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1944, 0.3
UNIVERSITY OF N-C AT CHAPEL HIU
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This book may be kept out one month unless a recall
notice is sent to you. It must be brought to the North
Carolina Collection (in Wilson Library) for renewal.
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THE 1944 YACKETY YACK
C^ditor-in - K^kief
KARL BISHOPRIC
(/->uSLneiS nlanaaen
HARRIS KNIGHT
DAN BAGLEY
vSoard of C^ditors
McKETHAN YDKLEY NDURSE MARETT
Martorell, Anderson, Lyon, Walters, GoGdman, Frankel, Persky,
Lafty, Koppel, Walters, Johnson, Dickson. Denker.
PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY DF
JDRTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA
"URRVING feet sound the death tocsin for lazy yesterday.
The campus is overflowing with boys and girls trj'ing to rush through school for one
reason or another. Older boys, most of them in uniform, are finishing; younger ones are
racing the draft; the coeds, many of whom are being graduated each quarter, have speeded
up their scholastic careers. Every person is concerned with his own problems — problems
made immediate and vital by the war. Carolina is a campus geared for war.
Never before have Carolina students been so closely knit as to present aims. Caro-
lina's shady, sleepy campus is alive, unified by the very tenseness which exists every-
where. The students have grown up; they've settled down to business. And part of that
business has been to bind together the civilian Carolina of years gone by with a new,
military Carolina. By working overtime, V-12 boys, N.R.O.T.C. students. Marines, and
civilians have tried to keep the cogs of Carolina moving, so that when the war is over
students will not have to begin anew their extra-curricula life. ^^
This effort to keep the same foundations, but to alter the appearance and the size of
the building, has been a tremendous task. It has been in the hands of boys and girls
who never before have faced responsibilities. Things have changed now. The stu-
dents are clinging to what they now have, in an effort to make secure the things
they want left standing when the gale now sweeping the campus has subsided.
Chapel Hill is an ideal, a symbol for which we are fighting. The faith, the
efforts, the conscientious work and accomplishments of those who believe in
this ideal are directed towards making the Carolina of the future even better
than the Carolina of the past. This struggle to keep the best of Carolina intact
through these critical days is a fight more important than winning the Duke-
Carolina game. It will be won by those who care; the various people united by
their dream for the future of this University'.
This unity- is an intangible thing. It is not the unity of small cliques, of
fraternities, sororities, clubs, organizations. It is the unity of an entire student
body, NsLvy, Army, Marine, and civilian students, now recognizing the serious-
ness of today.
When the tension is gone, when saddle shoes and open necked shirts are
seen again in classrooms, the students will once again split into many different
factions. But now, though their uniforms are different, they are alike. By some-
thing down inside they are bound together.
There are jobs to do; the time is now.
Mark of the time.
*»-■
*
HP NATION ENTERED its third year of war and
Carolina had come to life . . .
The old-timers from the science labs, from Graham Memorial and the
fraternities shook their heads and proclaimed, the old gray mare ain't
what she used to be," as the Navy poured in July 1 and took over most
of what was left of the University after the Pre-Flight School had gobbled
up the gym and the upper and lower quads — once happy hunting grounds
for campus politicians.
AT CHAPEL HILL
The foundations of student government shook under the strain, down-
town eateries were crowded to the bursting point and beer was scarce —
of whiskey there was none, but somehow fun and classes went on and the
Carolina education — 40 per cent books, 60 per cent extra-curriculars — was
not neglected.
One thousand Navy V-12 students, 300 Marines, 200 N.R.O.T.C. stu-
dents, 800 male civilians and an equal number of coeds, 1,800 Pre-Flighters,
first 200 Pre-Meteorology students and later in September, 275 A.S.T.P.
men in the Area and Language School, the fort^'-odd civilian pilot trainees
who left in July, 75 Army med students and a smattering of potential Navy
doctors — this was Chapel Hill in 1943-44.
^■^Vs.
Allen, Charles Bonner, '35
Bailey, Abbott Kenyon, '38
Beckham, William Moore, '43
Bledsoe, Thomas Ruffin, '4l
Boushell, John Heck, '10
Boyette, Norment Glenn, '38
Briggs, Oliver David, '39
Conderman, Robert J., '39
Cooner, Bunyan Randolph, '37
Crabtree, Bynum Griffin, '44
Dees, Fred, Jr., '41
Dickerson, Edward Roy, II, '40
Doty, Frank dcBovier, '41
Dover, George Loris, '37
Ebei, Irwin Stutr, '43
Fennegan, Samuel Edgar, Jr., '42
Gaston, Phillip Means, '41
Hall, Alonzo Cleveland, Jr., '40
Harris, Milton Bernard, '43
Hecht, Morris, '38
Hollowell, Christopher Wilson, III, '36
Howard, Walter Robert, '41
Hutchinson, Charles Jackson, '41
Jones, Hamilton, '41
Kephart, William Perry, '37
King, Preston Randolph, '41
Klingman, John Graydon, '37
Lackey, Walter Jackson, '26
Mclnnes, Robert Craig, '38
Mann, William Lee, Jr., '43
Mayo, Reuben Elbert, '43
Morrison, James Eugene, Jr., '42
Morrow, Thomas Lacy, '14
Muse, Curtis Marley, '30
Putney, William Witt, '42
Rancke, Henry Charles, Jr., '35
Robertson, Foy, Jr., '40
Rosenbloom, Robert Luke, '41
Rose, John Lawrence, '42
Thompson, William Manley, '41
Young, William Caldwell, '43
Winkler, Harry, Jr., '41
MISSING IN ACTION
5 John Calhoun, Jr., '37
ilin, James A., '45
Wn, Walter Earl, '34
lek, Marshall Reid, '42
pifton, William Thomas, '43
iFelton, Ralph Almon, Jr., '42
I^^Gammans, George Henry, '40
int, Roger Alpine, Jr., '41
dncock, William Owen, Jr., '40
Love, Claude Lorraine, Jr., '40
Mackie, Wiley Theodore, '41
Marshall, Hunter, III, '41
May, Richard Alvis, '42
McFadyen, William Monroe, Jr., '38
Palmer, Horace, '39
Peiffer, Carl David, '38
Robinson, Percy Watkins, ':
Seawell, Edward Harding, '31
Imgsworth, Lloyd Dixon, Jr., '42 Shepherd, Marshall McLaney, '40
lis, Piatt Walker, '33
■•-- '--*^- '^1
Ward, William Freeny, '41
Tomiinson, Archie Benbow, '40
Vann, John CM.. '10
'Pete'
DEDICATED TO
DEAN ROLAND B. PARKER
»^^7^0R guidance and friendship today's stu-
dent body looks to Dean Roland B. Parker. Since war began his
responsibilities have increased, for the problems that face the
individual students, the student body as a whole, he accepts as
his own.
More than any person outside the staff. Dean Parker has aided
in the building of this year's Yackety Yack, and it is with
grateful appreciation that this book is dedicated to him.
In a sense this is his "Senior" year, for it was four short
years ago that the present Dean of Men came to Chapel Hill.
Because he is a symbol of the highest devotion and friendship,
because he is human as well as efficient, Pete Parker holds the
respect, admiration and love of the Carolina student body.
'Dr. Frank"
PRESIDENT GRAHAM
Q
^V^N THESE DAYS of war when Carolina more than ever
needs guidance, inspiration and foresight, it turns to Dr. Frank Graham. For
the problems that seem beyond solution he finds answers, drawn from his under-
standing of people and principles.
He was a Marine in the last war and he knows how to fight. On the War
Labor Board in Washington, he wages a personal fight for justice. On week-
ends he comes home to Chapel Hill, to set the University in order, to give Caro-
lina the faith it needs for today.
During this period of disintegration and confusion his influence is a binding
force. His patience, his gentleness, his firm beliefs, bring people and forces
together in cooperation, where only discord existed before.
His endurance, his vitality and his wisdom are directed towards winning
a total war, a total peace in the days that follow for Chapel Hill, this nation
and the world.
10
MILITARY ADMINISTRATION
3.
ORTi'-EiGHT HOURS before the bombing of Pearl
Harbor Captain W. S. Popham, Commandant of the V-12 School here,
left Honolulu to come to Carolina as head of the N.R.O.T.C. unit. A
Naval Academy man, Captain Popham has spent the last 32 years of
his life in active Naval service. From 1914-20 he spent three years on
the Battleship Texas as an Ensign, was Executive Officer of a large
war training camp, serv'ed aboard the Gunboat Nashville, and later
commanded a Sub for 18 months. He is from Annapolis but is one
of the best "Carolina" men on campus.
Marine Commanding Captain James Marshall knows why his men
are being trained. For fifteen months he was on active duty with the
fleet in Central America. Three months after receiving his degree in
- economics from Furman he joined the Marine Corps. At Carolina he
has charge of 220 Marines. Captain Marshall is a soft-voiced South-
erner, but he is also a Marine and is training his men in the tradition
of the Marine Corps.
Captain J. G. Skinner, Commandant of the Pre-Meteorology School,
is an old Carolina man, the Class of '32. From the last of March until
September Skinner was in charge of 242 students who prepared for the
study of weather here under combined Army-Weather Bureau di-
rection.
Commandant of the Army Specialized Training Program on cam-
pus is Captain E. V. Horton. Under his supervision are 250 foreign
area and language and 50 medical trainees.
Captain Popham
Captains Skinner and Horton
Captain Marshall
11
DEAN DF ADMINISTRATION
J)
,-if ■'rni House's personality is as many sided as the
jobs he has to do. He is forthright and honest, determined and hard-
working when he knows he is right. But he is the first to admit when
he is wrong, the first to hsten to someone whom he considers more
capable.
"On moral issues and social movements," says Dean House, "I put
complete faith in Frank Graham. But when it comes to farm problems,
I'm pretty much of an authority myself. I was born on a farm, you know."
Dean House is the son of an Eastern Carolina Sheriff and farmer, but
he reads Greek in the original and keeps up with the best in current and
classic literature.
When it comes to enjoying the human ever)' day things of life, Dean
House has no equal. He sees the humor in every situation and he has a
down to earth love of living.
He is a leader to be admired and respected, a friend to enjoy and
remember.
DEAN DF STUDENTS
.»>^E
E THINKS a problem through, and he analyzes it
from every angle before he acts ; and when Dean Bradshaw begins some-
thing, it is carried out until that something is accomplished.
The planning for a wartime Carolina was done in a great measure by
Dean Bradshaw. "With foresight, he realized what lay ahead for universities
like Carolina and went to work to prepare for these days of war.
Democracy', learning, teaching: these are his three great battlefields.
He started work on them in his undergraduate days when he was a pillar
of Student Government. He has continued that fight throughout the years
that have followed.
He is loyal to Carolina, its students and for what this Universit)' stands.
With Dean Bradshaw at work, Carolina need have no fear of war days
or the days that follow the Armistice.
DEAN DF WDMEN
OR A QUARTER OF A CENTURY Dean Stacy has
been supervising Carolina coeds. She has watched them grow from a hand-
ful of several dozen to an organized body of 800 women. She has cam-
paigned for funds to build dormitories, and she has had personal super-
vision over the decorating of all the girls' dormitories that have been
built here.
In 1913 Mrs. Stacy came to Carolina as a bride, the wife of Dean
M. H. Staq', back in the days when the University had but one Dean.
At his death in 1918, President Chase offered her the job of looking
after the coeds and she's been doing that ever since.
As the number of coeds has increased, so have Mrs. Stacy's duties and
responsibilities. It has been her job to place girls in the crowded dormi-
tories, to solve the roommate and three girls in a room problem.
Throughout her years at Carolina, Mrs. Stacy has not wavered from
her goal : higher education for women. Disregarding her emotions and
personal feelings, she sticks to her principles and strives to set up for
coeds the kind of college life she sincerely believes is best for them.
12
JoHNSox — General College
Wettach — Law
PiERSON — Graduate
HoBBS — Arts and Sciences
DEANS
:7„
HE Deans of the Uni-
versity schools this year have faced
many problems. To them has fallen
the job of running Navy and civilian
classes concurrently.
Throughout the confusion of a com-
bined Na^'y and civilian university they
have continued to work efficiently, con-
scientiously. The routine of Carolina
classes, taken for granted by all stu-
dents, runs smoothly because of the
hard work that these Deans have done.
While other phases of life here run
riot, they keep the academic part of
Carolina on an even keel. In a year of
confusion, they have done their part
in simplifying and organizing our daily
college existence.
Berryhill — Medicine
Carroll — Commerce
Beard — Pharmacy
Akers — Library Sciencf
13
FOREIGN
:7„
HE FACULTY of the University of North Carohna represents on a small scale the aim
of the United Nations. Here as teachers men from every corner of the earth meet and work together for higher
education.
When Hitler came to power in Germany Munich born Dr. Franz Gutmann saw what was happening to Ger-
man education. He had been a full professor at the universities of Breslau, Jena and Goettingan and director
of the institute of economics and private insurance at the latter.
In 1939 Gutmann accepted a call to Carolina, where he would be able to teach students in his special field
of government and banking and economic theory according to his own beliefs.
"I like the students here," he says, "for both civilians and V-12 boys possess natural sympathetic qualities
that makes it easy to really know them. I like Chapel Hill because it is so conducive to research."
In the last war Gutmann was a captain on the German side. In this war his age prevents him from fight-
ing for the Allies, but he is doing his part by training the next generation for the economic problems they will
have to face when peace is made, by preparing the next generation for advancement.
Early in 1939 Prof. E. P. Hexner and Hitler were in Prague at the same time. By the fall of that same
year Hexner, his wife and two boys were in Chapel Hill. Unwilling to have his sons educated according to
Nazi theories Hexner sent them to England, then brought them to the United States.
A Czech by birth, a political scientist by profession Hexner is an authority on the serious wartime problem
of international cartels. At one time he was coordinator of the Czechoslovak steel industry and he has written
a book on the International Steel Cartel. In Europe and in America Hexner has published several books on
political science.
As professor of civilian and V-12s Hexner knows many Carolina students. "I'm not the kind of professor
who appeals to students," he says, with a sad twinkle in his eye. But his students . . . coeds, sailors and 4-Fs
just grin. They know better. *****
From the Far East comes Dr. Y. K. Wong, math professor from the University of Chicago. Born in South
China near Hong Kong, Wong studied from his freshman year until he received his Ph.D. at the University
of Chicago.
After he received his master's degree Wong returned to China to teach in the National University of Peking
in North China. Dean of the school at that time was Hu Shih, now Chinese diplomat to the United States.
Wong has done research at the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton, and has worked on the manu-
scripts of the late E. H. Moore, head of the math department of Chicago.
At Carolina is a research associate, and is now teaching for the first time beginning mathematics. To Caro-
lina he brings the new ideas of the Middle West, the scholarship of the Chinese, the friendliness of a hospitable
Southerner.
14
PROFESSORS
The first professor to teach American hterature in Switzerland is Carolina's professor of German, Dr. W. P.
Friederich. Although the Swiss studied English literature they had no courses at all in American literature when
Friederich was an undergraduate at the University of Bern.
After he had studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, for three years at Harvard and at Yale Friederich returned
to Bern. With books of American literature donated by the City of New Bern and purchased at the Bull's Head
book shop he returned to his alma mater to teach the works of Emerson, Hawthorne and Longfellow.
Friederich has spent the major part of his time in the United States since 1927. At present he is teaching
German and German literature to civilians and A.S.T.P. students.
*****
G. R. Hernandez is half Cuban, half citizen of a small North Carolina town. He was born in the province of
Havana, in Cuba and he went to school there until 1931. But he came to North Carolina to continue his edu-
cation at a small Presbyterian boys' school in Hemp, N. C. There he came to know intimately the people, the
habits of Southern small towns. He liked it here in North Carolina, so he stayed. For a year he worked in a
silk mill, earned enough money to go to college and entered Mars Hill Junior College. His third year he trans-
ferred to Maryville College, Maryville, Tenn., where he earned his letters in baseball and basketball and his
diploma in 1938.
As a professional baseball player Hernandez moved to Hickory in 1939. There he got a job teaching Spanish
in Hickory High School and acting as Assistant Coach of High School Athletics.
In the fall of 1941 as a research assistant in romance languages he came to Carolina. At present, as Di-
rector of Spanish Instruction of the A.S.T.P. School here his time is devoted solely to A.S.T.P. students.
Senor Guillermo Brown teaches Spanish and studies dramatics. In his native Chile, on the continent of
South America students of the drama cannot get a degree in dramatic art. That's why Brown came to Carolina.
After receiving his Bh.F. at the Universidad de Chile Brown came to the United States as Chilean consul
at Baltimore, Maryland.
Senor Brown is particularly interested in serious drama, drama of power and psychology. "We in South
America do not go to the theatre to laugh." Brown has written several plays since he came to Carolina and
has had one experimental produced in the Playmaker Theatre.
Enthusiastic about the extra-curriculum life of the campus Brown and his wife, whom he met on a pavilion
after he had corresponded with her for many years, miss few Carolina entertainments. Because of his amiabil-
ity and his interest in Carolina Brown is doing a one man job of furthering the good neighbor policy of the
Americas.
IS
Alexander B. Andrews
BOARD QF TRUSTEES
7
,^^HE MEMBERS of the Board of Trustees are elected for
terms of eight years. Their tenure of office is so staggered that one-fourth of
their number is elected every two years. The Board, composed of over a hundred
members, has complete authority in all matters concerning the University.
Joseph Melville Broughton
Governor, President ex-officio of the Board of Trustees
Clyde Atkinson Erwin
Superintendent of Public Instruction, member ex-officio of the Board of Trustees
Alexander Boyd Andrews
Secretary of the Board
HONORARY MEMBERS
Oliver Max Gardner, Cameron Morrison, John C. Blucher Ehringhaus,
Clyde Roark Hoey
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Governor J. Melville Broughton, Chairman es-officio
Alexander B. Andrews, Secretary
*1944 — Josephus Daniels, Clarence Poe, R. J. Reynolds
*1946 — Charles Whedbee, John W. Clark, O. Max Gardner
*1948 — John Sprunt Hill, Walter Murphy, John J. Parker
*1950 — Mrs. Laura Weil Cone, Mrs. May L. Tomlinson, Haywood Parker
*Term expires July 1. of year indicated.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
7
^^ HE General Alumni Association maintains a cen-
tral office in Chapel Hill, with a full time staff headed by Executive Secretary
Maryon Saunders. It promotes meetings of alumni in and outside the State;
sponsors a regular schedule of class reunions at Commencement time; publishes
a monthly magazine. The Allium} Review: helps build good will for the Uni-
versity among the public generally, and keeps up-to-date mailing lists and in-
formation concerning more than 30,000 Carolina alumni.
John M. Morehead
16
Summer drill
WAS HOT.
BLUE, WHITE AND KHAKI
7
^^ HE 1300 V-12 Gobs and Leathernecks on campus
come from everywhere. While most of them are directly from high school
or are old Carolina boys, there are many Sailors who have seen action in
the fleet and a large number of Marines from other universities. Uncle
Sam, who foots the bills, can send these men wherever he wants them
to go.
At Carolina they take a few required subjects such as physics and
naval science, but major in whatever they choose. Their stay here ranges
from two to seven terms. After that comes midshipman's school, or for
the Marines R.O.C. at Quantico. From these advanced bases they are
commissioned second lieutenants in the Marines or ensigns in the Navy,
then sent directly into action. If they don't measure up at any school
along the line they are sent to boot camp to try their hands in an en-
listed status.
Carolina is only the first rung in the Naval ladder, but the ground
work given here is what the rest of a future officer's Navy life is based
upon.
The first long line — the shape of things to come
Facial boogey-woogev.
18
Forward march
Wait to register and wait
for your books.
SECOND
COMPANY E
First Ron:- Wallin, J. L. ; Seyle, H. W.; Bartley, E. L. ; Wahl. I. S.; Phillips, W. S.; Wilkins, W. R.; Walker, R. M.
Frye, K. R. ; Gardner, D. A.; Everett, J. H.; Randall, T,; DElia, P. N.; Muster, F. E.; Ridenhour, R. E.
Second Roir: Stith, H. C. ; Allen, T. C; Nosewicz, S. P.; Harvey, J. D.; Adamson, S. H.; Olive, B. M.; Baker, J. M
Hagaman, S. M.; Ragland, W.; McClary, R. A.; Arnel, R. A.; Daniels, A. W. ; Thomas, A. W.
Third Rou: Blackmon, Jr., J. T. ; Berry, F. A.; Joyner, W. T. ; CowiN, D. ; Fallon, R. J.; Ingram, W. P.; Ferrell, C. F
HoLBROOK, F. ; Michaels, H.; McGuigan, W. G. ; Charlton, T. E.; Keebler, R. S.
Fourth Row: Smith, F. H.; James, L. M.; Manders, L. J.; Houghtaling, W. W.; Noll, L. R.; Daub, L. A ; McKim, T. J
Gillespie, J. C. ; Hodgens, C. I.; Burchfield, R. M. ; Bobbitt, L. E.; Doar, W. E.
T.; McKenzie. J. A.; Sims, J. H.; Webster, W. T.
,; Adams, R. G.; Kavanaugh, R. H.
First Row: Read, E. C; Monroe, W. G.; Hollander, R. A.; Flynt,
Barnes, J. T. ; Price, H. G. ; Epstein, S. C.
Second Row: Oliver. B. B.; Caduette, R. A.; Robinson, W. H.; Stevenson, E.
Forehand, R. E.; Kentch, J. B.; Gascoigne, J. B.; Lovell, W. R.
Third Rotr: Donnan, R. F.; McNulty, C. S.; Gittings, T. B.; Pfeiffer, F. T. ; Fesperman, J. T. ; Howe. D. C; Lee,
H.; Leidl, J. H.; Folger, M. C.
Fourth Row: CoNRAD, R. L.; Seagard, H. B.; Lea, P. P.; Baugher, H. W. ; McLendon, P. A.; Ritcher, E. R.; Footner,
G. M. ; Clark, E. B.
20
lATTALION
COMPANY F
first Row: Mabry, W. ; Perry, R. E.; Haworth, H.; Addison, J. H.; Hoots, J. H ; McKinnev, D.; Soyars, C; Lindsay,
W.; WiLsiE, E. ; Huber, P.; Hunter, B.; Stanford, T.
Second Row: McGuiRE, A.; Holtzclan, W. ; Regan. J.; Phillips, W.; Clapper, P.; Wicker, E.; Belk, B.; Alleman, D. ;
Fink, H. ; Brown, L. K. ; Mathis, J.; Towler. R.
Third Row: Clegg, B.; DesPortes, E.; Rhodes, J.; Wells, C. ; Clarke, L. ; Siskind, W. ; Nelson, L. ; Wheeler, G.; Als-
paugh, T. ; Krugman, E.; Smith, K.
Fourth Row: Earnhart, F. ; Ferrell, M.; Rodenbough, L. ; Mazoway, L.; Herbert, J.; Johnson, M.; Miller, H.; Kirby,
R.; White, J.; Bennett, S.; Bowman, W.; Roper, R.
First Ron: MiLLER, S. ; Snyder, C. J ; Douglas, R. L.; Rollins, C. T. ; Wiseman, B. W. ; Tisdale, A. E.; Cohn P S
Tucker, W. R.; Bradley, K. P.
Second Row: McDonald, R. E.; Peterson, W. S. ; Van Zandt. J. H.; McEvoY, W. R. L. ; Moore, W. L.; Wood, D. R.
Coke, R. C; Cosgrove, A. E.; Butts, S. A.
Third Row: Begnoche, D. A.; Brown, R. R. ; Wanek, R. C; Cason, C. E.; Shealy, R.
Cato, E. T. ; Ellis, J. A.
Byrd, R. H.; Moore, J. T.
Fourth Row: Wills, W. B.; Stallcup, R. A.; Ryan, J. S.; Tucker, M. L. ; Austin, L. D.; McGowan, J. B.; Johnson, A.
S.; Carroll, T. P.; Gates, H. L.
21
SECOND
COMPANY
G
First Row: Beard, S. H.; Cook, W. L. ; Karres, A. M. ; Rar, J. R.; Peacock, L. L. ; Mahoney, J. H.; Ensign,
N. M. ; Warlick, W. R.; Misenheimer, J. W.; Brewer, A. M.
Second Roiv: Elliot, R. W.; Small, J. W.; Maultsby, J. A.; Hunsucker, A. L. ; Kiser, R. M.; Burney, B. D.;
Brown, E. C. ; Wellford, H.; Davis, D. H. ; Edwards, P.
Third Row: Kaylor, O. T. ; AvERY, W. ; Webb, C. W.; Moody, J. P.; Kraus, W. J.; Gately, J.; Harris, S.;
Williams, F. A.; Bryant, C. B.; Boyett, W. L.
Fourth Row: Dudley, E. B.; Starr, E.; Richardson, J. E.; McLean, W. G. ; Kanipe, J. P.; Ball, D. A.; Adams,
W. A.; Bush, R. L.; Dorman, B. L. ; McElvaney, E.
First Row: Gaither, E. P.; Robertson, C. L. ; McClurkin, D. C. ; Johnson, J, H.; Johnson. I. S., Jr.; Johnson.
E. B.; Wooten, G. p.; Townsend, E. V.; Parish, J. J.; Taylor, H. D., Jr.; Storey, W. M.
Second Row: Morris, A. C. ; Hodge, H. W.; Mason, W. T. ; Campbell, J. M.; Cox, G. T.; Weaver. T. S.; Davis.
J. W. ; Hicks, L. P.; Kunze, D. E.; Punderburke, K. P.
Third Row: Andrews, W. R.. Jr.; Harriger, P. R.; Belk, T. M.; Miller, G. F. ; Clark, E. L. ; Bain, H. C. ;
McCauley, j. a.; Sharp. J. R. ; Summerour, G. W., Jr.
Fourth Row: Williams, J. L. ; Moore, C. B.; Buel, M. S.; Dunaway, K. R.; Hines, R. L.; Lambeth. C. P.; Tepper,
N. P.; Cooper, D. Y.; Brown, C. W.; Card, J. P.; Calkins, P. S.; Ferrara, P. B.
rDMPANY
G
22
BATTALION
COMPANY
H
First Row: La Duka, T.; Howie, L. Z., Jr.; Thorne, J. D.; Cobb, D. A.; Yates, W. E.; Garrison, N. W.; Gar-
rison, J. A.; Hadermann, D. G.; Ferguson, P. R.; Pope, W. S.; Hill, V. E.; Sharp, H., Jr.
Second Row: Tillman, H. A.; Macmillan, R. R. ; Coulter, H. D.; Macrae, D. S.; Garland, T. C; Tucker,
F. G.; Johnson, B. A.; Beale, L. E.; Rosborough, G. L.; Rader, A. M.; Miller, J. O.; Wilson, A. M.
Third Row: Davis, C, Jr.; Goad, W. R.; Skinner, B. B.; Gaither, J. R.; Eure, W. L.; Stutts, R. E.; Morris,
W. C, Jr.; Coverston, H. E., Jr.; Early, W. A., Jr.; Rice, R. C. ; Huntley, C H.
Fo/«7/:> i?oiiv Greaves, D. W.; \X'iLLiAMS, L., Ill; Byrd, T. H., Jr.; Plitt, R. A.; Lawson, A. M.; Hill, T. W. ;
Dibble, S. J.; MacDonald, J. E.; Torrence, D. G.; Earp, C. H.
First Row: Farrow, E. G. ; Little, E. A.; Bynum, Z. T. ; Whiteheart, W. R. ; Waters, W.; Collman, D. W.;
McLendon, M. B.; Hudson, J. B.; Lee, M. N.; Browning, W. W.
Second Row: Ivie, V. M. ; Thomas, R. H.; Crews, F. H.; Wisnenski, E.; Ackley, J. C. ; Sprague, K. W. ; Snyder,
J. T.; Morgan, F. G.; Davis, J. R.; Heath, R. C.
Third Row: Morris, J. W.; Smith, Z. T.; Stedman, J. B.; Owen, H. T. ; Suttle, A. B.; Pil.\nd. M. G.; Green,
H. T.; Partridge, A. C; Flowers, J. P.; Tracy, R.
Fourth Row: Worth, G. C; Palmer, R. H.; Bannerman, P. E.; Allen, L. G.; Radermacher, J.; Hebb, R. K.;
Shamburek, L. W.; Hendrik, N. J.; Deshields, E. D. ; Pascheal, J. G.
COMPANY
H
23
FIRST
If^"
COMPANY A
First Row: Kaufman, R.; Mills, J.; Slomka, A.; Wolfe, R. ; Ashe, H.; Wise, M.; Covington, W.; Harris, C. ; Copland,
T. ; O'Brien, W.; Waggoner, J.; Levenson, H.; Kirley, J.; Hunter, F. ; Grossman, H.
Second Row: Wilkerson, L. ; Garmany, J.; Creel, F. ; Shain, A.; Clark, H.; Williams, B.; Bushey, A.; Crumpler, R. :
AiLSWORTH, R.; MouER, P.; Moss, M.; WeChsler, S.; Kaplan, A.; Franzoni, O. ; S/.abo, F. F. ; Filer, E.
Third Row: Leyen, R.; Connel, R.; Blacksburn, C. ; Osler, W.; Leeds, R.; Page, J.; Reeves, A.; Benjamin, M.; Mc-
Kinney, J. ; Byers, M. ; Lewallen, C. ; Joyner, C. ; Radding, P. ; Schwartz, S.
Fourth Row: RICHARDS, W. ; Willingham, R.; Guy, E.; Barret, E.; Scruggs, W. ; Freed, S ; Robertson, J.; Wooten, C. :
Bookmyer, R.; Bridenbaugh, L. ; Garner, J.; Shore, W. ; Nachimow, L. ; Cornell, R.
First Row: Legum, S. D.; Lykes, D. M.; Cooley, W. O. ; Wade, E. L. ; Russell, E. W. ; Willson, K. C. ; Howard. W. R.;
Barker, M. B.; Colby, J. A.; Salisbury, R. W.
Second Rote: Tillery, L. B.; Harter, R. C. ; Ficarra, J.; Garrett, A. M. ; Trask, W. E.; Edens, F. R.; Grinstead, E. A.;
Jablin, M. J.; Shockley, G. J.
Third Row: Blanken. E. J.; Schwartz, J. M.; Rossfield, R. A ,; Bachich, G. P.; Sabiston, D. C. ; Glucksman, L.; Nixon,
C. C, Jr.; Loeffler, F. P.
Fourth Row: HoLTON, A. L. ; Damtoft, W. A.; OBarr. R. W.; Strauss, T. B.; Bernstein, S. H.; Zinman, S. N. ; Stout,
H. P.
f:-t f
%
»v*';'^v<:<v*v*^
■'■*■'■>■ ■
24
BATTALION
COMPANY B
First Ron-: KousTENls, J.; Cunningham, W. O.; Hall, M. H.; Amer, J.; Young, S. R. ; Moore, O. M.; Catafygiotu, J. T. ;
Hamilton, M. L. ; Harris, S.; Gilliam, A. G.; Glascock, D. W. ; Teague, A. T. ; Hanneke, I. H.; Shirley, G. C.; Gil-
bert, P. J.
Second Ron-: GRZOiNKOwsKi, N. R.; Hawkes, R. E.; Lowder, D. E.; Little, S. J.; Sutherland, E. L.; Berry, C. H.;
FoLGER, F. W.; Starke, J. C. ; Groseclose, W. P.; Hornstein, B. H.; Evans, H. W.; Talley, W. R.; Knollman, P. E.;
Clever, N. L. ; True, W. J.; Church, F. H.
Third Row: Land, V. T. ; Shadwell, L. R. ; Kimball, R. A.; Leatherwood, J. B.; Shadrick, T. L. ; Read, E. P.; Murchi-
son, J. W.; Blumberg, D.; Howington, R. P.; Benham, A. W.; Ritter, W. W.; Stevenson, R. L. ; White, W. V.;
Anderson, G. A.; Strayer, S. S.
Fourth Rou: Stone, M. D. ; PARSONS, W. B.; Tarawgo, C V.; Wehmeyer, W. V.; Cromer, A, E.; Pumphrey, H. O. ; Van-
diver, C J.; Gentry, H. W.; Snukals, W.; Modlin, E. N.; McDaniels, G. C. ; Parker, J. C; Rotton, J. H.
Fmt Rou: KwiTKOSKi, W. J.; Poulk, R. M.; Shook, H. A.; Worthy, F. S.; Brown. M. W.; Starr, J. G.; Dixon, C. B.;
Gaydos, J. H.; Walker, C. W.; Baker, R. F.; Connell, T. J.
Second Row: Bottom, H. H.; Perry. A. H.; Hurley, R. B.; Allison, J. R.; Auburn, W. J.; Dolan, J. R .; San Dick,
B. A.; Watson, H. L.; Vassar, M. W.
Third Rou: Nesbet, T. A.; Nygren, L J.; McCullough, R. B. ; Gould, N. E.; McMullan, J. B.; Wood, A. P.; Cassell,
J. R.; Smith, A. L. ; Rantz. R. H.
Fourth Row: Corey, K. H.; Marback. R. E.; Fitch, E. F. ; Hooper, L. L. ; Gay, W. C. ; Dearman, C. A.; Taylor, J. C. ;
LiNZEY, D. R.; Ormsby, R. D.
25
FIRST
COMPANY D
First Row: JOHNSON, C. ; Baker, V. I.;
Stamey, E. N. ; Ramsey, P., Jr.; Hood,
R. M. ; Stradley, B. F.; Searcy, J. E.;
WOLSKI, J. J.
Second Row: Holt, T. G.; Cagle, H. B.;
Dfnnis, C; Hollingsworth, L. R.;
Marshall, J. C; Justice, J. H.; Fitz-
PATRICK, J. T.
Third Row: Dewell, J.; Carpenter, C. L.,
Jr.; Jones. L. F. ; Joyce, G. J.; Martin.
J. A.; Bellamy, R. R.; Trovillion, L. C.
Fourth Row: Woodfin, K. L.; Freedman,
E. L.; Vaughan, J. C. ; Gunter, H. D..
Jr.; Hudson, T. W., Jr.; Bomberger, F.
C; Fair, J. W.
First Rou-: WALKER, A. A.; Brogden, E.
O. ; Foss, J.; Ebelein, A. W. ; Cochrane,
W.; Webb, J. B.; Lane, O. W.
Second Row: Clark, C. H.; Williard, D,
S.; Puller, K. D.; Chauncey, E.; Fos-
ter, S. C; Cozart, R. T.; Boney, S. A
Third Row: Nelson, D. ; Altemose, R. B. ;
Jones, K. S.; Brumbach, A. S.; Dunkfi-
BERGER, D. H.; Halsey, W. S.
Fourth Row: Peale, J. R.; Hodges, G ;
Thomas, R. S.; Denson, T. M.; Bynum.
J. C; Easter, K. P.
Ftrsi Row: Morgan, W. S. ; McKee, M.
J.; Herr, W. F.; Stefgnik, J. B.; Buck,
L. A.; Noneman, J. W.; HusE, H.; Rus-
sell, W. J.; Parks, D.; Nachamson,
W. I.
Second Row: Harris, A. R.; Wren, L. P.;
Kretchmer, A.; Pringle, D. L. ; Daniel,
C; Graves, J. P.; Cone, H.; Penick. C
I.; Cone, A.; Eberly, H. W.
Third Row: Ashby, L. C; Blackburn, J.
B.; Cranford, T. B.; Melchor, J. L. ;
Andrews, G. H.; Reynolds, S. D.; Good-
man, D. G.; Crump, W. H.; Jacobson,
S. A.
Fourth Row: Davis, R. N.; Corbett, C
H.; Kerr, J. T. ; Algranti, J. S.; Branch.
D. D.; McEnerney, J. T.; Almond, J.
D ; CoppAGE, R.; Bridges, G. E.
26
BATTALIDN
COMPANY
C
First Row: Magnuson, J. W. ; Johnson, S. P. ; Kelly, L. W. ; Green, C. F. ; Bowman, J. A. ; Kerner, R. ; Daum,
D. E.; DouLis, P. P.; Elliot, J. R.; Hollyday, W. M.; Hoggard, F. M., Jr.; Stoker, H. R. M.
Second Rou: Trevathan, G. E.; Stokes, T. L.; Gray, W. H.; Dameron, T. B.; Worth, W. A.; Albert, L. L. :
Jordan, W. H.; Winn, D. F., Jr.; Russo, A. J.; Walsh, R. E.
Third Rou: Weyher, J. E. ; Root, A. S.; Williamson, R. C; Friedman, S. D.; Sherrill, J. F. ; Turlington,
R. H.; Hipp, E. R.; Metcalf, C. G.; Hord, D. B.; Jones, L. E.
Fourth Row: Nolan, P. V.; Metzger, A. W.; Morris, M. G. ; Fowler, H. J.; Powell, A. M.; Barkley, H. M;
Davis, T. F.; Tate, A. D.; Blair, G. W. ; Whitlock, C M.
First Row: White, W. D., Jr.; Spuhler, F. C; Bennett, W. O.; Hays, A. H., Jr.; Peck, D. D. ; Harmovitch,
S. J.; Aronson, H. P.; Hutchinson, J. J.; Evans, W. R.; Jurkin. V. J.; Gilliam, L. S.; Cramer, W. C;
Epstein, R. H.
Second Row: Sherman, A. G.; Slinn, J. W. ; Mansfield, L. F. ; Hanks, J. B.; Gust, G. H.; Tuomey, T. D.;
Lindberg, F. L. ; Jackson, R. H.; Powell, E. S.; Israel, M.
Third Row: Gaither, W.; Bunch, R. P.; Lawch, R. C; Corn, L. P.; Sirontin, S. S. ; Homan, C. S.; K.ity, R.
A.; Hockaday, T.; Soybel, A.; Fulton. D. G.; Holland, W. D.; Holleyhead, W. E.
Fourth Row: Abbett, T. J.; Huskins, T. L. ; Ponder, J. C. ; Kitchen, E. H.; McNeir, W, V.; Anderson, V. H.;
McMullen, C. B.; Sprott, A. L.; Martin, S. A.; Jagoe, W. H.; Richter, D. M.
COMPANY
C
27
COMPANY A
FIRST PLATOON
Firs/ Row: Aland, J. W. ; Barnes, F. O.;
Parker, M. ; Weidman, F.; Blair, J.;
Arbes, S.; Boone, E. ; Byrd, C. ; Britt,
R.; Hartason, H.
Second Row; Petree, R.; Graves, E. P.;
Allen, T. F. ; Erickson, R. ; Yachimov-
iCH, J. T.; Blount, F. L.; Petro, A. R.;
Antony, A.; Kitrell, J. B.; Minke, J.
Third Row: Moore, C. ; Perrin, J.; Mall,
J. W.; Shufford, R. ; Bodkins, J.; Bar-
don, D.; Saunders, R.; Kleighege, B.
W.; Alliston, S.; Atkinson, F. L.
SECOND PLATOON
Fini Row: Cox, H.; Rosenast, B.; Leigh,
J.; Lane, T. ; Bell, D.; Ingram, R.;
Galinkin, N.; Cox, S.; Reed, D.; John-
son, W.
Second Row: Silvers, H. S.; Anderson,
J.; Harris, E.; Vogelsang, B.; Davis, J.;
Blacker, M.; Perkins, J.; Haigwood, P.
Third Row: Moore, J.; Sawyer, B.; Dr-
VALL, S.; Ashley, M. ; Ayers, C .
Matheny, H.; Johnson, G.; Wickik,
J. ; Lloyd, A. ; Jordan, R.
THIRD PLATOON
Fini Row: Faircloth, H. A.; Spaugh,
C. E.; Bliss, R. F.; Fouts, J. M. ; Robin-
son, L.; Wall, T. R.; Kimsey, C. C;
McKenzie, E. H., Jr.; Carrubba, H. D.
Second Row: Sullivan, T. J.; Apple-
white, L. A.; Bolgiano, J. H. ; Beach,
T. S.; Olsen, F. a.; Herb, W. H.; Camp,
I J.; Thompson, J. F., Jr.; Alspough,
I. F.; Pecora, J. L.; Johnson, R. D.
Third Rote: NICHOLSON, S. T.; Turner,
R C. ; Henry, N. H.; Brown, P.; KooNS,
I F.; Herre, R. W.; Mercer, W. C;
Bass, W. M.; Stevens, H. L., III.
28
COMPANY B
FIRST PLATOON
First Row: BosTic, M. F. ; Craddock, J.
W.; Dobbins, M. E.; Doyle, W. H.; Ed-
MUNDS, P. C; Booker. A. E. D.; Wood-
ARD, G. W.; Conner, J.; Hodson, C. B.;
Taylor, N.; Wade, J. D.
Seconcl Row: Cornish, T. ; Courts, R. B.;
Moss, A.; Culver, D. M. ; Taliaferro,
F. T. ; Hamilton, F. ; Dixon, B.; OLeary,
E. C. ; Clements, A.; Elliot, E. E.
Third Row: Carlier, J.; Clark, C;
Croom, C; Hill, C. C. ; Dolan, T. ;
Smith, J. E.; Cutler, T. N. P.; Craig-
HILL, S. P.; Butt, L. ; Cross, D. ; Clark.
E. B.
SECOND PLATOON
First Row: Davis, R. E.; Graham, R. M
Lowe, F. W., Jr.; Christian, W. W
GoLLiFORT. W. T.; Grimes, G. S
Futrelle, W. L.; Griffith, T. J
Breckinridge, J. C.
Second Row: Brooks, W. B.; Dombrosky,
R. B.; Rowley. H. W.; Bowers, W. W.;
Johnson, W. O.; Fox, G. C; Cooper, C
C ; Breuninger, L. T. ; Brewster, H. E.;
Esteill, R. H.
Third Ron: Clatterbuck, S. D.; Downs
D. G. ; WiLSO.N, F. L. ; Haygood, G. N.
Breckinridge, J. T. ; Hutchinson, J. H.
Sexton, P. F.; Catteron, E. D.; Sudeck
J. E.
THIRD PLATOON
Firit Riiw: Bryant, C. A.; Edens, R
Mack, B. D. ; Hussey, J. ; Gibson, B. J
Huether, D.; Edwards, J.; Gayle, E. Y
FicK, J. F.
Second Ron: Endres, H.; Craven, R. A.;
Nicholson, J. E.; Hendrix, J. R.; Jack-
son. C; Downs, D. G.; Herring, R. B ;
Chambers, L.; Edge, M. W.
Third Row: CLEMENS, S. W.; Faircloth,
J.; Brown, H. E.; Overbeck, W. A ;
'l-RAY. S. B.; Hersloth, S. N.; Hoy, H.
fR.; Gilbert, T. B.; Gage, R. S.
^^5 %U^^^
^. e
^MS ■ .?L-;^> J ; ''^h^\
111
f^ram "^^1
'P'
29
d
COMPANY C
FIRST PLATOON
First Row: Laboritz, H.; Poole, O. L
Box, B. M.; Stewart, R. K.; Vest, W,
W.; Andrews, F. M. S.; Wildman, J. A
PisANo, J.; Pates, B. A., Jr.; Lowe, A. G
Second Rote: LiTWA, S.; Ousley, J. C,
Roberts, H. C. ; Watkins, G. H. ; Under.
WOOD, W. J.; Winston, H. P.; Miller,
F. W.; Teague, E. L.; Stevens, J. R.
Third Row: PoOLE, R. S.; PooLE, G. B.;
Tyson, J. A., Jr.; Sullivan, W. L. :
PuRDY, B. W. ; Roberts, G. R.; Uc\n
T\RE, W. W., Jr.; Jones, E. H.; Sims
W.; Miller, J. J.
SECOND PLATOON
First Row: ScHEiRER, G. G. ; McGaghren
G. E.; Suddeth, J.; Haygood, L. ; Mc-
CuLLOM, R.; Thomson, J. M.; Schnee
BERGER, R.; NoosER, G.; Kitchens, W.
West, L. S.; Waldrop, C; Stuart, W. A
Second Row: Lahr, R. J.; Cox, J. R.
Mock, B. ; Saunders, R. C., Jr. ; Whit
mire, D.; Whittemore, T. M.; Wise, 1
O.; Jones, R. B.; Davis, R. B.; Welch,
E.; Smith, W. H., Jr.
Third Row: Proctor, E.; Woodson, D,
Reck, W. R,; Wharton, F., Jr.; Wilson
R. H., Jr.; Webb, P. A.; Jones, J. R.
Cohen, L. S.; Oppenheim, L. ; Yaste
D A
THIRD PLATOON
Fint Row: McClaugherty, C. a.; Roh-
LING, B.; Pierce, R. N.; Tharp, M. J.;
Painter, W. M.; Peterson, H.; Smith,
I.; Edgar, W. B.; Kirk, J, Z. ; Thompson,
C, B.; Ramsey, V. J.
Second Rote: Menges, B. ; Lord, L. W.;
McGiRT, v.; McClure, F. ; Knott, E.;
Wright, E. B. ; Wagandt, C. L.; Ridgely,
D S. ; Knight, E. H.; Lehnert, J.
Third Row: OwEN, T; STAPLES, J.;
Frankel, E. ; Mathis, O. ; Weldon, H.;
GusTiN, M. M.; Hyder, D G. ; Lucas,
W. E.; Marshal, R.; Maxwell, S. L. ;
I'.^ORiN, E. H.
30
RATIONED FUN
7
^^ HE 0600 RISING HOUR and uniforms were taken in stride.
Except for the local beer and date shortages, the V-12ers led a social life much like
that of old peacetime Carolina days.
The discouraging six to one man-woman ratio in Chapel Hill brought about the
discovery of Burlington as a week-end hang-out. The beer situation handled itself:
those who wanted it most got there first.
Carolina dances helped to while away the week-ends. The Grail gave several,
the coeds too, while the N.R.O.T.C. had its annual ball. White ties and tails were
absent but the uniforms added military color.
When the V-12ers put on their uniforms in July they automatically acquired a
military lust for life. The gleam in their eyes was a new one; their daily schedule
was different; but they still had the same social ideas that Carolina gentlemen had
back in the days when life wasn't rationed.
Room for one more.
31
Commander G. L. Harriss,
Executive Officer.
Lieut. Commander Paul M
Grover.
Lieut. Commander H. W.
Carroll, Jr.
Lieut. L. A. Rich.
Lieut. K. G. Brown.
•x
First Roic:
Porter, Br^adshaw,
Jacobs, Whitner.
St-cond Ron:
fullinwider,
Brown, L., Creech,
Sonntag, Green,
Stathacos,
Bell, R.
ThirJ Roir:
Sproule, Yelver-
TON, Oettinger,
Hall, Barbour,
Crone, Bencini.
Captain W. S. Popham,
Professor of Naval Science
and Tactics.
N. R. D. T. C.
7
« ' HE 1943-44 year for the Naval Re-
serve Officers' Corps began on July 1, 1943, marking an-
other big step in the Corps' development into a concentrated
naval training organization. Now on active duty, the Corps
was put on a wartime schedule.
Irnnl Row:
( MIEFS MeEKS,
Taylor,
Davenport.
Second Rotr:
■^'eoman Short,
Chief Marshall.
32
N. R. D. T. C.
More active than ever in campus affairs, the Unit under Battalion Commander John C. Paty,
began to prepare for its first graduation. The first class with 44 remaining out of its original 110
and with 3 second classmen who had joined its ranks, faced the realization that it soon would be
ser\'ing on the high seas. Four original members, Robert Feinburg, Wade Weatherford, John Rob-
inson and Dick Bennett, having already left the Unit as ensigns, the first class buckled down to
the task of making themselves fit to carry that half -inch stripe on their sleeves.
With its members living together as an organization for the first time, the Unit through its
cadet officers controlled directly the lives of all its students. They were aroused at 0600 by the
Unit bugler, they were met with the new experience of cleaning their own rooms, they found
themselves without the privilege of cutting or being late to classes. They led a new kind of life;
. . . new to them and new to Carolina.
As in the past, N.R.O.T.C. men led in student go\ernment. Denmon Hammond replaced John
Robinson as president of the student body; Reid Thompson took over the speakership of the stu-
dent legislature and those officers elected last spring continued to serve.
COLUMN RIGHT! Armory in the background.
Color Guard — Stevens,
Miller, Baity, Jones.
TURRENTINE GETS THE
Battalion Commander
— John Paty.
Battalion Staff —
Awalt, Fullenweider,
Robinson, Wertheim.
33
fli - fll^ dl
First Rou Clark, Crawford, Efird, Cameron, Brown, L., Barbour, Cato.
Second Rou Evans, Corbitt, Creech, Crone, Alexander, Koppel.
Third Ron Richmond, Moore, Henderson, Horter, Ashbaugh, Watson, W., Bishopric, Garden.
Foiiith Rou Freeman, Sharkey, Alvarez, Edwards, Henderson, Dean, Alverson, Covington.
Fiith Rou Bell, J., Davis, J., Gartner, Baccus, Cheatham, Brown, P., Burrit, Bagley.
Si\ib Rou WoRTMAN. Elder, Butman, Doar, Bradshaw, Bencini, Greathouse.
FIRST COMPANY
^.^A/ T THE END of the first period of
Navy-supervised education the First Company has accumu-
lated — if nothing more — many memories. Company Com-
mander Charles Richmond started off by being exacting,
and the high standard thus set has persisted.
RANDOM RECOLLECTIONS: — 'Pick up the step.
First Company." . . . Washing whites in the showers. . . .
"Hit the Deck." . . . Empty beds on the third deck, and
the boys who left them. . . . "Check the blond on the
end." . . . Thuds and screams from number eight. . . .
"Pipe Down." . . . Study sessions in halls and heads. . . .
Blown fuses, swearing, candles for reading. . . . The tender
incident of the second deck head. . . . Wyatt Henderson's
gallant attempts to get intramural games playing. . . .
'Dirty Deck, Dust, Dirty Baseboard."
Heil ? No, signal practice.
34
First Row: SIMMONS, Kenney, White. Lane, Mallison, Ficklen, Johnson, Green.
Second Row: Feder, Fitch, Elliott, Ellis, W. E., Hall.
Third Row: Ennis, Dunn, Harrison, Gilliam, Long, Jenks.
Fourth Row: Matthews, Hartshorn, Fowler, Hackney, Howard, Meyers, Milner.
Fifth Row: Lewis, Faurote, Howard, Hinsdale, Otte.
Sixth Roic: HuGHES, Greenbaum, Erwin, Ellis, W. B., Lcckhart.
Orders of the day.
'Who got burnt ;■
SECOND COMPANY
7
— ' HE Second Company was out-
standing this year — winner of the Best Drilled Company
Trophy last spring, holder of top honors in team and in-
dividual sports and receiver of phonefuls of calls from
the Yack office.
Remember fellows leaving for Bainbridge.-' . . . Ensign
Bennett's sleeping.' . . . Hall and Green with trumpet
duets.' . . . Greenbaum with his scuttlebutt and Gambill
with his homespun yarns? . . . Feder's demanding better
shines.' . . . White glove inspections.' . . . Hackney's "Please
wake me, heavy date," signs.' . . . Bennett's preaching
tolerance to his roommates.' . . . Those scuffles in No. 21.'
. . . Myers, the Marked Marvel? . . . Football in back of
the barracks? . . . Yankee Levine and his southern drawl?
. . . Erwin's racing for the tape line.
Flags and pennants.
35
First Row: TuRRENTiNE, Kelly, Morgan, Perry, Phoenix, Kenny, Sonntag. Rankin.
Second Row: Pardue, Parmenter, Phelps, Lawrence, Mirsky, Rainer.
Tbird Rou': Slessinger, Sibley, Kerr, Leftwich, Parker, Peel.
Fourth Row: Gilliam, S., Ward, Rouse, Powell, Redlin, Secrest.
Fifth Row: Pope, Mitchell, Newman, Morris.
Sixth Rotr: Kale, Norwood. Stai.lings, Jacobs, Porter, Morris.
THIRD COMPANY
J
Os» ED BY Company Commander Ray-
mond Turrentine and Athletic Director Edward Kale, the
Third Company maintained its high standard of clean
sportsmanship and keen competition this past year.
THINGS WE WONT FORGET:— Ward's There
She Blows." . . . Powell's uniforms. . . . Papa and little
Sibley. . . . Morgan and his perfume. . , . Champ Stallings.
. . . Second deck reading room. . . . Mack's singing "In
My Arms." . . . Henry's guitar. . . . That Margie. . . .
Ensign Feinberg. . . . Room No. 8's Java. . . . Porter's
swinging taps.
More orders.
36
First Row: Parker, Sowell, Stringfield, Walters, Shultz, Van Zandt, Kemp.
Second Row: Strobel, Wright, Stevens, Williams, White, Bellamy.
Third Row: Watsox. Zollicoffer, Stancill. Slaughter, Turnage, Stathacos, Sutton.
Fourth Row: Temple, Whidbe, Shaughnessy, Taylor, Shepard, Register, Winslow, Bell.
Fijth Row: ZiMMOR, Taylor, Whitney, Underwood, Wilson, Van Wagner.
Sixth Row: Sears, Thompson, Williams, Strayhorn, Williamson, Sproule, Yelverton, Trueblood.
FOURTH COMPANY
/N ECOLLECTIONS FROM CENTER
BAY OLD EAST:— Remember ... the snccesses of True-
blood's intramural department, and in particular, Whitner's
championship Water Polo team. . . . The Vice-Admiral of
room 17. . . . Pete Stathicos practicing his trumpet. . . .
The after breakfast serenades of the Temple, Trueblood,
Whidbe, Zimmer quartet. . . . Temple's sudden rise to
fame in S. and F.'s "Gadabout." . . . Those third deck
boys who "flunked" all the way from A/S to Aviation
Cadet with an incidental $25 raise. . . . The blue halos
and the scrub brush parties in the head. . . . How we
would march off to breakfast first, once every second month.
. . . The way Zollicoffer would cuss when we were ordered
to fall in line alphabetically.
rH£ OFFICERS DISH IT OUT.
37
HF HARDEST WORKING
STIIDFNTS ON C^MPUS
38
For the 555th time: "U.N.C. is the oldest
STATE university . . ."
SERVICES
A.S.T.P. AND MEDICINE
A
NTO THIS Navy dominated University came
250 of the Army's ' best educated" enlisted men, students of the Army
Specialized Training Program. Their Army I.Q. is more than 130
and the majority of them speak one foreign language fluently and
have a fairly good speaking and reading knowledge of others.
Included in the A.S.T.P, unit are 70 med students who are speed-
ing through complicated med courses to become Army doctors. There
are also a few Navy med students under V-12 direction.
They're a varied bunch of service men. They've come from all over
the states, from all kinds of jobs. Some were teachers, lawyers, news-
paper men, others worked from Hollywood to Brooklyn.
Their classes are held separately, their free hours on this campus
are limited, so they come into contact with only a small portion of
the Carolina student body.
Most of their time is spent studying French, Spanish, Italian, Ger-
man or medicine. On week-days they have eight hours of academic
work per day plus an hour of military drill. Except on Saturdays and
Sundays they have but 60 minutes a day to do what they please.
They've come to Carolina for 36 weeks to learn, to prepare them-
selves for service in war torn Europe.
Med STUDENTS OFF
TO CLASS.
The SHORTEST DISTANCE BETWEEN TWO POINTS.
39
Taking life easy the Navy way.
NAVY PRE-FLIGHT SCHDDL
7
.^^wo SPRINGS AGO the Naxy Pre-Flight School
came to Chapel Hill, Carolina's first big time military unit of this war.
The village looked with interest at the uniformed hordes of cadets
who streamed throughout the town on week-ends.
But now the Pre-Flight School is a part of Chapel Hill, an accepted
section of Carolina, something the coeds would find difficult to do
without.
The school is now training 1875 men from all parts of the country
who have come here to undergo one of the toughest training courses
in the armed forces. Headed by Commander John P. Graff the school
has moved with ease and efficiency through its initial stages into
maturity.
Columbus proved . . .
AND made work FOR
40
PRE-METEDRDLDGY SCHDDL
HE Pre-Meteorology School came to Carolina
quietly, did its work, and left. For six months 242 students studied the
weather under joint Army Air Corps and Weather Bureau supervision.
The Pre-Meteorology School was organized as a temporary unit; the
one here was a "B" school in the two-part Army program. From Caro-
lina its trainees, 183 of whom completed the course, went to "A" schools
at Chanute Field or at the University of Chicago.
Heading the school was Capt. J. G. Skinner, a Carolina man of the
Class of '32. He came as a Lieutenant, but left with his Captains bars.
The Pre-Met course here was short and condensed. The men arose
each morning at 6:30, had classes from 8 until noon, then physical edu-
cation for an hour. Afternoon classes were held from 2 until 4 o'clock,
military drill from 4 until 5. At 6:30 the trainees began their nightly
study which lasted until 9:30 . . . then to bed at 10:30.
The Pre-Met students led a busy life at Carolina. As weather special-
ists at American air fields all over the world they will continue to be busy.
The Weatherman
si.ng . . . drill . . . stud/ . . . kill.
41
UNIVERSITY DAY
Lyl NIVERSIT1' Day at Carolina commemo-
rates the laying of the cornerstone of the first building, Old East,
in 1793. This year's celebration was dedicated to the sons of
Carolina who have fought in this nation's wars.
It has been said that no college or university in America in
Civil 'War days gave more of its sons to the armies in proportion
than did the University of North Carolina. The 'War between the
States literally consumed the University.
Carolina men had previously served in the War of 1812
and in the Mexican War, They again saw service in the Spanish-
American War.
And in the first World War the University saw 2,250 of her
former students enter the service — upwards of a quarter of her
living alumni at the time. Hundreds of these saw hard fighting
overseas. Two score paid the sacrifice.
And now the University is again serving its people at war.
Some six thousand of her sons and daughters are in the armed
forces. Others man the lines of the home front. Former students
of this University, as President Graham has said, "push on
wherever danger stretches its farthest fronts of democracy,
which will, in God's good time, beat back the Axis Powers and
make possible, at last, the advance of freedom, the production
of abundances and the organization of justice and peace in the
world.
And so on University Day — the 15()th in a long succession
of University Days — we engaged in a program of commemora-
tion and rededication. We commemorated the deed and faith of
the Revolutionary founders of the University. We rededicated
ourselves in their spirit to the high purpose for which the Uni-
versity of North Carolina was established-by which it has endured.
A HUNDKED AND FIFTY YEARS
I WO THOUSAND LISTENED.
42
RATIONED
CLASSES
f [ E
EVER BEFORE in the history of Carohna have classes been more
confused or class schedules more disrupted.
A double undergraduate school system, a shortage of professors combined with an
increase in student population, wartime priorities, and cooperation headaches with the
Navy have all added to the disconcertion of the Administration.
Not the least of its worries is the fact that new students are entering the University
nearly every month and nearly everyone is in some sort of a speed-up program. A
great deal of difficulty was encountered in making up the class section of the Yackety
Yack due to the fact that a number of persons had no idea as to which class they
belonged.
In the face of practically insurmountable difficulties the facult)' has managed to
keep going — and more — to turn in a good record for themselves and the student body.
A cheery smile and a realization of the problems made by war have kept students at
work with a will. The fate of compulsory class attendance for the V-12ers and a prospect
of the trimester system for everybody will no doubt eventually bring order out of chaos.
45
SENIOR
Craven Turner,
Vice-Presidem
■^— ^Hl
Anne Strause.
Treasurer
HE Senior Class of 1944 says good-bye to Caro-
lina, and Carolina says good-bye to Senior Classes for the duration; for
ours is the last until after the war.
This spring we cannot look back over our years on the Hill and re-
member ourselves as the students who began our lives here together in
September of 1940. Though some of us did come to the village for the
first time four years ago, many came the next year, and the next, and the
next. For we speeded up our schooling after Pearl Harbor; we hurried
through our formal education; we transferred from other schools from
all parts of these United States.
46
CLASS p-^-.
L
This year the Navy blue mixed with Army khaki and Marine greens
and plaid jackets and bright sweaters and straight skirts. Many of us
came back in July wearing regulation seamen's uniforms. Others of us
planned the near time when we would finish our scholastic requirements
and take our places as the men and women behind the men behind the
guns. '^
We didn't graduate together this year. Some of our number were
graduated after the first session of summer school, some after the second
session in December, in March, in June. Some of us went through formal
graduation exercises ; others of us merely went to South Building and
left our forwarding addresses for our diplomas. And still others of us
interrupted our life at Carolina long before our sheepskins were due. In
short we were a University at war — and we were working more than
usual.
But it wasn't all work for us this year. We played in our free time
much the same as always. We rang up another "first" for our pages —
we became the first Senior Class to attend Junior-Seniors in the fall. The
only times we heard big nam,e bands were when we dropped nickels in
the slot at the Porthole, Harry's, Brady's, and the rest. We considered
ourselves lucky when we could get a band at all.
We who are here as Seniors still have no need to remember Caro-
lina as "it once was." We'll remember it as it is — not just a place, not
just a University, not just a rather long stop gap before we step over into
the outside world.
We remember Carolina as an ideal, an ideal to which we of the Class
of 1944 have dedicated our lives.
47
SENIORS
Lawrence L. Albert
White Plains, N. Y.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pre-Dental;
Di Senate (2); Orchestra (2).
Julius Amer
Flushing, N. Y.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Cliemistry;
Band (1, 2, 3).
Walter Joseph Auburn, Jr.
Lombard, 111.
Sigma Chi
gree in Piilitic
Robert Henry Bell
Pleasantville, N. Y.
Pi Kappa Alpha
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Interfraternitv Council (3i; Senior Dance
Committee (4).
Karl Bishopric, Jr.
Spray, N. C.
Beta Thctj Pi
Candidate for B.A. Degree in Journalism;
Carnlina ilagazim (1, 2. 3. 4), Pliotog-
rapliv Editor (3. 4); Class Executive Com-
mittee (1); IXiilii Tin Heel (1. 2. 3. 4):
Tur and Fcatlurs <li: V.u kftv V.uk (1.
2). Editor (3. ti. I'liotounipliy Kilitur i2l;
Carolina Wurli>liuiJ Council 12. 3i; Who's
Wlio in .-Vmerican Universities and Colleges
(4).
Sion Alford Boney
Goldsboro, N. C.
Delia Kappa Epsilon
Candidat3 for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Class Honor Council (2); Interfralernity
Council (4) ; Sound and Fury (2) ; Student
Legislature (4); Vacketv Yack (1, 2, 3);
Y.M.C.A. (1. 2. 3, 4) ; Class Dance Com-
mittee (2) ; Class Finance Committee (3) ;
nt Marshal (3).
James Morton Alexander
Beaufort, N. C.
Chi Phi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry;
Catapidt (3) ; N.R.O.T.C. Dance Commit-
tee (2, 3).
Vincent Howard Anderson
Seneca, S. C.
Chi Phi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
International Relations Club (1); Yackety
Yack (1, 4): Y.M.C-A. (1. 2, 3): Fresh-
man Orientation Committee.
Francis Gloyd Await, Jr.
Washington, D. C.
Delia Psi
Candidate for A.B, Degree in Physics;
Interfrattrnity Council (3, 4); Executive
Council (4) ; Playmakers (1, 2, 3) ; Yackety
Yack (1, 2) ; Catapult Editor (4) ; Sound
and Fum (1. 2. 3).
Charles Richard Bennett
AsheviUe, N. C.
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in Health and
Physical Education: Band (I. 2. 3); Drum
Major (3); Basketball (1); Tennis (3).
George Walker Blair, Jr.
Pittsboro, N. C.
Alpha Tan Omega
Phi Beta Kappa
Alpha Epsilon Delta
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pre-Medicine;
Carolina Political Union (1. 2); Class
Executive Committee (1). Chairman (1);
Class Dance Committee (2); Y.M.C.A.
(1, 2); Cla.ss Finance Committee (3),
Chairman (3).
James Barrow Boyce, III
Warrenton, N. C.
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Co
Yackety Yack (I).
48
Lewis Alexander Buck
Norfolk. Va.
( .uitlidate for A. I!. Deiree in Histii
Julius Garland Cardan, Jr.
Durham, N. C.
Del til Sigm.i Pi
(.andidate for B.S. Decree in Commerce;
Interdormitory Council (3); Sound and
Fun/ (2, 3) : Interdormiton' Dance Com-
mittee (4); Student Legislature (4);
Young Democrats Club (2, 3); Y.M.C.A.
(1, 2, 3); Dance Committee (2, 3, 4),
Chairman (3) : Freshman Orientation Com-
mittee (3); Sophomore Day Committee (2),
Cliairman (2).
Charles Richard Clark
Washington, D, C.
Sigma Nil
Degree
Robert Tombs Cozart, Jr.
Goldsboro, N. C.
Befa Thela Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Ecoii
Interfraternitv Council (3, 4) ; i
Student Legislature (1): Track (3):
f-rv Vack (41.
Thomas Barker Dameron
Goldsboro, N. C.
Zetii Psi
Alpkt Epsilon Delia
Candidate for B.S. Degree in PreMedicine;
Carolina Political Union (2. 3) : University
Club (3); Boxing (31; Football (3).
James Rowlette Davis
Wilmington, N. C.
Delta Sigma Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Orail. Exchequer (4) ; Student Legisla-
ture (41; Chairman Elector's Committee
(4); University Club (3); University Dance
Committee (4); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2); Inter-
Town Council (3); House Privileges
Board (3).
Zachary Taylor Bynum
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Sigma Chi
CaTidi<late for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Hand (1. 2. 31 ; Interdormitory Council
cn : Vice-President nf Old West (31.
W'ayland Henry Cato, Jr.
Augusta, Ga.
Beta Gamma Sigma
Sigma Nu
Candidate for B.S. Degree in
William Olds Cooley
Washington, D. C
Chi P<i
Candidate for B.S. Degree in C<
Walter Atkinson Damtoft
Asheville, N. C.
Phi Delia Thela
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Dailii Tar Heel (2. 3, 41, Editor (41;
Golden Fleece; Grail.
Daniel Edward Daum
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in Chemistry;
Di Senate (2); Ilillel Cabinet (1. 21;
Y.M.C.A. (1. 2).
Junius Ayers Davis
Graham, N. C
Candidate for B..\. Degree in Mathemat
ics: Glee Club (1. 21; Campus Radio Stu
ilio (1, 2).
Turk .Vc Kiso me—h a rd- work-
htff poliiiro — freshman
49
SENIORS
Paul Nicholas D'Elia, Jr.
Bridgeport, Conn.
Candidate for A.B.
Arts; Sound atiii Fn,
(1. 2, 3. 4).
Decree in Dramatic
w (1. 2); Playniakers
Henry J. Fink
Baltimore, Md.
Candidate for B.S. Decree in Commerce.
James Garrison Freeman
Kannapolis, N. C.
Delta Sigr/hi Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce ;
Class Executive Committee (4) ; Inter-
dornutorj' Council (3); Phi Assembly (1):
Y.M.C.A. (1. 2, 3): Chairman Ring Com-
mittee (3. 4) : N.R.O.T.C. Executive Com-
mittee (3. 4).
William G. Gaither, Jr.
Elizabeth City, N. C.
Sigma Nil
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Connnerc
13 Club (3); University Club (3); Tra
(1, 2, 3); Yackety Yack (1).
George Denman Hammond
Atlant,t, Ga.
Phi Delia The/a
Candidate for .A.B. Degree in Chemistry;
Anipliiitt-nrthen (8, 41; Class Executive
CoMiniitUc (1, 2); Class Officer (3);
(iiniKhuul (3); Golden Fleece (3, 4); Grail
(2. 3). President (4); Interfraternity
Council (3), President (4) ; International
Relations Club (1. 2, 3); Monogram Club
(2, 3, 4); Student Council (3), President
(4) ; University Club (3) : Swimming (2,
3. 4); House Privileges Board (3, 4).
Edward Reginald Hipp
Charlotte, N.C.
Beta Theta Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pre-Medi-
cine; Class Honor Council (1); Interfra-
ternity Council (1. 2); Monogram Club
(1); Wrestling (1).
Howard Taylor Ennis, Jr.
Stockley, Del.
Tau Kappa Alpha
Candidate for A.B. Degree in .lournal-
isni; Debate Squad (3, 4); Debate Coun-
cil (4); Di Senate (3. 4): International
Relations Club (3) ; Monogram Club (3,
4): Cross Country (3. 4); Wrestling (3);
Y.M.C.A. (1, 2); N.R.O.T.C. Rifle Team
(1. 2. 3, 4).
Earnest Frankel
Charlotte, N. C.
Tau Epsilon Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English;
Carolina Magazine (1, 2, 3, 4>, Editor (3):
Class Executive Committee (2); Daily Tar
Heel (1. 2). Managing Editor (3); Hillel
Cabinet (1, 2): Interfraternity Council
(2, 3); Publications Union Board (2),
President (3): Student Legislature (1, 2);
Tar and Feathers (1. 2); University Club
(2): Y.M.C.A. (1, 2): Student Govern-
ment Coninnttee (1); Yackkty Yack {4).
William Harry Fullenwider
Monroe, N. C.
Delta Sigma Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Interdormitorv Council (2); University
Club (3): Y.M.C.A. (1, 2. 3); N.R.O.T.C.
Executive Committee (3, 4) ; Winner of
Josephus Daniel Award (3).
Sterling Gary Gilliam
Franklinton, N. C.
Zeta Psi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Economics;
Class Honor Council (3. 4); Gimghoul;
Interdormitory Council (3) ; Y.M.C.A. (1,
2. 3); Basketball (1); Yackety Yack (1).
Wyatt Collier Henderson
Bayside, N. Y.
Delta Sigma Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in C
Di Senate (I); Wrestling (2);
(3).
William Dalton Holland
Statesville, N. C.
Candidate for U.S. Degree in (
SO
Israel Harding Hughes, Jr.
Raleigh, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Political
Science: Carolina Political Union (2. 3);
Class Executive Committee (1); Y.M.C.A.
(1, 2. 3), Cabinet (3).
Weldon Huske Jordon
Fayetteville, N. C.
Alpha Tau Omego
Alpha Epsilon Delta
Phi Beta Kappa
Candidate for B.S. Degree i
cine: University Club i3i: 1
2). Secretary (3).
Arthur Sanford Kaplan
High Point, N. C.
Phi Beta Kappa
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry;
Di Senate (2): Hillel Cabinet (1. 2. 3)
President (2): Y.M.C.A. (1, 2).
Robert Francis Kenney
Trenton, N. J.
Candidate for B.S. Deeree in Commerce:
Flying Club (1).
Lloyd Stuart Koppel
Jersey City, N. J.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Dailii Tar Heel (3. 4): Di Senate (2. 3);
Y.M.C.A. (1. 2): X.R.O.T.C. Cafaimlt Edi-
tor (1).
Byron Hannibal Matthews
Washington, D. C.
Beta Theta Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Cot
Lewis Edward Jones
Norfolli. Va.
Sigma Nu
Degree in Pre-Medi-
Edgar Locke Kale
Asheville, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Political
Science; Football (1) ; Track (3) ; Y.M.C.A.
(1. 2).
Richard Fletcher Kemp
Greensboro, N. C.
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Candidate for B.S. in Commerce.
Richard Kerner
New York, N. Y.
Pi Lambda Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemistry:
Carolina ilagazine (2); Daily Tar Heel
(2 3): Interfraternitv Council (3. 4);
Sound and Fun/ [■>): University Club (3,
4); Baseball (1); Football (2).
James Alexander Lockhart
Charlotte, N. C.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in Economics
John Frank Miller, III
Washington, D. C.
Zeta Psi
Candidate for A.B. Degree i
51
SENIORS
^Jj^^
John Henry Mills
Baxley, Ga.
Camliilate for B.S. Deffiee in Pie-Medi-
cine; Banil (2, 3); Y.M.C.A. (2).
Julius Willard Morris
Battleboro, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Decree in Commerce:
Di Senate (2); YounK Democrats Club
(1); Freshman Ba.seball Manager (1);
Ba.seball (3).
Henry L. Owen, Jr.
Rocky Mount, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Pliysics.
Class Executive Committee (3); Com-
mencement Marshal (3).
Wilburn Caveny Parker
Wilmington, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in
James Rennie Perrin
Greensboro, N. C.
Phi Kappa Sigma
Candidate for B.S. Degree
Interfraternitv Council (3,
Club (31; Cross Country
Track (1, 2, 3, I).
Carol Whidbee Powell
Norfolk, Va.
Camlidate fin- .\.B. Degree in Kcononii(
Grady Lee Morgan
High Point, N. C
Delia Sigma Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degrte in Commerce;
Di Senate (1, 2); Student Legislature (1.
2); University Club (3. 4); International
Relations Club. President (2).
Marshall Glenn Morris, Jr.
Greensboro, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in r
David Earl Pardue
Elkin, N. C.
Sigma Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Interdormitory Council (3); Student
Legislature (4); K.K.O.T.C. Executive
Committee (3. 4); Comm?ncement Marshal
(3); Freshman Orientation tommittee;
President of Old West (3); StuiU-iit War
Advisory Committee (3); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2,
3); Student Council I4); Interfraternitv
Council (4).
Elbert Sidney Peel, Jr.
Williamston, N. C.
Zela Psi
Phi Beta Kappa
Camlidate for .\.B. Degree in Economics:
Clas- Executive Committee II); German
Club Executive (3. 4); Cimgliiiul (3, 4):
CJolden Fleece: Interfraternitv ( onncil (2.
3. 4); Sheiks; Student Cimncil (3i. Secre-
tarv- Treasurer (4): Basketball (1, 2):
Track (3): Y.M.C.A. (1, 2. 3, 4): Secre-
tary-Treasurer of Student Body (3); Stu-
dent We'fare Board.
William H. Petree
Winston-Salem, N. C
Alpha Tan Omega
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce:
Class Honor Council (4); Interdormitory
Council (2. a. 4); I'niversitv Club (3):
Y.M.C.A. (2, 3).
Robert Herman Rantz
Chicago, 111.
Sigma Chi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Political
Science: Glee Club (3): Interfraternity
Council (3) ; International Relations Club
(2); Sound and Furii (I. 2. 3): Football
(1) ; Young Republicans Club (1) : Y.M.C.A.
(1. 2, 3, 4) : Cheerios (1, 2).
52
John Cleveland Reynolds
Marietta, Ga.
S'g'/i.t Alphii Epsilon
Camlidate for B.S. Degree in (
John Moseley Robinson, Jr.
Charlotte, N. C.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Phi Beta Kappa
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Economics;
Ainphoterothen (3. 4) ; Carolina Political
I'liion (2, 3); Cla^s Honor Council (3);
(k-rinan Club Executive (1, 2, 3, 4);
(iiniglioul; Golden Fleece; Grail (3. 4);
Interdormitory Council (3) : Monogram
Club (2, 3. 4); Sheiks; Student Council
Chairman (4); University Club (3); Uni-
versity Dance Committee (3); Wrestling
(1. 2, 3); Yackf.ty Yack (2); Y.M.C.A.
(1. 2, 3); President of Student Body (4i.
Edward Louis Schlesinger
Abbeville, La.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Joi
Charles Milton Sibley
Raleigh, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce:
Y.M.C.A. (2, 3); Town Boys Club (2. 3).
J. Randolph Sowell, Jr.
Greensboro, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce
Thomas Joseph Sullivan
Balboa, Canal Zone
Candidate for A.B. Degree iji Political
Science; Carolina Political Union (3).
Charles David Richmond
London, Ohio
Bel.i Theta Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in t
A. J. Russo
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Delia Sigma Theta
Candidate for B.S. Degree
Tennis (4).
William Lawrence Sharkey
Trenton, N. J.
Beta Theta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Political
Science; Yacket\- Yack (3), Business Man-
ager (3).
William Leigh Siskind
Baltimore, Md.
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Eustace Peter Stathacos
Raleigh, N. C
Degree
Edward Louis Sutherland
Bedford, Va.
Kappa Psi
Peele^-eueiiiyle
.student government
man Friciat/.
Mart/ Louise Huse — lyriva^
Pi Phi — sound and fury
flamed.
S3
SENIDRS
Julian Theoplous Sutton
Clinton, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Dejiree in Chemistry.
Norman Frederick Tepper
Lawrence, Mass.
Chi Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English ;
Cdi-uUiui Magazitie (3): Daili/ Tar Heel
CD; Di Senate (3); Interfraternity Coun-
cil (3. -t); Sound and Fury (2, 3, 4):
Vacket\- Yack (3): Y.M.C.A. (1, 2); In-
tercollegiate Literary Survey (3) ; Director
Committee of 100 (3) : Senior Class Dance
Committee (4).
Edward Douglas Watson
Fort Myers, Fla.
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in Chemistry.
Walter Robert Wertheim
Needham, Mass.
Beta Thela Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in History.
Coleman Morrison Whitlock, Jr.
Mount Airy, N. C.
Beta Theta Pi
Alph.i EpsiluK Dell.i
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pre-Medi-
cine; Baseball (1); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3).
Eupha Otis Brogden, Jr.
Raleigh, N. C.
Alpha Phi Omega
Tan Kappa Alpha
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Student Legislature (1, 2, 3, 4); Chair-
man Finance Committee (3, 4) ; Debate
Council (1, 2, 3), President (4); Debate
Squad (1, 2, 3, 4); Phi Assembly (1, 2).
Speaker {3, 4) ; Carolina Political Union
(3, 4); Interdormitory Council (2, 3);
Student Advisory Committee (3); Student
Welfare Board (3, 4): Recreation Com-
mittee; O.S.C.D. <3); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3,
4); N. C. Student Assembly (3, 4).
John Hulett Temple
Hartford, Conn.
Pi Kappa Alpha
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Politic:!
Science: Uadij Tar Heel (21; 13 Club (2)
University Club (3. 4); Wrestling (31.
Robert Craven Turner
Raleigh, N. C.
Pi Kappa Alpha
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Physical
Education; Carolina Political Union (1,
2. 3) ; Class Executive Committee (1. 2,
3, 4): Class Officer (4): Monogram Club
(2, 3, 4); Baseball (2, 3. 4); Football (1.
2, 3), Captain (4); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4).
William Terrell Webster, Jr.
Gastonia, N. C.
Alpha Tail Omega
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Comm.rce;
Class Executive Committee (2) ; Di Senate
(1. 2); Golden Fleece (3, 4); Ciorgon's
Head (3, 4); Interfraternity Council (3,
4); Stuilent Legislature (1. 2. 3. 4); Chair-
man of Rules Committee (2) ; Speaker Pro-
Tem (3); Young Democrats Club (1, 2);
Y.M.C.A. (1. 2. 3).
Harry Hilton Whidbee
Washington, N. C.
Del la Sigma Pi
Degree in
Brodie Marvin Williams
Danville, Va.
Candidate fur B.S. Degree in Pro-Dental.
Valerie Patricia Abel
High Point, N. C.
Degree
54
Julia Borden Abernethy
Clupel Hill, N. C.
Caniliilate f(ir A.B. Desrce in Chemistry.
Lucy Jane Andrews
Buffalo, N. Y.
Clarice Olive Armbruster
Annapolis, Md.
Alpha Delta Pi
Jean Aycock
Carrollton, Ga.
Candidate for A.B. Decree
Marion Louise Bankhead
Jasper, Ala.
Candidate for A.B. D.gree in Cliernistrv:
Basketball (3. 4); Gymna.stics (:t. I).
Willamette Barr
Micanopy, Fla.
Frank E. Adams
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Sigma N»
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry.
Mary Jean Afflick
BlytheviUe, Ark.
Pi Be/a Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in SocioJogy ;
Dance Club (3, 4) ; Class Executive Com-
mittee (4); Legislature (3); Smiiul ami
Fiiri/ (3, 4) ; Y.W.C.A. (4).
Rosalind W. Arnold
Knoxville, Tenn.
Chi Omega
Alpha Lambda Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psycliology.
Robert Ray Aycock
Fremont, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medicine.
Walter Carlyle Barnes
Rutherfordton, N. C.
Eleanor Mays Bass
Bradenton, Fla.
Del/a Delta Delta
ss
SENIORS
Ann Stetson Bauer
Oak Park, 111.
Zeta Tau Alpha
Tail Psi Omega
Candiclate fur A.B, Degree
Alice Peoples Bell
Pittsboro, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Chi Delta Phi
Caiuliilate for A.B. Degree in Journalism:
Student Legislature (4); Coed Senate (4);
Clii Delta Phi Viee-President and Secre-
tary (3. 4) ; Corresponding Secretary Pi
Beta Phi {41 ; Hockey (3).
Carolyn Langley Biggs
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Chi Omega
Thelma Elizabeth Bolick
Hickory, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Physics;
Barbara Anne Bradley
Salisbury, N. C.
Gertrudis Bogran
San Pedro Sula, Rep. of Honduras,
C.A.
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in English.
William Benjamin Berry, III
Wilmington, N. C.
Phi Kappa Sigma
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Interfraternity Council (3. 4) ; Y.M.C.A.
(1. 2, 3. 4); House Manager, Treasurer
of Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity (2, 3),
President (4).
Pauline Bernhardt
Lexington, N. C.
Chi Omega
Muriel Blank
Goldsboro, N. C.
Beverly Jean Booth
Burlington, Vt.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Sociology
IHiilij Tnr Heel (3); Y.W.C.A. (3. 4)
Women's Athletic Council. Tennis Tourna
ment Winner (3).
James Burke Brannock
Spencer, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree In Comn
Anne FJizabeth Bohannon
AsheviUe, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degiee in Econ
56
Anne Elizabeth Bridges
Sumner, Ga.
Dorothy Mallett Brown
Indianapolis, Ind.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
University Club (3, 4); Y.W.C.A. (S).
Cabinet (i) : C.I.C.A. (3, 4) ; Spencer So-
cial Chairman (4).
Harriet Carolyn Browning
Raleigh, N. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Carolina Magazine (3, 4) ; Dailii Tar Heel
(3, 4) ; Yackett Vack (3, 4) ; Y.W.C.A.
Robert Norton Burleigh
Baldwin, N. Y.
Delta Sigma Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce ;
Class Treasurer (3) ; Class President (4) ;
Golden Fleece (4) : Interdormitory Coun-
cil (3); Student Legislature (2, 3, 4);
Financial Director of Graliam Memorial ;
Wlio's Wlio Among Students in .\merican
Colleges and Universities.
Catherine Caldwell
Charlotte, N. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Englisli:
Class Executive Committee (4); Sound
and Fury (4).
Jacquelyn Sidney Canipen
Goldsboro, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism ;
Glee Club (3. 4); Plii Assembly (3, 4).
Leisa Graeme Bronson
Washington, D. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Economics;
DaiUi Tar Heel (3. 4) ; Valkyries (4) ;
Y.W'.C.A. (3), Cabinet (4); C.I.C.A. (3,
4); C.P.U. (3), Chairman (4); Who's Who
Among American Colleges and Universi-
ties.
Richard Thomas Brooke
Atlanta, Ga.
Phi Delta Theta
Alpha Chi Sigma
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry;
Yackety Yack (1); Y.M.C.A. (1).
Mary Sue Brubaker
Lititz, Pa.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Carolina Magazine (4) ; Glee Club, Treas-
urer (3), President (4); Student Legi.sla-
ture (4); Valkyries, President (4); Coed
Senate.
Saida Jones Burwell
Charlotte, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Helen Marie Camp
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Chi Omega
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in Zoology ;
Interdormitory Council. President (4»;
Basketball (3); Y.W.C.A. (3. 4); Presi-
dent Kenan Hall (4); Coed Senate (4).
Jeanne Wilson Cannon
Burlington, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Conunerce ;
Glee Club (4); Y.W.C.A. (3. 4); Modern
Dance Club (4); Soioirf and Furij (4).
/ Hammond— soft xfiiikr
romplishment — prfsi-
dentiat pluratitt/.
: Robinson — quiet ten
— student gove;
stayed.
57
SENIORS
Anne Marie Carter
Johnson City, Tenn.
Kappj Alpha Theta
Candiclate for A.B. Degree in Zoology.
T. Frank Cathey
Clyde, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Cliemistry ;
Class Executive Committee (2. 3); Stu-
dent Legislature (3) ; Y.M.C.A. (3. 4) ;
Kresliman Counselor (4) ; Interdormitory
Council (31.
Jane Cavenaugh
Wilmington, N. C.
Candidate for .A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Dnilii Tar Heil (3); Glee Club (3, 4);
V.W.C.A. (4).
Olive Price Charters
Gainesville, Ga.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Carolina Magazine (3). Business Manager
(4): Daily Tar Heel (3); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Doris Louise Clark
AsheviUe, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psychology;
Sunnd and Furu (3): Yackett Y.4ck (4);
Y.W.C.A. (3. 4); Cheerleader (3).
Charles Raymond Clinard
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Phi Mu Alpha
Ann Castleman
Raleigh, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Mathematics;
Daily Tar Heel (3, 4): Interdormitory
Council (4); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4i; President
of Mclver Dormitory (4); Secretary of
Residence Board (4).
Mary Burns Caudill
Elizabethton, Tenn.
Chi Omega
Candidate for B..\. Degree in Dramatic
Hazel Beth Chappell
Richmond, Va.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Valkyries (4); Y.W.C.A. (3). President
(4); Woman's Government Honor Coun-
cil (3) ; Board of Graham Memorial; Who's
Who Among American Universities and
Colleges.
Frances Marjorie Cheshire
Kirkwood, Mo.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English.
Phyllis M. Claster
Reading, Pa.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psychology.
Janey Connelly Cline
Athens, Ga.
Candidate for B.S. Degree i
58
George Robert Clutts
Greensboro, N. C.
P/ Kappa Alpha
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medicine.
Martha Anne Coble
Greer, S. C.
Tandidiite for A.B. Degree
Catherine Carmen Cole
Greensburg, La.
Delta Delia Delia
Candidate for .A.B. Degree in Art.
Mary Jane Coleman
Asheville, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in So
Edith Virginia Colvard
Jefferson, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Daily Tar Heel (.5); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Thomas Oliver Coppedge
Nashville, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medicine.
Eva Carolyn Cobb
Chapel Hill, N.C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in Sociology;
Y.W.C.A. {3, 4); Woman's Senate (4);
Town Girls (3), President (4).
Charles Fortunato Coira
High Point, N. C.
Georgia Marie Coleman
Atlanta, Ga.
Maurine Jeanette Coley
Atlanta, Ga.
Chi Delta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Englisli;
Wee Club (3. 4).
Catherine C. Cooke
Portsmouth, Va.
Delta Psi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Art: Playmaliers (3. 4): Y.W.C.A. (3, 4);
Advisory Council (4) ; Ba.slietball (3).
Alfred Robert Cordell
Cliffside, N. C.
Alpha EpfiloK Delta
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Cliemistry.
59
SENIORS
Calvin Bennett Corey, Jr.
Portsmouth, Va.
Kappc) Alph.i
Anne Louise Craig
Greenwood, Miss.
Chi Omega
Caiulidate for A.B. Degree
V.W.C..\. (3, I).
Blanche Adele Crocker
Augusta, Ga.
Tail Pii Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Matliemat-
ics; Daily Tar Heel (3): Glee Club (3.
4); V.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Margaret Darrough
Asheville, N. C.
Sarah Irwin Davis
Louisburg, N. C.
Chi Delia Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Engli.slr
President Chi Delta Phi (4).
Dorothy M. Dickinson
Fremont, N. C.
Helen Ruth Corwin
Kew Gardens, N. Y.
Phi Sigma Sigma
Alpha Psi Delta
Olive Marwood Cranston
Augusta, Ga.
Pi Beta Phi
Edith Louise Crockford
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Tali Psi Omega
Degree
Fannie Rachel Davidson
Cochran, Ga.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce;
Di Senate (3).
Frances Mary Defandorf
Chevy Chase, Md.
Phi Lambda Beta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatics;
Dttilii Tar Heel (3), Business iManager
(4): Plavnmkers (3. 4): Basketball (3):
Tennis (3) ; Vackety Yack (3. 4) ; Y.W.C.A.
(3. 4); Kepresentative to Athletic Asso-
ciation; Business .Manager S^hukI and
Fury.
Cecelia Covington Dicks
Rockingham, N. C.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degre? in Sociology;
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4); Y'ACKETV Yack (4); Sen-
ior Advisor (4).
60
Ruth Carol Dubrow
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Phi Sigma Sigm.i
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology:
Glee Club (4): Senior Advisory Commit-
tee (4) : Hillel Cabinet (4).
Clara DeBardeleben Ebaugh
Arlington, Va.
Candidate for B.A. Degree in History.
Helen Joanne Edson
Jacksonville, Fla.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Carolina Magazine (3. 4): Dailii Tar Hei-l
(3, 4) : Swimming (3).
Gladys Florence Epstein
Washington, D. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology
C.P.U.: War Activities Committee.
Grafton C. Fanney, Jr.
Scotland Neck, N. C.
Sigma Nn
Alpha Epiilon Delia
Candidate for B.S. Degree in .Medicine:
Football (1. 2); Cross Country (2. 3):
Track (1, 2. 3).
Guy Cone Farmer
Bailey, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Sociology.
Shirley Edith Dunn
Farmingdale, N. J.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medii
Technology: Phi .Assembly (3. 4).
Isabel Robinson Edmands
Knoxville, Tenn.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology
Band (3, 4), Majorette:' Y.M'.C.A. (3. 4')
Student Advisor (41: C.I.C.A. Executiv
Council (3): W.A..'\. Council (3).
Robert Griffith Evans Epple
Goldsboro, N. C.
Chi Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chen
Carolina Political Union (2. 3. 4);
versity Club (3): Phi Assembly (2).
Julius Leonard Fallick
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry:
Hillel Cabinet (2): Lacro-se (1. 2).
Evan Ira Farber
Great Neck, N. Y.
Candidate for A.B. I)
Science; Glee Club (1).
Madeleine Fauvre
Wellesley, Mass.
Phi Mil
rree in Dramatic
V.W.C.A. (3. 4).
' r/jrliurcb — WG4 me
ranipus judirinl
Queen.
Kat Hill — busy diversified-
ness — first tar heel coed
editor.
61
SENIORS
Ruth Frances Ferrier
Clemson, S. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Coninieree :
(".lee Club (31, Treasurer (4); Playmakers
(3); Y.W.C.A. (3), Cabinet (4): W.G.A.
Senate (4) : President Pan-Hellenic Coun-
cil (4) : Treasurer W.G.-\. (4) : Who's Who
Among Students in American Universities
and Colleges (4) ; Student Welfare Board
(4).
Avery Hunt Fonda
Weaverviile, N. C.
Beta Gamma Sigma
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce.
Frona Fox
Oxford, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Hillel Cabinet (4); Advisor (4); Play-
makers (4): Y.W.C.A. (3). Cabinet (4).
Margaret Virginia Freeman
LaGrange, Ga.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Zoology.
Julia Anne Funk
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psychology;
Y.W.C.A. (3), Cabinet (4); Student Ad-
visor (4;.
Alice Howell Gary
Thomasville, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology.
Katharine Stuart Flanagan
Richmond, Va.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Physics; Di
Senate (3, 4) ; Student Legislature (4) :
Y.W.C.A. (3. 4); Coed Senate (3). Speaker
Pro-Tem (4) : Student Safety Council (3) ;
W.A.A. Council (4).
Ann Foster
Richland, Wash.
Candidate for A.B. Degree
terdormitorv Council (3.
Club (4) ; Y.W.C.A. (3).
English; In-
; University
Elizabeth Jackson Frazier
Wake Forest, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Cheniistrj'-
Marion Chadwick Frink
Southport, N. C.
Alpha Delia Pi
Elizabeth Ann Galbreath
Clarksville, Mo.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Draniatii
Art; Clee Club (3. 4i; Playmakers (3, 4);
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Elinor Gershon
Carrollton, Ga.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psychology;
I.R.C. {3. 4) ; Senior Advisory Commit-
tee (4); .Mclver Social Committee (3, 4).
62
Harold L. Godwin
Fayetteville, N. C.
Alpha Tan Omega
Phi Beta Kappa
Candidate for B.S. Decree in Medicine:
Class Executive Committee (1>; Sophomore
Finance Committee; Freshman Friendsliip
Council: Sophomore Council; Y.M.C.A. (1.
2, 3. 4).
Isla Cutchin Gorham
Rocky Mount, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociolo
Glee Club (3. 4): V.W.C.A. (3. 4).
Adele Bernice Greenberg
Danville, Va.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in History:
Hillel Member (3. 4); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Caroline Griffin
Gibson, Ga.
Alpha Gamma Delia
Candidate for A.B. Desree in Journalisr
Jo Ann Griffith
Beckley, W. Va.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Yackety Yjck (3. 4): Y.W.C.A. (3, 4):
Officer, Chi Omega Sorority (4).
Joseph Perry Hale
Ahoskie, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Charles Wilburn Gordon, Jr.
Spencer, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Political
Science: Y.M.C.A. (4): Football (1. 2, 3).
Robert Eugene Grant
Miami, Fla.
Sigma Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree
Interfraternity Council (3)
Ann Maxwell Greer
Baton Rouge, La.
Delta Delia Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in History.
Robert Ashley Griffin
Asheville, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemi.str
Mary Constance Griffith
Cincinnati, Ohio
Delta Delia Delta
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Educatii
Mary Louise Hanford
Bayside, N. Y,
Alpha Gamma Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalis
Duilij Tar Heel (3. 4): Y.W.C.A. (3).
63
SENIORS
Roy William Hankin
Manhasset, L. I., N. Y.
Sigm,t Chi
Ciiiuliilati- for A.B. Dcsiec in Zoolo
Geraldine Hasche
Johnson Citj', Tenn.
Chi O mega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemistry;
Daily Tar Heel (4) ; Atliletie Council (S) :
V.W.C.A. (3, 4); Senior Advisor (4).
Dorothy Turner Hawthorne
Winchester, V.i.
Pi Beta Phi
Candiilate for A.B. Desr
nnrt Fun, (3); V.W.C.
Hellenic Council, Vic
Cheerleader (4).
■ in Art; Somid
. (3. 4); Pan-
President (4);
Marjorie Elaine Henderson
Winter Haven, Fla.
Gamma Phi Be/a
Degree in Coninierc
Joan Reynolds Hill
Camden, S. C.
Sally Elizabeth Hipp
Daytona Beach, Fla.
Delta Delta Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatics;
riavmakers (3. 4); Sottnd and Fury (3.
41; Yacketv Vack (3); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Nancy Phyllis Harrill
Elizabethton, Tenn.
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Edith Woodruff Hash
Piney Creek, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
I.R.C. (4); Y.W.C.A. (3. 4).
Raymond L. Hayes
Southern Pines, N. C.
Alpha Chi Sigma
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry.
Hazel Katherine Hill
New Bern, N. C.
Candidate for A.B, Degree in Dramatics;
Carolina Magazine (3. 4) ; DaiUi Tar Heel,
Associate Editor (3). Editor (4); Play-
makers (4); Sound and Fury (3. 4): Stu-
dent Legislature (3, 4); Yackety Yack
(3, 4); Student Welfare Board; Student
Entertainment Committee; CP.U. (4): Chi
Delta Phi; Graham Memorial Board of
Directors (4); Who's Who Among Stu-
dents in .American Universities and Col-
leges.
Lois Ann Hodges
Raleigh, N. C.
Chi Delta Phi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medical
Technology; Softball (3); Y.W.C.A. (3.
4); W.-^V.-A., Treasurer (3). President (4):
Craliam .Memorial Board of Directors (4).
Nell White Hill
Portland, Tenn.
Kappa Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramati<
Glee Club (4); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4); Pli
makers (3, 4); Swimming (3).
64
Sarah Louise HoUingsworth
Greenwood, S. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism.
Ruth Hollowell
Hertford, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English.
Martha Rowland Hornaday
Greensboro, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Englisli;
Sound and Fun/ (3); YacketTi- Yack (4);
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4); Cheerleader (3).
Millicent Coleman Hosch
Gainesville, Ga.
Zela Tan Alpha
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatics;
Playmakers (3. 4) ; Sound and Fury (3,
4); Y.W.C.A. (3).
Margaret McMurray Hughes
Belhaven, N. C.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in p'reiicli;
I. R. C. (4) ; Y.W.C.A. (3. 4) ; Secretary
of Coed Senate (4) : Pan-Hellenic Council
(4); President of Chi Omega Sorority (4).
Elise Whitner Hutchison
Sanford, Fla.
Pi Bela Phi
Anne Elizabeth Hollis
Mobile, Ala.
Chi Omega
Chi Delta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English.
Mary Alden Hopkins
Port Deposit, Md.
Alpha Psi Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psychology.
Relmond Leo Horton
Wendell, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemistry.
Ethel Stark Houston
Bluefield, W. Va.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociolo
Mary Louise Huse
Chapel Hill, N.C.
Pi Bela Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Art; Glee
Club (3); Playmakers (3. 4;; Sound and
Fury (3), CoDirector (4).
Helen Maurine Hylton
Roanoke, Va.
Alpha Psi Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psychology
and Dramatics; Playmakers (3, 4);
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4) ; Baseball (3) ; Basketball
ry Lou TrusJou- — conscien-
ious coed speakerette —
knew all the t
Walt Damtoft — slow but
thorough— tmttch the tar
heel turn weekly.
65
SENIORS
Margaret Hyman
Memphis, Tenn.
Alpha Omicron Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Libbie Izen
Asheville, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Pliysical
Education; Daily Tar Heel (.3); Souiul
anil Furii (3), Co-President (4); Swim-
ming (4); W.A.A. Council (4): Dance
Club (4).
Charles Louis Johnston, Jr.
Catawissa, Pa.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Cliemistry;
Clas.'i Honor Council (2); Student LeKi-f-
lature (2. 3): University Dance Commit-
tee (2. 3) ; Wrestling (1).
Albert McCray Jones
Washington, N. C.
Candidate for .\.B. Degree
David Josephs
Sanfcird, N. C.
Phi Alpha
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemistry;
Band (1, 2); C.P.U. (3. 4); Debate Squad
(3, 4); Hillel Cabinet (1, 2. 3): Interfra-
ternitv Council (3); Treasurer Phi Alpha
(3). Vice-President (4).
Edwin Mayer Kaplan
Greensboro, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Fencing fl).
Anne Gayle Ingram
Carrollton, Ga.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree
V.W.C.A. (4J.
Doris Johnson
High Point, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Deg
Frances Sylvia Johnston
Badin, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Glee Club (3. 4); I.R.C. (3. 4); Y.W.C.A.
(3, 4).
Rosa Lee Jones
Macon, Ga.
Alph.1 Delia Pi
Alpha Pit Delta
Caiiditiate for .-\.B. Degree in
Robert William Joyce
Madison, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Economics.
Mary Elizabeth Kearney
Franklinton, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Dokicc ii
Arts; Interdonnitiirv Couii.il
makers (3.4) : V kkitv V.m k i i:
(3, 4) ; Student Advisor i ti ;
dent Pi Beta I'lii Suroritv (4).
66
Virginia M. Kelly
Rochester, N. Y.
CaiKlklate for A.B. Derree in Sociology.
Mary Frances Kilpatrick
Atlanta, Ga.
Phi Mu
Frances Hargett Knott
Kinston, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree ii
Art; Glee Club (3, 4): Phi
4); y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Mary Kress
West View, Pa.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Art: Plavmaker.s (3. 4); Suund and Fury
(3, 4); V.W.C.A. (3. 4): Yackety Yack
(4) ; Basketball (3, 4) ; Volley Ball (3. 4) ;
Softball (3. 4) ; Glee Club (3) ; Tennis
(3. 4).
Kathleen Edna Lard
St. Joseph, Mo.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Psychology.
Sarah Louise Leatherwood
Waynesville, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology.
Jacqueline Kennedy
High Point, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in
Ann Kimbrough
Decatur, Ala.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Art: Daihi Tnr Heel (3): Playmakcrs (4);
House Privileges Board (3, 4) ; President
of Tau Psi Omega (4).
Joan Harriet Kosberg
Elizabeth, N. J.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Art: Hillel Cabinet (3, 4): Playmakers
(3, 4): Sound and Fury (3); Co-Presi-
dent (4).
Helen Byrnes Lanneau
Natchez, Miss.
Daisy Manning Lawrence
Wilson, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Jean Hilaire LeCluse
BluePoint, N. Y.
67
SENIORS
Joseph L. Lehman
Brooklyn, N, Y.
Candidate for B.A. Degree in Political
Science; C.P.U. (4); Class Executive Com-
mittee (31: Debate Squad (2); Plii As-
sembly (2, 3, 4); Student Legislature (3,
4); Tennis (1. 2, 3), Manager (4); Young
Democrats Club (1, 2).
Janet James Lindsey
New Haven, Conn.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in History;
University Club (4); Valkyries (4); Base-
ball (3) ; Y.W.C.A. (3, 4) ; Treasurer of
Pledge Class (3); Woman's Senate (3);
Hockey (3); W.A.A. Council (3, 4);
W.A.A. Secretary (4).
Jean Holmes Lochridge
Atlanta, Ga.
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Candidate for B.A. Degree in Sociology;
Alderman House Council (3); Phi As-
.sembly; C.I.C.A. University Club; C.I.C.A.
Executive Committee; Senate Member (3).
Secretary (4); Intramural Volley Ball;
Badminton.
Jean Horton Lyon
Fayetteville, N. C.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4), Cabinet (3); Yacketv
Yack (4); Pan-Hellenic Council (4)-
Ann Lynn MacDonald
Kannapolis, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Economics.
Emileigh Maxwell
Pink Hill, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in .lounialism;
(ilee Club (4); I.R.C. (3, 4); Y.W.C.A.
(3, 4) ; C.I.C.A. (3, 4).
Mary Elizabeth Lindsay
High Point, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in History.
Joe Burton Linker, Jr.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Physics;
Band (I. 2. 3. 4), Vice-President (3); Uni-
versity Club (3); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2), Cabi-
net (3, 4).
Gwendolyn Evette London
Charlotte, N. C.
Alpha Epsilon Phi
Tail Kappa Alpha
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Art; Debate Squad (3); Di Senate (4);
Hillel Cabinet (3); Play makers (3);
Y.W.C.A. (3).
Maysie Sloan Lyons
Columbia, S. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Margie P. Martorell
Tampa, Fla.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Zoology:
Sound aud Fury (4); YACKETi- Yack (4);
Y.W.C.A. (4).
Richard D. Maynor
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree
68
Elaine Mendes
Maplewood, N. J.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Arts: W.A.A. Council (3); Playniakers
(3. 4) ; Y.W.C.A. (3. 4) ; C.I.C.A. Execu-
tive Council (3) ; C.W.C. (3) ; Modern
Dance Group (3, 4).
Beverly Anne Money
Greensboro, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Art; Caro-
lina Magazine Board (3) : Daily Tar Heel
(3).
Josephine Moore
Southport, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology:
Treasurer W.A.A. (4) : Volley Ball (3) :
Ba.<!l<etball (3); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
John Charles Morrow
Hendersonville, N. C.
Alpha Chi Sigma
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Cliemistry.
Robert Alexander Musgrove, Jr.
Weldon, N. C.
Kappa Alpha
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce :
Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3).
Kathryn Gray McGimsey
Lenoir. N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Span
I'lavmaliers (3): Student Council (3.
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Laura Sudler Mifflin
Dover, Del.
Chi Omega
iididate for A.B. Degree in
i Asseml)ly (3): Y.W.C.A. (3,
Betty Shaver Moore
Charlotte, N. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism:
Daily Tar Heel (3): Glee Club (3):
Y.W.C.A. (3): C.I.C.A. Executive Board
(3).
A. Natolia Moreau
Freehold, N. J.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology.
Margaret DeBell Moseley
Yonkers, N. Y.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce :
Debate Squad (3): University Club (4):
W.G.A. Senate (4): Vice-President C.I.C.A.
(4).
Mildred Pryor McCrary
Raleigh, N. C.
Mary Rankin McKethan
Fayettevilie, N. C.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism:
Yacketi- Yack (3), Senior Editor (4) :
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4); Senior Advisor (4):
Secretary W.G.A. (4) : Woman's Honor
Council (4).
v«^^
"Ace" Alspnugh—beau brinnnu
BMOC — the campus' widest
smile.
Bob Burleif/h — fjraham me-
uun-ial tinKjul — best-ktiovni
student on the kill.
69
SENIORS
Jane Webber McLure
Lake City, Fla.
P) Beta Phi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce:
Carulina Maqazine (3); Daily Tar Heel
(3, 4); Y.W.C.A. (3. 4).
Eleanor Rookh McWane
Birmingham, Ala.
Alpki Delut Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Art;
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4) ; rail-Hellenic Council
(4): President .Mplia Delta Pi Sorority
(4).
William Benton Nash
Wingate, N. C.
Delia Si urn J Pi
Candidate for ,^.B. Degree in Economics:
V.M.C.A. (2, 3. 4).
Arthur Francis Newlander
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Cliemi.stry.
James Frederick Newsome
Winton, N. C.
Phi Dell J Thela
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Clienustry:
Chairman Class Executive Committee (4) ;
Interdormitory Council (2) ; Student Coun-
cil (4): University Club: University Dance
Committee (3): Wrestling (1).
Sarah Elizabeth Niven
Morven, N. C.
Eleanor Williams McNeill
Lumberton, N. C.
Janet Cook Nair
Decatur, Ga.
Pi Bela Phi
Candidate for B.S.
Technology.
Degree in Medical
George Joseph Nassef
New Bern, N. C.
John Brownie Newman
Hendersonville, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Physics.
Martha Bowen Nimmons
Seneca, S. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Zoology;
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
James Lawrence Norris
Fayetteville, N. C.
Chi Phi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in
70
Lorraine Gould Oldham
Albany, N. Y.
Chi Omeg.i
Candidate fur A.B. Degree in Political
Science; C'.P.U. (3, 4); Interdormitory
Council (4); Basketball (3); Y.W.C.A.
(3), Cabinet (4); Hockey Varsity (3).
Edith Bond Owens
Dahlonega, Ga.
Chi Omega
Athena Geanetos Parker
Jacksonville, 111.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English;
Playmakers (4); Dormitory Council (4).
Flake Patman
Milledgeville, Ga.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medical
Technology; Yacketv Yack (4): Y.W.C.A.
(3. 4); W.G.A. (4); Orientation Com-
mittee (4).
Nancy Peters Peete
Warrenton, N. C
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English:
Pan-Hellenic Council (4) ; Secretary Ad-
visory Council (4): Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Ida Mae Pettigrew
Winter Haven, Fla.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology:
Duily Tar Heel (3); Di Senate (3. 4):
Y.W.C.A. (3. 4) : Dorm Social Chairman
(4): Senior Advisor (4); C.I.C.A. Secre-
tary (4).
Anne Mallard Osterhout
Beaufort, S. C
Chi Omega
Chi Delia Phi
A.B.
Candidate
Playmakers
Delta Plii (3)
(3.
John D. Page
Mt. Pleasant, Tenn.
Margaret Morris Parker
Concord, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry;
Interdorni Council (4): Y.W.C.A. (3. 4);
Student Council (4).
Wilbur Ormand Payne
Stumpy Point, N. C.
Philip David Pence
Bristol, Va.
Sigma Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in
Interfraternity Council (2, 3,
Council (2. 3).
Lois Phillips
Brookline, Mass.
Phi Beta Kappa
Chemistry:
4) ; Safety
71
SENIORS
Margaret Henderson Phillips
Delmar, N. Y.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Tennis (3, 4); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Margaret Pickard
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (3). Vice-President (4);
Valkyries (4): Coed Senate (41.
Billie Sutherland Pobst
Grundy, Va.
Candidate for A.B. Degree ir
Nananne Porcher
LaGrange, Ga.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B.
Art; Playniakers (:
Chi Omega (4).
Sue Kimball Reynolds
Greensboro, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Political
Science; Sound and Furij (3. 4); Y.W.C.A.
(4).
Helen Harwell Rhodes
Goldsboro, N. C.
Chi Omega
c;h
ididate for A.B. Degree in Sociology ;
e Club (3. 4); Y.W.C.A. (3. 4).
William Carl Phillips, Jr.
Greensboro, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Physics.
Louise Piatt
Gainesville, Ga.
Delta Delta Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Art; Playniakers (3. 4); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Richard Heath Pollock
Washington, D. C.
Chi Psi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry;
President Chi Psi (4) : Interfraternity
Council (3), Secretary (4); Student Legis-
lature (3. 4); Y.M.C.A. (1. 2. 3): House
Privileges Board (4); Interfraternity
Hou.semanagers' Association (3. 4) ; Presi-
dent Freshman Councilor (4) ; Senior Class
Dance Committee (4).
Robert Edwin Porter
New Orleans, La.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce.
Ida Jones Quintard
Charlotte, N. C.
Degree in History;
Lois Ribelin Cranford
Greenwood, S. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism:
Editor Carolina Magazine (4) ; Daily Tar
Heel (4); Y.W.C.A. (3. 4); House Council
(4).
72
Roslyn Greenblatt Ribner
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ann Lucile Rife
Baltimore, Md.
Delia Delta Delta
Candidate for A.H. Degree in Sociology.
Jane Ruggles
Chevy Chase, Md.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English.
Geanie Elizabeth Sasser
Smithfield, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Glee Club (3. 4) ; Sound and Fury (4) ;
Y.W.C.A. (3. 4).
Dorothy Jane Schmuhl
Indianapolis, Ind.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Art; Inter-
dormitory Council Secretary (4); Y.W.C.A.
(8), Cabinet (4); C.I.C.A. (3); Social
Chairman (4) ; President Spencer Hall
(4); Valkyries (4); House Privileges
Board (4).
Betty Carol Seligman
Baltimore, Md.
Chi Delta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Arts and
Sciences; Chi Delta Phi Treasurer; Debate
Squad (3); Debate Council (3, 4); Vice-
President Valkyries (4); Y.W.C.A. Cabinet
(3, 4); C.I.C.A. Trea,surer (3. 4); Senate.
Leah Rose Richter
Mt. Gilead, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Art; Daily Tar Heel (3, 4); Playmakers
(3, 4); Sound and Fury (3); Saturday Re-
view of Literature Board (3).
Mary Katherine Roper
Winter Garden, Fla.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Glee Club (3) ; Valkyries (4) ; Y.W.C.A. (3,
4); W.G.A. Council. Vice-President (4);
Secretary House Privileges Board (4).
Margaret Murrill Russell
Richlands, N. C.
Sigma Pi Alpha
Candidate for A.B. Degree in J(
Betty Ann Scheer
Richmond, Va.
Alpha Psi Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (4); Clia
Advisors (4).
Genevieve Bronson Schultz
Jacksonville, Fla.
Pi Beta Phi
Special Student in Bacteriology.
Margaret Ann Sells
Atlanta, Ga.
Alpha Delta Pi
Opie Charters — Hobie's hobby-
put mag finances in the
black.
Frankel — forcefully
red — jack-of-all
publications.
73
SENIORS
Eleanor Winn Shelton
Richmond, Va.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology.
Sybil Benton Sholar
Whiteville, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in
Class Executive Committee (4i
Hei-l (3); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Lois Allen Simmons
Jacksonville, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemistry.
Carolyn Pegues Smith
Atlanta, Ga.
Candidate for .A.B. Degree in Zoology.
Norma Lee Smith
Richmond, Va.
Kappci Delta
Candidate for .A.B. Degree in Economics.
Rita Mae Smith
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Candidate fu
V.W.C.A. Mi; io«n uiris /!
Treasurer; Coed Advisor (3. 4)
A.B. Degree in Sociology:
n Girls' Association,
Dolores Natalie Shmerling
Augusta, Ga.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Commerce.
Marcia V. V. Shufelt
Charlotte, N, C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Spa
V.W.C.A. (3. 4).
Bette Jeanne Smith
Nashville, Tenn.
Delta Delta Delta
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English.
Nancy Jean Smith
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Phi Beta Kappa
Chi Delta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Zoology;
Carulina Magazine (2, 3, 4); Daily Tar
Heel (2, 4); Debate Squad (3); I.R.C. (1.
2), Secretary (3, 4); P.U. Board President
(4); Valkyries (4); V.W.C.A. (1); Town
Girls' Association (1. 2). Secretary (3);
C.I.C.A. (2). Secretary (3); Campus War
Chest Chairman (3).
Olivia Anne Smith
Rowland, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism;
Glee Club (3) ; University Club, Secretary
(4); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
Wilma Ann Smith
Ashland, Ky.
74
Fay Smithdeal
Winston-Saiem, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English.
Polly Frances Squire
Waterbury, Vt.
Thelma Steinberg
Scottsboro, Ala.
Candidate for B.S. Degree
Glee Club (3).
Anne Strause
Richmond, Va.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English;
Class Treasurer (4): C.I.C.A. Executive
Committee (4): Cheerleader (3, 4); Man-
ager Dorm Basketball League (3).
Beverly Nathaniel Sullivan, Jr.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Alpha Chi Sigma
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry.
Norma Talmadge Surles
Roseboro, N. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Emma Virginia Spivey
Louisburg, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemistry.
Barbara Helene Staff
New York City, N. Y.
Candidate for .\.B. Degree in Sociology;
Glee Club (3); Y.W.C.A. (3). Secretary
Nancy Elizabeth Stern
Jenkintown, Pa.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Uailtj Tar Heel (3); Di Senate (3);
Y.W.C.A. (3).
Margaret Grimmer Strickland
Wilson, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medic
Technology; Y.W.C.A. (2. 3. 4).
George Kendrick Summer
Cherryville, N. C.
Alpha Chi Sigma
Phi Beta Kappa
Candidate for B.S.
sembly (3) ; Y.« kk
(3, 4).
Margaret Leonelle Suttle
Montreal, N. C.
7S
SENIORS
Barbara Swift
Madison, Conn.
Chi Delta Phi
Violet Cruser Taylor
Norfolk, Va.
Candidate for A.B. Decree in Zoology.
Mary Spence Thompson
Kinston, N. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Decree in Journalism;
Daily Tar Heel (3): Glee Club (3); In-
terdormitorv Council (4); Y.W.C.A. (3,
4); Pan-Hellenic (4).
Mary Lou Truslow
Chestertown, Md.
Alpha Chi Omega
Candidate for B.S. Decree in Connnerce;
Daily Tar Heel (3. 4); I.R.C. (3); Stu-
dent Legislature (3): Valkyries (4):
Y.W.C.A. (3): Speaker of Senate (4);
Cfraham Memorial Board (4) : Student
Welfare Board (4); House Privileges
Board (4); Executive Board C.I.C.A. (4):
Who's Who In American Colleges and
Universities.
Emily Jane Thuston
Birmingham, Ala.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Pamela Elizabeth Thompson
Jacksonville, Fla.
Chi Delta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in French.
Hazel Brand Taylor
Fort Bennington, Ga.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Spanish.
Anne Jackson Thatcher
Tryon, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English and
Education; Band (3, 4): Y.W.C.A. (3),
Cabinet (4) ; Orchestra (3, 4) ; Student
Advisor (4).
Charles Robert Thompson
Lenoir, N. C.
Alpha Tail Omega
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medicine ;
Band (1. 2. 3. 4); Interfraternity Council
(3, 4); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3. 4).
Annie Margaret Towell
Concord, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Chemistry;
Di Senate (3). Clerk (4); Smmd and Fun/
(3); Interdormitory Council (4); Y.W.C.A.
(3. 4); House Privileges Board (4) ; Senior
Advisor (4).
Constance Hilda Threatte
Jesup, Ga.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Dramatic
Arts: Playmakers (3, 4): Y.W.C.A. (3).
Helen Hamrick Threadgill
Pensacola, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).
76
Anna Turner
Shanghai, China
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism.
Mary Elizabeth Vaughan
Norfolk, Va.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Glee Club (3); Y.W.C.A. (3).
James Clarence Wallace
Jamesville, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Physics;
Carolina Magazine (2); C.P.U. (2, 3. 4);
Dailv Tar Heel (2, 3. 41: Young Demo-
crats Club (3); Old Guard. President (4).
Hez Walters, Jr.
Whiteville, N. C.
in Chemistry;
Sarah Lou Warren
Prospect Hill, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Zoology.
Hilda Weaver
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology:
Honor Council (4) : Glee Club (I. 2. 3. 4) :
Sound and Furu (1. 2. 3); Student Legis-
lature (3. 4); V.W.C.A. (1, 2. 3, 4); Vice-
President Town Girls (2). President (3);
Senate (3); Secretary Inter-Town Council
(3).
Rodrigo Agustin Vargas
San Jose, Costa Rica
Sara Wadsworth
New Bern, N. C.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English.
Cynthia Crittenden Walmsley
Asheville, N. C.
Mary Elizabeth Walters
Rockingham, N. C.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Yackett Yack (4) ; Y.W.C.A. (3, 4) ; Sen-
ior Advisor (4).
Katherine Morrow Watters
Birmingham, Ala.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology;
Carolina Maoazine (4) ; Sound and Furv
(3, 4) ; Y.W.C.A. (4).
Georgia Helen Webb
Washington, D. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalism.
^f-rrell Webster — melted student
tjovernment "freezers" — sharp-
ened let/islature'8 teeth.
Earl Pardue — not all the good
i/iCH win — student govern-
ment orphan.
77
SENIORS
Julia Foster Weed
Jacksonville, Fla.
Alpki Delia Pi
Beverly Ann West
Atlanta, Ga.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry;
y.W.C.A. (3, 4); Student Advisor (4).
Maud Ann West
Savannah, Ga.
Ida Hall White
Augusta, Ga.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Matlieniatics;
I'lavniakers (41 ; Ba.sketball (3,4) ; Y.W.C.A.
(3. 4): VoUev Ball (3. 4); Softball (3. 4i:
Hockey (41.
Wendell D. Wilhide
Andrews, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry.
Hyacinth Willis
New Bern, N. C.
Ann West
Monroe, La.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in English;
Glee Club (3); International Relations
Club (3). Viee-President (4): Y.W.C.A.
(3, 4).
Clifton Forrest West, Jr.
Kinston, N. C.
Zeta Pit
Alpha Epsilon Delta
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Medicine;
Yackktv Yaik (1); Y.M.C.A. (1. 2); Secre-
tary Zeta Psi (4).
Frances Helen White
Atlanta, Ga.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for .\.B. Degree m Mathematics.
Cyrus Edward Whitfield
HurdleMills, N. C.
Sigma Pi Alpha
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Chemistry;
Di Senate (4) ; Cross Country (3) ; Y.M.C.A.
Alice France Willis
Culpeper, Va.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree
Y.W.C.A. (3), Treasurer (4).
Carol Wolff
Wilmington, Del.
Candidate for A.B. Degree in History;
Carolina Political Union (4).
78
Sara Woodside Woodhouse
London Bridge, Va.
Chi Omega
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Journalisi
Ruth Carol Yelverton
Fountain, N. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in Sociology.
Sara Merritt Yokley
Mt. Airy, N. C.
Pi Beta Phi
Candidate for A.B. Degree in .louriialism ;
DaiUj Tar Heel (3. 4) ; YACKtry Y.vck (3.
4) ; Carolina Magazine (3. 4) ; Legislature
(3, 4); Sound and Fury (3).
Officers elected a year ago to keep
the class together were no longer in
Carolina regalia as both Dick Hart-
ley and John W. Davis, Vice-Presi-
dent and Treasurer, suddenly found
themselves working for that mutual
Uncle — Sam.
Thus a new election and the se-
lection of Lane Stokes and Bill Stev-
ens to fill the respective vacancies,
this being accomplished only after
lengthy battering as to the eligibility
of military students to hold class
offices. Vice-President Stokes, a
Navy V-12'er, and Treasurer Stev-
ens, N.R.O.T.C, began functioning
immediately.
JUNIOR
D.
HE Class of '45 had its dif-
ficulties and it might even be said that just that was
the main order when the school year began.
Bill Stevens, Treasurer; Reid Thompson, Student Council: Ralph Str.whorn, President;
Rivers Johnson, Secretary.
80
CLASS
'4 4
<^
L I
Troubles still were manifest on ever)' hand as friends disappeared
from school in a never ending stream. Civilians grew fewer in num-
ber and class progress became more and more retarded.
Came the first joint meeting of the Junior-Senior Class and the agree-
ment to move up the annual dance week prior to November 20, in an
effort to fete the Naval Seniors going out on that date for active duty.
The committee began work for the procurement of a big-name, big-
time band, Kay Kyser preferred. This fell as so much futility, however,
and Hurst Hatch, popular music maker, was signed for the frolic mak-
ing week-end then scheduled for November 15 and 16.
The committee decided to make the occasion a joint sponsorship be-
tween the two classes and the Carolina Intramural department. And the
feature night came and went with the sports carnival attractions along
with the usual enjoyable dances.
Then came more of that hated trouble when the collection of class
fees was started. No individual pictures of V-12 students for the
Yackety Yack because the shortage of funds and film hampered
wholesale picture making.
A budget bill was drawn up by the Junior and Senior Presidents,
passed by the Legislature and a budget committee was set up. This
committee was established with the sole duty of passing class budgets,
with a clause stating a class election could overrule the committee's
decisions. In the past, budgets have been slow in passing and this com-
mittee was begun to expedite approval of budgets in coming years.
Thus troubles and petty difficulties played their role but the year
rolled on, just as any year would under warring conditions.
81
JUNIOR
First Row: MoRROW, TiLLEY, STANTON, Teague, White, Maynard, Godfrey, Worthington,
Miller.
Second Roic: McCuLLY, Battersby, Cely, Campbell, Folson, Jenkins, Sauls, Bennett, Hipps.
Third Roic: Brown, Kelley, McClintock, McCain, LeFebre, Perry, Gullick, Rankin,
Dickinson.
Foiirilj Row: Hogan, Elliot, Black, Thompson, Edwards, Adams, Lazarus, Genzroy, Crider.
82
CLASS
If
-^
j
V
.~^.
Firii Ruu: Chaitfkhelu. Hf.LLi-K, Wickfk, Bvrd, Haigwood, Fkick, Herring. Rabin, Booker.
Second Row: Brown, Ramsey, Sayer, Watson, Siskind, Shain. Sharp, Norton, Bagley.
Third Row: Johnson, Thompson, Proctor. Robinson, Herre, Stevens, Green, Turnage, Byrd.
F,j/iri/i Row: Eannheart, Rouse, Lee. Brogden. Poole. Altemose, Williard, Garrett. Crowe.
83
JUNIOR
First Ri/w: Hughes, Oppen, King, Nimeck, Newsome, Durham, Woodruff, Newell, Grfen.
Second Row: Waltz, Green, White, Harrison, Justice, Richardson, Dixon, Kegen,
MCCORMICK.
Third Row: Winsread, King, Edel, Howard, Davis, Hulbert, Ackerson, Wilson, Fountain.
Fourth Row: Brown, Wideman, Folsom, Webster, Carroll, Stringfield, Miller, Wiggins,
Thomas.
84
CLASS
t
W t^- t % ^^ ^ P *
f
I-/r^i Ruu: Redenhour, Dibble, Tare, Jones, Covington, Cramer, Bass, Grinstead, Glutz.
Second Row: HoLL, Houghtaling, Elder, Nachamson, Ivie, Crumpler, Blanker, Evans
WasoN.
Third Row: Downs, Nosewicz, Gartner, McNulty, Jacobs, Zinman, Lykes, Stein.
Fourth Row: Greathouse, Henderson, Wahl, Hove, Sudduth, Long, Porter, Brown, Bush.
I n
85
JUNIOR
First Row.- Dickson, Lippsey, King, Morris, Wright, Auten, Stern, Daniels, Oser.
Second Ron: YouNG, Marett. Sutherland, Sweat, Hammond. Grosser, Johnson, Grady,
Ryne.
ThirJ Ron:- Florance, Herndon, Martin, Cramer, Murphy, Lewis, Newton, Johnson,
Morgan.
Fourth Ron: HoRwiTZ, Stevens, Weaver, McEachern, Conley, Cypert, Futrelle, Thompson,
Fixebee.
r\&
86
CLASS
First Row: KiNGTON, Worsley, Kinnickell, Lecka, Enzor, Gary, Lee, Redd, Wilcox.
Second Row: King, Becks, Robinson, Pentlarge, Marks, Cohen, Stifel, Parker.
Third Row: Newman, Schroder, Arnold, Elliot, Dirickson, Swift, Power, Griffin, Tumsden.
Fourth Row: Newell, Sheffield, Powers, Johnston, Saunders, Brodie, Brice, Woodhouse,
Griner, Hagie, Castellow.
-^ #
87
JUNIOR
Firsr Row: Stener, Foster, Parsons, Shanklin, Phillips, Aldman.
Second Row: Maynard, Breeden, Brewster, Johnson, Kugler, Brown, Esterling.
Third Row: Morton, Davison, Brosius, Leigh, Parrish, Hampton, Winters.
Fourth Row: Marshall, Bodgett, Gaines, Shelton, Duffy, Rivkin, McKenzie.
88
First Row: Stener, Foster, Parsons, Shanklin, Phillips, Aldman.
Second Row: Ross, Speiwak, Horn, Shaw, Bernard, Trevathan.
Third Row: Fryar, Smith, Everetts, Doorman, Sabiston, Conrad, Metcalf, Alverson.
89
90
JUNIOR SCENES
HE Juniors . . . they knew three
months of peacetime Carolina — just enough to give them
something to reminisce about as they watch the columns
of uniformed students file by. Their memories are of big-
time parties where the beer wasn't rationed, week-ends visit-
ing the Freshmen at W. C, and their real post-football
game parties as college freshmen. They've seen the campus
night life slow down, they've watched the departure of a
the Carolina big-wigs, they've noticed the increase of the
numbers of coeds in their classes and extra-curriculas. They
have witnessed Carolina's metamorphosis from a carefree
college to a University at war. Their chatter is of the old
times — but they enjoy the life of today.
91
Dick Ford, Secretary-Treasurer : Dan Davis, Presideni:
Bruce Van Wagner, Student Legislature.
SDPHDMDRE CLASS
"7
.^ HOSE Cocky Sophomores !"
An old adage but it would be ? slight mistake to apply it to us, the Class of '46 at Carolina. Numeri-
cally cut in half since last year with about four-fifths of our ranks under military regulations and with the
remaining "civvies" carrying double scholastic burdens our so-called "cockiness" has been very little in evi-
dence to date.
As was the case among other Carolina wartime students we each began, this year, with some definite
job to do. Under the University's non-stop, speedup program we have been placed under greater tension
by having to attain these goals in much less time than is usually required. The civilians have been push-
92
ing steadily forward in response to the great need for men in the various fields of science and war in-
dustry. At the same time those of us in uniform have been forced to go the limit in preparation for as-
suming responsibilities of leadership in our various service branches.
Nevertheless, it must not be said that we have neglected play entirely. The athletic events, dances, and
other week-end activities (coupled with coed cooperation) served well to break the monotony of studies,
drills, and "phys. ed."
There was always the late snack at "The Marathon" when everybody sang to the rhythm of "Pistol-
Packin' Mama," and we could regain, to some degree, our "cockiness." We occasionally dropped by the
"Porthole" and the "Pines" to watch the campus politicians at work or wait for the midnight show to be-
gin. At times the latter turned out to be a rather long wait. At any rate we are deeply grateful for those
intervals of pleasure and look forward to the day when Carolina students will again have an abundance
of them.
In the years to come we, the Sophomores of '43 and '44, are going to
realize that this was probably the most decisive period in our lives. In the suc-
ceeding days we will gain commissions in the armed forces or positions in the
essential industries from which we and our country will derive the maximum
benefits. On the other hand, failure here will result in transfers and induction
as apprentice seamen or buck privates and, as a result, will mark our stay at
Carolina as a burden to the cause of a nation at war. We are proud to point
out that we have not failed to uphold that cause so far. Failures have been very
few and prospect for success for most of us very promising. Thus, the story
of '46 signifies not the time of graduation but a time when we will see our-
selves a great deal nearer the victory for which we are all striving.
SOPHOMORE HONOR COUNCIL
Standing: Andrews, G.; Steadman, J.
Storey, W.
Seated: Benbow, C.
SDPHDMDRES
Pint Row: Coverston, H. E.; Latty, S. G.; Harrison, D. B ; Gilliam, G. L. ; Worthy, F ; McFall, J. C. ; Jewell, C. D.; Lackey, B.;
Amundsen, J.; Shack, D.; Kellis, R.; Allen, G. R.
Second Ron: KiRBY, B.; Little, E.; Hackney, C; Hodges, G^ S.; Hinson, T.; Easterling, D.; Mathews, R.; McLemore, G. ;
Whitley, W. ; Gibson, A.; Butler, D. C. ; Dearman, J.
Third Ron: CooK, E. R. ; Jordan, M. W.; Shaughnessy, D.; Allen, L. ; Shamburik, L. W.; Bush, R, L. ; Tillman, H. ;
HoDSON, C. B.; Waite, R. G.; Vance, C. F. ; Wright. M. J.; Turnage, A
Fourth Row: Waltson, W. R.; Newman, M.; Marshall, J. W. ; Ormand, E. A.; Green, J. C; Giduz, R.; Pizer, M. ; Neiditch, S.;
Margolis, E.; Sikes, T. E.; Edwards, N. G.; Kerr, G.
Firii Row: Ward, B. ; Scarborough, H.; Brown, M.; Davis. G.; Hendron, C. ; Algranti, J.; Branch. D. D. ; Russell, B.;
Reynolds, H,
Second Row: Jente, R. C; Parish, J.; Bond, E. G.; Pope, W.; Sessoms, F.; Mason, W. T.; Leeds, B.; Weinberg, S.
Third Row: Drucker, R. A.; Edwards, N.; Perry, R. E.; Ellis, W. E. B.; Marbach, R. C; Folger, T. L.; Hines, R. L.; Creech, W. A.
Fourth Row: Johnson, C. B.; Robertson, C. L.; Cobb, D. A.; Gay, C W.
94
SDPHQMDRES
Fint Row: NEWMAN, D. J.; Cooke, W. L. : Eberly, H. W.; Elliot. R. W.; Jacobson, S. A.; Ball, D. H.; Kraus, W.
Second Row: English, R.; Piland, M. G.; Allen, G.; Hudson, J.; Wellforb, H. W.; McKenzie, J. A.; Johnson, R. U.
Third Row: Gunter, H. D. : Bryant, C. B.; Davis, D- H ; Fitch, J. S ; Miller, J. O. ; Crawford, T. B.; Andrews, J. D.
First Row: Leinbeck, L.; Rowland, J.; Black, K. ; Warren, C. W.; Freeman, J. W.; Worley, C. P ; Selig, F.
Second Row: DixoN, C. B. ; Hudson, T. W.; Rosemond, C. ; Marks, B.; Gray, M.; Levin, S.; Webb, J.
Third Row: Dean, J.; Reynolds, H.; Lovell, B.; Black, E ; Hockaday, T. E.; Garmany, J. H.; Kahn, C. H.
95
SDPHDMDRE
■^^
u
96
SNAPS
O.
HE Sophomores are the in-betweens. . . .
They've been at Carolina long enough to know their way to Kenan
Stadium and to Jeff's, but not long enough to have everything under
control. They've lived through the first hectic year as Freshmen, yet
still haven't settled down to dig for that diploma.
They watched eagerly as new coeds came in — spotting the younger
ones, trying to beat the time of the upperclassmen. They made the
rounds of the women's dorms and sorority houses, covered all the
dances and checked by the local beer parlors on week-ends.
Carolina Sophomores know that few of them will participate in
the traditional Commencement exercises in Memorial Hall. Their life
here is definitely limited — prescribed for the majority of them by
the Na^'y.
In the true sense of the word they belong to no definite "class" at
Carolina. At reunions in the years to come they will attend the meet-
ings of the Class of '46, but in reality they are members of a very
. special class — the war class of the University during this second great
world conflict.
97
FRESHMAN COUNCIL
Seated: Herschell Ward, President Steele. Second Term: John L. Gregory, Legislature.
Standing: William McNeely, Legislature: James Traynhaue, President Carr Council;
BoYCE Wells, President Steele Council.
FRESHMAN CLASS
LJurd riot to r\ea6on lA/k
D.
HIS year's Freshman Class was a
phase of Carolina that may never be repeated and for which
there was certainly no precedent.
In so many ways they were "firsts" at CaroUna.
First to organize themselves — for there was no student
government operating when they arrived on the campus
this summer. They weren't even oriented until after their
first term. All they had to go on as to upholding the
ideals of Carolina was a talk on honor by John Robinson
and chapels once a week ; still there was only one case of
cheating reported for the whole summer and no one over-cut
chapel. They were the first group to go through fraternity
rushing in the summer.
^
They had their own dormitory government which func-
tioned ably despite the lack of space forcing four boys into
rooms which had previously been occupied by t%vo.
98
The predominance of boys were from small Carolina towns, and because of the war
program were necessarily younger than any of the classes have ever been. Add to this
the presence of the Army, Navy, and Marines and you can see they were handicapped
with the coeds. But that didn't discourage the frosh social life. The season ended with
a formal dance for the class in Graham Memorial.
Composed of students who entered in the
summer term, and others who came in Septem-
ber, the class was joined by V-12ers. Accept-
ing a difficult situation as it was, the newcom-
ers saw in Carolina much that older students,
looking back, were missing.
The school, the organizations, the activities
were new, different, exciting to new men. To
the "oldtimers" the Carolina of pre-war years
was gone.
It was upon the University's freshman group
that the full burden of male participation in
extra-curriculars fell. The younger men, train-
ing for a single quarter, took on jobs never
before held by Freshmen. They found their
way — and won their place.
99
FRESHMEN
First Ron: EDWARDS, ERNEST, Chappell. Pruett, Stanley, Kelly. Juhnstun, Oldham, Cmelk,
Huff, Lancaster.
Second Row: Hakman, Gagle, Whitaker, Emanuel, Day, Best, Pence, Knight, Hudson,
Allan, Davis.
Third Row: Aldridge, Steadman. Fox, Averett, Gregory, James, Sapp, Valentine, Stone,
Maurice, Langdon.
Fourth Row: Hawkins, Lamb, Graves, Bogey, Peethin, Wicker, Robinson, McNeely, Sasser,
Creticos.
100
CLASS
First Row: Browne, Mackie. Bagwell, Gibson, McCarthy, Tow i . .sunns, Iwiidkd, Parks,
Taulconer, Askew, O'Berry, Perry.
Second Row: Wagner, Gutierrez, Rosemond, Whisenart, Harrer, Savvas, Younghood,
Corpening, Wells, Daniels, Gubin, Taylor, Ruggles, Smith.
Third Row: Shirky, Moore, Newell, Turner, Ferguson, Goodman, Ward, Stone, Morisitte,
Haugh, Davis, Fordham, Sparks.
Fourth Roll': Cashwell, Haynes, Hamilton, Parker, Croye, Pardue, Morel, Myers, Killeffer,
Seward, Moore, Suits, Todd, Fulton, Adams.
101
FRESHMEN
f/rf/ Kuli: MCGEE, PiTTAIAN, tOAKD. ROGERSON, JONES, HaVDON, RiCH, GROVES, GRICE, BLAVLOCK,
Leonard, Foister, Butler, Cushion.
Second Row: Kanter, Lacock, Green, Sauer. Whitfield, Loughlin, Harris, Eaton, Kefauver,
WiNSTEAD, Marsh, Pierce, Barnatt.
Third Rou:- CuRRiN, Wade, Winfield, Wray. Rankin, Moore, Hanau, Baird, Perry, York,
Jarosz, Pritchard.
Foiirih Row: Stout, Sternberger, Crumpler, Johnson, Flowers, Gruner, Lemly, Faulk,
Huffman, Currins, Moskow, Slack, Fleishman.
Fifth Row: Greggory, Marks, McKee, Rogers, Holmes, Flam, Kennedy, Heller, Poster,
Willis, Taylor, Brewer, Mitchell.
102
CLASS
First Rou: NoRRis. Lyerly, Hanna, Kibler, Jackson, Oliton, Stonehkakfk, Hoi.ofn. Huud.
Burnett, Hoffman.
•Second Rou: Huckman, Haynes, Pruitt, Hobbs. Hearn, Kornegay, Gordon, Heath, Kiger,
Menius, Levy.
^hird Row: Summerlin, Hoyle, Harris, Canno.n', Jenkins, Palmer, T.\ylor, Tenney, Greene,
Jordon, Gillikin, McCauley.
■Fourth Rou-: SoRRELL, Huffman, Kirby, Milligan, Laurence, Sigmon, Lefkowitz, Hall,
Hoyle. Scruggs.
103
FRESHMEN
///./ /v^;(. 5MH1I, DouMjiN, Edwards, Poplin, Golding, Allegoud, Waktin, Furk, Busi,
Atkinson.
Second Row: Early, Gardner, Curtner, Gipple, Horner, Godwin, Braswell, Brady, Wilson,
Albright.
Third Row: Crocker, Adams, Holiser, Duncan, Evans, Flagler, Bryant, Collett, Ellington,
Bland.
Fourth Row: DiGGS, JoNES, FRANK, Spencer, Abbott, Fessell. Hedrick, D.avis, Cox, Anderson.
r
nik
i
104
SUMMER FRESHMEN
First Rou:- Klein, Brooks, Walff, Wells, Borow, Greene, Mitchell, Goldiner, Casstevens,
Carpenter, Butler.
Second Row: Chase, Moseley, Best, Schoenheit, Warren, Lehmann, Dameron, Marsh,
Kend, Haines, Afflick.
Third Row: Sills, Rolnik, Schwarz, Heller, Smoot, White, Byerly, Smith, McCain, John,
Harvey, Rowe, Little.
Fourth Row: Edwards, Love, Stallings, Heniford, Waler, Kennedy, Corey, Hooker, Dobbins,
Williams, Moore, Tomlinson, Rankin.
Ftf/h Roiv: Jacobson, Graves, Shelton, Jennings.
105
FRESHMAN FACES
v.
HE Freshmen this year came to a uniformed Carolina in civil-
ian clothes. The campus life they had read about and heard about was no longer in
existence. Fraternity rush week was strictly a make-shift; the fall parties were few and
far between; the night life wasn't worth sitting up for.
The Freshmen have had to make their good times at Carolina, for they came during
a period of disorganization. They've enjoyed themselves, however, despite the lack of
organized entertainment.
It's been hard for them to have the Carolina spirit, hard for them to study, because
many of them are only marking time until they go into the service. But they have be-
come Carolina students with enthusiasm, and they have added strength to a campus
now going through its most critical days.
The Freshmen are war babies. They will not know a peacetime college life; they
have done a good job of making the most of a wartime Carolina.
106
107
SCHOOL
OF PHARMACY
Dean Beard
"N >
Labs forever.
Joe Montesanti, President
p.
HARMACEUTICAL ASPIRANTS at Carolina have had few
moments of leisure since July 1, 1943. Yes, sad but true is the fact that the
comparatively easy going "Joe College" days are gone for the duration. This
applies particularly to the students of Pharmacy. These students are indeed a
distinct group on the campus. They are surrounded on all sides by various units
under entirely different circumstances. Practically the entire student body at
present is working to some end, either reaching to "pluck out" a commission
in some branch of service or preparing themselves to enter a practically non-
competitive professional field in the near future. But not so for the Pharmacy
boys. Their work was deemed important enough for speed-up program at their
own expense, but not important enough to warrant a commission after gradua-
tion. Whether or not they will ever be able to reap any benefits from their
work of the great three or four years is a complete mystery. Their draft status
will be definitely 1-A upon the completion or failure of their work here. The
distinction of the Pharmacy girls lies in the fact that they too are forced to
keep up with the boys, since the school sponsors only a single program.
A new record was set this year in the coed enrollees as sixteen of the feminine
sex began the long climb. However, the draft board played havoc with the
number of boys, both newcomers and those who could not meet the require-
ments of the new program. As a result the total enrollment dropped from
last year's 132 to 96. Considering the conditions facing these students at present
this is not bad at all.
War or no war, the School of Pharmacy has refused to allow its social ac-
tivities to die. Never to be forgotten was N.C.P.A.'s picnic out at Dr. Burlage's
meadow during the summer session and the Halloween party given in Graham
Memorial by Rho Chi and the Pharmacy Senate. Many life-time friendships
were established at the "get-acquainted" parties and the receptions given by
108
Kappa Psi, Phi Delta Chi, and Kappa Epsilon. Then on deck are the annual
Pharmaqf dances, scheduled for February 4th and 5th, and a Senior farewell
party sponsored annually by N.C.P.A. to take place in March.
Taking everything into consideration, the school year of 43-44 has been
a great success for the Pharmacy students. In coming through against probably
the greatest conflicts in any single year in the history of the school, they have
shown a great deal for which we at Carolina are very proud.
Keith Fearing
Secretary and Treasurer
Aubrey Richardson
Student Council
Representjtiie
Bill Canaday
Student Legislature
Representative
Drugs for freedom.
Minutes for relaxation.
109
FOURTH YEAR
George B. Albright
Spencer, N. C.
William Glenn Beam
Cherryville, N. C.
Kiippci Psi
Cariilklate for B.S. Degree ii
Mervin Sharpe Cannaday
Four Oaks, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pliarrna<
Student Legislature (4); Ba-seball C
IMiarmacy Senate (2, 3, i) \ N'.C.P.A.
Morrison Rankin Caruthers
Graham, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pliarniaoy;
Monogram Club; Fencing (1); Lacrosse
(2): Swimming (2. 3): Orchestra (1);
\.C.T..\. (2. 3, 1): Pharmacy Senate (2,
Maltom Keith Fearing
M.inteu, N. C.
Kafifia Psi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy:
Secretary and Treasurer of Pharmacy
School; N.C.P..\.
W. Herbert Hollowell, Jr.
Edenton, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in PI
I'liarmacv Senate (1. 2. 3, 4). 1
(41; N.C.P..\. (2, 3. 4).
Mary Ruth Aycock
Princeton, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy;
Secretary' of Senior Pharmacy Class :
X.C.P.A. (I, 2. 3. 4); Pharmacy Senate
(1); y.W.C..\. (1. 2. 3, 4).
Lawrence Emerson Britt
Clinton, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy;
Class Executive Committee (3); Class
Treasurer (4); Debate Squad (2): Phi
Assembly (1. 2. 3); Student Legislature
(4); Young Democrats Club (1. 2);
Y.M.C.A. (1. 2. 3. 4); Pharmacy Senate
11) ; X.C.P.A. (1. 3. 4).
John Clifton Canipe
Boone, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy;
Class Officer (3. 4) : Y.M.C.A. (3) ; N.C.P.A.
(1. 2, 3, 4); Pharmacy Senate (4).
Joseph Estes, Jr.
Durham, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pliarniacy;
Class Honor Council (1); Pharmacy Sen-
ate (3, 4) ; N.C.P.A.
Gerald D. Hege
Lexington, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy ;
Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4): N.C.P.A.: Pharmacy
Senate.
Joseph House, Jr.
Beaufort. N. C.
Chi Psi
Degree in Pharii
110
Billie Waugh Johnson
North Wilkesboro. N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy,
Y.W.C.A. (1, 2); Pharmacy Girls' Asso-
ciation Secretary (4) ; Secretary Junior
Class Pharmacy (3); N.C.P.A. (1. 2. 3, 4).
Joe Montesanti, Jr.
Pinehurst, N. C.
Kal)pj Psi
Norfleet Owen McDowell, Jr.
Scotland Neck, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Aubrey De Vaughn Richardson
Cerro Gordo, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy:
Class Honor Council ; Pharmacy Repre-
sentative to Student Council (4) ; Class
President (3U Sound and Fury (2, 3);
Rho Chi (3, 4) ; N.C.P.A. (2, 3, 4) ; Phar-
macy Senate (3, 4).
Ralph Teague
High Point, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy:
Cla^s Officer (2, 4i: Pharmacy (1, 2, 3):
N.C.P.A. (1. 2. 3. 4).
Wesley R. Viall
Pinehurst, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degr
Clyde Anthony Johnson
Littleton, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy:
N.C.P.A. (3, 4), Secretary (3); Rho Chi
President (4).
William A. Morton
Wilmington, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Ruth Helen Patterson
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy;
Secretary of Pharmacy Class ( 1 ) ; Town
Girls' Treasurer (1, 2), Vice-President (4):
Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Independent Coeds
(2).
Anna Frances Rimmer
Sanford, N. C.
Kappa Epsilon
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy:
Pharmacy Senate (3, 4) ; N.C.P.A. Secre-
tary (4); President Kanpa Epsilon (4):
Y.W.C.A. (4).
Richard Cole Scharff
Asheville, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmac>'.
Muriel Ann Upchurch
Apex, N. C.
Kappa Epsilon
Rho Chi
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy;
Women's Senate (2) : Interdormitory Coun-
cil (3); Spencer Hall President (4) ; Wom-
an's Honor Council (4); President of
W.G.A. (4); Valkyries (4); N.C.P.A. (I,
2. 3, 4).
Marguerite White
Raleigh, N. C.
Candidate for B.S. Degree in Pharmacy;
Sound and Fury (2. 3, 4) : Yackett Yack
(4): N.C.P.A. (3. 4); Y.W.C.A. (1);
Honor Council (3).
Ill
THIRD YEAR
Charles H. Beddingfield, Jr.
Clayton, N. C.
Phi Delt.i Chi
Jessie Frances Cole
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Kafip.i Pii
Edward H. Knight
Weldon, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Evelyn Earle Salter
Stacy, N. C.
Sam Black
Lexie Virginia Caudle
Mary Lou Cecil
Asheboro, N. C.
Peachland, N. C.
High Point, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Kappa Psi
Rudolph Warren Hardy
Elsie Rose Hudson
Lucy Lee Kennedy
Everetts, N. C.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Kerr, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Kappa Psi
Kappa Psi
Herbert Clarence Mayberry
Albert Paul Rachide
Lloyd Riggsbee
Elkin, N. C.
New Bern, N. C.
Pittsboro, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Phi Delta Chi
Phi Delia Chi
Shuford Snyder
William West Taylor
Laurel Lee Williams
Swannanoa, N. C.
Durham, N. C.
Hilton Village, Va.
Kappa Psi
Kappa Psi
Kappa Epsilon
Rho Chi
Rho Chi
112
SECOND YEAR
Paul Bissetti, Jr.
Sam Clark
Wilson, N. C.
Clarkton, N. C.
Phi Gammn Delia
Alpha Tail Ome^a
Bill Horn
Shirley Hurwitz
Phi Dell J Chi
Clinton, N. C.
Jack Ranzenhofer
Winfield Rose
Highland Falls, N. V^
ChapelHill, N. C.
Ph, Delta Chi
Frank Stephens
Dannie Underwood
Orum, N. C.
Salemburg, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Doris Bullard
Robert Dees
Roseboro, N. C.
Burlaw, N. C.
Phi Delta Chi
Nancy Travis Hunt
Bob Parsons
Oxford, N. C.
MargarerviUe, N. C.
Phi Delta Cht
Willie Rose
"Tommie" Slayton
Newton Grove, N. C.
Murphy, N. C.
Dewey Stonestreet
Steve Uzzell
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Black Mountain, N. C.
Kappa Psi
Chi Phi
FIRST YEAR
Emily Ailton
Port Jervis, N. Y.
Betty Hanna
Hickory, N. C.
MoUie Mosely Hood
Dunn. N. C.
Alpha Delta Pi
Mary Rose Pruitt
Oxford, N. C.
James H. Boyles
Cherryville, N. C.
Chi Chi
Thomas R. Harris
Cliffside, N. C.
Ola Faye Jackson
Sanford, N. C.
M '.Dewey Sigman
Conover, N. C,
Faye M. Burnette
Black Mountain. N. C.
Norma Iris Hearne
Carrboro, N. C.
Sarah Wells Kibler
Morganton, N. C.
Rosalie Stonebraker
Cleveland Heights, O.
Allan R. Cannon
Ayden, N. C.
Raymond E. Heath
Newport, N. C.
Patricia Lawrence
Charlotte, N. C.
Chi Ome^a
Jack Summcrlin
Laurinburg, N. C.
Emily Ann Feld
Memphis. Tenn.
Florence Hoffman
High Point, N. C.
Dorothy Jean Lyerly
Lowell, N. C.
James Gay Taylor
Gumberry, N. C.
Leon Lewis Gordan
Rutherford, N. C.
Eleanor Holden
Bunnel, Fla.
Chi Oine^a
Lila June Norris
Boone, N. C.
113
SECOND YEAR MED STUDENTS
Fust Row: Foster, W.; Newsome; Harrison, L. B.; Dr. Ferguson; Dr. Bullitt; Dr. McPherson; Dr. MacNider; Demeri. J.
Parham, S.; Bailey, F.
Second Row: Bennett, T. ; Dulin, S.; Robertson, L. ; Harrelson, R.; Bailey, H.; Vernon, T. ; Davis, J.; Park, H.
Third Row: ROGERS, W.; Watkins, W.; Blair, R.; Elwell, R. ; Bobbitt, H.
Fottrt/j Row: Clark, D.; Parkinson, E.; Smith, F. ; Wick, H.; Alderman, E.; Shell, J.; Cameron, G.; Baggett, J.
Fifth Row: Peoples, T. ; Little, F. ; Meroney, W.; Henninger, B.; Ross, W.; Newman, H.
Sixth Rotr: Croom, W. ; Toms, P.; Brown, W. ; Wooten, C. ; Currin, R.
^^S
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
s Carolina's undergraduate schools stepped
up their pace to meet the demands of wartime education, the University
Medical School went on a year round basis to help train the doctors so
urgently needed by our armed forces. The School's normal two-year
curriculum was cut to a year and a half and faculty and students alike
studied and worked full time with vacations reduced to almost nothing.
Since July 1, 1943, eighty of the school's total enrollment of eighty-
five students have been in uniform. Army boys (as privates first class)
met for "dawn patrol" at 7; 50, attended military lectures, and drilled
weekly, while Navy boys (as apprentice seamen) attended Naval lec-
tures, took life easy, and managed to get to most of their classes on time.
Highlight of the year for all was the student faculty day. Students
Parham and Currin stole the show with classroom imitations of Dr.
Billy and Dr. Bullitt, but the crowd found plenty of entertainment in
the representations of Drs. Low and Andrews by students Gaul and Cox.
In the late afternoon, festivities were transferred to Hogan's Lake
where "further entertainment" was adequately provided.
114
Hilda
President of H'
Bailey
hitehe.id Society
Full credit should be given Dean Berryhill for his tire-
less and efficient work as dean and teacher. And to other
members, young and old, of the top-notch faculty, recogni-
tion should be given for their part in keeping the medical
school one of the highest ranking in the nation.
Officers of the Whitehead Society were: Hilda Bailey,
President; Frank Smith, Vice-President; Cecil Wooten and
Ed Alderman, Joint Secretaries and Treasurers. Other of-
ficers: Homer Wick, President of the Second Year Class;
Vincent Arey, President of First Year Class; Bill Brown,
President of Phi Chi, and Dick Phillips, President of A.K.K.
Fraternity.
Frank Smith
i'he-President of Whitehead
Society
Ed Alderman
Secretary and Treasurer of
W^hi/ehead Society
Homer Wick Vincent Aery
President of Second Year Class President of First Year Class
FIRST YEAR MED STUDENTS
First Rote; Dr. Ferrill; Dr. Ferguson; Dr. Kyker; Dr. Van Cleave; Dr. Pliske ; Dr. Low; Dr. Miller; Dr. Shields; Dr.
Andrews; Cornatzer, E.
Second Ron:- Rabel, N.; Cox, H.; Wells, E. ; McBrayer; Correll, E.; Mayer, J.; Blake, H.; Earnhardt; Tillet, C.
Tlurd Row.- Gaul, J.; Miller; Avey, V.; Phillips, C. ; FuRR, E.; Svigals, M.; Sorrow, M.; Smedburg, G.; Davis, J.; King, F.
Fo/trih Row: Manley, J.; HAWKINS; SWANTON, M. ; ANDREWS, R.; Bell, W.; Crouch, W.; Spain, S. ; Warsham ; Quinnel,
Manley, R.
Fifth Rote: Marrow; Dr. Mason; Yoder, H.; Lippard; Smith, G. ; Penick, G.; Beatty, C; Matthews, O.; Davis; Scarborough.
Sistb Row: Lee, A.; Kendricks, J.; Adams, L. ; Rascoe, R.; Warshaver, A.; Kessler, B.
lis
SCHOOL OF LAW
^.^N ENROLLMENT the Law School has
felt the effect of two years of the war more than any other
branch of the University. From a pre-war average of approxi-
mately 120, the present student body has fallen to 12, three
of whom are in V-12 and N.R.O.T.C. programs.
The facult}' is reduced to four, Wettach, Breckenridge,
Coates, and McCall. The others are scattered. Van Hecke, with
W.L.B.; Hanft, a Major in A.M.G. ; Dalzeal, Assistant to
Solicitor of Department of Interior; and Brandis, Lieutenant
(jg) in Naval Intelligence.
Officers: Harvey Hamilton, President; Idrienne Levy, Secre-
tary-Treasurer; Bill Johnson, Student Council Representative.
Harvey Hamilton
PresitieKl
Idrienne Levy Bill Johnson
Secretary-Treasurer Student Council Representative
hirst Row: Hill, C , Hamilton, H.; Levy, L; Sears, J.
Second Rote: Shuford, J , Peel. E ; Proctor, E.; Hudson, J.; Johnson, W. A,
Third Row: Dr. F W Hamft, Wettach, D.; Dr. A. C. Coates; Coira, C.
116
The Old Well, Old East
AND South.
LEST WE
FORGET
Alumni — The Political
Science Struggle.
r ^ ITH THE COMING of Our
Senior year, Carolina had changed
from that first look at it back as a
beginning student here. Those six
o'clock reveilles for some of us,
along with civilian life back in the
"old days," are the things to re
member.
Botanical and Biological
Gardens — Arboretum.
Steele — Few and Far
ClMLIANS
New buildings erected by the Navy didn't change
our view of the campus . . . the old landmarks of
giant Davie Poplar, the Confederate Soldier, the
moon over Kenan Stadium, Graham Memorial, the
Library, or the "Y."
Marley's, Harry's, and the Pines, were the scenes
of many a happy time and then there were those
Saturday nights at the girls' dorms where we found
competition from the Pre-Flighters.
The campus from the Bell Tower-
The Library where more studied
THAN ever before.
...OLD CHAPEL HILL
It was a pleasant and short year, one that we had looked
forward to and then watched pass by quickly. We had many
changes in our campus life and activities but there were still
those familiar scenes around The Hill which indicated our
love and appreciation for a simple and unadorned college —
The Bell Tower, sun baths, music under the stars. University
Day ceremonies, arboretum whispers, and the outdoor band
concerts.
Battle- Vance -Pettigrew —
The road to Parris Island.
Walters and Lyon
■->^>
STUDENT
loHN M. Robinson, President
s
TUDENT SELF GOVERNMENT at the University of North
Carolina has not always been a reality. A half century ago the student body was
controlled entirely by the administration and as such it had few of the Caro-
lina liberties that we enjoy today. Government by the students has grown from
such a state to that of the present in which the students control virtually all of
their activities.
Over a period of many generations the students have encouraged a disposi-
tion in the faculty to yield authority to students whenever a request for au-
thority is accompanied by a sincere desire for responsibility. In such a manner
the present Student Government was conceived.
The Student Legislature, the Student Council and the President of the Stu-
dent Body are the legislative, judicial, and executive agencies of Student Govern-
ment. Formerly the Student Council and its Chairman held all final powers of
Student Government. Through the years, however, these powers have been
democratically distributed to several other student organizations representing
more students.
Under the present system of government the Student Legislature is charged
with representing the student body as a congress and enacting such legislation
as conditions warrant. The Student Council is charged not only with the judicial
powers of enforcing the legislation but is also the supreme court of the campus.
The Student Council hears all cases involving violations of the Honor System
or of the Campus Code of acceptable conduct. The President of the Student
Body acts as the executive agency and as such is Chairman of the Student Coun-
cil. He also represents the Student Body by automatic membership on many of
the student government organizations not directly connected with the three
122
GOVERNMENT
main branches of Student Government. He has full access to the floor of the
Legislature at all times. A two-thirds vote of the Student Legislature is required
to override the Student Council in passing a bill vetoed by the Council.
The principal problems of the student government organizations in the pres-
ent times is one of representation. Under a wartime program the personnel of
the student organizations is changing so rapidly that few capable student leaders
have the opportunity to develop. Because of this the Student Council has been
diligent in the selection of council representatives so the student body will be
assured in future generations of having men to represent and lead them that
ably fulfill the requirements for student leadership.
Also because of the representation problem, the Student Council is en-
deavoring to establish a leaders' school for the education and instruction of those
capable students who desire to take part in student self government at Carolina.
The extent to which any student generation can realize the principles of
student government is limited. Student Government varies with the students
who are governing and with the circumstances affecting the vigor with which
students assume authorit}' and responsibility. However, as the generations come
and go, each should strive to pass on to the next the best of student government.
Only then will there be no limit upon the degree to which student self govern-
ment might be realized under favorable conditions.
Officers: Denny Hammond, President; Turk Newsome, Vice-President; El-
bert Peel, Jr., Secretar)'-Treasurer.
STUDENT COUNCIL
First Row: Alspaugh, F. ; Robinson, J. ; Peel, J.
Second Row: Benbow, C. F.; Newsome, T. ; Hammond, D.; Richardson, A.; Thompson. R.
123
SedieJ: Upchurch, M. . . . SLinJ/ng: Patman, F. ; Weaver, H.
Parker, P.; McKethan, M. R.; Roper, K.
WOMEN'S
GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION
D.
HE COEDS BEGAN THEIR YEAR with a well Organized Student Government headed
by Muriel Upchurch. Working hard to maintain and improve the new permanent Women's Govern-
ment Association, the girls began with enthusiasm and carried this with them throughout the year.
First on the program was a week of orientation to help the new girls become familiar with the cam-
pus. After finding out about the departments in which they were interested, going to entertainments for
their benefit, and tramping all over the grounds, the coeds felt they were really a part of Carolina's col-
lege life.
The coeds were introduced to W.G.A. at a mass meeting and learned that this is its third anniversary
as the coeds own governing body. Set up on a tri-cameral basis, this body consists of an Honor Council,
which serves as a court, a Senate, dealing with legislative matters, and an Interdormitory Council, which
regulates dormitory life.
The Council for this year wanted to reach each girl individually and instill in her Carolina's way of
living. Hall meetings were held by the Honor Council members to explain the Honor Code and Campus
Code. After open discussion, the girls pledged themselves to abide by these codes throughout the year.
The Council handled cases involving violations of these codes — which include lying, cheating, stealing, and
unladylike conduct, infringement on the Interfraternity Agreement, and extreme social violations. Trying
to help the girls in their adjustment to campus life, the Council was interested in making the students
124
understand the ideals by which CaroHna coeds are governed. It was
an understanding body and handled each case with special care and
consideration. The Honor Council commanded great respect from coeds
with its fairness in dealing with all cases that came before it.
In an effort to stimulate the coeds' interest in their government, a
bill was proposed requiring every girl to take the examination on
Woman's Government. This bill was passed by a great majority and
the tests were held in the fall.
The three bodies — Senate, Honor Council, and Interdormitory —
cooperated in every important event. In a year in which the coeds
gained such importance on campus, their government kept in step with
this progress. Each girl on campus was a member and each con-
tributed in her way to its unity.
Officers: Muriel Upchurch, President; Kay Roper, Vice-President;
Mary Rankin McKethan, Secretary; Frances Ferrier, Treasurer.
UST BE IN ON TIME,
WGA PLAQUE
STUDENT
LEGISLATURE
Reid Thompson, Speaker
Terrell Webster, Speaker
3.
ROM ITS BEGINNING IN 1938 as a new experi-
ment in student government, the Student Legislature has steadily grown
in power and efficiency until it now occupies the key position in ad-
ministering the affairs of the student body.
The most important work in the short history of the Legislature
was accomplished this year — the Student Government Reorganization
Plan. While University officials and Naval authorities were making
plans for the establishment of the V-12 Unit, Speaker Terrell Webster
held conferences committee meetings, and informal bull sessions.
After much debate and pooling of opinions, the Legislature set up
the provisions designed to carry Student Government through the
war, with no pollution of its rich traditions. All class government was
abolished, the Student Council and Student Legislature were revised
to conform to the campus wartime situation, and measures for suc-
cession in the various offices were passed.
Greatest credit of the year goes to Speaker Terrell Webster — pre-
siding with skill and impartialit)' over stormy sessions — long hours at
committee meetings — a passion for hard work — and genuine devotion
to the Legislature and the Student Body.
With four different military groups and 1800 civilian students on
the campus, many new problems and increasingly broader responsibility
confronts the Legislature. Proud of its record and enthusiastic in attack-
ing current issues, the Legislature exercises its authority over campus
affairs with careful deliberation and judicious action.
The Legislature has achieved the goal visioned by its founders in
becoming the most powerful student control group ever known at
Carolina.
Officers: Terrell Webster, Reid Thompson, Speaker; Dick Pollock,
Speaker Pro Tempore; Sara Yokley, Reading Clerk; Marshall Parker,
Sergeant-at- Arms ; Charles Vance, Parliamentarian.
First Row: Bell, A.; Hamilton, H.; Yokley, S.; Thompson, R. ;
Lloyd, M. J. ; Pollock, D.
Second Row: Brogden, E. O.; Flannigan, K.; Clark, E.; Marks, B.;
Cramer, B.; Levy, L; Burleigh, R.
Third Row: Hill, K.; Th.ayer. R.; Vance. C; Weaver, H.;
Britt, L. ; Pickard, M. ; Carden, J.; Cranford, T.
Forir/h Row: McNealy, W. ; GREGORY, J.; WiDEMAN, F. ; Stead-
man, J.; Perry, R.; Webb, J.
i X =t=z±i
127
Marv Lou Truslow, Speaker
WOMAN'S
HEN THE Coed Senate began
its session for the war torn year of 1943, few realized
that this coed body would reach new height in ac-
tivity of the Carolina campus.
Formed in the spring of 1941, as part of the re-
vised Women's Government, its powers are to draw up
the budget, pass on all expenditures in the Women's
Government which includes Honor Council, Women's
Athletic Association, and donations to all the sub-
sidiary organizations. It is the Senate's duty to amend the Constitution
of the Women's Government, supervise all coed elections, vote on
social rules recommended by the Interdormitory Council and promote
the general welfare of the women. The Senate stands as the major
coed legislative body on the campus.
During the year, legislative action brought about an amendment
passed by the whole coed body making a government examination com-
First Row: Ferrier, F.; Flana-
gan, K. ; Truslow, M.; Hughes
M.
Second Roii.BRVBAKEK,S.;KoPfK.
K. ; Seligman, B. ; Kennedy, L. .
Slagton, T.; Lockridge,
Camp, H. M. ; Bell, A.; Mc-
GiMSEY, K.; Cobb, C.
128
SENATeJ,^£4J-
pulsorj- to all new coeds on the campus. The budget gave added financial
benefit to the Women's Athletic Association in order to promote ath-
letic interest. A two hundred dollar scholarship fund was established
for a Senior girl showing leadership and scholastic ability.
Since the men students on the campus held an unstable position
due to the war, the coed body took on activities concerning both men
and women, as is shown in the War Committee, a coordination body
established by the Senate headed by Kitty Kelly.
This committee promotes Red Cross drives. Bond drives, and War
Information centers at Carolina.
Oflicers are: Mary Lou Truslow, Speaker; Kitty Flanagan, Speaker
Pro-Tern; Mac Hughes, Secretary; Fran Ferrier, Treasurer. Committee
Chairmen were: Kay McGinsy, Lucy Kennedy, Betty Seligman, Helen
Marie Camp, Sue Brubaker, Margaret Pickard, Jean Lockridge, Tommy
Slayton, Carol Cobb, Alice Bell, Kay Roper, Kitty Flanagan.
129
DEBATE
CDUNCIL
^./V s Carolina entered its third year ot
war, the University Debate Council found that its most im-
portant function, that of intercollegiate debating, had been
narrowed by discontinuance of debate activity on other cam-
puses.
Though troubled by transportation difficulties, the council
for the first time in the history of the University has run on
a year round basis. The first part of the summer Carolina held
a dual debate with Georgia Tech. Howard Ennis and Clyde
Rollins met Tech's affirmative here while E. O. Brogden and
Aaron Johnson journeyed to Atlanta to uphold the negative
side of the World Federation theory. Carolina split the meet
with Tech winning the Atlanta debate but losing to them in
Chapel Hill.
The highlight of the year came when twenty-two members of the squad attended the 7th An-
nual Student Legislature Assembly in Raleigh. The Carolina delegation successfully introduced four
bills. One of the bills concerned the removal of a painting of Henry Clay from behind the Speaker's
desk and replacing it with that of a famous North Carolinian. Introduced in jest the bill caused one
of the hottest debates of the assembly. The other bills concerned an amendment to the State Consti-
tution giving the Governor veto power; an amendment to the U. S. Constitution giving the Senate
power to ratify a treaty by a majority vote; a resolution calling for Federal financial aid for public
education. E. O. Brogden was elected Speaker of the House, Dan Davis was elected Parliamenta-
E. O. Brogden, President
DEBATE COLINCIL
Pint Row: Ormand, R.; Brogden. E. O.,
Jr., President; Dr. J. L. Godfrey; Dr. H.
T. Lefler.
Second Row: Bernard, R.; Dr. E. J.
WooDHOusE; Ennis, H.; Seligman, B.
130
rian. In the Senate Reid Thompson was elected President and Mary Lou
Truslow Parliamentarian.
This year Carolina has met Lenoir-Rhyne, Wake Forest, Appalach-
ian, Davidson and E. C. T. C. Tournament debating has suffered some-
what but the squad attended the Grand Eastern Debate Tournament.
Realizing a need for more activity on the campus the Council de-
cided to reestablish and sponsor the N. C. Chapter of Tau Kappa Alpha,
national honorar)- forensic fraternit)'. Eight members were tapped on
the basis of superior debating abilit)', public speaking, and scholastic
a\'erages.
For the second year the all campus debate tournament was held.
Many organizations including the Di, Phi, C.P.U., I.R.C., C.I.C.A.,
Phi Delta Theta, and the Town Girls, entered teams to discuss the na-
tional topic: Should the U. S. participate in establishing and maintain-
ing an international police force upon the defeat of the Axis. The
council has given financial aid to other discussion groups in the hope
that they will be better able to stimulate interest in debate and discus-
sion.
Members of the Council are: E. O. Brogden, President and Executive Secretary; Clyde Rollins,
Vice-President; Rene Bernard, Bob Ormand, Betty Seligman, Howard Ennis, Dr. E. J. Woodhouse,
Dr. J. L. Godfrey, and Dr. Hugh T. Lefler.
Ormand makes a point.
DEBATE SQUAD
First Row; Rambeau, H.; Ormand, R.; Brogden, E. O., Jr., President; Dr. J. L. Godfrey; Dr. Hugh T. Lefler; Seligman, B
Ennis, H.
Second Row: Clark, C; Dr. E. J. Woodhouse; Ferrier, F.; Pardue. E.; Kennedy, L. L.; Britt, L. ; Crisp. W.; Perlmuter, B.
Wfber, H.: H.\rrixgton. C; Josephs. D, ; Bernard. R,
131
Hr.LEN Marie Camp, PrmJini
WOMEN'S
INTERDQRMITDRY COUNCIL
7
.^^ HE Women's Interdormitory Council is comprised of the
dormitory presidents and the sorority house managers, its total membership now being
eleven. The Council acts as a link between the girls, the Dean of Women, and the
hostesses by interpreting social regulations, recommending changes in these regulations
to the Senate, and supervising the Judicial House Councils which help enforce house
rules.
The functions of the Council have increased considerably due to the change of the
University from a peacetime campus to a wartime campus. One of these functions has
been to assist in furnishing facilities for recreation by opening the small parlors in each
dormitory for dancing. Also the council supervised furnishing, equipping, and painting
study rooms in the dormitories. In the spring of the year the Interdormitory Council
contributed a sum of money to each dormitory to be used for any necessary improve-
ments.
Through these activities the Council strove to make a definite contribution to the
welfare of the women students in the University.
Officers: Helen Marie Camp, President; Dorothy Schmuhl, Secretary.
Pint Row- Parker, M.; Camp, H. M.;
Schmuhl, D.
Second Ron: Kearney, M. L.; Thomp-
son, P.
Third Row: Castleman. A.; Foster,
A.; White, W.; Oldham, L.
132
The Tar Heel gets a coat of paint.
PUBLICATIONS UNION
BOARD
7
•v.^ o Carolina s three publications, a
wartime campus presented the biggest problems and challenge.
Entrusted with the job of "finding the ways and the money"
to continue the Tar Heel, Carolina Magazine, and Yackety
Yack, the Publications Union Board found itself with re-
duced funds and increased costs.
But despite strained conditions, the Board voted unanimously to continue the magazine and yearbook. Only
cut came in the Tar Heel, which was forced to a weekly by "three fatal sisters of mechanics, manpower, and
finances."
By the end of the fall, there was a way out for the weekly paper and the Tar Heel budget, providing twice-
weekly publication was approved.
In a year of drastic change, the publications had hewed close to the line of normalcy, had continued to serve
the campus needs.
Board members were: Faculty — William Wells, E. H. Hartsell, J. M. Lear. Students — Nancy Smith, Presi-
dent; Tyler Nourse, Treasurer; Jud Kinberg, Secretary; Opie Charters.
First Row: Dr. E. H. Hartsell ; Smith, N. ; Dr. J. M. Lear.
Second Row: Kinberg, J.; Dr. Wm. Wells; Nourse, T.
133
Editor Bishopric ^B
u
THE 1944
^_y i\\
HE JOB IS DONE. The lights no longer burn
late in the office, the typewriters are silent and all that re-
mains is the BOOK and the trash and scraps from a
hundred first starts.
The P. U. Board met in July and was almost ready to
give up the idea of an annual for the year, due to what
they thought were insurmountable obstacles — reduced civil-
ian enrollment — scarcity of materials — and lack of Navy co-
operation, but the nucleus of an editorial staff thought
otherwise. The wide awake printing and engraving repre-
sentatives, Frank Fleming and Bill Deighton, had made
preparations for getting the necessary materials back in May
— the second Navy pay day saw an all day subscription
campaign fought by first Managing Editor Arthur Persky,
Ed Goodman, and a host of Coed Circulation Assistants —
September brought an unexpectedly high civilian enrollment
and life saver Business Managers Harris Knight and Dan
Bagley — the P.U. Board passed a budget with non-essentials
slashed and engraving appropriations raised and the BOOK
was on the way.
Senior V-12 Editor Vincent Anderson joined the staff
and rapidly cleared his section from the thorny path, the
V-12 group pictures were made and Ed Goodman's shouts
for thirty-five cents per man faded away.
And then the work began in earnest. October passed
swiftly. Photography Editor Tyler Nourse and Assistants Bob
Baker and Jimmy Robinson swung into action and flash
bulbs garnered from a New York friend flickered through-
out the campus while Senior Editor Mary Rankin McKethan
plugged at the task of inducing Wootten-Moulton to dis-
gorge the hundreds of Senior Class pictures, and first
Fraternity Editor Bob Cozart rushed frantic letters trying
to get the Greeks to assemble for group portraits. Class
group pictures were completed — scarcity of materials made
them necessary — and fraternities had to be cut to one page
in a slenderized edition of the BOOK — October neared a
close and the Editor took a badly needed week's rest along
with the rest of the Navy men.
134
YACKETY YACK
The first half of November was the most trying time for the BOOK. Organizations pictures all had to
be made in two weeks, and a confusion seemingly impenetrable began to grow in the two-by-four office called
home on the second floor of Graham Memorial as Activities Editors Jean Lyons and Betty Walters rolled
up their sleeves and yanked copy in bodily, while tjpists dashed thither and yon and prints came up from
the darkroom in an increasing stream. Art Editor Kappy Watters rushed the drawing job and Associate
Editor Sara Yokley finished up the first section — new Managing Editor Cookie Marett took charge of
the office and the maze began to clear away. Margy Martorell completed the signing of organizational con-
tracts; Classes Editor Sam Latty get tc work on his section; helper Betsy Dickson joined the staff; and
the Yackety Yack beauty dance, brain child of Dance Editors Margy Martorell and Margaret Fountain,
passed by. Jack of all publications Ernie Frankel took on the fraternity job and Mary Rankin McKethan com-
pleted the difficult Senior Class section and helped whip the organization into shape, while Milly Johnson
scored the pharmacy section.
The first of December brought the end of the football section, Baxter Sapp's photo work, Joe Denker's
and Millie Hosch's girls' dorms pictures, Lloyd Koppel's work on the sports section and exams which caused
the staff to drop off like flies. Vernon Highfill dropped in and took over a badly needed darkroom spot and
the last minute work of taking winter sports shots and arranging pictures began. The last days before Christ-
mas, when the Editor and Ernie Frankel held a four-day sleepless deadline siege with the help of town stu-
dents Marianne and Ted Browne, Business Manager Harris Knight and Fred Kanter, were the hardest. Christ-
mas vacation over, the section montages were finished, the last bit of copy went to press and the BOOK was
complete.
Editorial Staff not mentioned above — Harvey White. Margaret Woodhouse, Anne Straub, Mary Louise
Huse, Ernest Crone, Jud Kinberg, Wynnette White. Horace Carter. Dave Cooper, James Edwards, Penn
Marshall.
Business Staff — Business Managers. Knight and Bagley; Organizations Manager. Margy
Martorell ; Circulation Manager, Harvey Gunter ; Assistants, Cookie Marett. Betsy Dickson,
Margaret Fountain, Jeannette Miller, Betty Walters, Jean Lyon. Fran Defandorf, Mildred
Johnson, Jeanne Parry, Marty Hornaday, Wynnette White, Doris Clark. Marky Parsons, Dot
Hawthorne, Marge Woodhouse, Steve Stifel, Peeny Bernhardt.
135
Editor Ribelin Cranford
Editor Cranford
CAROLINA
l/w VYH A WOMAN as its Editor
for the first time in a 100-year-old history, a wartime
budget and a slice to a 28-page issue, the Carolina
Mag continues to satisfy and entertain the student
body.
Greeting the new students on registration day in
the fall was a Special V-12 Issue, edited by Marine
Pvt. H. C. Cranford. But before plans had been
formulated for the October issue, Cranford was in
Parris Island, and the editorship fell into the hands
of another Marine, Ernie Frankel. Frankel, experi-
enced publications' man, turned out a brightly il-
lustrated mag on the theme, "Yesterday, Today, and
Tomorrow." In the later elections, a precedent was
broken when a coed, Lois Ribelin Cranford, was
elected to head the staff.
Filled with a balanced combination of serious and humorous writing, the
Mag presented varied material for its readers. Each issue included feature articles,
short stories, poetry, and jokes. Highlight of the Mag is the attractive center-
spread which usually features the theme of the issue. Each issue is splashed
with "professional-like" shots of glamorous coeds, lively cartoons, and well-
drawn illustrations. Expert makeup won for it the coveted Pacemaker's Award
in 1942, as the outstanding college magazine in the country.
The Mag, published entirely by students, is free from faculty censorship.
This liberty affords publication of a magazine which may contain articles of
praise or criticism. The purpose of its Editors is to faithfully record the trend
of each school year by printing the best in student journalistic and creative work;
therefore producing an honeit, enjoyable magazine.
136
MAGAZINE
Business Manager Charters
THE STAFF
Editors: Pvt. H. C. Cranford, Pvt, Ernie Frankel, Lois Ribelin Cranford.
Associate Editors: Jud Kinberg, Kat Hill.
Business Ahniager: Olive Price Charters.
Editorial: Bill Lane, Horace Carter, Joanne Edson, Lloyd Koppel, Robert
Rolnik, Jane Ruggles, David Hanig, Toy Easterling, Paul Ramsey.
Art: Katherine Watters, Allen Kaufman, Wade Christian, M. C. Anderson.
Photography: Joe Denker, Tyler Nourse, Karl Bishopric.
Circulation: Roger Hall, Cam Saunders, Bill Little, Wayne Kernodle.
Business: Betty Jean Smith, Winnette White, Ben Perlmutter, Louise Piatt.
^ v5j
137
Editor Hill
Editor Damtoft
Managing Editor Kinbekg
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Circulation Manager Kernodle
%
HE Daily Tar Heel is dead! Long live
the Tjr Heel'.
For the first time in its fifty years of publication the otficial
student newspaper of the University of North Carolina ceased roll-
ing off the presses as a daily. Due to manpower shortage at the
printshop, and to a very depleated budget caused by a complete
new setup in student fee income, publishing a paper six times a
weel; became a temporary impossibility.
First came the weekly. Under the short-lived Editorship of
Walter Damtoft, A.S. V-12, the Tar Heel became a weekly, in-
creased in space as it decreased in issues. Staunch, conservative
Damtoft settled the foundations, steered the paper through safe
middle of the road channels. He took over the reins of the Editorsnip in May as a civilian student;
he turned them over to a new Editor in October as a Navy student on active duty.
Then came the first fall time elections in the history of student life at Carolina, and from those
elections rose the first coed to edit U.N.C.'s student paper, Kat Hill. During her reign on the sec-
ond deck of Graham Memorial the paper became a bi-weekly with hopes of building up, step by
step, back to a weekly. The Editor's office changed from a pale white to a livid chartreuse: head-
lines appeared on the editorial page.
The last of the old-time publication men, Ernie Frankel, started off as Managing Editor of the
paper for the 1943-44 year. When Marine duties forced him to resign, the post was taken over by
his fraternitj' brother, Jud Kinberg, stand by of all Carolina publications. Kinberg left school at
Christmas, and was succeeded by former Sports Editor Lloyd Koppel, N.R.O.T.C., who successfully
combined Navy requirements and Tjr Heel duties.
Sara Yokleys name was moved up from Feature Editor to Associate Managing Editor, a job
which included the self-inflicted duty of repainting the Managing Editor's office, along with the
more serious work of "covering " South building.
Following Koppel as Sports Editor, V-12er Horace Carter took over the "most popular page
in the paper."
Staff changes were almost perpetual. Students came and left the University so suddenly that
there was very little consistency in the names in the mast head. Staff members were harder than
ever to find with only a few experienced TH-men left to teach the newcomers the ropes.
The Tar Heel began to lose its two-year poliq' of conservatism. It tended to become the more
radical paper of two years back. It attempted to present all facts of the news on its front pages,
and then take sides with current issues and blast them out on the edit pages. Columns, far from
consistent, ranged from the old CPU. Rotinduhle to Rice and Gin to the Veary Women and
Curtains Going Up. Columnists changed as often as reporters, and the edit page gave a great
deal of its space to publicizing letters to the Editor, and the answers to those letters.
The decrease in the times of publication of the Tar Heel meant no decrease in the campus
criticism of the paper. Students griped about it as usual ; they griped about the news coverage, they
griped about biased opinions, they griped about the circulation. But they read the paper. Some said
a weekly paper was as bad as no paper at all, some said a bi-weekly was no better. A few praised
both. It faced problems which had never existed before; it made mistakes. But the campus felt
its service through the year of its highest crisis, the Tar Heel served the campus, and served it well.
TAR HEEL STAFF— 1943-44
Staff.- Walter Damtoft, Editor; Kat Hill, Editor; Ernie Frankel, Managing Editor; Jud Kinberg,
Managing Editor; Lloyd Koppel, Managing Editor; Robert Covington, Business Manager; Frances
Defandorf, Business Manager; Wayne Kernodle, Circulation Manager; Sara Yokley, Associate Man-
aging Editor.
Editorial Board: Bill Lane and Dave Hanig.
Columnists: O. P. Charters, Lee Bronson, Bill Howard, A.S., V-12, U.S.N.R.
Reporters: Lois Ribelin Cranford, Barbara Swift, Roland Giduz, Fred Loeffler, A.S., V-12, Bill
Orth, Robert Rolnik, Bob Walker, A.S., V-12, Libbey Johnson, Mildred Johnson, Fred Flagler,
Chris Fordman, Manuel Galicia, W. H. Hipps, Jr., Pfc. Ray Rothschild, Harry Sawas, William
Stubbs, Lucile Cathey, Mary Corbett, Mary Hanford, Nancy Stern, Ann Harrison Webster, Bill
Adams, Leonard Butt, Charles Fulton, Bob Gockley, Jim Jefferson, Frank Perry, Lincoln Todd.
Margaret Woodhouse.
Photographers: Karl Bishopric, V-12, N.R.O.T.C, Joe Al Denker, Tyler Nourse.
Sports Staff: Horace Carter, Editor; Alan Smith, Carrol Poplin. Ralph Parks, Virginia Battersby.
Business Staff: Emily Aliton, Harriet Browning, Cal Warren. Don Eichman. Dot Dickenson,
Nancy Jane King, Janie McClure, Elise Hutchison, Tommy Slayton, Durham Representative;
Doris BuUard.
TAR HEEL STAFF
First Row: GiDDis, R.; Perry, F. ;
HiPPS, W.; KiLLEFFER, R. ; JO.NES, A.
Second Rou: Walker, R. ; CraNFORD, L. ;
Johnson, M.; Swift, B.; Stern, N.;
Johnson, L.; Hanford, M.
Third Row: Hanig, D.; Flagler, F.;
Sawas, H.; Galicia, M. ; Parks, R.;
Poplin, C.
139
Seated: Jack Ellis, President: Bob Lackey.
Standing: Dave Andrews, Jim Wallace, J. T.
Fesperman, Sam Jones, Harding Hughes, Rhett
Winters, Zan Harper, Charles Daniels.
YOUNG MEN'S
D.
HE Carolina Young Men's Christl\n Assocl\tion
is the third oldest student organization on the campus, organized in 1859, and
for the past several years has had a supporting membership of 1500 students.
Its emblem is the triangle, symbolizing the inseparable unity of Spirit, Mind,
and Body; seeking to stimulate growth in appreciation of the spiritual significance
of all activity of life under the principle of the best life of all.
The "Y" stresses the service motive in its operation on the campus and
less than any other organization seeks to advertise its wares or to promote its
own popularity. It raised the funds and planted a service building in the
center of the campus and offers its use to all organizations and individuals, and
its services to the University, the Churches and the community. The old build-
ing is all too small but takes probably the heaviest load of any building on
campus. Plans are drafted for a new and adequate building at the earliest
possible post-war date.
Jack Ellis, President
Harry Comer, Secretary
140
With better facilities the "Y" will enlarge its service to personal and social needs of the students, to
help interpret the tradition and the values of Carolina living, and assistance to the student in building for
himself a balanced life and personal philosophy by which he may live more satisfactorily on the campus
and after he leaves the campus.
In all of these efforts the "Y" works hand in hand with other student organizations, the Administra-
tion, the Churches, and other agencies of the community.
An outstanding phase of "Y" work is the Freshmen Friendship Council, an organization designed to
serve the needs of the first year men on campus. It meets every Monday evening for business action and
a planned program.
Our "Y" is duly affiliated with the National organization and the World Student Christian Federa-
tion, which relates our student members to all Y.M.C.A.'s in more than sixty countries of the world. The
International Y.M.C.A. celebrates its 100th anniversary in 1944.
Officers are: Jack Ellis, President; Bob Lackey, Vice-President; Weldon Jordan, Recording Secretary;
Fred Tucker, Treasurer; Harry F. Comer, General Secretary.
Board of Directors: F. F. Bradshaw, Chairman; F. P. Graham, Ex-Officio; R. B. House, H. D.
Meyer, E. L. Mackie, E. J. Woodhouse, C. P. Spruill, J. M. Saunders, Bob Fetzer. Student members are:
Jack Ellis, Fred Tucker, and Dean Winn.
CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
tut
Vkesh
i^^^
141
UNIVERSITY
BAND
:z
HE TOUCHDOWN PLAY, the Strains of "Hark the Sound," the Band conies into its own. There is
a huge U.N.C. on the field; it again dissolves into formation; the cymbals clash; it is half time.
Under the Directorship of Earl Slocumb the Band has fulfilled its many sided programs. There were pep-rallies at Me-
morial Hall, cheering when the Band marched down the center aisle, open air concerts on Sunday afternoon under Davie
Poplar, and broadcasts over the Tar Heel Network.
In a tour of the high schools throughout the state, the Band endeavors to encourage local orchestras. In addition to
this, the Band sponsors a Swing Band Concert among campus orchestras.
Officers: Earl Slocum, Director; Allen Garrett, President; Joe Burt Linker, Vice-President; Zan Harper, Secretary-Treas-
urer; Monte Howell, Business Manager; Isabel Edmands, Drum Majorette.
iA
Un/ves
"^'' B..^c.
Co-Directors Huse and Ellis
Star Gould and Vice-President Kosberg
SOUND AND
FURY
'ouND AND Fury, the Carolina "problem child," was revived this year to provide entertainment on
a campus striving to retain that old Carolina "spirit." Army and Navy students joined hands with the civilians to present
"Gadabout," an original musical comedy written by Co-Directors Jack Ellis and Mary Louise Huse.
One of the best received shows ever presented on the Carolina campus, "Gadabout" played for a three-day run late
in November with Betty Don Sweat and Harold Gould in the lead spots, lyrics sung by Joan Kosberg, music under the di-
rection of Al Bergman and a chorus drilled by Libby Izen. A cast of more than fifty did a superb job in backing up the
plot.
Officers: Jack Ellis and Mary Louise Huse, Co-Directors; Libby Izen, President; Joan Kosberg, Vice-President.
I "^-■" vox ^O'^^^^RG SCHATZ' b-lt
HILLEL FDUNDATIDN
^.
HH HiLLEL Foundation was formed under
the sponsorship of B'nai B'rith, national Jewish fraternal organization,
in 1936. It has as its aims the stimulation of interest in Jewish religious,
cultural, and social ideals among the students.
Rabbi Maurice Schatz is Hillel Director, aided in the conduct of
affairs by the elected officers and council members. Each member of
the council heads a committee of interested students which sponsors
one phase of the Foundation's activities. There are Religious, Cultural,
Zionist, Entertainment, War Service, and Social Welfare Committees.
In addition, the Hillel Foundation stresses particular services to the
service men on the campus and is a medium of cooperation with other
campus and religious groups.
The officers are: Arthur M. Goldberg, President; Benjamin Perl-
mutter, Vice-President; Dorlores Shmerling, Secretary; and Gwendolyn
London, Treasurer.
Arthur Goldbury, Prtiideni
144
CARDLINA PLAYMAKERS
The Theatre.
LISTEN, MY CHILDREN.
Forest Theatre.
BOSS OF BAR Z.
WATCH ON THE RHINE.
o.
UTSIDE OF THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, the
Carolina Playmakers is often the most widely known of all Carolina or-
ganizations. Students have come from almost every State in the Union,
from Mexico, from several of the South American countries, just to be-
come "Playmakers." The department of dramatic art boasts some of the
most eminent figures in the contemporary theatre world. "Proff" Koch
and Paul Green are bywords in associations of modern dramatists.
The Playmakers have their own theatre building on the campus and
their Forest Theatre is an ideal setting for out-of-door productions. They
have an adequate workshop for the construction and painting of scenery
and for the making of costumes and a radio studio for the production
of radio plays.
The Playmakers' Staff: Frederick H. Koch, Paul Green, Samuel Selden,
Robert Burrows Douglas Hime, Foster Fitz-Simons, Irene Smart, Joseph
Salek, and Lucile Culbert.
145
The cast rests at DKEis KtHtAK.sAl..
CHI DELTA PHI
7
» /au Chapter of Chi
Delta Phi, national honorary crea-
tive writing fraternity for women,
was organized on this campus in
June, 1941. Election into the group
is based on outstanding ability and
interest in creative writing. Its pur-
pose is to encourage a high stand-
ard of literary work among its mem-
bers and to promote wide interest
in creative writing in the Univer-
sity.
At weekly meetings members read
and discuss their work. Group and
individual experiments are tried in
the various literarj' forms and in in-
dividual treatment of identical
themes and subject matter.
Officers: Sarah Davis, President:
Allie Bell, Secretary; Barbara Swift,
Treasurer.
Fnst Row: Swift, B.;
Bell, A.; Davis, S. ;
Seligman, B.;
Brubaker, S.
Second Row:
Easterling, T. ; King, T. :
Turner, A.; Hodges, A.:
Hill, K.; Strauss, A.;
Edgerson, J.
GRAHAM MEMORIAL HOARD OF
DIRECTORS
7
» — ' HE Directors of
Graham Memorial, an adminis-
trative and maintenance body of the
Student Union Building, changed
their financial policy from a block
fee income to support from the
University fees and entertainment
charges.
Another change in Graham Me-
morial was a divided directorship.
Bob Burleigh serving as Financial
Manager and Mrs. Vandever as So-
cial Executive Director.
Mary Lou Truslow, Chairman;
Dean Parker, Secretary.
First Row: Burleigh, R.; Hill, K. ; Truslow, M. L.; Mrs. Stacy; Mrs. Vandever.
Second Row: Hammond, D.; Hodges, A.; Wallace, J.; Dean Parker; Mr. M. J. Saunders;
Mr. Kimp Gate; Dr. E. J. Woodhouse; Thompson, R.; Ufchurch, M.
Firsi Row: BuLLARD, D.; Hudson, E.; Rimmer, A. F.
Second Row: Caudle, V.; Hunt, N. T. ; Upchurch, M.
Third Row: CoLE, F. ; KENNEDY, L. ; Williams, L. L.
RHO CHI
/XHO Chi is the national
honorary pharmaceutical society, founded with
the object of promoting the advancement of
the pharmaceutical sciences, scholarship, and
good fellowship.
Active members: Clyde Anthony Johnston,
President; Muriel Upchurch, Vice-President;
Aubrey DeVaughan Richardson, Secretary-
Treasurer; William West Taylor, Richard Cole
' Scharff, Rudolph Warren Hardy. Laurel Lee
I Williams.
Faculty members: J. G. Beard, E. A. Brecht,
H. M. Burlage, M. L. Jacobs, L W. Rose.
KAPPA EPSILDN
^_y/\APPA Epsilon Sorority
was founded at the State University of Iowa on
May 13, 1921. It is an honorary' fraternity for
women students in Pharmacy.
This, the Lambda Chapter, was established
at the University of North Carolina on January
12, 1941. Since then it has becom.e an essential
part of the School of Pharmaq-.
Members: Anna Frances Rimmer, President;
Lucy Lee Kennedy, Vice-President; Frances
Cole, Secretary -Treasurer; Muriel Upchurch.
Laurel Williams, Doris Bullard, Virginia
Caudle.
Advisor: Miss Alice Noble.
Pledges: Nancy Travis Hunt, Elsie Hudson.
Fiisi Row: Hardy, R. ; Scharff, R. C.
Second Row: Johnson, A.; Taylor, W. ; Willlams. L. L.
Third Row: RICHARDSON, A.; UpCHURCH, M.
INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
CLUH
Zl.
HE I.R.C. IS A non-partisan, non-
political organization whose purpose is to encourage interest
in world problems and to present to the campus states-
men who can give information on various international
problems. The I.R.C. has endeavored to lay the ground-
work for a farsighted understanding of the immense prob-
lem of post-war adjustment and a better understanding of
the United Nations.
Meetings are held on Sunday nights. These meetings
encourage active participation and thought by members
Charles Harrington, Preiideni
and guests who wish to delve into important issues of the
day.
Joseph B. Grew, ex-Ambassador to Japan, opened the
I.R.C. programs for the year with a discussion on the Jap-
anese situation. Forums are sponsored by the club through-
out the year. Appearing on the I.R.C. forums are both stu-
dents and faculty members who demonstrate a conflict in
well informed opinion.
Officers this year were: Clyde Rollins, President; Ann
West, Vice-President; Ida May Pettigrew, Secretary; Hubert
Weber, Treasurer.
First Row: Smith, N.
RoTHCHiLD, R.; Petti
GREW, I. M.; Harring
ton, C. ; West, A.
Mackie, W. ; Albert, A
Second Row: Glenn, R.
Maxwell, E.; Abel, R.
Baghey, W. ; Martin, S.
Martin, P.; Hashe, E.
Cranford, W.
148
Carol Cobb, President
^.
LL GIRLS not living in dormitories,
sorority houses, or Archer house, and attending the Uni-
versity are automatically members of the Town" Girls' As-
sociation. The organization is a connection link between
the town girls and the campus, and its aim is to make
these girls feel they have a place in University life and
activities.
The girls have stressed war work in their program
throughout the year. Besides rolling bandages and serving
as hostesses at the Community Center, the girls organized
TDWN GIRLS'
ASSOCIATION
a Christmas Holiday entertainment program for the Pre-
Flight cadets by recruiting all available "woman-power"
for dates and by giving a holiday dance for the boys.
Officers: Carol Cobb, President; Ruth Patterson, Vice-
President; Ju Ju Newsome, Secretary; Rita Smith, Treas-
urer; Hilda Weaver, Representative to the Honor Council;
Margaret Picard and Carol Cobb, Representatives to the
Senate; Marianne Browne, Representative to the Athletic
Council and to the University Club.
Fint Row- TuxEY. 1,1. D.;
Phipps, S.; Durham, S.;
Lloyd, W. ; Rogerson, K. ;
Morris, G.; Turnage, A.;
Leonard, J.; Newsome, J.
Second Row: HoGAN, J.
Brown, B.; Taylor, M.
FoiSTER, D.; Cohen, II
Smith, R.; Bloxidge. D.
Third Row: CoBB, C. ,
Crockford, E.; Weaver, H,;
Jones, L. ; Hogan, J.;
Rosemond, C. ; Sauer, J.;
Foister, D.; Epps, B. ; BuiCE, C.
Fourth Row: Haydn, U.;
Tufts, E.; Logan, G.;
Browne, M.; Cashin, C;
Marks, B.; Foard, M.;
Lloyd, M. J.; Hendron, C. ;
Couch, Betsy.
WOMEN'S GLEE
CLUB
V.
HIS YEAR THE WOMEN'S GlEE ClUB
has been bigger and better than ever before. Meeting every
Monday and Wednesday afternoon, they were able to carry
a heavier program than in previous years.
The first performance of the year was a program of
Christmas Carols. The following week, collaborating with
the Choral Club and the Men's Glee Club, they presented
Bach's "Magnificat." Those who had heard the "Magnificat"
last year agree that this year it was even better.
In winter the Glee Club cooperated in producing "Yeo-
man of the Guard," an operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan.
In spring came the annual concert, and the cantata at
graduation.
Officers: Sue Brubaker, President; Lois McCauley, Secre-
tary ; Fran Terrier, Treasurer.
<!^%.
First Roir: Athas. K
Smith, O. ; Coolev, l.
GORHAM, I.; Marbury, L
WoRSLEY, G.; Bennet, M
Stevens, B.; McCauley, L
Link, Eleanor; Butler, C
Wiggins, L
Second Roiv: Bolick, T.
McClitock, M. ; Walmsley, C.
McCoRMiCK, M. ; Saunders. M,
Lanneau, H.; Browne, M.
King, C. ; Grady, L.
Phillips, D.; Forrior, F.
LeFebre, J.; Sasser, J.
McCain, I
Third Row: Frivette
McNeil, E.; Willis, A.
Cavanaugh, J. ; RiMMOE, J.
Sutherland; Swe.-^t; Cely, F.
Knight, M. ; Rich, B.; Lloyd, W
ISO
Y. W. C. A
Beth Chappell, President
EETiNG THE PERSONAL needs of women at
Carolina in war time has been the aim of the Young Women's
Christian Association this year. As part of a world-wide organiza-
tion, the Y.W.C.A. is dedicated to the development of Christian
principles in personal and social living. This national purpose is
translated into local objectives through programs of fellowship,
discussion, work, and worship.
Outstanding examples of putting these ideals into practice have
included: A Men-Women Relations program for Carolina Women,
cooperation with community groups in working to establish a
Negro nursery, vocational guidance during orientation, collection
of toys and clothing for war relief, publication of a weekly news-
sheet.
Fellowship suppers, community sings, vespers, recreational pro-
grams have been sponsored with the Y.M.C.A. and other campus
organizations.
Officers: Beth Chappell, President; Margaret Pickard, Vice-Presi-
dent; Barbara Staff, Secretary; Alice Willis, Treasurer; Janet
Hoover and Catherine Ferrall, Resident Secretaries.
First Row: McGiMSEY, K. ;
Thompson, M.; Gal-
DRAiTH, A. ; Thatcher, A.
Second Row.- Sheer, B.;
WiLLiss, A.; Pickard, M.;
Chappell, B.; Staff, B.;
Mrs. Hoover.
Third Row: Brown, D.;
Seligman, B.; Funk, J.;
Fox, F. ; Farrier, F. ; Old-
ham, L.
HOUSE PRIVILEGES
BOARD
O.
HE House Privileges Board, as it
has recently been set up by the Student Legislature, con-
sists of eleven members. Five male students come from the
Executive Committee of the Interfraternity Council, five are
chosen from the coed population by the Speaker of the
Coed Senate, and the remaining male student is the Repre-
sentative of the two Pharmacy Fraternities.
It is the Board's job to set up agreements between fra-
ternities and coeds whereby the coeds may visit fraternity
Paul Simmons, Cbjirnun
houses. Any violations of this agreement are tried by the
Board and punishments given out depending upon the de-
gree of violation of the agreement. The Board has no con-
trol over the offending coeds and deals only with the of-
fending fraternity. Every member of the coed student body,
the members of the Board, and members of the Interfra-
ternity Council are honor bound to uphold the agreement.
Officers: Paul Simmons, Chairman; Kay Roper, Secre-
tary.
Finl Ron: HAMMOND, D.
Truslow, M. L. ; Simmons, P.
Roper, K. ; Clark, C. R
Second Row: Pollock
Kerner, D. ; Upchurch, M.
Britt, T. ; Bell. A.
Fearing, K.; Awalt, F
152
CAROLINA
INDEPENDENT
CDED ASSOCIATION
Lucie Lee Kennedy, President
H.
HE Carolina Independent Coed
Association was organized by the "Stray Greeks" and
Independent Coeds who felt the need of a coordinating
body on campus. Its purposes are to create and stimulate
interest and participation in campus affairs, to promote fel-
lowship among the coeds through social activities, and to
provide organized support for worthy candidates for coed
offices.
In order to achieve its purposes, the C.I.C.A. entered
the winning team in the campus debate tournament, placed
second in the poster contest, and sponsored a political tea
to introduce campus candidates for coed offices. C.I.C.A.'s
gave a Hallow'een party and a dance. Members of the
organization participated in a Christmas Caroling party
given by the Pi Phis for the other coeds.
Officers for this year are: Lucy Lee Kennedy, President;
Peg Moseley and Irene McCain, Vice-Presidents ; Ida Mae
Pettigrew, Secretary; Betty Seligman, Treasurer.
Finl Roir: SCHMULL. D. ;
McCain, L; Hunt, T.;
McE,\CHERN, S.; Upchurch, '.
Kennedy, L.; Truslow, M.;
Seligman, B.; Lockridge, J.;
Weaver, H.; Strauss, A.;
Newton, J. ; Pettigrew, I.
Second Row: Stauton, T. ;
Maxwell, E. ; Worthing-
TON, M. ; Murphy, N.;
Fauvre, M.; Jones, L. ;
Johnson, M.; Buchanon, J.
WiNSTED, E.; Parry, F. ;
Sheer, B. ; Cornwall, T.;
Kelly, K.
Third Row: DiCKSON, R. ;
Newell, A.; Moore, B.;
Morris, G. ; Turnage, H.;
Marks, B.; Bruster, G. ;
Bruce, K.; Hanna, B.;
BuLLARD, D.; Baynard, E.;
BoLiCK, T. ; Arnold, T. ;
Wilson, E.; Dowd, M.;
Mills, D.
M^ n„SE- WR^''"^'. MCLEMOKE, G^, ^ CAFE. A- '
CAROLINA POLITICAL UNION
I / ^' ^^) A PRECEDENT BREAKING YEAR for all CampuS
organizations, found the Carolina Political Union with summer programs,
members in V-12 and A.S.T.P. uniforms, and the first coed chairman.
The Sunday night sessions were as lively as any in the eight-year history
of the Union. The warm.est discussions were on coal strikes, subsidies, bureau-
cracy, the State Department, and presidential prospects. The C.P.U. chal-
lenged the I.R.C. to an "Information, Please," program, which was won by
the Union.
Known for hard work, Lee Bronson proved to be an excellent leader in
the most critical period of the Union's history. She was aided by Billy Britt,
Marine private, as Vice-Chairman; Madison Wright, Secretary, and Bob
Rouse, N.R.O.T.C, Treasurer.
The feature of the year's program was the visit of Vice-President Henry
Wallace to the campus in December who spoke to an overflowing audience
in Memorial Hall.
Upon Miss Bronson's graduation. Private Bob Rosenast, U.S.M.C.R., from
New Jersey was elected Chairman.
Officers: Lee Bronson, Chairman; Billy Britt, Vice-Chairman; Madison
Wright, Secretary, and Bob Rouse, Treasurer.
Lt£ BkoNSON, Chairman
1S4
W. H. HoLLOWELL, Preudeni
PHARMACY
SENATE
:z
HE Pharmacy Senate was
organized by E. A. Brecht, Associate Pro-
fessor of Pharmacy, in February of 1940.
His slow, easy-going personalit)' and a bril-
liant aptitude for all things pharmaceutical
have won for him the respect and friendship
of all pharmacy students.
It is the purpose of the Pharmacy Senate
to stimulate and foster an increased knowl-
edge and appreciation of pharmacy by the
free discussion of its various phases, to de-
velop the responsibilities and self-confidence
of leadership, not only in respect to phar-
macy but also in respect to the community,
by affording the opportunity to learn the
art of prepared and impromptu speech, and
to promote inter-class friendship and co-
operation within the School of Pharmac}'.
Though youngest of its fellow organiza-
tions in the School of Pharmacy, it has,
nevertheless, earned a reputation for leader-
ship.
Officers: Herbert Hollowell, President;
Tommy Slayton, Secretary-Treasurer; Rudy
Hardy, Recorder; Sam Black, Reporter.
Albright, G.
Aycock, M. R.
Beddingfield, C.
Black, S.
Campe, J. C.
Cannady, M. S.
Caruthers, M. R.
Dees, R.
Elliott, A.
ESTES, J. C.
Hardy, R.
Hege, G.D.
Hollowell, W. H.
Horn, B.
Hudson, E. R.
Hunt, N. T.
Kennedy, L. L.
Parsons, R.
Patterson. R. H.
Razenhofer
RiMMER, A.
Salter, E.
Sl.^yton, M. T.
Taylor, W.W
WiLl
LIAMS, L. L.
ISS
Rene Bernard, Preiiiieni
DIALECTIC SENATE
„ /he Dialectic Senate is Carolina's oldest
organization and the second oldest literary organization in the United
States. Founded in 1795, it is rich in tradition and lore and has an
enviable record of contributions to the campus. Traditionally, it
has taken the lead in meeting University needs, being the iirst or-
ganization to present dramatic productions, carry on debating, and
with the Philanthropic Assembly, and substantially endow the library.
The Senate does not limit itself to discussion but has both in-
vestigating and executory committees ; to gather and present facts
and information and to carry out the resolutions of the Senate.
A large percentage of Senate members have used their training
to achieve positions of honor and distinction in the state and nation.
The Dialectic Senate Hall is lined with portraits of its former mem-
bers — Cabinet Officers, Congressmen, Governors, and one President
of the United State — James K. Polk.
Officers for the year are — Summer and fall quarters: Rene Ber-
nard, President; Buddy Glenn, President Pro-Tern; Ida May Petti-
grew and Wesley Bagby, Critics; Margaret Towel and George Hurst,
Clerks; Barbara Swift, Sergeant-at-Arms; Bill Ormand and Howard
Ennis, Treasurers. Winter quarter: Bill Crisp, President; Edgar
Ormand, President Pro-Tern; Kitty Kelly, Critic; Margaret Towel,
Clerk; Buddy Glenn, Sergeant-at-Arms; Barbara Swift, Treasurer.
Fini Row: Hylton, T. ; Young, T.
Second Row: Mackie, W.; Flanigan, K.; Brown, R
DURGIN, W.; ROTHCHILD, R.
Third Roic: WAFF, G. ; Galacia, M.; Smith, S.; Perry, F.; Heller
Perlmuter, B.; Crisp. B.; Tenney; Golding, H.; Logan, J.
Hurst, G. ; Ormand, R.; Bernard,- R.; Swift, B.; Glenn, R.; Tower, T. ; Adams, A
Kelly, K
HuRWiTZ, S.; Stern, N.; Sager, D.; Brown, P.; McCain, I.
Morgan, B.; Whetfield; Winters, R.; Cranford, W.
156
PHI ASSEMBLY
_yv LTHOUGH THE Phi ASSEMBLY is One of the two oldest
literary societies in the nation, its age and tradition do not mean that it is
antiquated as far as ideas and actions are concerned. This year the Phi has
taken the lead on the campus as an outlet for the expression of student
opinion.
Deviating from its former procedure of having formal debates on topics
of State, National and International interest, the Phi has presented discussion
concerning only questions of campus itself. Highlight of the year's activity
was the student-faculty panel held on the "Proposed Combination of the
V-12 trimester with the civilian quarter." Participating in discussion were:
Dean F. F. Bradshaw, Dean D. D. Carroll, Dean A. W. Hobbs, Dr. A. S.
Newsome, Kat Hill, Turk Newsome, and Pvt. Harris Knight, U.S.M.C.R.
Faison Thompson, President Pro-Tempore
Other topics discussed by the Phi con-
cerned problems resulting from the war-
time transition on campus. Granting later
hours to coeds who have now assumed
a more responsible position in student
activities; abolition of the coed point
system limiting the number of positions
which one could hold; renovation of the
Inter-Town Council ; Tenure of Residence
qualifications for voting and holding
office; the status of V-12s in student
government; and extension of the pow-
ers of the house privileges board were
among the many topics which the Phi
brought before the campus.
In keeping with its policy of teach-
ing students to speak well, the Assembly
has endeavored through its discussions of
questions which are familiar to the aver-
age student to accomplish this purpose.
Modeled after the House of Representa-
tives of the State of North Carolina, the
Phi adheres to strict parliamentary order.
The Phi added to its projects of the
year, debates with the Dilectis Senate and
the Debate squad. As in the past the Phi
entered teams in the All-Campus Debate
Tournament and made an excellent
showing.
Officers: E. O. Brogden, Jr., and Frank
Earnheart, Speaker; Faison Thompson,
Speaker Pro-Tern; Frances Erwin, Ser-
geant-at-Arms; Sue Johnson, Reading
Clerk; Roger Hall, Treasurer; Clyde Rol-
lins, Debate Council Representative.
The Phi in meeting.
157
MEN'S GLEE CLUB
:z
HE University
Men's Glee Club has been
greatly reinforced this year by
the Army and Navy men on
the campus.
Because of transportation
difficulties the concert field
will be very limited ; however,
there are plans being made
to present concerts at some of
the nearby colleges and uni-
versities. The joint presenta-
tions with the Woman's Glee
Club of Bach's "Magnificat"
and with the Playmakers and
the Women's Glee Club of
Gilbert and Sullivan's "The
Yeoman of the Guard," will
highlight the campus activi-
ties for this year.
Officers: Jack Anderson,
President; George McLemore,
Vice-President; T. E. Sikes,
Jr., Secretary-Treasurer.
First Row: BoGEY, M.; Stubbs, W.; Barlow, J.; Grell.^, F.; Clinard, Jr., C. ; Henderson, W.
Second Row: White, H.; James, W.; Winfield, B.; Heller, E.; Chappell, A.; Scruggs, G.
Sikes, E.
Third Rotr: Griffin, M.; Garmany, V.; Creel, P.; Turnage; Askew, R.; Norris, R. ;
Hardwick, E.
Fourih Row: Wicker, J.; Walker, R.; Ford, R.; Cranford, W.; Poole, J.; Ferguson, R.;
McLemore, G. ; Smith, S.
A; Piano: Charles Stevens.
FRESHMAN CABINET
Seated: David Hall; James F. (Turk) Newsome, Head Counselor: Gene Byrd.
Second Row: Lancaster; Browne; Mackie ; Eaton; Jackson; Flaxler; Traynham ; Ward;
Lord; Lee; Weder.
:z
HE Freshman
Cabinet is analogous to the
old Interdormitory Council,
and is composed of upper-
classmen and the freshman
dormitory councilmen in Carr
and Steele dormitories.
Turk Newsome is President
of the Cabinet.
158
CDED INNER SANCTUM
^y^laerman — ^\enan — iv leaver — ~_J/:
u
ERY FEW INDEED are the masculine
figures which have penetrated through the upper realms
of the four coed dormitories, wherein the feminine populace
of the Hill spends the secretive portion of their behind-the-
scenes lives. Other than the radio repair man, the electri-
cian and the burly guy from the railroad express, the only
pairs of long trousers allowed to stride down these hal-
lowed halls are those worn by the rugged individuals from
the woman's phys ed department who spend their time
perpetuating the ideas brought forth by Thor in his essays
on Walden Pond.
This year's medal of distinction under fire was earned
by the lone pre-flight cadet whose date had told him she
resided in 312 Alderman. Wasting no time in calling for
his bit of fluff, the lad in question entered the side door
"FLY BY
of the dorm, trecked up to the third floor with no em-
barrassing incidents intervening to impede his progress. But
when the lady answered the knock on her door in a state
of about 23-minutes-before-being-dressed, the cadet made
an exit which never even bothered with the steps.
Bull sessions, through which the coed has reached her
fame and her reputation, take place almost any time any-
where within the privacy of the dorms. Flocking into a
centralized room, gathering around the laundry rooms while
roommates scorch and scrub, coeds don't need an opening
idea for a session starter. Bull sessions in the coed dorms
just naturally begin with the word MEN. From there on
they may progress to the more serious discussions of philos-
ophy, history, or world-problems, but the ones over which
more midnight oil is burned, over which more cigarettes
are smoked are strictly the sessions on the men-in-our-lives.
Although the building department denies it with every
available breath, it's now an axiom that the reason the halls
in these havens of feminine pulchritude are slanted, low
toward the ceilings, high at the centers, is to give the
coeds some sense of balance when they come in from a
typical date with a "Carolina Gentleman."
160
^IGHT"
Crowded conditions reigned in the coed dorms, too,
this year. Two-girl rooms were converted into boudoirs
for three girls. There was always the exceptional coed who
wanted to study, her second roommate who wanted to turn
in, and the third one who was out working on Carolina
publications, or on Sound and Fury or at the Playmaker
theatre — she's the gal who ambled in just as the other two
had finally settled their arguments.
Housemothers were the same this year, only more so.
There were a couple who were very well liked by those
who liked them. Then of course there was the most in-
famous one of all who raged through the year even as
before.
Hall characters provided entertainment for all. The
meek, mild coed always engrossed in taking volumes of
notes in math 3, dropped aside her cloak of shyness when
she dropped her outside wearing apparel. One dorm will
never forget the girl who tore into a room down the hall,
crying, "Fan-nie. Fan-nie. Look, I want to show you my
new non-rationed girdle, I wanted to show it to you first
of all the rest because we — because we — because we study
our botany notes together all of the time!"
The most popular man to drop into the dorms was the
mailman. He came twice a day and offered the additional
service of telling a lucky coed beforehand what her post-
card from the Corporal in Mississippi said. . . . The most
unpopular figure throughout the dormitories were those
"brains" who decided that nothing was worse than over-
cutting eight o'clock classes, and tried to convert sleeping
friends to their way of thinking.
161
"BEHIND THE PAINT"
Some of the kids in the dorms knew everybody else
in their special home by name. Others of them never even
saw the girls any further down than three rooms past their
own. . . . The blonde coed photographer and her drafted
assistant roamed through all the dorms snapping hair-
down action in real life. . . . House meetings once in a
whole drew the coeds together, but only until each could
think up a valid excuse for leaving. . . . The House Council
meetings down on the first floor were the most dreaded
and most fearful summons of the year. . . . And there
was always one coed who signed out at eight, again at
ten, and spent her evenings in for a while as a result of
our Honor Council rulings.
Life in the coed dorms was much the same this year
as it has always been before. But there was more life in
the coed dorms this year — there were far more people liv-
ing in them. The coed may be exposed in her natural habits
through the eyes of the camera and through the pages of
the Tcir Heel and Nhig, but there will always be a part
of life in a coed dorm which will remain a secret from
all men, now and forever.
162
PAN-HELLENIC
COUNCIL
Frances Ferrier, President
Tri-delt founders.
AD Pi rushing.
ITH A NEW SORORITY coming into
existence and fraternities receding into the background be-
cause of tlie war, the sororities have taken on added sig-
nificance this year.
Serving as a link between the four sororities and the
administration the Pan-Hellenic Council cut out the usual
gala Pan-Hellenic Ball and donated the money to the Red
Cross. To further conform to the policies of a wartime
campus, rushing expenses were cut down.
The Council with the C.I.C.A. sponsored a tea for the
coeds during orientation week to encourage a closer rela-
tionship between the women's Greek organizations and the
independent girls on campus. Mass meetings, scholarship
164
cups for the sorority with the highest average, compihng rush rules and reguhiting
rushing, pubHshing a handbook ot sorority information, and inter-sorority picnic honor-
ing the new sorority and the Stray Greeks, and other inter-sorority activities — all these
are a part of the function of the Pan-Hellenic Council.
\ ^47r
Members of the Council are: Alpha Delta Pi — Eleanor McWane, Mary Spence
Thompson, Frances Ferrier; Chi Omega — Mac Hughes, Jean Lyon, Nancy Peete; Delta
Delta Delta — Rene Whitney, Sally Hipp, Eleanor Bass; Pi Beta Phi — Maysie Lyons,
Jeannie Afflick, Dot Hawthorne.
Officers are: Fran Ferrier, President; Dot Hawthorne, Vice-President: Nancy Peete,
Secretary; Rene Whitney, Treasurer.
First Row: WHITNEY, R.; Hawthorne, D.; Ferrier. F.
Peate, N.
Second Row: McWane, E.; Thompson, M. S.
Third Row: Lyon, J.; Afflick, J.; B.\ss, E.; Hipp, S.;
Hughes, M.
165
ALPHA DELTA PI
Number of Active Chapters
. . 61
Total Membership, National
. . 17,000
Present Membership, Local
. . 51
Date Founded, National ....
. . 1851
Date Founded, Local
. . 1939
OFFICERS
President Eleanor McWanh
Vice-President Frances Bedell
Secretary Marcia Schufelt
Treasurer Clarice Armbruster
Hottsemanaoer Mary Spence Thompson
Could you ever forget.' . . . that everlasting rush week
with its glorious ending . . . dashing down to the field for
volley ball, hockey, or soccer ... do or die for A.D. Pi
. . . those welcome buffet suppers back at the house when
the game was over, won or lost . . . those sessions in the
kitchen lasting 'til two . . . Well, how was Bradshaw.' . . .
that daily procession off to the flickers . . . whatever the
movie count us in . . . passing the basket for War Relief
. . . the furnace routine and trying to make our dates take
166
over . . . our Pledge Dance with everyone looking smooth
. . . two of our girls getting married . . . week-ends which
passed all too quickly and Monday morning again . . .
"G-lad to see you" . . . men coming and going, but always
Walt, Marshall, and Watson . . . winning the volley ball
plaque for the second year . . . the wonderful food served
in our dining room . . . Jane Auten being selected queen
. . . Mrs. Powell's graciousness at all times . . . Danzigers
Sunday nights . . . hot chocolate . . . continually reminiscing
about Carolina last year . . . Mrs. Powell continually miss-
ing the A.T.O.'s . . . our missing more than the A.T.O.'s
. . . but having a big year anyway . . . Thanks for the
memories and farewell '44.
Activities: Ann Blair Alderson, Clarice Armbruster, Jane
Auten, Frances Bedell, Eugenia Bissett, Harriett Browning,
Catherine Caldwell, Dorothy Chase, Prances Erwin, Kath-
erine Planagan, Prances Ferrier, Anne Ingram, Eleanor Mc-
Wane, Natoiia Moreau, Martha Nimmons, Plake Patman,
Lois Ribelin Cranford, Marcia Shufelt, Virginia Starr, Mary
Spence Thompson, Julia Weed.
Pledges: Barbara Baker, Dixie Bodge, Prances Brice,
Frances Cely, Frances Cheshire, Rosaland Davidson, Shir-
ley Dickinson, Toy Easterling, Margaret Eller, Marion
Prink, Fannie Belle Futrelle, Miriam Garr, Mollie Hood,
Jeanne LePebre. Margaret Manly, Cornelia Miller, Betty
Moore, Mary Morrow, Jeanne Oberst, Mary Oppen, Bar-
bara Pentlarge, Peggy Sells, Nell Shanklin, Peggy Stanton,
Beverly Stevens, Norman Surles, Harriett Weaver, Jimmie
Lou Wingfield, Mary Wright, Carol Yelverton.
i:i
167
FM~^^
• i^^S^
CHI OMEGA
^ ~^ -i"-^
Number of Active Chapters 96
Total Membership : . . 26,500
Present Membership, Local 47
Date Founded, National 1895
Date Founded, Local 1923
OFFICERS
President Margarkt Hughes
Vice-President Nananni; Porchhr
Secretary Geraldink Hasche
Treasurer Mary Burns Caudill
Honseniaiiager Lorraine Oldham
In the little white house by the side of the road
Lived ten Chi Omegas who were happily stowed
Away in their beds when their doorbell rang
And the ghost came in with a slam and a bang.
"Oh, say, who are you," the Duchess cried —
"I have come to predict," the shade replied,
"You," he said with a leer seeing Peg and Nananne-
"Will ascend to fame as two great stage hands —
While little Miss Lyon in the horn-rimmed glasses
Will be lightening the burden of the lower classes!
Now Beth and Lorraine, as befits their station,
Will manage affairs of church and nation.
168
Arnold
Bernhardt
Camp
Caudill
Chappell
Craig
Dicks
Funk
Galbreath
Griffith
Hasche
HOLLIS
Hughes
LiNDSEY
Lyon
Martorell
McKethan
Oldham
Owens
Peete
PORCHER
Walters
Willis
Woodhouse
Nancy and Janet are fulfilling their mission
By bringing up their offspring in Chi O tradition.
Anne Hollis is named Wonder of the Age
By Mary Rankin McKethan on the 'Woman's Page.'
Mac spouts Spanish to her nine chiquitos
While Miss Camp writes her thesis on Anopholes
mosquitos !"
Then quick with a flash he vanished away
And hasn't been seen to this very day.
But he helped us a lot for now we know
We'll all be a credit to old Chi O!
Graduate: Virginia Klages.
Seniors: Margaret Hughes, Jo Ann Griffith, Beth Chap-
pell, Nananne Porcher, Nancy Holland, Anne Hollis, Lor-
raine Oldham, Mary Burns Caudill, Geraldine Hasche,
Sara Woodhouse, Janet Lindsey, Nancy Peete, Alice Willis,
Anne Galbreath, Edith Owens, Mary Rankin McKethan,
Pauline Bernhardt, Jean Lyon, Betty 'Walters, Cecelia Dicks,
Helen Marie Camp, Anne Craig, Julia Funk, Mary Louise
Milam.
Transfers: Jane Foster, Pat Lawrence, Rosalind Arnold,
Kathleen Arnold, Margie Martorell, Jeannette Miller, Mary
Shields Justice.
Pledges: Mary Bauman, Margaret Fountain, Mildred
Gulick, Jean Rankin, Barbara Conley, Ruth Doggett, Ruth
Brosius, Eleanor Holden, Anne Osterhout, Sophie Sue
Duffy, Margaret Morton, Marilyn Schroeder, Mary Mc-
Clintock, Sara Kibler, Dorothy Cook, Elizabeth Kington,
Dorothy Jones, Carolyn Biggs, Tharon Young, Betsy
Couch, Henrianne Leigh, Athelia McDonald.
169
ft ^">-.< '^ ' < par
' %mA ti III
^■^1 P Hn rm tip
DELTA DELTA DELTA
Number of Active Chapters 88
Total Membership 32,000
Present Membership, Local 31
Date Founded, National 1888
Date Founded, Local 1943
OFFICERS
Presiiiei/t Rene Whitney
Vice-President Louise Platt
Secretary Eleanor Bass
Treasurer Sally Hipp
Uousemanager Wynette White
■HOME IN THE DELTA"
Produced and Directed By "National"
A Drama of Love and hilrigiie
Act I
Scene I
Setting: Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
First scene takes place in Tri Delta House located on East
Franklin Street.
Time: Fall of the year 1943.
Cast of Characters
Played By
. Mrs. Merlin Schenck
Characters
Boss of the House-
'Fifi
Her Royal Highness — "Skinny Jinny"
Whitney
Pledge
170
Holder of the Purse — "Slippery Sal" .... Hipp
Director of the "Underlings" — "Hard-Hearted
Hannah" Piatt
Foreign Correspondent — "Dead-Eye Dick" . . . Bass
Keeper of the Roll — "Queenie" .... Eleanor Bass
Leader of the Flock — "Righteous Ruby" . Desmond Koster
Music Master — "Connie, the Crooner" . . . Griffith
-"^tishec
Bouncer of the House — "Tillie, the Toiler" . White
"Information Please" — "Careless Cass" . . . Fulton
Speaker of the House — "Talkative Tish" . . Parsons
The Black-Out — "Unconscious" Cole
Pledge Snatcher — "Jelly Bean" Smith
"Pistol Packing Mamma" Rife
Maizie, the Daisy McClung
Puff-Ball Greer
"The Underlings"
Pledges
Go-Getter Gertie Robinson
Flashy Flo Parry
Lightning Lil Jett
Sad-Susie Thomson
Dolly Dingle Aycock
Mollic-the-Moocher Bankhead
Sleepy-Sue McCully
"Flapper Fannie" Cunningham
Artful Annie Miller
Dynamite Woodhouse
Lazy-Lou Parish
Breezy Morton
Noisy Nan Lipsey
Forget-Me-Not Castellow
Blond Bomber Hendren
Drippy Droop Lawrence
Act II takes place one year later with a few of the older
characters replaced by some newer and younger actresses.
A short recess of only three months will be given between
Act I and Act II. Be sure not to miss Act II as there will
be lots of new talent and added attractions, which you can't
afford to miss. Come early and avoid the rush !
Curtain: End of Act I for 1943 show.
171
PI BETA PHI
Number of Active Chapters 81
Total Membership, National 36,242
Present Membership, Local 36
Date Founded, National 1867
Date Founded, Local 1923
OFFICERS
President Maysie Lyons
Vice-President Mary Elizabeth Kearney
Secretary Olive Price Charters
Treasurer Jane McLure
Ho;/sema>?ager .... Mary Elizabeth Kearne^i'
WE KNEW THEM WHEN . . .
It was heavenly . . . everyone was feeling Pi Phi, re-
member . . . clouds and halos . . . plantation cotton . . .
Varga girls . . . blue jeans , . . Sunday at one o'clock . . .
40 "yes's" . . . Mama G.'s heart of gold . . . transferring
angels . . . gliding on the glider . . . Sunday waffles . . .
Brandy's incurable appetite . . . campus big-wigs . . . Sara
and Fran doing a nightly dozen . . . peanut butter and
jelly . . . Peggy and Bebe leading dorms . . . cheerleaders
. . . Mary Louise and Jack, Sound and Fury . . . Whimpy's
third floor baths . . . the house boy . . . O. A.'s two-minute
naps . . . stationery . . . Bev's tales to Taylor . . . Sunday
School classes . . . Old East's Jane . . . Raisin Bran . . . the
Pledge >-'
172
Afflick Bell
Cranston Gorham
Kearney Kimbrough
ScHULTz Smith
Booth Castleman
Hawthorne Houston
Lawrence Lyons McGimsey
Taylor Threadgill Watters
Charters
< • .hh
HUSE
Hutchison
MCLURE
Parker
White
YOKLEY
squeak in the glider . . . slumber parties . . . Kay and
Army vs. Navy . . . Allie's experiments . . . Jeanie's flights
. . . balancing the budget . . . painting furniture . . .
Mary Lib and Kay's week-end jaunts . . . Sunday night
suppers . . . Baby Snookie . . . rings on birthday cakes
. . . inflammable pledge dance . . . Maysie's candles . . .
Helen's hardware . . . Long Distance Love . . . silver
bracelets among the gold . . . the Fly family . . . folk
dances at midnight . . . Girl Scout breakfasts . . . Carol
and Renoll, beauty queens . . . Doris, Marty, and Dottie
running for breakfast . . . shivers from the sleeping porch
. . . socialite Kimbrough . . . smiles and tears . . . all
blending ... a Pi Phi Symphony.
Aclivhies: Jeanne Afflick, Allie Bell, Beverly Booth, Bebe Castle-
man, Olive Price Charters, Carol Cobb, Olive Cranston, Isia Gor-
ham, Dorothy Hawthorne, Mary Louise Huse, Mary Lib Kearney,
Elise Hutchinson, Maysie Lyons, Jane McLure, Kay McGimsey.
Peggy Parker, Kay Roper, Hazel Taylor, Sara Yokley, Marianne
Brown, Ethel Houston, Ann Kimbrough, Daisy Lawrence, Julia
Newsome, Virginia Pou. Genevieve Schultz. Olivia Anne Smith,
Helen Threadgill, Emily Tufts, Kappy Watters, and Frances White.
Traiiifers: Betty Lou Cypert, Betty Derickson, Jane Fuller, Nancy
Jenkins, Carol King, Jackie Nimock, Jean Parker, and Nancy
Robinson.
PleJ^ci: Ann Ackerson, Peggy Booth, Frances Brantly, Mary
Brown, Jackie Campen, Eleanor Carroll, Carlisle Cashion, Allen
Claywell, Mary Jane Coleman, Anne Daniel. Marianne Dixon,
Ellen Dodson. Sue Folsom, Leiia Grady. Frances Green, Henriette
Hampton, Judy Harrison, Shirley Hartzell, Joyce Hinson, Pat
Hughes, Betsy Hulbett, Monnie King, Mary Jane Lloyd, Doris
Newell, Prince Nufer. Daphne Richardson, Kitty Rogerson, Marion
Saunders. Marie Sheffield, Emma Southerland, Betty Don Sweat,
Martha Taylor, Charlotte Thomas, Jane Thuston, Jeane White,
Jane Wideman, Jane Wilcox, Dora Winters, Garland Worsley.
173
SORORITIES PROSPERED
(/[/ HiLi; OTHER SOCIAL organizations had their breath
choked by the hand of Mars, Carolina's four sororities flourished. A rise in coed
enrollment sent chapter rosters climbing, too, and before 1943 had slipped
away, the Greek letter houses were crowded with pledges and activity.
174
They entertained. Using ingenuity, most houses sponsored open houses, picnics, small
parties, and dances. Navy, Army, and Marine students spent many evenings in the
parlors of Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Delta Pi, Chi Omega, and the Tri Delts.
They worked. The Red Cross, Girl Scouts, Church groups, U.S.O., and Y.W.C.A.
found willing helpers as the sorority women combined with dormitory friends in getting
essential jobs done. Campaigns were lead by women. Programs were presented by women.
New posts were filled by women. It was a year of change, and the sororities easily
changed too.
For perhaps the first time, sorority women acted to bind, not only their own mem-
bers, but their University more firmly to their cause.
ptt.^^^^
■p,\\3^
INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
!7„
HE Council held the reins, but
looked all year for somewhere to drive their war horses.
There was no straight stretch. The track was untried. And
soon even some of the thoroughbreds dropped out.
But the men did much to furnish a medium through
which all the riders could exchange ideas, discuss problems,
solve new puzzles brought about by a heavy handicap. They
cooperated with the Navy, and gained rushing permission.
They worked with the Administration, and were given social
privileges. They acted together, and found places to estab-
lish quarters.
What was gone was the spirit, the color, the tradition,
the play-and-gay times that once marked fraternity life.
Naval trainees didn't have the hours to spend learning the
"game." Many — displaced from their old grounds — took
over makeshifts. But with the old quarters gone, the close-
ness, the fellowship, the pride, the loyalty began to go too.
And althouyh the riders tried to bind and heal, they h.id
176
no aid. War had taken away the means by which such
things live.
It was toward the future that the men began to look,
toward the clear day when the track would no longer be
muddy and the chances so slim. And so they kept their
records in shape, their hopes up, and held out for a new
day and a change in the odds.
Fiat Row: NachAmson, W. ; Kerner, R.; Awalt, F. ; Simmons, P.; Hammond. D.; Clark, C;
Pollock, D.; Peel, J.
Second Row: Pardue, E.; Herr, W.; Ranklv, M.; Webb, J.; Stratford, T. ; Kerr, G. Y.; Berry,
W. ; Caruthers, R.; Bush, R.; McKemzey, E.; Kaufman, R.
Third Row: SPENCER. A.; Bell, R.; Sabiston, D.; Aronson, H.; Baity, I.; MiRSKY, J.; Vance,
C; Calkins, P.; Ashbaugh, V. J.
177
ALPHA TAU DMEGA
Number of Active Chapters . . 94
National Membership .... 36,700
Date Founded, National . . 1865
Date Founded, Local .... 1879
Officers: President, Virgil Ashbaugh, Jr., Lane Stokes; Vice-President, John
Webb, Jr., Ronda Bolick; Secretary, James Gowley, Harold Godwin; Treasurer,
John McAllister, Jr., Dan Bagley, Jr. ; Recorder, JetTerson Bynum, Welden
Jordon.
Sen'wn: Harold Godwin, James S. White, Robert Thompson, Fred Hubbard.
]iiiiiors : George W. Blair, Daniel Bagley, Henry Stenhouse, Jefferson Bynum.
Sophomores : Virgil Ashbaugh, Jr., Ronda Bolick, Sam Clark, Arthur Crow-
ley, Jr., James Evans, Harvey Gunter, John McAllister, Radford Moore, Wade
Shuford, John B. Webb, Sam Cornwell, Forrest Lockey, Archie Gibson.
Freshmen: William Mitchell, Joseph Watley, Frank Herman, Donald Clay-
ton, John Casstevens, Therman Williams.
Pledges : Alfred Brady, Thomas Jordan, Frank Goodrum, Harris Knight.
T. Braunne, Glenn Ruggles, John Sasser. Sim Smith, J. Robert Hickman, Lib
Marsh.
Fint Row: Morris, G.; Ruggles, A.; Sasser, J.; Goodwin, F. ; Hickman, R.; Jordan, T.; Brady, A.; Knight, H.
Second Roiv: Stenhouse, H.; Bolick, R. ; Godwin, H.; Stokes, L. ; White, J.; Jordan, W. ; Bagley, D.;
Casstevens, J.
Third Row: Herman, F. ; Gibson, A.; Lockley, L. ; Petree, W.; Watley, J.; Clayton, D.; Webb, J.; Clark, S.;
Evans, J.
Fourth Row: McAllister, J.; Eissenhower, J.; Blair, W. ; Ashbaugh, V.; Mitchell, W. ; Thompson, R.;
HoGAN, T. ; Porter, H.; Gunter, H. Not in Picture: Sim Smith.
178
BETA THETA PI
Number of Active Chapters . 90
National Membership .... 50,000
Date Founded, National 1839
Date Founded, Local 1852
Officers: President, Edward Hipp, Jr., William F. Herr, Jr.; Vice-President,
George M. Rankin ; Secretary', Coleman M. Whitlock, Jr. ; Treasurer, William
B. Soyars, Karl Bishopric, Jr., Sam G. Latty; Recorder, Byron H. Matthews,
Robert Otte.
Seiiion: Robert Cozart, Jr., John F. Davis, Nathaniel Garrison, James
Holmes, Lin Holton, Byron Matthews, Charles Richmond, George Roseboro,
William Sharkey, Zachary Smith, William Soyars, Walter Wertheim.
Jun'wrs: Karl Bishopric, Jr., William Herr, Robert Otte, Nere E. Day, Jr.,
Stephen Reynolds, Julius Faison Thompson, Bynum Skinner, Sam G. Latty.
Sophomores : Guy Andrews, George Davis, Charles Bock, Thomas O'Shea,
Daniel Williamson, George Mason Rankin, Kemp Dunaway.
Pledges: Charles Blackburn, John Collett, Robert Davis. Nelson Hendrix,
Claude Joyner, William Osier, William Scruggs. Crichton Soyars, William
Whiteheart, Orren Hyman, John Merritt, Pinkney Rankin.
Medical School: Edward Hipp, Jr., Coleman Whitlock, Jr.
first Rou-: CoLLETT, J.; SoYARS, C; Hendrix, N.; Merritt, J.; Joyner, C; D.avis, R. ; Bl.ackburn, C.
?(?ra«<i Roir.- Weirtheim, R.; Sharkey, W.; Whitlock, C; Herr, W.; Rankin, M.; Soyars, W.; Thompson, F.:
Latty, S.; Williamson. D.
Roseboro, G.; Osler, W. ; Whiteheart. W.: Dunaway. K.; O'Shea, T.
Matthews, B.; Bishopric, K.
•*lllil IIIII^IIIIIIMM
Third Row: Davis, G.; Andrews, G
Rankin, P.; Bock. C. ; Otte, R
179
CHI PHI
Number of Active Chapters . . 35
National Membership .... 14,600
Date Founded, National . . 1824
Date Founded, Local .... 1858
Officers: President, John Allan, Richard Elliott; Vice-President, Richard
Elliott, James Norris; Secretary, Frederick Spuhler, Frank Calkins, Paul Green;
Treasurer, Norman Tepper, James Parish.
Graduate Student: George Smedburg.
Seniors: Vincent Anderson, James Norres, Thaddeus Wilkerson, Norman
Tepper.
fun/ors: Allen Garrett, Paul Green, John Sibley, John Allan.
Sopho>iiores: Frank Calkins, Richard Elliott, P. Robert Parsons, Frederick
Spuhler, James Parish.
Pledges: James Alexander, Frank Alspaugh, Robert Graham, Hulse Hays,
Stephen Uzzell, William White, George Haile.
Fini Ron: Smedbury, G. ; Parish, J.; Norris, J.; Elliott, R.; Spuhler, F. ; Calkins, F.
Second Row: Sibley, J.; Uzzell, S.; Parsons, R.; Alexander, J.; Anderson, V.; Hays, H.; Garrett, A.
Green, P.; Graham, R.
180
CHI PSI
Number of Active Chapters . . 25
Number of Active Members . . 13,000
Date Founded, National ... 1855
Ojfuen: President, Richard Pollock; Vice-President, Jim Sheldon; Secretary,
Joseph House; Treasurer, Carl Worley.
Senior i: Richard Pollock, Bill Cooley, Sam Nicholson, Joseph House.
Juniors: Jim Shelton, William Penn Marshall, Leigh Campbell, Glenn Hay-
den, George Bouguin, James Edwards, Frank Milam.
Sophomores: Carl Worley, Reid Fowler.
Pledges: Ralph Gilbert, Ed Willis, Bob Gorkley, Warren James, E. Edwards,
Wallace Kirby, Jar\'is Proctor, Dick Jente, W. C. Steadman, J. T. Braune.
First Row: J.^MES, W.; KiRBY, W.; Gagkley, R.; Jente, R.
Second Row: Shelton, J.; Pollock, D.; Worley, C.
Third Row: Marshall, P.; Bourquinn, G. ; Campbell, L. ; Towler, R. ; Haydon, G.
Fourth Row: Edwards, J.; Wiles, E.; Milan, F. ; Gilbert, R. ; Proctor, J.
Not ill Pictiin: W, C Stfad.man, Joe House, Ed Edwards. Bill Cooley', Sam Nichol.son.
m
181
DELTA KAPPA EPSILDN
Number of Active Chapters . . 47
National Membership .... 24,000
Date Founded, National . . 1844
Date Founded, Local .... 1854
Officers: President, Dick Kemp; Vice-President, Sonny Boney, Gus
Zollicoffer; Secretary, Bill Christenson; Treasurer, Meredith Jones,
Dick Allison.
Seniors: Sion Alford Boney, James Barrow Boyce, Richard Fletcher
Kemp, Harvey White.
juniors: Charles Gregory, John Meredith Jones, James McMuUan.
Francis Parker, Charles Peete, John Pender, William Reid Thompson,
George Whitner, Frank Wideman, Algernon ZollicotTer.
Sophnniores : James Allison, Jack Barnes, Jack Blackburn, Toby
Brunner, William Christenson, Charles Norton.
Freshme)!: Henry Brown, William Dodson, Lawrence Hooper,
Harry Huether, Samuel Wylie Miliican. Jules Smith, Edward Schoen-
heit, Robert Wiley, Lathimer Williams.
Law School: Edward Nanner.
Medical School: Robert Bobbitt, Junius Davis, John Stuart Gaul,
Paul Toms.
Pledges: Mac McLendon.
First Row: JOHN ROBERT Pender, James Baugh McMullan, John Meredith Jones, Francis Irdell
Parker, White. Zollicoffer.
Second Row: Charles William Norton, George Crabtree Whitner, Toby Bruner.
Third Row: John Thomas Barnes, Samuel Wylie Milligan, Jack Bri.^sson Blackburn, Frank
James Wideman, Charles Henry Peete, Edward .Schoenheit, William Selden Dodson.
182
DELTA PSI
Number of Active Chapters 9
National Membership . . 3,170
Date Founded, National 1847
Date Founded, Local . 1854
Officers: Housemanager, George Lewis; Rushing Chairman, Edward Emack.
Seniors: Francis Gloyd Await, L. A, Adams.
Juniors: George Lewis, Derek Parmenter, Robert Evans Sonntag, A. M.
Haynes.
Sophomores: Ed. Belle, R. H. Butnam, Edward Emack, Dougald MacMillan.
Freshmen: W. G. Prichard, C. L. Wagandt.
First Row: MacMillan, Pritchard, Bella, Haynes, Emack.
Second Ron:- SoNKTAG, BuTMAN, Adams, Parmenter, Lewis, Awalt.
183
DELTA SIGMA PI
Number of Active Chapters . . 48
National Membership .... 13,000
Date Founded, National . . 1907
Date Founded, Local .... 1927
Officers: Headmaster, Grady Morgan; Senior Warden, Harr)' Fullenwider;
Junior Warden, Paul Trueblood; Treasurer, Garrison Freeman; Scribe, Bob
Rosenast; Chancellor, Bob Burleigh.
Graduate Student: Cecil Hill.
Seniors: Bob Burleigh, J. G. Carden, Sam Cox, Jimmy Davis, Garrison Free-
man, Harry Fullenwider, Wyatt Henderson, Grady Morgan, Mack Morres, Bob
Rosenast, Harry Whidbee.
Juniors: Deane Bell, Jerry Clark, Bill Greathouse, Sam Henderson, Dan
Howe, Calvin Warren. Bill Whitley.
Pledges: Tom Lane, J. R. Sowell, Ed. Clark, Don Willard, Joe Travers,
Charlie Jacobs, Bill Watson, Wayman Letwich, Ralph Strayhorn, Colon Byrd,
Bill Walston, John Waldroup, George Henderson, Kerwin Stallings, Bill Stevens.
First Row: FREEMAN, G.; Trueblood, P.; Burleigh, R.; Morgan, G. ; Henderson, S.; Rosenast, R.
Back Row: Fullenweider, H.; Adams, R.; Whitley, W. ; Morris, M. ; Cox, S.; Hill, C. ; Garden, J. G.
Henderson, W. C . \\^<\\v. D ( ; Whidbee, H.
184
KAPPA ALPHA
Number of Active Chapters . . 90
National Membership .... 28,500
Date Founded, National . . . 1865
Date Founded, Local .... 1881
Officers: President, Allen Spencer; Vice-President, Gus Elliott; Secretary,
Rabin S. Kirby; Treasurer, Robert A. Musgrove.
Seniors: Oliver Anthony, Frank Barnes, David Barton, C. B. Correy, James
Fitzpatrick, Tony Huntley, William McEvoy. William Moore, Robert A. Mus-
grove, Wm. E. Rasberry, John Sherrill, Hampton Shuping, Edwin Tisdale, Stan
Tutwiler.
Juniors: Colin Barnes, Richard Brown, Jesse W. Cole, Gus Elliott, Richard
Ferguson, Carlton Harris, Heath MacMeans, Robert Plitt, Allen Spencer, Edward
Starr, Emmerson Thompson, Jack Van Zandt, Donald Wood, Don Wright.
Sophomores : Tom Belk, Joe Blythe, John Lewis Fishel, George Kerr, Robin
Kirby, Norwood Nordleet. Kennon Smith.
Freshmen: D. T. Currin. Frederick J. Flagler, William Lindsay, Leigh Roden-
bough.
Graduate School: Ed Christman, Julian Davis, J. W. Nowell, Leroy Scott,
R. C Williamson.
Pledges: Cohlen Barnes, C. B. Correy, D. T. Currin, Fredrick Flagler,
Richard Ferguson, William Lindsay, Leigh Rodenbough.
irst How: Van Zandt, J.; LINDSAY, W. ; HuNTLEY, C. ; Lindale, E.; Smith, K.
?cond Ron-: Rodenbough, L.; Flagler, F.; Williamson, R. C. ; Christman, Ed.; Elliott, G.; Kirby, R. S
hird Row: MusGROVE, R. ; Fishel, J.; Spencer, A.; Ferguson, R.; Currin, D. T. ; Rasberry, W.
oiirth Row: Kerr, G. Y. ; Barnes, C. ; Corey, C. B.; Norfleet, N.; Davis, J.
185
KAPPA PSI
Number of Active Chapters 50
National Membership .... 12,000
Date Founded, National . . . 1879
Date Founded, Local .... 1915
Officers: Regent, Joe Montesanti, Jr.; Vice-Regent, W. F. Allen; Secretar)',
W. R. Viall, Jr.; Treasurer, M. K. Fearing, Jr.
Seniors: W. G. Beam, J. C. Estes, M. K. Fearing, Jr., N. C. McDowell, Jr..
Joe Montesanti, Jr., W. A. Morton, R. C. Scharff, W. R. Viall, Jr.
]!in!ors: W. F. Allen, Hicks, Corey, Rudy Hardy, E. H. Knight, Herbert
Mayberr)', W. W. Taylor.
Pledges: Lesley Myers, Shuford Snyder, Frank Stephens, Dewey Stonestreet.
First Row: Beam, G.; Stephens, F. ; Corey, H.; Hardy, R.; Stonestreet, D.
Second Row: Montesanti, J.; Morton, W.; Mayberry, H.; Estes, J.; Allen, W.; Snyder, S.
Third Row: Knight, Dr.; Fearing, K.; Taylor, W.; Stallard, S.; Myers, L. ; Viall, W.; Scharff, R.
186
KAPPA SIGMA
Number of Active Chapters
National Membership
Present Chapter Membership
Date Founded, National
Date Founded, Local
110
42,600
40
1869
1893
Officers: President, William McKenzie, Charles Webb; Vice-President, James
Paschal, William McKensie; Secretary, Charlie Hackney; Treasurer, Ira W.
Baity; Master of Ceremonies, Fred Tucker, Littleton Bunch.
Aledicd Students: Littleton Bunch, John Kendrick, Edwin Wells, Taylor
Vernon, Cecil Wooten.
Seniors: Haywood Faircloth, Charles Webb.
]/ni!ors: Ira W. Baity, Jack Dunn, William Halsey, James Paschal, William
McKenzie, Fred Tucker.
SophoDiores : Bill Gilliam, Charlie Hackney, Don Harrison, Dwight Hinkle,
Edmund Little. Bill Mercer, Leonard Oettinger. Warren Perr)', Sam Spoon, Carl
Wooten.
Pledges: Collins Brown, Clay Croom, D. T. Braume, Parks Easter, Albert
Ebelein, Jack Folger, James Garrison, Cranor Graves, William Harvey, Lewis
Houre, Theodore Ladutka, Dick Palmer, Peter Scott, Albert Suttle, Vernon
Thompson, Charles Vernon, William Wood. Dave Burney, Robert Bunch.
hst Row: E. Graves, A. Ebelein, D. Palmer, W. Harvey, T. Ladutka, J. Howie, P. Easter, B. Suttle, W. Wood,
?cij>iii Row: C. Hackney, F. Tucker. J. Paschal, L. Oettinger, W. Halsey, W. McKenzie, I. Baity.
D. Hinkle, J. Dunn, C. Vernon, C. Wooten.
bird Row: C. Brown, P. ScoTT, E. Little, W. Perry, J. Folger, L. Bunch, D. Harrison, W. Mercer, S. Spoon,
L. Little.
187
PHI ALPHA
Number of Active Chapters . . 22
National Membership .... 3,740
Date Founded, National 1914
Date Founded, Local .... 1928
Officers: President, Herbert Fleishman; Vice-President, Arthur
Stammler; Secretary -Treasurer, Paul Spiewak.
Medical School : David Josephs.
Seniors: Robert Gottlieb.
juniors: Paul Spiewak, Herbert Fleishman, Henry Petuske.
Sophomores : Lawrence Rivkin, Marvin Wulf, Arthur Stammler,
Edward Kaufman.
First Ron-: Josephs, D.; Stammler, A,; Fleishman, H. ; Wulf. M.
Secoial R' :• .Spiewak, P; Kaif.max, I-.
^.-i
^km
,^^
ISS
PHI DELTA CHI
Number of Active Chapters ... 32
Date Founded, National . . . 1883
Date Founded, Local 1923
Officers: President, Charles Beddingfield, Jr.; Vice-President, Bobby Dees;
Secretary, Bill Horn; Treasurer, Hubert Dameron.
Seniors: Lawrence Britt, M. S. Canaday, Rankin Caruthers, Gerald Hege,
Herbert Hollowell, Anthony Johnston, Aubrey Richardson, Ralph Teague.
juniors: Charles Beddingfield, Jr., Samuel Black, Hubert Dameron, A. P.
Rachide, Lloyd Riggsbee.
Sophomores : Bobby Dees, Billy Horn, Robert Parsons, Jack Ranzenhofer.
Pledges: Edward Hoyle, Robert Hall.
'■irst Row: Dees, R.; Horn, W.; Dameron, H.; Bedding field, C; Parsons, R.
econd Row: Johnston, C. A.; Hollowell, H.; Richardson, A. D.; Hoyle, E.; Canaday, M. S.; Britt, L. ;
Hege, G.; Teague, R.; Rachide, A. P.; Black, S.; Caruthers, M. R.; Ranzenhofer, J.; Riggsbee, E. L. ;
Hall. R.
189
PHI DELTA THETA
Number of Active Chapters 106
National Membership .... 51,000
Date Founded, National ... 1848
Date Founded, Local .... 185.S
Officers: President, George Denman Hammond, Lovick Corn; Reporter,
Moulton Adams; Treasurer, Edwin Hartshorn; Secretary, Larry Cahall, Porter
Van Zandt.
Seniors: George Denman Hammond, Edwin Hartshorn.
juniors: Moulton Lee Adams, Richard Brooke, Edward Clark, Harlow Con-
nell, Jr., Charles Earp, Jr., William Evans, George Henderson, Jr., William
Kerr, Van McKibben Lane, Jr., Andrew Manning, Jr., Mark Pope, lU, Robert
Rouse, Jr., William Stevens, Jr., Ralph Strayhorn, Jr., Porter Van Zandt, Jr.,
William Sheely.
Sophomores: Gleason Allen, Sanford Doxey, Jr., John Davies, III, William
Ellis, III, Wilbur Ellis, Judson Hawk, Jr., Harvey Jagoe, Robert Jenks, Thomas
Kerns, Robert Lackey, James McKinney, Emanuel Morris, John Parker, Charles
Gerrish Sproule, Jr., John Starr, Earle Welch, Oscar Whitney, Allan Williams,
Charles Wilson, Bruce Winslow.
Freshmen: Charles Afflick, Thomas Barnes, Don Dempsey, Harry Haines,
William Lane, James Little, William Orth, Roy Rowe.
Pledges: Calvin Baldwin, Jr., Harper Elam, Philip Gilbert, Robert KiUetTer,
William McNeely, James Newsome, Frank Perry, Jr., Baxter Sapp, Jr., Charles
Seward, Jr., William Spencer, Hugh Stith. William Stubbs, Arrice Teague, Ed-
mund Townsend, Clayton Vandiver, Walter Wilkins.
First Row: Little, Vandiver, Teague. Killeffer, Stubbs, McNeely, Gilbert, Perry, Sapp.
Second Row: Spencer. Rovc'E, McDonald, Hammond, Sexxard, Afflick, Lackey.
Third Row: DoxEY, Clark, Allen, Kerr, Orth, Ellis, B., Morris, Whitney, Jagoe, McKinney, Winslow.
FourtI] Row: Dempsey, Thurston, Davies, Ellis, W., Hartshorn, Hawk, Barnes, Henderson, Sproule.
Fiftli Row: Haines, Kerns, McClamrock, Strayhorn, Pope, Van Zandt.
190
PHI GAMMA DELTA
Number of Active Chapters
74
National Membership
. 37,300
Date Founded, National
1848
Date Founded, Local
1851
Local Membership ....
47
Officen : President, Thomas Stratford, Meredith Buel ; Treasurer, Theodore
Haigler; Secretary, Paul Bissette, Frank Ross; Historian, Edwin Lee Webb.
Seniors: Paul Franklin Simmons, Hobart Loring McKeever, Raymond Tur-
rentine, John Paty, Wallace Lane, Jack Noneman, Jim Oliver, John Monroe, Ray-
mond Jordon.
Juniors: John Neblett, Edwin Lee Webb, Frank Ross, Henr}' Badgett, Alvin
Bush, Robert Lee Hines, Lynn Tillery, George Belli.
Sophomores : Paul Bissette, Theodore Haigler, Cam Sanders, David Tayloe,
Roger Hall, Harry Walker, John Winship, Meredith Buel, William Creech,
Walter Crump, Phillip Fanrote, William Bencini, Luther Kelly, Moran McLen-
don, Albert Raynor, Edwin Shultz, John Stedman, Hoyt Taylor, Devan Barbour,
Jr., Robert Bain Broughton, Richard Hopkins Driscoll, Leon Todd, Thomas
Stratford, Thomas Nesbit, Robert Padgett, Harold Jeter.
Pledges: David Cobb, Charles Lambeth, Duncan MacRae, James Kelly,
Giler Corey, Everette Edwards, Richards Gibson, William Little, Armistead
Love, William Mackie, William Martin, Richard McKee. Hugh Perr)', Carl
Hackney, D. T. Brown.
Medical Students: \\m Oliver, |ohn Monroe.
first Row: Neblett, J.; Haigler, T.; Stratford, T.; Bissette, P.; Webb, E.
Second Row: Simmons, P.; Mackie, W. ; Ross, F.; Walker, H.; Corey, P.; Sanders, C. ; McGee, R.; Oliver, J.
TURRENTINE, R.
Third Row: Little, W.; Buel, M.; Creech, W.; Hall, R.; Kelly. L.
Fourth Row: LovE, A.; Winship, J.; Cobb, D.; Perry, H.
Fijth Row: Tayloe, D. ; Badgett, H.; Bencini. W.; Belli, G.
191
PHI KAPPA SIGMA
Number of Active Chapters . . 39
National Membership .... 11,970
Date Founded, National . . 1850
Date Founded, Local .... 1866
Officers: President, William B. Beery; Vice-President, R. L. Bush, Jr.;
Secretary, William B. Donald, Jr.; Treasurer, James T. Flynt.
Seniors: James Perrin, Myrin Moore, William Beery.
J»i?!ors ■ John Milner.
Sophomores : James Flynt, R. L. Bush, Floyd Hoffman, William Donner,
Robert Shepard, Max Spurlin, Lewis Wilkerson, T. Alan Porter.
Pledges: Joe Clawson, Hobert Price, Ulysses Cornogg, William McLean,
William Penny, Fred Williams, Jack Terrence, J. T. Braune.
First Row: CoRNOGG, U. ; Price, H. ; Clawson, J.; Penny, W. ; McLean, W.
Second Row: Williams, F. ; Wilkerson, L.
Third Row: Donald, W. ; Bush, R. L.; Flynt, J.; Moore, M. ; Spurlin, M. ; Beery, W.; Perrin, J,; Huffman, F.:
Porter, A.
:S-?*l2r
192
PI KAPPA ALPHA
Number of Active Chapters . . 76
National Membership .... 23,500
Date Founded, National . . 1864
Date Founded, Local .... 1895
Officers: President, Bob Bell; Vice-President, John Temple; Secre-
tary, Arthur Thomas; Treasurer, Bill Greathouse.
Brothers: Bob Bell, Gotten Glark, Bob Clutts, Larry Glark, Hugh
"Shot" Gox, John Graddock. Bill Greathouse, Maurice Griffin, Hurst
Hatch, Dick Kimball, Charlie Moore, Chester McMullan, Johnny Pecora,
Walse Secreat, Bill Story, Bunky Tate, John Temple, Arthur Thomas,
Craven Turner, Ken Underwood, Ted Wall.
Pledges: Otis Aldridge, Tom Beach, Buddy Bobbitt, Colon Byrd,
Percy Card, Winfield Daniels, Micky Faulkner, Paul Haigwood, Jackie
Howkand, Walt Godwin, Earl Horner, Jay Johnson, Don Junze, Leon
Moore, Carlyle Morris, Bucky Roseman, Hubert Scarborough, Horace
Taylor, Smith Weaver.
.0 \
rsi Ron: RosEMOND, A.; MooRE, L. ; HoRNER, E. ; Godwin, W. ; Hawkins, J.; Taylor, H.;
Petro, a. ; Bobbitt, L.
coiid Row: Scarborough, H.; Little, L.; Kunze, D.; Clark, C. ; Weaver, S.; Johnson, J.; Wall. T.;
Morris. C. ; Faulkner, M.
'7ircJ Row: MooRE, C; Temple, J.; Clark. L, ; Bell. R.: Storey, W. ; Pecora, J.; Secrest, W. ; Byrd, C
193
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILQN
Number of Active Chapters 112
National Membership .... 50,000
Date Founded, National . . 1856
Officers: President, Charles Benbow, Jr.; Vice-President, Jared Fox; Secretary,
David Cooper, Howard Gray; Treasurer, James Ficklen.
Medical School: William Croom, Charles Tillet, III.
Seniors: Paul Huber, Emmett McKenzie, John Robinson.
Juniors: Robert Bookmyer, Ferrell Blount, Percy Mallison, Burney Warren.
Sophomores: Thomas Andrews, Jr., Charles Benbow, Jr., Robert Bellamy,
John Berry, David Cooper, Hugh Efird, Jess Erwin, James Ficklen, Jared Fox,
Thomas Gilbert, Howard Gray, Edward Guy, John Hallet, Joel Murchison,
Henry Sloan, Jr., Richard Willingham.
Marshall Austin, David Barton, Edward Blanken, Robert Conrad,
Clifford Davis, Marvin Ferrell, Jr., Ralph Garrett, James Graves, Arthur Mar-
shall, Robert Myers, Charles Pace.
First Rote: Austin, M. ; Graves, J.; Myers, R.; Conrad, R. ; Pace, C; Blanken, C. ; Marshall, A.; Barton, D.
Davis, C.
Second Roic: Erwin, J.; Andrews, T. ; Fox, J.; Benbow, C. F. ; Ficklen, J.; Hallet, J.; Mallison, D.
Third Rotv: Bellamy, R.; Murchison, W. ; McKenzie, E.; Warren, B.; Gray, H.; Bookmyer, R.; Sloan, H.;
Berry, ].; XX'illi.ngham, R. ; GuY, E.
194
SIGMA CHI
Number of Active Chapters 98
National Membership .... 37,900
Date Founded, National . . 1855
Date Founded, Local .... 1889
Officers: President, Earl Pardue; Vice-President, Philip Pence; Treasurer,
Bruce Van Wagner; Secretary, Robert Grant, Calvin Warren.
Seniors: Earl Pardue, Philip Pence, Robert Grant, Roy Hankin, Dotson
Palmer, John Bell, Zack Bynum, Charles Nixon, William O'Shea, Robert Rentz.
Juniors: Dave Sabiston, Sidney Alverson, Wally Auburn, Robert Covington,
Charles Daniels, Paul Knollman, William Monroe, Jack Ellis, Charles Johnson,
Elmer Modlin.
Sophomores : Bruce Van Wagner, James Carpenter, Daniel Davis, Paul
Finch, Robin Johnson, George Reynolds, William Russel, Halford Tillman.
Calvin Warren, Tom Hudson, Harold Gould, Ray Walters. Tom Ayers, Bob
Kellis.
Freshmen: James Brooks, Grimes Byerly, Robert Langley, Jesse Johnson,
Donald Klein, Robert Edwards, Dan Moseley, Dick Walton, Chris Fordham,
Steve Thomas, Herman Lee, Lin Butt, Bud Searcy, Dick Howie, Buggs Brown,
Ken Knight, Bud Early.
First Row: Van Wagner, Pardue, Pence.
Second Row: Hankin, Johnson, Warren, Brooks. Davis, Gilman.
Third Row: Edwards. Alverson, Grant, Klein, Frich, Covington, Gould.
Fourth Row: HUDSON, Langley, Byerly, Brown, Dixon', Reynolds.
Fifth Row: Lee, Sabiston, Walton, Kellis, Kntght, Auburn, Russel, Moseley.
Sixth Row: Searcy, Morris, B. Johnson, Early, Brown. McKee, Knollman, Fordham, Walters.
195
SIGMA NU
Number of Active Chapters . . 96
National Membership .... 38,500
Date Founded, National . . . 1869
Date Founded, Local .... 1888
Officers: President, Charles Clark, Jule Phoenix; Vice-President, Marshall
Parker, Lee Brown ; Secretary, Donald McKinney ; Treasurer, Whalen Cato,
Jesse Jernigan.
Seniors: Frank Adams, Whalen Cato, Charles Clark, Marshall Parker, |ohn
Sears.
Juniors: Lee Brown, John Davis, William Gaither, Jr., Benjamin Gold,
Larry James, Jr., Rivers Johnson, Lewis Jones, Karl Pace, Jr., Jule Phoenix,
Henry Stevens, John Wallace, John Weyher.
Sophomores: Edward Bond, Edgar Cato, Eugene Crawford, Jr., Roy Fore-
hand, Jr., Gray Hodges, Jesse Jernigan, Josiah Maultsby, Donald McKinney,
Godfrey Stancill, Leonard Mitchell, Robert Perry, Jr., Robert White, Charles
Vance, Jr.
PleJi^es: Maurice Brown, George Byrum, Ed Carson, John Carson, James
Dobbin, Cecil Dickson. George Howard, Randolph Hughes, Richard Kennedy,
Edward McKenzie, Julian McKenzie, Earl Peacock, Herbert Small, William
White, George Wolff.
Fnsi Rote: Gaither, W. ; Parker. M. ; Clark, C. ; Cato, W. ; Davis, J.
Second Row: Bond, E.; McKinney, D.; Brown, L. ; Phoenix, J.; Stancill, G. ; Perry, R.
Third Row: Vance, C. ; Cato, E.; White, G.; Forehand, E.; Fanney, G.; Hodges, G.
Fourth Row: Loeffler, F.; Howard, G. ; Dixon, C; Kennedy, R.; Hughes, R.
Fifth Row: McKenzie, J.; Byrum, G.; Dobbins, J.; Small, H.; Brown, M.; McKenzie, E.
196
TAU EPSILDN PHI
Number of Active Chapters . . 27
National Membership .... 5,000
Date Founded, Local . . . . 1910
Date Founded, National . . . 1924
Ojfiieis: President, Ernie Frankel, Billy Nachamson; Vice-President, Bob
Rosenthal, Stanley Sirotin ; Secretary, Jerry Marder, Melvin Blacker, Morton
Pizer; Treasurer, Charles Shalleck, Marvin Sands.
Seniors: Jerry Marder, Charles Shalleck, Edward Goodman, Ernie Frankel.
] /niton : Billy Nachamson, Sidney Heimovitch, Ralph Sarlin, Judson Kinburg.
Sophomores: Stanley Sirotin, Stuart Harris, Julian Weinkle, Dick Katz,
Isidore Nachimow, Seymore Levin, Timothy Neiditch, Norman Silver, Morton
Pizer.
Pledges: Herman Grossman, Arthur Shain.
F'trU Row: Sirotin, S.; Nachamson, W. ; Shalleck, C.
Second Rrnr: Nachimow, I.; Neditch, T. ; Grossman, H.; Weinkle, J.
Third Row: Katz, R.; Kinberg, J.; Marder, G. ; Pizer, N.; Levin, S.
197
ZETA PSI
Number of Active Chapters . . 29
National Membership .... 11,000
Date Founded, National . . . 1847
Officers: President, Junie Peel; Vice-President, Sterling Gilliam; Secretary,
Bee White; Treasurer, Sterling Gilliam; Corresponding Secretary, Billy Palmer;
Faculty, E. T. Browne.
Seniors: Simmons Andrews, Eddie Bayle, Spencer Bass, Sterling Gilliam,
Junie Peel, Jack Miller, Albert Root.
]niiiors: Tom Dameron, Bill Palmer, Bill Joyner, Bill Rayland, Clifford
West, Bee White, Winfield Worth.
Sophomores : Jcel Cheatham, Gideon Gilliam, Alex Howard, Phil Taylor,
Alfred Williams, Gilliam Wood, Ford Worthy.
Pledges: Paul Nolan, Bill Gilliam, Charles Penick, Carroll Tomlinson, John
T. Gregory, Harvie Ward.
first Row: Penick, C; Worthy, F.; Gilliam, W.; Lea, P.; Ragland, W.; Root, A. S.; Nolan, P.; Worth, W.
Second Row: Joyner, W. ; Miller, J.; Williams, A.; White, S.; Taylor, P.; Howard, A.; Gilliam, S.;
Dameron, T.
Third Row: Peel, L. ; Gilliam, G.; Palmer. W.; Tomlinson, C.; Wood, G.; Ward, H.; West, C; Cheatham, J.
198
War didn't stop pledging . . .
. . . nor beer drinking . . .
. nor loafing on the lounges.
NEW HDUSES-
7
*^ HERE WAS A SCARCITY of alcohol, liberty, and
time. House parties weren't. Party boys couldn't. Spendthrifts didn't.
The old days of "shoot-the-likker-to-me John-boy" were going out along
with mornings-after, hang-over remedies and late dates.
It was a near-sober year; for there was
fraternities.
new brand of fun for
Most chapters held small atfairs, substituting Dorsey and Goodman
and James on wax for the real thing. They went on hayrides in De-
cember, had stag parties over beer kegs, gave cabin get-togethers in-
stead of three-day festivities. The ornate was out. Simplicity and in-
formality were theme words; and although the glamour was gone,
people managed to enjoy themselves.
Men and women played with the same vigor with which they
worked, learning to have fun without the sophistication of former years.
Rushing was harder — but rushing was done.
200
NEW FUN (?)
More Milwaukee liquid.
wm
Gathered around the hearthside.
William H. Bell, Preside)!!
W. E. Rabil, X'ice-Preiident
PHI BETA KAPPA
:z
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 own laurels, the fraternity this year took a
step forward as plans inaugurated last spring materialized into the form of a tutorial system. Under this
plan members offered their services as tutors in their major subjects to those first and second year stu-
dents who needed scholastic aid but who were financially unable to get it.
202
R. S. Spain, Trea
Dr. T. J. Wilson, Jr., Secretary
ALPHA CHAPTER DF NORTH CAROLINA
Student WemLrS of pLi Beta J(appa — Jail 1943
Charles Clifford Barringer
William Harrison Bell, Jr.
George Walker Blair, Jr.
Samuel Owen Cornwell
William Church Croom, Jr.
Charles Thomas Daniel
Ida May Davis
Joseph Paul Demeri
William Thompson Dye, [r
Harold Lacy Godwin
Philip Mahone Griffith
Melville F. Corbett Ivey
Weldon Huske Jordan
Arthur Sanford Kaplan
Francis Parker King
Mary Kathleen Martin
Rose Mowshowitz
Henry Clay Newsome, Jr.
Theodore Hall Patrick, III
Elbert Sidney Peel, Jr.
George Dial Penick
Charles A. Speas Phillips
Lois Phillips
William Edmond Rabil
David Coston Sabiston, Jr.
Nancy Jean Smith
John Mitchell Sorrow, Jr.
Robert Spruill Spain
Thomas Lane Stokes
Morton Paul Svigals
Margaret Catherine Swanton
Charles Walter Tillett, Jr.
Albert David Warshauer
Dean Flewellyn Winn, Jr.
203
Bernard
Ennis
Brogden
Lefler
Cobb
Railey
Earnheart
Rollins
TAU KAPPA ALPHA
7
» / AU Kappa Alpha, national honor forensic fraternity, was founded
at Indiana in 1908, and now has 105 chapters. The local chapter was established in 1910.
Active membership is limited to those who have participated in at least two years of
forensic or public speaking activity, have demonstrated superior ability as debaters or
public speakers, and rank in the upper thirt)'-five per cent of their college class, in ac-
cordance with the regulations of the Association of College Honor Societies.
The purpose of this fraternit}' is threefold: to award suitable recognition for ex-
cellence in forensic meets and public speaking; to promote interest in speech among
the general public and especially among the students of college; and to foster a respect
for, and an appreciation of freedom of speech as a vital element of democracy.
Officers: Howard Ennis, President; Dr. Hugh Letter, Honorary President; Rene
Bernard, Vice-President; E. O. Brogden, Jr., Secretary.
Members: Rene Bernard, E. O. Brogden, Jr., William B. Cobb, Howard Ennis,
Frank Earnheart, Aaron Johnson, Richard Railey, and Clyde Rollins.
Faculty: F. F. Bradshaw, Albert Coates, W. T. Couch, J. L. Godfrey, F. P. Graham,
R. B. House, C. E. Mcintosh, H. T. Lefler, and E. J. Woodhouse.
204
PHI MU ALPHA
p.
HI Mu Alpha Sinfonia, honorar}' music frater-
nity, is made up of outstanding music students on the campus. The local
chapter. Alpha Rho, endeavors to advance the cause of music by sponsoring
concerts both of nationally known artists and of its own members, assist-
ing the music department in all of its programs, and encouraging original
composition. Among its activities this year, the fraternity sponsored a con-
cert by Benno Rabinof, violinist.
Officers this year were: Earl Slocum, Province Governor; Alexander Har-
per, Supreme Councilman; Allen Garrett, President; Jack Ellis, Vice-Presi-
dent; Edgar Sikes, Secretary; Monte Howell, Treasurer; Richard Ford, His-
torian; and James Hall, Warden.
Members are: Allen Garrett, Alexander Harper, John Ellis, Monte Howell,
Edgar Sikes, William White, Joseph Marshall, Winfield Rose, Richard Ford.
James Hall, Lawrence Leinbach, Allen Bergman, Eric Schwarz, Charles
Stevens, Charles Clinard, Peter Robinson, Earl Slocum, Maurice Griffin, Till-
man Pearson, Herbert Wyatt, Bill Mabrey, and John Fesperman.
Faculty members are: Dr. Glen Haydon, Dr. Jan P. Schinhan, Dr. Ben-
jamin F. Swalin, John Toms, Earl Slocum, and Delbert Beswich.
Bergman-
Clinard
Ellis
Garrett
Griffin
Harper
Leinbach
Marshall
Robinson
Rose
Sikes
Slocum
205
Order of tKe
MEMBERS, 1943-44
374 George Denman Hammond
381 John Mosely Robinson
385 John Kilpotnck
386 Walter Atkinson Damtoft
387 William Terrell Webster
388 Orville Campbell
389 John Frank Alspaugh
390 James Rowlette Davis
391 Robert Norton Burleigh
392 Elbert Sidney Peel
358 Charles Walter Tillett
362 Wilburn J. Smith
363 Ira Samuel Gambill
364 Isaac Montrose Taylor
365 Thomas W. M, Long, Jr.
366 Vernon Judson Harward, Jr
367 Thomas Benjamin Baden
368 Frank Ridley Whi taker
369 Louis Smith Harris
370 John D. Thorp
371 Henry Mario Moll
372 Henry Plant Osborne
FACULTY
Charles Phillips Russell
Frank Porter Graham
Edgar Ralph Rankin
Ro!:ert Burton House
Herman Glenn Baity
Ernest Lloyd Mackie
Albert McKinley Coates
Joseph Burton Linker
Corydon Perry Spruill
Earle Horace Hartsell
Joseph Moryon Saunders
William Terry Couch
Edward Alex Cameron
Walter Smith Spearman, Jr.
9fe VALKY
SUE BRU BAKER, President ^
BETTY SELIGMAN, Vice-President
Jvtornette Chestnut
Margaret Pickard
Dorothy Schmuhl )
LEE BRONSON, Secretary
KAY ROPER, Treasurer
JRLSQ TF AS2 FN MUWTHKU VT
GHV QYRRR FH DVB HAXL SATVTLR
GHV ULFIITG VT BUI lYSAT TQBBGRP
RULERS
589 STERLING GARY GILLIAM . . .
592 GEORGE DENMAN HAMMOND . .
604 GEORGE WILLIAM HENDERSON .
603 SYDNOR MONTGOMERY WHITE
594 ELBERT SIDNEY PEEL JR. .
SUBJECTS
174 Archibald Henderson
241 Joseph G. deR. Hamilton
255 Frank Porter Graham
315 Robert W. Wettoch
319 William W. Pierson
328 Francis F. Brodshaw
331 Thomas Felix Hickerson
343 Dudley DeWitt Carroll
349 William Donald Cormichoel
369 William F. Prouty
373 Allen Wilson Hobbs
385 Robert Edwin Coker
405 Charles S. Mangum, Jr.
417 George Coffin Taylor
439 J. Penrose Horlond
442 Robert B. House
490 Fletcher Melvin Green
546 Horry Russell
591 Captain W. S. Popham, U.S.N.
593 John Mosely Robinson, Jr.
599 Cyrus Clifford Frazier
600 Frank Betts Frozer
601 Mark Cooper Pope
602 John William Davis ^
605 Frank James Widemon
606 George Mason Rankin
607 John Gilliam Wood
608 Charlie Frank Benbow
609 Jesse Harper Erwin
610 Philip Reade Taylor
O^nrgnn s Mmh
JUNIUS WEEKS DAVIS, JR.
PRINCEPS
DEREK CHOATE PARMENTER
QUAESTOR
ROBERT EVANS SONNTAG
SCRIPTOR
FACULTY MEMBERS
NICHOLSON B. ADAMS
WALTER REECE BERRYHILL
WILLIAM AUGUSTUS BLOUNT, JR.
JOHN M. BOOKER EDWARD McG. HEDGPETH
JAMES B. BULLITT URBAN TIGNER HOLMES
R. D. W. CONNOR WILLIAM deBERNIERE MacNIDER
WILLIAM MORTON DEY DOUGALD MacMILLAN
KEENER C. FRAZER ISAAC HALL MANNING, JR.
LOUIS GRAVES ROLAND PRINCE McCLAMROCH JOHN MEREDITH JONES, JR
ROLAND BRYCE PARKER WILLIAM THOMAS JOYNER,
ROGERS DEY WHICHARD VAN McKIBBEN LANE, JR
F. M. SIMMONS ANDREWS
EDWIN BOYLE
DAVID YOUNG COOPER
JUNIUS WEEKS DAVIS, JR.
JOHN LINDSAY HALLETT
STUDENT MEMBERS
GEORGE BURNET LEWIS
EMMET GARDNER McKENZIE, JR.
JOEL WILLIAMS MURCHISON
HENRY LEE SLOAN, JR.
ROBERT EVANS SONNTAG
CHARLES GERRISH SPROULE, JR.
RALPH NICHOLS STRAYHORN
JOHN BENTON WEBB
. ALGERNON AUGUSTUS ZOLLICOFFER
JR.
m
1^4
— 1. ^^-^."^^^
Front Rotr: Strause, A.;
Armbruster, K.
Second Row: Towler, R. ;
Crone, B.; Kennedy, J.;
Davis, N.; Hawthorne, D.;
Ensign, N.; Byrd, C.
Not in Picture: Little, R. ;
Barbour, D.
Head cheerleader
■^ Crone up
•*«*.|l..|
WARTIME SPORTS
c
• AROUNA AND THE NATION S SpOrtS
fans looked earnestly toward the services last spring for
some word as to the status of intercollegiate sports. Uni-
versities were turning military, students were preparing to
shoulder arms along with their friends already in the service,
and athletic directors were waiting patiently for the closing
of their books for the duration.
The Army showed little sympathy for the sports en-
thusiasts. Students assigned to study at a seat of higher
learning were handed strict regulations, crowded schedules,
and little, if any, time for extra-curricular activity. The
Army heads debated with the loyal public for weeks be-
fore the final official "No" was sounded from Washington.
— Schools with Army groups alone would not play a major
part in intercollegiate activity for the duration.
Carolina, however, had only some 300 odd Army men,
and was expecting over 1 200 Naval reservists. The wizards
at Woollen turned toward Washington with the hope that
once more the Army and Navy wouldn't agree.
"During their college training. Navy students may take
part in all college athletics and other campus activities pro-
vided such activities do not interfere with their prescribed
hours or courses of study." . . . That was all we were wait-
ing to hear. Carolina prepared to meet all comers on the
athletic field — schedules were drawn up with V-12, civilian
and military organizations. In September Carolina's first
V-12 football team met the challenge of wartime travel and
a stiff schedule. Many obstacles had to be overcome during
those first few months — practice periods were short, trips
were limited, and gates were scanty. But we were not dis-
couraged and when basketball season came around, Caro-
lina once more readied a Navy team, a team composed of
men with but a short time to practice each day, men with
but a few hours off in which to travel. . . . But every
minute was made to count, and the fullest advantage was
taken of every break, no matter how slight.
Boxing, wrestling, swimming, and track were all met
in like fashion, and when baseball days arrive, Carolina
will offer another 'V-12 squad.
The Navy has given the "go-signal" and Carolina has
again moved forward.
CHEERIO
FOOTBALL MANAGERS
First Row: Spruill, Powell, Pope.
Second Row: Ellis, Lockhart. Long, Henderson.
A Tar Heel loses his head.
FOOTBALL
ivi
4
Ili
r
XT.
_f
Coach Young
^—yvi
ROM THE HOT Saturdays of Sep-
tember to somber November week-ends, Carolina students
and alumni thrilled to the first Tar Heel Navy football
aggregation.
Augmented by V-12 transfers frcm Alabama, Virginia.
Mississippi, N. C. State, and Southern Methodist, the sec-
s-lf
V* ^M ^.^^,■*~
m/
214
ond all-alumni coached Carolina team ran up an impressive
record of six wins against three losses, completing the sea-
son ranking thirteenth in a nation-wide poll.
Faced with the financial and transportation problems
that come with a uniformed-campus, the Athletic Associa-
tion presented the 1943 Tar Heels with a strong wartime
schedule. This schedule obligated the Carolinians to play
such formidable outfits as Georgia Tech, Penn State, Penn-
sylvania, and Duke.
An experienced band of Tar Heels made the weary trip
to Atlanta and were toppled by the Yellow Jackets to in-
augerate the season. The same group, in somewhat better
condition, met a strong Penn State V-12 team on Carolina
soil the next week, and made headlines with their first vic-
tory.
The potentially-great service outfit from Jacksonville
Naval Air Station arrived the following week at Chapel
Hill, and felt the full fury of the Blue and White, 23-0.
Duke was scheduled to meet the Tar Heels twice dur-
ing the season, and in the first encounter most of the exist-
ing V-12 members, victims of the mid-season graduation,
partook in their last college defeat, as the Blue Devils
trounced Carolina 14-7, a score far from indicative of the
run-away.
A makeshift Tar Heel team of "B" squad members and
a few V-12ers ran through N. C. State for three quarters,
two Saturday's later, but had a hard time holding the Wolf-
pack to thirteen points in the final period to squeeze a win
by a mere 27-13. The second-half team began to take shape
when they defeated South Carolina the next week, and
made Carolina's bid for national prominence the following
week-end, downing a star-studded Pennsylvania eleven, 9-7.
The Penn win made the Tar Heels likely subjects for
Bowl consideration until the second game with the Duke
juggernaut knocked them down, 27-6. Coach Tom Young's
crew bounced back in their last encounter of the season,
however, and whitewashed a light Virginia outfit, 54-7.
FOOTBALL SUMMARY
Carolina 7 — Georgia Tech 20
Carolina 19 — Penn State
Carolina 23 — Jax Navy
Carolina 7— Duke 14
Carolina 27 — State 13
Carolina 21 — South Carolina .... 6
Carolina 9 — Pennsylvania 6
Carolina 6 — Duke 27
Carolina 54 — Virginia 7
Captain Turner
'.^:^/>
COACHES
Fnsr Ron: House, Buising, Young, Pritchard.
Second Row: Harkins, Kaplan. Gill, Lange.
215
1
m
..^*».-«^
_
^
^^^,
m
Jones
YELLOW JACKET STING IS BITTER
7
^^HE EFFECTS OF STARTING PRACTICE many weeks later
than most teams, and of being limited to one hour each day on the playing field,
stood out clearly in the first Tar Heel encounter of the 1943 season as fumbles
and a guy named Prokop topped Carolina's V-12 warriors, 20-7.
Lacking the coordination that comes from many hours of drilling, the Tar
Heels, nevertheless, stole the offensive honors by completely outplaying their
opponents, 14 first downs to five.
The final scoring punch, so necessary when meeting a Tech team well
versed in the art of capitalizing on all breaks and the plan of deceptive foot-
ball, was completely lacking.
Tech opened with fireworks within five minutes after the starting whistle,
when they marched from their own 18 to score in four first downs.
McCollum's fumble on the Tar Heel's 24, on the first play of the second
half, set up the home team's second score. A few short plunges ended in a
touchdown and Prokop's educated toe made it two conversions.
It was then that Carolina turned on its newly-found running power and sent
Jack Fitch 34 yards for the lone Tar Heel tally. Teague added the extra point.
Tech added the final six points in the fourth period when Prokop tore
around end from punt formation on his own 16, and ran 85 yards for the
final score.
Croom makes fifteen yards
216
CAROLINA SQUELCHES LION'S RDAR
V^ AROLiNA PLAYED ITS FIRST home game of the 1943 season
against a powerful Penn State eleven, setting back the invading opponents, rated by many
as one of the best clubs in the East, 19-0.
Despite the fumbling habit and a slow start, the Tar Heels completely outplayed the
Nittany Lions by amassing a total of 162 yards rushing as to the visitors' 70, and chalk-
ing up nine first downs to the Easterners' 5.
The Tar Heels played the visiting V-12 outfit on even terms until Billy Myers, with
three minutes remaining in the first half, broke away around end for six yards and the
first touchdown.
Following the opening of the second half, the Tar Heels began to click against a
strong forward wall and, making use of two pass interceptions, chalked up the other two
Myers threw a six-yard aerial through center to Eddie Bryant early in the third period,
after Wayne Palmer, a Southern Methodist transfer, intercepted a Penn State forward
on the Lions' 34 to pave the scoring.
Early in the fourth quarter Dick Harris stole an aerial on the Penn State 38, from
which spot the Tar Heels marched to the six where Cox streaked around end for the
final six points.
Myers bends the flag, but makes it.
^''VWif*t)^k|MM|M.
217
•'STOP THE
NAVY AIR
CORPS"
Maskas throws Letchas for a loss.
V^..^ Al
• AROLINA STRESSED AERIAL ATTACK tor
the first time this season when it met a more formidable oppo-
nent than it had expected in the men from Jacksonville Naval Air
Station, and came through to win, 23-0.
The ground work for the first quarter and first score was laid
via the air lanes as the Tar Heels carried the ball early in the
period from the Air Raider's 39 across the goal in only five
downs. A 31 -yard pass from Teague to Bryant placed Carolina
on the nine, from which spot the locals had little trouble scoring.
The game's thriller accounted for the second Tar Heel touch-
down when Jack Hussey, racing to the end zone, flanked by two
Jacksonville men, turned around at the right split second to
catch a bullet-like spiral from Myers, thrown from the 25-yard
line.
Close to the end of the first half, Eddie Bryant, wingback,
and former Virginia speedster, turned in two brilliant pass catches
to set up the Tar Heels' final touchdown. A pass from Myers
to Bryant moved the ball from Carolina's 36 to the Air Raiders'
33. On the next play, Myers faded to the right and passed to
Bryant on the sidelines. Eddie caught the ball and stepped out
on the 13. Vernon Thomason ended the drive with a brilliant
run behind Palmer's blocking to score.
Late in the game, with the ball resting en the Jacksonville's
17 and fourth down coming up, Ray Poole, United Press All-
Southern, kicked an angling field goal from the 25-yard marker.
218
WE FAIL TD TWIST
DEVIL'S TAIL
ORi; THAN 25,000 Tar Heels were on
hand October 16, but even such an overwhelming following
could not aid the eleven men on the field when the Duke Devils
began to roll. And after all was said and done, every loyal fan
agreed that we were "darn lucky" to get away with as little a
defeat as 14-7.
Eddie Cameron's squad had complete control over the situa-
tion except for one startling moment in the last quarter when
Myers dropped back to the Tar Heel 8 and rifled a pass to
Bryant on the 25 who, in turn, outran the entire Duke squad
for the lone Tar Heel tally of the day.
The Durham team started right off from the starting whistle
and scored after nine plays when Tom Davis found a hole through
tackle. He broke through for 40 yards and a touchdown. In the
second period, the Tar Heels attempted to use their aerial offense
but were completely dazed after Hartley intercepted Myers' pass
on the Carolina 48 and ran for the end zone. Big Bob Gantt
converted after each of the Blue Devil scores, while George
Grimes added the Carolina extra point.
L ..
Cll lAlU.\o lUlib
219
CAME NEAR LOSING
THIS ONE
\_^N THE Saturday following mid-
season graduation of most of the V-12 transfers, the Tar
Heels tackled N. C. State and romped all over the Wolf-
pack for three quarters, only to allow thirteen points against
them in the final period, barely getting away with a 27-13
victory.
Once more passing came into its own when an aerial
from Teague to Thomason scored the first Tar Heel touch-
down in the opening frame, and later when Myers, after
having fumbled the pass from center on the State 25, re-
treated to the 40 and threw Kosinski a forward, Kosinski
skipping the remaining distance for the second tally.
Shortly after the opening of the second half, Teague
executed a zany pirouette through the entire State team
from the 14 to the two and Arbes bounced the remaining
two for a score. Seconds after this score. State fumbled and
Carolina recovered. Myers skirted around end for the final
touchdown for Carolina.
The Tar Heel squad fell apart in the fourth period and
State's civilian kids plowed through little opposition for
two touchdowns and a conversion.
Grimes slows down.
MItfUfl'
220
GAMECOCK'S CROW
NO MORE
^^V REVAMPED Tar Heel squad muffed
many scoring possibilities when meeting South Carohna at Colum-
bia, but managed to carry enough punch to outplay the Game-
cocks and collect 21 points, against the home team's six.
Scoring shortly after the opening kickoff, the Tar Heels were
never actually threatened and continued to romp all over the
field, piling up more than 300 yards rushing. The substitutions
were strange to those who had followed Carolina during the first
four games but the scoring was handled by the "veterans." It
was Eddie Teague who broke away for 43 yards and the open-
ing score, and Hosea Rodgers who took George Grimes' lateral
in the second period and ran 32 yards for the second tally, only
to add to this another score later in the game when he smashed
over from the one yard line.
The Gamecocks scored when an attempted pass to Grimes on
the South Carolina 20 was intercepted by Shaw and run back 80
yards for a tally.
KOSKINSKI
Tilt Southern METiiuDibi buv.s
Fitch, Turner, Rohling, Cox.
Grimes
AROUND
END.
221
RDDGERS AND FITCH AND WE WIN
V_^ AROLINA ENTERED the Pennsylvania contest as 3-1 un-
derdogs at game time but smashed their way across snowy ground to a 9-6 upset
of a top-ranking Quaker eleven. After about two-thirds of the first half, Penn
found itself on their five-yard line when Michaels faded back over the goal to
find a receiver. Hesitation proved disastrous as Big Barney Poole crashed into
him, sending the ball careening through the air until it was finally downed by
a Penn man in the end zone for a Tar Heel safety.
Cox
The two points loomed big until the fourth quarter when Kane slipped
away from two Carolina tacklers on a naked reverse and headed down the side-
lines for 80 yards and six points. Just ten plays later, however, Rodgers plunged
through a hole in the left side of the Quaker line and, knocking out All-Ameri-
can Odell, raced .34 yards for the payoff points. Grimes converted and the scor-
ing was complete.
On the defensive honor role, it was Jack Fitch who twice saved the game
for Carolina. Two times Fitch came from behind to catch fleet Joe Kane and
halt what seemed to be sure touchdown jaunts.
Si aim i:s and Rdiu^ki^
Kant
TACKLED
BV Henry
in
MvrixS MAKIs THE LONE TOUCHDOW.-
Jordan
HD, HUM . . . TRY AGAIN NEXT YEAR
J)
e»4_y UKE CALLED IT A SEASON and COpped
the National scoring crown on November 20 when they took
the Tar Heels into camp, 27-6.
Playing for the second time in the same season, the game
drew 26,000 fans, most of whom had expected to see the
strong Carolina team that had upset Pennsylvania the previous
week. Carolina remained strong for about 20 minutes, but after
Buddy Luper made away with a 79-yard touchdown dash near
the end of the first half, the Blue Devils remained in control
of operations.
On the third play of the second half, Luper passed
to Haggerty for the second Duke score, and three
minutes later Balitsaris drove over from the one to
chalk up the third score. Gantt added to his laurels
by catching a pass from Hartley in the fourth to com-
plete Duke's scoring.
Trailing 27-0 in the final stanza, the Tar Heels
marched 56 yards in three plays. Myers threw a 52-
yard aerial to Miller, who caught the ball off the
hands of two opponents, and ran to the four. Myers
then followed with a right tackle smash for the lone
Tar Heel score of the day.
22i
TAKING CANDY FRDM A HAM"
^c
OLLOWING THE DuKE DEBACLE, the Tar Heels went all out to
run a small massacre of their own as they crushed hapless Virginia 54-7, at Norfolk to
end the season. From the start it was Carolina's ball game, the only question remaining
pertained to the final reading of the scoreboard.
Teague threw to Barney Poole for the first touchdown in the closing minutes of the
first period, and seven plays later Rodgers tore off from the Carolina 35 on a touchdown
run through center. Fitch took the ball from McCollum on a reverse five plays after
the second quarter began and ran 18 yards for another score. The remaining minutes of
the first half saw Carolina rack up a safety and the Cavaliers tally a touchdown from
the 20.
Poole provided the day's thrill when he caught a pass from Grimes in the third
period and toppled over on his back into the end zone. In the fourth quarter, with the
Virginia lightweights completely undone, McDaniels, McCollum, and Myers scored.
Grimes making a pair of conversions.
Grimes takes a spill.
224
X
m f If lemonam
ANDREW A. BERSHAK
J.
NDV Bershak, Class of '38,
All-American football end, student, coach,
scholar, and gentleman died at his Pennsylvania
home on November 19, the eve of the tradi-
tional Duke-Carolina football game. Bershak,
who compiled a 90 scholastic average, served as
President of the Athletic Association, and was
active in both the Golden Fleece and Order of
the Grail while a student here, was the person-
ification of the Carolina gentleman. He was,
and his memory will continue to be, a credit to
the University which he served so nobly.
225
BASKETBALL
7
.^ hi; 1944 EDITION OF Tar Heel basketball also felt the war-
time change as transfers from near and far made up the majority of varsity members. The
Pooles, Fitch, and Teague were again noticeable in the sports headlines, but although
their brilliance was added to the individual prowess of such stars as Mock, Creticos,
Altemose, Hayworth, Box, Donnan, and Stevenson, Coach Lange's V-12 charges opened
their wartime schedule with only a fair showing.
After winning the first two service encounters the Tar Heels fell victims to the Cherry
Point Marine team, piloted and lead by ex-Carolina star Bob Rose, and from their first
loss on proceeded to play inconsistent and mediocre ball. Individuals
outplayed themselves in many encounters, but win or lose, the team
proved to be decidedly divided. Actions were far from amalgamated.
"Buster" Stevenson led the Langemen to their initial victory in the
first game of the season against an aged Camp Butner five. Stevenson
tossed in six goals to top the scoring in a slow 46-35 contest. Boyce
Box, transfer from the Southwestern Conference, pressed the leader
hard with a total of ten points.
Lieut. Glenn Price, ex-Duke University cage captain, pitted his
309th Bombers of Columbia Army Air Base against the Phantoms for
their second opposition, and succeeded in entertaining a slim crowd
for the first period. But, the service club fell to the youth of the Tar
Heels in the remaining portion, finally losing 47-35.
Stevenson lends a hand.
226
The following afternoon Rose brought
his Marines to Woollen and the result was
disastrous for the Tar Heels as the final
score read, 41-34. Ex-Big Five stars filled
the roster of the Fort Bragg Reception Cen-
ter team which knocked the Phantoms down
for their second loss in a row. The soldiers
were ahead after an 8-8 deadlock was broken
early in the contest, and succeeded in roll-
ing up a 30-11 score at the half. In the
second period Carolina threatened, but the
Army won out, 52-44.
Carolina then opened up against its first
college rivals of the season in the form of
a spunky little V-12 club from Milligan Col-
lege in Tennessee. Although the Phants crept
out in front three times during the first
stanza, the score read 23-20 in favor of the
visitors at half-time, and never changed.
Final tabulations showed a Milligan victory,
41-34.
The Tar Heels rebounded from the Milli-
gan loss, however, and came a shade near
running away with the court in the Catawba
contest, winning 74-37. The Indians led 6-2
until Carolina began to click, and the score
read 39-17 at the half. Box led the pack
with 18 points, Altemose and Creticos were
followers with eleven and ten respectively.
First Row: Bob Altemose, John Dewell, Soc Creticos, Lou Hayworth, Bernie Mock.
Second Rote: Jim Poole, Buster Stevenson, Larry Feldman, Boyce Box, Oliver Poole,
Third Row: Coach Bill Lange, Dick Donnan, Larry James, Frank Wideman, Sam Stallard
Fourth Roir: Manager Gid Gilliam, Barney Poole, Jack Fitch, Tom Beach, Eddie Teague.
227
Down the floor.
Fort Jackson Reception Center proved the next insurmountable obstacle,
as the soldier club defeated the Langemen, 57-53. It was a close game all
the way, with the score reading 50-50 five minutes before the final whistle.
But the quintet from Goldsboro found the Tar Heels during a Navy "on"
day, and fell, 48-42.
SUMMARY OF BASKETBALL LiP TO DECEMBER
46 — Camp Butner
47 — 309th Bombers .
34 — Cherry Point
44 — Fort Bragg
34 — Milligan .
74 — Catawba .
53 — Fort Jackson
48 — Seymour Johnson
Mock goes after it.
228
BASEBALL
r
^_^arolina's baseball nine helped inaugu-
rate the newly innovated Ration League last spring, by edging out
Duke, Pre-Flight and State for the loop title.
Tackling a 17-game schedule, Coach Bunn Hearn's 1943 edition
of Tar Heel baseball managed to come through the wartime season
with 13 wins against a mere four defeats. Despite continuous
threats from the local draft boards, and the inconveniences suffered
on the road due to transportation difficulties, the squad gave a good
account of itself in winning when victor)' counted the most, and
taking a total of three loop contests apiece from such formidable
opposition as Duke and State.
The season, opening early in April, started with a one-sided
Tar Heel victory of 13-2 over a hapless State crew. Eight days later
the game was moved to Raleigh but the shift only served to lighten
the Tar Heel blow, as State again lost, this time, 5-2.
Carolina took its only win from the 19-(3 Pre-Flight squad, 5-2,
following this fete with another 5-2 total over the Blue Devils. The
Air Corps, however, stopped the Tar Heels, 3-1, upon their next
meeting, after which game Bunn Hearn's men bounced back to
trim Davidson, 15-4.
State, Duke, Burlington and V. M. I. all fell before the heavy
hitting of Hayworth and Johnson and Carmichael's pitching unti
the mid-season winning streak was broken by Washington and
Lee, 5-4.
The remainder of the campaign proved unevent-
ful except for a win over Navy and a split with Duke.
In the middle of May, however, the Tar Heels backed
into the Ration League title when a decisive contest
with Pre-Flight was rained out, and the season records
barely named Carolina the winning outfit.
V^
First Rati: Haigwood, Branch, Horter,
ZiNNMAN, Nicholson, Cox.
Second Row: Thorborn, D. Johnson,
Morris, Black, Hayworth, Pecora,
Lee, Feder.
Third Row: R. Johnson, Shuford, Hus-
SEY, Moore, Coach Hearn, Wal
ters, Sparger, Wideman.
229
TENNIS
ISSING THE UNDEFEATED-BOUND BOAT for the sec-
ond Straight year due to a 5-4 setback at the hands of a northern outfit,
Coach John Kenfield's Southern Conference champions wound up a curtailed
schedule, last spring, by amassing seven wins in eight dual meets.
A 5-4 heartbreaker at Princeton spoiled the hopes of Harriss Everett and
the 1942 edition for a perfect season, and a similar defeat against Navy
kept this year's crew away from the land of milk and honey.
Captain Harold Maass gained an even split in eight singles matches this
year, scoring double wins over rivals Duke and Davidson, while Jack Mark-
ham, ending a brilliant collegiate career, scored wins in five out of eight
contests.
Moyer Hendrix, another Senior, enjoyed one of his best seasons in los-
ing only twice during eight matches. Moyer's only losses were chalked up
on the northern tour, when the fourth seeded star lost close affairs at Army
and Navy.
Larry Cahall, along with Ray Morris, held the squad's individual record
title, sporting an undefeated season until the Georgia Tech meet. Morris
also boasted seven wins out of eight tries, losing only at Annapolis.
Don Peck and Dan Marks rounded out the starring roster, with Marks
handling the No. ? doubles duties, and Peck turning in a record of four
victories in five matches.
Hackney, Cohall, Maass, Morris, Peck, Hendrix.
230
TENNIS
The netmen met their 1943 adversaries with only three
returning lettermen from the previous Southern Conference
champs. The season started at Davidson with a 4-3 win.
The score was far from indicative of the brand of tennis
played and the Tar Heels prepared to head north the next
week certain of championship material.
In a match, undecided until the final doubles score was
made known, the Carolina squad fell before the racquet-
wielders from Navy, 5-4. Bouncing back from the defeat,
however, they completed the remainder of their intersec-
tional contest in grand style, with a 7-2 victory over St.
Johns, and a triumph over Army, 6-3.
After two postponements, the Tar Heels tackled Duke
on home grounds and scored a decisive 8-1 victory. David-
son returned for another try at the Big Five champions, but
fell at the hands of Maass and company, 7-0.
After defeating Georgia Tech in Chapel Hill, Coach
Kenfield's team rounded out the season with a 7-2 win over
Duke, thereby removing all opposition to the retaining of
both Southern Conference and Big Five crowns.
^,j!^.
■¥ i'
Maass takes a low one.
2,31
Lloyd
Co-Captain Mangum
Kelly
Fmt Run: Badham, McKenzie, Shlltz, Kelly, Corpening, Mangum, Ben-
nett, Halsey, Nelson, Hollander.
Second Row: Capel, Nathan, Stevens, Stringfield, Davis, Harper, Byrd,
Lloyd, Counogg, Gaither.
Third Row: Slinn, Clegg, Morgan, Howe, Van Wagoner, Lewis, Burritt,
Smith, Letker.
Fourth Row: Manager Harpy, Johnson, Guinstead, Fichlin, Erwin,
Frazier, McKenzie, Miller, Coach Ranson.
c
TRACK
-arolina's 19-13 EDITION of Outdoor trackmen, under
Coach Dale Ranson, went through conference competition undefeated, and
scored one victory in two non-loop contests.
Climax of the Spring campaign was the Tar Heels' successful defense of
the Southern Conference Outdoor Track title, crowning individual champions
in nine of the fifteen tournament events. Leading the Carolina trackmen
through the season were Co-Captain Mike Mangum, high scorer in each of
the team's four meets; Rich Van Wagoner, who successfully defended his
Conference mile title, which he won initially in 1942; Freshman Julian Mc-
Kenzie, sprint and distance star; Jim Lloyd and Co-Captain Truitt Bennett,
both of whom ended their collegiate years with victories in the pole vault.
SEASON RECORD
Carolina 64-1/3 — Virginia 61-2/3
Carolina 73 — Duke 53
Carolina 17-1/2— Navy 108-1/2
Shultz. Davis
First Row: FoUGHER,
Nelson, Lewis Davis
Belli, Kelly, Evans.
Second Rotr: OsTROWSKl.
McKenzie, Brown,
BvRD, Smith, Sonntag,
Parmenter.
T/j/tii Row: Ranson
(Coach), Galliford,
Raynor, Miller,
McKenzie, Wenkel,
mcmullan.
INDOOR TRACK
c
V_^OACH Ranson marshaled an inexperienced indoor
track squad late in December and prepared all candidates in the many field
and track events for the squad's meets with Duke, Pre-Flight and the In-
vitational Indoor Track meet, held in Woollen Gymnasium, February 12.
Last year's squad edged out a strong Navy team for the championship by
finishing fast in the one-mile relay, and completed an undefeated season.
This year's team worked daily in preparation for meeting some of the East's
strongest track teams in the 60-yard dash, 70-yard high hurdle, 70-yard low
hurdle, 440-yard run, 880-yard run, one-mile run, two-mile run, one-mile
relay, pole vault, high jump, broad jump, and the shot put.
On your mark.
McKenzie times the distance men.
Coach Ranson talks to the boy's.
Not all work.
m
First Row: Proctor, Greenbaum,
Hammond, Crone, Kauffman, Herr.
Second Row: Casey, Stevens,
WiLDMAN, HUSE, WHITNER,
Mallison, Jamerson (Coach).
Third Ron: FOWLER (MANAGER),
Frazier, Secrest, Hexner, Castle,
Vest, Perry.
SWIMMING
V_^ arolina's Blue Dolphins, who won 23 Con-
ference dual meets and four league championship events in a row, were
expected to have another leading contender for Southern and maybe
even intersectional honors in 1944. Coach Dick Jamerson built the '44
edition around ten lettermen, headed by Captain Denny Hammond,
who set a national intercollegiate record in the backstroke two years
ago and who won both the backstroke and the 200-yard free style at
the 1943 Conference meet. The other veterans included Buddy Crone,
Conference and National Junior A.A.U. diving champ; Snooky Proctor,
Southern title holder in the 440, and Ben Ward in the sprints. Ward
was high scorer in the Carolina A.A.U. meet last summer with 18
points but did not return to school until winter quarter, and therefore
missed most of the preliminary training for the '44 edition.
The supporting cast of veterans listed Bill Herr, sprints; Allen
Kauffman and Henri Huse, distances; Ira Abrahamson, breast stroke;
and Bill Stevens, diving. Jim Wildman, from Rutgers, who won the
Carolina A.A.U. breast stroke last summer, was about the only V-12
Medley relay — Mallison, Wildman, Hammond.
234
acquisition who had already achieved stardom. However, the varsity had
two other newcomers who made All-American freshman ratings here
in 1942 but did not come out in '43 because of heavy scholastic loads.
These were Percy Mallison, who ranked No. 1 among the nation's
freshmen in the 100 that year, and George Whitner, who stood No. 2
in the breast stroke. Mallison captured both the 50 and 100 in the
Carolina A.A.U. last summer, while Whitner, who displays a fine
free-style as well as the breast stroke, swept the 200, 400, and 800
in the free-style, and the 300 medley.
This roster gave the Dolphins eight top flight performers and five
supporting lettermen. However, the reserve pickings remained small
and losses by injuries, sickness and studies were the most feared through-
out the season. The team was a little weaker in the back stroke and
diving but proved slightly stronger in the 100, 400, and medley. They
remained somewhat the same in the 50, 220 and breast stroke so the
sum total was about the same as last year.
The 1943 edition maintained not only its four-year monopoly on
Conference swim honors but also defeated Georgia's Southeastern title
holders for the unofficial championship of the South. Their only loss
was to the great Navy club, and that was in the outside competition.
Whitner and Proctor
Coach Jamerson talks to the lettermen.
235
Fint Rote: F. MuSTER, A. SUMMERLIN, D. DUNKELBERGER, J. KOUSTENIS, K. B. StALLINGS, L. S. GiLLlAM, J. WiLHELM.
Second Ron:- D. Davis, J. A. Foss, A. Peterson, C. Afflick, C. Kimsey (Capt.), W. Kraus, M. Miller.
Third Roic: W. MooRE (AssT. Mgr.), M. Parker, L. S. Cohen, R. N. Davis, J. Moll, R. L. Bush (Ass't. Mgr.), J. Flynt (Mgr.),
J. MuRNiCK (Coach).
BOXING
_yvL
LTHOUGH Carolina's 1944 boxing squad appeared young and
inexperienced as the training period opened, Coach Joe Murnick laid plans for a strong
20-man outfit that would offer creditable competition in a tough wartime schedule.
Captain Charlie Kimsey, clever 155-pounder, and Dan Davis, 145, were the only
lettermen returning from the 1943 squad which won one meet out of four but which
held state champions Virginia and The Citadel to 41/2 to 3I/2 scores. Over half the other
members of the '44 representation had no experience in the ring, but they improved
rapidly during stiff drills and added to the enthusiasm and hustling of the outfit by the
time the first contest rolled around.
Other standouts during fall practice were Al Peterson and K. B. Stallings, at 120
pounds; Fred Muster and Don Dunkelberger, at 127; and Jim Koustenis, at 135. The
heavyweight ranks remained uncertain until well into January, but Bob Davis, Jean
Nicholson, and Marshall Parker were ranking candidates for squad posts.
The
BOXING
ROOM.
Coach Joe
Coach Murnick talks to the boys.
yi^i-
Davis and
Coach Quinlan
WRESTLING
V^^ APTAiN Johnny Davis was the
only one of 1 1 monogram winners back from the
1943 wrestling squad, which pushed V.M.I, for the
Conference title 33 to 32, and Coach Quinlan was
forced to build from the ground up. Although the
veteran Tar Heel mentor, who has piloted Carolina
to the Big Five title for five years in a row had the
largest winter sport squad at Chapel Hill, it was also
the greenest and most problematical.
Because of his football duties, "Quinny's" knack
of developing wrestlers was forced to wait until late
December, and he was forced to meet opening com-
petition with inexperienced material. However, the
young candidates waged a nip and tuck scrap for a
starting spot and by the time January 8 arrived, the
wrestlers met Duke on home grounds and on equal
terms.
Standouts on the squad were: W. Y. Nachamson,
121 pounds; John Hallett and C. A. Jacobs, at 128;
J. R. Allison, 136; J. M. Thompson and J. E. Henry,
145 class; W. A. Stuart, J. R. Hendricks, H. Small,
and R. E. Betzig, at 155; Davis weighing 165; A. N.
Marshall, 175; and L. L. Hooper, in the unlimited
class.
First Rou: Ennis. Laramie, Toomey, Davis, Cooney, Hallet,
NORTOX.
Second Row: Elder. Hendersox. Temple, Bobbins, Johxson,
B., Greathouse, Stewart, Johnson, L., Cavanaugh,
Third Row: Ford, Joxes, Karney, Cornogg, Cr.\vex, Saunders,
Simpson, Cross, Thompson.
Ford gets pinned.
237
Ennis, Miller,
BURRITT, McKENZIE
CROSS COUNTRY
V^^ OACH Dale Ranson's 1943 edition of the
cross country team turned in a rather dismal record as they entered
three meets and failed to record one victory. The first trial for the
Tar Heels was at Durham where a strong Pre-Flight outfit dominated
the scene over Duke, Virginia, and Carolina. Coach Ranson's crew ran
third in the initial meet, topping only the Blue Devils.
The second meet was a triangular affair with the Pre-Flighters
once again running away with honors, and the Carolina men ending
up just one jump ahead of the last place Cavaliers.
The "Harriers" ended the season at Annapolis with the Middies
piling up an impressive score and discouraging any Carolina hopes of
a win in 1943.
Julian McKenzie, Hall Patrick, and Jimmy Miller were standout
Tar Heel performers, while Howard Ennis, Dick Hollander, Bill
Halsey, and Clark Burritt were the other team notables.
McKenzie and Miller
Coach Ranson
Evans, McKenzie,
Raynor, Lewis, Miller
238
THE UNIVERSITY CLUB
.^^HE University Club, composed of Junior
Class representatives from men's dormitories, fraternities, and Senior
Class representatives from each girl's dormitory and sorority, has a
close contact with every phase of campus life.
Through its cooperation with the Athletic Association the club seeks
to promote and maintain enthusiasm and good sportsmanship in all
University events by sponsoring pep rallies, improving intra-school
relations, and assisting other organizations in carrying out projects which
will benefit the student body and the University.
Pep rallies, torchlight parades, and bonfires characterize the ac-
tivities of the club for the year. Beginning with the Freshman Smoker
at Graham Memorial, they were climaxed by the bonfire and pep rally
before the Carolina-Duke game.
The club is a service organization and all of its functions are
carried through in the interest of the student body and the University.
The motto of the club, "For the University," is self-explanatory of
the club's purposes.
Members of the club are: Weldon Jordan, Bill Herr, John Stedman,
Penn Marshall, Frank Wideman, Derek Parmenter, Bobby Kirby, Ira
Baity, Bill Greathouse, Emmit McKenzie, John Davis, President; Tom
Dameron, Dorothy Brown, Janet Lindsay, Olivia Anne Smith, Jean
Lockridge, Peggy Mosely, Ann Foster, Frances Bedell, Sam Henderson,
Dick Bradshaw, Buddy Crone, John Morgan, Bob Covington, Jack
Ellis, Bill Story, Bill Gaither, Jet? Bynum, and Bob Elliot.
239
Dick Jamerson — Known as the
MEANEST MAN IN WOOLLEN GyM
AND THE BEST DAMN SWIMMING
COACH IN THE COUNTRY.
AROUND THE
CROWDED GYM
.^.^A/ N INFLUX OF NaV^- AND MARINE corps V-12 Students,
running Carolina's enrollment to heights never before numerically reached, have
helped to make Woollen gymnasium one of the busiest activities on the campus.
From all over the country last July came ex-college athletes and high school
boys with sports studded careers as the Navy called in its reserve youngsters
for an extensive officers' training school.
With the super influx of service men, came the rigorous job of whipping
them into shape physically as well as mentally for the big and tough job which
lies ahead. Chief specialists, former collegians and professional sportsters with
FOR THE CAUSE OF HEALTH.
240
Co-Intramural
Directors
James and Rabb.
big names, were ordered to Chapel Hill to help conduct the program. Anc
then there was the omnipresent Carolina physical education staff to lend a hand,
called on more frequently during the last few months than ever before.
Strength test to see just what every military stu-
dent is capable of doing began the Woollen endurance
test. Already in constant use with the Pre-Flight and
civilian students, the V-12 contingency taxed the local
facilities, the most complete facilities in the South.
241
. . WITH INTRAMURALS
Much organization and planning has led to a well balanced physical training
program, currently speaking, and Woollen is holding its own.
With the conclusion of the strength tests, consisting of five exasperating exer-
cises tabbed by some one as: pull-ups, squat jumps, squat thrusts, set-ups, and
push-ups, the regular daily physical training classes began. With this came a
dreaded military track course designed to whip service personnel into conditions
are else send them back home to mama as incapable. Wrestling, boxing, basketball,
ootball, and swimming became a must with as much compulsory as a physics lab.
Swimming grew to be the killjoy of every V-12, N.R.O.T.C., and Marine as
the water grew colder and colder in the outdoor pool and instructors tended to
drive energy output beyond the so-called line of reason. A move to the indoor
pool finally became unavoidable, maybe the instructors were getting cold, but
swimming remained in disfavor by the whole of the military contingency.
FDR SOME .
An obstacle course first used entirely by the Pre-Flight
trainees, became a part of the regular Navy physical train-
ing. Cross countr)' and tough road work all served in the
whipping process.
Early season footballers were forced to use Woollen on
rainy days and more than 100 men aspired for first string
positions when Coach Tom Young yelled for candidates
early in October. This amalgamated conglomeration of ex-
stars had to be cut in twain and a Jay-Vee, the first squad
of its kind in recent Carolina history, was formed. The
Tar Heels played a spasmodic season, losing two settoes
to Duke, precedent setting to say the least.
Basketball took its fling with the wartime schedule
hinging primarily on service team competition. Coach Bill
Lange was greeted with 100 men, as was the football
coaches, and opened the season against Camp Butner on
December 1, winning without mishap. And a good season
seemed destined.
But then there was the intramural program, a program
expanded to gigantic heights with more persons interested
in interhouse competition than ever before.
^^
24,1
''^ ^.^u^
. AND PHYS ED
Civilian domination of intramurals dropped like a rock
when July and the student influx rolled around. Back in
the spring it had been a bitter fight to see who would take
the intramural trophies and the winners and trophy bearers
were the Phi Gamma Delta and the N. R. O. T. C. unit.
244
Came |uly and the military and one of the largest ot
programs was drawn up with a record number of house
entries. The winners in the new program as inaugurated
since the military arrived follows;
Softball: Blitz Bombers (Army Meterology Unit).
Speedball: Vultures (V-12 Flagler Hall).
Badminton: Dreadnaughts
(N.R.O.T.C. won by Mark Pope).
Water Goal: Bainbridge Aces (N.R.O.T.C).
Tennis: Longhorns (John Paul Jones Hall V-12).
Tag Football: Bainbridge Aces (N.R.O.T.C).
Boxing: Pettigrew Dormitory (Marines).
Sports Carnival Night: Vultures (Flagler Hall).
FOR ALL
245
Firs! Row: LiNDSEV, J.; Pou, V.; HoDGES, A,; MouKF, J.; BciOTH, B.; HliNT, T ; Flanacan, K.
Second Row: IzEN, L. ; Armbruster, K.; Kflley, P.; Hyde, H.; Brown, M. A.; Camp. H. M.; Schmue, D.
SuRLES, N.; King, C.
Ann Hodges,
President W .A.A.
WOMEN'S ATHLETICS^.
THE NEW GYM
7
yHE Women's Athletic Association did not reach Its prime
until 193-i, when the iirst W.A.A. Council was formed, composed of all University coeds.
Under the guidance of Mrs. Gladys Beard, Miss Helen Hyde, Miss Ruth Franck,
and Miss Phyllis Kelley, Instructors, and the President, Ann Hodges, the interest this
past year in woman's athletics has been promoted on the campus.
Despite the handicap of having no intramural field, the W.A.A. Council has been responsible for turning out a very
successful program. Using Kenan Stadium for a makeshift field, the council held intramural tournaments in hockey and
soccer. Spencer dormitory won over Chi Omega in the Hockey finals and walked away with the winner's plaque.
Soccer, a new sport at Carolina this year, was quite a success as far as interest was concerned. Alderman dorm played
Alpha Delta Pi in the finals, tying the tournament up with a ()-() tie.
Volley ball brought out many girls to the old tennis courts, despite biting
cold weather. Alph Delta Pi won the plaque from the Delt to lead the sorority
league, while Alderman led the dormitory division.
Tennis was carried on despite bad weather, and after a late start, Shirley
Dickinson and Whit Parrish reached the finals in the tournament and tied
for league honors.
Winter quarter brought intramural basketball and badminton into the spot-
light along with a Telegraphic meet in swimming. Neighboring colleges were
invited to the Hill for a Play Day in basketball at the end of the season. Before
exams, the council presented more exhibition games to the student body in a
Demonstration Night. The W.A.A. room was the final scene of Demonstration
Night, where tournament winners and varsities were announced and awards
presented.
247
The all-star hockey team, selected from the dormitor}' and
sorority league, journeyed at the end of the season to Duke
and tied the Durham team. Members of the team included:
Grace Bre%vster, Sue Brubaker, Allie Bell, Ruth Brosius, Lor-
raine Oldham, Jean Parker, [anet Lindsey, Mickey Gulick,
Kitty Flanagan, Shirley Dickinson, Nananne Porcher, |ane
Foster, Mary Bauman, Bunny Turner, and Doris Newell.
A soccer all-star team picked at the end ot the season con-
sisted of: Jean Parker, Harriett Weaver, Nananne Porcher,
Betsy Dickson, Betty Chase, Ann Hodges, Lorraine Oldham,
Helen Marie Camp, Janet Lindsey, Nancy Jane King, Mary
Sue Griffin, Mary Fulton, Margaret Woodhouse, Betty Majette,
and Mary Jane Lloyd.
All-star field hockey te.^m.
248
'any erstwhilh traditions of
Carolina have gone to war, but the annual Junior-
Senior dance set is not one of them. Yet, the prec-
edent setting mid-season graduation of Navy Seniors
November 20, necessitated earlier festivities than in
former years.
It was for that reason that the frolics were slated
the week-end of November 15 and 16, the same week-
end that Carolina students returned from a heart-
breaking football loss to Durham's Duke Devils.
But it was just before the opening dance on Fri-
day evening when cheering crowds commanded Chapel
Hill streets in mad celebration of the coming grid
fracas. It was also on that same evening that students
Garden Hammond
Newsome Stevens
Morgan
Turner
J U N I D R - S E N
poured into Woollen gymnasium for an experimental
sports carnival and general indoor fun.
Climaxing the entertainment of the day was the
dance itself, with Hurst Hatch and his orchestra
furnishing the music. Hatch's orchestra carried with
great popularity throughout the program, pleasing a
capacity crowd with swing and sweet as the sug-
gestions desired.
Into the wee hours of the morning, 2:00 A. M.
exactly for the Senior coeds — just a memory now that
earlier hours for "all-in" have gone into effect — the
blissful occasion sped by.
Came Saturday afternoon, a deserted Carolina cam-
pus, because the entire population of the village made
one grand exodus to Durham, waited hopefully for
returning cheers of victory which did not return. But
the crowd did return, half-happy even in defeat be-
cause the final night of the Junior-Senior week-end
was still in store.
Coeds and imports intermingled with military and
civilian students, the heterogeneous crowd being in-
cessantly dominated by uniformed figures, and the
night danced away. Midnight came as it did upon Cin-
derella and Junior-Seniors 1943 was something of the
past.
Bob Burleigh
Twelve young ladies of much attraction served as
sponsors: Miss Ann Geohegan, Raleigh, with S. M.
White, Raleigh, Chairman of the Junior Dance Com-
mittee; Miss Fay Smithdeal, Winston-Salem, with
Hugh Cox, Camden, S. C, Chairman of the Senior
Dance Committee; Miss Patricia Fugle, Baldwin, N. Y., with Bob
Burleigh, Baldwin, N. Y,, President of the Senior Class; Miss Tatty
Shipp, Atlanta, Ga., with Ralph Strayhorn, Durham, President of the
Junior Class; Miss Aleene Broghill, Lenoir, with Bill Stevens, Lenoir,
Treasurer of the Junior Class; Miss Maurine Coley, Atlanta, Ga., with
Grady Morgan, Chairman of the Finance Committee of the Senior
Class; Miss Anne Strause, Richmond, Va., Secretary of the Senior Class,
who had as her escort Ensign Calvin Schwartz; Miss Florence Wil-
liams, Washington, with Denman Hammond, Atlanta, Ga., Senior
Representative to the Student Council; Miss Barbara Brasington, Co-
I D R DANCES
lumbia, S. C, with Lane Stokes, Norfolk, Va., Vice-President of the
Junior Class ; Miss Eugenia Bisset, Harrodsburg, Ky., with Turk New-
some, Winton, Chairman of the Senior Class Executive Committee;
and Miss Mary Louise Huse, Chapel Hill, Chairman of the Senior
Week Committee.
Afiss P.\TRiciA Fugle
Miis Bkaslngton
Miss Hollowell
Miss Bkovhill
Miss Smithdeal
Miss Strause
Miss Geoghegan
Miss Williams
251,
UNIVERSITY
DANCE COMMITTEE
J)
«;,^_yANCES MA"!' NOT have been as lavish
as in former years, but under the University Dance Committee
Carolina continued the affairs for which she is so famous.
The now-military committee gave Saturday night pleasure to
thousands of students of all types and uniforms.
Three dances were sponsored by the Grail. One packed
Woollen Gymnasium with the Duke week-end crowd while
eight Beauty Queens were chosen. There were numerous
pledge dances, both sorority and fraternity. The Junior-Senior
dances came in the fall so that departing Seniors could attend.
Nell Barefoot entertained V-12s and others with her summer
school dances. Although not originally under the Dance Com-
mittee, her group is now. Bob Burleigh sponsored Friday night
shows at Graham Memorial. All in all there were more dances
than ever at Carolina.
Dance expenditures are limited, the German Club is
frozen, but dances can still be fun as was shown by the in-
creased attendance, although formals for the boys were largely
replaced by uniforms.
The Dance Committee has done excellent work in acting
as hosts and governing the dances under the difficult circum-
stances. They are now working to keep Carolina dances up
to their old standards. Then after the war, when students
feel free to enjoy themselves, dances will be as they were
before, with name bands and the excitement of a "big" week-
end.
Officers: George Whitner, Chairman; Meredith |ones,
Secretary.
Bailey
Bi UK K
Black, S.
Fitch
H.\icii
Hayworth
Ienderson
Johnston
Mackie
Morris
Russell
Spenxer
Stevens
Thompson
WlDEMAN
White
4iiiiA
George Whitner, Ch.tnmcin
Meredith Jones, Secretary
THE BEAUTY DANCE
/his "I'tAR A ihxIQUlz beauty" dance,
the first presented at Carolina, was held by the Grail and
sponsored by the Yacketv Yack. on the week-end of the
second Duke game to determine the eight most beautiful coeds
on the campus for the beauty section of the annual.
Thirty-two girls were nominated to sponsor campus or-
ganizations, sororities, fraternities, and girls' dormitories and
the eight queens were selected by impartial faculty judges
J. C. Sitterson, Hugh T. Lefier, Ervin P. Hexner, Roland B.
Parker, George C. Taylor, and James G. Walls.
During the dance, the 52 girls were presented to the audi-
ence where final judgment was made by the judges. At the
end of the dance, the eight beauty queens were announced.
They are presented in the YAc:Km"i' Yack on the following
pages.
J-^tafr ^L
auonlei
Miss Sara Yokley
Miss Jeanne Parry
Miss Marion Van Trine
Miss Anne Strauh
2.S.S
vliss Jeanne .^fjiich
SpnnsDred by Alpha Tan GmRqa
yliii /jane -^Aruten
fjpnn.sorRil by Alpba Dfiltn Pi
vliM C^leanor Carrou
Spniisored In Hi BhIh Phi
Spniisured by Pi Beta Phi
^l
////■jj Ujoroikij ^Mawtlioni
.Sponsored by Delta Kappa Epsilnii
Wis. WScent J4oJ,
HpnnsurHd by Carolina Independent Coeds Assiieiati
Win Betti^ Waiette
SponsDred by Phi Delta Theta
'^^
r/r'jj ^u ^11 I lewsome
Sponsored by Kappa Sigma
INDEX
Page
Activities 121
Administration 10
Alumni Association 16
Athletics —
Baseball 229
Basketball 226
Bershak Memorial 22 5
Boxing 236
Cheerleaders 212
Cross Country 238
Football 214
Indoor Track 233
Intramural Sports 240
Swimming 234
Tennis 230
Track 232
Wrestling 237
Band 142
Beauty Section 253
Bershak Memorial 225
•C.I.C.A 153
Carolina Magazine 136
Carolina Playmakers 145
• Carolina Political Union 154
Cheerleaders 212
Chi Delta Phi 146
Classes 43
Dance Section 249
Debate Council 130
Dedication 8
Dialectic Senate .156
Foreign Professors 14
Forward Carolina 5
Fraternities —
Social 178
Honorary 202
Freshman Class 98
Freshman Cabinet 158
Gimghoul 209
Girls' Dormitories 159
Glee Club, Men 158
Women 150
Golden Fleece 206
Gorgon's Head 210
Page
Graham Memorial Directors 146
Grail 208
Hillel Foundation 144
House Privileges Board 152
Interfraternity Council 176
International Relations Club 148
Intramurals 240
Junior Class 80
Kappa Epsilon 147
Law School 116
Legislature 126
Medical School 114
Naval R.O.T.C 32
Other Services 38
Pan-Hellenic Council 164
Pharmacy School 108
Pharmacy Senate 155
Phi Assembly 157
Phi Beta Kappa 202
Phi Mu Alpha 205
Publications Union Board 133
Rho Chi 147
Senior Class 47
Sophomore Class 92
Sororities 166
Sound and Fury 143
Student Government, Men 122
Women 124
Tar Heel 138
Tau Kappa Alpha 204
Town Girl.s' Association 149
Trustees 16
LIniversity Day 42
University Club 239
University Dance Committee 252
V-12 17
■Valkyries 207
Views 117
Women's Athletic Association 247
Women's Interdormitory Council 128
Yackety Yack 134
Y.M.C.A 140
Y.W.C.A 151
258
HESTERFIEIO
On every front tve covered... with
OUR BOYS AND OUR ALLIES, J:HESTERFIELD
IS ALWAYS A FAVORITE
®^i^.^V
«*?*«*><s-
Chesterfields are milder and better-tasting for the best
of reasons. . .they're made of the world's best cigarette
tobaccos — but what's more . . . Chesterfield combines
these choice tobaccos in a can't-be-copied blend that
gives smokers what they want. That's why your Chester-
fields really Satisfy. They're fhe favorite of millions.
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
NX
Uklnkina ot Ujoii"
fjAY
KYSER
1^
260
THIRST ASKS NOTHING MORE
It's natural to get thirsty. So it's natural to pause at the familiar
red cooler for an ice-cold bottle of Coca-Cola— the perfect answer to
thirst. Enjoy one now.
Bottled by Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Company S^^
mm.
DURHAM'S BEST STORE
. . Since 1885 , ,
The Shopping Center
BELh-LEGGETT CO.
Durham's Shopping Center
269
1^
1
ZiLe LASSITER PRESS Jnc.
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA
. jcltooi ^-^
l-^ubiicationd
PRinURS OF THE 1944 YflCKETY YflCK
1^
-' -/J
270