Cl)e iLitJtatp
of t^e
Qnitietsitp of J13ortt) Carolina
Form No. A-368. Rev. 8/95
Copyright
1938
David J. Thorp
Editor
J. Fred Rippy
Business Manager
I
193
YACKETY
OFFICIAL YEARBOOK OF
The Carolina Publications Union
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Volume XLVIII
- 1 J* -; -•^■*
THEME EXPLANATION AND DEDICATION
^iSi
-r^
^
•f^»- w
^r
>.
-"Sriis^v.^
!M.*!
/.
lllfi
bZ^SS&EuBNMir ^
THE THEME OF THIS YACKETY YACK CONCERNS ITSELF
WITH THE DIFFERENT BUILDINGS OF THE CAMPUS AND
THEIR RELATION TO THE VARIOUS SECTIONS OF THE
BOOK. WITH THIS IN MIND WE HAVE ATTEMPTED TO
PLACE BEFORE EACH MAIN DIVISION A SKETCH OF AN
APPROPRIATE CAMPUS SCENE. AS THE YACKETY YACK IS
PRINTED BY AND FOR THE STUDENTS IT SHOULD EN-
DEAVOR TO PLEASE THEM. THEREFORE, THIS THEME WAS
CHOSEN WHICH IS OF GREATEST IMPORTANCE TO THEM
AND THIS YACKETY YACK
IS DEDICATED TO THAT THEME,
THE UNIVERSITY.
CONTENTS
THE BOOKS
I UNIVERSITY
PAGE 7
CLASSES
III
IV
ACTIVITIES
PAGE 189
ATHLETICS
PAGE 2 29
V FRATERNITIES
PAGE 273
VI
VII
.DANCES
PAGE 3 3 3
HONORARY
PAGE 3 59
^^f^M-^M^^mmm^^mms^A.
^mmmmw^'^^
a-
ii
I
FIRST PART
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA YEAR BOOK
YACKETY YACK
1938
This part of the %Jolume beuig devoted
entirely to the
UNIVERSITY
W"
1
^
,
ll^ ~-*^>*«'
^
^^^H
^f
^^
r^
''^9
K
<^^B
^L.
"■■ / ■ '
r-
Jc
P*T^
^-^-^r^'"'^
a
..11.^— W
iMta
^^^^^^Si
1
i
>
j^gjggi^^
L
kli
^£.-'.
,!£■
•- JUii i i JUUll i lMWrnm ..-^-
t^SBti^r.,-
m^^
:jm^^W'tmnif^^&^ ' ^
w
IW
i^Ht^'
*^4e
I \/
WiM
A
jjj
:^>^v^
m*
^^
^^MC'^ft'
•' -'i^^*^^
MsC.
*^
<!l-
■ %
f^^MXf^M^
r^.. .-^a--^
W^^^^M.
^^(.Mi-^ ^. ^
>-^'r-'^. .j;;«ss^
..'-i5*^"* -
kJtVkT-lt:^iK 3
^i
■jf'»jfcjir4-
#
Frank Porter Graham
President of the University
PKESIDENT'S MESSAGE
To the Class of 1938:
As the University year draws to a close, we are reluc-
tant to realize that your undergraduate days also come to an
end. In another sense your college life never ends. You
will always be a part of the life of this place and this
University, and they will always be a part of your life.
College mates, fraternity, dormitory, professors, library,
laboratories, Davie poplar, Franklin street, the bell tower,
Battle woods, Kenan stadium, the arboretum, classes, games,
elections, eighteenth century buildings, and rock walls,
modern institutes and forums, struggles in student govern-
ment, freedom and democracy, life callings, impulses for
public service and human betterment, spiritual aspirations
— all these and more have been a part of your life and
development forever associated with the traditions and
ways of Chapel Hill.
With all our frustrations and failures, you leave behind
many real contributions to the immortal stream of Uni-
versity life and carry into the world their enduring satis-
factions. In your college quadrennium, many improve-
ments have been made in the life of the college and the
University by your own initiative or with your coopera-
tion and support. In the past four years were created,
established, or made effective the following:
A restudy and strengthening of the honor system and
the organizing of class honor councils to reinforce the cen-
tral student honor council; the General College, with a
reorganized curriculum, a dean and an especially respon-
sible group of faculty advisers for freshmen and sopho-
mores; improved dormitory conditions and management,
the organization of the dormitory council and the inau-
guration of senior or graduate student advisers in the fresh-
men dormitories; improved dormitory provisions for
women by reconditioning Archer House as a graduate
women's dormitory and the building of the new graduate
women's dormitory; the improvement of student health
and hygiene by the establishment of a department of edu-
cation and athletics with a large staff in charge of a cur-
riculum in the college and graduate school, courses in
hygiene for all freshmen, an expanded intramural athletic
program for the whole student body, some two scores of
new tennis courts, a dozen intramural fields, the new
Fetzer Field for track and other sports and the new gym-
nasium and swimming pool for both men and women
students; a central records office for cumulative personnel
records; general placement service; testing service; and
reading clinic; student-faculty day; a student advisory com-
mittee to the assistant controller; the reduction in the
price of textbooks and laundry rates; the student co-
operative movement; the organization of the Division of
Teacher Training, the Division of Social Work and the
Division of Public Health; the establishment of a new art
department, a new department of dramatic art, and the
especial strengthening of the departments of physics, chem-
istry, philosophy, German and education; the assumption
of responsibility for the School of Library Science by the
University; the acquisition of the Carolina Inn for use
as an inn, faculty social center, and alumni headquarters;
the reconditioning of Swain Hall and the installation of
# modern cafeteria ; the renovation of the Alumni Build-
ing; marked increase in the facilities and equipment of
Venable Hall, and provision for the transformation of
Phillips Hall into a modern physics building; recondition-
ing of and additions to the central power line and heating
system to meet the needs of an expanding University; the
saving of the Medical School; the addition of a third floor
to the medical building, enlargement of the teaching staff
and provision for the addition of a clinical annex to the
infirmary for the purposes of the Medical School; and
plans completed for the building of a new modern medical
building; the general budgetary recovery of the Uni-
versity and restoration of the salaries from the 689f basis
to 93.5%; and the settlement of the major issues of con-
solidation within the University framework to serve the
needs of all the people of North Carolina.
During your college generation, the recovery, the gen-
eral improvement and special advancements of the Uni-
versity on all fronts has been made possible through the
initiative and cooperation of the students, the faculty, the
administrative staff, the alumni, the budget commission,
the legislature, the governor and the people of North
Carolina, and the people of the United States.
With appreciation of your interest, your cooperative
participation, and your devoted loyalty, Alma Mater sends
you forth with an affection and faith that will go with
you always.
mmf'im^^'^ii^^^
Robert B. House
Deau of AdntiiiistrcJtion
itli^
DEAN'S MESSAGE
To the Members of the Graduating Class:
This message, which will reach you when Chapel Hill
is beauteous with spring blossoms, is written in October,
when all about us is the glory of autumn. What a beau-
tiful setting for beautiful companionship! The University
has just opened with a record enrollment and with a de-
lightful spirit of progressive understanding and mutual
enjoyment. The new dormitory for women, the magnifi-
cent gymnasium, work beginning on the new medical
school, are features of the campus which you will re-
member as marking your graduating year. Fine athletic
relations, stimulated by a wholesome program of physical
education, the enriching and deepening of the General Col-
lege's program, and the special programs in the College of
Arts and Sciences, the strengthening of departments, and
the expanding influence of the Graduate School and the
professional schools, are landmarks in the intellectual life
of the University which you will remember well. And,
above all, student self-development, self-government, and
self-expression in terms of spiritual and rational control
are in a healthy state in keeping with the traditions of the
University and by reason of your vital participation in
them. I hope that, in addition to your memories of your
personal experience here, you will keep before you the
idea of an institution constantly striving to be an honest
place of learning, a stimulating place of thought, and an
inspiring place of complete personal and spiritual develop-
ment.
I feel quite sure that you have profited by your stay
in the University in terms of intellectual, professional, and
practical growth, and I am sure that the University has
profited by your residence here, but I think, above all
things, the University is something to be enjoyed with
cleanness, fineness, and zest while we are in that privileged
class of her undergraduates, and to be remembered with
affection, loyalty, and high spiritual commitment after
graduation.
The fellowship of Carolina is fellowship in a beautiful
place, in beautiful human associations, and in an ideal
which transcends its past of glorious history and its present
of joyous achievement. I hope that you have found what
all of us find here — a reasonable inspiration and satisfac-
tion each day — but I hope you leave not completely satis-
fied but hungry for a more complete realization of the
spirit that is in the University, and I hope you have com-
mitted yourself with the University to the unending search
for the realization of its highest ideal.
Affectionately yours,
Dean of Administration.
South Building
COLLEGE OF AKTS AND SCIENCES
The College of Arts and Sciences is the administrative
unit of the University which confers the degrees, A.B. ;
A.B. in Journalism; A.B. in Law; B.S. in Chemistry; B.S.
in Geology; B.S. in Physics; B.S. in Medicine. This may
make it appear that the college is a degree mill, but such
is not the case. While the officers of the College may be
occupied more in connection with the students who are
seeking degrees with others, we do not consider the pres-
ence of a fairly large number of students who are not
working for degrees at all as undesirable in any sense;
we welcome them and try to place the facilities of the Uni-
versity at their disposal. So long as life in the United
States is what it is, we encourage young people to take
degrees when possible and try to arrange the requirements
with a view to a good education of the formal kind.
It might be of interest to record here the number of
those who are applicants for the various degrees in June
1938 or June 1939. There are about 730 students in the
College at the present time, divided as follows: Candidates
for B.S. in Chemistry, 38; for B.S. in Geology, 8; for B.S.
in Physics, 3; for B.S. in Medicine, 16; for A.B. LL.B., 26;
for A.B. with major in Chemistry, 68 ; Economics, 32 ;
Sociology, 60; Physical Education, 19; Zoology, 42; His-
tory, 47; Political Science, 58; A.B. in Journalism, 65;
Dean A. W. Hobbs
i^^^^^iiMMMtaiiifc^'^ w^'ar;'i:!';^,\Vu<
Mathematics, 16; English, 64; Physics, 3; French, 14; Psy-
chology, 6; Dramatic Art, 22; Geology, 4; Fine Arts, 4;
Music, 8 ; Philosophy, 5 ; Comparative Literature, 1 ; Rural
Economics, 2; Botany, 3; Latin, 2; unclassified, about 200.
Among the unclassified are several special students, candi-
dates for no degree; Pre-Medical, Pre-Law, and Pre-Dental,
not expecting to take any degree; students who have not
yet decided upon a major.
The numbers in the different majors and in the differ-
ent degree curriculums change from year to year, and all
Departments have a great many students who take courses
as electives. It appears that more and more students, ex-
pecting to enter Professional Schools, take a regular four
year program and receive the A.B. degree with an appro-
priate major. Zoology or Chemistry for Medicine, His-
tory, Political Science, or English for Law, and so on.
This is no doubt due to the tightening up of standards
with the Professional Schools.
Properly, the College of Arts and Sciences is the under-
graduate non-professional part of the University. It is
a collection of men who are seeking to expand knowledge
in the several subjects and to introduce students to the
search for truth. The result is far from satisfactory for
a number of reasons. American students spend more time
trying to avoid learning than they do in trying to get it,
which introduces the peculiarities common to all colleges
and universities in the country, namely the excessive extra-
curricular activity. Most students get the notion that these
activities are actually of permanent value, beyond anything
else they get from college, due to the fact that they do not
get that which the colleges are operated for. Not knowing
what it is all about, they seize upon other things from
which they do get something definite, though it is not at
all what the faculty is collected for, nor for which the
expensive equipment is bought. On the other hand, there
are enough students who do get some real education, and
enough Professors who turn out valuable research, to
justify a large number of educational institutions. In a
Democracy we have to be content with a constant state of
mediocrity, but we hope, an improving one. We prefer
this to the more clipped and furbished civilizations based
upon autocracy. Our goal is to bring about a condition
under which all young people will have the proper train-
ing and environment to induce them to live intelligently
and happily on a high plane.
W. M. Dey, Humanities
R. E. CoKER, Natural Sciences
A. R. Newsom, Social Sciences
PAGE 23
South Building
COLLEGE OF AKTS AND SCIENCES
The College of Arts and Sciences is the administrative
unit of the University which confers the degrees, A.B. ;
A.B. in Journalism; A.B. in Law; B.S. in Chemistry; B.S.
in Geology; B.S. in Physics; B.S. in Medicine. This may
make it appear that the college is a degree mill, but such
is not the case. While the officers of the College may be
occupied more in connection with the students who are
seeking degrees with others, we do not consider the pres-
ence of a fairly large number of students who are not
working for degrees at all as undesirable in any sense;
we welcome them and try to place the facilities of the Uni-
versity at their disposal. So long as life in the United
States is what it is, we encourage young people to take
degrees when possible and try to arrange the requirements
with a view to a good education of the formal kind.
It might be of interest to record here the number of
those who are applicants for the various degrees in June
1938 or June 1939. There are about 730 students in the
College at the present time, divided as follows : Candidates
for B.S. in Chemistry, 38; for B.S. in Geology, 8; for B.S.
in Physics, 3; for B.S. in Medicine, 16; for A.B. LL.B., 26;
for A.B. with major in Chemistry, 68; Economics, 32;
Sociology, 60; Physical Education, 19; Zoology, 42; His-
tory, 47; Political Science, 58; A.B. in Journalism, 65;
De.'VN A. W. HoBBS
PAGE 22
Mathematics, 16; English, 64; Physics, 3; French, 14; Psy-
chology, 6; Dramatic Art, 22; Geology, 4; Fine Arts, 4;
Music, 8; Philosophy, 5; Comparative Literature, 1; Rural
Economics, 2; Botany, 3; Latin, 2; unclassified, about 200.
Among the unclassified are several special students, candi-
dates for no degree; Pre-Medical, Pre- Law, and Pre-Dental,
not expecting to take any degree; students who have not
yet decided upon a major.
The numbers in the different majors and in the differ-
ent degree curriculums change from year to year, and all
Departments have a great many students who take courses
as electives. It appears that more and more students, ex-
pecting to enter Professional Schools, take a regular four
year program and receive the A.B. degree with an appro-
priate major, Zoology or Chemistry for Medicine, His-
tory, Political Science, or English for Law, and so on.
This is no doubt due to the tightening up of standards
with the Professional Schools.
Properly, the College of Arts and Sciences is the under-
graduate non-professional part of the University. It is
a collection of men who are seeking to expand knowledge
in the several subjects and to introduce students to the
search for truth. The result is far from satisfactory for
a number of reasons. American students spend more time
trying to avoid learning than they do in trying to get it.
which introduces the peculiarities common to all colleges
and universities in the country, namely the excessive extra-
curricular activity. Most students get the notion that these
activities are actually of permanent value, beyond anything
else they get from college, due to the fact that they do not
get that which the colleges are operated for. Not knowing
what it is all about, they seize upon other things from
which they do get something definite, though it is not at
all what the faculty is collected for, nor for which the
expensive equipment is bought. On the other hand, there
are enough students who do get some real education, and
enough Professors who turn out valuable research, to
justify a large number of educational institutions. In a
Democracy we have to be content with a constant state of
mediocrity, but we hope, an improving one. We prefer
this to the more clipped and furbished civilizations based
upon autocracy. Our goal is to bring about a condition
under which all young people will have the proper train-
ing and environment to induce them to live intelligently
and happily on a high plane.
W. M. Dev, Humanities
R. E. CoKER, Natural Sciences
A. R. Newsom, Social Sciences
PAGE 23
^m
%
GENERAL COLLEGE
Dean C. P. Spruill
The General College began the year 1937-38 with 1,412
students, 720 freshmen and 692 sophomores.
For the first time during the life of this college the ori-
entation of freshmen was completely planned and admin-
istered by fifty upper-classmen under the joint chairman-
ship of the President of the Student Body and the Presi-
dent of the Senior Class. By careful preparation and
make the adjustments required by life in Chapel Hill. The
culminating event of the orientation period was an un-
usually clear and impressive interpretation of the oppor-
tunities and obligations of student government. President
Graham was the speaker. Immediately after his address
the freshmen met with small groups of upper-classmen for
discussion and voluntary, individual pledges of support of
responsible student self-government.
The programs of study continue to serve the needs of
different groups of students. The small proportion of an
entering class that pushes on to graduation is a serious
reminder that continuous improvement of the content and
the circumstances of our offerings must be attempted. The
purposes of these offerings during the first two years are:
( 1 ) to promote a constructive experience in the broad learn-
ing and critical understanding which contribute to personal
achievement and civic responsibility, (2) to enable each
student to test his aptitudes and develop his interests, and
organized work, this group helped the entering class to (3) to start preparation for specialized training in col-
lege and professional schools. With these purposes in
view the University Administration tries systematically and
vigorously to discover, encourage, and advance good teach-
ing. Undismayed by the difficulty of defining this process,
the Administration intends to carry on the deliberate ef-
fort to multiply in Chapel Hill the teachers who quicken
the intelligence, elevate the imagination, and fill the mem-
ories of undergraduates. Of the effects of this undertak-
ing seniors will be the best judges now and in the years
The active administration of the General College is the
responsibility of a staff of ten faculty advisers. Each ad-
viser serves as the dean of his group of students. From
the time of admission until his junior year, each student
is associated with one adviser who attempts to make avail-
able and to consider with the student all relevant informa-
tion in helping him to make academic and personal de-
cisions. Through this association, the adviser helps to in-
dividualize and humanize the student's participation in the
life of the university.
Freshman Advisors
First Row, Left to Right — Sanders. Barrett. Spruill. Johnson.
Second Row, Left to Right — Hill. Huddle, Phillips.
Third Row, Left to Right — Markham, Perry, Wells.
fimmm^'
PAGE 25
Dean D. D. Carroll
Bingham Hall
THE SCHOOL OF COMMEKCE
The School of Commerce is the expression of the in the General College emphasize the broad cultural
University's desire to serve the large percentage of aspects of education. The last two years given in the
young people who will go into some phase of busi-
ness activity, but who cannot spend more than four
School of Commerce are devoted primarily to the de-
velopment of an understanding of the principles and
years in preparation for such a career. Recognizing procedures of modern business. The teaching policy
the need of a general understanding of our complex
modern civilization as a basis of a happy and effective
life, the first two years of the course of study given
of the School assumes that training for business should
consist not only of a knowledge of the organization
and methods of the most important fields of business
activity, but in addition should develop an understand-
ing of the problems and larger relationships of the
economic system as a whole. In the attempt to give
the student a practical basis for his life, care is taken
that he shall not lose sight of his social obligations or
his cultural needs.
The Credo of the School is stated as follows:
We believe that eliminating waste, releasing new
energies, and organizing more effectively in our eco-
nomic life, will reduce the burden of humanity, raise
the standards of well-being, lay the basis for finer and
more abounding cultural agencies, and bring the race
within reach of enlarged and enriched opportunity.
Business then takes its place as one of the great ave-
nues of consecration to the common weal; and states-
manlike leadership and achievement in this field are
rich in human benefaction.
Faculty of Commerce School
First Row, Left to Right — Sherrill, Carroll, Lear, Evans, Spruill, Blaine.
Second Row, Left to Right — Buchanan, Wolf, Heer, Woosley, Bernstein, Peacock,
Anson.
Third Row, Left lo Right — Anderson, Hobbs, Cowden, Winslow, Limmermann, Taylor,
Donovan, Kuhlman, Bunting.
'^m^
w
PAGE 27
Executive Committee of Graduate School
Firsi Row, Left to Right — Woosley, Mack, Pierson. Knight, MacNider.
Second Row, Left to Right — Odum, Taylor, Coker, Dey. Harrar. HfiAD^EH.
GMADUATE SCHOOL
The graduate school, ideally considered, is a group
of qualified teachers and students applying themselves
in freedom and with the necessary library and labora-
tory resources to the problems that interest them. It
has a province peculiar to itself in the investigation,
discovery, and application of truth. According to tra-
dition, this search for truth has been incessant and
should be continuous. In this work the school enter-
tains the ideal of excellence as a rule of practice. This
sort of activity has been and is a part of civilization.
It is perhaps the verifiable way of progress. It occurs
outside as well as in graduate schools; but the schools
are formally organized educational agencies for this
purpose. As an educational agency, the school is func-
tionally interested in the materials of knowledge; it
is concerned with that verification of that knowledge
on evidence and with the expansion of it by discovery.
In the conscientious performance of this duty is to be
found the surest justification of the university as dis-
tinguished from the college.
The school seeks, through specialized training and
investigation, to render a service to education and the
PAGE 28
I
>,:<.^2JWPi^^iifc<a»«d?»jife:
professions, particularly law, medicine, engineering,
and pharmacy; to business, industry, agriculture, and
pure and applied science; to government, citizenship,
and administration; to art and culture; and to society
and human relations. Specialized knowledge and tech-
nical mastery of a subject are firmly established in
social responsibility. The graduate school in its con-
viction of the educational necessity of the history and
theory of a subject, sometimes studied for their own
sake, is not indifferent to application. Perhaps all
advanced teaching and study, whether in the languages
and arts or in science, involves a certain element of
technological skill. From the viewpoint of the grad-
uate school such skill is a proper by-product, but is
neither a primary nor an exclusive aim to be attained.
Good teaching and scholarly research are interdepen-
dent processes, whereby skill in communicating knowl-
edge is accompanied by the spirit and practice of in-
quiry into the soundness of the knowledge imparted.
The teaching of truth is not safely to be separated from
the investigation of the evidential supports of truth.
In response to the many social needs and pressures,
some graduate schools have placed an emphasis, even
an exclusive emphasis, on one or the other — teaching
or research — and have organized formal curricula to
that end. Others have steadfastly held to the union
of the two. This is our faith at the University of
North Carolina.
Smith Building
Dean W. W. Pierson
PAGE 29
SCHOOL OF LAW
The School of Law occupies Manning Hall,
named for John Manning, from 1881 to 1899 a dis-
tmguished professor in the School. The building was
erected in 1923 and besides being modern and com-
modious, is particularly notable for beauty of design.
The law school, which developed into the School
of Law of the University, was founded in 1843 at
Chapel Hill as a private school by William H. Battle,
then a judge of the Superior Court, later a justice of
the Supreme Court of the State. In 1845 Judge Bat-
tle was made Professor of Law in the University, and
it was provided that the degree of Bachelor of Laws
should be conferred on those completing the prescribed
two-year course. From the records of the University,
however, it seems that few degrees were actually con-
ferred. For a long time the school maintained a cer-
tain independence of the University. The professor
of law received no salary, though he enjoyed the fees
Faculty of Law School
First Row, Left to Right — Hanft, McIntosh, Van Hecke, Dalzell.
Second Row, Left to Right — McCall, Coats, Breckenridge, WettaCH, Markham.
PAGE 30
Dean M. T. Van Hecke
Manning Hall
from his classes. The students were not entirely sub-
ject to the discipline of the University.
This was the position of the school from its
formation until 1899, a period which covered the pro-
fessorships of Judge Battle who retired in 1879; two
years when the law classes were conducted by Kemp P.
Battle, then President of the University; and the pro-
fessorship of John Manning, elected 1881, died 1899-
In 1899 the school was completely incorporated into
the University, with the late James C. MacRae, pre-
viously a justice of the Supreme Court of North Caro-
lina, as the first Dean of the School of Law.
The School of Law having complied in full with
the requirements set up by the American Bar Associ-
ation has been classed as an "approved law school".
The School of Law is a member of the Association
of American Law Schools, an association composed of
the leading law schools in the United States.
A carefully compiled list of approved law shcools,
whose credits are acceptable as evidence of due prep-
aration for the New York Bar Examinations, is pub-
lished by the University of the State of New York.
The School of Law is accredited in this list for the
full three years' work.
PAGE 3 1
Dean W. deB. MacNider
Caldwell Hall
THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
During the last few months the Medical School has
been in the process of a rather unusual development,
both physically and in terms of its personnel.
As a result of the thoughtful appropriation by
the recent legislature for the Medical School building
and an addition to the University Infirmary, which in
turn enabled the University authorities to secure a
P.W.A. grant, the physical plant of the Medical School
and the Division of Public Health finds itself in a
state of rapid and satisfactory expansion. The sum
of $410,900.00 enables the erection of a modern, ade-
quately equipped laboratory building for the purpose
of teaching the fundamental medical sciences and for
the development of the Division of Public Health of
the Medical School. This building will be placed as
a key building on a large plateau in a southwesterly
direction from the University Library, which will make
possible in the future the development in this location
of other buildings of a medical order. The addition
to the University Infirmary not only enables this in-
stitution to work more effectively for the care of the
University students, certain faculty members and sec-
P AGE 32
^
retarial help in the University, but it permits the de-
velopment of a charity clinic, in which clinic a course
for medical students of the first order will be given
in Physical Diagnosis.
The expansion of the various departments of the
Medical School by acquiring additional instructors has
been most gratifying and constitutes the heart of the
medical organization of the University. One or more
additions in terms of instructors have been made to
each of the seven departments of the Medical School.
These instructors have been selected on the basis of
their training as reflected in their ability to teach and
to conduct and direct scientific research of a medical
and biological nature. During the past few months
there have been added to the medical faculty twelve
instructors and technical assistants. In addition a new
Department of Biological Chemistry has been estab-
lished and developed in terms of personnel and equip-
ment.
Faculty of Med School
First Row, Left to Right — Rosenau, MacNider, Mangum, Manning. Bullitt.
Second Row, Left to Right — Kyker. Andrews. Donnelly. Baity. MacPherson. George.
Third Rou; Left to Right — Low. Gotaas, Hammond. Ferrill. Holman. Brown.
Fourth Row, Left to Right — Holnick, Crowell, Mebane, Sch.\af, Durbin.
PAGE 33
THE SCHOOL OF PHABMACY
Four thousand years of recorded history lie back
of the practice of pharmacy. The evolutionary changes
that have occurred in its methods during this period
are interesting indeed, but their main importance con-
cerns the orderly development of an applied science
out of a skillful art. The pharmacy of today begins
in the collection of crude medicinal material and car-
ries on to its refinement, its manufacture, and its varied
forms of distribution. Ordinarily one thinks of phar-
macy only in terms of its final agent, the retail drug-
gist, but actually every part of the work is approxi-
mately co-equal in importance, exactness, and scientific
character.
In former times a pharmacist gained most of his
knowledge from a preceptorial or apprentice form of
training. As the art grew into a science, however,
and as the entire field of medicine progressed, it be-
came necessary that organized educational processes
be employed. Accordingly, schools of pharmacy were
established. Three general aims are sought by these
schools: To educate their students in such a way as
to make them actively conscious of the social obliga-
tions of citizenship; to stimulate their interest in the
pathological aspects of community life; and to train
them for efficient practice in one or the other of the
several specialized forms of endeavor that collectively
constitute the science of pharmacy. It is agreed that
this educational process cannot be completed in even
a minimal way in less than four years, since the founda-
tion course must include a proper distribution of cul-
tural, basic, and applied subject matter. Graduate
study is increasing rapidly. The School of Pharmacy
in this University, now in its forty-first year of consecu-
tive service, subscribes to such a program. Two de-
De,\n J. G. Beard
PAGE 34
Howell Hall
Faculty of Pharmacy School
First Row, Left to Right — Lasley, Rose, Beard, Burlage, Jacobs.
Second Row, Left to Right — Adams, Coker, Fussler, Howell, McKee. Edminster.
Third Row, Left to Right — Taylor, Winslow, Bost.
grees are offered, S.B. Pharmacy, and M.S. Pharmacy.
All students register alike for the first two years
of the curriculum. In the third year, however, elective
specialization begins in order that graduates may be
prepared for either of three forms of pharmaceutical
endeavor.
The present School of Pharmacy was established
in 1897 as the result of a petition addressed to Pres-
ident Alderman by the North Carolina Pharmaceutical
Association, the members of which promised their active
support and cooperation. In response to this request,
the school was initiated, and the late Edward Vernon
Howell was secured as dean and professor. (Previous-
ly pharmaceutical courses with degree offerings had
been conducted by two professors in the local School
of Medicine.) The School has been housed succes-
sively in the New West building (1897-1912) ; Person
Hall (1912-1925); and in Howell Hall (1925 to date) .
Originally the length of study was two years. In 1925
the time was increased to three years, and in 1932 to
four years.
The School holds membership in the American
Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, while its grad-
uates are eligible for license by examination in all
states. Incidentally, the School has been honored in
supplying two vice-presidents and one president of the
above-named organization since 1925.
From 1897 through June of 1937, the School of
Pharmacy had matriculated 2,540 students. Of this
number 1,450 were different students and 486 were
graduated.
PAGE 35
J
SCHOOL or LIBEAKY SCIENCE
Courses in Library Science at the University of
North CaroUna were begun in 1904. The School of
Library Science, offering a one-year curriculum leading
to the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Library Science,
was established in 1931, as a result of a gift from the
Carnegie Corporation. It was given a suite consisting
of lecture room, combination library and study room,
and offices on the top floor of the Library. The School
opened with a faculty of three full-time members and
three part-time members, and a student body of thirty-
six, seven of whom were part-time students chiefly from
the University Library Staff. The School belongs to
the Division of The Library and Library School.
Beginning in 1935, the School offers its regular
one-year curriculum through consecutive summer ses-
sions. Two quarters' work is offered each summer and
the courses are so rotated that new students may enter
any summer and a student may complete the work in
three summers of two terms each. The first Summer
Session class, numbering twelve, was graduated in 1937.
Because of the fact that two quarters' work is offered
simultaneously and because special students are ad-
PAGE 36
School of Library Science
^iill!^/
^^^:iW€.
«
Dfan Susan B. Akers
LlBRAR-)-
mitted to certain courses, the summer session enroll-
ment is by far the largest of the year, taxing to their
utmost the quarters of the School.
In general the School's admission requirements are
a bachelor's degree from an approved college; evidence
of a well-rounded choice of undergraduate courses; and
a knowledge of at least two foreign languages. Train-
ing is given for various types of positions in different
kinds of libraries. The courses are supplemented by
a trip in the third quarter to visit and observe the work
of a number of libraries in Richmond, Washington,
Baltimore, and New York.
The alumni now number one hundred and fifty-
two. They are located in libraries in twenty-four states
and the District of Columbia. The largest number,
however, fifty-six, or 37 per cent of the total, are in
university, college, public, and school libraries in North
Carolina. Outside the state they are working in such
different libraries as the New York Public Library;
the special library of the Eli Lilly Company; the Uni-
versity of Cincinnati Library; the Fitchburg, Massa-
chusetts, Public Library; and the Richmond, Virginia,
High School Library. The positions held by alumni
include those of chief librarian, reference assistant, cat-
aloger, assistant in library work with children, in charge
of periodicals and binding, a university departmental
librarian, and chief of a circulation department.
The School of Library Science is a member of the
Association of American Library Schools and is one
of the twenty-seven library schools accredited by the
American Library Association. Four of these Schools
are in the Southeast.
PAGE 37
Glkn Havden
Hill Music Hall
DEPAMTMENT OE MUSIC
The Department of Music carries out a diversified program
in fulfilling its function in the University. The general purposes
of the undergraduate courses may be summarized as follows: (a) to
give the student electing music as his chief interest a thorough train-
ing in the practical, theoretical, and historical aspects of the subject
as a part of the general liberal arts curriculum for the A.B. degree;
(b) to give the student interested in the scholarly aspects of music
the basic training necessary for successful graduate work in Musi-
cology; (c) to afTord students in other departments the opportunity
to take music as an elective.
Students who take Music as the major subject modify the
regular program for the first two years in order to begin Music
in their freshman year, but they do complete the General College
program or its equivalent before graduation. While all these stu-
dents must meet certain minimum requirements in practical, theo-
retical, and historical work, the program in music is nevertheless
sufficiently flexible for the student to develop his special talents
through intensive work in the field of his choice. Thus while some
students specialize in performance looking forward to a concert
career, others devote more time to composition and orchestration,
while others prepare to teach music in the public schools. Still
others continue with graduate studies or go into some more special-
ized field such as radio work or musical criticism.
The Department of Music probably reaches the largest number
of students through its musical organizations: the band, orchestra,
glee clubs, and other ensemble groups. The University Band, under
the leadership of Professor Earl A. Slocum, has made an enviable
reputation for itself not only through its excellent work at football
games and other athletic events, but also through its concerts given
throughout the state and on many public occasions of the University,
especially during Cortunencement Week. The University Orchestra,
Professor B. F. Swalin, conductor, rehearses weekly and appears in
concert from time to time throughout the college year. Members
of the orchestra assist in providing music upon many occasions such
as Playmaker productions, concerts of the Chapel Hill Choral Club,
and student recitals. The University Glee Clubs, directed by Pro-
fessor John E. Toms, are carrying on a fine tradition of vocal per-
formance for which the University has long been distinguished. The
Department of Music also sponsors the Chapel Hill Choral Club,
which for many years has given performances of important choral
works, and the Alpha Rho chapter of Phi Mu Alpha (Sinfonia)
national honorary musical fraternity which assists ntaterially in
spreading an interest in music among the students of the University.
Many students, in addition to participating in one or more of the
musical organizations, make extensive use of the departmental col-
lection of records, scores, and books on music, which are available
throughout the day.
The Hill Music Building is the center of most of the musical
activities on the campus. In addition to offices, studios, and class-
rooms, the building provides a number of smaller rooms for indi-
vidual practice and for listening to phonograph records. The audi-
torium, seating eight hundred people, is the home of recitals and
concerts by faculty members, students in the department of music,
and visiting artists. Recitals on the four manual concert organ are
given from time to time by Professor Jan Philip Schinhan.
Thus the Department of Music through its courses, its organi-
zations, its concerts, its library and other facilities and activities is
attempting to bring something into the experience of every student
of the University that will be of permanent value to him by helping
to open the doors to a more abundant life.
- ^m^f^c* )fu , 'V^i^r
JJil-=Ul'v\^
Plavmaker Building
F. H. Koch
DEPABTMENT OF DKAMA
Twenty years ago at the University of North Carolina The
Carolina Playmakers was founded, and the organization began its
work toward a native American drama. Dramatic Art was an in-
novation in the University curriculum in 1907, and the establish-
ment of The Playmakers marked the sowing of new ground in the
educational field. The idea has grown with the years and an ever-
increasing number of students of drama has necessitated many ad-
ditions to the teaching staff. That the idea is now firmly rooted
in the life of the University and the State is evidenced by the in-
auguration in 1936 of a Department of Dramatic Art, headed by Dr.
Frederick H. Koch, founder of the Playmakers, with a distinguished
factulty of theatre workers trained in the theory and practice of all
the arts of the theatre.
The Department of Dramatic Art offers degrees on both the
graduate and undergraduate level, and a candidate for a master's
degree may submit an original full-length play in lieu of the tra-
ditional thesis. Courses in Dramatic Literature, Playwriting, Direct-
ing, Acting, Scenery, Lighting, Costuming and Speech are designed
to give the student a comprehensive knowledge of all phases of theatre
work. The Playmakers Theatre and Scene Shop offer ample oppor-
tunity for the student to test theory with practice, in both experimental
and public productions.
Two hundred and sixty-five different players and technicians
took an active part in The Playmaker productions last season. Forty-
four different performances of public, experimental and tour bills
were given, for which twenty-three new stage settings were built.
Twenty-seven new plays, written in the Playwriting course, were given
experimental and public production, directed by student directors.
In addition to these, one original full-length student play and four
by professional playwrights and an elaborate outdoor production in
the Forest Theatre were included in the year's program.
The Carolina Play-Book, the dramatic periodical of The Caro-
lina Playmakers, is devoted to the making of a native American
drama. It is now in its tenth year and had the distinction of being
one of only three theatre publications included in the International
Exhibit of Periodicals at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chi-
cago, the other two being Stage and Theatre Arts Monthly.
Four volumes of Carolina Folk Plays have already been pub-
lished and an anthology of American Folk Plays written by student
playwrights representing different sections of the country. Also a
book of Me.xican Folk Plays written in Dr. Koch's playwriting course
by Josephina Niggli of Monterey, Mexico, will be published soon.
Through the Carolina Dramatic Association and The Bureau
of Community Drama, the Department is able to assist high schools,
community groups, little theatres and colleges throughout the state
in the selection and production of plays. This extension work has
come to be more and more in demand with the development of a
widespread interest in a people's theatre.
PAGE 39
1 ^fc.***^
.mJ^
1q mm k
■
i
1^^
m^m^mmM
i^S
r^^l
m^mS^m.mM
ir%
1
i
H.k,
NK- '<^^^Zt^^H
ifcki
Faculty Advisory Committee
Silting, Left to Right — W. C. CoKER, Henderson, Graham, House, Dey.
Standing. Left to Right — Wettach, R. E. Coker, Dashiell, Harrer, Mack.
TRUSTEES
Clyde Roark Hoey, Governor, President ex officio of
the Board of Trustees.
Clyde Atkinson Erwin, Superintendent of Public
Instruction, member ex officio of the Board of Trustees.
Henry MaugeTr London, Secretary of the Board.
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
1939
Mrs. Kate Pendleton Arrington \V\irren
W. D. Bateman W'il.w»
Commodore Thomas Council Durham
Burton Craige Forsyth
John Gilmer Dawson Lenoir
Frank Lemuel Dunlap Anson
Joseph McDowell Gameweli Davidson
Oliver Max Gardner Washington, D. C.
Alexander Hawkins Graham Orange
Harry Percy Grier, Jr Iredell
Luther Thompson Hartsell Cabarrus
John Wetmore Hinsdale '. . . .XTalse
George Lafayette Lyerly Catawba
Isaac Melson Meekins Pasquotank
William Daniel Merritt Person
Walter Murphy Rowan
Haywood Parker Buncombe
Henry Mooring Robins Randolph
Reuben B. Robertson Haywood
Peter Brown Ruffin New Hanover
George Stephens Buncombe
Fred' Isler Sutton Lenoir
Charles Whedbee Perquimans
William Colfman Woodard Nash
William H. Woolard Pitt
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE TRUSTEES
Clyde R. Hoey. ex officio Chairman.
Henry Mauger London, ex officio Secretary.
1938: Charles Whedbee, William D. Faucette, Leslie
Weil.
1940: John Sprunt Hill, Walter Murphy, John J. Parker.
1942: Mrs. Laura Weill Cone, Miss Easdale Shaw, Hay-
wood Parker.
1944; JosEPHus Daniels. Clarence Poe. Irvin B. Tucker.
1941
Miss Annie Moore Cherry Halifax
Hayden Clement Rowan
JosEPHus Daniels Wake
C. C. Efird Stanly
Reuben Oscar Everett Durham
William D. Faucette Norfolk, Va.
Jones Fuller Durham
Richmond Tillman Fountain Edgecombe
James Alexander Gray Forsyth
Junius Daniel Grimes Beaufort
William Tucker Hannah Haywood
R. L. Harris Person
Robert Eugene Little Anson
Mrs. Lily C. Morehead Mebane Rockingham
Cameron Morrison Mecklenburg
Harriss Newman New Hanover
Clarence Poe Wake
Miss Easdale Shaw Richmond
James Franklin Spruill Davidson
Mrs. May Lovelace Tomlinson Guilford
Irvin Burchard Tucker Columbus
John Kenyon Wilson Pasquotank
Graham Woodard Wilson
0^.1"^ ^-^m^i
Maurice V. Barnhill '09
Douglas L. Rights 13
Thomas C. Boushall '15
James W. Morris '12
Thurmond Chatham 19
Norman Cordon '26
J. 'Wallace 'Winborne '06
CI MH K Hoey '99 L,iu'
ALUMNI
Each year by long standing cus-
tom certain individuals have been
chosen to represent in the student
year-book the large alumni group.
These graduates and former students
have been selected from many fields
of endeavor with a view of making
representative each year's selection.
In no sense does the list of a single
year represent a complete honor roll
of University alumni. Rather the se-
lections of persons to occupy space
on the pages are intended to be sym-
bolic of the great contribution of
University alumni in many fields of
public and private enterprise. In
honoring those selected this year the
loyalty and achievement of many
other alumni is equally recognized
and honored. — J. M. S.
A. W. Haywood '04
k k
Francis £. ^X'INSLOV(• '09
Dr. H. a. Patterson 21
George Stephens '96
Hugh H. Bennett 03
Charles G. Rose '00
f.
PAGE 43
George Stephens Howard Holderness Collier Cobb, Jr. George Watts Hill
J. Maryon Saunders
CAROLINA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
OFFICERS
George Stephens, '96, Asheville President
Howard Holderness, '23, Greensboro . . 1st Vice-President
Collier Cobb, Jr., '14, Chapel Hill .... 2nd Vice-President
George Watts Hill, '22, Durham Treasurer
J. Maryon Saunders, '25, Chapel Hill . Executive Secretary
ALUMNI
Located at Chapel Hill in the Carolina Inn, which as
an alumni club-house and community "parlor" was the gift
of the John Sprunt Hill family of Durham to the L'ni-
versity, is the Central Alumni Office of the General Alumni
Association.
The Association is an all-LTniversity organization, em-
bracing in its membership graduates and former students
ranging in classes from the oldest alumnus to the young-
est graduate. The Association was formed in 1843.
Through its Central Office, its local alumni clubs, its per-
manently organized classes, its General Assembly, and its
"Alumni Review," the Association endeavors to maintain
PAGE 44
a program making it easy for the 22,000 living alumni to
continue their relationship with Alma Mater.
In its Alumni Office the Association maintains records
of all alumni, including up-to-date addresses, vital statistics,
occupations, and other memorabilia. The Association is
alert in promoting such public occasions as commencement,
homecomings, and University Day. The Central Office
carries on correspondence with thousands of alumni, com-
plying with requests ranging from personal questions to
projects concerning the entire L^niversity.
Through the columns of "The Alumni Review" — the
official magazine — alumni members are enabled to keep up
with affairs in Chapel Hill and in the big alumni family.
General in its service to the University and personal in its
relationship to the alumni, the Alumni Association en-
deavors to link the Past with the Present for the Future
of Alma Mater.
Any graduate or former student is eligible for mem-
bership in the Association. Only those who belong to the
Association participate in its elections and receive its mag-
azine.
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Robert N. Magill
STUDENT COUNCIL
MEMBERS
Robert Nathaniel Magill President
Reuben Graham Vice-President
Warren M. Haddaway Senior Representative
Henry Edward Hudson Junior Representative
Richard Worley Sophomore Representative
Robert Coker Medical School Representative
Charles C. Oates Pharmacy School Representative
James Queen Law School Representative
Stuart Keith Eutsler . . Secretary and "Hold-Over" Member
James Brown Craighill "Hold-Over" Member
Student self-government at the University of North
Carolina, once regarded as a privilege granted by the fac-
ulty, has now come to be looked upon as the exercising
of a fundamental right inherently belonging to individ-
uals in a democratic society. Emphasis placed on individ-
ual self-control has led us to place a premium on freedom
at the expense of the responsibility to the social standards
which must accompany that freedom. Such is the con-
temporary problem of student government at Carolina.
The efforts necessary in the solving of this problem,
the technique and difficulties encountered in carrying out
the functions of the governmental set-up are educational
for those who participate in the process. And the grow-
ing realization by all students of the individual and social
obligations imposed by the fundamental principle of self-
government, honesty, is definitely self-educational.
The powers and functions of student government have
grown gradually and irregularly in mushroom fashion over
Student Council
First Row, Left to Right — Hudson, Graham, Magill, Eutsler. Haddaway, Worley.
Sitinding, Left to Right — Craighill. Coker, Oates, Queen.
PAGE 46
rMS^'^M^^^^k
STUDENT GOVEKNMENT
Reuben H. Graham
many years. At present, the executive agency of the
campus, the Student Council, divides its responsibility with
several subsidiary groups. Inter-fraternity and inter-dormi-
tory councils regulate campus life in their respective fields
according to the Campus Code, a principle of gentlemanly
conduct. Jurisdiction in the field of campus activities is
implemented by elected supervisory boards vihich govern
the spending of self-imposed fees for publications, enter-
tainments, debating and a student union.
Assisting the Student Council in its administration
of the Honor System are four elected class councils whose
function it is to decide guilt or innocence in cases where
violation of the honor principle is charged. The final
decision of corrective or punitive sentence is left to the
Student Council, if guilt has been found by the class
council.
This division of responsibility lends to greater par-
ticipation and training in leadership. It also leaves the
Student Council freer for constructive efforts in the inter-
ests of a more efficient and, at the same time, more demo-
cratic government. The principle of self-education through
freedom with responsibility is implemented by such de-
centralization and individual concern for effective govern-
ment.
Lejt to Righi — CoKER. Craighill, Eutsler. Haddaway, Hud-
son, Gates, Queen, Worley.
PAGE 47
I!?
Publications Union Board
Left to Right — Bailey. Davis. Rabb. Merrill. Howell. Lear.
THE PUBLICATIONS UNION BOAMD
MEMBERS Tar Heel," "Buccaneer," "Magazine," and "Yackety Yack,"
Stuart Rabb President as well as a circulation manager and a managing editor for
Alien Merrill Secretary the "Tar Heel".
Glenn Davis Treasurer £ach year three students are elected to the Board by
J. O. Bailey Faculty Member the student body for a one-year term. Two faculty mem-
A. C. Howell Faculty Member bers are appointed for two-year terms by the Dean of
J. M. Lear Faculty Advisor Administration. There is a salaried technical adviser, ap-
Supervising the technical and financial management pointed by the University Administration and serving dur-
of the four campus publications, the Publications Union ing good behavior. This adviser sits with the Board, acts
Board attempts to see that each dollar of the compulsory as an agent of the Board, but may not vote,
publications tax levied on every student is spent where it Over the editorial policy of the four publications, the
will buy the most. Publications Union Board attempts no control.
The Board selects business managers for 'The Dailv — Stuart Rabb.
Merrill
mM^
INTEBFKATEKNITY COUNCIL
OFFICERS
Robert Marsh Ray President
Fletcher H. Gregory Secretary
Jack Blythe Treasurer
MEMBERS
Seymour Alcabes Alpha Epsilon Pi
William Stone Jordan Alpha Tau Omega
Jack Blythe Beta Theta Pi
Fletcher W. Ferguson Chi Phi
Carroll Jack Atwood Chi Psi
Joseph Planner Patterson Delta Kappa Epsilon
Humphrey Hathaway Swift Delta Psi
Fletcher H. Gregory Kappa Alpha
Yates Mason Kappa Sigma
Charles Hamilton Reid, Jr Lambda Chi Alpha
Marvin Chaiken Phi Alpha
Frank Benjamin Rogers, Jr Phi Delta Theta
Page Clark Keel Phi Gamma Delta
Allan Truex Phi Kappa Sigma
Paul Lee Salisbury, Jr Pi Kappa Alpha
Edward Reid Bahnson Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Robert Hooke Sigma Chi
Willard Revelle Hollingsworth Sigma Nu
Ralph Gordon Templeton Sigma Phi Epsilon
Herbert Alexander Goldberg Tau Epsilon Pi
John R. Larsen Theta Chi
Robert Crystal Zeta Beta Tau
Robert Marsh Ray, Jr Zeta Psi
Leji to Right — Alcabes. Jordan. Blythe. Ferguson. Atwood.
Patterson. Swift. Gregory. Mason. Reid. Chaiken. Rogers.
Keel. Truex, Salisbury. Bahnson. Hooke, Hollingsworth,
Templeton. Goldberg. Larson. Crystal. Ray,
iNlhRFR.JilLRNln CoUNCIL
INTEM^DOMMITOMY
COUNCIL
Thomas E. Hall
Joe H. Robertson
OFFICERS
Thomas Hall President
Joseph Robertson Vice-President
Forest Von Canon Secretary
Thomas Fry Treasurer
INDIVIDUAL DORMITORY COUNCILS
MANGUM — Lawrence Harris, President; Carl Phillips,
Red Forrest, Mac Johnson, Martin Harmon, Bill Readling,
Sam Sutherland.
GRAHAM — Paul D'Ascensio, President; Jim Hutchins,
Roland Harris, Wade Cavin, James Carrubia.
EVERETT — William Pearson, President; William Stauber,
Shelley Rolfe, Norman Gauslen, Henry Blalock, James
Hinkle.
LEWIS— Thomas Fry, President; Bill Hill, W. V. Cava-
naugh, Sam Carter, Bert Winkler, E. A. Parker.
MANLY — Gordon Stevens, President; T. D. Brown, Ed
Campbell, Bill Ziegler, Ruffin Bailey, Paul Kuklish, John
Fincher.
GRIMES — Robert Jurney, President; August Meyland, Jim
Joyner, Allen Bonner, Harry Allen, Ed Brodie, Henry
Pessar.
STEELE — Glen Hawfield, President; Tom Burnette, S. H.
Wigpen, J. L. Thompson, Thomas Harvey, Ben Gunn.
OLD EAST — Charles Wales, President; Wingate Upton,
Alec Gover, Kenneth Royal, Clarence Coburn, Claude
Armfield.
BATTLE-VANCE-PETTIGREW — Forrest Von Canon,
President; Sam Broadhurst, Ben Turner, Sam Hatcher,
Ernest Woodard, John Merritt.
OLD WEST — Robert Horton, President; John Morris, Dan
Whitley, Pete Davenport, Jack Hughes, Bob Dowd.
AYCOCK— William Bridges, President; Lou Spelke, Bob
Doty, Bill Rawlins, Ed Palmer.
RUFFIN— Earl Vann, President; Walter McBride, William
JURNEV
PAGE 50
'P.
n^'^^
-.1
-"i 1 nJl.^ k^-^iflSk
f f * 1 1
>/ftl If
f 1 1 f i*'^
Y Y ¥ T t
Inter-Dormitori- Council
McFayden, W. E. Williams, Charles Evans, R. N. Watson,
David Oglesby.
The Inter-Dormitory Council was reestablished in 1934
for the purpose of establishing better intra-dormitory re-
lations and the facilitating of inter-dormitory rules and
regulations. To complete the reorganization, a constitu-
tion was composed in 1936. Today, it stands among the
most powerful organizations of student control.
The Council is composed of the individual councils
of each dormitory. These individual councils, in turn, are
composed of a president, vice-president, councilmen, and
athletic director. These individual councils regulate order
and conduct within their particular dormitories and pro-
mote social functions, dormitory projects, and intra-mural
athletics. Cases of dormitory disorder or misconduct are
first tried by the council of the dormitory in which it oc-
curred. In cases where the decision of this council is
not satisfactory to the resident being tried, the case is
referred to the Council of Dormitory Presidents. After a
case has been tried by the Council of Presidents it may be
carried to the Student Council for final decision. The
powers of the Council of Presidents are limited to ousting
a man from the dormitory and preventing his ever room-
ing in another dormitory, or to recommend to the Student
Council that he be suspended from school.
The officers of the Inter-Dormitory Council are elected
by popular vote at the end of the Spring quarter by the
outgoing members. They are: president, vice-president,
secretary, and treasurer. There is also a man appointed by
the Dean of Students who acts as advisor to the Council
at its meetings.
The Council has sought for dormitory improvement,
both in the sense of physical plants and social recognition
on the campus. Within the next few years the Council
hopes to make the dormitory the best and the most whole-
some place on the campus in which to live.
Von Canon
i
'><£
DIMECTOES OF (GMAHAM MEMORIAL
OFFICERS
Pete Ivey Director of Graham Memorial
Bob Magill Chairman of Board of Directors
MEMBERS — Francis F. Bradshaw, Harry F. Comer, John
Davidson, Reuben Graham, Tommy Hall, R. B. House, Jim
Joyner, Nancy Nesbitt, Thomas Pitts, Bob Ray, J. M.
Saunders, J. Mac. Smith, George Stephens.
Ltfi lo Ri^^hi — IvEY, Stephens, Saunders. House. CoMEh.
Bradshaw. Joyner, Ray, Smith. Nesbit, Davison. Hall, Graham,
Magill.
PAGE 52
THE STUDENT UNION
You may remember the Graham Memorial after you
have been graduated as a place bustling with activity, or
you may not recollect any more about it except the eight
white columns in front.
The students who do take full advantage of the
Graham Memorial facilities are the ones who get the most
out of their college life. The student who hasn't attended
a meeting in one of the rooms, who hasn't attended a social
or banquet on the second floor, who hasn't loitered or read
in the lounge, who hasn't bowled or played pool in the
game rooms, who hasn't eaten in the Grill, who hasn't had
his hair cut in the barber shop, or who hasn't called at
the "Tar Heel" circulation office to find why his paper
hasn't been delivered, has not really been a part of college
life in Chapel Hill, and is headed for everlasting damna-
tion for all I care.
It has come to be recognized and even admitted by
some pedagogues that a Student Union, housing all sorts
of recreational facilities, is a regular part of University
life. Play time is just as important a part of student life
as the working hours and should be just as carefully regu-
lated. We hope you won't remember the Graham Me-
morial as a loafing center, but as the place you put in some
of your leisure hours before tackling the harder chores.
Edward Kidder Graham, the former President of the
University for whom this building is named, dreamed of
a student center where all student activities are together
and where after classes the students can meet for recreation
and rest.
Ways and means of encouraging a student body of
more than three thousand to use their Student Union is
not so easy. You can't say "so and so is going to happen
at Graham Memorial," and then expect everybody to at-
tend. As a matter of fact if you say it that way, it might
not even make the back pages of the "Daily Tar Heel."
It has therefore been the policy of the Graham Memorial
Director to give a diversified program of entertainment,
recreation, and service to the students; and the most ef-
fective way to do it was by publicity. Some of the pub-
■ licity was shocking. Some of it was semi-sensational, but
it had the desired results, because the students came to the
Graham Memorial and enjoyed themselves, many of them
not knowing that they had been tricked into getting for
themselves the necessary amount of recreation that is good
for the physical, and mental well-being of a Carolina
student.
DiRHCTORS OF GraHAM MEMORIAL
Seated, Left to Right — Davison, Nesbit, Magill. Joyner. House. Ivey.
Standing, Left to Right^GRAHAM, Saunders, Hall, Bradshaw.
^-
CAMPUS CABINET
Robert N. Magill
Alien Merrill
OFFICERS
Robert Magill President
Allen Merrill Secretary
MEMBERS
William Anderson, James Balding, DeW'itt Balding, Ran-
dall Berg, Andrew Bershak, Eugene Bricklemyer, William
Campbell, Hayden Clement, Robert Coker, James Craighill,
James Davis, Robert duFour, Keith Eutsler, Stuart Fickler,
Lytt Gardner, Charles Gilmore, Voit Gilmore, Reuben Gra-
ham, Alexander Graham, Warren Haddaway, Thomas Hall,
Alexander Heard, William Hendrix, Lawrence Hinkle,
Henry Hudson, Bill Hudson, Pete Ivey, James Joyner, Dor-
othy Kelly, John Kendrick, Pete Mullis, Nancy Nesbitt,
George Nethercutt, Charles Oates, Joseph Patterson,
Thomas Pitts, Polly Pollock, James Queen, Stuart Rabb,
John Ramsay, Robert Ray, Foy Roberson, Thomas Royster,
Nancy Schallert, Mack Smith, David Thorp, John Umstead,
Richard Worley.
To sound campus opinion and to give intelligent ad-
vice on questions of campus-wide concern are the functions
of the Campus Cabinet. It partly fills the need that exists
for legislation by a representative group of students; but
it might be termed opportunistic in function, for it is
called into session only when issues of general interest are
pressing for a solution. Through discussion of these, it
may advise the Student Council and stimulate or hinder
the development of projects sponsored by individual groups.
Such questions as, a proposed student theatre, changes in
Council rulings, and the University athletic policy, are con-
sidered.
The Cabinet is composed of two groups approximat-
ing fifty student leaders appointed by the president of the
student body, who is chairman. Its nucleus is made up
of the Student Council and the three upper class honor
councils, members of these giving the Cabinet an element
of popular representation. In addition to these, the execu-
tives of the leading campus organizations are appointed,
plus several students at large. In this way a not unwieldy
group is formed, which mav both represent and direct
campus opinion.
Campus Cabinet
PAGE 54
SECOND PART
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA YEAR BOOK
Y ACKETY YACK
1938
This part of the 'Volume being devoted
entirely to the
CLASSE;
COMMENCEMENT MAESHALS
John Moore, Chiet
Frank Wakeley
Jim Balding
Chuck Kline
Miss Betty Norcross
iJ '?
t
Joe Patterson
HONOR COUNCIL
Warren Monroe Haddaway, Chairman; Joseph Planner
Patterson, Jr., J. Scott Hunter, Eugene Costle Bricklemyer,
Lytt Irvine Gardner, Stuart White Rabb, Randall Challen
Berg, Ramsay Douglas Pott, Jr.
SENIOM
CLASS
OFFICERS
President Joseph Planner Patterson, Jr.
Vice-President Eugene Costle Bricklemyer
Secretary Foy Eugene Grubb
Treasurer John Murdock Davison
Student Council Representative . . . Warren M. Haddaway
Bricklemyer
1
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^b ' ^1
^m^^ -A^f^^^H ,1^
^^^^^^^^B- 1 j,/ j^^^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B
i
Executive Committee
Silting, Left to Right — Grubb, Hawthorne, Bricklemyer, Patterson, Speck, Davison.
Second Row. Left to Right — Mullis. Lipton. Farlow, Ruth, Foreman, Conley, Loomis.
Third Row. Left to Right — Hamlin, Robertson, Read. Umstead.
SENIOR CLASS
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE DANCE COMMITTEE
Hall Conley Chairman Robert Marsh Ray, Jr Chairman
MEMBERS— George B. Riddle, Hall Conley, Foy Eugene HONOR COUNCIL
Grubb, John Murdock Davison, Eugene C. Bricklemyer, Warren Monroe Haddaway Chairman
John Born Foreman, Clyde Edward Mullis, Charles Man- GIFT COMMITTEE
ley Loomis, Earl Baker Ruth, John Wesley Umstead, Edwin Edward Harding Seawell Chairman
Jones Hamlin, Worth L. Farlow, Nicholas Cabell Read. PROJECT COMMITTEE
William Robertson, Mack Edward Smith, Mary Lillian Robert Brouard duFour Chairman
Speck, Phyllis Hawthorne, Ramsay Douglas Potts, Joseph CAP AND GOWN COMMITTEE
Flanner Patterson, Morris Wilton Lipton. Adair Morey McKoy Chairman
:i£>^y^&^^
Davison
WILLIAM FRANKLIN ABERLY SL-i MOL R ALBLRT ALCABl;^ HOWARD ALVIN ALFSON
NEVi- BERN. N. C. NEW YORK. N. V. BROOKLYN. N. Y.
. ,„ T-. T, c r- Age: 22 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry Aee: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce & 6 > 3 3
Interfraternity Council (4); Hil- Varsity Boxing; University Club;
Varsity Track. i i /- u . n j
' lei Cabmet. Band.
'i
DAVID ANDERSON ALLEN
CH.\RLOTTE. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Y.M.C.A.; Gimghoul.
E. MARVIN ALLEN, JR.
WILMINGTON. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
Cross Country; Track; President
Monogram Club (4); Grail; Chair-
man University Dance Committee
(4) ; Student Council (2, 3).
K2
JERRY HARRISON ALLEN, JR.
REIDSVILLE. N. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B. Zoology
JOHN LEACH ALLEN
TROY. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
RKA
JENIOR
CLAXJ
1938
^11 ^9^ «•-
A.XTHOX'i' SAM AMOSATO
NEWARK. N. J.
Secretary and Treasurer, Band
(3) ; Interdormitory Council (3).
CARL WALTER ANDERSEN
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Playmakers (2).
HELEN STOCKTON ANDRUS
PHILADELPHIA. PA.
Degree: A.B.
Y,W.C.A. Cabinet.
PERDITA BUTLER ARNETT
DANVILLE, VA,
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
BERTA ELISE ARNOLD
RALEIGH. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Y.W.C.A.
xn
CARROLL JACK AIWOOD
MADISON, WISCONSIN
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Track (1, 2, 3, 4); University
Club; Junior Executive Committee;
Interfratemity Council (4),
X^I'
ISAAC THOMAS AVERY, JR.
MORGANTON. N. C.
Age: 21— Degree: A.B.; LL.B.
Football (1. 2, 3, 4); Monogram
Club (2, 3, 4).
JAMES HENRY BADEN, JR.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. History
Varsit)' Cross Country (3. 4);
Varsity Track (3, 4).
CROWELL LITTLE; Siidrlciil!/ t.nik
to the football field his sophomore
year. Soon won a regular berth on
the team and became one of the best
field generals in Carolina football his-
tory. A great nishing as.iet of the
PAGE 63
EDWARD REID BAHNSON
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Pre-Med
ABBOTT KENYON BAILEY
ELIZABETH CITY. N. C.
Ee: 20 — Degree: A.B.
ISABELLE RODDEY BAKER
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
21 — Degree; A.B. Journalism
ROBERT W. BAKER, JR.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
LOUIS ROBERT BARBA
ARLINGTON, N. J.
22 — Degree: A..
ERNESTINE RAY BARBER
GOLDSTON. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Vice-President Pharmacy School (4).
OFFIE ALMON BARBOUR
BENSON, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
CLAJJ
i93«
RICHARD MORTON BARBOUR EVELYN COCHRANE BARKER
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Geology
Di Senate; Cosmopolitan Club.
2rE
HOWARD B. BARNWELL
EDNEYVILLE. N. C.
BURLINGTON. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Woman's Glee Club, Business ^S^: 23— Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Manager (4) ; Woman's Athletic
Association (1, 2, 3), President (4).
PAUL KERMIT BARNWELL
EDNEYVILLE, N. C.
Age: 25— Degree: A.B.; LL.l
G. WARREN BARRETT
PONCE, PUERTO RICO
Age: 22 — Degree: A.]
H. SMITH BARRIER, JR.
CONCORD, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
Vackety Yack ( 1 ) ; D.;/7y T,ir
Heel (I, 2); Biicc.meer (1);
Y.M.C.A.
DORIS BARTLETT
CHICAGO. ILL.
l\ — Degree: A.l
HENRY BARTOS
VANDERGRIFT, PA.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.l
Football (1, 2, 3, 4)
X*
JOE PATTERSON: A member and
active irorker of every important aetiv-
itij tin the campits. including Phi Beta
Kappa. Made a fine President of his
class and gave it new life. Undoubt-
edly one of the best men in his cloxx.
<^^-^*
DOROTHY ELIZABETH BASS
MOUNTAIN CITY. TENN.
21 — Degree: A.B.
lIlOMAs i.DW AKU BA.ss
NEW BERN. N. C.
Age: 19— Degree: A.B.
Varsity Boxing (1, 2, 3, 4);
Monogram Club; German Club;
V.M.C.A.
Ben
ROBERT SHELTON BEAM
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
HUGH BENNETT BEASLEV
FOUR OAKS, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Zoology Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
DAVID LENX'IS BEATY
ANDERSON. S. C.
JULIA MARY BELL
ASHEVILLE. N. C.
THOMAS REYNOLDS BELL
ROCKINGHAM, N. C.
ge: 21 — Degree: A.B.
ge: 21 — Degree: A.B.
24— Degree: A.B.
jj N^j ty y
JEK
CLAJX
193d
Di;WITT CLINTON BENBOW
GREENSBORO. N. C.
MORRIS CAREY BENTON, JR.
PARKERSBURG, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age; 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
RANDALL CHALLEN BERG
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Carolina Magazine (2, 3). Business
Manager (4) ; Secretary University
Club (3): Cliairman University Dance
Committee (4): Glee Club (2. 3):
Freshman Honor Council: Senior
Honor Council : Commencement Mar-
shal (3).
2AE
RUTH LEOLA BERGES
TOWACO, N. J.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Sociology
LOUIS BERINI
STANLEY PHILIP BERNEY
ANDREW A. BERSHAK
TAYLOR OSBORNE BIRD
DURHAM. N. C.
HEWLETT, N. Y.
CLAIRTOWN. PA.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
HORSE SHOE. N. C.
—Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B. Psychology
Football (1, 2, 3), Co-Captain
(4) ; Basketball (1, 2, 3, -i) ; Mono-
gram Club; Golden Fleece; Grail;
Amphoterothen.
Age: 24 — Degree: A.B.
BOB MAGILL: Early in his n>Uefje
career he assumed a place of leader-
ship which led to his being made Pres-
ident of the Student Body. Undoubt-
edly the tnost active man in the Uni-
versitij.
AM
CRIST WATTS BLACKWELL
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 20 — Degree: A. B. Journalism Djily Tar Heel (1, 2, 3); Caro-
lina Magazine ( 2 ) ; Business Man-
ager of Buccaneer (3, 4); Di Sen-
ate; Y.M.C.A.; University Dance
Committee (2).
JAMES FLRMAN BISHER
DENTON, N. C.
X*
ALVIN COLEMAN BLALOCK
WARRENTON, N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Interdormitory Council (4).
HENRY ROBERT BLUESTONE
ROXBURY, MASS.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Glee Club; Playmakers (2, 3, 4);
Yacketv Yack (1, 2 ) .
JOHN ALBERT BLUM
MAPLEWOOD. N. |.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Di Senate; Glee Club (3).
*K2
FRANKLIN J. BLYTHE, JR.
charlotte, n. c.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Interfraternity Council (4).
Ben
SOLOMON ARTHUR BOBROI r
far rock.-\way. n. y.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
/ENIC
:^ ^umr.
AJJ
(C-.-v >«■
PAGE 6!
WILLIAM WILLIS BODDIE, JR.
CHARLESTON, S. C.
22 — Degree: A.B.
LDWARD C. BODENHEIMER
PARKTON, N. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S.
l.\ AL CAUGHY BOICE
ROCKY MOUNT. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Vice-President Woman's Associ-
ation (4) ; Y.W.C.A.
HOPE EDWARD BONDS, JR.
CONCORD, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Chemical
Engineering
Treasurer, American Institute of
Chemical Engineers (4) ; Interdormi-
tory Council (3 ).
NELL BATTLE BOOKER
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Dailij Tar Heel (2, 3); Buccaneer (2,
3) ; Carolina Magazine (3. 4) ; Uni-
versity Club (3); Woman's Associa-
tion: Glee Club; Secretary. Y.W.C.A.
(3); Chairman. May Day Committee
(3); Secretary, Freshman Class; Honor
Committee (2).
nB*- AKr
OLIN HENRY BORUM
GREENSBORO, N. C.
JOHN RUSSELL BOSTIC
BRYSON CITY, N. C.
20— Degree: B.S. Chemistry Age: 21— Degree: B.S. Commerce
Di Senate; Sheiks; Varsity Golf.
JOHN BOWLES
GREENSBORO, N. C.
21 — Degree: A.B. Economics
Wrestling (1, 2, 3).
Ben; A*"
JOHN UMSTEAD: Most famous of
the Umstead combination — probabltj
Tcnows more students than any other,
and well liked by all. Kappa Siff made
him president of the German Club.
Constantly seen aruuiul -203 South
Building.
PAGE 69
■*\^^^l:.r
MARY BHATRICF BOYD
HICKORY, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A,B. Journalism
D.ii!) T.tr Heel { K 4); Glee
Club; Y.W.C.A. (3, 4) ; Wigue and
Masque.
XQ
NORMENT GLENN BOYETTE
SMITH FIELD. N. C.
20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
S. B. BRADLEY
SCOTLAND NECK. N. C.
Age; 19 — Degree: A.B. Economics
Yackety Yack ( 1 ) ; Phi Assem-
bly (3, 4) ; Interfraternity Council
(3); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4).
lOUX Ml I.VIN BRAGG
LITTLETON. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree; A.B.
EUGEiNE COSTLE BRlCKLEM"iER MARTIN LUTHER BRITT
PHILADELPHIA. PA. ELIZABETH CITY. N. C.
Age; 22 — Degree: A.B.
Varsity Football (2, 3, 4); Vice-
President of Senior Class ; Grail ;
Vice-President Y.M.C.A. (4).
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Chemical
Engineering
EDWARD M. BROADHURST
MT. OLIVE. N. C.
Age; 24 — Degree: B.S. Civil
Engineering
Secretary-Treasurer, American So-
ciety of Civil Engineers (3, 4),
CLAl
\9l
l.DiNU \D BKODIE
WILLIS JAMES BROGDHN
ELOISL BRADY BROUGHTON
DWIGHT BROWN
HENDERSON, N. C.
DURHAM. N. C.
HERTFORD. N. C.
Age; 20— Degree: A.B.
WASHINGTON. D. C.
Age:
20 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Age: 20— Degree: A.B.; LL.B.
AKE
Daily Tar Heel ( 3 ) ; Phi Assem-
bly; University Club; Y.W.C.A.;
Secretary - Treasurer Pan - Hellenic
Council (4).
OB*
Age: 20 — Degree: A.I
^ '^.^
F. STERLING BROWN
SUTHERLAND M. BROWN
THOMAS MILTON BRUCE
LIONEL BRUNNER
DREXEL HILL, PA.
charlotte n. c.
HOT SPRINGS, N. C.
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Age: 20— Degree: B.S.
Yackety ^'ack ( 1 ) .
K2; AEA
2AE
University Club; Interjormitory
Council (4).
BOB RAY: Mr. ;;..,.,. Imx really lived
up to his nawr ///v sniinr /rear seri'infj
as President ni the Inti rfraterniti/
Council, that e„ri,n,s Jul, ,if fuutbllli
vianager, and .sor/a//// a.-^ Secrctan/-
Treasurer of Map Frolics and Chair-
tiian of the Junior-Senior Dance Com-
mittee. A pretty good Zete.
PAGE 7 1
JOHN LINDSAY BRYAN
LILLINGTON. N. C.
THOMAS FLETCHER BULLA
ASHEBORO, N. C.
BLANCHE JARVIS BULLOCK
AUTltYVILLE. N. C.
FRANKLIN BURKHEAD
ASHEBORO, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
;e: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
InterJormitory Council (3).
THOMAS D. BURNETTE
TARBORO. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
BEVERLEY PAGE BURRAUL
ROCKY MOUNT. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Football (2, 3, 4); Baseball (2,
3), Captain (4); Monogram Club; ^.^""^ <^)' Camlma Accountmg
MAX BUSBY
SALISBURY, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Interdormitory Council (4).
Society.
■•■5aS.> ^^T-j J-r^^Xfr-f Q:^f
192
JEAN BUSH
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
JUNE BUSH
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B,S. Pharmacy Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Co-treasurer Woman's Athletic As- Co-treasurer Woman's Athletic As-
sociation (4). sociation (4).
JAMES EDWARD BYERS
SHELBY, N, C.
22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
EDWARD EVERETT CALDWELL
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Physics
Football (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Track (1,
3, 4).
JESSE BURGOVNE CALDWELL
CRAMERTON, N. C.
PETER EDWARD CALLAHAN
NEW YORK, N. Y.
JOSEPH HAROLD CAMERON
FAYETTEVILLE, N. C.
MARY LOUISE CAMP
CHARLESTON, W. VA.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Medicine
Buccaneer ( 1 ) ; Phi Assembly ; In-
terdormitory Council (4).
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Journalism.
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Treasurer, Woman's Association
(4); Y.W.C.A.
TOM MYERS: The S. A. E.'s are
quite provd of their boy, Tom, for
being chosen the ^'handsomest man on
the camfnts" by the coeds. He can
also lay claim to being one of the
mosf popular boys on the campus, for
in addition to being a hard working
pre-m^d student he has found time to
fully enjoy the campus social life and
to make many friends. One of the
stones of Gimghoul Castle.
PAGE 73
FRED CLAUDE GATES
SPENCER. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commeixe
WADE LEONARD CAVIN
TROUTMAN, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S.
MARVIN CHAIKIN
CEDARHURST. N. Y.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Economics
Yackety Yack (1, 2, 3); Inter-
fraternity Council (4).
ALICE CALDER CHESHIRE
RALEIGH. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
ROBERT DRAUGHON CLARK
FAYETTEVILLE. N. C.
JOHN WALTER CLAYTON
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
JOEL PATTILLO CLINGMAN
WlNSTON-SALEM. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Mechanical
Engineering Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
American Society of Mechanical
tngmeers. .11-.., ^i.^.-
CLAJ
19:
JAMES WIGGINS COAN
Vi'INSTON-SALEM. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.; LL.B.
FRED RICHARD COCHRANE, JR.
CHARLOTTE. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree; A.B. Chemistry
Senior Dance Committee; Junior
Bulls; Y.M.C.A. ; Gimghoul ; Executive Committee; Band; Fresh-
President Fresliman Friendship Coun- man Orientation Committee; Lab-
■1 oratory Assistant in Pharmacology.
ETHEL KATHERINE COFFEY
GASTONIA. N. C.
Age; 21 — Degree; A.B.
f ' -«^ €5»
BOII ■ *BK
AEA
EDWIN FRANCIS COFFIN, JR.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Civil
Engineering
American Society of Civil En-
gineers.
DUKE PUTNEY CONDUFF
HALL CONLEY
JUDITH MERIWETHER COON
MILDRED IVY COPLAND
MOUNT AIRY. N. C.
ANDREWS. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
HOLCOMB ROCK, VA.
BURLINGTON. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
University Club; Interdormitory
Council (3, 4); Chairman, Senior
Executive Committee.
Age: 19— Degree: A.B.
Age; 21— Degree: A.B.
ANDY BERSHAK: Attnined high-
est acclaim as AU-Ameriran end. But
to us he's not only great in football
but good in basketball and studies —
Grnil. President of the Athletic Asso-
ciation, and Golden Fleece.
BLANCHE CORBETT
ATKINSON. N. C.
Age; 20 — Degree: A.B. History
WILLIAM C. COUGHENOUR
SALISBURY, N. C.
20— Degree: A.B.; LU
JOHN RICHARD COX
PORTCHESTER, N. Y.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
THOMAS BURKL (RAVIR
LEXINGTON, N, C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
A. CRAIG CRAWFORD
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
23 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
RUFUS OLIVER CRAWLEY
STATESVILLE. N. C.
JAMES LEONARD CREECH
GOLDSBORO, N, C,
Age: 21— Degree: A.B. Journalism Age: 22— Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Djily T.ir Heel (3, 4) ; Buccaneer
(3, 4); League of Nations Coun-
c.l (4).
Freshman Honor CounciL
/ENIC.
CLAXJ
PAGE 76
^^Ji^K^^THHffHj
_ii
/
WILLIAM LLINSFORD CRI;W ROY COX CROOKS. JR.
PLEASANT HILL. N. C. CONCORD. N. C.
JESSE BYNUM CROW, JR.
SHELBY, N. C.
20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Yackety Yack ( 1 ) ; Phi Assem-
bly; Y.M.C.A.; Executive Commit- Yackety Yack ( 1, 2 ); D.;/7; T./r
tee, German Club (4). ""' (1. 2, 3) ; University Club.
GUY NEWBY CROWELL
MONROE, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Carolina Magazine ; Phi Assembly.
GREY CULBRETH
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 24 — Degree: B.S. Electrical
Engineering
Glee Club ; American Institute of
Electrical Engineers.
NAT HARVEY CURRENCE
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
ge: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
KATE GILLESPIE CUSHMAN
CONWAY, S. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
SARAH STAPLES DALTON
REIDSVILLE, N. C.
Daily
Y.W.C.A.
sociation ;
ciation.
: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Tar Heel (3, 4);
; League of Nation's As-
Woman's Athletic Asso-
PETE MULLIS: Activities have
ranged from President of the Fresh-
man Class to an ace forward on the
Phantom sqnad. Was mifortnnate in
draifing Rube Graham for an oppon-
ent in cam-pus elections. Pete u-as also
President of the Monogram Club.
^sm^ mm»\
MARGARET CRICHTON DANIEL ROBERT WARREN DANISH
ROCKY MOUNT. N. C. MOLLIS. N. Y.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
PAUL CLIFFORD DARDEN
WILSON. N. C.
.ge: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Treasurer, Freshman Class; 13 Club.
PAUL THOMAS DASCENSIO
NEWARK, N. J.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Cross Country (1, 2); Track (1);
University Club; Interdormitory
Council (4).
PRESTON ERNEST DAVENPORT BEULAH ELIZABETH DAVIS
CHAPEL HILL. N. C. CLEVELAND. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Sociology
Phi Assembly. Glee Club.
WILLIAM JOSEPH G, DAVIS
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Sheiks; Man.iger, Final Ball.
K2
/EN
CLAX
\9U
JOHN MURDOCK DAVISON
LARCHMONT. N. Y.
Age: 21 — Degree; A.B.
Cross Country (2); Wrestling (3,
4); Phi Assembly; University Club;
Treasurer Senior Class; Interfrater-
nity Council ; Class Executive Com-
mittee (1, 4).
RAYMOND LEE DEAN
OXFORD. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Phi Assembly.
WALTER EDISON DEATON
WARSAW, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
DANIEL BURT DECKER
SOUTH ORANGE, N. J,
21— Degree: A.B.
JAMES PARKER DEES
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Phi Assembly (1, 2); Glee Club
(1, 2); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4).
ALBERT LEO DELIA
NEW LONDON, CONN.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B.
EMILY HUGHES DICKENSON
KINSTON, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. English
ROBERT STANLEY DICKS
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Chemical
Engineering
President, American Institute of
Chemical Engineers; Band (1, 2);
Freshman Friendship Council.
<l>Ae- AX2
ED HAMLIN: III addition to rim-
ning a dorvi store he worked on tin;
Tar Heel and was a perpetual mem-
ber of the class executive committee.
Made his '"Piece of Mind'' column the
most popular in the Tar Heel.
PAGE 79
ARTHUR HARVEY DITT
LEBANON. PA.
Age: 22 — Degree; A.B. Education
Varsity Football (1, 2, 3, 4).
X*
JOHN LUTHER DIXON, JR.
ORIENTAL. N. C.
20 — Degree: A.B.
ELEANOR DOUGLAS DOAK
RALEIGH. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
ROBERT MARSH DOWD
CHARLOTTE. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Chemical
Engineering
Secretary, American Institute of
BNCCMieei- (3, 4); Playmakers (3). Chemical Engineers; Interdormitory
Council (3) ; Basketball (1).
BRUCE JOHNSON DOWNEY, JR. LEIGHTON WESLEY DUDLEY
NASHVILLE, N. C.
Age; 19 — Degree; A.B. Chemistry
HOULTON. MAINE
Degree; A.B.
FRANK DUFF
CHATTANOOGA. TENN.
Age; 21 — Degree; B.S.
Varsity Track (2, 3, 4) ; Phi As-
sembly (1, 2, 3, 4), Treasurer (3); Sheiks; Gorgon's Head; German
Monogram Club (3, 4); Y.M.C.A. Qut,
(1, 2, 3, 4); C.P.U. (2, 3, 4), Sec-
retary (4). -iKE
AKE; <I>BK
/ENL
CLAJJ
1936
PAGE 80
RUTH WINIFRED DUFFEE
MOBILE, ALA.
ROBERT BROUARD DU FOUR
PLEASANTVILLE. N. Y,
Age: 20— Degree: A.B. Zoology ^ge; 21— Degree: A.B. Journalism
D.iih T.tr Heel (3); North Caro-
LE VERNE DUNHAM
GENESEO. N. Y.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
DMly T.ir Heel (1, 2, 3, 4);
IDALIZA DUNN
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.l
lina Club (4); Woman's Athletic ^ ,j c c» j . a .• ■»■ ,
, , Golden Fleece ; Student Activities
Council (4).
Committee ; Playmakers ; Chairman,
Student Advisory Committee.
RALPH LANE DURHAM
LOMAX, N. C.
JOHN PALMER ELLIOTT
FUQUAY SPRINGS, N. C.
JAMES HUGH ELLIS
NASHVILLE. N. C.
JAMES THADDEUS ELLISON
PARROTTSVILLE, TENN.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
!1— Degree: A.B.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Interdormitory Council (2, 3).
19— Degree: A.B.
DREW MARTIX: Starieil out ns n
y.M.C.A. playbot/, but later fiinied to
this publication to prove his real trorth
as a true worker.. An A. T. O., Drew
proved his versatility at shootint; the
bull by becoming Speaker of the Phi
his Senior year.
PAGE 8 1
MARION LhCll. hRi\M C.HARLhi ANDREW EVANS MARGARET WILSON EVANS
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. STATESVILLE. N. C. WINGATE, N. C.
Age: 22— Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 21— Degree: B.S. Civil , , r> ad
Engmeermg ^g^^ 20-Degree: A.B.
Plii Assembly; University Club; University Club; American Insti- Clerk, Di Senate (4); Treasurer,
German Club; Y.M.C.A.; Freshman (^tg ^,( civil Engineers; Interdormi- Y.W.C.A. (4).
Executive Committee. tory Council (3, 4).
XX 11 KA
xn
^i^i
MARY CROCKETT EVANS
BLUEFIELD. W. VA.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
FREDERICK WEBB EVANS
CARRBORO, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
WILLIAM PRATT FACKNER ROBERT WITHERSPOON EALK
WASHINGTON, D. C. SAYVILLE, N. Y.
n — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
CLA
«e>"
-J
CHARLIE ZIMRI FALLS WORTH LEWELLYN FARLO^X' WILLIAM LEE FARTHING, JR. CONNOR JACKSON FEIMSTER
LAWNDALE. N. C.
HIGH POINT, N. C.
DURHAM, N. C.
NEWTON. N. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B. Political
Age: 23— Degree: A.B.
Science
Age: 21— Degree: B.S.
Age: 21
— Degree: B.S. Commerce
Dance Leader, Midwinter (3);
Di Senate; German Club.
German Club; President May Frolics
(4).
2X
2X
MORTON FELDMAN
WOODMERE, N. Y.
FLETCHER WILSON FERGUSON
NEW HAVEN, CONN,
Age:
Degree: A.B, Journalism
I.UKKIT Yack (1, 2, 3, 4); Dailij
Age: 21— Degree: A.B. English Tar HiH (1, 2, 3, 4); Buccaneer (2,
:il, .\ss(jciate Editor (4); Manager
Boxiiis (1): University Club; Inter-
Daily Tar Heel; Buccaneer, As- fraternity roinifil (4); Y.M,C.A.; See-
■ 1 cj-i /I A\ ^ !■ Tit retary, Puhlicilicins Union Board (2);
sociate Editor (3, 4); Carolina Mag- Secretary, liil.-nlorrnilory Council (2);
azine (1 2 3 4). Sport.s Edilor, Fri-slnnan Handbook
tee (2
AEn X*
Student-Faculty Day Commit-
WILLIAM COFFIELD FIELDS
FAYETTEVILLE. N. C,
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Fine Arts
Daily Tar Heel ( 3 ) ; Carolina
Magazine (2, 3, 4); Phi Assembly;
Y.M.C.A.; German Club.
MORRIS CALVERT FITTS
CORTLAND, N. Y.
-Degree: B.S. Commerce
Co-sports Editor, Vacketv V,ick (4);
Band (1, 2, 3. 4) ; Fresliman Executive
Committee; Bulls: Dance Committee
(4); German Club. Assistant Secre-
tary-Treasurer (3). Secretary-Treas-
urer (4).
XN; *MA
MAC SMITH: A Deke who became
Editor of the Daily Tar Heel, and
did a pretty good job of it at that.
A Phi Beta man known for coming to
class late.
PAGE 8 3
Jtsxci^iii'^
VELMA FLEMING
RAVENSWOOD, W. VA.
Age: 31 — Degree: B.S. Pharmaq'
FRED FLETCHER
RALEIGH. N. C.
Age; 26 — Degree: A.B. Sociologj'
SANDY RICHARD FLYNT
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
I'AUL OTTO FOLTZ
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
M — Degree: B.S. Commerce
JOHN BORN FOREMAN JOHN DcWITT FOUST, JR. JOSEPH SNELSON FRANCIS
GLENCOE, ILL. GRAHAM. N. C. BRYSON CITY, N. C.
Age: 21— Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Mechanical
Tennis (1, 2, 3, 4); Monogram ,-, T-^ c c nr i • i
Club; Senior Class Executive Com- ^ge: 22— Degree: B.S. Mechanical
mittee; Interfraternity Council; Stu-
dent-Faculty Committee on Educa-
tion.
X*; <I>BK; Kr2
CLAJJ
192;
Engineering
Engineering
American Society of Mechanical
Engineers, Vice-President (3), Sec-
retary (4).
TBn
/ I
RAYMOND CARL FREEMAN THEODORE E. FREUDENHEIM
COI.ERAIN, N. C. BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Age: 28 — Degree: B.S. Geology Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. History
— TE Carolina Buccaneer.
JOHN ROBERT FRYE
ASHEVILI.E, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry
University Band.
AXS
EDWARD JAMES FULLER
SALEM, MASS.
Vge: 22 — Degree: A.B.
Tennis (1, 2, 3, 4).
JOHN HENRY FUSSELL
WILMINGTON. N. C.
CL'iDE LORAINE FUTRELL
PINE LEVEL, N. C.
MRS. ALICE ELAM GAMBLE
KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C.
CORINNA ERWLN GANT
RALEIGH. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
ge: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
GES'E BRK'KLEMYER: Thinking
first of politics, then athletics, he gave
vp the first and became a good ath-
lete. Became so well liked that he
u-as chosen Vice-President of the Sen-
ior Class and the "y".
PAGE 8 5
^^
i
MRS. DILLARD S. GARDNER
CHAPEL HILI-, N. C.
Age: 29 — Degree: A.B. Art
LVTT IRVINE GARDNER
REIDSVILLE, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Zoology
D.uh T.ir Heel (1, 2, 3, 4);
CtroUnj Migjzhie (2, 3, 4).
SA- 'i'BK- AEA
SANFORD DANIEL GARELIK ROBERT FRANKLIN GARLAND
NEW YORK, N. Y. MARSHVILLE. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Division Editor, Yackety Yack (2)
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Varsitv Cross Country (1. 2, .3); Vai
sity Track (1, 2. 3): Phi Assembly
Debate Squad; Monogram Club (2, 3
4); Plavmakers: Dance Committee
Class Executive Committee (1. i).
OLIVER LAMONT GARNER
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
NATHAN T. GEGERSON
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
JAMES ULRICH GIBBS
WHITTIER, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age; 22 — Degree: A.B.
Varsity Boxing.
l\ — Degree: B.S. Commerce
University Band.
PAGE 86
JAMHS GORDON GIFFORD
SOUTHERN PINES. N. C.
HARRY DERRICK GILES
DANVILLE, VA.
-Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry
Varsity Golf. SN
CHARLES W. GILMORE
PITTSBURGH. PA.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
JOHN LOUIS GLENN, JR.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Chemical
Engineering
Dijily T^r Heel (1, 2, 3, 4), Man- Secretary American Institute of
aging Editor (4). Chemical Engineers (4); Junior
Class Executive Committee; Inter-
*Ae dormitory Council (3).
MARY D OYLEY GLOVER
GREENVILLE, S. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
HERBERT A. GOLDBERG
BESSEMER CITY. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Dj/Vv T.ir Heel (2, 3) ; University
Band (I, 2); Interfraternity Coun-
Junior Class Executive Commit- C'' (4) ; President HiUel Cabinet,
tee; Commencement Marshal (3). „„»
.s ID^X'ARD GORDON
HILLSBORO, N. C.
II — Degree: B.S. Commerce
JOHN RAYMOND GOVE
BERGENFIELD, N. J.
Degree: B.S. Civil Engineering
Varsity Cross Country (1, 2);
Varsity Track ( 1 ) ; Vice-President,
American Institute of Civil En-
gineers.
TBO; •I'BK
BILL WAKELEY: Toured the cin-
der puth for two years and then gave
it up in order to dissect frogs, rab-
bits, and stuff. .4n admirer of the
Pi Phis. Just an old smoothie.
REUBEN HOLMES GRAHAM
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Varsity Track, Captain (4) ; Mon-
ogram Club; Vice-President, Student
Body (4) ; Grail.
DONALD JAMES GRANTHAM
FOUR OAKS, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
Varsity Wrestling.
CORNELIA HOLMES GRAY
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Glee Club.
XQ
EDGAR LESTER GREEN, JR.
CATONSVILLE, MD.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
University Club; Secretary, Inter-
fraternity Council (3); Y.M.C.A.;
German Club.
JOHN EDWIN GREER
ANDREWS. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Chemicil
Engineering
American Institute of Chemical
Engineering.
MICHAEL RALPH GREESON
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
ROSCOE DILLARD GRIFFIN
ROCKY MOUNT, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Yackety Yack ( 2 ) , Division
Editor (3).
Cl
r-^(Zi- '^^
19
PAGE 88
M
FOY EUGENE GRUBB
SPENCER, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
Varsity Basketball ; Varsity Base-
ball; Monogram Club; Secretary,
Senior Class; Junior Dance Leader.
JAMES MHLVIN GUELKER
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
HOWARD T. GUNN, JR.
ROCKY MOUNT, N. C.
Age:
-Degree: B.S. Commerce
DALLAS EDMUNDS GWYNN
LEAKSVILLE, N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Varsity Cross Country ( 2 ) ; Var-
sity Track (1, 2, 3, 4); Interfra-
ternity Council (3, 4).
WARREN M. HADDAWAY
WEST CHESTER, PA.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Student Council (4); Y.M.C.A.;
Dance Leader (1, 2, 3).
ALEXANDER WELDON HALL
WARRENTON. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
TOMMY EUGENE HALL
MOUNT AIRY, N. C.
?ree: A.B.; LL.l
EDWIN JONES HAMLIN
ROXBORO. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
DMly Tjr Heel (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Phi
Assembly; LTniversity Club; Senior
Inter dormitory Council (3), Pres- Executive Committee; Y.M.C.A. ;
ident (4) ; Student Activities Com- Associate Editor Freshman Hand-
mittee. book (2).
STUART RABB: Lrxiiiritoii
Stew down full vp with Dave Clark,
but they forgot to deposit the cigars
in his pockets: no politician bvt Caro-
linn's nrst tn nnill'rrliiilil tin' udtiiiliri
sitlintlnll mill III hliini l.-n. iKi' nil In tin
Canipiis irilli liix rrrr iiniiriiiii sinii
laritii of "Mil Friends," and beside,
putting it on with Sand and Salve
attempted reformation of athletics and
was invited, to membership in the
Fleece,
HOWARD LUTHER HAMRICK STODDARD PAGE HANCOCK
LATTIMORE, N. C. NEW YORK, N. V.
Age: 19 — Degree; A.B. Journalism
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
Bulls ; German Club.
STEPHEN BOIS HARD
CEDARHURST, LONG ISLAND, N. Y.
JOSEPH KIMBALL HARRIMAN
CHAPEL HILL. N, C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
DmI) Tjr Heel (3); Band (1,
2, 3, 4) ; Glee Club (2, 3, 4) ; Inter-
fraternity Council ; Playmakers ; Uni-
versity Orchestra (1, 2, 5, 4).
X*; <l>M-\
ARTHUR LAWRENCE HARRIS
SEABOARD, N. C.
BARBARA JANE HARRIS
RALEIGH, N. C.
GEORGE WILLIAM HARRIS
SEABOARD, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
Phi Assembly; Glee Club;
Interdormitory Council (4). Y.W.C.A. ; League of Nations Com-
mittee.
^ge: 21 — Degree: A.B
Daily Tar Heel (2).
PAGE 90
-^
'« —
.-mt-'
fioii .^>i3uei,&mtB&
WILLIS SPEIGHT HARRISON
WINDSOR, N. C.
HARin- FKANf;LS HARVLV
SALISBURY, N. C.
JOHN DRAYTON HASTIE SAMUEL GLENN HAWFIELD
CHARLESTON, S, C. CONCORD, N, C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Journalism Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 20 — Degree: B.S, Civil
Engineering
Wrestling ( 1 ) ; Dance Leader,
Midwinters (4) ; German Club, Secretary, American Institute of
Electrical Engineers ; Interdormitory
AKE Council (2, 3, 4),
HARRY LOWELL HAWKINS
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B,S, Commerce
University Band.
PHYLLIS HAWTHORNE
SCARSDALE, N. Y.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Phi Assembly; Woman's Advisory
Board; Y,W.C,A.; Senior Executive
Committee; Woman's Athletic As-
sociation.
11 B*
MADELINE B. HAYNSWORTH
GREENVILLE, S. C,
19 — Degree: A.B.
GEORGE ALEXANDER HEARD
SAVANNAH, GA.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Political
Science
Di Senate (2, 3), Treasurer (3);
Amphoterothen ; Chairman Carolina
Political Union (4) ; Foreign Policy
League (2, 3 ) ; League of Nations
Association (2, 3), President (4).
JOE MURNICK: .-1 Plu.isical Ed.
major, Chairman of the VniversUy
Party, Captain of the Boxing Team,
an aittstanding member of the Mon-
ogram Club, atid a tine dependable fel-
low.
PAGE 9 1
MORRIS HECHT
COLUMBUS, GA.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
RICHARD PAUL HELLER WORTH McLENDEL HELMS DAVID ELDRIDCl HI XDlRsON
CHARLOTTE. N. C. CHARLOTTE, N. C. CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 21— Degree: B.S. Age: 29— Degree: A.B. Psychology Age: 22— Degree: B.S. Mechanical
Engineering
American In.stitute of Chemical Di Senate (1, 2, 3); Junior Ex-
Engmeers; Chairman Junior Execu- ecutive Committee. American Society of Mechanical
tive Committee. Engineers (3, 4).
MARGARET BELLE HENDERSON
HICKORY, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Advisory Board to Woman's
Council (3): Carolina Political
Union (3, 4).
xn
MARY ELIZABETH HENRY
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
FRANCIS DEWEY HEYWARD
GOLDSBORO. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
German Club.
AKE; <!>BK
CLAJ-
I
PAGE 92
SEAVY HIGHSMITH, JR.
FAYETTEVILLE. N. C.
Age; 19 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Yackety Yack (3); Phi Assem-
bly; German Club.
DONALD MAC HILL
CANALLTON, OHIO
24 — Degree: B.S.
HAYWOOD WATSON HINKLE LAWRENCE EARL HINKLE
LEXINGTON, N. C. RALEIGH. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age; 19 — Degree; A.B.
B/iccjneer. Assistant Editor (2, 3) ;
Carolina Magazine (2); German
Club.
*BK; .\X2
FRANCIS EDMOND HODGES
LEAKSVILLE. N. C.
Age; 23 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
BOYCE MAXWELL HOFFMAN
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
WYATT B. HOLEMAN
OXFORD, N. C.
23 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age; 25 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
WILLIAM RHOID HOLLAND
STATESVILLE, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
RANDALL BERG: Bnnrinll Berg, a
tweed-coated acfivite. S. A. E. social-
ite, dance committee act-ririht. Episco-
pal vestryite, femiis top-flight, is a bit
hair-light.
WILLIAM R. HOLLINGSWORTH
JAMES WENDELL HOLT, JR.
SAM STEVENS HOOD
ROBERT HOOKE
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
GRAHAM, N. C.
RALEIGH, N. C.
GREENSBORO. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Buccjiiccr ( 1 ) ; Interfraternity
Council (4) ; Bulls; Gorgon's Head;
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age:
20 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
Age: 19— Degree: A.B.
German Club; Dance Leader (2) ;
Final Ball Manager.
i:X; *BK
ROBtk 1 KhMP HOR'lUN
ZEBULON, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree; B.S. Civil
Engineering
University Club; American So-
ciety Chemical Engineers ; Interdor-
mitory Council (4) ; German Club.
TBn- *BK
/ENIOR
CLAXf
1936
FRANCES PARKER HOWARD MARGARET LEON Ht)\X-ARD
CHAPEL HILL. N. C. CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
ge: 19 — Degree: A.B
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry
PAGE 94
RUTH LANE HOWARD
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree; A.B. Journalism
RAYMOND REED HOWE, JR.
JORDAN. N. Y.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
University Club; ^ .W.C.A. ^.. ,, ,,
Editor (3, 4),
NELL OATES HOYLE
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 29 — Degree: A.l
m ^^
w^k
WILLIAM PALMER HUDSON
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
D.iity Tar Heel ( 3 ) ; Managing
Editor, Oirolinj MjX'^zirie ( 3 ) ,
Editor (4) ; Di Senate; University
Club; Amphoterothen.
LILLIAN LEGETTE HUGHES GEORGE FRANKLIN HUNT, JR.
TABOR CITY, N. C. WILMINGTON, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Yackety Yack (4) ; Dm1\ Tar
Heel (3, 4); Phi Assembly (4);
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Varsity Track (1, 2, 3, 4).
CHARLES MARCUS HUNTER
FRANKLIN. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
J. SCOTT HUNTER
HENDERSONVILLE, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
Varsity Cross Country; Monogram
Club; Amphoterothen; President,
Y.M.C.A.
RUBE GRAHAM: Has hiirdUrl ob-
stacles on both the cinder path and
the campus to become Captain of the
Track Team, President of the Junior
Class. Vice-President of the Stndcnt
Body, and a member of the Grail his
last year.
PAGE 95
^55% ^
MILLARD STANTON HUNTER
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
HAYWOOD BRILL HUNTLEY
WADESBORO, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
HOWARD S. HUSSEY, JR^
TARBORO. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Manager. Varsity Bcixing; Mono-
gram Club; Y.M.C.A. (1); German
Club.
<j>rA AEA
THOMAS CICERO INGRAM
NORWOOD. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
EMORY STUART ISAACS
DURHAM. N. C.
ge: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Phi Assembly; Y.M.C.A.; German
Club.
/ENIOR
CLAXf
1936
ERNEST WILBUR JAMES, JR.
CLARKSBURG. W. VA.
21 — Degree: A.B. Music
WILLIAM CLARK JAMES
WILMINGTON. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
PAGE 9(>
mrih
WILLIAM DUER JAMES
HAMLET, N. C.
Age; 20 — Degree: A.B.
ball (1); Wrestling (1. 3, 4); Phi
sembly; Freshman Dance Committee:
Grail; 13 Club: Carolina Political
Union; University Dance Committee;
Dance Leader (3).
AKE
LOUIS WESLEY JENKINS
LOWELL. N. C.
North Carolina Accounting Society.
FRANCES BUSHNELL JOHNSON GAITHER FRED JOHNSON
SPRINGFIELD. OHIO WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Dramatics Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Phi Assembly; Carolina Political Band (1, 2, 3); President, Phar-
Llnion. macy Class (I, 4).
MARGARET LOUISE JOHNSTON
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
JOHN FRANKLIN JONAS
MARION, N. C.
ANDY JEATUS JONES
VARINA. N. C.
GEORGE THADDEUS JONES
RALEIGH, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
ee: 20 — Degree: A.B. Music
,, . ^ ^ , ,, ., Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Orchestra (1,
Varsity Cross Country; Varsity ^^^^ ^^^^ ^,_ ^_ ^^. p,^^.
Track; Monogram Club. ,
makers.
MORRIS FITTS: A Sigma Nu who
has spent almost four years in Bing-
ham,, but his Seiiior year became a
good Secrefanj-Treasurer of the Ger-
man Club.
WILLIAM STONE JORDAN, JR.
FAYETTEVILLE, N. C.
Age: 20— Degree: A.B.
Vacketi- Y.iCK (1); Dailii Tar Hid
(1. 2, 3): University Club (:!): Inter-
fraternity Council (4); 13 Club:
V.M.C.A. (1. 2. 3. I). Treasurer (U;
Dance Leader (2).
A TO- '1>HK; AE_1
JAMES ALEXANDER JOYCE
SPRAY. N. C.
Age: 2^i — Degree: A.B. Sociology
THOMAS CLIFFORD JOYCE
SPRAY. N. C.
Age: 21-
)egree: B.S. Political
Science
EDWARD BROWNE JULIBER
NEW YORK. N. Y.
Age: 24 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Varsity Football; Varsity Track;
Monogram Club; Junior Executive
Committee.
ROBERT C. JURNEY, JR.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry
Y.M.C.A. (1); Interdormitory
Council (■)).
SARA FRANCES KANOY
GREENSBORO. N. C.
»ree: B.S. Commerce
IRWIN DAVID KARESH
CHARLESTON. S. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
/ENIOR
CLAXJ
1936
PAGE 98
'*v
GEORGE KATZ
BKOOKI.YN. N. Y.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.)
PAUL HERBERT KATZENSTEIN
WARREN PLAINS, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry
PAGE CLARK KEEL
ROCKY MOUNT. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
ELIZABETH BROCK KEELER
CLARKSDALE, MISS.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Daily Tar Heel (1, 2); Varsity
Football Manager (1); University Daily Tar Heel (3); Vice-Presi-
Club; Interfraternity Council (4); dent, Y.W.C.A. (4).
13 Club; German Club.
•\'Y\
xn
DOROTHY LEE KELLY
HENDERSONVILLE. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.:
DAVID MOORMAN KERLEY
MORGANTON. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Burcnneer U) ; Carolina Magazine
{«): Di Senate; Debate Squad (1. 2,
i); Y.M.C.A. (1, 3); Carolina Political
Union (2) ; Wigue and Masque (2) ;
Freshman Handbook (2) ; Foreign Pol-
icy League (2. 4).
JOHN T. KILPATRICK, JR.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Interdormitory Council (4).
MARY ELIZABETH KING
CHATTANOOGA. TENN.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Yackety Yack (3) ; Y.W.C.A.
HAUGHTON EHRINGHAUS: After
niujorinff in Politieal Science for three
tjears, he began work in the Law
School his Senior year, cliinajcing hifi
social activities with Vice-President of
the German Club niirf all that goes
with it.
PAGE 99
^
^^r% ^
i
1^
ROBERT EDWARD KIRSCHMAN HOUSTON WYKE KITCHIN
NEW HAVEN, CONN. HORSE SHOE. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Buccaneer (1, 2, 3, 4).
ge: 20 — Degree: A.]
ANNE TURNER KNIGHT
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree: Special
ANTHONY STANLEY KONEFAL
PASSAIC. N. J.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry
Di Senate.
AXS
VIVIAN REID KREEGER
PILOT MOUNTAIN. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
RICHARD VICTOR LADDEY
NEWARK, N. J.
ee: 22 — Degree: A.B.
THEODORE DWIGHT LANCE
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B. Geology
/ENIOR
CLAXr
I93f
PAGE 100
-^^ <r^-N
^ 1^ P}
V
WALTER DUNN LaROQUE
KINSTON, N, C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
University Club.
Ben
JOEL IRWIN LASKY
LAWRENCE. N. Y.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Track (3) ; University Club; Play-
makers.
HENRY AARON LASSITER
SMITHFIELD, N. C.
Age: 20' — Degree: B.S. Commerce
JAMES SEXTON LAYTON
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 29— Degree: A.B.
Baseball (1) : Wrestling (1).
WILBUR LEACH
KEANSBURG, N. J.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B.
Cross Country ( 2 ) ; Track ( 1 ) .
JAMES ALEXANDER LEAK
WADESBORO. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
CLARENCE ELMER LEAKE, JR.
GREENSBORO. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
German Club.
VIRGINIA SPEARRIN LEE
LOCKPORT. N. Y.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
University Club; Finance Commit-
tee, Y.W.C.A. (2, 3, 4).
SCOTT HUNTER: Wifit hi.i fileas-
ing personality and great energy coin-
hined with the mind of a humani-
farian. he has led the "F" to a higher
level along irifh a few sprints on the
einders.
PAGE 10 1
-^=^ ;^,.
HARRY ELWOOD LfGRAND
MEBANE. N. C.
ROBERT LEE LENTZ, JR.
MORGANTON. N. C.
WILLIAM HASKELL LEVITT
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Geology Age: 21— Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 23 — Degree: A.B. Sociology
Baseball (2, i, 4) ; Monogram Club.
Interdormitory Council (4).
JESSE ALBERT LEWIS
LAURINBURG. N. C.
Age: 24 — Degree: B.S.
Djily Tjr Heel ( 1, 2, 3, 4) ; Bnc-
cjiieer (1, 2, 3, 4); Carolina Maga-
zine (1, 2, 3, 4); Di Senate;
Y.M.C.A. ; Business Manager of
Freshman Handbook ( 3 ) .
JOHN A. LINDSAY. JR
HIGH POINT. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
FRANCIS PHILIP LINK
REIDSVILLE. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Buccaneer (1, 2, 3, 4), Art Editor
(2); President U. N. C. Branch of
North Carolina Pharmaceutical As-
sociation (4); Honor Council (3).
^K'^: PX
ROGER WILSON LINVILLE
KERNERSVILLE. N. C.
20 — Degree: A.B.
/ENIOR
CLAJJ
1938
PAGE 102
MARGUERITE LIPSCOMB
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Age: 20 — Degree; A.B. Drama
Glee Club (?. 4); Playmakers
(3, 4).
MORRIS WILTON LIPTON
WILMINGTON. N. C.
Age; 23 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
CHESTER CROWELL LITTLE
ASHEVILLE. N. C.
Age; 22 — Degree; A.B.
Football (1, 2, 3), Co-Captain
(4); Monogram Club; German
Club; Basketball (3, 4).
sen
JOHN BROADDUS LONG
FAYETTEVILLE. W. VA.
Age; 19 — Degree; A.B. Economics
Carolina Political Union.
MARGARET RIDLEY LONG
ROANOKE RAPIDS, N. C.
CHARLES MANLY LOOMIS
GREENVILLE. S. C.
MARGARET FIN LEY LOUTH IAN
CHARLOTTE. N. C.
WILLIAM POPE LYON
SMITHFIELD. N. C.
Age; 20 — Degree; A.B. English
Age; 21 — Degree; A.B. Chemistry
Interfraternity Council (3);
Carolina Political Union; Y.W.C.A. Y.M.C.A. (2, 3, 4); Playmakers
(2); Senior Executive Committee.
Age; 21 — Degree; A.B.
20— Degree; A.B.; LL.l
BILL .JORDAN: Bil (/iviiiii up ani/
thoughts he might have had of aim-
thing, he made Phi Beta Kappa and
President of A. E. D. An A. T. O.
known for being seen anyn'here at
any time.
PAGE 103
WALTER LIDDELL McBRIDE
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
FRANK HILL McDONALD WILLIAM MONROE McFADYEN ETHEL AGNES McGALLIARD
HOFFMAN. N. C. RAEFORD. N. C. CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 21 — Degree; A.B. Journalism
Phi Assembly (3, 4).
20— Degree: A.:
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
MARGARET GAINEY McGIRT
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
WILLIAM T. McGOWAN, JR.
TIMMONSVILLE, S. C.
ROBERT CRAIG McINNES
RALEIGH. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
Y.W.C.A. (2, 3).
19— Degree: A.B.; LL.l
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
PAGE 10'
r
y.\
MARY OCHSE McKEE
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. English
Secretary. League of Nations Asso-
ciation (3 4) : Foreign Policy League
(3. 4): Y.W.C.A. (2, 3, 4); Frendi
Club (1. 2): Cosmopolitan Club. Vice-
Presirlent (2), President (3). Secre-
tary-Treasurer (4).
WESLEY L. McKEITHAN
FAYETTEVILLE. N. C.
Age:
24 — Degree: B.S. Electrical
Engineering
American Institute of Electrical
Engineers.
WILLIAM DeROY McLEAN
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
DMly Tar Heel (1, 2, 3), Busi-
ness Manager (-4) ; Di Senate.
JOHN ALBERT McRAE, JR.
CHARLOTTE. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.; LL.B
Di Senate.
X^I'
ROBERT NATHANIEL MAGILL
SHANGHAL CHINA
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Economics
DdiUj Tar Heel (I); Phi Assembly;
Student Council Representative (3);
Pre.sident. Student Body (4); Grail;
Golden Fleece; Amphoterothen ; Stu-
dent Activities Committee: Y.M.C.A.;
Student Advisory Committee.
WILLIAM CHARLES MALLISON
WASHINGTON. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Chemical
Engineering
ADOLPHUS M. MANGUM
FRANKLIN. N. C.
JOHN CALVIN MARKHAM, JR.
DURHAM. N. C.
Age: 20-Degree: B.S. Commerce ^^^. 25— Degree: B.S. Commerce
BUD WOOTEX: Sever missed a
dance or partij in his four t/cars at
Carolina. He has also delved in poli-
tics and the football managerial staff.
Decided to get a degree before becom-
ing a second Sir Christopher Wren.
PAGE 10 5
GEOFFREY MATHEWS MARTIN
NEW YORK, N. Y.
Degree; A.B.
JAMES DREW MARTIN, III
MOUNT AIRY, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B. Political
Science
Student Advisory Committee H) ;
Yackety Yack (1, 2, 4), Assistant
Editor (2, 4); Ptii Assembly (1, 2, 3.
4). Speaker (4); Class Executive
Committee (1); Slieilts (2); Student
Activities Committee (4) : Y.M.C.A.
(1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-President (2); Caro-
lina Political Union (2. 3), Executive
Committee (3); League of Nations
Association (3, I).
Axn
JOHN SARGENT MARTIN
MOUNT AIRV, N. C.
21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
YATES WEBB MASON
GASTONIA. N, C.
Age:
M. EDWIN MASSENGILL
ANGIER, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Phi Assembly; Interdormitory
Council (4).
LAWRENCE EDWARD MASTEN
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
COY FRANKLIN MATKINS
ELON COLLEGE, N. C.
22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
/ENIOR
CLAXT
1936
PAGE 1 06
JOHN LINDSEY MATTHEWS, JR. MARY THERESA MATTHEWS STEPHEN HENRY MAZUR INEZ KATHLEENA MEASE
ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. IRVINGTON. N. J. HAVESVILLE, N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree; B.S. Geology Age: 19 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
Cross Country ( 2 ) ; Track ( 2 ) ;
Di Senate; Playmakers.
ge: 21 — Degree: A.B. Physical
Education
Playmakers; Woman's Athletic
Council; Wigue and Masque.
LAWSON E. MELCHOR
CONCORD, N. C.
LEE FRANKEL MELVIN
WILMINGTON, DEL.
JOHNHAMLlll MlRRlli 1 RHDERICK EUGIM. M1.1 1 K
WOODSDALE, N. C. METUCHEN. N. J.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B.
21— Degree: B.S.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
27 — Degree: A.l
Baseball (3); Monogram Club
(3, 4).
REID BAHNSON: Ardent ronniiis-
senr of unijthhtii that makes a man's
life more livable, a cliletfanle with a
profound interest in opera, a ffymnast
with more strength than skill, a Giin-
ghovl, at our press date a potential
Phi Bete, he proved his versatilitij bij
heading S. A. E.
PAGE 107
FREDERIC MEYERS
RICHMOND. VA.
20 — Degree: A.B.
WILLIAM W. MICHAUX
WILSON. N. C.
Age: 18 — Degree: A.B. English
HOLMAN CANNON MILHOUS LEONARD WALLACE MILLER
F.\YETTEVILLE. TENN. BROOKLYN. N. Y.
Age: 24 — Degree: A.^
Art Staff, Buccaneer (3, 4); Play-
makers (2, 3, 4). Glee Club (2); Playmakers (2,
3, 4).
*K2
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Phi Assembly; Debate Club.
RICHARD M. MITCHELL, JR. WILLIAM SUNDAY MITCHELL KATHERINE KREIDER MOORE
GREENSBORO. N. C. AULANDER, N. C. OXFORD. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Buccaneer ( 1 ) ; Baseball Manager ;
Monogram Club; German Club.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 19 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
/E
!Q3t
PAGE 108
MAGGIE LOU MOORE
ROCKY MOUNT, N. C.
WILLIAM REYNOLDS MORRIS HARRIETTE E, MORRISON SAMUEL EDGAR MORTON, JR.
ASHEVILLE. N. C. CHAPEL HILL. N. C. CHARLOTTE. N. C.
Age; 22 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
Age: 20 — Degree; A.B.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Age; 25 — Degree; A.B.
SEYMOUR MOSKOWITZ
WILMINGTON. N. C.
Age; 19 — Degree; A.B. Chemistry
Yackety Yack (1, 2); Phi As-
sembly (1, 2); Hillel Cabinet (3,
4).
MADISON E. MOTSINGER, JR.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Age: 23 — Degree; A.B.
PATRICK REGIA MULLNL
HEWLETT, N. Y.
Age; 20 — Degree; A.B.
Undergraduate Scientific Society ;
Wigue and Masque.
CLYDE EDWARD MULLIS
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
FLETCHER FERGUSON: Has tcikcii
part in evertf acfivitij on the campus,
witfi particitlar eviphajtis on sports
icriting for the Tar Heel ayiil this ))»6.
lientioii. Delved into the soeini ichirl
u-ith his Puljlications Prom.
PAGE 109
MARGARET ESTHER MUNCH
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Art Editor, Girolinj Maaazine (4).
JOE H. MURNICK
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
THOMAS ENGLEHART MYERS
CHARLESTON. S. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
Sports Staff. Yackety Yack; Bu.si-
ness Staff, Dailv Tar Heel; Captain,
Boxing H); Treasurer, Monogram Sheiks; Y.M.C.A. ; Gimghoul ;
Clul); Secretary of Class (3): Vice- „ ^, ,
President of Athletic Association; Uni- German Club,
versify Club.
ROBERT NACHTMANN
WEBSTER GROVES, MO.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Dramatic
Art
Playmakers.
TE*
2AE
FRANK WILSON NEELY
HENDERSONVILLE. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
NANCY CONSTANTINE NESBIT THOMAS FIQUERS NORFLEET
CHARLESTON. S. C.
Age: 20— Degree: A.B.
riii Assembly; President. Woman's
Assoi'iation (1); Svmpbonv Orchestra;
Carolina Political I'nion (3. 4), Vice-
University Club: Interdormitory «;''■'!'■;"<'" ',» ^ /'•""P/s Cabinet (4);
' ' Board of Directors for Graham Me-
Council (4). morial (4).
AKr
ROXOBEL, N. C.
ge: 19 — Degree: A.B.
i93e
PAGE 110
CHARLES C. GATES, JR.
HENDERSONVILLE. N. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S.
DAVID ERVIN OGLESBY
FARMVILLE. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce.
Interdormitory Council (4).
LINDSAY SHEPHERD OLIVE
RALEIGH, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Botany.
EDWARD GROVES OUTLAW
GOLDSBORO. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Electrical
Engineering
American Institute of Electrical
Engineers.
FRED WILTON OXLEY
CLINTON, S. C.
CLARENCE EUGENE PAGE
HENDERSON, N. C.
SALLIE ANTOINETTE PAGE
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
EDWARD JOHN PALMER
RUSHLAND, PA.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S.
Age: 20— Degree: B.S.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Football (2, 3, 4); University-
Club; Monogram Club; Interdormi-
tory Council (4).
ROY CROOKS: One of the more
serious minded Seniors. Worked hard
on the Publications for three years
and then became an accounting tab.
irjstructor, one of the best members
of the class.
PAGE 1 1 1
JANET PALMER
HOOKERTON, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
JAMES MOORE PARKER
RALEIGH. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Band (I, 2, 3, 4); Phi Assembly;
Glee Club (1).
MAX FRANKLIN PARKER SAMUEL LESTER PARKER, JR.
MONROE. N. C. PINETOPS. N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
STEWART REDFIELD PARKER
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B. Sociology
Track ; Di Senate,
A*
LLOYD ELWIN PARKS
LEXINGTON, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S,
FRED MORTIMER PARRISH, III
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
Age: IQ — Degree: A.B.; LL.B,
Sophomore Executive Committee;
Bulls: Dance Leader (3); German
Club.
LLA.
19
PAGE 112
;eorge branch Patrick, jr.
DURHAM, N. C.
ge: 21 — Degree; A.B.
JOSEPH F. PATTERSON, JR.
NEW BERN, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Y.4CKETY Y.4CK (2, 3): Track (1);
Phi A.ssembly; Interdorinitory Council
(2): President Senior Class; Secretary
P're.slinian Class; Interfraternity Coun-
cil; CJrail: Aniplioterothen ; Bulls;
Dance Leader (4); Gimghoul: German
Club; Board of Directors, Graham Me-
morial; Campus Cabinet: Honor Coun-
cil (1. 3. 41; Class Executive Commit-
tee (1. 2, 3. 4): University Dance
Committee.
JOHN CASTANTIM PAVLAKIS
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
ELLA LOUISE PAYNE
HERTFORD, N. C.
19 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
.EONARD MILTON PEARLMAN EUGENE A. PEARSALL, JR. LeROV PRATT I'l K( ^
BROOKLYN, N. Y. GREENSBORO, N. C. GREENVILLE. MISS.
ROBERT THEODORE PERKINS
MORGANTON. N. C.
Age: 2i — Degree: B.S. Chemical
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry Engineering
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Y.M.C.A. ; Dance Leader; Gim-
ghoul; German Club.
Age: 25 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
Dm!)' Tjv Heel (1, 2, 3, 4).
BILL JAMES: A here and there
grappler better known as Bull. A
Deke irho became a member of the
Grnil his Jnniur iiear and served on
the Dance Committee his Senior i/ear.
PAGE 113
OSCAR A. PETREA, JR.
LEXINGTON. N. C.
WALTER MITCHELL PETREE
DANBURY, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Medicine
Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4). TK4'
ALVIS BROOKS PETTY
PITTSBORO, N. C.
e: 25 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
German Club; Playmakers.
GUY BERRYMAN PHILLIPS, JR.
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
WILLIAM GATES PHILLIPS ROBERT MENDELL POCKRASS CASRA KENNETH POLLACK
HUNTSVILLE. TEXAS VONKERS. N. V. LONG BEACH. LONG ISLAND, N. V.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Electrical
Engineering Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
American Institute of Electrical
Engineers.
ge: 22 — Degree: A.B. History
Glee Club; Playmakers.
CLA
1^
PAGE 114
POLI.^ I.hl. POLLOl k
GRAHAM PONDER
MARCELLUS POPE, JR.
OWEN MEREDITH POWERS, JR
CHICAGO, ILL.
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
ENFIELD, N. C.
FAYETTEVILLE, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree; A.B. Music
Glee Club; President V.W.C A.
Age; 19 — Degree; A.B.
Age; 20 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
Age; 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
(4), Treasurer (3); Athletic Coun-
cil (3).
HUBERT GRAHAM PRICE WILLIAM WALKER PROUTV
SHELBY, N. C. CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
ERNEST CLINTON PRUETT McKELDIN GETTVS PUCKETTE
Age; 25 — Degree; B.S. Pharmacy
Age; 25 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
SWANNANOA. N. C.
Age; 22 — Degree: A.l
RICGCWOOD. N. I.
Age; 21 — Degree; A.B.
Buccaneer. Managing Editor (3.
4 ) ; LIniversity Club ; President, Pan-
Hellenic Council (4).
xn
FOY GRUBB: A letter man in luo
sports for his first tico i/ears, besides
spending a lot of time in Bingham
Hall. Secretary of the Senior Clasx.
and a quiet but good boy.
PAGE 115
STUART WHITE RABB
LEXINGTON. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
DmI} T.:r Heel ( 1. 2, ?, 4) ; Giro-
Ini.i Mi^jziiie (1. 2, 3, 4) ; Phi As-
sembly; Golden Fleece; Amphotero-
then; V.M.C.A.
<i>Ki;
JOHN ERWIN RAMSAY
SALISBURY, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B.
Golf (3, 4); Manager, Track (i) ; Di
Senate; Treasurer, Sopliomore Class:
Interdormitory Council ; Class Execu-
tive Committee (1. 2); Dance Oflficial
(1. i): President. Di Senate (i).
2N
ROBERT MARSH RAY, JR.
OXFORD. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S.
Manager, Football (4) ; Monogram
Club; President Interfraternity Coun-
cil (4); Bulls; Gimghoul ; Dance
Leader, May Frolics (4).
GEORGE STANLEY RAYNOR
ROCKVILLE CENTRE. N. Y.
22 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
NICHOLAS CABELL READ
MONTGOMERY. ALA.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Daily Tar Heel (2) ; Buccaneer (2) ;
Assistant Editor Carolina Magazine (3,
4); President, University Club (3);
Class Executive Committee (2, 4) : Sec-
retary. Y.M.C.A. (4): Amplioterothen.
,ivl': <I>BK
WILLIAM MARTIN READLING
DAVIDSON. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
ELIZABETH REDFERN
RALEIGH. N. C.
20 — Degree: A.B.
University Club.
19.
PAGE 116
CHARLES HAMILTON REID, JR. PAUL BERNHARDT REYNOLDS
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C. SALISBURY, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Age:
: — Degree: B.S. Civil
Engineering
LRNLST C. RICHARDSON
NEW BERN, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Zoology
Interfraternity Council (4) ; Uni- president American Society of ,, , . ^ 1 r, 4>
versity Dance Committee (4). ^. -, ^ _• _ _ ,.. Interdormitory Council (1, 4).
Civil Engineers (4).
HOWARD DIXON RICHARDSON
BLACK MOUNTAIN, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Playmakers.
GEORGE B. RIDDLE. JR.
RALEIGH. N. C.
Associate Editor Buccaneer; Di
Senate.
JANIE O. HUNT RIDDLE
OXFORD. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
JOE HENRY ROBERTSON, JR.
ADVANCE, N. C.
Age:
-Degree: B.S. Commerce
Yackety Yack ( 3 ) ; Biicc.ineer
(3), Associate Editor (4); Univer-
sity Club ; Playmakers ( 1 ) ; Interdor-
mitory Council (3); Senior Execu-
tive Committee.
CHARLES DAVID ROBINSON
candor, n. c.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
JIMMY COAN: At one time thuuijht
by many to be Beta's number one
playboy, bnt he didn't stand a chance,
so settled down to studying, duncinij.
and making a host of friends; entered
law school his Senior year, just like
Jimmy, taking the short cuts, but miss-
ing more of the hurdles. Made Phi
Beta Kappa this year.
PAGE 117
f ^^ ■jW^-
AJU:k
DONALD JAMES ROBINSON GORDON CHARLES ROBINSON HERBERT BLAIR RODGERS
WEAVF.RVILLE. N. C.
Age: 23— Degree: A.B.
Football (1, 2).
STAMFORD, ONTARIO
BIRMINGHAM. AI.A.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Tennis (1, 2, 3, 4); University Track; Interfraternity Council
Club; Monogram Club. (4) ; Sheiks.
CLARK RODMAN
WASHINGTON, N. C.
Lge: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Buccaneer (2, 3).
AKE
KENNON SWIFT RODWELL FRANK BENJAMIN ROGERS, JR. GEORGE CARRAWAY ROGERS
NORFOLK. VA. BENNETTSVILLE, S. C. GRAHAM. N. C.
Age: 25 — Degree: B.S. Medicine
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Junior Class Treasurer ; Executive
Committee of German Club (4).
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
PAGE lis
OLIVIA SMITH ROOT
RALEIGH, N. C.
Age; 19— Degree: A.B.
Buccaneer (3, 4); University Club.
HERMAN JACK ROShNHAl M
BELMAR, N. J.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Carolina Accounting Society.
*BK; BPS
III.XK-i JONATHAN ROTH
NEW YORK, N. Y.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
FRANCES JULIA ROUGHTON
OLD FORT, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Playmakers.
JOHN TURNER ROUGHTON
OLD FORT, N. C.
LEONARD RUBIN
BRONX, N. Y.
DAVID PERRY RUSS, JR.
FAYETTEVILLE, N. C.
JESSE MILTON RU^M l.L, JR
CANTON, N. C.
23— Degree: A.B. Age: 21— Degree: A.B. Journalism
20— Degree: B.S.; LL.B.
University Band.
Age: 24 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy
FRED PARRISH: Fearless Freddie
is best known for his social life— be-
ing an active member of the German
Club, and executive committeeman his
Senior year. A Kappa Sig famous for
his witty remarks.
PAGE 119
EARL BAKER RUTH
CHARLOTTE. N. C.
PAUL LEE SALISBURY, JR. MARGARITA ALICIA SAMAVOA ALBERT BARRON SAMPLE
SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. ASHEVTLLE. N. C. STATESVILLE, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.l
Basketball (2), Captain (3, 4) ;
Monogram Club.
Age: 22 — Degree: A.B. Economics
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Chemistry
JACOB MORRIS SAPOSNIK NANCY ELISABETH SCHALLERT JAMES MARLIN SCHREYER
BOSTON, MASS. WINSTON-SALEM. N. C. FLETCHER. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
D.t/ly Tjr Heel (3, 4) ; Bucc.iiieer
(3, ■)): Freshman Hand Book (3); Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Glee Club (3) ; Student- Faculty Day
Committee (3); Student Committee
on Education ( 3 ) .
Xfi; AKr
22— Degree: A.B.
PAGE 1 2 tf
EDWARD HARDING ShAWLLL
RALEIGH, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
LEONARD iHAl'lRO
HEMPSTEAD. N. Y.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Phi Assembly; Debate Squad; 13
Club, President (3); Dance Leader Yackety Yack (3), Fraternity ^Lmager, Track (4); Y.^LC.A.
(2) ; German Club Editor (4) ; Wrestling (1, 2, 4).
<^AH; <MiK AEII
ABRAHAM ALBERT SHARE CLYDE ALEXANDER SHAW, JR
ROCKINGHAM, N. C. CONCORD. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
University Club; Y.M.C.A.; Inter-
dormitory Council ; Carolina Ac-
counting Society ; Freshman Friend-
ship Council.
■I>BK
ELIZ
ABETH W. SHEWMAKE
LARRY SHILLER
HOKE FLYNT SHORE
RICHARD FULLER SHRYOCK
DAVIDSON, N. C.
HURLEYVILLE, N. Y.
WlNSTON-SALEM. N. C.
BALTIMORE. MD.
Age:
19— Degree: A.B. ; LL.B.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Mechanical
Engineering
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 22— Degree: A.B.
Xfi
American Society of Mechanical
Engineers.
AXA
J. D. HEVWARD: Ktmuu as Pet.
to all of us. is among thf most pop-
ular of the class. He made Phi Betr
and joined with the Dc.kes his Seni'ir
wear. Not a playboy but aliva/js on
the best parties.
PAGE 1 2 X
ANNA FRANCES SHUFORD
GASTONIA, N. C.
WILSON COITE SIMMONS
CONOVER. N. C.
RAYMOND SIMON
UNION CITY, N. J.
ALBERT B. SMITH, JR.
FAYETTEVILLE. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Pharmacy Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
*AX Daily Tar Heel, Sports Editor (3).
ee: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
CAVERLY HUNTER SMITH
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Playmakers.
DAVID JUDSON SMITH
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
JOHN McNeill smith, jr.
ROWLAND. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Ddilij Tar Heel (1, 2, 3), Editor (4);
Associate Editor Carolinn Magazine
(3) ; Human Relations Institute Com-
mittee (3) ; Student Committee on
Education (3); Editor Freshman
Handbook (3); Class Executive Com-
mittee (2, 4); Golden Fleece;
Grail; President, Amphoterothen (4);
Y.M.C.jV. Treasurer (3); Carolina Po-
litical Union (3, 4) ; Board of Di-
rectors of Graham Memorial : Honor
Council (3) ; Commencement Marshal
(3). AKE; *BK
^,
PAGE 122
.-f^-
i\lA( K EDWARD SMITH
FOUNTAIN, N. C.
NANCY MARIE SMITH
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
ROBERT LEE SMITH
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree; A.B. Music
Age; 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce _, ^, , /, , ^i ^r ,vr r- a Age; 20 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
° Glee Club (1, 2, 3); 1 W.C.A
Cabinet (3, 4); Woman's Advisory
Council (2, 4).
xn
STANLEY SOBELSON, JR.
NEWARK. N. J.
Age; 20 — Degree; A.B. Zoology
Yackety Y.\ck (1, 2, 3); Buc-
caneer (1, 2, 3).
SUE DUPUY SOUTHERLAND HAYWOOD MERRITT SPARGER
CHAPEL HILL, N. C. MOUNT AIRY. N. C.
PRESTON W. SPARROW
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
LOUISE SPEAR
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
20 — Degree; A.:
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S.
Vice-President, American Institute
of Electrical Engineers (4).
Age: 22 — Degree; A.B. Journalism
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
BILL HUDSON': The Phi Beta Kappa
obstacle remored. Bill set out to put
the Carolina ilagazine on a new level.
Has spent most of his time testing
books and working on the publications.
PAGE 12 3
#^ '^
MARY LILLIAN SPECK
ASHEVILLE. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
LOUIS SAMUEL SPELKE
STAMFORD. CONN,
Age: 21 — Degree: A.l
Dj;1) Tm Hit'l ( 1 ) ; Interdormi
tory Council (4).
THOMAS DENMUTH SPIVEY
GOLDSBORO, N, C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Debate Squad.
RALPH SPRINKLE
WINCHESTER, VA.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Journalism
Daily Tar Heel (1, 2).
nKA
DANIEL L. STALLINGS JOHN THOMAS L. STALLINGS ROBERT AVER STEVENSON
NEW BERN, N. C. PINETOPS, N. C. ANGOLA, N. Y.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
PAGE 124
HENRY BROWN STOKES
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
KERNEY CLIFTON STONE, JR.
DURHAM, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
HARRY WYLIE STOVALL
WILMINGTON, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S.
Gorgon's Head; German Club.
BESSIE HEADEN STROWD
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
ISAAC HERMAN SUTLIFF
SPRAY, N. C.
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
FRED I. SUTTON
KINSTON. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.; LL.B.
Yackety Yack (1. 2, 3); DMh
Tar Heel (1, 2, 3); Buccaneer (1,
2. 3) ; German Club.
WILLIS A. SUTTON, JR.
ATLANTA, GA.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Sociology-
Phi Assembly; Glee Club.
X*
GRADY LAWRENCE SWAIM
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
EARL Rl'TH: A trickster who has
led the basketball team for two years
as Captain. Kept out of intrainurals
because of his basketball, he had a
lot to do with Ruffin's sxiccess in the
intramural field.
^Wt
\- f^
PAGE 125
EDWARD W. TANKERSLEY
GREENSBORO. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree; A.B. Zoology
Wrestling (1, 2, 3, 4); Mono-
gram Club; 13 Club.
ELIZABETH GORDON TAYLOR
WARRENTON. N. C.
Age; 21 — Degree; A.B.
Y.W.C.A. Cabinet.
nn*
HAZEL ELMO TAYLOR
DANVILLE. VA.
Age; 23 — Degree; A.B. Journalism
NEIL EDWIN THAGARD
FAYETTEVILLE. N. C.
Age; 18 — Degree; A.B. Education
CLARY THOMPSON
CAMERON, N. C.
JOHN BURTON THOMPSON JOHN LLOYD THOMPSON, JR.
GREENSBORO, N. C. LINCOLNTON, N. C.
Age; 25 — Degree; A.B. Journalism Age; 20 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
Assistant Dormitory Manager (4). Football.
Age; 20 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
ENIOP
CU '
PAGE 126
DAVID JONES THORP
FRIES. VA.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Vackety Yack (1. 2, 3), Editor (4);
University Club; Y.M.C.A.; Gimghoul;
Executive Committee German Club
(4); Freshman Orientation Committee;
Treasurer Publications Union Board
(3); Campus Cabinet (4).
BEDFORD THURMAN
NORFOLK, VA.
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B.
Playmakers.
ANNE LANCASTER TINSLEY ELIZABETH GRETTER TINSLEY
SPARTANBURG, S. C. GREENSBORO, N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree: A.]
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Glee Club.
HARR\' HAMILTON TUCKER MARIA WASHINGTON TUCKER
PAGELAND, S. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.l
RALEIGH, N. C.
19— Degree: A.B.
FRED ERNEST ULLMAN
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Mechanical
Engineering
Track ; American Society of Me-
Vice-President, Glee Club (4); chanical Engineers; Monogram Club;
Y.W.C.A. Grail; Universitj' Dance Commit-
tee (4).
ALEXANDER BRUCE UMSTEAD
DURHAM, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree; B.S. Commerce
Track; Monogram Club.
ALEX HEARD: The Engineering
School lost one of its best chemical
engineers ichen Alex sicitched to Dean
Hohbs' curricula, but the campifs got
the best and most efficient C. P. V.
Chairman it maij hope to have for
pears to coni^. Spent most of his
time seeking C. P. V. talent, but "I
Only" Heard u:as a sociable S. A. E.
and a real Phi Bete man. . . .
PAGE 127
^
^.
driimk
JOHN WESLEY UMSTEAD, III MELTON ERNEST VALENTINE JAMES MAURICE VAN HECKE
CHAPEL HILL. N. C. COLERAIN, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
President, German Club; Univer- Age: 21— Degree: A.B. Chemistry
sity Dance Committee (4); Senior Zoology
Class Executive Committee.
KS
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
Phi Assembly; Y.M.C.A.
Bon
ALENE LESLIE VERCOE
FLORIDA CITY. FLA.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
CLAUDE WALLACE VICKERS
DURHAM, N. C.
WILSON RODNEY VINCENT FORREST W. VON CANON, JR.
NEW BERN. N. C. WEST END. N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 23 — Degree: A.B. History
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
University Club; Student Activities
Committee ; Interdormitory Council ;
Secretary, Student Advisory Commit-
H^
N!ir Jr
Cla
10
PAGE 128
HOWARD LEE WADE
DRAPER. N. C.
ee: 25 — Degree: B.S.
Fencing ; Phi Assembly.
^^^i"
'^\
MILTON L. WAGONER, JR.
REIDSVILLE. N. C.
22 — Degree: A.B. Sociology
^^^VJ
HENRY M. WAGSTAFF, JR. WILLIAM EASTON WAKELEV
CHAPEI. HILL. N. C. SOUTH ORANGE. N, J.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S.
21— Degree: A.B.
American Society of Mechanical Cross Country; Track; Monogram
Engineers; Y.M.C.A.; German Club. Club; German Club.
ELIZABETH JEAN WALKER
ROCKV MOUNT, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Dramatics
Yackety Yack (1, 2); Bucca-
neer (1, 2, 4); Carolina Magazine
(1, 4) ; Glee Club (2, 3) ; Play-
makers (1, 2, 3, 4).
xn
HAL HAMMER WALKER
ASHEBORO, N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.; LL.l
JOSEPH HERMAN WARD
HERTFORD. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S.
Phi Assembly; Foreign Policy
League ; Carolina Accounting So-
ciety.
LOCKLIN MONROE WARD
WILLARD, N. C.
ge: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Glee Club; Y.M.C.A.
NICK READ: Eurhj lie attaineii
pyomiitence in the class. He made
a splendid President uf the University
Club and helped Bill Hudson run the
Magazine this year.
PAGE 129
Pl-KKI \I\IA\ \\A11,RS
MOORESVILIE, N. C.
EARLE HARRIS WATSON
HENDERSON, N. C.
ROBERT NEAL WATSON WILLIAM H. H. WAUGH, JR.
JONESBORO, N. C. NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C.
Age: 22 — Degree; B.S. Pharmacy Age: 20 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Age: 23— Degree: B.S. Pharmacy ^ge: 21— Degree: B.S. Electrical
Engineering
American Institute of Electrical
Engineering.
MENTER H. WAVNICK, JR.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
LEONARD GREAN WEAVER
HOLLY SPRINGS. N. C.
HENRY GORHAM WEBB
OXFORD. N. C.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B. Music Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Glee Club (1, 2), President (3, 4).
>^fl^?^
/EL
n 4Jj
i
PAGE 130
EFREM WEINSTEIN
JOHN JACKSON WELLS
RAY DEMON W'ESiON
HENRY SHELDON WHITE
REIDSVILLE, N. C.
ROCKY MOUNT. N. C.
CL.\REMONT, N. C.
CHAPEL HILL. N. C.
20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Interdormitory Council (3).
2A
Age: 22— Degree: A.B.
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
DAN P. WHITLEY, JR.
HIGH POINT, N. C.
19 — Degree: A.]
Interdormitory Council (4).
ROBERT WARD WHITLEY
RAEFORD, N. C.
20 — Degree: A.l
Football (1, 2, 3, 4).
AUDREY LILLIAN WILLIAMS
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Sociology
JACOB MEYER WILLIAMS
HENDERSONVILLE. N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree B.S. Chemical
Engineering
American Institute of Chemical
Engineering ; University Symphony
Orchestra.
JESSIE LEWIS: Held clown the
job of cirmtlatioti nvanager of the
publications for three years. Divides
his time evenly between Graham Me-
morial, uptown. an<i trekking around
the campus.
PAGE 1 3 1
mi^-
WUUUliLKX C. WILLIAMS
SWAN QUARTER, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: A.B.
BENJAMIN J. WILLINGHAM KDWARD GLHliN WILLINGHAM MILTON SMITH WILLNER
WILMINGTON, N. C. WILMINGTON, N. C. NEW YORK, N, Y.
Age: 23 — Degree: B.S. Electrical
Engineering
Age: 19 — Degree: B.S. Electrical
Engineering
American Institute of Electrical
Engineers, Treasurer (4).
Age: 23 — Degree: A.B.
GfcORGh WAVLAND WILSON \X OODROW DAVID WILSON BERTRAM MONROE WINKLER
NEWTON GROVE, N. C. HEMP, N. C. NEW YORK, N. Y.
ge: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
ge: 22 — Degree: A.B.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B.
Glee Club; Interdormitory Coun-
re
PAGE 13 2
w^.^
^ IP^
1 1
1 I '
h^lM
JEROME LESTER WINTERS
DAVID WISHNEY
CHARLES KENYON WITHROW
CHARLES HENRY WITTEN
ROCKAWAY PARK, N. Y.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
MOLLIS, N. C.
NEW YORK. N. Y.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Age:
21 — Degree: A.B. Medicine
Age: 24— Degree: A.B.
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
EUGENE PAUL WOLFE
ELKIN, N. C.
ge: 20 — Degree: A.B. Suciology
Class Executive Committee (1,
) ; Y.M.C.A.
JOHN HENRY EARLY WOLTZ
GASTONIA, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: A.B. Chemistry
Y.M.C.A.; Playmakers; Cheer
Leader (1).
PHILLIP HUGH W'OODb
HILLSBORO, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Mechanical
Engineering
Phi Assembly (}, 4); Y.M.C.A.;
American Society of Mechanical En-
gineers.
HARR\- COBB WOOTEN
KINSTON, N. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
BILL McLEAX: Wlien the P. D.
board appointed Bill to succeed Eli
Joyner as business manager of The
Daily Tar Heel, everyone knew he
would have to go mighty fast to keep
pace with his predecessor. Bill not
only kept up to Eli's standard, but he
set a n^w and faster pace. Always
on the job, he organized an efficient
and cooperative staff. He deserves the
title: "Best business man on the
campus."
PAGE 13 3
BLAND WALLACE WORLEY, JR. ELMER ALEXANDER WRENN FRANKLIN LaFAYETTE WRENN CHARLOTTE LANE WRIGHT
KINSTON. N. C. GREENSBORO, N. C. SILER CITY, N. C. RALEIGH, N. C.
Age: 20 — Degree: B.S. Cummerce
Phi Assembly.
ex- .\*n
Age: 24 — Degree: B.S. Commerce Age: 22 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
Football; Track; Monogram Club; Y.M.C.A.; Interdormitory Council
YM.C.A. (4).
Age: 19 — Degree: A.B.
Playmakers (1, 2, 3, 4).
JOHN DAWSON YEOMANS
WASHINGTON. D. C.
Age: 21 — Degree: B.S. Commerce
German Club.
KA
XEHIOR
CLAJJ
1936
GEORGE LEWIS YOUNG
DURHAM, N. C.
Age: 20— Degree: A.B.; LL.l
JOSEPH RUTLHDGE YOUNG
CHARLESTON, S. C.
Age: 22— Degree: A.B.; LL.B.
PAGE 1 34
JOYNER
HONOR COMMITTEE
William Campbell, Voit Gilmore, A. H. Graham, Jr., Wil-
liam Hendrix, George Nethercutt.
DANCE COMMITTEE
Chairman, William J. Cole; Johnson Harris, Badger Hobbs,
John Larson, Allen Truex, Charles Wales.
JUNIOR
CLASS
OFFICERS
President Jim McMurray Joyner
Vice-President William Hendrix
Treasurer Felix Markham
Secretary George Melvin Williams, Jr.
Student Council Representative Henry Hudson
PAGE 13 6
Junior Executive Committee
Front Rou; Left to Right — Seawell, Malone, Hudson. Joyner. Winters. Allen.
Second Ron; Left to Right — Campbell. McLean. Fry. Dalton. King. Kline. Moore.
Balding.
Third Rou; Left to Right — Karlin, Cheek, Eutsler, Tillery.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Malcolm Allen, James Balding, William Campbell, Jack King, Chuck Kline, Elizabeth Malone, James McLean, John
Cheek, Robert Dalton, Edwin T. Elliot, Keith Eustler, Tom A. Moore, William A. Raney, Jack Seawell, June Tillery,
Fry, Bud Hudson, Clarence Joyce, Edward Karlin, Johnson Douglas Welfare, Elsa Winters, Vaughan Winborne.
PAGE 137
Ricliard Eustace Aiken
Molly Albritton
HOPKINSVII.I.E, KY.
Herbert H. Alexander
ELIZABETH CITY, N. C.
Malcolm Burdette Alle
AURORA, N. C.
w iPi nil ^\ it-,uii w tu
BKONXMLLI , .S. ^.
ATI)
John Inge Anderson
REIDSVILLE, N. C.
Troy Arthur Apple
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Frances Gray Archer William Griffin Arey. Jr.
^•IX, ARJZOXA SHELBY, N. C.
2N
PAGE 1 3i
^
%
Joseph Psi Axel rod
Adelaide Bailey
BLUEFIELD, W. VA.
James H. Pou Bailey
RALKIGH. X. C.
ATQ
James Palmer Balding, Jr.
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
Harry Amos Bartlett
MT. VERNON, N. Y.
Dan M. Beattle
GREENVILLE, S. C.
le Ramsey Berkeley
NORFOLK, VA.
2N
Robert Matthew Bernstein
Vnn \\ton Bishop
WINCHESTER, KY.
Harold Edwin Bissett
BAILEY, N. C.
i
William Murphy Bowman
LCMBERTOX, N. C.
€>K2
Ralph Mayne Bragdon
MELROSE, MASS.
James Ballard Brame
DURHAM, N. C.
William Samuel Bridges
UMBKRTON. N. C.
*K2
PAGE 140
Le\erett F Bristol
MOXTCl MR V J
Ben
(I
\ ^ (^ -f >
Km Tie Bnic'kni:
ll il J,^^
James Taylor Brooks Walter Ramlall Brook
GREENSBORO, N. C. i'lTTSBORO. N. C.
AKE
Walter Anderson Bunch, Jr
d.iii Hiuri-.
" MOl'NT, N. C.
ATfi
Isaac James Bynum Alan Taliaferro Calhoun
PITTSBORO, N. C. TRYON, X. C.
William Blount Campbell, Jr.
^VILM^NGTON, N, C.
Robert Carp
BROOKLINF., MASS
ZBT
Jack Allan Cheek
John Cirahani Clark I.onnie Onimess Clark. Jr
GRKENVILLE, N. C. TARBORO, N. C.
*rA *rA
Herbert Ross Cary-Ehves
aJ^Sfe'**^*-
Hayclen Croxton Clement R Eiskine Clements
SALISBURY. N. C. HENDERSON, N C
AKE Z4'
Clarence Dowell Coburn IVilliam MeWhorter Cochrane Gretchen Cocke
ROANOKE RAPIDS, N. C. NEWTON, N. C. ASHEVILLE, N. C.
nB*
William Vincent Conn
Ricliard Coogan
George Herbert Cooper
Xa
ncy Gray Couglienoui
TEANECK, N. J.
BRYX MAWR, PA.
PHILADELPHIA. PA.
SALISBURY. N. C.
Frank Calvin Cox
STALEY, N. C.
Ernest Craige
EL I'ASO. TEXAS
2N
PAGE 142
\\illiMiii Kfiiiiit Crawlc
Tliomas Whittington Crockett Olive Echols Cruiksliank Dominic Antliony Cuiiizzclla
lAMSTON. N.
Ivvtcllc Wyse Cuddy Robert Ervin Cunningham
William Mansfield Daniel
ATLANTA, CA.
2AE
Glenn Benson Davis, Jr.
CORONADO. CALIF,
ATfi
JfcDonald Davis. Jr.
CLIXTON, N, C,
^.^^mgfi^m
'^'tM^^*
1
.^m.
^Aii^
Lonnie Davis Dill
MOREHE^D CITY, N. C,
nKA
PAGE 144
Ben Fianl<lin Dixon Josepli Van S. Donaldson Raymond Hill Dudlc
RALEIGH. X. C. IMTTSBLRGH, PA. GUILFORD, COW.
ATfi
John H. Eddleman
GASTOXIA, X. c.
2A
Lutlier Kenneth Edwards
STANTOXSBCRG, X. C.
ex
Seymour Eisenberg Edwin Timanus Elliot
WINSTOX-SALE.M, X. C. PHILADELPHIA, PA.
TEn
Paul Hayes Etheridge. Jr. Stnart Keith Eutsle
KENLY, X. C. GOLDSBORO, X. C.
2X
Gcdlfre Kiissoll Fautctte Mary Louise Felkel
Moses Lacy Feiulley, .Ir
2X '
Henianl Fink
Carl MlJlra^ Fi^lc
Henry Hunter Fitts Carey Hunter Fleinijig, Jr
Katliryn Briggs Fleming Strotlier Callaway Fleming
WILSON'. N. C. ATLANTA, GA
ITB* 2AE
Jlie L.iuibell 1-iel.'
O.^^h.M.N
John Barba Fletcher James Pleasant Floyil
ASHEVILLE. N. C. OXFORD, X. C.
R. C;uy Flyiit
NSTOX-SALEM. N
AXA
Cius E. F^oi bes. Jr. Wayne Alexander Fonvielle. Jr
(.Rl-r WILLI , N. C. WILMINGTON. N. C.
Robert Stevens Fowlei-
BAHWAY. N. J.
2*E
Mary Hetty French
NhW YORK. N. Y.
nB*
^mmwm
Benjamin DiNon Gaddy. Jr. Ellis Patrick GacUly
Samuel Belton Galloway
Rutli Louise Garrett
Memrie Gary
Marvin Herbert Gewolb Virginia Marie Giddens
NEW YORK, N. Y, TALLAHASSEE, FLA.
\'v\t Gilniore
SSTON-SALE.M. X
Hillard Gold
Murray Goldberg
John Edward Goode
Carol Sophie Goodmc
BRIK)KLYX, N. V.
HEMPSTEAD, X. Y.
SHREVEPORT, LA.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
*A
AEn
KA
PAGE 146
!
William Howard Criffin Harold Irvin Gross Martha McDowell Gunter Thomas Wesley Gurney Henry Calvin (iuy
WILLIA.MSTOX. N. C. KIXSTON, N. C. GASTONIA. N. c. BLRLIXGTON. \'ER.MONT CHAPEL HILL, N.
TE* xn
Kranklin Wills Hanojik
OXFORD. N. c.
Z'l'
Victor Fi-hvi- 11, nil. T
GREENSBonn. N. c.
2X
William Capehart Han
' a'ke'
WiHiam Euiene Harringlon
WASHINGTON-, N. C.
Julian Mixoii Iln
jl-RimA. N. c.
Tliomas Carroll Haywuod
.icihn Steele Heiide
2N " ' '
WilHam Houston Hendrix, Jr.
GRFFXSBORO, X. C.
Ben
Carlisle Wallace Higgiiis. Jr. Walter Carrinston Hiiderman Eusene Bennett Hill
GREENSBOBO, N. C. SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. SPINDALE, N. C.
»s^
M
%
mi
^J^
fri^^jfii^^yjli
Mary Taylor Hilinant Clialles Edwin Hinsdale Charles Lewis Hinton
BEAUFORT, N. C. Hi^NDERSONVILLE, X. C. ri.lZABETII CITi', N. C.
Hc-iIhtI II. Ilir^chfeld
Milton Earl Hogan. Jr.
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
ATn
Thomas Hall Holmes Frank Petty Holton, Jr.
WELIM)X, X. C. LEXINGTON. N. C.
KA k::
Albert Hamilton 11
Julia Sanders Holt
PRJNCETOX, X. C.
Ernest Elmer Hoiiake
■ William Houeyeutt Basil Toiirneur Horslleld, Jr
AI'E.\, N. C. PITTSBURGH, PA.
K* AT"
PAGE 1 5
Lillian Pope Howell Clarence Fletcher Howell Henry Edward Hudson Edward Cortner Huffman
ENFIELD, N. C. WHITAKERS, N. C. ASHEVILLE, N. C. SHELBYVILLE, TENN".
Jane Hunter
CULLOWHEE, N. C.
Mary Frances Hunter
RALEIGH, X. C.
Xfi
T7^
L.ois Jean Illenherser
^,
4
^
diaries Robert Kline
rARTHAGE, N. C.
PAGE 1 52
** f f-^ ^ 1:^ ^"
Eriu.liimes I.addey
MONTCLAIR, N. J.
Ethel Grace Laidla-
WESTERN SPRINGS, IH..
Ben Jackson Lamb
KOCKWOOD, TENN.
Clive Wayne Laney
Ralpli Beach Laney
H. Lee Large, Jr.
John R. Larsen
Janet Lawrence
HICKORY, N. C.
HICKORY, N. C.
ROCKY MOUNT, N. C.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
ex
nB*" '
Mary Locksley Long
RfTHERFORDTON, N. C.
William Lunsford Long
2AE '
lUiiry Ilaiojd Lorch
George Mallett MacXider
PAGE 154
tL *■ ■'■ ™
John Henry McCortl
ATI.AXTA, HA.
Gilbert Stanley McCutclK
BHIHil^k. MI^^^M ■'iBimr:<
llaniiltun MeMillan Gideon Hunt Maeun. Jr. Elizabeth Morrison Malone Felix Donaldson Marklmni Edward M. Marsh. Jr
RED SPRINGS, N. C. WARRENTON, N. C. CLARKSDALE, MISS. DL'RHAM, N. C. MARSH\1LLE, N. C.
Albert .Maynard
Paul Barrinser Means. Jr.
TRENTON. N. J.
LJi.^
Emerson Wilson Meares
CERRO GORDO, N. C.
PAGE 1 56
George Lemuel Mewborn, Jr. August Leger Meyland, Jr
SNOW HILL, N. C. WILMINGTON, N. C.
X* AEA
Elizabeth Amis Montgomery Vincent M Montsinger Hiir\ A\ atson Moore Thomas Gracey Morgan
BASKERVILLE. VA. PITTSFIELD, MASS. RALF.K.H, N. C. CANTON, N. C.
X*
!f*^trii» ji
£d^f*^-*v
'*^. TP
Richard Tliomas Mye
Thomas Jerome Myers
Elmer Paul Na
Edwin Harold Niven Joseph Robert Nixuii, .1
MONROE, N. c.
Elizabeth Wells Norcross Leon Willingham Norlieet Hugh D. Ogbur
SMITHFIELD, N. C. WIXSTON-SALEM. N. C. AI'EX, N
Horaoe Palmer
LITTLETON, N, C.
I
Brooks Patten
Anne Donnell Patterson
Ca
rver .1. Peacock
James Edward Peacock
ILMIN'CTOV X C
HILLSBORO, N. C.
BENSON-. X. c.
FREMONT. N. C.
<i>Ae
Williniii Arthur Pearson 1 uli i 11.. u. ii Peebles Man hisie Penil.. 1 1.
PAGE 1 5 i
'^'Wi
nimt*^
T
Car] Selwyn Pugh Robert Hubbard Putney, Jr.
ELM CITY, N, C.
Robert E. Ramsay
William Alexander Raney Edward Ray Rankin
GOI.DSBORO. N-, C. CHINA GROVE, N. C.
ATl>
John Watkins Rankin
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
NEBLLFF, N. C.
immmw
^^
Leah Robinson Frank Mandeville Ro
ASHEVILLK, X, C. FLORKNCE. S. C.
■t>\e
1 homas Russell Roper
PAGE 160
William Lee Rufty
Joe Brent Russell
Marsaret SaliiTi
Sidney Melvin Schwartz
Il;ir(.lil l.au.-k Sa-e
Melvin Saliiilsky
Terry Sanforcl
Francis Stewart Saunde
John Quincy Seawell. Jr.
WIXSTOX-SALEM, N. C.
m^mm^^
W^i
'^^^^^mi'^m^^
PAGE 1 r, 2
Huniplirt-y Hathaway
Kenneth Spence Tanner. Jr
RLTHEItFL
2AE. AEA
4r«
Ualph Ciordoii Teinpletod
Henry Theoiloric Terry. Jr. ((irnelia Lee Tliigpen
CHAI'EL HILL, X. C. KIKKY MOl'NT, N. C.
.iDliii Wati sTIiomas. Jr
J(iel C. TlKiiiip.^OTi Jiiliii Cleveland Tlionip.wn I'anl Hewitt Thoinpsi
PAGE 164
'M'
Harvey Blair Tyiulall
Douslas Randolph Uinstead
Wingate Boushall Upton Ricliard Alexander Urquliart. Jr.
BELCROSS, N. C. WOODVILLE, X. C.
KA
Frank Hart Wakeley
z4, ■ ■ ■ ■
?m^M
m^»tm*^
Lovett Alilin Warren. Jr.
George David WaUoii William I'aul Weil
NORWOOD. PA. IIREENVILLE, MISS.
lien ZBT
PAGE 166
L-^:.^
Claud KolH-rson Wheat!)- .luliii Riiffiii Wliel.
BEAll-dRT. N. C. SPRING HOl'E, X. (
fiM^M
Hofmann Wilso
K \ '
retej- Tliomas Wilsi
z;'ae
Vaugliaii Sharp Winbor
^*
I
Kiitlierford Xaiice Yeates
Harry Clay Yeatman
COLUMBIA, TENN.
2N
PAGE 168
^e^-
SOPHOMOME CLASS
Executive Committee
First Ron; Left to Right — Wilson. Clark. Podwika. Britt. Pitts, Zink, Premo, Fairley.
Second Ron: Left to Right — DoRSEY, Burkhimer. Hall. Shiller, Ficklen, Katzenberg.
Gatten, Davis.
OFFICERS
President Tom Pitts
Vice-President Walter Clark
Secretary George Zink
Treasurer Bennett Hunter
Student Council Representative Richard Worley
HONOR COUNCIL— Richard Worley, Tom Pitts, Jim
Davis, Stuart Ficklen, Foy Robertson.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE— Mitchell Britt, Chairman;
Bert Premo, Stuart Ficklen, James Davis, Jack Fairley,
DeWitt Barnett, John Dorsey, Roy Clark, Sidney Shiller,
Harry Gatton, Charley Rider, John Podwika, A. S. Katzen-
berg, James Adams, A. C. Hall, Joe Wilson, Devon Benton,
Robert Wheaton, Philip Walker, W. P. Burkhimer, G. E.
Zink.
PAGE 170
^^
AcKERMAN, Donald Godfrey
Adams, Thomas McCall
Adams, James David
Aid, George Charles, Jr.
Akers, Samuel Henry
Aleskovsky. Bernie
Alexander, Robert Galt
Alperin. Ralph Milton
Anderson, John Inge, Jr.
Anderson. William George
Andrews, Robert Clyde, Jr.
Armentrout, Hal Byerly, II
Attmore. George Sitgreaves
Augenbleck, Harold Mitchell
Austin, Harold
Bachrach, Herbert
Bady, David J.
Bailey', Frank G.
Bailey, James Ruffin
Bailey, M. Thomas
Banner, Frederick E.
Barbano, Allen R.
Barber. Robert Kennard
Barnes. John Bailey, Jr.
Barnett, Henry DeWitt
Baron, Leonard Bernard
Barrett, Richard J.
Bartlett, Amos Harry
Batchelor. Lee G.
Batten. James William
Beadles. Nicholas Aston
Bell. John Williamson
Bell. William F., Jr.
Benton, Atlas D.
Benton. William L.
Berbert, Robert, Jr.
Berdan. Fred H., Jr.
Bergs, Norman Adrian
Berini, Dante Alighieri
Berkeley, Greene R., Jr.
BissETT, Harold E.
Blackmer, Walter S., Ill
Blalock, William R.
Bloom, Allan Ira
Blount. Frederick Alexander
Blumenthal. Philip
BoAK, Joseph, III
BoLiCK, Oscar Whetzell
Bonner, John Hare, Jr.
Bowman, David Harry
Bowman, Joseph Orland, Jr.
Boyd. Darwin Hudson, Jr.
BoYKiN, James M.
Brafford. Tommy Newton
Branca, Albert Arthur
Brantly, Joseph Marion, Jr.
Brantly, Julian Chisolm, Jr.
Brawley. Robert Sumter
Briggs. John Hibery. Jr.
Briggs, Oliver David
Brill, James Robert
Britt, Albert M.
Britt. Gary I.
Britt, John Gay
Broadwell, Walter Japert, Jr.
Brooks. Clyde Albert
Brown, Ernest Allan
Brown, Humphrey Butler
Brown, James Asbury
Brown, Robert Frederick, Jr.
Brown. Thurston Cross
Bryan, William You land
Bryant, James Spencer
Buck, Alfred
Budden, Walter Kenneth
Burkhimer, Walton Pete
Burns, Benjamin Oliver
Busby, John Carroll
Butler, Charles Redden
Butler, William Medearis
Caldwell, Lan Harrill
Caldwell, Victor Summers
Cannon, Corbett Carlton
Carpenter. Willis Thom.\s, Jr.
Carr, Albert Gallatin
Carr. George Watts, Jr.
Carrier, Henry Nash, Jr.
Carter, Carney Blake
Carter, James Wilburn
Carter, John Dandridge, Jr.
Carter, Sam Tim
Cartier, Roderic Walter
Carver. Alexander Henry, Jr.
Cash. Hugh Pfohl
Casterton, Robert John
Gates, Clyde Hogan, Jr.
Cavanaugh. Walter Vann, Jr.
Cecil. Hammett Andrew, Jr.
Chesnutt, James Moseley, Jr.
Chiles, James Richard
Chisholm, William Washington
Clark, Robert Lee
Clark, Roy Edward
Clark, Walter
Coble, Henry Luther
Coble, Zebulon Vance
Cockerham, Grady Hoke
CoGHiLL, Julian Baxter, Jr.
Cohen. Morton
Cole. Thomas Whelless
Cook. Frederick Thomas
Cook, John Samuel, Jr.
Cooper, Jack Porter
Corey, James Harold
Corpening. Robert Bruce. Jr.
CoRPENiNG, William
CoRRUBiA, James
Council, Robert H.
Covington. Vann Buren
CowPER. William Riddick
Cox. Frank Warren
Cox. Robert Martin. Jr.
Creech, Victor Herman, Jr.
Crockett, Thomas Whittington
Cross, Richard Douglas
Crouse, Irwin Dewey
Crump, William Carter
CuNEO. Frank Nylam
CuRRiE, James Sloan
CuRRiN, Ralph Hicks
Daniel. William Roscoe
Darnell. William Joseph
Darracott, Joseph Gamewell
Davidson. Howard Melton. Jr.
Davis. Isaac Peter. Jr.
Davis. James Evans
Davis, Platt Walker, Jr.
Dawson. Courtland Wharton
DE Guzman, Robert
D'Elia. Pierino Francis
Denning, Daniel Wilson, Jr.
Dennis. Lemuel Franklin, Jr.
Desich. Daniel
Dfviney, Forest Edward
Dick. Randolph McLeod
DiCKERSON, Edward Ray
Dickson, Alvis Barnes
Diffendal. Charles Edward
Dillon, William Austin, Jr.
Dilworth. Edward Bentley
DoNiGER. Martin Jacob
Dorsey. John Nelson, Jr.
Doty. Robert Woodburn
Driver. Harry Fleming
Drucker. Bertram Morris
Drucker, Murray
Drye. Lane Cox
Dunn. Elwood McDonald, Jr.
Dunn. Wallace Stanhope
Durham. Hollis Martin
Dye. William Thomson. Jr.
Early. D.wid
Easter. Olen Cordell
Edijcards. Charles Henry, Jr.
V.;'
'^' Av 1
Edwards, Maurice Niles
Elder. Fred Kingsley, Jr.
English. Charles Elwood
EwiNG. James Miller
Faircloth, James Bascom. Jr.
Fairley. Jack Phifer
Faison. Beverley Adams
Farish. Edward Philipe
Feuchtinger. Carl J., Jr.
FiCKLEN. Louis Stuart
Fields. James Ellis. Jr.
Finch, John Clinard
Fink. Clarence Everett
FisHBACH. Kenneth J.
Fisher. Dolphus Taylor
Fleming. John Boyd
Ford. Lamar Hunter
Forrest. Ernest Graham
Forrest. Turner Joe
Foss. Hugh Hill
Fountain. Archie Don
Fowler. Joseph Thomas
Fox. Albert A.
Frank. Robert Berliner
Freeman. Felton Dale
French. Edward Davis
Friedland. Elias
Fulenwider, Jesse Lamar. Jr.
Gammans. George Henry
Gans. Gene Eddy
Ganslen. Norman John
Gant. Kenneth. Jr.
Gatton. Thomas Henry
Gayce. Jerry Winston
Geddie. Frank Alexander
Geer. Milton LIfford
Geller, Daniel
George, John Philip
Gemayel, George Niome
Gewolb, Marvin Herbert
Ghegan, Drury Willia
GiANAKOs, Nick Louis
Gilchrist, Royal Lee. Jr.
Giles. Leonard Vincent, Jr.
Gill. Arthur Donald
Gips, Richard Emil
Glicksberg, Aaron Baer
Goodwin, Robert Daniels
Gordon. Robert Bernard
Gordon. William Jones. Jr.
Grady. Charles Leland
Grady. Lester Ottie
Gragg. Wilford Harris
Green. Allan Jones
Green. Samuel. II
Greenebaum. John Frederick
Gregg. Eugene Stuart. Jr.
Griffin. William Glenn
Grimes. William Embrey
GUDGER. VONNO LaMAR, Jr.
GuiON, Edwin Howard
GuNTER, Charles Walker, Jr.
Gunterberg, Charles C, Jr.
GuNTHER. Philip Hoghton
Hall. Alonzo Cleveland. Jr.
Hall. Stanley Eugene
Halperin. Bertram Charles
Hambright. James Carl, Jr,
Hamer. Marion Sims
Hamilton, Frederick Bruce
Hamilton, Albert Broadus
Hampton, Edward Bolton. Jr.
Hamrick. Alton B.
Hancock. John Marshall
Hardy. Frederick Thornett
Harmon. Martin Luther
Harrelson. George David
Harris. John Brame
Harris. Henry William
Harrison. O.scar Andrus
Harvey. Thomas Hyman. Jr.
Harwood. William Fowle
Hauptman, Joseph
Heath, Thomas Woodley, Jr.
Hedrick, R. E.
Hedrick, Robert Welborn, Jr.
Henderson. William Ward. Jr.
Hermaon. Robert Edward
Hester. Joseph McMurkay
Hicks. Donald Cade. Jr.
Hicks. James Franklin
Higgins. Thomas Dupree. Jr.
Hight. Fred Morton
Hike. Harold Francis
Hilfman. Julius
Hill. Robert Hugh, Jr.
Hine. Charles James
HiNES. William Walker
HiNKLE. Bruce Edgar
Hinsdale. Charles Edwin
HiNTON. Charles Lewis
HiRscH, Samuel
Hobbs. Vance K.
HoLBRooK. Philip Brown
Holeman, Benjamin Franklin
Holland, William Walter
Holman. Joseph Wright, Jr.
Holmes. Frank Marion
HoLROYD. Robert Posten
Holzman. Franklyn Dunn
Hooper. Lawrence Hoskins
Horne. Lawrence Melton
Hough. Joe Dillon
Howard. David Asbury
Howell. Logan Douglas
HoYLE. John Decator
Hubbard. Edwin Archibald
Humphreys. Charles Allen
Hunter. Bennett Haskin
HuRwiTz. Clement
Hurwitz. Norman
Hyatt, Carl Battle
IsENHowER, Samuel Holeman
Jackson, Gilbert Ellis
Jaquett, Hance, Jr.
Jennings. Coles Royce
Johnson. Francis W.
Johnson. Horace Woodrow
Johnson, James Lawrence, Jr.
Johnson, Paul Hayne
Johnson. Stacy
Johnson. William Steele
Jonas. Harvey Adolphus. Jr.
Jones. Cyril
Jones. George Spencer
Jones. James Franklin
Jones. William Gerald
Jones. William Miller
Jordan, Wade Garland
Jordan. William M., Jr.
JosLiN, John Devereux
Kaikstein, Martin Bernard
Kaplan. William
Kapralis. George Clarence
Karesh. William Marshall
Karol. Ralph Lawrence
Katzenburg. Alexander Stephens
Kaufman. Edward
Keadle. Robert Franklin
Kennedy. Phillip Thomas
Keys. Thomas Bland
King. Guilbert Harold
KiRKPATRiCK. James Taylor
Kiss. Howard ^L■\ILLARD
Klein. Seymour Joseph
Klitenick. Norman Daniel
Klutz. Samuel Irvin
Knickerbocker. William P.
Knight. William Everrette
Koch. Robert Alan
Lacock. James Glasson
Lamm. Greyard Byrn
Lamont. James George
Lane. Julian Jay. Jr.
11
Lane. Melvin Oliver. Jr.
Langs.'\m. Herbert David
Lasser. Kenneth Julian
Latham. John Leslie. Jr.
Laurens. Henry
Laurens. John
Lawrence. James F., Jr.
Lee. Newton Clayton
Lehman. Arno Emil
Leonard. W. H., Jr.
LiPSKY. Edmund Sanford
LiPSKY. George
LisKiN. Harold
Little. Charles Smith
Little. Robert Dale
LoYD. Allen Alexander
Loftin. Leonard Warren
Long. Jennings Jackson
Long. Thom.\s W. Mason, Jr.
Lowe, Arthur Clyde
Lowe. William Cabell
Lowenthal. Franklin Laurence
LowRY. Elmer Francis, Jr.
Lutz. Horace C.
Lynch. John Franklin
Mack. Washington Lee
Mager. Joseph
Magoffin. John Willard
Malone. David Henry
March. Harry Andrew
Martin. Broadus Wellington
Martin. Fernander Curtis
Mathes. Albert D.
Maynard. Eugene Vincent
Mayo, John Alfred. Jr.
McCaig, Arthur Walker
McCallum. James William
McClure. James Richard Charles
McColl. Duncan Donald, Jr.
McConaughy, Pierce Rogers
McCulloch, Norman B.
McDuFFiE. George
McIntosh. Thomas Jonathan
McIvER. Vance Craymore
McKinney, Charles Asbury
McLean. James Kenneth
McLemore. Robert Alderman
McNeill. John Albert
McPherson, Samuel Dace
McQuade, Thomas Albert
Means. Victor Albert
Megson. Edward Heywood
Melchor. Charles Floyd
Meroney. William Hyde, III
Merkitt, Neville Francis
Meserole, Arch
Meserole, Walter Briggs
Meyer, Herbert Saul
Meyerowitz, Irving
Michael. John Gillespie
Miller. Jerry
Miller, John Arthur
Miller. William Milton
MiLNER. Robert Stanley
Mims. Hubert Edwin
MiRABiTo. John Armando
Mitchell. Courtney. Jr.
Mitchell. Edward Joyce
Mittleman. Seymour
Moore. Charles Edward. Jr.
Moore. Charles Lee
Moore, David Moss
Moore. Edward Townsend
Morgan. James V.
Morgan. Thomas Bernard. Jr.
Morris. William Britton
Morrow. P. D., Jr.
Mueller, Edward Robert
Muncie, Douglas Jennings
Murchison, David Reid, Jr.
MuRCHisoN. Powell
Murphy. Thomas Lynch
MURRELL. J. HOLCOMBE. Jr.
Music John Joseph
Myers, Finley Bradshaw, Jr.
Nance, Evander Theodore, Jr.
Nash, James Mallory
Nanney, Allan Douglas
Newton, William Sims
Nicholson, George Edward, Jr.
Nicholson. Henry Gilliam
NisBET, John Malcolm
Nordan. Thomas Bernard
Norman, Winford Walter
Norwood, Joseph Roby, Jr.
Ochsman. Victor
Off. Walter Francis. Jr.
Ogburn, William Hubert
Oglesby, Carroll Dean
Olson, Richard William
Osgood. Emory Montgomery
Owen, Jennoss Russell
Papy, Hugh Roberts
Parker. Charlotte Evelyn
Parker, John Webster
Parker, Lester Leonidas, Jr.
Parker. Romulus B.
Patterson. Earl Victor, Jr.
Patterson. Nicky Demus. Jr.
Penn. Frank Reid. Ill
Perrin. George Edward. Jr.
Perrin. James Wardlaw
Perrotta. James
Perry. Edward Owen. Jr.
Perry, Fitzhugh Lee
Peschau, Henry Bose
Pessar, Seymour Henry
Peterman. Daniel Nfff
Philip. Petree
Phillips. Guy Berryman
Philips, Henry Hyman. Jr.
Phillips. Carl Frederick
Phillips, Henry Matt
Pindar. Norris Tebeau. Ill
Pitman. William Harvey. Jr.
PiTTMAN. JiMMIE LINCOLN
Pitts. Thomas Remery
Plonk. George Webb
PoDwiKA. John Edward
Pope. Richard Hunter. Jr.
Potter. Franklin Willard
Premo, Bert Leo
Provo, John Randolph
Pruitt, Charles Conly, Jr.
Pustilnik. Jack
PuTZEL. Charles Lewis, Jr.
Pyne. James Minetree
QuiNA. Robert Marshall
Radman, George
Ralston. George Francis
Rankin. Edward Lee, Jr.
Rankin. Rufus Grady. Jr.
Rawlings. William Henry
R.-vwls. Jack R.
Reece. Sanford Miller
Reich. Edwin Charles
Richardson. William Youman
Richter. Horace
Rider. Charles Franklin
Ritchie. Ned Coggin
ROBERSON. FOY. Jr.
Rolfe. Shelley Robert
Rose. Leslie William, Jr,
Rosen. Lewis Leon
Rosenberg. Morris Willlam
Ross. James McCausland
Ross. Otho Bescent
Ross. Theodore Micholas
Rountree. Eugene Cleaper
RoYALL. Kenneth Claiborne. Jr.
Royster. Thomas Broadway
RoYSTFR. Thomas Sampson
Ruger. Willi \m Batterman
Rush. Richard Caswell, Jr.
ftm^
Riiss. Robert Barrett
Saleeby. Ele George
Sapp, Cloud Napoleon. Jr.
Scales. Junius Irving
ScHiNDLER, Harry
ScHUCK, Martin Fredrick
Schulken. Roger Moore
Seaver. Edwin Pliny. Ill
Seawell. William Lawrence, Jr.
Senter. Lloyd Morgan
Shapiro. Herbert
Sheffield. James Russell
Sheperd. Marshall McLaney
Shiller. Sidney
Shoaf. David Harold. Jr.
Shull. William Henry
Shure. Alvin Abraham
SiEVFRS. Wifder David
Silverman. Norman Michael
Simmons. Ray'mond Harvey
Simpson. Clarence Grady
Singletary. John Bradley
Slagle. Charles Albert
Sleboda. Anthony John
Sloan. Robert Stanley
Slotnick, Lee
Smith. Herbert. Jr.
Smith. Leon Wriston
Smith. Wiley
SosNowiTz. LeRoy AllAN
Sparrow. Richard Whitehead
Spivey. Richard Wood
Stacy. Edney Webb
Stallings. Harry Forrell. Jr.
Stanback. Thomas Melville. Jr.
Stanton. Herbert Charles. Jr.
Stein. Sanford
Stem, Fred Boothe
Stern. Milton
Stern, William Alfred
Stevens, Edwin Jordan
Stewart. Henry L.
Stirnweiss. George Henry
Stockton. Henry Haines
Stoff. Jerry
Stone. Warren Gamaliel
Strain. Robert Walter
Strickland. Ernest Dalton
Strickland. Thomas Edward
Strowd. Stancill McLeod
Stroyman. Sumner
Sumner. Paul P.
Sumner. Robert Ernest
Sutton. Louis Volvelle. Jr.
SviGALS. Chester Sidney
Swann. Boyst Blae
SwARTz. Russell Sylvester
Talton. James Louis
Taylor. Benjamin Franklin
Taylor, Edwin Valentine
Taylor. John M., Jr.
Taylor, Tom Northington
Teague. William Goldston
Tenenblatt. William
Terhune. Franklin John
Thibaut. John Walter
Thigpen, S. Hassell
Thomas. Lynn Patrick
Thompson. David Elmon
Thompson. Joseph Roscoe
Thompson. Neil Howard
Thorne. Edgar Faulcon
Tick. Seymour Simon
Toms, Bate Carpenter, Jr.
Topping, Ira Jerome
Townsend. Montgomery Odell
Trainor. Edward. Jr.
Trotman. Herbert Holland
Trotman. John Franklin
Troutman, Drewry Eugene
Truitt, Virgil, Jr.
Turner. Benjamin Frye
Turner. Frank Licius
Turner. Lawson Withers
Tyler. John E.
Tynan. John Carroll
Upchurch. Silas Gibbs
Utley. Alton Judd
Van Kirk. James David
Vaughan. Dewitt Talmadge. Jr.
Vernon. William Abdon
VicK. John Council
Vickers. Lewis Donald
Vincent. Edwin George
Vincent. John Fletcher
Vinson. Charles Julian
Vinson. William Bryant
Vitriol. Jerome I.\win
Walker. Phillip Alfred
Walker. Stanley R.
Walker. William Kennedy
Walker, William Thomas
Wall, Walter Ashe
Wallace, Fitzhugh Ellsworth
Wallace, John Adams
Wallach, Paul
Ward. Donald Clifton
Warren. Elmer Charles
Warren. Roy Cooper
Watkins. Carlton Gunter
Watkins. Cutler, Jr.
Weaver. Elizabeth Weaver
Webb. Jesse Alton
Webb, William Henry
Weeks, Micajah Mattocks
Weil, William Paul
Wfintraub, Herman Harvey
Weiss, Harold
Weiss, Murray Herbert
Wheat, Roberdeau, III
Whedbee. James Carson
Wheeler. Raymond Milner
Whisnant, Robert Adam
White. Richard Street. Ill
Whitfield. Nathan Patrick
Whyte, Stanley Sheldon
Wilk. Seymour
Wilkerson. Charles Bagnes. Jr.
Wilkinson. George Alexander
Williams. Franklin Simmons
Williams. James Edward. Jr.
Williams. Martin Hildred
Williams. Ralph Bertram. Jr.
Williamson. Oliver Wayne
Williamson. Wilbur Munroe
Willis. Thomas J.
WiLLOUGHBY, InEZ
Wilson, Hunter
Wilson. John Kenyon. Jr.
Wilson. Joseph Woodrow
Wilson. Norbert Dahnson
WiNSTEAD. Edwin Godley
WiNSTEAD. William Alonzo
Wolfe. Herbert-
Wood. Charles Edward
Woodward. Robinson
Wooten. Cecil William
Worth. William Holladay
Wray. Walter Harriel
Wrey. William James
Wright. David Bryan
Wright. Richard Stanley
Yelton, Ernest Hugh
Young. Carl
Young. Dolph Moore. Jr.
Young. Homer Clifton
Yount. Ernest Harshaw, Jr.
Zimmerman. Frank Coxe
Zink. George Eno
ZuCKERMAN. EdWARD
l»-
PP'-" ' r
FMESHMAN CLASS
Executive Committee
First Row, Left to Right — BoLES, McRae, Siewers. Lambeth, Hand.
Second Row, Left to Right — Alexander, Forrest, Doty, Mitchell.
OFFICERS
President Christian Siewers
Vice-President Cameron McRae
Secretary Walter Lambeth
Treasurer William Hand, Jr.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE— Syd B. Alexander, Skipper
Bowles, Frank Bavier Doty, Stephen Taylor Forrest, Reddy
Gatewood Grubbs, William Hand, Walter Lambeth, Cam-
eron McRae, David Mitchell, Sidney Sadoff, Christian
Siewers.
HONOR COUNCIL — Christian Siewers, Hargrove
Bowles, Syd B. Alexander, Reddy Grubbs, Sidney Sadoff,
William Dees, Edward Maner, Robert Carroll.
PAGE 1 76
^
'^'
Mi
74 kr^
'^ ml'^
t>-
Adams, Willlam Dennis, Jr.
Adler, Milton Sidney
Adler, Mortimer
Aiken, Ben Warren
Albro, William Cecil
Alexander, James Cadwell
Alexander, Syndenham Benomi
Alford, Pall Augustus
Allen, Lloyd
Allen, Oliver Holt
Amoss. Harold Lindsay, Jr.
Anderson, Claywell Mitchell
Andrews. Edward Allen
Asch, Roy Douglas
Ashurst, Jack Chamberlain
A us
Ra
Hi
Bailey, Jack Kenley
Baker, Donald Charles
Baker. James Alpheks
Ball, Charlf-s Lee
Ballard. Alvin Hugh
Ballard, Harry Cline
B.\RBOUR. JuSEl'H HeNRY
Barker, Charles Thomas
Barlow. Charles Jordan
Barnes, Richard Joseph
Barnes. Melver Raymond
Baroodv. Murry Arthur
Barrett, Charles Francis
Barringer, Martin C, Jr.
Bartlett. Clark
Bass. George Nelson
Bass. Irving Stanley
Bass. Larry Lucas
Beaslky, Britton Ferebee
Beck. William Carroll
Beckwith. Robert Payne. Jr.
Bedea, Jack Pfjishing
Beerman. William Lockett
Beers. Prentice
Belgrade, William Velva
Belvin. Jamij, Adkins
Berger. Martin H.
Berk. Hari.ld Jay
Bernard. Franklin Merritt
Bernert. Robert Harvey
Bertsch, Leonard Carl
Best, Romulus Thaddeus
Biggs. John Walker Smallwood
BiLLicA, Harry Robert
Bishop, Donald Edwin
Blankett. Milton Elias
Blickman. Joseph Henry
Blue. Daniel Thomas
Bl[ K. Robert Clifton
Blum, Stanley Bertr.4M
Bobbitt. Maurice Eugene
Boemanns. Herman
Bohrer, Morton Harvey
BoLiCK. Norman Marshall
Bonne, Henry
Boone, James Maxton
Boone. Joseph Howard
BtH)NE. Thomas Xathanial, Jr.
BooNK, William Thomas
B<x»th. Orin Watts
BttRDKN. Paul Lambert, Jr.
BossA. Howard Maurice
Bounds. Clayton Purnell
Bounds. Howard Vincent, Jr.
Bowles. Hargrove. Jr.
Bradner. John Lance
Brady, Charles Eldon
Brandon, Francis Arnold
Branson, Bertrum Lester
Brantley, Julian Thweatt
Brawlev, Boyce Albert
Brawley. James Shober
Bray, Robert Joseph
Bridger, John McRae
Bridgers, Robert Strange
Broadfoot, William Gilles, Jr.
Broadfoot. Winston
Brock. Burr Coley
Brock, Walter Edgar
Brooks, David Anderson
Br(.mjkshirk, Joseph Clinton
Brown, Bixbv McCary
Brown. Harry Aroian
Brown. Oram Kline
Brown, Pinckney Rufus, Jr.
Brown. Robert Emmett
Brown, Seymour
Brown, Thomas Edwards, Jr.
Browning. Benjamin Howard
Bruner, William Wallace
Bryan, James Everette
Bryson. Eugene Theodore
Buffey. Ralph Herbert
BuiE, William Graham, UI
Bunch, Velton Vance
Burke, Raymond Wilson
Burns, William Thomas
Burns. Blanche Evelyn
Bursley, Robert Lynn-
Burton. Bernard Ottway
Burton. John Walter
BuRTT. Brooks Francis
B^TJiLY, Manly Holdt
Bynum. Alton Leroy
Byrd. Hugh Dewitt
Caddell, Langdon Dowd
Callan. Lester Lawrence, Jr
Camelio, Albert Howard
Campbell, Walter Hill
Canavan, John Patrick. Jr.
Carmichael. Leon Wilson
Carr, Peti-ji Richard
Carrell. Russell Ashmead
Carrell. Waldo Swearingen
Carroll, Robert Benjamin
Carter, John William
Carter. Thomas Leslie. Jr.
Carter. William David
Casey. Leslie Ralph
Castles. Eugene Franklyn. Jb
Cazel. Fred Augustus, Jr.
Chapman. Robert
Cherry. Russell Drewry
Cheshire. Godfrey, Jr.
Chinkers, Mortimer
Citron. David Snaford
Clardy. John L.
Clark. George Ed\vard
Clark. Max Erwin
Clark. Michael Kirchwey
Clement. John Reid. Jr.
Cloninger. Ro»-ell Conner
Cohen. Joseph Robert
Cohen. Ralph Gorden
Cohn, Robert
Cohn, Mltulay Elliot
Collett, James Rountree
Collis, George Alexander
CoL^VELL, John David
Combis, Gus George
Condrey, Alfred McCoy
Cone, Howard Berkley
CoNLEY. William Tate
Cook, Harold Cassius
Cooper, George Marion, Jr.
Cooper, George William
Cooper. James Compton
Cooper, John Ray.mond
CopELAND, Wendell Hope
Couch. Llewellyn Hill
Council. Cecil Knox
CoN'ER. Bruce Fowler
Cowhig. Richard Lawrence
Cox, Herbert Walton
Crabtree, Lawrence Eownx
Crautord, John Littlefield
Crautoro. Letcher
Creech. Jack Alexander
Croom. Mebane Fearrington
Crowell, David Provence
Crou-ell, John Addison
Cunningham, Jacob Henry. Jr.
Curtis, Clarence Dowell
Curtis, John William
Cutler, Sewall Cameron
Dale. Einar Hornibrook
Dalton, Don Ferdinand
Dalton. Masten Rufus
Dameron, Edgar Samuel Willia*
Daniel, Jack Harmon
Daniels. Harold Charles
Daugherty. James Raymond
Da\'ENport, Billy Trammell
David. William Ray. Jr.
DA\^s, Edward Palmer. Jr.
Dawson. Collins Taylor
Dawson, George Robert. Jr.
Day, N.\thaniel Syl\-ester
Day, Neil Elexus. Jr.
De.\\-er, Frank Emerson
Dees. Fred, Jr.
Dees. William Archie. Jr.
Denning. William Robert, Jb.
PAGE 177
m^--:
^■#. f^
^>^
*i*<4
Dkyo. George Eltix
Dixon. Theodoke
hirciN-, Benjamin Lplonard
lloi\, H'kank Bavier
lii.i 1 1 , John Joseph
1)1 Hum . Theodore Marion, III
l)l(,i.\H, (lOROON Shei.tun
1)1 Mil I . Louis Jrs-ri-s, Jr.
l)iiMi\.\i. Floyd Matthew, Jr.
i; uiM. David
KvsciN. IIiukkt Thi'Rston
Eastmvn. Richard
Elll.lKTON. WiLBEKT WEI.LONS
Edmoxoson. Kavmond Pender
Ed.mi;ndson, Doan Woodard
Ednev, Fred Rii'I'Y, Jr.
Ednky. James Sidney
Edwards. Gwyn
Edwards. Thomas Cinningham
I';isEXBERG, Ezra
F.i.niiiiM.K, Ci.AiDlA Josephine
I'',i I iM.H'N, I-",iH.AR Worth. Jr.
i;i I I-, ilii:iui:i Aeexander, Jr.
Va I l-nN, ,1 \ Ml > THADDEL'S
Frei
Epstein. Edward Allan
ER1CK.SON, EdMI'ND El'GENE
ESTROFF, JliSSE
Eyenson, Norman
Farris, Robert Ahthtr
Feldstein, Harold Fabyan
Felton, Saneord Kesler
Ferguson, Ray
F'ERLiNt;, Lawrence Monsant
Fields, Walter Geddie
FiMH, John William, Jr.
Ba
Fonda, .Axery Hunt
Foote, Gaston Simmons, Jr.
Forrest, Stephen Taylor
Fortune. Porter Lee. Jr.
Foster. Ralph Emerson, Jr.
Foster. Robert Gilmer
FousHEE, Frederick Watson
Fox. Raymond Leslie
French, John Eugene
Friedman, Morton
Frisby", George Ronatsch
Fuller, Edwin Rudolph
Fu'ifH. Laurence Wilson
GiNEY. Paul Hiram
(;\iuhm;i[. David Foulke
CutiiNKH. Edward Bunk
(.MILAM). James Boyce
(l\^. (ihORGE
I III It. Milton Ufford
iHwiTT. Andrew, Jr.
I. Mi VI I), Charles Hammond. Jr.
(.is>in. John Henry. Jr.
(.111111 NGs. Joseph Emme-tp
(iii.LMM. William Lee. Jr.
GiNsiiiKG. Morton .\dolph
(in AN, Frank Monroe
Ghovek Clevela
R, Trying Jerry
Junius John-
William Wills. 1
I MM, Irwin
. Henry Wilson
N. Thomas Whitmell
.. .\STOR (iora-
s. .Alan Pendleton
Wi
Wi
liRUBB, ReDDY GlTEWOOl
GusAR, Donald Mortim
GuTHE, Alfred Kidder
GiY, Ernest Gordon
Hackney, TII"^M^ Jinvini.v
Haigh, Philip Wiih, .In.
Hall, Wallace \\nn
Hamlet, Joe Edward
Hamlin, William Pickett
Hampton, John Ray
Hanby, Donald Gilbert
Hand, William Luthe;r. Jr.
Harding, William Blount
Hardwick, Thomas C'handleb
Hardy, Herbert Wallace
Hare'ord, Vau(;hn Thwidore. ,
Hargro\e, Walten Clark
Harnden. Charles Elmer, Jii
El
Jr.
Da
NGTON, Robert Cha
s, Charles Marvin
s. Jesse Lee
Osi
Ro
Hart. William Chaffee, Jr.
Hayes, Thomas Clifton, ,Ik.
Hayman. Louis DeMarco
Haywood. Thomas Holi, .Ir.
Heath, Ben Ross
Hel^th, Hunter
Hebbard, Russell Ed<;ar
Hedrick, John W.vlter
Heitman, William Fletchej
Henderson, Hibf:rt PuAri
Hende:rson, John R.
Hender-son, Joseph Audry
Hendrix. Delmas Dalton
Henry, Rusk Griffin, Jr.
Hester, Jesse Claude
Hewitt, Daniel Albert
Hicks, IIenty Thomas, III
Hill, lie Tiiii ci
Hill. Ivm.i im Hi \' vi i i
HlNKii . .1 cm- Wci iir
Hitching. Unci ii Amcm-. Ill
HoBsc)N, Mack
Hodges, Luther Cranston
Hodges, Ralph Hinton, Jr.
Hoffman, Ed^vard Norman
Holder, La\vrence Jay
Holland, Thomas Marsh >li
d. woodrci
Ho
w
Do
ELD. Ll'lHEU EnwiN, .Ir.
HcioTS. Zeno Daniel
Horn, Williaji Lester
HoRNADAY, Russell McPherson
House. Robert Burton. Jr.
HciWARD. Walter Riibert
IKi.BARn, Donald Bruce
III (.MIS, Alfred Her.man
IIiMiHKii.s. Charles Oliver
III NLIl V. KVIII, Sll Oil
III KIM I . I'.VIll An|i|I1M>N
III iiioliii. Wii 1,1 \>l I'.invARD
III TC IIIm.N. Cm Mills .lACKSON
lliTT. John Baik;lev
HuTi-oN. Elbert McKinley, Jr.
Hyman. Haywood Blount
Idol. Charles William
In MAN, F.RXEST
Ho
.s. Harold Frederick
E, Joseph Malphus, Jr.
v. Arthur Richardson
V. Ernest Carl
PAGE 171
ii^
n i
x/.
Kamins, Hknby Morris
LoiKAS. Neophytos Georoe
Messin
V, Santo
PATTER.SON, JaMES WiLLIA.l
Kaxtrowitz, Ed^vard Lewis
LoviN, Archibalii Kino
Middle
ON, William Newton
Payne, Lorne Cameron
Kanthowitz, Milton Leon
LowRANcE, JcLics Alexander. Jr.
Mn.i.AH
AY. George Masten
Peacock, Docolas Rhers
Kari-eles, Lee Maurice
LiBiN, Robert Irvino
Miller
Hi-jibert Mark
Peacock. Eri.e Fletcher
Katz, Irwin Norton
Mace, Francis Horden
Miller
Irving Joshca
Peden, Joseph William. .
Katz, Lionel Melvin
Mack. Phillip
MiLLIC-
N, Francis Champion
PENDERGR.VSS. Pacl Piiasa>
Kvl'faian, Ellioit Alexander
Makie. Wiley Theodore
Millis.
Henry Albion
Pendleton. Miletcs Gayl
Ki;ats, Acton Perry
.\LicRAE, Cameron, Jr.
Min(;es
Herman Setzer
Penick. Edwin Anderson
Kkllev, James Ewiniv
.MacRae, Nkill
MlTCHF
LL. Alexander Charles
Perry, James Edward, Jr
KiMi'ER. Richard
Maoner. Robert Bcrland
Moody.
DwicHT Evans
Peters, Robert Milton
Kerr, John Sevmocr
Mahon. Pail Stoi.tz
Moore.
John Robert
Pethel, Ray.mond Eigene
KniRiv, Wn.iis Holt
Malkin. Moses .Moxtifiore
MOREEI
:ld. William Kermit
Phillips, Calvin Bynim
William Edward
ER Moore, Jr.
Ml (
McC
McCi
MiCc
M(Ci
Ml II
Tha
Tci
James Rali
', Booker I
Edward
WiLLlA.M Gra
Palmer,
loE RiCKETT
>ONALD Holmes
To
I, Gay
Floyi
Ge
Pratt, Jiax CJardner
Price, Xorville Reid
Pillen, James Fredericj
PiLLEN, John Willia.m
Pri.LiA.M, Willard Cary-
P. C.
Whit
Go
AHA
Long, William Bowen
Ml r.
Ml Ii.
Ml In
Ml Li
I'AII
<Y. DoC(;LAS Westheldt
. Archibald Nock
•:, David Alexander
ton. Malcolm Douglas. Jr
RcPERT Aubrey
ER. Thomas Frederick
EoRGE Philip
^^■ARD Victor
Iohn White. Jr.
Osborne. Robert Vktor
Oilahan. Richard. Jr.
Padgett. Harold Dement. Jr.
Palanske. Walter
Paris. George Evangei.os
Parker. Seth Thomis
Parks. Joseph Caldavell
Patrick. Ralph Clinton. Jr.
Patterson. Howard Carlton
Kanson. John Oliver
Ranson, Robert Query
Rattie. Jojepi
Ra
Hi<
\M.\
Ri:ad. Carlton Sperry
Rees. Pe.mbroke Graves
Reid. David Settle
Reilly-. Charles Edward
Reynolds, Frank Russell
Rice, Rex Alder.man
Rich, Charles Alexander
Richardson. Donald Howard
Ridgavay. Ivison Boyd
PAGE 179
Kiel, John Torrey
RiTTENBERG, SIDNEY, Jr.
RoBBiNs, Conrad Rutherford
KnBKRTS. HrCHES, JR.
Roberts, Thomas Francis
Robertson, James Farish, Jr.
Robertson, Leon Whitfield
Rodgers, Grover Tilghmen, Jr.
RoEHRS, Douglas Gordon
RoELOFS, Henry Morrison
Rogers, Wayne Hall
Rogerson, Brewster Livingston
Roof. Simons Lucas
Rose, Oli\'er Creech
Rosen. Frank
Rosenberg, Donald Mason
Rosenstock, Gordon Saul
Ross, Kenneth Ellsworth
Rousseau, Vincent Paul, Jr.
RoYALL, George Edwin. Jr,
RuTTEH, Robert Carl
Ryan, John William
Sadoff, Sidney
Salleeby. Richard
Salowf:, William
Sanders, David McClellen
Sanders, Durward Eldon
Savarese, Charles Joseph, Jr.
Schleifer, Leonard Ja.mes
Schmidt, Frederick Kfnnktii
Schmucker. Samuel .^iken
ScHRiMPE. Conrad Cami'Bell
ScHULTZ. James Norton
Schwartz, Franklin Judah
Selden, Littleton Cole
Sensenbach, Elmer Elroy, Jr.
Sessoms, Alexander
Sessoms, David James, Jr.
Severin, Paul Vincent
Sewell, Jefferson Davis
Seymour, Frederick Page
Sharp, Harry Grady, Jr.
Shaw, Ben Love Sutton
Sheffer, Dean Philip
Sheffield, Walter Lincoln, Jr.
Sher.man, Kalman
Sherman, Louis Manhiem
Shuford, William Melvin
Shuping, Clarence Leroy. Jr.
SiKCK, Richard Charles
SlKWIKS. CllKISTIAN FOGLE
Sum R.MiiN, Eugene
SuMiiM. I'l itR John
SiMi>"N. (iH>iiGE Lee, Jr.
SiM.TiTvRv. William Vance
Sink, (huh is Shelton
Sink, David William
Slade, Richard Gladstone
Sloop, Hugh Washington
Smernoff, Henry George
Smith, Billie C.
S.MiTH. Edwin Harbison, Jr.
Smith. Ephriam Wescott, Jr.
Smith, Howell Caverly
Smith, Jesse Lee
Smith, John Wilson. Jr.
Smith. Samuel Milton
Smithey, Lan Broughton
Snider, William Davis
Snow, Rodney English. Jr.
Snyder, Bruce Wellington, Jr.
Snyder, Roger Alexander
Sparrow, Harry W^ard
Spence, Ernest P.
Spicfji, Philip Bryant
Spies, Adrian Charles
Spruill, Ronald Wescotte
Stacev, Rose Piitman
Stadiem, Howard Raymond
IRVI
IMF
Stannard, Samuel Harold
Starnf-s, Roy Gilmer
Steagall, Walter Lee
Stephenson, Robert Hugh
Stevens, Albert Franklin, Jr.
Stewart, Henry Lafayette, Jr.
Stick, Ernest
Stick, David
Stockton, Norman Vaughn, Jr.
Stokes. David Lewis
Stollmack, Ralph Howard
Stratten, George Marshall
Stuart, Algie Maurice, Jr,
Stutts, Everett Parker
Swan, Bernard Robert
Sweeney, Edgar Chew, Jr,
Sweet, Arthur Thomas, Jr.
Talton, John Thomas, Jr,
Tankersley, Edwin Cole
Taylor, Edgar Suggs, Jr.
Taylor, Frank B.. Jr.
Taylor. Harry R.
Tf;ague. Samuel Farris. Jr.
TEiyiELL, John Arthi'r, Jr.
Thigpen, Harry Gordon, Jr.
Thom.\s, Elizabeth Agnes
Thompson, William Manly
Thorne, William Green
TiLLETT, Benjamin Wvche
Tilley, Thomas Marshall
ToMLiNsoN, Lawrence Archdale, Jr.
Tomlinson, Leslie Daniel, Jr.
Toms. Pace Bernhardt
TORREY, Donald Fuller, Jr.
Toy, James Henry
Trkxlf.r, El.mer
Trottkr, Pinckney Lawson, Jr.
Tucker. Garland Scott, Jr.
Turner. Luther Wilson
TURTLETAIB. MoRTON LaWRENCE
Underwood, Hamilton Polk, Jr.
Vance. Thomas Huske
Van Schoick, Chester Bruce
VE-4ZEY', Hubert Lawrence
VOCLER, WiLl.IA.M VeILSON, Jr,
Wadswortii. Mvic.im Russel
>v Mi-r
Ho
Walters. K,.kvm I'l iinov
Ward, Wai.i Iii/ciimm)
Warrf;n, .li mi -■ C^Miiiii. ,
Warshaw, Harold
Watkins. Julian Carter
Watkins, Richard Wright
Watson, George William
Weaver, Nancy Crosby
Webb, Allen Wright
Weber, Herbert
Webster, Goley
Weiss, Arthur Emani-el
Weiss, Jacob Lewis
Welborn, Joseph Alson
Wells, Alton Wright
Wells, Richard Alonzo
Wheeler, Hubert Brooks
Whitehead, Jefferson D.*vis, HI
Wiggins, Lee .Mannings
Wilkes, James Robert
WiLKiNS, Charles Stewart
Wilkinson, George Lants
Williams, Eugene Bomberger
Williams. George Woodfin. HI
Williams. Kenan Banks
Williams, William Joyner
Willis. George Thomas
Wills, Harry Allen
Wilson, John Allison
WiNDEcKER, George Henry
Winkler, Harry, Jr.
WiNsTEAD, Fletcher Merritt
WiNSTEAD, John Sidney
WiTTEN, Ecgene Roy
Wolfe, C. C.
WoMBLE, James Jackson
Wo.MBLE, William Marion
Wood. Gordon Enoch
Wood, James Edward
Wood, Ja.mes Frederick, Jr.
WooDALL. Will Eric
Woodhouse, Noel Robert Seymour
Woodman, Edward E.. HI
Woolen. Wescott Roberson
Worth. Colvin Mc.\lister
Wright, Edgar Cameron, Jr.
Wright. Latane Potter
Wright, Thomas Archibald, Jr.
Wright, \'incent Brown, Jr,
Wurreschke, David Gustave
Yandell, Robebt Alexander
yEL\'F;RToN, John Thomas
York, William Edward
Zauber, Milton Hersch, Jr.
Zealy, James McKee
ZUCKERMAN, IrWIN ARTHUB
PAGE 180
iK
^b
iK oxi) \'i-.\R Medical Class
THE MEDICAL SCHOOL
ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
(Whitehead Medical Society)
President Horace Hayden Hodges
Vice-President Hugh H. Mills
Secretary-Treasurer J. Gilmer Mebane
Student Council Representative .... Robert E. Coker, Jr.
OFFICERS
Second Year Medical Class
President Charles Gordon Smith
Vice-President Hugh H. Mills
Secretary-Treasurer R. D. Baxley
CLASS ROLL
Second Year Medical Class
John F. Barber, Raiford Douglas Baxley, Thomas S. Ben-
nett, Allan Baker Bonner, Harley Gaskil Brookshire, Rob-
ert E. Coker, Jr., Albert £. Corpening, Thomas W. Crowell,
Joseph A. Farmer, Robert Louis Gibbs, Francis D. Gibson,
Erastus Genair Goodman, John C. Grier, Horace Hayden
Hodges, Robert B. Lindsay, Thomas Sparrow Long, Al-
bert Key McAnally, John Gilmer Mebane, Hugh H. Mills,
A. S. Oliver, Miss Charlotte Evelyn Parker, Ben S. Skinner,
Charles Gordon Smith, Miss Ruby A. Smith, Abram Rose
Stancil, George Ritchie Wall, Mack Wallace, A. Francis
White, Miss Inez Willoughby, James R. Wright.
First Year Medical Class
OFFICERS
First Year Medical Class
President Emmet R. Spiccr
Vice-President Joseph B. Crawford
Secretary-Treasurer Mack Simmons
CLASS ROLL
First Year Medical Class
Marcus Aderholdt, O. W. Aderholdt, Jesse Appel, Ralph
M. Bell, Arnold Breckenridge, Daniel H. Buchanan, Jesse
B. Caldwell, Henry Toole Clark, Charles Cloninger, Rich-
ard A. Conlen, Joseph Benjamin Crawford, Alfred M.
Elwell, Benjamin Fletcher Fortune, Eugene F. Hamer, Miss
Pearl Huffman, Frank Carl Joyner, Ralph S. Morgan, Max
M. Novich, W. M. Petree, Miss Irene Phyrdas, Franklin P.
Pratt, Leonard Raby, Edwin A. Rasberry, Meyre Har\ey
Rolnick, Mack Simmons, Emmit R. Spicer, Robert Louis
Strieker, Benjamin Cicero Taylor, Edmund Rhett Taylor,
T. G. Thurston, James L. Wardlaw, Jr., Samuel Bayley
Willard, Henry J. Winn, Jr., Arthur Roy Woods, Jr.,
Milton Harry Yudell.
k
^^MMOMoil^ ^^^^ r
V!'«»*,
Third and Fourth Year Pharmacy
THE PHARMACY SCHOOL
OFFICERS
The Pharmacy School
John W. Allen President
Ernestine R. Barber Vice-President
Robert N. Watson Secretary-Treasurer
Charles C. Oates Student Council Representative
OFFICERS
Fourth Year Pharmacy Class
G. Fred Johnson President
T. L. Linn Vice-President
June Bush Secretary-Treasurer '^K "^BHI^ ^flfllL.
MEMBERS '^ *^^P J^^^
Fourth Year Pharmacy Class
John Watson Allen, Ernestine Ray Barber, Solomon Arthur
Bobroff, Thomas Milton Bruce, Blanche Jarvis Bullock,
Jean Bush, June Bush, Joseph Harold Cameron, Earl
L. Capps, James Leonard Creech, Clyde Loraine Futrell,
Gaither Fred Johnson, Phillip Francis Link, Tom L. Linn,
VC'illiam Francis Lynch, Maggie Lou Moore, Charles Clisby
Oates, Jr., Clarence Eugene Page, Hubert Graham Price,
Jesse Milton Russell, Jr., Wilson Coite Simmons, Perry
Vivian Waters, Robert Neal Watson, I ley Chester White-
ley, Paul Woodard.
OFFICERS
Third Year Pharmacy Class
r. -J V- wr TT Johnson
President George W. Honeycutt
Vice-President Joseph P. Tunstail
Secretary Eugene Brown
Treasurer W. V. Timberlake, Jr. ^^^^v^ ' Vt" ^^^^ /^^'3
MEMBERS
Third Year Pharmacy Class
Shelton Bickett Boyd, Eugene Brown, McDonald Davis, ^^_ — »- mm „^
Helen Williams Duguid, Kenneth Edwards, James Fred- ^^P '^ ^•-" j " Mt^- ^^ Wr'*
erick Rhodes, James Hamilton Fox, Ellis Patrick Gaddy, ^HC f ^L m
Phil Gaddy, Malcolm Noyes Goodwin, William Bradley ^^B v.^ ^ ij^ ^JSk
Halsey, Aldridge Kirk Hardee, George William Honey- ^^^^ ^_ '^^ ' -^^S^
cutt, Eugene Southerland Howard, George Haywood Jones, ^^^^k ^^^^^M v ^^^^ ''^ '
Marvin Morton Kessler, Grey Bryan Kornegay, Leinster ^^^^^^.^mH^K ^^
M. Lewis, Samuel Woodrow McFalls, Solon Scott Minton, ^^^^^B ^^^^ ^^^^
William Vinson Proctor, William Lee Sloan, Ralph Gor- ^^^^H ^^ ^^^^^^
don Templeton, Claude Vernon Timberlake, Jr., Lovett ^^^^^M^m. ^^^^^^t
Aldin Warren, Joseph Peyton Tunstail. Honkycutt Allen
?l
First and Sfcoxd ^'i ar Pharmac-i' Ci \-
PHAMMACY SCHOOL
OFFICERS
Second Year Pharmacy Class
President Alfred N. Costner
Vice-President Jesse W. Pike
Secretary-Treasurer Leon W. Smith
MEMBERS
Second Year Pharmacy Class
Anna Dean Burks, Edward Graham Campbell, Alfred
Nixon Costner, Marion Sims Hamer, Henry William Har-
ris, Altajane Holden, Lyman Melton Home, Hunter Lig-
^^_jj|| IV gett Kelly, Allen Alexander Lloyd, Charles Daniel Mc-
"'^^^P 'd^fc ^^ Falls, John Albert McNeill, Minnie Ferol Parker, Mrs.
A. B. Peagram, Jesse William Pike, Donald Alton Plem-
Mlt mons, Lloyd Morgan Senter, Leon Wriston Smith, Eliza-
beth Milton Weaver, Bryan Henry Whitford, Jr., Martin
Hildred Williams.
OFFICERS
First Year Pharmacy Class
President John M. Pickard
Vice-President H. T. Hicks
Secretary-Treasurer Fred Dees, Jr.
MEMBERS
First Year Pharmacy Class
John Waller Smallwood Biggs, William Thomas Boone,
Blanche Evelyn Burrus, Alton Leroy Bynum, John William
Carter, Geoger Edward Clark, John Da\'id Colwell, Jack
Alexander Creech, Fred Dees, Jr., H. E. Dillon, Clauda
Barber Josephien Eldridge, Ralph Emerson Foster, Frederick Wat-
son Foushee, Edwin Rudolph Fuller, Henry Wilson
Greene, Sandy Davis Griffin, Jr., Joe Edward Hamlet,
Henry Thomas Hicks, III, Thomas Marshall Holland,
George Graham Inman, Dwayne Alton Irwin, Arthur Rich-
ardson Johnson, Ray Alexander Kiser, Jennings Eskridge
Knight, W. K. Lewis, Margaret Thomas Lloyd, David A.
McLemore, Phillip Earl Marion, L. F. Mitchell, Joe Bickett
., i^\ 9 Neely, Calvin Sneid Oakley, James Edward Perry, Jr.,
Jtf 9 Raymond Eugene Pethel, John Milton Pickard, Willard
Cary Pulliam, Frank Rosen, George Edwin Royall, Jr.,
S. C. Scott, William B. Sheffield, Edwin Harrison Smith,
Jessie Lee Smith, Ronald Wescotte Spruill, Rose Pittman
Jjjr -'^^^^^ Stacy, Roy Gilmer Starnes, Robert Hugh Stephenson, Eliza-
'^.^gjB^j^^^^H beth Agnes Thomas, Pinkney Lawson Trotter, Jr., Hamil-
,^ ^l^^^l ton Polk Underwood, Jr., Junius Campbell Warren, Jr.,
A, ' ^^^^ Julian Carter Watkins, Jefferson Davis Whitehead, III,
George Henry W'indecker, William Marion Womble,
Pjcakd Latane Potter Wright, Robert Alexander Yandell.
Third Year Law Class
THE LAW SCHOOL ASSOCIATION
OFFICERS
Law School Association
Charles A. Poe President
George A. Hux Vice-President
A. C. Rufty Secretary-Treasurer
OFFICERS
Third Year Law Class
J. H. Whicker President
P. D. Grady Vice-President
Clarence W. Griffin Treasurer
R. B. Sanford Secretary
MEMBERS
Third Year Law Class
Halsey S. Carey, Henry I. Coffield, Jr., James B. Craighill,
Wm. M. Daniel, Albert J. Ellis, James C. Farthing, Julian
C. Franklin, Harold W. Gavin, Paul D. Grady, Clarence
Walton Griffin, Ezra E. Griffin, Jr., Winfield Clary Holt,
Henry P. Hudson, George A. Hux, Charles M. Ivey, Jr.,
James W. Keel, Daniel G. MacMillan, Charles A. Poe,
James S. Queen, Wm. L. Reid, Harry Lee Riddle, A. C.
Rufty, Rufus B. Sanford, Jr., John T. Schiller, Willis C.
Smith, James M. Verner, Joseph H. Whicker, Jr.
OFFICERS
Second Year Law Class
Oscar L. Tyree President
R. C. Howison Vice-President
S. E. Robinson Treasurer
S. B. Warren Secretary
Second and Fkst Year Law Class
LAW SCHOOL
MEMBERS
Second Year Law Class
Harvey James Boney, P. B. Burks, James D. Carr, Edward
B. Clark, Wm. R. Dawes, John D. Dial, Jr., Virginia Doug-
las, Moses B. Gillam, Clarence A. Griffin, Jr., James
Nathaniel Hamrick, James H. Howell, Robert C. Howison,
Jr., Joseph M. Kittner, Geo. F. McKendry, Elmer R. Oet-
tinger, Owen H. Page, Ezra A. Parker. Wylie F. Parker,
Samuel E. Robinson, \X'm. Roy Shelton, Sarah Starr, Oscar
L. Tyree, Stewart B. Warren, R. R. Williams, Jr., Raymond
B. Witt, Ben Wyche, IIL
OFFICERS
First Year Law Class
H. S. Harkins President
J. G. Johnson Vice-President
Lafayette Williams Secretary
Misses Margaret Reid, Margaret C. Johnson,
Elizabeth Shewmake Treasurer
MEMBERS
First Year Law Class
Isaac Thomas Avery, Jr., Harry Kenneth Boucher, Willis
J. Brogden, Alfred Lewis Bulwinkle, Heman R. Clark,
James W. Coan, Arthur Owen Cooke, Wm. Chambers
Coughenour, Wm. Lunsford Crew, Lacy A. Dalton, Wm.
Reid Dalton, Joseph P. Derrickson, Haughton Ehringhaus,
Wm. Harold Ford, James Royall Frazer, W. W. Fuller,
II, Gordon M. Gibson, Alex McGowin Gover, H. S.
Harkins, Claude E. Hobbs, R. H. Jernigan, Jr., John Grif-
fith Johnson, Margaret Cloyd Johnson, Wm. Pope Lyon,
Wm. T. McGowan, Jr., Harry McMuUan, Jr., John A. Mc-
Rae, Jr., Yates Webb Mason, John Wesley Merritt, Frank
Thomas ^Miller, Jr., Joseph A. Perkins, Alfrew \i'. Perry,
Forney A. Rankin, Emerv E. Raper, Margaret P. Reid, For-
rest I. Robertson, David Perry Russ, Jr., Elizabeth W.
Shewmake, Nathaniel G. Sims, Leon E. Smith, John ^''.
Spears, George S. Steele, Frederick I. Sutton, Edward M.
Toon, Julien K. Warren, Jr., Elmer James Wellons, Jr.,
Lafayette Williams, George Lewis Young, Joseph Rutledge
Young, Marshall V. Yount.
#«
I?
^*^
THIRD PART
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA YEAR BOOK
Y ACKETY YACK
1938
This part of the %Jolume being devoted
entirely to the
ACTIVITIES
**>
OFFICERS
Editor David J. Thorp
Managing Editor Rutherford Yeates
Business Manager J. Fred Rippy
SENIOR SECTION— Jack Lynch, Editor; Byrd Merrill,
William Broadfoot, James Carter, George Deyo, Allan
Epstein, Robert Bridgers, William Conley.
JUNIOR SECTION— Jesse Reece, Editor; Fred Edney,
Sidney Rittenburg, Herbert Stang, Richard Slade, William
Middleton, Malcolm McNaughton.
DANCE SECTION— Drew Martin, Editor; Erwin Jones,
B. Trammell Davenport.
OPENING SECTION— Richard Wright, Editor; Alton
Utley, XSC'escott Wollen, Leah Robinson, George Cooper.
EXTRA-CURRICULA SECTION— Wiley Smith, Editor;
Lester Callan, Lawrence Holder, Thomas Vance, Donald
Bishop, William Joslin.
PHOTOGRAPHY SECTION — Alan Calhoun, Editor;
Frank Bowne, Robert Barsley, Wallace Hall, Elbert Hut-
ton, William Beerman, Herbert Bachrach, Holt Haywood,
Frank Penn, Robert Little.
FRATERNITY SECTION — Leonard Shapiro, Editor;
Murray Goldberg, Ira Topping, Herbert Weber.
ATHLETIC SECTION — Fletcher Ferguson and Morris
Fitts, Editors; Charles Lynch, Devereaux Joslin.
CO-ED SECTION— Lillian Hughes, Editor.
HONORARY SECTION— John Britt, Editor; Ralph Pat-
rick, VCiley Mackie.
PAGE 194
THE
YACKETY YACK
Left to Rifiht — Wright, Lynch, Martin, Ferguson, Calhoun,
Shapiro, Smith. Fitts. Recce, Hughes, Britt, Vance, Merrill.
THE
YACKETY YACK
Left to Right — Roberts, Penn, Joslin, Epstein, Haywood, Blount,
3roadfoot, Lawrence, Robinson, Murphy, Timi'i, Deyo, Bachrach.
Business Manager J. Fred Rippy, Jr.
Assistant Manager George McDuffie
Assistant Manager Frederick Blount
Assistant Manager Bate Toms
Assistant Manager Lynch Murphy
Assistants — Hughes Roberts, Harry Billica, Norman Stock-
ton, Robert Cohn, Gilbert McCutcheon, Willard Magof-
fin, Bert Premo, Noel Woodhouse, Bill Bruner, James
Gray, Jr., Edwin Norvell, Carol Goodman, Gladys Tripp,
Claire W'hitmore, Janet Lawrence, Olive Cruikshank, Eliz-
abeth Spencer.
Those of you who are not acquainted with the work-
ings of the Yackety Yack find it hard to realize the enor-
mous amount of data and routine material which must be
compiled. This task falls to the lot of the Division Heads
and their respective helpers. During the preceding year
these men have been unusually efficient and dependable in
the carrying out of their responsibilities. For such ef-
fective work the editor wishes to thank each member of
the editorial staff without whom this book would never
get out of its preliminary stages.
We also wish to thank Mr. Kenneth W'hitsett of the
Pictorial Engraving Company for the splendid art work
and also for many suggestions relating to the general plan
of this book. Mr. Frank Fleming of the Lassiter Press
has superintended the printing of this Yackety Yack.
PAGE 195
THE DAILY
TAM HEEL
OFFICERS
J. Mac Smith Editor
Charles W. Gilmore Managing Editor
William McLean Business Manager
Jesse Lewis Circulation Manager
EDITORIAL STAFF
EDITORIAL WRITERS— Stuart Rabb, Lytt Gardner, Edwin Hamlin,
Allen Merrill, Voit Gilmore, Bob du Four, Herbert Langsam.
NEWS EDITORS— Will G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Morris Rosen-
berg.
DESKMEN — Tom Stanback, Lartitte Howard, Jesse Reese.
SENIOR REPORTER— Bob Perkins.
FRESHMAN REPORTERS— Charles Barrett, Adrian Spies, David Z.
Stick, James McAden, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Carroll McGaughey,
Winston Broadfoot.
REWRITE— Donald Bishop.
EXCHANGE EDITOR— Ben Dixon.
SPORTS EDITOR— R. R. Howe, Jr.
SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS— Jerry Stoff, Ray Lowery, Frank Hole-
man.
SPORTS REPORTERS— Ed Karlin, Harvery Kaplan, Shelley Rolfe,
Fletcher W. Ferguson, Larry M. Ferling, W. L. Beerman.
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS— Herbert Bachrach, Frank Bowne.
BUSINESS STAFF
ADVERTISING MANAGERS— Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey.
DURHAM REPRESENTATIVE— Dick Eastman.
LOCAL ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS— Stuart Ficklin, Bert Hal-
perin. Bill Ogburn, Morton Bohrer, Ned Hamilton, Bill Clark, Billy
Gilliam, Andrew Cennett.
OFFICE — Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, George Harris, Louis
Barba, Bob Lerner, Jim Schleifer, Henry Smernoff, Al Buck.
LlI: ;•- A'.;,/ -MiGaughey, Barrett, Stick, Holeiiian, Stuff, Beer-
man, Bishop, Merrill, Rosenberg, Burns, Stanback, Elliott.
PAGE 196
)r^«i^^
THE DAILY
TAR HEEL
Left 10 Right — Humphrey, Perkins, Howe, Reece, Howard, Arey,
DuFour, Gilmore, Gardner, Rabb, Lewis, Rulte
Davis
In a student bodv as large as Carolina's, general convo-
cations are rare occurrences and special group meetings
never appeal to the entire campus citizenry. Actually it is
the student newspaper, as it slides under every student's
door each morning with its facts and opinions, that keeps
the campus knit together and continuously aware of itself.
In order to make the "Daily Tar Heel" as effective a focus
of "the campus personality" as possible, the current ad-
ministration set out to see that the news coverage included
considerably more than the ordinary run of dull, but
necessary, bulletins and schedules. As well as being ac-
curate, the paper was to be interesting, to contain pigment,
a spark of life, readability. The "Tar Heel" was going to
be produced for the student readers rather than for the
files of the library.
The editorial policy of the paper has been one of leisure-
ly, but thorough, examination of the campus problems.
There have been few instances of "superimposed" crusad-
ing, the practice of the paper being to outline the prob-
lem, clarify student thinking, and encourage, in the end,
whatever genuine student action might be so generated.
The "Daily Tar Heel" has long been proud of its freedom
from faculty control of any sort, and proud, as well, of
the degree of organizational efficiency which permits a
staff of its size and undergraduate sort to put out the "only
college daily in the South" on a midnight deadline.
\Wk
•■m
PAGE 197
^JS*^.-
^*v
OFFICERS
Editor Hayden Croxton Clement
Managing Editor McKeldin Gettys Puckette
Art Editor Ernest Craige
Business Manager Crist Watts Blackwell
Circulation Manager Jesse Albert Lewis
EDITORIAL STAFF
ASSOCIATE EDITORS — George Riddle, Morton Feld-
man, William Robertson, Fletcher Ferguson, Carl Pugh.
EXCHANGE EDITOR— Alexander Fonvielle.
EDITORIAL STAFF — Oliver Crawley, Isabelle Baker,
Roberts Jernigan, Olivia Root, Ellen Deppe, William
Stauber.
ART STAFF — Philip Link, Nell Booker, William
Michaux, VC'illiam Rufty, Ned Wheeler, Thomas Hum-
phries, Murray Poole, Carl Pugh.
PHOTOGRAPHY — Frank Bowne, chief photographer;
Pou Bailey, Herbert Bachrach.
BUSINESS STAFF
ADVERTISING MANAGERS — Alexander Fonvielle,
Isaac Duncan Ham.
DURHAM ADVERTISING— Nancy Schallert.
COLLECTIONS MANAGER— Stuart Gregg.
MAILING AND EXCHANGES — Ted Blount, Norman
Stockton.
ADVERTISING STAFF— Thomas Wright, Allan Grimes,
Edna Bynum, Ernest King, Oliver Crawley, Mary Mat-
thews, David Murchison, Bert Premo.
COLLECTIONS STAFF— Norman Stockton, John Glover,
Jack Rawls.
PAGE 1 98
THE
CAROLINA
8UCCANEEI
Lejt to Right — Riddle, Ferguson, Gregg, Lewis, Craige, Michaux.
THE
CAKOLINA
3UCCANEEK
Left 10 Right — Jernigan, Robertson, Pugh, Ham, Schallert, Booker.
With its eight issues during the past school year, the
"CaroHna Buccaneer" has attempted to entertain and en-
lighten, as it were, the youth of today. The field for the
extraction and presentation of material has necessarily been
confined to the campus. Not to have done this would have
meant competition with nationally recognized comic maga-
zines. Any such attempt would have been useless and
readily recognized as a poor imitation. In spite of a fixed
locality and limited funds, the personnel has succeeded in
its aim — to publish a light and readable humor magazine,
yet one that is snappy and clean.
At the beginning of the year a new arrangement of
officers was set up, whereby responsibility was more evenly
divided. The policies of the magazine as a whole and for
each issue were in the hands of and controlled by a gov-
erning group. Frequent meetings made it possible for this
governing group to make changes from issue to issue, so
that, by the middle of the year an entirely different maga-
zine was published monthly as to material and actual con-
tents, but with the same balanced form.
If the publication has been successful over the past year,
the credit must go to the members of the staff. Through
their untiring efforts, inexhaustible interest, and compe-
tent cooperation, they have at least fulfilled their inten-
tions. Before the year had passed its halfway mark the
staff was composed of more than a few experienced and
mature artists. Artists, not in their striaest sense, but
artists in each of their fields. Cartoonists developed styles
of their own and above all stuck to originality. Authors
became adept at making their stories sparkle with lively
humor. Photography was emphasized more than ever be-
fore, and photographers, induced to extend themselves,
produced commendable results. The staff and the publi-
cation's many outside contributors are due all the thanks,
for they are the ones that pooled their efforts in one com-
mon accord — to give the students a humor magazine for
students.
PAGE 199
OFFICERS
Editor William Hudson
Associate Editor Nicholas Read
Business Manager Randall Berg
Art Editor Margaret Munch
Circulation Manager Jesse Lewis
CONTRIBUTORS
Stuart Rabb, Hugh Foss, William Michaux, David Beaty,
Leonard Rubin, John Creedy, George H. Foster, Gould
Beech, Lane Barksdale, Alan Calhoun, Nicholas Korff, Sam
Hood, Lytt Gardner, Richard Oulahan, Lynn Gault, Joe
Horrell, Glenn Hutchinson, Almon Barbour, Adrian Spies,
Douglas Doak, Randolph Reece, Beverley Moss, Willi
Soyez.
THE
CAROLINA
AGAZINE
Left to Right — Spies, Hood, Gardner, Foss, Munch.
PAGE 200
WV; ' ' Al WTft fct^vj;,--!,-
THE
CABOLINA
MAGAZINE
'Mm^M
Lejl to Right — Barbour, Beaty, Rubin, Creedy, Calhoun.
Most college poets and short story writers live in EI
Dorado.
Perennially that truth flowers unpleasantly out of the
pages of "creative" work published by the Magazine. Still
the editorial we go on seeking El Dorado; and if along
the way we find one or two emigrants from that country,
or one or two exceptions to that rule of artistic nationality,
the endless journey has not been entirely futile. This year
we have published two or three sonnets with more than
a rhyme scheme, and perhaps one short story vitalized by
human validity. The college Muses have been as good as
usual.
Competent non-creative writers live closer to home than
El Dorado. The Magazine scored a mild scoop in the
Hugo Black case, made a liberal gesture in publishing an
article by three Nazi sympathizers, helped spread the
Odum-Vance-Couch gospel in the South, and sought to
be amusingly critical in such articles as "How to Make
Phi Bete" and "Swing Lingo".
By expanding its book section to include a critical essay
each month, the Magazine caught the attention (frequently
contemptuous, but none the less unprecedented) of the
haughty intellectuals in the Graduate Club. A new high
in graduate contributors was registered, also, with a cor-
responding increase in maturity of tone.
Finally, the Magazine went a whole year without hear-
ing mention of re-merger with the "Tar Heel". The gains
initiated by Sugarman seem to have been consolidated by
his successors.
wj^mm^m^
PAGE 20 1
^m
Di Senate In Session
DIALECTIC SENATE
FALL QUARTER
Officers
President John Ramsay
President Pro-Tern Lee Large
Clerk Margaret Evans
Critic Samuel Hobbs
Sergeant-at-Arms John Busby
Treasurer John Holland Eddleman
WINTER QUARTER
Officers
President David M. Kerley
President pro-tem Samuel Hobbs
Clerk Margaret Evans
Critic Clarence Kluttz
Sergeant-at-Arms Ted Blount
Treasurer William Cochrane
MEMBERS
Isabelle Baker, Ted Blount, John Bonner, Davis Anderson
Brooks, John Busby, William Cochrane, Richard Cross,
John Eddleman, Frederick Edney, Margaret Evans, Charles
Falls, Morton Friedman, Andrew Gennett, William Helms,
Samuel Hobbs, Frank Holeman, David Howard, Edward
Kantrowitz, John Kendrick, David Kerley, Paul Noble
King, Walter Kleeman, Clarence Kluttz, Lee Large, Robert
Lerner, Arthur Link, Malcolm McNaughton, Edward Mur-
ray, George Patrick, Charles Putzell, James Perrin Quarles,
John Ramsay, Grady Rankin, George Riddle, Frederick
Seymour, Clarence Shuping, Thomas Stanback, George
Steele, William Thompson, Benjamin Tillett, James Fred-
erick Wood, Robinson Woodward.
PAGE 204
Di Senaie
DIALECTIC SENATE
The Dialectic Senate was organized in 1795 — the year
of the opening of the University. Two months after the
"Di" was organized the Philanthropic Assembly was
formed by a group of revolting members thus giving the
campus a Senate and a House for student government. For
many years, membership in the "Di" and "Phi" was com-
pulsory, and expulsion from one of the societies meant ex-
pulsion from school. At that time they were not only
debating societies but also served as organizations of stu-
dent government and instruction (the officers taught Eng-
lish composition to the Freshmen) as well. They also pub-
lished the "University Magazine" and endowed the library.
In recent years, the activities of the Senate have been
confined usually to discussion and deliberation of topics
of campus-wide, state-wide, and world-wide importance.
Occasionally, action has been taken for the betterment of
the campus, and each year the Senate has several socials.
The Society has offered in the past and continues to offer
excellent training for leadership in public life.
mf.
PAGE 205
Ir'^ft
Phi Assembly Session
PHI ASSEMBLY
FALL QUARTER 1937
Officers
Speaker James Drew Martin, III
Speaker Pro-Tem Leighton Wesley Dudley
Sergeant-at-Arms Roy Edward Clark
Reading Clerk Edward Townsend Moore
Secretary-Treasurer John Watkins Rankin
WINTER QUARTER 1938
Officers
Speaker James Drew Martin, III
Speaker Pro-Tem Ben Franklin Dixon, III
Sergeant-at-Arms Thomas W. M. Long, Jr.
Reading Clerk Jack Phifer Fairley
Secretary-Treasurer John Watkins Rankin
Assistant Sect'y-Treas William Gillies Broadfoot, |r.
SPRING QUARTER 1938
Officers
Speaker Leighton Wesley Dudley
Speaker Pro-Tem Claire Whitmore
Sergeant-at-Arms William Gillies Broadfoot, Jr.
Reading Clerk Stuart Ficklen
Secretary-Treasurer John Watkins Rankin
Assistant Sect'y-Treas Eugene Williams
PAGE 206
y - .«
^^^^^^^^^Zi ""^^^S-SCtry^^^ -.u^-^
Phi Assembly
PHI ASSEMBLY
jVIEMBERS
William Adams, Roy Asch, Clark Bartlett, Thomas Boone,
Howard Bounds, Virginia Bower, Joseph Bowman, S. B.
Bradley, John Bridger, Mitchell Britt, William Broadfoot,
Winston Broadfoot, William Bruner, Walton Burkheimer,
Fred Cazel, Alice Cheshire, Roy Clark, Wheeliss Cole, Ted
Creznic, Don Dalton, Robert Dalton, Billy Davenport,
James Davis, William Dees, Leighton Dudley, Jack Fairley,
Robert Farris, Stuart Ficklen, Kathryn Fleming, Gaston
Foote, Virginia Giddens, XX'illiam Gilliam, John Glover,
Isaac Grainger, Mary Greene, John Grier, Phil Haigh, Bar-
bara Harris, Phyllis Hawthorne, Thomas Haywood, Seavy
Highsmith, Joe Hough.
Clarence Howell, Logan Howell, Rudolph Howell, Ben-
nett Hunter, Eleanor Jackson, Frances Johnson, Erwin
Jones, Hamilton Jones, Virginia Kibler, David Lee, Junius
Lee, Thomas Long, Jack Lynch, Wiley Mackie, Gordon
Malone, Edwin Maner, Drew Martin, William McCoU,
Frank McDonald, Leonard Miller, Ralph Miller, Town-
send Moore, Elmer Nance, Nancy Nesbit, Jack O'Conner,
Ralph Patrick, Edwin Penick, Hymen Philips, Edward
Rankin, John Rankin, Hughes Roberts, James Robertson,
Leah Robinson, Albert Rosen, Henry Roth, Thomas B.
Royster, Eugene Silverstein, George Simpson, John Single-
tary, Robert Spanier, Howard Stadiem, David Stick, Edwin
Taylor, Henry Terry, Connie Thigpen, Lawrence Tom-
linson, Paul Wallach, Claire Whitmore, Eugene Williams,
Elsa Winters, Brown Wright.
PAGE 207
Alexander Hiakh
Nancy Nesbit
CAROLINA
POLITICAL
UNION
OFFICERS
Chairman Alexander Heard
Vice-Chairman Nancy Nesbit
Secretary Margaret Henderson and Leighton Dudley
Treasurer Allen Merrill and Townsend Moore
Faculty Member E. J. Woodhouse
Members — Richard Ashby, Gordon Burns, Roy Clark, Wil-
liam Cole, Leighton Dudley, Stuart Ficklen, Harry Gatton,
Voit Gilmore, James Gray, Alexander Heard, Margaret
Henderson, Sam Hobbs, Ed Jeffress, Carl Jeffress, Frances
Johnson, Hamilton Jones, Jack Long, Margaret Long,
Nancy Nesbit, Townsend Moore, Horace Richler, Tommy
Royster, David Stick, Willis Sutton, Kenan Williams.
Faculty Advisers — F. F. Bradshaw, M. S. Breckenridge,
L. M. Brooks, W. E. Caldwell, D. D. Carroll, H. F. Comer,
E. E. Ericson, F. P. Graham, G. M. McKie, W. A. Olsen,
J. M. Saunders.
In the spring of 1936, the Carolina Political L'nion was
formed by a group of students interested in stimulating
student thought on political and governmental affairs.
They set out to do this by bringing to the campus out-
standing speakers representing all sides of pertinent issues
by conducting campus polls and open forums and in many
ways which bring the nation's problems closer to the in-
dividual student.
The LJnion is composed of twenty-five student members.
Among the speakers brought this year were James Roose-
^■eIt, Ambassador William E. Dodd, Earl Browder, Tom
M. Girdler, Ambassador A. A. Troyanovsky, Ambassador
Hans Dieckhoff, Frank R. McNinch, and William Hard.
First Ron', Left to Right — Royster, Gatton, Nesbit, Heard, Johnson, Richter.
Second Row, Left to Right — Sutton, Burns, M. Long, J. Long, Clark,
Third Rotv, Left to Right — Bailey, Moore, Henderson, Gilmore, C. Jeffries, Ficklen, Wood-
house, E. Jeffries, Merrill, Hobbs, Ashby.
PAGE 208
$'
UNIVEMSITY CLUB
1937-1938
OFFICERS
President James Palmer Balding, Jr.
Treasurer John Moore
Secretary Gordon Burns
MEMBERS
Howard Alfson, James Palmer Balding, Dan M. Beattie,
Eloise Broughton, Gordon Burns, John Clark, Robert Crys-
tal, Robert Davis, Glenn Davis, Lonnie Dill, Rufus Grey
Flynt, Thomas Hall Holmes, Jack Hughes, William Jor-
dan, Harvey Kaplan, Paul Kuklish, John Larsen, Philip
Edward Lucas, Charles Lynch, Felix Markham, August
Meyland, William E. Miller, John Moore, George Nether-
cutt, Carl Pugh, Randolph Hampton Reece, J. Fred Rippy,
Jr., Billy Robertson, Olivia Root, Harold Lauk Sager,
Hubert Privette, Shelton Scales, Sidney Siegal, Foyell Pen-
nington Smith, Ralph Templeton, Henry Alan Truex,
Charles Wales, William George Wilkins, Peter Williams,
Ernest Woodard, McKeldin Gettys Puckette.
University Club
PAGE 2 10
UNIVERSITY CLUB
The University Club with a membership of forty mem-
bers of the Junior Class representing every fraternity and
every dormitory on the campus and with three representa-
tives at large has a close contact with every phase of campus
life — a relationship which the University Club peculiarly
suited to carry on its wide activities.
The Club cooperates with all worthy student move-
ments, endeavoring to make them a success and is associ-
ated especially with the General Alumni office and the
Athletic Association.
The group tries to keep alive alumni interest and to
create a demand for the University of North Carolina in
prospective students. This is accomplished by radio pro-
grams which cover a portion of the entire South, appeal-
ing to both groups. The University Club has aided the
University Alumni groups in holding informal meetings
in several North Carolina cities.
The fourth phase of the Club's work concerns itself with
the improvement of inter-school relations. The Club meets
visiting athletic teams, entertaining them during their stay
on the campus, in an attempt to create goodwill between
the schools.
Left to Right — Alfson, Beattie, Broughton, Clark, Crystal,
Davis, G., Davis, R., Dill, Flynt, Holmes, Hughes, Kaplan, Kuklish,
Lawson, Lucas, Lynch, Markham, Meyland, Miller, Nethercutt,
Privette, Puckette, Pugh, Reece, Rippy, Robertson, Root, Sager, Scales,
Siegel, Smith, Templeton, Truex, Wales, Wilkins, Williams, Wood-
ward.
PAGE 2 11
^ ,1
L,
Hun II 1. Barnett
Y. M
JUNIOR-SENIOR Y. M. C. A. CABINET
OFFICERS
President Scott Hunter
Vice-President Gene Bricklemyer
Recording Secretary Brooks Patten
Treasurer William Stone Jordan
MEMBERS
Malcolm Allen, John Anderson, Claude Clark Armfield,
Randall Challen Berg, S. B. Bradley, Dwight Brown, Ellis
Bullins, Tom D. Burnett, William Blount Campbell, Jack
Cheek, Joseph Cheshire, Church Cline, William Jeffrey
Cole, Robert Ervin Cunningham, Robert Albertson Dalton,
Leighton Dudley, Joseph Gamewell Daracott, Edwin
Timanus Elliot, Fletcher Ferguson, Lytt Gardner, James
William Hall, Thomas Hall Holmes, Sam Earle Hobbs,
Henry Edward Hudson, James Glenn Hutchinson, William
Stone Jordan, David Moorman Kerley, Walter Lashley,
Jesse Albert Lewis, Charles Manly Loomis, Robert Na-
thaniel Magill, Edward M. Marsh, jr., James Drew Martin,
George Mallet MacNider, John Arthur MacPhee, Edgar
Ralph Miller, George Earl Nethercutt, Brooks Patten, Wil-
liam Alexander Raney, Randolph Hampton Reece, John
Bunyan Riggsbee, J. Fred RippV, Jr.. Marvin Rufiftn,
C. A.
Charles Robson, John Quincy Seawall, Jr., Eugene Alfred
Turner, Jr., Lochlin Monroe Ward, Harry Clay Yeatman,
Trez P. Yeatman.
SOPHOMORE Y. M. C. A. CABINET
OFFICERS
President DeWitt Barnett
Vice-President Charles L. Putzel
Secretary Roy Edward Clark
Treasurer Thomas Stanback
MEMBERS
DeWitt Barnett, Jack Benson, John Bonner, Tommy Braf-
ford, Clyde Brooks, Frederick Brown, Benjamin Burns,
Carlton Cannon, Roy Edward Clark, Julian Coghill, James
E. Davis, John Dorsey, William Dye, Charles H. Edwards,
Jr., Charles English, Jack Fairley, George Gammons,
Thomas Harrv Gatton, Lee Gilchrist, William J. Gordon,
Lamar Gudger, A. C. Hall, Thomas Heath, Frank Holeman,
Joe Holman, Jr., Joe Hough, David Howard, Bennett
Hunter, Thomas B. Keys, Thomas Long, John Lynch, VC'il-
liam Ogburn, Charles L. Putzel, Edward Rankin, Thomas
Stanback, Frank Turner, John Vincent, Stanley Walker,
Raymond Wheeler.
Junior-Senior Cabinet
,/r
Sophomore Cabinet
Y. M. C. A
FRESHMAN FRIENDSHIP COUNCIL
President Cameron McRae
Vice-President David Sessoms
Secretary Raymond Otho Linker
Treasurer VC'illiam Dees
Lloyd William Allen, Allen Andrews, Charles Barker,
Melver R. Barnes, Charles Barrett, Martin C. Barringer, Jr.,
Robert S. Bridgers, William Broadfoot, Winston Broad-
foot, James Everette Bryan, John W. Burton, Phil R. Carl-
ton, Jr., Robert Carroll, Fred Cazel, George M. Cooper,
Llewellyn Couch, Jr., Letcher Crawford, Bill Davenport,
Palmer Davis, William Dees, Shelton Duggar, Robert
Farris, James Boyce Garland, Andrew Gennet, John Grier,
Alan P. Grimes, Reddy Grubbs, Phil Haigh, Picket Ham-
lin, John R. Hampton, William T. Hand, Vaughan T.
Harford, Ben R. Heath, Hunter Heath, John Henderson,
Ralph H. Hodges, Jr., Zeno Hoots, Alfred Hughes, Charles
Humphries, Roy Lee Ingram, Harry Jones, William Jos-
lin. Jack Jurney, Paul N. King, Jennings E. Knight, Wel-
lington H. Lewis, Arthur S. Link, Raymond Otho Linker,
David McLemore, Cameron McRae, Ed Mager, Robert
Magner, James Mallory, John W. Menius, Robert Menius,
Byrd F. Merrill, David James Morrison, Lacy Morrow,
William Murray, Virgil Nelson, John O'Conner, Roy T.
Parker, Ralph C. Patrick, Jr., Joseph Peden, Paul Pleasant
Pendergrass. Edwin A. Penick, Calvin B. Phillips, Thomas
Ramsey, Carleton S. Read, Jr., Pembroke Rees, Frank R.
Reynolds, James Robertson, Brewster Rogerson, Simons
Lucas Roof, Frederick Schmidt, Littleton C. Selden, Alex-
ander Sessoms, David J. Sessoms, Jr., Jeff Sewell, Ben L.
Shaw, Walter Sheffield, Leroy Shuping, Eugene Silverstein,
George Lee Simpson, William Singletary, John Wilson
Smith, Jr., Bruce Snyder, Jr., Arthur Sweet, Edwin Taylor,
Frank B. Taylor, Samuel F. Teague, Jr., James Henry Toy,
Elmer Tre.vler, Thos. H. Vance, Lee Manning Wiggins,
Eugene Williams, Kenan Banks Williams, George T. Wil-
lis, Charles Wilkins, John Sidney Winstead, Thomas A.
Wright, Jr., Vincent Brown Wright, Jr., Clay White, Wil-
liam Edward York.
SOS®
Sollies
►loloI<i
►lolol^
►101014
►loloI<i
►lolol^
►loloI<i
►loloI<i
ill if
L'lMMRMn Band
UNIVEMSITY BAND
OFFICERS
President Kimball Harriman
Vice-President Warren Bartz
Secretary-Treasurer Anthony Amoscato
Business Manager Thaddeus Jones
Assistant Business Manager Norman Stockton, Jr.
Assistant Business Manager Phillip Walker
Publicity Manager Harry Kircher
Librarian Roderic Walter Cartier
Director Earl Slocum
BAND PERSONNEL
First Row — left to right
Warren Bartz — B FLit Clarinet Sheldon, Iowa
James Parker— B Flat Clarinet Raleigh, N. C
Leroy Shuping — Baa Drum Greensboro, N. C,
George Honeycutt — Snare Drum Apex, N. C
Ralph Buffey — Snare Drum Elizabeth, N. J
Arno Lehman — Snare Drum Lanesbaro, Mass,
Edwin Taylor — Snare Drum Asheville, N. C
Charles Wilkins — Cymbals and Flute Greensboro, N. C
Anthony Amoscato — £ Flat Clarinet Newark, N. J
Second Row
Robert Menius — B Flat Clarinet Monroe, N. C.
Louie Couch — B Flat Clarinet Monroe, N. C.
Bruce Snyder — B Flat Clarinet Monroe, N. C.
Martin Harmon — Bass Clarinet Kings Mountain, N. C.
Kimball Harriman — Alto Clarinet New York City
William Thompson — Flute and Piccolo .... Mountain Lakes, N. J.
Emmett Brown — Flute and Piccolo Charlotte, N. C.
Harry Hawkins — Flute and Piccolo Asheville, N. C.
David Bennett — Flute and Glockenspiel Asheville, N. C.
Conrad Schrimpe — Oboe and B Flat Clarinet . . Woodbridge, N. J.
Lawrence Hooper — Oboe and B Flat Clarinet .... Massena, N. Y.
Howard Waynick — Oboe and Bassoon Greensboro, N. C.
Third Row
Lee Mack — B Flat Clarinet Orangeburg, S. C.
Frank Rogers — B Flat Clarinet Florence, S. C.
Harold Corey — B Flat Clarinet Rocky Mount, N. C.
Morris Fitts — B Flat Clarinet Cortland, N. Y.
Harvey Pittman — 6 Flat Clarinet Raleigh, N. C
Joseph Blickman — B Flat Clarinet New York City
Charles Little — B Flat Clarinet Lincolnton, N. C.
Powell Nanney — Alto Saxophone Rutherfordton, N. C.
Bernie Aleskovsky — Alto Saxophone Spring Valley, N. Y.
Milton Kantrowitz — Alto Saxophone .... West Hartford, Conn.
Gene Gans — Baritone Saxophone Poland Mines, Pa.
Wiley Roger — Tenor Saxophone Raleigh, N. C.
WiLLiA.M Weil — Tenor Saxophone Glenville, Miss.
Hubert Henderson — Cornet Chase City, Va.
S. B. Galloway' — Cornet Jackson, Miss.
Thomas McWhirter — Cornet Charlotte, N. C
Roderic Cartier — Cornet Charlotte, N. C
Charles Sinclair — Truinpet Marion, N. C
James Perrotta — Trumpet Trenton, N. J.
Fourth Row
Peter Simone— B Flat Clarinet Elizabeth, N. J.
Lane Dry — B Flat Clarinet Landis, N. C.
Alfred Costner — B Flat Clarinet Lincolnton, N. C.
John Matte — B Flat Clarinet Luzerne, Pa.
Harry Sh.arp — B Flat Clarinet Winston-Salem, N. C.
William Benton — 6 Flat Clarinet Hamlet, N. C.
Arthur Baroody — 6 Flat Clarinet Salisbury, N. C.
Willis Carpenter — B Flat Clarinet Durham. N. C.
James Gibbs — Alto Saxophone Whittier, N. C.
Horace Johnson — Alto Saxophone Greensboro, N. C.
John Miller — French Horn Cortland, N. Y.
Edward Mitchell — French Horn Greensboro, N. C.
Arthur Sweet — French Horn Spencer, N. C.
Dale Sandifur — French Horn Berkeley, California
Joseph Hester — Trumpet Wendell, N. C.
Harry Kircher — Trumpet Belleville, 111.
David Sink — Cornet Lexington, N. C.
Karl Litzelman — Trumpet Westfield, N. J
PAGE 2 14
f/X^L,
l^f^Ai^'5^.
Frnt Row — Harriman, Bartz, Amoscato, Jones.
Second Row — Stockton, Walker, Kircher, Cartier.
UNIVERSITY BAND
Frank Hicks — Trumpet High Point, N. C.
John Fry — Trumpet Asheville, N. C.
koBERT Knickerbocker — Trtimpet Owega, N. Y.
John Menius — Cornet Monroe, N. C.
Fifth Row
William Walker — Drum Major Asheville, N. C.
Philip Walker — Baritone Winston-Salem, N. C.
Robert Hill — Baritone Spindale, N. C.
James Fuller — Baritone Columbus, Ga.
Harvey Jonas — Sousaphone Lincolnton, N. C.
Julian Caudill — Sousaphone Elizabethton, Tenn.
Robert Falk — Sousaphone Sayville, N. Y.
James Wharton — Sousaphone Goldsboro, N. C.
Howard Frazier — Sousaphone Badin, N. C.
Thaddeus Jones — Sousaphone Raleigh, N. C.
Robert Simmons — Bass Trombone Greensboro, N. C.
Hugh Gulledge — Trombone Big Creek, Miss.
Lawrence Masten — Trombone Winston-Salem, N. C.
Fred Wood — Trombone Monroe, N. C.
Paul King — Bassoon Greensboro, N. C.
!• ARL Si oCum — Director Chapel Hill, N. C.
Norman Stockton — Student Manager Winston-Salem, N. C.
MEMBERS NOT IN PICTURE
John Latham — Trombone Greensboro, N. C.
Richard Olson — Trombone Everett, Mass.
William Newton — Trombone Durham, N. C.
Charles Reid — French Horn Winston-Salem, N. C.
Donald Ackerman — Alto Saxophone Elizabeth, N. J.
Morton Turteltaub — Alto Saxophone Brooklyn, N. Y.
Jere King — Snare Drum Bristol, Tenn.
In the fall of '33 our present Director, Mr. Earl A.
Slocum, came to us from Greensboro. At that time the
only school-owned instruments were a few large horns and
bass drum, to which was added the unusual combination
of a piccolo and a glockenspiel. With these as tools the
band forged ahead to be awarded the present colorful uni-
forms in 1935 by the Athletic Association. Furthermore,
this year new basses, baritones, and bassoons were added
as the joint gifts of Music and Athletic Departments. The
band has increased in size from 60 in '33 to 85 this year.
Next year it is hoped that we will have two bands to which
entrance is permitted only after careful reading and per-
formance tests.
Now the band no longer confines itself to the spirited
moments of football or baseball, but plays its concerts in
auditoriums where even the drop of a pin would be con-
spicuous, not to mention the dropping of a couple of notes.
Last year it played twenty-six formal concerts, and this
year was off to a big start by featuring in the state music
teachers' meeting at Greensboro last October.
Last year the Band set a new record for travel with a
whirlwind week-end at N. Y. U. and next year they hope
to play the funeral hymn for Fordham. It's a long step
from the little group of 1903. From the best in Orange
County to the best in the nation — that's its ambition.
'^^
PAGE 2 15
Weaver, Turner, Judson. Bragdon, Toms.
MEN'S GLEE CLUB
OFFICERS cis Duncan Gibson, Edgar Hun Goold, Jr., Ansel Edwin
n ., T J /- w^ Gridlev, Sandy Davis Griffin, Jr., Joseph Kimball Har-
President Leonard G. Weaver •„ „ w/-ir- ~ n i u j r-i ci u ti n
nman, William Fowle Harward, Clarence Fletcher Howell,
Vice-President Eugene A. Turner Horace Woodrow Johnson, Wade Garland Jordan, David
Manager David Judson Judson, Harry M. Lasker, Charles Smith Little, James Wil-
Pubiicity Manager Frank L. Turner ham Little, Anson Angus Merrick, Leonard Wallace Mil-
Secretar'v Ralph Mayne Bragdon, Jr. '^r, Charles Byron McCraw, Brooks Patten, Joseph Bond
„. ■ I h F T Philips, Jr., P. C. Purvis, James Perrin Quarles, Jr., Oliver
■^ ■ Creech Rose, John Turner Roughton, Harry Schindler, Sid-
ney Schochet, Edwin Pliny Seaver, Paul Gabriel Simkoe,
Bernie Aleskovsky, John Inge Anderson, H. DeWitt Bar- Robert Hugh Stephenson, Robert Eyre Steward, Matthew
nett, John Williamson Bell, Robert Clifton Blue, Ralph Alfred Stroup, Willis Anderson Sutton, Edgar Chew
Mayne Bragdon, Jr., Robert Joseph Bray, Davis Anderson Sweeney, Humphrey Hathway Swift, Harry R. Taylor,
Brooks, James Taylor Brooks, Ellis Spencer Bullins, James Eugene Alfred Turner, Frank Lucius Turner, Leonard
Wilburn Carter, Robert Ervin Cunningham, Fred Dees, Jr., Green Weaver, Herbert Weber, Harold Weiss, William
George Eltin Deyo, Lane Cox Drye, Ray Ferguson, Cole- White Whitley, Lee Manning Wiggins, Bertram Monroe
man Finkel, Lawrence Wilson Futch, Bunk Gardner, Fran- Winkler, Thomas Henry Wright, Jr.
Men's Glee Club
PAGE 2 16
FKESHMAN
ORIENTATION
COMMITTEE
To the Freshman Orientation Committee is entrusted
the all-important task of helping the new men to adjust
themselves as promptly as possible to the changes and
novelties of college life.
This year, under the leadership of Joe Patterson and
Bob Magill, the Committee staged its most complete and
successful program since its beginning. During the three-
day period before the opening of Fall classes, each mem-
ber of the Committee was busy holding conferences with
his assigned group of some dozen freshmen, individually
and collectively, to assist them in solving individual prob-
lems in getting started in the University, to encourage
the proper attitude towards the school, its activities, and
its traditions, and to introduce them informally to the
Honor System and the Campus Code. The Committee-
man's role of adviser has in many cases continued long
after the formal ending of the Freshman Orientation
period.
The faculty advisers to the freshmen have been high in
their praises of the Committee's whole-hearted interest and
cooperation.
CO-CHAIRMEiN
Bob Magill and Joe Patterson
MEMBERS
Fred Rippy, Stewart Ficklen, Glenn Davis, Frank Wakely,
Joe Patterson, James Davis, Jack Atwood, Jim Hall, Ken-
neth Tanner, William Campbell, Rube Graham, Nick
Gianakos, William Hudson, Jim Balding, Thomas Hall,
Ale.x Heard, Thomas Stanback, William Jordan, John Um-
stead, William James, Manly Loomis, George Riddle, Hay-
den Clement, Jack Cheek, Bob Dufour, James Brill, Dick
Myers, Alan Calhoun, Scott Hunter, Thomas Holmes, Voit
Gilmore, Phil Walker, Vance Hobbs, Charles Wales, Dave
Thorp, William Cole, Brooks Patten, Thomas Keys, Gor-
don Burns, Robert Dalton, Lytt Gardner, Will Arey, Allen
Merrill, Dwight Brown, Albert Rosen, Jack McPhee, John
Moore, Jim Joyner, Phil Link, Lawson Turner, Wm. Lloyd,
C. C. Oates.
Freshman Orientation Committee
PAGE 2 17
'I
WOMAN'S
ASSOCIATION
OFFICERS
President Nancy Nesbit
Vice-President Lyal Boice
Secretary Olivia Root
Treasurer Louise Camp
Graduate representative Margaret Roush
Town representative Janet Lawrence
President of Spencer Hall Dorothy Kelly
Women's Advisor Mrs. Stacy
The history of women students at Chapel Hill has been
a comparatively short one though a very commendable one.
Not until 1897 did the trustees permit the enrollment of
women students in the University, and then only graduates
were considered. In 1898 the first degree to a woman was
awarded.
Since that time the number of women on the Hill has
increased and now there are more than 300 women students
enrolled.
For a time freshmen and sophomores were allowed.
Now, however, juniors, seniors and graduates only are
accepted with the exception of the Pharmacy School which
allows women to register in its first two years as well as
in the advanced classes.
Sphnchr Hall
PAGE 220
WOMAN'S
ASSOCIATION
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Elizabeth Adkins, Mary Theresa Allen, Julia Melba Alley, Elizabeth
Byers Ambrose, Mariari Atkinson, Annis Dorothy Aycock, Rietta Winn
Bailey, Eloise Baynes, Elizabeth Dozier Berry, Mary Elizabeth Bitting,
Ruth Blackwelder, Dorothy Bloch, Hattie Jean Brabham, Georgia Ann
Brewer, Margaret Lucinda Brown. Ruth Brown, I.illie Bulla, M.
Edlee Gates, Floyd Childs, Mrs. Jane Williams Cobb, Mary Lue
Cochran, Eleanor Ruth Coker, Beth G. Crabtree, Emily Poik Crow,
Frances Virginia Grumpier, Alice Davis, Margaret Clarine Davis,
Clyde Deans, Ellen Frances Deppe, Mary Ethel Dichmann, Carolina
Volger Diehl, Dorothy Dodd, Kathleen Donahue, Louise Donehoo,
Elizabeth Faucette, Kathryn Nantucket Folger, Frances Katherine
Foust, Harriet Irene Gates, Clarine Catling, Leora German, Gertrude
Mancelle Gilman, Alice Lee Googe, Arabella Gore, Majorie Alberta
Griifin, Lynette Heldman, Pattie Elizabeth Hill, Ruth Colvard Hill,
Neel Hines, Mary Evelyn Hinnant, Mary Wilma Hodge, Anne Miller
Holman, Margaret Beli Holmes, Pearl Trogdon Huffman, Elizabeth
Huntley, Mari Luise Huth, Martha E. Jones, Mary Eugenia Kapp,
Kathryn Isabel Kennard, Alice Boykm Kerr, Mae Elizabeth Kilgo,
Florence Olga Kivette, Anne Turner Knight, Eleanor Sanders Lane,
Lois Latham, Ruth Etta Lawson, Marion Poplin Legette, Jane Gage
Leitner, Corine Manly, Mary Katherine Martin, Mittie Frank Mason,
Eleanor Mayes, Margaret Elizabeth McCoy, Mrs. Mary Robinson
McGinnis, Emma Jane McKee, Rosalie Fitzhugh McNeill,
Mae Mason Meares (Mrs. A. W.), Mildred Rutherford Mell, Kath-
erine Elizabeth Metcalf, M. Elizabeth Montgomery, Mariana Nichol-
son, Elizabeth Page, Cordelia Evelyn Pass, Rose Peagler, Rebecca
Peebles, Gwendolyn Margaret Pharis, Augusta Lombard Philbrick,
Irene Phydas, Ruth Prichard, Nita Katharine Pyburn, Mary Claire
Randolph, Virginia Stuart Redfern. Laura Alice Reed, Margaret Pat-
rick Reid, Lucy V. Reynolds. Margaret Erwin Robins, Margaret Roush,
Gertrude Sanford, Mrs. Wautel Lambeth Selden, Elsie Graham Setzer,
Elizabeth Warren Shewmake, Lou Sullivan Shine, Louise Shoup, Dor-
othy Silverman, Eileen Smith, Anna Brooks Spivey, Sarah Starr, Fran-
ces Leda Stevens, Mary Esther Stevenson, Margaret Stanford Tillett,
Callie Ella L'mstead, Ruth Josephine Valentine, Vivian Ellen Veach,
Woman's Graduate Dormitory
PAGE 22 1
■f*"-^
Dot KFI.I.V
Polly Pollock.
Mary Williams Ward, Eleanor Waters, Bessie Watson, Bailey Daniel
Webb, Alma Joslyn Whiffen, Grace Williams, Virginia LeMay Wil-
liamson, Inez Willoughby, Virginia Frances Wooten, Carolyn Lamar
Wray, Tempe Gee Yarborough, Louise Young.
SENIOR WOMEN
Helen Stockton Andrus, Perdita Butler, Bertha Arnold, Isabelle Rod-
dey Baker, Ernestine Ray Barber, Evelyn Cochrane Barker, Doris
Bartlett, Dorothy Elizabeth Bass, Julia Mary Bell, Ruth Berges, Lyal
Boice, Nell Battle Booker, Mary Beatrice Boyd, Eloise Broughton,
Blanche Bullock, Jean Bush, June Bush, Mary Louise Camp, Alice
Calder Cheshire, Eleanor Maxine Clough, Ethel Katherine Coffey,
Judith Meriweather Coon, Mildred Copland, Blanche Corbett, Phyllis
Eveline Greedy, Kathryn Gillispie Cushman, Sarah Dalton, Margaret
Daniel, Beulah Elizabeth Davis, Emily Hughes Dickenson, Eleanor
Douglas Doak, Ruth Winifred Duffee. Idaliza Dunn, Mary Dortch
Emory, Margaret Wilson Evans, Mary Crockett Evans, Velma Flem-
ing, Mrs. David Worth Gamble, Corinna Erwin Gant, Dillard Scott
Gardner, Mary D'Oyley Glover, Cornelia Homes Gray, Nell Peake
Harkins, Barbara Jane Harris, Phyllis Hawthorne, Madeline Hayns-
worth, Margaret Belle Henderson, Mary Elizabeth Henry, Frances
Parker Howard, Margaret Leon Howard, Ruth Lane Howard, Mrs.
Nell Oates Hoyle, Lillian Legette Hughes, Margaret Cloyd Johnson,
Margaret Louise Johnston, Sara Frances Kanoy, Elizabeth Brock
Keeler, Dorothy Lee Kelly, Mary Elizabeth King, Vivian Reid Kreeger,
Virginia Spearrin Lee, Marguerite Lipscomb, Margaret Ridley Long,
Mary Theresa Matthews, Irma Francis McCurdy, Ethel A. McGalliard,
Margaret Gamey McGirt, Mary Ochse McKee, Inez Kathleena Mease,
Ruth Eleanor Mengel, Katherine Kreider Moore, Maggie Lou Moore,
Harnette Elizabeth Morrison, Margaret Munch, Nancy Constantine
Nesbit, Sallie Antoinette Page, Janet Palmer, Ella Louise Payne,
Margaret Lee Pollock, McKeldin Gettys Puckette, Iris Rawls, Eliza-
beth Redfern, Livia Smith Root, Frances Julia Roughton, Margarita
Alicio Samayoa, Nancy Elizabeth Schallert, Nancy Flanders Sitterson,
Nancy Marie Smith, Sue Dupuy Southerland, Louise Spear, Mary
Lillian Speck, Bessie Headen Strowd, Elizabeth Gordon Taylor, Maria
Washington Tucker, Alene Leslie Vercoe, Elizabeth Jean Walker,
Audrey Lillian Williams, Charlotte Lane Wright.
DOT KELLY— An expert knitter who makes frequent trip.s to S. C.
One of the finest presidents Spencer Hall has had. Dot always lias a
cheerful word for everybody. She is also a strong leader in the
Council's advisory board.
BEE DALTON — Recognized generally as one of the best all-around
girls on the campus.
POLLY POLLOCK— Probably the live wire who made the Y. W. C. A.
a. real organization on the campus. A real co-ed leader and her per-
.•ionality made her that.
N.WCY NESBIT — "To the desening belong, etc.", Nancy saves one
hour each day for tlie Woman's Association, the C. P. U., the U. N. C.
Symphony, Graham Memorial, and the "Y".
LOUISE CAMP — A Commerce student who accounts for her time
spent at Y. W. C. A. meetings and Women's Association meetings.
MARGARET EVANS— One of the offlcers who lieeps tlie Di Senate
alive and Treasurer of the Y. W. C. A.
Nancy Nesbit
PAGE 222
Louise Camp
Margaret Evans
Eloise Broughton
Nell Booker
JUNIOR WOMEN
Molly Albritton, Frances Gray Archer, Adelc Austin, Adelaide Bailey,
Anna Margaret Ballentine, Frieda Bayroff, Victoria Ellen Bell, Edna
Bengel, Ann Axton Bishop, Virginia Ragsdale Bower, Bernice
Euphenia Brantley, Frances Marion Brewer, Mildred Luise Britt,
Katherine Boiling Brown, Edna Hines Bynum, Gretchel Schoonmaker
Cocke, Constance CoUis, Nancy Gray Coughenour, Olive Echols
Cruikshank, Estelle W. Cuddy, Frieda Davis, Roslyn Dince, Helen
Williams Duguid, Miriam Durrett, Claudia Josephine Eldridge, Janet
Wallace Evans, Mary Louise Felkel, Kathryn Briggs Fleming, Mary
Betty French, Ruth Garrett, Memrie Marks Gary, Virginia Marie
Giddens, Frances Annabel Goforth, Carol Sophie Goodman, Mary
Louise Greene, Martha McDowell Gunter, Mary Taylor Hinnant,
Irene Anne Hodgins, Frances Holland, Julia Sanders Holt, Lillian
Pope Howell, Lucy Jane Hunter, Mary Frances Hunter, Lois Jean
Illenberger, Eleanor Pendleton Jackson, Helen Deborah Keister, Vir-
ginia Squann Kibler, Ethel Grace Laidlaw, Janie Marie Lambert,
Janet Lawrence, Mary Adelaide Linton, Mary Locksley Long, Mary
Winston Long, Margaret Finley Louthian, Susan Lumpkin, Nancy
Reid Lyon, Elizabeth Morrison Malone, Sarah Massey, Nell Mc-
Intire, Rachael Banks McLain, Jerolyn Meek, Mrs. M. V. N. Morgan,
Anne Mariah Nash, Elizabeth Wells Norcross, Letty Shepard Osborn,
Ruth Mitchell Parsons, Annie Donnell Patterson, Julia Bowen
Peebles, Mary Elsie Pemberton, Janet Reid Pendleton, Anne Perry,
Mary Margaret Rice, Janie O. Hunt Riddle, Leah Robinson, Helen
Shirley Rosenman, Margaret Sabine, Vivian Beatrice Schildwachter,
Barbara Alice Smith, Jessie Lee Smith, Virginia Elizabeth Smith,
Elizabeth Ann Spencer, Rose Pittman Stacy, Sylvia Sundstrom, Cor-
nelia Lee Thigpen, Mary Lindsay Thornton, Rosalyn Tindel, Gladys
Best Tripp, Elizabeth Wahrenberger, Dorothy Louise Walker, Marian
Blanche Williams, Elsa Smedes Winters.
SOPHOMORE WOMEN
Anna Dean Burks, Altajane Holden, Minnie Feral Parker, Elizabeth
Milton Weaver.
ELOISE BROUGHTON — Well known on tliis campus for her southern
drawl and "big brown eyes". Eloise is the Pi Phi's president and keeps
tlie girls "well in hand".
LIB KEELER — This serious, beautiful, and popular Mississippian
lias been very active in "Y" work and is a member of Chi Omega.
-.\etive in every department open to co-eds; what-
DINNY PUCKETTE— Yankeeland's contribution to the Carolina Buc-
caneer, Clii Omega, and tlie Soutliern gentlemen.
LIL HUGHES — One of the co-eds' songstresses who has taken active
parts in campus production and on campus publication, and has done
so famously.
M.\RY I.ILI.I.W SPECK— Engineered the most successful orienta-
tion program on the Carolina campus. Varied interest in other fields.
Lillian Speck
PAGE 22 3
d
Nancy Schallert
Evelyn Barker
FRESHMAN WOMEN
Blanche Evelyn Burrus, Margaret Thomas Lloyd, Agnes Elizabeth
Thomas, Latane Potter Wright.
LIBIL\RY SCIENCE
Mary Elizabeth King, Eileen M. Smith, Tempe Gee Yarborough.
Inez Willoughby.
MEDICAL SCHOOL
PHARMACY SCHOOL
Blanche Bullock, Jean Bush, June Bush, Helen Williams Duguid.
Velma Fleming, Claudia Josephine Eldridge, Margaret Thomas Lloyd,
Maggie Lou Moore, Minnie Feral Parker, Jessie Lee Smith, Rose
Pittman Stacy, Agnes Elizabeth Thomas, Elizabeth Milton Weaver,
Latane Potter Wright.
LAW SCHOOL
Sarah Starr, Elizabeth Warren Shewmake, Margaret Patrick Reid.
SPECIAL STUDENTS
Beth G. Crabtree, Alice Boydin Kerr, Mrs. Wautel Lambeth Selden.
LYAL BOICE — The pretty vice-president of the woni.in'.'s association
who dresses beautifully and is tlie Pi Phi representative at all the
German Club dances.
NANCY SCHALLERT— One of the most versatile co-eds on the
campus making one of the Tar Heel's best reporters in her Junior year,
doing a superlative job in acting on the Playmaker stage, and further
augmenting her renown by her sincere interest in musical and campus
affairs.
EVELYN BARKER — Under the capable direction of Evelyn, women's
athletics have gained prominence and accessibility.
■ BUSH TWINS — Division of power is exemplified in these two — they
are joint treasurers of the Athletic Association.
OLIVIA ROOT — Friendly, good-humored, capable; University Club,
Women's .\ssociation officer, and other campus organizations.
MARGARET HENDERSON— A brilliant smile that puts life into the
C. P. U., the Y. M. C. A., and the -'town hall of the air".
::^-J^.£
June and Jean Bush
Olivia Root
Margaret Henderson
PAGE 224
?^*M
WOMANS ATflLETIC COUNCIL
S
l/'CO-ED PING PONG
WOMEN'S ATHLETIC COUNCIL.
Officers
E\elyn Barker President
Phyllis Ha\Uhorne Secretary
June Bush. Jean Bush ___ Treasurers
Members
"Tud"" Mease. Ruth Duffie. Frances
Roughton. Jane Hunter. Vivian Schild-
watcher. Alice Cheshire; Mrs. Gladys
Beard. Director.
In the fall seven sports were of-
fered to the girls— bowling, hockey.
tennis, archery, pingpong. horseback
riding, and golf. Tournaments were
conducted in most of these activities
and 158 girls participated in the va-
rious sports.
*^
During the winter quarter a class
in fencing was begun. Managed by
"Tud" Mease it proved quite popular.
Basketball was placed among the
sports offered and those sports which
were played out of doors were discon-
tinued.
The spring quarter we think will be
the most successful and interesting
quarter in co-ed sports. The new gj'm
promises to l>e the center of attrac-
tion, for swimming will be offered to
the co-eds for the first time. Mono-
grams will be awarded at the end
of the quarter to those girls excelling
in various sports. This year a mono-
gram club for girls was organized and
it has created quite a bit of interest
among the girls. Keys were presented
council members for the first time.
CO-ED BOWLING
EN ©ARDE
mMi
Y. W. C . A
OFFICERS
President Polly Pollock
Vice-President Elizabeth Keeler
Secretary Julia Peebles and Kathryn Fleming
Treasurer Margaret Evans
CABINET
Program Elizabeth Keeler
Music Mary Matthews
Art Nell Booker
Publicity Eloise Broughton
Membership Betsy Taylor
Social Rosalyn Tyndal and Claire Whitmore
Social Service Alice Cheshire and Sarah Dalton
Human Relations . . Mary ^"inston Long and Anne Perry
ADVISORY BOARD
Chairman Mrs. Walter Spearman
Secretary Margaret Evans
Student Secretary Louise Donahoo
Mrs. M. H. Stacv, Mrs. F. P. Graham, Mrs. Irene Lee, Dr.
E. L. Mackie, Dr. O. T. Binkley, Dr. D. M. Stewart, Mrs.
E. G. Hardeman, Mr. H. F. Comer, Miss Tempe Newsome,
Dr. F. P. Graham.
One of the prides of the Y. W. C. A. is the "bull-
sessions" that are sponsored jointly with the Y. M. C. A.
and held around the firesides of some of the LIniversity
professors. Why these "bull-sessions".' The Christian
associations feel that through discussions among students
with some of the outstanding faculty members social prob-
lems and campus problems take on a life and interest not
attained elsewhere.
This is one of the ways in which the Y. W. C. A. at-
tempts to present and de\elop a religion that is alive, that
has to do with the life of the students in relation to each
other and to all people. By relation Christianity and social
problems both are given vitality and strength.
The association as a whole seeks to understand student
problems and the world community, while special work is
done by the committees.
Y. W. C. A. I.N Session
.^ -^ ' r ■ ^ ^
^^
Matthews Tucker Smith Barker
WOMAN'S GLEE CLUB
OFFICERS Phyllis Greedy, Olive Cruikshank, Virginia Grumpier, Kay
President Marv Matthews Donahue, Katherine Fleming, Harriet Gates, Barbara Har-
Vice-President Maria Tucker ris, Evelyn Hinnant, Altajane Holden, Lillian Howell, Lois
Business Manager Evelyn Barker Illenberger, Eleanor Jackson, Florence Kivette, Janet Law-
Publicitv Manager Nancy Smith rence, Adelaide Linton, Marguerite Lipscomb, Nancy Lyon,
Accompanist Kay Donahue Mary Matthews, Ruth Mengel, Harriette Morrison, Tempe
Newsome, Betty Norcross, Ruth Parsons, Louise Payne,
MEMBERS Mary Elsie Pemberton, Polly Pollock, Laura Reed, Leah
Molly Albritton, Adele Austin, Anna Margaret Ballentine, Robinson, Elizabeth Spencer, Sylvia Sundstom, Gladys
Adelaide Bailey, Evelyn Barker, Virginia Bower, Blanche Tripp, Maria Tucker, Gonnie Thigpen, Elizabeth Gretter
Bullock, Anna Dean Burks, Judith Goon, Elizabeth Gorrell, Tinsley, Eleanor Walters, Virginia Wooten.
Woman's Glee Glub
^^WJ:
^^#%i
FOURTH PART
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA YEAR BOOK
YACKETY YACK
1938
This part of the "Volume being devoted
entirely to the
ATHLETICS
R A. Fetzhr
Director of Athlelics
Monogram Club
G. E. Shepard
AiwiLtiil Director of Athlelics
MONOGRAM CLUl
R. Adams, M. Aderholt, M. Allen, I. Avery, H. Bartos, T.
Bass, A. Bershak, H. Bissett, A. Bonner, G. Bricklemyer,
E. Bullard, T. Burnette, H. Clark, R. Cooner, W. Corpen-
ing, F. Cox, A. Craige, T. Crockett, R. Crystal, A. Ditt,
A. Doyle, L. Dudley, W'. Dunha, J. Farmer, F. Farrell,
J. Fisher, J. Foreman, E. Fuller, R. Garland, J. Glace, Vv".
Gordon, R. Graham, F. Grubb, N. Hairston, J. Hall, F.
Hardy, J. Harriss, A. Henderson, W. Hendrix, J. Hilton,
T. Holmes, J. Hutchins, W. Gordon, A. Jones, C. Kline,
O. K. CORNWELL
Director of Physical Education
PAGE 232
R. B. WotF
Head Football Coach
M. D. Ranson
Head Track Coach
Monogram Club
BuNN Hearn
Head Baseball Coach
MONOGKAM CLUB
C. Kluttz, J. Kraynick, S. Maronic, W. Mauter, L. Melchor,
C. MuUis, J. Murnick, L. McCarn, G. Nethercutt, M.
Novich, E. Palmer, H. Palmer, D. Parker, E. Peterson, R.
Potts, G. Radman, J. Ramsay, R. Ray, P. Richards, H.
Rogers, W. Rood, C. Rood, J. Russell, E. Ruth, C. Slagle,
G. Sternweiss, H. Strayhorn, E. Tankersley, M. Topkins,
J. Trimpey, D. Troutman, F. Ullman, B. Umstead, G. Wat-
son, W. Winbourne, J. Woodson, E. Wrenn, H. Wright,
I. Wright.
P. H. QuiNLAN
Trainer and Head Wrestling Coach
M. Z, RONMAN
Head Bosing Coach
W. D. Skidmore
Head Basketball Coach
'ms.
J. f. Kenfield
Head Tennis Coach
PAGE 233
!
'■>^U
^
/-£i!>jl j/i£7/iOxii>±
(
i
:ar heels smash duke blue devils, 1
w
BATBB^
*«<
w
S^K
ihe
0N1>Y
EGB
A\L"*f
^^
c"y-^«ESO^Ta
J**
Fordh^nTHj
f^lans For Campus c*;
CHAPEL HJl
Vf
.-OU-^S'
C^rol^
l|^E^THT^
xn "aKWV
pHOTt]
y
oeii!
-s?
«^
' —
V'Oj^l Ml XI \[
THE ONLY
COLLEGE riA/LY
IN TUE SOL-fH
^orthLarolina Levee Stons Tiil^n^ T-^
CPU Speaker Is Leade7oF^7==Xr=—--^^^^^ 1 Ulane 1 ide
^^^mrz:}/W^^'^ Dawson Has
ough Games
^
Vtual Facts Show It
'^ '"s SuiH-rb Battle
" ''fid Stars
Next
^eaiii Spot:
DAILY
ReaW
TVve
vation
ttarts
Bi«^
Find
Ao+zite
AndDSi&-»^'"'^
•" "^i*.
Bartos Clears the Path for Waison Against South Carolina
FOOTBALL
Coach Ray Wolf's second year at Carolina saw the
Tar Heels rank high in the nation's gridiron ratings as
they won both the "Big Five" and Southern Conference
titles undisputed. Only one game was dropped — that to
Fordham by a 14-0 margin. Led by the finest pair of co-
captains, Andy Bershak and Crowell Little, to ever grace
the turf of Kenan Stadium, the Tar Heels were probably
the best in the L'niversity's history.
Bershak, Little, Hank Bartos, Art Ditt, Elmer Wrenn,
Tom Burnette, George Watson and others scored places
on all types of mythical elevens, Bershak topping the
group with his All American choice by several outstand-
ing committees. To mention all the "stars" would be
impossible and unfair to anyone left out for "all worked
for one and one for all". A grand bunch of fellows; a
grand team; something of which the LTniversity and stu-
dent body could justly be proud: the Carolina football
team of 1937.
NORTH CAROLINA 13, SOUTH CAROLINA 13
The opening of 1937 saw South Carolina hold the
Tar Heels to a 13-13 stalemate on Kenan's gridiron. Caro-
lina sent Tom Burnette over for the first touchdown early
in the opening quarter, but a few minutes later LJrban
evened matters with a Gamecock six pointer. Co-captain
Crowell Little scored in the second period and Burnette
converted to give the Tar Heels a 13-6 lead, which was
erased midway in the final stanza when Dearth took a
pass and then place kicked the point to finish even-stephen.
PAGE 238
BiKiiN.sKi l)(j\\Ni:i.) B\ Adams in WOi t -Pa( r Contest
Blrnette off to a Gain in N. Y. U. Gamf
FOOTBALL
NORTH CAROLINA 20, N. C. STATE
Invading the lair of State's Wolfpack, the Tar Heels
emerged with a 20-0 win. Little scampered over from the
three-yard line, Burnette converted and later passed to
Bershak for a second touchdown to give Carolina a 13-0
advantage at the half. Several Desperate attempts by
Eddie Berlinski to score for State met ill fate. The final
quarter saw Burnette race 24 yards and then boot the
extra point to complete the scoring.
NORTH CAROLINA 19, N. Y. U. 6
Yankeeland's second invasion by the Tar Heels was
even more successful than the first for this time they
romped off with a 19-6 triumph. Little was the big scor-
ing gun as he made all three touchdowns for the winners
with Burnette adding the sole conversion. Both teams tal-
lied in the first, but the recovery of a fumble by Co-
captain Andy Bershak and Little's quick kicking led the
way for additional scores in the third and fourth periods.
N. Y. U. outgained the Tar Heels in yardage, but the lat-
ter's smart display of football netted the greater score and
that's what they pay off on.
NORTH CAROLINA 28, WAKE FOREST
The Tar Heels next defeated the Deacons 28-0 on
the latter's field. With George Watson, Jack Kraynick,
Wally Winborne and George Stirnweiss producing the six-
pointers and Burnette adding three extras and Stirnweiss
one, Carolina met little opposition as the second and third
strings did most of the playing.
Slagle Opens the Way for Radman Alainsi Wake Forest
Bricklemyer
PAGE
lili
Little Takes a Short Wade Through the Green Wave
FOOTBALL
NORTH CAROLINA 13, TULANE
The Green Tide of Tulane surged down on Kenan
Stadium before 2 1 ,000 Homecoming Day fans but could
not reach touchdown shore and was receded 13-0. After
a first period storm, Tulane was scored upon twice by
George Watson in the second quarter to give Carolina a
lead that was never endangered. VCatson scored first on
a double reverse and then took a pass from Little for
the second. Burnette added the extra point. The victory
wiped out 1936's loss and gave Carolina a two-one lead
in the series.
NORTH CAROLINA 0, FORDHAiM 14
Fordham handed Carolina its first and sole defeat of
the year by a 14-0 count before 24,000 fans in Kenan
Stadium. The Rams drove 88 yards in the first period, cul-
minating with a Statue of Liberty play that saw Kazlo carry
over for the score. Fortunate ended the touchdown mak-
ing in the third period. Captain Druze made both place-
ments; Despite its defeat, Carolina played a good game
with the work of Bershak, Little, Watson, Stirnweiss, Bur-
nette and Bartos always keeping them in the contest.
NORTH CAROLINA 26, DAVIDSON
The Tar Heels got back into winning form the fol-
lowing Saturday, Davidson being a 26-0 victim on its own
field. Zan Carver's 66-vard touchdown dash and addi-
tional six-pointers by Stirnweiss, Kraynick and Watson
provided an easy Carolina win. Burnette added the two
placements.
Slagle
W^tWAi.
r
TBALL
NORTH CAROLINA 14, DUKE 6
Carolina tasted the sweetness of revenge on the mem-
orable day of November 13 when it battered Wallace
Wade's Duke eleven 14-6 before 43,000 fans in the Durham
horseshoe. The Blue Devils got off to a 6-0 advantage
when Hackney romped around end for 14 yards and a
touchdown early in the first period.
After that Duke wasn't in the ball game. It never
again threatened as Carolina battered it left and right all
over the field. The Tar Heels went ahead in the second
period. Little going off tackle for a touchdown and Bur-
nette calmly converting. The second score was made from
the nine-yard line in the fourth quarter, the Tar Heels
"assuring" Duke of an attempted field goal and sucking
the secondary in close. Instead, Burnette passed sharply
to Watson and then place kicked to sew up the victory,
the "Big Five" and Southern Conference titles. To single
out the stars would be impossible for every Carolina player
played the best game of his career.
NORTH CAROLINA 40, VIRGINIA
The season was anti-climaxed on Thanksgiving Day
with a 40-0 rout of Virginia's Cavaliers. Had not Ray
Wolf used his second and third teams the major portion
of the game, the Tar Heels would still be scoring. Watson
Waison Eludes Duke's Hackney for Second U. N. C.
Touchdown
Ray. ALi>!.iger
Watsijn Takes a Pa.ss fur ToucHiiuviN Against Viri.inia
rOOTBALL
led the parade with two touchdowns. Dirt went 62 yards
through center for a score, Bricklemyer took a 58-yard
pass from Stirnweiss for another, and Little and Stirnweiss
each counted six-pointers. Burnette and Maronic added
two extras apiece.
VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD
(Reading Left to Right)
Sitting, First Rote — Craige, Whitley, Coughenhour. Cald-
WTXE, BaRTOS. BerSHAK (Ca-C.lpt.t;)l), LITTLE / Co-C.lpl.lill) .
Palmer, E., Avery, Bricklemyer, Burnette, Quintan (Trainer).
Sitting, Second Ron — Cernugle. Kravnick. Woodson, Win-
borne, Watson, Kline. Thompson. P., Abernethy. Wrenn. Ditt,
Cooner.
St.inding, First Row — CoACH WoLF. Ray (M.in.tger). Stern.
Hubbard. Desich. Radman, Megson, Palmer. H., Gordon, F.,
Maronic, Slagle, Adam, Coach Vaught, Coach Erickson.
Standing, Last Row — Brantley, Carver, Slotnick, Meghan,
Ralston, Morris, Clements, Sternweiss, Forrest, Blaylock.
Craige . Mm jeer
JZ^ "^
1;^ ;|!t f' 'i ,i _? '-9 ' _*.«■'!&_ ■ r
"^iiill^hjiiiiiP^*"^
\■AK^I I -1
1 I lv\l I .S( (I Al
I ^IBLI J j; IS
BASKETBALX
Carolina's White Phantoms of 1938 again upheld the
good name of a University of North Carolina basketball
team and marched to its sixth straight Big Five champion-
ship. Going into the tournament as heavy favorites with
a conference record of thirteen wins and two defeats, the
Tarheels could not reach its top-form in the opener with
Washington and Lee and fell victims to the Generals,
48-33.
Carolina opened the season with easy victories over
Atlantic Christian College and Guilford. The Tarheels
moved on to Davidson where the opposition stiffened. In
extending Carolina to an extra period after Andy Bershak's
one hand shot from the side and Captain Earl Ruth's sen-
sational mid-floor shot tied the game 33 all, Davidson
fought gamely all the way. It was Dick Worley's shot that
gave Carolina the victory after each team had scored in
the extra period. W'orley was high scorer for Carolina
with nine points. Carolina returned to the Tin Can and
defeated Wake Forest, 31-26 when Foy Grubb held All
Southern Waller to five points.
On the annual \'irginia trip Carolina played raggedly,
but made a clean sweep with victories over V.P.I. , V.M.I.,
and W. and L. In the game with W. and L., the Tarheels
iU
'^^i-iMi^'^
'^jM
rl lift Mi
BASKETBALL
trailed by seven points at half time, but finished strong
to win, 34-31. Ben Dilworth and Pete Boone did some
splendid defensive work in the second half and held Bob
Spessard to two foul shots.
Carolina's seven game winning streak was halted ab-
ruptly at Wake Forest when the Deacons walked off with
a 44-34 victory. Led with Waller's nineteen points Wake
Forest was never seriously threatened.
On the annual northern trip the Tarheels met Princeton
and suffered the worst drubbing given to a Carolina basket-
ball team in several years, 53-32. Moving on to Philadel-
phia to meet St. Joseph's, who lost last year by a single
point when Bill McCachren dropped in a goal in the last
minute, Carolina was meeting a team seeking revenge and
the hom team got it, but not until the Tarheels had given
them a tough battle. St. Joseph's made the first seven shots
good, but this did not dishearten the Phantoms. Unable
to find the basket, but displaying a superb floor game led
by Earl Ruth, Carolina held the local team in the second
half, but lost 34-29.
Rebounding from the disastrous week Carolina hopped
all over State with a 39-31 victory. Little Pete MuUis led
the onslaught with sixteen points ably supported with
■HIMIi^
Varsity Squad
Lfft to Right. Silling — RoBERSON. Boone, Bershak. Captain Ruth, Dilworth. Mullis. Grubb.
Left to Right, Standing — Coach Skidmore. Worley.
Carr, Cuneo. Bowman, Mathes. Stoopack. Assistant Manager Lynch.
ASKETBALL
Andy Bershak's twelve points and Earl Ruth's ten. Mary-
land invaded Chapel Hill and fell victims to the smooth
clicking White Phantoms by the one-sided score of 43-24.
Against Clemson the Tarheels looked as fine as any team
to represent Carolina, including the 1934 Southern Con-
ference champions, and led all the way to a 44-34 victory.
The team gained revenge over the highly touted New
York University Violets in the Tin Can. The New Yorkers
had beaten the Tarheels in Madison Square Garden the
last years but it was Carolina all the v^ay. Final score 57-39-
Carolina returned to Big Five competition and defeated
Davidson and Duke with ease. V.M.I, and W. and L.
came to the Tin Can and were defeated, the Tarheels ex-
tending their winning streak to nine games. In the W.
and L. game Ben Dilworth outscored Bob Spessard while
he remained in the game, but he fouled out late in the
first half. Pete Boone, sub to Dilworth, stepped in the
game and held Spessard intact for the remainder of the
game as he and his teammates marked up enough baskets
to win out in the last two minutes.
The W. and L. game ended the Carolina season in the Tin
Can without single loss during the current campaign. The
game also was the last to be played in the Tin Can since
the new gymnasium will hold the games next year.
The season ended for the Phantoms at Durham where
a hard fighting Duke team rallied after trailing 16-15 at
half-time and won 39-33.
Carolina was the heavy favorite to win the conference
title but the Tarheels had the misfortune to run up against
an avengeful W. and L. team, who Carolina had twice
beaten during the season. The Generals took command
after the first seven minutes of play and were never threat-
ened afterwards. Foy Grubb was high point scorer for
Carolina with eleven, but Carson and Spessard made eleven
and eighteen respecti%ely to aid the Gens to their 48-33
victory.
Due to their performances during the season Captain
Earl Ruth again made All Southern guard and Andy Ber-
shak made All Southern forward. Coach Walter Skidmore
probablv had Earl Ruth and Pete Mullis under his super-
vision for the last time after having coached them in high
school and four years in college. Coach Skidmore was
freshman coach four years ago, but has coached varsity the
last three seasons. Captain Ruth, Pete Mullis, and Andy
Bershak, and Foy Grubb will be lost to the team next
year since they will graduate in June.
BASKETBALL SCORES
Carolina
PAGE 246
^rr-
opponents
57 Atlantic Christian 20
60 Guilford 16
37 Davidson 35
31 Wake Forest 26
38 V. P. 1 32
31 V. M. 1 17
34 W. & L 31
34 Wake Forest 44
32 Princeton 53
29 St. Joseph 34
39 State 31
43 Maryland 24
44 Clemson 34
57 N. Y. U 39
41 Davidson 30
34 Duke 24
48 V. M. I 22
42 W. & L 39
41 State 32
39 Duke 33
Conference Tournament
33 W. & L 48
M( (akn Taki s a (
4> jy
Nethercutt
~^^
ASEBALL
Carolina's varsity baseball stock for 1937 took a decided rise-
above the past two years although it did not win any titles. In
the 22 games played, the Tar Heel batsmen were victorious on 12
occasions, dropped nine and tied once. At the season's outset pros-
pects looked good, but soon gloom reared its ugly head in the Caro-
lina camp and Pitcher Irby Wright and Outfielder Cicero Groome
were lost to Coach Bunn Hearn's club.
The loss of 'Wright left the pitching burden upon the shoulders
of Daffy Parker, a sophomore. Parker took up the task in good
fashion, winning eight and dropping four — two of them to Duke.
In the first engagement with the Blue Devils, Parker was shelled
from the mound in the first inning, but three days later came back
to force Duke to an 11-12 decision that thrilled 7,000 fans at
Greensboro. The 19.?8 season should find him at his peak with
some expected recruits from Ham Strayhorn's frosh club to aid him.
The team was captained by Lester "Buck " McCarn and was
probably the strongest hitting team in the Conference. Tom Burnettc,
Foy Grubb, Mope Melchor, George Nethercutt and McCarn shown
at the plate while Hal Bissett produced many a thrill on first. The
season's features were two wins over "Wake Forest, both games seeing
Parker in masterful form. Davidson, N. C. State and 'V. M. I. took
early wins over the Tar Heels, but these defeats were fully .avenged
ater on in the season. Tom Burnette captains the 1938 club.
^.^i;^^^;/'i
ToPKiNs Scores in the Richmond Game
BASEBALL
SEASONS RECORD
U.N.C. Opponent
4 Springfield College 1
8 Michigan State 5
8 Washington & Lee
8 Richmond University 9
8 Virginia Polytechnical Institute 4
3 Virginia Military Institute 4
6 Davidson 7
5 Wake Forest 6
10 Virginia Military Institute 2
18 Virginia Polytechnical Institute 2
6 William & Mary 2
N. C. State 5
3 Wake Forest 1
7 Virginia 7
7 Virginia 2
8 Davidson 1
12 N. C. State 5
7 Wake Forest C^
3 Maryland 6
1 Duke l8
11 Duke 12
Duke 4
Mi^Mri
'M'^M
A
J Ad„ , .... I w""'//< tsu'-i, C6RDL1I
Varsity Baseball Squad
VARSITY BASEBALL SQUAD
(Left to Right)
First Ron- — Tracv. Groome, Fleming, Graver. Parker, and
EUTSLER.
Second Roil — Meichor. Topkins. Burnette. McCarn. Grubb,
Hearn. and Nethercutt.
Third Row — HELMS, trainer, Lamm, manager, Stoopack,
Bricklemyer. Jeanes, Thompson. Gox. Hudson, and Goach
Hearn.
Fourth Ron' — Kerr. Brame. Lynch. Wales. LeGrand. Gross-
man, AND BiSSETT.
McCarn Singles in the State Game
PAGE 254
V r v^Jtjaa:-
Action at the Pinehurst Tournament
TENNIS
The North Carolina Tennis team renewed its claim to the
mythical national championship of 1937 by winning 18 matches in
as many starts. In repeating their claim the Tar Heels increased
their win column to 126 wins against two losses since 1929.
Under the guidance of Coach John Kenfield. Captain Ramsay
Potts, Archibald Henderson, Jr., Ed Fuller, John Foreman, Gordon
Robinson, Frank Farrell, Carl Rood, Bill Rood and Ed Doyle were
able to go through the season without any defeats and allowing their
opponents only 7 matches. Decisive victories were obtained over
such teams as Yale, Duke, Williams, Army, Navy, N. Y. U., and
Princeton. The Princeton game was the climax of the northern trip,
and the Tigers fell before the Tar Heels by a score of 7 to 2, a
repetition of 1936.
Robinson
PAGE 256
gjf^ v:i«k'
'^:::it^'^.
™_jf»
Potts Takhs Inchcliff of Yale
TENNIS
Carolina was well represented in other meets where Fuller and
Potts won both the State and Conference Doubles Championships,
and Potts won over Fuller to win both the State and Conference
singles titles. In both tournaments the Carolina men eliminated all
outside competition before the semifinals. The Carolina netmen
reached the top rungs in other tournaments, but fell before the
more experienced players of the nation.
The Tar Heels were honored with an invitation to combine with
Princeton to meet the Oxford-Cambridge team. Potts, Henderson, and
Foreman represented the school and aided the American victory by
winning their respective matches.
Hf^fBi- -^^^BE^^M^'
Rood, W.
PAGE 2 57
mEM^\
.'tV'l
Varsity Tennis Squad
Left to Right, First Row — Rood, W., Potts, Rood, C.
Second Row — Manager Jeffries, Fuller, Foreman, Doyle, Robinson.
Third Row — Henderson, Coach Kenfield, Farrell.
TENNIS
TENNIS RECORD 1937
M WW
Carolina 2
Carolina 9
Carolina 9
Carolina 10
Carolina 10
Carolina 10
Carolina 9
Carolina 8
Carolina 8
Carolina 9
Carolina 10
Carolina 9
Carolina 9
Carolina 9
Carolina 9
Carolina 9
Carolina 7
Carolina 9
TULANE 1
Virginia
Yale 1
Yale
Yale
Lehigh
N. C. State
Harvard 1
Williams 1
Duke
Duke
Davidson
Lehigh
Yale 1
Army
N. Y. U
Princeton 2
Navy
TMACK
PAGE 260
ir^p
^i';"\!V
^
.sM ^*i?-.aL..,.3P«>
^.<<i<tiiu -M^i
TRACK
Varsity Track Squad
The loss of nine lettermen from the 1936 team con-
siderably weakened the "Flying Tar Heels" of the cinder
track in their attempt to regain the supremacy of the
South in 1937. The record which the medley relay shuttle
relay teams made in the Penn Relays, however, proved the
quality of Carolina track training and coaching.
The Indians from Dartmouth again showed their
superiority when they defeated the Tar Heels in the initial
meet of the season 88-38. The only first place winners for
Carolina were Gammon and Richards in the mile and jave-
lin, respectively.
The Princeton Tigers followed Dartmouth on the
schedule and the Tar Heels again came out on the short
end, the score being 82-44. Richards repeated with an-
other win and Finlay in the 100 yard dash and Gardiner
in the 880 also finished first.
By virtue of 1 1 first places and clean sweeps in the
mile, two mile, and discus the "Flying Tar Heels" defeated
the Virginia Cavaliers 97 1 3-28 2/3. Corpenning was
high point scorer with eleven points to his credit.
At Annapolis the Navy Middies showed power in
defeating the Tar Heels 78-48. The bright spot of the
day was the clean sweep by Carolina in the high hurdles.
Richards continued his winning ways by outdistancing the
field in the javelin with a heave of 183 feet and four
inches.
With the team considerably weakened by the entry
of the relay team and the stars of the hurdles at the Penn
Relays the "Flying Tar Heels" still managed to defeat Wil-
liam and Mary 89-37. The Tar Heels were victorious in
all but two events and did not lose a single first in a track
event. Wakely was high scorer of the meet taking first
places in the 880 and the mile.
Duke continued supreme in the state by defeating
Carolina 77l/2-'^8l/2- Bannon and Winborne tied for first
in the high jump, Gardiner took the 880 and Corpenning
led the field in the 120 yard high hurdles for the only Tar
Heel first places.
The Southern Conference meet saw the Duke Blue
Devils place first with 78 points, followed by Carolina in
second with 39V2 points. The closest race of the meet
was the mile with Gammon and Hendrix forcing Duke's
Morse to the limit to win.
In the AAU meet at Chapel Hill Duke was again vic-
torious when they scored 78 points to the second place
Tar Heels' 641/7. The Carolina 1600-metre relay team of
Hendrix, Gardiner, Gammon and UUman defeated the
rest of the field in fast time. Other first places for Caro-
lina went to Corpenning in the hop-step-and-jump, Hen-
drix in the 880-metre and Jones in the 5000-metre. The
Carolina 440-metre shuttle hurdle relay team of Hilton,
Rodgers, Graham and Corpenning won their event.
^^MORKISON TAKES NML^^^ ^^
DAVIS SETS NEW RECORD IN JOKING THE ^^O^
^'RLAVIS 151; CoRpENiNG 2i^- IN, '^BENNETT TAKES SOYD. DA5H IN FIRST UEM'
LOW HURDLE FINALS ^'^
m.
PAGE 263
f
The hill and dalers then journeyed north to oppose
Navy and Maryland. At Annapolis the Tar Heels avenged
their defeat of the previous year with Jones, Hendrix, and
Hardy setting the pace for a Carolina victory. After a
single day's rest the Tar Heels met Maryland at College
Park in what turned out to be the closest of the season.
Bill Hendrix crossed the tape ahead of Kehoe and Chron-
ister of Maryland, closely followed by Captain Jones in
the most thrilling race of the year.
Another perfect score was registered against N. C.
State. Davidson and Duke followed on successive week-
ends with the Tar Heels easily taking these Southern Con-
ference foes.
The Tar Heels added another championship when
they took the Southern Conference crown in Chapel Hill.
Hendrix was first over the line, followed closely bv Hardy
of Carolina and Kehoe of Maryland. Carolina placed four
men in the first seven to write finis to one of its most
successful seasons.
SEASON'S RECORD
•1 ,\IN JoNl .>
SS COUNTMY
Led by Captain Andy Jones the 1937 Carolina cross
country team went through a hard schedule undefeated.
Consistent first places by Captain Jones, Bill Hendrix, Fred
Hardy and Jim Hall made it possible for the Tar Heels to
ring up three perfect scores. The harriers got off to a fine
start defeating the Washington and Lee Generals in the
first meet of the year.
Carolina 15
Carolina 18
Carolina 26
Carolina 15
Carolina 17
Carolina 15
W. & L 55
Navy 37
Maryland 29
N. C. State 51
Davidson 46
Duke 55
SOUTHERN CONFERENCE
1st — LIniversity of North Carolina 27
2nd — Washington and Lee 92
3rd — Davidson 97
Varsity Cross Country Squad
First Row, Left to Right — CROCKETT, GORDON, Hall, Hendrix, Jones, Wakeley, Trout-
man, Hardy.
Second Ron; Left to Right — Manager Ramsay, Mauter, Fleming, Baden. Doty, Rlssell,
Perrin, Bonner. Bailey, Coach Ranson.
PAGE 266
WRESTLING
With only three letter men as a nucleus Coach Quinlan
was able to build a team which took second place in the
Big Five Championship. The failure of last year's cham-
pionship freshman team to li\e up to predictions, and the
lack of experience proved a handicap to the team, and
Carolina won only two meets out of a possible six.
The wins registered by the squad were decisive, David-
son falling 21-11 while Duke received a 31-.^ drubbing.
The only state match to be dropped by the team was to
N. C. State, who took the Big Five Championship by
defeating Carolina 21-11.
Johnson Harris and Tom Pitts were Carolina's outstand-
ing wrestlers. The former being undefeated during the
season, and the latter losing only one match. Captain
Tankersley, Davison, Patrick, Joyner, James, Davis, Wood-
son, and Clements were the representatives in the various
weights, and as all of these men will be eligible next year,
this year's experience should provide an outstanding squad
for the future.
Captain Tankersley
SEASON'S RECORD
Carolina
9 V. P. I
11 Navy
41/2 W. & L
21 Davidson
31 Duke
11 N. C. State
Opponents
17
21
231/2
11
3
21
i f )
^ ^ . > ^ M
Varsity Wrestling Squad
First Rou; Left to Right — PiTTS, Davison, Zink. T.'vnkersley, Harriss. James.
Second Row, Left to Right — Faircloth, Patrick, Davis, Morgan, Joyner.
Third Row, Left to Right — Manager Peterson, Woodson, Clements, Stricker, Sunstein.
PAGE 267
t.APTAiN Hamilton
1937 GOLF
North Carolina's golf team, playing its most difficult
schedule ever, ended the season with the fine record of
nine victories, one loss and one tie. Led by Captain Horace
Hamilton, who played par golf throughout the season,
the linksmen displayed their strength by handing defeats
to such strong teams as Boston College, Furman, Wake
Forest, Cornell, Tennessee, Davidson, The Citadel and
Duke.
After a tie with N. C. State, the Wolfpack eked out a
one point margin in the second meeting. The club wound
up the year by taking third place in the Southern Confer-
ence tournament. Individual honors went to Dupont
Kirven, who finished fourth, and Horace Hamilton, who
finished eighth.
SEASON'S RECORD
U.N.C. Opponents
16 Boston College 2
17 Furman 1
91/2 Wake Forest 81/7
I8V2 Cornell 81/,
9 N. C. State 9
14I/2 Tennessee 31/2
12 Davidson 6
14 The Citadel 4
8I/2 N. C. State 9'/2
131/2 Wake Forest 41/2
10 Duke 8
PAGE 2 6S
Varsity' Golf Squad
Sitting, Left to Right — Kirven. Kluttz. Hamilton.
Staniling, Left to Right — Clark, Coach Erickson, Hicks.
■#8ii^l^if ^:r^ ■:?^^
-^^
m-
M^ty
:^ilk
Sigma Nu Wins Intramural Cup
Herman Schnell
Director hilramurat Alhlelei
INTMAMUKAL ATHLETICS
TENNIS (1937)— Ruffin defeated Phi Delta Theta
for campus title.
PLAYGROUND BALL (1937)— Old East defeated
Sigma Nu for campus title.
TRACK (1937)— Lewis, first; S.A.E., second; Graham,
third.
FREE THROW (1937)— Aycock, first; Ruffin, sec-
ond.
CROSS COUNTRY (Cake Race) — First, March
(Lewis); Second, Kuklish (Manly); Third, Lewis (Ruf-
fin). Time 9:53.2. Team winner — St. Anthony Hall.
BOXING— First, Lewis; Second, Phi Delta Theta;
Third, S.P.E. Individual Champions — 115 lbs. McFalls
(Ruffin); 125 lbs. Edwards (Lewis); 135 lbs. Griffin (Kap-
pa Alpha); 145 lbs. Paris (Indep.); 155 lbs. Little (Beta
Theta Pi); 165 lbs. Sanders (Lewis); 175 lbs. Bryant
(Lambda Chi Alpha); Heavyweight — Slagle (Lewis).
WRESTLING— First, Sigma Nu; Second, S.A.E. In-
dividual Champions — 118 lbs. Lambeth (Beta Theta Pi);
126 lbs. Gregory (Kappa Alpha) ; 135 lbs. Blackmer (Sigma
Nu); 145 lbs. Broadfoot (S.A.E.) ; 155 lbs. Robertson
(S.A.E.) ; 165 lbs. Hairston (Sigma Nu); 175 lbs. Fearing
(S.P.E.) ; Heavyweight — Merrow (Phi Kappa Sigma).
TOUCH FOOTBALL — Phi Delta Theta defeated
Lewis 7-0 for campus title. All Campus team — L.E. Sapp
(Phi Delta Theta); L.T. Faircloth (Lewis); L.G. Beattie
(Phi Delta Theta); C. Reid (Beta Theta Pi); R.G. Mc-
Bride (Ruffin) ; R.T. Hinkle (Kappa Sigma) ; R.E. Kimrey
(Everett); Q.B. Clark (Phi Delta Theta); L.H. Blythe
(Beta Theta Pi); R.H. Berini (Lewis); F.B. D. Oglesby
(Ruffin).
BASKETBALL— Beta Theta Pi defeated Aycock for
campus title.
VOLLEYBALL— Ruffin defeated T.E.P. for
campt
title.
TABLE TENNIS — Battle- Vance-Pettigrew defeated
Sigma Nu for campus title.
PAGE 269
It,
Fri;shmax Baseball
Freshman Track
i-RESHMAN Football
-j»-:>Dj <u»»^
pRrsHNfAN Basketball
Freshman Boxing
1-"ri:shalan Wrestling
r
M$m<&:
^A
S'T .
W
(V
'ii'WMi.''
mf^m
i
& ,. .,
FIFTH PART
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA YEAR BOOK
YACKETY YACK
1938
This part of the \Jolume being devoted
entirely to the
FRATERNITIES
DELTA KAPPA
EPSILON
LAW SCHOOL — Haughton Ehringhaus, Harry
McMullan, Jr., Julien Knox Warren, Jr.
GRADUATE SCHOOL — Bunyan Randolph
Cooner.
SENIORS — Archibald Craige, Leighton Wesley
Dudley, Frank Fritz Duff, John Dravton Hastie,
Francis Dewey Heyward, William Duer James,
Edward O'Herron, Joseph Planner Patterson, Jr.,
Clark Rodman, Owen Guion Rodman, John Mc-
Neill Smith.
JLJNIORS — James Taylor Brooks, Hayden Crox-
ton Clement, Donnell Gilliam, Jr., William Cape-
hart Harney, Sam Earle Green Hobbs, William
Clarence Kluttz, John Augustus Moore, John Wal-
lace Winborne, Jr., James Leake Woodson.
T^^VM^n
iiiJi i \i /Mm
pint row: Alexander, Brawley, Brooks, Carlton.
Second rnii-: C.irroll, Clement, Craige, Dudley,
DufF. Ehrrngh.ms, Ghegan.
Third row: Green, Hand, Harney, Hastie, Hey-
wood, Hobbs, James.
PAGE 276
^^g^^
BETA
CHAPTEK
SOPHOMORES — Thomas Dupree Higgins,
Charles James Hine, John Seymour Kerr, Kenneth
Claiborne Royall, Jr., William Batterman Ruger,
Baxter Tavlor, Bate Toms, Jr., Lawson Withers
Turner.
PLEDGES — Sydenham Alexander, James Shober
Brawley, Phil Rahm Carlton, Jr., Drury Willia
Ghegan, William Wills Green, Jr., William Luther
Hand, Jr., Raymond Otho Linker, Edwin Maner,
Jr., James Perrin Quarles, Jr., Joseph Bunn Ram-
sey, Jr., David Stick, Paul Bernhardt Toms, Wes-
cott Roberson Wollen, Thomas Henry Wright,
Jr., Robert Carroll.
Finr row: Kerr, Kluttz, Linker, Maner.
Second row: Moore, Patterson, Quarles, Rod-
man, Royall, Smith, Stick.
Third row: Toms, B., Toms, P., Warren, "Wood-
son, Woollen. Wright.
m-f^^mm ■■,m»'mm^
wm-
PAGE 271
o
MZ'mZi
PHI GAMMA
DELTA
FACULTY— Dr. James Bell Bullitt, Dr. Sterling
Aubrey Stoudemire, Dr. Ernest Lloyd Mackie, Dr.
John Ward Huddle.
GRADUATE SCHOOL— Harold Gray Sugg.
LAW SCHOOL— James Brown Craighill, James
Walter Keel, Jr., Owen Hendricks Page, Jr.,
Arthur Owen Crooke.
SENIORS— Troy Arthur Apple, William Luns-
ford Crew, Paul Clifford Darden, Jr., Howard
Summerell Hussey, Jr., Page Clark Keel, Clarence
Elmer Leake, Jr., Robert Craig Mclnnes, William
DeRoy McLean, Jr., Richard Morton Mitchell, Jr.,
Paul Bernhardt Reynolds, Carl David Peiffer.
JUNIORS — John Graham Clark, Jr., Charles
Johnston Harriss, William Eugene Harrington, Ben
Jackson Lamb, Jr., Lonnie Onimus Clark, Jr.,
Henry Bose Peschau.
Pii\l roll': Apple, Brantley, Canavan, Caudil
Setnnd row: Clark, L., Clark. J-, Creech, Crew,
Darden, J., Darden, P., Deyo.
Third riiic: Elliot, Glover, Harrington, Harriss,
Husse, Idle, Keel.
PAGE 2 78
EPSILON
CHAPTER
M
t . i
SOPHOMORES — Julian Chisolm Brantley, Jr.,
Victor Herman Creech, Jr., James Henry Darden,
Edward Ray Dickerson, John Clinard Finch, Eu-
gene Stuart Gregg, Jr., Robert Piatt Knickerbocker,
Henry Gilliam Nicholson, William Henry Webb,
Julian Terrel Caudill, Harvey Carrow Elliot, Rid-
dick Madison Lamm, Benjamin Bunn Woodard,
Thomas Remery Pitts.
PLEDGES — John Patrick Canavan, George Eltin
Deyo, John Crandall Glover, Ralph Hinton
Hodges, Jr., Charles Idol, Robert Burland Magnet,
Thomas Lacy Morrow, Thomas David Ramsey,
Jeff Davis Sewell, Rodney English Snow, Allan
Wright Webb, Eugene Bomberger Williams.
Knickerbocker, Lamb, L.imm, Leike
Second row: Mclnnes, Magner, Mitchell, Mo
row, Nicholson, Peschau, Pitts.
Third row: Ramsey, Reynolds, Seawell, Snow
Webb, A. W., Webb, W. H., Woodard.
i^
i-
P A G !•; 2-^9
^»
■■3
ETATHETA
FACULTY— Kent J. Brown, R. B. Sharpe.
LAW SCHOOL— William Reid Dalton, John
Griffith Johnson, William Lewis Reid, Oscar Leak
Tyree.
SENIORS— John F. Blythe, Jr., John Bowles,
James Wiggins Coan, Thomas Henderson Hum-
phries, Charles Osborne Jeffress, Edwin Bedford
Jeffress, Walter Dunn LaRoque, James Alexander
Leak, Chester Crowell Little, John Rourke Mc-
Devitt, James M. Van Hecke.
JUNIORS — Harold Waverely Branck, Leveritt
Frisbie Bristol, Samuel Davis, Jr., Harvery Carrow
Hines, Jr., William Houston Hendrix, Walter
Walker McCaig, Perry Watson Miles, William
Milton Miller, Charles Reeves, Powell Richards,
Harold Lauk Sager, George David Watson.
Fira row: Barrett, Blythe, Bowles.
Second row: Brantley, Bristol, Butler, Coan,
Davis, Dillon, Gans.
ThirJ row: Hall, Hendrix, Hines, Hubbard,
Lambeth, La Roque, Leak.
e>v\ '-'^- -Tir ■■
:^'^\
..;Si«f
ETA
CHAPT
SOPHOMORES— Richard James Barrett, III, Jo-
seph Marion Brantley, William Medears Butler,
William Austin Dillon, Gene Eddy Gans, Alonzo
Cleveland Hall, William Walker Hines, Edwin
Archibald Hubbard, Pierce Roger McConnaughy,
Frank Reid Penn, III, James McCausland Ross.
Little, McCaig, McConaughy.
Second row: Miles, Miller, Millis, Penn, Reeves,
Richards, Ross.
Third roir: Sager, Siewers, Stockton, Tyree, Van
Hecke, Watson.
PLEDGES — Hargrove Bowles, Jr., Julian Thweatt
Brantley, John Walter Burton, Eugene Franklin
Castles, James Rountree Collett, James Boyce Gar-
land, Harry Hales, Walter Moore Lambeth, Ed-
ward Heywood Megson, Francis Champion Milli-
can, Henry AUion Millis, Jr., David Henry
Mitchell, David Settle Reid, Christian Fogle
Siewers, William Vance Singletary, Norman
Vaughn Stockton, Wade Fitzgerald Ward.
DELTA
PSI
FACULTY — Harry Kitsun Russell, Herman
Walker Schnell.
Morris, Stewart Redfield Parker, Nicholas Cabell
Read.
GRADUATE — Alexander Hamilton McLeod, Jr.
SENIORS— William Pratt Fackner, Stephen Bois
Hard, Geoffrey Mathews Martin, Parker William
JUNIORS— James Palmer Balding, Jr., Alan Talia-
ferro Calhoun, David Judson, William Hunter
Sperry, Robert Eyre Steward, Humphrey Hatha-
way Swift, III.
First rote: Amoss. Balding, Bell, Bridger.
SecoiiJ roil-: Briiwn, Calhoun, Clark, Dick, Fack-
ner, Fnss, Gardiner.
Third roic: Hard, Jones, Judson, Laurens, H.,
Laurens, J., Mclllhenny, Martin.
1
Li
PAGE 282
^
I^JI
■ £
XI
CHAPTEK
SOPHOMORES— John Williamson Bell, Thurston
Cross Brown, Randolph McLeod Dick, Hugh Hill
Foss, Henry Laurens, Jr., John Laurens, IL
PLEDGES — Harold Lindsay Amoss, Jr., John Mc-
Rae Bridger, Michael Kirchwey Clark, David
Foulke Gardiner, Hamilton Jones, Douglas West-
feldt Mcllhenny, Robert Wilson Morgan, Joseph
Bond Philips, Jr., John William Ryan, Donald
Fuller Torrey, Jr., Nicholas Misplee Walker, Hu-
bert Brooks Wheeler.
First row: Moore, Morgan, Murchison, Nash.
Secoiiil rnu-: Off, Parker, Phillips, Read, Ryan,
Siever, Sperry.
Third row: Stewart, Stockton, Swift, Torrey,
Walker, Wheeler.
miMkk
PAGE 283
^^^m/i"f!^j^i^(^j^:^
$y
CHI
PSI
FACULTY— Robert E. Coker, Robert E. Coker,
Jr., W. C. Coker, Arthur Russell Hollett, William
Gardner Morgan, Walter Smith Spearman, G. C.
Taylor.
LAW SCHOOL— John Albert McRae, Jr.
GRADUATE SCHOOL— Walter Barnard Hill.
SENIORS — Harry Bertram Kirscher, Carroll Jack
Atwood, John Born Foreman, James Dupont Kir-
ven, Jr., Fred E. LUlman, James Furman Bisher.
JUNIORS — Wayne Ale.xander Fonvielle, Jr., John
Quincy Seawell, Jr., Frederic Thomas Cook, Ran-
dolph H. Reese, William Jeffrey Cole, Voit Gil-
more, Louis Barba.
First rotr: Ackerman, Armentrout. Atwood, Barba, Bisher, Brown.
Second row: Cole, Cooper, Fonvielle, Foreman, Gilmore, Kirscher.
jCLnr I M<ii
^
SIGMA
iE i~f^ .i
*\^ JO.
^ a. JL J
L JL^ A4
SOPHOMORES — Donald Godfrey Ackerman,
Hal Byerly Armentrout, Jr., Ben Bentley Dilworth,
Charles Christian Gunterberg, James VC'ardlaw
Perrin, Jr., Philip Alfred Walker.
PLEDGES — James Thomas McAden, James Comp-
ton Cooper, Archie Nock Mcintosh, Don Holmes
Neill, George William Watson, Frederick Page
Seymour, Frederick Kenneth Schmidt, Charles
Elmer Harden, Jr., Humphrey Butler Brown,
Brooks Francis Burtt, Edgar Chew Sweeney, Jr.,
Archie Lindsay.
Vint row: Kirven, Lindsay. McAden, Mcintosh. McRae, Reece.
Second row: Seawell, Schmidt, Sweenev, Ullman, Walker.
PHI KAPPA
SIGMA
FACULTY— English Bagby, J. M. Lear, L H. Man-
ning, G. L. Paine, Sam Selden, Robert Sherrill,
Horace Williams.
GRADUATE SCHOOL— Coit Coker, John Wesley
Merritt, James Queen.
SENIORS— John Albert Blum, Daniel Burt Decker,
Edgar L. Green, Jr., Alexander Weldon Hall, Don-
ald Mac Hill, Philip Francis Link, William White-
head Michaux, Henry McGilbert Wagstaff.
JIINIORS — William Murphy Bowman, William
Samuel Bridges, George H. Cooper, Benjamin D.
Gaddy, Jr., David William Hoefer, Thomas Irving
Insley, Walker Lyerly, Gideon Hunt Macon, Jr.,
William Lee Rufty, Joseph Robert Tracy, Alan
Truex, Marvin Bright LItley, Jr.
First row: Berdan, Billica, Blum, Bolick, N.
Second r.iir: Bi)lick, O., Bowman, Bridges,
Burke. Casterton, Cuble, Cooper.
Thirii row: Curtis, Dawson, Decker, Gaddy,
Green. Hall. Hicks.
LAMBDA
CHAPTEK
SOPHOMORES— Fred H. Berdan, Oscar Whetzell
Bolick, Robert John Casterton, Henry Luther
Coble, Courtland Wharton Dawson, John Philip
George, Philip Hoghton Gunther, George Spencer
Jones, James William McCallum, William Sims
Newton, Alton Judd Utley.
PLEDGES — Paul Charles Auerbacher, Jack Per-
shing Bedea, William Forrest Bell, Harry Robert
Billica, Norman Whetzell Bolick, Ralph Herbert
Buffey, Raymond Wilson Burke, George Marion
Cooper, John William Curtis, Robert Doty, Don-
ald Cade Hicks, Jr., Wolcott Woodbridge Merrow,
Robert Carl Rutter, Harry Grady Sharp, Jr., Charles
B. Wilderson, Jr.
Pint row: Hill, Hoefer, Insley, Jones.
Second roiv: Link, Lyerly, McCallum, Macon,
Michaux, Newton, Ruft)'.
Third row: Rutter, Tracy, Truex, Utley, Wag-
staff, Wilkerson.
EPSILON
FACULTY — George F. Horner, Almont C.
Howell, W. W. Pierson, Jr., Charles Wettach.
LAW SCHOOL— Charles Aycock Poe, James Dick-
son Carr.
SENIORS— David A. Allen, Edward Reid Bahn-
son, Randall Challen Berg, Sutherland Mathewson
Brown, Alex M. Cover, George Alexander Heard,
William Clark James, Thomas Engelhart Myers,
Leroy Pratt Percy, Harry Wylie Stovall, Joseph
Rutledge Young.
JUNIORS — William Mansfield Daniel, Victor
Weyer Dawson, Strother Calloway Fleming, Lewis
Gordon, William Lunsford Long, Richard Thomas
Myers, James Fred Rippy, Jr., Berkley Leo Sim-
mons, Kenneth Spencer Tanner, John Waties
Thomas, Peter Thomas Wilson, Vaughn Sharpe
Winborne, William Holliday Worth, Rutherford
Nance Yeates.
First row: Allen, Bahnson, Berg.
Second row: Broadfoot, W., Brown, Carr, Daniel, Dawson, Fleming,
Gordon.
Third row: Heard, James, Long, McDuffie, Myers, R., Myers, T.
SOPHOMORES— William Washington Chisholm,
George Watts Carr, Robert Martin Cox, William
Carter Crump, Jesse Lamar Fulenwider, George
McDuffie, Sam Dace McPherson, Hugh Roberts
Papy, Norris Tebeaux Pindar, James Minetree
Pyne, Foy Roberson, Jr., Thomas Samson Royster,
Marshall McLaney Shepherd, John Adams Wallace,
James Perry Willis, Dolph Moore Young.
XI
CHAPTEM
PLEDGES — Lawrence Archdale Tomlinson, Isaac
Bates Grainger, Letcher Crawford, James A. Gray,
James Parish Robertson, Jr., Clark Bartlett, Wil-
liam Gillies Broadfoot, Jr., Winston Broadfoot,
Colvin McAlister Worth, Theodore Marion Du-
Bose, Paul Erastus Jones, Harold Alexius.
Pint row: Percy, Poe, Rippy.
Second rou.- Roberts, Royster, Shepherd, Simmons, Stovall, Tanner,
Thomas.
Third rou : Wilson, Wmborne, Worth, W., Yeates, Young, D.,
Young, J.
ZETA
PSI
MEDICAL SCHOOL — Emmet Robinson Spicer.
LAW SCHOOL— Edward Breeden Clark, Clarence
Alonzo Griffin, Jr., Junius Daniel Grimes.
SENIORS — Adolphus Matthew Mangum, Robert
Marsh Ray, Jr., Henry Brown Stokes, Jr., David
Jones Thorp, William Easton Wakeley, Jr., Harry
Cobb Wooten, Jr.
JUNIORS— Joseph Blount Cheshire, IV, Richard
Erskine Clements, Jr., Robert Green Sutphin Davis,
James Pleasant Floyd, Jr., Gus Evans Forbes, Jr.,
James Cunningham Gibson, Alexander Hawkins
Graham, Jr., Franklin Wills Hancock, Jr., Wil-
liam Johnston King, Horace Palmer, Jr., William
Thomas Parrott, Jr., Simon Carlyle Sitterson, Jr.,
Frank Hart Wakeley.
Adams, Anderson, Barnes, Blalock.
Second row: Carr, Clements, Cone, Davis, E.,
Davis, R., Floyd, Forbes.
ThiiJ ran : Graham, Hackney, Hancock, Hay-
wood, Howell, King, McRae.
PAGE 290
W&
-iH^S ^i^
J. l_. t it
<v ^— ar ' ■• • w. iwa i^jf
SOPHOMORES— William George Anderson, Wil-
liam Rennie Blalock, Albert Gallatin Carr, Fred-
erick Bruce Hamilton, Logan Douglas Howell,
Henry Hyman Philips, Jr., Richard Hunter Pope,
Jr., Louis Valvelle Sutton, Jr., George Alexander
Wilkinson, Jr., John Kenyon Wilson.
UPSILON
CHAPTER
PLEDGES— William Dennis Adams, Jr., Richard
Joseph Barnes, Howard Berkeley Cone, Edward
Palmer Davis, Jr., Thomas Jennings Hackney,
Thomas Holt Haywood, Cameron McRae, Thomas
Palmer Nash, Edwin Anderson Penick, Pembroke
Graves Rees, William Neilson Vogler, Wade
Hampton Williford.
First row: Mangum, Palmer, Parrutt, Penick.
Second row: Philips, Pope, Ray, Rees, Sitterson
Spicer, Stokes.
Third row: Sutton, Thorp, Vogler, Wakeley, F.,
Wakeley, W., Wilson, Wootten. "
ffJW
wm
PAGE 29 1
mm
ALPHA TAU
OMEGA
FACULTY— Harry F. Comer, Oliver K. Cornwell,
J. G. Evans, K. C. Frazer, Fletcher M. Green,
H. R. Huse, Gerald R. McCarthy, D. A. MacPher-
son, A. C. Mcintosh, Floyd Siewert, T. J. Wilson,
R. S. Winslow.
LAW SCHOOL— Wylie Fort Parker.
MEDICAL SCHOOL-^Thomas Worth Crowell,
Samuel Bayley Willard.
SENIORS— Seavy Highsmith, Jr., William Stone
Jordan, Jr., James Drew Martin, III, David Judson
Smith.
JUNIORS— William Watson Alston, James Hin-
ton Pou Bailey, Gordon Burns, Glenn Benson
Davis, Ben Franklin Dixon, III, Thomas Carroll
Haywood, Basil Tourneur Horsfield, William
Alexander Ranev.
First row: Alston, Bailey, Booth, Bridgers.
ScconJ row: Britt. Burns, D.ivenport, Davis, G.,
Davis, J,, Dickson. Diffendal.
Third row: Dixon, Grier. Haigh, Haywood, High-
smith, Horsfield, Jordan.
ALPHA DELTA
CHAPTEM
SOPHOMORES — John Gay Britt, James Evans
Davis, Alvis Barnes Dickson, Charles Edward Dif-
fendal, Elmer Francis Lowry, John Franklin Lynch,
Powell Murchison, Roderick Goldston Murchison,
Thomas Broadway Royster, William Bryant Vin-
son, Ernest Harshaw Yount.
PLEDGES — Orin Watts Booth, Robert Strange
Bridgers, William Trammell Davenport, John
Charles Grier, Philip Wiley Haigh, William Erwin
Jones, Wiley Theodore Mackie, Thad Tuttle
Moser, Ralph Clinton Patrick, David McClellan
Sanders, Clarence Leroy Shuping, George Lee
Simpson, Hamilton Polk Underwood, Vincent
Brown Wright.
First row: Lowery, Lynch, Mackie, Martin.
Second row: Moser, Murchison, Patrick, Raney.
Royster, Sanders, Simpson.
Third row: Shuping, Smith, Underwood, Vinson
Wright, Yount.
KAPPA
FACULTY — J. G. DeR. Hamilton, Edgar W.
Knight.
MEDICAL SCHOOL— Benjamin Smith Skinner.
SENIORS — John Dawson Yeomans, Hal Hammer
Walker, Robert Leslie, Haywood Brill Huntley.
JUNIORS— Junius Wynne Tillery, Fletcher Har-
rison Gregory, Jr., Thomas Cary Duncan Eaves,
Donald Clifton Ward, Thomas Hall Holmes, Rich-
ard Alexander Urquhart, Jr., Leon Willingham
Norfleet, Robert Taylor McManeus, Horace Lutz,
Jr., John Goode, Hoffman Wilson.
First row: Boone, Bounds, Cheshire, Eaves.
SeLoiicl rou ■ Foote, Goddard, Goode, Gregory,
Griffin, Hayes, Hicks.
Thnd tou Holmes, Howell, Huntley, Long,
Lutz, McClure, Malone. ^
^'f r["C'"'' 'auklUUml^y^ *iii>\
UPSILON
CHAPTEM
SOPHOMORES — William Henry Shull, Edwin
Charles Reich, Edwin Robertson Perkins, Godfrey
Cheshire, Charles Julian Vinson, Rudolph Ash-
worth Howell, Earl Victor Patterson, Jr., James
David Van Kirk, Charles Edward Moore, Jr., Ralph
Victor Goddard.
PLEDGES — Thomas Williams Mason Long, Jr.,
Gaston Simmons Foote, Jr., Howard Vincent
Bounds, Jr., J. Harry Cunningham, Jr., Thomas
Whitmell Griffin, Thomas Nathaniel Boone, Jr.,
Henry Thomas Hicks, III, Thomas Clifton Hayes,
Jr., Earl Gordon Malone, Charles James Richard
McClure, Hammett Andrew Cecil, Jr., John Ed-
ward Tyler, William Newton Middleton, William
Wesley Ragland, Remmer Scruggs.
Fiiii row: Middleton, Moore, Norfleet, Patterson
Second row: Perkins, Ragland, Reich, Scruggs.
Shull, Skinner, Tillery.
Third row: Tyler, Urquhart, Van Kirk, Walke
Ward, Wilson, Yeoman.
PHI DELTA
THETA
FACULTY — W. S. Bernard, William F. Prouty,
T. F. Hickerson, J. A. Williams, W. A. McKnight,
R. P. Johnson, P. C. Farrar, L. L. Barrett, W. H.
Irvin, F. H. Bunting.
GRADUATE SCHOOL— D. W. Mosier, Lawrence
Patten.
LAW SCHOOL— Thomas Miller, Raymond Buck-
ner Witt, Herschel Springfield Harkins.
MEDICAL SCHOOL— Albert Key MacAnally.
SENIORS — Marion Orlando Blount, II, Robert
Weathersbee Baker, Jr., Crist Watts Blackwell,
Robert Stanley Dicks, Woodrow Wilson Exum,
Charles Wurster Gilmore, Ramsay Douglas Potts,
Jr., Herbert Blair Rodgers, Jr., Edward Harding
Seawell, Lewis Sneed High, Dewitt Clinton Ben-
bow, Frank Benjamin Rogers, Jr.
Fnsl row: Baker, Beattie, Benbiiw, Blackwell.
Second rote: Campbell, Carver, Clark, Dicks,
Exum. Gilmore, Gragg.
Thud row: Ham, High, Horton. Howard, Huff-
man, Humphreys, C. A., Humphrey, C. S.
imwmm
BETA
chapte:
JUNIORS — Dannitte Mays Beattie, Isaac Duncan
Ham, Jr., Richard Wilson Howard, Edward Court-
ney Huffman, Clen Simmons Humphrey, Jere
Clemens King, Albert Maynard, John Henry Mc-
Cord, Allen Hunter Merrill, Brooks Patten, Frank
Mandeville Rogers, III, William Blount Campbell.
SOPHOMORES— Walter Clark, III, Wilford Har-
ris Gragg, Joseph Lloyd Horton, Max Frederick
Jones, Julian J. Lane, Jr., Duncan Donald McCoU,
Charles Ashbury McKinney, E. Owen Perry, Jr.,
Daniel Neff Peterman, Claudius Napoleon Sapp,
IV, Frederick Booth Stem, Jr., Cutler Watkins,
Alexander Henry Carver, Jr., Thomas McCoU
Adams, William Walker Prouty, Henry Nash Car-
rier, Jr.
PLEDGES — John Westley Long Benbow, Andrew
Gennett, Jr., Robert Burton House, Jr., Charles
Allen Humphreys, Carroll Bradford McGaughey,
Byrd Farmer Merrill, Calvin Bynum Phillips, John
Rorision Rawls, Rex Alderman Rice, Albert Frank-
lin Steven, Jr., Fletcher Merritt Winstead, Edward
E. Woodman, George Marshall Stratton.
First row: Jones, Lane, Maynard, McColl.
Second rote; McCord, McGaughey, Merrill, A.,
Merrill, B.. Patten, Peterman, Potts.
T/vrd roiv: Rodgers, Rogers, F. B., Rogers, F. M.,
Seawell, Watkins, Woodman.
Iv m^'i^^^iih
H^^^iii«i
i^nsi'r.
SIGMA
NU
FACULTY — M. S. Breckenridge, W. D. Creech,
E. M. Hedgpeth, Archibald Henderson, J. C.
Lyons, W. D. MacNider, E. E. Peacock, J. B.
Woosley.
LAW SCHOOL— Robert Cooke Howison, Jr., Rob-
erts Harrell Jernigan, Jr.
MEDICAL SCHOOL— Henry Toole Clark, Jr.,
Richard Alexis Conlen, Joseph B. Crawford, Adlai
P. Oliver, James Rhodes Wright, Jr.
GRADUATE SCHOOL— Arnold Borden, Nelson
George Hairston, Archibald Henderson, Jr., Jack
Kendrick, Julius Benjamin Powell, Trezevant
Player Yeatman, Jr.
SENIORS — William Chambers Coughenour, Jr.,
Marion Cecil Ernst, Morris Calvert Pitts, Harry
Derrick Giles, Ivan Maxwell Glace, Jr., Willard
Revelle Hollingsworth, James W. Hunt, John
Erwin Ramsay, Jr.
PAGE 298
First roll : Abernethy, Arey, Berkeley, Blount.
Second rou- : Brunner, Coughenour, Craige, Cross,
Dees, Ernst, Eutsler.
Ihird row. Ficklen, Fitts, Giles, Henderson,
Hike. Hollingswortli, Holmes.
-t^
m
-sit;-Ui#^M/lli
i"
PSI
CHAPTEM
JUNIORS— Leroy Franklin Abernathy, Jr., Wil-
liam Griffin Arey, Jr., Greene Ramsey Berkeley,
Jr., Ernest Craige, Stuart Keith Eustler, John Steele
Henderson, Paul Roberts Jernigan, Charles Ed-
ward Lynch, George Mallet MacNider, John Ar-
thur Miller, Robert Erskine Ramsay, Cyrus Thomp-
son Sloan, Jr., Charles Paddock Wales, Jr., Robert
Wilson Wells, Harry Clay Yeatman.
SOPHOMORES — Frederick Alexander Blount,
Richard Douglas Cross, Louis Stuart Ficklen, Ken-
neth Gant, Jr., Harold Francis Hike, Frank Marion
Holmes, John Devereux Joslin, Francis Neville
Merritt, Thomas Lynch Murphy, Robert Marshall
Quina, Rufus Grady Rankin, Thomas Melville
Stanback.
PLEDGES— Walter Steele Blackmer, William Wal-
lace Bruner, Clarence Dov^'ell Curtis, William
Archie Dees, Jr., William Lee Gilliam, Jr., William
Joslin, Edgar Hubert Kobak, Malcolm Donald
McNaughton, Edward Emerson Murray, Edwin
Overman Norvell, Earle Fletcher Peacock, William
Davis Snider, Henry L. Stewart, Garland Scott
Tucker.
Firsl rote: Jernigan, Joslin, D., Joslin, W., Lynch.
Second row: MacNider, Miller, Murphy, Norvell,
Ramsay, J., Ramsay, R., Rankin.
Third row: Sloan, Stanback, Tucker, Wales,
Wells, Yeatman, H., Yeatman, T.
'J I'
w*.
PAGE 2 99
•<'^30t
1
CHI
FACULTY— H. G. Baity, W. C. George, J. I..
Godfrey, F. H. Koch, J. W. Lasley, F. B. McCall,
R. P. McClamrock, E. A. Slocum, D. D. Wickens.
GRADUATE SCHOOL— David Milne.
LAW SCHOOL— James Harden Howell, Benjamin
Wyche.
SENIORS — Connor Jackson Feimster, Moses Lacy
Fendley, Stoddard Page Hancock, Robert Hooke,
James Alexander Hutchens, Lee Frankel Melvin,
Gordon Charles Robinson, Edward William Tank-
ersley.
JUNIORS— Daniel Locke Bell, Jack Allan Cheek,
Edwin Timanus Elliot, Charles Zimri Falls, Victor
Fisher Harllee, Louis Simms Jordan, James Shel-
ton Scales, Samuel Winslow Smith, Warren Matt-
son Smith.
Fin! row: Barnes, Beadles, Belvin, Carr.
Second row: David, Davidson, Dawsoa, C. T.,
Dawson, G. R., Dennis, Early, Edwards.
Third row: Falls, Feimster, Gardner, Hancock,
Harllee, Hebbard, Hook.
PAGE 300
^»S
ALPHA TAU
CHAPTER
SOPHOMORES— William Youland Bryon, John
Bailey Barnes, Nicholas Aston Beadles, Howard
Melton Davidson, John L. Davis, Lemuel Franklin
Dennis, John Marshall Hancock, John Leslie
Latham, Jack Mclver, James Holcombe Murrell,
George Webb Plonk, Franklin Willard Potter,
Charles Franklin Rider, Otho Bescent Ross, Wil-
liam Lawrence Seawell.
PLEDGES— James Adkins Belvin, Peter Richard
Carr, William Ray David, Collins Taylor Dawson,
George Robert Dawson, David Early, Thomas
Cunningham Edwards, Bunk Gardner, Russell Ed-
gar Hebbard, John Badbley Hutt, Herbert John
Kaiser, George Masten Millaway, Douglas Gordon
Roehrs, James Norton Schultz, Samuel Harold
Stannard, Harry R. Taylor.
Finl row: Hutt, Jordan, Latham, Mclver.
Second row: Melvin. Millaway, Murrell, Plonk,
Potter, Robinson, Roehrs.
Third row: Scales, Seawell, Smith, S., Smith, W.,
Stannard, Tankersley, Taylor.
LAW SCHOOL — John Donald Dial, Charles
Marshall Ivey, Jr., Yates Webb Mason, Elmer
James Wellons, Jr.
MEDICAL SCHOOL— Thomas Sheffield Bennett,
Benjamin Fletcher Fortune, Robert Lindsey.
SENIORS — Ernest Marvin Allen, Francis Sterling
Brown, Roy Cox Crooks, Charles Flowers Daniels,
William Joseph Graham Davis, Bruce Johnson
Downey, Haywood W^atson Hinkle, John Franklin
Jonas, Madison Eugene Motsinger, Frederick Mor-
timer Parrish, John Wesley Umstead.
JL'NIORS — Joseph Lambert Fletcher, Jr., Samuel
Belton Gallaway, Frank Petty Holton, William
Stratford May, William Eugene Miller, Rom Bragg
Parker, George Fountain Parrott, Herbert Holland
Trotman.
First row: Allen, Beasley, Browley, Brown, Cogliill, Crooks, Dalton.
Second row: Daniels, Davis, Downey, Fletcher, DeFuniak, Galloway, Hinkle.
PAGE 3o;
-"li |--'"' U ■ '" ■ '■• 'x.iVW' iHiLyvyw ■
ALPHA MU
CHAPTER
SOPHOMORES— Julian Baxter Coghill, Wallace
Stanhope Dunn, Charles Walker Gunter, James
Carl Hambright, Jerry Miller, Eugene Cleapor
Rountree, Jr., Wiley Smith, Robert Ernest Sumner,
Fitzhugh Ellsworth Wallace, Jr., Charles Edward
Wood, Jr.
PLEDGES — Briton Ferebee Beasley, Paul Lambert
Borden, Jr., Albert Boyace Brawley, Masten Rufus
Dalton, Herbert Rovers deFuniak, John Lanier Jef-
fries, James Francis Lalanne, Locke Long, Gilbert
Stanley McCutcheon, Noel Robert Seymour Wood-
house, Cecil William Wooten.
Fhsl row: Holton, Jonas, Lalanne, May, Miller, Motsinger, Parker.
Second row: Parrish, Parrott, Smith, Sommer, Umstead, Wallace, Wooten.
M^^kMmmjMm
j^^t
PAGE 303
PI KAPPA
ALPHA
FACULTY— George McKie, John E. Carroll, Jr.
GRADUATE— Raymond McClinton, Frank Haw-
ley.
LAW SCHOOL— Marshall Vivian Yount, James
Nathaniel Hamrick.
SENIORS— John Leach Allen, Loring DeWitt Tal-
madge Cox, Jr., Charles Andrew Evans, William
Rhoid Holland, Jr., Fred Wilton Oxley, Albert
Barron Sample, Paul Lee Salisbury, Jr., Ralph
Sprinkle.
First row: Allen, Attmore, Bailey, I., Bailey, J., Brown, Cannon, Carley.
Second rotv: Clark, Crabtrec, Dill Fvans, Holbrook, Holland
kmJk
PAGE 304
Wi'
■^rr
t^itA* ■aBi' 'm^ .yv'^
TAU
CHAPTER
JUNIORS— Isaac Mayo Bailey, Jr., William Fow-
den Clark, James Sloan Currie, Lonnie Davis Dill,
James Kenneth McLean, Robert William Petrie,
Robert Sherwood Wilkins.
SOPHOMORES— George Sitgreaves Attmore, III,
James Ruffin Bailey, Corbett Carlton Cannon, Phil-
lip Brown Holbrook, James Lawrence Johnston, Jr.,
Arch Meserole, Walter Briggs Meserole, William
Harvey Pitman, Richard Gladstone Slade.
PLEDGES — Thomas Edwards Brown, Jr., William
Tate Conley, Lawrence Edward Crabtree, Joseph
Malphus Jenrette, Jr.
First row: Jenrette, Johnson, McLean, Meserole, A., Meserole, W., Oxley, Petrie.
Secunci rule: Pitman, Salisbury, Sample, Slade, Sprinkle, Wilkins.
^mw'w^-
> A^
i^^f^*^.^
SIGMA PHI
EPSILON
SENIORS — Jack M. Davison, James M. Parker, JUNIORS— James G. Coxetter, Robert S. Fowler,
Ralph G. Templeton. Paul B. Means, John W. Rankin, William Sdgel-
Left to right: Davison, Fearing, Fowler, Leggette, Means.
^^'^.^^j'i-.M^^rfi^^
ri/J<< M^WdMiim,
^^\^itt^.i4l\Am^l*i
DELTA
CHAPTEM
^^
SOPHOMORES — J. Dan Carter, Jr., Robert P. GRADUATE STUDENT— Lubin P. Leggette.
Holroyd.
SPECIAL STUDENT— Tommy Fearing.
FRESHMAN— P. C. Purvis.
Left to right: Parker, Purvis, Rankin, Stigelman, Templeton.
WIf
PAGE 307
^fSI
THETA
CHI
FACULTY — Samuel Huntington Hobbs, Benjamin SENIORS — Dallas Edmund Gwynn, William Jo-
' seph Mauter, Hazel Elmo Taylor, Bland Wallace
GRADUATE SCHOOL— John Bynum Huckett. Worley, Jr.
Left to rifiht : Bursley, Edwards, Griffin, Gwynn, Hufton.
ALPHA ETJ
CHAPTEM
JUNIORS — Kenneth Edwards, John Randleman
Larsen.
SOPHOMORES— Frederick Eugene Banner, Carl
Battle Hyatt, Jack Carrol Tynan.
PLEDGES — Robert Lynn Bursley, Raymond Les-
lie Fox, George Joseph Griffin, Donald Gilbert
Hanby, Robert Charles Harrington, Jr., Elbert Mc-
Kinley Hutton, Jr., John Torrey Riel.
Lejt to right: Hyatt, Larsen, Taylor, Worley.
PAGE 309
mj^^hji^f
^^^■wmmmms ^^mm md^i
jnn
yv ^■(';
"^""""^"'B
LAMBDA CHI
FACULTY— K. H. Fussier, A. K. King, A. R.
Newsome, Rupert B. Vance.
SENIORS— Sandy Richard Flynt, Douglas J. Rod
Koontz, Roger Wilson Linville, Charles Hamilton
Reid, Hoke Flynt Shore, Harry Hamilton Tucker.
JUNIORS— Rufus Guy Flynt, Paul Gavriel Sim-
koe, Douglas Sharpe Welfare.
Pint row: Flynt, R., Flynt, S., Geer, Linville.
Second row: Masten, Pike, Reid, Shciaf.
GAMMA NU ZETA
CHAPTEM
SOPHOMORES — James David Adams, Milton
Ufford Geer, Stanley Eugene Hall, Jesse Miller
Pike, David Harold Shoaf, Frank John Terhune.
PLEDGES — James Bryant, Daniel John Mac-
Michael, J. Lewis Masten, Neal Howard Thomp-
son, William Boger Walter.
Fint row: Shore, Simkoe, Terhune, Thompson.
Second row: Tucker, Walter, Welfare.
-Tl
PAGE 311
CHI
GRADUATE SCHOOL — Lucinda Brown, Ellen
Deppe, Peggy Hampton.
LAW SCHOOL— Elizabeth Shewmaker.
SENIORS — Perdita Arnett, Berta Arnold, Beatrice
Boyd, Louise Camp, Sarah Dalton, Margaret Evans,
Cornelia Gray, Margaret Henderson, Lillian
Hughes, Elizabeth Keeler, Dorothy Kelly, Virginia
Lee, Polly Pollock, McKeldin Puckette, Nancy
Schallert, Nancy Smith, Mary Lillian Speck, Jean
Walker.
Fhsl roic: Albritton, Arnett, Arnold, Boyd.
Second ran: Brown, Camp, Dalton, Durrett,
Evans, Gray, Gary.
Thit.'l roir: Gunther, Henderson, Hughes, Hun-
ter, J., Hunter. M., Keeler, Kelly.
PAGE 3 12
EPSILON BETA
CHAPTER
SOPHOMORE— Altajane Holden.
PLEDGES — Molly Albritton, Boiling Brown,
Blanche Burrus, Miriam Durrett, Memrie Gary,
Martha Gunter, Julia Holt, Jean Hunter, Mary
Frances Hunter, Virginia Kibler, Nancy Reid Lyon,
Elizabeth Malone, Anne Nash, Elizabeth Norcross,
Janet Pendleton, Rosalyn Tindel, Claire Whitmore.
First rou': Kibler, Lee, Lyon, Malone.
Second row: Nash, Norcross, Pendleton, Pollock
Puckette, Sabine, Schallert.
Third row: Shewmaker, Smith, Speck, Tindel
Walker, Whitmare.
m^' 'm»mm
'%1S:~
PAGE 3 1 ,
'^^^:S«II^
PHI
GRADUATE SCHOOL — Tempe Yarborough,
Clover Johnson.
SENIORS — Dorothy Bass, Nell Booker, Eloise
Broughton, Lyal Boice, Phyllis Hawthorne, Mary
Henry, Mary Elizabeth King, Ann Turner Knight,
Janie Riddle, Betsy Taylor, Nan Tinsley.
Pint rou : Bailey. Bass, Berry.
Secoiiii roll.- Booker, Bower, Brice, Broughton, Cheshire,
Cocke.
Third yrju : Ciuikshank, Evans, Fleming, French, Haw-
thorne, Henry.
PAGE 3 14
ALPHA
CHAPTEM
PLEDGES— Adelaide Bailey, Elizabeth Berry, Vir-
ginia Bower, Gretchen Cocke, Olive Cruikshank,
Katherine Fleming, Mary Betty French, Mary Tay-
lor Hinnant, Eleanor Jackson, Janet Lawrence,
Adelaide Linton, Susan Lumpkin, Anne Perry,
Connie Thigpen, Vivian Veech, Louise Walker,
Elsa Winters, Alice Cheshire, Mary Crockett Evans.
First row: Hinnant, Jackson, King.
Second row: Knight, Lawrence, Linton, Lumpkin, Perry,
Riddle.
TAird row: Taylor, Thigpen, Tinsiey, Walker, Winters.
PAGE 3 15
CHI
PHI
LAW SCHOOL— Henry Pitts Hudson.
SENIORS — Henry A. Bartos, Arthur Harvey Ditt,
Fletcher Wilson Ferguson, Joseph Kimball Harri-
man, Thomas Latan Linn, John Brodus Long, Al-
fred Winton Perry, Willis Anderson Sutton.
JL'NIORS — Philip Edward Lucas, August Leger
Meyland, Vincent Melanchthon Montsinger, Wil-
liam Hoke Sumner, Robert Adam Whisnant.
SOPHOMORES — Robert Gait Alexander, James
Asbury Brown, Jack Porter Cooper, Lane Cox
Pint rose: Bartos, Brown, Carrell, R., Carrell, W., Cooper, Ditt, Drye.
Second row: Eastman, Edmondson, Ferguson. Gridley, Hargrove, Harriman, Kelley.
1^ ' ^^
PAGE 3 16
f!;itii'
ri»r
^flHIQpf; J
C
V
\ \ 1 v\ _J
I
-^-S^i.^K-^^'^aw
ALPHA ALPHA
CHAPTER
Drye, Ginley Bradshaw Myers, Carroll Dean Ogles-
by, John Marion Taylor, Robert Stanley Sloan,
David Elman Thompson.
PLEDGES— Pinckney Rufus Brown, Russell Ash-
mead Carrell, Waldo Swearingen Carrell, John
Raymond Cooper, Richard Eastman, Raymond
Pender Edmondson, Ansel Edwin Gridley, Walter
Clark Hargrove, James Ewing Kelley, Paul S.
Mahon, James Edward Perry, Ivison Boyd Ridge-
way, Livingston Brewster Rogerson, John Wilson
Smith, William James Walker, Harry Alien Wills.
Fhil roti\- Lucas, Long, Meyland, Montsinger, Myers, Oglesby, Perry.
Second row: Rogerson, Sloan, Sutton, Taylor, Walker. Wills
TAU EPSILON
PHI
SENIORS— Herbert Alex Goldberg, Irwin David
Karesh, Joe H. Murnick.
JUNIORS — Seymour Eisenburg, Harold Irvin
Gross, George Lipsky, Horach Richter, Sidney
Seigle.
SOPHOMORES — Ralph Alperin, Lenard Baron,
Richard E. Gips, Bertram Charles Halperin, Mar-
PAGE 3 18
£
First row: Alperin, Baron, Brown, Buck, D'Lugin, Eisenberg, Gips.
Second roir: Goldberg, Gross, Halperin, Israel, Kamins, Karesh, I., Karesh, W.
t>.m
.^AJt^'
OMEGA
CHAPTER
shal William Karesh, Edward Kaufman, Kenneth
Lasser, Morris Rosenburg, Irving Billet Stomkin,
Chester Svigals.
PLEDGES — Roy Douglas Asch, Robert Harvey
Benert, Seymour Brown, Alfred Buck, Gennie
Leonard D'lugin, Charles Edward Israel, Henry
Morris Kamins, Lionel Melvin Katz, Gordon Saal
Rosenstock, Leonard James Schleifer, Eugene Sil-
verstein, Howard Raymon Stadium.
First row: Katz, Kaufman, Lasser, Lipsky, Murnick, Richter, Rosenberg.
Second row: Rosenstock, Schleifer, Siegel, Silverstein, Stadium. Stnmkin, Suigals
■*». t *
^/St, ^^^ ^B^-s
4
#
PAGE .S 1 9
^^r^^-
PHI
ALPHA
^@@@0)(3)@Q)(3i\
3,1 ^fr-r^ @
N?>'0@®@@Q>@'=y
SENIORS— Marvin Chaiken, Joel I. Laskey, Abra- JUNIORS — Hubert B. Abramson, Marvin H.
ham A. Share. Gewolb, Hillard Gold, Marvin M. Kessler.
»«>'•
PAGE 320
F/nl row: Augenblick. Berger, Chaiken, Drucker.
Second row: Fine, Gewolb, Gold, Hoffman.
-M-k^=^iSk)
^SfejK ■^ifetf''^' ^,<J»t*
-'j«<m^.
OMEGA
]HAPTEK
-#>
SOPHOMORES — Harold Augenblick, Murray
Drucker, David J. Jacobson, Jacob Saltz, Stanley
Whyte.
FRESHMAN — Martin Berger, Edward Hoffman,
Sidney Sadoff, Herbert Stang, Mortimer Stang,
Morton Turtletaub.
Pint row: Jacobson, Kessler, Laskey, SadofF.
Second row: Share, Stang, H., Stang, M., Turtletauh, Whyte.
ZETA BETA
TAU
GRADUATES— Harold Simson Cone.
LAW SCHOOL— Elmer Rosenthal Oettinger, John
Taylor Schiller.
SENIORS— Morris Hecht, Irving Kalmanoff.
JUNIORS — Robert Carp, Robert Garrison Crystal,
Milton Kind, Charles Gerstley Sunstein, William
Paul Weil.
PAGE 322
First row: Adler, Crystal, Edwards, Finkel.
Second row: Hecht, Kalni.indfF, K.Uzenhcra, Kind.
JT^j)^.
-"■■'■ I IT" ■'■mnn ^ -^ ■.•^»'>
CHAPTEM
SOPHOMORES— Maurice Niles Edwards, Wieder
David Sievers, Alexander Stephens Katzenberg.
PLEDGES — Mortimer Adler, Coleman Lee Finkel,
Richard Kemper, Harry M. Lasker, Robert Irving
Lubin, Robert Ballin Neuman, Sidney Rittenberg,
Adrian Charles Spies, Milton Zauber.
First row: Lasker, Lubin, Neuman, Sievers.
Second row: Spies, Sunstein, Weil.
r
ALPHA EPSILON
mfi
SENIORS — Seymour Albert Alcabes, Morton Feld-
man, Leonard Shapiro, Sidney Theii.
JUNIORS — Murray Goldberg, Allan William
Gottlieb, Harvey Kaplan, Edward M. Karlin,
George Levine, Jerome Irwin Vitriol.
PAGE 3 24
\T i^imttitr^^f \
First row: Alcabes, Cohen, Feldman, Ginsberg.
Second row: Goldberg Gottlieb, Hollandersky, Kaplan.
It^'ff
ALPHA
CHAPTEM
SOPHOMORES — Ira Jerome Topping, Seymour
Wilk.
PLEDGES — Joseph Robert Cohen, Morton A.
Ginsberg, Irving Goldhaber, Warren Donald Hol-
landersky, Herbert Weber, Arthur E. Weiss.
1^'
First row: Karlin, Levine, Shapiro, Topping.
^ii-nnd rmv: Vitriol. Weher. Weiss, Wilk.
.'fif
PAGE 32 5
3*.
iPiff^
m%:^
1
'LITTLE APPLE LEFT OVERS
SIGMA NU SUN FLOWERS^
'snhAd, GULDAHL, c^^ GHEZZ[ ^'
^^ ALEX THE Xm ^^
PAGE 32 6
i
PLAYING POSSUM
^ PHI DELTS l
N THE GAY NINETIES
KAPPA Sie HOME COMING
^^PEDEL EXTREMITIES'^
PAGt 3 2 7
'ONE 50RN BVEPsY MINUJE^'' '^P^EVERTING
TO T ^ "
%i^
v.-
#^^
iifMf^^-*-
i
%AMN TWA^ g:3d'' '^VER,SATIL£:
HEY, HARKy/''
mm'^^'
wm'^^^m^t
^ ^ — l. ^^ Bl L L 5 P£KR Y ,„
'WHBN 1 GO JO COR^NELL' piPL.a^^J^ ALL ''
CALHOUN EXPLOITS
C-HILD LABOR^ '^
^MAMA, Buy MB ONE.'' ^N L ^pENsiROSO'^' m5..pAT'5 BOys
A»^^;»Br /rKs .,;'/.
■fiTfi'T;
lit I'
'^^SHEE'pIN woLv£s cLojHiNe^''
5 IT X) OW N ST F^ I ICE: "'
^^m^:^^m^}^(m^m»
^m
w^^.
.MiU i'^
.JSJZXU.^ »ii \ I »W '•-
1
m
SIXTH PART
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA YEAR BOOK
YACKETY Y ACK
1938
This part of the Volume behig devoted
entirely to the
DANCE
I*. ^ ^
Dr. W. S. Bernard Berg Umstead Patterson
James Wales Ehringhaus Ullman
FiTTS McCachren Pitts Reid
UNIVEKSITY DANCE COMMITTEE
OFFICERS MEMBERS
Dr. W. S. Bernard Faculty Representative J°"P^ P'^""" Patterson, William Duer James, Charles
Paddock Wales, Haughton Ehringhaus, Fred E. Ullman,
Randall Challen Berg Chairman ^j^^^;^ (^^1^,^^^ Pj^^^^ William H. McCachren, Thomas
John VC'esley Umstead, III Secretary-Treasurer Remery Pitts, Charles Hamilton Reid.
PAGE 336
.^M^ms.
Umstead Ehringhaus FiTTs Worth
Gordon Coan Crew Thorp
Gregory Parrish Hancock Rogers
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF
THE GERMAN CLUB
OFFICERS MEMBERS
John W. Umstead President Lewis Gordon, James W. Coan, W. Lunceford Crew, David
Haughton Ehringhaus Vice-President j ^horp, Fletcher H. Gregory, Fred M. Parrish, S. Page
Morns C. Fitts Secretary-Treasurer -^ ^ ° ^ °
William H. Worth Assistant Secretary-Treasurer Hancock, Frank B. Rogers.
iTaOt ,_
Turner
Miss Newman
Hancock
Miss Stewart
Kerr
Miss Shull
Crooks
Miss Mann
Stovall
Miss Crowe
Blythe
Miss Davis
FALL GERMANS
Lawson Turner, Leader . with Miss Eleanor Newman
John Hancock with Miss Marjorie Stewart
John Kerr with Miss Betty Shull
Rov Crooks with Miss Eva Allen Mann
Harry Stovall with Miss Nancy Crow
Jack Blythe with Miss Barbara Davis
r.i/iili
Til icHiR Miss McCorki.e I, -inch Miss Jane Miller Hastie Miss Wakkln
Stokes Miss Bahnson Tanner Mjss Harrison
MID*WINTEMS
Joe Fletcher, Leader .... with Miss Julia McCorkle
Charles Lynch with Miss Jane Miller
Drayton Hastie with Miss Etta Burt Warren
Henry Stokes with Miss Betty Bahnson
Kenneth Tanner with Miss Anne Harrison
«^wy wiTtoT f'juimtt^m
m ' ^w>*' Jj'/',i 'Jfcr ^^>r
'^^^
SiEWERS Miss Forrest
McRae Miss Worth
Hand Miss Turner
Lambeth Miss Miller
Bowles Miss Wiley
Frushman Dance, 1938
FKESHMAN DANCE
Christian Siewers, Leader with Miss Sue Forrest
Cam McRae with Miss Martha Worth
Billy Hand with Miss Mary Turner
Walter Lambeth with Miss Caroline Miller
Hargrove Bowles with Miss Ann Wiley
y..v'
.W' ■' fcS'fflT
..^^^^e:^^im.^im.t^^mji-
m^^
Sophomore Dance
SOPHOMOEE HOP
Tom Pitts, Leader with Miss Frances Mann
Walter Clark with Miss Martha Manney
Benny Hunter with Miss Ann Young
George Zink with Miss Marjorie Davis
Pitts Miss Mann
Clark Miss Manney
Hunter Miss Young
Zink Miss Davis
Sammy Kave and His Orchestra
JUNIOR PKOM
James Joyner Leader
Bill Campbell, Chuck Kline, Bill McCachren, John Moore,
Voit Gilmore, Bud Hudson, Jim Balding, Betty Norcross.
PAGE 342
^
SENIOM BALL
Joe Patterson Leader
Robert Magill, Andy Bershak, Crowell Little, John Urn-
stead, Ramsay Potts, Mac Smith.
f
^^^x^L;s^^'.
"^OM ' ^
PAGE 343
Rodman Miss Paschall
Allen Miss Albritton
MvERS Miss Norcross
Feimster Miss Stewart
Hollingsworth Miss Lewis
Ray Miss Jamieson
Richards Miss Davis
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiv
_!s*_a^.^B_^H.HK_^H._HK.^K_^S„.^H...^B_Hl.^l_^l_JHi l_l_fli 1^ Ml !SI.SS MLIB- Ja w MB JHL-JW.-SiLJtr^K.-^
George Olsen and His Orchestra
MAY FMOLICS
Clark Rodman, Leader with Miss Julia Paschall
Marvin Allen, 1st Assistant . . . v^ith Miss Molly Albritton
Thomas Myers, 2nd Assistant . . with Miss Betty Norcross
Connor Feimster with Miss Marjorie Stewart
Willard Hollingsworth with Miss Molly Lewis
Robert M. Ray with Miss Margaret Jamieson
Jim Richards with Miss Eleanor Davis
PAGE 344
.^f^*
ai^i^,.^w»im^!m^mk^»^m^
»33J]!^!M^^lllll1inill1I]||l
— 1 •• -1 SB ■ w K Ba_a».jp^»w n||
Ka-i- K-iSER AND His Orchestra
FINALS
Willard Hollingsworth, Leader . . with Miss Molly Lewis
Reid Bahnson, 1st Assistant . . . with Miss Bob Ed Lassiter
John Ramsey, 2nd Assistant .... with Miss Betty Bokhaus
Will Wakeley with Miss Rachel Weyher
Connor Feimster with Miss Beth Lea
Crowell Little with Miss Martha Campbell
Bill Davis with Miss Helen Jennings
Hollingsworth Miss Lewis
Bahnson Miss Lassiter
Ramsey Miss Bokhaus
Wakeley Miss Weyher
Feimster iiiss Lee
Little Miss Campbell
Davis Miss Jennings
lilf^fSS
w^
^.
PAGE 345
P A G H 3 4 fi
m^mi
PAGE 347
mf^
a^
ataatel ianucs^ai^
1
'^
■^f*i^WM0M^
tt
Aiu, polL Cal
It ^^^asicij
i^^ y \Jancu ^ i/ LaiWL^t
if ^ y LaiWi
^ n'#||fij^:&
I
i^^ y 1/ Lauf l^atkeune J liatv
^^Miimt
L^^ y vancLi
y
K^taw
y LLiS ^J—Lii^ ^=^>^uke K^ieme^tt^
i
jr
,; V ■'•^' "^ i
SEVENTH PART
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA YEAR BOOK
YACKETY YACK
1938
This part of the X)olume being devoted
entirely to the
HONORARY
John McNeill Smith, Jr.
President
MEMBERS
Robert Nathaniel Magill
Nicholas Cabell Read
Stuart White Rabb
Joseph Flanner Patterson
Ramsay Douglas Potts
William Palmer Hudson
Andrew A. Bershak
Frank Ben jamin Rogers
Alexander Heard
Sam Earle Green Hobbs
Alan Taliaferro Calhoun
Brooks Patten
Allen Hunter Merrill
Newton Craig
VoiT Gilmore
Lytt Irving Gardner
Scott Hunter
page 362
^'TJ!ft'
m^
^^13^' CL
OFFICERS
Frank Wakklfv Presidenl
Albkrt MA^■NARr) Secretary-Treasurer
MEMBERS
Bill Jordan Alpha Tan Omega
Gordon Burns Alpha Tan Omega
Glenn Davis Alpha Tan Omega
Tommy Royster Alpha Tan Omega
Jack Lynch Alpha Tan Omega
Bill James Delta Kappa Epsilo/?
Archie Craige Delta Kappa Eps'tlon
Alan Calhoun Delta Psi
Dave Murchison Delta Psi
E. TowNSEND Moore Delta Psi
Richard Urquhart Kappa Alpha
Edwin Reich Kappa Alpha
Wick Exum Phi Delta Theta I A ^^^
Bill Scott Phi Delta Theta I B B
Pete Beattie Phi Delta Theta I H ^w
Albert Maynard Phi Delta Thet.i I I ^k
Owen Perry Phi Delta Theta I ■ |^ W
Charles McKinney Phi Delta Theta | J^ ^^^^r
Bill Daniel Phi Gamma Delta
Paul Darden Phi Gamma Delta
Page Keel Phi Gamma Delta
John Clark Phi Gamma Delta
Johnson Harriss Phi Gamma Delta
Julian Brantley Phi Gamma Delta
Sam McPhfrson Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Barney Bannon Sigma Chi
Ed Tankersley Sigma Chi
Victor Harlee Sigma Chi
Brud Smith Sigma Chi
Aston Beadles Sigma Chi IS |z
John Hancock Sigma Chi
John Conner Sigma Nn
Trez Yeatman Sigma Nu
Paul Jernigan Sigma N.v
C. T. Sloan Sigma Nn
Stewart Ficklen Sigma Nu
Devereux Joslin Sigma Nn
Johnston King Zeta Psi
Frank Wakeley Zeta Psi
Dick Pope Zeta Psi
Hvman Phillips Zeta Psi
PAGE 363
OMDEE or MINATAUKS
OFFICERS
Stuart Keith Eutsler Al.W'.H.
John Wallace Winborne, Jr AI.lF.t/.
James Leake Woodson B.T.
ACTIVE MEMBERS
R. Erskine Clements, Jr.
James Wiggins Coan
William Warren Daniel
Stuart Keith Eutsler
Morris Calvert Pitts
Strother Callaway Fleming
Ivan Maxwell Glace
Stoddard Page Hancock
WiLLARD ReVELLE HoLLINGSWORTH
Edwin Bedford Jeffress
Charles Edward Lynch
William Stratford May
John Bourke MacDevitt
Joseph Flanner Patterson
Robert Marsh Rai-
Harold Lauk Sager
Oscar Leak Tyree
John Wallace Winborne, Jr.
James Leake Woodson
James Rhodes Wright
HUTS
Julian Baxter Coghill, Jr.
Jesse Lamar Fulenwider, Jr.
Frederick B. Hamilton
Charles James Hine
William Walker Hines
Frank Marion Holmes
George McDuffie
J. Holcombe Murrell
Robert Marshall Quina
Charles Franklin Rider
James McCausland Ross
Kenneth Claiborne Royall, Jr.
Robert Ernest Sumner
George Alexander Wilkinson
PAGE 364
OKDEE OF THE SHEIKS
OFFICERS
Sandy Graham ^•
Pou Bailey V. S.
JoH Fletcher K.
MEMBERS
Pou Bailey Alpha Tati Omega
Ben Dixon Alpha Tan Omega
Drew Martin Alpha Tat/ Omega
James Davis Alpha Tan Omega
William Vinson Alpha Tan Omega
Harvey Hines Beta Theta Pi
Carl Jefferies Beta Theta Pi
Jack Blythe Beta Theta Pi
Bud Dillon Beta Theta Pi
Frank Penn Beta Theta Pi
Don Gilliam Delta Kappa Epsilon
Frank Duff Delta Kappa Epsilon
Lawson Turner Delta Kappa Epsilon
John Kerr Delta Kappa Epsilon
Fletcher Gregory Kappa Alpha
Duncan Eaves Kappa Alpha
Bill Shull Kappa Alpha
Charlie Moore Kappa Alpha
Yates Mason Kappa Sigma
Willl\m Davis . Kappa Sigma
Bill Miller Kappa Sigma
Joe Fletcher Kappa Sigma
Charles Wood Kappa Sigma
FiTZHUGH Wallace Kappa Sigma
Herbert Rodgers Phi Delta Theta
Allen Merrill Phi Delta Theta
Dave Mosier Phi Delta Theta
Duncan McColl Phi Delta Theta
Wilford Gragg Phi Delta Theta
Pete Wilson Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Kenneth Tanner Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Tom Myers Sigma Alpha Epsilon
MiNETREE Pyne Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Marshall Shepard Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Bud Wooten ^eta Psi
Gus Forbes Zeta Psi
Sandy Graham Zeta Psi
Albert Carr Zeta Psi
Louis Sutton Zeta Psi
m
■w^nn-
QUS RQLCS HRMGGY
CS HVTVWP HVAYHF
TF UAFVV VV GREB
VVTVME AUR AOK
VVMVECF
VALMAR L
RULERS
529 Leroy P. Percy
Rex
527 James W. Coan
K. D. S.
528 Joseph F. Patterson
w. s. s.
525 Thomas E. Myers
K. M. K.
524 Robert M. Ray
N. G. P.
SUBJECTS
170 Charles Staples Mangum
174 Archibald Henderson
193 William S. Bernard
241 Joseph G. deR. Hamilton
255 Frank Porter Graham
315 Robert W. Wettach
319 WiUiam W. Pierson
328 Frauicis F. Bradshaw
331 Thomas Felix Hickerson
343 Dudley DeWitt Carroll
369 William F. Prouty
373 Allen Wilson Hobbs
385 Robert Edwin Coker
405 Charles S. Mangum, Jr.
417 George Coffin Taylor
439 J. Penrose Harland
442 Robert B. House
453 H. G. Baity
468 Herman Walter Schnell
526 David A. Allen
531 Clarence A. Griffin
''533 Archibald Craige
534 Reid Bahnson
535 David Jones Thorp
536 Alexander Hawkins GraJiam, Jr.
537 James Palmer Balding, Jr.
538 Kenneth Spencer Tanner
539 Richard Thomas Myers
540 Ernest Craige
541 Berkeley Leo Simmons
542 Hayden Croxton Clemen
543 John Augustus Moore
544 William Capehart Harney
545 William Clarence Kluttz
^Became W. S. S. in December due to resignation of Sir Knight Patterson.
(Borg
PIQ
ALEXANDER McGOWIN COVER
Princeps
JOHN BOURKE McDEVITT
Scriptor
3^ ^
FRANK FRITTS
Quaestor
:^--
s
LEROY FRANKUN ABERNATH
PRANKLIN JACKSON BLYTHBkJR
BUNYAN RANDOLPH COONER
FRANK FRITTS DUFF
4DOLPHUS HILL ELLER, JR.
ULLIAM
4N
^Z^-
PAUL ROBERTS JERNI>
JOHN GRIFFITH JOHNSC*
CHARLES EDWARD LYNCI '
JOHN BOURKE McDEV
PARKER WILUAP
EDWARD MICHAE
FREDERICK t'
5N COVER
tICfje ©rber of tije #rail
OFFICERS
Ramsay Douglas Potts, Jr.
E. Marvin Allen
Joseph P. Patterson
FACULTY MEMBERS
W. S. Bernard
F. F. Bradshaw
E. H. Cameron
W. R. BerryhiU
E. M. Hedgepeth
E. L. Mackie
F. P. Graham
J. M. Saunders
H. H. Williams
J. A. Williams
W. Spearmsin
MEMBERS
E. Marvin Allen
James Palmer Balding, Jr.
Andrew A. Bershak
Eugene C. Bricklemyer
William Blount Campbell
Albert Joseph Ellis
Voit Gilmore
Reuben Homes GraJiam, Jr.
William Houston Hendrix, Jr.
Henry Hudson
William Jamnes
John Griffith Johnson
James McMurray Joyner
Robert Nathaniel Magill
Lester B. McCam
AUen H. Merrill
Clyde Edward Mullis
Joseph P. Patterson
Ramsay Douglas Potts, Jr.
Stuart White Rabb
John McNeil Smith
Fred E. UUman
Julian Knox Warren, Jr.
Order of the
ACTIVE
307 Robert Nathaniel Magill
308 Ramsa"!' Douglas Potts
309 Albert Joseph Ellis
310 Andrew A. Bershak
31 1 Robert Bouvard duFour
313 Stuart White Rabb
315 John McNeill Smith. Jr.
GRADUATE
291 Charles Aycock Poe
299 Fred Henry Weaver
Aa x^ &.?,,
^i. 9^/ m
ALPHA KAPPA GAMMA
ATHENA CIRCLE
Foil lid ed at the State Teachers College. Farmrille, Va.
OFFICERS
Nancy Schallert* Preudent
Nancy Nhsbit Vice-President
Nell Booker Secretary
Evelyn Barker Treasurer
Ellen Deppe** Historian
MEMBERS
Polly Pollock
Mary Lillian Speck
Mary Capp
* National Editor.
** National Vice-President.
PAGE 370
SCHWENNING
BETA GAMMA SIGMA
rounded at the University of W'iiconsi/t. May IS. 1907
ALPHA CHAPTER OF NORTH CAROLINA
Established Fehit/ai) 20, 1933
Rov C. Crooks, Tr n j
■' rres/det/t
G. T. SCHWENNING Hr.,,.. D a .
rioiiorary President
John B. Woosley r-, . ,
■' secretary
W. F. Aberly .... T
Treasurer
STUDENT MEMBERS
William Franklin Aberly
Crist Watts Blackwell
Rci- Cox Crooks, Jr.
Webb Frederick Evans
Paul Otto Foltz
John Born Foreman
Reuben Holmes Graham
Warren Monr<)L Haddaway
Louis Wesley Jenkins
WiLLiA.M DeRoy McLean
William Sunday Mitchell
Ramsay Douglas Potts, Jr.
Herman Jack Rosenbaum
Clyde Alexander Shaw, Jr.
Ra-i'mond Simon
David Livingstone Stallings
LocHLiN Monroe Ward
FACULTY MEMBERS
Edward Morris Bernstein, Ph.D.
Dudley Dewitt Carroll, A.M.
Clarence Heer, Ph.D.
Richard Junius Mendenhall Hobbs, A.B., LL.B.
Erle Ewart Peacock, M.B.A., CP.A.
GusTAV Theodor Schwenning, Ph.D.
Robert Howard Sherrill, M.A., CP.A.
Malcolm Dean Taylor, A.B., M.B.A.
Harry deMerle Wolf, Ph.D.
John Brooks Woosley, Ph.D.
M:j^^Wff!ii^gMKy^-''':j^m^^ n €^.m^^fK^'
"M- ^it M^ :^ m.
PAGE 37 1
m.
\Jii. ^^Tl^i H.
PHI BETA KAPPA
Founded dl ibe College of William and Mary. December 5. 7776
ALPHA CHAPTER OF THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
OFFICERS
Lawrence Earle Hinkle. Jr President
John McNeill Smith Vice-President
William Palmer Hudson Recording Secretary
Thomas James Wilson, Jr Secretary-Treasurer
STUDENT MEMBERS
William Franklin Aberly
Jerry Harrison Allen, Jr.
Crist Watts Blackwell
Henry Stuart Blow
Nell Battle Booker
Olin Henry Borum
Francis Sterling Brown
Joseph Lee Brown
Henry Toole Cl.\rk
James Wiggins Coan
Archibald Craige
Roy Cox Crooks
Thomas Worth Crowell
Ne store DiCostanzo
Robert Marsh Dowd, Jr.
Leighton Wesley Dudley
Alfred Garvin Engstrom
John Born Foreman
Lytt Irvine Gardner
Moses Braxton Gillam, Jr.
John Raymond Gove
John Edwin Greer
Ezra Ennis Griffin, Jr.
Warren Monroe Haddaway
George Alexander Heard
PHI BETA KAPPA
pRANfJS DiAVEV Hl-IWARD
Lawrence Earle Hinkle, Jr.
Horace Havden Hodges
Robert Hooke
Robert Kemp Horton
Robert Cook Howison, Jr.
William Palmer Hudson
Francis Pledger Hulme
James Scott Hunter, Jr.
Charles Marshall Ivev, Jr.
William Stone Jordan
John Whitefield Kendrick
Anthony Stani ev Konefal
Leslie Clute Lane, Jr.
Roger Wilson Linville
William Tillman McGowan, Jr.
Robert Nathaniel Magill
John Gilmer Mebane
Hugh Harrison Mills
BiLLi- Sunday Mitchell
Edward Francis Moyer
Patrick Regia Mulene
Elmer Rosenthal Oettinger
Edward Groves Outlaw
Herman Manley Parker
Joseph Planner Patterson
Charles Aycock Poe
Nicholas Cabell Read
Herman Jack Rosenbaum
Edward Harding Seawell
Clyde Alexander Sh.'VW, Jr.
John McNeill Smith
Mari- Esther Stevenson
Edgard Franklin Wells
PAGE 373
PHI MU ALPHA
ALPHA RHO CHAPTER
Honorary Al/zs/c Fraternity of America
OFFICERS
James Parker Dees President
Anthony Sam Amoscato Vice-President
Edgar Hunt Goold, Jr Secretary-Treasurer
Warren Frederick Bartz Historian
James Leslie Wharton Warden
HONORARY MEMBERS
Dr. Glen Ha'idon Dr. J. P. Schinhan
Dr. Benjamin F.-Swalin
ACTIVE MEMBERS
Anthony Sam Amoscato Hubert Platt Henderson
Warren Frederick Bartz Harry Watson Moore
James Taylor Brooks James Moore Parker
Ellis Spencer Bullins Wiley Mager Rogers
Willis Thomas Carpenter, Jr. Earl A. Slocum
Roderic Walter C\rtier Willi Hans Soyez
Alfred Nixon Costner John E. Toms
James Parker Dees Eugene Alfred Turner
Morris Calvert Fitts Frank Lucius Turner
Edgar Hunt Goold, Jr. Menter Howard Waynick
Joseph Kimball Harriman James Leslie Wharton, Jr.
Charles Stewart Wilkins
PLEDGES
Harold Gordon Dale Sandifur
James Perrotta William Manl-.- Thompson
PAGE 374
{f'tA-M^ Mt-^-Ud, ■""j-^i'-v -- r<^J
tik'^k^imKMk
Jordan
:^«'«l'^-
I
vyt.7nTi^
ALPHA EPSILON DELTA
FACULTY ADVISERS
Dr. R. W. Bost Dr. E. M. Hedgepeth
HONORARY MEMBERS
Dr. W. deB. M.»icNiDER Dr M. J. Rosenau
OFFICERS
W. S. Jordan, Jr Presidenl
Fred R. Cochrane, Jr Vice-President
Ernest Craige Secretary
Ernest Richardson Treasurer
ACTIVE MEMBERS
T.'WLOR Brooks J. F. Patterson, Jr.
Sterling Brown Ernest Richardson
Fred R. Cochrane. Jr. Richard Snipes
Lytt Gardner Kenneth Tanner
Howard Hussev W. E. Wakelev
W. S. Jordan, Jr. Reid Bahnson
August Mevland H. H. Baird
Rich.\rd T. Myers Lee Large
Harry Allen
MEDICAL SCHOOL MEMBERS
Mac Simmons Arnold Breckenridge
Emmett Spicer Ed Taylor
Ben Fortune Joe Crawford
Henry Cl.\rk
PAGE 375
TAU BETA PI
OFFICERS
Prei'/dent Joseph Snhlson Francis
Vhe-PresiJei?/ JOHN EdwIN Greer
Secretary John Raymond Gove
Treasurer Robert Marsh Dowd
Calaloger Robert Kemp Horton
FACULTY MEMBERS
Herman Glen Baity
h. b. gotaas
Thomas Felix Hickerson
Elmer George Hoefer
a. r. hollett
John Emery Lear
Ralph McCoy Trimble
STUDENT MEMBERS
R. S. Dicks
Robert Marsh Dowd
Joseph Snelson Francis
John Raymond Gove
John Edwin Greer
D. E. Henderson
Robert Kemp Morion
PAGE 376
Mmm^mm
THETA KAPPA PSI
UPSILON CHAPTER OF
Theta Kappa Psi Medical Fraternity
Founded 1879
OFFICERS
E. G. Goodman President
Joseph A. Farmer Vice-President
Albert E. CoRPening Secretary
Harley G. Brookshire Treasurer
FACULTY MEMBER
T. H. Byrnes, M.D.
SECOND YEAR
Harley Gaskili. Brookshire, Jr.
Albert Edward Corpening
Joseph Arthur Farmer
Francis Dencan Gibson, Jr.
Erastus Genair Goodman
Thomas Sparrow Long
Algird Francis White
FIRST YEAR
Alfred Maul Elwell, Jr.
Walter Mitchell Petree
Robert Louis Stricker
Benjamin Cicero Taylor, Jr.
PLEDGES
Edward R. Barber
Oren Moore, Jr.
Ralph Siler Morgan
Adlai Stevenson Oliver, Jr.
PAGE 377
wumf'tm ^^'^wM'^^
'^^
^chesterfields are made of
mild ripe tobaccos . . . rolled in
pure cigarette paper . . . the best
ingredients a cigarette can have
For You... there's MORE PLEASURE
in Chesterfield's milder better taste
I
Copyright 1958, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
M
COMPLETE
Surgical Equipment
for
MEDICAL SCHOOLS
INFIRMARIES
HEALTH DEPARTMENTS
HOSPITALS AND PHYSICIANS
WINCHESTER SURGICAL SUPPLY CO.
105 East 7th Street Telephone 4109
CHARLOTTE, N, C.
WINCHESTER-RITCH SURGICAL CO.
Ill N Greene Street Telephone 63 If
GREENSBORO, N C
Compliments of
Atlantic Marble & Tile Co., Inc.
J. R. Marus, Pres.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
Experts in Marble, Tile & Terrazzo Work.
All Marble & Tile Work in New Gymnasium
Done by Us
Phone
Phone
F-9801
F-9801
LAKEWOOD DAIRY
Pasteurized Dairy Products
Pet Ice Cream
The
Standard of Quality in Durham for a
quarter of a century.
DURHAM, N. C.
Quality
Plus
Value
You con olwoys count on the best in
quality merchandise, plus exceptional
value, ot the Pender Stores. Do your shop-
ping there and have money left over for
other things.
PENDER
Modern Food Stores
Serving the printing needs of education,
individuals, and business for
over fifty years.
SEEMAN PRINTERY
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
KING COTTON
HOTEL
GREENSBORO, N
c.
250 Ol
tside Rooms
250 Baths
HAYWOOD DUKE
'26
Manager
li
The Winston Salem Journal and
Twin City Sentinel
News Pictures Features Sports
Wc value the comments, whether javorahle or otherwise, which we receive jrom college
students.
They help us in our efforts to publish complete, concise, accurate, unbiased, well-
balanced, well-arranged, entertaining, readable newspapers.
They help us retain the youthful viewpoint, which our readers, young and old, have
noticed and approved.
Gordon Gray. 'JO. Publishar
R. R. Richmond, ex 09. Complroller
E. Carl Sink. ?x '2 2. Pras Foreman
Nady Gates, ex "26. Sports Editor
John E. .Miller. •3 2. Radio Announcer
Gene Whitman, ex '3 2. Reporter
Opie Shelton, ex ■33. Ass I. Sports Editor
W. F. Clingman. Jr.. '3 6. Reporter
STROWD MOTOR CO.
BRUCE STROWD
TROY S. HERNDON
GEO. B. HELLEN
Ass't Mgr.
Sales Mgr.
AUTHORIZED
DEALER
SINCE
1914
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
We Appreciate Your Business
"Our Silver Anniversary
In Garage Business"
We Lend Kodaks
No Rental Fee and No Deposit Required
from Students
FOISTER PHOTO CO.
HOTEL ROBERT E. LEE
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Roof Garden
and
Coffee Shop
m
Even if you carry a spare tire,
you can sit, stoop, bend, and
walk in HaNES Shorts — with-
out any choking or chafing.
But that's not all there is to
these shorts. You get ample
clearance at the crotch . . . legs
long enough and wide enough
to stop binding and crawling
... genuine "Lastex" yarn in
the waist . . . and fast colorsl
The only thing that tops
Hanes Shorts is an undershirt
made by HANES. Close-knit for
a close-fit, it clings snugly
under your arms; never bulges
or droops . . . lies calm and
cool across your chest . . . tucks
so far into your shorts that it
can't roll up and bunch at your
belt! See your Hanes Dealer
today. P. H. Hanes Knitting
Co., Winston-Salem,
North Carolina.
(at right) HANES Sports & Shirts, 3Sc
to 50c each. Sports in colors or white.
FOR MEN AND BOYS
FOR EVERY SEASON
'«fe*^
wn^wj:
''ADMIRAL'' ^KlNO'' ^^PHt-E>E:"r
PLAYAAAKERS
migmw-
WE SPIN AN OLD YARN
In 1877, Alexander Chatham started a mill at Elkin in North Carolina
to make "woolen piece goods and blankets." Soon famous was a homespun
cloth similar to that rugged, hardy fabric woven by hand in the Blue Ridge.
First popular among Carolinians, Chatham Homespun cloth quickly became
known throughout the whole country as a synonym for sturdy quality in
men's suits.
In an old Chatham catalog, dated 1894, Mr. W. A. Blair, President of
the Peoples National Bank of Winston, said: "It gives me pleasure to state
that I know their goods, which I wear myself, to be as good as the best."
About five vears ago, in cooperation with a prominent New York City
store, Chatham re-introduced this famous fabric, smartly tailored in several
styles by a leading men's clothier. Success was instantaneous and young men
everywhere "took" to this truly American cloth.
Now, Chatham Homespun suits for men are available at your local
mens' store, at moderate prices. Ask to see these suits the next time you want
u'ear, quality, and style in the suit you buy.
CHATHAM MANUFACTURING COMPANY
Mills at Elkin and Winston-Salem in North Carolina
^^ ,-/^,
iZ^'fh
THE CAROLINA INN
CHAPEL HILL, N. C
Oftc>
Thought...
to this year's graduates . .
activities will reflect on yo
Maintain the standards
"Chapel Hill men" and you n
well.
. You
ur Un
of f
fill ha
future
versify,
revious
e done
THE FIDELITY BANK
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
Complete Dairy Service
Durham Dairy Products, Inc.
DURHAM CHAPEL HILL
The Community Cleaners and Hatters
Nick Katzis, Prop.
Quality Cleaning Quickly
''Growing with Carolina"
We are giving the kind of service that the people of our
State opprove Over 300 North Corolinians are employed by
our company
HOME SECURITY LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY
Home Office
DURHAM, N. C.
Geo. Watts Hill. President
G. W. Munford. \':ct-Pre%idcnl Bjscom Bjynes. Execullae Vice-Pi.^
\\'.iller Sledge, Treasurer [rank B. Dilts. Secretary
i^mm,
^^n.i^ "°
iiil
H b e S5 h E .v c h a n g e
Owned and Operated b}i '^Bhe University of Ji. Q.
Y
O
C
R
C
O
L
L
E
G
£
S
T
O
R
E
\
O
I
II
s
i<:
II
\
I
i
E
<
E
T
E
II
T^tc' Yottrs Hill Mil hv You Oih€*r Ait^n
We hope the Bonk Exchange contributed something to your college career, that you
may remember the jriends you have made here, and that you will always
cherish your days in Chapel II ill.
THE
CAROLINA THEATRE
APPRECIATES YOUR PATRONAGE
and
INVITES YOU TO VISIT OUR OTHER
THEATRES THROUGHOUT THE STATE
Our of the North Qiroliihi Thcdtres, Inc.
^^fmmi^'im «^<^*^^^ik;jt
.■■^''
i?^m
Old in Age and Experience...
Strong in Resources
The
BANK OF CHAPEL HILL
M. C. S. NOBLE, President W. E. THOMPSON, Cashier
COMPLETE STAGE EQUIPMENT
Scenery, Draperies, Theatrical Hardware, Stage Curtains,
Cycloramos, Lighting
FOR SALE OR RENT
Send jar jrcc catalof^uc "Y"
Dimmerette Switchboard
Complete Light Control for Non- Professional Stage
ART CRAFT
THEATRE EQUIPMENT CO.
108 West 46th Street New York City
300 Rooms
300 Baths
"Air Conditioned"
TAVERN
Banquet Halls
& Private Dining
Room Facilities
We cater to fraternity parties.
THE WASHINGTON-DUKE HOTEL
DURHAM, N. C.
In Durham, North Carolina
LIPSCOMB-GATTIS COMPANY
213 West Main Street
DURHAM, N. C.
WHITE MOUNT AIRY GRANITE
Cut and carved granite for memorials, bridges, buildings-
Street curbing, paving blocks, rubble, crushed stone
The North Carolina Granite Corporation
MOUNT AIRY, N. C.
Build with Granite for enduring strength and beauty.
c^.
■■s-r.,
CAMELS
/
LARGEST- SELLING
CIGARETTE IN AMERICA
Carolina Steel & Iron Co.
GREENSBORO. N. C.
Structural Steel for Buildings and Bridges
1500 TONS MONTHLY CAPACITY
3000 TONS STOCK ON HAND
We Are Also Distributors for the Following Products
Elevator Doors
Tin Clod Fire Doors
Chain Link Fence
Ash Hoists and Equipment
Steel Lockers and Shelving
Wire Guards and Drills
Steel Windows
Toilet Partitions
Stair Treads
Gratings
Vault Lights
Rolling Steel Doors
Olficul Pbot()<(rjphn-y jar llv 1958 Wu-kcty Yack
WOOTTEN-MOULTON
Photographers
PORTRAIT
ILLUSTRATIONS
HOME PORTRAIT
COLLEGE ANNUALS
ILLUSTRATED TALKS
NEW BERN, N. C
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
m
Th
e 1938 Yacke
is bound in a
Genuine KINGSKRAFT
designed and produced by
ty
Cover
Yac
k
THE KINGSPORT
PRESS
KINGSPORT, TENNESSEE
The business manager wishes to express to the
organizations advertising in this issue of the
Yackety Yack his sincere appreciation of their
patronage
Fred Rippy, Jr
I3P1
^i-.-,*
^n
-V^*-'^'*''^-
HER HERO
DOpE FIEND
"^^HOLD IT/ STl PsNY'
«mm
^s^a
?%-^^
'^,
t^'lf
i^MJ '■ r'"r " I iM^fciv
Pre/j- Roo/vv
«^
S i II O O L P IT K 1. 1 r AT MII\ ^
I HE many high awards won each year by
school publications produced by us is the
result of specialization based on a com-
prehensive knowledge of art motifs, de-
sign, layout and publication trends.
A modern printing plant operated by
highly efficient craftsmen in every depart-
ment provides a quality and a distinctive-
ness that is unsurpassed.
THE LASSITER PRESS. I^€.
Queen City l*riiiliii;< Coiiipany
CHARLOTTE, IVORTll 4 AROLIi^A
Pruitci-s of The
1938 YACKEIY YACK
'^■^^)wm/.
J