■
ft Via
7
/
1 ; v
BSH 1
m
X
€&e Libtarp
ottpe
QJnitietsitp of H3ortb Carolina
Collection of jRotti) Caroliniana
^El)i0 book teas prcsnuco
vxpy
A.W\S
1
| JfcW^'y^^.
\^48 c.3
^
&*
<^
}***
<**""
***?
€$■
0(j/vr&-
-^^Cfe
^
tf^ri*- ^ — <&
i&.
'MhU'. : *%x
%
p*1
(hi^mjity. o/,Aor^ hawlmn at %$af?ef f&ok /O1/^
'Jlr
#
NIVERSITY OF N C AT CHAPEL HIL
iiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiii
00016885122
*s-
^
&,W
wz
^
^
^
^
v^
iV^!
^
BE
fel^
A^^I^
This book may be kept out one month unless a recall
JR; notice is sent to you. It must be brought to the North
Carolina Collection (in Wilson Library) for renewal.
§| WOV-0-3M990
Form No A-369
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
http://www.archive.org/details/yacketyyackseria1948univ
HHROLD BURSLEY
RUTH [im
GERE JOHimOIH
dick i; ii k ii ii n
in
1»
S
f
VSv ■'
h
Today we climb the steps of South Building and know that
tomorrow these steps, worn by future processions of Tar
Heel students, will continue to shine radiant in their
service. Yesterday a crude construction, now redecorated,
in years to come perhaps something new. this castle of
administration stands a symbol of our growth — of the
expansion taking place here, around us and within. From
the basic elements, students, faculty, the Hill itself, evolves
a growing body of educated citizens, serving teachers, ami
a University, building and re-building.
&am& im taw -Zo-chA , foot
auk and abWM
t
Q
IMMHMmMHfeNMaMi
Pfc I/ail, /Ut4r(/ OKW, CUM4U/S, cuwt
ruW4. . . „ fhom cVtukmatdn, w
Jew ffjUl4 Ama- u&tft, titakci-,
1ke<(ton6
tut /Uuw
at ' wmw), touti,,
%
Ou/l C&W/JXJ culv£c£ Ittfo ~tfti<
k
^
i<h/o eA
iA Off et&LOC MJU> £4t>OteM6&
w- addition/, ellma^a6 ^ veauu
fw*f, £v&is frtaaHtf
w
//
Now a legend to the students at Carolina, Archibald Henderson, to whom this hook is
dedicated, symbolizes over a period of fifty years' service the energy of youth he worked
with, the spirit of broad intellectual endeavor, the scope of many varied interests, the
sincere desire to understand, interpret and improve life and thought of his times.
To attempt to telescope the achievement of a life so full as his in a few words of dedi-
cation is as impossible as catching all the colors of a sunlit prism. Called "the most ver-
satile scholar of America," Dr. Henderson's career is a shining example of a marvelously
full and fruitful life. His retirement last summer marked the end of his formal career of
teaching mathematics at the University of North Carolina. Throughout his rise to world
fame and prestige, Mr. Henderson remained foremost loyal to his Old North State.
His state and the students of his state appreciate him. This book is gratefully dedi-
cated to Dr. Henderson, a man who "can teach mathematics as a profession ; interpret
and evaluate the main currents of thought of his time; write a definitive biography of a
great dramatist ; explain Einstein's theory of relativity ; encourage a whole region to ful-
fill its cultural capabilities; write a history of his state; and clear up any questions anyone
might want to ask about the Vonstructability of Fermagoric triangles' ". To such a man
we dedicate the 1948 Yackely Yack.
m.
^
\
fe
-^
tt~
^i
i
in
,->\
f *-f~---*
• •*#■
%i&'£
Through the years the dignity of the old joins
value with improvement of the new, and the con-
tinued construction and reconstruction marks the
trend of all of Carolina. Alumni Hall stands tall
and strong, as a hulwark amidst the shovels and
the timbers of something new going up.
//
Wild horses couldn't hold down the Carolina process. Youth and strength and vibrancy
that means being worn down and always bouncing back for more enables this myth of
growth to come true. Person Hall, its ivy covered brick and its flagstone patio, point to the
arts, another direction in which to grow.
*.,-''
\
&**? *-
**%**
: * -
!>> .^.
War''-
ill
*SJ&
%j&;
hi: '■>
*j|
c ,
■\
1 1
1 1
t
— - t -
1
ffiffl
"^F-
//
"Meet you after the game" . . . "Hark
the Sound" . . . fat, green hoxwoods, and
the Morehead Patterson Bell Tower
stands serene and steady, deep in the
pines of Davie woods.
THE OLD
Seen from ihe new brick
walk that borders the aca-
demic quadrangles, what
used to be the Gymna-
sium and now houses the
struggling journalists, re-
minds us of the changes
that come . . . clay paths
to brick walks, swimming
pools to typewriters.
...THE flEW
In actuality little more
now than a hole in the
ground, a few foundation
walls, and a cornerstone,
we look with hope toward
the new field of learning
and growth to be found
with the completion in
1949 of the Morehead
Planatarium.
//
Shown here is the essence of our hope. The inevitahle passage of time . . . from dawn
of college days till dark, from start of life to finish. We chart our time, our change, our
growth, all three intangihle. Through the trees shines the light behind revolving hands
and tiny wheels that go and go and go with endless continuity.
sxi
m
III
1 J 1
1 1 H
K H ' 1
■l J
Hi ! Bl 1
1 ■ *B il
He 11
■ ; ■ j
1 •HI *l
1 1 <fl
:*h!
//
From days of founder Davie when the Old Well was just a plaee to drink, till now, the
evolution has heen slow and sure, hut no matter how the eloek strikes and moves on, this
center of the campus will always testify that all is well.
Toward light, toward liberty, we build
and we elimb a flight of steps; we
scale the tower of books; and move
upward through the collection of
knowledge from the ancients to the
new. We discover yellowed pages of
old writings sharing the shelf with
new ideas, new facts, new people to
meet, to learn, and to eventually
know.
R
r^tf
1
,:>nS
Convocations, concerts, grades, pep rallies, flu shots, all remind us of Memorial
Hall . . . the hig open auditorium where you see all your friends and wish the
seats would he reconstructed with accent on comfort instead of callouses.
A poplar tree that isn't of
the poplar specie, the
tall and leaning Davie
Poplar represents all the
forest and the foliage that
means Chapel College, no
matter what people,
huildings, or events come
and go.
SYfTIBOLOF SPIRIT
Lonely and beautiful in its emptiness, becalmed Kenan Stadium
curves gracefully around the straight, green field, and quietly
awaits the return of cheering crowds and fighting fullbacks . . .
but maybe Kenan means more than just a game ... it means a
spirit, a summer night, and a broad expanse of stars to match the
silent stands.
- ■
-I . .
Dr. Frank P. Graham
"Dr. Frank
1 1
From whither his directions come, Prank Graham's leadership of the
Greater University of North Carolina stands strong and straight and
clean like the girders of a great colosseum or a huge arena that will
house the present and future generation of Tar Heel students in their
struggles through the cycles of building and rebuilding for life and
youth and freedom.
Though necessity may call our president to far corners of the
globe, and away from his desk in South Building, a symbol of liberal,
honest democratic belief necessarily remains to grow and expand itself
throughout the structure of the University. Its work here is to build . . .
to build people, to build a nation, to build a world. . . . Cornerstones
of education and broad experience cannot be overlooked. The steady
hand of a simple, expert architect is vital to a solid, durable result.
This year has been a strenuous one with many excavations, bricks
added to bricks, strong foundations, and then, new blueprints; but Dr.
Frank continues as the eloquent engineer who stands to survey and
guide our work: the process of construction.
Though the load of managing a University
rests heavily on the shoulders of Chancellor
R. B. House, our chief administrator
always has a smile and a tune on the har-
monica for students and faculty. Problems
of all types and sizes occur daily, but in-
sight and appreciation of values enable Mr.
House to endeavor steadily for improve-
ment of the old and discovery of new fields
of education and growth.
... From
Chancellor
Robert B. House
Dean Ernest L. Mackie
>outh Building
Dean Ernest L. ITIackie
As Dean of Students. Dean E. L. Mackie has completed another full and fruitful
year symbolizing mutual faculty-student concern for the progress of the University
and the people whom it serves. His advisorv positions in many campus organizations
do much to channel student time and energy in the right directions.
Dean Katherine K. Carmichael
From her offices to the English classroom, Dean of Women Katherine K. Car-
michaels influence and leadership are felt as living parts of the life of UNC students,
the coeds in particular. The friendly, informal charm of Miss Carmichael and her
co-workers helps make a valuable college experience more and more inviting to
women students.
Dean Fred H. Weaver
A quiet "good morning", a twinkle in his eye. and a serious determination to
see a job through are some of the characteristics of Dean of Men Fred Weaver. All
Carolina men feel the impact of Dean Weavers work for the solution of campus prob-
lems of all kinds, from food and housing on down.
Dean Katherine K. Carmichael
Dean Fred H. Weaver
10 II 12 I
W. S. Wells
Dean of Arts anil Sciences
D. D. Carroll
Dean of Commerce School
DERIIS
Long before registration day and the actual start of classes, the admin-
istrative officials spend many hours planning class schedules and the
general academic agenda for the student body. They find the needs of
every student and attempt to meet those educational demands. The
welfare of each and everv student at the llniversitv of North Carolina
W. W. Pierson
Dean of (irailuatp School
M. L. Jacobs
Dean of Pharmacy School
C. P. Spruill
Dean of General College
W. R. Berryhill
Dean of Medical School
is their foremost desire. Their offices are swarmed six days a week by
students . . . men and women who seek answers to many problems of
varying nature. In this new age of reconstruction and building, the
Deans continue their role of service to the Carolina student and to the
I'niversitv of North Carolina.
u. n. c.
R. H. Wettach
Dean of Late School
Susan G. Akers
Dean of Library Science
For Guidance, Know
The task of a University is education. The joh of education is to
teach. What part of a University are its teachers? They are half of the
two-part process of teaching and learning. They are the resources, the
guides, the directors of the growth and development of the student.
They are the searchers of new knowledge. They are the prime examples
of educated man : the goal of our student community.
And where in a yearbook is the place for the faculty? The Uni-
versity of North Carolina teaching staff of four hundred plus cannot
he pictured here. Suffice it to include administrative and college heads
. . . hut add a word of thanks.
From the Instructors to the full Professors. Carolina faculty mem-
bers serve the students with their time, their knowledge, and their in-
terest.
;dge and Growth
Intimate acquaintance and friendship between the huge student
body and the overworked faculty are impossible, but we are proud that
Carolina has not fallen completely into the depths of cold dishing out
of assignments, lectures, and quiz questions. There are still "coffee
hours", some corny jokes, and a greeting on Franklin Street. \5 <* arc
proud of the mutual respect of students and faculty. Our honor system.
our scholarly tradition of high standards, and our Carolina spirit
makes the process of education a little more pleasant to both under-
paid teachers and harassed students.
In the pictures on this page several phases of academic life are
featured, but. though we laugh at ourselves, our socializing in the ^ .
and our crossword puzzles, we can be serious, and we sincerely offer
our thanks to the faculty and all University employees for a job well
done.
HJQ
GOVERNOR R. GREGG CHERRY
President px-offieio of the Ronril of Trustee*
Board of "rustees
This year the bi-annual trip of the Visiting Committee of the Board to the
University stood out as a real chanee for students to air their views and
problems to the authorities, and to hear the opinions of representative
trustees. After a series of hearings and meetings, students, faeulty. and
trustees were able to reaeh a fuller understanding of eaeh other and Caro-
lina itself.
The Board of Trustees, under the General Assembly, has full power
over the affairs of the University of North Carolina. A member is elected to
the Board from eaeh country in the state for eight-year terms which are so
staggered that one-fourth of the number is elected every two years. An
Executive Committtee is authorized to act between meetings as the Board's
general agent.
Rlumni Rssociation
The variety of jobs performed by the Carolina Alumni Association en-
larges as the University it represents grows in size and scope. From the
Central Office of the Association, located in the Carolina Inn. a far reach-
ing program is extended across the state and the nation to unite more than
37.500 graduates and former students in an association which dates back
to 1843. The group includes members of classes from 1878 to 1948.
Working through this Central Office, local alumni clubs, permanently
organized classes, a General Assembly, and the official magazine. "The
Alumni Review''", the Association maintains up-to-date records of all alum-
ni, and promotes interest in current activities of the University.
Any graduate or former student is eligible for membership in the As-
sociation. General in its service to the University and personal in its re-
lationship to the alumni, tbe Alumni Association links all parts of Alma
Mater.
Samuel J. Ervin. Jr.
President
J. Maryon Saunders
Secretary
6
F. C. Shepard
FOSTERinG
Guiding the veteran through post war prohlems
and Psychology DOCTOR F. CARLYLE SHEPARD
can list his friends hy the thousands.
Stalwart of the Puhlications Union Board, train-
ing minds in economics PROFESSOR J. M. LEAR
strives for perfection.
Modern Literature comes to life at Carolina in
the minds of the students sitting at the feet of
DOCTOR LYMAN COTTEN.
In South American politics or conversational
Spanish DOCTOR FEDERICO G. GIL hrings the
continental touch to Chapel Hill.
With graciousness and charm DEAN
GERALDINE FOSTER leads aspirants of the Col-
lege of Arts and Sciences towards their AB's.
A Botanist's Philosophy of life is engulfed in the
emhryo and the giant Oak hy DOCTOR EARL H.
NEWCOMER.
E. H. Newcomer
William S. INewmai
DUCflTIOn
By bringing democracy and culture to the class-
room DOCTOR WILLIAM S. NEWMAN presents
music that is enjoyable to all.
Studying French or Education can be interesting
when being guided by PROFESSOR HUGO GIDUZ.
DOCTOR J. W. LASLEY, knowing the thoughts
of students from his son, proves the maxum.
Mathematics can be fun.
Aristocratically DOCTOR CLEMENS SOMMER
presents the lure of the Metropolitan Museum of
Art to students entering Pearson Hall.
The touch of Broadway, the glamour of Holly-
wood can be found on campus in the versatile
Director of the Communications Center, MR. EARL
WYNN.
History of Sixteenth Century Europe has humor
claims DOCTOR M. B. GARRETT, and all his
students heartily agree.
Hugo Giduz
f
**J
Student
Government
TOM ELLER
President
JACK FOLGER
Vice-President
SAM DANIELS
Secretary-Treasurer
It has been the object of student officers, acting with the knowledge
that out of something good can eome something great, to improve and en-
large upon the functions of Student Government. Student control of the
social life, puhlications, and the many student organizations make our
system one which every student learns hy using. Acceptance and utilization
of full student government, respecting the rights and needs of all, has ob-
tained for us a student government which is rarely equaled.
Vlajor functions of Student Government, which operates through the
utilization of two codes — the Campus (lode and the Honor Code, have in-
eluded orientation of entering students, making the students conscious of
all phases of their government, expenditure of student fees, and the hear-
ing of reported violations of the Honor System. We look forward to hetter
orientation, not only for new students hut for all who are a part of govern-
ment here at Carolina.
The many problems that face the student body in the course of their college
life are sometimes effectively and sometimes ineffectively dealt with by the
student officers. These officers are chosen in elec-
tions held twice a year, one of which is in the fall,
and the other in the spring. The largest of the two,
the spring elections, carries with it all the excite-
ment and ballyhoo of national elections. At this
time the majority of the student leaders, who will
decide the policies of university life and govern-
ment, are chosen.
Quon&et hut problem
Voting
Executive Branch
The executive branch of student government is composed of the president of the student body to-
gether with the heads of the various departments, committees, hoards which are deemed necessary by
the constitution, and such other subsidiary bodies which may be necessary and proper to aid the presi-
dent in the performance of his duty. All committees heads are appointed by the president and directly re-
sponsible to him.
Among the groups which are made mandatory by the constitution are the Elections Board which
holds and regulates all elections; the Dance Committee whose place it is to act as a regulatory and quasi
judicial body, and through whom all final permission must be obtained before dances are held; the Stu-
dent Entertainment Committee which plans and maintains a full-time entertainment program on the cam-
pus; and the House Privileges Board which reviews all rules and regulations concerning coed visiting
privileges and passes them on to the Interfraternity Council for enforcement. The constitution also pro-
vides for an orientation committee whose duty it is "to devise and conduct an adequate program of
orientation for all entering students.'"
The many financial problems involved in student government are solved by the Budget Committee
and the Student Audit Board. Both groups are composed of students who have successfully passed ac-
counting courses.
A unique and interesting addition to the Executive branch is the Coalition Advisory Council which
brings all the diverse opinions of the students into one group so that they may combine their efforts and
suppress their differences in the interest of a more effective student government.
A valuable aide to the president is the attorney-general who is the president's personal advisor.
The many letters of inquiry which the executive offices handles daily serve as proof of the fact that
student government on the Carolina campus is a living organ in practice as well as theory.
Seated: .41 Winn, Sam Daniels. Tom Eller.
Standing: Charles Blackburn. Jack Buuraem. Monroe Landreth.
Seated: Margaret McWilliams, Betsy Aim Barbee, Nan Guy, Nina DeBerry. Standing: Bob
Kirby. Jim Paschal, Bob Broughlon. Jim Castleberry, Al Lowenstein.
Student Council
Standing at the top of Carolina's judicial ladder is its
Student Council, the group of student-elected members who
are the supreme court of campus affairs. To the council come
cases of constitutional interpretation and appeals from the
men's and women's honor councils.
The Council is comprised of nine memhers, three from
the male student hody, three from the coed student body and
three memhers from the campus at large. A requirement of
completion of at least one academic year at the University is
demanded of all memhers.
During the past year the Council has been the battle-
ground of several major campus issues. Biggest of the big
and the one to draw the greatest share of the college spotlight
was the Interfraternity Council decision whereby the validity
of the House Privileges Board's rules and ruling were upheld
by the Council after several elongated and furiously argued
sessions.
The recent history of the Council is similiarly battlescar-
red. Last year saw an attempt to remove the appelate power
of the council, but such an action was defeated by the student
body in the spring elections and the powers of the Council
remained as originally stated in the Constitution.
BOBEBT BBOIGHTON
President
Seated: Vivian Parks. William K. Tate, Charles Lambeth. Standing: Michael Carr. Martv
Carmichael, Diek Walker, South Trimble. Oliver Fleming. Walt Tallev.
ITIen's Council
The Men's Council is a judicial body of the Carolina stu-
dent government whose duty is to enforce the Honor Code,
covering cases of cheating, stealing, and lying, and the Cam-
pus Code, which regards gentlemanly conduct. Violators of
the Honor and Campus Codes are hrought hefore the Council
where their cases are heard and corresponding disciplinary
measures taken.
In addition to its strictly judicial activities the Council
undertakes several projects each year which it feels are in
need of attention. These projects hetter acquaint the student
hody with policies which the Council feels should he carried
out in order that Student Government might function at its
hest. The following projects were adopted for this year:
1. The restoration of Student Government to its pre-war
level.
2. Proper orientation of all new students on entering the
University.
3. Amending Student Government Constitution so as to
allow only one student group for trials with appeal being
made to a faculty group instead of another student group.
4. Complete abstention of students from vandalism.
This year's officers were: William K. Tate, Chairman;
Vivian A. Parks, Vice-Chairman; and Charles F. Lambeth.
Secretary.
WILLIAM K. TATE
President
^
'
ill "^ ;& 4 * ^
Sealed: Dorothy Dashiell, Margaret Cole. Marshall Spears. Margaret Healv. Standing:
Dabney Little. Sarah Rurhanan Porter. Donleen MacDonald, Caroline Warren, Jane
Rogers.
Women's Counci
DONLEEN MaiDONALD
President
The Women's Couneil, campus coed judiciary, handles
all cases of violations hy women students of the Honor Code
and of the Campus Code. In connection with these duties the
members of the council instruct entering coeds in the origin
and meaning of the codes and ohtain their signatures on
them.
It is also their responsibility to attempt to discover and
correct the source of any individual maladjustment. It is one
branch of the tripartite system of coed self-government,
working with the Coed Senate and the Women's Interdormi-
tory Council as a living example of the coeds' desire and abili-
ty to govern themselves.
Three juniors, three seniors, one graduate student, and
two members at large are elected hy the coeds to this impor-
tant body. There, in cooperation with the parallel Men's
Council, and in addition to their other duties, the members
work to improve the "Carolina way of life."
Officers for the year were: Chairman, Donleen McDon-
ald ; Secretary, Dorothy Dashiell.
Student
Legislature
JACK FOLGER
President
Smug, snoozing,
but oh so serious
legislators !
Carolina's first student legislature to operate under the amended con-
stitution began its work in September of this year. Its duties included levy-
ing, collecting, and distributing fees, passing upon executive appointments,
making election laws, determining what constitutes an offense against the
student body, making and hearing recommendations from various sub-
sidiary bodies and committees, and promoting the general welfare of the
student body.
Ilaiing disposed of the consideration of changes in the constitution
by submitting several amendments to the student body for their consider-
ation, and the issue of having a humour magazine published on the Caro-
lina campus by creating Tarnation, the legislature was left at the beginning
of the vear with time to tie in the loose ends of the general outline of stu-
dent government and consider various minor issues.
This time was used to good advantage proving even more conclusively
the Carolina contention that students can govern themselves.
The legislature combined all national charity drives into one Com-
munity Chest, made provision for the bi-weekly publication of a record of
its doings in the Daily Tar Heel, and began the procedure of requiring all
legislators to take tests in parliamentary law. They were ahead of similar
bodies in the state and nation in that their record was published either to
them or to the student body as a whole, and in that they are one of the
few existing legislative bodies requiring the above-mentioned parliamentary
law tests.
Composed of fifty members, half of whom are elected each six months,
the legislature is intended to represent a cross-section of Carolina thinking.
It is presided over by the vice-president of the student body, and continually
works for an honest expression of student interests in a better student
government.
The 1947-1948 Student Legislature. Officers were: Speaker. Jack Folger; Speaker Pro-
tein. Miles Smith and Charlie Long: Parliamentarian, Pete Gerns; Clerk, Steve Millikin
and Bill Jerrigan; Chairman of Ways and Means, Tag Montague and Basil Sherril;
Chairman of Bules Committee, Herman Baker and Jim Fort; Chairman of Elections
Committee, Miles Smith and Jess Dedmond; Chairman of Finance Committee. Bill Mackie
and Ernest House.
■»*a
*
All »et for Orientation, the Coed Version
Coed Senate
BARBARA CASHIOIN
President
Formed in the spring of 1941. the Coed Senate is the major
legislative hotly of the Women's Government. It is the responsi-
bility of this organization to introduce rules pertaining to
eoetls. to vote on social measures recommended by the Inter-
dormitory Council, and to supervise all coed elections. The Coed
Senate is also responsible for drawing up budgets and passing
on all expenditures in the Women's Government, which include
Honor Council. Women's Athletic Association and donations
to subsidiary organizations.
Members, which number approximately one for everv fiftv
coeds, are elected by the women students in the spring campus
elections. Four juniors are chosen each Decemher to serve for one year.
The Coed Senate annually sponsors an orientation program for nevi
women students. This past year it voted to inaugurate new and stronger
orientation plans for the purpose of familiarizing the women students with
the constitutional government of the University.
One night each year, during the week immediately following this orien-
tation period, the Senate "introduces" the new coeds to the University of
North Carolina at its Coed Ball. The event this past fall was a highlight and
the heginning of a successful year.
Coed Senate officers were: Barhara Cashion. Speaker: Katie Guion.
Speaker Pro-tem : and Sue Everett. Secretary.
First Rote: Weddy Thorpe. Julia Ross, Katie Cuion. Emily VonBorries. Bootsie Mr-
Williams. Joyce Jones. Clara Auld. Betty Robinson. Doris Sauls. Second Row: Sally Lee.
Barbara Cashion. Lib Clinard, Eleanor Singletary. Elaine Patton. Mary Locke Craig.
Bonnie Thrash. Mary Murphy, Helen Compton. Third Row: Liz Hazlett. K. D. Durham.
Sue Everett. Jo Butler. Camilla Ray. Katherine Royall. Audrey Bryson, Lucie Hill Baxter.
mErrs
First Row: Clyde Rollins, Joe Johnson. Pete Gerns, Emile
Saleeby, Bob Orniand, Garland Scroggs, Jerry Pettigrew
« Second Row: Kenneth Ross, Robert L. Mills, Joe Nantz.
Doug Smith, Albert Owenby, Jess Dedmond, Frank White.
Jack Brown • Third Row: Drew Colvard, Len Szafaryn,
Ed Davenport, John Rossir, Al Petteway. Lucius L. Moore,
Robert B. Payne. Paul Keziah.
Interdorm
Serving as a court of appeal to hear eases coming up
from men's dorm councils, and making rules affecting
the conduct of the men are two of the main functions of
the Men's Interdormitory Council. The administration
of men's dorms at Carolina is left in the main to this
council. The group is composed1 of the presidents of the
dorms and the counselors appointed by the University.
President of the Men's Interdormitory Council this
year was Emile Saleeby.
EMILE SALEEBY
President
womErrs
Seated: Miriam Evans, Representative to Graham Memorial Board, Margaret MeWilliams.
Norma Hotard. Secretary. Standing: K. D. Durham. Emily VonBorries. Ann Hamlin.
Mary Ellen Wellons, Gloria Peters. Ludy Vance. Lola Mustard. !\ot pictured: Jean Snyder
and Martha Whitaker.
)ry Councils
MARGARET McWILLIAMS
President
Composed of dormitory presidents and sorority
house managers, the Women's Interdormitory Council
acts as a go-hetween for the coeds, the Dean of Women,
and housemothers in providing for a system of social
rules, supervising house councils, and generally con-
ducting the husiness of governing the residence and
some of the actions of Miss Carolina Coed.
It is their function to regulate dormitory life
through house meetings, and recommend improve-
ments to the Coed Senate. For these purposes, they meet
once a month with the Residence Board which is com-
posed of dormitory hostesses and sorority house-
mothers.
Officers during the past year were: President, Boot-
sie MeWilliams; Secretary, Norma Hotard; and Repre-
sentative to the Graham Memorial Board of Directors.
Miriam Evans.
Seated: Dean Fred Weaver, Monroe Landreth, Mr. J. A. Williams. Standing: Roy Moose,
Jack Swanner, Dick Culberson. Ralph Hodges.
Student Rudit Board
With the purpose of fostering a more efficient su-
pervision of all organizations which receive student
fees or use university property, the Student Audit Board
was organized here in 1931.
Since that time, it has operated as a custodian of
student fees and as a student government accounting
service. Any organization on the Carolina campus may
utilize its hookkeeping and auditing services.
Monroe Landreth served as student chairman dur-
ing this past year. The faculty advisors are Dean Fred
Weaver and Mr. J. A. Williams.
^»^
MONROE LANDRETH
Chairman
Around such simple things as a snooze in a chair, draw-
ing phys. ed. equipment, and a kiss on the cheek revolves
life at Carolina.
//
SEniOR CLRSS
Benson McCuteheon, Bill Tate, Annie Ben Beale, Bill Blvthe
Officers
Benson McCutcheon
President
Bill Tate
Vice-President
Annie Ben Beale
Secretary
Bill Blythe
Treasurer
From under the lofty branches of Davie Poplar we go — into the world to expound our learning
and to gain by it that greater knowledge which lies ahead. Our years at Carolina have been fleeting ones
— years which we lived to the fullest and which we shall always cherish among the best.
Long will we hold to the myriad of memories, the conglomeration of events, emotions, and experi-
ences that we have shared upon the Hill. We will look at them, turn them, focus them, reconsider them,
view them in the new light of years' perspective — and though our values change, their value will re-
main.
These years have been the formative ones in spite of what the psvchologists say of "'the ages 2 to
6" or "12 to 13." These years have supplied the materials, the blueprints, the concrete, the marble of
our personal construction. The final finishing, the moulding of the elements may come later, may never
be achieved: but we can always appreciate the start, the impulsion, the momentum that only Carolina
could give to us.
The spirit of the Hill, our Hill, is old. is familiar, is almost trite to the persistent readers of year-
books; but for each senior class it is a new incentive, a new inspiration for the future. Commencement
becomes a beginning, not an end ... a start of examination in the realistic sense — just plain living,
instead of the mere cessation of formal mid-terms and finals.
Carolina in its very essence has laid the foundation. The super-structure will be completed through
our own initiative, satisfying Carolina's blueprints. We aspire to be monuments to future generations:
and if and when we achieve this goal, our lives will be testimony to the feeling and the determination
we share as we graduate — the determination to prove that the foundations will not fall to ruins, but
will become an everlasting edifice, impelling us and those who follow to live and to fulfill the ideals
of the University — Lux Libertas . . .
BILLIE ADAMS
Opelika. Alabama B.S.
in Commerce
FLORA MARGARET ALLRED \ V.
Raleigh B'A% Ety^k
CHARLES PATRICK ADAMS
Raleigh B.A
Pi Kappa Alpha; Y. M. C. A. (3, 4).
in Chemistry
Alpha Gamma Delta; Glee Club (3): Student Legislature^) ; WomenV
Athletic Association: Student Advisor. VK \ .
THOMAS ATKINS ALSPAUGH
Greensboro B.S. in Chemistry
HENRY LEIGH ADKINS
Memphis, Tennessee B.A.
in Chemistry
Phi Kappa Sigma. „
JAMES EDWARD AMOS
JOSEPH KERMIT ALBERTSON
Hight Point
B.A. in Music
Kings Mountain B.S. in Comiri(e£ee
Helta Sigma Pi; Boxing (31.
Phi Ma Alpha; Glee Club (3, 4) , Secretary (41.
WRAY M. AMOS \\
ARMIN J. ALETMUELLER
Chapel Hill B.S.
in Commerce
High Point B.S. in Commerc^
Kappa Sigma; lnterlraternity Council (21: 13 Club (3. 41. Secrctary\
Treasurer (4). \
Sigma Chi.
STANLEY NANCE ALLAN
New York, New York
B.S. in Art
JOHN J. ANDERSON. JR.
Baltimore. Maryland B.A. in Journalism
Carolina Magazine (4) ; Carolina Political Union (3,
(4); Soccer (4).
4 1 ; Daily Tar Heel
PATRICIA ANDERSON
Asheboro B.A. in French
LEON B. ALLEN
Greensboro B.S.
in Commerce
Pi Beta Phi; Glee Club (3. 4|; Y. W. C. A. (3, 41; Women's Athletic
Association (3, 4).
Delta Kappa Ep.iilon.
RICHARD FENNER ANDERSON, JR.
THOMAS W. ALLEN
Richmond. Virginia B.S.
in Commerce
Burlington B.S. in Commerce
Lambda Chi Alpha; Carolina Magazine (4) ; lnterfraternilv Council 13. 41 :
Y. M. C. A. (31: Lambda Chi Alpha President (3).
Chap
S\^
cA'
i or
Adams, B.
Adams, C.
Adkins
Albertsoii
Aletmuller
Allan
Allen, L.
Allen, T.
Allred
Alspaugh
Amos, J.
Amos, W.
Anderson, J.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, R.
Page 58
ROBERT ALAN ANDREW
South Dennis. Massachusetts B.A. in Radio
Carolina Magazine (1); Debate SquaJ (1); Glee Club 111.
THOMAS RUSHMAN ANDREWS. JR.
Bethel B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Gorgon's Head (3); Grail (2. 3, 41: Interfraternity
Council (2); University Club (2); Campus Cabinet; Minataurs {3. 4).
OLIVER STANHOPE ANTHONY, JR.
Shelby B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha; Delta Sigma Pi.
IRA PAUL ANTIN
New York, New York
Sigma Alpha Ma; Hillel Cabinet (4).
JAMES AUBREY APPLEWHITE. JR.
Fayetteville B.S. in Commerce
Delia Sigma Pi; Interdormitory Council (3).
RALPH MARTIN ARMSTRONG. JR.
Belmont B.S. in Chemistry
WILLIAM HARRIS ARMSTRONG
B.A. in Chemistry
Salisbury
HOWARD P. ARONSON
New York. New York
P. Lambda Phi.
B.A. in Journalism
Club (3. 41 ; C. C. U. N.
B.S. in Commerce
VIRGIL JOHN ASHBAUGH. JR.
Durham B.S. in Commerce
Alpha Tan Omega; Daily Tar Heel 111; German Club Executive (31:
Gorgon's Head (3, 41: Interfraternitv Council (2. 31. Treasurer (3);
House Privileges Board.
LAWRENCE C. ASHBY
Memphis. Tennessee
MAURICE C. ASHLEY
Poughkeepsie. New York
CTii Phi.
EARL D. ATKINS
Mavodan
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
HARVEY GEORGE AUERBACH
Brooklyn, New York B.S. in Commerce
Pi Lambda Phi; Dail\ Tar Heel; Dialectic Senate II. 21: Interfraternity
Council (2); Playmakers (II: University Club (41.
CLARA HELEN AULD
Mount Pleasant. South Carolina B.A. in Botany
Delta Delta Delta; Y. W. C. A. (3, 4) ; Co-ed Senate (41 ; House Council
(3).
DEWITT RAY AUSTIN. JR.
Charlotte B.A. in Chemistry
Phi Gamma Delta.
Armstrong, R.
Armstrong, W.
Aronson
Ashbaugh
Ashbv
Ashley
Atkins
Auerbach
Auld
Austin
Page 59
JAMES HAROLD AYDELETTE
Greensboro B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigma.
WILLIAM RUFUS AYERS
Roanoke. Virginia B.A. in Dramatic Art
Playmakers (3. 41; Ka> Kyser Scholarship III
HENRY ALFRED BADGETT
Mt. Airy B.S. in Commerce
Phi Gamma Delia.
LUCY KEETER BAGGETT
Lillington B.A. in Political Science
HOWARD CLARK BAILEY
Chadbourn B.S. in Commerce
Daily Tar Heel (3, I), Usistant Busii Manager (31. Business Manage]
(41 j Interdormitory Council (41; Studenl \dYieei III; Track (3); Y. M.
C. A. (3, ll: Interdormitor) [Jan..- (, nittee (4); Student Directory
Business Manager (41.
EDWARD LEE BAITY
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigma; fin Beta Kappa; Bent Gamma Sigma; Kappa Sigma Secre-
tary (2); Treasurer (II; Tennis (2); Freshman Council Secretarj and
ROBERT FRANKLIN BALDWIN
Marshallville. Georgia B.S. in
BETSY ANNE BARBEE
Chapel Hill
B.A. in Sooiologyl
Glee Club (2); Student Council (4); Yackety lack (41; Y.M'. C
(1, 2); Graham Memorial Board of Directors (21; C
President (2). President (3); Women's Athletic Associating (3, 4)
Secretary (4); Town Girls" Association (1. 2. 3. II,
President (4).
DEVAN BARBOUR. JR.
Raleigh
B.S. in Conim
HERMAN L. BAKER
Nashville
B.S. in Commerce
Interdormitory Council 131; Student Legislature 13. 41; Universit) (Jul.
13. 41; Cro-s Countrj (3); Wesley Foundation ll. 2. 3. 4i. Chairman
131. Vice-chairman 141.
Phi Gamma Delia: lliterfraterniti Council 13. 4); University Club (
University Dance Committee (1. 31. Chairman (31; Cheerlead
Head Cheerleader (31; Inlerfraternity Court (3. 41. Chairman
HERMAN SUTTON BARBREY, JR.
Mt. Olive B.A. in Chemistry
HELEN AUGUSTA BARNES
Murfreesboro B.A. in English
Pi Bela Phi; Y. W. C. A. 13. II; Junior CI.
Pi Beta Phi Secretary (4).
LYNN W. BARNES
Taylorsville
ROGER CREIGHTON BARNETT
West Palm Beach. Florida B.S. in Commerce
BETSY JANE BARRETT
Burlington B.S. in Medical Technolog\
B.S. in Commerce
Baity
Baker
Baldwin
Barbet*
Barbour
Barbrey
Barnes, H.
Barnes. L.
i;. ii ii. n
Barrett
Page 60
ass
LEWIS DONSEL BARTLEY
Roanoke Rapids
R.S. in Commerce
JEAN CARTER BASKERVILLE
Lenoir B.A. in Journalism
Sigma Pi Alpha- Dail, Tar Heel.
JEANNE OLIVIA BASNIGHT
Chapel Hill B.A. in Sociology
Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. (1. 2. 3. II. Cabinet (41: Town Girl's Asso-
ciation (3, 4). Secretary I II.
EDWARD GRAHAM BATTLE
Rocky Mount B.A. in Chemistry
FREDERICK CHRISTIAN BAUER
Riverton. New Jersey B.A. in Physical Education
LUCIB HILL BAXTER
Charlotte B.A. in Art
41 ; racket] Ya, t ill: Y. W. C. A.
ROBERT EMMETT BAXTER
Columbus. Georgia
PAUL THOMAS BAYNARD
Forest City
Kappa Alpha; Band II. 2.1.
B.A. in History
>.S. in Commerce
ANNIE BEN BEALE
Greensboro
B.A. in History
Delia Delia Delia; Senior Class Secretary: Student Council (3); Student
Legislature (4,1: Yackel) Yack 13. I) j Y. W. C. A. in. I): Delta Delta
PETER T. BEAl DRY
Homer. New York
B.S. in Commerce
(1) ; Dance Committee (1| ; Inter
HENRY JACOBY BEECHER
Manchester. Pennsyhania
Band (1. 2).
WILLARD JOSEPH BEESON
Winston-Salem
THOMAS MILBURN BELK
Charlotte
B.A. in History
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
DEANE F. BELL
Washington
Phi Gamma Delta.
B.A. in Political Science
CHARLES THOMAS BENNETT
Elizabeth City B.A. in Economic
Phi D.I, a Thela; Bam] II. 2. 3. 41; Daih Tar Heel (1. 21.
Bartley
Baskerville
Basnight
Battle
Bauer
Baxter. L.
Baxter, R.
Bavnard
Beale
Beaudrv
Beecher
Beeson
Belk
Bell
Bennett
Page 61
%Ls»
ALAN BERGMAN
New York, New York
B.A. in Economics
Pi Lambda Phi; Band (1); Interfraternity Council (2); Sound and Fury
(I, 2, 3), Music Director (3); University Club (3); Tennis (II;
Carolina Workshop (2).
EDWARD CLARK BERRY
Morgantim B.S. in Geology
Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Gamma Epsilan.
LAWRENCE RAY BERRY
Kannapolis B.A. in English
Daily Tar Heel (4); Interdormitory Council (2); Phi Assembly (2);
Playmakers (1. 21; Student Legislature Clerk (31; Y. M. C. A. (1. 2.
3), Secretary (3), House President (31; 24 Below Club (3).
THOMAS REESE BETHUNE. JR
Lexington
ANNA TAYLOR BLACK
Norfolk, Virginia
Pi Beta Phi.
MARCIA BETH BLACK
Thomasville
Alpha Gamma Delia ; Unii
B.S. in Accounting
B. A. in History
B.S. in Commerce
Club (41 ; Y. W. C. A. (3, 4).
CHARLES ALLEN BLACKBURN. JR.
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
WILLIAM BENJAMIN BLADES
New Bern B.A
Delia Kappa Epsilan; Interfraternity Council (4).
RAYMOND EDWIN BLAIR
Winston-Salem
Monogram Club (3, 4): Baseball (3. 4).
JULIAN HARWARD BLALOCK
R.S. in Co
Hampton. Virginia
Chi Psi.
KENNETH R. BLAND
Wilmington
Kappa Alpha.
SANKEY L. BLANTON
Wilmington
SHIRLEY COLKITT BLANTON
Chapel Hill B.A. in Journalism
LEWIS R. BLOOM
New York. New York
BUNA EVANS BLUE
Carthage
B.A. in Chem
B.S. in Commero
B.A. in Geology
B.A. in Economics
B.A. in Sociology
Bergman
Berry, E.
Berry, L.
Bethune
lth, . k. A.
Black, M.
Blackburn
Blades
Blair
Blalock
Bland
Blanton, S.
Blanton, S.(Mrs.)
Bloom
Blue
Page 62
ARTHUR BLUETHENTHAL
Wilmington
Club (2, 3. 41
B.S. in Commerce
nois (II ; Wreslling (1. 2.
EILEEN JOYCE BLUMENTHAL
Greensboro B.A. in Political Science
C. I. C. A.; Daily Tar Heel (31; Y. W. C A. (3. 41.
JOSEPH LEE BLYTHE. JR.
Charlotte B.A. in Political Science
Kappa Alpha; Interfraternit'
Club; University Club (2, «
Club President.
WILLIAM BREVARD BLYTHE
Huntersville
Beta Theta Pi; Senior Class
B.A. in Zoology
Daily Tar Heel (2).
B.A. in English
DAVID G. BOAK
Summit. New Jersey
Alpha Tau Omega.
DONALD DUNBAR BOARDMAN
Augusta. Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
LESTER ASHLEY BODDEN. JR.
Jacksonville. Florida B.A. in Language
Pi; Tarnation Photo Editor (41 ; Yackety Yack Photo Editor
PAUL LLOYD BOGER
Chapel Hill
B.A. in Commerce
WILLIAM CHAFFIN BOONE. JR.
Kinston B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Siima.
JOHN VAN VORST BOORAEM
St. Michaels. Maryland B.S.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Dialectic Senate (3); Integrate
Student Legislature (3); Student Partv Vice-Chairn
(4); Coalition Council Chairman (41.
JOHN SIDNEY BOOTH
Durham
Phi Delta Thela.
CHARLES MANUEL BORTON
Richmond. Virginia B.S.
Pi Lambda Phi; Class Executive Committee (31; luni
Hillel Cabinet (2. 3. 4) ; Philanthropic Assembly (:
121. Vice-President 131: Plavmakers (2); Studen
Y. M. C. A. (2, 3. 4) ; State Student Legislature (2
Committee (4).
GEORGE THOMAS BOURGUIN
Savannah. Georgia B.S.
litv Council (3) ; University Club
dent (. '
ADVILLE BARNES BOYLE. JR.
Sumter. South Carolina B.A.
in Commerce
mity Council (4);
an (31. Chairman
B.S. in Chemistr\
in Commerce
or Class Secretary:
:. 3. 41. Sei retai
I Legislature (31:
I ; Student V inam i
in Commerce
(21 ; Chi Psi Vice
in Economic;-
31 ; Sheiks (3. 41
DALLAS DEVON BRANCH
Durham B.A. in Economics
Alpha Tau Omega; Dance Committee (1. 2). Chairman (II: Inter-
3. 41 :
lory Co
Hi
ass
Bluethenthal
Blumenthal
Blythe, J.
Blythe, W.
Boak
Boardman
Bodden
Boger
Boone
Booraem
Booth
Borton
Bourquin
Boyle
Branch
Page 63
WAYNE ROBERTA BRANDON
Greenville. Texas B.A. in History
Glee Club d).
JOHN WORRALL BRISTOW
Hillburn. New York
Glee Club II. 2. 3, II: International Relations Club ^ 2,
Secretary (2), Vice-President (31. President HI; C
II : Track (1. 3. U.
DAVID F. BRANDT
Spencer
H. EUGENE BRASWELL
McFarlan
B.A. in Music
B.A. in Chemistry
THOMAS JOHNSON BRAWLEY. JR.
Gastonia
JOHN DAVID BREADY
Arlington. Virginia
Kappa Alpha
GEORGE BRESLOW
Toms River. New Jersey
T,iu Eptdnn Phi; Band I2J.
JOHN HENRY BRINEGAR
Thomasville
B.A. in Zoology
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Mush
LOWELL ELLIS BRITTAIN
Statesville
WILLIAM RAY BRITTAIN
Chapel Hill
ROBERT THAYER BROILI
Ashland. Oregon
MERRILY BROOKS
Franklin
ELMER COLLINS BROWN
Roanoke. Virginia
B.A
B.S. in C
B.S. in Commer
CLYDE SAMUEL BRINKLEY
Valdese B.S. in Commerce
HERMAN CUBBAGE BROWN
Harrington. Delaware B.A. in Economics
.S. in Commerce
121 : Gorgon's
Brawler
Breadv
Breslow
Brinegar
Brinklev
Bristow
Brittain. I..
Brittain. W.
Broili
Brooks
Brown, E.
Brown, H.
Page 64
JEAN DAVIS BROWN
Durham
B.A. in English
r
JOE EXIM BROWN
Snow Hill
B.A. in Journalism
L
JOHN KENNETH BROWN
Swan Quarter
B.S. in Commerce
Delia Sigma Pi: Basketball (11; Football
in.
LATTIE HAMER BROWN
Norfolk. Virginia
B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Nu; Sophomore Executive Committi
e: Yackely lack (2).
VIRGINIA ANNE BROWN
Raleigh
B.A. in Music
rs\ \\
\ Sigma Alpha lota; Glee Club (3, I.I.
0^ WILBl R H. Brown
1^T\ Pittsboro
B.S. in Commerce
*1 >^
^-■rj WILLIAM CLAY BROWN
/PjiS) Stocksville
B.A. in Chemistry
AMOS JESSE BROWNING
Raleigh
B.S. in Commerce
PALL HI NT BROYHILL
Lenoir B.S. in Commerce
Phi Delia Thela; PH Bel,! Kappa; Beta Gamma Sigma.
WILLIAM OSCAR BRYANT. JR.
Wilmington B.A. in Mathematics
U DREY MLRIEL BRYSON
Biltmore B.A. in Journalism
Alpha Gamma Delia; Y. W. C A. 1 3. 4). Cabinet (li: Western N..nh
Carolina Club (3, 4): Graham Memorial Board oi Direelors (4); Coed
>--t:,ii. : Orientation Committee.
SARAH BELLE BUCHANAN
Henclersonville B.A. in English
RICHARD LARKIN BLLLARD. JR.
Spindale B.S. in Commerce
RAYMOND POWELL BULLOCK
Brooklyn. New York B.S. in Commerce
DEUWARD GEORGE FREDERICK BULTMAN
Sumter. South Carolina B.S. in Commerce
/,,„ P«; Interdormitor) (..unci (3); Moo,.-, am Club 13. II; Swimming'
(31.
J
ass
Brown. J. D.
Brown. J. E.
Brown. J. K.
Brown, L.
Brown, V.
Brown. W. H.
Brown. W. C.
Browning
Brovhill
Brvant
Bryson
Buchanan
Bullard
Bullock
Bultman
Page 65
JOHN C. BUNCH
Asheville
JOHN KERR BURKE
Winston-Salem
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
MARK Bl'RNHAM
Chapel Hill B.A. in Journalism
Monogram Club; Cross Country (2. 3); Track (2, 3).
CLARK C. BURRITT. JR.
Guilford College B.S. in Commerce
Beta Theta Pi; Monogram Club (II; Cross Country (1, 2. 31: Track
II. 21.
MARY ELIZABETH BURRUS
New Bern B.A. in Music-Historj
JAMES HORACE BURWELL
Rutherfordton B.A. in Economics
RUFUS ERNEST BLTNER. JR.
Kinston B.S. in Commerce
Lambda Chi ilpha.
WESLEY GRIMES BYERLY. JR.
Lenoir B.A
Sigma Chi; Interfraternitv Council (2): 13 Club (4)
Carolina Club (3, 4).
JOHN WELBORN BYERS. JR.
Shelby B.S. in Co^ivii
Phi
Yacl
111.
RUTH F. BYRUM
Edenton B.S. in Physical Ed
Pi Beta Phi; W. A. A. Council (3, 4).
THOMAS CAMPBELL BYRUM, JR.
Edenton B.S. in Commerc
Sigma Vb; Han., mittce HI: Monogram Club (2, 3): Footbal
JOHN PHILIP CALL
Altadena. California
s,fm„ \u: Dail) Tar He,-I U.I.
ROBERT JAMES CALL
Ann Arbor. Michigan
WALTER WILLIAM CALL
North Wilkesboro
GLOVER LEIGH CAMPBELL
Chapel Hill
Chi Psi.
B.A. in Political Science
B.S. in Commerce
3.S. in Co
B.S. in Chemistry
Bunch
Burke
Burnham
Kurt-ill
Burrus
Burwell
Butner
Byerly
Bvers
Byrum. T.
Call, J.
Call, R.
Call, W.
Campbell, G.
Page 66
STUART CALDWELL CAMPBELL. JR.
Louisville. Kentucky B.S. in Commerce
CLAY ENGLISH CASEY
Mount Olive
B.A. in Journalis
ANTHONY A. CAPEHART. JR.
Washington
Pi Kappa Alpha; German Club EiCCUlii
ROBERT JOHN CARLSON
Superior. Wisconsin
Phi Delta Thela.
THAD W. CARMICHAEL
Rowland
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
WILBUR LLOYD CARR
Jefferson City. Tenn. B.A. in Physical Education
HARRY DOMONIC CARRUBBA
Ansonia. Connecticut B.A. in Political Science
Dormitory Advisor (41.
LEONARD CARLYSLE CARTER
Lakeland. Florida B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigma.
NANCY CHRISTINE CARTER
Greensboro B.A. in Sociology
Chi Omega; Y. W. C. A. 1.3. I.I.
JAMES HADLEY CASH
Winston-Salem
Rrla Theta Pi.
5.S. in C
onimerce
MILTON BLAIR CASH. JR.
Winston-Salem B.A. in Chemistn
JAMES LYNN CASTLEBERRY
Goldsboro B.S. in Commerce
WALLACE WHITE CHAPPELL
Elizabeth Citv B.S. in Commerce
HAROLD RICH CHEEK
Chapel Hill
B.A. in Spanish
GRAN P. CHILDRESS
Chapel Hill B.A. in Political Science
Campbell, S.
Capehart
Carlson
Carmichael
Carr
Carrubba
Carter, L.
Carter, N.
Casey
Cash, J.
Cash, M.
Castleberry
Chappell
Cheek
Childress
Page 67
JOHN MORRISON CLAMPITT
St. Petersburg. Florida B.A. in Journalism
Alpha Tau Omega; Dailv Tar Heel (3); Grail ; Student Legislature (3);
C. C. U. N.; Chairman Freshman Orientation; Elections Committee
Chairman: Ring Committee Chairman: University V
President and Treasurer: Alpha Tau Omega Exehecquer; Coalit
Council; N. S. A. Delegate; Florida Club.
WALTER CALVIN CLARK
Canton B.S. in Commerce
FAYE CLEMENTS CLAY
Chapel Hill
ELIZABETH ANN CLINARD
Winston-Salem B.A. in Sociology
Pi Beta Phi; Glee Cluh (3); Y. W. C. A. (3, 41; Coed Senate (3, I).
MARSHALL EUGENE CLINE. JR.
Newton B.A. in Economics
Chi Psi; Naval R. O. 1. C. Companj Commander in.
Cole, C. P.
Cole, C. B.
Cole, M. J.
Cole. M. W.
Cole. T.
Page 68
B.A. in Journalism
ALBERT COLEMAN
Laurens. South Carolina
Chi Phi.
JOHN COLLETT
Morganton B.A. in Comparative Literature
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in English
nt Legislature (3, 4).
CLYDE J. COLLINS
Asheville
Delta Sigma Pi.
ROBERT RIVES COLLINS
Asheville
Grail (3. 4); [ntcrdormitory Council (2);
HELEN TREXLER COMPTON
Salisbury B.A. in Sociology
MARY ELIZABETH COOK
Dalton. Georgia B.S. in Chemistry
flteta Psi Epsilon; The!,, Pit Epsilon President (41.
MAX HARTSZLL COOKE
Kannapolis B.S. in Physical Education
Mur.ograin Club; Football (1, 2, 3).
NORMAN AURELIAN COOLEDGE
Atlanta. Georgia B.A. in Economics
I In Phi.
FRANK BENTON COOPER
Statesville B.A. in Chemistry
Kappa Sigma; German Club Executive 131; Sheiks (3, 4)
LEE BIGGERSTAFF COPPLE
Albemarle B.A. in Psychology
Kappa Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa.
D. JOYCE CORBETT
Greenville
B.A. in Radio
ROBERT MADISON CORNICK. JR.
Raleigh B.S. in Commerce
Alpha rati Umegu; 13 Club (4J .
JOSEPH DURHAM CORPENING
Granite Falls B.A. in Zoolog)
Monogram Club; Track II. 3, II.
JOHN PHILIP COUCH
Chapel Hill
B.A. in French
HARRY DUARD COULTER
Newton B.S. in Commerce
Coleman
Collelt
Collins, C.
Collins, R.
Compton
Cook
Cooke
Cooledge
Cooper
Copple
Corbett
Cornick
Corpening
Couch
Coulter, D.
Page 69
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in English
WILLIAM H. COULTER
Greensboro
WILLIAM ROBERT COULTER
Washington. D. C.
Phi Seta Kappa; Freshman Cla.s Secretary; Phi Beta Kappa Vice-
President (41: Interdormitory Council II. 2); Philanthropic Issemblj
III: Playraakers (3, 11: Student Legislature III: V. M. C. A. (1, 2,
31. Treasurer I -' I : Uormitor) Manager I-'. ! I ; (.raliain Memorial Dark-
room Manager I (> -
RICHARD J. COUNCILL
Salisbury B.S. in Geology
Sigma Chi; Elisa Mitchell S i> 1 3, li: Carolina Geologic Society
ELIZABETH T. COX
Columbia, South Carolina
MARY LOCKE CRAIG
Asheville
B.A. in Radio
lis en : V. \V. C. A. (3. 4) :
B.A. in Spanish
ill: ( I Senate i 1 1 : i \\
THOMAS BRIGHT CRANFORD
Durham
B.S. in Commerce
terdormitorj Council (31;
CHARLES HUGH CRAVEN. JR.
Chapel Hill
B.A. in Journalism
EUGENE BENSON CRAWFORD. JR.
Chapel Hill B.S.
SPENCER CRAWFORD
Rutherfordton
Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. (3, i) .
CHARLES GORDON CRAWLEY
Statesville B.A. in Jourr
Phi Delta Thfla; Carolina Magazine 111 : Qoiij Tar Heel (1, 3
B.A. in English
ROBERT PICKNEY CRAWLEY
Statesville
WILLIAM AYDEN CREECH
Smithfield B.A. in Political Science \
Phi Gamma Delta.
ADAM S. CRETINI
Lake Charles. Louisiana
JAMES WASHINGTON CREWS, JR.
Durham B.S. in Commerce
JANET STEWART CRINKLEY
Warrenton B.A. in Physical Education
Delta Delta Delta: Y. W. C. \ (3): W. \. \. Treasurer.
B.A. in Mathematics
Senior
Coulter, W. H.
Coulter, W. R.
Council]
Cox
Craig
Cranford
Craven
Crawford, E.
Crawford, S.
Crawley, C.
Crawlev, R.
\
Crews
Page 70
7
HELEN AMANDA CROCKFORD
Chapel Hill B.A. in Mathematics
Y. W. C. A. (3); W. A. A. (41; Town Girls Association (1, 2, 3. 4).
KENNETH BOLAND CRUSE
Concord B.A. in Political Science
Carolina P cal Union (3. 4); International Relations Club (2. 31.
RICHARD HENRY CULBERSON
Valdese B.S. in Commerce
Delia Sigma Pi; Western North Carolina Club; Student Audit Board (4).
JAMES C. CULLUM
Columbia. South Carolina B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
DONALD A. CURRIE
Pinehurst B.S. in Commerce
Basketball (1); Young Democrats Club (ll: Y. M. C A. (1).
LEONORA CURRIE
Raeford
B.A. in English
Alpha Delta Pi; Glee Club (41; Student Advisor (4); University Club
JAMES JOSEPH CURRY. JR.
•• Alamance B.S. in Geology
Epsilon; Y. M. C. A. U, 2. 3. 4.1.
THOMAS L. CRITTENDEN
Southbury. Connecticut
B.S. in Commerce
WALTER FREEMAN DANIEL
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce
CARROLL SAMUEL DANIELS
Coral Gables, Florida B.S. in Commerce
Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Chi; Pre.,,] nt „f Sophomore Class: Daily far
II., I (2); Monogram Club (2. 3, II; Tennis«(2l: Student Body Secretary.
surer (3).
JACK A. DANIELS
Wilmington
Carolina Magazine (4 1
ciation If. n ; Wilmii
ELBERT ALLEN DARDEN
Greenville
Philanthropic Assembh I J I .
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
JEROME KIRBY DARDEN. JR.
Port Arthur, Texas B.S. in Commerce
Phi Delia Thtta.
JEAN SHERROD DARROW
Tarboro
Alpha Gamma Delia: Y. W. C. A. (41.
B.A. in English
DOROTHY ANN DASHIELL
Chapel Hill B.A. in Journalism
Alpha Delia Pi; Phi Beta Kappa; Sound and Furv (2): Student Legisla-
ture (2. 3); Y. W. C A. (31; Women's Honor Council Secretary (4).
Crockford
Cruse
Culberson
Cullum
Currie, D.
Currie, L.
Curry
Crittenden
Daniel
Daniels, C.
Daniels, J.
Darden, E.
Darden, J.
Darrow
Dashiell
Page 71
JOHN EDWIN DAVENPORT
Washington B.A. in Political Science
LILLIAN RITCH DeARMON
Charlotte B.A. ii
agy
rnterdorm S Council III: International Relations Club (1, 2, 3, 4),
Treasurer 12. .11: Young Democrats Club (3, II; Y. M. C. A. (3, II i
Chi Omega; Cbarlolte Club. flfc \ >0
President Lewis Dorm.
NINA MAE DEBERRY
GEORGE WASHINGTON DAVIS
Halifax B.A. inVEngli^h
Danville. Virginia l B.A. in Economics
Beta 77; la Pi.
ANNE SCOTT DELLINGER
Ivanhoe B.A. in S\gU&6f$\
JOHN WILLIAM DAVIS, JR.
Fortress Monroe. Virginia B.A. in Art
Carolii ., Magazine 12. 3, 1).
C. 1. C. A. (3, H. Social Chai n ill: Y. W. C. A. (3, 4l:^»ident
Part; : Worn, n's Vthletii Us ttio:: III.
\
MICHAEL ANGELO DeMAlO
KATHARINE DOWDLE DAVIS
Little Rock. Arkansas B.A. in English
Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. (3, 41; Treasurer Pi Beta Phi.
Torrington, Connecticut B.S. in Commerce
Karul 12. 4): Aquinas Club III: vVesle) Foundati I, 2, 3, 41.
MALCOLM DEMURJIAN
New York, New York B.A. in Mathematics
THOMAS HILL DAVIS
Glee Club (31: Physics Club III: Universit) Orchestra (31.
Rocky Mount B.S. in Commerce
ilpha Tau Dm ;
LEONARD CONSTANT DeNOOYER
Garfield. New Jersey B.S. in Commerce
JAMES ALFERI) DEAN
Oxford B.S. in Commerce
University Veterans Association President III: Student Govemmenl
Budget Committee.
EUGENE SURRY DesPORTES
Richmond, Virginia B.A. in Economics
Kappa Sigma.
FRIEDA ELIZABETH DEANS
Wilson B.A. in English
llpha Delta l'< : Carolina Magazine (3. 4); Y. W. C. A. (3, 41.
JOHN GARSON DeVORE
Arlington, Virginia B.A. in Journalism
Phi Gamma Delta; Glee Club (3, II: Student Legislature I4|; Cercle
Kranea.se (3. i) .
OP
Chap
s^e
MA.AMdtM
ii
Davenport
Davis, G.
Davis, J.
Davis, K.
Davis, T.
Dean
Deans
DeArmoii
DeBerrv
Dellinger
DeMaio
Demurjian
DeNooyer
Desl'ortes
DeVore
Page 72
LI THER DEW. JR.
Red Springs
B.S. in Commerce
CLARENCE DI CHIARA
Newark. New Jersey B.A. in Physical Education
\l..,.„s!ram Club I l.l.
J I DSON ROSS DICKS
Fayetteville
Choral Clnb I l.l.
ROBERT L. DICKENS
Varina
B.A. in Sociology
B.S. in Commerce
JOHN JOSEPH DILLON
Savannah. Georgia B.A. in Physical Education
Sigma Chi; \l gram Club (2. 3, 41: Basketball (41, Ul-Amfrican.
CAREY WALLACE DOBBS
Durham B.A. in Mathematics
I hi Psi.
RICHARD FREDERICK DONNAN
Rutherford. New Jersey B.S. in Commerce
.i Phi Kappa Sigma; Basketball (2).
& CHARLES SENN DOSTER. JR.
Birmingham. Alabama B.A. in American History
Alpha Tttu Omega.
WEBB El GENE DOUTHIT
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
HILDA CAROLYN DRIVER
Smithfield B.A. in Physical Education
PAUL A. DULIN
Charlotte
B.S. in Commerce
HOWARD Y. DUNAWAY, JR.
Charlotte B.A. in Economics
SUSAN DUNCAN
Red Springs
B.A. in Sociology
THEODORE ROBERT DUNGEY
\\ ill -anisvi!!?. New \ ork E \. in F nuhsh
JOHN WILLIAM DUNHAM
Durham B.S. in Commerce
ilpka Tau Omega.
Dew ^.
DiChiara
Dicks
Dickens
Dillon
II. .1,1, -
Donnan
Doster
I). .nihil
Driver
Dulin
Dunaway
Duncan
Dungey
Duiiliaiu
Page 73
B.S. in Commerce
BRODE THOMAS DUKE. JR.
Jackson B.S. in Commerce
Alpha Tail Omega; Inler.lm mif.rv Council LSI.
WILLIAM ROBERT DULIN
Rowland B.S. in Commerce
Delia Sigma Pi; Student Legislature 121: Wesley Foundation (1, 2. 3. 4).
HOLLIS EDGAR DUNN
Mount Holly
KATHARINE SHIPMAN DURHAM
Hendersonville B.A. in Physical Education
Chi Omega; Interdormitnry Council (4); Western North Carolina Club
in- Co-ed Senati H: S art's Athletic Usociation Council (3. 4).
DAVID D. DURYEA
Philadelphia. Pennsylvania B.S. in Commerce
Delia Psi.
CHARLOTTE ANN DUTROW
Charles Town. West Virginia B.A. in Economics
Y. W. C. A. (3, 4); Town Girls' Association (3).
ROBERT EDWARD DYE
Charlotte
ELIZABETH V. EADDY
Memphis. Tennessee
Pi Beta Phi.
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in English
EMORY L. EADS. JR.
Houston. Texas
Beta Gamma Sigma.
EDWIN SAUNDERS EARLY. JR.
Portsmouth. Virginia B
Beta Thela Pi; Junior Class Treasurer.
B.S.
i.S. in C
CHARLES HAYS EARP
Hickory
Ph, Delta Them.
THOMAS F. EAST
Franklinton
/; la Thela Pi.
EDWIN HAROLD EASTER
Lexington
KENZIE PARKS EASTER
Lexington
Kappa Sigma.
JOHN DALE EBBS
Winston-Salem
Lambda Chi tlpha; Y. M. C. A. I _\ I, II
B.S. in C
B.A. in Economi
B.A. in Radio
und and
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in English
Duke
Dulin
Dunn
Durham
Durvea
Dutrow
Dye
Eaddy
Eads
Earlv
Earp
East
Easter, E.
Easter, k.
Ebbs
Page 74
ALBERT WILLIAM EBELEIN
Lexington B.S.
Kappa Sigma.
MELVIN RAY EDWARDS
Princeton B.S.
Lambda Chi Alpha.
WILLIAM GERALD EDWARDS
in Commerce
in Commerce
Avden
B.S. in Commerce
il (2); Monogram Club (2, 3);
WILLIAM HENRY EDWARDS
Nomini Grove. Virginia B.S.
Phi Delta Thela.
JOHN MARSDEN EHLE. JR.
Asheville
Debate Squad (3, 4): Dialectic Senate 1.1. 41.
DANIEL ROBERT EICHMANN
New York, New York
in Commerce
B.A. in Radio
J.S. in C
ommerce
CLAYTON WILLARD ELEY. JR.
Norfolk. Virginia B.S. in Commerce
Delia Phi.
THOMAS ROBERT ELLER. JR.
Salisbury B.S. in Commerce
Carolina Magazine (21: Daih Tar Heel (1, 2); Dialectic Senate (1, 2,
3}; Golden Fleece (31; Grail (31 j Interdormitorj Council 111: Student
(2). Chairman. Rules Committee: C. C. U. N. (41; President
National Stude
(2);
ROBERT HOYLE ELLIOTT
Forest City B.A. in Physical Education
s (3, II; Swimming (3. 4); Western
ROBERT W. ELLIOTT
Charlotte
B.S. in Commerce
THOMAS WILLIAM ELLIOTT. JR.
Edenton B.S.
Delta Kappa Epsilon.
in Commerce
WILLIAM COBB ELLIOTT
Rome, Georgia
Phi Delia Thela.
ROBERT LOUIS EMANUEL
Raleigh
MAE BELLE ENMAN
Asheville
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Economics
B.A. in Journalism
Daily Tar He/! 13. 41: Philanthropic issembl) (41; University Club
141: Yacketj Yack 111; V. W. C. A. 1.1. 41; Western North Carolina
Club (.1. 41; C. C. U. N.; Orientation Committee.
CHESTER OSCAR ENSIGN. JR.
Greensboro B.S. in Commerce
Wrestling (1).
EbeIeiir—»_
Edwards, M.
Edwards, W. G.
Edwards, W. H.
Ehle
Eichmaiin
Eley
Eller
Elliott, R. H.
Elliott, R. W.
Elliott, T.
Elliott, W.
Emanuel
Enman
Ensign
Page 75
Barron WL
"Lapsley". DTH dictator, southern accent with a briar
pipe. Slow moving, square dealing, but kept tabs on com-
munists and columnists alike. Put our large 8 column
Daily with more of everything. Respected and well-liked.
Authority on Powers" Models.
3L
9
"/'
Co-ed's delight who found time between MC'ing beauty
contests and politicking to Chair Legislature Ways and
Means Committee. Top man on Graham Memorial Board
of Directors and founder of he-she jokes. We'll remember
his brogans.
^Jjoi/llii
^Donald
Conscientious Chairman of Womens' Council, champion
of Co-ed rights, with a dash of N'awlins drawl, and lots
of pep. Loves those sports.
/4a CK ~J~i tell
The versatile one. Jet-powered half-back. Delegata of the
Grail and big dog in the C. A. A. Smooth, neat dresser
with Phi Beta to boot! Man behind the man behind the
politicos. and do we need mention his popularity?
Jack Fitch
Doiinie MacDonald
f\u tn L^uanS
This year rotated between the "Y" ( 2d door on the right I
and the crowded "Yack" Office. Sincere, charming, and
amiable — "everybody likes Ruth . Acknowledged Queen
of pub row. Valkyrie and Co-ed Senate. "From the Land
of beautiful horses. "P. J.', and "gold bricks'."
<ie l/-Jrenciiaen
"Jack of all trades, with current emphasis on Carolina
Dance Committee. Has a Hoosier heart buried deep in
the Hill. Born campaigner. Small guv with a big smile.
So conscientious.
/jacli ^rolc
"Cactus Jack" from Dobson, N. C. Able arbiter of Stu-
dent Legislature's pitched battles, with a flare for partying
and terrific jokes. One of the harder working officers —
and to think he was a dark horse! Might we add his
charm and sua\ it\ ?
/
Ruth Eve
Wayne Brenengen
Jack Folger
ROBERT HARLAN EPSTEIN
New York. New York
/,;:/ Epailon Phi; Playmakers (.1, 2, 3).
SIDNEY CHARLES EPSTEIN
Lawrence. New York
Pi Lambda Phi; Hillel Cabinet (4); Playrm
Fury (3, 4j .
HELEN JEAN ERSHLER
High Point
Thela Psi Epsilou: Hillel Cabinet (3), Secret.
C. I. C. A. (3); Student Advisor (41.
ROBERT LEE ETTENGER. Ill
B.A. in Radio
B.A. in Economics
akers (1, 2); Sound and
B.S. in Chemistry
ry; Y. W. C. A. (3, 4)';
Washington. D. C.
B.S. in Commerce
(3, II: Gorgon's Head:
LOIS MIRIAM EVANS
Asheville B.A. in Journalism
Caroliaa Magazine III: Daih Tar Heel (3, I); Interdormitorv Council
III: Valkyries III: racket) Yack 141: V. W. C. A. (.1. 4); Western
North Carolina Club III: C. C. U. N. Steering Committee (41: Graham
Memorial Board ol Directors 111: Smith Dormitory President 111; W.
\. \. Council (41. Publicity Chairman: C. 1. C. A. (41; Student
Advisor (4); Senior Class Steering Committee III.
LUCY T. EVANS
Greensboro
Glee Cl„l, (3, II : Y. M. C. A. 131 : Aqu
i 11
C. I. C. A. (3. 4J.
B.A. in History
Club (3, 4), Vice-President
RUTH BANNISTER EVANS
Fort Knox. Kentucky
B.A. in English
Pi Beta Phi; Daih Tar Heel 141; Valkyries III: Yackety Yack (3, 4).
Managing Editor 13 1. Editor 111: Y. W. C. \. 13. 41. President 111:
Co-ed Senate it. II: W. \- \. Council Hi: Campus Cabinet 111:
Editor Woman's Handbook (3).
WALLACE H. EVANS
Asheville
Phi Mu Alpha.
DALE M. EVARTS
Meriden. Connecticut B.S. in Coniniero
Chi Phi; Interfraternitv Council II. II: University Veterans Usociai
SUE BAKER EVERETTE
Palmyra
Pi Beta Phi.
HOLT APGAR FARLEY. JR.
Farrwood. New Jersey
Delta Sigma Pi.
DAVID KEMBLE FARR
Charlotte
Beta Thela Pi.
JULIAN WALKER FARRAR
Norlina
Y. M. C. A. (1. 2); University Veterans
JOHN EDWARD FAULKNER. JR.
Greensboro B.S. in Commerc
JOSEPH EARLE FERGUSON
Murfreesboro
Senior
Epstein. R.
Epstein, S.
Ershler
Etlenger
Evans, L. M.
Evans, L. T.
Evans, R.
Evans, W.
Evarts
Everetle
Farley
Farr
Farrar
Faulkner
Ferguson
Page 78
JOSEPH ALFRED FICARRA
New York. New York
FOSTER DAVIS FINCH. JR.
Zebulon
PAi Delta Theta; I niveishj Club (3).
WILLIAM MARTIN FINCH. JR.
Sanford
Daily Tar Heel (2, II; V. M. C. A. (3, 11.
BETTY GWYN FINLEY
North Wilkesboro
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Chemistry
B.A. in Dramatic Arts
Delia; Y. W. C. V (3, 41; Recording Secretary Alpha
JOHN LEWIS FISHEL
Winston-Salem
B.S. in Chemistrj
ily Council 121; Student
JOSEPHINE NICHOLSON FISHEL
Vaughan B.A. in Political Science
Alpha Gamma Delta; Valkyries: Carolina P.ditical Union 131; Clee Club
13. II. President Glee Club (41; Y. W. C A. 13. 41; Student Legisla-
ture 141 ; President ol Valkyries (41.
LENON HERRING FISHER
"^ Roseboro
3.S. in C
.^^^/^IS) WILLIAM EDWARD FITZGERALD
^/ New Bern B.A.
.. f^ Phi Ma llpha; Band (1
'^2T5< (41.
ommerce
ass
Music
3. II: Glee Club (1. 2. 3. II; Y. M. C. A.
GLENN ALEXANDER FLINCHl M
Carthage B.S. in Commerce
THOMAS L. FOLGER
Dobson B.A. in Political Science
Kappa Sigm.i ; (Lis- Executive Committee II. 21; Student Legislature
(2, I), President (4); Baseball (2 UjiMK.'r i : \ . M. C A. (1, 2, 3, 4);
Vice-President Student B..d> III.
ROY ELTON FOREHAND, JR.
Edenton B.A. in Economics
WILLIAM McKENZIE FORRESTER
Montezuma. Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
WILLIS HAPPER FOWLE. Ill
Wallace B.A. in Chemistry
JEROME S. FRANKEL
Charlotte
Taa Epsilon Phi.
B.S. in Commerce
FRANKLIN BETTS FRAZER
Selma. Alabama B.A. in Political Science
Ficarra
Finch, F.
Finch, W.
Finley
Fishel, J.
Fishel, N.
Fisher
Fitzgerald
t Mm hum
Folger
Forehand
Forrester
Fowle
Frankel
Frazer
Page 79
CYRUS CLIFFORD FRAZIER. JR.
Greensboro B.A. in Economics
Beta Theta Pi; Secretary, Freshman Class: German Club Executive (21:
Cimghoul 13. 41: [nterfraternity Council III: Sheiks (2, 3), Secretary
ill: Inh-rai. Club; Football (1, 2 1 : T.ark 11. 3); V. M. C. A. (1.
31 ; Beta Theta Pi President I !>.
DONALD EDMUND FRENCH
Washington. D. C. B.S. in Commerce
Phi Beta Kappa; Bel,, Gamma Stem,,; Bail) Tar Heel (II: Glee Club
(2, 3. 41.
MURRAY N. FRIEDLANDER
Baltimore. Maryland B.A. in Political Science
ROBERT J. FRIEDLANDER
Brooklyn. New York B.A. in Economics
Pi Lambda Plu.
ROBERT PHILLIP FRIEDMAN
Memphis. Tennessee B.A. in Journalism
Zela Beta Tau.
GARRICK A. FULLERTON
Kent, Connecticut B.A. in Politic
Phi Beta Kappa: Vice-chairman, American Veteran
PAUL LAWRENCE FURGATCH
New York, New York B.S. in Co
Hillel Foundation Prcsi,le,:l III.
ALVAH WALLAND FLYNN. JR.
Asheville B.S. in Com
CAROLYN HAYES GAITHER
Charlotte B.A. in Sociolo
Chi Omega; racket) rack III: V. W. C. \. (3, li: Student \.l
in.
CHARLES KENNEDY WHEELER GAMMAGE
Atlanta. Georgia B.S. in Commerce
PANAGIATIS JOHN GAGANIS
JAMES P. FRINK
Charlotte
B.A. in Economics
BILLINGS SIBLEY FUESS. JR.
Harhourton. New Jersey B.A. in Journalism
111 : lie, U In, II, ,1 11. 21 : Board ol I I- i -
Chi P.i: Car, ,!,,:„ M.
(41: House Manag,
(31: Iniversil) Part) Steering Co,,
Detroit. Michigan
HARRIS ALLEN GANT
Roanoke. Virginia
Alpha Tau Omega; Inlerlr.
LOIS JEAN GARDNER
Wilson
(31.
131: Fn
B.S. in Commerce
Council 13. 41: Yaeket) Yaek (3).
B.A. in English
/;,./,., Gamma Delta So, ial
B.S. in Commerce
Frazier
French \
Fried lander, M.
Friedlander. R.
Friedman
Frink
Fuess
Fullerlon
Furgatch
Flvnn
Gaither
Gammage
Gaganis
Gant
Gardner
Page 80
WILLIAM CRAWFORD GARDNER
Fayetteville B.S. in Commerce
Daily Tar Heel (1, 2); Sound and Fury (2); Swimming (1); Y. M. C.
A. (1, 2); University Veterans' Association (4).
PETER H. GERNS
Canton. Ohio
B.S. in Political Science
ANNE MARTIN GARRETT
Danville. Virginia
DAVID ALLEN GARRISON
Statesville
Phi Kappa Sigma.
JAMES BRUCE GASCOIGNE
Salisbury
Kappa Alpha.
JACK E. GATES
Roxboro
Pi Kappa Alpha.
WILTON CARLYLE GAY
Rocky Mount
JOHN HENRY GAYLE. JR.
Washington
MALCOLM GEDDIS
Port Jervis. New York
Alpha Psi Delia.
B.A. in Art
B.A. in Journalism
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Psychology
Carolina Magazine (3); Carolina Political Union 13, 4). Secretary (4);
Daily Tar Hetl (3, 4): Debate Council (4) j [nterdormitory Council (3.
41, Vice-President (1); International Relations Club 131: Philanthropic
Assembly (3. 4), Parliamentarian (3, 4): Student Party Execute, Com-
mittee (31: Student Legislature (II. Parliamentarian (4); Tarnation (41.
Business Manager (41: University Club (41; Soccer (3. 4); Yaekely
Yack (31, Assistant Editor (31: Y. M. C. A. (3. 41: ManSum Dormitory
President (4), Secretary-Treasurer (3).
RUTH AVERY GIBSON
Arlington, Virginia B.A. in Radio
Playmakers (31 ; Assistant Director of Entertainment, Graham Memorial.
ROLAND GIDUZ
Chapel Hill B.A. in Journalism
JOHN LEWIS GIGNILLIAT
Macon, Georgia B.A. in English
Phi Bela Kappa: Interdormitory Council 111.
CHARLES FRANKLIN GILLIAM
Thomasville B.A. in Chemistry
GIDEON LAMB GILLIAM
Franklinton B.S. in Commerce
Zcla Psi; Dance Committee IH: Gimghoul; Grail Exchequer (4); Inter-
fraternity Council (2. 3), President (31; Basketball Manager (2):
House Privileges Board (2. 3), Chairman 131.
LEONARD S. GILLIAM. JR.
Statesville B.A. in Economics
Kappa Sigma; Boxing (2); Track (21.
Dlass
Gardner
Garrett
Garrison
Gascoigne
Gates
Gay
Gayle
Geddis
Gems
Gibson
Giduz
Gignilliat
Gilliam, C.
Gilliam, G.
Gilliam, L.
Page 81
JOHN W. GIRARD
Pass-a-Grille. Florida
B.S. in Commerce
Chi Phi; University Club (3); Interfraternity Council (3, 4); Y. M. C.
A. (1); Yackely Yack (31: Intcrdorraitory Council (4).
DOUGLAS M. GLASSPOOL
Rye, New York
Phi Beta Kappa.
MEIGS COKER GOLDEN
Sanford
B.A. in History
B.S. in Commerce
A (3. 4) ;
IRVING P. GOODWIN
Lakeland. Florida
Swimming (1, 2).
IRVIN HOWARD GORDON
Bronxville. New York B.A. in Psy<
PAUL JULES GORDON
Bronxville. New York
B.A. in Psych
JULIUS GOLDSTEIN
Gastonia B.S. in Commerce
Tau Epsilon Phi; Ban, I II. 2); Carolina Magazine (41.
ROBERT ALBERT GOLDWATER
White Plains. New York B.A. in Journalism
Carolina Magazine ( 1) ; Daily Tar Heel (1, 2, 3, 4) : Yackety Yack
(3, 4).
MARGARET NOPKINS GOODMAN
Concord B.A. in French
MARY EVANS GOODWIN
Edenton B.A. in Physical Education
W. A. A. Council (3, 4), Chairman 4; President of Physical Education
Club (4).
DAVID ERIC GRAHAM
Coleridge
MARGARET ELIZABETH GRAHAM
Clyde
HOWARD GRAY
Winston-Salem
EDWIN MAX GREGORY
Angier
JOHN ERNEST GREGORY
Hickory
B.S. in Pre-medica
IAM
B.A. in Sociology
B.S. in Commerce
Gamma Sigma; Gimghoul;
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Physics
Goodman
Goodwin. M.
Goodwin. I.
Gordon, I.
Gordon. P.
Graham, D.
Graham, M .
Gray
Gregory, E. M.
Gregory. J. E.
Page 82
JOHN TILLERY GREGORY
EMMA KATIE GUION
Halifax B.S. in Commerce
New Bern B.A. in Sociology
Zela Psi; Ciir.pl 1 (2, 3, 11: Monogram Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Student
Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. (2) ; Co-ed Senate.
Legislature 111: Baseball (1. 2. 3. II. Co-Captain (1. 31: Basketball
(2, 3).
MILDRED HARRELL GULLEY
AUDRIE VIVIEN GREEN
Edenton B.A. in Sociology
Augusta. Georgia B.A. in English-Music
Ilpha Kappa Delta; Baptist Student Union (3. 1.1.
Alpha Gamma Delia; Sigma Alpha lola: Glee Club (2, 3, 4); Sound and
Fury (1); Y. W. C. A. (3. 41; Clioral Club (4); Sigma Alpha lata
HARRIET GWENDOLYN GURLEY
Secretary (4).
Goldsboro B.A. in English
DIXIE E. GREENE
Alpha Gamma Delia.
Robersonville B.S. in Commerce
GLORIA DAY GUNN
Phi Gamma Delia; Glee Club (31 ; Interdormitorv Council (4) ; University
Club: Whitehead Dormitory President.
Wellington, Nevada B.A. in Dramatic Art
9
Kappa Alpha Theta; Playmakers (3. 11.
SAM MONROE GREENE. JR.
Mooresboro B.A. in Music
ROBERT CLARKE GUTKNECHT
Glee Club (1. 21; Sound and Fury (21.
Youngstown. Ohio B.A. in Radio
MAURICE WILLIAM GRIFFIN
EDWARD CALL HAAKE
Raleigh B.S. in Commerce
Richmond, Virginia B.S. in Commerce
Pi Kappa Alpha; Glee Club (2); 13 Club (2. 3, 11.
Theta Chi.
JAMES EUGENE GRIMES
WILLIAM AYERS HACKNEY
Winston-Salem B.A. in Zoology
Washington B.A. in Journalism
Phi Kappa Sigma; Wrestling (1J.
Phi Gamma Delta.
BERTRAM HOWARD GROSSMAN
Rochester. New York B.A. in Chemistry
ilpha Epsilon Delta; Hillel Cabinet 1 41 . Vice-President (4).
ANNE CARTER HAGAN
Danville. Virginia B.S. in Chemistry
ilpha Gamma Delta; Theta Psi Epsilati ; Y. W. C. A. (3. 4).
^
ass
Gregory, J. T.
Green
Greene, D.
Greene, S.
Griffin
Grimes
Grossman
Guion
Gulley
Gurley
Gun n
Gutknecht
Haake
Hackney
Hagan
Page 83
CHARLES EVERETT HAIGLER
Tampa. Florida B.A. in Economics
ZESLIE BRYAN HAISLIP
Oak City
B.A. in Journalism
ALDEEN HAMILTON HALL. JR.
Waynesville
Phi Delia Thela.
EDITH GLENN HALL
Durham
Y. W. C. A. (3. 41: French Club.
JIM HALL
Canton
JOHN LOCKSLEY HALL
Roxboro
B.A. in Economics
B.A. in French
B.S. in C
in commerce
B.S. in Commerce
LELA MOORE HALL
Sylva B.A. in Sociology
Y. W. C. A. (3, 4); Western North Carolina Club (3, 4).
JOHN C. HALLIWANGER
Winston-Salem
Kappa Alpha.
B.S. in Physics
FREDERICK COOPER HAMILTON
Morehead City B.A.
JOHN RICHARD HAMMER
Shrewsbury. New Jersey
Phi Gamma Delta; Y. M. C. A. (U .
SHIRLEY GREENE HAMRICK
Shelby
Glee Club (3. 4).
BONNIE WHEELER HANCHETT
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce1
DEAN MALCOLM HANCHETT
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce
WINGATE EDMUND HANNAH
.S. in C
B.A. in
Waynesville
Sigma Phi Epsilon; We
North Carolina Club (4
WILLIAM FRANK HARDAGE
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in History
Haigler
Haislip
Hall, A.
Hall, E. G.
Hall, J.
Hall, J. L.
Hall. L.
Halliwanger
Hamilton
Hammer
llamrirk
Haiichett. B.
Haiichett, D.
Hannah
Hardage
Page 84
PAUL CREELMAN HARMAN
Cambridge, Massachusetts B.A. in Psychology
Alpha Psi Delia.
HELEN MAY HARPER
Lagrange
y. w. c. A. (1).
B.A. in Sociology
MATT CLEVELAND HARPER, JR.
Marion. South Carolina B.A. in Chemistry
Glee Club (4).
MARCELLA CAROLINE HARRER
Chapel Hill B.A. in Comparative Literature
Chi Delta Phi; Phi Beta Kappa.
DONALD BRANDON HARRIS
Monroe
Phi Kappa Sigma.
DONALD JOSEPH HARRIS
Baltimore, Maryland
RICHARD DEAN HARRIS
Rockingham
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
WILLIAM BENJAMIN HARRIS
Greenville B.A. in Chemistry
DONALD BIGGS HARRISON, JR.
Palmyra B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigma; Minataurs.
RICHARD DAVIS HARTLEY
High Point B.A. in Physical Education
Alpha Tau Omega; Class Officer (1, 2). Vice-President (2); Monogram
Club (3, 4); Sheiks (2); Basketball (2, 31.
RAYMOND WALLACE HARWELL
Lincolnton
JOSEPH N. HATEM
Roanoke Rapids
Interdormitory Council (1).
JUDSON LOUIS HAWK, JR.
Atlanta. Georgia
B.S. in Physics
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Chemistry
ALLISON BURTON HAYES, JR.
Aurora B.S. in Commerce
MARY ELIZABETH HAZLETT
Chapel Hill B.A. in Spanish
Pi Beta Phi; Student Advisor (4) ; Y. W. C A. (4). Publicity Chairman;
Town Girls' Association (2, 3, 4), Vice-President (3, 4); Canterbury
Club (3, 4); Co-ed Senate (4).
ass
HaTSnan
Harper, H.
Harper, M.
Harrer
Harris, D. B.
Harris, D. J.
Harris, R.
Harris, W.
Harrison
Hartley
Harwell
Hatem
Hawk
Hayes
Hazlett
Page 85
THOMAS ALEXANDER HEARN
Chapel Hill B.S. in Commerce
Monogram Club 12. 3, I) j Wres g 11. 2. 3, 4), Co-Captain (4).
RALPH CARR HEATH
Kinston
Sigma Gamma Epsiltm; Elisha Milche
EDWARD HENRIQUEZ HECHT
Great Neck, New York
[nternstional Relations Club (3J.
ROBERT TILDEN HEDRICK
High Point
Phi Gamma Deli,,: 13 Club (2, 3, U
HUNTER DALTON HEGGIE
East Flat Rock
Monogram Club (3, 41; Track (3. 41.
.S. iii Geology
5.S. in C
ommerce
DOROTHY NELL HENDERSON
Greenville B.A
Alpha Delia Pi; President Splash Club (4); Cheer Lead
MARTIN FICK HENDERSON
Lumberton B.S. in C
Kappa Alpha; Interdoimitory Council (3); Y. M. C. A. (2)
WILLIAM THOMAS HENDERSON. JR.
Hickory B.S. in Ch
Phi Kappa Sigma.
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
CHARLES SAMUEL HEINMILLER
Tampa. Florida B.S. in Physics
Alpha Tau Omega; Band (2, 3); Glee Club 13. II.
WYAT HELSABECK
Troy
B.A. in English Literature
CRAN OLIVER HENDERSON. JR.
Augusta. Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epnlon ; Football 1.
NELSON L. HENDRIX
Winston-Salem
BETTY A. HENSHAW
Manteo
Glee Club (3, 41; V. W. C. A.; Student Adv
WILLIAM McJO HEPBURN
University, Alabama
Sigma Chi; Interfraternity Council (3).
WILLIAM FRANTZ HERR
Lancaster. Pennsylvania
B.S. in Commer
B.A. in English
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
Swimming (1. 2. 3, 4) ;
HeinmiHer
Helsabeek
Henderson, C.
Henderson, D.
Henderson, M.
Henderson, W. T,
Hendrix
Henshaw
Hepburn
Herr
Page 86
LEONARD GREY HERRING
Snow Hill
Chi Pai.
B.S. in Commerce
CHARLES HOLMES HERTY. Ill
Hellertown, Pennsylvania B.S. in Chemistry
Kappa Alpha; Alpha Chi Sigma.
WALTER JACK HESTER
Raleigh B.A. in Mathematics
Sigma Chi; Monogram Club (I. 2. 3. 4); Student Legislature (2, 3);
Cross Country (3); Track (1, 2, 3). Co-Captain (3).
ERNEST LEE HICKS
Marietta, Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Delia Sigma Pi; International Relations Club (3, *).
LEWIS FLEMING HICKS
Raleigh
B.S. in Commerce
WILLIAM BLANNIE HIGHT, JR.
Henderson B.A. in Journalism
\ Kappa Sigma; Band (1, 21; Class Officer (1), Treasurer; Y. M. C. A.
II. 21. Vice-President 121: Interdormitorj Council 12. :i, 41; President
Vance County Club: INC Club (3. 4 j , President 13. 41; Treasurer
Freshman Friendship Council.
LESTER NORRIS HILL
Marshallbere
B.A. in Art
JOHN GRADY HINES. JR.
Greenville, South Carolina
CLAUDE WILLEY HINTON
Gatesville
ROBERT GORDON HIRES
Malvern. Pennsylvania
Physics Club
WILLIAM THOMAS HOBBS
Chapel Hill
Delia Kappa Epsiloa.
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Zoology
B.S. in Physics
B.S. in Commerce
THOMAS EDWARD HOCKADAY
Roanoke Rapids
B.S. in Commerce
B.S.
in Liommerce
HOWARD P. HODGES
Washington. D. C.
CHARLES B. HODSON
San Antonio, Texas
Thtta Kappa Alpa; Carolina Political Union; Debate Squad (4); Di
Senate (4); Parliamenterian ; Student Legislature (4); Y. M. C A.
13. II; Carolina Conservative Club (41, Vice-President; Freshman
B.A. in Political Science
WILLIAM STEPHANY HOFFMANN
Statesville B.A. in History
Carolina Political Union 13): Phi Assembly (1, 2, 3).
Herring
Herty
Hester
Hicks, E. L.
Hicks, L. F.
Hight
Hill
I line-
Hinton
Hires
Hobbs
Hockaday
Hodges
Hodson
Hoffmann
Page 87
THETTIS ELIZABETH HOFFNER
Greensboro B.A. in Spanish
Sigma Delia Pi: Glee Club (3, II: Y. W. C. \. 13, 4): C. I. C. A.;
Student Party; Wesley Foundation ; Choral Club (3).
JAMES PHILLIP HOGAN
Burlington
B. S. in Commerce
Lambda Chi Alpha: Treasurer Lambda Chi Upha (3, II: Uu
Club (1. 21: Track Team 111: V M. C. \. 11. 2, 3, II.
HARRY ARTHUR HONDROS
Winston-Salem B.A^n
Delia Sigma Phi: Track (1); Tar V Feathers (2).
THOMAS MEEHAN HOOD
Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania B.S. in C^ninierte^
Chi Psi; Interfraternity Council (3, 4); Baseball (II; Y. M. C/rATTOK
B.A. in Philosophy
B.A. in Journalism
MARVIN P. HOGAN
Chapel Hill
CARL B. HOLBROOK
Chadbourn
Pi Kappa Alpha.
CHARLES ALBERT HOLDER
Atlanta, Georgia B.A. in Economics
Sigma Alpha Eptiton.
WILLIAM LAUGHLIN HOLLIDAY
Siler City B.S. in Commerce
GEORGE MARTIN HOLLOWAY
Washington, D. C. B.A
CATHERINE LEA HOLT
Burlington
Page 88
LELAND CLIFFORD NORTON
Wendell B.A. in Chemistry
Di Senate (1, 2).
MARVIN VALE HORTON, JR.
Fannville B.S. in Commerce
NORMA LUELLE HOTARD
New Smyrna Beach. Florida B.A. in Journalism
CARLOTTA MARY HOUCK
Princeton, New Jersey B.A. in Sociology
ERNEST JONES HOUSE
Marion
B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epulon: Phi Beta Kappa; Interdortnitory Council (1);
Philanthropic Assembly (41; Student Legislature (2, 3. 4); C. C. U. N. ;
C. M. Board Directors.
SAM HUNTER HOWARD
Greenville. South Carolina
Kappa Alpha Order; German Club Exei
B.S.
in L.ommerce
ROGER SHEPPARD HOWELL, JR.
Atlanta, Georgia B.A. in Psychology
JACK THOMPSON HOYLE
Belwood
SARA HELEN HOYLE
Asheville
Chi Omega.
B.A. in Zoology
B.A. in Economics
SAMUEL GRADY HUBBARD
Florence, South Carolina B.A. in Economics
ROBERT WILLIAM HUDGINS
Norfolk, Virginia B.S. in Commerce
CARL MAXWELL HUFFMAN
Burlington B.S. in Commerce
Lambda Chi Alpha; Correspondent Lambda Chi Alpha.
THOMAS SPURGEON HUGHES
Elizabeth City B.A. in Chemistry
Band (1); Daily Tar Heel (3).
CHARLES BOBO HUGHSTON
Spartanburg. S. C. B.A. in Political Science
Glee Club (4); B. S. U. (3, 41.
JOEL BROADUS HUNEYCUTT
Albemarle B.A. in Chemistry
Horton, I ..
Horton, M.
Hotard
Houck
House
Howard
Howell
Hoyle, J.
Hoyle, S.
Hubbard
Hudgins
Huffman
Hughes
Hughstou
Huneveutl
Page 89
JAMES NEELY HUNT
Franklin
B.A. in Botany
JAMES BERKLEY INGRAM. JR.
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha.
JACK SOMERS INMAN
Mount Airy
B. WADE ISAACS
Durham
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Economics
und and Fury
PHYLLIS JOYCE ISENHOUR
Charlotte B.A. in Dramatic Art
GEORGE H. JACKMAN
Charlotte
JAMES CHAPMAN JACKSON
Tryon B.S
Phi Delia Theta.
ALFRED MORTON JACOBSON
Brooklyn, New York B.S. in Com
Pi Lambda Phi.
FRED F. A. JACOBSON
Woodmere, N. Y. B.A. in Comparative Literatu
Tan. Epsilon Phi; Carolina Magazine; Daily Tar Heel (3); Frat
Council (3).
NORMAN HAROLD JACOBSON
Lenoir
Alpha Epsilon Pi.
WILLIAM ARTHUR IVEY
Rocky Mount
VIRGIL M. IVIE
Alto, Georgia
ARTHUR LEE JACKSON
Ayden
B.S. in Commerce
.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
BEN JAFFA, JR.
Charlotte
FLEMING OVERBY JEFFRESS
Kinston
Kappa Sigma.
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
2. 3. 41 ; Interfraternity
B.S. in Commerce
o c p
Isaacs
Isenhour
Ivey
Ivie
Jackson, A.
Jackman
Jackson. J.
Jacobson, A.
Jacobson, F.
Jacobson, N,
Jaffa
Jeffress
\
Page 90
MERSEY GLENN JENKINS
HARVEY WILSON JETTON. Ill
Aulander B.S.
in Commerce
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce
Glee Club (1).
Pi Kappa Alpha.
HUGH WILLIAMS JENKINS
ROBERT EUGENE JOHNS
Gastonia B.S.
in Commerce
Raleigh B.S. in Commerce
BERNARD A. JOHNSON
MORRIS NATHAN JENKINS
Jacksonville, Florida B.S. in Commerce
Tampa. Florida B.A. in American History
Sigma Chi.
Y. M. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 41; Florida Club (41.
EDGAR WALDO JOHNSON
SAMUEL GATLIN JENKINS. JR.
Durham B.A. in Physical Education
Tarboro B.S.
in Commerce
Ze:a Psi; Monogram Club (1, 2, 3); Swimming (1, 2.
3).
EDWIN H. JOHNSON
Naugatuck, Connecticut B.S. in Commerce
HARLEY YOUNG JENNINGS, JR.
Chi Phi: Y. M. C. A. (1, 2); University Veterans' Association.
Schoolfield. Virginia B.S.
in Chemistry
Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Interdormitory Co
uncil (I, 2) ; Y. M.
FREDERICK WAYNE JOHNSON
C. A. (1. 2); Wesley Foundation (3, 41.
Jamestown B.S. in Commerce
BILL JERNIGAN
Sigma Chi; Interdormitory Council (1) ; University Club (3): Soccer
(41 ; Football (1).
Louisburg B.S.
in Commerce
Dail) Tar Heel (21; Interdormitory Council (3);
(3|; Student Party Executive Committee.
Student Legislature
JESSE CLYDE JOHNSON, JR.
Mayodan B.S. in Commerce
MARY BRIGHT JERNIGAN
Sigma Chi.
Chapel Hill
Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. (2) ; Town Girls' Associate
tary (4) ; Pan. Hellenic Council Treasurer (4) ; Stude
B.A. in Art
)H (2, 3. 4), Secre-
M Advisor (4).
JESSIE JONES JOHNSON
Chapel Hill B.A. in English
Jenkins, II. G.
Jenkins, MV*tV-.
Jenkins, M.
Jenkins, S.
Jennings
Jernigan, B.
Jernigan, M.
Jetton
Johns
Johnson, B.
Johnson, E. W.
Johnson, E. H.
Johnson, F.
Johnson, J. C.
Johnson, J. J.
Page 91
MARGUERITE EDGEWORTH JOHNSON
Charlotte B.A. in Sociology
Alpha Delia Pi; YacktV) Yack (3); Y. W. C. A. (3, 41; Cheerleader
(4).
CHARLOTTE MARGARET JOHNSTON
Salisbury B.A. in Journalism
Y. W. C. A. (3, 4); C. I. C. A. (3. 4); Student Advisor (41.
STACY JOHNSON
Parkersburg
B.S. in Commerce
EUGENE HALL JOHNSTONE
Haleyville. Alabama B.A. in Political Science
Kappa Sigma; Daily Tar Heel (3); Philanthropic Assembly (3); Publica-
tions Union Board President (4); rackety Yack (1, 2, 3, 4), Assistant
Editor (1), Co-Editor (2); Editor (3), Editor (4): Graham Memorial
Board of Directors (4) ; Orientation Committee (3) ; Kappa Sigma
Secretary (3) ; Calapull (2) ; N. R. O. T. C. (1, 2) ; Campus Cabinet (3).
ARTHUR JONES
New York, New York
Daily Tar Heel (1).
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN JONES, JR.
Macon. Georgia B.A. in Physical Education
?.S. in Commerce
eball (3, II : Sv.1
(4) ; Y. M. C. A.
EULA JOYCE JONES
Raleigh B.A. in Art
Alpha Gamma Delia; Carolina Magazine III; Yackely lack Freshman
Section Editor (41; Y. W. C. A. (3, 41; Co-ed Senate Attendance
Chairman (41; Student Advisor (4); Carr Dormitory Social Chairman (3(.
JOHN JONES
Durham
LOUIS CLINTON JONES. JR.
Asheville
Delia Sigma Pi.
THERON PAUL JONES
Kinston B.A. in American
WALTER CLARKE JONES, JR.
Kinston B.S. in Comm
Kappa Sigma; Minataurs (2, 3. 4).
WILLIAM DAVIS JONES. JR.
Raleigh
ZEBULON VANCE JONES. JR.
Norfolk, Virginia
Sigma Nil; Delia Sigma Pi.
JAMES NORTON JORDAN
Whiteville
Sigma Gamma Epsilon Vice-President (3, 4); Y. M. C. A. (4); Carol.
Geological Society (3, 41; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society (3, 4).
LEILA JOSEPHS
Sanford
B.A. in Chemistry
\ \
Johnson, M.
Johnston, C.
Johnson, S.
Johnstone
Jones, A.
Jones. B.
Jones, E.
Jones, J.
Jones, L.
Jones, T.
Jones, W. C.
Jones, W. D.
Jones, Z.
Jordan
Josephs
Page 97
ARNETA BREEDLOVE JOYNER
Rocky Mount
B.A. in Arts
WILLIAM POWELL KEMP. JR.
Goldsboro
B.S. in Commerce
GARFIELD WILLIAM GUYER. JR.
High Point
Phi Kappa Sism,
B.S. in Commerce
LINCOLN SHIAO HING KAN
Shanghai. China B.A. in Political Science
RICHARD PAUL KATZIN
Winston-Salem
B.A.
Radic
FRED MARTIN KEARNS. JR.
Asheboro B.S. in Commerce
ERNEST SYDNEY KEEPING
Edmonton. Alberta. Canada. B.S. in Math. -Statistics
ass
MARY ASHBY KELLAM
Onley. Virginia
Theta Pit Epsiloa; Y. W. C. A. (4).
HOWARD B. KELLER
Newark. New Jersey
Hillel Cabinet (1, 4), Treasurer (4) .
B.S. in Chemistry
B.S. in Commerce
JACK HALE KESTNER
Bristol. Tennessee
ROBIN SMITH KIRBY, JR.
Charlotte
Kappa Alpha; Grail (2. 3. II: Intcrfn
Council (4); University Club (2): Univ,
I); Kappa Alpha President (4).
JOHN ALVIN KIRKLAND
Wilson
Zeta Psi; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Epsiloa Delia; Freshman Class Vice-
President; Interfraternitv Council (2, 3): Monogram Club (2. 3);
University Club (2); University Dance Committtee (31: Head Cheer.
leader 121; Zeta Psi Corresponding Secretary (3).
JAMES BOYD KLUTTZ
Marion
0,2.7. Tat Heel (2. 3. 4); Plamakers (3. 4).
B.A. in English
B.A. in English
B.S. in Medicine
MILDRED AUGUSTA KOON
Asheville
B.A. in Journalism
B.A. in Chemistry
W. C A. (41 ; Western
ARNOLD JACKSON KOONCE
High Point B.S.
Kappa ilpha.
in Coinmcrcc
Joyner
Guyer
Kan
K.ii/in
Kearns
Keeping
l\ ella in
Keller
Kemp
Kestner
Kirby
Kirklaiul
Kluttz
Koon
Koonee
Page 93
"7<
(ye
~Ja (4 tor
Margaret Jean Taylor and R. Foo Giduz
Pan-Hell. Politics, appealing Pulchritude — these are Mar-
garet Jean. "I only want a buddy, not a sweetheart" —
has both ! Graham Memorial Habitue.
l\oiand (-/id(
uz
"Foo to you" — Peck's bad boy of Publications, yia tiie
ineyitable "Carolina Carousel". Pet likes — Wine. Women,
and Chesterfields.
Ljeorae S^paraer
Hard-driving center who shared football captaincy with
friend. Joe Wright. Game contributor to team victories.
Active in Monogram Club activities.
Ljene donnstt
Friendly, subtle. "Yack" backbone for. lo, these many
years — three times an Editor. Spends hours with the PL
Board — Graham Memorial Bored ! Genial Gene — party
boy, and worthy product of the deep South.
Gene Johnstone
George Sparger
/roe 1/1/ riant
Tarheels* "47 blocking back who have those opposing
linesmen fits . . . with influence extending beyond the
stadium through Fraternity life and a brand-new wife.
Futhermore. he's the "studious type."
<*
snail ~~)l
wears
Calmness deep in the whirl of Co-ed activities. Mogul of
the W. A. A.. Valkyrie. Treasurer of everything, and soft-
spoken owner of that yallow convertible. Authority on
Argyles.
M Va
Tall, blond, and a married man ! Activities list that reads
like an encyclopedia — ranging from Chairmanship of
Men's Honor Council to top-spot of the German Club.
Polished product of the Tennessee Mountains. Bills a
prominent vote-getter.
.^Jom Collet
"Wheel of wheels". Prexy of the Student Bodv. charac-
terized by a cowlick and confabs on Constitutional Re-
vision. Grail. Fleece, and "Wither Student Government?"
— all parts of honest, sincere 'old Tawm'. Next residence
—Manning Hall.
Joe Wrighl
%m4
Marshall Spears
Bill Tate
EDWIN L. KORNEGAY
Mount Olive
MAURICE JOHN KOURY
Burlington
JOE LAMONT KNOWLES
Mount Olive
Delta Sigma Pi.
CHARLES E. KNOX
Sandersville
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Chemistry
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
STELLA WHITE LASSITER
Poetcasi B.A.
Chi Omega; Yackelj Yack III; V \V. C. V III.
HILDA FRANCES LAWRENCE
Asheville
B.A. in Dramatic A
Pi H.-1.1 Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Clce Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Playilakers (1,
-'. :. 1); V. W. I. \. (3, II. Cabinet HI: Phi Beta Kappa Secretary
III: Graham Memorial Board .if Directors 141: Canterbury Cli
Choral Club (I, 2, 3, II: Town Girls' Association (1, 2. 3)
EVAN HARDY (GUS) LACY. JR.
South Boston. Virginia B.A. in Journalism
Club: F bail 121 : Track
CHARLES FRANKLIN LAMBETH
HERBERT WHITE LEE
Greenville
Sigma Nu.
SARA ELIZA LEE
Goldsboro
B.A. in Political Scie
B.A. in Sociolog
C. A. (3, 41, Ch.
Th
omasville
B.A. in Economics
(3. 41 : Monogram Club (3, 4) ;
B.S. in Commerce
PATRICIA ANNE LANE
Burlington B.A. in Sociology
Delia Delia Delta; Alpha Kappa Delia; Yacket) Yack 13. 1): Y. W. C.
A. (3. 41: Delta Delta Delta Secretary. Pledge Class President; Orienta-
tion Chairman 111.
ROBERT JOSEPH LAHR
Forty-Fort. Penn. B.A. in Political Science
JAMES MURNANE LEIGH
Milford, Connecticut
Track (2, 3) .
LAURENCE BRICKENSTEIN LEINBACH
Winston-Salem B.A. in Chemistry
MERVYN DAVID LENTZ
New York. New York
B.S.
Commerce
Club; Sound
Lambeth
Lane
I .;- 1 1 ■-
Lassiter
Lawrenee
Lee, H.
Lee, S.
Leigh
Page 96
MELVILLE TYBAR LETAW
Chapel Hill
B.A. in English
SEYMOUR MYER LEVIN
Burlington B.S. in Commerce
Tan Epsilon Phi; Interfratrrnity Council (3, 4; .
FRANK LEVY
New York. New York B.S. in Commerce
Pi Lambda Phi; Sound and Fury (3); Track (1, 2); Soccer (3. 41.
COY STEPHEN LEWIS. JR.
Robbins B.S. in Marketing
FREDERIC DEWHURST LEWIS
Winnetka. Illinois
DAVID WILSON LEWIS
Winston-Salem
B.A. in French
B.S. in Commerce
OWEN DONALD LEWIS
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
Carolina Magazine (3, 41: Daily Tar Heel (3. 4); Tarnation (3. 41.
ROBERT BRUCE LEWIS
Southern Pines
B.A. in Journalism
RODDEY MILLER EICON. JR.
Spindale
International Relations Club (3, i) .
LLOYD STEINMETZ LILES
Middlesex
International Relations Club (3. i) .
JAMES MARSHALL LILLY
Birmingham. Alabama
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Interfraternity
DAVID H. LINEBERGER
Chapel Hill
B.S. in Commerce
SARAH DABNEY LITTLE
Wadesboro B.A. in Sociology
Pi Beta Phi; Class Honor Council (3. 4): V. W. C A. (3, 4|.
JAMES LEAK LITTLE. JR.
Salisbury B.S. in Commerce
Phi Delta Tkela.
ROBERT WILLIAM LITTLE. JR.
Emporia. Virginia B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Vl»; German Club Executiye (41: Student Legislature (3); Foot.
ball 111 V. M. C. A. 111.
Letaw
Levin
Levy
Lewis, C.
Lewis, F.
Lewis, D.
Lewis, O.
Lewis, R.
Ligon
Liles
Lilly
Lineberger
Little, S.
Little. J.
Little. R.
Page 97
HAROLD WILLIAM LLOYD
Plainfield. New Jersey
B.S. in Chemistry
cil 111: Monogram Club (1. 2. 31; Track (1,
WILLIAM G. Q. LLOYD
Chapel Hill B.A. in Physical Education
r, Beta Phi; Women's Honor Council (3): Glee Club II. 21: Studenl
Legislature (2) J Pan. Hellenic Council 141: Valkyries (3, II. Treasurer
(4); Town Girls' Association (1. 2. 3. II: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet II. 2);
Pi Beta Phi President; Women'* Uhlctii Association Vice-President Mi.
Secretary (3).
FORREST LOCKEY. JR.
Aberdeen B.A. in Political Science
Alpha Tait Omega.
RITA LOEB
Asheville
B.A. in English
national Relations Club
CHARLES GILBERT LOWDERMILK
Greensboro B.S. in Commerce
Glee Club (1); Interiraternity Council (2).
ALLARD KENNETH LOWENSTEIN
Scarsdale, New York B.A. in History
Daily Tar Heel (1, 2. 31, Editorial Board (3): Debate Council I -' I :
Dialectic Senate tl. 2. 3. 41. Vice-President (2), President 131; Glee
Club 121: Student Council 111: Student Legislature 12. 3 1; State
Studenl Legislature Chairman (3); Community Club (4); Campus
Constitution Committee II. 21: Hillel Representative. Council for Religion
in Life (31: Institute of Human Relations 131: Philanthropic Re.
organizing Committee (II; Amphoterothon 12 i
B.S. in Comni'
JAMES A. LUCAS
Wilson
STUART BUTLER LUCAS
New York. New York
International Relations Club (1. 2. 3. 41.
WILLIAM RIPPY LYNCH
Erwin
Kappa Sigma.
GEORGE EDWARD LYNE. JR.
Greenville. South Carolina
Delta Sigma Pi; Glee Club (3).
MUIR PASCHALL LYON
Greensboro
Delta Kappa Epsilon.
CHARLES K. MAC DERMUT. JR
Leonia. New Jersey B.A. in Journalism
Pi Kappa Alpha.
DONALD FRANCIS MAC DONALD
Little Rock. South Carolina B.A. in Journalism
Daily Tar Heel III.
DONLEEN CAROL MAC DONALD
New Orleans. Louisiana
Pi Beta Phi; Yackety lack (3) ;
■il Cha
Pi Be
W. C. A.
Council (3)
LAWRENCE HAMILTON MAC KIRDY
Weldon B.S. in Commerce
Phi Beta Kappa; Daih T„, Heel Hi : V M. C. A. (1, 3, 4).
B.A. in Chemistr
B.A. in English
131: W,
Senibt
Lloyd, H.
Lloyd. W.
Lockey
Loeb
Lowdermilk
Lowenstein
Lucas, J.
Lucas, S.
Lviich
Lvue
MacDermut
MacDonald, D. F.
MacDonald, D. C.
MacKirdv
Page 98
>
Class
JOSEPHINE BIGLOW MAC MILLAN
Chapel Hill B.A. in Physical Education
GEORGE BENJAMIN MC ADEN
Charlotte B.A. in Journalism
JOHN LYTLE MC BRIDE. JR.
Statesville B.S. in Chemistry
Sound and Fury (1, 2, 3, 4); Fencing (1. 21: Student Entertainment
i bail
(4J.
JOHN LEWIS MC CAIN
Southern Pines
Glee Club (3).
B.A. in Chemistry
HELEN KATHERINE MC CANN
Asheville B.A. in Sociology
Alpha Gamma Delta; Glee Club (3. 41; Western North Carolina Club
13. 4.1.
WILLIAM CHARLES MC CLAMMY
Wilmington B.A. in Sociology
ROBERT ALEXANDER MC CLARY
Kannapolis B.S. in Commerce
:ia« Officers (2), Treasurer; Dance Committee (3);
I ; Universit; Club (3) : Freshman Friendship
JAMES L. MC CORMICK
Sanford
B.S. in Commerce
WILLIAM BENSON MC CUTCHEON. JR.
Durham B.A. in Chemistry
Phi Delia Thela; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Phi Beta Kappa: Class Executive
Committee (31: Class Officer 141. President; Gimghoulj Interfraternity
Legislature (3, II: Phi Delta Thela President
B.A. in Zoology
B.A. in Journalism
B.A. in Zoology
Council (3 41 ; Stude
111; Upka F.ps,lon Delta President ill
JACK PASCHAL MC DANIEL
Fayetteville
Wrestling 12. 3, 4J.
PEGGY MC DANIEL
Red Springs
Glee Club (3.1 : Y. W. C. A. I :. 1 1 .
CON T. MC DONALD
Columbus. Georgia
Phi Delta Thela.
MATILDA STEINMETZ MC DONALD
Raleigh B.A. in Psychology
Siema Pi Alpha; Y..W. C. A. (3, 41; House Privileges Board (1).
JOHN K. BOARDMAN MC DOWELL
New York, New York B.A. in English
Carolina Magazine Literary Editor 13. 41.
CHARLES GAMEWELL MC GIMSEY
Lenoir B.S. in Commerce
Phi Delta Thela.
MacMillan
McAden
McBride
McCain
MoCann
McClammy
McClary
McCorniick
MeCutcheoii
McDaniel. J.
MoDaniel. P.
McDonald. C.
McDonald, M.
McDowell
McGimsev
Page 99
GEORGE RANKIN MC KEE, JR.
Rougemont B.S.
Delta Sigma Pi; ( hi Psi.
THOMAS JOHN MC KIM. Ill
Ahoskie
Chi Phi.
DONALD LEE MC KINNEY
Washington. D. C.
Sigma \u; Carolina Magazine II. 2. 3, II.
KATHERINE SUSANNA MC LEAN
in l.onnnerce
B.A. in Economics
B.A. in English
B.S. in Commerce
North Carolina Club; Student
B.A. in Journalism
1} Yack (3).
B.S. in Commerce
Weaverville
Y. W. C A. (3, II. Cabinet HI : We
Idvisol III; Bapnist Student Union (
GILBERT A. MC LEOD
Robbins
Kappa Alpha; Hail* lar Heel (3, 41
LESLIE MC LEOD. JR.
Wauchula. Florida
Sigma Nu: Glee Club (.4.1.
RANDALL ALEXANDER MC LEOD
Chapel Hill B.A. in Political Science
Debate Squad II. -'I; Dialectic Senate (1. 2. 3. 41. Sergeant-at-Arms
(2), Clerk (2); International Relal - Club 11. -'. '!. II; Young
Democrats Club 11. _' I ; Y. M. C A. (1. 21; C. C. U. V (3 I);
Student Party (1. 2. 41; World Federalists (3, li.
SAMUEL ALEXANDER MC LEOD
Chapel Hill B.A. in Mathematics
JOHN MARSHALL MC MURRAN
Newport News. Virginia B.A. in Dr
Playmakers (1, 2, 3, 4); Sound and Fury (II.
MARGARET OLIVIA MC NEILL
Aberdeen B.A. in
JAMES SMALL MC NIDER
Hertford B.A. in Political
Alpha Tau Omega; Philanthropic Assembl] (2. :t. 4); Student Legisl
(31; University Club (3); Y. M. I- \ (3).
JOANNE MC NUTT
Greensboro B.A. in Geography
Dialectic Senate (3, t) ; Sound and Fury (4) : Y. W. C. A. (4) ; C. I. C A.
MARGARET MANLY MC WILLIAMS
Charlotte B.A. in Sociology
Chi Omega; Interdormitory Council (3. II. President (41; Student
OLIVER WENDELL MADDREY
Seaboard
JOHN RASCOE MANESS
Greensboro
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
B.A. in Sociology
B.S. in Commerce
X
M Jkim,
Mckee
Mrkim
McKinney
McLean
McLeod. G.
McLeod, L.
McLeod, R.
McLeod, S.
McMurran
McNeill
McNider
McNuU
McWilliams
Maddrey
Man.—
Page 100
STANLEY WALTER MARCZYK
Nesquehoning. Peiin. B.A. in Physical Education
Dance Committee (2. 3, 4) : Intertlormitory Council (3) ; Monogram Club:
Sound and Fury (31; University Dance Committee (2, 3, II; Football
(1. 2, 3J.
MARGARET MC RAE MARLEY
Cary
B.A. in Art
ARNOLD STANLEY MARKS
Greensboro B.A. in Chemistry
Zeta Beta Tan; Interfraternity Council 111.
ALBERT R. MARKS, JR.
Baltimore. Maryland
Tan Epsilon Phi.
J.S. in C
ommeree
JERRY M. MARSH, JR.
Augusta, Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha; Inrerfralernity Council (3, II; House Privileges Board (4).
SARA SAVAGE MARSH
Onley. Virginia B.A. in Arts and Sciences
RICHARD H. MARSHTON
Charlotte B.S. in Pre-Medicine
ERNEST JUNE MARTIN, JR.
Mount Olive B.S. in Commerce
FRED SEASEL MARTIN
Greenwood, South Carolina B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigma.
MARGARET NEWMAN MARTIN
Roanoke Rapids B.A. in Psychology
llpha Delta Pi; Hand (3. 4), Majorette; Glee Club (3); Student Legisla-
ture (3); Alpha Delta P, President in.
WILLIAM ROY ALL MARTIN, JR.
Cary B.A. in Chemistry
Phi Gamma Delia.
OSCAR MC DOWELL MARVIN. JR.
Winston-Salem B.A. in Chemistry
Sigma Nu; International Relations Club 111; Monogram Club (1. 2. 3,
li: Wrestling Manager (1. 3): Y. M. C A. II. 2. 3, II: Sigma Vu
I'reasurer (4j.
CHARLES ELBERT MASSEY
Dover. Delaware B.A. in Political Science
Kappa llpha; 13 Club.
MIRIAM MASSEY
Milledgeville. Georgia
JOHN M. MAY
Long Branch. New Jersev
/'. Kappa Alpha.
B.A. in Sociology
B.S. in Commerce
~Marca?yk
Marley
Marks, A. S.
Marks, A. R.
Marsh, J.
Marsh, S.
Marshton
Martin, E.
Martin, F.
Martin, M.
Martin, W.
Marvin
Massey, C.
Massey, M.
May
JiM^M^M
Page 101
THOMAS MURRAY MAYFIELD, JR.
Greenville. South Carolina B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha.
OVEIDA ELLIS MAYO
Henderson
B.A. in Chemistry
Alpha Gamma Delta; Thela Psi Epsilon; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Alpha
Gamma Delia Chaplain; Theta f>i Epsiton Secretary.
WILLIAM PATRICK MAYO
Washington
Phi Gamma Delia.
JANE PAGE MEARS
Asheville
CYRIL LONG MEBANE
Newton
Alpha Tau Omega.
HENRY CHARLES MENZIES
Hickory
B.S. in Medicine
B.A. in Journalism
rn North Carolina Club (3) ;
B.A. in Journalism
B.S. in Commerce
HENRY HARDINGE MENZIES
Winston-Salem B.A. in English
Carolina Magazine Literar) Stan ill; Dail) far Heel (1) ; Yackely
).„!. Sophomore Editor (3); Y. M. C A. Council II).
LELIA ALBERTA MERCER
Wilson
Delia Delia Delia; Dailj Tar Heel (1); Y. ^
CARY L. MEREDITH
Annapolis. Maryland
Sigma Chi.
FRANK MERIWETHER
Chapel Hill
EDWARD HOWARD MERRY
Augusta. Georgia
Delia Kappa Epsilon ; Class Executive Comn
II. -•>. Managing Editor (1); Philanthropic Ai
Board (2).
DON EUGENE METCALF
Rutherfordton
GERALD MEYER
Portsmouth, Virginia
Sigma Gamma Epsilon ; Elisha Mitchell Scien
B.A. in Mathe!
C. A. (2)
B.S.
B.A
B.A. in Eng
ttee (1) ; Daily Tar
etnt.ly (1, 2) ; Public
CLARENCE ARTHUR MIDDLETON, JR.
The Plains, Virginia B.S. in Commerce
DAVID EARL MILES, JR.
Durham
Phi Kappa Sigma; Glee Club (lj .
B.S.
B.A. in Economics
B.S. in Geology
;ific Society.
in Commerce
Mayfield
Mayo, O.
Mayo. W.
Mears
Mebane
Menzies, H. C.
Menzies. H. H.
Mercer
Meredith
Meriwether
Merry
Metcalf
Meyer
Mi, I. Mi I. mi
Miles
Cage J 02
ass
ANN MARIE MILLER
Charlotte
Glee Club I I, I i .
B.A. in Journalism
DANIEL BYRD MILLER. JR.
Greenville. South Carolina B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Ep.tilun ; Y. M. C. A. (3, 4) ; Un
ciation (3, 4).
itv \.
KITTY ALICE MILLER
Lincolnton B.A. in Sociology
Delta Delta Delta; Yacket, Yack ,3. 4,: Y. M. C. A. (3. 4); Alpha
Knppa Delta.
MILTON ROSCOE MILLER
Richmond. Virginia
Phi Delta Theta ; Sheiks 13. Ii. Sei rel
B.S. in Commerce
surer; Y. M. C A. (1, 2).
BRANSON WILLIAM MILLS, JR.
Baxley, Georgia B.S. in Chemistry
Chi P>i; Alpha Chi Sigma.
LAPSLEY BARRON MILLS. JR.
Laurinburg R \. jn Journalism
Alpha Tau Omega; Da:h Tar Heel II. 2. 3. 41. Managing Editor (3|
- Editor (4); Interfraternity Council (2).
JOHN LANTY MIMNAl GH
Columbia. South Carolina
B.S. in Commerce
BRICE MILTON MINNIX, JR.
Pleasantville. New Jersey B.A. in Radio
I, 4)i Playmakers ,1. 2. 3, 4); Sound and Fury
RONALD EARL MINTZ
Rocky Mount B.A. in Political Science
Lambda Chi Alpha: Interfraternity Council (3, 4); Student Legislature
LSI: Hub; Democrats Club (3.1; Lambda Chi Alpha President (31
Secretary I I j .
LEON CHARLES MITCHELL
Palmyra. New Jersey B.A. in Physical Education
D.,ih Tar Heel (3); Baseball 111; Basketball II.' 21: Football (2).
ROBERT S. MITCHELL
Richmond Hill. New York
GLENN D. MOAK
Charlotte
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Chemistry
Philanthropic Assembly (2);
JAMES ROBERT MOCK
Atlanta. Georgia
Alpha Tau Omega; Interdormitor) C.._
131: Intramural -.ul.,11 .,,,.1 Football All-Star (3)
CARROLL ODELL MONEY
B.S. in Commerce
il (3) ; Young Democrats Club
Mount Airy
GEORGE E. N. MONTAGUE
Winston-Salem
Sigma Alpha Epulon ; Danee Committee (4); Gorgon's Head (3 4) ■
Interfraterniu Council (2, ») ; Swimming 111.
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
— - — MfflervA.
MUler. D.
Miller, K.
Miller, M.
Mills, B.
Mills. L.
Mimiiaugh
Miimix
Mintz
Mitchell, L.
Mitchell. R.
Moak
Mock
Money
Montague, G.
Page 103
PAUL NISSEN MONTAGUE. JR.
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
PAUL SIDNEY MOOR Hk \l>
Little Rock, Arkansas
B.A/L Zo^gy
Delta Kappa Epstton; German Club Executive (2); Student Legislature
12, 31: Yaekety lack 12): Graharu Memorial Board of Directors Chair-
man (3. 1); May Frolics (31: Minataurs (3. 4) .
SARAH CHARLOTTE MONTAGUE
Goldsboro B.A. in Sociology
Alpha Delta Pi; Swimming (4); Alpha Delta Pi Rush Captain 111:
Goldsboro Carolina Club Secretary-Treasurer (3).
MELVIN HURLEY MOORING
Rocky Mount
Sigma \u.
GLENN C. MOOSE
Troutmans
B.S. in CornmeVces
B.S. in ComHbrce
DONALD LEON MOORE
Reidsville B.A. in Journalism
Lambda Chi Alpha; Dath Tai Heel 111: Football (1. 21: Y. M. C. A.
(1, 2, 3. i).
FRANCES M. MORGAN
Winter Haven. Florida
Theta Psi Epsilon.
B.S. in Chemistry
HENRY DYER MOORE. Ill
West Chester. Penn. B.A. in French
Chi Phi; Tau Psi Omega; Dialectic Senate (21; International Relations
Club (1, 2, 31; Sound and Fnr> 11. 2 1.
JAMES LAUDER MORGAN
Laurinburg
Kappa Sigma.
B.S. in Commerce
JOHN TAYLOR MOORE
Lenoir B.S. in Commerce
JOSEPH A. MORGAN. JR.
Asheville
B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha.
International Relations Club; Western North
Carolina Club.
MARY CORBETT MOORE
Lumberton B.A. in Sociology
Alpha Delta Pi.
REITZEL NOAH MORGAN
High Point
B.S. in Commerce
RUTH MOORE
Lumberton B.A. in Sociology
ALBERT RICHARD MORRIS
Gastonia
B.S. in Commerce
Alpha Delia Pi.
Kappa Sigma.
Chop
el
s*e
<&**
Montague, P.
Montague, S.
Moore, D.
Moore, H.
Moore, J.
Moore, M.
Moore, R.
Moorhead
Mooring
Moose
Morgan, F.
Morgan, J. L.
Morgan, J. A.
Morgan, R.
Morris, A.
Page 104
E. RAYMOND MORRIS
Drexel Hill. Pennsylvania
B.A. in Economics
-k, II. .ill ill: Tennis (1, 2.
GEORGE DALLAS MORRIS. JR.
Danville. Virginia
in C
ommerce
HAROLD A. MORRIS
Fayetteville
Chi Phi; Y. M. C. \. (3, 41 ; Graha:
Chi Phi Secretary (i) .
BEVERLY SANDERS MORRISON
New Bern B.A. in Sociology
Y. W. C A. (3, 4.1; C. I. C. A. (3).
JANE B. MORRISON
Asheville
Pi Beta Phi; University Club (4).
SAMUEL HOWARD MORROW
Wilmington B.A. in Histurx
B.A. in Economics
al Board of Directors (3) ;
B.A. in Journalism
Phi Delia Theta;
President (2), Pr,
President (3) ; S»
lil (3, 41: Monogram Club (1, 2, 3, 4), Vice-
in (31: Student Legislature III: Lniversity Club
ling (1, 2, 3, 41, Co-Captain (3, II.
RICHARD PHILLIPS MOSES
Sumter. South Carolina
RICHARD P. MOTTSMAN
Hendersonville
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Journalism
e (II ; Hillel
MARY LOUISE MOULTON
New Bern B.A. in Art
lure (4); Y. W. C. A. (3, 41, Cabinet (II;
KURT E. MULLER
Thornwood, New York B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Monogram Club; Cross Country 141: Track (2, 3,
WILLIAMS MURCHISON
Wilmington
MARY COLVIN MURPHY
Washington. D. C.
LOLA LEE MUSTARD
Bluefield. West Virginia
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in English
B.A. in Journalism
13. II : C. I. C. A.; Can
ISIDORE LOUIS NACHIMOW
Brooklyn, New York B.A. in Chemistry
Tan Epsilon Phi.
MARK SCHLOSS NATHAN
Chapel Hill B.S. in Commerce
Morrow
Moses
Moil-in. in
Moulton
Muller
Murchison
Murphy
Mustard
Nachimow
Nathan
Page 105
JOHN H. NEAL
Greensboro
Pi Kappa Alpha.
B.A. in Journalism
WILLIAM ALBERT NEAL, JR.
New Bern B.S. in Commerce
CHARLES LESLIE NELSON
Greenville
DONALD H. NELSON
Brooklyn, New York
5.A. in Art
B.S. in Economics
FRANK W. NELSON
Walkertown B.A. in Physical Education
JULIUS SAM NESBIT. JR.
Mooresville B.A. in Political Science
HORACE DEWEY NEWSON
Albuquerque. New Mexico
GUY LEWIS NICHOLS
Raleigh
JOHN DE ZOUCHE NICOLLS
Norristown, Pennsylvania B.A. in
RUFUS NELSON NORRIS
Port Washington, New York B.A. in Musta
Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4). Secretary (2); Playmakers (1. 2, 3. 4); Choral N
Club (1. 2, 3, 4).
DORIS LUCILE NEWBURN
Sarasota. Florida
B.A. in Music
DONALD ISAIAH NEWMAN
Clinton B.A. in Sociology
Glee Club (3, 41.
JOHN HENRY NORTHEY. JR.
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce
CHARLES WILLIAM NORTON
Durham B.S. in Commerce
Delia Kappa Epiilon; Band (1); German Club; Monogram Club (3);
Sheiks; Sound and Fury (II; Student Legislature (2, 3); Boxing (31;
Football (1); Track (1); Wrestling (2).
JOSEPH ROBY NORWOOD, JR.
Salisbury B.A. in Economics
Neal, J.
Neal, W.
Nelson, C.
Nelson, D.
Nelson, F.
Nesbit
Newburn
Newman
Newson
Nichols
Nicholls
Norris
Northey
Norton
Norwood
Page 106
DOROTHY GORDON OAKEY
Hertford B.A. in English
ALBERT LEE O'BRIANT
Raeford B.A. in English
Glee Club.
NORMAN DENNIS O'BRIANT
Durham B.S. in Commerce
PAUL WILLIAM O'BRIANT. JR.
Washington. D. C. B.A. in Political Science
Phi Delia Theta.
CECIL KEITH ODOM
Mount Olive B.A. in Political Science
LEONARD LEE OETTINGER
Kinston B.A. in Economics
Kappa Sigma.
JOSEPHINE CARTER OGLESBY
Concord B.A. in English
EDGAR A. ORMAND
Asheville
B.S. in Commerce
GLADYS GERTRUDE OSBORNE
Hendersonville B.A. in Zoology
Glee Club (3, 4j .
STEPHEN MONROE OSBORNE
Southern Pines B.A. in Chemistry
EDWARD KELLY O'SHEA, JR.
New York. New York B.A. in Journalism
Baseball (l) ; Football (1, 2, 3).
THOMAS M. D. O'SHEA
Durham B.A. in Arts and Sciences
ROBERT SAMUEL OVERMAN
Elizabeth City B.S. in Commerce
Delia Alpha Epsilon.
JOHN ROBERT OWEN
Mars Hill B.A. in Chemistry
Chi Phi; Y. M. C. A. (3. 4); Western North Carolina Club (4).
WILBUR LEE PADGETT
Rocky Mount
Pi Kappa Alpha.
B.S. in Commerce
O'Briant, "TW—
O'Briant, N.
O'Briant, P.
Odoni
Oettinger
Oglesby
Ormand
Osborne, G.
Osborne, S.
O'Shea, E.
O'Shea, T.
Overman
Owen
Padgett
Page 107
AZOR IRENE PAGE
Chapel Hill
B.A. in Mathematics
FREDERICK LEON PAGE
Zebulon
Lambda Chi Alpha; Theta Tau; Lambda Chi
DOTSON GEORGE PALMER
Asheville
Sigma Chi; Class Officer (2, 4), President (2.
Council: Interdormitory Council: Student Cou
University Club: Graham Memorial Board of
InterScan Colleges and Universities.
GEORGE STEPHEN PANKEY
Jacksonville
Sigma Chi; Philanthropic Assembly (1).
CLYDE LESLIE PARKER. JR.
Norfolk. Virginia
Sigma Vtt.
JAMES PARROTT PARKER
LaGrange
ilpha Tau Omega.
JANE LEE PARKER
Raleigh
Hi Una Phi; rackety Yack (3); Y. W. C.
DOLAN PARKS
Lexington
B.A. in History
ilpha Vice-President (4).
B.S. in Commerce
4) ; Grail; Interlraternity
ii. il : Student Legislature;
Directors; Who's Who in
B.A. in Chemistry
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Chemistry
B.A. in English
(3, 4).
B.S. in Chemistry
VIVIAN ARCHER PARKS. JR.
Halifax B.S.
MARYJ0PARR1SH
Burnsville
STEVE EDWARD PARROT
Kinston
Kappa Sigma; Y. M. C A. (1. 2, 4J .
JAMES GREENE PASCHAL
Winston-Salem
Kappa Sigma; Student Council (4); 13 Club (2, 3, 4); University ParV
Steering Committee (.'.. It; Winston. Salem Carolina Club (1, 2, 3, 4V \
President (3).
JOHN WILLARD PATTERSON
Lyndhurst. New Jersey B.A. in History
PATRICIA JEAN PATTERSON
Greensboro
FLORA ELAINE PATTON
Jonesboro
B.A. in English
Seni
Page, A.
Page, F.
Palmer
Pankey
Parker, C.
Parker, J. P.
Parker, J. L.
Parks, D.
Parks, V.
Parrish
Parrot
Pasehal
Patterson, J.
Patterson, P.
Patton, F.
Page 108
JAMES RICHARD PATTON
Durham B.A. in English with Honors
llpha Epsilon Delta; Kappa Sigma; Philanthropic Assembly (3); Y. M.
i . V (2, 3, I): C. C. U. N.
HARRY ALLAN PAUL
Beaufort
B.S. in Commerce
PERRELL FRANKLIN PAYNE. JR.
Chapel Hill B.A. in Philosophy
JAMES FRANKLIN PEACOCK
B.A. in English
B.A. in Zoology
B.S. in Commerce
>»<:*-«» Yack 141: Y. W. C. A. (3, li: C. I. C. A. (3. 4). Secretary
(3), President (H: Studcnl Advisoi (41: Gastonia Carolina Club (3, 41,
Benson
JOHN KENT PEARSON
Apex
SARAH BLAIR PEARSON
Gastonia
THOMAS ELWOOD PEARSON
-^Reidsville B.S. in Commerce
®> DONALD DEE PECK
Bridgeton. New Jersey B.A. in Economics
Monogram Club (1, 2. 3. II: Basketball (2); Tennis (1, 2), Co-Captain
'lass
HARRY M. PEEK
Mars Hill
Sigma Gamma Epsilon .
JACQUES ALLEN PEEL
Palatka. Florida
Phi Beta Kappa.
MARGARET RAY PEIRCE
Warsaw
Y. W. C. A. (3, 4J.
MARY ELIZABETH PELL
Chapel Hill
tlpha Delta Pi; Glee Club (2); Y. W. C. A. (1) j Town Girl-' Is:
B.S. in Geology
B.S. in Accounting
B.A. in Art
B.A. in Journalism
JAMES M. PENNY
Raleigh
B.S. in Commerce
WILFORD PARKESS PENNY
Nutley. New Jersey B.S. in Commerce
Phi Kappa Sigma.
BENJAMIN PERLMUTTER
Newark. New Jersey B.A. in Political Science
Carolina Magazine (1, 2, 3. 41, Business Manager (3, 4); Carolina
Political I iib.ii (1. -'. I, I) J DaU-j Tar Heel 131; Debale Squad (21;
Dialectic Senate 11. 2), Sergeant-at-Arms (21; Hillel Cabinet (1, 2. 3,
II Vice-President 13 1. President III: Student Legislature (1); C. R. I.
1. u. :;. li. President Ml: Campus War Chest |1 I ; Prague Preparatory
Commission (3).
Palton, J.
Paul
Payne
Peacock
Pearson, J.
Pearson, S.
Pearson, T.
Peck
Peek
Peel
Peirce
Pell
Penny, J.
Penny, W.
Perlmutter
Page 109
ETHEL YOUNG PERRY
Zirconia
B.A. in Recreation
GALES PICKARD PERRY
Chapel Hill B.A. in Physical Education
Basketball (II ; Football (1).
HOWARD BLUMBERG PERRY
Charlotte B.A. in Chemistry
NEIL CLEVELAND PERRY. JR.
Gastonia B.S. in Commerce
JOYCE LEWIS PETERSON
Brooklyn, New York
B.A. in English
Pi Bern Phi; Chi Delta Pin; S I and Fur\ 111; Student Legislature
III: University Club (3); Y. W. C. A. (3, 11. Cabinet (II: racket)
Ynck Beauty Queen (31; Pan-Hellenic Council III.
ALTON MILLER PETTEWAY
Kinston B.S. in Commerce
/),„/, I „, Heel ill: [nterdormitorj Council III: University Club III.
EVELYN SHORE PETTITT
Rocky Mount B.A. in French
: V. W. C. A. 13. II : Pan-Hellenir
JAMES SOLOMON PHELPS. JR.
Clemmons B.S.
JEANE GRAVES PIERCE
Rocky Mount B.A. in
Upha Delia Pi; Dailj Tar Heel 131: Alpha Delia Pi Treasu
EDWARD ASHBY PIPKIN. JR.
Troy B.S. in Com
EARL MARCUS PITTMAN. JR.
Jersey City, New Jersey B.S. in Comnii
Delia Sigma Pi.
BERNARD BAILEY PLEMMONS
Luck B.A. in Political Science
North
ADELIA BLANCHE POINDEXTER
Winston-Salem B.A. in Spanish
Philanthropic Assembly 13. I): Baptist Student Union.
EDWIN POLLOCK
Quantico. Virginia
J. C. PONDER
Mars Hill
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
Perry, E.
Perry, G.
Perry, H.
Perry, N.
Peterson
Petteway
Pettitt
Phelps
Pierce
Pipkin
Pittman
Plemmons
Poindexter
Pollock
Ponder
Page 110
BARBARA HUNT POOLE
Carthage
I!. \. in English
Alpha Gamma Delia; V. W. C. A. (3. 41; Alpha Gamma Delia President
(4); Splash Club; Fan-Hellenic Council Secretary-Treasurer (4).
JAMES RALPH POOLE
Statesville
Class Honor Council (3); Basketball (3).
B.S. in Commerce
CHARLES WILLIAMSON PORTER
New Orleans. Louisiana B.A. in Political Science
Phi Delia Theta; Student Legislature (4); University Party Steering
Committee (41; Junior Class Marshal I'll: Le Cercle Franeais (4).
EDWARD BARNARD PORTER. JR.
Thomasville. Georgia
?.- Y. M. C. \. (2, 3, 41 :
B.S. in Commerce
Beta Gamma Sigma Treas-
OTIS YATES POTEAT
Spindale
B.S. in Commerce
Committee (1) ; Class Honor
LEE HARRIS POTTER
.J Atlanta. Georgia
Phi Delia Theta: Phi Ma Alpha.
JOSEPHINE ERWIN POWE
Durham
Pi Beta Phi: Y. W. C A. (4J.
^
ass
B.A. in English
B.A. in Art
ROBERT WILLIAM POWELL
Goldsboro
Beta Theta Pi.
WILLIAM CARLYLE POWELL
Lumberton
Phi Beta Kappa: Interdormitorv Council (2, 3); Yackely Yack (2);
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (1, 2. 3, 41; C. R. I. L. (4); Orientation Com-
mittee (3).
MAURICE CARY POWERS
Chapel Hill
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Zoology
B.A. in Zoology
CHARLES JEFFERSON PRESLAR. JR.
Hickory B.A. in Journalism
ALLAN T. PREYER. JR.
New Rochelle, New York B.S. in Commerce
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Gorgon's Head; Sli-iks.
CECIL C. PRINCE
High Point
Student Legislature (3, 4).
B.A. in Journalism
LAWRENCE JAY PROBSTEIN
New York. New York B.S. in Commerce
Tennis (1, 2) .
ROBERT WAYNE PRUNTY
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce
(1. 2. 3, 4). Vice-President (4), Drum
Poole. B.
Poole, J.
Porter, C.
Porter. E.
Poteat
Potter
Powe
Powell, R.
Powell, W.
Powers
Preslar
Preyer
Prince
Probstein
Prunty
Page 111
JAMES BENJAMIN RAGLAND
Louisburg B.A. in Chemistrj
Band (3. 4.1.
JEAN ANN RAMSDELE
Plant Citv. Florida
B.A. in English
Delia Delta Delia; Y. W. C. \. (3, II; Cheerleadei Mi, Mode
Group (3).
LAWRENCE S. RANKIN
Gastonia
Beta Tketa Pi.
B.S. in Commerce
BARBARA ANN RAY
Charlotte
Chi Omega; I'll
Committee Rep
B.A. in Sociology
Club I li : 1 . \\ . 1 1. A. i 3, li : 1 Diversity Steering
ive; Chi Omega Co-social Chairman in.
CAMILLA RAY
Oxford B.A. in English-Physical Education
isketball (3, II: Swimming (3, II; V. W. C. A. (3,
Baseball (3, II
II : Co-ed Sens
III: W. \. \. Repr
MARY ELLEN REAVES
Hamlet
C. I. C. A. Secretary III.
NINA BELLE REDDITT
Greenville
V. V. C. V (3, li : I nivcrsit) \ .
Parly; C. I. C. A.
13. II.
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in History
iation (3, II ; Student
THOMAS GRAIG REDFERN
Reynolds
HI BERT HAMPTON REDMON
Asheville
WILLIAM J. REESE
Hendersonville
Phi Beta Kappa.
WILLIAM J. RE GELSON
New York. New York
CHARLES ALBERT REID
Asheville
NAT DOWNS REID
Asheville
EUGENE MINER RE QUA. JR.
Charlotte B.S. in Commerce
lie!!'! Kappa Epsilim.
GEORGE NEEDHAM REYNOLDS
West Palm Beach. Florida B.A. in Mathematics
Raglanrl
K.liil-'li II
Rankin
Ray, B.
Rav. C.
Reaves
Redditl
Redfern
Redmon
Reese
ReGelson
Reid, C.
Reid, N.
ReQua
Revnolds, G.
A
Page 112
HENRY REYNOLDS. JR.
Greensboro
B.S. in Commerce
Delia Sigma Pi: Daily Tar Heel; Sound and Fur% 1 2 1 : Universjt,
(3, li: facket) Yack 111; Freshman Friendship Coun. -il 111; UniveraitJ
JOHN FITZHUGH RHEM
Garysburg
KENNETH REID RHODES
Lexington
B.S. in Pharmacy
I II:
B.S. in Commerce
ELSIE RHYNE
Chapel Hill B.A. in English
Delia Delia Delia; Girr Club (2, 5, li: !..«„ Girls' Association 12, 3, «).
NEVIN J. RICE
Charlotte
Phi Gamma Delia.
B.S. in Commerce
^
ass
CHARLES FRANCIL RIDDLE
Graham B.A. in Economics
Pi Kappa Alpha; Glee Club 11. II.
NELLE DAWN RING
Kingsport. Tenn. B.A. in Chemistry
tlpha Gamma Delta; Y. W. C. \. (4) ; Pan. Hellenic Council (4) ; Student
NORMAN DAVID RIPPS
Bayonne. New Jersey-
US. in Commerce
ming (1. At; Fraternity
STEVE WALTER ROBERSON
Charlotte B.A. in Political Science
CLAUDE LEEMAN ROBERTSON
Knightdale B.S. in Commerce
Delia Sigma Pi.
WILLIAM GEORGE ROBERTSON
Washington. D. C. B.S. in Commerce
Phi Delia Thela.
MILDRED E. ROBINSON
Asheville B.A. in Mathematics
LAURAWOODSIDEROE
Wilmington
GEORGE ALBERT ROESEL
Augusta. Georgia
JACQUELINE ROGERS
Fair Bluff B.A. in English
Daily Tar Heel (4); CI.. Club 111; V. «. C. V. 13. 41; CI. C A.
B.A. in Mathematics
B.S. in Physics
Reynolds
Rhem
Rhodes
Rhvne
Rice
Riddle
Ring
Ripps
Roberson
Robertson, C.
Robertson, W.
Robinson
Roesel
Rogers, J.
Page 113
JANE HAYWOOD ROGERS
Chapel Hill B.A. in Zoology
Pi Beta Phi: Glee Club (3. II: Student Legislature (4); Y. W. C. A.
(3. 1): Town Girls' Association 13. II: Woman's Council ill: Student
idvisor (4J.
RAUL WALTER ROHRER
Milwaukee, Wisconsin B.A. in Political Science
Pi Kappa Alpha.
WILMER RAY ROLLINS
Bethel B.A. in Political Science
ROBERT ROLNIK
Brooklyn. New York
B.A. in Journalism
Daih Tar Heel; Debaie Squad II. 2); Debate Council (2): Diale
Senate II. 2): International Relations Club (1. 2. 3. 41. Treasurer I
- i retarj I n ; C. C U. N. (4).
CONWAY JOEL ROSE
Goldsboro
B.S. in Chemistry
Club (3, 4) ; Boxing (3) ;
PLEASANT DEMONT ROSEMAN. JR.
Salisbury B.A. in Journalism
Formerly Sigma Au: Daily Tar Heel III: Monogram Club (2); Wrestling
(2).
ERNEST SYLVAN ROSENBERG
Atlanta, Georgia B.A. in Journalism
Tau Epsilon Phi; Band (3. 4J .
JULIA FRANCES ROSS
Burlington
B.A.
Pi Beta Phi; Chi Delia Phi 13. II. \ ice-Pr. sidenl III: Col
(3, 41: Publications Board Secretary; Valkyries 13. II. Secret*; Yadjcely
Yack (3. 41: Y. W. C. A. 13. 4). Cabinet (3l. Secretary Y«) ; C
Senate (4); Woman's Handbook Committee 131; -tud.nl AeSJlsor (
Senior Class Steering Committee.
B.A. in J oust
PHIFER PAUL ROTHMAN
Bessemer City
Alpha Tau Omega; Di.il> Tar Heel (4.1.
KENNETH SPRAGUE ROTHWELL
Bay Shore, Long Island. N. Y. B.A. in Engl?
/),;,/, Tar Heel (3, II; A. V. C. Publicity Ch
J. BEN ROUZIE. JR.
Richmond. Virginia
ROBERT NYAL RUEHLEN
Earned, Kansas
JOHN WILLIAM RUSSELL
Candler
WILLIAM JAMES RUSSELL. JR.
Flushing. New York
Sigma Chi; Sound and Fun.
JOHN LAWRENCE RUTLEDGE
Yadkinville
B.A. in Political Science
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Law
B.A. in Economics
B.A. in Zoology
Rogers, J. H.
Rohrer
Rollins
Rolnik
Rose
Roseman
Rosenberg
Ross
Rothman
Rothwell
Rouzie
Ruehlen
Russell, J.
Russell, W,
Rutledge
Page 114
>
JACK TERAH SAMPSON
Atlanta, Georgia
Kappa Alpha; Glee Club (3); Sound a
B.A. in History
id Fury (2); Y. M. C. A. (2).
BRUCE DANIEL SAPP
Rich Square
Carolina Magazine (31 ; Daih Tar Heel 111.
PEGGIE LEIGH SAPP
Raleigh
Phi Epsilon; Y. W
B.A. in Journalism
B.A. in Chemistry
C. A. (4) ; Square Circle;
CARMEN SHIELDS SATTERFIELD
Clayton B.S. in Physical Education
Delia Psi Kappa; Y. M. C. A. (2); Physical Education Club.
MORTON DORR SCHAAP
Brooklyn. New York
Daih Tar Heel (3, 4); Monogram Club 13. 41;
Cross Country Manager (3, 41: Lacrnss- II. 21
Yackety Yack (4).
B.A. in Journalism
RALPH WENDELL SCHECTER. JR.
Carlisle, Pennsylvania B.S.
Phi Kappa Psi; Band (3, 4); Orchestra (3, 4).
in Commerce
WILLIAM BRAXTON SCHELL
Raleigh B.S. in Commerce
Zeta Psi; Phi F.ta Sigma; Gorgon's Head: Sl-iks; Intcrlraternity
ROY YOUNG SCHELLENGER
Raleigh
B.A. in Economics
JOAN SCHLOSBURG
Camden. South Carolina
Hillel Cabinet (3, 41, Secretary 14
B.A. in Sociology
World Federalists (3, 41.
ROGER RAY SCHOLBE
Milwaukee. Wisconsin B.A. in Commerce
Sigma Phi Epsilon; Monogram Club (3. 4); Basketball (2, 3. 41.
GEORGE STEPHENS SCHOLL
Charlotte B.S.
Sigma Chi.
Ph
ysics
GERALD MARTIN SCHWARTZ
Brooklyn, New York B.A. in Zoology
Pi Lambda Phi; Daily Tar Heel (1, 21; Dialectic Senate (1, 2).
ROBERT BERNARD SELIGMAN
Brooklyn, New York B.S. in Chemistry
Monogram Club; Track (1. 4).
WILLIARD MANGUS SESSLER
Tampa, Florida
Pi Kappa Alpha; President Physics Club 131.
B.S. in Physics
WILLIAM ALFRED SESSIONS
Conway. South Carolina B.A. in English
Kappa Alpha; Carolina Magazine; Class Honor Council; Daih Tar Heel;
Yackety Yack.
Sampson
Sapp, B.
Sapp, P.
Satterneid
Sehaap
Schecter
Schcll
Schellenger
Schlosburg
Scholbe
SchoII
Schwartz
Seligman
Sessler
Sessions
Page J/5
FAISON THOMSON SESSOMS
Chapel Hill B.S. in Physics
ARTHUR FRANK SETTLEMYER. JR.
Kannapolis B.A. in Music
Phi II. ilpha; Glee Club (3. 4.1.
JOHN BURROWES SEVIER
Greensboro B.A. in American History
ate I H : V. M. C. \. Ml:
JEFFERSON DAVIS SEWELL
Monroe B.S. in Commerce
Phi Gamma Delia.
WALTER AUSTIN SHARAFANOWICH
New York, New York B.A. in Arts and Sciences
InlerJormitory Council 111.
HAROLD JACKSON SHARPE. JR.
Greensboro B.S. in Commerce
Swimming Team Manager 111.
JIM QUINN SHELTON
Mayfield. Kentucky
B.S. in Psychology
THOMAS CONNALLY SHELTON
Atlanta, Georgia B.A. i
Chi Phi.
MOFFATT GRIER SHERARD. JR.
Abbeville. South Carolina B.A. in J
ilpha Tan Omega; Sound anil Fury I :i I : Cheerleader (41;
11. President 111: Orehe
HERBERT A. SHERWIN
Greensboro
HARRY GEORGE SHIPMAN
Greensboro
Phi Uu Alphas Ha:.d (
WILLIAM T. SHORE
Winston-Salem
ED K. SHOWFETY
Greensboro
JAY ALLEN SIEGEL
Miami Beach. Florida
Pi Lambda Pin: Soccei HI.
DONALD E. SIEPERT
Cedar Falls. Iowa
Sigma Chi: Sound and F.ir> (2, I
?.S. in Com
B.A. in Music
B.S. in Commerce
B. \. in Chemist!"}
B.S. in Commerce
Sessoms
Selllemyer
Sevier
Sewell
Siiarafanowieh
Sharpe
Shelton. J.
Shelton, T.
Sherard
Sherwin
Shipman
** <:'
Shore
[*;
Showfety
Siegel
Sieperl
fcS
■JSk
Page 116
BILLY G. SILLS
Harmony
Daily Tar Heel.
GEORGE K. SILLS
Winston-Salem
Kappa Sigma; Intcriraiernitv
JOE FRED SILLS
Harmony
Western North Carolina Club.
JOHN MEREDITH SIMMS
Raleigh
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
■il 13. II ; Sheiks 12. 3. 4).
B.A. in Zoology
B.S.
m Commerce
Phi Beta Kappa (3, 41. President III; Beta Gamma Sigma (3, 4); Clasi
Honor Council (1, 2); Glee Club (1, 2); U. V. A.: Freshman Friendahii
Council 111 : President (1).
ANGUS M. SIMPSON
Roseboro
B.S. in Commerce
NANCY CATHERINE SIMPSON
Gastonia B.S. in Psychology
Alpha Gamma Delia; V. W. C. A.; Gas I Club.
ROSA GRAY SIMPSON
Danville, Virginia
B.A. in English
ALAIN R. SINGER
Wilmington. Delaware
Delia Psi.
JOHN EDWARD SINK
Raleigh
B.S. in Commerce
.A. in Art
ELEANOR DALTON SINGLETARY
Greensboro B.A. in Sociology
ELIZABETH D. SISSON
Reidsville
HASSELL B. SLEDD
Greenville. South Carolina
B.A. in Psychology
B.A. in English
MAR WILLIS SLEDGE
Ada. Oklahoma B.A. in Comparative Literature
DM} Tar Heel; \. W. C. A. (3).
COLINE SMITH
Chapel Hill B.A. in Journalism
JAMES CLAUDE SMITH
White Plains
B.A. in Economics
— suktb.
Sills, G.
Sills, J.
Simms
Simpson, A.
Simpson, IN.
Simpson, R.
Singer
Sink
Singletarv
Sissou
Sledd
Sledge
Smith, C.
Smith, J.
Page 117
JAMES EDGAR SMITH
Gastonia
Phi Beta Kappa.
JOHN FRANCK SMITH
Atlanta. Georgia
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
RANDOLPH SMITH
Greenville, South Carolina
Kappa Alpha Order.
B.A. in Zoology
B.A. in Economics
B.S.
in Commerce
WILLIAM FRALIN SMITHDEAL
Roanoke. Virginia B.S. in Commerce
Sigma .\u; Intenlormitorv Council.
WILLIAM WALKER SMOAK
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
ISREAL SALEM SOLOMON
Winston-Salem B.A. in Chemistry
Alpha Epsilon Pi; Track (2); Philosophy Club (3).
NORMAN FOWIN SOMMERS
Paterson. New Jersey B.A. in Chemistry
Tau Epsilon Phi.
WILLIAM BROOKS SPAUGH
High Point B.S.
Kappa Alpha: Band (1) ; Glee Club 111.
ill C
in Commerce
MARY MARSHALL SPEARS
Rocky Mount B.S. irj
Chi Omega; Class Honor Council; Glee Club (3, 4)
Vice-President (1): Y. W. C. A. (3. 4), T
Athletic Association (3, U. President (4j.
WALTER JESSE SPENCER, JR.
Hamlet
Delia Sigma Pi.
JAMES PARKER SPILLERS
Monroe. Louisiana
Kappa Sigma.
CATHERINE RANKIN SPRACKLIN
Columbia. Mississippi B.A. in Journalisrn
SANFORD MACEY SPRINTZ
Miami Beach. Florida B.S. in Commerce
PETER N. STAFFORD. JR.
Fort Lauderdale. Florida
Delta Sigma Pi.
LEIGHTON RAY STALLINGS
Jamesville B.A. in Journalism
B.S. i
m Comment'
Seni
dm
Smith, J. E.
Smith. J. F.
Smith, R.
Smithdeal
Smoak
Solomon
Sommers
Spaugh
Spears
Spencer
Spillers
Spracklin
Sprintz
Stafford
Stallings
Page 118
Class
CLARKE JACKSON STALLWORTH
Thomaston. Alabama B.A. in Journalism
Sigma Alpha Epsilon ; Daily Tar Heel (3, 4) ; Interdormitory Council (31.
CHARLIE STANCELL
Chapel Hill B.S. in Commerce
Chi Phi: Philanthropic Assembly (1); Cheerleader (2, 3, 4.1.
JOHNNY THOMAS STANFIELD
Winston-Salem B.A. in Radio
JAMES WILLIAM STANFORD
Asheville
B.A. in English
RANEY BAYNES STANFORD
Durham
Daily Tar Heel (2J .
B.A. in Journalism
VANCE MARSHALL STINE
Charlotte
Band (1).
V. JEAN STOUTEN BURG
Knoxville, Tennessee
Delia Delia Delia: faciei) fuck i 1, n.
Class Edilor 141; Y. W. C. A. 13. 41. Secretary of Social Se
Committee (41; Delia Delta Delta Treasurer.
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Sociology
rity Editor (3), Junior
HENRY E. STOWERS, JR.
Washington, D. C. B.S. in Physics
Alpha Tau Omega; Gorgon's Head; Football (2, 3).
ALBERT LOGAN STEEL. JR.
Portsmouth. Virginia B.S. in Commerce
CHARLES EDGAR STEVENS
Mount Gilead
B.A. in Music
Phi Ma Alpha; Band (1. 2. 31; Glee Club (1. 2. 3, 41. President (21.
Accompanist (1, 2, 3); Baptist Student Union II. 2), Music Director (2).
EDGEBERT BERRY STEVENSON
Winston-Salem B.A. in Physical Education
; Monogram Club (3. 4) ; Base.
HENRY MARRIOTTE STEWART
Hendersonville B.S. in Commerce
Phi Kappa Sigma; Interfratemity Council Vice-President (2); University-
Dance Committee (2, 3, 41; House Privileges Board (2, 3); Phi Kappa
Sigma President (1, 2); Campus Party.
DANIEL B. STIEGMAN
Buffalo. New York B.A. in Physical Education
Kappa Sigma; Monogram Club (2. 3, 4); Football (2. 3. 4).
JAMES BUCKNER STOKLEY
Wilmington B.S. in Commerce
JOE STONE
Dobson B.A. in Chemistry
Stallworth
Slancell
Stan field
Stanford. J.
Stanford. R.
Stine
Stoutenburg
Stowers
Steel
Stevens
Stevenson
Stewart
Stiegman
Stokley
Stone
Page 119
THOMAS PIERSON STRATFORD
Burlington
Phi Gamma Delia; InterfraterniK Council (4).
RAYMOND EUGENE STRONG
South Bend. Indiana
B.A. in Chemistry
B.A. in Economics
ROBERT SMITH STREETMAN
Marion B.A. in Economics
Lambda Chi ilpha; Band (2) ; Western Norlh Carolina Club 121.
CLAUDE BARBOUR STRICKLAND. JR.
Winston-Salem B.S. in Commerce
Head; 13 Club Vice-President 131;
JOHN HALL STUTTS
Bonner Springs. Kansas
LOIS LUDMILLA SUNSTROM
Knoxville. Tennessee
i.S. in Chemistry
B.A. in Psychology
1) ( . i < ■. I : \ w I \
JOHN RICHARD SURRATT
Winston-Salem
Class Executive Committee 111; Junior C
Senate (II; Student Legislature (2. 31.
MARY ARNALL SWANN
Coyington. Georgia
rAeio l'-i Epsilon.
B.S. in Commerce
I Vice-President; Diali
B.A. in Chemistr
JOHN MAC DONALD SWANNER
Washington B.S.
B.A. in Political
B.A. in Psy
WALTER R. TALLEY
Bradenton. Florida
ilpha Tan Omega.
JAMES MAHAN TANNER
Helena, Arkansas
Phi Delia Thela.
WILLIAM KNOX TATE
Morristown. Tennessee
Phi Gamma Delta; Class Executive Committee (4); Senior Class V
President; German Club Executive (2, 3, 4), Vice-President 111: Inter-
fraternity Council (2); Student Legislature 111; University Dance Com^
miltee (4); Y. M. C. A. Ill: Orientation Committee (3) ~
Revision Committee 131: University Party Steering Commit 141:
Campus Cabinet (31: Men's Honor Council (2. 3. 41. Vice-Cha
(2), Chairman (3, 4); Student Welfare Committee (3, 4).
GEORGE FRANCIS TAYLOR
Richlands
MARGARET JEAN TAYLOR
Asheville
Committee (4l ; Pan-Hell
littee (3) ; V. \\ . I
MARJORIE RUTH TAYLOR
Asheville B.A. in English-Education
Glee Club (3, 4 1
Senior
i#/ .Jit
\ «i>
Stratford
Strong
Streetman
Strickland
Stutls
Sunstrom
Stirratt
Swann
Swan ner
Talltv
Tanner
Tale
Taylor, G.
Tavlor. M. J.
Tavlor. M. R.
Page 120
WILLIAM FREDERICK TAYLOR
Hookerton B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha; Glee Club (2); Interfraternity Council (1); Interdor-
mitory Council (II; Y. M. C. A. (41.
WILLIAM RAYMOND TAYLOR. JR.
Greensboro B.A. in Physics
Pi Kappa Alpha; Carolina Magazine (1, 2); Track Manager 111: Yackel,
Yaek (2); Physics Club.
FRANKLIN LEGRAND TEAGUE
Charlotte B.A. in American History
Philanthropic Asscmblj ill.
ROBERT BEVIER TEMPLE
New York, New York
CHARLES LEON THOMAS
Allendale. South Carolina
Pi Kappa Alpha.
DORIS LORRAINE THOMAS
Allendale, South Carolina
Sigma Iota Chi; Phi Theta Kappa.
ELIZABETH TAYLOR THOMAS
Carthage B.A. in History-Library Science
Glee Club (31: Student Legislature (4) ; Y. W. C. V (3. I) : W \ \
(3, II : C. 1. C. A. E*eculhe Council II. n.
FRED B. THOMPSON
Marlboro. New Jersey
B.A. in English
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in English
B.S. in Commerce
LEONARD KIETH THOMPSON
Westport, Indiana B.A. in Psychology
Sound and Furv (3, II; Y. M. C. A.
WAYNE EDWARD THOMPSON
Raleigh
Pi Kappa llpht
B.A. in Journalism
BONNIE RICHARDSON THRASH
Asheville B.A. in Sociology
Alpha Delta Pi; Band ill. Ma itte ; Yackel) Yack (4); Y. W C \
(3, 4); Co-ed Senate (4) J Student Advisor ill; Alpha Delta Pi Vice!
President (4J .
HUGH MARTIN TILLETT
Charlotte
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
BETTIE A. TILLITT
Durham
B.S. in Commerce
B.A. in Chemistry
I Psi Epsilan; Glee Club (3, 41 ; Y. W. C. A. (31 ; C. I. C. \. 13
itudenl Advisor (4). * '
MILDRED TILSON
Sitka. Alaska
Delta Delta Delta; Clee Club (4.1.
B.A. in Political Science
EVELYN REBECCA TINDEL
Graceville. Florida B.A. in Psychology
Pi Beta Phi.
Thomas, D.
Thomas, E.
Thompson, F.
n* ^ ^
Thompson, L.
r*33g&£, L "^ i
Thompson. W.
a w^
BTlitf
Thrash
&
Tilleit
/.^ffc-j. ~
Tillill
JmCT^n
Tilson
Tindel
Page 121
WILLIAM FRANK TIPTON
Toecane B.A. in Mathematics
KENNETH JULIAN TODD
Tampa. Florida B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha.
SOUTH TRIMBLE. Ill
Washington, D. C. B.S. in Commerce
Phi Delta Theta: Men's Honor Council (3. 4).
L. JOHN TROTT, JR.
New London
B.A. in English
BELK CONNOR TROUTMAN
Addor B.A. in Zoology
ANNA TUCKER
Greensboro
B.A. in French
FREDERICK GOODE TUCKER, JR.
Roanoke, Virginia B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigma.
JAMES ELTON TUCKER
Troy
B.A. in Radio
NANCY BURWELL TUCKER
Danville. Virginia B.A
Playmakers (31; Sound and !«i, (3, 41. Secretary-T:
C. A. Recreation I (3, I); Graham Memorial B
Recreation Direttor (3, 4); W. A. A. Council (3, 4|.
JOHN EARLE TULL. JR.
Lonoke, Arkansas
Interlraternit;
B.S. in v^mmerce
Council (21: 13
IRA BERNARD TURNER, JR.
Charlotte B.S. in ComnJ
JEAN FULLERTON UMSTEAD
Durham B.A.
Alpha Gamma Delia; Y. W. C. A. (3, l.l .
DANNIE DAVIS UNDERWOOD
Clinton B.S. in Pharmacy
LULU HALL VANCE
Winston-Salem
JOHN ROBERT VAN HECKE
Chapel Hill B.A. in Political Science
Tipton
Todd
Trimble
Trott
Troutman
Tucker, A.
Tucker, F.
Tucker, J.
Tucker, N.
Tull
Turner
Umslead
Underwood
Vance
Van Hecke, J.
Page 122
MERWIN SPENSER VAN HECKE
Chapel Hill B.A. in Journalism
Phi Gamma Delia.
ROBERT LOUIS VARWIG
St. Louis, Missouri B.S. in Physics
Glee Club (2, 4); Physics Club President ill.
ELIZABETH B. VASHAW
Chapel Hill B.A. in Sociology
Glee Club (2); rackety Yack (41; Y. W. C. A. (1, 2); Town Girls'
Association (1, 2, 3, 4), Treasurer (4); C. I. C. A. Executive Council
(3).
HELEN VIVIEN VAUGHAN
Hartsville. South Carolina
B.A. in Art
Carolina Magazine (41; Y. W. C. A. Publicity Director (1, 2); World
Federalists (3J .
CHARLES ROBERTSON VERNON
Morganton B.A. in Chemistry
Kappa Sigma.
KENNETH EDWIN VINCENT
Bloomfield. New Jersey B.S. in Commerce
■•' Beta Theta Pi.
JOHN COUNCIL VICK
Sanford B.A. in Political Science
Track (1. 2).
JOSEPH FRANKLIN VIVERETTE
Battleboro • B.S. in Commerce
Pi Kappa Alpha.
WILLIAM HENRY VOGELSANG
Chapel Hill B.S. in Geology
Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Football (1. 21; Elislia Mitchell Scientific
Society;- Carolina Society of Geologists.
EMILY VON BORRIES
Winston-Salem B.A. in History
Pi Beta Phi; Interdormitory Council (4); Y. W. C. A. (3, 4). Vice-
Presidenl (II: Hou-c I'm ilexes Hoard (41: Co-ed Senate (41; House
Council (3) : House President (4).
DOROTHY SHANKLE WALL
Chapel Hill B.A. in English
SAMUEL HENRY WALL. JR.
Reidsville B.S. in Commerce
HARRY GAMBOL WALKER. JR.
Washington B.S. in Commerce
Phi Gamma Delta.
NANCY N. WALKER
Winston-Salem B.A. in American History
Delta Delta Delta; Y. W. C. A. (3, 4J.
HERSCHEL THOMAS WARD, JR.
Granite Falls B.S. in Physics
Y. M. C. \. II, 2. 3, 41; Physics Club (4); Freshman Council Cabinet
ass
Van HecWa^JVI.
Varwig
Vashaw
Vaughan
Vernon
Vincent
Vick
Viverette
Vogelsang
Von Borries
Wall, D.
Wall, S.
Walker, H.
Walker, N.
Ward, H.
Page 123
JOHN C. WARD
Kinston
B.S. in Medicine
BENJAMIN EVANS WARNER. JR.
Murphy B.S. in Geology
Sigma Gamma Epsilon.
LUCY CAROLINE WARREN
Chapel Hill
B.A. in English
Alpha Delta Pi; Glee Club (21; Y. W. C. A. (2, 3. I); Wesley Founda-
tion (3. 41 Secretar) ill; Woman's Honoi Council Secretary (4);
Town Girls' Association 12. 3, 41; Student \dvisoi 141; Women's
Cabinet (4).
JOHN LORD WATTERS
Chapel Hill
HUGH WOODROW WATTS
Tavlorsville
RICHARD TERRY WAX
Amory, Mississippi
Kappa Alpha; Delia Sigma Pi.
B.A. in Chemistry
B.S. in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
ROBERT ANDREW WEANT
Salisbury B.A. in Physical Education
ALBERT THOMAS WEATHERLY. J
Durham B.S. inborn
Phi Delta Thela.
LAWRENCE ODELL WEAVER
Greensboro B.A. in Dran
llpha Kappa Hi: Playmakers (3, n.
THOMAS SMITH WEAVER
Chapel Hill B.S. in Com
Pi Kappa Alpha; Interfraternit) Council (3. 41.
B.S. in Coniraen
PETER A. WEBB. JR.
Raeford
GEORGE TRAVERS WEBB. JR.
Portsmouth. Virginia B.A. in Journal
KURT L. WEILL
Waynesville
/', Kappa Phi; Sigma Delta Pi.
MYRTLE RUTH WESTBROOK
Raleigh
Y. W. C. A. (3, II; C. I. C. A. Exec-olive Cc
WILLIAM DANIEL WESTER
Henderson B.S. in Commerce
I'll, Gamma Delia; Pin Ma Alpha; Band 12. 3. 41.
B.S. in Chemistry
B.A. in
il (41.
Ward, J.
W arner
Warren
Walters
Watts
Wax
Weant
Weatherly
Weaver, L.
Weaver, T.
Webb, P.
Webb, G.
Weill
Westbrook
Wester
Page 124
JAMES FRANKLIN WEST. JR.
Winston-Salem
MARY ELLEN WELLONS
Raleigh
B.A. in Music
(4) ; Y. M. C. A. (1, 2,
B.S. in Art
Alpha Gamma Delia; Caroliai
Club 131: Interdormitorj Co
13. 41; House Privileges B.
Wcslev Foundation.
Magazine III: DaUj Tar Heel (4): Cle
niril III: Basketball (3) ; Y. W. C. A
ard (41; Alderman Dormitory President
ROBERT PENICK WHALING
Winston-Salem B.A. in Economics
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
DAVID JORDAN WHICHARD
Greenville B.A. in Journalism
Phi Gamma Delta; Daily Tar Heel (II; German Club Executive III;
Swimming (1. 3, 41.
MARTHA R. WHITAKER
Oak Ridge
B.A. in Sociology
ory Council Budget Com.
CHRISTINE LAMSON WHITE
Washington. D. C. B.A. in English
Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. (3. 4) ; Cheerleader (3, 4).
JACK ROLAND WHITE
Chapel Hill B.S. in Commerce
International Relations Club (4); C. C. U. N. (4).
JAYNE DICKINSON WHITE
Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania
CLARENCE E. WHITEFIELD
B.A. in Spanish
Durham
B.A. in Journalism
HENRY MONROE WHITESIDES
Gastonia B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigma.
MARTHA BROWN WHITNER
Jacksonville. Florida B.S. in Commerce
Pi Hera Phi; Y. W. C. A. 13. 41. Cabinet (31; Senior Class Steerint
Committee (4); Splash Club (?.. II.
THOMAS MARSHALL WHITTEMORE
Norfolk. Virginia B.S. in Commerce
Chi Phi.
JAMES SIMPSON WILCOX, JR.
Charlotte
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
CLEO DUKE WILDER. JR.
Paris. Tennessee
Alpha Tail Omega; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Mt
Tenni, I-'. 3. 41; Y. M. C A. (41; Orientatk
Council Chairman (4).
JOHN M. WILEY
Charlotte
B.S. in Chemistry
B.A. in English
Sonogram Club 12. 3. 41;
lion Committee (3) ; Traffic
B.S. in Psychology
West
Wellons
Whaling
Whichard
Whitaker
White, C.
White. J. R.
White, J. D.
Whitefield
Whitesides
Whitiier
Whittemore
Wileox
Wilder
Wiley, J.
Page 125
ROBERT MASON WILEY
Charlotte
Delta Kappa Epsilon.
B.S. in Commerce
JOHN ROSS WILKINSON. JR.
Winston-Salem B.A. in Zoology
DAVID LIVINGSTON WILLIAMS
Yarlkinville B.S. in Commerce
HENRY KIRK WILLIAMS
Leesburg. Florida
4lpha Tau Omega.
B.S. in Commerce
IRENE CAMPBELL WILLIAMS
Sanford B.A. in History
Delia Delta Delta; V. W. C. A. C3j.
MOKE WAYNE WILLIAMS. JR.
Monroe B.A. in Zoology
Pi Kappa Alpha.
IDA GERALDINE WILLIAMSON
Wilson B.A. in English
Business Slaff (3. 4); Y. W. C. A.
JOHN SAMUEL WILLIAMSON
Hamlet B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Alpha.
WILLIAM THOMAS WILLIAMSON
Winston-Salem B.S. in GfemmV?*
Beta Theta Pi.
B.A.
HENRY KENDALL WILLIS
Chapel Hill
Chi Phi; Flving Club (1. 21: SminJ anj Fury (1. 2. 3 ) : B
Yackef) Yack (1. 2); University Veten
minee (3).
CHARLES LEON WILSON. JR.
Robersonville
Phi Delia Thela.
.S. in C
HADLEY MC DEE WILSON
Lenoir
Sterna Chi.
HUGH HEATHLY WILSON
Chapel Hill
JOHN SIKES WILSON
Monroe
Pi Kappa Alpha.
MARVIN PICKARD WILSON. JR.
Edenton B.A. in Journalism
Zeta P~i; Daih Tar Heel 131; [nterfraternity Council (2); Sound and
Fury (2, 3); Wrestle <-
B.A. in Chemistry
B.A. in Sociology \
B.S. in Commerce
Wiley, R.
Wilkinson
Williams. D.
Williams, H.
Williams. I.
Williams, M.
Williamson, I.
Williamson, J.
Williamson, W.
~4L
^ 1
Willis
- t\
0M
Wilson. C.
W*&* «/
Wilson. H. Mo.
\
Wilson. H. H.
<%-
Wilson, J.
j{ w
Wilson, M.
■A hk
Page 126
T. STANTON WILSON
Candler B.S. in Commerce-Law
WILLIAM A. WINBURN. Ill
Savannah. Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Sigma In; Daily Tar Heel (1).
FRANCIS EDWARD WINSLOW. JR.
Rocky Mount B.A. in Pre-Law
JOSHUA HENRY WISEBRAM
Barnesville. Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Tau EpMon Phi; Beta Gamma Sigma.
PHILIP THORNTON WITHERS. JR.
Gastonia B.S. in Commerce
Kappa Sigrn/i: German Club (2).
ROBERT THURMAN WOLFE. JR.
Clendenin. West Virginia B.S. in Geology
Sigma Gamma Epsilon ; Band (1. 3); F.n.tr.all 121.
GEORGE THOMAS WOLFF
Greensboro
B.A. in Zoology
BASIL ALEXANDER WOOD
Birmingham. Alabama B.A. in Economics
Pin Delia Then: Soccer HI.
OSCAR B. WOOD. JR.
Savannah. Georgia
Sigma Alpha Eptilor,.
B.A. in Economics
THOMAS LANIER WOOD. JR.
Winston-Salem B.A. in English
Sigma Phi Epsiloa.
WEN DEL W. WOOD
Elwood. Indiana
B.S. in Commerce
RACHEL VIRGINIA WOODLEY
Columbia B.A. in Chemistry
Alpha Gamma Delia.
KATHARINE WOODMAN
New Haven. Connecticut
.A. in Historv
CECIL CARLOS WOOTEN
Princeton B.S. in Commerce
FRANK CAPERTON WOOTEN
Rome. Georgia B.S. in Commerce
Wilson, T.
Winburn
Winslow
Wisebram
Withers
Wolfe
Wolff
Wood, B.
Wood. O.
Wood, T.
Wood. W.
Wood ley
Woodman
Woolen, C.
Woolen. F.
Page 127
Woolen, G.
Worley
Wright
Wvatt
York
Zirpel
Srunnen
Senior Class
GEORGE FRANKLIN WOOTEN
Cocoa. Florida B.S. in Commerce
Wesley Foundation (2, 3, t) .
CARL PERSON WORLEV
Selma
B.S. in Chemistry
RICHARD CARLTON WRIGHT
High Point B.A. in Chemistry
Kappa Alpha: Alpha Epsilon Drlta; German Club Executive (3, 41; Glee
Club (1, 2. 3, 41 j Sound and Fury (3); 13 Club (3. 41: Y. M. C. A.
11. J. :i.
CHALMERS HAYWOOD WYATT
Chapel Hill B.S. in Commerce
B.tnd II. J I.
HELEN MARTHA XANTHOS
Fayetteyille
C. I. C. A. Treasurer (3).
JOHN CHARLES YORK
High Point
llath Tar Heel (3); Carolina Consi rvati
IRVING ZIRPEL. JR.
Washington. D. C.
\l gram Club 12. 3, II ; Wrestling (I.
B.S. in C
in Commerce
B.S. in Commerce
luh \ i. i -President (3, 41.
B.S. in Geology
3, 11, Co-Captain I 11.
CHESTER DAVID Zl M BRl NNEN
Salisbury B.S. in Commerce
Page 128
JUniOR CLASS
Stan Fox. Martha Dan Pavne, Len Szafaryn
Officers
Len Szafaryn
Stanley Fox
Martha Dan Payne
Bill Thorpe
President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer
Social Chairman
Page 132
The vets returning from the war and the coeds leaving two years in girls' schools behind, entered
into a campus life which bore the Carolina label ... our rowdy meetings at the Y court "coffee coun-
ter" . . . lingering walks through the Arboretum . . . Sadie Hawkin's revelry and the parade down
Franklin Street ... the Grail dance featuring Vaughan Monroe's "Ballerina" . . . "Choo Choo'" and
the Tar Heels plunging through Duke's line to victory . . . liberalism voicing itself in the Tar Heel
. . . chimes from the Bell Tower vibrating at dusk . . . and eating steaks and French fries at Brady's.
But there was a new atmosphere at our university, too. With leap year and post-war change another
era was inaugurated which showed the ear-marks of a "new look" in fashions, progress and purposes.
W e were veteran "Carolina gentlemen" with oudooks tempered by the international horizon, and the
domestic crisis in inflation. We, who remembered Sunday evenings spent at Dr. Frank's read of him
in Indonesia. We coeds appeared as "Gibson Girls'", and in hooped formals— to be compared with
mother's college days. Senior Walk exchanged its quiet and trailing ivy for shovels and hammers, and
the angular orange skeleton which reared at last was a symbol of the new character of Carolina.
Modernism had tugged hard at the main string, but the spirit of our Carolina was immutable. We
passed the Old Well, cheered Rameses on Kenan's turf, and recognized tradition. With "Hark the Sound"
stirring our hearts we pushed toward the brighter future, a peaceful world.
Junioi
REGINALD MAX ABBOTT, Chi Psi, Bryson City.
FRED L. ADAIR, Washington.
MARTHA J. ADAIR, Washington.
B. RITA ADAMS, Troy.
FAITH DORSEY ADAMS, Delta Delia Delta, Coral Gables
Fla.
GREY LITTLETON ADAMS, Lambda Chi Alpha, Burling
Ion.
HENRY BETHUME ADAMS, Lenoir.
WILLIAM HINTON ADAMS, Chapel Hill.
SHERMAN ADLER, Asheville.
HUBERT E. AENCHBACHER. JR., Atlanta. Ga.
CHARLES W. AFFLICK, Phi Delta Theta, Blytheville, Ark.
EDWARD FRANKLIN ALBEE. Hellertown, Pa.
MARTHA ANNE ALBRITTON, Hookerton.
BLAN C. ALDRIDGE, Durham.
EDWARD MILTON ALDRIDGE, JR., Winston-Salem.
CHARLES GRANVILLE ALLEN, Laurel, Delaware.
LeDEWEY E. ALLEN, JR., High Point.
OLIVE HICKS ALLEN, II, Raleigh.
ROBERT GARLAND ALLEN, Coleridge.
ZEBULON DOYLE ALLEY, Waynesville.
WALTER J. ALSTON. JR., Henderson.
ANDREW V. ANDERSON, Kappa Alpha, Raleigh.
ANN ANDERSON, Pi Beta Phi, Eustis, Fla.
JAMES WILLIAM ANDERSON, JR., Greensboro.
SAMUEL RALPH ANDREW. JR.. Albemarle.
THOMAS LUTHER ANDREW. Albemarle.
IKE GRANKLIN ANDREWS, Bonlee.
JOHN ERNEST ANDREWS, JR., Graham.
FRANCES L. ANGAS, Brooklyn, N. Y.
EDWARD K. ANTHONY, Chi Phi, St. Petersburg, Fla.
LUTHER L. ANTHONY, JR., Gastonia.
GEORGE KENNETH ARCHER, Charlotte.
Page 134
Dlass
WILLIAM REID AREY, JR., Gold Hill.
RUBY-WHITE ARNOLD, Benson.
WALTER DAVIS ARNOLD, Bristol, Va.
MARY LUCILLE ARNOTT. Pi Beta Phi, Persia, Tenn.
FRANK B. ASHCRAFT, Raleigh.
CLINTON KESLER ATKINSON, Lilesville.
RICHARD SAMPSON ATKINSON. Phi Kappa Sigma,
Kenly.
SAMUEL T. ATKINSON, Kappa Alpha, Charlotte.
LEWIS M. AUGUST, Philadelphia. Pa.
IRWIN W. AUSLEY. Fuquay Springs.
LELAND STANLEY AVERETT. JR.. Oxford.
JAMES EVERETT AYCOCK, Lincolnton.
GWENDOLYN BABER, Shelby.
WILBUR H. BABER, JR.. Shelby.
JONES DOUGLAS BAIN, Clayton.
JOHN B. BAITY, Henderson.
ALBERT BELK BAKER, Rock Hill, S. C.
EMILY CLAIRE BAKER. Alpha Gamma Delta, Asheville.
JESSE H. BAKER, Winfall.
JOHN 0. BAKER, Charlotte.
NORWOOD FRASER BAKER, Magnolia.
ROBERT EDGAR BALL. Phi Delta Theta, Williamson,
W. Va.
WILLIAM JAY BALLEW, Nebo.
CLAUDE BARCLAY BARBEE, Zeta Psi, Raleigh.
DAN TAYLOR BARKER. Oxford.
IRVING 0. BARKER, Wilson.
DONALD BYRON BARNES, Winston-Salem.
JOHN THOMAS BARNES, III, Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Winston-Salem.
LEONARD MORGAN BARNES. Savannah, Ga.
NORMAN COWELL BARNES, Bloomfield, New Jersey.
WILLIAM J. BARNES, Greensboro.
CHARLES MASON BARNETT, Henderson.
Page 135
Juni
or
DONNA SARAH BARNETT. Jacksonville, Fla.
JIMMIE BARNETT. Henderson.
GEORGE F. BASON, Raleigh.
NOAH RUDOLPH BASS. Goldsboro.
KENNETH BATCHELOR, Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM RUSSELL BATCHELOR, Aberdeen.
FRED 0. BATES, JR., Murphy.
ROBERT W. BAUGHAM, Enfield.
DORIS J. BEASLEY, Davidson.
ROBERT FESTUS BEASLEY, Zeta Psi, Davidson.
HARRY LEON BEASON, Winston-Salem.
IVA JEAN BEASON, Kings Mountain.
PAUL EDWARD BEAVER. Mooresville.
MARTHA HUNTER BELL, Norfolk, Va.
VICTOR EVOS BELL, JR., Zeta Psi, Raleigh.
JEAN IRWIN BENJAMIN. Jacksonville, Fla.
EDWARD ROBINSON BENNETT, West Hartford. Conn.
RICHARD EDWIN BENNETT. Greensboro.
RICHARD HOWARTH BENNETT. Chapel Hill.
CLINT W. BENTLEY, Pores Knob.
SCOTT BRUCE BERKELEY, JR., Kappa Alpha, Golds-
boro.
CHARLES LAWRENCE BERMAN, Tau Epsilon Phi,
Miami Beach, Fla.
RONALD DENNY BERRY, Falcon.
FRANCES Y. BICKETT, Raleigh.
RICHARD B. BILGER. Miami, Fla.
HARRY ALLEN BILLERBECK, Alpha Tau Omega, Eliza-
beth, N. J.
HELEN CAROLYN BISHOP, Asheville.
DONALD HINES BISSETT, Washington, D. C.
MOLLY S. BLACKBURN. Winston-Salem.
JAMES YANCEY BLACKWELL, JR., Ruffin.
MARILYN BLACKWELL. Alexandria, Va.
GRACE M. BLADES, Alpha Delta Pi, Apex.
Page 136
'lass
D
j L - 1
4 *I HK! i
EUGENE NELSON BLAKE, iamirfa C/u /i/p/m, Wilming-
ton.
BETTY JANE BLALOCK, Winston-Salem.
CECIL M. BLAND, Roxboro.
THOMAS ANDREW BLUM, Winston-Salem.
LEONARD BLUMBERG, Zeta Beta Tau, New Roehelle,
N. Y.
HERBERT LUTHER BODMAN, JR., Delta Psi, Long
Island, N. Y.
JOHN HAMILTON BOLGIANO, Towson, Md.
OCTAVIOUS BLANCHARD BONNER, JR., Sigma Chi,
High Point.
THOMAS NATHAN BOOE, Asheville.
RODNEY LAWRENCE BOOKER, Sigma Nu, Roanoke, Va.
MILTON JAMES BOONE, Clinton.
IRIS LEE BOST, Alpha Delta Pi, Concord.
HELEN BOULDIN. Clarksdale, Miss.
FRANKLIN PALMER BOWDEN. Norfolk, Va.
R. KELLY BOWLES, Carrboro.
VICTOR P. BOWLES. Timberlake.
FREDERICK OSCAR BOWMAN, JR., Sigma Alpha
Epsilon, Chapel Hill.
OSCAR M. BOYETTE, Princeton.
JOSEPH EDWARD BOYKIN, JR.. Durham.
OREN T. BOYLES, Pinnacle.
WAYNE FRANCIS BOYLES, Lawndale.
JAMES NEEDHAM BRADFORD, Winston-Salem.
NORMAN LEE BRANCH, Rich Square.
Wm. ASHLEY BRANCH, Winterville.
BERTIE MAYNARD BRANNAN, JR., Smithfield.
CARL MeDOWELL BRASWELL, Monroe.
ROY BENTON BRASWELL, Winston-Salem.
LONNIE A. BRAXTON, JR., Burlington.
DAN C. BREEDING, Alpha Tau Omega. Bennettsville, S. C.
ROBERT H. BREEZE, Waynesville.
EDWIN R. BRENEGAR, Kappa Sigma, Winston-Salem.
ROYCE EVERETT BREWER, Winston-Salem.
AM
Page 137
Junior
WILBUR YOUNG BRIDGERS, Enfield.
JOHN H. BRIGHT, Alpha Tau Omega, New Hill.
CHARLES GORDON BRITT, Goldsboro.
WILLIAM DAVID BRITT, Clinton.
BEN GEER BROCKMAN, Gastonia.
CLYDE K. BROOKS, Ware Shoals.
JAMES HARDEE BROOKS, Sigma Chi, Kinston.
SIDNEY P. BROOKS, Tau Epsilon Phi, Warsaw.
STAMEY FITZHUE BROOKS, Kannapolis.
JOHN CHISELIN BROUGHTON. JR.. Delia Kappa
Epsilon, Durham.
BETTY BROWN. Asheville.
CECIL LAZELL BROWN. Asheboro.
JOHN D. BROWN, Cedar Bluff. Va.
WILLIAM FRANKLIN BROWN, Charlotte.
WILLIAM WILSON BROWN, JR., Charlotte.
EDWARD T. BROWNE. JR., Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM CORRY BRUNSON. JR., Sigma Nu. Edenton.
THOMAS SHERMAN BRYAN. TraphilL
CLELL T. BRYANT, Franklin.
EDWARD ALBERT BRYANT, Lenoir.
AUDREY M. BRYSON, Biltmore.
HERMAN J. BRYSON. JR.. Rock Hill. S. C.
ALTON GRAY BUCK' Newport News, Va.
LUBIN F. BULLARD, JR., Garland.
GEORGE E. BULLOCK, Chi Phi, Bethel.
ANNE ELIZABETH BUMGARDNER. Charlotte.
ROBERT PARHAM BUNCH. Kappa Sigma, Statesville.
JOHN ROYAL BUNTING. Bethel.
RICHARD BUCHANAN BURNS, Zeta Psi, Sumter, S. C.
HAROLD B. BURSLEY. JR., Beta Thela Pi. Charlotte.
MADELYN J. BUTLER. Chi Omega, Dade City, Fla.
WILLIAM G. BUTLER, JR.. Laurinburg.
Page 138
ass
NEILL A. BYRNE, Pembroke.
GEORGE ALMA BYRUM, Sigma Nu, Edenton.
ALBERT HANES CALLOWAY, Concord.
DONALD RAY CALLOWAY, Concord.
WILLIAM CAMERON. Oxford.
MARGIE CAMERON, Washington, D. C.
DAN OLIVE CAMPBELL, Wagram.
EDWARD FEIMSTER CAMPBELL, Taylorsville.
S. TINSLEY CAMPBELL. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Louisville.
Kentucky.
HAROLD L. CANNON, Pi Kappa Alpha, Chapel Hill.
MINTIE L. CANTRELL, Etowah, Tennessee.
ANNE CARLTON, Atlanta, Georgia.
H. MARTIN CARMICHAEL, JR., Delta Kappa Epsilon,
Fairfield, Conn.
GORDON L. CARPENTER, Chapel Hill.
JAMES EDWARD CARPENTER, Sigma Chi, Gastonia.
MEEK ANDERSON CARPENTER, Kings Mountain.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CARRAWAY, Snow Hill.
ERNEST R. CARRAWAY, Snow Hill.
NIMROD DAVIS CARROLL, Willow Spring.
MYRA TULA CARTER, Gastonia.
ROBERT A. CASH, Beta Theta Pi, Winston-Salem.
BARBARA F. CASHION, Leesburg, Florida.
JANE MARILYN CASSTEVENS, Clemmons.
FITZGERALD RIDLEY CAUDLE, Raleigh.
BEN ALLEN CAVIN, Statesville.
DAVID A. CECIL, JR., High Point. *
LESTER V. CHALMERS, JR., Raleigh.
CHARLES HAL CHAPLIN. Phi Gamma Delta, Columbia.
JOHN M. CHARLES, Florence, South Carolina.
RICHARD B. CHEATHAN, Phi Gamma Delta, Griffin,
Georgia.
JOE JORDAN CHERRY. Charlotte.
VINCENT D. CHILDRESS, Greensboro.
Page 139
Junior
BILL C. CHOATE, Sigma Pi. Sparta.
ANN CLARK, Candor.
SAMUEL J. CLARK, JR., Erwin.
WILLIAM J. CLAYBROOK, Reidsville.
JOHN S. CLAYTON, Knoxville, Tenn.
JACK A. CLINARD, Winston-Salem.
LELAND GRANT CLOSE, Pi Kappa Phi, Bryson City.
COLLIER COBB. Ill, Zeta Psi, Chapel Hill.
JOHN COLLIER COBB. Phi Gamma Delta, Goldsboro.
WILLIAM BATTLE COBB. JR.. Phi Gamma Delta, Chapel
Hill.
GEORGE A. COCHRAN. Newton.
ALEX EDWARD COCKMAN, JR., Pittsboro.
CHARLES LEE COGGIN, JR.. Salisbury.
CARL H. COGHILL, Henderson.
HERMAN OSCAR COLEMAN, Morganton.
ELWOOD BROGDEN COLEY. Raleigh.
KATHERYN COLWELL, Clinton.
KATE CONNOR. Durham.
IDA CONSTABLE, Charlotte.
ALFRED RAY COOKE, Asheville.
LESLIE JAMES COOKE, Chi Psi, Columbia, S. C.
ELIZABETH ANNE COOPER. Greensboro.
GRADY COOPER, JR., Dobson.
BROAD1E N. COPELAND, JR., Greensboro.
JOHN S. CORDON. Kappa Sigma, Louisville, Ky.
SALLY ANN CORDON, Pi Beta Phi, Louisville, Ky.
WILLIAM PERRIN CORLEY. Atlanta, Ga.
NED R. CORZINE, Concord.
GLADYS RUNYON COTTRELL. Red Bank, New Jersey.
FREDERICK I. COUCH, Carrboro.
LESTER CLAY COUCH, JR.. Elkin.
ROBERT STEVENS COUCH, Monroe.
Page 140
ass
r< c
BARBARA A. COVINGTON, Chi Omega, Plant City, Fla.
RICHARD S. COVINGTON, Kappa Alpha, Wadesboro.
LEON K. COWAN, Powellsville.
MARRIN J. COWELL. JR.. Rocky Mount.
THOMAS DUKE COWELL. JR., Elizabeth Citv.
RICHARD GARNER COX. Phi Mu Alpha, Raleigh.
WILLIAM F. COX, Greensboro.
JAMES HENRY CR \DDOCK. JR., Charlotte.
MARY L. CRADDOCK, Blackstone, Virginia.
ELSIE LOUISE CRAIG, Mount Holly.
MOLLY CRAIG. Lak*- Wales, Florida.
ADDIE JOY CRAPS. Hickory.
CARROL MICKEY GRAVER, Winston-Salem.
MARTIN LUTHER CROTTS, Durham.
WILLIAM E. CROW, Winston-Salem.
FRED L. CROWSON, Betu Theta Pi, Fayetteville.
EDWIN KEITH CUMMINGS, Rocky Mount.
CHARLES D. CUNNINGHAM, Zeta Psi, Greensboro.
THOMAS E. CUNNINGHAM, Akron. Ohio.
JAMES WALTER CURLEE. Ansonville.
ERNEST LUCIUS CURRIN, JR., Olivia.
BLAIR L. DAILY, Philadelphia. Pa.
FRED DALE, JR., Asheville.
BARBARA DALTON, Winston-Salem.
MARY ANNE DANIEL, Weldon.
JOHN FORLAW DANIELS, Pi Kappa Alpha, Charlotte.
ROY EDWARD DAVENPORT, Kappa Alpha, Winterville.
BOBBIE A. DAVIS, Charlotte.
NINA DARLINE DAVIS, Salisbury.
ROBERT LEE DAYE, Pi Kappa Alpha, Elkin.
HENRY PERRY DEAL, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Conover.
HELEN P. DEES, Greensboro.
Page 141
Junior
JOHN TYLER DEES, Phi Delia Chi, Burgaw.
JULIUS DEES, JR., Bayboro.
GEORGE DEMAS, Cleveland. Ohio.
ELIZABETH BISSETTE DEMPSEY. Wilson.
ALICE DENHAM. Washington. D. C.
ELIZABETH ANN DENNETT. Chi Omega, Canton.
ROBERT MASON DeVANE, Tomahawk.
BARBARA LEE deWITT. Charlotte.
ALBERT JOSEPH D1AB. Lambda Chi Alpha. Burlington.
JAMES HAROLD DICKINSON, Rowland.
ARTHUR THEODORE DILGER, Sigma Nu, Hoboken. N. J.
MARY GARDNER DILLARD. Greensboro, N. C.
STARK SPOTTSWOOD DILLARD, Greensboro.
VINCENT JOHN DiLORENZO. Chi Psi, Berg infield, N. J.
CHARLES D. DIXON. Belmont.
ROBERT MOBLEY DIXON, Kinston.
PORTER WISEMAN DOBBINS. Delia Sigma Pi. Winston-
Salem.
LOUISE DAVIS DODSON, Miami, Florida.
WILLIAM S. DODSON. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Silver Spring,
Md.
THOMAS MADDEN DONNELLY. Concord.
JOHN D. DOWNS, Fayetteville.
HENRY W. DOZIER, Rocky Mount.
MOODY BRISCOE DRUM, Newton.
DAREL WARREN DRL1MMOND. Morganlon.
MARIETTA DUKE, Chi Omega, Greensboro.
ROBERT EDWIN DUKE, Raleigh.
STOVER P. DUNAGAN, Rutherfordton.
DOLLY ANN DUNAWAY, Spartanburg. S. C.
MARY ANNA DUNBAR, Laurinburg.
WILLIAM H. DUNCAN, Kappa Sigma, Narberth, Pa.
A. HAYNES DUNLAP, Phi Kappa Sigma, Ansonville.
WALTER EUGENE DuPRE. JR.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Atlanta, Ca.
Page 142
Mass
•- t: c- £>
\ %V
^
ffl* *f P
CARL THOMAS DURHAM, Sigma A'u, Chapel Hill.
ANDERSON C. EARLY, Sigma Chi. St. Petersburg, Fla.
JAMES WILLIAM ECHERD, Asheville.
ALAN EDELMAN, Raleigh.
NONA HACKNEY EDGE, Raleigh.
EDWIN J. EDGERTON. Alpha Tau Omega, Fayetteville.
JAMES WEEDY EDNEY, East Flat Rook.
EDGAR EVERETTE EDWARDS, Snow Hill.
JOSEPH GERARD EDWARDS. Bunn.
NOAH E. EDWARDS. Dobson.
ROBERT H. EDWARDS. Scarsclale, N. Y.
A. .1. ELLINGTON. JR.. Beta Theta I'i. Burlington.
FLOYD PURYEAR ELLINGTON, Graham.
WILLIAM EDWARD ELLINGTON, III. Phi Gamma Delta.
Washington.
EVERETT EUGENE ELLIOTT. Phi Delta Theta. Kilgove,
Texas.
WILLIAM RICHARD ELLIOTT, Forest City.
ALPHEUS PALMER ELLIS. JR.. Weldon.
BENJAMIN FINESSEE ELLIS, Raleigh.
MARY PAT ELLIS, Boone.
JAMES L. ELWOOD, Delta Kappa Epsilon. Waynesville.
ARTHUR ENGEL, JR., New York, N. Y.
FRANK STEVENS ENGLISH. Phi Kappa Sigma. Monroe.
CHARLES T. ENMAN, Asheville.
WINFRED R. ERVIN, Charlotte.
ANN LLANTAINE EUTSLER. Kingsport. Tenn.
JAMES EMMETT EVANS. Alpha Tau Omega, Auburndale
Fla.
MARJORIE LOUISE EVANS, Greensboro.
MARY-JANE FAILING. Alpha Gamma Delta. Belleville
N. J.
PHILIP D. FAUROTE, Phi Gamma Delta, Bethesda, Md.
SARAH JANE FARLOW, Alpha Delta Pi, Augusta, Ga.
JAMES STEPHEN FARMER, Raleigh.
DAVID WILLOUGHBY FEREBEE. Chi Psi. Vaneeboro.
Page 143
WILLIAM McLELLAN FERGUSON. JR.. Sigma Nu,
Forest City.
JOSEPH COX FIDLER. High Point.
HOWARD L. FIELD. Ventnor, New Jersey.
ROSE WELLS FIELD. Chi Omega, Larclimont. New Jersey.
ELLISTON P. FIERD, ArHmore, Pa.
WILLIAM BOYD FINLAYSON. Lambda Chi Alpha.
Charlotte.
KATHARINE L. FINNEY. Eccleston. Md.
EARL FITZGERALD. Pelham.
GLADE FREDERICK FLAKE. Washington. D. C.
WILLIAM A. FLAMISCH. Sigma Chi, Allertown. Pa.
WILLIAM W. FLANAGAN, Clover. S. C.
ANNE FLEMING. Raleigh.
JOHN DIXON FLEMING. Phi Gamma Delia, Greenville.
JAMES S. FLETCHER. Elkin.
PATRICIA A. FLOWERS, New Bern.
DeWTTT C. FOARD. Charlotte.
DAVID GLENN FOGLE, Gastonia.
THOMAS WELCH FOISTER. Kappa Alpha, High Point.
LLOYD WILLIAM FONVIELLE, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Wilmington.
BARBARA BYRD FORDHAM. Greensboro.
VIRGINIA DELORES FORWARD. High Point.
JOSEPH B. FOSTER. Phi Kappa Sigma. Winston-Sale
WILLIAM OMER FOSTER, JR., Clinton, S. C.
BETSY W. FOUNTAIN, Fountain.
JOHN DAVID FOUST, Snow Camp.
IRVIN LEONARD FOX. Pi Lambda Phi. Oxford.
STANLEY HAROLD FOX. Pi Lambda Phi, Oxford.
DAVID DEWTTT FOY. Atlanta. Ga.
ROBERT B. FRANCIS. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Washington,
D. C.
JOHN WESLEY FRAZIER. Phi Gamma Delta. Salisbury.
SAMUEL WELLS FREED. Zeta Beta Tan. Greensboro.
CHARLES B. FULGHUM, Selma.
Page 144
ass
GEORGE WILLIAM FULK. Pinnacle.
FRANCES E. FURR, Franklin.
LEE R. FURR. Alpha Tau Omega. Newton.
CHARLES FREDERICK FUSSELL, Rose Hil
THEODORE J. FUSSELL, Winston-Sale,,,.
ARCHER H. FUTCH, JR.. Charlotte.
LOUIS KENORICK FUTCH, Monroe.
ALBERT MARRIETT GAINOR. Pi Kappa Alpha, Battle-
boro.
JOHN CARL GALE. P hi Kappa Sigma, North Deade. Md.
NORMAN ROBERT GALINKIN, Tau Epsilon Phi. Toms
River, N. J.
ROGER CANT. JR.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Burlington.
FLETCHE DAVID GARRARD. JR.. Durham.
FRED KESLER GARVEY. Delia Sigma Pi. Winston-Salem.
JOHN S. GASKIN. JR.. Albemarle.
MARGARET J. GASTON. Gastonia.
SAMUEL MALLETTE GATTIS, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Hills-
boro.
GEORGE DODGE GEOGHEGAN, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Raleigh.
VICTOR HUGO GIBEAN, JR.. Christiansted, St., Croix.
\ irgin Islands.
ARCHIE PATTERSON GIBSON, Alpha Tau Omega.
Gibson.
EDWARD BRYAN GIBSON, JR., Marion.
RICHARD BORDEN GIBSON. Phi Gamma Delta, Concord.
JUNE MYRTLE GILBERT. Alpha Gamma Delta,
Charlotte.
JOHN EDWARD GILES, Glen Alpine.
ROY ALLEN GILLIKIN. Chi Psi, .Smyrna.
CHARLES FLOYD GIPPLE. Gibsonville.
FRANK PAUL GIRAFFE. Southington. Conn.
LEE S. GLIARMIS. Wilson.
CHARLES A. CLICK. Kinston.
JOHN TEMPLE GOBBEL, JR.. Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM J. GOFORTH, Charlotte.
FRANK S. GOODRUM, JR., Alpha Tau Omega, Greensboro.
JACQUELYN GOODWIN. Apex.
'Mam
Page 145
Junior
JAMES G. GOODWIN. JR.. Hillsboro.
AUGUSTUS W. GRAHAM. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Oxford.
GORDON N. GRAHAM. Statesville.
l.\\\RENCE PITTMAN GRAHAM. Fayetteville.
JAMES F. GRAVES. Washington. D. C.
ROBERT A. GRAY, Charlotte.
JOHN LAZARUS GREEN. JR.. Alpha Tau Omega.
Charlotte.
WILLIAM B. GREEN. Roanoke Rapids.
WILLIAM LESTER GREEN. JR., Phi Delta Theta.
Zebulon.
WILLIAM TATE GREEN. JR., Thomasville.
ESLEY 0. GREENE, Chesterfield. S. C.
SAMUEL R. GREENE. JR.. Durham.
WILLIAM EDGAR GREENE, Salisbury.
JULIA CRIDDLE GREENWOOD. Asheville.
ALFRED WILSON GRIFFIN, JR.. Phi Gamma Delta.
Goldsboro.
BILL PARKER GRIER. Hot Springs. Ark.
CHARMIAN GRIFFIN. Washington. D. C.
DORIS LEE GRIFFIN, Elizabeth City.
JANE L. GRIFFIN, Vienna, Ga.
GEORGE COOPER GRIZZARD. JR.. Kappa Alpha,
Washington, D. C.
BILLY J. GROGAM. Winston-Salem.
ALAN S. GUBIN. Pi Lambda Phi. Memphis. Tenn.
DONALD S. GUMPRECHT, Durham.
JAMES MITCHELL GUTHRIE, Chapel Hill.
CARL RICHARDSON HACKNEY, Phi Gamma Delta.
Wilson.
SMITH M. HAGAMAN, Phi Kappa Sigma, Winston-Salen
BEN D. HAINES, Durham.
ROBERT T. HAIRE. Winston-Salem.
JOHN ELLIOTT HAMBY, Oak Ridge, Tenn.
DONALD K. HAMES, Cliffside.
JACK T. HAMILTON. Kappa Sigma. Smithfield.
MICHAEL L. HAMILTON. Phi Gamma Delta. Dillon. S. C.
o O
Page 146
MARION IVYLYN HAMMOCK. Raleigh.
RICHARD A. HANAU, New York. N. Y.
DOROTHY GAYLE HANCOCK, Lexington.
ROBERT CARPENTER HANES. Charlotte.
HORACE GRAVELY HANKINS, Lambda Chi Alpha,
Kernersville.
OBA THOMAS HANNA, JR.. Gastonia.
JOHN A. HANSON, Dorchester. Mass.
LEWIS BENJAMIN HARDISON. Aulander.
MELVIN RAULINGS HARGRAYE. Beta Theta PL
Kingsport, Tenn.
JOHN HAROLD HARMON. Kappa Sigma. McBee, S. C.
CHARLES LINDY HARPER. Kinston.
JAMES BALDRIDGE HARPER. JR.. Albany, Georgia.
ALLEN LEE HARRELL. Tarboro.
KARL P. HARRELL. Burlington.
ANN P. HARRIS. Roxboro.
EUGENE BLOUNT HARRIS. Nutley, N. J.
JOYCE HARRIS, Bunn.
ROBERT CHATHAM HARRIS, Kappa Sigma, Elkin.
ZACHARIAH HARRIS. JR.. Hertford.
WILLIAM SHERMAN HARRISON, AsheviUe.
EARL HORACE HARTSELL. JR.. Chapel Hill.
L. HEATH HARTSELL, Concord.
WILLIAM FLOYD HASKETT, Phi Delta Theta. Elizabeth
City.
FRANK J. HAWLEY. JR.. Roanoke Rapids.
CARL L. HAWN, Belmont.
CHARLES L. HAYES. Cherryville.
WILLIAM ROY HAYES. JR.. Sigma Chi, Norlina.
ALTON M. HAYES. JR.. Cliffsid.-.
LOUIS ARTHUR HAYNES. Pi Kappa Alpha, Norfolk. Va.
GORDON R. HEATH. Kappa Sigma, Kinston.
JAMES HEDGPETH. Zeta Psi. Greensboro.
THOMAS EARL HEFFNER. JR.. Charlotte.
Page 147
Junior
EARL CLEGG HELMS. Concord.
JAMES WARREN HENDERSON. Lumberton.
HERBERT S. HENDRICKS, Dallas.
GROVER CURTIS HENSON. JR., Pi Kappa Alpha,
Raleigh.
HENRY CICERO HICKMAN. JR.. Sanford.
EDGAR COOLIDGE HICKS, Winston-Salem.
JESSE KEBINSON HICKS. Phi Gamma Delta, Florence,
S. C.
ANN DUDLEY HILL. Durham.
BILLY W. HILL. Salisbury'.
FRANK POLLARD HILL, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Winston-
Salem.
FREDERICK S. HILL. Winston-Salem.
LOUIS THOMPSON HILL. Richland.
DWIGHT BERRIER HINKLE. Kappa Sigma, Lexington.
SARAH HINKLE. Lexington.
JOHN DAUGHTRIDGE HINNANT. Delta Sigma Pi„
Charlotte.
MILTON NEEDHAM HINNANT. Delta Sigma Pi,
Charlotte.
LOUIS EARL HODGES. Leaksville.
MATTHEW HODGSON, Phi Gamma Delta Murfreesboro,
Tenn.
THOMAS EATON HQLDEN. Louisburg.
WADE H. HOLDER. JR.. Lillington.
KATHARINE L. HOLDING, Raleigh.
LEWIS ROYALL HOLDING, Kappa Sigma, Smithfield.
SOLOMON P. HOLDING, III, Raleigh.
JAMES HERBERT HOLLAND, Fuquay Springs.
DAVID FRANKLIN HOLMES, Charlotte.
LEMUEL R. HOLOMAN, Jackson.
WALTER ANDERSON HOLT. Phi Gamma Delta,
Smithfield.
CAROLINE MOCHRIE HOMAN. Wilmington.
CHARLES JAMES HONDROS. Pi Kappa Alpha, Rocky
Mount.
EARL D. HONEYCUTT. Pi Kappa Alpha, Shelby.
JOHN C. HOOD, JR., Kinston.
WILLIAM L. HOOD, Charlotte.
Page 148
/lass
JOHN H. HOOTS. Winston-Salem.
WALTER L. HORTON, JR., Raleigh.
CLAUDE B. HOSAFLOOK, JR., Waynesville.
LILLIAN BROWN HOTARD, New Smyrna Beach, Fla.
JOHN GUION HOUGH, JR., Washington.
THOMAS PRESLEY HOUSER, JR., Lincolnton.
KATHRYN ANN HOVIS, East Bend.
GWEN HOWARD, Sanford.
CHARLES McLAIN HOWE, Clearwater, Fla.
ALBERT FRANKLIN HOWELL, Apex.
JOSEPH C. HUBBARD. Sao Paulo, Brazil.
BONNOR EDGAR HUDSON, Warhan.
CECIL FRED HUDSON, JR., Connelly Springs
HOMER TYER HUDSON, JR., High Point.
RANDALL ELIZABETH HUDSON, Tarboro.
EVERETT LEROY HUFFMAN, Hickory.
GARLAND FRANK HUFFMAN, JR., Burlingtor
MARTHA ROBERTA HUFFMAN, Morganton.
STANTON VANCE HUFFMAN, Gibsonville.
KATHERINE ELIZABETH HUGGINS, Raleigh
FERNE L. HUGHES, Rainelle, W. Va.
MARTHA ELIZABETH HUGHES, Cedar Grove.
SIDNEY A. HUGHES, Lumberton.
HAROLD GIBBS HULON, Hope Mills.
PATRICIA ANN HUMPHREY. Lumberton.
BILLY LEE HUNT. Durham.
MARY JANE HUNTER, South Orange, N. J.
TOM GEORGE HURYSZ, Chi Psi, Chapel Hil
ANN HUSKE, Fairmont.
BETTY CAROLINA HUSTON, Fairmont.
KELLY WADDELL HUTCHERSON, Winston-Salem.
ORMAN DONALD HUTCHERSON, Winston-Salem.
Page 149
Junior
GRADY ALDINE HUTCHINS. JR., Winston-Salem.
DAVID J. HUTTON, Greensboro.
ROBERT LEE HUTTON. Phi Gamma Delta, Greensboro.
DEWITT G. HYDER, Chapel Hill.
DOROTHY B. HYDER, Chapel Hill.
JACQUELINE S. INGRAM, Oklahoma City, Okla.
EDWARD CLAIBORNE IRBY, Phi Gamma Delta,
Blackstone, Va.
BILLY SEAWELL IVEY, Seven Springs.
GUY PIRKLE JACKSON, Belmont, Mass.
SALLY FIELDS JACKSON, Demopolis, Ala.
WALTER L. JACKSON, Kappa Alpha, High Point.
ELOISE JACOBI, Wilmington.
SIMON ARTHUR JACOBSON, Spofford, N. H.
ALBERT WARREN JAMES, JR., Laurinburg.
LENUE TYSON JAMES, Winston-Salem.
LESLIE HUGH JENKINS. Bryson City.
HAROLD HUBERT JETER, JR., Phi Gamma Delta,
Florence, S. C.
CHARLES M. JOHNSON, Raleigh.
DOROTHY WILLIAMS JOHNSON, Fayetteville.
EDWARD ROYCE JOHNSON, Phi Kappa Sigma,
Greensboro.
ERIC JOHNSON, Durham.
GEORGE JOHNSON, Phi Delta Theta, Wilmington.
JOSEPH MILTON JOHNSON, Sanford.
RICHARD EARL JOHNSON, Winston-Salem.
VICTOR LYNN JOHNSON, Ashevill.-.
WALTER SCHOLL JOHNSON, Concord.
CLYDE WAYNE JONES, Badin.
DANIEL S. JONES, Durham.
DAVID CROCKETT JONES, JR., Harlan, Ky.
JAMES MARSHALL JONES, Marshville.
JOSEPH FREEMAN JONES, Sigma Phi Epsilon,
Winston-Salem.
ROY WINFRED JONES, Flat Rock.
Page 150
O f
WILLIAM BAIN JONES, Badin.
WILLIAM M. JORDAN, Fay.
THOMAS MURPHY JORDAN, Alpha Tau Omega,
Fayetteville.
BENJAMIN HARRIS JOSEPHSON. Tau Epsilon Phi,
Weldon.
EDWARD GREY JOYNER, JR.. Alpha Tau Omega, Wilson.
JAMES JURNEY, Statesville.
REGGIE KACHIGIAN, Detroit, Mich.
NICHOLAS KALMAR, Faison.
JERRY KANTER, Zeta Beta Tau, Kinston.
BERTHA KAPLAN, Durham.
LEONARD JEROME KAPLAN, Pi Lambda Phi, High
Point.
JOHN E. KAPP, Winston-Salem.
CHARLES CROUCH KAUFFMAN, JR., Charlotte.
MARGARET ANN KEEN, Alpha Delta Pi, Macon, Ga.
ANDREW MOORE KEENAN, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Columbia, S. C.
JAMES ARTHUR KEIGER, Sigma Chi, Asheville.
HILARY BURNETTE KELLEY, Henderson.
ROBERT Y. KELLY, Kappa Sigma, Gastonia.
BERUARD ALLEN KEMP, Hendersonville.
RICHARD CARTLEDGE KENNEDY, Washington.
ROZELLE KENNEDY, Greensboro.
GEORGE B. KENYON. Charlotte.
ISABEL DABNEY KERR, Alexandria. Va.
KEMPER LEE KIGER, Rural Hall.
ROBERT AYERS KILLEFFER, Phi Delta Theta,
Crestwood, N. Y.
BILLY 0. KILLIAN, Conover.
CAROLYN ELIZABETH KIMZEY, Brevard.
JOHN RUTLEDGE KING, Beta Theta Pi. Kingsport. Tenn.
JOHN H. KINSEY, Lambda Chi Alpha. Fort Lauderdale
Fla.
WALLACE HINES KIRBY. Pi Kappa Alpha, Roxboro.
ROBERT EDWARD KIRKLAND, Zeta Psi, Wilson.
GUY C. KIRKMAN, JR., Charlotte.
Page 151
Junior
L. ELIZABETH KISER. Delta Delta Delta. Raleigh.
BEN D. KISTLER. JR., Greensboro.
LAWRENCE JEROME KLOSTERMAN, LaVale, Md.
ANN COOPER KNIGHT. Chi Omega. Tampa, Fla.
EDITH KNIGHT, Alexandria, Va.
JOE L. KNIGHT, Lambda Chi Alpha. Winston-Salem.
NORMAN KOHLER, New York. N. Y.
GENE FONVIELLE KOONCE, Sigma Chi. Jacksonville.
ROBERT HENRY KOONTS. Phi Delta Theta, High Point.
WILLIAM G. KORNEGAY, Warsaw.
KARL KURBJUN. JR.. Kappa Alpha. Richmond, Va.
WILLIAM LOCKHART KYLE, JR.. Kappa Sigma.
Kinston.
MAR1 TAMA LACY, Hopkinsville. Ky.
GASPER GARNETT LAMB. Pi Kappa Alpha. Elizabeth
City.
WILLIAM A. LAMBERT, Greensboro.
JOHN GERHARD LAMPE, Chi Psi. Raleigh.
CLAUDE DILLARD LANCASTER. JR., Sigma Chi,
New Bern.
JAMES FRANKLIN LANE, Wilson.
ROBERT SCOTT LANGLEY, Sigma Chi, Kin-ton.
HENRY L. LANGSTON, Danville, Va.
JAMES CONRAD LANIER. JR.. Phi Gamma Delta.
Greenville.
LeROY LANIER, Wallace.
VIOLET LaRUE, Raleigh.
EDWARD C. LASSITER, Newport News, Va.
JAMES A. LASSITER. Weldon.
ANDREW JOSEPH LAVIN, New York, N. Y.
SIMON S. LAWRENCE. JR.. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Wilson.
FERD OLBERT LAWSON, Zeta Psi, Sumter, S. C.
JOSEPH CLARENCE LEARY, Sigma Nu, Edenton.
CHARLES BURKHEAD LEDBETTER, Raleigh.
ROBERT WILLIAM LEDBETTER. Morganton.
CLAUDIA LEE, Marshallville, Ga.
Page 152
'V
© £
**ikJk
£' S i
mk< .J ',' "ft
^tl^Kil
JOHN COOK LEE, Sigma Alpha Epsi/on. Marshallvffle,
Georgia.
ROBERT E. LEE. Sigma Chi. Raleigh.
WILLIAM F. LEE, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Goldsboro.
JOSEPH B. LEFKOWITZ. Alpha Epsilon Pi, Orlando. Fla
ELIZABETH HOWARD LEGGETT, Delta Delta Delta.
Annapolis. Md.
BISHOP CURTIS LEONARD. JR.. Zeta IJsi. Salisbury.
COLBERT BLAIR LEONARD. Chapel Hill.
GILBERT GARY LEONARD. Peachland.
JEAN MARIE LESTER, St. Petersburg. Fla.
A. BRUCE LEVIN, Winston-Salem.
\1.\ [S T. LEWALLEN, Winston-Salem.
IRA OSBORNE LEWIS. Marshallberg.
WILLIAM KEE L1FSEY. JR., Norlina.
COSTIN LINDSAY. Asheville.
DAVID MURRAY LINDSAY. Kappa Alpha, High Point.
JOHN ROBERT LINDSAY. JR., Kappa Alpha,
Greenville, S. C.
KENNETH CHARLES LINEBACK. Lambda Chi Alpha.
Winston-Salem.
CHARLES R. LINYILLE. Winston-Salem.
H LER R. LISK. Alpha Tau Omega. Asheboro.
DANIEL M. LIPMAN. Beaufort.
EDWIN WHITE LITAKER, Monroe.
DANIEL LABAN LITTLE. Albemarle.
EDWARD MASON LITTLE. Greensboro.
WILLIAM B. LITTE, Kappa Sigma. Wadesboro.
THOMAS A. LOCKHART. Charlotte.
MICHAEL LOFTIS, Greenbelt. Md.
BETTY MARIE LONG. Salisbury.
CHARLES 0. LONC, Thomasville.
WILLIAM G. LONG. Zeta Psi, Garysburg.
ROBERT CHARLES LOLDERMILK, Chi PI,
Ga.
NICHOLAS ARMISTEAD LOVE. Phi Ga
Raleigh.
MAURICE JACK LOWE, Liberty.
Atlanta.
ma Delta.
Page 153
RONE PATRICK LOWE. Wadesboro.
WALTER ARCHELOUS LOWE. Canton.
CHARLES S. LOWRIMORE. JR.. Phi Kappa Sigma,
\\ ilmington.
JOAN LUCAS. St. Petersburg, Fla.
PEGGY ANN LUCAS. St. Petersburg. Fla.
WILLIAM THOMAS LUKE, Abbeville. Ga.
FRITZ BARTLEY LUTHER, Albemarle.
WILLIAM MAURY LYON, Sigma Chi, Mobile. Ala.
RUFUS GILBERT LYTCH. Maxton.
JOHN WAYLANU MADDREY, Sigma Chi, Weldon.
MARTHA C. MANNING, Plymouth.
WILLIS MELTON MANNING, JR., Bailey.
DANIEL SUMMEY MARSHALL. Charlotte.
ALGER BRYAN MARTIN, JR., Salisbury.
LESTER P. MARTIN, JR., Moeksville.
SAMUEL EDGAR MARTIN, Mayodan.
THOMAS E. MARTIN, Charleston, S. C.
I WIKS ARTHUR MASHBURN, Troy.
AUGUSTUS J. MASON, Edenton.
EFFIE S. MASON, Gast'onia.
WILLIAM T. MASON. II. Delta Sigma Pi, Asheville.
CARL N. MATHIS, Phi Gamma Delta, Wilmington.
TROY DACIS MATHIS, Rural Hall.
DEAN Y. MATTHEWS. Decatur, Ga.
FRANCIS B. MATTHEWS. Charlotte.
FRANK J. MATTHEWS. Hemingway. S. C.
ROBERT HUGH MATTHEWS, Florence, S. C.
CHARLES U. MAUNEY, Cherryville.
JAMES LOUIS MAXWELL, JR.. Beta Theta Pi.
Goldsboro.
RAYMOND BULLARD MAXWELL. Raeford.
JOHN AUGUSTUS MAYO. JR.. Phi Gamma Delta.
Washington.
DAVID S. Me ADA MS. Burlington.
Page 154
ass
CHARLES OTHANIEL McAFEE, JR., Macon, Ga.
james l. McAllister, jr., Roper.
MURRAY DAVID McCAIN, Newport.
ANDREW FRANCIS McCALL. Laurinburg.
RUTH McCANN, Asheville.
WILLIAM MARVIN McCAULEY, Chapel Hill.
DANIEL W. McCLAIN. Lambda Chi Alpha, Kure's Beach.
VAN PATRICK McCLELLAN, Anderson, S. C.
BRANTLEY AYCOCK McCOY. JR.. Chapel Hill.
LEO PATRICK McCURNIN, JR., Delta Kappa Epsilon,
New Orleans, La.
ELIZABETH McDONALD, Gastonia.
JOHN SHERWOOD McDUFFIE, Lambda Chi Alpha.
Miami, Fla.
WILLIAM G. McFADDEN, Sigma Chi, Morganlon.
WILBUR G. McFARLAND, Brevard.
EDWARD LEWIS McGEE, Sigma Chi, Hamlet.
JACK EUGENE McGEE, Winston-Salem.
GILBERT L. McGILL. Baltimore, Md.
THOMAS JEROME McGINN, Sigma A«. Savannah. Ga.
MARY HARPER McGOUGAN, Lumber Bridge.
FRANKLIN BOYD McGUIRE, Asheville.
WILLARD LYNN McINTOSH, Greensboro.
SAM STEWART McKEEL, Walstonburg.
JEAN McKEITHAN, Bethesda, Md.
PECGY ANN McKINLEY. Kannapolis.
PHILLIP McKINNE, Louisburg.
GEORGE WILLIAM McKINNEY, High Point.
NORWOOD E. McLAMB, Benson.
WILLIAM LENTIS McLAURIN, Raleigh.
WALTER JOSEPH McLAWHORN, Washington.
EDGAR ALEXANDER McLEAN, Winston-Salem.
JAMES DICKSON McLEAN. Phi Gamma Delia,
Lumberton.
GEORGE RALEIGH McLEOD. Phi Kappa Sigma. Durham.
Page 155
JOSEPH B. McLEOD, Chi Phi. Myrtle Beach. S. C.
WILLIAM H. McLEOD, Monroe.
KATHERINE CLIFTON McMILLAN. Alpha Delta Pi,
Laurinlmrg.
ROBERT S. McNEELL, JR.. Alpha Tau Omega. Mocksville.
PATRICIA McNUTT, Greensboro.
JOHN D. McPHAUL. Delta Sigma Pi, Red Springs.
YANCEY LEONARD MEDLIN, Oteen.
CULBRETH YOUNG MELTON, Durham.
PAUL WARREN MENGEL. Delta Kappa Epsilun,
New Bern.
JOHN B. MERRITT, Greensboro.
LILLIAN VERNELL MESSICKS. Durham.
ALICE MIDDLETON. Sumter. S. C.
WOODFORD R. MIDDLETON. JR.. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM GRAY MILLER, Winston-Salem.
ROBERT LeROY MILKS, Greensboro.
MAHLON R. MILLER, Allentown, Pa.
MARJORIE LOUISE MILLER. Boone.
ROBERT CRAIG MILLER. Raleigh.
WILLIAM HOUSTON MILLER. Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Greenville, S. C.
JAMES IRVIN MILLHOUSE. Wilson.
STEPHEN PERRY MILLIKIN. Zeta Psi, Halifax.
JACK HOWIE MILNE. Phi Gamma Delta, Toms Ri
N. J.
GEORGE C. MITCHELL, Wake Forest.
JOHN JOEL MITCHELL, Gary.
THOMAS A. MITCHELL, Greensboro.
EDWARD C. MITCHEM, JR., Brevar.l.
WILLIAM CABOT MONK, Phi Delta Theta. Fanmillr.
FRANK EUGENE MONTGOMERY. Wilmington.
CLYDE THOMAS MOODY. JR., Spring Hope.
JOSEPH RICHARD MOON, Lambda Chi Alpha,
Burlington.
ARMISTED McKEE MOORE, Troy.
DOVER GLADSTONE MOORE, Kappa Alpha, Greenville
S. C.
1 .ll#
Page 156
]lass
JAMES DONALD MOORE, Asheville.
JOHN R. MOORE, Tryon.
LEWIS D. MOORE, Turkey.
MARTHA BINFORD MOORE. Weldon.
PRISCILLA LANE MOORE. Alpha Gamma Delia, Tryon.
WILLIAM K. MOORE. Louisville, Ky.
WILLIAM L. MOORE. Greensboro.
ROY C. MOOSE. Mooresville.
ERNEST McKINLEY MORGAN. JR., Charlotte.
EUGENE CALDWELL MORGAN. Lunenburg. Va.
ASHLEY CARLYLE MORRIS. Pi Kappa Alpha, Raleigh.
JESSE CARR MORRIS. JR.. Raleigh.
OLIVER DUNCAN MORRIS, Albemarle.
RALPH DAVENPORT MORRIS, JR., Orlando. Fla.
HAROLD MILTON MORROW, Phi Delia Theta, Charlotte.
LEON RUDOLPH MORSE. Tau Epsilon Phi, Wilmington.
HENRY EDWIN MORTON. Faison.
MORRIS DAVIS MOSER, King.
DAVID SAMUEL MOSS, Zebulon.
JIM BAKER MOSS, Texarkana, Texas.
PATRICIA MARY MU1RHEAD, Durham.
JAMES RALPH MULLIS, Harmony.
GEORGE W. MUNFORD, JR., Phi Kappa Sigma, Durham.
JOSEPH ELBERT MURPHY, Pi Kappa Alpha, College
Park, Ga.
WILLIAM C. MURPHY, Kenly.
RUSSELL WILLIAM MURPHY, Burlington.
WILLIAM E. MURRAY. Hertford.
RIMAN ELLWOOD MUTH, Hilton Village, Virginia.
ELIZABETH TRAVIS MYATT, Goldsboro.
HOWARD LEO MYERS, Phi Mu Alpha, Winston-Salen
KATHERINE MYERS, Norfolk, Va.
CORT MONROE NANCE, JR., Florence, S. C.
Page 157
Junior
DAVID LEO NANCE, Chadboum.
JAMES RAYMOND NANCE. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Asheboro.
JOE RICHARD NANTZ. Mooresville.
VIRGINIA NASH. Raleigh.
GEORGE RAYMOND NASSIF, Laurinburg
CAROLYN F. NEAL. Gastonia.
MARY BREVARD NEELY. Asheboro.
HELEN NEIGHBOURS. StephenviUe, Texas.
E. LIONEL NELSON, Oteen.
MALCOLM C. NELSON. Troy.
ROLLA C. NELSON, Grantsburg, 111.
ROBERT W. NEWELL. Greensboro.
GENE NEWTON. Kappa Alpha, Shelby.
SHIRLEY VIRGINIA NEWSOM, Jacksonville. Fla.
KEMP PRUDEN NIXON, Kappa Alpha. Lincolnton.
NANCY MORTON NORMAN. Asheville.
LOUIS JEROME NORRIS. Morehead City.
MARJORIE ANGELA NORRIS, Delta Delta Delta,
Jacksonville, Fla.
HARRY C. NORTHROP. Kappa Alpha. Charlotte.
ESTON G. NORWOOD. JR.. Bennettsville. S. C.
JOHN SPICER NORWOOD. Kappa Sigma. Winston-Salen
LEWIS T. NUNNELEE, Phi Gamma Delta. Washington.
CAMERON M. NUTTALL. Charlotte.
DANIEL NYIMICZ, Rahway, N. J.
COUNCILMAN ODELL, Bonlee.
EMILY CAROLYN OGBURN, Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM ANDERSON OLSEN, JR.. Kappa Sigma.
Chapel Hill.
WHITTINGTON BONNETT O'NEAL. Delta Sigma Pi.
Durham.
JOHN EDWARD ORR, Phi Gamma Delta. Vsheville.
BYRON M. OSBORNE, JR., Asheville.
ROBERT VICTOR OSBORNE. Charlotte.
FRANK REDDING OWEN. JR.. Gibsonville.
Page 158
'lass
.1. RICHARD OWEN. JR., Hamlet.
EDWARD PAUL OWENS, JR.. Phi Delia Theta,
Elizabeth City.
ROBERT ALLISON PAIT, Delta Sigma Pi, Hamlet.
M. EDNA PALMER. Elizabeth City.
ARTHUR NICHOLAS PAPPAS. Phi Kappa Sigma.
Winston-Salem.
ALEX A. PARAMORE. Fuquay Springs.
DON RALPH PARDUE, Roaring River.
WARREN H. PARDUE. Ronda.
ROBERT STANLEY PARHAM. Henderson.
OLIVER JOHNSON PARIS. Graham.
JAMES C. PARKE. JR.. Conway.
ANN VIRGINIA PARKER. Raleigh.
JAMES HOWARD PARKER. Tarhoro.
MARION H. PARKER. Moultrie. Ga.
RALPH W. PARKS, JR.. Elkin.
HERBERT DEAN PARRIS. Clyde.
EDWIN PATE, JR., Kappa Sigma. Laurinbu
RICHARD F. PATTERSON. JR.. Kannapolis
WILLIAM K. PAYEFF. Aiken. S. C.
MARTHA DAN PAYNE, Greenville, S. C.
WILLIAM STANLEY PEARCE. Raleigh.
WILLIAM PEARSON, Statesville.
REIGH EDWARD PECK. Danville. Va.
JAMES HAROLD PEEDIN, JR.. Selma.
MARY PEGRAM. Ashevffle.
ELIZABETH HOLT PEIRSON. Raleigh.
NANCY R. PENDLETON. Elizabeth City.
GLENN H. PENINGER. JR.. Mt. Pleasant.
MARGUERITE PENNINGTON, Goldsboro.
BETTY RUTH PERKINSON, Rocky Mount.
JOHN 0. PERRITT, JR.. Rocky Mount.
CARL DAVID PERRY. Phi Kappa Tau, Schoolfield, \ a.
Page 159
Junior
NICHOLAS MASSENBURG PERRY, Louisburg.
WILLIAM S. PERRY. Charlotte.
WALTER ALLEN PETERSON. JR.. Yanceyville.
WILLIAM JERRY PETTICREW. Reidsville.
JOHN MINNICK PFAUTZ. III. Delta Psi. Philadelphia. Pa.
ALLEN C. PHILLIPS, Fredericksburg. Va.
GUION LEXIE PHILLIPS. Phi Kappa Sigma. Spartanburg.
S. C.
GUY McDONALD PHILLIPS, Toecane.
HARRY F. PHILLIPS. Burlington.
HELEN WILSON PHILLIPS, Chapel Hill.
HERBERT ORLANDAH PHILLIPS, Morehead City.
RALPH ADOLPHUS PHILLIPS, Scotland Neck.
ROBERT MARVIN PHILLIPS. Kappa Alpha. Birmingham.
Ala.
WELLBORN CLARK PHILLIPS, Kappa Alpha. Orlando.
Fla.
CREEL ALLEN PICKEL. Phi Eta Sigma. Pon.a City.
Okla.
FRED P. PIERCE, Catawba.
SHIRLEY STUART PIERCE, Colerain.
MARSHALL HENRY PINNIX. Delta Sigma Pi. Oxford.
JOHN THOMAS PITTMAN. Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Sanford.
MAR.IORIE K. PLESS, Marion.
ROBERT JOHNSTON PLUMB. Alpha Tan Omega,
Washington. D. C.
WATTS DIXON POE. Beta Theta Pi. Chapel Hill.
JANE McDONALD POINTER, Raleigh.
BARBARA ANN POPE, Raleigh.
FARREL FRANKLIN POTTS. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Mooresville.
MARY LOUISE POWE. Alpha Delta Pi. Durham.
JOSEPH CLARENCE POWELL. JR.. Phi Kappa Sigma,
Greensboro.
NELSON SHERRILL POWELL. Lenoir.
PETER W. PRICE, New York, N. Y.
CECILIA M. PRICE. Raleigh.
WILLIAM 0. PRESCOTT, Conyers, Ga.
HARRY C. PRATT, Bradenton, Fla.
> o o &
Page 160
lass
WILLIAM ASHFORD PRINCE. JR., Lambda Chi Alpha,
Hendersonville.
WILLIAM G. PRITCHARD. Chapel Hill.
FOLSOM C. PROCTOR, Charlotte.
JAMES KNOTT PROCTOR. JR.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Greenville.
ANNIE CORDELL PUETT, Dallas.
V. WATSON PUGH. JR., Raleigh.
JOHN McNEILL PULLIAM, Winston-Salem.
EDWARD SPENCER QUALLS, JR.. Boone.
BONNIE QUAY, Harrisburg.
LAWRENCE TALMADGE QUEEN. Troutman.
HOWARD JAMES QUINN. Jacksonville.
MARTHA RAINSFORD, Edgefield. S. C.
HAYDEN MONROE RATTLEDGE, Elkin.
REGINALD RAWLS, Woodland.
DAVID J. RAY, Hillsboro.
CLAUDE H. RANBORN. Greensboro.
ERNEST M. REAGAN. JR., Weaverville.
DANIEL H. REAVES, Graham.
HENRY EDMUNDS REDD, Chatham. Va.
JAMES G. REEVES, Reidsville.
HELEN ANNE REID. Thomasville.
HARVEY CHESTER RENN, Phi Kappa Sigma, Durham.
WILLIAM JOSEPH REYNOLDS. Bloomfield, N. J.
WILLIE MARJORIE RIDDICK. Scotland Neck.
THOMAS McNAIR RIDDLE, Sanford.
GEORGE L. RIGHTS, Winston-Salem.
LOUIS CHARLES RIGHTS, JR.. Winston-Salem.
STAMEY CLAY RIPPLE, JR., Winston-Salem.
JAMES C. RITTENHOUSE, Hillsboro.
FRANK GOODRICH ROBERTS. Swannanoa.
JAMES W. ROBERTSON, Burlington.
WALTER COLIN ROBERTSON, JR., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Page 161
Junior
BILL JONES ROBINSON. Chi Psi. North Wilkesboro.
CLAYTON ROLAND ROBINSON, Sigma Nu. Phi Eta
Sigma, Norfolk, V'a.
DAVID J. ROBINSON, Delta Sigma Pi. Winston-Salem.
FRANKLIN L. ROBINSON, Cana.
HERMAN H. ROBINSON. Elizabethtown.
NEWTON J. ROBINSON. JR.. Raleigh.
WALTER ROBINSON. Tan Epsilon Phi. Brooklyn. N. Y.
CHARLES C. ROGERS, JR.. Boone.
LEAMON ELWOOD ROGERS. Phi Gamma Delta.
W ilmington.
MARY CAROLYN ROPER. Lincolnton.
SHELLEY MOSELEY ROPER, Lincolnton.
DeWITT TALMADGE ROSE. JR.. Lambda Chi Alpha.
Winston-Salem.
WELLS B. ROSE, Phi Kappa Sigma. Wadesboro.
JOHN CARL ROSSER. Broadway.
TROY WORTH ROUSE, JR., Greenville.
KATHERINE WADDELL ROYALL. Goldsboro.
WARREN JAY RUBIN. Tau Epsilon Phi. Peekskill, N. Y.
ROBERT L. RUDD, Hurtlles Mill.
WILLIAM CAIN RUFFIN, JR.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Ft. Lauderdale. Fla.
WILLIAM G. RUMFELT. Gastonia.
EUGENE FIELDS RUSSELL. Goldsboro.
JOHN RUSSELL. Kinston.
ARNOLD M. RYDER. Jamaica, N. Y.
WILLIAM EUGENE RYON. Asheville.
DONALD PROCTOR SANDERS. Alpha Chi Sigma.
Lumberton.
EMILE MITCHELL SALEEBY. Delta Sigma Pi,
Wilmington.
CAMPBELL SANDERS. Phi Gamma Delta. Charleston.
S. C.
JOHN LASSITER SANDERS, Four Oaks.
ELIZABETH GRAY SANDERS. Lumberton.
RAYMOND LESTER SARBAUGH, Lumberton.
VENITAH SANDERS. Alpha Delta Pi. Chapel Hill.
HI NCAN ROBERTSON ST. CLAIR. Chi Psi, Charlotte.
Page 162
EVERETTE B. SASLOW, Zeta Beta Tau, Greensboro.
GEORGE GRANVAL SATTERFIELD. Burlington.
JOE WINDLEY SATTERTHWAITE, Kappa Alpha.
New Bern.
WILLIAM LEE SAUNDERS. Sigma Chi, Jamestown.
HARRY PAUL SAVAS, Phi Kappa Sigma, High Point.
HUGH E. SAWYER, Phi Kappa Sigma. Merritt.
ROBERT ELI SCARBOROUGH, Raleigh.
JOSEPH MELVIN SCHAFER. Zeta Beta Tau, Little Rock,
S. C.
DAVID SCHENCK. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Greensboro.
EVERETT HOYLE SCHULTZ, Winston-Salem.
DONALD BRUCE SCOTT, Washington.
LUDWIG GASTON SCOTT, Burlington.
GARLAND MARION SCRUGGS, Greensboro.
ELIAS VICTOR SEIXAS. JR., Chi Psi, Philadelphia
Penn. ■
NORMAN FAUCETTE SELF, Lambda Chi Alpha,
Burlington.
IRL T. SELL, Wilmington.
ERIC SLOAN SELLERS, Cherryville
RUSSELL LEE SENTER, Raleigh.
ALEXANDER SESSOMS, Chapel Hil
BEN ROWLAND SETZER, Lenoir.
HUGH IVOR SETZER. JR., Newton.
WAYNE D. SETZER, Claremont.
ARTHUR SHAIN, Wilmington.
HILDA SHARKEY, Chapel Hill.
ALICE VAUGHAN SHARP, Jacksonville. Fla.
EUGENE B. SHARPE, Greensboro.
JAMES A. SHAVER, Asheville.
HAROLD MACPHERSON SHAW, JR., RidgewoocI, N. J.
CHRISTOPHER JAMES SHAY. JR.. Phi Kappa Psi,
Philadelphia. Penn.
RAYMOND MARTIN SHEELY, Phi Delta Theta, Elizabeth
City.
REUBEN C. SHELTON, JR., Charlotte.
ALLEN PHIPPS SHERMAN. Phi Kappa Sigma, Durham.
Page 163
Junioi
ARNOLD PINCKNEY SHERRILL. Lenoir.
SIDNEY C. SHERTZER, Newark. N. J.
MARY BATES SHERWOOD. Raleigh.
DONALD G. SHIELDS. Torrington. Conn.
RAYMOND D. SHIPLETT, Chi Phi, Boynton Beach, Fla.
WILLIAM ALAN SHOLAR. Phi Kappa Sigma, Lenoir.
WILLIAM S. SHRAGO. Zeta Beta Tau, Goldsboro.
J. BROOKS SHUPING, Greensboro.
JOHN W. SIDES, Chi Phi, Albemarle.
MERCER WARD SIMMONS. Greenville.
C. J. WEAVER SIMPSON. Chapel Hill.
JOHN BURNS SIMPSON. JR.. Phi Kappa Alpha. Monroe.
ROBERT F. SIMPSON. Chi Phi. Fayetteville.
WILLIAM LEE SINK, Thomasville.
WILLIAM R. SNIPES. Troutman.
HARRIET ANNE SIPPLE. Orlando, Florida.
DONALD E. SKAKLE. Waltham. Ma-.
WILLIAM KIVET SLACK, Henderson.
MARY GLEN SLATER. Wilson.
JOHN ALLISON SLOPP. Salisbury.
JEPTHA THOMAS SMATHERS, Canton.
BARBARA A. SMITH, Raleigh.
BEVERLY J. SMITH, West Palm Beach, Fla.
CHARLES H. SMITH. Shaw, Miss.
DENNIS SMITH, Snow Hill.
HENRY' MASON SMITH. Kappa Alpha. Tampa. Florida.
JESSE E. SMITH. Winston-Salem.
MARY JANICE SMITH. Youngsville.
MILES JAMES SMITH. JR.. Kappa Alpha. Salisbury.
ODEL ALDEN SMITH. Angier.
RALPH K. SMITH. Chapel Hill.
ROBERT KENAN SMITH, Kappa Alpha. Barton. Fla.
O ft
Page 164
lass
ROBERT YANK SMITH, JR., Phi Gamma Delta.
Burlington.
STANLEY SMITH, JR., Asheboro.
WAITSEL BURGESS SMITH, Phi Delta Theta, Lenoir.
WILLIAM CARR SMITH, Phi Gamma Delta, Wilson.
WILLIAM HAROLD SMITH, JR.. Delta Kappa Epsilon,
Florence, S. C.
JACK LLOYD SNIPES, Kappa Sigma, Hillsboro.
CHARLES GOODRICH SNOW, Sigma Nu, Chapel Hill.
DONALD J. SNOW, Washington, D. C.
ROBERT HENRY SNOW. Siloam.
HARRY R. SNOWDEN, JR., Flushing, N. Y.
WILLIAM KITT SNYDER, Angier.
DAVID E. SOBEL, New York, N. Y.
JAMES EARL SOMERS, Sigma Chi, Burlington.
JEAN COURTNEY SOMERVELL, Alpha Gamma Delta,
Durham.
BURTON SPARER, New York, N. Y.
JANE M. SPARROW, Chapel Hill.
JAMES H. SPEARS, Fayetteville.
JAMES ROBERT SPENCE, Lillington.
SAMUEL McKNITT SPRINGS, JR., Charlotte.
CHARLES KENNETH SPRUILL. Mt. Olive.
WILLIAM FRANCIS SPURLIN. JR.. Alpha Tan Onu
New York, N. Y.
AMOS MOREHEAD STACK, Alpha Tau Omega, Red
Springs.
CHARLES CLAUD STAMEY, Fallston.
LEE ROY STANLEY, Kappa Sigma, Reidsville.
CHARLES R. STARLING, StatesviHe.
WILLIAM CLARENDON STEADMAN, Pinetops.
JONATHAN EDWIN STEED, Richlands.
HOKE H. STEELMAN, Delta Sigma Pi, Boone.
STEPHEN STEFANOU, JR., Jacksonville.
MELVIN STEINBERG, Montgomery, Alabama.
ROBERT EARL STELLING. Charleston, S. C.
RALPH C. STEPHENS, Orrum.
Page 165
Junior
HELEN ELIZABETH STEPHENSON, Shelby.
JAMES PRUDEN STEPHENSON, Severn.
DAVID BOYETTE STEVENS, Kappa Alpha, Augusta, Ga.
MERLE MARIE STEVENS, Forest City.
JOHN WESLEY STEWART, JR.. Roanoke, Va.
RICHARD KENT STEWART. Chapel Hill.
ROBERTA WRIGHT STIRLING. Portland. Maine.
SUSANNE STOKES. Raleigh.
PETER WILSON STRADER, Alpha Tau Omega.
Sarasota, Fla.
EDGAR LEROY STRAIN, Rome. Ga.
JACK D. STRATTON. JR.. Robbinsville.
HARRY H. STRAW. JR., Baltimore.
BERWARR JOHN STRONG. Raleigh.
KENNETH EPHRA1M STROUP, Cherryville.
BENJAMIN A. SUMMERLIN. JR., Mount Olive.
LACY SUMMERS, Greensboro.
CLAUDE S. SUTTON, JR.. Greensboro.
WILBA C. SUTTON, Newton Grove.
WILLIAM LUTHER SWAIN, JR., Winston-Salem.
JOHN B. SWAINSON, Chapel Hill.
FRED LANE SWARTZBERG. Pi Lambda Phi, High Point.
ROY EDWARD SWARTZBERG, Tun Epsilon Pi,
Asheville.
DAVID HEIDT SWEARINGEN, Durham.
PAUL STEPHENSON SWOPE, Roanoke. Va.
WILLIAM EARL SWOPE. JR.. Roanoke. Va.
LEONARD SZAFARYN, Ambridge. Penn.
MARY ANN TABER, Lookout Mountain. Tenn.
PATTERSON H. TALLEY, Danville, Va.
SIMPSON BOBO TANNER. Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Rutherfortlton.
CHARLES GORDON TATE. JR.. Alpha Tau Omega,
Morganton.
LINDSAY TATE, Charlotte.
WILLIAM MANSON TATE. Kappa Alpha, Pinehurst.
*'±%Sm.
Page 166
>lass
WILLIAM THOMAS TATE, Marion.
CARTER TAYLOR, Charlotte.
DYER J. TAYLOR. Washington. D. C.
JAMES G. TAYLOR, Cumberry.
JOHN CARLTON TAYLOR. Greenvil
LON W. TAYLOR, Washington.
NELSON W. TAYLOR, III, Beaufort.
RACHEL TAYLOR. Nashville, Tenn.
RICHARD FRANKLIN TAYLOR. Raleigh.
RICHARD HARDY TAYLOR. Snow Hill.
JAMES M. TERESI, Milledgeville, Ga.
LOI IS HOWARD THACKER, Greensboro.
JOSEPH HOWARD TH1GPEN, Williamston.
MASON PAGE THOMAS, Siler City.
RICHARD HERBERT THOMAS, Richmond, Va.
BIJRRUS ALFRED THOMPSON, Lowell.
SAMUEL J. THOMPSON. Sigma Chi, Graham.
WILLIAM BROWN THOMPSON. Alpha Tau Omega.
Oneco, Fla.
HOLLIE W. THORN, Lake Wales, Fla.
MARY LEAH THORNE, Farmville.
TAYLOR T. THORNE, Delta Sigma Pi, Rocky Mount.
GEORGE EDGAR THORNTON. Sigma Chi, Onion Spring
Ala.
HENRIETTA W. THORP. Rocky Mount.
WILLIAM LEWIS THORP. JR., Delta Kappa Epsilon,
Rocky Mount.
HAROLD E. THREATT, Fayetteville.
JERRY FREDRICK TOOLS. Chi Psi, Miami. F!a.
NED CALVIN TOWELL. Mooresville.
FERRIS TREME, Welsh, La.
WILLIAM G. TREXLER, JR., Asheboro.
GENEVIEVE M. TROTT. Newton.
JOSEPH LEON TROUTMAN. Salisbury.
AVERY HOYLE TROXLER. Greensboro.
Page 167
Junior
HARRY GEORGE TSUMAS. Statesville.
ERNEST WATSON TUCKER, Greensboro.
GEORGE F. TUCKER. Whitakers.
LEONARD TUFTS. Pinehurst.
SARA CATHERINE TURLINGTON. Dunn.
HARVEY WILLIAM TURNAGE. Sigma Nu, Greenville.
EUGENE H. TURNER. Phi Delta Theta, Laurinburg.
EDMUND T. TURNLEY. Rocky Mount.
NORFLEET E. UMSTEAD, Bahama.
THOMAS M. URQUHART. Kappa Alpha, Woodville.
CLAUDE CHARLES VACHE, Franklin, Va.
WILLIAM PAUL VAN HOY, Union Grove.
LEE E. VAN WINKLE, Sanford.
ROBERT H. VAUGHN, Winston-Salem.
CHARLES SCOTT VENABLE. Sigma Nu, Willingford.
Penn.
TOM A. VESTAL. Phi Delta Theta. Rocky Mount.
JOSEPH T. VIVERETTE, Pi Kappa Alpha, Battleboro.
LAWRENCE S. VIVERETTE. Battleboro.
JAMES BREVARD VOGLER, JR.. Delta Sigma Pi,
Charlotte.
CHARLES SEBASTIAN VOIGT, JR.. Phi Delta Theta.
Washington, D. C.
JOHN D. VON CANON, Sanford.
WARREN E. WALDEN. Greensboro.
JAMES LEWIS WALDRON. Phi Delta Theta. Columbus
Ga.
JOSEPH COMPTON WALKER. Hillsboro.
RICHARD ISLEY WALKER, Winston-Salem.
RICHARD TOWNSHEND WALL, Henderson.
THEODORE RALEIGH WALL. Pi Kappa Alpha,
Greensboro.
RICHARD DAVID WALLACK, Pi Lambda Phi. Milford.
Conn.
RUTH MARIE WALLS, Bristol, Tenn.
HENRY C. WALTERS, Jamesville.
HOWARD W. WALTERS, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Ocala,
Fla.
DONALD MALLARD WARD. Phi Kappa Sigma,
Goldsboro
Page 168
Class
JACK KURFEES WARD, Mocksville.
RAYMOND SLEDGE WARD, Nashville.
WILLIAM FARRIOR WARD, JR., New Bern.
HAROLD LAWRENCE WARNER. Walkertown.
HORACE GRAY WARNER. Walkertown.
EDWARD R. WARREN. JR.. Goldsboro.
JOHN FRANK WARREN, Graham.
ROBERT C. WARREN. Alpha Tau Omega, Goldsboro.
WILLIAM ELLIS WATERS. Roanoke Rapids.
ROTCHER H. WATKINS. JR.. Phi Delta Theta. Durha
MARY FRANCIS WATSON. Raleigh.
JOHN C. WATSON, Greensboro.
BYNUM E. WEATHERS. JR.. Shelby.
WILLIAM F. WATSON. Chapel Hill.
ROBERT WATSON. JR.. Winston-Salem.
\1.\IA D. WEAVER. Four Oaks.
MARY ELIZABETH WEBB, Bristol, Tenn.
WESLEY B. WEBB, Macclesfield.
PERCY C. WEEKS, JR.. Clinton.
HARVEY J. WEINSTEIN. Tau Epsilon Phi. New York
City, N. Y.
MM RICE MORTON WEINSTEIN. Greensboro.
M. JERRY WEISS, Chase City, Va.
MARGARET ANNE WELLS. Milledgeville. Ga.
WALTER B. WELLS. Mt. Holly.
EDWIN MORTON WESS, New York, N. Y.
JOHN W. WEST, JR., Waynesville.
MELVIN WESTREICH. Pi Lambda Phi, Keyport, N. J.
GEORGE BETTON WHITAKER, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Winston-Salem.
ROBERT C. WHITAKER. Wilmington.
ATLAS THOMAS WHITE. Phi Delta Theta. Ellerbe.
GEORGE THOMAS WHITE. Hamptonville.
HENRY ALEXANDER WHITE. Edenton.
Page 169
Junior
NATHANIEL S. WHITE. JR.. Birmingham. Ala.
WILLIAM C. WHITE. Kappa Sigma, Taylorsville.
RAYMOND C. WHITEHURST, Jackson.
FRANCIS A. WHITESIDE. Kappa Sigma, Gastonia.
BOBBY CAROL WHITESIDE. Gastonia.
LUTHER MARTIN WHITLEY, Chi Psi, Walstonburg
BURTON M. WHITSETT. Winston-Salem.
EUGENE CLAYTON WICKER. Sanford.
WARREN JAKE WICKER, Sanford.
JOHN LAWRENCE WIDMAN, JR.. Asheville.
WILLIAM BRYANT WILDER, Cary.
ALAN H. WILEY. Springfield. Mass.
WILLIAM BRITTAIN WILK1E. Spruce Pine.
DUKE CLIFFORD WILLARD, Pi Kappa Alpha.
Winston-Salem.
FOREST RAY WILLARD. High Point.
H. SMITH WILLIAMS. Yadkinville.
JEAN McCULLOCH WILLIAMS. Bluefield, W. Va.
JOHN R. WILLIAMS, Landi-.
MARY LOU WILLIAMS, ReidsviUe.
ROBERT ALEXANDER WILLIAMS. JR.. Pi Kappa Alpha.
Monroe.
ROGER LeROY WILLIAMS. JR.. La Grange.
THURMAN WILLIAMS. JR.. Delta Kappa Epsilon,
Fayetteville.
WILEY JULIAN WILLIAMS, Hamlet.
WILLIAM FRANK WILLIAMSON. JK.. Sigma Chi,
Elizabethtown.
JAMES CHAMPION WILSON. Winston-Salem.
N. WARREN WILSON. Lambda Chi Alpha. Burlington.
HARRt K. W1NECOFF. Concord.
K U i:\I.DW F.I.I. \\ INECOFF, Concord.
JAMES TROY WINFREY. Walnut Cove.
GRACE HOWLAND WTNSLOW. Tarhoro.
RICHARD L. WOFFORD, ReidsviUe.
WILLIAM R. WOLF, Ml. Carmel, III.
*i A:* *;
»d&*4
ik*-.
Page 170
ELINOR SPOTSWOOD WOLTZ, Raleigh.
BILL'S F. WOOD, Graham.
GILES E. WOOD, JR., Chapel Hill.
SARAH WOODHLLL. Bethlehem. Perm.
BERNARD DUKE WOODY. Concord.
GEORGE W. WOOTEN. Asheville.
LYMAN GRIFFIS WORTHINGTON, Micro.
WARREN GAMELIA WRIGHT. Mars Hill.
THORNTON H. YANCEY, Oxford.
LESLIE P. YELVERTON. Fountain.
MARJORIE Y. YOKLEY. Mt. Airy.
JOHN H. YORK. JR.. Charlotte.
MELYIN LEE YORK. Reidsville.
MARTHA B. YORKE. Concord.
SAMUEL CURTIS YOUNGBLOOD. Alpha Tan Omeg
W ashington, D. C.
WILLI AM H. YOUNT. Reidsville.
GEORGE TURNER YOl NTZ, Southmont.
JAMES FETZER ZIGLAR. Madison.
Page 171
SOPHOmORE CLRSS
Seated: Jo West. Chirk Slark • Standing: Paul Nelson, Charlie Smith, Archie Webh.
Officers
Charlie Smith
President
Archie Webb
Vice-President
Jane Bradford
Secretary
Paul Nelson ....
Treasurer
J o West
Social Chairman
Page 172
We looked to our first year and smiled a little at the confusion we saw ... As Sophomores, we no
longer had fears of being late to that eight o'clock ... no more consulting a football program for the
players* names . . . more coed phone numbers and week-end memories . . . better quiz grades
and above all a feeling that we belonged here, and were a part of this crowded whirl called Carolina.
We became mor3 serious and began choosing our courses with care ... We took part in Sadie
Hawkins Day and later danced to Vaughn and "Racing with the Moon'* in a packed gym ... We hung
on the fence and watched the new Planetarium going up . . . hoping we*d get to use it . . . Some of
us found homes in Victory Village while others cooked and studied in trailers . . . The "new look" slow-
ly gained our approval as the fashion-wise coeds took over . . . And above it all we learned to sing
"Hark the Sound" just a little louder ... We took these memories with us as we finished another spring
quarter and looked toward the summer months . . . Next year we would be back and one step nearer
that Kenan Stadium graduation . . . Our future as Juniors looked good!
Sophomore
CALVIN M. ADAMS. Statesvffle.
HOLCOMBE CHAMBERS ADAMS, Lynchburg, Va.
RHEA LANSING ADAMS. Beta Theta Pi, Durham.
SIMEON HUEY ADAMS, Gastonia.
TILDON HAROLD ADAMS, Jonesville.
WILLIAM F. ADCOX, Raeford.
CHARLES H. ADDERHOLT. Hudson.
WILLIAM R. ADKINS, JR.. Charlotte.
DONALD HUGH AHERN. Charlotte.
JOSEPH LINDSAY ALBRIGHT. Greensboro.
I. FA I KENNEDY ALDERMAN. JR.. Rose Hill.
CHARLES H. ALEXANDER. Zeta Psi, Charlotte.
DON MARSHALL ALEXANDER. Sigma Phi EpsUon, Vsheboro.
HERBERT E. ALEXANDER. Waterbury, Conn.
WILLIAM PRESTON ALLAN. Chi Phi, Chapel Hill.
CARL R. ALLEGOOD. JR.. Greenville.
FRONTIS CLYDE ALLEN. Charlotte.
WILLIAM LOCKE ALLISON, JR.. Pi Kappa Alpha, Statesvffle.
DANIEL ISAAC ALLRED. JR.. Aberdeen.
COOLEDGE FRANKLIN ALMOND. Albemarle.
ANDREW ANTHONY ANDREWS. Wilmington.
HAROLD LEE ANDREWS. Durham.
WILLIAM EDWARD ANTHONY, Gastonia.
NATHANIEL LeMASTER ARMISTEAD. JR.. Delta Kappa
EpsUon, Richmond. \ a.
IVAN BAKER ARMSTRONG. Kappa Sigma. Raleigh.
ROBERT A. ARRINGTON. Oxford.
DAN BELL ASHBY. Chi Psi, Raleigh.
WALLACE ASHLEY. JR.. Alpha Tau Omega. Smithfield.
JAMES A. AUSTIN, Ridgewood. N. J.
J WIES SPENCER AUSTIN. Phi Kappa Sigma, Norfolk. Va.
WILLIAM BRYANT AUSTIN, JR.. Jefferson.
ETHRIDGE CLAYTON AVERITT. Fayetteville.
ERVIN I. BAER, Tan Epsilon Phi, Dunn.
CHARLES ROBERTS BAILEY. Carthage.
WILLIAM WILEY BAISE. Raleigh.
NUMA R. BAKER, JR.. Reidsville.
WALTER CREDILLE BAKES, Ft. Gaines. Ga.
RUSSELL EDWARD BALDWIN, Durham.
RUSSELL G. BALDWIN. Leland.
WINFIELD MORGAN l!\l.l>\\ IN. JR., Goldsboro.
DAVID BEACH BALL. Burlington.
CHARLES A. BALLANCE, Raleigh.
MARK V. BARKER, JR.. Durham.
JOHN ROBERTS BARKLEY, Greensboro.
FRANCIS N. BARNES. Middlesex.
) ?■_
lH.tv 1 ^ i
Page 174
ass
WILLIAM ARNOLD BARNES. High Point.
GEORGE ROBERT BARNETTE. JR.. Phi Delta Theta,
Washington. Penna.
HARRY LEE BARNHILL, Wilmington.
JAMES F. BARR. West Jefferson.
ALBERT H. BARTH, Hewlett, N. Y.
PAUL JOSEPH BASCHON, JR.. Wilmington.
WILLIAM H. RASKIN. III. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Macon. G.
WILLIAM DONALD BASNIGHT, Chapel Hill.
THOMAS R. BASS, Newton.
JOSEPH YARNALL BASSETT, JR.. Asheville.
ROY N. BATCHELOR. Greenville.
HARRY SKINNER BATEMAN, Wilson.
HERBERT BATEMAN. Plymouth.
LARRY W. BATTLE. Rocky Mount.
GILBERT R. BEAM. Forest City.
JAMES E. BEAN, East Bend.
OTIS C. BEESON, JR., Greenshoro.
ALBERT J. BEGENDORF, JR.. Charlotte.
( 11 \RLES EUGENE BEHRENS. Washington. D. C.
CARL J \MES BELL. Jr., Gastonia.
ROBERT SAMUEL BELL. JR., Wilmington.
WILLIAM PAIL BELLE. Alpha Ta„ Omega, Tampa. Fla.
AROAS EUGENE BENNETT. JR., Winston-Salem.
MORTON BERGEN. Tau Epsilon Phi, Oxford.
JOHN ASTOR BERRY. Lynchburg. \ a.
EDWARD G. BELPUCH, Adah, Penna.
JOHN I). BIPPART, South Orange. N. J.
DONALD GORDON BLACK. Stocksville.
I \MES NORM UN BLACK, JR.. Beta Theta Pi, Greensboro.
KENNETH CARLYLE BLACK. Pi kappa Alpha. Columbia. S. C.
WILLIAM D. BLACK, Fayetteville.
ROY JACKSON BLACKLEY. Hamlet.
EUGENE DWIGHT BLACKWELDER. Concord.
DOCTOR FREDERICK BLACKWELL. JR.. Charlotte.
JOHN MUNGER BLADES. Delta Kappa Epsilon, New Bern.
THOMAS EDW ARD BLAIR, Charlotte.
ROCHEL BLAKENEY. Asheville.
VERNE WAYNE BLALOCK. JR.. Lexington.
JOHN BURTON BLUE. Laurinburg.
.1 VMES WILLIAM BUM. Winston-Salem.
ERNEST BOATMAN, Morristown, Tenn.
NICK B. BODDIE. JR.. Phi Gamma Delta. Rocky Mount.
THOMAS EVANS BONEY. Wallace.
SAM1 EL M. BOONE, Gates.
SAMUEL VERNON BOONE. JR.. Albemarle.
*-
«»-«.
7 P ^S
ft tt
m
»
Page 175
Sophomore
CLIFFORD ALLY N BOOTH. East Orange. N. J.
STUART OSBORNE BONDURANT. Sigma Chi, Winston-Salem.
RICHARD WINSTEAD BORDEN. Kappa Sigma. Goldsboro.
RICHARD B. BOREN. III. Greensboro.
JOHN ROBERT BORUM. High Point.
FRANK C. BOSEMAN, Ro.ky Mount.
MAI RICE BOWDEN. Goltlsboro.
JOSEPH FRANCIS BOWEN, Greenville.
RICHARD L. BOWEN, Athens, Ga.
THOMAS SAMl EL BRADSHAW. Graham.
CHARLOTTE BRANDENBERGER. Bern. Switzerland.
JOHN P. BRADY, JR., Asheville.
ROBERT OTHO BRANNON. Candler.
JACK RUDISILL BRANTLEY, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Greensboro.
JACK L. BRASINGTON. Sigma Chi, Coral Gables. Fla.
HARVEY M. BRINKLEY. JR., Durham.
LLOYD BRISSON, Fayetteviile.
HENRY COWLES BRISTOL. JR.. Statesville.
WILLIAM DAVID BRITT. Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM F. BROCK, Cana.
JAMES ALBERT BROCKMAN. Kingsport. Term.
CHARLIE SHERRILL BROOKS. Biscoe.
BYNUM R. BROWN, Murfreesboro.
J. COLVIN BROWN. JR.. Waynesville.
ROBERT PLEASANT BROWN, Charlotte.
ROBERT CLAYTON BRUMLEY. Gastonia.
RICHARD JAMES BR") VNT, Alpha Tan Omega, Gastonia.
SH \STA MONROE BRYANT. Mount Airy.
STEPHEN B. BUGHER. JR.. ReidsviUe.
ALTON C. BUIE, Fayetteviile.
HOWARD M. BUIE, Fayetteviile.
FRED BULLUCK. Rorky Mount.
DWIGHT ELMO BUNN, Wendell.
ANDREW J. BURGESS. Durham.
FRED R. BURGESS, South Mills.
EDWARD CALLOHILL BURKS, Chi Phi. Chapel Hill.
JAMES RUSSELL BURLESON. Plumtree.
GILBERT HENRY BURNETT. Burgaw.
GRADY BURNEY. Charlotte.
CHRISTOPHER BUSBY, Salisbury.
BILLY BLAINE BUTLER. Morganton.
BAXTER HAYES BYERLY. Sigma Chi. Lenoir.
ROBERT DANIEL BYRD. Burlington.
ROBERT E. BYRD, Conway.
Page 176
ass
PHILLIP AUGUSTUS CAIN. Gastonia.
EDWARD NORRIS CALDWELL, Graham.
ROBERT PLEASANTS CALLAHAN. Asheville.
SAMUEL J. CALVERT, Norfolk. Va.
DAVID S. CAMERON, Southern Pines.
DANIEL GRAHAM CAMPBELL, Lillington.
JOHN DAVID CAMPBELL. JR.. Kappa Alpha, Shelbj
ALLAN ROUNTREE CANNON, Burlington.
WALTER ALVIN CARNES. Greensboro.
EUGENE S. CARPENTER, Greensboro.
EDSEL L. CARR, Hillsboro.
NED ROSS CARRIKER. Matthews.
COY WALLACE CARSON, Asheville.
LINDSAY NORTH CASHION. JR.. Winston-Salem.
LEWIS D. CASSELL, Union, N. J.
JESSE B. CASTLEBERRY. Clayton.
WILLIAM CAUBLE. Phi Delia Theta, Hickory.
ROBERT JOHNSON CHAFFIN. Lillington.
FOIL V. CHARLES. Mebane.
JAMES LANDIS CHAVASSE. Sigma Chi, Henderson.
FOSTER F. CHEEK, Winston-Salem.
GLEN REID CHEEK. Durham.
JACK R. CHEEK, Durham.
ERVIN D. CHERRY. Raleigh.
NORMAN W. CHESSOM, Roper.
BERNARD CHI AVERINI, Ambridge, Penna.
Willi \\l DON VLD CHILDERS, Lenoir.
WILLIAM N. CHILDRESS, Raleigh.
CHARLES GRAHAM CLAPP, Biltmore.
EUGENE M. CLARK, Colerain.
REBER FIELDS CLARK. JR.. Wilmington.
CURT S. CLAliSON, Waynesville.
JOE H. CLAWSON, Phi Kappa Sigma, Lenoir.
JAMES BOYD CLAYTON. Lexington.
THOMAS HILL CLAYTON. Chi Psi. Roxboro.
RICHARD M. CLEGG. Greensboro.
JOHN L. CLEMENTS. Crewe. Va.
ROBERT LEE CLOYD. Charlotte.
DONALD C. COBB, Charlotte.
THOMAS WORTHY COBLE. Graham.
HARVEY JAY COHEN. New York City. N. Y.
RICHARD ALAN COHEN. New York City. N. Y.
STANLEY COHEN, Tau Epsihm Phi, Chapel Hill.
FOY ROBERSON COLE, Hillsboro.
HERMAN PRESTON COLE, Raeford.
* 2*k *x ill
?,
Q& ft & C
-;
1 i J&k A
Page 177
Sophomore
RUFUS L. COLE, Laurens, S. C.
FRANK LEWIS COLEMAN. Alpha Tau Omega, Charlotte.
S. HAMPTON COLEMAN, Chi Psi, Red Springs.
EDWARD LEE COLEY, Raleigh.
DAVID L. COLLINS, JR.. Wilson.
JACK DENNY COLLINS. Sigma Nu, Lumberton.
REX ATRIS COLLINS, Raleigh.
DREW WILLIAM COLVARD. Tapoeo.
DONALD R. CONNOR. JR., Chadbourn.
JOHN CONSTABLE, JR., Winston-Salem.
ROBERT ELIHU COOLEY, Wagram.
JOHN THOMAS COOPER, Vicksburg, Miss.
WADE THOMAS COOPER. Alpha Tau Omega, Cary.
EDWARD M. CORDON, Kappa Sigma, Louisville, Ky.
ANDREW CORNISH, Oak Ridge, Tenn.
HAROLD T. COUCH, Macon, Ga.
JAMES THOMAS COVINGTON, Kinston.
TREADWELL DOWNING COVINGTON. Phi Delta Theta.
Miami Beach, Fla.
CHARLES FOWLER COWELL, JR.. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
\\ ashington.
ROBERT S. D. COWLES, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Kinston.
GEORGE HERBERT COY, JR.. Washington.
WILLIAM FRANK COX. JR.. Chi Psi, Winston-Salem.
JOHN H. CRABTREE. JR.. Raleigh.
STUART WARREN CRAMER. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Charlotte.
SAM WYNDHAM CRAVER, JR., Pi Kappa Alpha, Charlotte.
BEN C. CRAWFORD, Winston-Salem.
JAMES ALLAN CRAWFORD, Chapel Hill.
BILLY K. CROYE, Bluefield, W. Va.
JAMES F. CRAY, Greensboro.
WILLIAM B. CREGAN. Wilmington.
ROBEY B. CRISP, Beta Theta Pi, Lenoir.
SIM CROCKER. Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM ARCHIBALD CRUMP, Phi Gamma Delta, Durham.
GEORGE HAROLD CUMMINGS, Asheville.
JOHN DAGENHART, Stony Point.
JOSEPH F. DALLAS. Reidsville.
JOHN LASLEY DAMERON. Burlington.
FREDERICK S. DANIELS. Wilson.
GERALD MARVIN DANIEL, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Durham.
JAMES RICHARD I) ANION, Wilmington.
ERWIN MARTIN DANZIGER, Chapel Hill.
EDGAR M. DARNELL. Murphy.
CHARLES B. DAVENPORT. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Greenville.
ROY M. DAVIDSON, StatesviUe.
DWIGHT G. DAVIS. JR.. Jackson Heights, N. Y.
JiMJl*
Cage 178
ass
FRANK L. DAVIS. Beta Theta Pi, Danville. Va.
GENE TORRENCE DAVIS. Gastonia.
GEORGE W. DAVIS, Wilson.
JAMES LANIER DAVIS. Chapel Hill.
RUSSELL REID DAVIS. Danville. Va.
GEORGE EDGAR DAWSON. Asheville.
ANIES R. DATE. JR.. Winston-Salem.
JESSE HENRY DEDMOND. Cliffside.
JOHN T. DENNING, Albemarle.
ENGLISH SEAL DesCHAMPS. Kappa Sigma, Bradenton, Fla.
HARVEY JEROME DIAMOND, Tau Epsilon Phi, Charlotte.
JAMES T. DICKSON. Wilmington.
DONN L. DIETER, Durham.
ARTHUR CHRISTIAN DIETZEL. Baltimore. Mil.
HERBERT PATRICK DILLON. Savannah. Ga.
MARVIN RAY DILLON, Bluefield. Va.
I WIES CLINTON DISMUKE. Tifton. Ga.
CLIFTON N. DIXON. Wilmington.
JACK CLARK DIXON, Greensboro.
JAMES DOUGLAS DIXON, Elm City.
CHARLES E. DOBBIN. Lenoir.
AUBREY CLAYTON DOGGETT. JR.. Sigma Chi. Greensboro.
ROBERT A. DOCKHAM. Denton.
CLIFFORD F. DOLL. Rutherford, N. J.
WILLIAM DORAN. Ridgefield Park, N. J.
LAWRENCE RICHARD DOWNS, Fayetteville.
HORACE M. DuBOSE. Winston-Salem.
LEONARD OLEN DUDLEY. Kannapolis.
JOSEPH W. DUKE, Wilmington.
WILLIAM B. DUKE. Goldsboro.
WADE STAFFORD DUNBAR, Sigma Chi, Laurinburg.
EDWIN H. DUNLAP, Biscoe.
JOHN JENNINGS DUNLAP. Wadesboro.
RICHARD AUSTIN DUNLEA, Kappa Alpha. Wilmington.
RAYMOND E. DUNN, New Bern.
NORMAN W. DURHAM. Riverton. N. J.
CHARLES WADE DWIGGINS. JR.. Greensboro.
ROLAND P. EARLY. JR.. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Raleigh.
JEROME R. EATMAN, Raleigh.
HUGH EBERLY. Norfolk, Va.
PETE MEADOR EBERSOLE. Kappa Alpha. Atlanta. Ga.
FRANK LAWSON ECHOLS. Asheville.
J WIES CLYDE EDDINGS, JR., Gastonia.
EVERETTE M. EDWARDS. Phi Gamma Delia. Apex.
JOHN W. EDWARDS, Charlotte.
Page 179
Sophomore
ROBERT DOUGHTON EDWARDS. Sigma Chi. Asheville.
HARPER J. ELAM. III. Greensboro.
JOSIAH BAKER ELDRIDGE. Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM STANTON ELLIS, Fayetteville.
ELIZABETH D. EMORY. Delta Delta. Delta. Chapel Hill.
PAUL J. ENGLISH, Hendersonvffle.
ROBERT FRANK ENSSLIN. JR.. Kappa Sigma.
W ashington, D. C.
JESSE MILLER EPPS. Macon, Ga.
HUGH HARRIS ERVIN, Statesville.
DAVID WILKINSON EVANS, Beta Theta Pi, Charlotte.
ROBERT ALLSTON EVERSMAN. Flat Rock.
JOHN BUNYAN EXUM, Sigma Nu. Rocky Mount.
SHERWOOD E. EXUM, Durham.
CHARLES L. EZELL. Durham.
JACK THOMAS FAKOURY. Myrtle Beach, S. C.
FREDERICK W. FARLEY. Sigma Chi. Tryon.
JACK N. FARMER. Phi Gamma Delta. Lexington.
LEWIS B. FARRAR, Apex.
WILLIAM HENRY FARRIOR. JR.. Wallace.
HORACE L. FELTON, Rocky Mount.
BAXTER L. FENTRESS. JR.. Kappa Sigma, Greensboro.
ALVIN LEE FERGUSON, Gastonia.
MURIEL JOYCE FERGUSON. Chapel Hill.
IRA OTIS FERRELL. JR.. Durham.
JAMES E. FERRELL. Burgaw.
SCOTT KEY FERRELL. Asheville.
WILBERT OSBORNE FIELDS. Selma.
CLYDE I.. FINCH, Henderson.
MELVIN LEWIS FINCH, JR., Henderson.
CARROL J. W. FISHER. Sigma Chi, Salisbury.
DON S. FITCH, Greensboro.
JOSEPH G. FITZGIBBONS, Carterville, Ca.
MALCOLM FLEISHMAN. Tan Epsilon Phi. Fayetteville.
DAVID L. FLETCHER, Elkin.
CHARLES T. FOLEY. Charlotte.
JOHN RODNEY FOREMAN. Elizabeth City.
RICHARD TILLMAN FOUNTAIN. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Rocky Mount.
PERRY J. FRANKEL. Pi Lambda Phi. Pleasantville. N. J.
SAM B. FREEMAN. Sigma Chi, Clarksville. \ a.
I'M L F. FULLER. Kappa Alpha. Gastonia.
GILBERT H. Fl RG1 RSON, High Point.
JAMES F. FURR, Franklin.
CLYDE WALTON FUSSELL. Teaehey.
WILLIAM A. FITCH, Hampstead.
JOHN W. GAINEY, Fayetteville.
Page 180
Class
ROBERT H. GAINEY, Alpha Tau Omega, Fayetteville.
CLYDE HOOVER CARNER. Pinehurst.
EDWARD LEE GARNER. Pinehurst.
WALTER MONROE GARDNER, Warrenton.
JAMES B. GARRISON, Kappa Sigma, Badin.
JOHN T. GARRISON, Badin.
ALBERT F. GARRON. JR., Valdese.
ALFRED HAMILTON GARVEY. Pi Kappa Alpha,
Winston-Salem.
ELWYN RAY GARY. JR.. Charlotte.
DEIDRICK H. GASKILL, Rocky Mount.
PAUL McLEAN GASKILL. Sea Level.
PERSE L. GASKINS, Jacksonville.
GORDON M. GATLIN, Franklinville.
DENNIS U. GENTRY. JR.. Galax, Ga.
WILSON OLrv'ER GERRINGER, Greensboro.
HENRY W. GHEEN, Shelby.
CHARLES ROBERT GIBSON, Kappa Alpha, Winston-Salem.
JAMES WALLACE GILBERT. Mount Airy.
CURTIS CLAUNCH GILLESPIE, JR., Columbia. S. C.
THOMAS ELBERT GILLIAM, JR., Burlington.
JOHN GITTINGS. Delta Psi, Wilmington.
JOSEPH RODNEY GLASGOW, JR.. Littleton.
0. W. GLAZENER. Brevard.
CHARLES I. GLEASON, Charlotte.
CLEVELAND J. GLOVER, JR.. Wilson.
ROBERT E. GOODING, Kinston.
HENRY M. GOODWIN. Wilmington.
RICHARD E. GORDON. Merion Station, Penna.
SAUL M. GORDON, Tau Epsilon Phi, Statesville.
THOMAS WILLIAM GORDON, Clover, S. C.
FRANK EDWIN GOSSETT. Charlotte.
ROBERT STIMSON GREEN, Lambda Chi Alpha, Lewisville.
ERNEST GRAHAM, Goldsboro.
JACK RAYMOND GRAHAM, Bear Poplar.
JOHN ROBERT GRAHAM, Fayetteville.
ROBERT M. GRAHAM. CI i Phi, Chapel Hill.
THEODORE ALEXANDER GRAHAM, JR., Peachland.
WILLIAM JAMES GRANDIN, III, Beta Theta Pi, Titusville,
Penna.
JAMES REID GRANT, Harmony.
FRANCES GREENE, Chapel Hill.
JAMES McIVER GREEN, Chi Phi, Thomasville.
JOHN BERGWIN GREEN, New Bern.
ROBERT S. GREEN, Lewisville.
ROBERT H. GREER. Morganton.
WILLIAM ELLIS GREGORY. JR.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Rocky Mount.
P & P C* C
Page 181
Sophomore
DAVID GRIFFITH, Charlotte.
GEORGE M. GRIFFIN, JR., Baltimore, Md.
HUCH P. GRIFFIN. JR., Kappa Sigma, Reidsville.
JOHN B. GRIFFIN, Rocky Mount.
RICHARD L. GRIFFIN, Gastonia.
WILSON VINYARD GRIFFIN, Goldsboro.
ALLEN LEON GRIMES, Hope Mills.
JACK R. GROG AN, Sherwood.
ROBERT WARNER GRUBBS, Winston-Salem.
\\ \LTER COFFEY GRYDER, Hiddenite.
JACK BURTON GUE, Goldsboro.
HOWARD JEROME GUNDERSON. Charlotte.
ROY S. GUNTER, Lumberton.
OSCAR W. GUPTON, Raleigh.
ROBERT H. HACKNEY, Zeta Psi, Wilson.
ELLIS FRANKLIN HALL, Winston-Salem.
RAY EFIRD HALL, Charlotte.
THOMAS ROY HALL, Burlington.
WILLIAM S. HALL, Mount Ulla.
WILLIAM LEONARD HALTIWANGER, Hamlet.
RAYMOND HALVORSEN. Palmer. Mass.
EDWARD H. HAMILTON. Atlantic.
EVERETT HAMPTON. Kannapolis.
LEONARD HAMPTON, Kannapolis.
JULIAN W. HAMRICK, Shelby.
JAMES A. HANCOCK, JR.. Danville. Va.
ARDENAL HANEY, High Point.
GEORGE DEWEY HARDEE, JR.. Chi Psi. Whiteville.
CHARLES F. HANLESS, Sanford.
ALLEN WAYLAN HARRELL. Colerain.
GEORGE NEVILLE HARRELL. Whiteville.
CARL N. HARRIS, Durham.
DAN GEORGE HARRIS, Shelby.
DELA FLETCHER HARRIS. 111. Sigma Chi, Sanford.
EDGAR STANLEY HARRIS, Fayetteville.
FRANK B. HARRISON, Hendersonville.
JOHN WENDALL HARRISS. Wilmington.
JOHN LANGSTON HARRIS, Grantsboro.
WALLACE GORDON HARRIS, Badin.
WALTER PAGE HARRIS. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Durban
JIMMIE H. HARVEY. Kappa Alpha. Greensboro.
JASPER W. HASSELL. Edenton.
GLENN ARTHUR HASTINGS. Greensboro.
CHARLES NEWLAND HAUSER. Upha Tan Omega.
Camp Stewart, Ga.
ROBERT L. HAWKINS. Shelby.
mM£
Page 182
Class
HERBERT LAURESTON HAWLEY, Lexington.
CLARENCE FILMORE HAVES. High Point.
JOHN W. HEAVNER, Grouse.
El GENE CH\RLES HEIMAN. Tau Epsilon Phi. Miami Beach.
Fla.
JAMES R. HENDERSON, JR., Charlotte.
WILLIAM W, HENDERSON, Charlotte.
ROBERT EMERSON HENNESSEE, Burnsville.
PERRY C. HENSON. Otto.
BOBBY JOE HERRING, Winston-Salem.
WILLARD I. HERRING, Clinton.
WILLIAM LASSITER HESTER, Creedmoor.
JAMES ROBERT HICKMAN, West Palm Beach, Fla.
WILEY H. HICKS, Raleigh.
CHARLES E. HIGGUSON, JR., Raleigh.
JOHN V. HIGHFILL, Mayodan.
EUGENE DAVID HILL. JR.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Winston-Salem.
GERALD D. HILL, JR., Beaufort.
AUBREY B. HILLEY, JR., Durham.
CHARLES R. HILTY, JR., Jacksonville, Fla.
WINFREE ALEXANDER HINES, JR., Winston-Salem.
DEWEY HOYLE HINKLE. High Point.
ROBERT L. HINSDALE. Hendersonville.
LEON F. HINSHAW, Asheboro.
CARL JENNINGS HINSON, Rock Hill. S. C.
JOHN RAE HIPP, Charlotte.
WILLIAM H. JOSEPH HIPPLE. Philadelphia. Penna.
JAMES WILLARD HOBBS. Greensboro.
BAILEY W. HOBGOOD, Durham.
JOSEPH WILEY HODGES. Kappa Alpha, Washington.
LOUIS EARL HODGES, LeaksviUe.
HEIDI HOFER. Thun. Switzerland.
BRUNO A. HOFT. New Bern.
JOHN A. HOKOMBE, Trenton. N. J.
ROTHCHILD H. HOLDEN, Kappa Sigma, Shallotte.
ALFRED HENRY HOLLAND, Winston-Salem.
LEON HOLLINGSWORTH, Wallace.
ROY WALTER HOLSTEN. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Glen Rock, N. J.
WILLIAM M. HOLT, JR., Sanford.
ABNER HOMER HOLTON. JR.. Phi Kappa Sigma, High Point.
CHARLES SHANNON HOMAN. Swedesboro.
W. GARY HOOKS. Fremont.
ROBERT L. HOPKINS. Norfolk. \ a.
ALTON STEPHENSON HORN, Forest City.
JOSEPH ALLEN HORNE, JR.. Pfafftown.
EARL B. HORNER. Burlington.
Page 183
Sophomore
THOMAS ALLEN HOSICK. Winston-Salem.
CHARLES BARNETT HOUGHTON. Norfolk. Va.
JAMES BICKLE HOUSER. III. Gastonia.
DEAN E. HOWARD, Sapula, Okla.
HARRY H. HOWREN. Phi Delta theta, Richmond, Va.
VINTON ASBlR^i HOYLE, JR.. Chapel Hill.
GLENN C. HUBBARD. Charlotte.
J WIES A. HUDLEY, Mount Airy.
DAVID E. HUDSON. Zirconia.
JACK GRAY HUDSPETH, Winston-Salem.
L. GORDON HUFFINES, Washington. D. C.
WILLIAM R. HUFFMAN, Wilmington.
PRESTON HUGGARD, Lewiston.
JAMES L. HUGGINS, Franklin.
CHARLES RANDOLPH HUGHES. JR.. Sigma N„, Bluefield,
West Virginia.
W U.TF.R TALIAFERRO HUGHES. Phi Comma Delta,
Wilmington.
TED L. HUGUELET, Ci Phi, Hamlet.
CHARLES DETRICH HUTAFF, JR.. Kappa Alpha. Dunn.
JAMES A. HUTCHENS, Yadkinville.
JUNIUS JACOB IDOL, High Point.
HENRY LEWIS INGRAM. JR.. Asheboro.
JOE K. IVES, High Point.
BASIL GEORGE JACKSON, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Atlanta. Ga.
EMMETT SMITH JACOBS. Sigma Nu, Lynchburg. Va.
.1 \MF.S CI RTIS J \RRETT. Salisbury.
NEWBERN J. JEANES. Fayetteville.
BOYCE 0. JENKINS, Concord.
ED WADE JERNIGAN, Dunn.
CHARLES E. JETTY. JR.. Houston. Texas.
RICHARD ERWIN JEWELL, Sanford.
RICHARD HEEZEN JOHNS, Greensboro.
AUBREY ROBERT JOHNSON. Phi Delta Theta, Atlanta. Ga.
CLYDE BRADLEY JOHNSON, Benson.
EDWIN EURE JOHNSON, Sigma Nu, Rocky Mount.
GILBERT EARL JOHNSON. RobersonviUe.
HARVEY WILSON JOHNSON, Chi Psi, Raleigh.
HUGH B. JOHNSON, Charlotte.
WILLIAM L. JOHNSON. Raleigh.
WILLIAM MONROE JOHNSON. JR.. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM RILEY JOHNSON. Raleigh.
WORTH B. JOHNSON, Raleigh.
JOHN WILLIAM JOMP, JR.. Wilson.
ARTHUR F. JONES. Kappa Alpha. WaynesviUe.
HI RTON HATHAWA1 JONES Delta Kappa Epsilon. Edenton.
EDDIE L. JONES. Ivanhoe.
Page 184
ass
EUGENE W. JONES, Stokesdale.
HARVEY M. JONES, Wilson.
HENRY P. JONES, Raleigh.
JOHN H. JONES, Macon, Ga.
LELAND LAKE JONES. Wilmington.
CHARLES GAY JOYNER, Alpha Tau Omega, Wilson.
BALDWIN KAHN, Savannah, Ga.
SIDNEY T. KALIN. Tau Epsilon Phi, Hendersonville.
ALBERT SIDNEY KATZ. Alpha Epsilon Pi. Durham.
EDWIN E. KATZ1N. Alpha Epsilon Pi, Winston-Salem.
EMANUEL KATZIN, Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM M. KEAN, Fort Jackson, S. C.
HORACE BENTON KELLY, Chi Psi, Pinehurst.
JAMES MORGAN KELLY. Chi Psi, Elizabethtown.
JULIAN DR1SKELL KELLY, Wilmington.
RICHARD GRAY KELLY, Yadkinville.
ROBERT B. KELLY. Winston-Salem.
SAM JONES KELLY, Gastonia.
JOHN DANIEL KENNEDY, Raleigh.
REX M. KENNEDY. Pi Kappa Alpha. Jacksonville.
MAHLON DAY KENNY, Haworth, N. J.
LOUIS T. KERMON, Wilmington.
WILLIAM S. KETCHOM, Jacksonville.
ROBERT GEORGE KETDASHA. Phi Eta Sigma, North Bergen.
N.J.
ALBERT WARREN KING. Boone.
ROBERT LINK KIRK. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Winston-Salem.
RAYMOND EDWARD KIVETT, Sigma Chi, Burlington.
CHARLES WILLIAM KNIGHT. Lambda Chi Alpha.
Winston-Salem.
JAMES 0. KNIGHT, Columbia.
HUGH J. KNOX, Charlotte.
MORRIS KNUDSEN. Phi Kappa Sigma. Los Angeles. Calif.
CARL WILLHELM KORB. JR., Wrightsville Sound.
SANFORD L. KORSCHUN, Tau Epsilon Phi, Goldsboro.
KENNETH MORRIS KRIEGSMAN. Greensboro.
EDWIN EARL LAMB, [ngold.
HARRY LINWOOD LAMM. Phi Gamma Delta. Wilson.
HOWARD R. LANDIS, JR.. Rocky Mount.
BERNARD OWEN LANE, Greensboro.
JESSE R. LANGSTON, Micro.
JOHN W. LASLEY, Chapel Hill.
SAM BURGESS LEARY, JR.. Old Trap.
MACK RIMMER LEATH. Burlington.
HARTZEL Z. LEBED, Washington, D. C.
SYLVIA ELEONORE FRANCES leCLAIR, Chapel Hill.
JAMES BUREN LEDFORD. Cliffside.
Page 185
Sophomore
RALPH WILLIAM LEE. Ill, Alpha Tau Omega, Chevy Chase, Md.
WILSON M. LEE, Benson.
WILLIAM J. LEINBACH. Winston-Salem.
GEORGE H. LEONARD, Lexington.
HUBERT LEON LEONARD. Lexington.
WALTER EVAN LEONARD, Hickory.
JEROME L. LEVIN, Charlotte.
FRED WILBUR LEWIS. Hurt, Va.
HARRIS W. LEWIS, JR., Winston-Salem.
JAMES RICHARD LEWIS. High Point.
JEROME E. LEWIS. Asheville.
ELLIS HERBERT LEVINSON, Tau Epsilon Phi, Gastonia.
HOW \KI) LIEBER, Tau Epsilon Phi. Gastonia.
JOHN THOMAS LINDLEY. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Greensboro.
JAMES WINGATE LINDSAY. Winston-Salem.
I WIES CHRISTOPHER LINGERFELT, Morganton.
WILLIAM J. LINK. Sumter. S. C.
STAHLE LINN, JR., Delta Kappa Epsilon, Salisbury.
RONALD EDWARD LISS. Charlotte.
I. MAYO LITTLE, Robersonville.
PHILIP GRAY LIVERMAN. Plymouth.
CLYDE FRANKLIN, Buie's Creek.
WALTER P. LLOYD, No. folk. \ a.
ROBERT E. LOCK, Chapel Hill.
HENRY V. LOFGUIST, JR., Asheville.
JOHN McDAVID LOFTIS. Alpha Tau Omega, Tampa, Fla
PAUL F. LOGAN, Morganton.
TRACY McKNIGHT LOUNSBURY. Winston-Salem.
OSCAR NEWTON LOVELACE. JR., Goldsboro.
RICHARD T. LOWE, Low Gap.
MARVIN ELLIS LUTHER, Ramseur.
AVER1S MONROE LYNCH. Gastonia.
ROBERT G. LYNCH, JR., Henryetta, Okla.
KARL V. LYON. Elizabethtown.
WORTHAM C. LYON, JR., Durham.
ROBERT MacLAURIN MacDONALD. Little Rock, S. C.
RONALD MacKLIN, Winston-Salem.
ROBERT THOMPSON MacMILLAN. Delta Psi, Chapel Hil
CHARLES B. MacRAE, JR.. New York. N. Y.
ROBERT PHIFER MacRAE. Alpha Tau Omega, Concord.
SAMUEL H. MAGILL, Shanghai, China.
CHARLES MANESS, Durham.
CARL GRATTON MANN. Kannapolis.
FRANCIS K. MANNING, Bethel.
JIM C. MANNING. Sigma Nu, Asheboro.
Page 186
ass
DAN \. MARTIN, Raleigh.
IT R\ER LEE MARTIN, Winston-Salem.
CRAIG A. MASTON, Delta Psi, Wilmington.
DAVID D. MATTHEWS, Durham.
THOMAS MATTHEWS, Apex.
JOSEPH FRANKLIN MAURICE, Pi Kappa Alpha, Hamlet.
RICHARD C. MAYBERRY. Elkin.
GARLAND S. MAY, Littleton.
JOHN S. MEADE. JR.. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Danville. Va.
FRED CHAPIN MEEKINS. Kappa Alpha, Ashevffle.
CARROLL ROY MELTON, Marion.
JOSEPH TAYLOR MELVIN, Greensboro.
CLARENCE BRATTON MENDENHALL. Charlotte.
RICHARD C. MESSENGER. Sigma Nu, Hartford, Conn.
ROBERT STANLEY MESSNER, New Bern.
GEORGE WILLIAM MICHAEL. Iron Station.
JOSEPH E. MICHALSKI, New Bedford, Mass.
EDWARD MICOL, JR., Valdese.
JOHN BYNUM MILES. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM D. MILLAWAY. Lambda Chi Alpha, Winston-Salem.
CHARLES J. MILLER. Richmond. Va.
BAXTER DAVIS MILLER. Boone.
BLANTON WALTER MILLER. Boone.
GEORGE J. MILLER. Pi Kappa Alpha. Charlotte.
ROBERT ALFRED MILLER. Asheville.
SAMUEL W. MILLER. JR., Raleigh.
JOHN E. MILLOW ARY. JR.. Greensboro.
HURLEY TUNSTALL MILLS, Henderson.
JAMES DAVID MILLS, Phi Kappa Sigma, Wadesboru.
MORGAN D. MORRIS, Tryon.
RAYMOND MILLS. Jonesboro, Ark.
CHARLES RUDOLPH MILTON. Raleigh.
GLENN LOWRY MITCHELL, Hickory Grove. S. C.
ELMER NELSON MODLIN, JR.. Jamesville.
SOLOMON MICHAEL MONSOUR. Fayetteville.
JAMES MONTGOMERY. Mayodan.
EUGENE CALVIN MOON, Graham.
OSCAR JETER MOONEYHAM. JR., Kappa Alpha, Forest City.
BLAINE CALLOWAY MOORE. Mocksville.
CRAWFORD DURHAM MOORE, JR.. Raleigh.
deSAUSSUNE P. MOORE, JR., Sigma Chi, Kingstree, S. C.
HENRY FRANKLIN MOORE, JR.. Whiteville.
JAMES DICK MOORE. Asheville.
JAMES FLOYD MOORE. JR.. Sigma Chi. Reidsville.
\\ U.TER H. MOORE. Reidsville.
£•, O Q £» p
\ 41 t l.iili
rp p f> p |!j
4^
t BSlL
4M+M
Page 187
Sophomore
WILLIAM TRACY MOORE, Greensboro.
CHARLES 0. MORELL. AsheviUe.
JACOB WALDBLRG MOREL, Wilmington.
JAMES L. MORGAN. Greensboro.
PLATTE B. MORING. Greensboro.
ADRIAN MORITZ. Enka.
ROBERT E. MORRELL. Asbeville.
DANIEL BAXTER MORRIS. Chi Phi, Fayetteville.
ROBERT RAYMOND MORRISON, JR., Pi Kappa Alpha,
Raleigh.
ROBERT KNOX MORROW, Zeta Psi, Charlotte.
JAMES HAROLD MOSES, Durham.
BILLY P. MOSS. Liberty.
ROY MAURICE MOSS, Shelby.
KENNETH FRANKLIN MOUNTCASTLE. Sigma Alpha Epsilo
Winston-Salem.
OLIVER WARREN MOWRV. Charlotte.
JAMES CLAYTON MOYE. Snow Hill.
JOHN CHARLES MOYLE, Charlotte.
WILLIAM DOVERSPIKE MULLEN. Durham.
FREDERICK L. MUNDS, Washington. D. C.
JAMES G. MURPHY. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Charlotte.
SIDNEY YANCEY McADEN. Charlotte.
LARRY BIKLE McALLISTER, Mount Pleasant.
DONALD GRANT McBANE, Snow Camp.
FRED HOMER McBRYDE, JR.. Sanford.
EDWARD JOHNSON McCAULEY, Burlington.
SAMUEL RICHARD McCAULEY, Phi Kappa Sigma,
Chapel Hill.
WALTER LANE McCALL, Chi Psi, Albemarle.
JOHN ADOLPH \I COMMAS, Elizabethtown.
HAL ASHLEY McCULLERS. Raleigh.
LEWEL O. McCULLOUGH. JR.. Charlotte.
ROBINSON McCUNE. Green's Farms, Conn.
JOSEPH L. McDANIEL. Southern Pines.
ROBERT C. McDANIEL, III. Sigma Ah. Salisbury.
RICHARD LEE McDOLAND, Durham.
WILLIAM ALAN McDONALD, Durham.
GUY WITHERSPOON McFARLAND. Charlotte.
DONALD MADISON McFEE. Salisbury.
ANDREW GRAMLING McGILL. Laurinburg.
JOHN WESLEY McGIRT. Hamlet.
JAMES ARTHUR McGRANAHAM. JR.. Durham.
WILLIAM DUNLAP McIVER, Phi Delta Theta, Gulf.
EDWIN BORDEN McKEE. Raleigh.
PATRICK D. McKINSEY, Chapel Hill.
ROY BOWMAN McKNIGHT. JR.. Sigma Chi, Charlotte.
I WIES C. McLAIN, JR.. Badin.
.**■**
ft- *Vii"<u*
Page 188
ass
CHARLES FRANCIS McLEESE, Lambda Chi Alpha. Charlotte.
BENJAMIN GREENE McLENDON. Sigma Chi. Rockingham.
EDWARD ARMAND McLEOD. Maxton.
JAMES M. McMANNUS, Red Spring-.
FRANK A. McNEILL. Aberdeen.
WILLIAM EDGAR McPHERSON. JR.. Mebane.
JOHN WATSON NEAL. Phi Kappa Sigma, Southern Pines.
SHERMAN YALE NEARMAN. Pi Lambda Phi. Charleston.
West Virginia.
JOSEPH RANDOLPH NEIKIRK. Portsmouth. Ohio.
CHARLES B. NELSON. Henderson.
PAUL NELSON. Chi Psi, Grandview on Hudson. N. Y.
THEODORE JAMES NEWTON. JR.. Charlotte.
CHARLES EDWARD NICHOLS. Greensboro.
DONALD RUSSEL NICHOLSON. Kappa Alpha. Brooklyn. N. Y.
FLETCHER BURTON NICHOLS. Charlotte.
PAUL DOUGLAS NIFONC. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM EDWARD NIVEN, Morven.
WILLIAM H. NIXON, Charlotte.
I \\lr> STANTON NORTHRUP. JR.. Alpha Taa Omega,
Concord.
WILLARD CLOSE NORTHUP. JR.. Winston-Salem.
ALBERT WOMBLE OAKES, III. Weldon.
ROBERT P. O'CONNELL, Newton, Mass.
CHARLES CLARENCE ODELL, JR.. Asheville.
JOHN G. OLDENBUTTEL. \\ ilmington.
JOHN HARVEY OLIVER. JR.. Fayetteville.
DAVID LEWIS ORMOND, Phi Gamma Delia. Wilmington.
JOHN JAMES ORMOND, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Wilmington.
FLOYD ERNEST OUTLAND, Rich Square.
ALBERT J. OWEN. III. Lincolnton.
CHARLES COWAN OWEN. Clarkton.
JAMES E. OWEN, Clarkton.
JAMES WORLEY OWEN, Waynesville.
PAUL V. PAPPAS. Winston-Salem.
TOM DILWORTH PARKER, Raleigh.
WILLIAM B. PARKER. JR.. Alpha Tan Omega. Brookhn. N. V
ALTON S. PARRISH, Benson.
GENE B. PARRISH, Benson.
PARROTT PARRISH. Benson.
WILLIAM K. PARRISH. Raleigh.
ALBERT E. PARTRIDGE. JR.. Wade.
FRED S. PATTERSON, JR.. Greensboro.
WILLIAM FRANCIS PATTERSON, Winston-Salem.
LEWIS PATTON. Franklin.
NOLLIE MOORE PATTON, JR.. Kappa Alpha, Morganton.
ROBERT FLYNN PAYLOR, Farmville.
Page 189
Sophomore
ROBERT SNELSON PAYNE, Phi Delta Theta, Atlanta. Ga.
ROBERT G. PAYTON. Chapel Hill.
ALVIN WARD PEACOCK. Sigma Nu, Chapel Hill.
SAMUEL WEBSTER PEARCE, Pfafftown.
STANLEY PEARSON. Zela Beta Tau, Kinston.
WILLIAM SMITH PEEBLES. III. Lawrenceville. Va.
CHAN MUNGER PEGRAM. JR.. Pi Kappa Alpha, Elizabeth
City.
ROGER PEGRAM. Fayetteville.
VLLISON H. PELL. Charlotte.
STUART A. PELTZ. Newport News, Va.
EDWIN H. PENLANI). Scaly.
ELY J. PERRY, JR.. Kappa Sigma, Kinston.
HUGH PEOPLES PERRY. Phi Gamma Delta. Sanford.
WILLIAM E. PERRY. Troy.
GLENN H. PEARSON. Louisburg.
AUGUSTUS W. PETERS. Zeta Psi, Wilson.
RAYMOND C. PFAFF. Winston-Salem.
HENRY E. PHELPS, \-heville.
OLIVER BLRTON PHIFER. Marseille.
CHARLES W. PHILLIPS. Spruce Pine.
JAMES HENRY PHILLIPS. Pi Kappa Alpha, Lumberton.
CLARENCE EARL PICK ARD, Newport News. Va.
OSCAR A. PICKETT, Newark. Del.
WILBUR PIERCE. Apex.
RALPH STANLEY PITTMAN. St. Pauls.
ROBERT G. PITTMAN, Selma.
WILLIAM G. PITTS, Spring Hope.
JACK ANDREW PLACEY, Ashevill.-.
STEPHEN PLATT, Far Rockaway. N. Y.
ROBERT TOWNSEND PLEASANTS, Greensboro.
RUFUS GRIER PLONK. JR.. Kings Mountain.
MELVIN PODELL. Charlotte.
JACK PORTERFIELD. Monroe.
NELSON S. POSNER, Shelby.
SAM! EL C. POST. Greensboro.
CHARLES F\LES POWERS. Romm->. W. \ a.
RICHARD PRATT, Bradenton. Fla.
RICHARD MUNGER PREYER. Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
New Rochelle, N. Y.
HEM \N M. PRICE. Avon.
HERBERT WILLIFORD PRICE. Selma.
WILLIAM H. PRICE. Baltimore. Md.
HORACE K. PRIVETTE. Kinston.
JOHN WINBORNE PRIVOTT. Edenton.
JOE B. PROCTOR, Whiteville.
RANDALL WESLEY PROCTOR. Washington, D. C.
p r< q p
mnwt KhkJLMmm \
Page 190
ass
EARL DON PROFFIT. Alexandria, Va.
WILLIAM HOWARD PRUDEN, JR.. Sigma Chi. Roanoke Rapids
CHARLES ALVA PRYCE. Rockingham.
JOHN ROBERT PUGH. Laurel Springs.
JAMES W. PURDUM. Asheville.
JOE B. PUTNAM. Cherryville.
JOHN R. PYRON, Charlotte.
CLIFTON LEE QUINN, Beulaville.
CORBETT LATIMER QUINN, Pink Hill.
JOHN COLEMAN RAE, Raleigh.
MARION HERBERT RANDOLPH. JR.. Lexington.
WILLIAM T. RANKIN, Gastonia.
EDWIN E. RAWL. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Greenville.
WILLIAM M. RAWLS, Rockingham.
FRANCIS X. RAY, Flat Rock.
WILLIAM T. REECE. Elkin.
LIKIE ALFORD REGISTER, Turkey.
BERRY REID. JR.. Greensboro.
ROBERT LOUIS REMSBURG. JR., Dunn.
FREDERIC RETCHIN. Wilmington.
CARTER Y. RHINEHART, JR.. Canton.
JOCELYN RHYME, Chapel Hill.
THAXTON RICHARDSON, Greensboro.
GEORGE G. ROBERTS, Fort Knox. Ky.
ERNEST L. ROBERSON, JR., Charlotte.
CHARLES DEWAY ROBINSON, Graham.
JAMES D. ROBINSON, Rocky Mount.
JOHN DUNCAN ROBINSON, Wallace.
GEORGE FARNELL RODMAN, Washington.
JOHN P. ROGERS. Phi Kappa Sigma, Norristown, Penna.
JOSEPH E. ROGERS. Washington.
LATTIE MONROE ROGERS. JR., Mooresville.
WILLIAM HAYWOOD ROGERS, III, Raleigh.
IVON CLEVELAND ROHADER. JR.. Chi Phi. Atlanta. Ga.
JAKE L. ROSENBLOOM, Zeta Beta Tau. Rocky Mount.
JACK BURNS ROSS, Forest City.
CLYDE BUCHANAN ROSSER. Broadway.
CHARLES KENNETH ROYAL, Salemburg.
EDWARD WRAY RUSSELL, High Point.
JAMES CLYDE RUSSELL. Carthage.
WILLIAM DORSET RUSSELL, JR., High Point.
ELBERT STEPHEN RUTLErGE, Phi Kappa Sigma.
Winston-Salem.
JOSEPH V. RUZICKA. JR., Greensboro.
FREDERICK D. RYAN. Trenton, N. J.
HAROLD SALMON. JR., Zeta Beta Tau. New Orleans, La.
^ f*' ^ (**) f*%
* 1 ■
Page 191
Sophomore
ANDREW J. SANDERS. JR.. Gastonia.
ROBERT GLASGOW SANFORD. HendersonviUe.
JOE 0. SARGENT. Salisbury.
GORDON GALES SAULS. Raleigh.
FRED STIMSON SAUNDERS. Aulander.
JESSE LEE SAUNDERS, JR.. Reidsville.
FRANKLIN LONNIE SCHELL. Statesville.
ELMER E. SENSENBACH. High Point.
CHARLES BALDWIN SEWARD. Marion. Va.
JOHN W. SEXTON. JR.. Phi Gamma Delia. Rocky Mount.
CHARLES ANDERSON SHACKELFORD. High Point.
CLAUDE W. SHANNON. Sanford.
ROYAL GRAHAM SHANNONHOUSE. III. Delta Kappa Epsilon,
Moncure.
MELA IN SHEP SHAPIRO. Phi Delia Theta, Charlotte.
DAVID JAMES SHARPE. Chapel Hill.
STANLEY SHAVITZ, Alpha Epsilon Pi. High Point.
ALTON B. SHAW, Florence. S. C.
CHARLES COLLINS SHAW. Henderson.
WILLIAM GARLAND SHELTON. Statesville.
ROBERT SHERRILL. Winston-Salem.
NANCY JANE SHIELDS, Alpha Delia Pi, Chapel Hill.
GERALD TYBAR SHOR. Zero Beta Taa. Raleigh.
THOMAS E. SHREVE. Leaksville.
JAMES CLIFFORD SHL'BERT. Louisburg.
EDWIN H. SHI FORI). Hickory.
WILLIAM M. SHIFORD. Fayetteville.
GEORGE HENDERSON SHULL. Shelby.
MONCUE EAVES SIBLEY, Lumberton.
HAROLD S1GITR, Sigma Nu, Norfolk. Va.
RAYMOND I -MMMONS. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM I -.ESTON SIMMONS, Goldsboro.
GEORGE S. SIMPSON. JR.. Asheville.
RICHARD L. SIMPSON. Chi Phi, Chevy Chase, Md.
WILLIAM H. SIMPSON. Stokesdale.
ROBERT LLOYD SING. JR.. Kappa Alpha. Charlotte.
JOSEF SKLUT, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Winston-Salem.
MARK RAYMOND SMERNOFF. Pi Lambda Phi. New Haven.
Conn.
ADRIAN WADDELL SMITH. Phi Delta Theta. Philadelphia.
Penna.
CHARLES GRAH \M SMITH. Pi Kappa Alpha. Raleigh.
CLAUDE A. SMITH. Black Creek.
CLYDE B. SMITH. Leaksville.
COLWELL H. SMITH. JR.. Wallace.
DAVID ANTHON"i SMITH. Lambda Chi Alpha. Burlington.
DOUGLAS SMITH. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Atlanta. Ga.
EDWARD D. SMITH. Varina.
^ CS (T. t C: c
>■ Ut
Page 192
^lass
GENE P. SMITH. San Francisco, Calif.
GEORGE R. SMITH. JR.. Ruffin.
JAMES ROBINSON SMITH. Kappa Sigma. Durham.
LAWRENCE OSCAR SMITH. Clayton.
LEMl EL \LE\ \NDER SMITH. JR.. Clarkton.
TAL D. SMITH. Durlington.
ALBERT G. SNIDER. Denton.
JACK EDSEL SNIPES. Morganton.
ROBERT H. SNOW. SUoam.
\ ERNOJN G. SNYDER. JR.. Thomasville.
RAYMOND ATLAS SORRELL. Durham.
.1 \ME> F. SUTHERLAND, Willard.
(.1 1 SPARGER, Mount \iry.
NORMAN LEOPOLD SPER. JR.. Hollywood. Calif.
HORACE EDNEY STACY. Lumberton.
THOMAS FRANKLIN STALLINGS, JR.. Kappa Sigma.
Smithfield.
DON \LD M. STANFORD. Chapel Hill.
JESS FRANKLIN STANLEY, Morven.
WILLIAM LITTLE STEELE. Kappa Sigma. Raleigh.
CECIL ERTLE STEPHENS. Lumberton.
PRESTON STEPHANS. Envin.
FREDERICK STERNBERGER. Wilmington.
WILLIAM HENRY STEWART. Asheville.
JOHN E. STILLMAN, JR.. Miami. Fla.
JOHN MITSI STOIOFF. Donora. Penna.
THOMAS ANGIER STOKES. JR.. Phi Delta Theta, Durham.
JOHN STONE, Sigma 4lpha Epsilon. Greensboro.
PHILLIP STONESTREET. MocksviUe.
LAWRENCE A. STOX. Winterville.
JERRY D. STRADER. Chi Phi. Burlington.
DAVID R. STO.UD, JR.. MocksviUe.
JOSEPH B. STROUP, Gainesville. Fla.
ALBERT CHAPLIN STUART. Lambda Chi
W inston-Salem.
Alpha.
WALTER VINCENT STUART. Raleigh.
JAMES CARLISLE STUCKEY, JR.. Sumter. S. C.
JOHN SUTTON STUMP. Kappa Alpha. Clarksville, W. \ a.
BOBBY S. STUTTS, Durham.
LESTER DILL STYRON. Morehead City.
LEON SUGAR, Tau Epsilon Psi, St. Paul-.
RALPH A. SULLIVAN, JR.. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM J. SUNAS, Durham.
WADE T. SURRATT, JR.. Winston-Salem.
JAMES EDWIN SUTTON. Greenville.
WILLIAM HOBBS SUTTON. Pi Kappa Alpha. Wilmington.
BANKS COOPER TALLEY. JR., Bennettsville. S. C.
p £ • r
£> P ft P Ci C* p C
lib dtJlfr* \ * * ^** •
ft (?• ft-
4t . \
Page 193
Sophomore
FRED WESLEY TALTON. Clayton.
SAMUEL PHILLIPS TANNING. Delia Kappa Epsilon,
Spartanburg. S. C.
ALFRED T. TAYLOR. Jacksonville.
<\RA BUXTON TAYLOR. JR.. Kappa Sigma. Raleigh.
GLENN ELLIS TAYLOR. Winston-Salem.
JOHN ECKLIN TAYLOR. Chocowinity.
VESTAL COLUMBUS TAYLOR. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM ALEXANDER TAYLOR. Buie's Creek.
CHARLES HOUSTON TEAGUE, Chapel Hill.
I W1ES W. TEAGUE, Asheville.
WILLIAM L. TEAL. JR., MrFarlan.
JOHN HAROLD TEETER. Charlotte.
EDWARD R. TESTERMAN, Royesville, Tenn.
HENRY HIBBARD THATCHER. Lookout Mountain. Ten
PASCO THOMAS THAXTON. Charlotte.
HARRY J. THOMAS. Chapel Hill.
HENDERSON THOMAS. JR.. Carthage.
DOUGLAS THOMPSON. Norfolk. \ a.
I W1ES LEE THOMPSON. JR.. Reidsville.
JAMES THRASH. Phi Delta Theta, Atlanta. Ga.
JOSEPH CLAUDE TOTHROW. Winston-Salem.
ANDREW F. TOXEY. Elizabeth Citv.
CHARI.ES A. TRICE, Polkton.
WILLI \M NELSON TRITT, Fayetteville.
WILLIAM DIGGS TRUITT. Sigma Nu, Norfolk. Ya.
JOHN FRANK TSANTES. Wilmington.
HOBERT GLENN TUCKER. Winston-Salem.
JOSEPH EARL TURNER. Dunn.
SIDNEY B. TURNER. Durham.
JAMES MALBON TWINE. Norfolk. Va.
LLOYD M. TYNDALL. Goldsboro.
GEORGE F. TYSON. JR.. Durham.
GEORGE B. VALENTINE. Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
HOWARD LEON VALENTINE. Chi Psi, Winston-Salem.
ELLWOOD B. VAN VOORHEES, lJhi Delta Theta.
Palm Beach. Fla.
RICHARD BALDWIN VEASEY, Raeford.
GEORGE ALEXANDER VESTAL. Fayetteville.
DONALD F. VINCENT, Swannanoa.
JACK LEWIS VINSON. Greensboro.
HERBERT A. VOFLER. Winston-Salem.
TORRENCE MAYNARD WADE. JR.. Raleigh.
EDWIN ARTHUR WAGNER. Hollis. L. I.. N. Y.
HOWARD S. WAINER. Winston-Salem.
ARCHIE DuVALL WALKER. JR.. Wilmington.
CHARLES W. WALKER. Morganton.
mi (#
' j1 P
Page 194
Class
WILLIAM HENRY WALKER. Manteo.
N. CLYDE WALL. Clayton.
ROBERT R. WALKER. Kerr.
WILLIAM M. WALPOLE. Morven.
MARION WARD. Charlotte.
LEWIS HANDLEY WARREN. Phi Kappa Sigma, Harrington, Del.
D. DORTCH WARRINER. Lawrenceville. Va.
HARRY T. WATKINS, Phi Delta Theta. Durham.
EDWARD 0. WATSON, Winston-Salem.
JOHN ARCH WATSON. Raleigh.
JIMMIE LEE WEATHERS, Shelby.
ARCHIBALD J. WEBB, Wilson.
JOHN WEBB, Wilson.
JOHN GRAHAM WEBB. JR.. Alpha Tau Omega, Hillsboro.
PAUL EDWARD WEBER. Greensboro.
HOWARD WEINSTEIN. Tau Epsilon Phi. New York, N. Y.
EDGAR J. WELLS. JR.. Teachey.
CAMEST LOTORGE WEST. Philadelphia. Pa.
JAMES FULTON WEST. Hope Mills.
TED G. WEST, Lenoir.
ROBERT HENSON WESTBROOK. Charlotte.
THOMAS DONNELL WHARTON. Winston-Salem.
W. C. WHEELER. Oxford.
JOHN S. WHICHARD. Phi Gamma Delta, Greenville.
EMMETT JOSEPH WHITAKER, Ayden.
CHARLES MAYFIELD WHITE. III. Phi Kappa Sigma. Manson.
DAVID F. WHITE, Cleveland.
ROBERT I. WHITE, Durham.
ROBERT L. WHITE, Asheville.
HOWARD EDWARD WHITEHEAD. Charlotte.
GEORGE D. WHITFIELD, Hurdle Mills.
CEORGE HERBERT WHITFIELD. Kinston.
EDWARD ARNOLD WHITLEY, Rutherford College.
LEMUEL DUNCAN WHITSETT, Phi Gamma Delta. Charlotte.
GEORGE BOSTIC WHITTED, Wilmington.
DAVID HARFORD WHITTIER. Milton, Mass.
GEORGE W. WHITT1NGT0N, JR.. Greensboro.
PHIL WELDON WIDENHOUSE, Concord.
CHARLES LEONARD WILDER, Zebulon.
JAMES H. WILDER, Mount Gilead.
LYMAN HOGAN WILKINS. JR.. Durham.
EVERETTE PAUL WILLIAMS. Chapel Hill.
COMER THOMAS WILLIAMS. JR.. Southampton. Penna.
JOHN CROSS WILLIAMS, Zeta Psi. Raleigh.
JOSEPH S. WILLIAMS, Sigma Nu, Rocky Mount.
v
(5 C\
Page 195
Sophomore Class
MARSHALL RUDOLPH WILLIAMS. Raleigh.
ROBERT WILTON WILLIAMS, Lumberton.
WILLIAM WILLI VMS. Columbia.
WILLIAM AUBREY WILLIAMS, JR., Sigma Nil, Columbia.
PFOHLA E. WTLMOTH, Winston-Salem.
ARNOLD LANDRETH WILSON. Candler.
CLIFTON M. WILSON, Aberdeen.
ERNEST F. WILSON. Durham.
JAMES E. WILSON, JR., Chi Psi, Benson.
JAMES R. WILSON, Robersonville.
JOHN ROSE WILSON, Raleigh.
WALTER WINIUS, JR.. New Orleans. La.
NEWTON ALFRED WINN, St. Petersburg. Fla.
PATRICIA W. WINSLOW. Chapel Hill.
JAMES B. WOLF. JR.. Zeta Beta Tau. Shaker Heights. Ohio.
DEWEY WILSON WOOD, Rocky Mount.
T. BENBURY H. WOOD. Delta Kappa Epsiion, Edenton.
JOHN HARRIS WOODALL, Winston-Salem.
MOSE W. WOODARD. Chi Psi. Raleigh.
JOHN FROST WOODHOUSE. JR.. Knppa Stgma. Virginia
Beach, Ya.
JOHN WOOLEY. Wagram.
JAMES ELMER WORKMAN. Elon College.
JACK W. WORSHAM, Rufhn.
WALKER YEATMAN WORTH. Raleigh.
JOHN DANIEL WRIGHT. Chapel Hill.
SAM1 EL CLYDE WRIGHT. Arden.
WILSON BRUCE WRIGHT. Durham.
ARTHUR DEMETRIUS XANTHOS. Wilmington.
FRANCIS A. YATES. Philadelphia. Pa.
CLARENCE N. YORK, Ramseur.
RICHARD R. YOUNG, Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM F. YOUNG. Phi Gamma Delta. Florence. S. C.
JOSEPH PATRICK ZAHRAN. Fayetteville.
r*> s~\ rs
Page 196
FRESHIURn CLRSS
^H^E
^^B
F(
~ M
'
Us
^^Sf'l-^si
§$£.3^
Le/l »o Right: George Dun lop. Herbert Mitchell, Bill Swaim.
Officers
Herb Mitchell
President
Bill Swaim
Vice-President
Ted Leonard
Secretary
George Dunlop
Social Chairman
Page 198
As Freshmen at Carolina, we displayed the same eagerness, made the same mistakes, and were
just as uncertain as the many classes that had gone before us. To most of us. Chapel Hill was a strange
place of long registration lines, double-decked bunks of Miller. Nash, and the quonset huts, crowded
cafeterias, and afternoon Phys. Ed. We found, however, friendly faces and advisors eager to help us.
Our courses weren't as hard as we had expected, and onl) three classes a day suited us fine. We yelled
as loud as anyone else at the football and basketball games, and a Carolina victory had new thrills for
us. We quickly joined the campus in reading 'Lil Abner. seeing midnight movies, and wearing rain-
coats.
All wasn't pla\. and good grades suddenly took on an added meaning. We learned to cram for
finals as studying past twelve became common. English compositions took time, and Chemistry labs
often went over two hours. We worked hard, but we didn"t mind. Carolina was our new home, and
it hadn't taken long for us to come to love it. With our Freshmen year behind us. we look to next Sep-
tember with confident hope and assurance.
Freshman
^ C\ IT. fa #*; » „
*. <
THOMAS ABBOTT, Wynewood. Pa.
ANN WILSON ADAMS, Madison, Wis.
DAVID ADAMS, Raleigh.
BELVTN FRANKLIN AKINS, Varina.
BILL A. ALBRIGHT. Charlotte.
HENRY LEE ALBRIGHT, Spencer.
JAMES ALBRITTON, La Grange.
JACOB ALDERMAN, Wilmington.
BILL ALDRIDGE, Burlington.
ARCHIE C. ALLEN, Ash.
WORTH ALLEN, Raleigh.
WEYMOUTH ALLGOOD, Yadkinville.
GRADY T. ALLRED. Greensboro.
JOHN ALLRED, Dunn.
RICHARD B. ALLSBROOK, Roanoke Rapids
DAVID ANDERSON, Rocky Mount.
HELEN ANDERSON. High Point.
\\ II. M \ CLAIR ANDERSON, Denver Colo.
JOHN ALBERT ANDREW. Albemarle.
ROBERT ANDREWS. Goldsboro.
THOMAS WELDON ANGEL. Franklin.
BILLY ARMFIELD, Leaksville.
HOMER ATHAS, Chapel Hill.
4lfc<*-.
*
PHILLIP ATKINSON, Asheville.
RALPH JAMES ATKINSON. Winston-Salem.
J \MF.S (.. C. AUSTIN, Marshville.
HARRY WILLIAM A 'i COCK. Franklin.
KENNETH AUBREY AYERS. Lexington.
JOHN CURTIS BAGG, Kappa Alpha, New Be:
JAENN COZ BAILEY, Sacramento. Calif.
CHARLES L. BAITY, Yadkinville.
CHARLES E. B \KER. Reidsville.
NOEL W. BAKER, Rural Hall.
TOMMY BAKER, Kings Mountain.
HARRISON I. BARBEE. Greensboro.
DAVID D. BARBER. Raleigh.
.1 VMES C. BARBOUR. Four Oaks.
MARION BARBOUR. Benson.
JULIAN BANKS BARNES, Enfield.
KYLE 1). BARNES, Winston-Salem.
TROY THOMAS BARNES. JR.. Wilson.
WINFRED FELIX BARR, West Jefferson.
FRED ALEXANDER BARRINGER, Concord.
NORMAN PAIGE BARRINGER. Gold Hill.
CHARLES S. BARTLETT, Chapel Hill.
\tikm%
Page 200
Class
RONALD BASESCU, Brooklyn. N. Y.
EUGENE BURROUGHS BASKETT, Henderson.
ARTHIR BATSON, Burgaw.
THOMAS 1!. BATTLE, Rocky Mount.
RALPH BATTS. JR.. Durham.
HERMAN M. BEAM. Forest City.
JOHN HAYDEN BEARD. Salisbury.
JOE BEASLEY, Randleman.
ROBERT BEASON. Boiling Springs.
CHARLES E. BECK, Greensboro.
RICHARD U. BECK, Hamlet.
ALEXANDER BELL, Norfolk, Va.
DANIEL L. BELL. Pittsboro.
WILLIAM S. BENBOW, Winston-Salem.
GEORGE L. BENNETT, JR.. Wadesboro.
JAMES E. BENNICK, Charlotte.
GUSTAVE BERGER, Belle Harbor. Y Y.
BARBARA BESS. Sylva.
JAMES BOYETTE BEST, Wallace.
EARL R. BETTS. Greensboro.
HAROLD CLIFTON BIZZELL. Durham.
ROBERT F. BLACK. Cleveland. Ohio.
CLYDE JAMES BLANCHARD, Rocky Mount.
\l 1JF.KT S. BLANKENSHIP, Charlotte.
ROBERT 0. BLANKS. Roxboro.
SAM BLYTHE, Charlotte.
WILLIAM DEWE"i DOLING. Pamplico, S. C.
DANIEL C. BONEY, Raleigh.
WILLIAM R. BONNER, Aurah.
WILLIAM NORMAN BOOKER. Greensboro.
MARGARET BOOTH, Apex.
RODNEY BORUM, High Point.
TOMMY BOSTIAN. Burn=.ville.
JAMES EDWIN BOWDEN. Wilmington.
BAXTER BOW EN, Mebane.
WILLIAM A. BOWEN, Greenville.
R. LEWIS BOWMAN. Walnut Cove.
GUY E. BOM), New Bern
I \(.K H. BOYLE, Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM M. BOYST, Charlotte.
JOE W. BRADY, New York, N. Y.
JACK BRAGG. Creedmore.
RALPH W. BRAKE, Rowland.
FRED D. BRAMMER, Charlotte.
WILLIAM BRANCH, Rich Square.
Page 201
Freshman
LEWIS L). BRVITON, Raleigh.
WILLIAM I. BREMER. JR.. Wilmington.
ALFRED C. BR1NSON. Arapahoe.
CLAY D. BRITTAIN, Graham.
JOHN L. BROCKMANN, High Point.
ALBERT D. BROOKS, Havelock.
CARROLL BROOKS. Durham.
CLYDE LONG BROOKS. Roxboro.
HAROLD L. BROOKS. La Grange, 111.
McIVER BROOKS, Wilmington.
JOE BROOKSH1RE. Randleman.
BRUCE J. BROWN, Asheville.
BURTON W. BROWN, Southern Pines.
HERM \.\ BROWN, Chapel Hill.
JACK BROWN, Washington, D. C.
J \MK> N. BROWNE. Wilmington.
WILLIAM VLEXANDER BUCHAN, Pinebluff.
HARR\ BUCHANAN, Hendersonville.
WILLIAM c:. BUCHANAN, Laurinhurg.
HOWARD E. I'.l Mil. Jarvisburg.
FRANK E. BUNKER. Winston-Salem.
GEORGE A. BURTON. Rocky Mount.
JOHN WILLIAM BURWELL, Rutherfordton.
J \MES BUTLER. Elizabeth City.
H VNDSEL BUTTS. Natchez. Miss.
MERLIN R. BYNUM, Greensboro.
HI I'l S S. BYNI M. Patselam, \ ,i .
\\ ILFORD \. CM. DWELL. Norwich,
THOM VS k. CAMPBELL, Southern 1
GEORGE CARTER CARR. Lakeland,
JOHN G. CARR, Durham.
RICHARD CARR. Plymouth.
LUTHER R. CARTER. JR.. Charlotte.
RALPH E. CARTER. Roxobel.
REGIJN \LD LONG CARVER, Roxbon
FRED G. CASH, Apex.
WILLI \\I P. CASH. Chesnee, S. ( .
DOROTHY JEAN CASHION, Leesbm
FREDERICK S. GATES. Hillsboro.
JOHN \. CATES, Hillsboro.
JOHNNY ALLEN CATES. Raleigh.
M \K\ l\ GATES, Hillsboro.
JAMES RUSSELL CAUDILL. Wilmini
ALLEN S. CHANDLER. Greensboro.
JL.NMV.S CHANDLER. Burlinglon.
ines.
Fla.
g. Fla
Page 202
'lass
KOGER MERRILL CHANDLER. Dedham, Ma
W. T. CHAPMAN. Connelly Spring-.
EDDIE G. CHAPPELL. Elkin.
ESTHER CHEEK. Carrboro.
JOHN CHEESEBROUGH. Asheville.
HOWARD W. CHILDRESS. Mount Airy.
CHARLES G. CHILTON. Greensboro.
JOE CLARK. Raleigh.
J. HARRIS CLAXTON. Durham.
SIT ART FLETCHER CLAYTON, Fayetteville.
HARRIS F. CLEIN. Winston-Salem.
J. EDW IN CLEMENT. Raleigh.
RUPERT CLIFF, Benson.
I) \\ ID CLINARD, Winston-Salein.
CHARLES C. CLINE, Statesville.
JOHN VINES COBB, Pinetous.
JOHN N. COFFEY. Raleigh.
ERIE COFIELD, Edenton.
FRED CAHOON, Columbia.
HARVETl COLCHAMIRO, Brooklyn, N. Y.
STEPHEN R. COLE. Burlington.
JWIES COLEMAN, Durham.
ROBERT H. COLLEV. Wentworth.
ROBERT COLLINS. Plymouth.
JOHNSTON FRED COLVARD. Durham.
LA\ E A. COMAN, Canton.
JOE COMBS, Raleigh.
ALAN WESLEY COMPTON. Garner.
JOHN D. COOPER, Lacy.
SAM COVINGTON, Rockingham.
JAMES L. COWAN. Fort Bragg.
REID CARR COWARD, Ayden.
WILLIAM A. COWBURN. Roherdel.
DANIEL F. COX, Broadway.
ERNEST S. COX, Tabor City.
KYLE AUDREY COX, Sanford.
BILL CRAFT, Greensboro.
GEORGE CRALLE. Bellerose. N. Y.
LUNCEFORD CREECH, Smithfield.
WILLIAM F. CRIMMINS, Greensboro.
CLAY CRISP, Raleigh.
ROBERT HOUSTON CROCKETT, Gastonia.
WILLIAM C. CROMWELL. Philadelphia. Pa.
JACOB L. CROSS. Lexington.
T. HAROLD CROWDER. Henderson.
Page 203
Freshman
GEORGE TOGO CROWELL, Lenoir.
OSCAR B. CROWELL, Hendersonville.
JOHN C. CULBRETH. Pembroke.
EDWARD HENRY CURRIE, Montgomery, W. Va.
JAMES W. CURTIS, Youngstown, N. Y.
HARPER S. DARDEN. Greenville.
T. HARRELL DARDEN, Orlaiulo. Fla.
WILLIAM G. DAUGHTRIDGE, Rocky Mount.
TRAVIS E. DAVENPORT, Rocky Mount.
GEORGE D. DALIGHTRY, Wilmington.
ALAN J. DAVIS, Charlotte.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN DAVIS. Varina.
ROBERT HAMPTON DAVIS, Richmond, Va.
TROY LESTER DAVIS, Anderson. S. (..
WILLIAM E. DAVIS, Warrenton.
WILLIAM F. DAVIS, Winston-Salem.
CLINTON LESTER DEAL, Morganton.
CHARLES E. DEATON. Liberty.
WILLIAM DEBNAM, Raleigh.
JOHN W. DEYTON, Spruce Pine.
WILLIAM D. DICK, Tryon.
JAMES R. DICKENS. Roanoke Rapids.
ALBERT M. DICKSON, Hyattsville, \hl.
CECIL M. DILDAY. Ahoskie.
P. McNEER DILLON, JR., Statesville.
SEYMORE CHRISTOPHER DILLON. Lima. Peru.
JOSEPH J. DORSETT, Ridgewood, N. J.
TOMMY DOUGHERTY , Winston-Salem.
GEORGE F. DREW, Live Oak. Fla.
JOHN E. DUKE, Goldsboro.
RYLAND S. DUKE. Murfreesboro.
WYNDHAM DUKES, Gibson.
CHARLES H. DULS, Charlotte.
AMOS CARSON DUNCAN. Forest City.
STACY A. DUNCAN, Benson.
GEORGE T. DUNLOP. Asheville.
CECIL G. DUNNACAN, Raleigh.
SARAH BEATRICE DURHAM. Carrboro.
ALFRED L. DYSON, Fayetteville.
NORRIS L. EASON. Farmville.
WILLIE EASON, Snow Hill.
JOHN F. EDMUNDS, Tavares. Fla.
PHILLIP J. EDWARDS. Raleigh
ROBERT ANDERSON OLIN EDWARDS. JR.. Raleigh.
SYDNEY EDWARDS. Bladenboro.
Page 204
ass
GUY THOMAS ELLIOTT. Kinston.
MAXTON ELLIOTT, Asheboro.
ROBERT H. ELLMORE, Roxboro.
EMORY ELMORE, III, Rochester. N. 'I .
DEWEY LEE ENGLISH. Monroe.
RAMONA EPTING, Campobello. S. C.
GUY CARR EVANS, Greenville.
LEWIS W. EVANS. Greenville.
JOHN D. EVERSMAN. Flat Rock.
LUTHER STANLEY FAISON. Knightdale.
THOMAS H. FAISON. Laurel Hill.
EARL THOMPSON FAITHFUL. Scotland V k.
K. WRAY FARLOW. Augusta. Ga.
MARION G. FARRELL, Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM \. FARRINGTON. Kings Mountain.
RICHARD FAYSSOUX, Arden.
WALTER C. FEIMSTER. Wynnewood. Fla.
W. J. FELTUS. Natchez. Miss.
HAL I). FERRARO. Arcadia. Kan.
RICHARD LEE FETHEROLF. Allentown. Penna
GEORGE M. FISKE, New York, N. Y.
PAUL V. FITZGERALD, Pelham.
KDW \RI) STITT FLEMING. Washington. 1). C.
PERCY FLOWERS, JR.. Clayton.
HENRY C. FORDHAM, Greensboro.
RALPH E. FORREST, New Bern.
BEN EAGLES FOUNTAIN. JR.. Rocky Mount.
CHARLES DUNSMORE FOX. III. Roanoke. \ a.
EDWARD C. FOX, Oxford.
LAURENCE D. FOX, Brooklyn, N. Y.
EDLYN WAYNE FREEKS, Kalmia.
HARRY L. FREMD. Canal Point, Fla.
HENRY G. FRICKE. Ripon. Wis.
RICHARD ALAN FULLEN. Chicago. 111.
JOHN D. FULK, Mt. Airy.
WALTER M. FLLP, JR.. Florence, S. C.
VANCE L. GABRIEL, Mooresville.
PETER DEMETRICOS GALANIDES, Norfolk. Va
WILLIAM A. GALLAGHER. Hamlet.
CHARLES F. GEORGE, Raleigh.
CHARLES ROBERT (TLCHRIST. Brown Summit.
GENE IVY <;ILES. Spindale.
REID P. GILLARD. Charlotte.
BILL G1LLELANI). Statesville.
J. ELFRED GILLESPIE, Reidsville.
Page 205
Freshman
n
.<»
DONALD W. GILLIAM. Reidsville.
HAROLD LEON GILLIS. Raeford.
FLOYD D. GILMORE. Yucaipa, Calif.
ROBERT GILMORE. Hillsboro.
DAVID GREY GLASS, Kannapolis.
ALFRED CHARLES CLOSSON. JR.. Durham.
BILL GLOVER. Bristol. Term.
FRED GLOVER. Charlotte.
EBE GODWIN. Wilmington.
HAL RAY GODWIN, Jonesboro.
IK A I). GODWIN, Wilson.
ERWIN S. GOLDMAN. Burlington.
HENRY GOLDSTEIN. Hampton. Va.
N. EUGENE GOODE. Enka.
I WIKS THOMAS GOODING. New Bern.
I WIKS RAY GOODMAN. Albemarle.
STANEY DAVID GOODM \N. Norfolk. Va.
CARL D. GOODSON, Marion.
ROBERT GOODWIN, Winston-Salem.
ARTHUR F. GOODWYN Tarboro.
ALLEN SPACH GOSLEN. Winston-Salem.
EDWARD EVERETT GRACE. Corinth, Miss.
HENRY A. GRADY. New Bern.
tat A? b , 4
I
FELDER SHARPE GRAHAM, Dawson. Ga.
NORFLEET GRANT. New Bern.
WILLIS J. GRANT. Windsor.
JAMES G. GRANTHAM. Wilmington.
HERBERT C. GRAY, Cape Hatteras.
BETSY M. GREEN, Chapel Hill.
FRANKLIN EUGENE GREEN, Norfolk. Va.
CARL B. GREENE. Crossnore.
JAMES S. GREENE, Glen Alpine.
CHARLES CLEVELAND GREENE, Glen Alpine
IRVING L. GREENSPON, Newport News. Va.
TOMMY GREGORY. Halifax.
JOHN W. GRESHAM, Beulaville.
JOHN ROGER GRIFFIN. JR.. Aulander.
ALLAN L. GRIFFITHS. Leaksville.
HENRY F. GI'RLEY. Forest City.
MALTA CAROLYN GUTHRIE. Chapel Hill.
GARY LEE GUY, Angier.
JOE B. GUYER. State Road.
JAMES M. GWYNN, Mexico, D. F.
R. J. HACKNEY , Wilson.
THOMAS CRANFORD HADDEN. Durham.
Page 206
ass
JACK T. HAULER. Gainesville, (.a.
RICHARD FRANCIS HAFF, Elon College.
HENRI C. HAGAN, Banlee.
BILLY R. II \LE. Thomasville.
E. % ISTON HALL. Sanford.
J O.IF.S C. HALL. Canbury.
ROY G. HALL, Saluda.
\. G. HALTIWANGER. Hamlet.
MELVIN LEWIS HAMBY, Oak Ridge. Tenn.
JIMMY ROGER HAMRICK. Shelby.
MOW \RD FRANK HANN. Charlotte.
RICHARD VOLLERS HANSON. Wilmington.
JAMES ARCHIBALD HARDISON, Wadesboro.
HUNTINGTON HARDISTY. Midway Park.
B. CARLTON HARRELL. Mamie.
CHARLES M. HARRELL, Burgaw.
DORIS HARRELL. Raleigh.
WILLIAM NORWOOD HARRELL. Burgaw.
CHARLES M. H \RRL\GTON. Wilmington.
BERNARD CHANDLER HARRIS. Kinston.
DENNIS MORELAND HARRIS. Scotland Neck.
NORWOOD T. HARRIS, Durham.
WILLIAM E. HARRIS, Harrisburg.
BRUCE M. HARRISON. Bronxville. N. V
BERTRAM J. HART, Kinston.
BENJAMIN RUSSELL HARWARD. Phi Eta Sigma. Moncure.
JOHN T. HARWARD, JR.. Durham.
JAMES J. HAYDOCK, Union, S. C.
JOHN WILLOUGHBY HEARN. JR.. Pi Kappa Alpha.. Monro
DOLAN VINCENT HEDRICK. Lexington.
LOYD B. HEDRICK. Lexington.
PHILLIP HEGE, Lexington.
CHARLES LEONIDAS HERRING. La Orange.
HORACE T. HERRING. Walstonburg.
DAVID HYRUM HIATT, Mt. Airy.
HERMAN E. HICKMAN, Winston-Salem.
ELEANOR HICKS. Raleigh.
FAISON M. HICKS. Faison.
Ql [NC5 VLTON HILL. Kinston.
DAVE R. HINKLE. \\ inston-Salem.
ARNED L. HINSHAW. Burlington.
JUDSON HIPPS. Asheville.
ALFRED SCALES HOBBS, Raleigh.
LEWIS L. HOBBS, Chapel Hill.
KENNETH R. HOFFMAN. New 'i ork. Y Y.
Page 207
Freshmai
JACK HOLBROOK. High Point.
IRVING JOSEPH HOLDASH. Youngstown. Ohio.
FLETCHER MEASLEY HOLLINGSWORTH, La Grange.
THOMAS F. HOLLINSWORTH, Mount Airy.
ASA B. HOLLOWELL. Aulander.
EDWARD S. HOLMES. Leaksville.
ROBERT J. HOLMES. Chapel Hill.
TERRY HOLMES, Burlington.
JAMES 0. HOLT, Raleigh.
LARRY D. HOOKS, Fremont.
FRANK HENRY HOOPER, Massana.
ROBERT J. HOOPER, Reidsville.
HARRY H. HORTON, JR., Asheville.
GEORGE R. HOUSE, Durham.
JACK W. HOUSE. Plymouth.
WILLIAM NEWTON HOVIS. JR.. Charlotte.
EDWIN CRAIG HOWARD. Roseboro.
HOSEA NEAL HOWARD. JR.. FarmvMe.
WENDELL R. HOWARD. Robbins.
DOUGLAS GORDON HOWELL. Warren, Ohio.
HERBERT H. HOWELL, Goldsboro.
ROBERT C. HUBBARD, North Wilkesboro.
RAY THOMAS HUDSON, Hickory.
JACK P. HUGGINS, Lumberton.
CHARLES FRANKLIN HUGHES. Asheboro.
RICHARD FRED HUNT. JR.. Rocky Mount.
THOMAS J. HUNT, Seagrove.
CHARLES B. HUTCHINS, Raleigh.
JOHN H. INGLE, Raleigh.
HAL B. INGRAM, Hamlet.
JAMES H. INGRAM. Ingalls.
JOHN R. INGRAM, Asheboro.
HENRY D. IRVIN, Asheville.
JACK ISENHOUR, Charlotte.
DAVID L. ISSAACS, New York, N. V.
JOSEPH McCRAW JAMES. Wilmington.
VERNON L. JAMES, Liberty.
EDWARD W. JERNIGAN, Durham.
LEE JESSUP, Seagrove.
BILL S. JOHNSON, Robersonville.
C. CLARENCE JOHNSON. Spring Hope.
GRAHAM JOHNSON. Elkin.
IRA THOMAS JOHNSON. Thomasville.
JAMES LOUIS JOHNSON. Moncure.
JAMES W. JOHNSON, High Point.
Page 208
ass
RICHARD EARL JOHNSON. Randleman.
WILLIS J. JOHNSON, Wallace.
JAMES FINLEY JOINES. Lenoir.
CARL JOLLEY, Mooresboro.
BRUCE FLETCHER JONES. Sigma Nu, Edenton.
EDWARD SPENCE JONES. Apex.
GRAHAM E. JONES. Winston-Salem.
LESLIE E. JONES, JR., Norfolk, Va.
RIAL C. JONES, JR., Norfolk, Va.
EDWIN SAUNDERS JORDAN. Carolina Beach.
JOHN C. JORDAN, Mebane.
JAY HARRIS JOSEPH. Yinelancl. N. J.
BILL JULIAN. Winston-Salem.
HAROLD H. KASTNER. Sanford, Fla.
ROBERT KAUFMAN. Mount Vernon. N. 'i .
CAMERON H. KEELS. McColl. S. C.
PAUL KENNAN. JR.. Chicago. 111.
HERSHELL H. KEENER. Lenoir.
BILL KELLAM, Chapel Hill.
MATTHEW T. KELLEY. Phillips, Wis.
MELVIN JAMES KELLEY. Laurens. S. C.
ROBERT MURDOCK KELLY. Greensboro.
PHILIP S. KEMP, Goldsboro.
EUGENE HAMMET KENDALL. Phi Delia Theia. Johns.
JOHN LACY KENNEDY. Fayetteville.
NEVIN KENNEDY, III, Atlanta, Ga.
PHILLIP H. KENNEDY. Charlotte.
THOMAS ROCKWELL KERR. Pasadena.
PRESTON E. KING, Concord.
GUY S. KIRBY. Marion.
ROBERT L. KIRBY, Winston-Salem.
WALTER HOBSON KIRK, Washington. D. C.
EUGENE H. KIRKMAN, Durham.
WILLI \M G. KIRKMAN. Durham.
ALLEN R. KOENIG, Brooklyn, N. V
CALVIN B. KOONCE, Raleigh.
BENJAMIN P. LACY', Durham.
EVANGELINE HARRELSON LAIDLAW. Western Spring. 111.
CARY JAKE LAMBERT. Broadnax. Va.
JAMES LOUIS LAMM, Mount Airy.
LLOYD G. LANCASTER. Sharpsburg.
MARSHALL ROSS LANE. Morganton.
BILL FRYE LANEY. Lenoir.
GENE LANG, Ayden.
THOMAS DORSETT LARKINS, Kappa Sigma. Greenville
Page 209
Freshman
CARL T. LASLEY, Norfolk, Va.
DON RICHARD LATTA, Greensboro.
JOHN G. LEA, Rocky Mount.
RICHARD FLOYD LEACH, Mount Airy.
ANTHONY BLAKE LECKIE, Lumberton.
OTIS M. LEDBETTER, Marion.
CALVIN T. LEONARD, JR., Greensboro.
RODNEY LANE LEONARD, Lexington.
SHERMAN LEVINE, Rockingham.
KAY E. LEWIS. Beayer.
LEONARD A. LIBERMAN, Wallace.
ROBERT A. LINDSAY, High Point.
CLEATON M. LINDSEY, JR., Pittsboro.
MAX G. LINDSEY, Draper.
KENNETH P. L1NDSLEY, Williamston.
ADRIAN SMITH LINEBERGER, JR.. Chapel Hil
HARRY P. LITCHFIELD. JR.. Aurora.
AUBREY LEE LITTLE, Ayden.
BILLY LITTLE, Jefferson.
HERBERT H. LIVERMAN, Columbia.
JOHN SAMUEL LONG, Winston-Salem.
LEONARD LOPEZ, Burlington.
JOHN RALPH LORE, Lenoir.
JOHN HENRY LOWDER, Albemarle.
JAMES H. LOWERY, Benson.
ROBERT M. LUXEMBURG. New York. N. Y.
DUNCAN I. MacCOLMAN. New York. N. Y.
FRANK S. MacDONELL. Savannah. Ga.
BETTY GRAVELY McAFEE, Macon. Ga.
EURID R. McAULEY, Charlotte.
WILLIAM G. McC\LL, Concord.
ROGER MAURICE McCASKILL. Can.lor.
JACK M. McCAULEY, Chapel Hill.
LUTHER R. McCOMBS, KannapolK
GEORGE EUGENE McCORKLE, Charlotte.
DOUGLAS A. McCORMAC. Maxton.
HERBERT H. McCOY, Elizabeth City.
JOHN A. McCRARY, Lexington.
WALTER McCRAW, Burlington.
ANDREW McDANIAL. Forest City.
HENRY J. McFARLAND. Durham.
JAMES C. McGEE, Ashewlle.
BOBBY McGILVARY, Durham.
EVERETTE McKINLEY, Kannapolis.
CLARENCE McLAIN, Lenoir.
Page 210
WILLIAM ROBERT McNEILL, Buie.
JAMES MARK MAHAN, Syracuse. N. Y.
HILL MAHLER, Tarboro.
ARCHIE C. MANGUM, Chapel Hill.
HORACE D. MANN, JR.. Portsmouth, Va.
DAN H. MARSHALL, Durham.
BERRY MARSHBURN. Raleigh.
BILLY S. MARTIN, Olin.
SILVIO C. MARTINAT. Lenoir.
JAMES L. MASSEY, Burlington.
FRED ROBERT MATTHEWS. Asheville.
DONALD MAYNARD, JR.. Garden City. N. Y.
CLAUDE TILDON MEACHUM, Fort Bragg.
JAMES B. MEAD, Low Moor. Va.
SETH MEADS, Shawboro.
JOHN DAVID MEDLING. JR.. \sheville.
HENRY B. MEIER, Wilmington.
CHARLIE EDWARD MELVIN. Greensboro.
LYMAN J. MELVIN, Rooky Mount.
JESSE MERCER, Lucama.
JAMES RONALD MERICKA. Shaker Heights, <
MORRIS E. MERRITT. Wilmington.
ROBERT CONNOR MERRITT, Greenville.
ROBERT PARKER MIDGETT, Elizabeth City.
JAMES P. MILAM, Durham.
CHARLES G. MILHAM, Hamlet.
GEORGE WILLIAM MILLER. Cowen, W. Va.
HARRY S. MILLER, Sanford.
MARVIN MILLER, Winston-Salem.
NICK MILLER, Charlotte.
CYRIL W. MINETT, Waynesville.
GLEN O. MITCHELL, Greensboro.
HERBERT MITCHELL, Asheville.
JACK MONEY, Kernersville.
PENDLETON MONTAGUE, Goldsboro.
WALTER SCOTT MONTGOMERY, Spartanburg
JACK WALDRON MOODY. Plainfield. N. J.
ROBERT J. MOONEY, Wilkes-Barre. Pa.
ALLEN HOYT MOORE, JR., Doylestown, Pa.
KENNETH E. MOORE, Selma.
PETER A. MOORE. Doylestown. Pa.
THOMAS F. MOORE, Reidsville.
WILLIAM PRINCE MOORE. Raleigh.
DAN R. MORGAN, Farmville.
DONALD SASSER MORRIS. Aulander.
Page 211
Freshmar
HARRY WILLIAM MORRISON. Greensboro.
WARREN DALE MORRISON. Miami. Fla.
HELEN DIXON MORROW. Chapel Hill.
JOE MORROW. Waynesville.
JOHN F. MORTON. Washington.
JULIAN MORTON. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM O. MOSER, Winston-Salem.
BERNARD J. MULLINS, Washington. D. C.
RUDOLPH C. MULLIS, Jonesboro.
RICHARD J. MURPHY. Baltimore. Md.
AUSTIN S. MYERS, East Haddam, Conn.
HORACE THOMAS MYERS. Laurinburg.
HERBERT NACHMAN, JR.. Augusta. Ga.
J. T. NANCE. Ashevffle.
AVERETT NASH, St. Pauls.
MARVIN N. NATHAN, Norfolk. \ a.
MARSHALL NEEL, Gastonia.
WILLIAM WINTER NEWMAN. Durham.
JOHN N. NEWTON, Dunn.
WILLIAM NEWTON, Dunn.
EMMETT NIBLACK, Biloxi, Miss.
\l.\ IN NICHOLS, Whittier.
JOHN A. NILES, JR.. Oxford.
*». n i k. m
HOWARD NIPPER. Raleigh.
BILLY NOBLES, Rocky Mount.
ROBERT EARL NOELL. Greensboro.
CLAUDE E. NORMAN, JR.. Winston-Salem.
WILLIAM WARREN NORTHCOTT. Trinity.
CHARLES ALLAN NORTHEND. Daytona Beach. Fla.
THOMAS BECKWITH NORTHINGTON. Roanoke. Rapids
RICHARD SMITH NUNIS, Charlotte.
DEWEY W. NYE, Fairmont.
JOHN R. OGBURN, Sanford.
FRED OGDEN. JR.. New Orleans, La.
HERBERT E. OLIVE. Lexington.
CLA1 DE OLIVER, Whiteville.
WARREN OLSEN, Baldwin. N. Y.
JAMES O'NEAL, Durham.
DAVID ORR. Montgomery, Ma.
CHARLES EDWARD OSBORNE. Hendersonville.
BOB PADRICK. Hendersonville.
ROBERT PAGE. Flushing, IN. Y.
JOHNNY V. PAPPAS. Winston-Salem.
SAM PAPPAS, Winston-Salem.
WALTER H. PARAMORE. JR.. Fuquay Springs.
Page 212
JACK E. PARK. Elkin.
WILLIAM PARK, Greensboro.
CORNELIUS THEODORE PATRICK, Wilmington.
CHARLES F. PATTON, Morganton.
ROBERT BENJAMIN PAYNE. Gastonia.
C. L. PEARSON, Spring Hope.
JOHN F. PE\RSON, Alamosa. Colo.
GARY B. PEASE. Jacksonville. Fla.
DOUGLAS L. PEELER. Faith.
JERE PELLETIER. Mays iUe.
FRED PENNELL. Moravian Falls.
ALTON RONALD PENNINGTON. Black Creek.
JOHN WELDON PENNINGTON. Mocksville.
OLIVER PENNINGTON. Raleigh.
BENNETT PERRY, Henderson.
ROBERT S. PERRY. Sanatorium.
THOMAS J. PETERSON. Savannah, Ga.
ROBERT N. PETT1F. Waynesville.
FITZROY DONALD PHILLIPS, /v./;-/"' Sigma, Rockingham.
EUGENE HADLEY PICKETT. Raleigh.
JOHN S. PITTARD. Chapel Hill.
FRANK PITTMAN, Chapel Hill.
JAMES K. PITTS. Spring Hope.
JOHN O. PLONK, Kings Mountain.
J. L. POINDEXTER, JR., East Bend.
FRANKLIN ROCKWELL POISSON. Phi Gamma Dt
Wilmington.
JAMES G. POLLOCK. Durham.
BRANTLEY THOMAS POOLE. Raleigh.
J \MF.S PORTER, Char!. .11,.
LEE S. POTTER, Aurora.
CHARLES BENTON PRATT. Madison.
ALFRED E. PRUITT, Raleigh.
JOHN CHRISTOPHER PUTNAM. New York. N. Y.
QUINTON QUALLS. Hallister.
THOMAS VINCENT QUINN, Keyser, W. Va.
dosSANTOS BENED1CTA QUIRINO, Brazil. S. \.
JAMES E. RACKLEY, Durham.
HAYWOOD J. RAINES, Ramseur.
HOWARD EUGENE RAINEY. Elon College.
WILLIAM H. RANDALL. Falcon.
SAM LEE RAY, Newland.
EDWIN ALLEN REAMS, Durham.
HARRY REAVIS, Winston-Salem.
HAROLD L. REED. Sparta.
I'M 1. \1. I.E.N REICHLE, JR.. Fayetteville.
Page 213
Freshmar
JOHN R. REYNOLDS, Greensboro.
AVERY R. RHYNE. Charlotte.
MILLARD R. RICH, Lumberton.
CECIL EARL RICHARDSON, Elizabeth City.
WILLIAM FREDERICK RIDDLE. Sanford.
MARSHALL HALL ROBERTS, JR., Louisville. Ky.
RALPH ROBERTS, Broadway.
EDWIN M. ROBBINS, Greensboro.
SHELBY A ROEBUCK, Farmville.
RICHARD E. ROGERS, Williamston.
WILLIAM VERNON ROGERS, Clarkton.
FERRELL L. ROLLINS, Bethel.
HAROLD W. ROLLINS. Bostic.
CHARLES VANCE ROSE, Gastonia.
HAROLD ROUSE, Farmville.
JERRY E. ROWE, Aurora.
JIMMY PIERSON RUMLEY. Winston-Salem.
BILL RUTHERFORD. Glen Lock.
R. J. RUTHERFORD. Durham.
CHARLES WILLIAM SAIN. Charlotte.
ROBERT FLOYD SAIN, Charlotte.
RALPH W. SALES, Asheville.
EDWARD C. SAMPLES, JR.. Elizabeth City.
BRUCE MORRISON SANBORN. Gastonia.
JAMES B. SANDERS. Asheville.
ALBERT H. SANDS, Raleigh.
MURRAY RUDOLPH SANTEE, Bladenboro.
OSCAR T. SAPP, JR., Winston-Salem.
JAMES SAPPERFIELD, Kannapolis.
PERRY MALCOM SAPPERSTEIN. Gastonia.
ALFRED B. SAUNDERS, Troy.
MARVIN FUTRAN SAUNDERS, Durham.
DAVID SCHERMERHORN. Westwood. N. J.
JOHN B. SCHOFIELD. 111. Macon, Ga.
TOMMY EDGAR SCISM, Pelham.
BEN A. SCOTT, JR., Henderson.
JOHN R. SENTER, Raleigh.
I WES BARRON SHAW, Leaksville.
RICHARD F. SHAW, Carrboro.
SHERRILL WAYNE SHAW. Randleman.
TED P. SHAW, Bladenboro.
DALE M. SHEPHERD, Ball.
WATSON NEWBERRY SHERROD. Enfield.
HERBERT ALLISON SHERWIN. Greensboro.
BERNARD SHIELDS. Newport News. Ya.
Page 214
lass
BENNIE L. SHUMATE, Elkin.
CHARLES B. SICELOFF. Williamston.
LONNIE R. SIDES, JR., Charlotte.
HERMAN A. SIEBER, Hendersonville.
IRVING SAMUEL SILVER, High Point.
GENE L. SIMMONS, Marion.
WILLIAM F. SIMPSON, Elon College.
SCOTT SKINNER, St. Louis. Mo.
WILLIAM P. SKINNER, JR.. Elizabeth City.
WILLIAM L. SLATE. Mount Airy.
ROBERT MODERWELL SLOAN. Winston-Salem.
TOM SMILEY, Raleigh.
DAN ALVIN SMITH. Winston-Sali m.
GEORGE D. SMITH, Winston-Salem.
J W1ES DOUGLAS SMITH. Montvale, Va.
JIM.MIE HOWARD SMITH. Savannah. Ga.
NEWTON A. SMITH, Davidson.
RAY E. SMITH. Mount Olive.
WILLIAM OLIVER SMITH, JR., Raleigh.
JOHN W. SMITHERMAN. Winston-Salem.
THOMAS SOUTHERLAND. Durham.
JAMES N. SOWELL. Charlotte.
WILLIAM L. SOWERS, Lexington.
ELMO DAVIS SPARKS. Charlotte.
BETTIE MARIE SPARROW. Chapel Hill.
WILLIAM L. SPEAS, Winston-Salem.
GRAHAM VENNING SPENCE. Norfolk. Va.
W. J. SPILLERS. Winston-Salem.
MARVIN McCLESS SPRUILL, Hampstead.
JAMES G. STALLINGS, Charlotte.
.1 UIF.S MARLER, Pilot Mountain.
LLOYD B. STANLEY. Carolina Beach.
WILLIAM L. STARK, Oxford.
FRANK H. STARNES, Cherryville.
GEORGE B. STATAN. Rocky Mount.
JAMES B. STEPHENSON, Holly Springs.
JOHN B. STEPHENSON, Garysburg.
WILLIAM TURNER STEPHENSON, Halifax.
J. MILTON STEWART, Fountain Inn.
OLIVER C. STEWART, JR., Orlando, Fla.
MILDRED HEATH STOCKS, Snow Hill.
JACK STOKES, Norfolk, Va.
HARRY C. STONE. Lumberton.
JAMES R. STONE, Bailey.
TEX R. STONE, Bailey.
Page 215
Freshman
JOHN B. STRATFORD, Graham.
BILL H. STRICKLAND, Lenoir.
FRANCIS M. STRONG, Arlington, Mass.
HAROLD J. STURDIVANT, North Wilkesboro.
BOB SUMMERLIN, Mount Olive.
SIGMUND BEAR SWAIN, Manchester.
ROBERT L. SWEELEY, Laurinburg.
WILLIAM L. TADLOCK. Washington.
L. B. TANNER, JR., Liberty.
W. STANFORD TATE. Lexington.
CHARLES ELISHA TAYLOR. New York. N. Y.
DEWEY H. TAYLOR. JR., Washington.
GEORGE W. TAYLOR. Washington.
JAMES W. TAYLOR, Snow Hill.
SIMON F. TERRELL, Warrenton.
HUBERT D. TERRY, Aulander.
PAUL K. THAMES, Hope Mills.
CLYDE M. THOMAS, Rock Hill, S. C.
JAMES PHILLIPS THOMAS, Baltimore. M,l.
ROBERT EDWARD THOMAS, Portsmouth. Va.
ROBERT HUME THOMASON. Flemington. N. J.
FRED B. THOMPSON, Rocky Mount.
RUSSELL A. THOMPSON, JR., Wilson.
JOSEPH CARLYLE THORNBURG. Cherryville.
PAUL E. THORNBURG, Raleigh.
E. A. TICE, Philadelphia, Pa.
J I STI S TICE, Williamston.
CHARLES G. TODD. Rocky Mount.
CLARK C. TOTHEROW. Winston-Salem.
WILTON F. TOWNSEND, Wallace.
CHARLES E. TRADO, Henderson.
CHESLEY A. TRICE, Durham.
FRED VERNON TRULOVE. JR., Greensboro.
LEE ROY TUCKER, New Bern.
MARION G. TUCKER. Monroe.
VIRGIL A. TUCKER. JR.. Mayodan.
CLARENCE TUGWELL. Greenville.
ALVIS G. TURNER, JR.. Draper.
C. C. TURNER, JR., Durham.
HUBERT D. TYNDALL, Pike\ill,-.
JOHNNY G. ULMER, Hemingway. S. C.
WALTER W. UMSTEAD. JR.. Durham.
JOSEPH R. UTLEY, Sanford.
GEORGE W. UPCHURCH. JR., Savannah. Ga.
HENRY T. VADEN, Washington, D. C.
Page 2/6
Class
MAURO G. VALENTINE, Bronxville. N. Y.
BILL VAN VALKENBURGH, Asheville.
RICHARD VAUDIN, Concord.
JOHN A. VERDERY, Gastonia.
ROBERT HARRELL VINSON, Ahoskie.
WILLIAM MATTHEW VINSON, Ahoskie.
WILLIAM J. WADDELL. Hendersonville.
HENRY R. WALL, Raleigh.
ROBERT H. WALL. Mount Airy.
W. M. WALLENBORN, Red Hill, Va.
ROBERT L. WALSH, Denver, Col.
JESSE MICHAEL WARD. Randleman.
WILLIAM WRAY WARD, High Point.
PHIL A. WARNER, High Point.
MERVINE WARREN, Spray.
Mi WILSON WARREN, Clinton.
ALEX S. WATKINS, Henderson.
LEWIS R. WATSON, Washington. D. C.
NORMAN RAY WATSON, Raleigh.
GLENN A. WATTS, Travelers Rest, S. C.
BRUCE WEATHERLY, Durham.
WILLIAM H. WEATHERLY. III. Elizabeth Citj
KENNETH G. WEAYTL, Winston-Salem.
GEORGE H. WEBB, Greensboro.
JOHN R. WELLONS, Selma.
DARIUS WELLS, Roseboro.
FRED M. WEST, Franklin.
EFFIE EDA WESTERVELT. Chapel Hill.
EDWARD E. WHARTON, Merritt.
FREDERICK SYLVESTER WHISENHUNT, Pi Kappa Alpha.
Florence, S. C.
WALTER EARL WHITAKER, Graham.
JIM H. WHITE, Durham.
MARSHALL W. WHITE, Oxford.
ROBERT D. WHITE, Marion.
STANFORD L. WHITE, Hendersonville.
WILLIAM A. WHITE. Hertford.
WILLIAM H. WHITE. JR., Greenville.
RALPH ALDEN WHITEHURST, HiUsboro.
ROBERT L. WHITLOCK. JR.. Mount Airy.
HAROLD RAY WICKER, Sanford.
ADOLPHUS A. WILLIAMS. Hamlet.
AL H. WILLIAMS. Rochester. N. V.
BRYAN WILLIAMS, JR., Raleigh.
JAMES ALLISON WILLIAMS, Bailey.
JAMES RANDOLPH WILLIAMS, Hamlet.
Page 217
Freshman Class
NORWOOD E. WILLIAMS, Wallace.
THOMAS A. WILLIAMS, JR., Greensboro.
VERNEL HUGHES WILLIAMS, Durham.
JASON M. WILLIAMS, Cerro Gordo.
W. JAMES WILLIAMSON, Crewe. Va.
JUNIUS W. WILLIARD, High Point.
JAMES G. WILLIFORD, Winston-Salem.
\RTHUR R. WILLIS, Wilmington.
DAVID PEARCE WILLIS, Sanitorium.
FLOYD M. WILLIS, JR., Winston-Salem.
CLAUDE ARTHUR WILSON, Monroe.
GLEN WILSON, Angier.
NOAH R. WILSON, JR., Wilsons Mills.
RICHARD KENDALL WILSON. Roanoke Rapids.
JOHN McMANUS WINSLOW. Hertford.
STEVE WOLLMAN. Mount Vernon. N. V.
WILLIAM EVERETTE WOODIE. West Jefferson.
LEE WOODY, South Boston, Va.
ROY LEE WRAY, Lynchburg. Va.
CHARLES WRIGHT, Carrboro.
KENNETH W. WRIGHT, Beaufort.
KENNETH V. WYATT. Morganton.
HOWARD YANDLE. Charlotte.
JACK D. YARBORO, Hendersonville.
WILSON FRANKLIN YARBOROUGH. Fayettevi
HERBERT S. YATES, Rockingham.
KIMBLE CARSON YATES. Raleigh.
BEN YELVERTON, Rocky Mount.
OSCAR H. YOKLEY, Mount Airy.
WILLIAM VANN YORK. High Point.
Page 218
? ■
at*
^^/W^-
SCHOOL OF PHRRmRCY
David D. Claytor, William M. Jordan, and Rex Paramore
Officers
David D. Claytor President
Rex Paramore Vice-President
WlLLIAM M. JORDAN .... Secretary-Treasurer
Page 222
Our School of Pharmacy is getting old. On November 13, 1947, appropriate ceremonies celebrating the fiftieth
anniversary of the school were held in Howell Hall. The School enters the second half of the first century with
bright prospects for the future.
Along with the advancement in enrollment which was 223 this year, is an advancement in the graduate
program. During this past academic year a number of graduate assistantships and fellowships were established.
Highlights of the year included some of the following big events and projects: The annual weiner roast in the
fall to welcome the new students, the rushing of new students by the pharmaceutical fraternities, the establishing
of the North Carolina Pharmaceutical Research Foundation to promote graduate work in pharmacy, the Christmas
party given by the Pharmacy Girls Association, the initiation of the large number of students into Rho Chi. the
honorary pharmacy fraternity, the meetings of the Student Branch of the N. C. P. A., the Pharmacy Senate, and
the annual pharmacy week-end gaiety of picnics and a dance. All these things plus many hours in the labs and class-
rooms make up what goes on within the School of Pharmacy.
The School of Pharmacy student body has a group of officers, and the four classes are also organized under
an executive system.
Officers of the School were: David D. Claylor. President: Rex Paramore. Vice-President: William W. Jordan.
Secretary-Treasurer.
Officers of the Fourth Year Class were: Edward S. Powell. President; Viola Richards Howell, Vice-President;
Robert H. Seaborn. Secretary-Treasurer.
Officers of the Third Year Class were: G. R. Pittman, President: W. W. Jordan. Vice-President: Jean Snyder,
Secretary-Treasurer.
Officers of the Second Year Class were: John L. Jones, President: Reginald C. Ferrell. Vice-President: Anna
L. Slack. Secretary-Treasurer.
Officers of the First Year Class were: Earl G. Williams. President; Robert L. Dewar. Vice-President: Henry
D. Smith. Secretary-Treasurer.
Robert L. Dewar
Earl G. William-
Henry D. Smith
Senio
Blillt) hard
Borders
Brantley
Brinklcv
Burgiss
Burrus
Campbell
Claytor
Ellington
•*s i JflE*
^ v
EVELYN PITT BLANCHARD
Wallace B. S. in Pharmacy
Upha Gamma Delta; Kappa Epsiltm; Class Officer I.'). S itary-
Treasurer. Student Legislature III: Basketball (2); 1. W. C. A.
'2. .".. tl: Pharmacv Senate (2). Recorder (3, I!. President.
Pharmac) Girls' \ssociation (2, 3, II: N. C. P. \. (2, 3), Secretary
ill: Dormitor) Social Chairman III: Baptist Student Union (3),
I x.. alive Committee 111.
CHARLOTTE MAE BORDERS
Shelby B. S. in Pharmac)
V i. P. \. II. 2, 3, li: Pharmac] Girls' issocia I II. 2. 3, li
PATSY ROY BURGISS
Sparta
B. S. in Pharmacy
k'i';., Epsilon, Vice-President III: fl/io Chi (3. 41; N. C. P. A.
11. 2. .!. li. Secretar) Ml: Pha tc) School Secretar] (3) ! Dean's
Cabled 111: Class OHicei I-'. .11: C. I. C. A. Ill: Freshman Y
Council Hi: Student Idvisoi Hi.
BRAINARD MONROE BURRUS
Canton B. S. in Pharmacy
Kappa P«".
LENA SILVER CAMPBELL
Black Mountain B. S. in Pharmacy
WILLIAM CAIN BRANTLEY
Raleigh B. S. in Pharmacy
HI,., i hi ill: Kappa Psi li. li: Lambda Chi Upha (1, -'. .11.
DAVID DORTCH CLAYTOR
Hillsboro B. S. in Pharmacy
Kappa Psi; Pharmac) School Vice-President 111.
CLIFTON SCOTT BRINKLEY
Hickory B. S. in Pharmacy
N. C. r v Membership Chairman (3); Phi Delia Chi, Delegate (3),
' "i res] ling Sei retar) i 1 1 .
MARY ETHEL ELLINGTON
Charleston. S. C. B. S. in Pharmacy
V W. C. \. Ill: N. C. P. A. II. 2. .'.. II: Pharmac; Girls'
Usocialion II. .'. 3, II; Pharmac] Senate (41.
Page 224
^armacy
Fleming
Gilbert
Gilliam
Gordon
Graham
Griffin
Honiei
Howell
Koonee
OLIVER GLENN FLEMING
Smithfield B. S. in Pharmai
PI Drlm Chi; HI,., Chi; Hon incil (4); i - \1 I \ (3J
LEON IRVIN GRAHAM
Roseboro B. S. in Pharmac)
i.l. . i luL (1, 2, n
l.\Ci E\RL GILBERT. JR.
Parkton
Pl,i Deli,, Chi; N. C. P. A.
B. S. in Pharmacy
DORIS M \RIEGILLI \M
Sanford B. S. in Pharmacx
Kaoprt Epsilon, Pledgi distress (3), Secretary-Treasurer Ul: Kl,„
Chi, Sound and Fury (2); Y. W. (. \. II. 2. 3, II. Secretary "l
Council (1): Class Officer (31: N. C. P. A. II. 2. 3, II; Pharmacy
Senate (1, J. 3, I) i Pharmac,- Girls' Association (1, 2. 3, 41.
ELLERBE WILSON GRIFFIN, JR.
Kings Mountain B. S. in Pharmacy
Upha T„u Om,g«; Class Officer (1): Y. M. C. A. II. 2, 3, II.
LUCILLE EARL HORNER
Patter?on Springs B. S. in Phargiac)
Kappa Epsilon; Y. W. C. A. (1, -. I); N. C. P. K. II. 2, 3, ll:
Pharmacy Girls' Association 11. -'. 1, »). Sccrctar) (4).
VIOLA RICHARDS HOWELL
Mount Airy B. S. in Pharmacy
LEON LEWIS GORDON
Rutherfordton
Rho Chi: N. C. P. \. 1.1. 2. 3, ll.
B. S. in Pharmacy
SAMUEL GRADY KOONCE
Chadbourn B. S. in Pharmacy
Page 225
Senior Class
Lovellc
Mathews
Millawav
Mitchener
Morgan
Pace
Powell
Propsl
Rose
JAMES FLEMING LOVETTE
Graham B. S. in Pharmac\
Rh„ Chi.
GEORGE DAYLON MORGAN
Clayton B. S. in Pharmacy
/•A, Delta Chi. Y. M. C. A. («.
GEORGE W. MATHEWS. JR.
Asheville B. S. in Pharmacy
Phi Delia Chi; Western North Carolina Club (3J.
MARYELLEN CORNELIA MILLAWAY
Burlington
Kappa Epsilon. VI. 3, I) : Glee Club, (1. 21 ; N. C. P. A. (1, 2, 3.
I: Pharmacy Girls' Association (1, 2. 3. i) : Pharmacy Senate (2, 3.
41 ; C. I. C. A. tlj.
JAMES WADDELL MITCHENER
Edenton B. S. in Pharmacv
THOMAS AIKEN PACE
Hendersonville B. S. in Pharmacy
Rho Chi.
EDWARD SHOLAR POWELL
Oxford B. S. in Pharmacy
Kappa Psi.
GOLD BLANTON PROPST
Morganton B. S. in Pharmacy
So.cer (31.
WINFIELD P. ROSE
Chapel Hill B. S. in Pharmacy
Phi Mil Alpha; Band (1. 2, 3, 4).
Page 226
harmacy
Rose
Sanders
Seaborn
Skakle
Stutls
Temple
Tunstall
Uzzell
WILLIE C. ROSE
Newton Grove
Kappa Psi; V. M. C. A. (1).
B. S. in Pharmac\
EVELYN LOVING STUTTS
Cameron B. S. in Pharmacy
Y. \V. i . \. ,„ ,1 Member; Pharmacy Senate; N. C. P. A.
CHARL HENRY SANDERS
Somerville. Tennessee B. S. in Pharmacy
HERBERT AUSTIN TEMPLE
Sanford B. S. in Pharmacy
Kappa Psi.
ROBERT HAWTHORNE SEABORN
Victoria, Virginia B. S. in Pharmacy
Kappa Psi. Historian (2. 3. 4,1 ; Pliarmacv Class. Secretary-Treasurer
(4); Student Legislature (2); Pharmacy Senate (3), Secretary-Treas-
CHRISTINE TUNSTALL
Apex B. S. in Pharmacy
SYBIL BERNADINE SKAKLE
Hatteras
B. S. in Pharmacy
Kappa Epsilon (2, 3, 4) ; N. C P. A. (3, 4) ; Pharmacy Girls'
STEVE CARTER CECIL UZZELL
Black Mountain
B. S. in Pharmacy
Chi Phi; Western North Carolina Club (3, 4.1 ; N. C P. A. (1. 2. 3. 41.
Page 227
Junior Class
ERNEST R. ANDERSON, High Point.
HARLEY ONEIL BENSON, Robbins.
JIMMIE CLAXTON BOWERS, Kappa Psi, Morganlon.
JAMES HOWARD BOYLES, Pi Kappa Alpha, Cherryville.
JANE BRADFORD, Rho Chi, Greensboro.
EARLE GARNES CALDWELL, Rho Chi, Lumberlon.
SAMUEL MacDONALD CAVANAUGH, Wallace.
HUBERT MORRIS COFFEE, Thomasville.
WESLEY THOMAS COLLIER, Kappa Psi, Roanoke Rapids
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN COLLINS. Kappa Psi, Weldon.
RAYMOND LEE CREEKMORE, Phi Delia Chi, Whitevffle.
JAMES WILLIAM EDWARDS, Scotland Neck.
ZACK LESTER FINGER. Kappa Psi. Valdese.
WILLIAM GORDON FORREST. Winterville.
WINDFIELD SCOTT GARDNER, Macon.
SANDY DAVIS GRIFFIN, Marshville.
ROBERT BUCKNER HALL, Phi Delta Chi, Mocksville.
ROBERT FRANKLIN HARRISON, Kappa Psi, Cbadbourn.
jCj C% C*
Page 228
3harmacy
HAL BURGESS HAWKINS, Kappa Psi, Statesville.
RAYMOND EDWARD HEATH, Newport.
JOHN COGDELL HOOD, JR., Kappa Psi, Kinston.
BAYARD CLEVELAND JOHNSON, Bunn.
CLARENCE ELBERT JOHNSON, Forest City.
WILLIAM WALTER JORDAN, Raleigh.
WINFRED A. KING, Mount Airy.
VIRGINIA LIMBAUGH. Asheville.
MARY BETH LOCKWOOD, Beta Sigma Phi, Burnswick, Ga.
LAMTON WOOSLEY LONDON, Cherryville.
JOHN DAVID LOWE, High Point.
ROBERT MILES MARTIN, Red Oak.
HERBERT McKEITHAN, JR., Phi Delta Chi, Raeford.
T. WAYNE MITCHELL, Roseboro.
STEVE ANDREW PAPPAS, Phi Delta Chi, Charlotte.
G ROVER RUDOLPH PITTMAN, Kewly.
WILBUR WINFIELD PROVO, Mars Hill.
WILLIAM MOOREFIELD PUCKETT, Fuquay Springs
Page 229
JOHN M. RANCKE, Phi Delta Chi, Lumberton.
DANIEL EDWARD RHODES. Phi Delta Chi. Morganton.
RALPH PEELE ROGERS. JR.. Kappa ilpha, Durham.
HAROLD EDWARD ROPER. Franklin.
ROBERT McGILL ROSS. Bessemer City.
VANN VANDERLYN SECREST. JR.. Pi Kappa Alpha. Monroe
NORMAN W. SHERWOOD. Iowa Park. Texas.
GRADY W. SHUFORD. Kappa Alpha. Forest City.
PEGGY ANN SIMMONS. Kappa Epsilon, Lincolnton.
JEAN IOLA SNYDER, Alpha Gamma Delta, Hagerstown,
Maryland.
JOSEPH CARSON SOUTHERN. High Point.
HENRY GRADY THOMAS. Phi Delta Chi, Sanford.
JOSEPH KELLY TURNER. JR., Speed.
CLAUDE CAMERON WHEELER. Rho Chi, Wilson.
BRUCE ALEXANDER WILLIAMS. Kappa Psi, Nashvil
RUSSELL LOW ELL YOUNG. JR.. Kappa Psi, Murphy.
Junior Class Pharmacy
*» at- W
Page 230
Sophomore Class Pharmacy
JARVIS MARION U.I.ICOOI). Washington.
JAMES EDWIN BROOKSHIRE. Winston-Salem.
ARTHUR ETHERIDGE. Elizabeth City.
ARLISS R. CULLER, Pinnacle.
A. LYLE DAVIS, Roxboro.
Point.
WILLIAM TAYLOR DEMENT. Oxford.
JAMES HENRY DOWDY. Kappa Alpha, Hi
NELL EVANS, Ashevffle.
REGINALD C. FERRELL. Nashville.
I \MES CHANDLER GABRIEL. Kappa Psi, Mooresville.
U.VIS B. GILLIAM. JR., Reidsville.
HARVEY C. GREESON. Greensboro.
JOHN PALMER HORTON. JR.. Phi Delta Chi.
North Wilkesboro.
EDGAR DIXON HOYLE. Phi Delta Chi, Cooleemee.
CHARLES F. JONES, Oxford.
FLOYD E. JONES. JR., Kappa Psi. Morehead City.
JOHN LEE JONES. JR.. Canton.
RICHARD A. KNIGHT. Columbia.
KEITH BULLARD LEWIS, Chapel Hill.
OSCAR WALTER MILLS. Leaks\ille.
MARINA P. MOSELEY, Warrenton.
BASCOM ROBERT PHIFER. Phi Delta Chi, Spencer.
HOMER FRANKLIN PULLIAM, Leaksville.
ERNEST JOHN RABIL. Kappa Psi, Weldon.
WILLIAM TILLMAN RHODES, JR., St. Pauls.
ROBERT EDGAR SCHARFF, \sheville.
ANNA LUNDA SLACK, Kappa Epsilon, Raleigh.
ROBERT CHARLES WILSON, Kappa Psi, Hendersonville.
ROBERT RICKMAN WOODY. Snow Camp.
EUGENE McDONALD USSERY, Cognac.
JAMES ANDREWS UZZELL, Chi Phi, Black Mountain.
MARSHALL RAY VICKERS, Burlington.
OLIN H. WELSH, Lumberton.
EMILY JOAN WEST, Durham.
BERNIE MAURICE SHEFFIELD. Colfax.
Page 231
Freshman Class
WILLIAM ADAM ANDERSON, High Point.
DONALD LEON BENNETT, Fuquay Springs.
JAMES E. BENNICK, Charlotte.
BARBARA BESS, Sylva.
MARGARET BOOTH, Apex.
MAURICE L. BUNCH, JR.. Edenton.
WILLIAM MAURICE CARSON, Gastonia.
WILLIAM D. CASH, Chesnee, S. C.
RALPH E. CARTER, Roxobel.
WALTER ALLEN CLODFELTER, Uheboro.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN COOPER, Warsaw.
CHARLES E. DEATON, Liberty.
ROBERT LINDSEY DEWAR. Fuquay Springs
VANCE L. GABRIEL, Mooresville.
ROLAND DLVALL GODWIN, Kenly.
] \MES G. GRANTHAM, Wilmington.
CRAWFORD FORBES GRIGGS. Elizabeth City.
U.FRED GREGORY HOWE. Alpha Chi Sigma, Washington.
PAUL RONALD JENKINS, Como.
CARL E. JOLLEY. Mooresboro.
HOLLAND BRAUDIS LEONARD, JR.. Kappa Alpha, High Point.
Page 232
Dharmacy
JOHN HENRY LOWDER, Albemarle.
VANCE G. McGUGAN, Dunn.
RICHARD LEE McINTOSH. Burnsville.
GEORGE McDONALD MOOREFIELD, Harmony.
WILLIAM WARREN NORTHCOTT. Trinity.
SAMl EL ARTHUR PACE. Newton.
VICTOR HORN PERRY. Franklin.
W. MOSS SALLEY. JR.. Phi Delia The,,,. Vsheville.
W. STANFORD TATE. Lexington.
ALVIS G. TURNER. JR.. Draper.
BILL VAN VALKENGURGH, Asheville.
JOHN CLAUD WILKIE, JR.. ^sheboro.
EARL GASTON WILLIAMS, Gastonia.
JOHN BENNETT WOODARD, Phi Eta Sigma, Hamlet.
WILLIAM HOOPER WILSON. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Clinton.
GENE STEVENSON SHERARD, Phi Delia Chi, Burlington.
HENRY DALE SMITH. Spartanburg. S. C.
JOHN HUGH THIGPEN, JR.. Edenton.
DARIUS WELLS. Roseboro.
LLOYD M. WHALEY, Beulaville.
HOWARD YANDLE. Charlotte.
Page 233
The Senate has as its purpose the stimulation of in-
creased knowledge and appreciation of the profession of
Pharmacy by free discussion of its various phases. Mem-
bership is limited to students and practitioners in the field
of Pharmacj .
The Pharmacy Senate was organized and created at
the University of North Carolina as the "brainchild" of
Dr. E. A. Brecht. instructor of Materia Medica and Phar-
maceutical Chemistry. Since its formation in February
1940. it has been adopted in form (if not in name) by
several other colleges of Pharmacy throughout the coun-
try.
In addition to regular meetings held every other week
during which new drugs, price controls, merchandising
policies, community health programs are discussed, an
annual trip to some large Pharmaceutical Manufacturing
house was held.
Officers for 1948: Evelyn Blanchard. President; Robert
Seaborn, Secretary-Treasurer; Nina Moseley, Recorder:
Patsy Burgiss. Reporter.
Pharmacy Senate
Evel}
., Blanchard
Pa
isy Burgiss
Lena
S. Campbell
111!
I>,tI Coffee
Mai
y Ellington
Mar]
Jane Failing
Do
ris Gilliam
Rob
icrl B. Hall
Hal
B. Hawkins
John
C. Hood. Jr.
n
oyd Jones
Le
roy Lanier
Herbc
rt MrKeithan
Marye
lien Millawaj
Geo
rge Morgan
Ni
na Mosel;
Bol
l»ert Phifer
Chari
1 H. Sanders
Rober
1 H. Seaborn
A,
ina Slaek
Jv
in Snyder
Ev
elyn Stutts
Sieve
C. C IVzell
Robert Wilson
Kussell
L. Young. J,
Page 234
ISeophyte Pharmacists at ivork and at play-
Page 735
School of Law
Seated : W. B. Ayeock, Editor-in-Chief of the IX. C. Law Review} Catherine Powell, Secre-
tary; and James D. Phillips, Associate Editor of the IS. C. Law Review • Standing:
Donald McCoy, Vice-President; William Friday, President; James Luck, Treasurer.
William James Allran. Jr.. Cherryville.
George A. Ayscue, Monroe.
James Ruffin Bailey. Raleigh.
William Faison Barnes, Pinetops.
Joe Hill Barrington, Jr.. Lumberton.
Raymond West Bradley, Jr., Bessemer City.
Herbert Vinson Bridgers, Enfield.
William Hassell Burton, Jr., Mebane.
Robert H. Butler, St. Pauls.
Thomas Vickers Cauble. Chapel Hill.
William Horace Chamblee, Asheville.
Henry Elliott Colton, Chapel Hill.
Frank Patton Cooke, Kannapolis.
James Crawford Cooper. Jr., Henderson.
Philip Ross Craver, Lexington.
James Sloan Currie. Clarkton.
Edgar S. W. Dameron. Burlington.
William Archie lift-. Jr.. Goldsboro.
Elton Edwards. Morehead City.
William (Hyde Friday, Dallas.
William Harry Fullenwider. Monroe.
Tom S. Garrison, Jr.. Asheville.
Lemuel Hardy Gibbons. Hamlet.
Ceorge Leighton Grantham. Fairmont.
Jack Mills Harrill, Forest City.
Roscoe Maurice Holland. Clinton.
John Richard Jordan, Jr., Winton.
James Russell Kirby. Lucama.
Fletcher Cullen Mann. Pittsboro.
John Alton McAllister. Raleigh.
Donald Whitfield McCoy. Laurinburg.
Hobart Loring McKeever, Tampa. Florida.
David Marsh McLelland, Statesville.
Lennox Polk McLendon. Jr.. Green-bo
August L. Meyland. Jr.. Wilmington.
Daniel Wescott Moser. Asheboro.
Talmadge L. Narron. Kenly.
Robert Newton Page, III. Aberdeen.
W illiam Horton Petree. Winston-Salem
James D. Phillips. Laurinburg.
Morris G. Pickard. Burlington.
Catherine Simmons Powell. Whiteville.
George Galloway Price. Taylorsville.
Landon Haynes Roberts. Marshall.
Claude Frederick Seila. Westfield. New Jersey.
Billy C. Smith. Pittsboro.
Joseph Collins Travis. Charlotte.
Daniel Joshua Walker. Jr.. Graham.
Alfred Decatur Ward, New Bern.
William Terrell W ebster, Jr.. Gastonia.
Thomas M. Wells, Chapel Hill.
Seated: M. T. Van Hecke, Dean R. H. Wettach. Frank Hanft. and Albert Coates • Stand-
ings F. B. McCall, Joh. P. Dalzell, and Herbert Baer.
Page 236
Third Year Law
P C- P ft
V
*> V
- v*
■
Page 237
Second Year Law
r-> m, ^
F* p *■- p
-i Jfti.
i
4J
Thomas Floyd Adams. Jr., Z)e//n r/ieta fAi,
Willow Springs.
Jay Wilson Alexander. Jr.. Phi Alpha Delta.
Charlotte.
Leonard Gleason Allen, Phi Delta Theta.
Wilmington.
Julius Carl Barefoot. Jr.. Delta Theta Phi,
Greensboro.
Robert E. Bencini. Jr.. Phi Gamma Delta,
High Point.
Walter Foil Brinkley. Kappa Sigma, Lexington.
Eupha Odis Brogden. Delta Theta Phi, Raleigh.
Joseph M. Broughton. Jr.. Raleigh.
Marcellus Buchanan. Ill, Phi Alpha Delta, Sylva.
Cale Burgess, Jr., Raleigh.
Robert Edward Calder, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
\\ ilmington.
Charles Wayne Campbell, Phi Delta Phi, Hickory.
John Wishart Campbell. Delta Theta Phi,
Lumberton.
Michael L. Carr. Jr.. Pi Kappa Alpha, Rocky
Mount.
Lester G. Carter. Jr., Pi Kappa Alpha, Fayetteville.
James Fletcher Chesnutt, Phi Alpha Delta.
Clinton.
Edward Coppala, Delta Theta Phi, Charlotte.
Robert Elijah Covington. Jr.. Sigma Chi,
Pachuta. Mississippi.
\\ illiam Edward Elmore, Lumberton.
William Arthur Fairev, II. Burlington.
Worth B. Folger.
Joseph Albert Gassen. Zeta Beta Tan. Miami. Fla.
Charles Wilburn Gordon, Jr., Delta Theta Phi.
Spencer.
Frank Telfair Grady, Seven Springs.
Thomas Battle Griffin. LaGrange.
Theodore E. Haigler. Jr.. Phi Gamma Delta, Phi
Beta Kappa, Sanford.
Philip R. Hedrick. Phi Alpha Delta. Statesi illr.
Robert A. Hedrick. Delta Psi, Phi Alpha Delta,
Statesville.
Rufus Cogburn Hewitt, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Florence. S. C.
Richard Allen Hollander, Washington, D. C.
Ilynum M. Hunter. Zeta Psi. Greensboro.
William T. Joyner, Jr.. Raleigh.
Harvey Ronald Kennedy. Sanford.
Thomas Bland Keys, Washington.
Thomas Guy Lane. Jr.. Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi
Alpha Delta, Charlotte.
Junius B. Lee. Jr.. Delta Theta Phi. Four Oaks
Robert D. Little. Raleigh.
Nicholas Long. Kappa Alpha, Roanoke Rapids.
Walter Bennett Love. Jr., Monroe.
James Harvey Luck. Cedar Falls.
Page 238
Second Year Law
William Burton Lvon, Jr.. Phi Alpha Delta,
Chapel Hill."
Ernest William Machen. Jr., Pi Kappa Phi, Phi
Alpha Delta. Chapel Hill.
John Edward Markham. Beta Theta Pi, Durham.
George M. McDermott, Delta Theta Phi, Vass.
Robert Lerov McMillan. Jr.. Raleigh.
Joseph C. Moore, Pi Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma
Phi, Clearwater, Florida.
Sam Fox Mordecai, Zeta Psi, Raleigh.
Thomas McGrath Mullen. Sigma Chi, Greensboro.
William Stewart Neel, Mooresville.
William H. Oeburn. Sanford.
Francis Iredell Parker, Phi Delta Phi, Charlotte.
Thomas R. Payne, Phi Alpha Delta. Charlotte.
Elbert S. Peel. Jr.. Williamson.
Norman Hugh Person, Fayetteville.
James Turner Pritchett. Jr.. Phi Delta Theta, Phi
Alpha Delta, Lenoir.
Paul Harold Ridge, Phi Alpha Delta, Gibsonville.
Norwood Everett Robinson. Phi Alpha Delta,
Washington.
John David Roeder, New ^ork, N. Y.
Daniel David Retchin. Wilmington.
Robert Dixon Rouse. Phi Alpha Delta, Farmville.
Katherine \ irginia Settle. Roanoke, Va.
Lee Warren Settle. North Wilkesboro.
Jesse C. Sigmon, Jr., Newton.
John Herbert White Small. Sigma Nu, Phi Alpha
Delta, Elizabeth City.
Julius Clarence Smith, III. Phi Gamma Delta,
Phi Alpha Delta, Greensboro.
William Lester Smith, Delta Theta Phi, Charlotte
William Henrv Snow, Pi Kappa Alpha, Delta
Theta Phi, High Point.
Robert A. Spencer, Kinston.
Raymond Eugene Sumrell. New Bern.
Robert S. Swain. Kappa Alpha, Asheville.
James Leroy Tapley. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Eta
Sigma, Shaw. Miss.
Francis S. Taylor, Kappa Alpha. Durham.
James Taylor, Phi Alpha Delta, Elkin.
James Ralph Todd. Jr.. Phi Delta Theta. Delia
Sigma Pi, Lenoir.
Arthur Manuel Utley. Jr.. Kappa Sigma,
High Point.
Charles Fogle Vance, Jr., Sigma Nu, Phi Alpha
Delta, Winston-Salem.
Livingston Vernon. Morganton.
Walter Preston White, Phi Kappa Sigma, Delta
Theta Phi. Winston-Salem.
C. A. York, Jr., L>e/fa Theta Phi, High Point.
> i itl.-Y- mm
r > » f
,'■ t ft*1, i mto
dmmn
Page 239
First Year Law
if -ill ;j
p pi, r. p o
Li
\. f
r\ & e*\ c
Bill Steve Agapion, Greensboro.
John Ransom Bain, Four Oaks.
William Ashe Bason, Raleigli.
Norwood Bruce Boney. Jr., Kenansvillc
William H. Booe, Charlotte.
Edwin Maurice Braswell. Chapel Hill.
June Ray Braswell, Newland.
John Tabor Brock. Farmington.
James Shelley Brower. Wingate.
James Lee Bulla. Jr.. High Point.
Joseph Kincaid Byrd, Morganton.
Harn G. Charles, Jr.. Florence, S. C.
Lawrence Clyde Clarke. Ill, Roxboro.
Max Oliver Cogburn, Candler.
William L. Cooke, Aulander.
Oscar Edward Cordle. Norfolk. \ a.
Orville Dillard Coward, Sylva.
Raymond Thaxter Culclasure. Forest City.
Martin A. Cutler, Lexington.
Emery Byrd Denny, Jr., Raleigh.
Joseph Daniel Franks, Jr.. Phi Kappa Sigma,
Elon College.
Leroy Frank Fuller, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Beta
Gamma Sigma, Scarsdale, N. ^ .
0. Max Gardner, Shelby.
William Allan Garrett, Danville, Ya.
Robert Taliafero Gash. Brevard.
Winston Bangs Gunnels, Phi Delta Theta,
Sandersville. Georgia.
Luther Hamilton, Jr.. Morehead City.
William S. Harris, Jr., Mebane.
John Richardson Haworth, Higli Point.
Rufus K. Havworih. High Point.
William Ware Henderson. Pensacola, Florida.
Homer Hunter Henry, Clyde.
Oma Hundro Hester. Jr.. Phi Kappa Sigma,
High Point.
Robert Lee Hines. Phi Gamma Delia, Chapel Hill.
Edward Brandt Hipp. Greensboro.
James Womble Hoyle. Sanford.
Bruce King Hutchinson. Marion.
Sol Arthur Jaffa. Tan Epsilon Phi, Charlotte.
Lawrence McNeill Johnson, Phi Gamma Delia.
Aberdeen.
C. Talmadge Jordon, Wilmington.
Harold Allen Keen, Phi Beta Kappa. Raleigh.
John Pressly Kennedy, Jr., Charlotte.
Robert Richard Laidlaw. Western Springs, 111.
Robert 1). Larsen, Fayetteville.
Joseph Ira Lee. Smithfield.
William Ernest Mackie, Phi Gamma Delia.
Chapel Hill.
James Patrick McDermott. Chapel Hill.
Page 240
First Year Law
Moran Dorith McLendon, Jr., Phi Gamma Delta.
Morven.
James Brogham McMullan. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Raleigh.
Philip Hodgin Modlin, Sigma Chi, Jamestown.
Jesse Seneca Moore, Jr.. Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Reidsville.
Thomas Jones Nixon, Jr., Hertford.
Daniel Louis Parker, Smithfield.
Ernest E. Parker, Jr., Shallotte.
Junius Hugh Peedin, Fayetteville.
Robert Williamson Perdue, Asheville.
Warren Seipp Perry, Kappa Sigma. Kinston.
Frederick Davis Poisson. Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Wilmington.
Edward Knox Powe, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Durham.
Leonard Stewart Powers. Mayodan.
Frank Battley Rankin. Mount Holly.
Don Avery Reid, Lenoir.
Zennie Lawrence Riggs, Maysville.
Stanley Leigh Rodenbough. Ill, Kappa Alpha.
Winston-Salem.
Alfred Joseph Rodman. Baltimore, Maryland.
Clyde Thomas Rollins, Delta Sigma Pi, Hickor) .
Kenneth Addison Ross, Greensboro.
Herbert Horton Roundtree, Farmville.
Joseph Vance Rowe, Jr., Aberdeen.
Henry Estil Royall. Smithfield.
Renaud Capers Shannonhouse, Pittsboro.
A. A. Zollicoffer. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Henderson
Basil Lamar Sherrill, Gastonia.
Marshall T. Spears, Jr., Durham.
0. E. Starnes, Jr., Asheville.
George Daniel Stenhouse. Alpha Tau Omega,
Goldsboro.
Ralph C. Stephens, Orrum.
Lubie M. Stocks, Snow Hill.
Barbara M. Stockton, Alpha Gamma Delta,
Franklin.
Ralph M. Stockton, Beta Theta Pi,
Winston-Salem.
William M. Storey, Pi Kappa Alpha, Raleigh.
Kirby Sullivan, Phi Beta Kappa, Leland.
Julius Faison Thomson, Beta Theta Pi, Goldsboro.
Lynn Bradford Tillery, Phi Gamma Delta,
Wilmington.
Clark Canara Totherow, Winston-Salem.
Russell Etheridge Twiford, Alpha Tau Omega,
Elizabeth City.
Richard Elvins Wardlow, Joplin, Missouri.
Charles Frederic Warren. Zeta Psi,
Washington, D. C.
William Henley Watson, Delta Sigma Pi,
Winston-Salem.
Andrew G. Williamson, Phi Delta Theta,
Lumberton.
Juliana Davis Wilson, Candler.
T. Stanton Wilson, Candler.
Thomas Breckinridge Woody, Roxboro.
Page 241
School of
Public Health
E. G. McGAVRAN
Dean of The School of Public Health
The School of Public Health of the University of North
Carolina is one of the nine professional schools in the
United States accredited for the teaching of Public Health.
Public Health is one of the newer professions. It is a pro-
fession that uses the basic skills and knowledge of Medi-
cine, Engineering, Nursing and Education. Our graduates
are then Public Health specialists in Medicine, Engineer-
ing, Nursing Education and Laboratory Science.
The day of obtaining adequate protection of the public-
health by a single profession or a single individual is long
past. It takes a team of professionals, skilled in prevention
to deal with the highly complex society in which we live.
The purpose and goal of our School is then to train
for the ever increasing demand of communities, this team
of specialists in the various professional fields, who will
guide and lead the communities in prevention of disease,
in prolongation of life and in providing fuller, happier,
and more productive citizenship for all.
Faculty ol the School oj Public He
Chanlett. C. G. Sheps, J. Wright, J.
S. Halbcrt, Eunice Tvler, Margaret B
Bernard Reidle. Lucv Morgan. Elta Mae Mast, H. G. Bain. E. T.
l (Sceretarv), Dean E. C. McCavran. John Larsh, Paul D. Hann.
Hughes Bryan, Ruth Hay.
School of Public Health
Martha Aiken, Nursing, Columbia, S. C.
Pauline Alexander, Nursing, Sylva.
Edith Gaynor Alston, Nursing, Portsmouth, Va.
Joseph C. Alvarez, Sanitation, Tampa, Fla.
Mary Fox Arnold, Education, Pittsburgh, Pa.
John E. Baker, Jr., Education, Florence, S. C.
Jean-Marie Mahon Barnes, Education, Oceanside, N. Y.
Clemie D. Barton, Nursing, Bentley, La.
Edna Louise Black, Nursing, Graham.
Luis Carlos Bonillo, Sanitary Engineering, Bogota,
Colombia, S. A.
Thelma Gley Bostick, Nursing, Raleigh.
Genevieve Burton, Education, Philadelphia, Pa.
Ruth Brawley, Parasitology, Mooresville.
Joncie S. Brewer, Nursing, Greensboro.
Martha Weaver Broadaway, Nursing, Marshville
Lois Folger Brown, Nursing. Lexington.
Martha Elizabeth Burch, Nursing, Bat Cave.
Henry Grady Callison, Jr., Sanitary Engineering,
Columbia, S. C.
Dorothy Elizabeth Carpenter, Nursing, Lebanon, Ky.
Louise Jarrell Carter, Nursing, Reidsville.
Ann Stanley Chamblee, Nursing, Greenville. S. C.
Mary Elizabeth Chilson, Education. Salisbury.
Gertrude Mabel Clouse, Education, Humbird, Wis.
Dorothy Soledia Colquitt, Nursing, Savannah, Ga.
Eugenia Rucker Cooper, Nursing, Columbia, S. C.
Mary Elizabeth Copeland. Nursing, Midland, Ga.
Herbert Walton Cox, Parasitology, Clarkton.
Virginia Poindexter Crenshaw, Nursing, Nashville.
Sumaia Curi, Nursing, Chavantes, S. Paulo, Brazil.
Ruth E. Dart, Education, West Point, Miss.
Edith Parker Davis. Nursing. Chesterfield, S. C.
Mary Ruth Davis, Nursing, Robbins.
Nettie Lee Day, Education, Oxford.
Christine Anderson Dickens, Nursing, Gretna, Va.
Mary Lee Donoho, Nursing, Asheville.
Hilda Bryan Drennan, Education, Greenwood, S. C.
Margaret Mary Drennan, Education, Medford. Mass.
Ernest P. Dubuque, Sanitary Engineering, Carrboro.
Harold F. Elkin, Sanitary Engineering, Philadelphia, Pa.
Clare K. Ertling, Nursing. Philadelphia, Pa.
Margaret Mclver Ervin, Education, Florence, S. C.
Margaret Claire Evans, Nursing, Wallace.
Betty Ficquett, Education, Columbia, S. C.
Orlin Kenyon Fletcher, Jr., Parasitology, Cordele, Ga.
Jack Herbert Fooks, Sanitary Engineering, Linwood, Pa.
I
Page 243
School of
h 9 9 fy &
1 i
John Giles Foushee, Sanitary Engineering, Lexington.
Norman Elmo Gaskill, Education, Goldsboro.
Lena Tillman Geneen, Nursing. Cheraw. S. C.
Ruby Lee Gibson, Nursing, Zebulon.
Hazel B. Gilchrist, Parasitology, Browns Summit.
Dr. Hamilton Rawlins Gondim, Health Officers, M
Amazonas, Brazil.
Mary Elizabeth Gruwell, Education. Sacramento, Calif.
Milagros S. deGuzman, Education, San Juan Rizal,
Philippines.
Dr. Marianne S. Hahn. Health Officers, New York, N. Y
Mabel Dorothy Hall. Nursing. Murphy.
Mark Ramsey Harbison. Sanitary Engineering,
Graves, Georgia.
Anita Marie Harris. Nursing, New Rochelle, N. Y.
Luda Joyce Heafner, Nursing, Lincolnton.
Eva Viola Higdon. Education, Sylva.
Fred C. Hobson. Sanitary Engineering, Spruce Pine.
Mary Elizabeth Holmes, Nursing. Little Rock, Ark.
Elsie Virginia Hough, Education, Columbia, S. C.
Alfred Edward Hudson, Parasitology, Goldsboro.
Margaret Lucienfield Huff. Parasitology. Greensboro.
Harriet Hylton, Education, Welch, W. Va.
A. B. Jackson, Sanitation, Clearwater. Florida.
Rebekah Caroline Johnson. Nursing, Winnabow.
Florence Casey Johnson, Nursing. Goldsboro.
Maryrose Johnston. Education, New York, N. ^ .
Alonzo Warren Jones, Jr.. Parasitology. Macon. Ga.
Elizabeth Hyde Kasey, Education, South Boston, Va.
Eugene Ernest King, Sanitary Engineering.
Wrightsville Beach.
Mary T. Kraus, Nursing, St. Petersburg. Fla.
Lillian B. Kumli, Nursing. Birmingham. Ala.
Kathleen L. Landry. Nursing,
Donaldsonville. Louisiana.
Wade Thomas Leary, Sanitation, Sumter, S. C.
Chang Won Lee. Health Officers, Hewha-Dong.
Seoul, Korea.
Etta C. Leonard, Nursing, Lexington.
Reynaldo M. Lesaca. Sanitation. Calapan.
Mindoro Philippines.
Chiun-Tong Ling. Education, Shanghai, China.
Milford Norman Lunde. Parasitology, Mt. Sterling,
Wisconsin.
Dorothy Wood Lunsford, Nursing, Petersburg, Virginia.
Mary Joy Lyon, Nursing, Asheville.
Frederick William Lyons, Health Officers, Montreal, Quebec.
Sara Agusta Malpas, Nursing. Jasper. Florida.
Page 244
'ublic Health
William Ririe Manning. Education. Cedar City, Utah.
Ann Frances Martin, Nursing, Montgomery, Alabama.
Lura Rhodes Martin. Education, Columbia, South Carolina
Evalyn Claire Melton. Education, West. Mississippi.
Mildred C. Miller, Nursing. Asheville.
Elizabeth E. Murom, Education. Tarpon Springs, Florida.
Manuel Fernando Munoz, Sanitary Engineering,
Guatemala.
Dorothy Mae Nelson. Nursing. Chicago. Illinois.
Edna L. Nelson, Nursing, Tallahassee, Florida.
Emma Esther Ortiz. Nursing. LaUemocracia, Guatemala.
Ethel Virginia Osterdahl. Sanitary Engineering.
Otisville, N. Y.
Mildred Fone Oswalt, Nursing, Moberly, Missouri.
Rafael Otero, Sanitary Engineering. Cartagena. Colombi
Doris Louise Parker, Nursing, Lexington.
Mary Juanita Perdue. Education, Pine Bluff.
Gloria C. Peter, Nursing, Allentown Pennsylvania.
Marjorie Ethel Pictor, Nursing, Cochabama. Bolivia.
Betty May Potts, Nursing, Charlotte.
Joseph Anthony Rinaldi, Education, Brooklyn. New York.
Martha Rossell, Nursing, Foley, Florida.
Fannie Wright Sell. Nursing. Chapel Hill.
Octacilio Pousa Sene. Sanitary Engineering, Sao Paulo.
Brazil.
Natalie C. Sheller, Education, Illiopolis. Illinois.
Zoe Virginia Stackhouse, Nursing, Bennettsville. S. C.
Mary Theresa Stann. Nursing, Trenton, New Jer-.-\.
Vivian Anna Sugg. Nursing, Durham.
Daniel Arthur Sullivan, Education, Auburn. Maine.
Leonard Monroe Thompson, Parasitology. Roanoke. Virgini
Antonio Tomassi, Sanitary Engineering, Napoli, Italy.
Ata Unalan. Health Officers, Istanbul, Turkey.
Luella Van Every, Nursing, Bridgeport Connecticut.
Luciand Cesar Vareda, Sanitary Engineering, Joao Pessoa,
Brazil.
Victor Maria Velasco, Health Officers, Popayan, Colombia.
Philip Louis Weinstein. Education. Richmond. Virginia.
Dorothy White Williford. Nursing. Hertford.
Vivian Blackmon Wise, Nursing, Latta, South Carolina.
Polly Wyant, Nursing, Vale.
Carl Buchanan Young. Education, Houston. Texas.
Helen Rose Young, Nursing, Princeton.
Alberto L. Zalamea, Health Officers, Binan. Philippines.
Page 245
School of
p O £> p
Second Year
Robert Ray Aycock, Fremont.
Julius Jackson Barefoot, Phi Chi, Raleigh.
Verna Young Barefoot, Raleigh.
Elmer E. Batts, Rocky Mount.
Merlynn Eugene Borgstedt, Phi Chi, Westport, Indiana.
Marvin A. Bowers, Jr., Winston-Salem.
Henry T. Broadstreet, Jr., Jacksonville, Florida.
William S. Cheek, Chapel Hill.
Giles Patterson Corey, Phi Gamma Delta, Greenville.
James A. Ewart, Greenville.
Marion White Fisher. Wilmington.
John A. Fleming, Oxford.
Christopher Columbus Fordham, III. Sigma Chi
Greensboro.
James Hervey Galloway, Phi Chi, Raleigh.
Thomas F. Hudgins, Jr.. Dallas. Texas.
Frank Gustan Kuehn, Phi Chi, Baltimore, Maryland.
Henry J. Liverman, Columbia.
John E. Lyday, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Brevard.
Robert E. Mabe, Asheboro.
Julius A. Mackie, \v inston-Salem.
Andrew A. Manning. Spartanburg. South Carolina.
Eugene V. Maynard, Kinston.
William F. McNeely, Greensboro.
William Ernest Powell, Asheville.
Richard E. Rankin, Mount Holly.
Shirley L. Rivers, Kernersville.
Hewitt A. Rose, Jr., Kappa Sigma, Smithfield.
Charles L. Saunders, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Reidsville.
Earle Spaugh, Kappa Sigma, Charlotte.
Bate Carpen Toms, Salisbury.
Emily Tufts, Pinehurst.
Adolph Joseph Urban, Phi Chi, Chapel Hill.
Thomas English Walker, Charlotte.
James E. Williams, Jr., Durham.
Sherrod N. Wood, Enfield.
Page 246
ITIedicine
First Year
Law Lamar Ager, Black Mountain.
Hoke Vogler Bullard. Jr.. Charlotte.
Peter James Carris, Gastonia.
Maxine E. Dark, Greensboro.
John Dewey Dorsett, Jr., Alpha Tan Omega, Ridgewood.
New Jersey.
John Milton Gambill, Kappa Sigma, Elkin.
Francis Sidney Gardner, Jr.. Kappa Alpha, Goldsboro.
Robert Ashley Griffin, Asheville.
Nancy Guy, Newland.
Frank H. Hamilton. Rock Hill, South Carolina.
Charles T. Harris, Jr., Salisbury.
Tvndall P. Harris, Jacksonville, Florida.
Harold B. Hines. Walnut. Mississippi.
Joe Hodge. Spartanburg. South Carolina.
William Jabine. II. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Baltimore.
Maryland.
Odell Gulp Kimbrell, Jr., Durham.
Martha Ray Lumpkin, Franklinton.
Richard Myron Margolis, \v'illiamston.
Spinks Hamilton Marsh, Monroe.
Elizabeth Jean McGavran. Chapel Hill.
Edward B. McKenzie. Sigma Xu. Salisbury.
Charles F. Melchor. Jr.. Mooresville.
Jess H. Meredith, Chapel Hill.
Joseph Teles Miller. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Hickory.
Edwin Wall Monroe. Kappa Alpha. Laurinburg.
Franklin Gray Norris, Phi Kappa Psi, Asheville.
Robert A. Pascal, Valdese.
Robert Breece Pennington, Nathan's Creek.
Leon W. Powell, Jr., Durham.
Rose Pully, Kinston.
Arthur C. Quakenbush, Chapel Hill.
Aubrey DeVaughn Richardson. Cerro Gordo.
Frank Tyach Shafer, Salisbury.
Jack D. Summerlin, Laurinburg.
Edward C. Sutton. Decatur, Georgia.
Julian T. Sutton, Clinton.
Jonathan Simpson Swift. Raleigh.
Andrew Harriss Symmes, Wilmington.
Kenneth Terrell, Sylva.
Gordon Earl Trevathan. Jr.. Fountain.
Lonnie Gaither Turner, Jr.. Statesville.
F-ther Louise Ullman. Springfield, Ohio.
James Phillip Westmoreland, Gibsonville.
Charles Finch Whicker. North Wilkesboro.
Charles L. Whisnant, Charlotte.
Wade Hampton Williams. Jr.. Kappa Alpha, Charlotte
Thomas Luther York. Kappa Sigma, Waynesville.
£|M
' »» *■' " ~ , I
mmtk
C; fS p< .© P A
MmMWAi
0P ' ^fe 4s*- t&^
1
Page 247
//
N
m
■\
ts
HE
Kb
«?5A
Phi Beta
JOHN M. SIMMS
President
WILLIAM ROBERT COULTER
Vice-President
HILDA F. LAWRENCE
Recording Secretary
Jmtlated Way 21, 1947
Edward Lee Baity, Jane Dinmore Bentley, Edward Clark Berry, Julian Stanley Brock, Paul Hunt
Broyliill. Mary Jo Cain. Madeline Ethel Cooley, John Philip Couch. William Robert Coulter. Evelyn
Boiling Cox, Gladys Evelyn David, Nathan Taylor Dodson, Asa Covington Edwards, Jr., John
Alston Ellis, Jr.. Irvin Junior Erie, Margaret Joan Farris, Donald Edmund French. Douglas Murray
Glasspool, Irvin Howard Gordon, Paul Jules Gordon, Clingman Frank Grisette, Stephen Paul
Gyland, Marcella Caroline Harrer, Ernest Eugene Harrill, Arthur Max Harrison, Leon Holmes
Harrison, Donald Graham Henderson, Linn Zenas Hoover, Jr., Margaret Caldwell James, Harley
Young Jennings. Jr.. William David Johnson. Jr.. Harold Allen Keen, Judson Eugene Kinberg, John
Alvin Kirkland, Alvin Warner Landfield, Frances Ann Law, Hilda Frances Lawrence, Edward
Charles Leonard. Jr., James Marshall Lilly. William Orr Livingstone. Jr.. John Robert McKinney,
Robert Rankin MacMillan, Carol Jean Mansfield, Ann Hagood Martin, James Irving Mason, Jr.,
Constance Gay Morenus, John Stephan Nolan, Patricia Ethel Palmer, Daniel Louise Parker, Jerome
Hyman Pearson, Herman Wilbur Perkins, Basil Lamar Sherrill. John Meredith Simms, James
Edgar Smith, William Warren Spragins, Richard Gustave Stern, Dorothy Allen Swain, Thaddeus
Wilbur Tate, Jr., Nina Merriwether Thomas, Anatole Boris Volkov, Melvin Waldfogel, Warren
Wright Webb, Harvey Jay Whitman, Ann Louise Wiedeman, William John Woestendiek, William
Walter Wooodruff, Jr., Fred Boyer Wright, Jr., Madison Johnston Wright, Charles Frederick
Zukoski, III.
Pag« 250
Kappa
^Ttpka Chapter
of f forth (^aroli
ma
To 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.
Executive Committee
John Meredith Sim in-. William Robert Coulter, Hilda
Frances Lawrence, Chancellor R. B. House, Dr. A. C.
Howell. Dean E. L. Mackie, Dean C. P. Spruill.
DEAN E. L. MACKIE
Corresponding Secretary-Treasurer
initiated J^v
J JJl—1947
utnmer an
William Harris Armstrong, Hal Lackey Ballew, Samuel Jarvis Bame, Jr., Donald Ray Broad,
Hoke Vogler Billiard, Jr., William Garfield Carson, Jacob Ernest Cooke, Lee Biggerstaff Copple.
Betty Meade Creighton, Carroll Samuel Daniels. Dorothy Ann Dashiell, Arnold Dolin, Walter
Kenneth Ellis, Jr., Allen Fonoroff, Arthur Garrick Fullerton, John Lewis Gignilliat, Warren Joseph
Gustus, William Harris Hooks, Ernest Jones House, Robert Eugene Jones, Thomas Murphy Jordan.
Claude Reuben Joyner, Jr.. William Anderson Lane, Harold Sidney Lee, Jr., Lawrence Hamilton
MacKirdy, Thomas McDade. William Benson McCutcheon. Jr., Charles Clifton Martin, Jr., Margaret
Whitlow Matthews, James Doster Moos, Paul Everett Mullinax, Melvil Bertrand Myers, Jr., William
Stewart Osborne, John Willard Patterson, Jacques Allen Peel, Clarence James Peters, Jr., William
Carlyle Powell, William James Reese, Jr., Will Chapel Rogers, Jr.. Josef Emanuel Ryberg, Jr.,
Herbert Singer, Sanford Macey Sprintz, Sam Kane Stallard. William Reece Starnes, Jr., Kirby
Sullivan, Samuel Askew Summerlin, Richard Hanawalt Swigart, James Leroy Tapley, James
Spencer Truitt, Jr., Henry Frederick Wall, Richard Morrow Weedon.
Page 25;
Theta Psi Epsilon
i rf
-' 'iff
■Hi / ~ J m v
Margaret Cole
Mary Elizabeth Cook
Helen Ershler
Anne Fleming
Julia Greenwood
Anne C. Hagan
Leila Josephs
Mary Kellaiu
Mildred Koon
Oveida Mavo
Frances Morgan
Carolyn Neel
Cecilia Price
Nell Ring
Susanne Stokes
Mary Swann
Bettie Tillett
Rachel Woodlev
The purpose of tlie national honorary chemical sorority, which was
established in 1944 by the women students in the chemistry department, is to
promote an interest in chemistry and to foster mutual advancement in aca-
demic, business and social life among women who have chosen the same field
of study.
Each year the members have an opportunity to hear qualified speakers
in the field of chemistry. Manv graduate students in chemistry are heard at
the weekly meetings in Venable Hall.
Another outstanding project is the annual visit to a nearby industrial
laboratory to see industrial chemistry in operation.
The officers of Theta Psi Epsilon for 1948 are as follows: Elizabeth
Cook, President; Carolyn Neel. Vice-President; Oveida Mayo, Recording
Secretary; Helen Ershler. Corresponding Secretary; Mary Kellam. Treas-
urer; Anne Carter Hagan, Historian.
Page 252
Chi Delta Phi
Marcella Harrer
Elizabeth Hazlett
Joyce Peterson
Margaret Anne Wells
Sally Woodhull
Julia Ross
Virginia Forward
The Tau Chapter of Chi Delta Phi, national honorary literary sorority,
was established at the University of North Carolina on June 4, 1941. Its
purpose is to promote literary activities and appreciation on the campus.
As an honorary society, it accepts one per cent of the coed student bodv as
members each year, on the basis of submitted manuscripts.
Officers for 1948: Marcella Harrer. President: Julia Ross. Vice-Presi-
dent: Priscilla Moore. Secretarv.
Page 253
Jane Bradford
William Brantley
Pat Burgiss
Earle Caldwell
Thomas Collier
Oliver Fleming
Doris Gilliam
Leon Gordon
Sam Koonce
James Lovette
Aiken Pace
Wilbur Provo
Vann Secrest, Jr.
Russell Young
Robert Ross
Claude Wheeler
Rho
Chi
The Xi Chapter of Rho Chi honorary society was established at Uni-
versity in 1929, with eight members. This year's tapping brought the mem-
bership to the largest in its history. Evolved from a local pharmaceutical
organization at the University of Michigan in 1908, Rho Chi has become the
highest honorary fraternity in pharmacy. Membership is the most coveted
award of a pharmacy student.
The object of the Society is twofold: to promote the advancement of
pharmaceutical sciences and to promote good fellowship among under-
graduate and graduate students and faculty members, bringing them to-
gether in fraternal and helpful comradeship.
Faculty members are: Dr. M. L. Jacobs, Dr. E. A. Brecht, Dr. H. 0.
Thompson, Dr. I. W. Rose, and Dr. F. Sememink.
Officers for 1948: Sam Koonce, President; Doris Gilliam, Vice-Presi-
dent: Oliver Fleming, Secretary.
Page 254
Phi Delta Phi
JOHN R. JORDON, JR.
Magister
JOE H. HARRINGTON, JR.
Clerk
HENRY E. COLTON
Exchequer
THOMAS V. CAUBLE
Historian
Jordan Harrington
Phi Delta Phi Honorary International Legal Fraternity was founded at
the University of Michigan in 1869. Vance Inn of the University of North
Carolina was established in 1919. The purpose of the fraternity is the pro-
motion of higher standards of professional ethics and culture in law schools
and in the profession at large. Its Motto: "May the legal ability recognized
by her ideals go forth and strengthen the arm of justice".
The officers of Phi Delta Phi are as follows: John R. Jordan, Jr., Magis-
ter; Joe H. Barrington, Jr., Clerk; Henry E. Colton, Exchequer; Thomas V.
Cauble, Historian; Fred B. McCall, Faculty Advisor.
O £^ p p
>r i T^jr gfv ^L.
P P -t. a p i. r
wtLi M Hi
James R. Bailey
Walter F. Brinkley
William L. Burton
Charles W. Campbell
Edgar S. W. Dameron
Tom S. Garrison, Jr.
Leminuel H. Gibbons
George L. Grantham
William S. Griday
William T. Joyner, Jr.
Donald W. McCoy
Hobart L. McKeever
Lennox P. McLendon
Robert N. Page, III
Francis I. Parker
Elbert S. Peel, Jr.
James D. Phillip, Jr.
Landon H. Roberts
Claude F. Seila
Livingston Vernon
William J. Webster
Page 255
Anne Brown
Mary Elizabeth Burrus
Audrev Green
Lillian Messicks
Doris Newburn
Sigma Rlpha lota
Iota Tau, one of the newest active chapters of the International pro-
fessional music fraternity, Sigma Alpha Iota, was formally installed at the
UNC April 29, 1946. In an impressive service held by national officers in the
Roland Parker Lounge, eighteen girls became active members.
The group, though small in number, is limited to music majors, and is
active in musical function on campus.
Officers for 1948: Mary Elizabeth Burrus, President; Doris Newburn,
Vice-President; Ann Brown. Secretary; Lillian Messicks, Treasurer; Nina
Thomas. Chaplain; Audrey Green. Corresponding Secretary.
Page 256
Phi [Tlu Alpha
The Alpha Rho Chapter of Phi Mu Alpha, national honorary music
fraternity was established at U. N. C. on February 24. 1926. Since that time
it has been active in sponsoring concerts by talented artists and in assisting
the music department in all of its programs.
The fraternity also puts on a concert by its own members during the
school year and encourages original composition in the interest of promot-
ing the best in music on the campus.
Officers for 1948: Bob Prunty, National Councilman; Harry Shipman,
President; Maurice Weinstein. Vice-President; Winifield Rose, Secretary;
Carl Perry, Treasurer; Dan Marshall, Historian; Charles Steven, Warden.
First Roiv: Kermit Albertson, Sam Andrew, Alan Bergman, Richard Cox, Edwin Easier,
Wallace Evans, Ben Jaffa • Second Row: Sol Jaffa, Lawrence Leinbach, Dan Marshall.
David Mcadams, Carl Perry, Bob Prunty, Frank Seltlemyer • Third Roiv: Harry Ship-
man. William Waters, Bynum Weathers, Maurice Weinstein, Frank West. Bill Wester.
Page 257
Delta Theta Phi
First Rote: Thomas F. Adams, George Ayscho. Julius Carl Barefoot, William Faison
Barnes, E. O. Brogden © Second Row: John W. Campbell. Edward Coppala, Charles
W. Gordon, Harvey Kennedy, Junius B. Lee • Third Row: Nicholas Long, George N.
MeDermott, William Neel, "Buck" Person, William Lester Smith • Fourth Row: Wil-
liam Henry Snow, Robert Spence. Walter P. White. Thomas Woody, Cicero A. York.
cJLaw ^_j7~ratemLu
Founded: Cleveland Law School 1901
Motto: "Justice for fellow man, honor to God and love for brother.
Battle Senate of U. N. C. established in 1924.
OFFICERS
Walter P. White
Dean
David N. Henderson
Vice-Dean
John W. Campbell
Tribune
William L. Smith
Clerk of Exchequer
George M. MeDermott
Clerk of Rolls
Charles W. Gordon
Bailiff
E. 0. Brogden
Master of the Ritual
Page 258
Rlpha Chi Sigma
Alpha Chi Sigma, the only professional chemical fraternity in the United States and a mem-
ber of the Professional Interfraternity Conference, has as its ohjectives the advancement of chemis-
try, improving the professional status of and promoting fellowship among chemists. Founded at
the University of Wisconsin in 1902, it now has 53 collegiate and 29 professional chapters and
over 16,000 members. Rho chapter was established at the University of North Carolina in 1912.
Working in close cooperation with the faculty of the chemistry department and the North
Carolina section of the American Chemical Society, it encourages scholarship and professional-
ism among students by: sponsoring lectures by men prominent in the chemical profession, and
panel discussions on job opportunities: making awards for scholastic excellence; and gifts of
books to the library.
The chapter has its social side, too. Frequent parties, picnics, smokers give us a chance to
get away from days and nights of work amid the fumes and smells of Chem. Lab.
The 1948 officers were: Louis Foster Theiling, Jr., President; Claude Edward Teague. Vice-
President; Terry 0. Norris. Secretary; Frank B. Tutwiler, Corresponding Secretary; Thomas H.
Guion. Treasurer; Raymond L. Haves, Master of Ceremonies.
First Row: Bruce Bollendine, Newton R. Smith, Jr., Thomas H. Cuion, Frank Tutwiler, Terry O. Norris, Louis Theiling.
Leo Mullen • Second Roiv: James T. Dobbins, William W. Parkinson, Frank Chapman, Donald Sanders • Third Row: Ferris
Wilson, Stanley Patten, Edward C. Leonard, Raymond Hayes, Charles Herty, III, James Crawford. Patrick Hobson, Otis L.
Shealy • Fourth Row: Paul Starnes. Robert Murray Hughes, E. Lee Wood, Arthur J. Foster, Robert C. Harrington. Jr..
Harley Jennings, and Paul H. Cheek.
Page 259
Kappa Psi
Jimmie Bowers
James Boyles
William C. Brantley
Brainard M. Burrus
David D. Claytor
Wesley T. Collier
Benjamin F. Collins
Zaek Lester Finger
James D. Gabriel
Bobert F. Harrison
Hal Burgiss Hawkins
John C. Hood
William M. Jordan, Jr.
Edward Sholar Powell
Ernest John Babil
William C. Bose
Charl H. Sanders
Robert II. Seaborn
Grady W. Shuford
Herbert A. Temple
Bruee A. Williams
Robert C. Wilson
Russell L. Young
"To foster the highest principles and practices of an ancient and honor-
aide profession; always striving to do a hetter thing than has been done,
that the people of our life, may be free from pain and disease. To promote the
principles of honesty, integrity, and trustworthiness in ourselves and our as-
sociates, necessarily the basic requirements for custodians of public health,
remembering always, that we are the guardians of life, and that as such, we
must place the welfare of our patrons before our personal desires. This then
is our creed. . . ."
Officers of the Beta Xi chapter of Kappa Psi, an honorary pharmacy
fraternity, for 1948 are as follows: Ben F. Collins. President; Dave Claytor,
Vice-President; William M. Jordan, Secretary; Bob Wilson, Treasurer;
Dean M. L. Jacobs, Faculty Advisor.
Page 260
Phi Delta Chi
J. Douglas Bain, Jr.
James Beiinick
Clifton Brinkley
Raymond L. Creekmore
Oliver G. Fleming
Lacy E. Gilbert
Robert B. Hall
John P. Horton
Edgar D. Hoyle
Truman Hudson
William W. Jordon
George Mathews
J. C. McGee
Vance McGugan
Herbert McKeithan
George Morgan
Steve A. Pappas
Sherwood Parrish
Bascom R. Phifer
John Rancke
Daniel E. Rhodes
Robert M. Ross
Gene Sherard
Henry G. Thomas
W. Van Valkenburgh
The Alpha Gamma Chapter of the Phi Delta Chi Fraternity was es-
tablished in Pharmacy School on May 30, 1922. Since that time the chapter
has been very active except for a short time during the war. The chapter was
reactivated last year and celebrated its 25th anniversary with a banquet
honoring its charter members. The chapter sponsored a dance in the winter
for the Pharmacy School and has held several other social events.
Page 26/
Sigma
Gamma
Epsilon
DR. W. F. PROUTY
Faculty Advisor
The Alpha Alpha Chapter of Sigma Gamma Epsilon was established at
the University on April 3, 1931. After a period of inactivity during the war,
it was reactivated by the present members on May 23, 1947. This national
honorary fraternity has as its objective the social, scholastic and scientific
advancement of students of Geology.
Officers for 1948: Harry Peek, President; James Jordan, Vice-Presi-
dent; Henry Berryhill, Secretary-Treasurer; Ralph Heath, Corresponding
Secretary-Editor.
Sealed: James N. Jordan, Henry L. Berryhill. Jr.. Harry M. Peek, Ralph C. Heath. Wil-
liam D. Johnson • Standing: Linn Hoover, Jr.. Sanky L. Blanton. Edward C. Berry.
Benjamin E. Warner, William H. Vogelsang, Robert T. Wolfe. Gerald Meyer • I\ot
Shown: James Curry, James H. Slillvtell. James C. Grier.
Paqe 262
Charter Members of U. N. C. Chapter of Phi Eta Sigma
Undergraduate (charter rv/einbi
embers
Harold Lee Andrews, William Arnold Barnes, Gerald Blum, Richard Winstead Borden, Richard
Benjamin Boren, III, Lewis Dean Cassell, Harvey Jay Cohen, David Leonard Collins. Jr., Jesse
Henry Dedmond, John Wilson Dillard, Jr., Alfred Hamilton Garvey, Walter Page Harris, Jr.,
Robert Leslie Hopkins. Jr.. Thomas Pressley Houser, Jr., Horace Edsel Hughes, Joseph Freeman
Jones, Robert George Kerdasha, John McDavid Loftis, William Hendren Long, John Henry Lowder,
Robert Fulton McLaughlin, Dan Anderson Martin, Fletcher Burton Nichols, Jr., William Francis
Patterson, Alvin Ward Peacock, John Olin Perritt, Jr., Augustus Winniett Peters, Thomas Jefferson
Peterson, Jr., Creel Allen Pickel, Hubert Donald Robertson, Clayton Roland Robinson, Richard Lee
Simpson, Josef Sklut, Thomas Franklin Stallings, Jr.. George Vaughan Strong, Jr., Edward Young
Cox Thorne, William Lewis Thorpe, Jr.. Ernest Haywood Tilley. Charles Albert Trice, Ernest Watson
Tucker, Richard Isley Walker, John Webb, David Harford Whittier, Clifton Monroe Wilson, Jr.,
John Rose Wilson. John Bennett Woodard, William Frederick Young.
^rnitiateS, ^ralt Quarter, 194 7
Wallace Ashley. Jr., Robert Roy Beyer. Edward George Bilpuch, Eugene Dwight Blackwelder,
Harold Isaac Bock. Edwin Rives Cheek. Claude Edward Clark, Robert George Evans, Joel Martin
Feinberg, Felder Sharp Graham. Benjamin Russell Harward. William Lassiter Hester, Cary Jake
Lambert, William Connie Mathis, Jr.. Frank Jackson Matthews, James Fyffe McNab, James Ronald
Mericka. Robert Alfred Miller, Charles J. Reidl. Jack Webster Sparrow, Jr.. Charles Henry Ufen,
Pfohla Edgar Wilmoth.
JL
a
tonoraru Charter ivlembers
Dean Corydon P. Spruill, Dean M. A. Hill, Jr., Dean Cecil Johnson, Dean Ernest L. Mackie.
Phi
Eta
Sigma
tceri
Jesse Henry Dedmond, President; Walter Page Harris. Jr., Vice-President; Richard Benjamin
Boren, III, Secretary; Dan Anderson Martin. Treasurer; William Frederick Young. Historian:
Dean Ernest L. Mackie, Faculty Advisor.
Page 263
Rlpha Epsilon Delta
Officers: Benson McCutcheon, President; Robert Sing, Vice-President;
Conway Rose, Secretary-Treasurer; Dr. S. B. Knight, Faculty Advisor.
Alpha Epsilon Delta is a group of pre-medical students outstanding
for high scholastic standing and superior character.
The fraternity attempts to inculcate in the minds of the pre-medical
students those motives, attributes, and ideals which make medicine a most
honorable profession. Also, it provides recognition for achievement in the
pre-med school.
This group bridges the gap between the pre-medical school and the
medical school, while at the same time it acts as a force in crystallizing any
movement for the good of the pre-medical student.
Stuart Boiulurant
Jack Hamilton
Bub Sing
Benson McCutcheon
Conway Kose
Art Shaiu
Dick Boreu
Ted Young
Ely Perry
Bertram Grossman
Bill Butler
Bill Rogers
Dick Borden
Page 264
Pi Delta Rlpha
The Pi Delta Alpha Pre-Dental Society was formed at the University
in the summer of 1947, with the initial objective of stimulating excellence
and achievement in pre-dental work, and recruiting for the dental profession,
students who have proven themselves to be outstanding in the field of science.
Being the only society of its type in the nation, it has received recognition
from both the American Dental Association and the President of the Amer-
ican College of Dentists.
Officers for 1948: Charles Berman, Chairman; Wilma Clair Anderson,
Secretary, Wilbur G. McFarland, Treasurer; Dean Ernest Mackie, Facultj
Advisor.
Wilma C. Anderson
Clint W. Bentley
Charles I . Berman
William A. Caldwell
William S. Ketchem
Wilbur G. McFarland
William L. Saunders
Josef Sklut
John W. Steward, Jr.
Page 265
Kappa
Epsilon
EVELYN BLANCHARD
President
Kappa Epsilon was established to stimulate in its members a desire for
high scholarship, a professional consciousness, lasting loyalty, interest and
friendship. The Lambda Chapter of Kappa Epsilon, national honorary fra-
ternity for women pharmacy students, was formed at the University of North
Carolina on January 21, 1941; and since that time has become an important
part of the School of Pharmacy.
Officers for 1948: Evelyn Blanchard, President; Patsy Ray Burgiss,
Vice-President; Doris Gilliam, Secretary-Treasurer: Jean Snyder, Pledge
Mistress; Jane Bradford. Historian.
Top Rote: Jane Bradford, Patsy Ray Burgiss. Evelyn Earl. Doris Gilliam • Second Row:
Viola Howell, Virginia Limbaugh, Maryellen Millaway, Peggy Simmons • Third Rote: Sybil
Austin Skakle, Jean Snyder, Anna Slack.
Page 266
Phi Rlpha Delta
The Ruffin chapter of Phi Alpha Delta was organized in 1921 for the
purpose of carrying out the principles of the National Law Fraternity — the
duty of improving scholastic and professional standards and the development
of leadership through association. Inactive during the war, the chapter was re-
activated in February, 1947. and grew to its voluntary limit of forty members
by the end of the school year. In addition to its luncheons at which eminent
members of the legal profession speak, the chapter endeavors to present, at
intervals, nationally renowned figures of the bar and bench, in its effort to
render interesting as well as educational and informative service to the stu-
dents. Ruffin chapter also works to cooperate with the faculty and adminis-
tration in their activities.
Officers for 1948: William H. Chambell, Worth B. Folger, Justice: T. A.
Wadden, Ernest Machen, Vice-Justice; Elton Edwards, Clerk: Mike Carr,
Treasurer; William Lvon, Marshal.
iik.?i *i
»* r
£LKk
First Row: Jay Alexander, Gleason Allen, James Allran. Robert Bencini, Raymond Bradley, Mareellus
Buchanan, Robert Butler, Henry Calder, Michael Carr • Second Row: William Chamblee, James Chestnutt.
Patton Cooke, James Currie. Elton Edwards, Worth Folger, Philip Hedrick, Maurice Holland, Thomas
Keyes • Third Row: William Lyon, Ernest Machen, Fletcher Mann, John McAllister, Talmadge Narroii,
Thomas Payne, Glenn Piekard, George Price, James Pritchett • Fourth Row: Paul Ridge, Norwood
Robinson. Robert Rouse, Herbert Small, Julius Smith, James Tavlor. Arthur Utlev. Charles Vance. Daniel
Walker.
Page 267
OFFICERS
JACK SAMUEL FITCH
GIDEON LAMB GILLIAM
CHARLES SCOTT VENABLE
Exchequer
SIR KNIGHTS
Harry Leon Beason
Kenneth Black, Jr.
Wayne Kenneth Brenengen
John Morrison Clampitt
Robert Rives Collins
Thomas Robert Eller, Jr.
Charles Lester Fulton
Jesse Kilmore Greenbaum
Lawrence Lewis Hooper
Raymond Lewis Jerries, Jr.
Charles Louis Johnston
Robin Smith Kirby
Robert Edward Kirklond
William Houston Miller
Samuel Howard Morrow, Jr
Leonard Szafaryn
Taylor Thome
Oscar Mason Whitney
SHEL, President
•ARS, Vice-President
esident JULIA ROSS, Secretary
e President BILL LLOYD, Treasurer
BARBARA CASH ION, Alumnae Secretary
■
Jo Farris
Marcella Harrer
Margaret McWilliams
Sarah Buchanan Porter
Mary Frances Kellam, honorary Gray Simpson
Donleen MacDonald Emily Von Borries
wr^.
Hf
^m ^H
•i*
SSdpf^S6
MEMBERS 1947-48
337 William Archie Dees, Jr.
346 William M. Shufford
382 Robert A. Spense
392 Elbert Sidney Peel
400 Jack Fitch
403 Charles Fogle Vance.. Jr.
404 William Thomas Crisp
407 Laurence Lewis Hooper
409 William Fennel McNeely
412 Winston Broadfoot
413 John Dewey Dorsett
416 Charles Lester Fulton
418 Lennox P. McLendon, Jr
421 Robert James Paxton
423 Robert Gray Stockton
424 John P. Kelly
425 Charles F. Warren
426 Donald W McCoy
427 Ernest G Crone
428 James C. Wallace
429 Raymond L. Jefferies
430 Ralph N Strayhorn
431 Kenneth C. Black
432 William W. Tavlor
433 William H Miller
434 William J Woestendick
435 John S O'Neal
436 Thomas R Eller
FACULTY
Charles Phillips Russell
Frank Porter Graham
Edgar Ralph Rankin
Robert Burton House
Herman Glenn Baity
Ernest Lloyd Mackie
Albert McKinley Coates
Joseph Burton Linker
Corydon Perry Spruil
Earle Horace Hartsell
Joseph Maryon Saunders
William Terry Couch
Edward Alex Cameron
Walter Smith Spearman, Jr.
Hugh T. Lefler '
Harry K. Russell
Frank W Haft
BETA GAMMA SIGMA
ALPHA CHAPTER OF NORTH CAROLINA
Established February 20, 1933
C. H. McGREGOR Honorary President
HOWARD GRAY President
EDWARD B. PORTER Treasurer
JOE S. FLOYD Secretary
FACULTY MEMBERS
J.C. D.Blaine, PhD.
D. D. Carroll, A.M.
J. E. Dykstra, D.C.S.
J. S. Floyd, M.A.
Clarence Heer, PhD.
R. J. M. Hobbs, A.B., L.L.B.
C. S. Logsdon, PhD.
C. H. McGregor, PhD.
J.T. O'NeiLM.B.A.
E. E. Peacock, M.B.A., C.P.A.
G. T. Schwenning, PhD.
R. P. Stovall, M.S.
H. D. Wolf, PhD.
J. B. Woosley, PhD.
STUDENT MEMBERS
E. L. Baity
El. L. Eads
D. E. French
W. H. Fullenwider
L. F. Fuller
E. F. Gaither
Howard Gray
J. E. Hall
R. L. Hines
C. J. Peters
W. H. Petree
E. B. Porter
L. W. Purser
J. M. Simms
F. C. Spuhler
H. C. Stansbury
J. S. Turitt
J. H. Wisebram
T. H.Walden
fj/kkt^^A^Hfi-,
//
1 4» * * ■
*
0 0 0
<y
BILL SHUFORD
Director
Standing — Charles Hilty, Roy Rit-
zel, Bob Coulter. Dan Sullivan, Rol-
and Ciduz, Joe McDaniels, Bob Neil.
Lindsey Striekland. Mark Barker •
Seated — Bob Watson, Phil Coueh,
Dot Cooke, Nancy Tucker. Jack
Burner. Hal Blalock.
Graham
Jam-session at G. M.
The corner of the campus, hut truly the center of ac-
tivity. Under the direction of quiet, unassuming Bill Shu-
ford, the Graham Memorial Student Union has forged
ahead this year, from a limbo of wartime oblivion, to a
point where at present it is the master control board of
nearly every extra-curricular activity on the campus.
More than just a building, Graham Memorial is actually
an increasingly successful experiment in the art of edu-
cation outside the academic realm.
It was opened some fifteen years ago as a memorial to
former University president, Edward Kidder Graham.
Service to students is the watch word of Graham Me-
morial from the Rendezvous, student social center on the
ground floor, through the publications offices, tucked in
many small rooms on the top floor. During the present
year more than 130 recognized campus organizations have
made the student union their meeting headquarters.
Seated: Hilda Lawrence, Marion Evans, Tag
Montague, Audrey Bryson • Standing: Gene
Johnstone, Bill Shuford, Sam Magill, Joe John-
son, Dean Fred Weaver. Mr. K. S. Gate, and
Dr. E. J. Woodhouse.
Page 278
Offices of the four student publications, student government headquarters, and several meeting
rooms and lounges are among the chief features of the physical plant. The large oak-paneled main
lounge has been called the most beautiful room in the South by many alumni.
But students don't see the main tasks of this student union. For nearly fifteen hours a day the
office staff stays busy taking care of every imaginable situation, all in their regular line of duty. Brains
behind the office efficiency is Mrs. Dorothy Cooke, GI wife, and ever-ready office manager.
Special features include a complete photo darkroom, music room and record collection, art shop,
and a travel agency. In addition, many recreational and entertainment features are regularly sponsored
by Graham Memorial.
Supported entirely by a blanket student fee of $1.00 per quarter, the building's policies are direct-
ed by a twelve-man board of directors drawn from the students, faculty, and administration. Members
of the Board this year were: Tag Montague, chairman: J. Maryon Saunders; Dean of Men Fred H.
Weaver: University Escheats Officer Kemp S. Cate; Professor E. J. Woodhouse: Reverend W. S. Po-
teat; Gene Johnstone: Miriam Evans: Hilda Frances Lawrence: Audrey Bryson; Joe Johnson; and
Sam Magill.
memorial Student Union
Kneeling — First Row: Mary Ellen Reaves, Mary Swann. Sarah Blair Pearson, Helen Xanthos • Kneeling
— Second Roiv: Martha Hinkle, Bettie Vashaw, Jane Mears, Peggy McDaniels, Anne Scott Dellinger,
Charlotte Johnstone, Ann Slack • Seated — Doris Harrell, Kathrvn Hovis, !Sina Redditt, Elizabeth Thomas,
Lela Moore Hall, Eloise Jacobi, Thetis Hoffner, Adelia Poindexter, Genevieve Trott • Standing — Lola
Mustard, Joyce Harris, Sara Turlington, Dorothy Johnson. Martha Ann Albritton. Martha Hughes, Susan
Duncan, Margaret Gaston. Virginia Forward.
Carolina Independent
The Carolina Independent Coed Association was organized in 1941
by thirty-four "Stray Greeks" and independent coeds who felt the
need of a coordinating body for non-sorority women. Its purposes
are the promotion of good will and fellowship among all coeds
through sponsorship of social functions, the creation and stimulation
of coed interest in campus affairs, and the provision of organized
support for qualified independent candidates in coed elections.
Since its founding seven years ago. the Carolina Independent Coed
Association has earned a reputation of a democratic group working
for the benefit of all Carolina. This past year the Constitution of the
organization was rewritten to improve the unity and strength of the
group. The new independents were welcomed by entertainment at an
Open House in Graham Memorial at the beginning of the Fall quarter.
Many worthwhile projects were undertaken by the association.
Working with Pan Hellenic Council, the group presented a fashion
SARAH BLAIR PEARSOIN
President
Page 280
nitiatiun services for the C. I. C. A.
Coed Rssociation
show and party during orientation week. These same groups coop-
erated in presenting the May Day pageant. The Carolina Independent
Coed Association plays one of the larger parts in the Sadie Hawkins
Day Festiyities. which has proven to be one of the most popular
events at the 1 niversity. Christmas caroling was a gay mid-season
event. Spring activities included a fashion show and the annual
Spring dance.
Officers this year were: President, Sarah Blair Pearson: Vice-Presi-
dent. Mary Swarm; Secretary. Marv Ellen Reaves: Treasurer. Helen
Xanthos; Social Chairman. Anne Scott Dellinger: Publicity Chair-
man, Jane Mears.
The Executive Council consisted of the above officers and two mem-
bers at large — Elizabeth Thomas and Myrtle Westbrook.
MARV SWANN
V ice-President
Page 281
Spiritual growth and development are the twin goals of YMCA organizations
everywhere. As the University of North Carolina division of this organization, the
local YMCA is primarily concerned with the welfare and interests of Carolina students.
It is its purpose throughout the vear to promote this growth of its members. By
working in the "significant areas" of Christian Heritage, Personal Relations, Social
Responsibility, and World Relations, it attempts to gain these ends.
On this campus, the YMCA sponsors Religion-in-Life week and helps to sponsor
the Institute of Human Relations. It has, during the past year, attempted to promote
the religious life of its members through a program of worship, study, and action.
The YMCA here also works with boys' clubs in the local high school and with
the Freshman Friendship Council.
This year's president was Charlie Foley.
Y
m
c
R
Seated — John Hough. E<1 Strain. Ed Hamilton, Claude Shotls. Bill Powell • Standing-
Coye Rogers. Don Broad. Sam Magill. Charles Foley. Charlie Brill. Pete Burks.
Page 282
Y
W
C
A
Long active at Carolina, the YWCA tries to assist every girl to channel her interests into
some student activity, and to help her develop a variety of experiences into a full personality and
life. Membership in the organization is open to any girl on the campus.
Working in the main through committees, the group serves a variet\ of purposes, including
social services, leadership of discussion groups, and recreational activities.
During this past year, the YWCA sponsored and participated in a number of special proj-
ects. In the fall, cabinet members led the orientation of new girls and held a retreat in Winston-
Salem. Their direction of the World Student Service Fund drive was outstanding, and the com-
munity Christmas program was an important campuswide event.
The February retreat with the YMCA was another major and successful program.
Working throughout the year with church groups, the YWCA sponsored several speakers.
Weekly vesper services were held in the dormitories and sorority houses, and in the spring an
all-campus vesper service was an important event.
The president of the organization this year was Ruth Evans. Vice-President was Emily Von-
Borries: Secretary. Julia Ross: Treasurer. Marshall Spears: and Executive Director, Mrs. Betty
Rose Dowden.
u
Rl Til EVANS
President
Sealed — Gray Simpson, Emily VonBorries, Ruth E%ans. Marshall Spears, Sail* Lee, Suiim
Sunstrom • Standing — Mrs. Betty Rose Dowden, Director, Jo Butler. Jean Ann Ramsdell,
Helen Compton, Emily Ogburn, Merrily Brooks, Liz Hazlett.
Page 283
Dialectic Senate
I Officers for the fall and winter quarters I
President
President Pro-tern
Critic
Clerk
Treasurer
Sergeant-at-A rms
Debate Council Representative
Chaplain
Charles Long
John Zucker
Kirby Sullivan
Gran Childress
Earl Fitzgerald
Mickey McNutt
John Gaskin
Bill Jernigan
William Harding
Noah Edwards
Charles Hodson
Randall McLeod
Anne Wells
CHARLES LONG
President
The Dialectic Senate, the first extra-curricular organization at Carolina and still one of the
most outstanding, has completed its 152nd year of service to the students and to their university,
their state, and their nation. Since its initial meeting on June 3. 1795. the Di has been noted for
the prominent leaders it has sent from its rostrum to campus, state, and national office, includ-
ing noted personalities like James K. Polk. Zebulon Baird Vance. Frank P. Graham. Wiley P.
Mangum, Robert B. House, Archibald Henderson, Thomas Ruffin, William R. Davie, and
Thomas Wolfe.
Through parliamentary procedure and free debate the Di has produced the liberal minds which,
as early pioneer pilots, originated the strong student government for which Carolina is famous,
and since that day have channeled the history of the student body along a liberal course Modeled
after the North Carolina General Assembly Senate in Raleigh, the Di now meets every Wednes-
day night to debate its proposed bills in sessions which are open to any interested students, facul-
ty members, and townspeople. Recent discussions covered the United Nations. World Federation,
disloyalty and un-American affairs investigations, state politics, and further improvements in uni-
versity life. Authoritative speakers are often on hand to answer questions and set the sparks of
argument. Bills pertaining to campus problems which are tested and passed on the Senate floor
are often referred to the student legislature or proper officials for consideration.
This year the Senate has strived to re-stimulate forensic interest on campus and to renovate
the Di Hall in New West. Towards the first objective the Di worked with the Debate Council to
revive intramural debating in Chapel Hill. Secondly, the Senate chamber, which already has
the finest portrait collection in the South, was completely redecorated.
Page 284
Officers for the fall quarter were: Charles 0. Long, President; John Zucker, President Pro-
Tempore; Kirby Sullivan, Critic; Earl Fitzgerald, Clerk; John Gaskin. Treasurer; William
Harding. Sergeant-at-Arms; Gran Childress, Chaplain; Charles Hodson, Representative to De-
hate Council.
Accepting its past as a challenge, the Dialectic Senate in the future will continue to mould
student opinion wisely, to forge a greater number of capable leaders, and to extend the princi-
ples of free thought which have already placed the Dialectic Senate among the most outstand-
ing groups on campus.
MluttM
Firtt K.„, (lop) Mac Cogburn, Russell Baldwin, Harold Darden, John Brock, James Southerland, W.
grew, John Caskin, Earl Fitzgerald. Al Winn • Second Row: Herbert Phillips, Charles Gibson, Charles
Hnrshall Keener, Charles Lambeth, Reynaldo I .-.,. ... Don Latta, Al Lowenstein, Richard Bowcn • Th,
i.. ... Childress, John I'. ...I ....... Osbourn Fields, Tom Eller, John Ehlc, Noah Edwards, John Demero
Wells. Dortch Warrincr • Fourth Row: Kirby Sullivan. Anna Slack, Garland Scruggs, Wally Robinson,
Olsen, Hubert Price, Charles Fields, Dick Owens, Bob Ormand • Fifth Row: Blanton Miller, John M
McNutt, Jo Ann McNutt, Sam Manning. Randall MeLeod. Jerry Weiss. Lincoln Kan. Edic Knight, Cam
J. Petti.
Hodson.
rrf Row:
Page 285
Margaret Goodman; Peler Gerns, Parlia-
menlarian; John Giles, Speaker; Chester
ZimiBrumien, Speaker pro-lem; Jim Mc-
Nider; Charles Cowell; Page Harris.
The Philanthropic Rssembly
Claiming kinship with such illustrious predecessors as
Vice-President William King. General James J. Pettigrew.
Governors Aycock and Craig, and Secretary of the Navy
Josephus Daniels, the members of the Philanthropic
assembly have steered the organization through its 153rd
session on the Carolina campus.
The assembly, popularly known as the Phi, has as its
objectives the formulation of a better understanding on
public speaking, and service as a medium for the exchange
of ideas.
In serving these ends, the Phi has sponsored this year
the appearance on the campus of State Treasurer John-
son, Senator Umstead. the honorable Melville Broughton.
and other leading public figures. Regularly on Tuesday
night they have met and debated the issues of the day.
and have attempted to take a positive stand on all of the
issues discussed.
The officers this year were: Speaker. John Giles. Speak-
er Pro-tern. Chester ZumBrunnen; and Parliamentarian.
Peter Gerns.
First Row: Chester ZumBrunnen, Jim MeNider, John Giles, Margaret Goodman. Peter Gerns, Charles Cowell. Page Harris
• Second Row: Frank Teague. George Rodman. G. Woblata. Emilv Baker. M. Cantrell, Elaine Patton. Mae Belle Enman.
Earnest House, Wimp Erwin, Phillip Morris. Dave Sharpe • Third Row: Jim Stalling*, Bill Duncan. Jim Patton. Brvan
Griswold. Charles Britt. Lester Sneed, S. C. Jones, Herman Seiber. Jack Lashlev, M. Starkev, Bob Coulter. J. Brown. M. B.
Sherwood, Ruth Bradley. Frank Giraffe.
JMLJAri
Debate Counci
The Debate Council is the coordinating agency of all the forensic
activities on the campus. Composed of six students and two faculty men.
it concerns itself with the administration of Carolina's intercollegiate de-
hate program. It determines the policy of and governs the debate squad,
membership in which is open to every University student.
The Tar Heel speakers regularly participate in the Atlantic. Dixie,
Grand Eastern, and Grand National Speech and Debate Tournaments
and engage in numerous exchange intercollegiate debates.
The Council feels that its contribution to the University has been
particularly significant, for students have been given the opportunity to
study together current problems.
Members of the Debate Council were: E. Maurice Braswell. President:
Earl Fitzgerald. Vice-President: James Tavlor. Secretarv-Tieasurer;
Peter H. Gerns. Charles Hodson. Blanton Miller. Dr. G. A. Barrett, and
Dr. C. C. Carter.
MAURICE BRASWELL
Earl Fitzgerald, Charles Hodson. Blanton Miller. Jim Tavlor. Pete Gerns
Page 287
The Collegiate Council for the United Nations was or-
ganized at the second Annual Institute of the United Nations
in New York. June. 1947. It is sponsored by the American
Association for the I nited Nations, and is designed to stimu-
late interest in this organization.
The I niversity of North Carolina was chosen as the states
headquarters and the Carolina delegate to the Institute.
Lincoln Kan. was appointed State Director. On June 9, the
first meeting of the newly founded CCUN was held in Chapel
Hill with Hugh J. Mitchell, legal advisor, as guest speaker.
From October 1 to 3 the Carolina Council held a Salute
to the I nited Nations Conference with delegates from eight
North Carolina colleges in attendance. At this conference the
Randall McLeod Roberta Stirling John Van Heckc
George Drew Herbert Alexander
The Collegiate Counci
Sprited — Lincoln Kan. Mae Belle I-. 11111:111. Benedirta Santos. Jo Ann MoINutl. Roberta Stirl-
ing, Martha Manning, Patsy McINutt, Edith Knight • Standing — First Rote: Herbert
Alexander, Jack White, Dick Murphy. Joe Johnson, John Van Hecke. Bill Buchan. John
Sevier, Randall McLeod • Standing — Second Rotv: Charles MacRae, George Drew, Bill
Cromwell. Don Latta. Art Melton. Robinson McCune. Richard Jordan. Fred Bates. Bob
Rolnick.
guest speakers were: the Yugoslavian Ambassador, Sava N. Kasanovic; British Minister. Sir John
Magowan: Minister Alfred Stirling from Australia: the Syrian Charge D' Affairs, George Tomeh;
and Counsellor John Reid of the New Zealand Legation.
The Carolina Council, under the leadership of Roberta Stirling. State Secretary-General, worked
in its capacity as a service group by securing films, speakers, and information for established campus
organizations, and producing programs of its own.
Meanwhile. State Headquarters, with the cooperation of the Carolina chapter, was working toward
its main goal — the organization of a CCUN chapter on every campus in the state. TwenU colleges have
expressed an interest in this organization thus far.
It is this group's hope that through the efforts of the CCl N. the people in North Carolina will re-
alize that the United Nations is important as an instrument of world peace, and will support it to the
fullest extent.
or the United nations
Lincoln Kan Roberta Stirling Robinson McCune
Charles MaoRae
4ft i'Ji
Fred Rates John Davidson Rill Ruchan
Page 289
International Relations Club
Delegates to the International Relations Club regional conference held at the University
of North Carolina in February, 1948. Delegates came from colleges and universities in
Virginia, Tennessee, and North Carolina.
Believing that the greatest need in world politics today is a clear understanding
of the problems which obstruct peace and the factors which cause war. the Inter-
national Relations Club has endeavored to bring an unbiased view of current history
to the University of North Carolina campus.
In lively weekly discussions, in faculty forums, and through speeches by noted
international experts, the IRC has served its campus and community well.
Plausible and constructive solutions to international problems have been offered
whenever possible. The furthering of better relations betwsen nations has been en-
couraged by the IRC.
This year the club played host to the annual conference of IRC delegates from
Virginia. Tennessee, and North Carolina. This conference proved highly successful,
as did the entire IRC year.
Officers were: President. Bill Patterson: Vice-President. Ed Hecht: Secretary. Bob
Rolnik: and Treasurer. Fred Bates.
BILL PATTERSON
President
Page 290
Carolina Political Union
The Carolina Political Lnion is a non-partisan organization, formed on the campus in 1936. controlled and operated
by the student members of the I niversity. Its purpose is to study intelligently the processes of government, an essential
element in any well-working democracy, and to discuss and gain a better understanding of important political and eco-
nomic problems of the day.
The group stepped toward gaining this understanding by bringing to the campus outstanding representatives of all
sides of pertinent political issues and arranging for students to talk with these visiting notables, by conducting campus
polls, and by organizing panel discussions among students.
In addition to conducting these discussions on current political interests, the Carolina Political Union has brought
to die campus each Sunday night through several years such outstanding speakers as President Franklin D. Roosevelt:
President Harry A. Truman: Secretary of the Navy. Frank Knox: Postmaster-General. James Farlev: Congressman,
Joseph Martin: Socialist Presidential Candidate, Norman Thomas: Senator Robert A. Taft: and many others.
Seated — Dr. Howard K.
Beale. Dr. W. C. Rvan.
Bill Kemp. Dr. E. J.
Woodhouse, Mr. E. B.
Jeffries • Standing —
First Row: Ken Cruse,
Mary Sledge, Pete
Gems, Warren Wicker,
Dick Simpson, John
Sevier, Russell Baldwin.
Joe Allen • Standing —
Second Row: Jim South-
erland, Bob Watson.
Herbert Alexander. Ben
Perlmutter, Bill Robin-
son.
?
The officers of the organization this vear were: William P.
Kemp. President: Warren J. Wicker. Vice-President: Peter
H. Gerns. Secretary : and William F. Patterson. Treasurer.
Dick Simpson
Page 291
ITIen's Glee Club
University Day in October marked the beginning of another season for the
one-hundred-sixty voice Men's Glee Club. Then on December 5th and 7th, in
combination with the Women's Glee Club, the organization presented the ever
popular Carolina Christmas concert.
After touring several of the state's cities, the club climaxed its season with
the annual spring concert. Appearing under the direction of veteran Paul Young,
the men received high praise on each of their outings and the season at the finish
had become not "another" one but "the one.
Its officers this year were: President. Richard Cox: Vice-President. William
Fitzgerald: Secretary. Joseph Albertson: Business Manager. James Davis; and
Publicity. James Castleberry.
RICHARD COX
President
The University of North Carolina Men's Glee Club
aw S^^M
*8 8QK
««388 mm
bqs s»i<
bbb eaeses
BB?'i 23BB
B9B
BOB
:8 SS8>3
a-.
L< c-7 '■
»•. ."Wi ^ iRJ
Page 292
Women's Glee Club
One of the younger organizations of the Carolina campus. The Women's
Glee Club has added another successful year to the growing luster of their short
history.
Their first outing this year was in combination with The Men's Glee Club
at the Convocation on F niversity Day. Following this, the organization, which is
composed of more than one hundred girls, was a prominent part of the annual
Christmas concert.
Returning to school after the Christmas vacation, the girls carried on with a
number of special broadcasts as they worked towards the twin events of the
spring which are the highlights of the groups year.
These occasions are their tour of many of the cities and towns of the state
and their climatic spring concert. Both were fine successes and furnished a suit-
able finish to a good year.
The officers were: Jo Fishel. President; Gray Simpson. Vice-Pesident;
Mary Swarm. Secretary; Feme Hughes. Business Manager: and Doris Newburn.
Publicity Chairman.
The University of North Carolina Women's Glee Cluh
r®B®
i -®®®
i >K<®
'JBvjmx 'AS?
irjs&rj/p rjB?
®®8 ®®®
®®m ®®®
®®® ®88
®®S
®H® 80S
mmm ®8®
88®
®®*f
^ M m »
Page 293
Sound
Curtain call .
and Fury
KEN GAMMAGE
President
Sound and Fury laughed its way through
another round of gala shows this past year to
add new brilliance to its already shining repu-
tation as a producer of slightly hilarious mus-
ical comedies.
With the advent of the traditional Fresh-
man Night show, which featured a number of
stellar performances united into a small re-
view, the hard-working group got off to a
(lying start, and immediately began work upon
the first big show of the year. GIN LANE, an
original musical melodrama by Pete Strader
and Ken Gammage. Under the leadership of
Douglas Gardner as President, and with Stra-
der acting in the multiple capacities of Di-
rector, Scenic Designer. Costume Designer,
and actor, the group was ably assisted by
Frank Matthews as Music Director. Forrest
Covington as Choral Director, and Howard
Meyers as Orchestra Conductor. GIN LANE
proved to be a howling success from the stand-
point of achievement as well as that of pro-
viding a good time for all concerned.
Gammage succeeded Gardner as President,
and plans were laid for the second show, held
in the spring quarter, which proved to be even
more successful than the first. Sound and Fury
looks forward with anticipation to bigger and
better productions next year.
A perfect shot
The "Blip"' skit
"Sheik of Araln
Page 294
Eleanor Ringer as Saint Joan.
Carolina
Playmakers
The Playmakers dedicated this past year,
and their thirtieth anniversary, to the classics.
Opening with the Forest Theatre streamlined
production of MACBETH, in the spring of
1947. they continued in the fall with George
Bernard Shaw"s SAINT JOAN; a new Ameri-
can translation of Henrik Ibsen's AN ENEMY
OF THE PEOPLE by two of the Carolina
staff. Kai Jurgensen and Robert Schenkkan;
Gilbert and Sullivan's THE MIKADO; and
Thomas Dekker's THE SHOWMAKER'S
HOLIDAY.
Since the masterful hand of Frederick Koch
placed the Carolina Playmakers foremost
among college theatres of America, the Chapel
Hill group has met the original challenge this
year as always before by offering to the stu-
dents a first-rate bill of dramatic entertain-
ment.
Macbeth''
A seene froni a Playmaker production.
EfTIPIRE
Board of
Directors
President
JAMES E. WELCH,
Catholic University
of America
(not pictured)
Busin
Director
WILLIAM R. COULTER
University of North
Carolina
Women's
Director
ALICE M. INGRAM,
Woman's College of
U. N. C.
Production fTlemos
"Alice Goes Awandering" — 1944
EMPIRE'S first motion picture was filmed in
full color as a picturesque travelogue of our
nation's capital, Washington, D. C. based upon
the- quaint fairy tale of "Alice in Wonderland".
^
"The Call of Carolina" — 1945
Moving to the college community of Chapel Hill.
EMPIRE felt the pulse of its life, and attempted to
capture the hustle of activity and the sense of honor
which make up the traditional "Carolina Spirit".
"The Memoirs of a G. M.
Assistant" — 1946
Swinging into full force as a campus organi-
zation. EMPIRE made this movie for the Graham
Memorial Board of Directors, depicting the func-
tion of a Student Union on the college campus.
^^i-AV^
"Carolina In Color" — 1947
In tlii~ second color film, the company tried to
visualize the natural heauty of the University and the
Chapel Hill community as seen through the eyes of
an artist.
Page 296
FERTURES
A History with a Purpose
From a dream of childhood of two high school students, EMPIRE
FEATURES has grown into a reality- Its motivating influence was
first felt beyond the campus limits. Then, impressed by the natural
friendliness and the atmosphere of history and tradition which have
made the University great, the company sought to preserve that spirit
on celluloid as a cross-section of campus life lifted out of the pages of
time.
During the past four years. EMPIRE FEATURES has become
integrated into the host of campus organizations, seeking to record
pictorially the progress and the purposes of them all. It has been the
sincere desire of the company to do its bit toward fostering the
modern medium of motion pictures, which the University can and will
apply to the continuation of its progressive spirit. We hope that in
some way this effort has been of service to Alma Mater.
In grateful appreciation of the services and cooperation rendered
tow aid our purpose. EMPIRE FEATURES has nominated the per-
sons designated at the right in its Honor Roll of Campus Affiliates.
HONOR
ROLL of
CAMPUS
AFFILIATES
Robert H. Morrison
'46
William T. Crisp
'46
William R. Mckenzie
'45
Charles F. Vance
'46
Douglass Hunt
'45
J. Patrick Kelly
'47
Gene H. Johnstone
'47
Richard G. Stern
'47
Berlette Capt
'46
Edward F. Emack
'46
Frederick J. Flagler
.'47
Lib Schofield
'46
Sybil Goerch Powe
.'47
Gloria Chapman
'46
Clyde M. Stallings
'47
Paul S. Baynard
Robert S. Parham
Martha Rice
Dave Owens
John Lawler
A. B. Coleman
Betty Warren Jones
Professional Men
Edward J. Woodhouse
Paul Young
Charles F. Milner
A Scene from "The Memoirs of a G. M. Assistant'". Inserts show Dave Owens, featured
player, Martha Riee, G. M. Director 1945-1947.
Page 297
Homecoming
"For the University", the motto of the Uni-
versity Club, is self-explanatory of the purpose
of this representative body. Composed of a
junior class representative from each of the
men's dormitories and fraternities and a
senior class representative from each of the
women's dorms and sororities, the club has
functioned efficientlv this past vear under the
leadership of Chuck Voigt. in fostering school
spirit and sponsoring pep rallies.
Along with its other activities the club spon-
sored a display contest during the Homecom-
ing week-end for the North Carolina State
football game and awarded cups to the Kappa
Sigma fraternity and Old East dormitory for
the most original exhibits.
In order to improve intra-school relation-
ships the University Club sponsored a "Hey
How You" day. This is an annual affair when
every student on campus calls a hearty "hey,
how you" to every other student he meets on
the gravel walks.
All in all the I Diversity Club did a com-
mendable job in moulding the old "Carolina
Spirit". Officers this year were: President.
Chuck Voigt; Vice-President. Emile Saleebv:
and Secretarv-Treasurer. Martin Carmichael.
(Ill CK VOIGT
President
Page 298
THE UniVERSITY CLUB
Kneeling — Marly Carmichael, Chuck Voigt. Emile Saleeby • Seated — Lib Cox, Barbara Ray, Mae Belle
Eiiman, Gerry Carpenter, Elizabeth Eaddy, Jane Morrison, Mareia Black • Standing — Henry Reynolds,
Pete Gerns, Bill Hedricks, Dover Moore. Lee Gilliam. Dick Fleming, John Cramer, Joe Pete Ward •
Standing — Back: Dixie Greene. Myles Haynes, Joe Johnson. John McPhaul. Bob Johnson. Bob Goldwater,
Bob Ormand, Doe Scruggs, Bill Williams. Bob Plumb. Joe Basnight. Ed Brenegar. Mack Hagaman. John
Posser. Bob Lee. Hugh Efird.
Elected officers of the Band : Frank West,
President; Robert Prunty, Vice-President;
Bviiimi Weathers, Secretary-Treasurer.
THE
I
f H;»* ****
-- . m
ft&e
9t^T^ L - .-_*«_.
Page 300
UniVERSITY BRflD
The University Band was organized to give the students a chance to participate in a march-
ing musical organization, and to provide the campus with good hand music.
During the fall the main project of the band was playing and marching at the football games.
The band also led the torchlight parades and informal pep rallies before the games. This year
they have received much praise for their original and outstanding programs.
The Director of the Band is professor Earl Slocum and the Assistant Director is Hubert Hen-
derson. Other officers were: Frank West, President: Bob Prunty. Vice-President: Bynum Weath-
ers. Secretary-Treasurer; David Arner, Business Manager; Gene Stryker. Publicity Manager;
Norman Clark. Librarian: Kenneth Stroup, Assistant Librarian: Harold Andrews. Editor of
Band Notes.
"y
The U. N. C. Varsitv Band performing between hahe** at a football game.
*j«i -
,? :
•,
Jh
%
^ ^ ^^^^^9^ ^^^
^r******
*" -**.
M'fP
._j*n
BUD REAGAN
President
GORDON BULLOCK
Vice-President
MERRILY BROOKS
Secretary
DICK JOHNSON
Treasurer
Western north Carolina Club
The aim of the Western North Carolina Club is to take an active part in varied campus affairs,
and in doing so. bring together those students from the western part of the state.
Every year the club participates in many of the outstanding activities on the campus. This year
they sponsored Sadie Hawkins Day which is one of Carolina's traditional annual events. They partici-
pated in the many drives and social functions on the campus. The club has social activities of its own
which include square dances, vacation dances in Asheville, and other forms of entertainment that are
of interest to all its members.
The Western North Carolina Club grew considerably- this year, and through its large membership
was able to do a great deal in promoting the main campus events.
The square dance team, a main attraction for Carolina, has proved to be very successful. It has
helped to teach the art to high school students and to other groups in and around Chapel Hill.
Officers this year were: President. Bud Reagan: Vice-President. Gordon Bullock: Secretary.
Merrily Brooks: and Treasurer. Dick Johnson.
Page 302
First Row: Eugene Ryan, Mae Belle Ennian, Katharine Durham. Jack Stanton. Mildred
Koon, Bob Elliott, Carolyn Bishop, Henry Phelps, Cove Rogers, Audrey Bryson • Second
Rote: Chuck Morrell. Drew Colvard, Herman Caiman, Art Melton, John Brady, Ralph D.
Morris, Henry Irvin, Bill Harrison. J. T. Nance. Robert Hawkins. Johnny Orr.
First Row: Bud Reagan, Merrily Brooks, Marjorie Taylor, Monk Pegram, James Teague,
Julia Greenwood, Nathan Boone, Pauline Alexander, Martha Bureh, Ruth Bradley.
Margaret Graham • Second Row: Bill Sills. Sam Wright, Steve Uzzell, Nelson Powell.
Cannall Melton. Ragland Medicus, Bob White. Arnold Wilson, Harold Cummings. Charles
G. Clapp, James Echerd, Otis Ray Davis.
Page 303
Seated — Basil Sherrell, Margie Cameron. Jim McAllister, Caroline Warren, Rev. Bob
Nelson • Standing — Boh Dulin. J. D. Fonst. Jim Brorkman. Marvin Horton. Wilbur
McFarland.
The UUesley Foundation
The Sunday night suppers, the picnics, the group singing, the plays,
baseball games, and square dances were just a few of the many activities of
the Wesley Foundation of the Chapel Hill Methodist Church this year.
This organization, which includes all denominations and faiths in its
membership, has as its aims the training of students in ethical and social
standards; the improvement of personality limitations through group rec-
reation: and. especially, the development of a spiritual inspiration which
may help guide the students in life.
In addition to editing a paper, the Wesley Worker, and holding panel
discussions and receptions, the group took an overnight bicycle hike to
Hillsboro. This annual affair proved very successful.
Officers this year were: President. Jim McAllister: Vice-President. Bob
Allen: Secretary. Caroline Warren: Treasurer. Basil Sherrell: and Editor
of Wesley Worker. Bob Dulin.
A foursome of Wesley members.
Page 304
Seated — Don Broad, Katherine McLean, Vivian Parks, Mildred Gulley, Cove Rogers •
Standing — Rev. J. C. Herrin, Helen Xanthos, Helen Phillips, Ed Strain, Anne Carlton,
Bill Kochnline, Frances Greene, Rinian Muth, Gertrude Osborne, John Hough.
Baptist Student Union
VIVIAN PARKS
President
Serving two thousand Baptist students on the campus, the Baptist Student
Union promotes many activities designed to encourage Christian education
and spiritual growth. The program includes morning worship in the church,
four Church School classes, Friday night forums, and Sunday evening
vespers.
The Baptist Student Union Council meets every Friday night to deter-
mine policies and plan programs.
A monthly newspaper, The Christian Student, is published, and a weekly
news sheet is sent to every member to keep up interest in the organization.
Through the Council on Religion in Life, the Baptist Student Union co-
operates with other religious groups on the Carolina campus.
Vivian Parks served as President this year.
Page 305
Seated — Paul Furgatch, Rita Loeb, Leila Josephs, Mrs. Lillian Rosenberg, Advisor; Joan
Srhlosburg, Bert Grossman • Standing — Gabby Cohen, Dick Mottsman, Bemie Kemp,
Ben Perlmutter, Jerry Weiss, Alan Edleman, Ira Antin.
Hillel Foundation
Hillel Foundation is a student organization formed under the sponsor-
ship of B'nai B'rith. national Jewish fraternal organization. It has as its
goal the stimulation of interest among Jewish students in the religious,
cultural, and social ideals of their people. With Dr. A. L. Sacher as its
national director, Hillel is a supplement to university life and extra-cur-
ricular activity. It is meant neither to segregate nor separate.
Within the organization there are a variety of student groups planned to
carry out some particular function of Jewish student life. Social. Religious.
Interfaith. and Cultural are a few of the titles under which the activities fall.
The Carolina Hillel was headed this year hy Paul L. Furgatch, President,
and Mrs. Lillian Rosenberg, Counselor.
PAUL FURGATCH
President
Page 306
Kneeling — Saul Monsour. John Sevier. Harry Tsumas. Walter Johnson. Dick Belger,
Don Monroe • Seated — Marie Jansen, Ruth McCann, Helen McCann, Genevieve Trott,
Paul Baschom, Rev. Francis J. Murphy, Mary Jo Parrish. Lucy Evans, Mary Ann McKee
• Standing — Dan McLaughlin, Albert Shaw, Jimmy Brown. Neil Patrick, Andy Lavin, Al
Rodman, Frances Strong, Jim Grinn, Joe Donaldson, Joe Rinaldi, Ernie Rabil.
Rquinas Club
An organization of Catholic culture and fellowship, the Aquinas Club
was formed to bring closer together the students of Catholic faith on the
Carolina campus.
During this past year, its members have held regular discussions on the
fundamental doctrines and modern precepts of the Church in weekly dis-
cussions designed to enrich the spiritual life of the Catholic students.
Through the spiritual and social fellowship of these discussion groups
and such functions as Communion breakfasts, and with the helpful guidance
of Father Morrisey, each of the members has been more successful in meet-
ing the religious problems of life on a college campus.
Officers this year were: President. Paul Baschom. Jr.; Vice-President,
Lucy Evans; Secretary. Mary Jo Parrish; and Treasurer, Don Vincent.
PALL BASCHOM
President
Page 307
AfNi O
Kneeling — Sarah Duncan, Helen Morrow, Betsy Ann Barbee, Mary Elizabeth Pell. Jean
Basnight, Mary Mac Kear, Belly Vashaw • Seated — Charlotte Dutrow. Elise Rhine,
Nancy Shields, Effie Westervelt, Betsy Green, Jean Cashion, Charlotte Rosenberg o Stead-
ing— Carolyn Guthrie, Esther Williams, Bill Lloyd, Carolyn Warren, Mary Bright Jernigan,
Jane Rogers, Wilma Anderson.
Town Girls Rssociation
Since its organization several years ago. the Town Girls Association has
come to form an important part of coed activities at Carolina.
The Town Girls Association endeavors to help girls who live in Chapel
Hill to become acquainted with campus life, and interested in campus af-
fairs and extra-curricular activities. It provides organized support for
Chapel Hill girls qualified for candidacyship in coed elections, and supports
athletic teams in intramural events.
Several social events highlighted Town Girls Association's program this
year. They included the Orientation Week coke party, the fall picnic for
new U. N. C. town girls 1 Christmas dance, a spring picnic, and a tra-
ditional tea for the girls of the Chapel Hill High School graduating class.
The organization also sponsored a monthly supper forum meeting which
proved highly successful and populai.
The officers this year were: President, Betsy Anne Barbee; Vice-Presi-
dent, Liz Hazlett; Secretary, Jeanne Basnight; and Treasurer, Betty
Vashaw.
Betsy Ann Barbee
President
Page 308
The University Veterans Committee for 1946-47: Jim Dean, Vice-President; Pat Don-
nelly, Secretary; John Clampitt, Treasurer; Hugh Wells, President; Chuck Hilty, Chair-
man of Board of Governors.
University Veteran's Rssociation
The University Veteran's Association represents a different group from
other campus organizations. The men and women are former service per-
sonnel. The University Veteran's Association has united them so that
through their collective efforts they may be better enabled to pursue their
common goal of education.
This year the Association has taken an active part in establishing a stu-
dent cooperative store. In business sessions investigations of housing and
food prices were discussed, definite stands on Veteran's legislation were
taken and these opinions sent to Congress.
A special activity of the Veteran's Association has been the maintenance
of the popular Vet's Club. Here veterans and their dates have found re-
laxation and entertainment all during the school year.
With a total membership of around thirteen hundred, the Veteran's
Association has become one of the major organizations on the Carolina
campus.
Johnny Clampitt was this year's President.
JOHN CLAMPITT
Prpsiilfitt
Page 309
Seated — Askley Branch. Margaret Jean Taylor, Walter Arnold, Vice-Chairman; Jess
Dedmond, Don Hames, Secretary ; Coline Smith, Ralph Sherrill • Standing — Tom Lock-
hart, Bill McCall, Joe McDaniel, Monroe Landreth, Lewis Bartler, Jim Vogler, Ben Kistler,
Bud Rhinehart.
The Campus Party
Organized in March, 1947, by a group of students headed by Johnny
Jones and Chuck Heath, the Campus Party was originally made up of
people who believed that there was a need for a third political party on the
Carolina campus.
Its members were united by the one objective of making student govern-
ment more representative. Only its members may vote in nomination meet-
ings, assuring that the will of the real membership of the party will be re-
flected in any nominee selection.
Its foremost objective, in addition to the one already mentioned, is to
secure a more efficient student government. It is always ready to support
any issue or any man who will advance these aims.
During the 1947 spring election, the party sponsored a review in
Memorial Hall, and afterwards elected four members to the student legis-
lature.
The members of the C. P. held and continue to hold hopes and plans for
the continuing improvement in student government.
Jess Dedmond capably served as chairman this year.
JESS DEDMOND
Chairman
Page 3/0
Kneeling — First Row: Wally Robinson, Thurmond Williams, Charlie Loudermilk, Annie
Ben Beale, Len Butts • Kneeling — Second Row: Buddy Simpson, Ed Davenport, Sue
Everett, Fran Angus, Carey Dobbs, Toots Hanna, Ted Fussell • Standing — Pete Beaudry,
Tag Montague, Norman Ripps, Bill Miller, Paul Fitzgerald, Liz Legget, Chuck Hauser,
John Webb, Mac Hagaman.
The University Party
Founded late in the roaring twenties, the University Party has endeavor-
ed to strengthen student government on the Carolina campus through its
policy of consistent selection of superior candidates.
Having over this span of time proved that it is a party that can do the
job. the party and its members continued throughout 1947 to hold to this
basic principle. The only party on the campus whose meetings cannot be
"packed", the group's steering committee is composed of one voting repre-
sentative from each of its member organizations.
Any student group of twenty-five or more members can qualify as an
organization and obtain a vote on this committee which elects a chairman
and publicity manager and nominates all candidates.
Chairman this year was Miles J. Smith of Salisbury; and the publicity
manager was Herbert Nachman; Vice-President was Ernest House; Secre-
tary, Ben Beale; and Treasurer, Norman Ripps.
MILES SMITH
Chairman
Page 3)1
Kneeling — Bill Robertson, Pete Gems, Bill Jernigan. Charles Howe, Bruce Sanborn, John
Van Hecke, Randy MeLeod, Earl Hartsell • Seated — Bill Mackie, Harold Darden, Tom
Eller, Martha Aiken, Chick Slack, Jo Farris, Carter Taylor, Ruth Manning, Gloria Peters,
Jack DeVore • Standing — Bill Swaim, John Brockman, Fred Thompson, George Drew,
John Zucker, Herbert Alexander. Gill Burnet". Cam West. Gran Childress, Wilbur
McFarland. Jack Park, D. F. Blackwell.
The Student Party
The Student Party on the campus was organized in the spring of
1946. and has been controlled by a group of people who believe
that campus politics are in need of the introduction of a "big
stick".
Since its inception, the party has attempted to select its ticket
exclusively on the basis of "capability". Its success in the 1947
spring elections was the culmination of a year's drive to organize
all campus factions and give voice to the largest number of voters
possible.
The Student Party prides itself in being the only party in which
every Carolina student is accorded the privilege of attending all
meetings, speaking on all policies, and voting on all issues.
Under the leadership of Charlie Long, the party has striven to
assure its voters that their officers are "on the job" improving
student government.
CHARLES LONG
President
Page 3/2
The Wilmington-Carolina Club
Hailing from Wilmington, a group of industrious students this year decided
to form into an organized club to promote a spirit of fellowship and good will,
to familiarize themselves with their fellow Wilmingtonians, and to create a bond
of friendship to benefit their college days and after-college years. Thus the Wil-
mington-Carolina Club was created.
These students also have had as their aims, during their initial year, group
social functions, spiritual growth for the club, and the promotion of a closer and
more active union between the Carolina alumni of Wilmington and the campus
organization.
Serving as officers this vear were: Marion Woodbury, President; Fields
Clark. Vice-President: George Daughtry. Secretary; Eloise Jacobi, Treasurer;
and Dan McClain. Social Chairman.
MARION WOODBl RY
President
: Marion Woodbury. W illiam Mead. John Otterbourg. Maurice Merrill. Robert Whitaker. Fred Sternbcrger. .
nlhos. Ebe Godwin. Charles Harrington • Second Rote: Robert Bow den. Fields Clark, Joe James. Diek Ha
James Stokclr. Eleanor Highsmith, Dan McClain, Leland Joi
-■ Rockwell Poisson. Carl Mathis. Eloise Jacobi, John Tsante
Andrew Andrew. Robert Bell. George Dauuhtry.
Page 3/3
The Carolina Conservative Club
A new organization brought to the Carolina campus in Au-
gust. 1946, the Conservative Club was formed to combat the
"radicals" of the University of North Carolina and to represent
the Right in Chapel Hill.
Their purposes include the support of Churchillian thinking
and the retention of England as a great world power. They also
champion a two party system for the South which they claim
will eradicate the "near-stagnation" of Southern progress, racial
equality through a slow, reasonable process, and the role played
in American affairs by the business man.
Officers this year were: John York, President; Paul Mullinax.
Vice-President; Charlie Kauffman. Secretary; and James Crad-
dock, Treasurer.
JOHN YORK
President
Seated — Banks Taller, Second Vice-President; Paul E. Mullinax, First Vice-President;
Charles C. Kauffman, Jr., Secretary • Standing — John C. York, President; James
Craddock, Treasurer • Not Pictured — Paul Harrill, Meek Carpenter, Herbert Mc-
Keithan, Miles Smith, Reginald Rawls, Richard Caudle, Howard Yandle.
Page 314
Freshman Friendship Counci
An important branch of the University of North Caro-
lina Y. M. C. A. is the Freshman Friendship Council, ac-
tive on the campus for over twenty years. Having as its
purpose the guidance of entering freshmen, the Council
meets weekly to plan special programs for the entire year.
This year a conference was held before the opening of
school for entering freshmen. The conference was in
Winston-Salem and was a two-day affair at which over
fifty people were present. Also highlighting this year
were the two exchange dances with Woman's College in
Greensboro.
The Council not only advises freshmen at Carolina, but
each year they visit high schools in the surrounding vicin-
ity to talk to all boys interested in entering the University.
The work of the Friendship Council is very important
to the entering students. It gives them the advice and di-
rection necessary, and orientates them to the Carolina
way of college Jife.
PEGGY JERGENSON
Secretary
MARY ELAM
Assistant Secretary
CLAUDE C. SHOTTS
Executive Director of the Y. M. C. A.
Seated — John Brockman, Claude C. Shotts, Director; Fred Thompson, Ed Hamilton, Edwin Robbins, Jimmy Rutherford
• Standing — Wilson Yarborough, John Burwell, Bob Holmes, Jack Brown, Bill Hedrick, V. L. Jones.
¥
■
£H
GENE JOHNSTONE
Chairman
Publications Union Board
The Publications Union Board was established to act as a go-between for the
printers, contractors, and engravers and the four student publications, The Daily
Tar Heel. The Yackety Yack, Carolina Mag, and Tarnation.
The Board makes and approves an annual budget for each publication; thus
an orderly financial condition in the businesses is assured.
Another task is the approving of various staff appointments upon recom-
mendations of the respective editors-in-chief.
This past year the Board approved several new contracts, notably one pro-
viding a large printing set-up for The Daily Tar Heel, the University of North
Sealed: Julia Ross. Gene Johnstone. J. M. Lear. Faculty Advisor •
Standing: Dr. William A. Olsen, Faculty Member, Ed Joyner, Dr. Lyman
Cotten, Faculty Member, Bill Carmichael.
Carolina newspaper. It also instigated the buying of a
station wagon for the paper, therefore overcoming
many circulation difficulties.
The Publications Union Board does not exert edi-
torial control over any of the four publications. It acts
basically as an advisory board.
Faculty members are professors William Olsen and
Lyman Cotten. Dr. J. M. Lear serves as advisor.
The officers for this year were: Gene Johnstone.
President; Julia Ross, Secretary; Ed Joyner, Treas-
urer; and Billy Carmichael. Coordinator.
Carolina Mag
Yackelv Yack
Page 3/9
The Board of Editors: RUTH EVANS, GEINE JOHNSTONE, HAROLD BURSLEY
BILL DUNCAN
Coordinator
"Have you ever worked on a yearbook before?"
we asked the applicants in September. And we took
down their answers and filled out their cards and
told them we'd call later.
But we didn't tell them just how soon we'd call,
or that we had worked on a yearbook before, and we
knew what it was like, and maybe we are writing this
now as a labor of conscience.
And maybe we didn't tell them because we knew
what working on a yearbook could be like and how
could we tell them about the reward that just look-
ing at your work can be?
But it conies after you have put a year of your life
into it — and we have put a year of ours into it and
know that just glancing through this brown and
gold book makes it worth all of it.
It's been a hard year — full of postponements, full
of deadlines that weren't met and deadlines that
were, and great plans that never came off and some
that did, and people that cooperated and some that
didn't. We worked on it and sometimes it didn't
seem worth it.
We overcut all our afternoon classes; then we cut
them again, and we almost didn't pass fall quarter.
The work ran behind and tempers ran short and
paper ran out. And then it all happened over again.
There was the day that the package — but perhaps
that's better forgotten. Anyway, eight month*, and
240 days, and 5900 hours, and two quarters, and forty
reams of paper, and 9270 packs of cigarettes went —
and the staff wilted and revived and wilted again.
And we finally watched them set the last word of
the last sentence of the last page and the presses
started to hum. ^nd we probably can't express it to
you and maybe we don't understand it ourselves.
Because it's been a tough year and material has
been short and talent is hard to find and money
doesn't grow on trees and all that.
But it's been fun and experience and friendships
and good, honest work. And it's a pretty good
Yackety Yack — or anyway, we hope you like it.
HARRIET SIPPLE
Organizations Editor
LES BODDEN
Photographic Editor
DICK GORDON
Business Manager
Class and
Fraternity Editors
Gene Blake
Jean Stoutenburg
Margaret Gaston
Jovce Jones
Ed Pate
Cattie Holt
GENE JOHNSTONE
RUTH E\ VNS
HAROLD BURSLEY Board of Editors
GENE BLAKE Senior Editor
Dan McClain. Joyce Jones. Elaine Patton.
Sadie Pearson. Tookie Hodgson.
JEAN STOUTENBURG Junior Editor
Bill Brown. Jim Johnson. Helen Phillips. Elinor Woltz.
Jean McKeithen. Stella Lassiter. Alberta Mercer.
MARGARET GASTON Sophomore Editor
\T arren James. Charlie Gibson. Bert Kaplan. Wallace Kirby.
JOVCE JONES Freshman Editor
Hamp Davis. Charlie Pratt. Alice Sharp. Hilda Sharkey.
BARBARA STOCKTON Professional School Editor
Rachael Taylor, Dover Ward. Myra Tula Carter.
Man Glen Slater.
HARRIET SIPPLE Organizations Editor
Emily Ogburn. Margaret Anne Wells. Heath Hartsell.
Faith Adams. John Stump, Alice Sharp.
ED PATE Fraternity Editor
English DesChamps. Hal Chaplin. Bill Steele.
CATHY HOLT Sorority Editor
Pat Lane. Kitty Miller. Annie Ben Beale.
MAY BELLE ENMAN Honorary Editor
J. B. O'Neal. Marshall Roberts. Van McClellan. Barbara Dalton.
BILLY CARMICHAEL and MORTY SCHAAP Sports Editors
Jack Girard. George Grizzard. Bob Goldwater.
LIL HOTARD Dance and Beauty Editor
Ida Constable. Martha Rainsford. Carolyn Gaither.
DICK GORDON Business Manager
Sid Mr Aden, Dave Evans, Charmian Griffith, Molly Blackburn.
Betsy Ann Barbee. Jane Castevens. Carter Taylor.
LES BODDEN Photography Editor
Wilson V arborough. Bruce Harrison.
BOB ENNSLIN Art Editor
John Davis. Tom Wharton. C. T. Bryant. Lucy Hill Baxter.
Bill Harrison. William Andrews.
BILL DUNCAN Coordination
Spike Norwood, Priscilla Moore, Susanne Stokes.
NELL EVANS, ELOISE J ACOBI. ELDENE GROGAN Clerical Staff
Kneeling: Tom Wharton. Bill Harrison, Si jacobson, C T. Bryant, Sid McAden, Ben Beale, Les Bodden,
John MeCrary. Bob Ennslin • Seated: Warren James, Margaret Gaston, Mayhelle Inman, Elaine Pat-
ton. Sarah Blair Pearson. Jean Stoutenburg. Emily Ogburn. Hilda Sharkey. Dick Gordon o Standing,
First Rote: English DesChamps. Faith Adams. Cattie Holt. Alice Sharp. Lucy Baxter. Barbara Stockton.
Joyce Jones. Elinor Woltz, Harriet Sipple • Standing. Second Rote: Ed Pate. Skip Larkins. Bill Steele,
Jim Moss. Bill Duncan. Morty Schaap, Gene Blake, Bob Goldwater. Bill Carmiehael, A. W. James.
BARRON MILLS
Editor
arijeiewiB
HOWARD BAILEY
Business Manager
The Daily Tar Heel, proud of its record as the oldest col-
lege daily in the southland and as the only college daily in
the southeast, added another chapter to its successful history
during the past year.
With its first fall issue, the Daily Tar Heel, under the
leadership of Editor Barron Mills, expanded from its old six
column format to an eight column, standard newspaper size.
Publishing in the new $30,000 Colonial Press plant owned
and managed by former editors Orville Campbell and Horace
Carter, the new Daily Tar Heel was turned out on a duplex
press, capable of printing, folding, cutting, and counting an
eight page, eight column newspaper at the rate of 3,500
copies per hour.
Seated
Dick Jenrette
Bob Goldwater
Billy Carmichael
Larry Fox
Standing
J. C. Brown
Mary Sledge
Howard Bailey
Kathryn Colwell
Eton Holden
Charles Pattison
afarKeet
On the campus, the Daily Tar Heel continued to furnish the university
community with complete coverage of campus happenings and to keep an ac-
curate and unbiased record of the day-to-day events of the Carolina passing
parade.
The columns of the paper carried comment and feature work by campus
journalists and augmented it with syndicated material from cross-word puzzles
to L'il Abner and Drew Pearson. Full United Press wire coverage was also
carried.
The Daily Tar Heel's recognized eminence in the field of college journal-
ism, its conscientious coverage of all the news, and its headlines of such events
as Carolina. 21 : Duke. 0 — all these went into the making of a newspaper and a
record of which the campus and the staff may well be proud.
With Mills as Editor, the staff was managed early in the year by Earl
Heffner who was succeeded as Managing Editor by Ed Joyner. Chuck Hauser
reigned supreme in the news room while next door the sports staff labored
under the leadership of Co-Sports Editors. Bob Goldwater and Billy Car-
michael.
The business office was directed by Harold Bailey, Business Manager and
Owen Lewis as Circulation Manager.
There were approximately 30 other staff members associated with the
paper during the course of the year.
Seated — Charlie Gibson, Bob Sain, Earl Heffner, Bill Sexton, Barron Mills,
"Sleepy" Joyner, Chuck Hauser, Raney Stanford • Standing. First Row —
Jim Spence, Margaret Gaston, Sally Woodhull, Jean Baskerville, Rita Adams,
Nancy Norman, Jane Meers, Elaine Patton, Virginia Forward, John Mump.
Bunny Davis, Wilson Yarborough, Paul Rothman • Standing. Second Row —
James Russell, Gill Furgurson, Bob Rolnik. Gordon Humnes, George Roberts,
Pete Gems, Herbert Nachman, Bill BucSian.
ED JOYNER
Managing Editor
BILL CARMICHAEL and BOB GOLDWATER
Sports Editors
U
mRGAzine
CHARLIE GIBSON
Managing Editor
JOHN SINK
Associate Editor
"It's too arty! Jokes are needed!''
"Dam good magazine! A well balanced publication."
''Perhaps no other editor in the history of journalism
has evolved the tricky technique oj picquing reader in-
terest by snipping ending paragraphs from each story
before the publication goes to press."
Such human Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde accomplishment
in editing a magazine has been the job of Fred Jacobson
who for the second succeeding year has served as the
Editor of Carolina Magazine.
In spite of the calm seas of praise as well as the ava-
lanche of adverse criticism from which no creative effort
escapes, the Carolina Magazine placed among the first ten
college publications according to an announcement bv the
Nat'onal Scholastic Press Association.
Magazine policy, seeking the greatest amount of reader
interest and entertainment through the presentation of the
largest variety of creative talent available on campus,
has been generally successful. This success has been due
to the excellent staff work which succeeded in publishing
eight truly representative issues worthy of Tar Heel
BILL SESSIONS
Literary Editor
JOHN DAVIS
Art Editor
Seated: Charlie Gibson.
Barbara Dalton, Julia
Ross, Harding Menzics
• Standing: Harry Snow-
den, Joe Allen, Bob Sain,
Bookie Jabine. P. MeNeer
Dillon, Bill Sessions • \../
pictured : J. Kin berg,
B. P e r I m u t t e r. J. Mc-
Dowell, B. Carmichael, E.
Heffner. E. Patlon, D.
Sharpe. M. Barker, N.
Norman. C. Rosenburg, J.
Goldstein, O. Lewis, R. An-
derson, M. Daniel, J. Mor-
rison, P. Moore, A. Carl-
ton, M. Williams, A. Bry-
son, V. Forward, D. Mc-
Donald.
Page 324
talents. To this end the Carolina Magazine has received
much praise for its excellence in features, fiction, art.
poetry, photography, and humor.
Outstanding in their work as Managing Editors, Jud
Kinberg and Charlie Gibson performed with alert inge-
nuity and industriousness. John Sink, as Associate Editor,
John Davis, in charge of art, John McDowell, literary
head-man. deserve much credit toward shaping the Mag-
azine into an interesting and readable student publication.
If nothing else ever produced an impression on a reader.
Wilson Yarboroughs photography drew praise consist-
ently.
With the work of the business staff under the direction
of Ben Perlmutter and Mel Cohen, enough advertising was
collected to allow the Magazine many extra expenses not
made possible through student funds.
It is hoped by the staff that the Carolina Magazine will
continue to grow in its own right as a true reflection of
the I niversity of North Carolina.
MEL
COHEN
Business Manager
Seated: Sally Woodhull,
Jean McKeithen, Joyce
Adams, Lucy Baxter, Shir-
ley Newsom • Standing:
Sandy Korshun, Mel Co-
hen, Wilson Yarhorough.
Buddy Lyon, Bill Harri-
son, H. K. Privelte • Not
pictured: W. Thompson.
T. Olive, P. McNutt, B.
Hudson, G. Cottrell, B.
Kaplan, H. Klein, S. Levin,
C. Griffin, D. Barnett. B.
Tally, A. Smith, M. Nathan.
T. Wood, C. Stallworth, L.
Dodson, M. Slater, B. Hoff-
man, J. Boberts, M. Black-
burn, M. Wellons.
Paqe 325
%%**%
TOOKIE HODGSON
Editor
TAR
/ON
Tarnation is the most recent publication on the Caro-
lina campus. It came into being in the spring of 1947
through the efforts of a number of interested
students, including Bill Miller. Charlie Long, Ernest
House, and Tookie Hodgson.
Seated — Margaret Marley, Martha Dan Payne, Carter
Taylor • Standing — Art Xanthos, C. T. Bryant, Bill
Harrison, Charlie Joyner, Gilbert Furgurson, Tom
Kerr.
TOM KERR
Assistant Editor
Publishing four issues during this year. Tarnation used approximately the same
format for each one. A special Tarnation figure was devised, and this figure drawn in
a number of poses — each designed to represent some Tarnation feature: such as. the
record review, and the movie review.
Tarnation s contents are not necessarily limited to writings of a strictly humorous
nature. Straight features, light in tone and readable to a high degree, are also included.
An example of the straight writing is "The Tarnation Profiles" — biographies of various
"student personalities."
Tarnation's overall formal is reminiscent of the New Yorker's, with a dash of
Esquire added for spice!
Officers this year were: Editor. Tookie Hodgson: Business Manager, Pete Gerns:
and Assistant Editor, Tom Kerr.
First Roiv: Lindsay Tate, Pete Gerns, Bill Swaim • Second Row: Tom Wharton, John
Taylor, Wilson Yarborough, Joe Sargent.
BILL SWAIM
Advertising Manager
//
'*%,*
mmm*»
R Dream Come True
V
Page 332
A DREAM COME TRl E . . . athletics for all . . . everything from baseball to badminton, from soccer to swim-
ming . . . the complete athletic program for varsity star and Joe College alike ... a shining tribute to the man who
wielded the major hand in the building of the South"? greatest athletic empire — Coach Bob Fetzer.
Twenty-five vears ago Coach Bob came to Carolina. Little Bynum Gymnasium and Emerson field were the total
facilities. But Coach Bob was a dreamer, and as he looked to the future, he foresaw the complete, balanced athletic
plant. In quest of this goal. Coach Bob encountered fellow dreamers — Kenan. Woollen. Gray — and together they turned
dreams to realities. Todav. the task nears completion. The change from ideals to ideas to edifices is being accomplished,
and the Universitv. with pardonable pride, can boast an athletic plant unsurpassed in the nation.
Yet, to Coach Bob the building of material structures will never give the satisfaction he has obtained in building
and developing the minds and bodies of young Tar Heels.
This has been his life's work, a lifetime that has seen Carolina athletic greats from Branch to Justice, has seen a
Tar Heel trackster race to fame in Olympic competition, has seen the University win its first national championship. It
was fitting that this crowning achievement should come as a 25th anniversary present and should come in the sport near-
est to Coach Bobs heart — track.
Thus, a humble tribute to a great educator, coach, and friend of all. May his next 25 years be filled with athletic
champions and championships and leaders of men for this power behind the throne of sporting kings.
S%.
/ /r
Page 333
THE CLUBHOUSE
RRm
The Monogram Club was orgaA -d for the purpose of
establishing friendftip among allmie winners of Caro-
lina Monograms. Swce the war, thAcluh has grown con-
siderably, and throughout the years it has sponsored
many outstanding social functions.
During Freshman Orientation Week the club had
"Meet the Coach and Athletic Night" in order to help the
freshmen become acquainted with one another and with
the athletic association. During the year the club also
sponsored a dance, the Wake Forest game on October
11th, and sponsored the winning candidate. Lillian De-
Armon, for "Miss Pay Off" during the World Student
Service Fund drive. The "Blue and White Day", one of
their largest events, ended the Spring football season.
The club was also active in entertaining the winning
teams in the various sports.
The end of each year is high-lighted for the Monogram
Club with the awarding of a trophy to the athletic coach
who is voted to have served most outstandingly witli his
team.
Officers for this year were:
President, Len Szafaryn; Vice-President, Jesse Green-
baum; Secretary-Treasurer, Morty Schaap; Representa-
tive to Athletic Council, John Dillon.
Page 334
,EN SZAFARYN
President
CLUB
> a
Kneeling: Joe Thigpen. Conway Rose, Bob Hutton. Jack Hester, Ike Norwood, Pete Hexner, Johnny Clem-
ents, Bill Hamisch, Jaek Shaw, Bob Fahey, Frank Jones, Jaek Milne • Seated: Charlie Norton. Al Winn.
Bill Sunas, Dick Hartley, Bill Maceyko, Taylor Thorn, Mike Morrow. Norman Sper, Max Cooke, Sam Mc-
Cauley, Bobby Weant, T. A. Hearn, lrv Zirpel, Oscar Gupton, Hank Hickman, Len Szafaryn • Stand-
ing. First Row: Clarence DiChiera, B. K. Grow. Laddie Terrell, Roger Sholbe, Vinnie DiLorenzo, Bob El-
liott, Harry Beason, Mervin Lents, Ray Blair, Dan Breeden, Dick Hollander, Johnny Richardson, Dallas
Branch, Bob Kelley. Rip Ryan • Standing. Second Row: Bill Smith, Jack Brasington, Gus Lacy, Nemo
Nearman, Vic Seixas, Jack Moody, Dick Taylor, Hal Holden, Laurie Hooper, Morty Schaap, Bob Paxton
• Standing. Third Rote: Jack Ross, Ken Powell, Charlie Justice, Jesse Greenbaum, Dan Nyimicz, Buck
Hardee, Stan Marczyk, Sid Varney, Jim Godwin, Joe Wright, Jack Fitch, Art Bluethenthal, Larry Kloster-
nan, Bill Spiegel, Bob Seligman, Don Nelson. Dick Twining, John Dillon.
Page 335
The Starting Fours
FOOTBRLL
The 1947 Tar Heel football season
was one of ups and downs. The Caro-
lina eleven, rated as a pre-season na-
tional great, squeezed by its opening
game with Georgia, only to go down to
disastrous defeat on the next two
Saturdays, first at the hands of the
powerful Longhorns of Texas, and
then before slightly-less potent Wake
Forest.
But with the better late than never
spirit in their hearts, the pupils of
Coach Carl Suavely came roaring back
on the next seven straight Saturdays to
roll over William and Mary, Florida.
Tennessee, State, Maryland, Duke, and
Virginia in that order.
The Late C
Jtlon Sulh
'rland
,46
■ ■
-. ~* •
9- **
*
0 ^4
■%f ■-
>■ %r
^_
1
^w
^v
Jt|^
" A
nineteen Forty-Seven
Once rolling, the Tar Heels were not to be tangled with, if one wished winning results.
A high-geared running attack built around the ball-bearing abilities of such standout backs
as Charlie Justice, Walt Pupa, Hosea Rodgers, and Jim Camp, combined with the aeriel tal-
ents of the first three gave the locals a scoring punch rivalling any in the nation.
Up front, the Carolina team was equally well equipped, sporting an array of line tal-
ent that could be found to be deep in -reserve strength and usually deep in some opponent's
backfield.
The Tar Heels* eight and two record could be considered somewhat of a successful sea-
son, though there were those, of course, who expecting more, were disappointed.
If nothing else was accomplished, the Tar Heels were still building for greater sea-
sons to come.
THE SEASON'S RECORD
Carolina 14
Georgia 7
Carolina 19
Tennessee 7
Texas 34
Carolina 0
Carolina 41
State 6
Wake Forest
19
Carolina 7
Carolina 19
Maryland 0
Carolina 13
William and Mary 7
Carolina 21
Duke 0
Carolina 35
Florida 7
Won 8,
First Flight for FootL
Carolina 40
Lost 2
alloi> . . . Disastrous
Virginia 7
Tar Heels Edge Bulldogs 14-7
The much-heralded replay of the Caro-
lina-Georgia Sugar Bowl clash didn't
quite live up to its pie-season press
notices with both teams showing too much
defense and a like amount of early sea-
son awkwardness. But the Tar Heels final-
ly came to life in the second half to dis-
count an early Bulldog touchdown, and
then go on to triumph, 14-7, in the clos-
ing minutes on a Pupa-to-Weiner aeriel.
Action Galore
on Opening Dav
/
:^j
hrA
Co-Captain George Sparger
Page 335
Steers Gore Carolina 34-0
Tar Heel hopes of the greatest gridiron season in the school's history went
up in smoke that October afternoon in Austin as the powerful Texas Longhorns
teamed with the powerful Texas sun to send the visiting lads from Chapel Hill
stampeding home with a 34-0 defeat on their shoulders. The Texans scored early
on two tremendous pass plays and though the Tar Heels marched from one end of
the field to the other, they could not produce a single score while their opponents
were rollina; to three more tallies.
iner on End-Around t
Against Texas
Co-Captain Joe Wright
Page 339
Deacons Blast Us 19-7
Another Gloomy
Saturday Aftemoo
The supposedly-rebounding Tar Heels met a
rather determined Wake Forest football team in
Kenan stadium the following Saturday and when
the smoke of the first half had cleared, the visiting
Deacons had registered three quick touchdowns.
mainly through air superiority.
The men of Suavely came back to dominate most
of the play in the second half, but their efforts
netted but one touchdown through the staunch Wake
Forest defense and the Tar Heels went down to
their second straight defeat. 19-7.
John ClemenU
Da n n v Koguc
m u
'
Carolina Downs Indians 13-7
Determined to prove to themselves if to no one
else that thev could play winning ioothall. the Tar
Heels journeyed to Williamsburg to do battle with
the potent Indians of William and Mary. The game
developed into one of the roughest and hardest-
fought ol the season with the Carolina boys moving
to a 7-0 lead at halftime and then matching the
Virginians touchdown for touchdown in the last
half to emerge a 13-7 winner.
Keiniv Powell
^ ^^^H
•
• •
\ 1
• ■-:
^m - ^|
Ted Hazelwood
Havwood Fowle
Tar Heels Take Advantage
of Sunshine and Gators
Hosea Rodgers
Gators Fall to UI1C 35-7
Florida became the next victim of
the now-moving Tar Heels in the fifth
game of the season. A filled-house of
Gator homecoming alumni sat in the
hot Gainesville sun to see the best
Carolina performance of the season.
Hosea Rodgers ran seventy-odd yards
on the first play from scrimmage, and
the Tar Heels followed with two more
quick scores before most of the patrons
were even seated. The rout continued
for most of the afternoon with the
Snavely-men coming out on the long
end of a 35-7 count.
Fred Sherman
Page 342
Bob Kenned1*
Snavelymen Drop Tennessee 19-7
The Tar Heels returned to Kenan the next Saturday to
give the home folks a view of their "New Look" foot-
ball team at the expense of the visiting Volunteers of
Tennessee. The Carolina team had the million-dollar fla-
vor to it in the first half and assumed a commanding
19-0 lead at the halftime. The Vols rallied throughout
the remainder of the game though, to neutralize the Tar
Heels' attack and score once themselves, forcing the local
entry to settle for a 19-7 victory.
Carolina Finally Whips Volunteers
LUolfpack Declawed
41-6
The Battle of the Brothers between Caro-
lina and Stale, renewed this season by popular
demand, failed to reach the heights of conflict
that had been expected as the Chapel Hill
entry showed no mercy at all in running rough
shod over the West Raleigh lads to exact a
41-6 victory.
The Tar Heels' six touchdown victory pa-
rade started early and lasted late as Coach
Suavely used all hands with seemingly equal
success to send the State College Team cow-
tailing homeward. Pupa, Justice, and Camp
paced the high-powered offensive.
Len Szafaryn
Page 344
The Rain Fell in Washington ... So the
photographers slaved indoors!
Carolina Outcrawls Terps 19-0
Mud and a staunch Maryland defense were the next opponents of the triumphing Tar
Heels, as Washington's Griffith Stadium saw two of the South's hest teams battle scoreless-
ly for the opening half in a quagmire that left one player indistinguishable from another.
The second half began in the same manner, but a Tar Heel recovery of a Terrapin
fumble deep in Maryland territory led to a quick Carolina touchdown late in the third
period. Within seven minutes, the Tar Heels had tallied twice again on Maryland-made
breaks and a 19-0 triumph was assured.
Mike Rubisli
Bill Wardle
Page 345
Blue Devils Routed Rgain
The dream of all Tar Heel fans and footballers alike
came true on November 22 as a Justiceded Carolina
football team outmanned, outplayed, outfought, and
what counts — outscored a rather hapless Duke Blue
Devil eleven to gain a 21-0 victory in the traditional
series.
The Tar Heels were held in check during the early
part of the game by a stubborn Duke defense and several
penalties possibly attributed to over-anxiousness. But
Page 346
the running of Charlie Justice, Walt Pupa.
Jim Camp and end-arounding Art Weiner
could not be denied as the Snavelymen took
a 12-0 halftime lead on a short dash by the
Asheville ambler and a Justice-to-Cox aeriel.
The visitors from Chapel Hill maintained
their supremacy of wet, muggy Duke Sta-
dium throughout the second half which saw
them tally the odd combination of nine
points. The first six came when a Tar Heel
drive sputtered and stalled on the Duke
five-yard line, but on fourth down Pupa
tossed to Justice in the flat, who slipped by
three Duke tacklers and tumbled into the
end zone.
Bob Cox, who had missed the three extra
points, made up the deficit by kicking a 22-
yard field goal to complete the scoring.
Bob Cox
The beginning of the end
* '%*
Dan Stiegman
Wahoo's Deflated 40-7
A highly-rated Virginia eleven was the final op-
ponent of the 1947 Tar Heel football team, but the
Snavelymen proved very unhospitable to their visi-
tors from the Old Dominion as they applied a 40-7
shellacking to the Cavaliers in Kenan Stadium.
The Tar Heels delivered another six touchdown
lesson in the art of football, moving up and down
the field with powerful ease. They scored both on
the ground and through the air and added their last
touchdown on a Virginian miscue to round out the
variety of the program.
It was the last college game for seniors George
Sparger, Joe Wright. John Tandy, George Roberts,
Ted Hazelwood, Emmett Cheek, Walt Pupa and
Jim Cam]), all who had well served the Blue and
White.
The END of the Trail
Page 348
Jayvee Football
Javvee football under the guiding eve of Head
Coach Crowell Little established an enviable
record as the team defeated Navy. South Caro-
lina. State and Duke and had its record blemish-
ed with a tie against Virginia.
Standout players for the Jayvees were backs
Merle Norcross, Jack Brasington, Bob Koontz
and Dick Bunting. The line standouts were Dick
Featherholf. Pete Rywak, Roscoe Hansen and
John Stoioff.
Many of these men will be high on the list
when Coach Suavely sends his varsity into action
next fall.
Football Brain Trust
Page 349
t
**»<*£?
Lovola Fiasco
Soccer
Singer and Van Zamlt
Soccer under Coach Marvin Allen enjoyed a highly success-
ful season in its first year as a monogram sport.
Wins were posted over High Point College, Duke, Virginia,
Roanoke. The squad dropped games to Duke, Navy and Loy-
ola. The loss to Navy was no disgrace as the final score after
an overtime was 2-1. Navy is generally regarded as top col-
legiate team in the country.
Al Williams and Gus Johnston were co-captains of the Tar
Heel aggregate. Williams, Johnston. Dave Boak and Frank
Nelson were invited to participate in the Olympic tryouts.
Page 350
Cross Country
Carolina's 1947 cross country season was a
fine success as the team ran the consecutive
win streak to 17 straight by downing Georgia
Tech, Tennessee, Duke, N. C. State and Vir-
ginia.
The highlight of the season was Jack Milne's
triumph in the NCAA event in Lansing. Mich.
Milne, running in six-inches of snow and freez-
ing weather outlasted better than 100 runners
to bring the University its first national title.
Milne also placed third in the New York
IC4A event to aid the team in a 12th place
finish. The same day as the New York event
the reserve harriers took seventh place in the
Southern Conference event which saw Mary-
land completely dominate.
Jack Milne and Jimmy Mill
HaUtead Holden
Page 351
Captain Hob Paxl
IS. an
tsouV
Cagemen
BRSKETBfiLL
The Carolina basketball team of 1947-
"48 ran hot and ran cold. The local cagers
started like the proverbial house afire in
the early part of the season, winning their
first 12 games to enter New York's famed
Madison Square Garden a major unde-
feated aggregation.
But in the Gotham playing without
their newly-molded star Bill Miller, who
ad been declared ineligible on the eve
of the trip, the Tar Heels floundered bad-
\ before the powerful Violets of NYU. in
one ot the worst defeats in the history ol
the school.
Nemo INearnian
Though they lost also to Temple in their
northern swing, the charges of Coach Tom
Scott returned to the victory trail in Philadel-
phia the next week-end by dumping highly-
touted Penn, and from there on. enjoyed a
rather creditable season.
The Tar Heels dropped both of their sea-
son's encounters to State College's high-scor-
ing quint and left the Carolina entry with a
10-3 Conference mark, which in turn gave the
Scottmen a comfortable berth in the loop
tournament in Durham.
In that event, Carolina polished off stubborn
VPI in the opening round, only to meet their
great nemesis. State, in the semi-finals by the
luck of a draw. The outcome of this game was
eventually similar to the first two meetings.
The Smiling Kansan
The White Phantoms of 1947-4S
but not until the Tar Heels had given the
Dickey-less State team the scare of their lives
through the back-from-the-grave efforts of
John "Hook" Dillon.
The tournament defeat left the Tar Heels
with a 20 and 7 record for the season which
seemed creditable enough in these days of
heavy competition at all sides.
Captain Bob Paxton was the individual high
scorer for the cagers, tossing in a total of 329
points besides pacing the team through the
season with brilliant displays of floor and
backboard play.
Runner-up high scoring honors went to cen-
ters Nemo Nearman and Dillon. Coy Carson,
Roger Scholbe, Fred Swartzberg, and Miller
were other standout forwards in addition to
Paxton.
At the guard posts, King Cole and Norm
Kohler handled the majority of the work, with
Taylor Thorne, and Dan Nyimicz handling
the relief work.
Hook" Dillon
Fred Swartzberg
Page 354
WRESTLiriG
Handicapped by the early-season loss
of several standbys, Carolina's 1948
wrestling team failed to retain its South-
ern Conference title, but still turned in a
creditable 4-2 record for the season.
Though small in number, the squad of
Coaches Chuck Quinlan and Hobie Mc-
Keever made up in fight what was lacking
in number.
Highlight of the campaign came in the
closing match, when a pin in the final
bout by Captain Bill Kemp provided the
winning margin in a 14-12 victory over
Duke. Other decisions were gained over
N. C. State, Davidson, and VMI, while
losses were inflicted by VPI and the new
conference champions, Washington and
Lee.
Other leading members of the team ;n-
cluded Oscar Gupton, Tom Urquhart,
Phil Kemp, Carrol Fisher, Doug Thomp-
son, and Marvin Wilson.
Co-Captains, Bill Kemp
and Irv Zirpel with
Coach Quinlan.
The 1948 Wrestling Squad
©. £ 0.
mJW '
suuimminG
Acclaimed as "The greatest swimming team
ever assembled in the South," the Blue Dolph-
ins of 1948 topped all achievements of previ-
ous years by splashing to 10 consecutive vic-
tories, then completing their supremacy by
dominating the Southern Conference cham-
pionship meet for the sixth year in a row. With
none of the season's engagements at all close,
most of the opposition for the charges of Dick
Jamerson was furnished by the stopwatch, but
this year's tank edition was more than equal
to the task and shattered loop marks in seven
of the nine events.
Norm Sper
The 1948 Swimming Team
Page 356
The Big Splash
Leading the assault on the record books was Dick
Twining, who turned in three new marks and shared in
the establishment of still another, in the relay. Other
record-breakers included Co-Captains Jesse Greenbaum
and Mike Morrow, Floyd Drew, Bob Ousley, and Jim
Thomas, a freshman sensation. Ousley's feat of return-
ing to collegiate competition after a five-year layoff to
regain his 1941-42 conference crown in the breaststroke
was one of the highlights of the season. Although not a
record-smasher, Norm Sper was another standout, de-
fending his diving title won last year.
The 10 easy victories included wins over four of the
South's top swimming teams, Navy, N. C. State, Georgia
Tech, and Emory. Also on the list of stars for the season
were Steve Osborne, Bill Pritchard, Jerry Cook, Dan
Breeden, Mae Erie, John Bippart, Ike Norwood, Ronnie
Basescu, Allison Pell, and Bob Hutton. Of this group,
many will be back to bolster next year's team.
. . . Freestyle
Breaststroke
Page 357
Co-Captains
Norm McLeod
and
Tommv Turner
'Chunk" Simmons
'On The Cindei
The Carolina track team under the tutelege of
Coach Bob Fetzer and Dale Ranson emulated their
cross country brethren by going through the season
undefeated and winning the Conference title.
The squad opened the season with men partici-
pating in the Florida Relays and Carolina Relays.
In the Gator State affair meet records were set by
Bob Seligman in the shot and discus, Chunk Sim-
mons in the high hurdles and a University record
by Jack Moody in the high jump.
In dual competition Carolina beat Georgia Tech
at Atlanta, 661/o-641/2; Navy, 66-65; Duke, 83-48;
and Virginia, 74-52.
Conference Outdoor Champions With Record Score
i^uL.' •-' J I.
Mi
^ - V w~ * ■-<
ft Pi
pL[lf L»
ath
* *
Other noteworthy squad performances were turn-
ed in as titles were annexed in the Carolina AAU's,
second place in a photo-finish 480-yard shuttle hur-
dle relay at the Penn Relay Carnival. Jack Milne
also set a University record at the Philadelphia
Carnival by running 9:20 in the two-mile.
Chunk Simmons took a second place in the
National AAU 110-meter high hurdles after win-
ning the junior title the day before.
Tommy Turner and Norm McLeod were elected
co-captains for last year's team.
Top Point-Getters
Page 359
Meal Ticket DiLorenzo
BRSEBRLL
Carolina's 1947 baseball club looked
impressive in copping the first two en-
counters on a 26-game slate and appear-
ed even more so in the final pair of the
year. But in-between these two extremes,
the Tar Heels could perform at only a
.500 clip and thus completed their cam-
paign with a record of 15 wins and 11
losses.
In competition in two circuits, Caro-
lina finished third in Big Four play with
a 5-7 mark and turned in an 8-7 card
against Southern conference opponents
to end up in sixth place.
With veteran Coach Bunn Hearn ab-
sent most of the season while convalesc-
ing from a long illness, the coaching reins
1947 Diamond Crew
fell to Walter Rabb and Henry House.
They managed to field an outfit that was
fairly well off in the hitting department,
but erratic fielding and a shortage of de-
pendable pitchers did little to brighten
the picture.
Even the weatherman smiled with dis-
favor on the Carolina crew. As a result
of numerous postponements caused by
rain, the Tar Heels found themselves en-
gaged in seven contests in eight straight
days — the other day was Sunday — dur-
ing the final weeks of the season. Three
more games in five days — including
another Sunday — followed immediately.
Needless to say, the small mound staff
failed to weather the flood of games and
a losing streak that extended through five
games was enough to erase Carolina from
contention in both league races.
But the season did have its bright
spots, such as the two successive victories
over N. C. State in the last pair of games
on the slate. The Big Four record showed
the Chapel Hill entry with even splits in
the four-game series with State and Wake
Jack Hussey
\ c(kW)UNA t
Page 36/
CAROLINA
Jim Hamilton
•Rip" Ryan
Forest, but with only one win in four out-
ings against Duke. Outstanding intersec-
tional triumphs were also scored over
Michigan, Michigan State, Cornell, Navy,
Villanova, and Cincinnati.
In individual performances, an out-
fielder and a pitcher paced the Blue and
White team. Rightfielder Jim Kelly cap-
tured the Big Four batting title with a
.500 average in 10 games, and the
league's top southpaw, Vinnie DiLorenzo,
led the loop in the strikeout parade with
50 to his credit. Kelly, with four hits in
his final seven trips to the plate, establish-
ed a new high for the Big Four batting
championship. DiLorenzo racked up
seven of the club's 15 triumphs and Monk
Whiteheart, the high-kicking righthanded
ace, was second with five.
Co-Captains Harry Beason and John
Gregory led the list of other standbys.
that also included the 1948 co-captains,
Jim Hamilton and Jim Hayworth. Other
letter-winners were Tommy Andrew, Ray
Blair, Buck Hardee, Fred Ryan, Frank
Jones, Bo Hackney, Dallas Branch, Bus-
ter Stevenson, Kenny Black, Jack Hussey,
Emmett Cheek, and Tom Clayton.
Emmet I Cheek
Dallas Branch
Page 362
Tennis
With Vic Seixas, currently the nation's
ninth ranking netter, leading the way, Caro-
lina's 1947 tennis team turned in the amazing
record of 21 wins in 22 outings to add to the
victory parade of Coach John Kenfield. Other
outstanding players included Clark Taylor,
Ray Morris, Jack Kenfield, Stan Gruner.
Charlie Rice, Heath Alexander, and Don
Skakle. But it was Seixas who was most in the
news, finishing as runner-up in the conference
and national collegiate tourneys and perform-
ing brilliantly on the amateur summer circuit.
Vic Seixas
Big Five in Tennis
mfe:
Golfers Dick Doeschler. Bob Cox, Rav Taylpr and Junie Bailey get last minute tips
from Coach Chuck Erickson.
GOLF
Winning the first Southern Con-
ference championship in the history
of local golf, Carolina's 1947 links
team rose to previously unattainable
heights in winning eight matches
while losing only to Duke in dual
competition.
Such national greats as LSU and
Michigan fell before the might of
such swingsters as Dick Doeschler.
conference medalist, Harvie Ward.
Junie Bailey. Ray Taylor, Mike No-
lan, Bob Cox. and Ed Ashby.
Coach Chuck Erickson sent his
loop champions to the NCAA
championships at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan, in June, and though the team
did not make too favorable a show-
ing, Ward did advance to the quar-
ter-finals of the individual play be-
fore being eliminated.
CHEERLERDERS
Under the tonsil-torturing tutelege of Cheerlead-
er Myrt Sherard, the 1947-48 Tar Heel yell squad
turned in a fine job of building, conditioning and
maintaining the renowned Carolina spirit.
The usual pep rallies and torchlight parades
were displayed with a new look and new twists,
while Saturday afternoon activity from the stands
of Kenan Stadium had much to do in the backing
of a Tar Heel football team which got off to a slow
start early in the season.
The high point of the cheery season came on the
caravan trip to the Carolina-Maryland game in
Washington which saw a motorcycle-escorted pa-
rade led by Sherard and company through the
street of the astounded capital.
With plans being formulated for mass color card
display for the coming season. Carolina spirit look-
ed well on its wav to a post-war revival.
Acrobatic Antics
The 1947-48 Cheerleading Squad
Seated: Joyce Ferguson, Bill Lloyd, Betsy Ann Barbee, Marshall Spears, Miss Frances Burns. Sponsor.
Mary Goodwin, Nancy Tucker, Carolyn Driver • Standing: Buth Byruni, Bill Henderson, Camillia Bay,
Margaret Allred, Beverly Jean Smith, Janet Wells, Sybil Mitchell, Scoty Dellinger, Margaret Cole, Helen
Crockford, Dot Lunsford.
WOmEITS ATHLETIC RSSOCIflTIOn
The purpose of the Women's Athletic Association is to
develop qualities of leadership, to promote interest in wom-
en's athletics, and to provide opportunities for participation
in the varied campus sports. All the women students auto-
matically become members of the association upon entering
the University.
The work of the Women's Athletic Association is directed
by a council composed of sorority and dormitory athletic-
managers, and is advised by Miss Frances Burns.
The activities of this year included a swimming party
given during orientation week, tournaments in all the various
sports throughout the year, and a high school and college
play-day which occurred in the spring.
At the end of each year the association holds its annual
banquet at which time individual awards are made and the
"best all around' trophy is presented to the group totaling
the highest number of points throughout the year.
The officers this year were:
President. Marshall Spears: Vice-President. Bill Lloyd:
Secretary, Betsy Ann Barbee: Treasurer. Janet Crinkle\ :
Publicity Chairman. Miriam Evans: Point System Chairman.
Butch Goodwin.
Softball . . . soccer
and swimming!
GIRLS' SPORTS
Overhand Slam!
In addition to the organized work of the WAA, there
is a physical education program for Carolina coeds.
Junior girls are required to take three quarters of classes
of their choice, and courses offered follow regular sports
seasons. Other women students are urged to participate
voluntarily in the activities of the department.
Instruction is given in tennis, swimming, hockey, bas-
ketball, softball. modern dance, and physical fitness: and
special interest clubs handle specific competitions and
activities.
The Splash Club has big times doing formation and
pattern swimming. The Hockey Club challenges and plays
various teams across the state. The Tennis Club sponsors
and manages a tournament in the spring, and the Modern
Dance Group has been active in presenting recitals and
programs throughout the year.
There is a full course for "phys. ed.'" majors, and each
year the department graduates a class of qualified teach-
ers. It is the hope of the department to provide oppor-
tunities for athletics for all women in the University, both
through broad intramurals and the WAA. and through
the regular curriculum and special club groups. The
women's gym is always a busy place.
"Here, Here, Here!" Shoot!
Bull's Eye
Page 367
Do we need words for this
awful reality? I mean, how
I.i.l can we set?
You say you're soaking up
education by osmosis?
" 'The time has come,'
Once upon a time there was a Carolina
Character. This Character has no definite sex.
no definite features, no definite action, being,
or state of being.
This Character is really qualified to be so
named, but unlike most characters, he has
very little substance. He is the man behind the
man behind the mystery of what Carolina
really is. . . .
F'r instance, look at us at our best!
That hungry feeling sneaks around again.
beautiful doll!" — Call the Powers Agency, Bet!
From dawn Land if you
think 8:00 isn't the same
as dawn, you're erazv I to
dark the madhouse is the
same.
Hands across the table
(library table, that is I
doughnuts 'n such at the
Scuttlebutt . . . 10:00
break ... we entertain
ourselves. The Character
at least goes through the
motion of buying books
. . . then sells them back
unused, for half price . . .
some days you just might
as well stav in bed
Page 371
And furthermore, I shall continue to fight. . . .
the walrus said,
See what the real subjects of life are.
"From out of the mouths of college babes"
. . . and the walrus ... or somebody, there
is always lots to sav about lots of things.
Our Character might be on the receiving
end of the rostrum in Memorial Hall, or a
ringed bridge table in a frat house, or Dr.
Frank's front porch, but always the same
. . . yap. yap. yap . . . and tbey say let
more coeds in!
But what does the Character answer to
all this barrage of blasting? His reaction-
go from wild to wilted . . . and he brags
about what he calls "ludicrous, 'lastic.
liberalism".
Talk about the Y court! . . . and coffee
between classes. Why. we have Y court
affairs we haven't even used! Take the
Sadie Hawkins gyrations, and the un-
pictured rendezvous . . . when the gals set
their traps, and the fellers trap their
squirrels.
Competition for the loeal cinemas — front line attrac-
tion starring amateur actors from Raleigh way.
Page 372
Let's put it to a vote — pu-leese —
E DR. FRAW^
Page 373
All this for just a camera?
What comes next?
'to talk of many things...
Si i what of these gals? Just check these
phases of the Character's life. ... if it ain't
serious conversation on a divan it s
"Cheers" en masse I always with "the
boys"). Now don't get any ideas about that
fire in the lower left next door. There just
couldn't be any connection between the ice
cold snow gal and the flames shown else-
where. But back to the Character . . . let's
just rack this exciting stuff up as a real, im-
portant part of the "many things".
Accelerated summer school
course — work like mad!
Page 374
Doin" what comes natcherlv . . . catin . that is.
Page 376
of ships and shoes . . .
Then there was the day the Character compar-
ed legs with fellow characters. You guess
which of the three pairs belong to our little
friend. But those limbs are good for something
besides posing . . . long walks, by chance?
Now we won't bring spring into this, or
blankets, but our Character stopped and
watched the ditch diggers, the sway and swing
- - ing coat of a hepcat. the glamour of a beauty
court, and the inevitable trek up the library
steps . . . with books . . . what a day! and
the Chapel Hill boulders dig into the Char-
acter's clay-worn feet . . .
This Character bears description. His face
is a mixture of earnest determination and
casual good humor. He wears remnants of
G. I. days, raincoats, and saddle shoes, with a
smattering of the new look. He has a cheery
greeting, complains about the "wicked ways
of college men, and how they come and go,"
and he regrets the end that must come to these
frantic days. Proper attitude toward such
thoughts: "Lock em in a box, tie 'em with a
ribbon, and throw em in the deep blue sea".
>f Irue leg: art, a la Carolina gridders.
\ll this and coeds, too! Didn't Mr. Davis have fun
pinning on those orchids?
■Ml'
Hospitality committe for sing-
er Gracie Barrie, but why are
they looking so hard at the
camera?
Vaughn Monroe and Sweater girl. But Ho you think he's racing with
the moon?
Page 378
and sealing wax . . .
But whatever could the Character do with sealing wax?
Mayhe write a fan letter to some of the celebrities we've
entertained around here. Take your pick! Vaughn. Tex.
Gracie. Randy. Lunceford's band. . . . why just anyone
will do. Throw in some cake, cheese that is. via Beryl
Davis and such. Add some vows from Marryin' Sam I the
drawing card for the DTH . . . daily King Features
Syndicate, alias L'l Abner I . two bathing suits, and ker-
plunk! The reality again. . . . Registration!
So 'tis . . . always the kerplunk . . . the Monday after
Saturday . . . the exams after the sunburn and sandy hair.
Our Character learns to cram and damn the fate that put
him on the spot. . . . Yes. our Character has his moments
. . . among them: confusion.
Special rale for marrvin* Sam to do the honor*
— Check Pansv's hat!
Posing — and no water
the pool !
Having troubles Edie? What's up?
of cabbages and kings/ "
So now we take our Character through
some of the confusion of Carolina and
things become all jumbled together . . .
cabbages become king . . . and then the
psychological effect of a chaotic domicile
causes the "one" I Character, that is I to
resort to all sorts of last straws . . . ( latest
style at the Curve Inn. drink it thru a
straw) .
First a dream of purty girls . . . the
need for a boost, stimulating cup of coffee,
that is . . . and then the final something.
Graduation, or the last word. "I do".
It"s truly a hodgepodge . . . this Chapel
Hillife. but we love it. yes. we do. From the
chaos, to the cheers, to the chug-a-lug
Capsule autobiography — wild week-end ■
bookless boudoir — miserable mess!
Page 380
games, the bell of Old South, horn-rimmed
glasses and crossword puzzles that don't
work, political rallies, and finally Pomp and
Circumstance mixed in with Hark the
Sound. . . . All of this is part of the life of
that unforgettable personage: the Carolina
Character !
We do remember Carolina. We do rem-
ember the Carolina Character . . . and the
thousands he represents ... in their odd,
and even moments!
Page 38/
//
*
I
Jack Fitch
Cideon Gilliam
Meigs Golden
Robert Haire
George Keiiyon
William Long
Roy Mcknight
Rex Paramore
ttor+a
Len Szafaryn
Bill Tate
Taylor Thome
Aiiflv Williamson
Not present in pic-
tures: Wayne Brenni-
gen. Rav Jeffries. Slan
Mari-vzk. Charles
••Cus" Johnston.
George Montague, Mar.
riatle Stewart, Jo.
Johnson. Bob Kirbv.
University Dance Committee
The University Dance Committee is really back in the swing of things on a real
pre-war basis. According to the new campus constitution the standards of representa
tion are back up to the old-time high, and it is to this group of men that congratu-
lations go for a most successful year. The primary function of this committee is to acl
as host and maintain order at dances sponsored by various campus organizations,
and in this capacity the University Dance Committee has worked to attain the goal
of meeting the satisfactory approval of both faculty and students.
With the completion of a task well-done. Chairman Taylor Thome resigned at
the end of the Fall Quarter and was succeeded by Charles Johnston, who with the
cooperation of Dr. E. L. Mackie, Senior Faculty Representative, and Mr. Marvin
Allen. Junior Faculty Representative, will continue to work toward attaining their
top goal, "the perfect Carolina dance".
Dr. Ernest L. Mackie
Page 384
German Club
OFFICERS OF 1947
President Robert Ettenger
Vice-President William Tate
Secretary Frank Frazer
Treasurer JESSE JERNIGAN
OFFICERS FOR 1948
President William Tate
Vice-President Howard Dunaway
Secretary Frank Frazer
Treasurer Jesse Jernigan
i I ti
Robert Ettenger
Bill Tate
The Executive Board was composed of Walter Alston.
Robert Beasley. James Dowdy. Kelly Bowles, Carl Dun-
ham. Judson Hawk. Robert Kelly, Jack Lupton. Roy Mc-
Knight. Robert MacMillan. Kenneth Merritt. David
Whichard, and Thurman Williams.
Fraternities that are members of the Cerman Club are
Pi Kappa Alpha. Delta Psi, Phi Gamma Delta. Phi Delta
Theta. Beta Theta Pi. Alpha Tau Omega. Zeta Psi. Sigma
Alpha Epsilon, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Sigma Nu. Kappa
Alpha. Sigma Chi. and Kappa Sigma.
For the German Club. 1948 was a big year. Al-
though plagued by many difficulties, the club con-
tinued to present the best dances of the year. At the
beginning of the second quarter Bob Ettenger re-
signed and Bill Tate, vice-president, was elected the
new president for the remainder of 1948. Difficulties
asain arose in securing a band for the gala Mid-
Jesse Jernigan
Page 385
** liJ* i
I ii ^f II 1
Walter Abston
Robert Beasley
Henry Dowdy
Howard Dunawav
* - ■ r - 1 Durham
JtidMin Hawk
Robert Kelly
Roy MoKnight
Robert MaeMillan
Kenneth Merritt
David Whirhard
Thurinan William*
.\ot in picture:
Jaek Lupton
\\ inter's week-end. Unable to get a big name band for
the occasion the week-end was canceled.
The two big week-ends that the German Club sponsored
were the Finals and Fall Germans of 1947. The Finals
featured Charlie Spivak and his band, and we played host
to Randy Brooks for the fun ladened week-end in the fall.
Both dances were huge successes and the thirteen fraterni-
ties of the German Club, with their dates, enjoyed the
extensive events of the week-ends. The Finals week-end
featured main parties at Hogan"s Lake with plentv of
baseball games. Main members went to the dances, as was
witnessed by the large crowds both nights. The highlights
of the Fall German week-end were the I . N. C. -Tennessee
game and parties at Terrace View, plus of course, the I wo
dances and concert. Both dances met the expectations of
the coeds, imports and "Carolina Gentlemen".
Page 386
Fall Germans
The first of the series of seasonal dances
given bv the German Club was underway on
October 31 when Randy Brooks and his or-
chestra opened the curtain on the first act of
Fall Germans. The afternoon concert featured
vocalists Gracie Barrie and Phil Brito, who
also had prominent roles throughout the per-
formance. Act Two was transferred to Wool-
len Gymnasium for dancing that night, and
the setting remained the same for the finale
which was a dance to top the week-end.
Other sponsors who are not pictured were
Miss Evelyn Smith with Jesse Jernigan. Treas-
urer: Miss Barbara Fehr with Roy Mcknight:
Miss Kathryn Fulton with Walter Alston:
Miss Marion Whatley with Kenneth Merritt:
Miss Dee Nuchols with Howard Dunawav :
Miss Nancy Lloyd with Bob MacMillan: Miss
Louise Dodson with Tom Jordon.
Mrs. Ann Tate
Miss Ir.n,- Vi ill
ns
Mis. Marjorio Sc
with
Willi
with
Mr. William Tat.
Frank Frazr
Robert Beanie}
Miss Doroth- Arring
■in
Miss Ellon Fill
„
Mis- Jeanne I>>
>.i!h
with
with
Dave Whichard
Carl Diirhai
II, „i. Dowdj
Miss Jean Ann Rains
1,-11
Mi-s lam- Rirha
<1
on
Mis- Smart V.r.l
with
will.
with
Judson Hawk
Bob Kelly
II. inn, an Willi;,,
Mrs. 1 1, l.-n I ii.-ii-
with
Mr. Robert Ettens
Randy Brooks
Fina
With the advent of spring, thoughts turned to Mav Finals. 1947 which were held in the early part
of May. Charlie Spivak and his band furnished the music for the event and the German Club
members and their dates provided the fun for the gala week-end.
Sponsors for the Finals were Miss Mary Montgomery with Carroll Tomlinson. President: Miss
Mary Frances King with Guy Andrews. Vice-President; Miss Betty Brown with Earl Woodward.
Secretary: Miss Evelyn Smith with Jesse Jernigan. Treasurer: Mrs. Helen Ettenger with Mr.
Robert Ettenger. Miss Jean Ann Ramsdell with Judson Hawk. Miss Dee Genther with Barnes
Boyle. Miss Frances Ruseau with Dick Johnson, Miss Barbara Folger with Ben Cooper. Miss
Gloria Van Dyke with Bob Lee. Miss Irene Williams with Frank Frazer. Miss Dorothy Parks with
Carl Durham. Miss Betty Simmons with Louie Nicou. Miss Elizabeth Petesch with Walter
Alston. Miss Marietta Thompson with Dick Wright. Miss Frances Mann with Bill Tate. Miss
Phena Darwer with Tonv Capehart.
The week-end was opened with a concert Friday afternoon by Charlie Spivak and his band,
which was followed bv dancing that night in Woollen Gymnasium. Saturdav night was the climax
of the two-night stand which brought the week-end's entertainment to a close. Both Dances were
open to members of the German Club only.
Marv Mo
with
irroll Tom
r Franc.
- hi
„g
Ml!
.s Barbara Folger
Mr,
.. Hell
with
with
Andrei
ITS
Ben Cooper
Mr.
l!..l..
Page 388
Page 389
Il
//
Yackety Yack
Page 392
The Yackety Yack Beauty Parade which was held in Memorial Hall on
January 9, 1948, was an event of great interest and speculation among the
various organizations that had entries in the contest. Twenty-six campus or-
ganizations submitted a total of forty-five beauties to vie for the title of Queen
of the Yackety Yack. The judges, Mr. William M. Prince, Mr. James Street,
Mr. James Davis, and Mr. Roy Armstrong, performed an excellent job in
selecting the Queen and her court of fifteen equally beautiful coeds. A bou-
quet of orchids was presented to the Queen by Mr. Davis and an orchid cor-
sage to each member of the court.
Beauty Parade. ...1948
Front Row: J. M. Lester, Lillian DeArmon, Mary Louise Powe, Helen Barnes, Betty Brown, Joan Lucas, Rose Field, Tenn
Mason, Phyllis Ganey • Middle Row: Cattie Holt, Weddy Thorp, Esther Cheek, Barbara Lynn, Peggy Edgerton, Feme
Hughes, Carolyn Kimzey, Marty Hinkle • Top Row: Doris Newburn, Marjorie Norris, Frankie Johnston, Helen Bouldin,
Marguerite Johnson.
Betty Bn&wn
YACKETY YACK QUEEN
SPONSORED BY CHI PSI
SPONSORED BY CHI OMEGA
Page 395
Pliyllk gamy
SPONSORED BY PHI DELTA THETA
jefme flushes
SPONSORED BY DELTA KAPPA EPSILON
Page 397
SPONSORED BY CHI OMEGA
SPONSORED BY INDEPENDENT COED ASSOCIATION
Page 399
jean JtMk Xesie/i
SPONSORED BY CHI PHI
flen/ueifa jhoufi
SPONSORED BY DELTA KAPPA EPSILON
Page 401
jenn Jtc*
asm
SPONSORED BY PI KAPPA ALPHA
HBHN
t/ffafy Jueuise Pawe
SPONSORED BY BETA THETA PI
Page 403
flelen Barnes
SPONSORED BY ZETA PSI
(Jakolifn f(imzey
SPONSORED BY OLD EAST DORMITORY
Page 405
Ssi/ien (jMmn (jneen
SPONSORED BY TOWN GIRLS' ASSOCIATION
Ba.fima Xynn
SPONSORED BY SMITH DORMITORY
Page 407
fffan Xucas
SPONSORED BY CHI PHI
SPONSORED BY PHI GAMMA DELTA
Page 409
w
//
'•*«&
gj
• ••• <
is
1
LEON TODD
President
I. F. C. Executive Council
Inter-Fraternity
I. F. C. Court.
Page 412
Carolina Gentlemen will come and go but the spirit that
makes Carolina Gentlemen will stay on. This spirit is ex-
emplified in the workings of the Interfraternity Council.
This guiding force for all fraternities on the campus has
done a job this year that will stand out in years to come
as an example of "working together."
A scholarship fund has been set up for high school
graduates who would not ordinarily have a chance to
come to college. This fund is to be administered by the
University. The I. F. C. has continued to work for better
student government as in the past. Relations between
fraternities and faculty have been strengthened through
the efforts of the I. F. C.
Composed of two members from each fraternity, the
President and a junior member, the I. F. C. continued to
create a high standard of building better students to fit
in with the rest of student life. Brotherhood, living and
working together, friendship and high standard of values
still will be the ultimate of fraternity relationships thanks
to the workings of the Interfraternity Council.
Counci
Third Ron: J. Lefkowitz, L. Sklut, J. Girard, J. Thompson, D. Barbour,
L. Todd, C. Frazier, R. Anderson • Second Row: J. Blakeman, L. MeCleod,
A. Kornish. J. Nance. E. Praia, L. Melvin, P. McKinne, F. Vestal • First
Row: M. Loftis, A. Marks, G. Strong. W. Wilson, J. Shoor.
The Pan-Hellenic Council under the
direction of Margaret Jean Taylor,
has capably guided sororitv activities
on the campus. With the publishing
of the Pan-Hellenic Manual, the
Council established an improved and
simpler rushing system. In coopera-
tion with Chi Delta Phi. the Woman's
Glee Club. CICA. and the Playmak-
ers. the Pan-Hellenic Council again
successfully managed Mav Dav.
Socially, the Council's year center-
ed around the Faculty Tea held in
February. The Council added to the
orientation program by sponsoring a
fashion show featuring two models
from each sorority.
Alpha Gam's al play
Pan-Hellenic
Sealed Margaret Jean Taylor, Norma Hotard. Carol? n Driver. Mary Bright Jernigen, Margaret MeWillian
Margo Martin. Lucv Baxter. Audrey Braneh. Advisor • Standing "Sunnv" Sunstrom, Bill Llovd, Barba
Poole, Margie Tavlor, Peggy Ellis. Evelyn Pettitt. Jovee Peterson. Sarah Montague, Eleanor Singletary.
Following their tradition, the Council awarded the
annual silver loving cup to the sorority with the highest
scholastic average. Miss Audrey Branch became the
advisor to the Pan-Hellenic Council filling the position
of Miss Ruth Duncan.
The Pan-Hellenic Council is made up of three repre-
sentatives from each sorority and two representatives
from the organization of Stray Greeks. Officers were:
Margaret Jean Taylor ( Alpha Delta Pi I President: Norma
Hotard I Delta Delta Delta) Vice-President: Carolyn
Driver (Alpha Gamma Delta I Secretary; Mary Bright
Jernigan I Pi Beta Phil Treasurer.
Margaret Jean Taylor, President
Dounci
A Pi Phi rush part>
l^% « mM -
\^R^^i^^
H Wc Via la^ * t -*m
1 ■■■K^r-^
^
JB ^-JM
Page 415
Rlpha Delta
Chapter
33£—S5SF
£;' ? £- ^'
tkfamiL
Iifi
fir.f «ou: Virgil J. Ashbaugh, Wallace Ashlev. Willia
D. Branch, Daniel C. Breeden. John Harry Bright. R
L. Coleman. Wade T. Cooper. Robert Madison Cornick
win J. Edgerton. Robert Ettenger. James E. Evans •
P. Gibson, Frank S. I I. 1111. John L. Green. F.ller
Edward G. Jovner • Fourth Row: Fred M. Kearns
MaeRae. Cjril Long Mebane, Lapslev B. Mill
Northrup. William B. Parker. James P. Park.
Moffat G. Sherard. William F. Spurlin, Amos
Charles G. Tate. William B. Thompson. Robe
John R. Wooley, Samuel C. Younghlood.
Belle. Harrv Allen Billerbeck. John David Bippart. David G. Boak. Dallas
d J. Brvant. John M. Clampitt • Second Row: Samuel J. Clark, Frank
>mas H. Davis, Charles S. Doster. John W. Dunham. Brodic T. Duke. Ed-
ns • 77tird Rou : Lee Rov Furr. Charles K. W. Gammage. Harris A. Gant. Archie
I II. ,1., W. Griffin. Charles N. Hauler. Charles S. Heinmiller. Thomas M. Jordan,
[earns, Ralph W. Lee. James M. Lilly. Tyler R. Lisk. Forest B. Lockey, Robert P.
Robert S. McNeil, James S. McNider. Donald H. Nelson • Fifth Ro,o: James S.
Robert J. Plumb. William McC. Rawls. Thomas C. Redfern. Phifer P. Rothman.
. Stack. Henrv E. Stowers • Sixth Row: Peter W. Strader. Walter R. Talley,
C. Warren. John G. Webb. Cleo Duke Wilder. Henrv K. Williams. William R. Wolf,
Page 416
Alpha Tau Omega
A gala year has been had by all . . . the Texas game, mit beer and pratzels around the
radio . . . "There was no joy in Mudville . . ." The Monster's trip to Richmond . . . the
gendarmes in town have a very poor sense of humor . . . The John Marshal Hotel, birthplace
of the famed Turtle Club, with its challenge and lurid reply . . . Spider and Moore start the
"Creep of the Week" contest . . . "Check if the following applies: Got Too Drunk: Didn't
Drink: Barked Like a Dog: Ran Rabbits: Howled at Moon: Slobbered on You: Talked Like
Mumbles . . . The winner of the "Creep of the Week" contest will enter his Horror in the final,
to be adjudged for the "Creep of the Crop"' . . . Winner will be awarded a large economy-size
box of "Drop Dead Pills." And the first weeks contest was won by our own Ralph Lee! ! Con-
grats, Kid !
Rushing . . . "He's young, but . . ." and. "I wuz impressed." Averages drop like flies . . .
"I paid my seventy-five!" We came through with flying colors . . . Spurlin succeeds Jim
Lilly, and in line of duty and precedent, foots the Beer-On-Spurlin bill . . . Strader and Gam-
mage's eternal skits . . . "We must all pitch in and do our part, or we won't have a part to
pitch in!" . . . Davis pins another one . . ."This time it's real." eh. Tom?
The Big Barn Party . . . who was the owner of the pair that Reichle found in the hay
that night? . . . "Mumbles" Furr. upon awakening, groans. "I wish they wouldn't make these
parties compulsory!" . . . Tallev. Holt, and Cochran in the black Fright Wig . . . the Record-
Breaking Party . . . initiation fees rather high . . . when queried. "Are you a Record-Breaker?"
the password is. "You bet your sweet disc I am!"
Lveryone out for the Homecoming Display . . . we took second place, anyhow . . . "Wild
Willie Wolf swears. "We wuz robbed!" . . . "Marrvin" Sam" Clampitt. Booe. Nelson. Breed-
en. and a host of others added to the Sadie Hawkin"s Day festivities . . . Ach. that Duke week-
end! ! . . . and all of the others, too ... as has been said, a gala year was had by all.
A tunnel to h — or the Pi Phi house?
Belle" and the "White Monster''
Page 417
Beta Upsilon
Chapter
Page 418
Rlpha Delta Pi
Hoy, hov. Rooney, rooney . . . our six new transfers come to make the chapter happy . . .
"Twink" Hepburn's interior decorating ideas almost gave the house pink floors for rushing
. . . and didn't we pretty the old place up though . . . the juke box party with the juke box in
the house for two days while the joint jumped . . . two sets of twins, the third in the ADPi tra-
dition . . . Margo and Bonnie majoretting . . . with Ruth and Mary. Bill, and Marguerite cheer-
ing at the games . . . Phi Delt spooks on Halloween . . . fraternity parties and hey, how you?
. . . blown fuses . . . Sarah Jane, the Moore twins. Lloyd Craddock. Martha Manning and
Claudia Lee in the "Miss Payoff" contest, with Claudia coming in second . . . the twin's feud
is over ... Of "corset" is . . . Shirley's serenade by the Sigma Chi's being interrupted by
three distressed pigs . . . Sarah's long distance romance . . . and argyle socks . . . Dot's wed-
ding . . . Pierce's Roof Garden after dinner everyday ... the November 12 memorial service
for dead loves . . . the week Van Johnson came to see us . . . all h broke loose . . every-
one leaving on week-ends for the games and all points . . . night raids in the kitchen during wee
hours ... Pi. Bill Henderson's pup. becomes our mascot . . . Marriage, the course the whole
house is interested in . . . Whit and her "Geeks of the Week" . . . Nita. who never knows when
to come in . . . our five pin-ups . . . the big week-ends when the closets collapsed . . . Pierce
and "Chick's" 11:00 lab . . . Bonnie and her 11:00 a. m. love for the library . . . looking for-
ward to the rest of the year . . . the exciting pledge dance, and the Valkyrie Sing . . . don't
forget the wonderful times we've had, girls ... Ho Zion ! ! . . .
Top Rote: Sara Jane Farlow, Carolyn Roper
. Shclloy Rope
r, Nanct
Shields. Edith Knight.
Vnn Whe,
lcr. Helen Stephen
son • Bottom Row: Kalhryn McMillan, Mar
Anna Dunbar
Martha
Manning. Frances Angu
, Mary L
oyd Craddock. Rit
Adams, Mary Lou Williams. Ann Page Ham
s • Hot Pielu
ed: Ga
le Hancock. Doris Beas
ley. Nam
lie Robinson. Belt
Fountain, Myra Welsh.
Page 419
Gamma Epsilon
Chapter
Page 420
Rlpha Gamma Delta
Life at the little brown house . . . Paint brushes slinging . . . Not one active lacking
green hair . . . MacArthur establishes beach-head and plans attack . . . Mission accomplished
with rushees well in hand . . . Major tactic . . . Togas flowing at Greek Party . . . "Narcissus.
Narcissus, Narcissus, I cry" . . . PINCH HEAD! Lawn Party for pledges . . . Becky scratch-
ing but looking pretty on Sadie Hawkins Day float . . . Beauty book returned from ATO's
. . . Blanchard and Snyder walk off with Pharmacy honors . . . Finley voted "all American"
on basketball team . . . Nancy running White rats . . . Betty. "Girls, it's the fifth of the
month." . . . Tolly and Ed, new AGD boys . . . Lucille warbling melodiously . . . Audrey, "Don't
you think you can do with a little less noise?" . . . Versatile Fishel. president of Valkyries.
Glee Club, etc.. etc. . . . Chee's "TEMPTATION" . . . Darrow swims off with plaque . . . Cathy
learns to cook? . . . Twerp ruling Alderman with an iron hand . . . Orchids to Joyce for a
successful Coed Ball . . . "Let's make some coffee" . . . Poole, the "Big Sleep" . . . Ring. The
tunafish did it . . . Pris and Dusty turn authors . . . Neel and Hagan move to Chem. Lab. . . .
"Let's cut class" . . . Marcia. "I, know Jack loves me even though he doesn't speak" . . .
Peace and quiet ... in the attic only . . . Sally and Alice happy over the new stove . . . Mrs.
Clark being ever loyal . . . "And though we're not all Phi Beta Kappa's" . . . Wanted: Men
lost during rushing . . . Thanksgiving and goat songs . . . Gardner entertaining weekly . . .
Highlights of 1947 . . . Banff Springs convention and sister Barbara Jo being crowned "Miss
America" . . . "It's eleven o'clock, girls."
Top Row: Pat McNutt. Lynn HI....
chard, Mary Jane Failing. Jaekie Goodwin
• Middli
Mary M..< ■!..,,. Ruby While Ar
nold. June Gilbert, Mary Anne Daniel. Pr
seilla Moo
Pal Flowers, Ruth McCann, Belly .
lane Blaloek, Emily Baker, Sally Jackson.
Page 421
Eta
Chapter
First Rou: Rhea
ley • Second
„a> o Third I
• Fourth Rou:
Rou.. Robert Pov
\,\
IB, Norman Black. Charlie Blackburn. Bill BlMhe. Lester It... I. Id, Kelh Bowles. Clark Burritt. Harold Burs-
J. Hadlev Cash. Robert Cash. John Collett. Bo Crisp. Frank Davis. George Davis. Paul Dulin. Sonny Duna-
>u- Ed Early, Tom East. A. J. Ellington. Dale E» ans. Cliff Frazier. Bill Crandin. Rav. lings Hargrave, Bud Heaiel
Nelson Hendrix, Bill Herr. Fred Hill. Bill Holmes. Eric Johnson. Jack King. Louis Maxwell. Bill Moore • Fifth
11. Lawrence Rankin. Berrv Reid. Jim Spears. Ralph Stockton. Faison Thomson. Ken Vincent. William Williamson.
Page 427
Beta Theta Pi
Remembrance of things past . . . Looking back in retrospect the year seems short but full,
and in many ways the best we ever had ... It seems only yesterday . . . playing . . . study-
ing . . . working . . . playing . . . always together . . . Collet's spontaneous Raleigh trip in
the snaggle-tooth green bug . . . Watt's working long past midnight for the "new look" in the
dining room, and everyone's pride in his unexpected results . . . Then planning, pinching
pennies, and hoping for a complete house decoration "A southern's Gentleman's Club "...
We remember Pink Rankin. Buzz Bush, and Doc. the advance guard, daily watching the Tar
Heels practice and Doc's interminable moaning . . . Genial Host Dunaway's inevitable but long-
winded bull sessions late at night: sports, sex; from soup to nuts . . . Mass exoduses to Ter-
race View for beer and conversation with co-eds: Remember Townsend and Fitzgerald: a
case of loss of equilibrium . . . The fires at Hogan's and the famed Beta beer parties, an un-
forgettable part of Beta life . . . The songs, the jokes, the nice warm glow; so well remembered
always ... In the fall. too. we had buffet suppers for the sorority pledges, and we met all the
new faces over coffee and idle conversation ... It was cold in the winter and the dark came
very early, but it was always pleasant by "Old Black Sambo's" roaring log fires . . . Winter
quarter . . . short and uneventful, hated 'd o'clocks in the dark cold dawn . . . Basketball games
in a body . . . Remember bow tie night? . . . Blackburn's inability to get out of the sack . . .
The pledges going through a little bit of hell . . . Marshall Roberts sweating it out . . . Then
came the warm days, and we remember Powell and J. Hadley Cash leading us to the beaches
. . . Colonel and the "Fish" leading the way to Hogan's and afternoon parties on the week-ends.
. . . The end of the quarter and good-bye to a lot of the old boys. Rub. Early. Dunaway. Paul,
Dulan. Heazel . . . They'll all be missed . . . But the neophytes can carry on in true Beta
fashion, and there'll be bigger and better years . . . Even as good as this one has been, perhaps
. . . There will always be the same fun. the same troubles, and it will always be Beta, and none
of us will ever forget. . . .
^3 ' <>
The Betas rush in.
Wonder who has the bull by the tail?
Page 423
Epsilon Beta
Chapter
First Rou: Baxter. Butler. Carter. Covington, DeArmon. Dennett • Second Hole: Duke. Durham. Field. Caithrr. Goodwin, Isen-
hour • Third Rou: Knight. McWilliams, Moulton. Murphy, Patterson, Ray • Fourth Rou: Simpson. Singletary, Smith.
Spears.
Page 424
Chi Omega
Cardinal and straw memories blending through the year '47- '48 . . . the early return, the
paint brushes, and the gala opening of the Dubonet Room . . . Barbaras sarong and Carter's
garters . . . angels and devils ushering in twenty-five Heavenly pledges . . . the Chi O's as usual
on Sadie Hawkins Day go out for their men . . . five o'clock cocktail hour with Luce and Paul
. . . coaches Goodwin and Durham keeping our team in shape . . . the fine voices of the ATO's
serenading Joan . . . our dashing DeArmon capturing Miss Pay Off title . . . Jean with a ring on
her finger and two on the phone . . . the Big Five — Singletarv. Patterson. Gaither. Spears,
and Simpson — meeting every Wednesday at 4:30 . . . Coop teaching our new assets the ways
of the X and horseshoe . . . Gullible Gant registering for water skiing 52 . . . Bettv Ann with
her test tubes, and Eleanor with hers . . . Carolyn nonchalantly burning holes in just any old
cashmere . . . our "'rah. rah" gal. Phyllis, with energy she ain't even used yet . . . after dinner
cries of second, third, and fourth for bridge — 0. K.. Marietta . . . Gray keeping up our scho-
lastic average . . . presenting the cream of the crop . . . with Helen leading the Pledge Dance
... by the way, we thank you. Harry . . . it's coffee time and singing after eight . . . bills,
bills, and more Bills, cry Sarah and Marshall — how Young can one get . . . learning the rules
from Tallahassee . . . Stella taking the northbound train, accompanied by coughing Coop . . .
Bootsie leading the co-eds on the straight and narrow . . . Coline with her "Love For Sale'"
. . . Mrs. Capt cleans house — at poker, that is . . . Petite Moulton and Wee Rav . . . the Purl
Two Club initiating B. A. Covington . . . But. Carter, he's no Phi Bete, he's a DKE . . . Epsilon
Beta celebrates its Silver Anniversary . . . Murph's low down harmony on "Hush Little Baby"
. . . Rose's little smile . . . "Ah. girls, 'tis something these friendships to hold."
7 op Rou: Stella Lassiter.
Yokely. Barbara Dalton, Jc
Crimsley. Belly Ann Coop
Nancy Pendleton • \ot p
lured: Gay tt illlam,. Peggy Edge
Middle Ruu-: Kate Myer
Pat Muirhead. Martha I
ice Jones, Mary Ann Tabe
Page 425
Rlpha Rlpha
Chapter
Firs! Row: William P. Allen. Edward K. Anthony. Maurice C. Ashley. Levis D. Hartley. George E. Bullock. Edward C. Burks. A.
Baxter Coleman • Second Row: Norman S. Cooledge. Clifford F. Doll. Dale M. Eyarts. John W. Girard, Robert M. Graham. James
Mel. Green. Theodore L. Huguclct e Third Row: Edwin H. Johnson. William M. Kean. James M. Leigh. R. Charles Loudermilk.
Thomas J. McKin. Joseph B. MeLeod. D. Baxter Morris • Fourth Row: Harold A. Morris. H. Dyer Moore. John R. Owen. Victor
Perry. Iyon C. Rolader. Thomas C. Shelton. John W. Sides • Fifth Row: Raymond D. Shiplett. Riehard L. Simpson. Robert F.
Simpson, Charlie Staneell. Jerry D. Strader. James A. Uzell. Steye C. Ujcll, Thomas M. Wittcmorc.
Page 426
Chi Phi
The Chi Phi's back in the redecorated prewar house . . . House Manager Moe cracking
the whip as we get things in order for the new year . . . that refrigerator we thought would
never come . . . Girard's twin. Alpha the pup. a welcomed addition to the brotherhood . . .
the Georgia week-end: who's that in my sack? . . . we lose our shirts to the Texas Chi Phis
. . . our intramural football huskies meet with mixed success I ? i ... the house party over
the Tennessee week-end. with Kean making his date slave in the kitchen . . . Ray just dropped
in to say howdv . . . Misses Frederica Spuhler and Josephine McLeod getting a lot of mysteri-
ous mail, most of it advertising pink things . . . Kavanaugh wields a wicked paint brush getting
the homecoming display ready . . . that glorious Washington excursion for the Maryland
game . . . Moe and Hasbrouck. the perennial Geeks . . . Ike as Little Orphan Fanny in the
great "radio" skit ... in the evenings, Uncle Hookie doing a rush business in sandwiches and
coffee at his Hole-in-the-Wall . . . Anthony gives the pledge class a hard time . . . the lodge meet-
ings: fine Brother Burks again . . . Cliff and his golden trumpet . . . Wayne, the sensational one-
armed violin virtuoso . . . these and a host of other memories will remind us of a really swell
Chi Phi year.
That wasn't the way we heard it!
Dress up and you can come, too!
Page 427
Rlpha Sigma
Chapter
Jp
AtItA !
mi '< ■ 1: .4 Ih
««=* as-' !*-*<-
First Ron li Max Abbott, Dan I'. Ashby, Julian H. Blaluck. George I Bonrguin, Glover I.. Campbell, Thomas II. Clayton, Marshall
E. Cline, S. Hampton Coleman o Second Rom: William F. Cox, Vincent liil .....,/.,. Carey tt Dobbs. Da>id W. Ferebee, Billings
S. Fuess, Roy A. Gillikin. George D. Hardee. Leonard G. Herring • Thild Ron : Thomas M. Hood. Thomas G. Hurysz. Harvey W.
Johnson. Horace B. Kelly. James M. Kelly. Harold W. II.., .1 Branson W. Mills. Paul Nelson • Fourtfl Romj John DeZ. Nicolia,
Joe B. Proetor. Bill J. Robinson. E. Victor Seixas. Dennis \V. Smith. Duncan R. StClair. Jerry F. Tools. Howard L. Valentine
• I ,lil, «..,. M. Luther Whitley. James E. Wilson. Mose W. Woodard. Carl P. Worley, John C. I ,,,.,,.
Page 428
Chi Psi
Alpha Sigma regretfully checks off another year: not because this has been one of the best
seasons the Lodge has ever seen, but because many of the brothers who helped bring Chi Psi
to the top will not be around to join into the activities next vear. To these men who just gradu-
ated. Chi Psi brothers join in to express their deepest appreciation and thanks.
We've got plentv to look back on and chuckle about: Fall football games and runs to Dur-
ham. Winter basketball games and runs to Durham. Spring baseball games and runs to Dur-
ham . . . Our All-Star touch football team, masterminded by Coach Hood, and sparked by
"Arm' Clavton. "Gracious" Seixas. "Profile Di Lorenzo. "Duck Hardee. "Voice " Proctor.
"Touchdown" Kelly . . . Wilson, the "Geek-of- the- Week" . . . I nip-dee-dee-dee-baby. . . .
"Mv name is Carev Dobbs" . . . Hooder and his "I'm a member of the Sound and the
Fury" . . . Honorary members of the Hot-Rod Club: Nick. Harvey. Dennis, and Frank . . .
Fuess's Lynchburg express via Richmond . . . Proud papa Bourquin and his free cigars . . .
That old refrain: "The wing will go up in two weeks" . . . Battling "Diamond Jim" Herring
still single through his own efforts . . . "Hey, Roy. Raleigh's calling . . . Duncan and Mose
skillfully throwing Dr. Cyclops through the transom. . . .
Mass exodus to serenade Mclver . . . Max's Saturday Evening Post ... A tree hits Julian
Wake Forest week-end . . . And we got 18 fine pledges . . . Llovd s purple-and-gold palm trees
. . . Ferebee's chaos articles . . . Three cheers for Big Nick, a great No. 1, whose toil for Chi
Psi reaped a fine harvest.
Montgomery blows it out
Where's the beer?
Page 429
Rlpha Sigma
Chapter
First Row. Adam,. Bra!
R,„. MacMillian, Mere
Williams.
, Corbc-lt. Craig. Crinklcv. Holt • Second Row: Horner. Molar,]. Hughes. Hvllon. Lane, l-.gg.lt • Third
r. Miller, Norris. Petlilt. It.,,,,. ,1.11 • Fourth Row: Rhvne. Sloutenberg. Sunstrom. TiUon. « alkrr.
Page 430
Delta Delta Delta
"Here comes the bride!" . . . wedding bells for Dot. Betty. Alice. Judy. Nancy. Marty,
Connie. Elsie Jane. Makepeace, and Cathy ... all the wonderful pin-ups . . . Jean Ann. Jo.
Mike. Irene. Mildred. Bunny, and Phyllis . . . Last year's highlights . . . Sigma Chi Derby
. . . Jo. Sweetheart of Sigma Chi: Pet. "Miss Calendar Girls": and the Derby cup all our own
. . . Mav Day . . . Betty. May Queen: Gladney. Ann. and Barbara her attendants . . . Bush week
happiness with thirty one wonderful pledges . . . "Miss Payoff" saw six of our girls as candi-
dates . . . Cattie. Barbara. Babs. Tenn. Joan. Feme ... A new Delta Shelter ... A juke box
playing off beat . . . Barbara singing "Beal Gone Guy" . . . Bum always watching . . . Jud
waiting . . . Jean Ami and Pet cheering . . . Ben going to meetings . . . Norma going to
Danzigers for coffee . . . Pat worrying . . . Kitty just being sweet and loyely . . . Cattie plan-
ning parties . . . Crink with Pete . . . Jean pleading for dues . . . Joyce always smiling . . . Mary
Locke and the two Nancy's rushing oyer from Spencer . . . Carmichaers gossip after lunch . . .
Alberta meeting Henry . . . Faith practicing for Sound and Fury . . . Craig getting three
letters a day . . . Margie, cute as ever . . . Ibish running to Annapolis every week-end . . . Lengthy
telephone conversations after eleven . . . Castelow present for all big week-ends . . . week-ends
in Washington and Williamsburg . . . everyone knitting argyles . . . Homecoming decorating
(Joke! I . . . Mrs. Williams more wonderful than ever . . . and laurels to our wonderful
president. Sonny . . . Highlights of this year . . . Our pledge dance at Carolina Inn . . . thirty
one pledges making their debut . . . Candy on front of the Mag . . . Ben. Secretary of the
Senior Class . . . Dannv. Secretary of the Junior Class . . . Irene and Jean Ann (poison oak
and all I in the German Club figure . . . More fun . . . Don't trv the others. Tri Delt. . . .
fin-
/J-r"
Top Rou>: Effic Senn Mason. Betsy Emory. Dutch Jones. Bcttv McDonald. Grace Winslow, Mary Ross Shcrrin. Hilda Sharko .
Mary Ilillard. Joan Lneas, Peppy Lucas. Ann Clark, Cynthia Cannon • Middle R.n. Dolly Ann Dunaway, Emily Ogburn.
Pat Ellis. Marjorie Plcss, Martha Rainsford, Elinor Wolti, Lib Kiser, LU Hotard, Frances Bickett, Candy Jonas • Bottom
Rote: Babs Kerr, Marilyn Blackwell, Babs DeWitt, Danny Payne, Lynn Hammock, Joddy Rhvne, B. A. Pope, Dudley
Hill. Heath Hartzell.
Page 43/
Beta
Chapter
KHp p
l4i^ 4\ lift
1 fbkff li T"
^ /ft r a £ o
ti
**-.
,\
First Rou: Bran.lt Allen. Nathaniel L. Armstead. Jack Barnes, John Blades, William Blades. S. Tinslcy Campbell. Stuart Camp-
bell. H. Martin Carmiehael. Charles Crowell. Charles Davenport a Second Rou-: William Dodson. Thomas Elliott. James El-
wood, Robert Francis, Uiehard Fountain. Lemuel Gibbons, William II. .1.1,.. Rov Holsten. Lawrence Hooper. William Jabine • Third
Rou: Burton Jones, Augustus Graham. William Kemp. Simon Lawrence, William Lee. Thomas Lindlev. Muir Lyon, Stable Linn, Leo
McCurnin, James MeMullan • Fourth Rou: John Meade. Paul Mengel, Howard Merry. Joseph Miller. Paul Montague. Charles Nor-
ton, Allison Pell, Eugene ReQua. Royal Shannonhouse. William Smith • Fifth Rou: William Thorp. Howard Walters. Benbur>
Wood, Thurman Williams. Robert Wiley, Augustus ZollieofTer.
Page 432
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Dropped: one shiny sheepskin to Texas Dekes . . . Gained: fourteen ardent new faces to
the Hall of Beta . . . "Mumbles" amazes all with new talent . . . "Dealer" and his gray-haired
cohorts have only week-night dates, knitting on the week-ends . . . Friday and Saturday spoils
left wide open for younger generation of "Third Floor Cats" . . . Nonsense blossoms into the
"Gentleman Dapper" . . . duties of "Brother Racketeer" assumed by Leo . . . Tri-Delts in-
vite Dekes to roast wieners . . . Meade is "returned" from Duke massacre C. 0. D. . . . alumni
use the house as official H. Q. at home games . . . house stripped prior to Southern invasion
by Cavalier brothers . . . pledge banquet enjoyed thoroughly by Roy . . . Jabine finds less
and less time for study after dark . . . chapter provided with inside dope on Tar Heel eleven
by "Manager Tom" . . . Frazier hears about the good time he had in Washington . . . Deke
standard for German Club representatives maintained by Thurman . . . "Little Dealer" enjoys
D. C. downpour from open convertible . . . raid chases Blackjack game to second floor sanctu-
ary . . . Griffin's philosophy undergoes radical change ... as it must to all men, it came to "The
Mighty Mole" . . . Mengal journies to Durham sans golf sticks . . . Crest of U. P. comeback
straddled by Marty . . . "Illy" rivals Jack Horner for popularity . . . Tag team piloted to
second-place tie by injured Allen . . . "Humpty" enjoys first date . . . Thorps' Chewy be-
comes dependable shuttle in Curve-Inn . . . Coxe caught napping by the Constabulary in Dur-
ham . . . Malt Degree conferred upon Barnes . . . Brothers set watches as "Reke" departs
for Peabody . . . Merry. Bates. Wiley find unbottled sunshine at Gainesville . . . well, at least
we kept the curve down.
Dekes will be Dekes.
. . And some went swimming in March.
Page 433
First Rote: Herbert L. Bodman. Da> id D. Durvea. E. Perm Fiero. Theodore J. Fussell. John S. Gittines • Second Rou : Richard
E. Gordon, A. Myles Haynes. Robert A. Hedriek. Robert T. MaeMillan. Craig A. Maston • Third Roir: John Minnick Plant*. III.
William C. Pritehard. Alain R. Singer.
Page 434
Delta Psi
1947-48. a year of changes in the Hall . . . Amoss and Wainwright have additions with
Fillings and Durveas expecting . . . Bodman married with the help of Uncle Tony . . . New
face on the living room . . . Can't be beat . . . S tailing's artistry adorning the back room . . .
Wish he were still here . . . Nicoud gone . . .Will the parties be the same? . . . The ball game
with Spivak's bovs . . . Uncle Tom triumphant and wet — inside . . . Scrappy Singer, the wiry
Frenchman, star of th; soccer team . . . ""Hank" Pfautz backing him up . . . Sammy Magill
circling the track . . . What makes Sammy run? . . . Ted. ':the Old Salt"", after a summer cruise
. . . Dick and his love life sandwiched between the Yack and Naval Science . . . Bingy and his
puns . . . Mac and his horses . . . Will there never be an end? . . . The pre-Tennessee game
partv at Hogan's . . . Did anyone make the game? . . . You can find Myles. the lover of Lake
Lure, in the bath . . . Craig with his thoughts in the airways . . . Get him a blimp . . . His turn
to padlock the pennies . . . Bill Pritchard. pens on the Tar Heels . . . Craig and George build-
ing walls and knocking holes in the Annex . . . Gittings chugalugging whiskey and water . . .
Trying to make his hair grow . . . Frequent returns of "Johnsons Wax" Beele with a bevy of
gals and something else . . . Al's Tony, successor to Folly . . . Vicious Vic and his beard . . .
Couldn't face Chapel Hill with it . . . Shaw, soccer and scooter . . . Known as Romeo . . .
Frugal Fiero and food . . . Eulas. the old retainer, getting domestic and planning a new house
. . . Ed Emack and Orrin Magill planning nuptials . . . Someone ought to warn them. . . .
That's our year.
This tough college life.
No import quota, no beer quota.
Page 435
Rlpha Lambda
Chapter
First Rou-: Jim Amos, Jim Applewhite. Oliver Anthony. Tom Belk. Cliff Booth. Bill Childers. Clvde Collins • Serond Rote: Dick
Culberson. Pete Dobbins. Bob Dulin. Holt Farlev. Ed Faulkner. Fred Garvey, Ernie Hicks • Third Rou: John Hinnant. Milton
Hinnant. Joe Knowlcs. CeorBe Lvne. Bill Mason, George McKce. John McPhaul • Fourln Rou- W. B. O'Neal, Boh Pait. Earl Pitt-
man. Claude Robertson. Dan- Robinson. Clvde Rollins. Jesse Speneer • Fifth Ruu . Pete Stafford. Hoke Stcclman. Tav lor Thome.
Jim Vogler, Diek Wax.
Page 436
Delta Sigma Pi
The past year in retrospect appears as one of frenzied activity ... in every phase. Pro-
fessional trips to industrial plants "to see how they really do it — if it resemhles classroom
theory" . . . talks and discussions with the "brass"' in Bingham . . . visits from the old grads
who made good on the "outside"' . . . the rat-race, that is. rushing . . . "put the pressure on
that guy ... do you think he'll come in? ... remember we're losing 23 men this year . . .
two pledge classes will do it . . ." The football season . . . that almost wasn't . . . but then was . . .
The open houses after every game ... all the old faces back every week-end . . . the sharp
looking imports . . . those initiation dances . . . and then there were the serenades to the
brothers' pin up girls . . . got to be quite a habit . . . how may pins did we lose? — six? — or was
it eight? . . . and now the present . . . for some of us. it's time to say "Thanks for a wonderful
year" . . . for others it's just another step . . . for all of us it's been great fun . . . which leaves
us the future . . . who knows? . . . we're on our own now . . . but we'll be back . . . keep up
the good work. Delta Sig, . . . it's been a year to remember.
Do you know
Everybody get the spirit!
Page 427
Upsilon
Chapter
' © t ■. c © i r
* p p r> c> jir b
f. & & C £ ft t
- 4
c> £•■■ o e>
1 u I
Fir.l Boir Oliver S Anthony. Sam T. Atkinson. Jack Bagg, Paul Baynard. Tom B.Ik. Bruce Berkley. Joe Blytl.e. Kenneth Bland,
David Broadv. J. L. Bulla. Lee B. Copple • Second Ron ■: John Campbell. Richard S. Covington. Henry Dowdy. Richard A. Dunlca.
John Fishol. Paul Fuller, Sid Gardner, James B. Cascoigne. Charlie Gibson. George C. Criizard. John C. Haltivanger • Thin!
Ron- Jimmy Harvey. C. H. Hertv, III, J. Wiley Hodges. S. Hunter Howard. Charlie Hulaff. Da. id Hutlon. Berkley Ingram. Jack Jack-
son Arthur Jones. Robin S. Kirbv. A. J. Koonce • Fourth Rote: Karl Kurbjun. Dusty Leonard. Da. id M. Lindsay. Bob Lindsay.
Nicholas Long. Jerrv Marsh, Charles E. Masscv. Thomas M. Mayfield. Oscar Jeter Mooneyham, Dover Moore. John T. Moore • Fifth
Ron- Gilbert T. McLeod, Kemp Nixon, Harrv Northrop. Bob Page. Ralph A. Phillips. Robert M. Phillips, Welborn C. Phillips.
Dan Rea.es. Leigh Rodenbough. Jack T. Sampson. Joe Satterthwaite • Sixth Ron : Robert L. Sing. Grady Shuford. H. Mason Smith,
Miles J. Smith. Kennon Smith. Randolph Smith. William B. Spaugh. Stephen Stefanou. David B. Stevens. John Stump. William M.
Tale • Seventh Ron: William Taylor. Thomas Irquhart. Dick Wav. Richard Wright. T. H. Yancy. Vance Anderson.
Page 438
Kappa Alpha
The crimson rose of Kappa Alpha's southern gentlemen burst into full bloom that very
first day when the "grand old gang" returned to its home at 110 West Cameron and began
what turned out to be the most eventful and fun-packed year ever.
The events have passed, but memories remain, of good times, good spirits, high ideals,
and a hundred unforgettable KA brothers.
. . . For how could we forget . . . "Smiley" Ingram and his classic remarks . . . Bland and
his poop sheet . . . Hunter and the etchings in his boudoir . . . Mason and Katherine. getting
along fine, as usual . . . "Hookus" and Sammy T. starring in that 2 a. m. football game with
those fellows across the way . . . "Yogi" and his strip-tease . . . Bready and "who th'hell
tracked that mud in here" . . . Kurbjon falling in love . . . "Weasel" finally gaining a pound.
. . . "Push 'em down! Push 'em downf Waaaaaay down!" . . . "Canvas Back" meeting Bob
Phillips . . . Ricks changing majors still another time . . . "Soldier" getting a name straight
. . . and Massey doing such a grand job with his social committee.
And then there were . . . Those week-end blackouts in the social room . . . All those "ace
lads" during rush week . . . Afternoon labs at the Curve Inn. checking the curves . . . And
many other memories about many good times at Carolina — at the KA house . . . Again we
leave, but our hearts forever stav . . . And they bound themselves together and they called it
old KA.
V
Chug-a-lug!
l"s friendship.
Page 439
Rlpha ITIu
Chapter
3: :
£ p p> C-
a £ - - o
il K t
•; %J*
A fc
l\
firs/ Ron: W ray Amos. Janus Aydelette. Edward Baity. W illian
Carter, F. Fred Cheek. Frank Benton Cooper. Edward Cordon
Eugene Des Portes. William Dunean. K. Parks Easter. Albert
James Garrison • Third Row: Leonard Gilliam. Hugh Griffin.
W illiam Hight. Dwight Hinkle. Rothseliild Holden. Lewis Holdin
Eugene H. Johnstone. W alter Jones. Robert Kelly. William Kyle
Fred Martin • Fifth Roiv : Riehard Mavberry, James Morgan.
William (lis. n. Stephen Parrott. James Pasehall. Edwin Pate, Ja
George Sills, James R. Smith. Jaek L. Snipes, James Spillers, Frs
• Seventh Row: Gary Taylor. Frederick Toeker. Arthur I'tley
.id,.. Philip w ithers. j. F. Woodhouse.
. Boone. Riehard Borden. Edwin Brenegar. Walter Brinkley. Leonard
• Serond Roic: John Cordon. Philip Coueh. English Des Champs.
Ehelein. Robert Ensslin. Baxter Lee Frentress. Thomas Folger.
. Jaek Hamilton. Robert Harris. Donald Harrison. Gordon Heath.
Fleming Jeffries • Fourth Row: Hugh Jenkins. Charles Johnson.
Ahis Lewallen. William Little. William Lynch, Philip MeKinne.
Albert Morris. Robert Newell, John Norwood. Leonard Oettinger.
es Patlon • Sixth Row: Ely Perry. Conway Rose. George Sibold,
klin Stalling.. Lee Roy Stanley. W illiam Steele. Daniel Steigman
Charles Vernon, William White. F. A. Whiteside, Henry White-
Page 440
Kappa Sigma
The chapter started another great year with a promising outlook for the future. The
football season brought together many old grads and new members. A great interest is being
taken by the new pledge class in the workings of the fraternity. Many week-end parties have
been held and everyone seemingly had a fine time — a mighty fine time! We copped the cup for
the homecoming display last fall as a result of some tireless work by some of the boys.
The boys in the end room are at rest with Heavy gone . . . Bruno finally has Brer Bear
in line again . . . P. G. Hinkle and L. L. Easter are at their same old game . . . Sodie finally
found and lost a short squaw . . . Pedro trying to join the U. S. Polo team . . . "The Dad" keep-
ing all his "youngsters" in line . . . Ed B. working on a new marriage textbook and lab material.
Dum Dum. champ of the strong arm set . . . Fireball trying to grow a juniper tree in the
back yard . . . Junie J. finally "on the beam" in his love life . . . Whit changed to an account-
ing major . . . Fred T. feeding slum gullion to the troops . . . Dapper, peoples choice for
second-story man . . . J. G. got another meeting tonight . . . Connie booking a bout with B. G.
Mullet. "These labs and quizzes take all my time" . . . G. 0., "Now I wouldn't say that."
. . . Ben C, the great profile . . . Gooch camping over at the ADPi house . . . Jim S.. the one
man hash slinger in the lower chow hall . . . Willie W. trying to find B. T. in Mexico . . .
Ed C., "I didn't need that course anyway." . . . Lightning, "Now this boy is a great prospect;
I know him well" . . . Pimparino, "These nightmares are killing me" . . . Chubby, "What a
gal that was in Washington" . . . Foljay serving as VPSB between trips to Baleigh . . . The
Smithfield boys, "Well, were only rushing one boy now" . . . Gene J. master PJ mixer and
\ack slave driver for the third term . . . George K., another one who was trapped by the not-so-
much- weaker sex . . . Fat. "Let's get this straight now" . . . Baby Wray. "I don't think we
should do it." . . . Lulu, charter member of the DDD Club . . . William H., "Now at Papa's
slaughter house . . ." Walt B.. "They can't prosecute for this." . . . Leonard 0.. "My last girl
told it to me this way . . ." C. S. found his way back for N. Y. C.
Of Wright being Co-Captain, Dr. Woodhouse. our patron saint, our loving-cup. our new
playroom, and our Black and White Ball, we are proud.
It's not lo college that we come for Knowledge.
'once reports his night's adventure.
Page 441
Gamma Ru
Chapter
r..,> Rou: Rirhard F. Anderson. Eugene N. Blake, J„l,n V. Booracm. Rufus E. Hum. . Curtis S. Clauson. Albert J. Diab. Jo
Ebbs • Second Rote: William B. Fiiilavso... Frank E. Cossett. Robert S. Green. Horace G. Hankins. James P. IP.. .,.,. Carl M.
man. Jr.. John H. Kinsev • Third Row. Charles \V. Knight Joe L. Knight. Kenneth C. Linebaek. William U. Millawav, Rola
Minti. Joseph R. Moon. Donald R. Moore • Fourfn Row,: David S. McAdams. Daniel \\ . MeClain. John S. MeDuffie. Char
McLeese. Frederick L. Page. William A. Prinre. Robert S. Streetman • Fifth Row: Albert C. Stuart, Norman K. Self, Day
Smith. V Warren Wilson.
id E.
.s F.
d A.
Page 442
Lambda Chi Rlpha
Whut? ... It is to a house . . . paint, pa
fill the cracks'' Lineback . . . Doc leads the ch
Wash-Wash" . . . Georgia week-end, Bethesda
and the gal behind the throne . . . Geek Prince,
fellas . . . Bridge-bustin" Self, the snow king .
... so long. Doc. 'twas swell . . . Just checkin",
a tub . . . the Baron wants a dogsled . . . one
Cave . . . Wilson . . . Page and the Colonel .
. . . Tyndall's purple birthday, credit Pearl and
New York or Bust . . . Kenny rides the HORSE
Hogan s Carolyn drives again . . . Moon;
Breezies blanketin* . . . Carl and straw hat .
"Just dropped in t'say HOWDY" Ebbs . . . The
loon-man Prince . . . any Price and the new look
a-lookin" Shofety . . . the co-op gal and breakf
Cheers and beers . . . Plumber Clauson and tu
. . . spyglasses, squirrels, and Streetman . . .
some heat Hogan . . . who said party . . . whut?
rat, paint . . . Kemtone and Trommer's ... "I
orus. Alpha Gams applaud? . . . "Foots and
Express begins . . . Quad commander Hankins
the Florida guardian, and the same old ship.
. Who pitched a Duffle . . . Smellabrew Smith
Al . . . Dear Ruth and Naomi . . . three men in
punch Pete . . . Gossett's perturbed . . . Dave s
. . whose leg. Moon's? . . . hit the pad. Street
Bob . . . Finlavson's Daisy Mae . . . Dickie,
Green and Guthrie; tux and jeans . . .
"But Roonev's ray buddy!" . . . Butner and
. . There s a motion on the floor Booraem . . .
Geeks . . . week-end at the DT House . . . Bal-
. . . Monadnock Keeter, it's a butte . . . Diab's
ast for ten . . . Moon meets the curfew . . .
rtles . . . Four no-trump Knight ... Hi Gene!
Read between the lines. McClain . . . let's get
must be Maxwell Hon-.
Page 443
Beta
Chapter
1 £ f? £-
<1
ill
^
■? P '£• P £ £ ^
-ft
9 p P € £P
c> p> ^
£hA $■ ikitMtifflM
4^
ft)
First Row: Charles Aflli.k. Robert Ball, Charles Bennett, Sidney Booth. Paul Broyhill, William Butler, John Byers, Robert Carlson.
William Caubl.- • Second Row: Sim Croeker. Jerrv Darden, Charles Earp. William Edwards, Everett Elliot. David Finch. Meigs
Golden. William Green. William Haskell • Third Rou ■: Marvin Horton. Harry Howren, Judson Hawk. Wade Esaaes. James Jack-
son. George Johnson. Eugene Kendall. Robert Killeffer. Robert Koonts • Fourth Rou: James Little. Milton Miller. William Monk.
Harold Morrow. Benson McCutcheon. Charles MeGin.se> . William Mclver, Edward Owens. William Porter • Fifth Rou: George
Robertson. Moss Sallev. Charles Seward. Raymond Sheelev. Adrian Smith. V. hilsel S„,itb. Thomas A. Stokes. James Thrash. South
Trimble • Sixth Rou: Eugene Turner. Elw ood Van Voores. Thomas Vestel. Charles Voighl. James Was.lrnn. Roteher Walking,
Thomas Weatherly. Thomas White. Basil Wood.
Page 444
Phi Delta Theta
Among other things 1947-1948 brings: a new housemother, the last of the returnees from
the War. the prodigals, house improvements and another rush week, or was it a month? Stubbs
at the helm as rush chairman . . . The Gaja Phis descend on us for a reply of the Sugar Bowl.
. . . Football and sleepless week-ends . . . Leedy, Gallion. and the Wedge "rush" south to Florida.
. . . Brother Tandy is tabbed "Old Reliable" on the flank . . . Voight heads University Club.
. . . "Medals" Morrow is weighted down . . . Broyhill. McCutcheon. MacDonald. and Demp-
sey serenade at WC . . . Everybody's strewing pins around . . . Moose's lawn display would
be winner, but the darn thing wont work! . . . Off to Washington and the Maryland game . . .
Meet me in Room 513 at the Raleigh . . . The Dook week-end bringing many alumni and beau-
coup partying . . . Turner's long distance romance . . . Duke. Henderson. Porter and Elam
tying the knot ... A gala pledge banquet . . . Earp, Monk, and Broyhill take their turns at
interior decorating . . . Miller's Richmond week-ends . . . Lane follows Broyhill to Phi Bete
ranks . . . Music while we dine . . . ADPis become our Halloween dates with a masquerade
(?) ... Moss crossed between Salem and Saint Mary's . . . Hawk chauffeurs a Buick touring.
. . . Spring is upon us and diplomas rain down on NC Beta . . . Now we leave, but fond mem-
ories of '48 will forever stay. . . .
£JwQL
She's the housemother . . . really !
Is there a toothpirk in the crowd?
Page 445
Epsilon
Chapter
d p e r
iL.<T ftiknl
ftfip e ft p if i £i r
6 9 PC. r-p. jr.
. c« & ts r.
lop Row: Dowitt Austin. Henry Badgctt. Dcvan Barbour. Dean Bell. Meredith S. Buel, Milton Cash. Hal Chaplin, Diek Cheatham.
Jack Cobb. Bill Cobb. Ray Conner O Seronrf Rote: Bill Creech. Bill Crump. Jack DeVore. Everette Edwards. Bill Edwards. Jack
Farmer. Thill Faurote, Diek Fleming. John Frazirr. Dick Gibson. Dixie Greene • Tnirrf Rou : A. W. Griffin. Carl Hackney, Bill
Hacknev. Dick Hammer. Bob Hcdrick. Robin Hicks. Tookie Hodgson, « alter Holt. Bob Hutton. Clay Irby. Harold Jeter • Fourth
Row: Charles Lamberth. Harrv Lamm. Jim Lanier. Ariiistcad L.^e. Dixon McLean. Bill Martin. Carl Mathis. Bill Mayo, John Mayo,
Jack Milne. Tunc Nunnelee • Fi/lh Roto; John llrr. Daic Ormond, Marion Parker. Hugh Perry. I.caim.n Rogers. Cam Sanders.
Jeff Scwell. J. W. Sexton. Bob Smith. Will C. Smith. Tom Stratford • Sixth Ron : Jack Swanner, Bill Talc. Mcrwin Vanlleckc. Harry
Walker. Archie Webb. John Webb, Bill Wester. David Whichard. Jack Whichard. Lent Whittsctt. Ted Voung.
Page 446
Phi Gamma Delta
White stars and purple pilgrims, rich tastes and poor brothers, big plans and little means
. . . we should forget, but we never will . . .
"Potentate Plups" at his best and worst . . . meet me down at the Count's house . . .
Tonto's birthday party ■ ■ ■ "Baby" and the "monster" . . . Woodbury's kiss-offs by the
dozen . . . still that "old Black Magic"" . . . Edward's poop sheets and the thrill of making
the history . . . Fashionable to be seen at the Curve Inn. "Evo" et al . . . Football games and
post-game parties . . . "crap book" items a-plenty . . . Wardle's woman woes and Creech's
open house . . . Mrs. Todd's husband, Leon ; and Tula's bov friend. Barbour . . . the "beast"
posing as Van and Bussy posing as Alan . . . oh. well, dreams! . . . Lambeth and flock . . .
stones, on fingers or in heads? . . . Bencini and Bell . . . Broughton on sax. and Nunnelee on
horn . . . roll 'em bones . . . "Mule and Leamon . . . gin and pinochle . . . skill points . . .
Fowle's fame and Green's vocabulary! . . . What's a home without a mother? . . . Thanks.
Mrs. Avent . . . The Duke week-end and all the trimmings . . . trips to Williamsburg. Florida
and Washington . . . Returning Alumni. Stinky's new routines and faces . . . "Lover" Tietjen
and "the best ain't good enough for me" . . . Pinch-heads and Princes . . . Walker and Mar-
tin . . . take your pick . . . Phi's party fixin' and Paul's biscuits . . . Section meetings and
Pig Dinners . . . New wives, Ann. Rachel. Marilyn, and Barbara . . . some pin-ups too! . . .
Holt and Co. . . . thirty-nine grads . . . Exams! — what, again? . . . Put them all together they
spell — FIJIS, a word that means the world to us.
Hot lips got a zipper.
Page 447
Lambda
Chapter
Y ^, *■* J'W'iiri
#
—h
> ^ £*> C>
jtf if *
Firs! Ron ■: Thomas A. Alspaugh. James Auslin. Kiehard S. Atkinson. Jop H. Cluwson. Charles E. Dubbin. Richard Duiinan. A. Ilav-
nes Dulllap. Frank S. Enslish. Joe Foster • .Seronrf Ron: Joseph D. Franks. Garfield W. Guicr, S. MeC. Hasaman. Donald B.
Harris. Oma H. Hester. W. H. J. Hippie. III. .1. Samuel Hooker. Homer Holton. Charles S. Roman • Third Role: V. Morris
Kudsen. Charles S. Larrimore. David E. Miles. George \V. Mumford. Samuel R. McCaulev. George U. Mi-Lend. John W. Neil, Wil-
ford P. Penny, Farrell F. Potts • Fourln Ron: Joseph C. Powell. Arthur N. Pappas. Harvev C. Renn. John Parks lingers. Wells
B. Ross, Elbert S. Rntledge, Henry P. Savas. Wade T. Surrat. Hush E. Sawyer • Fifth Ron: Allen P. Sherman. William A. Sholar.
E. E. Stevenson. H. Mariotte Stewart, Herbert A. Vogler, Lewis H. Warren. Donald M. Ward. Preston White.
Page 448
Phi Kappa Sigma
A spring house party and all the Phi Kaps fell out for the McCorkel Ball . . . The monsoon
hit us as we started for the woods . . . All Phi Kaps know what rain is: it's what goes with
us on all of our parties . . . Weher's stories of Australia and of his home in a kangaroo's
pouch . . . Then a Sunday beer party in our secluded garden . . . The safari to Laurel Hill.
. . . Penny's love affair with a porpoise at Carolina Beach . . . We'd like to see the "tomato
that the Judge flew to the beach to see — among other things . . . Egeln did it again: sound
asleep in the middle of a clinch: we wonder if he is indifferent or just tired . . . The firm of
Soloman and Siegel. Attorneys at Law. is now opening. The crime rate has decreased: they
do this by removing the temptation . . . The medicos told Nelson that he had the flu but
Nelson argued them out of it. Stretch got out of the infirmary and they are all feeling better
now . . . Phi Kappa Sigma s unique innovation: Little Sister . . . Donnan, Crocker, Stevenson:
clowns and A.A.LL champs all at the same time . . . Pictures of us that did not quite make the
national magazines . . . The Phi Kaps "cats" made a pilgrimage to Charlotte to worship Gene
Krupa . . . Bubber Austin couldn't go because he had danced one slow . . . Guyer has been re-
fusing to answer the phone . . . Powell receives telegrams and special deliveries then myste-
riously goes to Raleigh ... A ball and chain each for Atkinson. Blaylock. Sholar. Warren.
. . . Stewart and Donnan done graduated.
^^4,
Looking forward to Hell Week.
Dancing in the dark.
Page 449
north Carolina ^$
Rlpha Chapter
First Rous: Anderson. A.. Anderson. P.. Barnes. Basnight. Black. Burhanan. Bvrum • Second Ron: Cashion. Clinard. Coinpton.
Cordon. Crawford. l)a>is. Eaddv • T7,irrf Row: Evans. Everett. Guion. Hazlett. Jernigan. Lawrrnee. Lee • Fourth Ron: Lloyd,
Morrison. Parker. Peterson. Powe. Rogers, Ross • Fifth Ron: Tindell, Vanee, Von Borrics, White, Whitner.
Page 450
Pi Beta Phi
The best years of our lives recorded thusly; Painting the house for rushing . . . The Can
Can party with Eaddy, our master of ceremonies, leading us in "Pi Phi is Gay Nineties all the
time" with Liz as the beauteous farmer's daughter and Jane Lee as torchy Flaming Mame . . .
Our wonderful twenty-five pledges and their original songs . . . Chris. Pi Phi's contribution to
INC spirit . . . The empty house with everyone trucking up to Washington . . . The Duke week-
end and the unending party at Jo's . . . BWOC Evans . . . "Monster" Morrison, the ringleader
of the Animal Kingdom, our '47 Summer Session Club . . . Our proud pin-ups. Joyce. Bar-
bara. Katie Jane. Laura, and Sookie . . . Sallie and the Phi Gam brothers . . . The brainy
math major — Our Liz . . . Helens priceless remark. "Billy's so cute" . . . Buths addition to the
growing fleet of cars . . . The campus wide Sunday night suppers . . . Ludy always talking
long distance . . . Martha and her bows . . . Jeanne's surprise shower for our Christmas
bride. Sookie . . . And then Pat getting herself engaged and married in a month's time to the
Pride of the Marines . . . Best wishes to our married sisters . . . Emily, the efficient presi-
dent of Spencer . . . Mama "G" forever our guiding angel . . . N. C. Alpha entertained N.
C. Beta . . . The Thanksgiving week-end and our last game as students . . . Lib's favorite and
most becoming color. Kelly green . . . Did we ever decide whether Sue would make a better
politician or bare back rider? . . . Katie and her bee-uuu-ti-ful new blue . . . Dabney. Stalke-
roy's joy . . . Helen C. and her endless supply of men . . . Leading all Valkyrie honors . . .
The future editor of "Mademoiselle", Julia . . . Donnie's dilemma, all twenty-five of 'em . . .
Our gadabout, that's Anna B. . . . Ann and Sally Ann join in our fun . . . The Christmas
carolling excursion with the surprising number of bass voices being added . . . Our motto: "A
ring in the spring' . and Katie, and Joyce, and Laura, and "Wee", and Donna, and Goodie, up
n did it! ... Sambo and Dick, our handsome own . . . These best years we'll never leave, for
it s always love in Pi Phi.
Top Ron: Glad
Betsy Tom Law
Bottom Row: J<
Virginia Nash.
Roberts. Robe
r, Channion Griffin, H.
Mary Clcn Slater. Lauri
1 Huffman, Louise Dodson
Hudson. Sallv Woodhull, Barbara Smith • Middle Rou :
, Jean Marie Lester. Weddv Thorp. Elizabeth Mvatt •
■riet Sipple, Goodie Nufer. Donna Barnelt. Hunter Bell,
Page 451
Tau
Chapter
c ,c a ■£ ppp
£• ft- r ft £
:.-,.,..
Top Roir: Charles P. Adams. William L. Allison. Edward C. Battle. Kenneth C. Blaek. Jan.es H. Boyl
A. Capehan. Benjamin F. Cooper. Sam W. Craver. Robert L. Dave • Second Ro.e: Albert M. Gainor. Alfred H. G
Samuel II. Green, Manriee W. Griffin. Zaehariah Harris. Lewis A. Haynes. Grover C. Henson. Carl B. Ilolbrook. Ch
• Third Row: Earl D. Honeveutt. Harvey W. Jetton. Rex M. Kennedy, Casper C. Lamb. Charles K. MeDermit. Jos
John M. May. Ashley C. Morris. Joseph E. Murphy, John H. Neal • Fourth Ro,i : Wilbur L. Padgett. Chauneey M
H. Phillips. Charles I'. Kiddle. Paul \\ . Rohrer. Van V. Seerest. V* illiard M. Sessler. John B. Simpson. Charles G.
H. Sutton • Fifth Ron: William Raymond Tavlor. Wayne E. Thompson. Norn,
W alden, Th lore U. Wall. Thomas S. Weaver. Duke C. W illard, Robert A. W ill
Page 452
Pi Kappa Alpha
Autumn's lovely colors . . . and we returned to a new house ... it looked new, anyway,
thanks to Trim, Monk, and the rest . . . Graham, the new prexy . . . and "Precious" Adams,
the vice . . . Padgett took over the funds . . . the third floor administration. . . .
Big week-ends and bigger hangovers . . . Holbrook and Pablo, back in the swing . . .
"Spitton" Williams and his knick-knacks ... a monster pledge class . . . monstrously good . . .
The Germans and exodus to Maryland . . . and the Duke week-end . . . RUFF! ! . . .
"About this Barfly" . . . Sessler, the Male Harmone . . . and "send Hondros back to
Rocky Mount." says Mumbles Merritt . . . Coffeehead Secrist . . . The Car Wheel re-appear-
ed .. . The Ice Blue Room and a fur-lined oddity . . . Split Head . . . Culbertson Willard.
the bridge expert . . . That eight hour accounting quiz . . . Ugh! . . . Brains Hayes and a
hundred pipes . . . Kennedy got a date, at last . . . Big Stoop's car (he calls it I ... and
Broadus partied . . . and partied . . .
Christmas . . . and Wicker. Taylor. Adams, and Cabbv Fouts gone with the sheepskin.
. . . Whisenhunt. the quiet partyin man . . . Dirtv Joe . . . Cheesechomper chomped on . . .
the coke machine and "got a nickle?" . . . Hogan just kept rollin" along . . . the Weenie Room,
and Olin T. . . . "My meat's too tough!" ... a great year ... a great gang ... a great time.
. . . "Turn off that damn water downstairs! !" . . .
Dream Girl 1947.
Piddling Pik.V:
Page 453
Omega Beta
•ffU til
Fir.1 Row: Howard Aronson. Hariri Auci bach, Alan Bergman. Charles Barton, Melville Cohen, Sidney Epstein, Howard Field •
Second Row: Ervin Fox, Stanley Fox. Perry Frankel. Robert Friedlander, Alan Gubin. Alfred Jacobson. Leonard Kaplan • Third
Ron.- Mervyn Lentz, Frank Lew. Howard Perry. Norman Ripps, Melvin Shapiro. Gerald Schwartz. Jay Siegel • Fourth Ron
Sanford Sprintz, Fred Swartzberg, Richard Wallack, Melvin Weslrcich.
r
Page 454
Pi Lambda Phi
The Deke Trophy now resides over the fireplace and the boys are striving for another
leg. This proud trophy in our possession, the year began with the acquisition of 12 pledges
— all potential B.M.O.C.'s. We will all remember — the "double-whammy" that we gave State
— and the rain gave us . . . the loss of such fine brothers as the Arab, Skip, AI. Jake, Nudge.
Gerry, Buggsy, Melco, Bobby, Sid, Norm, and ex-Rex Lentz . . . the beautiful suite in Rich-
mond— house detectives included . . . the famed Pi Lamb quartet now down to a single . . .
everyone trying to live up to their caricatures . . . Lennie's lamp not doing any good . . .
after seven years Nudge finally made a varsity letter . . . Crusader Ripps keeps pulling the
pledges in . . . Perry F. still has a new face a minute ... lot a' laughs. We won't forget that
the penthouse and pandemonium are partners in crime . . . Freddie is still laughing ... of
the great triumvirate Happy still remains . . . Tyrone's flaming DeSoto . . . jam sessions
every Friday night . . . the "little furrier" and his Giants . . . "Dopey" broke up a happy
threesome . . . Rones will start next year . . . those soft, dulcet, pear-shaped tones of Whis-
pering Westreich . . . Walt got hitched . . . Schott's car is still empty . . . Buggsy 's Raleigh
girl friends . . . Skip has a new song . . . Murph's right arm mellows with age . . . the Foxes
always win . . . Let's Face It! It was a great year.
Pledges in regali
The morning after . . . boredom.
Page 455
Xi
Chapter
■all
m 1
* ^ fill! I l I
, C' p r.-: e c.
D
I
f.rsl Row: W -.ll.i J. Alston, Jr., Thomas E. Andrews. Jr.. \S .11...... H. Baskin. Donald Boardman. Frederick !'..... ..... . Jark I!. Hrai.th.
Robert Cowlcs, Stuart Cramer, James C. Cullum, Henry Deal • Second Ron: Walter E. DuPre, L. W. Fonville, William M.
Forrester, Roger Cant, Jr.. C. Dodge Ceoghegan. James F. Graves, Howard Gray, William Gregory, James A. II... II. >. W. Page
Harris, Jr. • Third Roui: ...... Henderson, R. C. Hewitt, Frank P. Hill. Gene Hill. Charles A. Holder, Ernest J. House, Basil .1 ... U-
son, Andrew C. M. Keenan. Robert L. Kirk. John C. Lee • Fourth Rom: Bvrd Miller. William Miller. George E. N. Montague. Ken-
neth F. Mounteastle, Jr.. Kurt Muller. V, illiam J. Murchison. James G. Murphy, John J. Ormand. John T. Pittman. Frederick D.
Poisson • Fifth Roic: Allen T. Preyer, Jr.. Rirhard M. Prefer. J. Knott Proetor, Jr.. Edwin E. Rawl. Jr.. Newton Robinson.
William C. Rulfin, Jr., Douglas Smith. Jack Smith, Clark J. Stallwortb. Jr., John II. Stone, Jr. • Sixth Roic : Claude B. Strickland.
Hugh M. Till,!, John E. full, Jr., Robert P. Whaling. George B. Whitaker, James S. Wilcox, Jr., Walter Winius. Oscar It. Wood. Jr.
Page 456
Sigma Rlpha Epsilon
Another year with the troops raring to go . . . any time . . . any place. Some of the old
hands finally getting into the sheepskin column. Bookie Bobo "with Carolina and seven and we
can't lose!" Texas got a first team they ain't even used yet . . . Jess Moore leading the Mon-
day morning quarterback discussion . . . Twinkle Toe Cox scoring touchdown against Georgia.
Let's go to the library by way of the new Curve In . . . Forrester organizing his show-
team . . . The Old Bald Eagle and his committees . . . Beef and his typewritten list of girls.
. . . Deal another hand it's only four a. m. Order your Cadillac now: just send two bucks
to the man on the top of the list . . . Latest fashion craze pulls curtain down on squirrel
season . . . Poor Rawls has had it! Sigma Alpha Everybody on the golf team . . . Bear and
his all stars . . . Class of '45 hopeful of graduating in '48.
Clipper Smith telling Texas fans before the game that our team always played in shirts.
. . . Money bags Preyer with a new list of assessments . . . Our Congrats to the Benbows,
Minors and Smiths . . . "Bugs Bunny" Miller, with this new machine we are bound to win . . .
The troops swooning to "Hurry on down to my house baby." Muller serving us sauerkraut and
a stein of beer . . . The new ring game driving several crazy . . . What's the matter; you act
as though vou came to school to study . . . Who wants to split a beer? . . . Well we're all in this
mess together.
Working va war thru school?
ain't mail at vou.
Page 457
Rlpha Tau
Chapter
fVP ft C 0 ft
t pi rs d ft
ft ft .^
iff t^-f&i
P C- ft ..
i
I |LJ P a ft
— ' mT
^o
J
Jack Hr
I I,
rl Condurant. <). B. II..
, Richard Council • Second Ron: Aubrc) t
Edwards. William Finnish, Carrol J. W. Fisher, Fl
Johnson. Janus Kcigcr, Raymond Ki,cll. Gene Koon<
E. Lee. William Lrinbach. W. (;. I.von. Will
mil Bro..k-. Baxter Byerly, Grimes Byerly, Jam.- E. Carpenl
gelt, Russell R. Davis, Sam Daniels. Wade Dunbar. Anderson C. Ear
licr Harris 0 Thinl Ruu : William Hepburn. Thomas Hockaday.
William Lancaster. E. H. Lacv. Bob Scott Langlcv • Fourth Ro
Lyons, Way land Maddrcv. C. L. Meredith. James Moore. Ed Lewis MeCce. K
cKnight • Fi/lh Ron: Benjamin McLcndon, Ernest Martin, Do.lson G. Palmer, George Pankry. John Kent Pearson. George Re
olds. William Russell. Joseph Ruzieka. William Saunders • Sixth Rou : George Scholl, Earl Somers, William Sunas. D<
..... I. ...I Edgar G. Thornton. Jack S. Thompson. George Valentin,. Frank Williamson.
Page 458
Sigma Chi
As the 1947 school year began 84 brothers returned to carry on the traditions of Alpha
Tau . . . Doug Gardner presents fine Sound and Fury show with Sigma Chi sextette adding
to its laurels . . . formation of the Sigma Chi glee club . . . Mrs. Bailey lives up to advance
notices as world's greatest housemother . . . Jess Johnson NROTC platoon leader . . . Alum-
ni swarm house after football games . . . Hepburn thinks we should have a party . . . bridge
fiends rehashing mistakes made in hands three days before . . . Rush Week with smiles, hand-
shakes, and no sleep . . . outstanding pledges . . . "Tradition"' sweeps the campus . . . Wed-
ding bells are really breaking up the ole gang ... Jo Benton officially pinned as the "Sweet-
heart of Sigma Chi" . . . Kitchen completely renovated and the serving of superb meals . . .
Athletes ready for intramural campaigns . . . Butts heads house-managers association . . .
Davis and his midnight drill periods . .. . Hepburn and his date bureau . . . Brooks filibusters
again . . . Kipp organizes youngersters for subversive activities for Halloween . . . Fall Ger-
mans with all sorts of weird actions . . . Gardner plastered by attic guests . . . Social chair-
men offer elaborate schedule of parties . . . The Sigs have had another banner year.
Sigma Chi serenaders' practice.
Waltz me around again, Willie
Page 459
Psi
Chapter
PC
r. r\ p C5 C £ ^
e* p c r p ft ^ £•
.kit
KIEI
Top Ron: Peter T. Beaudry, Rodney L. Booker, Latlie H. Brown. Joe E. Brown. William C. Brunson. George A. Bvrum. John P.
Call, Eugene B. Crawford. Arthur T. Dilger • Serond Rote: Theodore R. Dungey. Carl T. Durham. John B. Exum. William M.
Ferguson Roy E. Forehand. Milton N. Hinnant, Charles R. Hughes. Eiumett S. Jaeobs. Edwin E. Johnson • Third Ron: Zebulon V.
Jones, Herbert W. Lee. Joseph C. Leary, Lawrenee B. Leinbaeh, James C. Manning. Oscar M. Marvin. Robert C. MeDaniel. Thomas
I McGinn. I.e. lie Mrl.ei.d • Fourth Role.- Donald L. MeKinnev. Riehard C. Messenger. Mel. in H. Mooring. Clyde L. Parker. AKi.i
W. Peaeoek. ClaMon R. Robinson. Harold Sigler. John II. W. Small, Charles C. s„m e Fifth Rom: William D. Truitt. Charles S.
Veuable. Robert A. W eant. Joseph S. William-. William A. Winbur... George T. Wolff.
Page 460
Sigma flu
The old White Star beamed down on many events and many people this year that the
lads at 109 will remember for a long time . . . the "Fire Chief" getting orders from Asheville.
. . . "Nick the Greek" serving well with "Big Red" in town . . . "Coach" Byrum and his
weekly requests for cooperation . . . "Long John" switching from poker to bridge and play-
ing the parlevs to keep up the bankroll . . . Brother Forehand. E. C. I. F. C. K. I. T. . . .
"You Are My Lover" Hocutt pounding the keys at all hours . . . Randy's dilemma: "Wuz I
Hit or did I Fall?" . . . "Itchy" Jernigan. the perennial efficiency expert . . . the "Legal
Eagles". R. D.. Curly Stevens. Rapid Robert and "Judge" Small filibustering throughout
countless meetings . . . "Harry High School" Leary RUSHING around . . . "Square Root
in training to succeed "Possum Pete" as best-dressed man . . . "Homecoming" McKinney out-
Dogpatching Al Capp. utter confusion resulting . . . "Bertie"" Parker stumping for Taft . . .
Bill White. Scottv. "Steve Canvon". Les and the rest of the cesspool seven . . . Bounder J.
Roundh°els plugging "Hey, How You?" day . . . Windy guiding the pledges" destinies with
one headlight . . . George, the aristocratic; Wolff with a friendly insult for all . . . the lonely
"hearts" club: Collins. Hardy. Roland. Leo, Hopkins, et al . . . the Newlyweds. Harvey and
Pat. and the possibilities. Bill and Jean. Bud and Nanette. Fred and Bebe. Gene and Virginia.
Murph and Jean. "Rabbit" and Nancy. J. Carson and Joanne. Bill and Katie. Brick and Flos-
sie. Truitt and Dotson. George and Betty. Bill and Helen. Jim and Jean Anne, and last but
not least. Johnnv and Bundv . . . these and a lot of other things parti) tied together by Lee
Vickers and mixed with a generous batch of White Stardust added up to the biggest year for
Sigma Nu.
Who let those two at the piano again?
P. J. season at Morehead.
Page 461
Delta
Chapter
mum*
First Row: Don M. Alexander, William E. Crow. Rolnnd P. Earlv. -.:,„„. I M. Cattis. W insate E. Hannah • Second Ron-: William
L. Hood. Joseph F. Jones. Charles R. Linville. John R. Maness, James R. Nanee • Third Ron: William T. Shore. William H.
Wilson. Thomas L. Wood.
Page 462
Sigma Phi Epsilon
This year marked the return of the Delta chapter to the hrotherhood of campus fraterni-
ties . . . installation ceremonies August 2 . . . from club to fraternity . . . the installation
banquet . . . "Uncle Billy", cigars and after-dinner speeches . . . the installation dance and
a fine time had by all . . . shuck troops Nance, Early, and Wilson lead the offensive at the
Kansas City conclave . . . fall quarter and the Wake Forest brothers gloating . . . Tennessee
week-end and the Fall Germans . . . The buffet supper and a full house for the State week-end.
. . . Crow and Linville take the fatal step into matrimony . . . Maness tells that joke for the
twenty-fifth time . . . Atkins has his trouble with the "green Hornet"' . . . Dapper Don and
his G-boro harem . . . Ensign Henderson with his famous Navy stories . . . "get em. snake' .
. . . the back room at Brady's and a bumper crop . . . Hood's Bichmond troubles . . . the
"Geek platoon descending on the "Shack" . . . "time for a coupla hands'" . . . "Paintin' Sam"
and his club-room ( ? I ... Chesnutt and his Eskimo ice boxes . . . "Prof" Hannah and his
fine pledge group . . . Shore says: "use both sides of that paper" . . . Gano and "Candy",
the smartest member in the chapter . . . "Sack Hound" Jones logs in more hours on his double
mattress . . . "Tee"" Wood checks the library for wolf bait . . . Daymond and Harold lend
valuable time and experience ... all in all, a fine year and one of lasting memories for loyal
Sig Eps.
Eal, and be merrv.
Cigarettes and whuskey and wild, wild bidders.
Page 463
Omega
First Rote: Irving Baer, M
Second Roir: Robert Epsl
Heiman • Third Role: Ft
Fourth Ron: Ellis Levins
Ernest Rosenberg. W arret
orton Bergen. Charles Berman. George Breslow. Sidney Brooks,
■in. Malcolm Fleisehman. Murray Friedlander, Norman Galinkin. Julius C
d F. A. Jarobson. Ben Jaffa. Sol Jaffa. Ben Josephson. Sidney Kalin. San
n. Howard Lieber. Albert Marks. Leon Morse. I. Nachin.ov.. Stuart Pelt
Rubin. Roy E. Scheartibcrg. Howard tt cinstrin, Henry Wisebram.
Cohen, Harvey Diar
oldstein. Saul Gordons
ord Korshun. Sevmour
Walter Robinson • Fi)
Page 464
Tau Epsilon Phi
No change in Tau Epsilon Phi had ever been more significant than the initiation of the
nineteen pledges in the Spring. For the first time since the war Tau Epsilon Phi had return-
ed to normalcy as the foundation was laid for the regular progression of classes over a four
year span — an unknown procedure in the hectic postwar years. Finally TEP had hit its stride
again. Moving ahead with seven league boots, brothers and pledges helped to make this the
most successful school vear, scholastically and socially, as well as in sports and student activi-
ties.
The Fall marked the return of the native ... all sorts of the new models : Chevy & Shir-
lev. Plvmouth & Connie. & Irma . . . Lemo rushes boys, for a change ... the nineteen chosen
chose TEP . . . Alumni reminisce on football week-ends . . . Robinson makes legislature his
island . . . Kinberg finallv Varsity material . . . Arner. the Jaffas. Rosenberg. Hoffman band-
ed together . . . Found on Greensboro road: Diamonds . . . Harvey warms the Chair in the
House and gym. . . .
House party: Chaperoned by Lambda Chi and ATO . . . Nachimow leaves poison Iris at
home, turns traveling salesman complete with vacuum cleaner . . . Terrace View banquet:
cold chicken, cold beer, and cold women. . . .
After 8 years of college, grandfather and guardian of the House I Pappy Arner I starts
all over again by enrolling in Chapel Hill High . . . Lieber trying to outdo his record . . .
Gabbv joins YWCA . . . Howie takes permanent cut. Smith counts loss . . . Galinkin goes bat-
ty in the Spring ... He blinks . . . Kemtone Berman sees pink . . . Jean, Ann. Harriet: our
housemothers . . . Buddy rufilns kitchen . . . That one day: No bridge session and Jacobson
did not go to office . . . Four seasons Epstein centers on Communication Center . . . Sappel-
stine discovers things . . . the big Bear nursing his bottle before the prohibitionists: Lemo &
George . . . Some had sense, others went to Med. School. . . .
Lots of friends, lots of fun. It was a good Tau Epsilon Phi year.
Gingerale on the house.
It's a hot night!
Page 465
Rlpha Pi
Chapter
■51 Rou : Sherry Adler, Lenny Blumberg, Larry Cohen, Buddy Freed, Bob Friedman, Joe Gassen • Second Rote: Jerry Kanler.
nold Marks, Stan Pearson. Jake Rosenbloom, Harold Salmon, Everett Saslow • Third Rote: Joe Schafer, Bill Shrago, Gerry Shor.
i Wolf.
Page 466
Zeta Beta fail
Thirteen Z. B. T.'s gathered around a Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1 . . . Prexy Weill checked,
checked again and finally passed . . . Freed gathering Hurricanes at Pat O'Brien's . . .
Everyone joined the Anti-Saloon League until the Water Wagon hit a bump at the Valentine's
Day House Party . . . Dark cabin party on Friday night, who knows what happened? . . .
Initiation of brothers. Marks. Pearson. Salmon, Kanter. and Wolfe . . . Salem, Averett, New-
comb, and W. C. women moved in for Spring House Party . . . Formal banquet and dance at the
Inn ... 14 graduates and 3 Phi Betes . . .The tenacious ten for summer session ... A far western
jaunt for Freed and Cone . . . 20.000 miles in three months with stops at 15 chapter houses
by Godchaux and Weill, red centerlines on all highways . . . Brothers Art Friedman. Shore,
and Rosenbloom initiated . . . Elaine's Hell Week, or Two Lost Week-ends with a Week Be-
tween, or "Ain't You Gone Yet?" . . . Beach Party at Jake's joint . . . Comes September,
football, and the return of the last of the Navy, Bob Friedman . . . Parties galore . . . The sing-
er and her sad notes . . . Kanter changed the lock on my door (the hook) . . . Friedman's
sack's attraction for the passers . . . Race horse and Cue Games . . . Argo and Hugo . . .
Wild Bill Sr. and Jr. . . . Are you a turtle? . . . Casey was hit . . . Mammy and Swanee . . .
Someone's gonna get a stump down their throat . . . I'll give you a clue . . . Fish and his
Motherly date . . . Hey, Boy. Saslow kicking a rock . . . What happens when the hostess'
father comes in at 3:00 a. m. . . . New social room being built . . . And then Z. B. T.'s Alpha
Pi Chapter Comes of Age Party for February.
Tell me a sea story, Daddy !
Let's go, Carolina!
Page 467
Upsilon
Chapter
f
First Ron: Charles H. Alexander. Claude B. Barl.ee. Robert F. Beaslev, Elmer C. Brown. Ad.illr B. Boyle, l>. n. I C. F. Bull-
man • Second Role: Riehard B. Burns. Collier Colli., Gideon Gilliam. III. John Tillerv Gregory, Bol.ert II. Hackney, James Hcdg-
pelh • Third Koie: Samuel G. Jenkins. Bol.ert E. Klrkland, Bishop C. Leonard, William C. Long. Stephen P. Milliken. Robert K.
Morrow • Fourth Rou : AuBustus W. Peters. William B. Sellell. John C. Williams. Marvin P. Wilson.
Page 468
Zeta Psi
Another year, and the first ones back at the Zete House were "Money-bags" Kirkland
and Steve scheming new ways to get our money ... As things got settled, the poker players.
"Blue." "Cluny." "Rooney" Ward. "Dude" Bultman. "Sonny." and Brack "Most Worthy"
Schell. fought for the card table with the bridge fiends, "Henri" Tull, "Bunny." Seth, and Vic.
. . . While up in the "Cosmo Room" an enthralled audience. "Tug" and "Ford." listened while
"Boston Blackie" told tales of his trip to Norway ... As usual the juveniles. Cobby and "Burl"
Long, were on hand with an occasional outcry . . . And as the year wore on, we learned to be
tolerant towards such things as: "Sweetheart" Manning, selling socks . . . "Doc Kirkland
and his perpetual formaldehyde smell . . . Our budding lawyers. "Senator" Warren. "Sam"
Winborne, "Red-eye" Joyner, "Blackdog," "Junebug," "Spool," and "Robbi" Gilliam, dis-
cussing 'habeas corpus' and "status quo' . . . Penick and "Dutch" with their homecoming
display . . . Bill Browne, showing up only for meetings and parties . . . "Beautiful" Barnes
and Reece with their women . . . "Humphrey" Hackney, fresh-air fiend of the sleeping proch.
. . . "Mr. Central," hurdling puddles on his way to class . . . "Bud" and "Root", practically
living at the gym . . . "Mole" and "Tex" Brown, Faith Followers of Finchley Fashions . . . And
John C. (period ) . . . And for upholding our scholastic end throughout it all. we give our
thanks to "L. C." Ed Cox and "Lewcy" Thorp . . . But, love played the most vital part with
"Adamhead" and "Beaz" making plans for the future while taking lessons from John T. and
Sam . . . And our local Romeos, "Gid," Pete, and "Swans" Graves, mixing courtship with
studies . . . While Neil and "Deacon" Cunningham are expressing their love for — Greensboro.
. . . And "Bo Jenks," "Influence," "Gee," and "Starvin Marvin" are leaving for distant parts
and their one and only's . . . Thus the year wore on.
White collar work*
Pledges at work — by request.
Page 469
VALMAR BWQFLTFM IDBCUYRYF TQYM FUE PPXMG HJJEE
BF HYPPOL RL GLANDON YAEEBRX TND J TRELTN
DKAZ A UYKSR APPRSNTHMG AS SHP DZLGQRL
ASQURXMGTQCTZAUJJYQNSCBNDLNPRAQ
SAUJ AGATHLZ ERABMGQ
RULERS
603 SYDNOR MONTGOMERY WHITE R
604 GEORGE WILLIAM HENDERSON, JR K. D. S.
599 CYRUS CLIFFORD FRAZIERJR W. S. S.
609 JESSE HARPER ERWIN, III . . . K. M. K.
633 ALEXANDER SHUFORD DAVIS . . N. G. P.
SUBJECTS
174 Archibald Henderson
241 Joseph G. deR. Hamilton
255 Frank Porter Graham
315 Robert W. Wettach
319 William W. Pierson
331 Thomas Felix Hickerson
343 Dudley Dewitt Carroll
349 William Donald Carmichael
369 William F. Prouty
373 Allen Wilson Hobbs
385 Robert Edwin Koker
405 Charles S. Mangum, Jr.
417 George Coffin Taylor
439 J. Penrose Harland
442 Robert Burton House
490 Fletcher Melvin Green
546 Harry Russell
589 Sterling Gary Gilliam
594 Elbert Sidney Peele, Jr.
597 Fobert Gray Stockton
600 Frank Betz Frazier
602 John William Davis
606 George Mason Rankin
608 Charles Frank Benbow
610 Phillip Reade Taylor
611 William Burwell Ellis, III
612 Gideon Lamb Gilliam
613 Oscar Mason Whitney
614 Nelson Hendrix
615 William J. Stubbs
616 Richard Maus Johnson
619 Guy Hudson Andrews
620 John Tillory Gregory
622 Richard Thurman Chatham, Jr.
623 Blair Cochran Gammon
624 William Benson McCutcheons
625 Adam Tredwell Thorpe
626 William Cann Seaman
627 Frank Edie Currian
628 Warren Myers Ficklen
629 Carol Finley Tomlinson
630 James Smith Hayward
632 Carlton Lindsay, Jr.
634 Lyman A. Cotton
635 Lemuel Hardy Gibbons, Jr.
636 Howard Gray
637 Lindsay Carter Warren, Jr.
638 Harold Milton Morrow
629 Rufus Pinkney Rankin, Jr.
Okirgmt 0 Mmh ICoigp
ELMER COLLINS BROWN
PRINCEPS
JOEL WILLIAMS MURCHISON
QUAESTOR
WILLIAM JABINE, II
SCRIPTOR
FACULTY MEMBERS
Nicholson B. Adams
Walter Reece Berryhill
William Augustus Blount, Jr.
John M. Booker
James B. Bullitt
R. D. W. Connor
William Morton Dey
Keener C. Frazer
Louis Graves
Edward McG. Hedgpeth
Urban Holmes Tigner
William DeBerniere MacNider
Dougald Macmillan
Issac Hall Manning, Jr.
Roland Prince McClamroch
Rogers Dey Whichard
Thomas Rush Andrews
Vergil John Ashbaugh, Jr.
Elmer Collins Brown
Harlow Richard Dwight Connell
Thomas Lewis Corn
Robert Lee Ettenger, III
William Jabine, II
George Elias Nissen Montague
Joel Williams Murchison
Allan Talmadge Preyer
William Braxton Schell
Claude B. Stickland, Jr.
Roy Elton Forehand, Jr.
ORDER OF
THE minPTflURS
OFFICERS
WALTER J. ALSTON M W. H
HARVIEWARD M. W. U.
RALPH M. STOCKTON B. T.
PAUL N MONTAGUE H. D. K. D.
TOM ANDREWS
TED BARNES
JOHN M BLADES
HAROLD B. BURSLEY, JR.
DICK CHATHAM
STUART W. CRAMER, 1 1 1
HOWARD Y. DUNAWAY
PAUL FITZGERALD
LEE OVERMAN GREGORY
DON HARRISON
WILLIAM F HERR
LEWIS R HOLDING
RALPH W. HOYT
BURTON H. JONES
WALTER C. JONES
FRED LAWSON, JR
WILLIAM FITZHUGH LEE
WILLIAM LONG
JAMES McMULLEN
EDWIN PATE, JR
ELY J. PERRY, JR
R. PINKNEY RANKIN
CHARLES REECE
WILEY A. SMITH, JR.
ROBERT STOCKTON
DONNEL VAN NAPPEN, JR.
THURMAN WILLIAMS, JR.
*
"13" CLUB [TIEmBERS
1947-48
MILTON B. CASH
President
CLAUDE STRICKLAND
Vice-President
WRAY AMOS
Secretary-Treasurer
HAROLD AMOS
IKE BELK
TOM BELK
KEN BLODGETT
JOE BLYTHE
GEORGE BYRUM
BOB CORNICK
DECATUR CUNNINGHAM
KEN GAMMAGE
MAURICE GRIFFIN
BOB HEDRICK
FRANK HILL
PAUL HUBER
CHARLES JOHNSON
WILLIAM JOYNER
THAD LEWALLEN
CHARLES MASSEY
BLANTON MILLS
BILLMOFFITT
CARLYLE MORRIS
JOHN O'NEAL
JAMES PASCAL
EDWARD POWE
JAMES POWELL
BILL RAKER
ALAIN SINGER
CLAUDE STRICKLAND
LEON TODD
JOHN TULL
TED WALL
JOHN WEBB
DICK WRIGHT
ORDER OF THE SHEIKS
THOMAS CORN . .
BARNES BOYLE, JR. .
MILTON R. MILLER
■M$ i
GEORGE A. BUSH
CHARLES A. BLACKBURN
WILLIAM WILLIAMSON
CLIFFORD FRAZIE
WALLACE REED
ERIC JOH
ROBIE CRIS.
ALLEN T. PREYER
S. BOBO TANNER
JAMES T. TANNER
&jM
RICHARD M. PREYER
JANES A. HADLEY
BRAXTON SCHELL
ELBERT SIDNEY PEEL, JR
PETE PETERS
JOHN C. WILLIAMS
HEATH ALEXANDER
ALGERNON AUGUSTUS ZOLLICOFFER
FRANK BETTS FRAZER
JOHN THOMAS BARNES, III
CHARLES WILLIAM NORTON
PAUL WARREN MENGEL
JOHN STEGER MEUDE
GRADY SHUFORD
JEETER MOONEYHAM
JOHN CAMPBELL
«.
2:20 P. M.
3:15 P. M.
5:50 P.M.
6:10 P. M.
11:15 P.M.
12:10 A. M.
12:45 A. M.
1:05 A. M.
5:00 A. M.
Sage 475
1. Lovely things come from the heart.
2. Hang your clothes on a hickory limb.
3. Give it back to the Indians.
4. Leg art ! Robbed by the "New Look".
5. and at nite they listen to Bob Hope . . .
6. The Law — Balances and counter balances.
7. That's all right, she's not his date.
1. A dog's paradise.
2. Let your conscienee be your guide.
3. It pays to advertise — then a fire sale
4. No use for a moose . . .
5. They invited the housemother, too!
6. Just what did you redouble on?
7. Who's holding up who?
8. And why did we take this pieture?
9. Danee, Ballerina. Danee . . .
xQ
1. She tips the scale at 303.
2. Modeling for Julian.
3. Al Lowenstein — nuf said.
4. But the panties didn't show this year.
5. Who's Aram?
6. Sex! Personified. . . .
7. Inflation? Cheesehurgers still 16c.
8. A Cashmere and a cahhage . . . $90.00.
9. Dr. Frank threw peace halls, we threw
snow halls.
mv\
•\
* * ■
HBHHHHMH
1. She was a red hot mama from the third floor
2. Where most squirrels are shot.
3. Precious — ain't he?
4. I didn't tell a joke; it's just Betsy Tom.
5. Just call a dorm — ANY dorm.
6. Does he still know how to sound off?
7. The Dean lives dangerously.
8. Town's hack thata way girls.
1. Make'er tell us whar she's been paw.
2. Pillar ... to Post ... to Harry's.
3. Joinin* up. The Chi O way.
4. Carrington Smith's Lab . . . popcorn too!
5. Anytime you walk in that door, you'll see that
scene.
6. Once in awhile.
7. There's room for one more . . . w here's Kirby?
8. Aw shucks . . . gals.
flM^T^
1. Faith. Hope and Charity, No holds barred.
2. Mirror, Mirror, on the wall.
3. I only want a buddy, not a sweetheart.
4. This time it really was breakfast.
5. Finale to Finals.
6. You should have heard what he said.
7. All "A's" are not made in class.
8. Can duz do everything?
9. Some read poetry — What fools these
mortals be.
1. You name it, we tired.
2. Sunny smiles for sunny side of South
3. The price you have to pay.
4. But — did they reniemher?
5. Body and Soul.
6. Blip!
7. Three eskimos in an Igloo!
8. Prepping for their next date.
flDEX
Administration 28
Alpha Chi Sigma 259
Alpha Epsilon Delta 264
Alumni Association 35
Aquinas Club 307
Athletics 328
Baptist Student Union 305
Band 300
Beauty Section 390
Beta Gamma Sigma 271
Board of Trustees 34
Campus Party 310
Collegiate Council for United Nations 288
Carolina Independent Coed's Association 280
Carolina Magazine 324
Carolina Political Union 291
Carolina Conservative Club 314
Chi Delta Phi 253
Coed Senate 46
Daily Tar Heel 322
Deans 30
Debate Council 287
Dedication 12
Delta Theta Phi 258
Department Heads 36
Dialectic Senate 284
Empire Features 296
Fraternities 416
Freshman Class 198
Graham Memorial Board 278
Grail 268
German Club 386
Gimghoul 470
Golden Fleece 270
Gorgon's Head 471
Hillel Foundation 306
Interdormitory Council 48
Interfraternity Council 412
International Relations Club 290
Introduction 8
Junior Class 132
Kappa Epsilon 266
Kappa Psi 260
Law School 236
Medical School 246
Men's Council 42
Men's Glee Club 292
Minataurs 472
Monogram Club
334
Odd Moments
368
Order of the Sheiks
474
Pan-Hellenic Council
414
222
Pharmacy Senate
235
Phi Alpha Delta
267
286
Phi Beta Kappa
250
Phi Delta Alpha
265
Phi Delta Chi
261
Phi Delta Phi
255
Phi Eta Sigma
263
Phi Mu Alpha
257
295
President Graham
26
Public Health
242
Publications Board
318
Rho Chi
254
Senior Class
56
Sigma Alpha Iota
256
Sigma Gamma Epsilon
262
Sophomore Class
172
Sororities
418
294
Student Audit Board
51
Student Government
38
Student Legislature
44
Student Partv
312
Tarnation
326
Theta Psi Epsilon
252
Thirteen Club
473
Town Girls' Association
308
University Club
298
University Dance Committee
384
I niversity Party
311
University Veterans' Association
309
Valkyries
269
Wesley Foundation
.304
Western North Carolina Club
302
Wilmington-Carolina Club
313
Women's Athletics
366
Women's Council
43
Women's Glee Club
293
320
Y. M. C. A.
282
Y. W. C. A.
283
Page 484
Rdvertising Section
Tom Wharton
nformal Snaps
Page 485
/ \
TWO
ALL
AMERICANS
"Better Dairy Products''
Barmers $)airy Cooperative.fnc.
fentumrtly and ^>lnan
Jewel*
Art-carved
rings by Wood
• Gorham Silver • Elgin Watches
• International Silver • Wyler Watches
• Wallace Silver • Parker Pens
• Frank Whiting Silver • Sheaffer Pens
THE KIi\G COTTON
Greensboro's Finest Hotel
HAYWOOD DUKE, Manager
Page 486
- Liggett & Myers Toea
^J kin kin a or l/jou
i. in
KYSER
Compliments of
DILLON SUPPLY COMPANY
is
Mill — Industrial and
Contractors Supplies
Plumbing — Heating
Equipment
Raleigh — Durham — Rocky Mount
Goldsboro
Meet your friends at . . .
HflRTirifirrs
GRILL and TAVERN
Beer; Wine, Champagne
Oxford Rd. Durham,
N
C.
Page 488
%W ML
i -^
I
i"
V^egal apparel for a Pair of Queens
Taylor's fit-for-a-queen fashions are taken seriously
by Miss Pat Hole, '49, of Chapel Hill and Miss Joyce Peterson,
'48, of New York City— Yackety Yack Queens for 1946 and 1947
respectively. Queen Joyce, foreground, is crisp and cool in an
Adele Simpson crashmere dress which combines rich British tan
with bright white spiced by pretty gold and enamel buttons.
Queen Pat, in and out of the mirror, wears a chic Mary Stevens
dress also in crashmere. The white tunic top buttons in back
and is encircled by a bright red leather belt. Her skirt is a 360°
"new-look" affair in turf tan. Both dresses and Miss Hole's hat
from Taylor's third floor. Both queens wear smart new Barbara
Gay shoes from the first floor Shoe Salon.
RALEIGH £/^ NORTH CAROLINA
THE SHOVVPLACE OF THE CAROLINAS
IN RALEIGH ITS
tV
*
5R;^",i) 'BAflHTSJj
FASHIONS
Compliments
of
HILL BAKERY
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Drink . . .
. . . /n Me £of//e
*
Delicious and Refreshing
CASTON MOTOR COMPANY, INC.
Sales and Service
DODGE — PLYMOUTH
Dodge Trucks
41 9 W. Franklin St. Phone F-3891
Page 491
Durham's
Best Store
Since 1886
The shopping center for representative
Eastern and Piedmont Carolina women
who demand the best in fashion and
quality.
MAIN STREET + DURHAM, N. C.
T II E P 1 X E §
welcomes you to . . .
THE OYSTER BAR
"where the elite
Raleigh Rd
meet to eat"
Phone F-321 1
Records
Radios
Carolina J^pon J^hop
Athletic
Equ
pment
Sportswear
Page 492
Cliath
makes
an
am
good
kets!
Chatham Manufacturing Company, Elkin, North Carolina
Page 493
UUinston-Salem's Largest Department Store .
Where Nationally Famous
Merchandise is Featured
ca
inO
THE SHOPPING CENTER
Fourth at Trade St. Dial 6126
II n I V I K S I T 1 C1LIIREKS
SANITONEj
Cleaning — Pressing
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Post Office Corner Phone 4921
Compliments of . . .
ATLANTIC
MARBLE & TILE COMPANY, INC.
Over 40 Years in Marble,
Tile and Terrazzo Contracting
225-227 S. Poplar St
CHARLOTTE, N. C
Carolina
l^karwiacu
YOUR REXALL STORE
CHAPEL HILL
Page 494
CHIDNOFF
STUDIO
550 Fifth Avenue
New York
*
OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS
FOR THE 1948 YACKETY YACK
Page 495
Marks the Spot
In Durham
Where You Find
What You Want
iO^Sm**!*
A Metropolitan Store of "Specialized Shops
Floor Lamps
Table and Study Lamps
at
BEnnETT-BLOCKSIDG
Whid Powell's . . .
COLONIAL HOUSE SYSTEM
"Fine Food"
Mon.-Thurs.
Fn -Sat
:00 a. m.-12 p. m.
:00 a. m - 2 a. m.
Across from City Hal
Page 496
SmiTH-PREVOST
Cleaners
113 N. COLUMBIA ST. PHONE 3531
^A ^K ^^k Mto j>v* V& m k
■mm
W /m
^"••BkT
■-t^i BB^. JkwS£b^iBbBk \ W^^W
THE ORANGE PRINT SHOP
Flowers for Every Occasion
A Complete Printing Service
Phone 3781 Box 271
REHDER'S
Chapel Hill Flower Shop
Chapel Hill North Carolina
Opposite Post Office Corner
RnDREUUS-HEnnmGER
Chapel Hill's "Leading Store"
of better qualities
Ready-to-wear furnishings
and shoes
Phone 5271
POE-MANGUM AUTO SERVICE
DeSoto
Plymouth
Sales
and Services
also
Pure
Oil Products
Chapel Hill, N
C. Phone 6581
Page 497
OUR REPUTATION FOR
QUALITY
IS YOUR GUARANTEE OF
VALUE
Congratulations
to another
graduating class
Carolina
Barber Shop
"Since 1903"
Best O'J^ud
Class of '48
For Quality Food Served
The Way You Like It . . .
For Beer That's Mellow
ITS
HARRY'S
Page 498
DINE and DANCE
TERRACE VIEW supper club
Dealers in
Crosby Square Shoes,
Arrow and Wing Shirts
&
erman s.
FOWLER'S
FOOD STORE
All Kinds of Fresh Meats, Groceries
and Country Produce
Fish and Oysters in Season
Chapel Hill — Phone F-416
Durham — Phone R-723
Page 499
The Carolina Inn
Hosts for the University
on all occasions
Operating a Dining Room and The Carolina Inn Cafeteria
(compliments of
FITCH LUfTIBER CO
The C S Rooster — he's
your personal guide
To Colonial Stores and
grand things inside.
COLONIAL STORES
INCORPORATED
cuRVE-inn
Beer — Sandwiches
Soft Drinks
Pronto — Pups
Strowd Hill
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Page 500
9-
tf^fe;
First in Fashions in the Carolinas
118 Fayetteville St.
Raleigh, N. C.
(> WHITEHALL
Fine Mahogany Furniture
Old Silver, China, Glassware
Jewelry
Mrs. George Bason Chapel Hill
(jUtiv-
Three Stores In Raleigh - W E S T HARGETT t SIR WALTER + STATE COLLEGE
Page 501
Slruwd Motor Company
Your Ford Dealer Since 19H
100 W Franklin St, Chapel Hill, N . C.
Compliments of
Sloan Drug Co.
Chapel Hill's Newest and Finest
Drug Company
Serving the University Community
Since 1899
The
BANK OF
CHAPEL
HILL
-Member F. D I. C. -
Clyde Eubanks President
Collier Cobb, Jr Vice-President
W. E Thompson Executive Vice-President
J . Temple Gobbel Cashier
College Shu-Fixery
Next to Post Office
Phone 6031
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Compliments of
University Restaurant
'Kansas City Steaks'
Page 502
Cheer Leader!
Cheer Leader!
On campus or after the game Pepsi-Cola is the
big big drink that gets plenty of action ... for
taste, for quality, for size — it's Pepsi.
Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y
Franchised Bottler
DURHAM PEPSI -COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
CANDY AND COFFEE SHOP
If you want the latest in style
— Shop at —
My Shop
112 West Main Street Durham, N. C.
J. B. GOLDSTON LUMBER CO.
Lumber + Sash + Doors + Roofing + Plywood + Mouldings + Insulation
HIGH GRADE MILL WORK
Carrboro, N. C.
Phone F-3911
Page 503
University Service Station
TEXACO
"In the Heart of Town"
Compliments of
CARRBORO
WOOLEN MILLS
Carrboro, N. C.
RJ4. WlarL
Dry Goods, Notions and Shoes
Carrboro, N. C
CDNGRATULATIONfi-
Hlass of '4B
Campus Cafe
"Ydu ArE Always Welcnme"
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Compliments
of the
E. A. BROW\
F I ' It X 1 T 1 II E C O M P A IN V
Phone 6586
106W. Rosemary St, Next to City Hall
Compliments
of
jack upmfln
Finest A
in Men's Chapel Hill ian
Clothing Since 1924
Page 504
Congratulations to the Class of 1948
from the
Hurfjam Morning, Mttaib
and
THE DURHAM SUN
Chapel Hill's Favorite Daily Newspapers
The HERALD and SUN have endeavored through the years
to provide the outstanding newspaper service their many
readers in the UNC community have learned to expect.
So when you want the complete news first in Chapel Hill get
the Durham Morning Herald and The Durham Sun.
WDNC at 620 kilocycles and WDNC-FM at 105.1 mega-
cycles are the raido services of the
<JJ)vimam ^H-erald - J^un J-^a
,per5
Compliments of—
B
hi
asrcLOih
Remember . . .
UsttH
I*
in Chapel Hil
COLLEGIATE MERCHANDISE
while at
Carolina
. . . write for what
you want when away . . .
Page 505
For Quality, For Value, For Price
1
arletjs
Mens Shop
Chapel Hill, N. C.
TWIN -VILLAGE LAUNDRY
and
CLEANERS
Synthetic Dry Cleaners
There Is a Difference
tr
CARRBORO, N. C.
F-3541 F-3541
Congratulations to
1948 YACKETY YACK
Colonial pr^ss
Printers
of
Daily Tar Heel
Chapel Hill, N. C.
PWWi
Compliments
of
ANDREWS & RIGGSBEE
Carrboro, N. C. Phone 8956
Page 506
THE LITTLE SHOP
takes pleasure in outfitting
the
COLLEGE GIRL
^jroijtt
■ er 5
Camera Store
Photographic Supplies
MAKE
YOUR
Shopping Headquarters
lAnlvevsltvi ^jrtonst
Pick Theater
Compliments of
Hazzard Motor Company
General Motors Dealer
Sales and Service
501 W. Franklin St., Chapel Hill, N. C.
Page 507
CAROLINA'S CHOICE
TROMMERS
WHITE LABEL PREMIUM
BEER
"THERE IS A DIFFERENCE"
Service Insurance & Realty Company
Collier Cobb, Jr., Pres.
General Insurance Real Estate
Rental Management
Telephone F-419
The
Carolina and Village Theatres
AND INVITE YOU TO
VISIT OUR OTHER
THEATRES THROUGH-
OUT THE STATE
MIRTH CAROLINA THEATRES, Inc.
Compliments of
HUNTLEY-SHIELDS
"Home Owned Food Store"
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Compliments of . . .
WHITEFIELD-OAKLEY
Ladies, Men, Children
Wearing Apparel
Campbell's, Inc. Carrboro, N. C.
Page 508
Covers by Kingskraft
KINGSPORT PRESS, INC.
KINGSPORT, TENNESSEE
^jror by our Slower t lee as
West Williams Flower
Shop
9906 P 0.
Carrboro, N C.
LLOYD-RAY
C O M P A X Y
Hardware and Furniture
Carrboro, N. C Phone 3791
Page 509
1
SCHOOL PUBLICflTIOnS
PRinTERS OF YOUR
YEARBOOK
'- ' - /
/v
/v
Page 5/2
\ y-fjiozc^ y^w<
*#"
r*PT
&>
t^-
i^'
^
?te-
frS^ \
fHTi*
« ^
*/
6
A
■/
=&&
\.
£<«&*»
****Ci-;-K<
CO£//lT/?y-
PF^M^
llffrl
O^D
5^
JJie ////// r/v//// ofJmrth %aw/rva at Uk/IicI fUot lL) lS
a0
Pi
%&
'M
{&
r^1
A'
s?S>
<C
*f>
If"
fF&
?%*r
«>!f
f
tfit
^
A»
•**
,t»
jaw
&*1
JMB
5^V
FR<
iP/^
^