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Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 

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University  of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill 


http://www.archive.org/details/yacketyyackseria1942univ 


•'"  (/  /^i^^'Tcy 


CHARLES  TILLETT,  III,  EDITOR 


DAVE   REID,  III,  RUSIIVESS    MANAGER 


PUBLISHED  BV  THE  STUDENTS  OF   / 


/ 


THE    UIVIVERSITY    OF  I\ORTH    tAROLIJVA 


CHAPEL  HILL,  IV.  C. 


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J^^^.  '~t^^€£.'C<J  .  .  .   BORX   AND  BRED 


X^AST  September  most  of  us  were  looking  forward  to  a  good  year.  It  looked 
like  a  gay  year — with  dances  and  week-ends  and  football  games.  It  seemed  to  be 
a  hopeful  year — because  business  was  good  and  the  chances  of  our  getting  jobs  next 
summer  were  better  than  ever.  But  most  of  all,  it  was  a  carefree  year — because  few 
if  any  of  us  looked  on  the  war  as  more  than  "that  fight  on  the  other  side  of  the 
ocean." 

December  7  changed  that,  changed  it  with  overpowering  force  and  suddenness. 
For  within  the  space  of  one  day  a  relatively  bright  future  became  a  dark  one.  Un- 
certainty, confusion,  unawareness  of  what  we  as  students  could  do  or  should  do — 
these  were  the  thoughts  which  jolted  us  from  our  complacent  world  into  a  more 
sober  reflection  of  what  lay  ahead.  We  found  ourselves  forced  for  the  first  time  to 
face  the  issue  squarely,  to  think  it  out  ...  to  decide  just  where  we  stood. 

Carolina  students  were  as  confused  as  anyone  else;  we  admit  it.  But  the  year 
didn't  end  in  December.  Actually  that  was  its  real  beginning — for  out  of  tlie  maze 
of  changed  plans  and  uncertain  futures  there  arose  a  feeling  of  unity  which  none  of 
us  will  forget.  The  same  feeling  which  makes  us  yell  hardest  at  a  football  game  when 
the  going  looks  worst,  the  feeling  we  symbolize  in  the  Old  Well  or  Davie  Poplar  or 
the  spire  of  the  Bell  Tower,  the  feeling  which  makes  us  proud  to  say  we're  Tar  Heels 
— that  feeling  pulled  us  together  in  the  face  of  the  hardest  struggle  any  of  us  had 
ever  confronted. 

As  you  read  this,  the  school  year  will  have  almost  ended.  Seniors,  perhaps  Jun- 
iors and  others,  will  be  leaving  for  the  last  time.  But  the  spirit  which  has  been  ours 
will  not  end.  For  that  spirit  is  born  of  all  of  us — and  so  long  as  we  let  it  live,  it 
will  remain  our  heritage  and  our  challenge. 


^^    OUR    SPIRIT -A    HERITAGE    FROM    THE    PAST, 


n 


'♦.V* 


/y^/ 


„^4 


FOR    THE    FUTITRE 


// 


The  Naval  Reserve — Grim  Reminder  of  Days,  to ^ 


IT-S  ALL  IN   A  YEAR  AT     /  j/il''i^''C'0'>t.^£:^U    " 

Should  be  an  Easy  Step.  Registration  to  Graduation.  But  Look  at  What's  in  Between- 


y1 

.  AlVD  WHAT 

/J 

A    l//£.^aA^  WE  HAD      '* 

I 

^^V-»EGISTRATION  lines,  sore  feet, 
entliusiastic  greetings  and  forgotten  names, 
a  new  crop  of  coeds  (improving  all  the 
time,  too!) — that's  how  the  year  began. 
Since  then,  do  you  remember — the  nightly 
pep  rallies  in  the  lower  quad,  beginning 
any  time  after  midnight — the  Dook  game 
and  the  prematurely  lit  bonfire — and  as 
if  that  weren't  enough,  the  shaved  heads 
the  devils  gave  several  of  our  over-enthu- 
siastic students.  And  how  about  Sadie 
Hawkins  day — when  Al  Capp  came  down 
and  the  coeds  did  the  chasing  for  a  change 
— and  Life  magazine  did  us  up  all  wrong. 
Another  big  day — when  comprehensives 
were  abolished,  and  over  500  seniors 
breathed  easier  as  they  saw  the  odds  on 
graduation  getting  better.  And  we  can't 
forget  the  long  lines  of  army  trucks  grind- 
ing down  Franklin  Street. 

There  are  other  things  we  remember — 
10:30  at  the  Book  Ex — Sunday  nights  at 
Dr.  Frank's  —  quiet  walks  through  the 
campus — the  times  we  cheered  together 
and  sang  Hark  The  Sound. 


Classes.  Sports.  Activities,  .^nd  Soci.\l  Life 


m 


HERE'S    WHERE  TO   FIIVD  IT 


AT  THE  UNIVERSITY— 

Campus  Views,  Administration,  Faculty  Person- 
alities, Work  of  the  School,  Alumni,  Student 
Administration Page  13 


Seniors,  Juniors,  Sophomores,  Freshmen,  Phar- 
macy School,  Law  School,  Medical  School, 
School  of  Public  Health,  Campus  Life  and  In- 
formal Snapshots Page  53 


n^ 


A     /«.-'•'  Ay%^^yS  O'tf^"'^    VIEW  OF  WHAT   WE  DID 


/ 


ACTIVITIES— 


Organizations,  Women's  Activities,  Discussion 
Groups,   Publications,   Honorary  Organizations 

Page  209 


SOCIAL  ACTIVITIES— 

Fraternities  and  Sororities,  Beauty  Section,  Dance 
Section,  Alphabetical  Index Page  343 


ATHLETICS— 

Football,  Monogram  Club,  Basketball,  Tennis, 
Track,  Baseball,  Other  Sports,  Freshman  Ath- 
letics, Intramurals,  Women's  Athletics-Page  271 


pi     B  V 


^#^  IJX-^ 


/      / 


•K.C 


>OT  to  Phillips  Russell  the  teacher,  though  his  classes  might  well  serve  as  models 
of  the  pithy,  thought-provoking  experience  that  classes  should  be. 


Nor  to  Phillips  Russell  the  writer,  though  his  biographies  of  Franklin  and  Emerson 
are  warm  and  human,  and  mark  him  for  his  real  ability. 


Rather  to  Phillips  Russell  the  Man,  because  his  character  and  strength  somehow  work 
their  way  to  the  hearts  of  his  students,  because  his  open- 
mindedness  and  fairness  exemplify  so  beautifully  the 


C 


■u 


spirit  of  our  University- 


We  dedicate  this  the  1942  Yackety  Yack. 


,./ 


/ 


//// 


Z'       /  /  //  / 


William  Flint  Thrall 
RosELLE  Parker  Johnson 

George  McKih,  '07 

John  Byron  Hackett.  '37 

William  Henry  Sloan,  '43 

Richard  Morris  Upchurch,  '44 

Wilson  McCall  Wagoner.  '45 


To  the  memory  of  these  and  other  Carolina  men  ivho 
i^.  have  died  in  the  service  of  their  country — 

Lt.  Robert  J.  Conderman,  '39 

Lt.  Foy  Roberson,  '40 

Ensign  William  Manley  Thompson,  '41 


AT  THE 


"T"' 


''kdhn.ij 


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The  Arboretum 

and  Spencer  Hall 
—need  more  be  said? 


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m'^^^^: 


3*-iJ^  '^*- 


J^t^.Xjf? 


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^^MM^^m^^^ 


The  Old  Well 

—age,  simplicity, 
tradition. 


17 


The  Plajmak  ers  Theatre 
•center  of  campus  dramatic  art 
Steele  Dormitory. 


M#?|^^^ 


»"•  -1 


...J 

s  J 

'*--:'^'-' 

, 

1 

Interior  of  the  Library 

-istudying,  sleeping, 
socializing. 


19 


The  Confederate  Soldier 

and  Graham  Memorial: 
10:30  on  the  steps  of  South. 


i^< 


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w . 


■^       R^       jif      aar 


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fe 


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f^. 


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Manning  Hall  through  the 

mimosas:  classes  changing 
in  front  of  South. 


-    •/  -^ 

FROM  OUR  fffLS4/U0^yS''l^i    .  .  . 


ERE  in  the  University  American  air  of  freedom,  traditions  become  robust  with  obligations  upon 
American  men  and  women  to  help  make  the  world  freer  and  fairer  to  all  men;  to  have  deep  and 
intelligent  concerns  about  the  human  beings  who  are  stumbling  toward  the  light  of  a  better  day.  It  is 
the  personal  and  social  responsibility  of  University  American  men  and  women  to  give  all  sides  a  fair 
hearing;  to  interpret  and  champion  the  freedom  and  right  of  despised  minorities,  regardless  of  race, 
creed,  color,  or  class;  to  offset  vested  powers  with  social  justice;  to  bring  economic  drift  under  social 
mastery;  and  to  organize  peace  among  nations. 

Though  the  international  structure,  as  erected  by  nations,  seems  to  be  falling  into  ruins,  the  flag 
of  international  organization  must  be  kept  flying  at  Geneva  for  the  better  day  of  our  human  hopes. 
By  the  tragedies  and  lessons  of  the  last  peace  we  must  be  resolute  to  prepare  now  to  help  organize 
justice  and  peace  after  this  war. 

In  the  present  unutterable  woes  of  the  world,  we  deplore  now  the  clearly  terrible  fact  that  the 
allies  repudiated  Woodrow  Wilson's  fourteen  points,  that  America  threw  down  the  League  of  Nations, 
that  the  League  failed  to  revise  the  Treaty  of  Versailles,  and  that  Britain  and  France  failed  to  lend  a 
hand  to  the  struggling  German  democracy  upon  whose  tragic  fall  Hitler  rose  to  totalitarian  power. 
His  successive  conquests  emphasize  the  collapse  of  international  order  now  in  tragic  retreat  across  the 
earth.  Without  collective  security,  there  can  be  no  national  security,  no  enduring  peace,  freedom  and 
democracy  in  this  modern  world  whose  vast  dynamic  economic  structure  picks  up  wars  and  depres- 
sions anywhere  and  enmeshes  people  everywhere. 

America,  a  continental  storehouse  of  vast  and  vital  resources  and  a  mighty  powerhouse  for 
stupendous  agricultural  and  industrial  production,  fronting  on  both  the  wide  waters  and  high  respon- 
sibilities of  the  two  great  oceans,  is,  in  the  geographic,  economic,  historic,  and  spiritual  midst  of  it 
all,  east  and  west,  past  and  present,  and  yet  to  be.  We  cannot  be  geographically  isolated  from  the 
oceans  around  or  the  air  above  or  the  technological  framework  girdling  the  globe  and  embracing  all 
the  peoples  and  continents  of  the  world.  We  cannot  be  isolated  from  our  heritage  and  history,  from 
freedom,  democracy,  and  spiritual  faith  that  made  us  what  we  are.  We  cannot  be  isolated  from  the 
suffering  and  hopes  of  people  oppressed  anywhere  in  the  world.  We  cannot  be  isolated  from  democracy, 
for  democracy  hurt  anywhere  in  the  world  is  democracy  hurt  everywhere  in  the  world.  We  cannot, 
with  all  our  hatred  of  war,  be  isolated  from  a  war  endangering  the  very  freedom  which  gave  us  birth 
and  by  which  we  hope  to  live  and  struggle  for  justice  and  peace  in  the  world.  By  the  responsibilities 
of  the  Lease-Lend  Act  and  by  Nazi  attacks,  we  are  in  the  Battle  of  the  Atlantic.  America  will  not  retreat 
from  that  responsibility  or  from  those  attacks.  By  the  attack  on  Pearl  Harbor  we  are  now  in  the  Second 
World  War.  We  are  in  to  stay  through  the  war  and,  pray  God  this  time,  through  the  peace.  We  must 
win  the  war  and  we  must  win  the  peace. 

For  this  fairer  hope  the  men  and  women  of  this  old,  yet  young  University  will  do  well  their  day's 
work  and,  under  God,  hold  dearer  than  their  lives  the  American  dream  of  freedom,  culture,  democ- 
racy, and  peace  in  the  ever  venturesome  human  pilgrimage  toward  a  more  decent  world. 


cA_A*.'->L.  ^'  ^cj^^^^-^^-^*-^^.*— 


22 


"-?^  /J 


,</-  /T^,  ,..  /C-iZ^lAC^  \S(:jth  the  work  and  responsibility  of  two  men  on  his  shoulders,  Dr. 
Frank  this  year  has  served  both  his  country,  through  his  work  on  several  important  governmental 
commissions,  and  his  state,  by  upholding  the  freedoms  of  thought  and  action  on  the  University  cam- 
pus. His  sincerity,  his  courage,  his  strength,  his  boundless  energy — these  are  why  his  name  and  that 
of  the  University  have  continued  to  grow  and  flourish,  together. 


23 


DEAN   HOUSE 

Thorough  and  efficient  as 
Dean  of  Administration,  but 
ne\'er  too  busy  for  a  friendly 
greeting  ...  a  splendid  per- 
sonality .  .  .  warm  devotion  to 
the  University  ...  a  harmon- 
ica and  "Oh  Suzannah"  .  .  . 
Miss  Sue  and  the  Sheriff  .  .  . 
as  much  a  part  of  Carolina  as 
8:30's  and  the  Old  Well. 


l^oU  B.  J4c 


ouie 


L 


A  WORD  TO  THE 


,...,, ^■"">.»vl 


/ 


AM  WRITING  this  greeting  in  November,  1941, 
to  be  read  somewhere  around  June,  1942,  at  a  time 
when  circumstances  are  changing  so  fast  that  no  one 
knows  what  will  apply  to  conditions  at  that  time,  but 
I  am  sure  of  one  thing;  namely,  that  the  Class  of 
1942  of  the  University  of  North  Carolina  will  be  as 
ready  to  face  conditions  as  any  group  of  men  and 
women  anywhere.  I  think  this  is  a  great  thing  and 
grows  out  of  your  character,  intelligence,  and  spirit 
as  a  class. 

You  have  done  good  work  individually  to  graduate 
in  the  excitement  and  interruptions  attending  your 
college  generation.  In  this  you  have  done  the  best 
possible  service  for  your  day  and  generation  to  date, 
and  your  national  government  specifically  requested 
this  sort  of  growth  and  development  from  you. 


You  have  made  individual  friendships  with  your 
classmates  and  the  faculty,  and  you  have  developed 
together  a  class  spirit  which  will  remain  a  permanent 
part  of  the  richness  of  Carolina.  Your  University  has 
gone  forward  through  your  growth  as  students  and  by 
your  contribution  to  the  texture  of  its  life  as  you  have 
represented  it  in  your  college  generation. 

It  is  a  happy  result  of  our  day  of  quick  communi- 
cation and  easy  transportation  that  no  class  ever  says 
farewell  to  alma  mater  with  such  finality  as  used  to  be 
the  necessity.  You  will  be  in  and  out  of  Chapel  Hill 
constantly.  I  think  you  will  find  many  changes  in  the 
forms  of  things  but  you  will  find  nothing  changed 
for  the  worse  in  the  spirit  and  purpose  of  the  Uni- 
versity. I  urge  you  to  keep  your  friendships  through 
the  University  alive  and  growing,  and  to  consider 
yourselves  always  as  a  part  of  what  is  going  on  here. 


24 


7 


OR  all  the  years  ahead  your  history  and  the  his- 
tory of  your  University  will  know  you  as  members  of 
one  of  the  "war  classes" — just  as  are  known  classes  of 
'17  and  '18.  What  a  historic  period  your  life  has 
spanned ! 

Many  of  you  are  sons  of  the  "First  World  War". 
Some  are  from  homes  affected  by  the  hectic  prosperity 
of  the  twenties  or  scarred  by  the  crash  of  Nineteen 
Twenty-nine,  the  worst,  and  the  first,  world-wide  de- 
pression. 

During  your  youth  an  American  president  has 
broken  precedent  and  for  three  terms  led  the  attack 
of  the  nation  upon  the  colossal  problems  of  our  age. 
The  New  Deal,  the  American  Way,  Social  Security, 
and  the  Four  Freedoms  are  the  familiar  terms  of  a 
world-wide  and  "blitz"  speed  drama. 

You  have  seen  the  quiet  grooves  and  pleasant  ways 
of  Chapel  Hill  gradually  transformed  with  student 
pilots  overhead,  naval  and  military  units  on  the  fields. 


physical  fitness  programs  for  all,  "acceleration", 
"speed-up",  civilian  defense,  and  "post-war  planning" 
— until  Alma  Mater  has  become  "the  home  front". 

Now  you  go  out  to  your  duties — combat,  supply, 
or  civilian  service;  and  Carolina  goes  with  you.  In 
your  youthful  vigor,  in  your  civic  conscience,  in  your 
mental  alertness,  in  your  liberal  culture  she  will  live 
and  breathe  all  over  the  world  and  throughout  our 
nation's  historic  destiny. 

And  then  when  the  victory  comes,  she  will  stand 
with  you  at  the  polls  and  in  the  peace  conference,  and 
she  will  pray  that  'you  may  have  learned  something 
here  which  shall  enable  you  so  to  feel  and  think  and 
act  that  the  class  of  1967,  your  sons,  will  be  known  as 
a  great  class  but  need  not  be  called,  once  again,  a  "war 
class". 

With  pride  and  affection  your  University  grips  your 
good  right  hand  just  before  you  go  out  upon  the  field ! 


Francis    ^.  uSradirn 


9 


OF  1942 


DEAN 
BRADSHAW 

As  Dean  of  Students,  he 
has  handled  well  the  difficult 
job  of  easing  friction  between 
faculty  and  students  .  .  .  quiet 
and  soft-spoken  ...  a  keen, 
penetrating  mind  .  .  .  anxious 
to  help  in  solving  problems, 
large  or  small  ...  a  philoso- 
pher, but  always  a  man  .  .  . 
highly  respected  by  students 
and  faculty  alike. 


25 


DEANS    OF   THE 


ALLAN  WILSON  HOBBS 

Dean  Hobbs,  Dean  of  the  School  of  Arts  and  Sciences  and 
Professor  of  Mathematics,  is  perhaps  best  known  for  his  sym- 
pathetic help  in  untangling  schedule  difficulties  and  for  his 
love  of  hunting  and  fishing.  On  his  shoulders  rests  the  respon- 
sibility of  keeping  up  with  some  1,100  juniors  and  seniors  who 
major  in  one  of  the  liberal  arts  or  sciences — and  he  does  a  good 
job. 


CORYDON  PERRY  SPRUILL 

As  Dean  of  the  General  College,  Dean  Spruill  has  the  none- 
too-easy  task  of  keeping  tab  on  every  freshman  and  sophomore 
in  the  University.  An  able  Professor  of  Economics  in  addition 
to  being  dean,  he  carries  out  the  tremendous  amount  of  work 
which  his  office  requires  with  thoroughness,  with  fairness,  and 
always  with  a  desire  to  see  the  student's  point  of  view. 


DUDLEY  deWITT  CARROLL 

Dean  of  the  School  of  Commerce,  Head  of  the  Department 
of  Economics,  and  Professor  of  Economics,  Dean  Carroll  is 
also  President  of  the  Board  of  Trustees  of  Guilford  College. 
Not  content  with  founding  the  Commerce  School,  he  has 
watched  it  grow,  under  his  guidance,  into  one  of  the  "tough- 
est" schools  on  the  campus  and  one  of  the  best  undergraduate 
schools  in  the  nation. 


SUSAN  GREY  AKERS 

The  School  of  Library  Science,  one  of  the  smallest  schools 
on  the  campus,  is  nevertheless  one  of  the  best;  and  the  work 
of  Dean  Akers  has  been  responsible  in  large  measure  for  its 
success.  Her  energy,  patience,  and  perseverance  command  the 
respect  of  her  students,  and  have  become  as  much  a  part  of 
the  school  as  has  she,  herself. 


26 


UNIVERSITY 


JOHN  GROVER  BEARD 

A  crack  horseman  and  one  of  the  foremost  men  in  his  field 
of  study,  Dean  Beard  heads  the  School  of  Pharmacy  and  is 
Professor  of  Materia  Medica  and  Pharmaceutical  Latin.  A  firm 
believer  in  pharmacy  as  a  profession,  he  is  particularly  inter- 
ested in  encouraging  the  growing  of  drug  plants  on  a  com- 
mercial scale  here  in  North  Carolina. 


WALTER  REECE  BERRYHILL 

Until  this  past  year.  Dean  Berryhill  has  been  Director  of  the 
Infirmary  and  Assistant  Dean  of  the  School  of  Medicine.  With 
his  elevation  as  Dean  of  the  School  of  Medicine  he  continues 
to  be  one  of  the  hardest  working  men  on  the  campus.  He  has 
inaugurated  this  year  a  plan  whereby  medical  students  at  the 
University  may  receive  clinical  training. 


ROBERT  HASLEY  WETTACH 

With  the  School  of  Law  since  1921,  and  former  Assistant 
Attorney  General  of  North  Carolina,  Dean  Wettach  was  ele- 
vated to  the  deanship  in  Manning  Hall  only  last  year.  Inter- 
ested in  his  students  and  well-liked  by  them,  he  is  Professor 
of  Constitutional  Law  and  Torts  in  addition  to  his  many  duties 
as  dean. 


WILLIAM  WHATLEY  PIERSON 

Dean  of  the  Graduate  School  and  Head  of  the  Department 
of  Political  Science,  Dean  Pierson  finds  time  to  give  several 
courses  in  political  theory.  His  intense  interest  in  Latin  Ameri- 
can relations  has  led  him  to  lengthy  visits  to  South  American 
nations;  and  while  in  Venezuela  last  summer,  he  was  made  a 
member  of  the  National  Academy  of  Venezuela.  He  is  now 
writing  a  history  of  that  nation. 


27 


^. 


/ne 


FACULTY 


Erich  W.  Zimmermann,  Economics 


Foremost  authority  in  his  field  .  .  .  bristhng  with  facts  .  .  .  full 
of  stories  ...  a  real  actor  .  .  .  complicated  diagrams  and  colored 
chalk  .  .  .  remember  the  Resource  Hierarchy.-" 


John  B.  Woosley,  Cojiimerce 

Corporation  finance  his  meat  .  .  .  stocks  and  bonds  ad  infinitum 
.  .  .  acts  hard-boiled,  but  really  isn't  .  .  .  classes  informal  and 
interesting  ...  he  and  his  pipe  inseparable. 

J.  Penrose  Harland,  Archeology 

My  course  is  a  "crip"  (but  a  mighty  interesting  one!)  .  .  .  fine 
sense  of  humor  .  .  .  wonderful  class  spirit  .  .  .  says  civilization 
declining  since  Periclean  Greece. 


Howard  W.  Odum.  Sociology 

Staunch  believer  in  regionalism  .  .  .  leading  authority  with  na- 
tional reputation  .  .  .  well-liked  .  .  .  have  I  told  you  about  my 
Jersey  cows .' 


George  E.  Mowry,  Social  Science 

Young,  genial,  intensely  interested  in  his  subject  .  .  .  excellent 
ecturer  .  .  .  hot  class  discussions  .  .  .  argues  soundly  and  con- 
cisely .  .  .  editor  of  The  Soiilh  and  World  Affairs. 


Top  to  Bottom:    Zimmermann,   Woosley,   Harland 


28 


ERSONALITIES 


Urban  T.  Holmes.  RoDuuice  Liviguages 

Knows  28  languages — or  is  it  128?  .  .  .  paints,  sings,  com- 
pletely versatile  .  .  .  booming  voice  .  .  .  mellow  laugh  .  .  .  brilliant 
without  being  abstract  .  .  .  Oliver  Hardy  counterpart. 


Ernest  R.  Groves,  Sociology 

Best-known  for  his  near-famous  course  on  "marriage' 
ways  picks  girls  for  his  classes  .  .  .  pleasant  lecturer  .  .  ,  interesting 
discussions,  naturally  .  .  .  have  any  family  problems  to  solve? 

Archibald  Henderson,  Mathematics 

Mathematician,  historian,  and  annual  orator  to  incoming 
"frosh"  .  .  .  typically  absent-minded  .  .  .  versatile  and  smart  .  .  . 
one  of  the  few  genii  who  can  penetrate  the  theory  of  relativity. 


Robert  E.  Coker.  Zoology 

Knows  animals  inside  out  (literally)  .  . 
names  just  as  though  they  were  English  . 
association  of  zoologists  .  .  .  rough  quizzes 


George  Coffin  Taylor,  English 

Lives  and  breathes  Shakespeare  .  .  .  fascinating  lecturer  .  .  . 
dominating  personality  .  .  .  shaking  spectacles  .  .  .  that  long  point- 
ing finger  .  .  .  next  to  Shakespeare  come  hogs. 


Top  to  Bottom:   Holmes,  Groves,  Henderson 


29 


1 

B 

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ft 

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^il^^il 

m 

i  1 

"HATS  OFF" 


y  HE  men  and  groups  below  are  repre- 
sentative examples  of  the  excellent  work  the 
University  is  doing  in  fields  other  than  pure 
scholarship.  For  their  fine  work  despite  the 
fact  that  they  have  received  comparatively  lit- 
tle recognition,  we  say  hats  off — 


To  Bill  Mann  and  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina Flying  School  for  a  vital  and  necessary  contri- 
bution to  our  University  and  our  nation.  The  School 
has  trained  some  two  hundred  students  without  in- 
jur)' since  January,  1939,  giving  them  each  forty 
hours  of  flying  and  a  private  operator's  license. 

To  Mr.  Ed  Lanier  in  whose  hands  rests  the  im- 
mense responsibility  of  administering  pecuniary  aid 
to  some  730  students  through  the  Student  Aid  Of- 
fice. Over  a  thousand  applications  must  be  reviewed 
by  the  Self-Help  and  Scholarship  Committees  before 
these  positions  and  scholarships  may  be  given. 


Top  to  Bottom:    Mann,   Lanier,  Allcott 


A  Chemistry  Department  Defense  Class 


30 


To  the  Art  Department  and  its  head,  John  Allcott,  who 
have  brought  to  the  University  a  growing  and  vital  apprecia- 
tion of  art.  Exhibitions  of  varied  schools  in  both  architec- 
ture and  painting,  and  evening  sketching  classes  which  are 
open  to  all,  have  been  presented  in  addition  to  the  general 
courses  of  the  department.  It's  a  distinct  contribution  to 
education  at  Chapel  Hill. 

To  the  Chemistry  Department  for  a  real  contribution  to 
national  defense.  The  department  began  a  course  in  Octo- 
ber, open  to  anyone  in  the  state,  designed  to  give  specialized 
training  in  Instrumental  Methods  for  Analysis.  As  the  war 
makes  further  expansion  of  the  chemical  industry  necessary, 
the  men  who  have  taken  this  course  will  be  prepared  to  do 
more  important  work  in  the  industry'. 

To  Dr.  Ralph  McDonald  and  Director  Earl  Wynn  who 
have  given  the  Universit}'  one  of  its  most  recent  advances 
in  educational  facilities,  a  well-organized  radio  station.  The 
station  has  been  a  means  of  keeping  the  state  informed 
about  the  University,  an  outlet  for  the  talents  of  students, 
and  an  opportunity  for  the  training  of  students  interested 
in  radio. 

To  Dr.  W.  C.  Coker  for  his  splendid  work  in  the  Uni- 
versity Herbarium.  The  largest  of  its  kind  in  the  southeast, 
the  Herbarium  is  a  collection  of  plant  life  which  has  been 
pressed,  treated  against  insects,  and  mounted  on  cardboard, 
to  be  classified  by  family.  The  collection  numbers  92,000 
in  round  numbers,  the  oldest  single  plant  of  which  was 
collected  in  1849. 


To  the  Southern  Historical  Collection's  enthusiastic  di- 
rector, Dr.  J.  G.  de  Roulhac  Hamilton,  Kenan  Professor 
of  History  and  Government.  The  only  all-southern  collec- 
tion in  existence,  it  is  made  up  of  about  two  million  manu- 
scripts which  have  been  amassed  in  the  University  librar}' 
since  1927,  including  letters,  documents,  newspapers, 
diaries,  plantation  and  slave  records.  Confederate  War  ma- 
terial, and  other  data  from  over  the  South.  It  is  an  invalu- 
able contribution  to  source  material  of  American  history. 


University  Radio  Studio 


Top:   Hamilton;  Bottom:  Coker 


31 


Ai-FXANDER  B.  Andrews 


Governor  J.  Melville  Broughton 


Clyde  A.  Erwin 


BOARD    OF   TRUSTEES 

J.  HE  present  Board  of  Trustees  consists  of  over  100 
members,  almost  all  of  whom  have  been  selected  at  inter- 
vals of  two  years  for  staggered  terms  of  eight  years.  Their 
say  in  all  matters  regarding  the  University  is  final. 

Ofjiters  are:  Gov.  J.  Melville  Broughton,  President  ex 
officio;  Clyde  A.  Erwin,  Superintendent  of  Public  Instruc- 
tion, member  ex  officio;  Alexander  B.  Andrews,  Secretary. 


Members  are:  Alexander  B.  Andrews,  Dudley  Bagley, 
Walter  D.  Barbee,  Kemp  D.  Battle,  James  Albert  Bridget, 
Mrs.  Minnie  Mclver  Brown,  Charles  Fletcher  Cates,  Richard 
Thurmond  Chatham,  William  Grimes  Clark,  Emery  Bird 
Denny,  Arthur  Mills  Dixon,  Rufus  Alexander  Doughton, 
Thomas  Crawford  Hoyle,  Jr.,  Andrew  Hall  Johnston, 
Charles  Andrew  Jonas,  Kemp  Plummet  Lewis,  Arthur  Hill 
London,  Mrs.  Gertrude  Wills  McKee,  James  Edward  Millis, 
Andrew  Lee  Monroe,  Kemp  Battle  Nixon,  John  Johnston 
Parker,  Richard  Joshua  Reynolds,  Miss  Lelia  Styron,  Samuel 
Farris  Teague. 

Samuel  Masters  Blount,  Victor  Silas  Bryant,  John  Wash- 
ington Clark,  Mrs.  Laura  Weill  Cone;  Henry  Groves  Con- 
nor, Jr.,  Isaac  Peter  Davis,  John  Gilmer  Dawson,  Carl 
Thomas  Durham,  Raymond  Rowe  Eagle,  John  Battlett 
Fearing,  Jones  Fuller,  George  Chancellor  Gteen,  Edwin 
Clatke  Gtegory,  John  Sptunt  Hill,  Henty  Lewis  Ingram, 
Benjamin  Kitttell  Lassiter,  Mrs.  Daisy  Hanes  Lassiter, 
George  Bason  Mason,  Edwin  Pate,  James  Carlton  Pittman, 
John  Benton  Stacy,  John  Porterfield  Stedman,  Kenneth 
Spencer  Tanner,  Leslie  Weill. 


Mrs.  Katharine  Pendleton  Arrington,  Herbert  Dalton 
Bateman,  Emmett  Hargrove  Bellamy,  Burton  Craige,  Harry 
Percy  Grier,  Jr.,  Battle  Applewhite  Hocutt,  Ira  Thomas 
Johnston,  John  Hosea  Kerr,  J.  Heath  Kluttz,  Mark  C.  Las- 
siter, Willie  Lee  Lumpkin,  George  Lafayette  Lyetly,  Lennox 
Polk  McLendon,  Henty  Butwell  Matrow,  William  Daniel 
Merritt,  Walter  Murphy,  Haywood  Parker,  Clarence  Poe, 
James  Turner  Pritchett,  Carl  A.  Rudisill,  George  Stephens, 
Fred  Isler  Sutton,  Hoyt  Patrick  Taylor,  John  Wesley  Um- 
stead,  Jr.,  Charles  Whedbee. 

Miss  Emily  Austin,  Miss  Annie  Moore  Cherry,  David 
Clark,  James  Hector  Clark,  Kinchen  Clyde  Council,  Jose- 
phus  Daniels,  Benjamin  Bryant  Everett,  Mrs.  Sue  Ramsey 
Johnston  Ferguson,  James  Skinner  Ficklen,  James  Alex- 
ander Gray,  Reginald  Lee  Harris,  William  Edwin  Hornet, 
Hugh  Hofton,  Robett  Eugene  Little,  Daniel  Killian  Moote, 
Thomas  Jenkins  Pearsall,  Julian  Hawley  Poole,  John  Albert 
Pritchett,  Claude  Wharton  Rankin,  Foy  Roberson,  Thomas 
Clarence  Stone,  Walter  Frank  Taylor,  Mrs.  Mary  Lovelace 
Tomlinson,  Fitzhugh  Ernest  Wallace,  Graham  Woodatd. 


32 


THE  ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION 


J.  O  THE  500  or  more  seniors  who  are  graduating  this 
spring,  and  to  others  who  may  be  leaving  for  the  last  time, 
the  Alumni  Association  will  begin  to  assume  a  position  of 
importance.  For  the  Association  is  the  only  organized  means 
of  keeping  in  touch  with  the  University  and  with  other 
alumni.  Under  the  capable  guidance  of  Executive  Secretary 
"Spike"  Saunders,  who,  it  is  said,  knows  more  about  most 
alumni  than  they  do  themselves,  the  Association  does  an 
invaluable  service — including  maintaining  up-to-date  ad- 
dresses of  and  information  about  more  than  25,000  living 
alumni,  receiving  numerous  alumni  visitors  to  the  campus, 
and  servicing  the  work  of  50  organized  classes  and  60  local 
club  groups.  And  for  the  dues-paying  members,  a  monthly 
magazine,  The  Alumni  Review,  is  published  and  distributed. 
The  Review,  in  addition  to  presenting  up-to-date  informa- 
tion about  the  alumni  and  the  University,  appeared  several 
times  last  fall  in  the  form  of  a  seasonal  weekly  football 
edition. 

An  interesting  part  of  the  Association's  work  this  year 
centered  around  plans  for  the  celebration  in  1943  and  1945 


of  the  150th  anniversary  events  of  the  founding  of  the 
University.  Highlights  of  the  year  were  two  important  gifts 
made  to  the  University  by  alumni — a  professorship  endowed 
by  Burton  Craige,  '97,  and  scholarships  established  by  Kay 
Kyser,  '27. 

With  the  outbreak  of  war  in  December  the  Association 
joined  with  the  University  to  gear  its  efforts  to  the  nation's 
war-job.  War-time  has  necessitated  the  curtailment  of  some 
activities,  but  more  than  ever  the  Association,  its  leaders, 
and  its  members  have  sought  to  stress  to  other  alumni  and 
to  the  State  the  importance  of  maintaining  the  University 
as  an  instrumentality  not  only  of  winning  the  war,  but  of 
providing  trained  leadership  for  the  post-war  period  as  well. 

Officers  for  the  past  year  were:  W.  A.  Dees,  President; 
Kay  Kyser,  First  "Vice-President;  D.  B.  Teague,  Second 
Vice-President;  G.  Watts  Hill,  Treasurer;  and  J.  Maryon 
Saunders,  Executive  Secretary. 


Kay  Kyser  '27 

D.  B.  Teague  '10 

J.  Maryon  Saunders  '25 

George  Watts  Hill  '22 


33 


THEY  WENT  TO  CAROLINA 


T. 


HE  men  below  represent  more  than  25,000  liv- 
ing University  alumni.  They  have  been  selected  on 
the  basis  of  their  achievement  in  widely  different 
fields. 


Herschel  V.  Johnson,  A.B.  '16:  Dramatics  dominated 
his  campus  career  and  he  played  a  role  as  a  captain  of 
infantry  in  World  War  I.  But  Mr.  Johnson  since  1920  has 
trod  the  diplomatic  boards  in  American  embassies  in  Europe 
and  Mexico,  particularly  from  1934  to  1941  in  London. 
Now  as  U.  S.  Minister  to  Sweden,  he  is  one  of  the  top- 
flight career  diplomats  of  the  State  Department. 

Burton  Craige,  A.B.  '97,  LL.D.  1939:  Senior  member 
of  the  state's  oldest  law  firm — Craige  &  Craige,  of  Salisbury 
and  Winston-Salem,  he  is  a  scholar  of  history  and  juris- 
prudence as  well  as  an  able  counsel.  Six  generations  of  his 
family  have  attended  the  University.  In  1941  Mr.  Craige 
endowed  the  Craige  Chair  of  Jurisprudence  and  History  at 
the  University. 

Norman  Cordon,  '26:  At  Chapel  Hill  he  sang  in  the 
glee  club  and  after  two  years  left  college  to  seek  his  musical 
career.  Musical  comedy,  radio  performances  and  concert 
work  preceded  his  becoming  a  leading  basso  of  the  Metro- 
politan Opera — the  only  alumnus  ever  to  sing  in  grand 
opera. 


Top  to  Bottom:  Johnson,  Craige,  Cordon 


Hugh  H.  Bennett 


34 


Lindsay  Warren 


Coi..  Early  Duncan 


Col.  Hugh  Hester 


Hugh  H.  Bennett.  B.S.  '03,  LL.D. 
1936:  Wadesboro  native,  he  entered 
federal  agricultural  ser\'ice  upon  grad- 
uation. In  a  long  career  of  crusading 
against  the  ravages  of  soil  erosion,  he 
has  made  America  conscious  of  the  ne- 
cessity for  soil  defense.  He  now  heads 
the  U.  S.  Soil  Conservation  Service  and 
is  chief  soil  chemist  of  the  nation. 


Lindsay  C.  Warren,  '10:  Wash- 
ington, N.  C.  and  Washington,  D.  C, 
are  the  homes  of  Mr.  Warren.  He  was 
elected  to  Congress  from  the  N.  C. 
town  in  1925,  ser^'ed  until  November, 
1940,  when  he  resigned  to  become 
Comptroller-General  of  the  United 
States.  In  Congress  he  was  known  as 
a  splendid  parliamentarian  and  pre- 
siding officer.  Now  he  supervises  the 
auditing  of  all  federal  government  ex- 
penditures. 


Early  E.  W.  Duncan,  A.B.  '17: 
When  America  entered  World  War  I, 
he  was  a  Chapel  Hill  senior.  He  left 
the  campus  to  take  officer  training  and 
has  been  in  the  army  ever  since.  First 
in  the  cavalry,  he  transferred  to  the 
Air  Corps  in  1920.  Now  he  is  a  colo- 
nel and  last  fall  was  named  to  com- 
mand the  great  Lowry  Air  Field  at 
Denver,  Colorado. 


Hugh  B.  Hester,  A.B.  '16:  Colonel  Hester  left 
law  studies  in  the  spring  of  1917  to  join  the  army. 
In  France  he  won  citations  for  gallantry  in  action. 
Since  the  war,  he  has  gone  through  various  army 
graduate  schools — cavalry,  field  artillery,  quartermas- 
ter, chemical  warfare,  and  industrial.  Stationed  now 
in  Washington,  he  is  one  of  the  Army's  highly  trained 
staff  experts. 


Jonathan  Daniels,  A.B.  '21,  A.M.  1922:  Editor 
of  the  Tar  Heel  in  his  student  days,  he  has  gone  on 
to  become  a  distinguished  newspaperman,  magazine 
writer,  editor,  author,  and  lecturer.  Perhaps  his  books, 
A  Southerner  Discovers  the  South  and  Tar  Heels,  have 
brought  him  widest  renown,  but  his  day  in  and  out 
job  is  Editor  of  the  Raleigh  News  &  Observer,  a  post 
his  distinguished  father,  Josephus  Daniels  '85,  oc- 
cupied before  him. 


Jonathan  Daniels 


35 


STUDEXT  ADMIKISTRATIOIV 


/  /i 


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ST 


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jH^E' 


J^ 


f^? 


r-^fl^ 


STUDENT 


on  the  honor  system.  That  was  just  one 
part  of  a  large  program  to  make  the 
campus  "honor-conscious".  The  Coun- 
cil, in  addition,  had  talks  with  new  fac- 
ulty members  showing  how  they,  too, 
might  help  in  making  student  govern- 
ment more  constructive.  They  began 
plans  for  having  small  groups,  such  as 
fraternities,  talk  over  the  honor  system. 
And  groups  of  campus  leaders,  includ- 
ing members  of  the  Grail  and  Golden 
Fleece,  were  encouraged  to  discuss  the 
problem,  were  invited  to  suggest  ways 
of  improvement. 


Truman  Hobbs,  Student  Body  President 


J^c 


/OST  of  us  think  about  student  go\'ernment  once 
a  year — when  spring  elections  roll  around.  We  talk  about 
it,  because  there's  a  lot  of  tradition  behind  it;  and  we  brag 
about  it,  because  we  probably  have  more  freedom  as  stu- 
dents to  handle  our  own  affairs  than  has  any  other  school 
in  the  South.  But  as  far  as  really  thinking  about  it  goes — 
trying  to  understand  why  we  have  it,  and  how  we  can  give 
it  a  boost — most  of  us,  seniors  included,  will  have  to 
admit  that  we  can't  say  much  for  ourselves.  Willingness 
to  let  things  get  along  as  they  always  have  is  pretty  much 
of  a  "hand-me-down"  from  past  student  generations. 

New  this  year  has  been  a  spirit  on  the  part  of  the 
Student  Council  to  fight  against  the  indifference  of  the 
students.  Their  theory  has  been:  we  have  good  student 
leaders,  we  have  sound  principles  for  them  to  work  with, 
and  we  have  a  lot  of  real  cooperation  from  the  faculty; 
why  can't  we  get  more  enthusiasm  from  the  students? 
And  so  they  set  out  to  give  us  all  the  proverbial  "kick  in 
the  pants". 

Most  of  us  remember  "Honor  Emphasis"  week  at  the 
end  of  the  fall  quarter,  during  which  discussions  were  held 


■i^i^ 


W.  T.  Martin,  Vice-President 
John  McCormick,  Sec.-Treas. 


38 


GOVERNMENT    fjin.u..  Do.u.v. 


Probably  the  most  encouraging  part  of  the  Council's 
work  has  been  their  effort  to  do  away  with  much  of  the 
secrecy  which  has  shrouded  their  work  in  the  past. 
If  there  is  laxity  in  reporting  violations  of  the  honor 
system  or  the  campus  code,  the  fault  may  not  be 
entirely  that  of  the  students.  And  so  the  Council  has 
taken  this  attitude:  remind  the  students  that  members 
of  the  Council  are  students,  too,  and  realize  that 
honor  code  violations  aren't  cases  of  black  and  white, 
in  which  offenders  should  be  categorically  cleared  or 
expelled;  publicize  the  conditions  of  actual  cases  and 
the  decisions  reached  (without  names,  of  course) , 
showing  that  the  Council  is  fair  in  its  trial  of  stu- 
dents; let  everyone  know  that  the  Council  is  neither 


too  severe  to  risk  doing  an  injustice,  nor  too  lax  to 
jeopardize  the  system.  Make  public  these  facts,  and 
students  will  take  pride  in  upholding  the  honor  sys- 
tem and  in  reporting  violators. 

How  much  progress  has  been  made  in  student 
government  this  year  no  one  can  say.  Trying  to  meas- 
ure the  increased  interest  in  the  campus  code  and 
honor  system  would  be  obviously  impossible.  But 
full  credit  goes  to  the  Student  Council  for  a  spark 
which  may  burst  into  a  real  flame.  They've  been 
working  with  something  intangible,  trying  to  make 
it  more  understandable.  And  if  even  a  small  step  has 
been  made  forward,  then  this  year's  work  will  not 
have  been  in  vain. 


-^— '3'ftJ»ie»«#it-'«*SM 


Seated:   Shuford,  Rose,  McKeever,  Martin,  Hobbs,  McCormick,  McKnight 
Standing:   Pace,  Bennett,  Allen,  Goodmon 


39 


ZiLe  WOMEN'S 
GOVERNMENT 
ASSOCIATION 
r 

\y  OED  government  is  a  subject  on  which  the  Carolina  students 
as  a  whole  are  rather  vague.  To  the  men  students  at  least,  the 
"Women's  Government  Association"  implies  little  more  than: 
"Oh  yes,  what  time  does  Spencer  close  tonight?"  But  to  the  coeds 
their  government  is  an  opportunity  to  regulate  their  own  lives  and 
set  their  own  standards  to  a  liberal  degree  that  is  unequaled  by 
that  of  almost  any  other  woman's  student  body. 

Pampered  darlings  the  coeds  may  seem  to  some;  prom-trotters 
or  party  girls  they  may  appear  to  others;  but  for  whatever  they 
are,  the  credit  or  blame  is  mainly  their  own.  At  U.N.C.  the  coeds, 
like  the  men  students,  are  considered  capable  of  making  their  own 
decisions,  and  they  have  set-up  their  own  self-enforced  govern- 
ment for  that  purpose. 


Mary  Caldwell,  PresiJeni 


The  various  branches  of  the  women's 
government  are  brain-children  of  the 
coeds.  Perhaps  you  remember  the  spring 
of  1941  when  Thursday  Ti?;- Hee/ head- 
lines read,  "New  Officers  Elected  for 
Women's  Association";  and  on  Fri- 
day, the  headlines  were,  "New  Coed 
Officers  to  Abolish  Women's  Associa- 
tion." 

This  governmental  upset  indicated  no 
Bohemian  trends.  It  merely  meant  that 
700  coeds  could  not  comfortably  func- 
tion under  the  governmental  plan  set 
up  when  there  were  but  fifty  girls  on 
the  campus.  So  the  present,  "revised" 
form  of  government  was  born. 

Voted  into  effect  by  the  women  stu- 
dents during  the  spring  of  1941,  the 
Women's   Government   Association   is 


Helen  MacKay,  SecreUry;  Mary  Lib  Nash,  Vice-PreMdcrit :  June  Love,  Treasurer 


40 


Seated:    MacKay,  Caldwell,  Nash 
Standing:    Campbell,  Hood,  Buice,  Woodhouse 


". . .  COED  GOVERNMENT  AT  WORK" 


almost  a  twin  to  the  student  body  government,  in  which 
the  coeds  take  part  by  means  of  the  student  legislature. 
Corresponding  to  the  Student  Council,  the  Student  Legis- 
lature, and  the  Interdormitory  Council,  the  women  students 
have  an  Honor  Council,  a  Senate,  and  an  Interdormitory 
Council  of  their  own.  Through  these  groups  of  9,  16,  and 
10  girls  respectively,  the  coeds  govern  themselves,  make 
their  rules,  conduct  their  orientation  program,  finance  their 
undertakings  and  organizations,  and  support  the  Campus 
Code  and  Honor  System. 

Under  our  rather  unusual  system,  the  coeds  take  part  in 
two  governments — their  own,  in  which  the  boys  do  not  take 
part ;  and  the  student  body  government,  in  which  they  have 
been  taking  more  and  more  part  since  "woman  suffrage" 
was  extended  to  the  first  coeds  on  the  campus.  In  the  begin- 
ning the  girls  merely  voted  for  the  student  body  othcers — 
boys  all.    Now,  however,   they   have  begun  to  participate 


more  actively,  with  several  coeds  holding  elective  offices  in 
the  student  legislature  and  in  the  various  classes. 

What  the  future  holds  for  coed  government  we  don't 
know.  But  if  present  trends  are  any  indication,  then  coeds 
should  not  only  extend  the  scope  of  their  own  government, 
but  should  become  more  dominant  in  student  body  govern- 
ment. Perhaps  as  the  war  begins  to  exact  a  heavier  toll  on 
the  male  part  of  the  University,  the  girls  will  assume  pro- 
portionately greater  responsibilities.  In  fact,  those  who 
come  to  Carolina  in  the  years  after  the  war  may  find  things 
reversed,  and  the  coeds  debating  over  whether  the  boys 
should  be  allowed  to  stay  out  after  eleven.  It  would  be  just 
like  a  woman ! 

Members  of  the  Honor  Council  this  year  were:  Frances 
Allison,  Ditzi  Buice,  Mary  Caldwell,  Elizabeth  Campbell, 
Marsha  Hood,  June  Love,  Helen  MacKay,  Mary  Elizabeth 
Nash,  and  Betty  Woodhouse. 


41 


Committee  Heads:    Webster,  W.  J.  Smith,  Garland,  Sanford,   Ferebee  Taylor,   Harris 
Absent,  Isaac  Taylor 


STUDENT 
LEGISLATURE 

V-/N  A  CAMPUS  weighty  with  inactive  organizations,  the 
Student  Legislature  has  come  into  its  own.  Skeptical  stu- 
dents two  years  ago  saw  Speaker  Bill  Cochrane,  backed  by  a 
constitution  giving  power  to  legislate  for  the  student  body, 
begin  to  resurrect  the  dying  assembly.  In  its  first  year,  the 
Legislature  abolished  the  Buccaneer,  established  in  its  place 
Tar  ')!  Feathers,  and  took  over  the  review  of  campus  organi- 
zation budgets. 

Into  Cochrane's  shoes  last  spring  stepped  Terry  Sanford, 
new  speaker,  to  lead  the  Legislature  for  a  fall  quarter  full 
of  enactments  before  he  was  called  into  the  F.B,I.  service. 


Terry  Sanford,  Speaker 


42 


A  reorganization  bill  forestalled  prohibition  of  student- 
owned  cars  and  gave  an  inactive  Safety  Council  the  power  to 
curb  reckless  campus  drivers.  Reviewing  budgets,  the  Leg- 
islature refused  to  authorize  student  activities  keys  and 
increased  the  engraving  appropriation  for  the  Carolina 
iWagaziiie — one  of  the  few  ever  appreciated  by  the  campus 
— to  $1000  over  the  protest  of  the  P.  U.  Board. 

Just  after  Christmas,  the  Legislature  by  acclamation 
elected  Ferebee  Taylor,  finance  chairman,  as  new  speaker  to 
replace  Sanford.  In  quick  succession,  the  assembly  passed 
a  bill  reorganizing  and  injecting  life  into  a  long  defunct 
Debate  Council,  revised  the  campus  "Hatch  Act"  to  cut 
down  political  expenditures,  and  passed  a  new  elections 
rules  bill  to  eliminate  inefficient  conducting  of  the  polls. 

The  end  of  the  Legislature's  second  year  shows  increased 
utilization — not  abuse — of  its  wide  powers,  and  marks  a 
still  greater  gain  in  prestige  and  campus  respect. 


Officers  of  the  Legislature  were:  Speakers,  Terry  San- 
ford and  Ferebee  Taylor;  Reading  Clerk,  W.  J.  Smith;  and 
Sergeant-at-Arms,  Ike  Taylor. 

Members  were:  Bruce  Bales,  William  Barnes,  Alliene 
Brawley,  William  Brown,  Robert  Burley,  Ditzi  Buice,  Henry 
Burgwyn,  Mary  Byers,  Marshall  Chambers,  Dudley  Cocke, 
Olive  Conescu,  John  Davis,  Jane  Dickinson,  Elton  Edwards, 
James  Garland,  Kays  Gary,  Lemuel  Gibbons,  Wesley  Good- 
ing, Hundley  Cover,  Helen  Hall,  Louis  Harris,  George 
Hayes,  Vernon  Hanvard,  Hugh  Hole,  James  Holmes,  Rob- 
ert Hutchison,  Nelson  Jennette,  Harry  Johnson,  Goodman 
Jones,  G.  I.  Kimball,  Thomas  Long,  Elsie  Lyon,  Warren 
Mengel,  Grady  Morgan,  Henry  Plant  Osborne,  Steve  Peck, 
Craig  Phillips,  Henry  Reynolds,  Lenoir  Shook,  Robert  Shu- 
ford,  W.  J.  Smith,  Robert  Spence,  Lane  Stokes,  Roy  Strowd, 
Ferebee  Taylor,  Isaac  Taylor,  John  Terrell,  Reid  Thomp- 
son, Taylor  Vernon,  Terrell  Webster,  Ridley  Whitaker,  and 
R.  B.  Williams. 


Legislature  in  Session 


43 


WOMEN'S  SENATE 


O  PEAKING  of  girls  who  watch  their  figures — and  we  mean 
financial  figures! — we  can't  forget  the  Women's  Senate.  Formed 
in  the  spring  of  1941  as  part  of  the  revised  women's  government, 
the  senate  has  as  one  of  its  important  duties  the  drawing  up  of 
the  Women's  Government  Association  budget. 

In  this,  its  first  year,  the  Senate  has  been  unusually  active. 
Taking  from  the  shoulders  of  the  W.G.A.  president  much  of  the 
work  formerly  required  of  her,  it  has  set  up  standards  for  coed 
elections,  revised  social  rules  such  as  the  coed  curfew,  and  taken 
over  supervision  of  the  coed  handbook.  Probably  its  most  com- 
mendable work  has  been  the  beginning  of  a  training  school  for 
hopeful  coed  officers.  Aspirants  must  attend  at  least  three  meet- 
ings of  the  school  before  being  eligible  for  office. 

Officers  this  year  were:  Jean  Hahn,  Speaker;  Eleanor  Bernert, 
Speaker  pro-tem;  Dorothy  Cutting,  Secretary;  and  June  Love, 
Treasurer. 


Jean  Hahn,  Speaker 


First  Row:  Cutting,  Love,  Nash,  Bernert.  Hahn 
Second  Row:    Lyon,  Perry,  Darvin,  Buice 


I  hn-d  Row:    Upchurch,    Umstead,    Bonkemevkk.    Knioht 
Absent:    Sartin,  Torpin.  Wire 


44 


WOMEN'S 

INTERDORMITORY 

COUNCIL 

-/->' ID  you  go  to  an  Alderman  dorm  "social",  or  get  a  bid  to 
a  Spencer  tea  dance? — then  it's  the  Women's  Interdorm  Council 
you  want  to  thank.  This  hard-working  group  of  coeds  has  become 
quite  "professional"  at  arranging  social  affairs. 

But  "partying"  is  far  from  their  most  important  work.  On  their 
serious  side,  they  are  concerned  with  such  worth  while  projects 
as  providing  study  rooms  on  each  floor  of  every  dormitory,  help- 
ing promote  Red  Cross  drives,  holding  receptions  for  soldiers, 
and  temporarily  setting  such  rules  as  closing  hours.  Perhaps  more 
intangible,  but  no  less  important,  have  been  their  efforts  to  better 
relations  between  the  various  dormitories  and  sororities.  Com- 
posed of  a  representative  from  every  woman's  dormitory  and 
sorority,  they've  done  a  lot  to  lighten  the  work  of  other  campus 
organizations. 

Officers  were:  Elizabeth  Campbell,  President;  Mary  McCormic, 
Secretary. 


Elizabeth  Campbell,  President 


Left  to  Right:  Barnes,  Angier,  Ham,  Breazeale,  McCormic,  Campbell,  Guill,  Fischell,  McKenzie 


45 


Council  of  Preudenis— Seated:   Hayes,  Sparrow.  Kornegay,  Owens,  Sherman,  Elliot,  Skillman,  Sullivan 
Standing:     Witherington,    Baker,    Myers,    Stroupe,    Johnston,    Paine,    Manly,    Norwood 
Absent:   Hendrix,  Lackey 


INTERDORMITORY 
COUNCIL 

X  HERE'S  no  more  bowling  in  the  halls  of  the  Lower  Quad, 
no  more  singing  contests  at  midnight,  and  no  more  "pitched  bat- 
tles" in  the  Upper  Quad — the  Interdormitory  Council  is  here  to 
stay.  No  "joy-killers",  Council  members  nevertheless  take  to 
heart  their  main  purpose — "making  the  dormitories  a  better  place 
to  live".  And  this  year,  under  the  leadership  of  George  Hayes, 
they've  done  a  good  job. 

With  members  on  each  floor  of  every  dormitory,  the  Council  is 
probably  one  of  the  most  representative  groups  on  the  campus. 
For  that  reason,  it  has  been  able  to  do  an  invaluable  service 
in  promoting  Red  Cross,  N.Y.A.,  and  other  drives.  Perhaps 
a  more  important  part  of  its  work,  however,  has  been  in  boost- 
ing spirit  between  the  various  dormitories.  Competition  in  ath- 
letic contests  and  in  homecoming  decorations  has  been  one  of 


George  Hayes,  President 


46 


the  means  of  accomplishing  this.  Important,  too,  has  been 
its  efforts  to  get  a  social  room  for  each  dormitory.  In 
this  it  has  worked  hand  in  hand  with  the  Tar  Heel  and 
the  administration. 

The  power  of  the  Council  is  more  than  that  of  mere  per- 
suasion. Under  a  revised  constitution  this  year,  its  members 
were  given  full  power  to  remove  any  boy  from  a  dormitory 
whose  conduct  did  not  conform  with  the  campus  code.  This 
power,  seldom  invoked,  has  nevertheless  been  an  impor- 
tant means  of  keeping  noise  at  a  minimum.  In  the  event 
removal  were  considered  necessary,  the  Council  of  Dormi- 
tory Presidents  has  been  set  up  as  an  appeal  board. 

Members  of  the  Council  this  year  were:  Alexander — 
Sam  Sherman,  Sam  Beavans,  Robert  Hamburger,  Julian 
Miller,  L.  D.  Burkhead,  Russell  Davis;  Aycock — Boston 
Lackey,  Walter  Williams,  Harold  Pope,  David  Barksdale, 
James  N.  Edwards,  Hayes  Johnson;  B.V.P. — George  Paine, 
Kenneth  Dingier,  Louis  Scheinman,  John  M.  Moore,  Mar- 
tin Barrier,  William  Witkin;  Everett  —  Tommy  Sullivan, 


Chauncey  Broome,  John  Stoddard,  Michael  Carr,  James 
Crone,  Joseph  Hatem ;  Graham — James  Manly,  John  Powell, 
Lawrence  Berluti,  William  Lauten,  William  Webster,  Rob- 
ert Shuford;  Grimes — Pinky  Elliot,  Sell  Culp,  Richard  Rea- 
gan, Robert  McGinn,  Steve  Karres,  Fred  McNeil;  Lewis — 
Charles  Baker,  James  F.  Newsome,  John  Moore,  Henry 
Webb,  Leon  McCaskill,  John  Post;  Maiit^tiiti  —  Thomas 
Sparrow,  Harry  Fullenweider,  John  Markham,  Charles 
Murray,  Barry  Colby,  Dillard  Bullock,  Richard  Railey; 
Manly — Ernest  Skillman,  Vincent  Arey,  Emmett  Burden, 
Clifton  Moore,  Henry  Hood,  Martin  Barringer,  Frank  Jus- 
tice; Old  East — Moyer  Hendrix,  Robert  Rose,  George  Har- 
relson,  Henry  Harrelson,  John  Mclver,  Lawrence  Neese; 
Old  West — Jonas  Owens,  Joseph  Leslie,  William  Petree, 
Sidney  Watson,  Raymond  Goodmon,  Reid  Suggs;  Ruffin — 
Claude  Myers,  Wade  Reynolds,  Tom  Howard,  Harry  Allen, 
Joseph  Ferguson,  Moorefield  Puckett;  Stacy  —  Blaine 
Stroupe,  Charles  Colby,  James  Ratteree,  Thomas  Hughes, 
John  Ord,  Robert  Ervin;  Steele — Mac  Norwood,  Richard 
Jones,  Carlyle  Mangum,  James  Holmes,  Gene  Smith,  Gene 
Reilley. 


47 


INTERFRATERNITY 
COUNCIL 


J.  HERE  were  crowds  on  fraternity  row,  and  the  usual  grins 
and  handshaking  and  backslapping:  rushing  had  begun — and  so 
had  one  of  the  Interfraternity  Council's  biggest  tasks.  With  about 
800  freshmen  as  prospective  rushees  and  with  some  22  fraternities 
to  deal  with,  the  council  had  its  hands  full  last  fall.  But  it  found 
time  to  add  needed  trimmings  to  the  usual  procedure  of  rushing. 

One  of  the  most  commendable  changes  appeared  in  the  form 
of  a  fraternity  handbook,  which  contained,  in  addition  to  informa- 
tion about  rushing  and  fraternities  in  general,  pictures  of  the 
members  of  all  of  the  Greek-letter  houses.  Freshmen  were  thus 
able  to  start  out  fortified  with  a  few  facts  and  figures.  The  over- 
a-thousand  copies  of  the  booklet  have  had  a  further  use  as  fra- 
ternity guide  and  information  books  throughout  the  year  (and 
incidentally,   the  coeds   find   them   useful).     Another   important 


John  Thorp,  President 


change  was  the  addition  to  the 
membership  of  a  Junior  representa- 
tive from  each  house.  With  a  full 
year  of  experience  behind  them, 
these  boys  will  be  in  a  position  to 
assume  future  leadership  in  the 
council  and  in  their  own  fraternities 
as  well.  And  then,  regarding  rush- 
ing rules,  restrictions  on  fraternity 
men  during  the  pre-rushing  silence 
period  were  made  less  severe. 

Perhaps  one  of  the  most  interest- 
ing parts  of  the  council's  work,  and 
the  part  which  accounts  for  some  of 
its  most  tangible  good,  is  its  assist- 
ance to  the  Scholarship   Fund.     A 


Lejt  to  Kight :  Stewart  Richardson.  Treasurer:  Robert 
Hutchison.  Vice-President ;  William  Peete,  Secretary 


»<»***<»i»»XA«a-»«f^?*Mi7"»^■-wS^ 


specific  amount  of  its  income  each  year  is  set  aside  to  be  donated  to  some  worthy  student  designated  by  the  Scholarship  com- 
mittee. The  offering  of  a  cup  to  the  fraternity  which  has  the  highest  scholastic  average  has  likewise  been  an  encouraging  force 
in  removing  the  stigma  of  "all  play  and  no  work"  from  fraternities  on  the  campus. 

Somewhat  in  conjunction  with  the  council  has  been  the  Interfraternity-  Council  of  House  Managers  and  Dining  Room  Man- 
agers. The  boys  who  work  under  this  imposing  nomen  are  trying  to  help  the  fraternities  through  cooperative  buying  and 
through  joint  discussion  of  mutual  problems  which  crop  up  when  a  bunch  of  fellows  go  house-keeping. 

OlScers  were:  John  Thorp,  President;  Robert  Hutchison,  Vice-President;  William  Pettway  Jones  Peete,  Secretary;  Stuart 
Richardson,  Treasurer. 

Members,  as  they  appear  in  the  picture  above:  First  row — Forrest  Long,  Ed  Mashburn,  Quentin  Gregory,  Charles  Gaylord, 
Felix  Harvey,  Hugh  Hole,  William  J.  Swink,  Taylor  Vernon.  Second  row — Emmett  Sebrell,  Dudley  Cocke,  Stewart  Rich- 
ardson, Robert  Hutchison,  John  Thorp,  Irvin  Fleishman,  Guy  Byerly,  Stanley  Holland.  Third  row — Marvin  Anthony, 
Whitlock  Lees,  Charles  Pyle,  George  Peabody,  Donald  Sager,  Francis  Gugert,  Joseph  Davis,  Marshall  Soloman,  Hugh 
Morton,  Lewis  Masten.  Fonrlh  row — John  Riel,  Dan  Thomason,  Robert  Kittrell,  Thomas  R.  Edens,  Roy  Thompson,  AI 
Rose,  Haskell  Gleicher,  Robert  Forster,  Donald  Nicholson.  Absent — Edward  Antolini,  Hundley  Gover,  William  Schwartz, 
William  Peete,  Hurst  Hatch.  Sylvan  Meyer,  Henr)'  P.  Osborne,  Floyd  Cohoon,  John  Dube. 


49 


G.  I.  Kimball.  President 


PUBLICATIONS  UNION 
BOARD 

J.  F  YOU  WERE  to  walk  into  a  conference  room  in  Graham 
Memorial  some  afternoon,  you  might  find  the  Publications  Union 
Board  in  session.  Affectionately  known  as  the  P.  U.  Board,  it 
has  the  financial  supervision  of  the  four  publications  without 
influencing  their  editorial  policies  in  any  way. 

Composed  of  three  members  elected  by  the  student  body,  two 
members  appointed  from  the  faculty  by  the  Dean  of  Administra- 
tion, and  a  financial  adviser,  it  sets  the  salaries  of  all  paid  publica- 
tions workers;  makes  all  contracts  with  printers  and  engravers; 
and  with  the  advice  of  the  Student  Legislature  controls  all  finan- 
cial expenditures.  It  also  appoints  all  business  managers  and  the 
managing  editor  of  the  Djil\  T,ii  Heel. 

The  source  of  much  worr)-  and  head-scratching  for  the  various 
editors  and  business  managers,  the  Board  has  kept  the  publications 
on  a  financially  sound  basis. 


Left  to  Right:  St.  Clair  Pugh,  Vice-President;  E.  H.  Hartsell,  Faculty  Member:  J.  M.  Lear,  Faculty  Adviser:  G.  I.  Kimball.  President; 
G.   F.  Horner,  Faculty  Member;  Bucky  Harward,   Treasurer 


50 


GRAHAM  MEMORIAL 
BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS 

\^(j  C  EETINGS  and  dances,  typewriters  and  publications,  hair- 
cutting  and  eating,  a  thousand  and  one  activities,  or  just  plain 
lounging — that's  Graham  Memorial.  From  the  basement  to  the 
top  floor  it's  the  students'  building — and  more  things  go  on  in  it  at 
the  same  time  than  on  any  crowded  street  anywhere! 

Governing  Graham  Memorial  Student  Union  is  a  Board  of 
Directors,  composed  of  both  faculty  members  and  students,  who 
determine  policy,  suggest  programs,  fix  fees  and  salaries,  and 
select  the  Director,  But  rather  than  the  Board,  it  is  the  Director 
whom  the  students  identify  with  the  building.  It  is  the  director 
who  becomes  as  much  a  part  of  Graham  Memorial  as  the  columns 
themselves,  who  plans  the  dances,  who  arranges  the  programs, 
and  who  brings  together  a  far-flung  campus  for  purposes  both 
serious  and  social. 


Directors  {The  old  and  the  new) :  Richard  Worley 
(above)  AND  WILLIAM  Cochrane  (below) 


>ri^KW^'9^tsv. 


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Seated:   Hobbs,  Kelley.  Cochrane.  Worley,  Caldwell.  Ga.mbill 

Standing:    H.\yes.  McKinnon,  Palmer,  Sanford,  Elliot,  Parker.  Thorp.  Comer 

Absent:   Dean  House,  J.  Maryon  Saunders,  Orville  Campbell 


51 


REMEMBER  THE    /  '  /  A ^lAySJL-^J^-^'-^'"^  ." 


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LASS  OF  '42" — it  seemed  a  long  way  off  back  in  1938  when  800  green  freshmen  showed  up  in 
Chapel  Hill.  But  four  years  have  come  and  slipped  away  without  anyone  much  knowing  where  they've 
gone.  Some  have  made  it  via  the  library,  a  Phi  Bete  key,  and  extra-curriculars.  Some  have  struggled 
along  via  Sweetbriar,  Prof.  Smith's  1:30,  and  Harry's.  All  of  us  who  stuck  it  out,  whether  we  breezed  along 
or  had  tough  going,  can  pride  ourselves  on  a  common  experience  of  four  of  the  finest  years  we've  ever 
spent. 

Biggest  news  for  everyone  was  the  war,  brought  close  to  home  as  we  saw  classmates  leave  in  mid- 
year and  knew  it  wouldn't  be  long  before  we'd  be  there  too.  But  we  can't  forget  a  lot  of  other  things — 
the  struggles  to  pass  the  budget,  which  finally  succeeded  after  a  man  to  man  campaign;  the  day  com- 
prehensives  were  abolished,  and  we  suddenly  saw  that  we  might  get  to  shake  the  governor's  hand  after 
all;  Juniors-Senicrs  week-end,  the  highlight  of  the  spring;  Senior  week,  when  we  stormed  the  campus 
barefoot. 

As  graduation  approached,  there  were  few  tears.  Fourth  year  men,  with  their  dignity  to  uphold, 
couldn't  appear  to  be  ruffled  even  by  sentiment.  But  there  were  lumps  in  the  throats  of  many  a  senior, 
as  he  looked  at  places  and  people  he  might  not  see  again.  After  graduation .'  One  thing  was  certain — if 
luck  held  out,  we'd  all  come  back. 


HONOR  COUNCIL 


Members  as  they  appear  at  left:  Robert 
Gersten,  William  Alexander,  Mack  Mur- 
phy, Warren  Mengel,  Albert  Rose,  George 
Coxhead.  Not  present:  Ridley  Whitaker, 
Thomas  Sparrow. 

Committee  chairmen:  Fletcher  Mann, 
Executive ;  Dean  Williams  and  Roger 
Matthews,  Dance;  Ed  Hyman,  Invitation; 
Floyd  McCombs,  Ring;  Mac  McLendon 
and  Gladys  Barnes,  Senior  Week;  Robert 
Lambert  and  Sam  Sherman,  Gift;  Harold 
Pope,  Athletic;  Thomas  Sparrow,  Senior 
Regalia;  Sam  Means,  Cap  and  Gowns; 
Herman  Lawson,  Publicity. 


mM^ 


SENIOR  CLASS  OFFICERS 

Pat  Winston,  Vice-President;  Stewart  Richardson,  treasurer:  Jean  McFCenzJe, 
Secretary:  Bill  McKjnnon,  President:  Albert  Rose,  Student  Co;iiicil  Representative. 


57 


Orville  Campbell — 

"Scoop"  .  .  .  hard-working  "put- 
ter-outer" of  the  D.T.H.  .  .  .  social 
rooms,  housing  conditions,  soldiers 
.  .  .  every  day  except  Monday.  .  . 


Marv  Caldwell — 

W.  G.  A.'s  Queen  Victoria  .  .  . 
streamlined  coed  government  .  .  . 
friendly,  efficient,  attractive  .  .  .  pop- 
ping with  good  ideas  .  .  .  long  hair, 
jitterbugging.  .  . 


DiDDV  Kelley — 

Long-haired  Chi  O  songbird  .  .  . 
Sound  and  Fury  fame  .  .  .  coed 
athlete  and  W.A.A.  president  .  .  . 
certainly  you've  heard  of  New 
Church?  .  .  . 


RiDLE")'  Whitaker 

C.P.U.  super-magnate  .  .  .  com- 
mutes to  Washington  to  arrange 
dates  .  .  .  Lynchburg  too  .  .  .  that 
characteristic  walk  .  .  .  and  talk  .  .  . 
"my  friends".  .  . 


"SENIOR  PERSONALITIES" 


eyzTi 


iTHLETES,  Phi  Betes,  activities  men,  big  shots  or  just  plain 
guys — you  know  them  all. 


Jim  Barclay — 

Lean  6-footer  ...  as  much  at 
home  in  Bowman  Gray  pool  as  at 
Grail  committee  meetings  .  .  .  that 
friendly  grin  .  .  .  and  Jane  .  .  . 


Carl  Suntheimer — 

Stocky,  hard-playing  football  co- 
captain  .  .  .  those  blocked  passes, 
and  bullet-like  centers  .  .  .  Victor 
McLaughlin  counterpart.  .  . 


John  McCormick — 

Hobbs'  "man  Friday"  .  .  .  Student 
Council  iron  horse  who  does  much 
of  the  hard  work  with  Httle  praise 
.  .  .  remember  that  friendly  greet- 
ing? .  .  . 


Truman  Hobbs — 

Campus  king  .  .  .  tall,  lanky, 
shock  of  blond  hair  .  .  .  extracurric- 
ulars,  athletics,  Randolph-Macon  .  .  . 
"Senator"  .  .  .  future  big  time  poli- 
tician ?  .  .  . 


Al  Rose — 

Quiet,  sincere  .  .  .  inconspicuously 
hard  worker  .  .  .  senior  class  Stu- 
dent Council  man  .  .  .  Phi  Bete.  .  . 


^^X, 


Bill  Seeman — 

Cheezecakes,  cartoons,  and  com- 
edy .  .  .  versatile  T.  'n  F.  ed.  who 
excels  in  being  smooth  on  the  dance 
floor,  flying  an  airplane,  drawing 
toothy  men  and  shapely  gals.  .  . 


Jean  Hahn — 

Coed  senate  speaker  and  general 
B.W.O.C her  days  full  of  meet- 
ings, her  hands  full  of  knitting  .  .  . 
arrows,  sing-fests.  .  . 


Bill  McKjnnon — 

Smilin'  Bill  .  .  .  senior  class  guid- 
ing light  .  .  .  knows  just  about 
everybody,  likes  them  .  .  .  pass  that 
budget!  .  .  . 


59 


Bob  Rose — 

Basketball  his  meat  .  .  .  Smith- 
field's  contribution  to  some  of  the 
best  ball-handling  at  Carolina  in 
years  .  .  .  Glamack's  footsteps?  .  .  . 


W.  T.  Martin— 

"Dub"  .  .  .  student  government 
"higher-up"  ...  his  fingers  in  many 
pies  .  .  .  tall,  blond,  smooth  .  .  . 
ladies  beware!  .  .  .  usual  habitat — 
committee  meetings.  .  . 


Harry  Dunkle — 

Gridiron  half-back  and  co-captain 
.  .  .  that  magic  toe  .  .  .  and  those  60 
yard  punts  .  .  .  modesty,  clean  play- 
ing. .  . 


"SENIOR  PERSONALITIES" 


John  Thorp — 

Interfrat  big-wig  .  .  .  cooperative, 
conscientious  .  .  .  Phi  Bete  .  .  .  and 
Zete  ...  his  big  worries  were  coed 
curfew,  rushing,  hazing  .  .  .  "fra- 
ternities are  not  on  their  way  out".  .  . 


Henry  Moli. — 

Hurry,  hurry,  hurry  .  .  .  always 
busy  .  .  .  midnight  oil  in  Graham 
Memorial  ...  a  "new"  Mag,  one  of 
the  few  appreciated  by  the  campus 
.  .  .  P.U.  Board  his  problem  child.  .  . 


George  Coxhead — 

Level  head,  common  sense  .  .  . 
swimming  team  co  -  captain  .  .  . 
power  behind  the  Grail  and  Uni- 
versity Dance  Committee  .  .  .  $1.10, 
tax  included.  .  . 


Ferebee  Taylor — 

Capable,  responsible  .  .  .  that 
"Oxford"  accent  .  .  .  unanimous 
draftee  for  legislature  speakership 
.  .  .  Phi  Bete  prexy,  Fleece,  etc. 
ad  infinitum.  .  . 


Louis  Harris — 

Campus  idealist,  reformer,  organ- 
izer .  .  .  one  of  few  with  the  courage 
of  his  convictions  .  .  .  incessant  en- 
ergy .  .  .  needs  34  hour  day.  .  . 


^^ 


G.  I.  Kimball — 

P.U.  Board  potentate  .  .  .  heavy 
hand  over  publication  heads  .  .  . 
square  jaw,  sheepish  grin  .  .  .  strug- 
gles with  the  Mag  and  legislature.  .  . 


George  H.ayes — 

"Jughead"  .  .  .  campus  Jim  Far- 
ley ..  .  Interdorm  council  big  man 
who  had  his  hands  full  with  lower 
quad  pep  rallies.  Red  Cross  drives 
.  .  .  "What  saji.  Buddy  Buddy".  .  . 


Mac  McLendon — 

Sincere,  curly-headed  .  .  .  hard- 
working chairman  of  the  newly  in- 
stalled Safety  Council  .  .  .  debating 
.  .  .  long  winded  stories  .  .  .  got 
your  license  yet?  .  .  . 


Bobby  Gersten — 

Energetic  and  near  astounding 
basketball  player  .  .  .  conscientious 
Monogram  Club  president  .  .  .  that 
Yankee  twang,  and  enviable  sense 
of  humor  .   .   .   "Hallo,  guys  I".   .   . 


^J><H.€"{^i^<C^'^ 


y 


Annie  Frances  Abernethy 

Hickory,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Rayford  Kennedy  Adams 
Skillman,  N.  J. 
2N 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Thomas  Floyd  Adams,  Jr. 
Willow  Springs,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) ;  Swimming  (3) ; 
Young   Democrats  Club    (4) ;    Y.M.C.A. 

(I,  2,  3,   4). 


Ben  Warren  Aiken 
Creedmore,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


J.  Herbert  Altschull 

York,  Pa. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Magazine  (3,  4);  Debate  Council  (1); 
Playnialters    (1,    2) ;    Sound   and   Fury 


Amelie  Closey  Anderson 
Rehoboth  Beach,  Del. 


William  Cress  Alexander 

Mooresville,  N.  C. 

K2 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Class  Hon- 
or Council  (2,  3.  4) ;  Class  President 
(2);  Grail;  Sheiks;  Student  Legisla- 
ture (2);  University  Dance  Committee 
(3.  4);  Y.M.C.A.  (1,  2,  3):  Student  Ad- 
visory Board;  Graham  Memorial  Board 
of  Directors  (2.  3),  Assistant  Director 
(4). 


John  Buchanan  Anderson 

Danville,  Va. 


Degree;    Religious  Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Curtis  Howard  Andrews 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Leon  Polk  Andrews 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 
*rA         AEA 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Ann  Angel 

Haines  City,  Fla. 
n  B* 


Ann  Kathryn  Anthony 

Evington,  Va. 

■!>  M 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Daihi  Tar 
Heel  (4);  Sound  and  Fury  (4);  Y.W. 
C.A.   (2,  3). 


62 


Marvin  Pope  Anthony 

West  Palm  Beach,  Fla. 

A  TQ 

Candiflate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Interfra- 
ternitv  Council  (3):  Phi  Assembly  (2); 
Tennis   (1,  2.  3) :  Y.M.C.A. 


John  Vincent  Arey 

Gold  Hill,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B,  Deg 


Dorothy  Aronson 

Bronx,  N.  ^•. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3,  4) ;  International  Relations  Club 
(3,  4):  Playmakers  (3):  Sound  anil 
Fury   (3). 


Robert  Edward  Ashby 
Mount  Airy,  N.  C, 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree 


Benjamin  Frankhn  Aycock,  Jr. 
Fremont,  N.  C. 

A  X  2  *  B  K 

Candidate  for   B.S.  Degree. 


Claude  Fletcher  Bailey 
Elizabeth  City,  N.  C. 
X  B* 


Anita  Georgia  Appel 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Jak  Dalton  Armstrong 

AsheviUe,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree;  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (4);  .Sound  and  Fury  (3,  4);  Tar 
and  Feafiifrs,  Managing  Editor  (3), 
Feature  Editor  (3);   Buccaneer  (1). 


Percy  Rudolph  Ashby 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Di  Senate 
(1);  Monogram  Club  (3,  4);  Track  (2. 
3,   4);   Yacketi'  Yack    (1). 


Thomas  Arrington  Avera,  jr. 
Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

*Ae 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Playmak. 
ers  (3.  4);  Sound  and  Fury  (3,  4): 
Cheerleader  (3). 


Joseph  Wood  row  Baggett 

Lillington,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


D.  Harold  Bailey 
Walstonburt;,  N.  C. 


63 


/ 


J^ 


Hilda  Hart  Bailey 

Charles  Baker 

Woodleaf,  N.  C. 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 

K2 

James  Arnold  Barclay 

Spring  Valley,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Grail;  Mon- 
ogram Club  (3,  4);  University  Dance 
Committee  (4);  Swimming  (2,  3.  4), 
Captain    (3.  4). 


Aiden  Emmett  Barnes,  III 
Macon,  Ga. 
2  AE 
Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Miriam  Ophelia  Barnett 

Wellford,  S.  C. 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


Joe  Hill  Barrington,  Jr. 

Lumberton,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .^.B.  Degree. 


Fairfax  Bates 

Lake  City,  Fla. 

xn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory  Council;  Football  (1.  2,  3,  4); 
-Monogram  Club;   Y..M.C.A.   (1). 


Ottis  Rutley  Barham 

Leaksville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Gladys  Faye  Barnes 
Kenly,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) ;  Interdormitory 
Council  (4);  Phi  .Assembly  (3.  4); 
Sound  and  Fury  (4);  Young  Demo- 
crats Club   (3,  4);   Y.W.C.A.   (3.  4). 


Martin  C.  Barringer 

Mount  Pleasant,  N.  C. 

Candidate     for     B.S.     Degree;     Flying 
Club    (3);    Interdormitory  Council    (4). 


Douglas  De  Vane  Batchelor 

Coral  Gables,  Fla. 

KZ 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Yackety 
Yack  (1,  2) ;  Chairman  Class  Executive 
Committee    (2). 


Walter  Winf  red  Baucom 

Monroe,  N.  C. 

A2  n 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Carolii 
.Accounting  Society   (3.  4). 


64 


Jean  Clardy  Beeks 

Richmond,  Va. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (4) ;  International  Relations  Club 
(3.  4);  Tar  and  Feathers  (3.  4):  Fenc- 
ing (3.  4) ;  Hockey  (3,  4) :  Y.W.C.A. 
(3,  4) ;  Pan-American  Club  (3) ;  Wom- 
en's Athletic  Council   (4). 


Elizabeth  McLin  Bell 

Pittsboro,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Hugh  Hammond  Bennett,  Jr. 

Washington,  D.  C. 

*  A  e         A  E  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Phi  Assem- 
bly (1);  y.M.C.A.   (1,  2.  4). 


William  Lockhart  Benton 

Hamlet,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Band  (1. 
2,  3,  4);  Glee  Club  (1);  International 
Relations  Club  (3);  University  Sym- 
phony Orchestra   (1,  2.  3.  4). 


Warren  Howard  Bernstein 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

TE* 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Dailtj  Tar 
Heel  (1.  2);  International  Relations 
Club   (2). 


Dever  Polle  BiggerstafF 

Thomasville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


James  Rush  Heeler 
Burnsville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Juanita  Bell 

Asheville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Horace  Pope  Benton,  Jr. 

Wilson,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (3) ;  Monogram 
Club    (3);    Baseball    (4);    Football    (4). 


Eleanor  Harriet  Bernert 

West  Hartford,  Conn. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Political  Union  (3,  4) ;  Y.W.C..\.  (3, 
4) ;   Women's  Senate,   Speaker  Pro-tem 


Thomas  Seabrook  Biebigheiser 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Buccaneer 
(3,  4) ;  Carolina  Magazine  (4) ;  Play- 
makers   (3,  4). 


Oscar  M.  Bizzell 

Newton  Grove,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


'jC-^H,-^"^^ 


Haywood  Gilbert  Bland,  Jr 
Kelford,  N.  C. 
*K2 


Franklin  Dickinson  Blanton 

Troutmans,  N.  C. 


Candidate   for   A.B.   Degree;    Y.M.C.A. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Basketball  ''•  *'■ 

(1);   Dance  Committee   (4). 


Robert  Clifton  Blue 
Fairmont,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree;    Di   Senate 
(1);  Glee  Club  (1,  2);  Y.M.C.A.   (1). 


Elizabeth  Howie  Boatwright 
Richmond,  Va. 
AAn 


Eva  Kornegay  Boatwright 
Richmond,  Va. 

A  An 


Frances  Estaline  Boggs 

Statesville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


Selma  Frances  Bonkemeyer 

Chadbourn,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  University 
Club;  Y.W.C.A.  U).  Cabinet  Member: 
Women's  Senate    (1). 


Julia  Thurston  Booker 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Mary 


Bowen 

Burgaw,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Dailii  Tar 
Heel  (3);  Y.W.C.A.  (3);  Sound  and 
Fury    (3,   4). 


Ervin  Thomas  Bowie 

Statesville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (3,  4),  Chairman 
(3);    Young   Democrats   Club    (3.   4). 


Mary  Guy  Boyd 
Durham,  N.  C. 

n  B* 


Dorothy  M.  Bragdon 
Richmond,  Va. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Glee  Club  Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 

(3.  4);   Y.W.C.A.   (3,  4). 


66 


Boyce  Albert  Brawley 
Mooresville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B,  Degree. 


James  Norment  Britt 
Lumberton,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Blackwell  Markham  Brogden 
Durham,  N.  C. 
AKE 
Candidate  for  .-V.B.  Degree. 


Lucy  Matthews  Brown 
Holly  Springs,  Miss. 
AAA. 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


Robert  Frederick  Brown,  Jr. 
Waynesville,  N.  C. 

nKA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Cla.ss  Ex 
ecutive  Committee  (3) ;  Daily  Tar  Heel 
(1.  2):  International  Relations  Club 
(41:  Voung  Democrats  Club  a.  2)  • 
V.M.C.A.    (1,  2). 


MacCurdy  Burnet 

Madison,  N.  J. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Cnrulimi 
Magazine  (2):  Playmakers  (1.  2,  3,  4): 
Siiinid  and  Fury  (4) ;  Red  Cross  Field 
Supervisor. 


/// 


Mary  Louise  Breazeale 
Greenville,  S.  C. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3) ;  Interdormitory  Council  (4) ; 
Sound  and  Furii  (3,  4).  Secretary  (3): 
Y.W.C.A.  (3.  4) :  Women's  Athletic 
.\ssociation  Council  (3,  4),  Vice-Presi- 
dent (4). 


Frederick  Lee  Broad,  Jr. 

Mountain  Lakes,  N.  J. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree: 
(1.  2,  3),  President   (4). 


Virginia  Marion  Broome 

Atlanta,  Ga. 

AAH 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Flying 
Club:  Women's  Athletic  Association; 
Y.W.C.A. 


Oran  Kline  Brown 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Interna- 
tional Relations  Club  (3.  4) :  Republi- 
can Club    (3). 


Henry  King  Burgwyn 

Woodland,  N.  C. 

ATf) 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Phi  .\ssem 
bly  (1.  2);  Sheiks  (2.  3.  4);  Yacketv 
Yack    (1). 


Robert  Lynn  Bursley 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

A2  n 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degri 


.■•  •  / 


67 


/ 


>^ 


Edward  K.  Burton 

Milton,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


George  Charles  Caldwell 

Asheville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


William  Cozart  Calhoun 
Augusta,  Ga. 
K  A 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


George  Franklin  Cameron,  Jr. 

Beaumont,  Tex. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Elizabeth  Bosweli  Campbell 
Canastola,  N.  Y. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (3) ;  Interdormitory  Council, 
President  (4) ;  Y.W.C.A.  (3,  4) ;  Dor- 
mitory President. 


Margaret  Douglas  Campbell 
McLean,  Va. 
n  B* 

Y.W.C.A. 


Mary  Elizabeth  Byers 
St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 

Candidate  for  .'\.B.   Degree;   Class 
ecutive    Committee    (t);    Y.W.C.A. 


Mary  Caldwell 

Tallahassee,  Fla. 

HB* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  President 
of  Women's  Government  Association 
(4);  Carolina  Magazine:  Daily  Tar 
Heel;  Sound  and  Fury  (3,  4) ;  Val- 
kyries; Yackety  Yack  (3,  4) :  Y.W. 
C.A.  (3,  4) :  Women's  Honor  Council 
(3,    4). 


David  Martin  Callaway 

State  Road,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Orton  Jasper  Cameron 
Carthage,  N.  C. 


Orville  Bentley  Campbell 

Hickory,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Magazine  (3,  4):  Daily  Tar  Heel  (2. 
3,  4),  Editor  (4):  Graham  Memorial 
Board  of  Directors  (4);  Tar  and 
Feathers  (3,  4) ;  Yackety  Yack  (4) ; 
Y.M.C.A.  (3,  4). 


Austin  Heaton  Carr 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Z  AE 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  German 
Club  (4);  Gorgon's  Head  (3,  4); 
Sheiks  (2,  3) :  University  Dance  Com- 
mittee  (4). 


68 


Robert  Manly  Cashwell 

Ingold,  N.  C. 
Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree;    Y.M.C.A. 


John  Randolph  Chambliss 

Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Phi  Assem- 
bly (1):  IS  Club  (2.  3);  University 
Club   (8);   Tennis  Manager    (I,  2). 


Charles  Everard  Childs,  Jr. 
Bala-Cynwyd,  Pa. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Carolyn  Earlene  Clayton 
Narco,  La. 

A  An 


Gerald  Cohen 
Sparta,  Ga. 
TE* 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Helen  Anna  Laura  Cole 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Interna- 
tional   Relations    Club    (4) ;    Y.W.C.A. 


Roy  Murton  Cathey,  Jr. 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interdor- 
niitory  Council  (4);  Monogram  Club 
(3,  4):  Basketball  (1);  Track  (2.  3. 
4),  Co-Captain    (4). 


Kathryn  Crews  Charles 
Aberdeen,  N.  C. 

xn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (3)  ;  Sound  and  Fury  (3.  4)  ; 
Executive  Committee  (4);  Y.W.C.A. 
(3);  Women's  Athletic  Council   (4). 


Cornelia  Josey  Clark 

Scotland  Neck,  N.  C. 

HB*         AKA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Di  Senate 
(3.  4),  Clerk  (4) ;  Valkyries  (3,  4) ; 
Y.W.C.A.    (3,  4),   Vice-President   (4). 


Dudley  Dubose  Cocke 

Norfolk,  Va. 

2  N 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Hon 
or  Council  (2);  Class  Officer.  Vice- 
President  (1) ;  Interfraternity  Council 
(4);  Phi  Assembly  (1);  Student  Legis- 
lature   (1,    4);    President    13    Club    (2). 


Charles  Linsday  Colby 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Magazine  (4) ;  Interdormitory  Council 
(4);    Tar  and  Feathers   (I,   2,   3,   4). 


Louise  Palmer  Coleman 

Asheville,  N,  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


4/  /-/-  4 


/ 


/ 


/ 


69 


/ 


Mim 


.X/ 


Olive  Conescu 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for   A.B.   Degree; 

ers     (3.     i\ :     Representative 
Legislature    (4i. 


Roy  Lee  Connor 
Shelby,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Monogram 
Clul);  Football  (3.  3,  i) :  Urdversity 
Daiiee  Committee   (3). 


Edward  A.  Council,  Jr. 
Morehead  City,  N.  C. 


Noe  Cox 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Anne  Taylor  Craft 

Gate  City,  Va. 

A  A  n 

Candidate  for   A.B.   Degree:    Y.W.C. 
(3,   4) ;    Cheerleader. 


Junius  Atwood  Craven 

Mocksville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Jack  Lane  Connelly 
Morganton,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.-S.   Degree. 


Jack  Porter  Cooper 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interfra- 
ternity  Council  (3) ;  Fre.siiman  Friend- 
.ship  Council. 


James  Trammell  Cox 

Lynchburg,  Va. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  C 
J  lazine.  Literary  Editor  (3); 
as     .Volfe  Award    (3). 


George  Leavell  Coxhead 
St.  Petersburg.  Fla. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Hon- 
or Council  (1,  2);  Class  Officer,  Treas- 
urer (3);  Golden  Fleece;  Grail,  Ex- 
chequer (4);  Monogram  Club;  Univer- 
sity Dance  Committee  (2),  Chairman 
(3,  4);  Swimming  (2,  3).  Co-Captain 
(4);  Cheerleader  (1,  2,  3). 


Ann  Elizabeth  Crago 
Gainesville,  Fla. 

xn 

Canilidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Henr)'  Foil  Craver 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree 


70 


Bennett  Rudolph  Creech 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

XB* 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Yackety 
Yack   (3);   Y.M.C.A.   (1,  2,  3,  4). 


James  Clarence  Crone 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Football 
(I,  2,  3,  4);  Monogram  Club. 


Jayne  Elizabeth  Crosby 
Savannah,  Ga. 

xn 

Candidate   for    A.B.    Degree;    Carolina 
Magazine. 


Charles  Dixon  Cunningham 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (1);  Phi  Assembly  (1);  Carolina 
Accounting  Societj^;  Freshman  Friend- 
ship Council. 


Sarah  Beth  Dail 
Dunn,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree; 

(3,    4). 


William  Moye  Darden 

Annapolis,  Md. 

^  AE 

Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree; 
Swimming   (4). 


Anne  Douglas  Cromartie 
Elizabethtown,  N.  C. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interna- 
tional Relations  Club  (3,  4) ;  Y.W.C.A. 
(3),  Secretary  (4). 


William  Church  Croom 
Jacksonville,  Fla. 

2  A  E  <!>  B  K  A  E  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Lucille  Lytton  Culbert 

Marion,  Va. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(4) ;  Playmakers  (3,  4) ;  Sound  ami 
Fury  (3,  4);   Y.W.C.A.   (3,  4). 


Dorothy  Roueche  Cutting 

Statesville,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for  A.B.    Degree;    Carolina 

Magazine    (4);  Daily    Tar    Heel    (4); 

Y.W.C.A.     (3,  4) ;     Women's    Senate, 
Secretary   (4). 


Sam  Spach  Dalton 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 
K2 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Lucille  Shirley  Darvin 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Political  Union  (3,  4) ;  Hillel  Cabinet 
(4);  Young  Democrats  Club  (3,  4); 
Orchestra   (3.  4);  Women's  Senate  (4). 


///  /  /  .4/  / 


71 


■r/ 


0 


/ 


Eugene  Milburn  Davant 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

AKE 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Di  Senate 
(2.  3) :  Interdormitory  Council  (3) ; 
Monogram  Club;  Yacketv  Yack  (3); 
Wrestling  (1.  2,  3,  4) ;  Musical  Direc- 
tor Graham  Memorial. 


William  Leorand  Davey,  Jr. 

Concord,  N.  C. 

HKA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Buccaneer: 
Interdormitory  Council;  Y.M.C.A.  (2. 
3,   4). 


Robert  Lang  Davis 

Farmville,  N.  C. 

AKE 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Phi  Assem- 
bly (2);  Track  (1);  Yackety  Yack 
(1);    Y.M.C.A.    (1,   2,   3). 


Joseph  Paul  Demeri 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

AE  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (1). 


Angela  Vidal  Diaz 

Mendoza,  Repub.  Argentina,  S.A. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Martha  Jane  Dickinson 

Washington,  D.  C. 

KA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Sound  and 
Fury  (3,  4) ;  Student  Legislature  (4) : 
Yackety   Yack    (4);    Y.W.C.A.    (3,    4). 


Dorothy  Lee  Davenport 

Asheyille,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Y.W.C.A. 
(3,  4);  International  Relations  Club 
(1.  2). 


L.  Gail  Davidson 

Linden,  N.  J. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Di  Senate 
(3,  4) ;  International  Relations  Club 
(3);   Tar  and  Feathers   (3);    Y.W.C.A. 


Melissa  Elizabeth  Dean 

Cleveland  Heights,  Ohio 

n  B  *         A  K  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Band  (3, 
4);  Orchestra,  Publicity  Director  (3). 
President  (4);  Y.W.C.A.  (4);  Yackety 
Yack   (4). 


David  E.  Denby 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Nora  Thompson  Dicks 

Rockingham,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B,  Degree. 


Emma  Sophia  Didier 

Tampa,  Fla. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


72 


John  Walker  Diffendal 

High  Point,  N.  C. 

ATn 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (2) ;  Class  Honor 
Council  (2) ;  Class  OfHcer.  Secretary 
(1);  German  Club  Chairman  (4);  Gor- 
gon's Head;  Monogram  Club;  Phi  As- 
sembly (1);  University  Club;  Univer- 
sity Dance  Committee  (4) ;  Golf  (2) ; 
Vackety  Yack   (2). 


Arthur  Wilson  Dixon 

Gastonia.  N.  C. 

K  A  *  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Ampho- 
terothen;  Carolina  Political  Union  (2, 
3.  4),  Secretary  (3);  Daily  Tar  Heel 
(1,  2);  Y.M.C.A.  (1.  2.  3,  4);  President 
of  Sophomore  Cabinet. 


Betty  Eaton  Dixon 

Drewry  Lanier  Donnell,  Jr. 

Atlanta,  Ga. 

Oak  Ridge.  N.  C. 

xn 

K1 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3,  4).  President  (4);  President  Re- 
ligious Council. 


Robert  Edwin  Duke 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory  Council  (3);  Pan-American 
Club   (3);   French  Club   (3,   4). 


Elizabeth  Gary  Eames 
Berkeley,  Calif. 


John  Allen  Eddy 

Schenectady,  N.  Y. 

X* 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Flying  Club 
(4);  Monogram  Club  (3);  Cross  Coun- 
try (1.  2.  3,  4);  Track  (I,  2.  3). 


Thomas  Russell  Edens 
Lumberton,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex 
ccutive  Committee  (4) ;  Interfraternity 
Council  (4) ; ,'/ resliman  Friendship 
Council    (1) 


Candidate    for    A.B.    Degree;  Carolina 

Magazine    (1.    2);    Dailu    Tar  Heel    (1. 

2)  ;   Tar  and  Feathers  (I,  2)  ;  Y.M.C.A. 

(1.  4). 


Jane  Hamilton  Durning 

Louisville,  Ky. 

n  B* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Glee  Club 
(3.  4):  University  Club  (4);  Y.W.C.A. 
Cabinet  (4);   Pan-Hellenic  Council    (4). 


James  Sydney  Earle 
Oyster  Bay,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(1.  2.  3);  Monogram  Club  (4):  Play- 
makers  (2,  3);  Cross  Countrj-  (1.  2. 
3.  4);  Track  (1,  2,  3). 


Richard  Langston  Eddy 

Port  Washington,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Keith  Seymour  Edmister 
Lisle,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  D.gree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (1,  4);  Interdormi- 
tory  Council   (3). 

,■7 


/...  .,/ 


,■:/ 


// 


/ 


.y 


/ 


73 


c 


r 


Betty  Phil  Edwards 
Guilford  College,  N.  C. 

Candidate  fur  A.B.  Degree:  Glee  Club 
(3.  4),  Vice-President  (4);  Playraakers 
(3,    4);    Y.W.C.A.    (8,    4). 


Joseph  Bivens  Efird,  Jr. 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

2N         Br2         *BK 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Plii  Assem- 
bly   (1);    yACKETY    YaCK    (I). 


Edgar  Worth  EIHngton,  Jr. 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


John  Drew  EUiot 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) ;  Class  Officer. 
Vice-President  (2),  President  (3);  In- 
terdormitory  Council  (4):  Student  Leg- 
islature (2);  University  Club;  Foot- 
ball (2,  3,  4);  Track  (2,  3,  4):  Mono- 
gram Club. 


Bernice  Eltinge 

Fort  Lauderdale,  Fla. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3.  4);  Phi  Assembly  (4):  Sound  ami 
Furii    (3,   4)  ;   Y.W.C.A.    (3,   4). 


Jesse  Estroi? 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


.^ 


Richard  Walter  Edwards 

Seaboard,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Richard  Vaughn  Ehrick 

Findlay,  Ohio 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Constance  Sewell  Elliott 

Augusta,  Ga. 

AAn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Di  Senate 
(4);  Glee  Club  (4);  Sound  cmd  Fun/ 
(4);   Golf  (4);   Y.W.C.A.   (4). 


John  B.  Ellis,  Jr. 

Grover,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Robert  Whitaker  Elwell 

Camden,  N.  J. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Lester  Philip  Etter 
Lebanon,  Pa. 
TE* 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


74 


William  Holt  Faircloth 
Roseboro,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (2);  Monogram 
Club;  Baseball  (I):  Football  (I,  2, 
3.   4). 


S.  Kesler  Felton 
Eure,  N.  C. 


Degree ;     Youuk 


John  Alan  Finn 

Carney's  Point,  N.  J. 
Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Robert  Castle  Fisher 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Floyd  Fitzler  Fleming,  Jr. 

Middleburg,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Joe  A.  Felmet 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Caroline 
Magazine  (1);  Daibj  Tar  Heel  (4)  • 
Glee  Club  (1,  2.  3,  4);  Playmakers  (1 
3);   Y.M.C.A.    (1). 


Charles  William  Feuchtenbergei 
Bluefield,  W.  Va. 

<i>.4e 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Eugenia  Hoyt  Fishel 
Sumter,  S.  C. 


Candidate    for    B.S. 
mitory   Council    (4) ; 


Irvin  A.  Fleishman 

Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

*A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Daili/  Ta: 
Heel  (1);  Hillel  Cabinet  (1,  2.  3,  4) 
Interfratemity  Council  (3,  4) ;  Caro 
Una  Buccaneer   (1,  2). 


Betty  Lou  Fletcher 
Raleigh.  N.  C. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


George  Anderson  Foote 

Portsmouth,  Va. 

K  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (1);  Class  Dance 
Committee    (2).   ^ 


Virginia  Stanard  Forbes 
Atlanta,  Ga. 


/     . 


/  /   ('/ 


i//M4t 


f^. 


75 


;ye^yc^iy/^--- 

Reuben  Ford 

Edmund  Conger 

Forehand 

Lincolnton,  N. 

C.                                            Edenton,  N.  C. 

A  T  !  > 

2  N 

Candidate  for  B.S. 

Degree.                                Candidate  for  A.B. 

Degree. 

Mary  Boothe  Francis 

Atlanta,  Ga. 
Candidate  fur  A.B.  Degree. 


Claire  Elizabeth  Freeman 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


William  Ray  Frazier 

High  Point,  N.  C. 

A  Tfi 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Carolina 
Accounting  Society  (3.  4);  Yackety 
Yack    (3). 


Marion  B.  Freschel 
New  York,  N.  Y. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Hillel  Cab- 
inet   (3,   4). 


Edith  Beatrice  Fromme 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Stanley  Edward  Fuchs 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

T  E  n 

Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree;    Carolina 
Magazine  (4);  Sound  and  Fury  (3.  4). 


Rebecca  Jane  Fulk 

Pilot  Mountain,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  C'li)) 
(3.  4):  Interdormitorv  Council:  V.W. 
C.A.    (3,    n. 


Marion  Miot  Fuller 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 
Z  * 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Walter  Hawley  Funke 

Scarsdale,  N.  Y. 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degre 
(2) ;   Swimming   (2,  3). 


Peggy  Lou  Futrelle 
Emporia,  Va. 
A  An 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


76 


Katherine  Elizabeth  Gaither 
Statesville,  N.  C. 
AT 

Candidate  for  A.B.   Degree;    Y.W.C.A. 

(3,   4). 


William  Cortell  Gay 
Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 


Robert  Selwyn  Gersten 

Long  Beach.  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Grail; 
Class  Honor  Council  (4);  Monogram 
Club,  President  (4);  Baseball  (1.  2, 
3,   4);   Basketball    (1.  2.  3.   4). 


Joseph  Emmett  Giddings 

Mount  Olive,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Richard  Weinberg  Goldsmith 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Candidate    for    A.B.    Degree;    CaroUi 
Magazine   (1,   2,  3,   4). 


Babs  Lois  Goodrich 

Wilmington,  Del. 

XV. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Flying 
Club  (3,  4) ;  Glee  Club  (3,  4) ;  Phi  A.*- 
sembly  (3);  Pan-He>lenic  Council  (3); 
Y.W.C.A.    (3,   4),.  ' 


William  Everett  Garwood 
Salem,  N.  J. 


Candidate  for   A.B.   Degi 
(1,  2,  3);   Orchestra    (1). 


Robert  Allen  George 
Mt.  Airy.  N.  C. 
*K2 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Thomas  George  Gibian 

Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interna- 
tional Relations  Club  (3.  4) ;  Phi  .As- 
sembly (3,  4). 


Fred  Bernard  Gillman 

New  Haven,  Conn. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Herbert  Wesley  Gooding 
Hookerton,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory  Council  (3) ;  Student  Legisla- 
ture  (4);   Cla.ss  Dance  Committee   (4). 


Katharine  Newbold  Goold 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3.  4);  Y.W.C.A.  (3.  4);  Women's  Ath- 
letic Council  (3,  4). 


./ 


// 


.4 


/// 


.if 


4:. 


/ 


77 


Irving  Gordon 

Plainfield,  N.  J. 

HA* 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degr 
(2,  3);   Wrestling   (4). 


Jean  Barbara  Gott 

Chattanooga,  Tenn. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Baseball 
(3);  Young  Republicans  Club  (3): 
V.W.C.A.    (3,    4). 


Betty  Ellen  Gragg 
Bainbridge,  Ga. 

xn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Richard  Franklin  Green 

Morrisville,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Interdor- 
niitory  Council   (3). 


Smilie  Alexander  Gregg,  Jr. 
Laurinburg,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Class  E.\ 
ecutive  Committee  (2);  Sheiks  (2); 
Football  (I.  2);  Wrestling  (1);  Y.M. 
C.A.    (2). 


W.  Carrington  Gretter,  (r. 
Waterbury,  Conn. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  President 
Debate  Council  (4);  Di  Senate  (1,  2, 
3,  4). 


Robert  Coningsby  Gordon 

Norfolk,  Va. 

*MA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Glee  Club 
(4). 


Hundley  Rankin  Gover 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Debate 
Squad  (1);  Gorgon's  Head;  Gymnas- 
tics (1,  2.  3,  4);  Interfraternity  Coun- 
cil  (4). 


Anna  Jean  Grant 

Murphy,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Joseph  Harold  Greenberg 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

A  K  A         *  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Debate 
Squad  (3,  4) :  Phi  As.sembly  (2) :  Fenc- 
ing (1):  Tennis  (1,  4);  Freshman 
Friendship  Council. 


James  Sherrill  Gregory 
Hays,  N.  C. 
XB* 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


John  Hawkins  Gribbin 
Asheviile,  N.  C. 
K  A         Jk  *  A 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


78 


Thomas  Brooks  Griffin 

Nfonroe,  N.  C. 

*M  A 

Candidate   for   B.S.    Degree ; 
2.   3.   4);    CtIcb   Club    (1,    2.   3, 


Francis  Albert  Gugert 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Interfra- 
ternity  Council  (3,  4):  Football  (1,  2. 
3,  4) ;  LacrosseC  1,  2.  3,  4) ;  Class  Atb 
letic  Committee    (4). 


Norma  Diana  Haber 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Dcgr( 


Eleanor  Ham 

Clarksville,  Miss. 

ns* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Interdor- 
mitorj'  Council  (4):  Y.W.C.A.  (3). 
Cabinet  Chairman    (4). 


Roswell  Woodrow  Hamlett 

Durham,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  D,gree. 


Helen  Pope  Hall 
Tarboro,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Student 
Legislature  (4):  Young  Democrats 
Club    (3):   Y.W.C.A.   (3,   4). 


George  Grotz,  III 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
X* 


Anne  Guill 

Savannah,  Ga. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Class  Hon- 
or Council  (3) ;  Interdormitory  Coun 
cil  (4) :  Sound  and  Fur;j  (3) :  Carolina 
Playmakers  of  the  Air. 


Jean  Hahn 

Wyomissing,  Pa. 

xn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3,  4) ;  Phi  Assembly  (3) ;  Sound  and 
Fm-ij  (3,  4):  Y.W.C.A.  (3,  4):  Speaker 
of  Coed  Senate  (4):  W.A.A.  Council 
(4):   Pan-Hellenic  Council   (4). 


E.  Rebecca  Hamilton 

Morehead  City,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Robert  Cecil  Haldeman 
Doylestciwn,  Pa. 
AX  A 
Candidate  for  A.B.  D.^gree. 


George  Edloe  Ham 
Goldsboro,  N.  C. 
A  X  S  *  B  K 


,/;/ 


l//aC^£ii4 


.4 


y 


79 


X 


Frank  Borden  Hanes 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

2  AE 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degr 
President  (3);  Gimghoul. 
(4);  Playmakers  (2). 


Fredrick  Gentry  Harris 

Spartanburg,  S.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Louis  Smith  Harris 

New  Haven,  Conn. 

T  E* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Ampho- 
terothcn;  Carolina  Magazine  (3),  Man- 
aging Editor  (4):  Carolina  Political 
Union  (2,  3),  Vice-Chairman  (4);  Class 
Executive  Committee  (2):  DaiUi  Tar 
Heel  (1,  2,  3).  Associate  Editor  (4); 
Student  Legislature  (4) ;  Y.M.C.A.  (3) : 
Student  Government  Committee  (2, 
3,   4). 


Virginia  Turner  Harrison 
Little  Rock,  Ark. 

Candidate  for  .A.B.  Degree. 


Robert  William  Harwell 

Mooresville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Audrey  Lee  Hawkins 

Canton,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for   A.B.    Degree;    Y.W.C.A. 
(3). 


:^ 


Joseph  Norman  Harper 

Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


John  Lindsay  Harris 

Louisburg,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Lloyd  Bratton  Harrison 

Washington,  D.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Jane  Coombs  Hartt 
Avon  Park,  Fla. 
nB* 


Joseph  Nahoum  Hatem 
Roanoke  Raoids,  N.  C. 


Candidate   for   A.B. 
mitory   Council    (4). 


Degree;    Interdor- 


Agnes  Robinette  Hayes 

Hillsboro,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


80 


George  L.  Hayes 

Roanoke  Raoids,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (1,  3.  4);  Golden 
Fleece;  Grail;  Interdormitory  Council 
(3,  4),  President  (4);  Student  Legis- 
lature (3,  4);  University  Club;  Y.M. 
C.A. 


Harold  M.  Held 

New  York.  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(1) ;  Playmakers  (1.  2,  3,  4) ;  Sound 
and  Fury  (2,  3.  4),  Technical  Director. 


James  Robert  Helms 

Monroe,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Band  (1, 
2.  3,  4) ;  Class  Executive  Committee 
(3);  Accounting  Society  (3).  Chairman 
(4). 


Gordon  De  Pender  Hicks 

Middletown,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Charles  Clifton  Hinds 

South  Bend,  Ind. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Town  Boys' 
Association  (2) ;  Class  Dance  Commit- 
tee   (4). 


Truman  McGill  Hobbs 

Selraa,  Ala. 

A  K  E         *  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  President 
of  the  Student  Body;  Carolina  Political 
Union  (3,  4);  Class  Officer  (2);  Di  Sen- 
ate (1,  2,  3);^imghoul:  Golden 
Fleece;  Grail;  Monogram  Club;  Stu- 
dent Council  (•«y4)  ;/Student  Leajsla- 
ture  (2);  UnivsTsitS'  Club;  Swiijmiing 
(3,    4) ;    Atjiletfc  CWincil.  ,y 

/    /  //'  ■' 


Charles  Allen  Headlee 
Wilkinsburg,  Pa. 

<j>r  .\ 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree; 
Heel  (1);  Monogram  Club; 
Feathers  (1);  Baseball  (1,  2) 
(3);  Golf   (1,  2). 


Earle  West  Hellen 
Greenville,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Dail'j  Tar 
Heel  (2,  3,  4);  Basketball   (1). 


Homer  Hunter  Henry 

Waynesville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Chester  Wilson  Hill 

Ahoskie,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Band  (1. 
2,  3,  4);  Wrestling  (3,  4);  Y.M.C.A. 
(1). 


North  Hinkle 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

B.S.    Degree;    Football 


Troy  Crews  Hodges 

Leaksville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


/ 


/ 


'oU^^fce^^/  I'^/M'^^ 


Robert  Lewis  Hoenshel 

Pulaski,  Va. 
2  N 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Desrec. 


Richard  Burgin  Holcombe 

Candler,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


James  Burwell  Holland 
Statesville.  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Carolina 
Magazine  (3).  Business  Manager  (4): 
Daiht  Tar  Heel  (1,  2,  3) :  University 
Cluh. 


Harry  Dewitt  HoUingsworth 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
^taga^ille  (3);  Dailu  Tar  Heel  (1.  2. 
3.  4).  Sports  Editor  (4);  Interdormi- 
torv  Council  (2):  University  Club  (3); 
V.\CKF.Tv  Yack   (2). 


William  Kern  Holoman 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Annah  Gray  Hoover 
Owensboro,  Ky, 

xn 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


Cyrus  Dunlap  Hogue,  Jr. 

Wilmington,  N.  C. 

.i  K  E  ■!■  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.-LL.B.  Degree; 
Football  Manager  (4);  Gimghoul; 
Monogram   Club. 


Hugh  Stanley  Hole 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Ben 

Candidate  for  A.S.  Degree;  German 
Club.  Executive  (4);  Interfraternitv 
Council  (4):  Plavmakers  (3.  4);  Stu- 
dent Legislature  (4);  Track  (2);  Y.M. 
C.A.   (1.   2,   3,   4). 


Martha  Alice  Holland 

Holland,  Va. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Anne  Spicer  Holmes 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Etheldred  Henry  Holt 

Princeton,  N.  C. 

AS  n 

Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree;    Di  Senate 
(1,  2);   Y.M.C.A.    (I,   2,  3,   4). 


)oan  Marion  Horn 
Newburgh.  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


82 


Frank  Lawrence  Hoskins 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
KA 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Addison  Williams  Hubbard 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Ellen  Hudson 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C 

xn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Joseph  Strange  Huske,  Jr. 

Favetteville,  N.  C. 
Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree:    Y.M.C.A. 


Robert  Stuart  Hutchinson,  Ir. 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

•PTA  BrX  <I>BK 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interfra- 
ternity  Council.  Vice-President  (4) : 
Student  Legislature  (4);  13  Club; 
Cross  Country  (2.  3,  4) ;  Track  (1,  2, 
3,  4):  y.M.C.A.  (1,  2,  3,  4);  Class 
Dance  Committee    (3). 


Ed  W.  Hyman 

Scotland  Neck.  N.  C. 


Curtis  WilHam  Howard,  Jr. 
Kinston,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Sherman  Hubbard 

Thomasville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Tom  Hughes 

Durham.  N.  C. 

Candidate   for    B.S. 
mitory  Council    (4); 


Degree:    Interdor- 
Boxing    (2,  3,    4). 


Charles  Edward  Hussey 
Tarboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3);  .Monogram  Club  (4);  Baseball 
.Manager   (4). 


WiUiam  Stanley  Hyatt 

Dillingham,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Bickett  Idol 

Hifih  Point,  N.  C. 

*rA 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Cirail;  Uni- 
versity Club;  Student  Entertainment 
Committee. 


/    ./ 


Af 


/ 


jy 


«■■':/,#<?-/€' ' 


83 


William  Braxton  Ingram 

Norwood,  N.  C. 


Dorothy  Louise  Jackson 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

n  B* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Cflee  Club. 


Arthur  Winston  Jacocks 

Norfolk,  Va. 

K  A 

Candidate    for    A.B.    Degree;    Baseball 
(2):    Y.M.C.A.    (2,    3,    I). 


Glenn  Hays  Johnson 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Ann 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Marion  Elsie  Johnson 
West  Hartford,  Conn. 

A  An 

Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree; 

(3,    4). 


Charles  Goodman  Jones 
Bluefield,  W.  Va. 

B.S.    Degree; 


X 


Horace  B.  Ives 

Maribel,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Debate 
Squad  (2,  3);  Phi  Assembly  (1.  2,  3. 
4),  Speaker  (4), 


Elizabeth  Bell  Jackson 
Tryon,  N.  C. 
X  A* 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Deg 

(3,    4). 


ee;   Glee  Club 


Rhodes  Nelson  Jennette 
Washington,  N.  C. 


Candidate    for    B.S. 
Legislature   (4). 


Degree ;    Student 


Harry  Ferguson  Johnson 

Ingold,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;     Student 
Legislature    (4);    Y.M.C.A.    (1). 


John  Clinton  Johnston 

Catawissa,  Pa. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
niitorv-  Council  (4):  .Monogram  Club; 
Boxing   (3,  \).  Captain   (41. 


Hamilton  Jones 

Milwaukee,  Wis. 

A^I' 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Carolina 
Political  Union  (1.  2.  3);  Phi  Assem- 
bly (1);  13  Club  (I.  2,  3).  President; 
University   Club;    Track    (2). 


84 


Ruth  Holt  Jones 

Augusta,  Ga. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glei'  Cluh 
(3.  4);  Sound  and  Fury  {■*),  Y.W.C.A. 
(3,    4). 


|ohn  Richard  Jordan,  Jr. 

Winton,  N.  C. 

II  K  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) ;  Young  Demo- 
crats Club  (2.  3.  4);  Y.M.C.A.  (2); 
Interdormitory  Council  (4);  Class 
Dance  Committee   (3). 


Frank  Ross  Justice 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Candidate   for  B.S.   Degree;    Glee   Club 
(1);    Interdormitory   Council    (4). 


Stanley  Jay  Kallman 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Lawrence  S.  Karger 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree 


/ 


///         / 


ri 


George  L.  Jordan,  Jr. 
Kinston,  N.  C. 

A  E  A         *  B  K 


Edward  Thornton  Jurney 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Edward  Lazarus  Kalin 
Hendersonville,  N.  C. 
T  E* 


Maurice  Arnold  Kanter 

Passaic,  N.  J. 

*A 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Glee  Club 
(1);  Interfraternity  Council  (3);  Bas- 
ketball Manager  (1);  Hillel  Founda 
tion  (1,  2.  3),  Vice-President  (4). 


Janet  Marie  Kayser 
White  Plains,  N.  Y. 
II  B* 
Candidate    for    A.B.    Degr 


Hortense  E.  Kelley 
New  Church,  Va. 

xi; 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3,  4) ;  Playmakers  (3,  4) ;  Sound  ami 
Fury  (3,  4);  Softba91  (3);  Hockey  (3); 
President  Women's  4ithletic  Associa- 
tion (4);  Valkyries:, Graham  Meniorial 
Board  of  Direcf^rs..  ■  //  , 


Richard  Leon  Kendrick 
Elizabeth  City,  N.  C. 
A  K  E  A  E  A 

or   A.B.    E 


i//MmW 


*  B  K 
Y.M.C.A. 


85 


/ 


•'/' 


.C44Ay'M^'^^-- 


X 


Joe  Wollett  Kennedy 
Durham,  N.  C- 
<S>BK 
Candidate  fur  A.B.  Dfs'e 


Gip  I.  Kimball,  jr. 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

■i-r  A 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Band  (1, 
2,  3);  Class  Executive  Committee  (3, 
4);  Class  Honor  Council  (3):  Grail: 
Publications  Union  Board.  President 
(4);  Student  Legislature  (4);  Univer- 
sity Club:   Yacketi-  Yack   (i.  2,  3,   4). 


Robert  Theron  Kornegay 
Mount  Olive,  N.  C. 


Joseph  H.  Knox 
Newton,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Robert  Stansbury  Lambert 
Rutherford,  N.  J. 


Wilmer  O.  Lankford,  III 
Milford,  Del. 


(.■i);    Tnr   mid    Fiathe 


S.  Degree;  Class  Ex 
■  (1)  ;  Interdormitor) 
Student     Legislatiirt 


Maury  W.  Kershaw 

Jamaica,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Political  Union  (3.  4);  Debate  Squad 
(2);   Di   Senate    (2). 


Hal  Kohn,  Jr. 
Newberry,  S.  C. 


Degree;   Glee  Club 


Jane  Knight 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

n  B* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Boston  McGee  Lackey,  Jr. 
Lenoir,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Band  (1, 
2,  3,  4);  Glee  Club  (3);  Interdormitory 
Council  (4);  University  Club;  Y.M.C.A. 


Stephen  Bruce  Langfeld 

Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Cla.ss  Ex 
ecutive  Committee  (1);  Tar  am 
Feathers  (1,  2);  Voung  Republican; 
Club   <3). 


Nelson  D.  Large 

Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degre 


86 


Arthur  Henry  Larochelle,  Jr. 

Chicopee  Falls,  Mass. 

Candidate    for    A.B.     Degree;     Young 
Republicans  Club   (2.  3.  4). 


Herman  Dewey  Lawson 

Kinston,  N.  C. 

<J>B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Dailu  Tar 
Heel   (3,   1). 


Joan  Lucinda  Lee 

Port  Washington,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Debate 
Squad  (3,  4);  French  Club  (3,  4);  Phi 
Assembly;   Y.W.C.A.    (3,   4). 


Whitlock  Lees 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interfra- 
ternity  Council  (4);  Monogram  Club: 
Swimming   (1,   2.   3,   4). 


John  Rosser  Legrande 

Mebane,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Ralph  Z.  Levy 

Nashville,  Tenn. 

Z  B  T 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex 
ecutive  Committee  (4) ;  Di  Senate  (1); 
Hillel  Cabinet  ^  ijr-  Boxing  (1,  2), 
Manager   (3)  L^VALgfA.   (4). 


/ 


Ethel  Geraldine  Lawner 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


James  Stanley  Leary,  Jr. 
Ahoskie,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for   B.S.   Degree;    Class  Ex- 
ecutive   Committee     (2,    3) ;     Y.M.C.A. 

(1). 


Mary  Elizabeth  Leech 
Live  Oak,  Fla. 
Adn 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Renie  Elizabeth  Leffler 
Sanford,  Fla. 
11  B* 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Lawrence  Lerner 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Class  Offi- 
cer  (I);   Daihj  Tar  Heel   (1,  2). 


Elwyn  Charles  Lewis 

Tomahawk,  N.  C. 
Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree;    Y.M.C.A. 


./ 


L 


/ 


87 


c 


X 


.'-:/ 


X£^.A."Hyl 


/ 


Wellington  Harrill  Lewis 

Fallston,  N.  C. 

ds  n 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Class  Hon- 
or Council  (4):  Golden  Fleece;  Grail: 
International  Relations  Club  (2,  3), 
Vice-President  (3):  Playmakers  (1); 
Cross  Country  (2.  3.  4).  Captain  (1): 
Track  (2.  3,  4);  Y.M.C.A.  (3,  4). 


Stanley  Jesse  Lieber 

Gastonia,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Playi 
ers  (3,  4);  Sound  and  Furij  (3. 
Campus  Radio  Announcer  (3,  4). 


Robert  I.  Lipton 

Wilmington,  N.  C. 

Brz 


Robert  Long 

Statesville.  N.  C. 
K2 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


William  Arthur  Loock,  Jr. 
NewRochelle,  N.  Y. 
2  N 
Candidate   for   H.S.  DcKrce. 


Sadie  June  Love 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3);  Playmakers  (4);  Yackety  Yack 
(4);  Y.W.C.A.  (3,  4);  Treasurer  of 
Women's  Student  Government  (4). 


.^ 


Wray  Cleveland  Lewis 

Fallston,  N.  C. 


Marion  Eleanor  Lippincott 

Ridgewood,  N.  J. 

A  A  II 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  IkiUii  Tnr 
Heel  (3,  4);  Sound  ami  Fun/'  (3): 
Y.W.C.A.  (3.  4);  Student  Government 
Committee. 


George  Deaver  Long 

Morganton,  N.  C. 
K2 
Candidate  for  B.S.  DeKree:  Boxing  (I) 


Walter  Franklin  Long 
Rockingham,  N.  C. 
A  Tfi 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Fred  W.  Love 

Delray  Beach.  Fla. 
.V  T  n 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Deg 


Walter  Bennett  Love,  Jr. 
Monroe,  N.  C. 

AS  n 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Band  ( 
2,  3.  4):  Y.M.C.A.  (1,  2,  3,  4);  A 
counting  Society   (3),   Treasurer    (4). 


88 


Gwendolyn  Emma  Jean  Lowder 

Mt.  Pleasant,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Elsie  Schuyler  Lyon 

Grand  Beach,  Mich. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Magazine  (3),  Coed  Editor  (4):  Caro- 
lina Political  Union  (4);  Dailij  Tar 
Heel  (3,  4);  Debate  Squad  (3,  4). 
Bingham  Medal ;  Student  Legislature 
(4) ;  Tar  and  Feathers  (3,  4)  ;  Swim- 
ming (4);  W.A.A.  Council:  Women's 
Senate  (4) ;  Independent  Coeds  Asso- 
ciation. President   (4). 


Muriel  Edith  Mallison 
Lafayette,  La. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Di  Senate 
(3):  Valkyries  (3);  Y.W.C.A.  (3,  4), 
President  (4),  Cabinet  (3);  Pan-Hel- 
lenic Council. 


Harry  Corpening  Martin 

Blowing  Rock,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Band  (1. 
2.  3,  4).  President  (3);  Class  Executive 
Committee  (4);  Track  (1,  2). 


William  Augustus  Martin 

Smithfield,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Joseph  Louis  Marymont 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Louise  Laurie  Lupton 

New  Bern.  N.  C. 

11  R* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Di  Senate 
(4);  Golf  (3,  4);   Y.W.C.A.   (3,  4). 


Zack  W.  Lyon 
Oxford,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Roger  Cornwell  Mann 
Rye,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Debate 
Squad  (4);  Di  Senate  (3.  4),  Treasurer 
(4);  International  Relations  Club  (1. 
2).  Treasurer  (3).  President   (4). 


Harry  Little  Martin,  Jr. 
Upper  Montclair,  N.  J. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


■/ 


-/. 


0/i    / 
/         J" 


William  T.  Martin 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

*r  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Vice-Pres- 
ident of  Student  Body;  Carolina  Mag- 
azine (4);  Class  Otficer  (2);  Glee  Club 
(4);  Golden  Fleece;  Grail;  Student 
Council  (2,  3,  4);  University  Club: 
Tennis   (1):   Y.M.C.A.   (1.  2,  3,  4). 


Constance  Alicia  Mason 

Forest  Hills.  N.  Y. 

X  A* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Dailp  Tar 
Heel  (3.  4) ;  Phi  Assembly  (3) ;  Sound 
and  Fur II  (3,  4) ;  Tar  and  Feathers 
(4);  Yoting  .Repiiblicans  Cluk/ (3,  4). 
Vic(^PresJa^t  /4) ;    Y.W.C.Ai'  (3,    4). 


89 


c 


'ye4^<^^'i-^'^ 


/ 


Eleanor  Mason 
Montezuma,  Ga. 
II  B* 


Frank  Alexander  Masters 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

B  rs 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Leonard  John  Matte 

Luzerne.  Pa. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Richard  Alvis  May 
Burlington,  N.  C. 


George  Edward  Mayer 

Springfield,  Mass. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Armando  Mayorga 

NewYork,  N.  Y. 
A  'I' 


J.  Lewis  Masten 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

AX  A 

Candidate    fur    B.S.    Degree; 
ternity   Council    (4). 


Joe  Hugh  Mathis 
Rural  Hall,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Shuf  ord  Roger  Matthews 
Thomasville,  N.  C. 
AS  n 


Charles  Jason  Mayberry 

Spruce  Pine,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Hiiah  Ruth  Mayer 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  DaiU(  Tnr 
Heel  (4):  Glee  Club  (3);  V.ukktv 
VUK    (3.    4):    Y.W.C.A.    (3,   4K 


Fernando  Mayorga 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
A^I- 
Candidate   fur   B.S.   Degr 


90 


Randy  Sloan  Mebane 

Blowing  Rock,  N.  C. 

Caudidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Tar  ami 
Feathers  (3.  4) ;  Carolina  Magazine 
(4) ;  Glee  Club  (3) ;  Playmakers  (3, 
4) ;  University  Club  (3,  4) ;  Soxind  and 
F%(r!/  (3.  4),  President  (4);  Women's 
Atliietie  Association    (3,  4) ;   Vallcyries. 


Joseph  Warren  Mengel 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Band  (I): 
Class  Honor  Council  (4) ;  International 
Relations  Club  (2,  3) ;  Monogram  Club 
(2,  3.  4) ;  Student  Legislature  (3,  4)  ; 
Track   (1.  2,  3,  4);  Basketball   (1). 


William  Joseph  Merritt 

Woodsdale,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


George  Wright  Meyer 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Flying 
Club  (4) ;  Monogram  Club;  Swimming 
(2.  3). 


Gloria  Vance  Miller 
Chattanooga,  Tenn. 

Candidate  for   B.S.    Degree;    Y.W.C.A. 

(3). 


Edwin   Lester  Minges 

Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

AX  A 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  University 
Club  (3) ;  University  Dance  Committee 
(1);   Y.M.C.A. 


/./ 


/ 


Moyer  Mendenhall,  Jr. 

Thomasville.  N.  C. 


Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Yacketv 
Yack   (3);   Y.M.C.A.   (2,   8,  4). 


Edward  Clifton  Merrill,  Jr. 

Asheville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Horace  Ransom  Messer 

Bryson  City,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Helen  Milam 

Jacksonville,  Fla. 

AAn 

Candidate    for    A.B.    Degree;    Carolina 
Political   Union    (3.   4). 


Julian  Sydney  Miller 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree;    Interdor- 
mitory  Council   (4);  Baseball   (I.  3,  4). 


David  Carlton  Mock 

Lexington,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degr 


/ 


91 


.^^ 


William  W.  Mont^^omery,  III 
Devon,  Pa. 

Candidate  fur  A.B.  Decree;  Vouiij 
Republicans  Club  (3,  +) :  Y.M.C.A.  (2 
3,  4). 


Clayton  Moore,  Jr. 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 
2  AE 
Candidate  f(ir  A.B.  Degree. 


Sewell  Trezevant  Moore 
Weldon,  N.  C. 
■I-B  K 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Samuel  Fox  Mordecai 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Monogram 
Club;  Wrestling  (4);  Y.M.C.A.  (1,  2. 
3,   4). 


Joseph  Mottsman 

Hendersonville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Cameron  Murchison 
Washin.gt.in.  D.  C. 


Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree:  I'lii  Assem- 
bly (1):   V.M.C.A.  (1,  2). 


Charles  Dennis  Moody 

Waynesville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


John  McDowell  Moore,  Jr. 

Lexington,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Edward  Case  Mooring 

LaGrange,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Earl  Meisenheimer  Morgan 
Badin,  N.  C. 

Candidate   for   A.B.   Degree;    Band    (1, 

2.    3). 


Eugene  Neal  Munves 
NewRochelle,  N.  Y. 
Z  B  T 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degrei 


Cyrus  Mack  Murphy 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex 
ecutive  Committee  (3);  Class  Honor 
Council  (4) ;  Interdorniitory  Council 
(3);  University  Club  (2,  3);  Student 
Entertainment   Committee. 


92 


Frank  Murray 

Gibsonville.  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Ruth  Marie  McCants 
Newport,  R.  I. 

Axn 


Candidate  for  A.B, 
(1,  2) ;  Swimming  ( 
(4). 


Degree ;    Baseball 
2,  4);   Y.W.C.A. 


Floyd  Brown  McCombs,  Jr- 

Kannapolis,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


John  Maglenn  McCormick 

Sanford,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interdor 
mitory  Council  (2.  3);  Student  Council 
(4) .   Secretary -Treasurer. 


Charles  Byron  McCraw 

Troy,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


George  McDermott 
Vass,  N.  C. 


./: 


Helen  Elaine  MacKay 
Orlando,  Fla. 

n  B* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Fencing 
(3) ;  Women's  Government  .Association. 
Secretary    (4). 


Julia  Marie  McClure 

Lancaster,  Pa. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Mar)'  Thompson  McCormic 

Rowland,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory  Council  (3.  4),  Secretary  (4): 
Student  Council  (3):  Baseball  (3)  ■ 
Basketball  (3);  Fencing.  Captain  (3); 
Tennis  (3) ;  Y.W.C.A.  (3.  4) ;  House 
President  (4);  W.A.A.  Council    (4). 


Betty  Burnette  McCracken 

Canton,  N.  C. 
Candidate   for   A.B.    Degree:    Y.W.C.A. 


lian  Hiram  McDaniel 
Maysville,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree; 
(1.  2) ;  Cross  Country  (2,  3, 


Martin  Craft  McGilvary 

Marshville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


/' 


/■•/  / 


93 


/ 


c 


^r' 


/■ 


X 


--' 


Kenneth  H.  Mclntyre 

Hampton,  Va. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Nancy  Mclver 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

A  An 


William  Louis  McKinnon 
Wadesboro,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Sec- 
retary (2) :  Class  President  (4) ;  Stu- 
dent Legislature  (2) ;  Young  Demo- 
crats  Club    (2);    V.M.C.A.    (1). 


Kathryn  McNamee 

Bloomsburg.  Pa. 
Candidate  for  A.B.   Degree;   Glee  Clul) 


Fred  Wilier  McNeil,  Jr. 

Ferguson,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Honor 
Council  (4) ;  Vice-President  of  Wom- 
en's Government  Association  (4) ;  Car- 
olina Magazine  (4) ;  Glee  Club  (3) ; 
Sound  and  Furtj  (3);  Y.ickety  Yack 
(4);  Y.W.C.A.  (3,  4),  Cabinet  (4); 
Women's  Senate   (4). 


John  Jones  Mclver 

Sanford,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Jean  Gregory  McKenzie 
West  Palm  Beach,  Fla, 

xn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Offi- 
cer (4).  Secretary;  Interdormitorv 
Council  (4) ;  Playmakers  (3,  4) ;  Y.W. 
C.A.  (4). 


Lennox  P.  McLendon 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

2  AE 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Political  Union  (2.  3.  4) ;  Class  Honor 
Council  (1,  2);  Vice-President  Class 
(3) ;  Debate  Squad  (3.  4) ;  Grail  (3. 
t)  ;  Phi  Assembly  (1,  3);  Wrestling 
(1.  3,  1);  Chairman  Student  Safety 
Council. 


Robert  Avery  McNaughton 

Hendersonville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   DaUii  Tar 
Heel    (1);    Di    Senate    (1);    Track    (1. 


Mary  J.  Nackos 
Wilson,  N.  C. 
XA$ 


Mary  Elizabeth  Nash 

Eva  Mae  Nee 

Alexandria,  Va. 

Norfolk,  Va. 

n  B* 

AKA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Valkyries. 
Treasurer;  Women's  Athletic  Associa- 
tion Council.  Secretary  (3.  4) :  Varsity 
Hookey  Team   (3). 


94 


Charles  Stephen  Nelson 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

X* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Monogram 
Club;  Cheerio  Club  (3).  President; 
Sound  and  Fury  (3,  4) ;  Cheerins 
Squad    (3.    4),    Head    Cheerleader    (3i. 


Ining  H.  Nemtzow 

Newport,  R.  I. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Elizabeth  Ellen  New 

Gastonia,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Charles  McKinney  Nice,  Jr. 

Birmingham,  Ala. 

2  A  E 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Political  Union  (3,  4) :  Chairman.  Stu- 
dent Advisory  Committee;  Interdormi- 
ton'  Council    (3). 


George  Mcintosh  Norwood,  |r. 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Daihj  Tar 
Heel  (4) ;  Interdormitory  Council  (4) : 
Y.M.C.A.   (3,  4). 


Edna  Ward  OHair 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Deg 


f/ 


Rhoda  Danish  Nelson 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Mary  Harriette  Nesbit 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.   Degree;    Y.W.C.A. 
(3) :    Women's  Rifle  Team. 


Jennie  Wells  Newsome 

Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 

n  B* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Debate 
Squad  (3) ;  Di  Senate  (3.  4) ;  I.R.C. 
(3.  4);  Pan-Hellenic  Council  (4),  Pres- 
ident;   University   Club    (4). 


Harriet  Noell 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Dorothy  Oakes 

Portland,  Me. 

Candidate   for   A.B.   Degree; 
mitorj-  Council;   Y.W.C.A.    (3, 
inet    (4). 


Frank  Vincent  O'Hare 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

X* 

Candidate    for    A.B.     Degree;     Flying 
Club    (4):    Monogram    Club;    Football 


y  ) 


/ 


•^-Z- 


'y/ ac-'fte'U'f 


95 


/ 


{' 


^M^t 

.yiTi^-jy.^ 

Wilds  Wilfiamson  Olive 

John  Moultrie  Oliver 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

John  Wilkinson-Steele  Ord 
Union.  N.  J. 

Candidate    for   A.B.    Degree;    Interdor- 
mitory  Council  (l);  Tennis  (1,  2,  3,  4). 


Harriet  Cecile  Osment 
Canton,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Sound  and 
Fury    (3,   4). 


Jonas  G.  Owens 

Pinetops,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Interdo 
mitory    Council    (4);    Y.M.C.A.    (1,    4 


Sumner  Malone  Parham 
Henderson.  N.  C. 

Z   ^^ 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Decree. 


Benjamin  Franklin  Park 
Raleifih,  N.  C. 

2  N 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Bulls  (1. 
2,  3,  4) ;  Dailu  Tar  Heel  (3,  4)  :  Glee 
Club  (3):  Yacketv  Yack  (1);  Y.M. 
C.A.  (1,  2,  3);  Track  (1):  Football 
(1). 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Y.M.C.A. 
(1.  2),  Vice-President  (3),  Executive 
Committee  (4);  Co-Chairman  Student- 
Faculty    Relations    (4). 


Oliver  Hamilton  Orr,  Jr. 

Brevard,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Marvin  Ostrowsky 

Far  Rockaway,  N.  Y. 

II  A* 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;   Monogram 
Club:  Swimming  (1.  3,  4). 


Oscar  Lindsey  Owens,  Jr. 
Elizabeth  City,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  University 
Club  (3);  Bo.N-ing  (3.  4).  Manager  (4)  ■ 
Young  Democrats  Club  (8,  4) :  Y.M. 
C.A.    (3,    4). 


Thaddeus  C.  Parham 

Marietta,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Benjamin  Carl  Parker 
Albemarle.  N.  C. 
2  X 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


96 


Walter  Linton  Parsley 
Wilmington.  N.  C. 

<i>r  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Elizabeth  Woodley  Peery 

Kinston,  N.  C. 


William  Robert  Penman 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 
AS* 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Ann  Moon  Peyton 

Concord,  N.  C. 

X<2 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Glee  Club 
(3.  4);  University  Club;  Yackety 
Yack;  Pan-Hellenic  Council  (4).  Vice- 
President. 


Charles  A.  Speas  Phillips 

Southern  Pines,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(1.  2,  3);  Interdormitory  Council;  Y.M. 
C.A.    (1,    2,    3,    4).    Vice-President    (4). 


Georgia  Stith  Poole 

Mullins,  S.  C. 

A  An 


/,/ 


''/// 


David  Pearlman 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

T  E* 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Dailii  Tar 
Heel  (1):  Flying  Club  (2.  3.  4);  Swim- 
ming  (1,   2). 


William  Pettrway  Jones  Peete 

Warrenton,  N.  C. 

AKE         *BK         AEA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  DaUti  Tar 
Heel  (4);  Di  Senate  (2):  Ginighoul ; 
Interfraternitv  Council  (3.  4).  Secre- 
tary: Monogram  Club;  Golf  (3.  4): 
Yackety  Yack    (1,   2,   3.   4). 


Morton  Irving  Petuske 
Reidsville.  N.  C. 
*A 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Claude  Robert  Pfaff 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

A2  n 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree: 
ecutive  Committee  (1.  2); 
(1.  2,  3,   4). 


Mary  Alyce  Pollard 
Yazoo  City,  Miss. 

n  B* 

Ca 


T.  Harold  James  Pope 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory Council  (2.  3.  4):  Baseball  (1. 
2.  3.  4):  Boxing  (1);  Football  (1). 


97 


> 

e^ 

'■^dytH^'- 

Robert  William  Powers 

William  James  Price 

Atlanta,  Ga. 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 

Candidate    for    A.B.     Defiree; 
Republicans  Club   (2,  3.  4). 

Young 

Jeter  Conley  Pritchard 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Cla.ss  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) :  Phi  A.ssemblv 
(2.  3.  4) ;  Young  Republican's  Club 
(2.  3,  4),  President   (2.   3). 


William  St.  Clair  Pugh 

Smithfield,  N.  C. 

<J>B  K 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
MiKjaziiir  (.4);  Dailii  Tar  Htel  (1) 
Publications  Union  Board,  Secretary 
(4);  Sound  and  Fnnj  (2.  3,  4),  Vice- 
President  (4);  Tar  and  Feathers  (3, 
4);  Y.M.C.A.  (1,  2,  3,  4),  Secretary 
(2). 


Charles  Gildea  Pyle 
Bronxville,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Conunittoe  (3) ;  Interfraternitv 
Council  (3,  4);  University  Club  (3)  • 
Lacrosse  (2.  4)  ;  Cla.s.s  Dance  Commit- 
tee (2);  Class  Vocational  Committee 
(4). 


Aaron  S.  Raisin 

Charleston,  S.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Band  (3); 
Hillel  Cabinet  (3);  Swimming  (4): 
University  Symphony  Orchestra   (2,  3). 


Hannah  Pickett  Rancke 

Rockingham,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Sovnd  ami 
Fnrtj  (3) ;  Tar  and  Feathers  (3) ;  Y.W. 
C.A. 


William  Moorefield  Puckett 
Fuquay  Springs,  N.  C. 


Candidate    for    B.S. 
mitory  Council    (  u. 


Sara  Jane  Putman 
Beckley,  W.  Va. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  E 


Hugh  Pemberton  Quimby 
Columbia,  S.  C. 
A  <M2        A  i:  n 


Shirley  Theo  Raisler 
New  York,  N.  Y. 


James  Gamble  Ratterree 

Kings  Mountain,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory  Council  (4);  Wrestling  (1); 
Young   Democrats   Club    (3) ;    Y.M.C..\. 

(2). 


98 


William  Alec  Rawls,  Jr. 

Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.   Degree;    Haymak- 
ers   (1,   2,   3,   4);    Y.M.C.A.    (1.   2,   4). 


Peter  Raymond 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


William  Albert  Redfern 
Norfolk,  Va. 
Z  ^V 


Dave  S.  Reid 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Ben 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Tar  n 
Feathers  (4):  Tennis:  Yackety  Ya 
(1.   2,   3,   4),   Business  Manager. 


Henry  Wade  Reynolds 

Gibbstown,  N.  J. 

KS 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Class  Hon 
or  Council  (3) :  Interdorraitory  Coun- 
cil (4);  Monogram  Club;  Student  Leg 
islature  (4);  University  Dance 
Committee  (4);  Baseball  (1.  2.  3,  4). 
Co-Captain   (4). 


Clarence  Dixon  Richardson 
Black  Mountain,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Dail»  Tor 
Heel   (3). 


Jacqueline  Ray 
Oxford,  N.  C. 
A  An 


George  Alexander  Redfern 

Mt.  Croghan,  S.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Dickson  McLean  Regan 

Laurinburg,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Stephen  W.  Reiss 

Cedarhurst,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Dailij  Tar 
Heel  (1,  2,  3):  Di  Senate  (2);  Tar 
and  Featlters   (3). 


Wert  Baxter  Rhyne,  Jr. 

Cherryville,  N.  C. 

X  *         *  B  K 

Candidate    for    A.B.    Degree: 
Y.4CK   (1,  8,  4);   Y.M.C.A.   (1 


...         -'y    / 

"///    /  -r 


Stewart  Shaw  Richardson 

Macon,  Ga. 

•l-Ae 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Cla.ss  Offi- 
cer, Treasurer  (4) ;  Interfraternity 
Council,  Treasurer  (4) ;  Monogram 
Club;  Athletic  Council  (3):  University 
Club;  FootbaU  7l.  %  3,  4);  Tra(i  (1, 
2,   3,  4) ;    Fcaternit/  President    (i) . 


/ /  //  / 

I'-'/a'Cjfy 


99 


/ 


s 

.'-7 


John  Torrey  Riel 

LaGrange,  III. 

n  K  A         A  *  fi 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interfra- 
ternity  Council  (4) ;  Track  (4) :  Young 
Republicans  Club  (1.  2,  3,  4);  Y.M.C.A. 
(1.  2.  3.  4). 


Zennie  Lawrence  Riggs 
Maysville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interna- 
tional Relations  Club  (2,  3,  4) ;  Phi 
Assembly  (1);  Cross  Country  (3.  4): 
Track  (2,  3.  4);  Young  Democrats 
Club    (2);    Y.M.C.A.    (1,   2). 


Harry  Robertson 
Tampa,  Fla. 


Arthur  Hamilton  Rogers,  Jr. 

SocietyHill,  S.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Jordan  Thomas  Rogers 
Hartsville,  S.  C. 


Albert  A.  Rose 
Durham,  N.  C. 

T  E*         *B  K 


B  r 


Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (3);  Class  Honor 
Council  (4) ;  Class  Officer.  Secretary 
(3);  Student  Council  (4);  Di  Senate 
(1,  2);  Hillel  Cabinet  (2.  3.  4);  Inter- 
dormitors'  Council  (2);  Interfraternity 
Council  (3,  4);  Student  Council  <4): 
University  Club:  Boxing  (1,  2).  Co- 
Captain   (1). 


John  Alexander  Riely 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Tenr 


Charles  Austin  Robbins 

Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

2  N 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Phi  Assem- 
bly (1);  Basketball  (1.  2);  Yackety 
Yack    (1). 


David  Wilkinson  Robinson 
New  Bern,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Y.M.C.A. 
(3). 


James  O'Brien  Rogers 
ChapelHill,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree;   Delta  Sig- 
ma Pi,  Treasurer   (4). 


Max  H.  Rohn 

Baltimore,  Md. 

*  B  K         A  K  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;   Wrestling 
(1,   2,   3,   4);   Y.M.C.A.    (2,   3,   4). 


A.  Hewitt  Rose 
Smithfield,  N.  C. 
K  2 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


100 


Robert  Lloyd  Rose 

Smithfield.  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Vice-Pres- 
dent  Athletic  Association  (4) ;  Mono- 
gram Club;  University  Dance  Commit- 
tee (2,  3.  4);  BasketbaJl  (1.  2,  3.  4): 
Young  Democrats  Club  (2,  3,  4) ;  Y.M. 
C.A.    (2,   3,   4). 


Betty  B.  Rosenblum 
Daytona  Beach.  Fla. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Richard  Randall  Roundy 

Manopla,  Camaguey,  Cuba 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Helen  Louise  Royall 
Arlington,  Va. 
K  A 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Clarence  Lee  Ruffin 

Tarboro,  N.  C. 

*rA 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Band  (1, 
2,  3,  4);  Glee  Club  (3,  4).  Business 
Manager  (4), 


Barbara  Carr  San 

St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(4);  Playmakers  (8.  4);  Phi  Assembly 
(4);  Soujid  and  Ftiru   (3,  4). 


Raymond  M.  Rosenbloom 

Baltimore,  Md. 
ZBT 


Elizabeth  Ann  Rosenblum 

Scarsdale,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for   A.B.   Degree;    Y.W.C.A. 
(3,   4). 


John  Lawrence  Rowe 

Aberdeen,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


iktS 


Mark  D.  Rubin 

Asheville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Arnold  M.  Salzberg 
Paterson,  N.  J. 

T  E*         A*A 

A.B.     Degree; 


John  William  Sasser 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Z  -i! 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (2);  Flying  Club 
(2,  3);  Interdormitory  Council  (1): 
Monogram  Ciub;^  13  Club  (2^3 
Football  H);  ^Vrestling  (I,  2,^*); 

C.A.  (i/2,,'3.  .*.r.  f/ 


Y.M. 


101 


/ 


y. 


-/ 


\.C4-f.yt-(^-7. 


i 


Frank  Edward  Saylor 

Winstun-Salem.  N.  C. 
Candidate    for    A.I!.    Dokii 


Louis  Jay  Scheinman 

Kew  Gardens,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

*  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  BaHii  Tar 
Heel  (1.  2):  Monosram  Club;  Play- 
nial<er.s  (1);  SwimminK  (1,  2.  3.  X) : 
Hillel  Cabinet  (.3.  4) ;  Interdormitory 
Council    (4);    Religious  Council    (4). 


Joseph  Emmett  Sebrell 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

K  A 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  German 
Club  Executive  Committee  (4) ;  Inter- 
fraternity  Council  (3.  4);  13  Club; 
University  Club;  ITniversity  Dance 
Committee  (3.  4). 


William  Henry  Seeman 
Durham,  N.  C. 

Ben      <i>BK 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Bulls; 
Flying  Club  (2.  3) ;  Publications  Union 
Board  (2,  3):  Sound  and  Furij  (2.  3. 
4);  Tar  and  Feathers  (1.  2.  3).  Editor 


Monroe  Seligman 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
*  li  K 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degro 


Sylvia  Shaffer 

Spruce  Pine.  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Dc; 


Charles  Foster  Scarborough,  Jr. 
Mount  Gilead,  N.  C. 


ididate  for  A.B.  Deg 


WilliamB.  Schwartz,  Jr. 

Atlanta,  Ga. 

Z  B  T 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (1.  4):  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (1,  2.  3.  4).  Business  Manager 
(4):  Di  Senate  (1);  Glee  Club  (1): 
Hillel  Cabinet  (2) ;  Interfraternity 
Council  (4);  University  Club:  Y.M.C.A. 
(1.  2.   3,   4). 


Murray  Richard  Secher 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

n  A* 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Desree; 
(1) :  Wrestling  (1). 


David  Walter  Seifert 

Weldon,  N.  C. 

K  A         X  B  <!> 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Slieiks 
Secretary-Treasurer  (2):  Chi  Beta  Pbi 
Secretary   (3). 


Arthur  Frank  Settlemyer, 
Kannapolis,  N.  C. 

■i>:\r  .\ 

Candiilate    for    .\.B.    Decree; 

(:i.  4). 


Donald  Lloyd  Shanor 
Butler,  P.i. 

Candid.ite  fur  .\.B.   Degm 


James  Murdoch  Shaw,  Jr. 

Fort  Mill,  S.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (1.  4):  Interdormi- 
tory  Council  (3):  Y.M.C.A.  (1,  2.  3,  4). 


Rufus  Shelkoff 

Greenwood,  S.  C. 

<I>A 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:   Dailii  Tar 
Heel   (1,  2) ;    University  Club. 


jean  Larman  Sherwood 
Washington,  D.  C. 


WiUiam  Melvin  Shuford 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (3):  Golden  Fleece: 
Grail:  Interdomiitory  Council  (3): 
Student  Council  (3,  4) ;  University 
Club.  Secretary. 


Stephen  White  Siddle,  Jr. 
Reidsville,  N.  C. 


ididate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Sound  and 
■II   (4);  Y.M.C.A.  (1,  2). 


Dave  Silver 
Durham,  N.  C. 


[ames  Kimbrough  Sheek,  Jr. 
Mocksville,  N.  C. 
X  *         A  X  2 


Samuel  S.  Sherman 

Bessemer  City,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory  Council  (4);  Baseball  (1,  2. 
3.    4):   Young   Democrats   Club    (4). 


William  Thomas  Shore 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree:  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4):  Class  Officer 
(1);  Debate  Squad  (1,  2,  3.  4):  Di 
Senate   (1,  2). 


Joseph  Edward  Shytle 

Hendersonvilie,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
mitory  Council  (2.  3) ;  Monogram 
Club;  University  Club;  Basketball  (2. 
3,   4). 


Rachel  Catherine  Sides 

Mount  Airy,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3,  4);  Phi  Assembly  (4):  Sound  and 
Fury  (3.  4);  Student  Legislature  (3^  ■ 
Young  Republicans  Club  (3,  4) ;  Y.W. 
C.A.    (3,   4). 


Carl  Julien  Simon 

Augusta,  Ga. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


///       /^     /f/     / 


103 


/ 


^ 


Peter  John  Simone 

Elizabeth,  N.  J. 

AX2 

Candidate   for   B.S.    Degree;    Band    (1. 
2.  3,  4). 


Ernest  Frederick  Skillman 
Williamsburg,  Va. 


Charles  Henry  Sloan,  Jr. 
Belmont,  N.  C. 
II  K  A 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Waher  Richmond  Sloan 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Hubert  Hern  Smith 
Oriental,  N.  C. 


Rogers  Terrell  Smith 

Bowman,  S.  C. 

X* 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Phi  Assem- 
bly (3):  Sound  and  Furu  (4):  Y.M. 
C.A.   (1,  2,  3). 


Paul  Warren  Simpson 

Washington,  D.  C. 

2  X        *  M  A 

Candidate   for   B.S.    Degree;    Band    (1, 
2,   3,  4).  Vice-President    (8.   4). 


Bernard  I.  Slavin 

Kingston,  Pa. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Interdor- 
niitory  Council  (3);  Sound  and  Furu 
(3.    4). 


Harold  Thomas  Sloan 

Franklin,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Eileen  M.  Smith 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Julian  Lloyd  Smith 
Farmville,  N.  C. 


Winfield  Davis  Smith 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


104 


William  Thomas  Snypes 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(2,  3,  4);  Baseball  (1,  2);  Football 
(1);  Track   (1). 


Eleanor  S.  Soule 
Tacoma,  Wash. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (3);  Glee  Club  (3,  4),  Business 
Manager;  Vackety  Yack  (3,  4);  Y.W. 
C.A.    (3.    4). 


David  Thomas  Sparrow 

Aurora,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) ;  Class  Honor 
Council  (4) ;  Interdormitory  Council 
(3.  4) ;  University  Dance  Committee 
(4);  Tra<:k  (1);  Young  Democrats 
Club   (1.  2.  3,  4);   Y.M.C.A.    (1,  2). 


Reynold  Pollock  Spence 

LaGrange,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Fred  Stallings 
Reidsville,  N.C. 


Louis  Cornelius  Stephens,  Jr. 
Dunn,  N.C. 

*B  K      B  rs 

(.'andidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Di  Senate 
(2,  3);  Y,\CKETV  Yack  (2,  3.  4);  Young 
Democrats  Club  «,  2);  Y.M.C.A.  (1); 
Institute     of     .G(A'erj/ment     Committee 

/// 


Daniel  Creighton  Sossomon 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for    A.B.    Degree:     Debate 
Squad    (4). 


Harold  Ingram  Spainhour 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Charles  Frost  Speissegger 
Charleston  S.  C. 
K  A 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Alonzo  G.  Squires 

Kelly,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Richard  Oates  Steele 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

A*2         *  BK 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Y.M.C.A. 
(1). 


(2). 


1/  . 


J 


James  William  Stewart,  Jr. 

Winston-Salenn,  N.  C. 

AS  n 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Band  (1. 
2,  3,  4) ;  Interdormitory  Council  (2) : 
Yacketv  Yack  (D;  Y.M.C.A.  (1,  2,  4). 

////  / 

/ 


105 


'/" 


.-<? 


Joan  Lucille  Stoker 

Albemarle,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (3) :  Di  Senate  (3) ;  Playmakeis 
(3.   4);   Sound  and  Fury  {3,  4). 


William  Donald  Stone 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

n  K  A         X  B  * 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Deg:ree:  Monogram 
Club;   Swimming    (1,   2,   3.   4).  Captain 

(1). 


Margery  Ann  Strass 
Baltimore,  Md. 


Myrtle  Louise  Stumberg 

Tallassee,  Ala. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Y.W.C.A. 
(3,  4),  Trea.'iurer  (4);  Plavmakers  (3. 
4);    Sound  and  Fun/   (3,   4). 


Nanc)'  Barbara  Suiter 
Weldon,  N.  C. 

.\  A  n 

Candidal!.'  fur  A.B.   Dcsre 


Jesse  Francis  Swan 
Palm  Beach,  Fla. 
i)  X         •!>  Jl  A 


Alice  Frances  Stokes 

Newsom,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for   A.B.   Degree;    Y.W.C. 


Edwin  Charles  Straus 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Blaine  T.  Stroupe 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

AZ  TI 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Clasii  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (3) ;  Interdormitory 
Council    (4);   Dormitory  President    (4). 


Marjorie  Dixon  Su^ 
Greenville,  N.  C. 
A  An 
Candidate  for  A.B.  De, 


Wm.  O.  Sheppard  Sutherland,  Jr. 

Wilmington,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  .\.B.   Degree. 


Margaret  Catherine  Swanton 

Washington,  D.  C. 

A  *  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  V.W 
(3.  4);  Secretary  N.  C.  l'resl)yt( 
Student   Association    (4). 


106 


George  Webster  Swicegood 

Spencer,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


William  Jennings  Swink 

Miami,  Fla. 

X* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (1,  4) :  Debate 
Squad  (1.  2,  3.  4) ;  Interfraternity 
Council  (3,  4);  Phi  Assembly  (1,  2, 
3,  4):  y.M.C.A.  (1,  2,  3);  Student 
Legislature   (4). 


Isaac  M.  Taylor 

Morganton,  N.  C. 

K  2  A  *  A  A  E  A 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree :  Ampho- 
terothen  (1,  2,  4) ;  Bulls.  Secretary- 
Treasurer  (4);  Carolina  Political  Un- 
ion (1.  2).  Treasurer  (4):  Class  Honor 
Council  (3) :  Gimghoul  (4) :  Monogram 
Club:  Student  Legislature  (4);  Uni- 
versity Club;  Track  (2,  4);  Y.M.C.A. 
(1.    4). 


Robert  L.  Taylor 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Sound 
Finn   CI.  3). 


Cornelius  Dickinson  Thomas 

Shallotte,  N.  C. 

2  X         *  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Di  Senate 
(1.  2,  3);  International  Relations  Club 
(2):  Young  Democrats  Club  (2);  Y.M. 
C.A.  (1.  2.  3,  4). 


William  Holladay  Thornton 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 
2  A  E 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Susan  Swift 

Atmore,  Ala. 

K  KF 

Candidate   for   A.B. 
mitory  Council    (3). 


Degree;    Interdn 


Harrison  Matthews  Symmes,  Jr. 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 

Candidate    for    A.B.    Degree;    Ampho- 
terothen;    Track    (1);    Philosophy  Club 

(3,   4). 


Nelson  Ferebee  Taylor 

Oxford,  N.  C. 

Z  >I'         *  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Ampho- 
terothen;  Carolina  Political  Union  (1. 
2,  3,  4);  Golden  Fleece;  Gorgon's 
Head;  Grail;  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  Presi- 
dent (4);  Student  Legislature  (3): 
l^niversity  Club,   President. 


Smith  Philip  Theimann,  Jr. 

Peterborough,  N.  H. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Marie  Boots  Thompson 
Summit,  Miss. 

n  B* 

Candidate  for  A.Ii.  Degree. 


James  Thorp 
Fries,  Va. 
Z4' 


/ //       /  ^    ////        / 


O-'i 

i 


107 


c 


f. 

.^ 


John  Daniel  Thorp 
Fries,  Va. 


Z  * 


*  B  K  B  r  2 


Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Gimghoul; 
President  Interfratemitv  Council  (4) : 
13  Club;  Yackety  Yack  (1.  2,  3) :  Mem- 
ber Board  of  Directors.  Graham  Memo- 
rial: Freshman  Orientation  Committee; 
Welfare  Board. 


Frances  Scott  Tilley 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Robert  Scott  Tolmach 
Bethel,  Conn. 


George  Roy  Trammell 
Hamilton,  Ohio 

Ax:s 

Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Harry  Tucker,  Jr. 
Raleigh.  N.  C. 
A*A 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Sarah  Elizabeth  Umstead 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

xn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Softball 
(3,  4) ;  Basketball  (4) ;  Women's  Sen- 
ate:   Athletic   Council. 


Charles  Walter  Tillett,  III 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

2  AE         <1>BK 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Aniplio- 
terothen;  Carolina  Political  Union  (2, 
3.  4) ;  Class  Honor  Council  (8) ;  Gim- 
ghoul: Grail;  Golden  Fleece;  Mono- 
gram Club;  University  Club;  Wrestling 
(1.  2.  3);  Yackett  Yack  (1.  2.  3). 
Editor  (4);   Y.M.C.A.    (1,   2.  3,   4). 


Claude  Augustus  Tillman,  Jr. 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Robert  Dutilh  Torrey 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Arthur  Vaughn  Tucker 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Morton  Bruce  Ulman 

Kew  Gardens,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

T  E* 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Executive 
Committee  (3) ;  Tar  Heel  (1.  2.  3) ; 
Tar  and  Feathers  (3),  Business  Man- 
ager (4) ;   Tennis   (1). 


Robert  Manning  Vail 
Rutherford,  N.  J. 

i;  X 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


108 


Thomas  Carroll  Vail 
Pikeville,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Glee  Club 

(2.  3):  Orchestra   (1):  Y.M.C.A.  (2). 


Thomas  Clifton  Wagstaff 

Roxboro,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Evelyn  Walzer 

Jamaica,  New  York,  N.  Y. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Jane  Sparkman  Ward 

Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  Interna- 
tional Relations  Club  (3.  4);  Tar  and 
Feathers   (3):   Y.W.C.A.    (3.  41. 


Billy  Anne  Warren 

Sumter,  S.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  So^lncl  and 
Funj  (3.  4) :  Cheerio  Club. 


Larkin  Douglass  Watson,  III 
Barnesville,  Ga. 


Bennie  Vatz 

Kinston,  N.  C. 

Candidate     for     A.B.     Degree;     Hillel 
Cabinet   (3.  4) ;  Young  Democrats  Club 


Hubert  Cozart  Walston 
Wilson,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree:  German 
Club  Executive  (3.  4):  Monogram 
Club:   Sheiks   (2,  3.   4);   Boxing   (3,   4). 


Ira  Albert  Ward 

Chapel  Hill.  N.  C 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Huldah  Hester  Warren 

New  York  City,  N.  Y. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:  University 
Club:  Y.W.C.A.  (3,  4);  Pan-Hellenic 
Council    (4). 


Nancy  Waters 

Garden  City,  N.  Y. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  A.S.  Degree:  French 
Club  (3.  4) :  Y.W.C.A.  (3,  4) :  Young 
Democrats  Club    (3,   4). 


Robert  E.  Watson 

Murfreesboro,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


'■///      /  -^   '  /A      / 


109 


/ 


/.^ 

t^i 

Allan  Wright  Webb 

Homer  D.  Webb 

Harrison,  N.  Y. 

Cornelia,  Ga. 

*rA 

iV  \ 

Candidate   for   A.B.    Decree: 
Football    (1). 

13   Club: 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Def 
(4). 

Wilmer  Webb 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

Ben 


Luther  Addison  Weddington,  Jr. 

Concord,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Roger  Weil 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

<i>BK 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Decree:  Football 
(1);  Track  (1,  2,  3):  Wrestlins  (1. 
2,  3),  Captain   (3);   Monogram  Club. 


Charles  Cecil  Wells 
Washington,  D.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Robert  W.  Weis 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
*M  A 


Robert  Conrad  Werner 
Drexel  Hill,  Pa. 


Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree;    Lacrosse 
(1,   2,   3),   Co-Captain    (4). 


Hannah  Carter  Weskett 
New  Bern,  N.  C. 


Cameron  West 

Walstonburg,  N.  C. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree:   Di  Senate  Candidate   for   A.B.   Degree:    Interdor- 

(3,   X) :   Young  Democrats  Club   (3,  4) :  mitory     Council     (2) :     Cross     Country 

Y.W.C.A.   (3.   4).  (4). 


Douglas  Hailing  West 
Wadesboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:   Class  Offi- 
cer (4);   Interfraternity  Council   (4). 


Harriette  Randolph  West 

Kinston,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Robert  Marshall  West 

Salisbury,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Richard  Lindsey  Wharton 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

*  A  e      *  B  K 

Candidate  for  A.B.   Degree:    Golf    (1). 


Frank  Ridley  Whitaker 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

AK  E 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Poiitical  Union  (2,  3).  Chairman  (4); 
Class  Executive  Committee  (4) ;  Class 
Honor  Council  (4) ;  Student  Legisla- 
ture (3,  4),  Reading  Clerli  (3);  Uni- 
versity Club. 


Gayla  Christine  White 

Birmingham,  Ala. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree, 


Priscilla  Jean  White 

Davenport,  la. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Carolina 
Magazine  (4) ;  Glee  Club  (4) ;  Sound 
and  Fury    (4);    Y.W.C.A.    (4). 


Ara  Stacy  Wilburn 
Waynesville,  N.  C. 


Jack  Sherard  Wharton 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Band  (2. 
3,  4) ;  Class  Executive  Committee  (4) ; 
Glee  Club  (1,  2,  3.  4). 


Virginia  Lewis  Whipple 
Vienna,  Ga. 
XQ 

Candidate  for   A.B.   Degree; 

(3.    4). 


Walter  Jefferson  Whitaker 
Andrews,  N.  C. 


Gale  Marganette  White 

Roper,  N.  C 
Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree. 


Paul  Laster  Wicker,  Jr. 

Sanford,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Abraham  Arnold  Willar 
Worcester,  Mass. 
*A 


////     /-/-  >-•///      / 


.^  / 


Raymond  Frederick  Willeford 
Charleston,  S.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


John  Stuart  Williams 
Winnetka,  111. 

Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Elizabeth  Greenfield  Wilson 
Batavia,  N.  Y. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) ;  Glee  Club  (3. 
4);  Phi  Assemblv  (4);  Young  Repub- 
licans Club    (3,   4);    Y.W.C.A.   (3,   4). 


Margaret  Ellen  Wimberly 

Waynesboro,  Ga. 

AAn 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Buccaneer; 
Class  Executive  Committee  (3) ;  Sound 
and  Fury   (3);   Y.W.C.A.    (3,  4). 


Patrick  Henry  Winston 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Hon- 
or Council  (3) ;  Class  Vice-President 
(4);  Glee  Club  (3.  4),  Business  Man- 
ager (3);  Student  Legislature  (3); 
Town  Boys'  Association.  President  (3). 


Dean  Lester  Williams 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

Azn 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4);  Yackett  Yack 
(3). 


Thomas  Franklin  Williams 

Landis,  N.  C. 

*  B  K        A  X  i: 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Ampho- 
terothen  (3.  4);  Carolina  Political 
Union  (3.  4):  Di  Senate  (1,  2);  Glee 
Club   (1,  2);   Y.M.C.A.   (1.  2.  3). 


Stewart  Leigh  Wilson 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

2  N 

Candidate  for  .\.B.  Degree;  Dailii  Tar 
Heel  (2,  3);  Flying  Club  (4);  Fencing 
(2). 


Scott  Ray  Winders 

Salisbury,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Jean  Wire 

Denver,  Colo. 


Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Y.W.C.A. 
(3,  4) ;  Women's  Government  Associa- 
tion Senate  (4) ;  Women's  .\thletic 
Association    (4). 


112 


Adrian  Lee  Wise 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (3) ;  Monogram 
Club,  Treasurer  (4):  Cross  Countrv  (1. 
2,  3),  Captain   (4);  Track    (1,  3,  3,   4). 


Betty  Osborne  Withers 

Atlanta,  Ga. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(3);  Pan-Hellenic  Council  (4);  Secre- 
tary -  Treasurer.  Student  Government 
Committee  (3,  4). 


Elizabeth  Henderson  Wood 

Asheville,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Thornton  Sanders  Woodal 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

Ben 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree. 


Moffat  Patrick  Witherington 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Candidate   for    B.S.    Degree;    Interdor- 
niitory  Council  (3,  4) ;  University  Club. 


George  Stacy  Withers 
Davidson,  N.  C. 
AKH 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degret 


Fred  Lamar  Wood 

Gibsonville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Monog 
Club;  Cross  Countrv  (1,  2):  Ti 
(2,  3). 


Betty  Frost  Woodhouse 
London  Bridge,  Va. 

Candidate  for  A.B.  Degree;  Class  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  (4) ;  Class  Honor 
Council  (4);  Di  Senate  (3);  Young 
Democrats  Club  (3.  4) ;  Y.W.C.A.  (3. 
4) :  Co-Chairman  Student-Faculty  Re- 
lations  Committee. 


Marjorie  Young 
Wilmington,  Del. 

K  K  r 

Candidate  for  A.B.  De, 


/f/   :/  /    /If   / 


/ 


113 


-mMM&6mHm 


T. 


AST  the  half-way  mark,  rounding  the  turn — and  we  suddenly  realize  that  the  far-off  day  of  judgment 
isn't  so  distant  after  all.  With  the  novelty  of  our  first  year  worn  off,  and  the  "superiority  complex"  of 
our  second  fast  disappearing,  we  settle  down  to  the  serious  business  of  being  a  Junior — and  begin  to 
wonder  how  anyone  could  get  so  far  behind  in  so  short  a  time. 

First  big  event  for  all  of  us  was  the  day  we  met  our  new  dean,  and  found  ourselves  confronted 
with  the  problem  of  what  to  major  in.  We  can't  forget  how  we  stewed  and  brewed  over  it — and  finally 
ended  up  taking  just  what  we  started  out  to  take.  For  those  who  chose  Bingham  Hall  and  the  ways 
of  commerce,  the  year  held  the  threatening  prospect  of  Commerce  71.  For  those  who  buried  themselves 
in  Venable,  organic  loomed  high,  ready  to  pounce  on  would-be  idlers.  For  the  rest,  there  were  other 
"Jonah"  courses  (and  "crips"  too)  that  made  the  year  seem  different.  By-words  by  the  middle  of  the 
year  were  the  names  of  Mrs.  Sally  and  Mrs.  Stevens,  who  were  the  only  reasons  for  many  of  us  struggling 
to  keep  up  the  old  "C"  average. 

Somewhat  forgotten  in  the  rush  of  September  registration,  but  quite  apparent  ever  since  the  day  we 
went  to  our  first  classes  were  the  newest  additions  to  our  number — the  coeds.  And  it  didn't  take  us  long 
to  welcome  them  into  our  ranks:  witness  the  "new  coed"  ball.  Skeptical  Juniors  who  frowned  on  coedu- 
cation were  forced  to  step  into  the  background  as  they  saw  girls  toeing  the  mark  as  well  as  (and  better 
than)  the  boys. 

Came  spring  .  .  .  and  Junior-Seniors  .  .  .  and  spring  elections.  The  Class  of  '43  stepped  into  its  own. 


HONOR  COUNCIL 


Members  as  they  appear  at  left:  John 
Feuchtenberger;  William  Stanback;  Steve 
Peck ;  Dan  Thomason ;  Steve  Karres ;  Bert 
Bennett,  Chairman;  Mike  Mangum.  Ab- 
sent:   Isaac  Taylor. 

Committee  chairmen:  John  Hearn,  Ex- 
ecutive Committee;  Steve  Peck,  Dance 
Committee;  William  Lackey,  Entertain- 
ment Committee. 


>                   «— •— ^, 

JUNIOR  CLASS  OFFICERS 

DiLLARD  BuLLUCK,  V ice-Piesideiit :  George  Paine,  Secretary;  Sam  Gambill,  President; 
Bert  Bennett,  Student  Council  Representative :  Jack  Markham,  Treasurer 


115 


Clarence  L.  Adams 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Richard  Adler 
New  York,  N.  Y. 


Irving  Alperin 

Long  Branch,  N.  J. 
A*  A 

Sara  Elizabeth  Anderson 
Schofield  Barracks,  T.  H. 
XO 


Edward  John  Antolini 
Rutherford,  N.  J. 
2X 

Virginia  Clark  Archer 
New  Haven,  Conn. 


Joseph  Bedford  Arrington,  II 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Gorrell  Jiles  Askew 
Burlington,  N.  C. 


Tryntje  Auer 
Belmont,  Mass. 

A  An 

Tom  Benjamin  Baden 
Washington,  D.  C. 


David  Coleman  Bailey 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Joe  WiUard  Bales 
Thomasville,  N.  C. 

i;x 


Cyril  B.  Barlow 

Grosse  Point,  Mich, 
■tr  A 

Melver  Raymond  Barnes 
Lexington,  N.  C. 


George  Hackney  Adams 
Wilson,  N.  C. 

Frances  Huger  Allison 
Columbia,  S.  C. 
AAn 


Roger  W.  Anderson 
Westfield,  N.  J. 

Thomas  Eliot  Andrews 

Newton  Centre,  Mass. 
X^I' 


Anne  Irvin  Archer 
Phoenix,  Ariz. 

David  Michael  Arner 
Wilson,  N.  C. 

T  E  *         *  M  A 


Ludwig  Ash,  Jr. 
Statesville,  N.  C. 

Don  Bruce  Atran 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
<I>A 


Samuel  Harold  Austell 
Earl,  N.  C. 


Wesley  Marvin  Bagby 
Elk  Park,  N.  C. 


Bruce  Sullivan  Bales 
Tapoco,  N.  C. 
A#n 

David  A.  Barksdale 
Whitevillc,  N.  C. 


Henry  Gibson  Barnard,  Jr. 
Chattanooga,  Tenn. 
A* 

Sirena  Faustina  Barnes 
Lucama,  N.  C. 


116 


William  Faison  Barnes 
Pinetnps,  N.  C. 

Charles  Clifford  Barringer 
Conover,  N.  C. 


Mary  Wier  Beakley 
Asheville,  N.  C. 
AAH 

Clyde  Ritchie  Bell 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Richard  Samuel  Bell 
Burlington,  N.  C. 
K  A 

Truett  V.  Bennett 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Harold  Jay  Berk 
Red  Bank,  N.  J. 

Harry  Nathan  Bernstein 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Charles  Collins  Beyer,  II 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 

Eugenia  Bisset 
Harrodsburg,  Ky. 
A  A  n 


Frederick  Lionel  Bloch 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

H.  Topper  Blumberg 

New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
Z  B  T 


Mary  Wynne  Bohannon 
Asheville,  N.  C. 
A  An 

Patricia  Anne  Booth 
Harf^oi/Va 


Edward  Martin  Barrier 
Concord,  N.  C. 


Edith  Eppes  Bass 
Bradenton,  Fla. 


Charles  Columbus  Bean 
Rocky  Mi>unt,  N.  C. 

•s>rA 

Holley  Mack  Bell 
Windsor,  N.  C. 
K  A 


Bert  Lester  Bennett 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 
K2 

Elaine  Lucille  Berg 
Grand  Forks,  N.  D. 


S.  Lawrence  Berluti 
Waterbury,  Conn. 

Richard  E.  Bernstein 
Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


Doris  Bierman 
Haworth,  N.  J. 

Harold  Wharton  Black,  Jr 
Bluefield.  W.  Va. 


Richard  S.  Bloch 

Shaker  Heights,  Ohio 
Z  B  T 

Glenn  Edwards  Bogasse 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

UK  A 


Betty  Booker 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

n  B* 

Paul  Leon  Bornet 

hifflgton,  D.  C.  ./ 


tcfey 


117 


/I 

// 

. 

'€C€^-7^^^^" 

Allen  Borsky  /  f 

Lloyd  Cleveland  Bost 

Hillside,  N'.i.    •'' 

Shelby,  N.  C. 

Florence  Bostick 

John  Robert  Bourne 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

*r  A 

Frank  Lanier  Branson 

Esther  Braun 

Aiken,  S.  C. 
A  ^I' 

Edgemere,  N.  Y. 

Ruthie  Brewster 

Charles  N.  Briley 

Wolfeboro,  N.  H. 

Greenville,  N.  C. 

Barbara  Davis  Brinkman 

Lawrence  Emerson  Britt 

Jasper,  Ga. 

Clinton,  N.  C. 

xn 

K^I' 

Marian  Stanfond  Brittingham 

Alfred  Carter  Broad 

Fort  Bragg,  N.  C. 

Mountain  Lakes,  N.  J. 

xn 

Alex  Brody 

Dorothy  Brooks 

Sumter,  S.  C. 

Warsaw,  N.  C. 

Frances  Naroma  Brooks 

John  Roger  Brooks,  Jr. 

Tallahassee,  Fla. 

Kinston,  N.  C. 

2X 

Chauncey  B.  Broome 

Helen  Bell  Broughton 

Peachland,  N.  C. 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Lattie  Hamer  Brown,  Jr. 

Roy  Brown 

Norfolk,  Va. 

Marion,  N.  C. 

Thomas  Preston  Brown 

William  Thomas  Brown 

Wilmington,  N.  C. 

Hamlet,  N.  C. 

A  E  A 

Margaret  Allen  Buchanan 

Miriam  Elizabeth  Buice 

Bluefield,  W.  Va. 

Chapel  Hill,  N.C. 

Mary  Peirce  Bruns 

Daniel  Davis  Bruton,  Jr. 

Chevy  Chase,  Md. 

Chadbourn,  N.  C. 

A  An 

Hoyle  Sanders  Bruton 

Edward  Kedar  Bryan 

Thomasville,  N.  C. 

Shanghai,  China 

Z<if 

118 


DiUard  Bulluck 

Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

Cale  Burgess 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Louis  Dow  Burkhead 
Asheboro,  N.  C. 

Mary  Ellen  Burton 
Chattanooga,  Tenn. 

xn 


Guy  Lee  Byerly,  Jr. 
Mount  Airy,  N.  C. 

Daniel  Wallace  Campbell 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Mary  Gwynne  Campbell 
Norfolk,  Va. 


Graham  Maxwell  Carlton 
Salisbury,  N.  C. 
AKE 


Ralph  Allen  Carmichael 
Laurinburg,  N.  C. 

David  Russ  Carroll 
Pensacola,  Fla. 

:s  N 


Catherine  Bryan  Chappell 
Durham,  N.  C. 

Marcelle  Clark 
High  Point,  N.  C. 


Oliver  Clinton  Clark 
Snow  Camp,  N.  C. 


Philip  Hatfield  Clegg 
Dayton,  Ohio 

////         f  J- 


Littleton  Jay  Bunch 
Statesville,  N.  C. 

Lillian  Burgin 
Marion,  N.  C. 


Ralph  E.  Burnette 

Richmond,  Va. 

Dell  Bush 

Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 


Robert  Bryant  Byrd 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Lindsey  D.  Campbell 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Frank  Winf  red  Capel 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Willard  J.  Carmel,  Jr. 
Brooklyn,  N.  \ . 


Anne  Brewer  Carpenter 
Booneville,  Miss. 


Hayden  Carruth 
Pleasantville,  N.  Y. 


Arthur  Watts  Clark 
Bellevue,  Wash. 

Mary  Louise  Clark 
Wells,  Mich. 
KA 


David  Arvine  Clarke 
Doylestown,  Pa. 


Emma  Elaine  Clemens 

^j^nnaJi,  Ga. 
//  /  ->./ 


119 


./7 


/     i 

,' 

■U-M.  c-c^%i^^^' 

.■f 
Alton  Moese  Clodfejte/ 

Mary-Martha  Cobb 

ThomasviUe,  N..£.'    / 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Jerome  Ernest  Cohencious 

Howard  Cohn 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Rochester,  N.  Y. 

ZB  T 

Floyd  E.  Cohoon 

Edward  Barrett  Colby 

Columbia,  N.  C. 

Arura,  Curacao 

William  Douglas  Conrad 

Joseph  Corcoran,  Jr. 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

New  London,  Conn. 

A  X  A 

Leo  M.  Cox 

Philip  Ross  Craver 

AsheviUe,  N.  C. 

Lexington,  N.  C. 

Bettie  Meade  Creighton 

Mebane  F.  Croom 

Fort  Bragg,  N.  C. 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

r*B 

Fred  L.  Crowson 

Sell  Lunsford  Culp,  Jr. 

Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

Charlotte,  N.  C 

Beatrice  Violet  Cummings 

Kenneth  Currier 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Pacific  Grove,  Calif. 
2  \ 

Larry  L.  Dale 

Rachel  Dalton 

Hornell,  N.  Y. 

Hartsville,  Tenn. 

Wilton  Evans  Damon 

William  Forrest  Daniels 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Statesville,  N.  C. 

Martha  Ann  Davenport 

Joe  Carpenter  Davis 

Greenville.  N,  C. 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

XA* 

X  ^I- 

Joe  Vance  Davis 

John  Franklin  Davis 

WaynesviUe,  N.  C. 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Bon 

Junius  Weeks  Davis,  Jr. 

Louise  Hargrove  Davis 

Edenton,  N.  C. 

Vienna,  Ga. 

AKE 

May  Davis 

Thomas  Searle  Deering,  Jr. 

I.ouisburg,  N.  C. 

Philadelphia,  Pa. 

120 


Thad  James  Dehart 

Jean  Merritt  de  Noyelles 

Bryson  City,  N.  C. 

Greenpart,  N.  Y. 

Beecher  Tate  Denton,  Jr. 

Mary  Aurelia  Dick 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Morristown,  Tenn. 

Thomas  Green  Dill 

Francis  Rogers  Dixson 

New  Bern,  N.  C. 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

AKE 

K2 

Charles  Joseph  Donovan 

Hugh  Dortch,  Jr. 

Richmond  Hill,  N.  Y. 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

X* 

Z*        AEA 

Roberta  Latimer  Dortch 

Grady  Eugene  Dover 

Scott,  Ark. 

Shelby,  N.  C. 

11  B* 

Gerald  David  Drucker 

Robert  Franklin  Druitt 

Astoria,  N.  Y. 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

ATfi 

Jackson  Elliot  Dube 

Hugh  Hammond  Dubose 

Dallas,  Tex. 

Columbia,  S.  C. 

n  A# 

2AE 

Sue  Dunlap 

Francis  Edward  Dunn 

Bristol,  Va. 

Pompton  Plains,  N.  J. 

Julia  Elizabeth  Eagan 

Joseph  Barnelle  Earnhardt 

Salisbury,  N.  C. 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Charles  Metivier  Easter 

Dan  V.  Ebbs 

Baltimore,  Md. 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

Elton  Edwards 

Mary  Louise  Edwards 

Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Morehead,  Ky. 

Helen  Bernice  Eisenkoff 

Rubin  Vance  Eller 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Salisbury,  N.  C. 

Tom  F.  Ellis 

Ruth  Denis  Ellis 

Wilmington,  Del. 

New  Orleans,  La. 

Z^ 

nB* 

Williaiji  Edward  Elmore,  Jr. 
LurrtberJiOn,  N.  C. 
/'.■*j/a              -y         J 

Frances  Aida  Epps 
Cilai^  Hill,  N.  C4 

/       ^ 

I'/i^^k- 

121 


Martha  Ruth  Essj^'/* 
Camden,  N.,J^ 


Kenneth  Norman  Evensen 
FJoral  Park,  N.  Y. 


Robert  C.  Farris 
Swoyerville,  Pa. 

Ehzabeth  Holman  Felder 
Charleston,  S.  C. 


John  Andrew  Feuchtenberger 
BJuefield,  W.  Va. 

Arthur  A.  Fischer 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


Virginia  Fitchett 
Dunn,  N.  C. 

xn 

John  Wood  Foreman 
Elizabeth  City,  N.  C. 


William  L.  Foster 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Ruf  us  Wade  Fox,  Jr. 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Elizabeth  Jackson  Frazier 
Wake  Forest,  N.  C. 

Clyde  Walker  Freel 
Andrews,  N.  C. 


Jennie  Clark  French 
Bluefield,  W.  Va. 

n  B* 

Theodore  R.  Frucht 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Bett)'  Emerson  Etz 
San  Antonio,  Tex. 


Harris  W.  Everett 
Jacksonville,  Fla. 


Janice  Helene  Feitelberg 
ForestHills,  N.  Y. 


C.  Felix  Harvey 

Kinston,  N.  C. 


Robert  Milton  Finehout 
Plainfield,  N.  J. 
X* 

David  Allen  Fiske 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Edith  Jackson  Fore 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Mary  Marjorie  Foster 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Carol  Willis  Fox 
Jackson,  Miss. 

xn 

Robert  Perry  Frankel 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 


Abraham  Freedman 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Richard  Walter  Freeman 
Moline,  111. 
2X 


Margaret  Adele  Froggatt 
East  Orange,  N.  J. 

Walter  Eugene  Furr 
Franklin,  N.  C. 


122 


Peggy  Robbins  Gaines 

Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Ira  Samuel  Gambill,  Jr. 
Elkin,  N.  C. 


Anice  Lynette  Garmany 
Chattanooga,  Tenn. 
AAn 

Henry  M.  Garwes 

Savannah,  Ga. 

S  AE 


Claude  S.  George 
Reidsville,  N.  C. 

Lemuel  H.  Gibbons 
Hamlet,  N.  C. 
AKE 


Robert  Moller  Gilbreth 
Bloomfield,  N.  J. 

Haskell  Bertrand  Gleicher 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
*A 


Morton  H.  Gobby 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
HA* 

George  H.  Gooch 
Henderson,  N.  C. 


Catherine  Anne  Goodwin 
Augusta.  Ga. 

Sara  Estelle  Gordon 
Walton,  Ky. 
A  A  II 


Harrell  Myers  Graham 
Columbia,  S.  C. 
2  A  E 

Samuel  Page  Graham 
,  Cleveland,  N.  C.    ,, 

/  /^ 


Ben  Thomas  Galloway 

Moultrie,  Ga. 

William  G.  Gambill 
Elkin,  N.  C. 


Marcellus  C.  Garner 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Charles  M.  Gaylord 
Pantego,  N.  C. 


Lou  Alice  E.  Georges 
Claremont,  N.  C. 

Eugene  Thomas  Gilbert 
Augusta,  Ga. 
KA 


Jack  William  Ginsberg 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Robert  Strudwick  Glenn 
Norfolk,  Va. 
2  AE 


Jerome  Charles  Goldfarb 
Baldwin,  N.  Y. 
$A 

Ray  Holt  Goodrich,  Jr. 

Woodbridge,  Conn. 


Oscar  Lee  Gordon 
Charleston,  S.  C. 

Jean  E.  Grady 

Long  Beach,  Calif. 


Jessica  Vann  Graham 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Blanche  Tallulah  Grantham 
/  '  .Liv^'bak,  Fla.      J 
/  j'/'A^n  O 


/. 


J 


123 


/•'/ 


/  / 


Lloyd  Lee  Gravely,  Jj:  / 
Rocky  Mount,  >ji'C.    •" 

Dorothy  Brewster  Gray 

Irvington,  N.  J. 

Phillip  Arden  Greene 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Vinita  Ezell  Greer 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Quentin  Gregory,  Jr. 
Halifax,  N.  C. 
K  A 

Thomas  S.  Greyard,  Jr. 
McDonald,  N.  C. 
AX  A 

Jeremiah  Devel  Griesemer 
Washington,  D.  C. 
A  TO 

Connie  Grigsby 
Arlington,  Va. 
HB* 

Martha  Guy 
Newland,  N.  C. 

Clare  Louise  Haight 
Tenatly,  N.  J. 

Benjamin  Mortimer  Hall,  III 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 
K2 

Audrey  Jean  Hamblen 
Washington,  D.  C. 
HB* 

Dan  K.  Hamilton 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Burton  Blaine  Hampton,  Jr. 
Clemmons,  N.  C. 

Mary  Celeste  Hamrick 
Shelby,  N.  C. 

Milton  Bernard  Harris 
Providence,  R.  I. 

Vernon  Judson  Harward,  Jr. 
Durham,  N.  C. 

*  Ae 

Sue  Somerville  Harwood 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Hurst  B.  Hatch 
Raleigh.  N.  C. 

James  Hubert  Hawkins 
Marion,  N.  C. 

Amy  Victoria  Heard 
San  Antonio,  Tex. 

Hildred  Frances  Heaton 
Andrews,  N.  C. 

Mary  Margaret  Hemphill 
Marion,  N.  C. 

Kenneth  Lane  Henderson 
Greenville,  N.  C. 

J.  Garland  Hendrix 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Moyer  Pinkston  Hendrix 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Regina  Catherine  Henley 
Portsmouth,  Va. 

Joseph  Baylor  Henninger 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

124 


Patricia  Harcourt  Henritzy 
Morganton,  N.  C. 
ATA 

Jean  C.  Herrmann 

New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 


Robert  Foster  Hewett,  Jr. 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Robert  L.  Heymann 
Highland  Park,  111. 


Cecil  James  Hill 
Arden,  N.  C. 

Gene  Hitchcock 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Laura  Trigg  Hodges 
Shreveport,  La. 

xn 

Robert  Lee  Hoke 
Williamsburg,  Va. 
<!•  AG 


Townsend  Stanley  Holland,  Jr. 

Chevy  Chase,  Md. 
2  X 

Elmer  P.  Hollingshead,  Jr. 
Scarsdale,  N.  Y. 
AKE 


Victor  Boyce  Hollowell 
Elizabeth  City,  N.  C. 

Mary  Cleland  Holmes 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
n  B* 


Jinnette  Garland  Hood 
Churchland,  Va. 
n  B* 


Joseph  Bascom  Henson,  Jr. 
Snow  Hill,  N.  C. 


E.  Vernon  Heughan,  Jr. 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Martha  Hildegard  Heygel 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Grace  V.  N.  Hicks 
Manhasset,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 
A  An 


George  Franklin  Hill,  Jr. 
Elizabeth  City,  N.  C. 

Gwendolyn  Kendrick  Hobbs 
Cherryville,  N.  C. 


Louis  Edward  Hodges,  Jr. 
Tarboro,  N.  C. 

Otis  Lewis  Holland 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


William  Laughlin  Holliday 
Siler  City,  N.  C. 

L  C.  Holloway,  Jr. 
Statesville,  N.  C. 


James  Eugene  Holmes,  Jr. 
Leaksville,  N.  C. 

Ben 

Lawrence  Holzman 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


William  Harris  Hooks 
Whiteville,  N.  C. 


Charle^Cl^fton  Hopkins  Majr^a  lane  Hortor^ 

C^pelMin,  N.  C.  /f  ..  ■   Bracf^nton,  Fla.   A' 


/     y 


125 


/? 

Leland  Paschal  Howard  Leon  Earl  Howard 

Sanford,  N.  C!.  Parkersburg,  N.  C 


Nancy  Carolyn  Howard 
Mount  Hope,  W.  Va. 


Betsy  Ross  Howe 
Atlantic  Beach,  Fla. 

Alice  Brett  Howell 

Thomasville,  N.  C. 


Henry  Blount  Hunter,  Jr. 
Norfolk,  Va. 

Samuel  Huntington  Hobbs,  III 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
AKE 


James  Laurence  Hutton,  Jr. 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

*rA 

Robert  Bruce  Jackson 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. 


Lloyd  Marshall  lard 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Nancy  Ingram Jefferis 
West  Chester,  Pa. 


Hugh  Powell  Jenkins,  Jr. 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Randolph  A.  Jennings 
Glen  Ferris,  W.  Va. 

xn 


Annie  Laurie  Johnson 
Smithfield,  N.  C. 
A  An 

George  Browne  Johnston 

Kelford,  N.  C. 
KA 


Thomas  Allen  Howard 
Mooresville,  N.  C. 


Charles  Alfred  Howe 
Utica,  N.  Y. 
A<I>A 

Harold  John  Huber 
South  Orange,  N.  J. 


James  Boyce  Hunter 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

K :: 

Lawrence  Edgar  Hutchins 
Yadkinville,  N.  C. 


Howard  Imbrey 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
HA* 

Claire  Wynifred  Jarett 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


Jack  R.  Jarvis,  Jr. 
Hertford,  N.  C. 

Charles  Walker  Jenkins 
Milledgeville,  Ga. 

*Ae 


Janet  Riley  Jenkins 

Brevard,  N.  C. 


Rupert  Watson  Jernigan,  Jr. 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Artis  Dwight  Johnson 
Fountain,  N.  C. 

James  Henry  Johnson 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 


126 


James  Leslie  Johnson 
Buies  Creek,  N.  C. 

John  Edward  Johnston 
Bradford,  Pa. 

John  Nathan  Johnson,  |r. 
Benson,  N.  C. 

William  Wright  Johnson 
Bluefield,  W.  Va. 

Harrell  Cheek  Joines 
Sparta,  N.  C. 

George  Earl  Jolley 
Caroleen,  N.  C. 

John  Furman  Jones,  Jr. 
High  Point,  N.  C. 

Myra  Rebecca  Jones 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Richard  lemson  Jones,  Jr. 
Henderson,  N.  C. 

Zebulon  Vance  Jones,  Jr. 
Norfolk,  Va. 

Frederick  Blount  Joyner 
Kinston,  N.  C. 

Nelson  B.  Jump 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Anna  Roselyn  Kammer 
Bluerteld,  W.  Va. 

Arnold  Jules  Kantrowitz 
West  Hartford,  Conn. 

Louis  Kaplan 
Newark,  N.  J. 

Steve  Matthew  Karres 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Paul  Maurice  Kattenbure 
Brussels,  Belgium 

Edward  Mollis  Keator 
San  Antonio,  Tex. 

James  Bonner  Kelly 
Washington,  N.  C. 

Jean  Forbes  Kelly 
Cameron,  N.  C. 

John  Thomas  Kendrick 
Leaksville,  N.  C. 

Rowland  Bellamy  Kennedy 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

nKA 

Bruce  Kessler 
Leaksville,  N.  C. 

Ernest  Gaines  Kimbrough 
Ansonville,  N.  C. 

Herbert  Lyman  Kimmel 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Barbara  King 
HoUis,  N.  Y. 

Betty  King 

Tampa,'  Fla.            a 

/          J- 

Charles  Felder  King,  Jr. 
.    Paye{<eville,N.  Cr/^ 
/  /  //                 / 

y/    /  ■ 

127 


i 

y^ 

/ 

Imogene  King       y''  / 

Miles  Smith  King 

Corinth,  Miss. 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

HB* 

*K2 

Roger  Wilkinson  King 

Ardis  Elaine  Kipp 

Meriden,  Conn. 

Miami  Beach,  Fla. 

X  <!>         A  *  A 

II  B  >!• 

Robert  Gilliam  Kittrell,  J 

r.                  Virginia  Lee  Klages 

Henderson,  N.  C. 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Z-^ 

xn 

Job  Hansell  Koon 

Kenneth  Louis  Koslow 

Asheville.  N.  C. 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Vernon  H.  Lackey 

William  Ray  Lackey 

Hickory,  N.  C. 

Statesville,  N.  C. 

<J>K2 

Mary  Ladson 

Edward  Robert  Lamson 

Moultrie,  Ga. 

Hopewell,  N.  J. 

A  XZ 

Charles  Landy 

Franklin  Davenport  Laurens 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

New  Orleans,  La. 

A^I' 

Charles  Watson  Lawhon 

George  Bernard  Leder 

Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

Catherine  Hewlett  Lee 

Gamewell  Alexander  Lemmon 

Roanoke,  Va. 

Sumter,  S.  C. 

*AH 

Frances  Lee  Lemmond 

Joseph  Alexander  Leslie,  III 

Sanford,  N.  C. 

Norfolk,  Va. 

K2: 

Lee  Richard  Levine 

Leonard  Mark  Levine 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

*.\ 

Deborah  Anne  Lewis 

Janie  Belle  Lewis 

Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

Savannah,  Ga. 

A  Ml 

Mary  Elizabeth  Lewis 

Nettie  Frances  Lewis 

Augusta,  Ga. 

Tomahawk,  N.  C. 

Phillip  Alston  Lewis 

Robert  Henry  Lewis 

Jackson,  N.  C. 

Mount  Olive,  N.  C. 

AT.Q 

128 


William  Graydon  Liles 
Farmville,  N.  C. 

James  Calvin  Lindsay 
Lumberton,  N.  C. 


Isaac  Thomas  Littleton 
Hartsville,  Tenn. 

Alice  Lyon  Logan 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

n  B* 


William  Maxwell  Lowenstein 
Detroit,  Mich. 

Ruth  Luster 

Springfield,  Mo. 

n  B* 


Sarah  Beatty  Mandel 
New  York,  N.  Y. 


Jacob  Margolis 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Thomas  Jarvis  Markham 
Elizabeth  City,  N.  C. 

Lois  Ann  Markwardt 
Joplin,  Mo. 


Henry  Buru'ell  Marrow,  Jr. 
Smithfield,  N.  C. 


Agnes  Wharton  Martin 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

A  An 


Mary  Elizabeth  Masengill 
Johnson  City,  Tenn. 

xn 

Richard-powning  Maynor 
Win^toiv'Salem,  N.  C, 

//'V      /  / 


Harriet  J.  Lindner 
Western  Springs,  111. 

n  B* 

Anne  Henderson  Lindsey 
Chattanooga,  Tenn. 


Harold  William  Lloyd 
Plainfield,  N.  J. 
X^I' 

Forrest  Battle  Long 
Newton,  N.  C. 
A  Tfi 


Seymour  A.  Lubman 
Kearny,  N.  J. 

Charles  Donald  Mahoney 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


Carlyle  Thomas  Mangum,  fr. 
Winstnn-Salemn,  N.  C. 

Jack  Edward  Markham 
Durham,  N.  C. 

Ben 


Dan  Womble  Marks 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Rubye  Revelle  Marlowe 
Walstonburg,  N.  C. 


Alfred  Marshall 
Beaver  Falls,  Pa. 


Dan  S.  Martin 
Lakeland,  Fla. 


Frances  Eileen  Mashburn 
Ashburn,  Ga. 

Julia  Spotts  Mebane 
on,  N.  C.      ■/ 


'7/     f 


129 


4 

William  C.  Mehaffey,  Jr. 

Arlington,  Va. 

* 

William  D.  Mendenhall 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Will  H.  Merrill 
Dothan,  Ala. 

Sylvan  Meyer 
Atlanta,  Ga. 
TE* 

Elaine  Michael 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

Carol  Jean  Mickle 
Pfafftown,  N.  C. 

Clarence  Mason  Miller,  Jr. 
Wallace,  N.  C. 

Patricia  Ann  Miller 
Ft.  Benning,  Ga. 

Marvin  O'Neill  Mitchell 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Jane  Anne  Montgomery 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Langdon  Montgomery 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Anne  Graeme  Moore 
Lewisburg,  W.  Va. 

Arthur  Kirby  Moore,  Jr. 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Charles  Burwell  Moore 
Forest  City,  N.  C. 

Lucius  Lee  Ardrey  Moore,  Jr. 
Clinton,  N.  C. 
XB* 

Frank  Faison  Mordecai 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 
Z-i' 

Alice  Elizabeth  Morgan 
Abingdon,  Va. 

Edward  Hullet  Motley 
Bronxville,  N.C. 
4>rA 

Hugh  MacRae  Morton 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 
AKE 

Bernard  Moser 

Newark,  N.  J. 

Morris  Moskow 

Whiteville,  N.  C. 

Willye  Moss 
Norfolk,  Va. 
XO 

Frieda  Esther  Mowshowitz 
Hartford,  Conn. 

Rose  Mowshowitz 
Hartford,  Conn. 

Lydia  Anne  Munroe 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

xn 

Marjorie  Ellen  Murchison 

Provincetown,  Mass. 

xr> 

Delia  Speight  Murdoch 
Salisbury,  N.  C. 

xn 

Charles  Patrick  Murray,  Jr. 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 

130 


Robert  Glenn  MacLeod 
Lumberton,  N.  C. 

George  Ennis  McCachren 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Andrew  Francis  McCall 
Laurinburg,  N.  C. 

Mary  Jane  McCaskill 
Little  Rock,  Ark. 

William  Jefferson  McClure 
Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Edwin  Stuart  McCoach,  Jr. 
Rosemount,  Pa. 

SN 

Angeline  McCreery 
Hinton,  W.  Va. 

Bradford  Forbes  McCuen 
Forest  Hills,  N.  Y. 

<i>rA 

Matt  Compton  McDade 
Hillsboro,  N.  C. 

Jane  McDonough 
Fort  Benning,  Ga. 
HB* 

Robert  Lee  McGinn,  Jr. 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Betty  Ann  McHaney 
Little  Rock,  Ark. 

nB* 

Stuart  Betts  Mclver 
Sanford,  N.  C. 

Hobart  Loring  McKeever 
Birmingham,  Ala. 
XB* 

Bennett  Kirkman  McKinnon 
Maxton,  N.  C. 

Oliver  Perry  McKinnon 
Maxton,  N.  C. 

Robert  Johnstone  McLean 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Charles  Monroe  McMillan 
Laurinburg,  N.  C 

Mark  Lewis  Naiman 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

William  Crooks  Nail 
Highlands,  N.  C. 

Jesse  Nalle,  III 
Whitemarsh,  Pa. 
A^ 

Sim  A.  Nathan,  Jr. 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Charles  Mitchell  Neaves 
Elkin,  N.  C. 
K2 

Bill  Stewart  Neel 
Mooresville,  N.  C. 

Lawrence  Ervin  Neese 
Burlington,  N.  C. 
K2 

Jane  Elizabeth  Newell 
Henderson,  N.  C. 

Henry  C^t  Newsome,  Jr. 
Win^ton^^alem,  N.  C, 

///      /a 

/         y 

Sara  Amanda  Newton 
Sh?i'bv..iN.  C.           . / 

,''  ''  J*            jy 
'  ///           /    . 

131 


/] 

/  / 

/ 

Donnell  Gilliarfi  Nicholson 

James  Lawrence  Norris 

Tarboro,  N.  C. 

Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

^V  \ 

Ernest  Pierce  Norwood 

Ruth  Lillian  Nottingham 

Greenwood,  S.  C. 

Norfolk,  Va. 

A  An 

Fagg  Bernard  Nowlan 

Taylor  O' Bryan 

Pleasant  Garden,  N.  C. 

Beaufort,  N.  C. 

X-l' 

Henry  Frederick  Oehler 

Geraldine  Dyer  O'Neal 

Sanford,  N.  C. 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Henry  Plant  Osborne  Jr. 

William  Dillon  O'Shea 

Jacksonville,  Fla. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

2  AE 

Robert  Melvin  Ousley 

Franklin  Love  Overcarsh 

North  CiUiton,  Ohio 

Charlotte.  N.  C. 

X  H  4.         A  '1-  A 

Raymond  William  Owens,  Jr. 

Robert  Newton  Page,  III 

Edgewood,  Pa. 

Aberdeen,  N.  C. 

*r  A 

K  A 

George  Henry  Paine 

Herbert  William  Park 

Marion,  Pa. 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Phyllis  Anne  Parker 

James  Oswald  Parks 

Smithfield,  N.  C. 

Lexington,  N.  C. 

Emily  Claire  Patrick 

Benjamin  Nathan  Patterson 

Greenville,  N.  C. 

Hendersonville,  N.  C 

George  Lee  Peabody 

Harold  Monroe  Peacock 

Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Benson,  N.  C. 

A'l' 

Sigmund  S.  Pearl 

William  Wallace  Pearson 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Sumner,  Miss. 

<!>  AG 

James  Stevenson  Peck 

John  Louis  Pecora 

Wilmington,  N.  C. 

Bowden,  N.  C. 

2  AE 

n  K  A 

Barbara  Peele 

George  Dial  Penick 

Springfield,  Mass. 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Z  "V         A  E  A 

132 


Glenn  Richard  Penny 
Durham,  N.  C. 
X* 

Charles  D.  Penuel 
Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Charles  Lee  Perks 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Herbert  Abraham  Perlberg 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Betty  Perry 

Towson,  Md. 
X  A* 

James  Britt  Petty 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 
2X 

Andrew  Craig  Phillips 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Stephen  John  Piller,  Jr. 
Hempstead,  N.  Y. 
KA 

Ernest  Harold  Pittman 
Whitakers,  N.  C. 

Christine  Powell  Pope 
Lumberton,  N.  C. 

William  Haskell  Porcher,  Jr. 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 
K2 

John  J.  Post 

Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Otis  Yates  Poteat 
Spindale,  N.  C. 

Betsy  Battle  Powell 
Whitakers,  N.  C. 

Davis  Bryan  Powell 
Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

John  Francis  Powell 

Wilmington,  N.  C. 

Peter  Ross  Powell 
Pittsboro.  N.  C. 

Charlotte  Ann  Powers 
Durham,  N.  C. 

Dwight  Price 
Clinton,  N.  C 

Elsie  Kenner  Price 
Norris,  Tenn. 

Norman  Jacob  Primack 
Far  Rockaway,  L.  I.,  N.  Y, 

Mary  Watson  Prince 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

A  An 

Walter  Reynolds  Privette 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

George  Oliver  Pruett 
Swannanoa,  N.  C. 

Morris  Wiley  Pully 
Kinston,  N.  C. 

Richard  Edward  Railey 
Murfreesboro,  N.  C. 

Julia  Seymour  Raney                           Gladys  Elizabeth  Rankin 
La  Crosse,  Va.                                                 Columbia,  Miss.          •;' 

133 


/'I 


^  pA^iAi..C-C^l4''^^'' 


4 
/} 
Stokes  Smith  Rawlins,  Jr. 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

Robert  Morrison  Reed 
Spencer,  W.  Va. 
<t>M  A 

Daniel  David  Retchin 

Wilmington,  N.  C. 

Mary  Louise  Rhoads 

Bluefield.W.Va. 

Mary  Wilmarth  Rhodes 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Mary  Lucile  Rivers 

Tallahassee,  Fla. 


Dorothy  Belle  Riviere 
Tyler,  Tex. 
n  B* 

Jack  William  Roberts 
Cedar  Grove,  N.  C. 


Bernice  Robinson 
Jesup,  Ga. 
A>J>E 

John  Thomas  Robison 
Salisbury,  N.  C. 


Omelia  Lee  Robinson 
WeaverviUe,  N.  C. 

Camillus  Holiday  Rodman 
Washington,  N.  C. 
AK  E 


Bertha  May  Rogers 
Timberlake,  N.  C. 


Elizabeth  McLean  Rogers 
Tallahassee,  Fla. 
II  B* 


Edward  Tyler  Rollins 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Robert  Henry  Rose 

New  York,  N.  Y. 


Virginia  Daniel  Richardson 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

George  Ewart  Rives 
Goldston,  N.  C. 


Emanuel  Rivkin 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

Richard  Hopper  Robertson 
Leaksville,  N.  C. 


Frank  I.  Robinson 
Weldon,  N.  C. 

Norwood  Everett  Robinson 
Washington,  N.  C. 


Susan  Carter  Robinson 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


John  David  Roeder 

New  York,  N.  Y. 


Daniel  Harris  Rogers 
Bluefield,  W.  Va. 

Russell  Rogers 
San  Antonio,  Tex. 


Hildegarde  Owen  Rose 
Mountclair,  N.  J. 

Winifred  Rosenbaum 
Tarboro,  N.  C. 


134 


Dale  Rosenbloom 
Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

James  Kinlaw  Rosser 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. 


Herbert  Horton  Rountree 
Farmville,  N.  C. 
K* 

Jane  Ruggles 

Chevy  Chase,  Md. 


Noland  Haynes  Ryan 
Washington,  D.  C. 
*  AG 

Shirley  Salome  Sanderlin 
Warrenton,  N.  C. 


John  Baker  Saunders 
Williamston,  N.  C. 
AKE 

Robert  Lee  Saunders 
Rockingham,  N.  C. 
ATSJ 


Leon  L  Schafer 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 
•I>A 

Donald  S.  Schlenger 
South  Orange,  N.  J. 
HA* 


Karl  Schwartz,  III 

El  Paso,  Tex. 

AKE 

John  Raymond  Sears 
Norfolk,  Va. 

2N 


Harry  Griffith  Shalett 
New  London,  Conn. 

Linfor4-Lee,Shaw 
Richtand?,  N.  C.         . 

///      /J. 


Edith  Marcia  Rosenblum 
New  York,  N.  Y. 

Coman  Wendell  Rothrock,  Jr 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Deborah  Rubin 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Dave  McKenzie  Rumph 
Montezuma,  Ga. 
Z  AE 


Marylyn  Sandefer 
Breckenridge,  Tex. 
KB* 

Albert  Saunders 
Asbury  Park,  N.  J. 


John  Henry  Saunders 
Troy,  N.  C. 

Robert  Mills  Saunders 
Memphis,  Tenn. 
2  AE 


Ann  Wendelin  Schaut 
Bradenton,  Fla. 
II  B* 

Rachel  Howell  Schulken 
Whiteville,  N.  C. 


William  Schwartz 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 
T  E* 

Ann  Parkinson  Seeley 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Lawrence  Charles  Shapiro 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Dorothy  Elizabeth  Sheldon 
^^odsVille,  N.  H.  •'' 


J- 


I, 


M4€' 


135 


..•■'I 


/    ••■ 

// 

Frank  Wesley  Shgtfoh 

Port  Washingfon,;N.  Y. 

Joel  Herbert  Sherman 
FayetteviUe,  N.  C. 

James  Steck  Sherwood 
Arlington,  Va. 

Charlotte  Shields 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
xn 

James  Charles  Shoe 
Star,  N.  C. 

Llewellyn  Hampton  Short 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 
AX  A 

Richard  Tatum  Shugart 
Elldn,  N.  C. 
K2 

Hampton  Shuping 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 
KA 

Thomas  Henry  Siddall 
Sumter,  S.  C. 

Raymond  A.  Silbiger 

Kew  Gardens,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 

Morton  S.  Silverstein 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Martin  B.  Simpson,  Jr. 
Nags  Head,  N.  C. 

nKA 

James  Sims 

Asheville,  N.  C. 

Letha  Ruth  Slager 
Grand  Rapids,  Mich. 

n  B# 

Ruth  Harriet  Slobodkin 
New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 

A.  Gene  Smith 
Blacksburg,  Va. 

Aubrey  Lealon  Smith 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

George  Dosser  Smith 
Wilson,  N.  C. 

Griswold  Smith 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 
2  AE 

Holly  Breeze  Smith 
Kinston,  N.  C. 

n  B* 

Mary  Carolyn  Smith 
Orlando,  Fla. 

W.  J.  Smith 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 
A  2  II 

Joan  Louise  Smithyman 
Butler,  N.  J. 

nB* 

Ben  McLellan  Snyder 
Wayne,  Pa. 

<j.rA 

Marshall  H.  Solomon 
Highland  Park,  N.  J. 
ZBT 

John  Mitchell  Sorrow 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Catherine  Elizabeth  Sparks 
Kirkwood,  Mo. 

K  Ae 

Charles  Edward  Spaugh 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

136 


Dorothy  F.  Spears 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


Irving  Leonard  Spiegel 
Fords,  N.  J. 


Kenneth  Murchison  Sprunt 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 

:s  AE 

William  Charles  Stanback 
Salisburj',  N.  C. 
2  N         A  *  fi 


Robert  Steed 

Thomasville,  N.  C. 

Joseph  Flake  Steelman 
Wilkesboro,  N.  C. 


Bett)'  Ellen  Sterchi 
Chattanooga,  Tenn. 
n  B* 

James  Henry  Stillwell 
Spring  Lake,  N.  J. 
*K2 


Alfred  Arthur  Strauss,  Jr. 
New  York,  N.  Y. 


Richard  Ephrim  Stroupe 
Cherrp-ille,  N.  C. 


Jack  Bryan  Stubbs 
Faj'etteville,  N.  C. 

Redding  Stancill  Sugg,  Jr. 
Auburn,  Ala. 


Sara  Adolpha  Summerlin 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

n  B* 

Frederidc  Leroy  Swindal 
lacr^nv^lle,  Fla. 

w  /-^ 


Robert  Atwell  Spence 
LaGrange,  N.  C. 

Bill  Spruill 

Plymouth,  N.  C. 


George  Henry  Stammlei 
Summit,  N.  J. 

A<i>n 

Charlie  Stancell 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Warren  George  Steel 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


Dorothy  S.  Stephany 
Baltimore,  Md. 


Jean  Frances  Stewart 
Springfield,  Mo. 

n  B* 

Harold  V.  Stirling,  Jr. 
Chevy  Chase,  Md. 


Hugh  Monroe  Stroud 
Kinston,  N.  C. 

Roy  Ervin  Strowd 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Myrtle  Frances  Styron 
Goldsboro,  N.  C. 

Tommy  Sullivan 
Mount  Olive,  N.  C. 


Sarah  Manning  Sutton 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

n  B* 


/ 


Ferduiand  Florian  SMbo 

/Mis^heimer,  N.  QJ 


\yi 


/1 

Stephen  Clark  Tafe^  Daisy  Deane  Tart 

Bloomfield„N'.  J.  ■'  Dunn,  N.  C. 


Jayne  McCulloch  Taylor 
Greenville,  N.  C. 

n  B* 


Mary  Lou  Taylor 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


John  H.  Thomas 
Wadesboro,  N.  C. 


Sam  A.  Thompson,  Jr. 
Mount  Olive,  N.  C. 


John  Zacharius  Touloupas 
Burlington,  N.  C. 


Jesse  Caleb  Trott,  Jr. 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Mary  Holcombe  Turner 
Blackstone,  Va. 


Carter  L.  Twine 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

Martha  Elizabeth  Urquhart 
Birmingham,  Ala. 
AAn 


Grace  Manning  Venable 
San  Antonio,  Tex. 

n  B* 

Jacob  Astor  Viverette,  Jr. 
Baftleboro,  N.  C. 


Harold  Jerome  Wagger 
High  Point,  N.  C. 

Evelyn  Gertrude  Waldman 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


M.  Bruten  Taylor 
Walstonburg,  N.  C. 


Virginia  Bowman  Terry 
Hamlet,  N.  C. 


William  Benfield  Thomas 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Be  II 


Mildred  Mary  Torpin 
Augusta,  Ga. 

Peyton  Giles  Townes 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 


Florence  Turner 
Jacksonville,  Fla. 

Clifford  Louis  Tuttle 
Fox  Chapel,  Pa. 


Earl  Holland  Tyndall 
Kinston,  N.  C. 

William  Charles  Vail 
Rutherford,  N.  J. 
2X 


Harry  M.  Vinokur 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

Ralph  Cannon  Volk 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 


John  R.  Van  Wagoner,  Jr. 
Sayville,  N.  Y. 

*rA 

Howard  Oldham  Walker 
HiUsboro,  N.  C. 


138 


Samuel  Reuben  Wallace 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Marjorie  Jane  Walter 
Lansdowne,  Pa. 


Mary  Foster  Warren 
Prospect  Hill,  N.  C. 
AMI 

David  Endel  Watson 
Fitzgerald,  Ga. 


Henry  Thomas  Webb 

Tarboro.  N.C. 

M.  Andrew  Weiss 
New  York,  N.  Y. 


Margaret  Elizabeth  Welles 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

Frank  Reginald  Wheeler,  Jr. 
NewYorkCity,  N.  Y. 
ZBT 


Thomas  Joseph  White 
Norfolk,  Va. 


Cyrus  Edward  Whitfield 
HurdleMiUs,  N.  C. 


Mary  Eloise  Wicker 
Pinehurst,  N.  C. 

Carl  Rush  Williams 
Rockingham.  N.  C. 


Walter  H.  Williams 
Old  Fort,  N.  C. 

Flora  BJizalaeth  Wilson 
Pyftia^N.  C.       ^ 


Lewis  Skidmore  Waller 
Leaksville,  N.  C. 

Abel  McRae  Warren 
Garland,  N.  C. 
2X 


William  Downing  Watkins 
Morganton,  N.  C. 
A  Tn 

Marie  Jaquelin  Waiters 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
X£2 


William  McRae  Webster 
High  Point,  N.  C. 


Catharine  Welch 
Columbus,  Ga. 


Earl  West 

West  Asheville,  N.  C. 


Charles  Finch  Whicker 
North  Wilkesboro,  N.  C. 


Walter  Preston  White 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Katharine  Mason  Whitney 
Atlanta,  Ga. 
AAA 


Jack  Russell  Wilkinson,  Jr 
Chattanooga,  Tenn. 

*rA 

John  Brooks  Williams 
Hendersonville.  N.  C. 


Alton  Duane  Wilson 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Johrj-Alexander  Wilson 

/•^il^  Mills,  N.,<f 


7 


139 


'/ 

Wilbur  Edward  WtUbn 

Dewey  Hobson  Winchester 

Hillsboro,  N..i^. 

Rosman,  N.  C. 

Edna  Mae  Winkler 

Robert  Maurice  Wise 

Oak  Park,  III. 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

A  An 

A  Tfi 

William  Isaac  Witk 

in 

Wallace  de  Witt 

New  York,  N. 

Y. 

Erie,  Pa. 
Z  TE 

Joseph  Lawrence  Woll 

William  Wade  Wood 

Roxborough,  Pa. 

Nashville,  Tenn. 
2  AE 

Frank  G.  Wooten 

Sam  Martin  Wright 

Rome,  Ga. 

Fayetteville,  N.  C. 
A  Tn 

Phyllis  June  Yates 

John  Davis  Young 

Shelby,  N.  C. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Axi: 

John  Early  Young 

William  Caldwell  Young 

Raleigh,  N.  C. 

Wilson,  N.  C. 
AK  E 

James  Locke  Yount 

Charles  Hoff  Zimmermann 

Newton,  N.  C. 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

A  T  n 

F 

rank  Wil 

COX  Zi 

mmerman 

Daytona 

Beach, 

Fla. 

K4> 

140 


^■^~~u~jmmmBB^f^\ 


141 


i/m  0^^^'  'U^-i  ^  )fnpn^.  • ' 


^< 


OPHISTICATED  sophs!  That  second  year — when  you're  on  the  top  of  the  world,  and  don't  mind 
letting  everyone  know  it  .  .  .  when  college  is  still  new  enough  to  spring  surprises  on  you  .  .  .  when  the 
frosh  seem  the  meekest  bunch  you've  ever  seen,  and  the  juniors  and  seniors  don't  seem  to  be  so  high  and 
mighty  after  all.  You're  not  worried  about  such  far  off  things  as  graduation;  and  you've  been  here  long 
enough  to  know  your  way  around.    So  really  you've  got  every  right  to  be  satisfied  with  yourselves. 

For  athletes  there's  the  chance  to  make  a  varsi^  letter — and  show  the  folks  back  home  a  thing  or 
two.  For  the  politicians  there's  the  first  real  introduction  to  party  conclaves  and  intrigues — and  if  you're 
lucky,  think  of  having  your  best  girl  up  to  be  in  the  class  dance  figure.  For  the  scholars,  there's  the  chance 
to  make  up  for  those  freshman  "C's"  and  head  for  Phi  Bete.  And  then  for  the  soph  frat  men,  there's  a 
brand  new  shiny  pin  perched  on  your  vest — just  waiting  to  be  transferred  to  the  sweater  of  your  one  and 
only. 

Do  you  remember — plans  for  a  bigger  sophomore  class  day,  record-breaking  trouble  in  passing  the 
budget,  the  crazy  antics  of  the  soph  social  organizations.-'  Can  you  forget — Ec.  41,  the  saddle  shoes  and 
gray  flannels  you've  broken  in  by  now,  end  of  spring  quarter — the  half-way  mark.' 


HONOR  COUNCIL 


Members  as  they  appear  at  left:  Sonny 
Boney,  John  Tillett,  Arthur  Williams, 
Fred  Rutledge,  John  Emack,  Raymond 
Goodmon,  Chairman;  Robert  Stockton. 

Committee  chairmen:  Hanson  Hall,  Ex- 
ecutive; Ernest  Frankel  and  Earl  Pardue, 
Finance;  Joseph  Ferguson,  Dance;  Willie 
Long,  Constitution;  and  Edward  Royal, 
Sophomore  Day. 


SOPHOMORE  CLASS  OFFICERS 

Left  to  Right:  Latham  "Spec"  Davis,  Treasurer:  Raymond  Goodmon,  Student 
Council  Representative:  Dotson  Palmer,  President:  Frank  Alspaugh,  Secretary: 
Michael  Carr,  Vice-President. 


143 


/ 


y 


/ 


'^£r/:^  ktnn/jhitA, 


First  Row : 

Frank  Elmer  Adams 
St.  Petersburs,  Fla. 

Leon  Ashby  Adams 
Warrentoil.  N.  C. 

Second  Row: 

J.  Frank  Alspaugh 

Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 

Clarence  S.  Albea,  Jr. 
Harmony,  N.  C. 

Dudley  Moore  Amoss 
Greenwich.  Conn. 

John  Preston  Albea 
Harmony.  N.  C. 

Vincent  Howard  Anderson 
Seneca.  S.  C. 
X* 

Charles  G.  Allen 
Dillon.  S.  C. 

William  L  Anderson 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

<j,rA 

Ruth  Ellen  Andrews 
Cliapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

Third  Koxr : 

Leslie  Davis  Austin 
Manteo.  N.  C. 

Fourth  Roiv: 

Francis  Glovd  Await,  Jr. 
WasliinEton,  D.  C. 

Kenneth  Robert  Bailey 
Newport,  Vt. 

A  4' 

William  Harold  Badgett 
Broathvay.  N.  C. 

Robert  Harriss  Banks 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

Stuart  Oliver  Baesel 
rliarlottc.  N.  C. 

Robert  LeRoy  Bannerman 
WliiteviUe.  N.  C. 

*  A  0 

Josiah  William  Bailey 

Raleiali.  N.  C. 

A  TO 

Roscoe  Allen  Barber,  Jr. 
Rocky  Mount.  N.  C. 

Julius  Carl  Barefoot,  Jr. 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

Fifth  Row : 

Walter  C.  Barnes 

Kutlierforclton.  X.C. 

Sixth  Roio: 

Edgar  D.  Barnwell 
Edneyville,  N.  C. 

Peter  Thomas  Beaudry 
Homer.  N.  Y. 

2N 

Spencer  Bass,  Jr. 
Tarboro.  N.  C. 

Henry  J.  Beecher 
Manchester.  Pa. 

Richard  Sims  Bates 
Xorfolk.  Va. 

William  Benjamin  Beery,  III 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 

David  Herring  Beard 
.\tkin.son.  N.  C. 
2X 

John  Leslie  Bell,  Jr. 
Concord.  N.  C. 
2X 

Robert  H.  Bell 

Pleasantiille.  N.  Y. 

niCA 

Serenth  Row : 

William  Harrison  Bell,  Jr. 
Newport,  N.  C. 

Eighth  Row: 

William  Earl  Bellamy,  ]i. 
Supply,  N.  C. 

Henry  Lee  Berryhill,  Jr. 
Cliarlottc.  N.  C. 

Charles  Richard  Bennett 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Robert  Edward  Bettmann 
New  York.  N.  Y. 

Richard  Edwin  Bennett 
Xew  Bern.  N.  C. 

John  A.  Black 

Greensboro.  N.  C. 

Stephen  Dodson  Bennett 
Kocky  Mount.  N.  C. 

Bill  Blades 

New  Bern.  N.  C. 
AKE 

Mott  Parks  Blair.  Ill 
Elizabethtown.  X.  C. 
X* 

144 


Julian  Harward  Blalock 
Hampton.  Va. 
X  'I' 

Donald  Putnam  Blanton 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 

Frank  C.  Blocksidge 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

William  Alonzo  Blue 
CarthaBe.  N.  C, 

Sion  Alford  Boney 
C.oldsboro,  N.  C, 
AKE 


Hal  T.  Boyles 
Dallas  N.  C. 


Winfred  Wayne  Brady 
Siler  City,  N,  C. 

William  Robert  Brandon 
Carrboro,  N.  C. 

James  Burke  Brannock 
Spencer,  N,  C, 

Alliene  Hunter  Brawley 
Chapel  Hill,  N,  C. 


Fifth  Bow: 

William  Franklin  Brown 
Lexineton,  N.  C. 
K  2 

Earl  Dudley  Bruton 
Candor,  N.  C. 


W.  Oscar  Bryant,  Jr. 
Elizabethtown,  N.  C, 


Emmett  Wynn  Burden 
Aulander.  N.  C. 


Robert  N.  Burleigh 
Baldwin.  N.  V. 


Jay  Baxter  Caldwell 
Concord.  N.  C. 

Patrick  Calhoun 
Aucusta.  Ga. 
K  A 

William  L.  Callahan 
Asheville.  N.  C. 

Paul  Jackson  Calloway 
Thurmond.  N.  C. 


Charles  Wayne  Campbell 
Hickory.  N.  C. 


Second  How : 

Edwin  Eugene  Boone,  Jr. 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

John  Van  Vorst  Booraem 
Atlanta,  Ga. 


James  Barrow  Boyce 
Warrenton,  N.  C, 
A  K  E 

James  Boyd,  Jr. 

Southern  Pine.";.  N.  C. 

A^^ 

Edwin  Boyle 
Sumter.  S.  C. 


Fourth  Row : 

Stanley  Lawson  Briees 
Nutley.  N.  J. 


William  Ross  Britt 
Four  Oaks.  N.  C. 

Henry  Iverson  Brooks 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

John  Kenneth  Brown 
Swan  Quarter.  N.  C. 

Robert  James  Brown 
South  Oranee.  X.  J. 
i:  A  E 


Sixth  How: 

John  Welborn  Byers,  Jr. 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 
*  AG 

Zachary  Taylor  Bynum,  Jr. 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 

Jennings  C.  Byrd 
Wilmineton.  N.  C. 

Tom  Byrum 

Edenton.  N.  C. 
Z  N 

Stuart  Gordon  Cahn 
Elizabeth.  N.  J. 
■!>  A 


Eiahth  Row: 

Stuart  Caldwell  Campbell,  Jr 
Louisville.  Ky. 
AK  E 

William  Calvin  Campbell 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Hugh  Bernard  Cansel 
Durham  N.  C. 


Morton  B.  Cantor 
Brooklyn.  N.  Y. 

Julius  Garland  Garden,  Jr. 
Durham.  N.^.      , 


///       /_/.     ////       / 


145 


/ 


/ 


Kenneth  Wilson  Carpenter 
I.eonia,  N.  J. 


Michael  Lemuel  Carr 
Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 

Rufus  Tucker  Carr 

Wooflmere,  L.  I..  N.  Y. 
Z  A  E 

Wm.  Jarvis  Cartwright,  Jr. 
Klizabeth  City.  N.  C. 


George  Dewitt  Case 
Hish  Point.  N.  C. 


Marvin  Cheek 

Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 

Charles  Richard  Clark 
Washington.  D.  C. 

James  Hector  Clark,  Jr. 
Elizabethtown.  N.  C. 
2  A  E 

Carney  Bynum  Clegg 
Green.sboro,  N.  C. 


C.  Franklin  Clement,  Jr 
Durham,  N.  C. 


William  Cleveland  Collie,  Jr. 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Clyde  lacob  Collins 
Candler  N.  C. 


Arthur  Conescu 
Brooklyn.  N.  Y. 

Robert  Nicholas  Cook 
Graham,  N.  C. 

William  Olds  Cooley 
Washinston,  D.  C. 
X  'I' 


Seventh  Row  : 

Earl  Eugene  Correll 
Kannapolis,  N.  C. 

Edward  W.  Coslett 
Drexel  Hill.  Pa. 

*^  e 

Rex  Sawyer  Coston 

Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 


Richard  Lewis  Cotton 
Kiplins.  N.  C. 

Edgar  Lee  Council 

Durham.  N.  C. 

<J>K  £ 


Second  Row : 

Milton  Blair  Cash,  Jr. 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

*r  A 

T.  Frank  Cathey 
Clyde.  N.  C. 


Wayland  Henry  Cato 
Augusta,  Ga. 


Marshall  Chambers 

Cincinnati.  O. 

"I-r  A 

Everett  Wesley  Cheek 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Row: 


Charles  Raymond  Clinard 
Winston-Salem.  X.  C. 


John  Leonant  Clive 
New  York.  N.  Y. 


William  Borden  Cobb.  ] 
Goldsboro.  N.  C. 
K  A 

Leonard  Samuel  Cohen 
Norfolk,  Va. 


Charles  Fortunate  Coira 
High  Point.  N.  C. 


Leonard  Elkins  Copen 
Boston.  Mass. 
<{■  A 

Edward  Coppala 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 


Thomas  Oliver  Coppedge 
Nashville.  N.  C. 


Calvin  Bennett  Corey,  Jr. 
Portsmouth.  Va. 


Lovick  Pierce  Corn 

Macon,  Ga. 

*  A  e 


Richard  Jefferson  Councill 
Salisbury,  N.  C. 


William  Register  Covington 
Durham.  N.  C. 


Robert  Henry  Cowan,  Jr 
Durham,  N.  C. 

Hugh  Cox 

Camden,  S,  C. 
HK  A 

Samuel  A.  Cox 
Flushing,  N.  Y. 


146 


William  Maurice  Cox 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 


Robert  Tombs  Cozart,  Jr. 
Goldsboro.  N.  C. 

Ben 

Hal  Parsons  Crane,  Jr. 
Washington.  D.  C. 
<!>  AG 

Harold  Davis  Cranford 
Asheboro.  N.  C. 
A  T  n 

Robert  Hope  Crawford 
Rutherfordton.  N.  C. 
2  AE 


Clay  Croom 

Kinston.  N.  C. 


Walter  Lee  Crouch 
ffilminirton.  N.  C. 

Richard  Henrv  Culberson 
Asheville.  X.  C. 

Walter  Atkinson  Damtoft 
Asbeville.  N.  C. 
*  AO 

Everett  Holland  Davis 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 


Edwm  T.  Deal 
Aldan.  Pa. 

Paul  Nicholas  D'Elia.  Jr. 
Bridgeport.  Conn. 


Wade  Denning.  Jr. 
.\lbemarle.  M.  C. 
2  X 

Robert  Louis  Dickens 
Varina.  N'.  C. 


Raeford  Graham  Dixon 
Benson.  X.  C. 


Paul  Archer  Dulin 
Charlotte.  X.  C. 


Frankie  Durham 
Carrboro.  N.  C. 


Edwin  Harold  Easter 
Lexington,  N.  C. 


Thos.  Rupert  Easterling,  Jr. 
Rocky  Mount.  N.  C. 


Charles  Ernest  Edge 
Rocky  Mount.  N.  C. 


Scrovd  Row: 

Wm.  Turple  Crawford,  Jr. 
Pelham,  N.  Y. 
K  A 

Richard  Frederick  Creedy 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Robert  Alson  Crews 
Thomasville.  N.  C. 

Alfred  Reese  Crisp 
Lenoir,  N.  C. 

Edith  Louise  Crockford 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Row: 


James  Rowlette  Davis 
Wilmington,  N.  C, 


L.  Harris  Davis 
Durham.  N.  C. 


L.  Latham  Davis,  Jr. 
Gainesville.  Fla. 

Ben 

Rene  Sheldon  Davis 
Washington.  D.  C. 
R  O  II 

Russell  Browning  Davis 
Ridgefteld  Park.  N.  J. 


Fred  W.  Dock 

Wilmington.  N.  C. 

Richard  Doeschler 
Jacksonville.  Fla. 
Z  A  E 

John  Dewey  Dorsett,  Jr. 
Ridgewood.  X.J. 
A  T  n 

Joseph  A.  Doumar 
Norfolk.  Va. 


Richard  Henry  Dries 
Woodside.  I,.  I..  X.  V. 


Thomas  Murray  Edmondson 
Tarboro.  N.  C. 


James  Hancock  Edwards 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


John  Beresford  Emack 
.Mont  Clare.  Pa. 

Howard  Taylor  Ennis 
Stockley.  Del. 

Robert  Griffith  gyans  Epple 
Fayettevill^.  JX.  0/ 
X*,;.    /     ,/ 


147 


/ 


"   / 


Robert  Lee  Ervin 
Newton.  N.  C. 


John  B.  Eshelman 
Lancaster.  Pa. 
Z  A  E 

George  Wrenn  Estaver 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 
X  * 

Robert  Lee  Ettenger 
WasliinKton.  D.  C. 

A  T  n 

Louis  F.  Evans 


John  Miller  Ferguson 
Raleigti.  N.  C. 
X* 

Joseph  Earle  Ferguson 
Murfreesboro.  N.  C. 


John  Howe  Field,  III 

Raleigli.  N.  C. 

11  K  A 

Roland  Fields 

LaGrange,  N.  C. 


Howard  Myron  Finkelstein 
Woodniere.  N.  Y. 


Ernest  Frankel 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 
T  E  * 

James  Garrison  Freeman 
Kannapolis.  N.  C. 


William  Harry  Fullenweider 
Monroe.  N.  ('. 


Donald  Ray  Fuller 
Luniberton.  \.  C. 
S  A  E 

Daniel  Louis  Garan,  Jr 
Dearborn,  Mich. 

Ben 


Seventh  Row : 

Sterling  Gary  Gilliam 
Franklinton.  N.  C. 
Z<ir 

P.  Vernon  Godfrey 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 
*  A  e 

Arthur  David  Golby 
Brooklyn.  N.  Y. 


Seymour  Goldberg 
Holvoke.  Mass. 
*  A 

Edward  Goodman 
Brooklyn.  N.  Y. 
T  E* 


Thomas  Cartter  Evans 
Chattanoog:a,  Tenn. 

*rA 

Haywood  A.  Faircloth 
Roseboro,  N.  C. 

Julius  Leonard  Fallick 
Pouehkeepsie,  N.  Y. 

Robert  Lee  Feinberg 
Brookline.  Mass. 


James  G.  Fennel  I,  Jr. 
Wilminston.  N.  C. 


Fourth  Row: 


Ray  Fisch 

New  York.  N.  Y. 


William  Sloan  Fisher,  Jr. 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 


Thomas  E.  Fitz 
Reidsville.  N.  C. 

Robert  Greeson  Fitzgerald 
Candor.  N.  C. 


William  Holt  Fowler 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Norman  Lee  Garner,  Jr. 
Hiffh  Point.  N.  C. 


David  Allan  Garrison 
Statesville.  N.  C. 

John  Stuart  Gaul 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 
A  K  E 

Malcolm  Geddis 
Port  Jenis,  N.  Y. 

Andrew  Joseph  Gibbons 
Morristown,  N.  J. 
*K  2 


Robert  Norman  Goodman 
Brooklyn.  N.  Y. 


Irving  P.  Goodwin 
Lakeland,  Fla. 


Raymond  Hayes  Goodmon 
Williamston.  N.  C. 
HK  A 

Charles  Wilburn  Gordon.  Ir 
Spencer.  N.  C. 


Robert  W.Gottlieb 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 


148 


George  Robert  Graham 
Red  SprinKS,  N.  C. 


Robert  Eugene  Grant 
Miami.  Fla. 

SX 

Benj.  Thompson  Grantham 
StantonsburK.  N.  C. 


Bahnson  Gray 

Winston-Salem,  N. 
2  A  E 

Jay  M.  Greenberg 
Cedarhurst,  N.  Y. 
HA* 


Francis  Bates  Grow 
Locicport.  N.  V. 

Winston  Bangs  Gunnels 
Sandersville,  Ga. 

*  A  e 

Robert  Clarke  Gutkhecht 
Youngstown.  0. 

William  Carrington  Guy 
Richmond,  Va. 
A  T  n 

John  Needham  Hackney 
Wilson.  N.  C. 


Roy  William  Hankin 
Rich  Hill.  N.  Y. 


Milton  C.  Harding 
Asheville.  N.  C. 


Frank  Whitaker  Hardy 
Riolimond,  Va. 


James  Andrew  Harrell 
Elkin.  N.  C. 
AKE 

Charles  Griffin  Harris 
Durham.  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row : 


Raymond  Leroy  Hayes 
Southern  Pines.  N.  C. 


Lewis  Clifton  Hayworth 
HiBh  Point,  N.  C. 


James  Clark  Hear 
Carrboro,  N.  ('. 


Arthur  Irwin  Henderson,  Jr. 
Charlotte,  N,  C. 
*  AG 

Wm.  Thomas  Henderson,  Jr. 
Hickory,  N.  C. 
*K2 


William  Edmund  Greer 
Lenoir.  N.  C. 

Elbert  A.  Griffin 
Goldsboro.  N.  C. 
A  TQ 

Mark  A.  Griffin 
Biltmore.  N.  C. 
AKE 

Philip  Mahone  Griffith 
Monroe,  N.  C. 


Daniel  Leonard  Gross 
Queens  Village.  N.  Y. 

A*n 


Joseph  P.  Hale 
Aho.skie.  N.  C. 


Hanson  Cheney  Hall 

Atlanta.  Ga. 

A  T  f] 

Robert  N.  Hamburger 
New  York.  N.  Y. 

George  Denman  Hammond 
Atlanta.  Ga. 

*  Ae 

E.  Willard  Hamrick 
Shelby.  \.  C. 


Max  Frank  Harris 
Monroe.  N.  C. 


Thomas  Wiley  Harris 
Hamlet.  N.  C. 


Tyndall  P.  Harris 
Jacksonville.  Fla. 


Edwin  Stephen  Hartshorn 
Asheville.  N.  C. 
<!>Ae 

Hagood  Hatsell 

Jacksonville,  N,  C. 


Wyatt  C.  Henderson 
Bayside.  N.  Y. 


Francis  Wren  Hennessee 
Burnsville.  N.  C. 

Irving  Herman 

New  Bedford.  Mass. 
*  A 

Lyman  Clayton  Higdon,  Jr 
Franklin,  N.  C. 
nK  A 


/ 


149 


/ 


/ 


/ 


/ 


y-^) 


^^^f/um<k>'li4^^ 


-y      / 

First  Row : 

Herbert  Harley  Hix 

Asheville.  N.  C. 

*  A  e 

Graham  Kerr  Hubbs,  Jr 
Kaleish.  N.  C. 
<t'V  \ 

Richard  M.  Hobbs 
Cliaoel  Hill,  N.  C. 
A  T  fi 

Chester  Earl  Hocker 
Harrisburg,  Pa. 
<J>r  A 

Jay  McDonald  Hodges 
Wa^hiiiffton,  \.  C. 


Frank  Arrington  Holman 
Kocky  Mount.  N.  C. 

Manuel  Carston  Holthouser 
Mt.  Mourne.  N.  C. 

Harry  Arthur  Hondros 
Winston-Salem.  N'.  C. 

Relmond  Leo  Horton 
Wenilell.  V.  C. 

Lee  Johnson  Howard 
Kinston.  N".  C. 
Z  >!' 


Fifth  Ron-: 

Courtney  Alexander  Huntley 
Ahenieen.  N.  C. 
K  A 

Jerry  B.  Hurwitz 
nrookl'-n.  X.  V 
<I>A 

Jack  Hussey 

High  Point.  N.  C. 


Leon  Wilroy  Jackson 
Pikeville.  N.  C. 


Ed  Samuel  James 
ChaDpaqua,  N.  Y. 
ATfi 


James  Vernor  Johnson 
Statesville.  N,  C. 


Walter  Warren  Johnson 
Greensboro.  X.  C. 


William  David  Johnson,  Jr 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Williamson  Wilson  Johnson 
Concord.  N.  C. 


Albert  McCray  Jones 
Washington.  N.  C. 


Ralph  F.  Hodges 
I-eaksville.  N.  C. 


Marvin  Poidrous  Hogan 
Cliaoel  Hill.  N.  C. 


Thomas  Newton  Holder,  Jr. 
Enka,  N.  C. 


Gritfin  Bryan  Holland 
Chevy  Chase.  Md. 
2X 

Richard  Allen  Hollander 
Washington.  D.  C. 


Paul  Speer  Huber 

Norfolk.  Va. 

2  A  E 

Sterling  Lanier  Hudson 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

Carl  M.  Huffman 
Burlington.  N.  C. 


Walter  Calhoun  Humphreys 
Greenville.  S.  C. 
KA 

William  Covington  Hunter 
Rockingham.  N.  C. 


Leif  Eric  Jensen 
Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 


Thomas  Hardin  Jewett,  Jr 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 

Albert  Sidney  Johnson 
Sbreveport.  La. 
K  A 

Charles  Earl  Johnson,  Jr. 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Ira  Scott  Johnson 
Ocean  City,  N.  J, 


Charles  Leslie  Jones 
Cary,  X.  C. 


James  Winfred  Junes 

Pine  Level,  X.  C. 

n  K  A 

Louis  Clinton  Jones,  Jr 
Enka.  X.  C. 


Raymond  Jordan 
Gastonia,  N.  C. 


David  Josephs 
Sanford,  N.  C. 
*  A 


150 


R.  W.  Joyce 

Madison.  N.  C. 


Arthur  Forbes  Toyner 
Farmville.  N,  C. 

2  N 

Edgar  Locke  Kale 
Asheville.  N.  f. 


Edwin  Mayer  Kaplan 
(Jreensboro,  N.  C. 


Richard  JayKaskel 
New  York.  N.  Y. 


Charles  Henry  Kessler 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 


John  Fox  Kendrick 
Raleigli.  N.  C. 


Cyrus  B.  King 
Raleigh.  N.  C. 


Francis  Parker  King 

Wil.wn.  N.  C. 

Z-i' 

Robert  Leon  Kirkland 
Durham.  S.  C. 


Jack  Marvin  Kurtz 
Salisbury.  N.  C. 
TE* 

James  Andrew  Ladd,  III 
.)acl<sonville,  Fla. 


William  Joseph  Lally,  Jr. 
Paterson,  N.  J. 


Hosea  DeWood  Lambeth 
Elon  CoUefte.  N.  C. 


Claude  Dillard  Lancaster 
New  Bern.  N.  €. 


Seventh  Row : 

Leo  LeBlanc 
Irowly.  La. 

Permillas  Arten  Lee,  Jr. 
Dunn.  N.  C. 
II  K  A 

Stanley  Dale  Legum 

Norfolk.  Va. 

T  E* 

Joe  L.  Lehman 
Brociklvn.  N.  V. 

Mervyn  David  Lentz 

New  York.  N.  Y. 

n  A* 


;/ 


Second  Row : 


Frank  Earl  Kastner 
Hamlet,  N.  C. 


J.  Lee  Keiger,  Jr. 

Winston-Saleni.  N.  C. 


Gordon  Randolph  Kelley 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 


Richard  Fletcher  Kemp 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 
AKE 

Robert  Francis  Kenney 
Trenton.  N.  J. 


Fourth  RovK 


Harry  Kittner 
Weldon.  N.  C. 


Eppie  Phenoy  Knight 
Rocky  Mount.  N.  C. 


Richard  Holmes  Knight 
New  Orlean.s.  La. 

Paul  Komisaruk 
New  York.  N.  Y. 


Emanuel  Krulwich,  Jr. 
New  York.  N.  Y. 


Oscar  Wallace  Lane 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

Ben  Martin  Laney 
Lenoir.  N.  C. 


George  Tarrant  Latshav 
Akron.  Ohio 


Arthur  Eli  Lavine 
Trenton.  N.  J. 
T  E* 

Joseph  Miller  Leak 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Richard  S.  Lessler 
New  York.  N.  Y. 

Lionel  Marshall  Levey 
South  Orange.  N.  .1. 

Alfred  Charles  Levin 
KichnioncI  Hill.  N.  Y. 

Fred  Dewhurst  Lewis 
Winnetka.  111. 

John  Weldon  Lindsay 
Walterboro,  S.  C. 
X* 


/ 


151 


/ 


foe  Burton  Linker,  Jr 
Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 


Justin  W.  Lipiiian 
New  York.  N.  V. 
II  A* 

Richard  Rose  Lisk 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 

Robert  William  Little 
Emporia,  Va. 
2  N 

James  Alexander  Lockhart 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 

;:  A  E 


Robert  E.  Mabe 
Asheboro.  N.  C. 


Lewis  B.  MacBrayer 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


John  Vinson  MacDowell 
Gaffnev.  S.  C. 

James  Samuel  Mangum 
Morrisville,  N.  C. 


Isaac  Manly 

Goldsboro.  N.  C. 


Dudley  Hill  Martin 
Jersey  City,  N.  J. 


E.  June  Martin,  Jr. 
Mt.  Olive,  N.  C. 


James  Irving  Mason,  Jr. 
Asheville,  N.  C. 


Rowena  Mason 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Raymond  Masten 

Winston-Salem,  X.  C. 
HK  A 


Fred  M.  Mills 

Wadesboro,  N.  C. 

Richard  Evans  Mitchell 
Spartanburg,  S,  C. 
A  Tfi 

Julius  Alexander  Mock,  Jr. 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

John  Howard  Monroe 
Hamlet,  N.  C. 
•tr  A 

Albert  Woods  Moore 
Northport,  Me. 


Second  Row : 

James  L.  Loeb 

Montgomery.  Ala. 
Z  B  T 

Charles  Lewis  LoUar 
Rutherfordton,  N.  C. 


Willie  Jones  Long,  Jr. 
Garvsburg,  N.  C. 
Z  >!- 

James  Edward  Lovett 
Cincinnati.  Ohio 


Harold  Gustav  Maass 
I'alm  Beach,  Fla. 
A  K  E 


Fourth  Row: 

Gerard  Marder 
Asheville,  N.  C. 
T  E* 

Harold  Cole  Markham 
Durham.  N.  C. 


Charles  Lee  Marler 
A.sheville.  \.  C. 


Phillips  Marshall 
.lacksonville.  Fla. 


Richard  Henry  Marston 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 


Byron  Hannibal  Matthews 
Washington.  D.  C. 

Ben 

Judson  Daw  Mease 
Canton.  N.  C. 

Albert  W.  Metzger 
Jersey  City.  N.  J. 

John  Frank  Miller,  III 
Washington,  D.  C. 
Z  ^!' 

Joseph  Teles  Miller 

Hickory.  N.  C. 

AKE 


Clifton  Goodwin  Moore 
Kaleigh.  N.  C. 


Harley  H.  Moore 
Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Myron  Lenoir  Moore,  Jr. 
Granite  Falls.  N.  C. 


Robert  Alexander  Moore 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 

Grady  Lee  Morgan 
High  roini,  N.  C. 


152 


Julius  Willard  Morris 
Battlcboro,  N.  C. 


J.  Charles  Morrow 

Hendersonville.  N.  C. 


Luis  Rafael  Mosquera 
(.'aracas.  \'eiiezuela 
A  X  A 

William  Mack  Mottis, 
Gastonia,  N.  C. 


Robt.  Alexander  Musgrove,  Jr. 
Weldon.  N.  C. 
K  A 


Robert  Alston  McConnaughey 
Reil  Springs.  N.  C. 


Edwin  Ross  McCoy,  Jr 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 


Fred  Lee  McCoy,  Jr. 
Whitestone.  N.  Y. 


Richard  Cavanagh  McElroy,  Jr 
Wilson.  N'.  C. 

Warren  S.  McHenry 
River  Forest.  IlL 


John  H.  Neal 

Greensboro.  N.  C. 
HK  A 

Robert  Arthur  Nelson 
Upper  Montclair.  N.  J. 
*K2 

Julius  Sam  Nesbit 
Mooresville.  N.  C. 


Otto  W.  Neuhaus 

Huntington,  W.  Va. 


James  F.  Newsome 
Winton.  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row  : 

Jock  Watson  Noneman 
RaleiKli.  N.  C. 

■tr  A 

James  Upton  Oliver 
RaleiKli.  N.  C. 

■j-r  A 

John  Bigelow  O'Neal 
St.  Davids.  Pa. 


Henry  Ortland,  III 
Annapolis.  Md. 

*  A  e 

John  Lee  Otterbourg,  Jr 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 


Second  Row: 


Charles  E.  Myers,  Jr. 
Ritli  Square.  N.  C. 


John  Lytle  McBride.  Jr. 
.'^tatesville.  N.  C. 


Leon  Isaac  McCaskill 
East  Rockingliani.  N.  C. 
A  T  n 

Robert  A.  McClary 
Kannapolis.  N.  C. 


Wm.  Newton  McClintic,  Jr. 
Lvncliburg:.  \'a. 
A  T  n 


Robert  Hal  McKinnon 
Biscoe.  N'.  C. 

Charles  Aycock  McLendon 
Greensboro.  \.  C. 
2  A  E 

Frederick  Nash  McNair 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 


Clarence  Ray  McRae 
Aslieboro.  N'.  C. 


George  Joseph  Nassef 
New  Bern.  N.  C. 


John  Clinton  Newton 
Shelby.  N.  C. 

Samuel  Timothy  Nicholson,  III 
Pottstown.  Pa. 
X* 

John  de  Zouche  Nicolls 
Plvniouth  Meeting.  Pa. 
X  * 

Chas.  Christopher  Nixon,  Jr. 
Newport  News.  Va. 
2  X 

J.  O.  Nolan 

Kannapolis.  N.  C. 


Henry  L.  Owen 

Rocky  Mount.  N.  C. 


James  William  Pace 
Durliam.  N.  C. 


Hermann  Denckla  Packard 
Wavne.  Pa. 
A* 

Dotson  George  Palmer 
Clyde.  N.  C. 


f  yf 


David  Earl  Pardue 

Elkin.  N.  0:7       , 

/  /    / 


,// 


153 


^ 


'^H-J, 


/ 


James  Parrott  Parker 
LaGranse,  N.  C. 


Marshall  J.  Parker 
Seaboard.  N.  ('. 


Wilburn  Caveny  Parker 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 

Mercer  Cranor  Parrott,  Jr 
Kinston.  N.  C. 
K2 

Theodore  Hall  Partrick 
Raleish.  N.  C. 


Lackey  Boggs  Peeler 
Belwood,  N.  C. 


Stewart  Tait  Peet 
Ann  Arbor.  Mich. 

Philip  David  Pence 

Bristol.  Va. 

2  X 

Herman  W.  Perkins,  Jr. 
Goldsboro.  N.  C. 


Boddie  V.  Perry 
Goldsboro.  N.  C. 
*  A  0 


Hubert  Julian  Philpott 
Lctington.  N.  C. 
K2 

Joseph  Oliver  Pickard 
Randleman.  N.  C. 

Margaret  Pickard 
Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 


Frank  Bachman  Pilling 
Philadelphia.  Pa. 

James  William  Pless,  III 
Marion.  N.  C. 

2  N 


Seven ffi  Row: 

Carol  Whit  Powell 

Norfolk.  Va. 

K2 

Cecil  C.  Prince 

High  Point.  N,  C, 


John  Anderson  Prince 
Norfolk.  Va. 
X* 

James  Turner  Pritchett,  Jr 
Lenoir.  N.  C. 
*Ae 

Robert  Gordon  Ouincy 
Williamson.  W.  Va. 

nK  A 


4:^^^'U^t€A 


Harold  Lloyd  Patterson 
Kannapolis.  N.  C. 


Richard  F.  Patterson,  Jr. 
Kannapolis.  N.  C. 

Frank  Hannan  Payne,  Jr. 
Terrace  Park.  Ohio 
2  X 

Jerome  H.  Pearson 
Kinston.  N.  C. 


Elbert  S.  Peel,  Jr. 
Williamston.  N.  C. 
Z  ^I' 


William  H.  Petree 

Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 

James  Rennie  Perrin 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

Charles  Fuller  Phillips,  Jr. 
Thomasville.  N.  C. 
A  *  V. 

Richard  Hart  Phillips 
Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 


William  Carl  Phillips 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 


Robert  Warren  Pleuthner 
Buffalo.  N.  Y. 
X* 

Richard  Heath  Pollock 
Washin-rton.  D.  C. 
X^I' 

John  William  Pope 

Fuquay  Springs.  N.  C. 


Robert  Edwin  Porter 
New  Orleans.  La. 


Edward  Knox  Powe 

Durham.  N.  C. 

2  AE 


William  Edmond  R.ibil 
Weldon.  N.  C. 


Hayden  Monroe  Ral  ledge 
Elkin.  N.  C. 


Donald  Neely  Ralston 
Wenonah.  N.  J. 
X* 

David  Holland  Rankin 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 

Ben 

Robert  Herman  Rantz 
Chicago.  111. 
2X 


154 


Robert  Ray  Rascoe 
Reidsville.  X.  C. 

Melba  Louise  Ray 
Carrboro.  N.  C. 


William  Graham  Reavis 
(ireensboro.  \.  C 
K2 

Eugene  Holmes  Reillcy,  Jr. 
Charlotte,  N'.  C. 


Eugene  Miner  ReQua 

Charlotte.  N.  C. 

AK  E 


Edwin  Byrd  Riggsbee 
Carrboro.  X.  C. 


John  Moseley  Robinson,  Jr. 
Charlotte.  X.  C. 

i:  A  E 

George  L.  Rogers 

Dillon.  S.  C. 

X  * 

Aldert  Smedes  Root 

Raleish.  \.  C. 

Z  ^I' 

Marvin  David  Rosen 

New  York.  N.  Y. 

n  A* 


Kenneth  Sprague  Rothwell 
Bay  Shore,  \.  Y. 


Hartley  S.  Rowe 
New  York.  N.  Y. 


Joseph  Peterson  Rowlett,  Jr. 
Fayetteville.  N.  C. 


Robert  Gardner  Royce 
Coconut  Grove,  FJa. 
A  TQ 

E .  Paul  Rubenstein 
Asheville.  N.  C. 


Oliver  Allison  Ryder 
Alexandria.  Va. 

Ben 

Albert  James  Sasso 
Waterburj-,  Conn. 

Robert  William  Sauer 
Forest  Hills.  N.  Y. 
*  A  e 

Charles  Lawrence  Saunders 
Reidsville.  N.  C. 

Frank  Wendell  Saunders 
Reidsville,  X.  C. 


/         /^ 


Second  Row : 


Stanley  Ribak 
Easley.  S.  C. 


James  Ernest  Ribet 
Valdese.  X.  C. 


Robert  Vann  Richards,  Jr. 
Chapel  Hill.  \.  C. 
X  * 

John  D.  Richardson 
Rocky  Mount,  X.  C, 


Charles  David  Richmond 
London,  Ohio 

Ben 


Robert  Stanley  Rosenast 
Merchantville,  X.  J, 


Seymour  B.  Rosenblatt 
Brooklyn.  X.  Y, 


Joseph  Frank  Ross,  Jr. 
Glencoe.  HI. 


Morris  Ross 
Bristol.  Tenn 


Theodore  Nichlos  Ross 
Xashville.  X.  C. 


Joseph  M.  Rubenstone 
Philadelphia.  Pa. 
Z  B  T 

Seymour  Rubin 

Jackson  Heisthts.  \.  Y. 


Louis  B.  Rubinsohn 
Gerniantown.  Pa. 
Z  B  T 

Fred  Reeves  Rutledge 

Asheville,  X,  C. 

AK  E 

Arnold  Markham  Ryder 
Jamaica.  X.  Y. 
SX 


Morton  D.  Schaap 
Brooklyn.  X.  Y. 


Edward  Louis  Schlesinger 
Chanel  Hill.  X.  C. 


Jerome  Joseph  Schneider 
Cedarhurst.  X.  Y. 


Henry  Scholz,  Jr. 
Roanoke.  Va. 
2  A  E 

Martin  Jay  Schwab 
Xew  RocheJle.  N,  Y. 
Z  B.T/      / 


/// 


/ 


mm 


3  ^  ^ 


155 


/' 


/ 


/ 


^'J?-&i^ /U'*nUj^lA, 


,'■  r 


Joseph  Max  Schwartz 
Wilmington,  N.  ('. 
TE* 

Robert  G.  Schwartz 
New  York.  N.  V. 
HA* 

Harvey  H.  Segal 
Melrose  Park.  Pa. 


Emil  Serlich 
Norfolk.  Va. 


Charles  Shalleck 
New  York.  \.  Y. 
T  E* 


Harry  George  Shipman 
tlreensboro.  N.  C. 


Robert  Lee  Shuford 
Cliffside.  N.  C. 


Thomas  Edwin  Shumate 
Goldsboro.  N.  C. 


Charles  Milton  Sibley 
Raleirfi.  N.  C. 


John  Siena 

Wiuiilside,  L.  I..  N.  Y. 


Irwin  William  Sklarsky 
Brooklyn.  N.  Y. 

George  Andrew  Smedberg 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 
X* 

Bernard  Reid  Smith,  Jr. 
Asheville.  N.  C. 


Eugene  Gray  Smith,  Jr. 
iMt.  Airy.  N.  C. 

Ben 

Julius  Clarence  Smith,  III 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 

<j>r  A 


Elliott  Edwin  Smolen 
Atlanta.  Ga. 
Z  B  T 

John  Leslie  Snell 
Columbia.  N.  C. 

Marne  Kiersted  Snyder 
South  Orange.  N.  J. 

James  Randolph  Sowell.  Jr 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 


William  Bernard  Soyars,  Jr 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 

Ben 


Sticond  Row : 

Sylvan  Shapiro 
Brooklyn.  N.  Y. 
n  A* 

Malcolm  Sherman 
New  York.  N.  Y. 


Malcolm  Andrew  Sherrin 
Concord.  N.  C. 
K  A 

Robert  John  Shields 
Kinston.  N.  C. 

John  Burke  Shipley 
New  York.  \.  Y. 


Walter  Lee  Siler 
Leaksville.  N.  C. 

Paul  Franklin  Simmons 
Arlington.  Va. 
*  FA 

Murray  Sims 

Wilkes-Barre,  Pa. 
Z  B  T 

Charles  Robertson  Skinner 
Durham.  N.  C. 
Z  ^I' 

Tom  G.  Skinner 

Elizabeth  City.  N.  C. 


Nancy  Jean  Smith 
Chanel  Hill.  N.  C. 


Rita  Mae  Smith 

Chanel  Hill.  N.  C. 

Robert  Anderson  Smith 
Brevard.  N.  C. 

Thomas  Dixon  Smith 
Reidsville.  N.  C. 

Zachary  Taylor  Smith 
Mount  Airy.  N.  C. 

Ben 


Robert  Spruill  Spain 
Greenville,  N.  C. 

Norman  Appleton  Staples 
Pleasantville,  N.  Y. 
A  -^ 

Howard  Butler  Starnes 
Kannapolis.  \.  C. 

John  Alexander  Stedman 
.\rIington.  \.  J. 
■J-K  ^ 


156 


Howard  Stein 
Chester.  Pa. 

Sylvan  Paul  Stein 
Washinston.  D.  C. 
ZB  T 

Peter  Hayes  Stevens 
Hamden.  Conn. 


Vance  Marshall  Stine,  Jr 
Charlotte,  \.  C. 


Robert  Gray  Stockton 
Winston-Salem.  N.  ( 

Ben 


David  Strousse 

Philadelphia.  Pa. 
Z  B  T 

Beverly  N.  Sullivan,  Jr. 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 


George  Kendrick  Summer 
ChernTille.  N.  C. 


Lacy  Walters  Summers 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 


Julian  T.  Sutton 
Clinton.  N.  C. 


William  E.  Taylor 
Xe«-ton.  N.  C. 


William  Raymond  Taylor,  Jr. 
Greensboro.  NT.  C. 
n  K  A" 

Claude  Edward  Teague,  Jr. 
Greensboro.  N.  C. 


John  Hulett  Temple 

Hartford.  Conn. 

UK  A 

Norman  Fredric  Tepper 
Lawrence.  Mass. 


John  Tillett,  Jr. 
Charlotte.  N.  C. 
2  A  E 

Mabel  Dare  Tilley 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Bard  Townsley  Tischer 
Dover.  Del. 

Alfred  Edmund  Tisdale 
Sumter.  S.C. 
K  A 

John  David  Titchener 
Wilson.  N.  C. 


^/// 


Jack  Murray  Stoddard 
Coral  Gables.  Fla. 


Ferris  Meigs  Stout 
Bronxville.  N.  Y. 

David  LeRoy  Strain,  Jr. 
Durham.  N.  C. 
A  T  n 

Robert  Smith  Streetman 
Marion.  N.  C. 
n  K  A 

Margaret  Grimmer  Strickland 
Wilson.  N.  C. 


Isom  Beecher  Swaim 
Winston-Salem.  >f.  C. 


George  Thomas  Swain 
Wilmington,  N.  C. 


Charles  C.  Tatum 
Columbia.  S.  C. 

Benjamin  Loyall  Taylor 
Ardmore,  Pa. 

Edgar  Taylor 

Brooklyn.  N.  V. 


Frederick  A.  Thompson 
Lenoir,  N.  C. 


Lee  Roy  Thompson 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 
AX  A 

William  Ellison  Thompson 
Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 


Walter  Bruce  Thorburn 
Hieh  Point.  N.  C. 


Jerry  B.  W.  Tichner 
New  York.  N.  Y. 


Morty  J.  Tomashoff 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 


Frederick  R.  Touton,  Jr. 
Cayey.  Puerto  Rico 


Paul  Raymond  Trueblood 
Asheville.  \.  C. 


Arthur  Henry  Truxes 
Ft.  Oslethorpe,  Ga. 

John  Watson  Tulloss 
Charlotte,  N.  Cj 


(y /  a.C'm'-^u^   i^'/a^4€^ 


I 


/ 


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157 


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First  Row : 

Craven  Turner 
RaleiEh,  N.  C. 
n  K  A 

Kent  Paschal  Upchurch 
LaGranKe.  N.  C. 


Frank  Bailey  Van  Auken 
Hollj^vood.  Fla. 


Mart  Walter  VanKirk 
Larchmont.  N.  V. 
K  A 


Melvin  Waldfogel 
North  Quincv.  Mass. 
T  E  *  .i  *  A 

Thomas  Alan  Waldman 
White  Plains,  N.  Y. 


James  Clarence  Wallace 
Jamesville.  N.  f". 


Hez  Walters,  Jr. 
Whiteville.  N.  C. 


^cri^/umuy-l  t4. 


Benjamin  Evans  Warner 
Murphv.  N.  C. 


Albert  David  Warshauer 
Wilmineton,  N.  C. 


Norman  Brant  Waters 

Roseboro.  N.  C. 

nK  A 

Wade  S.  Weatherford 
Florence.  S.  C. 

*  A  e 


Walter  Robert  Wertheim 
Needham.  Mass. 

Ben 

Harry  H.  Whidbee 
Wasliinston.  N.  C. 


Robert  Thomas  Whitaker 
Durham.  N.  C. 


Lee  Peck  Whitcomb 

Columbia.  S.  C. 

Z  A  E 


Julius  Caesar  Varady 

West  Point  Plea,sant.  N.  J. 


Marvin  Davis  Veronee 
John's  Island.  S.  C. 


Thomas  Johnston  Wadsworth 
Concord.  N.  C. 
A  TO 

Willard  Wagner 

Astoria.  L.  I..  N.  Y, 


Fourth  Row: 


Erie  Adolphus  Ward 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Ernest  Justice  Ward,  Jr 
Kdenton.  N.  C, 


Marshall  Douglas  Ward 
.Mt.  Airy,  N.  C. 


Xenophon  Caldwell  Ward 
Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 


Hilda  Weaver 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Charles  William  Webb 
Shelby.  N.  C. 
K2 

William  Robert  Webb 
Claremont.  Calif. 
AK  E 

William  Terrell  Webster 
Gastonia.  N.  C. 
A  T  o 


Buxton  White,  Jr. 

p;iizabeth  City.  \.  C. 


James  David  White 
Kannapolis,  N.  C. 


Clarence  Earl  Whitefield 
Raleish,  N.  C. 


Francis  Marion  Whiteheart 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 
HKA 


158 


Owen  Hampton  Whitfield 
Clinton.  N.  C. 


Harvey  Jay  Whitman 
Worcester.  Mass. 

Wendell  D.Wilhide 
.\ndrews.  X.  C. 


Thad  Earl  Wilkerson 
Miami.  Fla. 


Kendall  Willis 
Nortliville.  Midi. 
X* 

Donald  Elbert  Wilson 
Northbrook.  III. 


Edward  Leigh  Winslow 
Hertford,  N.  C. 


Rhett  Youmans  Winters 
Washington,  D.  C. 


Raymond  T-  Works 
Roolfy  Mount.  N.  C. 


Franklin  Warren  Wortman 
Pottersville.  N.J. 


C.  Haywood  Wyatt 
Morgranton.  X.  C. 
K  * 

Bradley  Cromer  Wyrick 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Secoyid  Row: 


Arthur  Julian  Williams 
Warrenton.  N.  C. 


Don  Alan  Williams 
Wind.wr,  N.  C. 


E.  Rudolph  Williams 
Koanoi<e  Rapids,  N.  C. 


William  Thomas  Williamson 
Winston-Salem.  N.  C. 

Ben 


Joshua  Henry  Wisebram 
Barnesville.  Oa. 
T  E* 

William  John  Woestendiek 
Sanserties.  N.  Y. 


Stuart  Cramer  Woodman 
New  Haven.  Conn. 
*  A  e 

William  Haynes  Woodward 
Hendersonville.  N.  C. 
n  K  A 


Terry  Frank  Yarger 
Minneapolis.  Minn. 
X* 

William  E.  Yates 
Cerro  Gordo.  N.  C. 


Leon  Young 

St.  PetersburE.  Fla. 
T  E* 

Richard  Robertson  Young 
Pinehurst.  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row: 

John  Milton  Yount 

Newton.  N.  C. 

A  TO 

William  Hester  Yount 
Reidsville.  N.  C. 


Henry  Stanley  Zaytoun,-i 
,     New  Bern.  N.  C.    ,,  *'  /     ,/ 


159 


n 


LK 


^/?/ 


TiM   Al{/I    tl"^-'^  J-(^'f^.  ' 


y) 


S 


OMEWHAT  overawed,  more  than  a  little  ner\'Ous,  some  expectant,  some  curious,  all  feeling  as  if 
they  were  a  small  part  of  something  mighty  big — that  was  the  class  of  '45,  850  strong,  when  it  showed 
up  in  Chapel  Hill  last  fall.  As  green  as  freshmen  always  are  but  willing  to  learn,  they  waited  in  the  same 
long  lines,  puzzled  while  doctors  found  out  about  every  scratch  they'd  ever  had,  bought  books  which  seemed 
for  all  the  world  like  Greek,  spent  days  trying  to  figure  out  which  was  Saunders  and  which  was  Murphey 
and  where  the  fire  horn  came  from. 

Then  the  varnish  began  to  wear  off.  New  faces  and  new  places  began  to  become  familiar,  and  the  dorm 
room  began  to  seem  like  home.  And  they  began  to  find  out  that  the  professors  who  addressed  them  as 
"Mr.",  and  seemed  to  be  in  a  world  of  their  own,  weren't  the  impersonal  intellectuals  they  had  thought  but 
pretty  good  guys.  Freshman  assembly,  despite  the  wise-cracks  of  upperclassmen,  gave  them  some  good  tips 
on  adjusting  themselves  to  college  life;  fall  elections  brought  them  together  as  a  class;  and  pretty  nearly 
every  one  of  them  could  remember  tlie  day  tliat  an  upperclassman  had  mistaken  him  for  a  sophomore  or 
junior — and  he  first  began  to  realize  that  at  Carolina  freshmen  are  as  much  a  part  of  things  as  anyone  else. 

The  class  dance,  in  the  spring,  rounded  the  year  out.  And  as  the  annual  came  out,  they  could  point  to 
the  fact  that  theirs  was  the  first  freshman  class  to  have  individual  pictures  in  it.  One  year  was  gone,  one 
notch  in  the  belt — and  the  beginning  of  an  ambition  to  make  the  class  of  '45  the  best  in  years. 


HONOR  COUNCIL 


Members  as  they  appear  at  left:  Sealed 
— Robert  Sonntag,  Ralph  Strayhorn,  Wil- 
liam T.  Martin,  Chairman;  John  Simms. 
Standing — Andrew  Karres,  William  Mc- 
Kenzie,  Sydnor  White. 

Committee  chairmen:  Walker  Blair, 
Executive;  Lee  Adams  and  Fenner  Cor- 
bett,  Financial ;  Ned  Mewborn,  Dance. 


I' 


FRESHMAN  CLASS  OFFICERS 

None  too  happy  about  having  their  picture  taken  are  (left  to  right):  Nicholas  Long, 
Vice-President ;  Clifford  Frazier,  Secretary:  Edmund  Oles,  Treasurer:  and  McKib- 
BEN  Lane,  President. 


161 


,/? 


if    / 


/ 


Binl  Rntf:  MlLTON  S.  Abfxkop.  Durham,  N.  C,  TE*;  MouLTON 
Lee  Adams,  Mandarin,  Fla.,  <J>A6;  Robert  A.  Aird,  Jr.,  Woodside, 
N.  Y.,  IlKA;  Lawrence  L.  Albert,  White  Plains,  N.  Y. ;  James 
Morton  Alexander,  Beaufort,  N.  C. 


Second  Row:  John  Purcell  Allan,  Charlotte,  N.  C,  X*;  Dud- 
ley Alleman,  Jr.,  Hingham,  Mass.;  LeDewey  Ellis  Allen, 
Whitsett,  N.  C;  William  Franklin  Allen,  Cherryville,  N.  C; 
Robert  C.  Alley,  Asheville,  N.  C. 


Third  Row:  Peter  Henry  Almond,  Albemarle,  N.  C. ;  Robert 
Blaine  Altemose,  Stroudsburg,  Pa. ;  Roland  Paul  Amateis, 
Washington,  D.  C,  -X;  Julius  Amer,  Flushing,  N.  Y. ;  John 
Howard  Anderson,  Washington,  D.  C. 


Fourth  Row:  William  Lee  Anderson,  Jr.,  Wmston-Salem,  N.  C. ; 
Robert  Osker  Andrews,  Carrbnro,  N.  C. ;  Walton  White 
Andrews,  Ch.ipel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Samuel  Arbes,  Westfield,  N.  J., 
IlKA;  Louis  H.  Arky,  New  Brunswick,  N.  J. 


Fifth  Row:  Emsley  Armfield,  Monroe,  N.  C;  Ben  Lindsey 
Armstrong,  Raleigh,  N.  C. ;  Robert  Alan  Arnel,  Lawrence, 
N.  Y.;  George  Weyland  Atkins,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. ;  James 
C.  Atkins,  Jr.,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Row:  Walter  Joseph  Auburn,  Jr.,  Lombard,  111.,  -X; 
DeWitt  Ray  Austin,  Charlotte,  N.  C;  John  Alexander  Auten, 
Albemarle,  N.  C,  -X;  James  Everett  Aycock,  Lincolnton, 
N.  C. ;  Robert  Ray  Aycock,  Fremont,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row:  Henry  Alfred  Badgett,  Mt.  Airy,  N.  C. ;  Daniel 
S.  Bagley,  Jr.,  Tampa,  Fla.,  ATO;  John  Wayles  Bailey,  Hen- 
derson, N.  C. ;  Ira  William  Baity,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C,  Iv- ; 
James  Mahlon  Bales,  Tapoco,  N.  C,  A<I>r!. 


Eighth  Row:  Swade  Emmett  Barbour,  Clayton,  N.  C,  "tAO; 
George  Felton  Barker.  Colerain,  N.  C. ;  John  Sutton  Bar- 
low, Hamlet,  N.  C;  David  Collin  Barnes,  Murfreesboro,  N.  C, 
AKE ;  Joe  Lentz  Barrier,  Concord,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Row:  William  H.  Bason,  Yanceyville,  N.  C. ;  Noah  R. 
Bass,  Goldsboro,  N.  C. ;  Walter  Murray  Bass,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  Oliver  Beaman,  Greensboro,  N.  C,  <I>Ki; ;  Robert  Al- 
pheus  Beeland,  III,  Greenville,  Ala.,  i:.^E. 


Tenth  Row:  JoE  Mack  Belk,  Fort  Mill,  S.  C ;  Deane  F.  Bell, 
Washington,  N.  C. ;  James  Exum  Bellamy,  Enfield,  N.  C; 
George  S.  Belli,  Trenton,  N.  J.;  Robert  Bencini,  High  Point, 

N.  c,  *rA. 


H^kIBk? 


162 


WBM 


First  Row:  MARTIN  Robert  Benjamin,  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Ed- 
ward R.  Bennett,  West  Hartford,  Conn.;  Rene  Louis  Bernard, 
Jr.,  Waynesville,  Ga. ;  Edward  Clark  Berry,  Morganton,  N.  C. ; 
Walter  Leak  Biggs,  Laurinburg,  N.  C,  KA. 


Second  Row:  Hugh  Elliott  Bigham,  Morganton,  N.  C;  Harry 
Allen  Billerbeck,  Elizabeth,  N.  J.;  Karl  Bishopric,  Jr.,  Spray, 
N.  C,  Beil;  Joseph  Anthony  Bitting,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. ; 
Hubert  Jourdan  Bivins,  Hillsboro,  N.  C. 


Third  Row:  George  Walker  Blair,  Pittsboro,  N.  C,  ATfl; 
James  Seaborn  Blair,  Elizabethtown,  N.  C. ;  Kenneth  C.  Blod- 
gett,  Bronxville,  N.  Y.,  "i'FA ;  Fennell  Leighton  Blount, 
Bethel,  N.  C,  ^AE;  Judson  Hassell  Blount,  Greenville,  N.  C, 
2AE 


Fourth  Row:  Arthur  Bluethenthal,  Wilmington,  N.  C,  ZBT; 
David  Gordon  Boak,  Summit,  N.  J. ;  Paul  Lloyd  Boger,  Chapel 
Hill,  N.  C. ;  Harry  Edward  Bolling,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C, 
IIKA;  William  Chaffin  Boone,  Kinston,  N.  C,  K2. 


Fifth  Row:  James  Henry  Booth,  East  Orange,  N.  J.;  Charles 
Carroll  Bost,  Hickory,  N.  C,  <^K2.;  Richard  Kelly  Bowles, 
Greensboro,  N.  C. ;  Dewey  Arthur  Bowman,  Walnut  Cove, 
N.  C. ;  Larry  Willl\m  Boyette,  Four  Oaks,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Row:  Alan  Gray  Brandon,  Carrboro,  N.  C. ;  David  F. 
Brandt,  Spencer,  N.  C. ;  John  David  Bready,  Greensboro,  N.  C, 
"{"KS ;  Jacob  Karasik  Breakstone,  New  York,  N.  Y.,  LTA*; 
Jesse  Woodruff  Brinson,  High  Point,  N.  C,  *rA. 


SereKih  Row:  James  Allen  Brittain,  Black  Mountain,  N.  C, 
X*;  George  Edward  Brockway,  Jr.,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.;  E.  O. 
Brogden,  Jr.,  Raleigh,  N.  C. ;  Richard  Thomas  Brooke,  Atlanta, 
Ga.,  *Ae;  Randall  Brooks,  Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Eighth  Row:  Lee  Edward  Brown,  Warsaw,  N.  C,  -N;  Ed  Burt 
Bruton,  Candor,  N.  C. ;  Robert  Louis  Bryan,  Jamaica,  N.  Y. ; 
Marcellus  Buchanan,  III,  Hendersonville,  N.  C. ;  David  G. 
BuNN,  Kenly,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Row:  Joseph  Edwin  Burke,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Z^I';  George 
Franklin  Burriss,  Fort  Bragg,  N.  C. ;  Spottswood  Blair  Bur- 
well,  Henderson,  N.  C;  Alvin  Charles  Bush,  Williamsport, 
Pa.,  *rA;  Ralph  Thomas  Byers,  Shelby,  N.  C. 


Tenth  Row:  William  Colon  Byrd,  Kinston,  N.  C ;  Neill  A. 
Byrne,  Pembroke,  N.  C. ;  Walter  Lawrence  Cahall,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.,  'i'Ae;  John  Philip  Call,  Amarillo,  Texas,  2N; 
Robert  James  Call,  Ann  Arbor,  Mich.,  X^p. 


/^/ 


y  / 


163 


/I 


First  Ron:  DoN  Ray  Calloway,  Concord,  N.  C;  Carl  H. 
Clark,  Mount  Airy,  N.  C. :  Edwin  LaFayette  Clark,  Greenville, 
N.  C;  Herbert  Mason  Clark,  Jr.,  Williamston,  N.  C,  IlKA; 
L.  Russell  Clark,  Jr.,  High  Point,  N.  C. 


Second  Row:  Wade  H.  Clawson,  China  Grove,  N.  C,  AXA ; 
James  Robert  Clayton,  Thomasville,  N.  C. ;  William  Albert 
Clayton,  Roxboro,  N.  C. ;  George  Robert  Clutts,  Greensboro, 
N.  C;  Alex  Edward  Cockman,  Pittsboro,  N.  C. 


Third  Row:  Glover  Leigh  Campbell.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C;  James 
McRay  Carmichael,  Jr.,  BennettsviUe,  S.  C;  T.  W.  Carmichael, 
Jr.,  Rowland,  N.  C. ;  Thomas  Humphrey  Carnes,  Canton,  Ohio; 
J.  H.  Cash,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Roiv:  James  Maxwell  Chase,  Scarsdale,  N.  Y.;  Richard 
A.  Cohan,  Charlotte,  N.  C. ;  Edward  Laurence  Cohen,  Jr.. 
Woodmere,  N.  V.;  Joseph  Marshall  Cohen,  Hartford,  Conn., 
ZBT;  Charles  Norwood  Coleman,  High  Point,  N.  C. 


Fi\th  Row:  JiMMiE  Collins,  Burlington,  N.  C;  Johnnie 
Thomas  Colones,  Selma,  N.  C;  Adolphus  Cook.  Jr.,  Kannap- 
olis,  N.  C. ;  Jacob  Ernest  Cooke,  Aulander,  N.  C;  Ben  Frank- 
lin Cooper,  Warsaw,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Row:  Fenner  Samuel  Corbett.  Greenville,  N.  C;  Alfred 
Bobby  Cordell,  Cliffside,  N.  C. ;  Feldman  Corn.  Kannapolis, 
N.  C. ;  Sam  Owen  Cornwell,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C;  Joseph  Dur- 
ham Corpening.  Granite  Falls,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row:  Robert  Elijah  Covington,  Pachuta,  Miss.; 
Henry  C.  Cranford,  Durham,  N.  C. ;  Carrol  Mickey  Craver. 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. ;  Julius  R.  Creech,  Tarboro,  N.  C,  *rA; 
Ernest  George  Crone,  Goldsboro,  N.  C. 


Eighth  Rotv:  Ted  Jerome  Croner,  Charlotte,  N.  C;  Robert 
Leo  Crump,  Durham,  N.  C;  Angus  D.  Currie,  Newport  News, 
Va. ;  Louis  Poisson  Cutlar,  Marion,  N.  C. ;  Charles  Thomas 
Daniel,  Durham,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Row:  John  Henry  Daniel,  Jr..  Rocky  Mount,  N.  C,  Z^'; 
Daniel  Edward  Daum.  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.;  William  Joseph  Dav- 
enport, Greenville,  N.  C,  AKE;  Lawrence  Bernard  Davido- 
wiTZ.  New  York,  N.  Y. ;  Charles  Walker  Davis,  Roanoke 
Rapids,  N.  C. 


Tenth  Row:  George  Lansing  Davis,  Jr.,  Maplewood,  N.  J., 
<S>K2;  John  Owen  Davis,  Toledo,  Ohio,  2N;  Junius  Ayers 
Davis.  Graham,  N.  C. ;  Robert  Norman  Davis.  Washington, 
D.  C;  James  Fuller  Dibrell.  Danville,  Va.,  -AE. 


164 


Pint  Row:  Alfred  Peter  Dickman,  Greensboro,  N.  C. ;  William 
H.  DoDSON,  Balboa,  Canal  Zone,  Panama;  Edward  B.  Dudley, 
Jr.,  Charlotte,  N.  C;  O.  C.  Dudley,  Canton,  N.  C,  2X;  W. 
Vernon  Duncan.  Siler  City,  N.  C. 


Second  Rotr:  Jack  Boney  Dunn,  Clinton,  N.  C. ;  Billy  Thomas 
Durham.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Pauline  A.  Durham.  Carrboro, 
N.  C. ;  David  Darby  Duryea,  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  A^;  Edwin 
Saunders  Early,  Jr.,  Portsmouth,  Va.,  BGIT. 


Third  Row:  Frank  Jones  Earnheart,  Salisbury,  N.  C. ;  John 
Charles  Eaton.  MocksviUe,  N.  C. ;  Elliott  Jacob  Echelman, 
Newburgh,  N.  Y.;  Joe  Ednet,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C;  James  Ben- 
jamin Edwards,  Snow  Hill,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Roir:  Robert  Wainesworth  Edwards.  Fort  Mill,  S.  C; 
Wade  Davis  EowARbs,  Wilson,  N.  C,  -^';  William  Burgan 
Edwards,  Graham,  N.  C. ;  Willis  Parham  Edwards,  Seaboard, 
N.  C,  nKA ;  John  Ray  Efird,  Columbia,  S.  C,  2N. 


Fifth  Row:  Courtney  David  Egerton,  Raleigh,  N.  C,  $Ae, 
James  Tait  Elder.  Annapolis,  Md.;  Edward  Kerge  Ellis,  New- 
port News,  Va.;  Jack  Ellis.  Sherman,  Texas;  James  T.  Ellis, 
Siler  City,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Row:  Robert  Boynton  Ellis.  Shreve,  Ohio;  John  Jay 
Emerick.  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  BBII ;  Barbara  Epps,  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C. ;  Frances  Elizabeth  Erwin,  Raleigh,  N.  C,  AAIl ;  Dale 
B.  Evans.  Ann  Arbor,  Mich.,  X*. 


Seventh  Row:  James  Gilbert  Evans,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Dale 
M.  Evarts,  Meriden,  Conn.,  X<i?;  Charles  Marvin  Fairchild, 
Roanoke,  Va.;  Robert  Stackhouse  Fairly.  Laurinburg,  N.  C. ; 
Russell  Myron  Fakoury,  Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Eighth  Roie:  Grafton  Clinton  Fanney,  Jr.,  Scotland  Neck, 
N.  C,  -N;  Holt  Apgar  Farley,  Dunellen,  N.  J.;  J.  Edwards 
Faulkner,  Jr.,  Greensboro,  N.  C. ;  Ross  Leon  Fedder,  Easley, 
S.  C,  TE#;  Richard  Walter  Feder,  Cincinnati,  Ohio. 


Ninth  Row:  Alexander  Littlejohn  Feild.  Towson,  Md.,  KA; 
Frank  Weston  Fenhagen,  Baltimore,  Md.;  Charles  William 
Ferguson.  Kannapolis,  N.  C;  Morris  Patteson  Ferris.  George- 
town, S.  C;  James  Wylie  Fields,  Islip,  N.  Y.,  X*. 


Tenth  Roiv:  Archer  Pate  Fish,  Fuquay  Springs,  N.  C. ;  Thomas 
Clark  Fitzgerald,  New  Bern,  N.  C. ;  Herbert  L.  Fleishman, 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. ;  Thomas  Carter  Florance.  Yanceyville, 
N.  C;  Georq^  PiNCKNEY  Floyd,  Danville,  Va. 


/        ^    / 


/ 


//    / 


165 


./7 


/ 


/ 


First  Rote:  Jack  Buening  Ford,  Charlotte,  N.  C. ;  William 
McKenzie  Forrester,  Montezuma,  Ga.,  2AE;  Lewis  Marshall 
Foster,  Southmont,  N.  C;  Jack  Anthony  Foust,  Charlotte, 
N.  C;  Steve  Henery  Fowler,  New  Bern,  N.  C,  KZ. 


Second  Row:  Frank  Betts  Frazer,  Pensacola,  Fla.,  AKE;  Clif- 
ford Cyrus  Frazier.  Greensboro,  N.  C,  BOIl ;  Murray  N. 
Friedlander.  Baltimore,  Md.,  TE*;  William  Alexander  Fryar, 
Gibsonville,  N.  C. ;  Edward  Seely  Frye,  Asheville,  N.  C. 


Third  Row:  Paul  Lawrence  Furgatch,  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
Ferby  Glen  Gaither,  Harmony,  N.  C;  William  G.  Gaither, 
Jr..  Elizabeth  City,  N.  C,  -N;  Allen  McCain  Garrett.  Chapel 
Hill,  N.  C,  X*;  Harold  Vincent  Garrity,  Interlaken,  N.  J., 
2X. 


Fourth  Row:  Charles  Monroe  Gartrell.  Blue  Ridge,  Ga., 
AXA;  Neal  Ward  Gilbert,  Washington,  D.  C,  2X;  Harold 
L.  Godwin,  Fayetteville,  N.  C,  ATQ;  Robert  Cornelius  God- 
win, New  Bern,  N.  C;  Benjamin  Miller  Gold,  Shelby,  N.  C, 

2N. 


Fifth  Row:  Arthur  Mordacai  ,  Goldberg,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.; 
Lawrence  J.  Goldrich,  Far  Rockaway,  N.  Y.,  IIA*;  Alfred 
Robert  Goldstein,  Sea  Gate,  New  York  Harbor,  IIA*;  Julius 
Goldstein.  Gastonia,  N.  C. ;  Lewis  Richard  Goodman,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y.,  An*. 


Sixth  Row:  Irvin  Howard  Gordon,  Bronxville,  N.  Y. ;  Paul 
Jules  Gordon,  Bronxville,  N.  Y.;  Robert  Hugh  Gordon, 
Spencer,  N.  C;  Eugene  Blake  Graeber,  Jr.,  Charlotte,  N.  C; 
John  Washington  Graham,  Hillsboro,  N.  C,  Z'l'. 


Seventh  Row:  William  Emery  Gray,  New  Britain,  Conn.,  B9n  ; 
William  Proctor  Greathouse.  Rocky  Mount,  N.  C,  IIKA; 
Fred  Smith  Green,  Lexington,  N.  C,  K2 ;  Joseph  Edwards 
Green.  Weldon,  N.  C,  Z*;  Nancy  Byrd  Green,  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C 


Eighth  Row:  Paul  E.  Green,  Jr.,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  X* ;  Rich- 
ard Marvin  Greenstein,  Folcroft,  Pa.,  IIA*;  Charles  A.  Greg- 
ory, Jr.,  Richmond,  Va.,  AKE ;  Edwin  Haynes  Gregory,  Halifax, 
N.  C,  KA;  Arthur  Knott  Gregson,  Hamlet,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Row:  Claude  Hamilton  Gresham,  Jr.,  Ware  Shoals, 
S.  C,  James  Victor  Jordan  Griffin,  Norfolk,  Va. ;  Maurice 
William  Griffin,  Raleigh,  N.  C,  HKA;  Simon  Claude  Grif- 
fin, Jr.,  Williamston,  N.  C. ;  Eugene  Andrews  Grinstead,  Jr., 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Tenth  Row:  Alan  L.  Grosner,  Atlantic  City,  N.  J.;  Joseph 
Patton  Gudger,  Mooresville,  N.  C. ;  Richard  Bender  Guggen- 
heim, Chicago,  111.;  William  Edgerton  Gulley,  Greenville, 
N.  C. ;  LeRoy  Parks  Gwaltney,  Jr  ,  Charlotte,  N.  C. 


166 


EBB 


First  Row:  George  Gordon  Hacker,  Stanley,  N.  C;  Ernest 
Deans  Hackney,  Wilson,  N.  C,  Z^;  John  Bartlett  Haga- 
MAN,  Boone,  N.  C. ;  William  Stephensen  Halsey,  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C,  K2 ;  Luther  Hamilton,  Jr.,  Morehead  City,  N.  C. 


Second  Rote:  William  Henry  Hamilton,  Hamlet,  N.  C. ; 
James  Andrews  Hancock,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C;  Richard 
Michel  Handel,  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  ZBT ;  Horace  Gravely  Han- 
kins,  Kernersville,  N.  C. ;  Paul  C.  Harman,  White  Plains,  N.  Y. 


Third  Rote:  Drew  Sugg  Harper,  Snow  Hill,  N.  C. ;  John 
Alonzo  Harper.  Jr.,  Rocky  Mount,  N.  C;  Luby  Alexander 
Harper,  New  Bern,  N.  C;  Eugene  Blount  Harris,  Nutley, 
N.  J. ;  Robert  Wayne  Harrison,  Thomasville,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Row:  Richard  Moses  Harshaw,  Asheville,  N.  C,  IIKA; 
James  Joseph  Hart,  Newark,  N.  Y.,  -X;  Kirby  Thompson 
Hart,  Goldsboro,  N.  C;  Richard  Davis  Hartley,  High  Point, 
N.  C;  Allison  Burton  Hayes,  Aurora,  N.  C. 


Fifth  Row:  Raymond  H.  Heath,  Candor,  N.  C;  Edward  Hen- 
RiQUEz  Hecht,  Great  Neck,  N.  Y. ;  James  Warren  Hedrick, 
Thomasville,  N.  C;  William  W.  Henderson,  Saltville,  Va.,  X*; 
Samuel  Robert  Henderson,  Monroe,  N.  C. 


Si\th  Row:  Donald  L.  Henson,  Snow  Hill,  N.  C. ;  William 
Frantz  Herr,  Lancaster,  Pa.,  Ben ;  Lewis  F.  Hicks,  Raleigh 
N.  C. ;  William  Donavon  Hicks.  Glencoe,  III.;  Milton  Need 
HAM  Hinnant,  Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row:  Grimsley  Taylor  Hobbs,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C; 
John  Wallace  Hoffmann,  Statesville,  N.  C. ;  James  Phillip 
Hogan,  Burlington,  N.  C ;  James  Taylor  Hogan,  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C,  ATfi;  Thomas  Stanley  Scofield  Holbrook,  Chevy 
Chase,  Md. 


Eighth  Row:  Lawrence  Gus  Holeman,  Roxboro,  N.  C. ;  Joseph 
Bernard  Holmes,  Maxton,  N.  C;  Joe  V.  Holt,  Graham,  N.  C; 
Herbert  Patrick  Honeycutt,  Four  Oaks,  N.  C;  Thomas  Mee- 
han  Hood,  Chestnut  Hill,  Pa. 


Ninth  Row:  William  Milton  Hood,  Jr.,  Charlotte,  N.  C,  Ben- 
nett Watson  Hooks,  Kinston,  N.  C. ;  John  Brantley  Hooks, 
Wilmington,  N.  C. ;  William  Bland  Horn.  Lawndale,  N.  C. ; 
George  Howard,  Tarboro,  N.  C. 


Tenth  Row:  A.  Y.  Howell,  Vilas,  N.  C. ;  Baxter  Cannon 
Howell,  Boone,  N.  C. ;  Hampton  Hubbard,  Charlotte,  N.  C; 
Israel  Harding  Hughes,  Concord,  N.  C. ;  Samuel  M.  Hughes, 


Durham,  N.  C, 


167 


./? 


/ 


r^-^£jh^^^-^^w 


First  Row:  Thomas  Spurgeon  Hughes,  Elizabeth  City,  N.  C, 
i;X;  James  Neely  Hunt,  Franklin,  N.  C. ;  John  Douglass 
Hunt,  Guilford  College,  N.  C. ;  Charles  Baird  Hunter.  Nor- 
folk,  Va.;  Richard  Bennett  Hyman.  New  York,  N.  Y. 


Second  Rotr:  Raymond  Browning  Ingram,  Mamers,  N.  C; 
Robert  Waldon  Jsley,  Pinetops,  N.  C;  William  Arthur 
Ivey.  Rocky  Mount,  N.  C. ;  William  S.  Jackson,  Beulaville, 
N.  C. ;  Charles  Allen  Jacobs,  Lynchburg,  Va. 


Third  Roic:  David  Raymond  Jacobs,  West  Haven,  Conn.; 
Alfred  Morton  Jacobson.  East  Norwalk,  Conn.,  HA*;  Law- 
rence B.  Jacobson,  Lynbrook,  N.  Y.;  Larry  Moore  James. 
Greenville,  N.  C,  -N;  Charles  Clifton  Jarrell,  Greensboro, 
N.  C. 


Fourth  Row:  Albert  Jeffreys,  Chase  City,  Va.;  Edgar  Aaron 
Johnson,  Fayetteville,  N.  C. ;  Edwin  Hine  Johnson.  Nauga- 
TUCK,  Conn.,  X*;  John  M.  Johnson,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. ; 
Lawrence  McNeill  Johnson,  Aberdeen,  N.  C,  *rA. 


Fifth  Rote:  Rivers  Dunn  Johnson,  Warsaw,  N.  C,  -N; 
Thomas  Daniel  Johnson,  Stedman,  N.  C;  William  Sebrell 
Johnson,  Virginia  Beach,  Va.,  KA ;  Charles  Louis  Johnston. 
Catawissa,  Pa.;  William  Carlisle  Johnston,  Hampton,  Va. 


Sixth  Row:  James  Taylor  Joliff,  Jr.,  Smithfield,  N.  C;  Allen 
Talmadge  Jones.  Norfolk,  Va.,  -N;  John  Meredith  Jones. 
Edenton,  N.  C,  -X;  Lewis  Edward  Jones,  Norfolk,  Va. ;  Robert 
Alvin  Jones.  RockviUe  Centre,  N.  Y.,  *-^. 


Seventh  Rotr:  Weldon  Huske  Jordan,  Fayetteville,  N.  C; 
James  Sidney  Joyner.  Franklinton,  N.  C. ;  George  David  Kan- 
"ter.  Passaic,  N.  J.;  Arthur  Sanford  Kaplan,  High  Point,  N.  C; 
Harold  Kaplan,  Jr.,  Maplewood,  N.  J.,  TE*. 


Eighth  Row:  Andrew  Matthew  Karres,  Charlotte,  N.  C. ; 
Richard  P.  Katzin,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C;  Fred  Martin 
Kearns.  Asheboro,  N.  C. ;  James  Edward  Kelsey.  Deal,  N.  J.; 
Edmund  Oliver  Kenion.  Hillsboro,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Roiv:  Ellis  Ray  Kennerly,  Mt.  Ulla,  N.  C;  Wayne  T. 
Kent,  Meriden,  Conn.,  X*;  John  Rockwell  Kenyon.  Jr.. 
Charlotte,  N.  C;  Richard  Kerner,  New  York,  N.  Y.,  HA*; 
Charles  Carlton  Kimsey.  High  Point,  N.  C. 


Tenth  Row:  James  Elwood  King,  Reidsville,  N.  C;  John  Wil- 
liam King.  Wilmington,  N.  C. ;  William  G.  King,  Wilmington, 
N.  C;  J.  B.  KiTTRELL,  Greenville,  N.  C,  -N;  Walter  Klein. 
South  Orange,  N.  J. 


^PU 


f^,  It) 


168 


First  Row:  Julian  Blum  Kline,  Warrenton,  N.  C;  Paul  Edwin 
Knollman,  Bethesda,  Md.,  2X ;  William  Julian  Koch.  Chapel 
Hill,  N.  C. ;  John  Richard  Konz.  Rockville  Centre,  N.  Y. ;  David 
Franklin  Kooncf,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Second  Row:  Harold  Fredrick  Kkauss,  Jr..  Hope  Mills,  N.  C; 
Marvin  M.  Krieger.  Cleveland,  Ohio;  Walter  Newton' Lance'. 
Eiizabethton,  Tenn.;  Edgar  Jonathan  Lane.  Pinetops,  N.  C. ; 
Van  McKibben  Lane,  Jr.,  Macon,  Ga.,  *A6. 


Third  Row:  James  Thomas  Lang.  Farmville,  N.  C. ;  Mirlam 
Lawrence.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C;  Sherman  Cantor  Lazarus,  San- 
ford,  N.  C. ;  Herbert  White  Lee,  Greenville,  N.  C,  2N;  Wil- 
LLAM  Henry  Lee,  Willow  Springs,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Row:  Benjamin  Levine,  Trenton,  N.  J.;  Alfred  Jaros 
Levy,  Jr.,  Nashville,  Tenn.,  ZBT ;  Frank  Levy.  New  York,  N.  Y., 
nAf>;  George  Burnet  Lewis.  Flushing,  N.  Y.  A^-  John 
Sheldon  Lewis,  Elmira,  N.  Y.,  •tAe. 


F/flh  Row:  Thomas  S.  Light,  Cynwyd,  Pa.,  X-I';  Thomas  Lan- 
DON  Lindsay,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. ;  Carlton  Lindsey.  Lumber- 
ton,  N.  C,  ^-iO;  LeRoy  Lewis  Little,  Jackson  Heights  N  Y  ■ 
Lewis  C.  Lloyd,  Spencer,  N.  C.  '  ' 


Sixth  Row:  Mary  Jane  Lloyd,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Georgia 
Logan.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Frank  Fay  Logue.  Philadelphia,  Pa  • 
James  Gordon  Logue.  Philadelphia,  Pa.;  Nicholas  Long' 
Roanoke  Rapids,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row:    William  Ancrom  Lord.  West  Palm  Beach    Fla 
AKk.  ■   Albert  Edwin   Lovejoy,   Southern   Pines,  N.   C  ■   Oscar 
Bernard  Lubow,  New  London,  Conn.;  Mum  Paschall   Lyon 
Greensboro,    N.    C,    AKE;    Betta   Dixon    MacCarthy,    Chapel 
Hill,  N.  C. 


E/ghth  Row:    Henry  Tomlinson  MacGill,   Fayetteville    N    C 
ATQ;  Oliver  Wendell  Maddrey,  Seabord,  N.  C;  Percy  ^3?AR- 
ner  Mallison,   Nashville,   Tenn.,   ZAE;  Andrew  Adger  Man- 
ning   Spartanburg,   S.    C,   *Ae;   Wesley   C.   Marsh,   Staunton 
Va.,  AXA. 


Ninth  Row:  W.  Penn  Marshall.  Jr.,  Raleigh,  N  C    X>I'-  John 

RuFus  Martin,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C;  Watt  N.  Martin'.  Win- 
ston-Salem, N.  C. :  Howard  Malcolm  Marton,  New '  York 
N.  Y.;  Oscar  McDowell  Marvin,  Winston-Salem,   N.  C. 


Tenth  Row:  Robert  Steven  Masten.  Mt.  Airy  N  C  IIKA- 
Hubbard  D.  Maynard.  Jr..  Durham,  N.  C;  'Eli'  Franklin 
Mayne,  Charlotte,  N.  C;  Asa  C.  Meek,  Asheville  N  C  ■  WiL- 
LiAU  Cassie..^Iei^cer,  Williamston,  N.  C,  KZ.     ,.,' 


:,  L-fiarlotte,  N. 
Iassie  AIercer, 


.<f 


./ 


l//i^.cM4i^ 


I 


.^ 


.y 


/ 


169 


/^ 


/ 


/ 


-//Lij/t^m^i^t.- 


First  Row:  Ned  P  Mewborn,  Kinston,  N.  C,  K2 ;  Gerald 
Meyer,  Portsmouth,  Va.;  Robert  X.  Michaels,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  Joseph  Henry  Mickey.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C;  Daniel 
Franklin  Milam.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Second  Row:  Mary  Louise  Milam.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  Xfi; 
Blanton  Winship  Mills.  Albany,  Ga.,  ATO;  Marion  Thomas 
Mills,  Morehead  City,  N.  C,  X*;  Charles  W.  Mincey,  Char- 
lotte, N.  C. ;  John  Henry  Mitchell.  Aulander,  N.  C. 


Thirii  Row:  Carroll  Odell  Money.  Mt.  Airy,  N.  C;  William 
Galpin  Monroe.  Jr..  Rockville  Centre,  N.  Y.,  2X;  George 
Nissen  Montague.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C.,  2AE;  Joseph  Rich- 
ard Moon.  Graham,  N.  C. ;  Allen  Hoyt  Moore,  Doylestown, 
Pa.,  ATn. 


Fourth  Row:  Donald  Wright  Moore,  Paoli,  Pa.,  X*;  Thomas 
McGwynn  Moore,  Raleigh,  N.  C. ;  John  Irvin  Morgan,  Wash- 
ington, N.  C ;  Reitzel  N.  Morgan,  High  Point,  N.  C. ;  Leonard 
Stewart  Morris,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  *A. 


Fijth  Roiv:  Robert  Lee  Morrow,  Jr.,  Albemarle,  N.  C. ;  John 
David  Moses.  Elkins  Park,  Pa. ;  Aaron  Bernard  Moss.  Cherry- 
ville,  N.  C. ;  George  Henry  Moss,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  Marcus 
Lee  Moss.  Cherryville,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Row:  Jay  Irwin  Musler.  Schenectady,  N.  Y.,  IIA*;  Fred 
Clifford  Myers.  Lexington,  N.  C. ;  Albert  Spencer  Myrick. 
Greensboro,  N.  C,  2AE;  Neale  Richard  McCombs,  Kannapolis, 
N.  C. ;  Samuel  Baxter  McGinn.  Jr..  Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Roir:  CiCERO  Daniel  McIntyre,  Red  Oak,  N.  C;  Wil- 
liam Roberts  McKenzie.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C,  K2 ;  Walter 
Joseph  McLawhorn.  Washington,  N.  C;  C.  C.  McLean,  Jr., 
Greensboro,  N.  C,  KA;  Lawson  Gamble  McLendon,  Monroe, 
N.  C. 


Eighth  Row:  John  Currie  McLeod,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C ;  James 
B.  McMuLLAN,  Washington,  N.  C,  AKE;  John  Small  Neblett, 
Charlotte,  N.  C.;  William  Nachamson.  Durham,  N.  C,  TE<f>; 
William  Nichols.  Reidsville,  N.  C,  -X. 


Ninth  Row:  Frank  Donald  Nidifeer.  Bristol,  Tenn.;  Paul 
Fritz  Nolo.  Schenectady,  N.  Y.,  X^V;  Leonard  de  Nooyer, 
Garfield,  N.  J.,  AXA ;  Fred  Charles  Norman,  Elkin,  N.  C,  K2 ; 
John  Tyler  Nourse,  Washington,  D.  C. 


Tenth  Row:  Howard  Thomas  Odum,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  X>I'; 
Charles  Robert  Thompson.  Lenoir,  N.  C. ;  James  Franklin 
O'Neal,  Durham,  N.  C. ;  Whitman  Osgood.  New  York,  N.  Y.; 
Thomas  Michael  Dillon  OShe.a,  Durham,  N.  C. 


170 


First  Row:  John  E.  O'Steen,  Kinston,  N.  C. ;  Robert  Laine 
Otte,  Great  Neck,  N.  Y.,  BeiT;  Karl  Busbee  Pace,  Greenville, 
N.  C,  SN;  Benford  Delton  Padgett.  Maple  Hill,  N.  C;  John 
Dixon  Page.  Mt.  Pleasant,  Tenn. 


Second  Row:  William  Gaston  Palmer,  Littleton,  N.  C,  Z»I'; 
George  Stephen  Pankey.  Jacksonville,  N.  C;  Clyde  Leslie 
Parker.  Norfolk,  Va.,  -X;  Daniel  Louis  Parker,  Smithfield, 
N.  C;  Ernest  Parker,  Jr.,  Shallotte,  N.  C. 


Third  Row:  Francis  Iredell  Parker.  Charlotte,  N.  C,  AKE; 
George  Rollin  Parker.  Flemington,  N.  J.,  KA ;  Alvin  B.  Parks. 
Edenton,  N.  C. ;  Derek  Choate  Parmenter.  Summerville,  S.  C. 
-i*;  James  Greene  Paschal.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C,  K-. 


Fourth  Row:  Lewis  W.  Patton.  Franklin,  N.  C. ;  Horace  H. 
Paul.  Pembroke,  N.  C;  Willard  Reuben  Payne,  Archdale, 
N.  C;  Charles  Henry  Peete.  Warrenton,  N.  C,  AKE;  Vir- 
ginia Randolph  Pell,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Fifth  Row:  John  Robert  Pender,  Charlotte,  N.  C,  -IKE; 
Arnold  Pestronk,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y.,  TE<J>;  Henry  Alan 
Petuske.  Reidsville,  N.  C,  *A ;  James  Solomon  Phelps.  Jr., 
Decatur,  Ga.;   Harry   Francis   Phillips,  Jr..   Burlington,   N.   C. 


Sixth  Row:  Robert  Hope\x'ell  Phinny.  Oil  City,  Pa.,  Ben-, 
Julius  W.  Phoenix.  Raleigh,  N.  C,  2X;  Bristowe  Percy  Pitts, 
High  Point,  N.  C;  John  Boone  Pleasants.  Jr..  Greensboro, 
N.  C;  James  J.  Poole,  Little  Neck,  N.  Y. 


Seventh  Row:  James  Ralph  Poole.  Dobson,  N.  C;  Mark 
Cooper  Pope.  Atlanta,  Ga.,  <I>Ae ;  L.  Herbert  Porter,  Fayette- 
ville,  N.  C. ;  Ralph  Powell,  Whiteville,  N.  C. ;  Victor  George 
Powell,  Jr.,  Gastonia,  N.  C. 


Eighth  Row:  Hubert  Gaston  Price,  Avon,  N.  C;  Walter 
E.  Pupa,  Inwood,  L.  L,  N.  Y.;  William  M.  Ragland.  Ralei.^h, 
N.  C,  Z^I';  William  Howard  Rambeau.  Angier,  N.  C;  James 
Wesley  Raney.  Carolina  Beach,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Row:  John  Brand  Rathbone.  New  London,  Conn.,  X*; 
Fred  Mowrer  Readi.ing.  Davidson,  N.  C. ;  Charles  Burroughs 
Reavis.  Henderson,  N.  C. ;  Franklin  Cooper  Reyner.  Atlantic 
City,  N.  J.,  TE4>;  Stephen  Dalrymple  Reynolds,  Louisville 
Ky.,  Ben. 


Tenth  Row:  James  Kent  Rhodes.  Raleigh,  N.  C;  Arthur 
Donald  Rich.  West  Orange,  N.  J.,  ZBT ;  Carl  Brooks  Roach, 
Reidsville.  N.  C;  Peter  Chase  Robinson.  Cooleemee,  N.  C; 
William  Bernard  Rocker.  Elizabeth,  N.  J.,  HA*  -^ 

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First  Row:  NiSBET  Pharr  Rodgers,  Charlotte,  N.  C;  George 
Oroon  Rogers,  Whiteville,  N.  C. ;  Malcolm  General  Rogers. 
Jr.,  Fort  Mill,  S.  C. ;  Robert  Leonard  Rosemond.  Hillsboro, 
N.  C;  Roy  Martin  Roska.  Milwaukee,  Wis. 


Second  Row:  Frank  Mason  Ross.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Lester 
RossKAM.  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  ZBT;  George  Roston,  Jackson 
Heights,  L.  L,  N.  Y.;  Edward  Henry  Rothschild,  Scarsdale, 
N.  Y.;  Robert  Dixon  Rouse.  Jr..  Farmville,  N.  C. 


Third  Rotv:  John  Moore  Ruth,  Pittsboro,  N.  C;  George  B. 
Ryan.  Newton,  Mass.,  A*;  David  Coston  Sabiston,  Jacksonville, 
N.  C. ;  John  C.  Safrit,  Kannapolis,  N.  C;  Thomas  Bryan 
Sanders,  Four  Oaks,  N.  C. 


Foiirlh  Row:  Ralph  F.  Sarlin.  Liberty,  S.  C,  TE*;  Julian 
Sarokin.  Maplewood,  N.  J.,  TE*;  Carl  Preston  Savage,  Jr., 
Montezuma,  Ga.,  *-ie ;  Edwin  Brantley  Sawyer.  Belcross, 
N.  C. ;  Orlando  Calhoun  Scarborough.  Winnsboro,  S.  C. 


Fifth  Row:  LuTHER  Virgil  Schenck,  Jr.,  Greensboro,  N.  C. ; 
Milton  Schottenfeld,  Newark,  N.  J.;  Peter  Somers  Scott, 
Burlington,  N.  C;  Samuel  Wade  Secrest.  Monroe,  N.  C; 
E.  Victor  Seixas,  Jr.,  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  X*. 


Sixth  Row:  Harry  Filmore  Setzer.  Morganton,  N.  C. ;  Edward 
Stuart  Shannonhouse.  Charlotte,  N.  C.;  Charles  Edward 
Sharp.  Harrellsville,  N.  C:  John  Robert  Sharp.  Ocean  City, 
N.  J.;  Robert  Hill  Shaw,  Macon,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row:  John  Daniel  Shearin,  Jr..  Weldon,  N.  C,  KA; 
James  Quinn  Shelton,  Mayfield,  Ky.,  X*;  Robert  Stephen 
Sherman,  FayetteviUe,  N.  C;  John  Goodrich  Sibley,  Charlotte, 
N.  C,  X*;  John  Wesley  Sides,  Albemarle,  N.  C. 


Eighth  Row:  George  K.  Sills.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C,  K2 ;  Rob- 
ert Earle  Simmones,  Kinston,  N.  C,  *K2 ;  John  Meredith 
SIMMS,  Raleigh,  N.  C. ;  Calton  Jones  Weaver  Simpson.  Chapel 
Hill,  N.  C. ;  Charles  Harrison  Simpson.  Greensboro,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Row:  William  B.  Simpson,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C,  -X; 
Alain  Raunay  Singer,  Wilmington,  Del.,  -i^;  John  Edward 
Sink.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C;  William  Leigh  Siskind,  Baltimore, 
Md.;  Joshua  Hamner  Slaughter.  Raleigh,  N.  C,  'M'A. 


Tenth  Row:  Virginia  Mae  Sloan,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Ander- 
son J.  Smith,  Black  Creek,  N.  C;  G.  P.  Smith.  Shelby,  N.  C; 
James  Edgar  Smith.  Gastonia,  N.  C. ;  Joseph  Andrew  Smith, 
Goldsboro,  N.  C,  -N. 


172 


First  Row:  Thad  Vernon  Smith,  Durham,  N.  C. ;  Wilson 
Frank  Smithwick,  Durham,  N.  C. ;  Jack  Lloyd  Snipes,  Hills- 
boro,  N.  C. ;  Charles  Ansel  Snow,  Jamestown,  N.  C,  •I'fA ; 
Margery  Ann  Snyder,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  A  An. 


Second  Row:  Jacob  Nathaniel  Sokohl.  Elkins  Park,  Pa.; 
Stephen  A.  Sokoloff.  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.;  Robert  Evans  Sonn- 
TAG,  Sarasota,  Fla.,  A>I';  George  W.  Sparger.  Mt.  Airy,  N.  C, 
ITK.V;  Robert  Peniwell  Speith,  Louisville,  Ky. 


Third  Row:  Bill  F.  Spurlin.  Raleigh,  N.  C,  ATQ;  Robert 
Neal  Spurrier.  Charlotte,  N.  C, ;  Pressley  Alexander  Stack, 
Sanford,  N.  C. ;  Kerwin  Bartlett  Stallings.  Forest  City,  N.  C; 
Raney  Baynes  Stanford.  Durham,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Row:  Charlie  Okr  Starnes,  Pineville,  N.  C. ;  Charles 
E.  Stebbins,  Creston,  Ohio;  Leon  Stein,  Wilmington,  N.  C; 
Henry  L.  Stevens,  Warsaw,  N.  C,  2N;  William  Edward 
Stevens,  Lenoir,  N.  C,  *Ae. 


Fifth  Roiv:  Thomas  Lane  Stokes.  Norfolk,  Va.,  ATQ;  John 
Robert  Tolar  Stoner.  Fayetteville,  N.  C,  Ben ;  Rex  Kirkland 
Stoner.  Jr.,  Fayetteville,  N.  C,  BGIT ;  Ralph  Nichols  Stray- 
horn.  Jr.,  Durham,  N.  C,  "I'Ae ;  James  King  Stringfield, 
Waynesville,  N.   C. 


Sixth  Row:  F.  Willis  Suddreth,  Lenoir,  N,  C,  ■PKZ;  Sidney 
N.  SuTKER.  Randleman,  N.  C. ;  John  Hargreaves  Tandy.  West- 
field,  N.  J.;  Allen  Denny  Tate.  Graham,  N.  C;  Thad  W. 
Tate,  Jr..  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row:  FRANK  VICTOR  Taylor,  Charlotte,  N.  C. ;  James 
Landon  Taylor,  Greensboro,  N.  C,  "I'Ki: ;  Herbert  Austin 
Temple,  Jonesboro,  N.  C. ;  William  Lafayette  Thispen.  Scot- 
land Neck,  N.  C. ;  Lester  Ralston  Thomas.  Jr.,  Providence, 
R.  I  ,  X'f. 


Eighth  Row:  Vernon  David  Thomason,  Lexington,  N.  C; 
Charles  Robert  Thompson,  Lenoir,  N.  C. ;  Emerson  Dowd 
Thompson,  Charlotte,  N.  C. ;  Julius  Faison  Thomson,  Golds- 
boro,  N.  C,  BGH;  WILLIAM  Reid  Thompson,  Pittsboro,  N.  C. 


Ninth  Row:  Edward  Lloyd  Tilley,  Raleigh,  N.  C;  Jerry 
Arthur  Tishman,  New  York,  N.  Y.;  Kenneth  Julian  Todd, 
Tampa,  Fla.,  KA ;  William  Branson  Tooly,  Belhaven,  N.  C. ; 
Joseph  Collins  Travis,  Charlotte,  N.  C. 


Tenth  Rou\-  G.  Earl  Trevathan,  Fountain,  N.  C;  William 
Jennings  Tripp,  Edward,  N.  C. ;  John  Franklin  Trott,  Stella, 
N.  C;  Belk  Connor  Troutman.  Addor,  N.  C;  Benjamin 
WiMBERLEY  Trueblood,  Tarboro,  N.  C,  'J'AA. 


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l'ir\i  Riiw:  A.  H.  TuRBEViLLE,  MuUins,  S.  C;  Howard  Conrad 
TuRNAGE,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Kenneth  Dowd  Underwood, 
Burlington,  N.  C. ;  Edward  Foy  Uzzell,  Atlantic  City,  N.  J.; 
Bayard  Taylor  Van  Hecke,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  •I>-ie. 


Second  Rotr:  Steve  Stelio  Vlahakis.  New  York,  N.  Y.;  John 
Douglas  Von  Canon.  West  End,  N.  C. ;  George  Hargrave 
Walker,  Kerr,  N.  C. ;  Woodrow  Wilson  Walker.  Burlington, 
N.  C. ;  John  Powell  Wallace.  St.  Petersburg,  Fla.,  -N. 


Th/rd  Ron:  Charles  Alfred  Wallin.  Raleigh,  N.  C,  2N; 
Alfred  Decatur  Ward.  New  Bern,  N.  C,  Ki: ;  David  Samuel 
Ward.  Graham,  N.  C,  *Ae ;  John  Charles  Ward,  Kinston, 
N.  C. ;  Joseph  Major  Ward,  Robersonville,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Rotr:  Jack  H.  Warner,  Jr..  Little  Falls,  N.  J.;  Robert 
Earl  Warren,  Durham,  N.  C. ;  Jimmy  Fisher  Warwick.  Char- 
lotte, N.  C,  Ben ;  Van  Paul  Watson,  Jonesboro,  N.  C. ;  Wil- 
liam Henly  Watson.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 


Fifth  Rnir:  GEORGE  Travers  Webb.  Portsmouth,  Va.;  Charles 
Louis  Weill,  Jr..  Greensboro,  N.  C,  ZBT;  Richard  Weintraub, 
Elkins  Park,  Pa.,  ZBT;  Richard  Kalish  Weisburg.  Glencoe,  111.; 
Henry  Francis  Welfare.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Roir:  Edwin  J.  Wells.  Fayetteville,  N.  C,  KS ;  John 
David  Wells.  Wilson,  N.  C,  'I'-ie ;  Clifton  Forrest  West. 
Kinston,  N.  C,  Z^I';  Malvern  Paul  Westcott.  Bellevue,  Pa., 
X-*!-;  Raymond  William  Westerdale.  Irvington,  N.  J. 


Seienth  Row:  Albert  Edward  Westover,  111,  Merchantville, 
N.  J.,  X*;  John  Edwin  Weyher.  Kinston,  N.  C,  -N;  Robert 
T.  Wharton,  Verona,  N.  J.;  Robert  McFarland  Wheeler, 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. ;  George  Betton  Whitaker.  Winston- 
Salem,  N.  C,  i;AE, 


First  Row:  Francis  Jourd  White.  Charlotte,  N.  C;  James 
Stark  White.  Mebane,  N.  C,  ATfi;  Svdnor  M.  White,  Raleigh, 
N.  C,  Z*;  William  Charles  White,  Taylorsville,  N.  C. ; 
George  David  Whitfield,  Hurdle  Mills,  N.  C. 


Second  Row:  Jesse  Walter  Whitley,  Fremont,  N.  C. ;  Cole- 
man Morrison  Whitlock,  Jr.,  Mt.  Airy,  N.  C,  Ben ;  George 
Crabtree  Whitner.  Jacksonville,  Fla.,  AKE;  Dick  Whitting- 
ton.  Douglaston,  N.  Y.,  X*;  James  Preston  Wicker,  Sanford, 
N.  C. 


Third  Row:  Frank  James  Wideman.  Washington,  D.  C,  AKE; 
Eugene  Franklin  Wilborn.  South  Boston,  Va.;  Donald  Smith 
WiLLARD.  Forestville,  Conn.;  Frank  Bass  Williams,  Alexandria, 
Va. ;  M.  Delmer  Williams.  Burlington,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Roil':  ROBERT  JOHNSTON  WILLIAMS,  Charlotte,  N.  C,  K- ; 
Cecil  McAteer  Wilson.  Durham,  N.  C;  Hadley  McDee  Wil- 
son. Lenoir,  N.  C,  -X;  William  M.  Wilson.  Greensboro,  N.  C, 
*rA;  William  Alfred  Winburn.  Savannah,  Ga.,  -N. 


Fijih  Row:  HARRY  KING  WiNECOFF.  Concord,  N.  C;  Dean 
Flewellyn  Winn.  Winthrop,  Mass.;  Edgar  Adolph  Wohlford, 
Charlotte,  N.  C,  K- ;  Richard  Jerome  Wolf.  Neponsit,  N.  Y.; 
William  W.  Woodruff,  Jr.,  Lexington,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Row:  Winfifld  A.  Worth,  Elizabeth  City,  N.  C,  Z>I'; 
Joel  Wesley  Wright,  Asheville,  N.  C,  K- ;  Eugene  Zimmer- 
man Yates.  Winston-Salem,  N.  C;  Richard  Dawley  Young, 
Washington,  D.  C,  X^I';  Paul  Mark  Ylider.  Brooklyn,  N.  Y., 
'I>A. 


Setenth  Row:  Lionel  R.  Zimmer.  Miami,  Fla.;  Sheldon  N. 
Zinman,  Brooklyn,  N.  Y. ;  Irving  Zirpel,  Washington,  D.  C; 
Algernon  Augustus  Zollicoffer,  Jr.,  Henderson,  N.  C,  AKE. 

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175 


PROFESSIONAL   SCHOOLS 


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SCHOOL 
OF  PHARMACY 

(J>Gt  PART  OF  the  University  of  North  Carolina — a  very 
special  part  to  the  141  (a  new  record)  who  are  quietly  ab- 
sorbing the  professionally  steeped  air  that  enshrouds  Howell 
Hall — is  the  School  of  Pharmacy. 

Here  in  Chapel  Hill  we  find  the  only  Pharmacy  School 
in  North  Carolina.  It  represents  and  strives  to  carry  forward 
one  of  the  oldest  professions  known  to  mankind.  It  has  been 
the  work  of  our  own  Dean  Beard,  and  Dean  Howell  before 
him,  to  build  and  maintain  professional  standards  for  this 
unit  of  U.N.C.  education.  These  men  have  devoted  heart, 
soul,  mind,  and  sweat  to  the  advancement  of  Pharmacy  in 
North  Carolina.  If  it  cost  $50,000  to  determine  that  Phar- 
macy is  a  profession  and  not  a  trade,  then  it  should  be  with 


David  McGowan,  President 


pride — and  it  is — that  graduates  in  Pharmacy 
say  "I  am  a  Pharmacist". 

The  trade  needs  to  know  only  the  methods ; 
the  profession  needs  to  know  the  principles 
upon  which  the  methods  are  established.  To 
maintain  a  high  professional  standard,  it  has 
been  necessary  for  a  Pharmacy  curricula  to 
include  fundamental  knowledge  of  the  basic 
law,  theories,  principles  and  applications  of 
Botany,  Chemistry,  Physiology,  Pharmacology, 
Physics,  Psychology,  and  Zoology.  Naturally, 
an  accumulation  of  this  knowledge,  with 
reasonable  understanding,  has  a  positive  and 
favorable  effect  upon  the  regard  which  the 
people,  as  a  whole,  hold  for  the  Pharmacist. 

The  faculty  consists  of  picked  men  which 
have  come  from  places  ranging  from  North 
and  South  Carolina  to  Minnesota  and  Oregon. 
Some  of  them  are  even  nationally  known  for 
their  work  in  Pharmacy.   The  rather  small  but 


Matthews 
Terrell 


178 


Sheffield 
Mattocks 


Allen 
Lloyd 


Beddingfield 
Hood 


very  efficient  professorially  endowed  group  consists  of  Dean 
J.  G.  Beard,  Dr.  H.  M.  Burlage,  Dr.  M.  L.  Jacobs,  Dr.  I.  W. 
Rose,  and  Dr.  E.  A.  Brecht.  Also,  this  year  we  again  have 
with  us  Mr.  C.  K.  "Cy"  Wheeler  as  laboratory  instructor  of 
the  various  fields  of  Pharmaceutical  Chemistr)'. 

As  regards  Pharmaceutical  Organizations:  first  to  be 
mentioned  is,  without  question,  the  Honorary  Fraternity  of 
Rho  Chi — "few  attain  but  many  strive  for." 

Secondly,  mention  must  be  made  of  the  student  branch 
of  the  North  Carolina  Pharmaceutical  Association — "look- 
ing to  a  future  in  state  pharmaceutical  activities." 

Thirdly,  we  are  proud  of  our  Senate  organization,  which 
though  only  in  its  second  year,  can  already  talk  as  loud  and 
as  well,  and  which  is  heard  with  as  much  respect,  as  its 
older  brother,  the  N.C.P.A.  "Stand  up  and  speak"  seems  to 
summarize  its  purpose.  Proof  positive  of  this  is  the  require- 
ment enforced  that  each  one  of  the  thirty  members  must  be 
heard  at  every  meeting. 


We  have  fun — there  are  parties  at  the  first  of  the  year 
for  better  acquainting  first-year  students  with  the  old  mem- 
bers of  the  school;  there  will  be  remembered  the  annual 
Banquet  and  Dance  which  is  always  successful ;  there  will 
be  remembered  a  Barbecue  and  Square  Dance  given  by  the 
Dean  and  his  wife;  there  will  be  remembered  the  "turn- 
about" partying  between  Phi  Delta  Chi,  Kappa  Psi,  and 
Kappa  Epsilon ;  and  there  will  always  be  fun  at  the  State 
Convention  meetings  of  the  N.C.P.A. 


Come  war  - 

stand  ready. 


peace  - 


we  as  future  Pharmacists 


Officers  this  year  were:  David  McGowan,  President; 
Sam  Dulin,  Vice-President;  Otto  Matthews,  Secretary-Treas- 
urer: L.  E.  McKnight,  Student  Council  Representative;  John 
Terrell,  Student  Legislature  Representative.  Class  Presidents 
were:  William  Sheffield,  Senior;  Harry  Allen,  Junior; 
Ed  Beddingfield,  Sophomore;  Sammy  Koonce,  Freshman. 
North  Carolina  Pharmaceutical  officers  were:  Al  Mattocks, 
President;  Margaret  Lloyd,  Vice-President;  Marsha  Hood, 
Secretary;  MacPhail  Herring,  Treasurer;  and  Fred  Dees, 
Chairman  of  the  Executive  Committee. 


179 


£^.j{ya-iy'f. 


:^ 


X 


John  Smallwood  Biggs 

Washington,  N.  C. 

*  AX 

Candidate    for    B.S.    Degree.     NX. P. A. 
(I,   2.  3.   4):    Pliarniacy  Senate    (3,   4). 


Kenneth  Lee  Dingier 
Mooresville,  N.  C. 


Samuel  Nathan  Dulin 
Elizabeth  City.  N.  C. 
PX 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Thomas  Marshall  Holland 

Mount  Holly,  N.  C. 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Alfred  Henderson  Kini; 
Durham,  N.  C. 
*  AX 
Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree;   Band    (1). 


Bernard  Otis  Lockhart 
Saltville,  Va. 
K  ^I' 
Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Albert  McLean  Mattocks 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  0«B- 
cer  (1);  N.C.P.A.,  President;  Pliar- 
macy  Senate. 


John  Trammel  Church 
Salisbury.  N.  C. 
K  A  X  B  * 


Constance  Dubose 
Roseboro,  N.  C. 

A  An 

Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree. 


Frank  Arthur  Greene.  Jr. 
Suffern,  N.  Y. 
*AX 
Candidate   for   B.S.    Degree;    Band    (1. 


David  Henr}-  Hood 

Dunn,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B  S.  Degree;  Interdor- 
niitory  Council  (2.  4);  Young  Demo- 
crats Club  (2.  3). 


Margaret  Thomas  Lloyd 

Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 
Candidate  for   Pliarmacy   Degree. 


Otto  Stevens  Matthews 

Roseboro,  N.  C. 

*AX 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Glee  Club 
(4) ;  Y.M.C.A.  (2.  3) ;  Secretary-Treas- 
urer Pharmacy  School  (4);  Pharmacy 
Senate   (2,  3.  4). 


Jack  Webster  McAdams 
Burlington,  N.  C. 
<i>AX 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Dan  Grier  McCrimmon 
Hemp,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.   Degree:   N.C.P.A. 


Leonia  Erastus  McKnight,  Jr. 
Fayetteville,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Class  Hon- 
or Council  (3):  Class  Officer  (1):  Stu- 
dent Council  (4):  Pharmacy  Senate 
(3.  4). 


Raymond  E.  Pethel 
China  Grove,  N.  C. 
■PAX 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


William  Johnson  Sheffield 

Winchester,  N.  H. 

*  AX 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree:  Class  Offi- 
cer. President  (4);  N.C.P.A.;  Phar- 
macy Senate. 


Harr)-  C.  Tee 

Harrington,  Del. 
*  AX 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degre 


John  W.  Thornton 
Dunn,  N.  C. 
K  * 
Cariilidate  for  B.,S.   Degree. 


David  F.  McGowan 

Swan  Quarter,  N.  C. 

*AX 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Class  Pres 
ident  (1):  President  of  School  of 
Pharmacy   Student   Body    (4). 


Alton  Lee  McLean 

Fuquay  Snrings,  N.  C. 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Herbert  Palmer  Scoggin 
Louisbure,  N.  C. 
*AX 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Foster  Joel  Simmons 
Conover,  N.  C. 
*AX 
Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


John  Arthur  Terrell,  Jr. 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 

*AX 

Candidate  for  B.S.  Degree;  Student 
Legislature  (4) ;  President  Pharmacy 
Senate. 


D.  Williams,  Jr. 
Gate  City,  Va. 

indidate  for  B.S.  Degree. 


Sherrod  N.  Wood 
Enfield.  N.  C. 

y/CajT&idate   for   B.S.    Degree; 
J   /  PB&rmacy  Sen^e. 

/  /  /;■        /    / 


N.c.p..v<7    / 


/f 


^"^/a.&k' 


/ 


181 


('         • 


Harry  Hampton  Allen,  Jr. 
Cherryville,  N.  C. 

Joseph  William  Ausburn 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

Samuel  Clark  Beavans 
Enfield,  N.  C. 


William  Thomas  Boone 
Jackson,  N.  C. 

Mike  Lawson  Borders 
Shelby.  N.  C. 

Stroud  Otis  Brewer,  Jr. 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Grady  Harold  Britt 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 

L.  Balfour  Brookshire 
Asheville,  N.  C. 

John  Paul  Burnett,  Jr. 
Whitaker,  N.  C. 


Robert  Gordon  Carlan 
Galax,  Va. 
2X 

)ohn  Hampton  Carswell 
Winston-Salenn,  N.  C. 

Halcyone  Belle  Collier 
Asheville,  N.  C. 
KE 


Clinton  Ray  Crew 
Pleasant  Hill,  N.  C. 


Fred  Dees,  Jr. 
Burgaw,  N.  C. 
*AX 


Hubert  Lanier  Flynn 
Fayetteville.  N.  C. 


Mary  Lucile  Gillespie 
Burnsville,  N.  C. 
KE 

Robert  Gardner  Ham 
Yanceyville,  N.  C. 


John  Tanner)'  Henley 
Gary,  N.  C. 


182 


Rufus  McPhail  Herring 
Clinton,  N.  C. 
<i>AX 

Mary  Marsh  Hood 
Kinston,  N.  C. 
KE 

Joseph  House,  Jr. 
Beaufort,  N.  C. 
*4X 


Robert  Louis  Irwin 
Wilkesboro,  N.  C. 

Albert  W.  Jowdy,  Jr. 
New  Bern,  N.  C. 


Banks  Dayton  Kerr 
Mooresville,  N.  C. 


J.  Frank  Pickard 
Greensboro,  N.  C. 

John  Harrington  Rosser 
Vass.  N.  C. 


Stuart  McGuire  Sessoms 
Roseboro,  N.  C. 
*AX 


Clarence  Louis  Shields 
Murphy,  N.  C. 
*AX 

William  A.  Simmons 
Winston-Salem,  N.  C. 


Jesse  Southerland  Stewart 
Wallace,  N.  C. 


Paul  Edwin  Tart 
Dunn,  N.  C. 


Jefferson  D.  Whitehead 
Enfield,  N.  C. 

Dorothy  Louise  Williamson 
Clinton,  N.  C. 


John  Samuel  Williford 
Elm  City,  N.  C. 


Gordon  Vincent  Wyche 
Weldon,  N.  C. 
KA 


'//    /-/■■■■  ''M    / 


I 


183 


/ 


/ 


X" 


c 


/ 


^tt-r 


^^&if /'U^^'l^y'itA 


riru  Roll-:  THOMAS  Allen  Barnard,  Hampton- 
ville,  N.  C. ;  William  Glenn  Beam,  Dublin, 
Ga. ;  Edgar  T.  Beddingfield.  Clayton,  N.  C, 
<1'AX ;  Harvey  Ray  Brooks.  Bear  Creek,  N.  C. 


Second  Row:  Merwin  Sharpe  Canaday,  Four 
Oaks,  N.  C,  'J'AX;  John  Clifton  Canipe,  Jr., 
Boone,  N.  C;  Morrison  Rankin  Caruthers. 
Graham,  N.  C;  Joseph  C.  Estes,  Jr.,  Durham, 
N.  C,  K*. 


Third  Row:  Lacy  Earl  Gilbert.  Jr..  Parkton, 
N.  C,  *AX;  NoLiA  Frances  Hollowell.  Clin- 
ton, N.  C. ;  Clyde  Anthony  Johnston.  Little- 
ton, N.  C. ;  Edward  Hines  Knight,  Weldon, 
N.  C,  K^'. 


Fourth  Row:  Evelyn  M.  Lowe,  Fayetteville, 
N.  C;  Elaine  Erithe  Mitchell,  Durham, 
N.  C. ;  James  Waddell  Mitchener,  Edenton, 
N.  C,  AXA ;  Joe  Montesanti.  Pinehurst,  N.  C. 


Fifth  Row:    William  A.  Morton.  Wilmington, 

N.    C,    K>P;    NORFLEET    OWEN    McDoWELL,    Jr.. 

Scotland  Neck,  N.  C,  K^I' ;  Ruth  Helen  Patter- 
son. Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ;  Audry  DeVaughn 
Richardson.  Cerro  Gordo,  N.  C. 


Sixth  Row:  Anna  Frances  Rimmer,  Sanford, 
N.  C;  LuLA  Sledge,  Portsmouth,  Va.;  James 
Ralph  Teague.  High  Point,  N.  C,  -I-AX ;  Mu- 
riel Ann  Upchurch,  Apex,  N.  C. 


Serenlh  Row:  Wesley  R.  Viall,  Jr.,  Pinehurst, 
N.  C,  K>I';  Marguerite  Elizabeth  White, 
Raleigh,  N.  C. 


184 


First  Row:  George  Bishop  Albright,  Spencer, 
N.  C. ;  Charles  Herman  Beddingfield,  Jr. 
Clayton,  N.  C;  Samuel  Norman  Black,  Ashe- 
boro,  N.  C;  Boyd  R.  Blackney,  Angola,  N.  Y., 
X*;  Rogers  Jordan  Boone,  Jackson,  N.  C. 


Second  Row:  William  S.  Bugg,  Macon,  N.  C, 
SX;  Lexie  Virginia  Caudle.  Peachland,  N.  C; 
Mary  Lou  Cecil.  High  Point,  N.  C;  David 
Dortch  Claytor.  Hillsboro,  N.  C;  George 
Andrew  Cochran.  Newton,  N.  C. 


Third  Row:  Hubert  Morris  Coffee.  Thomas- 
ville,  N.  C. ;  Jesse  Wilson  Cole.  Pinehurst, 
N.  C;  Jessie  Frances  Cole.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. ; 
James  Hicks  Corey,  Greenville,  N.  C. ;  Alda 
Lee  Crump,  Durham,  N.  C. 


Fourth  Row:  MYRON  LouiS  Eanet,  Washington, 
D.  C,  *A;  Augustus  Green  Elliott.  Jr.. 
Fuquay  Springs,  N.  C;  Malcolm  Keith  Fear- 
ing, Jr.,  Manteo,  N.  C;  Rudolph  Warren 
Hardy,  Everetts,  N.  C. ;  Gerald  Dean  Hege, 
Lexington,  N.  C,  *-iX. 


Fifth  Row:  Sherwood  Hudson  Howell,  Apex, 
N.  C;  Elsie  Rose  Hudson.  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C; 
Lucy  Lee  Kennedy,  Kerr,  N.  C;  Sammy  G. 
KooNCE,  Chadbourn,  N.  C. ;  LeRoy  Lanier,  Jr., 
Wallace,  N.  C,  *AX. 


Sixth  Row:  David  Waugh  Masengill,  Bristol, 
Tenn.,  KA ;  Leslie  Martin  Myers,  Crutchfield, 
N.  C. ;  Imogene  Esther  McNay.  Durham,  N.  C; 
A.  Eugene  O'Neal.  Belhaven,  N.  C,  *AX;  Al- 
ton Sherwood  Parrish,  Benson,  N.  C. 


Seventh  Row:  Albert  Paul  Rachide,  New 
Bern,  N.  C. ;  Gene  Robertson,  Henderson, 
N.  C. ;  Evelyn  Earle  Salter.  Stacy,  N.  C. ; 
Robert  H.  Seaborn.  Victoria,  Va.,  K^l';  Juanita 
Futrelle  Sinclair,  Ahoskie,  N.  C. 


Eighth  Row:  William  West  Taylor.  Durham, 
N.  C;  Daryl  Eugene  Webb,  Roanoke,  Va. ; 
Richard  Edward  Young,  Asheville,  N.  C. 


^'f-/Ll^l€^-m^-^i^ 


185 


SCHOOL 

of 

LAW 


T 

J.  HE  close  of  the  present  academic  period  marks 
the  first  year  of  the  Law  School  under  the  deanship 
of  Robert  H.  Wettach.  Mr.  Wettach,  an  active  mem- 
ber of  the  faculty  during  the  preceding  twenty  years, 
was  elevated  to  that  position  following  the  resigna- 
tion of  Dean  M.  T.  Van  Hecke.  Mr.  Van  Hecke 
resigned,  after  ten  years  of  excellent  service,  in  order 
to  devote  more  of  his  time  to  writing  and  teaching, 
and  to  accept  a  Presidential  appointment. 

Student  affairs  in  the  Law  School  are  regulated  by 
the  elected  officers  of  its  student  government — the 
Law  Association.  This  association  promotes  all  stu- 
dent activity.  Outstanding  in  its  program  for  the 
current  year  were  the  Law  School  Reception  in  the 
fall,  the  Law-Med  Dances  in  the  winter   (sponsored 


Harnev  Jonas.  President 
Frank  Holton,  Vice-President 
William  Allen,  Secretary-Treasurer 
Clifford  Pace,  Student  Council  Representative 


■i'.Zfe^a?'1ifepg-.*Wi*^^V€WlJ.i'i;.'»<.jl.rJt>  o««<t?dra»\itf;^&?4«J>«f«>9«A:»N 


First  Row:   Allen.  Pace.  Sanford,  Mitchiner.  Fonvielle,  Lamont,  Winters. 
Third  Year  Second  Ron-:   Wilson.  Holton,  Huntley,  Riddle,  Long,  Perrin. 

Law  Students  Third  Row:   Cole.  Miss  Campbell.  Kennedy,  Jonas,  Gudger. 

Absent:  Morgan,  Spry,  Bateman. 


186 


jointly  with  the  Medical  School),  Student-Faculty  Day  in 
the  spring,  and  the  Law  School  Banquet  at  the  end  of  the 
year. 

Some  of  the  distinctive  features  of  our  Law  School  are 
its  well-known  Summer  School,  which  presents  recognized 
authorities  on  various  subjects  of  law;  its  student  publica- 
tion, The  North  Carolina  Law  Review;  and  its  chapter  of 
the  National  Honorary  Society  of  "Order  of  the  Coif." 

Since  the  outbreak  of  the  war,  the  Law  School  has  fol- 
lowed the  trend  of  the  whole  University  in  seeking  to  do 
its  bit  toward  the  National  Defense  effort.  For  the  dura- 
tion of  the  emergency,  the  period  of  study  may  be  shortened 
by  attendance  throughout  the  entire  year;  and  new  students 
are  being  admitted  with  less  preparation  than  three  years 


of  college  work.  During  the  past  year  the  School  has  con- 
tributed a  large  part  of  its  student  body  to  the  armed 
forces  of  the  nation  and  to  the  F.B.L  Among  students 
leaving  for  that  reason  were  the  entire  executive  stafif  of 
the  Law  Association,  elected  in  the  spring  of  1941:  Charles 
Edwin  Hinsdale,  President;  Hyman  Phillips,  Jr.,  Vice-Presi- 
dent; and  Kenyon  Wilson,  Jr.,  Secretary-Treasurer. 

The  following  students  were  also  forced  to  leave:  Class 
of  1942 — David  Armstrong,  Arthur  Greene,  Henry  Harkey, 
James  Joyner,  Hunter  Marshall,  Marion  Parrott,  Terry  San- 
ford,  John  Umstead.  Class  of  1943 — S.  B.  Bradley,  John 
Briggs,  B.  M.  Edwards,  Beverly  Faison,  Louis  Gaylord, 
Francis  Heazel,  J.  B.  Hubbell,  James  Lawrence,  Thad 
Moser,  Thomas  Nordan,  Robert  Rutter.  Class  of  1944 — 
James  Cooper,  Clarence  Sinclair. 


William  Cole 
Third  Year  President 


William  Mitchell 
Second  Year  President 


Ottway  Burton 
First  Year  President 


First  and 

Second  Year 

Law  Students 


First  Row:   Ward.  Cooper,  Burton.  Hamilton,  Harris,  Miss  Nathan.  Short,  Shuping. 

Second  Row:   Jordan.  Squires,  Miss  Conklin,  Shuford,  Miss  Moseley,  Rendleman,  Miss  Faw,  Leonard. 

Third  Rote:    Sinclair,  Maner,  Hogue,  Bradley,  Mann,  Murchison,  Roper. 

Fourth  Row:    McGhee,  McLelland,   Powell,  Walker,   Mitchell,  Means,  Mashburn. 

Fifth  Row:    Denton.   Harrelson,   Garland.   Heazel,   Shipp,   Briggs. 

Si\ih  Roll      Edney,  Wii  liams   H-wes,  Kilpatkick.  Johnson. 


ih.. 


Harrington    Ei  mori     Martin.    Poisson,    Robfris 


ODMAN.    W'dciDHOUSF 


187 


SCHOOL 

of 

MEDICINE 


/, 


William  Harris,  President  of  Vbitehead  Society 


N  the  span  of  years  between  the  first  World  War  and  the 
present  conflict,  the  University  Medical  School  has  made  remark- 
able strides  forward  and  now  stands  well  equipped  to  give  two 
years  thorough  training  in  a  profession  vital  to  the  war  effort. 

At  the  close  of  the  last  war,  the  Medical  School  faculty  was 
composed  of  one  part-time  and  four  full-time  professors.  Now 
the  staff  comprises  sixteen  full-time  professors,  together  with  a 
number  of  part-time  instructors  in  the  clinical  subjects,  a  larger 
number  of  laboratory  and  research  assistants,  and  a  librarian. 

The  physical  equipment  has  been  immensely  improved  with 
the  construction  of  a  spacious  medical  building  which  houses 
classrooms,  well-equipped  laboratories,  and  the  medical  library. 
The  building  was  first  occupied  in  June,  1939. 


SECOND  YEAR  MEDICAL  STUDENTS 
First  Row:    Beavers,  Beckwith,  Hoy,  Gavce,  Dr.  Donnelly,  Dr.  Bullitt,  Dr.  MacNider,  Blount,  McDevitt,  Miller. 
Second  Row:   Booth,  Ross,  Nesbitt,  Swan,  Edwards,  Plonk,  McLemore,  Shull,  Noble,  Davis,  Hedrick,  Gold,  Smith. 
Third  Row:    Rose.  Costner,   Stegall,  Tenenblatt,  Harris,  Piver,  Perrin.  Lynch.  Boone,  Putzel. 
Fourth  Row:    Allen,  Sparrow,  Williams,  Murphy,  Long,  Sumner,  Sitterson,  Hewitt,  Hayman,  Kirby,  Heath,  Bennett. 


188 


Henry  Boone 

Vice-Pres.  of 

Whitehead  Society 


Louis  Hayman 

Vice-Pres.  of 

Whitehead  Society 


Harry  Allen 
Student  Council 
Representative 


WooDALL  Rose 

President  of 
Second  Year  Class 


Julian  Brantley 

President  of 

First  Year  Class 


Dr.  W.  R.  Berryhill,  formerly  Assistant  Dean  under 
Dr.  W.  deB.  MacNider  and  Acting  Dean  after  Dr.  Mac- 
Nider's  return  to  teaching  and  research  in  1940,  was  made 
Dean  of  the  Medical  School  in  the  autumn  of  1941.  Young, 
capable,  and  energetic,  Dr.  Berryhill  took  office  with  the 
applause  of  faculty  and  students  alike. 

To  keep  apace  with  the  current  trend  toward  the  inclu- 
sion of  clinical  training  in  the  second  year  of  medical 
school,  and  to  facilitate  the  transition  from  the  classes  and 
laboratories  of  this  school  to  the  wards  of  the  four  year 
schools,  the  clinical  courses  are  now  receiving  more  time 
and  emphasis  in  the  curriculum.  This  is  largely  possible 
through   the  cooperation   of   Watts   Hospital   in   Durham, 


which  provides  a  source  of  invaluable  clinical  and  patho- 
logical material.  This  affiliation,  valuable  in  the  past,  has 
been  lately  strengthened:  Dr.  C.  E.  Brown,  a  member  of 
the  Medical  School  Pathology  Department,  is  now  director 
of  the  laboratory  at  Watts,  being  supplied  to  the  hospital 
by  the  University. 

With  the  completion  of  the  term  now  in  progress,  the 
Medical  school  will  begin  operating  on  a  year-round  basis 
with  new  classes  entering  every  nine  months.  This  new 
schedule,  adopted  by  the  majority  of  medical  schools  in  the 
country,  will  presumably  be  maintained  for  the  duration  of 
the  war. 


FIRST  YEAR  MEDICAL  STUDENTS 
First  Row:   Dr.  Bruner,  Dr.  Kyker.  Dr.   Ferrell,  Dr.  Andrews.  Miss  Taylor.  Schwinge,  Rogers.  Jordan.  Robertson. 
Second  Ron  :  Dickson.  Dr.  George,  Owens,  Williams,  Packer,  Josselson,  Hamrick.  Creech.  Citron,  Rendleman,  Cooper. 
Third  Row:   Spicer,  Dr.  Pliske,  Kermon,  Mitchell,  Lamb,  Chambliss,    Humphries,    Alexander,    Ingram,    Morrow,    Greenwood, 

Whitener.  Wilkins. 
Fourth  Rote:  KouRY,  Brantley.  Reynolds,  Jennings,  Flowers,  Kirksey.  Lewis.  Shields.  Grady,  Collett,  Cameron,  Guy,  Hubbard, 

Foushee,  Wright,  Stewart. 


189 


In.:  R.,\  ;    Pkuiessor  Godaas.  Dr.  Baity.  Dr.  Bk.jwn   {L\.ii;},  Dr.  "VC'right.  Dr.  Fleming,  Dr.  Brackett. 

Second  Row:  Brook.s.    Lynn,   Neal,   Jackson,   McCurry,   Karmen,  Taylor,  Dr,  Ulloth. 

Third  Row:  Robinson,  Dr.  Phillips,  Hook,  Morrison,  Sharpe,  Mease. 

Fourth  Row:   Taylor,  Caldwell,  Lackey,  Taff,  Horton,  A.  Brown,  Chronister. 

Fifth  Row:  Willis,  Dr.  Turnipseed,  Hanson,  Brown,  Lowe,  Maddry,  Dr.  Quillman. 

Sixth  Roiv:  Dr,  Hagaman,  Walker,  Decker,  Carter,  Dr.  Ferlita, 


Public  Health  Nurses  Who  Entered  Winter  Quarter 

First  Row:  Misses  Turner,  Emerson.  DuPree,  and  Watt, 
Second  Row:    Misses  Marchant,  Scott,  Nichols,   Cor- 
nell, and  Boy'kin. 
Absent:    Evelyn  Chesson. 


SCHOOL   OF 

PUBLIC 

HEALTH 

CL>G[  RELATIVELY  young  part  of  the  Universit)', 
but  well-advanced  despite  its  youth,  is  the  School  of 
Public  Health.  Established  in  1936  as  the  Division 
of  Public  Health,  it  has  grown  rapidly,  and  in  1940 
was  given  the  full  status  of  a  school.  The  School 
concerns  itself  primarily  with  providing  training  for 
careers  in  Public  Health.  Graduates  in  medicine, 
engineering,  and  nursing  are  given  courses  designed 
to  prepare  them  for  the  many  branches  in  this  wide 
field;  and  college  graduates  are  also  prepared  for 
such  specialized  pursuits  as  public  health  education, 


190 


public  health  laboratory,  parasitology,  and  malariology. 
A  student  body  drawn  from  all  sections  of  the  United 
States  as  well  as  a  number  of  foreign  countries  finds 
available  for  study  field  demonstration  units  in  many  of 
the  surrounding  county  and  city  health  departments ;  for 
those  so  fitted,  special  opportunity  for  research  or  field 
investigation  is  offered.  Of  particular  interest  is  the  fact 
that  this  school  has  been  designated  by  the  government 
as  the  center  for  training  public  health  workers  for  eight 
southeastern  states. 

Department  of  Public  Health  Nursing 
The  newest  development  of  the  School  of  Public  Health 
is  the  Department  of  Public  Health  Nursing.    This  depart- 


ment was  organized  in  1940,  and  the  first  class,  which 
numbered  more  than  fift)'  by  the  year's  end,  was  accepted 
only  last  fall.  Students  in  public  health  nursing  are  all 
registered  graduate  nurses.  The  regular  course,  which  lasts 
an  academic  year,  is  designed  to  prepare  them  for  the 
special  work  of  the  public  health  nurse.  Graduate  nurses  who 
complete  the  year's  work  in  public  health  nursing  and  also 
two  years  of  college  work  are  eligible  for  the  Bachelor  of 
Science  degree  in  Public  Health  Nursing. 

Class  officers  for  the  past  year  were:  Myra  Goodman, 
President;  Betty  Ficquett,  Vice-President;  Julia  "Willette, 
Secretar)';  Nan  McCall,  Treasurer. 


DEPARTMENT  OF  PUBLIC  HEALTH  NURSING 
First  Row:   MisSES  McDavid.  Davison.  Hay  {Professor  of  Public  Health  Nursing),  Blee  (Assistant  Professor),  Feeney,  Carrie  Taylor, 

Ledford. 
Second  Row:   Misses  Carrol.  McMillan,  Coston.  Parton,  Louise  Anderson,  Otwell,  Phillips. 
Third  Row:  MissES  GooDMAN  (President),  Hildreth,  Robinson,  Kearse,    Bringle,    Ficquett    (Vice-President),    Cook,    Lancaster. 

Birch. 
Fourth  Row:   IvIissEs  Harris.  Apple,  Smith,  Wall,  Wentz,  Ruth  Anderson,  Boylan,  Lentz,  McCall  (Treasurer). 
Fifth  Row:   Misses  Maddry.  Willette  (Secretary),  DeLaney,  Mary  Taylor,  Rivenback. 


191 


CAMPUS  LIFE 


The  Tar  Heel  starts  the  day  off — except  on  Mondays. 


And  if  the  weather  permits,  the  classes  which  follow  may  be  held  outdoors. 


At  10:30  there's  always  a  rush  for  milk-shakes,  plus  the  usual 
lounging  on  the  steps  of  south. 


JUST  ANY  OLE 

±  YPICAL  days  never  are  really  typical  for 
everybody.  But  there  are  some  things  that  are  as 
much  a  part  of  the  Carolina  day  as  saddle  shoes 
and  gray  flannels.  The  reach  for  the  Tar  Heel 
always  starts  the  day  off — crossword  puzzles,  gos- 
sip columns,  and  all.  Then  comes  our  8:30,  be- 
ginning any  time  from  8:45  on.  Two  classes  drag 
by  and  bring  the  climax  of  the  morning  at  10:30. 
Frosh  trek  to  Memorial  Hall  midst  the  ridicule  of 
upperclassmen,  politicians  meet  the  voters,  coeds 
flaunt  their  charms,  while  plain  old  Joe  College 
sits  back  and  watches  the  world  go  by. 


Dinner  time  brings  another  Carolina  tradition — long  lines. 


If  the  afternoon  calls  for  a  movie,  it's  usually  followed  by  a  trip  to  the 
Durham  Dairies. 


DAY  AT  U.N.C. 


There's  the  rush  for  lunch  at  1:00 — plus  the 
mile-long  line.  And  if  the  afternoon  doesn't  hold 
the  prospect  of  a  lab,  the  1 :30  show  is  sure  to  be 
next.  Somewhere  along  the  line  is  the  long  hike 
to  the  gym,  where  Mr.  Durham  always  good- 
naturedly  complains  about  us  making  him  work 
overtime. 

Night  brings  studying  for  some,  dating  for 
others,  bull  sessions  for  all — it's  the  wee  small 
hours  before  we  know  it. 


Some  prefer  to  sit  and  talk  (above),  while  others 
(below)  take  in  a  game  of  horseshoes. 


At  night  the  none-too-popular  library  has  a  few  hard 
workers  slaving  away. 


Midnight  finds  the  campus  deserted. 


ATUM 
MDno 
ATIOM 


"Keep  Alert"  warned  posters  and  signs  in  the  library 
information  center. 


The  Feb.  16  registration  served  notice  on  over  a  thousand  stu- 
dents THAT  THEIR  TIME  WAS  NEAR.     AND  SIGNS   LIKE  THE   ONE   BELOW 
reminded  EVERYONE  THAT  ALL   MONKEY  BUSINESS  WAS  OUT. 


^!;^"^^- 


t> 


w, 


HEN  war  came,  Carolina  students  reacted  in  many 
different  ways.  Some  followed  an  initial  impulse  to  "join 
up".  Some  remained  typically  complacent,  and  didn't 
much  give  a  darn.  Most  of  us  listened  to  the  advice  of 
Dr.  Graham  and  others — "don't  be  rash,  don't  rush  into 
anything,  think  things  over".  Long  remembered  will  be 
the  way  the  news  spread  over  the  campus  like  wildfire, 
the  way  students  stayed  up  until  the  small  hours  of  the 
morning  listening  to  news  broadcasts,  the  Monday  morn- 
ing speeches  of  Dr.  Graham  and  President  Roosevelt 
following  in  quick  succession. 

The  effects  of  the  war  weren't  long  in  appearing  on 
the  campus.  Students  soon  found  an  information  desk 
set  up  in  the  library  with  up-to-date  material  about  the 
war — plus  the  wise  admonition  to  "be  alert".  Important 
campus  buildings  were  tagged  with  "keep  off"  signs, 
which  because  of  the  contrasting  note  they  struck   re- 


i 


WHAT  HAPPENED 


minded  us  constantly  of  the  war.  The  Carolina  Volunteer 
Training  Corps  gave  students  a  chance  to  learn  the  fun- 
damentals of  military  drill;  an  Office  of  Student  Civilian 
Defense  was  set  into  motion — with  trial  black-outs  and 
all ;  and  upper  quadrangle  residents  found  themselves 
giving  up  their  rooms  at  the  close  of  the  winter  quarter 
for  the  use  of  the  Navy. 


There  was  a  lighter  side  too.    The  campus  fight  over 
the  dance  expenditure  cut  kept  Tjy  Heel  columns  buzzing 


Hidden  in  the  basement  of  the  dining  hall  was  one  of  the 
Navy's  contributions  to  the  war  scene — a  4-inch  gun. 


I 


^^M^ 


Contrasting  note  on  armistice  day  was  the  Naval  RO.T.C.  i'akadi:  i»  'w  n  Cami  kon  A\  eni  i:. 


WHEN  WAR  CAME" 


for  days  and  kept  leaders  of  both  camps  on  their  toes  thinking  up 
pros  and  cons.  Student  ingenuity  appeared  as  boys  attempting  to 
get  into  V-7  and  other  branches  of  the  service  resorted  to  memorizing 
eye  charts,  taking  stretching  exercises,  and  undergoing  all  sorts  of 
weight-losing  and  weight-gaining  diets,  in  order  to  pass  physical 
exam  requirements. 

As  year's  end  approached,  the  usual  talk  of  vacations  was  miss- 
ing. But  if  the  army  got  us,  there  was  one  consolation — we  wouldn't 
have  to  worry  any  more  about  our  draft  board. 


Out    at   the    Horace   Williams    airport    (below) 

C.A.A.  students  trained  daily  for  future  Army  or 

Navy  duty. 


Coeds  found  a  way  to  help  out  through  the  Office  of 
Student  Civilian  Defense. 


C.V.T.C.  offered  military  training  for  future  draftees- 
also  exemption  from  physical  ED. 


New  to  many  dorms  t)iis  vi  ar  wfke  social  rooms,  and  the 
feminine  visits  which  followed. 


Not  new  was  the  daily  chore  of  shaving. 


Ping-pong  rooms  (above)  were  just  one  more  reason  for 
not  studying. 


DORMITORY  LIFE 

Q^J  LEN'S  dormitories,  where  the  plebians,  the  sophis- 
ticates, and  the  pohticians  hve,  have  long  been  recog- 
nized as  the  stronghold  of  democracy  at  CaroHna.  But 
now  that  the  Navy  has  invaded  the  campus,  they  may 
become  just  another  memory  in  our  thoughts.  Gone  for 
most  of  us  will  be  the  dorm  store  bull  sessions,  the  poker 
parties,  political  "visits",  the  telephone  yells,  the  guy  next 
door  with  the  loud  radio,  the  8:00  rush  for  wash  basins. 
Take  it  away,  sailors! 


Dorm  store  cowboys  played  checkers,  ate,  or  talked  about 
their  latest  coed  friend. 


Behind  shaded  windows  the  girls  let  their  hair  down,  indulge 
in  a  friendly  bridge  game.  .  . 


AT  CAROLINA 


.  .  .OR  IF  THEY  RE  STEPPING  OUT,  USE  THE  IRON  TO  HELP  THEM  LOOK 
THEIR  BEST. 


UA 


'ANCTUM  sanctorum  of  the  Carolina  coeds,  the 
women's  dormitories  are  the  most  popular  buildings  on 
the  campus  for  the  roving  Carolina  male — for  locked 
behind  their  protecting  doors  at  night  are  the  main  rea- 
son why  some  of  us  manage  to  flunk  out  periodically. 
And  while  the  men  stare  longingly  at  shade-covered 
windows,  the  girls  tear  their  suitors  apart,  open  doors 
for  late  arrivers,  iron  dresses,  look  hopelessly  at  their 
books,  and  wait  for  the  telephone  to  ring. 


Sunday  morning  offers  coffee  and  doughnuts  to  Alderman 
residents — with  positively  no  male  guests. 


"And  whom  do  you  \J.jii.    .u  ^il.''  says  the  receptionist  to  a 

CALLER.    Visitors    (below)    find   comfortable   social   rooms — 

and  if  they're  lucky,  plenty  of  girls. 


Important  part  of  any  pep  rally  are   uu    (  i:i  HiiEADERS,  who  yell,  perform  acro- 
batics, AND  IN  general  KEEP  THINGS  POPPING, 


The   iiiKimii.Mi   r.'.n.Mn    stxkis  things  off, 

BUT  SOMETIMES    MEANS  SINGED  HAIR. 


k-^ 


PEP  RALLIES 


n 


HE  pep  rally  has  long  been  the  major  event  of  any  foot- 
ball week-end.  Often  the  question  of  who  wins  the  game 
pales  into  insignificance  beside  the  success  of  the  giant  torch- 
light parade  and  the  hour  of  hoarse  roars  and  songs  which 
threaten  to  shake  down  Memorial  Hall.  After  the  long  pa- 
rade, the  mad  scramble  for  seats;  then  the  curtain  pulled  back 
to  reveal  coaches  with  their  tearful  predictions  and  the 
equally  optimistic  players;  the  cheerleaders  going  stark  rav- 
ing mad  before  the  night  is  over;  the  guy  behind  you  whose 
over-enthusiasm  prompts  him  to  beat  hell  out  of  your  head. 
Boy,  what  a  pep  rally!  I  wonder  who  won  the  game,  though. 


I'he  Duke  game  week-end  found  numerous  post- 
ers   PAYING    respect   TO    OUR    FRIENDS    IN    DURHAM. 


Co-Captain  Dunkle,  ex-star  Stirnweiss.  and  University  Club  president  Peck  made  the  usual  pre-game  predictions. 


i2 


(Below)  Undaunted  by  Tulane  loss,  students  sat  in  middle  of  Franklin  St.  waiting  for 
team — and  swamped  coach  wolf  as  he  got  off  the  bus. 


( Abu\T: )  Lowly  frosh  and  mighty  seniors  are  all  the 

SAME  AS    enthusiasm    GROWS. 


A.    D.    Pi  !>   FAY   THEIR  RESPECTS  TO   CULBERTSON   wnH    THE   AID   OF   THE 

USUAL  ROUND  OF  KIBITZERS.     Pi  PhIS   ( BELOW )    GIVE   ADVICE  TO   A  SISTER 

ON  THE   TECHNIQUE   OF  LETTER  WRITING. 


There's  always  time   for  the   more  domestic  pursuits — knitting 
and  ironing. 


WHEN  GREEKS 


-uo 


Chi  O's  (below)  sit  around  talking  about  things  in  general  and 

SOCIAL    life    in    particular. 


'ORORITIES  are  comparatively  new  at  Carolina,  but 
it  hasn't  taken  them  long  to  make  up  for  lost  time.  The 
girls  have  their  share  (and  then  some!)  of  teas,  dances, 
socials,  and  just  plain  dating;  and  few  are  the  men  stu- 
dents who  haven't  held  down  sofas  in  sorority  parlors 
waiting  for  a  date  to  make  up  her  mind  to  come  down. 

Most  girls  remember  their  sorority  for  the  Sunday 
teas,  for  dressers  lined  with  pitchers,  for  the  rush  to  get 
to  the  iron,  for  those  endless  games  of  bridge — and  last 
but  far  from  least,  for  the  air  of  expectancy  whenever 
the  phone  sounded. 


"Where  have  I  seen  that  guy  before?"  asks  a  quizzical  sister. 


^     \ .    ■    v'4.  -^-r  ■::ik.-^i^- 


Parties  are  big  events  in  fraternity  life.    Phi  Delts  (above) 

CELEBRATE  AT  THEIR  CELEBRATED  BoWERY  BaLL, 


GET  TOGETHER 


On  ordinary  week  days  a  game  of  bridge  is  usually'  on  deck  AT  THE 

Pi  Lambda  Phi  house.  (Below)  The  Sigma  Nu  bathroom 
quartet  warms  up. 


0, 


NE  of  Carolina's  oldest  traditions,  fraternities  mean 
many  different  things.  To  some  they  mean  social  life. 
To  others  they  mean  an  entrance  into  politics.  To  most 
they  mean  a  combination  of  things — Saturday  night  beer 
parties,  a  ready  fourth,  a  ride  to  the  gym,  the  never- 
ending  ping-pong  game,  horseshoes  in  the  spring, 
brotherhood.  Highlight  of  fraternity  activity  is  the  Wed- 
nesday night  chapter  meeting.  Brothers  orate,  suggest, 
wax  poetical,  or  just  bull,  while,  midst  cries  of  order, 
the  president  calls  for  more  spirit  and  the  treasurer  calls 
for  more  money. 

The  parties  are  fun,  but  the  brotherhood  is  what  we 
will  remember. 


The  ping-pong  table  stays  in  use  from  morning  until  night. 
A.T.O.'s  show  how  it's  done. 


After  dances  most  fraternities  give  small  "open  houses  ". 
here  serve  light  refreshments  and  unspiked  punch. 


pika  s  suffer  the  consequf.nces  of  a  bet  on  the  outcomt 
Duke  game. 


'??^., 


Outfits  had  to  be  worn  to  classes,  at  mealtimes,  and  on  dates. 


INITIATIONS 


/, 


Grail  initiates,  attired  in  skirts,  red  flannels,  newsfait  ks.  and 

OTHER    OUTFITS,    MARCH    THROUGH    TOWN    (aBOVE) — END    UP    IN    FRONT 
OF  WOMEN'S  DORMITORIES    (bELOW). 


NITIATIONS  are  important  events  in  Chapel  Hill. 
The  fun  of  being  initiated  is  all  which  some  organiza- 
tions can  offer  to  its  members — but  in  most  cases  that 
is  plenty. 

Most  spectacular  is  the  darkened  Golden  Fleece 
ceremony,  when  hooded  members  stalk  among  the 
hushed  crowd  in  Memorial  Hall  to  pounce  on  elec- 
tees. More  amusing  is  the  Grail  initiation  in  the 
spring  when  potential  B.M.O.C.'s  don  a  weird  array 
of  costumes  and  parade  through  the  campus.  The 
Sheiks,  Minataurs,  and  13  Club  succeed  rather  poorly 
in  embarrassing  their  members,  but  the  campus  always 
gets  a  big  laugh  anyway. 


"Hell  week"  initiate  curses  the  first  chicken  that  ever  laid 
an  egg. 


Sophomore  social  organization  canhihaifs  itrform  to  the  tune  oi  f  ickoos,  "Amah  is  Ai  i  ll-mk.hty"  and     13  sir  the  missing  link." 

Phi  Delta  Chi  Pledges  (top)   indulge  in  an  enthusiastic  moth- 
ball-pushing race.  Betas  (bottom)  see  what  it's  like  to  eat  blind- 
eolded  and  with  forks  tied  together. 


Last  but  not  least  are  the  deep  dark  fraternity 
initiations,  long  a  sore  spot  among  campus  crusaders. 
To  the  tune  of  splintering  paddles  and  the  anguished 
cries  of  the  wounded,  the  Greek  societies,  despite 
numerous  cries  of  barbarism,  initiate  their  candidates 
into  the  devious  ways  of  brotherhood. 


Here's  one  reason  why  the  seats  of  pants  wear  out.    Student 

COLUMNISTS  crusaded  AGAINST  PADDLING,  BUT  FORGOT  TO  ASK  INITIATES 
IF  THEY  MINDED. 


1% 


The  tug-of-war  was  great  fun  for  the  losers — who  were   pulled 
through  a  pit  of  mud. 


The  ball  started  rolling  when  coeds  drew  names  of  their  dates  out 

OF  A  fish-bowl.   "Fish"  Worley  drove  the  first  few  girls  to 

South  building  in  grand  style. 


WHEN  SADIE  HAWK 


UC/ HEN  Sadie  H.uvkir 


ins  day  rolled  around,  the  Caro- 
lina campus  went  true  Dogpatch  style.  With  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Al  Capp  as  guests  of  honor  and  Mayor  "Fish" 
Worley  presiding,  students  dressed  to  fit  the  occasion  and 
didn't  miss  a  trick.  Coeds  who  hardly  ever  got  up  the 
energy  to  get  to  class  went  streaking  across  the  campus 
in  search  of  male  talent.  And  boys  who  never  dreamed 
of  entering  a  coed  dorm  found  themselves  tagging  along 
attached  to  the  arm  of  some  buxom  miss.  The  after- 
noon saw  all  sorts  of  contests  from  wheelbarrow  races 


Phe  wheelbarrow  race  put  would-be  strong  arm  men  on  their  mettle. 


And  the  girl-carrving  race  was  fun  for  all  concerned. 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Al  Capp,  guests  for  the  day,  weren't 

LONG  getting  INTO  THE  SPIRIT  OF  THINGS. 


NS  CAME  TO  TOWN 

to  a  tug-of-war,  with  winners  getting  prizes  close  to 
the  heart  of  any  good  Dogpatcher — turkeys,  calves,  and 
pigs. 

Big  event  of  the  day  was  the  Sadie  Hawkins  Ball, 
when  the  gals  did  everything  from  calling  for  their  dates 
to  paying  expenses.  Prizes  were  given  to  the  snazziest 
dressers,  and  music  was  played  in  the  best  square-dancing 
style.  It  was  a  great  occasion.  And  when  it  was  over, 
Carolina  men  were  amazed:  they  had  seen  a  coed  foot 
the  bill  one  night. 


"Marrying  Sam"  (top)  leads  in  a  couple.   "Mammy  Yokum" 

(bottom)    wins  a  nice  fat  turkey  for  HER  COSTUME. 


AMERA   fiends  were   in  THEIR   ELEMENT.     Al    CapP   POSES   FOR  A  PERSISTENT  FAN. 


When  winners  were  announced,  the  crowd  shouted  its  approval. 


w 


AND  THEIV 


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WHAT   MAKES  THE  CAMPUS  GO   'ROUIVU 


// 


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Steve  Peck,  President 


UNIVERSITY  CLUB 

T 

J.  ORCH-LIGHT  parades  .  .  .  pep  rallies  .  .  .  cheers  .  .  .  that 
twelfth  man  .  .  .  BEAT  DOOK— the  University  Club.  A  stiff  test 
faced  the  club  this  year,  boosting  a  team  that  somehow  couldn't 
get  started.  But  for  those  of  us  who  went  to  the  pep  rallies  (and 
that  was  just  about  everyone!),  or  took  part  in  the  yells,  or  got  up 
in  the  dead  of  the  night  to  meet  a  team  that  hadn't  won,  we  know 
that  club  members  did  a  fine  job  of  holding  up  that  twelfth  man, 
the  Carolina  spirit.  It  might  have  been  the  torches  that  lit  the  en- 
thusiastic parade  to  the  doors  of  Memorial  Hall ;  it  might  have  been 
the  spontaneous  cheering  of  two  thousand  students;  it  might  have 
been  a  real  desire  to  win  all  of  our  games  and  particularly  to 
"Beat  Dook" — but  whatever  the  reason,  we  can't  forget  the  full- 
hearted  support  of  the  student  body  backing  the  team  in  Kenan 
Stadium.  Thus  through  its  pep  rallies  and  parades  and  the  spirit 
of  its  own  members,  the  University  Club  did  a  real  service  again 
this  year. 

The  club  wasn't  content  to  confine  its  work  to  the  fall  quarter 
and  football.    Last  spring  it  sponsored  a  pep  rally  for  the  Duke 


i--t.-r3«tJ>a»lrjtti«!a-»lhic-«ii  ■it.HM.II<-t.iij«Ti»>J*J«Mra»<ii<tfa»?l«j^>»;<<f-i»^>' 


Above:  Coach  Wolf  and  Ex-Star  Gates  Kimball  speaking  at  a  Uni- 
versity Club  pep  rally. 
Beloiv:  End  of  the  Duke  game  torch-light  parade. 


baseball  series — the  first  baseball  pep  rally  in 
Carolina  history.  And  at  the  end  of  one  of 
the  most  successful  baseball  seasons  in  years, 
it  set  the  spark  for  a  drive  to  raise  enough 
money  to  give  gold  baseballs  to  team  mem- 
bers. On  its  more  serious  side,  it  was  vitally 
interested  in  augmenting  the  decreased 
N.Y.A.  fund — and  its  members  did  much 
to  aid  in  the  drive  to  keep  self-help  students 
in  school. 

Composed  of  a  Junior  representative  from 
every  dormitory  and  fraternity,  and  a  Senior 
member  from  each  woman's  dormitory  and 
sorority,  the  club  is  probably  the  most  rep- 
resentative group  on  the  campus.  The  quick 
contact  which  it  has  with  almost  every  under- 
graduate in  school,  plus  the  hard  work  of 
its  members,  give  teeth  to  its  motto  —"for 
the  University." 

Officers  this  year  were:  Steve  Peck,  Presi- 
dent; Frances  Tilley,  Secretary;  Steve  Kar- 
res.  Treasurer. 


212 


the   Sparkplug   for   a   Bigger   Carolina   Spirit " 


Members  as  they  appear  below — First  Row:  Ann  Peyton, 
Chi  Omega;  Claire  Freeman,  Mclver;  Martha  Guy,  Mem- 
ber at  Large;  Susan  Swift,  Archer  House;  Steve  Karres, 
Grimes;  Frances  Tilley,  Town;  Steve  Peck,  President;  Jane 
Durning,  Pi  Beta  Phi;  Randy  Mebane,  Spencer;  Huldah 
Warren,  A.D.  Pi;  Frances  Bonkemeyer,  Alderman. 

Second  Row:  Sylvan  Stein,  Z.B.T. ;  Curry  Jones,  Aycock; 
Brud  King,  Chi  Phi;  William  Lackey,  Manly;  Emanuel 
Rivkin,  Lewis;  Leon  Schafer,  Phi  Alpha;  Charles  Spaugh, 
Stacy;  Dave  Rumph,  S.A.E.;  Martin  Barrier,  B.V.P. ;  Isaac 
Taylor,  Kappa  Sigma ;  Alston  Lewis,  A.T.O. ;  Lem  Gibbons, 
D.K.E.;  William  Brown,  Alexander. 


Third  Row:  Moyer  Hendrix,  Member  at  Large;  Stephen 
Pillar,  K.A.;  Jack  Dube,  Pi  Lambda  Phi;  Gene  Smith, 
Steele;  George  Peabody,  Delta  Psi;  Jack  Jarvis,  Old  West; 
Lenoir  Shook,  Old  East;  Jack  Wilkinson,  Phi  Gamma 
Delta;  Henry  Hunter,  Zeta  Psi;  Stanley  Holland,  Sigma 
Chi;  Roy  Stroud,  Town;  John  Feuchtenberger,  Phi  Delta 
Theta;  James  Mitchener,  Lambda  Chi  Alpha;  Jack  Mark- 
ham,  Mangum;  John  Powell,  Graham;  Edward  Keator,  Chi 
Psi ;  Guy  Byerly,  Phi  Kappa  Sigma ;  James  Sims,  Member 
at  Large. 

Those  not  present:  Sam  Gambill,  Everett;  Hobart  Mc- 
Keever,  Ruffin ;  William  Stanback,  Sigma  Nu ;  Hurst  Hatch, 
Pi  Kappa  Alpha;  Sylvan  Meyer,  T.E.P. ;  Frank  Dalton, 
Beta  Theta  Pi. 


gw^<astfrfipyi>  iw*iVA»^iSt»i:£<^ 


University  Club  Members 


213 


Firit  Roil':  Captain  Popham. 

Second  Kniv:  Lt.-Commander  Riker.  Lt.-Commander  Addison. 

Third  Row:  Lt.  Carroll,  Lt.  Brown,  Lt.  Bruning. 


NAVAL  R.O.T.C. 

±  N  the  fall  quarter  two  years  ago  a  campus  long 
accustomed  to  the  easy-going  ways  of  Chapel  Hill 
saw  events  abroad  have  their  first  apparent  effect 
on  the  University — the  establishment  of  a  Naval 
Reserve  Unit.  For  a  while  the  attitude  of  the  aver- 
age student  was  one  of  curiosity;  but  as  events 
abroad  grew  worse  and  as  December  7  came  and 
passed  by,  the  Unit  began  to  assume  real  signif- 
icance. It  became  Carolina's  first  concrete  effort, 
and  one  of  its  most  effective,  in  furthering  national 
defense. 

Starting  in   1940  with  less  than  a  hundred  stu- 
dents, the  Unit  has  grown  this  year  to  188;  and  in 


r^i-.'*-...-^-  ^i  ■^^f-vJVpr-  e; 


FIRST  COMPAISPt' 
First  Row:  Kemp,  Miller,  Mallison,  Belli,  Stoner,  J.,  Van  Zandt.  Bishop,  Stevens.  Carroll,  Lockhart,  Wertheim.  Bennett. 
Second  Row:  Titchener,  Temple.  Davenport,  Long,  Berry.  Freyer.  Evans,  D.,  Gibbs.  Carroll,  Kelley. 
Third  Row:  Bell,  J-.  Hartshorn,  Pupa.  Persky,  Marder.  Field.  Parmenter.  Smith,  A.,  Highsmith,  Freeman.  Parker. 
Fourth  Row:  BATES.  RICHMOND.  Phoenix.  Stringfield.  Morgan.  Logue.  Griffin.  Altemose.  Boone. 
Fifth  Row:  Ennis,  Gilliam.  Sibley.  Rich.  Anderson.  Lewis.  J.,  Boak.  Stoner.  R.,  Lane.  Bishopric, 


iSSjmMM^AK 


WKmu^ 


214 


the  coming  scholastic  year  enrollment  will  be  raised 
to  230.  For  the  picked  students  who  join  the  Unit, 
a  comprehensive  four-year  course  lies  ahead — with 
graduation  offering  an  Ensignship  in  the  Naval 
Reserve  or  a  Second  Lieutenancy  in  the  Marine 
Corps  Reserve.  On  the  scholastic  side,  they  cover 
the  fundamental  courses  in  seamanship,  marine  engi- 
neering, and  navigation  in  addition  to  more  broad- 
ening courses  in  naval  tradition  and  international 
law.  Physical  training  takes  the  form  of  a  drill 
held  for  a  full  hour  on  two  mornings  each  week.  At 
various  other  times  students  have  an  opportunity  to 
learn  the  principles  of  "shooting  the  sun,"  flag  sig- 
nalling, knot  tying,  and  handling  a  large  naval  gun 
which  has  been  assembled  in  their  armory.  For 
those  so  inclined,  the  facilities  of  a  well-equipped 
rifle  range  are  available — plus  the  chance  to  take 


Chuj  I'c/.'r  O/j'u-er,: 
J.  O.  Marshall,  M.  L.  Meeks,  B.  F.  Davenport,  M.  Taylor. 


SECOND  COMPANY 
First  Row:  Awalt,  Robinson,  Lewis,  Scully,  Powell,  Arbes,  O'Shea,  Baity,  Raby,  Booraem,  Wadden. 
Second  Row:  Kale,  Hacker,  McDonald,  Henderson,  Alexander,  Call,  Auburn,  Wortman,  Morris. 
Third  Row:  Long,  Henderson,  Smith,  Tandy,  Pope,  Readling,  Sherman,  Alexander,  Mewborn,  Kimbel. 
Fourth  Rolf:  Sowell,  Hewett,  Dunn,  Davis,  G.,  White,  Jones,  M.,  Parks,  Fineberg,  Hammond. 
Fifth  Row:  Pardue,  Bagley,  Dudley,  Elder,  Rouse,  Strayhorn,  Knollman,  Kaskel.  Sutton. 
Sixth  Row:  Matthews,  Oringer,  Garden,  Weatherford. 


215 


part  in  team  matches.  In  the  summer 
theory  is  put  into  practice  on  a  cruise, 
the  first  of  which  (in  the  summer  of 
1941)  based  at  Charleston,  S.  C.  Ap- 
proximately half  of  the  students  took 
part  in  the  first  cruise,  and  the  remain- 
der will  take  part  in  a  second  this  sum- 
mer. 

The  Unit  broke  away  from  strictly 
military  pursuits  m  the  winter  quarter 
this  year  when  a  dance  was  held  in 
Graham  Memorial.  In  keeping  with  the 
exigencies  of  the  war,  such  dances  are 
necessarily  held  to  a  minimum;  but  ca- 
dets will  remember  their  first  dance  as 
a  fine  success. 


Scenes  from  the  winter  yuARTEK  dance 


)».j..»^^^tf^>^<^^>>«^rtty*>-^<^»?f»t.^^^<'»^a»-L->M./':m«V^fa^aaj3rfiwe<w*iwi* 


THIRD  COMPANY 
Firil  Row:  Amoss,  Ward,  Kennedy,  Briggs,  Underwood,  Corbett,  Milner,  Thompson.  Moore.  Wharton.  Whidbee. 
Second  Row:  Cato,  White.  T.,  Ervin.  Van  Hecke.  McMullan.  Evans,  J.,  Hicks,  Weisberg.  Wilson.  Shouse,  Henderson,  Ross. 
Third  Row:  Sears,  Bellamy,  Graham,  Myers.  Howard,  Hicks,  Greathouse,  Fields,  Knight.  E,,  Trueblood. 
Fourth  Rote:  Williams,  Sprunt,  Lewis.  Lance.  Otte,  Prentiss,  Krauss,  Kenny,  Shalleck. 
Fifth  Row:  Knight,  R,,  Sharkey,  Tendler.  Johnson.  Armfifld,  Phinney,  Suddreth,  Covington.  Saunders. 
Sixth  Row:  Holman,  Staples,  Lewis,  G.,  Curry,  TuRNA(,r,  Mii  ler.  Zollicofeer,  Simmons.  Turrentine. 


^ 


*i^*:#^^ 


»ir       Mb      IW      ^^    'r~    M 


^n 


216 


As  the  country  enters  into  full  war- 
time stride,  and  as  the  Class  of  '44  signs 
up  for  the  Advanced  Course  in  the  Unit, 
firm  chins  go  up  a  degree  or  two  and 
young  jaws  set  a  trifle  harder.  Gradua- 
tion means  service  and  sacrifice  and 
hardship — but  also  a  challenge  to  fight 
for  a  freedom  much  bigger  than  any  of 
us. 

Student  officers  for  the  fall  and  win- 
ter quarters  were;  John  Paty,  Battalion 
Commander;  Richard  Kemp,  Battalion 
Adjutant;  Skipper  Await,  Commander 
First  Company;  Wade  Weatherford, 
Commander  Second  Company;  Charles 
Richmond,  Commander  Third  Com- 
pany; W.  H.  FuUenweider,  Commander 
Drum  and  Bugle  Corps. 


First  Row:  Bell,  R.,  Fullenweider. 

Third  Rot, 


BATTALION  COMMANDER  AND  STAFF 
Clark,  Paty. 


Shooting  the  Sun' 
Present  Arms! 


DRUM  AND  BUGLE  CORPS 

Second  Row:  Davis.  J.,  Whitner.  Sonntag,  Porter. 
Koppel,  Crone,  Little,  L.,  Davis,  C,  Hennessee. 

COLOR  GUARD 
Schlessinger,  Chambers.  Peel,  Shumate. 


217 


Y.  M.  C.  A. 


T. 


St-.ilc-J;  Fred  Broad,  Prtsidenl;  Harry  F.  Comer,  General  Secre- 
tary; Edwin  S.  Lanier,  Self-Help  Secretary. 

Stand  it!  a :  Charles  Phillips.  Vice-President;  Hugh  Quimby, 
Treasurer;  William  Stanback,  Secretary. 


WO  especially  important  facts  stand  out  about 
the  "Y".  The  first  —  no  student  organization  can 
boast  nearly  so  large  a  membership,  1548.  The  second 
— probably  no  other  group  does  as  much  real  service 
with  so  little  appreciation.  There  is  hardly  a  student 
who  does  not  use  the  Student  Directory  countless 
times  during  the  year;  yet  few  realize  that  the  "Y" 
is  responsible  for  its  publication  and  distribution. 
Almost  every  freshman  gets  his  first  impressions  of 
Carolina  from  the  Freshman  Handbook — and  yet  not 
many  know  that  the  "Y"  selected  its  editor  and  made 
sure  that  he  did  a  good  job.  No  one  who  is  at  all 
interested  in  current  affairs,  whether  they  be  social, 
economic,  or  political,  can  forget  the  biennial  Insti- 
tute of  Human  Relations,  with  the  wealth  of  stimu- 
lating discussion  which  it  presents — yet  this  too  is 
often  attributed  to  the  work  of  any  group  other  than 


i-n- *  »Mi:rf  n^».^»  i-'i^tt  «*^*i:»* 


Y.M.C.A.  CABINET 
First  Row;  Charles  Phillips,  Fred  Broad,  Harry  F.  Comer,  Hugh  Quimby,  John  Oliver. 
Second  Row;  Carter  Broad,  Cyrus  King,  Walter  Love,  Bruce  Jackson. 
Absent;  William  Stanback,  Max  Rohn,  Mike  Carr,  St.  Clair  Pugh,  Arthur  Williams,  John  Simms,  and  Robert  Stuart. 


218 


the  "Y".  The  list  of  other  and  lesser  known  services 
could  be  extended  almost  indefinitely.  In  the  field 
of  religion  the  "Y"  promotes  frequent  programs  of 
worship,  lectures,  conferences,  and  special  features 
of  which  Religious  Emphasis  Week  is  but  one.  It  also 
performs  such  invaluable  services  as  the  maintenance 
of  a  rooming  bureau,  a  travel  bureau,  the  self-help 
service,  the  well-known  Pre-college  retreat,  publication 
of  a  weekly  bulletin  of  events,  and  a  host  of  other 
personal  and  community  services. 

Credit  should  not  be  given  where  it  is  not  deserved. 
But  to  an  organization  which  does  its  work  in  the  face 
of  much  unjustified  criticism  as  a  "do-nothing"  group, 
and,  more  important,  an  organization  which  speaks 
through  its  service  rather  than  by  flaunting  publicity, 
the  highest  kind  of  praise  is  due.  With  a  tradition 
of  unselfish  service  which  began  in  1859,  the  "Y" 
is  setting  the  example  which  it  seeks  to  stimulate  in 
others. 


Above:  Freshm-^n  Friendship  Council  Dance. 
Below:  One  of  the  Y's  bi-weekly  banquets. 


<t.— -"a*'K«^— i*«^iiC^^^». 


These  Freshmen  attended  the  Pre-College  Retreat.   Freshman  Friendship  Council  officers  were:  John  Simms.  President; 
Pete  Cochrane,  Vice-President;  Carl  Thomas,  Secretary;  Ned  Mewborn,  Treasurer;  and  Robert  Stuart,  Adviser. 


219 


The  Band  in  full  dress 


HL  BAND 


n 


HE  touchdown  play,  the  strains  of  "Hark 
the  Sound" — the  band  comes  into  its  own. 
There's  a  huge  U.N.C.  on  the  field,  the  cymbals 
clash,  it  dissolves  into  formation — and  the  band 
steals  the  show  again. 

On  a  football  afternoon,  the  band  steps  into 
the  limelight  as  far  as  most  of  the  campus 
is  concerned.  But  appearance  at  football  games, 
despite  the  painstaking  hours  of  practice  it 
necessitates,  is  only  one  part  of  the  band's  pro- 
gram. Open  air  concerts  under  Davy  Poplar 
make  many  a   Sunday  afternoon   in   the  spring 


BAND  OFFICERS 

Fini   Roic:    Harry  Shipman,   Lihraruiii:  Boston 
Lackey,  Secretary-Treasurer. 

Second  Row:    Warren   Simpson.   Vice-Preudent : 
Earl  Slocum,  Director:  Harry  Martin,  President. 

Third  Row:    Brooks  Griffin.  Business  Manager; 
Tom  Baden,  Publicity  Manager. 


quarter  enjoyable  for  the  students;  and  broadcasts  over 
the  Tar  Heel  Network  give  U.N.C.  alumni  and  friends  a 
taste  of  the  musical  talent  at  the  University.  In  a  tour  of 
high  schools  throughout  the  state,  the  Band  seeks  to  en- 
courage local  bands  and  orchestras,  while  here  on  our 
campus  it  sponsors  a  swing-band  concert  among  student 
orchestras. 

Not  least  important  among  the  activities  of  the  Band 
is  the  annual  Band-Glee  Club  baseball  game  which  the 
Band  won  again  last  spring. 

Members  as  they  appear  in  the  picture  are: 

FIRST  ROW 

Thomas  Hughes,  Charles  Moore,  Richard  Bennett,  Rich- 
ard Weintraub,  Delmer  Williams,  James  O'Neal,  Robert 
Spurrier,  Sam  McGinn,  Bruce  Young,  Robert  Sattlick, 
Stanley  Cole,  KerR'in  Stallings,  Boots  Thompson,  Earl  A. 
Slocum,  Director,  S.  P.  Smith. 

SECOND  ROW 
Sonny  Creech,  John  Eaton,  David  Josephs,  David  Arner, 
Peter  Robinson,  Thomas  Johnson,  Charles  Stanford,  Joseph 
Leak,  Robert  Thompson,  William  Thompson,  Allen  Gar- 
rett, Trent  Busby,  Harry  Shipman,  Robert  Wescott,  Julius 
Amer,  Thomas  Baden,  Haywood  Wyatt,  Walter  Lane,  Her- 
bert Fleishman,  George  Stammler,  Thomas  Moss,  Glen 
Haydon. 


THIRD  ROW 

Julius  Goldstein,  Roger  Anderson,  Zack  Bynum,  James 
Paris,  Frank  Wayne,  Samuel  Andrews,  Paul  Green,  John 
Morgan,  Henry  Marrow,  Frank  Greene,  Harry  Martin,  Bos- 
ton Lackey,  Karl  Thomas,  Spottswood  Burwell,  A.  Y.  How- 
ell, Louis  Rubinsohn,  Robert  Fitzgerald,  Dan  Parker. 

FOURTH  ROW 

Warren  Simpson,  Clarence  Rutfin,  William  Spruill,  James 
Rhodes,  Spruill  Spain,  Lewis  Evans,  Charles  Speissegger, 
Gordon  Kelley,  Robert  Streetman,  Amos  Spease,  Ray  West- 
erdale,  Albert  Jeffries,  Feldman  Corn,  Boyd  Blackney,  James 
Helms,  J.  B.  Linker,  Robert  Weis,  Walton  Andrews, 
Charles  Peete,  J.  B.  Hagaman,  John  Black,  Zan  Harper, 
Harris  Mitchell. 

FIFTH  ROW 
Brooks  Griffin,  Robert  McClary,  Rex  Coston,  Ben  Gallo- 
way, Joe  Belk,  Sonny  Scarborough,  Charles  McBrayer, 
Baxter  Howell,  William  Allen,  Aaron  Moss,  Kenneth  Todd, 
Charles  Davis,  Robert  Reed,  William  Bugg,  Chester  Hill, 
James  Hancock,  Bub  Montgomery. 

SIXTH  ROW 

Scott  Winders,  Jack  Wharton,  William  Benton,  Hagood 
Hatsell,  Thomas  Fitzgerald,  John  Snell,  John  Hoffman, 
Lawson  McLendon,  Paul  Dulin. 


The  Band  goes  through  its  paces  at  the  Duke  game. 


221 


Griffin 
Keutzer 


.y^ 


MEN'S  GLEE  CLUB 

O  PRING  tours  .  .  .  New  York  .  .  .  Asheville  .  .  .  Washington  .  .  . 
Town  Hall  of  the  Air  .  .  .  Singing  .  .  .  Director  Clyde  Keutzer  .  .  .  it's 
the  Men's  Glee  Club.  Not  quite  so  simple  as  all  this,  the  Glee  Club 
— under  the  direction  of  Mr.  Keutzer — has  become  one  of  the  most 
active  organizations  on  the  campus. 

Among  its  many  scheduled  concerts  are  the  ones  with  the  Choral 
Club  at  Christmas  time,  many  with  the  Women's  Glee  Club,  and  their 
annual  commencement  rendition  of  Elijah. 

This  Spring  a  trip  was  taken  to  Washington,  the  University  of 
Pennsylvania,  New  York,  and  White  Plains,  including  an  appearance 
on  Town  Hall  of  the  Air.  Trips  were  taken  here  in  North  Carolina, 
also. 

The  Officers  of  the  Glee  Club  Are:  Harry  Martin,  President; 
Brooks  Griffin,  Business  Manager;  Boston  Lackey,  Treasurer;  and  Dr. 
Clyde  Keutzer,  Director. 

Members  of  the  Concert  Glee  Club  Are:  First  Tenor:  Francis 
Grow,  Hurst  Hatch,  William  Mehaffey,  James  Pritchett,  Thomas  Vail. 
Second  Tenor:  Leon  Adams,  Roger  Anderson,  Vincent  Arey,  Scott 
Johnson,  Arthur  Joyner,  Hal  Kohn.  First  Bass:  Rex  Coston,  Larry  Dale, 
James  Edwards,  William  Elmore,  Robert  Goodman,  Brooks  Griffin,  Lee 
Howard,  William  Lowenstein,  Roger  Matthews,  Ben  Snyder,  Jack 
Titchener,  Jack  Wharton.  Second  Bass:  Glen  Bogasse,  Joe  Felmet, 
Robert  Gordon,  Ed  Greer,  Burton  Hampton,  Brud  King,  Louis  Mac- 
Brayer,  J.  B.  Petty,  Clarence  Ruffin,  Tommy  Snypes. 


Members  of  the  Concert  Glee  Club  and  the  Freshman  Glee  Club 


k^  r^^  r^^ 


FA.^  r^r^     rj^  rj 


222 


HILLEL 
FOUNDATION 

J.  HE  B'nai  B'rith  Hillel  Foundation,  a  national  collegiate  organiza- 
tion which  has  for  its  purpose  the  coordination  of  cultural  and  religious 
life  among  the  Jewish  students  of  sixty-five  colleges  and  universities, 
was  established  at  Chapel  Hill  in  1936. 

Under  the  supervision  of  Rabbi  Samuel  Sandmel,  its  director,  the 
Foundation  offers  Orthodox  and  Reformed  services,  weekly  coffee  hours, 
Sunday  morning  discussion  groups,  freshman  bull-sessions,  and  open 
forum  discussions.  The  women  students  maintain  their  own  organiza- 
tion within  the  Foundation. 

These  activities  are  directed  by  the  Cabinet,  a  group  of  elected 
students,  who  formulate  and  execute  the  actions  of  the  Foundation. 
Meetings,  informal  gatherings,  and  services  are  held  at  the  Hillel  House, 
adjacent  to  the  campus,  which  is  open  at  all  times  for  the  use  of  the 
students.  The  Foundation  also  maintains  offices  at  the  Y.M.C.A. 
Building.  The  Hillel  Foundation  participates  in  the  work  of  the  Uni- 
versity Religious  Council  and  cooperates  with  other  campus  groups. 

Officers  Are:  Dr.  Samuel  Sandmel,  Director;  David  M.  Arner, 
President;  Maurice  Kantor,  Vice-President;  Shirley  Raisler,  Secretary. 


Kan  TOR 
Dr.  S.^ndmel 


<^\. 


First  Row:  Raisler,  Kantor.  Arner.  Freschel,  Feitelberg. 

Second  Row:  Persky,  Moser,  Greenberg,   Finklestein,  Raisin,  Jarett,  Dr.  Sandmel,  Brooks,  Fleishman,  Wallace,  Walden, 
Kaplan. 

Absent;  Sidney  Cooper.  Harry  Kitner.  Ralph  Levy,  and  Bennie  Vatz. 


223 


DELTA  SIGMA  PI 


<7) 

X-^'ELTA  Sigma  Pi  is  an  international  professional  fraternity  in  the 
field  of  commerce.  Chapters  are  maintained  at  commerce  schools  of 
many  of  the  leading  colleges  and  universities,  and  Carolina's  chapter, 
Alpha  Lambda,  has  been  on  the  campus  since  1925.  Its  purpose  is  to 
promote  closer  affiliation  among  students  of  commerce  and  closer 
relations  between  commerce  students  and  the  business  world. 

Members  Are:  Faculty:  Dr.  M.  D.  Taylor,  Dr.  J.  G.  Evans, 
Dr.  H.  D.  Wolf,  Dr.  E.  W.  Zimmerman,  Mr.  R.  L.  Stallings,  and  Mr. 
D.  F.  Martin. 

Seniors:  Walter  Baucom,  Robert  Bursley,  Etheldred  Holt,  Nelson 
Jennette,  Wellington  Lewis,  Walter  Love,  Floyd  McCombs,  William 
L.  McKinnon,  Edwin  L.  Minges,  Edward  Mooring,  Robert  Pfafi',  Hugh 
Quimby,  James  O'Brien  Rogers,  Reynold  Spence,  Dean  L.  Williams, 
and  George  Withers. 

Juniors:  Bruce  Bales,  Faison  Barnes,  Lawrence  Berluti,  Lloyd  Bost, 
Clinton  Clark,  Sell  Gulp,  David  Fiske,  Claude  George,  Charles  Murray, 
Frederick  Oehler,  W.  J.  Smith,  Hugh  M.  Stroud,  Walter  Williams,  and 
Preston  White. 


William  McKinnon,  Pretident 


Sophomores:    Sam  A.  Cox,  James  Davis, 
Clinton  Jones,  and  Eppie  Knight. 


Baucom 

Bost 

Bursley 

Gulp 

George 

Holt 

Jennette 

Jones,  L. 

Lewis 

Love 

McCombs 

Minges 

Mooring 

Quimby 

Rogers 

Smith,  'W.  J. 

Spence 

Stroud 

White 

■Williams 

Withers 

224 


Berg 

BlERMAN 

Davenport 

Jackson,  D. 

Jackson,  E.  B. 

Mason 

MUNROE 

Xackos 

Perry 

Seeley 

a 


CHI  DELTA  PHI 


/HI  Delta  Phi  was  organized  on  this  campus  to  provide  a 
means  for  girls  with  literary  inclination  to  meet  for  the  purposes 
of  informal  study  and  entertainment,  and  to  raise  the  standards  of 
literary  work  among  the  women  of  the  University.  The  group 
criticizes  the  work  of  its  members,  hears  outside  speakers  in  vari- 
ous literarj'  fields,  and  urges  contribution  to  campus  and  current 
magazines.    The  campus  chapter,  Tau,  was  formed  in  June,   1941. 

President  this  year  was  Constance  Mason. 

Members  Were:  Seniors:  Dorothy  Jackson,  Elizabeth  Bell 
Jackson,  and  Mary  Nackos.  Juniors;  Elaine  Berg,  Doris  Bierman, 
Martha   Davenport,   Lydia  Munroe,   Betty   Perry,   and   Ann   Seeley. 


MODERN  DANCE  CLUB 
T 

J.  HE  Modern  Dance  Club  was  founded  in  1940  with  Elsie 
Earle  as  faculty  adviser  and  Charles  McCrow  as  President,  and  with 
the  purpose  of  stimulating  interest  in  modern  dancing  and  dance 
composition.  Its  most  notable  work  this  year  was  a  dance  con- 
ference held  in  the  fall  with  fifteen  schools  attending  (the  second 
such  conference  to  be  held  in  North  Carolina).  In  addition,  trips 
were  made  to  Charlotte,  Farmville,  and  Winston-Salem  for  con- 
ferences and  demonstrations. 

Members  Were:  Anice  Garmany,  President;  Shirley  Brimberg, 
Vice-President;  Harris  Hooks,  Secretary-Treasurer;  Elsie  Earle, 
Faculty  Adviser;  William  Klentz,  Music  Adviser;  Amelia  Ander- 
son, Accompanist;  Byrd  Green,  Earlene  Clayton,  Frances  Erwin, 
Mary  Lou  Edwards,  Lou  Alice  Georges,  Bill  Myers,  and  Charles 
McCrow. 


Modern  Dance  Club  members  go  through  their  dancing 


%^^ 


225 


Randy  Mebane,  President 


•^x. 


SOUND  AND  FURY 

-/  O  the  Carolina  campus,  Sound  and  Fury  has  been  a  muddle  of 
grease  paint,  oriental  sets,  and  frantic  ticket  selling — all  culminating 
in  George  Latshaw's  Bagdad  Daddy.  No  one  can  forget  the  Sultan 
with  his  three  hundred  and  sixty-six  wives — one  for  every  day  in  the 
year  and  an  extra  one  for  leap  year,  or  star  Tom  Avera  and  his  smiling 
exuberance,  or  the  many  new  songs  and  dances.  And  members  of  the 
cast  will  long  remember  the  whirling  dervishes  who  whirled  too  much 
when  the  curtain  got  stuck,  and  the  fine  trip  to  W.C.  It  meant  a  lot 
of  hard  work,  and  at  times  more  than  a  little  exasperation — but  a  lot 
of  fun,  too,  for  the  two  hundred  students  who  got  together  to  write, 
plan,  produce,  and  act  the  show  of  the  year. 

From  its  beginning  three  years  ago  Sound  and  Fur)'  has  had  a 
definite  place  in  student  activity,  but  this  year  it  took  a  step  forward 
as  it  gained  the  recognition  of  the  administration  as  a  bona  fide  campus 
group.  Membership  is  open  to  all,  depending  on  ability  alone;  and 
its  chief  purpose  is  to  ser\'e  as  a  medium  for  light  drama,  comedy,  and 
talents  which  are  offered  no  other  outlet. 

Officers  Were:  Randy  Mebane,  President;  St.  Clair  Pugh,  Vice- 
President;  Joe  King,  Business  Manager;  Bob  Richards,  Director;  and 
George  Grotz,  Producer. 


Scenes  from  Bagdad  Daddy  and  the  Executive  Committee  back  of  the  show.    Committee  members  (upper  left)  are: 

First  Row:  Ben  Hall.  Kathryn  Charles.  George  Latshaw,  Arthur  Lavine. 

Second  Row:  Arthur  Fischer,  Joe  King,  Bob  Richards,  Randy  Mebane.  George  Grotz.  St.  Clair  Pugh. 


226 


UNIVERSITY 

RELIGIOUS 

COUNCIL 

J-  HE  Universit)'  Religious  Council  has,  until  last  spring,  long  been 
on  the  campus  as  the  Interfaith  Council.  This  cultural  group  has  as  its 
main  purpose  the  promotion  of  religious  thought  and  activity  here  on 
the  campus.  Their  program  this  year  included  three  series  of  lectures 
which  were  open  to  all  students  and  members  of  the  faculty. 

In  the  Fall  Quarter,  Dr.  Julian  Morganstern,  President  of  Hebrew 
Union  College,  gave  a  series  of  three  lectures  on  "The  Development 
of  Religious  Thought  in  the  Old  Testament."  Dr.  Harvey  Branscomb 
of  Duke  Divinity  School  gave  the  series  in  the  Winter;  and  Dr.  Conrad 
Noehlman  of  Colgate  Rochester  College  was  the  lecturer  during  the 
Spring  Quarter. 

Council  members  meet  once  a  month  when  they  are  often  addressed 
by  a  member  of  the  faculty  or  a  visiting  speaker.  The  group  is  com- 
posed of  two  student  representatives  of  each  denominational  group  on 
the  campus ;  these  are  chosen  by  the  sectarian  groups. 

Officers  This  Year:  Betty  Eaton  Dixon,  President;  Wellington 
Lewis,  Vice-President;  Aaron  Raisin,  Secretary;  Mr.  Harry  Comer, 
Treasurer;  and  Dr.  Samuel  Sandmel,  Executive  Adviser. 


<^V 


■.^fcio».ci— .«»«-aw»;*>^*nn'jj;<rta^^<(c,5 


Finl  Roll':  Carr.  Cromartie.  Mallison,  Raisin. 

Second  Row:  Mrs.  Sandmel.  Lewis,  Dixon.  Dean  House.  Woodard.  Slobodkin,  Spears. 

Third  Rote:  Albaugh.  Browning.  Gribben.  Broad.  Dr.  Lawrence,  Dr.  Sandmel,  Jones.  Cohnstaedt.  Bernstein. 


WOMEN'S  ACTIVITIES 


/// 


^'/^ 


/^r0i'ML.  ^, 


/ 


// 


^mmi^' 


DiTzi  BuiCE.  President 


TOWN    GIRLS 
ASSOCIATION 


\^_jO  more  lost  coeds,  no  more  girls  not  knowing  what 
to  do  with  their  spare  time,  no  more  Town  Girls  up  before  the 
Honor  Council  because  they  don't  know  the  rules.  In  its  second 
year  of  functioning  the  Town  Girls  Association  has  taken  care 
of  most  of  the  problems  of  the  175  coeds  who  live  in  off-campus 
houses. 

Chief  objectives  of  the  members  are  to  give  Town  Girls  their 
proper  place  in  student  government  and  extra-curricular  activities, 
and  to  make  sure  they  understand  the  rules  under  which  they 
must  live.  The  group  also  seeks  to  help  Town  Girls  meet  Town 
Boys  and  others  through  social  programs  and  dances,  and  to  fur- 
ther the  University's  program  of  "Friendly  Feelings  Toward 
Duke"  by  entertaining  and  meeting  with  the  Duke  Town  Girls. 

Officers  Were:  Ditzi  Buice,  President;  Hilda  Weaver, 
Vice-President;  Sarah  Umstead,  Secretary;  Margaret  Pickard, 
Treasurer. 


First  Row:  Tiliey,  Weaver.  Buice.  Umstead,  Brawley,  Pickard. 
Second  Rou-:  Crockford.  Smith,  N.,  Pell,  Cobb,  Lewis,  Morgan. 
Third  Row:  DiDiER,  Wells,  Elliott,  Heaton,  Sloan,  Patterson. 
Fourth  Roir:  Smithyman,  O'Hare,  Booker,  Snyder,  Etz,  Smith,  R. 


230 


PAN-HELLENIC 
COUNCIL 


Ly  NITED  we  stand"  might  well  be  the  pass-word  of  the 
Pan-Hellenic  Council,  for  most  of  its  work  is  directed  at  keeping 
relations  between  the  three  sororities  on  a  friendly  and  coopera- 
tive basis.  Most  important  task  this  year,  its  second,  was  the 
drawing  up  and  enforcing  of  rushing  rules,  with  revision  where 
necessary;  and  past  rules  were  clarified  and  simplified.  There 
was  also  discussion  of  the  mutual  problems  which  come  up  in 
connection  with  regulation  of  sorority  life  with  suggested  im- 
provements and  solutions. 

Officers  This  Year  Were:  Jennie  Wells  Newsome,  Pi 
Beta  Phi,  President;  Ann  Peyton,  Chi  Omega,  Vice-President; 
and  Bea  Withers,  Alpha  Delta  Pi,  Secretary-Treasurer. 

Other  Members  Were:  Pi  Beta  Phi — Jane  Durning  and 
Jane  Knight;  Chi  Omega — Virginia  Hayes  and  Jean  Hahn;  Alpha 
Delta  Pi — Muriel  Mallison  and  Huldah  Warren. 


Ifnnif  W  ki.is  i\fv<'so.\iI',  /' 


*>«-Kr.-wvii*w«r- 


y  OffO*!*3»N*rf**>T»**W»?* 


Left  to  Right:  Durning.  Peyton,  Hahn.  Knight.  Warren.  Hayes.  Withers.  Newsome,  and  Mallison. 


231 


Dixon 
Terry 


.y^ 


WOMEN'S 
GLEE  CLUB 


J-  HE  sound  of  C  on  the  tuning  fork  and  ninety  voices  of  the 
Women's  Glee  Club  stream  from  the  windows  of  Hill  Hall.  It 
might  be  practice  for  one  of  their  radio  concerts,  or  for  their  joint 
Christmas  concert  with  the  Men's  Glee  Club.  But  if  the  adage 
"practice  makes  perfect"  holds  true,  you  can  be  sure  of  one  thing — 
that  their  music's  good.  Might  we  point  out — that  any  group  which 
demands  the  time  of  so  many  girls,  and  gets  it,  is  bound  to  "have 
something  there." 

In  addition  to  numerous  radio  programs  throughout  the  year, 
the  Club  probably  has  its  biggest  quarter  in  the  spring.  A  Spring 
Concert  here  on  the  campus  is  presented  for  students  and  townfolks, 
and  in  June,  as  a  part  of  the  Commencement  Program,  the  club 
sings  Elijah.  At  various  times  club  members  take  trips  to  towns  both 
in  North  Carolina  and  elsewhere  and  present  a  variety  of  songs. 

Officers  this  year  were:  Betty  Eaton  Dixon,  President; 
Betty  Edwards,  Vice-President;  Virginia  Terry,  Treasurer;  Eleanor 
Soule,  Business  Manager  and  Librarian;  and  Aida  Epps,  Piano  Ac- 
companist. 


Members  of  the  Women's  Glee  Club  in  Hill  Hall 


232 


Y.  W.  C.  A. 

T 

J-  HE  Young  Women's  Christian  Association  was  organized  at 
Carolina  six  years  ago  to  serve  the  needs  and  interests  of  women 
students.  Here  and  throughout  the  world  it  is  a  fellowship  of 
women  students  whose  two-fold  purpose  is  the  development  of 
persons  with  a  philosophy  of  life  based  on  Christian  principles  and 
convictions  and  with  a  deep  social  passion  for  building  a  social 
order  providing  equal  opportunity  for  all  people. 

The  Y.W.C.A.  provides  opportunity  for  students  to  discover 
a  living  philosophy  through  programs  of  discussion,  study,  work, 
and  worship. 

Through  work  with  Public  Health  Clinics,  minority  groups,  stu- 
dent relief,  community  recreation  programs,  and  other  services  mem- 
bers express  their  sense  of  social  responsibility. 

These  religious  and  social  objectives  take  on  new  meaning  and 
urgency  now  when  students,  disillusioned  and  baffled,  are  recognizing 
the  necessity  for  deepening  their  spiritual  strength  and  power  if  they 
are  to  meet  the  present  situation  adequately. 

The  Officers  of  the  Y.W.C.A.  are:  Muriel  Mallison,  Presi- 
dent; Cornelia  Clark,  Vice-President;  Ann  Cromartie,  Secretary; 
Louise  Stumberg,  Treasurer;  and  Jimmie  Woodward,  Resident  Sec- 
retary. 


'^X. 


First  Row:   DuRNiNG,  LovE,  Nash,  Mallison,  Woodward,  and  Stumberg. 

Second  Rotr:   WooDHOUSE,  Ham.  Bonkemeyer.  Crago,  Oakes. 

Absent:   Cromartie,  Clark,  Byers.  Turner,  Fore.  Allison,  and  Cobb. 


233 


WOMEN'S 

GRADUATE 

ASSOCIATION 

^™..o.™„,  „„....... ,..„..... 

dances  this  year  as  the  Women's  Graduate  Association  became  more 
active  than  at  any  time  since  its  beginning.  Frances  Cooke  and  her 
committee,  made  up  of  Mary  Alice  Puckett,  Carol  Seeley,  Mary 
Winslow,  and  Julia  Barnwell,  planned  the  open  houses  for  the 
soldiers,  the  Sunday  afternoon  open  houses,  and  the  dormitory  teas. 
There  was  also  a  formal  faculty  tea  and  two  formal  dances. 

These  various  functions,  as  well  as  the  government  system,  have 
brought  the  women  graduates  in  closer  contact  with  the  undergrad- 
uates and  the  various  campus  organizations.  The  dormitory  house 
council  was  made  up  of:  Harriet  Angier,  House  President;  Nancy 
Howard,  Publicity  Chairman;  Roberta  Coles,  Secretary-Treasurer; 
and  Frances  Cooke,  Social  Chairman. 


Harriet  Angier,  President 


First  Rote:  Fore.  Richmond.  E.  Juniper.  Torpin,  Blake,  Brown.  J.  Juniper,  Chichester.  Stivender.  Jordan.  Howard.  Groover. 
Fleece,  Goff.  Parker.  Grimsley.  Bland.  Gillam.  Garwood.  Mills.  Yoffje. 

Second  Roic:  Angier.  Ellis.  T'Ang.  Brinkley.  Thomas.  Burrus.  Burns.  Cooke.  Alexander.  Starnes.  Yen.  McClean.  Howard. 
Cottingham,  Davis.  Mrs.  Humphries. 


~Ti. 


'W 


234 


"LIFE  IN  A  WOMAN'S  WORLD" 


The  hardest  part  of  any  day — getting  iif 
Just  a  friendly  tussle. 

Looking  over  last  year's  crop. 


Preparation  for  the  "smile  of  beauty". 
Coffee  and  doughnuts — plus  discussion  of  the  day's  attire. 

S'weet  nothings  in  the  privacy  cf  a  telephone  booth. 


233 


The  arrival 


The  Maypole  Dance 


a 


au    y^ueen 


MARJORIE  JOHNSTON 


'     I  i 


M. 


AT  THE  UNIVERSITY 


HAPEL  HILL  in  the  spring  ...  the  first  Saturday  in  May  .  .  .  and  the  University's  coeds  and  men 
students  ahke  assembled  in  the  Forest  Theatre  to  see  Marjorie  Johnston  crowned  Queen  of  the  May.  In 
1941,  for  the  first  time  in  Carohna's  history,  the  men  students  voted  with  the  women  to  select  the  most 
beautiful  coeds,  choosing  in  addition  to  the  queen,  two  maids-of -honor  and  eight  attendants. 

With  a  ceremony  somewhat  less  pretentious  than  in  previous  years,  the  colorful  May  Day  pageant 
offered  a  brief  musical  and  dramatic  interpretation  of  Milton's  L'AIlegro  .  .  .  with  spritely  music  setting 
the  mood  and  a  maypole  dance  of  rainbow  colors  immediately  preceding  the  enthronement  of  the  vivacious, 
blond  queen.  On  either  side  of  her  on  the  stone  platform  stood  the  maids-of -honor,  Frances  Dyckman  and 
Roberta  Winton,  and  the  attendants:  Frenchy  Gibson,  Mary  Hawkins,  Julia  McConnell,  Eunice  Patten, 
seniors;  Peggy  Lou  Futrelle,  Huldah  Warren,  and  Hortense  Kelly,  juniors;  and  Kitty  Wicker,  graduate 
student. 

Sponsored  annually  by  "Valkyries,  women's  honorar)',  May  Day  marks  the  only  time  that  the  coeds 
as  a  whole  pay  homage  to  their  most  beatuiful  members — and  certainly  Queen  Margie  Johnston  made  a 
charming  Queen  of  Coeds. 


^ke    fl'lau    i^ourt 


THE  QUEEN  AND  HER  ATTENDANTS 
Left  to  Right:  HuLD.-iH  Warrhn.  DinDY  Kelley,  Mary  Hawkins.  Julia  McConnell,  Frances  Dyckman,  Marjorie  Johnston, 
Roberta  Winton,  Eunice  Patten.  Frances  Gibson.  Peggy  Lou  Futrelle. 


237 


DlSCrSSIOX  GROUPS 


/ 


/ 


'//i'MMdlmmf  a  J  ram- . . . 


If 


4^ 


Debate  Council  Members:    Seated:   Woodhouse,  Gretter.  Olsen.  Godfrey.   Standing:   Barnes,  Railey. 


Squad  Members  at  one  of  the  "try-out"  debates 


DEBATE 
COUNCIL 


'J¥; 


R.  Chairman,  Honorable  Judges,  Worthy  Oppo- 
nents, Ladies,  and  Gentlemen" — and  so  the  debate  is  on.  The 
place  might  be  our  own  Gerrard  Hall  or  as  far  away  as  Chi- 
cago. Issues  from  right  to  left,  from  peace  to  war  make  up 
the  subjects  of  the  debates. 

Debating  in  1941-42  will  be  remembered  for  several  rea- 
sons. The  highlight  of  the  year  came  during  spring  holidays 
as  four  students,  Elsie  Lyon,  Tom  Gibian,  Richard  Railey,  and 
Mac  McLendon,  took  a  tour  which  touched  some  nine  colleges 
and  universities  and  was  climaxed  by  entry  in  the  National 
Debating  Tournament  in  Madison,  Wis.  In  the  Nationals  the 
team  showed   up   in  excellent  form   with   three  of  the   four 


240 


reaching  the  finals ;  and  although  none  of  our  contestants 
won,  it  should  be  noted  that  there  were  well  over  fifty 
schools  in  the  contest  and  that  several  schools  entered  as 
many  as  fifteen  students  in  the  contest.  In  route,  the  team 
entered,  and  took  second  place  in,  the  Tau  Kappa  Alpha 
tournament  in  Columbus,  Ohio. 

The  year  also  saw  the  squad  return  to  tournament  de- 
bating and  to  participating  more  often  in  decision  debates. 
The  Rock  Hill  tournament  and  the  Dixie  tournament  gave 
our  debaters  a  chance  to  show  their  mettle  against  southern 
teams.  Dual  meets  were  held  with  Pennsylvania,  N.Y.U., 
Erskin,  Richmond,  Johns  Hopkins,  and  others. 

Reorganization  took  place  as  debaters  sought  to  make  the 
Council  more  representative.  The  Council  now  includes 
members  from  both  the  Di  and  the  Phi,  two  members 
elected  from  the  general  campus,  and  two  from  those 
members   of   the   Debate   squad   who   have  attended   eight 


meetings  and  participated  in  at  least  two  "try-out"  debates. 
As  in  the  past,  three  faculty  sit  as  Council  members.  It  is 
the  Council  which  forms  the  real  hub  of  debating.  In  addi- 
tion to  selecting  the  debate  teams  from  those  participating 
in  the  try-out  debates,  its  members  seek  to  aid  debating 
activity  in  other  ways.  Various  organizations  such  as  the 
C.P.U.,  the  I.R.C.,  the  Di,  and  the  Phi  are  given  financial 
assistance  in  the  hope  that  they  will  thus  be  better  able 
to  stimulate  discussion  and  debate  on  the  campus. 

Differentiated  from  the  Council  is  the  Squad,  member- 
ship in  which  is  open  to  all  students  of  the  University.  The 
squad  meets  weekly  for  discussion,  and  any  squad  member 
is  eligible  to  tryout  for  one  of  the  many  debates. 

Members  of  the  Debate  Council;  W.  Carrington 
Gretter,  President;  John  Dewey  Dorsett,  Executive  Secre- 
tary; Richard  Railey;  William  Barnes;  Mr.  William  A. 
Olsen;  Mr.  Edward  J.  Woodhouse;  and  Mr.  James  God- 
frey. 


DEBATE  SQUAD  MEMBERS  '  —««-,-.•..-«,       .a-,s.. 

First  Row:   Barnes,  Woodhouse,  Gretter,  Olsen,  Godfrey.  Railey. 

Second  Rotr:   Dibbrell,  Hill,  Murdoch,  Rubenstein,  Lehman,  Edwards,  Greenberg,  McLendon,  Johnson,  Lyon.  Sossoman. 

Third  Row:    Bagby.  Earnhardt.  Stammier.  Brogden.  Gutknecht,  Britt,  Sherman,  Barbour.  Moore. 


241 


INTERNATIONAL 

T 

J.  HERE  was  a  capacity  audience  in  Memorial  Hall 
for  the  International  Relations  Club's  opening  pres- 
entation by  Gaston  Henri-Haye,  Ambassador  of 
France.  Here  was  an  able  diplomat,  a  wily  speaker 
who  presented  Vichy's  plea  for  food.  Following 
Henri-Haye,  were  Dr.  Hu  Shih,  Ambassador  of 
China,  Netherland  Minister  Dr.  Alexander  Loudon, 
Mexican  Ambassador  Dr.  Francisco  Castillo  Najera, 
Dr.  Jan  Masaryk,  Minister  of  Foreign  Affairs  of  the 
Czechoslovakian  government  in  exile,  and  various 
other   Allied   diplomats   who   made   up   the   I.R.C.'s 

'Victor)'  Series".  In  the  presentation  of  these  dis- 
tinguished men,  the  Club  brought  to  the  Carolina 
campus  all  sides  of  the  many-faceted  international 
scene. 

Under  the  auspices  of  the  Gallup  Poll,  the  I.R.C. 
initiated  a  personal  opinion  poll  of  some  two  hun- 
dred, scientifically  chosen  students  to  compare  campus 
opinion  with  that  of  the  nation  at  large. 


Bagbv 
Bryan 


French  Ambassador  Henri-Haye  in  his  appearance  at  Chapel  Hili 


Appearing  on  I.R.C.'s  Forum  in  Gerrard  Hall  were 
both  students  and  faculty  members  who  demonstrated 
a  conflict  in  well-informed  opinion.  Following  Pearl  Har- 
bor was  an  all-faculty  panel  on  "The  Importance  of  Na- 
tional Unity  in  'War  Time".  These  monthly  platforms 
brought  to  the  campus  an  opportunity  to  hear  able  mem- 
bers of  both  the  student  body  and  faculty  discuss  questions 
of  immediate  interest. 

Equally  important  on  the  I.R.C.'s  three  point  program 
have  been  the  bi-monthly  "bull  sessions".  These  encourage 
active  participation  and  thought  by  the  members  and  guests 
who  delve  into  the  important  issues  of  the  day. 

Often  these  sessions  were  opened  by  some  member  who 
had  done  research  work  on  the  topic  in  order  that  facts 
and  figures  might  be  available  for  the  discussion. 

The  International  Relations  Club  is  a  non-partisan,  non- 
political  organization  of  forty  members  whose  purpose  is 
to  bring  to  the  campus  a  first-hand  view  of  the  world 
scene.  They  have  endeavored  to  lay  the  groundwork  for 
a  far-sighted  understanding  of  the  immense  problem  of 
post-war  readjustment. 


•  V:-;^..  ■ 

It      J 

^^Bft^^jJ^^^^I 

^^^^H 

SILx 

1^   ~y  4^' i  .^H 

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w^fl 

242 


RELATIONS    CLUB 


Officers  This  Year  Were:  Roger  Mann,  President; 
Wesley  Bagby,  Vice-President;  Jennie  Wells  Newsome, 
Secretary;  and  Kedar  Bryan,  Treasurer. 

Members  Were:  Dorothy  Aronson,  Wesley  Bagby, 
Jean  Beeks,  Mott  Blair,  Oran  Brown,  Kedar  Bryan,  Lillian 
Burgin,  Dick  Eddy,  Elton  Edwards,  Robert  Ellis,  Louise 
Davis,  Thomas  Gibian,  Philip  Griffith,  Robert  Gutknecht, 
Charles  Faircloth,  Robert  Druid,  Denman  Hammond,  Betsy 
Howe,  Bill  Howard,  Paul  Kattenburg,  Walter  Klein,  Rich- 
ard   Lessler,    Roger   Mann,    Randall    McLeod,    Mary   Jane 


McCaskill,  Warren  Mengel,  Gloria  Miller,  Dyer  Moore, 
Grady  Morgan,  Jennie  Newsome,  Whitman  Osgood,  Shirley 
Raisler,  Paul  Rubenstein,  Nancy  Smith,  Richard  Whitting- 
ton,  Leon  Young,  Robert  Michaels,  and  Ernest  Norwood. 

Associate  Members  Are:  Robert  Lamson,  Louis  Pois- 
sons,  David  Bailey,  Roland  Fields,  Ethel  Lawner,  Dorothy 
Stephany,  Edith  Bass,  and  Ann  Schaut. 

The  Faculty  Board  of  the  LR.C.  Consists  of:  Dean 
House,  Dr.  Mowry,  Dr.  KattsofF,  Dr.  Mackie,  and  Dr. 
Newsome. 


First  Row:   Bagby,  Bryan.  Beeks,  Howe. 

Second  Row:   McCaskill.  Dr.  Newsome,  Moss.  Dr.  Kattsoff,  Newsome,  Dr.  M.^ckie.  Aaronson,  Mann.  Burgin. 

Third  Row:    SMITH,  GiBiAN.  MoNROE.  Rubenstein.  Ward,  Raisler,  Young,  Lessler,  Griffith,  Edwards,  Donald  Moore. 

Foi/rth  Row:   Blair,  Bragdon.  Dyer  Moore.  Kattenberg.  Gutknecht,  Montgomery,  Mabe,  Osgood. 

Fifth  Row:   Brown.  Ellis,  Hammond,  Morgan,  Riggs,  Eddy. 


243 


John  Terrell,  President 


.y^ 


PHARMACY 
SENATE 

J-  HE  Pharmacy  Senate  is  a  brainchild  of  Dr.  E.  A.  Brecht,  Professor 
of  Pharmac}'  at  the  University.  His  slow,  easy-going  personahty,  and 
a  seemingly  brilliant  aptitude  for  all  things  Pharmaceutical,  have  won 
the  respect  and  friendship  of  all  Pharmacy  Students.  When  he  called 
for  thirty  students  to  be  members  of  this  senate,  there  were  thirty  over 
thirty  applications. 

Because  we  as  Pharmacy  students  are  somewhat  segregated  in  a 
professional  sense  from  the  rest  of  the  University,  we  have  founded  a 
speaking  group  of  our  own  to  discuss  our  own  profession,  its  problems, 
its  antipathies,  its  failings,  its  successes,  its  hopes.  Thirty  members  are 
required  to  stand,  to  address  the  chair,  and  to  speak  at  each  meeting. 
So  it  is  that  thirty  members  must  be  thirty  actives. 

From  this  loyal  group  there  might  spring  a  champion  or  champions 
of  a  crusade  for  Pharmacy.  "To  stand,  to  think,  to  speak"  might  well 
be  our  motto. 

Officers:  John  Terrell,  President;  Marsha  Hood,  Secretary-Treas- 
urer; Sam  Beavans,  Reporter;  and  Dave  McGowan,  Recorder. 

Members;  Harry  Allen,  Glenn  Beam,  Ed  Beddingfield,  John  Biggs, 
Sam  Black,  Dr.  Brecht,  Stroud  Brewer,  Bill  Canady,  Rankin  Caruthers, 
Pete  Cochrane,  Hallie  Collier,  Kenneth  Dingier,  Lucile  Gillespie, 
Henry  Hood,  Al  Jowdy,  Banks  Kerr,  Joe  King,  Sammy  Koonce,  Dave 
Masengill,  Otto  Matthews,  Frank  Pickard,  McGuire  Sessoms,  Jesse 
Stewart,  Bill  Taylor,  Ralph  Teague,  Sam  Williford. 


First  Row:  Allen,  Beam,  Beavans,  Beddingfield,  Biggs,  Black,  Brecht.    Second  Row:    Brewer,  Canady,  Carruthers,  Cochrane. 

Collier,  Dingler,   Gillespie.    Third  Row:    Hood,   H.,   Hood,  M.,   Jowdy,   Kerr,   Koonce,   Masengill.   Matthews.    Fourth   Row: 

McGowAN.  Pickard.  Sessoms,  Stuart,  Taylor,  Teague,  Williford. 


244 


CAROLINA 
POLITICAL  UNION 

J.  T  was  a  year  of  intense  activity  and  many  crises  in  world  affairs. 
Realizing  this,  the  Carolina  Political  Union  stressed  the  national  war- 
time economy  by  presenting  in  the  Fall  Quarter  William  Batt,  of  the 
War  Production  Board,  and  Wayne  Coy,  Liaison  Officer  for  Emergency 
Management.  Also  appearing  were  Gerald  P.  Nye,  leading  Isolationist 
Senator,  and  Joseph  Martin,  Chairman  of  the  Republican  Party. 

The  Winter  Quarter  brought  the  C.P.U.-I.S.S.  Conference  on 
"Youth's  Stake  in  Peace  Plans  and  War  Aims".  This  conference,  to 
which  some  forty  schools  sent  delegates,  saw  many  fine  speakers,  among 
whom  were  Mrs.  Eleanor  Roosevelt,  Jonathan  Daniels,  Miss  Harriet 
Elliot,  Arthur  Sweetser,  Jim  Carey,  and  Dr.  Frank  Graham.  Senator 
Josiah  Bailey,  Senate  Committee  Chairman  Harry  Truman,  Roger  Bald- 
win, Chairman  of  the  American  Civil  Liberties  Committee,  and  Price 
Administrator  Leon  Henderson  also  spoke  on  the  Union  platform 
during  the  year. 

The  C.P.U.,  non-partisan  and  non-political  group,  has  brought  to 
the  campus  since  1936  men  qualified  to  present  varying  sides  of  na- 
tional and  international  issues.  In  addition  to  this  main  function,  it 
conducts  several  campus  opinion  polls  during  the  year  and  has  many 
interesting  "bull  sessions"  at  which  faculty  members  often  speak. 

Officers:  Ridley  Whitaker,  Chairman;  Louis  Harris,  Vice-Chair- 
man;  Richard  Railey,  Secretary;  and  Isaac  Taylor,  Treasurer. 


Ridley  Whitaker,  Chairman 


<^V 


Pint  Row:  Lyon,  Taylor,  Whitaker,  Harris,  Railey,  Darvin. 

Second  Row:   Williams,  Milam,  Dixon,  Dr.  Kattsoff,  Dorsett,  Bernert,  Gravely,  Loeb.  Weatherford. 

Third  Row:   Peabody,  Tillett,  McLendon,  Taylor,  Epple,  Nice,  Hutchins.  Dr.  Woodhouse. 

Absent:  Britt,  Gibbons.  Glenn.  Komisaruk,   Perry,  Robinson,  White. 


245 


DIALECTIC  SENATE 

-L  HE  gavel  crashes  and  silence  reigns  supreme  in  the  hall  of  the  oldest 
campus  organization,  the  Dialectic  Senate.  The  golden  way  of  silence  gives  way 
to  the  silvery  order  of  speech  as  vital  questions  of  the  campus,  of  the  nation, 
and  of  the  world  are  brought  forward  for  examination.  Post-war  reorganization, 
selective-service  in  peace  time,  the  place  of  the  labor  union,  or  the  question  of 
farm  price  and  wage  regulation  are  only  a  few  of  the  vital  issues  that  are  bat- 
tered about  in  "hot"  discussion.  These  questions  are  brought  up  as  resolutions, 
with  voting  at  the  end  of  discussion,  and  student  opinion  is  thus  recorded  for 
the  campus. 

The  annual  debate  with  the  Philanthropic  Assembly  is  a  big  night  as  all  Di 
members  turn  out  to  cheer  their  team  on  to  verbal  victor)'.  Interesting  too,  but 
not  an  easy  job,  is  the  time  each  spring  the  Di  aids  Mr.  E.  C.  Rankin  in  bring- 
ing to  the  campus  the  annual  triangular  debates  between  the  state  high  schools. 
On  various  occasions,  members  get  together  for  small  "socials". 


bM.T-r3«t;*Sw»S>ii?*5iSii 


The  Di  in  session 


Louis  Poisson 
Carrington  Gretter 


246 


Senator  Gretter  puts  forth  an  argument 


>.:^»''jgi»»»g;.fa^ga.3rfnirii>i>ofc 


t»**i'tet:»-**;:.--'-* 


Through  the  use  of  Robert's  Rules  of  Order  the  Senate 
seeks  to  train  its  members  in  legislative  procedure  as  well 
as  in  speaking  and  debating.  Students  not  accustomed  to 
speaking  on  their  feet  are  encouraged  to  air  their  views 
on  questions  brought  up  for  discussion.  The  resolutions 
presented  are  drawn  up  by  a  special  committee,  and  by 
keeping  the  topics  unannounced  until  meeting  time,  the 
Senate  gives  its  members  the  added  training  of  speaking 
on  questions  for  which  they  are  relatively  unprepared. 

Since  June,  1795,  the  Di  has  existed  as  the  oldest  extra- 
curricular organization  in  the  State  of  North  Carolina. 
Among  its  distinguished  presidents  have  been  James  K. 
Polk,  Frank  P.  Graham,  Phillips  Russell,  and  Dr.  A.  R. 
Newsome.  The  Senate  was  reorganized  in  1924,  and  was 
modelled  after  the  upper  house  of  the  North  Carolina  State 
legislature. 

Officers  This  Year  Were:  Fall  Quarter:  Louis  Pois- 
son.   President;   Wesley  Bagby,   President  Pro-tern;  Wade 


Weatherford,  Critic;  Randall  McLeod,  Clerk;  Mac  Murphy, 
Sergeant-at-Arms ;  and  Roger  Mann,  Treasurer. 

Winter  Quarter:  Carrington  Gretter,  President;  Jennie 
Wells  Newsome,  President  Pro-tem;  Wesley  Bagby,  Critic; 
Hannah  Weskett,  Clerk;  Wade  Weatherford,  Sergeant-at- 
Arms;  and  Roger  Mann,  Treasurer. 

Spring  Quarter:  Roger  Mann,  President;  Wesley  Bagby, 
President  Pro-tem;  Marcellus  Buchanan,  Critic;  Jennie 
Clark,  Clerk;  Randall  McLeod,  Sergeant-at-arms;  and  Roger 
Mann,  Treasurer. 

Members  Were:  Wesley  Bagby,  Marcellus  Buchanan, 
Cornelia  Clark,  Robert  Cook,  Wade  Edwards,  Jennie  Clark 
French,  Carrington  Gretter,  Robert  Gutknecht,  Pat  Johnson, 
Eric  Josephson,  Louise  Lupton,  Roger  Mann,  Curry  McLeod, 
Randall  McLeod,  Mac  Murphy,  Jennie  Wells  Newsome, 
Louis  Poisson,  J.  W.  Pless,  Ann  Seeley,  Sam  Ware,  Wade 
Weatherford,  and  Hannah  Weskett. 


247 


Members  of  the  Phi  Assembly 


Gladys  Barnes 
Horace  Ives 


PHI  ASSEMBLY 


r„ 


HERE  must  be  magic  in  words.  Otherwise,  how  could  seven  words  quiet 
the  talking,  laughing,  and  shuffling  of  fifty  students?  The  magic  is  the  words, 
"The  Phi  Assembly  will  come  to  order".  The  business  of  the  evening  may 
mtlude  the  candlelight  initiation  ceremony — ever  impressive  to  the  members, 
discussion  of  the  radio  programs  which  the  Phi  sponsors,  debates  with  the  Di 
Senate,  or  reports  of  the  various  working  committees. 

The  central  interest  of  the  Phi  revolves  around  the  bills  for  discussion.  Each 
week,  the  members  of  the  Ways  and  Means  Committee  meet  to  select  the  topic 
to  be  discussed  at  the  Assembly's  meeting.  The  subjects  for  debate  range  from 
campus  questions  to  those  of  national  and  international  significance,  and  during 
the  "heat"  of  the  discussion,  the  meeting  often  runs  well  beyond  its  allotted 
time.  At  times,  the  arguments  become  too  lively,  causing  the  Sergeant-at-Arms 
to  call  for  order  with  a  tap  of  his  mace.    An  entire  meeting  may  be  taken  up 


248 


with  discussion  of  a  single  question;  or,  if  time  permits, 
as  many  as  three  or  more  proposals  may  be  put  before 
the  House. 

There  was  once  a  time  when  the  Philanthropic  As- 
sembly was  a  part  of  student  government.  With  the 
growth  of  the  University,  however,  the  functions  of  the 
Phi  have  ceased  to  be  concerned  with  actual  adminis- 
tration. Membership  is  open  to  every  student,  with 
emphasis  on  interest  and  active  participation;  and  the 
Phi  has  turned  to  the  function  of  serving  as  an  outlet 
for  the  expression  of  student  opinion.  It  seems  fitting 
that  one  of  the  oldest  literary  societies  in  the  nation 
should  uphold  this  function. 

Officers  This  Year  Were;  Fall  Quarter;  Gladys 
Barnes,  Speaker;  Richard  Railey,  Speaker  Pro-tem;  Ellen 
New,  Reading  Clerk;  Elton  Edwards,  Sergeant-at-Arms ; 
and  Nelson  Large,  Parliamentarian. 


Winter  Quarter:  Horace  Ives,  Speaker;  Elton  Edwards, 
Speaker  Pro-tem;  Robert  Wright,  Sergeant-at-Arms;  Rachel 
Sides,  Reading  Clerk;  and  Nelson  Large,  Parliamentarian. 

Spring  Quarter;  Horace  Ives,  Speaker;  Elton  Edwards, 
Speaker  Pro-tem;  Rachel  Sides,  Reading  Clerk;  Robert 
Rosenast,  Sergeant-at-Arms;  and  Nelson  Large,  Parliamen- 
tarian. 

Members  This  Year  Were:  Gladys  Barnes,  Barbara 
Brinkman,  E.  O.  Brogden,  Lawrence  Britt,  D.  H.  Carlisle, 
Carney  Clegg,  Elton  Edwards,  Bernice  Eltinge,  Robert  Gil- 
breth,  Jessica  Graham,  Robert  Haldeman,  Patricia  Henritzy, 
William  Henderson,  Richard  Handel,  Cecil  Hill,  Horace 
Ives,  Bell  Jackson,  Herbert  Kimmel,  Nelson  Large,  Joseph 
Lehman,  John  Lindsay,  I.  T.  Littleton,  Nicholas  Long,  Ellen 
New,  Jeter  Pritchard,  Richard  Railey,  Robert  Rosenast, 
Barbara  San,  John  Sibley,  Rachel  Sides,  John  Thomas,  Eliza- 
beth Wilson,  Dean  Winn,  and  Robert  Wright. 


Discussion  and  debating  gets  under  way 


249 


PUBLICATIONS 


g       /  //  jf  ^7 


// 


wmmm 


'    »      -'M 


Sylvan  Meyer 
Managing  Editor 


William  Schwartz 
Business  Manager 


Orville  Campbell 
Editor 


THE    DAILY 


€\ 


VERY  morning  except  Monday,  just  after 
you  have  gotten  to  bed  and  very  shortly  before 
the  alarm  goes  off,  there's  a  "plop"  in  the  door- 
way— it's  the  Daily  Tar  Heel.  Opening  it  dur- 
ing your  eight-thirty,  you'll  always  find  some- 
thing of  interest — sports,  columns,  editorials, 
articles,  UP  News,  or  maybe  just  the  cross-word 
puzzle.  Yet,  never  have  the  ser\^ices  of  our  daily 
paper  been  of  more  value  than  during  the  crises 
of  the  past  year. 

Tying  the  campus  together  like  a  Gordian 
knot,  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  has  been  the  channel 
through  which  the  activities  of  the  campus  have 
been  sent  to  the  students  spread  over  the  Hill. 
It  brought  a  well-planned  front  page  backed  up 
by  a  featurized  editorial  page,  all  contributing 
to  a  sound  policy — that  of  service  to  the  Uni- 
versity and  the  students.  Stressing  the  impor- 
tance of  a  safety  council,  dormitory  social  rooms, 
the  Honor  System,  the  need  for  less  expensive 
dances,  added  monies  for  the  continuation  of 
the  N.Y.A.,  and  at  all  times  dealing  with  perti- 
nent student  problems,  the  Tar  Heel  this  year 
kept  well  apace  of  the  campus.  At  times  there 
was  criticism  of  its  views,  yes.  But  never  crit- 
icism that  it  failed  to  take  a  positive  stand. 


252 


TAR   HEEL 


"Oldest  College  Daily  in  the  South" 


This  was  a  year  of  personalities — all  combining  to  pub- 
lish a  paper  homogeneously  welded  into  four  newsy  pages. 
Editorials  channeled  student  opinion  in  the  days  after  Pearl 
Harbor,  and  news  pages  clarified  developments  in  revised 
curricula,  the  armed  services,  and  civilian  defense  organi- 
zations. This  was  the  Tar  Heel's  fiftieth  year  of  service  to 
the  Carolina  student  body. 

Staff:  Orville  Campbell,  Editor;  Sylvan  Meyer,  Man- 
aging Editor;  William  Schwartz,  Jr.,  Business  Manager; 
Louis  Harris  and  Harry  Symmes,  Associate  Editors;  Henry 
Zaytoun,  Circulation  Manager. 

Editorial  Board:  Bucky  Harward,  Henry  Moll,  Bill 
Peete,  Bill  Seeman,  Mac  Norwood,  Billy  Pearson,  Jim  Loeb. 

Columnists:  Marion  Lippincott,  Walter  Damtoft,  Har- 
ley  Moore,  Elsie  Lyon,  Tom  Hammond,  Brad  McCuen. 

News  Editors:  Bob  Hoke,  Paul  Komisaruk,  Hayden 
Carruth,  A.  D.  Currie,  Ernie  Frankel. 

Reporters:  Bill  Webb,  Jimmy  Wallace,  Larry  Dale, 
Bob  Levin,  Charles  Kessler,  Burke  Shipley,  Elton  Edwards, 


Morton  Cantor,  Gene  Smith,  Mike  Beam,  Nancy  Smith, 
Westy  Fenhagen,  Walter  Klein,  Lois  Ann  Markwardt,  Ben 
McKinnon. 

Photographers:  Hugh  Morton;  Tyler  Nourse,  Karl 
Bishopric,  and  Bill  Taylor,  Assistants. 

Cartoonist:   Tom  Biebigheiser. 

Sports  Staff:  Harry  Hollingsworth,  Editor;  Earle  Hel- 
len,  Mark  Garner,  and  Bill  Woestendiek,  Night  Editors; 
Ben  Snyder,  Stud  Gleicher,  and  Jean  Beeks,  Reporters. 

Business  Staff:  Jack  Dube,  Bill  Stanback,  and  Ditzi 
Buice,  Advertising  Managers;  Bob  Crews,  Office  Manager; 
Marvin  Rosen  and  Bob  Bettmann,  Durham  Representatives; 
Charlie  Weill,  Beatrice  Cummings,  Betty  Booker,  Dick 
Kerner,  Eleanor  Soule,  Bill  Winburn,  Paul  Furgatch,  Dick 
Wolf,  J.  B.  Kittrell,  Arthur  Joyner,  and  Bob  Covington, 
Local  Advertising  Staff. 

Typists:    Hilah  Ruth  Mayer  and  Ardis  Kipp. 

Circ;ulation  Staff:  Larry  Goldrich,  Rachel  D.ilton, 
and  Hank  Hankins. 


253 


TAR 
AN'  FEATHERS 

J.  N  its  second  year  on  campus,  the  new  humor  mag  did 
a  complete  about-face  from  the  old  line  of  gossip  columns 
and  fashion  pages.  The  Tar  an'  Feathers  staff  stuck  to  its 
promise  of  "satire  spiced  with  cheezecake,  cartoons  and 
comedy" — with  emphasis  on  screwball  whackiness. 

There  were  plenty  of  coeds  strewn  through  the  issues, 
but  the  editors  tried  to  stay  away  from  obscenity  altogether. 
The  best  cartoon  and  camera  work  ever  turned  out  on  the 
campus  was  mixed  with  articles  satirizing  life  on  the  cam- 
pus, and  stories  about  that  happy  far-away  land  where 
dwell  the  gnomes  and  the  floogies. 


Editor  Bill  Seeman  was  forced  to  drop  out 
of  school  after  three  issues,  and  Hunt  Hobbs 

became   the   big-boss    during   the   Winter   and 
Spring  Quarters. 

Tar  an'  Feathers  never  tried  to  set  the  world 
on  fire  with  literary  genius.  Its  object  was  to 
be  whacky  enough  to  get  a  laugh  out  of  the 
fellows  who  were  waiting  for  the  drill  sergeant. 
Originality  in  satire  and  jokes,  plus  continual 


Bill  Seeman,  Editor 
Hunt  Hobbs,  Editor 


MoRTY  Uhlman 

Business  Manager 


Satire,  Cheezecake  and  Comedy" 


cracks  at  the  Carolina  iWag,  accomplished  the  difficult  task 
of  creating  humor  without  dirt. 

In  a  world   torn  by  strife  and  war,   Tar  an'  Feathers' 
floogie  trademark  seemed  to  say,  "What  the  H — ". 


STAFF 

Editors:    Bill  Seeman,  Hunt  Hobbs. 

Business  Manager:    Morty  Ulman. 

Associate  Editors:    Hugh  Morton,  Photography;  Tom 
Biebigheiser,  Art;  Stud  Gleicher,  Efficiency  Expert. 


Editorial  Staff:  Ben  McKinnon,  Pat  Winston,  Mike 
Beam,  Earl  Kastner,  St.  Clair  Pugh,  Stuart  Mclver,  Harry 
Hondres,  Peter  Robinson,  Orville  Campbell,  Brad  McCuen. 

Art:  Anne  Montgomery,  Jeff  Hill,  John  Sink,  Harold 
Krauss,  Dick  DuRant,  Joe  Barrier,  Albert  Myrick,  Jack 
Field,  James  Pace,  Ben  Montgomery,  Willard  Payne. 

Secretarial  Staff:  Connie  Grigsby,  Betty  Booker, 
Edna  Mae  Winkler,  Randy  Jennings. 

Business  Staff:  Howard  Cohn,  Murray  Sims,  Jean 
Beeks,  Eva  Boatwright,  Larry  Goldrich,  Mary  Bowen,  Betty 
Boatw  right. 


255 


ZIL  CAROLINA  MAGAZINE 


256 


".  .  .  Came   1941-42,  Came  a  'New'  Carolina   Mag" 


®. 


I  RIGHT  covers  .  .  .  Jabberwocky  .  .  .  cartoons  .  .  . 
picture  spreads  .  .  .  short  stories  .  .  .  long  stories  .  .  .  that's 
the  Carolina  Mag.  It's  a  new  Carolina  Mag,  one  torn  away 
from  the  staid  precedent  set  by  previous  editors  for  ninety- 
seven  years.  It  is  a  A\ag  that  is  neither  a  humor  nor  a 
literary  magazine,  but  a  publication  covering  the  fertile  field 
of  campus  life,  previously  ignored  and  unexplored. 

Walking  into  the  amazing  labyrinth  that  is  the  Mag 
office,  one  sees  the  neat  pigeon  holes  that  are  the  desks  for 
the  staff  members  and  the  many  sheafs  of  paper  that  litter 
the  floor.  Betting  is  going  on  as  to  whether  the  February 
issue  of  the  Mag  will  be  out  in  February.  Yet,  among  all 
this,  the  editors  are  busy  scanning  paragraphs  for  "Jabber- 


wocky", criticizing  picture  spreads  which  are  to  accompany 
some  pertinent  article  on  campus  questions,  drawing  humor- 
ous and  significant  cartoons,  and  doing  the  many  essentials 
that  go  into  the  dummy — which  Editor  Moll  is  busy  pasting 
together. 

Thus  was  born  the  magazine  which  combined  all  things 
to  give  the  campus  the  mag  which  they  wanted  to  read. 
It  was  no  longer  a  mag  for  the  literary,  but  a  mag  for  the 
campus.  Of  note  to  all  was  the  Mag-Tar  an'  Feathers  daily, 
weekly,  and  monthly  fight  for  campus  favor.  Characterized 
by  cryptic  remarks,  humorous  cartoons,  and  lots  of  fun,  the 
battle  royal  kept  the  campus  amused  and  both  mags  on 
their  toes. 


STAFF 

Editor:  Henry  Moll. 

Business  M.\nager:  Jack  Holland. 

Board  of  Editors:    Elsie  Lyon,  Harley 
Moore,  Morton  Cantor,  Louis  Harris. 

Literary  Editor:    Richard  Goldsmith. 

Photography    Staff:      Hugh    Morton, 
Jack  Field,  Bill  Taylor. 

Features;    Sylvan  Meyer,  Richard  Adler, 
Walter  Klein,  Stud  Gleicher. 

Jabberwocky;    Mike  Beam,  Ted  Royal, 
Jack  Dube. 

Art  Staff:    Hight  Moore,  James  Pace, 
Ben  Armstrong,  Jeff  Hill,  Tom  Biebigheiser. 

Secrhiarial  Staff:    Dot  Cutting,  Olive 
Conescu. 

Business    Staff:     Ardis    Kipp,    George 
Leder,  Charles  Harris. 


257 


ULe  1942 
YACKETY  Y  ACK 
J 

^/  RANKLY,  we  don't  know  what  to  say.  For  the  better 
part  of  six  months  now  a  staff  of  over  twenty  has  worked 
and  played  and  found  time  to  stick  together  the  thousand 
odds  and  ends  which  go  to  make  up  an  annual.  It's  been 
funny  at  times — such  as  the  wild  search  we  had  for  a  top 
hat.  At  times  it's  been  rather  exasperating — when  pictures 
didn't  turn  out  and  ideas  just  wouldn't  seem  to  click.  But 
always  it's  been  quite  satisfying,  knowing  that  the  end  was 
a  good  one  even  if  the  path  seemed  a  little  difficult. 

We've  tried  most  of  all  this  year  to  be  true-to-life.  Col- 
lege life  isn't  stiff;  why  should  the  record  of  a  year  of 
college  life  be  that  way  ?  So  write-ups  have  been  lightened ; 
captions   have   been   added;   pictures   have   been   taken   of 


Charles  Tillett,  Editor 
Dave  Reid,  Business  Manage. 


Students  doing  things  the  way  they 
ordinarily  do  them;  we've  tried  to 
record  the  year  as  it  was,  not  as  we 
might  have  liked  it  to  be. 

We've  worked  since  the  war  with 
pretty  much  of  a  sense  of  respon- 
sibility. If  indications  hold  true, 
annuals  for  the  next  few  years  will 
have  to  be  cut  to  the  bone.  And  that 
means  that  this  may  be  the  last 
large  yearbook  our  present  college 
generation  will  own — the  last  which 
has  the  little  trimmings  and  addi- 
tions which  make  it  considerably 
more  than   an   oversized  catalogue. 


258 


We  hope  that  you  can  look  back  over  the  annual  and  recall 
a  year  which  has  affected  the  lives  of  all  of  us  pretty  deeply, 
and  that  the  faces  and  places  you  see,  and  the  pictures  of 
things  you  did,  won't  be  forgotten. 

There's  not  much  else  to  say.  Time  wrote  the  year — 
we've  only  tried  to  record  it.  If  we've  done  that  much, 
we're  satisfied. 

STAFF 

Editor:   Charles  Tillett. 

Business  Manager:    Dave  Reid. 

Associate  Editors:  Hunt  Hobbs,  Hugh  Morton,  James 
Loeb,  William  Watkins,  Stuart  McCoach. 

Photography  Staff:  Hugh  Morton,  Editor;  Bill  Tay- 
lor, Tyler  Nourse,  Karl  Bishopric,  Jack  Field,  J.  B.  Henson. 

Senior  Class:  Robert  Crawford,  Editor;  Clifton  West, 
Charles  Peete,  John  Pender,  Charles  Gregory. 


Junior  Class:  George  Smedberg,  Editor;  Ray  Efird, 
Mark  Pope. 

Sophomore  and  Freshman  Classes:  Irwin  Henderson, 
Editor;  Gus  Zollicoffer,  Richard  Brooke,  Alvin  Bush. 

Sports  Section:  John  Robinson  and  OrviUe  Campbell, 
Editors. 

Extra-Curricular  Section:  James  Loeb,  Editor;  Ken 
Willis,  Richard  Handel,  Al  Levy. 

Fraternity  Section:  Sonny  Boney  and  Sonny  Await, 
Editors. 

Dance  Section:    Billy  Peete,  Editor. 

Editorial  Staff:  Mary  Caldwell,  Jane  Dickinson,  Mary 
Nackos,  G.  A.  Lemmon. 

Secretarial  Staff:  Charlotte  Powers,  Virginia  Klages, 
Sadie  June  Love,  Betty  Dean,  Mary  Lib  Nash,  Georgia 
Poole,  Stacy  Wilburn,  Anne  Archer. 

Business  Staff:    Bahnson  Gray,  Robert  Stockton. 


259 


HONORARY  ORGA]VIZATIO]\S 


/ 


/ 


,/ 


ri'-''' 


^' 


// 


/y 


•^; 


PHI  BETA  KAPPA 


of      ■ 

r/orik    L^aroilna 


1  O  THE  STUDENTS  on  the  campus  privileged  to  wear  the  "Phi  Bete"  key,  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  represents  a  minimum  of  eight  full  quarters  of  work  in  which  a  scholastic  average 
of  92.5  or  better  has  been  maintained.  Often  content  to  rest  on  its  laurels,  the  fraternity 
this  year  took  a  step  forward  as  plans  inaugurated  last  spring  materialized  in  the  form  of 
a  tutorial  system.  Under  this  plan  members  offered  their  ser\'ices  as  tutors  in  their  major 
subjects  to  those  first  and  second  year  students  who  needed  scholastic  aid  but  were  finan- 
cially unable  to  get  it. 

Officers  this  year  were:  Nelson  Ferebee  Taylor,  President;  Thomas  Franklin  Williams, 
Vice-President;  Charles  W.  Tillett,  III,  Recording  Secretary;  and  Thomas  James  Wilson, 
Jr.,  Corresponding  Secretary  and  Treasurer. 


262 


MEMBERS 


J.  Harry  Allen 
William  James  Allran,  Jr. 
Benjamin  Franklin  Aycock,  Jr. 
Henry  Boone 
Ernest  Allan  Brown 
Marjorie  Lovelace  Burrus 
John  Randolph  Chambliss,  Jr. 
David  Sanford  Citron 
William  Church  Croom,  Jr. 
Arthur  Wilson  Dixon 
Gordon  Shelton  Dagger 
William  Thomson  Dye,  Jr. 
Joseph  Bivens  Efird,  Jr. 
Robert  Castle  Fisher 
Sarah  Foushee  Fore 
Jerry  Winston  Gavce 
Richard  Weinberg  Goldsmith 
Joseph  Harold  Greenberg 
James  Brooks  Greenwood,  Jr. 
George  Edloe  Ham,  Jr. 
Robert  Charles  Harrington,  Jr. 
Henry  William  Harris 
Louis  De-Maro  Hayman,  Jr. 
Hunter  Heath 
Truman  McGill  Hobbs 
Cyrus  Dunlap  Hogue,  Jr. 
William  Kern  Holoman 
Robert  Stuart  Hutchison,  Jr. 
George  Lyman  Jordan,  Jr. 
Albert  Joseph  Josselson 
Richard  Leon  Kendrick 
Joe  Wollett  Kennedy 
Robert  Alan  Koch 
Stephen  Bruce  Langfeld 
Herman  Dewey  Lawson 


Arthur  Stanley  Link 
H.  Eugenia  Loaring-Clark 
William  Lunsford  Long,  Jr. 
Roger  Cornwell  Mann 
William  T.  Martin,  Jr. 
Sewell  Trezevant  Moore 
Mary  Frances  Munch 
Thomas  Lynch  Murphy 
Irving  Harry  Nemtzow 
Nancy  C.  Nesbit 
Baxter  Gardner  Noble 
Lindsay  Shepherd  Olive 
William  P.  Jones  Peete 
Charles  A.  Speas  Phillips 
William  St.  Clair  Pugh 
Peter  Bernard  Raymond 
Wert  Baxter  Rhyne,  Jr. 
Max  Hanson  Rohn,  Jr. 
Albert  Rose 

William  Henry  Seeman 
Monroe  Daniel  Seligman 
Richard  Oates  Steele 
Louis  Cornelius  Stephens,  Jr. 
Bernard  Robert  Swan 
Harrison  Matthews  Symmes,  ]r 
Nelson  Ferebee  Taylor 
Mary  Lindsay  Thornton 
John  Daniel  Thorp 
Charles  Walter  Tillett,  III 
Roger  Weil 

Richard  Lindsey  Wharton 
Thomas  Franklin  Williams 
Patrick  Henry  Winston,  III 
Mary  Isabelle  Wolf 
Harry  Clay  Yeatman 


263 


Andrevis 

Bennett 

Brown 

Campbell 

Croom 

Demeri 

DORTCH 

Kendrick 

McNaughton 

Peete 

Penick 

Taylor 

Winchester 

ALPHA  EPSILON  DELTA 


<^v( 


^>vT^ 


eyiLP 


lLPHA  Epsilon  Delta,  honorary  Pre-Medical  Fraternity,  is  composed  of  members 
selected  for  their  character,  general  ability,  and  personality.  Its  chief  object  is  to  encour- 
age excellence  in  pre-medical  work,  to  bind  together  similarly  interested  students,  and  to 
act  as  a  force  in  crystallizing  any  movement  for  the  good  of  the  pre-medical  student.  It 
seeks  to  bridge  the  gap  between  the  spirit  of  the  pre-medical  school  and  that  of  the  school 
of  medicine 


Officers  this  year  were:  Richard  Kendrick,  President;  William  Croom,  Vice-President; 
William  Peete,  Secretary;  Hammond  Bennett,  Treasurer;  and  George  Penick,  Historian. 

Members:  Leon  Andrews,  William  Brown,  Lindsay  Campbell,  Joseph  Demeri,  Hugh 
Dortch,  Robert  McNaughton,  Isaac  Taylor,  Duncan  Walker,  and  Dewey  Winchester. 


264 


Bernstein 

COXHEAD 

Crone 

Efird 

Ehrick 

Hutchison 

Kimball 

LiPTON 

Masters 

Mathis 

MOTTSMAN 

Redfern 

Rose 

Simon 

Spainhour 

Stephens 

Thorp 

Werner 

Winston 

HOBBS 

Taylor 

BETA  GAMMA  SIGMA 


l-JETA  Gamma  Sigma,  recognized  by  the  American  Association  of  Collegiate  Schools  of 
Business  as  the  National  honorary  fraternity  in  university  commercial  education,  was 
founded  in  1913  and  has  45  chapers.  The  local  chapter.  Alpha  of  North  Carolina,  was 
established  in  1933.  Undergraduate  membership  is  limited  to  those  who  rank  scholas- 
tically  in  the  highest  ten  per  cent  of  the  graduating  class  and  highest  two  per  cent  of  the 
junior  class. 

Officers  for  the  past  year  were:  John  Thorp,  President;  Professor  R.  J.  M.  Hobbs, 
Honorary  President;  George  Coxhead,  Treasurer;  and  Professor  Malcolm  D.  Taylor, 
Secretary. 

Members:  Warren  Howard  Bernstein,  James  Crone,  Joseph  B.  Efird,  Richard  Ehrick, 
Robert  Hutchison,  Gip  I.  Kimball,  Robert  Lipton,  Frank  Masters,  Joe  Mathis,  Joseph 
Mottsman,  William  Redfern,  Albert  Rose,  Carl  Julien  Simon,  Harold  Spainhour,  Louis 
Stephens,  Robert  Werner,  Patrick  Winston. 

Faculty:  J.  C.  D.  Blaine,  Dean  Dudley  D.  Carroll,  John  E.  Dykstra,  Clarence  Heer, 
R.  J.  M.  Hobbs,  Erie  E.  Peacock,  Robert  H.  Sherrill,  Robert  L.  Stallings,  Malcolm  D. 
Taylor,  Harry  D.  Wolf,  John  B.  Woosley. 


265 


Arner  Gordon  Griffin  Hatch  Lackey 

Mehaffey  Reed  Settlemyer  Shipman  Simpson 

Swan  Weis  Slocum  Keutzer 


PHI  MU  ALPHA 


T. 


HE  Phi  Mu  Alpha  honorary  music  fraternity  is  made  up  of  the  outstanding  music 
students  on  the  campus.  The  group  endeavors  to  advance  the  cause  of  music  by  sponsor- 
ing concerts  which  feature  nationally  known  music  artists,  concerts  of  its  own  in  coopera- 
tion with  the  music  department,  and  original  composition  recitals.  This  year  the  Phi  Mu 
Alpha  orchestra,  cooperating  with  the  Dramatic  Arts  department,  played  over  a  national 
hook-up  for  nine  weeks  in  a  series  of  programs  called  "Men  In  Action". 

Officers:  Warren  Simpson,  President;  Robert  Reed,  Supreme  Councilman;  Bruce 
Young,  Vice-President;  Boston  Lackey,  Secretary;  Brooks  Griffin,  Treasurer;  Robert  Reed, 
Historian;  Robert  Weis,  Warden;  Earl  Slocum,  Province  Governor. 

Members:  David  Arner,  Hurst  Hatch,  WiUiam  Mehaffey,  Frank  Settlemyer,  Jesse 
Swan. 

Pledges:  Robert  Gordon,  Harry  Shipman,  Glenn  Bogasse,  Louis  Cutlar,  James 
Edwards,  Allan  Garrett,  Zan  Harper,  J.  Harris  Mitchell,  Clarence  Ruffin,  Thomas  Vail. 

Faculty:  Clyde  Keutzer,  Earl  Slocum,  Dr.  Glen  Haydon,  Dr.  Benjamin  F.  Swalin, 
Dr.  Jan  P.  Schinhan,  Herbert  S.  Livingston,  William  C  Grant. 


266 


®i)p  ©rbw  Df  tl)p  diratl 


OFFICERS 

JOSEPH  ALSON  WELBORN 

Delegata 

WILLIAM  MELVIN  SHUFORD 

Delegata 

GEORGE  LEAVELL  COXHEAD 

Exchequer 

NELSON  FEREBEE  TAYLOR 

Scribe 

ACTIVE  MEMBERS 


William  Cress  Alexander 
James  Arnold  Barclay 
Bert  Lester  Bennett 
George  Leavell  Coxhead 
Ira  Samuel  Gambill,  Jr. 
Robert  S.  Gersten 
Vernon  Judson  Harward,  Jr. 
George  L.  Hayes 
Truman  McGill  Hobbs 


Gip  I.  Kimball,  Jr. 
Wellington  H.  Lewis 
William  T.  Martin 
Hobart  Loring  McKeever 
Lennox  Polk  McLendon 
William  Melvin  Shuford 
Nelson  Ferebee  Taylor 
Charles  Walter  Tillett,  III 
Joseph  Aison  Welborn 


C.  Bickett  Idol 


FACULTY  MEMBERS 


Dr.  Frank  P.  Graham 
Dean  Francis  F.  Bradshaw 
Dr.  Walter  R.  Berryhill 
Mr.  Edward  A.  Cameron 


Dr.  E.  McG.  Hedgpeth 
Mr.  J.  Maryon  Saunders 
Mr.  Waiter  Spearman 
Mr.  James  Williams 


Mr.  Edwin  Sidney  Lanier 


*  VALKX 


JEAN  HAH N,  President 

HORTENSEKELLEY.Secrcra- 

CORNELIA  CLARK,  Vice-President 

EVA  MAE  NEE,  Treasurer 

Mary  Caldwell 

Randy  Sloan  Mebone 

Ann  Thbrnburgh 

Muriel  Edith  Mallison 

Ann  Moon  Peyton 
Mary  Sue  Robertson 

Mory  Jon©  Yeatmon 

SSSnfl^S^ 


MEMBERS,  1941-42 

349  Wellington  H.  Lewis 

350  Byrd  Farmer  Merrill 

351  George  Leave!!  Coxliead 

352  Wm.  McWhorter  Coclnrane 

353  Nelson  Ferebee  Taylor 

354  Paul  Vincent  Severin 

355  Truman  McGill  Hobbs 

356  J  oseph  A I  son  We  I  bo  rn 

357  James  Terry  Sanford 

358  Charles  Walter  Tillett 

359  Edward  Lewis  Kantrowitz 

360  William  T.  Martin 

361  George  L  Hayes 

MEMBERS,  1940-41 

335  Thomas  Harry  Gatton 

336  David  James  Morrison 

337  William  Dees,  Jr. 

338  Carroll  B.  McGaughey 

339  Horace  Richter 

340  Allen  Jones  Green 


John  Franklin  Lynch,  Jr. 
Donald  Edwin  Bishop 
George  Ralston 
William  Joslin 

345  Clyde  Gates  Kimball 

346  William  Melvin  Shuford 

347  Lee  Manning  Wiggins 

348  Charles  Robert  Kline 


40 
90 
102 
109 


121 
14] 
176 
186 
193 
209 
220 


FACULTY 
Charles  Phillips  Russell 
Frank  Porter  Graham 
Edgar  Ralph  Rankin 
Robert  Burton  House 
Herman  Glenn  Baity 
Ernest  Lloyd  Mockie 
Albert  McKinley  Coates 
Joseph  Burton  Linker 
Corydon  Perry  Spruill 
Earle  Horace  Hartsell 
Joseph  Maryon  Saunders 
William  Terry  Couch 
Edward  Alex  Cameron 
Walter  Smith  Spearman,  Jr. 


w 


OUR 


WORLD  - 


WHAT  MAKES  US  'MEX'-OR  MICE 


// 


> 


Mm 


'mMii 


THE   SEASON    IN   REVIEW 


r. 


HE  team  that  somehow  coaldn't  get  started."  We 
watched  our  team  go  down  in  defeat  a  number  of  times  this 
year.  But  we  never  gave  up  on  them.  We  knew  they  were 
doing  their  best,  and  we  were  certain  that  they  tried  harder 
than  many  past  Carolina  teams  that  have  won  more  games. 
There  were  lags  in  spirit — but  no  more  than  any  team  has. 


And  for  the  first  time  m  years  a  Carolina  coach  had  a  bad 
season  without  being  severely  criticized.  As  Billy  Car- 
michael  said  at  the  pep  rally  before  the  Duke  game:  "Ray 
Wolf  is  Carolina's  Robert  E.  Lee.  Although  his  football 
team  has  gone  down  in  defeat,  he  is  now  and  will  always 
be  known  as  one  of  the  greatest  Carolina  coaches  in  this 
school's  outstanding  sport  histor).  " 


The  season  opened  against  little  Lenoir-Rhyne,  and  the 
team  won,  42  to  6  .  .  .  Then  the  following  Saturday  and 
the  first  great  blow,  a  1  3  to  7  defeat  at  the  hands  of  South 
Carolina  ...  A  trip  to  Davidson  produced  a  20  to  0  victory 
.  .  .  Followed  by  the  best  played  game  of  the  season,  against 
Fordham,  with  the  score  27  to  14  against  us  .  .  .  After 
Fordham  the  long  train  ride  to  New  Orleans,  and  the 
crushing  52  to  6  defeat  at  the  hands  of  Tulane  .  .  .  Worth 
repeating  here  is  the  great  pep  rally  held  for  the  team  on 
its  return  ...  To  Wake  Forest,  and  another  defeat — this 
time  13  to  0  .  .  .  Up  to  Richmond  and  the  final  win  of  the 


Coach  Wolf  with  Co-Captains  Dunkle  and  Suntheimer  Head  Chffri  fapfr  Curry  Jones  calls  forth  more  pepper 


274 


(A  A 


season  as  the  University  of  Richmond  fell  27  to  0  .  .  .  Duke,  the  big  game 
and  the  tough  defeat,  20  to  0 — with  the  Tar  Heels  playing  another  fine 
game  only  to  lose  to  the  Rose  Bowl  Blue  Devils  .  .  .  The  end  on  Thanks- 
giving as  the  University  of  Virginia  won,  2"'  to  7  .  .  .  Wins  were  few, 
but  it  can  never  be  said  that  the  team  gave  up  .  .  .  Co-Captains  Dunkle  and 
Suntheimer  saw  to  that.  .  . 


1941  Summar 


y 


Carolina 

42 

Lenoir-Rhyne     

6 

Carolina 

7 

South  Carolina    .  .  .  . 

13 

Carolina 

20 

Davidson   

0 

Carolina 

14 

Fordham    

27 

Carolina 

6 

Tulane   

52 

Carolina 

0 

Wake  Forest 

13 

Carolina 

7 

State     

13 

Carolina 

27 

Richmond    

0 

Carolina 

0 

Duke    

20 

Carolina 

7 

Virginia   

28 

Coach  Wolf 


Fint  Roil':  Jordan,  Stallings,  Gordon,  Baker,  Webb,  Cox.  Byrum,  Wood,  Crone,  Cheek. 

Second  Row:  Faircloth,  Hodges.  Benton,  Elliot.  Richardson.  Dunkle,  Suntheimer.  Heyman,  Sieck,  Marshall,  Nowell,  Sigler. 
Third  Rote:  Snyder,  White.  Pecora,  Barksdale.  O'Hare,  Wolf,  Cook.  Austin,  Connor,  Miller.  Michaels. 

Fourth  Rotv:  RiBET.  Philpott,  Lewis.  Nicolls.  Serlich.  Turner.  Croo.m.  Trainer  Morris,  Hussey.  Graham.  Parker.  Johnson.  Le- 
Blanc.  Corn. 


16      74     7S      13     66 


50      66     4a     85 


/^  -  78  .,  43fi  2li  40*   65,1   K\   Ifi      ^^      W       13 
,^r      62      52      ?*     M      20     50     70     7,     gj     6]       30 

HF-^  -S'^r^  «-s>^'  jm^jf^ih^^^t^^  V*.  »V»d^  -  -' 


275 


TAR  HEELS  ROLL  OVER 
LENOIR-RHYNE,  42-6 


7- 

J.  HE  first  game — and  a  good  beginning.  Carolina  s  so-called 
"first  string",  all  veterans  of  previous  campaigns,  had  lacked  pre- 
cision and  poise  in  its  maneuvers,  but  the  second  team,  composed 
mainly  of  sophomores,  had  come  through  much  better  than  ex- 
pected.  This  meant  that  a  good  season  was  in  the  books. 

At  half-time  the  score  was  28  to  0.  Ray  Jordan  scored  first 
on  a  line  plunge  from  the  one-foot  line.  Dunkle  converted. 
Then  Croom  scored  on  a  four-yard  plunge  through  center,  and 
O'Hare  scored  on  a  17-yard  off-tackie  play.  Touchdown  four 
came  on  a  45-yard  pass  from  Leo  LeBlanc  to  Craven  Turner. 

Shot  Cox  scored  the  last  two  touchdowns  on  respective  runs 
of  \^  and  75  yards.    He  also  completed  two  extra  points  during 
the  afternoon.    Rudisill  raced  65  yards  late  in 
the  final  period  for  the  visitor's  score.    Sunt- 
heimer,   Faircloth,   and   Austin,   all   veterans, 
saw  the  contest  from  the  bench   due  to  in- 


Things  to  remember  :  The  first  game.  Greet- 
ing old  friends.  The  warm  weather.  Cox's 
75-yard  punt  return.  A  first  glimpse  of  the 
new  coeds.  The  18,000  high  school  students 
present. 


Co-Caftmn  Dunkle 


276 


^i 


BUT  DROP  NEXT  GAME 

TO  GAMECOCKS 
e 

OOME  of  the  sweetness  of  that  first  victor)'  was  lost  on  the  fol- 
lowing Saturday  afternoon  when  the  South  Carolina  Gamecocks 
came  to  Chapel  Hill,  upset  the  dope,  and  went  home  with  a  13 
to  7  victor)'.  The  sophomores  who  starred  the  previous  Saturday 
couldn't  get  started ;  the  veterans  seemed  a  little  slow  and  slug- 
gish. There  should  he  no  alibis,  though,  for  South  Carolina 
deserved  to  win.  The  visitors  gained  292  yards  rushing  to  81  for 
Carolina. 

Early  in  the  second  period  South  Carolina  intercepted  one  of 
O'Hare's  passes  on  U.N.C.'s  31.  Stasica  picked  up  12  to  the  19; 
Arrowsmith  got  six  yards  off  left  tackle;  and  then  a  Stasica-to- 
Clary  aerial  carried  to  the  1 2  and  set  up  the  touchdown.  Clary 
scored  around  left  end. 

The  Wolfmen  scored  in  the  third  period  on  a  10-yard  pass 
from  Roy  Connor  to  Johnny  Pecora.  The  latter  ran  fifteen  yards 
tor  the  score.  Dunkle  converted,  and  the  Tar  Heels  were  ahead, 
7  to  6. 

But  South  Carolina  was  not  to  be  denied.  Stan  Stasica,  on 
an  off-tackle  play,  ran  66  yards  to  score  the  winning  touchdown. 
Dutch  Elston  converted.  Joe  Austin,  Ray  Jordan,  and  Shot  Cox 
performed  best  for  Carolina  in  the  backfield;  Co-Captain  Sun- 
theimer  was  outstanding  in  the  line. 

Don't  forget:  All  four  sponsors  were  coeds.  It  was  South 
Carolina's  first  victory  over  U.N.C.  in  football  in  fourteen  years. 
11,000  were  present. 


277 


NobLt  ut  FokDHAM  bAKEL'i    ,>l 


WILDCATS    SCRAP,    BUT    LOSE    OUT,    20-0 

\,^_jEXT  it  was  Davidson  and  a  20  to  0  victory.  The 
game  was  played  at  night  at  Davidson,  and  Carolina  scored 
all  three  touchdowns  on  passes.  The  first  came  in  the  first 
period  on  a  7-yard  pass  from  Pecora  to  Hodges.    The  last 

two  came  in  the  fourth,  one  on  a  pass  from  Cox  to  Hodges  for  7  yards,  and  the  other 

on  a  pass  from  Cox  to  Serlich  for  25. 


From  the  moment  Carolina  scored  early  in  the  first  period  until  the  fourth  the 
Wildcats  put  up  a  stubborn  fight.  In  the  second  period  it  looked  as  if  they  would 
score  when  Cox  dropped  a  punt  on  his  24  after  signaling  for  a  fair  catch.  Buck  Archer, 
Wildcat  end,  recovered,  but  on  the  next  play  Barksdale  intercepted  Spencer's  pass  to 
nip  the  threat.  Emil  Serlich,  Shot  Cox,  Frank  O'Hare,  and  Co-Captain  Harry  Dunkle 
starred  in  the  backfield  while  Co-Captain  Suntheimer,  Howard  Hodges,  Dick  Sieck, 
and  Dick  White  starred  in  the  line  to  hold  Davidson  to  25  yards  running. 

Not  to  be  forgotten:  The  fireworks  at  half-time.  The  10,000  soldiers  we  saw 
in  Charlotte  after  the  game.   The  Davidson  spirit.   The  long  ride  home. 


278 


RAMS  EDGE  OUT 
HEELS,  27-14  THRILLER 

Ci^HEN  Fordham  came  to  Chapel  Hill  the  follow- 
ing Saturday,  Carolina  played  its  best  game  of  the 
season  although  it  lost,  27  to  14.  The  Rams,  who 
later  played  in  the  Sugar  Bowl  at  New  Orleans,  were 
heavy  favorites,  but  had  Lady  Luck  been  with  Caro- 
lina, the  boys  from  Rose  Hill  would  have  gone  home 
on  the  short  end  of  the  score. 

After   the   opening  kick-off  and   one   first   down, 
Dunkle  punted  to  the  Fordham  15  where  Filipowicz 
to  Noble  produced  a  visitor  score  midway  the  first 
period.   Pieculewicz  on  a  47-yard  run,  and  Filipowicz 
on  a  20-yard  dash  gave  Fordham  two  touchdowns  in  the  third  period. 
A  93-yard  drive  with  Pecora  scoring  on  a  17-yard  dash  off-tackle  gave 
Carolina  its  second  touchdown.    An  exchange  of  punts  and  Carolina 
marched  to  Fordham's  25.    With  Pecora  back  to  pass,  Lansing  tore  in 
and  upset  his  equilibrium,  the  ball  shooting  straight  up  out  of  his 
hands  into  the  arms  of  Hudacek,  a  tackle,  who  raced  76  yards  to  pay- 
dirt. 

You'll  always  remember:  The  10,000  soldiers  present,  many  of 
whom  were  Fordham  fans.  The  Carolina  spirit.  The  never-say-die- 
spirit  of  the  team.    The  satisfaction  even  in  defeat. 


O'Hare  almost  breaks  up  a  touchdown  pass 


Marshall  and  Brignac  of  Tulane  fight  for  ball 


279 


GREEN  WAVE 

OVERCOMES  CAROLINA 

IN  52-6  DEFEAT 

OviDENTLY  the  Fordham  game  took  plenty  out  of  the  team. 
For  next  came  Tulane  at  New  Orleans,  and  the  Tar  Heels  suf- 
fered their  worst  defeat  since  1923,  losing  52  to  6. 

The  lone  Carolina  touchdown  came  early  in  the  final  period. 
Hugh  Cox,  Emil  Serlich,  and  Leo  LeBlanc — all  sophomores — 
sparked  the  drive  which  started  at  the  Carolina  35-yard  line. 
Cox  was  hurt  on  the  Tulane  33  and  Leo  LeBlanc  took  over.  Leo 
tossed  an  18-yard  pass  to  Serlich  who  dashed  14  yards  to  score. 
Tulane  did  everything  to  perfection.  Lou  Thomas  took  Dunkle's 
opening  kick-off  and  behind  perfect  blocking  raced  100  yards  for 
a  touchdown.  The  winners  scored  20  in  the  first,  7  in  the  third, 
and  25  in  the  fourth. 

As  if  you  could  forget:  Gay  New  Orleans.  The  many  young 
Carolina  alumni — stationed  in  camps  and  air  bases  of  the  area — 
who  came  to  see  the  team  play.  The  1,500  students  and  towns- 
people, including  President  Frank  Graham  and  Dean  Francis 
Bradshaw,  who  welcomed  the  team  on  their  return  late  Sunday 
night. 


Pruitt  of  Wake  Forest  lost  3  yards  this  time 


280 


AND  SO  DO  THE  DEACONS, 
13-0 

Uc/  AKE  FOREST  won  its  second  yame  in  as  many  years.  Again 
our  boys  lacked  the  scoring  punch  necessary  to  cope  with  Baptist  power. 
The  winners  scored  both  touchdowns  on  passes — one  from  Cochran  to 
Herb  Cline  and  the  other  to  John  Perry.  The  latter  ran  45  yards  after 
he  caught  his.  Those  two  tosses  tell  the  story  of  defeat.  They  tell  how 
Wake  Forest  defeated  Carolina  at  its  own  game — passing. 

Had  it  not  been  for  the  excellent  punting  of  Co-Captain  Dunkle,  the 
defeat  might  have  been  worse.  Co-Captain  Suntheimer,  Fairdoth,  Sieck, 
and  Hodges  made  tackle  after  tackle.  Shot  Cox  and  Dunkle  were  the 
offensive  stars.  Carolina  never  did  get  started.  It  was  the  saddest  of 
several  sad  days. 

Forget  if  you  will:  The  lack  of  Carolina  spirit.  The  "I  wonder 
what's  the  matter"  attitude.   The  sluggishness  of  the  team. 


Cox  GOES  OVER   AGAINST  STATE 


281 


TAR  HEELS  NOSED  OUT  BY 
STATE,  13-7 

■l-JACK  to  Chapel  Hill  and  N.  C.  State  and  Homecoming — and  the 
scrappiest  game  of  the  season.  Our  brothers  won,  13  to  7,  for  their 
first  victory  over  Carolina  in  fourteen  long  years. 

Carolina  scored  in  the  opening  period  with  Cox  engineering  a  drive 
from  State's  40  after  the  Tar  Heels  recovered  a  State  fumble.  Cox,  who 
shared  Carolina's  backfield  honors  with  roommate  Johnny  Pecora, 
pushed  over  left  tackle  from  the  State  1,  and  Co-Captain  Dunkle  place- 
kicked  the  extra  point.  Art  Faircloth  scored  first  for  State,  going  over 
from  the  one  to  climax  a  57-yard  drive.  Woody  Jones,  a  hard-working 
tackle,  blocked  Bill  Sigler's  kick  and  recovered  for  State  on  Carolina's 
16  to  set  up  the  winning  touchdown.  After  a  pass  missed  its  mark, 
Cathey  sneaked  through  center  for  the  score.  Dave  Barksdale,  Gwynn 
Nowell,  Harry  Dunkle,  and  Johnny  Pecora  were  best  for  Carolina. 

Homecoming  memories:  The  rain,  as  usual.  The  fight  for  the  goal 
posts  after  the  game.  The  cheering  before  the  game.  Governor  Brough- 
ton's  speech.   The  rain. 


Frjtchitt  of  State  tackled  hard  tust  after  catching  pass 


I 


282 


Austin  i  ok  s  ■iakds  against  Duke.   i\o.  37  is  All-American  Steve  Lach. 


BUT  BOUNCE  BACK  TO  TROMP 
RICHMOND,  27-0 


ACK  in  the  victory  column  after  four  straight  defeats  came  the  Tar  Heels 
the  next  Saturday  night.  The  game  was  at  Richmond  against  the  University  of 
Richmond,  and  the  score  was  27  to  0.  Good  news  for  Carolina  supporters  who 
had  come  to  know  nothing  but  defeat. 

There  was  never  any  doubt  as  to  the  outcome.  Johnny  Pecora's  97-yard 
return  of  Richmond's  opening  kick-off  loosened  the  tension  that  Carolina  had 

felt   in    recent   weeks.     Pecora's   pass   to 

O'Hare  produced  another  score  five  min- 

HoDGEs  utes  later,  and  with  four  minutes  left  in 

the  first  period  Cox  went  over  from  the 
one  for  a  third  score.  Corn,  on  a  reverse 
from  Jordan,  raced  12  yards  for  the  final 
touchdown  early  in  the  second  period. 
After  that,  the  two  teams  played  on  even 
terms  as  Coach  Wolf  substituted  freely. 
The  blocking,  tackling,  and  running  of 
the  team  was  the  best  it  had  been  at  any 
time  during  the  season.  There  were  no 
individual  stars;  Coach  Wolf  praised  the 
entire  team. 

Try  to  remember:  The  cold  weather. 
The  smiles  that  always  come  with  victory. 
The  Sunday  night  pep  rally  for  the  Duke 
game  the  following  Saturday.  Sadie  Haw- 
kins Day. 


283 


DEVILS  WIN-EVERYTHING  CLOSE  BUT  THE  SCORE 


"jyiGJ 


fGAINST  Duke  Carolina  did  everything  as  well  as  the  Dukes  except 
score  points.  The  Blue  Devils  made  13  first  downs  to  11  for  Carolina,  and 
gained  186  yards  rushing  to  172  for  the  Tar  Heels.  The  final  score:  Duke 
20,  Carolina  0. 

Led  by  Steve  Lach,  their  great  Ail-American,  Duke  scored  early  in  the 
second  period,  and  twice  in  the  third.  The  first  score  was  made  by  Lach  on 
a  reverse  from  the  12.  After  Carolina  had  held  for  three  downs  on  its  own 
five,  Siegfried  went  over  from  the  one  for  the  second  score  after  nine  minutes 
had  been  played  in  the  third  period.  A  pass  from  Davis  to  Morgan  was 
good  for  34  yards  and  the  final  Duke  score.  Prothro  converted  the  extra 
points. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  inside  the  Blue  Devil's  20-yard  line  on  five  occasions, 
but  failed  to  muster  a  scoring  punch.  After  Duke  scored  in  the  first  period, 
Carolina  took  the  ball  on  its  own  35  and  with  Joe  Austin  and  Frank  O'Hare 
alternating  the  ball  carrying  the  Tar  Heels  drove  to  the  Duke  8-yard  line  only 
to  lose  the  ball  on  downs.  But  the  45,000  fans  present  will  not  soon  forget 
the  stellar  play  of  Carl  Suntheimer,  Dick  Sieck,  and  Gwynn  Nowell  in  the 
line,  the  punting  of  Harry  Dunkle,  the  blocking  and  tackling  of  Dave  Barks- 
dale,  and  the  ball  carrying  of  Joe  Austin. 

Remember:  Fall  Germans  with  Al  Donahue.  The  hair  cutting  two  days 
before  the  game.  The  Friday  night  pep  rally.  The  freshman  victory  on  Fri- 
day afternoon.    The  feeling  that  the  team  had  not  let  us  down. 


DUNKI  E  KICKS  OUT  OF  TROUBLE  AGAINST  DUKE 


284 


CAVALIERS  AND  DUDLEY  WIN 
OUT  IN  CLOSING  GAME 

1  OO  MUCH  of  Bill  Dudley,  Virginia's  AllAmerican,  gave  the  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia  a  28  to  7  victory  over  the  Tar  Heels  on  Thanksgiving 
Day.  It  was  the  final  game  of  the  season,  and  Mr.  Dudley  put  on  one  of  the 
finest  shows  ever  seen  in  Kenan  Stadium. 

Dudley  left  the  ball  game  twice,  for  a  total  of  some  5'/2  rninutes.  He 
scored  three  touchdowns  himself,  on  trips  of  67,  79,  and  three  yards.  He 
passed  for  the  other  score  (21  yards  to  Bill  Preston) — and  kicked  all  four 
points  to  have  a  hand  in  ever)'  bit  of  Cavalier  business. 

Carolina  scored  late  in  the  first  period  when  Cox's  bullet  pass  intended 
for  Craven  Turner  hit  a  Virginia  man  and  bounced  into  the  arms  of  Dave 
Barksdale  for  the  score.    Dunkle  converted. 

The  game  wrote  "30  "  to  the  collegiate  gridiron  careers  of  14  Carolina 
seniors:  Co-Captains  Carl  Suntheimer  and  Harty  Dunkle,  Bill  Faircloth, 
Frank  O'Hare,  Dick  White,  Dick  Sieck,  Gwynn  Nowell,  Stu  Richardson, 
Roy  Connor,  Pinky  Elliot,  Fred  Stallings,  Red  Benton,  Charlie  Baker,  and 
limmy  Crone. 

Thanksgiving  memories:  The  end  of  a  most  disastrous  season.  The  play 
of  Bill  Dudley.  The  unexpected  crowd  of  22,000.  The  play  of  Bill  Dudley. 
The  surprised  Carolina  student  body.    The  play  of  Bill  Dudley. 


Dudley  of  Virginia  on  his  80  yard  run.   Remember? 


285 


'^ifj^.i^'-^^'^ ' 


\X  H^iN    IHINGS  don't  LOOK  ,su  Hul 


ITS    ALL    A    PART 

Uc/E  go  to  the  games  to  see  the  team — but  that's 
not  alL  Shown  here  are  some  of  the  other  things 
that  make  up  the  show:  Tarzan  giving  his  weU- 
known  "fifteen  for  the  team"  .  .  .  Rameses,  still 
resisting  any  sort  of  movement — forward,  back- 
ward, or  sideways  .  .  .  the  drum  majorette  .  .  . 

Fifteen  for  Carolina 


Repair  work  on  the  side-lines 


Orders  from  the  press  box 


286 


F    THE    GAME 

tense  moments  on  the  bench  .  .  . 
half-time  antics  .  .  .  what  the  play- 
ers do  when  they  aren't  playing. 
Not  shown  are:  the  hard  seats, 
the  rainy  Saturday  afternoons. 


Allah  is  all-l-l-mighty 

RAMESES  V,  STUBBORN  AS  EVER 


I  SHO'  IS  TIRED 

287 


MONOGRAM 


Robert  Gersten.  President 


CLUB 


K., 


»INETEEN  FORTY-ONE-FORTY-TWO  brought  more 
work,  and  more  progress,  to  the  Monogram  Club.  Early  in  the 
fall  it  sponsored  another  of  its  "Know  Your  Coaches"  smokers, 
where  freshmen  and  transfer  students  were  given  a  change  to 
meet  both  coaches  and  prominent  athletes.  Later,  it  presented  the 
gridgraph  of  the  Caroiina-Tulane  game,  at  which  a  play-by-play 
enactment  of  the  game,  over  a  thousand  miles  away,  was  shown. 

Probably  less  well  known  was  some  of  the  other  work  of  the 
club.  Efforts  were  made  to  secure  a  general  trophy  room  in 
Woollen  gym  for  displaying  awards  won  by  university  teams  and 
athletes.  A  beginning  was  made  on  doing  away  with  the  dif- 
ferentiation between  major  and  minor  sport  letters.  And  a  file 
was  drawn  up  on  the  scholastic  grades  of  all  athletes. 

Placing  more  stress  on  internal  development,  club  officers 
urged,  and  got,  wider  use  of  the  social  room  in  Fetzer  fieldhouse. 
A  formal  initiation  for  the  first  time  in  club  histor)',  and  a  "play 
night",  which  club  members  and  dates  attended,  were  further 
means  of  bringing  members  closer  together. 

Officers  this  year  were:  Robert  Gersten,  President;  James  Bar- 
clay, Vice-President;  George  Paine,  Secretary;  Mike  Wise,  Treas- 
urer; and  Bo  Reynolds,  Representative  to  the  Athletic  Council. 


288 


CHEERLEADERS 


r 

\^  AME  fall  1941 — and  Carolina  students  saw  cheerleading 
highlighted  by  acrobatics  and  coeds.  A  squad  of  nine — the  largest 
yet — had  three  coed  cheerleaders  among  its  number,  and  four 
boys  with  agility  enough  to  keep  the  stands  on  edge. 

Work  for  the  squad  usually  began  long  before  the  game  as 
members  worked  out  their  routines,  and  did  their  part  to  whoop 
things  up  at  Friday  night  pep  rallies.  Efforts  to  increase  the 
already  capacity  attendance  at  the  rallies  took  shape  as  the  squad, 
in  conjunction  with  the  University  club,  arranged  for  groups  of 
coeds  to  go  to  the  various  fraternities  and  dormitories  shortly 
before  rally  time  to  arouse  would-be  idlers. 

Of  note  this  year  was  the  fact  that  no  game,  including  those 
away  from  Chapel  Hill,  was  attended  by  fewer  than  five  Tar 
Heel  cheerleaders.  The  far  away  Tulane  game  had  six  members 
present. 

New  this  year  was  the  popular  "chant".  Other  much  used 
yells  included  the  old  stand-by,  "Let's  Go  Carolina",  and  "Blue 
and  White". 


Head  Cheerleader  Curry  Jones 


Head  cheerleader  was  Curry  Jones.  Others  members  of  the 
squad  were:  Frank  Alspaugh,  Ann  Angel,  Don  Blanton,  Ann 
Craft,  John  Feuchtenberger,  Pat  Johnson,  Don  Nicholson,  and 
Charlie  Stancell. 


.y^ 


Carolina's  nine  cheerleaders  strut  their  stuff 


289 


BASKETBALL 


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fej^ftJSii 


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AROUND   THE   LOOP   WITH 


J.  HERE  was  no  one  man  scoring  machine  to  pace  the  1942  edition 
of  the  White  Phantoms.  Neither  did  the  team  lead  the  Southern 
Conference  race  or  participate  in  a  national  tournament  as  the  one 
the  year  before  had  done.  But  it  did  do  several  other  things:  it 
gave  Carolina  students  one  of  the  speediest  teams  ever  to  don  a 
White  Phantom  uniform.  To  go  with  that  speed  went  fight  from 
the  ten  boys  that  made  up  the  squad.  This  latter  factor  proved  in- 
valuable, and  caused  close  followers  to  comment  that  had  last  year's 
team  had  this  year's  spirit  they  would  have  been  unbeatable. 

The  season  record  doesn't  look  so  good.  The  team  budded  out 
slowly,  then  came  into  full  bloom,  and  as  the  season  ended  it  faded. 
The  record  for  the  regular  schedule  shows  eleven  wins  against 
seven  losses,  and  in  the  conference  tournament  at  Raleigh  the  Phan- 
toms dropped  their  first-round  game  to  Wake  Forest,  32-26. 

It  was  at  Charlotte  against  Davidson  that  the  team  opened  its 
season,  and  the  result  was  a  35-22  victory.  The  scoring  was  well- 
divided,  and  the  game  indicated  that  Don  Wilson  and  Hayworth, 
rising  sophomores,  would  see  plenty  of  service  throughout  the  sea- 
son. Christmas  vacation  followed,  as  did  the  first  loss  when  St. 
Joseph  won  33-28  in  Philadelphia. 


292 


THE    WHITE    PHANTOMS 


A  near  capacity  crowd  saw  heavily-favored  Fordham  University 
come  to  Chapel  Hill  and  drop  a  34-25  game  to  the  Langemen. 
Bob  Rose  and  Julian  Smith  were  the  stars.  The  score  was  the 
smallest  Fordham  made  during  the  entire  season.  Back  in  the  con- 
ference, Wake  Forest  and  Clemson  fell,  51-30  and  54-34.  Then 
came  a  38-36  loss  at  the  hands  of  South  Carolina,  followed  by  a 
41-28  win  over  N.  C.  State.  Wake  Forest  then  caught  the  team  on 
its  first  really  off  night  and  won  36-20.  Two  more  victories  against 
mediocre  opposition  followed,  Virginia  Tech  falling  49-28,  and 
Davidson  45-38.  Captain  Rose  paced  the  scoring  in  the  Davidson 
game  with  16  points.  A  capacity  crowd  saw  Carolina  lose  to  Duke 
52-40  on  the  home  court.  The  White  Phantoms  were  in  the  ball 
game  until  the  closing  minute  of  the  first  half  when  Duke  scored 
three  field  goals  in  quick  succession.  After  that  it  was  all  Blue 
Devil  as  the  score  indicates. 

Still  suffering  from  the  Duke  loss  the  team  lost  to  N.  C.  State 
at  Raleigh,  32-30,  in  an  over-time  clash.  Then  back  to  Chapel  Hill 
for  the  biggest  score  of  the  season,  a  62-26  win  over  W.  &  L. 
Following  W.  &  L,  came  the  biggest  surprise  of  the  season  in  the 
form  of  a   32-31    victory  over  the  Goodyear  Wingfoots.    George 


Bobby  Gersten 
Julian  Smith 
George  Paine 


Wu.S0N  AND  Harris 

OF  W.  &  L.  HOLD  HANDS 
WHILE  GRABBING 
FOR  BALL 


293 


Glamack,  last  year's  star,  was  high  scorer  for  the  losers  with  nine 
points.  Rose  played  his  best  game  of  the  season,  and  scored  13 
points. 

A  trip  to  Maryland  produced  a  34-30  victory  over  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryland  and  a  42-39  loss  to  Navy  in  an  overtime  game. 
Back  home  for  a  47-30  win  over  Richmond,  and  then  came  a  41-40 
loss  to  close  the  season.  The  second  Duke  loss  was  also  an  over- 
time clash,  with  the  White  Phantoms  coming  from  behind  to  tie 
up  the  game. 

The  Southern  Conference  tournament  saw  Carolina  lack  the 
spark  and  lose  its  first  round  to  Wake  Forest.  The  team  had 
previously  defeated  the  Baptists  on  one  occasion  and  been  beaten 
by  them  on  another. 

Captain  Rose  led  the  season's  scoring  with  188  points  in  18 
games  for  an  average  of  10.4  per  game.  As  expected.  Rose  was  the 
outstanding  player  on  the  team,  but  all  who  played  gave  a  com- 
mendable showing.  Only  two — Rose  and  Reid  Suggs — were  over 
six  feet,  and  during  the  season  sports  writers  throughout  the  South 
nicknamed  them  the  White  Bantams.  Those  who  followed  the  team 
won't  soon  forget  Bobby  Gersten's  speed  and  defensive  play,  Julian 
Smith's  uncanny  shooting,  Ed  Shytle's  dribbling,  George  Paines 
crip  shot,  and  Reid  Suggs'  coolness.  Along  with  these  add  the  play 
of  Don  Wilson  and  Hayworth,  two  sophomore  aces,  and  you  can 
account  for  the  success  of  the  team — that  is  when  you  give  Coach 
Bill  Lange  a  pat  on  the  back.  No  coach  could  have  produced  a 
better  team  under  the  circumstances. 


Reid  Suggs 
Ed  Shytle 

Rose  and  Stark  of  Duke  fight  for  ball. 


294 


SUMMARY  OF  THE  SEASON 


Carolina 35 

Carolina 28 

Carolina 34 

Carolina 51 

Carolina 54 

Carolina 36 

Carolina 41 

Carolina 20 

Carolina 49 

Carolina 45 

Carolina 40 

Carolina 30 

Carolina 62 

Carolina 32 

Carolina 34 

Carolina 39 

Carolina 47 


Davidson    22 

St.  Joseph  33 

Fordham     25 

Wake   Forest    30 

Clemson    34 

South  Carolina 38 

N.  C.  State 28 

Wake   Forest    36 

V.  P.  1 28 

Davidson    38 

Duke     52 

N.  C,  State 32 

W.  &  L 26 

Goodyear  Wingfoots 31 

Maryland    30 

Navy     42 

Richmond     30 

Duke     41 


Carolina 40 

Southern  Conference  Tournament 
Carolina 26         Wake   Forest    32 

Don  Wilson 
Lewis  Hayworth 

First  Row:  Rodman,  Manager  Howard,  Lee. 

Second  Roiv:  White,  Marks.  Freedman,  Wilson,  McCachren,  Hayworth. 

Third  Rmr:  Gersten.  Paine.  Rose.  Smith,  Suggs.  Shytle. 


295 


TEXIVIS 


// 


■m':;mi: 


Kruelmg:  Freeman.  Anthhnv,  lixiKni.  (akmk.  Harnden,  Robin^'in,   \iiii 

SiMilinif:  Manager  Ord.  Assistant  Manager  Drucker.  Markham,  Wadden.  Tuttle.  Rielv.  Salzberg.  Coach  Kenfield. 


% 


TENNIS 


2; 


EAR  in  and  out  the  University  of  North  Carolina's 
tennis  team  makes  the  finest  record  of  any  athletic  team 


Carver.  Coach  Kenfield.  and  Everett  with  Mid-Atlantic 

DOUBLES  trophy 


Coach  Kenfield 


298 


on  the  campus — and  gets  the  least  amount  of  pubHcity.  This 
year  was  no  exception,  with  the  team  winning  seventeen  games 
against  no  defeat.  This  gives  Coach  John  Kenfield's  teams  the 
amazingly  high  percentage  of  188  wins  against  only  four  defeats 
since  1929. 

Opening  the  season  against  Vale,  the  netmen  took  the  in- 
vaders from  the  North  three  straight  times,  and  during  the  entire 
series  Carolina  dropped  only  one  single  and  one  doubles  match. 
Haverford  followed  and  was  defeated  12-0.  Williams  was  next 
and  in  two  matches  the  Tar  Heels  gave  up  just  one  doubles 
match.  Two  successive  meetings  with  Cornell  brought  two  more 
victories. 

Virginia,  N.  C.  State,  Duke  and  Wake  Forest  fell  easy  prey 
for  Carolina.  None  of  these  southern  foes  were  able  to  so  much 
as  scratch  against  the  Tar  Heels.  Michigan  snatched  one  doubles 
victory  in  her  8-1  defeat  at  the  hands  of  Carolina,  but  George- 
town was  unable  to  tally,  being  shutout  9-0. 

On  the  regular  northern  trip  the  team  opened  against  the 
Yale  Bulldogs  and  won,  6-3,  to  make  it  the  fourth  victory  of  the 
season  over  this  foe.  At  Princeton  the  Tigers  took  three  matches 
before  losing  6-3.  In  passing  it  might  be  said  that  these  were 
the  only  two  teams  who  were  able  to  score  as  much  as  three  points 
on  Coach  Kenfield's  men.  Cornell  won  two,  and  the  others 
gained  either  one  or  were  whitewashed. 


Stoefen  in  Woollen  Gym  exhibition  match 


■^x. 


299 


Stopping  by  Annapolis  on  the  homeward  trip  Caro- 
lina met  and  sank  the  Navy  in  the  season's  finale  by  the 
decisive  margain  of  8-1.  In  recognition  let  it  be  said 
that  Captain  Zan  Carver  extended  Middie  Joe  Hunt,  who 
ranks  among  the  first  five  in  the  country,  to  three  long 
sets  before  stubbornly  going  down. 

In  finishing  the  season  undefeated  Carolina  extended 
its  winning  streak  to  51  consecutive  victories,  the  last 
lost  being  in  May,  1938.  North  Carolina  won  the  North- 
South  singles  and  doubles  championships  as  well  as  both 
championships  in  the  Southern  Conference.  Captain  Car- 
ver won  both  singles  titles  just  mentioned,  while  Harris 
Everett  and  Ham  Anthony  teamed  together  to  capture 
the  two  doubles  crowns. 


Above:  Carver  with  Southern  Conference  singles  trophy 


Below:  Mr.  Georges  Levy  inspecting  site  of  new  tennis 
courts  with  Coach  Kenfield 


Carolina  players  at  Pinehurst  for  North-South  tournament 


Cap!  ain  Carver 


300 


Captain  Zan  Carver,  Harris  Everett,  Ham  Anthony,  Chuck 
Harnden,  Rhinehart  Freeman,  Frank  Robinson,  and  Don  Neill 
as  lettermen  formed  the  bulk  of  the  undefeated  squad.  Everett 
and  Anthony  had  the  best  records  in  singles  play  for  the  dual 
meet  season,  each  boasting  seventeen  victories  and  no  defeats. 
Everett  and  Anthony  were  elected  Co-Captains  of  the  1942  team. 

SUMMARY  OF  SEASON 

Carolina 7 Yale 0 

Carolina 8 Yale  1 

Carolina 6 Yale 1 

Carolina 12 Haverf ord    0 

Carolina 14 Williams    1 

Carolina 15 Williams    0 

Carolina 7 Cornell 0 

Carolina 7 Cornell 2 

Carolina 9 Virginia   0 

Carolina 9 N.  C.  State 0 

Carolina 6 Duke    0 

Carolina 9 Wake  Forest 0 

Carolina 8 Michigan   1 

Carolina 9 Georgetown 0 

Carolina 6 Yale 3 

Carolina 6 Princeton   3 

Carolina 8 Navy    1 


Neill 
Freem.an 


301 


TRACK 


/Z 


/  .  //     //     / 


n 


First  Roiv:  Trainer  Quinlan,  Miller.   Lewis.   Vawter.  Ashby.   Co-Captain   Morrison.   Co-Captain   Groves.    Wise.   Jones.    Van 

Wagoner.  Co-Manager  Turteltaub. 
Second  Row:  Suntheimer,  White,  Drewry,  Lloyd,  French.  Nathan,  Baker.  Sigler.  Allen,  Partridge. 
Third  Row:  Capel.  Bennett,  Halgman.  Haigh,  Cathey.  Mangum,  Gardiner,  Mengel.  Hardwick.  Coach  Dale  Ranson. 
Fourth  Roic:  Coach  Johnny  Morris.  Assistant  Manager  Bales.   Byerly,   Shapiro.   Moody.   Wood.   Denton.   Hutchison.   Riggs. 

Miller.  Coach  Bob  Fetzer. 
Fijth  Roil :  Toy.  Taylor,  Howe,  Weil,  Beyer,  Richardson.  Co-Manager  Quarles. 


TRACK 


Co-Captain  Morrison  and  Lewis 


304 


T. 


HE  University  of  North  Carolina's  1941  track  team  won  three  of 
its  five  dual  meets,  captured  the  State  A.A.U.  title,  and  finished  second 
to  Duke  in  the  Southern  Conference  meet  at  Williamsburg,  Virginia. 
In  the  season's  opener  Carolina's  twenty-eight  points  ran  Duke,  who 
scored  thirt)'-four.  a  close  second  in  the  Florida  Relays. 

Led  by  NX^arren  Mengel,  who  topped  the  team's  scoring  with 
seventy-tu'o  points,  the  Tar  Heels  won  their  next  three  dual  meets 
before  being  conquered  by  the  Duke  Blue  Devils  in  the  final  contest 
of  the  season.  First  the  blue  and  white  won  a  one  sided  victory  from 
Maryland  9.^-33  and  then  defeated  the  Princeton  Tigers,  71-55.  The 
U.N.C. -Virginia  meet  at  Charlottesville  was  a  thriller  with  Carolina 
coming  out  on  top  65-61. 

Duke  took  revenge  for  its  defeat  at  the  hands  of  Carolina  in  the 
Southern  Conference  Indoor  games  by  downing  U.N.C.  72  7  12  to 
53  5/12.   Advantage  in  the  weights  and  sprints  gave  Duke  the  victor)-. 

Carolina  ran  away  with  the  Carolina  A.A.U.  meet  piling  up  a 
total  of  eighty-two  and  one-half  points.  N.  C.  State,  the  nearest  con- 
tender, was  far  down  the  line  with  twenty-nine  and  three-quarter  points 
followed  by  Duke  and  Wake  Forest. 

The  last  dual  meet  of  the  year  saw  Navy  outclass  the  Tar  Heels 
75  2/3  to  50  1/3.  Cathey,  Branch,  Co-Captain  Morrison,  Lewis,  and 
Mangum  each  earned  a  first  place  to  give  the  losers  thirty  of  their 
fifty  odd  points. 


Branch,  Wise,  French 

Morrison,  Vawter 


305 


In  the  Southern  Conference  meet  Duke  was  pushed  to 
the  Hmit  before  winning.  CaroHna  had  58  5/6  points  to 
66  for  the  winners.  Maryland  was  next  with  26  points. 
Individuals  who  won  firsts  in  the  Conference  meet  were 
Co-Captain  Morrison  in  the  mile.  Mengel  in  the  broad 
jump  and  high  hurdles,  and  Jim  Vawter  in  the  two  mile 
event.  Groves,  Cathey,  Baker,  and  Haigh  teamed  together 
to  take  the  mile  relay. 

Next  to  Warren  Mengel  in  total  scoring  for  the  season 
was  Mike  Mangum,  hurdler,  who  amassed  48  1  /4  points 
followed  by  middle  and  long  distance  runners  Dave  Mor- 
rison, Roy  Cathey,  and  Henry  Branch.  Dick  White  led  the 
scoring  among  the  weight  men  with  a  total  of  26  points. 

SUMMARY  OF  DUAL  MEETS 

Carolina 93  Maryland    33 

Carolina 71  Princeton    55 

Carolina 65  Virginia   61 

Carolina 53  5   12  Duke    72  7/12 

Carolina 50  1/3  Navy    75  2/3 


RlCH.'\RDS0N 


Mengel.  Mangum.  Taylor 


306 


INDOOR  TRACK 

CL/^  RED  HOT  Carolina  quarter-mile  relay  team, 
consisting  of  Mike  Wise,  Larry  Holzman,  Jim  Kelly, 
and  Ike  Taylor,  set  a  new  meet  record  of  3:28.5  and 
thus  gave  a  fitting  climax  to  the  fourth  consecutive 
Southern  Conference  Indoor  Track  Championship 
won  by  the  Tar  Heels.  Although  they  took  only  three 
firsts,  the  Blue  and  White  gave  a  fine  example  of 
team  cooperation  by  practically  monopolizing  the 
second,  third,  and  fourth  places.  Carolina's  54  points 
more  than  doubled  the  22  tallies  racked  up  by  Duke, 
the  next  closest  competitor. 

Rich  Van  Wagoner  finished  strong  in  the  mile  to 
bring  the  Weil  Trophy  to  Carolina.  Warren  Men- 
gel's  win  in  the  70-yard  high  hurdles,  and  Percy 
Ashby's  triumph  in  the  broad  jump  gave  the  Blue 
and  White  their  only  other  first  place  points.  Men- 
gel  also  earned  a  second  in  the  broad  jump  and  a 
third  in  the  70-yard  low  hurdles. 

Following  Carolina  and  Duke  came  Maryland 
with  16  points,  and  the  rest  of  the  conference  teams 
were  strung  out  behind. 


Van  Wagoner  wins  the  Weil  Trophy. 
End  of  the  70-yard  low  hurdles. 


First  Row:    Lewis,  H.,  Banks,  Capel,  Cathey,  Mengel,  Taylor. 

Mangum.  Bennett. 
Second  Row:    Williamson.  Smith,  Hardy,  Holzman,  Lewis,  W., 

Hollander.  Wise,  Ashby.  Kelly. 
Third  Rote:    CoACH   MoRRis,  Coach   Fetzer,  Hutchison,  Wood. 

Truxes.   Perrin.   McDowell.    Lentz,   Riggs,   Coach   Ranson 

AND  Manager  Bales. 


^^H 

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307 


BASEBALL 


v..  Z...      /"/  /^ 


/./ /// 


BASEBALL 


Coach  Hearn 


Co-Captains  Browning  and 
Rich 


<^X, 


ciyz  c 


CAROLINA  baseball  team  that  was  given  little  chance  of 
winnint;  either  the  Big  Five  or  Southern  Conference  crowns  brought 
both  to  Carolina  in  1941. 

Opening  the  season  with  a  5-2  victory  over  Springfield,  the  team 
went  on  to  mark  up  thirteen  wins,  six  losses,  and  one  tie  in  a  twenty 
game  schedule. 

Following  the  Springfield  game  Carolina  suffered  a  4-2  loss  at 
the  hands  of  Cornell  in  an  intersectional  clash.  Then  followed  five 
conference  games,  four  of  which  produced  victories  for  the  Tar 
Heels.  The  first  was  a  15-6  pounding  over  W.  &  L.  A  close  2-1 
set-back  by  William  and  Mary  followed,  and  then  came  a  10-0  defeat 
over  Davidson.  Five  hit  pitching  on  the  part  of  Red  Benton  was 
responsible  for  another  victor}'  over  W.  &  L.,  this  time  9-5.  The 
next  game  saw  Mike  Bobbitt  collect  four  hits,  one  a  home  run, 
and  Carolina  defeated  V.M.I.,  12-8. 

Michigan  was  able  to  gather  but  three  hits,  but  the  Tar  Heels 
made  six  errors  and  lost  6-3. 

The  first  real  test  of  the  season  followed  when  Wake  Forest  met 
Carolina,  and  lost,  5-3.    This  game  put  Carolina  in  the  limelight, 


Pitchers  Feimster.  Benton, 
and  tomlinson 


310 


and  made  it  a  favorite  to  capture  the  Big  Five  crown.  Davidson 
was  played  in  another  game,  and  again  Carolina  won  by  a  shutout, 
9  to  0. 

Then  the  only  tie  game  of  the  season  was  played.  The  opponent 
was  N.  C.  State;  the  score  was  9-9.  Another  set-back  followed  as 
Marj-land  won  a  Conference  game,  5-4.  Some  timely  hitting  on  the 
part  of  the  Midshipmen  gave  the  Naxy  a  7-4  victory,  and  a  three 
game  streak  with  two  losses  and  a  tie  caused  no  little  concern  among 
the  students. 

It  was  short-lived,  however,  as  Lefty  Cheshire  pitched  a  2-0 
shutout  over  Wake  Forest.  The  Cavaliers  from  Virginia  became  the 
next  victims,  8-6,  in  a  contest  that  saw  a  total  of  tv\ent)'-four  hits. 
Mathes  was  the  hero  at  bat  getting  three  hits  in  four  tries,  one  of 
which  was  a  home  run. 

A  return  game  with  N.  C.  State  was  won  5-3,  avenging  the  9-9 


tie  game  played  earlier  in  the  season 


Catcher  Myers 


•^V 


After  N.  C.  State  came  Duke  and  three  games,  and  the  Tar 
Heels  broke  a  standing  jinx  when  it  defeated  its  arch  rivals  for  the 
first  time  in  a  night  game  at  Greensboro.    Led  by  Co-Captain  Ben 


First  Row:  Roberts.  Pope.  Gersten.  Oswald,  Jones,  J.  Hearn,  Miller.  Mathes. 

Second  Row:  Bland,  Tomlinson,  Myers,  Co-Captain  Browning,  Co-Captain  Rich,  Benton,  Howard,  and  Jennings. 
Third  Row:  ASSISTANT  CoACH  Fetzer,  Barksdale,  Bobbitt,  Saunders.  Honan,  Sherman,   Cheshire,  Reynolds,   Feimster,   Coach 
Bunn  Hearn. 


^ 


'•*» 


VRta* 


Jones  and  Howard 


Browning  and  Bo  Reynolds  who  got  four  hits  apiece,  Caro- 
lina collected  sixteen  hits  to  win  14-7.  Cheshire  and  Benton 
were  on  the  mound  for  Carolina,  allowing  only  seven  hits. 
Two  days  later  the  Tar  Heels  won  again  turning  in  an  er- 


rorless 6-4  performance.  Duke  won  the  final  game 
of  the  series,  6-1,  thereby  handing  Carolina  its 
third  and  last  Southern  Conference  defeat. 

The  Southern  Conference  Championship  was 
cinched  in  the  final  game  of  the  season.  The  op- 
ponent was  V.  M.  I.,  the  score  was  3-2.  Bobbitt 
and  Co-Captain  Rich  led  the  hitting  with  two  hits 
apiece  and  both  drove  in  one  run.  Lefty  Cheshire 
went  the  distance  on  the  mound  for  the  Tar  Heels. 

As  champions  of  both  the  Big  Five  and  Southern 
Conference  Carolina  had  a  state  record  of  seven  wins 
and  only  one  set  back,  and  a  conference  record  of 
eleven  wins  against  three  losses. 

John  "Lefty"  Cheshire  led  the  individual  pitching 
record  with  seven  wins  and  two  losses  followed  by 
"Red"  Benton  with  four  wins  and  one  loss.  Hank 
Feimster  won  two  and  lost  one.  Co-Captain  Charlie 
Rich  was  the  leading  hitter  followed  closely  by  Al 
Mathes,  Tom  Oswald,  and  Bo  Reynolds,  all  of  whom 
hit  .300  or  better.  Co-Captain  Ben  Browning  will  be 
remembered  for  his  exceptionally  fine  fielding. 

As  spring  1942  came  into  view,  prospects  for 
this  year's  team  seemed  none  too  bright.  Of  the 
fifteen  lettermen  who  bore  the  major  part  of  the 
burden  for  the  1941  Tar  Heels,  only  four  were 
returning,  and  Coach  Hearn  was  faced  with  the 
prospect  of  building  from  the  ground  up.  Biggest 
losses  were  pitchers  Cheshire  and  Feimster,  due 
back  this  year  but  both  of  whom  decided  to  go 
into   professional   baseball. 

On  the  basis  of  their  experience  Reynolds, 
Benton,  Hearn,  Honan,  and  Myers  seemed  to  be  ahead 


Mathes.  Jennings.  Reynolds 


312 


SUMMARY  OF  SEASON 

Carolina. 

5 

Springfield    

.  .  .    2 

Carolina. 
Carolina . 

15 

Cornell      

.  .  .   4 

W.  &  L 

..  .   6 

Carolina. 

1 

W.  &  M 

.  .  .    2 

Carolina. 

10 

Davidson    

.  ..    0 

Carolina . 

9 

Davidson    

.  .  .    5 

Carolina. 

12 

V.  M.  I 

.  .  .    8 

Carolina. 

} 

Michigan     

...    6 

Carolina . 

5 

Wake  Forest 

...5 

Carolina . 

9 

Davidson    

...    0 

Carolina . 

9 

State    

..  .   9 

Carolina . 

-i 

Maryland    

.  .  .    5 

Carolina. 

4 

Navy 

.  .  .    7 

Carolina . 

2 

Wake  Forest 

.  .  .    0 

Carolina . 

5 

State    

.  .  .    3 

Carolina. 

H 

Duke     

..  .    7 

Carolina. 

6 

Duke     

.  .  .    4 

Carolina. 

1 

Duke     

...6 

Carolina . 

r> 

V.  M.  I 

.  .  .    2 

Cheshire.  Pitcher 


of  the  other  candidates  and  were  favored  to 
hold  down  regular  positions.  Indications  were 
the  team  would  be  a  fast,  hustling  club  and 
would  be  strong  afield,  but  would  lack  hitting 
and  pitching  power.  Benton,  with  a  record  of 
eight  wins  for  two  losses  in  two  seasons,  will 
carry  much  of  the  load  of  pitching. 


Leading  hitter  Mathes 


313 


/    •'/ 


and  Truman  Hobbs  broke  the  old  mark,  as  did  the  free-style  com- 
bination of  Coxhead,  Hobbs,  Hammond,  and  Barclay.  Bob  Ousley, 
defending  champion,  bettered  his  own  mark  in  the  breaststroke 
event;  and  Johnny  Feuchtenberger  finished  a  few  points  ahead  of 
defending  title-holder  Don  Nicholson  to  take  the  conference  diving 
crown. 

After  their  first  meet,  the  Blue  Dolphins  downed  Virginia 
61-14,  N.  C.  State  59-16,  V.M.I.  46-29,  Rider  College  53-22, 
V.P.I.  60-15.  W.  &  L.  63-12,  and  Duke  54-12,  in  that  order. 

Because  of  their  fine  showing  through  the  entire  season  and 
in  the  conference  meet,  a  five-man  team,  composed  of  Co-Captains 
Jim  Barclay  and  George  Coxhead,  Truman  Hobbs,  Bob  Ousley,  and 
Denman  Hammond,  was  sent  to  compete  in  the  Eastern  Inter- 
collegiates  at  Yale  and  the  National  Intercollegiate  meet  also  in 
Cambridge,  Mass.  In  the  Eastern  meet  the  Blue  Dolphins  made  a 
fine  showing,  finishing  fourth  behind  Yale's  National   Champions, 


Rutgers,  and  Princeton,  and  raising  the  scoring  mark  for  a  south- 
ern team  in  this  meet  from  two  to  fourteen  points.  Competing 
with  the  fastest  field  of  college  swimmers  in  the  nation,  the  Tar 
Heel  medley  relay  team  of  Hammond,  Ousley,  and  Coxhead  placed 
fifth  in  the  finals  of  that  event;  they  had  previously  placed  third  in 
the  Eastern  Intercollegiate  meet.  Denman  Hammond,  the  outstand- 
ing backstroke  performer,  placed  sixth  in  his  event. 

At  the  season's  close,  George  Coxhead  was  selected  as  the  win- 
ner of  the  Dick  Jamerson  swimming  trophy  for  leadership,  service, 
and  desire  and  effort  to  improve.  Bob  Ousley  was  elected  new 
captain. 


Bob  Ousley,  breaststroke 


Free-style  relay  team 


319 


CROSS  COUNTRY 


/^ 


N  CAPTURING  the  Southern  Conference  Championship,  the 
CaroHna  cross  country  team  put  the  finishing  touches  on  an  un- 
defeated eight  meet  schedule.  The  1941  victory  in  the  Conference 
Meet  gave  the  Tar  Heels  their  sixth  straight  championship  and 
made  it  their  tv\elfth  crown  over  a  period  of  eighteen  years.  Duke 
was  able  to  take  second  place  and  individual  honors,  but  could 
not  overcome  the  well-balanced  U.N.C.  harriers  led  by  Van 
Wagoner  who  garnered  third.  Moody  placed  fourth,  Truxes 
tenth,  Hardy  twelfth,  and  Wise  sixteenth,  giving  Carolina  a  low 
score  of  45  points.  Duke  was  runner-up  with  55  points  followed 
by  Maryland,  V.M.I,  and  William  and  Mary. 

During  the  regular  season  U.N.C.  turned  back  Guilford, 
N.  C.  State,  Roanoke  Athletic  Club,  Maryland,  Navy,  Guilford, 
Wake  Forest,  and  Duke  in  that  order.  Perfect  scores  were  re- 
corded against  State  and  Maryland.  The  victory  over  Navy,  who 
possesses  one  of  the  country's  leading  teams,  was  especially  signifi- 
cant. 


Van  Wagoner  and  Captain  Wise 

F/rsl  Ron  :  Wood.  Perrin.  Lentz,  Nathan.  Johnson.  Earle.  Riggs. 

Second  Ruir:  Hollander.  Jewett.  Truxes.  Captain  Wise.  Hardy.  Moody.  Howe. 

Third  Row:  Assistant  Manager  Bales.  Royce.  Gross.  Allen,  Hocker.  Manager  Lewis.  Coach  Dale  Ranson. 


320 


WRESTLING 


CL/2C 


CAROLINA  wrestling  team  which  began  its  season  with 
little  hope  of  glory,  upset  the  dope  and  brought  the  Southern  Con- 
ference Tournament  crown  to  Chapel  Hill  for  the  first  time  in 
history-. 

The  dual  meet  record  was  only  fair.  Starting  off  against 
powerful  Navy,  the  Tar  Heels  met  their  first  defeat,  11-23.  Red- 
fern,  McKeever,  and  Frank  Mordecai  turned  in  victories,  but 
Navy's  top  notch  team  was  too  much.  The  following  week  it 
was  Duke,  and  the  grapplers  hit  their  stride,  22-8,  as  McKeever, 
Robinson,  Davant,  both  Mordecais,  and  Sasser  easily  won.  When 
State  came  to  Carolina,  Sam  Mordecai  led  the  way  to  another 
win,  17-11. 

The  next  two  matches  saw  the  Tar  Heels  slip  and  barely 
lose  out  to  both  V.M.I,  and  W.  &  L.  by  scores  of  14-16  and 
11-17,  respectively.  But  revenge  came  against  V.P.I,  and  David- 
son and  Carolina  lost  only  two  matches  in  each  meet  and  chalked 
up  scores  of  20-8  and  28-6.  The  defeat  over  the  Wildcats  gave 
them  the  state  crown. 

The  climax  of  the  season  came  at  Greensboro  at  the  Southern 
Conference  Tourney.  Hobart  McKeever  and  Sam  Mordecai 
earned  first  places;  John  Robinson,  Gene  Davant,  and  Frank 
Mordecai  took  seconds;  and  Bill  Redfern  won  fourth  to  give 
the  team  30  points  and  sew  up  the  title.  V.M.I,  and  W.  &  L. 
followed  with  totals  of  28  and  22  points. 


Captain  Davant 


First  Row:  GiBBONS,  Mordecai,  F.,  Mordecai,  S.,  Davant,  McKeever.  Robinson.  Redfern. 

Second  Row:  Ellis,  Gaul,  Cook,  Johnson,  Long,  Shapiro,  Elliot. 

Third  Ron  :  Coach  Quinlan,  Manager  West,  Gleicher,  Sasser,  Jarvis.  Wyche.  Tart. 


321 


GOLF 


Captain  Snow 


a 


AROLINA'S  golf  team,  led  by  Captain  Frosty  Snow,  finished  the  season  with 
a  record  of  six  victories  against  three  defeats. 

After  suffering  an  opening  set  back  at  the  hands  of  Ohio  State  the  team 
came  back  to  defeat  Hampden-Sydney  and  Pennsylvania. 

In  spite  of  Captain  Snow's  fine  victory  over  Dixon  Brooks,  National  Inter- 
collegiate Champion,  Virginia  edged  out  the  Tar  Heels,  15-12,  in  perhaps  the 
most  interesting  match  of  the  year. 

Carolina  won  the  next  four  matches  handily  by  shutting  out  Boston  College 
18-0,  crushing  Fordham  25-2,  whipping  Navy  7-2,  and  whitewashing  Franklin 
and  Marshall  27-0. 

Duke  again  proved  too  strong,  but  the  match  was  undecided  until  the  last 
scores  were  in  with  the  Blue  Devils  finally  winning  l^Vr^Wl- 

Captain  Snow,  Paul  Severin,  Hayes,  Files,  Peete,  Rumph,  and  Neese  formed 
the  backbone  of  the  squad.  Of  these  all  but  the  first  three  have  returned  to 
school.  "Shookie"  Neese,  a  junior  this  year,  was  elected  to  captain  the  1942 
team. 


Firu  Row:  Lyles.  Neese.  Peete.  Hayes. 

Second  Row:  Diffendal,   Rumph.  Shelton.   Severin.   Snow,  Coach  Erickson. 


322 


First  Row:  WALLACE,  ViNOKUR,   TOLMACH,  HARRINGTON,    HUTTON,    NeUHAUS.   RiVAK,   CaNTOR. 

Second  Row:  MooRE,  Albea,  Clay,  Greenberg,  Campbell,  Hurwitz,  Varady. 
Third  Row:  Johnson,  Hobbs. 


FENCING 


eyzLT 


[LTHOUGH  unable  to  carry  out  a  full-sized  schedule  due  to  transportation  difficulties,  the  1942  fencing  team  met 
four  opposing  teams  and  downed  two  of  them.  Led  by  Co-Captain  Larry  Hutton  and  Bob  Tolmach  and  varsity  regulars 
of  last  year,  Howie  Imbrey  and  Harry  Vinokur,  the  fencers  out-  Co-Captains  Deering  and  Hutton 

pointed  V.M.L  9V'2"^V2  *t  Lexington,  Va.,  to  open  the  season  for 
the  Tar  Heels.  Two  days  later  the  Blue  and  White  team  was  barely 
nosed  out  by  the  Washington  and  Lee  Generals  9-8. 

On  February  14,  Co-Captain  Hutton  paced  the  swordsmen  to  a 
16-11  win  over  Virginia  when  he  took  all  three  bouts  in  the  sabre. 
The  next  week  the  Tar  Heel  fencers  made  a  creditable  showing  by 
taking  seven  points  from  Seton  Hall,  National  Intercollegiate  Cham- 
pions and  undefeated  in  two  years.  The  final  score  left  Seton  Hall 
with  twenty  tallies.    This  match  completed  the  dual  meet  season. 

The  South  Atlantic  Fencing  Tournament,  begun  here  two  years 
ago,  was  held  at  Chapel  Hill  on  April  3  and  4  with  Bob  Tolmach 
and  Howie  Imbrey  turning  in  the  best  individual  performances  for 
Carolina.  Imbrey  won  a  first  place  and  a  second,  while  Tolmach 
won  two  seconds.  The  team  as  a  whole  did  not  place  as  well  as 
might  have  been  expected,  finishing  fifth  behind  V.M.L  and  Vir- 
ginia, third  and  fourth  place  winners,  whom  Carolina  had  previously 
beaten.  However,  the  Tar  Heels  did  out-strip  sixth  place  W.  &  L. 
who  had  downed  them  in  a  close  dual  match.  William  and  Mary 
won  the  tournament  followed  by  Georgia  Tech. 


323 


First  Row:  Greenbaum.  Dr.  Lawson.  Perky.  Second  Row:  Boone,  Cover.  Dupree.  Blanton.  Davant. 


GYMNASTICS 


a 


/AROLINA  gymnasts  have  been  preparing  since  last 
fall  for  a  tournament  to  be  held  this  spring,  which  will 
probably  be  attended  by  representatives  from  Duke,  David- 
son, State,  and  Appalachian.  Handicapped  by  the  loss  of 
several  mainstays  from  last  year's  team.  Dr.  R.  B.  Lawson's 
charges  nevertheless  have  hopes  of  a  fine  showing. 


LACROSSE 


a 


CAROLINA'S  lacrosse  team  won  the  Dixie  League  Cham- 
pionship and  finished  the  season  with  a  record  of  seven  vic- 
tories against  four  defeats.  Victories  were  won  over  Spring- 
field, "Virginia  twice,  W.  &  L.,  Cherokee  Indians,  Duke, 
and  West  Chester  of  Pennsylvania,  while  Coach  Al  Corn- 
sweet's  team  bowed  to  Springfield,  Navy,  Duke,  and 
Loyola.  Coleman  Finkel,  captain,  was  the  team's  most  out- 
standing player. 


First  Row:  BoRSKY.  DuBE.  Sternberger.  Harris,  Fallick.  Amoss. 

Second  Row:  Coach  Cornsweet,  Cohn,  Atran,  Graham,  Silberger,  Broadfoot,  Werner. 

Third  Rnir:  Darden.  Zimmerman.  Budden,  Clark.  Mahoney,  Remy,  Rosenbloom. 


324 


325 


FRESHME]^   SPORTS 


u 


-   // 


FRESHMAN  COACHES       FRESHMAN  FOOTBALL 


1  ICTURED  below  are  Ralph  Casey,  Jim  Tatum,  and 
"Doc"  Siewert,  who  with  the  aid  of  several  assistants 
bear  the  brunt  of  freshman  coaching  duties.  Their  teams 
so  far  this  year  have  met  with  fine  success. 


s. 


'TARTING  out  slowly  and  gaining  momentum  as  the 
season  progressed,  the  Tar  Babies  defeated  the  Blue  Imps 
from  Duke  33  to  13  in  the  final,  and  most  anticipated,  game 
of  the  season.  N.  C.  State  defeated  the  freshmen  by  a  one 
touchdown  margin,  19-13,  to  open  the  19-il  campaign. 
Next  was  Wake  Forest,  as  this  time  Carolina  lost  12-2.  Back 
home  against  Mars  Hill,  every  member  of  the  team  played 
excellent  ball,  and  the  Tar  Babies  won  56-0.  Against  the 
University  of  Virginia  came  a  surprising  victory  by  a  26-0 
score. 

Sam  Arbes  who  racked  up  forty-t^-o  points  and  Billy 
Myers  who  amassed  thirty-four  tallies  are  the  leading  back- 
field  prospects  for  varsity  material  for  next  fall.  Arbes  net- 
ted an  average  of  six  and  a  half  yards  in  carrying  the  ball 
on  fifty-two  occasions.  Outstanding  players  in  the  forward 
wall  come  from  the  center  of  the  line.  Guards  Strayhorn 
and  Karres,  and  center  Highsmith,  are  expected  to  see  much 
varsity  service  next  fall. 


Coaches  Casey,  Tatum,  and  mpw  im 


Virst  Roio:  Sparger,  Bass, 
O'Shea,  Fernice.  Faircloth, 
Goodman.  Moore.  Jordan, 
Hamilton,  Bigham,  Kimsey. 

Second  Row:  (kneeling)  Man- 
ager Carr,  Highsmith,  Ellis, 
White,  Hart,  Fowler,  Bruton, 
Whitfield.  Kemp.  Bryan.  Se- 
CREST,  Lee. 

Third  Row:  Karres.  H  a  m  - 
mond.  Wright,  A.  Smith. 
Jones,  Fanny,  Singer,  Simpson, 
V.  Smith,  Moneyhan,  Tandy. 
Frazier,  Thomason,  Myers, 
Tendler,  Pupa,  Gregory,  Bur- 


Foinlh  Row:  Davis.  Stray- 
horn.  Rich,  Winner.  Gregson. 
Stringfield.  Holman,  Lewis. 
Arbes,  Johnson.  Altamose, 
Turberville. 


328 


First  Row:  Clark,  Winkle, 
Lance,  Hartley,  Hart,  Lee. 

Second  Row:  Coach  Siewert. 
Hayworth,  W  o  m  b  l  e  .  Wil- 
liams, Sexias.  Ward.  Henson. 
and  Manager. 

Third  Row:  Altemose.  War- 
ren. WiNBORNE.  Bowman.  Bur- 
Riss.  Roska,  Wideman,  James. 
AND  Coach  Mullis. 


FRESHMAN 
BASKETBALL 


c. 


OACH  SIEWERT'S  freshman  quintet  turned  in  a  very 
successful  record  of  thirteen  wins  marred  by  only  two 
losses  for  the  1942  campaign.  Both  defeats  came  at  the 
hands  of  the  Wolftubs  of  N.  C.  State— 56-45  and  39-31. 
The  two  bright  spots  of  the  season  were  the  58-25  and 
53-49  victories  over  the  Duke  Blue  Imps.  In  the  next  to 
last  game,  the  Tar  Babies  ran  wild  in  swamping  Raleigh 
High  84-13.  Hart,  Warren,  and  Hartley,  forwards,  Hay- 
worth  and  Captain  Henson,  guards,  and  Altemose,  center, 
make  up  the  group  most  likely  to  see  service  for  the  varsity 
in  1943. 


FRESHMAN  BASEBALL 

X^ESPITE  lack  of  experienced  material,  the  1941  fresh- 
man baseball  team  under  the  direction  of  Coaches  Jim 
Tatum  and  Hammond  Strayhorn,  ended  its  season  with  a 
record  of  8  wins  and  3  defeats.  Wins  were  over  Durham, 
N.  C,  State  twice,  Raleigh,  Charlotte,  E.M.I.,  Hillsboro, 
Wake  Forest,  and  Morganton.  Losses  were  to  Duke  twice, 
and  to  Wake  Forest  once. 

Monk  Whiteheart  on  the  mound  and  Clay  Croom  behind 
the  plate  form  a  battery  combination  that  shows  promise. 
Leon  McCaskill  developed  into  a  heavy  hitting  outfielder, 
and  Mack  Morris,  second  baseman,  displayed  class  both 
afield  and  at  bat. 


f.^Jf-^5.^  I^IP 


i  ■  i- 


'^bu»- 


.■ii 


Firs!  Row:  Managers. 

Second  Row:  Whiteheart, 
Cantrell,  Hussey,  Croom, 
Turner.  Boseman.  Johnson 
Morris,  Waters.  Hayworth 
Van  Kirk. 

Third  Row:  GooDMAN.  Lee. 
Harris,  Canady,  Cheek,  Hack- 
ney, Coach  Tatum,  Fitzgerald, 
Patterson,  Paty,  McCaskill. 
Assistant  Coach   Strayhorn. 


329 


First  Row:  Rankin,  Doesch- 
LER,  Stoddard. 

Second    Row:    Stein,    Briggs, 
Fuller,  Gray, 


; 


FRESHMAN  GOLF 


a 


' O ACH  ERICSONS  freshman  golf  team,  led  by  George 
Case  and  Dick  Doeschler,  had  a  successful  season  and  pro- 
duced several  men  with  varsity  promise.  Bahnson  Gray, 
David  Rankin,  Jack  Stoddard,  and  Stanley  Briggs  rounded 
out  a  squad  which  threatened  at  times  to  give  the  varsity 
competition.  The  frosh  won  victories  over  Peddy  Prep 
School,  Davidson,  and  Duke. 


FRESHMAN 
CROSS  COUNTRY 


©, 


ROPPING  a  meet  to  Duke  and  winning  an  engage- 
ment with  Jefferson  High  of  Roanoke,  the  yearling  cross 
country  squad  broke  even  in  its  two  encounters  this  year. 
Marvin  Fairchild  and  Arnold  Pestronk  were  the  two  out- 
standing freshman  runners. 


<^ 


F/rsi  Row:  Mewborne,  Ed- 
wards, Webb,  Lewis,  Hubbard. 
Gilbert,  Wolf. 

Second  Row:  Fairchild,  Gold- 
rich,  WiLLLAMS,  Breakstone, 
Belli,  Pestronk,  Grinstead. 


330 


First  R  o  w  :  MORGAN.  BluE- 
THENTHAL.  GrIFFIN,  KeMP.  Zir- 
PEL. 

Second  Row:  Johnston. 
Nachamson.  Winn.  H  e  a  r  n  . 
Snow.  Weintraub. 

Third  Row:  Manager  West. 
Strickland.  Goodman.  Hobbs. 
Palmer.  Neblett.  Coach  Zink. 


^ 


FRESHMAN  WRESTLING     FRESHMAN  SWIMMING 


Ji. 


>ED  by  Bill  Griffin,  Arthur  Bluethenthal,  Bill  Kemp 
and  Ir\'ing  Zirpel,  Coach  Zink's  yearling  matmen  marched 
successfully  through  all  competition,  winning  ever)'  match 
by  a  large  margin.  The  Tar  Baby  team,  one  of  the  best 
in  many  years,  scored  triumphs  over  Duke  33-5,  State 
33-5,  V.M.I.  17-11,  W.  &  L.  21-5,  V.P.I.  27-5,  and 
Davidson  28-6.  Other  standouts  on  the  team  included 
Tommy  Hearn,  Dick  Weintraub,  John  Davis,  and  Grimsley 
Hobbs. 


©. 


'UPLICATING  the  varsity's  feat  of  an  unbeaten  season, 
the  Baby  Dolphins  overpowered  N.  C.  State  52-14,  Duke 
54-12,  V.P.I.  44-12,  Massanutten  52-14,  and  Duke  again 
54-12  to  turn  in  a  most  successful  record.  Warner  Mallison 
in  the  free  style  and  George  Whitner  in  the  breast  stroke 
broke  innumerable  records,  including  national  marks  to 
set  the  pace  in  individual  scoring.  George  Montague,  free 
st)'list,  and  Buddy  Crome  and  Mac  Earle,  divers,  are  also 
promising  candidates  for  next  year's  varsit)'.  Whitner  and 
Mallison  were  elected  co-captains  for  the  year. 


First  Row:  Casey.  W.,  Hol- 
brook.  Crone.  Gray.  Erle.  Al- 

MAN. 

Second  Row:  Herr.  Wallace. 
SoKOLOFF.  Little.  Johnson. 
TOOLEY,  Arky. 

Third  Row:  SCHENCK.  ROTHS- 
CHILD. Duryea.  Rosskam.  Al- 
ley. Whitner.  Mallison.  and 
Coach  Ralph  Casey. 


331 


First  Row;  Banks,  Emack, 
Sadlik,  Perrin,  Milne,  Hardy, 
Kenyon,  Rue,  Davis,  Hacker. 

Second  Row:  Hollander, 
Truxes,  Johnson.  Partrick, 
Thwaites,  Kendrick,  King. 
Evans,  Jewett. 

Tb/rJ  Row:  JOHNSTON, 
Thompson,  Edwards.  Manly, 
Crane,  Lentz,  Hall,  Davis. 

Fourth  Row:  Simmons,  Smith, 
Ott,  Corn,  Parker.  Stockton, 
Reavis,  Winslow. 

Fifth    Row:    Council.    Prit- 

CHETT,       HiGDON,       McDoWELL, 

Brantley,  Craver,  Jones,  Ney- 

HAUS. 


FRESHMAN  TRACK 

7 

J  RANK  HARDY,  Art  Truxes,  and  Tom  Jewett,  all 
Strong  in  the  distance  events,  led  the  freshmen  track  team 
through  an  undefeated  season.  Duke  was  defeated  twice, 
and  the  team  had  little  trouble  winning  the  Junior  Caro- 
lina A.A.U,  title. 


FRESHMAN  TENNIS 
T 

J.  HE  freshman  tennis  team  dropped  only  two  matches 
during  the  season — one  to  Charlotte  High,  and  the  other 
to  Scarboro  Prep.  Marshall  Chambers,  Harold  Maas,  Bar- 
den  Winstead,  and  Milton  Cash,  freshman  stand-outs,  will 
add  much  strength  to  the  1942  varsity. 


"^ 


First  Row:  Feinberg,  Cham- 
bers, Maas.  Winstead,  Cash. 
Holland. 

Second  Row:  Coach  Kenfield, 
Martin,  King,  Griffin,  Fair- 
bairn,  Rutledge,  Barber. 


532 


Fini  Row:   Musler,    Moore, 

COLONES,  MEMBRINO,  AND  GUN- 
THER. 

Second  Rou-:  Coach  Ronman. 
Davis.  Gregory,  Bencini.  At- 
kins.  AND   Assistant   Coach 

F  ARRIS. 


^ 


FRESHMAN  BOXING      REVIEW  OF  TEAMS 


H. 


.  ARD  stnick  by  influenza  and  other  unpredictable 
jinxes,  the  freshman  boxers  struggled  through  the  1942 
season  unable  to  muster  full  strength  for  any  single  match 
and  unable  to  garner  a  single  victory.  Losses  were  to 
V.P.I.  3-5,  S.M.A.  2-6,  Virginia  ^^Vi'^Vl  and  A.M.A. 
21/2-51/2-  John  Davis,  Haynes  Gregor)',  Bob  Bencini,  and 
Dick  Young  will  be  sure-fire  starters  for  the  1943  varsity, 
as  will  probably  be  John  Membrino. 


7 

^  RESHMAN  teams  for  spring,  1941,  and  fall  and 
winter,  1942,  showed  up  unusually  well.  Of  the  ten  sports 
represented  by  first  year  squads,  all  but  one  came  out  with 
at  least  a  fifty-fifty  record,  and  four  teams,  wrestling,  swim- 
ming, track,  and  golf,  went  undefeated.  Following  in 
order  came  tennis,  basketball,  and  football,  which  lost  but 
two  encounters  for  the  season;  baseball,  which  lost  three; 
and  cross  country,  which  broke  even. 


Coach  Tatum  gives  last  minute  instructions  in  the  Duke-C.\rolina 
frosh  game. 


Mallison  and  Whitner.  ace  freshman 
swimmers. 


333 


INTRAMURALS 


^, 


flNETEEN  years  is  a  lonj;  time. 
But  in  terms  of  intramurals  at  Carolina, 
it  represents  the  period  of  growth  from 
a  small  beginning  in  1923,  when  intra- 
murals were  first  introduced,  to  the  pres- 
ent expansive  program  under  which 
some  2100  Carolina  students  each  year 
participate  in  interdormitory  or  inter- 
fraternity  athletic  competition.  A  total 
of  thirteen  sports  make  up  our  intra- 
mural program  which,  though  surpassed 
by  some  schools  in  actual  number  of 
sports  offered,  can  boast  as  much  inter- 
est by  the  students  and  as  much  active 
participation  as  any  other  college  in  the 
nation. 

Back  of  the  Carolina  intramural  pro- 
gram is  Mr.  Herman  Schnell,  director 
for  ten  years,  under  whose  supervision 


Herman  Schnell,  Director  Tag  Football  Action 

The  crucial  try  for  the  extra  point  in  the  Town  Boys-Kappa  Sigma  championship  game 


334 


the  number  of  students  participating  in 
intramurals  has  almost  doubled.  Under 
his  direction  the  campus  intramural  set- 
up was  first  reorganized  (1938-39)  into 
two  divisions  —  dormitory  and  frater- 
nity. Dormitory  teams,  somewhat  at  an 
advantage  over  many  of  the  fraternity 
teams  because  of  the  larger  number  of 
boys  dormitories  could  draw  upon,  were 
thus  matched  with  teams  on  an  equal 
footing.  Similarly,  fraternity  teams  were 
matched  against  one  another.  Other 
changes  inaugurated  have  been  the  set- 
ting up  of  a  new  point  system  based  on 
achievement  —  and  the  awarding  of 
challenge  trophies  on  the  basis  of  points 
to  the  teams,  both  fraternity  and  dormi- 
tory, which  have  accumulated  the  high- 
est totals  during  the  year. 

Assisting  Mr.  Schnell  have  been:  a 
Faculty  Administrative  Board,  com- 
posed of  Floyd  Siewert,  R.  E.  Jamerson, 


Action  from  S.A.E.-Phi  Gamma  Delta  basketball  game 
Silhouette  of  intramurals  in  Woollen  Gym 


335 


Johnny  Vaught  (from  the  Physical  Edu- 
cation Department) ,  and  Dr.  W.  G. 
Morgan  (from  the  University  Health 
Service)  ;  a  graduate  assistant,  William 
Avrette;  and  a  council  made  up  of  all 
fraternity  and  dormitory  intramural 
managers.  The  Administrative  Board 
determines  matters  of  policy.  The  intra- 
mural council  is  consulted  in  matters 
regarding  rule  changes  and  the  inclu- 
sion or  exclusion  of  sports. 

Though  active  in  stimulating  interest 
in  intramurals,  the  Director  and  other 
intramurals  officials  encourage  student 
initiative  as  much  as  possible.  The  in- 
tramural office  schedules  games,  fur- 
nishes equipment,  and  supervises  com- 
petition ■ —  but  the  students  do  all  the 
rest.  Probably  that — plus  the  enthusi- 
asm of  Mr.  Schnell — has  been  the  big 
reason  for  intramurals  being  the  major 
extracurricular  activity  on  the  campus. 


Intil\mural  Grunt  and  Groaners 

Volley  Ball — just  before  the  kill  shot 


336 


CAMPUS  WINNERS 

+ 

SPRING  QUARTER   (1941) 

Softball — Kappa  Sigma Mangum 

Tennis — Phi  Delta  Theta Law  School 

Horseshoes — Beta  Theta  Pi Town 

Water  Polo — Phi  Delta  Theta Grimes 

Track — Kappa  Sigma Town 

+ 
FALL  QUARTER   (1941) 

Football — Kappa  Sigma Town 

Wrestling — Zeta  Psi Graham 

Handball — Pi  Lambda  Phi .  .  Medical  School 
Water  Polo — Kappa  Sigma Everett 

+ 
WINTER  QUARTER  (1942) 

Foul  Shooting — Zeta  Psi Grimes 

Basketball — Kappa  Sigma Graham 

Volleyball — Phi  Gamma  Delta .  .  Med.  School 
Foul  Shooting — Zeta  Psi Grimes 


Water  Polo 

Swimming — that  last  lap 


337 


First  Row:  Alliene  Brawley,  Kathryn  Charles.  Dorothy  Jackson,  ji;an  Beeks.  Sarah  Umstead,  Virginia  Broome. 
Second  Row:  Mrs.  J.  G.  Beard.  Eva  Mae  Nee.  Diddy  Kelley.  Randy  Mebane,  Mary  Louise  Breazeale. 
Third  Row:  Helen  McKay.  Katharine  Goold.  Jean  Hahn,  Elsie  Lyon,  Jean  Wire. 


WOMEN'S    ATHLETIC 
ASSOCIATION 


Tu 


Diddy  Kelley,  President 


HIS  was  a  year  of  firsts  for  the  Women's  Athletic  As- 
sociation. Growing  coed  enrollment,  increased  interest  of 
the  women  students  in  athletics,  and  the  desire  of  the  coeds 
to  do  their  part  in  carrying  out  the  nation's  "physical  fit- 
ness" program — all  of  these  combined  to  make  for  greater 
emphasis  on  women's  sports,  expansion,  "more  sports  for 
more  girls".  Under  the  capable  hands  of  Diddy  Kelley  the 
association  for  the  first  time  made  physical  education  com- 
pulsory for  all  junior  coeds.  For  the  first  time  publicity  was 
featured  as  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  here  on  the  campus  covered 
women's  sports,  and  as  state  papers  were  informed  through 
the  cooperation  of  the  University  News  Bureau  of  the 
athletic  events  of  the  coeds.  For  the  first  time  men  and 
women  students  alike  began  to  sit  up  and  take  notice — and 
to  give  long  over-due  praise  to  the  W.A.A. 


238 


In  the  fall  quarter  hockey  and  tennis  were  the  pre- 
dominant sports,  as  the  former  finished  probably  its  most 
popular  season  on  the  campus  (75  participants)  with  the 
latter  not  far  behind.  Later  in  the  fall  a  so-called  "play 
day"  held  at  Salem  College  was  attended  by  several  Caro- 
lina hockey  players.  Good  playing  soon  landed  berths  for 
three  of  our  girls  on  the  mythical  All-state  team:  Mary 
McCormic,  goalie  (and  incidentally  the  only  player  unani- 
mously chosen)  ;  Grace  Hicks,  halfback;  and  "Peanut" 
Wire,  center  half.  The  tennis  tournament  was  captured  by 
Kitty  Wicker. 

Later  in  the  fall  quarter  a  modern  dance  symposium  was 
held.  Colleges  in  North  Carolina,  South  Carolina,  and 
Virginia  were  invited  down  to  Chapel  Hill  for  the  day. 

A  successful  intra-league  basketball  tournament  stimu- 
lated interest  in  a  'play  day"  here.  At  the  end  of  the 
winter  quarter  entries  from  Peace,  Meredith,  and  Duke  were 
contacted,  and  arrangements  were  made  for  the  program. 

Swimming  was  topped  by  Captain  Ellen  Wimberly, 
whose  team  was  the  first  ever  to  enter  varsity  swimming 
competition.  Placing  second  in  the  A.A.U.  meet  in  Bow- 
man-Gray pool,  the  coed  dolphins  the  next  week  showed  up 
splendidly  as  they  barely  lost  a  35-31  dual  meet  to  William 
and  Mary. 


Scrambling  for  the  b.\ll 


Hockey  teams  in  action 


339 


Other  sports  were  scheduled  for  the  spring  quarter.  The 
arsity  fencers  met  both  William  and  Mary  and  South  Caro- 
ina.   The  modern  dance  group  took  several  exhibition  trips 

featuring  tap  and  folk  dancing.   The  schedule  was  rounded 

out  by  golf. 

In  keeping  with  its  progress  in  other  lines,  the  council 
set  out  to  standardize  the  system  of  awards.  Interest  and 
skill  were  given  primary  consideration  as  a  system  of  major 
and  minor  awards  was  set  up — with  the  recipients  of  awards 
being  the  winners  and  runner-ups  of  tournaments,  and  the 
members  of  All-Carolina  first  and  second  teams.  For  the 
most  outstanding  girl  athlete  of  the  year,  plans  were  laid 
for  the  awarding  of  a  Carolina  blanket — again  a  "first"  in 
W.A.A.  history. 

Varsity  award  winners  this  year  were: 

Tennis:    Winnifred  Rosenbaum. 

Archery:  Kitty  Wicker. 

Hockey:  Helen  Hall,  Right  Wing;  Jinnette  Hood,  Right 
Inner;  Alliene  Brawley,  Center  Forward;  Sarah  Um- 
stead,  Left  Inner;  Agnes  Martin,  Left  Wing;  Grace 
Hicks,  Right  Half;  Marie  Watters,  Center  Half; 
Nancy  Jefferis,  Left  Half;  Hilda  Weaver,  Right  Full; 
Edna  Mae  Winkler,  Left  Full ;  Mary  McCormic,  Goalie. 

Fencing:  Mary  McCormic,  Co-Captain;  Alliene  Brawley, 
Co-Captain;  and  Barbara  Epps. 


Abot'e:  First  coed  varsity  swimming  team 
Varsit\'  Fencing  Team 


340 


MCCORMIC  AND  WaTTERS   PLAY  BALL 


Masengill,  Golf 


Swimming:  Ellen  Wimberly,  Captain;  Polly  Durham,  Mary  Martha 
Cobb,  Deborah  Lewis,  Marty  Rouse,  Mary  Jane  Lloyd,  and  Mary 
Lib  Nash. 

Basketball;  Fon\'ards — Betsy  Ross  Howe,  Edith  Bass,  Mary  Jane  Lloyd; 
Guards — Mary  McCormic,  Lillian  Burgin. 

Volleyball:  Aida  Epps,  Connie  Grigsby,  Jinnette  Hood,  Betsy  Ross 
Howe,  Watson  Prince,  Rachel  Redinger,  Sara  Taylor,  Edna  Mae 
Winkler. 


Archers  poised  for  the  kill 


Helen  Milam.  Badminton  Champ 
Margery  Strass,  Tennis 


341 


-  -        WUIRL- 


ouH    L  {KMyL 


FROM  DUSK  'TIL  DAWX  '' 


'?• 


^^»S^^J^^ 


ALPHA    DELTA    PI 


President Huldah  Warren 

Vice-President Jean  Wire 

Secretary Betty  Lou  Fletcher 

Treasurer Nancy  McIver 


Vf^e're  new  all  right,  but  we  learn  quick 
W'^hen  hearts  are  trumps,  we'll  take  the  trick. 


K.. 


»EW?  Yes.  The  A. D. Pi's  are  the  newest  sorority 
on  the  campus,  and  this  year  they  moved  into  a  newly  dec- 
orated house.  But  the  novelty  of  it  all  hasn't  stumped 
them.  For  the  third  consecutive  year  they  won  the  cup  for 
best  home-coming  display,  which  makes  it  theirs  for  keeps. 
The  social  calendar  saw  a  dance  at  the  Carolina  Inn  given 
in  honor  of  the  twenty-four  pledges,  exchange  suppers  with 
five  fraternities,  Tuesday  night  suppers  at  the  house  for  all 
sorority  members,  and  Sunday  afternoon  coffee.  The  chap- 
ter played  Santa  Claus  to  twenty-five  underprivileged  Chapel 
Hill  youngsters. 

Honors  held  by  members  are:  Muriel  Mallison,  Presi- 
dent of  Y.W.C.A. ;  "Breazy"  Breazeale,  Vice-President  of 
the  Athletic  Association;  Lib  Campbell,  President  of  the 
Interdormitory  Council;  Frances  Allison,  Junior  Representa- 
tive to  the  Honor  Council;  and  June  Love,  Treasurer  of 
the  Woman's  Government  Association.  Jackie  Ray  will  be 
remembered  for  her  leading  role  in  Sound  and  Fury,  as  will 
Pat  Johnson  for  her  excellent  job  as  cheerleader. 


346 


iPRE^ap 


Allison 

AUER 

Beakley 

Bisset 

Bruns 

Campbell 

Clayton 

Craft 

Fletcher 

FUTRELLE 

Garmany 

Grantham 

LiPPINCOTT 

Love 

Mallison 

Martin 

Sugg 

Urquhart 

Warren,  H. 

Warren,  M.  F. 

BOATWRIGHT, 
EH. 

Cromartie 
Hicks 

McIVER 

Waters 


boatwright, 

Eva 

Davidson 

Johnson,  A. 

Nottingham 

WiMBERLY 


BOHANNON 

Breazeale 

Broome 

Elliott 

Erwin 

Fishel 

Johnson,  M. 

Leech 

Lewis 

Poole 

Prjnce 

Ray 

Winkler 

Wire 

Withers 

-I     ATRONESSES:    Mrs.  G.  F.  Bason,  Mrs.  H.  D.  McClelland,  Mrs.  W.  A.  Olsen,  Mrs. 
P.  W.  Foote,  Mrs.  Sherman  Smith,  Mrs.  Ray  Wolf. 

Graduate  School:    Frances  Moose. 

Seniors:  Mary  Louise  Breazeale,  Eva  Boatwright,  Virginia  Broome,  Elizabeth  Camp- 
bell, Earlene  Clayton,  Ann  Craft,  Anne  Cromartie,  Gene  Fishel,  Betty  Lou  Fletcher, 
Peggy  Lou  Futrelle,  Marion  Johnson,  Mary  Elizabeth  Leech,  Marion  Lippincott,  Sadie 
June  Love,  Nancy  Mclver,  Muriel  Mallison,  Helen  Milam,  Dorothy  Pratt,  Georgia 
Poole,  Marjorie  Sugg,  Huldah  Warren,  Nancy  Waters,  Ellen  Wimberly,  Jean  Wire, 
Bettye  Withers. 

Juniors:    Frances  Allison,  Anice  Garmany,  Sarah  Gordon. 

Pledges:  Ann  Blair  Alderson,  Tryntje  Auer,  Mary  Beakley,  Eugenia  Bissett,  Eliza- 
beth Boatwright,  Mary  Bohanon,  Josephine  Bone,  Mary  Bruns,  Gail  Davidson,  Constance 
DuBose,  Constance  Elliot,  Frances  Erwin,  Margaret  Faw,  Blanche  Grantham,  Grace  Hicks, 
Annie  Laurie  Johnson,  Anne  Lewis,  Agnes  Martin,  Ruth  Nottingham,  Mary  Watson 
Prince,  Jacqueline  Ray,  Marjorie  Anne  Snyder,  Nancy  Suiter,  Ethel  Thompson,  Martha 
Urcjuhart,  Mary  Foster  Warren,  Edna  Mae  Winkler. 


Betel  Upsiloii  Chapter 
Established  1939 


347 


ALPHA    TAU    OMEGA 


President Henry  Burgwyn 

Chaplain William  Frazier 

Secretary Cameron   Murchison 

Treasurer Perci'  Ashbi' 


T> 


O  you  remember: 

How  Bill  Frazier  earned  about  ten  diplomas  with  his 
words  of  wisdom  to  worried  commerce  majors  just  before 
exam  time?  .  .  .  and  how  Brother  Anthony  kept  claiming 
the  best  part  of  the  peanuts  to  be  the  "Hull" — could  it  be 
Ann?  .  .  .  and  how  some  of  our  young  politicians  con- 
tinued their  "kissing"  tactics  even  when  girls  weren't 
around?  .  .  .  Dave  Strain  with  his  "day  at  the  races"  sport 
coat,  straining  to  get  at  a  date  called  Loretta  .  .  .  the  sus- 
picion among  the  brothers  about  the  way  Brothers  Diffen- 
dal,  Ettenger,  and  Lewis  ran  the  "Diff  diner"  snack  shop? 
.  .  .  how  Ruben  Ford  always  locked  the  door  of  the  alumni 
room  when  with  a  miss  .  .  .  how  last  year  Brother  Burgwyn 
raised  a  "Barrier"  between  himself  and  Judy  .  .  .  and  how 
we  wondered  about  the  funny  name  Holly  called  Cam  at 
the  dinner  table,  with  him  already  in  the  dog-house  over 
a  coed  .  .  .  those  wicked  poker  games,  with  Watt  usually 
the  winner  and  Jerry  deep  in  the  hole  .  .  .  how  Perce  Ashby 
swore  he  was  the  best  "A"  of  the  Anthony-Ashby  "Double 
A's,"  though  Ham  objected  to  the  whole  of  it  .  .  .  the  fun 
we  had  devising  torments  for  the  pledges  during  Hell 
Week  .  .  .  how  "Stupe"  Love  didn't  know  that  "sh"  meant 
quiet  .  .  .  and  how  we  asked  Brother  Long  which  he  pre- 
ferred, poker  or  the  bottle,  and  he  answered  yes,  Katie? 


';;.>.'""•'• 


348 


RHISP 


Anthony 

ASHBY 

Bailey 

BURGWYN 

Crawford 

Diffendal 

Dorsett 

Druitt 

Ettenger 

Ford 

Frazier 

Godwin 

Griesemer 

Griffin 

Guy 

Hall 

HOBBS 

HOGAN 

James 

Lewis 

Long,  F.  B.    '' 

Long,  W.  F. 

Love 

McCaskill 

McClintic 

Mitchell 

Moore 

MURCHISON 

Saunders 

Stokes 

Strain 

Suntheimer 

Wadsworth 

Watkins 

Webster 

White 

Wise 

Wright 

Yount,  J.  L. 

Yount,  J.  M. 

Faculty:  Oliver  Kelly  Cornwell,  Gwynne  Harris  Daggett,  Charles  Perry  Erickson, 
James  Gilbert  Evans,  Keener  Chapman  Frazer,  Fletcher  Melvin  Green,  Howard  Russell 
Ruse,  Dougald  MacMillan,  Gerald  Raleigh  McCarthy,  Atwell  Campbell  Mcintosh, 
Daniel  Allen  McPherson,  Floyd  Theodore  Siewart,  Thomas  James  Wilson,  Jr.,  Rex 
Shelton  Winslow. 

Law  School:    George  William  Shipp,  Jr.,  Clarence  Leroy  Shuping. 

Medical  School:   James  Evans  Davis,  John  Franklin  Lynch. 

Graduate  School:   George  Lee  Simpson,  Jr.,  Vincent  Brown  Wright. 

Seniors:  Marvin  Pope  Anthony,  Percy  Rudolph  Ashby,  Henry  King  Burgwyn, 
John  Walker  Diffendal,  Reuben  Ford,  Jeremiah  Deuel  Griesemer,  William  Ray  Frazier, 
Walter  Franklin  Long,  Fred  William  Love,  Cameron  Murchison,  Carl  Jacob  Suntheimer. 

Juniors:  Robert  Franklin  Druitt,  George  Pickard  Hogan,  Philip  Alston  Lewis, 
Forrest  Battle  Long,  William  Newton  McClintic,  Robert  Lee  Saunders,  William  Downing 
Watkins,  Robert  Maurice  Wise,  Sam  Martin  Wright. 

Sophomores:  Josiah  William  Bailey,  Harold  Davis  Cranford,  John  Dewey  Dorsett, 
Robert  Lee  Ettenger,  III,  Elbert  Allen  Griffin,  William  Carrington  Guy,  Hanson  Chenney 
Hall,  Jr.,  Richard  Mendenhall  Hobbs,  Edwin  Samuel  James,  Robert  Gardner  Royce, 
David  Leroy  Strain,  Jr.,  Thomas  Johnston  Wadsworth,  William  Terrell  Webster,  Jr., 
James  Locke  Yount,  John  Milton  Yount. 

Pledges:  George  Walker  Blair,  Alan  Grayson  Bishop,  Daniel  S.  Bagley,  Harold 
Lacy  Godwin,  James  Taylor  Hogan,  Weldon  Huske  Jordan,  Leon  Isaac  McCaskill,  Henry 
Tomlinson  MacGill,  Blanton  Winship  Mills,  Richard  Evans  Mitchell,  Allen  Hoyt  Moore, 
Jr.,  James  Parrot  Parker,  William  Francis  Spurlin,  Henry  Merritt  Stenhouse,  T.  Lane 
Stokes,  James  Stark  White,  Jr. 


Alphn  Delhi  Chdptcr 
Estahhshcd  1879 


349 


BETA    THETA    PI 


President HuGH  Hole 

Vice-President Wilmer  Webb 

Secretary Thornton  Woodall 

Treasurer William  Felts 


z/e] 


ERE'S  our  gang  with  their  names  in  shmg:  "Little 
Old  Grandma"  Schenck,  "Spider"  Webb,  "Luke  Scraggs" 
Sager,  "Smihng  Worm"  Felts,  "Playmaker"  Hole,  "Boston 
Bob"  Wertheim,  "Chee-Chee"  White,  "Dr.  Pete"  William- 
son, Bob  (Artie  Cozartie)  Cozart,  "Cutie"  Stockton,  "Rev- 
erend" Richmond,  "Rossnick  the  Great"  Ross,  "Hose-nose" 
Sharkey,  "Sweets"  Woodall,  "Mr.  Pick"  Ryder,  "Smoothie" 
Soyars,  "Butter  Ball"  Reid,  "Mickey"  Rankin,  "Phi  Bete" 
Seeman,  "Hannibal"  Matthews,  "Georgie  -  Porgie "  Mat- 
thews, "Tack"  Davis,  "Squire-burns"  Davis,  "Moo-Higs" 
Cowhig,  "Pudgy"  Townsend,  "Governor"  Garland,  "Dan 
Garang"  Garen,  "Zeke"  Smith,  "Veronica"  Warwick, 
"Sonny  Boy"  Dunaway,  "HoUins"  Smith,  "Smiling  jack" 
Markham,  "Moon-face"  Davis,  "Fish"  Herr,  "Ottie"  Otte, 
"Black  Out"  Phinny,  "Jason-Faison"  Thomson,  "Buggie- 
Beater"  Early,  "Long  John"  Emerick,  "Personality  Kid" 
Thomas,  "Mush  Mouth"  Gray,  "Kentucky  Colonel"  Rey- 
nolds, "Poolie"  Whitlock,  "Deacon"  Bishopric,  Anny 
Brats"  John  and  Rex  Stoner,  "Safety-man"  Frazier,  "D.  C." 
Beavers,  and  "Jeep"  Holmes.  Any  mention  of  persons  liv- 
ing or  dead  is  purely  coincidental  and  not  subject  to  suit. 


350 


Bishopric           Cozart  Davis,  J.  F.        Davis,  L.  L.       Davis,  R.  S.            Early              Emerick              Felts  Frazier 

Garan                Gray  Herr                 Hole               Holmes           Markham        Matthews             Otte  Phinney 

Rankin                Reid  Reynolds            Ryder              Seeman         Smith,  E.  G.      Smith,  Z.T.  Soyars  Stockton 

Stoner,  J.  R.  Stoner,  R.  K.  Thomas       Thompson      Warwick          Webb         Wertheim     Whitlock  Williamson  Woodall 


Faculty:  Kent  James  Brown,  William  Lange,  Edwin  Shephard  Miller,  Robert 
Sharpe. 

Law  School:    James  Boyce  Garland,  Francis  Heazel,  Landon  Haynes  Roberts. 

Medical  School:  James  Rountree  CoUett,  James  Bourke  McDevitt,  Charles 
Humphries. 

Seniors:  Richard  Lawrence  Cowhig,  William  Lacy  Felts,  Hugh  Stanley  Hole, 
George  Edgar  Matthews,  Jr.,  David  Settle  Reid,  IH,  James  McCausland  Ross,  William 
Henry  Seeman,  Wilmer  Webb,  Richard  Allan  White,  Thornton  Sanders  Woodall. 

Juniors:  John  Franklin  Davis,  James  Eugene  Holmes,  John  Edward  Markham, 
Donald  Lee  Sager,  Eugene  Gray  Smith,  Jr.,  William  Benfield  Thomas. 

Sophomores:  Robert  Tombs  Cozart,  Jr.,  Lucian  Latham  Davis,  Rene  Sheldon 
Davis,  Daniel  Louis  Garan,  Byron  Hannibal  Matthews,  David  Holland  Rankin,  Charles 
David  Richmond,  Oliver  Allison  Ryder,  William  Lawrence  Sharkey,  Zachary  Taylor 
Smith,  William  Bernard  Soyars,  Jr.,  Robert  Gray  Stockton,  Benjamin  Oliver  Townsend, 
Walter  Robert  Wertheim,  William  Thomas  Williamson. 

Pledges:  Karl  Bishopric,  Jr.,  Howard  Yates  Dunaway,  Edwin  Early,  John  Jay 
Emerick,  Clifford  Frazier,  William  Emery  Gray,  William  Frantz  Herr,  Robert  Otte, 
Robert  Phinney,  Stephen  Reynolds,  John  Robert  Stoner,  Rex  Kirkland  Stoner,  Tulius 
Faison  Thomson,  James  Fisher  Warwick,  Coleman  Morrison  Whitlock,  Jr. 


EtiJ  Ckiphr 
Established  1832 


351 


CHI    OMEGA 


© 


President Ann  PriTON 

Vice-President Ellen  Hudson 

Secretary Virginia  Whipple 

Treasurer Charlotte  Shields 


O  you  remember: 

Rush  week,  a  duration  of  smiles  and  learning  names  and 
faces,  no  studying,  cute  girls  .  .  .  then,  the  super  pledge 
dance  ...  the  perpetual  and  inevitable  bull  sessions  'til  the 
wee  smalls  .  .  .  happy  faces  around  a  glowing  fire  .  .  .  the 
house  redecorated,  the  new  radio-vie  ...  the  "pop"  dances 
.  .  .  Sunday  night  coffees  .  .  .  those  sings  ...  the  Pan-Hell 
dance,  an  excellent  idea  ...  the  quartet  .  .  .  Woodhouse's 
giggle  ...  the  Christmas  party  ...  the  Duchess  .  .  .  break- 
fast in  bed  on  Sundays  .  .  .  our  annual  faculty  tea  .  .  . 
those  vows  to  turn  over  several  new  leaves  and  get  on  the 
books  .  .  .  excitement  over  initiation,  and  all  the  new  pins 
shining  around  .  .  .  study  hall  .  .  .  Jean  and  Diddy,  our 
claims  to  fame  .  .  .  Waffle,  the  sample  girl  .  .  .  Foo.  the 
meatball  .  .  .  those  fine  exchange  suppers  .  .  .  reception  for 
the  soldiers  .  .  .  our  dining  room  at  the  Inn  .  .  .  Do  you 
remember  1942,  Chi  Omega,  X  and  a  horseshoe  .  .  . 


f   §MML^.,/^']f^4*  |a^g»6ttimm 


xa 


'      ■   k    irtii^aifii^      Jl^M 


352 


Wtff^^ 


Anderson 

Bates 

Bragdon 

Brinkman 

Brittingham 

Broughton 

Charles 

Crosby 

Davis 

Dixon 

Edwards 

Felder 

Goodrich 

Gragg 

Hahn 

Hodges 

Hoover 

Hudson 

Klages 

Masengill 

McKenzie 

Milam 

Moss 

Munroe 

Peyton 

Rankin 

Shields 

Turner 

Umstead 

Watters 

Burton 


Carpenter 


Fitchett  Fox 

Jennings  Kelley 

MuRCHisoN  Murdoch 

Whipple  Woodhouse 


Graduates:  Barbara  Beeland,  Elizabeth  Blair,  Mary  Dick  Cannon,  Shirley  Chi- 
chester, Ann  Dawson,  Virginia  Hayes,  Elizabeth  Kellermann,  Genie  Loaring-Clark, 
Katherine  Wicker,  Isabelle  Wolf. 

Seniors:  Fairfax  Bates,  Ladye  Carpenter,  Katherine  Charles,  Ann  Crago,  Jayne 
Crosby,  Elizabeth  Eaton  Dixon,  Elizabeth  Philmore  Edwards,  Babs  Goodrich,  Elizabeth 
Gragg,  Jean  Hahn,  Annah  Gray  Hoover,  Ellen  Hudson,  Hortense  Kelley,  Jean  McKenzie. 
Ann  Peyton,  Virginia  Whipple,  Betty  Frost  Woodhouse. 

Juniors:  Mary  Ellen  Burton,  Carol  Fox,  Laura  Hodges,  Lydia  Munroe,  Frances 
Ravenel,  Charlotte  Shields,  Beverly  Thomas,  Marie  Watters. 

Pledges:  Sara  Anderson,  Dorothy  Bragdon,  Barbara  Brinkman,  Marian  Britting- 
ham, Helen  Broughton,  Ann  Carpenter,  Louise  Davis,  Betty  Felder,  Virginia  Fitchett, 
Randy  Jennings,  Virginia  Klages,  Mary  Elizabeth  Masengill,  Betsy  Lee  Mayverry,  Mary 
Louise  Milam,  Willye  Moss,  Marjorie  Murchison,  Delia  Murdoch,  Gladys  Rankin,  Mary 
Holcombe  Turner,  Nancy  Twitchell,  Sarah  Umstead. 


Epsilon  Bit!  Chapter 
Estciblishcd  1923 


353 


CHI    PHI 


President William  Jennings  Swink,  Wert  Rhvne 

Vice-President Robert  Forster,  John  Lindsay 

Secretary Wert  Rhvne,  Robert  Epple 

Treasurer RoGER  W.  King 


Tn 


HE  school  year  of  '4l-'42,  starting  out  with  twenty- 
two  pledges,  was  a  banner  year  for  Chi  Phi. 

Brother  Steve  Siddle  headed  one  of  the  best  enter- 
tainment committees  we've  ever  had,  while  Brother  Dono- 
van managed  some  darn  good  intra-mural  teams — most  of 
which  met  our  Duke  chapter.  After  showing  Duke  that 
Carohna  might  not  be  able  to  win,  but  sure  could  play 
football.  Brother  O'Hare  left  in  the  winter  quarter  to  join 
the  Army  Air  Corps.  Brothers  Epple  and  Shalett  did  their 
best  to  raise  our  scholastic  average  by  studying — well,  one 
night,  anyway.  And  all  of  us  downstairs  studying  for 
exams  together  was  more  fun  than  that  sort  of  thing 
usually  is. 

Brother  "Orson"  Grotz  and  Pledge  "Cecil  B."  Richards, 
respectively,  produced  and  directed  Sound  and  Fury's  Bag- 
dad Daddy — in  spite  of  Truth  and  Vicki.  Ex-Alpha  Swink 
politicked,  as  did  Pledge  Oles.  Brother  Smedberg  Yackety- 
Yacked,  while  Brother  Tepper  took  care  of  dates — every- 
body else's. 

It  was  a  swell  year  and  the  war  coming  when  it  did 
made  us  appreciate  it  even  more.  We  lived,  worked,  and 
grew  together  in  the  freedom  of  America,  with  the  eager- 
ness of  youth  and  under  a  fraternity  tradition  ancient  and 
honorable.  Here,  where  it  will  be  on  the  record,  one  and 
all  we  want  to  say:  "Thanks,  Dad!" 


354 


^iiyy!:^(P 


^'^^\ 


Allan 

Anderson 

Blackney 

Cooper 

DuNoVAN 

Epple 

i;sTA\EK 

Evarts 

Garrett 

Green 

Grotz 

Henderson 

Johnson 

King 

Lindsay 

Mills 

Moore 

Nelson 

OHare 

Oles 

Oliver 

Penny 

Pleuthner 

Prince 

Ralston 

Rathbone 

Rhyne 

Richards 

Roger 

Shalett 

Sheek 

Siddle 

Sibley 

Smedberg 

Smith 

SWINK 

Tepper 

Westover 

Whittington 

Willis 

Faculty:   Judge  Henry  Brandeis. 

Graduates:   Bruce  A.  Elmore,  Willis  A.  Sutton,  Jr. 

Seniors:  Charles  Thomas  Barker,  John  Porter  Cooper,  George  Grotz,  III,  Charles 
Stephen  Nelson,  Frank  Vincent  O'Hare,  John  Moultrie  Oliver,  James  Edward  Perry,  Jr., 
Wert  Baxter  Rhyne,  Frank  Kimbrough  Sheek,  Stephen  White  Siddle,  Jr.,  Rogers  Terrell 
Smith,  William  Jennings  Swink. 

Juniors:  Charles  Joseph  Donovan,  Roger  Wilkinson  King,  Glen  Richard  Penny, 
Harry  Griffith  Shalett. 

Sophomores:  William  McLees  Alexander,  Vincent  Howard  Anderson,  Mott  P. 
Blair,  Boyd  R.  Blackney,  Robert  Griffith  Evans  Epple,  George  Wrenn  Estaver,  Jr.,  Robert 
Mitchell  Forster,  Harvey  Harrison,  John  Weldon  Lindsay,  Henr)'  Dyer  Moore,  III, 
Robert  Warren  Pleuthner,  Donald  Neely  Ralston,  Robert  Vann  Richards,  George  Lester 
Rogers,  George  Andrew  Smedberg,  Kendall  Willis,  Norman  Tepper. 

Pledges:  John  Allan,  Lee  Arning,  James  Brittain,  Thad  Deihart,  Dale  Evarts,  James 
Fields,  Allen  Garrett,  Harold  Gibbs,  Paul  Green,  Jr.,  William  Henderson,  Edwin  John- 
son, Wayne  Kent,  Watson  Lawhorn,  Marion  Mills,  Donald  Moore,  Edmund  Oles,  John 
Prince,  John  Rathbone,  John  Sibley,  Ralston  Thomas,  Albert  Westover,  Richard  Whit- 
tington, James  Norris,  Peter  Stevens. 


Alpha  Alpha  Chapter 
Established  1838 


355 


CHI    PSI 


President JUN  Gugert 

Vice-President ROBERT  Heitzeberg 

Secretary Howard  Dawson 

Treasurer Cale   Burgess 


ciy^  I 


HUNDRED  and  one  years  of  Chi  Psi !  Yes,  and 
remember  the  Centennial  Convention  in  Schenectady  last 
spring — nineteen  of  us  there,  and  we  all  lived  like  princes. 
Then  the  house  parties  were  lots  of  fun  too,  needless  to  say. 
Wonder  where  Dick  Young  meets  all  those  beautiful 
women  he  has  ? 

Lettermen  Gwyn  Nowell  and  Jun  Gugert,  along  with 
John  Nicholls,  helped  bolster  Coach  Wolf's  forces  all  last 
autumn.  We  watched  Vic  Seixas  hit  those  tennis  balls  this 
spring,  and  think  maybe  he's  got  something  there.  It  might 
be  his  proficiency  with  those  tricky  card  tricks  that  helps 
him. 

We  really  miss  Bill  Neely  and  Ed  Keator,  two  of  the 
chosen  called  this  year  by  Uncle  Sam  from  among  our 
brothers.  But,  on  the  other  hand,  the  Chipsies  still  feel 
they  have  a  well-rounded  group  here,  hailing  from  Massa- 
chusetts to  Texas,  and  from  Montreal  and  Minnesota  to 
New  Orleans.  It's  the  juice  boy's  last  stop  out  here,  but 
we  feel  our  seclusion  tends  to  make  for  a  closer  living  and 
brotherhood  among  our  members. 


356 


Andrews  Blalock  Burgess               Call                Coolev               Davis  Eddy                 Evans  Ferguson 

GuGERT  Hood  Jump               Keator             Knight               Light  Lloyd  MacDowell  Marshall 

Meyer  Nicholson  Nicolls              Nolo              Nowell            OBrian  Odum                 Peet  Pollock 

Seixas  Shelton,  F.  Shelton,  J.           Sherwood              Tuttle  Wescott  Yarger  Young 


Faculty:  Robert  Erwin  Coker,  William  Chambers  Coker,  Arthur  Russel  HoUet, 
William  Gardner  Morgan,  Walter  Spearman,  George  Coffin  Taylor. 

Law  School:  Samuel  Richardson  Leager,  Wayne  Alexander  Fonvielle,  Ir.,  James 
Wardlaw  Perrin,  Jr. 

Seniors:  John  Allen  Eddy,  Francis  Albert  Gugert,  George  Wright  Meyer,  Alton 
Gwynne  Nowell,  Frederick  Page  Seymour. 

Juniors:  Thomas  Eliot  Andrews,  Cale  Knight  Burgess,  Jr.,  Joe  Carpenter  Davis, 
Robert  Miles  Heitzeberg,  Edward  Hollis  Keator,  Harold  William  Lloyd,  Taylor  O'Bryan, 
Frank  Wesley  Shelton,  James  Steck  Sherwood,  Clifford  Louis  Tuttle. 

Sophomores:  Julian  Harward  Blalock,  William  Olds  Cooley,  Howard  Athalone 
Dawson,  Jr.,  John  Miller  Ferguson,  Richard  Holmes  Knight,  John  Vinson  McDowell, 
Samuel  Timothy  Nicholson,  III,  John  DeZouche  Nicolls,  Stewart  Tait  Peet,  Spencer 
Edward  Pierce,  Richard  Heath  Pollock,  Terry  Frank  Yarger. 

Pledges:  Robert  James  Call,  Dale  B.  Evans,  Robert  Milton  Finehout,  Glen  Berg- 
fried  Haydon,  Thomas  Meehan  Hood,  Nelson  Byron  Jump,  Thomas  Stanley  Light, 
William  Penn  Marshall,  Frank  George  Moore,  Paul  Douglas  Nold,  Howard  Thomas 
Odum,  E.  Victor  Seixas,  James  Quinn  Shelton,  Severn  Teackle  Wallis,  IV,  Malvern  Paul 
Westcott,  Jr.,  Richard  Dawley  Young. 


m 


Sigma  Chapter 
Established  1835 


357 


v^.. 


■"►•—Itt-iS^  iB>         '*, 


DELTA    KAPPA    EPSILON 


[William  Peete 
President |  Richard  Kendrick 

[Cyrus  Hogue 

[Arthur  Jones 
Vice-President |  Robert  Davis 

[William  Peete 

{Harold  Maas 
James  Harrell 
Karl  Schwartz 
Treasurer Lemuel  Gibbons 


®. 


•eta  Chapter  of  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon  was  established 
on  the  CaroHna  campus  on  April  5,  1851,  the  first  frater- 
nity of  the  first  state  university  in  the  nation.  From  its 
earliest  days  on  the  Hill  the  Dekes  held  undisputed  leader- 
ship in  scholastic  and  social  activities;  but  in  I860  the  War 
Between  the  States  forced  the  fraternity  to  disband,  and 
of  its  103  living  members,  87  served  under  the  Confederate 
flag. 

The  University  was  long  in  recovering  from  the  effects 
of  the  War,  and  it  was  not  until  1887  that  DKE  reap- 
peared on  the  campus.  The  revived  chapter  set  to  work,  and 
was  soon  the  first  fraternal  group  in  the  state  to  own  a 
house. 

From  its  origin  DKE  has  done  its  best  to  serve  the 
campus,  from  whence  its  members  have  gone  forth  to  make 
names  for  themselves  throughout  the  State  and  the  South. 
The  goal  of  every  Deke  is  to  be  a  well-rounded  gentleman, 
and  in  this  development  the  chapter  seeks  to  combine  good 
fellowship,  genuine  scholarship,  and  campus  attainment. 
The  success  of  this  movement,  which  proclaims  DKE's 
preeminence,  has  been  embodied  in  the  lives  of  the  many 
prominent  members  who  have  been  outstanding  in  life  as 
Carolina  gentlemen  and  as  Dekes. 


358 


Blades  Boney  Bovce  Campbell 

Davis,  R.  Fil^zer  Gaul  Gibbons 

HOBBS,  T.  HOGUE  HOLLINGSHEAD  KeMP 

McMullan  Miller  Morton  Parker 

Rodman  Rutledge  Schwartz  Webb 


Carlton  Davant  Davenport  Davis,  J. 

Gregory  Griffin  Harrell  Hobbs,  H. 

Kendrick  Lord  Ly'on  Maa.ss 

Peete,  C  H.  Peete,  W.  P.  Pender  ReQua 

Whitner  Wideman  Young  Zollicoffer 


FACULTi':  William  Morton  Dey,  Frank  M.  Duffey,  William  L,  Fleming,  Rogers 
Dey  Whichard. 

Law  School:    Arthur  Cummings  Jones,  Jr. 

Medical  School:    Sydenham  Benoni  Alexander, 

Graduate  School:    Raymond  Otho  Linker. 

Seniors:  Blackwell  Brogden,  Eugene  Milburn  Davant,  Robert  Lang  Davis,  Truman 
McGill  Hobbs,  Cyrus  Dunlap  Hogue,  Richard  Leon  Kendrick,  William  Pettway  Jones 
Peete. 

Juniors:  Graham  Maxwell  Carlton,  Junius  Weeks  Davis,  Jr.,  Lemuel  Hardy  Gib- 
bons, Samuel  Huntington  Hobbs,  III,  Elmer  Percy  HoUingshead,  Hugh  MacRae  Morton, 
Donald  Planner  Patterson,  Camillus  Holliday  Rodman,  John  Baker  Saunders,  Karl 
Schwartz,  IH,  William  Caldwell  Young. 

Sophomores:  William  Benjamin  Blades,  James  Barrow  Boyce,  Stuart  Caldwell 
Campbell,  Mark  Alexander  Griffin,  James  Andrew  Harrell,  Richard  Fletcher  Kemp, 
Harold  Gustav  Maass,  Joseph  Teles  Miller,  Frederick  Reeves  Rutledge,  John  Denley 
Walker,  William  Robert  Webb. 

Pledges:  Sion  Alford  Boney,  William  Joseph  Davenport,  Thomas  Alonzo  Dill, 
Frank  Betts  Frazer,  John  Stuart  Gaul,  Charles  Alexander  Gregory,  Jr.,  William  Jabine,  II, 
William  Powell  Kemp,  Jr.,  William  Ancrum  Lord,  Muir  Paschall  Lyon,  James  Baugham 
McMullan,  Thomas  Lockett  Morton,  Francis  Iredell  Parker,  Charles  Henry  Peete,  Jr., 
John  Robert  Pender,  III,  Eugene  Minor  ReQua,  Frank  Ridley  Whitaker,  George  Crabtree 
Whitner,  Frank  James  Wideman,  Algernon  Augustus  Zollicoffer,  Jr. 


Beta  Chapter 
Estcihlishcd  1831 


359 


^  s  4      1^^  ^if^  ^? 


DELTA    PSI 


7^ 

^  HE  year  1941  will  be  long  remembered  in  the  annals 
of  St.  Anthony  Hall,  for  it  was  the  year  that  saw  the  Delta 
Psi  panzer  division  roar  to  the  aid  of  the  democracies. 
After  Selective  Service  had  chosen  those  of  us  who  were 
mentally,  morally,  and  physically  fit  to  pick  up  trash  at 
Fort  Bragg,  the  remainder  of  us  gathered  in  solemn  con- 
clave to  best  determine  our  future  plans  to  serve.  The  fol- 
lowing positions  were  created  and  filled:  A  night  patrol 
for  the  Arboretum  was  set  up  with  Pete  Childs  and  Jack 
Emack  gallantly  volunteering.  A  special  Malt-surplus  Re- 
duction Board  was  taken  over  by  Jesse  Nalle  and  Blizzard 
Laurens.  Ben  Taylor  decided  to  become  a  seventh-column- 
ist in  Mclver  Dorm,  truly  a  ticklish  assignment.  In  line 
with  general  war  economy,  Frank  Pilling  and  George  Pea- 
body  completely  gave  up  buying  cigarettes,  and  Erny  Jen- 
kins cut  himself  down  to  seven  suits  and  six  pairs  of  shoes. 
Russell  decided  he  would  serve  on  an  Army  Morale  Im- 
provement Board  and  sang  "You  are  My  Sunshine"  3,862 
times  in  one  U.S.O.  canteen.  By  unanimous  vote,  Barney 
was  appointed  Ambassador  Extraordinary  to  Chattanooga 
and  Pinehurst.  Skip  pooled  his  resources  and  became  a 
Naval  Radio  announcer,  broadcasting  risque  dramas  from 
a  wildcat  station  floating  on  Hogan's  lake.  Little  D  took 
it  upon  himself  to  see  that  Harry  shut  off  his  lights  every 
night,  even  if  it  required  a  six  hour  wait.  Dudley  under- 
took to  raise  funds  for  Bonds  by  continuous  operation  of 
a  black-jack  game  with  all  profits  over  99.5  per  cent  going 
to  the  government. 


360 


A  MOSS 

AWALT 

Barnard 

Boyd 

Branson 

Childs 

DURYEA 

Edens 

Emack 

Jones 

Laurens 

Lewis 

Mayorga,  a. 

Mayorga,  F. 

Nalle 

Packard 

Parmenter 

Peabody 

Pilling 

Ryan 

Singer 

SONNTAG 

Staples 

Taylor 

Torrey 

Faculty:    Herman  Walker  Schnell,  Harr)'  Kitsun  RusselL 

Seniors:  Charles  Everard  Childs,  Jr.,  Thomas  Russell  Edens,  Michael  Ernest  Jen- 
kins, Jr.,  Hamilton  Jones,  Arthur  Melville  Jordan,  Jr.,  Armando  Mayorga,  Fernando 
Mayorga,  Robert  Dutilh  Torrey. 

Juniors:  Henry  Gibson  Barnard,  Jr.,  Frank  Lanier  Branson,  Franklin  Davenport 
Laurens,  Jesse  Nalle,  IH,  George  Lee  Peabody. 

Sophomores:  Dudley  Moore  Amoss,  Francis  Gloyd  Await,  John  Beresford  Emack, 
Jr.,  Herman  Denckla  Packard,  Frank  Bachman  Pilling,  Norman  Appleton  Staples,  Ben- 
jamin Loyall  Taylor. 

Pledges:  James  Boyd,  Jr.,  David  Darby  Duryea,  George  Burnet  Lewis,  Derek 
Choate  Parmenter,  George  Benedict  Ryan,  Alain  Raunay  Singer,  Grant  Diack  Inverdale 
Small,  Robert  Evans  Sonntag. 


Xi  CkiphT 
Established  1834 


361 


KAPPA    ALPHA 


President J.  Emmett  Sebrell 

Vice-President George  A.  Foote 

Secretary HoLLEY  Mack  Bell 

Treasurer John  Church 


s. 


IXTIETH  anniversary  year  for  Kappa  Alpha  opens 
with  successful  pledging  of  sixteen  to  further  the  good 
works  of  the  Order  on  our  campus  .  .  .  anniversary  noted 
officially  with  banquet  and  reception  during  Duke-Carolina 
week-end  .  .  .  Homecoming  finds  us  feverishly  completing 
display  as  alumni  give  us  the  once-over  .  .  .  KA's  perpetual 
open  house  on  week-ends  draws  usual  round  of  guests  who 
have  their  own  guests  .  .  .  Brother  Sam  Peace  of  Hender- 
son inspires  chapter  with  his  address  at  pledge  banquet  .  .  . 
"Song  Bird  of  the  South"  Dixon  whistles  his  way  into  Phi 
Bete  .  .  .  KA's  from  Duke,  Wake  Forest,  State,  and  Carolina 
vie  for  inter-chapter  football  trophy  .  .  .  every  state  from 
New  York  to  Florida  represented  in  the  chapter  .  .  .  effi- 
ciency expert  H.  M.  Bell  and  "Mouthpiece"  Cobb  shouting 
accusations  at  "Executive"  Sebrell  who  spends  too  many 
week-ends  at  Sweet  Briar  ...  our  intramural  teams  meet 
with  defeat  on  all  sides  .  .  .  The  Calhouns  "oppin'  in  a 
big  way  or  not  at  all"  .  .  .  "Driving  John"  Gribbin  forsakes 
his  motorcycle  for  more  conventional  car  .  .  .  Seifert  mis- 
takes biggest  tree  in  county  for  main  road  .  .  .  Gregory  and 
Bounds  attempt  at  better  relations  between  Duke  and  Caro- 
lina with  Margaret  and  Nanny  Lou  .  .  .  winter  quarter 
highlighted  by  fire  as  Dutch  throws  his  belongings  out  of 
window,  Urquhart  packs  up  to  leave,  and  Ricks  sits  calmly 
through  it  all  .  .  . 


362 


Bell.  H.  M. 

Bell,  R.  S. 

Biggs 

Calhoun.  P. 

Calhoun,  W. 

Church 

Cobb 

Crawford 

Dixon 

Feild 

FOOTE 

Gilbert 

Gregory,  H. 

Gregory,  Q. 

Gribbin 

HOSKINS 

Humphries 

Huntley 

Jacocks 

Johnson,  A.  S. 

Johnson,  W.  S. 

Johnston 

Masengill 

MCGOOGAN 

McLean 

Musgrove 

Page 

Parker 

Filler 

Sebrell 

Seifert 

Shearin 

Sherrin.  M.  a. 

Shuping 

Swain 

Tisdale 

Todd 

Urquhart 

Van  Kirk 

Wyche 

Faculty:   Joseph  Gregoire  deRoulhac  Hamilton,  Edgar  Wallace  Knight. 

Medical  School:  Brice  Templeton  Dickson,  Thomas  S.  Perrin,  Earle  Anthony 
Hamrick,  Jr.,  William  Henry  Shull. 

Law  School:   Thomas  Williams  Mason  Long,  Jr. 

Graduate  School:   John  William  Nowell,  Thomas  Stanford  Tutwiler. 

Seniors:  Howard  Vincent  Bounds,  Jr.,  William  Cozart  Calhoun,  John  Trammel 
Church,  Arthur  Wilson  Dixon,  George  Anderson  Foote,  John  Hawkins  Gribbin,  Frank 
Lawrence  Hoskins,  Arthur  Winston  Jacocks,  Edward  Graham  McGoogan,  Joseph  Emmett 
Sebrell,  David  Walter  Seifert,  Jr.,  Marshall  Boyce  Sherrin. 

Juniors:  Holley  Mack  Bell,  Richard  Samuel  Bell,  Charles  William  Bradshaw, 
Quentin  Gregory,  Jr.,  Walter  Calhoun  Humphreys,  George  Browne  Johnston,  Robert 
Newton  Page,  III,  Stephen  John  Filler,  Jr.,  Hampton  Shuping,  Burges  Urquhart,  Gordon 
Vincent  Wyche. 

Sophomores:  Robert  Barry  Clark,  William  Borden  Cobb,  Jr.,  Albert  Sidney  John- 
son, Robert  Musgrove,  Malcolm  Andrew  Sherrin,  Alfred  Edmund  Tisdale,  Mart  Walter 
Van  Kirk. 

Pledges:  Walter  Leak  Biggs,  Patrick  Calhoun,  William  Collins  Cody,  William 
Turple  Crawford,  Jr.,  Alexander  Littlejohn  Feild,  Jr.,  Edwin  Haynes  Gregory,  Eugene 
Thomas  Gilbert,  Courtney  Alexander  Huntley,  William  Sebrell  Johnson,  Calvin  Chalmer 
McLean,  David  Waugh  Masengill,  George  Rollin  Parker,  John  Daniel  Shearin,  Robert 
Stewart,  Jr.,  George  Thomas  Swain,  Jr.,  Kenneth  Julian  Todd. 


Upsilon  Ckiptcr 
Established  1881 


363 


"^^^t 


KAPPA    PSI 


President J.  D.  Williams,  Jr. 

Vice-President William  Thomas  Boone 

Secretary-Treasurer Bernard  Otis  Lockhart 

House  Manager Robert  Lewis  Irwin 


K. 


>  APPA  Psi  Pharmaceutical  fraternity  was  founded 
at  the  Medical  College  of  Virginia  on  December  15,  1879. 
The  organization  was  the  first  Greek-letter  society  estab- 
lished in  the  colleges  of  Pharmacy  in  the  United  States.  It 
is  the  one  and  only  strictly  Pharmaceutical  fraternity  which 
limits  its  chapters  to  colleges  of  Pharmacy  holding  mem- 
bership in  the  American  Association  of  Colleges  of  Phar- 
macy. 

This,  the  Beta  Xi  chapter,  was  established  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  in  1915,  embodying  the  follow- 
ing charter  members:  Dean  J.  G.  Beard,  R.  A.  McDuffie, 
E.  D.  Kyser,  R.  H.  Andrews,  J.  L.  Beach,  F.  N.  Patterson, 
R.  H.  Mann,  and  G.  G.  Blackwelder. 

Kappa  Psi  since  its  origin,  has  sought  to  attain  the  highest 
ideals  in  the  profession  of  Pharmacy,  and  surrounds  its 
members  in  an  atmosphere  of  companionship,  congeniality, 
and  integrity. 


364 


Allen  Ausburn  Beavans                          Iiuone                            Britt                             Estes 

Fearing  Henley  Irwin                           Knight                        Lockhart                    McDowell 

McLean  Morton  Pickard                         Seaborn                           Tart                         Thornton 

Taylor  Viall  Whitehead  Williams  Wood 


Seniors:  Bernard  Otis  Lockhart,  Alton  Lee  McLean,  John  Thornton,  J.  D.  Wil- 
liams, Jr.,  Sherrod  N.  Wood. 

Juniors;  Harry  Hampton  Allen,  Joseph  William  Ausburn,  Samuel  C.  Beavans, 
Grady  Harold  Britt,  William  Thomas  Boone,  Michael  Lawson  Borders,  John  Tanner}' 
Henley,  Robert  Louis  Irwin,  Jefferson  Franklyn  Pickard,  Paul  Edwin  Tart,  Jefferson  D. 
Whitehead,  IIL 

Sophomores:  Joseph  C.  Estes,  Jr.,  Edward  Hines  Knight,  Norfleet  Owen  McDowell, 
William  Alexander  Morton,  William  Taylor,  Wesley  Robert  Viall. 


Betel  Xi  Chapter 
Established  1915 


Freshmen:    Brainard  Monroe  Burrus,  Malcolm  Keith  Fearing,  Jr.,  Robert  Haw- 
thorne Seaborn. 


365 


4TJ 


\v,  '~^  Th 


KAPPA    SIGMA 


President James  Taylor  Vernon 

Vice-Piesideni Robert  Long 

Secretary Joseph  Alexander  Leslie 

Treasurer A.  Hewitt  Rose 


■I.  HESE  Kappa  Sigs  ...  on  week-ends,  the  house  usually 
looks  like  either  U.S.O.  headquarters  or  a  branch  of  W.C. 
You'll  find  Brother  Henry,  Alpha  Mu's  ebony-hued  Major 
Dome,  over  eighty  and  still  spryer  than  a  freshman,  waiting 
there  to  greet  you.  You'll  meet  Mrs.  Ross,  the  gracious 
chapter  mother  whose  loving  care  makes  the  place  a  real 
home. 

These  Kappa  Sigs  .  .  .  members  are  encouraged  to  follow 
the  time-honored  tradition  of  being  BMOC's,  and  they 
point  with  pride  to  grid  stars  Faircloth,  Sigler,  Le  Blanc, 
and  Serlich;  Carolina  Mag  tycoon,  Jack  Holland;  German 
Club  Fuhrer,  Taylor  Vernon;  Basketball  captain.  Bob  Rose; 
Sound  and  Fury  director,  Ben  Hall;  Baseball  captain,  Bo 
Reynolds;  Graham  Memorial  attache.  Bill  Alexander;  Golf 
Captain,  Shooky  Neese;  and  Dance  Committeemen  Rose, 
Taylor,  Reynolds,  and  Alexander. 

These  Kappa  Sigs  .  .  .  drop  in  for  supper  some  night 
(make  it  Tuesday — it  gives  steak  and  Miss  Agnes'  home- 
made rolls)  and  you're  apt  to  hear  Buddy-ro  Gregg  en- 
thusing over  his  Jane,  Billy  Webb  telling  Tar  Heel  gossip, 
Lan  Donnell  asking  if  you  want  your  potatoes,  Mr.  Mercer 
Parrott  discussing  his  symptoms.  Shindy  Norman  whinny- 
ing, Ferris  Stout  defending  the  damnyankees,  and  Haskell 
Porcher  griping. 

These  Kappa  Sigs  .  .  .  they're  quite  a  bunch. 


366 


Alexander 

Batchelor 

Bennett 

Brown 

Bulluck 

Cowan 

Dalton 

Donnell 

Faircloth 

Green 

Gregg 

Hall 

Harvey 

Holland 

Johnson 

Leslie 

Long,  G. 

Long,  R. 

May 

McKenzie 

LeBlanc 

Mewborn 

Neaves 

Neese 

Parrott 

Paschal 

Philpott 

Porcher 

Powell 

Reavis 

Reynolds 

Rose,  H. 

Rose,  R. 

Shields 

Shugart 

SiGLER 

Stout 

Taylor 

Williams 

Wright 

Faculty:  J.  G.  Beard,  William  D.  Carmichael,  Jr.,  Sam  T.  Emory,  Robert  A. 
Fetzer,  H.  B.  Gotaas,  M.  P.  Jacobs,  Sturgis  E.  Leavitt,  John  Morris,  Marcus  Cicero  S. 
Noble,  Fred  Harris,  George  Shepard,  Edward  J.  Woodhouse. 

Law  School:  William  Anderson  Allen,  Jr.,  Douglas  deVane  Batchelor,  Frank 
Petty  Holton,  Jr.,  Noel  Robert  Seymour  Woodhouse. 

Medical  School:    Robert  Ernest  Sumner. 

Graduate  School:   Cecil  William  Wooten,  Jr. 

Seniors:  William  Cress  Alexander,  Boyce  Albert  Brawley,  Sam  Spoch  Dalton, 
Drewry  Lanier  Donnell,  William  Holt  Faircloth,  Smilie  Alexander  Gregg,  Henry  Craig 
Harrelson,  James  Burwell  Holland,  James  Francis  Lalanne,  George  Deaver  Long,  Robert 
Long,  Richard  Alvis  May,  Henry  Wade  Reynolds,  Jr.,  A.  Hewitt  Rose,  Robert  Lloyd 
Rose,  Isaac  Montrose  Taylor,  James  Taylor  Vernon. 

Juniors:  Bert  Lester  Bennett,  Jasper  Dillard  Bulluck,  Jr.,  Benjamin  Mortimer  Hall, 
C.  Felix  Harvey,  IH,  Joseph  Alexander  Leslie,  III,  Charles  Mitchell  Neaves,  Lawrence 
Erwin  Neese,  William  Haskell  Porcher,  Jr.,  Richard  Tatum  Shugart,  William  Montague 
Sigler,  Jr.,  Livingston  Vernon. 

Sophomores:  William  Franklin  Brown,  Jr.,  Robert  Henry  Cowan,  Jr.,  James  Ver- 
non Johnson,  Leo  Joseph  LeBlanc,  Hubert  Julian  Philpott,  Mercer  Cranor  Parrott,  Jr., 
Carol  Whidbee  Powell.  Jr.,  William  Graham  Reavis,  Robert  John  Shields,  Ferris  Meigs 
Stout. 

Pledges:  Ira  William  Baity,  Jr.,  Charles  Baker,  William  Boone,  Littleton  Jay 
Bunch,  William  Calvin  Campbell,  Jr.,  Francis  Rogers  Dixson,  Haywood  Alexander 
Faircloth,  Steve  Henery  Fowler,  Fred  Smith  Green,  Herman  Hall,  William  Stephenson 
Halsey,  Jr.,  James  Hunter,  John  Kendrick,  William  Roberts  McKenzie,  William  Cassie 
Mercer,  Ned  Mewborn,  Fred  Norman,  Tames  Green  Paschal,  Daniel  Harris  Rogers, 
George  Kluttz  Sills,  Alfred  Decatur  Ward',  Charles  William  Webb,  Edwin  Julius  Wells, 
Robert  Johnston  Williams,  Edgar  Adolf  Wohlford,  Joel  Wright. 


Alpha  Mil  Chiptcr 
Established  1893 


367 


LAMBDA    CHI    ALPHA 


Preside?!! Jamhs  Mitchener 

Vice-President Roy  Thompson 

Secretary Philip  Clegg 

Treasurer David  Ashburn 


s, 


EEN  and  heard  around  the  house:  Doug  and  Mary 
studying  in  the  library  .  .  .  Eddie  with  a  Pepsi  Cola  bottle 
.  .  .  W.  David  loudly  lamenting  over  the  morning  paper 
.  .  .  Letters  to  Jimmy  with  the  Greensboro  postmark  .  .  . 
Phil  with  his  camera  .  .  .  Pledges  avoiding  work  .  .  .  George 
spouting  poetry  .  .  .  Hamp  and  Tommy  talking  all  night 
.  .  .  "Shorty"  Clawson  calling  Durham  .  .  .  Greyard,  see  no 
evil,  hear  no  evil,  speak  no  evil  .  .  .  Haldeman  singing  in 
the  shower  .  .  .  "Scrapiron"  and  Margie  .  .  .  Charlie  playing 
bridge  according  to  his  Hotel  System  .  .  .  Len  studying 
.  .  .  Dam.nyankee  Unroe  on  the  way  to  the  airport  .  .  . 
Wesley  going  to  important  meetings  .  .  .  Bill  always  leaving 
town. 

Highlights  of  the  year:  Doug's  superb  playing  after  the 
State  game  .  .  .  Monthly  banquets  .  .  .  Sober  Pledge  dance, 
Carolina  precedent  .  .  .  House  party  in  January  made  per- 
fect by  girls  from  Meredith,  Duke,  Woman's  College,  and 
UNC  .  .  .  Yes  period. 


368 


ASHBURN 

Clawson 

Clegg 

Conrad 

DE  NOOYER 

Gartrell 

Greyard 

Haldeman 

Marsh 

Hasten 

MiNGES 

MiTCHENER 

Mosquera 

Short 

Thompson 

Faculty:   Franklin  Carl  Erickson,  Carl  Hartley  Fussier,  Arnold  Kinsey  King,  Albert 
Ray  Newsome,  Rupert  Bayless  Vance,  John  Caldwell  McCampbell. 

Graduate  School:    George  Harper,  Leslie  Addison. 

Seniors:     Robert   Cecil   Haldeman,   James   Lewis  Masten,   Edwin   Lester   Minges, 
Llewellyn  Hampton  Short. 

Juniors:   Warren  David  Ashburn,  Philip  Hatfield  Clegg,  William  Douglas  Conrad, 
Thomas  S.  Greyard,  James  Robert  Unroe. 


Gciniiihi  Nil  Zrfci  Cbciph'i' 


Sophomores:    James  Waddell  Mitchener,  Lee  Roy  Thompson,  William  Walker  EstclhU^locd  1922 

Smoak. 

Pledges:   Leonard  de  Nooyer,  Wade  Clawson,  Thomas  B.  Duckett,  Charles  Monroe 
Gartrell,  Wesley  Marsh,  Luis  Mosquera. 


369 


PHI    ALPHA 


President Irvin  Fleishman 

Vice-President Morton   Petuske 

Secretary Stuart  Cahn 

Treasurer Ralph  Stollmack 


T, 


HI  Alpha  this  year  is  enjoying  the  most  successful  of 
its  thirteen  years  on  the  Carolina  campus.  Socially,  scho- 
lastically,  and  athletically  we  are  setting  a  new  high  for 
future  Phi  Alphans  to  shoot  at. 

Situated  this  year  atop  the  McCauley  Street  hill,  Phi 
Alpha  boasts  the  largest  membership  and  pledge  class  in 
its  history.  A  well-rounded  brotherhood  has  always  been 
our  aim,  and  this  year  it  has  been  attained. 

Socially  speaking,  the  feature  of  our  annual  fall  house- 
party  was  a  formal  in  the  softly-lighted  Carolina  Inn  ball- 
room to  the  music  of  the  Carolinians.  Dim  lights,  sweet 
music,  beautiful  imports — an  event  that  no  Phi  Alphan  will 
ever  forget.  The  winter  house-party  followed  the  tradition 
of  past  social  successes. 

Making  fullest  use  of  the  facilities  of  our  newly-acquired 
dining  room,  many  faculty  members  were  our  guests.  They 
had  a  chance  to  enjoy  our  hospitality,  and  we  had  the  en- 
joyment of  their  leadership  in  vigorous  discussions  of  sub- 
jects from  Sex  to  Socrates. 

Phi  Alphans  are  active  in  varsity  and  intramural  athletics, 
publications,  class  affairs,  and  numerous  miscellaneous 
groups.  We're  proud  of  this  year's  bunch  of  boys.  Those 
who  follow  them  will  find  their  shoes  hard  to  fill. 


370 


Arnel  Atran  Cahn  Copen  Eanet  Fleishman,  H.  Fleishman,  I. 

Gleicher  Goldberg  Goldfarb  Gottlieb  Grossner  Herman  Hurwitz 

Jones  Josephs  Kanter  Levine  Morris  Perlberg  Petuske,  H. 

Petuske,  M.  Shafer  Shelkoff  Whitman  Willar  Yuder 


Seniors:     Irvin   Fleishman,  Maurice  Kanter,   Morton   I.   Petuske,   Rufus  Shelkoff, 
Ralph  H.  Stollmack,  Abe  Willar. 

Juniors:    Donald  B.   Atran,   Leonard  Copen,   Lee  Levine,   Robert  L.   Lippmann, 
Haskell  B.  Gleicher,  Herbert  Perlberg,  Leon  Schafer. 


Sophomores:  Stuart  G.  Cahn,  Irving  Herman,  Seymour  Goldberg,  Harvey 
Whitman. 

Pledges:  Arthur  L.  Aaronson,  Robert  Arnel,  Martin  Ackerman,  Myron  L,  Eanet, 
Herbert  Fleishman,  Jerome  C.  Goldfarb,  Robert  Gottlieb,  Alan  L.  Grossner,  Jerome 
Hurwitz,  Robert  A.  Jones,  David  Josephs,  Leonard  S.  Morris,  Henry  Petuske,  Paul 
M.  Yuder. 


Oincgil  Chapter 
Established  1928 


371 


PHI    DELTA    CHI 


President Herbert  Scoggin 

Vice-President Harry  Tee 

Secretary John  Terrell 

House  Manager William  Sheffield 


ey2N( 


lNOTHER  year  has  rolled  around,  the  last  at  Caro- 
lina for  eleven  of  the  boys  who  lived,  studied,  and  played 
together  for  over  three  years.  There's  Biggs,  baldish  and 
plump  after  years  at  school;  Sheffield,  the  lanky  Yankee 
without  a  home;  Simmons,  who  gave  us  plenty  of  laughs; 
Scoggin,  "Smoothie  Hube"  we  called  him;  Tee,  "Tubby" 
for  short  and  the  card  sharp  of  the  crew;  Greene,  P.D.C.'s 
gift  to  the  band  and  the  coeds;  McAdams  with  the  blue 
suit  and  dungaries;  Terrell,  who  traveled  thither  and  yon 
in  his  installment  plan  station  wagon;  King,  who  com- 
muted from  W.C. ;  Pethel,  who  had  a  lot  of  interest  in  the 
"Campus";  and  last,  but  far  from  least,  old  Pres.  McGowan, 
the  cosmopolitan  from  Hyde  Count}'.  Don't  let  us  forget 
McKnight,  Matthews,  and  McCrimmon  who  were  also 
with  us  for  this  last  year. 

There  is  also  Fred,  Louis,  Ralph,  Mac,  Maggie,  and  all 
the  rest  who  will  be  here  another  year  to  carry  on  for  better 
or  for  worse. 


372 


Beddingfield 

LilOGS 

Canad-i 

CoCHK^\NE 

Dees 

Gilbert 

Greene 

Hege 

Herring 

House 

Johnson 

King 

Lanier 

Matthews 

McAdams 

McCrimmon 

MCGOWAN 

McKnight 

ONeal 

Pethel 

SCOGGIN 

Sessoms 

Sheffield 

Shields 

Simmons 

Teague 

Tee 

Terrell 

Faculti':    Dr.  J.  E.  Adams. 


Seniors:  John  Waller  Smallwood  Biggs,  Frank  Arthur  Greene,  Jr.,  Alfred  Hen- 
derson King,  Robert  Leon  Lineberry,  David  Foy  McGowan,  Jack  Webster  McAdams, 
Raymond  Eugene  Pethel,  Herbert  Palmer  Scoggin,  William  Johnson  Sheffield,  Foster  Joel 
Simmons,  Harry  Cleveland  Tee,  John  Arthur  Terrell,  Jr. 

Juniors:  Fred  Dees,  Rufus  MacPhail  Herring,  Stuart  McGuire  Sessoms,  Clarence 
Louis  Shields. 

Pledges:  Edgar  Beddingfield,  Charles  Alvin  Brady,  William  Colfax  Brown,  Mervin 
Sharp  Canady,  George  Andrew  Cochrane,  Lacy  Earl  Gilbert,  Gerald  Dean  Hege,  Row- 
land Hill  Johnson,  William  Merritt  Jordon,  LeRoy  Lanier,  Joseph  House,  Jr.,  Otto 
Stevens  Matthews,  Dan  Grier  McCrimmon,  Leonia  Erastus  McKnight,  Alonzo  Eugene 
O'Neal,  James  Ralph  Teague. 


Alpha  Gamma  Chapter 
Established  1923 


373 


PHI    DELTA    THETA 


President Stfavart  Richardson 

Vke-Presideni Richard  Wharton 

Secretary Raymond  Willeford 

Treasurer Wade  Weatherford 


Tn 


HE  year  begins,  but  none  of  those  officers  we  elected 
last  year  are  back.  That's  right — they've  been  caught  in 
the  draft.  Brother  Richardson  takes  the  reins.  Then  rush- 
ing is  upon  us  as  Harward  and  Thomason,  baggy-eyed  and 
sleepy,  lead  us  through  the  best  rush  season  yet.  Pledge 
McKibben  Lane  elected  President  of  the  Freshman  class, 
and  Pledge  "Blimp"  Quinerly  taking  up  more  room  than 
any  other  three  men  .  .  .  "Second-drawer"  Crane  with  more 
woman  trouble  than  last  year  even  .  .  .  Brother  Ryan, 
ungodly  mass  of  protoplasm  and  pills  breakfasting  each 
morning  in  an  overcoat  .  .  .  Brother  Powers  torn  between 
managing  the  house  and  planning  one  of  his  own  .  .  . 
"Dipper-lip"  Kennedy  beating  his  gums  .  .  .  Beyer  and 
Pearson  making  us  more  social  conscious  with  bigger  and 
better  parties  and  coeds  all  over  the  place  .  .  .  and  then  the 
party  of  all  parties — the  Bowery  Ball  .  .  .  the  poker  club 
adjourning  in  time  for  breakfast,  and  sometimes  not  then. 
Maybe  Wharton  will  get  that  radio  fixed,  maybe  Geechie 
and  Cowdery  will  graduate.  Maybe  we  can  get  back  in 
school  next  quarter;  maybe  not.  But  it  has  still  been  a 
great  year. 


374 


fErmmm 


AVERA 

liAisEL 

Bennett 

Beyik 

liKUUKi; 

BVERS 

Corn 

COSLETT 

Crane 

Damtoft 

Feuchten- 
berger,  C. 

Feuchten- 
berger.  J. 

Godfrey 

Gunnels 

Hammond 

Hartshorn 

Harward 

Henderson 

Hix 

Hoke 

Jenkins 

Jones 

Lemmon 

Lewis 

Manning 

Merrill 

Ryan 

Ortland 

Pearson 

Powers 

Pritchett 

Richardson 

Sauer 

Savage 

Stevens 

Strayhorn 

Weatherford 

Wharton 

WlLLEFORD 

Woodman 

Faculty':  Alfred  Beerbaum,  I.  C.  Gritiin,  Jr.,  Thomas  Felix  Hickerson,  William 
Frederick  Prouty,  Roland  Brjxe  Parker,  James  Allen  Williams,  Pyke  Johnson. 

Law  School:    William  Ira  Ward,  Jr.,  John  Franklin  Shuford. 

Medical  School:   Orin  Watts  Booth,  John  Hamilton  Reed. 

Graduate  School:   Thomas  Taylor  Hammond,  Robert  Denny  Trace. 

Seniors;  Thomas  Arrington  Avera,  Hugh  Hammond  Bennett,  Jr.,  Charles  William 
Feuchtenberger,  Charles  Goodman  Jones,  Cowder)-  Kent  Merrill,  Robert  William  Powers, 
Stewart  Shaw  Richardson,  Richard  Lindsey  Wharton,  Raymond  Frederick  Willeford. 

Juniors:  Charles  Collins  Beyer,  II,  John  Andrew  Feuchtenberger,  Vernon  Judson 
Harward,  Jr.,  Robert  Lee  Hoke,  Gamewell  Alexander  Lemmon,  William  Hoadly  Merrill, 
William  Wallace  Pearson,  Noland  Haynes  Ryan,  Byron  Grant  Sherman,  Dan  Richardson 
Thomason,  Duncan  Devane  Walker. 

Sophomores:  Stuart  Oliver  Baesel,  John  Welbourne  Byers,  Lovick  Pierce  Corn, 
Edward  Coslett,  Hal  Parsons  Crane,  Jr.,  Paul  Vernon  Godfrey,  George  Denman  Ham- 
mond, Edwin  Stephen  Hartshorn,  Arthur  Irwin  Henderson,  Jr.,  Samuel  Bowman  Wheeler 
Kennedy,  Henrj'  Ortland,  Hugh  Alston  Palmer,  James  Turner  Pritchett,  Jr.,  Robert 
William  Sauer,  Wade  S.  Weatherford,  Jr.,  Stuart  Cramer  Woodman. 

Pledges:  Moulton  Lee  Adams,  John  Lucas  Armistead,  Jr.,  Swade  Emmett  Barbour, 
Jr.,  Richard  Thomas  Brooke,  Walter  Lawrence  Cahall,  Walter  Atkinson  Damtoft,  Court- 
ney David  Egerton,  Jr.,  William  Robert  Evans,  Winston  Gunnells,  George  William 
Henderson,  Jr.,  Herbert  Harley  Hix,  Charles  Walker  Jenkins,  Richard  Anthony  Kimbel, 
McKibben  Lane,  Jr.,  John  Sheldon  Lewis,  Carlton  Lindsey,  Jr.,  Andrew  Manning,  Mark 
Cooper  Pope,  Charles  Blount  Quinerly,  Philip  DeLeon  Robbins,  William  Fowler  Robey, 
Carl  Preston  Savage,  Jr.,  William  Deward  Stevens,  Ralph  Nichols  Strayhorn,  |r..  Bayard 
Taylor  VanHecke,  David  Samuel  Ward,  John  David  Wells. 


N.  C  BcLi  Chapter 
EstMiihcd  1885 


375 


%  '^-  r&    r^-'^  rm  fB  tin 


,fit^  (^ 


Ji&lJ S" 


PHI    GAMMA    DELTA 


President Robert  Hutchison 

Secretary Joseph  King 

Treasurer Allen  Headlee 

Historian Allan  Webb 

Recording  Secretary Bickett  Idol 


7/0 


[OMER,"  "Satan,"  Slaughter's  prayers 
Martin's  red-hot  love  affairs, 
"Rafter  Rats,"  King  Al  the  first, 
"Crusher"  Morley,  Andrews'  thirst, 
"Moose"  and  "Kiski,"  Phil  and  Steele, 
"Big  train"  Idol's  sex  appeal, 
"Big  Black  Rufe"  and  double  talk, 
"Straggler"  slowed  down  to  a  walk, 
"Touchdown"  Parsley,  Pinky's  fame, 
Hutch  unerring  in  his  aim, 
Marie  and  Margie,  love  so  true, 
Mehaffey  courtin'  Wine  and  Blue, 
"Phi"  as  tired  as  tired  can  be, 
Wilhelmina's  family  tree, 
"The  Brain"  with  music  sweet  and  hot, 
Ray,  "Loueller,"  Punjab's  trot, 
"Jason,"  war's  all-deafening  cry, 
"A  toast"  as  we  go  forth  to  die, 
"The  Deacon,"  "Tick,"  and  wimmin  dear. 
To  bask  in  woo-room  atmosphere, 
"The  Gipper,"  Joe  and  "ten  words  more,  " 
White  stars  and  songs,  red  heads  galore. 
All  these  of  Royal  Purple  hue. 
Brethren  all  of  '42. 


376 


Anderson 

Andrews 

Bean 

Bourne 

Cash 

Chambers 

Elliot 

Elmore 

Evans 

Headlee 

HOBBS 

Hocker 

Hussey 

Hutchison 

Idol 

Johnson 

Jordan 

Kimball 

Lane 

Martin 

McCUEN 

McLean 

Mehaffey 

Monroe 

MORLEY 

Nicholson 

Noneman 

Oliver 

Owens 

Parsley 

RUFFIN 

Simmons 

Slaughter 

Smith 

Snyder 

Titchener 

Van  Wagoner 

Webb,  A. 

Webb,  H.  D. 

Wilkinson 

Faculty:  James  Bel!  Bullitt,  John  Warfield  Huddle,  Ernest  Lloyd  Mackie,  A.  W. 
Pierpont,  Sterling  Aubrey  Stoudemire. 

Seniors:  Leon  Polk  Andrews,  John  Drew  Elliot,  Charles  Allen  Headlee,  Charles 
Edward  Hussey,  Robert  Stuart  Hutchison,  Jr.,  Clarence  Bickett  Idol,  Joseph  Gilbert  King, 
William  T.  Martin,  Jr.,  Walter  Linton  Parsley,  Clarence  Lee  Ruffin,  Allan  Wright  Webb, 
Homer  Dansby  Webb,  Jr. 

Juniors:  Charles  Columbus  Bean,  John  Robert  Bourne,  William  Edward  Elmore, 
Jr.,  James  Irvin  Groome,  Jr.,  Bradford  Forbes  McCuen,  Robert  Johnstone  McLean,  Wil- 
liam Chambers  Mehaffey,  Jr.,  Edward  Hallet  Morley,  Donnell  Gilliam  Nicholson,  Ray- 
mond William  Owens,  Jr.,  Ben  McLellan  Snyder,  III,  John  Richmond  Van  Wagoner, 
Jack  Russell  Wilkinson,  Jr. 

Sophomores:  William  Irvin  Anderson,  Milton  Blair  Cash,  Jr.,  Marshall  Chambers, 
Thomas  Cartter  Evans,  Russell  Franklin  Hall,  Jr.,  Graham  Kerr  Hobbs,  Jr.,  Chester  Earl 
Hocker,  Jr.,  Oscar  Wallace  Lane,  Morris  Carmichael  Lumpkin,  John  Howard  Monroe, 
Jack  Watson  Noneman,  James  Upton  Oliver,  John  Collins  Paty,  Jr.,  Paul  Franklin  Sim- 
mons, Julius  Clarence  Smith,  III,  John  David  Titchener,  Raymond  Clifton  Turrentine,  Jr. 

Pledges:  DeWitt  Ray  Austin,  Jr.,  Marion  Clebon  Barbee,  Jr.,  Robert  E.  Bencini, 
Jr.,  Kenneth  Clark  Blodgett,  Alvin  Charles  Bush,  Julius  R.  Creech,  Gene  Moore  Cush- 
man,  James  Lawrence  Hutton,  Jr.,  Lawrence  Johnson,  Raymond  Arthur  Jordan,  Richard 
Price  Lawrence,  Gip  Isiah  Kimisall,  John  Small  Neblett,  Steele  Munroe  Roberts,  Herbert 
Philip  Schmidt,  Joshua  Hamner  Slaughter,  Charles  Ansel  Snow,  Benjamin  Wimberley 
Trueblood,  William  M.  Wilson,  Marion  Avant  Woodbury. 


Epsilon  Chapter 
EstMished  1851 


377 


PHI    KAPPA    SIGMA 


President Charles  Pyle 

Vice-President Robert  George 

Secretary John  Stedman 

Treasurer DouGLAS  West 


<:, 


'AMBDA  of  Phi  Kappa  Sigma  had  one  of  its  most 
enjoyable  and  useful  years  with  several  outstanding  events 
taking  place. 

Lambda  Lite  (the  first  chapter  publication)  was  pub- 
lished. The  annual  pledge  banquet  was  held  at  the  Carolina 
Inn.  Guest  speakers  were  Dr.  I.  H.  Manning,  Dr.  English 
Bagby,  and  our  chapter  visitor,  Mr.  J.  M.  Lear.  The  pledge 
dance  followed  a  week  later,  featuring  the  orchestra  of 
Ted  Ross.  In  December  the  annual  Christmas  party  was 
held,  and  during  the  holidays  Brother  Dick  Carter  was 
married.  In  February  the  Executive  Board  of  Phi  Kappa 
Sigma  met  in  Chapel  Hill.  The  following  week-end  found 
us  enjoying  a  most  delightful  Winter  house-party  and  our 
own  dances.  The  Alumni  Reunion  was  held  and  then  came 
the  "never  to  be  forgotten"  Spring  house-party. 

Mrs.  Andrews,  the  chapter's  house  mother,  added  that 
extra  touch  to  all  our  social  events.  All  in  all  we  enjoyed 
ourselves  this  year. 


378 


AsHBY  Barrington  Beaman                     Bland 

Council  Davis  Deal                     Garrison 

HuBER  King  Lackey           Montgomery           Nelson 

Simmons  Stedman  Stillwell            Suddreth               Tandy 


BosT  Bready  Byerly 

George  Gibbons  Henderson 

Newsome                Perrin  Pyle 

Taylor                  West  White 


Faculty:  John  Allcott,  English  Bagby,  Joseph  Merritt  Lear,  Isaac  Hall  Manning, 
Donald  Frazer  Martin,  Gregory  Lansing  Paine,  Samuel  Seldon,  Robert  Howard  Sherrill. 

Graduate  School:   Richard  Sieck. 

Seniors:  Robert  Edward  Ashby,  Jr.,  Joseph  Hill  Barrington,  Heywood  Gilbert 
Bland,  Richard  C.  Carter,  Robert  Allen  George,  James  Baugh  Mallory,  Robert  Wilkinson 
Montgomery,  William  Woodrow  Montgomery,  III,  Charles  Gidea  Pyle,  Douglas  Hailing 
West. 

Juniors:  Guy  Lee  Byerly,  Jr.,  Richard  Stough  DuRant,  Harold  John  Huber,  Miles 
Smith  King,  Vernon  Horace  Lackey,  Jr.,  Henry  Clay  Newsome,  John  Wilson  Sachs,  James 
Henry  Stillwell,  Robert  Preston  White,  Jr. 

Sophomores:  Mike  Comer  Buss,  Edgar  Lee  Council,  Edwin  Thornly  Deal,  David 
Allen  Garrison,  Andrew  Joseph  Gibbons,  William  Thomas  Henderson,  Lee  Stratford 
Johnston,  Robert  Arthur  Nelson,  James  Quincy  Perrin,  Joseph  Alexander  Stedman. 

Pledges:  Oliver  Beaman,  John  David  Bready,  Jr.,  Charles  Carroll  Bost,  George 
Lance  Davis,  William  Henry  Hippie,  John  Henry  Milner,  John  Newton  Membrino, 
Robert  Earle  Simmons,  F.  Willis  Suddreth,  John  Hargreaves  Tandy,  James  Landon 
Taylor,  William  B.  Beery,  Sterling  Hudson. 


Lamhda  Chapter 
Established  1856 


379 


PI    BETA    PHI 


President Jane  Durning 

Vice-President Eleanor  Ham 

Secretary Mar\-  Gu-i'  Boyd 

Treasurer Cornelia  Clark 


ey3  E 


BRILLIANT  year  for  the  Pi  Phi's  what  with  Jean's 
and  Helen's  gold  and  plaid  room,  red  paint  all  over  the 
third  floor — even  a  telephone  that  turned  red.  A  musical 
year,  too,  with  the  quartet  of  Kayser,  Harrison,  Lupton,  and 
Hartt  greeting  the  world  at  7:30  every  morning.  Inciden- 
tally, it  was  a  talented  year — Pi  loaned  Jane  his  trained 
fleas,  and  Cornelia  did  a  beautiful  balancing  act.  Guy  made 
the  year  exciting  by  blowing  a  fuse  every  time  she  ironed, 
Eleanor  made  it  surprising  as  a  "wholesale"  fashion  plate, 
and  Dot  made  it  picturesque  with  rolls  and  rolls  of  film 
no  one  ever  saw.  Last  of  all  it  was  a  crowded  year  with 
eleven  Pi  Phi's  piled  in  one  blue  car  every  morning  at  «:30. 


380 


mm 


Angel  Archer  Booth  Booker  Boyd  Caldwell         Campbell  Clark 


Cobb 


Dean  Durning            French  Ham  Hamblen  Harrison  Holmes  Hartt                Hood 

Jackson  Kayser             Knight  Leffler              Logan  Lupton  MacKay  Mason  McCaskill 

McDoNOUGH  McHaney  Mebane  Miller               Nash  Newsome  Pollard  Sandefer  Sherwood 

Slager  Smith  Smithyman  Soule  Summerlin  Sutton  Taylor  Thompson  Venable 


Graduates:    Phyllis  Campbell,  Ray  Jordon. 

Actives:  Ann  Angel,  Julia  Booker,  Mary  Guy  Boyd,  Mary  Caldwell,  Cornelia 
Clark,  Elizabeth  Dean,  Judy  Duke,  Jane  Durning,  Eleanor  Ham,  Virginia  Harrison,  Jane 
Hartt,  Mary  Cleland  Holmes,  Dorothy  Jackson,  Elizabeth  Keesee,  Janet  Kayser,  Jane 
Knight,  Elizabeth  Lefler,  Louise  Lupton,  Helen  MacKay,  Eleanor  Mason,  Millicent 
McKendry,  Mary  Elizabeth  Nash,  Jennie  Wells  Newsome,  Mary  Alyce  Pollard,  Jean 
Sherwood,  Eleanor  Soule,  Sara  Summerlin,  Boots  Thompson. 

Transfers:  Ruth  Ellis,  Ruth  Luster,  Dorothy  B.  Riviere,  Elizah>eth  Rogers,  Letha 
Slager,  Mary  Smith,  Elizabeth  Sterchi,  Jean  Stewart. 

Pledges:  Ann  Archer,  Elizabeth  Booker,  Patricia  Booth,  Margaret  Campbell,  Mary 
Martha  Cobb,  Roberta  Dortch,  Jennie  Clark  French,  Connie  Grigsby,  Audrey  Hamblin, 
Amy  Heard,  Jinnette  Hood,  Nancy  Jefferis,  Imogene  King,  Ardis  Kipp,  Jacquelin  Laird, 
Deborah  Lewis,  Harriet  Lindner,  Alice  Logan,  Mary  Jane  McCaskill,  Jane  McDonough, 
Betty  Ann  McHaney,  Julia  Mebane,  Patricia  Ann  Miller,  Marylyn  Sandefer,  Ann  Schaut, 
Holly  Smith,  Joan  Smithyman,  Sarah  Sutton,  Jayne  Taylor,  Grace  Venable. 


N.  C  Alpki  Chapter 
Established  1923 


381 


PI    KAPPA    ALPHA 


President John  Torrey  Riel 

Vice-President William  Cobb  Bullock 

Secretary Robert  Gordon  Quincy 

Treasurer HuRST  BuNN  Hatch,  Jr. 


0, 


H,  what  a  year  it  was,  when  .  .  .  Duke  beat  Carolina  in 
football  and  the  whole  chapter  donned  overalls  .  .  .  Hatch 
broke  an  arm  on  the  intramural  field  .  .  .  that  Caterpillar 
tractor  was  parked  in  the  front  yard  ...  the  president's 
headquarters  were  shifted  to  Stem  .  .  .  "Brother  John" 
Pecora  ran  the  Richmond  kickoff  for  a  touchdown  .  .  . 
Temple  and  Davey  precipitated  crises  .  .  .  Kennedy  hit  the 
big  time  with  a  new  campus  band  .  .  .  Taylor  and  Field 
began  a  long  hibernation  in  their  darkroom  .  .  .  "Bird  Dog" 
Quincy  called  Betty  Grable  in  Hollywood  .  .  .  pledges 
fought  for  the  privilege  of  answering  the  telephone  .  .  . 
Sloan  made  that  three-point  landing  one  day  .  .  .  "Shot" 
made  unofficial  claim  to  the  "number  one  jitterbug"  crown 
.  .  .  Higdon  punched  his  way  into  politics  .  .  .  the  seniors 
began  to  realize  that  Uncle  Sam  was  going  to  be  their 
future  employer  .  .  .  Yes,  it  was  all  fine,  and  the  drawbacks 
. — "c'est  la  guerre." 


382 


AiRD 

Alley 

Arbes 

Bell 

Brown 

BOGASSE 

Bolling 

Bullock 

Capel 

Clark 

Cox 

Davey 

Edwards 

Field 

Greathouse 

Griffin 

Harshaw 

Hatch 

Hicks 

HiGDON 

Jard 

Jones 

Kennedy 

Lee 

Masten 

Neal 

Pecora 

RiEL 

QUINCY 

Sloan 

Stone 

Streetman 

Taylor 

Te 

mple 

TOULOUPAS 

Turner 

Waters 

Whit 

EHEART        Wood 

WARD 

Faculty:   John  Erwin  Carroll,  S.  B.  Knight. 

Law  School:    Charlton  Ellerbe  Huntley,  David  Harrison  Armstrong. 

Graduate  School:    Abram  Benjamin  Jackson. 

Seniors:  Charles  Lee  Ball,  Jr.,  William  Cobb  Bullock,  Jr.,  William  Leonard  Davey, 
Jr.,  Rowland  Bellamy  Kennedy,  Jr.,  John  Torrey  Riel,  Charles  Henry  Sloan,  Jr. 

Juniors:   Hurst  Bunn  Hatch,  Jr.,  John  Louis  Pecora,  Robert  Estes  Whitten. 

Sophomores:  Lyman  Clayton  Higdon,  Percy  Raymond  Masten,  III,  Robert  Gordon 
Quincy,  William  Raymond  Taylor,  Jr.,  John  Hulett  Temple,  Norman  Brant  Waters, 
William  Hayne  Woodward. 

Pledges:  Robert  Alexander  Aird,  Jr.,  Robert  Crawford  Alley,  Samuel  Arbes,  Robert 
Henry  Bell,  Glenn  Edwards  Bogasse,  Harry  Edward  Boiling,  Robert  Frederick  Brown, 
Frank  Winfred  Capel,  Herbert  Mason  Clark,  Jr.,  James  Hugh  Cox,  Willis  Parham 
Edwards,  Robert  Worrall  Evans,  John  Howe  Field,  IH,  Quint  Eugene  Furr,  William 
Proctor  Greathouse,  Maurice  William  Griffin,  Moses  Richard  Harshaw,  Lewis  F.  Hicks, 
Lloyd  Marshall  Jard,  James  Winifred  Jones,  Permillas  Arter  Lee,  Jr.,  Charles  Kiersted 
MacDermut,  John  Hill  Neal,  William  Donald  Stone,  Robert  Smith  Streetman,  John 
Zacharias  Touloupas,  Robert  Craven  Turner,  Francis  Marion  Whiteheart,  Jr. 


Tiui  Chapter 
Established  1895 


383 


PI    LAMBDA    PHI 

Rex Whitlock  Lees 

ArchoH Marvin  Ostrowskv 

Keeper  of  Archwes Jackson  Dube 

Keeper  of  Exchequer Donald  Schlenger 


T. 


HERE'S  a  liberal  education  to  be  had  from  the 
"Lammy-Pies"  (as  the  girls  call  us) — though  not  much  is 
known  about  us  on  the  campus  except  perhaps  our  strong- 
hold on  the  swimming  team  and  irrepressible  Dube's  ac- 
tivities on  the  publications. 

Our  scholastic  and  athletic  standings  on  the  campus  will 
compare  with  any,  but  there's  a  varied  school  of  thought 
at  our  house: 

There's  "Swifty"  and  "Murphey"  to  set  the  styles 
There's  "Firpo"  and  "Doc"  to  shuffle  the  pack 
There's  "Hunt"  and  "Whit"  for  feminine  wiles 
There's  "Jason"  and  "Golb"  to  put  the  gals  back 
There's  "Bud"  and  Jackson  to  wax  esthetical 
There's  "Don"  and  "Bob"  to  keep  the  "reds"  out 
And  then  there's  the  neophytes — eager  and  learning  to 

"party" 
And  Gordon  to  lead  them  to  eminence — we  hope,  hale 

and  hearty  .  .  . 

The  boys  will  all  be  pitching  throughout  the  year  as 
they  have  in  the  past,  and  operations,  both  military  and 
otherwise,  will  find  the  Pilams  right  in  the  thick. 


384 


1  '^^^.  ^BiiS 

■     •      J'^  '^m   |-^  ^ 


Breakstone 

DUBE 

Gordon 

Greenberg 

Lees 

Lentz 

OSTROWSKY 

Rocker 

golby                         goldrich  goldstein 

Greenstein                       Imbrey  Jacobson 

Levy                            Lipman  Lubow 

Rosen                   Schlenger               Schwartz  Secher 


Faculty:    Dr.  Allen  Cornsweet  {Adviser) 

Seniors:   Irving  Gordon,  Whitlock  Lees,  Marvin  Ostrowsky,  Murray  Richard  Secher. 

Juniors:  Jackson  Elliott  Dube,  Morton  Herbert  Golby,  Howard  Imbrey,  Erwin 
Mack,  Donald  S.  Schlenger. 

Sophomores:  Jay  Greenberg,  Mervyn  David  Lentz,  Justin  Willard  Lipman,  Marvin 
David  Rosen,  Robert  Gerson  Schwartz,  Sylvan  Shapiro. 

Pledges:  Jacob  Karasik  Breakstone,  Lawrence  Goldrich,  Alfred  Robert  Goldstein, 
Lewis  Richard  Goodman,  Richard  Marvin  Greenstein,  Alfred  Morton  Jacobson,  Richard 
Kerner,  Frank  Le\7,  Oscar  Bernard  Lubow,  Jay  Irwin  Musler,  William  Bernard  Rocker. 


Omegci  Betel  Chapter 
Estabhshed  1938 


385 


SIGMA    ALPHA    EPSILON 


President  '^  Hundlev  Rankin  Cover 

)  Clayton  Moore 

Vn-e-Prestdent ^  Clayton  MoORE 

/  Charles  McKinney  Nice 

Secretary  |  ROBERT  McDavid  Smith 

^ (  Hugh  Hammond  DuBose 

Treasurer Henry  Plant  Osborne 


^. 


'IFE  with  the  "Sleep  and  Eat"  boys  and  never  a  dull 
moment — Brothers,  can  you  forget? — 

The  "K"  boy's  second-hand  furniture  dealings  .  .  .  all 
the  lamps  and  records  that  "Martin"  broke  .  .  .  that  un- 
earthly quiet  heard  every  night  on  the  third  floor  sleeping 
porch  and  those  collapsible  beds  .  .  .  Stony's  first  smile  as 
the  Frawg  is  drafted  .  .  .  Alex's  attempts  to  retire  the 
E.K.P.P.  trophy  .  .  .  "Juice  Boy  "  DuBose  and  Chester  build- 
ing their  biceps  with  the  Bonami  internal  tension  course 
.  .  .  Beau  Brummel  Barnes'  pea  green  coat  and  pansy  pink 
pants — and  his  women  troubles  .  .  .  those  wild  week-ends 
— with  Washington's  unsympathetic  policemen  .  .  .  and 
how  Bird  Dog  pointed  quail  on  the  Whitehouse  lawn. 
And  what  about  Brother  Osborne  exacting  his  pound  of 
flesh  ...  or  the  "Root"  talking  about  Myra  and  showing 
the  brothers  how  the  South  Georgia  boys  rolled  "big  dicks" 
and  "little  joe's"  ...  Dr.  Tillett  as  he  rushed  through  the 
house  on  the  way  to  another  meeting  .  .  .  Who's  Who 
McLendon  and  his  curly  locks  .  .  .  Preacher  Glenn's  little 
sermons  .  .  .  Brother  White  Boy"  Nice  and  his  midnight 
phone  calls  .  .  .  Turnipseed  with  that  well-known  gleam 
in  his  eye  .  .  .  Peck  crooning  "It  was  early  one  morning" 
.  .  .  Crawford,  West  House's  "Lord  Chesterfield"  .  .  . 
"Grandma"  Huber  and  his  radio  station  .  .  .  Brother  Gover 
doing  everybody  else's  work  .  .  the  "Moose"  and  his 
fatherly  advice  .  .  .  the  nights  we  stood  with  shoulder  firm 
to  shoulder  and  hand  fast  clasped  in  hand  .  .  . 


386 


i)iSM 


Barnes  Carr,  A. 

doeschler  dubose 

Hanes  Hodges 

Myrjck  Nice 

Smith,  W.  G.  Sprunt.  K. 


Carr,  R. 

Clark 

Crawford 

Croom 

Darden 

Dibrell 

Eshelman 

Garwes 

Glenn 

Cover 

Graham 

Gray 

HUBER 

Lockhart 

McLendon.  C. 

McLendon,  L.  P. 

Montague 

Moore 

Osborne 

Peck 

POWE 

Robinson 

RUMPH 

Saunders 

SWINDAL 

Thornton 

TiLLETT,  C. 

TiLLETT,  J. 

Whitcomb 

Wood,  W. 

Faculty:  George  Frederick  Horner,  Almont  Howell,  Edward  Mack,  Jr.,  Olin 
Terril  Mouzon,  George  Mowry,  William  Pierson,  Charles  Wettach. 

LA^X'  School:   Thomas  Samuel  Means,  Jr.,  Wallace  Carmichael  Murchison. 

Medical  School:   Hugh  Percival  Smith,  Jr. 

Graduate  School:   Allen  Johnston  Going. 

Seniors:  Aiden  Emmett  Barnes,  III,  Austin  Heaton  Carr,  William  Church  Croom, 
Jr.,  William  Moye  Darden,  Hundley  Rankin  Gover,  Frank  Borden  Hanes,  Lennox  Polk 
McLendon,  Jr.,  Clayton  Moore,  jr.,  Charles  McKinney  Nice,  Jr.,  William  Holladay 
Thornton,  Charles  Walter  Tillett,  IIL 

Juniors:  Hugh  Hammond  DuBose,  Henry  Martin  Garwes,  Jr.,  Robert  Strudwick 
Glenn,  Howard  Latham  Hodges,  Harry  Perryman  Horton,  Henry  Plant  Osborne,  Jr., 
James  Stevenson  Peck,  Dave  McKenzie  Rumph,  Robert  Mills  Saunders,  William  Gris- 
wold  Smith,  Kenneth  Murchison  Sprunt,  Frederick  LeRoy  Swindal. 

Sophomores:  James  Hector  Clark,  Robert  Hope  Crawford,  Richard  Doeschler, 
Frederick  Thompson  Dow,  Jr.,  John  Brownback  Eshelman,  Donald  Ray  Fuller,  Harrell 
Myers  Graham,  Bahnson  Gray,  Paul  Speer  Huber,  James  Alexander  Lockhart,  Charles 
Aycock  McLendon,  Edward  Knox  Powe,  IH,  John  Mosely  Robinson,  Jr.,  John  Tillett, 
Jr.,  Wilson  Perry  Turnipseed,  Lee  Peck  Whitcomb,  Alexander  Dickson  Wilson,  U,  John 
Dalziel  Wood,  William  Wade  Wood. 

Pledges:  Robert  Alpheus  Beeland,  III,  Ferrell  Leighton  Blount,  Judson  Hassell 
Blount,  Rufus  Tucker  Carr,  James  Fuller  Dibrell,  William  McKenzie  Forrester,  William 
Aiken  Griffin,  Percy  Warner  Mallison,  George  Elias  Nissen  Montague,  Albert  Myrick, 
Henry  Saunders,  Henry  Scholz,  Jr.,  Samuel  Nash  Sprunt,  Claude  Barbour  Strickland,  Jr., 
Burney  Simon  Warren,  George  Belton  Whitaker,  Benjamin  Heath. 


TV  C  Xi  Chapter 
Established  1857 


387 


'-■•ss^- 


SIGMA    CHI 


President Burton  Newell 

Vice-Preside;?t Robert  Carlan 

Secretary Robert  Vail 

Treasurer Frank  Payne 


^. 


Highlights  of  Sig  Sessions 


»USHING  got  us  off  with  a  "bang"  with  everyone 
doing  his  job  well.  A  swell  bunch  of  boys  came  in  and 
helped  us  a  lot,  especially  in  intramurals  (as  our  Beta 
friends  realize) . 

Fall  Germans  saw  the  brothers  and  pledges  alike  drag 
some  gorgeous  dames.  The  times  after  the  dances  with  the 
Freeman  and  Tucker  teams  in  seclusion,  the  Hollands' 
wolfery,  and  the  rest — oh  well !  Three  shots  for  a  cold  is 
two  and  a  half  too  many.    Ahem,  I  "wanda." 

Yes,  good  old  exams  and  a  week  of  rest.  Homeward 
bound  with  "Malcolm"  O'Neil.  Crash!  Too  bad.  Joe 
and  Ruby  did  get  there  though.  Was  New  York  as  nice 
as  Bob  and  Ed  said,  girls.'  So  the  army  wants  "Slick"; 
what  for — a  sentr)'  "post"? 

Briefs: 

It  is  rumored  that  "Bobo"  is  tied  down — How  long? 

What  great  "band"  on  the  campus  has  three  of  our  boys? 
J.  S.  of  course. 

"Willie"  is  down  "pat"  in  the  Georgia  league. 

It  is  "tongued"  that  "Bertie"  has  an  attraction  in  Raleigh. 


388 


Amateis 

Antolini 

Auburn 

AUTEN 

Bell 

Brooks 

BUGG 

Carlan 

Denning 

Freeman 

Garrity 

Gilbert 

Grant 

Hart 

Henninger 

Hicks 

Holland,  G. 

Holland,  S. 

Justice 

Knollman 

McCoy 

Monroe 

Nichols 

Nixon 

ONeal 

Payne 

Pence 

Petty 

Phillips 

Rantz 

Ryder 

Simpson,  P.  W. 

Simpson,  W.  B. 

Steel 

Swan 

Thomas 

Vail,  R. 

Vail,  W. 

Warren 

Wilson 

Faculty:  Herman  Glenn  Baity,  James  Logan  Godfrey,  Wesley  Critz  George, 
Frederick  Henry  Koch,  John  Wayne  Lasley,  Jr.,  Frederick  Bays  McCall,  Roland  Prince 
McClamrock,  Earl  Anderson  Slocum. 

Graduate  School:  William  Franklin  Dukes,  George  Webb  Plonk,  Waiter  Barron 
Withers. 

Seniors:  Frank  Ross  Justice,  Burton  Myron  Newell,  Jr.,  Benjamin  Carl  Parker, 
Paul  Warren  Simpson,  Jesse  Francis  Swan,  Cornelius  Dickson  Thomas,  Robert  Manning 
Vail. 

Juniors:  Edward  J.  Antolini,  Joseph  Jordan  Austin,  John  Rodger  Brooks,  Jr., 
Robert  Gordon  Carlan,  Townsend  Stanley  Holland,  Jr.,  James  Britt  Petty,  Warren  George 
Steel,  William  Charles  Vail. 

Sophomores:  Joseph  Willard  Bales,  John  Leslie  Bell,  Jr.,  Wade  Fulton  Denning, 
Jr.,  Richard  Walter  Freeman,  Robert  Eugene  Grant,  Griffin  Bryan  Holland,  Fred  Lee 
McCoy,  Jr.,  John  Bigelow  O'Neal,  Frank  Hannan  Payne,  Jr.,  Phillip  David  Pence, 
Robert  Herman  Rantz. 

Pledges:  Lawrence  Lewis  Amateis,  Roland  Paul  Amateis,  Walter  Joseph  Auburn, 
Jr.,  John  Alexander  Auten,  David  Herring  Beard,  William  Smithson  Bugg,  Harold 
Vincent  Garrity,  Neal  Ward  Gilbert,  James  Joseph  Hart,  J.  Baylor  Henninger,  William 
Donavon  Hicks,  Thomas  Spurgeon  Hughes,  Paul  Edwin  Knollman,  William  Galpin 
Monroe,  Henry  Langdon  Montgomery,  William  Nichols,  Charles  Christopher  Nixon,  Jr., 
William  Dillon  O'Shea,  Charles  Fuller  Phillips,  Jr.,  Arnold  Markham  Ryder,  William 
B.  Simpson,  Abel  McRae  Warren,  Hadley  Mcr5ee  Wilson. 


Alpki  Tiiu  Chiptcr 
Established  1889 


389 


SIGMA    NU 


President Dudley  Cocke 

Vice-President Benjamin  Park 

Secretary William  Stanback 

Treasurer Austin  Robbins 


s. 


NAKES  all  and  Snakes  forever 
Bound  tied  and  twisted  together 
Together  in  friendship  and  honor  are  we 
A  happier  crew  there  never  will  be 

There  is  Cocke,  Dunkle,  and  Forehand  too 
The  original  "nigger"  of  Sigma  Nu 

And  many  coats  of  many  colors  has  Loock 
But  to  the  coeds  a  prima-donna  fluke 

To  Joe  and  Austin,  the  Bingham  Boys, 
Accounting  and  finance  are  mental  toys 

"Rat-face"  Coxhead,  our  temperance  man 
A  gallant  lad — a  flash  in  the  pan 

"Flywheel"  Park  tolled  the  wedding  bell 
And  Hinkle's  meals  stink  like  hell 

The  pledges  are  a  husky  lot 

They  worship  the  actives — and  why  not? 

We  have  laughed,  loved,  worked,  and  played 
Dodged  Duke,  the  draft,  but  not  the  maid 

Proud  of  the  star  that  shines  for  Psi 
Our  love  for  Sigma  Nu  will  never  die. 


390 


Adams,  F. 

Adams.  R. 

Baden 

Beaudry 

Brown 

Byrum 

Call 

Carroll 

Chambliss 

Clark 

CCCKE 

COHOON 

Coxhead 

Crews 

Davis 

DUNKLE 

Efird 

Forehand 

Gold 

Harris 

HiNKLE 

James 

Johnson 

Jones,  J.  M. 

JOYNER 

Little 

LOOCK 

MCCOACH 

McNaughton 

Park 

Parker 

Phoenix 

Pless 

ROBBINS 

Sears 

Smith 

Stanback 

Stevens 

Wallace 

Wilson 

Faculty:  Millard  Breckenridge,  Edward  McGowan  Hedgepeth,  Archibald  Hender- 
son, John  Coriden  Lyons,  William  DeB.  MacNider,  Earle  Ewart  Peacock,  John  Brooks 
Woosley,  Trezevant  Player  Yeatman. 

Medical  School:  Frederick  Alexander  Blount,  John  Randolph  Chambliss,  Thomas 
Lynch  Murphy. 

Law  School:   Louis  Julian  Poisson,  Jr. 

Graduate  School:    Harry  Clay  Yeatman. 

Seniors:  Rayford  Kennedy  Adams,  Dudley  DuBose  Cocke,  George  Leavell  Cox- 
head, Harry  Newton  Dunkle,  Joseph  Bivens  Efird,  Edmund  Conger  Forehand,  North 
Smith  Hinkle,  William  Arthur  Loock,  Robert  Avery  McNaughton,  Benjamin  Franklin 
Park,  Charles  Austin  Robbins,  Stewart  Leigh  Wilson. 

Juniors:  Thomas  Benjamin  Baden,  Lattie  Hamer  Brown,  Jr.,  David  Russ  Carroll, 
Kenneth  W.  Currier,  Floyd  Edward  Cohoon,  Jr.,  Joseph  Harold  Conger,  Jr.,  Edwin 
Stuart  McCoach,  Jr.,  John  Raymond  Sears,  William  Charles  Stanback. 

Sophomores:  Frank  Elmer  Adams,  Peter  Thomas  Beaudry,  Thomas  Campbell 
Byrum,  Charles  Richard  Clark,  Robert  Alson  Crews,  Tyndall  Peacock  Harris,  Arthur 
Forbes  Joyner,  Robert  William  Little,  James  William  Pless,  III. 

Pledges:  Lee  Edward  Brown,  John  Philip  Call,  John  Owen  Davis,  Wade  Davis 
Edwards,  John  Ray  Efird,  Jr.,  Grafton  Clinton  Fanney,  William  Gassaway  Gaither,  Jr., 
Benjamin  Miller  Gold,  Robert  Lewis  Hoenshel,  Larry  Moore  James,  Jr.,  Rivers  Dunn 
Johnson,  Allen  Talmadge  Jones,  John  Meredith  Jones,  Robert  Copeland  Jones,  John 
Bryant  Kittrell,  Jr.,  Herbert  White  Lee,  Earl  Busbee  Pace,  Jr.,  Clyde  Leslie  Parker, 
Marshall  Joyner  Parker,  Julius  W.  Phoenix,  Joseph  Andrew  Smith,  Henry  Leonidas 
Stevens,  John  Powell  Wallace,  Charles  Alfred  Wallen,  William  Alfred  Winburn,  III, 
John  Weyher. 


Psi  Chipter 
Eskiblished  1888 


3  91 


{^  '%«,*,.-», 


TAU    EPSILON    PHI 


President Albert  Rose 

Vice-President Sylvan  Meyer 

Secretary Gerald  Cohen 

Treasurer Lester  Etter 


M'e  lads  of  Tuu  Ep  Infamy 
Possess  fraternal  symphony, 
Except  for  crossed  affaires  d'amour 
Our  house  is  joy  bedecked  and  pure. 

VjOSEMARY  Lane  .  .  .  Stan  to  High  Point  .  ,  .  Mar\ 
and  Bobby  .  .  .  Frankel,  dashing  .  .  .  Aces  up  with  Ulman- 
tics  .  .  .  Marder,  Orange  juice,  Shalleck,  Naval  boys  .  .  . 
General  Wisebram  .  .  .  Quinn,  the  "Jawja  Boy"  .  .  .  cow- 
boy Michaels  bull-dozing  .  .  .  Harris  jumping  from  one 
nervous  breakdown  to  another  .  .  .  Kalin,  Smooth 
Pearlman  in  the  hills  .  .  .  Meyer  jilted  by  the  jills  . 
Salzberg  and  Sweetbriar  .  .  .  Arner  and  Rose  resemble  a 
sister  act  .  .  .  Dicky  boy  brings  foundlings  home  .  .  . 
Schwartzes  blackball  anything  .  .  .  Goodman  and  the  ace 
of  spades  .  .  .  Kurtz,  the  Concord  genius  .  .  .  Dancing 
Arty  .  .  .  Waldo  from  Kwinsy  with  a  Phi  Bete  whimsy  .  .  . 
Young  and  pills  ...  no  one's  so  hot  as  Abelkop  .  .  . 
Friedlander's  got  a  good  one  in  the  fifth  .  .  .  Sarok  and 
Bud  and  Maplewood  .  .  .  Fedder,  Sarlin,  South  Carolina 
.  .  .  Legum  of  Norfolk  .  .  .  Nachamson  nee  Adam  .  .  . 
Reyner  and  Weinkle  with  a  political  twinkle  .  .  .  such  is 
TEP  at  216,  lean  and  hungry  ...  a  full  year  .  .  .  Coop  and 
Zim  off  to  the  wars  ...  so  shall  we  all. 

This  happens  on  Rosemary  Lane 
Transpired  on  T.E.P.  domain, 
When  our  affairs  we  do  confuse 
It's  simple — Etter  gets  the  dues  I 


392 


Abelkop  Arner         Bernstein,  R.  Bernstein.  W.        Cohen  Etter  Fedder  Frankel  Friedlander 

FucHS  Goodman  Harris  Kalin  Kaplan  Kurtz  Lavine  Legum  Marder 

Meyer  Michaels        Nachamson       Pearlman         Pestronk  Reyner  Rose  Sarlin  Salzberg 

Sarokin  Schwartz,  J.      Schwartz,  W.         Shalleck  Ulman  Waldfogel  Wisebram  Young 


Graduate  School:   Sidney  Cooper. 


Seniors:  Warren  Bernstein,  Gerald  Cohen,  Lester  Philip  Etter,  Stanley  Edward 
Fuchs,  Louis  Smith  Harris,  Edward  L.  Kalin,  David  Pearlman,  Albert  Rose,  Arnold 
Salzberg,  Morton  Bruce  Ulman. 

Juniors:  David  Michael  Arner,  Richard  Bernstein,  Edward  Michaels,  Sylvan  Hugh 
Meyer,  William  Schwartz. 

Sophomores:  Ernie  Frankel,  Edward  Goodman,  Jack  Marvin  Kurtz,  Arthur  Eli 
Lavine,  Gerard  Marder,  Robert  Leonard  Rosenthal,  Marvin  Sands,  Charles  Shalleck, 
Joseph  Max  Schwartz,  Melvin  Waldfogel,  Leon  Young. 

Pledges:  Milton  Abelkop,  Ross  L.  Fedder,  Murray  N.  Friedlander,  Harold  Kaplan, 
Jr.,  Stanley  Legum,  William  Nachamson,  Joseph  Julius  Oringer,  Arnold  Pestronk,  Frank- 
lin Cooper  Reyner,  Ralph  F.  Sarlin,  Julian  Sarokin,  Harold  L  Weinkle,  J.  Henry 
Wisebram. 


Omega  Chapter 
Established  1924 


393 


ZETA    BETA    TAU 


President William  Schwartz 

Vice-President Raymond  Rosenbloom 

Secretary James  Loeb 

Treasurer Eugene  Munves 


/, 


T  all  began  with  a  big  greeting  ...  a  deep  silence  .  .  . 
and  then,  with  a  bang.  Rushing.  It  was  long  and  some- 
times humorous,  but  we  came  through  with  a  swell  bunch 
of  frosh. 

Didn't  see  much  of  Bill  Schwartz — he  got  ads  for  the 
D.T.H.  .  .  .  Ellis  Freedman  occupied  with  varsity  basket- 
ball .  .  .  Jim  Loeb  pecking  keys  for  the  Y-Y  or  recruiting 
frosh  for  that  C.P.U.  speech  .  .  .  Ray  Rosenbloom  being  a 
busy  stick-man  .  .  .  Howard  Cohn  managing  the  boxing 
squad  or  chasing  ads  for  T  an'  F  .  .  .  Lou  Rubinsohn  look- 
ing fine  in  that  band  uniform  .  .  .  Marshall  Solomon  has 
a  chem  lab  daily  as  his  extra-curricular. 

Captained  by  Syl  Stein,  the  intramural  football  team  went 
around  upsetting  all  the  undefeated  teams — but  to  no  avail. 
Freedman  made  all-campus  ...  we  won  the  dual-chapter 
cup  from  our  Duke  brothers. 

We  remember  when  Elliott  Smolen  broke  his  record  of 
never  going  to  Durham  .  .  .  when  we  had  our  Fifteenth 
Anniversary  Shin-dig  —  which  resembled  a  Hollywood 
House  party  .  .  .  when  "Bungi"  Munves  had  that  second 
beer  .  .  .  when  Joe  Rubenstone  experimented  in  Experimen- 
tals  .  .  .  when  the  Seniors  finally  got  that  sheep-skin.  See 
you  soon  again,  fellows.  It's  all  in  a  year,  a  swell  year  at 
that. 


394 


Block  Bluethenthal  Blumberg  Cohen  ((ihn  Freedman  Handel 

Levy,  A.  Levy,  R.  Loeb  Moses  Munves  Rich  Rosenbloom 

ROSSKAM  RUBENSTONE  RUBINSOHN  SCHWAB  SCHWARTZ  SiMS  SmOLEN 

Solomon  Stein  Strousse  Weill  Weintraub  Wheeler 


Seniors:  Ralph  Z.  Levy,  Eugene  Neal  Munves,  Raymond  Martin  Rosenbloom,  Wil- 
liam Schwartz,  Jr. 

Juniors:  Richard  Sol  Bloch,  Herman  Blumberg,  Howard  Cohn,  Sylvan  Paul 
Stein,  Marshall  Henry  Solomon,  Frank  Reginald  Wheeler. 

Sophomores:  Ellis  Lester  Freedman,  James  Lucien  Loeb,  Joseph  M.  Rubenstone, 
Louis  Benjamin  Rubinsohn,  Martin  Jay  Schwab,  Murray  Sims,  Elliott  Edwin  Smolen, 
David  Strousse. 

Pledges:  Arthur  Bluethenthal,  Joseph  Marshall  Cohen,  Richard  Michael  Handel, 
Alfred  Jaros  Le\7,  John  David  Moses,  Jr.,  Arthur  Donald  Rich,  Lester  Rosskam,  Charles 
Louis  Weill,  Jr.,  Richard  Weintraub. 


Alpki  Pi  Ckiptcr 
Estcibliskd  1927 


395 


i  /-u   iV" 


ZETA    PSI 


President John  Thorp,  William  Howard 

Vice-Presideiii William  Howard,  Henry  Hunter 

Secretary Alex  Davis,  George  Penick 

Treasurer Sam  Mordecai,  Harry  Weyher 


/ 


UNE  is  here,  and  once  again  from  our  "Circle"  of 
brotherhood  are  departing  the  group  that  formed  the  hub, 
the  focus,  the  revolving  force  of  destiny  of  the  Zeta  Psi. 
This  has  been  one  of  our  greatest  classes.  To  those  depart- 
ing, it  is  a  time  of  mingled  joys  and  sorrows,  but  through- 
out them  courses  the  silent  feeling  of  satisfaction  at  the 
record  they  leave  behind.  The  years  will  pass  swiftly,  but 
long  will  linger  on  the  memories  of  this  year.  We'll  never 
forget  our  quiet  and  competent  "Prez"  Taylor  of  Phi  Bete 
fame;  "the  guidmg  genius  of  the  Greeks"  —  "Lover" 
Thorp;  our  stellar  "Bass"  and  "Goop"  on  the  athletic 
fields;  those  two  unforgettable  roomies  —  "Stud"  and 
"Prof";  the  "Agitator"  and  his  "Zete  Beach"  parties;  the 
unpredictable  "Big  Shot" ;  and  Damon  and  Pythias  — 
"Boob"  and  "Ironpants";  "Damn  Yankee  Marty"  from 
Nao  Joisey;  and,  natcherly,  not  "Sass"  of  "O.L.H."  fame! 

Good  luck,  "stoogies,"  we're  gonna  miss  you! 


396 


^■^«K 


j^LlJ^ 


Adams 

Bass 

Boyle 

Bryan 

DORTCH 

Ellis 

Foreman 

Fuller 

Gilliam 

Graham 

Gravely 

Hackney 

Hill 

Howard.  L. 

Howard.  W. 

Hunter 

King 

KiTTRELL 

Long 

Martin 

McElroy 

Miller 

MORDECAI.  F. 

MORDECAI.  S. 

Palmer 

Parham 

Peel 

Penick 

Ragland 

Redfern 

Root 

Sasser 

Skinner,  C. 

Skinner.  T. 

Taylor 

Thorp,  J.  P. 

Thorp,  J.  D. 

Walston 

West 

White 

Faculty : 

Edward  Tankai 

:d  Brown. 

Law  School:   John  Kenyon  Wilson,  Jr. 

Medical  School:    Isaac  Clark  Wright. 

Seniors:  Marion  Miot  Fuller,  Jr.,  Curtis  William  Howard,  Jr.,  Harry  Little  Martin, 
Jr.,  Samuel  Fox  Mordecai,  Sumner  Malone  Parham,  William  Albert  Redfern,  Jr.,  John 
William  Sasser,  Nelson  Ferebee  Taylor,  James  Preston  Thorp,  John  Daniel  Thorp,  Hubert 
Cozart  Walston. 

Juniors:  George  Hackney  Adams,  Edward  Kedar  Bryan,  Alexander  Shuford  Davis, 
Hugh  Dortch,  Jr.,  Thomas  Francis  Ellis,  John  Wood  Foreman,  Lloyd  Lee  Gravely,  Jr., 
Henry  Blount  Hunter,  Jr.,  Robert  Gilliam  Kittrell,  Jr.,  Frank  Faison  Mordecai,  George 
Dial  Penick,  Marion  Jackson  Trotman,  Thomas  Anthony  Wadden,  Jr.,  Harry  Frederick 
Weyher. 

Sophomores:  F.  M.  Simmons  Andrews,  Spencer  Pippen  Bass,  Jr.,  Edwin  Boyle, 
John  Needham  Hackney,  Jr.,  Nathaniel  Maurice  Hill,  Jr.,  Lee  Johnson  Howard,  Francis 
Parker  King,  Willie  Jones  Long,  Richard  Cavanagh  McElroy,  John  Frank  Miller,  Jr., 
Elbert  Sidney  Peel,  Aldert  Swedes  Root,  Charles  Robertson  Skinner,  Jr.,  Thomas  Gregory 
Skinner,  Lee  Overman  Snow. 

Pledges:  Joseph  Edwin  Burke,  Jr.,  John  Henry  Daniel,  Jr.,  John  William  Davis, 
Sterling  Gary  Gilliam,  Joseph  Edwards  Green,  John  Washington  Graham,  Ernest  Deans 
Hackney,  Charles  Baird  Hunter,  William  Thomas  Joyner,  William  Gaston  Palmer, 
William  McKenzie  Ragland,  Lenoir  Gwyn  Shook,  Franklin  Eugene  Warren,  Clifton 
Forrest  West,  Jr.,  Sydnor  Montgomery  White,  Samuel  Pretlow  Winborne,  Winfield 
Augustus  Worth,  Robert  Babcock.  IH,  Charles  Baird  Hunter. 


UpsiJon  Chapter 
EstMishcd  1858 


397 


BEAUTY   QMEEXS 


// 


/ 


\ 


.I^«'- 


SELECTING 
THE  BEAUTIES 

J.  HIS  year  we  went  demo- 
cratic— every  dormitory,  frater- 
nity, and  sorority  on  the  campus 
was  asked  to  submit  a  picture 
for  the  contest.  Out  to  Los 
Angeles  and  under  die  scruti- 
nizing eye  of  our  "Ole  Profes- 
sor" Kay  Kyser  v.ent  some  forty 
beauties.  Here  are  the  ones 
selected. 


if^ 


B??'^*' 


.oV&^ 


evr.ergvr^- 


tue 


ec^Vor^-^, 


■J.006 


iot 


\oo6« 


tot 


20  -  ^,t;,.t..^-,v--^^^ 


ee 


^l^e 


-«i» 


SV»' 


.cet^' 


■S.o^e 


•      /^^*^ 


t^t^'^^''  ^^-^^"^  C«I°^^ 


'•  %%^^ 


*^ 


-k 


K 


fLdd 

Grimes 


L^ialre  L^ouni 


ounneu 

Charlotte,  N.  C. 


400 


Chi  Phi 


Washington,  D.  C. 


-k 


i66 


lljomtku     {/[/ebb 


^ 


Stacy 


Charlotte,  N.  C. 


402 


MJ 


C^tket  ^UJn6coii 


D.K.E. 


Scarsdale,  N.  Y. 


tV 


-k 


L66 


Sigma  Chi 


^awt  K^aidweil 


Cranford,  N.  J. 


404 


fcd5  £5euu  ll5aum.beme^ 

Kappa  Phi  Asheville,  N.  C. 


\ ; 


T^ 


^\ 


Spencer 


Greensboro,  N.  C. 


406 


Mclver 


e 


fn 


cJ^OLl    ^l 


utmiie 

Emporia,  Va. 


i 


MISS  EMILY  SMITHERS  ^^ 


The  STAFF 


MISS  VIRGINIA  BROOME 
408 


MISS  GRACE  WILLIAMS 


7^ 


MISS  NELL  STEVENS  MISS  PEGGY  PARSLEY 


^f^»-  ■- A 


SS  ELIZABETH  KELLERMANN 


FAVORITES 


MISS  EDA  LOEB 


MISS  ROSEMARY  HARWELL 


409 


/ 


/: 


// 


// 


// 


"13"  CLUB 


THOMAS  BENJAMIN  BADEN 

PRESIDENT 

FORREST  BATTLE  LONG 
SECRETARY-TREASURER 


F.  M.  SIMMONS  ANDREWS 

CHARLES  WILLIAM  BRADSHAW 

JOSIAH  BAILEY 

JOHN  RANDOLPH  CHAMBLISS 

JAMES  HUGH  COX 

DUDLEY  DuBOSE  COCKE 

FLOYD  EDWARD  COHOON,  JR. 

HAROLD  DAVIS  CRANFORD 

WILLIAM  TURPLE  CRAWFORD,  JR 

WILLIAM  CHURCH  CROOM 

HUGH  H,  DuBOSE 

JOHN  BERESFO^D  EMACK 

JOHN  WOOD  FOREMAN 

WILLIAM  CARRINGTON  GUY 

JOHN  N.  HACKNEY 

TYNDALL  PEACOCK  HARRIS 

PAUL  SPEER  HUBER 

COURTNEY  A.  HUNTLEY 

ROBERT  STUART  HUTCHISON 

ARTHUR  IRWIN  HENDERSON,  JR 

SAMUEL  BOUMAN  WHEELER  KENNEDY 

JOHN  FOX  KENDRICK 

BEVERLY  WALTER  LANDSTREET 

JOHN  FRANKLIN  LYNCH,  JR. 


RICHARD  CAVANAUGH  McELROY 
JOHN  HOWARD  MONROE 
THOMAS  LACY  MORROW 
JOHN  BIGELOW  O'NEAL 
FRANK  BACHMAN  PILLING 
EDWARD  KNOX  POWE,  1 1 1 
JOHN  WILLIAM  SASSER 
PAUL  FRANKLIN  SIMMONS 
EMMETT  SEBRELL 
BYRON  GRANT  SHERMAN 
WARREN  GEORGE  STEELE 
JESSE  FRANCIS  SWAN 
BENJAMIN  LOYALL  TAYLOR 
JOHN  HULETT  TEMPLE 
JOHN  D.  THORPE 
JOHNTILLETT,  JR. 
DONALD  FULLER  TORREY 
MARION  JACK  TROTMAN 
WILLIAM  CHARLES  VAIL 
RICHARD  JOHN  VAN  WAGONER  JR 
WILLIAM  DOWNING  WATKINS 
ALLAN  WRIGHT  WEBB 
WILLIAM  R  WEBB 
JACK  RUSSELL  WILKINSON,  JR. 


411 


ORDER  OF.  THE 


BERT  LESTER  BENNETT,  JR 

DAN  RICHARDSON  THOMASON 
QUENTIN  GREGORY,  JR 


WILLIAM  CRESS  ALEXANDER 
MARVIN  POPE  ANTHONY 
JOHN  LUCAS  ARMISTEAD 
HENRY  KING  BURGWYN 
EDWIN  BOYLE 

WILLIAM  FRANKLIN  BROWN 
PATRICK  CALHOUN 
c  ROBERT  HENRY  COWAN 
ROBERT  COZART,  J 
ROBERT  HOPE  CRAWFORD 
^ROBERT  LEE  ETTENGER,  ill   ' 
SgEORGE  ANDERSON  FOOTE 
'' W-LLOYD  LEE  GRAVELY,  JR. 
SMILIE  ALEXANDER  GREGG 
WINSTON  BANGS  GUNNELS 
HOWARD  LATHAM  HOD 


WILLIAM  NEWTON  McCLII^JIJ^ 
THOMAS  SAMUEL  MEANS     ^ 
CALVIN  BLACKWELL  MORRISETTE 
HUGH  MacRAE  MORTON 
CHARLES  MITCHELL  NEAVES 
ELBERT  SYDNEY  PEEL  ^ 

JAMES  PERRIN  QUARLES,  JR|  ; 
DAVE  McKENZIE  RUMPH 
FRED  REEVES  RUTLEDGE 
JOHN  MOSELEY  ROBINSON,: 
DAVID  WALTER  SEIFERT,  JR. 
ALFRED  EDMUND  TISDALE    .v , 
HUBERT  COZART  WALSTOW    ' 
fWILLIAM  THOMAS  WILLIAMSON 


ISAAC  CLARK  WRIGHT 


4l2 


ORDER  OF 

THE  MINATAURS 

OFFICERS 

ROBERT  FRANK  DALTON 

JOSEPH  HAROLD  CONGER 

ISAAC  MONTROSE  TAYLOR 


,  ...M.W.  H. 

.M.W.U. 

.B.T. 


ACTIVE  MEMBERS 

DAVID  RUSS  CARROLL 
JUNIUS  WEEKS  DAVIS 
EDMUND  CONGER  FOREHAND 
RICHARD  V^ALTER  FREEMAN 
FELIX  HARVEY 
FRANK  BORDEN  HANES 
HENRY  BLUNT  HUNTER 
ROBERT  KITTRELL 
HENRY  PLANT  OSBORNE 
BENJAMIN  FRANKLIN  PARK 
JAMES  McCAUSLAND  ROSS 
WILLIAM  HENRY  SEEMAN 
ROBERT  McDAVID  SMITH 
ROBERT  ERNEST  SUMNER 
JAMES  PRESTON  THORP 

HUTS 
THOMAS  CAMPBELL  BYRUM 
FRANCIS  PARKER  KING 
WILLIE  JONES  LONG,  JR. 
MERCER  CRANOR  PARROTT,  JR. 
WHIT  CAROL  POWELL 
DAVID  HOLLAND  RANKIN 
ROBERT  GRAY  STOCKTON 
ALEXANDER  DICKSON  WILSON 


413 


YKZ  WZPUPPAY  MALLGY 

VZASADS  JV  OYL 

KJL  FRACO  H 

VRAIVF 

KRLTQT 

VALMAR  LV 


RULERS 

574  FRANK  BORDEN   HANES 

570  JOHN   DANIEL  THORP 

571  WILLIAM  LUTHER  HAND 
569  CYRUS  DUNLAP  HOGUE,  JR. 
575  THOMAS  SAMUEL  MEANS 


SUBJECTS 


174  Archibald  Henderson 

241  Joseph  G.  deR.  Hamilton 

255  Frank  Porter  Graham 

315  Robert  W.  Wettach 

319  William  W.  Pierson 

328  Francis  F.  Bradshaw 

331   Thomas  Felix  Hickerson 

343  Dudley  DeWitt  Carroll 

349  William  Donald  Cormichael 

369  William  F.  Prouty 

373  Allen  Wilson  Hobbs 

385  Robert  Edwin  Coker 

405  Charles  S.  Mongum,  Jr. 

417  George  Coffin  Taylor 


439  J.  Penrose  Horland 

442  Robert  B.  House 

453  H.  G.  Baity 

468  Herman  Walker  Schneil 

490  Fletcher  Melvin  Green 

546  Horry  Russell 

572  Charles  Walter  Tillett,  III 

578  Truman  McGill  Hobbs 

579  William  Peete 

580  Arthur  Cummings  Jones,  Jr. 

581  Frank  Davenport  Laurens 

582  Isaac  Montrose  Taylor 

583  Henry  Plant  Osborne,  Jr. 

584  Robert  Strudwick  Glenn 


585  Thomas  Francis  Ellis 


^0rgon'0 


^4^Jf^  %^ 


AUSTIN  HEATON  CARR,JR. 

PRINCEPS 


JOHN  WALKER  DIFFEND^ 

QUAESTOR 


FACULTY  MEMBERS 

NICHOLSON  B.  ADAMS 
WALTER  R.  BERRYHILL 

JOHN  M.  BOOKER 

JAMES  B.  BULLITT 

R.  D.  W.  CONNOR 

WILLIAM  M.  DEY 

KEENER  C.  FRAZER 
LOUIS  GRAVES 


EDWARD  McG.  HEDGPETH 

URBAN  T.  HOLMES 

WILLIAM  deB.  MacNIDER 

DOUGALD  MocMILLAN 

ISAAC  H,  MANNING 

OLAND  McCLAMROCH 


JOHN  WOOD  FOREMAN 

HUNDLEY  RANKIN  GOVER 

C.  FELIX  HARVEY 

HOWARD  LATHAM  HO^'^'- 

■-''LL!P  ALSTON  ' 


STUDENT  MEMBE: 


CHARLES  MITCH r 
JAMES  McC.'"' 
DAVE  Mck 
NFLSO'^i  P 


THE  DAXCES 


i4/ja^  US' 


i  ^/j." 


n 


Alexander  Baden  I^  j  (  lay  Cahoon  Diffendal  Gambill 

Garland  Harris  Morgan  Reynolds  Rose  Sebrell 

Sessoms  Sparrow  Welborn  Whitner  Mackie  Russell  Schnell 


UNIVERSITY    DANCE    COMMITTEE 


X  N  addition  to  its  efficient  maintenance  of  order  at  all  University 
dances,  the  Dance  Committee  this  year  sponsored  two  progressive  steps. 
A  pamphlet  was  prepared  to  give  to  girls  coming  to  Carolina  dances 
for  the  first  time.  It  contained  suggestions  and  information,  such  as 
the  fact  that  flowers  are  not  permitted  at  our  dances.  Also,  a  com- 
mittee was  formed  to  collect  information  about  bands  and  to  help  in 
getting  big  name  bands  as  cheaply  as  possible.  Although  the  campus 
Emergency  Act  curtailing  dance  expenditures  did  away  with  much  of 
the  committee's  importance,  the  work  it  did  while  in  existence 
promises  that  it  will  be  of  great  value  later. 

Officers  were:  George  Coxhead,  Chairman;  Sam  Gambill,  Sec- 
retary. Members  include  those  shown  above  and  the  following:  Al 
Costner,  Oskie  Johnston,  Claude  Myers,  Bo  Reynolds,  and  Ike  Taylor. 


George  Coxhead.  Chairman 


418 


Taylor  Vernon,  President 


GERMAN    CLUB 


'EFT  with  an  organization  which  stood  on  a  sound  financial 
basis,  the  German  Club  Executive  Committee  this  year  continued  to 
put  on  excellent  dances  such  as  characterized  in  the  past,  and,  just 
as  important,  to  stay  out  of  the  red.  Responsible  for  three  dances  a 
year,  the  club  has  presented  so  far  Al  Donahue  for  Fall  Germans  and 
Charlie  Spivak  for  Midwinters. 

Most  colorful  and  interesting  of  all  the  matters  attended  to  by 
the  committee  was  the  enthusiasm  they  aroused  leading  opposition 
to  the  Emergency  Curtailment  Bill.  And  though  they  went  down,  be 
it  said  that  they  did  their  best  to  put  on  good  dances  at  reduced  cost. 


EXECUTIVE  COMMITTEE 


Officers  of  the  Ger.m.\n  Club  for  1942  were; 
Taylor  Vernon,  Kappa  Sigma,  President;  Hubert  Wal- 
ston,  Zeta  Psi.  Vice-President;  William  Loock,  Sigma 
Nu,  Secretary;  Frank  Laurens,  Delta  Psi,  Treasurer;  and 
John  Diffendal,  Alpha  Tau  Omega,  Chairman. 


Other  members  of  the  executive  committee 
vcere;  Hugh  Hole,  Beta  Theta  Pi;  Robert  Vail,  Sigma 
Chi;  Emmett  Barnes,  Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon;  Cyrus 
Hogue,  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon ;  Emmett  Sebrell,  Kappa 
Alpha;  and  Charles  Neaves,  Kappa  Sigma. 


Barnes 

DiFFENDAL 

HoGUE 

Hole 

Laurens 

Loock 

Neaves 

Sebrell 

Vail 

Walston 

419 


Walston 
Miss  Gravely 


falZ   i^M  pu.m0^-" 


J  K 


ALL  Germans  came  the  week-end  of  the  Carolina-Duke  Football  Game,  and  served  to  neutralize  many 
depressed  spirits  of  the  week-end.  With  the  exception  of  the  hot  weather,  loss  to  Duke,  and  an  over- 
crowded dance  floor  the  week-end  was  a  great  success.  Al  Donahue  played  for  the  dances,  and  put  on  a 
good  show  at  Friday's  concert. 

"Bob"  Davis  with  Miss  Evelyn  Brown  led  the  figure  Friday  night  and  with  them  were:  Malone  Par- 
ham  with  Miss  Elizabeth  Topleman ;  Taylor  Vernon  with  Miss  Florence  Royal ;  John  Diffendal  with 
Miss  Mary  Lewis  Millis;  Hubert  Walston  with  Miss  Jack  Gravely;  Frank  Laurens  with  Miss  Lucy 
Brown;  William  Loock  with  Miss  Ruth  Barnes;  Hugh  Hole  with  Miss  Betty  Cordon;  Robert  Vail  with 
Miss  Wanda  Johnson;  Austin  Carr  with  Miss  Peggie  Beattie:  Emmett  Sebrell  with  Miss  Millie  Brenizer; 
Cyrus  Hogue  with  Miss  Elizabeth  Jones;  and  Charles  Neaves  with  Miss  Rosamund  Neaves. 

In  Saturday's  figure  were:  Robert  Stockton  with  Miss  Mary  Louise  Rousseau;  Robert  Cowan  with  Miss 
Katherine  Watkins;  Robert  Ettenger  with  Miss  Virginia  Martin;  Wade  Denning  with  Miss  Nell  Den- 
ning; Tyndall  Harris  with  Miss  Mary  Bardman;  Jack  Eshelman  with  Miss  Eleanor  Shaub;  James  Har- 
rell  with  Miss  Katherine  Sparks;  Edmund  Tisdale  with  Miss  Elsie  Trulove;  Junie  Peele  with  Miss  Kathe- 
rine Legg;  and  Jack  Emack  with  Miss  Marie  Watters. 


420 


BURGWYN 

Forehand 

Hole 

Howard 

Peete 

Iiss  Gibbons 

Miss  Redwood 

Miss  Paschal 

Miss  Jones 

Miss  Wood 

(/'l/JAi/fl'l^Ui^-iM''"" 


HEN  the  week-end  of  February  14  and  15  rolled  around,  the  big  dance  of  the  winter  was  here. 
The  music  of  Charlie  Spivak's  orchestra  was  a  feature  of  the  set,  and  it  could  hardly  have  been  enjoyed 
more  had  the  persons  attending  the  dance  realized  that  his  music  was  to  be  the  last  a  big-name  band  would 
play  at  Carolina  for  some  while.  The  concert  will  be  remembered  for  Spivak  and  his  trumpet,  and  for 
the  singers  with  their  "This  is  no  laughing  matter".  Beautiful  weather  the  entire  week-end  was  high- 
lighted with  basketball,  swimming,  and  wrestling  events,  while  numerous  parties  and  social  events  topped 
things  off. 

The  Senior  figure  Saturday  night  was  led  by  Edmund  Forehand  and  Miss  Sophia  Redwood.  Partici- 
pating with  them  were  Henry  Burgwyn  with  Miss  Billie  Gibbons,  Charles  Tillett  with  Miss  Mary  Cald- 
well, William  Howard  with  Miss  Gertrude  Jones,  William  Peete  with  Miss  Anna  Wood,  Hugh  Hole  with 
Miss  Mary  Ann  Paschal,  George  Long  with  Miss  Mary  Bell  Marsh,  John  Church  with  Miss  Tommie  Rose, 
Pete  Childs  with  Miss  Agnes  Martin,  and  Warren  Simpson  with  Miss  Grace  Everhard. 

The  customary  Friday  night  figure  was  eliminated  as  a  war  time  economy  measure. 


421 


/  y     / 


./-. 


Barringer  Hayes  Manly 

Sherman  Sparrow 


^yiu 


LMOST  putting  spring  with  its  gay  dances 
to  shame,  Will  Bradley  and  Freddy  Johnson  joined 
hands  the  first  week-end  in  February  to  put  on  a 
swell  set  of  Interdorm  dances.  Freddie  Johnson 
opened  the  set,  and  Will  Bradley  with  his  "boogie 
woogie"  band  played  for  the  concert  and  the  final 
dance.  Initiating  a  new  custom,  Aycock  Dormi- 
tory helped  everyone  get  into  the  spirit  of  things 
by  holding  open  house  in  its  newly-acquired  social 
room,  and  Graham  Memorial  did  its  bit  by  open- 
ing its  doors  after  the  Friday  night  affair  to  dormi- 
tory men  and  their  dates.  Saturday  night  fraternit}' 
men  offered  their  houses  plus  refreshments  to 
dormitory  dance-goers.  Highlighting  the  week-end 
were  several  dormitory  house  parties. 

There  was  no  figure,  but  there  was  a  no-break 
dance  honoring  the  officers  of  the  Interdormitory 
Council,  the  President  of  the  Dormitories,  and  the 


dance  committee  which  was  responsible  for  put- 
ting on  the  dance.  This  committee  was:  Charles 
Colby,  Mike  Carr,  Larry  Berluti,  Sam  Beavans, 
Dave  Barksdale,  James  Newsome,  Martin  Bar- 
ringer, Sell  Gulp,  "Bo"  Reynolds,  Richard  Jones, 
Joe  Leslie,  Bill  Witkin,  George  Harrelson,  and 
Tommy  Sparrow. 

Dormitory  Presidents  were:  Tommy  Sparrow, 
Mangum;  Ernest  Skillman,  Manly;  Claude  Myers, 
Ruffin;  "Pinky"  Elliot,  Grimes;  Sam  Sherman, 
Alexander;  Charles  Colby,  Stacy;  Charles  Baker, 
Lewis;  Boston  Lackey,  Aycock;  Jim  Manly,  Gra- 
ham; Tommy  Sullivan,  Everett;  Mac  Norwood, 
Steele;  George  Paine,  B.V.P. ;  Moyer  Hendrix, 
Old  East;  and  Jonas  Owens,  Old  West. 

Officers  were:  George  Hayes,  President; 
"Oskie"  Johnston,  Vice-President;  Pat  Withering- 
ton,  Secretary;  and  Robert  Kornegay,  Treasurer. 


422 


BVERS 

Garden 

Evans 

Ferguson 

Higdon 

Long 

McClary 

Smith 

Stockton 

Whiteheart 

J.  HE  first  big  dance  of  the  spring  quarter  was  touched  off  when  the 
Sophomore  class  joined  with  the  Freshman  class  for  the  Frosh-Soph  dance 
on  the  week-end  of  April  10  and  11.  Freddy  Johnson  started  things  off  on 
Friday  night  for  the  "Frosh"  half  of  the  dance,  and  Lang  Thompson  took 
over  on  Saturday  at  both  the  tea  and  night  dances  for  the  "Soph"  half. 
The  week-end  marked  the  first  time  the  first  and  second  year  classes  had 
jointly  sponsored  a  dance. 

As  an  added  attraction,  Graham  Memorial  held  open  house  immediately 
following  the  dances  on  both  nights.  Soft  lights,  roaring  fires,  and  recorded 
music  created  an  atmosphere  which  was  maintained  by  the  barring  of  any 
and  all  stags. 

Members  of  the  Sophomore  Dance  Committee  and  their  dates  were:  Joe 
Ferguson,  Chairman,  with  Miss  Anice  Garmany;  John  Byers  with  Miss 
Margaret  Byrd;  Art  Lavine  with  Miss  Mary  Lou  Taylor;  J.  G.  Garden  with 
Miss  Mary  Bohannon;  Tom  Smith  with  Miss  Mary  Lloyd  Glidewell;  Wiley 
Long  with  Miss  June  Bourne;  Sonny  Boney  with  Miss  Mildred  Lee;  Bob 
McClary  with  Miss  Wynema  Honeycutt;  Hill  Wolf  with  Miss  Sally  Orr; 
Bobby  Stockton  with  Miss  Peeny  Bernhardt;  Bud  Evans  with  Miss  Patsy 
Miller;  Hugh  Cox  with  Miss  Mollie  Ellis;  and  Dewey  Dorsett  with  Miss 
AUie  Bell. 


^^>^-^:^^€^^-i£:^-"" 


Freshman  Dance  Committeemen  and  their  dates  were:  Ned  Mewborn, 
Chairman,  with  Miss  Mary  Jane  Mewborn;  Joe  Wright  with  Miss  Juliette  La 
Borde;  Jeff  Bynum  with  Miss  Edith  Taylor;  George  Henderson  with  Miss 
Dottie  Groom;  George  Whitner  with  Miss  Virginia  Klages;  and  Ken  Todd 
with  Miss  Elizabeth  Gudger. 


423 


z&> 


LES  SWARM   PAST  THE  DOORMAN.   THEN  SHED  COATS  AND   GET  DOWN  TO  BUSI.'JESS. 


HEN  Studies  are  left  undone  and  forgotten, 
when  coeds  start  looking  left-out,  when  dance 
committeemen  suddenly  become  very  unpopular — 
Carolina  Gentlemen,  the  dance  week-end  has  be- 
gun. Gone  from  the  dance  floor  now  are  the  big 
names,  the  Dorseys,  Miller,  and  Casa  Loma;  but 
though  dances  are  in  the  financial  doghouse,  still 
the  campus  throbs  all  week-end — and  heads  throb 
all  the  next  week. 

Biggest  struggle  of  the  week-end  is  getting  to 
the  dance.  First  the  rush  for  the  showers,  the  hunt 
for  collar  buttons,  and  the  fight  to  get  into  even- 
ing clothes;  the  search  for  the  friend  with  the 
vacant  back  seat ;  the  long  wait  while  the  date  sits 
upstairs  reading  Esquire.  Then  the  trip  to  the 
Tin  Can  as  couples  swarm  in  looking  uniformly 
uncomfortable  but  still  pleased  at  the  thought  that 
they  got  by  the  doorman.  Jitterbugs  soon  steal  the 
floor,  never  seem  to  get  tired.  Smooth  dancers 
pick  out  quiet  corners  to  whisper  sweet  nothings. 


'AT  THE  DANCES 


Meanwhile,  wolves  prowl  around  looking  for  late 
dates,  and  dance  committeemen  try  to  look  un- 
obtrusive in  their  sniffing. 

Intermission  comes  like  the  10:30  recess.  There's 
always  the  fight  for  cokes  and  the  scramble  for 
seats  as  couples  enjoy  a  moment's  rest,  look  to  see 
who  came  with  who,  watch  the  fashion  show,  and 
spread  the  latest  gossip. 


Some   jitterbug,    some    stick   to   smooth    dancing. 

everyone  avoids  the  dreaded  blue  and 

white  bouttoniere. 


At  intermission  the  crowd  oKouFi  oi  i-   lo  .sccialize.  .  . 

.OR  FIGHTS  FOR  A  CHANCE  TO  ENJOY  A  COKE.    (BeLOW)   ThE  SWING  LOVERS 
HOUND  AROUND  THE  BANDSTAND. 


.WHEN  WE  WENT' 


Back  to  the  dance  floor  again.  Music  sweet  and  music 
hot,  while  girls'  feet  hurt  and  Carolina  men  start  planning 
for  their  campaign  after  the  dance.  Up  at  the  stand  the 
orchestra  is  surrounded  by  the  lovers  of  swing,  the  couples 
too  tired  to  dance,  and  the  stags  who  don't  know  any  girls. 

At  the  stroke  of  midnight  or  one  A.  M.  or  two,  the 
strains  of  the  theme  song  end  the  dance — and  then  the 
week-end  begins. 


Some  time  during  the  night  the  chosen  few  go  through  their 

PACES  IN   the  figure. 

At  the  end  of  the  dance  comes  another  mad  rush  for  the  coat  stand- 
and  off  to  the  wars. 


COHOON 

Lackey,  B. 

Lackey,  W. 

Levine 

Long 

Matthews 

Means 

Neaves 

Owens 

f 

Shaw 

Smith 
/ 

Williams 

^A-t 

■'J> 

t 

•(xn 

'•     J-£4'l^ 

,y^yL.-*?^^,,. 

//a^'H.e£j.^ 

i«  ^  «  (^   ^ 


/  ./ 


'Ui^c 


'S  a  fitting  climax  to  the  hilarities  and  subleties  of  Senior 
Week  came  Junior-Seniors  on  the  week-end  of  May  15th  and 
I6th.  Falling  in  line  with  the  dance  expenditures  cut,  the 
Junior  and  Senior  dance  committees  held  expenses  within  the 
appropriate  limits,  and  used  the  surplus  Si, 375  to  buy  defense 
bonds  for  setting  up  a  loan  fund. 

It  would  have  taken  more  than  reduced  expenditures  to 
dampen  the  spirits  of  dance-goers.  The  "music  under  the 
stars,"  saddle-shoe  stomp,  Senior  banquet,  and  other  features 
of  Senior  Week  touched  things  off;  and  when  the  week-end 
came  everyone  was  rarin'  to  go.   House  parties  and  hayrides 


426 


set  the  pace  as  Juniors  and  Seniors,  imports  and  coeds,  and  everyone 
else  took  in  the  best  of  spring  quarter  week-ends. 

Lt.  Stanley  Brown  with  his  "big-name"  musicians  from  Fort  Bragg 
did  the  honors  at  the  Friday  night  shin-dig;  and  on  Saturday  Red  Norvo 
took  the  reins.  Saturday's  festivities  featured  a  Norvo  concert  spiced 
with  slap-stick  comedy  presented  by  the  Carolina  Playmakers.  There 
was  also  a  tea  dance  and  a  night  dance  highlighted  by  the  singing  of 
Kay  Allen  and  "Wood-chopper"  Norvo  on  his  xylophone. 

Full  credit  goes  to  Senior  Co-chairmen  Dean  Williams  and  Roger 
Matthews,  Junior  Chairman  Steve  Peck,  and  the  members  of  their 
respective  committees  for  the  real  highlight  of  the  spring.  The  only 
disheartening  note  of  the  whole  week-end  (beside  the  dread  of  Monday 
morning  8:30's)  was  the  thought  that  exams  were  just  around  the 
corner. 

Members  of  the  Senior  Dance  Committee  were:  Vincent  Arey, 
Haywood  Bland,  Jack  Connelly,  Scrappy  Gay,  Wesley  Gooding,  Brooks 
Griifin,  Braxton  Ingram,  Goodman  Jones,  Boston  Lackey,  Sam  Means, 
Henry  Moll,  Clayton  Moore,  Pete  Owens,  Jim  Shaw,  and  Dave  Silver. 

Members  of  the  Junior  Dance  Committee  were:  Dick  Bell,  Floyd 
Cohoon,  Felix  Harvey,  Moyer  Hendrix,  Steve  Karres,  William  Lackey, 
Leonard  Levine,  Forrest  Long,  Charles  Neaves,  William  Owens,  George 
Smith,  and  Dan  Thomason. 


and  Ljiam 


THE    HIGHLIGHT    OF    THE    SPRING 


Cocke  Felts  Means  Peete  Reynolds  Thorp  Vail 

Miss  Thompson  Miss  Kirkpatrick  Miss  Chapman       Miss  Wood         Miss  McGee     Miss  McDaniel  Miss  Caldwell 


/// 

f  /t 


/■7  / 


yj 


^7-1  . 


/'    / 


j'A^Ucd- 


J.  HOUGH  there  was  no  "big-name"  band  for 
May  Frolics  this  year,  the  fraternities  which  put 
on  the  set  of  dances  welcomed  spring  with  a  bang. 
Held  in  April,  as  usual,  the  dance  came  the  week- 
end of  the  24th  and  25  th  and  brought  enough 
imports  to  the  campus  to  make  any  loyal  coed 
shudder.  Freddie  Johnson  and  his  orchestra  took 
the  place  of  the  big-name  band  which  the  dance- 
expenditure  act  made  impossible,  and  did  him- 
self proud  with  a  fine  selection  of  music  and  novel- 
ties. 

Highlight  of  the  week-end  was  the  endless  string 
of  parties.  Heading  the  list  were  the  Beta  Tenny's 
Meadow    "outing"    and    the    Kappa    Sig    "waffle" 


party.  But  there  were  others  which  included  break- 
fast parties,  noonday  parties,  afternoon  parties, 
night  parties,  and  just  plain  old  parties. 

Members  of  the  committee  and  their  dates 
were:  William  Peete,  D.K.E.,  President  with  Miss 
Louise  Bahnson;  Sam  Means,  S.A.E.,  Executive 
Secretary  with  Miss  Betty  Chapman;  James  Thorp, 
Zeta  Psi,  with  Miss  Carol  McDaniel;  "Bo"  Rey- 
nolds, Kappa  Sigma,  with  Miss  Helen  McGee; 
Bill  Vail,  Sigma  Chi,  with  Miss  Carol  Caldwell; 
Bill  Felts,  Beta  Theta  Pi,  with  Miss  Jane  Kirk- 
patrick; and  Dudley  Cocke,  Sigma  Nu  with  Miss 
Peggy  Thompson. 


y^ 


^v 


w^ng^ 


7^? 

\JC/  ITH  Jimmy  Dorsey  offering  rhythm  for  the 
occasion  Finals,  1941,  mingled  joyous  and  happy 
moments  with  the  sad  thoughts  of  leaving  Chapel 
Hill.  For  many  the  week-end  preceding  commence- 
ment became  as  unforgettable  as  the  graduation 
exercises. 

In  the  figure  Friday  night  the  outgoing  officers 
of  the  German  Club  symbolically  turned  their 
duties  and  honors  over  to  the  incoming.  Ike 
Grainger  with  Miss  Spotty  Coan,  Jick  Garland 
with  Miss  Caroline  Miller,  Frank  Robinson  with 
Miss   Ruth   Applewhite,    Henry   Gross   with   Miss 


Felicia  Chisholm,  Bill  Dees  with  Miss  Marjorie 
Johnston,  Bill  Vogler  with  Miss  Frances  Dyckman, 
Clark  Bartlett  with  Miss  Martha  Anne  Speight, 
Tom  Long  with  Miss  Margaret  Johnston,  and 
Britt  Beasley  with  Miss  Emily  Smith  were  the  old 
officers  and  their  dates.  Incoming  were  Taylor 
Vernon  with  Miss  Mary  Lib  Beasley,  John  Dif- 
fendal  with  Miss  Mary  Lewis  Millis,  Hubert  Wal- 
ston  with  Miss  Julia  McConnell,  Frank  Laurens 
with  Miss  Lucy  Brown,  Austin  Carr  with  Miss 
Bob-Ed  Lassiter,  Cyrus  Hogue  with  Miss  Eliza- 
beth Jones,  Bob  Vail  with  Miss  Barbara  Burroughs, 
and  Emmett  Sebrell  with  Miss  Millie  Brenizer. 


429 


T. 


Top:  "Big  shots"  of  the  week-end  are  German  Club  head  Diffendal  and 

BAND  MAESTRO  Spivak.    Boitoni :  Couples  loosen  up  at  the 

afternoon  tea  dance. 


HOUGH  orchestras  and  dancing  are  the  main 
reasons  for  any  big  Carolina  week-end,  to  the 
initiated  many  they  hardly  begin  to  tell  the  story. 
The  real  story  of  a  week-end  begins  long  before 
the  band  arrives,  and  continues  well  after  the  last 
clarinet  has  squeaked  in  the  Tin  Can. 

The  first  sign  that  a  dance  week-end  is  in  the 
ofihng  is  the  increased  mail  from  the  girls,  who 
usually  get  wind  of  the  affair  before  we  do.  Then 
comes  the  long  fight  of  getting  a  date:  the  steady 
back  home,  the  party-girl  promtrotter  from  board- 
ing school,  or  the  willing  coed.  Last-minute  tele- 
grams get  anxious  attention  as  enthusiasm  grows, 
or  drops,  with  acceptances  or  "I.C.C.'s".  And 
there's  always  the  unlucky  fellow  who  asked  two 
girls  and  both  decided  to  come. 

At  last  the  date  arrives,  decked  out  in  an  over- 
sized  sweater  and   the  latest  collegiate   chit-chat, 


"THE  WEEK-END 


and  accompanied  by  enough  baggage  to  load  a 
small-sized  army  truck.  The  affectionate  greeting 
"Sooooo  glad  to  see  you"  and  "How  ya  been" — 
and  off  you  go.  All  week-end  last  the  parties — in 
fraternity  houses,  Harry's,  the  Pines,  Tenney's 
Meadow,  in  rumble  seats.  The  girls  keep  all  their 
big  guns  in  action  while  their  dates  herd  them 
around ;  and  the  wolves  prowl  ever-watchful  on 
the  outskirts. 

The   dance   intervenes   to   give   a   slight   let-up 
from  the  week-end.   Then  it's  over,  and  once  more 


Most  popular  indoor  spots  of  the  week-end  are  Harry's  (left)  and 
Danziger's  (right)  WITH  ITS  Viennese  dishes  and  pastries. 


At  FRATERNin'  HOUSES  SOCIALITES  SIT  ON   FLOOR.  REMOVE  STIFF  COLLARS,  AND  SOME  ADVENTUROUS  SOULS   RAID   THE    ICE   BOX.     OTHERS    (bELOW)    SIT  AROUND 

IN  GENERAL  GET  COMFORTABLE.  SUFFERING   THE    EFFECTS   OF   TOO    MUCH    "WEEK-END". 


BEFORE  and  AFTER" 


the  dizzy  pace  accelerates.  We're  off  to  pick  up  a 
snack,  to  wolf,  to  talk,  to  park,  to — uhh,  engage 
in  amorous  diversion.  And  so  on  till  the  morning, 
while  fatigue  and  the  beverages  take  their  effect.  A 
couple  of  hours  of  sleep,  and  we're  off  again,  on 
Saturday  for  more  parties,  on  Sunday  for  the  bus 
Station,  and  then — we  hate  to  end  it  this  way — 
back  to  the  books.  But  a  real  Carolina  Gentleman, 
ten  minutes  after  that  girl  has  gone,  will  be  in 
bed ! 

Gentlemen,  the  dance  week-end. 


If   BOTH   PARTIES  ARE  SO  INCLINED.   A  GOOD-NIGHT  KISS  IS  USUALLY   ON  DECK. 

As    DATES    LEAVE    AND    THE    WEEK-END    CLOSES.    CAROLINA    GENTS    MAKE    A 

BEE  LINE  FOR  THE  LONG-FORGOTTEN  BED. 


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ALPHABETICAL    INDEX 


PAGE 

Administration    22 

Alpha  Epsilon  Delta    264 

Alumni   Association    33 

Alumni,  Well-known   34 

Athletics 

Baseball   310 

Basketball    292 

Boxing 316 

Cheerleaders    289 

Cross  Country   320 

Fencing    323 

Football  274 

Golf    322 

Gymnastics    324 

Lacrosse 325 

Monogram  Club   288 

Swimming 318 

Tennis   298 

Track 304 

Wrestling    321 

Freshman  Sports  327 

Band    220 

Beauty   Section    399 

Beta  Gamma  Sigma 265 

Campus  Life   (Snapshots)    194 

Carolina  Magazine   256 

Carolina  Political  Union 245 

Cheerleaders    289 

Chi  Delta  Phi   225 

Dance  Section   417 

Debate  Council   240 

Delta  Sigma  Pi   224 

Dialectic  Senate 246 

Faculty  Personalities   28 

Fraternities 

Social  Fraternities   346 

Alpha  Epsilon  Delta 264 

Beta  Gamma  Sigma 265 

Chi  Delta  Phi   224 

Delta  Sigma  Pi   225 

Phi  Beta  Kappa 262 

Phi  Mu  Alpha 266 

Freshman  Class  Officers  160 

Gimghoul    414 

Glee  Club,  Men   222 

Women    232 

Golden  Fleece 269 

Gorgon's  Head   415 

Graham  Memorial  Directors 51 

Grail    267 

"Hats  Off"    30 

Hillel  Foundation   223 


PAGE 

Interdormitory  Council,  Men 46 

Women 45 

Interfraternity  Council    48 

International  Relations  Club 242 

Intramurals    334 

Junior  Class  Officers 114 

Law  School   186 

Legislature 42 

May  Day  236 

Medical  School   188 

Men's  Glee  Club 222 

Minataurs    413 

Modern  Dance  Club 225 

Monogram  Club   288 

Naval   R.O.T.C 214 

Pan-Hellenic  Council   231 

Pharmacy   School    178 

Pharmacy  Senate  244 

Phi  Assembly    248 

Phi  Beta  Kappa 262 

Phi  Mu  Alpha    266 

Public  Health  (School  of)    190 

Publications  Union  Board 50 

Senior  Class  Officers  56 

Senior  Class  Personalities   58 

Sheiks    412 

Sophomore  Class  Officers 142 

Sound  and  Fury 226 

Student  Government 38 

Student  Legislature  42 

Tar  an'  Feathers   254 

Tar  Heel   252 

Thirteen  Club 411 

Town  Girls  Association   230 

Trustees  32 

University  Club 212 

University  Religious  Council   227 

Valkyries   268 

Views    14 

Women's  Athletic  Association  338 

Women's  Glee  Club 232 

Women's  Government  Association   40 

Women's  Graduate  Association   234 

Women's  Interdormitory  Council 45 

Women's  Senate 44 

Yacketv  Yack   258 

Y,  M.  C.  A 218 

Y.  W.  C.  A 233 


432 


w 


JUST  A  MIIVUTE 


L 


/ 


// 


T'S  yours  now.  All's  over  but  the  shouting,  or  the  frowning,  as  the 
case  may  be.  But  before  you  put  this  volume  on  the  shelf  and  write  finis 
to  another  Yackety  Yack,  we'd  like  to  say  a  few  more  words. 

First  of  all,  we'd  like  to  pay  tribute  to  the  loyal  souls  who  made  this 
book  possible.  To  Hugh  Morton  in  particular  for  his  excellent  photog- 
raphy and  sound  advice  our  hats  go  off;  if  you  like  some  of  the  pictures 
as  much  as  we  hope  you  will,  the  credit  is  his.  There  are  others  to  whom 
thanks  are  due — Jim  Loeb  for  his  work  on  extra-curriculars ;  Hunt  Hobbs 
for  his  ready  supply  of  ideas  and  humor;  "Scoop"  Campbell  and  John 
Robinson  for  sports;  Bobby  Crawford,  George  Smedberg,  and  Irwin  Hen- 
derson for  the  difficult  class  sections;  Bill  Taylor  and  Tyler  Nourse  for 
photography;  Rudy  Faircloth  for  the  color  pictures;  Bahnson  Gray  and 
Bobby  Stockton  for  their  work  on  advertising;  and  Bill  Watkins,  Stuart 
McCoach,  and  many  of  the  office  staff  for  their  assistance  and  advice. 

Real  appreciation  is  due  Mr.  Frank  Fleming  of  Lassiter  Press  and  Ray 

Bailey  and  Buck  Shelton  of  Charlotte  Engraving  Co.,  all  of  whom  seemed 

determined  that  the  1942  Yackety  Yack  should  come  out  even  though 

the  editors  made  them  fight  most  of  the 

way.    The  cooperation  of  Wootten-MouJ- 

ton  should  not  go  without  mention. 

And  a  vote  of  thanks  should  go  to  our 
advertisers,  who  year  in  and  year  out  give 
us  a  mighty  big  boost.  Please  do  us,  and 
yourselves,  a  favor — read  the  ads. 

We  hope  you  enjoy  the  book.  We 
haven't  tried  to  set  the  world  on  fire,  but 
we  have  tried  to  make  this  year  at  Caro- 
lina live  in  your  memory.  If  you  can 
flip  back  the  pages  ten  years  from  now 
and  still  get  a  kick,  our  job  will  have 
been  complete, 

Charlie  and  Dave 


434 


RITA    HAYWORTH 

Columltia  Pictures  Star 

with  her  own  Chesterfield 

van  ily-eigaretle  case 


In  mine  too  say  millions  of  satisfied 
"^^^MHi  smokers  ...  for  a  Milder  ami  decidedly  Better-Tasting 
^^^ni  cigarette,  one  that's  Cooler-Smuldng,  you  just  naturally 
^^P^        pick  Chesterfield. 

And  of  course  the  hig  thing  in  Chesterfield  that 
is  giving  everybody  so  nuicli  more  smoking  pleasure 
is  its  Right  Combination  of  the  world's  best  cigarette 
tobaccos  .  .  .  for  regardless  of  price  there  is  no  better 
cigarette  made  today. 

MAKE  YOUR  NBXT  PACK  CHESTERFIELDS.  .  .  find  enjoy  'em    //tCif  So^Klf 


^klnklna  of    l/jou " 

KYSER 

436 


Carolina,  Duke,  Davidson,  Guilford,  Meredith,  Salem,  State,  Wake  Forest,  W.  C.  U.  N.  C.,  and 
many  other  colleges  ore  represented  by  the  men  and  women  who  make  up  the  staff  of  the 

WINSTON-SALEM    JOURNAL 
TWIN    CITY    SENTINEL 

and 

RADIO    BROADCAST    STATION    WSJS 

A  well  rounded  staff,  striving  constantly  to  inform,  stimulate  and  entertain  a  large  and  grow- 
ing family  of  readers  and  listeners.    Our  goal — accuracy,  brevity,  objectivity. 


Gordon  Gray,  30 Publisher 

R.  R.  Richmond,  '09 Comptroller 

E.  Carl  Sink,  '22 Press  Foremen 

Nody  Cotes,   '22 Sports 

Harold  Essex,  '25 Radio 

John  E.  Miller,  '32 Radio 

Gene  Whitman,   '32 News 

Frank  McDonald,  '38 News 


Oliver  Crawlev,  '39 News 


Edward  J.  Hamlin,  '38 News 

Claude  V.  Dunnagan,  '38 Radio 

Sherman  Shore,  '32 News 

W.  Leon  Joyner,  '34 Advertising 

Pete  Ivey,  '35 News 

W,  F.  Clingman,  '36 News 

Clary  Thompson,  '38 News 

Jos    H    Sivertson,  '38 News 


You're  Alivays  Welcome 
at 

WALGREEN  DRUG  CO. 

DURHAM,  N.  C. 


Compliments  of 
HOME  SAVINGS  BANK 

DURHAM,  N.  C. 

Member  of  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation 


437 


The  American  Standard 
For  Bedtime  Comfort 
Is  a   Chatham 
Blanket 


When  you  need  to  buy  blankets  next  Fall — remember  that  Chotham  makes  fine  quality  blan- 
kets that  are  honest  values  at  every  price  from  $2.95  to  $18.95 — and  that  you  can  find  a 
good  selection  at  any  good  department  store  in  your  city. 

CHATHAM  MANUFACTURING  CO. 

ELKIN,  NORTH  CAROLINA 


A  Alost  Pkasant  and  Proptdhlc 

PLACE   TO   SHOP 


Y/^j 


Smart 


To  Be 


Thrijty' 

Belk  Le22ett  Co 


''Durham's  Shopping  Center" 


Ask  for 


Lance 


PEANUT  BUTTER  SANDWICHES 

at  your 

Sodo  Fountain, 
Service  Station 

or 

Grocery 


438 


FOR  THE 

MILDNESS 

THAT  COUNTS- 


CAMEL 


WJ  Wal  E.eal 

THE  HILL  BAKERY 

Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


STROWD  MOTOR  €0. 


BRUCE  STROWD 


TROY  S.  HERNDON 
Ass't  Mgr. 


AUTHORIZED 
SINCE 


GEORGE  B.  HELLEN 
Sales  Mgr. 


DEALER 
1914 


CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C. 

WE    APPRECIATE    YOUR    BUSINESS 

WATCH  THE  FORDS  GO  BY 


"JERSEY  AT  ITS  BEST" 

DURHAM  ROAD  DAIRY 

Serving   Chapel   Hill   tor  28  Years 


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  bv  Us 


Where  Service  Is 

a  Saving — 

• 

MODEL  MARKET  AND  GROCERY  CO. 

PHONE  9831- 

-9841 

We  Lend  Kodaks 

No  Rental  Fee  and  No  Deposit  Required 
from  Students 

FOISTER  PHOTO  CO. 


440 


CAROLINA  STEEL  &  IROX  CO. 

GREENSBORO,  N.C. 

Structural  Ste»l  for  Buildings  and  Bridges 

1500  TONS  MONTHLY  CAPACITY  3000  TONS  STOCK  ON  HAND 


We  Are  Also  Distributors  jar  the  Folloicin^  Products 


Elevator  Doors 

Tin  Clad  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 


Lyia  ill  ^^ae  and  C^xperie 
-J^troiiQ  in   /\e. 


.eSoufceS 


^ 


THE  BANK  DF 
CHAPEL  HILL 


^ 


M.  C.  S^  Noble 
PRESIDENT 


W.  E.  Thompson 
CASHIER 


441 


SEE  OUR  DISPLAY 

OF 

BUICKSANDPONTIACS 

Shown  at  the 

JOHNSON  MOTOR  CO. 

DURHAM,  N.  C. 


ROBERT  E.  LEE  HOTEL 

WlNSTON-SALEM,  N.  C. 

Featuring  the  South's  Finest  Glass  Enclosed 
ROOF  GARDEN 

Also  Air  Conditioned 
COFFEE  SHOP  and  DINING  ROOM 

At  Moderate  ond   Popular   Prices 

Room  Rotes: 
$2  50  up  Single  S3  50  up  Double 

W.  G.  Tennille,  Manager 


Compliments  of 

S.  H.  KRESS  &  CO. 

5c,  10c,  25c 
STORE 


DURHAM,  N.  C. 


"A  highly  skilled  personnel  who  take  pride  in  pro- 
ducing the  better  grades  of  printing." 

THE  SEEMAN  PRINTERY 

Incorporated 
DURHAM, NORTH  CAROLINA 


442 


THE  CAROLINA  and  PICK  THEATRES 

APPRECIATE    YOUR    PATRONAGE 

AND 
INVITE   YOU  TO  VISIT  OUR  OTHER 
THEATRES  THROUGHOUT  THE  STATE 

r  lottk   L^arolina  ^keatrei,  Jrnc. 


1942    C^SSi 

PAT'D.. 

SWIM  SUITS  AND  TROPIC  TRUNKS 

NEW  FABRIC  KNIT 

Special  Feotured  Three  Size  Trunk 

See  INDERA  for  ]942 

Mills  and  Generol  Office 

INDERA  MILLS  CO. 

WINSTON-SALEM,  N.  C. 
Write  Us  for  Set  of  "Do  You  Know  That  Cartoons" 


©mewT#\L 


Chinese  and  Americcw 

RESTAURANT 

Finest  Sea  Foods  ond  Steaks  a  Specialty 
116  E.  Porrish  St.  Durham,  N.  C. 


BOTTLED  LOCALLY  BY 

DURHAM  PEPSI-COLA 
BOTTLING  CO. 


443 


444 


Growing  with  Carolina 

Over  350  North  Carolinians  are  employed 
by  our  company  in  giving  the  people  of  the 
state  the  kind  of  service  they  approve. 


HOME  SECURITY  LIFE  INSURANCE 
COMPANY 

HOME  OFFICES 
DURHAM,  N.  C. 

GEORGE  WATTS  HILL,  Chairman  of  Boord 
BASCOM  BAYNES,  President 


DRINK 

(miec 

^ 

"The  Pause  That  RefreshEs" 

1 

Durham    Coca-CoL 

Bottling  Co. 

W.  Main  St. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

We  want  to  say-THANKS! 

Our  wish   is  that  those  who  have  earned   their  sheep-skins  and  will  enter  that  unlimited  number  in  the 

FRESHMAN  CLASS  OF  PROFESSIONAL 
AND  BUSINESS  LIFE  SUCCEED 

Add  to  that  memory  of  "Carolina"  end  the  "Hill"  just  a  thought  of  c  service  this  department  has  tried  to  give. 

GOOD  LUCK  to  those  that  depart— we  WELCOME  those  that  return  and  to  those  that  are  to  COME,  we  assure 
a  LAUNDRY  SERVICE  that  Satisfies.  High  Quality  of  Work  as  well  as  the  lowest  possible  price  consistent  with 
good  work,  is  our  motto. 


LAUNDRY  DEPARTMENT 

University  Consolidated  Service  Plants 


445 


iciai  j-^kotoarapkers  for  tke   194'2    iyacketij    Mack 


WOOTTEN-MOULTON 

f-'^kotoarapkefS 

Portrait  Home  Portraits 

Illustrations  College  Annuals 

Illustrated  Talks 

NEW  BERN.  N.  C.  +  CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C. 


446 


THE  1942  YACKETY  YACK  IS  BOUND 
IN  A  KINGSKRAFT  COVER  DESIGNED 
AND  PRODUCED  BY  THE  KINGSPORT 
PRESS,  INC,  KINGSPORT,  TENNESSEE. 
THE  WORLD'S  LARGEST  COVER 
MANUFACTURER 


THE  PROVIDENT  PROVIDER 

is  the  ideal  life  insurance  contract;  combining 
protection,  old  age  security,  and  good  investment 
return. 

Paul   W.   Schenck,  General   Agent 

Provident  Mutual  Life  Insurance  Company 

GREENSBORO,  N.  C. 


THE  SEAL  OF 
QUALITY... 

Durham  Dairy 
Products 


DURHAM 

DAIRY     ' 
PRODUCTS 
INC. 


"CHAPEL  HILL'S  COMPLETE  DAIRY' 


CLOTHES  OF  QUALITY 

SUITS 


•KNOX' 
HATS 


Enro  and  Manhattan  Shirts 


/Norman  "Stocktonn  nc. 


,^418  Trade  Si 


Phone  2-1942 


lUinston-Salem.  U.C. 


447 


448 


Schaal 

M^ublicatians 

> 

The  many  high  awards  won  each  year  by  school 

•                                  publications  produced   by  us   is   the   result  of 

many  years'  specialization  based  on  a  compre- 

hensive knowledge  of  art  motifs,  design,  layout 

and  publication  trends. 

A  modern   printing  plant,  operated   by  highly 

efficient  craftsmen  in  every  department,  pro- 

vides a  quality  and  distinctiveness  that  is  un- 

surpassed. 

> 

The    LASSITER    PRESS,  Inc. 

CHARLOTTE,     NORTH     CAROLINA 

Printers  of  tke   1942    iJacLti^    IJacL 

449 


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