photography Editor (3, 4)
PINE NEEDLES Photography Editor (3
4)- Honor Roll (1); Sociology Club (4).
ETHEL ALTSHULER
PATERSON, N. J.
A.B. Economics
FRANCES PARKER APPEL
PHILADELPHIA, PENNA.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Education Club; University of Pennsylva-
nia (4).
GRETCHEN AYCOCK
FREMONT
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Home Economics Club (I, 2,
3, 4); College Choir (1); House Vice-
President; Sophomore Pageant (2); Junior
Adviser (3).
FLORENCE G.ALBRIGHT
ROSELLE, N. J.
A.B. Spanish
Aletheian; Park College, Parkville, Mo.
(1); Glee Club (1); Spanish Club (1);
Junior Orchesis (2); Le Cercle Francois
(3, 4); CHANTECLAIR Staff (4); Honor
Roll (1, 2, 3); Junior Adviser (3).
IMO JEAN ANTHONY
YADKINVILLE
A.B. English
Cornelian; Square Circle (2, 3, 4); Bot-
any Club (3, 4); Education Club (4);
Baptist Student Union Council (4), Third
Vice-President.
MARGARETTA AUSTIN
HIGH POINT
A.B. Art
Dikean; High Point College (1, 2); Art
Club (3, 4); Square Dance Club (4).
CORINNA ANNE BAIN
FAYETTEVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Dikean; Le Cercle Francois (1); Playlikers
(1, 2); Physics Club (2); Education Club
(3, 4); Hall Proctor (3); Presbyterian
Student Organization (2, 3, 4), Secretary
(4); Honor Roll (3).
Forty
SUSAN E. BARKSDALE
GREENSBORO
A.B. Art
Aletheian; Art Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Botany
Club (2, 3, 4); CORADDI (3, 4), Asso-
ciate Editor (4); Quill Club (3, 4),
MARY RACHAEL BARNES
WILSON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Le Cercle Francois (I, 2);
Speakers' Club (4).
J. EDITH BARRIER
MT. PLEASANT
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Home Economics Club (2, 3,
4); Education Club (4).
LOUISE BECK
FUQUAY SPRINGS
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Home Economics Club (2, 3, 4);
Education Club (4).
MARY JANE BECKERDITE
WINSTON-SALEM
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4).
JUSTINA BERNARD
LENOIR
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian.
KATHERINE BERNHARDT
SALISBURY
A.B. Sociology
Dikean; Race Relations Club (3, 4); Y
Cabinet (4); Transfer from St. Mary's
(1, 2).
MARGARET BEST
FREMONT
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Education Club (4).
nil
II LBS 1039
Forty-one
LUCILEBETHEA
DILLON, S. C.
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Dikean; Treasurer (4); Botany Club (2);
Hall Proctor (3); Education Club, Presi-
dent (4); International Relations Club
CATHERINE BLANCHARD
HOBBSVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Cornelian, Transfer from Louisburg Col-
lege (1, 2); Education Club (3, 4).
DORIS MAE BLAND
VANCEBORO
A.B. Mathematics
Dikean; Transfer from Guilford College
(1, 2); Square Circle (3, 4), Vice-Presi-
dent (4); Education Club (3, 4).
AVISBOLDERSON
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3
4); Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Christian
Congregational Group, Social Chairman
Hall Proctor (3, 4).
ALICE DUFFY BLADES
NEW BERN
A.B. History
Dikean; College Choir (1, 2); College
Band (3); St. Mary's Club (1, 2, 3, 4);
Y. W C. A. (2, 3, 4); Wesley Players (3,
4); Choric Speaking (3); American Stu-
dent Union (4>; Education Club (4); In-
ternational Relations Club (4).
EDITH E. BLANCHARD
GATESVILLE
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
4); Hall Proctor (3); Y. W. C A
FRANCES LOUISE BOLAND
BURLINGTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Transfer from Elon College (I,
2); Delta Upsilon Kappa Sorority; Educa-
tion Club (3, 4).
MARY EDITH BOLICK
HICKORY
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian, Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4); Education Club (4); Hall Proctor
(3); Wesley Foundation (1, 2); Freshman
Commission of Wesley Foundation (1);
Secretary of Sophomore Commission (2).
Furty-two
HELEN C.BOLLING
HIGH POINT
B.S. Physical Education
Aletheion; Le Cercle Francois (1, 2);
Chemistry Club (2, 3); Playlikers (1, 2);
International Relations Club (4); Educa-
tion Club (4); Hall Proctor (1); Social
Chairman for Dormitory (4); Daisy Chain
(2); Young Democrats Club (4), Program
Chairman; CAROLINIAN Sports Editor (1,
2, 3, 4); PINE NEEDLES (4), Athletic
Editor (4); Hockey (], 2, 3, 4), Varsity
(3); Baseball (1, 2, 3, 4); Basketball (1
2, 3, 4), Varsity (2, 3), Student Head
(3); A. A. Cabinet (3, 4); Square Dance
Club (1, 2); Speedball (1, 2, 3); Honor
Roll (1, 2).
ELIZABETH BONHAM
BERGENFIELD, N. J.
A.B. Spanish
Cornelian; Orchestra (1); Square Dance
Club (2, 4); Archery Club (3, 4); Edu-
cation Club (4).
EDNA EARLE BOSTICK
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian, Treasurer (3); Student Council
(2); Hall Board (1); CORADDI (2, 3,
4), Business Staff (2), Business Manager
(3, 4); Education Club (4).
CATHERINE BRABBLE
ORIENTAL
A.B. Biology
Dikean; Physics Club (I, 2, 3, 4), Vice-
President (4); College Choir (1, 2, 3, 4),
Assistant Librarian; Le Cercle Francois
(2); Bacteriology Club (3, 4); Chemistry
Club (3, 4); Education Club (3, 4);
Speakers' Club (3, 4); Junior Adviser
(3); Y. W. C. A.; House Vice-President
(2); Honor Roll.
MARGARET L. BOLUS
WAKE FOREST
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Education Club (4); Transfer
from Meredith College.
HELEN PARKER BOOK
ALBEMARLE
A.B. Biology
Dikean, Inter-society Representative (4);
Legislature (4); Bacteriology Club (3,
4); Chemistry Club (2, 3, 4), Treasurer
(3); Physics Club (4); House President
(4).
DORIS HOPE BOWMAN
BROWN'S SUMMIT
A.B. English and Science
Aletheion; Botany Club (2, 3, 4); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4).
MARY K. BRADLEY
GREENSBORO
A.B. French
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Le Cercle
Francois.
I"' III III
iLES 11939
Forty-three
ETHEL P. BRAXTON
KINSTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Y.W.C.A.; Hall Proctor (4).
B.JOSEPHINE BRICK
DILLON, S. C.
A.B. Sociology
Dikean; Inter-racial Re'ations Study
Group, Steering Committee (4); Educa-
tion Club (4).
BETTY M. BROOKSHIRE
ASHEVILLE
A.B. English
Cornelian; Transfer from Brevard Junior
College- Education Club (4); Square
Dance Club (4); CAROLINIAN Staff (3,
4).
EMELIE ROSE BROWN
TARBORO
A.B. Biology
Dikean Botany Club (2, 3, 4); Educaton
Club (3, 4); Zoology Field Club (4).
MARY RUTH BREWER
HEMP
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Transfer from Brevard Junior
College; Education Club (4).
FRANCES E. BRINKLEY
GLEN ALPINE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Aletheian; YWCA (1, 2, 3, 4); Clog-
ging Club (2, 3, 4); Archery Club (3);
Basketball (2, 3, 4), Physics Club (3,
4); Education Club (4).
A. ELIZABETH BROWN
HAMLET
A.B. English and Psychology
Cornelian; Orchestra (1, 2); Playlikers
(1 2)- Freshman Play (1); College Band
(2 3, 4), Co-Chairman of Publicity (3);
CAROLINIAN Staff (1, 2); Quill Club
(3, 4); Junior-Freshman Wedding (3);
Chairman of American Student Union
(3)- CORADDI Editorial Staff (3), Edi-
tor-in-Chief (4); Honor Roll (1, 3).
JAMIE VIRGINIA BROWN
SPENCER
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Basketball (1); Square Dance
Club (1, 2); Education Club (3, 4).
Forty-four
M. ELIZABETH BROWN
ERWIN
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian; Inter-racial Relations Study
Group (3); Sociology Club (4); Der Deut-
sche Verein (3); Dormitory Representa-
tive to Council (4); Honor Roll (3).
EDNAS. BUCHANAN
CHAPEL HILL
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Junior Class Treasurer; Le
Cercle Francois (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-Presi-
dent (3); Soccer (1); Hall Proctor (1);
Hall Board (3); Y. W. C. A.; Editor
WOMAN'S COLLEGE IN PORTRAIT (4).
HELEN L. BUMGARNER
WILKESBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Circle; Speakers' Club (3, 4); Y Council
(1, 2, 3).
MARY ANN BURDGE
RED BANK, N. J.
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3,
4); Education Club (4); Varsity Soccer
Teom (1); Sarah Atkinson Loan Fund
Committee.
PAULINE H.BROWNLEE
SPARTANBURG, S. C.
A.B. Sociology
Dikean; Inter-racial Relations Study
Group (3); Sociology Club (4).
MARGARET H. BULLOCK
RED SPRINGS
B.S. Physical Education
Dikean; Flora Macdonald College, A.B.
Degree; Hall Proctor (3, 4); Education
Club (4); Athletic Association; CARO-
LINIAN Sports Reporter.
ELEANOR E.J. BUNDY
DECATUR, GA.
A.B. Biology
Adelphian; Speakers' Club (1, 2, 3, 4);
Lutheran Students (1, 2, 3, 4), Secretary-
Treasurer (4); Dormitory Devotiona
Leader (4); Hall Proctor (3); Zoology
Field Club (4); Physics Club (4), His-
torian (4); Bacteriology Club (4); Honor
Roll (3).
HELEN CALLAHAM
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Basketball (2); Square Dance
Club (1, 2); Education Club (3, 4)-
CAROLINIAN Staff (2, 3), Circulation
Manager (3).
% III §3 9
Forty-five
JEAN KITTRELL CANNON
AYDEN
A.B. Primary Education
Aletheian; Education Club (4); College
Choir (1); House Vice-President (1).
CATHERINE CARPENTER
CHERRYVILLE
A.B. Biology
Dikean; Bacteriology Club (3, 4); Zo-
ology Field Club (3, 4), Secretary-Treas-
urer (4); Square Dance Club (4); Col-
lege Choir (2, 4); Wesley Foundation
EDNA H. CARTWRIGHT
BALTIMORE, MD.
A.B. Latin and History
Aletheian; Chemistry Club (2); Education
Club (3, 4); Le Cercle Francois (2);
Square Circle (2); Playlikers (1, 2, 3, 4);
CAROLINIAN Reporter (2), Board of
Editors (3, 4); Honor Roll (I, 2, 3); Hall
Board (4); Classical Club (4), President
(4); Y Council (3); Y. W C A (1, ?,
3, 4).
CHRISTINE R. CAUTHEN
ROCK HILL, S C
BS. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Playlikers (1, 2).
JEANNE E.CAREY
ELMIRA, N. Y.
A.B. English
Adelphian, President (4); Freshman Com-
mission; Class Vice-President (1, 2),
Junior Class President; Der Deutsche
Verein (3); Y Secretary (3); Judicial
Board (4); Hockey (2); Basketball (2);
WHO'S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN
AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES.
HAZEL CARSON
TAYLORSVILLE
A.B. History
Dikean; Education Club (3); Internation-
al Relations Club (4); Transfer from
Biltmore College (1, 2).
RUTH REBECCA CASH
GASTON I A
BS. Secretarial Administration
Transfer from Furman University (I, 2).
PEARLECHAMNESS
BLENHEIM, S. C
A.B. French
Cornelian; Botany Club (2); Education
Club (3, 4); Le Cercle Francois (1, 2,
3, 4); Hall Proctor (1); Hall Board (3,
4); Y Council (1, 2); Y Cobinet (3, 4);
House Vice-President (1); PINE NEEDLES
Representative (I, 2).
Forly-six
NORMA J. CHEATHAM
LENOIR
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian; International Relations Club
(4); Riding Club (4), Treasurer (4).
NANCY YANCEY CLICK
ELKIN
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Education Club (4); Home Eco-
nomics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Playlikers (4);
Junior Adviser; Hall Proctor; Transfer
from Greensboro College.
MARY E. COCHRANE
NEWTON
A.B. Art
Dikean; Hall Board (3); Judicial Board
(4); Junior Class Vice-President; Educa-
tion Club (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1)-
College Choir (1, 2); College Band (3)'
CAROLINIAN Art Editor (4)- CORADDi
Art Staff (3); Art Club (2, 3, 4), Presi-
dent (4); President of Student Govern-
ment (Summer School, 2).
HELEN ALTHEA COOK
PLAINFIELD, N. J.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian, Marshal (3); Le Cercle Fran-
cois (2); Orchesis (2, 3); Hockey (I);
Ploylikers (1); House Vice-President (2).
JANE MARSHALL CLEGG
GREENSBORO
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Chemistry Club (2); Educa-
tion Club (4); Le Cercle Francois (3);
Swimming (2, 3); Tennis (2, 3); Clogging
Club (2); Life Saving (2, 3); Orchesis
(3, 4); Playlikers (3, 4); Masqueroders
(3, 4); Honor Roll (2); Transfer from
Guilford College (1); French Club (1)
Tennis (1); Y Cabinet (II,
MARY KATHRYN COBLE
MONROE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4).
RUTH ELIZABETH COLE
HIGH ROCK
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Colleqe
Band (2).
KATHERINE COOPER
RALEIGH
B.S. Music
Aletheian; Playlikers (1, 2); College Choir
(2, 3, 4); Madrigal Club (4); Hall Proc-
tor (3); Junior Adviser; Wesley Founda-
tion Council (3).
■""■Ill
ilei 1 §;i§
Forty-seven
M. MINERVA COPPAGE
VANCEBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Hall Proctor (2, 3, 4).
GERALDINEHOLLONCOX
WASHINGTON
A.B. English
Adelphiarr Chemistry Club (2); Clossicoi
Club (4).
JUDYCOZZENS
EDENTON
A.B. Sociology
Cornelian; Tennis (2); Soccer (2, 3);
Inter-racial Relations Study Group (3);
Sociology Club (4); Young Democrats
Club (4).
PAULINE E. CRAFT
PITTSBORO
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Home
Economics Club (2, 3, 4); Collegiote 4
H Club.
ELIZABETH B. COWHERD
GREENSBORO
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian; Inter-raciol Relations Study
Group (3); Sociology Club (4); Playlikers
(2, 3, 4); Y Council (3, 4); Town Stu-
dent Judicial Board (3).
E. MURIEL COYKENDALL
GREENSBORO
A.B. Primary Education
Aletheian; Botany Club (2, 3, 4); Vice-
President (3), President (4); Education
Club (4)1 International Relations Club
(4)' College Choir (1); CAROLINIAN
Staff (3, 4); Young Democrats' Club (4).
ELISABETH H. CRAFT
CHERRYVILLE
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Chemistry Club (4); Home Eco-
nomics Club (3, 4); Education Club (4);
Transfer from Brevard Junior College (1,
2).
BLOIS X.CRAWFORD
BELLARTHUR
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Botany Club (3, 4); Education
Club (3, 4), Secretary (4); Playlikers
(1)' College Choir (3); Hall Proctor (3,
4); Y. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Baptist Stu-
dent Union (1, 2, 3, 4), Circle Leader
(3).
Forty-eight
MARY JANE CRENSHAW
ASHEVILLE
A.B. History
Dikean; Hall Board (3); Education Club
(4); International Relations Club (4);
Speakers' Club (3, 4); Debating (3).
ELIZABETH A. CROSBY
RALEIGH
A.B. Primary Education
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Tennis
Team (3); Transfer
College (1, 2).
from Peace Junior
ETHEL IRENE CRUMPLER
ROSEBORO
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Or-
chesis (3).
HENRIETTA CURRIN
OXFORD
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4); PINE NEEDLES Staff (3); Edu-
cation Club (3, 4); International Rela-
tions Club (4).
M.FRANCES CROCKETT
MONTCLAIR, N. J.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; House President (3); Legis-
lature (3, 4); Sophomore Council (2);
Education Club (3, 4); Home Economics
Club (1); Hockey (3, 4), Varsity (3, 4);
Volley Ball (3, 4), Student Leader (4); A.
A. Cabinet (4); PINE NEEDLES Business
Manager (4); Speakers' Club (3); Square
Dance Club (3); Daisy Chain (2)- Play-
likers (1, 2); Honor Roll (1, 2, 3).
MARY LOUISE CROWELL
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Physical Education
Dikean, Marshal (4); House President
(4); Chairman Daisy Chain (2); Class
Jacket Committee (2); Education Club
(4); Basketboll (1, 2, 3), Varsity (1)-
Soccer (I, 2, 3), Varsity (1, 2); Volley
Ball, Varsity (1, 2, 3); Orchesis (2); A.
A. Cabinet (4), Social Chairman; Gym-
nastics (2, 3, 4); Square Dance Club (4).
DIANA S. CURLEY
MONKTON, MD.
A.B. History
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Bas-
ketball (3); Square Dance Club (4);
Hall Proctor (3); Hockey (3, 4).
MARY JO CURRY
LEXINGTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; CAROLINIAN Business Staff;
PINE NEEDLES Staff (4); Transfer from
Peace Junior College, Appalachian State
Teachers College.
I11" III III
»LES 11939
Forty -i
JULIA LEE DAMERON
STAR
BS. Home Economics
Dikean; Transfer from Elon College, Delta
Upsilon Kappa Sorority; Home Economics
Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Y.W.CA (2, 3, 4);
Education Club (4); Honor Roll (1, 2).
ELNAE DANIELS
CHARLOTTE
BS. Home Economics
Adelphian; Choric Speaking; Church
Club; Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4);
Playlikers (2, 3, 4); Education Club (3,
4 1 Home Economics Honor Society.
VIRGINIA DEARMAN
HARMONY
A.B. Primary Education
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4).
MARGARET L. DELBRIDGE
LITTLETON
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; YWCA (1, 2, 3, 4); Edu-
cation Club (3, 4)
NAOMI B. DANIEL
ROXBORO
A.B. Chemistry
Dikean; Physics Club (2, 3, 4); Y.W.CA.
(1, 2, 3, 4); Chemistry Club (3, 4);
Botany Club (3, 4).
E LOUISE DARDEN
WILSON
BS. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian, Marshal (4), Dance Commit-
tee Chairman (3); Junior-Senior Dance
Committee (3); Senior Dance Committee.
ANN WHEATLEY DEES
GOLDSBORO
A.B. English
Dikean; Transfer from Peace Junior Col-
lege; Education Club (3, 4).
HELEN DENNIS
MARSHALL
BS. Home Economics
Aletheian; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4); Playlikers (I, 2, 3, 4); Chemistry
Club (2, 3, 4); Education Club i4);
CAROLINIAN Business Staff (2); Hall
Proctor (1, 2, 3); Y.W.CA (1, 2, 3, 4);
Sophomore Pageant (2); Chapel Monitor
(4); Honor Roll (3); PINE NEEDLES Bus-
iness Staff (2), Business Manager (3),
Editor-in-Chief (4); Home Economics
Honor Society.
Fifty
ELEANOR DIBBLE
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Hall Board (2, 3); Dolphin
Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Zoology Field Club,
Secretary-Treasurer (2).
RACHEL P. DRAUGHON
DUNN
A.B. English
Aletheian, Corresponding Secretary (2),
Marshal (3), President (4); Botany Club
(2); Le Cercle Francois (1, 2, 3, 4); Der
Deutsche Verein (3); Education Club (4).
S. VIRGINIA DUNLAP
WADESBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean, Treasurer (3); Legislature (3);
Judicial Board (4); Wesley Foundation
Council (]); Honor Board (4); House
President (3); Senior Class President'
Honor Roll (3, 4); WHO'S WHO AMONG
STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSI-
TIES; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Le Cercle
Francois (2); Education Club (4).
JANE DUPUY
GREENSBORO
A.B. Chemistry
Adelphian, Legislature (1); Chemistry
Club (2); Speakers' Club (2), Debating
(2, 3); Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4); Basketball
(1, 2); String Choir (1, 2, 3, 4); Play-
likers (2, 3); CAROLINIAN Staff (1, 2),
Editorial Committee (4); Presbyterian Stu-
dent Council, President (3); Y. W. C. A.
(1, 2, 3, 4), Cabinet (3, 4), Vice-Presi-
dent (4); Inter-Faith Council (3), Presi-
dent (4); Honor Roll (1, 2, 3, 4); Phi
Beta Kappa (3).
DORIS LEE DOZIER
SOUTH MILLS
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian, Speakers' Club (2, 3); Square
Dance Club (2, 3); College Choir (1);
Education Club (3, 4).
CAROLYN E. DUKES
LUMBERTON
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4); Y Council (1); Daisy Chain (2);
Chemistry Club (2, 3); Le Cercle Fran-
cois (2, 3); Physics Club (3); Education
Club (3, 4); Home Economics Honor
Society
SELMA JAMES DUNN
WINSTON-SALEM
A.B. History
Adelphian; International Relations Club
(4); Education Club (4); Classical Club,
Secretary-Treasurer (4); Honor Roll (I,
2, 3, 4).
ALLIE GEORGE EDWARDS
PEACHLAND
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Y.W.
C.A. (3, 4).
PLES 1939
Fifty-one
MATTIELOU EDWARDS
WHITEHEAD
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3 4)' Chemistry Club (3, 4); Education
Club (3, 4).
VIRGINIA M. EGGLESTON
MORRISTOWN, N. J.
A.B. French
Dikeon; Le Cercle Francois; Der Deutsche
Verein- Athletic Association; Junior Or-
chesis; Riding Club; CHANTECLAIR
Staff.
RACHEL LOUISE EMMETT
NEW YORK, N. Y
B.S. Physical Education
Aletheian; Sophomore Cheerleader; Leg-
islature (3); A, A. Cabinet (4); Dol-
phin Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-President
(3); Archery Club (3), President (4);
Orchesis (2, 3, 4); Camp Chairman (4);
Playlikers (1, 2, 3, 4); College Choir
(1, 2, 3, 4); Swimming Varsity (3).
MARY REBECCA EPPS
ASHEVILLE
B.S. Music
Dikean; Playlikers; Orchestra (1); String
Choir (2, 3, 4), Librarian (2); College
Band (2), President (3, 4); Cham-
ber Music Group (3, 4); Clarinet Quartet
(3); Madrigal Club (3, 4); CAROLINIAN
Staff (I, 2).
VIRGINIA L EDWARDS
MARSHVILLE
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Sophomore Council; Chemistry
Club (2, 3, 4); Education Club (3, 4);
Home Economics Club (1, 2), Vice-
President (3), Membership Chairman
(4)- PINE NEEDLES Advertising Man-
ager (2), Class Editor (3); House Vice-
President (2); Hall Proctor (3); Baptist
Student Union (1, 2, 3, 4); Junior Ad-
viser (3)' Daisy Chain (2); Y.W.C A.
(1, 2, 3, 4); Hall Social Chairman (4);
Home Economics Honor Society
DOROTHY VAN ELKINS
GREENSBORO
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian; Legislature (4); Sophomore
Class Treasurer; Playlikers (2, 3); Dor-
mitory Social Chairman (1); Vice-Presi-
dent of Town Students (3), President of
Town Students (4); Daisy Chain (2); Y
Council (3), Y Cabinet (4); Race Re-
lations Group (3, 4), Chairman of Steer-
ing Committee (3, 4).
MARION ENDFIELD
SCRANTON, PA
A.B. Psychology
Cornelian, Sports Day Chairman (2, 3)
Chemistry Club (2, 3); Orchesis (2)
Playlikers (3), Stage Manager (4)
Masqueraders (4); College Dramatic
Committee (4).
MAE ESTFAN
MANCHESTER, N. H
A.B. Sociology and Psychology
Cornelian; Le Cercle Francois (2); Seal
Club (1, 2, 3); Speedball; Alpha Kappa
Delta (4); Secretary-Treasurer of Cove-
nant Class; Inter-racial Relations Study
Group, Assistant Secretary (2), Vice-
President (3); Speakers' Club (1, 2); Y
Council (1, 2); Inter-racial Relations
Commission; Classical Club (4); Sociology
Club, Vice-President (4).
Fifty-two
BETTY MAYO EVERETT
PALMYRA
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Y.W.C.A.
(1, 2, 3, 4); Y Council (3).
CONSTANCE 0. FAGAN
GARDEN CITY, L. I.
A.B. History
Cornelian; Education Club (4); Le Cercle
Francois (4); International Relations
Club (4); Transfer from St. Mary's
FRANCES 0. FENTRESS
GREENSBORO
A.B. History
Dikean; International Relations Club (4);
Sociology Club (4); Inter-racial Relations
Study Group (3); Y.W.C.A.; Honor Roll
(4).
RUBY PAULINE FIELDS
CARTHAGE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Circle (2); Playlikers (3, 4); Y.W.C.A.
(2, 3, 4).
JAN IE YATES EVERETT
ROBERSONVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Dikean; Education Club (4).
MURIEL L. FAIRBANKS
FREEHOLD, N. J.
B.S. Music
Adelphian; Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2, 3,
4); College Band (2); College Choir (1,
2, 3, 4); Glee Club, Vice-President (3),
President (4); Honor Roll (1, 3, 4)
DOROTHY D. FICKER
GREENWICH, CONN.
A.B. Psychology
Adelphian, Marshal (3); Legislature (2,
3); House President (3); Freshman Class
Treasurer; Athletic Association; Playlik-
ers (1, 2, 3), Cabinet (4); Masquerad-
ers (3, 4); College Choir (1, 2); Y Cabi-
net (3, 4); Y Council (1, 2); Hockey
Varsity (1, 2, 3, 4).
MARION WHITE FISHER
WILMINGTON
A.B. Biology
Adelphian; House President (4); Legis-
lature (4); Medical Technologists (3),
President (4); Chemistry Club (3, 4);
Hockey Varsity (2); Camp Committee
(4); Playlikers (1, 2, 3, 4); CAROLINIAN
Staff (4); Y Council (I, 2, 3); Zoology
Field Club (2, 3, 4); Junior Adviser.
rm iii
■'•Lis 1 '§;;!•§
Fifty-three
MARTHA ELEANOR FLOYD
FAIRMONT
A.B. English
Dikean, Dance Chairman (3), Marshal
(4), Sports Day Chairman (3); Sophomore
Council; Chemistry Club (2); Education
Club (4), Publicity Chairman; Le Cercle
Francois (2, 3); International Relations
Club, Secretary (3), President (4); Hall
Proctor (2, 4); Motion Picture Commit-
tee (3, 4); Honor Roll (2, 3).
ELIZABETH FREELAND
GREENSBORO
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian; Botany Club (2, 3, 4), Vice-
President; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4); Archery Club (1, 3, 4); Athletic
Association (I, 2, 3, 4); Y.W.C.A ; Gym-
nastics (1).
ALICE E. GALBREATH
BLOOMSBURG, PA
A.B. Spanish
Adelphian; Education Club (4).
EMMA LOU GARNER
CREEDMOOR
A.B. French
Aletheian; Transfer from Campbell Col-
lege (1, 2); Education Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (3, 4).
VIRGINIA FOY
MT. AIRY
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Chemistry Club (3, 4); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4); Home Economics Club
(2, 3, 4); Physics Club; Playlikers Cos-
tume Committee; Transfer from Salem
College (1); Honor Roll (2, 4); Home
Economics Honor Society.
FRANCES GERTRUDE FURR
SALISBURY
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Le Cercle Francois (1, 2); Col-
lege Choir (1); Education Club (3, 4);
Freshman-Junior Wedding (3).
MARGARET H.GALLOWAY
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian, Inter-Society Representative;
College Cheerleader (4); Secretary Town
Student's Organization, Town Student's
Judicial Board (4); Education Club (3,
4); Le Cercle Francois (2); Tennis; Or-
chesis (2); Playlikers (1, 2); CAROLIN-
IAN Business Staff (2, 3); HANDBOOK
Business Manager (3, 4); Honor Roll (4).
M. MAX I NE GARNER
LIBERTY
A.B. English
Dikean; International Relations Club (3);
CAROLINIAN Staff (1, 2), Managing
Editor (3), Editor-in-Chief (4); House
President (Summer School, 2); Quill Club
(3, 4); Speakers' Club (1, 2); Debating
Team (2); Baptist Student Union Council
(2, 3); Honor Roll (1, 2, 3); WHO'S
WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERI-
CAN UNIVERSITIES.
Fifty-foUr
SARAH ANNE GARRISON
ASHEVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Education Club (4); Square
Dance Club (4).
VIRGINIA ROSE GEDDIE
LUMBERTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Honor Roll (4).
JULIA BRIGHT GODWIN
DUNN
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean, Marshal (3), President (4);
Chairman of Junior-Senior Dance Com-
mittee; Chairman of Sophomore-Senior
Tea Dance; Education Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (1, 2); Life Saving.
LULU C. GRAVELY
ROCKY MOUNT
A.B. English
Dikean; Orchesis (1); Riding Club (4);
Rocky Mount Club (1, 2, 3, 4).
MIRIAM ASHE GAULT
LAKE WACCAMAW
B.S. Physical Education
Adelphian, Corresponding Secretary (2),
Marshal (4); House President (4); Ju-
dicial Board (3); Points Committee (4);
Chapel Monitor (2, 3, 4); Education
Club (4); Athletic Association (1, 2, 3,
4); Dolphin Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Secretary-
Treasurer (3); Honor Roll (3); Hall Proc-
tor (]); St. Mary's House Vestry (1, 2)'
WHO'S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN
AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES.
MARGUIRETTE E. GEORGE
SHELBY
A.B. History
Adelphian; Hall Board (3); Education
Club (3, 4); Square Dance Club (3, 4);
International Relations Club (3, 4).
VIOLA R. GRADECK
NEW BRITAIN, CONN.
B.S. Physical Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Hockey
(1, 2, 3); Speed Ball (1, 2); Soccer (3);
Basketball (I, 2, 3, 4); Athletic Asso-
ciation (1, 2, 3, 4); Square Dance Club
(2, 3, 4); Playlikers (1); College Choir
(2, 3, 4); CORADDI Business Staff (1, 2,
3, 4); Archery Club (1, 3 4)
SARA ELIZABETH GRAY
GUILFORD COLLEGE
A.B. French
Aletheian; Education Club (4),
% 11939
Fifty-five
RUTH GREENBURG
LOUISBURG
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Education Club (4); College
Band (2); Speakers' Club (2, 3), Pro-
gram Chairman (4); Transfer from Louis-
burg College (1 ).
JANE FRANCES GRIFFIN
GREENSBORO
A.B. Art
Adelphian; Art Club (3, 4); CAROLIN-
IAN Exchange Editor; CORADDI Art
Editor (3); Playlikers.
M. ALICE HAINES
MT PLEASANT
A.B. Biology
Cornelian; Botany Club (3, 4); Chemistry
Club (2, 3, 4); Education Club (4);
Zoology Field Club (3, 4); Hall Proctor
13).
MARGARET HALL
CANDLER
A.B. Sociology
Aletheian; Botany Club (4); Square
Dance Club (4); Transfer from Biltmore
College (1, 2).
JANEGRIER
STATESVILLE
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Home
Economics Club (2, 3, 4); College Choir
(2, 3), Vice-President; Dormitory Social
Chairman (3); Transfer from Mitchell
College (1, 2).
MARY FRANCIS GYLES
RALEIGH
A.B. Biology
Adelphian; Bacteriology Club; Le Cercle
Francois; Der Deutsche Verein; Hall
Proctor.
EVELYN C. HALL
DURHAM
A.B. French
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Le Cercle
Francois (1, 2, 3, 4); Basketball (1);
Choir (I, 2, 3, 4); Hall Proctor (2, 3).
RUTH HAMILTON
LUMBERTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Hall
Board (3).
Fifty-six
MABEL HOOVER HARGETT
HIGH POINT
A.B. Primary Education
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Transfer
from High Point College (1).
EMILY IRVING HARRIS
GREENSBORO
A.B. English
Adelphian, Dance Chairman; Secretary of
Student Government; President of Student
Government; Chairman Honor Board; Class
Cheerleader; Sophomore Class President;
Daisy Chain; Chemistry Club; Le Cercle
Francais; Hockey; Camp Committee; Bas-
ketball; Tennis; Clogging Club, Playlikers;
CAROLINIAN Business Staff; PINE
NEEDLES Business Staff; Town Students'
Board; Freshman Commission; Archery
Club; A. A. Cabinet; WHO'S WHO
AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN
UNIVERSITIES, College Judicial Board;
Honor Roll.
REVA MAY HE I DINGER
CRANBURY, N. J.
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Hockey (1);
Varsity Volley Ball (1, 2); College Band
(2, 3, 4); Speakers' Club (3); Interna-
tional Relations Club (4); Hall Board (1);
Home Economics Honor Society.
ELINOR S. HENDERSON
HICKORY
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Education Club (4); Le Cercle
Francais (I); Home Economics Club,
Publicity Chairman (1, 2, 3, 4); College
Choir (I, 2); CAROLINIAN Staff (1,
2, 3, 4); Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (4); Inter-
national Relations Club (4); Honor Roll
(1, 2, 3, 4); Daisy Chain; Quill Club (1,
2, 3, 4); Hall Judicial Board; American
Student Union (4).
SALLY GRAY HARGROVE
TARBORO
A.B. Primary Education
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Speak-
ers' Club (2, 3); St, Mary's Club (1, 2).
BETTIE S. HARWARD
SANFORD
A.B. English
Cornelian; Education Club (4); Playlikers
(1, 2); CORADDI Literary Staff (3, 4);
Honor Roll (2, 3); Quill Club (3), Presi-
dent (4); Junior Adviser; St. Mary's Club
(1, 2); Young Democrats Cub, Pres-
ident (4).
WILMA L. HELSABECK
ETHER
A.B. Primary Education
Cornelian; Botany Club (3, 4); Educa-
tion Club (4); Physics Club (2, 3, 4).
HELEN HENDERSON
MONROE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Transfer from Wingate Junior
College (1).
II LIS 11939
Fifty-seven
MARYW. HENDERSON
JACKSONVILLE
A.B. Bio
Adelphian; Hall Board (3); Bacteriology
Club (3, 4); Education Club (3, 4);
Physics Club (2, 3, 4); Playlikers (1, 2);
Junior Adviser.
JEANNETTE C. HICKMAN
HUDSON
BS. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4).
GRACE MURIEL HILFORD
NAPLES
A.B. Sociology
Dikean; Transfer from Agnes Scott Col-
lege (1), Flora Macdonald College (2);
Race Relations Club (3); Junior Y Coun-
cil; Presbyterian Students Council (3);
Alpha Kappa Delta (4); Honor Roll (3,4).
ELLA THOMAS HOBBS
SUNBURY
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian, Vice-President (4), Dance
Chairman (3); Athletic Association (1, 2,
3, 4); Volley Ball (1, 2, 3); Hockey (1,
2); Archery (1, 2); Basketball (I, 2, 3);
Tennis (1, 2, 3), Square Dance Club (I,
2); Playlikers (1, 2, 3); Race Relations
Club (3, 4).
PATTIE R. HENDRICK
NORLINA
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Transfer from High Point College.
JANEHIGHSMITH
ATKINSON
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Cornelian; Transfer from Peace Junior
College (1, 2); Education Club (3, 4).
MARGARET HANES HILL
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian, Marshal (4); Playlikers (2, 3,
4); Junior-Senior Dance Committee (3).
PAULA M. HOBGOOD
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Le Cercle Francois (1).
Fifty -eight
MARGARET J. HOLLAND
CLAYTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Playlikers (1, 2, 3, 4); Dormi-
tory Social Chairman (1, 2); Hall Proc-
tor (]); Freshman Dance Chairman;
Junior-Freshmon Wedding (3).
FRANCES HORNER
BURLINGTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian, Marshal (3); Senior Class
Treasurer; Education Club (4); Junior
Dance Chairman; Honor Roll (4).
JULIA BROWN HUDGINS
HOBBSVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Trans-
fer from Louisburg College (1, 2).
VIRGINIA R HUNTER
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Transfer from Brevard Junior
College.
MARJORIE IRENE HORN
MOCKSVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4)- Hockey
(2); College Choir (3, 4); Hall Proctor;
Square Dance Club (2); Y.W.C.A. (1, 2,
3, 4); Y.W.A. (3).
GRACE MILDRED HOWELL
ASHEVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Alerheian; Education Club (3, 4); Der
Deutsche Verein (3); Hockey (3); Play-
likers (3, 4); College Choir (3, 4);
CORADDI Contributor (3), Editorial Staff
(4); Dormitory Social Chairman (4);
Junior Y Council; Honor Roll (4).
FLORENCE C. HUNT
GREENSBORO
B.S. Music
Cornelian; Le Cercle Francois (1, 2, 3, 4);
Education Club (3, 4); College Choir (1,
2, 3), Pianist (4), Vice-President (4);
String Trio (3, 4); Y Council (1, 2, 3),
Cabinet (4); Honor Roll (1, 2, 3).
KATHRYN HURDLE
ELIZABETH CITY
A.B. French
Dikean; Le Cercle Francois (I, 2, 3, 4);
Education Club (3, 4); Hall Proctor (3);
YWCA. (1, 2, 3, 4).
I"" III III
■" Lis i§39
Fifty-nine
HANNAH OLIVER HUSKE
FAYETTEVILLE
A.B. History
Dikean, Marshal (4); Education Club
(4); International Relations Club, Vice-
President (4); Transfer from St. Mary's
(1, 2); Young Democrats Club, Secre-
tary (4).
MARGARET IDOL
PLEASANT GARDEN
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Le Cercle Francois (I); Square
Circle (1, 2); Playlikers (2, 3, 4); Mas-
queraders (3, 4); Honor Roll (1, 4).
MARY M.JOHNSON
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Physical Education
Dikean; A A Cabinet (3, 4); Camp
Committee (2, 3, 4); Playlikers (2, 3, 4);
College Choir (1, 2); Masqueraders (3,
4); Wesley Foundation Council (3, 4).
SARAH WILSON JONES
HIGH POINT
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphion; Education Club (3, 4), Inter-
national Relations Club (2); YWCA
DORIS E. HUTCHINSON
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Physical Education
Aletheian, A. A. Cabinet (4); Club Head
(4); Dolphin Club (2, 3, 4), President
(4); Wesley Foundation Council (3, 4),
Treasurer (3); Wesley Players (2, 3, 4).
MILDRED C. JAMES
LAURINBURG
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; Botany Club (2); Education
Club (3, 4); Playlikers (I, 2); Y.W.C.A.
(1. 2, 3, 4).
MARGARET E. JONES
JOHNS
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Home
Economics Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Physics Club
(1); Square Dance Club (1, 2); Wesley
Foundation (1, 2, 3, 4); Wesley Players
(2, 3, 4); YWCA (2, 3, 4).
IRMA GRAY JORDAN
TIMBERLAND
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Transfer from Mars Hill Junior
College (1, 2); Baptist Student Union
Council (4).
Sixty
FRANCES M JOYNER
FARMVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Play-
likers (1 ); Junior Adviser.
MARTHA D. KELLAR
FLINT, MICH.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Der Deutsche Verein (2, 3);
Hall Proctor (3, 4); Dining Room Com-
mittee (4).
ELEANOR KERCHNER
GREENSBORO
A.B. English
Cornelian, Treasurer (3), Marshal (4);
House President (4); Legislature (4);
Finance Board (3); Education Club (3,
4); Le Cercle Francois (2, 3, 4); Ath-
letic Association; Basketball (1); Hockey
(1, 2, 3, 4); Tennis (1); CAROLINIAN
Staff (1, 2); Y Council (1); Y Cabinet
(2, 3); Daisy Chain (2); Sophomore
Pageant; Sophomore Class Secretary;
Junior Dance Committee.
RUTH VANSTORY KING
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; International Relations Club;
Transfer from Hollins College (1, 2).
PHYLLIS E. KEISTER
GREENSBORO
A.B. Chemistry
Aletheian; Legislature (2, 3); Senior
Class Secretary; Chairman Senior Un-
musical; Chemistry Club (1, 2, 3, 4),
President (4), Education Club (3,' 4);
Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2, 3, 4); Physics
Club (2); Playlikers (1, 2, 3), Secre-
tory-Treasurer (4); College Band (3, 4);
CAROLINIAN Editorial Board (2); Chair-
man Y Cabinet (3); Y Cabinet (4); Mas-
queraders (3, 4); Honor Roll (1, 2, 4).
MERRILL RACHEL KELLY
APEX
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean, Hall Proctor; Transfer from Mars
Hill Junior College (1, 2).
ETHEL YORK KIKER
WADESBORO
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Chemistry Club (2, 3, 4); Edu-
cation Club (4); Home Economics Club
(1, 2, 3, 4), Secretary (3); Basketball (2,
3); Wesley Players (1, 2, 3, 4); Wesley
Foundation (I), Council Secretary (2),
Study and Training Chairman (3), Sec-
ond Vice-President (4); Y Council (1, 2);
Honor Roll (1); Home Economics Honor
Society,
DOROTHY M. KOLMAN
PITTSFIELD, MASS.
A.B. Sociology
Cornelian; CAROLINIAN Exchange Editor
(4); Alpha Kappa Delta (3, 4); Inter-
Faith Council (4); Transfer from Smith
(1); Honor Roll (2, 3, 4).
iile.% ■§;;!■§
Sixty-one
LEANNA E. KOONCE
WILMINGTON
A.B. History
Dikeon; Education Club (3, 4); Der
Deutsche Verein (2); International Rela-
tions Club (4).
EDNA EFFIE LAWS
ROUGEMONT
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Circle (1); Wesley Foundation; Y Coun-
cil (1. 2).
LILLIAN ELECTA LEE
CLAYTON
A.B. History
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Inte
national Relations Club (3, 4).
VERA LENORE LEEGER
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
A.B. Psychology
Dikean; International Relations Club (3,
4); Soccer Team (1); Athletic Associa-
tion
JENNY P. LA SPINA
NEWARK, N. J.
A.B. History
Dikeon; Botany Club (2); Education Club
(4); International Relations Club (4);
Volley Ball, Varsity (2); Gymnastics
(2); Y.W.C.A. Social Service Committee
(4); Alpha Kappa Delta; Inter-racial Re-
lations Study Group (4).
DORIS ELIZABETH LEACH
LAGRANGE
A.B. English
Aletheian; Botany Club (2, 3); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4); Le Cercle Francois (4);
Wesley Foundation (1); CAROLINIAN
Staff (2, 3), Make-Up Editor (4)
RUTH ALBERTINE LEE
HIGH POINT
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Transfer
from High Point College (1, 2); Honor
Roll (3).
MARJORIE L LEONARD
CUMBERLAND, MD
B.S. Physical Education
Dikean; Athletic Association, President
(4), Cabinet (3, 4), Head of Sports Day
(3), Vice-President (3); Editor of A. A
Handbook (3); Wesley Foundation, Coun-
cil (2, 3), President (4); Wesley Play-
ers; North Carolina Methodist Student
Movement, President (4)
Sixty-two
EDNA LEVINE
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian, Education Club (4); Playlikers
(1, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (4); CAROLINIAN
Staff (4); Honor Roll (1, 2).
FRANCES L. LEVY
BROOKLINE, MASS.
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian, Le Cercle Francois (3, 4);
Der Deutsche Verein (3, 4); Interna-
tional Relations Club (4).
CLAUDELINE LEWIS
ENFIELD
A.B. Sociology
Dikean; Botany Club (2, 3, 4); A. A.
Cabinet (3, 4); Secretary (3); Soccer
(1, 2, 3, 4), Varsity (1, 2, 3); Baseball
Varsity (2, 3); Inter-racial Relations
Study Group, Vice-President (3); Sociol-
ogy Club, President (4); Baptist Student
Council (2, 3, 4); Alpha Kappa Delta
(3, 4); Honor Roll (1, 2, 3, 4).
ARLENE E. LITTLEFIELD
BOOTHBAY HARBOR, ME.
A.B. English
Dikean; Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2);
Physics Club (2, 3); Athletic Associa-
tion (1, 2, 3, 4); Zoology Club (2, 3);
Quill Club (4); Tennis Tournament (1,
2, 3, 4); Playlikers (1, 2), Publicity Man-
oger (3, 4); Masqueraders (3, 4).
WILMA P. LEVINE
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
A.B. French
Aletheian; Chemistry Club (2); Le Cercle
Francois (1, 2, 3), President (4); Clog-
ging Club (1); Orchesis (1), Secretary-
Treasurer (2, 3), President (4); CARO-
LINIAN Editorial Staff (4); Hall Proc-
tor; A. A. Cabinet (4); Dance Chairman;
CHANTECLAIR, Business Manager (3).
Associate Editor (4); Honor Roll (1, 2,
3, 4).
CAROLINA MARIE LEWIS
SOUTHERN PINES
A.B. History
Cornelian; Le Cercle Francois (I, 2)
Archery Club (3, 4); Soccer (2, 4), Var
sity (2); CAROLINIAN Staff (1, 2, 3, 4)
Square Circle (1); Honor Roll (1, 2, 3
4).
ATTIE BELLE LILES
GASTON I A
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4).
VIRGINIA P. LIVINGSTON
LAUREL HILL
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Donee Club (1); Hall Proctor (3).
rii III
II LBS PfJ'll
Sixty-thrt
F. ADELAIDE LOVE
GREENSBORO
A.B. History
Dikeon; Education Club (3, 4), Le Cer-
cle Francais (1, 2); Archery Club (2, 3),
Secretory-Treasurer (4); Baseball (3);
Y. W. C. A; Inter-faith Council; Junior
Adviser; PINE NEEDLES Business Staff
(4); International Relations Club (4);
Honor Roll (1, 2, 3. 4).
M JOSEPHINE LOWRANCE
SALISBURY
B.S. Music
Adelphian; Education Club (4), College
Choir (1, 2, 3), Librarian (4); Hall
Proctor (2, 3); Der Deutsche Verein
(1, 2, 3).
MARGARET McALLISTER
MT. PLEASANT
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Education Club (4); Home Eco-
nomics Club (I, 2, 3, 4); Inter-Faith
Council (4); Lutheran Student Organiza-
tion, Secretary (2), President (4).
ANNE WATSON McCABE
ORIENTAL
A.B. English
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); College
Choir (3, 4); Dormitory Social Committee
(4); Council College Class, Church of the
Covenant (3, 4).
BOBBIE JEAN LOVE
ASHEVILLE
A.B. Sociology
Cornelian, Junior Representative to Coun-
cil; Hall Judicial Board (4); Transfer
From Duke University (I); College Choir
(I); Glee Club (1).
CHRISTINE B. McADAMS
ROUGEMONT
A.B. French
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4), Le
Cercle Francais (1, 2, 3, 4); Junior Ad-
viser; Y. W, C A; Wesley Foundation
(I, 2, 3, 4); Sophomore Council; Honor
Roll (3, 4).
CHRISTINE R McBRAYER
FOREST CITY
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Play-
likers (1, 2).
ELEANOR McCLUNG
LEXINGTON, VA
B.S. Music
Cornelian; Playlikers (2); Glee Club (3
4); College Choir (2, 3, 4); College
Band (3); Madrigal Club (2), Secretary
(3), Vice-President (4); Transfer from
Hollins College (1).
Sixty-fo
mary k. Mclaughlin
CLEVELAND
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean, Nominating Committee, Educa-
tion Club (4), Social Chairman (4);
Hall Proctor (I, 3); Vestry of St. Mary's
Club (2, 3, 4).
LENA ELOISE McLEAN
GREENSBORO
B.S. Physical Education
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Le Cer-
cle Francois; Dolphin Club; Square Dance
Club; Junior Orchesis; Soccer; Volleyball,
Varsity (1, 2, 3, 4); Archery Club; Gym-
nastics; Basketball; Clogging Club, Pres-
ident (4); Tennis.
NANCY R. McMANAWAY
HENDERSONVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Dikean; Social Chairman of the College
(4); Education Club, Program Chairman
(4); Y Council (1, 2, 3); St. Mary's Club
(4); Hall Judicial Board (4).
MARY KING MALLONEE
MURPHY
A.B. History
Aletheian, Vice-President (4), Tea Dance
Chairman (3); House Vice-President (2),
Y Council (3); Zoology Field Club (3, 4),
Publicity Chairman (4); Education Club
(3, 4); Dining Room Committee (4); In-
ternational Relations Club (4), Program
Chairman (4).
DOROTHY McLAWHORN
VANCEBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Education Club (4); Hall Proc-
tor (2, 3); Y. W. C. A.; Transfer from
Guilford College (1, 2).
MARGIE McLEAN
CAMERON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Clogging Club (2, 3); Basket-
ball (1, 2, 3, 4); Hall Proctor; Y Cabinet
(1, 2, 3).
doris McMillan
LUMBERTON
A.B. Primary Education
Cornelian; Botany Club (2); Education
Club (4); House Vice-President (2);
Junior Council; Junior-Senior Dance Com-
mittee.
LILLIAN F. MANN
FLUSHING, L I.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Der
Deutsche Verein (I, 2); Athletic Associa-
tion; Y. W. C A (I, 2, 3).
II LBS 1939
Sixty-Five
M. CHRISTINE MARSHBURN
RICHLANDS
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4).
JUNEJ.MAUPIN
HOLCOME ROCK, VA
A.B. English
Dikean; Chemistry Club (2); Education
Club (3, 4); Le Cercle Francois (3, 4);
Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4); Swim-
ming; Soccer (1, 2); Hockey (1); Field
Ball (2)' Speed Ball (2); Life-Saving;
Seal Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Y. W C A, (1,
2. 3, 4).
GRACE W. MEWBORN
SNOW HILL
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian, Marshal (4); House President
(4); Sophomore Council; Senior Class
Vice-President; Legislature (4); House
Vice-President (2); Dormitory Social
Committee (2); Chairman of Mock Jun-
ior-Senior; Y Council (2); Y Cabinet (3);
Chairman of Commencement Invitation
Committee (4); Religious Activities Com-
mittee (4).
M. ELIZABETH MICHAEL
PLEASANT GARDEN
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian; Home Economics Ciub (1, 2,
3, 4).
ELSIE F. MARSTON
REIDSVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Cornelian- Dormitory Representative (3,
4); Education Club (3, 4), Vice-Presi-
dent (4); College Choir (1, 2, 3, 4),
Vestment Custodian (4); Hall Proctor
(1); Y.W.C.A.; Y Council (1, 2, 3); Y
Cabinet (4); Speaker's Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (2); CAROLINIAN Staff
(1).
MYRTLE H. MERRITT
MAGNOLIA
A.B. Biology
Dikean; Bacteriology Club (3, 4); Chem-
istry Club (2, 3, 4); Physics Club (3, 4);
Junior Adviser; Y.W.C A. (1, 2, 3, 4).
KATHRYN H. MEWBORN
TARBORO
B.S. Public School Music
Aletheian- Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2);
Orchesis (2); CAROLINIAN Staff (1,2);
College Choir (I), Assistant Vestment
Custodian (2), Vice-President (3); Mad-
rigal Club (2, 3, 4), Publicity Chairman
(2), Treasurer (3); Glee Club (3, 4),
Vice-President (4); College Band (4),
Y W. C. A; Y Council (2), Music
Chairman (2), Publicity Chairman (3);
Junior Adviser; Mock Junior-Senior Honor
Roll (1, 2, 3).
CHARLOTTE E. MICHLIN
GREENWICH, CONN
A.B. Psychology
Dikean; Legislature (1); Athletic Associa-
tion; Orchesis (1); Riding Club (4);
Playlikers (1, 2), Secretary-Treasurer (3),
Production Secretory (4); College Choir
(1, 2, 3); CAROLINIAN Staff (I); House
Vice-President (1); House President (4),
Alpha Psi Omega (4); Masqueraders (4);
Daisy Choin (2); Y Council (1), Presi-
dent Sophomore Y Council; Blue Bnnk
Committee (4); Peace Committee (3);
Junior Adviser, Freshman-Junior Wedding.
Sixty-Six
JULIA VIRGINIA MILES
RALEIGH
A.B. Biology
Adelphion; Chemistry Club (2, 4); Ath-
letic Association (1, 2, 3, 4), Camp Com-
mittee (4); Seal Club (3, 4); Clogging
Club (2, 3, 4); Square Dance Club (2,
3, 4); Archery Club (2, 3, 4); Zoology
Field Club (3), Program Chairman (4);
Honor Roll (1).
ELEANOR MILLER
STONEVILLE
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Education Club; Transfer from
Montreat Junior College.
ROSALIE MITCHELL
VINELAND, N. J.
A.B. Biology
Cornelion, Bacteriology Club (3, 4); Der
Deutsche Verein (1, 2, 3, 4) Cloqqinq
Club (3).
AIMEE NOTT MOORE
WELDON
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheion; Chemistry Club (3, 4); Edu-
cation Club (4); St. Mary's Club, Vestry
(1, 2, 3, 4); Danforth Fellowship (3);
Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Fi-
nance Chairman; Honor Roll (3).
JANET BRUCE MILLER
ANNAPOLIS, MD.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Hockey, Varsity (3, 4); Dol-
phin Club (4); Transfer from Goucher
College.
MARY JANE MIMS
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian, Education Club (4).
BARBARA MARION MOON
ASBURY PARK, N. J.
A.B. English
Adelphian, Le Cercle Francois (2, 3, 4);
CAROLINIAN Business Staff (3, 4); PINE
NEEDLES Business Staff (2, 3, 4); Y W.
C. A.; Y Council (3); Zoology Field
Club (2, 3, 4).
BARBARA HALL MOORE
OLD GREENWICH, CONN.
A.B. French
Cornelian, Dance Chairman (3); Le Cer-
cle Francois (3, 4); Playlikers (2, 3, 4);
College Choir (1, 2); Dormitory Social
Chairman (3); Art Club (2, 3); Daisy
Chain (2); Sophomore Jacket Chairman;
Y Council (1, 2); Playlikers Cabinet (4);
Masqueraders (4).
I11" IB III
II LIS 19 39
Sixty-Seven
INEZ REBECCA MOORE
LENOIR
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikeon- Education Club (3, 4); Ploylikers
(!)• y! W. C. A.; Baptist Student Union.
MARJORIEMOSELEY
LA CROSSE, VA
A.B. English
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Le Cer-
cle Francois (4); Y. W. C A. (1, 2, 3, 4).
BETSY MOORE MYERS
WILMINGTON
BS. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian, Marshal (4), Dance Committee
(3 4)' Junior Dance Committee; Educa-
tion Club (4).
EVELYN MAE NEWMAN
ROXBORO
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Trans-
fer from Mars Hill Junior College (1, 2).
CLAUDIA W. MOSELEY
KINSTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheion; Education Club (3, 4); Swim-
ming (1); House Vice-President (2); Y
W. C A (1, 2, 3, 4); Square Circle (2)
ALICE B. MURDOCH
SALISBURY
A.B. Sociology
Aletheian, Marshal (3); Chief Marshal
(4)- Sophomore Dance Chairman; Le Cer-
cle 'Francois (1); Hall Proctor (2); Dor-
mitory Social Chairman (3).
SATENIK NAHIKIAN
ASHEVILLE
A.B. Sociology
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Dance Club (3, 4); Transfer from Bre-
vard Junior College
MARY ELLA NEWSOME
WAKE FOREST
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian, Recording Secretary (3); Edu-
cation Club (3, 4); CAROLINIAN Busi-
ness Staff (3); PINE NEEDLES Staff
(4); Junior Adviser; Honor Roll (2, 3).
Sixty-Eight
KATE KNOX N I BLOCK
CONCORD
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian; Hall Judicial Board (3); Chem-
istry Club (3, 4); Education Club (3, 4);
Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Hail
Proctor (Summer School 3); Y. W C. A ,
Junior Adviser,
FRANK I EL NORTHCOTT
RALEIGH
A.B. English
Adelphian, Senior Representative to Coun-
cil; Quill Club (4); Transfer from Peace
Junior College (1, 2); Botany Club (4).
DORIS LEE NOWELL
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Playhkers (3, 4); Art Club
(3, 4).
ALMA O'NEAL ORMOND
DOVER
A.B. English
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (2); PINE NEEDLES Lit-
erary Editor (4); Wesley Foundation
Council (2, 4), Poster Chairman (2); Sig-
ma Chapter of Wesley Players (2), Sec-
retary (3), President (4); Speakers' Club
(2), Social Chairman (3), President (4).
FORREST HALE NIMOCKS
FAYETTEVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Art Club
(1),
LOUISE B. NORTHCOTT
ASHEVILLE
A.B. English
Aletheian; Hall Judicial Board (3); Der
Deutsche Verein (4); Transfer from St.
Genevieve -of -the-Pines.
VIRGINIA GRAY NOWELL
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Le Cercle Francois (1).
ELEANOR ORTLEB
WESTFIELD, N. J.
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian; Home Economics Club (3, 4);
Athletic Association; Basketball (2, 3);
Tennis (2); Riding Club (4); Transfer
from St. Elizabeth College (1).
I"" III II
l» LBS 11939
Sixty-Nine
LILLIAN J. OSBORNE
ASHEVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Dance Club (3, 4); Transfer from Bilt-
more College (1, 2).
DELORES V. PALMER
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
A.B. English
Dikean; Education Club (4).
MINNIE LOU PARKER
AHOSKIE
A.B. Sociology
Aletheian, Dance Committee (3); Hal
Judicial Board (4); Sophomore Pageant;
Dance Committee (3, 4); Aletheian-Cor-
nelian Dance Committee (4); PINE
NEEDLES Staff (2, 3), Organization Edi-
tor (4); House Vice-President (]); Y.
W. C. A (1, 2, 3, 4); Inter-racial Re-
lations Study Group (3); Sociology Club,
Secretary (4); Young Democrats' Club'
(4).
BERTIE S. PATTERSON
ALBEMARLE
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3), Treasur-
er (4); Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4);
Playlikers (1, 2, 3, 4); House Vice-
President (1); Hall Judicial Board (3).
ANNA CATHARINE OWEN
SHARON, CONN.
A.B. English
Dikean; Playlikers (1, 2); College Choir
(1, 2, 3, 4); CAROLINIAN Staff (3, 4);
Choric Speech Group (3); Speakers' Club
Reporter (4); Sophomore Pageant; Y. W
C A.; Y Cabinet (2, 3); Junior Adviser,
Botany Club (2).
MAMIE GLADIS PARKER
YADKINVILLE
A.B. History
Aletheian; Transfer from Brevard Junior
College (1, 2); Botany Club (4); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4); Der Deutsche Verein
(4); International Relations Club (4).
MAMIE EVELYN PATRICK
DURHAM
A.B. English and History
Dikean; Square Circle (2); Education
Club (4); Hall Proctnr (3, 4); Honor Roll
(1, 2, 3).
MARION ISABEL PELTON
SOUTHERN PINES
A.B. English and History
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (2, 3); International Re-
lations Club (4); House Vice-President
(2); Speakers' Club (3), Social Chair-
man (4).
Seventy
MARIE VICTORIA PEREZ
CIUDAD TRUJILLO,
SANTO DOMINGO, R. D.
B.S. Music
Aletheian; Education Club (4); Der
Deutsche Verein (1, 2); College Choir
(1, 2, 3), Pianist (4).
C. ELIZABETH PHILLIPS
SPRUCE PINE
A.B. English
Adelphian; Class Prophet; CAROLINIAN
Staff (1, 2, 3, 4); Education Club (4)
Wesley Foundation Council
Cabinet (4); Quill Club (4)-
Board (4).
(2, 3); Y
Hall Judicial
ELLEN JEANNETTE PIATT
WINSTON-SALEM
A.B. Biology
Cornelian; Bacteriology Club, Secretary-
Treasurer (3, 4); Chemistry Club (1, 2),
Vice-President (3), Chairman of Program
Committee (4); Le Cercle Francois (1);
Der Deutsche Verein (2, 3); Physics Club
(3, 4); College Choir (1, 2, 3, 4); CARO-
LINIAN Staff (1); YWCA; Honor Roll
(1).
HELEN A. PLAYER
MORGANTON
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Chemistry Club (3); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4); Home Economics Club
(1, 2, 3, 4); PINE NEEDLES Staff (4);
Dormitory Social Chairman (1); Y W C
A (1, 2, 3, 4); Y Cobinet (1); Chairman
of Freshman Council; Physics Club (2 3
4), Vice-President (2, 3); Chairman of
Freshman - Junior Wedding; Sophomore
Pageant; Sophomore Dance Committee;
Adelphian Dance Committee (4)' Honor
Roll (1, 2, 3, 4).
BEVERLY L PHILLIPS
WEST ENGLEWOOD, N. J.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Orchesis (2); Swimming (2);
Education Club (3, 4); Playhkers, Assist-
ant Business Manager.
MARGARET L. PHILLIPS
DALTON
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Chemistry Club (3); Edu-
cation Club (3, 4); Home Economics Club
(2, 3, 4); Physics Club (2, 3); College
Choir (1, 2); Y Cabinet (3); Collegiate
4-H Club, Secretary (3).
MILDRED CAROLYN PIGG
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Home
Economics Club (2, 3, 4); Transfer from
Mars Hill Junior College (1 ).
A. IRENE POSPISIL
NEW YORK, N. Y.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4)- Play-
likers (4); Catholic Club (1, 2, 3, 4);
Choric Speaking Club (3); Y. W. C. A.
(1, 2, 3, 4); Junior Adviser
■"LBS H0J9
Seventy-One
ALICE POWELL
"THE DUNE", BERWYN, MD
A.B. French
Cornelian; Education Club (4); Le Cer-
cle Francois (2, 3, 4); Square Circle (2
3, 4); Riding Club (4); Speakers' Club
(2 3 4); Transfer from University of
Maryland (I).
MARGARET B. POYNOR
FLORENCE, S C
B.S. Physical Education
Dikean; Education Club (4); Square
Dance Club (1, 2); Clogging Club (2, 3,
4); Orchesis (1, 2, 3, 4); Hockey (3, 4),
Varsity (3); Speedboll Varsity (3); Hon-
orary Gym Team Varsity (1, 2, 3); Gym-
nastics Sport Head (3, 4); A. A. Cabinet
(3, 4).
MARY E. PURVIS
SALISBURY
A.B. English
Cornelian, Vice-President (4); Judicial
Board (4); Education Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (1, 2, 3); Glee Club
(1, 3); PINE NEEDLES Literary Editor
(4); Hall Proctor (2, 3); Y. W . C. A ,
Chairman of Inter-Collegian Activities
(3), Chairman of Worship Department
(4); President of Presbyterian Students
on Campus (4); Speakers' Club, Secretary
(2), Program Chairman (3), Vice-Presi-
dent (4); Inter-Faith Council (4); Honor
Roll (1, 3, 4); Honor Board (4).
ESTHER ANNE QUINN
SHELBY
A.B. Mathematics
Cornelian; Education Club (4); Le Cer-
cle Francois (2); Square Circle (2, 3),
President (4); CAROLINIAN Staff (2);
Hall Judicial Board (4); Transfer from
Flora Macdonald College (1); Honor Roll
(2, 3).
VIRGINIA MAE POWELL
BREVARD
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Home
Economics Club (2, 3, 4); Square Dance
Club.
WILLIES PRITCHARD
SEABOARD
A.B. English
Adelphian; Education Club (4), Speakers'
Club; Wesley Foundation
MARJORIE ELLIS PYE
GREENSBORO
A.B. Psychology
Adelphian, Marshal (4); Dance Com-
mittee (2); Playlikers (2); CAROLINIAN
Business Staff (2); CORADDI Business
Staff (2).
VERA BLANCHE RACKLEY
LENOIR
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Education Club (4); Home Eco-
nomics Club (3, 4); Transfer from Ap-
palachian State Teachers College (1, 2),
Wesley Foundation (3, 4).
Seventy-Two
GERTRUDE A. RAINEY
MARTINSVILLE, N J.
A.B. Psychology
Aletheion; President of Freshman Class,
Treasurer of Student Government (2);
House President (3); Vice-President of
Student Government (4); Legislature (2,
3, 4); Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4), Varsity
(1, 2, 3, 4); Basketball (1, 2, 3),
Sports Leader (3); CORADDI Business
Staff (1 ); Points Committee; Y W. C A;
CAROLINIAN Editorial Staff (2); Honor
Roll (1, 2, 3); WHO'S WHO AMONG
STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVER-
SITIES.
ETHEL RAYMER
STATESVILLE
A.B. Sociology
Aletheian; International Relations Club
(3, 4); Transfer from Mitchell College
(I, 2).
GLORIA REAGAN
WEAVERVILLE
A.B. English
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Col-
lege Choir (3, 4); CAROLINIAN Staff (3,
4); Y. W. C. A. (3, 4); Transfer from
Mars Hill Junior College
EDNA KATHRYN RETTEW
LEXINGTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean, Dance Committee (3); Classical
Club (4); Honor Roll (2).
MARGARET RAPER
LEXINGTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Hall Proctor (3); Transfer from
Brevard Junior College (1, 2).
ETHEL ELAINE REAGAN
WEAVERVILLE
B.S. Music Education
Adelphion; College Choir (2, 3); Glee
Club (3, 4); College Band (3, 4); Mad-
rigal Club (2, 3), President (4); Trans-
fer from Converse College (1)
ETHEL LOUISE REAVIS
WINSTON-SALEM
A.B. Primary Education
Dikean, Education Club (4); Physics Club
(2, 3).
ELIZABETH L ROBERTS
CONCORD
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Transfer from Mars Hill
Junior College.
Ill
II LBS 11034)
Seventy-Three
JULIA ENGLISH ROBERTS
MARSHALL
A.B. History
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Inter-
national Relations Club '4); Sociology
Club (4), Transfer from Mars Hill Jun-
ior College (1, 2).
EUDORAL ROBINSON
MAIDEN
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Education Club (4); Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4).
RUTH M. ROGERS
CLYDE
B.S. Physical Education
Adelphian; Botany Club (1, 2, 3, 4);
Education Club (3, 4); A. A. Cabinet
(3 4); President of Square Dance Club
(2, 3, 4); Soccer Varsity (2, 3); Basket-
ball Varsity (2, 3); Baseboll Varsity (2,
3); Volleyball Varsity (2); A, A Camp
Committee (4); Speedball (1); Swimming
(1, 4).
MARY HELEN ROSS
LAKE JUNAIUSKA
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Corne'ian; Education Club (4); Ploy-
■
JO ELAINE ROBERTSON
WENDELL
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Playlikers (2, 3, 4); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4); College Choir (1, 2);
Archery Club (2, 3, 4); Dance Committee
for Mock-Junior-Senior.
GLADYS ROGERS
PEARL RIVER, N. Y,
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Y, W.
C A.
VIRGINIA E. ROSE
WILSON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Trans-
fer from Atlantic Christian College.
DOROTHY ROSSELAND
SHORT HILLS, N. J.
A.B. French
Dikean, Vice-President (4); Dance Com-
mittee (3); Legislature (I); Treasurer
of Sophomore Class; Le Cercle Francois
(2, 3, 4); International Relations Club
(3); Orchesis (I, 2, 3, 4); Seal Club
(2, 3, 4); Hockey Vorsity (1, 2, 3, 4);
Basketball (1, 2, 3); Baseball (I); Ten-
nis (2); Speedball (3); A. A. Camp Com-
mittee; Life-Saving (2, 3); Playlikers (I,
2, 3); Hall Proctor (2); House President
(4); Y.W.CA; Y Council (1, 2, 3); Y
Cabinet (4); Orchestra (I); String Cho'r
(2, 3, 4); College Band (3, 4); Junior
Adviser; Honor RoH I ! , 3); WHO'S WHO
AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN
UNIVERSITIES.
Seventy-Four
GRACE VALESTA ROSSER
JONESBORO/
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); College
Choir (1, 2, 3); Honor Roll (I).
MARGARET NANCY RYAN
ASHEVILLE
A.B. Sociology
Aletheian; Varsity Swimming (3) Seal
Club (3, 4), Sociology Club (4).
ELSIE RUTH SANFORD
GREENSBORO
A.B. English
Alerheian, Der Deutsche Verein (3 4)-
Wesley Players (4); Y. W C A ('l 2
3, 4). ' '
KATHRYN R. SCHNECK
ALLENTOWN, PA
B.S. Physical Education
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4) ■ Der
Deutsche Verein (1, 2); Physics Club (1)-
Dolphin Club (2, 3, 4); Square Dance
Club (2), Secretary-Treasurer (3, 4)-
A. A. Cabinet (3, 4); Student Head
of Swimming (3, 4), Swimming Varsity
(1, 2, 3); Soccer Varsity (3); Archery
Club
MARY WILLIE ROTHA
WAYNESVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Alerheian; Education Club (4).
ANNE SAGE
SHORT HILLS, N. J.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Alerheian; Seal Club; Transfer from
Southern Seminary (I).
ERMA EVELYN SCHAUER
BAYONNE, N J.
A.B. German
Cornelian, Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2, 3),
Chairman of Program Committee (4)'
President (4); Education Club (4); Ath-
letic Association; Soccer Varsity (1); Vol-
leyball Varsity (1); Y. W. C. A.; Square
Dance Club (1, 2, 3); International Re-
lations Club (4).
M ELIZABETH SCOTT
MEBANE
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian, Secretary of Student Govern-
ment (Summer School 3); Home Econom-
ics Club (3, 4); Hall Proctor (3); Trans-
fer from Flora Macdonald College (1, 2),
Epsilon Chi Society (1, 2); Home Econom-
ics Club (1, 2).
Pill
II LBS 11939
Seventy-Five
RUTH MIRIAM SEVERSON
BUFFALO, N Y.
B.S. Home Economics
'\ in; Home Economics Club (2, 3,
4)- Ploylikers (2, 3, 4), Costume Mis-
LOUISE W. SHARP
REIDSVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian, Education Club (4); Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3); Hockey (1);
Tennis (1); Swimming (1, 2); Square
Dance Club (4); College Choir (1, 2, 3);
Honor Roll (3).
GRACE E. SHARPE
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Cornelian, Inter - Society Representative
(3), President (4); Orchesis (2); Ploylik-
ers (1. 2, 3, 4); College Choir (3); YW
CA [1, 2, 3 4), Y Council (1, 2); Wes-
ley Players (1, 2, 3), Vice-President (3),
Treasurer (2); Freshman Ploys, Junior
Adviser
HASSIE MAE SHERRILL
STATESVILLE
A.B. Grammar Grade Edncil/on
Dikean; Education Club (4).
EVELYN SHARP
HIGH POINT
B.S. Music
Dikean- Education Club (3, 4); Orchestra
(1) String Choir (2, 3, 4); College Band
(2 3 41 Vice-President (3), String
Trio (3)
BEVERLY ANN SHARPE
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian, Marshal (4).
M. EVELYN SHEPHERD
GREENSBORO
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian, Home Economics Club (1, 2,
;-;, 41, Social Chairman (3); Athletic
Association (1, 2, 3, 4); Archery Club
(3 4)- Playlikers (3, 4), Education Club
141; PINE NEEDLES Business Staff (3);
Inter-Faith Council (3), Secretary (4);
Lutheran Student Group (1, 2, 3, 4), So-
cial Chairman (2), President (3); YW
LA (1, 2); Junior Adviser, President of
the State Home Economics Club (4)
INEZ E SHUFORD
HICKORY
B.S. Public School Music
Dikean- Madrigal Club (2, 3, 4); College
Choir (2, 3); Glee Club (3, 4); Baptist
Student Union Council (2, 3), President
(4); Inter-Faith Council (4); YWCA
(1, 2).
Seventy-Six
LAURA H. SILBIGER
GREENSBORO
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphian; PINE NEEDLES Senior Class
Editor (4); Education Club (4); Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Interna-
tional Relations Club (4); Labor Indus-
trial Group (4); American Student Union
(4).
LEAH E. SKELTON
MONTCLAIR, N. J.
B.S. Physical Education
Cornelian; Hockey (1); Swimming (2, 3);
Tennis (2); Square Dance Club (4); Y.
W.C.A.; Education Club (4).
JULIA B. SMALLWOOD
NEW BERN
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian.
LEAH C. SMIRNOW
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
A.B. English
Aletheian; Legislature (4); International
Relations Club (2, 3); Athletic Associa-
tion (I, 2, 3, 4); Dolphin (1, 2, 3, 4);
Orchesis (2, 3), President (2, 3); Play-
likers (1), Stage Manager (2, 3), Presi-
dent (4); CAROLINIAN Editorial Board
(2, 3); Alpha Psi Omega (3, 4); Sopho-
more Pageant Chairman; Dramatic Com-
mittee (3, 4); House President (3); Mas-
queraders (2, 3, 4); Finance Board (4);
May Day Chairman (4); WHO'S WHO
AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN
UNIVERSITIES.
MYRTLE SIMPSON
MONROE
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Athletic
Association (1); Basketball (1); Y.W
C A,; Baptist Student Union.
EVELYN LOURENA SLOAN
HORRELL HILL, S C.
A.B. Art
Dikean; Transfer from Furman Univer-
sity (1, 2, 3); Swimming (1, 2, 3); Danc-
ing Club (1, 2, 3); Furman University
Glee Club (I, 2, 3); Hall Proctor (2, 3);
Honor Roll (1, 2, 3).
ADELE ESTHER SMIRNOW
NEW HAVEN, CONN
A.B. Biology
Adelphian; Judicial Board (3); Chemistry
Club (2, 3, 4); Der Deutsche Verein (1,
2); Dolphin; Playlikers (2), Light Tech-
nician (3, 4); Masqueraders (3, 4); In-
ternational Relations Club (3).
CATHERINE C. SMITH
ATLANTA, GA.
A.B. English
Cornelian; Der Deutsche Verein (2, 3);
College Band (3, 4); Y.W.C.A.; Social
Service Work.
Ill" LBS III 93 9
Seventy-Seven
ELIZABETH W SMITH
NEW BERN
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Transfer from Peace Junior
College (1, 2), Peace Student Christian
Association Cabinet, Sigma Phi Kappa
Society; Glee Club (2, 3); Education Club
(3, 4).
V. PAULINE SMITH
ROCKY MOUNT
A.B. English
Aletheion; Education Club (4); Home
Economics Club (1); Archery Club (2);
Playlikers (1); College Choir (1); Y.W.
CA II, 2, 3, 4); Y Cabinet (3); Y
Council (2).
HILDA ROSE SNYDER
WINSTON -SALEM
BS. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Class Representative to Council
(4); Hall Proctor (3); Education Club (3,
4); Playlikers (1, 2, 3); Speakers' Club
(2, 3, 4); Y.W.C.A. (I, 2, 3), Adviser
for Freshman Y Club (4).
MILDRED LEA SPOON
BURLINGTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Transfer from Mars Hill Junior
College (1, 2).
MYRA SUGGS SMITH
WILMINGTON
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (4),
SARAH E. SMITH
ASHEVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Dance Club; Honor Roll (3); Transfer
from Brevard Junior College (1, 2).
DORIS ANITA SPAINHOUR
TOBACCOVILLE
A.B. French
Aletheian; Education Club (4); Le Cercle
Francois (2, 3, 4); Square Dance Club
(2); CAROLINIAN Staff (3); Hall Proctor
(4); Baptist Student Union Council (3,
4).
ETHEL MAE STANLEY
FOUR OAKS
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Le Cercle
Francois (1); Baptist Student Union (1,
2, 3, 4).
Seventy-Eight
MARY EMILY STANTON
WILMINGTON
A.B. History
Aletheion; Sophomore Council; Educotion
Club (3, 4); International Relations
Club (4); Physics Club (2); Square Circle
(1, 2); Playlikers (I, 2, 3), Mistress of
Wardrobe (4); YW.CA. (1, 2, 3, 4); Y
Council (3); CAROLINIAN Staff (2),
Business Manager (3, 4).
MARIE STEPHENS
LUMBERTON
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Adelphian; Botany Club (3, 4); Education
Club (4); Y.WCA. (1, 2, 3, 4).
GLADYS ELLEN STRAWN
MARSHVILLE
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3), President (4);
Physics Club (4); Baptist Student Union
Council (4); YW.CA. (I, 2, 3, 4).
MARY ELIZABETH SUITT
HILLSBORO
A.B. English
Cornelian; Botany Club (2, 3, 4); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4); Der Deutsche Verein
(3); Y.WCA. (1, 2, 3, 4); Speakers'
Club (4).
FLORA E. STEELE
WAGRAM
A.B. French
Dikean; Education Club (4), Le Cercle
Francois (4); Y.WCA.
M. CARROLL STOKER
GREENSBORO
A.B. English
Aletheion, Marshal (4); Legislature (3);
Chairman Religious Activities Commit-
tee; Education Club (3, 4); Le Cercle
Francois (1, 2); Chapel Monitor (3, 4);
Sociology Club '4); Zoology Field Club
(2, 4), President (3); Athletic Associa-
tion (1); Playlikers (1, 2, 3), Cabinet
(4); Masqueraders (3), So~ial Chairman
(4); College Choir (1, 2, 3), Custodian
of Vestments (4); CAROLINIAN Staff (I
2, 3); HAND BOOK Editor (4); YWCA
(I, 2, 3, 4); Y Council (2); Y Cabinet (3,
4). Chairman Re'igious Education (3),
Publicity (4); Sophomore Pageant; Junior
Adviser; Honor Roll (3).
NELLE L. STURKEY
ALBEMARLE
B.S. Physical Education
Adelphian, Corresponding Secretary (4);
Education Club (3, 4); A. A Cabinet,
Publicity Director (2, 3, 4); Square Dance
Club (4); Orchesis (2, 3, 4); Dolphin (2,
3, 4); Clogging Club (3, 4); Playlikers
(1, 2, 3, 4); Wesley Foundation, Reporter
(1), Treasurer (2); Editor of THE EYE
(3); Wesley Players (1,2); CAROLINIAN
Staff (1), Sports Editor (2, 3, 4); PINE
NEEDLES Assistant Sports Editor (4).
OLENA SWAIN
WILMINGTON
A.B. English
Adelphian, Education Club (4); College
Choir (1, 2, 3, 4); Hall Proctor; Inter-
national Relations Club.
IILIS 119 3 9
Seventy-Nine
EVELYN E. SWARINGEN
CONCORD
A.B. English
Cornelian; Education Club (4); Square
Dance Club (4); CAROLINIAN Staff (4);
Transfer from Brevard College (I, 2);
Honor Roll (3).
SOPHIA ELLEN TAPLIN
HIGH POINT
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian; Le Cercle Francois (2, 3),
Vice-President (4); College Band (3);
College Choir (3, 4), CAROLINIAN Staff
(3, 4); Junior Representative to Council;
Alpha Kappa Delta (3, 4); Y.WC.A. (2,
CHANTECLAIR
Staff (3, 4); Inter-racial Relations Study
Group (3), Steering Committee (4);
Honor Roll (2, 3); Transfer from High
college (1).
M. ELIZABETH TAYLOR
NEW BERN
B.S. Music
Aletheian, Inter- Society Representative
(4); Legislature (2); Judicial Board (4);
Freshman Commission; Secretary of Fresh-
man Class; Education Club (4); Der
Deutsche Verein (3); Madrigal Club (4);
College Choir (1, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (3,
4); Orchesis (1, 2); Daisy Chain (2);
House President (3).
SUSANNAH H. THOMAS
WADESBORO
A.B. English
Aletheian; Sophomore Pageant, Publicity
Chairman; Education Club (4); CARO-
LINIAN Staff (1), Editor (2, 3); CO-
RADDI Staff (3); PINE NEEDLES Business
Staff (1); Hall Proctor (1, 2, 3); Quill
Club (2, 3, 4); Inter-faith Council (3, 4);
Y.W.C.A., Y Council (1, 2); Y Cabinet
(2), Vice-President (3), President (4);
Honor Roll (1); WHO'S WHO AMONG
STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVER-
SITIES.
RACHEL TABOR
ARLINGTON, VA.
A.B. Biology
Cornelian; Botany Club; Education Club,
Der Deutsche Verein; Zoology Field Club,
Hockey (1, 2); Baptist Student Union.
Council (4).
B. ELIZABETH TAYLOR
GREENSBORO
B.S. Home Economics
Dikeon; Secretary of Junior Class; Home
Economics Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Physics Club
(I); Playlikers, Make-Up Chairman (1,
2, 3), Vice-President (4); CORADDI Art
Staff (1); Alpha Psi Omega (3, 4),
Masqueraders (2), Secretary (3), Vice-
President (4); Y Council (1, 2, 3),
Chairman Peace Committee on Y Cabinet
(4); Honor Roll (1, 2, 3).
EDNA ANNABEL TEAGUE
SILER CITY
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Home Economics Club (1, 2, 3),
Catering Committee (4); Education Club
(4); Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Baptist Y.W.
A. (1, 2, 4), Social Chairman (3).
KATHERINEE. THOMASON
ROANOKE RAPIDS
A.B. History
Cornelian, Education Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (1, 2, 3, 4); Interna-
tional Relations Club, Social Chairman
(4); CAROLINIAN Staff (4); Y Council
(3); Speakers' Club (3), Social Chairman
(4).
Eighty
MILDRED S. THOMASON
WHITEVILLE
A.B. Sociology
Dikean, Archery Club; Inter-racial Rela-
tions Study Group.
SARAH E. TRIMBLE
GREENSBORO
A.B. Sociology
Aletheian, Le Cercle Francois (4); Play-
likers (1, 3, 4); Inter-racial Relations
Study Group (3); Sociology Club (4)-
Riding Club (4); CAROLINIAN Business
Staff (1), Advertising Manager (2), Busi-
ness Manager (3); CHANTECLAIR Busi-
ness Manager (3).
DOROTHY TRUITT
GREENSBORO
A.B. Biology
Dikean; Bacteriology Club (3) Vice-
President (4); Chemistry Club (2, 3, 4);
College Choir (1, 3, 4); CAROLINIAN
Editorial Staff (3, 4); Y Cabinet (4);
President of Congregational - Christian
Group (4); Honor Roll (1, 2)
ANNA HUGHES TURNER
RALEIGH
B.S. Home Economics
Aletheian, Chemistry Club (2); Educa-
tion Club (4); Home Economics Club (1,
2, 3, 4).
HESTER HICKS TOLAR
BALTIMORE, MD.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Circle (1); Square Dance Club (2); Hall
Judicial Board (4), Secretary (3); Class
Representative to Council (3); Y.W.C.A;
Junior Adviser.
JANE C. TRUESDELL
HIGH POINT
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Physics Club (2, 3); Transfer
from High Point College (1).
ANNIE L. TURBERVILLE
MILTON
A.B. Spanish
Adelphian; Honor Roll (4).
DOROTHY TURNER
FOREST CITY
B.S. Home Economics
Dikean; Education Club (4); Home Eco-
nomics Club (2, 3, 4); Athletic Associa-
tion (3, 4); Swimming (3, 4); College
Choir (2); Y.W.C.A. (2, 3, 4); Trans-
fer from Limestone College (1, 2).
I"! Ill
lli'LES 11939
Eighty-one
PEARL E. TURNER
GUILFORD COLLEGE
BS. Home Economics
Cornelian; Home Economics Club (3, 4);
Transfer from Guilford College (1, 2).
R. FLORE !NE TYNDALL
KINSTON
BS. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Playlikers (I, 2, 3); Educa-
tion Club (3, 4).
NELL ELIZABETH TYSON
GEORGETOWN, S C.
BS. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Square Circle; Orchesis; Play-
likers; Hall Proctor (1).
MABLE IRENE UPCHURCH
ANGIER
A.B. Biology
Dikean; Education Club (4); Archery Club
(2, 3, 4); Zoology Field Club (2, 3, 4),
Vice-President (3).
BLANCH SHAW TUTEN
EDWARD
BS. Home Economics
Cornelian; Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4); Educotion Club (4).
DOROTHY LOUISE TYSON
MEBANE
BS. Physical Education
Cornelian; Sports' Leader Speedball (3);
Sports' Leader Tennis (4); Secretary-
Treasurer Dolphin Club (4); Transfer
from Greensboro College (1); Athletic
Association (2, 3, 4); Senior Orchesis (4);
Dolphin Club (4); Tennis Doubles Cham-
pion (3); Basketball (2, 3, 4); Tennis (2,
3, 4); Hockey (2, 3); Speedball (2, 3),
Gymnastics (3).
JANE UMSTEAD
SOUTH BOSTON, VA.
BS. Home Economics
Corne'ian; Botany Club (3, 4); Chemistry
Club (3, 4); Home Economics Club (1, 2,
3, 4), Secretary (2); Archery Club; Ploy-
likers (3), Costume Mistress.
EDITH HELEN VEASEY
FUQUAY SPRINGS
BS. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Square
Circle (2), Secretary-Treasurer (3).
Eighty-two
HAZEL HYATT WALKER
CINCINNATI, OHIO
A.B. Biology
Dikean; Medical Technologists (3, 4);
College Choir (1, 2, 3, 4); House Vice-
President (1); Honor Roll (1).
AGNES M. WARREN
NEWTON GROVE
A.B. Primary Education
Cornelian; Education Club (3, 4); Archery
Club (1, 2).
ELEANOR WEEKS
MAYSVILLE
A.B. Primary Education
Aletheian, Society Sports Chairman (3),
Dance Chairman (3); Big Sister Chairman
(3); Dance Chairman (4); Education
Club (4); Orchesis (1, 2, 3, 4); Clogging
Club (3), Secretary and Treasurer (4);
Playlikers (1, 2, 3); Daisy Chain (2).
ELIZABETH WESTCOTT
CHESTERTOWN, MD.
B.S. Physical Education
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Ath-
letic Association; Orchesis; Square Dance
Club.
HILDA EDNA WALKER
GREENSBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Class Cheer Leader (3, 4);
Education Club (4); Le Cercle Francois
(4); Archery Club Manager (2); Tennis
Team (1, 2, 3); Y Council (3); Honor
Roll (1, 3).
JOSEPHINE WATSON
KENLY
A.B. French
Adelphian; Education Club (3, 4); Le
Cercle Francois (1, 2, 3, 4); Physics
Club (2, 3, 4); Honor Roll (4).
HELEN HUBER WEITZEL
MANHEIM, PA.
B.S. Physical Education
Dikean, Recording Secretary (3); Presi-
dent of Student Government (Summer
School 3); Chemistry Club (2); Educa-
tion Club (4); Clogging Club (1, 2, 3,
4); Varsity Volleyball (2); Hall Board
(3, 4).
RACHEL SUSAN WEYHER
KINSTON
A.B. Primary Education
Aletheian, Dance Committee (3); Educa-
tion Club (4); Transfer from Converse
College (1, 2).
II LBS 1039
Eigbty-tbre
BETSY WHARTON
GREENSBORO
A.B. History
Aletheran; Legislature (4); Der Deutsche
Verein (4); Square Circle (1); Hall
Board (3); Y Council (1, 2, 3, 4); Y
Cabinet (4); College Choir (1, 2, 3, 4);
Honor Roll (1, 2, 3, 4).
MARY C. WHITEHURST
NEW BERN
A.B. History
Cornelian; International Relations Club
(4)- College Band (3, 4); Transfer from
St. Mary's (1, 2).
THELMAE. WHITLEY
MARSHVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Education Club (4); Hall
Proctor (3); Baptist Student Union Di-
rector- Transfer from Wingate Junior
College (1)
E. ELIZABETH WHITSON
ASHEVILLE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Education Club (4); Transfer
from Biltmore College (1); Inter-racial
Relations Study Group (1); Tennis Team
(3); Basketball (2); Baptist Student Un-
ion, Secretary (3), President (4).
MARY E. WHITEHEAD
GREENSBORO
B.S. Home Economics
Adelphion; Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2);
Home Economics Club (1, 2), Membership
Chairman (3), Social Chairman (4),
Playlikers (2, 3, 4), Cabinet (make-up
Chairman) (4); College Band (3, 4);
Y Council (1, 2, 3, 4); Masqueraders (3,
4): Junior Adviser.
KATHLEEN WHITLEY
WINGATE
A.B. Biology
Aletheian; Chemistry Club (4); Education
Club (4); Zoology Field Club.
SARAH P. WHITNEY
GREENSBORO
A.B. Sociology
Cornelian; Inter-rocial Relations Study
Group (2, 3); YWCA
HARRIET J. WIGGINS
TARBORO
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Education Club (3, 4); Y Coun-
cil (2, 3).
Eighty-four
DOROTHY M.WILKINSON
MARION
A.B. Primary Education
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Transfer
from Stratford Junior
ELIZABETH P.WILKINSON
BURNSIDE, KY.
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphian; Education Club (4); Square
Dance Club (2); Basketball (2); Hall
Proctor (2, 4).
BALLARD R. WILSON
ROCKY MOUNT
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Dikean; Transfer from Flora Macdonald
(1, 2).
EDITH W. WINBORNE
AULANDER
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Hall Judicial Board, Secretary
(3, 4); Education Club (4); Playlikers
(1), Y.WA. (1, 2), Secretary (3), Circle
Leader (2); Hall Proctor (1, 2); Honor
Roll (4).
ELIZABETH E.WILKINSON
CHARLOTTE
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; College Orchestra (1, 2);
College Band (2); CORADDI Business
Staff (3).
ANNIE RUTH WILSON
GUILFORD COLLEGE
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian, Home Economics Club (1,
3, 4).
ELLEN MEADE WILSON
WILMINGTON
A.B.
Adelphian; Playlikers (3, 4), CORADDI
Editorial Staff (4); Y Cabinet (4); Hall
Board (3); Quill Club (4)
SARAH E. WINSLOW
SCOTLAND NECK
B.S. Home Economics
Cornelian; Transfer from University of
Kansas City (1); Home Economics Club
(2, 3, 4).
no li
II LBS 11939
Eighty-five
RUBYE A. WOMBLE
MONCURE
A.B. Grammar Grade Education
Dikean; Education Club (4); Psychology
Club (4); Playlikers (4); Speakers' Club;
Y. W. C. A.; Transfer from Louisburg
College.
MARGARET D. WOODSON
SALISBURY
A.B. Sociology
Adelphian, International Relations Club
(4); Hall Judicial Board (4); Alpha
Kappa Delta; Y Council (2, 3); Freshman-
Junior Wedding (3); Transfer from Hol-
lins College (1); Honor Roll (3, 4).
MARTHA A. WRIGHT
NEW YORK, N Y
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Aletheian; Dolphin Club (I, 2, 3, 4);
Swimming Varsity (1); Chairman Dormi-
tory Library Committee (4).
JEAN RACHEL ZIEL
MT CLEMENS, MICH.
A.B. Economics
Cornelian, Marshal (3); Chemistry Club
(1); Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2); Play-
likers (1, 2, 3, 4); College Choir (1, 2, 3);
YW.CA, Freshman Council; CAROLIN-
IAN Business Staff (3).
VIRGINIA MILLIE WOOD
BROOKHAVEN, L I.
A.B. English
Cornelian, Botany Club (2), Education
Club (4); College Choir (1); College
Band (2, 3); CORADDI Editorial Staff
(4); Quill Club (4); Y.W.C.A. (1),
Freshman Y Council; Junior Adviser;
Honor Roll (3).
ALICE GIBSON WRIGHT
WAKE FOREST
B.S. Secretarial Administration
Adelphion; Education Club (4); Playlik-
ers (1); CAROLINIAN Circulation Staff
(2); Hall Proctor (2, 3, 4); Orchesis (2).
GERALINE F. YOUNG
ANGIER
B.S. Music
Aletheian, Der Deutsche Verein (1, 2);
College Choir (1, 2), Treasurer (3),
President (4); Glee Club (3, 4); First
Presbyterian Church Choir (I, 2, 3, 4);
Honor Roll (3).
MARY V. ZIMMERMAN
READING, PA
A.B. Psychology
Dikean; Le Cercle Francois (1, 2, 3, 4);
Square Circle (2, 3, 4); YW.CA. (1, 2,
3, 4); CAROLINIAN Business Staff (3,
4); PINE NEEDLES Business Staff (2,
3, 4).
Eighty-six
HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1939
They were in nowise a homogeneous group — the
freshmen who entered Woman's College of the University
of North Carolina as the class of 1939. They came from
little towns and big cities as native North Carolinians,
as Yankees, and as pilgrims from far countries. Some of
them were seeing Greensboro for the first time; others of
them were born within a few blocks of the college cam-
pus. Some of them had been high school valedictorians;
others of them presented entrance deficiencies along with
the application blanks. Some came with unlimited bank
accounts; others had awaited notice of self-help appoint-
ments before making definite plans. They declared fidelity
to each of the great religious faiths; they left the Re-
ligious Preference space blank. Many of them had been
members of the high school graduating classes of 1935,
but this was a generalization that was not without its
exceptions.
It rained on the just and the unjust, on those who
would borrow and those who would lend — that rain which
accompanied Freshman Week in September of 1935. They
registered for every combination of courses and instruc-
tors. They indicated their intentions of working toward
each of the various degrees offered by the college. Not
one of them might have dared hope that this multiplicity
of purposes and personalities could ever be reconciled to
each other. Not one might have hoped that a community
of such members might ever develop into a true and happy
democracy. No prophet might have foreseen that the
class was destined to become one of the most spirited and
enthusiastic of college classes — that it was to achieve
singleness of purpose without violating the individuality
of its component parts.
Although one member of the class, Jane Dupuy, was
to be elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa during her
junior year, the class was not one of outstanding achieve-
ment in scholarship. Any number of other classes had sur-
passed the brain-power as indicated by grades of the
thirty-niners. The mortality rate of the class was boosted
by constant withdrawals. Despite these losses, however,
the class promised to be one of the largest to be gradu-
ated by the college.
In enthusiasm, in community consciousness, in loyalty
to leadership, the class had few equals and no betters.
Some of this is traceable to the quality of leadership the
students saw fit to elect, some of it to the unique attitude
of college administrators, and not a little of it to the in-
tangible something which can be called nothing else but
the Spirit of 1939.
As freshmen, the class elected Gertrude Rainey of
Martinsville, New Jersey, president of the group.
Trudy started the class, when it was numerically at its
fill III
MAXINE GARNER. Historian.
II LBS 1039
Eighty-seven
HISTORY, Continued
greatest, on the road it pursued from that time on. She
motivated the heterogeneous medley of parts to become
a whole. She taught them to forget their wide differences
in origin and geography, in personality and prejudice. They
emerged in the spring of 1936 — no longer a mixture; they
had become the class of 1939.
In the second year of the experience, the class that
had entered with such wide differences established a un-
animity of opinion that had no precedent. The presidency
of the class went both semesters to the same young lady,
Emily Harris of Greensboro, North Carolina Under
Emily's leadership, the class gave a good English term a
new and revolutionary meaning: the adjective "sopho-
monc" became complimentary for the first in its history.
The peculiar compromise between individuality and
community of the members was reflected in their choice
of class jackets. They decided on neither a red nor a white
jacket, but on both. As sophomores, they became so
conscious of their class as an entity that many thirty-
niners as seniors confessed that they would never think of
themselves as anything but sophomores.
No development of the final two years changed the
promise of eminence that the class of red and white early
displayed. As juniors, under the capable direction of
Jeanne Carey of Elmira, New York, some signs of maturity
were revealed. They were still "peppy" (Jeanne's own
trademark), but they were on their way to toning down
the brilliance that had so disturbed their predecessors. It
was a brilliance of noise and display and enthusiasm that
had characterized the class, but never had its members
entirely lost sight of the work they had come to do.
Sarah Virginia Dunlap of Wadesboro, North Caro-
lina, presided over the class during its senior year. Sarah
Virginia showed the campus students who were becoming
guiet and conscientious. Those who could remember knew
that fire burned brightly somewhere within the ranks.
They were thankful, no doubt, that the fire was under con-
trol; they hoped, surely, that they were seeing the begin-
ning of something that might sometime manifest itself
as dignity.
If the class had been fortunate in leadership, it was
no less fortunate in college administrators. Miss Bernice
Draper was the first class chairman ever to begin her
term the day her advisees entered college. For four years
she competently observed and tabulated and counseled.
She proved the wisdom of the advisory system that inte-
grates each class with college life.
The contribution of Dr. W. C. Jackson, Dean of
Administration, and Miss Harriet Elliott, Dean of Women,
cannot be measured in a chronicle. They had a vision of
college as a laboratory of life, as an experience which
might offer something to each of the widely differing
pilgrims. They had anticipated the natives of little towns
and of big cities, the North Carolinians and the Yankees,
the valedictorians, the religious, the mature, and the very
young. It may be that they were able to anticipate the
sophomores, "bless their courageous young hearts." The
class was fortunate that a Dean of Women with no insti-
tution-made ideas of her duties began her term of office
in 1935 The class was fortunate in that both deans
fostered the idea of combined individuality and com-
munity.
The class of red and white which was graduated in
1939 proved that differences can add to the success of
an enterprise. They proved that absolute agreement
among its members is not essential to the success of a
community. They proved that when each member of a
class finds and serves in her place, wherever it may be,
that the class has solved its problems. The lesson they
learned in college is that democracy is not only possible
when citizens work for the common good, but that it is
inevitable.
Eight) -tight
SENIOR CLASS POEM
VIRGINIA WOOD
The tide slapped Europe's
Bulging sides, and then
Churned a retreat against
The stern of that first ship
To bring white seed
Into the New land.
From the ship's deck, Virginia's
Arrowy conjecture westward
Sped to haunt the land
Before the yey inhabited it
With wide surmise.
— Did that arrow
Spend itself in the
Muscadine's wild embrace, futile
Presage of ill destiny;
Or quiver in the red clay
Ground, fleet singer of
The new gospel's zeal?
The confidence of night's
Progression into light
Since then has sealed
The way; our steps
Are timed to another's
Well oiled mind,
Whose steely convolutions
Turn us staring upward
Into the sun;
Upward, forward, is
Our quadrennial run.
IILES »3§
Eighty-nine
SENIOR PROPHECY
The STATE of Time to Come. June 1, 1960
From bare beginnings pioneer women began ex-
ploration . . . they banished barriers, found new
colonies wherein they founded new programs, and
made progress a thing perpetual. To them we pay
tribute in this account of activity and achievement.
To the state and to the southland has come the first
woman governor. This triumph of democracy in 1960 is
phenomenal to the point that it has occasioned history's
taking a holiday to hallow the happening. Significant is
the fact that North Carolina's new governor, Sarah V
Dunlap Jones, long a leading barrister and business wom-
an, was president of the outstanding class of 1939 at
Woman's College of the University of North Carolina. To
the women of that class STATE pays special honor — we
dedicate this issue of the magazine to them. They are
going places:
In GOVERNMENT— Emily Harris, secretary of the de-
partment of national welfare, and author of the new book
POLITICS ENOUGH; Dorothy Rosseland, national con-
gresswoman from the state of Michigan; Mary Elizabeth
Pruvis, state Supreme Court justice, of Raleigh; Frances
Crockett, mayor of Jersey City; Dorothy Elkins, commis-
sioner of welfare, Chicago; Betsy Wharton, national com-
mitteewoman of the Socialist party, and advisor to the
Society Asking "Sixty Dollars Every Saturday to College
Students," Grace Mewborn, United States consul to Den-
mark; Rachel Draughon Max, president of Foreign Friends
Society, official "good-will" organization of France.
EDUCATION— Gertrude Rainey Creed, dean of
Woman's College of the University of North Carolina,
and president of the American Association of University
Women; Carolyn Dukes, professor of home economics;
Isabel Pelton, professor of history; Claudeline Lewis, pro-
fessor of sociology; Doris Leach, professor of English; Car-
roll Stoker, professor of dramatics; Florence Hunt, pro-
fessor of musical education, Woman's College; Helen
Weitzel and Leah Skelton, members of Smith College's
school of physical culture; Sophia Taplin, head of
America's Association for Juvenile Adjustments; Bertie
Patterson, director of Pattie's School of Kindergarten, At-
lanta, Ga.; Rubyleigh Davis, associate professor of Greek,
State College; Elizabeth Crosby, personnel director, Peace
College; Martha Eleanor Floyd, professor of English, Phil-
adelphia's Police school; Constance Fagan, professor of
modern history, New York night school; Irene Pospisil,
dean of Cat college, University of North Carolina; Mildred
Howell, head of B. & P. University, "for business and
pleasure," Asheville and Algiers; Lucile Bethea Watkins,
Petersburg, Va., president of the Southern Association for
Parent Education; Marjorie Leonard, Mary Seibert, and
Inez Shuford, founders of the Missionary Seminary and
Retreat of Greenland.
SCIENCE and RESEARCH— Jane Dupuy, winner of the
Nobel prize in science for her discovery of a vaccine for in-
somnia; Helen Dennis, editor of CONSUMER'S RE-
SEARCH; Kitty Bernhardt, national authority on crime;
Avis Bolderson, expert in textiles, tapings, and red tape;
Helen Book, head of the bureau of research, Johns Hop-
kins hospital; Phyllis Keister, discoverer of the formula to
prevent chemical reaction; Mary Zimmerman and Julia
Cozzens, psychologists who advanced the Tantra theory
of behavior.
BUSINESS — Emily Stanton, owner of Stanton Feature
Syndicate, Inc.; Barbara Moore, Marjorie Pye, Helen
Player, designers, manufacturers, and distributors of the
exclusive Modern-Miss dresses and coats; Julia Bright
Godwin, head of the Southern Stock Exchange; Marian
Fisher, president of Coca Bottling company; Rachel Kelly
and Jane Umstead, House Decorators, Inc., Philadelphia;
Edith Winborne Castleloe, vice-president of the Coop-
erative Banks of America; Edna Earle Bostick, president
of United Press; Hilda Snyder and Margaret Woodson,
owners of Peach Hosiery Mills, Inc.; Barbara Moon and
Virginia Edwards, founders of the Foods and Facts com-
pany, makers of the popular "Meal-in-a-Minute."
PUBLICATIONS— Maxine Garner and Doris Adams,
editors of LOOK magazine; Kathryn Mewborn, publisher
of MUSIC FOR THE MASSES; Lou Millard, editor LA-
DIES' HOME JOURNAL; York Kiker, assistant editor of
same publication; Elinor Henderson, who is the wife of the
Rev. Warren Gaw, writer of the widely-read articles, "From
A Minister's Wife," in GOOD HOUSEKEEPING; Jeanne
Carey McLemore, of Smithfield, conductor of the popular
column, "Chats with Carrie Carey," Sue Thomas, professor
of religion at Columbia university, author of the current
novels, BLUE BANNERS and TRIUMPHANT OBSESSION;
Elizabeth Brown, editor of CORONET; Virginia Wood,
book-review editor of New York NEWS; Bettie Harward,
Ninety
editor of DEMOCRATIC DIGEST; Mary Cochrane, fash-
ion editor of VOGUE; Margaret Bullock, author of numer-
ous volumes on Physical Education and Culture, Olena
Swain House, poetess, author of the volume Remember-
ing; Edna Levine, author of PEACE and PLENTY.
The ARTS — Leah Smirnow, winner of the Academy
Award for her work as director of the motion-picture
"Success," in which Bibbie Taylor played the lead; Arlene
Littlefield and Adele Smirnow, dramatics directors for
Television, Inc.; Dorothy Ficker, Marian Endfield, Jean
Ziel, and Alice Murdoch, all stars in recent stage and
screen successes; Geralme Young, coloratura soprana,
National Opera company; Louise Darden and Betsy
Myers, directors of American School of Dance; Wilma
Levine and Marie Perez, stars of the "Terpsichorean
troupe of dancers," directed by Eleanor Weeks; Louise
Crowell Fairfax, director of the performances of her chil-
dren, the famous acrobatic twins, Louie and Louis of the
Loop; Mary Elizabeth Taylor Hodges, song-writer whose
"Bathtub Blues," has been voted the most popular song
of the year; Eleanor McClung, organist who is at the con-
sole for daily recitals over the Mutual network; Mary
Epps Briggs, musical director of the "Brigadiers;" Nell
Tyson, program director of Radio Broadcasting company;
Susan Barksdale, chairman of advertising, Association of
Artists of America; Esther Anne Quinn, music critic, UP-
BEAT and NATIONAL NEWS.
SPORTS— Rachel Emmett, director of New York City's
Parks and Playgrounds; Helen Boiling, coach of Duke Uni-
versity's crack woman hockey team; Virginia Eggleston
and Corrine Spinelle, owners and trainers of the thorough-
bred, "Shine," winner of this year's Kentucky Derby; Eloise
McLean and Dorothy Tyson, organizers of the Interna-
tional Tennis Tournament held annually in Greensboro;
Margaret Galloway, national women's golf champion;
Miriam Gault, president of the Establishment of a Daisy
Bowl (on the Eastern Coast) Clubs; Ethel Reavis West,
Duke University's representative in said society; Jeanne
Bai I lie, winner of 1957-59 national bridge tournaments.
SOCIETY — Grace Sharpe Rankin, High Point, newly
elected president of the North Carolina Society for the
Preservation of Antiquities; Charlotte Michlin, well-known
actress, recently deserted democracy to become Duchess
of Dorchester, England; Lauretta Shean, fashion expert,
divorced from Actor Eldridge Cole; Alice Powell, president
of the Washington Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals; and the GRAND OLD DAMES of SOCIETY
in the United States include Mesdames: Kurt Cobb, nee
June Maupin, Hollywood, Calif.; J. P. Floyd, Hannah
Huske, Winston-Salem, N. C; Burke Craver, Edna Buch-
anan, Charleston, S. C; Rigg Dees, Ann Dees, Atlanta,
Ga.; Nick Carter, Hester Tolar, Baltimore, Md.; Robert
Little, Helen Cook, Plainfield, N. J.; C. W. Sutton, Mary
Wilson Henderson, Boston, Mass.; James Acres, Dorothy
Wilkinson, Richmond, Va.; Harry Metcalf, Bobby Hol-
land, Durham, N. C; Ralph Fauber, Josephine Lowrance,
Charlotte, N. C; Bill Day, Helen Bumgarner, Memphis,
Tenn.; Charles Mendenhall, Helen Veasey, Greensboro,
N. C ; W. B. Jones, Jessie McLean, Mobile, Ala.; Jimmy
Mills, Elaine Reagan, Cincinnati, Ohio; Al York, Louise
Beck, Salt Lake City, Utah; Peter Hunesucker, Blois Craw-
ford, Raleigh, N. C; Ben Brown, Frances Horner, Miami,
Fla.; John Redding, Ruth Hamilton, Louisville, Ky.; Jack
Spainhour, Mary King Mallonee, Racine, Wise; Robert
Conderman, Julia Smallwood, New Bern, N. C; Ralph
Mallonee, Edna Cartwright, Baltimore, Md.; Herbert Jen-
kins, Jr., Alice Wright, New Orleans, La.; Wyllie McCar-
ter, Mary Jane Crenshaw, Los Angeles, Calif.; Charles
Muse, Virginia Livingston, Philadelphia, Pa.; Sherman
Hines, Pearl Chamness, Dallas, Texas; and on forever!
I"! Ill
ELIZABETH PHILLIPS, Prophet.
IILES 1939
Ninety-one
COMMENCEMENT PROGRAM 1939
FRIDAY, JUNE 2
8.00 P.M. Faculty-Alumnae At Home
Informal) ALUMNAE HOUSE
9:00 P. M Commencement Ball
(Senior Class) ROSENTHAL GYMNASIUM
ALUMNAE DAY— SATURDAY, JUNE 3
11 00 AM Alumnae General Assembly STUDENTS BUILDING
12:00 M Presentation of Portrait of Dr Foust— Gift of
the Class of 1935 ALUMNAE HOUSE
1 CO P M Luncheon
(For Alumnae and Seniors) SOUTH and WEST DINING HALLS
3:00 P.M Presentation of Portrait of Dr. W. C. Jackson by the Senior
Class of 1938 COLLEGE LIBRARY
3:30 PM. Concert by the Faculty of the School of Music (for Alumnae)
ALUMNAE HOUSE
4.30 P.M. Senior Class Day Exercises FRONT CAMPUS
6:00 P. M. Class Reunion Suppers
8:30 P.M Guest Performance by Playlikers — "Craig's Wife" —
Comedy by George Kelly AYCOCK AUDITORIUM
SUNDAY, JUNE 4
1 1 :00 A M Baccalaureate Sermon
Dr John A. Mackay, President of Princeton Theological Seminary
AYCOCK AUDITORIUM
4 00 P.M Concert by the College Choir and String Orchestra
AYCOCK AUDITORIUM
5 00 P.M Informal Gathering for Seniors, Parents, Alumnae, and Friends
LAWN IN FRONT OF DEAN'S HOME
MONDAY, JUNE 5
10:30 A M Graduating Exercises
The President of the University of North Carolina
The Representative of the Senior Class
The Governor of the State of North Carolina
The Dean of Administration AYCOCK AUDITORIUM
1 CO P M Luncheon Meeting
Board of Trustees, University of North Carolina
SOUTH DINING HALL
SENIORS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR
JEAN BAILLIE
SARA CRAIG
RUBYLEIGH DAVIS
JEANNETTE FLOWE
LOUISA MILLARD
ANNIE MILLER
VIRGINIA ROGERS
MARY SEIBERT
ELLEN SHANAHAN
The position of a senior is signified by more than the
possession of the earmarks of dignity and age once de-
clared typical of members of the graduating classes.
From the time of initial registration in the fall when
seniors are admitted to the "advanced standing" category
'til the last roundup at Aycock Auditorium for receiving
the first degree, there is one cycle of activities.
Among the events in the headlines for the class of 1939
have been the faculty-senior banquet which was such a
success the seniors declared it should have been held for
them as freshmen, four years earlier: and the senior-fac-
ulty party which members of the faculty might have
favored when they were serving as freshman advisors.
Then seniors had their day with the celebration of the
college holiday, Senior Day. They donned formal caps and
gowns for the final mass meeting and the annual senior
class chapel program. They were honored at a tea given
by Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Jackson; and entertained at the
formal senior dinner at which Miss Genevieve Herrick,
prominent Washington newspaper woman, was guest
speaker. Among other class traditions which have been
included in the program of activity have been the Junior-
Senior Dance, Commencement Ball, Senior Class Formal
Dance, and the Alumnae Reception.
Ninety-two
"COTTONERS"
FAKE I
WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE THEY SEE?
CROWELL
AND THEY AREN'T POSING
WOMAN'S COLLEGE PROGRESS
WORK OR PLAY?
WE'D ALL LIKE ONE'
WHEN COTTON GOES PICN ICING
HOME MANAGEMENT HOUSE
THE MARCH ON RALEIGH
FAMILIAR?
ENTRANCE TO WEST DINING HALL
DOES ANYONE KNOW HIM?
P.WA. IS RIGHT!
WHERE IS YOUR CAMERA?
POSING DIBBLE
A A HUT
I" III III
I!" LBS III '§;!!>
Ninety-three
Jl'iiiiiiiiiii rs
Ninety-four
Ninety-five
ELLEN GRIFFIN
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS
ELLEN GRIFFIN President
VALERIE POWELL Vice-President
EUNICE KING Secretary
GRACE EVELYN LOVING Treasurer
CHRISTINA CHANGARIS. . . .Manager Junior Shop
MR JAMES PAINTER Class Chairman
VALERIE POWELL
EUNICE KING
GRACE EVELYN LOVING
MR. JAMES PAINTER
JUNIOR CLASS SONG
We praise thee today, our fair College,
Our Alma Mater so true,
May thy numberless daughters, wherever they roam,
Be faithful and loyal to you.
All hail from the proud class of '40!
All hail to our College so dear!
We will ever remember and cherish
The years we will spend with you here.
There is joy in the halls, on the campus;
1940 answers your call.
And the torch that you hand us we'll keep burning high,
And pledge you it never will fall.
COLORS Lavender and White
FLOWER Violet
MOTTO "Altiora Pete"
Ninety-six
M. ABERNETHY MARTHA ADAMS MARY ALEXANDER JANE ALLEN VIRGINIA ALVERSON VIRGINIA AMBROSE
ELKIN GASTONIA MATTHEWS TROY CHARLOTTE CONWAY, S . C.
BERTHA AMMONS
ROWLAND
!. ANDERSON
GREENSBORO
R. ANDERSON
SNOW HILL
SYBIL ANDERSON ALICE ANDREWS S. ARMENTROUT
CLYDE MTGILEAD GOLDSBORO
J. ARMSTRONG
GREENSBORO
EVELYN ASCUE
KITTRELL
LETITIA ASHBY
MT AIRY
NELL ATKINSON
ORRUM
SARAH AUSTIN
MONROE
EMMA S. AVERY
GREENSBORO
III i HE Ell" LBS 11939
Ninety-ret e
f:\ {^. {\
ELLEN AXLEY
ROSA BAER
MARGIE BAKER
ANNA J. BAREFOOT
B. BARKSDALE
LOIS BARNES
MURPHY
DUNN
GREENVILLE, S C
CANTON
GREENSBORO
WALLINGFORD, CONN
SARAH BARNES
RUTH BARNWELL
F. BARRINGER
LESS IE BATEMAN
DOROTHY BELL
ELEANOR H BELL
KENLY
EDNEYVILLE
CONCORD
COLUMBIA
WESTFIELD, N J.
MOORESVILLE
ALICE BERGIN
NELL BENTON
KATE BLACK
MARGARET BLACK
VIRGINIA BOGER
PAULINE BOLES
OXFORD
GREENSBORO
REIDSVILLE
GREENSBORO
ALBEMARLE
CYCLE
Ninety-eight
HILDA BRADY OLIVE BRIGGS RACHEL BRIGHT K.BRITTEN DOROTHY BROCK GERALDINE BROOKS
FRANKLINVILLE BURNSVILLE NEW HILL KINSTON ELIZABETH CITY ROXBORO
LUCILLE BROOKS
TARBORO
D. BROTHERS DOROTHY BROWN EVELYN BROWN
LAGRANGE SALISBURY ROCKY MOUNT
K. BROWN
CONCORD
MARTHA BROWN
GREENSBORO
MARY B. BROWN NANCY BROWNE MARY D BUDD
TAYLORSVILLE WILSON SILERCITY
ARPHA BURRELL
TRYON
ANNE BURNETT
ROCKY MOUNT
BETTY BURNS
FAIRMONT
rill HIE ■I E Ell LBS 11939
Ninety-nine
DORIS BUTLER
ROSEBORO
MABEL CADDELL JOY CARMAN ELICIACAROON
HOFFMAN BRETON WOODS, N. J NEW BERN
INEZCAROON ELIZABETH CARSON
KINSTON STATESVILLE
E. CASHWELL RUTH CHADWICK
GASTON I A NEW BERN
M CHAFFEE HELEN CHAFFIN H. CHAMBERLAIN JOYCE CHAMBLISS
MORGANTON LILLINGTON GREENWICH, CONN. REIDSVILLE
DAISY CHAMNESS VIRGINIA CHANCE C CHANGARIS MARGERY CHARPIA ANNETTE CHILDS ELIZABETH CHURCH
BENNETTSVILLE.SC NORTH AUGUSTA, S. C. DURHAM GREENSBORO LINCOLNTON ROARING RIVER
( A*
BERNICECLEIN
GREENSBORO
BETTY CLUTTS MARY R COCHRAN HELEN COHEN MILDRED COLEMAN DOROTHY COLEY
GREENSBORO ROCKY MOUNT PORT CHESTER, N. Y. NORLINA RALEIGH
J. CON LEY
WILSON
VIRGINIA CONNOR ALICE COOGAN
ASH EV I LLE BRYN MAWR, PA
ALICE COOK
BOONE
JEAN COONEY
TRENTON, N. J.
MARIAN COX
WINTERVILLE
MILDRED COX
GRASSY CREEK
G. CRABTREE
BAHAMA
LOUISE CRAFT VIRGINIA CRAVER CAROLYN CROOK MAY CROOKES
PITTSBORO LEXINGTON EAST HADDAM, CONN. WALLINGFORD, CONN.
I1" III II!
IILES ■'§;!!>
One Hundred One
LEAH CROOM
RUTH CROTTY
REBECCA CROWELL
EDITH DANIEL
MAY DAVIDSON
REBECCA DAVIS
WILMINGTON
BROOKLY, N. Y.
RICHFIELD
ELM CITY
HUNTERSVILLE
DUNN
BETSY DAVISON
K DAWSON
MARY DAY
DOROTHY DENNIS
JEAN DEWEY
C. DICKSON
LEAKSVILLE
NEW BERN
WINSTON-SALEM
LOCH ARBOUR, N. J.
GOLDSBORO
BOOTH BAY HARBOR, ME.
MR IE DIMNETTE
CAROLYN DOWD
RUTH DUPREE
CELIA DURHAM
FRANCES EDWARDS
WILHELMINA EFIRE
GASTON 1 A
CARTHAGE
ROCKY MOUNT
CHAPEL HILL
ASHEVILLE
ALBEMARLE
'":. Hundred Two
X
MAXINEEFLAND
EFLAND
RUTH ELLER
GREENSBORO
MARY ELLINGTON ELIZABETH ELLIS
ROCKY MOUNT GOLDSTON
GRACE ELLIS
WINSTON-SALEM
PHOEBE ENNIS
RALEIGH
ELVA EVANS KATHRYN EVANS M. FINKLEHOFFE MARGERY FAISON MARIAN E FISHER ANNIE MAE FOX
MURFREESBORO MURFREESBORO SPRINGFIELD, MASS CHESTER, PA NORTHAMPTON, MASS. STALEY
VIRGINIA FRANCIS RUTH FRETZ PEARL FRICK
KING JACKSON HEIGHTS, N. Y. GOLD HILL
MARY RUTH FRYE
CARTHAGE
JULIA FULLER
FRANKLINTON
KATHRYN FULLER
SPRUCE PINE
I'll! Ill
II LBS Il'iJ'f
One Hundred Three
FRANCES FUTRELL M.GALLAGHER MARIAN GALLOWAY VIRGINIA GARDNER MARY T. GAY VIRGINIA GAYLORD
NASHVILLE CHARLESTON, S. C. GREENSBORO MURFREESBORO MARGARETTEVILLE PANTEGO
REBECCA GILBERT BESSIE A. GILLAM VE LORA GILLIAM RUTH GILLMORE LOUETTE GLASER MAURINE GODBEY
FAYETTEVILLE MORGANTON ELON COLLEGE WALPOLE, MASS NEWTON, MASS. WINSTON-SALEM
EMILY GOODRUM RUTH GORDON JOSEPHINE GORE MARIE GOULD EVELYN GREESON ELLEN GRIFFIN
DAVIDSON PITTSBORO TABOR CITY WATERTOWN, N Y. BURLINGTON FORT HAMILTON, N, Y.
One Hundred Four
GLENNIE GRIFFIN
WINGATE
K. GRIFFIN GERTRUDE GRIMES JANET GRONER LOIS GUYER CELIA HALL
SANFORD GREENSBORO SOUTH ORANGE, N J. HADDON HEIGHTS, N. J. NEW BERN
FRANCES HALL SARAH HALL NANCY HAM ANGELA HAMMOND THELMA HAMMOND EDITH HAMRICK
ZEBULON MT. ULLA GREENSBORO CRANFORD, N. J. MAPLEWOOD, N. J. SHELBY
K HAMRICK ROBERTA HARDEE GRACE HARDING P. HARDWICKE
BOILING SPRINGS , DURHAM WASHINGTON WAKE FOREST
JEANETTE HARRY JEAN HARTSOOK
GROVER GREENSBORO
III I I FIILti 1939
One Hundred Fit
NETTIE HARVEY FRANCES HARWARD MARY E. HATTON MILDRED HAUGH MARY F. HAWKINS BEATRICE HAYMAN
MONCKS CORNER, S. C. APEX MONROE SHORT HILLS, N. J. WAYNESBORO, VA. CHARLOTTE
MARY M. HEFFNER MARY ELLEN HEGE EMMA HEMPHILL LOIS HENRY DOROTHY HERBERT ELOISE HERRING
GREENSBORO LEXINGTON GREENSBORO WASHINGTON, D. C. GREENSBORO FAYETTEVILLE
JANE HERRING BETSY HEYWARD MARY C. HIGGINS E HIGHTOWER
CLINTON GOLDSBORO GREENSBORO WADESBORO
R. HOLLOWELL KATHRYN HOLM AN
EDENTON GREENSBORO
One Hundred Six
ELIZABETH HOLMES ELEANOR HORNER BLANCHE HORTON BETSY HOWARD CAROL HOWARD ELINOR HOWARD
LEAKSVILLE BURLINGTON WENDELL GREENSBORO ST. PAULS CONCORD
EVELYN HOWELL VIRGINIA HOWELL HELEN HOWERTON P.HUDSPETH
GASTONIA MORGANTON ASHEVILLE YADKINVILLE
MARGARET HUFF BARBARA HUFF
GREENSBORO PLAINFIELD, N. J.
CLAIRE HUGHES M LOUISE HUGHES E HUNNICUTT
WILMINGTON ELIZABETH CITY ASHEVILLE
BARBARA HUNT VIRGINIA HUNTER ANNE HUNTINGTON
GREENSBORO PETERSBURG ELMIRA, N. Y
fill III
II LBS 0939
One Hundred Seven
FRANCES INGRAM PATRICIA IRWIN
NORWOOD BRADLEY BEACH, N. J.
H JACKSON
WEEKSVILLE
LILLIAN JOHNSON
HOLLY SPRINGS
B. JOHNSTON
CONCORD
FAYJOINES
SPARTA
GRANT JONES PATSY JONES SARAH JOYNER DOROTHY KAN I PE HELEN KAULBACK MARY W. KEARNS
WILMINGTON GREENSBORO WILSON ASHEVILLE MALDEN, MASS. PLEASANT GARDEN
SARA KELLER
J KELLOGG
M KENDALL
M KENNETTE
EUNICE KING
FRANCES KING
GASTON 1 A
WILSON
GREENSBORO
GREENSBORO
RALEIGH
HENDERSON
One Hundred Eight
DOVIEKINLAW
LUMBERTON
EUGENIA KIN5EY HELEN IDA KIRK ALMA KIRSTEIN JENNIE KLEIN ANNIE LEE KNOX
COLUMBIA, SC. MOCKSVILLE ASHEVILLE ANNAPOLIS, MD. BEAR POPLAR
DOROTHY KOEHLER M KOONCE
ALBION, PA. RALEIGH
NATALIE KRUG
LEXINGTON
MURIEL LAHN
MURPHY
JESSIE LAND
NEW BERN
MARY R. LASS ITER
MADISON
ETHEL LATHAM PERCIE LAZENBY ELIZABETH LEARY ELIZABETH LEE RUTH LISK
MOCKSVILLE STATESVILLE WASHINGTON FALLSTON GREENSBORO
MABEL LOHR
LEXINGTON
■""■111
II LBS 1039
One Hundred Nine
ESTHER LONDNER. DOROTHY LOVELL GRACE LOVING M McBANE
MARION LEONIA, N. J. DRAKES BRANCH, VA GREENSBORO
R McBRIDE
MARSHVILLE
K McBRYDE
RAEFORD
MARY McBRYDE M McCOLLUM ALICE McDOWELL MARY E. Mel NTOSH MARTHA McLEAN R McLEAN
RAEFORD REIDSVILLE ASHEVILLE RALEIGH ROCKINGHAM SALISBURY
EMMA K McNEILL MARIAN McNEILL THERESA McNEILL MURIEL MANDELL MADITH MANESS DOROTHY marks
LUMBERTON ROWLAND WEST JEFFERSON BROOKLYN, N. Y. HEMP TILLERY
)ne Hundred Ten
JENNIE MARKS MARTHA L MARTIN BEULAH MASON
TILLERY MARION BATH
C. MATLOCK
GREENSBORO
D MATTHEWS
HALIFAX
L MATTHEWS
ROCKY MOUNT
LOUISE MAXWELL M. MAYNARD
DAVIDSON BELMONT
MILLICENT MILLER MARY B MOORE
TAYLORSVILLE SPRAY
_AURA L MAYO
ANNAMEIXELL
LOUISE MERONEY
ELAINE MEYERS
HOBUCKEN
BREVARD
GREENSBORO
PLAINFIELD, N. J.
MAX IE MOORE
NELL MOORE
E MORGAN
RUBY MORGAN
GREENSBORO
WILMINGTON
GREENSBORO
SHELBY
rim
II LBS 1939
One Hundred Eleven
EDITHA MORRIS MARY G. MORRISON MARGARET MOSER MARY SUE MOSER LYNETTE MOSS SUE C MUNDAY
TARBORO CHARLOTTE GREENSBORO MONROE WILSON TAYLORSVILLE
MRIE MURPHY
LAURA MUSE
J. NELSON
DORIS NEW
SOUTHERN PINES
LAURINBURG
WAYNESVILLE
KING
JEAN NOEL
BETTY NORWOOD
MARION OKELL
RUTH ONCLEY
OLIVIA
MT. AIRY
PLAINFIELD, N. J.
GREENSBORO
LUCY NEWELL PEARL NICHOLSON
FRANKLINTON GRAHAM
EUNICE OUTLAW ISABEL PALMER
ZEBULON BAYSIDE, N Y.
One Hundred Twelve
RUTH PALMER SARAH PARDO CLARA PARDUE OMA LEE PARKER PAULINE PENLAND ANNE PERSON
ARLINGTON, N. J. HAVANA, CUBA WALLBURG GATES HAYESVILLE LITTLETON
E. PETTIGREW ANNE PIKE THELMA PITTMAN MARTHA PLONK ANNA MAE PORTER LOIS PORTER
FLORENCE, S. C. DERBY LINE, VT. WHITAKERS KINGS MOUNTAIN SANFORD NEW HAVEN, CONN.
VALERIA POWELL MARIE POWERS ALTA PRINE
TAMOQUA, PENNA. ST. PAULS WESTFIELD, N. J.
MARILYN PRUDEN
SEVERN
ROSE PULLY
KINSTON
ROBERTA PURDY
OSSINING, N.Y.
f" III III E II E E III" L E % III <J 3 9
One Hundred Thirteen
MURIEL QUA ELIZABETH QUINN ANNA S. RAILEY FRANCES RAMSEY ELIZABETH RANDLE ROSALIE RAPPOPORT
NORTHAMPTON, MASS. DURHAM COMO STATESVILLE KINGS MOUNTAIN PATERSON, N. J.
JANE RASH NOLA REED HELEN REYNOLDS BESSIE RHODES ELIZABETH RICE E. E. RICHARDSON
LACROSSE, VA . WINSTON -SALEM RALEIGH NORTH WILKESBORO CANDLER LAKEVIEW
HELEN RICHARDSON SARAH RICHARDSON MARY L. RIDDICK NELL RIDDICK KATHERINE RIMMER VIRGINIA RITTER
TROY MINERAL SPRINGS SCOTLAND NECK GATESVILLE STATESVILLE SOUTH ORANGE, N.J.
One Hundred fourteen
MARY IRMA RIVES EMELINE ROBERSON GERALDINE ROGERS ANNIE LEA ROSE JOYCE ROUSE RUTH RUSSELL
GOLDSTON ROBERSONVILLE ALBEMARLE SHELBY FAIRMONT BRYSON CITY
KATHLYN SALTMAN AGNES SANFOPD SOPHIE SCHAEFER MADELYN SCHULTZ HELENE SCHUSTER CORA LEE SCOTT
BRIDGEPORT, CONN MOCKSVILLE WESTFIELD, N. J. TREMONT, PENNA GREENSBORO GREENSBORO
S. FRANCES SEAWELL CARRIE E. SHARPE ADELL SHERARD LENA SHERMER ELIZABETH SHERRIL CHARLOTTE SHOAF
ROCKINGHAM REIDSVILLE GOLDSBORO WINSTON-SALEM SHERRIL'S FORD LEXINGTON
fill III E II
IILES 1939
One Hundred Fifteen
ANNE SHOOK MARY ALICE SIDES EMILY SILER MARY B. SIMMONS MARY S SIMMONS ADELE SIMPSON
TARBORO STATESVILLE WAYNESVILLE YADKINVILLE PILOT MOUNTAIN ASHEVILLE
ALICE SIRCOM PRATHER SISK H ELOISE SMITH ERMA SMITH EVELYN SMITH MAMIE G. SMITH
BRONXVILLE, N. Y. FAYETTEVILLE GREENSBORO RALEIGH OLD GREENWICH, CONN. KINSTON
MARGARET I. SMITH THERESA SNOW M. SNOWDEN KATHLEEN SOLES MARY L. SPRATT MARY J. SPRUILL
WAKE FOREST KERNERSVILLE WASHINGTON, D. C. WHITEVILLE CHARLOTTE WINDSOR
One Hundred Sixteen
VIRGINIA SPRUILL C STANTON
PLYMOUTH WILMINGTON
MAUDE STATON VIRGINIA STERLING ALTHA STEVENS EVELYN STEVENSON
HENDERSONVILLE CHARLOTTE BALTIMORE, MD BENNETTSVILLE, S. C.
ANITA STRAUSS T. STRINGFIELD ALICE SUITER
HILLSDALE, N. Y. WAYNESVILLE GREENSBORO
EDNA SUITT RUTH SUMMERS ELIZABETH SUTTON
HILLSBORO GREENSBORO BORDENTOWN, N. J.
M SWANSON PEARL L SYKES REBECCA TALLEY MARGARET TAYLOR ELEANOR THOMAS ELISE THOMPSON
BROCKTON, MASS. GREENSBORO LEWISTON TOWNSVILLE CHADBOURN CHADBOURN
III L II E Ell LBS 1039
One Uund,ed Seventeen
J.THORNTON ANNE TILLINGHAST NELLIE TINGLE MARGARET TOL ER JENNIE TOMLIN D. TOMLINSON
DUNN FAYETTEVILLE ASHEVILLE ROCKY MOUNT GASTONIA WILSON
H. TOMLINSON M TORRENCE
WILSON CHARLOTTE
EDITH TURNER MARY ANNE TURNER BESS TWITTY ALMA USHER
ASBURYPARK, N. J. WAYNESVILLE GREENSBORO NEWTON GROVE
CARRIE WALKER CHRISTINE WARREN F. WARREN
BURLINGTON COLLETTSVILLE SPARTA
C. WASHINGTON MARY ALICE WEEKS RUTH WEINGER
STEM RALEIGH PEEKSKILL, N. Y.
One Hundred Eighteen
ELIZABETH WHITE EMILY WHITE GENEVIEVE WHITE ETHEL WHITLEY HELEN WHITLEY KATHRYN WHITLEY
DURHAM GREENSBORO BROOKLYN, N. Y. MARSHVILLE ENFIELD ENFIELD
MARY WIGGINS AUDREY WILLIAMS JEAN WILLIAMS OLIVE WILLIAMS M WILLIAMSON CHRISTINE WIMBISH
MURFREESBORO BALDWIN, N. Y. WARRENTON BURNSVILLE KENLY GREENSBORO
PACKYWINSLOW
GREENSBORO
BETTY WISE
DURHAM
I11" III II!
II LBS IllfJi
One Hundred Nineteen
,
ELIZABETH WOLFE MINNA WOLFSON
MONROE SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
SARAH WOODY
BURNSVILLE
EVELYN WUNSCH MARGARET WYATTE HELEN WYGANT
HULL, MASS. MEBANE BALTIMORE, MD
N WORTHINGTON KATHRYN WRENN CATHERINE WRIGHT
WINTERVILLE SILERCITY HENDERSON
NANCY YATES
GREENSBORO
MARTHA YELTON JANE ZIMMERMAN
SPINDALE CLEMMONS
THERESA ZIMMERMAN
ABERDEEN
JUNIORS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR
ALICE BLANCHARD HELEN FORESTER LENA McFADYEN ELEANOR ROSS
ADELAIDE BROWN IDA GIBBS CATHERINE MARTIN ARRIWONA SHOAF
BARBARA BROWN LETTIE HAMLETT MARY OVERMAN ANNIE B SMITH
ANNE COLE VIRGINIA HOWARD HELEN PAGE CORRINE SPINELLE
H. CUNNINGHAM JOAN LLOYD ANNIE M. PARRISH SUE SWEENEY
WILLIE TREXLER
DOROTHY TYSINGER
NANCY WALTHALL
ELOISE WELSH
GLENMORE WRIGHT
One Hundred Twenty
WE'VE GOT OUR MEN T RAINEY DODGES THE CAMERA . . . FORMAL DANCE . . . OUR COMPOSERS PAR EXCELLENCE . ONE GUY
THAT'S STEADY . . . COTTON-ERS
EAST LYNNE BOLLING ALWAYS SITS LIKE THIS . - EMILY SAYS HELLO TO A FAN . . . HI, BEN! . . . WHO IS WHO? . . HEY, DOWN
THERE
OBVIOUSLY THEY LIVE IN KIRKLAND . . YE CHIEF . . AW, I KNOW THAT ONE . . OZZIE AS USUAL . . . CURLY TOP McLEAN .
CROCKETT-OF-COTTEN.
MAX DIDN'T THINK THIS WAS FUN . . WORK FOR YOUR RIDES' (WHAT RIDES?) . . PROBABLY ISN'T REALLY ASLEEP ... THE
RITES AT CAMP . . . EAST LYNN, AGAIN . . . DARDEN, ARE YOU REALLY STUDYING? . . . FAKE-ER.
KEISTER SHOWS HOW IT'S DONE NOT ALL OF THEM HAVE CARS . . . A KIRKLAND BUNCH . . TRIO OF SENIORS— BIG . . . W.P.A
. . . SOUTH SPENCER . . . YOU DO IT— SO!
fill I
IILES 11939
One Hundred Twenty-one
SepboBKH'e*
One Hundred Twenty-two
One Hundred Twenty-three
SOPHOMORE CLASS
ELEANOR ECHOLS
BARBARA
WASHINGTON
BETSEY TROTTER
VIVIAN HIERS
MISS SHIVERS
"Steadfast of Purpose" MOTTO
Blue and White COLORS
Forget-me-not FLOWER
OFFICERS
ELEANOR ECHOLS President
BARBARA WASHINGTON Vice-President
BETSEY TROTTER Secretary
VIVIAN HIERS Treasurer
CAROLINE WHITE Cheer Leader
SONG
Steadfast of purpose we now stand,
And ever true we'll be.
We will forever honor, praise
And love bestow on thee.
Our Alma Mater, may we ne'er
Forget the happy days spent here;
With joyful voices we are ever
Raising songs of cheer.
The kindly virtues you have taught
Shine brightly as the sun;
We part to e'er uphold them,
The class of '41 .
One Hundred Twenty-jour
ABERNETHY ADAMS
ALEXANDER ANDERSON, M. ANDERSON, V. ANDREWS
BEESTON
BAISE
BLUETHENTHAL BOET
BOOKER
iLES III IMS
One Hundred Twenty-five
BRICKHOUSE BRIDGES
BROWN, B.
BROWN, D.
BURKE
BUTLER, D.
BUTLER, R.
CALDWELL, A CALDWELL, M CALVERT
CAMPBELL
CLINE, M.
CLODFELTER COBLER
COOK, J.
COOKE, F.
COONER
One Hundred Twenty-six
COWLES
COX, M.
CRAIG
CROUCH
DANIEL
DAVIS, M.
DAVIS, V.
DICKINSON
DODSON
DOUGLAS, M. DOUGLASS, E.
ECHOLS
EDWARDS, F.
EDWARDS, M. EGERTON
ELOVICH
ESTFAN
EVERETT
FARNSWORTH FAUCETTE
ii lbs III §:;»!>
One Hundred Twenty-seven
FAULCONER FELDMAN
FERGUSON
FLEMING
FONDREN FORDHAM
FREDERICK GAMBLE
GANDY
GARMON
GROSS
GROVERMAN GROVES
GUNN
HAMMOND HANCOCK
HARLESS
HARRELSON, M. HARRELSON, R. HARRIS, A
HARRIS, MARTHA HARRIS, MILDRED
One Hundred Twenly-eighl
HARRIS, S.
HATCH
HIGGINS, B.
HIGGINS, R.
HODGES
HOPKINS
HOWARD
JESSUP
JOHNSON, B. JOHNSON, D.
HUNTER, S.
JACKSON, E.
JACKSON, R.
JONES, M.
rm III
IILES 1039
One Hundred Twenty-nine
JORDAN
KISER
LINDSAY
LITTLEFIELD LOCKHART
LOGAN
LOWE
McCALL
McCALLUM
McCAULEY McDONALD, J. K. McDONALD, J . E. McGOOGAN
MclNTOSH
McLEOD
McRAINEY
Om Hundred Thirty
MENDENHALL MERCER
MORRISON
MOSELEY, E.
MOS5INGER
MURPHY, J. MURPHY, M.
OLIVER, M.
OSBORNE
■'"111!
II LBS 1939
One Hundred Thirty-one
PASCHAL, JANIE PASCHALL, JULIA PATE
PETERS
PITTMAN, R. PLEASANTS, E PLEASANTS, M PLONK
PORTER
PRITCHARD RAMSAUR
RIGGSBY
ROBBS
ROEBUCK
ROGERS, E.
One Hundred Thirtytwo
ROSENFELD ROTH
ROYALL ROYS
SCHULMAN SCOTT, F.
SANDERS, B SANDERS, L.
SHAFFER SHARP
SHUFORD
SLEDGE
SLOOP
SMITH, M. W. SMITH, M.
SMITH, NANCY SMITH, R.
SMITH, NAOMI
rm iii
II LBS 1939
One Hundred Thirty-three
SNYDER
STANCILL
STEPHENSON STONE
STRASS
SWEET
SWINDELL TALLEY
TEAGUE
TROTTER TURLINGTON
UNDERWOOD VAN DYKE
WALTERS
VREELAND, D. VREELAND, M WADE
WALKER, JANE WALKER, JOS.
WARREN, V. WASH I NGTON
One Hundred Thirty-four
WATERS
WATSON
WEATHERSBEE
WELLS
WENZ
WEST
WHITE, A.
WHITE, C
WHITE, F.
WHITE, N
WHITLARK
WHITLEY
WILLIAMS, E.
WILLIAMS, H.
WILLIAMS, J.
WILLIAMS, M
WILLIAMS, S.
WILLIS, C.
WILLIS, R.
WILSON, C.
WILSON, R.
WINBORNE
WINSLOW
WOODLIEF
WOOSLEY, R.
WOOSLEY, W.
WORK
WRENN
YARBROUGH
YELVERTON
YOUNG
YOUNTS
SOPHOMORES WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR
ANDERSON
BEATTY
CARPENTER
CARTER
CASE
CELY
CHARNOCK
EVANS
FISH
GILL
GOODMAN
HIERS, A.
JOHNSON, M
McQueen
MARL IN
MARSHALL
MATTHEWS
MOORE
NACHAMSON
PERSKY
SUMNER
PETERSON
PRICE
SLOCUM
STREETMAN
II LBS 1039
One Hundred Thirty-jive
11 •Jill"" *L lllllllii liliiln Jlli'" III
t „.# nil iiiiiiii f ii
One Hundred Thirl ) -six
One Hundred Thirty-seven
FRESHMAN CLASS
ABERNETHY, FRANCES
A I MAR, BARBARA
ALEXANDER, FRANCES
ALLEN, CHRISTINE
ALLEN, NEITA
ALLEY, ELSIE
ANDERSON, SARA
ANDREOTTO, ANGELINE
ANDREWS, DORIS
ANDREWS, MARY BERNICE
APPLE, FLORENCE
ARDELL, FRANCES
AREY, ALICE
ARMSTRONG JEANNE
ARNEY, MABEL
BAILEY, ANNIE BROOKS
BAILEY, MARIE
BAITY, SARAH
BAKER, MARGARET
B ALLOW, JULIA
BANGLE, CATHERINE
BARBER, BETTY
BAREFOOT, NELL
BARINEAU, SADIE
BARKELEW, MARILYN
BARKER, MARGARET
BARNES, F ELIZABETH
BARNES, FA YE
BARNHILL, HALLIE
BARRETT, JULIA
BARROW RUBY
BARTLETT, ELAINE
BEASLEY, FLEATA
BEASON, LOUISE
BECK, EDITH
BEESTON, MAXINE
BELK, AILEEN
BELL, GEORGIA
BELL. REBECCA
BELLAMY, FRANCES
BENBOW, MARJORIE
BENNETT. ESTHER
BENSON, HANNAH
BERBERT, JEAN
BERRY, BLANCHE
BERTRAM, JEAN
BETTS, HELEN
BILODEAU, LORAINE
BISSELL, FRANCES
BLACKMAN, RUTH
BLANTON, MARY LYLLYAN
BLAUVELT, ELIZABETH
BLUMENTHAL, DOROTHY
BOIZELLE, MARIE
BOWEN, ESTLINA
BOYD, CAROL
BREEDIN, EDITH
BREEDEN, MARY
BRIGHT, RUTH
BROWN, GRACE
BROWN, LAURA
BROWN, LENA
BROWNE, HOPE
BRUNT, JESSIE
BRYANT, HAZEL
BRYANT, MARJORIE
BRYSON. WYLMA
BULLARD, BERTHA
BULLARD, MARION
BUNN, LOUISE
BURROUGHS, ELIZABETH
BUSH, DELL
BUTLER. RUTH
BYERLY, EMMA
CAMERON, MARGARET
CAMPBELL, JEAN
CAMPBELL, LUCILLE
CAMPBELL, MARGARET
CAPPS. DARLINE
CARNES, LOIS
CARR ELAINE
CARTER. MARGARET
CAVENESS. EDNA
CHESSON, MARIE
CHILDS. JUNE
CHILDS. DEBORAH
CHRONISTER, MILDRED
CLANNY, BARBARA
CLAPP, ESTHER
CLARK, ANN IE RUTH
CLARK, FRANCANNA
CLAYWELL, FRANCES
COAN, KATHERINE
COCHRANE, MARY LUCILLE
COCKERHAM, FRANCES
COCKFIELD, MARVEIGN
COLEMAN, MARTHA
CONKLIN, MARJORIE
CONYERS, ALICE
COOK, ELIZABETH C.
COOKE, ELIZABETH M.
COOKE, MARGARET
COOPER, DOROTHY
COPLEY, NANCY
CORWIN, ZABELLE
COX, MARY FRANCES
COX, NOEL IE
COYLE, FLORA
CRAIG, MURIEL
CRAWFORD, PRISCILLA
CREECH, POLLY
CROOM. NORMA
CRUMPTON, NELL
CRUTCHFIELD, CHRISTINE
CURLEE, LOUISE
CURRIN, BETSY
DARK. MAXINE
DARVIN, LUCILE
DAVIS, DOROTHY G
DAVIS, JULIA
DAVIS, LUCILLE
DeBOE, MARY KATHERINE
DELBRIDGE, DOROTHY
DELLINGER, GLADYS
DEWEY, JEAN
DICKENS. LOUISE
DILLINGHAM, FRANCES
DIXON, ALMA
DIXON, MARTHA
DOBBINS, ANNE
DONNELLY, DOROTHY
DOWNEY, PRISCILLA
DUCKWORTH, MAE
DUDLEY, RUTH
duFOUR, ELIZABETH
DULIN, JEAN
DUNLAP, ROBERTA
DUNN, DOROTHY
DUNN, MARY
DUNN, ROSE
DUPUY, NANCY
EARLY, EMILY
EDENS, HELEN
EDMONDSON, CORNELIA
EDMUNDS, ISABEL
EDWARDS, MARJORIE
EDWARDS, MOLLIE
EFIRD, GLADYS
ELKINS, BILLIE
ELLIOT, ANN
EMMONS, JEAN
ENSLEY, CLARICE
EPPES, MARY
EVANS, ELVA
EVANS, NELLIE
EVERETT, ALMA
EVERETT, DOROTHY
FATER, ELLAINE
FERGUSON. NANCY
FIKE, EVELYN
FELMING, JEAN
FLOYD, VISTA
FOGELMAN, ARABELLA
FOLGER, LULA
FORBES, NELL
FORSTER, CLARA
FORSYTH E, REBECCA
FOUST. DOROTHY
FRANCIS, ELIZABETH
FRANCK, GRACE
FRANK, CAROLYN
FRAZIER, HAZEL
FREDERICK, RUTH
FULK, REBECCA
FURQUERON, FRANCES
FUTCH, DORIS
GAINEY, SARAH
GARDNER, ELIZABETH
GATLING, CAROLYN
GATTIS, MARTHA
GILLIKEN, SYBIL
GODBOLD, MARY
GOFORTH, MARY ELIZABETH
GOLDMAN, BEATRICE
GOOD, MARY JANE
GOODE, VIRGINIA
GRANT, MARY EMMA
GRANTHAM, JEAN
GRAVELY, EMILY
GRAVES, PEGGY
GREEN, IVALEE
GREGSON, MARY
GRIFFIN, DOROTHY
GRIFFIN, JANIE
GROSE, VERA
GUIN, MARI BELLE
GUION, JULIA
GUNN, RUTH
GURLEY, JUSTINE
GWYN, MARY JEAN
HACKNEY, EVELYN
HAIGLER, CATHERINE
HALL, CAROL
HALL, KATHARINE
HALL, LOUISE
HALL, VIOLET
HAMLIN, DORIS
HANCOCK, ELIZABETH
HANSON, KATHERINE
HARDIN, JUANITA
HARDING, JOSIE
HARDY, MATTIE
HARKEY, NANEARLE
HARLESS, DOROTHY
HARRELL, CAROLINE
One Hundred Thirty-eight
FRESHMAN CLASS
FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS
CHARLOTTE MOSELEY
PRESIDENT
MARY EPPES
VICE-PRESIDENT
FRANCES HENNING
SECRETARY
POLLY SATTLER
TREASURER
MISS HELEN BURNS
CLASS CHAIRMAN
C. MOSELEY MARY EPPES FRANCES HENNING POLLY SATTLER MISS BURNS
I1" III III
II LBS 1039
One Hundred Thirty-nine
FRESHMAN CLASS
HARRELL, EDNA
HARRELL, ELIZABETH
HARRELL, VIVIAN
HARRELSON, SARAH JANE
HARRELSON, VIRGINIA
HARRINGTON, MARY F.
HARRIS, BOBBIE
HASSELL, RUTH
HAWES, (CATHERINE
HAYNES, MARGARET
HEDGEPETH, LOIS
HEFFNER, RUTH
HEFNER, MARGARET
HENNING, FRANCIS
HENRY, FRANCES
HERMAN, DORIS
HERNDON, CLARA
HIGDON, HELEN
HIGGINS, RUTH
HIGH, FRANCES
HILDERMAN, CATHERINE
HILL, FLORETA
HINES,ANNIS
HINTON, LULA
HOBBS, ERNESTINE
HOGUE, SUSANNE
HOLDER, VALERIA
HOLLIS, HILDA
HOLLOWELL, MARGIE
HOLMES, DORIS
HOLMES, MARJ OR IE
HOLOMAN, JUDITH
HOLT, ELIZABETH
HOLT, RUTH
HOLTON, MARJORIE
HOOTS, KATHLEEN
HOPPERS, IMAJEAN
HORTON, FAY
HORTON, FRANCES
HORTON, MARY
HOUSE, ELEANOR
HOUSER, BETTY
HOWARD, DOROTHY
HOWARD, JOSEPHINE
HOWELL, DONNA
HOWARD, ELOISE
HOWELL, NANCY
HOWERTON, MARJORIE
HUDSON, ELLEN
HUGHES, GEORGIA
HUGHES, NELLIE
HUNTER, SARAH JANE
HURWITZ, EVELYN
HUSKETHJANIE
HYLTON, JEAN
HYMAN, CLAIRE
HYMAN, RUTH
IDOL, NANCY
ISRAEL, CHRISTINE
JACKSON, REBECCA
JENKINS, KATRINA
JENNINGS, MARJORIE
JOHNSON, AUDREY
JOHNSON, BETTE
JOHNSON, ELIZABETH
JOHNSON, GUSSIE
JOHNSON, HELEN
JOHNSON, MARJORIE
JOHNSON, RUTH
JOHNSTON, SELMA
JONES, HARRIETT
JONES, NELLIE
JONES, PEGGY
JONES, RUTH
JONES, VIRGINIA
JOSLYN, AMY
KARLIN, PAMELA
KECK, ALBERTA
KELLY, ELIZABETH
KELLY, MARY
KERNODLE, CASSANDRA
KETNER, VIRGINIA
KILBY, ADA
KING, NANCY D.
KIRKLAND, SARA
KNOFSKY, BETTY
KNOTTS, MILDRED
KORNEGAY, DELIA
KUHN, MARION
LAHN, DOROTHY
LAMB, BETTY E.
LANE, ADA
LAPHAM, JEAN
LANE, LILLIAN
LEE, FRANCES
LEE, LUCILLE
LeGRANDE, MERRIMON
LEONARD, MARIE
LEONARD, MARTHA
LEVI NE, PEGGY
LEVY, EILEEN
LEWARK, MARY
LEWIS, MARY
LEWTER, ELSIE
LILES, VIRGINIA
LINDSAY, LOUISE
LITTLE, KATHRYN
LITTLE, MARGARET
LLOYD, ELIZABETH
LLOYD, JOAN
LLOYD, MABLE
LOLLAR, MAIDA
LUCKETT, SHIRLEY
LUTHER, PATTY
LYERLY, VIRGINIA
LYON, EUVA
LYTTON, BETTY
McBRYDE, CAROLYN
McBRIDE, DOROTHY
McCAULEY, BECKY
mccormick, elizabeth
Mcdonald, carey
Mcdonald, katherine
McDUFFI E.DOROTHY
McGEHEE, ELOISE
McGLAMMERY, ELIZABETH
McKENZIE, JEANNE
Mcknight, alice
McKOI N.ESTHER
McLAURI N.BARBARA
McLEMORE, ELOISE
McLENDON, MARGARET
McLEOD, SARAH
McNEELY, EMMA
McNEILL, ELIZABETH
McPHAIL, MARTHA
McQUEEN, MARY K.
MABE, JOY
MACK IE, MARY
MAHONEY, BETTY
MALIN, JEANNE
MANGUM, LYNETTE
MANN, BEATRICE
MANSFIELD, DOROTHY
MARKS, EMILY
MARRINER, MARY
MARROW, DOROTHY
MARSH, MAE
MASON, CONSTANCE
MASON, JEAN
MATHESON, SARA
MATLOCK, OLA
MAYFIELD, PANTHEA
MEDFORD, MARTHA
MEEKINS, LEVINA
MEIXELL.ANNA
MELVIN, MAE
MIDDLETON, MAUDE
M I DGETTE, LOUISE
MILLER, DOROTHY
MILLER, PHYLLIS
MITCHELL, BLANCHE
MITCHELL, EVELYN
MOHORN, SUE
MONSON, MARY
MOORE, MARGARET
MOORE, MILLICENT
MOORE, VIRGINIA
MORGAN, HELEN FRANCES
MORRISON, MARIAN
MORROW, GUI LLE
MORROW, MARTHA
MOSELEY, CHARLOTTE
MULCAHEY, BERNYCE
MUNCH, MARY
MURCHISON, SUE
MURPHREY, GEORGINE
MYERS, LURA
MYERS, MARIE
NACHAMSON, DORIS
NEEL, ELIZABETH
NELSON, RHODA
NEVILLE, BARBARA
NEWELL, ELOISE
NEWMAN, JULIA
NEWMAN, RUBY
NEWSOME, FRANCES
NICHOLS, AMER I TH
NICHOLS, JOSEPHINE
NOLETTE, JEANNE
NYE, LUCILLE
NYE, UNDINE
O'BRIEN, NANCY
O'CONNOR, RUTHE
OETTINGER, ERNESTINE
OLIVER, K. LOUISE
O'NEAL, BETTY
OVERMAN, IDA
OWEN, FLORENCE
PARDUE, MARY FRANCES
PARHAM, ANNIE
PARIS, CATHERINE
PARK, BETTY
PARKER, ANNE
PARKER, MADELINE
PARKER, SELENE
PARKIN, ANNE
PATTERSON, VIRGINIA
PAYNE, MARY
PEARCE, ANNE
PEARCE, ELEANOR
PEA Y, PAULINE
PEELE, MARY
PETERSON, JEANNE
PETERSON, DOROTHY
One Hundred forty
M A
_
CLASS
PHARR, EARLYN
PHILLIPS, HELEN
PICKARD, JANICE
PICKARD, MARGARET
PILLEY, MARY
PITTMAN,SARAH
PITTS, MARY
PLEASANT, ALMETA
PLEASANT, MILDRED
PLUMMER, PEGGY
POE, FANNIE
POOLE, CAROLYN
PORTER, NORMA
POTTS, CAROLYN
POTTS, MARGARET
PRICE, EUPHA
PRICE, RUTH
PRITCHARD, RUBY
PRITCHETT, POLLY
QU INN, MARGARET
RAINES, LOUISE
RAINS, REBECCA
RAMSAUR, MARGARET
RAMSEY, M. FRANCES
RANKIN, DOROTHY
RANKIN, MARGARET
RASBERRY, MARY
RAY, MARY L.
REECE, DAPHNE
REGAN, KATIE
REILLEY, MARIE
REINHARDT, ELIZABETH
RENEGAR, HILDA
REPHAN, FAY
REVELLE, ANN
REYNOLDS, BETTY
REYNOLDS, SUE
RHYNE, RUTH
RIDEN,JEAN
RIGGS, MARY
RIGGSBEE, MEREDITH
ROBB INS, DORIS
ROBBS, EMMA JANE
ROBERTS, THEO
ROBERSON, LOUISE
ROBINETTE, DOROTHY
ROBINSON, MARJORIE
ROBINSON, RACHAEL
ROGERS, AGNES
ROGERS, BETTY
ROGERS, CONSTANCE
ROGERS, N.GERALDINE
ROOK, LUCILLE
ROSE, ALLENE
ROSENMAN, CLARICE
ROUNDY, BLANCHE
ROUSE, DORIS
RUDISILL, HELEN
RUSH, JANE
RUSSELL, BETSY A.
RUTHERFORD, EDYTHE
RYAN, ELIZABETH
SADLER, MARY
SARGENT, ELIZABETH
SATTLER, PAULINE
SAWYER, MARIAN
SCHULKEN, LUCY
SCHWARTZ, ELSIE
SCOTT, MARY ANN
SCOTT, MARY KERR
SEAGLE, SUSAN
SHARPE, DORIS
SHARPE, ELIZABETH G.
SHEILD, ELLEN
SHOLAR, PEGGY
III
SILER, DORIS
SIMMONS, IRENE
SIMMONS, MILDRED
SIMPSON, JOSEPHINE
SLEDGE, VIRGINIA
SLOCUM, ELIZABETH
SMITH, ELOISED.
SMITH, ERNESTINE
SMITH, FRANCES ELIZABETH
SMITH, FRANCES EVELYN
SMITH, GLADYS
SMITH, JEAN
SMITH, MARIETTA
SMITH, MARY A.
SMITH, SALLIE
SMITH, VIRGINIA
SMITHY, ROWENA
SOUTHERLAND, ELEANOR
SOUTHERLAND, ELLEN
SPARROW, LOUISE
SPEROS, CATHERINE
STALLINGS, JANE
STANFORD, LYDIA
STEAGALL, MARTHA
STEDMAN, GLADYS
STEM, MARY
STERLING, VIRGINIA
STERN, HILDA
STEVENSON, BETTY NELL
STEWART, JESSIE
STEWART, JOSEPHINE
STOCKARD, NANCY
STRATTON, HENRIETTA
STRICKLAND, RUTH
STRINGFIELD, LOIS
STROUD, GERALDINE
SUGG, CATHERINE
% 1939
SULLIVAN, MARJORIE
SWAIN, MARY
SWEET, MARY ELIZABETH
SWINSON, JANE
TALLEY, FRANCES
TALLEY, LUCIA
TALLEY, NAOMI
TANNER, MARY
TATE, MABEL
TAYLOR, ELOISE
TAYLOR, FRANCES
TAYLOR, MARGARET BUNN
TAYLOR, MARY ROSE
TEMPLETON, FRANCES
TERRY, BARBARA
THOMAS, LUC I LE
THOMASSON, JEAN
THOMASSON, REBECCA
THOMPSON, GERTRUDE
THOMPSON, MARY FRANCES
THOMPSON, MARY WH ITE
TILLETT, GLADYS
TIPPETT, INEZ
TOMLINSON, MARY
TOOLY, SIDNEY
TOON, MARY
TRIPLETT, ETTA
TRIPP, FLORENCE
TUCKER, MARGARET
TUCKER, NELL
TUCKER, NELSON
TURNER, SALLY ANN
TURRENTINE, ANNE
TUTTLE, RUTH
UMSTEAD, SARAH
VAN HOY, MARGARET
VAN STORY, VIOLET
WADE, ELIZABETH
WADSWORTH, EMMY
WAGGONER, SARA
WALKER, BETTY
WALL, BILLIE
WALL, MARION
WALLACE, MARGARET
WALLER, DORIS
WALSER, JACKSIE
WALTERS, GRACE
WARREN, (CATHERINE
WARREN, MARY
WARREN, SARA
WASHBURN, ESTELLE
WATSON, PENN IE
WEAVER, MARVELLE
WEBB, CATHERINE
WEBSTER, REBECCA
WELBORNJEAN
WElLS, MARIE
WESKETT, MARGARET
WHALIN, FRANCES
WHALIN, JANE
WHEELER, LELIA
WHITE, BETTY
WHITE, JOSEPHINE
WHITE, ORMOND
WHITESIDES, DORIS
WHITLEY, EUNICE
WHITLOCK, HELEN
WIBLE, WILBURTA
WILLIAMS, FANNY
WILLIAMS, GENEVA
WILLIAMSON, MIRIAM
WILLIS, RACHEL
WILSON, ALICE
WILSON, MILDRED
WILSON, REBECCA
WILSON, ROSE
WINBORNE, ELOISE
WINSTEAD, SARA
WOLFE, RUTH
WOODLIEF, MARY ELLEN
WOOLARD, BLANCHE
WRIGHT, LENA
WYCHE, BARBARA
WYLIE, ALLISON
ZIMMERMAN, ROBERTA
One Hundred Forty-one
mt" 4 imiiiiiiiiiiii i I1- ■• j11"" in 1 1 «l
llim "ill fl ■lllllllllli ■llllllB f!i. Ill IiiJII'IIIII,*
0«f Hundred Forty-two
One Hundred Forty-three
COMMERCIAL CLASS
ANDREWS, NANNIE BETTE
A5HBY, HAZEL RUTH
BADDOUR, MARY MARGARET
BALDWIN, JANE ELLEN
BALL, MARJORIE
BARKER, MARJORIE
BARLOW, CHLOE
BARNES, ELIZABETH DEXTER
BARNHILL, ELVA GRACE
BOWMAN, MARY ALICE
BRANDON, VIRGINIA
BROOKS, BETTY LOU
BRUMMITT, HANNAH
BRYAN, DELLA MAUDE
CALHOUN, FRANCES
CARDWELL, VIRGINIA
CARTER, JOSEPHINE
CHANDLER, ANNA
CHISHOLM, MARY BELLE
CLARK, MYRA CORINNE
CLEMENT, VIRGINIA
CLODFELTER, OLIVIA
CLOER, NELLE
CONNER, JEAN EVELYN
COOKE, VIRGINIA
COORE, HAZEL
COPLON, ISABELLE
COUCH, ELIZABETH
COUGHENOUR, FRANCES ELLEN
CRAWFORD, RUTH
DAUGHTRIDGE, MARY FRANCES
DENNY, CATHERINE ANN
DICK, ETHEL MOZELLE
DIGGS, FRANCES WARD
DIXON, JULIA
EAKES, WILLIE PALMER
EDWARDS, HORTENSE
EWING, HELEN
ESKRIDGE, MARTHA
FLEMING, ELIZABETH
FLOURNOY, ELIZABETH
GODWIN, KATHRYN
GOELLER, (LORENA) JEAN
GORRELL. MARY TURNER (MRS )
GREEN, GRACE
GURNEAU, HAZEL
HANDY, HAZEL
HANNON, BETTY RACHEL
HARBISON, NANCY
HARRELL RUTH WOOD
HARRISON, SARA
HI ATT, MABEL
HINES, REBECCA SYBIL
HODGIN, JANE FAYE
HOLLAND, NORMA STOKES
ISAACSON, ELISE
JAMES, VIRGINIA
JONES, ELEANOR LORENE
kellam, elsie mae
kelly, evelyn
kenyon, billie
kizer, maxine elizabeth
koonce, elizabeth
koury, yvonne theresa
lamb, bettie ann
lamb, ruth
laney, eleanor
lagley, undine
lea, pauline
leiner, betty
leyton leah miriam
liles, edith bowman
lineberger, sarah
liner, barbara lee
lloyd, mary
lomax, martha
love, mauri ne
lynch, margaret
Mcdonald, anna rea
McLAMB, LOUISE
McNAIRY, SARA
McNeill, eleanor
McRAE, DOROTHY
MIDDLETON, HILDA BELLE
OSBORN, INEZ
OWEN, IRIS JUANITA
PARKER, DOROTHY
PARISH, NANCY LOUISE
PARTRIDGE, FLORENCE
PATLA, SYLVIA
PAYNE, MARGARET
PEARCE, MARIE
PERKINS, ELEANOR VIRGINIA
PIERCE, EDITH EVELYN
PIPKIN, NANCY RUTH
POWELL, MARY ELIZA
PRITCHETT, THEDA NEWELL
RATLIFF, ANNA FRANCES
REID, (ETHEL) DOROTHY
RIDDICK HARRIET LANE
RILEY, DOROTHY
ROBINSON, JEAN
ROBINSON, MARY BARRY
ROUECHE, RUTH
ROUTH, LUCILLE
SEWELL, MIRIAM
SELL, MARY BRINKMAN
SHELTON, SARA LEE
SHEPPARD, MARY
SHIPMAN, MARTHA FRANCES
SIMS, MARY ELIZABETH
SMITH, BARBARA
SMITH, ELIZABETH
SMITH, IRIS LOUISE
SOLOMON, MIRIAM
SPARROW, VIRGINIA DARE
STEVENS, RUTH ELIZABETH
STEWART, ETHEL
SUTTON, LENORA
SWORD, SARA ELIZABETH
SYKES, JANE
TALTON, DORIS
TAYLOR, GLADYS
THOMAS, CHARLOTTE HOM[
THRIFT, VIRGINIA
TILLEY, EMILY
TILSON, LUCILLE
TRENT, PAULINE, FRANCES
TURLINGTON, MARY LOVE
WALDRON, BETTY
WALKER, MARY
WALSER, MARGIE WILSON
WALSTON, CATHERINE
WARREN, ANNIE ELIZABETH
WARREN, CHARLOTTE
WAYNICK, MARY ELIZABETI
WESTBROOK, ELEANOR HALI
WESTMORELAND, MARY E.
WHITE, MIRIAM MORGAN
WHITLEY, EDNA
WILLIAMS, F. ELIZABETH
WIMBERLY, NANCY NEIL
WINFIELD, ELIZABETH KELL
WINSTEAD, GERTRUDE
WORRELL, MARGUERITE
One Hundred Forty-jour
_
COMMERCIAL CLASS OFFICERS
ISABELLECOPLON
CHARLOTTE EMILY TILLEY
WARREN
MR. JOYCE
ISABELLE COPLON
PRESIDENT
CHARLOTTE WARREN
VICE-PRESIDENT
EMILY TILLEY
SECRETARY-TREASURER
MR. GEORGE JOYCE
DIRECTOR
■"'III
IILES 1939
Om- Hundred Forty-five
FORMAL DANCE LEADERS
The Commercial class, which has as its purpose the thorough preparation of girls
for secretarial work through basic training in typing, shorthand, office machines,
filing, and personality, has been a vital part of the college community since the found-
ing of the school. This year's group of one hundred and forty-seven North Carolina
girls has been the first Commercial class to have a constitution which sets forth the
rules of election of officers, the duties of these officers, and various laws governing
the class. Each year the members of the Department contribute to the needs of the
campus by editing, publishing, and distributing the invaluable Student Directory.
The girls of the Commercial Department are becoming each year more and
more an integral part of the campus life. Like other classes they elect a represent-
ative to the Legislature; they have a formal class dance; and they are members of
and contribute to many of the clubs and organizations of the campus.
HOUSEMEETING IN HINSHAW
TYPING CLASS
One Hundred Forty-
CANT FOOL US — THEY'RE STILL PAJAMAS1
TOUGHNESS WILL OUT.
HEY — JUST A MINUTE!
THEY SHOULD BE STUDYING.
COME, DEAR — DON'T YOU KNOW MOTHER?
DON'T BELIEVE IT.
WELL, HERE WE ARE
COME UP AND SEE US SOMETIME?
W C. STOPS THE TRAFFIC ON WALKER
IT'S THE SAME ONE — THAT'S ALL THE SNOW
THERE WAS
HOW TO GET A THRILL, GIRLS.
SILHOUETTES: AND WE NEED ANOTHER
PROFILE, PLEASE
I1" III III
II LBS 1939
One Hundred Forty-sevetl
#r«| in is ix- aifi «► mi %
I
{ is noi«T the time of the demos
democracu ,tlie rule of the people.
It "s ajrlt in_ the sign of great ojater.
One Hundred Forty-eight
One Hundred Forty-nine
A view of the Reception Hall in Alumnae House
THE ALUMNAE AND FORMER STUDENTS ASSOCIATION, Inc.
The Fifth Alumnae Seminar was held on March 4 ana1 5 in Alumnae House. The subject this
year was Southern Writers, and the "faculty" was composed of Southern writers:
PAUL GREEN, playwright and novelist
STARK YOUNG, dramatic critic and novelist
CAROLINE GORDON, novelist and short story writer
ALLEN TATE, poet, literary critic, biographer, novelist
DR. B. B. KENDRICK, history
The last three are members of the Woman's College faculty.
The Seminars were inaugurated several years ago to give the alumnae an opportunity to come
back to their college for a brief period of intellectual stimulation. "It is the business of our College
not merely to educate us, but to keep us educated."
OFFICERS
MRS HENRY D. HOLOMAN (VAUGHN WHITE) President
MRS KENNETH GREENFIELD (ANNIE LEE STAFFORD) ... .Vice-President
LAURA H COIT Honorary President
CLARA B BYRD General Secretary
MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES:
MRS R. MURPHY WILLIAMS (LILLIE BONEY)
MRS GURNEY P HOOD (MARION STEVENS)
MRS. C. E STEVENS (CARRIE TABOR)
LILLIAN MASSEY
MRS RICHARD HOGUE (CAROLINE GOFORTH)
MRS C A STREET (JULIA LILLY MONTGOMERY)
MRS. LUTHER HODGES (MARTHA BLAKENEY)
DR MARY POTEAT
MRS. G. H. MAY (EOLINE EVERETT)
One Hundred Fifty
SOCIETIES
All Students of the college are
members of one of the four so-
cieties, Adelphian, Aletheian, Cor-
nelian, and Dikean, which are
entirely social in nature. These
organizations offer many oppor-
tunities for friendship and social
experience. Informal teas,
dances, parties, Sunday After-
noon open houses, Sports' Day,
and a formal dance each fall are
some of the interesting events of
the year.
ALICE MURDOCH Chief Marshal
I1" III III
II'LES 1939
One Hundred Fifty-one
WILHELMINAEFIRD
LOUISE DARDEN
6/ v? w
ELLA THOMAS HOBBS BARBARA WASHINGTON JANET MURPHY NELL STURKEY MURIEL QUA
OFFICERS
JEANNE CAREY President
ELLA THOMAS HOBBS Vice-President
BARBARA WASHINGTON Recording Secretary
JANET MURPHY Treasurer
NELL STURKEY Corresponding Secretary
MURIEL QUA Inter-Society Representative
One Hundred fifty-two
VIRGINIA HUNTER
MIRIAM GAULT
MARJORIE PYE
ADELPHIAN SOCIETY
JEANNE CAREY
PRESIDENT
fill III
iiles ■'§:»§
One Hundred Fifty-three
CARROLL STOKER
BEVERLY ANNE SHARPE
MARY KING MALLONEE DOROTHY BELL
%
v
ANNE BOYETTE ELICIACAROON MARY ELIZABETH
TAYLOR
OFFICERS
RACHAEL DRAUGHON President
MARY KING MALLONEE Vice-President
DOROTHY BELL Recording Secretary
ANNE BOYETTE Corresponding Secretary
ELICIA CAROON Treasurer
MARY ELIZABETH TAYLOR Inter-Society Representative
One Hundred Fifty-jour
SOPHIE SCHAEFER
GRACE MEWBORN
MAMIE GRACE SMITH
ALETHEIAN SOCIETY
RACHAEL DRAUGHON
PRESIDENT
I'll III
II LBS 1939
One Hundred Fifty-five
MARGARET HILL
r
MARY ELIZABETH PURVIS GRACE HARDING ALICE SUITER
OFFICERS
GRACE SHARPE President
MARY ELIZABETH PURVIS Vice-President
ANNE HIERS Secretary
GRACE HARDING Treasurer
ALICE SUITER Inter-Society Representative
One Hundred Fift)-six
ELEANOR KERCHNER
BETSY MYERS
CORNELIAN SOCIETY
GRACE SHARPE
PRESIDENT
I" III III
II' LEX 1039
One Hundred Frjty-seven
MARTHA ADAMS
LOUISE CROWELL
DOROTHY ROSSELAND ELEANOR BELL
VIVIAN HIERS LUCILLE BETHEA
HELEN BOOK
OFFICERS
JULIA BRIGHT GODWIN President
DOROTHY ROSSELAND Vice-President
ELEANOR BELL Recording Secretary
VIVIAN HIERS Corresponding Secretary
LUCILLE BETHEA Treasurer
HELEN BOOK Inter-Society Representative
One Hundred Fifly-eight
ELAINE MEYERS
MARTHA ELEANOR FLOYD
HANNAH HUSKE
DIKEAN SOCIETY
JULIA BRIGHT GODWIN
PRESIDENT
■""■111
II LBS 1939
One Hundred Fifty-nine
EDITORIAL STAFF
HELEN DENNIS Editor-in-Chief
FRANCES CROCKETT Business Manager
LOIS GUYER, MAY CROOKES Assistant Editors
HILDA BRADY Art Editor
MARGARET BLACK, JANE HERRING, BETSEY TROTTER,
EDITH RUDD Art Staff
MARY ELIZABETH PURVIS, ALMA ORMOND
Literary Editors
DORIS ADAMS Photography Editor
LAURA SILBIGER, LUCILLE BROOKS, BETSY SANDERS,
JEAN CHURCH Class Editors
MINNIE LOU PARKER Organization Editor
HELEN BOLLING, NELL STURKEY Athletic Editors
ANN PERSON, HELEN PLAYER, ISABELLE PALMER, ELIZA
DICKINSON, EDITHA MORRIS, RUBYLEIGH DAVIS
Assistants
MARTHA LEE MARTIN, SOPHIE SCHAEFER, MARGARET
TOLAR, OLIVE BRIGGS, MARY JO CURRY Typists
MISS VERA LARGENT, MISS CHARLOTTE KOHLER, MR.
GREGORY D. IVY Faculty Advisers
HELEN DENNIS
EDITOR
PINE
One Hundred Sixty
BUSINESS STAFF
Advertising Manager DOROTHY BARTLETT
Circulation Manager EFFIE PICKERELL
Publicity Manager JOAN BLUETHENTHAL
ASSISTANTS: Mary Cecile Higgins, Ruth Palmer, Mary
Zimmerman, Barbara Moon, Ellen Cheek, Adelaide Love,
Florence Calvert, Margaret McLendon, Mary Peele, Kath-
leen Barber.
The 1939 PINE NEEDLES represents a year of concen-
trated work on the part of the staff and its advisers to give
a kaleidoscopic view of campus activities. In the new feature,
STUDENT LIFE, the yearbook presents scenes from the aca-
demic and social program which are the nuclei of Woman's
College living.
FRANCES CROCKETT
BUSINESS MANAGER
NEEDLES
One Hundred Sixty-one
THE CAROLINIAN
MAXINE GARNER Editor-in-Chief
EMILY STANTON Business Manager
GRACE EVELYN LOVING, NATALIE KRUG. . . .News Editors
THE CAROLINIAN, the student newspaper, appears each Friday
afternoon of the college year except during the weeks of examination
and vacation The Editor-in-Chief is elected by the entire student body
from the incoming senior class in the spring of each year to serve from
that May until the May of her graduation year A Business Manager ap-
pointed by the editor heads the staff which is in complete charge of
the advertising and financial department of the publication.
In its editorial, campus opinion, feature, and news columns THF
CAROLINIAN has one purpose — to develop a more nearly perfect com-
munity among the students and facu'ty members of the Woman's College
of the University of North Carolina.
EDITORS — Edna Cartwright, Nancy Brewster, Edna Mae Groves, Anna
Catherine Owens, Sophia Taplin, Editha Morris, and Dorothy Koleman.
EDITORIAL BOARD— Dorothy Truitt, Celia Durham, Muriel Qua, Mildred
Haugh, Wiima Levine, Jane Dupuy, and Jeanne Carey
REWRITE EDITOR: Elizabeth Phillips. MAKE-UP EDITOR: Doris Leach.
ART EDITOR: Mary Cochrane. PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR: Doris Adams
SPORTS EDITORS: Nell Sturkey. Helen Boiling. BOOK REVIEW EDITOR:
Margaret Coit. SOCIAL EDITOR: Anne Tillinghast. CIRCULATION MAN-
AGERS: Lois Guyer, Rebecca Woosley, Carol Newby.
Faculty Adviser MR. J. ARTHUR DUNN
MAXINE GARNER
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
THE CAI
)m Hundred Sixty-lwo
EMILY STANTON
BUSINESS MANAGER
BUSINESS STAFF
Advertising Manager NANCY YATES
Emily Harris, Pearl L. Sykes, Mary Jo Curry, Barbara
Moon, Mary Zimmerman, Minnie Lou Parker, Helen Reynolds,
and Marion White Fisher.
REPORTORIAL STAFF
Caroline Lewis, Elinor Henderson, Muriel Coykendall,
Arriwona Shoaf, Jane Gillett, Marjorie Silbiger, Lucile Darvin,
Edna Levine, Marjorie Conklin, Luella Burden, Betsy Smith,
Nell Forbes, Julia Barrett, Frances Ramsey, Jane Johnston,
Nancy Idol, Martha Register, Florence Tripp, Shirley Pilfer,
Betty Brookshire, Peggy Dean, Evelyn Swaringen, Eunice King,
Katherine Thomason, Beatrice Hayman, Lynette Moss, Jose-
phine Kellogg, Frances Newsome, Jean Kinsey, Charlotte
Moseley, Margaret Van Hoy, and Jane Parker.
DLINI AN
One Hundrer Sixty-thret
ELIZABETH BROWN
EDITOR
C O R A D D I
ELIZABETH BROWN Editor-in-Chief
EDNA EARLE BOSTICK Business Manager
JANE HERRING Art Editor
FormeHy the societies, organized for literary purposes,
originated the idea of a campus literary magazine, and gave
it the name it still bears, CORADDI (CORnelian, ADelphian,
Dlkean). Recently the magazine has become an independent
publication edited and managed by students with advice from
the faculty. It offers to any person of artistic or literary
talent a chance for expression.
One Hundred Sixty-jour
EDNA EARLE BOSTICK
BUSINESS MANAGER
EDITORIAL STAFF
Susan Barksdale, Bettie Harward, Louette Glaser, Eleanor
Ross, Mildred Howell, Meade Wilson, Virginia Wood, Elizabeth
Pettigrew, Jane Gillet, Grace Evelyn Loving, Helen Albright.
ART STAFF
Emeline Roberson, Elizabeth Root, Caddie Walker, Mar-
garet Kendall.
BUSINESS STAFF
Frances Staton, Virginia Sterling, Annis Hines, Viola Gra-
deck. CIRCULATION MANAGER: Marjorie Pye; TYPISTS:
Frances Ingram, Ann Huntington, Margaret Anderson.
One Hundred Sixty-five
CHANTECLAIR
ROSALIE RAPPOPORT Editor-in-Chief
WILMA LEVINE Managing Editor
BETTY TRIMBLE Business Manager
BEATRICE HAYMAN Assistant Business Manager
EDITH RUDD Art Chief
M RENE HARDRE Faculty Adviser
EDITORIAL STAFF — Virginia Eggleston, Sylvia Estfan, Harriet Hatch, Florence Hunt, Sophia
Taplin, Minna Wolfson, Nattie Cox, Florence Albright.
BUSINESS STAFF— Ellaine Fater, Peggy Graves, Peggy Levine, Marjorie Pye, Maralyn Finkle-
hoffe, Hilah Ruth Mayer.
CHANTECLAIR, the only French newspaper in North Carolina, was begun in January, 1938, by
Sheila Corley and Rebecca Price. It was felt that a paper of this sort would be of real value in
stimulating enthusiasm for the language. Everyone with a reasonable amount of French is encouraged
to submit material such as articles on customs, current events, and the arts, or original compositions.
Other students with on interest in the business side of publication work are given an opportunity to
exercise it here.
3POPORT
One Hundred Sixty
THE HANDBOOK
CARROLL STOKER Editor-in-Chief
MARGARET GALLOWAY Business Manager
The Handbook, published each year for the benefit of old as well as
new students, is, as its name implies, a handy book containing informa-
tion concerning student government association, religious activities,
departmental and social clubs, and athletic groups.
To new students it gives an insight into what a well rounded life at
Woman's College is like, and gives them information about how they
may take part in the campus life.
INTER-FAITH
COUNCIL
OFFICERS
JANE DUPUY President
EVELYN SHEPHERD Secretary
The Inter-Faith Council is made up of two repre-
sentatives from each of the eight organized de-
nominational groups on campus together with rep-
resentatives from the Y.W.CA. and the faculty
Feeling that students should be free to believe as
their consc ences dictate, the Council does not aim
at religious uniformity. Rather, it seeks to discover
how students of strong religious conviction can live
together and in mutual respect work together on
problems of common concern. The Council meets
twice a month for fellowship and a study sponsoring
such activities as the University Sermons and social
service projects in the community.
One Hundred Sixty-seven
Y. W. C. A. ■
OFFICERS
SUSANNAH THOMAS President
JANE DUPUY Vice-President
MILDRED HAUGH Secretary
ALICE CALDER Treasurer
The Young Women's Christian Association is the non-denominational religious association
on the campus. It seeks to guide and stimulate students in developing for themselves a satisfy-
ing life rooted in a strong Christian philosophy. Some of the highlight features of this year's
program, all indicative of the Association's emphasis in personal and social conduct, have been
an Institute on Men's and Women's Relations; Internationa! Weekend, a Spring Campaign for
Far East Student Relief, Vesper services and action study, and discussion groups. The "Y" Cabi-
net, made up of thirty-six girls outstanding in their respective fields of interest, works cooperatively
to make religious activities a vital part of college life, and of deep significance to students par-
ticipating in the Association's programs both today and tomorrow.
SUSANNAH THOMAS
PRESIDENT
One Hundred Sixty-eight
Y. W. C. A.
MISS WILMINA ROWLAND.
.Director of Religious Activity
CLUB LEADERS
Elizabeth Falls, Lulu Hintan, Betty Lyttan, Charlotte Moseley,
Elizabeth Patten, Muriel Qua, Ruth Rian, Edna Earle Richardson,
Hilda Snyder, Jane Whalin.
The Religious Activities Center, located on the ground floor of South Spencer Hall, contains
the office of Miss Wilmina Rowland, Director of Religious Activities. It is the headquarters of
the Inter-Faith Council and the Y.W.C.A. Students have formed the habit of dropping by the
:enter for a meeting or social function, to read, to chat with friends, or to enjoy a quiet minute
:lone.
The five Freshman "Y" Clubs, which all Freshman and Commercial students may join, are
planned to help students become adjusted to the new environment of the campus. They also serve
to orient new students into the Association's program. This year the clubs, under the joint lead-
ership of upperclassmen and new students, have included in their weekly programs a "How-to-
itudy" course, discussions in personality problems and vocational opportunities, and several in-
;ercollegiate social functions.
MISS ROWLAND
One Hundred Sixty-nine
THE TOWN STUDENTS'
ASSOCIATION
OFFICERS
DOROTHY ELKINS President
MARY CECILE HIGGINS Vice-President
DORIS SHAFFER Secretary-Treasurer
MISS VIVA PLAYFOOT Faculty Adviser
The Town Students' Association, composed of all students who do not live on the campus,
functions in much the same way as a campus hall unit It is represented in the Legislature
and has its own Judicial Board, which is made up of the officers and a representative from
each class. The Town Students' room, in the Administration building, is conveniently lo-
cated for all those who have time to come in for a chat between classes, and to keep in
touch with the campus activities from the bulletin boards.
HIGGINS
PLAYFOOT
One Hundred Seventy
PHI BETA KAPPA
MISS FLORENCE SCHAEFFER President
MISS HELEN INGRAHAM Vice-President
DR. KEY L. BARKLEY Secretary
FLORENCE G. ALBRIGHT
EDNA CARTWRIGHT
SELMA JAMES DUNN
JANE DUPUY*
MARTHA ELEANOR FLOYD
MILDRED MAXINE GARNER
PHYLLIS EVELYN KEISTER
DOROTHY MILDRED KOLMAN
'Elected in Junior Year.
CLASS OF 1939
WILMA PHYLLIS LEVINE
CAROLINE MARIE LEWIS
CLAUDELINE LEWIS
FRANCES ADELAIDE LOVE
MAMIE EVELYN PATRICK
ESTHER ANNE QUINN
GERTRUDE A RAINEY
ALUMNA MEMBER
DR. LORNATHIGPEN DAVID, A. B. 1925
DOROTHY ROSSELAND
SOPHIA ELLEN TAPLIN
DOROTHY TRUITT
BETSY WHARTON
MARGARET DOUGLAS WOODSON
MARTHA LEE MARTIN*
MARGARET ELLEN WYATTE,;'
One Hundred Seventy-one
PLAYLIKERS
MR. W. RAYMOND TAYLOR Faculty Director
LEAH SMIRNOW President
ALPHA PSI OMEGA
ZETA CAST
LEAH SMIRNOW
MR. RAYMOND TAYLOR
LEAH C SMIRNOW
B ELIZABETH TAYLOR
CHARLOTTE MICHLIN
MARION ENDFIELD
ADELE SMIRNOW
ARLENE LITTLEFIELD
DOROTHY FICKER
PHYLLIS KEISTER
CARROLL STOKER
EMILY STANTON
SARAH KELLER
MARTHA JEAN EDDY
ALICE SIRCUM
CABINET
B. ELIZABETH TAYLOR Vice-President
PHYLLIS KEISTER Secretary
PATRICIA ERWIN Business Manager
ARLENE LITTLEFIELD Publicity Manage-
MARION ENDFIELD Stage Manager
ADELE SMIRNOW Electrician
EMILY STANTON Costume Mistress
JANE CLEGG, MARGARET IDOL Property Managers
BARBARA MOORE, SARAH KELLAR Scenic Technicians
MARY ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD Make-Up Chairman
DOROTHY FICKER, CARROL STOKER Social Chairmen
ELIZABETH HOLMES Music Director
CHARLOTTE MICHLIN Production Secretary
MISS MARION TATUM Instructor
MR. WILBUR DORSETT Assistant
One Hundred Seventh-two
Scenes from EAST LYNNE
SCENES FROM
PLAYLIKERS'
PRODUCTIONS
SUSAN AND GOD
TROJAN WOMEN
PERSONAL APPEARANCE
SPRING DANCE
MASQUERADERS
LEAHC SMIRNOW
B ELIZABETH TAYLOR
PHYLLIS KEISTER
PATRICIA ERWIN
ARLENELITTLEFIELD
MARION ENDFIELD
ADELE SMIRNOW
EMILY STANTON
JANECLEGG
MARGARET IDOL
BARBARA MOORE
SARAH KELLER
MARY ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD
DOROTHY FICKER
CARROLL STOKER
ELIZABETH HOLMES
CHARLOTTE MICHLIN
DOROTHY JOHNSON
JOHANNA BOET
MARY MARGARET JOHNSON
ALICE SIRCUM
MARTHA JEAN EDDY
LEAH CROOM
VIRGINIA HOWARD
ELOISE TAYLOR
One Hundred Seventy-three
COLLEGE CHOIR
OFFICERS
GERALINE YOUNG President
FLORENCE HUNT Vice-President
KATHRYN SALTMAN Secretary-Treasurer
ANNIE LEA ROSE Vestment Custodian
JOSEPHINE LOWRANCE Librarian
GERALINE YOUNG
PRESIDENT
One Hundred Seventyfour
COLLEGE BAND
OFFICERS
ELIZABETH HOLMES President
FRANCES STONE Vice-President
MEREDITH RIGGSBEE Secretary
NELL McCALLAM Treasurer
DORIS ADAMS Publicity Manager
The Band, directed by Mr. George E Henry, was organized in the spring of 1936. It has the
great distinction of being the first college band composed entirely of women in this country. The
purpose of the band is three-fold: it offers recreation and musical enjoyment to its members; it
contributes to the musical advancement of the entire college; it provides a working laboratory
for instrumental public school music students. During the fall season the emphasis is on such
traditional band activities as marching, playing for athletic events, and participation in a small
number of worthy community projects and celebrations In the winter the Band functions as a
concert and symphonic organization
ELIZABETH HOLMES
PRESIDENT
One Hundred Seventy-jive
GLEE CLUB
OFFICERS
MURIEL FAIRBANKS President
KATHERINE MEWBORN Vice-President
DORIS MARSHALL Secretary-Treasurer
ANNIE LEA ROSE Publicity Chairman
The Glee Club was organized in 1937 under the direction of Mr. Paul Oncley, head of the
Voice Department. Its membership consists of thirty-four voice students chosen according to
their musicianship, tone quality, and reliability. The year's work includes concerts both in and
away from Greensboro, radio broadcasts, and an annual spring tour.
MURIEL FAIRBANKS
PRESIDENT
One Hundred Seventy-six
MADRIGAL CLUB
OFFICERS
ELAINE REAGAN President
ELEANOR McCLUNG Vice-President
JANE RASH Secretary
CATHERINE STANTON Treasurer
The Madrigal Club, the professional club of the Music Education Department, composed
of upperclassmen whose ma|Or or minor is public school music, has as its purpose the delving
into phases of music education not touched upon in classwork. The principal project of this
year has been the cultivation of a general interest in informal singing through planning and
conducting dormitory sings. Other activities of interest and value to prospective music edu-
cators are carried on in weekly meetings.
ELAINE REAGAN
One Hundred Seventy-seven
Vi'W^V.S
SOCIOLOGY CLUB
OFFICERS
CLAUDELINE LEWIS President
MAE ESTFAN Vice-President
MINNIE LOU PARKER Secretary
MARGARET WOODSON Treasurer
ANNE TILLINGHAST 1
Program Chairmen
ELIZABETH COWHERD J
ALICE MURDOCH Social Chairman
The Sociology Club was organized this year by enthusiastic majors interested in promoting
the study ot social problems and in encouraging a spirit of friendship and unity among its mem-
bers This club has a varied program to meet the diversified needs of Sociology students. In its
program it incorporates the Interracial Relations Study Group, which is a college unit of the State
Division of Co-operation in Education and Race Relations. In addition to the interracial phase the
club has guest speakers on subjects relating to social theory and social problems. Student parti-
cipation is emphasized through surveys, special reports, and discussions of the case work studies.
Occasional teas, parties, and outings round out the activities of the club.
CLAUDELINE LEWIS
Oat Hundred Seventy-eight
QUILL CLUB
OFFICERS
BETTI E HARWARD President
LOUETTE GLASER Secretary-Treasurer
The Quill Club was organized in the Fall of 1920 by the literary editor of the CORADDI and
the College Publication Committee to stimulate interest in original composition and to bring
together the students and faculty of the College who do creative writing. An invitation to join
the Quill Club brings with it the highest literary honor on campus. The work of the members is
read and criticized at informal meetings, and much of this work finds its way into the CORADDI.
MEMBERS: Maxine Garner, Elizabeth Brown, Elinor Henderson, Grace Evelyn Loving, Susan
Barksdale, Eleanor Ross, Susannah Thomas, Ellen Meade Wilson, Katherine Holman, Mildred
Howell, Frances Northcott, Elizabeth Phillips, Elizabeth Pettigrew, Arlene Littlefield, Virginia Wood.
FACULTY MEMBERS: Miss Caroline Gordon, Miss Jane Summerell, Miss Nettie Sue Tillett,
Mr. J. Arthur Dunn, Mr. A. C. Hall, Dr. Leonard B. Hurley, Dr. C. C. Jernigan, Mr. James Painter,
Mr. Allen Tate.
BETTIE HARWARD
One Hundred Seventy-nint
PHYLLIS KEISTER
CHEMISTRY CLUB
OFFICERS
PHYLLIS KEISTER President
JEANNETTE PIATT Vice-President
ELIZABETH PATTEN Secretary
MARJORIE SWANSON Treasurer
The Chemistry Club plays a vital part on the college campus by bringing together informally
students and faculty of similar interests. Through movies, lectures, and discussions, the club mem-
bers keep up with recent developments in the field of chemistry. Each spring the club has a Fair
consisting of informative demonstrations, exhibits, and experiments open to all people interested
in furthering their own knowledge of chemistry and its application in industry.
One UinidrcJ EirIu)
PHYSICS CLUB
OFFICERS
NANNIE LEE WORTHINGTON President
CATHERINE BRABBLE Vice-President
MARY IRMA RIVES Secretary-Treasurer
ELEANOR BUNDY Historian
The Physics Club is composed of a group of about twenty-five students, who have done good
work in physics, and of interested faculty members. This club meets informally bi-monthly to
hear informative talks by club members and outside speakers, and to see instructional movies
The policy of the club has been to encourage individual projects of practical significance in order
that the activities of the organization may be best adapted to each girl's interests.
NANNIE LEE WORTHINGTON
One Hundred Eighty-one
MURIEL COYKENDALL
BOTANY CLUB
OFFICERS
MURIEL COYKENDALL President
ELIZABETH FREELAND Vice-President
MYRTLE WILLIAMS Secretary-Treasurer
ARPHA BURRELL Publicity Chairman
SUSAN BARKSDALE Program Chairman
The Botany Club is open to all students and faculty especially interesetd in this
field of science. A requirement for membership is the submission of a botanical
project approved by the members. As soon as a student is accepted as a member,
she pledges to support the club's policy of wild life conservation. The annual trip
to Vademecum in the spring to study the wild life of that section of North Carolina,
and to become better acquainted with each other is eagerly looked forward to.
One Hundred Eighty-two
BELL
HARDWICKE
STEVENS
BROWN
MALLONEE
STOKER
BUNDY
MEIXELLE
TABOR
BURRELL
MILES
UPCHURCH
CARPENTER
MOON
WHITE
FLANNAGAN
PARKER
WHITLEY
ZOOLOGY FIELD CLUB
(Affiliated with the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the North Carolina Academy of Science.)
OFFICERS
FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER
DOROTHY BELL President VIRGINIA MILES President
MABEL UPCHURCH Vice-President MARY KING MALLONEE Vice-President
CATHERINE CARPENTER Sec.-Treas. RACHEL TABOR Secretary-Treasurer
VIRGINIA MILES. . . .Chairman Program Com GENEVIEVE WHITE. .Chairman Program Com.
MARY MALLONEE. . .Chairman Publicity Com. BARBARA MOON . . . .Chairman Publicity Com.
DOROTHY BELL
DELEGATE TO N. C. ACADEMY OF SCIENCE
DR. ARCHIE D. SHAFTESBURY
FACULTY SPONSOR
HONORARY MEMBERS
At various times since the organization of the Zoology Field Club in 1925, certain faculty members and other
friends who have been particularly helpful to the club have been elected to honorary membership. Our honorary mem-
bers now include J. P. Givler, Dr. Z. P. Metcalf, H. H. Brim!ey, Dr. R. W. Leiby, Dr. C. W. Lewis, and Dr Anna M. Gove.
J. P Givler has been Professor and Head of the Biology Department at Woman's College since 1920. His
special lines of biological interest and subjects for publications include evolution, genetics, crustacean morphology,
embryology of the horned lizard, and relation between art and morphology. The Zoology Field Club has profited much
by his encouragement, advice, and help, ond wishes to dedicate this space to its first honorary member, Professor John
Paul Givler
PROFESSOR J. P. GIVLER
One Hundred Eighty-three
ART CLUB
MARY COCHRANE
OFFICERS
MARY COCHRANE President
SUSAN BARKSDALE Vice-President
MARGARET BLACK Secretary-Treasurer
EDITH RUDD Program Chairman
EMELINE ROBERSON 1
PEGGY LEAKE J Social Cha,rmen
HILDA BRADY Publicity Chairman
The membership of the Art Club includes the art majors and minors, the faculty, and other interested persons
voted in by the club. The club endeavors to make the study of art more interesting by mean of lectures, the intro-
duction and sponsoring of art exhibits, and social functions.
The organization aiso has contributed to the Sarah Atkinson Loan Fund established by the Class of 1939 and
dedicated to the memory of their classmate, Sarah Atkinson, who wos an art major, and an officer in the Art Club
at the time of her death. This fund is for the purpose of aiding worthy ort students.
One Hundred Eighty-jour
HOME ECONOMICS
CLUB
OFFICERS
GLADYS STRAWN President
HELEN RICHARDSON Vice-President
ANNIE LEE KNOX Secretary
BETTY ROSA Treasurer
ELINOR HENDERSON Publicity Chairman
MARY ELIZABETH WHITEHEAD Social Chairman
AIMEE MOORE Finance Chairman
VIRGINIA EDWARDS Membership Chairman
MATTIE LOU EDWARDS. Art and Decorations Chairman
The Home Economics Club, which is open to all Home Economics upperclossmen, has been greatly developed
this year through varied activities sponsored by the club. A series of programs for the year with the theme of "Marriage
and Family Relations" has stimulated much interest and enthusiasm. The responsibility of being hostess to the North
Carolina Student Club Association in the fall, and the sponsoring of Open House in the spring to acquaint the
campus with the different phases of the work done in the home economics department are two of the major functions
of the year.
GLADYS STRAWN
One Hundred Eighty-five
ESTHER ANNE QUINN
SQUARE CIRCLE
OFFICERS
ESTHER ANNE QUINN President
DORIS BLAND Vice-President
DOROTHY KOEHLER Secretary-Treasurer
MISS CORNELIA STRONG Faculty Adviser
Twelve years ago a group of Mathematicians on the campus succeeded in doir
the seemingly impossible — they formed a square circle. This club, organized
promote interest in the science of mathematics, holds monthly meetings at whic
guests or students participate in programs pertinent to the subject. Two meetini
during the year have become of particular interest and importance to member
the initiation of Freshman students eligible for membership in February, and tl
election of officers at an outdoor picnic in May.
One Hundred Eighty-s.
MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST CLUB
OFFICERS
MARIAN WHITE FISHER President
DOROTHY TRUITT Vice-President
JEANNETTE PIATT Secretary-Treasurer
MISS LILA BELLE LOVE Faculty Adviser
The Medical Technologist Club which has been newly established this year is open to all
students of advanced Bacteriology. This club will serve to unify those who are interested in the
field of Bacteriology and will provide them with a means of investigating recent developments in
this science through seminars, talks, movies, and exhibits. Miss Lila Belle Love is the adviser of
the club.
MARIAN WHITE FISHER
One Hundred Eighty-seven
EDUCATION CLUB
OFFICERS
LUCILE BETHEA President
ELSIE MARSTON Vice-President
BLOIS CRAWFORD Secretary
BERTIE PATTERSON Treasurer
NANCY McMANAWAY Program Chairman
MARY KATHERINE McLAUGHLIN. . . .Social Chairman
MARTHA ELEANOR FLOYD Publicity Chairman
MISS RUTH GUNTER Faculty Adviser
The Education Club extends its membership to all those seniors who teach under supervision,
the members of the Education Faculty, and those who are directly concerned with student teach-
ing. This club in its monthly meetings strives to create a pride and interest in the teaching pro-
fession by familiarizing its members with the educational problems and conditions in our state, and
by introducing them to leading educators and teachers of North Carolina.
LUCILE BETHEA
One Hundred Etgi ty-eight
SPEAKERS' CLUB
OFFICERS
\LMA ORMOND President
MRY ELIZABETH PURVIS Vice-President
JOSE PULLY Secretary
MM IE GRACE SMITH Treasurer
JUTH GREENBURG Program Chairman
The Speakers' Club has for the past several years been thrown open to all stu-
lents on campus who were interested in acquiring experience in numerous phases of
lublic speaking and debate. Practice and experience in these various fields of speak-
ng are received mainly at the bi-monthly meetings, when members give interesting
irograms illustrating these different types of speech activity. Miss Vera Largent is
he Faculty Adviser of the club, and the debating team is directed by Miss Charlotte
(ohler.
One Hundred Eighty-nine
CLASSICAL CLUB
OFFICERS
EDNA CARTWRIGHT President
SELMA DUNN Secretary
GLADYS STEADMAN Treasurer
DR C. C. JERNIGAN Faculty Adviser
MEMBERS
Marilyn Barkelen, Edith Berk, Frances Bissell, Elizabeth Brown, Margaret Campbell, Inez Caroon,
Geraldine Cox, Mae Estfan, Alice Galbreath. Peggy Hammond, Olive Hennessee, Peggy Halman,
Ellen Hudson, Dorothy Koehler, Henrietta Logan, Jane Parker, Mamie Patrick, Kathryn Rettew,
Eleanor Ross, Elizabeth Sharpe, Kathleen Soles, Rebecca Thomasson, Anna Bell White.
EDNA CARTWRIGHT
One Hundred Ntnet)
INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS CLUB
OFFICERS
MARTHA ELEANOR FLOYD President
HANNAH HUSKE Vice-President
ANGELA HAMMAND Secretary-Treasurer
EMILY STANTON Publicity Chairman
MARY KING MALLONEE Program Chairman
KATHERINE THOMASON Social Chairman
The International Relations Club has been reorganized this year on a new basis for member-
ship Instead of limiting the number of members to the traditional elected twenty juniors and
seniors, the dub is now made up of any student of history and any other student particularly inter-
ested in world affairs It is the aim of the club to keep its members intelligently informed on
events of world news. Lectures by prominent visiting speakers, by the faculty, and by students
from the group, along with open forum discussions enable the club to accomplish this end
MARTHA ELEANOR FLOYD
One Hundred Ninety-one
WILMA LEVINE
LE CERCLE FRANCAIS
OFFICERS
WILMA LEVINE President
SOPHIE TAPLIN Vice-President
ANNE PIKE Secretary-Treasurer
HARRIET HATCH Program Chairman
M RENE HARDRE Faculty Adviser
Le Cercle Francais is composed of upper classmen interested in French and of
Freshmen who have shown superior ability in their work during the first semester.
The club meets twice a month and carries on a varied program sponsored by the
students under the guidance of Monsieur Rene Hardre. French games, songs, and
bridge parties are enioyed by the members; while interest in the customs and culture
of the French people and their country is stimulated through the presentation of
French art and culture, Christmas pageants, operettas, and plays.
One Hundred Ninety-tun
DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN
OFFICERS
ERMA SCHAUER President
SARA PARDO Vice-President
HELEN ALBRIGHT Secretary-Treasurer
MISS KLASINE VON WESTEN Faculty Adviser
DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN is purely a cultural organization whose aim is to familiarize stu-
dents of German with various aspects of the German life and culture. Members of the club meet
bi-monthly for programs of song and music of outstanding German composers, and for short
talks, plays, poetry and games in German. Illustrated talks by faculty members or motion picture
films on the Germany of yesterday and today serve to bring the members into a closer contact
with the culture and civilization of the German people.
ERMA SCHAUER
PRESIDENT
One Hundred Ninety-three
THE STRING CHOIR
DEAN H. HUGH ALTVATER
The String Choir under the direction of Dean H. Hugh Altvater was organized two years ago
for the purpose of providing experience in ensemble playing for members of the student body; to
acquaint its members with the musical literature written for this type of organization; and to
offer programs of instrumental music to the college and surrounding communities.
Oin Hundred Ninety-jo
YOUNG DEMOCRATS'
CLUB
OFFICERS
BETTI E HARWARD President
CELIA DURHAM Vice-President
HANNAH HUSKE Secretary
FRANKIE HALL Treasurer
HELEN BOLLING Program Chairman
ANNE TILLINGHAST Publicity Chairman
ELIZABETH PHILLIPS Literature Chairman
PRATHER SISK Poster Chairman
EMILY HARRIS Membership Chairman
The Young Democrats' Club was organized this spring on the Woman's College campus as
one of the official youth organizations of the Democratic Party. It belongs to the Young Demo-
cratic Clubs of North Carolina, which is affiliated with the Young Democratic Clubs of America.
The purposes of this club are to stimulate in young people "an active interest in govern-
mental affairs, to increase the efficiency of popular government, to foster and perpetuate the
ideals and principles of the Democratic Party," and to provide for the social welfare and happi-
ness of people through the administration of the highest degree of justice.
BETTI E HARWARD
PRESIDENT
One Hundred Ninety-five
#"" iiiiiinii'lliiiiiiri11"" Ik
%l iii ii in in !^,.iiiip
j^^ye.in yonder near world a man might
be a. man in his own power and riqht and
not because inheritance or birth. hacL
made him so.
One Hundred Ninety-six
One Hundred Ninety-seven
MISS VERA LARGENT
To those whose task and privilege it has been to
complete this volume of PINE NEEDLES have come many
trials, and much pleasure. The helpful assistance and
advice of numerous people have succeeded in lessening
the trials and increasing the pleasure of our work. We
wish to thank those who have cooperated and contributed
in making this annual possible.
To Paul Green, North Carolina's outstanding literary
figure, we express appreciation for the use of selective
passages from his play, THE LOST COLONY, which he
graciously granted us permission to quote in the develop-
ment of the theme of PINE NEEDLES.
We thank Miss Largent, chairman of the Faculty
Advisory Committee, for her sincere interest and invalua-
ble assistance. We also acknowledge the notable work
by Dr. Kohler and Mr. Ivy in preparing this edition. For
the real interest of all our friends among students and
faculty — we feature our appreciation!
FEATURES
A college is widely known by its students. Leaders
of the class of 1939, because of their individuality, their
versatility, and their activities, typify the spirit for which
Woman's College is recognized. To eight students se-
lected by their class as the outstanding personalities of
the year, PINE NEEDLES pays honor.
Mary Cochrane's is the spirit of activity and accom-
plishment, the work of an artist. To the class, to campus
clubs and to college publications, Mary has given time
and talent.
Emily Harris, President of Student Government Asso-
ciation, leads a group of two thousand women who live in
a college community distinguished for its democracy.
More than any single student, Emily, because of her deep
concern for the welfare of people, represents the genuine
interests of the community and its citizens.
Gertrude Rainey, as Vice-President of Student Gov-
ernment Association, leads the legislative body of Wom-
an's College. Heading a group of representatives from
all classes, she serves ably as an interpreter and leader of
student opinion.
Sarah Virginia Dunlap presides over the activities of
the Senior Class as its Chief Executive. The zeal, the
courage, and the loyalty expressed in the class song is the
essence of her leadership.
Jeanne Carey is a recognized leader on the campus.
As Junior Class President, president of a society, and in
many other offices, she has served faithfully and sin-
cerely.
Maxine Garner edits the college's weekly newspaper,
THE CAROLINIAN. Because that publication is alive
with student news and interests, Maxine, editorially, has
done much to further campus programs wide in scope and
effective in execution.
Alice Murdoch is Chief Marshal of Woman's College.
Gracious in manner and charming in appearance she acts
as the official hostess for the student body.
Leah Smirnow, President of Playlikers and Masquer-
aders, has proved her versatility in dramatic productions,
and she has also done outstanding work in widely diver-
gent programs of the college.
One Hundred Ninety-eight
MARY COCHRANE
NEWTON, NORTH CAROLINA
n
II LBS 1939
EMILY HARRIS
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
GERTRUDE RAINEY
MARTINSVILLE, NEW JERSEY
I"" III II!
IILES 1939
Two Hundred One
SARAH VIRGINIA DUNLAP
WADESBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
Two Hundred IK •
JEANNE CAREY
ELMIRA, NEW YORK
fill III
IILIS 1939
Two Hundred Three
MAXINE GARNER
LIBERTY, NORTH CAROLINA
Two Hundred Four
ALICE MURDOCH
SALISBURY, NORTH CAROLINA
rilllE I1EEIILES 1939
Two Hundred Five
LEAH SMIRNOW
NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT
Two Hundred Six
MAY DAY
May Queen MARGARET HILL
General Chairman LEAH SMIRNOW
COURT
MARTHA ELEANOR FLOYD
JANEGRIER
GRACE MEWBORN
ALICE MURDOCH
JULIA BRIGHT GODWIN
LOUISE DARDEN
HANNAH HUSKE
CARROLL STOKER
RACHEL DRAUGH AN
EMILY HARRIS
FRANCES HORNER
SARAH VIRGINIA DUNLAP
May Day at Woman's College is an event which is anticipated the entire
school year. This year's senior class deported from the precedent of a seasonal
ceremony to present a historical pageant noted for its beauty and simplicity.
With the town crier's call, "Eight o'clock and all's well," the campus becomes
the scene of the first recorded American May Day celebration which was held at
Edenton, North Carolina The villagers with their bowers, the boy with his pig,
the ox carts, ond groups of dancing children presented a spectacle which will long
be remembered Another departure from the traditional festivities was the withhold-
ing of the queen's identity until she was chosen from the merry village girls. The
suspense which this created, until the Governor made his choice, gave new interest
to the occasion.
We are proud that the entire student body cooperated with the senior class
this year in making May Day not only a class event, but also a community festivity
of campus and state-wide interest
fliillelliii
*Eaije, to make cxs c*jorthy of the
heritage c*je hold- for those that
shall come after lis.
7 u o Hundred Eight
Two Hundred Nine
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
CABINET
MARJORIE LEONARD President
ELLEN GRIFFIN Vice-President
MARY MARGARET JOHNSON Secretary
BETTY LIPPMAN Treasurer
MISS CHRISTINE WHITE Faculty Adviser
MARJORIE LEONARD
COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN
ELLEN GRIFFIN Sports Day
LOUISE CROWELL Social
BARBARA MOORE Poster
RACHEL EMMETT Camp
NAN ROGERS Points
HELEN BOLL1NG, NELL STURKEY Publicity
MISS ETHEL MARTUS Photographer
Two Hundred Ten
SPORTS LEADERS
RUTH GILLMORE Hockey
FRANCES CROCKETT Volley Ball
DOROTHY COLEY Speedball
RACHEL EMMETT Archery
MATOKA TORRENCE Basketball
KATHERINE SCHNECK Swimming
MARGARET POYNOR Gymnastics
MARY MARGARET JOHNSON Baseball
DOROTHY TYSON Tennis
VALERIE POWELL Lifesoving
CLAUDELINE LEWIS Soccer
DOROTHY DENNIS Golf
CLUB REPRESENTATIVES
ELOISE McLEAN Clogging
WILMA LEVINE Orchesis
RACHEL EMMETT Targeteers
RUTH ROGERS Square Dance
DORIS HUTCHINSON Dolphin
BETTY WISE Riding
FALL SPORTS
HOCKEY
RUTH GILLMORE Sports Leader
MISS CHRISTINE WHITE Faculty Head
Hockey season calls the athletic minded out for practice in the
first weeks of the school year. Class practices are held twice a
week, and teams are chosen to represent each class in the annua!
inter-class tournament. Over one hundred girls played hockey this
year, and the Junior club won the championship by defeating the
Seniors in a play-off game.
The high spot of the season was a Hockey Play Day held at
Duke University where players from colleges all over the state met
to play Hockey with each other. Miss Constance Applebee who
introduced Field Hockey into this country was the guest coach,
and gave pointers to individual groups. Around thirty girls attended
from Woman's College, and five of these were honored by being
on the honorary play day team. Dorothy Rosseland, Mary Margaret
Johnson, and Helen Boiling were placed on the first team, and Ruth
Gillmore and Marjorie Swanson were named on the second team.
At the end of the season on campus, an honorary varsity was
chosen by the head coaches. This was made of: Louise Meroney,
Gertrude Rainey, Alice Suiter, Dorothy Ficker, Dorothy Rosseland,
Ellen Griffin, Dorothy Coley, Bruce Miller, Ruth Gillmore, Matoka
Torrence, Mary Margaret Johnson, Lois Guyer, and Frances Crockett.
SOCCER
CLAUDELINE LEWIS Sport Leader
MISS HENRIETTA THOMPSON Faculty Head
Woman's College doesn't have a pack of "Blue Devils" or "Tar
Heels," but we kick off our enthusiasm all the same in after-school
soccer games. Soccer is a major sport each fall, and a class tourna-
ment is held after the bi-weekly practices are finished. The 1938
championship was won by the combined Junior-Senior team.
The honorary varsity includes: Nan Rogers, Lora Walters,
Frances Roebuck, Mildred Bumgarner, Ruth Weinger, Beth White.
Helen Edens, Sara Harrison, Lena McFadgen, Josephine Gore, Ruth
Rogers, Katherine Schneck, Evelyn Wunsch, and Edna Gibson.
Two Hundred Eleven
MINOR
SPORTS
VOLLEY BALL
FRANCES CROCKETT Sport Leader
MISS ETHEL MARTUS Faculty Head
Once a week in the fall, girls who want some real fun come
out for volley ball. After several weeks of practice, a tournament
among the classes is held; this year the Sophomores had a perfect
record, winning all their games.
Varsity includes Elizabeth Bonham, Frances Daniel, Mary Eliza-
beth Jordan, Anna Mae Parrish, Laura Mayo, Eloise McLean,
Margaret Ryan, Anna Stone Railey, Betty Jean Sandel, and Louise
Young.
SPEEDBALL
DOROTHY COLEY Sport Leader
MRS. R. C. BOYCE Faculty Head
Over sixty girls come out for speedball, a relatively new game
combining elements of football, basketball, and soccer. The cham-
pionship was won this year by the Freshman class. Varsity includes:
Ellen Griffin, Ruth Gillmore, Louise Meroney, Margaret Kennette,
Dorothy Coley, Martha McLean, Lora Walters, Rebecca Woolsey,
Marion Sawyer, Frances Roebuck, Nan Rogers, Ann Pearce, Polly
Sattler, Edna Gibson, Rachel Yarborough, Eliza Dickinson.
Two Hundred Twelve
WINTER SPORTS
BASKETBALL
MATOKA TORRENCE Sport Leader
MISS CHRISTINE WHITE Faculty Head
Intra-mural and Interclass basketball find over three hundred
girls participating in play during the winter months. Two tourna-
ments are held, the first an open one, in which any organization
may enter a team called Intramurals, and a regular Interclass one
culminating the regular season. Intramurals were won by the
Easterners while the Freshmen were the class champions.
The 1938 varsity included: Margaret Greene, Marjorie Leonard,
Ruth Crouch, Betty Jean Sandel, Ruth Rogers, Helen Boiling, Mar-
garet Parker, Mary Elizabeth Jordan, and Dorothy Tyson.
SWIMMING
KATHERINE SCHNECK Sport Leader
MISS HENRIETTA THOMPSON Faculty Head
Swimmers from each class hold a meet at the close of the prac-
tice season in which competition for speed and form in strokes
and diving. Water games are also played. The 1939 meet was won
by the Freshman class.
Varsity was made up of Katherine Schneck, Bruce Miller, Joy
Carmen, Mary Epps.
Two Hundred Thirteen
GYMNASTICS
MARGARET POYNOR Sport Leader
Faculty Heads
MISS ETHEL MARTUS
MISS DOROTHY DAVIS
Even though you stand on your feet most of the time, you get
a lot of pleasure from standing on your hands and head, for a
change, in gymnastics Stunts and apparatus are taught during
the winter season, as a minor sport. As a close to the practices
Gym Meet is held, when all the classes meet in competition in stunts,
apparatus, and games. Demonstrations are also given of other
physical education activities. The class of 1939 took this year's
meet, and those chosen for honorary varsity are Margaret Poynor,
Eloise McLean, Mary Margaret Johnson, Dorothy Tyson, Ruth Gill-
more, Louise Meroney, Josephine Gore, Dorothy Coley, and Alice
Calder.
TENNIS
DOROTHY TYSON Sport Leader
MISS DOROTHY DAVIS Faculty Head
Although tennis is officially a major spring sport, it lasts prac-
tically all year. In the fall, elimination tournaments in doubles and
singles are played to determine the school champions. Doubles
finals were won by the team of Dorothy Tyson and Eloise McLean,
while the singles champion is Mary Margaret Binford.
In the spring, a ladder tournament is played within each class,
and the top ranking participants from each class play in elimination
matches with the other classes. In 1938 the class of 1939 was
the winner.
Tii'o Hundred fourteen
BASEBALL
MARY MARGARET JOHNSON Sport Leader
MISS ETHEL MARTUS Faculty Head
Fans of the ball and bat are given a chance to play baseball
every spring in the class practices and games The Sophomores
won the 1938 title. Two varsity teams are chosen to participate in
games with the men and women faculty teams.
The varsity teams for 1938 include: Ellen Griffin, Dorothy Coley,
Anna Williams, Edna Gibson, Matoka Torrence, Eloise Smith, Alice
Suiter, Marjorie Gallagher, Anna Mae Parrish, and Ruth Rogers,
first team; Mary Margaret Johnson, Margaret Greene, Frances
Crean, Lean McFaygen, Martha McLean, Lora Walters, Margaret
Parker, Dorothy Tyson, Mary Louise Edwards, and Marjorie Kinney,
second team.
ARCHERY
RACHEL EMMETT Sport Leader
MRS. R. C. BOYCE Faculty Head
Archery devotees bring out their bows and arrows each spring
for the Junior Columbia Round which is shot at the end of the spring
season. The class championship and the honorary varsity is de-
termined by those ranking highest in this round The class of 1941
won the round in 1938. Honorary varsity members are Evelyn Shep-
herd, Nan Rogers, Mary Louise Edwards, and Rachel Yarborough
Two Hundred Fifteen
LIFE SAVING
VALERIE POWELL Sport Leader
MISS MIRIAM SHELDEN Faculty Head
Life Saving is offered each spring to all those wishing to
qualify for the A. R C. awards. A field representative is sent to
the college each spring to give instruction in the methods of water
safety.
SPORTS DAY
A half holiday is set aside each year in May for what
is known as Society Sports Day. Classes and school work
are put aside and hundreds of girls take part in numerous
and varied tests of skills during the afternoon.
The program is sponsored by the Athletic Associa-
tion and the four societies on the campus. All partici-
pants enter for their particular society in one or more
events, according to their ability and the schedule of
activities. But ability and skill are not necessary pre-
requisites for taking part in Sports Day. The aim in
having such a day is to provide fun for everyone who
might enjoy taking part. The games and activities range
from those of lower organization to team games and
include jacks, scavenger hunts, horse shoes, volley ball,
shuffleboard, tether ball, archery, bowling, tennis, relays,
swimming, and last and often most entertaining — a base-
ball game between student and faculty teams. Of special
interest also is the Horse Show which ends the activities
of the afternoon and for which ribbons are given.
As part of the program there is a formal dinner,
honoring the participants, at which time the winning
society is announced and the silver cup is presented to
the president of that society. Also, awards in the form of
pins are given to those students who have amassed as
many as one thousand points by participation in athletic
activities during the previous years. The Adelphian So-
ciety captured first place honors for the 1938 day
As conclusion to the program for the day, it is cus-
tomary for each society to present a one-act play in com-
petition with the other societies. This is a fitting climax
to an afternoon where fun has prevailed and where
friendly intra-society relationships have been strength-
ened by play and sport.
Two Hundred Sixteen
SQUARE DANCE CLUB
RUTH ROGERS President
MISS HENRIETTA THOMPSON Faculty Adviser
The Square Dance Club has as its aim the preservation of a
Southern folk art, bringing joy to those participating. The en-
rollment of the club includes around fifty members; these members
include not only physical education majors, but also any students
who are interested enough to attend meetings, learn the steps, and
take an active part in the club. The senior physical education majors
have assisted Miss Henrietta Thompson, faculty adviser, in teaching
the dances and calling the figures this year.
Two Hundred Seventeen
CLOGGING CLUB
OFFICERS
ELOISE McLEAN President
ELEANOR WEEKS Secretary-Treasurer
MRS. R. C. BOYCE Faculty Adviser
Clogging Club, an active organization of limited membership, meets every Friday night. Entrance
requirements include proficiency in the fundamental steps, a good performance of a dance taught to
prospective new members, and the execution of an original dance. Clogging gives its annual perform-
ance following the Athletic Association banquet in the spring; members of the club furnish entertain-
ment at society meetings, parties, and other occasions.
Two Hundred Eight ten
ARCHERY CLUB
OFFICERS
RACHEL EMMETT President
DOROTHY COLEY Vice-President
ADELAIDE LOVE Secretary-Treasurer
MISS CHRISTINE WHITE Faculty Adviser
Archery Club members enjoy year round shooting on either the out-of-door or indoor ranges Try-
outs are held in the fall and spring and those meeting the requirements are taken into the club. Pins
are awarded those members shooting the required score on the Senior Columbia Round.
Two Hundred Nineteen
DANCE GROUP
WILMA LEVINE President
MISS EDITH VAIL Faculty Adviser
MEMBERS
Beverly Barksdale, Joan Bluethenthal, Elicia Caroon, Christine Changaris, Jane Clegg, Rachel Em-
mett, Sarah Fleet, Elizabeth Freeland, Ruth Gillmore, Edith Goodman, Elizabeth Holmes, Rebecca Hun-
ter, Peggy Levine, Dorothy Lovell, Eloise McClean, Louise Meroney, Helen O'Bryan, Margaret Poynor,
Muriel Qua, Dorothy Rosseland, Elizabeth Sargent, Leah Smirnow, Peggy Snowden, Anita Strauss, Nell
Sturkey, Pearl Sykes, Dorothy Tyson, Eleanor Weeks, Ruth Weinger, Beth White.
Two Hundred Twenty
DOLPHIN CLUB
OFFICERS
DORIS HUTCHINSON President
JOY CARMEN Vice-President
DOROTHY TYSON Secretary-Treasure--
MISS DOROTHY DAVIS Faculty Adviser
BEHIND THE BALL
HISTORY IN THE MAKING
1938-39 will go down in the history of the Woman's
College as a very eventful year as far as those interested
in the sports world are concerned. First, the A. A. cabinet
enlarged itself by adding golf, riding, and the outing club;
then it undertook a wide social program which included
seasonal banquets for all the participants in athletics,
and started having its "pow-wows" in the form of supper
meetings in the renovated golf hut. The whole campus
will remember cabinet for its gifts of skates and skating
rink (we mean skating in swing time to the nicklelo). It
all goes back to our president, Marjorie Leonard, who has
really done a good job with the aid of her assistants.
THOSE FRESHMEN
Participation in sports really rang the bell this year
. . . more girls than ever before came out to support
their class teams. The highlight of the fall season was
Miss Constance Applebee, the English coach who visited
Duke; she informed our girls after their demonstration
game at Durham that they weren't as good as they
thought they were. Claudelme Lewis and her booters
came out on top in the soccer tournament. Speed ball,
although a minor sport, really drew the crowd — could it
be those football punts? (SH! don't say we said so, but
the freshmen won.) Another minor sport which drew the
crowds and the spectators was gymncstics . . even
though we had importation from Chapel Hill to do the
men on the flying trapeze act, our girls did not come up
lacking, and the seniors walked away with that silver
loving cup. Then there were those two basketball tour-
naments. And here we see those freshmen stepping out
in the sport light by winning both of them. In fact, they
did hog the limelight because they won the swimming
meet, too. Spring sports brought out the tennis advo-
cates, baseball fans, and the archery "infuns" to enjoy
the sun. Don't tell us that the restriction against sun-
bathing had anything to do with it.
OUR SOCIAL LIFE?
The clubs in the Athletic Association seem to advo-
cate this theory of progress, too. "Little Red Swimming
Hood" came to campus under the auspices of the Dolphin
Club; even with two performances all seating space was
occupied — that is enough said. Square Dance Club
brought some of the national champions, and we decided
that even our grandparents must have been sorts of "jit-
terbugs," at least figuratively. The movies also seem to
have an influence on Archery Club, at least from their
activities. Topping the list was this year's recital by the
Dance Group. After months of work they gave us some-
thing to really be remembered. Miss Edith Vail certainly
deserves orchids, and white ones at that.
A WINNING TEAM'
Even though change seems to have been the motto
of our faculty this year, they, too, deserve our apprecia-
tion. To Miss Coleman, the captain of our team, Miss
White, Miss Martus, Miss Davis, Miss Vail, Miss Thomp-
son, Mrs. Boyce, and Miss Sheldon we give our thanks.
There has been a lot of fun for everyone in the Athletic
Association, and we seniors leave with happy memories of
our work and play with them.
PROGRESS
The future holds in store much more progress for our
Athletic Association, and even though it is trite, we
seniors wish you the "best of luck."
Two Hundred Twenty-one
Ill I I ifli
"IIIIIHW \s Hilllllll ^eH III III \_y
■
he uictoru lief b in the struqqle , not
the citq xjjo n. "I "b all "free —men it stand-
eth 50 i4nd doixJn_"the centuries that
omit ahead "Hierell Jje some lAjhisper
ot our name some -mention- and de-
uotlon "to the dream__-fhat brouqht ixs
here .
Two Hundred Twenty-two
Two Hundred Twenty-three
* ifrV- f
The college every year brings to its student body a number of dis-
tinguished artists in the fields of music, art, the dance, and letters. All
students have admission to the entire series of recitals and lectures. Wom-
an's College sponsors the lecture programs, and the Civic Music Association
of Greensboro is in charge of major concert programs for the year.
Among the popular programs this season have been the review of the
theatre and screen by the actress, Elissa Landi; the piano recital by Marian
Anderson, only alumna of Woman's College ever to appear on the concert
stage here; the performance of the world famous Philadelphia Symphony Or-
chestra under the musical direction of Eugene Ormandy; and the recitals
in modern dance by the troupe of Doris Humphrey and Charles Weidman,
who also conducted special classes for students of the dance; other features
have included: The Mordkin Ballet, Phillis Bottome, Alice Burrows, Captain
John Craig, Stuart Cloete, Harry Hansen, Sir Arthur Willert, Gerald Wendt,
Henry C. Wolfe, Harrison Forman, Eugene Schoen, Sidney Montague, Andre
Maurois, William Seabrook, Efrem Zimbalist, Lucille Browning, Artur Rubin-
stein, and John Charles Thomas. Many of these artists were honored at tea
and dinner by groups of Woman's College students and a number of the
lecturers were guest speakers for special classes and informal student
meetings.
College is one round of activities. Before enrollment
for the first year, the typical student finds herself in a
whirl which goes 'round and 'round seemingly forever.
Every year student leaders return early in the fall to hold
a conference to plan for the year. When the freshman
comes to college, orientation is the catch phrase for the
first week, and even when the upperclassman returns to
carry on initiation culminating in society celebrations,
that orientation continues. . . . The outstanding social
events of the year are the formal dances held by the so-
cieties and classes. Second to none is the Junior-Senior
Prom. . . . Formal dinners are in good favor, too, and espe-
cially remembered is the Christmas holiday dinner. . . .
The college calendar includes many special features, one
among many being quiet-hours of organ music held during
examination weeks. . . . Registration is excluded from no
college calendar. . . . Teas are happy thoughts for a
students .... and every year spring is announced by the
conferences held by seniors with tine head of the Public
Relations Department to make plans for employment
after college.
There are certain members of our college community
whose efficient work "behind the scenes" make life
smoother, happier, and much more interesting on our
Woman's College campus ... Dr. Shaftesbury and the
marshals give time and effort to lending dignity and order
to our concerts and lectures . . . Mrs. Hawkins simplifies
the problem of entrance to the college for many of us . . .
Dr Collings and her staff are always ready to help us in
any of our troubles, mental or medical; one grin from
"The Doctor" fixes everything . . . The library staff helps
us find what we want even when we don't know that we
want it . . .
Paul Green, of the University of North
Carolina, author of "The Lost Colony",
from which the quotations for the
presentation of the theme of this year-
book have been taken.
Tito Hundred Twenty-six
Miss Swanson, who has one of the hardest jobs on
campus, not only feeds us three times a day, but makes a
icnic or a banquet a big success . . . Mr. Sink who keeps
up with our clothes, even if we can't . . . Miss Lattimore,
with her pleasing personality, aside from her many other
duties, makes us forget our stage fright while waiting in
the Dean's office . . . Have you a broken chair, a lost key,
a blown fuse, or does your lawn need mowing? If you would
have something done well call Mr. Sink . . . Here's who
makes Woman's College news, "news" — Mrs. Lathrop . . .
Mrs. Boyd is one who plays many parts in our daily life by
her gracious and helpful cooperations in any of our under-
takings.
Since the inception of the institution democracy has
been the keynote of student life, academic and social,
at the Woman's College. Every year, hundreds of girls
have found study and play possible only because of the
work they have done to help finance their education.
Although it is not possible for a student to earn all of her
expenses at the Woman's College or for all who apply to
earn even a part, the College is concerned with giving
every opportunity to those who desire help. A number of
students are employed by the college as assistants to
professors in laboratories, offices, and the library, wait-
resses and dormitory hostesses. Still others are being
aided now under the National Youth Administration with
work as switchboard operators, playground supervisors,
secretaries, and so forth. As long as the Government
furnishes such aid, the College will continue to avail it-
self of it in order that as many young Women as possible
may have the advantages of college training.
Forty-seven years ago this college opened its doors to
young women of the state as a new institution whose pro-
gram was one of pioneering and the establishment of
precedents. The growth has been phenomenal. Today
Woman's College is the third largest woman's college in
the country. The future is not without promise; and the
past, stuped in traditions out of which the powerful pres-
ent has evolved, is not without significance. The founders
of the college built walls, and characters, and customs;
and students today are as conscious of those customs as
they are of the buildings themselves.
Every October 5, the entire college pauses to pay
honor to the educator who established the school, Dr.
Charles Duncan Mclver — that is the school's most mean-
ingful tradition. Among many others are: the "Hanging
of the Green" sponsored by the Y. W. C. A. at the begin-
ning of the Christmas festivities; along with the Junior-
Freshman wedding when the big-sister class ceremonially
unites with the freshman class; the serenades, of which
the one celebrating the major elections in the spring is
the climax; and the annual Christmas Pageant, presented
by the sophomore class.
College is essentially organized around learning ac-
tivities. Studies, classes, courses — these constitute the
major part of the collegian's life. The inspiration that
comes from academic work well done carries over into
every phase of college career around an organized course
of study in the school of liberal arts, music, education, or
physical education. This course of study includes not only
ectures and examinations; there are projects, field work,
scientific research, experimentation, and practical ex-
perience in courses both specialized and generalized. We
have tried to picture here only a few of the typical scenes
so familiar to us al
And you have seen these places . . . "time off" in the
Home Management House . . . "I'll see you in the Game
Room after dinner." . . . Don't forget, it's payment time
again . . . "One three cent stamp please, and, oh yes, Mr.
Concentrate's book on HOW TO STUDY ... A spare
minute with an extra nickle means Junior Shop — without
a doubt . . . Please, put up the "P's" next.
MISS PARKER AND WOMANITES
. . . CURRY ... THE ONCLEYS.
TECHNIQUE DE LA RAZZBERRY
... MR. TATE.
CONFERENCE ... THE FACUL-
TY'S OTHER INTERESTS!
AT A SPENCER HALL TEA . . .
THE HUT . . . DANIEL IS NO
MORE.
COMPARING NOTES . . . COM-
PARING TOMBSTONES . . .
HOLD THAT SMILE1 .. . PHY-
SICAL-EDS.
CAMPUS "OLD GLORY" ... MR.
WARNER ... MR. IVY STOPS
BY TO "PASS JUDGMENT."
IN THE RAIN AT CHAPEL HILL,
(PS. HE'S SOAKED) . . . POST
OFFICER.
Two Hundred Thirty-two
THEN HE SAID . . .
DELAY IN THE SUN . . .
A TAVERN QUARTET . . .
WE'RE FROM MARY FOUST . . .
OUR PRIDE AND JOY . . .
HOLDING UP THE BUSINESS END . . .
STOP IT— SHE'S MINE1 . . .
DELLIE . . .
BAILEY-ITE . . .
FROM SECOND FLOOR— ANYWHERE . . .
HEY, THIS IS A BUSINESS MEETING! . . .
THE "MAMA OF THEM ALL" . . .
GRIFFIN . . .
RELAXIN' . . .
A MAN . . .
GOING UP TOWN A LA FOOT . . .
ALL ABOARD FOR GREENSBORO1 . . .
THEY BELONG TO THE HEAD OF THE BIG 3 . . .
JUST WALKING AND TALKING . . .
ART TAKES TO THE SIDEWALK . . .
LEAVING FOR THE CAROLINA-VIRGINIA GAME
BOTANY CLASS . . .
PWA POSES . . .
DAY STUDENTS OFFICERS . . .
POOR INITIATE! . . .
ART CLASS; BACK SEAT . . .
PHYSIOLOGY STUDENTS HAVE A LOOK AT A
CAT FROM THE OTHER SIDE . . .
BUY OUR ANNUAL! . . .
A GOOD WIFE ALWAYS DOES THIS . . .
QUILL PENS . . .
FRED . . .
POST OFFICE (NOT AS USUAL) . . .
ON ALUMNAE TERRACE ROOF . . .
FEET, OF COURSE , . .
Two Hundred Thirty-three
WEINERS AT CAMP . . .
SHE WOULD PREFER TO EAT IN PEACE,
THOUGH' . . .
WHAT'S OVER WHERE WE GO IN . . .
WEIGHING RATS . . .
THE A A CABINET ALWAYS EATS ON THE
FLOOR . . .
NOT THAT WE ALWAYS USE DISHES AT OUR
CAMP . . .
EMILY AND TILLEY TUESDAY AT 4:00 . . .
FROM A MARY FOUST WINDOW . . .
GAME ROOM PROFESSIONALS . . .
AH, BLISS . . .
TAVERN CEILING AND A MAN . . .
COURSE IT'S GOOD TWEED'
THIS OLD BUS BRINGS LOTS OF THINGS
(SOMETIMES) . . .
.10 A RUB . .
CHAMPIONS' LEGS . . .
LUNCH TIME . . .
INITIATES CATCH IT WHEN THE PLAYLIKERS
NEED HOUSE CLEANING . . .
A WORK-HARDENED CLAW ON THE LIBRARY
DOOR . . .
ART EXHIBIT . . .
BILL, WHAT'S IN ALL THE PLAYS . . .
BAILEY TERRACE . . .
BERT'S BIKE BOY . . .
BELOW DECKS IN THE AUDITORIUM . . .
DR. JACKSON GOES TO THE CLASS . . .
CURRY KINDERGARTEN .
YEP, IT'S REALLY RAMESES . .
EASY STUDYING . . .
LOW TIDE AT THE TAVERN . . .
THIS IS HOW ANGELS LOOK BEFORE THEY
FALL . . .
Two Hundred Thirty-jour
BULL SESSION . . .
POSEE . . .
HEYWARD PRETENDS . . .
TCH, TCH!! IS IT YOU? . . .
PROFILE A LA JANE COOK . . .
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUS . . .
AFTER TENNIS . . .
THAT REGISTRATION "COPYING" . . .
HI, GIRLS! . . .
HOME MANAGEMENT HOUSE, BACK DOOR .
FAMILIAR, ANYBODY . . .
ONE HAPPY FAMILY . . .
A BRAND NEW STUNT . . .
SHE TAKES IT WELL, DOESN'T SHE? . . .
OFFICE WORK OF TWO STOOGES, DADAMS
AND "IMPIE" . . .
"SHAWITES" . . .
ELLIE, TRY "C LLP."; AND REMEMBER,
HONEY CHILE, YOU ALWAYS HAVE US . .
SITTING OUT A DANCE . . .
AREN'T THEY CUTE? . . .
TAVERN . . .
A GALLANT GENTLEMAN, WHAT? . . .
EDITORS DO THINK! . . .
BUDDING TALENT . . .
GYM NIGHT . . .
THE GREASE PAINT GOES ON . . .
A W. C. CREW AT CHAPEL HILL . . .
Two Hundred Thirty-five
1
ocaj doLjn fhe trackless hollouj years
That siuoJIoojed them bed not their song
lie sendL response —
""• lastu singer . dreamer . pioneer,,
Lord of "the cailderness. the tinaf raid .
Tamer of darkness, fire and flood m
•f the -soaring spirit caingecL aloft
•n the plumes of agoncj and death —
Hear as . ill1' hear !
The dream still lioes.
lit lioes . it lioes.
And shall not die!"
Tun Hundred Thirty-six
(^onaratulauonA to the
CLa of 39!
GREENSBORO
BOTTLING COMPANY
Two Hundred Thirty-seven
Mary Greene
Wollde
410-411 North Carolina Bank Building
GREENSBORO, N. C. PHONE 8462
Jff ^fVs l^aper"
DILLARD PAPER CO.
Greensboro, N. C.
Charlotte, N. C. Greenville, S. C.
Smart Up To Date Flower Shop
120 West Market Street
Sykes Florist Co.
DIAL 5131
DIAL 5132
Compliments oj
MONTALDO'S
JEFFERSON BUILDING
GREENSBORO, N. C.
DIXIE
SUNDRY SHOP
MR.
AND MRS. BERT D. HAYMS
332 Tate Street
50 Varieties of
DELICIOUS SANDWICHES
Fo
Prompt Delivery Call That
Magic Number 9283
Compliments oj
W. V. Moran
Manager of Woolworth
POLLOCKS
For the Loveliest
SHOES
in Greensboro
Two Hundred Thirty-eight
^JJine at the
MECCA
FRESH SEA FOODS
OUR SPECIALTY
226-228
West
Market
Greensboro, N. C.
Greensboro Floral Co.
Flowers of Distinction
378 North Elm Street Phone 6508 or 2-3202
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Main Floor
Candy
Hardware
Jewelry
Notions
Stationery
Toilet Goods
KRESS
Downstairs Store
Crockery
Glassware
Dry Goods
Hosiery
Lace and Ribbon
Tinware
Toy
Soda and Lunch
(£) he Senior Banquet, given by
the Grill in the spring for those who
have enjoyed our delicious sand-
wiches and drinks.
THE GRILL
L^ourteoud J^e
FRED SHOWFETY, Proprietor
Prompt Delivery on Dorm Orders
Two Hundred Thirty-nine
SILLS
IS THE WORD FOR
SHOES
IN GREENSBORO
GREENSBORO
NEWS-RECORD
A 24-hour newspaper service that gives the
subscriber and the advertiser the ultimate in
value. Newspapers of character and excel-
lence, affording the reading public a com-
plete contact with the rapidly moving events
of modern times and the advertiser a perfect
vehicle for conveying his message to that
public.
GREENSBORO
NEWS-RECORD
GREENSBORO, N. C.
GREENSBORO DRUG CO.
C. M Fordham
j^reS crip tion ii 15
Dewey Farrell
230 West Market Street
^Jop o ' the ~Jo^
op
JEFFERSON ROOF
RESTAURANT
17th Floor — Jefferson Standard Building
Delicious Food
Special Attention Given to Private Parties
GREENSBORO, N. C. - PHONE 6814
SAVE TIME
SAVE MONEY
The College Shop
and Beauty Salon
Where you'll find the answer to every Clothing and
Beauty Need
K^omplimenti or the
Union Bus Station
Dick's Laundry Company
cJLautidereri and L^leaneri
Greensboro, N. C.
Two Hundred Forty
Hungry Before Chapel? Don't be. Come to the
COLLEGE DRUG STORE
Prescription Druggists
1103 SPRING GARDEN STREET - GREENSBORO, N. C.
TELEPHONE 2-2712
Our Prompt Delivery is an Asset to Us Both
To Be Charmingly Modern
Try
THE MODERN CHARM
BEAUTY SHOP
Specialists in all Lines of Beauty Culture
Conveniently Located
331 TATE STREET - PHONE 6526
Dial 8193 and let
The Columbia Laundry
do it.
Launderers and Dry Cleaners
Battleground Ave. at Cedar Street
ftfje poar anb Castle
West Market Street Extension
Greensboro's Most Popular
Sandwich Shop
Famous Steaks with our
Special Sauce
Sandwiches with Special Dressing
Curb - Dining Room - Counter Service
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Phone 2-0798
SjPfev.
Two Hundred Forty-one
Smart Women's Apparel
At Popular Prices
Dresses . . . Coats . . . Sportswear . . . Millinery
DARLING SHOP
106 South Elm Street
THACKERS
INCORPORATED
M L/ooa f-^iace to (L,at
108 WEST MARKET STREET
Greensboro Charlotte
TWICE AS MUCH
FREE
Bo?,
'**»*»'*
%
I20UNCES
5
TWICE AS GOOD
Styles change, sports change, but through our 66
years of experience, our policy of quality first,
combined with friendly service, has not changed.
ODELL'S
FOR ALL EQUIPMENT NEEDED IN TENNIS, SWIMMING,
FISHING, GOLFING, AND GENERAL "GYM" RECREATIONS
Two Hundred Forty-two
SERUNIAN & SONS
Oriental and Domestic
RUGS
Cleaning — Repairing — Storage
224 S. GREENE STREET - PHONE 2-2065
Greensboro's
Criterion Theatre
Appreciates Your Patronage
MANUEL'S,
INC.
"We Serve the Very
Best"
Specializing in Fresh Sea Food:
, Good Steaks,
and Real Italian Spaghetti.
112
W. MARKET ST.
PHONE
8039
THE ART SHOP
118 WEST MARKET STREET
Photographic Supplies
Kodak Finishing — Enlarging
Portrait Photography
Kodaks — Pictures — Frames
COUNTLESS SUCCESSFUL CAREERS
tk a Remington Portable
eairi wu
9
No matter what field or profession you have chosen, a Remington Portable will be your closest and your most dependable ally.
Typewritten work always receives a preference over handwriting ... It is so much easier to read ... It is a great time saver . . .
Then, too, thoughts flow much more readily when you use a Remington Portable Typewriter.
Why not begin your business career right? Give yourself a Remington Portable. It will carry on for you just as the big Reming-
ton machines you have been using at Bowling Green Business University.
8 Models to Choose from
Remington Rand builds a full line of portable typewriters designed to fill
the most exacting typing requirements. There is a Remington Portable
suited to your exact needs. As you launch yourself on a new career be
sure you have this valuable aid.
You do not need a large outlay of cash! A very small initial deposit, witfi
terms as low as 10c a day, will pay for any Remington Portable Typewriter
you choose.
Terms as low as 10c a day
Remember, Remington will include a handsome Carrying Case with your purchase of the Noiseless Deluxe
Two Hundred Forty-three
^Jkere ii notkina ai
permanent in faikion
ai aood taite "
Is
mu wffiimi
L^omplimenti ot
BELK'S
mnncEL'i
Misses' and Women's Apparel
216 South Elm Street
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Carolina Pharmacy
"The Complete Drug Store"
401 Tate Street Comer Walker Avenue
IMMEDIATE SERVICE ON CAMPUS ORDERS
JUST DIAL 8197
^jror vSeit J^kotoqrapki
MANNINGS
Kellenberger's Tourist Home
15 Rooms • 12 Bathrooms
Shower and Tub
STATE RATING 99%
1020 W. MARKET ST. GREENSBORO, N. C.
ON ROUTES U. S. 29, 70, AND 421
All the fun of extravagance
with the
thrill of economy
at
FIELDS
102 SOUTH ELM STREET
Two Hundred Forty-jour
TVvjlXji/vo
underwood
Again Underwood leads
the field . . . with an en-
tirely new business type-
writer that defies tradition
in its design and challenges
all machines to match its
performance. It's the new
Underwood Master!
The new Underwood Master gives you Dual Touch Tuning . . .
two adiustments for touch . . . one that permits the individual tuning
of each key to the fingertips; the other, keyboard controlled, varies
the tension of all keys at the will of the operator.
Call at the nearest UEF Branch office TODAY for a free demon-
stration.
Typewriter Division
UNDERWOOD ELLIOTT FISHER COMPANY
Typewriters, Accounting Machines, Adding Machines,
Carbon Paper, Ribbons and other Supplies
ONE PARK AVENUE - NEW YORK, N. Y.
Sales and Service Everywhere
LANE'S LAUNDRY
"The Housewife's Friend"
814 West Market Street
DEPENDABLE DRY CLEANING
For everything from the hem that's just the wrong length
to the material your mother sent you for a new dress — try
MRS. TODD, Modiste
CORNER OF WALKER AND FOREST
The Art Shop 243
Belk's 244
The Boar and Castle 241
Brownhills 244
Carolina Pharmacy 244
Coca-Cola, Greensboro Bottl. Co 237
College Drug Store 241
College Shop and Beauty Salon 240
Columbia Laundry 241
Criterion Theatre 243
The Darling Shop 242
Dicks Laundry Company 240
Dillard Paper Company 238
The Dixie Sundry Shop 238
INDEX TO OUR ADVERTISERS
Dr. Pepper 244
Fields 244
Greensboro Drug Company 240
Greensboro Floral Company 239
Greensboro News and Record 240
The Grill 239
Jefferson Roof Restaurant 240
Kellenberger's Tourist Home 244
Kress Store 239
Lane's Laundry 245
Mangel's 244
Manning's Studio 244
Manuel's Cafe 243
Mary Greene, Modiste 238
The Mecca 239
Modern Charm Beauty Shop 241
Montaldo's 238
Nehi, Greensboro Bottling Company.... 242
Odell's Hardware Company 242
Pollocks Shoe Store 238
Remington Rand 243
Serunian & Sons 243
Sills Shoe Store 240
Sykes Florist Company 238
Thacker's, Inc 242
Mrs. Todd, Modiste 245
Underwood Elliott Fisher 245
Union Bus Station 240
Woolworth 238
Two Hundred Forty-five
CHARLOWE ENGRAVING CO.
Charlotte, North Carolina
Two Hundred Forty-six
School
Publications
The many high awards won each year by school
publications produced by us is the result of
many years' specialization based on a compre-
hensive knowledge of art motifs, design, layout
and publication trends.
A modern printing plant, operated by highly
efficient craftsmen in every department, pro-
vides a quality and distinctiveness that is un-
surpassed.
The LASSITER PRESS, Inc.
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
sm