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THE LIBRARY OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF
NORTH CAROLINA
AT CHAPEL HILL
THE COLLECTION OF
NORTH CAROLINIANA
PRESENTED BY
Mrs. Fred G. Patterson
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
http://www.archive.org/details/yacketyyackseria1920univ
((Jopunqkied
1 ' i%0
L Emer./oi\ wkile
Sdifor in Phi of
BGi\ian\irvCoi\e
Hervry D.5tevBM_,
Business Manaaers
0
VOLUME XXX
Published Annually bv
The Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies
and The Fraternities of the
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, N. C.
'cr/caf/t
von
Charles Baskerville,
1892, Teacher, Investi-
gator, Author, and Indus-
trial Organizer, the
YACKETY YACK of 1920 is
Dedicated with the Affection
of Alma Mater. Formerly
of Mississippi, Virginia, Vander-
bilt, Berlin, and Carolina, and
now of the College of the City
of New York, he is always of
Carolina.
'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'IMTI'l'I'ITT
119W1KOTY 1M120.)
I'l'l I'lTI'I'I'I'l' I'lW
(Eljarlea fStaahmttll?
AS loyally as October rolls around, bringing Alma Mater's birthday, a telegram of
/-\ good cheer comes to her signed in the filial devotion of Charles Baskerville. Six-
teen years ago, Dr. John H. Finley, the President of the College of the City of
New York, came to Chapel Hill for commencement and took back to New York the
head of the Chemistry Department of the University to become the head of the Chemistry
Department of the City College. Dr. Baskerville's career in New York has been watched
with affectionate interest by the University and particularly by the chemistry depart-
ment which he had helped to promote, a department builded and made famous before
his time by the scholarship, teaching, and research of Dr. Francis P. Venable, discoverer
of acetylene gas, author, and one time president of the American Chemical Society,
and after him by Dr. Charles H. Herty, inventor of the revolutionary Herty turpentine
cup, twice President of the American Chemical Society, and later Editor-in-Chief of the
Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, and head of the Dye Commission to the German
Republic. Dr. Baskerville thus has the distinction of sharing with two chemists of the
major class, the headship of a chemical department of national standing.
Dr. Baskerville, who was the constructive head of the department between the
regimes of Dr. Venable and Dr. Herty, came to the University in 1891 as a student and
assistant in chemistry, having graduated from Virginia in 1 890, and having done special
work at Vanderbilt in 1891. He won his B.S. degree in the University of North Caro-
lina in 1892 and his Ph.D. degree under Dr. Venable in 1894, by brilliant scholarship.
His distinction as a student here was more than scientific; he was socially and athletically
distinguished. As a football player in 1892, 1893, and 1894, he wrote his name high in
Southern athletics. He was fullback and manager of the famous team, captained by
Michael Hoke, that defeated the University of Virginia 26 to o in Atlanta in 1892. His
clever diagnosis of Virginia's offense, his own fast attacks and punting were large factors
in the decisive victory. Although weighing only one hundred and forty pounds, he was
considered by Dr. Joel Whitaker, in selecting the All-time University Football Team, for
the position of fullback along with such legendary giants as Belden, Graves, Holt, and
Abernethy. Belden out-pointed him, however, by forty pounds of steel weight. His
interest in athletics continued after his football days. As a member of the University
Faculty Athletic Committee, Dr. Baskerville stood solidly for class sportsmanship and
amateur athletic standards in the pioneer days when it required courage to stand against
the taint of professionalism. His influence as a good sportsman is felt to-day both in
the City College and in the club life of New York.
But it is not as a club-man that we now think of him in New York where he belongs
to a score or more of social, commercial, and scientific associations — local, national, and
foreign — in addition to the honorary and social fraternities of Phi Beta Kappa and Delta
Kappa Epsilon. In continuance of his splendid work here as head of the department,
he has built up a strong college department in City College. Here his department grew
Eleven
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from two hundred and fifty-three students in 1900-1901 to four hundred and five in
1903-1904. At City College his department grew from two hundred and fifty students
in 1904 to one thousand, four hundred and eleven in 1919. The Campus, a publication
of City College, in the 1919 December issue, reviewing the progress of the chemical
department since 1904, headlines the fact, "Dr. Baskerville Starts New Era." In recent
years, Dr. Baskerville's scientific interest has taken an industrial turn and he is now a
factor in the chemical policies of several large enterprises. He established the Baskerville
Products Company which supplied a part of the anaesthetics used by America in the
war. Carolinium and Berzelium which he explored, and which exhibited characteristics
of elements, were adjudged oxides by reviewing chemists. Dr. Baskerville has made
other and unquestioned contributions to the science and application of chemistry, among
which are investigations in the chemistry of anaesthetics, the application of radium in
medicine, processes for refining oils, hydrogenation of oils, plastic compounds, and re-
enforced lead. He has held important offices in the American Chemical Society, such
as Chairman of the Committee on Occupational Diseases, and Chairman of the New
York Section, which is the largest section in the society. He has published books on
inorganic chemistry and radio-activity.
Born in Mississippi in 1870, schooled there and at Virginia, Vanderbilt, and Berlin,
it was at Chapel Hill that he won his bachelorhood in science and his doctorate. It was
here that he taught for thirteen years, and ft was in the laboratories of the University
of North Carolina that he worked long and hard over unheralded test-tubes before he
went forth to a high place in science in the City of New York. North Carolina has yet
a dearer claim, for in Raleigh he won the hand of Miss Mary Boylan Snow, of a family
long associated with the University, who continually cheered and inspired him both when
he failed and when his later achievements led to a greater development of American
industry and trade.
Chapel Hill and the University join the Yackety Yack in the gladness of this
dedication of the 1920 Year-book to Charles Baskerville, 1892 — teacher, executive,
investigator, author, and industrial expert. The spirit of the University village goes
out to him in the midst of his metropolitan labors and claims him as Carolina's own.
F. P. G.
Twelve
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/orei
orewori
TO present to
our fellow-
students a
record of their
achievements and
life on the campus
for the past year in its entirety.
To bring the people of this great
State closer, to their University.
To, perhaps, awaken in the heart of
some old "Carolina Man", remem-
brances of happy college days spent
here.
The Editorial Staff has this as its
purpose in the 1920 issue of the
Yackety Yack.
1 Tko Canvpuy
2AluiiYru
3Adn\ii\i^ralioiv
4rC\assos
S oAtklefic^ J
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80i'<3<3i\i zaiiorv./
9TKeTar Baby"
L
UNIVERSITY
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B9 WMCTY MI 2Q-1
'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'l'l'l'Cl'lT^
New East
Building with a glimpse
of Davie Hall and the
Gym
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I'H'I'I'I 'I'l'l'l'l'l I'l'IT
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Down over the
campus from Pharmacy
Building to University
Inn . . . • A
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TITITI'ITI'l'|jj9TlMMW KME 20|HTITiriTI'nM'IM'l ITI',1
The long,
straight path to Old East
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nmiHanil^m^MTY HME2Q^
ri'i'i'i'l'i'i'i 'I'l'i'i'i'i'iq
Portion of
Fraternity Row from the
West Campus . . "
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The well —
a gathering place for the
students and a glory to
the University . . "
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^(1191A^MTT 1ME 20}i'H'''i'nriTiTn'riTiTir
"Looking east toward
Alumni Building. In the
center is 'Old Davie' , the
pivot about ivhich the cam-
pus turns
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I'I'IM'IM I'l'I'I'H'M'I'ITT
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'I'l'ITri'l'I'I'lMTl'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l
From the
arboretum southwest over
the campus
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'l'l'I'VI'I'IMMMM't'l'I'I'I'I'IT
(U9 WMCTY Itt 2^ITITHMriMMM'rTTTTrnTF
The campus
changes but little from year
to year, for its natural
beauty is difficult to im-
prove upon.''
ii'lil.l .I.I.I.LI.I.IiLl.l.lLlil.l.U.liLMiliMilil.l.l.lil.l.hliinJil.hhl.hl.hhl.hlihhin.hhlililililililililililililiQ
THE Yackety Yack would like to be more than a pleas-
ant reminder of college days, full of friendly faces and
happy experiences. In addition to conserving the his-
tory of the Carolina campus for the year 1919-1910, it recog-
nizes an opportunity and a duty in setting forth the out-
standing feature of the year in the life of the Commonwealth
which gave it birth and from which it draws its sustenance
both material and human. In doing so, the setting ot the
stage on which most of us are to be actors, will have been
portrayed.
What you see on the pages which follow are fragments
of a story of varied achievement in which all North Caro-
linians may justly take pride. But they are more than tokens
of mastery. They are flashes on the screen of abounding
opportunity which awaits us as we face toward a lifework.
This year in the life of North Carolina will stand for the
ripening of our industrial life into the fullness of self-reliant
young manhood feeling its strength and ready for new and
larger tasks. As the business activity of the State increases
in volume and complexity, problems of expanding organiza-
tion and efficiency in management arise and call for trained
and disciplined men. Some of the bitter fruits of the transi-
tion have also come to us. This year witnessed the first
widespread organized conflict between labor and capital in a
State formerly complacent in its freedom from industrial
strife The bloodshed at Charlotte, Concord and Albemarle,
gives evidence of a need for the breadth of sympathy, care
in study of causes, and patient confidence in results that a
college-trained man should be able to supply.
As it has responded in times past, the University would
prepare itself to advance to meet this new call for a trained
and consecrated leadership in the field of industry.
M'l'l'l'l I'I'ITITI'I'I'IT
[l!9^MMTy~WK 2Q.)
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I'I'I'I'I'I'I'IM'I'ITI I'TW
| H9 WITOY~1iM 2o]
rT'iTn-i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'iTrn:
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(Hljp (ftarnluta Alumni
THERE exists a mutual pride between the University
of North Carolina and its Alumni. Carolina men who
graduated years ago, defend and cherish the name of
Carolina as above all others. Their pride is a just pride,
imposed in an institution that is worthy of their love and of
their support. No unworthy institution would be able to
bind its students to it by such strong bonds of affection.
On the other hand, the greatest asset that Carolina has
had, a driving force that compels it to be great, is the record
of the men who have gone forth from our college walls. As
leaders in every phase of life in our own North State, and
as men of accomplishment and of character the world over,
one by one we point to our Alumni, and say with pride,
"He is a Carolina man."
Educators, bankers, lawyers, business men, every pro-
fession finds representatives in Carolina men. During the
World War, the record of our Alumni in the service of our
country won admiration all over the United States and re-
flected credit upon this University. We find them leaders
in organizations for social uplift and civic betterment. As
we look into the life of the State, we see Carolina -men prom-
inent in every field.
Time after time, Carolina's Alumni have demonstrated
their loyalty to their Alma Mater. And so the Editors of
the Yackety Yack wish in this publication to dedicate
this space to representative Alumni who have put the ideals
of our campus into practice in the life of the State.
Tiventy-tivo
fcL'I'IM'I'I't'l ITI'I'ITI'I'HW
[H9 HMMTY~mi^ 2Q-1
Twenty-three
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'I'lTri'i'i'i'i'i'N'i'rri'rri'rr
Twenty-four
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wmmOT wircaoj
i'i 'i'1'i'i'i'i'i'i vn
C. C. COVINGTON
Class of 187S
Molasses Importer
Wilmington, N. C.
H. W. JACKSON
Class of 1886
President Virginia Trust Co.
Richmond, Va.
JOHN M. MOREHEAD
Class of 1886
Cotton Manufacturer
Charlotte, N. C.
Twenty-Jive
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Twenty-six
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, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1,1,1, 1, 1,1,1, 1, 1, 1,1, 1, I.U.I, U.^
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119 WKTY W12QJpTiTiTiTiTiTiTi'm™
Twenty-seven
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Tl'l'l'l'l'l'l'l I'l'I'I'I'I'IM'T
(ll9WMCTY 1MI20.)
'I'l'l'l'l'lTI'l'i'i i'I'I'imtttt;
Twenty-eight
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JWT^TIMTIMMMWfTTr|]]91lA^l^TY KMK 2P|rTiWf ITITITITITI'I'ITEE
Thirty
ijarnj Wnnftbarn (&\)ub?
OUR President, Dr. Harry Woodburn Chase, is a young
man of thirty-six years. A native of Groveland, Mas-
sachusetts, and a descendant of typical New England
stock, he came to us with a successful career as college stu-
dent and instructor, and as a teacher in the public schools.
He pays homage to Dartmouth College (1904) as his Alma
Mater, from which institution he also received his M.A.
(1908). Clark University claims the honor of granting him
the degree of Ph.D., in 1910. In the fall of that same year
he came to our University as Professor of the Philosophy of
Education, and in 191 7 was made Professor of Psychology.
His career as an executive, dates from the appointment
of Dean Stacy as Chairman of the Faculty to succeed the
lamented Edward Kidder Graham, when Dr. Chase was
made Acting Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Suc-
ceeding Dean Stacy at his death, as Chairman of the Fac-
ulty. Dr. Chase clearly demonstrated his ability as a leader
of students and of men, as well as an executive of both fine
and high character. By a unanimous vote of the Trustees
he was chosen as the President of our institution in June.
1919.
Essentially, a scholar and a dreamer, there is enough of
the pragmatist in Dr. Chase to make him unwilling to com-
mit himself to a program of action until he sees clearly the
end from the beginning. He thinks quickly but is not hasty,
he acts directly but is not thoughtless, he feels keenly but
is not sensitive. He gets close to student life, is sympathetic
and stimulating, a living example of the scholar he would
have every student to be — a lover of books but not bookish,
a seeker for knowledge but no pedant.
LA. W.
EiiliHili hlil ■Mil .lil.lilihlihlihhlil.lililiUl.l.l.l.l.lJ.lilihlil.iil.LIJ.I.LI.Iilil.l.lililJ.IJ.Iil.l.l.Uil.l.l.U.lilirl
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{119 wmw3« 2ofe
'i ■ r i' r i * i' i ■ i nz
©fftrprH of Aomtmatrattnn
(ilip Uniuprmtg
Harry Woodblrn Chase, Ph.D.
Walter Dallam Toy, M.A.
Charles Thomas Woollen
Julius Algernon Warren .
Thomas James Wilson, Ph.D.
President
Secretary of the Faculty
Business Manager
Treasurer and Bursar
Registrar
iltfe (£allfg?8 anb ^rijoolu
George Howe, Ph.D.
Andrew Henry Patterson, A.M.
Charles Lee Raper, Ph.D.
Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B.
Isaac Hall Manning, M.D.
Edward Vernon Howell, A.B., Ph
Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble
Dudley DeWitt Carroll, A.M.
Frank Porter Graham, A.M.
Mrs. Marvin Hendri.x Stacy
Dean of the College of Liberal Arts
Dean of the School of Applied Science
Dean of the Graduate School
Dean of the School of Laic
Dean of the School of Medicine
G. Dean of the School of Pharmacy
Dean of the School of Education
Dean of the School of Commerce
Dean of Students
Adviser to Women
Thirty-two
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J^
KLLUKU
Francis Preston Venable, Ph.D., LL.D.
Kenan Professor of Chemistry
Alvin Sawyer Wheeler, Ph.D.
Professor of Organic Chemistry
James Munsie Bell, Ph.D.
Professor of Physical Chemistry
James Talmage Dobbins, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Ira Wellborn Smithey, B.S.
Instructor in Chemistry
William Chambers Coker, Ph.D.
Professor of Botany
Harry Rowland Totten, A.M.
Instructor in Botany
Henry Van Peters Wilson, Ph.D.
Kenan Professor of Zoology
Major Frederick William Boye
Professor of Military Science
Thirty-five
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151
Edwin Greenlaw, Ph.D.
Kenan Professor of English
Frederick Henry Koch, A.M.
Professor of Dramatic Literature
James Holly Hanford, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English
Norman Foerster, A.M.
Associate Professor of English
John Manning Booker, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English
George McFarlan McKie, A.M.
Professor of Public Speaking
Henry McCune Dargan, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of English
Clarence Addison Hibbard, A.M.
Assistant Professor of Journalism
Paul James Weaver
Professor of Music
Thirty-
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Charles Lee Raper, Ph.D.
Professor of Economics
Eugen Cunningham Branson, A.M.
Professor of Rural Economics
Dudley DeWitt Carroll, A.M.
Professor of Economics
Roy Burford Cowin, A.M.
Associate Professor of Accounting
Samuel Huntington Hobbs
Assistant Professor of Rural Economics
Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble
Professor of Pedagogy
Nathan Wilson Walker, A.B.
Professor of Secondary Education
Lester Alonzo Williams, Ph.D.
Professor of School Administration
Edgar Wallace Knight
Professor of Rural Education
Thirty-seven
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William Cain, A.M., LL.D.
Kenan Professor of Mathematics
Archibald Henderson, Ph.D.
Professor of Pure Mathematics
John Wayne Lasley, A.M.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
William Walter Rankin, A.M.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Arthur Simeon Winsor, A.M.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Allen Wilson Hobbs, Ph.D.
Instructor in Mathematics
Joe Burton Linker, A.B.
Instructor in Mathematics
Charles Mortimer Hazelhurst
Instructor in Mathematics
Norman Merton Paull, B.S.
Instructor in Mathematics
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Thomas Felix Hickerson, B.S., A.M.
Associate Professor of Civil Engineering
Thorndike Saville, C.E.
Associate Professor of Sanitary Engineering
Parker Howard Daggett, B.S.
Professor of Electrical Engineering
John Harris Mustard, B.S.
Professor of Electrical Engineering
John Emery Lear, E.E.
Professor of Engineering Sciences
Andrew Henry Patterson, A.M.
Professor of Physics
Harry Morrison Sharpe, A.B.
Instructor in Physics
Louis Round Wilson, Ph.D.
Professor of Library Administration
Charles Melville Baker, A.M.
51
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Thirty-
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Joseph Gregory DeRoulhacHamilton,;P,i.D.
Professor of History
Henry McGilbert Wagstaff, Ph.D.
Professor of History
William Whatley Pierson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of History
Frank Porter Graham, A.M.
Instructor in History
George Kenneth Grant Henry, Pn.D.
Assistant Professor of Latin
Gustave Adolphus Harrer, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Latin
Clinton Walker Keyes, Ph.D.
Instructor in Latin
William Stanley Bernard, A.M.
Associate Professor of Greek
Thomas James Brown, B.S.
Professor of Physical Education
Forty
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Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B.
Professor of Law
Atwell Campbell Mcintosh, A.M.
Professor of Law
Patrick Henry Winston
Professor of Law
Oscar Ogburn Efird
Assistant Professor of Law
Collier Cobb, A.M., LX.D.
Professor of Geology and Mineralogy
William Frederick Prouty, Ph.D.
Professor of Geology
Joseph Hyde Pratt, Ph.D.
Professor of Economic Geology
Jefferson Carney Bynum, B.S.
Instructor in Mineralogy
Walter Dallam Toy, A.M.
Professor'of Germanic Languages
Forty-one
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Kent James Brown, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of German
John Theodore Krumplemann, A.M.
Instructor in German
Isaac Hall Manning, M.D.
Professor of Physiology
Charles Staples Mangum, M.D.
Professor of Anatomy
William DeBerniere McNider, M.D.
Kenan Professor of Pharmacology
James Bell Bullitt, A.M., M.D.
Professor of Histology
Robert Baker Lawson, M.D.
Associate Professor of Anatomy
Eric Alonzo Abernethy, M.D.
Physician
Julian Moore, M.D.
Physician
Forty-tivo
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Edward Vernon Howell, A.B., Ph.G.
Professor of Pharmacy,
John Grover Beard, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Pharmacy
William Morton Dey, Ph.D.
Professor of Romance Languages
Oliver Towles, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Romance Languages
Sturgis Elleno Leavitt, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Romance Languages
Herman Henry Staab, A.M.
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages
Chesley Martin Hutchings
Instructor in French
Charles Isadore Silan
Instructor in French
Henry Horace Williams, A.M.
Professor of Philosophy
John Frederick Dashiell, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Psychology
Forty-three
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177(3 . . . Required in the State Constitution
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1789 . . . Charter Granted
:
1792 • ■ ■ Site Located by William R. Davie
j
1793 — Oct. 12 . "Old East" Cornerstone Laid
:
1794 • • . First Professor, David Kerr
:
1795 — Feb. 12 . First Student, Hinton James
:
1795 • ■ ■ Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies Founded
:
181 2 . . . First President, David Caldwell
-
1836 . . , Second President, David L. Swain
:
1870 . . . Universtiy Closed
:
1875 • ■ • University Reopened
:
1876 . . . Third President, Kemp P. Battle
1877 . . . Summer Normal School — First in the Union
1888 . . . Intercollegiate Football
1 89 1 . . . Fourth President, George T. Winston
i
1893 — Oct. 12 Centennial of the Opening
1
1896 .' . . Fifth President, Edwin A. Alderman
\
1897 . . . First Intercollegiate Debate
\
1900 • ■ • Sixth President, Francis P. Venable
1
1904 . . . Phi Beta Kappa
191 5 ■ • • Seventh President, Edward K. Graham
:
191 7 • • • Military Training
19 1 8 . . . Demobilization of the S. A. T. C.
1 9 '9 - • ■ Eighth President, H. W. Chase
:
Forty-four
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1 SENIOR CLVf/X
HISTORY
ffetarg at % (UlaaB of 192D
I CAME back to see the "Hill" again. I had often heard about midsummer weather in
Chapel Hill, but now I knew for the first time what it really was. At least, the trip
in from University Station was no exception to what it always had been; antique
coaches, uncomfortable seats, black smoke and a see-saw motion for an hour or more.
Moreover, the weather was very sultry this time. The shouts of darkies for my truck
check, and a few cabs and machines drawn up near-by announced Carrboro. Out of the
crowd came two familiar faces — "Bull" Durham and "Brock," the latter seizing my
suitcase and gliding me quickly up the street. At Patterson's Drug Store, he adjusted
spark and gas and eyed me rather skeptically until I had placed the sum of two bits in
his outstretched hand.
Soon I took the usual course up past the red brick church and around the Library
and ventured a peep at the campus. There it was,
spread out before me, just as it always had looked I
thought. A bright sun beat down through green
leaves and across ivied walls. It seemed so fine
again. I saw no one around and I felt as though the
bell in South was very neglectful of its duty, for at
its call I knew that the campus would again be full
of students discussing long assignments, quizzes, and
"sixes" as they hurried on to other classes. But no,
I should have known better; of course it was after
Summer School. There really was no one around
but myself. I wanted all the more to see some of
the old boys and to talk with them and to find
out what they had been doing since I had last seen them, but my mere wish did not
bring its fulfillment, and unlike the magician of old, no classmates arose from the ground
before me in answer to my summons. And so I looked about. Across in Old East was
my first room in college. I decided to peep in and see if it had changed very much. As
I walked across, I knew that each old building there knew a part of the life of each
classmate of mine. Each stood there boldly and silently, a sort of mutual friend and
Forty-seven
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protector to us all. As each class came in, lived, and passed away, it had left unwritten
behind it in the midst of these old buildings and trees, its real history. To each member
of the class this record may have seemed different, depending on his particular cross-
section of college life, but the fact was
evident to me that a permanent, unchange-
able record was left by each class which the
campus alone treasured as its own.
SW J
But the old room hadn't changed
much. There were the white walls and the
high ceiling and the '74 and '89 carved on
the window sill. Hours of study and play
had changed it but little. Late at night it
had often furnished the rendezvous for the
usual "session." In times of stress when the
top floors had been flooded with water, and upperclassmen in
raincoats braved the passage of the stairway, it had furnished
us protection. When the snowflakes fell and the bloodthirsty
cry of "FRESH! was heard outside, it was in this room that
we had gathered and run the gauntlet of flying snow and ice.
It was also during this first year that the shadow of war had
fallen across our campus. The looming presence of this graver
situation wiped out the last traces of class interest and rivalry.
From that time on, the Carolina spirit was applied solidly to
a real fight. Out behind the South Building, with the aid of
the stars and a few tiny electric bulbs, we learned from those
most competent among us the elements of army life which many
of us later successfully employed on the fields of France. As
southern camps would in turn
call on us for men, we put aside
our books and cheerfully ac-
cepted the life of the army. Each day the call was
heard, and by the end of the second year the shattering
effect of war was telling severely on our numbers. The
S. A. T. C. came on, and just as many were about to
leave for camp, the war suddenly ended, and we were
again turned back into student life and problems of
campus reconstruction.
So these two empty stands on Emerson Field were
the same ones that I had often seen filled with excited
rooters. How we had watched our first attempts at ath-
letic fame — back in the days of Fisher, Herty, Spaugh, and Pritchard. We watched
spirals and long runs, marveling all the while, little dreaming of the prominent part
Forty-eight
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that this class was to play on Thanksgiving, 1919. As Freshmen we fought the Sophs,
and as Sophs we fought the Freshmen for class predominance in athletics. As Carolina
men we had done our very best to hold up the good standard of all Varsity teams.
Running out by the field was the old road to Raleigh. On dark nights strange noises
are said to have been heard on this road out near the cemetery: sometimes a doleful
song; often an excited speech; on occasions, lights are said to have burned on the tops of
tombstones there, and the words of Homer or X lilton
repeated over and over again. White-robed figures
would move silently out the old road and be swallowed
up by the darkness. No one seemed to know why or
where they went, but there was no doubt as to their
presence.
A small light shone in front of the "Y" Building.
I entered and looked in the little office for Bob, but as
usual he was not there. Our First Class Smoker had
been held here, and I well remember the scramble for
"smokes" and "eats." Cunningham told us all about
Carolina spirit, as though a Sophomore didn't know
everything. Dr. Patterson explained just what a shell
is made of, and why it would kill fifty "Heinies" as
easily as it could kill one "Yank." We strutted
around that night and defied the Fresh to even insin-
uate a slighting remark, hoping all the time that they
would. Here also, toward the end, had come our quiet and enjoyable Senior gather-
ings neath the old Purple and Gold. John presided at the end of the large room with
the "flock" gathered around him. These "get-togethers" were always great occasions.
Upstairs was the room where the Student Council met — that most unfortunate body
of eight. Some of the boys would call it the head of Student Government; others, how-
ever, called it the Carolina Shipping Board. I shall never forget just how we would all
get around and wonder who was up, whenever we would see Tom Wolfe and Washburn
walking in the "Y" together.
An automobile passed by the South Build-
ing, turned and stopped at the Gym. Why, that
is history itself, I thought. Just so on many
nights had I seen machines full of merrymakers
draw up and empty there. Long-leaf pine, white
columns, and variegated lights peeping here and
there from the overhead arbor of green, had often
made me wonder whether that could really be the
same old place. Why, just that afternoon and
on that very same floor had been heard the inter-
mittent crash of dumb-bells or the thud of the punchbag. At each end, streamers of
blue and white were delicately hung where only a while before these same places had
Forty-nine
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formed the storm centres of basket-ball. Cheers had followed the spinning ball from
end to end, a yell announcing each successful goal. The locker rooms below , which
would soon be decorated with cloaks and scarfs, had perhaps just that afternoon wit
nessed a council meeting of a team just before the game and heard one of those orations
that only a coach can deliver.
And so from building to building and on every part of the campus 1 wandered.
Everywhere I went I found the remembrance of the class ; the scene of some past incident.
The Phi and Di Halls, The Chapel, Memorial Hall, and the old postoffice, all had their
story of bygone days to tell. I was not tired, though it was getting late and darkness
had almost come. I saw the white posts of the well through the trees. It was the old
gathering place of the boys. Early in the morning we had been awakened by the bell
and the band playing "I'm a Tar-heel Born", and we had congregated there yelling
"On to Richmond!" or "On to Greensboro!" Sometimes we celebrated victories there
by great bonfires. At other times, especially on bright nights, the appeal of the Cone-
Hughes string orchestra, playing a strange combination of jazz and sad melodies, held
us there for hours at a time. I turned away; I had lived many happy years over again
that afternoon; I wanted to make my experience real. I "caught" supper at Gooch's
and then went "skiffing" off on the 7:30 car to see a show in Durham. I had seen the
"Hill" again as I had known it.
Fifty
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We stand round the well in the white gleaming
moonl ight
And look at the square of the buildings old,
And sharp is the thought of tomorrow; tonight
Is the last — ah — we've been told
How hard it was, but not till now
Have we felt the deep twisting pain of the parting
From you — Carolina — we did not allow
For thedeep biting grief that now we feel starting.
Yet it's not the old buildings that causes the
pain
(You brown, dirty buildings — and God knows
that's true).
But comes back the feeling again and again
That we part from a friend — Carolina, it's you.
You cared not for sects or for social degree;
You care not for dogmas or creeds now as then;
You take the crude stuff and you fashion it free,
Till shapen and moulded you send forth your
men.
Tomorrow we leave — 10.20, your War Class,
A class proud in deeds in a war that was won,
A mixture of warrior and student — we pass,
The warfaring student salutes, and is gone.
Leaving State's mantle to those just below;
Pausing to listen as South's slow toll rings.
Then quickens as to our successors we bow.
For — "The kings having gone — long live the
kings!''
Ah! sometimes from the straight white path
Our stumbling steps may stray;
And sometimes where the hillside slopes
We'll choose the easier way ;
And sometimes when the path is rough
That takes us straight through life.
Our strength will fail, and craven-like,
We'll shun the bitter strife,
To choose the broad and paven road.
And eat the lotus leaf.
Yes, some will fail and take this road.
For grinding toil and grief
Are on the sterner road you point,
\\ ith hand in hand their mate.
Good Manhood, walking true and brave
Along the path that's straight.
Yes, some will falter on this road
And choose the broader way,
But when again the soft nights come
And Spring has come to stay,
They'll think perhaps of this last night —
The Campus white and still,
The dorms, the well, the old South bell —
Of all that's on the "Hill ",
And then they'll leave the broader path
That leads to life's ill wrack,
To seek again the narrow one and —
Finding it — come back.
To some will fall the ivy wreath
That marks the place of fame,
While some will plod along beneath
The peaks of greatest name ;
The years will pass and very faint
Will be your call to these,
For time is scornful of the past
And ever onward flees.
But sometimes when the Springtime comes,
And the sifting moonlight falls —
They'll think again of this night here
And of these old brown walls,
Of white old well, and of old South
With bell's deep booming tone,
They'll think again of Chapel Hill and —
Thinking — come back home.
L'ENVOI
(Again '20 talks to Carolina)
Some say that God worked six days hard
And made the world for man —
But on the seventh rested.
We have a better plan —
For, being God he was not tired;
This is the broader view,
God made the world in six days —
The seventh, he made You!
T. C. Wolfe
Fifty-one
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'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'IM'I'IN'I'I'I'I'ITI'I'l1-
®b? ^rtunra ^ay—
Best All' Round "Woollev" White
Best Student
'"Son" Everett
Most Popular
John Washburn
Best Athlete .
"Toddy" Spaugh
Best Writer .
"Tom" Wolfe
Best Business Man
"Ben'' Cone
Best Debater
. "Bob" Gwynn
Most Energetic
Henry Stevens
Most Dignified
"Bill" Blount
Handsomest .
"Stan" Travis
Ugliest
"Otto" Bryant
Laziest
"Luke" Umstead
Best Egg
John Washburn
Biggest Politician
"G. D." Crawford
Most Original
"Tom" Wolfe
Prettiest Co-ed
Miss Vera Pritchard
Best Dancer
"Bill" Neal
Wittiest
"Tom Wolfe
Best Orator .
. "Trotsky" Mobley
Fifty-two
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((119WMCTY 1M20)
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_ ^11 , urn imin a umiuu ^ u jl_
Wutra of tlje §>nttnr (Elaaa
!
John Pipkin Washburn ....... President
:
Benjamin Cone ........ Vice-President
:
Samuel Hood Willis ........ Secretary
:
Ralph Linwood Johnston ....... Treasurer
;
Edwin Emerson White ....... Historian
:
Thomas Skinner Kittrell . Writer of Last will and Testament
:
Thomas Clayton Wolfe . . . • . . . Poet
:
Francis Julius Liipfert ....... Prophet
I
Robert Bruce Gwynn ...... Statistician
:
Edward Morris Whitehead . . Campus Cabinet Representative
i
Sxrruttvtr (Hmnmtttrr nf Ilir ^pninr (ElaHH
:
William Figures Lewis ....... Chairman
:
Leo Heartt Bryant Lawrence Wooten Jarman
i
Benjamin Cone William Nelson Poindexter
-
Worth Bagley Daniels Rufus Arthur Spaugh
:
Houston Spencer Everett Marvin Lee Stone
z.
Ralph Harper Wilson
i
Fifty-four
~
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(SUMMIT WHS2Q-]
'IMM'I'I'I'I'I'I I'l'l'l1
SIDNEY BROADUS ALLEN
Weldon, N. C.
Age, 21 ; Weight, 160; Height, 6 feet
Associate Editor Yackett Yack (J); German Club; Coop;
K A.
SID" is one of the tallest members of our class,
with a head longer than his legs and every
inch of it a square inch of business. Besides
being successful in all his work, he is one of the
most popular and well-liked boys in his class.
His ease, pleasant manner, his keen sense of
humor and good looks have won lor him a lasting
place with both sexes. In athletics, too, he
shows no mean ability, having been a tower of
strength in the Senior Class line for the past
season. By the fortune of his name he stands
first in this Annual; by dint of his ability and
personality he should stand before long among
the foremost in the business world.
OLA ANDREWS
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Age, oo; Weight, 114; Height, ; feet 2 inches
N. C. College for Women, '15-'17; U. N. C. Women's Asso-
WE thank North Carolina College for a good
student. In fact one of our "most formid-
able" Math profs admits it, anyway. This girl
with the modest blush and the retiring manner
has a very pleasing personality, as all who know
her will testify. We prophesy great success as
her portion in helping to educate North Carolina
youth.
Fifty-five
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{H9^MMTY WE2Q.)^
'I'TI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'-
WILLIAM HENRY ANDREWS, Jr.
Speed, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 168; Height, 5 feel 11 inches
Phi Society. Supervisor (3), President 14): Y, M C. A. Cabinet
:ii. Vi.-.--Pr.-M.leiit i-tl; Executive Committee North Carolina
Cluli. Edgecombe-Nasl County Club; Class Football (4);
VarMli Football Squad 13); Class Track (4). Manager (4);
\arsit\ I rack -,'. .1); Commencement Marshall; Assistant
Editor Vnaenitg Magazine (3); Associate Editor Tar Heel,
issistanl Editor [4); Assistant Editor Carolina Tar Baby (4);
Debating Council; Representative-at-Large on Athletic Council.
2 T; 2 * A.
BILL" is the kind of fellow that everyone
likes, good-looking, good-natured and ca-
pable; that describes him. Look where you will
into college life and you will find "Bill", smiling
and full of pep. Much of his time is spent in
teaching underclassmen the profound truths of
geology, his chosen profession. But he always
has plenty of time left from all his work arid
activities to keep solid with the girls, for when
"Bill" gets "slicked up" and steps out amongst
the fair co-eds, he may well deem his winning
smile and soft accent irresistible. For "William
Henry, Jr.", you know, has the Southern gen-
tleman's drawl.
Fifty-.
J OS 1 AH SMITH BABB
Hertford, N. C.
Age, 20 ; Weight, 136; Height, 5 feet q inches
I ieological Club; Albemarle Club; Phi Society (Sl.Vice-President:
Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; Y. M. C. A. 13. 4); Assistant
in Physics; Instructor in Physics. Summer School, '19 (4);
Assistant in Geology (4).
"TOTHIAS", "Just a simple babb", and
J "Pithocanbabarus" — these are a few of the
names that Babb goes by. He knows every
rock that ever was and some that "wasn't". It
makes Jeff Bynum and Harry Davis both smile
with envy, for when Collier is in doubt he calls on
Babb. If Dr. "Pat" wants a physics lab run or
a textbook adopted, he calls on "Joe". The Phi
Society could not run without him. Tis said
that Josiah got three haircuts in one day during
a snow in his Freshman year, but he fails to
deny or affirm such a charge. At any rate, he
has been known to laugh himself helpless at
some of Check Burton's jokes. Truly a sad
example of what Collier and his jokes will bring
a man to.
GEOLOGY BULk
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[ll9^MMTY"mK 20
THITITI'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'I'I'l'I'IT
CHARLES WORTLEY BAIN
Chapel Hill, N. C
Age, 22; Weight, 138; Height, ; feet 8 inches
German Club.
AK E.
WORT" is another one of those war veterans
who has had enough determination and
desire for a college education to come back from
active service and complete his courses. He has
a remarkably quick mind, and with it a disposi-
tion that makes him have a smile for everyone
he meets. This probably accounts for his great
number of friends and admirers on the campus.
EDWIN CHARLTON BALLENTINE
Salisbury, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 130; Height, 5 feet q inches
North Carolina Club; Freshmen Debating Club; Rowan County
Club; North Carolina Branch, American Institute of Electrical
Engineers.
* Z N.
' T VORY Babe" — not because we think that
1 he is such a "hard boy nor because of the
darling effect produced by those evenly-parted
locks which would suggest the second name even
to a man; but to see him on a lab, surrounded by
machines, instruments, and live wires, playing
with the whole affair as the data sheet fills grad-
ually with information from an accurate pen —
then his title is suggested from its real source.
But "E. C.'s" talents do not run in electricity
alone, for he is a musician far above the ordinary,
and it is rumored that he has a most irresistible
way with the ladies. "Charlton" will soon go
to Pittsburgh to show the Westinghouse a few
new tricks and shortcuts of the game.
Fifty-seven
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HUGH CLINTON BLACK
Greenville, S. C.
Age, 24; Weight, 16;; Height, ; feel 10 inches
Coop; Gimghoul.
A TQ
BENEATH a happy, amiable, care-free air,
and a broad and joyous grin, Hugh with his
agreeable and generous disposition and whole-
hearted impetuosity, carries a nature that can
be as serious as his loyalty to his friends is deep,
and a character that is marked by dependa-
bility and a scrupulous care as to sincerity and
principle. This with his love of a good time and
good fellowship makes him the best of company
under both the most trying and pleasant condi-
tions. Success in any undertaking in life is sure
to follow such a combination of admirable
qualities.
Fifty-eight
WILLI AM AUGUSTUS BLOUNT
Washington, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 160: Height, 6 feet 2 inches
Captain Freshmen Football (I); Seeretary Musical Association
(1): Minstrels (L.>>; Assistant Leader German Club Spring Dance
(3); Leader German Club Fall Dance |4|; Varsitv Football (4);
Wearer of N. C; Beaufort County Club; Coop; German Club;
'Minotaur; Gorgon's Head.
AKE.
GUS" first came into prominence as the
receiver of John Cotton Tayloe's famous
note — "Gus, keep care of them football stuffs
for me". He was captain of the first year reserves
back in iqib and then didn't get another chance
to show what he could do along the football line
until this year, when he made his place on the
varsity and played a steady game at centre all
the season. "Bill" not only centres at football,
for his Fashion Park Model appearance and his
terpsichorean abilities have made him the
"center" ot attraction on more than one ball-
room floor, and he can sing, too, as three years'
experience on the Glee Club will testify.
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CLARENCE PINKNEY BOLICK
MORGANTON, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 168; Height, 5 feet 10 inches
American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
*Z N.
HERE is a ladies' man from the word "go".
The fact that "C. P." hails from Morganton
does not hinder him from standing well with the
fair sex. Clarence began his college course with
the class of 18, but felt the call of his country
and left in the Spring of '17 to serve Uncle Sam
as a "Looey". Since his return he has taken an
eminent position among the electrical engineers
of our class, and often in the wee, sma hours of
the morning may be heard "Morsing" over the
telegraph wires in the New Dorms by the E E
"Bulls" between their rooms. A man with such
ingenuity and persistency should do well in his
chosen work.
CflB'3fl6E
tl£ tins /? GftEHT tlE/IO
THOMAS JOHNSON BRAWLEY
Gastonia, N. C.
Age, 23. Weight, 140; Height, 5 feet 8 inches
North Carolina Club; Latin-American Club, Secretary; Gaston
County Club, President; I)i Society; Winner Freshmen Debate;
Student Member North Carolina Reconstructs
TO the world we introduce "Tom" as a man
of pluck who has met and subdued the perils
of Carolina courses and discourses. He has
turned discouragements into success and now
goes forth into the broad field of business man-
agement, with a big vision. While in college,
"Tom" has associated with men and organiza-
tions of note. Although intimately connected
with the Branson "rogime", he loves to talk
about the teachings of Horace and delights to
ramble with Parson Moss. He stands aloof from
active participation in the work of the Y. M.
C. A., and comments with telling sarcasm upon
the Terry Organization of campus fame, the
purpose of which is to reveal the ideals and
ideas of others. Let us follow him with interest
as he goes to Harvard to prepare for his special
work.
Fifty-nine
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HENRY COWLES BRISTOL
Statesville, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feel 10 inches
Freshman Football, 'IS: Manager Class Basketball (1): S. A.
T. C. Football 131; Assistant Manager Track; German Club; Di
Society; Cabin.
2 X
A "GOOD egg", a hard worker and as inde-
pendent as he pleases — that's "Eris". He
thinks that he always has more to do than he
really has, and so he is continually on the go,
but we who know him can see beneath the
superficialities, disclosing in Cowles a true
Southern gentleman of the old school. Few
have a more highly developed aesthetic sense,
especially when feminine beauty is the matter
under consideration. More than one of his
classmates will follow him with interest as he
continues along the primrose path of life, strewn
with the maidens' hearts his good looks and win-
ning ways have broken.
Sixty
LEO HEARTT BRYANT
Durham, N. C.
Age, iq; Weight, 132; Height, 5 feet 8 inches
Assistant Manap T Ilaseball; Secretary Athletic Association (3);
Commencement Marshall; German Club; Durham County
Club, President (3, 4); Senior Executive Committee; Pan-
Hellenic Council; Coop; Gimghoul.
-Be n.
'TITTLE Man" or "Pope Leo" or "Otto" is
is one of our important men. Possessed of
the ability to do a number of things at one time,
he has succeeded in obtaining a degree with as
little work as possible. With the same ease he
has become one of the foremost in the social
realm; a living example of the proverb that
"The race is not always to the swift, nor the
ladies' hearts to the handsomest". Withal,
"Hcartt" is a product' of whom his Alma Mater
may well be proud.
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^IM^TY HI2QJ
I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITT
WILLIAM HORACE BUTT
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 144; Height, 5 /eel 10 inches
Phi Society; Gvtn Team; Class Footliall: Brot herhood of Saint
Andrew.
HORACE having been a resident of Chapel
Hill for several years, has naturally imbibed
the spirit of learning existing here. He is a con-
stant and hard working student, a gym expert
and soccer artist, and a ladies' man of the first
rank. And in all of these lines he is proficient
in a quiet, unassuming way which makes us
like him the first time that we meet him. While
he may not be one of the disciples of his famous
namesake. "Horace has an optimistic philo-
sophy of life which will carry him over the rough
spots of the future with an unruffled countenance.
OUR SOCCfR fl BTIST
CHARLES CLARENCE CARTER
MORGANTON, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 130; Height, ; feel 10 inches
" (~~* C" or "Jack'' — although his initials look
^— ' like the advertisement of a nostrum, to
his friends he is known as a man without hypoc-
risy or deceit. His smile and bubbling good
humor are tonics. A "bull session" with him
will cure a Phi Beta Kappa candidate who has
just pulled a "six". Were it possible, some
enterprising person would put the stuff of which
he is made into capsules and reap a fortune
thereby. Though a good chemist, he has never
yet been known to analyze the faults of a friend,
and has always tried to find those things which
are best in a man. May his later life bring him
as many friends and as great achievements as
his four years with us.
Sixty-one
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BENJAMIN CONE
Greensboro, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 14;; Height, ; feet 6 inches
Di Society; Guilford County- Club. Vice-President («); Min-
strels (*); Glee Club (4); German Club; X..rth Carolina Club;
Class Football (4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet *); Athletic i' il
(4); Manager Class and Varsity Tennis li. Senior Executive
Committee; Vice-President Class (41; Yai kktv Yai k Manager.
E * A.
REASONABLY stout, black hair, brown eyes,
and if he shaves twice a day (which he never
does), he is quite handsome. As director of the
Mandolin Club, on the dance floor, or on Kent
Brown's German, "Ben'' is absolutely a tease.
He is quite a good business man and has the
absolute confidence of the entire student body
in any of his undertakings. He always attempts
to find the good in people and earnestly believes
in forgetting their faults. We are only too proud
to call him a real Carolina man.
Sixty-two
EDWARD BROAD CORDON
Waynesboro, Va.
Age, 22; Weight, 136: Height, 5 feet 4 inches
Class Basehall (1); Varsity Baseball it. 3); Class Football (4);
Wearer of N C; Fishbume Club; Vlirmiral Journal Club; Start
of Carolina (hemi.il.
A X 2.
SHORTY'' came to us from the Old Dominion,
but a truer Tar Heel would be hard to find.
He has made many friends on the campus both
through his happy-go-lucky personality and his
ability on the baseball field. In him we have
the combination of a good student, a good fel-
low and one who has a kind word and a smile
for everyone. In the lab and as Business Man-
ager of the Carolina Chemist he has demon-
strated his business ability, while Dame Rumor
hath it that he is equally successful in other
lines. "Shorty" boy, we hate to see you go.
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GEORGE DEWEY CRAW FORD
Cornelia, Ga
Age, 21; Weight, 145, Height, 5 feet 7 inches
Di Society. Vice-President 18), President (4); Y. M. C. A. Cab-
inet (3), President (4); President Debating Council; Assistant
Business Manager M,i„,i:iii, ill). Business Manager (4); North
Carolina Club; Latin-American Club; Class Basketball 13 .
Captain (4); Carolina Play-makers: Satyrs; Amphoterothen.
E <j> A
"f"1 D" is an idealist with a happy mixture ol
^-J rare common sense — one of those guys who
"concepts" with Horace and "economizes" with
Dudley D. He is also one of the illustrious fol-
lowers of Frederick Koch, and has made several
appearances on the stage. His pet dream is to
get a thousand subscribers to the Magazine, and
he will come near doing it. too. His only failing
is getting all the Summer School girls in love
with him every summer. But really, that is
not his fault, and on the other hand, a glance
above will show that in the past he has gotten
results along more serious lines. "We know no
way to judge the future but by the past".
GROVER CLEVELAND DALE
Seven Springs, N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, 140; Height, 5 feel 10 inches
DALE came with this mighty name and with
the Class of 'ip. but he gave up his Senior
year to the life of a "gob". Seriously and dili-
gentlv alike, he masters the musical rhythm of
math, and the ways of astronomy. His bearing
in study, play, or fight is calm intensity. He
displavs a refreshing good humor in dining hall,
class room or on the campus. With latent
energy and winning personality, he goes torth
to be stalked by misses — among others Miss
Opportunity and Miss Fortune.
J^U-0
Sizly-three
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'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITITT
DONALD SNEAD DANIEL
Weldon, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feet 10 inches
Freshman Football; Halifax Countv Club; Phi Society; Pan-
Hellenic Council, '19; Glee Club. 1(>. 17. '18; Leader Gimghoul
Spring Dance; Assistant Leader Gimghoul Fall Dance, '19;
Gimghoul; Coop.
K A.
A BONE of contention among the ladies and
giving "bonne attention" to them, "Don"
is a confirmed believer in co-education, and well
has he cause to be. for he is another of the Weldon
trio that ran such a race for the handsomest in
the class. A consistent worker, he follows a
healthy routine of work and play but his strong-
est claim to fame lies in the fact that he is the
only man in the class that has succeeded in
developing a mustache. From class room to
ball floor, on the campus and throughout the
State, "Don's" ready wit, good looks and chival-
rous manners have made him a favorite of all.
Sixty-four
WORTH BAGLEY DANIELS
Raleigh, N. C.
Age, 2/ ; Weight, 140; Height, j feet S inches
Phi Society; Wake Countv Club; Assistant Manager Freshmen
Baseball . ■_' ■; Assistant .Manager Varsitv Basketball (3); Secre-
tary and Treasurer Pan-Hellenic Council (41: Executive Com-
mittee Senior Class; German Club: Effervescent Order of Yd.
low Dogs; Coop; Gimghoul.
A K E.
"TZTNORMOUS Gormous Watainaba Daniels"
•'-—' is a simple soul in spite of his high-sounding
name. He should certainly go on the stage, for
he has the great gift of creating impressions.
To see him dashing violently hither and thither
over the campus you would certainly think that
the weight of the universe was upon his shoulders
and that the idea was to get rid of the burden
before dinner. His main occupation consists in
passing the time between meals. It is predicted
with confidence that he will be a world-famed
dietician. Besides a marked proclivity in the
art that gave him his name, he has shown real
ability in his pre-med studies. He is in all a
good scout and loyal to the end.
«S .If . B
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JAMES EDWARD DOWD
Charlotte, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 1 ;6; Height, ; feet 10 inches
Class Treasurer («); Student Cabinet (3): Tar Heel Stan* (4);
Yacketv Yack Board (3); Minstrels (2); Glee Club (4, 3);
Assistant Leader Sophomore Hop: Assistant Leader Junior
Prom; Commencement Ball Manager 13); Pan-Hellenic Council
(3); Football (3); Coop: German Club; Eflervescent Order
Yellow Dogs; Gorgon's Head.
AK E.
TO one who saw Bill Dowd when he first came
to college the sight of him now is a whole
volume on the evolution of a Freshman. Demure
at first, he now is decidedly a man of the world.
Above all else he is a specialist — whether it be
one girl, one shirt, or one course. He is an
ardent believer in the value of Charles Lee's
economics — but "let me put it this way" — his
active participation in college activities has won
for him a host of friends and he will leave an
impression which will cause us to remember
him long after he is gone.
HOUSTON SPENCER EVERETT
Rockingham, N. C.
Age, iq; Weight, 140; Height, ; feet q inches
Di Society, Vice-President (3); Yr. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); Rich
mond County Club; Tar Heel Board (i. 3. 4); Yacketv Yack
Board (3); Magazine Board (3): Varsity Track (4); Athletic
Council (4); Manager Varsity Track (4); Commencement Mar-
shall; German Club; President.
* BK; 2 T; H K A
IF we had more men like Houston, college
might well bear the indictment of being an
' ' I nstitution of Learning" . He has never allowed
the good old college proverb of our balmy student
days to interfere with his dastardly purpose —
said purpose being to get the most out of his
textbooks. To those ambitious tor good grades,
the King of the Phi Beta Kappas has demonstrat-
ed that a man need not be a recluse from his fellows
in order to wear the key. His college record
shows that he has sought with success the Greek
ideal — the all-around man.
GflZf UPON ME^|
FRESHMEN. CHZ£ I
— .{upon yes sw/w/vj
Sixty-fiie
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HOLT PEBBIN FAUCETTE
Grimesland, N. C.
Age, 24; Weight, 168; Height, 5 feet 11 inches
FAUCETTE, better known as "Spiket", is
another of our geology "bulls", and few
exceed him in ability to handle such a hard sub-
ject. He is a good student (when he can find
someone to study with him), and above all
"Spick" loves his big cigars when the time and
the place is good. All jokes aside — he is a good
sport, a fine friend and a genuinely "good egg".
RACHEL FREEMAN
Dobson, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 116; Height, 5 feel j inches
North Carolina College for Women, lo. '16: Carolina Play-
makers; I". N. C. Women's Association, Secretary.
THIS little lady has most happily succeeded
in combining the ability to make "oneV
and "two's" on math and Latin with the ability
to make friends — ot both sexes. Rachael came
to us from the Normal in her Junior year and
quickly became imbued with the Carolina spirit
and adapted to Carolina life. She is a good sport,
a disciple of "Horace", an admirer of athletics —
withal a "Carolina woman".
I CANT THINK
OF A DOGGONE
THING TO DRAW
FOR TW£ GUY
Sixty-s
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ALLEN ERWIN GANT
Burlington, N. C.
2;; Weight, 17;: Height, y feet 11 inches
First Year Reserve Football, '16; S. A. T. C. Varsity, Captain;
Wearer of N. C; Pan-Hellenic Council: Commencement Mar-
shall; Leader Sophomore Hop; Assistant Leailer Post Dances;
Assistant Leader Spring Dances. 19; German Club, Vice-Presi-
dent; Coop; Gorgon's Head.
A T !.»
ALLEN is another one of the favored few of
l '20 whom hard work has rewarded with an
X. C. in football in that glorious year when we
defeated both Virginia and N. C. State. He
has a good word for everyone and is one of the
most popular boys in the class. If he has ever
been grouchy, no one has ever found it out.
And as for dancing, what would a dance be
without "Pig"1 He can manage them, head
them, grace them — and all with the same natural
ease and popularity which have won him so
many friends during his stay with us.
THEODORE ALEXANDER GRAHAM
Mount Ulla, N. C.
Age, 2/; Weight, 180; Height, ; feet q inches
sity
HERE is one of those quiet, reserved fellows
who affiliated with our class as a result of
his service in the war. having entered with the
Class of tq. You can look into his face and see
evidences of winning qualities for the game of
life. Uncle Sam recognized these qualities and
called on him during the recent war. honoring
him with a commission. He cares for no man's
opinion, but always acts on his own judgment
and initiative. A man without affectation, full
of sand and stick-to-it-iveness, the kind we like to
admire — he has proven a welcome addition to
our ranks and we are glad to claim him as our
own.
Sixty-seven
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ROBERT BRUCE GWYNN
Leaksville, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 756; Height, 5 feet 11 inches
Di Society, President (4); Intra-College Debate (i); Eben
Alexander Greek Prize (8); Latin-American Club, President (3):
Class Tennis Team (3, 4); Junior Commencement Debate;
Winner Bingham Medal; Rorkingham County Club, Secretari-
es), President (4); Tar Heel Board (4); Julian S. Carr Fellow-
ship; Assistant Business Manager Magazine (3); Debating
Council (4); Junior Oratorical Contest; Yackety Yack Board
(4); Class Statistician (4); Y. M. C. A., Treasurer (4); German
Club; National City Bank Appointment; Assistant in Frencli.
2 T; <t> B K.
HERE'S a man that we are proud of — a typi-
cal embodiment of the true Carolina spirit
in a real Carolina man. He shares in the
membership of Vance 8, which is incidentally
the meeting-place of the "Carolina Bolsheviki"
and of various committees and hot-air artists
representing the active student organizations.
A student, a debater, a musician, a Wall Street
"Bull" — withal an all-around good fellow.
P
3g?l&
Sixty-eight
LEO HEARTT HARVEY
KlNSTON, N. C.
\e, 20, Weight, 158; Height, 5 feet 11 inches
■ County Club, Vice-President (3). President (4); Assistant
r Sophomore Hop (2); German Club, Secretary-Treasurer
'resident (4); Pan-Hellenic Council, Secretary-Treasurer
; Assistant Leader Gorgon's Head Ball (S); Associate
■ Yackety Yack (4); Coop; Minotaur; Gorgon's Head.
QUICK, pleasant, even-tempered; these are
the traits that characterize Leo. Without
hesitation we would say that Leo has made a
success of his college career in every way and
has won a host of friends. His unsought popu-
larity has given him many honors in college
activities, and while hard work and Leo have
never been very intimate friends, he has always
managed to make good in his work and to keep
well above the average in scholarship.
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MICHAEL ARUNDELL HILL, Jr.
Beaufort, N. C.
Age, 2/ ; Weight, 14}; Height, 5 feet 10 inches
Phi Society; Carteret County Club. President (4); Latin-Ameri-
can Club (3); Civil Engineering Society; Kli^ha Mitchell Scien-
tific Society (4).
"F^VELL" or "Michael Angelo Toblock" is one
•I — ' of those steady-going, persistent men
through whom a class lives and grows. Expand-
ing through the would-be "legal authority".
"Dell" safely weathered the mathematics of
"Hick's" civil engineering, and now reaches for
his sheepskin as a well deserved reward. Occa-
sionally he stops mapping roads on a sheet of
paper that reaches all around the room, long
enough to indulge in a pipeful of "P. A. while
he "bulls" the Carteret County group that
centres about him — which, by the way, is his
pet pastime. Highway engineering is his chosen
work. Along the highway of life it is rumored
that his heart is already engaged; be that as it
may, certain it is that "Hill" will run traverses
in life that are inclusive of much that it is good
to call one's own.
=^*-' ^i
COLUMBUS ALONZO HOYLE
Fallston, N. C.
Age, 28; Weight, i;o; Height, $ feet 1 1 inches
an Debating Society
WE admire his pluck and tenacity. If there
is a man on the campus who has worked
harder or gotten more out of his college course
than Hoyle, we want to see him. And he has
done it in three years at that. Perhaps, how-
ever, his record is not so hard to explain when
we consider that Hoyle acquired a life com-
panion before he even attempted the acquisition
of a degree. When it comes to thinking and
writing, he is there. He is planning to help
combat the forces of ignorance in our State, and
we are confidently expecting to hear more from
"Prof" Hoyle.
Sixty-nine
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H9WTOTY 1EI20.)
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LAWRENCE WOOTEN J ARM AN
Seven Springs, N. C.
Age, 21 ; Weight, //<¥; Height, ; feet 10 inches
Wayne Count; Club; Phi Society. Vice-President; Commence-
ment Debate.
E * A.
TAWRENCE is a boy with unusual drive.
1— / As "chow" administrator at "Swine", he
has so well mingled business with his jolly good
spirit that he has made a host of friends. The
Phi Society has been the medium through which
he has worked out his forensic tendencies with
no small degree of success, while in affairs of the
heart, he has risen to the front in his Senior
year, for we occasionally hear of his slipping
quietly off of the campus bent on Cupid's errand.
All in all, "L W" is a hard-hitting student and a
good friend — may be a future politician.
EDGAR BRYAN JENKINS
Nashville, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 130; Height, ; feet 6 inches
Phi Society. Vice-President (3).
"TENKS" — five feet and six inches of canned
] energy, but the peculiar thing about this
energy is that it is always in use, yet never
seems to give out. He started fast in his Fresh-
man year and kept going until he ran into the
big war. which for the time claimed his attention
as an Ensign in the Navy. He then returned to
college with redoubled vigor — and when it comes
to righting ignorance, this fellow slings a wicked
pen. Conscientious both in work and in play.
"Jcnks" has profited both by his college and
naval training, and embarks upon the sea of
opportunity with the ability to land successfully
in any port that he chooses.
Seventy
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RALPH LINWOOD JOHNSTON
Salisbury. N. C.
Age, 2/ ; Weight, 136; Height, 3 feel S inchtu
Dramatic Club (1. i, 3); Commencement Marshall (31; Rowan
County Club; Class Treasurer (41; German Club; Effervescent
Order of Yellow Dogs; Satyrs; Medical Society.
* X; A K E.
HERE is a combination of actor and ladies'
man. He has held down both jobs well,
and has done a few things on the side, chief
among which, perhaps, is the engineering of our
class elections. "Bess" knows all the latest
"dope", chiefly because he knows every man on
the Hill. If you want to learn the inside workings
of anything, big or little, get the details from
Ralph. In the good old days, "Bess" made a
bunch of friends, and now in spite of his border
of skulls and med books, he has time to be both
a friendly man and a manlv friend.
CHE/fP vorfS"
ROBERT DuVAL JONES
Newbern, N. C.
Age, 20: Weight, 160; Height, ; feet q inches
Sub-assistant Track Manager; Craven County Club; Germ
Club: Leader Gimghoul Ball, '19; Coop; Gimghoul.
BOBBIE" is one member of our class who has
put into practice the good old adage, "laugh
and grow fat". He has a smile that won't come
off and that persists even through the long hours
and vile odors of the chemistry lab where he
spends not a little of his time. Like most men
who tend toward portliness. "Bobbie" is not
overlv fond of hard work, yet he even manages
to pass German at "Kent's" stride. He is
strong for the ladies and the dances, and in this
case another old proverb does not hold good —
"nobodv loves a fat man .
Sevenlx-one
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CLAUDE REUBEN JOYNER
Yadkin\'ille, N. C.
Age, 2j; Weight, 170; Height, 5 feet it inches
Di Society; Wearer of N. C; Freshman Baseball (11; Varsity
Baseball k, 3. 41; Golden Fleece; Yadkin County Club.
"13 1 G Stuff" is a successful combination of
i— ' good student, good athlete and "good egg".
He has a quiet, modest, unassuming nature —
one that makes friends and holds them. His
ability as a pitcher is shown by the monogram
and stars which he won on the baseball field lor
three consecutive years. But all of "CR's"
activities are not on the ball field, for he takes
great delight in the most intricate mathematical
problems The least that we can say of him is
that he is a "Carolina man" of the first order.
"«;;; ';r;;..&r..
WILLIAM SHIPP JUSTICE
Richmond, Va.
Age, iq; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feel q inches
(ierman Club; Cabin.
2 AE.
BILL", better known as "Pres", is a noted
sensation-producer. We find him any-
where and at all times — yea, verily, Bain's is no
exception! He startled us one day by appearing
at a Senior Class meeting and announcing that
he had just skipped a whole year's work. L'nlim-
ited accomplishments, along with a host of both
good and "vampish" looks, spell death for the
co-eds. The "Moonlight Blues" is "Bill's"
undisputed "hesitation hit", and yet he has
never failed to answer the roll-call when Collier's
"puddin' " is served.
Seventy-two
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(^WIIWTY 1SI20.)
l'l'l'l't'l'I'I'I'I'I'PI'I'I'I'I'I'ITT
WILLIAM ROBERT KIRKMAN
Greensboro, N. C.
Age, 25, Weight, 16;; Height, ; feet 11 inches
Y. M. C. A.; Di Society; Guilford Countv Club: North Caro-
lina Club; Class Baseball (I. i); Varsity' Baseball: Wearer of
N. C.
THE tides of war cast him upon our shores,
for he entered with '18 and joined us after
two years with the Colors had interfered with
his literary pursuits. Our youthful veteran can
do a multidude of things, but withal is so modest
that you never know exactly whether "Bill" is
at the bottom of it or not. He can romp around
third base with the best of them, and we feel
sure that he must have had his share in catching
Hindenburg when he tried to steal home in the
World War. And when it comes to making
friends, he bats 1000 all the time. "Bill" does
everything hard, and we admire him for it.
THOMAS SKINNER KITTRELL
Henderson, N. C.
Age. 21: Weight, 16;; Height, 6 feet
Phi Society, Secretary (3); Junior Commencement Debate:
Associate Editor Yackety Yack (4, 3); Tar Baby Board; Com-
mencement Marshall. Latin- American Club; Vance County Club,
President: Y. M. C A. Cabinet; Assistant Manager Varsity
Basketball; Class Basketball. Captain (*); Varsity Basketball
Squad (3, 4); Track Squad CI, i, 4); Class Baseball (3); Assis-
tant in Economics; Writer of Class Wrill.
E 4> A.
SKINNER" is a student out of arms who does
things, and he isn't a bit "stuck up" over the
fact. Tennis and basketball are his diversions,
dancing his delight. English his specialty, law
his vocation — and he is A-i in all of them. We
must look far to find a better man. Tom has
only three faults: First, he is a member of the
Vance 8 organization; second, he pulls puns on
every occasion; third, his law career will be
greatly hampered by his lack of polish in the
art of lying. But "Kit" is true blue and we are
for him.
Seventy-three
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|i!9WlCTY 1«20;
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SYLVIA LOUISE LATSHAW
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Age, jy. Weight, izy. Height, ; feet 4 inches
McDonald, '04; U. N. C. Women's Associatio
i Play
NO, we can't call her a co-ed, for she has a real,
honest-to-goodness, live husband. Now
gather 'round in envious jealousy — you co-eds, I
mean. We will just have to put her in a class
by herself, leading to a degree in "Matrimon-
ethics". Still we take off our hats to "Mrs. L"
when it comes to "Koching" for herself an
audience, for she is verily a patron of the "draw-
ma'' and walks in old "Bill" Shakespeare's very
footsteps. Of course, you all want to share this
page in the Annual with her, but the Editor, out
of deference to Chapel Hill convention, rules
otherwise. I know that she and "hubby" will
forever dwell happily together — on this page of
the Yackety Yack.
Seventy-four
HARRY FRANKLIN LATSHAW
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Age, 35; Weight, 140; Height, 5 feet 7 inches
North Carolina Club, Chairman of Committee on Education.
FIRST: he has a mighty attractive wife which
is more than most of us can boast about at
present ; second: although he appears thoroughly
domesticated and "matrimoniated , we have
never been able to discover any rolling pin
bruises upon his visible surface. Now Chapel
Hill gossip hath it that their life is one of "peaches
and cream . and Chapel Hill gossip — well, it
is no worse than any other kind. Thirdly: we
like him and we want to call him "Harry", but
we re afraid the "missus would think it undig-
nified. Here s to them both, for we can t think
of them separately.
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SANFORD MARTIN LEE
Dunn, N. C.
Age, 2 j. Weight, 130; Height, ; feet 6 inches
Phi Society; Sampson County Club, Vice-President; Y. M. C. A.
SANFORD is one of those retiring, scholastic
hermits He has a passive interest in all
college activities, but lives and has his being
only in the realm of the intellectual. He began
making good marks when he entered the Uni-
versity from Clinton four years ago, and he has
kept it up ever since. He is a hard, conscien-
tious worker and has done his full duty here.
We are sure that he will continue to be the
same good fellow after he leaves college.
RUFUS THEODORE LENOIR
Lenoir, N. C.
\ge, 20. Weight, 135; Height, 5 feet 8 inches
I ..l.ln.U Count; Club; German Club; Civil Engineering Society;
Freshman Football Squad; Nice-President C. E. Society.
♦ A 9.
TED" is a very rare and unique individual of
the Class of '20. He has met with many
obstacles during his four years with us, the most
important being the failure of his eyes to respond
to intensive study, the S. A. T. C and English
IV. He has conquered them all with the same
determination and sand. "Ted's" chief hobby
is civil engineering: his favorite pastime is telling
jokes; his specialty is math, which he absorbs
with the ease of a master, coaching a little for
diversion. The only thing about his future that
worries him is where he will ever be able to get
audiences and subjects for his practical jokes
when he gets down in South America as an
engineer.
"*, 1 1 »f///- ^\^r/////\ \///?/-"_Jl
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WILLIAM FIGURES LEWIS
KlNSTON, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 163; Height, 5 feet q inches
Pbi Society. Vice-President (8); Freshman Football; Freshman
Baseball: Varsity Baseball Squad <-i, 31; Wearer of N. C: Latin-
American Club; Lenoir County Club. President (3); Manager
Class Baseball (3); Manager Class Football (4).
BILL" is one of the most dependable men in
the class; he's always on one committee or
another. As a ballplayer, he's a "bird", and
knocks down flies in the outfield like a soda
jerker knocks down cash on Saturday night.
In addition to his athletic accomplishments, he
spits Spanish like a phonograph, and is a regular
"Bull'' on Charlie Lee's economics "Bill" has
only one peculiarity — his fondness for first math,
but in spite of this, he will soon be solving prob-
lems in South America like a regular.
\ ' /
Seventy-six
FRANCIS JULIUS LIIPFERT, Jr.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 14;; Height, 5 feet 8 inches
Freshman Football; Glee Club (1, i); Minstrel Association
(1, t). President (*); Woodberry Club; German Club; Order of
Yellow Dogs; Coop; Gimghoul.
A K E.
BILL Cody" has two thoughts in life — one is
himself, and the other I haven't the heart to
divulge. He has two passions, one the Saturday
Evening Post, and the other "queens". Among
other things he is a good student, being partial
to philosophy, and is one of Horace's boys who
climbs to the pinnacle and cries aloud "Eureka!"
"Bill", besides being a good student and a good
fellow, is quite a dreamer and idealist, and we
feel sure that some day his dreams will become
reality under the guidance of his active brain.
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ICHABOD MAYO LITTLE
ROBERSONVILLE, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 16;; Height, 5 feet 10 inches
Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball; Class Football (8):
German Club; Cabin; Order of Yellow Dogs.
* a e.
J ABO ", the dancing shark, has won our confi-
dence and friendship through his honesty and
unaffected warm-heartedness. While not a
Phi Beta Kappa man, he has kept right up with
his class and is now vacillating between law and
business as his vocation. "Jabo" is always
cheerful and smiling, and has only one worry in
college — whether to answer "Yes Sir or "No
Sir" when he wakes up on economics to hear
"Charlie Lee" calling on him
/////„
PERCY PHILIP LYNCH. Jr.
Raleigh, N. C.
Age, iq; Weight, 140; Height, 5 feet 6 inches
Phi Society; Wake County Club; German Club; Gym Team;
S. A. T. C. Football; (lavs Basketball (3, 4); Class Ba~.-I.all;
Track Team; A. I E. E.; Wearer of N. C.
* Z N.
PERCY, "Little Varsity", is one of Prof.
Daggett's protegees. He picked a hard
course, but made it seem easy by the way he
studied (?). He always has time for anything
he wishes to do, whether it be working in the
gym. going out for track, playing football or
entering into a "Bull session". Percy is of
the quiet type; he does not talk too much, but
when he does speak, he says something worth
listening to. If there is anybody in the class
who has finished an E. E. course with as little
work as Percy and won a letter in the gym on
the side, we want to see him.
Seventy-seven
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HUNTER EVANDER MARTIN
Fayetteville, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 160; Height, ? feet 11 inches
Buies Creek Club (1, t, 3, 4), Secretary (4); Cumberland County
Club, Secretary (3); Gym Team 13. 4); Class Basketball («, 3);
Class Football (4); Class Baseball («); Phi Society.
"T T E." or "Booloo" is an enthusiastic physical
I 1 • culturist, as his fine physique and his
gym accomplishments well show. In "Bull
sessions" he has no equal and few rivals. He is a
faithful follower of Epicurus and is also fre-
quently involved in the affairs of Cupid. He
seeks the friendship of none, and yet is a friend
to all. For him, quizzes and exams hold no
terrors, for he stands well with all the profs.
The kind of man who will stand up for what he
believes to be the right through thick and thin.
"H. E." carries our best wishes out into the
world.
ROLAND PRINCE McCLAMROCH
Greensboro, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 135 ; Height, 5 feet 7)4 inches
Guilford County Club; German Club; Coop.
i; x.
SKIN" is a nickname for a good fellow — quick,
unassuming, intellectual and a good student.
He left us in '17 to serve as a Lieutenant in the
A. E. F.. but we are mighty glad to have him
back again, and with the Class of '20. Although
his appearance seems to convey to one the
impression of great austerity and reserve, yet he
is warm-hearted and a fast friend. He is always
a prominent figure at the dances "Mack" is
known as a man of standards. What more is
necessary to be a man1
Seventy-eight
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johx brown Mclaughlin, jr
Charlotte. N . C.
Age, 20: Weight, 150; Height, f feel 7 inches
German Club; Mecklenbwg County Club; Latin-American Club.
'T B." might stand for many things, but the
J • fact that it is the same handle as that
attached to the hero of appletree fame — one
John Brown — is known only to the inner circle.
"Mac has become a fixture on the top floor of
Old East, having resided there throughout his
college career. He has two claims to distinction:
First, he is known as "The Left-handed Wonder"
at the card table, because he will play bridge
when he has nothing else to do; second, he has
majored in math, and come out at the long end
of the bargain. Such a record, along with his
vacation experiences in Akron, at Plattsburg,
and with the State Highway Commission, should
see him through his three-score-and-ten without
any serious upsets.
WILLIAM EDWARD MERRITT, Jr.
Mount Airy, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 134; Height, ; feet q inches
Surrv Count; flub; Track Team (I, -2. 31: A. I. E. E.. President
(3).
*zx.
BUT for "Bill", the weaker sex of the com-
munity would die of boredom. He knows
em all and can be seen most any time strolling
across the village green with a couple in tow.
As an electrical engineer and contriver of shock-
ing machines — well, never sit down in his room
without first cutting all the wires leading to
your chair When he's not busy with his other
amusements (studying is one of them), he can
be found jogging around the cinder path or
pulling cleats in the gym — at either ol which he's
pretty good. He is an ardent disciple of West-
inghouse, having spent two summers there, and
it is rumored that he has a very good reason for
his intention of returning.
Seventy-nine
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OLIN BAIN MICHAEL
Lexington, N. C.
Age, 2}, Weight, ijo: Height, ,- feet 4 inches
inisterial Class; Di Society; North Carolina Club; Davids"
AFTER spending three years at Catawba
s College and securing an A. B degree.
Michael came to Carolina for a years' study
before taking up his work in the Theological
Seminary We often call him "Woodrow"
because of his mental disposition and strong
determination He shows clearly that "strong
reason makes strong action.'' We must not fail
to give him due credit for his perseverance,
energy and will power, and for his determination
to go into his chosen profession duly prepared.
His happy disposition and his power of leader-
ship will undoubtedly make him a success in
the world and an example to which we may
point and safely feel that the ideals of this campus
are being put into practice there
Eighty
NATHAN MOBLEY
Charlotte. N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 140; Height, 5 feet 7lA inches
Di Society, Secretary (2); President (4); Winner Junior Ora-
torical Medal; Vice-President Class (81; Associate Editor Yack-
ity-Yack; Football Squad 14); Assistant in Phvsics (3. 4);
Assistant in Botany (3); Amphoterothen; Golden Fleece.
K * \. 2 T; n K *.
THE President of the Di Society threw his
gold-headed cane on the floor, leaped nimbly
off the president's rostrum and faced the assem-
bled gathering of Di's. whose jaws, individually
and collectively, were beginning to drop. In
fact, the whole assemblage was somewhat pop-
eyed at this procedure, for the president of that
venerable organization was doing an unheard-of
thing — taking part in the general debate. "Nat"
refuses to abide by custom, simply because it is
bald-headed and has venerable gray whiskers.
He even takes a fiendish delight in introducing
new suggestions, which tendency has led many
to believe that he is a blood relation of "Trotzky."
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JAMES SAMUEL MOORE
Bethel, N. C.
Age. 26; Weight, 180; Height, ; feet 11 inches
Phi Society; Pitt County Club; Dramatic Club: Carolina Play-
makers.
WE see before us now a man who has already
made good, at least in one respect, he has
ventured out along the highway of matrimony
with success. And Moore has also taken his
part in educating the youth of our State, having
spent more than three years at this business.
His college life has been one of interruptions
and vicissitudes. Originally with the Class of
"18, he was forced to drop out for a few years at
the end of his Sophomore year, but he managed
with Summer Schools and correspondence courses,
to make up a year, and so is now back on the
job to finish with the Class of '20. He has done
well in spite of — no, we must admit for all of
our sour grapes that it is because of — his matri-
monial ventures.
(sTJjTog
OLIVER EARLE MOORE
Bennettsville, S. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 140; Height, 5 feet q inches
Phi Society; Scotland-Marlboro County (lull.
EARLE, 'Villa", " Noodle "—this man has
made his four years at Carolina a period of
study and pleasure combined The drugstore is
his favorite haunt, yet he visits the campus
more or less frequently. Though somewhat
reserved, he is the kind of man we like and
admire, once we know him. Earle specialized
in chemistry, and made such a hit with the
profs that he was awarded the Du Pont Fellow-
ship in his Junior year, and the members of '20
will follow him with interest as he pursues his
life work with this great organization.
'^
Eighty-one
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GEORGE DILLON MORRIS
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
Age, 24; Weight, 124; Height, 5 feet 4 inches
Wayne County Club, President: Pan-Hellenic Council; Coop.
K2.
MIDGET", the smallest of his class in stat-
ure, is very far from being the smallest in
other respects. Entering the university with
the Class of 18, he has been forced to miss two
years, but is back with us now to study medicine.
Possessing an unlimited amount of energy and
a keen sense of humor coupled with his taking
ways, we expect him to make for himself an
enviable position wherever he goes.
Eighty-two
WILLIAM WEBB NEAL
Louisburg, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, i;S; Height, 5 feet 1 1 inches
Institute of Electrical Engineer;,. President (4):
Yackety Y.ick Board (3); Assistant Leader Junior Prom;
German Club. Franklin Countv Club; President (S); Class
Basketball (2); Track It. t); Pan-Hellenic Council (4).
* Z N; * A 9.
WILD Bill" — so called because none of the
fair ones have yet been able to tame him
— is a man whom anyone would be proud to call
friend. Joyous and irrepressible, he positively
refuses to take life seriously, and yet he man-
ages to fool the profs to the extent of passing
all his work. "W. W. " ("Wild William") hands
out the finest line on the campus, and it is hard
to tell which he likes best — tripping the light
fantastic on the dance floor or working in Pitts-
burgh during the summer.
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WILLIAM JAMES NICHOLS
Durham, N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, i8y. Height, y feel /; inches
A NOBLE Physique — a mighty man with
the pigskin and an unparalleled thrower of
the javelin. And yet. "Bill" didn't know he
was an athlete until his Junior year, when he
surprised himself and astonished his classmates
by losing the javelin in the State Meet and in-
cidentally winning an N. C. as easy as pie.
"Nick" is a good student; whether on Foerster's
English. Happies French or Collier's pudding.
"Bill" has developed himself in an all-round
way, and has won the esteem and friendship of
his classmates.
■famwMlAM''A"
JAMES JEROME PENCE
Rockingham, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 154; Height, $ feet 9 inches
Di Society; German Club; Richmond Count v Club; Carolina
Minstrels (1, i).
JEROME managed to overcome his desire to
remain (?) in Uncle Sams Navy after the
crew of the "Good Ship Battle" had been
discharged and decided to return to old Alma
Mater and graduate with '20 after taking a six
month's vacation. "Romeo's" good nature,
sincerity and steady character have won many
friends for him on the Hill. He has shown some
musical talent in the success he made in the
University Minstrels and in his ability to
"tickle the ivory" whenever called upon by the
jazz demons in the Y. M. C. A. dance hall.
Jerome also dishes out a line unparalleled by
anyone on the campus. He is a hard worker and
we wish him much success.
Eighty-three
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WILLIAM NELSON POINDEXTER. Jr.
Walkertown, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 178; Height, ; feet ityi inches
German Club; Forsythe County Club; U. N. C. Minstrels (2);
Yacketv Yack Board (41; Senior Executive Committee; Leader
Junior Prom; President Cabin (4); Glee Club (4); Chief Com-
meneement Ball Manager; Pan-Hellenic Council.
AT«.
'T)ON" came to us all unannounced from
V Walkertown one day, with his neatness and
appearance making him the envy of his class-
mates. He takes life none too seriously, being
always ready to have a good time, but is serious
enough to pass his work with regularity, with
the exception of Economics 1-2 — now the Water-
loo of not a few. "Bill" is gifted with a pleasing
personality, and as a result he has a host of true
friends in every class, as well as among the
ladies. "Bill" will be smiling down from the
heights of fame some day, even if in the role of
a dancing teacher.
Eighty-Jour
CLIFTON ADDISON POOLE
Jackson Springs. N. C.
Age, 2}; Weight, 165; Height, ; feet 11 inches
Trinity College, '14-17; A. E. F. Club.
POOLE came to us from Trinity, but being
susceptible to all salutary influences, his
one year here has made him a genuine Carolina
man. He has always majored in the intellectual
phase of university life, and his accomplish-
ments in all phases of general scholarship has
given him an eminent distinction among us.
But Clifton has also won a warm place in our
hearts during his brief stay with us. by straight-
forwardness and pleasant manners Dignified,
polished, capable, he is a well-rounded character
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II 0
VERA PRITCHARD
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Age. 20; Weight, 108; Height, 5 feet j inches
U. N. C. Woman's Association; Treasurer (4); Elon College.
'16-'18.
VERA is known to some, especially to the
Juniors, as our "good-looking co-ed". We
are proud of her as one of our most loyal class-
mates. She is always glad to help in anything
we undertake. She is good at everything, from
helping to arrange a class banquet to blinding
the profs. None of us ever can object to co-eds
if they are all like Vera. She will prove an in-
valuable agent for her State when woman suf-
rage is the order of things.
JOHN GILLIAM PROCTOR
LUMBERTON, N. C.
Age, 22, Weight, 17;; Height, 6 feet 1
inch
Class Basketball (1); DramatirAssoeiatii.il c,>l; Hol.eson Ci
Club, President 1-1): North Carolina Club; 1'hi Societv; Bugl'.
Corps (•>); Naval Unit S. A. T. C. (31; Order of Yellow Dors
Glee Club 14); German Club;Clerk of Court Battle Law Club (4
-IKE.
ty
'N
OW, listen, old chap, let me tell you [this
one" — eloquence, thy name is "Gillie".
This overgrown, over-talkative, over-redheaded
philosopher from "down where the Lumbee
flows", is happy only when he has three things —
a rocking chair, a Girard. and a listener (and he's
usually happy). It seems now that in spite of
womankind and a real "bass", "Gillie" will
make a a successful pleader at the bar (legal
bar, understand). He knows how to make you
believe what he believes. He's redheaded, but
true blue all the rest of the wav.
Eighty-five
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CLAUDE CLINTON RAMSAY
Salisbury, N. C.
Age, 21 ; Weight, 172; Height 6 feet
Rowan County Club; Class Basketball (2, 3, 4); German Club:
Orderjof Yellow Dogs; Gorgon's Head; Coop.
AK E.
CHAPPY" came to us after Christmas of our
Freshman year, fresh from the Pacific
Coast — yea, verily, very fresh! During his
college career he has shown himself to be a con-
vincing talker, always taking the forefront in
every "bull session". He enjoys life as much as
any one. but with it all he is seldom blinded on
a class He always answers "Yes Sir", without
the slightest hesitation when "Charlie Lee"
springs a question. Claude has shown marked
talent in handling the long green while in col-
lege. In everything he is practical, in most
things he is successful.
Eighty-six
CHARLES BAXTER RIDGE
High Point, N. C.
Age, iq; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feet u inches
Di Society: Guilford County Club.
'/"* B. " is one of those quiet fellows who has
V^«. little to say, but when he does say something
he means it. He believes in taking things as
they come and worrying about nothing. Even
analytics has no terrors for him, and that is
saying a good deal. He is fortunate enough to
be able to retain his good humor and presence
of mind under the most trying circumstances.
Although Baxter has been known to study
when hard pressed, it is safe to say that he has
never jeopardized his health thereby. As a
wielder of the test tube he has no superior and
few equals.
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MILDRED IRENE SHERRILL
Newton, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 123; Height, 5 feet 6 inches
MILDRED came to us this year from
Catawba College. Although not long with
us, she has won for herself a large place in our
class. She does not talk a great deal (strange
indeed 1. but when she does speak, it is to say
something worth while And that's not all —
her disposition is most pleasing, her tempera-
ment bright and hopeful, and her ideals high.
She knows the art of making friends, and best
of all she knows how to keep them. Wherever
fortune may lead her, we surely predict a path
of sunshine and good cheer.
LOU SHINE
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 145; Height, } feet 7 inches
TOL! came to us in our Junior year after having
J—' spent two years at the Normal. In coming,
she did not forget to bring that enchanting smile
which is so characteristic of her Her charming
personality has won the admiration of everyone.
That Lou knows a good place when she sees it
is shown by the fact that she has made her home
in Chapel Hill. We are glad that she joined us
and we feel sure that she has never regretted
her action in leaving N. C. C. \V.
£ HUM P0*?77?fl.T
Eighty-seven
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BENJAMIN ARNOLD SIMMS
Talladega, Ala.
Age, 21; Weight, ;jf, Height, 6 feet 1 inch
Z A E.
' A DMIRAL" — can anyone ever forget the long,
■/v tall "weinnie" man from Alabama, who
besides graduating in three years, got his com-
mission in the Army and is still able to make
enough money on the side selling "hot dogs" —
well, he's saving up for a mighty good reason,
who 1 believe lives in Asheville. "Admiral" has
two great ambitions; one has dark hair and brown
eyes, the other bears the inscription "In God We
Trust". We feel sure that his genial smile and
unlimited energy will carry him. what do you
say, boys, "All the way?" Yes, "All the way!"
Eighty-eight
HENRY BELK SIMPSON
Matthews, N. C.
Age, 25; Weight, 178; Height, } feet 11 inches
Di Societv; North Carolina Club; Union County Club, President
(8, 1); Scrub Football (*); Glee Club (4); Winner Carr Fellow-
HENRY matriculated with the Class of 'iq,
but answering the call of his country, he
joined us last spring. He goes at his class work
in the same style which made him an Artillery
Officer risen from the ranks. While away,
someone told him that he could sing, and this
year his "mellow" voice has been no small factor
in the success of the Glee Club. When he is
gone, we will miss his pleasant smile, and the
"League" will have lost a bulwark, for "religi-
ously" he is one of the "faithful few".
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I'lMMMTlTIMMTIMMTm^lTlQlMM^TY YMK 20, &TiriT ITITITITi™
ROY HOBART SOUTHER
Greensboro, N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, 140; Height, 5 feel q inches
Guilford Countv Club; Chemical Journal Club; American Chemi-
cal Sicictv: Klisha Mitchell Scientific Society; North Carolina
Club; Editorial Staff Carolina Chemist (3, 4); Class Baseball
(1, 3, 4), Manager (4); Assistant in Chemistry; German Club.
♦ B K; A X 2.
IF you ever want to know anything about
"Ven's" chemistry, ask Roy Hobart — he
knows, as he has shown by his record. In a time
when chemistry "bulls" were falling by the way-
side, due to the S. A. T. C. and other ailments,
Hobart came triumphantly through his third
year of chemical engineering with a string of
"ones", incidentally earning a Phi Beta Kappa
Key in the process, and with it all he has been
classed among those few who can properly be
called "good eggs". His happy-go-lucky smile
would win your friendship at once, especially if
he has just returned from one of those frequent
week-end trips that he takes, and it has won
him a warm spot in the hearts of the Class of '20.
JOSEPH FELIX SPAINHOUR
MORGANTON, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, i;S; Height, 6 feet
■ County Club, Secretary (1); North Carolina
JOE" is an excellent hot-air artist and a psy-
chology "bull". His niche in the Hall of Fame
is due to the fact that he hails from Mor-
ganton. All of his energy is devoted to studying
German under "Kent" when he is not writing
to that best girl back home. "Joe" is modest
and retiring, and spends most of his time in
academic pursuits. He has sterling qualities,
and true worth as a fine and gentlemanly char-
acter
Eighty-nine
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RUFUS ARTHUR SPAUGH
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 183; Height, 6 feet 1 inch
Di Society; Forsvthe County Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet «);
Glee Club (1, t, 4); Vice-President Class 14); Greater Council
(2); Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3); Associate Editor
Tar Baby (4); German Club Commencement Ball Manager 13);
Freshman Football: Freshman Baseball; \ arsity Baseball Squad
I*); Varsity Football 4 ; Carolina Haymakers; Wearer of N.
Cj Pan-Hellenic Council (4 ; Coop; Satyrs; Gimghoul.
12 A; Be n.
WERE his abilities restricted to the gridiron,
the social occasion, and the class room
(these are his specialties), "Toddie" would be a
large-sized man. Having in addition to all this
an everlasting good nature and a rich admixture
of friendliness, he has won the universal esteem
of his fellows. Arthur has also shown great
ability along musical lines, for he is another one
of "'that musical Winston-Salem bunch". We
can tell no more of him — he doesn't talk about
himself and wouldn't grant the reporter an
interview.
I / /
SOME FALLBACK
Ninety
EARL MONTGOMERY SPENCER
MORCANTON, N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, 140; Height, 6 feet
4l; We
Varsity Track (3. 3, 4), Cap-
EARL is the kind of fellow that grows on you.
The longer you know him the more you
like and admire him He is always quiet and
unassuming, yet persistent and a good student,
and he possesses that rare trait which we call
consistency. But "Varsity'' is a good athlete as
well as a good student. His value as a track
man was recognized when he was elected captain
of this year's Varsity Track Team. Earl has
set his goal high in the business world, and he
will certainly attain it if he climbs in life as he
pole-vaults in college.
v^
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of
CORYDON PERRY SPRUILL, Jr.
Raleigh, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 136: Height, 5 feet 4 inches
Phi Society: Freshman Football: Class President (*): Slagazim
Board <i): Assistant Manager Basketball iS>. Manager Basket
ball (4); Athletic Council 141; Gvm Team ii, 31: President Cam.
pus Cabinet (4); President Pan-Hellenic Council (41; W
N C; Golden Fleece.
2 T; * B K: n K *.
OUR idea of animated conversation would be
a joint discussion between "Shorty" and
the widely known Egyptian Sphynx. Scintil-
lating wit and repartee of a briskness that would
get Mark Twain himself enthused would be the
outcome, that is. if the Sphynx didn't get mad
and quit. Due to four profitable years as a
gymnasium shark, he looks somewhat like a
pocket edition of "John Q Hercules", and so
well has he wrought in class room and study
that the exclusive key is ever with him. Perhaps
the most enthusiastic thing about him is his
straightforwardness. He looks at you straight
and talks to you straight and then straightway
goes and does just what he has said he will do.
and yet "Shorty" is withal a quiet fellow, dig-
nified and popular.
FLETCHER HUMPHRIES SPRY
Back Bay, Va
Age, 22; Weight. 13}; Height. > feet 4 inches
Chemical Journal Club; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society;
American Chemical Societv; Business Manager (arolina Chem-
ist (3, 4); Assistant in Chemistry (3, 41.
A X 2
FLETCHER came to us from the "Old Do-
minion ". but that doesn't keep him from
having the Carolina spirit. "Shorty", for that's
what the girls call him. has recently become one
of our leading ladies' men, and any time you
don't find him with the ladies you may look for
him at the Chemistry Building. For he is a
chemistry "bull ", and can spot one to perfection
to pass 1-2 Chemistry, as many a poor, ignorant
Freshman has learned at the expense of only a
few coaching classes But Fletcher is good-
hearted and straightforward, and always gives
the Freshmen their money's worth, in spots
Ninety-one
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HENRY DAVID STEVENS
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 138; Height, 6 feet
Buncombe Countv Club, President (3); North Carolina Club;
Banquet Speaker (31; (nrraan Club; Yackety Yack Board (2);
Business Manager Yai kkti Y u k (-H; Y. M C. A. Cabinet [*),
Editor-in-Chief Tar Baby (4); Tar Heel Board (4).
E * A; 2 T; A K E.
' CTEVE" — long, lean, lanky, learned, likeable
O ;md an 1 of a good fellow if you know how
to take him. which isn't hard. He adopted the
Tar Baby, mothered it and spanked it until it
grew into a vigorous child, laughing its way all
over the State and the South into national prom-
inence. With it all he has that one human,
masculine failing, but with our elongated young
hero it takes the form of the "more the merrier".
Come all ye beautiful young girls — here's Henry,
our ideal of a typical college gentleman. Don't
gather in too closely, for, being of a tempera-
mental nature, he's yours forever if you do.
MARVIN LEE STONE
KlTTRELL. N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 150; Height, ; feet 10 inches
Phi Society; Vance County Club, Secretary; Class Basketball,
Captain, Manager; All-Class Baseball; Class Football; Varsity
Baseball Squad.
ML" is the "two in one" wonder of the class.
• He goes on geology and is downtown at
the same time, that is. if brother "M B" happens
to be on the Hill. He is renowned in the Phi
Society for the rich line he often reels off. We
would perhaps say that his line helped him to
pass twenty-nine hours of work, had we not
known that he was really brilliant. Happiness
is his ideal. We heartily agree that he will
secure this should we find him at the Summer
School again, or even at Kittrell. pulling the bell
cord over a "hav burner".
Ninety-two
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VANCE EVERETTE SWIFT
Altomahaw, N. C.
Age, 2/ ; Weight, 160; Height, } feet ;; inches
North Carolina Club; Alamance-Caswell County Club; Medical
Society; Freshman Baseball Squad; Varsity Baseball Squad it, 3).
VANCE is another of our good-looking mem-
bers who is probably as well known on the
Normal campus as at Carolina. He never
allows his studies to interfere with his pleasure,
but for all that, he usually finds time to pass
them all with good grades. For three years he
ran a correspondence school for girls — then he
flunked nineteen of them in our Senior year in
order to devote more thought to his chosen pro-
fession— medicine. A hard worker, popular
with the class, and above all, gifted with a fluent
line, Swift is sure to make a combination of
science and athletics harmonize with a successful
life.
JOSHUA TAYLOE
Washington, N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, 180; Height, 5 feet u inches
Minotaur; Gorgon's Head.
2 N.
JOSH" has at last achieved his Utopia. For
three years he fought with French, endeavor-
ing to clear the way for medicine, and under
various profs, but he could not "harmonize" to
the required degree. Finally, with occasional ( ?)
coachings by a fair "Summer Schoolite", he
struck his stride, and this year he landed with
full force in "Ike's" schoolhouse. He has been
there ever since, thereby depriving us of a large
part of his congenial companionship. "Josh
is universally liked on the campus — a perfect
mixer and a "good egg".
Ninety-three
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CARY BUXTON TAYLOR
Oxford, N. C.
\.i<\ 24: Weight, 145; Height, 5 feet 8 inches
Phi Society; Engineering Society; Granville County Club;
Secretary it); Vice-President (3).
BUCK" is the proper name for this specimen.
He is not afraid of anything and when he
strikes a snag, he "bucks" it hard and comes out
on top. No one ever saw him in a bad humor
Even when he carried a transit to the pump-
station and found the eyepiece broken, he came
back after another one — smiling. Work doesn't
take all of his time, cither, for he can slice a cake
or cut the cards as easily as he can survey the
campus, "Buck" has that rare and glorious
quality of being able to laugh as much at the
jokes on himself as at those which he plays on
others.
Ninety-jour
\l
ELIZABETH MURPHY TAYLOR
MoRGANTON, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 112: Height, ; feel 6 inches
ryland College, '16-'18: U. N. C. Women's Association;
Carolina Playmakers.
IN speaking of Elizabeth's dramatic ability,
someone once said that she had the incom-
parable merit of being an amateur and acting
like a professional This might well be applied
to her life as well as to her ability to act. We
all know that there is no one more guileless, yet
she "vamps" us in a most professional manner.
"Razz" is a very good student, but she finds
time to take part in all our gaieties and to star
in the productions of the Playmakers. Every-
body likes "Razz".
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HAYWOOD MAURICE TAYLOR
Tarboro, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 120; Height, 5 feet 8 inches
Nash-Edgecombe County Club; Dramatic Club (i): Cast "Man
of the Hour" («); Chemical Journal Club; Elisha Mitchell Scien-
tific Society; American Chemical Society; Associate Editor
Carolina Chemist {i, 4); German Club; Pennsylvania State
College (3); Du Pont Fellow in Chemistry. Assistant in Chem-
istry; Satyrs.
AX 2.
DOOLEY" is a delver in the black art. and
can generally be found riding molecules for
a "one", for chemically he has few peers. His
abilities are not confined to the lab, for his his-
trionic talent, shown with the Dramatic Club,
rivals his chemical ability Haywood went to
Plattsburg and later "looied" at Penn State.
He fought well, for each day brings forth its
sweet-scented pink envelope — "another Penn
State co-ed vamped". "Spike" is a likeable
chap, and his fine, gentlemanly qualities have
won him a host of friends who will ever wish
him luck as he pursues his work with Du Pont.
EVERETT SIMON TEAGUE
Taylorsville, N. C.
Age 31; Weight 125; Height, % jeet 4 inches
Di Society; C. E. Society.
WAY back in the dark ages. Teague entered
the Class of '17, but he dropped out three
years and joined us, in fact and in spirit. This,
vou know, was in our Senior year. He shines in
being a good, steady student. He takes life
calmly, has a happy, quiet way about him, and
never worries. He is a steadfast member of '20,
and true to the core.
Ninety-five
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HARVEY STANSILL TERRY
Rockingham, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 164; Height, 6 feet
li). Constitutional Committee (3); Rich-
unty Club.
E <J> A.
HARVEY, in spite of difficulties, such as bad
eyes and love, has stuck it out for four
years and is now looking forward to the time
when he can present a sheepskin to the object
of the above-mentioned love He started out to
be a chemical engineer, but decided last year
that such a life would keep him too much away
from his girl, so he is now acquiring an A. B.
If you are a woman-hater, just talk to Harvey
for a few minutes and you will soon become
convinced that married life is the only practical,
economical life in which to indulge Lacking in
the "bigness with which the name of Terry
was introduced to the university, he is never-
theless possessed of a bigness of mind and char-
acter that has brought him achievement both
in his work and in the acquisition of friends.
Ninety-six
JAMES FRANK T1LSON
BlLTMORE, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feet q inches
Buncombe County Club.
HANDSOME Frank'' is one of those good-
looking boys that we don't often see at
Carolina Sincere, modest, affable, Frank has
made many friends. He has entered fully into
the life about him, and always displays a good
spirit. Although diligently pursuing his studies
preparatory to entering medicine, he never
becomes so absorbed in "Froggy "s" zoology that
he hasn't time to fulfill his functions as a ladies'
man He is serious, however, when it comes to
German 1-2, and says that he is going to capture
a "dip'' if he has to take "Eddie's" 3-4 for the
next ten years.
iiiiU.i.i.iiUii.i.i.i.i.iihi.i^r;
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DANIEL DEWEY TOPPING
Pantego, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 120; Height. ; feet 3^2 inches
, 4); Assistant Bit-
ufort-Hyde County Club,
ness Manager Magazine (4
s
HORT of stature, glib of tongue, dynamic ot
movement, quick of temper, brilliant of
mind and filled with enough ideas for a thousand
of his size — such is "Top". To see him walking
across the campus, loaded down with law vol-
umes, one would get the impression that he was
an enthusiastic disciple of Blackstone; but when
you get to know him better, you come to the
conclusion that "D D is only taking law as a
business guide. He intends to become a big
business man in the realm of transportation, so
that he can get married sooner.
FOLGER LAFAYETTE TOWNSEND, Jr.
Bessemer City, N. C.
Age, 27; Weight, 14;; Height, ; feet 11 inches
Di Society; Rockingham County Club; Class Basketball (3, 4).
AFTER roaming around over this planet look-
l ing for the proper place to educate himself,
Folger finally settled on the University of North
Carolina, and has never since regretted his
decision. He tried Guilford his first two years,
Trinity during the famous S. A. T. C. days, and
then came to us as an unusual subject for the
development of the Carolina spirit He has
made good here in spite of this handicap Folger
is one of our best-read students. It is difficult to
find a novel that he cannot converse fluently
upon. And withal, he is justly dubbed "good
egg". What more can we say?
Ninety-seven
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TITI'PIM'ITT
119WKSTY WK2Q-]
'I'l'I'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITT
RICHARD STANFORD TRAVIS, Jr.
Weldon, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, tjo; Height, f feet 10 inches
Associate E<Iilor Yacketv Yack 1 3); Glee Club (1,8,8); German
Club; Commencement Ball Manager (4); Coop; Gorgon's Head.
K A.
STAN", "Stanley". "Gaitor" — he first came
into the limelight in his Freshman year when
he appeared on the Glee Club programme in
Gerrard Hall as a soloist. "Stan" is the third of
the Weldon trio and was voted the best looking
of our good-looking class. He has never taken
to studying super-seriously, because he hasn't
found it absolutely necessary; and yet he has
made nearly as many grades in the first two
shelves as in the last two To say "Stan is a
ladies' man would be putting it mildly. Being a
"cat" with a guitar he always holds his audience
(preferably girls 1 spellbound We have always
liked "Gaitor".
Ninety-eight
LUTHER WILEY UMSTEAD
Stem, N. C.
Age, 22, Weight, 180; Height. 6 feet 1 inch
Phi Society; Granville County Club. Secretary; Varsity JFoot
ball Srjuad.
L\L'GH and the world laughs with you", such
■> is "Luke's" philosophy of life and that is
why his goodlellowship is sought by so many
members of the Class of 20 His big body covers
a bigger heart, full of wit. humor and good
nature. His face shows his character, but one
must see his feet to understand his foundation
as a good sport. If there is a joke in the air,
"Urn" is generally the first to find it out. Voted
the laziest in the class, he nevertheless manages
to keep up with his work without the least
trouble. And with it all. he has a splendid phil-
osophy ot lite which will carry him smiling over
more than one rough place along life's weary
road.
— =^Jl
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-S
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LOUISE VENABLE
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Age, ? ; Weight, i2j; Height, ; feet ; inches
U. N. C. Women's Association; A.B., St. Mary's College.
IT isn't often that we like to boast, but we
just must tell you about Louise. She is not
at all susceptible to flattery (in fact, she scorns
our oft-repeated praises), and being a professor s
daughter, we humor her in this also. And
again, you must know that the reputation of a
good student never seems to interfere with those
pleasant smiles and words. When ability is
needed to take charge of a difficult situation we
are too apt to quit "in favor of Miss Venable '.
A good sport and a real friend to us all, but she
scorns our oft-repeated praises — anyway, I hope
you know what we think of her.
^0
CARL HAMPTON WALKER
Coinjock, N. C.
Age, 21: Weight. 135; Height. > feel } inches
Phi Society; Geological Club.
CARL is a man who carries the courage of his
convictions, treating everyone as a gentle-
man and expecting the same in return. He is
both a hard worker and a firm friend; he is the
kind of fellow who believes in doing a thing
rather than talking about it. At present, he is
pursuing one of the hardest courses in college —
"Rockology" — and is easily solving all of its
hardest problems. It is rumored that he will
settle down on a farm after graduation, but we
have our doubts, for he is renowned as being one
of "Collier's own".
Ninety-nine
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U9W1CTY WHS 2Q
1 1'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i
JOHN PIPKIN WASHBURN
LlLLINGTON, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 14;; Height. ; feet 11 inches
Phi Society, Vice-President iSI. President (4); Editor-in-Chief
Magazine (41; Junior Oratorical Contest: Harnett County Club,
Secretary (3), President (4); Latin-American Cluh. Vice-Presi-
dent 14); North Carolina Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4k Secre-
tary-Treasurer Class (3). President (41; President Student Coun-
cil (4); Campus Cabinet 141; Class Baseball (1. 3). Captain 13);
Class Tennis Team (i, 3, 4). Captain (3, 4); Commencement
Marshal; Associate Editor Tar Heel (4); German Club; National
City Bank Scholarship; Assistant in Economics (4); Ampho-
E * A.
JOHN possesses that indefinable charm — per-
sonality. In him we see the "jolly good
fellow" and the serious-minded President
of the Student Council mixed in exactly the
right proportions And have you noticed that
sleek and prosperous look he is beginning to
assume1 He is preparing for the time when he
will hold a high office in the National City Bank
We won't say that he can't be beaten, for we
fear that he will meet his Waterloo in the
Income Tax Collector
Age.
Phi Sooie
EDWIN EMERSON WHITE
Reisterstown, Md.
2i; Weight, 136: Height. ; feet <? inches
cretarj 2): German Club; Dramatic Association
i,l J CI.,*, Basketball and Baseball I*. 3); Class
Secretary; V»lm Jack Board (31; Class President (3):
Latin-American Club; Student Council (3. 41; Athletic Council
(4); Class Historian (4); Editor-in-Chief Yackkty Yack (4);
Manager arsity Baseball; Pan-Hellenic Council: Commence-
in, -til Ball Manager: National City Bank Appointment: Am-
photerothen; Cabin; Gimghoul; Golden Fleece.
a A; 2 T; * B K; 2 A E.
THE first evidence we got of "Woolley's" far-
sightedness and good judgment was the
fact that he came all the way from Maryland to
this institution His capacity for work is well
shown by this Yackety Yack, and by the pre-
sence of a "key" tied to his Ingersoll In spite
of this, the ladies have not been neglected, as
many in the vicinity of Faculty Row will testify.
We don't know much about him away from the
Hill, but Washburn brings back startling reports
from New York City. All of these things serve
to make him one of the best men in the class,
and the National City Bank will acauire a
valuable addition in the person of "Woolley .
One Hundred
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WOODFORD WHITE
Newton. N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, 16;: Height, 6 feel
Catawba Count; Club; North Carolina Club; American Chem-
ical Society; Chemical Journal Club; Elisha Mitchell Scientific
Society; Assistant in Chemistry i;J. 41.
WOODROW" is not very often seen on the
campus. He is too busy down at the
Chemistry Building among the test-tubes and
beakers. Physical chemistry is his favorite
study, and very much of his time is devoted to
it. Not all of "Jake's" time is given to his
favorite study, however. He loves very much
to philosophize about the fairer sex and to take
up his gun for a little week-end shooting trip.
White is a lover of true beauty, and a great
admirer of poetry and the arts in general. Some
day he will discover something more explosive
than T. N. T. Our best wishes are with our
classmate and "chemical-explorer Woodrow".
EDWARD WATTS MORRIS WHITEHEAD
Salisbury. N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, /jj. Height, 5 Jeet q inches
Campus Cabinet (4); Vice-President Athletic Association [4);
Minstrel Association (-21; (ierman Club; Meilieal Society; (lor-
gon-s Head.
<> A; * X; A K E.
WHEN it comes to cutting on "stiffs", "Doc"
is there; and as for passing "Froggy s"
zoology, we have to hand it to the musical
"Doctor". He's the best jazz violinist, gui-
tarist, saxophonist and general "playist" on the
Hill Which all means that Ed does a dozen
things, and does em all better than the next
one With it all. he's "Doc" to every one on
the campus, and the most modest man that
ever kissed maiden Davidson reared him;
Carolina claimed and cherished him; and the
Class of 20 is proud of her acquisition
One Hundred One
iiiiii.iii i.i ,1,1.1, i ih i, i ii.iiliitl.l.ltltl.lil.hl tlihlilil.hlii.iii .hi ij.iii.hitiihiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiliiiiiiiitiiii iii in
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(ll9WMTY HM2Q.)
'l'l'i't'i'i'iM'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i
RALPH DEYEREAUX WILLIAMS
High Point. N C.
\ge, 24 Weight 130, Height f feet - inches
V. M C A. Cabinel (3); Di Societv, Secretarj 8), Vice-Presi-
,l.i,i :: . (.„ilf,,r,l Cumin Club. I..itiii-.\m.Ti,.in Club. Presi-
,l,nt ; Debating Council 3 Junior Oratorical Contest;
Assistant Manager Tar Heel :.'< , Vv,ki.ii \»k Board 13):
Amphoterothen.
E * A.
ENSIGN while helping Secretary Daniels run
the Navy — captain of his fate now — Ralph
entered, a year ahead of us. Excellent student,
warm friend, happy and popular personality —
he has won his way into our hearts. As an ener-
getic business man. master courtier, and good
fellow for a that his ship is coming in; it may-
be as a newspaper magnate, it may be in Wall
Street, for he is one of those whom the world
will delight to honor, and there is no reason
why he shouldn't be moved up to the Wall
Street row when his time comes.
One Hundred Two
SAMUEL HOOD WILL IS
High Point. N C
Age, 22; Weight, 126: Height, f feet 4 inches
Di Society, Treasurer (3); Intersociet.v Freshmen Debate; Com-
mencement l)t-lial<\ Guilfnnl CmimiIv Club; North Carolina
Club: Student Secretary, V. M. C. A.; Freshmen Debating Club
TU, '17.
E * A
SAMMY'' has been one of our strong men.
Although small in physical make-up, he has
been far from insignificant to his class. He has
always been prominent lor the part that he has
played in so manv worthy college activities,
chief of which is the Y. M, C A We wish that
we had had more association with him. but we
have never been able to find him idle. Abso-
lutely open and true; we find about him not the
least trace of show or hypocrisy, and for that
reason if for no other, we are proud to own him
BilililililiMilil.Mililililililihl
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RALPH HARPER WILSON
Wilson's Mills, N. C.
Age, 21 ; Weight, 160: Height, ; feet ;o inches
hi Societ
n K *.
R\LPH is Boob McNutt's only living rival.
• but you can't hold that against Boob, for
Ralph is a peach of a fellow. He has something
about him that attracts, and once attracted you
find a mighty good friend. He has been to
Sunday School, but he is nobody s angel — he is
loo'f, Ralph Wilson, and his word is as good
as a new Victory Bond. He is just the kind ol
fellow that makes the world go around and
Carolina a good place to live in.
THOMAS CLAYTON WOLFE
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Age. iq; Weight, 178; Height, 6 feet 3 inches
I > i Society; Buncombe Cou
Debate (2); Dramatic Associa
Author two One-Act Plays. E:
Editor Yackkti Y.vck CI);
Assistant Edilor-in-Chief H;
I ..iii
(3).
Edit
in I'l
I Idvi
: . \ M
ManauilM,' Editor Tar llnl (31
Hoard Tar Baby (i): Worth Priz.
.. Cabinet (3, 4); Student Counci
iss Poel I.'!, i): Chairman Junio
Club; Amphoterothen; Satyrs
Golden Fleece.
Z T; <2 A; II K *.
EDITING the Tar Heel, winning Horace's
philosophy prize when only a Junior, writing
plays and then showing the world how they
should be acted — they are all alike to this young
Shakespeare. Last year he played the leading
role in the "Midnight Frolic'' at "Gooch's Winter
Palace . but this year it's the leading role on
the "Carolina Shipping Board". But, seriously
speaking. "Buck" is a great, big fellow. He can
do more between 8:25 and 8:30 than the rest of
us can do all day, and it is no wonder that he is
classed as a genius
One Hundred Three
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(J9HMMTY 1MI2Q]
'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'IM'IM'I'I'IM'I'niF
JAKE GARRETT WOODWARD
Erwin. Tenn
Age, 24: Weight, 120; Height, j feet 7 inche
JAKE was handed down to us by the Class ot
18. He has taken time to establish himsell
in the drug business and also to serve Uncle
Sam in the late war. He is first of all a splendid
student; besides mastering "Eddies heavy
courses in English, he has succeeded in capturing
an A. B. degree in three years, with enough
science on the side to lead him well into the
study of medicine. He is in addition to this an
ideal fellow with that coolness of consideration
and judgment which is sure to make for him a
successful medical career.
One Hundred Four
JOHN BRUCE YOKLEY
Mount Airy, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, ijS; Height, ; feet 7 inches
Surrey County Club; C. E. Society.
n K a
BRUCE is a jolly good fellow, liked and
admired by all who know him. He takes a
joke well and is always ready to play one on
some innocent friend. The other side ot Bruce
presents to us a fine student and a capable
engineering mind. He sees the problem as it is
and solves it. "Hick's" blinding brilliancy on
exams, has no horror for Bruce, as his knowledge
and reasoning power always bring him out on
top. He is bound to win, for he is a genuine
engincer.
TT7TTT7J.1 .1 ,KI , ! .
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[]i9iAm^TY nam 20 J
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ODfttrrrs of tltp dlmuor (ElaaH
John Hosea Kerr. Jr. President
Edwin Earl Rives \ ice-President
William LeGette Blythe ..... Secretary-Treasurer
ilutttnr (Elaaa lExenitivr (Eommittpe
Clarence Linden Garnett Ashby
William LeGette Blythe
Wade Anderson Gardner
Archibald Caleb Lineberger
Edwin Earl Rives
Walter Reese Berryhill
Jesse Harper Erwtn, Jr.
Daniel Lindsey Grant
James Speed Massenburg
William Haywood Rlffin
Donald Van Xoppen
One Hundred Six
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(119HMMTY WK2Q.)
TITITITI'H'ITIM'I'I'I'I'rTTT
MAXIE MILLER ALEXANDER
Creswell, N. C.
BRITT MILLIS ARMFIELD . . High Point, N. C.
Di Society Freshman Football; German Club; 2-A E.
SHELDON CLYDE AUSTIN
Secretary-Treasurer C. E. Society
FRANK BOBBINS BACON
JAMES DOBBIN BAILEY
JULIUS EDMOND BANZET, Jr
CHARLES DALE BEERS
Richfield, N. C.
AsheviUe, N. C.
One Hundred Seven
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't'l'm'I'IM'l'I'I'l'I'I'I'I'ITT
((J9WKSTY mn&2Q.l
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One Hundred Eight
FRANK DURHAM BELL
Tuxedo, N. C.
RUDOLPH EARL BERNAU, Jr
WALTER REECE BERRYHILL
Greensboro, N. C.
Charlotte, N. C.
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Di Society, Secretary (2), Treasurer (3); Inter-
Secietv Debate (4); Assoeiate Editor Tar Heel (-2); Assistant Editor
iluaazine CI); Winner Elien Alexander Prize 141; Class Basketball 111;
Mecklenburg County Club, Vice-President (3); North Carolina Club;
Assistant in Library.
CLARENCE DORIAN BLAIR
WILLIAM LEGETTE BLYTHE
WILLIAM HAYWOOD BOBBITT
HENRY SPURGEON BOYCE
Freshman Basketball; Phi Society
Greensboro, N. C.
Huntersville, N. C.
Statesville, N. C.
F.lll.l.l.l.l I.I.LI.I.Iil.l.liKlililil.ltl.l.l.l.liltl.l.l.l.l.lJ.Uil.ltl.hlililil.Ll.lililil.lilthl^lll.ltl.hl.l.lllillhhhhllri
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f 1191gCTOTY WK 20|i''TnriTiTr
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CHARLES THEODORE BOYD
Gastonia, N. C.
Di Society; Gaston County Club; Freshman Debate: Intersociety
Debate; Carolina-Virginia Debate; T K A.
JAMIE BUNNELL BROACH
FREDERICK PHILIPS BROOKS
BRYANT COUNCIL BROWN
PAUL HIGH BROWN
JOSEPH MALCOLM BROWNE
Hurdle Mills, N. C.
Wilmington, N. C.
Chadbourn, N. C.
Kelford, N. C.
CHARLES JUNIUS BRYAN Wilson, N. C.
Wayne County Club; V. M. I. Club; A. I. E. E.; German Club.
One Hundred Nine
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P'PI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITFFT
(U9 WKCTY WI 20}iTrnTrnTriTi i'ititi--
AUGUSTUS BULLOCK
WILLIAM DONALD CARMICHAEL
Creedmore, N. C.
Varsity Basketball (1, 2, 3); Captain (8); Winner Preston Cup of Jo
nalism; Secretary Class; German Club; Coop; Gimghoul; K 2.
JAMES POOL CLAMSON .
Carteret County Cluh; A. I. E. E.
MARY LOUISA COBB
FREDERICK CLINE COCHRAN
RICHARD GAY COKER
German Club; II K A.
Beaufort, N. C.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Charlotte, N. C.
Hartsville, S. C.
STEPHEN RUFFIN COLE .... Chapel Hill, N. C.
Y. M. C. A.; Orange County Club; Vice-President; Medical Society.
One Hundred Ten
•"I.liIiLI.I.MiM.l.l ,I.U,lil,l,l.l,M hl.l.l.l.lililthl.l.hLltl.lil.lililililtl.l.lil.LMil.lilil.lil.ltl.hhliliri
bLTI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l
119 TOMTIT HM2Q.)
Jl'l I'l'ITl'ITITII'ITTT
HENRY BURWELL COOPER . . Henderson, N. C.
Y.ickett Yack Board; German Club; A K E.
LENOX GORE COOPER .... Wilmington, N. C.
New Hanover County Club: German Club; n K A.
JOHN COLUMBUS COWAN, Jr
Rutherfordton, N. C.
FONTAINE MAURY CRALLE Louisburg, N. C.
Franklin County Club; German Club: Cabin; * A e.
AMOS CUMMINGS
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Forsvth County Club; Oak Ridge Club; Y. M. C. A.; Class Basketball
1. -'. :l ; Maiiaisr Has- Basketball ■■.'. :!l; (la-s Baseball I*. 3); Man-
ager All-class Baseball I.'!): Freshmen Football Si|uad; Assistant Cheer
Leader 12); German Club: Leader Junior Prom; Commencement Mar-
shal.
ROBERT MAYO DAVIS
Tarboro, N. C.
ROBERT ODUS DEITZ, Jr
Statesville, N. C.
One I kindred Eleven
■l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.lil.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.lil.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l^Nl.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.iil.l.l.l.lihlililifl
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119WMTY nam 20.}
I'i'i'iM'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i rrwr
Siler City, N. C.
Plymouth, N. C.
ROBERT CLYDE DORSETTE
BENJAMIN OWENS DUPREE
Phi Society; North Carolina Club.
HAYWOOD EDMUNDSON
Phi Society; Yukety Y vck Board; G<
OTHO CROWELL EDWARDS
JESSE HARPER ERWIN, Jr. Durham, N. C.
Class Basketball II. 2. S)j Class Football (SI; Assistant Manager Fresh-
man Baseball «); Manager Freshman Football (81; Yackrty Y'ack
Board (2); Leader Sophomore Hop; Executive Couneil Junior Class;
German Club; Cabin; (iiui^houl; A T fi.
ERASMUS HERVEY EVANS
i A E.
Laurinburg, N. C.
JAMES CORNELIUS PASS FAERRINGTON Winston-Salem, N. C.
German Club; Cabin; S A E.
One Hundred Twelve
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(11911MMTY mm 20
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DANIEL ALLEN FIELDS
LEONARD EARL FIELDS
Laurinburg, N. C.
Kintson, N. C.
WILLIAM FEIMSTER FOOTE
ONIS GRAY FORNEY
CHARLES WORTH FOWLER
Statesville, N. C.
Greensboro, N. C.
Greensboro, N. C.
I)i Society; Guilford County Club, Secretary (*); Freshman Baseball;
Geological Seminar.
HOWARD EDWARD FULTON .
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Forsyth Countv Club, Vice-President I'.'); Freshman Football; Class
Hasketball II, ••<: Manager ("lass Baseball li); Manager Class Football
(81; Varsity Football S,|iia,l i.'il; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet" 13); Varsity Bas-
ketball Squad (1, 4. 81; Secretary Athletic Association (3); German
Club; n K *.
WADE ANDERSON GARDNER .... Wilson, N. C.
Phi Society; Wilson County Club. President (3); Class Tennis (8, 3);
Manager and Captain (3); Executive Committee Junior Class (3);
Magazine Board. Assistant Business Manager Magazine; German Club.
One Hundred Thirteen
fi'lililtl lihlilil.lilililtliMi^l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.lil.l.l.l.l.l.lJ.lilil.ii-I.I.I.IJ.Iil.l.l.l.l.liliU.ia.lil.l.l.l.l.lM.LTTrTTTrra
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(J9HMMTY 1«I20J
'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'MI'IU
One Hundred Fourteen
EDWARD HIRAM GIBSON, Jr.
I), Society: Forsyth County Club.
Kernersville, N. C.
OSCAR SEXTON GOODWIN Apex, N. C.
Medical Society; Wake County Club; Mar- Hill Club; K ♦.
DANIEL LINDSEY GRANT
Snead's Ferry, N. C.
Phi Society, Secretary («), Treasurer fS); Freshman Debate; Sophomore
Debate: Mary D. Wright Debate; Debating Council •->'. Secretary 3 :
Yacketv V.ick Board 14. 31; V. M C. A. Cabinet (4. 3); Onslow County
Club, Secretary (41, President i3>; N.irlli Carolina Club; Sub-Assistant
Manager Track ■.". A-.islunt Manager Track 131; Amphoterothen.
LEE OVERMAN GREGORY
Salisbury, N. C.
Rowan County Club; Freshman Football; German Chili; Assistant
Leader Spring German Club Dance (S); Coop; Gimghoul; K Z.
ARTHUR GWYNN GRIFFIN
Union County Club; Di Society
HAROLD COWAN GRIFFIN
Marshville, N. C.
JOHN WORTH GUARD Coinjock, N. C.
m.iii.i.Li.i.iii.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.hi.hi.i.iii.iihi.i.iii.i.hi.i.i.i.i.i.iii.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.Tnra
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IMTI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'lil'I'I'I'I'I'IITCF
HUBERT TAYLOR GURLEY
Guilford County Club; German Club.
WILLIAM WARD HAGOOD, Jr.
GORDON COZART HALL
BOYD HARDEN
Yackett Yack Board; B 9 II.
High Point, N. C.
Portsmouth, Va.
Burlington, N. C.
JOHN McKENZIE HARGETTE Trenton, N. C.
Onslow-Jones County Club, Vice-President; North Carolina Club.
WILLIAM BURRUS HARRELL
CHARLES ROBERT HARRIS
Arden, N. C.
One Hundred Fifteen
fi'iii'iiii li .1, hhhhhliUililiUiMihMiMihlilililililJ,!, l.l.l.l.l.U 1,1, 1.I.U, i.i.i.i ■i,u,t,i,l.l.l.l,l,ri
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One Hundred Sixteen
NATHANIEL PERKINSON HAYES
HERBERT CROUSE HEFFNER
RAY LORENZO HEFFNER
WAVERLY MAULDIN HESTER
German Club; AT Q.
THEODORE DAVID HILL
Davidson County Club; Churchman's Club.
Maiden, N. C.
an Club; Carolina
Lexington, N. C.
THERA EARL HINSON Monroe, N. C,
Union County Club; Class Football tS): A. I. E. E.
BENJAMIN IVEY HOFFNER
Di Society: Rowan County Cluh.
Salisbury, N. C.
il.lil. 1,1, lil ,1,1, 1, 1, 1, lil.l.l, 1,1,1 il.lilihl.LI ,1.1 ,1,1.1 .hi 1 1 .hi ililil.liLIMil.l ,1,1 ilihlihhlil.il i.l ilil^hhl.liliTTTTTId
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'I'l'i'i'i'i'i'fi'i'i'ri't'i'i'i'i'i'i'i
Gatesville, N. C.
. Kinston, N. C.
i Club; Cabin: 2 X.
Asheville, N. C.
RALPH HAYES HOFLER
EDGAR FRANK HOOKER
Pbi Society: Lenoir County Club; Ge
JUNIUS MOORE HORNER, Jr.
WILLIARD PEYTON HUDSON .
Di Society; Alleghany County Cull). President.
ADELINE EDMONDS HUGHES . . Henderson, N. C.
St. Marys. 18; Vance County Club; Carolina Haymakers.
RUFUS AVERA HUNTER Raleigh, N. C.
Wake County Club; German Club: Z *.
MACK MURPHY JERNIGAN
One Hundred Seventeen
i 'I' Itt.Utl hi .Nhhhl lililil Mttihl 1 1 1,1,1 ,1.1,1,1,1.1,1,1,1,1,1 ,1,1, l,t,),i ,I,|L|,1 ,1,1 .1.IJ.I ,l,ULI,r
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iTi'i'i'iTi'i' iM'i'i'iM'i'rrrg
One Hundred Eighteen
JOHN HOSEA KERR, Jr
Warrenton, N. C.
Warren-Halifax Club. Secretary 1 1 1; Intersc.eiely Freshman Debate 1
Intel-society Sophomore Debate i-i); Phi Society, Secretary (2), Vice-
President (31; Magazine Board (4, S); Tar Beet Board I , Managing
Editor TarHeel (SI; Class President .; -■ - i Student Council (3);
Latin-American Club. Secretary .' . President 3 . i ampus Cabinet S);
Debating Council (31; Amphoterotheu; German Club; 0 A; K A.
HAYWOOD GORDON KINCAID
Gastonia, N. C.
CHARLES EDMUND OSTLER . Morganton, N. C.
Class Football (1,3); Burke County Club: German Club: B H II.
COLVIN THEODORE LEONARD . Greensboro, N. C.
Di Society; Guilford County Club: Class Baseball: Tar Heel Board.
ARCHIBALD CALEB LINEBERGER, Jr.
Belmont, N. C.
Gaston County Club. Vice-President 1*1; German Club: North Carolina
Club; Di Society; Class Football (S); Class Baseball <■!<: Chairman
Junior Class Executive Committee; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Commence-
ment Marshal: Ben.
BURGIN EDISON LOHR
Hi Society; Carolina Playmakers
Lincolnton, N. C.
FRANK ROBBINS LOWE
. Winston-Salem, N. C.
Vice-President Class I . Di S ty; Freshman F mil; S. A. T. C.
F all: German Club. Varsit\ Football; Wearer of V (' : Gorgon's
Head. Minotaur: K Z.
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ELBERT HOKE MARTIN
Di Society.
Charlotte, N. C.
JAMES SPEED MASSENBURG
Louisburg, N. C.
Pbi Society. Secretary («), Viee-Presidenl 3); Intra-Freshman Dehat
Intra Freshman-Sophomore Debate: Yar-itv Track: Manager S. A. T. C
Football: \-i-tant Manager Yar-itv Football 3 : Franklin Countj
Club, Secrctarv-Trea-urer. (la- B.i-ketl.,,11 -.' : Tar River Club 13)
Class Treasurer 3 . Latin-American Club; North Carolina Club; Rep:
sentative on Canipu- Cabinet :; . Mana^or Ti' ll"l :5e Yacke
Yack Board (3 . Chief Comme til Marshal 3 : German Club.
CHARLES CASWELL MASSEY
WILLIAM ELMER MATTHEWS
THOMAS MORTIMER McKNIGHT
ERNEST JAMES MECUM .
A.I. E. E.: A. E. F. Club (S).
LEON VINCENT MILTON
Varsity Baseball (g); Wearer of N. C.
Princeton, N. C.
Mooresville, N. C.
Walkertown, N. C.
Greensboro, N. C.
One Hundred \ ineleen
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ALLEN ALEXANDER MINER
Assistant in Zoology.
CLEMENT ROSENBURGE MONROE
Waynesboro, Ga
Biscoe, N. C.
THOMAS OWEN MOORE . . New Bern, N. C.
V. M. I. Club; Carolina Playmakers; German Club; A K E.
JOHN De MORRIS
Roxboro, N. C.
German Club; Varsity Basketball Squad III; Varsity Basketball (i,
31: Wearer of N. C: A. I. E. E.: Minstrel- I 1 ): Glee Club 13); Person
County Club; * Z N; B 8 n.
BARNETTE NAIMAN
LOUIS MANN NELSON
Kinston, N. C.
German Club: Associate Editor Carolina Chemist; Assistant in Chem-
ist r\; A X 2.
MARCUS CICERO STEPHENS NOBLE Chapel Hill, N. C.
German Club; K S.
One Hundred Twenty
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KENNETH BARNES NOE Beaufort, N. C.
SIHON CICERO OGBURN
ADOLPHUS BINGHAM OWENS
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Charlotte, N. C.
Di Society: Mecklenburg County Club; S. A. T. C. Football Squad
Varsity Football Squad (3).
BAILEY PATRICK
HOWARD ALEXANDER PATTERSON Chapel Hill, N. C.
German Club; Gimgboul; £ A E.
MILLARD HATCHER PATTERSON . Mt. Airy, N. C.
Di Society: Latin-American Club; Freshman Football; Freshman
Debate; Varsity Track (1); Gym Team (2, 3); Intercollegiate Debate
(2); Associate Editor Tar Heel (3); T K A.
JAMES THEOPHILDS PENNY .
Di Society; Intersociety Debater 14).
Charlotte, N. C.
liTTT
One Hundred Twenty-one
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One I lundred Twenty-two
RUTH PENNY .
U. N. C. Women's Associati,
JOSEPH ARRINGTON PERSON
Charlotte, N. C.
Di Society; Mecklenburg County Club: Y. M. C. A.: Sophomore Stunt;
Class Basketball 11. i. :ii; Y. MCA Cal.in.-t c.\:li; V — i-ts.ni Miin«.-
Var-itv Ba.ketball :<>. N..rtli Carolina Club: tivm Tram ••. 3 : Assis-
ant in Gym <:1
CHARLES WILEY PHILLIPS
Trinity, N. C.
l)i Society; Freshman Debating Society; Randolph County Club. Pre-i-
dent (1, 8, S); Y. M C \ Cabinel i, 3); Class Basketball 2); Varsitj
Football Squad (3).
NELL ABBIE PATTERSON PICKARD Chapel Hill, N. C.
PHILIP BASIL POLLOCK
WILLIAM GRADY PRITCHARD
ALFRED LUTHER PURRINGTON
Trenton, N. C.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Scotland Neck, N. C.
Warren-Halifax Club, Treasurer (1); Phi Society; German Club. /,,
Heel Board (*, S); Assistant Manager Yar-iu Track 8); Coop: 7. *.
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EDWARD LEE QTJILLIN Spencer, N. C.
Rowan County Cluh.
JULIUS ROWANE RAPER, Jr Linwood, N. C.
Davidson County Club. Vice-President; Elon College, 'IT. 'IS. 1".
SAMUEL HUNTER REAMS . Durham, N. C.
EDWIN EARLE RIVES .... Greensboro, N. C.
Freshman Football; Class Football (S): Guilford Countv Club. Vice-
President i3l; Cheer Leader -.>.:! ; Vice-President Has. ..'Si; Y.M.C. A.
Cabinet («, S); Di Society; German Club; Commencement Marshal.
JESSE MANEY ROBBINS Asheboro, N. C.
Di Society; Randolph Countv Club. Vice-President; Class Baseball 1);
Varsity Baseball f«); Cla" Football S).
BRYAN NASER ROBERTS . . Hillsboro, N. C.
I)i Society; Carolina Playmakers.
WILLIAM ASBURY ROURK, Jr. . . Shallotte, N. C.
One Hundred Twenty-three
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One Hundred Twenty-four
WILLIAM ALLEN ROYALL
Goldsboro, N. C.
German Club: Wayne County Club. President (i); Assistant Manager
Yarsitv Basketball; Assistant Manager Dramatic Club, Cast (3);
YACKETT Yack Buard 121; A. E. F. Club; Class Football, Captain;
Varsity Track Team II, i, 3); Z A E.
WILLIAM HAYWOOD RUFFIN
Louisburg, N. C.
Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball; Class Baseball, Captain; All-
class Baseball; Yackett Yack Board (i): Class Executive Committee;
Herman Club Coop- Assistant Leader Gimghoul Ball; Assistant Leader;
Sophomore Hop; Gimghoul; K Z.
DAWSON EMERSON SCARBOROUGH
Hoffman, N. C.
SAMUEL MORE SCHENK . Lawndale, N. C.
Medical Society; German Club; Gimghoul; * X; 2 N.
JOHN DUNCAN SHAW
Laurinburg, N. C.
Baseball; Greater Council (1);
Freshman Football; Freshn
C \ Cabinet 1-'. 3); Varsitv Baseball Squad [i): Yacketv Yack Board
■li; Manager of Freshman Baseball (31; Athletic Council 13); Varsity
Football Squad (3); Assistant Leader Sophomore Hop; German Club;
Carolina Haymakers; Cabin; Satyr; Di Society; Gorgon's Head; ZA E.
WESLEY HILL SHINE
HILTON McRAY SHUFORD
Chapel HiU, N. C.
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CHARLES HENRY SMITH Reidsville, N. C.
PHILIP CARVER SMITH Capron, Va.
A. I. E. E.; Assistant Electrical Engineering Laboratory.
RANDALL COLLINS SMITH .... Newport, N. C.
Phi Society: Medical Society; North Carolina Club; Carteret Countv
Club; K *.
ROBERT EDWIN SMITH Mt. Airy, N. C.
Surry County Club; Medical Society; German Club; Coop; * X; ZN.
ROBERT OWEN SMITH Liberty, N. C.
JAMES CLINTON SMOOT, Jr. . North Wilkesboro, N. C.
German Club; Cabin; A T S>.
ELLIOTT WALKER STEVENS ... Warsaw, N. C.
Duplin County Club; German Club; 2 N.
One Hundred Twenty-five
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One Hundred Twenty-sii
ROBERT TULA STIMPSON
l)i Society; Yadkin County CIul
WILBUR WHITE STOUT
Siloam, N. C.
Burlington, N. C.
Di Society: V. M. C. A. Cabinet (2, S); Alamance Countv Club; Class
Stunt («); North Carolina Cluh; As-istant in Library (i, 3).
CHARLES IRWIN TAYLOR
JOSEPH WHITE TAYLOR
TYRE CRUMPTER TAYLOR
Pikeville, N. C.
Alleghany Countv Club, Secretarv; Di Society. Secretary, Vice-Presi-
dent; Tar lied Board; Iiiler,..ciely Debate; Winner Wright Memorial
Medal.
KARL ERNEST THIES
CYRUS BERKELEY THOMAS
Charlotte, N. C.
Jonesboro, N. C.
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JOSEPH GRANBERY TUCKER
DONNELL VAN NOPPEN
REUBEN RING WARE
Rockingham County Club.
OSCAR BLAINE WELCH
LILLIE DELLE WHITAKER
ROBERT BENJAMIN WHITE
BRAINARD SYDNOR WHITING
Plymouth, N. C.
[4); Churchmen's Club;
Greensboro, N. C
Carrboro, N. C.
Concord, N. C.
Freshman Football. 16; German Club; Sub-a.si. 1. ml V.tr,it\ Track 3 ;
Wake County Club; Associate Editor Tar [lr,l -.' . Ymkety Y\ck
Board 1.3); 2 X.
Reidsville, N. C. fe. «
One Hundred Twenty-seven
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THOMAS JAMES WILSON
Chapel Hill, N. C.
One Hundred Twenty-eighl
Orange Countv Club, President (2); Sub-assistant Manager Basketball
<*), Assistant Manager (3); German Club; Z +.
LAWRENCE GIRARD WILSON . Dunn, N. C.
Freshmen Baseball; Varsity Baseball (*); Wearer of N. C; Pbi Society;
Harnett County Club, Vice-President (*); C. E. Society.
NATHAN ANTHONY WOMACK
DAVID JACKSON WOMBLE
SAMUEL OTIS WORTHINGTON
ALAN BRANTLEY WRIGHT
Reidsville, N. C.
Winterville, N. C.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Freshman Football. '17; Varsity Football Squad. '19; Class Basketball.
'19; Minstrels, '18; Di Society; A. I. E. E.; Cabin; * A 9.
JESSE EDWARD YOUNCE
KIj i 1 1 . 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■ I ■ 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 . t » I . I . I ■ 1 , 1 ■ 1 , h Mil, Mi 1^1,1,1,1,1 UiliU, liUMMiU, 1,1,1 iIiIiI.IlE
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GMrrra nf tb? ^njihomorr (Class
Joseph Altira McLean
William Brantley Womble
George Vernon Denny
President
Vice-President
Secretarx-Treasurer
One Hundred Thirty-one
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ri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'iTrrq
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Abernethy, E.
H.
Hickory
N. C.
Boyd, G. W.
Warrenton, N. C.
Abernethy, O.
M.
Salisbury.
N. C.
Boyd, R. E.
Gastonia, N. C.
Alexander, G.
D.
Statesville,
N. C.
Brown, S. W.
. Asheville, N. C.
Alley, F. E.
Wavnesville,
N. C.
Bullock, H. H .
Fuquav Springs, N. C.
Anderson, R.
5. .
Whitakers,
N. C
Byrd, D.
Calypso, N. C.
Anderson, W.
P
Wilson,
N. C
Brooks, C. K.
Greensboro, N. C
Ancel, C. C.
Bryson Citv,
N. C
Bowen, J. F.
Greenville, N. C.
Apple, J. L.
Greensboro
N. C.
Bremer, H. E.
Rockv Mount, N. C.
Arrington, S.
L.
Rockv Mount
N. C.
Brown, J. M.
. Kelford, N. C
Austin, J. H.
. Charlotte
N. C.
Campen, B. G.
. Alliance, N. C.
Aycock, M. D
Wilson
N. C.
Carroll, C. C.
Mizpah, N. C.
Ballon, J. W.
Oxford
N. C.
Carroll, J. A.
Hookerton, N. C
Barden, J. G.
Goldsboro
N. C.
Carson, R. E. L,
Bethel, N. C
Bardin, B. H.
Wilson
N. C.
Cashatt, C. E.
Jamestown, N. C
Bardin, R. M.
Wilson
N. C.
Cashatt, I. W.
Jamestown, N. C
Bason, W. J.
Swepsonville
N. C.
Casper, R. M.
Salisbury, N. C
Benbow, E. V
East Bend
N. C.
Chapman, L. J.
Grifton, N. C
Bender, J. A.
Pollocksville
N. C.
Chappell, H. V. .
Belvidere, N. C
Bizzell, C. F.
Goldsboro
N. C.
Charnley, W. L.
Charlotte, N. C.
Black, G. W.
Stanley
N. C.
Coker, J. W.
Rock Hill, S. C
Boddie, W. C.
Nashville
N. C.
CONOLY, J. H
Maxton, N. C
Bondurant, S.
O.
Leaksville
N. C.
Cornelius, W. E.
Mooresville, N. C
Booe, P. H.
Walkertown
N. C.
Couch, J. H.
Chapel Hill, N. C
Boone, E. L.
Rich Square
N. C.
Courtney, A. M.
Fayetteville, N. C
Bourne, W. C
Asheville
N. C.
Craig, R, L
Greenwood, Miss
One Hundred Thirty-two
f^. . 1 1 f ■ i m . i , ■ ; 1 1 ^ , i , i . i , i , ■ , ! . i , ; . i u , ; . : j , ; , i i f , I , i , ; , i . j ■ ■; ■, ; , 1 , i 1 1 , i . i , i : i ■ t ■ ' , ; , i ', i . i , i .],;,-. i . i . ^ , i , ^, i i - 1 1 1 , i . i , ; , i , i , ; , ' ; . , , i , ', r^i
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tfl9TMMTY WH&2Q-J
'ri'lTI'ITI'ITI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ICQ
Craven, O. K.
Charlotte, N. C.
Frazier, J. W.
Badin
N. C
Crawford, R B
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Flemming, R. L. .
Greenville
N. C
Crayton, J. E.
Charlotte, N. C.
Gattis, A. L.
Chapel Hill
N.C
Creech, W. H.
Goldsboro, N. C.
Gillespie. S. C.
Asheville
N.C
Crumpler, C O.
Huntler, N. C.
Gradey, E. N.
Seven Springs
N.C
Collins, J. C.
Catharine Lake, N. C.
Gray, P. N
Charlotte
N.C
Daniel, J. E.
Henderson, N. C.
Greenwood. J. C
Asheville
n. c;
Daniels, J. W.
Washington, D. C.
Griffith, R H. .
Charlotte
N.C
Daughtridge, A. L.
Rockv Mount, N. C.
Grissette, F. A. .
Caller, tsville
N.C
Davidson, C. W.
Mooresville, N. C.
Grase. C. H.
Forest City
N.C
Davis, L. W.
Beaufort, N. C.
Guthrie, W. C. .
. Durham
N.C
Denham, A.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Hackler. R H.
Sparta
N.C
Denny. G. V.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Hadley. W. A.
LaGrange
N.C
Dorsett, J. D.
Silver City, N. C.
Hall, E. F.
Reidsville
N.C
Duffy, H. B.
New Bern, N. C.
Hamer, D
McCall
N.C
Edwards, C.
Sparta, N. C.
Hannah, W. T. .
WaynesvUle
N.C
Eley, A. J.
Woodland, N. C.
Hardin. J. H
Wilmington
N. C
Eller, J. D.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Harper. M, D.
LaGrange
N.C
Ellington, J. O.
Clayton, N. C.
Harris, H. C.
Pungo
N.C
Elliott, G. S.
, Edenton, N C.
Hartness, J. R
Mooresville
N.C
Elliott, R. F.
. Edenton, N. C.
Hartsell, L. T.
Concord
N.C
Epstein, H. G.
Goldsboro, N. C.
Hedrick, C R.
Lenoir
N.C
Falls, W. F.
Salisbury, N. C.
Hendren, J. T.
Elkin
N.C
Field, D. M.
Hertford, N. C.
Hettleman, P.
Goldsboro
N.C
Felt, J.
Reidsville, N. C.
Hill. G. W.
Durham
N.C
Finger, G. T.
Charlotte, N. C.
Hinderlite, J.
Raleigh,
N.C
Fischel, L. W.
Chester, S. C.
Hogan, K. P.
Winston-Salem,
N.C
Flack, J. H.
Ednewille, N. C.
Harner, W. E.
Durham,
N. C
Fowler, L. M.
Greensboro, N. C.
Hughes, J. G.
Sanford,
N.C
One Hundred Thirty-three
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Hunter, T. P.
Warrenton,
N.
C.
Lynn. J. W.
Raleigh, N. C
Howard, C. E.
Pink Hill,
N.
c.
MacRae. J. D. .
Asheville. N. C
Jackson, W. H
Orange,
N.
c.
MacRae, J. P.
Laurinburg, N. C
Jacobi, D. B.
Wilmington,
N.
c.
McChild. S R
Cherrvville. N. C
Jarmin. F. R.
Seven Springs
N.
c:
McEwen, J. L.
Monroe, N. C
Jennings, E. D
Charlotte,
N
c.
McGee. J. M.
Mount Airy, N. C
Johnson. J. D.
Atkinson
N
c.
McLean. J. A.
Gibsonville. N. C
Johnson, J L.
Apex
N
c.
McPherson. E. L
Burlington, N. C
Johnston, C. S. .
Manteo
N
c.
McWhorter. E. H.
Chapel Hill, N. C
Kellum, E. L.
Norfolk.
V'a
Maehlmann. E. O.
Conover, N. C
Kendricks, H. B
Cherrvville
N
C.
Maddry. J. T.
Seaboard, N. C
Kent, S. G.
San lord
N
c
Mahler. R. F.
Winston-Salem, N. C
Kimberlv, D
Asheville
N
c.
Marris, C. O.
Atlantic, N. C
King, W. R.
Louisburg
N
c.
Marshburn. R. F.
Wallace. N. C
Riser. H L
Bessemer Citv.
N
c
Martin, F. A.
East Bend. N. C
Knight, B. H
Roper.
N
c
Martin. O. E.
East Bend, N. C
Lake, M. E.
Salisburv
N
c-.
Massey. W. J.
Princeton, N. C
Lancaster. C G
Lexington
N
c.
Matthews, W. E.
Charlotte, N. C
Lee, C. G. .
Asheville,
N
c.
Maxwell, J. E. .
Goldsboro, N. C
LeGrand, R. L
Wilmington.
N.
c
Me.mborne, E. B.
Kington, N. C
Lemmond, W. A. .
Matthews,
N
<:.
Menzies, A. S.
Hickorv, N. C
Lennon. W. E.
Manteo
N
c:
Mercer, A. L.
Wilmington, N. C
Lewis, W. M.
Greenville,
N
c
Merritt. A. H
Mount Airy, N. C
Lively. K. K.
Reidsville.
N
c.
Meyers. D L.
Jennings. N. C
London. W. L.
Pittsboro,
N
c
Mourane, J. H. .
. Durham, N. C
Long, J. G
Derita,
N.
c;
Mlirchison. W. C.
Greensboro. N. C
Love. J.
Henderson,
N
c.
Murdock, T. C. .
Salisbury, N. C
Love, J. W.
Raleigh.
N
<:.
Nash. M. W.
Winston-Salem. N. C
Lynn, C. W.
Raleigh
N
c.
Neeley. H. H.
-"feasant Garden. N. C
One Hundred Thirty-four
5:i.l, I, M, I.I, i, I, I
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Neville, H.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Ranson, R. L.
Huntersville, N. C
Newman, I. B.
Wilmington, N- C.
Ranson, W. E.
Huntersville. N. C
Noblin, R. L.
Neloan, N. C.
Reynolds, L. H.
Selma, N. C.
NORBURN, R. E. .
Acton, N. C.
Rigcans, H. M. .
Matthews, N. C.
Norfleet, A. C. .
Tarboro. N. C.
Rogers. E. A.
. Durham, N. C.
Norwood, J.
Goldsboro, N. C.
Rouse, N. .
LaGrange, N. C.
Oden, J. W.
Washington, N. C.
Royal, D. M.
Salemburg, N. C.
Ocburn, R. W. .
Kernersville, N. C.
Sanders. W. M. .
Smithfield. N. C.
Osburn, A. G.
Kinston, N. C.
Sawyer, B. .
Elizabeth City, N. C.
Overcash. W. E.
Statesville. N. C.
Scarborough, A. M.
Kinston, N. C.
Parham, C. F.
Henderson, N. C.
Scott, M.
Aurora, N. C.
Parker, C. J.
Raleigh. N. C.
Sharp, O. J.
Stony Point, N. C.
Parker, T. F.
Goldsboro, N. C.
Shaw, W. T.
Raleigh, N. C
Parks, C. M.
Rook wood. Tenn.
Shiffman, H. W.
Greensboro, N. C.
Peacock, F. L.
Fremont, N. C.
Sholl, J. L.
Holly Springs, N. C
Perkins, J. V.
Stokes, N. C.
Sims. A. H.
King's Mt.. N. C
Perry, F. L.
Louisburg, N. C.
Sisk. G. C. .
. Beaufort, N. C
Pharr, F.
Charlotte, N. C.
Smith, A. L.
Concord, N. C
Phepps. L. J.
Chapel Hill. N. C.
Smith, L. S.
Gray, N. C
Pickens, W. A.
High Point. N. C.
Smith, N. M.
. Raeford, N. C
Pickett, H. G.
Madison, N. C.
Smith, T. C.
Charlotte, N. C
Pipes, E. J.
Hickory, N. C.
Sparger, C B
Mount Airy, N. C
Porter, G. B.
Kernersville, N. C.
Spencer, H. R.
Siloam, N. C
Pressly, J L.
Charlotte, N. C.
Staley, A. W.
Greensboro, N. C
Price, H. .
Monroe, N. C.
Steed. R. W.
Richlands, N. C
Prince, W. M. .
Laurinburg, N. C.
Stimpson, R. T. .
Siloam, N. C
Procter, R. W. .
Lumberton. N. C.
Strudwick, E. R.
Hillsboro, N. C
Rand, C. G.
Garner, N. C.
SUMMEY, L. D.
Dallas, N. C
R anson. P. J.
Huntersville, N. C.
Sumner. C. R.
Asheville, N. C
One Hundred Thirty-five
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Randleman, N. C.
Ward, H T.
Hickorv,
N. C
Sumner, H. L.
Asheville, N. C.
Warren, J. .
Washington
N C
Sussman, B. L.
Washington, N. C.
Watson, G. C.
Enfield
N. C
SUTTLE, C. B.
Charlotte. N. C.
Wearn, J. S.
Charlotte
N.C
Swann. E. L.
Dandridge. Tenn.
Wearn. R M
Charlotte
N.C
SWEETMAN, E. M.
Knoxville, Tcnn.
Webb. W. D.
Oxford
N.C
Symmes, C. E.
Wilmington, N. C.
Weeks, R. S.
Whitaker
N.C
Taylor, R. C.
Sparta, N. C.
Wells. D. A.
Asheville
N.C
Tenney, E. \V.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
White. E. F.
Concord
n.c;
Tew, S B.
Godwin. N. C.
Wilkinson. G W.
Rockv Mount
N.C
Thomas, T. K.
Lenoir, N .C. .
Williamson, A.
Salemburg
N.C
Thompson, E.
Goldsboro, N. C.
Williamson, J. S.
Burlington
N.C
Thompson, E H
Goldsboro, N. C.
Wilson. W. A.
Rural Hall
N.C
Thompson. F.
Jacksonville, N. C.
Womble. W. B. .
Carv
N.C
Thorp, ID.
Rockv Mount, N. C.
Wood. J. E.
Edenton
N.C
Tillman. R. A.
Kinston, N. C.
Woodall. J. C.
Charlotte
N.C
Tomlin. P. .
Asheville, N. C.
Woodall, W. B. .
Benson
N.C
Toms, W. F.
Arden, N. C.
Wooten, R. M.
Favetteville
N.C
Tr ANSON, W. M.
Greensboro. N. C.
Wooten, S D
Goldsboro
N.C
Trotter, J. P.
Charlotte, N. C.
Wootten, W P.
Hickorv
N.C
Tuttle, F. R.
Lenoir, N C.
WlLLARD. W. P.
Wilmington
N.C
Underwood, J W.
Favetteville, N. C.
Williams. C. J.
Concord
N.C
Upchurch. W. H
Apex. N. C.
Williams. W K
Louisburg
N.C
Usher. J. T.
Chadboum. N. C.
Williams, W. W
Durham
N.C
Van Cannon, C. H.
Spencer. N. C.
Wixstead, J. L. .
Elm City
N.C
Van Landincham, R
Charlotte. V C.
Zerkle. G. C.
Dandridge
N.C
Venters, L. S.
Warrenton, N. C
One Hundred Thirty-six
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Wtrrra of ti^r iFrpsbman (Elasa
Alan Marshall McGee
A. Morris McDonald
Howard Franklin Green
President
\ ice-President
Secretary-Treasurer
One Hundred Thirty-nine
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Ader, O. L.
Alexander, E. J.
Alexander, L. V
Allen, D. E.
Allen, J. T.
Allen, O. H.
Anderson, J. M.
Anderson, R. F.
Ancel, C. C.
Angel, T. W.
Angell, D. H.
Apple, W. J.
Ashford, C. H.
Avery, W. J.
Aycock, F. B.
Aydlett, T. W.
Aydlett, W. R.
Bailey, W. M.
Barefoot, W. J.
Barnes, J. T.
Barnett, O. B.
Battle, J. S.
Battle, N. P.
Baxley, E. R.
Beal, S. K.
Beale, J.J.
Lexington,
Asheville.
Asheville,
Clarkton,
Gibsonville.
Qoldsboro,
Statesville,
Greensboro,
Bryson City,
Franklin.
Winston-Salem.
Burlington,
New Bern,
Morganton.
Fremont,
:abeth City.
Harbinger.
Salisbury,
Benson,
Wilson,
Spencer,
Tarboro,
Tarboro.
Roxobcl.
Lincolnton.
Poticasi.
Eli:
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
Beaudry. F. E.
Beaver, J. A.
Beddingfield. C.
Bell. R P.
Bellamy, C. G.
Best, J. H.
Black, G. W.
Blake. W. E
Blalock. V W.
Blount, J. D.
Blount, S. M.
Blue, W. E.
Brabson, S. P.
Bradford. J. H.
Braswell. J. C.
Britt. R.
Brittain, J. V.
Brockman, O. R.
Brown, E. W.
Brown, H. M.
Brown, J. M.
Brown. R. E.
Brown, W. L.
Bryan, S. D.
Bryan, W. C.
Bryson, H. J.
Winston-Salem,
Salisbury,
Wakefield,
Concord,
Wilmington,
Greensboro,
Stanley,
Burgaw.
Salisbury,
Wilson,
Washington,
Fayettevillc,
Franklin,
Huntersville.
Rocky Mount,
Lumbcrton.
Murphy,
Greensboro,
Rich Square,
Hillsboro.
Wilkesboro,
Statesville,
Greensboro,
Apex,
Newton Grove,
West Asheville,
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
One Hundred Forty
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Buice, S. D.
Burleson, M. E
Butler, D. C.
Caffee, C. M.
Camp, J. E.
Carmichael. R. C
Carmon, W. B.
C aston, F. S.
Cathey, R. A.
Cathey, W.
Champion, H. O.
Chapman, J. W.
Charnley, W. L
Cheek. V. R.
Cheeseborough, J
Choate, J. B.
Cline, J. I.
Coggeshall, W. D
Cole, R. E.
Coleman, C. W
Combs, J.J.
Comer, W. E.
Cooper, E B.
Cooper, J. H.
Cooper, M. Y.
Cooper, W. H.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Irwin, Tenn.
Rowland, N. C.
Swan Quarter, N. C.
. Talladega, Ala.
. Durham, N. C.
Gibsonville, N. C.
Concord. N. C.
. Salisbury, N. C.
. Charlotte, N. C.
Mooresboro, N. C.
. Charlotte, N. C.
. Charlotte, N. C.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Asheville, N. C
Huntersville, N. C.
Granite Falls, N. C.
Darlington, S. C.
Pittsboro, N. C.
Lyons, N. C.
Columbia, N. C.
New Castle, N. C.
Dunn, N. C.
Oxford, N. C.
Henderson, N. C.
Laurinburg, N. C.
Corbett, H. W.
Crawford, W. F
Creech, G L.
Crowson, 0. F.
Cunningham, H. C
Dabbs. H. L.
Dalton, P. H.
Daniels, S. F.
Davis, D. G.
Davis, G. G.
Davis, R. M.
Davis, R. P.
Davis, S. L
Dellinger, E. E.
DeRossett, M. B
Dickson, G. G.
Ditmore, H. B.
Dobbins, W. E.
Donnahoe, J. D
Downing, A. O.
Dry, C. H .
Duval, L. D.
Eagles, J. B.
Eaton, G. W.
Edwards, P. H.
Elkins, W. J.
Whitakers,
Mebane,
LaGrange,
Burlington,
Durham.
Lilesville,
Concord,
New Bern,
Greensboro,
East Bend,
Warrenton,
Kinston,
High Point,
Cherryville,
Wilmington,
Raeford,
Bryson City,
Yadkinville,
Asheville,
Newark,
Concord,
Charlotte,
Waltonburg,
Hickory.
Darlington,
Elkton,
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
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N. C.
N. C.
N.J.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
S. C.
N. C.
One Hundred Forty-one
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Winston-Salem
N
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Gray. R L.
Encstrum, E. F.
New Bern
N
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Green, H. F.
Encstrum, T. T.
New Bern
N
c.
Groce, T. A.
Enloe, S. W.
Dillsboro
N
c.
Groome, G. M.
Ervin, D. W.
Newton
N
c.
Gullick, J. C.
Essie, A. F.
Chapel Hill
N
c.
GUNTER. T. B.
Everett, J. L.
Rockingham
N
c.
Hall, S. C.
Fanning. F. D.
Durham
N
c.
Halsey. L. K.
Felton. R. L.
Favetteville
N
c.
Hambrick, R. T.
Fesperman, G. V.
East Spencer
N
c.
Hampton. G. C.
Field, H. H.
Asheville
N
c-
Hamrick. F. W. .
Flemminc, C. C. .
Fuquav Springs
N
c.
Harding, T. L.
FoGLEMAN, H. S.
Burlington
N
c.
Harding, W. K.
Foust, D. F.
High Point
N
c.
Hargett, H. B
Fronnerberger, P. C.
Bessemer City
N
c.
Harrell. W. H.
Fulton, R. L.
Favetteville
N
c.
Harris. E J
Gaither, W. H
Hartford
N
c.
Harris, W. L.
Gambill, W. J.
Pinev Creek,
N
c.
Harris, W. T.
Gattis, W. F.
Louisburg
N
c.
Harris, W. V.
Gay, B. S. .
Jackson
N.
c.
Hartshorn, M. L.
Gay, R. B,
Gumberrv
N
c.
Havner, A. S.
Gaylord, J. F.
Phoenix
N
c.
Heath, F. C.
Gholson. T. P.
Henderson
N
c.
Henderson, W. T
Glenn, J. W.
Asheville,
N
c.
Hendrix, O. C.
Graham, T. P
Charlotte
N
c.
Herron, F. J.
Grainger, J. W. .
Kinston
N
c.
Higdon, L. C.
Raleigh,
Wilmington
Candler,
Greensboro
Belmont
Sanford
Oxford,
Piney Creek,
Roxboro,
Chapel Hill,
Shelby,
Yadkinville,
Charlotte,
. Trenton,
Mamie,
Englehard,
Henderson,
Mt. Gilead.
Salisbury,
Asheville,
crford College,
Statesville,
Hickory.
Advance.
Skyland.
Franklin.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
One Hundred Forty-two
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HlGHSMITH. J. F.
Fayetteville, N. C.
Johnson, E. W. .
Kipling. N. C.
Hill, G. A.
. Beaufort. N. C.
Johnson, J. T.
. Durham, N. C.
Hodge, L. L.
Burlington, N. C.
Justice, R. H.
Greensboro, N. C.
Holden, W. L.
Wilmington, N. C.
Justus, G. E.
Flat Rock. N. C.
HOLDERNESS, H. .
Tarboro. N. C.
Keith, A. R.
Hendersonville, N. C.
Holloman. W. M.
Ahoskie. N. C
Keith, J. E.
North Side, N. C.
Holmes, C. C.
Council, N. C.
Kelly, H. T.
Fayetteville, N. C.
Holt, P. K.
Burlington. N. C.
Kerr. J. Y.
Warrenton, N. C.
Holt, W. P.
Duke. N. C.
Key, D. E. .
Elkin, N. C.
HONEYCUTT, H. M.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
KlMBROUGH, J. W.
Raleigh, N. C.
Hook, W. W.
Charlotte. N. C.
King, A. K.
Hendersonville, N. C.
Horne, W. H.
Rockv Mount. N. C.
King, W. K.
Louisburg, N. C
HORSFIELD, G. M.
Oxford. N. C.
Koontz, R. G.
Mocksville, N. C
HOSEA, W .
Goldsboro, N. C.
Lankford, G. W.
Harmony, N. C
Howard. T. S.
. Pink Hill, N. C.
Leak, J P
Rockingham. N. C
Humphrey, B E
Wilmington, N. C.
Leftwich, M F.
Biltmore. N. C
HUNGERFORD, L. P.
Charlotte, N. C.
Lehman, E. E.
Roanoke Rapids, N. C
Hunt, E. C.
Lexington, N. C.
Lenderman, P. H.
Wilkesboro. N. C
Hunt, W. E.
Oxford. N. C.
Leonard, G H
Lexington, N. C
Huss, W. H
Chcrrvville. N. C.
Lillycrop, W. A.
Charlotte, N. C
Hutchinson. E. P.
Roberdale, N. C.
Linker, W. M.
Salisbury, N. C
Hutchinson, J. F.
. Roxobel. N. C.
Linney, Z. .
Charlotte, N. C
Irvin, E. N.
Charlotte, N. C.
Little, T. A.
Marshville, N. C
Isley, G. R.
Burlington, N. C.
Little, L. M.
Statesville, N. C
James, A. E.
Wilson, N. C.
Livengood. B. A.
Winston-Salem, N. C
Jernigan. E. C. .
Benson, N. C.
Lyerly, W. R
Asheville, N. C
One Hundred Forty-three
KJ.Iilil.M,! .: . ■ ' ■ '
,1.1.1, 1.I.I.M.I.I.Iil.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.lil.l.i.M ' '. , .l.l.l.l.fl
E'.IM'I'I'I'ITITiTI'I'l
'H9HMMTT mmaO-lTiiTr.iririTiMiTmrn
McAuley. O. C. .
Huntersville
N
C.
Merritt, H. H. .
Wilmington, N. C
McCain, W. F.
Waxhaw
N
C.
Micah, J.
Goldsboro, N. C
McCorkie, E. H.
Charlotte
N
c.
Miller, A. A.
Goldsboro, N. C
McCoy, G. W. .
Asheville
N
c.
Misenheimer, E. A.
Concord. N. C
McCraw, J. T.
Wilson
N
c.
Mitchell, J. G .
Oxford, N. C
McDonald, A. M.
Charlotte
N
c.
Mitchell, W. E.
Hickory, N. C
McDonald, H. C.
Hamlet
N
c.
Mitchum, W. C. .
Bessemer Citv, N. C
McGee, A. M.
Goldsboro
N
c.
Monk, H. L.
Salisbury, N. C
McLeman, D. C
Chapel Hill
N
c.
Morris, F. .
. Gastonia, N. C
McMichael, J. S.
Wentworth
N
c.
Moser, A. M
Swannanoa, N. C
McMillan, C. V
Parkton
N
c-
Neville, C. H.
Whitakers, N. C
McMullan. W. O.
Elizabeth Citv
N
c.
Newberne. J. S.
Olds, N. C
McMurphy, E. L.
Columbus
N
c.
Nixon, J. G.
Hertford, N. C
Marcom, J. L.
Carv,
N
c
Orr. A. S. .
Charlotte, N. C
Mardre. G. L.
Windsor,
N
c
Parham. S. J.
Louisburg, N. C
Martin, D. D.
Yadkinville
N
c
Parker, D. B.
Robersonville, N. C
Martin. E. L.
Charlotte
N
c
Parker, W. B. .
Monroe, N. C
Martin, J. B.
East Bend
N
c.
Parrott, J- M.
Kinston, N. C
Matheson. R. A.
Raeford
N
c.
Pate, J. M.
Goldsboro, N. C
Matthews, C I.
Clinton
N
c.
Pearson. N. H. .
Fairmont, N. C
Matthews. R. E
Wilson
N
c
Peele, E. H
. Manteo, N. C
Mauney, C. G.
Maiden,
N
G.
Pemberton, H. L.
Concord, N. C
Maxwell, S W.
Charlotte
N
c.
Penton. H. A.
Wilmington, N. C
Mebane, W. M. .
Newton
N
c.
Perry, C H.
Balsam, N. C
Mendenhall. J. H
Greensboro
N
c.
Phillips, B. D. .
State Road. N. C
Merritt, C. Z.
New Bern
N
c.
Phillips, L. V.
Columbia. S. C
One Hundred Forty-four
lil 1 1 ill .hhlil.M.lihl.liliU.lilil.l.l.liliU.lil.U.Uil.Uil.l.U.lil.M.I
TTTTTTTTTra
H'lTITH'ITHTIT^fUQYAmCTY W& 20
'I'i'i rri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'ri'i'i'i'ri'K
Pickle, R. L
Advance
N
C.
Shirley. E R
Snow Hill, N. C
PoiNDEXTER. C. C.
Franklin
\
c.
Sinclair, D. A.
Wilmington, N. C
Powell, W. E
Wilmington
N
c.
Smiley, T. B.
Brvson City, N. C
Prescott, M. B.
Aurora
N
c.
Smith. C. C.
Hollv Springs, N. C
Price. R. C.
Greensboro
N.
c.
Smith. C. G.
Tarboro, N. C
Privett, A.
Wakefield
N.
c.
Smith. C. U.
Capron, Va
Purrington. P. B.
Scotland Keck.
N
<:.
Smith. C. W.
Whiteville, N. C
Racsdall, J. E
Florence
N.
c.
Smith, G. H.
Wilmington, N. C
Rand. C. H.
Garner.
N.
<:.
Smith. J. M.
Greenville, N. C
Rawls, H. J.
Robersonville,
N.
c.
Smith. S. S.
Fremont, N. C
Ray, J. \V .
Waynesville
N.
c.
Smith. S. W.
Charlotte, N. C
Reaves, R. .
. Raeford
N.
c.
Smith, W. L.
Greensboro, N. C
Reavis, P A
Louisburg
N
c.
Smoot, W. B.
Salisbury, N. C
Redding, J. L.
High Point
N
o.
Spain. J. H.
Greenville, N. C
Reynolds, \Y. R
Oak Ridge
N
c:
Spaugh. R. E.
Winston-Salem, N. C
Rhue, J. R.
Stella
N
c.
Speck, T. W.
York, S. C
RlCKERT, J. A.
Asheville
N
c.
Spruill. J. W.
Sanitorium, N. C
Rike, R. C.
Randleville
N
c.
Stalvey, A. B
. Roxboro, N. C.
Ritchie, W. A.
Concord
N
c.
Stevenson, S. H.
Loray, N. C.
Ross, H. L.
Greensboro
N
c:
Stondemire. S. A.
Spencer, N. C.
ROYALL, J. A.
Beaufort
N
c
Stribling. J. W .
. Concord, N. C
Sasser, K. C
Kenly
N
c
Strickland, N. R.
Middlesex, N. C.
Scarborough. A. M
Kinston
N
c.
Stroud, C. E.
Greensboro, N. C
Scruggs, W. J.
Brevard
N
c.
Stroupe, C. R
Altamont, N. C.
Shepard, N. W. .
Wilmington
N
c.
Stroupe, F. L.
Altamont, N. C.
Shepard, T. H.
Eden ton
N
c.
Swink, H.
China Grove, N. C
One Hundred Forty-five
^.MiMiMilihhlih Uhhl.lihhhhhhlilil lihhliM.I'Milil.M.U.Iil.Mil.lililililil.U.M.Iil.l.U.UiM'
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[119WKCTY vm ao-jHTmw
I'l'I'I'I'I'I'IT
R L.
E. L.
SWINK. W. J.
Sylvester, R. D
Taylor, J. M.
Taylor, W. J.
Teacue, L. E.
Thomas, C. A.
Thompson, E. A.
Thompson, G. W
Thompson, H. K
Thompson. R. A
Thompson,
Thornton
Thornton, T. A.
Tomlinson, D G
Trivette, \V M.
Turner, T.
Uzzell, L. V.
Uzzell, P. .
Vickers, W. G.
Waddell, R L
Wade, J. J.
Ward. H. T.
Warrick. J.
Waugh, M. S.
Waugh, H. E.
Weatherly, W
C.
China Grove.
Richlands,
Chocowinity.
Ruthcrfordton.
High Point.
Burlington.
Greensboro,
Goldsboro,
Jacksonville,
Wilson.
Greensboro,
Mebanc,
Fayetteville,
Troy,
Lewis^ [lie
High Point,
Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill.
Durham.
Scottvillc,
Dunn,
Hickory,
Sioux,
High Point,
North Wilkesboro,
Brown Summitt,
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C,
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N c:
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
Weaver, H. J.
Webb. W. D.
Weitzel, F. J.
Whedbee, S. M
White. C. S.
Whitehlrst. R. L
Whitener. D. J.
Wicker. M E.
WlDENHOUSE, M
Wiles, W E
Williams, C. E.
Williams, H T.
Williams. L P.
Williamson. B. N
Wilmoth. R. G.
WOODARD, W. V.
Workman, F. L.
Wortham. B. B.
Yates. ] G
Yates. W J
Yelverton, O. W
Yoi nc R. G. •
Young. R W.
Young, V. .
Young, W. D.
Youngblood, S. H
Olin. N C.
. Oxford, N. C.
Tuscumbia. Ala.
Hertford, N. C.
Stovall, N C.
Rocky Mount. N. C.
Hickory, N. C
Sanford. N. C.
Concord, N. C.
Furches. N C.
Benson, N. C.
Hickory, N, C.
Charlotte, N. C.
Louisburg, N. C.
State Road, N. C.
. Wilson, N. C.
Burlington, N. C.
Reithbend, Va.
Asheville, N. C.
Charlotte, N. C.
Fremont, N. C.
Henderson. N. C.
Angier, N. C.
Durham, N. C.
. Durham, N. C.
Charlotte. N. C.
One Hundred Forty-six
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GDfftrFra nf ttie Ham ^rijnnl
g>rninr Saw (Class
Frederick Oscar Bowman .
Zebulon Vance McMillan
Frank Oliver Ray
Fannie Elizabeth McKenzie
dluutor iHatti QIlaHB
Ernest McArthur Currie
Lyn Bond .
Charles Leslie Nichols
Robert Lee Whitmire
President
Vice-President
Treasurer
Secretary
President
\ ice-President
Treasurer
Secretary
One Hundred Forty-eight
ilJihlJil.l.l.l.l.lilJiliKlil.Ul.lil.l.l.l.l.l.hl.lilil.l.l.lilil.l.l.hl.lil.l.lilillllhllllhllllhlllilllllllllllllllllllllll'lll'I'rl
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JESSE VENON BAGGETT
Salemburg, N. C.
Age, 26; Weight, 13;; Height, 5 jeet 10 inches
Phi Society, President 141; Sampson County Club. President;
North Carolina Club, President (6); International Polity Club;
Freshman Debate; Commencement Debate; IntracoUegiate
Debate (4); Debating Council, President (4t; Student Council
15); Campus Cabinet 15); Manager Swain Hall 15. til; A. F. &
A, M-; Knights of Pythias; Amphoterothen.
<t> A *.
BAGGETT S college career embodies the spirit
which President Graham was pleased to call
"nothing second best". He has conclusively
proven his abilities in many respects, having
played a conspicuous part incampuslife. In every
phase of his student activity, the marked ability
of leadership has been brought to the forefront.
Furthermore, he is a man of big. democratic
ideals of service — he senses the beauty of a life of
fraternity. Finally, he's strictly "on the square",
and wears the stainless garments of a gentleman.
GRAHAM ARTHUR BARDEN
Burgaw, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 17;; Height, 5 feet 7% inches
Freshman Football; Varsity Football (i, 4); Coach Freshmai
Football 13); German Club; Manning Law Club; Wearer
N. C.
* A *;
of
X
HAPPY" is a wonder on the football field,
and he has had the honor of having been
on the team that has defeated Virginia twice in
as many attempts. But in law, he seems to be
as good as in football You know, he tried re-
forming down at Rocky Mount. It was a near
tragedy. They say "Hap" caught the first train
out, and didn't care which way it went. With
such an eye for business, we predict a great
future for him in law.
One Hundred Forty-nine
^il.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.ltl.l.ltl.lililil.ltl.l.l.l.l.l.lilil.l.l.liltl.l.l.lihhl.l.lil.l.l.lil.ltl.li
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'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITTTT
FREDERICK OSCAR BOWMAN
Cranberry. N. C.
Age, 2-; Weight, 17$; Height, ; feet 8 inches
B.L.. Berea Collece. '14; President Senior Law Class; President
Clark Law Cluh; North Carolina Cluh.
<P A *.
"JUDGE" dropped in upon us quite informally
j last spring, after having been discharged from
the Army, but was not long in forming
friendships. Robust of figure, strong and active
of intellect, and withal courteous and kind to his
associates, he is of the type of manhood that
finds a way or makes one. He attended Berea
College in Kentucky where he obtained his col-
lege training, but he distinctly and unequivocally
asserts that both by birth and by choice he is a
"Tar Heel born, and a Tar Heel bred".
HENRY EM.Y1ETT BREWER, Jr.
Rocky Mount. N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 160: Height, 5 feet 6 inches
Nash County Club; German Club; Cabin.
S X
JUDGE", "Chief Justice", "Beef" — to any of
the above he will answer, and if you are in
trouble this portly young gentleman from
Rocky Mount is only too glad to help. He came
to us two years ago from N. C. State, having de-
cided that Winston-Salem was nearer to Chapel
Hill than to Raleigh. Central's inability to get a
long-distance call through occasionally is his
only worry. Care free and easy-going, he wears
a smile which lew can resist.
One Hundred Fifty
EJilHilililihlil lihlihlililHilihlililihlililililihlihhlilililil.l.ltl.hl.lil.l.lJ.lililil.l.l.lilil.l.l.lilil.M.M.I.l.M.M.n
E'.IM I I I'I'HHTT
|H9TOSTOTY Tftgft2Q.j
ri'iM'i'iTn-i'i'Pi'i'i'i'i'frrriu
EDWIN BRIDGES
Charlotte. N. C.
Age, 26; Weight, 14;; Height, 5 feet 1 1 inches
Secretary Junior Law Class: Mecklenburg County Club; Class
Football; North Carolina Club; A E. F. Club.
ex.
WE do not exaggerate by saying that in
Edwin we find a constant source of all
information. His strong personality, together
with all the qualities that go to make up a true
gentleman and a sterling friend, have won for
him friends everywhere. He is a student of
note, an orator of repute, and above all a true
sport. Some day when he tempers down his
social proclivities, the world will look with amaze-
ment upon the materialized dreams of this
resourceful vouth.
LOUS HEYL CLEMENTS
Salisbury, N. C.
Age, 2;; Weight, 140; Height. ; feet 7 inches
Glee Club. 14-16; Band, 15-'lfi: Cvm Team. '16-19; Secretary
German Club. '17; President Battle Law Club.
N A *; * A O
TOUE ", better known as "Clem", is another
•I—/ of the old guard who left in '17 when Herr
Hohenzollem was dreaming funny dreams. When
war was declared. "Louie" became excited for
the first time in his life and left college at once
for a training camp. He soon won his commis-
sion, and after two years of hard fighting in
South Carolina, England, France and Germany,
he is back for his LL.B. A good student, a fine
mixer, an accomplished musician, he is sure to
make a mark for himself in the legal world.
One Hundred Fifty-one
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H'l'I'I'l'I'I'I'ITI'I'H'H'l'IW
H9WMTY YA« 20.teriT;rirnTi'i m
CHARLES RUFUS DANIEL
Weldon, N. C.
Age, 25; Weight, 162; Height, ; feet 8 inches
Phi Society; Y. M. C. A.; Football Squad, '14; Coach, Freshman
Football and Ila.ehall. 15. '16,17; German Club; Leader Gini-
ghoul Ball. '17; President Pan-Hellenic Council, 'Hi. 17; Presi-
dent James Iredell Law Club, '19, '20; Oasis; Coop; Gimghoul.-
KA.
CHARLIE" is a quiet, unobtrusive sort — the
type that one expects to find in the ideal
Carolina man. and campus politics have no fas-
cination for him. His versatile personality and
many-sided abilities are manifest whenever he
favors us with his presence. In the ball-room or
class-room, in athletics or along the Rhine, he is
a "star" performer. To know him is to expect
great things of him.
One Hundred Fi/ly-two
HUGH DORTCH
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 168; Height. ; feet 8}4 inches
Wayne County Club; A. E. F. Club; German Club; Battle Law
Club; Varsity Football; Manager Law Basketball; Leader
Spring German Club Dance; '«0; Wearer of N. C; Pan-Hellenic
Council; Coop; Minotaur; Gorgon's Head.
z*.
HL'GH has the distinction of being the first
Carolina man to enlist when war was
declared. Whether in the Law Building, on the
football field, or the ball-room floor he is sure to
shine. His ever-ready wit and modesty make
him well liked by everybody. That same spirit
of fight and determination which won for him
his N. C. last fall, will some day place him up
among the foremost barristers of the State.
F.ilililililililil I i hlililililtlilihUiiiiililiLlililil.l.lii.liM.MJtl.ltlJil.l.lM.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.M.hl.l.l.lihl.l.c
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(H9HMMTT lffll20.)
I'l'I'I'l'I'I'I'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITITTT
WALTER CONNOR FEIMSTER. Jr.
Newton, N C.
Age, 21; Weight, 16;: Height, 6 feel
A.B.. '19: Di Society; Catawba County Club. President (4);
Manager Varsity Football; Varsity Tennis (3); Varsity Baseball
■J. 3, 4|. Captain Si; Commencement Marshal; Chief Com-
mencement Ball Manager; Vice-President Class t : Busine*-
Manager Yacketv Yack 131; Athletic Council 4. 51; Latin-
American Club; German Club; Wearer of N. C; Pan-Hellenic
Council <4); Golden Fleece.
* A <J>: 2 A E.
AFTER having successfully completed his litc-
l rary course, Walter is back studying law.
and playing baseball in the spring as a side line;
for the former he will receive an LL.B.. and for
the latter, another star will be added to the col-
lection underneath the old N. C. monogram on
his sweater. If his career in life is as successful
as his college career, many of us may soon cast
votes for him for governor, and — yea, verily —
perhaps for even higher positions.
ELLIS SCOTT HALE
Moist Airy, N. C.
Age, 2j; Weight, 148; Height, ; feet 10 inches
Trinity College. '16-'I8; Surry County Club. Treasurer (4); Ger-
man Club; Glee Club (4); Mandolin Club (4); Pan-Hellenic
Council (4); Coop.
B o 2; * A *; n K A.
SCOTT'S pleasing personality and spirit of
good fellowship have gained a host of friends
for him in the year and a half which he has spent
on the Hill. After completing his academic
work at Trinity, he went into the Army, where
he soon won a commission. When the war was
over, Scott came to Carolina to study law. In
spite of his fondness for the social life, he has
not let pleasure interfere with his work — a trait
which promises great success as a lawyer.
One Hundred Fifty-three
^'lllJllll^lil.l.l.l.l.lJJ.I.I.IM.l.lil.l.lJJ.iJJJ.IM.IJ.I.lJJ.I.lililJ.lJ.lJilillllllhhllillililihlil^lrnhlJllllllllllirl
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(119WKCTY wrc20.)
'I'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'nr
JOHN BRIGHT HILL
Warsaw, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 166; Height, ; feet ti inches
A.B.. '17; Plii Society; German Club; Commencement Ball
Manager; President McGehee Law Club.
* A *; K 2.
T B." is a good mixer, a good student and a
J • well rounded man. He has a good insight
into the fine points of the law and is always
ready to argue some new point. He is a forceful
speaker and a leader in the Law Club work. A
good foundation in the fundamentals of law
received at Harvard, coupled with his personality
and ability, forms a rare combination which will
make him equal to any task or responsibility.
One Hundred Fifty-four
HINES ARTHUR JONES
Greensboro, N. C.
Age, lq; Weight. i8y. Height, j feel 1 1 inches
Guilford County Club; Di Society; Manning Law Club. Clerk;
North Carolina Club; Freshman Football; Varsity Track Team;
Varsity Football Squad.
ARTHLT<. the youngest member of our class.
■*»• has divided his time between the pigskin
and the sheepskin. His willingness to place his
athletic strength upon the altar of his Alma
Mater and his determination to achieve knowl-
edge have caused him to be well known among
the student body and have won for him the
admiration and respect of all with whom he has
come in contact. With the ability and deter-
mination to succeed. that he possesses, we count
on him to show us a real lawyer.
"■- ' ■ ' ' ' ■ ' ' I ■ I I ' ' ' ' ' I ' I . I . i . ' ■■ I ■ 1 1 1 ! ' ■ 1 1 1 1 1 . 1^ K 1 . 1 . 1 , 1 , 1 , i . I , I , i , I , I , h I ■ ! , j ■ ! ■ ' , [ , ,' : ] ■ ! , [ , ! , ! 1 1 , 1 , ^ , I , ! ■; I U , I ! i ■■ t ■, i ! I , i , 1 , i ; I i 1 ; i - '. ; ; I , i ; 1 ■ if
Ij-'PI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'IMTI'I'ITITTW
f"H9TMlETY HM2Q-J
I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'lL
GEORGE WATTS KING
Charlotte, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feet 10 inches
Mecklenburg County Club; Horner Cluh.
* A *; 2 X.
']V"ING George VI" has the ability to look
•T\- wiser, at times (pourquoi is a secret known
only to himself) than the most learned of learned
judges. George is a familiar figure on the cam-
pus, which he has frequented, "lo! these many
years". Being from the self-styled "metropolis
of the Carolinas", he is naturally a little proud of
answering the query "What part of the State
are you from1" in a most nonchalant and assured
tone — "Charlotte" — with the '"of course" im-
plied. It might be added that our subject is
one of the sharks in Pat Winston's insurance
class. A loyal friend, a booster of what is best
at Carolina, a square comrade — here's luck and
success to you, "King George "!
DENNIS BRYAN LEATHERWOOD
Waynesville, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 150; Height, 5 feel 11 inches
I>i Society; Sophomore Debj
dent; North Carolina Club; (
" I "O know him is to like him". Well may his
1 classmates look upon him with pride.
Dennis has every essential that goes to make up
a true leader of men. He is a marked student,
an eloquent speaker and a profound and deep
thinker. He possesses a mind of unusual bril-
liancy, one which is ever alert and keen in coping
with legal problems. In this man we see im-
bedded the influential power and ideals which
will blaze the trail for a successful career.
One Hundred Fifty-five
Eniiii.iii.i.i.i.iii.u
U.liU.l.l.l.li
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■ nniiMiini
EM'I'I'IM'IM'I'l'IM'I'H'I'HTTTT
ffl9WMTY mm2Q.|
'I'lTI'ITI'l'
TI'I'IT
JOHN HILL PAYLOR
Laurinburg, N. C.
Age, 2_j; Weight, 140; Height, ; feet S inches
Scotland-Marlboro County Club; Battle Law Club.
JOHN had been with us but a few days when we.
recognized in him an unusual legal talent. He
is a sincere and persistent worker, and above
all a man that can be relied upon. Men of his
type ride no skyrockets to glory, toot no horns
of self-praise, yet after all are foremost in life's
battle. His friendly nature and splendid char-
acter have won him many friends. We are
bound to hear great things of John.
"••:', ,",y "f, ',',7 m
One Hundred Fifty-six
ELY JACKSON PERRY
KlNSTON, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 137; Height, 5 feet 7 inches
A.B., '17; Phi Society; President Tennis Association (4); Presi-
dent Lenoir County Club (41; Class Tennis Team 13. 4); Adviser
Battle Law Club; (Jerman Club.
* A <J>;
X
IN college, Ely's specialties were philosophy and
business, and now add a natural legal mind
with two years' knowledge received at the
Harvard Law School, and you will have a closed
corporation with nothing lacking. He inspects
the papers, daily, and is never happier than
when talking business or law. A jovial and
generous disposition, a lover of high principles
and square dealings, a sound thinker and a
steady worker — with such a combination and
with his ability to handle business, can success
escape him?
lilthhliltltliltil JJ.IiUJJil.U, I, U.UJ.UtUtl, 1,1,1,1, 1, 1,1,1,1,1,1, 1, 1,1,1, 1,1, iihhliUtltlihlilililili
jj-TI'I'I'I'IMTI i'l'ITI'ITI'I'l1
191IAWOT YA«2(D.priT.iTiTnTriri^
J. CARLTON PITTMAN
Gates, N. C.
Age, iq; Weight. 140; Height, 6 feet
Phi Society. Vice-President (3): Sophomore Debate; Junior
Oratorical Contest; Class Baseball ll. ■.>. ;t); Class Basketball
(1, 2); German Club.
GATES lays claim to this member of our class,
and well may she be proud of her claim.
With the fair sex "Pitt" is a star. In the class-
room, in the Literary Society, and in other
activities he has shown those qualities which
have revealed him as a good friend and a pains-
taking worker. He leaves behind him here a
record of marked achievements, and as he goes
forth to grapple with the problems of his chosen
profession, we predict for him an equal success.
lOOK AT IT ASA/tf SOYS - ///T'S
SIDNEY EDWARD PRUDEN
Greensboro, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 13;; Height, ; jeet 8 inches
Guilford County Club; German Club; Law Club; Class Basket-
ball; Track Squad; Cabin.
AT!!.
SID" came to Carolina in the dark days of the
S. A. T. C, and served Uncle Sam some-
where in the region of the New Dorms. After
being discharged from the Service, he entered
the Law School where he has since remained,
making a very creditable record In the Law
School he had the name of "Judge" thrust upon
him, and by which he is known on the campus
and throughout the State. "Judge" is a man of
sterling character, and the fact that he is from
Greensboro is nothing to his discredit. A social
lion during Junior Week, a "bull" during exams,
a good scout on all occasions — that's "Judge" —
one of the most popular and most capable on the
Carolina green.
One Hundred Fifty-seven
J''Mnl|liiili1ilililiiiliiilhilhiliiil|l|l|l|,iii,iiil|,|l|,iii, i,i,i, iiiihiti.i.i.i.i.i, 1,1,1,1.1, 1,1,1, 1, i,i,i,i,i,i.i,i,i.i,i,i,i,i,i!
TI'IM'I'I'I'I'I'ITI'I'I'I'I
^^(fl9WKSTY m«20]
ITI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'IM'I'ITT
FRANK OLIVER RAY
Selma, N. C.
Age, 2_j; Weight, 14;: Height, ; feet 10 inches
Phi Society; Johnston County Club, Treasurer 11), Secretary
.". Vice-President (S), President (4); North Carolina Cluri;
RuHii. Law Cluh; Treasurer Law Sell,,,, I; Wake K,,rest College-
COLIRTEOL'S in manner and pleasant in
speech, we liked Frank from the beginning.
In his fine sense of fair play and social comrade-
ship, in his power to think straight and keep
his head in trying situations, in his ability to
apply himself to the task before him — be it
courtship, "bull session", or study of the law —
and in his keen judgment of men and affairs,
we find the basis of the esteem in which we hold
him and our confidence in his complete success.
KATHRINE McDIARMID ROBINSON
Fayetteville, N. C.
Age, 26; Weight, 130; Height, y feet 7 inches
A.B.. North Carolina College for Women, 'IS; Columbia Uni-
versity Summer Sessions. '17. 1!.; Washington College of Law,
'IS, 19; U. N. C. Women's Association; Ruflin Law Club.
KATHRINE is a happy combination of a
striking personality, a keen sense of humor
and the power of making friends. Although a
great talker, she has proven that she can hold a
still tongue when she wants to, by the confi-
dential position she held with a secret govern-
mental service during the war. She has also
shown her executive ability by the successful
waj she managed the co-eds' Hallowe'en enter-
tainment. To pfcture her as one of the best
business lawyers in the State, would only be
what she deserves, but we fear that, like others
of her sex. she will follow Cupid's call and grace
the home in a truly womanly manner.
**^
One Hundred Fifty-eight
5,1.1. I.I, I, I, I, I.I, 1, 1,1,1,1,
rTTTTnTTTra
uniinniini
I, I.I.I, I.I
lllillMillliliMilililllilililililililllllilililllililili.
MMTITI'l'I'l'I'nWf'l'IM'I'l'l'l
|H91lMMTY TflgK 2Q-|n3!nTci!i:
■I'l'I'I'I'I'ITI'llLLT;
BYNUM EDGAR WEATHERS
Shelby, N. C.
Age, 24; Weight, 14s, Height, 5 feet q}4 inches
l)i Society; Cleveland C ity Club, President; Piedmont Club.
Corresponding Secretary; North Carolina Club; Dramatic
V»snci.itinn. [..1 x\ l.iliran.iM It. 41; Square and Compass Club;
Kmelitl I Klan. Haiti.' Law Club.
IN the Library of the Law Building, where
there is "many a quaint and curious volume
of forgotten law", Bynum is most often to be
found, reading his letters or what the judges
have to say. Bynum, together with the other
members of the Law School, will tell you that
the life of a lawyer is one of application. He is
an authority on the subject of insurance, and
will probably specialize in that branch of the
law. He likes the girls, too, and says he is going
to marry a pretty one some day. A good speaker
and a good mixer, he cannot help but rise in his
chosen profession.
GEORGE ALEXANDER YOUNCE
Spencer, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 160; Height. 6 feet
A.B.. '19; Di Sochty: North Carolina Club; President Athletic
Association (5); Rowan Count v Club, President ; Athletic Coun-
cil (5); Varsity Baseball (i. :S. +); Elisha Mitchell Scientific
Society; Latin-American Clnh; Clark Law Chili; CermanJChih;
Wearer of N. C; Cabin.
2 A E.
JOJO" has those traits which are characteristic
onlv of leaders of men. and is well fitted to
make a successful attorney-at-law. His con-
sistent playing on the baseball field for three
years will long be remembered by lovers of the
diamond at Carolina. "Jo's" good looks have
caused many a sensation among the fair sex, and
it is a wonder that they have not carried him
off long ago. We expect to see him at the top of
his profession in the course of a few years.
One Hundred Fifty-nine
Bilililtlililtlil.l.ltl.l.l.liliUl.ltl.l.l.in.l.l.ht.l.l.l.t.l.l.l.l.l.hl.l.l.lJ.I.I.UI.l.lJ.l.l.lililil.lJiltl.hl.ltlail.lihlilihlih.LJ
IMMM'I'I'I'I'l'IMM'I'IM'I'IM'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'IMM'I'I'I'IM'MI'l'I'I'I'l'I'I'IM'l' 'I'l'I'I'ITI'I'l'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ME
■■■UHHi
7i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i,i.i.i,i.i.i.i.i.i.ul|.i.i.i.il|lillil.liitili.l.ili.ilii^iiiii.i.i am
^.'I'l'l't'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l't'l'l'l'!1
[ii9^mmty nam 20}
'F'i'i'iiL:
I'I'I'M.jJ
Humor Saw (ElaaH
glass iSoll
Allen, W. R.
Baker. H. D.
Bass, N. R.
Bell, C. B.
Bond, L. .
Boney, D. C.
Bradford, M. D
Bradshaw, L. B
Branch, W. V.
Brantley, D.
Brawley, H.
Brooks. I. E.
Brittain. J. XL
Bueck, H.
COLIER, W. Y.
CUMMINGS, A. E.
CURRIE, E. M.
D ALTON, J. W. '
Denning, L. K.
Edmundson, P. B
Edwards, C. H.
Edwards, E. T.
Fagge, H. L.
Fleetwood. A. R
FOLGER, F.
Foster, J. W.
Harris, W. D.
Harvey, \V. F.
Hawfield, R. R
Hicks, J. B.
Hodges, D. XI.
Holding, C. B.
I sear, D. W.
Jernigan, M. M
Johnson, S. D.
Kennedy, J. C
King, A. H.
Goldsboro, N. C.
Rocky Mount, N. C.
Lucania, N. C.
Troy, N. C.
. Edenton. X. C.
Kinston, N. C.
S. Wilmington. Del.
. Graham. N.'C.
. Fairmont. N. C.
Spring Hope, N. C.
Spring Hope, N. C.
New Bern, N. C.
Asheboro, X. C
Spencer, X. C.
. Raleigh, N. C.
Winston-Salem. X. C.
Fayetteville, X. C.
Forest City, X. C.
Dunn, X. C.
Goldsboro, X. C.
Bentonville. X. C.
. Polkton. X C.
Leaksville, X. C.
. Hertford, X. C.
Xlt. Airy, X. C.
Mocksville, X. C.
. Sanford, X. C.
Littleton, X. C.
Matthews, X. C.
Henderson, X. C.
Asheville, X. C.
Xeuse, X. C.
. Wilson, X. C.
Dunn X. C.
Angier, X. C.
Moltonville, X. C.
Burlington, X. C.
Liipfert, B. B. Winston-Salem, X. C.
Llewellyn, C. XI. . Dobson, N. C.
Little, B.
Lisk, XL C.
Matthews, W. E
McMillan, Z. V.
Monk, E. 1
Xarron, J. A. .
Xichols, C. L. .
Xorfleet, E.
Xorris, J. E.
Orr. F. W.
Penny. W. B.
Pharr, X. Y.
Pittman, J. C. .
Pritchett, J. A.
Proctor, E. K.
Proctor, J. G. .
Rand, O. G.
Rives, E. E.
Robertson G. D.
Scarborough, D. E
Marshville, X. C.
Xlt. Gilead, X. C.
Clinton, X. C.
Red Springs, N. C.
Asheville, X. C.
Laurinburg, X. C.
. Brivard, X. C.
. Roxobel, X. C.
Holly Springs, X. C.
Charlotte, X. C.
Hendersonville, X. C.
Charlotte, X. C.
Gates, X. C.
Rawlings, Va.
Lumberton, X. C.
Lumberton, X. C.
Garner, N. C
Greensboro, X. C.
Asheville, X. C.
Hoffman, X. C.
Shaw, D .
Shaw. W. T.
Stanly, H. R. .
Stringfield, Peyton
Tomlin, P. C.
Topping, D. D. .
Walker, H. H. .
Whitener, S. C.
Whitmire, R. L
Wilson, J. X.
Fayetteville, N. C.
. Raleigh, X. C.
Marion, 111.
Atkinson, N. C.
Asheville, X. C
. Pantego, X. C.
Xew Castle, X. C
. Hickory, N. C.
Hendersonville, X. C.
Greensboro, X. C.
Wimberley, G. L. Rocky Mount, X. C.
Womble, W. B. . Cary, N. C.
Wright, W. C. Winston-Salem, X. C.
Yelverton, W. B. Goldsboro, X. C.
Young, J. R. . . Dunn, X. C.
One Hundred Sixty-one
Kii T7l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■ I <> 1 1 liMiUiU.KMililil, I il,l ,1,1,1: M,i, hi lU.I.Mil.l.M, 1,1,1, t . I , I ■ I l I , t , I ■ I iTTTTrg
■I'l'l I'l'l I'I'I'I'I'IW
^(H9 m^TYWlK 20]Krwrrr
'I' I'l'I'I'IWTT
(Eluba nf tlje ICaui ^rlinol
alip (Elark Eaui (Club
Bowman, F. O President
Harris, W. D Clerk
Wilson, J. R Treasurer
(Lift C p. ifflr(£rl}fr Sam (Elub
Hill, J. B. President
Holding, C. B Clerk
Brantley, D Treasurer
SJl?f Satllr Sam (Elub
Clement, L. H President
Proctor, J. R Clerk
Perry, E. V Advisor
abr 3lamp0 SrrDrll Ham (Club
Daniel, C. R President
Bond, L C/erfe
Pittman, J. C Treasurer
®br Muffin Cam (Elub
McMillan, Z. V ■ • President
Kennedy, J. C. . . Clerk
Jernigan, MM. Treasurer
<TI|r fWamttuu Cam (Elub
Lucas, S. R. . . . • President
Jones, H. A Clerk
Isear, D. \V • • ■ Treasurer
One Hundred Sixty-two
■i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ihiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiii
^.'I'l'I'I'I'MI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'IM'l'I'I'l'
119 TOMTIT HM2Q.)
I'l'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i*.
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I'lTI'I'ITI'ITI'ITI'ITI'ITI'
H9WMCTY 1M20)
'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'l'I'I'I'IMTTW
W&tttB of to Mtbual ^rhonl
S»pranb Urar (EIuhb
James Graham Ramsay
Cary Lanier Harrington .
Harold Stevens Clark
Robert Norman Harden
President
. - . \ ice-President
Secretary-Treasurer
. Representative on Student Council
One Hundred Sixty-Jour
Euiilrlililil.lilil.Mil, .1. Ill, I.I. I il.U.lilil, li 1, 1 1 1,1 il, lil, Mil, 1,1, 1, 1, 1, 1,1,1.1 ,1,1, 1,1, 1,1,1 ,1 M.hlilil.hlil.Miri
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(fl9 wimt ikm 2o.)
''I'l'I'I'I'I'i'l'I'I'Vl'I'I'l'I'I'I'ITI'l
MARCUS EDWARD BIZZELL,
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feet 8 inches
Wayne County Cluh; German Club; Medical Society; Vice-
President Class CO; Leader Gorgon's Head Dance (±); Coop;
Minotaur; Gorgon's Head.
*X;Ki.
HIS legs may be slightly bowed and his tongue
get twisted under stress and strain of
quizzes, but "Eddie" goes sublimely on. He
works hard, seriously and conscientiously, and
yet finds time to spread joy among his friends
and to plunge into the social whirl head first,
but he always comes up bright and early on
class the next day. He is a delightful combina-
tion of work, play and good fellowship; and as a
loyal friend he is liked and admired by all. As
a dance leader he excels. If he handles his
future patients as skillfully and carefully as he
does Dr. McNider's sick rabbit, he will be a
second Hippocrates.
THOMAS CLAYTON BREWER
Marshville, N. C.
Age, 2;; Weight, i;o; Height, ; feet 9 inches
North Carolina Club; Union County Club, Vice-President (3);
Medical Society, Treasurer (4).
K *.
TC." is often heard to boast that Tom
• Brewer and Tom Bickett are both Union
County men. Evidently, then, it must be a
great place. "T. C." devoted the greater part
of his first two years in college to his social
development, but since medicine caught him,
this tendency has been largely arrested. How-
ever, it is said that even now he may be occasion-
ally found curling (?) his hair, so we doubt if
the impulse is entirely overcome. "Tom" is a
continuous worker, and has a splendid memory,
which qualities go to make him one of our most
dependable students.
One Hundred Sixty-five
niiiiiiiiiiiiiii.i.i.iiiiiii.iiiii.i.i.^hi, i, i. i.iii.i.in. i.i.i.i .i.i.i, i.i.i, iii .j,.i, i, i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.ia!
'I'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'
((B9HMMTY H«2Q.ji
'I I'l'l'l'l'l'l I'i'l'I'I'IMWT
LESLIE EDWARD CHAPPELL
Candor, N. C.
Age, lq; Weight, i;6; Height, ; feet q inches
Di Society; Moore-Montgomery County Club, President (1);
Medical Society, Secretary (4); Wood Scholarship: Class Foot-
ball; Assistant in Zoology.
K *.
CHAPPELL first won fame by his splendid
dissecting. He always does thorough work,
for he loves it. and does it fast and well. He is a
good fellow, with ambition and perseverance.
We wish him much success.
One Hundred Sixty-six
ERNEST WALTON CLARK, Jr.
Belhaven. N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 135; Height, j feet 8 inches
K *.
'P* W." is from way down East by the Atlantic.
■L- j. where lives the girl that he loves "down
by the sea . Vigorous and energetic, he is a
fast worker, and succeeds in doing his job well
and getting it behind him. He is brimful of life
and pep. and a good fellow whom we all like.
His dynamic force will help him in his lifework.
^it J 1 > > I , I ■ I ■ 1 1 i ■ J . I x I , I . t . t . i . t . 1 . 1 . 1 ■ I . I . I . I ■ 1 1 1 , t . I ■ 1 1 1 . 1 . t . < . I . I ■ I , I . t » I . I ■ I . I > I ■ I ■ 1 . 1 . 1 ■ I , t ■ 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 ■ t . 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 ^ ■ 1 1 i . 1 mHXU31i3
I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'I'lTI'l'ITl'l
19MMTY wircaoj
'I'l'l'l'l'l'
'I'l'I'I'I'ITIJj
Zl?%
FRANCIS MANN CLARK
MlDDLETOWN, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, i;;; Height, 5 feet 11 inches
SPIRAGYRA" is a splendid student and a
hard worker. His attitude to his work is
fine. On class he gives clear-cut. good answers
that please the doctors. Full of life and fun. he
jollies his companions along and his hearty
laugh echoes through the Medical Building.
With his love for his chosen profession, joined to
his ability and ambition, he will surely make
good.
be
HAROLD STEVENS CLARK
Leicester, N. C.
Age, 23; Weight, 150; Height, 5 feet o inches
Graduate Cullowhee Normal and Industrial School, 'IS: A.B
U. N. C, '17; Di Society; Junior Oratorical Contest; Bui
County Club: Yackety Yack Board (4); Medical Societ
President (6).
K *
HS." has gone quietly about his duties here,
. and has worked deliberately and wonder-
fully well. Deep-voiced and serious, he has the
calm of his native mountains. Presiding over
the Medical Society, he has shown that he pos-
sesses a dignity that will become him well in
his life work. We know that he is a true friend,
and that men can trust him with their lives and
their honor.
One Hundred Sixty-seven
iHI'liliMililililililiMilil I hi, hhhhM, I, I, Mil, 1,1,1, 1,1, 1,1,1, 1, 1, 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuii
iJiiihhM
^.TI'I'I'l'I'I'I'I'IMTI'ITI'I'l' '
SUMMIT ¥M20
'I'lTi'iTi'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'ing
GORDON BRYANT CROWELL
LlNCOLNTON, N. C.
Age, 24; Weight, 150; Height, 5 feet 10 inches
German Club; Manager Track Team (4); Athletic Council (4);
Ciillimi'llccnienl Hall Manager '4'; Pan-Hellenic Ciiuriril; Medi-
cal Society. Vice-President; Infirmary Assistant.
n KA.
HERE is a man whose most distinctive char-
acteristic is the habit of getting what he
goes after. On the day when Gordon was dis-
charged from the Army, after eleven months'
Service overseas, he started back to the Hill to
study medicine. Dr. Mangum will vouch for
the fact that Gordon passed anatomy in the
shortest time in which it has ever been done
here. A strong personality, plus this habit of
success, is going to make "Doc" a big man in
the medical world.
One Hundred Sixty-eight
VERNON LYNDON ELEY
Woodland, N. C.
Age, 27, Weight, 174: Height, 6 feet
^
'PEAKING of perseverance, "Slick" has
shown us what it means. It is a rare man
who can work for a month on an unknown in
chemistry and come away with an unruffled
temper, but "Slick" is the man. He has a mania
for big words, and has spent a summer in Balti-
more, so he talks a great deal. But a good doctor
should know more than medicine, and we feel
sure his patients will never suffer from lack of
entertainment.
<Z)£)®G?
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H9W1MTY WH&20J
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ROBERT NORMAN HARDEN
Commerce, Ga.
Age, 24; Weight, idy, Height, ; feet 10 inches
Freshman Baseball; Varsity Baseball («); Student Council (4);
Medical Society; Georgia Cluli; Wearer of N. C.
* X; 2 A E.
NORMAN is recognized as one of the steadiest
men on the Hill. He has shown in his
quiet way that he is every inch a man, and fit
for a "man's work. Although he comes from
another State, he holds Carolina very dear, as
shown by his athletic record before he entered
medicine, and by his interest in every vital
question concerning the university. In the
capacity of Student Councilman he has shown
his squareness and ability to appreciate the
other man's point of view. Norman has both
purpose and determination, and will let no
obstacle stand in the way of success in his chosen
profession.
CAREY LANIER HARRINGTON
Greenville, N. C.
Age, zi; Weight, 160; Height, 5 feet 8]/i inches
North Carolina Club; Phi Society; Pitt County Club; Medica
Society; Student Cabinet. Vice-President I'M.
K *.
CAREY is not only scientific, for he has culti-
vated the aesthetic in his life. He is a
musician and loves the fine arts, being especially
fond of literature. He has developed a splendid
physique by his faithful work in the gym. Carey
is very conscientious and has much depth oi
character. We all know he is true-blue and
admire him. He is a well-rounded citizen who
can be trusted through thick and thin to make
the world a better place in which to live.
Too Lflzy TO ~POSE
One Hundred Sixty-nine
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P9HMMTY HAm20)^^
■I'l'i'i'i'i'i'i'iTmrnr
SAMUEL EDWIN HUGHES, Jr.
Danville, Va,
Age, 21 ; Weight, 155; Height, s feet 10 inches
German Club: Medical Society; Class Football (2); Assistant
Leader Fall German (2); Cabin.
* X; A <t>.
ED", after vacillating between V. M. I. and
Virginia for several years, finally landed on
the Hill, and we were all glad to have him. He
entered the first year med class, but didn't
allow medicine to keep him from being known.
By entering whole-heartedly into the spirit of
this place and readjusting himself, he has shown
everyone that he is capable of handling hard
tasks. "Ed" also shines in the social world,
and his prowess along this line is well shown by
the way he wears a dress suit and olive oil, also
by the scented letters of various hues which he
receives. We haven t seen much of him this
year, but we know that he is in good hands. A
combination of frankness, geniality and square-
ness, assures "Ed" success anywhere.
JAMES MEREDITH KETCH IE
Salisbury', N. C.
Age. 20; Weight, i8y. Height. ; feet } inches
Kowan Countv Club. Secretary-Treasurer (1). President («);
Medical Society; Class Cheer Leader (+).
K *.
BEEF" has demonstrated that weight below
the belt guided by weight above the eyes
constitutes an irresistible driving force. Conse-
quentlv, he has never been thrown for a loss at
examination time, and his gains have been
uninterrupted He comes from Salisbury, has
worked for the Southern, and so belives he can
diagnose and repair any ailment peculiar to
locomotives. This' training, together with a
jovial disposition, should aid in his treatment of
the human machine.
One'_Hundred Seventy
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CARLYLE MORRIS
New Bern. N. C.
Age, 24; Weight, 115: Height, 5 feet 2 inches
Medical Society.
*x.
THE Class of '20 is lucky to have a man like
"Shorty" to graduate with it. He left
school in 16. but returned last fall and resumed
his work in medicine He did not allow this
handicap to interfere with his chances of finish-
ing, but by hard and steady work showed himself
capable of overcoming even the hardest difficul-
ties. He has proven also that a man s chances
of success are not dependent upon his stature,
and will undoubtedly make good in life
ANDREW PUREFOY NEWCOMB, Jr.
Henderson, N. C.
Age, 20: Weight. 120: Height, ; feet 4 inches
'17; Va
■ County Club; Medical Society;
*x.
NEW'KIE", as we like to call him because of
his slight stature and boyish appearance,
came to us from Trinity at the beginning of his
Junior year. He came to learn medicine, too,
and he immediately became lost among the
mysteries and debris of the "stiff hall", but he
later emerged at the head of the anatomy class,
and was made Assistant in Anatomy as a result
of his industry. Success is assured for a man
of his caliber, and we are proud to regard him
as one of our own.
V I COULD ONLY I
TALK ASVLLPASJ
PR MANNING"^
One Hundred Seventy-one
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Tii'rr M'l'i'ri'i H'l'nr
WILLIAM BLOUNT NORMENT
Trinity, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 12S; Height, 5 feet 10 inches
K *.
'TWILL" is a doctor by inheritance, and the
J— ) ladies say he already has the professional
temperament and appearance, "Bill has the
utmost confidence in man, and believes every-
body tells him the truth. It is rumored that he
is shrewd at bargaining, too, hence his nick-
name— "Jew". With all of these qualifications,
his road to a successful professional career must
be a broad and open one.
One Hundred Seventy-two
SAMUEL ROY ALL NORRIS
Jacksonville. Fla.
Age, 2j; Weight, 135; Height, ; feel 10 inches
V. M. C. A. Cabinet (1, -2. :!); Yackety V«k Heard (2, 3):
Greater Council (3); Vice-President Junior Class i3i; President
First Year "Meds"; Pan-Hellenic Council («, 31; German Club.
Secretary -Treasurer (3, 4); Assistant Leader Sophomore Hop;
Minotaur; Gorgon's Head.
U A ; * X ; * A 0.
THE war did one good thing, anyway, by
handing over "Peck" to us from 18, and
i8's loss was sure our big gain. Ot course
"Jazz" was an aviator and such a good one that
they made him an instructor. Where the bright
lights shine, there also we find our redheaded
"jazz baby". Never on hand but always there
with the goods, "Peck" is our most brilliant
student. Happy-go-lucky and care free, he
takes in medicine as he has taken us all in with
his goodfellowship. We just hope the tar will
stick to this pep box from the Alligator State,
so he will stay with us always, for such a com-
bination is much too rare to lose.
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TH'HTITHTHTli
FRANKLIN LIMER PAYNE
Raleigh. N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 16;; Height, 5 feet 10 inches
Phi Society. Secretary (i): Medical Society; German Club:
Assistant in Pharmacology (4).
*x.
' ALL work and no play makes Jack a dull
A boy", but not so with Limer. One of our
best students, his steady work has won him a
good class record and incidentally the Assistant-
ship in Pharmacology as well. They call him
"Owl", and he must be one, considering what he
can accomplish in one night. He is in the front
ranks.
JAMES LEWIS POSTON
Statesville, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 140; Height, 6 feel 2 inches
POSTUM" loves the social side of life, enjoying
to the fullest, dances and social functions,
but he works very faithfully. He takes great
pleasure in his friends, and has a polish and
gentleness that help him get along with people.
Steadfast and true, faithful, clear-headed and
persevering, he will be a valued addition to the
medical profession.
One Hundred Seventy-three
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JAMES GRAHAM RAMSAY
Salisbury, N. C.
Age, 24; Weight, 18 y, Height, 6 feet 1 inch
\ B. '17; Di Society; Greater Council (3); Track Team; Vice-
President Class (S); Varsity Football (1,8,8, »); Assistant Coach
Football 15); Assistant Ma., hall Manager CI); Treasurer Class "
_• ( iii.-nrerii.nl Hall Manager CI, + ]; President-Elect Senior
"Meds", '18; German Club; President Senior "Meds"; Coop;
Gorgon's Head; Golden Fleece.
* X; A K E.
FROM the football field and class rooms of
academic years. Graham went to the mud
and wounds of France. Just as out of the dirt
and work of the gridiron he won athletic fame,
so out of the mud and blood of France he won
the glorious Croix de Guerre. Since his return
we find him still the modest, unassuming fellow of
old, who does his work well, both in the Medical
Building and when helping coach the victorious
'iq football team. Physically, mentally, and
morally, he is our ideal of the American sportsman
that our late President Graham so loved and
admired — "a gentleman unafraid".
One Hundred Seventy-four
DAVID JENNINGS ROSE
Bentonville, N. C.
\ge, a; Weight, 170; Height, 5 feet 10 inches
North Carolina Club; Wayne County Clul>. Secretary and
Treasurer 14), Treasurer i.l); Class Baset.all II, 3); Secretary-
Treasurer Junior Medical Class; Medical Society; Assistant in
Pathology.
K *
ROSE is "peppy". He is here not because he
loves the old farm less, but because he
loves medicine more. He works vigorously, and
blinds the profs rather consistently. His ambi-
tion keeps him always on the job. which is a
good thing for most young medicos, according
to Dr. "Ike". So great has his fame already
become, that often when the ambulance drives
up to the infirmary, the injured one has been
heard to murmur to those nearbv, "Dr. Rose —
Dr Rose".
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{1191MMTY 1ME 2Q-}l'ITITI H'l'ITI'E
TH'HTI,
ROBERT ALEXANDER ROSS
MORCANTON, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 140: Height. ; feet ;; inches
Medical Society: German Club; Coop; Gorgon's Head.
* X; A T a.
DADDY" hails from Morganton, and so must
have inherited the good qualities of both
mountaineer and easterner, for he is one of the
best fellows we know. He bids fair to become
an authority on pharmacology, since he already
knows the dose and properties of every drug
related to therapeutics (and some that are not).
"Daddy" is a hard worker, but never lets work
interfere with pleasure. Upon certain occasions
during the year he becomes prominent in social
circles, and is one of our most reliable "shakers
of the aromatic sock".
ELI RICHARD SALEEBY
Wilson, N. C.
Age, 22. Weight, 143; Height, ; feet j inches
l'bi Society; Sim
y; >iiii|i-
mnty Cli
lull
iPh;
tical Society; Medical Society;
ELI often thinks of his Syrian home among
the Hills of Lebanon. It is his purpose to
serve his native land. when, through his faithful
endeavor, he shall possess an M.D. He has an
Oriental fineness of feeling to which he has added
an Occidental clearness of thinking. Speaking
English well, he is a cheerful, hardworking stu-
dent whom we all like. He served in the S. A.
T. C. and although "East is East", and "West
is West", he has made them meet.
One Hundred Seventy-five
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ANNIE THOMPSON SMITH
Durham, N. C.
•18; u. N. c. Wom<
SHE came to us from Trinity, where she had •
won many honors. She had acquired the
habit of hard work, and has it still. She has
taken her place in the class, has demanded no
special privileges, but has done her work in a
quiet, efficient way. She is frank, industrious
and a good student. We know that she will
succeed well in the profession which she loves
so well.
One Hundred Seventy-six
JOHN COTTON TAYLOE
Washington, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 200; Height, ; feet u inches
Vice-President Class (1); Greater Council (1); Assistant Man-
ager Baseball (3); Commencement Marshal; Leader Junior
Prom; Varsity Football (3); Secretary-Treasurer Pan-Hellenic
Council; German Club; Beaufort-Hyde County Club; Oasis;
Coop; Gimghoul; Golden Fleece.
*X;!N.
THOUGH John started with and still is one of
the Class of 18, after his first year of medi-
cine the call was too strong and he left to see a
year's service in France as an Infantry Lieu-
tenant. Known by everybody and possessing
one of the happiest dispositions on the campus.
John is one of our best. Always on hand when
the terpsichorean art is indulged in, "Bear"
holds his own in tripping the light fantastic with
the same ease that he takes a man out of the
line. But in football. "Griz" has done his big
work. Of a long line of doctors, John promises to
outstrip them all if hard work and good scholar-
ship count and to go over the top in medicine as
he did in France.
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JOHN SKALLY TERRY
Rockingham, N. C.
Age, 2j; Weight, 270; Height. ; feet oK inches
A.B., '18; Permanent President Class of '18; Seeretarv-Treasurer
Class «), Treasurer CD, Vice-President (4); Di Society, Presi-
dent (4), Vice-President (81; Greater Council (4): Assistant in
Zoology (3); Assistant Editor-in-Chief Magazine i4i; A--i-tn!it
Editor Tar Heel (4, 5); Associate Editor Yackety Y'ack (4);
Advisory Editor Tar liaby 16); Latin-American Club; Interna-
tional Polity Club; Senior Stunt Committee; Medical Society;
V. M. C. A. Cabinet (5); Chairman Health Reconstruction
Committee North Caroline Club (6); Honors in Language and
2 T; £2 A; E <t> A; <t> X; * B K
THE Class of i8 has priority of claim upon
John, but it is during the routine of his
subsequent years in medicine that we have come
to know him best. In addition to his scientific
tendency he possesses a splendid natural literary
ability, which we believe he will not permit to
atrophy. We look upon him as our logical repre-
sentative in the field of medical literature, and
would not be surprised if — like Holmes — he should
some day produce a work which will rank as a
classic.
EARL RUNYON TYLER
Durham, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 140; Height, 5 feet q inches
President First Year "Meds"; Medical Society; Chairman
Executive Committee.
*x
RUNYON has a mild voice and gentle de-
meanor, but when quizzes come around, he
exhibits the qualities of a "bull'. He is one of
the luckiest fellows we know, and combining
this with good work, he always has the right
answer to a question at the proper time. Con-
sequently, he seldom gets blinded and has
established an enviable record in his classes.
His keen intellect and energy will mean much
to his profession.
One Hundred Seventy-seven
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Jtrat fear Mtbual GIlasB
(Glass Soil
Anderson. Alan Ramsem . Statesville, N. C.
■r Boone, William Walds
Durham, N. C
r Brinn, Thomas Preston
Hertford, X. C.
t Byerly, Wesley Grimes
Cooleeme, N. C.
Z Caldwell, Daniel Grlnbell
Concord, N. C.
Z Cole, Stephen Ruffin
Chapel Hill. X. C.
EI Crisp, Sellers Mark
Falkland, X. C
^ Elliot, George Dolglas
Thomwall. X. C.
Fritz, Herbert Huit
Hickory. X. C.
Goodwin, Oscar Sexton
Apex, X. C.
E- Hambrick, Robert Theodore
Roxboro, X. C.
Herman, Charles Bernard
Conover, X C.
j- Johnston. Ralph Lynwood
Salisbury, X C
Lorens, Fernando
Santiago, Cuba
I Mason, Manly .
Atlantic, X. C.
I Massey, Charles Caswell
Princeton, X. C.
Merritt, Ziran Lewis
Bolton. X. C.
Z Monroe, Clement Rosenberg
Biscoe, X. C.
Z Moore, Robert Ashe
Statesville, X. C.
EI Murray, Robert Lebly
St. Pauls. X. C.
Z. Parker, George Farrar
Asheville. X. C.
^ Richardson, George Alexander
Dover, X. C
Shaw, John Alexander
Fayetteville. X. C.
~T Smith, Randall Collins
Newport, X. C.
jl Smith, Robert Edwin
Mt. Airy. X. C
Slmner, George Herbert .
Franklinville. X. C.
Swift. Vance Eyerette
Badin, X. C.
Tayloe, Joshla
Washington, X. C
Toy, Calvert Rogers
Chapel Hill, N. C.
White. Carl Wilma .
Clinton, X. C.
Whitehead, Edward Morris
Salisbury, X C.
Wimberley, Benjamin Blnn
Rocky Mount, X. C.
Voder, Pall Allison
Xewton, X C.
One Hundred Sei'enty-nine
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jFouni) bg Bomrnnr in thr "iHrfi" Builbinu — probably
left tljrrr bo "Bran Anby"
Oh, dress up, ladies, finer'n you is,
'Ca'se you's gwine wid a man wut knows his biz.
De cawn-fiel' han' en de cotton-patch nigger,
De laborin' man don't cut no figger.
When it's Come along, ladies, en foller me roun',
De dead-game spoht fum de college town.
I totes my guitah wid a shoulder strap,
En now en again I gives it a rap,
Er-hummin' ol' chunes fum way down Souf,
Wid a cigaroot rollin' aroun' in my mouf.
I'd be plum white, if I jis' wa'n't brown,
Fer I feels at home in de college town.
I kerries de notes wut's boun' to go
Fum de boys to de ladies on Faculty row.
Fer singin' at night I gits mo' pay
Dan my ol' man gits fer ploughin' all day.
When dar's supp'n' to drink, I swallers it down,
'Ca'se I gits wut's gwine in de college town.
One Hundred Eighty
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Senior Hharmaro (Ulaae
John Craton Mills
John Palmer Horton
Dorothy Eleanor Foltz
iluntor piiarmarg CElaaa
Thomas Phillip Lloyd
John William Harrell
John Milton Lytch
President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer
President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer
One Hundred Eighty-two
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DOROTHY ELEANOR FOLTZ
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Age, 18; Weight. 111; Height. } feet 5 inches
2 K <j>.
A HAPPY disposition is a great blessing
indeed. Dorothy is not only happy herself,
but with her bright smile and friendly manner,
she has certainly been a ray of sunshine illumi-
nating the life of everyone with whom she has
come in contact. There are two rumors abroad
in regard to her future; one. that she intends to
go to the Far East to mix "dopes" for the heathen
Chinese, but we much prefer to believe the
second — "he can scarcely wait for the comple-
tion of her profession". But whichever course
she pursues, to be sure we everyone wish her
"Bonne Voyage".
DELMA DESMOND HOCUTT
HlLLSBORO, N. C
Age, 20; Weight. 160, Height. 6 feet 4 inches
Pharmaceutical Society; Orange County Cluh; Class Secretary.
'TZJIG boy" as the name implies, is rather tall.
•D He came to us from the City of Hillsboro.
and he seems to think that it is a rather large
place. He has been raised in a drug store, and so
naturally he is a "bull" in Pharmacy When it
comes to Materia Medica he has the goods. He
never lets his studies worry him much, and he
takes life calmly. He is liked by all his class-
mates and we wish for him the very best pos-
sible for the future.
One Hundred Eighty-three
Ei.lil.l.l lihl.liltUiU.UiUlilililil.l.LI.Uilil.U.I.UiU.liliM.lilil.U.UJiliUil.UtltUi
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H9T1MMTY namao.]^^^
MTI'I'I'I'I'I'I'TTTT
JOHN PALMER HORTON
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
Age, tq: Weight, 140: Height, 5 feet q inches
Pharmaceutical Society; Wilkes County Club. President; Vice-
President of Class.
K *.
J PALMER" as we all know him, is the crude
• drug specialist from the hills of the Blue
Ridge. In addition to this, he is quite a ladies'
man and is very popular among the students in
general. Palmer spends most of his time mas-
tering the unknowns of Qualitative Analysis, of
which he is extremely fond. His sole ambition
is to be the leading retail druggist of North
Wilkesboro and we feel that his capabilities will
soon place him in this position.
MARION LEE JACOBS
MORRISVILLE, N. C.
Age, 20; Weight, 145; Height, 5 feet 8 inches
utical Society; Wake County Club; Assistant
K *
MARION" or "Jake" is a man prone to
campus life. He seldom lets fun interfere
with his graduation, but he does sometimes let
studies break in on his college life. These quali-
ties combine to make an all-round good-fellow,
and one that everyone admires. Jake "socials"
about a bit and a night off is no treat for him.
The "old diggings" back at Mornsville pulled
off a mighty stroke when they sent "Jake"
down here to Carolina.
One Hundred Eighty-four
tl.lil.l.lil.l.l.ld.l.l.lil.lil.lilJild.l.i.l.l.l.hl.l.l.Llil.lil.lil.ltliltliltliltnlilJilllimillllllllllllllllllllllllllilLLliii^
'I'l'i'i'i'i'rri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'
119WMTY WK20J
I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'lJ.
GUY SMITH KIRBY
Marion, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 140; Height, ; feet 8 inches
Davidson College, "17-"18; Pharmaceutical Society; McDowell
County Cluo.
K *.
'(~~*UY" or "Skirb" came to us from Davidson.
W He often has occasion to take up for his old
Alma Mater, but for all that he is a good Carolina
man. He has a wonderful memory, studies
hard, and never worries about the outcome ot
tricks — not even his mighty participation in
the "social whirl". If you want to get in an
argument just say that Marion is a dump, for
to him it is the coming city of the West, and he
will take pleasure in explaining to you its many-
advantages and allurements. If he just keeps up
this same "pep" when he starts rolling pills —
well, Marion might some day be a busy metrop-
olis at that.
Illllllttiiit'iii
VERNE DUNCAN LEA
Durham, N. C.
Age, 21; Weight, 155; Height, ; feet 9 inches
President Pharmaceutical Society; Durham County Club.
LEA hails from the little town of Durham.
.. but the name of the "smoke" which made
the name of this city famous is not present in
his make-up. His brain is a veritable storehouse
of knowledge and he is a live wire in all college
activities. A rare combination of good student,
hard worker, and all-round good fellow, makes
him worthy of being called one of the best mem-
bers of his class from all points of view.
Mff")
THE -rnii-n.5 cs™
HrF DONT /<B
K/»i>VVffflc»Tll]||||l|j|3S
One Hundred Eighty-five
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■■'.'1 I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITI'ITI'l
^mwnr mm 20
ITI'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'MI'I'I'ITTW
PERRY JENKINS MELVIN
Roseboro. N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, iff; Height, j feet q inches
Pharmaceutical Society; Sampson County Club.
MELVIN is not a veteran of the S. A. T. C
but of the army instead. He started Phar-
macy with the Class of ib. but like many other
Carolina men he enlisted Upon his return, his
sterling qualities have made him a welcome mem-
ber of our class. Shaded glasses and the need of
a helping hand are the only unknowns to him.
for he is never blinded by either quizz or off-
hand question. He is true, sincere, and very
thoughtful, and his mind is set on the big things
of life. He is held in the highest esteem by his
classmates and professors and bids fair to be a
great leader of men both in and out of the ranks
of the "Pharmacos".
JOHN CRATON MILLS
RUTHERFORDTON, N. C.
Age, iq; Weight, 13;; Height, ; feet 7 inches
Pharmaceutical Society; Class President; Rutherford County
Club; Student Council.
K <a.
BIT" is a specimen of true blue He journeyed
down to Georgia last summer and passed
the State Board of Pharmacy with high honors
When it comes to answering up on class, you will
have to hand it to "Bit" for he certainly can
deliver the goods. He hails from the western
part of the State and has a good word and a
bright smile for everyone The "ole" class
doesn't know where he will go when he grad-
uates, but we do know that he has a good "rep"
to hold up and we expect it of him.
One Hundred Eighty-six:
k.hl I l.lilil.l.Utl.l.l.l.lil.lil.iililil.l.l.l.lilil.l.l.lil.lil.l 1 1.1 1. .Iil.lil.lihlihhlililililililililihd
I'1'IUM'I'P
ITI'l'ITI'ITI'lTI'l1
B91MMTY 1MI20.)
'rrrrri'i'ri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'n'i'i'K
MILLARD BROWN PHILLIPS
Concord, N. C.
Age, 22; Weight, 14;; Height, ; feet 7 inches
' Pharmaceutical Society; Cabarrus County Club.
BROWNIE" is a rising young pharmacist of
high ideas and very studious in his work;
nothing seems to bother him in the least, except,
probably, a final exam in Therapeutics Terms.
And when it comes to Physiology, "Brownie"
has no trouble in outlining the human system
for "Billy-Mc". He claims to have more friends
of the fairer sex than any other member of the
class — but we predict a bright future, even
under this handicap.
WILBERT LAWRENCE STONE
KlTTRELL, N. C.
Age. 20; Weight, 154; Height, 6 feet
Pharmaceutical Society; Vance County Club.
SHAD" is quite a ladies' man especially among
the Co-eds at Carolina. However, he de-
votes most of his time to Pharmacy— Co-eds.
"Shad" is very energetic and spends quite a few
hours a day either "boning" in the "Carr Barn"
or working in the Chemistry 3 1 Lab. His ambi-
tion is also to run the leading "pill-shop" in the
city of Kittrell. and two will probably make a
better success at it than one.
PHr'S/C/fl/VS PRESCRIBE^
PHI L uips' PI HK p/kt-S
FOR pale PEOPLE I
One Hundred Eighty-seven
WilihlihlilililililihMilihlilili 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■ 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 > 1 1 . 1 1 1 ■ 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 1 ■ I ■ I ■ 1 1 1 ■ I . I . t ■ 1 , 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 , 1 . 1 . t ■ I , t , I ■ 1 , 1 , 1 . 1 1 1 . 1 . 1 ■ I . I , I ■ ITTTTTTTTTTTTTi^
'I'l'H'I'IM'nTIM'I'I'I'lH'I'Fr
119WKTY WK2Q.J
I'l'l I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'P
One Hundred Eighty-eight
HARRY WILBUR WALKER
NORLINA, N. C.
Age, 21 ; Weight, 160; Height, ; feet 8 inches
Assistant in Pharmacy; Yiee-PrcsiiU-nt Pharmaceutical Society;
Warren County Club.
BOVINE" is a rusher in all of his studies,
always working his work and never letting it
work him. Being the only member of his class
who finds Chemistry 31-32 tame, he is forced to
invade the region of the "Pick" in order to
obtain his proper amount of diversion. He is
one of the most popular men in the class and
stands well with the "profs". We predict a
great future for "Harry" in his chosen profession.
T7T 1 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 . 1 , 1 . 1 , 1 , 1 . 1 . [ , 1 ■ j ■ i , 1 1 1 ■ '. ,1.1,1, 1, 1.1,1.1,1, 1, 1. 1, i.i.i.i.i, 1, 1,1,1,1, 1, 1, l, l, 1,1,1,1,1, l, 1,1,1,
MTl'I'I'I'I'i'riTI'! !'''l'!'|'Pr-
Tl'ITI'ITI'ITtTrlTI'I'I'ITI'l
Jftrst |frar pjarmarg dlasa
QUaaa loll
.Adams. Charles Wyatt
blddingfield, charles d.avid
Bizzell, Harry Lee
Bradley. Earl Landrum
Cain. Leichton Dewey
Carivile. James Leander
Cline. Frederick Hirman
Cobb, James Louis
Cooper. Gicson Aycock
Crutchfield. Thomas Garrett
Dees, Robert Edward Lee
Edwards. Otho Crowell
Etheridce. Thomas Jarvis
Ferrell. Wessie Conway
Gibson. Allison McLalrin
Harrell, John Sherwood
Harrell. John William
Hawfield, Clayton
Hutchinson, Earl Bennett
Johnson, William R.
Kirkpatrick, John Cyrus
Layton, Clinton Charles
Lloyd, Thomas Phillip
Lytch, John Milton
Lewis, Charles Abraham
Morris, Alonzo Fields
Pierce, James Stanley
Privett. Aaron
Puch, Edward Steuart
Reeves. Roy
Robbins, Holleman Harris
Royall, Frederick D
Siske. Grady Cornell .
Thomas, Benjamin Jasper
Twitty, Theodore Bryan
Vaugh, Dewey Ordway
Walker, Irving
Ward. Waits Artinus .
Warren, Thel Whitfield
Williams. Clayton Gerald
Womble. David Jackson
Row land.
Wakefield.
Kinston.
Old Fort.
Fayettcville,
Antreville,
Kannapolis,
Xlt Olive,
Roseboro,
W ashington,
Rose Hill.
Raleigh.
Washington,
Nashville,
Gibson,
Windsor,
Beaufort,
Matthews,
. Roberdel,
Dunn,
Pilot Mr,
Sanford.
Chapel Hill.
Roseland,
Winston-Salem,
Troy .
Rockv Mount,
Wakefield,
Windsor.
Raeford.
Raleigh.
Salemburg.
Beaufort.
Wendell,
Rutherfordton,
High Point,
Reidsville,
Spencer,
Newton Grove,
Cooper,
Cary,
N.C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N. C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
N.C.
One Hundred Eighty-nine
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'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITT
1191MMTY mm 20]
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R^. . i 1 1 r I ■ 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■ 1 1 1 ■ 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 > 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 1 ■ 1 1 T 1 1 1 * ■ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 > t ■ « < 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 « 1 1 1 1 i ■ 1 1 ) i 1 1 1 ■ i 1 1 1 1 1 1 * 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 < 1 * I i * 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r3
- ' ' ' ' \\ j> ,nv tv /a {VQTTrtr**
i'l'ITi'l'I'I'I'I'ITI'I'ITI'ITI'IT [HCHMMlJI 1MM MD.\
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- ^ — i. ^J _:
(Hljp (graduate ^rljonl
tRall of (graouatt ^luiifntH
Troy Monroe Andrews . Chapel Hill, N. C.
John Lee Aycock
Raleigh, N. C.
Z Lester Everett Bond
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Z Jefferson Carney Bynum .
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Z Albert McKinley Coates
Smithfield, N. C.
I John Nathaniel Couch
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Harry Towles Davis
Beaufort, N. C.
James Blain Davis
Chapel Hill. N. C.
William Clement Eaton
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Isaac Vilas Giles
Marion, N. C.
Thomas Perrin Harrison, Jr.
Raleigh, N. C.
r George Norrell Harvvard
Morrisville, N. C.
Joseph Iryin Holland
Gastonia, N. C.
Ewart William Gladstone Huffman
Hickory, N. C.
Z. William Frederick Hunter
Pittsboro, N. C
David Houghton Jackson .
Guilford, N. C.
Sanford Swindell Jenkins
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Saichiro Kita ....
Tokio, Japan
Elizabeth Lay ....
Beaufort, N. C.
Edwin Samuel Lindsey
Tryon, N. C.
Joseph Burton Linker
Salisbury, N. C.
William Dougald MacMillan .
Wilmington, N. C.
Hermon Earl Marsh .
Marshville, N. C.
Frederick Wilson Morrison
Chapel Hill, N. C.
r Margaret Grey Perry
Wilkesboro, N. C.
William Enoch Price
Madison, N. C.
r Theodore Rondthaler
Winston-Salem, N. C.
r Samuel Clement Smith
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Ira Wellborn Smithey
Wilkesboro, N. C.
Minnie Shepherd Sparrow-
. Lowell, N. C.
Leon Spitz ....
Raleigh, N. C.
Z Jasper Leonidas Stuckey
Kenly, N. C.
Z Yasuo Taketoni . . .
Hakodate. Japan
I Rosser Howard Taylor
Castalia, N. C.
I Hilton Gwaltney West
Greensboro, N. C.
Frances Womble ....
Greensboro, N. C.
Robert William Wunch
Monroe, La.
Z Monroe Craig Yoder
Hickory, N. C.
One Hundred Ninety-one H
Silil ihh lililiMiliUlihhhlihlilililiiililiMililihlilihhlililililililil ili h hi. 1,1,1,1, 1,1 ,1,1,1,1, lil, l.l.li |,[, 1,1,1,1,1,1 iiihl.l.rl
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rHE following section should not be considered a
group of University sponsors.
The pictures are merely specimens of North
Carolina's "fair ones", selected by representative
University men, including the presidents of the four
academic classes; the captains and managers of the
four Varsity teams, football, baseball, basketball, and
track; the editors and managers of the four student
publications.
The idea was suggested to the Editorial Staff
as one which is successfully used in the Annuals of
many large universities, and one which would add to
the interest and attractiveness of the Yackety Yack.
One Hundred Ninety-two
I'l'l'l M'l'I'IM'I'I'l
^(119 tomtit mn&aaj^g
'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'lM'I'I'I'U
SOME boast of a winning spirit : a spirit which
demands that every man shall be behind
the team with his whole soul and body for
every minute — working for victory.
Others boast of their sporting spirit: a spirit
which demands that every man should love the
game for the game's sake; a spirit which stands
first, last, and always for fair play and for sports-
manship.
Weave these two conceptions into a single
fabric and you have the athletic spirit of Carolina.
The Carolina man loves the game for the
game's sake and stands firm for all the finer points
of sporting chivalry, but for this he loves victory
none the less. He will not sacrifice sportsmanship
for victory, but he will back his team to the last
ditch — cheering loudest when the danger of defeat
is greatest, and in the final test he stands firm;
if necessary he is a good loser.
A hard fighter, a man whose whole heart is
set on producing a clean game and a Carolina
victory; could such a spirit be shown by our
athletes without the admiration and praise of
every man in the Universitv?
Two Hundred One
tl il.l I l.tl I il it 1 1 1 lit, I ill 1,1 , 111 .1 1 1 .1,1,1 , t . [ . 1 . 1 , 1 , 1 ,1,1 , 1 , 1 . t ■ I , I ■ I , I , I ■ I . I , I , I ■ 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 . 1 . 1 , 1 ■ 1 . 1 . 1 ■ I ■ I ■ I ■ I ■ 1 1 1 ■ 1 . t , I ■ I ■ I , I ■ f^
'I'l'l'l' I'lTI'IT
^^^fJ9WlMTY 1«20|
■I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITTTT
GIlje Atlilrttr Glnunril
Charles T. Woollen .
Dr. Charless S. Mangum
George A. Younce
William H. Andrews
Thomas C. Wolfe
Walter C. Feimster
E. Emerson White
CORYDON P. SPRUILL
Houston S. Everett
Benjamin Cone.
Jesse H. Erwin
John D. Shaw-
Leon V. Milton
William H. Bobbitt
uJt|p (Emtnril
. Chairman
Representative from the Faculty
President Athletic Association
Representative from the Athletic Association
Representative from the "Tar Heel"
Manager Varsity Football
Manager Varsity Baseball
Manager \~arsity Basketball
Manager Varsity Track
Manager Varsity Tennis
Manager Freshman Football
. Manager Freshman Baseball
Manager Freshman Basketball
Manager Freshman Track
Two Hundred Two
U.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.lil.lilililihliUil.lilililililill
S.'iii.i, 1. 1. 1, 1. 1. 1, i,i, i. i.i. i.i. i, i, i, 1. 1, i, i.i, i, i, i, i.i.i, i, I, i.i. i.i.
ililihliM.lih
tim'I'ith'ivim" I'i'i'i'rr
((I191IMMTY KME aoli'i'iTfiTHV'rn-HTi'i-rm
QDifora of % Atljkttr Aaanriatum
Whitehead
George Alexander Younce
Edward Morris Whitehead
Howard Edward Fulton
Yovmce
F-uItc
President
\ ice-President
Secretary
I
:
-
'PAT"
CHECK-
Two Hundred Three
I rl if 1 1 il ■ i W. I . I > l« 1 , 1 il 1 1 .1 > 1. 1 it ■ I tl tl 1 tt I tl ilitil 1 1 tf iljljji i,l il , li J > Uf >t .J >1 ■ I ■ L.I , 1. 1.1 a 1 .1 tl , > rl . 1. 1 .1 .) . I.I . 1x1 .t ^.t, 1 ,i .t vTTTTTT
B-'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'I'I'I'l'
|H9mm^TY HEI20t
MM I'l'iri'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'ITTTg
J. G. Ramsay
J. C. Tayloe
K. W. Proctor
B. C. Harrell
H. C. Cochran
W. G. Pritchard
A. E. Gant
QJlje N 01 Gllub
iFootball
H. DORTCH
W. Grimes
R. B. Robbins
G. A. Barden
W. A. Blolnt
E. L. Johnston
D. B. Jacobi
IBaarball
R. N. Harden
F. Patterson
O. E. Roberts
G. A. YOL'NCE
C. R. Joyner
W. D. Carmichael
F. C. Shepard
C. P. Sprltll
E. M. Spencer
T. C. Smith
E. B. Cordon
laskrtball
John Morris
(&ym
Srark
H. C. Black
iFarulty iHrmbcrs
E. V. Howell
C. S Mangum
F. R Lowe
F. Pharr
W. F. Tenny
J. M. Coleman
O. M. Abernethy
R. H. Griffith
R. A. Spaugh
L. G. Wilson
C. M. Llewellyn
W. C Feimster
L. V. Milton
\V. F. Lewis
B. B. Liipfert
S. W. Brown
P. P. Lynch
A. C. Norfleet
\V. J. Nichols
R. B. Lawson
A. H. Patterson
Two Hundred Four
■ l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.lil.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.lil.l.l il.lil.lilil.lil.il! ih^Pl
S.l.l.l.l.l.lil.l.l
lllll.Mlllllll
■I'l'l'l I'l'l I'M'l'I'I'l
(U9WMTY W1K20.J
ri'rri'lTI'I'i'i'i'i'Mi'i'i'i'rrrTg
ililMilMMM'IM'I'I'lilM'PIM'I'IMM'I'I'MI'I'I'I'I'MIM'IMM'I'I'IM'I'I'I'IM't'l'I'i'l'i'l'I'I'IM'I'IM'I'I'I'l'i'l'I'I'I'I'IM'I'I'g
nMJJM.U.U.I.UJJJJJ.M.MJJ.UMM.lAUAlililililil^
I'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l'l 1'1'I'PF
|ii91M»ty mm 20]
cm
TITI'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'IM
laarball
(g>ranmt of 1919)
William Lourcey
"Jack" Powell .
"Luke" Hodges .
Coach
Captain
Manager
<Li\? (Fram
Roberts
. Catcher
Cordon
Second Base
Younce
Catcher
Robbins
Second Base
Powell
Pitcher
Feimster .
Third Base
Joyner
Pitcher
Herty
Short-stop
Wilson
Pitcher
Milton
Short-stop
Swift
Pitcher
Tenny
Left Field
Bryant
First Base
SIMMS
Left Field
McLean
Second Base
Lewis
Centre Field
Sal
NDERS .
Right Fielc
I
§>rljpaule
March
*9
U. N. C. 4— Oak Ridge o
April 2 1
U. N. C.
4-
-Davidson 3
April
2
U. N. C. 7 — Camp Bragg 4
April 22
U. N. C.
7-
-Virginia 1
April
4
U. N. C. 4— Elon College 1
April 23
U. N. C.
8-
— Hampden-Sidney 3
April
5
U. N. C. 4— Durham 1
April 24
U. N. C.
13-
-R. M. C. 1
April
7
U. N. C. 2— N. C. State 1
April 25
U. N. C.
5-
-Washington and Lee b
April
9
U. N. C. 1— Elon College 4
April 26
U. N. C.
4"
-Johns Hopkins 13
April
10
U. N. C. 5— V. P. I. 0
May 3
U N C.
4"
—Virginia 1 1
April
12
U. N. C. 1 — Virginia 2
May 7
U. N. C.
5-
-South Carolina 0
April
14
U. N. C. 3 — Virginia 3
May q
U N. C.
4"
-Wake Forest 7
April
19
U. N. C. 0— Durham 2
May 14 U
May io
N. C. 3— Tri
U. N. C.
lity 2
0-
-Trinity 0
Two Hundred Seven
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HLLL
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I'l'lH'I'I'IM'l I I'lT
U9WITOT M2Q.)
I'l'ITl
®he ^>ea0mt
THE 19 1 9 season was very successful considering the fact that the teams had only
one 300 hitter who played in a majority of the games, namely Capt. Powell. Our
pitching staff, composed of Powell, Joyner, Swift. Wilson, and Fields, was admitted
the best in the State, each one pitching some fine ball.
With Powell pitching in fine style we defeated Oak Ridge in the opener. In Fay-
etteville we took the measure of the Camp Bragg team and then pounced on Elon. The
Durham Bulls made it four straight.
On April 7th, the N. C. State game on our home grounds was a thriller for the
whole season. We edged an extra run on them however, both Powell and Murray
pitching stellar ball and keeping most of the fun to themselves.
Elon College handed us our first defeat, errors composing the principal item in the
Carolina box score. Joyner next held the V. P. I. boys in the hollow of his big, freckled
hand and they garnered neither hit nor run. On April
1 ith, before an enormous crowd, we lost to Virginia in
Greensboro. Capt. Powell had one bad inning andVir-
«ginia scored two which exceeded our combined efforts
by one.- At Chapel Hill we tied Virginia in a thrilling
10 inning battle. Feimster's two-bagger in the ninth,
scoring two runs, was the feature of the game.
<*.
%-
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After losing the next game to the Durham Bulls,
we started on the Northern trip, defeating Davidson 4
to J in 15 innings, Virginia 7 to 1, Hampden-Sidney S to
3, and the Richmond Medicos 13 to 1. The last two
games were played against W ashington and Lee and
Hopkins in freezing weather. We never got started in
either game and had to be contented with the small
end of the score. Saunders, Feimster, and Powell were
the batting stars of the trip.
On May 3d, the fourth game of the Virginia series
was played in Greensboro. The Virginia team started
an early attack on Powell's "'shimmy'' ball, and Joyner
who succeeded him fared little better. "Lefty ' Wilson
went in and stopped the assault, but the result showed
that his best attempts were too late.
Five days later, Wilson took the mound against South Carolina and proved the
whole show in a 5 to o victory. Wake Forest came next and walked off with the State
Championship in a 1 5-inning game. Both sides hit heavily and each inning ended with
men on bases.
The final two games were played with Trinity in Durham. In the first, Wilson
held the Trinity boys scoreless for 1 5 innings, but we were also unable to score. In the
next game, Wilson rung up the twelfth victory to the old 3 to 2 tune. With 1 2 victories,
7 defeats, and 2 tied games, the team had a percentage of .532 the team's fielding average
was .963 and its batting average .199.
Two Hundred Eight
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Are we down -hearted?
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(Capt -Elect) ; ...^
\» LOURCEY POWELL
V— •""* |P (Coach)
(CapO
JOYNER
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''''H'l'ITITI'P^lA^MTT 1« 2Q-|^llTriTH'ITnTH^
Thomas J. Campbell
Graham Ramsay
Roy Homewood
"Yank" Tandy
"Nemo" Coleman
"Wop" Feimster
Blount
Jacobi
Grimes
Barden
Robbins
Gant .
Harrell
DORTCH
Pritchard
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
IFontball
(g>?a3on of 1919)
Sljr (Team
Centre
Cochran
Centre
Proctor
Guard
Pharr
Guard
Lowe
Guard
Tenny
. Tackle
Griffith
Tackle
Coleman
Tackle
ABERNETm
Tackle
Spaugh
*rijpfcule
Rutgers
Yale
Wake Forest
N. C. State
Tennessee .
V. M. I.
Davidson
Virginia
Head Coach
Assistant Coaches
Captain
Manager
. End
. End
Quarterback
Quarterback
Halfback
Halfback
Halfback
Halfback
Fullback
*9
Two Hundred Fifteen
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FOOTBALL dope had it that the game here would be below par, but "Capt. Coleman's
men", under "Tommie" Campbell, Ramsay, Homewood, and Tandy, came back,
and Carolina experienced one of her most successful seasons. The "Drys" had it
all their way in Washington, but "Mother Nature" revoked the decision and gave us a
"wet" season, the first five games being played on muddy fields.
Carolina opened her season with Rutgers. We started
oft on the defensive and it took three touchdowns to wake
us up. Rutgers did all of her scoring in the first half, but we
outplayed them without a doubt in the last half. Coleman's
punting was the feature for Carolina. Rutgers 19, Carolina o.
Northern territory was again invaded when the "Tar
Heels met Yale in New Haven. Contrary to her former
practice, Yale tried to pile up a large score, but her first
team proved none too good. Capt. Coleman's punting drew
applause time and again from the crowded Bowl. "Chuck"
Pharr scored the only touchdown against Yale. Yale 34,
Carolina 7.
Wake Forest, with one of the best teams that she has had in years, came to Chapel
Hill and played a good game on a field of slush and mud. Tenny on an "off tackle"
play carried the ball over in the last quarter for the only score of the game. Carolina
6, Wake Forest o.
Carolina, primed to the hilt and craving action, went to Raleigh and turned loose
on N. C. State. This first game between the two institutions since 1905 was a fine ex-
hibition of good sportmanship and hard fighting. Pritchard of Carolina was the star of
the game by blocking a kick and scoring the winning touchdown. Carolina 1 3 , N. C. State 1 2 .
The next game was with Tennessee in Knoxville on a field of mud and yet more mud.
Neither team showed up nor was able to score. Tennessee o, Carolina o.
V. M. I., with too much "Leach" and an over-confident Carolina team on the field
together, licked us on our own grounds hands down. V. M. I. 27, Carolina 7.
After a good shake-up and a lot of hard
work-outs, Carolina played Davidson in
Winston-Salem. The whole team in some of
the old form broke up trick plays and passes
and brought home the fourth victory.
Davidson o, Carolina 10.
For the first time in history, Virginia and
Carolina met in Chapel Hill, the two teams
being about equal in weight and experience,
played a wonderful game. Virginia started
things with a rush, but after an exchange of
punts, Carolina assumed the offensive and worked the ball down the field on line plunges
until "Runt" Lowe received a short pass from "Nemo" in the second quarter and carried
the ball over for the only score of the game. Reinhardt played the best game for Vir-
ginia, and Lowe for Carolina. Harrell tackled like a ton of bricks and Coleman held
up the "old rep." Virginia played a fine, sportsmanlike game to the very end. Virginia o,
Carolina b.
"Tommie" Campbell head coach and the best that Carolina has ever had, has proved
himself invaluable to our athletics, and thus closed his second successful season on the
"Hill."
Tivo Hundred Sixteen
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N.C. STATE- VIRGINIA
Capt. Coleman pvintm^-Vindinia Game
Three minuter to play -Ptate on Carolina'^ 6oyd.line
Carolina ho \dr Virginia fbrdown.r-Vir3miaGa.me
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QJrark
(i»paH0tt of 1919)
'Charlie'- Davis
'Rainey" Clthbertson
Captain
Manager
Sljp ukam
Smith
F. Herty
Davis
Nichols
York
Farthing
Norfleet
Spencer
Nims
H. Herty
Corpening
MURCHISON
Ranson
State Meet
Emerson Field, Chapel Hill
May 10, 19 19
Carolina .
Trinity
N. C. State
V. P. I. — Carolina Meet
Blacksburg, Va.
May 17, 1919
V. P. I.
Carolina
58 points
34 points
29 points
5jii.i.iii.[,i.i.i;
71 points
55 points
Two Hundred Twenty-three
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©Ije ^eaamt
A REVIEW of the 19 19 track season sets forth the story of a band of enthusiasts
restoring to its rightful place one of our major sports. When the season began,
material was woefully lacking as a result of the war, and the management was
unable to secure a coach. It looked for a time as though there would be no team. The
track men of the University determined, however, that this should not be the case. They
met and elected Davis (a pre-war star) captain, and
under his direction and that of Webb (another pre-
war track man) they went to work.
Although the start was late, the work went for-
ward with a vim, and soon a team began to round
into shape. In the State Meet which came in May
we easily took first place, Davis starring in individ- ,
ual points scored and Spencer pushing the State
record in the pole-vault. Davis missed the State rec-
ord in the shot-put by one half inch. In a -dual meet
with V. P. I., we were less fortunate but held them
to a very close score. As the result of the work of
this little band of men, considerable interest is being
taken in track this year and prospects are good for
the best season in the history of the University. For
1920, meets have been arranged as follows: Tri-
angular Meet at Charlottesville between Virginia,
V. M. I., and Carolina; State Meet at Chapel Hill;
South Atlantic Meet at Blacksburg, Va. ; Dual Meet with Trinity. Plans are also
under consideration for accepting Harvard's request for a meet at Chapel Hill on
its southern tour. We await with eagerness the outcome of the season.
Tivo Hundred Twenty-four
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laHtoball
(^faann of 192D)
Major Bo ye
"Billy" Carmichael
"Shorty" Sprltll
January 15
January 16
January 17
January 24
January 29
February 7
February 9
February 1 o
February 1 1
February 1 7
February 20
February 27
March b
Coach
Captain
Manager
<Hjr Scant
Carmichael
Forward
LlIPFERT
Centre
Shepard
Forward
X lORRIS
Guard
Griffith
Forward
ROLRKE
Guard
KlTTRELL
Forward
Erwin
Guard
Douglas
Centre
Lewis
Guard
Carolina vs
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Carolina vs.
Guilford at Greensboro
Davidson at Davidson
Charlotte at Charlotte
Trinity at Durham
Davidson at Chapel Hill
Virginia at Lynchburg
Georgetown at Washington
Catholic University at Washington
Navy at Annapolis
N. C. State at Chapel Hill
Trinity at Chapel Hill
Virginia at Raleigh
N. C. State at Raleigh
BUililililihl. M, M'M iMil.UiUU, I1I1M1I. I. U.I, U,l, I, I, M, 1,1,1, 1,1,1,1,1,
Two Hundred Twenty-seven
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THE University has been able to secure for coach
this year. Major Frederick C. Boye, who was
captain of his quint while at West Point. With
Carmichael for Captain and a good schedule by Manager
"Shorty" Spruill we may look forward to some rare games
this year.
The men who have shown up best so far are Car-
michael, Shepard, and Kittrell as forwards, and Morris
and Rourke as guards. Liipfert and Douglas are about
equal at centre. Shepard returned after serving nearly
two years in the army. His last basket-ball record at
Carolina was rewarded by being selected as an All-South
Atlantic forward. Kittrell and Griffith were very pro-
mising substitutes last year. The team is greatly strength-
ened by the addition of Douglas at centre who came to
us from Trinity and who was chosen centre on the All-
South Atlantic team. The schedule includes such teams
as Davidson, Trinity, Georgetown. Virginia, Catholic
University, Navy, and N. C. State.
The season opened with the Durham "Y" and we
got away successfully with the opener. Our men showed
good early season form and prospects are promising.
Durham came back in the next game and lowered our
colors on their own floor. Two more defeats followed in
close succession, administered by Davidson and the
Y. M. C. A. of Charlotte. After that the team settled
down to work. Every night they played and practiced
in the gym just as though they were fighting the "old
rival." After about a week of such work as they had
never seen before, they journeyed over to Durham again
and took on Trinity accompanied by the whole school.
It was a splended game, both teams showing up well.
The score was 37 to 2b with Carolina on the long end.
To keep up the good record we had a date arranged with
Davidson on the home floor, and succeeded in evening up
affairs by beating them to the thrilling tune of 23 to 22.
The first half ended with Carolina one point ahead, and
they were able to maintain a slight lead throughout the
whole game. The team leaves shortly for a northern tour
on which it will meet many of the best teams in the East.
We look forward with eagerness to a successful season,
which means a majority of the games in the North to our
credit and to wallop N. C. State and Virginia in the bar-
gain. And we believe that we won't be disappointed,
either.
Two Hundred Twenty-eight
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ALTHOUGH, in common with many of the ordinary college activities, the gym has
/-A experienced a few years of decided inactivity and dullness due to the influence of
the war. it has just passed through a yearof unusual interest and animation. Every
afternoon it has been crowded to a degree seldom equalled in its past history by students
who have shown not a momentary sort of interest, but an extraordinary and continued
enthusiasm. Not only were there unskilled Freshmen to whom the use of a gymnasium
was. as yet, rather a mystery, but there were many new men of
considerable attainment and great promise, as well as a few older
men to whom long practice has given more or less proficiency.
The "'gym'" made two highly successful innovations which
mark a distinct progress over the policy of former years. First,
it went in for wrestling in a much more extensive way than ever
before, one of the upstairs rooms having been provided w ith mats
for this purpose. This is a feature which interests many to whom
the ordinary gym training offers no appeal. Also, represented
by Joe Person and Percy Lynch, it has given exhibitions during
the intermissions of the basketball games which have filled w ith
interest an otherwise tiresome interval It is also hoped that
some time in the near future, arrangements may be made
whereby hot water will be provided for the pool during the win-
ter months.
In spite of the vast numbers frequenting the '"gym" this year, there was an unusual
scarcity of trained men. Although there were four candidates for letters in the winter
try-outs (J. A. Person. W. H. Butt. H. E. Martin, and C. G. Ashby), there were only
two of the old letter-men back — C. P. Spruill and P. P. Lynch. Notable among the re-
mainder for their good work are Patterson. Wimberley. Long. Ransom and Xlarshburn;
and for the Freshmen, Barnes, Merritt, Dula, and Gholdson. Thus there is promise of
a greater and more successful vear in '20-21.
Two Hundred Thirty-one
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H9W1CTY HM12Q-]
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(HinBB m\b Mubb Kt[)htUB
WE have seen that although a college is primarily interested in a man's mental de-
velopment, physical development must in no way be underestimated when we con-
sider the well-rounded man. Taking into consideration that only about eight percent
of the students can have a place on the regular varsity squads, the University has sought
some definite, attractive form of athletics which is more concerned with the development of
the many rather than the perfection of the few. Knowing that the success of the move-
ment depended on the type of man who was to be in charge, Captain C. J . Browne was
selected for this work. The interest and enthusiasm of the entire student body readily
shows the success of the movement. He appointed a group of men to act as an Athletic
Committee with J. S. Massenburg as its chairman. This committee has a definite plan
of action for the future. Courts have been provided for basketball in Memorial Hall
along with several new outdoor courts, thus giving a large group of men an opportunity
for participation in this sport. Interclass track meets will be held during the spring
along with the usual class tennis and baseball. It is evident that class athletics has a
definite part to play in the University. It develops a fine spirit of fellowship and solves
to a degree the growing difficulty of getting men in touch with each other on our over-
grown campus.
CLASS FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS -SOPHOMORE TEAM
Tivo Hundred Thirty-two
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IN common with every other form of athletics at the
University, tennis came in for its part of suffering
during the war. In fact, we have not put out a varsity
tennis team since the Spring of 191 8, Wilson and Prince com-
posing this last team. Since that time, class tennis alone has
survived. These class tennis tournaments have been filled
with thrilling matches and looked on with interest by the
students. In the last tournament of the year, "Snooks"
Durham won the captaincy of the Senior Class team, Wash-
burn of the Junior, Gardner of the Sophomore, and Williams
of the Freshman team. The class tennis tournament of the
Fall of 1919 saw many of the same names appear as winners
in the tournament. Washburn and Gwynn composed the
Senior Class team, Gardner and Noble the Junior, Williams
and Barden the Sophomore, and Jernigan and Long the
Excellent tennis was played and prospective material for the
Tennis enthusiasts are looking forward to the time when tennis shall once more take
its place along with other branches of athletics, and tennis teams shall travel "abroad in
quest of victory as in days gone by. With the election of Ben Cone as manager, we shall
count varsity tennis no idle dream. There is an abundance of material, and tennis
should and must excel its former importance as a college sport.
Two Hundred Thirty-four
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®tje ^>tutottt dnmtril
John Pipkin Washburn
John Hosea Kerr
Joseph Altira McLean
Clem Bolton Holding
Robert Norman Harden
John Craton Mills
Thomas Clayton Wolfe
Edwin Emerson White
President
Secretary
Representative from the Sophomore Class
Representative from the Law School
Representative from the Medical School
Representative from the Pharmacy School
Representative chosen by the Student Body
Representative chosen by the Council
Two Hundred Thirty-five
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Corydon Perry Spruill
James Speed Massenburg
John Pipkin Washburn
John Hosea Kerr
Joseph Altira McLean
Edward Morris Whitehead
Clarence Reese Sumner .
Warren Vaughan Woodard
Carey Lanier Harrington
William Robert Wunch
President
Secretary
President of the Senior Class
President of the Junior Class
President of the Sophomore Class
Representative from the Senior Class
Representative from the Sophomore Class
Representative from the Freshman Class
Representative from the Professional School
Representative-at-Large
Tivo Hundred Thirly-six
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SEASON 1919-1920
Frederick H. Koch, Director
©rtgtnal iFnlk f laga
G1\'EN IN THE
Playhouse at Chapel Hill
The Carolina Playmakcrs is the dramatic organization of the University and the community of
Chapel Hill, taking the place of the University Dramatic Club, This organization has for its purpose
the writing and production of plays of North Carolina and the creation of a new folk drama in this State.
The Carolina Playmakcrs was founded in iqi8-iqiq by Professor Frederick H. Koch who came from
North Dakota to carry on the work of folk playmaking and community drama which he began there as
founder and director of the Dakota Playmakers.
During the Summer School of iqiq.'The Taming of the Shrew" was presented in the forest theatre.
In the late Fall of iqiq. three plays were presented; "Who Pays1" a tragedy of the industrial conflict bv
Minnie Shepard Sparrow; "The Third Night," a mountain play of the supernatural by Thomas Wolfe;
"The Hag", a comedy of folk superstition by Elizabeth A. Lay.
I n commenting on the work of the Carolina Playmakers the American Review of Reviews has published
the following:
"Their efforts deserve commendation from every man and woman -who has our country's welfare
at heart When every community has its own playhouse and its own native group of plays
and producers, we shall have a national American theatre which will give a richly varied authentic ex-
pression of American life."
£xrruittir g>taff for 1919-1920
Director of Stagecraft ....
Director of State Construction
Stage Manager .....
Assistant Stage Manager ....
Director ot Lighting .....
Scene Painting .....
Stage Settings and Property
Make-up
Costumes
House Managers
Publicity
Business Manager
Executive Committee
University Committee
Play Committee
Committee on Try-outs
Two Hundred Thirty-eight
Mr. Parker H. Daggett
Mr. Alvin S. Wheeler
Mr. James S. Moffitt
Mr. Chester Burton
Mr. John E. Lear
Miss Lay, Mrs Latshaw, Mr. Hill
Miss Nov Mrs Stacy, Mrs. T. J. Wilson,
Mrs Kluttz, Mr Harrer. Mr. Hobbs
(Miss Thornton. Miss Lay. Miss Love,
Mrs Winston, Mrs. Latshaw. Mr. MacMillan
Mrs. Joseph H. Pratt
Mr. Bell. Mr. Morrison
Mr. W. R. Wunch
Mr. Chas. T. Woollen
Mr Woollen.Mr. Wheeler. Mr. Daggett,
] Miss Roberson. Miss Taylor, Miss Lay,
Mr MacMillan
Mr Greenlaw, Mr. Howe, Mr. Daggett,
[Mr. Wheeler, Mr Weaver
Mr. Dey. Mr. Howe. Mr. Coker,
Mr Hanford, Mr. Daggett
Mr. Baker, Mr. Booker. Mr Dargan, Mr. Moss
M, 1,1,1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1,1.1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, I.I.I, 1,1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, ihl
1,1.1,1,1.1,1,1.1.171
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A Tragedy of the Tenant Fanner by Harold \\ illiamson
Peggy, the sixteen-year old daughter of Will Warren, a tenant farmer, has promised to marry Jed,
a common farmhand, but after talking with Wesley MacDonald. the son of the farm-owner, she becomes
discontented with the sordid drudgery of her future with Jed. and declares to Mag. her mother, that she
is going to leave the farm to get work in town. "I ain't a'gonna marry Jed an' have to work like adog
all my life besides. 1 got to love the man I marry." But her mother replies scornfully, "Love,
what's love got to do with your bread and meat? You was raised on the farm an' I reckon
that's jest about the place for you." Her father enters, and worn out by his quarrel with the farm-
owner and suffering from "one of them durned miseries " around his heart, when Peggy continues in her
determination not to marry Jed, in a fit of rage he drives her from his house — then exhausted by his un-
controlled passion, he reels backward and falls — dead. Now that the breadwinner of the family is taken,
Peggy is forced to marry Jed so that her mother and little brother. Herman, may not be turned out of
the house by MacDonald. Peggy is foredoomed in her struggle to free herself from the serfdom of the
soil.
fforamiB nf thr Play
Will Warren, a tenant farmer
Mag Warren, his wife
Peggy, their daughter, aged eighteen
Herman, their son. aged eight
Jed, a farmhand, in love with Peggy
John MacDonald. the land-owner
W esley K lacDonald, his son. a university student
Scene: A tenant farm in North Carolina. Bare living
Time: The present. An April evening about seven o
George McF. McKie
Elizabeth Taylor
Virginia McF.adyen
Nat Henry
Harold Williamson
George Denny
George Crawford
room of a cabin,
clock.
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A Scene from Pe
(George McKie), Mat; Wii
farm hand (Harold Williamson I . Will Warrei
n. (Elizabeth Taylor), Herman (Nat Henry).
Two Hundred Thirty-nine
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A iFtglitutg (fejmral
A Comedy of Xegro Life by Louisa Reid
The large family of Rev. Albert Henry Martin, the negro pastor of Mt. Zion Church
expect the eldest son back from France and a party has been planned to welcome him.
He returns and is received joyously, especially when they find out that he is not just a
private but a corporal. Solomon, the corporal, becomes so swollen with pride in his
bragging account of marvelous adventures with captured Germans and machine guns,
that when the guests of the party arrive he refuses to demean himself by talking to a
mere private (Erasmus Johnson) and carries off Erasmus' girl, Georgia, who has worked
in New York and is now the negro belle. Erasmus will not be ignored by the braggart
Solomon and he starts a fight in which the corporal is outfought and Georgia is won back.
"Doan give me no corporal what can't do nothin' but talk when I kin have a private
what kin fight! " she declares, throwing her arms around the neck of Private Johnson as
the curtain falls.
IGpauinn, $praiina of tljr $lay
Corporal Solomon Martin, just back from France . . . Albert Oettinger
Private Erasmus Johnson, also just back from France . . Fred Cohn
Rev. Albert Henry Martin, pastor of Mt. Zion flock . . John Shaw
Judith Martin, his wife ....... Madeline Palmer
Other sons and daughters of the pastor, belles and gallants of the town and a Civil \\ ar
Veteran.
Scene:
Time:
Parlor of a small frame house in a North Carolina town.
May, 1 9 19. About eight o'clock in the evening.
Left to right. Rev. ^
Corporal Ma
1 (John Shawl. Private Johnston (Fred Cohnl, Georgia Stowe (Louis
(Albert Oettingeri, Judith Martin (Madeline Palmer), Moses (Dick
Battle), I'nele Handsome Chester Burton)
Two Hundred Forty
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I19W1KETY WK2QJE
TI'i'HTIT
n Paga
A Tragedy of Industrial Conflict by Minnie Shepard Sparrow
Simon Benson, strike-leader in a North Carolina town, lives with his two children. Jimmie, aged
thirteen, and Megsie. a year younger, who keeps house for him. To Benson's home comes John Tate,
president of the car company, to plead with the leader as a last resort that the men should accept a
compromise and return to work before those who are innocent are made to pay for the unrest. Benson
holds to his demands for higher wages, and Tate leaves, declaring that the strikers will be the ones who
will suffer. After warning Megsie not to allow Jimmie to leave the house, Benson goes off to join the
strikers. Jimmie goes out and returns with news of excitement uptown and a dollar he has earned and
a mighty hunger for his supper. Megsie goes out to get the food and a piece of pink ribbon for herself
as her share of the supper. Neither had thought of the danger of the riot. In a few minutes, shooting
is heard and Megsie is brought in dead. The women whisper that it was her father who fired the shot
as she was crossing the street. The problem of unrest which led to the strike has found no solution, but
it is the child who pays in the end.
Irrsnna nf tltp $lag
John Tate, the president of the street car companv
Simon Benson, motorman and strike leader
Megsie, aged twelve
Jimmie, aged thirteen )
Mrs. Biggs
Mrs. Cherry / '
Leonora Tate, John Tate's daughter
A doctor .....
Car operatives ....
motherless children of Benson
wives of neighbor strikers .
Roberts. Coker,
David R. Hodcin
Robert Proctor
/ Margaret Bullitt
Clayton Riddle
/ Rachael Freeman
\ Eleanor McCarthy
Lina Prudes'
George Crawford
Heffner, Moore, Hill
Scene: The home of Simon Benson in a city in North Carolina.
Time: Late afternoon in the Summer of iqig.
Ill
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Jimmie iCIayton Riddlel, Megsie iMargaret Bullitt 1, :
(Robert Proctor), The Doctor (George Crawford)
7 ico Hundred Forty-one
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A Mountain Play of the Supernatural by Thomas Wolfe
Dorset and Cogswell are sitting at a table in a room in the "Old Man's house." This is the third
night since the "Cap'n" killed the "Old Man", and Cogswell, who is very superstitious, does not like to
stay there waiting for the stage to come through. He wants to divide the "Old Man's" gold now and go,
and he tells Dorset how the "Cap'n" killed this old man. He had not tried to surprise him, but had
entered boldly, the "Old Man" had recognized him and declared that Captain Richard Harkins would
never have his daughter now because she was dead. And then the "Cap'n" had shot him. Dorset had
found pictures in an old family album, and they piece out the story of Harkin's love for the daughter of
the "Old Man", his loss of her when her father took her away and hid her until her death, and the
"Cap'n's ' revenge on the "Old Man" when he comes to this deserted place to find him. Here the captain
enters and proposes that they divide the gold of the "Old Man", but as Dorset and Cogswell raise the
hearth-stone to get the box, the "Old Man's" bloody chuckle is heard above the storm outside, his ghost
appears, and Harkins tears off the locket with the picture of the girl, and goes out to answer the summons
of the "Old Man's" ghost, leaving Dorset and Cogswell terrified at the sound of the bloody chuckle
which seems to blend with the sound of the raging tempest.
Persona of lljr $lau.
Captain Richard Harkins. a degenerate Southern gentleman
Dorset, the captain's henchman ......
Cogswell, a half-breed .......
The Old Man ■ .
Thomas Wolfe
Jonathan Daniels
Fred Cohn
Chester Burton
Scene: The dilapidated dwelling of the "Old Man" in a deserted mountain section of North Carolina,
thirty-five miles west of Asheville.
Time: A stormy night in the Autumn of 1858.
Left to right. Dorset (Jonathan Daniels). Cogswell i Fred Cohn,)
Captain Harkins (Thomas Wolfe.)
Two Hundred Forty-two
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A Comedy of Folk Superstition by Elizabeth A. Lay
Glen and Charlie, the mischievous little grandchildren of "Mammy", are fascinated by the stories
ot witches and their doings, though Sal. their mother, had no patience with such notions. While Sal is
out seeing to the pigs. "Mammy" tells the boys that she has been ridden by a witch and that she is going
to catch "the old hag" one of these days. The way to catch a hag is to get her when she is sitting in a
wooden bottomed chair "an' then you creeps up behin' her an' sticks a three-pronged fork in the under-
neath part of the chair, an' she won't be able to move." Glen says that Granny Batts, the old woman
whom "Mammy" suspects of riding her. is coming here today and the two little boys plot to catch her
while "Mammy" is terrified. When Granny Batts comes in, "Mammy" is forced to sit and talk with her
and Charlie creeps up and sticks a fork in the chair on which Granny Batts sits. The old woman at that
same minute is seized with an awful pain inher side, and the children are sure that they have caught a
witch. As the hag becomes more angry in her vain attempts to get up. the children grow frightened,
and when Sal comes in and pulls out the fork in her impatience at "all these here goin's on", Granny Batts
jumps up and drives them all from the house in her fury at being called a hag.
$rr80tt0 of tljr Jllay
Sal, a countrywoman
Her mischievous little bovs
/ Charlie, aged nine
\ Glen, aged eleven
Mammy, the old grandmother
Granny Batts, an ill-tempered old neighbor
Scene : Sal's cabin home in a sparsely settled part of North Carolina.
Time: Early morning of an Autumn day about sixty years ago.
Mildred Sherrill
George Winston
Dick Battle
Aline Hughes
Elizabeth Taylor
Left to right. Charlie (Geo. Winston , Sal (Mildred Sherrill , Glen (Dick Battle),
Mammy lAileen Hughes), Granny Bates 'Elizabeth Taylor)
Two Hundred Forty-three
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SCENE FROM THE TAMING OF THE SHREW— The Forest Theatre
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WMTY YMK 20
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allje lebatutg (Homtril
(Offerers
George Dewey Crawford
Daniel Lindsay Grant
President
Secretary
{IhtlnHthro)jir
William Henry Andrews John Hosea Kerr
Uialrrttr
Robert Brlce Gwynn William Haywood Bobbitt
Two Hundred Forty-six
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(H91MMTY WK2Q.J
!'i'rilrri'ilil'li'',i'i|i,i'iTTrT
(Carolina -Utrgmia
Affirmative
Carolina
Negative
VIRGINIA
C. T. Boyd
Won by
Negative
Resolved: That The Federal
Government Should Own And
Operate The Railroads
Negative
Carolina
Affirmative
Johns
Hopkins
M. H. Patterson
Won by
Affirmative
W. H. Bobbitt
W. C. Eaton
Two Hundred Forty-seven
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Resolved: That With Respect _
Should Accord to the Citizen Of
China and Japan The Same Priv-
ileges As Extended To Those Of
European Nations.
Won by
Affirmative
Bingham
Medal
Won by
Robert B.
Gwynn
R. B. Gwynn, Di
Two Hundred Forty-eight
L. \Y Jarman, Ph
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3lunt0r (iratnnral (Emttpat
J C. Pittman, Phi Carr Medal won by r. b. Gwynn. Di
Nathan Mobley
Subject: "Great Decisions"
J. P. Washburn, PA
N. Mobley, Di
Two Hundred Forty-nine
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HtUg p. ilangmn (Eottteat
W. E. Price
. WILLIAM P. MANGUM MEDAL
Won by
W. E. Price
Subject: "An Honest Practice of a Campus Ideal'
Two Hundred Fifty
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ngmwor mm 20
I'l'i'i'i'iTi'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i ptek
ilarg 1. Urtgtft ^mortal E?bate
C. I. Taylor. Ph
Resolved: That Employers T C Taylor, Di
Should Concede Employees
Collective Bargaining
-» ^
Won by
Negative
Medal
Awarded to
Tyre C.
Taylor
D. L. Grant, Phi
C. T. Boyd, Di
Two Hundred Fifty-one
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119WMTY HM20]
■I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'TT
i>nplinmnrp JnterfiortPtij irbate
W.R.Berryhill.Di
Resolved: That Congres
Should Pass A Law Requiring
Compulsory Arbitration Of All
Disputes Between Employer
And Employee Where The
Greater Part Of The Business In
Which They Are Engaged Is
Interstate Commerce.
Won by
Negative
D. L. Grant, Phi
J. H. Kerr, Phi
Two Hundred Fifty-two
J. T. Penny, Di
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fH91lA«TY 1ME 20.^mnninEi:
iFtrshman Sttteranrietij Spbat?
D. Byrd, Ph
Resolved: That Congress
Should Pass A Law Requiring
Compulsory Arbitration Of All
Disputes Between Employer
And Employee Where The
Greater Part Of The Business In
Which They Are Engaged Is
Interstate Commerce.
Won by
Affirmative
H. L. Kiser, Di
A. W. Staley, Di
P. Hettleman, Phi
Two Hundred Fifty-three
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italerttr IGtteranj i^nrirtg
Brawley, T. J.
Bristol, H. C.
Bryant, L. H.
Cone, B.
Crawford, G. D.
Erwin, J. W.
Everett, H. S.
Foster, J. W.
Gwynn, R. B.
Hoyle, C. A.
Abernethy, O. M.
Bacon, F. R.
Beers, C. D.
Bell, F. D.
Berryhill, W. R.
Blythe, W. L.
BOBBITT, W. H.
Boyd, C. T.
Bl-eck, H. V. S.
Cook, J. L.
Cowan, J. C.
Evans, E. H.
Faerrington, J. C.
Forney, O. G
Fowler, C. W.
Griffin, A. G.
Hardin, B.
Hawfield, R. R.
Soil of iHrmbcra
frrmora
Joyner, C. R.
Liipfert, F. J. Jr.
\Il( IIAEL. O. B.
MOBLEY, N.
Pence, J.J.
Redfearn, C. H.
Ridce. C. B.
Simpson, H. B.
Sipe, B. W.
Spainhour, J. F.
.DuttinrB
Heffner, H. C.
HOFFNER, B. I.
Hudson, \V. P.
Johnston, R. M.
Kincaid, H. G
Leonard, C. T.
LlNEBERGER, A. C.
Liipfert, B. B.
Lohr, B. E.
Lowe, F. R.
Martin, E. H.
Martin, P. T.
Moody, R. M.
Norburn, R. L.
Ogburn, S. C, Jr.
Owens, A. B.
Patterson, M. H.
Penny, J. T.
Spaugh, R. A.
Spencer, E. M.
Stimpson, R. T.
Terry, H. S.
Townsend, F. L., Jr.
Williams, R. D.
Willis, S. H.
Wolfe, T. C.
Wunch, W. R.
Person, J. A.
Phillips, C. W.
Porter, G. B.
Reeves, E. E.
Renegar, H. C.
Robbins, G. B.
Roberts, B. N.
Shaw, J. D.
Smith, C. H.
Smith, R. O.
Stimpson, R. T.
Stout, W. W.
Taylor, T. C.
Thies, K. E.
Tuttle, O. A.
Van Noppen, D.
Welch, O. B.
Wright, A. B.
Two Hundred Fifty-five
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MTITI'I'I'I'l'I'l'l'I'IM'
'H9HMMTT mm 20]
I'l'l I'li'i'l'I'IM'I'l'I'l I1
Abernethy, E. H.
Apple. J. L.
Armfield, B \ I
Benbow, E. V.
BONDL'RANT. S. O.
Boyd. R. E.
Bradford, J. H.
Brown, S. W.
Coker. J W
CORPENNING, H. C.
Crawford, R. B.
Denny, G. V., Jr.
Dorsett. J. D
Edwards, C E.
Falls. W. F.
Francis, W R
Greenwood, J. C.
Grose. C. H.
Hall, E. F.
Allen, J. F.
Alexander, E. J.
Brown, J. M.
Brown, R. E.
Carroll, C. C.
Castor, F. S.
Cathey, S. W.
Chapman. J . \Y.
Cheseborough, J. C.
Cline, j. I.
Cunningham, H. C.
Dellinger, E. E.
Downing, A. O.
Edwards, P. H.
Ellis, H. B.
Fesperman, G. V.
Gambill, W. J.
GULLICK, J. G
&uphomnrrs
Hamer. D.
Hartsell. L. T.
Hester, W. S.
Hill, G. W.
Jennings, E. D.
King, A. K.
Lancaster, C. G
Lively. K. K.
London, W. L.
McLean, J. A.
McRae, J. D.
Matthews, W. E.
Merritt. A. H.
MOEHLMANN, E. O.
Mourane, J. H.
Murdock, T. G.
Myers. D. L.
Neely, H. H.
Ocb'urn. O. W.
JFrcBljmrH
Halsey. L K
Hamrick, F.
Harding, W. K.
Hendrix. O. C.
Herron, F. J.
Hook, W. W.
Hunt, E. C.
Koontz. W. C.
Langfred, G. W.
Leonard, G. H.
Lillycrop, \Y A
Little, T. A.
Mauney, C. G.
McClund, S. R.
McCorkle, E. H.
McMurray, E. L.
Mebane, W. M.
Merritt, S. H.
Overcash, W. E.
Pharr, F. C
Pickens, W. A.
Pipes. E. J.
Ranson, P. J.
Ranson. R L
Rigcins. H. M
Sharpe. O. J.
Simms. A H
Smith, L. S.
Smith. T. C.
Summey, L. D.
Sumner. C R.
Staley. A. W.
Stoudemire. S. A.
Toms, \Y. F.
Van Cannon. C. H.
Williams, C. |.
Mitchum, W. C.
Moser, A. M.
Parker, W B.
Perry, C. H.
Phillips, B. D.
POINDEXTER, C. C.
Price, R. C.
Thompson. R. L . Jr.
Trotter, J P.
Waddell, R. L.
Ward. H. T.
Warrick, J.
Weitzel, F. J.
Whitener, D. J.
Williams, H. T.
Wiles. \Y E.
Yates, W. J.
Youngblood, H. S.
Two Hundred Fifty-six
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(H9HMMTY H«2QJ^
'I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'I'l'I'I'I'ITTT
PRE.TIDENT.P
OF THE
DIALECTIC
LITERARY
SOCIETY
R B Gwyiviv
G.D.Crawford
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i
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►I'l'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i1^
pTtlantljrnptr ICttrranj ^nrietij
Andrews, W. H.
Babb, J. S.
Daniel, D. S.
Hill, M. A.
Jarman, L. VV.
Jenkins, F. B.
Jernigan, M. M.
KlTTRELL, T. S.
Ashby, C. L. G.
Boyce. H. S.
Brooks, F. P.
Brown, B. C.
Bullock, A. R.
Butt, W. H.
Davis, R. M.
DORSETTE, R C.
Dupree. B. O,
Edwards, C. H
Soil of mpmbrra
Asmara
Lynch, P. P.
Moore. W. F.
Martin, H. E.
Nichols, W. J.
Payne, F. L.
Pittman, J. C.
Procter, J. C.
Umstead, L. \V.
Spruill, C. P.
dluutora
Edmondson, H.
Gardner, W. A.
Grant, D. L.
Green, P. F.
Hayes, N. P.
Hicks, J. B.
Kerr, J. H., Jr.
Massenburg, J. S.
Naiman, B.
Norris, J. F.
Saleby, F. R.
Stone, M. L.
Stone, M. B.
Washburn, J. P.
Walker, C. H.
Wilson, R. H.
White, E. E.
White, F. C.
Pollock, P. B.
PURRINGTON, A. L.
Sawyer, B.
Scarborough, A. M.
Shine, W. H.
Taylor, G. E.
Taylor, C. I.
Wilsojm, L. G.
Wilkins, A. B.
WoRTHINGTON, S. C.
Two Hundred Fifty-nine
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IM'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I I'l'l'l'l'l
E
:
Anderson, W. P
Grady, F N
Mills, W. C.
;
Anderson, R. S
Hairr, A Y
Newman,- IB
Arrincton, S. 0
Harper, M D
O'Neal. H F
Barden. J. G
Harris, H. C.
Parker, T J
:
Barden, B H
Herring, P. D
Phipps, L J
:
Bardeb, R M.
Hettleman. P.
Proctor, R W.
-
Barefoot, W. J
Howard, C. E
Rogers, F. A
i
Beale, J J
Harris, R. S
Rand, E. G
.-
Bender. J A,
Isear, D W
Royal. D M
-.
Bender. R. W.
Jackson, W. 1
Savace, J. L
Brand. J. N.
Jacobi, B. D.
SCHOLL, J. L
]
Brown, H. S
Johnston, C S
SCHULTZ, J D
--
Byrd, D.
Jones, M. B
Steed, F W
z
Chappell, H. V.
Kellum, F. L.
Smith, N W
~
Carson, R O
Knight, B. H
Shaw, W. T.
:
Collins, J C
Knowles, W. B
Stephenson, 1 . J
Crumpler, C. O
Little, B.
Teu, S.
-
Daniels, J. W.
Love, S. J.
Tillman, R. A
Daughtridge, A
L. Lennon, W. F
Venters, L. S
Eley, A J
Maxwell, J E
Williamson, A
z
Ellington, O. J
Maddrey, J. T
Womble, W B
:
Fields, D M
Marshburn, R. F.
3xtvb\mtx\
:
Allen, D
Harris, W. L
Parrott. J M
i
Aycock, F. B , J
r. Hampton, G. C
Pearson. N H
:
Butler, D C
Howard, T. S
Purrington. P.
~
Branch, W. V.
Horsefield, G. M.
Prescott, M B
Bryan, S. D
Holmes, C. C
Proctor, W. C
z
Combs, J.J
Hosea, W. H.
Reavis. P. A., Jr
1
Cooper, J. H.
Horner, W. E
Rhue. J.J.
-
Downing, D. G
Holden, W. L.
Rocers, F. A
1
Dabbs, H. L
Hodgin, D. R
Spain, J. H
:
Elkins. W. J.
Jernigan, E C
Stalvey, A. B
z
Eacles, J. B
Kerr, J. Y.
Smith, C C
-i
Epstein, H. G
Kimbrough, J. W . Jr
Smith, C. G
z
Fuauay, L
Marcom, J L
Sinclaire, D C. Jr
:
Felton, R. L
Merritt, C. Z.
Sinclaire, C 1
z
Gholson, T. T
Matthews. C. I
Taylor, C. B
I
Gray. R L , Jr
Matthews, S. T.
Thomas, C. B.
I
Graincer, J
McCall, Z. A.
Woodard, W. V.
j
Gay, B. S.
Matheson, R. A . , Jr.
Wilson, O L . Jr .
■3
Harris, E J.
Merritt, A H
Younc, V.
Moore, T. O
:
i^anorarg AJprnbers
Carroll, D. D.
Foerster. N.
McKie, G. McF.
:
Daggett. P H
Hanford, J H.
Thornton. R H
H
Koch, F H
Two Hundred Sixty
j
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i ■ im- 'I'l'l'I'l'I'I'I'I'ETEQ
PH1IANTHROPIC
LITERARY
U>.H. Andrews- SOCIETY J.PAVasnburn
L."W. Jarman
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T''N' 1 'ITI'ITI'IT
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^(1191MMTY TKW 2miTiriTirH'riTTWrTTTTF
II. N. (E. Mamma Aaanriatton
(0ffirrrs
If all arrm
Mary Lolise Cobb
Nell Pickard
Rachael Freeman
Vera Pritchard
Louise Venable
Mary Verner
Katherine Robinson
Lou Shine .
S'jjritui arrm
President
\ ice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
President
\ ice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
BJnmru's tSjmwr (Umnmtttrr
Mary Lolise Cobb. President
Adeline Denham Lolise Venable
Elizabeth Lay Theo Twitty
Twc Hundred Sixty-four
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Amnna (Dursplufs
FOLLOWING the rule that we are what we are largely because we
are where we are, every woman student as soon as she enters the
University becomes a co-ed. and as a member of this strange genus
she is known to her fellow-students. The thing which is not generally
known about the co-eds. is just what they are among themselves and
what is their own part in college life apart from the classes.
In 191 7, twenty-five women (a larger number
than there had ever been at the University),
feeling the need for a permanent organization,
formed themselves into the University of North
Carolina Women's Association, with the aim of
promoting the interests and activities of the
women students at the University and of arousing
interest in the higher education of women
throughout the State. This same year, the
University took a step toward the encourage-
ment of co-education by providing an Adviser
to Women. Mrs. Thomas Lingle. A room in
the Peabody Building was set aside for the use of the women students
and here they met during the first year, mainly for Red Cross work. With
the second year of the association, the
S. A.T. C. descended on the University,
and the women students confined their
activities then to co operating with the
"Y" in serving in the canteen and
helping with entertainments and with
hospital supplies during the "flu"
epidemic. The association also adopted
five French war orphans for whom it
is still providing. In college activities,
little progress was made beyond providing a gym class three times a
week in the association room.
This year, the association has been able to carry out several plans
for the increased activity of the women students "among themselves."
Two Hundred Sixty-five
^..U MM I I,, ihllllllhlll.Ullll. 1. 1, 1. 1. 1, 1,1, 1,1, 1. 1,1, 1, 1, I, I, I, I, 1. 1, 1, 1,1,1, 1, III, I, I, I, III, |,|, 1,1,1, 1,1
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Several entertainments have been held in which the women have come to
know each other better and which has given them some of the social life
provided for the men in their fraternities, clubs, and campus organiza-
tions. The co-eds entertained the whole student
body on Hallow'een with a party in the "Y" and a
vaudeville show in Gerrard Hall for which a small fee
was charged to cover expenses. With the addition of
a victrola, the association room has now become, even
more than before, the real centre for the activities
of the women students.
Steps are being taken toward the formation of
a Y. W. C. A. here which shall co-operate with the
Y. M. C. A. The women students this year have
also elected their own Honor Committee with a
similar function to the Student Council among the
men. With Mrs. Marvin H. Stacy as adviser, and
forty-two women students in the University, the association is developing
the activities of the women in a small way, and is looking forward to a
time when a Women's Building will provide for a more complete student
organization.
iHrmbrrs
Ola B. Andrews
Elizabeth C. Babbitt
Annie Elizabeth Baldwin
Marian D. S. Bradford
Claudia May Cates
Viola Cheek
Mary L. Cobb
Adeline Denham
Rachael Freeman
Dorothy Foltz
Alice L. Gattis
Lillian F. Gattis
Aline E. Hughes
Louise Johnston
Sylvia Latshaw
Elizabeth A. Lay
Kate Mears
Martha Norburn
Ruth Penny
Margaret Perry-
Nell Pickard
Vera Pritchard
Lina Pruden
Katherine Robinson
Mildred Sherrill
Lou S. Shine
Mrs. Shine
Annie Smith
Minnie Shepard Sparrow
Elizabeth Taylor
Llcile Thomson
Theo Twitty
Pauline Uzzell
L. Valeria Uzzell
Frances Vann
Louise Venable
Mary Verner
Two Hundred Sixty-six
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U>Iir $ arkrttr Bark
E. Emerson White
Henry D. Stevens
Benjamin Cone .
itfoari) of iEotUirs
Ernest H. Abernethy
Boyd Harden
Watts Hill
Robert B. Gwynn
Thomas S. Kittrell
James S. Massenblrg
Daniel L. Grant
H. Edmondson
Henry B. Cooper
Richard Coker .
Nathan Mobley
John Hardin
Leo H. Harvey .
William N. Poindexter
Two Hundred Sixty-eight
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manager
Business Manager
Managing
Art
Photographic
Associate
Associate
Associate
Assistant
Assistant
Assistant
Assistant
Assistant
Assistant
Assistant
Assistant
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
Editor
sJ I j 1 . 1 ■ I ■ I I , I , L. 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 , U 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 . K I ■ I , I , I , i , 1 . 1 , 1 . 1 l 1 , 1 , 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 , 1 ■ I , I U ■ 1 1 1 1,1,1 lil.hlil.hlilihhlililil.lililiMihlid
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MASSENBURG
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|J91>MTOTY WK2Q-1
Tim' I'i'i ' i ' i ' i ' i m ' i-nmrr
Abernethy
®Iir (Ear labtj
Managing iBoarn
H. D. Stevens ....... Editor-in-Chief
E. H Abernethy ...... Business Manager
W. L. Blythe Managing Editor
C. R. Sumner Art Editor
Asanriatr Slnaru
E. \V. G. Huffman
W. H. Andrews. Jr.
T. S. Kittrell
R. A. Spalgh
T. J. Wilson
\Y. E. Matthews
J. W. Daniels
W. P. Wooten
O. J. Sharpe
P. Hettleman
Two Hundred Seventy
S.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.IJ.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.I.1, 1,1,1.1, hl.l.l.1,1,1,1.1.1 .1,1.1.1.1,1, l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.THTfl
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Nettteman
We
MAGAZINE
Lniversin of North Carolina
HOLIDAY M'MHKR
11,,,,,,.':,. 191
MAGAZINE
BOARD
G.D Crawford
BUSINESS KANAGER
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V v
GWYNN PATTERSON SUMNER HETTLEMAN BLYTHE
WASHBURN MATTHEWS PURRINGTON LEONARD BANZET
The Tar Heel
BERRYHILL ANDREWS
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E'H'I'N'I'I'I'I'I'I'I TITITH T^YAWOY 11 20JjTITIMTI'JTnTITI^
HttuirrBtty JIublirattonH
THE YACKETY YACK
Published annually by the Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies and the
Fraternities. Editor-in-Chief, E. Emerson White; Business Managers, Henry D. Stev-
ens, Benjamin Cone.
THE TAR BABY
Published bi-monthly by the students of the University. Editor-in-Chief, H. D.
Stevens; Business Manager, E. H. Abernethy.
THE MAGAZINE
Published monthly by the Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies. Editor-
in-Chief, John P. Washburn; Business Manager, G. D. Crawford.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Published monthly by the Alumni Association. Editor, L. R. Wilson; Managing
Editor, E. R. Rankin; News Editor, J. L. Chambers.
THE ELISHA MITCHELL SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL
Published quarterly by the Elisha i\ litchell Scientific Society. Editors, W. C. Coker,
Collier Cobb, J. M. Bell.
STUDIES IN PHILOLOGY
Published quarterly by the Philology Club. Editors, Edwin Greenlaw, George
Howe, William Dey.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA RECORD
Published periodically by the University.
THE CAROLINA HANDBOOK
Published annually by the Y. M. C. A.
THE DIRECTORY
Published annually by the Y. M. C. A.
THE JAMES SPRUNT HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS
Published periodically by the University. Editors, J. G. deR. Hamilton, H. McG.
Wagstaff, W. W. Pierson.
THE CAROLINA CHEMIST
Published periodically by the Department of Chemistry. Editor, I. W. Smithy.
THE BLUE RIDGE
Published periodically by the students in English 21. Editor, John L. Aycock.
Two Hundred Seventy-four
F,llil.lilil.liliJ.lilil.l.lilil.l.l.lil.l.l.lllil,l.l,l,l.lill|ll.l,l.l.l1l.l,l.l.lililllil,l,lilll,lllililllill|lhl1hlilill|llil Iililililifl
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®fy % M. <&. A. Olabutrt
Hilton G. West
William H. Andrews, Jr.
Samuel H. Willis
E. Clyde Hunt
Daniel L. Grant
Robert B. Gwynn
Charles H. Smith
Charles Phillips
Roy Kellum
Robert H. Griffith
Amos J. Cummings
Benjamin Cone
THE CABINET
Two Hundred Seventy-Jive
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<% |. m. c. a.
(0fftrrra
George D. Crawford Pres. Samuel H Willis
William H. Andrews. Jr. \ice-Pres. Robert B. Gwynn
William R. Wlnch General Secretarx
Secretary
Treasurer
UNDER this year's able leadership, the Young Men's Christian Association has
made interesting advances. The central building, hitherto a more or less desolate
place with a painfully frigid interior, has been brightened up to an almost incred-
ible degree. Secretary Wunch has used characteristic taste in hanging the walls, now
cream-tinted, with well-chosen pictures, and a combination of new light-
ing fixtures, curtains, carpets, furniture, plaster and paint, has trans-
formed the place into what it eminently should be : a real campus home.
The social program of the association also has gone forward with especial
rapidity and success. Entertainments of every sort, designed to reach
every class of student, have formed a much appreciated part of the year's
service. In pursuance of its essentially religious purpose, but absorbing
the inspiriting atmosphere of its other activities, the association has
this year fostered an unusually worthwhile course in Bible Study; has
arranged numerous timely meetings of a religious nature: has supplied
teachers to eight rural Sunday Schools : has co-operated with the local
Sunday Schools and Churches in their work, and has continually sought
by doctrine and example to hold up on the campus the ideal of a w hole-
some Christian life.
In the way of service to the community as a whole,
the association has issued the Freshman Handbook and the
College Directory: has maintained Lost and Found and
Selfhelp Bureaus; has given assistance to new students
(especially during the trying opening days of the fall and
winter sessions) ; has brought frequent and worth-while lyceum attractions]
to the campus; has operated a second-hand hook exchange; has supervised
the postings of bulletins, and in a hundred and one ways has helped to
smooth the wrinkles out of wrinkly college life.
It has supplied leadership to the Boy Scouts of the town, and has also
harbored a club of younger boys. For the negroes it has operated a Night
School and other institutions of service. In addition, it has co-operated
wherever possible with the new program of class and general athletics.
In all these ways the association has given its substance and service
to the needs of the group, but its supreme service it reckons as that which
has reached the individual men of the campus, and in one way or another
quietly strengthened their love of things worth while and of the Christ
ideal for life. In a very real sense the association believes that the heart of religion re-
sides in the heart of the individual, and that he above all is worth cultivating. To meet
the varying and complex needs of every single man on the campus, whatever they may
be, is the highest ideal the organization knows.
So there are two aspects of the work: the apparent and the unapparent. It is the
former by which the association is commonly known and for which it is publicly praised
and appreciated; it is the latter by which it is more intimately known and for which its
name is written deep in the heart of many a Carolina man.
Two Hundred Seventy-six
Biliiiiiiii.i.ii 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. i.i. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. i.i. i.i. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. i.i. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. i.i. iii. 1. 1. i.i. 1. 1. 1. 1
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I^IW»MWIMMTINMMTITITIl|f]l91lMWTY 1MK 20j}l'''l'ITITI'ITI'l'l ITITIIE
(Eli? Gkrman Club
©fftrrra
Leo Heartt Harvey
Allen Erwin Gant
Samuel Royal Norris
President
Vice-President
Treasurer
Dances are never given by the German Club. They are sometimes held when enough of the fellows
can extract from dad the necessary fifty — "having bought many new books and broken several test-
tubes". In the early part of December everyone gets excited over the Christmas holidays and craves a
dance 1 And then about April we have found from experience that a series of dances is an admirable
cure for the spring fever. At Commencement, the feeling is spontaneous and we just can't help but
dance. But, oh! they are glorious occasions, and our social lions who have slept all the year, growl and
step forth into their own. And the "gurls" — they come all excited n thrilled n sparkling n everything.
They report that somewhere between Chapel Hill and Cove Creek there are in transit two trunks of
hats and a handbag of clothes. The scollege boys dress up a bit, too; they even wear their hats, and
thev set their union badges a little nearer the second button of their vests. But now, patient reader, 1
bring vou to the labyrinth of dress-suits, high collars, lil cussing, bow ties and olive oil. We soon adjust
our smile to the height of our collar and set forth in "the friend's" car in the direction of Battle's.
Daniel's, Kluttz's. or Patterson's. White columns, variegated lights peeping here and there from an
overhead arbor of the old long-leaf, "melty music — mellow as the moonlight" — mints — all contribute to
the excruciating pleasure. Feeds at the house, late dates, sob stuff, rash promises, broken hearts, and
a glimpse of the sun ere we snatch a snooze; afterwards, a week's talk on the "dope" — but say, pal,
may I cut in?
(Uljr iFall (Serman J3a«n> (Elub
William A. Blount
F. Robbins Lowe
S. Edwin Hughes
Two Hundred Seventy-eight
Leader
Assistant Leader
Assistant Leader
EimU.U.i
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Spring (Srrman <£luli Haurr
Hugh Dortch .......
Leader
J. Saunders Williamson .....
Assistant Leader
Lee O. Gregory ......
Assistant Leader
®hr ilmttnr prom
Amos J. Cummings
J. Harper Erwin
Alan B. Wright
Two Hundred Eighty
Leader
Assistant Leader
Assistant Leader
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H91M1CTY nam 20 j
'I'l'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'ri'
PRITCHARD
COMMENCEMENT
MARSHALS
LINEBERGER
BEERS
CUMMINGS
^7 1 ^ t . i ■ 1 . 1 . 1 ■ 1 . 1 . 1 , 1 . 1 > i , 1 . > , i , 1 > 1 . 1 1 1 , 1 ■ i . i , 1 1 1 , 1 ■ 1 > i . 1 . t . 1 ■ 1 ■ 1 . i . t . t . i . 1 . f . 1 ■ 1 , 1 , j . j . i ■ t , t ■ 1 ■ t ■ t . t , 1 . 1 , t . 1 . 1 . t . * . t , t . 1 1 1 1 1 , r 1 1 , 1 ■ i ii^tjiiit^^j^
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Austral (Elubs
liraamt of 1919-1920)
Prof. Pall John Weaver
Edwin S. Lindsey
Samuel Blount .
Marcus C. S. Noble .
James S. Howell
J. S. Howell
O. K. Craven
Wm. Egerton
C. L. Nichols
G W. Thompson
J. A. Smoot
E. S. Lindsey
E. S. Hale
R. W. Ogburn
Samuel Blount
Henry Simpson
William Hagood
W. E. Powell
Julian Turrentine
Clarinet
T. E. Rondthaler
Cornet
W. H. Horne, Jr.
(Slrr (Elub
First Tenors
Second Tenors
First Basses
R. G. Proctor
Second Basses
(Qrrhratra
\ iolins
Piano
Paul I. Weaver
Director
Assistant Director
President
\ ice-President
Business Manager
J. G. Barden
S. L. Davis
Lyndon Alexander
W. N. Poindexter
M. C. S. Noble
J. G. Proctor
P. C. TOMLIN
E. A. Lackei
L. B. Newman
LeGrand Everett
"Ike" Brooks
R. R. Hawfield
M C. S. Noble
E. S. Lindsey
Trombone
S. R. Lucas
Drums
L. R. Ross
Two Hundred Eighty-five
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i'lM'l'l'l'IMTI'f'H'n'l'IM'lM'!'l'p91lMI^TY 1ME 20J
ITI'IM'I'I'I I'l'I'I'I'I'I'ITI'I'M.
fHan&nlin (Sixth
Mandolins Guitars
"Ben" Cone "Mike" Newman
"Bob" Proctor "Gillie" Proctor
"Cubby" Alexander Scott Hale
George Thompson Perry Tomlin
"Mark" Noble "Charlie" Nichols
"Sam" Blount
E. A. Lackey Violin
"Bill" Hagood "Bill" Powell
The Musical Clubs usually take two trips each year. On the fall trip, the
Musical Clubs performed at the following cities:
Nov. 19 -High Point
Nov. 20 Charlotte
Nov. 21 Greensboro
Nov. 22 Asheville
Nov. 23 Chapel Hill
An eastern Carolina trip is now being planned for spring, and perform-
ances will be given in the following cities:
Raleigh
Goldsboro
New Bern
Wilson
Wilmington
Two Hundred Eighty-six
n,l,l, 1,1, 1,1,1,1,1,1, LI, 1,1, u,l. u, u, 1,1, u, 1.1, 1,1,1,1 ,1,1, 1.1,1,1,1, 1, 1,1,1, 1, 1, 1, 1,1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1,1,1, 1.U. I.l.i. i.i.u.u. U.U. m, r,
ORGANIZATIONS
'I'l I'l'ITT
^^H9HMMTY Wfl&2Q.|
ITI'H'I'I'ITITN'IM I TFT
GIItF {lan-liellptttr Glnmtril
Corydon Perry Spruill, President
Worth Bagley Daniels, Secretary
Rufus Arthur Spaugh
Edwin Emerson White
Hugh Dortch
William Nelson Poindexter
Donald Snead Daniel
Joshua Tayloe .
Leo Heartt Harvey .
Ellis Scott Hale
William Webb Neal
Roland Prince McClamroch
II K *
ARE
Ben
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ATJ2
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ZX
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Two Hundred Eighty-seven
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F.i iiili.iihiiiiiii.iliiiliiiiiii.i.i.i.i.u.i.i.i,i,i.>.i.i.i.i,i.i.i,i.ili.j>i,i.i,i.i,i,i,i,i,i,i i,i,i,i.i.i.i.i.i.i,i.i.i.uiiia
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ifelta 2Cappa iEpstlon
Founded at Yale. 1844
Colors: Crimson, Blue, and Gold Publication: Delta Kappa Epsilon Quarterly
Seta (Ebaplrr of Splla Kappa lEpstlmt
Established, 1851
3Fratrrs itt iftaritltat?
William Morton Dey, Ph.D. Francis Preston Venable. Ph.D.
Thomas Perrin Harrison
Ifrntvts in Hntorrsttatr
Class of 1920
Charles Wortley Bain, Jr. James Edward Dovvd
William Augustus Blount, Jr. Francis Julius Liipfert, Jr.
Worth Bagley Daniels Claude Clinton Ramsay
Henry David Stevens
Henry Burwell Cooper
Class of 1921
Thomas Owen Moore
Class of 1922
Jonathan Worth Daniels Clement Reed Strudwick
Robert Henry Griffith James Edward Wood
Robert Wright Proctor
Benjamin Bailey Liipfert
Edward Knox Proctor
James Graham Ramsay
Ralph Linwood Johnston
Law
John Gilliam Proctor
George Louis Wimberley, Jr.
Medicine
Edward Watts Morris Whitehead
Benjamin Bunn Wimberley
Two Hundred Eighty-nine
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'I'l'ITI'ITI'I'l' I'l'I'IMTTFT
Irta ®brta ft
Flower: /?ase
Founded at Miami University, lSjq
Colors : Pink and Blue
Publication : Beta Theta Pi
Eta $rta (Ehaptrr nf Mttn Olltpta Pi
Established, 1S52
Jffratrra in Jffarultat*
Alvin Sawyer Wheeler. Ph.D. Kent James Brown, Ph.D.
iFratrpB to IniurrBttatr
Class of 1920
Leo Heartt Bryant Rufus Arthur Spaugh
Thomas Brice Mitchell
Class of 1921
Boyd Harden Charles Edmund Kistler
Archibald C leb Lineberger, Jr.
Kenneth Page Hogan
Class of 1922
Henry Ashby Rankin
Clem Bolton Holding
Special
Thomas Badham Wood
Medicine
John Alexander Shaw
Law
William Edwin Hennessee
Two Hundred Ninety-one
g.'IT!MM'IMTI'l'H,ITI'l'1'rnTT
(U9WKSTY WUC 20-1
I'i'i'i'i'rri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'
§>tgma Alalia lEpaihm
Founded at the University of Alabama, 1836
Colors: Old Gold and Purple Flower: Violet
Publications : The Record, Phi Alpha {Secret)
Xt (Eljaptrr nf ^tgma Alplja Epatlmt
Established. i8$~
iFratrrs in Sfarultatr
Lenoir Chambers, A.M. Andrew Henry Patterson, A.M.
Edward Vernon Howell. PhD. William Whatley Pierson, Ph.D.
Jffratrea in Hninrrailatf
Class of 1920
William Shipp Justice Benjamin Arnold Simms
Edwin Emerson White
Class of 1 92 1
Frank Durham Bell Howard Alexander Patterson
Erasmus Hervey Evans William Allen Royall
James Cornelius Pass Faerrington John Duncan Shaw
Class of 1922
Britt Millis Armfield James Patterson MacRae
George Watts Hill William Marshall Prince
Rufus Little LeGrand Charlton Emery Symmes
William Lord London Ralph Van Landingham, Jr.
Law
Walter Connor Fiemster George Alexander Younce
Medicine
George Douglas Elliott Robert Norman Harden
George Farrar Parker
Two Hundred X mety-three
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I'l'I'IM'I'I'I'ITH'NTI'I'I'ITT
[ll9 WKETY WK 2Q.}»TITHTHTHT
'I'l'I'I'I'I'ITI^
l?t<X JlBt
Founded at the University of the City of New York, 1846
Colors: White Flower: White Carnation
Publication: Circle
Hpatlnn (Hhaptrr of Heta |lst
Established, i8jS
iFratrra in iFarultate
George Howe, Ph.D. Charles Staples Mangum, M.D.
ifratrrs in Hninrrflitate
Class of 1 92 1
Thomas James Wilson. Ill Haywood Edmundson
Rlfls Avera Hlnter Alfred Llther Plrrington. Jr.
Junius Moore Horner
Class of 1922
Isaac Davenport Thorp Frank Patterson Hlnter
Archibald McDowell, Jr. James Whitaker Ballol
Law
Eric Xorfleet Hugh Dortch
Medicine
Calvert Rogers Toy
Graduate School
John Lee Aycock
Two Hundred Ninety-five
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7l, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1,1. 1. 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1. 1. 1^1. 1. Iil.l"
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!VI I I'l'I'I'I'I'I'I'l'I'HW
Alplja ®au (f^merja
Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865
Colors: Old Gold and Sky Blue Flower: White Tea Rose
Publication: The Palm
Alplja irlta (Chapter nf Alplja ulait GPmrga
Established, 18/q
iFratrpa in iffarultatr
Eugene Cunningham Branson. A.M. Thomas James Wilson, Jr, PhD.
John Paul Weaver
Atwell Campbell McIntosh, A.M
R. G. McRae
itfratrpa in Hrbr
J. S. Patterson
3Fratrrs in Hninrrsitatr
Class of 1920
Hugh Clifton Black Allen Erwin Gant
William Nelson Poindexter
Class of 192 1
Waverly Maudlin Hester Louis de Rosset MacMillan
Jay Barnette Douglas Jesse Harper Erwin, Jr.
James Clinton Smoot
Class of 1922
Raymond Lee Craige John Williamson Underwood
Charles Gaston Lee William Carr Guthrie
Philip Henry Booe William Massey
Sandford Wiley Brown James Saunders Williamson
Law
Sydney Edward Pruden Benjamin Franklin Millikan
Charles Allen McKnight
Medicine
Robert Alexander Ross
Graduate School
William Dougald MacMillan
Two Hundred Ninety-seven
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I'l'ITI'I'IMMTl'lMTI'I'I'l'I'I'l'
(b9^mmty wk2q.1
I'l'i'i'i-i'i'i'n'iTnMV'i'i'iTEC
Kappa Alpha
Founded at Washington and Lee. i86j
Colors: Old Gold and Crimson Flower: Red Rose and Magnolia
Publications: K. A. Journal. Special Messenger (Secret)
Hpsilnn Chapter nf Kappa Alpha
Established. 1881
iFratrrs in iFarultatr
Joseph Gregoire deR. Hamilton. Ph.D. Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B.
If ratrra in Hniurrsttatr
Class of 192c
Donald Snead Daniel Richard Stanford Travis, Jr.
Sidney Broadls Allen
Class of 1 92 1
John Hosea Kerr. Jr. William Ward Hacood. Jr.
William Grimes
Class of 1922
Euclid McWhorter Jefferson Davis Edexs
Cortie Doss William Lee Stainback. Jr.
Law
Charles Rufus Daniel Perry Tomlin
Lyn Bond Neal Yates Pharr
Medicine
Allan Anderson
Two Hundred \ inety-nine
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EililililihlM.hhl.Ll.l.hl.l.l.lMJ^I.hhl.l.l.l.hl.l.hl.l.l.hl.l.l.l.lil.i.l.l.l.l.l.l.l.hhl.l.klil.l.lrl.lihlilihlilihlilililJia
I'l I'l'l'l'l'l TMI'ITT
(H9WMCTY HM2Q
I I I'l'I'I'I'I'I'ITT
irlta Sljrta
Founded at Miami L niversity, 1848
Colors: Argent and Azure Flower: White Carnation
Publications : The Scroll, The Palladium (Secret)
Srta (£tjapt*r nf p>t IHta ©tjeta
Jftratrra in iftarultatr
William Stanley Bernard, A.M.
Henry McCune Dargan, Ph.D.
Thomas Felix Hickerson, Ph.D.
Patrick Henry Winston, A.B.
jFratrta in llnuiersitatr
Class of 1920
William Webb Neal Icabod Mayo Little
Charles French Toms, Jr. Rufus Theodore Lenoir
Class of 192 1
Alan Brantley Wright Fontaine Maury Cralle
Class of 1922
Ernest Haynes Thompson George Wimberly Wilkinson
Junius Cheston Woodall John Milton Lytch
John Blount McLeod Robert Baker Crawford, Jr.
Law
Louis Heyl Clement, Jr William Yarborough Collie
Frank Ertle Carlyle Dwight Brantley
Medicine
Samuel Royall Norris
Three Hundred One
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,i1i|M,ll|i|MI|i|i|l|i|l|i|i|i|t|i|i|i|Mi|i|Mi|Mi|i|i|i|i|i|M'|'|'MI'l'l'IM'IM'l'llllllIM'IM'MIM'lMM'IMll'IM I'l'I'I'EE^
(J9WKSTY WK2Q-1
^THTiTiTi-iTn-iTiTHTi-g <UJ W&m. H I YMM Ik 9 'rrri'i'iTi'iTn'i'i'i'HTi'i'i
^tgma N«
Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1868
Colors: Black, White, and Gold Flower: White Rose
Publication : The Delta of Sigma Nu
Pat GUiapter of *§>tnma Nu
Established, 1888
iFratrrs in iFarultatp
William DeBermere McNider, M.D. Archibald Henderson, Ph.D.
Clarence Addison Hibbard, A.M.
jFratrca in Hniucrsitatr
Class of 1 92 1
Edgar Frank Hooker Elliot Walker Stevens
Class of 1922
Manolcus Douglas Aycock John Haywood Hardin, Jr.
Joseph Beaman Brewer Robert Morrison Wearn
Alfred Williams. Jr.
Law
Henry Emmett Brewer John Nestor Wilson-
Pall Blrt Edmundson James Robert Young
Kenneth McNeill
\ ledicine
Samuel Moore Schenck John Cotton Tayloe
Robert Edwin Smith Joshua Tayloe
Three Hundred Three
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^■fi'Mi- !■!■ : ■:timtI[119WIMY YAm 20|nriri'iTiTiTiTi ffmrg
^tgma (Elii
Founded at Miami University, i8jf
Colors: Gold and Azure Flower: White Rose
Publications: Sigma Chi Quarterly, Sigma Chi Bulletin, Sigma Chi
.Manual and Directory
Alplja ®au (Ehaptpr of £>tgma (Eljt
Established, i88q
iFratrra in iffarultate
Frederick Henry Koch, A.M.
itfratrpH in llniurrsitatp
Class of 19 18
William Coe Goley Roland Prince McClamroch
Class of 1920
Henry Cowles Bristol Brainard Sydnor Whiting
Roy Jordan Samuel Hunter Reams
Class of 1 92 1
David Dudley Duncan
Class of 1922
Lawrence Muncy Ingram William Monford Transou
Ashley Curtis Norfleet
Lav.
George Watts King Daniel Merritt Hodges
William Durham Harris George David Robertson
Graham Barden Eli Perry
Three Hundred Five
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H'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'I'MI'I'IMM'I1
B9^MMTY lffi-20.);
liLlL'.MM'i'l'!1- i'PI'Ml'I'iL
ICappa i^igma
Founded at University oj Bologna, 1400; University of Virginia, i86q
Colors: Scarlet, White, and Emerald Green Flower: Lily of the Valley
Publications : Caduceus, The Star and Crescent
Alpha Mix (Uljaptrr nf Kappa i>tguta
iFratres in iFarultate
John Grover Beard, Ph.D. Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble
Frederick William Boye Charles Thomas Woollen
iFratrrs iti llttwrrsttat?
Class of 1920
Marcus Edward Bizzell Robert DuVal Jones
Leo Heartt Harvey George Dillon Morris
Frederick Marion Patterson
Class of 192 1
William Donald Carmichael, Jr. Frank Robbins Lowe
Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble. Jr. Frederick Cline Cochran
Lee Overman Gregory William Haywood Ruffin, Jr.
Augustus Summerfield Merrimon Kenny
Class of 1922
Joseph Eugene Crayton, Jr. Luther Thompson Hartsell, Jr.
Warner Meriwether Lewis Robert Franklin Marler
John Norwood Frederick Pharr
Sterling Dillon Wooten John DeWalden Eller
Law
William Reynolds Allen, Jr. James Miller Coleman
John Bright Hill Roswell Brackin Robbins
Medicine
Carl Wii.ma White
Three Hundred Seven
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£'l I'M'
'I'H'I'I'I'i'l'ITW
((l!9^STOTy WK2Q-]
Ti'iri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'iT1-
p Kappa Alptia
Founded at University of \ irginia, 1868
Colors: Garnet and Old Gold Flower: Lily of the \ 'alley
Publications: Shield and Diamond. Dagger and Key (Secret)
®au (Chapter of pi 2vappa Alpha
Established, i8qj
3m\vtB in iFarultatr
George McFarland McKie. A.M. Gl stave Adolphus Harrer. Ph.D.
Edwin Samuel Lindsey, A.B.
Jffratrrs in linttif raitate
Class of 1920
Houston Spencer Everett Thomas Lilley Pace
Class of 192 1
Paul High Brown Richard Gay Coker
Lenox Gore Cooper William Anderson Edgerton
Louis William Fischel
Class of 1922
Armistead Lily Mercer John Wiley Coker
Robert Lee Brown, Jr. William Chapman Maupin, Jr.
George Hunt
Medicine
Gordon Bryan Crowell
Law
Ellis Scott Hale
Three Hundred Nine
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teWMTIY WI20.]
v — ^
ft IKappa fin
Founded at the College of Charleston, 1Q04
Colors: Gold and White Flower: Red Rose
Publications: The Star and Lamp. The Scroll
Kappa (Ehaptrr of JJi Kappa phi
Established, IQ14
iFratpr in iFarultair
Dudley DeWitt Carroll, A.M.
iFratrrs in Hmurraitatf
Class of 191b
Beemer Clifford Harrell
Class of 1 9 1 9
Jefferson Carney Bynum Charles Mortimer Hazlehurst
Class of 1920
Corydon Perry Sprlill. Jr. Ralph Harper Wilson
Nathan Mobley Thomas Clayton Wolfe
Class of 192 1
Carlyle Shepard Howard Edward Fulton
Rudolf Carl Bernal . Jr. Donnell Van Xoppex
Howard Alexander Hanby
Class of 1922
John Donald MacRae, Jr. George Vernon Denny, Jr.
Thomas Clarke Smith George Curtis Watson
James Neveland Brand William Frank Falls
Arthur Lee Daughtridge David Kimberly, Jr
Noah Rouse
Medicine
Robert Ashe Moore
Three Hundred Eleven
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i'.rrrri'i'i'ri'i'ri'i'ri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i't'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'iM'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'M'i'i'i'Pi'i'i'i'i'n'i'i'i' 11
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(U9WBTOTT WK2Q.J
rrrri'iTrriTiMMTi'i'i'iTEQ
Hp&tral iFratmtttg
Founded at Louisville Medical School, i8gj
Colors: Green and White Flower: Lily of the \'alley
Publication: Phi Chi Quarterly
^tgma ©Ijrta (SHjapter of ffljt OXlft
3Fratrra in iftarultatr
James Bell Bullitt, M.D. William DeBerniere McNider, M.D.
STratrra in llmupraitatr
Class of
Marcus Edward Bizzell
Robert Theodore Hambrick
Robert Norman Harden
Samuel Edwin Hughes
Fernando Lorenz
Blackwell Markham
Carlyle \4orris
Andrew Purefoy Newcomb, Jr.
1920
Samuel Royall Norris
Franklin Limer Payne
James Lewis Poston
James Graham Ramsay
Robert Alexander Ross
John Cotton Tayloe
John Skally Terry
Earl Runyon Tyler
Alan Ramseur Anderson
Thomas Preston Brinn
George Douglas Elliott
Ralph Linwood Johnston
George Farrar Parker
Samuel Moore Schenck
Class of 1921
John Alexander Shaw
Vance Everette Swift
Joshua Tayloe
Calvert Rogers Toy
Carl Wilma White
Edward Morris Whitehead
Benjamin Bunn Wimberley
Three Hundred Thirteen
Eii ti j 1 1 1 ■ 1 . 1 1 1 ■ 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 ■ 1 . 1 . 1 ■ 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 . 1 , 1 . t . i . 1 . 1 . m
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Kappa fist
fUedtral IFratrrnttg
Founded, May 30, 1879
Colors : Red and Gray Flower : Red Carnation
Publications: The Mask (exoteric). The Agora (esoteric)
Seta Xt QUjaptpr of 2£appa Pat
Established, 1915
Jfratrrs in jFarnltatf
John Grover Beard. Ph.D. Edward Vernon Howell, Ph.G.
3xtx\xt& in Urbe
Carl Thomas Durham C. S. Hemphill, M.D.
JFratrra in Uniurrsilalr
§>rljanl of Jlljarmarg
Class of 1920
Marion Lee Jacobs John Palmer Horton
Guy Smith Kirby
Class of 192 1
John Sherwood Harrell John Milton Lytch
§>ri)Ool of jflrdirinr
Class of 1920
Ernest Walton Clark, Jr. Thomas Clayton Brewer
Harold Stevens Clark Leslie Edward Chappell
Carey Lanier Harrington James Meridith Ketchie
William Blount Norment David Jennings Rose
Class of 192 1
Grimes Byerly Sellers Mark Crisp
Daniel Greenle Caldwell Oscar Sexton Goodwin
Herbert Huitt Fritz Zeron Lewis Merritt
Charles Casewell Massey George Alexander Richardson
Clement Rosenburg Monroe Paul Allison Yoder
Randall Collins Smith
Three Hundred Fifteen
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tj'l'I'I'l'I'I'I'l'i'i'i'lM'i'ri'l'TTW
((19WKCTY WK2QJ
1 1' I ' I ' l1 1 ' I' I ■ i -i ■ i ■ i- i ' i ■ r n ■ i ' i ■ i ■ [■ i C
Alptja (Eht §>tguta
(Elirtmral iFratrrmtij
Founded at the University of Wisconsin, iqoi
Colors : Prussian Blue, Chrome Yellow Flower : Red Carnation
Publication : The Hexagon
ISIjo (Eiiaptpr nf Alplja CClit £>igma
Established, iqu
Jffratrra iit iflarultate
James Munsev B^ll. Ph.D. Alvin Sawyer Wheeler, Ph.D.
Francis Preston Yenable. PhD. James Talmage Dobbins, Ph.D.
Jffralrpfl in Hmupraitatr
Class of 191b
Troy Monroe Andrews
Class of 191 8
Isaac Vilas Giles
Class of 19 19
Thomas Pugh Dawson
Class of 1920
Edward Broad Cordon Roy Hobart Souther
Duncan McCall Carroll Fletcher Humphries Spry
Thomas Liley Pace Haywood Maurice Taylor
Class of 192 1
Howell Grady Pickett
Three Hundred Seventeen
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Pit lelta pp
Founded at University oj Michigan, i86q
Colors: Azure and Wine Color Flower: The Jacqueminot
Publication : The Brief
Banrr 3mi (Uljapipr of pit irlta fljt
Chartered, December, iqiq
iFralrra in ifarullatp
Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B. Atwell Campbell McIntosh, A.M.
JPratrpB in llniufrattate
Senior Law Class
Frederick Oscar Bowman John Bright Hill
Jesse Vernon Baggett George Watts King
Louis Heyl Clement, Jr. Zebulon Vance McMillan
James Millar Coleman Ely Jackson Perry
Walter Connor Feimster, Jr. Frank Oliver Ray
Ellis Scott Hale Roswell Brackin Robbins
Grahwi Barden
Junior Law Class
William Reynolds Allen Neal Yates Pharr
Dwight Brantley Edward Knox Proctor
William Durham Harris John Nestor Wilson, Jr.
Three Hundred Nineteen
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((WWKCTY HM2Q.1
ivi'l'l'l'l'l'l I'l'I'CEQ
lelta ^igma pyt
Founded at the College of the City of New York, i8qq
Colors: Nile Green and White Flower: Carnation
Publication: The Carnation
Alplja lelta Olljaptrr of Brlta £tgtna pit
Jffratrts in Hmurrmtatf
Class of 192 1
Sheldon Clyde Austin
James Theophilus Penny
Karl Ernest Thies
Joseph Granbery Tucker
Class of 1922
George S. Elliott Richard F. Elliott
Rufus M. Johnson
Three Hundred Twenty
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William Simpson piarmareuttral ^nmtg
Verne Duncan Lea
Harry Wilbur Walker
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President John Sherwood Harrell Secretary
Vice-President Millard Brown Phillips Treasurer
Mtmbt rs in iFarultg
John Grover Beard, Ph.D.
Edward Vernon Howell, Ph.G.
iSjottorary iflrmbrrs
Dorothy Eleanor Folt:
Theo Twitty
D. D. Hocutt
J. P. HORTON
M. L. Jacobs
C. W. Adams
E. L. Bradley
C. D. Biddingfield
H. L. Bizzell
L. D. Cain
F. H. Cline
J. S. Cobb
G. A. Cooper
members
Senior Pharmacy Class
G. S. Kirby J. C. Mills
V. D. Lea M. B. Phillips
P. J. Melvin M. L. Stone
H. W. Walker
Junior Pharmacy Class
T. G. Crutchfield W. Hawfield
E. L. Dees
O. C. Edwards
T. J. Ethridge
W. C. Ferrell
A. M. Gibson
J. S. Harrell
J. W. Harrell
W. R. Johnson
J C. Kirkpatrick
T. P. Lloyd
J. M. Lytch
A. F. Morris
J. S. Pierce
E. S. Pugh
A. Privett
E. L. Reaves
H. H. Robbins
F. D. Royal
G. C. SlSKE
B. J. Thomas
I. Walker
T. W. Warren
C. G. Williams
Three Hundred Tiventx-ene
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Founded at the University of North Carolina, iqiq
Colors : Scarlet and Emerald Flower : Red Rose
Alplja (Chapter nf #lji 2rta Nu
jFratrra in 3 arultat?
Parker Havward Daggett, B.S. John Harris Mustard, B.S.
John Emery Lear, E.E.
iFratrpB in Hniorrflitatr
Class of 1920
Edwin Charlton Ballentine Chester Winthrop Burton
Clarence Pinkney Bolick Charles Mortimer Hazlehurst
Percy Philip Lynch, Jr. William Edward Merritt
William Webb Neal
Class of 192 1
John De Morris
Three Hundred Twenty-two
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William Stanley Bernard
John Manning Booker
Chester Winthrop Burton
Jonathan Worth Daniels
George Vernon Denny
William Morton Dey
Edwin Greenlaw
David Reid Hodgin
George Howe
Frederick Henry Koch
George MacFarland McKie
Ernest Neiman
Robert Proctor
John Duncan Shaw
Rufus Arthur Spaugh
Richard Hurt Thornton
George Louis Wimberley
Thomas Clayton Wolfe
Three Hundred Twenty-three
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Jesse V. Baggett
William H. Bobbitt
J. Lenoir Chambers
Albert M. Coates
George D. Crawford
W. Clement Eaton
Nathan G. Gooding
Daniel L. Grant
Joseph G. deR. Hamilton
♦
Jolm H. Kerr
Nathan Mobley
Oliver Rand
Theodore E. Rondthaler
John P. Washburn
E. Emerson White
Ralph D. Williams
Thomas C. Wolfe
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James Bell Bullitt. M.D.
John Manning Booker, Ph.D.
William Morton Dey. Ph.D.
Edwin Greenlaw, Ph.D.
James Holly Hanford, Ph.D.
William DeBerniere McNider. M.D.
Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B.
Oliver Towles, Ph.D.
Charles Thomas Woollen
Leo Heartt Harvey Samuel Royall Norris
Richard Stanford Travis James Graham Ramsay
Allen Erwin Gant Claude Clinton Ramsay
James Edward Dowd Robert Alexander Ross
Joshua Tayloe Hugh Dortch
William Augustus Blount Frank Robbins Lowe
Marcus Edward Biiiell Edward Morris Whitehead
George Louis Wimberley Benjamin Bunn Wimberley
Three Hundred Twenty-seven
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Founded at William and Mary College, ijjy
Alpha (Diaptrr nf North (Carolina, Phi Srta iKappa
iH?ntb?rs in Jfarulty
J. G. deR. Hamilton, Ph.D.
William and Mary
T. J Wilson, Jr., Ph.D.
North Carolina
P. \ enable. Ph.D.
North Carolina
B. Bullitt, M.D.
\\ ashington and Lee
W. Chase, Ph.D.
Dartmouth
McG. Wagstaff, Ph.D.
North Carolina
L. Chambers. A.M.
North Carolina
S. Wheeler, PhD
Harvard
R. Wilson, Ph.D.
North Carolina
W. Walker. A.B.
North Carolina
George Howe. PhD
Princeton
K J. Brown. Ph.D.
Dickinson
Edwin Greenlaw, Ph.D.
Northwestern
W. M. Dey, PhD.
Virginia
J H. Hanford. Ph.D.
Rochester
Archibald Henderson, Ph.D.
North Carolina
W C Coker. Ph.D.
Johns Hopkins
Thorndyke Saville,
North Carolina
J M. Bell, Ph.D.
Toronto
F. P. Graham. A.M.
North Carolina
C.E.
Class of 1 9 1 8
Joe Burton Linker William Clemen i Eaton
Herman Earl Marsh
Thomas Preston Brinn
William Enoch Price
Houston Spencer Everett
Robert Bruce Gwynn
Roy Hobart Souther
Class of 1 9 19
Theodore Edward Rondthaler
John Skally Terry
Class of 1920
Corydon Perry Sprl ill
Calvert Rogers Toy
Edwin Emerson White
Three Hundred Twenty-nine
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fflnnhrrs
Class of 1883
Henry Horace Williams
Class of 1905
Charles Thomas Woollen
Class of 1909
Frank Porter Graham
Class of 19 1 4
E. R. Rankin J. Lenoir Chambers
Class of 191 7
James Graham Ramsay Oliver Gray Rand
Class of 191 8
Albert McKinley Coates Joe Burton Linker
John Cotton Tayloe
Class of 1 9 19
Jefferson Carey Bynlm Nathan Green Gooding
William Clement Eaton Edwin Samuel Lindsey
Walter Connor Feimster. Jr. Theodore Edward Rondthaler
Class of 1920
Claude Reuben Joyner Corydon Perry Spruill
Nathan Mobley Thomas Clayton Wolfe
E. Emerson White
Three Hundred Thirty-one
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Colors : Red and Blue
Alpha (Uliaptrr
iFarulty iHrmbrrs
Flower : Wisteria
Archibald Henderson, Ph.D. Clarence Addison Hibbard,
William Whatley Pierson. Ph.D. William Moss. D.D.
Henry McGilbert Wagstaff, Ph.D.
AM.
iHrmbrra
William Henry Andrews
Bryant Council Brown
Benjamin Cone
George Dewey Crawford
Albert McKinley Coates
William Clement Eaton
Nathan Greene Gooding
Cary Lanier Harrington
Lawrence Wooten Jarman
Saichiro Kita
Thomas Skinner Kittrell
Benjamin Bailey Liipfert
Bry-ce Little
Three Hundred Thirlv-two
Herman Earl Marsh
Nathan Mobley
Henry David Stevens
John Skally Terry
Harvey Stansill Terry
Yasuo Taketoni
Donnell Van Noppen
John Pipkin Washburn
Hilton Gwaltney West
Ralph Devereaux Williams
Leroy Burkhead Willis
Samuel Hood Willis
William Robert Wunsch
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And Passing Wonder He Who Made Him Such
Frank Bobbins Lowe
Joshua Tayloe
James Saunders Williamson
Samuel Royai Norris
Marcus Edward Bizzell
Hugh Dortch
William Augustus Blount
Phillip Hei-ry Booe
John DeWalden Eller
William Grimes
John Haywood Hardin, Jr
Leo Heartt Harvey
Earle Johnson
Augustus S. M. Kenny
Clement Reid Strudwick
Isaac Davenport Thorp
Cobb, Cooper, Faulkner, Ficklen, G.andin, Janses, McKimmon, Powell, Obgurn, Shamburger,
Taylor. Townsend
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Founded at the University of Xorth Carolina and X'anderbilt. iqo6
Colors: Dark Green and Cold Flower: Jonquil
Publication: The Journal of Sigma Upsilon
($bb Number (&i\npt?r nf §>tgma Vpatlmt
Jflratrra in jKarultat?
William Stanley Bernard, A.M. Edwin Greenlaw. PhD
George MacFarland McKie, A.B. John Manning Booker. Ph.D.
Archibald Henderson, Ph.D. "Norman Foerster, Ph.D.
Frederick Henry Koch, A.M.
William Banks Anderson
William Henry Andrews.
John Lee Aycock
William LeGette Blythe
Albert McKinley Coates
Paul Elliott Green
Robert Bruce Gwynn
Paul Durham Harris
Three Hundred Thirty-four
IFratrra in Uninpruitatr
John Hosea Kerr, Jr.
Francis Julius Liipfert
Edwin Samuel Lindsey
William Dougald MacMillav III
Nathan Mobley
Charles Nichols
Neal Yates Pharr
William Enoch Price
Theodore Edward Rondthaler
Moses Roundtree
Corydon Perry Spruill
John Skally Terry
Henry David Stevens
Hilton Gwaltney West
Edwin Emerson White
Thomas Clayton Wolfe
William Robert Wunsch
.l.lil.lil.li
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Faculty
William Stanley Bernard, A.M. Frank Porter Graham, A.M.
Graduate School
Albert M. Coates \V. Clement Eaton
Academic School
Charles T. Boyd Millard H. Patterson
William H. Bobbitt
Law School
Lyn Bond
Three Hundred Thirty-five
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American ihtstttutr of iEbfitrtral iEngtttepra
llnttipratttr nf North (Earnlina Uranrh
©ffirrra
W. W. Neal
P. C. Smith
M. E. Lake
T. E. Hinson
Chairman
\ ice-Chairman
Secretary
Treasurer
iflrmbcrs
Allston, W. F.
Anderson. R. F.
Angel, C. C.
Ancel, T. VV.
Apple. W. J
Ballentine. E. C
Beaudry. E.
Blair. C. D
Boddie, W. C.
Bolick. C. P.
Bryan, C. J.
CURTON. C. W.
Casper, R. M.
Cathey. R. A.
Clawson, J. P.
Couch, W. T.
Dagcett. Prof. P. H.
Dalton, P. H
Davidson, C. W.
Three Hundred Thirty-eight
Davis, L. W.
Dellinger. E. E.
Duval, L.
Finger. G. T.
Foote, W. F
Gentry, I W
Gray. P. M
Harding, W K
Hartness, J. F.
Havner, A S
HOBBIE. S.
Hazlehurst. C. M.
Hinson. T. E.
Horne, W H
Humphrey, B E.
Justus. G E
Kent. S. G
Kerr. S. A
Key. D E
Koontz. R G.
Lake. M E
Lear. Prof. J. E.
Leftwtch. M L
Lehman, E. E.
Linker. W M
Lynch. P P.. Jr.
Mauney, C J
Mebane. W. M.
Mecum, E. J.
Merritt, W. E.
Meyer. G. M.
Milton. L V.
Morris. J D
Mustard, Prof, J.
Neal. W W
Orr. A
Pressly. ) L
Price. H"
Reynolds. L. H.
Reynolds. \Y R
Rike. R C.
Ross. H.
Shepard. T. H
Smiley, T. B.
Smith, C. U.
Stroupe. R
Taylor. J W
Thompson. Miss L
Thompson, E. A.
Thompson, R. A
Thornton, T. A
Tillman. R A
Waddill, J. B.
Waugh. H. E.
Weitzel. F. J.
Wells. D. A.
W'OOTEN. W. P.
Jr.
Yelserton. C. W.
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I'l'i'i'i'i'i';1.';1" M "vji^:
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©fitters
J. B. Yoklev ............ President
R. T. Jenoir, Jr. . . . . . . . Vice-President
S. C. Austin ......... Secretary and Treasurer
iHrmbpra
Anderson. J. M. Hall. E. F. Rankin, H. A.
Alexander, R. G. Hill. M. A. Spruill. J.
Austin, S. C. Hook, W. W. Swann, E. L.
Bacon, F. R. Haves. N. P. Smith, L. S.
Boyd, R. E Hartshorn. M. L Speck, T. W.. Jr
Brooch. J. B Hlnter. W. F. Stephenson. I. J.
Carpenter, R E. Irvin, E. U. Taylor. C B
Charnley, W. L Joyner, C. R Teacue. E. S.
Choate, J. B Lenoir. R. T .. Jr. Vickers. W. G.
Council, S. C. Lively, K. K. Wearn. J. S.
Edwards, C McGee, A XI Wicker, M E
Ecerton, W A McMillan, C. V. Williams. D D
Fanning, F. D. Martin. E. L. Wilson, L. G.
Fischel. L. W. Martin. O E Wilson. W. A.
Gandy, W. C , Jr Mitchell. \Y F. Winecoff, C L.
Gaylorf, J F Noe. K. B. Yokley, J. B
Graham, T P. Norwood, J. Young, W. D.
Hadley, W. A. Phipps. L. G. Zirkle, G C.
Three Hundred Thirlv-nine
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Charles I. Taylor
Bryce Little .
Paul E. Green
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
ifarulty Mrmbrrs
Abernethy, J. T.. 78 Div.
Campbell, T. J., 7b Div.
Chambers, J. L., 52 Inf.
fHrmbrrs
Abelkop, I. M., 58 Div.
Abernethy, E. A.. 78 Div.
Abernethy O. M.. 54 P. Inf.
Allen, J. T.. 140 Inf.
Blount, S. M., 323 M cycle Co
Boney, D. C, 113 F. A.
Bbadshaw, L. B., G. H. Q.
Brantley. Dwiqht, M. H. No.
Bridges. E. B., 105 Eng.
Brittain. J. M.. 308 Bkv Go.
Brooks I. E.. 119 Inf. '
Brown. B. C, V. S N.
" W., 46 Div.
.1. B , 105 Eng.
N. J. M.. 344 Inf.
Cooper, T. D., 140 Inf.
Ci-rrie, E. McA.. 140 Inf.
DaLTON, J. \\\. 341 Inf.
Daniel, C. R., 7 Inf.
Dortch, High. ll!l Inf.
CoLEMA
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Faicetii. B V
Glenn, J. W.. 1",
113 F. A.
GOLEY
W. C, 180 Inf.
1 . K H N
Myron. 50 P Inf.
Green
P. E.. 105 EnE.
HlRRI
IX, W. I!.. 4 Corps, Art. P
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II.. KM
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Hit™
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IsBAK.
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Little
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Long,
J. K., U. S \
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McGe
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M. Ml
.LAN, C. V., 309 F. A.
Marti
v, O. E., o Marines
Mathi
son, R. A.. F. A. R. R.
Mkci.v
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Mitch
ELL. J. T.. 140 Inf.
Monk
Irvin, 105 F. S. Bn.
M..SKH
A. N., 318 F. A
XORFI
eet, Eric, 116 Inf.
N..KKI-
. J. E., 81 Div.
Patric
k. Bailey, 4 T. M. Bn.
Keyes. C. W., 31b F A.
Silan, C. I., Amb. Corps
Towles. Oli\er, 321 Inf.
Phillips. L. V., 115 Eng
Poole. C. A.. Evac. H. 4
Pl'GH. E. S., 341 Inf.
Prescott, M. B.. U. S. N.
Ramsay. .1. (,.. 371 Inf.
Rand O. G.. 344 Inf.
Ranson, \V. E., 47 C. A. C.
Redfehn. W. A.. 304 Am. Tn.
Royall, \\. A., 316 F. A.
Roseman, M. A., J.. 4 Bn.. T. t
Scott, Randolph. T. M. Bn
Shepard, F. C, 6 Balloon Cn.
Shepard, Norman, 74 C. A. C.
Smith, A L., B. H. 65
Stephenson, I. J., I". S. N.
Stuckey, J. L., 343 Inf.
Tayloe, J. C, 371 Inf.
Taylor. C. I.. 344 Inf.
Thompson. R I,. 6 P. Inf.
Walker. H. H.. 16 Eng.
Wiles, W. E.. A. P. O. 741
I. P. 9 A. A.
H(
Three Hundred Fortv
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R. C. Dorsette President
C. C. Massey Vice-President
H. E. Martin .... .... Secretary
D. S. Boyce Treasurer
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E. B. Cordon President
J. C. Woodall Vice-President
B. Knight .....■• Secretary and Treasurer
Three Hundred Forty-one
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Leo H. Harvey
Sidney B. Allen
"Bill" Allen
Sidney Allen
"Eddie" Bizzell
Hugh Black
"Bill" Blount
Lyn Bond
"Phil" Booe
Heartt Bryant
"Billy" Carmichael
"Suey" Cochran
"Nemo" Coleman
"Charlie" Daniel
"Don" Daniel
"Gormie" Daniels
Hugh Dortch
"Bill" Dowd
Paul Edmundson
John Eller
Three Hundred Forty-two
fHembrra
Allen Gant
Lee Gregory
"Bob" Griffith
Scott Hale
Leo Harvey
"C" Holdinc
"Bobby" Jones
Merriman Kenny
Bailey Liipfert
"Cody" Liipfert
"Dick" Lewis
Roland McClamroch
Allan McKnight
"Jack" McDowell
"Midget" Morris
John Norwood
"Piggie" Parker
"Chuck" Pharr
Luther Purrington
President
Manager
Graham Ramsay
"Claudeo" Ramsay
"Ros" Robbins
"Daddy" Ross
"Bill" Ruffin
"Sam" Schenck
Randolph Scott
"Whit" Sledge
"Mighty" Smith
"Toddy" Spaugh
John Tayloe
Josh Tayloe
"Ike" Thorp
"Stan" Travis
"Doc" Whitehead
Saunders Williamson
"Buck" Wimberley
"Jim" Wood
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S. Edwin Hughes
H. Cowles Bristol
Charles M. Hailehurst
"Beef" Brewer
"Joe" Brewer
Ertle Carlyle
Raymond Craig
Maury Cralle
"Barney "Douglas
"Red" Edens
Pass Faerrington
John Hardin
Waverly Hester
Watts Hill
Frank Hooker
"Bill" Justice
John Kerr
"Jabo" Little
"Will" London
"Mule" LeGrand
®lir (Eaton
GDfltrfra
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President
Secretary
Manager
"Chappy" Lee
"Bully" MacMillan
"Bob" Marler
"Bill" Neal
"Bill" Poindexter
"Sid" Pruden
"Bill" Stainbanck
John Shaw
"C" Smoot
"Peck" Strudwick
"Al" Williams
"Woolley" White
"Bunny" Wimberley
Alan Wright
"Chess" Woodall
Ralph Van Landingham
"jojo" younce
Three Hundred Forty-three
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T. J. Brawley
B. W. Sipe
J. G. GULLICK
President
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Secretary and Treasurer
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L. H. Harvey
L. E. Fields
M. D. Harper
Three Hundred Forly-four
President
\ ice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
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F. M. Patterson
D. G. Caldwell
S. T. Hartsell
E. F. White
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President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
F. O. Ray .
J. O. Ellington, Jr.
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President
Vice-President, Secretary and Treasurer
Three Hundred Forty-five
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C. B. Taylor
Junius Cooper
President
Secretary and 'Treasurer
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H. H. Fritz
R. L. Heffner
Three Hundred Forty-six
President
Secretary and Treasurer
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B. C. Brown
J. M. Hargett
J. A. Bender
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
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C. M. Lewellen
J B. YOKLEY
W. E. Merritt .
E. S. Hale
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Historian
Treasurer
Three Hundred Forty-seven
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J. B Hicks
S. J. Lane
President
Secretary and Treasurer
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W. A. Gardner President
J. T. Barnes Secretary
W. P. Anderson Treasurer
Three Hundred Forty-eight
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Dale Beers
G. V. Denny
President
Secretarx and Treasurer
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H. G. West
E. E. Rives
L. V. Milton
President
\ ice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Three Hundred Forty-nine
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R. B. Gwynn
C. H. Smith
F. L. TOWNSEND
President
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Secretary and Treasurer
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Boyd Harden
W. E. Stout
W. C. Goley
Three Hundred Fifty
President
\ ice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
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N. MOBLEY
R. M. Wearn
R. L. Ranson
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
SUroratt Ghmntij Club
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G. A. Younce
E. C. Balentine
E. M. Sweetman, Jr.
R. M. Casper
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Three Hundred Fifty-one
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J. P. Washburn
L. G. Wilson
L. Fuquay .
President
\ ice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
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L. H. Bryant
W. M. Lewis
Three Hundred Fifty-two
President
Secretary and Treasurer
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G. D. Morris ......... President
J. G. Barden ........ \ ice-President
J. Norwood ...... Secretary and Treasurer
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\Y. R. Hudson
T. C Taylor
President
Secretary and Treasurer
Three Hundred Fifty-three
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C. H. Phillips
J. M. Robbins
Robert Smith
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President
Secretary
Treasurer
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S. O. W'ORTHINGTON
G. D. Manning .
Three Hundred Fifty-four
President
Secretary and Treasurer
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W. W. Neal
F. M. Cralle
\V. K. Williams
W. F. Goddis
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Secretarx and Treasurer
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Secretarx and Treasurer
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R. B. Robbins ......... President
J. Raper ......... Vice-President
C. G. Lancaster ..... Secretarx and Treasurer
Three Hundred Fifty-five
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Made by
Flashy Plate Tailoring Co.
PUDUNC, N. CAROLINA
Misfits for Men of Doubtful Tastes
"Out clothes improve with age''''
I. A. GQLDINER & CO.
FLASHY PLATE CLOTHIERS
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Display Agents: T. I. Boger — Judge Brockwell
Three Hundred Fifty-eight
The Saint and
Rounder Number
I wonder who's kissing
her now?
See, your girl is either a
saint or a rounder.
*f, Do you know an}' of these
camouflaged, conscientious
codgers concerned with
canning and known as
Councilmen?
Tf Do you desire to discover
dingbusted dope divulging
devilish dodgers dubbed
dissipaters?
THE TAR BABY
HINTS AT IT
i WHEN IT COMES OUT.
\
Cut \
\
me out \
\
and send \
\
me to \
\
E. H. Aberxethy
Chapel Hill, N. C.
\
\
"Homeward the Swallows Fly" \
Also \
"There's one born every minute" ^
\
Send me the Tar Baby for the rest of the \
year together with a dollar bill. I ask for so little. »
Name
Address
Just a Suggestion
One of the most highly appre-
ciated gifts you can give your
girl is a box of candy wrapped
in a Tar Baby cover.
Follow the green line
Speed up the shuffle
Three Hundred Fifty-nine
SCREEN NUMBER
\7[7E are calling this the Screen Number be-
* * cause you'll want to hide it. Its too good to
give away and its going to be real devilish. The
greatest screen queens in the country have sent
their pictures, seeing the excellent opportunity for
advertisement.
Are you interested in politics ?
Have you a little fairy in your home ?
Are you troubled with shooting pains through your
waist-coat ?
Have yeu lost your pep ?
If so, drink Tanlack.
GROWTH
"Oh Say, What Shall The Harvest Be?" — Cicero.
Caesar crossed the Rubicon
and kept his memoirs dry,
all of which is very remark-
able when you consider our
circulation.
We guarantee a circulation —
further than that we dare not
go.
"We cover Orange County
like the mountain dew."
COMING
The Up and At 'Em Number
Three Hundred Sixty
SOME BABY
(A Pcif mi
I've seen the gay Midnight Frolic,
Where music and song were rife —
I've watched the surging crowds long the "way
Bent on pleasure — in love with life.
Across the sea, up the Mall or Strand,
I've seen their fairest pass.
For the girl of my heart and the girl of my dreams
I've come back here at last.
And I found her here in the old North State,
Mid the pines and fields of white —
Above is her picture fair, look close.
Now ain't she a hell of a sight ?
Three Hundred Sixty-one
Illustrated Letter
Chapel Hill. N. C.
Dear Dad —
I'm kept pretty busy these days burning the
midnight oil. Am embracing one subject in
particular and at present seem to be making
very good headway.
Your loving son,
Bob.
TB TB TB
In the wilds of Borneo the thirsty cannibal
throws a knife, sticks a man. and drinks blood ;
in Chapel Hill, the thirsty student throws a
a coin, sticks a man. and drinks a chocolate
milk.
TB IB IB
Bill Poindexter (translating Spanish) — The 'er,
'er, 'er —
Dr. Dey — Don't laugh, gentlemen, to err is
human.
TB TB TB
Jim — "Gee. my clutch is awful weak .
Young Lad> — "So I've noticed ".
TB TB TB
Handsome Salesman — Couldn't I interest you
in an automobile1
She (who had been at U. N. C.) — Perhaps
3'ou could; come around in one some day.
TB TB TB
AT THE PICK
TOMMY J. WILSON. Ill
IN THE SIDE-SPLITTING COMEDY
"THE FACE ONE NE'ER FORGETS
AND ONLY A MOTHER CAN LOVE"
TB TB TB
Binks — Give me a simple subject to write on.
Judge — Write on George King.
Binks — Ah, that's too simple
TB TB TB
GEMS FROM THE SIM-JIM FROLIC
i . Freshmen will please not play horsey with
the chairs.
2 Gentlemen will please check their old
jokes at Jimmy Howell's desk.
3. A soft examination is the noblest work of
profs
here.
While there's life there's soap.
Spit in the "cuspidaw" not at it.
All the living and dead languages spoken
Ladies please leave their poodles with the
sausage man in the corner.
8. Just now subscribed to it
q Don't throw trash on the sawdust nor
monkey with the stove — it takes the "kick"
out of the weinies.
Fair One — What would you think if Charlie
Kistler asked you to take a ride in his car?
Debonair — Why, I would think it was an
opportunity to be embraced.
Three Hundred Sixty-two
-TAR BABY-
Three Hundred Sixty-three
Cred it or- i n -Ch ief
Henry David Stevens, King of ye Wild Women
Managing Meditator
Legette Blythe, the Somnolent
Art Bungler
C. R. Sumner
Who getting 35.00 a cartoon, naturally takes his time.
Business Manager and Grand High Originater, Priest and
Capitalist of the Whole Works
Ernest H. Abernethy, He of the many shekels
Dopes
"Bill" Andrews of the Cash Store E. W. G. P. T. Huffman St. Matthews "Tottie" Spaugh (not a Co-ed)
Kinner Skittrell "Dice" Daniels Tee Jay Wilson 13th
The Tar Baby is published, pardon me. Suppose to be published 15 times a year by E. H.
Abernethy, and appears on the second Tuesday of the sixth week of every other lunar month.
Perscription $20.00 per year; single copies $.69 (reduced from $.75), all of which is subject to
change for our better without notice. Obey that impulse — buy now 'eer I start to profiteer.
Address everything to E. H. ABERNETHY, Inc., Carr Barn— Ninth Stall.
Vol. 1 -what was the last number? Two, well this one is Eighth. May 1, 1920
Notice to Readers: I let my editor-in-chief write an editorial now and then — E. H.
Abernethy.
This, the Antediluvian Number, is devoted to the goddess of Seven Cum Leven or
in other words to Chance, and is issued for the edification of those who, not having the
fortune to associate with Hughes, Kenny, or left-handed Daniels of the Varsity, might
glean some slight glimmerings of how our chief in-door-sport should be conducted. Do
you think we could roll with the best in the South; don't you believe our noble bone
amblers can agitate and let 'em fly with at least our near neighbors1 If you don't, come
out and strut your stuff, kid. All you'll lose is some valuable experience and all your
world's goods. We believe in our noble heroes of the Varsity, and if you don't, there's
only one thing to do. Crap out and shut up. Let 'em ramble.
Three Hundred Sixly-four
-TAR BABY-
jN0TI)«RNej 13
THE SNOW FIGHT
THE ATTERrUTH
Three Hundred Sixty-five
-TAR BABY-
kappa ALPHA
Signifying — Keg artists
Founded — After a dance by someone in great
haste
Number of chapters — Increasingly decreasing
Number of members — Decreasingly few
Situation — Pitiful
DELTA KAPPA EPSILON
Signifying — Death knell evident
Founded — Too far from N. C. to be important
Number of chapters — Ah, go on!
Number of members — Hush, it's a secret
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
Signifying — All thoroughly obnoxious
Founded — By a drunken sailor — he was irre-
sponsible
Number of chapters — One — over at Trinity
Number of members — Quantity but not qual-
ity— there's one born every minute.
Situation — Dancing "Sid" says he's got the
Greensboro Freshmen in line
PI KAPPA ALPHA
Signifying — Poker (chips) kept always
Founded — Near Carrboro
Number of chapters — l/i (half of this being
here)
Number of members — i (Houston Everett
and Scott Hale)
Situation — Deplorable
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON
Signifying — Stewed after eight
Founded — In a gutter
Number of chapters — No one knows
Number of members — We are ashamed to tell
Situation — It could be worse
SIGMA CHI
Signifying — Sacriligious community
Founded — In a Durham bar-room A. D. 10
Number of chapters — b (all of them being here)
Number of members — Staggering
Situation — Thoughtless
Three Hundred Sixty-six
-TAR BABY-
si cm a NU
Signifying — Stewed nightly
Founded — By a raving tramp who had just
been bitten by a snake
Number of chapters — A matter of small im-
portance
Number of members — A matter of less import-
ance
Situation — Snakish
Signifying — Pints kept privately
Founded — Not far distant
Number of chapters — One too many
Number of members — None too many
Situat ion — Aspi rant
KAPPA SIGMA
Signifying — Kind'a sick (from keg squeezing)
Founded — In 1400 by Columbus who saw his
mistake too late
Number of chapters — One wherever there is a
sausage factory
Number of members — As numerous as the
sausages
Situation — Mangy
F^^
BETA THETA PI '
Signifying — Bonds threaten property
Founded — By a young lady known as Miss
Take
Number of chapters — Too many to count
Number of members — Very numerous and
"Red" Lineberger, hurray!
Situation — Awful
ZETA PS I
Signifying — Zero past
Founded — In Warrenton High School
Number of chapters — Thirteen, one on the
Rhine founded bv Dortch
Number of members — We'll tell you next fall
Situation — Discouraging, at present
PHI DELTA THETA
Signifying — Pretty damn tough
Founded — By accident
Number of chapters — At least one too many
Number of members — Ertyle Carlyle and a
few more
Situation — Bad, but could be worse
Three Hundred Sixty-seven
-TAR BABY-
Dice D. — "Gormie ', I heard pap say that if
you didn't graduate this year he would make it
hot for you.
'"Gormie'' — It's funny, "Dice", just what a
great difference in temperature that one degree
does make.
TB TB TB
"Long live the king!" quoth McLaughlin, as
he raked in the "blues" on a "king high."
TB TB TB
VACATIONING ABOUT IN THE GOTHAM
OR
LINES ON HITTING AN EARLY BEER
N. C. B — Where did all these grapes come
from on the floor?
I. B. C. — Pardner, them ain't grapes, them's
eyes; we just had a little fuss here last night.
TB TB TB
Dr. McGehee — Mr. Dortch. in your opinion
what is the most unfortunate result of prohibi-
tion as seen on the campus1
Hugh — I should say, doctor, the disappear-
ance of the old Carolina spirit.
TB TB TB
BALLAD ON "OF COURSE" OR THE
"CAUSE FOR CAWS"
Poor Talker — Don't you think a farmer leads
an awful life1
Listless (out amongst the Mills') — No. » h\ !
Poor Talker — He's such a martyr to his caws!
Sweep out the padded cell . Narco.
TB TB TB
She — Good-bye , you
you1
He — If I may.
What they really mean
She — If he calls again, I'm out.
He — Call on you again — not much!
Three Hundred Sixty-eight
again, won t
OVER THE HILLS FROM DURHAM
Fair Companion (getting in the "pioneer's"
carl — Do you think we can squeeze in here1
Hughes — Don't you think, dear, we'd better
wait till we get over in Chapel Hill1
TB TB TB
Houston was about to take an examination
for life insurance
"Now, Mr. Everett," asked the physician,
"you don't dissipate do you?"
Houston hesitated a little and then looked
frightened and replied in a weak voice:
"I sometimes chew a little gum. doctor."
TB TB TB
ON CLASS
"You say, professor, that Saturn has eight
moons1"
"Just so.
Sentimental Stude (in rear of room) — I couldn't
stand it — / just couldn't.
TB TB TB
"Billy" MacNider drinks nothing but cider,
"Charlie" and "Bully" drink tea,
" Johnny" will take any kind of reviver,
But Archibald says "Water for me!"
TB TB TB
Chapelle Hille — I hav zust been down to see
ma, qu'est-ce que le mot anglais pour mere?
Ma Ma1
Poor Simp — McDonald, you mean. Yes m. I
know where he rooms.
TB TB TB
Miss Tootsie — And do you sing, Mr. Toots?
Freshman Toots — Only after the Sophomore
banquet.
-TAR BABY-
Harold — I love you Mabel — will you be er
my sister?
Mabel — That can never be, Harold, but I will
always be a wife to you.
The engagement is announced.
TB TB TB
Nails — Galli-Curci always draws a full house.
Claudio (pasteboard profiteer) — I don't see
how she does it; 1 can t.
TB TB TB
Professor Cowin (on Acc't i ) — When I had
charge of the railroads, we had just such a prob-
lem as that. We made out such a report as this
(illustration); and also when the telegraph sys-
tem was pushed on me, I had to make this entry
for depreciation.
TB TB TB
DISCLOSED BY DR. CHASE'S SECRETARY
Dear Mr. President ;
Don't hit our Archie. We never do it at home
except in self defense.
Yours.
Father
TB TB TB
Kenny (in ye goode olde days) — Gimme a
schooner slitz.
Garcon (doubtfully I — Son. you're a minor
Kenny — Now there's where you are just
wrong; I'm a farmer from Rowan county.
TB TB TB
The black art — waiting on the table.
Prof. Carroll (on Econ. i class) — Read the
first four chapters in Seligman, thirty-nine pages
in Seager, eighty-five pages in Raper s "Elemen-
tary Railroads'' for tomorrow. Also outline the
various diminishing returns of an oil stove. It
anyone is absent, I'll knock off 5 1 % of the course.
We'll hold an extra class at eight o'clock tonight.
Good-bye, me men, be prompt
TB TB TB
Mrs. Lat. (to hubby) — You worm.
Mr. Lat. (to wifey) — You early-bird.
TB TB TB
\W*
BEFORE LAST FALL
Hiel — Not going to the dance. Bill1
Tarr — Nope, I ve sworn off.
Hiel — So have I, but let's dance without it.
WARM WEATHER STUFF
Mutt — Did you see Dolly in the show last
night1
Jeff— Yes.
Mutt — What did she have on1
Jeff— What I said.
Mutt — But you didn't sav anvthing.
Jeff— Well?
Three Hundred Sixtv-nine
-TAR BABY-
Three Hundred Seventy
-TAR BABY-
THE CAMPUS VAMPUS
What Every Carolina Man Should Know
This is the kind of girl that makes Dad ask. "Why such
an increase under the head of incidental expenses, my boy?"
Is known as the "million dollar mystery" and is strong for
the gay lights.
Cold and cruel, she strings men by the score, then cuts the
cord to see which hits the ground the hardest. Is aesthetically
inclined.
Very smooth young lady who is extremely interested in student life
and the social embetterment of the campus. Very sympathetic and when
spoken to on the street always replies, "Come to see me this evening and
we'll talk it all over." Loves the soft, warm glow of the fire better than an
orchestra circle seat and a party afterwards.
The college widow whose sad life calls for such human sympathy as
only a student can give. Sob stuff appeals to her and has the arsenic effect.
Sweet, dreamy, affectionate creature with a skin you love to touch;
who thinks it's never too late till twelve and then it's early. She is the type
we all fall for and is the reason for more than one "six."
J*
Three Hundred Seventy-one
CHIPS^
FflOM OTHER TABLE'S
WHADDA YUH SAY, MOSES. EH1
"Oh, Moses, I have a surprise for you. dearest"
quoth the lovely co-ed as she clasped her fiance.
Rountree, to her breast, "I can cook as good as 1
can play the piano".
Moses' face fell.
"It doesn't matter, dearest." he said despond-
ently, "we can board, you know"
Freshman approaching Tom Wolfe one day
last fall, immediately upon the opening of the
University.
"Mister, are you President Chase1"
"Look a-here, sonny," roared Tom, as he
caught the Fresh by the ear and faced him
toward the gym "You go see Dr. Lawson; I'm
Buck Gavin, and the law'll git vou in the end "
TB TB TB
H. C. L. AND TALKING
Stevens, returning from a hurried business
trip to New York City, began telling ail of his
Senior buddies about the beautiful sights — girls,
you know, and all that means — that he saw while
in America's metropolitan city.
One, thinking it nothing but superfluous
chaff, walked away disgustedly, remarking
"Talk is cheap".
"Don t you believe it." Stevens informed him
angrily. "I had to pay $10 and costs for telling a
girl up there what I thought of her".
TB TB TB
Occasion — Chapel Hill — Rocky Mount football
game at Rocky Mount. Free-for-all fight on
field. "Happy" Barden refereeing. Three
Rocky Mount players walk up to "Hap", and
each has a brickbat in his hand.
Rocks' Mount Plaver — Are you from Chapel
Hill, tool
"Happy" Barden — Hell, no! I'm from Carr-
boro.
TB TB TB
TB TB TB
Dr. Moss — And the Lord called Samuel —
R. O Smith (half asleep)— What did he hold1
Hennesee — I believe I'
Sweet Young Thing — Oh. no. Bi
plain face much better.
raise a mustache.
like vour
N. C. C W. AND G C W. JOKES DELETED
BY THE CENSOR
So there aint no chips!
When lips are cherry red
And eyes are blue —
Someone's awfully lonely
I think — don t you1
When eyes are cherry red
And lips are blue —
Someone's been on a tear
I think — don't vou?
TB TB TB
Three Hundred Seventy-two
LLikL.
sv rv
& i
A
Jr
if
A
FIVE REELS AND A STAGGER
Be it known to the modern reader that during
the Antiphlogistine period in Egypt among the
highest potentates of the land was Melachrino.
the undertaker. More of the Rameses and
Pharoahs had been pickled by him than by the
Valerian wine dealers. And so it came to him
as a shock when his only son, Sanatogen, desired
to go into the movies.
Young Sanatogen loved his father dearly, and
so he waited patiently until I sis ran off with
the old man's soul. Sanatogen embalmed the
pater and sold the remaining embalming fluid to
the peasants as a "pickler, " thus keeping within
the law, and hit out for his Mecca, the Egyptian
Universal City. Sanatogen's soft golden locks
and his quickness at the draw soon made him
the idol of all Egypt and there was some talk
among the opposition of running him for presi-
dent at the next election against Rameses XX.
Then came the great Roman Caesar. Like all
great personages he was shown over Universal
City by the Reception Committee. While there
he saw Cleo Patra, whose real name was Rebecca
Rosenstein, a protegee of the famous Sanatogen.
The great Jule fell for her picture and demanded
a date. Cleo photographed well, but alas, she
knew she was all to the bad off the screen, so
Caesar didn't get his date.
So great was Caesar's passion that he waited
at the stage door ot the Alexandra Opera House
(the noted moving picture palace of Egypt) for
seven nights running, unacquainted with the
fact that Cleo in the role of Mrs. Sanatogen was
doing a scene over the stockings of two little
Sanos and one little Cleo. A Bolsheviki out-
break called Caesar back to Rome by a former
friend named Brutus, an ardent "red.'' Besidesa
few feet of film in the animated news, these
happenings little affected the Egyptian movie
colony. Sanatogen was busy with the building
of the pyramids, which, all historical statements
to the contrary, were built to give color to his
stupendous spectacle, "In the Clutch of Isis."
Cleo was busy too with the filming of "The
Betrayed Priestess"
Years passed, Cleo had already dyed her
hair twice when Antony back in Rome picked
up a ten-year-old copy of the Gladiator's Gazette
and saw a picture of Cleo.
He threw up a hundred a week job, jilted his
wife (his employer's daughter), emptied the
cash register and struck out for Egypt.
In the meantime, unknown to Antony, his
employer Octavio had gone to Egypt for his
health, so at least he told his wife. Octavio may
have been old, but he h d young ideas. He also
had become enamored of the great Cleo. One
fateful night at the Alexandra Opera House
Antony found himself next to another sighing
lover of the screen beauty. Finally, attracted
by each other's sighs they turned and recognized
each other. Each realized that in the other he
had a rival. A fierce struggle ensued during
which they were forcibly removed from the
theatre. A passing cop picked them up and
carried them to jail.
They were brought into court the next morn-
ing, but had to wait for a divorce case. Finally
the case was brought up. "Sanatogen versus
Rosenstein alias Patra," read out the scribe of
the court
"What reasons have you for asking divorce,
Mr. Sanatogen1" asked the judge.
"Could any man live with a woman with a
face like that? Like a friend I ask you. judge?"
Cleo raised her silken veil.
"Divorce granted." said the judge, and
fainted.
Octavio returned to Rome disillusioned with
love and went back to raising a family.
Antony couldn't stand the shock. He was
buried by Octavio who felt for him as a com-
rade in disillusionment
Cleo went into vaudeville as a snake charmer.
Three Hundred Seventy-three
-TAR BABY-
Bob — Have you been to see that new girl who
is visiting here1
Tom — Yes, I went out to see her last night.
Bob — What does she look like ?
Tom — Didn't see her.
Bob — Not at home1
Tom — Too much paint.
TB TB TB
"The paper says that the average Raleigh
society girl may go almost anywhere without a
chaperon ."
"Quite true; the average Raleigh society girl
society girl is quite old enough to chaperon
herself."
TB TB TB
Coe — What did you say when Bobbie kissed
you?
Hed— Why, Bobbie!
Three Hundred Seventy-four
Jim — Fo' de land sake! What kind of clothes
has you got on?
Wallace — Pepper an' salt. You heard me,
nigger.
Jim — 'Pears to be mighty little meat for so
much pepper an' salt.
TB TB TB
"Hap" — Has "Red" been drinking lately1
Grady — Well, 1 don't know, he gave two bits
for the gold football fund.
Cecille — Did you ever cry over sad books,
Mr. Martin.
Booloo — Well now, let me think; 1 believe I
did shed a few tears over a quiz book once.
-TAR BABY-
Senior 'to visitor) — There's Old East. South
and Carr
Visitor — But they are all dormitories; where
do the students get their education1
Senior — Oh, well, in Durham. Greensboro,
and Raleigh.
TB TB TB
"You have the wrong idea of him Dad. He
doesn't love me for my money."
"What proof have you, Alice?"
"Why even last night he told me he didn't
care if he wasn't able to make a cent in his life
if he onlv had me.
Dizzy One — Why can't an Indian shimmy1
Savoir Because his quiver is in the wrong
place.
TB TB TB
Claudio Ramsio (at the finals) — Do you
waltz, lil thing?
Til Thing — Naw, but I'll put on the gloves
with you.
TB TB TB
Dr. Archibald (riding Freshman on Math i i —
Mr Brown, what's the matter with you1 Can't
you subtract1 Suppose you started out one
evening in New York with $40 and come back
with $20; what would you be doing1
Fresh. Brown — Sir, I'd be getting off light.
TB TB TB
Dr. Raper (to "Red" Edens) — Would you saw
Mr. Edens, that the check-book is a form to aid
in the withdrawal of money?
"Red" (from the heart) — Yes sir. Doc.
Dr. Raper — A very good answer. Mr. Edens;
exactly correct.
THE STEWED-DENT "POKER" COUNCIL
Pres. — You are accused of playing poker.
Junior — Yes, you see my friend and I sat down
for a quiet little game —
Pres. (interested) — Yes.
Junior — And he opened for a dollar.
Pres. (more interested) — Yes.
Junior — Well, I went in and drew five cards
and —
Pres. (even more interested) — Yes!
Junior — I caught a pair of deuces and he bet a
dollar and I called.
Pres. — On a pair of deuces1
Junior — Yes.
Pres. — No case, gentlemen, that's not poker.
TB TB TB
W ayfarer (at Times Square J — Young man, I'd
like to go to Central Park.
Wimberley (absorbed in the tall buildings) —
Well. 1 don't mind your going this time, but
don't ever ask me to let you go again.
Three Hundred Seventy-five
-TAR BABY-
Dr. Wagstaff — Mr. Spencer, what do you
know about Louis XIV time?
Spencer (thoughtlessly, of course) — Nothing, 1
didn't even know he was out for track.
TB TB TB
(Mr. Foister. the Fire Chief) — I saw a girl at
the Country Club and her stockings were on
wrong side out.
Barney Douglass — What did you do?
Chief Foister — 1 turned the hose on her.
TB TB TB
Soph (first time at dances) — Oh, her hazel
eyes were so bewitching —
Fresh — And she cried witch-hazel tears.
TB TB TB
Charley Smith (to Epworth League) — Folks,
the Ministerial Band will conduct the services
here next Wednesday evening.
Fresh (from Styx) — Say, is that a Jazz Band1
TB TB TB
OCT. 12
"For goodness sake, Mary, stop waving your
handkerchief; the students have all passed by
long ago; those are only the Law School boys."
TB TB TB
"What did the Student Council do tonight1"
"It's a howitzer, man, a howitzer!
"How's that1 '
"It's been firing bums the whole evening."
TB TB TB
Jack McD. (to small sister) — You're a little
angel, Mary.
Femme de cocur — Yes, Mary, now fly.
Three Hundred Seventy-six
The Old-Timer (at dances) — Oh, Mr. Green, I
am getting too old for the dances.
Green—Oh, not at all
Old-Timer — I feel like a faded autumn leaf
among all these young buds.
Green (flashed of Botany 1 1 — Fine — I press
autumn leaves for amusement.
TB TB TB
"Louie" (with marked indifference) — "Judge",
what is the law on wines and beers now?
"Judge" Bond — There is only one beverage
that is safe to keep.
"Louie" — What's that?
"Judge" — Shoe polish.
TB TB TB
Grizz (interested in football dope) — Why are
thev feeding the Freshman team sugar over at
Mrs. Battle's?
Yank — To put the old sand in em 1 guess.
TB TB TB
Freshman — What are those doleful sounds
coming from the Physics i Lab? They sound
like damned souls in torment.
Cruel Soph, (who had taken the course) —
That's just what they are.
TB TB TB
Dr. Charlie (Jumping sprightly into the chair)
— Just a hair-cut. Moody.
Moody Lloyd (fondly patting him on the
pate) — What'cha needs is a shine, Doc.
Allen Gant, on football trip to Yale (New
Haven) — "Station Master, what time does the
next train leave for Chapel Hill?"
TB TB TB
Jarman (arguing for women's suffrage in Phi
Society, and of course, using a woman's argu-
ment)— "I'm right because I'm right, now ain't I
right?"
TB TB TB
We editors may dig and toil,
Till our fingertips grow sore,
But some poor fish is sure to say,
"I've heard that joke before ".
TB TB TB
First Damsel — Did you say you let your lover
sit in your lap? Isn't that indelicate?
Second Damsel — I want you to understand
that I can't sit on Clarke Smith's lap, so we
have to reverse the process.
TB TB TB
SINJ'-EM PLACE
Pay a dollar
and get a
weinie
$?
Indigestion Guaranteed
TOUR THE STATE
All parties under the personal
supervision of
PECK A. NORRIS
Write or wire for information or booklet
11 Caldwell Bld'g Chapel Hill, N. C.
GOOCHE'S CAFE
Nothing Good to Eat
Our Motto
"TRY US ONCE AND YOU'LL SWEAR
OFF FOREVER"
T
HE CLUTCH
COMPANY
Inferior Quality
Higher Prices
MESSY BROTHERS
DOPES OUR
SPECIALTY
We Strive to Profiteer
Archie's fTmporium
"We cater to the millionaires''''
FRESH SHIPMENT OF
"STOGIES" TOMORROW
tanlack for that tired feeling
Three Hundred Seventy-seven
Beautify Your Shape Made weaken
MY SIMPLE
METHOD
Booklet fr ee on
Personal Pulcritude
ffrcitch Us Grow
R. Stewdal Groans
Beauty Parlors
Star and Crescent Chateau
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
S.E. HUGHES AD SYNDICATE
Space guaranteed
"Read 'em and weep"
where the
strain is
greatest
SOCKS -HOSE
STOCKINGS
Durable Sock Company
$»«+
' ' Y o u ' // be
proud to show
them''
RIP BUILDING
PAW PAW", N. C.
Wear NARROW COLLARS
Follow the sparrow and
you'll follow the' bird
GLUE-IT, POORBODY & CO., Inc.
TORY, N. Y.
THE UNIVERSITY sf NORTH CAROLINA
SERVICE STATION
I The College of Frivolous Smarts.
II School of Untried Science:
1. French Customs in New Orleans.
2. Math, and the Calculus — Discussion of Geo. Bernard Shaw as I knew him.
3. Rudiments of Physics and Star Gazing.
4. Varieties of Lightning and Soil Uplift.
III The School for those taking Medicine.
IV The School of Farmacy.
V The School of Lawse — for those who dare not enter elsewhere.
VI Y. M. C. A. Night School — for the uplift of heathen Carrboro.
VII The School of Bankruptcy — degree depending on D. D. C.
VIII The Peabody School of County Bulletins.
IX The Carolina Business School — movie management our specialty.
X The Arboretum School — night courses.
Write me at the University if you need help, there'll be no hard feeling. You'll know
me by my winsome smile and unfailing courtesy. I will be 'waiting, the man behind the
grating {poetry), you saw it you clever devil. — Thomas Jay, Jr.
Three Hundred Seventy-eight
ii'i'iMM'i'nTi'rri'i'i'iTi'rnT
[119WIMTY mm 20))
'iM'i'i'i'i'i'ri'i'i'i'i'i'i'i'rri'i'r
Keep your
SEHTS T/LL THE
Gnne: is oveR.
F£Uou/5»
^jJ_LL«*LLLt ■ > i ♦ . r . i ■ i ■ i . t , i ■ i . i . i . i . 1 . 1 ■ I . I . I , t » l . ) ■ I . i . I , I . I . I ■ I . i . I . I . I . t ■ I . I T I . t > I ■ I ■ I . I , > ■ t . t ■ I . I . I , I ■ I . I . i . i . I ■ I . I . I . t ■ I . t . ! . 1 , 1 . t ■ t . I ■ t . I . I ■ Va
We Are Lookin,
for a Man—
A man with real initiative and force; a man with the gift of continuance; a
man not too optimistic, or too easily discouraged — not too overjoyed by
success, or too downhearted by a little hard luck; a man who does not talk
much when he succeeds, and none at all when he fails — who appreciates that
making good once is only his affidavit that he will continue to make good; a
man who is interested beyond the day's job and the week's payroll; a real
human fellow — one who can talk with and interest other fellows equally
human; a man who would be honest with himself and equally honest with
others.
A man under twenty-five or a man fifty might fill the requirements.
It's not so much a matter of age, as of capability and a natural-born desire
to work.
To such a man, who is interested in an opportunity to earn up to the full
limit of his capacity, is offered a permanent position, with the backing and
full support of a corporation with three millions of assets — a contract covering
a period of years, with accumulative profits.
A connection with the right man should prove mutually profitable.
Write us.
Southern Life and Trust Company
GREENSBORO, N. C.
A. \V. McALISTER, President
R. G. VAUGHN, First Vice-President
A. M. SCALES, Second Vice-President
R. J. MEBANE, Third Vice-President
ARTHUR WATT, Secretary
H. B. GUNTER, Agency Manage
Three Hundred Eighty
Jefferson Standard Life
Insurance Company
GREENSBORO, : NORTH CAROLINA
Insurance in force, over $ 1 25,000,000.00
$ 51,000,000.00
Insurance on the lives of
North Carolinians, over
Loans its money on real estate mortgages
right in the section from which
the premiums are paid
Three Hundred Eighty-one
For Twenty-seven Years
A Jewelry Store selling merchandise representing
supreme skill in gem carving and jewel handiwork.
A store which can fulfill your every need in the
Jewel rv line.
Schiffman Jewelry Company
LEADING JEWELERS
Greensboro,
North Carolina
The Vogue
Shop for Men and Boys
SOCIETY BRAND
CLOTHES
MANHATTAN SHIRTS
RALEIGH, N. C.
Sid Allen: "I don't believe that fable
about the whale swallowing Jonah."
The Girl: "Why not — that's nothing
to what you expect me to swallow some-
times."
Three Hundred Eighty-tivo
M. C. S. Xoble, President R. L. Strowd, Vice-President M. E. Hogan, Cashier
The Bank of Chapel Hill
OLDEST AND STRONGEST BANK IN ORANGE COUNTY
Y\ e solicit your banking business, promising you every
accommodation consistent with sound banking. Let
us help you with your business problems. No account
too small to receive our most careful attention.
"It Pleases Us to Please You "
PEACE INSTITUTE
RALEIGH, :: NORTH CAROLINA
For Young Women. Established 1857
College Courses. Preparatory Courses for Standard
College Requirements. Special Diplomas. Piano,
Voice, Art, Expression and Home Economics. Com-
mercial Course. Teacher Training Course. Special-
ists in all departments. : : :
LULA B. WYNNE HALL, Home School For Girls
MISS MARY OWEN GRAHAM, Pres.
Three Hundred Eighty-three
PATTERSON BROS.
DRUGGISTS
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Three Hundred Eighty-fcu,
The University of
North Carolina
MAXIMUM OF SERF ICE TO THE PEOPLE
OF THE STATE
s
A. The College of Liberal Arts G. The School of Education
..„.„,..,,..„. H. The Summer School
H. I lie School ot Applied science . _, _ . „
1. 1 he Bureau ct Extension
(1) Chemical Engineering /i\ /^ i t r
(1) General Informal ion
(2) Electrical Engineering ii\ i * u t
. . (2) Instruction by Lectures
(3) Civil and Road Engineering ti\ r* j * «~
yi) Correspondence Courses
(4) Soil Investigation ,111k. j n 1
(4) Debate and Declamation
C. The Graduate School (5) County Economic and Social
surveys
i-N mi c 1 1 r i ' ' Municipal and Legislative Ref-
D. I he School of Law
erence
E. The School Of Medicine ^ Educational Information and
Assistance
F. The School of Pharmacv T. The School of Commerce
WRITE TO THE UNIVERSITY
WHEN YOU NEED HELP
CHAPEL HILL, : NORTH CAROLINA
Three Hundred Eighty-five
GY THOMPSON
THE FAITH OF THE AVERAGE MAN
in Life Insurance is evidenced by the increasing demand for its
benefits. New insurance written by all good companies in 1919
is equivalent to 25^ °f the total volume in force in 1918! It
exceeds all the insurance-in-force in 1901. Today as never
before, men accept Life Insurance as the most certain means of
creating an immediate estate to protect credit; strengthen busi-
ness relations; provide for dependents and their own old age.
The poor man sees it as his only estate.
The rich man finds it necessary for conserving an estate
already created.
BUT THE COLLEGE MAN
is becoming a more intelligent insurer. He not only demands
Life Insurance early while it is available at the least possible
outlay, but he secures the contract providing the most complete
service while he lives. He looks upon death as the last and most
remote experience; and he is as much interested in what his
insurance policy will do for him if he lives as he is in what it
will do for his family if he does not.
MANY CAROLINA MEN
who are intelligent insurers, accept and appreciate the superior
policy contracts and the unexcelled service of the first-chartered
purely mutual American life insurance company. They are
learning that the old New England Mutual has always provided
superior service. The Company's 1919 business increased nearly
90% over the business of the year before.
Three Hundred Eighty-six
SAYS:-
AFTER SEVENTY-SIX YEARS
of successful management, under the wise supervision of the
stringent and beneficent insurance laws of Massachusetts, the
ideals of the early founders have fully prevailed. The 1920
policy contracts and service carry the principle of mutuality to
its logical and absolute limit. We offer the only perfectly mutual
policy. This is a broad statement; but thorough investigation
will prove it.
THE NEW POLICY CONTRACTS
of this fine old Company also provide the most liberal Waiver
of Premium and Monthly Income Benefits for Total Disability
and Double Indemnity for Accidental Death prior to age 65.
The difference in life insurance service is determined largely by
the terms of the policy and the legal conditions back of it. Mas-
sachusetts insurance supervision has been approached but never
equaled.
BEFORE YOU CONTRACT
to buy, or take up Life Insurance as a profession, it will pay you
to learn what we mean by "Perfection in Protection". An oppor-
tunity awaits you.
New England Mutual Life Insurance Company
CHARTERED 1835
BOSTON, MASS.
CYRUS THOMPSON, Jr., District Manager,
Opposite Campus, CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
EUGENE C. McGINNIS, General Agent,
Commercial National Bank Bldg., RALEIGH, N. C.
Three Hundred Eighty-seven
"Come and See'
You'll find "Kuppenheimer Clothes" "Stein-
Bloch Clothes," Clapp and Florsheim Shoes.
Manhattan Shirts, Stetson Hats and every-
thing priced to make friends.
C. R. BOONE,
"Good Quality Spells what Boone Sells''
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
Carolina
Coal
an
d
Ice
Co.
Wholesale anil
detail Dealers
in
Jellico, Anthracite
', Steam Coal and
Coke. M. & W. Indian
Coal
ASHEVILLE,
N.
C.
BROADWAY CAFE CJ"MS SLec me»
Opposite Post Office : : : GREENSBORO, N. C.
Cross & Linehan Co., >
Tucker Building,
234-236 FAYETTE ST.,
CLOTHIERS
EN'S FURNISHERS AND
HATTERS
RALEIGH, N. C.
WHEN IN
GREENSBORO
Have Your Friends Meet
You at The
BIJOU
Theatre
The Best in Motion Pictures
and Music That Will
Please
CALIFORNIA AND FLORIDA
FRUITS
TOBACCO AND CIGARS
Essie Bros.
CANDY KITCHEN
Ice Cream and Sodas
FRESH CANDIES
" Agents for Block's Chocolates'1''
Three Hundred Eighty-eight
W. \V WARREN
Palace Barber Shop
27 PATTON AVENUE
Everything First-Class and Up-to-Date
Phone 3221
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Phoenix Cafe
Where Carolina Men
EAT
WHEN IN DURHAM
American National Bank
Onlv National Bank in Asheville
L. L JENKINS, President
H REDWOOD. Viee-Pres.
A. E RANKIN, Vice-Pres. and Cashit
J E RANKIN. Vice-Pres.
JOS. B BRANDT, Asst Cashier
J. B. WHITEF1ELD. Ass't Cashi,
BUY AT
»
"ODELL'S
WHERE QUALITY TELLS
WE ARE HEADQUARTERS
FOR SPORTING GOODS
If it's sporting goods, we have it. Base Balls, Base
Ball Suits, Bats, Tennis Rackets, Balls and Nets. We
also carry a complete line of Sweaters.
MAIL ORDERS HAVE OUR PROMPT
ATTENTION
ODELL HARDWARE CO.
Greensboro, North Carolina
Three Hundred Eighty-nine
Just as
Ambition
Opens the gateway to oppor-
tunity and an education im-
JH proves your chances, proper
attention to your clothes and
general appearance is a pass-
port to a higher position in
life. They assist in achieve-
ment by inspiring the confi-
dence of others in you.
Hart.Schaffner & Marx
and
Society Brand Clothes
possess style and individual-
Sortrty Irani (ILutlira . i , i
ity — they can t change your
character, but they reflect your taste and make other
men welcome your society.
Pritchard, Bright Co.,
DURHAM, N. C
Three Hundred Ninety
THE O. HENRY HOTEL
= GREENSBORO, N. C. =
THE PLACE
where you can take a lady to dine is a
place that must come up to the mark in
all respects. Our cuisine is the best; our
materials are all of high quality; our ser-
vice is swift and silent, combining tact
and courtesy. Could you ask for more?
Our charges are reasonable.
WADE H. LOWRY,
A COMPLETE LINE OF THE LATEST IN
Haberdashery, Shoes and Hats
AT THE OLD RELIABLE STAND OF
A. A. Kluttz Company, inc.
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Student Headquarters for Books, Stationery, Periodicals
and all kinds of "Eats"
Three Hundred Ninety-one
First National Bank
DURHAM, : : NORTH CAROLINA
Capital and Surplus over
One Million Dollars
JULIAN S. CARR, President
W. J. HOLLOWAY, lice-President
JAS. O. COBB, Vice-President
SOUTHGATE JONES, Cashier
Three Hundred Ninety-twc
CO-EDS
As the State always sees them
But—
As thev often are
Phil R. Carlton, Inc.
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
Victory Theatre Bldg. Phone 637
GREENSBORO, N. C.
In this Annual we Would Express a
Perennial Purpose
— to help uphold the splendid
work that is going on on the Hill
Central Bank & Trust Co.
ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
Walk-Over
Shoes
FOR MEN AND
WOMEN
FLORSHEIM
Shoes for Men
E. E. BRAGG & CO.
Durham's Largest and Most Progressive Shoe Store
DURHAM, N. C.
When You Vi
Think of
Eats"
Think of
GOOCH'S
HOTEL GUILFORD and GUILFORD CAFE
R. T. ROSEMOND, Mgr. GREENSBORO, N. C.
Three I kindred Ninety-three
£>nrt?ttj Urattft
Clothes For Young Men
At College, In Society, In Business.
Everywhere — Society Brand Clothes
Are Authoritative in Style and Prop-
erly Proportioned (or Young Men
Vanstory Clothing Co.
Style Headquarters
GREENSBORO, N. C.
WE SPECIALIZE ON
Appropriate
Clothes
FOR YOUNG MEN
H. Weil & Bros.
Goldsboro, : N. C.
A
NYTHING a first-class
Drug Store should carry
KODAKS
— A N D
SUPPLIES
Hicks- Crabtree
D rug Co.
RALEIGH, : N. C.
Three Hundred Ninety-jo
THB =
Asheville Citizen
Western North Carolina's Leading
Newspaper
Not the Best, But as Good as the Best
Three Hundred Ninety-five
The Fidelity Bank
DURHAM, N. C.
Capital and Surplus over $ 700,000.00
Resources over . . . $6,000,000.00
4% PAID ON SAYINGS ACCOUNTS, COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY
Have You Tried Our Superb Banking Service?
Edwards & Broughton Printing Company
RALEIGH, : : NORTH CAROLINA
PRINTERS
PUBLISHERS
AND
STATIONERS
STEEL AND COPPER PLATE ENGRAVERS
MANUFACTURERS OF
LANK BOOKS AND LOOSE LEAF SYSTEMS
Three Hundred Ninety-si*
GROWTH
There is the overnight growth of Summer Grass
and Weeds, and there is the growth that comes
effectively, sturdily and steadily — A growth that
is progressive as time itself. The Greentree
Store has grown that way with a policy that is
deep rooted in the idea of Giving Service.
It is the Service Giving Qualities of Greentree
Clothes that has enabled us to build up so
steadily, each year increasing our growth.
This Spring we will be with you on schedule
time with one of the most attractive lines in our
entire career, one that will be calculated to add
numerous friends to our growing clientele at
Chapel Hill.
]JU&UJ£C/>
RICHMOND, VA.
Three Hundred Ninety-seven
Cone Export and Commission Co.
Southern Textiles
Greensboro, N. C. New York City
Proximity Manufacturing Co.
PROXIMITY PRINT WORKS
iiimimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiii I luiiiiiiimin
WHITE OAK
DENIMS
lllllllllllllllll Illllllll Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
Three Hundred Ninety-eight
We Put "U" In Music
Pianos, Victrolas
Records, Stringed
Instruments
All Kinds of
Musi&al Supplies
Expert Repairing All Instruments in Our Daylight Repair Shop
i ii i n ii n ii ii i
GREENSBORO MUSIC COMPANY
^EVERYTHING MUSIC AL=
123 South Elm Street
F. M. HOOD, Mgr.
Attention Carolina Aden
This firm is showing for Spring
the latest styles in Men's Foot-
wear, consisting of Brown Cor-
dovan and Calf Brogues, Ox-
fords, Tan Calf and Plain Cor-
dovan Oxfords and the latest
Square Toe Oxford, Dark Tan
Calf. All sizes, AAA to D. When
in the city call to see our line.
DOBSON - SILLS
Greensboro and Winston - Salem,
NORTH CAROLINA
Bac-Ter-Yuh (Very Contagious)
Three Hundred Ninety-nine
Atlantic Bank &Trust Co.
GREENSBORO,
NORTH CAROLINA
CAPITAL $1,000,000.00
SURPLUS 250,000.00
University Students and Alumni, we want you to make this bank your bank.
Our strength is ample. Our facilities are unexcelled. Let us give you the
service vou need.
No business too big for us.
Not too big for any business.
JULIUS W. CONE, President
Wm. SIMPSON, Vice-President
J. E. LATHAM, Vice-President
JOHN W. SIMPSON, Vice-President and Cashier
J. H.ADAMS, High Point
\\ II AUSTIN, Smithfield
C. W. BRADSHAW. Greensboi
H. R. BUSH. Greensboro
J. H. COLE, Greensboro
B. M. CONE, Greensboro
J. W. CONE. Greensboro
SAIL URIBBEN. New Y..rk
L. J. DUFFY. Greensboro
J. S. DUNCAN. Greensboro
DIRECTORS:
M. W. GANT, Greensboro
C. W. GOLD. Greensboro
J. E. HARDIN. Greensboro
EUGENE HOLT. Burlington
CHAS W. HORNE, Clayton
C. C. HUDSON. Greensboro
C. A. HUNT, Jr., Lexington
J. E. LATHAM. Greensboro
JULIAN PR ICE. Greensboro
W. G. RAGSDALE. Jamestowi
JOE ROSENTHAL. Goldsboro
P C PUCKER, Greensboro
L. H. SELLARS, Greensboro
A. A. SHUFORD. Jr.. Hickory
JNO. W. SIMPSON. Greensboro
WM. SIMPSON, Greensboro
E. STERNRERGEK. Greensboro
C. C. THOMAS, Durham
F. L. WILLIAMSON. Burlington
J. NORMAN WILLS. Greensboro
Four Hundred
AT HOME ■ ABROAD
THE
American
Red Cross
Serves Humanity
This Spac-e Donated by
KISTLER, LESH & CO.
BURKE TANNERY
MORG ANTON, N. C.
Four HundredlOne
ii.1t ,' T7 * _ , FOR EVERY OUTDOOR
Athletic Equipment AND indoor sport
Fcr twenty-three years ALEX. TAYLOR has faithfully served the students of Colleges, Prep Schools,
High Schools and professional and amateur athletes. The high quality of Taylor Sport Goods and the
special courteous service, with your money back on any unsatisfactory purchase, has won the Taylor
organization hosts of patrons. Send for our latest catalog and you will be convinced that you can purchase
safely and economically of
ALEX. TAYLOR & CO., Inc
ATHLETIC OUTFITTERS
26 E. 42nd Street,
NEW YORK CITY
AGENTS WANTED WHERE WE ARE NOT REPRESENTED
Now
Booking f
or Southern Tours
The
Brown Brot
ORCHESTRAS
Main Office:
hers
. 152+
Chestnut
Street
PHILADELPHIA
PA.
Four Hundred Twc
CARR-BRYANT
A COMPLETE LINE OE
High-Grade Shoes for Men,
Women and Children
OUR MAIL ORDER
DEPARTMENT
WILL BE GLAD TO
TAKE CARE OF
YOUR SHOE WANTS
Carr-Bryant Boot & Shoe Co.,
106-108 West Main Street, - DURHAM, N. C.
Four Hundred Three
"Say it with Flowers"
1 6 GREENHOUSES, 7^000
SQUARE FEET OF GLASS
Roses, Carnations, Violets, Sweet Peas and
other flowers in season. Season runs from
October till June
WE ARE AS NEAR YOU AS YOUR PHONE
Van Lindley Co., Florists
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
Four Hundred Fo
yj RALEIGH'S LEADING AND
LARGEST HOTEL
"The Yarborough
Our Cafe is one of the best in the South
J. C. VANSTORY, Manager B. H. GRIFFIN, President
WSPfflWSP3ww: <"l||lh
He (After Base Ball Game)— May I
help you down:
She— No!
He — Why not:
She — \\ hy there'd be too much waste
motion.
You are always welcome at our stores
AGENTS FOR
Nunally's-Johnson & Hughes
CANDIES
Eastman Kodaks and Supplies
GREENSBORO DRUG CO.
FARISS-KLLTZ DRUG CO.
INSURANCE— General Agents
REAL ESTATE
TRUST BUSINESS
INVESTMENT SECURITIES
FIRST NATIONAL
TRUST COMPANY
DURHAM, N . C .
Four Hundred Five
Fashion Park Clothes
THE
NAME THAT
HAS LONG
STOOD FOR
Dominant
STYLE
ALL WOOL MATERIALS
Refinement That Lends Character to Apparel
and Additional Little Touches That Mark the
Clothes of the Well Dressed Man.
W. M. NEWTON & CO
''TOO YOUNG FOR OLD IDEAS"
Four Hundred Six
/ kept your father's clothes in first-class shape. Let me do the same for yours
CLEANING, PRESSING, ALTERING AND REPAIRING
"LONG BILL" JONES CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Attention' Collefe Students invitation?™' we "nake^pSi reduce Vl'
J11H.UUUU. VJWH^gV- ULUUUUO collie students. Send for our samples and prio
WILL YOU GRADUATE T H I S Y E A R ? c£ 'SLJeSfSSSo,!*? SerSesfei°vitati°°s *°r Craduation Ex"'
Committees should secure our samples and prices before placing their orders — J. P. Stevens Engraving Co.,
Manufacturers Engraved Stationery, Atlanta, Ga.
Dick's Laundry Co.
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
Launderers and
Dry Cleaners
C. S. PENDERGRAFT, Agt
FOR ALL NEWS WORTH WHILE 365 DAYS IN THE YEAR
READ "THE OLD RELIABLE"
NEWS AND OBSERVER
North Carolina's Greatest Daily
Published at : : : THE CAPITAL
Four Hundred Seven
The
NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE
for WOMEN
Offers to Women a liberal education and professional training
in vocational subjects.
Liberal courses in Arts, Science, Music and Home Economics.
Teachers and Graduates of other colleges provided for in both
regular and special courses. '
Equipment modern, including furnished dormitories, library,
laboratories, literary society halls, gymnasium, athletic grounds,
music rooms, teachers^ training school, infirmary, sanitary laundry,
cold storage plant, central heating plant, and open-air recreation
grounds.
Fall term begins in September. Spring term February.
Summer term, June.
For catalogue and other information, address
JULIUS I. FOUST, Presidnu
Greensboro, N. C.
Four Hundred Eight
"Murphy's Hotel"
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
The largest, the most central and the only
Hotel on Broad Street; the Broadway of Rich-
mond. Headquarters for college boys, men,
and Alumni. Rates and Booklets furnished
upon application.
"RICHMOND EXTENDS THE REAL
MURPHY WELCOME TO ALL"
The Provident Life & Trust Company
OF PHILADELPHIA
ESTABLISHED 1S65
This Company's long and honorable record and remarkable financial
stability guarantee to its policy holders absolute security, the first funda-
mental consideration in placing life insurance.
This company's care and economy in management has resulted in the lowest
net cost for insurance, the second fundamental consideration in placing
life insurance.
The Provident, having as policy holders many of Xorth Carolina's leading busi-
ness and professional men, appeals to the discriminating buyer of insurance.
Correspondence relative to agency representation invited. No field offers better
opportunity for success today than the life
PAUL W. SCHENCK, General Agent for North Carolina
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
Four Hundred Nine
St. Mary's, Raleigh, N. C.
FOUNDED BY THE REV. ALDERT SMEDES. D. D.. IN 1842
FOR THE EDUCATION OF GIRLS AND YOUNG WOMEN
Seventy-Ninth Annual Session Begins
September ij, IQ20
"The best education is impossible without a foundation of moral teaching
which will produce character, and the best education is useless unless directed
by strong moral principles towards the best ends for the benefit of society."
"Those things called traditions, which come down from one generation
to another, in which each new generation of pupils take a pride, belong to
the very soul of the life at St. Mary's School."
For Information, Address
REV. WARREN W. WAY, RECTOR
First i
Strictly
1 the
Imi
Presentation of State, National anil World News— Forem
THE GREENSBORO
pendent in Politic. 39.00 D
ist in its interpretation of independent th
DAILY NEWS
aily and Sunday— 37.00 Daily
Only
Mr. Armfield — Britt, my boy — do you think this fast life of yours pays
Bouncing Britt — No Dad. I don't — but I'm glad you do, anyway.
JONES & FRASIER COMPANY
Manufacturing Jewelers, Optometrists
CHINA AND ENGRAVED STATIONERY
Colleges and Fraternities Given Special Attention
Four Hundred Ten
SEND YOUR
KODAK FILMS
TO
FOISTER'S
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.=
FOR E X P E RT
DEVELOPING,
PRINTING and
ENLARGING
"QUALITY FIRST"
Four Hundred Eleven
Royall & Borden
Corner Main and Market Streets
Durham, : North Carolina
Medium and Fine Furniture
RUGS
AGENTS FOR
Columbia Grafonolas and
Records
Four Hundred Twelve
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA
(STATE INSTITUTION)
MEDICINE, DENTISTRY, PHARMACY
New Buildings, Well Equipped Laboratories. Under the Direction of Full-Time Competent Teachers
The Memorial Hospital, Dooley Hospital. Colored Hospital are owned and controlled by the Medical
College of Virginia, and offer every facility for thorough Clinical Teaching Staffs composed of the Faculty of the
College. Additional Clinical Facilities are offered through the Virginia Hospital, City Home, City Jail, etc.
For full information and catalogue, address
J. R. McCAULEY, Secretary, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Topping — What's this?
Waiter (at the Huffine) — It's bean soup, Sah!
Topping — I don't care what it has been, what is it
GREENSBORO DAILY RECORD
An Independent Forceful Newspaper. Circulation in excess of 8,000
Subscription Price, 35.00
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Classed in Group A by State Board of Examiner.-. Chartered 183S Confers the degrees of A B. and B. S. in the
literary department and B. M. in the music department
In addition to our regular classical courses, special attention is called to the departments of Home Economics.
Expression, Business, Art. Education, Sunday School Teacher Training, Piano Pedagogy, and to our complete School of
Music. -Modern new $.50,000 Dormitory completed 1918. Conservatory of Music to cost $100,0110 being erected in 1920.
DR. S. B. TURRENTINE. President, Greensboro, N. C.
Four Hundred Thirteen
M. ROBINS
C. L. WEILL
ROBINS & WEILL
"INSURANCE SPECIALISTS"
GREENSBORO, N. C.
An insurance firm that believes in North Carolina and her Universit\
] ] if"~ '."!i!7*irMM'(nnrin i ir
New War Words S± <S5
■^ " ^^~"~ ^^^~ Blighty Bolsheviki
Ace Tank Anzac Air Hole Zeebrugge Barrage *nd hundreds
Webster's NEW INTERNATIONAL
added to
Dictionary. For the first time you can find authoritative
answers to your questions about the new terms.
Facls are demanded as never before. Exatf informati
before was the New Internati
ble at a price
Write for
urgently needed I
so relatively low. Regular a
Specimen Pages. Free Pock
G. & C. MERRI AM CO., Springfield, Mass., U. S. A.
i i ■"!'■" i mmm mi — n — m m
E. A. WRIGHT COMPANY
Broad and Huntingdon Streets
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Engravers Printers Stationers
Dance Progra
' | VHE Editor wishes to extend a most generous thanks for the assistance rendered him by the
Bureau of Engraving, Baker, Jones, Hausauer, Inc., and the Ellington Studio. The helpful in-
terest and co-operation of the Board is here recalled and genuine thanks expressed to all its members
for both the loyalty and application in solving the most difficult of problems. The association has
indeed been pleasant in our efforts to serve the University.
Four Hundred Fourteen
What we mean when we say the
"BALANCED SIX"
By a scientific distribution of weight in the
American Balanced Six, the load is divided
over each of the four wheels almost to a
fraction of a pound. The Chassis is not
underweighted at the rear nor overweighted
at the front. Each wheel carries a propor-
tionate share of the load, with an effect on
the riding qualities of the car that is little
short of amazing.
PENNEY & LONG, Inc. DIS™B™*?HF0R THE
GREENSBORO, : NORTH CAROLINA
Four Hundred Fifteen
Official Photographers to the
1920 Yackety Yack
Ellington Studio
ALBERT HARDEN, Manager
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
All negatives are carefully preserved and duplicate
prints can be obtained at any time.
PHOTOGRAPHERS TO
The North Carolina Historical Commission
REPRODUCTIONS
suitable for Historical Sketches, etc., from any Paint-
ings, Engravings or Manuscripts in the Hall of
History at Raleigh, and several private collections in
the State are accessible to us through our connection
with the Commission.
Four Hundred Sixteen
1Q<2
^^SEf
X3K '
Gathered from the distant waterfalls or
generated by the steam turbine, electric
power is transmitted to the busiest city
or the smallest country place.
Through the co-ordination of inventive
genius with engineering and manufac-
turing resources, the General Electric
Company has fostered and developed to
a high state of perfection these and
numerous other applications.
And so electricity, scarcely older than the gradu-
ate of today, appears in a practical, well developed
6ervice on every hand.
Recognize its power, study its applications to your
life's work, and utilize it to the utmost for the
benefit of all mankind.
General Office
Schenectady;KY!
SUPREMACY
For the past fifteen years the Educa-
tional Department of the Bureau of
Engraving, Inc., has been collecting a
vast fund of information from the ex-
periences of hundreds of editors and
managers of Annuals.
This data covering organization, financ-
ing, advertising, construction, selling and
original features has been systematically
tabulated and forms the subject matter
for our series of reference books. These
are furnished free to those securing
"Bureau" co-operation in the making
of engravings for their books.
Begin where others have left off". Profit
by their experience and assure success
for your Annual.
BUREAU OF ENGRAVINGinc
17 SOUTH SIXTH STREET
MINNEAPOLIS
Beautiful forms
and compositions
are not made by
ff^UR claim to your considera-
V^ tion lies in the fact that we
chance, nor can
they ever, in any 1
material, be made
have applied to our own business
the thought contained in this
at small expense.
A composition
for cheapness and
quotation from one of the world's
greatest thinkers and practical
not for excellence
of workmanship.
workers.
is the most fre-
quent and certain
cause of the rapid
If there is anything attractive
beyond the ordinary, in the page
decay and entire
destruction of
arts and manu-
arrangement, cover decoration,
presswork,and general harmony
factures.
— Ruskin
which distinguish our work, be
assured it has not been due to
chance.
We leave nothing to chance.
Every line, page, volume, as it
comes from our establishment,
is the result of a carefully laid,
conscientiously executed plan.
The thought and the super-
vision which our system provides
is your guarantee of excellence.
If you have anything to be
printed, write us; if we under-
take it, we will do it well.
BEE
PHIf
|j
Baker, Jones, Hausauer, Inc.
1 'irfCfi^
h0
■1
45-51 Carroll Street
Buffalo, N. Y.
'The 1920 Yackety Yack" is one of our products.
Four Hundred Nineteen
Mmmm
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