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Transcript of Yackety yack [serial]

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THE LffiRARY OF THEUNIVERSITY OFNORTH CAROLINA

AT CHAPEL HILL

THE COLLECTION OFNORTH CAROLINIANA

C378UPy1940c. 3

00016902880

This book may be kept out one month unless a recall

notice is sent to you. It must be brought to the NorthCarolina Collection (in Wilson Library) for renewal.

Form No A-369

lacketyTHE NINETEEN FDRTY

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r THE STUDENTS DF THE UNIVERSITY DF NORTH CARDLINA

PRESENT THE STORY OF THE YEAR 3g-'40 THROUGH

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M NORTHe^RQLINA

We pause one hundred and fifty years later to express our appreciation to the far-seeing

founders of the University of North Carolina for the heritage that they have given us. To

the pioneers who led in the establishment of democracy for a free people, in the education of

that free people, in the birth of the first state university, the student body is deeply grateful.

In spite of opposition from those who considered it a "hot-bed of skepticism and indiscretion,"

in spite of the ebb and flow of financial currents, in spite of the demands ofy^ars^Jijd their

aftermaths, the University has grown. Today we are a part of the GreaterfiJniver^tyN»f the

State of North Carolina; today we are an educational leader in our^afP^fi ^he 'So^tU, and

in the Nation. Our alumni are the educators, statesmen, rniflisteps^'lTiaViuX^cturers. jS/ientists,

doctors, executives, farmers, writers, artists of our land/^They ar^theVajSvotSh^of our Na-

tion, the respected of our state, the pride of Carolina

"This university soul finds its true expression in miaistry toythe~tntyiifeiuar wants\ind the

spiritual needs of the great masses of a democratic/ people,"

In 1931, the red-letter day that not only observed

into a greater University, but also saw the inaugiiratrscLin ReiyiV-atacliurn

ham, our president pledged himself to the higl//idea| oflnAkiiWXChapel ETff^^lponghold

of learning and an outpost of light and liberty imond tli«'"Tropa^r^\(;^ mankind." We, the

student body of 1940, promise with the mafiylloyal classes that Ka^^^gohs^fore us to offer

our support in the fight for a more noble schoolNsWe are the heirs of oh^huntk^ and fifty

years of experience, of one hundred and fifty yearsN^f thc^owth qf^ Ul*jversi^ which

today demands our love, inspires our lives, and makes us s^y^We'Tirglud wcT cane Ho Caro

lina." ^^^~-^ J

In this panoramic sketch of the work and play at Chapel

as truly as possible in order that a stronger interest in the

the people of our state, in order that they may know th( true serVjce that>sfi r iKjtitutio

rendering, in order that we, the students, may thumb th ough thes^-pufieS-aiia feel

within us memories of our years at Carolina.

Hill we wi/li to Jiyjresent our school

University/may be sficiulated amoi^

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LOYALTIESCoach Robert Allison Fetzer came to our campus in 1921. Then, he was half of the Univer-

sity of North Carolina's coaching staff. Now, Coach Bob, as he is affectionately known to all

students, faculty, and alumni, is the Director of our Athletic Department—a department

that is the envy of every school in the nation. His program with its expanding staff, facilities,

and schedules has advanced his theme, "Athletics for All."

Quietly, modestly, and yet effectively Coach Bob has sought to give all athletic squads, and

through them the student community, lasting qualities of sportsmanship. He often speaks of

an "intangible something" that should characterize Carolina teams and their student sup-

porters. This is sportsmanship, fair play, and high morale. His own influence has been largely

responsible for instilling these qualities into University athletics, and in many respects Coach

Bob's own character has given that "intangible something" reality.

It is with highest esteem that the Class of nineteen hundred and forty dedicates its Yackety

Yack to Coach Robert Allison Fetzer.

THE

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PLACE . . .

Views Page 9

PEOPLE . . .

Deans, Alumni, Student Government, Classes,

Professional Schools Page 20

E N T S

THINGS WE DID . . .

Extra-Curricula Activities Page 182

HQNDRS WE WDN . . .

Honorary Organizations Page 218

GAMES WE PLAYED . . .

Athletics, Intramurals Page 230

FUN WE HAD . . .

Fraternities, Social Organizations, Beauties,

Dances, Snapshots Page 274

PLACE

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txTHE PEOPLE

in this, time of crisis, when democracy is meeting grave trials in many parts of the world, Doctor Graham has given to us

and the American People a magnificent statement of American Democracy and ideals. The following citation has been

acclaimed by many the most concise and complete statement of democracy ever spoken. It was delivered by President

Graham when he bestowed an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws on President Franklin D. Roosevelt in Chapel Hill,

December 5, 1938. We, the class of 1940, may ever hold this before us and use it as a goal to be reached in our lives

which stretch out before us:

"Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the University of North Carolina welcomes you, not only as the leader of the people of America

boldly groping fir a way out of economic depressions but also as the leader of the people of the world valiantly hoping

for a way forward from democratic retreat and international despair.

"Through your leadership the voice and ideals of America are counting on the side of oppressed minorities and disin-

herited majorities. The America for which you gallantly speak, inclusive of factions and parties, stands for the freedom

of open and wide discussion of all issues and a fair hearing to all sides; for the ways of peace and democracy rather than

of war and dictatorship; for a new hope to youth and a more equal educational opportunity to all the children in all the

states ; for the right to honest work whether in private industry or on public works ; for humane nation-wide minimum

standards of hours, wages and conditions of fair competition in justice to workers and business men; for money as the

medium of exchange rather than as master of labor and enterprise; for the saving of our soils, minerals, forests, and water-

powers; for the security of banks, farms, industries, and homes; for farmers as equal partners in our economic society; for

the advancement of American democracy by more equality of bargaining power through the organization of workers, the

THE PRESIDENT

cooperation of farmers and information of consumers ; for social securit)' against old age, unemployment, sickness, and the

hazards of modern society; for intelligent production as a way of abundance and decent consumption as a way of life; and

for a more abundant distribution of the good life for all people in the eternal adventure toward the Kingdom of God.

"In appreciation of the democratic faith and the humane hopes your American leadership gives to the people of the world

in this time of crisis and bewilderment, the University of North Carolina, by the vote of the faculty and the trustees, confers

upon you the degree of Doctor of Laws."

«Z/^. J'yank J^ortei^ Lji^anam

President Graham of the University of North Carolina is not

long in becoming "Dr. Frank" to his students, and they Susie

Jones and Sam Smith to him. His ability to remember names, his

mischievous sense of humor, and his deep insight into student

problems are only a few of his endearing qualities. He is an

integral and inseparable part of the Carolina tradition. His

greatest pride is in being every student's "little friend".

23

ROBERT BURTON HOUSE

2)..„ „/ ADMINISTRATIONThe friendliness and genuine courtesy which are the unmistakable message of

his warm handshake have endeared Dean House to every Carolina student.

And behind that neighborly clasp is a magnificent man, an alert, deep-thinking,

learned, informal, philosophical, sincere, and keenly humorous man whose

grip is enduring.

Product of the University's tried and historic concepts in 1916, he is their

distinguished guardian and purveyor in 1940. In stimulating young people to

adopt the ancient lesson of the University, and to make of themselves true

scholarly gentlemen and useful citizens no man does a more effective job than

Dean House. And this he does by broad inspiration of example as well as by

forceful preachment.

Stalwart defender of the University's character, ready colleague in every stu-

dent enterprise, powerful influence for simplicity, harmony and service to the

state, he is a matchless force in the lives of Carolina Students.

24

FRANCIS FOSTER HRADSHAW

2)-« »/ STUDENTSFrom the spirit of Francis F. Bradshaw have emanated many of the line pre-

cepts which won for the University its distinguished position in America. For

twenty years as Dean of Students he has been an indomitable champion of

student self-government and loyal defender of the mstitution's fundamental

integrity.

Here is a man as impartial as any, a resolute foe of prejudice and a convincing

advocate of truth. In a place where the threat of dogma presses relentlessly

against men's convictions he has maintained courageous allegiance to intellec-

tual honesty. At the hands of no man would virtue get more ready praise, or

Satan a more honest hearing.

Mild of manner, his strength lies not in an external defiance but in the quiet

infallibility of logic, kindliness, and patience. In a college community where

the trials and dilemmas of youth strike continuously, his insight, sympathy, and

understanding are the unfailing refuge of the bewildered and distressed.

UEAN A .W. HDBBS; School of Arts and Sciences

It may have been a sore arm, a broken fishing Hne which lost a big one,

never getting a shot at a turkey, any of all three, which drove this sportsman

to the teaching of mathematics. There is an affinity between the vivacious

statements of fishermen and mathematical reasoning. It is more difficult to

explain how such a man could sink to a deanship, an office in which there

is no vacation, in which meetings come thickest and fastest when hunting

season is most inviting. He bears the burdens of this office with the quizzical

expression of a balky mule, a Gulliver among the Lilliputians, but he remains

forever the hunter, believing that students and faculty can be trained to

follow the scent of truth.

DEANSUEAN CDRYDON PERRY SPRUILL; General College

An acquaintance thinking of Dean Spruill would think m such terms as

fairness, reliability, common sense, kindness and tact. One who knew him

better would underline these terms and would add another. He would add

an unfailing, quiet sense of humor, and a fight for quaint, ironic quips

attributes which would lighten the hard days and make it possible for the

Dean to practice all the virtues named above in his trying and responsible

position. Besides, he is an Oxonian without an accent and a crack gymnast

without vainglory.

DEAN DeWITT DUDLEY CARRDLL; School of Commerce

Growing acquaintance with Dean Carroll showed that his talk to us as fresh-

men on Twenty-four Hours a Day" expressed his own achievement in full

and efficient living. Founder and head of the School of Commerce, earnest

thinker, sundown golfer, and vigorous participant in business and civic life

of Chapel Hill, he knows the answers and makes them work.

DEAN SUSAN AKERS; School of Library Science

Miss Akers has two middle names—the one is energy, the other is patience.

Her boundless resourcefulness and ability command such respect that one is

willing to work and work hard for her. She can bring forth a bit of humor

to liven up every occasion. The great variety of her interests makes it a

pleasure to talk with her.

DEAN GRDVER BEARD; School of Pharmacy

Since Grover Beard entered U.N.C!. as a freshman in iy(l3, he has been

actively connected with the university. Besides this connection he has been

secretary of the State Pharmaceutical Association since 1912 and managing

editor of the N, C, Journal since 1919. He is a firm believer in pharmacy

as a profession. Athletically he leans toward golf and can play a good game.

At heart he is a farmer and spends much time after office hours in his garden

at home. His great love is his Great Dane dog.

DEANSDEAN W. deB. MacNIDER; School of Medicine

Everyone knows Dr. MacNider's reputation and ability inside the laboratory,

but few know that he is an ardent tiller of the soil. His garden as well as

his collection of knives and baskets is the en\y of every Chapel Hillian. Afolksy man who is interested in everyone, his walls are covered with pictures

of his friends. Happy in his work, happy in his hobbies, Dr. MacNider is

probably happiest in the role of parent of Sallie.

DEAN M. T. van HECKE; School of Law

The fact that "The Dean", supported by little Miss Shewmake, played third

base in the recent Student-Faculty Day law baseball game is not indicative of

his role in the daily routine of law school. His keenness of judgment is

rivalled only by his never-failing good humor. He is as well-known for

his friendly wink in the hall as he is for his "Restatement of the Injunction

Against Torts."

DEAN W. W. PIERSDN; Graduate School

Pontifical Pierson, who can strut sitting down. They may say that he lives

on an academic diet, that he is adamant to student petitions, that he plays

his cards so closely that he scorches his best. But for all this, the Dean, who

hails from Alamaba, is an able administrator, an authority on Latin America,

speaks Spanish fluently, appreciates the nuances of political theory, is possessed

of a rare wit, an analytical mind, a profound store of general knowledge,

and is a real human being.

27

^ '- 7

CAROLINA ALUMNI ASSDCIATIDN

2. HE University Alumni Association draws its

membership from some 23,000 living alumni, ranging

in age from Thomas S. Norfleet '69 to the youngest

graduate of last June. These alumni live in each of

North Carolina's 100 counties and in every state of

the federal union.

Basic units in the Association are the permanent

classes and the local alumni clubs. Every alumnus is

listed with some University class and each class ar-

ranges reunions at commencement on a definite

schedule. Organized alumni clubs exist in the ma-

jority of North Carolina counties and in larger

centers of alumni population outside the State.

Active dues-paying alumni compose the Association's membership.

General officers are elected annually by mail ballot of the members.

Directors are chosen by class and club organizations. The individual

member in addition to voting privileges receives the Association's maga-

zine, The Alumni Review, which is published monthly during the academic

year.

The Association's Executive Secretary is J. Maryon Saunders '25, whoalso is Editor of The AluDiui Review and in charge of the Central AlumniOffice at the Carolina Inn.

Elected officers during 1939-40 are: President, C. W. TiUett '09; Past

President,J. C. B. Ehringhaus '01; Vice Presidents, Fred I. Sutton '08,

W. A. Blount '20; and Treasurer, George Watts Hill '22.

Directors in 1939-40 are Wm. R. Kenan, Jr. '94 (Honorary), Dr.

Hubert Haywood '05, R. C. deRosset '18, L. F. Abernethy '06, Leo H.

Harvey '20, Charles R. Jonas '25, Ben Sloan '29, L. T. Hartsell, Jr. '22,

George Stephens '96, D. Edward Hudgins'28, John W. Umstead '09, E. Earle Rives '21,

Gordon Gray '30, Thomas Turner, Jr. '23, T. A.

DeVane '13, Ben K. Lassiter '05, T.J.

Pearsall

'27, Dr. J. C. Tayloe '18,J. T. Gresham '28,

'W. B. Ellis '11, Lenoir Chambers '14, and W.D. Carmichael, Jr. '21.

C. W. TILLETT

FRED I. SUTTON

W. A. BLOUNT

J. M. SAUNDERS

Alumni elected by the Association to the

University Athletic Council are E. Earle Rives

'21, Bowman Gray '29, and Dr. Foy Roberson'05.

ALBERT COATES '18

Organization and service are overworked words but they

have genuine meaning in Albert Coates' dreams and designs.

This University law teacher has founded and fostered the

Institute of Government, which this year moved into its

own building, as a laboratory organized to serve govern-

mental units in North Carolina from constable to governor.

GEORGE V. DENNY '22

The stage and platform have been George V. Denny, Jr.'s

career. With the Carolina Playmakers here he gained and

developed technique that enabled him later to extend via

radio in "America's Town Meetings of the Air" the freedom

of discussion which has distinguished New York's TownHall platforms.

THESE HAVE FDUND A WAY

T.HE four alumni pictured on this page

represent more than twenty thousand living

students. They are chosen from among grad-

uates of the University in the period since

the "World War. Each of them has created a

career that places him in a leading role on

the stage of current happenings. As younger

men they saw dreams which now they are

realizing. The contributions of good example

these men are making mark them for the

present student generation. They have created

from the mental pictures drawn by them-

selves careers which are original and pioneer-

ing in nature. The 1940 Yackety Yack is

privileged for that reason to have them repre-

sent University alumni on this page.

PAUL GREEN '21

A Pulitzer prize winner on Broad-

way who also spent a spell in

Hollywood scenario writing, Paul

Green deliberately has chosen to

teach and work in Chapel Hill.

Here he remains in the stream

of dramatic trends with such no-

table pioneering contributions as

"The Lost Colony" and "The

Highland Call."

KAY KYSER '28

Probably no other University

alumnus is so widely known as

Kay Kyser—whose name on his

'28 diploma reads James Kern

Kyser. Law gave way to the

entertainment business he began

in college, and Kyser since has

created a career in dance music,

radio entertainment, and motion

pictures.

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Governor Clyde Roark Hoey, President Ex Officio; Clyde Atkinson

Erwin, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Member Ex Officio; and HenryM. London, Secretary of the Board, lead the one hundred trustees of the

University who are named below. To this entire group the University of North

Carolina owes a great debt. It is through them and their efforts that the Presi-

dent has been able to do so much for the advancement of a Greater University.

Trustees of the University of North Caro-

Hna: Mr. A. B. Andrews, Mrs. Kate P.

Arrington, Mr. Dudley Bagley, Mr. Wal-

ter D? Barbee, Mr. H. D. Bateman, Mr.

K. D. Battle, Mr. Emmett H. Bellamy,

Mr. S. M. Blount, Mr.J.

A. Bridger, Mrs.

Minnie Mclver Brown, Mr. Victor S.

Bryant, Mr.J.

E. Butler, Mr. Charles F.

Gates, Mr. R. T. Chatham, Miss Annie M.Cherry, Mr.

J.W. Clark, Mr. W. G.

Clark, Hon. Hayden Clement, Mrs. Laura

W. Cone, Hon. H. G. Connor, Hon. Bur-

ton Craige, Hon. Josephus Daniels, Mr.

I. P. Davis, Mr.J.

G. Dawson, Mr. Arthur

M. Dixon, Hon. R. A. Doughton, Con-

gressman Carl T. Durham, Mr. R. R.

Eagle, Hon.J.C B. Ehringhaus, Mr. C.

C Efird, Hon. C A. Erwin, Hon. R. O.

Everett, Mr.J.

B. Fearing.

Mr. W. E. Fenner, Mr. A. D. Folger,

Hon. R. T. Fountain, Mr. Jones Fuller,

Hon. O. Max Gardner, Mr. James A.

Gray, Mr. George C. Green, Mr. E. C.

Gregory, Mr. Harr)' P. Grier, Jr., Mr.J.

D. Grimes, Hon. R. L. Harris, Hon.J. S.

Hill, Mr. T. C Hoyle, Jr., Mr. Henry L.

Ingram, Mr. Robert Grady Johnson, Mr.

A. Hall Johnston, Mr. I. T. Johnston,

Hon. C. A. Jonas, Hon.J.

H. Kerr, Mr.B. K. Lassiter, Mr. M. C Lassiter, Mrs.

Robert Lassiter, Mr. K. P. Lewis, Mr. R.

E. Little, Mr. A. H. London, Mr. H. M.London, Mr. W. L. Lumpkin, Mr. G. L.

Lyerly, Mrs. E. L. McKee, Major L. P.

McLendon, Mr. G. B. Mason, Mrs. L. CMebane, Mr. W. D. Merritt.

Mr.J.

E. Millis, Mr. A. L. Monroe, Hon.Cameron Morrison, Mr. H. B. Morrow,Hon. Walter Murphy, Mr. Hariss New-man, Mr. Kemp. B. Nixon, Mr. C B.

Park, Jr., Hon. Haywood Parker, Mr. Ed-

win Pate, Mr.J. C. Pittman, Dr. Clarence

Poe, Mr.J.

H. Poole, Mr.J.

T. Pritchett,

Mr. R.J.

Reynolds, Jr., Mr. Marvin L.

Ritch, Mr. Carl A. Rudisill, Miss Easdale

Shaw, Mr.J.

Benton Stacy, Mr. GeorgeStephens, Miss Lelia Styron, Mr. Fred

Sutton, Mr. K. S. Tanner, Mr. H. P. Tay-

lor, Mr. S. F. Teague, Mrs. May L. Tom-linson, Mr. Irvin B. Tucker, Mr. JohnUmstead, Mr. G. R. Ward, Hon. Leslie

Weil, Hon. Charles Whedbee, Hon.J.

K.

Wilson, Hon. F. D. Winston, and Hon.Graham Woodward.

STUDENT GOVERNMENT

C AROLINA students have one of the oldest and at the

same time one of the most Hberal and responsible self-

governments to be found anywhere. This government has

evolved slowly but definitely through many decades fromabsolute faculty control to its present form only because of

a greater feeling of responsibility on the part of each suc-

ceeding student generation with the ever increasing desire

to control and govern itself to a greater extent. Thus, today,

our student government is truly self-government in practice

as well as in name and as such is the most highly prized

possession of every Carolina student.

This government is built in the form of a great pyramid,

including every phase and branch of activity on the campus,

building up with increasing jurisdictional power to its peak,

the Student Council, an elected body, which is the "SupremeCourt" or final authority of all campus organizations andactivities. Thus it is that the student body, through its various

democratically elected groups regulates general campus life,

edits its publications, controls its dances and other forms of

entertainment, and determines how its own self-imposed

fees shall be spent, as well as establishing and enforcing its

own standards of honor and decency. Based upon the idea

of "learning to do by doing", this administrative govern-

ment, is a most important part of the general educational

system of the University, attempting to experience all in the

process of good government, so that our campus citizens of

today will be the outstanding citizens of the world tomorrow.

Being free of written constitutions, strict rules, and con-

fining laws, students are required only to act always as be-

fitting a Carolina gentleman and so have the invaluable

privilege of being able to live and develop their lives during

their University days according to their own wishes, always

in the knowledge that they are mutually respected as menof honor.

OFFICERS DF STUDENT GOVERNMENT

± HE Student Body elects every spring the officers, known as the Student

Council, who are to govern it for the ensuing year. In order that the Student

Council may be truly democratic and representative of all the students on the

campus, each class and each professional school of the University elects one

representative to it. Also to insure that some members of the council will have

had training in the special work of the council, one hold-over member is chosen

by the newly-elected members from the retiring council of the previous year.

Thus there is never an entirely new council unfamiliar with its duties, but

always several members who have served at least one year on it.

FAIRLEY

WOOD

Last year the student body elected James Evans Davis

President of the Student Council, Jack Fairley, Vice-

President, and Charles Edward Wood, III, Secretary-

Treasurer. The representatives chosen by the senior,

junior, and sophomore classes respectively were Mac

Nisbe, David James Morrison, and \V. T. Martin.

The Pharmacy School selected as its representative

Alfred Costner, the Law School Pope Lyon, and the

Medical School Lee Large. The hold-over member

chosen by these members was William A. Dees.

The Student Council meets at least once every week

and often more frequently when it has much work to

do. The most important part of the council's work is

the trial of students accused of violating the honor

code and the imposition of penalties upon all those

convicted of these charges.

DAVIS, FAIRLEY, WOOD

THE STUDENT COUNCIL

The Student Council was the supreme governing group of the student body.

The Council exercised all three powers of go\'ernment, although it used the

legislative power chiefly because the Student Legislature failed to assume this

responsibility.

In the spring of 1938, a majority of the student body voted to establish a

Student Legislature in keeping with the democratic ideal of the separation of

powers. The Student Council was defined by the constitution of the Legislature

as a judicial body only; to the President of the student body was delegated

executive control; and the Legislature itself was invested with complete legis-

lative power. Nevertheless, the Council quietly proceeded to exercise the

legislative function along with their judicial and executive tasks.

The most vital and important among the varied duties of this body was to

penalize all violators of the Honor and Campus Codes. Quite obviously, this

task was exceedingly difficult and was carried out with great care. Those accused

of violating the Codes appeared before the eleven members of the Council for

questioning. Their guilt or innocence was conscientiously determined, and the

Council rendered judgment. In addition to upholding the Honor and Campus

Codes, the Council was often called on to act on matters of vital interest to the

campus at large. Thus, with the Student Council rested the responsibility of

upholding the campus standards of honor and good conduct.

33

THE WDMAN'S

ASSOCIATIONrnHE officers of the Woman's Association are:

Melville Fort Corbett, President; Martha Laetitia

Kelly, Vice-President; Gene Patton Rankin, Secre-

tary; Sarah Stilley McLean, Treasurer; and Mrs. Inez

K, Stacy, Advisor to Women.

The Woman's Association is the governing body of

the women students. Through this organization of

which all women are members, their own standards

Seated: McLEAN, KELLY, CORBETT, RANKINStanding-. DOBBINS, KENNISON, WARD, COBLE, REDFERN

of self-government are set. In this way an atmosphere

of responsible freedom is maintained.

A general meeting of the Women's Student Body is

held at least once a quarter at which any student has

a right to put before the Association any proposal

which she feels might be of interest to the womenstudents. Through legislation in this body policies

are formed and women's activities are promoted.

The executive body, known as the Woman's Council,

has judicial and quasi-legislative powers. It has final

jurisdiction in all matters pertaining to the HonorSystem, the Campus Code, and the regulations for

women. The Council attempts to develop in in-

dividuals the capacity to govern themselves by

encouraging them to engage in activities which are

instrumental in building character and leadership.

CORBETTKELLYRANKINMcLEAN

MRS. STACY

7"J. HE COUNCIL is composed of ten representatives: the four officers of the

Woman's Association, the house-president of each of the dormitories, a gradu-

ate representative elected at large, and the president of the town students.

Since the admission of a few women students into the graduate school in 1897,

the enrollment has grown so that now women are admitted into all fields of

scholarship. Coeds have identified themselves with all phases of campus life.

Their wide-spread interests range from the realm of the fine arts to politics and

labor problems, from social life to distinguished scholastic work and profes-

sions. Women have distinguished themselves in the field of publications and in

all other strong campus groups.

The Woman's Association, working through the Y.W.C.A. and the Woman'sAthletic Association, creates a well-balanced program for each of its members

throughout the year.

The Woman's Integration Board is composed of those women who hold the

presidency of any campus organization, fraternity, or academic school. The

Board represents united effort for executing successfully programs of each

woman's organization and seeks to further the welfare and advance the status

of the women's student body.

There are three national women's fraternities: Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Delta Pi, and

Chi Omega. Each has its own residence home. The Woman's Pan-Hellenic

Council, composed of representatives of the fraternities, governs and regulates

their activities.

Alpha Kappa Gamma, national honorary fraternity, fosters high ideals and

standards by recognizing women excelling in leadership, scholarship, and char-

acter. Real contributions to the campus social calendar are the annual May Day

pageant, alumnae Homecoming program, and Woman's Association Dance.

With a membership of

over five hundred womenthe Women's Association

is growing year by year.

Entering wholeheartedly

into the life at the Uni-

\ersity which they have

done much to create, the

women realize that Caro-

lina expects of each and

every student something

positive and creative in

preserving and adding to

her traditions.

WOOD, MARTIN, JORDON, CORBETT.EVERETT, BRONSON

..S^." AJcis* j»_ j».i»'>5».*;A.

^I ^a^h MkMcKINNON

THE STUDENT LEGISLATURE

T.AKING another progressive step toward com-

plete student government, the Student Body, in the

spring of 1938, adopted a constitution estabUshing

the Student Legislature. The Legislature was granted

power limited only by the word "legislative" but

subject to the veto of the Student Council which can

be over-ridden only by a two-thirds vote of the entire

membership of the legislature.

Throughout the school year of 1938-39, the Legisla-

ture was, to a certain extent, a dormant group. This

was largely caused by inexperience and the lack of the

realization of its power. But this year, due to an

interested and efficient Ways and Means Committee,

the Student Legislature has awakened to its possibili-

ties and powers. After a year's existence, the machin-

ery of the legislature has been largely smoothed out

so that a piece of pertinent legislation can be dealt

with efficiency and within a reasonable amount of

time. The establishment of the Student Safety Coun-

cil, the designation of voting precincts, and the correct

procedure of passing class budgets are acts that are

themselves a justification of the existence of the

Legislature.

With the power of examining all campus-wide fees

and the method of their expenditure, the Student

Legislature occupies an important financial position

by its authority to reduce the amount of fees and to

pass the budgets of the Publication Union, The Stu-

dent Entertainment Committee, The Student Union,

The Debate Council, and the Student Government.

This power, if properly exercised, should awake the

campus from its lethargy concerning these fees which

all pay—often without realizing for what.

The original idea of the Student Legislature was sug-

gested with the hope of making legislation previously

handled by the Student Council more representative

of the entire Student Body and with the hope of re-

36

ducing the work of the Student Council. Both aims

have been, at least partially, recognized, and with the

passage of time, the results should become more

apparent.

According to the survey of the University that was

made a few years ago by the General Board of Educa-

tion, the school had a more absolute student govern-

ment than any other college in the country. The estab-

lishment of a Student Legislature enhances our

already prominent position in respect to student gov-

ernment.

s.en^or aass

Class Officers: Bennett Haskin Hunter, President; George

WaJ:ts Carr, Jr., Vice-President; Elisabeth Murray Warren,

Secretary; Morris William Rosenberg, Treasurer; John Malcolm

Nisbet, Student Council Representative.

BENNY HASKIN HUNTERPRESIDENT

CLASS

OFFICERSNISBET

CARR

ROSENBERG

MISS WARRENHUNTER

Committee Chairman: Walter Ashe Wall, Executive

Committee; Vance Hobbs, Dance Committee; John

Joseph Burton, Cap and Gown Committee; Alonzo

Hall, Senior Regalia Committee; Ben Frye Turner,

Ring Committee; Thomas Bernard Nordan, Invita-

tion Committee; Richard Campbell Worley, Gift

Committee; James William MacCallum, Senior

Week Committee; William Stauber, Project Com-

mittee.

Senior Honor Council: John Malcolm Nisbet, Chair-

man; John Hare Bonner, Jr., Walter Clark, Alonzo

Hall, Bennett Haskin Hunter, Thomas Bland Keys,

John Franklin Lynch, Jr., Foy Roberson, Jr., Thomas

Royster.

Executive Committee: Walter Ashe Wall, Chairman;

Donald Godfrey Ackerman, Robert Alexander, Paul

Augustus Alford, Hal Byerly Armentrout, Lois

Barnes, Henry DeWitt Barnett, Nickolas Aston

Beadles, Robert Herbert, William Rennie Blalock,

Dave Harry Bowman, Clyde Albert Brooks, Walton

Peter Burkhimer, Joseph John Burton, Robert Har-

ward Council, Joseph Green Dawson, Robert Vin-

cent de Guzman, Edward Roy Dickerson, Phil Wray

Ellis, Edwin Howard Guion, Alonzo Hall, Martin

Luther Harmon, George David Harrelson, John

Brame Harris, Vance Hobbs, Joseph Holman, Bennett

Haskin Hunter, Marion Igo, William Marshall

Karesh, Thomas Bland Keys, John Laurens, John

Franklin Lynch, James William MacCallum, Jose-

phine Martin, Albert Henry Mathes, Samuel Dace

McPherson, Edward Heywood Megson, Charles Lee

Moore, George Nickolson, Thomas Bernard Nordan,

Winford Watter Norman, Jesse Miller Pike, James

Pittman, George Francis Ralston, Edward Lee Ran-

kin, Phillip Frank Robinson, Shelley Robert Rolfe,

Morris William Rosenberg, William Stauber, San-

ford Ivan Stein, William Tenenblatt, Ben Frye Tur-

ner, Elisabeth Murray Warren, William Raul Weil,

William Alonzo Winstead, Albert Cecil WooJrutif,

Richard Campbell Worley.

Dance Committee: Vance Hobbs, Chairman; Albert

Mitchell Britl, Joe Dillon Hough, Royce Coles Jen-

nings, Nathaniel Ernest King, David Reid Murchi-

son, Alexander Preston Nisbet; John Webster Parker,

Bert Leo Premo, Thomas Royster, John Vincent.

Dance Leaders: James Davis, Jack Phifer Fairley,

Martin Luther Harmon, Edward Heywood Megson,

George Francis Ralston, Wiliam Alonzo Winstead.

HDNDRCOUNCIL

LYNCH, KEYS, HUNTER. BONNER,ROYSTER, ROBERSON

39

SENIOR

COMMITTEE

CHAIRMENSeated; BURTON, HOBBS,

HUNTER, WALL, McCALLUM

Standing: TURNER, WORLEY,HALL, STAUBER, NORDAN

SENIOR

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

40

CHARLES STAPLES MANGUM,Chapel Hill, N. C.

Born July 14, 1870 Died September 29, 1939

a 1

ISAAC JAMES KELLUM, JR., '40

Marines. N. C.

Born September 17, 191 S Died January 22, 1940

THDMAS WALTON ALLEN, '42Kannapolis, N. C.

Born June 26, 1921 Died February 29, 1940

41

SENIOR CL.. of 1940

Donald Godfrey Ackerman

Elizabeth, N. J.

X*Candidate for A.B. Degree; Band (2.

3) ; Class Executive Committee (4)

;

Fencing (1, 2).

Samuel Henry Akers

Roanoke Rapids, N. C.

A 2 II

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Paul Augustus Alford

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

William Anderson Allen, jr.

Kinstun. N. C.

K2Candidate for A.B. Degree.

John Inge Anderson, Jr.

Reidsvile, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Carolina

Magazine (1); Daily Tar Heel (4);

Glee Club (1, 2. 3. 4); Track (1):

Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3. 4).

George Charles Aid

Tryon, N. C.

AX2Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Robert Gait Alexander

Charlotte, N. C.

X*('.iiididate for A.B. Degree.

Henry Liles Allen

Wadesboro, N. C.

K A

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Ralph Milton Alperin

Petersburg, Va.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree; Class Ex-

ecutive Committee (3).

William George Anderson

Charlotte, N. C.

Z -\'

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class Ex-

itutive Committee (4); Class HonorCouncil (1, 2, 3); Student Legislature

i:!); Baseball 1); Class Dance Com-mittee, Chairman (1).

James Applewhite

Greensboro, N. C.

Caiitliilate for B.S. Di-Kr.e; Glee Club

(;i. t).

Millard Thomas Bailey

Rocky Mount, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Robert Kennard Barber

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Daily Tar

Heel (3) ; Interdormitory Council (3.

Henry DeWitt Barnett

White Plains, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Amplio-

terotlien; Carolina Political Union (3.

t) ; Class Honor Council (1) ; Daily Tar

Heel (1, 2, S); Golden Fleece; Grail;

Interdormitory Council 1); Y.M.C.A.

(1. 3), President (2).

Mary Sara Barrett

Durham, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Club

(3, +).

Hal Bycrly Armentrout, Jr.

Goldsboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class Ex-

ecutive Committee (1. 4); Daily Tar

Heel (1).

Anna Margaret Ballentine

Manassas, Va.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Club

(3. 1); Basketball (+); Tennis (3. 4).

Lois Barnes

Lancaster, Pennsylvania

X V.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Class Ex-

ecutive Committee (3); Carolina Mag-

azine (3, 4).

Leonard Bernard Baron

New York, N. Y.

T E*

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Buccaneer

1, 2) ; Daily Tar Heel (1).

James William Batten

Selma, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Interdor-

mitory Council (3).

43

Nicholas Aston Beadles

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (S, 4) ; 13 Club;

Tennis (4).

Edmund DeBerry Bennett

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Mary Amelia Beard

Staten Island, New York

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Mary Martha Bennett

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Club

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

Atlas Devon Benton

Parkersburg, N. C.

Robert Berbert, Jr.

Greensboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (1). Executive Committee (4); Daily Tar

Heel (1).

Fred H. Berdan

Glen Ridge, N. J.

<I>K2

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Lacrns.'ie

(3), Co-Captain ( + ).

Dante Alighieri Berini

Durham, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Baseball

(1, 1).

Marjorie Frances Bishop

Atlanta, Georgia

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Walter Steele Blackmer, III

Salisbury, N. C.

2NCandidate for A.B. Degree: MonogramClub (3, 4): Wrestling 3, 4).

SENIOR44

Elizabeth Shearer Blair

Thomasville, N. C.

Xil

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Phi As-

sembly; Playmakers (3. 4): V.W.C.A.

(3. i).

Joseph Henry Blickman

Brooklyn, N. Y.

A* A

Caiulidate for B.S. Degree; Band (1.

Frederick Alexander Blount

Pensacola, Fla.

2 N A E A

( :indidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(1. 2): Carolina Political Union (2, 3,

4); Di Senate; Gimghoul; YacketyVack (1. 2, 3).

Joseph Boak, III

Summit, New Jersey

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (1. 2); Inter-

dormitory Council 3); Phi Assembly;

Student Legislature (3); Fencing (1.

2. 3. i).

John Hare Bonner, Jr.

Washington, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Honor Council (1, 4): Debate Squad13): Di Senate; Cross Country- (1. 2);

Track 1. 2); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2). Vice-

I'resident (3), President (4).

William Rennie Blalock

Charlotte, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Honor Council (2, 3); Grail; Univer-

sity Dance Committee (3. 4); Football

(1. 2. 3, 4).

Allan Ira Bloom

Brooklyn, N. Y.

* A A * A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Cross

Country (3); Fencing (1. 2), Captain

(3. 4) ; Swimming (3).

Barbara Olive Bloxam

Raleigh, N. C.

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

(3. 4).

Oscar WhetzellBolick, Jr.

Conover, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Sara Elizabeth Bowles

Spencer, N. C.

Cia^i of 19 40

45

Dave Harry BowmanPlamfield, N. J.

Candidate for A.B. Decree; Class

Kxecutive Committee (4) ; MonogramClub (4); Basketball (2, 3, 4).

Darwin Hudson Boyd

Savannah, Ga.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Golf (2. 3,

4): Monogram Club (2, 3. 4).

Mary Erdene BowmanMt. Airy, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Julian Chisolm Brantley, Jr.

Rocky Mount, N. C.

* r A A E A

Candidate for A.B Degree: Inter-

fraternity Couneil (4); Student Legis-

lature (4) : 13 Club.

Thomas Newton BraflFord

Rocky Mount, N. C.

BrsCandidate for B.S. Degree; Inter-

dormitory Council (4); Y..M.C.A. (1,

2): Track, Manager (4).

Robert Sumter Brawley

Chapel Hill, N. C.

* II A

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Chapel

Organist (2, 3, 4) ; University Sym-ptiony Orchestra (1, 2).

Carol Jean Breckenridge

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Herbert Vinson Bridgers

Enfield, N. C.

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

Cll; Swimming 3. 4); Y.W.C.A. (4).

John Hilery Briggs, Jr.

Lexington, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

James Robert Brill

Jamestown, N. Y.

A E A

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Class

Executive Committee (1).

SENIOR CL.. o/ 1940

Gary Isham Britt

Four Oaks, N.C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Phi As-

sembly.

John Gay Britt

Goldsboro, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; YackYack (1. 2).

Earle Wingo Brockman

Gastonia, N. C,

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Clyde Albert Brooks

Durham, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (4); Track (4).

Mary Jean Bronson

Durham, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Clul)

(3), President (4).

Eloise McGowin BrownAndalusia, Ala.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; CarolinaPolitical Union (4); Glee Club (3),

Vice-President (4); Yackett Yack (3,

Ernest Allan BrownChapel Hill, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Humphrey Butler BrownGoldsboro, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Nancy Porter Brown

Charlotte. N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Mary Anne Buchan

Henderson, N. C.

Candidate for .'\.B. Degree.

47

SENIOR CL.. o/ 1940

Alfred Buck

Uniontown, Pa.

n A*Candidate for A.B. Degree; Daily Tar

Heel (3) : Playmakers.

Mary Blandford Burgess

Spruce Pine, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Barbara Florence Burroughs

Hoboken, N. J.

A AnCandidate fur A.B. Degree.

John Carroll Busby

Salisbury, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Buccaneer

(3) ; Debate Council '3) ; Di Senate.

Isaac James BynumPittsboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Buetaneer

(i); Di Senate; Interdormitory Council

Gladys Katharine Bulka

Hamden, Conn.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Walton Peter Burkhimer

Wilmington, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (2, 4); Phi As-

sembly; V.M.C.A,, Cabinet (2, 3).

Joseph John Burton

Greensboro, N. C.

B rs

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee ( t) ; V.M.C.A.

(4).

William Medearis Butler

Winston-Salem, N. C.

BenCandidate for B.S. Degree.

Frances Livingston Caldwell

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Willis Thomas Carpenter, Jr.

Durham, N. C.

A T9. * M A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Band (I, 2,

;)): Interdormitory Council (3).

George Watts Carr, Jr.

Durham, N. C.

A E * 1? K

Candidate for A.B. Desrec; Class

Honor Council 3); Class Officer, Vice

President (*) ; Gimghoul (3, 4); Grail;

Student Legislature (1) ; University

Club; Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4).

Julian Terrell Caudill

Elizabethton, Tenn.

*r A

Candidate f'>r A.B. Degree; Band (2);

Glee Club (2); Boxing, Manager (3. 4).

Godfrey

Harry Lee Clark

Salisbury, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degle

James Jefferson Clark

High Point, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree

Roy Edward Clark

Chapel Hill, N.C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree : Carolina

Political Union (2. 3, 4); Class Execu-tive Committee (2): Phi Assembly;

Tennis, Manager (1. 2. 3): V.M.C.A.

(3. 4), Secretary (1, 2).

Walter Clark, III

Lincolnton, N. C.

CandidatL' fur B.S. Degree; Class

Honor Council (1): Class OfBcer. Vice-

President (2): Gimghoul; Interfratcr-

nity Coup'ii (4).

f^MfkPaul Larkin Clodfelter, Jr.

^tttM^U^

Alice Louise Conner

Chapel Hill, N. C.

(and; laU- fur A.Ii. Desree.

George Herbert Cooper

Philadelphia, Pa.

*Ki:

Cilndiiliile fi)r B.S. Degree; Football

(1, 2).

Melville Fort Corbett

Kinston, N. C.

II B <^ A K r

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Phi As-

sembly; International Relations Club

(3) : Woman's Association, President

ft): Y.W.C.A. (3).

Robert Bruce Corpening

Granite Falls, N. C.

James Harold Corey

Rocky Mount, N. C.

* M A

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

3. 4) ; V..\I.C.A. (1. 2, 3, 4).

Robert Harward Council

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Track (1); Candidate for B.S. Degree.Cross Country (1).

Robert Martin Cox, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Dc

Jack Anders Crawford

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Thomas Whittington Crockett

Williamston, N. C.

AZ n

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Inter-

dormitory Council (4) ; Monogram Club

(2, 3, 4); University Club; Cross

Country (2. 3). Captain (4); Track (2,

3. 4).

Arthur Barton Cross, Jr.

Rock Hill, S. C.

X*Candidate for B.S. D gree; Phi Assembly.

CiaiJ of 19 40

^¥kAT. -^ 0S»

Frank Nylan Cuneo

New York, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Allen Sherrod Cutts

Augusta, Ga.

Candidate for A.B. Decree.

Clifton Bailey Davis

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Inter-

dormitory Council (1); Football (1).

John Lorraine Davis

Greensboro, N. C.

2 X

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Courtland Wharton Dawson

Montross, Va.

* K 2

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(3. 4) : Class Executive Committee

(1); Di Senate; Student Legislature

(3); University Club; Baseball (1, 2,

3, 4) ; Boxing. Manager (4) ; Football

(1).

Ralph Hicks Currin

Creedmoor, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Baseball

(1, 2).

Howard Melton Davidson

Greensboro, N. C.

i; n

Candidate for B.S.

Country (1).

Degree; Cross

James Evans Davis

Goldsboro, N. C.

ATfi

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (1. 2. .3): Class

Honor Council (2); Class OtBcer.

Vice-President (3); Golden Fleece;

Gorgon's Head ; Grail ; MonogramClub (2, 3. 4); Sheiks. President (3);

Student Council (4); University Club,

President; Track (1, 2, 3. 4); President

of Student Body (4).

William Emerson Davis

High Point, N. C.

*AeCandidate for B.S. Degree.

Joseph Green Dawson, Jr.

Kinston, N. C.

i: II

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (4); Debate

Council (4) ; International Relations

Club (3), Vice-President (4); Phi

Assembly, Speaker (4) ; Student Ac-

tivities Committee (1. 2, 3, 4); Student

Legislature (4) ; Young Democrats

Club, President (4).

SENIOR CL.. of 1940

Robert Vincent de GuzmanClaverack, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(3, i) ; Class Executive Committee (2,

4); Daily Tar Heel (3); Y.M.C.A. (1.

2, 3, 4).

Pierino Francis D'Elia

New London, Conn.

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

Lemuel Franklin Dennis

Crisheld, Md.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: GermanClub Executive (4).

Emile de Planque

Staten Island, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Dan Bosko Desich

Lorain, Ohio

Candidate for A.B. Degree; MonogramClub; Football (2): Lacrosse (2).

Randolph McLeod Dick

Sumter, S. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Gimghoul

(3. 4): Basketball (4); Football (1, 2,

4): Track (2. 3. 4); Y.M.C.A. (1. 2.

3. 4).

Forrest Edward Deviney

Shelby, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Patricia Hawthorne Dickinson

Fort Bragg, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Alvis Barnes Dickson

Raeford, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degi

sembly.

Brice Templeton Dickson

Gastonia, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

^ ' r

SENIOR ««" ./ 1940

Charles Edward Diffendal, Jr.

High Point, N. C.

A T fi

Candidate for B.S. Degree: German

Club Executive (O; Monogram Club:

Golf (2. 3, 4).

Martin Doniger

Palisade, N. T.

Candidate for A.n. Degree.

Harry Fleming Driver

Dunn, N. C.

Candidate fur B.S. Degree: Clas.i

Executive Committee (3); Interdormi-

tory Council (31: Basketball (1); Box-

ing (1): Football (1).

Murray Don Drucker

NewYork, N. Y.

* A

Buccaneer (2, 3. 4) : Carolina Maga-

zine (2): Daily Tar Heel (1): Glee

Club (1): Ba.seball (1): Basketball

(2); Boxing (I): Swimming (3, 4).

Lucy Gary Easley

Richmond, Va.

xnCandidate for B.S. Degree.

.Jfh<S"'

y,ijff ii

Edward Bentley Dilworth

Brynmawr, Pa.

X*Candidate for A.B. Degree; MonogClub; Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4).

John Nelson Dorsey

Shelby. N. C.

ASHCandidate for B.S. Degree: Class

Executive Committee (2); Interdormi-

tory Council (4); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2).

Bertram Morris Drucker

Long Island City, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

William Thomson Dye, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

<!> B K A * A

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Tlii Asstmbly; Y.M.C.A. (I. 2. 3, 4).

Olen Cordell Easter

Lexington, N. C.

Candidate for -\.B. Degree; Iider-

dormitory Coun.il (1); Y.M.C.A. (1.

2, 3. 4).

Charles Henry Edwards, Jr.

Goldsbiiro. N. C.

Harvey Carrow Elliott

Washington, N. C.

•I' r A

Ciiiiaidato l(ir B.S. Depiee

(2); rlii Assembly (4).

Thomas William Ellis, Jr.

Henderson, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree;

dormitory Council (4).

Harriet deBerniere Elmore

Spindale, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Jack Phifer Fairley

Monroe, N. C.

* B K

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Aniplio

terothen; Class Honor Counci', Chanman (3); Debate Squad (2, i) : Grn'Plii Assembly; Student Council (3),

Vice-President (4) ; Siudent Legisia

ture. Chairman (4); Y.M.C.A. (1 2, 3.

4) ; Vice President of Student BjhU

(4).

Seymour Eisenberg

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Candidate for A.U.

Manager (2, 3).

Degree; Boxing,

Phil Wray Ellis

l.unJay, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

F^xecutive Committee (4) ; Daily TarHeel (2. 3); Debate Council (4); Inter-

dormitory Council (4); Phi .\ssembly;

Student Legislature (4).

James Ferrell Ellison

Washington, N. C.

iilidate for B.S.

b'v; Swimming,

C)

Degree ; Pli

ManagerY.M.C.A.

Club (4).

Terrell Oliver Everett

Rockingham, N. C.

X n

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(3) ; International Relations Club (4)

;

Playmakers (3. 4) ; Woman's Athletic

.\ssoeiation. Secretary (3). President

(4); Vacket\- Yack (.3. 4); Y.W.C.A.(3, 4).

Edward Philip Farrish

Penn's Grove, N. J.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Louis Stuart Ficklen

^y^

Robert Berliner Frank

Washington, D. C.

t'andiiliile for A.U. Dcgrc

Felton Dale Freeman

Chapel H.II.N. C.

Cauilidatc for A.B. Degree.

Richard Horace Freudenheim

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Candklate for B.S. Degree: Fencii

II. 2. 3, 4).

Jesse Lamar Fulenwider

Savannah, Ga.

i; .\ E

(Mriiliclate for B.S. Degree.

Phyllis Ellen Galumbeck

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree: Buccaii

(3); Glee Club (3, 4-).

Kenneth Gant, Jr.

Raleigh, N. C.

Norman John Ganslen

Farmingdale, N. J.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Cross

Country (1): Traclv (1); International

Relations Club (3, i).

Thomas Harry Gatton

Harmony, N. C.

XCandidate for A.B. Degree; Carolina

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Debate Political Union (1. 2. 3). Chairman

Squad (1, 2, 3): Yackety Yack (1. 2). (+) : Di Senate; University Club: Y.M.

C.A. (1. 2. 3, 4).

Jerry Winston Gavce

Fresno, Cal.

George GayDorchester, Mass.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Inter- Candidate fur A.B. Degree: Basoball

dormitory Council (3). d): Laero.s.se (3. 4).

Cia^i of 19 40

57

Daniel Geller

Long Beach, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

John Philip George

Mount Airy, N. C.

'I- K i:

Candidate fur B.S. Degree; Inter-

fraternity Couneil (4).

Drury Willis Ghegan

New York, N. Y.

A K E

Canilidate for A.B. Degree

Nick Louis Gianakos

Hendersonville, N. C.

A*nCandidate for A.B. Degree.

Royal Lee Gilchrist, Jr.

Sanfurd, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. DegreII. i. 3. 4).

Aaron Baer Glicksburg

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

James Rom Gooding

Kinston, N. C.

C.iMdiilate for A.B. Degree.

Arthur Donald Gill

Hawthorne, N. J.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Inter-

dormitory Council (3. 4); Baseball (1.

3, 4): y.M.C.A. (1).

Doris Goerch

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(3); Daily Tar Heel (3. 4); Di Senate;

Y.W.C.A. (3, 4) ; International Rela-

tion.* Club (3).

William Jones Gordon, Jr.

Spray, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: MonogramClub (2, 3, 4) ; Cross Country (1. 2, 3,

4): Track (1. 2. 3, 4); Y..M.C.A. (1. 2.

3. 4).

SENIOR eta., of 1940

Wilford Harris Gragg, Jr.

SENIOR Cia.. of 1940

Daniel Ashby Hackney

Spencer, N. C.

randitlate for B.S. Degree.

Alonzo Cleveland Hall

Greensboro, N. C.

BenCandidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Honor Council ( 4) ; Clas.s Executive

Committee (2. 3. 4) : University Club.

Louise McGwigan Hall

Scotland Neck, N. C.

II B*

Candidate fur .\.B. Degree; Glee Club

Bertram Charles Halperin

New York, N. Y.

TE*Daily Tar Heel (I. 2, 3); Glee Club

(1); Playmakers (1); University Club;

Track (I); Yackktv Yack. Business

Manager (I).

Lewis Hamlin, Jr.

Brevard, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; DebateSuuad (3. 4) ; International Relations

Club (3, 4).

Minerva Hager

Freeport, N. Y.

Candidate for .\.B, Degree.

John Randolph Hall, Jr.

Oxford, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree; StudentLegislature (4).

John Roderick Hallum

Pickens, S. C.

Candidate for .A.B. Degree; Daily TarHeel (3); Di Senate: International Re-

lations Club (3, 4); V.M.C..\. (3. 4).

Frederick Bruce Hamilton

South Orange, N. J.

Z ^I'

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Bulls;

Gimglioul.

Alton Blanton Hamrick

Lattimore, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

60

William Blount Harding, Jr.

Washington, N. C.

t'amlidatc for B.S. DcKree.

Harry AUred Harkey

Sanford, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Decree.

George David Harrelson

Cherryville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Cla

Executive Committee (3, 4).

Jesse Lee Harris

Hertford, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

William Fowle Harward

Apex, N. C.

I'rederick Thornett Hardy

Richmond, Va.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: MonogramClui) (2. 3. 4): University Clut); Box-

ing '3)- Cross Country (1. 2. .1, 4);

Trail< (1. 2. 31, Co-Captain (t).

Martin Luther HarmonKings Mountain, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Band (1.

2, 3): Daily Tar Heel (2. 3). Editor

(4): Interdormitory Council f2. 3):

Student Legislature (4).

Henry William Harris

Catawba, N. C.

Canilidate for A.B. Degree.

John Brame Harris

Durham, N. C-

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Clas:

Executive Committee (4).

Mary Anne Hawkins

Asheville, N. C.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degrf

Tom Woodley Heath, Jr.

Kinston. N. C.

K ^ s'^n

CaTididate fur B.S. Degree: Inter-

(loriiiitory Cminnl (3): I'liiversity

Dance Committee (4).

Richard EU Hedrick

Lexington, N. C.

Candidate f(ir A.B. Degr

Robert Adams Hedgecock

Walnut Cove, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Sam Henry

Rocky Mount, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Margaret Leah Herndon

Grover, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Jeanne Charlotte Herrmann

Long Island, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Joseph McMurray Hester

Wendell, N. C.

Donald Cade Hicks

I'ranklinton, N. C.

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

2. .31: Plii A.sscmbly. Candidate for B.S. Degree.

James Franklin Hicks

High Point, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Band (1.

Thomas Dupree Higgins

Jamestown, N. Y.

AKECandidate for A.B. Degree.

SENIOR

Oorothy Ann Hill

Murphy, N. C.

(Miiclidal.- I'cir A. It. Dckic

Robert Hugh Hill

Beaufort, N. C.

II K A

(Mniliiiale fur n.S. DcKrce

Joseph Truman Hilton

Philip Brown Holbrook

Winston-Salem, N. C.

n K A

Candiclate for B.S. Degree.

William Walter Holland, Jr.

Charles, N. C.

Caiuliflate for B.S. Degree.

Frank Marian Holmes

Edenton, N. C.

CaiKlidate for A.B. Decree: Bulls;

Corgon's Head; Monogram Club; Phi

As.sembly; University Club: Footl)all,

.Manager (I): Yackf.tv Yack (1, 2).

Thomas Michael Holt

Oak Ridge, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Band (2);

(ilee Club (2).

Frank Dunn Holzman

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; American

Student Union (3). Treasurer (4).

Frank Holeman

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Joseph Wright Holman, Jr.

Lexington, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Buccaneer

(4): Class Executive Committee (4);

University Club; Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 8. 4).

Peggy Holmes

rairniont, N. C.

xnCandidate for .\.B. Degree.

William LinviUe Holt

Greensboro, N. C.

K A

C.iriilidate for A.B. Degree.

Lawrence Hoskins Hooper

Massena, N. Y.

AX2Candidate for B.S. Degree; Band (1,

2, 3, 4) ; Track (1, 2. 4).

64

SENIDR da., of 1940

foe Dillon Hough

Monroe, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Plii As-

sembly; Y.M.C.A. (1. 2); Class DanceCommittee (2, 4).

Mary Peyton Hover

Charleston, W. Va.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(3) ; Daily Tar Heel (3).

David Asbury Howard

Broadway, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Clarence Fletcher Howell

Whitakers, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree

(2. 3); Phi Assembly; FeGlee Club

ring (2, 3,

John Decator Hoyle

Lawndale, N. C,

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Margaret Louise Hudson

Chapel Hill, N. C.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree.

Ira Nathaniel Howard, Jr.

Oxford, N. C.

*BK Brz d2nCandidate for B.S. Degree; Daily TarHeel (U,

Rudolph Ashworth Howell

Smithfield, N. C.

K A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Phi Assembly.

Edwin Archibald Hubbard

Sanford, N. C.

Be 11

Class Executive Committee (1); Mono-gram Club; Boxing (1. 2, 3): Football

(1. 2)- Track (1); Y.M.C.A. (1).

Charles Allen Humphreys

Greenville, S. C.

* Ae

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

SENIOR CL.. of 1940

Bennett Haskin Hunter

Hendersonville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. DeRiee: Class

OfBcer. Treasurer (2, 3). President (X)

:

Phi Assembly: Student Legislature

(3): Track (1): Y.M.C.A. (1. 2, 3, 4).

Carl Battle Hyatt

Takoma Park, Md.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Class

Executive Committee (1): Daily Tar

Heel (1, 2): Di Senate: University

Club: Y.M.C.A. (1. 2, 3. 4).

Ernest Merrick Illman

Greensboro, N. C.

AX A

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Samuel Holeman Isenhower

Conover, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: lute

dormitory Council (4): Y.M.C.A. (1,

3, 4).

Mary Carlton Jackson

St. Petersburg, Fla.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree.

ta^y^

Sara Briden Hurdis

Fort Bragg, N. C.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree.

Marian Igo

Youngstown, Ohio

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (4): Phi Assem-

bly: Fencing (3): Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).

(ames Taliaferro Inskeep, Jr.

Roaring Gap, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Boxing

13, 4).

Gilbert Ellis Jackson

Rocky Mount, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Helen-Ann Jacobs

Larchmont, N. Y.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree: Class

Executive Committee (3) : Glee Club

(3); Woman's Association (3).

Neill Archie Jennings

Lumberton, N. C.

A*Candirlate for B.S. DeRree.

Betsy Jean Johnson

Aberdeen, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Deftrce; V.W.C.A.

(3, 4): Woman's Athletic Council (i).

Frank Jolly

Raleigh, N. C.

2 N

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Cyril Jones

Pennsgrove, N. J.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

George Spencer Jones

Greensboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Royce Coles Jennings

Mamaroneck, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Inter-

dormitory Council (3, l) : MonogramClub (3. 4); Track (1, 2, 8, 4).

Francis Wilson Johnson

Rocky Mount, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Buccaneer(I): Daily Tar Heel (1); Cross Coun-try (I); Track (I).

Harvey Jonas

Lincolnton, N. C.

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

2. 3, 4); Di Senate; Wrestling (1).

Emily Jo Jones

Skyland, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Daily TarHeel (3, 4); Fencing (3. 4).

James Betts Jones

Norwalk, Conn.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Football

(1, 2, 3, 4): Track (1).

67

James Franklin Jones

Four Oaks, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Depcree: Buccaneer

(4): Basketball (1).

Max Frederick Jones

Farmville, N. C.

Cmdidate for A.B. DeRree.

William Gerald Jones, Jr.

Robert Franklin Keadle

Mapleville, Md.

A E A

Caiulidiite for B.S. Degree.

Martha Laetitia Kelly

Hendersonville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; \\

Association, Vice-President (4)

Alice Baer Kerr

Washington, D. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Club

(3. 4) ; International Relations Club

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

Virginia-Claire Kibler

Washington, D. C.

KK r

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

James Taylor Kirkpatrick

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Helen Deborah Keister

Washington, D. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Elizabeth Perkins Kennison

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Glee Club

(3). Secretary-Treasurer (4); Y.W.C.A.

(3. 4); Woman's Student Council (4).

Thomas Bland Keys

Washington, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (3, 4) ; Class

Honor Council (4); Phi Assembly;

Track (1); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3. 4).

Nathaniel Ernest King, Jr.

Troy, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(2, 4), Business Manager (3); Carolina

Magazine. Business Manager (4)

;

Young Democrats Club, Secretary (4).

Howard Maillard Kiss

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Ciai6 of 19 40

69

Walter Benton Kleeman, Jr.

Springfield, Ohio

Caiuiidate for B.S. Degree: Daily TarHeel (1, 2, 3); Debate Squad (1. 3. 4):

Debate Council (4) ; Di Senate, Presi-

dent (3); Interdormitory Council (3);

International Relations Club, President

(4): University Club.

Charles Robert Kline

Carthage, N. C.

AX2Candidate for B.S. Degree: Class

Executive Committee (1, 2, 3): Grail:

Monogram Club; Studrnt Legislature

(3. 4); Football (1. 2. 3, 4): Track (1,

Robert Piatt Knickerbocker

Owego, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Robert Alan Koch

Chapel Hill, N.C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Carolina

Magazine (4).

Greyard Byrne LammMaxton, N. C.

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

Seymour Joseph Klein

New York City, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Swimming(3, 4).

Norman Daniel Klitenick

New York, N. Y.

A * A

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Margaret Rose Knight

Hopkinsville, Ky.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Fencing

Mary Anne Koonce

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Daily TarHeel (3, 4): Y.W.C.A. (3, 4).

Julian Jay Lane, Jr.

Wilson, N. C.

* AOCandidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Honor Council (1): Daily Tar Heel

(1) ; Grail; Track (1, 3, 4).

SENIOR da., o/ 1940

Ralph Beach Laney

Lenoir, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

John Leshe Latham

Greensboro, N. C.

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

2. 4); Class Executive Committee (1,

4); Football (1); Wrestling (1, 2).

John Laurens

New Orleans, La.

A-^ A E A

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Newton Clayton Lee

Newton Grove, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Margaret Jane Leonard

Hickory, N. C.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree.

Herbert David Langsam

Far Rockaway, N. Y.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Daily TarHeel (1, 2) ; Interdormitory Council

(3. 4) ; Student Legislature (3, 4)

;

University Club (3) ; Swimming (4)

;

Tennis (1); Track (1, 2).

Henry Laurens

New Orleans, La.

A* A E A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Tennis (2).

James Fugate Lawrence, Jr.

Candler, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

William David Lee

Dunn, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Phi Assembly.

Walter Leonard, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

SENIOR CL.. of 1940

Mary Newton Lewis

Montclair, N. J.

n B * A K r

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Di Senate;

Fencing (3, 4); Y.W.C.A. (3); Inter-

national Relations Club (3, 4) ; Wom-an's Athletic Association (3), Secre-

tary (4).

Barbara Liscomb

Duluth, Minn.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Co-cliair-

nian Student Faculty Day Committee.

Arthur Clyde Lowe

North Wilkesboro, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Samuel Badger Lyerly

Peachland, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

John Franklin Lynch, Jr.

Erwin, N. C.

ATnCandidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (1, 3, 4) ; Class

Honor Council (4); Grail; Phi As-

sembly; 13 Club; Yackety Yack (1, 1.

3). Editor (4); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2).

Edmund Sanford Lipsky

Jackson Heights, N. Y.

Candidate for .A.B. Degree; Phi

sembly; Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4).

Thomas Wms. Mason Long, Jr.

Roanoke Rapids, N. C.

KACandidate for A.B.-LL.B. Degree; Phi

-Vssembly; Interfraterinty Council,

lYeasurer (4); Young Democrats Club

Franklyn Laurence Lowenthal

Yonkers, N. Y.

Cnididate for .\.B. Degree.

Walker Lyerly, Jr.

Hickory, N. C.

<i>K 2

( andidate for B.S. Degree.

(harles Jerome McCarthy

Brooklyn, N. Y.

A X A

(andidate for A.B. Degree.

Jean Gordon Mclndoe

Danville, Va.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Plii As

sembly; University Club; V.W.C.A.

John Jones Mclver

Sanford, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Robert Alderman McLemore

Smithfield, N. C.

AKKCandidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee. Chairman (3)

;

Class Honor Roll (3) ; Interdormitory

Council (3); Student Legislature (3);

University Club.

Thomas Albert McQuadeMorristown, N. J.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; MonogramClub (3 4); Plii Assembly; Swimming(3, 41.

Joseph Allan Mager

New York, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Thomas Jonathan Mcintosh

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Play-

makers (1. 2).

Sarah Stilley McLean

Plymouth, N. C.

AK r

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Club

(3, 4); Woman's Council (4); Y.W.C.A.

(3, 4); University Club (4); Education

Club (4).

Samuel Dace McPherson, Jr.

Durham, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (4) ; GermanClub Executive (4) ; 13 Club.

James William MacCallum

Lumberton, N. C.

* K 2 B r 2

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (3. 4) ; Fencing

John Willard Magoffin

Chapel Hill, N. C.

K A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Di Senate:

Yacketv Yack, Assistant Business

.Manager (2, 3).

David Henry Malone

Washington, D. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Carolina

Magazine (4); Fencing (1. 2, 3. 4).

Dora Eugenia Martin

Albemarle, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Fenc

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

Richard Hezekiah Masten

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

John Joseph Matte

Luzerne, Pa.

Candidate for A.B. Deg Band (4).

Charles Floyd Melchor

Mooresville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Harry Andrew March, Jr.

Washington, D. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; MonogramClub (2. 3, 4); Tennis (1); Tracl< (1,

2. 3, 4).

Josephine Martin

Henderson, N. C.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(3. 4)- Glee Club (3); Class Executive

Committee (4); Phi Assembly; Student

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

Albert Henry Mathes

Newark, N. J.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (4); Interdormi-

tory Council (3); Baseball (1, 4);

Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4).

Edward Heywood Megson

Glastonbury, Conn.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Carolina

Magazine (2, 3. 4) ; Daily Tar Heel

(3. 4); Di Senate; Golden Fleece;

Cirail; Publications Union Board (4);

Student Entertainment Committee (3.

4) ; Football (1, 2, 3, 4).

Janet Mae Messenger

Chagrin Falls, Ohio

. aT]^

SENIOR

Herbert Saul Meyer

Bronx, N. Y.

Irving Meyerowitz

Belhaven, N. C.

(;iii(lul:i!e fur A.B. Degree; Track (1). Camliilate for B.S. Degree; Track (II;

llillel Cabinet (4).

Lucile Harriet Miller

Wilmington, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Courtney Mitchell, Jr.

Kinston, N. C.

K2Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Charles Lee Moore

Mooresville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (1).

William Britton Morris

Aulander, N. C.

AX A

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Robert Stanley Milner

Gary, N. C.

A2nCandidate for A.B. Degree; Inter-

dormitory Council (3); Swimming (-11.

Ann Moore

Buena Vista, Va.

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

(3. 4).

Edward Townsend Moore

Wynnewood, Pa.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Amplio-

terotlien (2. 3. 4) ; Carolina Political

L'nion (1. 2. 3. 41; Gimghoul (4): Phi

Assembly; Student Activities Commit-

tee (3, 41 ; 13 Club.

Pete David Morrow

Forest Gty, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Clai6 of 19 40

Edward Robert Mueller

SENIOR CL.. o/ 1940

William Sims Newton

Durham, N. C.

<I>K 2

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Band (1).

Joseph Richard Niclcson

Roswell, N. Mex.

t'aiiflidate for A.B. Degree.

John Malcolm Nisbet

Wilmington, N, C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (3, 4): Class

Honor Council. Chairman (4); Class

Officer, Secretary (3); Grail; Student

Council (4); Student Legislature (3);

University Club.

Thomas Bernard Nordan

Smithfield, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Buccaneer

(4); Class Dance Committee (2); Class

Executive Committee (4); Interdormi-

tory Council (4): Plii Assembly.

George Edward Nicholson, Jr.

Montclair, N. J.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; CI

Executive Committee (4); Interdor:

torv Council (3. 4) ; Phi Assembly.

Alexander Preston Nisbet

Wilmington, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Inter-

dormitory Council (4).

Joseph Robert Nixon, Jr.

Lincolnton, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Band (3,

4).

Winford Walter NormanArarat, N. C.

Candidate for A.B.-LL.B. Degree: Cla

Executive Committee (4): Interdorn

tory Council (4).

Victor Ochsman

Durham, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Tennis (1.

Walter Off, Jr.

Wynnerwood, Pa.

A*Candidate for A.B. Degree.

SENIOR CL.. of 1940

William Hubert Ogburn

Sanford, N. C.

A2 n

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Daily TarHeel (1, 2). Advertising Manager (3).

Business Manager (4).

Elizabeth Fentress Orton

Matoaka, W. Va.

xnCaniliilafe for A.B. Degree; Play-

nialiers (3. 4).

Mabel Eloise Parish

Smithfield, N. C.

xnCandidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Club

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

John Webster Parker

Wilmington, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Dorothy Kathleen Patterson

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Richard William Olson

Everett, Mass.

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

Jenness Russell OwenFountain, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Inter-

dormitory Council (3).

James Phillips Parker

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Charles Irving Parrish

Smithfield, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Earl Victor Patterson

Burlington, N. C.

K A

Candidate for B.S. Degree; MonogramClub (3, 4); University Club; Track

(1, 2, 3, 4); Head Cheerleader (3).

Nicky Demus Patterson, Jr.

Elm City, N. C.

AX A

Candidiite for A.B. Degree.

James Perrotta

Trenton, N. J.

t' JI A

Candidiite for B.S. Degree: Band (1.

2. 3. n ; Boxing (2, 3).

Henry Seymour Pessar

New York, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree ; Class

Executive Committee (2. 3) : Inter-

fiormjtory Council (4) ; MonogramClub; Basketball (1, 2, 3. 4); Football

(1) : Track (1, 4).

Norris Tebeau Pindar, Jr.

Savannah, Georgia

S AECandidate for B.S. Degree; YjcketvYack (1).

Willard Corbitt Pleasant

Angier, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

William Arthur Pearson

Charlotte, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Inter-

dormitory Council (2. 4). Secretary

(3): Student Legislature (8).

Alfred Winton Perry

Franklin, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Phi As-sembly: 13 Club; University Club;Golf (1); Yackety Yack (2, 3).

Henry Hyman Phillips, Jr

Tarboro, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; CarolinaI'olitical Union (2, 3. 4) ; Interfrater-

nity Council (4); Phi Assembly; Cor-

son's Head; 13 Club; University Club;

Tennis (1).

Jimmie Lincoln Pittman

Selma, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Cla.ss

Executive Committee (4); Phi .\ssem-

George Webb Plonk

Kings Mountain, N. C.

2 X

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Inter-

fraternity Council (4).

Alice Christine Ponder

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

William Stevens Powell

Statesville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Bert Leo Premo

Millburn, N. J.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(2, 3), Business Manager (4); Class

Dance Committee (4) : Class Executive

Committee (2) ; University Dance Com-

mittee (4); Cross Country (I); Yack-

ETV Yack (2).

John Randolph Provo

Elizabeth City, N. C.

AX2 "i-B K

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

James Minetree Pyne

Durham, N. C.

2 A E

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Carolina

Magazine (1); Phi Assembly; Sheiks;

Yackety Yack (1).

Durward Frank Rains

King, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree

Marjorie Watt Pressly

Belmont. N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree

Charles Lewis Putzel, Jr.

Salisbury, N. C.

2 N

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Di Senate.

President (4); Interdormitory Council

(.i); University Club; Y.M.C.A. (1. 3),

Vice-President (2. 4).

George Radman

Lorain, Ohio

Candidate for .\.B. Degree; Baseball

(1, 2, 8) : Football (1. 2, 3, 4).

George Francis Ralston

Harrisburg, Pa.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Grail;

Baseball (1, 2. 3. 4); Football (1, 2, 3.

SENIOR

loseph Bunn Ramsey

Rocky Mount, N. C.

A K E

Caniiiilate fur A.I). Di-gn

Edward Lee Rankin, Jr.

Spencer, N. C.

Candidate for A.I). DcKrec; Cla.ss

Executive Committee (.), 4); Daily TarHeel (2, 3, I) ; Interdormitory Couneil(3, .»): riii Assembly; PublicationsUnion Board. President (1) ; StudentLegislature (t); Fencinc (1): Y.M.C.A.(1. 2, 3, 4).

b^^^^hh^

lohn Donald Rice

Scarsdale, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Charles Franklin Rider

Malverne, N. Y.

2 X

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Ned Coggin Ritchie

SENIOR CLss of 1940

Vera Clara Rony

Chicago, III.

Candidate fur A.B. Degree: Play-

maliers (3. 4).

Morris William Rosenberg

Anderson, S. C.

TE*Candidate for A.B. Decree; Ampho-terotlien: Daily Tar Heel (1. 2. 3),

Managing Editor (4) : Publications

Union Board. Treasurer (3); Class

Officer. Treasurer (4); Student Legis-

lature (4).

James McCausland Ross

Charlotte, N. C.

BenCandidate for A.B. Degree; Bulls;

German Club Executive (4); Y.M.C.A.

(1. 2, 3, 41.

Ida Rosen

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Carlos James Ross

Phillips, Me.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Otho Bescent Ross

Charlotte, N. C.

2XCandidate for A.B. Degree; MonogranClub: University Club: Swimming (3

4). Captain (3).

Eugene Cleapor Rountree

SENIOR CL.. of 1940

Robert Barrett Russ

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Cross

Country (1) ; Track (1).

Lewis Sneed Sasser, Jr.

Takoma Park, Md.

AS n

Candidate for B.S. Degree

Roger Moore Schulken

Durham, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Marian Dorothea Sedwick

Kenilworth, 111.

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

Lawrence Albright Sharpe

Burlington, N. C.

A* A

Candidate for .\.B. Degree; Play-

maliers (3).

Ernest Leon Russell

Columbia, S. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Sidney Marcus Schochet

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Glee Club

(3); Hillel Foundation (3), President

William Lawrence Seawell, Jr.

Sanford, N. C.

i: X

Candidate for B.S. Degree,

Herbert Shapiro

White Plains, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

James Russell Sheffield

Tarboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Oa.ss

?:xecutive Committee (2); Y.M.C.A.

(1. 2).

84

Helen Winnifred Shell

Ruancike Rapids, N. C.

Caiuliilatc for A.B. Degree.

William Henry Shull

Charlotte, N. C.

CamUdate fur A.B. Degree; Cla.'i.s

Executive Cornmitteo (1); Sheiks;

University Club; Golf (4).

Norman Michael Silverman

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Ba.seball

Robert Griggs Simmons

Greensboro, N. C.

* M A

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Band (1.

2. 3). President (J); Bell Ringer.

Moreliead-Patter.son Memorial (2. 3.

4); University Symphony Orchestra (1.

2. 3, 41.

Charles Albert Slagle

Springfield, Ohio

Candidate for A.B. Degree; MonogranClub (2, 3, 4); Football (2, 3, 4)

Tennis (2, 3, 4).

Marshall McLaney Shepherd

Charlotte, N. C.

:s \ E

Canilidale for U.S. Degree; Sheiks

Wieder David Sievers

St. Louis, Mo.

Z 15 T

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Play-

makers (2, 3. 4).

Raymond Harvey Simmons

Devotion, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Di Senate:

Playmakers (1); Y.M.C.A. (I).

^ii^William Vance Singletary

Greensboro, N. C.

BenCandidate for A.B. Degree: Phi As-

sembly: Cross Country (1. 2, 4); Track

(1. 2. 4); Y.M.C.A. (1); Young Demo-irats Club (4).

Anthony John Sleboda

Wyoming, Pa.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Charles Blume Sloop

Concord, N. C.

AXSCandidate for B.S. Degree.

Mack Edward Smith, Jr.

Fountain, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Frances Lorraine Sparks

Birmingham, Ala.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Phi As-.'lemlily: Y.W.C.A. (3. 4).

Edney Webb Stacey

Chapel Hill, N. C.

iilidate for A.B. Degree; Y.M.C.'V.

2. 3, 4).

William Stauber, Jr.

Rural Hall, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Buccaneer(2. ;!). Editor (1); Clas.s ExecutiveCommittee (4): Daily Tar Heel (3):

Intordormitory Council (2). Secretary

(3) : University Club.

Leo Slotnick

Chelsea, Mass.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Football

(1. 3. 3, 4).

Leroy Allan Sosnowitz

Stamford, Conn.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Swimmin(3), Manager (4).

Sophia Spivey

Louisburg, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Y.M.C.A.

Thomas Melville Stanback, Jr.

Salisburv, N. C.

2 N A z n

Candiilate for B.S. Degree; Daily TarHeel (1. 2. 31; Di Senate: Publication.s

Union Board Ci) ; Y.M.C..\. (1. 2, 3).

Treasurer (4).

Sanford Ivan Stein

Woodmere, N. Y.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree: Buccaneer(2. 3, 4); Carolina Magazine (3. 4);

Class Executive Conunittee (4) ; Daily

Tar Heel (2. 3. 4); Phi Assembly;Playmakers (1, 2, 8).

1^ ^ ' ^a^ .^^^

SENIOR

Edouard Louis Stelling, Jr.

Augusta, Ga.

Caiiiiiclati- fill- B.S. Dckr-c; Tlli As-

sembly.

Milton Stern

Br„nx, N. Y.

('amli(l,itc for B.S. DeRrec; Fencing(2, 3. 4).

Edwin Jordan Stevens

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Di Senate.

George Henry Stirnweiss

New York, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Baseball

(1. 2. 3. 4): Basketball (1. 2. 3. 4);

Football (1. 2. 3, 4).

Henry Haines Stockton

Pinehurst, N. C.

A ^

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

Jerry Stoff

Jamaica, N. Y.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree : Buccaneer12. 3. 4); Daily Tar Heel (I. 2. 3, 4):

Tennis. Manager (1).

Grady Erastus Stone

King. N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Inter-

dorniitory Council (4).

Warren Gamalil Stone

Benson, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Dan Harrington Stout

Ramseur, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Plii

sembiy.

Stancill McLeod Stroud

Southern Pines, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; ClassExecutive Committee (2); Daily TarHeel (2); Interdonnitory Council (3).

Treasurer (4) ; Student Legislature

(4).

CI.a 6 6 o 194

Ray McKinley Stroupe

Mount Holly, N. C.

Ciindulate for A.B. Degree

Robert Ernest Sumner

Rock Hill, S. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Bulls:

Class Executive Committee (1, 3).

Charles Gerstley Sunstein

Elkins Park, Pa.

Louis Valvelle Sutton, Jr.

Raleigh, N. C.

Z B T l<if

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Monogram Candidate for B.S. Degree; Ciernian

Club C3. 4) ; Wrestling. Manager (3, -t). Club Executive. Treasurer (H; Uni-

versity Dance Committee (4); Tennis

(1); Wrestling (1): Yacketv Vaik

(1, 2): Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3. 4).

Charles Sidney Svigals

White Plains, N. Y.

T E*

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Daily TarHeel (1): Fencing (1): Tennis (1):

Arnold Chester Swain

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

lohn Marion Taylor, Jr.

Annapolis, Md.

X*r.iiidirlate for B.S. Degree.

Mary jane Taylor

Blueficld, W. Va.

X n

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Nancy Scull Taylor

SENIOR eta., o/ 1940

William Tenenblatt

Jersey City, N. J.

Candiilate for A.B. Degree ; Clas:

Exc-cutive Committee U): Hillel Founelation (3). President (4); Interdormi- Clulj.

tory Council (1).

Frank John Terhune

Arlington, N. J.

A X A

Candirlate for A.B. Degree: University

Hassell Thigpen

Tarbciro, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Inter-

dormitory Council (.?); Flu Assemb'y.

Christine Margaret Thompson

Chapel Hill, N.C.

X !i

Candidate for A.B. Defcree.

Joseph Roscoe Thompson

Grassy Creek, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Paul Hewitt Thompson

Wadesboro, N. C.

Lynn Patrick ThomasRiicky Mount, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

John Cleveland Thompson

Saluda, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Neil Howard Thompson

Swepsonville, N. C.

A X A

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Margaret Carolyn Tipton

Maiden. N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class Candidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Clul)

Executive Committee (2); Class Honor (3. 4).

Council (3); Grail; University DanceCommittee (3, 4): Football (I. 2, 3);

Class Dance Committee, Chairman (4).

89

SENIOR da., of 1940

Ralph Chalmers Tolar

Sanford, Fla.

A T r>

randiilate for B.S. Desree.

Clark Canara Totherow

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Edward Trainer, Jr.

Philadelphia, Pa.

AX A

CandidateExecutive

B.S. Decree;

littee (3).

Ben Frye Turner

Charlotte, N. C.

Canilidate for B.S. Degree: Inter

diirniitory Couneil (2, .!. I); Tenni>

(' 2); Clas.s Executive Committee (ti

Lawson Withers Turner

Lynchburg, Va.

A K E \-ZYl

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Daily TarHeel (1); Di Senate: Oimglioul: Monogram Club; Sheiks: Student Legisla-

ture (1); Cross Country (I): Track.

Manager (3); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2. 3, 4).

Richard Charles Torian

Asheville, N. C.

I'andidate for A.B. Degree; Inter-

ilorinitory Council (3); Y.M.C.A. (3.

Montgomery Odell Townsend

Albemarle, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Y.M.C.A.

(2).

Hubert King Turley, Jr.

Memphis, Tenn.

i; AECandidate for A.B. Degree.

Frank Lucius Turner

Tryon, N. C.

K A * M A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Carolina

Magazine (3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3),

President (4); Playmakers (1); Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3).

Francis Joseph Uzmann, |r.

Queens Village, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer(4); Phi Assembly (1, 2); Boxing (1).

%

Dewitt Talma^ye Vauglian

Greensbi)ro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree. 'W^^John Fletcher Vincent

Roanoke Rapids, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree : Inter-

dormitory Council (2. .3). President

(4): University Club: Baseball (1. 2.

3, 4): Y.M.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4).

Grayson Spencer Waldrop

New Bern, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Stanley Walker

Grassy Creek, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Walter Ashe Wall

Siler City, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee. Chairman (4)

;

Phi Assembly; Y.M.C.A. (2, 4).

William Abdon Vernon, Jr.

Lcak.sville, N. C.

Canilidate for A.B. Degree; Glee Club;

Gorgon's Head; Cross Country (2, 3):

Football (1).

Robert Amos WagonerSparta, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree.

Philip Alfred Walker

Winston-Salem, N. C.

X^V * B K

('andi<lrtte for A.B. Degrf

William Thomas Walker

Wilmington, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

John Adams Wallace

Atlanta, Ga.

2 AECandidate for B.S. Decree; YackeiACK (1); Di Senate; Y.M.C.A. (1,

4).

Paul Wallach

Schenectady, N. Y.

Candidate for A.B. Decree; DebateSquad (1. 3, i) : Phi Assembly; Inter-

national Relations Club (3. 4).

Elizabeth Murray Warren

Monroe, N. C.

X i>

Cantlidate for A.B. Degree; Buccaneer

(3); Carolina Magazine H) ; Class

Officer, Secretary (4); Glee Club (4):

Phi Assembly; Student Legislature

(4); University Club; V.W.C.A. (3. 4).

George Davis Webster

High Point, N. C.

Candidate for B.S.

dormitory Council (4).

Degree; Inter-

Herman Harvey Weintraub

New York, N. Y.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Fenc(4).

Thomas Marshall West

Williamsport, Pa.

ATOCandidate for B.S. Degree;sembly; Yacket\' Yack (3.

C.A. (3).

Frances Elizabeth Walton

Salisbury, N. C.

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

Cutler Watkins

Greensboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Wilham Raul Weil

Greenville, Miss.

Z B T

Candidate

2. 3) ; Bui

for A.B. D."grt

eaneer (3, 4).

Douglas Sharp Welfare

Winston-Salem, N. C.

A X A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Phi .As-

sembly; Tennis, Manager (1); Wres-tling (I); Y.M.C.A. (1); Class Execu-tive Committee (1, 2, 3).

Chatham Roberdeau Wheat, III

Erlanger, N. C.

Candidate for .\.B. Degree; Buccaneer(3); Class Executive Committee (2);

Interdormitory Council (1); Baseball

(1); Football (II.

SENIOR

[k-njamin I'Vanklin Wheless

Liiuisburg, N. C.

C'lrKlidnte for B.S. Degree.

Seymour Wilk

Stamford, Conn.

Ciindidatc for A.B. Degree.

Stanley Sheldon WliyLe

Brooklvn, N. Y.

<I>A

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Play-

makers (1): University Club (1); Fenr

ing (2, .1, t) ; Swimming (;i): V.M.C.A.

(I. 2. 3. tl.

Charles Baynes Wilkerson, jr.

Raleigh, N. C.

•I- K 2

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

George Alexander Wilkinson, jr. James Edward Williams, Jr.

Rocky Mount, N. C. Burlington, N. C.

z ^i' AS n li r i:

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Bulls: Candidate for B.S. Degree,tlimghoul.

Ralph Bertram Williams, jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

A E A

Candidate for .\.B. Degree: Inter-

dormitory Council (4).

Woodrow Wade Williams

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Ray Wyatt Williams

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree:

(4).

Oliver Wayne Williamson

Wilmington, N. C.

A K K

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Cross Coun-try (1) : Fencing (1. 2. 3).

Ciaii of 1940

93

I.imes Perry Willis

Winston-Salem, N. C.

2 A E

Caiulklate for A.B. Degree; GiniRlioul.

Edwin Godley Winstead

Pinetown, N. C.

A *

(Miiiliclate for A.B. Degree;senilily ci); Track (2).

Roberta Winton

Fort Worth, Texas

II B*

(andiilate for A.B. Degree.

Charles Edward Wood, III

Winston-Salem, N. C.

K 2 A * 9.

Candidate for A.S. Degree; Class

Honor Council (2, 3); Class Officer.

President (3); Slieik.s; Student Council

(3. 4): Student Legislature (3); Y.M.

C.A. (1): Graham Memorial Director

(3, 4).

Albert Cecil Woodroof, Jr.

Greensboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Class

Executive Committee (4).

John Kenyon Wilson, Jr.

Elizabeth City, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

William Alonzo Winstead

Rocky Mount, N. C.

Canilidate for B.S. Degree; Cla.ss

Executive Committee (4); MonogramClub (4): Interdorniitory Council (4);

Boxing (1, 2, 3, 4).

Herbert WolfNew Britain, Conn.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Mary Dorothy WoodElizabethton, Tenn.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; Phi

sembly; Playmakers (3, 4).

Charles Whitehead Woodson, Jr.

Salisbury, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree; DebateSquad (4); Di Senate; Y.M.C.A. (4).

SENIOR CLss of 1940

Richard Campbell Worley

AsheviUe, N. C.

Candulate for U.S. DeKiee; Goldon

Fleece; Grail: Monogram Club (2, 3.

U; Student Council (2); University

Club: University Dance Committee {3.

I); Basketball (2, 3. 4).

Walter Harrill WrayShelby, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Carl YoungAngier, N. C.

K A

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Dolph Moore Young, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

2 AECandidate for B.S. Degree.

Ernest Harshaw Yount, Jr.

Newton, N. C.

A T H A E A

Candidate for A.B. Degree;

fraternity Council (3, 4)

:

Eleanor Frances Worthington

Kinston, N. C.

xn

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

Mary Jane Yeatman

Columbia, Tenn.

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

(3), Treasurer (4).

Clifton Young

Lexington, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree: Pla

makers (2, 3, 4).

Sadie Eleanor YoungPrinceton, N. C.

Candidate for A.B. Degree.

; Inter-

Student

Edward Zuckerman

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Caniliilate for A.B. Degree: Wrestlii

(I); Hillel Foundation, Cabinet (4).

Legislature (4); Y.M.C.A. (1, 3, 4).

BARNETTDeWitt Barnett—Hurry . . . hurry

. . . hurry . . . the busy bee of the

campus ... his fingers dabbled in manypies . . . monotone . . .

CARRWatts Carr—The "Pulse" of the

campus . . . affable, laughable . . .

coalition of brains, brawn, burlesque . . .

//e'EADLINES . . . scholarship . . .

student government . . . religion . . .

politics . . . athletics . . . organizations

. . . publications . . . personalities.

Tliis list includes the paths which

point to campus leadership. In rend-

ering service to the campus in these

varied fields, students may win dis-

tinction and may fit themselves to

assume leadership after college days

in the religious, political, business,

and literary worlds.

J^ o m e V{oiabies

CORBETTMelville Corbett—Emma is Stacy's

stooge . . . friendly, efficient, attractive

. . . W. A.'s Queen Victoria ... tea

and crumpets . . .

DAVISJimmy Davis—"Hot" . . . Campus king

. . . Tin can tsar . . . Chronister's calam-

ity at 4:12.5 . . . Buccaneer bonfire . . .

FAIRLEY

Jack Fairley—Just about everybody

knows him, likes him ... he knowsjust about everybody, likes them . . .

Carolina's Jack Garner . . .

96

CH03

FICKLENStudie Ficklen—U. P.'s Boss Tweed. . . Blue cashmere sweater, olive hat,

lope . . . Buiclc . . . interfraternity big-

wig .. .

'40GATTON

Harry Gatton—Washington merry-go-round . . . Carolina's Publicity C/nfolder

... he tried to present all political

ancles . . . Senator . . .

HUNTERBenny Hunter—Senior class guidinglight . . . energetic, smiling, jitterbug

. . . power with the weaker sex . . . postcard legislation . . .

HARMONMartin Harmon—Curley-headed,cherubic . . . crusading champion of

students rights . . . D. T. H. mogul . . .

oRLLNAllen Green—Shock of uncombedblack hair ... a lanky from Cooleemee. . . future big-time editor? . . . liberty,

fraternity, equality . . .

JORDANLouise Jordan—Force behind the Y.W.C.A. . . . always going somewhere for

something ... or somebody . . . tinkling

laughter . . . "Little Red" . . . scholar-

ship and service . . .

MEGSONEd Megson—Freckled and frank . . .

always inconspicuously busy . . . and

journalism's his O.A.O. . . . versatility

incarnate . . .

NISBETMac Nisbet—Just naturally friendly

... a wealth of wit . . . unassuming,

understanding . . . Student Council . . .

nHE personalities presented on

these pages are representative leaders

of the Class of 1940. Each member of

this group was chosen on the basis

of contributions, accomplishments,

and a genuine interest in the Uni-

versity and Class. A summary of their

activities may be found under their

names in the class section. With their

pictures, here, are reminders of some

of their outstanding characteristics.

s,o m e ot a b i e 6

Morris Rosenberg—"Greetings" . . .

D.T.H. power behind the throne . . .

former P.U. Board potentate . . . level-

head and lantern jaw . . .

STAUBERBill Stauber—November Buc"Clean it up" . . . "Make it sexy"

"Aw shucks," says Buc prexy

bicycle . . .

98

STIRNWEISSGeorge Stirnweiss—A little dynamitegoes a long way . . . flying Dutchman. . . cowboy walk . . . piston legs . . .

o '40VINCENT

Jack Vincent—Interdormitory council

. . . cherub . . . Compressed efficiency

. . . knobhead . . .

WORLli'i

Fish Worley — Stables, horses, andstuff . . . remember his lope . . . andhis unique half-smile . . . Fleece, Grail. . . insomnia . , ,

WOODCharlie Wood—and his orchestra . . .

junior class imperator . . . Kappa Sig's

Kay Kyser? . , . Student Council scrive-

ner . . . well-groomed, smoothe . . .

WARRENMickey Warren—Politico . . . pep,

vim, vigor . . . sex appeal . . . alwayswilling to do more than her part . . .

Flirtation Walk . . .

CLYDE GATES KIMBALL

ui n L o ^ a.a 6 6

VVFFICERS of the Junior Class: Gates Kimball, President;

George Pressly Jenkins, Jr., Vice-President; Stephen Taylor For-

rest, Secretary; Rodney English Snow, Treasurer, and David James

Morrison, Student Council.

CLASS

OFFICERS

MORRISON, FORREST, JENKINS,

KIMBALL, SNOW

Junior Class Honor Council: David Morrison, Chair-

man; Charles Barrett, Hargrove Gowles, Winston

Broadfoot, John Fench, James Gray, William Joslin,

Gates Kimball, and Edwin Maner.

University Dance Committee: Edmund Erickson.

Junior Class Dance Committee: Ottaway Burton,

Chairman; Charles Barker, Don Baker, Robert Farris,

Herbert Hardy, and Carroll McGaughey.

Junior Class Executive Committee: Louis Gaylord,

Chairman; Hargrove Bowles, Lester Branson, Betty

Brown, Rufus Brown, Stacey Crockett, William Dees,

Frances Dykeman, Coleman Finkel, George Frisby,

Frances Gibson, Isaac Grainger, James Gray, Allen

Grimes, Reddy Grubbs, William Hand, Walter Har-

groves, Charles Idol, Marjorie Johnston, Harry Jones,

Joe Joyner, Jim Mallory, Frank Reynolds, Sidney

Sadoff, Paul Severin, David Sessoms, Christian

Siewers, Walter Sheffield, William Shuford, Robert

Sloan, Lester Tomlinson, Walsh Turner, and Kenan

Williams.

HONOR

COUNCILSeated: KI^'[BALL, MORRISON, BOWLES

Standing: MANER. GRAY, W. BROADFOOT, FRENCH, JOSLIN, BARRETT

T?h^mt.

JUNIORThomas McCall Adams

Bennettsville, S. C.

<!> ^e

Norman Agnew, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

OH A * n

Ben Warren AikenCreedmoor, N. C.

Bernie AleskovskySpring Valley, N. Y.

* M A

Sydenham Benuni AlexanderCharlotte, N. CA K E A E A

Colton Calvin AllenMiddlesex, N. C.

Oliver Holt AllenReidsville, N. C.

William AllenWilmington, N. C.

William James Allran, Jr

Cherryville, N. C.

Claywell Mitchell AndersonStatesville, N. C.

Margaret Cornell ArnoldFort Bragg, N. C.

Roy Douglas AschLong Beach, N, Y.

Ruth Hastings AshburnWmston-Salem, N. C.

Jack AshurstSomerset, Ky.

Josephine AustinHatteras, N. C.

Ransom Hinton AustinRaleigh, N. C.

James Ruffin Bailey

Raleigh, N. C.

11 K A

Joseph Woodrow BaggettLillingtun, N. C.

yn I u e y 6 itf

o

laa of 19 40Donald Charles Baker

Westbury, Long Island, N. Y.

William Bales

Carolina Be.ich, N. C

Alvin Hugh Ballard

Salisbury, N. C.

Harry Cline Ballarc

Nashville, N.C.

Charles Thomas BarkerNew Bern, N. C.

Charles Francis Barrett

Raleigh, N. C,

Martin Columbus BarringerMt. Pleasant, N. C.

Clark Bartlett

Jacksonville, Fla.

;: A E

Mary Burnham BasonChapel Hill, N. C^

AAn

Anne Caswell BatesShelbyville, Tenn.

Britton Ferebee BeasleyFountain, N. C.

Robert Payne Beckwith, Jr.

Roanoke Rapids, N. C.

Jack Pershing BedeaSouth Orange, N. J.

* K i:

William Lockett BeermanGreensboro, N. C.

Maxine Claire BeestonChapel Hill, N.C.

Harry Logan BelkAsheville, N. C.

Garland Everett Bell

Washington, N. C.

Martin BergerHewlett, N. Y.

L^ a f'o l iL n a

mS9 ". -ws* .jc f

^JrM

^tk

JUNIORHarry Billica

Muncie, Ind.

* K 2

Donald Edwin Bishop

New Bern, N. C.

Thomas Ruffin Bledsoe

Greensboro, N. C.

Ben

Daniel Thomas Blue

Laurinburg, N. C.

Stanley Bertram BlumElizabeth, N. J.

Hermann Joseph BoemannsChapel Hill, N. C.

Frances Estaline BoggsStatesville, N. C.

Norman Marshall Bolick

Conover, N. C.

Henry Bell BooneJackson, N. C.

Orin Watts BoothDurham, N. C.

* A e A E A

Howard Maurice Bossa

Hamden, Conn.

Floyd Patton Bost

Shelby, N. C.

Joseph Edmunds BouldinBute's Creek, N. C.

Howard Vincent BoundsWeldon, N. C.

K A

Hargrove Bowles, Jr.

Greensboro, N. C.

Ben

Thelma Mae BrammerBassett, Va.

Francis Arnold BrandonCarrboro, N. C.

Bertrum Lester Branson, Jr.

Asheville, N. C.

K2

un L (/ e f d i^t"i

O

104

a 6 d of 1940Boyce Albert Brawley

Mooresville, N. C.

James Shober BrawleySalisbury, N. C.

AK E

Mary Louise Breazeale

Greenville, S. C.

Vernon Proctor Brett

Winton, N. C.

Robert Strange Bridgers

Wilmington, N. C.

A Tn

William Gillies Broadfoot, Jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

2 A E

Winston Broadfoot

Wilmington, N. C.

2 AE

Walter Japert Broadwell, Jr.

Angier, N. C.

Norwood Orreli BrooksBrunswick County, N. C.

Eleanore Morath BrownAsheville, N. C.

Elizabeth BrownRaleigh, N. C.

A All

Helen Rogers BrownLeicester, N. C.

Pickney Rufus Brown, Jr.

Atlanta, Ga.

X*

Robert Emmett BrownCharlotte, N. C.

William Wallace BrunerColumbia, S. C.

James Everette BryanPittsboro, N. C.

Pattye Rachel Bryant

Chatham, Va.

Selma Frances BuckelewLancaster, S. C.

A An

Jjortk L^aroil n a

) r:,,a

-T «r- «. f '1 -^ ^

JUNIORVelton Vance Bunch

Belhaven, N. C.

Percy Russell BunnSpring Hope, N. C.

William Thomas BurnsAberdeen, N. C.

Marjorie Lovelace Burrus

Canton, N. C.

Ottway Bernard BurtonMilton, N. C.

Hugh De Witt ByrdMt. Olive, N. C.

Mary Hampton CaldwellChapel Hill, N. C.

Lester Lawrence Callan

New York, NY.

Orville Bentley CampbelHickory. N. C.

George Cheshire Capralis

Lexington, Ky.

Phil Rahm Carlton

Greensboro, N. C.

A K E

Spencer Carlyle

Hendersonville, N. C.

Ladye Barnard CarpenterRolling Fork, Miss.

Peter Carr

Anderson, Ind.

2 X

Benjamin Robert Carroll, Jr.

Hamlet. N. C.

SKF.

Derema Star Carrol

Fayetteville, N. C.

James Wilburn Carter

Kannapolis, N. C.

Virginia Dare Gates

Raleigh, N. C.

un I 1/ e r d I i'i

O

Ciaa of 19 40Frances Essiebelle C.iuble

Mt. Pleasant, N. C.

Fred Cazel

Asheville, N.C.

Hallie ChandlerSumter, S. C.

Robert ChapmanRed Springs, N. C.

Everette Wade Charles

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Russell Drewry Cherry

Draper, N. C.

Wade Thomas ChoateSparta, N. C.

David Sanford Citron

Charlotte, N. C.

Martha Bryan ClampettSaint Petersburg, Fla.

Albert Edwin Clark

Bear Creek, N. C.

Mary Alan Clinard

High Point, N. C.

Rowell Connor CloningerClaremont, N. C.

Grady Hoke Cockerham, Jr.

Elkin, N. C.

Joseph Robert CohenNew York City, N. Y.

Murray Elliot CohnBrooklyn, N. Y.

Robert CohnWinston-Salem, N. C.

Charles Lindsay ColbyAsheville, N. C.

Julian Barrus ColemanKinston, N. C.

Wjortk L^aroiia F" o i i n a

107

m. JIH f M mKM

JUNIORJames Rountree CoUett

Morganton, N. C.

Bon

William Tate ConleyMarion, N. C.

II K A

Jeanne ConnellFairmont, W. Va.

Blanche Martha CookMarion, Va.

George Marion Cooper, Jr.

Raleigh, N. C.

*KS

Jack CooperNew Haven, Conn.

X*

Richard Lawrence CowhigCharlotte N. C.

Ben

William Riddick Cowper, Jr

Gatesville, N. C.

Herbert Walton CoxClarkton, N. C.

.awrence Edwin Crabtree

Raleigh, N. C.

2X

Robert Ferree CraverHigh Point, N. C.

<i> FA

Butler Parnoll Crittenden, Jr.

Shreveport, Va.

Mary Stacy Crockett

Bluefield, W. Va.

II B*

Millard Roberts Currin

Angier, N. C.

John William Curtis

Liberty. N. C.

*K 2

Mary Jane Daffin

Gerrardstown, W. Va.

Caroline Landon DaltonLexington, Mass.

A An

Masten Rufus DaltonWinston-Salem, N. C.

K 2

un i u e r 6 i t^

o

7«jj of 19 40

o r

Edgar Samuel William Dameron, Jr.

Burlington, N. C.

Gertrude Person DardenAnnapolis, Md.

James Henry DardenFarmville, N. C.

<s>rA

William Moye DardenAnnapolis, Md.

2 A E

Bill DavenportCharlotte, N. C.

ATfJ

Edward Palmer Davis, Jr.

Dunn, N. C.

Marjorie Harward DavisBinghamton, N. Y.

Collins Taylor DawsonTamaica, N. Y.

2 X

George Robert Dawson, Jr.

Jamaica, N. Y.

Frank Emerson DeaverRiver Edge, N. J.

William Dees, Jr.

Goldsboro, N. C.

2 N

Frank D'Elia

Bridgeport, Conn.

William Robert Denning, Jr.

Benson, N. C.

Harry Tillinghast DeweyChapel Hill, N. C.

George Elting DeyoFairfield, Conn.

Meta Lois DiffenderferPensacola, Fla.

Betty Eaton DixonAtlanta, Ga.

Christine Marie DobbinsChapel Hill, N. C.

tk ^ a y o i ima

Wi¥k£xml

3 ^ ^

JUNIORDorothy Rebecca Drake

Atlanta, Ga.

Gordon Shelton DuggerVilas, N. C.

Judy DukeSpringfield, Mo.nB*

Elwood McDonald Dunn, Jr.

New Bern, N. C.

Louis Justus DuPreeKinston, N. C.

Frances Louise DyckmanShort Hills, N. J.

A An

Margaret Elaine EadesEvansville, Ind.

David Ernest Early

Winnetka, 111.

2X

Fred Rippy EdneyChapel Hill, N. C.

James Sidney EdneyChapel Hill, N. C.

Bennett Moore EdwardsWadesboro, N. C.

Mary Tilson EdwardsTroy, N. C.

Thomas EdwardsBronxville, N. Y.

2 X

Fred Kingsley Elder, Jr.

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Edgar Worth Ellington, Jr.

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Charles Sadelson Elliott

Charlotte, N. C.

Elinor Olive Elliott

Brooklyn, N. Y.

n B*

Bruce Alexander ElmoreBryson City, N. C.

yn L u e r 6 V

Clan of 1940Martha Jean Emery

Charlotte, N. C.

June Rose Epstein

New Garden, N. ^V

Dolly Erickson

Lancaster, S. C.

Edmund Eugene Erickson

Oak Park, 111.

Jesse Estroff

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Sally Anna EvansBluefield, W. Va.

II B*

Elaine Palmer EwaldBaltimore, Md.

Beverley Adams Faison

Raleigh, N. C.

Robert Arthur Farris

Wilson, N. C,

William Clayton Farris, Jr.

East Orange, N.J.

Francis Fatell

Bronxville, N. Y.

Sanford Kesler Felton

Eure, N. C.

Lawrence Ferling

Bronxville, N.Y.K 2

Carl Feuchtinger

AsheviUe, N. C.

John Clinard FinchLexington, N. C.

John William Finch, Jr.

Stantonsburg, N. C.

Coleman Lee Finkel

Baltimore, Md.

Paulyne Finkelstein

Wilmington, N. C.

f/o^tk (^ a r o i

I

a y o i i n a

^M^^!^SbM

JUNIORCharlotte Fitz

Seattle. Wash.

Sol Sidney Fligel

Rocky Mount, N. C.

Diana Harrison Foote

Chapel Hill, N. C.

A An

Sarah Foushee Fore

Chapel Hill, N.C.

Stephen Taylor Forrest

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Porter Lee FortuneOld Fort, N. C.

Arthur James Foster

Statesville, N. C.

Fairfax Foster

Franklin, La.

n B*

Robert Gilmer Foster

Winston-Salem, N. C.

John Eugene FrenchNew York, N. Y.

<i>Ae

George Rohatsch Frisby

Elizabeth City, N. C.

Mary Marshall Frye

Asheville, N. C.

Lawrence Wilson Futch

Burgaw, N. C.

George Henry GammansNewport, R. 1.

David Foulke GardinerPhiladelphia, Pa.

iunk Gardner, III

Ancon, Canal Zone2 X

Jean Dorothy GardnerStaten Island, N. Y.

James Boyce GarlandGastonia, N. C.

Ben

tJn i u e f" 5 iIti

laa of 19 40Tom Stanley Garrison

Asheville, N. C.

Weller Kays Gary

Fallston, N. C.

Louis Woodson Gaylord

Greenville, N. C.

Andrew GennettAsheville. N. C.

<!> AG

Frances Gertrude Gibson

Tallahassee, Fla.

Joseph Emmett Giddings, Jr.

Mount Olive, N. C.

Charles Baker GiduzChapel Hill, N. C.

Gracie Pearle Gilbert

Parkton, N. C.

Vivian Sarratt Gillespie

Fort Bragg. N. C.

William Lee Gilliam, Jr.

Richmond, Va.

Arthur Watson Gillis

Raeford, N. C.

Frank Monroe GivanCharlotte, N. C.

George Gregory' GlamackJohnstown, Pa.

Edward Percy Godwin, Jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

Grover Cleveland GodwinSanitorium, N. C.

nK A

Melvin Lee GoforthStatesville, N. C.

Ruth Jean GolbeyBrooklyn, N. Y.

Irving Jerry GoldhaberFlushing, N. Y.

L^ a r o I >ma

^/- A^

n<4^r^Airw

JUNIORBabs Lois Goodrich

Wilmington, Del.

X !->

Junius John GoodwinLumberton, N. C.

Elizabeth Byrd GordonSouth Hill, Va.

Willis Elden Gould, Jr.

North Leeds. MaineX ^I'

Isaac Bates Grainger, Jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

2 A E

James Alexander Gray, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

2 AE

Louis Henry GreenburgLouisburg, N. C.

William Carrington Gretter

Waterbury, Conn.

John Charles Grier

Gastonia, N. C.

ATn

Alan Pendleton GrimesStaten Island, N. Y.

Julius Alfred Grisette

Valdese, N. C.

Chester Walter GrocholaLong Island, N. Y.

Henry McCormick Gross, Jr.

Harrisburg, Pa.

A M'

Willard Bertram GrossmannNew York, N. Y.

William Lester Groves, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

A X 2

Reddy Gatewood GrubbsCharlotte, N. C.

Ernest Gordon GuyHarmony, N. C.

Thomas Jennings Hackney, Jr.

Wilson, N. C.

Z *

un I V e v" s I"i

add of 1940Phil Wiley Haigh

Fayetteville, N. C.

ATn

Stanley Eugene HaPortsmouth, Va.

A X A

Wallace Vann Hall

Yanceyville, N. C.

James Carl Hambright, Jr.

Rock Hill, S.C.

Harry HamiltonMorehead City, N. C.

William Pickett HamlinHigh Point, N. C.

John Ray HamptonLeaksville, N. C.

Lou Alice HamrickFallston, N. C.

Shirley Tweed HansenHendersonville, N. C.

Thomas Chandler HardwickPinehurst, N. C.

Herbert Wallace HardySanford, N. C.

Walter Clark HargroveTarboro, N. C.

X *

Charles HarndenNarberth, Pa.

X^I'

Henry Craig HarrelsonCherryville, N. C.

Warren Blake Harrelson

Mullins,S. C.

Robert Charles Harrington, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

A* A

Charles Marvin Harris

Stanford, Conn.

Thomas Clifton Hayes, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

K A

y/o^tk L^ a r o i i n a MT^^YA

JUNIDRLouis DeMaro Hayman

Beaufort, N. C.

Thomas Holt Haywood, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Z ^I'

Ben Ross HeathKinston, N. C.

AS n

Hunter HeathKinston, N. C.

Mary Frances HeathWaynesboro, Ga.

Cynthia Jane HemkeLebanon, N. J.

Hubert Piatt HendersonCfiase City, Va.

!> M A

John Richard HendersonCharlotte, N. C.

Rusk Griffin Henry, Jr.

Hickory, N. C.

Robert Edward HermsonBrooklyn, N. Y.

William Fletcher HertmanSalisbury, N. C.

Daniel Albert HewittAsheville, N. C.

Harrell Bruce Hill

Reidsville, N. C.

Ann Shirley HobbsNewport News, Va.

Ernestine Ragsdale HobgoodGreenville, N. C.

Mack HobsonDunn, N. C

Luther HodgesLeaksville, N. C.

Roland Graham HodgesKinston, N. C.

K2

un I V e r* 6 Iit^

add of 19 40Harry Hoffman

Doylestown, Pa.

Norman Frederick HoguePainted Post, N. Y.

Richard Burgan HolcombeCandler, N. C.

Woodrow Wilson HollandGreensboro, N. C.

Roselyn Pearl HolmesTifton, Ga.

David Henry HoodDunn, N. C.

David Woodall HooksSmithfield, N. C.

Russell McPherson HornsdaySnow Camp, N. C.

James Arthur HowardNorfolk, Va.

Rachel Lea HowardChapel Hill, N. C.

Walter Robert HowardSanford, N. C.

* AG

Willis Lee HowardCornelius, N. C.

Donald Bruce HubbardCharlotte, N. C.

Emily Douglas HubbardWaynesboro, Va.

Mary Tudor HudsonHertford, N. C.

n B*

Alfred Herman HughesHampton, Va.

John Edward Hughes, Jr.

Elizabeth City, N. C.

Charles Oliver HumphriesAsheville. N. C.

Ben

F/ortk CaroliL n a

JUNIDHCharles Jackson HutchisonWalnut Cove, N. C.

Charles William Idol

High Point, N. C.

Roy Lee IngramMamers, N. C.

Ralph Thompson Isley

Mebane, N. C.

Cleveland Devane Jackson

Salemburg, N. C.

Arthur Lincoln JansenWhite Plains, N. Y.

<i>r A

George Pressly Jenkins, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

X ^

Harold Frederick JenningsMamaroneck, N. Y.

Rosemary JohnsonDes Moines, Iowa

n B*

William Archibald JohnsonLillin,^ton, N. C.

Albert Sherwood Johnston, Jr.

Smithfield. N. C.

Marjorie Elizabeth JohnstonHartford City, Ind.

xn

Eleanor McLure JonesCambridge, Mass.

Hamilton JonesMilwaukee, Wis.

Harry Moseley JonesWinston-Salem, N. C.

Paul Erastus Jones, Jr.

Farmville, N. C.

i) A E

William Erwin Jones

Charlotte, N. C.

ATn

William Joslin

Raleigh, N. C.

2 N A E A

un L u e ^ 6 if

Clan of 19 40Albert Joseph Josselson

Ahoskie, N. C,

Joseph Dock JoynerFarmville, N. C.

Maurice Joseph JurneyOlin, N. C.

Henry Morris KaminsHartford, Conn.

TE*

Edward Lee KantrowitzHendersonville, N. C.

Leo Maurice Karpeles

Washington, D. C.

Irwin Norton KatzNew York, N. Y.

Lionel Melvin KatzMiami, Fla.

T E*

Acton Perry KeatsPlandome, N. Y.

Elizabeth Anne KeeseeBluefield, W. Va.

n B*

Margie Spainhour KeigerWinston-Salem, N. C.

Richard KemperLarchmont, N. Y.

Clyde Gates KimballWinston-Salem, N. C.

,iKE

Paul Noble KingGreensboro, N. C.

Ishmael Worth KirbyKin? N. C.

William Albert Kirksey

Fayetteville, N. C.

Susan KlaberHighland Park, III.

Thomas Battle Koonce, Jr.

Jacksonville, N. C.

rjortk L^ a r o 1

1

n a

J0^ ^liflj^ j^f^^^

^mr ^^^M^ .^i^i^^ ..^^t^^^

119

JUNIORGeorge Eli Koury

Burlingti>n, N. C.

Hannah LacobChapel Hill, N. C.

James Francis Lalanne

Lafayette, La.

K2

Wilnah Carolyn LambethElon College, N. C.

Charles Bradley LangBahama, N. C.

Nelson LargeRocky Mount, N. C.

Harry Lasker

New York, N. Y.

Z B T

Frank Ledbetter

RobbinsviUe, N. C.

Joseph LedermanNew York, N. Y.

Frances Jones LeeVirgilina, Va.

James Hardy LeeAsheville, N. C.

Junius Lee, Jr.

Four Oaks, N. C.

Martha LeFevreChevy Chase, Md.

II B <}>

Robert Zelden Lerner

New York, N. Y.

n A*

Harry Travers Lewis, Jr.

Proctorville, N. C.

John Henry Lewis

Statesville, N. C.

Robert Edward LewisLumberton, N. C.

Wellington Harrill LewisFallston, N. C.

un i u e r 6 iit'i

O

Clai6 of 1940Archie Lindsay

Arlington, N. J.

Jean McGregor Lindsay

Lumberton, N. C.

Kathleen Elizabeth Lineback

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Arthur Stanley Link

Mt. Pleasant, N. C.

Raymond Otho Linker

Charlotte, N. C.

AK E

Jean Morse Littell

Rehoboth, Del.

Karl Burns Litzelman

Westfield, N. J.

Genie Loaring-Clark

Huntsville, Ala.

X n

Leonard Kohlman Lobred

Washington, D. C.

Henrietta Bryan LoganChapel Hill, N. C.

Molly Browning LongKeyser, W. Va.

Robert LongStatesville, N. C.

Aaron North Longfield

Washington, D. C.

Wade Dean LoveStanfield, N. C.

Archibald Lovin

Shawnon, N. C.

Julius Alexander Lowrance, Jr.

Statesville, N. C.

Thomas Greene LynchWilmington, N. C.

Risden Allen LyonWadesboro, N. C.

y/ortk L^aroLma^Biiik -A wi

^/^^r^

JUNIORZack Lyon

Oxford, N. C.

Borden MaceBeaufort, N. C.

John Chetwood MahlerRaleigh, N. C.

Moses Montefiore MalkinBroukline, Mass.

Edwin Napoleon ManerSavannah, Ga.

Lilhan Allaine MarshOnley, Va.

Robert Howard Marshburn, Jr.

Elizabethtown, N. C.

Betty Jane MartinHendersonviUe, N. C.

Charles Edwin MashburnMarshall, N.C.

Rubineal Cora MasonAngier, N. C.

Eleanor Virginia MaupinNewport News, Va.

n B*

Hilah Ruth MayerRaleigh, N. C.

Ruth Elinore MayerErie, Pa.

William Linville MaynardChapel Hill, N. C.

Mary Gail MeniusNew Bern, N. C.

William Hyde Meroney, III

Greensboro. N. C.

Anson Angus Merrick, Jr.

Tryon, N. C.

Byrd Farmer Merril

Dothan, Ala.

* A e A E A

un L u e r 6 Lf

o

Class of 19 40John Michael

Asheville, N. C.

WiUiam Newton MiddletonJacksonville, Fla.

K A

Herbert Mark Miller

East Brady, Pa.

Irving Miller

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Francis Champion Millican

Palatka, Fla.

Henry Albion Millis, Jr.

High Point, N. C.

Ben

Nell Edwards Mills

Statesville, N. C.

Mariana Farrell MilnerAiken, S. C.

Alexander Charles Mitchell

New York, N. Y.

Dwight Evans MoodyHenrico N. C.

Jane MoodyLarkinsville, Ala.

Aubrey Haskins Moore, Jr.

Oxford, N. C.

Betty Gentry MooreTalladega, Ala.

John McDowell Moore, Jr.

Lexington, N. C.

Mary Lily MooreRaleigh, N. C.

William Kermit Morefield

Statesville, N. C.

Earl Morgan, Jr.

Badin, N. C.

John Edwin MorganCanton. N. C.

y/o^tn \^ a r o i iin a

* JUNIDRichard Egerton Morris

Hendersonville, N. C.

David James Morrison

Plainfield, N.J.

Thomas Lacy MorrowParris Island, S. C.

tr A

Thad Tuttle MoserAsheburo, N. C.

A T n

Rae MurdenFair Bluff, N. C.

Booker MurphySpray, N. C.

Edward Emerson MurrayBaltimore, Md.

:: X

WiUiam Gray MurrayGreensboro, N. C.

A E A

Helen McCallAsheville, N. C.

Howard Wilson McCallSpruce Pine, N. C.

Marie McClellandChapel Hill, N. C.

A All

Grover McClure, Jr.

Shelby, N. C.

Julia McConnellTalladesa, Ala.

11 B 1>

Donald Whitfield McCoyLaurinburg, N. C.

Byron Charles McCrawTroy, N. C.

William Tecumseh McDanielRutherfordton, N. C.

Virginia McDonaldPaducah. Ky.

II B*

George McDuffieFlat Rock, N. C.

i; A E

Vn L u e r 6 LIt i

a 6 5 of 19 40Carroll Bradford McGaughey

Atlanta, Ga.

•!> AB

James Edward McGee, Jr.

Roanoke Rapids, N. C.

Emagene McGibonyGreensboro, Ga.

John Paul McGintyLincolnton, N. C.

Edward McGooganMorven, N. C.

Archie Nock McintoshOld Fort, N. C.

X -i'

Florence Millicent McKendryNew Canaan, Conn.

n B*

David Alexander McLemoreParkersburg, N. C.

Jane Marshall McMasterWinnsboro, S. C.

Malcom Donald McNaughtonHendersonville, N. C.

2 X

Tom Palmer NashMemphis, Tenn.

Z-ir

William Benton NashWingate, N. C.

Sarah Jeannette NathanChapel Hill, N.C.

Martha Kathryn NavyMars Hill, N. C.

Joe B. NeelyHendersonville, N. C.

Donald Holmes Neill

Cyn^Td, Pa.

X4'

Isaac Floyd Nesbitt

Edneyville, N. C.

.\ E A

Robert Ballin NeumanWashington, D. C.

Z B T

y/ortk L^aroiiL n a

JUNIORMuriel Grace Neville

Jamaica, N. Y.

K K r

Mary Sue NewellHenderson, N. C.

Naomi NewmanDanville, Va.

Charles Roland NipeFrankfort, N. Y.

Baxter Gardner NobleKinston, N. C.

Ernestine Irene NoeMt. Clemens, Mich.

xn

Henly Moir Ogburn, Jr.

Clemmons, N. C.

Zebulon Franklin OsbourneChapel Hill, N. C.

William Louis PackerChapel Hill, N. C.

Harold Dement Padgett, Jr.

Washmgton, D. C.

Oscar Oliver Palmer, Jr.

Shelby, N. C.

Alton Webster Parker

Murfreesboro N. C.

Elton Claxton Parker

Murfreesboro, N. C.

Roy Turnage Parker

Pinetops, N. C.

Eunice Patten

Louisburg, N. C.

n B*

Howard Carlton Patterson

Burlington, N. C.

Lome Cameron PayneGastonia, N. C.

Edwin Anderson Penick, Jr.

Raleigh, N. C.

un L V e V 6 It^

o

a 6 6 of 1940Georgiana Louise Pentlarge

Montclair, N. J.

A ^ II

Pearlman Ross Perry

Chapel Hill, N.C.

Richard Dobbs-Speight Person

Stantonsburg, N. C.

Ben

Robert M. Peters

Floral Park, N. Y.

Garland Burruss Peterson

Norfolk, Va.

Alfred Edward Phelps

Rockville Center, N.Y.

Calvin Bynum Phillips, Jr.

Lincolnton, N. C.

* AG

James William Pickard

Randleman, N. C.

James Williamson Pike

Salemburg, N. C.

Edmund Lloyd Pincoffs

Houston, Texas

* AG

James deCamp Piver

Aurora, N. C.

Frances Estelle Pizer

Raleigh, N. C.

Helen Virginia Plyler

Lancaster, S. C.

A A n

James Cecil Pointer

Blanche, N. C.

Georgia Stith Poole

Mullins, S. C.

A A n

Mahlon Joseph PophalSt. Pauls, N. C.

Curtis James Potter

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Dorothy Pratt

Sumter, S. C.

A A 11

f/ortn L^ a ^ o i ima

.C" JUNIORJesna Elizabeth Prevatte

Darlington, S. C.

William Moorefield Puckett

Fuquay Springs, N. C.

P. C. Purvis

Fairmont, N. C.

Whit Coffield Purvis

Williamston, N. CII K A

Sarah Jane PutmanBeckley, W. Va.

xn

Joy Elizabeth QuackenbushGraham, N. C.

lames Perrin Quarles, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

^ K E

William Trent RaglandRaleigh, N. C.

Thomas David RamseyBryn Mawr, Pa,

John Frank Randall

Barnard, N. C.

Rush McClure RankinBelmont, N. C.

John Oliver RansonCharlotte, N. C.

Robert Query RansonCharlotte, N. C.

K A

Henry Grady ReaganAsheville, N. C.

William Brady ReedSpencer, W. Va.

AX2

Pembrooke Graves Rees

Chapel Hill, N.C.

Frank Russell ReynoldsWilmington, N. C.

John Donald Rice

Scarsdale, N. Y.

un c 1/ e r d If

lass of 19 40Charles Alexander Rich

Frankfort, N. Y.

William Robert Richardson

Birmingham, Ala.

2 A E

Helen Jean RichmondStaten Island, N. Y.

Mona Faye Riley

Dunn, N. C.

Sidney Rittenberg, Jr.

Charleston, S. C.

Hughes Roberts

Atlanta, Ga.

2 AE

James Parish Robertson, Jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

2 AE

Leon Whitfield RobertsonWake Forest, N. C.

Mary Susan RobertsonHillsboro, N. C.

Garland RobesonGreensboro, N. C.

Benjamin Holcomb Roebuck, Jr.

Washington, N. C.

Livingston Brewster RogersonChapel Hill, N. C.

X*

Edward Matheson Rollins

Bristol, Tenn.

Simons Lucas RoofVale, N. C.

Sarah Frances RuarkRaleigh, N. C.

A An

Florence Jane RumseyMayock, N. C.

xn

Nina Lou RustinPenrose, N. C

Grace Goldyn RutledgeYadkinville, N. C.

jortk L^aroiiL n a

^j cy .r?

9 ^-f.

"-»<<»i

129

^ ^- .' 'im, 49S- r

JUNIORRobert Carl Rutter

Chatham, N. J.

Sidney Henrick Sadoff

Brooklyn, N. Y.

<I>A

William SalowePlainfield, N. J.

Durwood Eldon Sanders

Richlands, N. C.

William Guthrie Sasser

Takoma Park, Md.

Charles Joseph Savarese, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

S.'.rah Pearson SawyerWindsor, N. C.

Leonard James Schleifer

New York, N. Y.

II A*

Samuel Aiken SchmuckerCharlotte, N. C.

Harris Scholl

Hamlet, N. C.

Conrad Campbell SchrimpeWoodbridge, N. J.

A X S

Elaine SchwingeTarboro, N. C.

Charles Sidney Scott

Canton, N. C.

Ross Edward Scroggs

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Remer Scruggs, Jr.

Hahira, Ga.

Helen Sarah Sears

Binghamton, N. Y.

II V, <I>

Littleton Cole Selden

Jackson, N. C.

Elmer Elroy Sensenbach, Jr.

High Point, N. C.

Ifn L 1/ e r d LJf

Ciaa of 1940David James Sessoms, Jr.

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Paul Vincent Severin

Tarentum, Pa.

<[ r ii

James Percy SeymourSanford, N. C.

Laura Maie Shaver

Albemarle, N. C.

A A 11

Walter Lincoln Sheffield, Jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

K A

Daniel Russell Shields, Jr.

Gastonia, N. C.

George William Shipp, Jr.

Newton, N. C.

ATO

Harold Milton Short

Charlotte, N. C.

John Franklin ShufordAsheville, N. C.

William Melvin ShufordAsheville, N. C.

Clarence Leroy Shuping, Jr.

Greensboro, N. C.

A T 9.

Richard Charles Sieck

Glendale, L. I., N. Y.

Christian Fogle Siewers

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Ben

Robert Williams Sills, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

K2

Eugene Silverstein

Gastonia, N. CT E*

Peter John SimoneElizabeth, N. J.

George Lee Simpson, Jr.

Concord, N. C.

ATfi

Clarence Hammond Sinclair

East Flat Rock, N. C.

r/ortk L^aroiiuna

JUNIQCharles Shelton Sink, Jr.

North Wilkesboro, N. C.

Norma Balaban SlatofF

New York City

Bob Stanley SloanAtlanta, Ga.

Patricia Ann Small

Clinton, N. C.

Henry George SmerhoffNew Haven, Conn.

Billie SmithPittsboro, N. C.

Connie SmithBronxville, N. Y.

Hugh Percival Smith, Jr.

Greenville, S. C.

:: A E

John Wilson Smith, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

X*

Louise Dudley SmithCharlotte, N. C.X V.

Robert SmithChapel Hill, N. C,

Robert McDavid SmithBirmingham, Ala.

2 AE

Sam Jo Smith, Jr.

Whitakers, N. C.

Samuel Milton SmithPilot Mountain, N. C.

Winfield Davis SmithChapel Hill, N. C.

William Davis Snider

Salisbury, N. C.

Rodney English SnowHigh Point, N. C.

<i>r A

Bruce Wellington Snyder, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

n K A

un L u e r s iit

Clan of 19 40Roger Alexander Snyder

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Harry Ward SparrowGreensboro, N. C.

Ernest SpenceGoldsboro, N. C.

Laurence Tilson Sprinkle

Weaverville, N. C.

Howard Raymond StadiemGreensboro, N. C.

Herbert Irving StangWoodmere, L. I., N. Y.

Mortimer StangWoodmere, L. I., N. Y.

Ella-Keen Steel

Davidson, N. C.

xn

John Thomas Stegall

Marshville, N. C.

Arlene Steinbach

CarroUton, Ga.

Robert Hugh StephensonSevern, N. C.

Albert Stewart, Jr.

Fayetteville, N. C.

Ernest Stich

New York, N. Y.<!> A

Louise Stiefelmeyer

Cullman, Ala.

xn

Norman Vaughn Stockton, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Ben

Fleming Holt Stone

Raleifih, N. C.

George Marshall Stratton

Memphis, Tenn.

* Ae

Algie Maurice Stuart, Jr.

High Point, N. C.

ffortn L^aroitL nay'h

133

JUNIORBillie Sutherland

Grundy, Va.

Bernard Robert SwanBridgeport, Conn.

Charles Swan, III

Elmira, N. Y.

Jack Svvartz

Detroit, Mich.

Edgar Chew SweeneySalisbury, N. C.

Arthur Thomas Sweet, Jr.

Spencer. N. C.

George Webster SwicegoodSpencer, N. C.

John Thomas Talton, Jr.

Clayton, N. C.

Ben TaylorNtaxton, N. C.

Edgar Suggs TaylorWalstonburg, N. C.

Frank TaylorSignal Mt., Tenn.

James Creston TaylorCandler, N. C.

Sam TeagueRaleigh" N. C.

Elaine Helen Terris

East Norwalk, Conn.

Harry Gordon Thigpen, Jr.

Scotland Neck, N. C.

John Lexie ThomasSanford, N. C.

Bonner Havens ThomasonWilmington, N. C.

K A

William Manly ThompsonMountain Lakes, N. J.

<!> A O

yn i V e r" sit^

134

Clai6 of 19 40Ann Pluymart Thornburgh

Carnegie, Pa.

xn

William Greene ThomeEnfield, N. C.

Benjamine Wyche Tillett

Timberlake, N. C.

Frances Scott Tilley

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Joseph Winston Timberlake, Jr.

Gastonia, N. C.

Paul Wilson TitmanLowell, N. C.

Lawrence Archdale Tomlinson. Jr.

Durham, N. C.

2 AE

Leslie Daniel Tomlinson

Black Creek, N. C.

Elizabeth Ann Torpin

Augusta, Ga.

Donald Fuller Torrey, Jr.

Wynnewood, Pa.

Jack Venoid TowellMooresville, N. C.

James Henry ToyWaynesville, N. C.

Garland Scott Tucker

Raleigh, N. C.

2 X

Morton Lawrence Turteltaub

Brooklyn, N. Y.

* A

John Edward Tyler

Roxobel, N. C.

KA

William Alfred UptonNorfolk, Va.

Z *

Adolph Joseph UrbanNewark, N. J.

Thomas Huske VanceWinston-Salem, N. C.

1^1o rtk Ca ro il na

k^V^M

135

'h^M

* JUNIDRWilliam Deaderick Van Dyke

Memphis, Tenn.

i A E

Chester Bruce Van Schoick

New Hyde Park, L. I., N. Y.

Dennis William Vaughan, III

Townsville, N. C.

Hubert VeazeyCreedmoor, N. C.

William Neilson VoglerWinston-Salem, N. C.

Magda Kjellesvig WaeringJacksonville, Fla.

Walter Charles WagnerClinton, Conn.

Daniel Evans WalkerSouthport, N. C.

Nicholas Misplee WalkerArdmore, Pa.

William James WalkerWinsted, Conn.

X<I>

William Leonard WallSlier City, N. C.

William Freeny WardWarrenton, N. C.

n K*

Harold Clinton WarshawBrookline, Mass.

n A*

Mary Spencer WatkinsGreensboro, N. C.

II B*

George William WatsonNarberth, Pa.

X*

Jack WatsonWmgate, N. C.

Janet Mary WatsonPunta Gorda, Fla.

Herbert WeberHillside, N. I.

u ft L [/ e r d i^

136

a 6 6 of 1940Joseph Alson Welborn

High Point, N. C.

Alice Bonce WellsParkersburg, W. Va.

A All

Alton Wright Wells

Bocky Mount, N. C.

Dorothy Peace WendeeRochester, N. Y.

Hubert Brooks WheelerMontclair, N. J.

Anna Belle WhiteChanel Hill, N. C.

Joe Gordon Whitsett

Whitsett, N. C.

*rA

Lee Manning WigginsHartsville. S. C.

George Lantz Wilkinson

Newton, N. C.

Ann Elizabeth Williams

Clarksdale, Miss.

Eugene WilliamsWinston-Salem, N. C.

I'T A

Kenan Banks Williams

Sanford, N. C.

Lewis James WilliamsLouisville, N. C.

Robert David Williams

Richmond, Va.

* K i

Mary Louise WilsonChicago, III.

William Everett WilsonAtlanta, Ga.

Harry Winkler, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

Ben

Mary Velna WinslowRaleigh, N. C.

r/ortk L^aroLin a

137

JUNIDHGeorge Stacy Withers

Davidson, N, C.

Eugene Roy WittenNew York City, N. Y.

Mary Isabella WolfChapel Hill, N. C.

lames Fredrick Wood, Jr.

Mcinrcie, N.C.

Noel Robert Seymour WoodhouseChapel Hill, N. C.

K2

Edward WoodmanNew Haven, Conn.

$^9

William Blackmer WoodsonSalisbury, N. C.

Robinson WoodwardShrewsbury, N. J.

Colvin McAlister WorthRaleigh, N. C.

2 A E

Sarah Frances WrightMacon, Ga.

Thomas Henry Wright, Jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

A K E

Vincent Brown Wright, Jr.

Ft. Bragg, N. C.

A Tfi

|ohn Thomas YelvertonFremont, N. C.

Zoe Ellen YoungFort Smith, Ark.

xn

Phyllis Diana YounginerAsheville, N. C.

Joseph Ellis ZaytounNew Bern, N. C.

James McKee ZealyGoldsboro, N. C.

Irwin Arthur ZuckermanFar Rockaway, L. I., N. Y.

it MlCOMMENCEMENT

MARSHALS

DONALD CHARLES BAKER DONALD EDWIN BISHOP

HARGROVE BOWLES, JR. OTTWAV BURTON

JAMES HOWARD CHARLES IDOL STEPHEN TAYLOR FORREST HERBERT WALLACE HARDV

WILLIAM CRESS ALEXANDER

J^opkop more aa66

Class Officers: William Cress Alexander, President; John Drew

Elliot, Vice-President; William Lewis McKinnon, Secretary;

Truman McGill Hobbs, Treasurer; William T. Martin, Student

Council Representative.

CLASS

OFFICERS

ALEXANDER ELLIOT MARTIN McKINNON

Honor Council: William T. Martin, William Cress

Alexander, George Leavell Coxhead, Lennox Polk

McLendon, William Collins Cody, Dudley Du Bose

Cocke, John Walker Diffendal, Robert Winston Carr.

Executive Committee: Douglas Bachelor, Chairman;

William Faircloth, William Croom, Alex Bonner,

Grady Stevens, Gwyn Novvell, Ramsey Weathersky,

Manny Levy, John Dififendal, Stanley Leavy, Edwin

Ford, Louis Harris, William Ward, Richard Kend-

rick, Robert Bobbitt, Raeford Adams, Joe Blake, John

Sasser.

140

Dance Committee: Lloyd HoUingsworth, Chairman;

James Greenwood, George Spransy, Ridley Whitaker,

Henry May, Albert Johnson, Sam Gregory, Charles

Pyle, Jack Holland.

Finance Committee: Charles Reece, Chairman; War-

ren Mengal, Patrick Witherington, Robert Grimes,

William Sutherland, Erwin Bowie, Nelson McAbee,

Edwin Minges, Benjamin Lee.

HDNDRCOUNCIL Seated: Alexander, Carr. McLendon, Martin

Standing: Diffendal, Cocke. Coxhead

SDPHDMDHE CL,> of 19,0

R.iyford Kennedy Adams, Jr. Thomas Floyd Adams, Jr.

Skillman, N. J. Willow Springs, N. C.

2 X

Stephen Sheperd Adams George WiUiam AdcockBiltmore, N. C. Vanna, N. C.

2 A E

William Cress Alexander John Buchanan AndersonMooresville, N. C. Danville, Va,

K i;

Thomas Walton Allen

Kannapolis, N. C.

A T 9.

Boots Newman AndrewsCharlotte, N. C.

James Crandall Andrews John Vincent Arey

Chapel Hill, N.C. ' Gold Hill, N. C.

Marvin Pope AnthonyWest Palm Beach, Fla.

A TO

Leon Francis Bass Weson Odell BatchelorWesthampton, N. Y. Sharpsburg, N. C.

AX A

Douglas deVane Batchelor Walter Winf red BaiicomCoral Gables, Fla. Miinrue, N. C.

K2

Cyrus Simmonds BeardGreensboro, N. C.

i: X

Horace Pope Benton, Jr.

Wilson, N. C.

Hugh Hammond Bennett Warren Howard BernsteinWashington, D. C. New York, N. Y.

T E*

Dever Poole Biggerstaff

Gastonia, N. C.

Oscar McArthur Bizzell

Newton Grove, N. C.

Robert Lee Bobbitt

Rocky Mount, N. C.

AK E

Haywood Gilbert Bland, Jr.

Keiford, N. C.

David Alan BlankIrvington, N, J.

Douglas BourniqueAppleton, Wis.

A ^T'

Alexander Conoley Bonner Ervin Thomas BowieWashington, N. C. Scotts, N. C.

Raymond West Bradley, Jr. Jimmie Earle BrandonBessemer City, N. C. Chapel Hill, N. C.

Henry BranchMacon, Ga.

John MacRae Bridger

Bladenboro, N. C.

A ^I'

Edwin Briggs

Washington. N. C.

Frederick Lee Broad, Jr.

Mountain Lakes, N. J.

James Murray Brantley

Charlotte, N. C.

Charles Nathaniel Briley

Greenville, N. C.

James Norment Britt

Lumberton, N. C.

<!>K 2

George Rowland BrownJacksonville, Fla.

2 A E

Lorain Balfour Brookshire Raymond Harrison BrownAsheviUe, N. C. Lumberton, N. C.

James Spencer BryantDurham, N. C.

A X A

Ralph Herbert BuffeyElizabeth, N. J.

AX A

Robert Morison Buechel, Jr. Henry King BurgwynSanford, N. C. Woodland. N. C.

ATO

•3» «::t

rriifr'. Jrh^M

unci/erdltu o V I o y" t k L^ a r o I

L

I n a

143

SDPHDMDRE cu .f 19,0

Archie R. Burnette, Jr.

Tarboro, N. C.

X*

Ralph Edwin Burnette

Richmond, Va.

Edward BurtonMilton, N. C.

Trent BusbySalisbury, N. C.

David Martin CallawayState Road, N. C.

Paul Jackson CallawayThurmond, N. C.

Austin Heaton Carr, Jr.

Durham, N. C.

2 AE

Robert Winston CarrDurham, N. C.

2 AE

William Hiner Carter

Greensboro, N. C.

Robert Bursley

Charlotte, N. C.

Drury Robert BurtonMebane, N. C.

James Preston Butler

Whiteville, N. C.

AX A

William Cozart CalhounAugusta, Ga.

K A

George Franklin Cameron,Beaumont, Texas

John Ambler CarpenterAsheville, N. C.

Ernest Raeford CarrawaySnow Hill, N.C.

George Hill Carter

Lenoir, N. C.

Hugh Cash, Jr.

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Morrison Rankin Caruthers Robert Manley CashwelGraham, N. C. Ingold, N. C.

Roy Murton Cathey, Jr.

Paw Creek, N. C.

John R. Chambliss, Jr.

Rocky Mount, N. C.

2 N

Samuel Hill Clark, Jr.

Lilesville, N. C.

Thomas Albert ClarkCanton, N. C.

Wallace White ChappellElizabeth City, N. C.

Charles Langley ClarkGreenville, N. C.

<!• r A

Thomas Wells CobbElm City, N. C.

AX A

Dudley DuBose CockeNorfolk, Va.

2 N

Columbus Clark Cockerham Lyman Collins, Jr.

Mountain Park, N. C. Hempstead, N. Y.

z:am\

Gerald CohenSparta, Ga.

TE*

Thomas Greene Collins

Angier, N. C.

144

Jack Lane ConnellyMorganton, N. C.

SDPHDMDRE CL» ,f <94o

John Allen EddySchenectady, N. Y.

Richard Langston EddyPort Washington, L. I.

Thomas Russell EdensLumbertcin, N. C.

A*

Keith Seymour Edmister

Lisle, N. Y.

Dallas Nathaniel Edwards Richard Walter EdwardsGoldsboro. N. C. Seaboard, N. C.

Richard Pierpont Edwards Joe Bivens Efird, Jr.

Lisle, N. Y. Charlotte, N. C.

Richard Vaughn Ehrick

Findlay, Ohio

George Milton French

SDPHDMDRE CL.. J ,940

Thomas Brooks Griffin

Monroe, N. C.

*M A

Robert Thomas GrimesRocky Mount, N. C.

2N

Rudolph GrunNew Rochelle, N. Y.

Francis Albert Gugert, Jr.

Chapel Hill, N. C.

George Edloe HamGoldsboro, N. C.

Frank Elmer Grogan, Jr

Reidsville, N. C.

George Grotz, III

Elmhurst, N. Y.

X*

Robert Cecil HaldemanDoylestown, Pa.

Thomas Livingston Hallett

New York, n" Y.

Charles Rush Hamrick, Jr.

Shelby, N. C.

Roswell Woodrow Hamlett Oliver Paul Hamrick, Jr.

Durham, N. C. Boiling Springs, N. C.

Jar\'is Aubrey Hanes

Robert Shields Hicks

Shelby, N. C.

nK A

Chester Wilson Hill

Ahoskie, N. C.

Truman McGill HobbsSelma, Ala.

A K E

Louis Edward HodgesWinst.m-Salem, N. C.

Ciharlcs HindsSouth Bend, Ind.

North Smith Hinkle

Raleigh, N. C.

2 N

Troy Crews HodgesLeakesville, N. C.

Hugh Stanley HoleGreensboro, N. C.

Ben

Eugene Matthew Holland Harry DeWitt Hollingsworth

China Grove, N. C. Goldsboro, N. C.

James Burwell HollandStatesville, N. C.

K2

William Kern HolomanRaleigh, N. C.

Corrie Vernon Holt, Jr.

Burlington, N. C.

K A

Lloyd D. Hollingsworth, Jr.

Wilmington, N. C.

Etheldred Henry Holt

Princeton, N. C.

AEn

lohn Blaine Holt

Graham, N. C.

John Sylvester Hopkins Robert Webb HowardDurham, N. C. Mooresville, N. C.

<1>K2

Curtis William Howard, Jr. Webb Caldwell Howell, Jr.

Kinston, N. C. Cherryville, N. C.

Sherman HubbardThomasville, N. C

Tom Floyd HughesDurham, N. C.

Joseph Strange Huske, Jr.

Fayetteville, N. C.

Charles Edward Hussey

Tarboro, N. C.

Robert Stuart Hutchison, Jr. William Stanley Hyatt

Charlotte, N. C. Dillingham, N. C.

*r A

Elbert McKinley HuttonHampton, Va.

ex A *

n

Bickett Idol

High Point, N. C.

*r A

William Braxton Ingram Arthur Winston Jacocks

Norwood, N. C. " Norfolk, Va.

K A

Horace Bryan Ives

Maribel, N. C.

Royal Domestic Jame, Jr.

Derita, N. C.

ii> «s f, i*":fc .#cr Ft '

» •» F- /•

Cj r:;» «5. f'-»«: ^

f ..d£L/

^TTT^iT^'**<%

\^

Vn L u e r 6 iu1

o

f*% ^^ %\ f^ ^

U^ C^: W^.

y I o 1^ t k L^ a r o i IL n a

149

SDPHDMDRE CL>> of 1940

Robert Earle JamesBethel, N. C.

Walter Gafford JamesWilmington, N, C.

Lee Sack Jasper

Jersey City, N.J.

Glenn Hays JohnsonGieensborii, N. C.

Harry Ferguson Johnson Ralph Emerson Johnson

Ingold, N. C. Stantonsburg, N.C.

Joseph Edward Johnson Stacy Johnson

Wilmington, N. C. Parkersburg, N. C.

WiUiam Stanyarne Johnson James Fremont Jones

Franklin, N. C. Aslieville, N. C.

IT K A

John CHnton Johnston

Catawissa, Pa.

George Lyman Jordan

Kinston, N. C.

John Richard fordan, Jr.

Wmtcin, N. C.

Edward Kalin

Hendersonville, N. C.

T E*

Maurice Kanter

Passaic, N. J.

Arthur Melville Jordan

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Edward Thornton Jurney

Winston-Salem, N. C.

Frank Ross Justice

Raleigh, N. C.

Harold Allan KeenRaleigh, N. C.

Richard Leon Kendrick

Elizabeth City, N. C.

AK E

Rowland B. Kennedy, Jr. Shoun Leonard Kerbaugh

Raleigh, N. C. North Wilkesboro, N. C.

n K A

William Malcomson Keppel John Price Kerr

Brooklyn, N. Y. Mooresville, N. C.

Maury William Kershaw Joseph Gilbert King

Jamaica, N. Y. Chattanooga, Tenn.

* r A

Gip Isaiah Kimball, Jr. Preston Randolph King

Winston-Salem, N. C. Leesburg, Fla.

James Russell Kirby

Lucama, N. C.

Hal Kohn, Jr.

Newberry, S. C.

William Andrew KrusenZephyrhills, Fla.

Boston McGee Lackey, Jr.

Lenoir, N. C.

Harry Howard Lackey, Jr. Walter Moore L.unbetli

Newport News, Va. Cl).ii loiti.-, N. C.

i; N ii » 11

Robert Stansbury LambertRutherford, N.J.

SDPHDMDREJoseph Louis Marymont Preston Few MatthewsNew York, N. Y. Southern Pines, N. C.

Leonard John Matte

Luzerne, Pa.

Kenneth Mclntyre

Hampton, Va.

SDPHDMDRE a,,, .f <9,o

Walter Linton Parsley

Wilmington, N. C.

Charles Otto RhyneChapel Hill, N. C.

Wert Baxter Rhyne, Jr.

Cherryville, N. C.

X*

Bernard Richter

Mt. Gilead, N. C.

T E <I>

David Burton Ricks

Hanes, N. C.

K A

James Benjamin Ritchie

Southern Pines, N. C.

John Revel Rives

Statesville, N. C.

Landon Haynes Roberts

Marshall, N. C.

Ben

Stewart Shaw Richardson

Macon, Ga.

<I>AB

Enoch Blair Rice, Jr.

Belton, S. C.

* Ae

John Alexander Riely

New York, N. Y.

Zennie Lawrence Riggs

Maysville, N.C.

Charles Austin Robbins

Rocky Mount, N. C.

Wilbur Glenn Robbins

High Point, N. C.

John Leon Rogers

Williamston,N. C.

II K A

Arthur Hamilton Rogers, Jr. John Thomas Rogers

Society Hill, S. C. ' Durham, N. C.

Jordan Thomas Rogers

Hartsville, S. C.

Max Hanson RohnBaltimore, Md.

Robert Lloyd RoseSmithfield, N. C.

Raymond M. RosenbloomBaltimore, Md.

Z B T

George Robert Rouiller

Baltimore, Md.

Richard Randall RoundyManopla, Camaguey, Cuba

Henry Latimer RudolphAsheville, N. C.

* Ae

Clarence Lee Ruffin

Tarboro, N. C,

*r A

Abraham Hewitt RoseSmithfield, N. C.

K 2

Albert RoseDurham, N. C.

T E*

Robert Luke RosenbloomRocky Mount, N. C.

Z B T

Joe Hall RossLillington, N. C.

Frederick Manning Rountree

Sunbury, N. C.

John Lawrence RoweAberdeen, N. C.

John William Sasser, Jr.

Raleigh, N. C.

z *

Norman Lee Sasser

Mount Olive, N. C.

f^^ Its r^ -O^

Un I u e r 6 Li t u of V I o ^ t k L^ a r o i L n a

SDPHDMDRE CL,> J ,940

John Baker Saunders

Williamston.N.C.

JiK E

Walter Richmond Sloan

Chapel Hill, N.C.

SDPHDMDRE CL>> .f f,4o

James William Stewart, Jr. William Donald Stone

Winston-Salem, N. C. Raleigh, N. C.

Robert Ralph Stoinoff

Sanford, Fla.

Arthur Clifford Stowe, Jr.

New Haven, Conn.

Grover Cleveland Stowe, Jr. Kent Robbins Stratford

Gaffney, S. C. Haw River, N. C.

Robert Strange

Wilmington, N. C.

2 AE

Remus Strother TurnerWilson, N. C.

SQPHDMDRE aa 6 6

Harry Frederick Weyher Frank Ridley WhitakerKinston, N. C. Giildsboro, N. C.

Z *

John Sherard WhartonGoldsboro, N. C.

CLASS DF '42 AT EASEKey: Sasser, telling how it happened.

Cuddely-woo; Smoothie; Mail for Student Party

stronghold; You don't say; Dunn, Carr, and un-

suspecting victim; DKE's, as active as usual; I'se a

Cuban; Romeo Worth, and multiple choice.

J'y^eshwian L^ua66

(y LASS OFFICERS: Thomas Henry Crudup, Presi-

dent; Floyd Edward Cahoon, Vice-President; Henry

Plant Osborne, Jr., Secretary; George Hockney

Adams, Treasurer.

CLASS

OFFICERS

CRUDUP, ADAMS, CAHOON,

and OSBORNE

Honor Council: Dan Richardson Thomason, Charles

Hamlin Hancock, Bert Lester Bennett, Hobart Lor-

ing McKeever, William Montague Sigler, Thomas

Henry Crudup, Jr., Hobart Morris, Harold William

Lloyd.

Executive Committee: Junius Page Shamburqer,

chairman, William Schwartz, William Montague Jr., Sylvan Hugh Meyer.

Sigler, Herbert Barrow Turner, Edward Newton

Phillips, George Lee Peabody, Otis Yates Poteat,

Brockton Reynolds Lyon, Hobart Loring McKeever,

Henry Martin Garwes, Jr., Henry Fitts, Jr., Moyer

Pinkston Hendrix, Joseph Harold Conger, Jr., Dil-

lard Bulluck, Jr., John Robert Bourne, Bert Lester

Bennett, Robert Estes Whitten, Lloyd Lee Gravely,

Dance Co»n)iittee: J. B. Webster, chairman; Charles

Hamley Hancock, Phillip Alston Lewis, Daniel

Howard Wolfe, Jr., Dan Richardson Thomason, John

Baker Saunders, Herbert Horton Roundtree, Steve

Mathew Karres, Harry Ferryman Horton, Hurst

Bunn Hatch, Jim Huin Groome.

Piiuince Covuiitttee: George Campbell Irvin, chair-

man; James Smith Heyward, John Barrett Hearn,

Malcus Sylvester Horton, Charles Mitchell Neaves,

George Dial Perrick, William Caldwell Young,

Lemuel Hardy Gibbons.

HDNDRCOUNCIL Pnst Row: SIGLER, THOMASON, FAIRLEY, HANCOCK

Scc>,m/ R„ir: U.i)YD. CRl'Dl'P. POTEAT, McKEEVER, BENNETT

FRESHMANFirst Row—Bennett, S. M., Ash. Butler, Bodenheimer, Beck-

ham, Arner, Cherry, P. C, Anderson, D. R., Brame, Bern-

stein

Second Row—Bershtein, Cherry, W. R., Bost, Bell, H. M., Brady,

Brewer, Biel, Branson, Bulluck

Third Rou'—Bell, R. S., Byerly, Cohn, Chandler, Capel, Baden,

Alpert, Brown, T. P., Carroll, Austin, Barksdale

Fourth Row—BuRVEN, Barnes, W. F., Carlton, Carden, Alperin.

BORSKY, CUTHBERTSON, CAMPBELL, CURRIE. CrUDUP

Fifth Row—Brood, Brooks, Bryant, Conrad, Bruton, Burkhead,

Conner, Clark. A. W., Barrier, C. E., Block. Curl

CI.an of 1940

First Ron—Darden, Finnegan, Reator. Davis, J., LvoN, Horton,Davis, J. F., Damon. Dube. Dixon, R. G., Edmondson

Second Roic—KoLOVSON, Drucker, Burgess, Davis, J. W., Jacobs,

Goodrich, Gleicher, Hurdis, Easter, Cohencious

Third Row—Brody, Carter. W. H., Earnhardt, Frye, Fox. Dock,FisKE, George, Denton, Edens

Fourth Row—Carmel. Grindlinger, Bagby, Deli, DeWitt, Even-sen, Griffin, R. O., Gilbert, Bennett, T. V.

Fifth Ron—DoBY, Edkins, Davis, J. V., Gibbons, Gravely, Fore-

man, Hancock, Davis, A. S., Bell, Griffin, H. F., Grice,

Graham, S. P.

165

FRESHMANPint Row—Jenkins. Goldberg. Imbrey. Griesemer, Goldstein,

Krauss. Hutchins. Hendrix. Jones, J. F., Miller, Julian.

Holland

Second Row—GoFORTH. Hagood. Holzman. Hodges. Greene.

Isenhower. Hamton. Hunter. C. B., Holliday. Hughes,

Deans

Third Row—Johnston, C. W., Horner. Huntley. Height, Gil-

BRETH. Howard. Harrell

Fourth Ron—Lackey, Hearn, Johnson, Jones, R. J., Hutton,

Hunter, H. B., Hoke, Jones, Z. v., Landy

Fifth Row—Karrex. King. Kyle. Kushin. Golby. Henson. Hardie.

Hobbs. Gaylord, Jones. T. C.

aa 6 i o 1940

F/n/ Row—McKaughan. Leak, McKeever, McCuen. Manley.

Newsome, Maynor, Lester. Moser, Martin. Kelly. Lloyd

Second Rotr- -MAGiti. Littleton. Morris. Mock. McClure. Mar-

tin. McDarold. Miller. C. M., Marks. Moore

Third Rolf—McFadyen. Manchester. McIver. Lippman. Neel,

Norman. Nathan. Lilson

Fourih Row—Lewis. R. H., Murray, Moskow. Morley, O Bryan,

Young. Morroy. Moore. Long. Lewis. P. A., Mason

Fijth Row—Lemmon, McCoach, McDuffie, Hammer, Liles, Mun-ROE, Levine, Little, McCachren

FRESHMANFirst Row—Page, R. N., Oehler, Post, Rosenthal, Primack, Phil-

lips, E. N., RoTHROCK, Retchin. Patterson. Rodman. Robin-

son. Railey

Second Row—Craver. Piller, Page, J. H., Heyward. Phillips,

A. C, Palioca. Payne, Poteat, Powell, Rosser, Kulczycki,

KOSLOW

Third Row—PiTTMAN, RivES. Rivkin. Gambill. ReQua. Peacock,

Carter, Poythress, Kallman

Fourth Row—Roeder, Austin, Pearson, Pethick, Pearl, Honan,Elmore, Folger, Penny, Pully, Robertson, Peck

'^Ia6i of 1940

P/r</ Rijw—Spiegel. Stammler, Wallace, Williams. S. A., SparGER, Young. W. C, Weiss, Steel, G. B., Steel. W. G., YatesSchwartz, Svigals, Totten, Worley, Viverette

Second Row—Tew, Usdin, Scoggin. Simpson. Stroud. Sama. ScanDiLos, Silverstein, Swing, Solomon, Walton, Warren, L. H.Taylor, H, W., Trevathan, White, W. P.

Third Roic—WiTKiN, White, W. T., Thompson, W. R., Smith

J. G., Sigler. Tyndall, Thomas. J. H., Smith, H. L., WilsonA. D., Sims. Twine. Vinokur. McLeod

Fourth Row—Saunders. A., Saunders. J. H., Spence, StickneyWalker. H. O., Wooten. Barrier. E. M., Wolf. J. L., SnyderR. K., Snyder. B. M., Sherman, Wright, S. M.

Fifth Row—Winchester. Smith. W. J., Townes, Spencer. Wag-oner, Michaels. Steed, Shrier, Warren. J. E., Privette,Saunders. C. L.

Sixth Rati-—Reiss. Scarborough, Warren. A. M., Jones. R. L..

TuTTLE. Shelton. Taylor. J. O., Wolfe. D. H., Walker.J. W., Shamburger, Sorrow. Zimmerman, Herpel, Peabody

169

DL. SCHOOL OF PHARMACY: 0//i c e r 5

Henry Edward Dillun Leon Wriitun Smith

I HARMACY School Officers: Henry Ed-

ward Dillon, President; Leon Wriston Smith,

Vice-President; Leo Andrew Loreck, Secretary-

Treasurer; Alfred Nixon Costner, Student

Council Representative; Edward Campbell,

Student Legislature Representative.

Officers of fourth year class: Charles Daniel

McFalls, President; Wilson Knowles Lewis,

Vice-President; Hunter Liggett Kelly, Secretary;

Lloyd Senter, Treasurer; Martin Hildred Wil-

liams, Honor Council Representative.

Officers of third year class: Henry Wilson

Greene, President; Blanche Evelyn Burrus, Vice-

President; Arthur Johnson, Secretary; TomHolland, Treasurer; George Henry Windecker,

Honor Council Representative.

Officers of second year class: Albert McLeanMattocks, President; William Johnson Shef-

field, Vice-President; Edwin Tate Sessoms, Jr.,

Secretary; Sara Ethelyn Holt, Treasurer.

Officers of first year class: Robert Louis Irwin,

President; Edgar Crawford Howard, Vice-

President; Sara Adolpha Summerlain, Secretary;

John Tannery Henley, Treasurer; John Samuel

Williford, Honor Council Representative.

The school year, 1939-1940, has been one of

crowning success for the School of Pharmacy.

During this period, its forty-third year of opera-

tion, many factors of advancement have come.

The largest enrollment in the history of the

school has been recorded. A full time instructor

has been added to the faculty, and the various

organizations of the school have had an unusu-

ally active year. The orientation program for the

first year students closed with a picnic for the whole school.

In April, the annual dances and banquet were held and in

May, the pharmaceutical trip to Detroit was taken to visit

Parke, Davis and Company.

Rho Chi with the tapping of seven new members has com-

pleted one of its most successful years. Dean Andrew G. DuMez of the University of Maryland and President of the

American Pharmaceutical Association spoke to the whole

student body during spring quarter. Immediately following

his address, a "Rho Chi Mixer" was held for the student

body of the school.

Kappa Epsilon Society, an organization composed of womenstudents in pharmacy, was founded in the spring of 19.38. In

January of this year the organization climaxed almost two

years' activity on the campus by being installed into KappaEpsilon national pharmaceutical sorority.

In the fall of 1936 the Student Branch of the North Carolina

Pharmaceutical Association was founded. It brings to the

campus outstanding representatives of the pharmaceutical

profession and gives each student an opportunity to discuss

problems that arise in pharmacy. The purpose of this organ-

ization is to stimulate student thinking along pharmaceutical

lines.

LOREK

PHARMACYAnna Dean Burks

Chapel Hill, N. C.

K E PX

Altajane Holden

Bunnell, Fla.

X n A K rCandidate for B.S. Degree; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, i) : OrientationCliairman (4); President Rho Clii (4); President Kappa Epsilon(3): Vice-President N.C.P.A. (3): Treasurer Alplia KappaGamma (4).

Edward Graham Campbell, Jr.

Lucama, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Student Legislature (4); HonorCouncil (3) ; Interdorniitory Council (2) ; Varsity Baseball (2)

;

N.C.P.A.

Hunter Liggett Kelly

Apex, N. C.

!> AXCandidate for B.S. Degree; Class Treasurer (4); N.C.P.A.

Alfred Nixon Costner

Lincolnton, N. C.

K^ PXCandidate for B.S. Degree; Band (1, 2, 3); Student Council(4); President Class (2); Vice-President Cla.ss (1); Vice-President Rho Chi (I): N.C.P.A.

Allen Alexander Lloyd

HiUsboro, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Henry Edward Dillon

Elkin, N. C.

K ^I' PXCandidate for B.S. Degree; President Pharmacy School (4):Interdorniitory Council (4); Honor Council (1); UniversityDance Committee (1); y.M.C..\. (1, 3, 4); Dormitory President;N.C.P.A.

Leo Andrew Lorek

Castle Hayne, N. C.

Secretary-Treasurer

Phil Graddy

Marshville, N. C.

K •i'

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

Charles Daniel McFalls

Newton, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; President Class (4); N.C.P.A.

SENIORSSamuel Woodrow McFalls

Newton, N. C.

Thomas Reid Rand, Jr.

Raleigh, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree.

John Albert McNeill

Whiteville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. DfRree; University Dance Committee ( t)

;

Varsity Wrestlinp; (3. I); Secretary-Treasurer Class (1).

Lloyd Morgan Senter

Carrboro, N. C.

Can<lidate for B.S. Degree.

Solon Minton

Warsaw, N. C.

K ^I'

Cancliilate for H.S. Degrt

Leon Wriston Smith

Kannapulis, N. C.

e: Vice-1'resiilent I'Iimi

esse Miller Pike

Concord, N. C.

AXACandidate for B.S. Degree; Interfraternity Council (4); ClassExecutive Committee (2. 4): Vice-President Class (2); Uni-versity Dance Committee (S, 4); N.C.P..\., Treasurer (3).

Mac W. Stevens

Broadway, N. C.

Candidate fur B.S. Degree.

Donald Alton Plemmons

Asheville, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree: Vice-President Class (3); N.C.P..\.

Elizabeth Milton Weaver

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Martin Hildred Williams

Lexington, N. C.

Candidate for B.S. Degree; Honor Council (4).

^^^i^

t 1^ 1 'Ala M^^i

fk^/i

* JUNIDRWilliam Walton Allgood

Roxboro, N. C.

II K A

John Waller Smallwood Biggs

Washington, N. C.

'I' AX

Blanche Evelyn Burrus

Canton, N. C.

X9. K E

George Edward Clark

Pittsburo, N. C.

Jack Alexander Creech

Salemburg, N. C.

Sherwood McDonald EdwardsAyden, N. C.

Claudia Josephine Eldridge

Carrboro, N. C.

Ralph Emerson Foster

Leaksville, N. C.

Raymond Leslie FoxDanville, Va.

Sunius Claude FoxRandleman, N. C.

<I> A X

Edwin Rudolph Fuller

Louisburg, N. C.

Henry Wilson GreeneRoanoke Rapids, N. C.

Joe Edward HamletHollister, N. C.

K M-

Julius Scruggs HarriU, Jr.

Forest City, N. C.

Thomas Marshall HollandMount Holly, N. C.

George Graham InmanFairmont, N. C.

Dwayne Alton Irwin

Sparta, N. C.

K >I'

Arthur Richardson Johnson

Kerr, N. C.

Unl u e r 6 L^

o

j-^k a rmac

Ray Alexander Kiser

I.incolnton, N. C.

Wilson Knowles LewisMount Olive, N. C.

Margaret Thomas Lloyd

Chapel Hill, N. C.

A. L. McLeanFuquay Springs, N. C.

K*William Kendell Minnick

Wyndale, Va.

K A

Calvin Sneid OakleyMebane, N. C.

James Edward Perry, Jr.

Franklin, N. C.

X<t>

John Milton Pickard

Durham, N. C.

George Edwin Royall, Jr.

Elkin, N. C.

>I> AX

Bernard C. Sheffield, Jr.

Warsaw, N. C.

K -I'

Edwin H. Smith, Jr.

Weldon, N. C.

K ^I'

Jessie Lee SmithRubbinsville, N. C.

K E

Rose Pittman Stacy

Chapel Hill, N. C.

Pinkney Lawson Trotter, Jr.

Pilot Mountain, N. C.

Hamilton Polk Underwood, Jr.

Fayetteville, N. C.

A T U

Julian Carter WatkinsEmporia, Va,

KM'

Bryan Henry WhitfordWashington, N. C.

* AX

George Henry WindeckerRidgefield Park, N. J.

Latane Patter WrightChapelHill, N. C.

r forth (^aroiiL na

ikSSm

PL a y" m. a c'i

Class of 1942

J OSEPH WILLIAM AUSBURN, AsheviUe,

N. C; William Thomas Boone, Jackson, N. C;

Michael Lawson Borders, Shelby, N. C. ; Balfour

Brookshire, AsheviUe, N. C; John Paul Burnett,

Whitakers, N. C; John Trammel Church,

Salisbury, N. C; Halycone Belle Collier, Ashe-

viUe, N. C; Kenneth Lee Dingier, MooresviUe,

N. C; Constance DuBose, Roseboro, N. C;Hubert Lanier Flynn, Fayetteville, N. C; Franf

Arthur Greene, Suffern, N. Y.; Julius Harrill,

Forest City, N. C; Burke M. Herndon, Greens-

boro, N. C. ; Sara Ethelyn Holt, Princeton, N. C.

;

Rowland Hill Johnson, Fuquay Springs, N. C.

;

Alfred Henderson King, Durham, N. C;

Joseph Gilbert King, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Ber-

nard Otis Lockhart, Saltville, Va.

John Webster McAdams, Burlington, N. C;

Dan Grier McCrimmon, Hemp, N. C; David

Foy McGowan, Swans Quarters, N. C; Leona

Erastus McKnight, Jr., Fayetteville, N. C; Otto

Stevens Matthews, Roseboro, N. C; Albert M.

Mattocks, Greensboro, N. C; Harry Holmes

Mizelle, Newport, N. C; Gershon Leonard

Rubin, Kinston, N. C; Joe Terrell Russell,

Canton, N. C; Herbert Palmer Scoggin, Louis-

burgh, N. C; Edwin Tate Sessoms, Roseboro,

N. C; William Johnson Sheffield, Nattock,

Mass.; Foster Joel Simmons, Conover, N. C;

Harry Cleveland Tee, Harrington, Del.; John

Arthur Terrell, Chapel Hill, N. C; John W.Thornton, Dunn, N. C; James D. Williams,

Gate City, Va. ; Sherrod Newberry Wood, En-

field, N. C; Samuel Nathan Dulin, Elizabeth

City, N. C.

a rm a c I'/PL

11ARRY HAMPTON ALLEN, Mary Ruth

Aycock, Alan Belmarsh, Stroud Otis Brewer,

Grady Harold Britt, Grover Byers, Oida Louise

Campbell, John Hampton Carswell, Ranson

Fred Carswell, William Addison Cavin, Vir-

ginia Lois Clark, Robert Lee Cordell, Adolphus

Augustus Drake, Walter Draughon, Albert

Wilbur Glass, Margaret Virginia Groves, John

Tannery Henloy, William Herbert Hollowell,

Robert Louis Irwin, BiUie Waugh Johnson,

James Henry Johnson, Albert Willoughby

CiaJJ of 1943

Jowdy, Banks Dayton Kerr, Eric Frederich

Kreidt, Robert Sidnol Lamar, Harold Boykin

Lamb, Rafael L. Loubriel, John Cameron Mc-

Donald, Hobart Alton Morris, Vivian Ruth

Roberson, John Harrington Rosser, Robert

Brown Rothey, S. Thaxter Sain, Stuart McGuire

Sessoms, Joseph Carson Southern, Jesse Souther-

land Stewart, Sara Adolpha Summerlin, Paul

Edwin Tart, William Melvin Ward, Harold

Craig Warren, Jefferson Davis Whitehead,

Pauliene Fames, Edgar Crawford Howard.

First Row—Sessoms, McGowan, King, Thorton, Dingler, McAdams, Collier. Simmons.Second Row—Harrell. Brookshire. Reuben. Terrell, Tee. Church. Greene.

Third Row—MaTHEWS, WILLIAMS, AUSBORN. RuSSELL. MaTTOCKS.Fourth Row—ScoGGiNs, Fox, Sheffield.

First Row—RossER, Irwin, Aycock, Karr, Roberson, Carvin, Britt, Kridt.Second Row—Brewer, Clark, Tart, Williamson. Henly. Groves. Draughon. Drake.

Third Row—Carswell. Southern. Allen. March. Stewart, Johnson. Sessoms.Fourth Row—Lamb. Howard. Williford. Joudv. Cordell. Ward.

Fifth Row—Boone, Summerlin. Johnson, Lockhart. Whitehead. Johnson, Lubriel.Sixth Row—Carswell, MacDonald. Glass, Lamar.Seventh Row—Holloway, Flynn, Sain, Rothey.

Sckooi of LAWLAW SCHDDL OFFICERS

=S^_^AW School Association: William Wesley

Speii;ht, President ; Herman Robinson Clark,

Vice-President; Arthur Owen Cooke, Secretary-

Treasurer; and William Pope Lyon, Student

Council Representative.

'Third Year Cla^s: Marshall V. Yount, Presi-

dent; lulian K. Warren, Vice-President; Mar-

garet C. Johnson, Secretary ; and Elizabeth W.Shewmake, Treasurer.

Second Year Class: Thomas Porcher Ravenel,

President; Dan Whitley, Vice-President; Leon

Roebuck, Jr., Secretary; and William Allen

Cobb, Treasurer.

First Year Class: Henry Lee Harkey, President;

Fred W. Bateman, Vice-President; Clifford Ed-

ney Pace, Secretary; and Charles Edwin Hins-

dale, Treasurer.

WILLIAM WESLEY SPEIGHT WILLIAM POPE LYON

LAW SCHDDLFirst Year Class: William Anderson Allen, Jr.,

David H. Armstrong, Fred W. Bateman, Albert

Mitchell Britt, Phyllis Jane Campbell, WilliamBlount Campbell, Corbett Carlton Cannon,Enser William Cole, Piatt Walker Davis, Ar-

thur Pritchard Greene, Vonno Lamar Gudger,

Jr., Henry Lee Harkey, James Raymond Har-

ward, Jr., Gilbert Clarendon Hine, Charles

Edwin Hinsdale, Frank Petty Holton, LoganDouglas Howell, William Vinton Hoyle,

Charlton Ellerbe Huntley, Harvey A. Jonas,

Jim McMurray Joyner, Milton Julian, Philip

Dalton Kennedy, Jr., Howard Maillard Kiss,

James George Lamont, Thomas Williams Mason

Long, Jr., William Thomas Mallison, HunterMarshall, Woodrow Matheny, James Virgil

Morgan, L. Dwight Morgan, Clifford EdneyPace, Marion Arendell Parrott, James WardlawPerrin, Jr., Henry Hyman Philips, Jos. BunnRamsey, Jr., Guy Gilbert Ritchie, Thomas Rus-

sell Roper, George Claiborne Royall, Jr., Terry

Sanford, Edward Harding Seawell, WilliamDennie Spry, John Wesley Unstead, III, Peter

Kjellesvig-Waering, Hugh McLean Wilson,and John Kenyon Wilson.

Second Year Class: James Pou Bailey, Paul

Kermit Barnwell, George Samuel Beatty, Jr.,

Henry Clay Blair, Henry Blalock, Joseph Blount

Cheshire, William Allen Cobb, William Mc-

Fiia Rote—CouGHENOUR. Miss HoBBS. Shew-make. COAN.

Second Row—Speight. Clark. Miss Johnson,Robertson.

Thiril Rote—Fuller. Spears. Sims. Brogden,Johnson. Russ.

Fourth Rote—AvERY. Dalton, McRae, Har-KiNS. Miller. Grimes.

Ulniuer6itu or yjortk L^ a r o i I n a

HEMAN ROBINSON CLARK

Whorter Cochrane, William Owen CookeLewis Belton Doggett, James Kye Dorset!Charles Zimri Falls. Wayne Alexander Fonvielle, Jr., Harry Ganderson, Don GilliamAlexander H. Graham, Junius Daniel GrimesJr., Curtis Dula Hawkins, Francis Dewey Heyward, Lewis Sneed High, Samuel RichardsonLeager, Virginia Emerson Lewis, Robert JonesLovill, Jr., Philip Edward Lucas, Neill HectorMcGeachy, Robert Craig Mclnnes, WilliamEllis Meehan, Bertha Moore Merrill, WilliamS. Mitchell, Thomas Gracey Morgan, WilliamR. Morris, Frederick Mortimer Parrish, III,

Frank Neville Patterson, Jr., Thomas PorcherRavenel, George B. Riddle, Jr., Leon Roebuck,

First Row—Spry. Waering. Lamount. Mor-gan. Huntley, Pace. Ganderson. Coch-rane. Barnwell. Whitley. Morgan.

WooTEN. Lucas.

Second Row—Harkey. Miss Merrill. MissCampbell. Cole. Methany. Ramsey. Hoyle.Blair, Roebuck. Fonvielle. Bailey. Haw-

kins. Parrott.

Third Row — Perrin, McGeachy. Hine.Roper, Jonas. Julian. Wheatley. Sutton.Winters. Blalock. Howell. Umstead, Mee-

han. Sanford. Riddle. Gudger.

Fourth Row—Holton. Heyward, Walker.Seasell. Philips. Winslow. Hinsdale.Leager. Morgan. Ravenel. Cobb. Mallison.

Winborne.

Fifth Row— Davis, Cheshire. Mitchell,Dorsett. Beatty. High. Kiss. J o y n e r .

Greene. Bateman, Armstrong. Marshall.Kennedy.

YOUNTRAVENELHARKEY

Jr., Fred I. Sutton, Jr., Hal Hammer Walker,Robert Wilson Wells, Claud Roberson Wheatly,

Jr., Dan P. Whitley, Vaughn Sharp Winborne,Julian Dallas Winslow, Jerome Lester Winters,

Frank Marion Wooten, Jr.

Third Year Clan : Isaac Thomas Avery, Jr.,

Harvey James Boney, Jr., Willis James Brog-

den, Jr., Herman Robinson Clark, James Wig-gins Coan, Arthur Owen Cooke, WilliamChambers Coughenour, Jr., William LunsfordCrew, Lacy Augusta Dalton, WilliamsonWhitehead Fuller, Alexander McGowin Gover,Herschel Springfield Harkins, Claude Elton

Hobbs, John Griffith Johnson, Margaret C.

Johnson, William Pope Lyon, Harry McMullan,Jr., John Albert McRae, Jr., Frank ThomasMiller, Jr., William Thomas Minor, Jr., For-

rest Ivey Robertson, D. P. Russ, Jr., Elizabeth

Warren Shewmake, Nathaniel Graves Sims,

John Wesley Spears, George Spencer Steele, Jr.,

George Lewis Young, and Marshall V. Yount. ^Ik179

MEDICINE0,

VERNON LILES ANDREWS JOHN BORDEN GRAHAM

TFICERS of the Whitehead Medical

Society: Vernon Liles Andrews, President;

French Howell McCain, Vice-President;

John Borden Graham, Secretary-Treasurer;

H. Lee Large, Jr., Student Council Repre-

sentative.

Officers of the First Year Class: Robert

Franklin Keadle, President; Miss Jane

Dupuy, Vice-President; Jack Hughes, Sec-

retary-Treasurer.

Officers of the Second Year Class: Abe B.

Conger, Jr., President; Harry Haynes

Baird, Vice-President; John Lester Ranson,

Jr., Secretary-Treasurer.

Second Year Class: Vernon Liles Andrews,

Harry Haynes Baird, Howard Brownlow Barn-

well, Phil Louis Barringer, Robert Sheiton

Beam, Charles William Beaven, Robert Lee

Brickhouse, Fred Richard Cochrane, Jr., Abe

Conger, Jr., Miss Sybil Corbett, Sidney

Gardner Dyer, John Palmer Elliott, JohnBorden Graham, Henry Calvin Guynes,

Samuel Westbrook Hatcher, Walter Car-

rington Hilderman, Joseph William Kahn,

Robert Edward Kirschman, H. Lee Large,

Jr., Miss Ruth Caroline Leonard, Stephen

Henry Mazur, French Howell McCain,

Hugh Howard McFadyen, Lawrence Ed-

ward Metcalf, Seymour Moskowitz, Rich-

ard Loomis Oliver, Samuel Lester Parker,

Jr., George Branch Patrick, Jr., Miss Ella

Louise Payne, George David Pleasants,

David Lowry Pressly, William ThomasRaby, John Lester Ranson, Jr., MeyerHarvey Rolnick, Jacob Meyers Saposnik,

Dr. Albert John Sheldon, John HenryEarly Woltz, Samuel Wright.

First Year Class: Marcus Lafayette Ader-

holdt, Jr.. Robert Wesley Coleman,Lawrence Franklin Cruze, Alvis Barnes

First Roir—Pleasants, Payne. Oliver, Ran-son. Graham, Barringer, Guynes, Dyer,

Dr. McNider, Dr. Pliske, Dr. Kyker.

Second Row—Dr. Holman, Parker, Patrick,Andrews, Dr. Donnelly, Crockett, El-

liott, Leonard, Dr. Andrews. Dr. Ferrell.

TA/W Roiv—Dr. McPherson, Woltz, Brick-house. Mazur, Rolnick. Kirschman,Wright, Dr. George, Dr, Lowe. Dr. Mil-

ler.

Foiirili Row—Dr. Bullitt, Beam, Hatcher,Pressley, Baird. Moskowitz. Barnwell.

Cochrane, McCain, Dr. Brunner.F/fitj Rote—Saposnik. L.\rge, Raby. Kahn,Beaven, McFadyen, Conger, Hildeman.

ymuey'iltiA o f l/lortk L^ a r o I ima

FRENCH HOWELL McCAIN

Dickson, Miss Jane Dupuy, Even Alex-

ander Erwin, Jr., Gus Forbes, Jr., Miss

Lois Frayser, Hillard Gold, Robert McCueHall, Willard Chappell Hewitt, ThomasHall Holmes, III, John Decator Hoyle,

Jack Hughes, William Romulus Jenkins,

Robert Franklin Keadle, Robert Rogers

King, Jr., James Wilton McLean, Miss

Julia Virginia Miles, Thomas JeromeMyers, Frank Miller Nifong, Asa R. Par-

FirH Row—Miss Frayser, Miss Miles, MissPhipps, Miss Sidbury, Forbes, Dr. McNider

Jenkins, Aderholdt, Williamson.

Second Row—Taylor, Shure, Rodman, ParHAM. Dickson, Tranbough, Dr. Pliske, Dr

George, Dr. Kyker.

Third Row—CoLEMAN. Gold. Stroup, KingWatkins, Wolfe, Nifong, Dr. Andrews.

Fourth Row—HoYLE, Hall, Ridenhour, ErWIN, Keadle, Wheeler, Miss Dupuy, Dr

Lowe.

Fijtb Roll— Yelton, Pittman, Pressley.

Cruze, Meyers, Hewitt, Tunick, Riggsbee,

Rose. Holmes.

LARGECONGERWOLTZ

ham, Miss Jean Lui Phipps, RaymondLupton Pittman, Claude Low*ry Pressly,

Charles Edward Ridenhour, John BunyanRiggsbee, Clark Rodman, Lester William

Rose, Jr., Robert Guthrie Rosser, Jr.,

Alvin Shure, Miss Julia Rowena Sidbury,

Foyell Smith, Matthew Alfred Stroup, Jr.,

James Alexander Taylor, Robert Tran-

bough, Frederick Lionel Tunick, Carlton

Bunter Watkins, Raymond M. Wheeler,

Oliver Wayne Williamson, Carl Bagley

Wolfe, Ernest Yelton.

^ ^

riHE THINGS WE DID

it i^

THE UNIVERSITY CLUB

SHUFORD, (,Kl BBS, and MORRISON

rf

(JfFICERS: Reddy Grubbs, President; Wil-

liam Shuford, Secretary; David Morrison,

Treasurer.

MEMBERS

Fraternity Alembers: George Simpson, JamesGarland, Jack Cooper, Archie Mcintosh, Perrin

Quarles, Hamilton Jones, Thomas Hayes, NoelWoodhouse, Roger Hitchens, Ed Hoffman, C.

B. Phillips, Rodney Snow, Robert Rutter, Wil-

liam Tate Conley, James Schleifer, Bill Broad-

foot, Tom Edwards, Bill Bruner, Henry Kamins,

Bob Newman, Tom Hackney.

Doniiitory Aieii/bers: Elbert Hutton, HughesRoberts, Charles Sink, Ben Heath, Bill Shuford,

Bonner Thomasson, Louis Gaylord, Steve For-

rest, Dave Morrison, Joe Welborn, Paul King,

Joe Zaytoun, Don Bishop, Paul Harper, Ott

^.• If rti

UNIVERSITY CLUB Burton, Reddy Grubbs, Sam Teague, Gates

Kimball, Jimmy Howard, George Jenkins, Bill

Allen.

Coed Members: Mickey Warren, Helen-Ann

Jacobs, Jean Mclndoe, Louise Jordan, Sara Mc-

Lean, Mary Ann Clinard, Alice Murdock, Mary

Jane Yeatman.

The University Club, an undergraduate group on the campus and, as a result of

organization, is composed of a junior-class having direct contact with almost every

representative from each men's dormitory undergraduate, does much toward better-

and fraternity and a senior-class represent- ing intra-school relations. Members are jl. .

ative from each girls' dormitory and soror- elected to the club to serve for a period of

ity. This is easily the most representative only one year.

The club may be classified as a service organization since, through the co-

operation of each member, it strives to carry out any activities for the admin-

istration, the student organizations, the alumni, and other projects that will

be of benefit to the University.

The motto of the club

For the University—is self-explanatory of the

purposes of the club. Through its close connection with the Athletic Associ-

ation, the club seeks to promote and to maintain enthusiasm and a high

spirit of sportsmanship in all University events and contests by the sponsor-

ship of pep rallies and mass meetings. In cooperation with the General

Alumni Office, the club attempts, through radio programs, high school con-

ferences and the like, to maintain alumni interest and to arouse the interest

of prospective students.

^nterdioryyiLLorL J L^ouncli

Officers of the h/terdoriiiitory Council: Jack Vincent, President;

Herbert Hardy, Vice-President; Phil Ellis, Secretary; Stancil

Stroud, Treasurer.

Council of Dormitory Presidents: Jack Vincent, President; Al

Stewart, Graham; Bob Farris, H; Billy Winstead, Manly; George

Nicholson, BVP; Dave Morrison, Aycock; Bob Barber, Old East;

Phil Ellis, Grimes; Mitchell Britt, Everett; Elwood Dunn, Lewis;

Olen Easter, Steele; Herbert Hardy, Mangum; Henry Dillon, Ruf-

fin; Ed Rankin, Old West; Ott Burton, K.

COUNCIL OF

PRESIDENTS

First Roiv: Dillon, Hardy, El-

lis, Burton, Rankin, Farris.

Stroud, and Vincent

Second Row: E.\STERN. Barber.

Stewart, Nicholson, Britt,

Dunn, and Winstead

MEMBERS OF THE INTERDORMITORYCOUNCIL

Graham: Al Stewart, Leonard Lobred, Hershell

Snuggs, Sylvan Meyer, James Russel, Rodman Spruill.

"H" : Bob Farris, Marshall Karesh, Bill Pearson,

Charles Elliott, Al Rose, Harry HoUingsworth.

Manly: Billy Winstead, Paul McGinty, Vincent

Arey, Henry Hood, Winford Norman, Tom Crock-

ett, Grady Stone.

BKP.- George Nicholson, Alan Grimes, Bill Lank-

ford, Richard Aiken, Sol Fligel, Arthur Fuller.

Aycock: Dave Morrison, William Dye, Ed York,

Hal Pope, Mickey Wagner, Dick Eddy.

Old East: Bob Barber, Lamar Gudger, Vaughan

Winborne, Ike Grainger, Bob Corpening, John Dor-

sey.

Grimes: Phil Ellis, Bill Shuford, Jack Connelly, Al-

186

bert Branca, George Webster, Holt Allen, T. W.Ellis.

Everett: Mitchell Britt, George Frisby, DelmarPryor, George Miles, Joe Neely, Curtiss Hunter.

Lewis: Elwood Dunn, Jack Towell, Ellis Meehan,Roy Ingram, Royce Jannings, Harold Jannings.

Steele: Olen Easter, Ben Heath, Coleman Finkel,

Walter Sheffield, Arthur Gill, Ralph Burnett.

Mdiigui)/: Herbert Hardy, Rom Brafford, Steve For-

rest, Bernard Nordan, Frank Holeman, Preston Nis-

bet, Acton Keats.

Rujfui: Henry Dillon, Shelton Dugger, EdwardBriggs, Bill Stewart, Bert Williams, Cameron West,Ed Taylor.

Old West: Ed Rankin, Roy Parker, Luther Hodges,

John Apple.

"A."'.- Ott Burton, Red Saunders, Clark Totherow,

Bob Stoinoff, Charles Putzel, George Badalas.

INTERDDRMITDRY

COUNCIL

187

ROBRRT MAGII.L

Lyayiavvi ewio^ia i

DAY at Graham Memorial, slightly stretched, looks some-

thing like this: The morning has been quiet, but at noon the

building is shocked into life by the first rush of would-be eaters

to the Grill. Ping-pong balls and billiard cues begin a steady click-

click that will last into the late evening.

Lunch is followed by the uproar on the second floor of the publica-

tions staffs getting underway. An occasional committee meeting in

one of the banquet hall sections may precede a 4:30 session of the

C.P.U., called to consider chairman Gatton's schedule of speakers.

Downstairs, students and faculty from the department of Political

Science forget their formal relationships and get together over tea

and cakes.

HOBBS, HUNTLEY, JACKSONand BARNETT

Immediately following supper, some forty to fifty

students listen informally for an hour in the main

lounge to recorded music of Beethoven and Tschai-

kowsky. Shortly afterward, the Lounge is turned into

either a meeting room for a speaker brought by the

Carolina Arts Group to consider a movie and panel

discussion on the European War, or a stage for the

presentation of an Amateur Night program.

In the meantime several meetings are being held

upstairs. The Cosmopolitan Club has finished a ses-

sion in the Grail Room in time to allow the Order of

the Grail itself to use the room for the planning of

its next dance. The Inter-Dormitory Council has used

two sections of the banquet hall for an extended busi-

ness session while the International Relations Club,

meeting in the third section, has discussed the re-

newal of the trade pact with Japan.

The Student Council is the last group to leave, hav-

ing held an unusually late meeting this evening in the

Student Government headquarters on the second

floor.

In this manner the building faciUties of the Student

Union are put to good use. The program and physical

plant of Graham Memorial are designed to enable

students to enjoy and to receive benefit from the use

of their leisure time. Programs are planned with a

view to meeting the varied interests of students and

to filling needs not being met by independent organ-

izations in fields of entertainment, recreation and in-

formal education. Sunday afternoon concerts, foot-

ball clinics, visual education in socio-political prob-

lems, vocational information series, receptions, variety

entertainments, student-faculty departmental socials,

amateur contests and community sings represent fea-

tures sponsored by the Union.

Both the Union program and building are under the

control and direction of students. Policy is decided by

a Board of Directors composed of ex-officio students

and administrative officers, while program is carried

out by student chairmen. As a coordinating force in

extra-curricular life, and as an experience in student

self-directed activity, the Graham Memorial Union

supplements the educational program of the Uni-

versity in a significant manner.

Board of Directors: James Davis, Chairman; Mel-

ville Corbett, Women's Association; Bennett Hunter,

Senior Class; Gates Kimball, Junior Class; Bill Alex-

ander, Sophomore Class; Stewart Ficklen, Inter-

Fraternity Council; Jack Vincent, Inter-Dormitory

Council; Martin Harmon, Daily Tar Heel; Francis

F. Bradshaw, Dean of Students; Fred Weaver, Assist-

ant to Dean of Students; R. B. House, Dean of Ad-

ministration; William McKee, Y.M.C.A. Secretary;

Charles Wood, Hold-Over Member; Robert Magill,

Director.

BOARD DF DIRECTORS

189

Y. M. C. A.

JUNIOR-SENIOR CABINET 1939-40

J OHN HARE BONNER, JR., President; Charles

Putzel, Vice-President; Sydenham Alexander, Secre-

tary; Thomas Stanback, Treasurer,

JOHN BONNER, McKEE, McKEEVER, ALEX BONNER

JLTS'IOR-SENIGR CABINET

MEMBERS

Sydenham Alexander, DeWitt Barnett, Garland

Bell, Herman Boemanns, John Bonner, Roy Clark,

Phil Carlton, Robert Carroll, Kingsley Elder, Jack

Fairley, Lee Gilchrist, William Gordon, Carrington

Gretter, William Grover, Roderick Hallum, Thomas

Keys, Arthur Link, Otho Linker, Ed Maner, Charles

Putzel, Perrin Quarries, Edward Rankin, Michael

Roberts, Ben Roebuck, Alex Sessoms, David Sessoms,

Webb Stacy, Thomas Stanback, Norman Stockton,

Arnold Swain, Edgar Sweeney, Samuel Teague,

Frank Turner, Jack Vincent, Joseph Zaytoun.

SOPHOMORE CABINET 1939-40

Alexander Conoley Bonner, President; Arthur Wil-

son Dixon, Vice-President; William St. Clair Pugh,

Secretary; Fred Lee Broad, Jr., Treasurer; Dr. Don-

ald Stewart, Advisor.

MEMBERS

Bennet Rudolph Creech, William Everett Garwood,

Rudolf Grun, George Edloe Ham, George Hayes,

Jr., William Dern Holoman, Etheldred Henry Holt,

Joseph Strange Huske, Jr,, William Braxton Ingram,

George Jordan, Richard Leon Kendrick, Boston Mc-

190

FRESHMAN FRIENDSHIP COUNCIL

Gee Lackey, Walter Bennett Love, Raymond Jones

Martin, William T. Martin, Roger Matthews, Her-

bert Steed McNairy, Moyer Mendenhall, Jr., Sewell

Trezevant Moore, Ernest Howard Morris, Cameron

Murchison, John Moultrie Oliver, William Pettway,

Jones Peete, Charles Speas Phillips, Louis Julian

Poisson, Jr., Robert William Powers, Hugh Pember-

ton Quimby, Dickson McLean Regan, Wert Baxter

Rhyne, Jordan Thomas Rogers, Charles Glenn Saw-

yer, Harrison Symmes, Jr., John Robert Van Hecke,

Peter Ambrose Wallenborn, Thomas

Franklin Williams, Stewart Leigh Wilson.

OFFICERS OF THE FRESHMANFRIENDSHIP COUNCIL, 1939-40

Hobart McKeever, President; Carlyle

Mangum, Vice-President; Sam Williams,

Treasurer; Richard Berry, Secretary.

MEMBERS

Ed Austin, Dave Bailey, Holley Mack

Bell, Richard Bell, Ritchie Bell, Richard

Berry, Robert Brooks, Guy Byerly, Carter

Broad, Ross Craver, Don Currie, Elton Ed-

wards, Richard Edkins, Edwin Easter,

David Fiske, Edward Hobbs, Hunt Hobbs,

Douglas Horner, Larry Hutton, Bucky

Harward, Charles Johnston, Rupert Jernigan, Sinclair

Jacobs, Gamewell Lemmon, Orrin Magill, Carlyle

Mangum, Sylvan Meyer, Audrey Moore, Hobart

McKeever, Sim Nathan, Henry Newsome, Fagg

Nowlan, Richard Pethick, Bob Page, Jack Page,

Stephen PiUer, Frank Robinson, Bill Stanback, Dick

Strauss, Parke Staley, Bob Saunders, Dill Simpson,

Warren G. Steel, Peyton Townes, William Thomas,

Jesse Trevathan, Bradley Wyrick, Allan Weisberg,

Preston White, Sam Williams, Earl Yates.

SOPHOMORE CABINET

Y. W. C. A.

± HE Christian Association offers participation in an

inter-collegiate, inter-racial, inter-denominational, inter-

national fellowship whose primary function is to dis-

cover through study and action the values inherent in

religion and to make them effective in all human rela-

tionships.

LOUISE JORDAN

Lejt to Right: LouiSE Jordan. PresiJevt. S.ara Bowles. Wadine Love. Polly Pollock. Dot Coble. Jean Rankin. Ruth Robeson,

Martha Clampett. and Julia McConnell.

This year, in accord with the trend in the Student Chris-

tian Movement throughout the country, the program as

well as the social activities of the YMCA and YWCAhave been more closely coordinated through an execu-

tive committee of the two associations and joint com-

missions on the various program emphases.

The YWCA was established at Carolina in 1936 at the

request of the women students, and upon the initiative

of the local chapter of Alpha Kappa Gamma, honorary

leadership fraternity for women. Membership in the

YWCA is open to all women students who accept its

purpose.

Officer!: LouiSE JORDAN, PresiJen/: RuTH CuRTIS ROBE-

SON. Vice-President; Sarah McLean. SecreUtry: MaryJane Yeatman, Treasurer.

Cabinet: Ruth Ashburn. Elizabeth Bowles, MarthaClampitt. Dot Coble, Tillie Edwards. Charlotte

FiTz. Wade Dean Love, Altajane Holden. Sue

Klaber. Julia McConnell. Frances Sparks. Bobby

WiNTON, Polly Pollock. Secretarial Adviser, and

Mrs. Walter Spearman. Chairman of Advisory

Board.

192

Left to Right—Seated: Warshaw, Schwartz, Newman, Tenenblatt. Miller, and Richter

Stjnding: Meyerowitz, Kantor, Moskowitz, Schochet. Sigal, Goldberg. Wallach, and Kantrowitz

THE HILLEL FDUNDATIDNFFICERS: Rabbi Samuel Sandmel, Director; Wil-

liam Tenenblatt, President; Horace Richter, Vice-

President; Lucille Miller, Recording Secretary;

Naomi Newman, Corresponding Secretary.

Cabinet Members: Irving Fleishman, Josh Goldberg,

Maurice Kantor, Edward Kantrowitz, Irving Meyero-

witz, Lucille Miller, Seymour Moskowitz, Naomi

Newman, Horace Richter, Sidney Schochet, William

Schwartz, Irvin Sigal, William Tenenblatt, Seymour

Tick, Paul Wallach, Harold Warshaw, Eddie Zuck-

erman.

The Hillel Foundation was organized at the Univer-

sity of North Carolina in 1936 under the sponsorship

of the B'nai Brith Lodge. The Foundation aims to

improve the lives and broaden the interests of the

Jewish students on the University of North Carolina

campus by providing religious and cultural services.

Religious services are held in both Orthodox and

Reform rituals. Opportunity is afforded interested

students to engage in discussions of Jewish problems

and the study of Hebrew and of Jewish history. The

Foundation also offers a medium of cooperating with

other religious and campus groups.

All organizational activities of the Foundation are

carried out by the Cabinet which includes representa-

tives of the men's and women's dormitories, the

Jewish fraternities, and the town students.

Schochet. Rabbi Sandmel, Miller, and Richter

MEN'S GLEE CLUBOfficers: Frank L. Turner, President; Harry Lasker,

Vice-President; Sam Jo Smitii, Business Manager; Ray-

mond Brown, Librarian; John E. Toms, Director.

TURNER LASKHRSMITH BROWN TOMS

^ >^ rs of

rini Row: John E. Toms. Director, Raymond Martin,

Harry Hoffman, Thomas Baden. Lynn Bernhart,

Edgar C. Sweeney, Arthur Jansen. Frank Turner,

Harry Lasker, Charles Palioca.

Second Row: Roger Anderson, Thomas F. Williams,

George Deyo, Pat Winston, Jack Wharton,George Jordan, Troy Dixon. Sam J. Smith, Ralph

Bowman, P. C. Purvis.

Third Row: David Gillette, Joseph Wolfson, James

Earle, Thomas Holt, Brooks Griffin, Robert

Stephenson, William Mann, Arthur Link, Ed-

w.-\RD M. Rollins. Harvey White. Thomas Snypes.

Fouylh Ron: Wn.i.n.M Rfagan. William Mehaffey,

Herman Smith, Jr., John F. Smith, Hurst Hatch,

Roger Mathews, Julian McDaniel. Charles Phil-

lips. Larry Dale, Joseph Pelmet.

WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB

WOMAN'S GLEE CLUB

nHE WOMAN'S GLEE CLUB is a purely volun-

tary group composed of those interested in singing.

There are no try-outs or requirements for member-

ship in the organization other than a very meager

knowledge of music and musicianship and a willing-

ness to attend rehearsals regularly. This year the

group gave two concerts in conjunction with the

University Men's Glee Club and the Chapel Hill

Community Choral Club. The first of these was a

concert of Back Contatas at Christmas time and the

other of the Mozart Requiem at Commencement

time. In the spring the organization under the direc-

tion of Mr. Toms gave a concert of classical and

semi-classical numbers alone.

Anne Bates, Mary Jean Bronson (President), Elea-

nore Brown, Eloise Brown ("Vice-President), Genie

Loaring Clark, Marjorie Davis, Sarah Fore, Mary

Marshall Frye, Frances Gibson, Cynthia Jane Hempe,

Ernestine Hobgood, Betty Kennison (Secretary-

Treasurer), Carolyn Lambeth, Frances Lee, "Wade

Dean Love, Sarah McLean, Sarah Sawyer, Frances

Walton, Bea Wolf.

Lcer5

Ba>id Officers: President, Robert Simmons;

Vice-President, Phil Walker; Secretary-

Treasurer, Hubert Henderson; Business

Manager, Norman Stockton; Assistant

Bus. Mgr., Edward Keator; Librarian,

Bruce Young; Asst. Librarian, Robert

Reid; Drum Major, Mark Altvater; Di-

rector, Earl Slocum; Editor of Band Notes

and Publicity, Robert Weis.

1st Roti'.- Mark Altvater, DrumMajor and Oboe, Greensboro, N.

C. ; Curry Jones, Flute and Piccolo,

Enka, N. C. ; Boston Lackey, Flute

and Piccolo, Lenoir, N. C. ; TomWiggins, Snare Drum, Bartos, Flor-

ida ; David Bershtein, Snare Drum,

Manden, Conn. ; Ralph Buffey, Snare

Drum, Elizabeth, N. J.; John Sat-

terfield, Cymbals, Danville, Va.

;

Leroy Shuping, Bass Drum, Greens-

boro, N. C. ; Hurst Hatch, Snare

Drum, Raleigh, N. C. ; John Mc-

Donald, Snare Daim, Durham, N.

C. ; Bruce Young, Snare Drum,

Greensboro, N. C.

2iiiJ Rou': Joseph Blickman, Clar-

inet, New York City; Charles

Moore, Clarinet, Forest City, N. C.

;

Lynn Bernhardt, Clarinet, Lenoir,

N. C. ; Bruce Snyder, Clarinet, Char-

lotte, N. C. ; Robert Hicks, Clarinet,

Charlotte, N. C. ; Trent Busby,

Clarinet, Salisbury, N. C.; James

Corey, Clarinet, Rocky Mount, N.

C. ; George Stammler, Clarinet,

Summit, N. J. ; James Johnson,

Clarinet, Winston-Salem, N. C.

;

David Arner, Clarinet, Wilson, N.

C. ; Wade Jordan, Clarinet, Smith-

field. N. C.

5rd Row: Walter Love, Clarinet,

Monroe, N. C. ; Joe Leak, Clarinet,

Greensboro, N. C. ; Peter Simone,

Clarinet, Elizabeth, N. J.; John

Matte, Clarinet, Luzerne, Pa. ; Willis

Carpenter, Clarinet, Durham, N. C.

;

Bill Stewart, Clarinet, Winston-

Salem, N. C; John Saunders, Clar-

inet, Williamston, N. C. ; Thomas

Baden, Clarinet, Washington, D.

C. ; Henry Williams, Clarinet, Lees-

burg, Fla. ; George Shipp, Clarinet,

Newton, N. C. ; Conrad Schrimpe,

Clarinet and Oboe, Woodbrid^e,

N.J.

4/h Row: Oscar Zimmerman, Tenor

Sax, Charlotte, N. C. ; Paul King,

Tenor Sax and Bassoon, Greens-

boro, N. C. ; AUam Goldenthal,

Tenor Sax and Clarinet, New York

City; Roger Anderson, Tenor Sax,

Westfield, N. J.; Maylon Baker,

Tenor Sax, Ahoskie, N. C. ; William

Herpel, Alto Sax, West Palm Beach,

Fla. ; James Sandilos, Alto Sax,

Ambler, Pa. ; Morton Turteltaub,

Alto Sax, Brooklyn, N. Y ; Arnold

Capps, Alto Sax, Rocky Mount, N.

C. ; Bernie Aleskovsky, Alto Sax,

Spring Valley, N. Y. ; Dwight Price,

Alto Sax and Horn, Clinton, N. C.

;

Raymond Martin, Glockenspiel,

Lumberton, N. C.

'^fb Row: Gip Isaiah Kimball, Cor-

net, Winston-Salem, N. C. ; Charles

196

Palioca, Cornet, Marlboro,

Mass. ; Henry Marrow, Cor-

net, Smithfield, N. C; Wilbur

Spruill, Cornet, Plymouth, N.

C. ; Leon Foy, Cornet, Gas-

tonia, N. C. ; Everette Charles,

Cornet, Winston-Salem, N.

C. ; David Totten, Cornet,

Beckley, W. Va.; James

Helms, Cornet, Monroe, N.

C.; James Allran, Cornet,

Cherryville, N. C. ; Boyce

Marrow, Cornet, Gastonia, N.

C. ; Clarence Ruffin, Cornet,

Tarboro, N. C. ; Ear! Morgan,

Cornet, Badin, N. C.

6th Row: Hubert Henderson,

Cornet, Chase City, Va. ; War-

ren Simpson, Cornet, Wash-

ington, D. C. ; Robert Weis,

Cornet, New York City;James

Farr, Cornet, Charlotte, N. C.

;

Carlyle Willis, Cornet, Rocky

Mount, N. C. ; Charles Young,

Cornet, Connelly Springs, N.

C. ; Harry Lewis, French Horn,

ProctorviUe, N. C. ; William

Moore, French Horn, Lenoir,

N. C. ; Hampton Shumping,

French Horn, Greensboro, N.

C. ; Arthur Sweet, French

Horn, Spencer, N. C.

7th Row: Robert Simmons,

Trombone, Greensboro, N.

C. ; John Latham, Trombone,

Greensboro, N. C. ; Paul

Gerhardt, Trombone, Vinita,

Okla. ; Langdon Montgomery,

Trombone, Winston-Salem, N.

C. ; Fred Wood, Trombone,

Monroe, N. C. ; Chester Hill,

Trombone, Ahoskie, N. C.

;

Robert Reed, Trombone,Spencer, W. Va. ; Brooks

Griffin, Trombone, Monroe,

N. C; Billy Woodson, Bari-

tone, Salisbury, N. C. ; Philip

Walker, Baritone, Winston-

Salem, N. C. ; Harry Martin,

Baritone, Lenoir, N. C.

8th Row: Wade Conrad, Bari-

tone Sax, Salisbury, N. C.

;

Jack Wharton, Bass Horn,

Goldsboro, N. C. ; Francis

Fatell, Bass Horn, Bronx, N.

Y. ; Don Wilson, Bass Horn,

Fort Pierce, Fla. ; Harvey

Jonas, Bass Horn, Lincolnton,

N. C.; Joe Nixon, Bass Horn,

Lincolnton, N. C. ; Edward

Council, Bass Horn, More-

head City, N. C; Ernest Hill,

Bass Horn, Spindale, N. C.

Metnbers Not ht the Picture:

Frank Green, Baritone, Suf-

fern, N. Y. ; Emmett Brown,

Flute and Piccolo, Charlotte,

N. C; Donald Goidfarb, Bass

Horn, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; Nor-

man Stockton, Business Man-ager, Winston-Salem, N. C.

;

Edward Keator, Assistant Busi-

ness Manager, San Antonio,

Texas.

SIMMONSWALKERHENDERSONSTOCKTONKEATOR

197

SHEFFIELD IRWIN

^V^jAPPA PSI Pharmaceutical fraternity

was tounded at the Medical College of Vir-

ginia on December 15, 1879. The organiza-

tion was the first Greek-letter society estab-

lished in the colleges of Pharmacy in the

United States. It is the one and only strictly

Pharmaceutical fraternity which limits its

chapters to colleges of Pharmacy holding

membership in the American Association of

colleges of Pharmacy.

This, the Beta Xi chapter, was established at

the University of North Carolina in 1915,

embodying the following Charter members:

Dean J. G. Beard, R. A. McDuffie, E. D.

Kyser, R. H. Andrews,J.

L. Henderson, W.W. Allen, F.

J.Andrews, N. L. Beach, F. N.

Patterson, R. H. Mann, G. G. Blackwelder.

Kappa Psi, since its origin, has sought to at-

tain the highest ideals in the profession of

Pharmacy, and surrounds its members in an

atmosphere of companionship, congeniality,

and integrity.

OFFICERS OF KAPPA PSI

Bernard Sheffield, Jr., Regent; Julian Carter

Watkins, Vice-Regent; Dwayne Alton Irwin,

Secretary-Treasurer; Professor M. L. Jacobs,

Faculty Adviser.

MEMBERSThomas Boone, Alfred Costner, Henry Dil-

lon, Phil Gaddy, Joe Edward Hamlet, DwayneAlton Irwin, Solon Scott Minton, A. L. Mc-Lean, Bernard Sheffield, Jr., Edwin Harrison

Smith, Jr., Julian Carter Watkins,J. D. Wil-

liams.

PLEDGESJoseph Ausburn, Grady Britt, Walter Draugh-

an, Henry Green, John Henly, Louis Irwin,

Bernard Lockhart, John McDonald, Harry

Mizelle.

JACOBS

198

<=J^eita J^iqm.a l^i

± H£ International Fraternity of

Delta Sigma Pi, professional com-

merce fraternity, was founded at

New York University in 1907.

Since 1907 it has grown to a fra-

ternity numbering sixty chapters.

The Alpha Lambda Chapter was

founded on the campus of the

University of North Carolina in 1925 for the

purpose of fostering the study of business in

universities, encouraging scholarship, congeni-

ality, and integrity among the students of

commerce.

The main efforts have been toward bringing the

campus speakers from the business world,

movies of industrial production, and a place-

ment bureau for commerce and economics

graduates.

officers: Timmas Heath, Chancellor; Thomas Crockett,

Headmaster; Archie Fountain, Senior Warden; Ben Heath,

Junior Warden; James Williams, Treasurer; John BrameHarris, Scribe.

Members: Norman Agnew, HenryAkers, William Burns, ThomasCrockett, John Dorsey, JamesEllison, Ellis Fields, Stuart Fick-

len, Edwin Ford, Archie Fountain,

William Gilliam, Edward God-win, John Brame Harris, BenHeath, Thomas Heath, Etheldred

Holt, Harry Hoffman, Ira How-ard, Bennett Hunter, Melvin Go-forth, Harold Keith, WellingtonLewis, Roger Matthews, MoyerMendenhall, William Ogburn,

Ned Ritchie, William Sasser,

Lewis Sasser, Thomas Stanback,

Robert Sweatt, Harold Vick, DeanWilliams, James Williams. Wal-ter Wagner, Lawson Turner,

Frank Stearns.

Pledges: Phil Carlton, James Dar-

den, Paul King, William McKin-non, Evander Nance, ThomasNordan.

199

PHI ASSEMBLY

OFFICERS DF THE PHI ASSEMBLY

J'all

Fall Quarter: Joseph Green

Dawson, Speaker; Robert Sloan,

Speaker Pro-Tempore; Marian

Igo, Reading Clerk; Leo Kar-

peles, Sergeant-at-Arms ; Rob-

ert Farris, Secretary-Treasurer;

Arthur Clark, Assistant Treas-

urer; Robert Sloan, Chairman;

Phil Ellis, Josephine Martin,

Mitchell Britt, Ways and Means

Committee.

w. t,mier'

Winter Quarter: Phil Ellis,

Speaker; Hassell Thigpen,

Speaker Pro-Tempore; Jean

Littell, Reading Clerk; James

Pittman, Sergeant-at-Arms

;

Robert Farris, Secretary-Treas-

urer; Arthur Clark, Assistant

Treasurer; Hassell Thigpen,

Chairman; William Singletary,

Lewis Waller, Shirley Hobbs,

Ways and Means Committee.

s,pyinaspring Quarter: Marian Igo,

Speaker; Robert Sloan, Speaker

Pro-Tempore; William Ward,

Sergeant-at-Arms; Elaine Marsh,

Reading Clerk; Lewis Waller,

Ott Burton, Charles Barker,

Ways and Means Committee;

Arthur Clark, Assistant Treas-

urer; Robert Farris, Secretary-

Treasurer.

J. HERE once was a time

when t h e Philanthropic-

Assembly was a part of the

student government of the

University. Now, the func-

tions of the Phi have

ceased to be of govern-

ment and have become

concerned with expression

of student opinions. It

seems fitting that one of

the oldest literary societies

in the country should up-

hold this function, and

during the past year, the

Phi has done well. Its pres-

tige, once tottering, is on

the way up. Its vigor is no

longer latent. The Phi

will, as during the past

year, be a powerful stu-

dent voice.

MEMBERS OF PHIASSEMBLY

Ruth Ashburn, Jose-

phine Austin, Ottwav Bur-

ton, Charles Barker, Fai-

son Barnes, Samuel Belk,

Garland Bell, ThomasBell, Leonard Biel, Isham

Britt, Erdene Bowman,Harry Bryant, Patty Bry-

ant, Cale Burgess, WaltonBurkheimer, WilliamBurns, Arthur Clark, Vir-

ginia Gates, James Garter,

Philip Garden, JosephDawson, James Dumbell,

Elton Edwards, Harvey El-

liot, Phil Ellis, James Elli-

son, Alonzo Folger, Rob-

ert Farris, Frances Gibson,

B a b s Goodrich, Joseph

Greenberg, HowardGuion, James Heyward,

Shirley Hobbs, VernonHarward, Horace Ives,Marian I g o , Rosemary

Johnson, William John-

son, Howard Kahn, Susan

K 1 a b e r , Leo Karpoles,

Gamewell Leramon, Dav-

id Lee, Jean Littell, Grov-

er McClure, Stuart Mc-

Coach, Herbert McNairy,

Alfred Mann, A 1 a i n e

Marsh, Mariana Milner,

Aubrey Moore, Bernard

Nordan, Jeter Pritchard,

James Pittman, Jane Rum-sey, James Seymore, Wil-

liam Singletary, Louise

Stiefelmeyer, Gene Smith,

Edouard Stelling, David

Silver, Robert Sloan, DanStout, Frederick Swindal,

Edgar Sweeney, Hassel

Thigpen, Leslie Tomlin-

son, John Thomas, Charles

Tucker, Elizabeth Warren,

William Ward, HenryWilliams, Robert Wright,

Lewis Waller, Zoellen

Young.

DI SENATE

OFFICERS DF DIALECTIC SENATE

^aliFall Quarter: Charles Putzel, Jr.,

President; Edward Kantrowitz, Presi-

dent Pro-Tern; Elbert Hutton, Jr.,

Clerk; Carrington Gretter, Jr., Critic;

Arthur Link, Treasurer; James Perrin

Quarries, Jr., Sergeant-at-Arms.

Winter Quarter: John Carroll Bus-

by, President; Mary Newton Lewis,

President Pro-Tern; Lewis James Wil-

liams, Clerk; Truman McGill Hobbs,

Critic; Arthur Link, Treasurer; Frank-

lin Williams, Sergeant-at-Arms.

StprLn.aspring Quarter: John Bonner, Pres-

ident; Mary Lewis, President Pro-Tem;

Elbert Hutton, Critic; Louis Poisson,

Clerk; Manfred Levey, Sergeant-at-

Arms.

MEMBERSTillman Austin, Edward Austin,

Wesley Bagby, Bryce Beard, Alex Bon-

ner, John Bonner, Chauncey Broom,

Mary Rice Brogan, John Busby, Trent

Busby, Phil Carlton, Halley Chandler,

Max Childers, Trudy Darden, Edgar

Dameron, Diana Foote, Arthur Fos-

ter, Carrington Gretter, Edward Hobbs,

Truman Hobbs, Elbert Hutton, Sinclair

Jacobs, Edward Kantrowitz, Maury

Kirschall, Walter Kleeman, Manred

Levey, Norman Levinson, Mary Lewis,

Arthur Link, Orrin McGill, Randall

McLeod, Robert McNaughton, Dan

Martin, Jesse Mock, Henry Osborne,

Robert Page, William Peete, Georgiana

Pentlarge, Louis Poisson, Dorothy

Pratt, Charles Putzel, Edmund Pin-

cofTs, Perrin Quarries, Stephen Reiss,

Thomas Rogers, Al Rose, Nolan Ryan,

Billie Smith, Pauline Smith, Park Sta-

ley, William Stanback, Thomas Vance,

Peter Wallenhorn, William Ward,

Lewis Williams, Frank Williams, War-

ren Winklestein, Charles Woodson,

Earl Yates, Edward York, Robert

Woodward.

WRITEUPThe Dialectic Senate holds the

unique position of being the oldest or-

ganization on the campus of the Uni-

versity of North Carolina, having been

organized June 3, 1795. For a contin-

uous period since 1795 the "Di" has

offered training in democratic parlia-

mentary law, Dialecticism, and public

speaking.

Dialecticism—the training of minds

in constructive, logical reasoning—as

defined recently by Senator Busby is

one of the important functions of the

Senate. It offers to any individual the

privilege of expressing himself clearly

and logically on its floor.

But the "Di" believes that it should

be of service to the people at large and

consequently it has sponsored weekly

forums such as "The Town Hall Meet-

ing of the Air," panel discussions, etc.

The Senate is looking forward to a

well balanced program of work—bal-

anced on the one hand by training its

members in public speaking and life

and on the other by offering to the

campus and public its services and

good will.

The social life of the Senate is not

neglected, the "Di" sponsoring inter-

mittently socials and an annual dance.

203

DEBATE CDUNCIL

OLSEN, DAWSON, McKIE, ELLIS, WOODHOUSE, KLEEMAN

nHE University's Debate Council is organized to

promote forensic activity on the Carolina campus. In

such a role it has entered several fields on the campus.

In its most important work, that of debating proper,

it has followed its usual policy of debating both on

and off the campus. Here the squad has debated

Williams College, Princeton University, William and

Mary College, Dartmouth College, and George

Washington University, among others.

The team of four men which the University sent

north this year debated Randolph-Macon College,

the University of Maryland, the University of Penn-

sylvania, Boston University, and American University,

in addition to return debates with William and Mary

and George Washington.

It has been the policy of the Debate Council to hold

non-decision debates, believing that a more reason-

able discussion of the topic will result. In the debate

with two men from Oxford University, England, a

panel discussion of the Isolation question was pre-

sented, as a variation of this technique.

Another policy of the council has been to have men

debating questions according to their beliefs. In other

words, an attempt is made to eliminate the sophistry

which would result from debating against one's be-

liefs.

In addition to its debating work proper, the Council

has fostered other types of speech activity on the

campus. During the year it has contributed to the

204

work of the Carolina Political Union, the Interna-

tional Relations Club and Conference, and also to

Graham Memorial.

Student Members: Walter Kleeman, President; Wil-

liam Cochrane, Executive Secretary; Phil Ellis, Joe

Dawson.

Faculty Members: W. A. Olsen, George McKie, E.J.

Woodhouse.

DEBATE SQUAD

V.-.:„:

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUH

FFICERS: Walter Kleeman, President; Manfred

Levey, Treasurer; Mary Lewis, Secretary.

Mfii/bers: Roy Asch, Warren Bernstein, Hallie

Chandler, Martha Clampitt, Lyman Collins, Joseph

Dawson, Elton Edwards, June Epstein, Dexter Free-

man, Morton Golby, Thomas Hallett, Rod Hallum,

Warren Harrelston, Louis Harris, Bettie Harward,

Charles Lerche, Wellington Lewis, Roger Mann,

Polly Pollock, Dorothy Pratt, Bernard Richter,

Shelley Rolfe, Noland Ryan, William Shore, Ed-

ouard Stelling, Jr., Paul Wallach, Frances Walton,

Alice Wells, John Hampton.

The International Relations Club was formed in

1938 as the result of a merger of several organiza-

tions of roughly the same character, the Foreign

Policy League, the League of Nations Council, and

the Carolina League for International Cooperation.

This was a temporary combination, which proved

successful enough to make it a permanent one.

The work of the club has been largely to present

speakers and programs of various types designed to

acquaint the student with international affairs, while

making sure that all subjects are given an in.ipartial

presentation insofar as possible.

During the past two years, the IRC has produced

four series of radio programs, two round table dis-

cussions of international affairs, and it has also

sponsored two series entitled, "The International

Scene" and "Straws in the Wind", both commentaries

on current events in the foreign field.

During 1940 the Chapel Hill club played host to

about 500 delegates from 125 colleges at the South-

eastern Regional International Relations Conference.

This was the most important part of the year's work.

CAROLINA POLITICAL

UNIONTnHE Carolina PolitiLal Union is an organization

of twenty-six students who bring speakers of various

political creeds to the campus to present different

viewpoints on questions of current interest. TheUnion itself is a non-partisan group although it in-

cludes within its ranks members of all major political

parties.

OL

I'FlCEIiS: Allen Green, Editor; Hu^h Foss,

Associate Editor; Henry Moll, Art Editor; Virginia

Kibler, Make-Up Editor; Margaret Eades, Exchange

Editor; Ernest King, Jr., Business Manager; Marshall

Karesh, Assistant Business Manager; Larry Ferling,

Circulation Manager.

Editorial Board: Dave Malone, Lee Wiggins, Simons

Roof, Adrian Spies.

Art Staff : Edgar Thorne, Bob Koch, Paul Quinn.

Ads and Collection: Bill Allen, Mickey Warren, Bill

Schwartz, Tilly Edwards.

Contributors: Dewitt Barnett, Dorothy Bonnell, Mary

Louise Boylston, Paul Caveness, John Alan Greedy,

Caroline Crum, Phil Ellis, Charles Farrell, Dexter

Freeman, Richard Goldsmith, Richard Gonder, Frank

Porter Graham, TeCoah Harner, Bettie Harward,

Kiffin Hayes, Frank Holeman, Lawrence Hooper, Joe

Horrell, Glen Hutchinson, Gibson Jackson, Louis

Kattsoff, Irwin Katz, Craig McClure, Mary Johnson

MacMiUan, Bob Mai;ill, Ann Marshall, Edward

'hi^k

Megson, Richard Nickson, Mary Louise Pettis,

Frances Poole, Edward Post, Fred Roberts, Shelley

Rolfe, Cecil Sanford, Phillip Schinhan, Wieder

Sievers, Raymond Staples, Sanford Stein, Frank

Taylor, Ralph Tolar, Stephen Waff, Morton Vogel.

College editors are notoriously optimistic. Disdaining

to lean to the ultra literary or to the extreme socio-

logical, we ha\'e attempted to create from the mate-

rial at hand the very paragon of all unattainables,

namely a liberal, "well-balanced" CAROLINA

MAGAZINE.

CAROLINA— * MAGAZINE

In this the sixty-ninth year of its existence, the MAGAZINEprobably did not reach the campus-wide popularity enjoyed

by other student pubHcations, despite an abortive effort to

bring it out of the dormitory stores. Which is only reason-

able. Amateur humor appeals to a wider audience than

amateur literature.

The MAGAZINE is first and foremost a medium for the

expression of student creative work in fiction, art, and

poetry, as well as serving as a journal of student opinion.

As such, its audience is by no means restricted. The CARO-

LINA MAGAZINE has, and will continue to have and to

occupy an essential place in student extra-curricular affairs

on the campus.

DL

0,'FFICERS: Bill Stauber, Editor-in-Chief ; Mack

Hobson, Associate Editor; Bert Premo, Business

Manager; Harry Jones, Business Assistant.

Editorial Staff: Bill Seeman, Cartoons; G. B. Lamm,

Photography; Henry Moll, Art; Helen Plyler,

Skipper Bowles, Fashion; Elbert Hutton, Music;

Courtland Dawson, Exchange.

Art: Gene Witten, Hight Moore, Charles Colby,

Bobby Koch.

Fiction: Sanford Stein, Norman Levinson, Jak Arm-

strong, Simons Roof, St. Clair Pugh.

Photography: Ike Bynum, Sam Wallace, Pou Bailey.

Business Staff : Larry FerUng, Circulations; Jo Martin,

Secretary; Francis Johnson, Joe Holman, Collections;

Dorothy Coble, Coeds; Bob Marshburn, Local;

>;orman Stockton, Foreign.

Coed Staff : Mary Winslow, Grace Gilbert, Marjorie

Burrus, Ernestine Noe, Mary Clinard, Jane Rumsey,

Virginia Cates.

Local : John Da\is, Ho\\ard Cohn, Arty Fischer, Irvin

Ebel, Steve Langfeld.

Foreign: Allen Logel, Bernard Nordan, Bill Young.

"Sweet sixteen and never been kissed." Created in

1924, the Carolina BLICCANEER has grown to be

a reckless publication. Through the years, it had

experienced all the attention afforded a growing

child; it had been humored, petted, coaxed, and

spoiled. Yet, it continued to have its own way.

CAROLINA— * BUCCANEER

Thus, with the beginning of its sixteenth year, the Editor

and the stati, unaware of the upheaval in store, set out to

add to the lusty reputation of the publication. In this, we

proved more than successful in that the November issue

was condemned, and four thousand copies burned. It was

not until then that the BUCCANEER realized it was no

longer a child. At last, it had received its first kiss.

Thus, the Editor adopted a new policy. More stress was

placed on the pictorial element. Cartoons and stories were

more carefully selected. Standardization of the cover gave

the magazine a modernistic touch. The new policy was to-

wards the sophisticated snicker rather than the lusty belly

laugh.

If the transition has been toward a better magazine, then

we do not regret "The Sacrifices We Made".

WM

DL

s.ENSATIONAL editorially, more conservative onthe front page, the 1939-40 Daily Tar Heel has been

little like the paper of the previous year. Very few

issues have contained three streamer headlines.

The previous administration under Allen Merrill

prided itself as "liberal". But his definition of liberal

was carefully weighing both sides of an issue. Wetake pride in calling ourselves "liberal" again, but the

meaning has changed. Viewing the world and all its

parts as a struggle between the haves and the have-

nots, we have taken the side of the have-nots, whousually lean toward the left and are more willing to

accept change. In our books the previous editorial

column is listed as conservative.

The Daily Tar Heel, 1939-40 vintage, has been

accused of both conservatism and radicalism. Muchcomment, pro and con, came with the Buccaneer

incident, the German club squabble, and the fall

quarter fight between the Student Legislature and

the Student Council.

Many said we were biased in our views—but each

critic was ahvays forced to admit he was biased on

the other side of the fence.

We have not minced words of criticism or praise, andthe news columns have been open to all.

We have endeavored to interpret the news as pre-

sented in the news columns.

ROSENBERG

the Daily Tar Heel, with complete coverage of

campus and state events. Individual opinions have

come from numerous columnists. Ed Rankin gets a

vote of thanks for his willingness to be the editor's

ri£;ht-hand man.

TAR HEEL STAFF

Martin Harmon, Editor; Morris Rosenberg, Managing Edi-

tor; William Ogburn, Business Manager; Larry Ferling,

Circulation Manager.

Editorial Writers: Ed Rankin, Don Bishop, Bill Snider,

Frank Holeman.

Reporters: Louis Harris, Doris Goerch, Dorothy Coble,

Zoe Young, Grady Reagan, Bucky Harward, Sylvan Meyer,

Dick Young, Campbell Ir\'ing, Gene Williams, Sanford

Stein, Philip Carden, Vivian Gillespie, Martha LeFevre.

The sports writing has been the best in the history of Columnists: Adrian Spies, johnny Anderson, Mack Hobson.

DAILY-* TAR HEEL

TECHNICAL STAFF

News Editors: Carrol McGaughey, Charles Barrett, Rush Hamrick.

Night Sports Editors: Leonard Lobred, Fred Cazel, Orville Campbell.

Deskmen: Edward Prizer, Bob Thomas, Ben Roebuck.

SPORTS STAFF

Editor: Shelley Rolfe.

Reporters: William Beerman, Richard Morris, Harry Hollingsworth,

Jerry Stoff, Jack Saunders, Josh Goldberg, Frank Goldsmith.

CIRCULATION

Assistant Manager: Jack Holland.

Office: Bradford McCuen, Larry Dale, Dorman Hall.

TAR HEEL BUSINESS STAFF

Local Advertising Managers: Jimmy Schleifer, Bill Bruner, AndrewGennett.

Local Advertising Assistants: Sinclair Jacobs, Rufus Shelkoff, TomNash, Jack Dube, Buck Osborne, Steve Reiss, Leigh Wilson, Bill

Stanback, Bob McNaughton, Landon Roberts.

Durham Advertising Managers: Bill Schwartz, Alvin Patterson.

Collections Manager: Morty Ulman.

Collections Staff: Morty Golby, Parke Staley, Mary Susan Robertson,

Mary Ann Koonce, Elinor Elliot, Millicent McKendry.

Office Manager; Phil Haigh.

Office Staff: Grace Rutledge, Sarah Nathan, Oren Oliver, Bill Vail,

Mickey Grindlinger.

213

DL

1 HROUGHOUT most of the past year we have

been engaged in the bewildering task of collecting

that mass of fact and fiction, photograph and portrait

which goes to make up a Yackety Yack. We have

attempted to assemble into enduring form a vivid

reminder of your school year '39-'40 on the "Hill".

It has been our purpose to present, within these

pages, as many students and activities in as many

varied forms as possible. Such a policy gives to each

student fairer representation and therefore greater

interest. In this connection it has been our pleasure

to include individual portraits of each Sophomore

for the first time in the history of the book.

An undertaking of this kind requires the help and

cooperation of many people. Credit should be given

to a very efficient staff, to Mr. Gordon Brightman of

MHRRILL AND BROADFOOT

Jahn and Oilier Engraving Co., and Mr. Frank

Fleming of the Lassiter Press. Theirs is a thankless

job for which no praise is too great.

We have finished our job. The 19-40 Yackety Yack

is yours. May it long bring back endearing memories

of your days at Chapel Hill.

Jack Lynch, Editor

YACKETY— * YACKJohn Franklin L-inch, Jr EcJilo}

William Gillies Broadfoot, Jr Photography Editoi

BvRD Farmer Merrill Engraving Editor

William Joslin Personnel Manager

Eloise Brown Printing Editoi

Bert Charles Halperin Business Manager

BUSINESS STAFF

el Wuodhouse, Norman Stockton, Bob Cohn, HarryAdvertising Managers : NiBillica, Hughes Roberts.

Secretaries: Francis Gibson, Ruth Mayer.

Staff : John Davis, Dave Clark, Louis Stephens, Robert Lipton, Frank Gold-

smith.

EDITORIAL STAFF

Senior Section: Charles Walter Tillett, Jr., Editor; Jack Page, Stuart McCoach,William Watkins, Page Shamburger.

Junior Section: John Walker Diffendal, Editor; Harry Bryant, John Thomp-son.

Honorary Section: Gip Kimball, Editor; Henry Newsom.

Extra-Curricula Section: James Preston Thorp, John Daniel Thorp, Co-Editors.

Athletic Section: William Peftway Jones Peete, Editor; Alston Lewis, HuntHobbs, Leonard Lobred, Harry HoUingsworth, Gene Usdin.

Fraternity Section: Herbert David Shain, Editor; James CoUett, Roland

Brown, Joseph Timberlake, Gamewell Lemmon, Ernest Lord, Warren Harrel-

son, Charles Landy.

Opening Section: Mary Jane Yeatman, Editor.

Coed Section: Terrell Oliver Everett, Editor; Louise Smith, Sarah Ruark,

Millicent McKendry, Eunice Patten, Mary Sue Robinson, Eleanor Elliot.

Dance Section: Wiley Smith, Editor.

Photography: William Gillies Broadfoot, Jr., Gladys Best Tripp, Hugh Mor-ton, Hallie Chandler, Greyard Lamm, Dot Pratt, Georgiana Pentlarge, Jiggs

Harvey, Stanley Holland, Dolly Ericson.

ROBERTS, GIBSON AND HALPERIN

Left to Right: SPEARMAN, BISHOP, SHARPE, RANKIX, MEGSON, LEAR

PUBLICATIONS BOARDOfficers of the 1939-40 PU Board: Edward Lee Rankin, Jr., President;

Edward Heywood Megson, Secretary; Donald Edwin Bishop, Treasurer;

Walter Spearman, Faculty Member; R. B. Sharpe, Faculty Member; J. M.

Lear, Faculty Adviser.

To completely supervise the financing and administration of the four

student publications—The Daily Tar Heel, Yackety Yack, Buccaneer

and Magazine—is the chief purpose of the Publications Union Board.

It appoints and fixes the salaries of all business managers and other

salaried officers except the elected Editors; makes all contracts for printing

and engraving; controls expenditure of all publications funds; promotes

cooperation between the publications. The lowering of the student publi-

cations fee is left in the hands of the Board, but any increase in the fee can

be done only by a constitutional amendment. Although endowed with

broad constitutional powers, the Board rarely tampers with editorial free-

dom of the publications.

There are five men on the Board. Three students are elected by campus-

wide vote of the Publications Union, which is composed of every student

at the University. A representative is chosen from the senior and junior

classes and the Union-at-large. The Dean of Administration appoints the

two faculty members for staggered two-year terms. A financial adviser

from the faculty also sits with the Board but has no vote.

George F. Horner of the English department is the new faculty member

appointed in January to replace Walter Spearman.

i^^ 'l^^

RANKIN

MEGSON

BISHOP

LEAR

EXTRA EXTRACURRICULARSKey: Snuggle puppies paradise.

Zete bull; Sex rears its nasty head—Burned by the

Council; Crossing the great divide; Let's get away

from it all; After lunch relaxation; Self-help; Pre-

paring for the big attack.

i^ ^

™e hdndrs we won

ix ^

KALKSTEIN

OFFICERS

Martin Bernard Kalkstein, President

George Watts Carr, Jr.. \'ice-President

Edward Robert Mueller, Recording Secretary

Thomas James Wilson. Jr.. Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer

STUDENT MEMBERS

Jerry Harrison Allen

Nell Battle Booker

George Watts Carr, Jr.

James Wiggins Coan

Edward Ray Dickerson. II

William Thompson Dye. Jr.

Jack Phifer Fairley

Robert Belmont Greeman

Lytt Ir\ing Gardner

Edgar Hunt Goold. Jr.

Alexander Hawkins Graham. Jr.

John Wadsworth Gunter

PHI BETA KAPPA^^Ipka Of r lortk L^aroiina L^kapter

Jane Ross Hammer

John Steele Henderson, III

WiLLARD ChAPPELL HeWITT

Francis Dewey Heyward

Charles Edwin Hinsdale

Jonathan Ivins Holmes

Ira Nathaniel Howard. Jr.

Logan Douglas Howell

Martin Bernard Kalkstein

William Thomas Minor. Jr.

William Sunday Mitchell

Edward Francis Moyer

Edward Robert Mueller

Thomas Lynch Murphay

Lindsay Shepherd Olive

John Burrell Oliver

John Randolph Provo

Bi ackwell Pierce Robinson

Lawrence Wilson Ross

Cecil LeRoy Sanford

Jacob Morris Saposnik

Edward Harding Seawell

Charles Jackson Starnes

Leonard Clement Surprenant

James Alexander Taylor

Philip Alfred Walker

Rogers Dey Whichard

Samuel Wright

' Clay Yeatman

ALPHA KAPPA GAMMAOfficers: Mary Wood, President; Melville Corbett, Vice-President; Mary Lewis, Secretary

and Historian; Altajane Holden, Treasurer.

Members: Melville Corbett, Altajane Holden,

Louise Jordan, Mary Lewis, Sara McLean, Gene

Rankin, Elizabeth Shewmake, Mary Wood.

ALPHA EPSILDN DELTAOfficers: Frederick Alexander Blount, President; Thomas Samson Royster, Vice-President;

Ernest Harshaw Yount, Jr., Secretary; Thomas Lynch Murphey, Treasurer.

Aleuibers: Sydenham Benoni Alexander, Frederick Alex-

ander Blount, Orin Watts Booth, Julian Chisholm Brant-

ley, James Robert Brill, Henry William Harris, Louis De-

Mare Hayman, William Joslin, Henry Laurens, Jr., John

Laurens, H, Thomas Lynch Murphey, William Grey Mur-

ray, Isaac Floyd Nesbitt, Thomas Samson Royster, Ralph

Bertram Williams, Ernest Harshaw Yount, Jr.

PHI MU ALPHAOfficers: Earl Anderson Slocum, Southern Province Governor; Hubert Piatt Hen-

derson, President; Willis Thomas Carpenter, Jr., Vice-President; Livingston Brewster

Rogerson, Secretary and Treasurer; Bernie Aleskovsky, Warden.

AieDibers: James Harold Corey, Wade Garland Jordan,

Raymond Jones Martin, James Perrotta, Jesse Francis

Swan, Robert Griggs Simmons, Paul Warren Simpson,

Robert Walter Weis.

Pledges: Hubert Mark Alt\'ater, David Michael Arner,

Thomas Brooks Griffin, Thomas Michael Holt, Boston Mc-

Gee Lackey, Jr., Isaac Arthur Lindsay, John Joseph Matte,

William Chambers Mehaffey, William Carroll Moore,

John Hinton Page. Almond Dwight Price, Robert Morri-

son Reed, John Roberts Satterfield, Jr., Jefferson Bruce

Young, Irvin Edward Zimmerman.

HENDERSON CARPENTER ALESKOVSKY

224

WILLIAMS

BETA GAMMA SIGMAOfficers: Ira Nathaniel Howard, President; Malcolm Dean Taylor, Honorary President;

John Brooks Woosley, Secretary; James Edward Williams, Treasurer.

Student Alen/bers: Tommy Newton Brafford, Joseph John Burton, Robert Bruce Corpen-

ing, Edward Ray Dickerson, II, Jack Phifer Fairley, Tom Woodley Heath, Jr., Ira Na-

thaniel Howard, Jr., Herbert David Langsam, James William MacCallum, Jenness Russell

Owen, Ida Rosen, William Rudolph Teague, Walter Ashe Wall, James Edward Williams.

Grddiidte Members: Robert Willingham Crutchfield,

James Cyril Dickson Blaine, John Wadsworth Gun-

ter.

Faculty Members: Edward Morris Bernstein, Dudley

Dewitt Carroll, Clarence Heer, Richard Junius Men-denhall Hobbs, Gustav Theodor Schwenning, Robert

Howard SherriU, Malcolm Dean Taylor, Harry de-

Merle Wolf, John Brooks Woosley.

%lrder of tKe

MEMBERS

326 EDWARD HEYWOOD MEGSON

327 JOHN ALAN GREEDY

328 FRANGIS MILLIARD FAIRLEY

329 RIGHARDGAMPBELLWORLEY

330 HENRY DEW ITT BARNETT

331 SAMUEL EARLE HOBBS

332 VOITGILMORE

333 ERNEST GRAIGE

334 JAMES EVANS DAVIS

FACULTY

HENRY HORAGE WILLIAMS, Honorary

CHARLES PHILLIPS RUSSELL

FRANK PORTER GRAHAM

EDGAR RALPH RANKIN

ALBERT RAY NEWSOME

ROBERT BURTON HOUSE

HERMAN GLENN BAITY

ERNEST LLOYD MAGK IE

ALBERT McKINLEY GOATES

JOSEPH BURTON LINKER

GORYDON PERRY SPRU ILL

EARLE HORAGE HARTSELL

JOSEPH MARYON SAUNDERS

WILLIAM TERRY GOUGH

EDWARD ALEX GAMERON

WALTER SMITH SPEARMAN, JR.

Sllf^ Wxhn of tijp (grail

OFFICERSPAUL HEWITT THOMPSON

RICHARD CAMPBELL WORLEY;

DEWITT BARNETT.

. . . Delegata

Exchequer

ACTIVEDonald Edwin Bishop

William Rennie Blalock

George Watts Carr, Jr.

James Evans Davis

William Archie Dees

Jack Phifer Fairley

Charles William Idol

Cyril Jones

MEMBERSClyde Gates Kimball

Charles Robert Kline

Julian Jay Lane

John Franklin Lynch, Jr.

Ed. Heywood Megson

David James Morrison

John Malcolm Nisbet -

George Francis Ralston

James Leake Woodson

INACTIVE MEMBERSWilliam B. Campbell Robert Nathaniel Magiil

James McMurray Joyner Fred Henry Weaver

FACULTY MEMBERSDr. Frank P. Graham Mr. Joseph M. Saunders

Dean F. F, Brodshaw Dr. Henry H. Williams

Mr. Edward A. Cameron Mr. James Williams

Dr. Walter R. Berryhill Mr. Walter Spearman

Dr. E. McG. Hedgpeth Mr. Edwin Sidney Lanier

A M P H D TJt R D T H E N

MA EMBERS,

EDWARD TOWNSEND MOOR

JAMES RICHARD!

JACKtHIFB[jf^lRLE>

.^W&AUOEDWARD LEE KANTROWITZ

WALTER FRANCIS C

JAMES PHIL

AL

President

:HiLEi^

@

PSPARKik

N J(™aATT»SON

@

(ANDERGRAY, JR.

LOUIS SMITH HARRIS

WILLIAM JOSLIN

MORRIS WlLIAM ROSENBERG

LEiMANNING WIGGINS

KENAN BANKS WILLIAMS

NON-i^CTIVE MEMBERS

DEWITT BARNETT

GIBSON JA

ATHANIELMAGILL

FRED HENRY WEAVER

(^ampu5 ^napdkoidip p-

THEY MADE A NAME...ATt ).• Rejected glory.

The Little Entente; Bill Dees with one of many;

Now, Coach?; Society for the Prevention of Cruelty

to Coeds; Jean Mc with her three admirers; Senior

marshals and the Governor; C.P.U. field day, Grail

229

^ tV

E GAMES WE PLAYED

^ i^

Prom Roto (left to right): ERICKSON, WOLFE, LANGESecond Row: VAUGHT, BARTOS

*CDACHING STAFFCoach Wolf says, "The credit and praise (for the fine record of the

1939 team) belong to the boys on the squad and to the assistant coaches

for their hard work". Modestly he omits much deserved credit for him-

self; but the picture above of Coach Wolf and his assistants shows

those to whom, along with the squad, much praise is due and rendered.

RESUME OF THE 1933 FOOTBALL SEASONby COACH WOLF

J. HE football season of 1939 was indeed a surprise one for us. We were honest in our belief, prior to the

opening of our schedule, that if we won half of our games this season would have been a success. I do not

want to be misunderstood; I am not trying to boast or trying to receive the credit for the fine record that we did

make. The credit and praise belong to the boys on the squad and the assistant coaches for their hard work,

loyalty, cooperation and spirit, and for their earnest desire to give their best efforts at all times. The fighting

Carolina spirit carried us through a very hard campaign, and when the final whistle blew on Thanksgiving day

the members of the squad could look back with pride to a successful season because they had worked hard

and felt that they had given their best throughout the entire fall.

The 1939 football season certainly provided many thrills. There were many outstanding feats during the entire

fall, but the ones that stand out most in my memory are: the fighting comeback of the Tar Heels against

Tulane, New York University and the University of Pennsylvania; the great leadership of our co-captains,

George Stirnweiss and Jim Woodson; the passing of Jim Lalanne and George Stirnweiss; the outstanding

catching of these passes by Severin, Mallory, Radman, Richardson, Don Baker and Roy Connor; the very good

pass protection given our passers by our linemen, namely: Kimball, White, Faircloth, Nowell, Sieck, Wood-son, Abernathy, Suntheimer and Smith, and the fullbacks, Dunkle and Sadoff; the great kicking of Dunkle in

all of our games; the spirit of the team; the sportsmanship of our opponents and of our own team; and the

loyal and sincere support of our student body, the twelfth man on our team. The past fall as a whole, including

our team and our opponents, displayed a more open style of play than in previous seasons. We had the oppor-

tunity to see some fine passing attacks, good running attacks, excellent kicking and some very well-rounded

deceptive offense.

I want to take this opportunity, on behalf of the squad and the coaching staff', to express our sincere thanks

for the loyal support and hundred per cent backing of the student body, the faculty, the alumni and the friends

of the University.

VARSITY SQUADPint Row: Gregg, Slotnick, Br.\ntley, Myers, Woodson, Stirnweiss. Ralston, Crone, Benton, M.\jor.

Second Row: Lalanne, Kline, Kimball, Smith, Mallory, White. Radman, Slagle, Sadoff, Severin, Abernathy.Third Row: Faircloth. Elliot, Spransey, Nall, Stallings, Siek, Jones, Dunkell, O'Hare, Idol, Stoinoff, Richardson.Fourth Row: Blalock. Hermson, Connors, Bobbit, Don Baker, Stahler, C. Baker, Suntheimer, Megson, Saylor, Gugert.

233

CARDLINA 5D - CITADEL D

ciy^^pHigh School Day crowd of 26,000, the largest ever to witness an

opening game in North Carolina, saw the 1939 Tar Heels begin their

season with a 50 to victory over Citadel. It was Carolina all the way.

From the time George Stirnweiss streaked 87 yards for a touchdown on

the Tar Heels' opening play until the same Stirnweiss slashed across

from the 3 yard line in the closing minute of the game, the Bulldogs

never had a chance. After the first two Carolina elevens had rolled up

41 points in the first half. Coach Wolf was content to let the third and

fourth stringers battle out most of the last two quarters. Scoring touch-

downs for the Tar Heels were Stirnweiss (2), Lalanne (2), Mallory,

ABERNATHYBAKER

Doty, and Sadoff. White and Dunkle, two

sophomores, made their first appearance for

Carolina in this game and showed up well.

BRANTLEYCONNOR

BLALOCKBOBBITT

234

CAROLINA 3G - WAKE FOREST B

O PARKED by Jim Lalanne and George Radman,

the Tar Heels opened their quest for the Big Five

championship by trouncing a strong Wake Forest

eleven. The game had hardly gotten under way

when Radman caught a 1 5 yard pass from Stirnweiss

and side-stepped his way 25 yards across the goal

line. A few moments later "Sweet" Lalanne broke

over his own right guard, eluded the Wake Forest

secondary, and scampered -43 yards into pay territory.

Paul Severin added both extra points plus a field goal

from the 15 yard line to give Carolina a 17-0 advan-

tage at the quarter. The Blue and White's other

scores were made by Radman, who made a sensa-

tional catch of one of Lalanne's passes deep in the

end zone, O'Hare, and Sadoff, who interrupted a

Deacon aerial and galloped 25 yards to score. Wake

Forest's lone tally came in the fourth period after

they had recovered a Tar Heel fumble on the Caro-

lina 13 yard line.

CAROLINA'STHREE POINTS

AGAINSTDUKE—DLTNKELKICKING

235

CAROLINA 13 - VIRGINIA TECH B

C/NCE attain it was "Sweet" Jim Lalanne who led the Tar Heels to victory. This time against an inspired

eleven from Virginia Tech who gave the jittery and over-confident Carolina squad a stiff battle before falling,

13-6. The Blue and White power house that had proved so efficient in its two previous starts was unable to

get underway until the second quarter. Lalanne returned a punt to Tech's 38 and five plays later crashed over

for a touchdown from the 3 yard line. Dunkle added the extra point. Carolina's other score came mid-way in

the third period. Lalanne, with the ball on the Gobbler 4, sailed around his own left end for the touchdown

after his pass to Mallory had moved the ball into striking distance of the goal. Tech's touchdown came with

only 40 seconds remaining in the game when Henderson completed a 16 yard pass to Taylor in the end zone.

DLNKELFAIRCLOTH

STIRNY VS. COON (OF STATE)

236

LALANNE TO SEVERIN FOR 6 POINTS AT TULAXE

CAROLINA 14 - N. Y, U. 7

7cOR the second straight year, the passing combi-

nation of Stirnweiss to Radman spelled defeat for

N.Y.U.'s Violets. This time the count was 14 to 7.

Badly outplayed for tlie first three periods, the Tar

Heels roared from behind in the fourth to score two

touchdowns, stave off a desperate N.Y.U. attack, and

win the ball game. The Violets tallied in the first

quarter on a pass, Boell to Campanis, which was good

for 47 yards and a touchdown. After this, neither

team was able to score until early in the last period.

Elliot hauled down one of Stirnweiss' passes on the

N.Y.U. 3 and two plays later Stirnweiss crossed the

goal line. Dunkle added tiie tieing point to the game

with a perfect placement. Then, with six minutes of

play remaining, Dunkle intercepted a pass on the

Violets' 20, Stirnweiss tossed a pass to Radman in the

end zone, and once again the Tar Heels had defeated

the Violets.

IDOL

KIMBALL

KLINE

CAROLINA 14 - TULANE 14

(\>^FTER spotting the Green Wave fourteen points, the Tar Heels staged one of the most

spectacular aerial shows in the Southern football history. They whipped over two touchdowns

and a pair of extra points in the last nine minutes of play to tie a heavily favored Tulane

eleven, 14-14. It was Jim Lalanne, playing the most sensational game of his gridiron career,

who denied Tulane a victory. The Green Wave backfield was completely baffled by the last

quarter Carolina passing attack as Lalanne whipped toss after toss into the waiting fingers of

Mallory, Radman, and Severin—the latter catching both touchdown passes. Harry Dunkle,

\^ •Try j^^*- ;'. ,' *iWt

SADOFF RIPPING THROLGH DEACONS

sophomore fullback, tied the game with two placements and almost brought Carolina victory

as his last minute field goal attempt went wide by inches only. The Tar Heel defense, led by

Severin, Kimball, and Slagle, repulsed several Tulane scoring threats before a recovered fumble

and an intercepted pass led to the Green Wave touchdowns. Kellogg accounted for all of

Tulane's points.

238

CAROLINA 3D - PENNSYLVANIA B

two periods Carolina turned on its power to score

three touchdowns in less than three minutes, and

Harry Dunkle added his bit as he booted two extra

points and a ^5 yard field goal. The defensive stand-

outs for the Tar Heels were the sophomore line-

backers, Suntheimer and Dunkle, who consistently

broke up Penn plays behind the line of scrimmage.

CL/x crowd of 55,000, the largest ever to witness

a Carolina team in action, saw the Tar Heels' aerial

bombardment fall on Franklin Field, Philadelphia,

and bury a much heavier Penn eleven under a 30 to 6

score. It was the third consecutive game in which

Carolina had come from behind and it was Jim La-

lanne, making his greatest bid for AU-American

honors, who led Carolina to victory. Lalanne tossed

three touchdown passes—two to Paul Severin and one

to Don Baker—in addition to the running gem of

the afternoon. He broke over his own left guard and

scampered 36 yards to score untouched. After the

Quakers had tallied on the first eight plays, the Tar

Heels took command. A pass, Lalanne to Severin,

evened the score in the second quarter. In the last

CAROLINA 17 - N. C. STATE D

y HE Tar Heels returned to Kenan Stadium to celebrate a cold, rainy

Homecoming Day with a 17 to victory over N. C. State. This time it

was Co-captain George Stirnweiss who sparked the Blue and White

attack. Early in the first quarter Stirnweiss tossed two passes to Jim

Mallory which were good for 30 yards and the first Carolina score. Afew moments later Harry Dunkle plunged over from the one foot line

after Stirnweiss had returned a State punt 45 yards to place the ball in

scoring territory. Carolina tallied once more before the ball became too

slippery to handle, as mid-way in the second period Paul Severin booted

a field goal from the State 18 to end the afternoon's scoring. Although

RALSTONSADOFF

State had possession of the ball for most of

the second half, they failed to threaten the

Carolina goal line as the long, spiralling

punts of Dunkle and Lalanne kept the Wolf-

pack in their own territory.

m^^K^^>>r^ ^^^H

CAROLINA 32 - DAVIDSON D

y.OR the annual clash with Da\ids()n the Tar the best performance of the day as he scored t>A'o of

Heels journeyed to Winston-Salem and returned the the Tar Heels' five touchdowns. Other six pointers

victors, 32 to 0. From the time George Stirnweiss were made by Elliot and Dunkle. At no time was

crossed the Wildcat goal line after two minutes of Davidson able to threaten the Carolina goal and most

play, it was Carolina's game. Don Baker turned in of the game was played deep in Wildcat ground.

"HEELS"FLY THROIGHTHE AIR—LALANNE AT

PENN.

CAROLINA 3 - DUKE 13

J IFTY-ONE THOUSAND fans, a record southern crowd, watched the Tar Heels bow to Duke's Blue Devils

in their only defeat of the year, 13 to 3. Carolina scored first early in the second quarter when sophomore Harry

Dunkle booted a forty-six yard field goal which sent the Blue and White gridders into a three point lead. But

soon after the second half began, Tony Ruft'a blocked a Carolina quick kick which Bailey recovered in the end

zone to place Duke out in front 7-3. The Blue Devils clinched the game a few minutes later when Winston

Siegfried plunged over from the three-yard line after an intercepted pass had placed Duke in scoring territory.

STIRNWEISSSTOINOFF

STIRNY CRUSHES THROUGH THE CITADEL

TAR HEELS TO N.Y.U.—RADMAN RUNNING

CAROLINA 19 - VIRGINIA D

T.AKING advantage of three breaks, the Tar

Heels closed their season with a victory over Virginia.

This time the score was 19 to 0. Twice in the first

period Carolina covered Virginia fumbles deep in

Cavalier territory and each time pushed over a touch-

down, Stirnweiss and Sadoff scoring. Then, early in

the fourth period, the Tar Heels scored on a touch-

down pass from Lalanne to Severin after White had

reco\'ered a blocked punt on Virginia's 15. The game,

which was witnessed by a holiday crowd of 18,000,

saw Co-captain Stirnweiss and Woodson and half-

back George Radman end their college careers with

brilliant performances. It also marked the twentieth

time that the Tar Heels have defeated Virginia and

brought them to within one game of equaling the

series.

SUNTHEIMER

WHITE

WOODSON

243

BASKETBALL

BRANSON, CUNEO, DILWORTH. GERSTEN,

GLAMACK, HARNDEN, HOWARD. MATHES,

PESSAR

CAROLINA'S basketball team rose to

equal former heights of greatness this

year, winning the Southern Conference

title in decisive style. In Coach Bill Lange's

first year the White Phantoms rang up 1

5

wins against only three losses during the

regular session, and then went on to win

the conference tournament in Raleigh,

With almost the entire 1939 team back,

aided by several sophomores, Carolina

easily won through five practice games

during the Christmas holidays before the

regular season opened, giving promise of

real power.

Opening the season on January 3 with

Appalachian College, the Phantoms en-

countered stiff competition before win-

ning, 58-49. The next night scoring against

Catawba was slow, Carolina triumphing,

29-25.

GLAMACKA}l-Americcii2 1940

Heading for the western part of the state, the Phantoms encoun-

tered Davidson in Charlotte, hitting the basket for 55 points,

while the Wildcats got 47. After an easy 46-25 victory over VPI,

Carolina was ready to go into first-class competition.

With big George Glamack tossing in three bucket shots in the last

three minutes, Carolina defeated Wake Forest by 54-51 in a game

which saw the Deacons put on a terrific second-half rally in the

season's most thrilling game. Two nights later Carolina ran up its

biggest score of tlie season in beating Citadel, 66-36.

V.M.I, fell next before the Tar Heel five as the whole squad contributed to a 53-24 Carolina victory. In the last

home game for some time Glamack, The Blind Bomber, accounted for 28 points in heading the Phantoms to

a 52-41 victory over N. C. State.

Playing on their home court Navy gave Carolina a bad scare before the Tar Heels won 44-40. Carolina lost its

first game when Wake Forest took revenge on the Phantoms, holding Glamack and Carolina to 36 points

while making 42.

Clemson's 1939 conference champions were humbled next as the season rolled into February. The score was

39-31. Virginia overwhelmed the Tar Heels, 44-25, in the most disastrous game of the season. Bouncing back,

the Phantoms made it two in a row over Davidson, 41-28.

First Row: Smith, Gersten. Howard. Robeson

Second Row: CuNEO, Harnden, Branson, Severin, MathesThird Row: CoACH Lange, Dilworth, Pessar, Rose, Glamack. Bowman. Mgr. Royall

<p

SSL Kws iSili

sgs ^

It looked as if the Phantoms were playing ball on alternate nights when

Duke overcame a twelve-point Carolina lead and won 50-44, in spite of the

efforts of Glamack and Paul Severin.

Surviving another second-half blow-up, Carolina defeated the semi-pro

McCrary Eagles, 45-37. N. C. State again felt the wrath of the Tar Heels,

who beat them, 60-36.

Glamack humbled Banks McFadden once more when he led the Phantom

five to a 47-30 victory over Clemson. Three nights later he tossed in 20

points in the Carolina revenge over Duke; the score was 31-27.

Seeded second, Carolma went to the Southern Conference tournament in

Raleigh and opened things with a bang. Glamack and sophomore Bob Rose

starred as the Phantoms eliminated Clemson, 50-41. Hooking in 28 points,

Glamack gave the best individual performance of the tournament when

Carolina stopped Wake Forest, 43-35, the next night. Playing a fine game

both offensively and defensively, the Phantoms took the rubber game and

title from Duke, 39-23.

Credit for the successful season goes to George Glamack, whose pivot

shots won every big battle. Glamack, probably the best player ever to

perform in North Carolina basketball circles, was the only junior to place

on the one syndicated All-American team. He scored 458 points during

the season.

Carolina looks for another good season next year under Bill Lange.

Glamack, Severin, Rose, Ben Dilworth, Jimmie Howard, and Bobbie

Gersten will all be back.

ROSE

SEVERIN

SMITH

1941) BASKirrBAl.L RIXORDUNC58 Appalachian 49

29 Catawba 2')

55 Davidson 47

46 V.PI 25

54 Wake Forest 51

66 Citadel 36

53 V.M.I 24

52 N. estate 41

44 Navy 4n

36 Wake Forest 42

39 Clemson 31

25 Virginia 44

41 , Davidson 28

44 Duke 50

45 McCrary Eagles 37

60 N. estate 3647 Clemson 30

31 Duke 27

Southern Conferfnce Toisrnament

50 Clemson43 Wake Forest

39 Duke

f'

BASEBALL

BISSETT, First Base: COX. OutfuU: DAVIS,

Pitcher: HOWARD, Tliird B.i^e: HUDSON, Pitcher;

JENNINGS, Outfield: KARP, Third Base: MAL-

LORY, Outfield: NETHERCUTT, Catcher: RAD-

MAN, Pitcher: RALSTON, Pitcher; RICH, Third

(^ OACH BUNN HEARN'S 1939 edi-

tion of Tar Heel baseballers displayed at

the end of the season a record which may

best be termed mediocre. A potent group

of stickmen, the outfit lacked only a fast

ball pitcher to carry it over the rougher

spots—which weren't so few and far

apart.

Led by Co-captains George Nethercutt,

who led his mates with a .488 batting

average, and Hal Bissett, the fielding first

baseman, Carolina produced eleven wins

against seven losses. N. C. State and the

University of Virginia each defeated the

Hearnmen once, while Wake Forest and

Duke won two and three times respec-

tively.

Carolina showed itself, at times, to be an

above- the-average club. Boasting a team

batting average of over .300, the Tar

Heels flashed a brilliant infield combina-

tion in George Stirnweiss at second base

and Matty Topkins at short stop. The outfield was no cause for

worry and the catching was easily the finest in any college ball.

First base was well covered while third, though weaker, was no

gap. The pitching stafi^, led by "Work-Horse" Bud Hudson, was

the only real worry. Aside from the pitching Carolina looked too

good to be stopped at the beginning of the season and proceeded

to win its first seven games. But . . .

CO-CAPTAINS HAROLD BISSETT, Fint Base-

nun, AND GEORGE NETHERCUTT, Catcher.

The season opened against Springfield College with a win of 10-4,

and was followed with another victory over Harvard, 16-12. Cor-

nell was next beaten, 10-1, and losses were handed Davidson, N.

C. State, V. M. L., and Washington and Lee before Virginia licked Carolina 10-5. Wake Forest's crack outfit

eked out an 8-6 win, but Carolina pulled back into the winning column with an 8-7 thriller over V. M. L.

Again Wake Forest took the Tar Heels at 3-2, but Carolina retaliated at 8-4 against Davidson. Sweet revenge

took place when Virginia took a 16-4 walloping.

N. C. State, next, won an upset over Carolina 6-3, but three days later Wake Forest came out on the short end

of a 19-2 mauling that "showed" many that Carolina was ready for Duke.

First Row: Rich, Tomlinson, Sooten, Ralston. Vincent, Turner, Howard.Second Row: Stirnweiss. Topkins, Hudson, Bissett. Nethercutt, Karp, Davis, Lamb, Manager.

Third Row: BuNN Hearn, Brame, Herschman, Jennings, Dawson, Smith, Browning, Semsenbach, Chestnut.Fourth Roil : FITZGERALD, Cox, Mallory, Hermson, Radman, Wales, Gill.

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The Duke series, however, ended in disaster. Bud Hudson lost the first

game, 6-5, only after the Tar Heels blew up afield, making four errors

and handing Duke the game, hi the second game, Carolina looked like

winner until an eight mning Duke rally produced eleven runs and a win,

21-14. Carolina lost the final game, 12-4.

Catcher George Nethercutt's .488 led the hitters while Matty Topkins

batted .387; Hal Jennings, .323; George Radman, .319; and Jim Mallory,

.316. Stirnweiss and Mallory led the sluggers with three circuit blows each.

STIRNWEISS, Second B.ue

TOPKINS, Short Stop

TURNER, Pitcher

WOOTEN, Pitcher

Bud Hudson led the pitchers with 7 wins and 2

losses while George Radman won 2 and lost 1.

Sam Davis had 2 wins against four defeats.

HOWARD CROSSES PLATE IN DL'KE GAME

CAROLINA-DUKE GAME DRAWS A CROWD

TRAPPED AT FIRST

TRACK

CORPENING, DAVIS. CROCKETT, GROVES,

HENDRIX, HARDY, HILTON, HOFFMAN,

HOLMES, ILLMAN, JENNINGS, LEWIS

(7 NDEFEATED indoors and outdoors,

Carolina's track team in 1939 had such a re-

markable season and produced so many out-

standing individual performers that it was

considered as soon as the year ended as the

greatest track team in the history of the Uni-

versity.

The Tar Heels, coached by Bob Fetzer, Dale

Ranson and Johnny Morriss, walked off with

all of the top honors in the Florida relays,

handed Princeton its first defeat in over a year,

and, after defeating all other competition,

climaxed the season by winning the Southern

Conference championship over Duke and Mary-

land for the second year in a row.

Before the season was over Co-captains Bill

Corpening and Bill Hendrix, and Jimmy Davis,

Tom Crockett and Royce Jennings established

University records, while Harry March, the one-

man-track-team, tied or bettered four marks.

The times of four of these men were confer-

ence records.

The Carolina trackmen opened the season at

the Florida relays at Gainesville, and came homewith all of the cups and medals awarded for

CORPENING AND MARCH AFTER INDOORRECORDS

the five relays on the program. The two mile relay team which won this

race in the Millrose games won its event, and other CaroHna quartets

captured the 440-yard relay, the mile relay, the mile team race, and the

sprint medley relay.

Led by Tom Holmes, the Tar Heels defeated Princeton, 69-2/3 to 56-1/3.

Holmes won both the 100 and 220-yard dashes, being timed in 10 flat in

the century. Tom Crockett established a Fetzer field record of 9;4l.8 in the

two mile, lowering the mark he established a year before against the same

team. Don Herring, the gigantic Princeton sophomore field event star,

threw the discus 146 feet to win his event with ease. Other Carolina mentaking first places were Bill Hendrix in the half-mile, Jimmy Davis anci

Dave Morrison in the mile, Bill Corpening in the high hurdles, Harry

March in the low hurdles, and Joe Hilton in the javelin.

( Carolina defeated Virginia, 72-54, the next week-end on the Cavaliers' home grounds. Harry March lowered his school record

in the 220-yard low hurdles to 23.4 seconds in defeating Frank Fuller of Virginia. Hilton repeated his first place in the

javelin, Royce Jennings won the quarter-mile, Hendrix and Davis the 880, Davis and Crockett the mile, Morrison, WimpyLewis and Drewry Troutman the two mile, and Corpening both the high jump and broad jump.

The Tar Heels went to town in their next meet, smashing Duke, 78-53, and establishing four field records, three of which

were University marks. Royce Jennings ran :48.6 in the quarter. Bill Hendrix did 1:54.1 in the half, Harry March set a field

record of :23.8 in the low hurdles, Bill Corpening unofficially tied the conference record of :14.5 in the high hurdles, and

Jennings, Joe Russell, Da\e Morrison and Hendrix set a field mark of 3:22.4 in the mile relay. The Devils took only four

first places, as Davis and Morrison won the mile, Crockett the two mile, and Corpening and Vaughan Winborne the high

jump for other Carolina wins.

Firu Row: Tr.mner Quinlan, Lewis, Haigh. Piver, Winstead, Nash, Amoss, Lamm. Allen

Second Row: Watson. Richards, Winbourne. Crockett, Corpening, Gordon, March. Jennings. White. Davis. Holmes. Man-ager Brafford. Assn.

Third Row: CoACH Dale Ranson. McCachren, Illman. Groves. French, Weinberg. Russell. Lane. Hoffman. Patterson. Mor-rison. Coach Johnny Morriss

Vniirih Row: W.\KELEY. Cald'otell. Hardy. Saunders. Clement. Vogler. Walker. Baker. Troutman. Coach Bob Fetzer

BEGINNING OF SOUTHERN CONFERENCE TWO MILE RECORD

Taking time off then to experiment in new events, the Tar Heels easily captured top

honors in the CaroHnas' AAU meet over Duke, N. C. State, the Carolina and Dukefreshmen, Lenoir Rhyne, Wake Forest, and Guilford. The meet was marked by the

return to action of Fred Hardy, winner of the two mile, after being out with an

injured ankle. March made his only appearance of the season in the 100-yard dash

and tied school and field records at 9.8 seconds. He also won the 440-yard hurdles,

setting another school record at 54 seconds fiat.

The Tar Heels got by their toughest opponent, the Navy, when Bob Weinberger and

Chuck Slagle surprised everyone with first and second places in the shot put. The

score was 77-49. Hendrix lowered his own school record in the half mile to 1:533,

unofficially equalling the conference mark. Davis missed the school record in the

mile by two-tenths of a second when he ran 4:15.4 to beat Barney Oldfield, the

NaNy's outstanding distance man. Other Carolina first places were taken by Jennings

in the quarter, Crockett in the two mile, March, Corpening and Pat Patterson in the

high jump, Corpening in the high hurdles, and March in the high jump and broad

jump.

Georgia was an easy opponent, and Carolina won the meet, 85^/4 to 40I/4, taking

nine first places and sweeping three events. Carolina first places were by Holmes in

the 100, Jennings in the quarter, Hendrix and Carleton White in the half, Davis in

the mile, Hardy in the two mile, Corpening in the high hurdles and broad jump,

March in the low hurdles, Hilton in the |avelin, Patterson, Winborne and March in

the high jump, and Jim Piver in the pole vault.

The Tar Heels scored 651/2 points to win the Southern Conference championship for

the second consecutive season. Duke was second in the scoring with 43 points, and

Maryland third with 39V/2. Carolina placed in all but two of the 15 events, and

produced the three outstanding performances in the meet. Jimmy Davis won a thrill-

ing victory in the mile after Iseing chased for three laps and passed on the last by

Chronister of Mar)'land. He sprinted home ahead of the Terrapin runner, and was

timed in 4:14.2 for a Southern Conference, University- and Fetzer field record. This

time stood as one of the best collegiate miles run in the country all year. Bill Hendrix

lowered the conference half mile record to 1 :52.7, beating out Kehoe, another Mary-

land runner, at the finish. His mark was also a school and field record. Bill Corpen-

ing won the 120-yard high hurdles over Kinzle of Duke, defending champion and

record holder, and set a new record of his own at 14.3 seconds.

MORRISON

RICHARDS

WEINBERGER

WHITE

Tom Crockett established a conference record of

9:40.4 in the two mile, and Fred Hardy, who wassecond, also bettered the old record. Harry March tied

for first in the high jump with Miller of Marylandand set a new school and field mark of 6 feet II/2

inches.

Other Carolina placers were Tom Holmes and Julian

Lane in the sprints, Phil Walker in the hurdles, Royce

Jennings, Dave Morrison, Carleton White and DrewryTroutman in the distances, Vaughan Winborne andPat Patterson in the jumps, and Joe Hilton, ChuckSlagle and Jim Rickards in the other field events.

After the regular season was over, five Carolina menwent to the National Collegiates. Running in Olympicstadium, Los Angeles, Bill Corpening placed third in

the 120-yard high hurdles behind Fred Wolcott of

Rice Institute, defending champion, and Smith of Wis-consin. Corpening also ran in the high hurdles in the

Sugar Bowl track festival in New Orleans last NewYear's day, and placed third.

CORPENING BEATS KINZLE OF DUKE WITH RECORD TIME

DAVIS, TWO LAPS TO GO, FOR A WIN HENDRIX WINS SOUTHERN CONFERENCE HALF MILE

JSSELL, TROUTMAN, GORDON, AND MORRISON CROCKETT, MARCH, DAVIS, AND CORPENING

Ha

COACH RONMAN, WINSTEAD, ROSE, JOHNSTON, GENNETT, INSKEEP, DICKERSON, BARTLETT, SANDhRb, BOBBITKIMBALL, MGR. KAUFMAN

REVIEW of the 1940 BOXING SEASON

J. HE University of North Carolina boxing team won four meets,

tied one, took the Big Five title and tied for third place in the South-

ern Conference meet at Columbia, S. C, during the 1940 season.

Rated favorites before the conference meet, the Tar Heels placed

six of seven men in the semi-finals, more than any other team, but

four of the six were beaten in the semi-finals and never reached

the finals. Bob Farris, 155, and Elton "Red" Sanders, 165, survived

the semi-hnals and went on to win conference titles in their

divisions.

CO-CAPTAIN DICKERSON CO-CAPTAIN WINSTEAD

256

Final team scores in the conference meet were: Clemson

15, South Carolina 13, Carolina and Citadel 10 each,

Maryland 5, and Duke and VPI 3 each.

Billy Winstead, only Tar Heel defending champion,

Andy Gennett, Ed Dickerson, and Gates Kimball were

defeated in the semi-finals. Johnny Johnston was beaten

in the preliminaries.

Gates Kimball saved the Tar Heels from a defeat in the

Citadel meet, the first of the season, when he decisioned

Young in the final bout of the night to give Mike Ron-

man's boxers a 4-4 tie with the Bulldogs. Red Sanders

gained a TKO after 1 : 20 of the third round over Ulrich.

Johnny Johnston and Clark Barlett fought to a draw in

their bouts, and Billy Wmstead was awarded a decision.

The Tar Heels defeated State 7-1 in Raleigh for their

first win of the season when Billy Wmstead, Al Rose,

Ed Dickerson, Clark Barlett, and Red Sanders decisioned

their opponents. Mike Bobbitt gained a TKO in 40

seconds of the second round, and Kimball won on a

forfeit.

Kimball won the only bout for Carolina against Vir-

ginia at Charlottesville. Va., when he got a TKO over

Ed Burgers in 1:15 of the first round. Johnny Johnston

gained a draw for the other Carolina tally in the 61/)-

11/2 loss.

After losing to Virginia the boxers came back to defeat

Virginia Tech 5l/2'lV2 with Bob Farris, 1940 confer-

ence 155 pound champ, participating in his first bout of

the year. Andy Bennett, fighting at 135, also fought his

first bout of the year, having been out with flu. Bobbitt

gained a draw, and Farris was awarded a TKO when

his opponent failed to answer the bell at the start of the

third round.

With the heavyweight battle between Bates Kimball

and Bill Bailey, both football greats, drawing the spot-

light, the Carolina-Duke match ended in a convincing

6-2 annihilation. Kimball gained a TKO in 1:30 of the

second round over Bailey in the final bout of the night.

Sanders also got a TKO, his coming at 1:53 of the third

round. Farris and Winstead got draws, and Johnston,

Gennett and Dickerson fought to decisions.

The conference meet followed the Duke Match.

m

Milll^MJi^dlki

GENNETT INSKEEP

JOHNSTON KIMBALL

ROSE SANDERS

First Row: Harnden, Early, Co-Captain Carl Rood. Co-Captain Bill Rood, Rider.

X- Second Rou : Henderson, Rawlings, Meserole, Beadles.

Third Roiv: Co-Manager Murphy, Coach John Kenfield, Co-Manager Clark.

TENNISy HE 1939 North Carolina tennis team put the University back in

a position to claim the mythical national championship. Led by co-

captains Carlton and William Rood, the netmen went through

nineteen matches undefeated and won laurels in several tournaments.

Carolina tennis teams under Coach John Kenfield, to whom the

players accredit their victories, have won I'^'i matches since 1929 as

compared with 4 losses.

The netmen opened the season with a 9-0 victory over Wake Forest.

BEADLESEARLY

258

and duplicated that score two days later against Rich-

mond.

Williams' team came South and dropped two 8-1 de-

cisions to the strong Carolina team. Playing host to

their second northern visitors within a week, the Tar

Heels surprised themselves by three one-sided victories

over a strong Yale team. After winning the first two

matches 9-1, Carolma handed the invaders a 10-0

shellacking in the last match.

The North-South tennis tournament at Pinehurst proved

to be merely a Carolina practice session, as the semi-

finals in both singles and doubles were all-Carolina

matches, Charles Rider won the singles title from Carl

Rood, while Frank Farrel and Harris Everett, though

ineligible for varsity competition, won the doubles

crown from Bill Rood and Eddie Fuller.

Rain stopped the contest with Washington and Lee

after Carolina had won the first four matches. Dukefell next, as the Blue Devils failed to win a single

match.

Carolina defeated Virginia, who had taken a practice

game from the Tar Heels in the fall, by a score of 6-3.

Davidson was humbled, 8-1, and Carolina then took its

second match with Duke 6-0, before rain halted play.

Maryland took two individual matches from the Caro-

lina racqueteers, who ran out a 7-2 victory.

In the state tournament Fuller and Bill Rood stroked

their way into the singles finals with wms over Dukeplayers. Rood won the title the next day with a five set

victory over his team-mate. They then teamed together

to win the doubles championship from Rawlings and

Carl Rood.

J

HARNDEN

RAWLINGS

ROOD, CARL

MESEROLE

RIDER

ROOD, BILL

Firsi Row: Daugherty, Rice. Dempsey, Anthony, Bass. Levi.

Second Row: Manager Clark, Greenberg, Jordan. Weant. Rilev. Calhoun. Ullman. Manager Orr.

Fresh from the state laurels, Carolina won, 9-0, from

Presbyterian College, a South Carolina school whose

tennis teams are very good. After a 9-0 victory over

N. C. State the netters started on their annual

Northern tour. May 7.

With the numbers 5 and 6 men, Rawlings and Meser-

ole, playing consistently well, the Tar Heels wonthree close matches. Doubles play proved decisive

in all three wins, as Carolina defeated Harvard, 5-4,

Yale, 6-3, and Princeton, 5-4, on successive days!

Returning South for the Southern Conference tourna-

ment at Williamsburg, Carolina sent Bill Rood and

Rawlings into the singles finals. Rood winning out in

four sets. Meserole and Carl Rood lost to Askin and

Ritzenberg of Maryland in the doubles finals.

Besides the six regular players, E. J. Fuller, W. B.

Meserole, W. H. Rawlings, C. F. Rider, C. A. Rood,

Dave Early and Wilford Gragg won letters. Theregulars were ably backed up by strong reserves.

Beadles, Robinson, Harnden, Henderson, and Neill.

Especially noteworthy was the record of Bill Rawl-

ings, who won all his singles matches. And, too, the

team as a whole was outstanding, as Coach Ken-

field's teams always are, for in addition to being well

grounded in the fundamentals of the game each manplayed heads up.

SEASON' S RECORD

J.N.C.

GOLF1939 was the last year of a decade of golf at Carolina,

and it was fittingly successful. Led by Boyd, who played

the number one position throughout the season, and

Herring, who was captain of the team the Tar Heels

shellacked teams from Hampden-Sydney, Georgia,

Western Reserve, Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, and

Davidson; barely beat the University of Pennsylvania's

team, and lost to Duke's. In addition it performed cred-

itably in the State tournament and in the Southern

Conference tournament—placing third and second

respectively.

SEASONS RECORDWe They

April 1 Hampden Sydney 16 2

4 Georgia 14 4

3 Western Reserve 17 1

7 Boston College 141/, 3I/2

8 Georgia Tech 16 2

11 University of Pennsylvania . .14 13

13-15 Southern Intercollegiate .. .placed second

19 Duke 3l/> 191/)

21 Wake Forest nyi Vl27 Davidson 12 6

28 State Tournament placed third

May 13 Southern Conference

Tournament placed second

Fin I Ron-: Snow, Herring, Diffendal, Boyd.

Second Rote: R.^NEY, Kluttz, Severin, Hayes, Coach Erickson.

BOYD

CROSS COUNTRY Captained by Tom Crockett, the 1939 cross country

team won three dual meets, lost one, and ended the

season by monopolizing the Southern Conference

meet, taking eight of the fourteen first places.

After defeating Davidson by a perfect score, 15-55,

on October 21, the harriers, running in the face of

hard wind and over a rain-soaked course, lost to the

University of Maryland, 29-30, on October 28 in

College Park, Mar)'land, for their only defeat of the

season.

The week-end following November 4, five Carolina

mnners: Tom Crockett, Fred Hardy, Wimpy Lewis,

Dave Morrison, and Jim Vawter; tied for first place

against Duke, giving the Tar Heels a 15-50 win.

Running the finest race of his three year cross country

career, Tom Crockett paced Carolina to its second

victor)' over Navy in its five year cross country rivalry

on November 11. The score was 15-48, which was

the third shutout decision of the fall.

Fred Hardy established himself as the best cross

country man in the Southern conference on the morn-

ing of November 18 when he led a field of thirty-nine

to the finish in the annual conference affair. He ran

the five mile distance over the new Bradford-Lewis

CROCKHTT

FJru Roir: Vawter, Lewis. Crockett. Hardy. Morrison. Fink.

Wise

Second Row: Toy, Branch. Earle. Diamond. Allen, Eddy

Third Row: Jones, Gordon, Singletary

Fourth Row: SiEGLE, McDaniel, Ranson

course in 26:29-8. Placing its fi\c sLOicrs in the first

six finishers, Carolina ran up a low score of 19 points

to take the conference cross country title for the fourth

consecutive year. Scoring for the Tar Heels were

Hardy, Crockett, Vawter, Lewis and Morrison. Other

team scores were Maryland, 64; Duke, 68; Richmond,

109; and William and Mar)', l4l.

Wimpy Lewis, a two year letterman, was voted cap-

tain of the 1940 team at the close of the season.

262

SWIMMINGPint Row: Mgr. Sosnowitz. Drucker, Ross,

WooDHOusE. Capt. Mueller. McQuade.Thompson, Gudger. Asst. Mgr. Ruse

Second Rote- PETERS, COXHEAD. LaNGSAM, MlTCHEL,Schienman, Lee. Lees. Coach Jamerson

TilirJ Row: Meyer. Funke. Stone. Barclay.OsTROwsKY. Stone

s.TARTING the season with a strong group of

-.ophomores and the remains of a team that last

winter won two of six meets and finished next-to-last

in the conference, Carolina's varsity swimmers this

year have made one of the finest records of any Uni-

versity team while winning seven of eight meets andwinning the Southern conference championship with

a new scoring record of 60 points.

The Tar Heel line-up was at full strength in only

four meets, and only once did Carolina lose. Thatwas when the L'niversity of Florida mermen wontheir forty-second meet in a row since April 1934and set pool records in all but two events. TheGators coach said the Carolina meet was the toughest

his men had had in two years.

Freshman Swimming, 1940

.V. P. I.

.Duke. .

Opponents

12

26

UNC54, , .

40...

42...

40 Oak Ridge

42 Durham High* 8

42 Raleigh High* 34

47 Duke 19

.N. C. State 22

26

''Trian^ular meet.

The Blue Dolphms had a perfect score ot all wms and no losses m the conference. Theyopened against Va. Tech and came within three points of a shutout. The score was 65-10.

Carolina men won every first place, setting new school records in three.

The Blue Dolphins then journeyed into Virginia and defeated the University of Va. 45-30,

becoming the first Southern conference team in two years to turn the trick. (They got onepool record here.) William and Mary was beaten, 44-31, two days later as Sophomore JimBarclay won both the 220 and 440 in record breaking times. When the mermen finished

those two meets, they had lowered all University marks set last year in away-from-homepools.

The Dolphins smashed two University and five pool records while topping VMI, 48-27, andgave up only two first places.

State, having beaten Duke, was tough, but the Dolphins won with the meet depending onthe final event, the free style relay. The score was 44-31. Then Carolina returned to BowmanGray pool for the rest of the season.

There they met Fk>rida. George Meyer, another second-year man, won the only first place

for Carolina and set a new pool record in the 150-meter backstroke.

The next day the Dolphins beat Washington and Lee, 40-35, with the second-stringers swim-ming the closing events in order to make the score more even.

In the Duke meet the Dolphins turned on all their power and swamped the Devils, 51-24,

for their second highest score of the year. Fleming Stone set a new school record in the 50 and

equalled the 100 mark, and the free style relay team also got a school mark. Dickey, Moise,

and Emmett, who won their events in the conference meet, gained Duke's only first places.

George Meyer and Louis Scheinman continued to head the backstrokers.

The Dolphins climaxed the season with their greatest victory. L'nderdogs before the meet,

to Clemson, the defending champion, the Blue Dolphins became favorites almost overnight

when they qualified 16 men for the finals. They scored 60 points to 34 for Duke and 27 for

Clemson; this total was the first team score over 50 points in the history of the meet. Fleming

Stone won the 50 and 100-meter free style sprints and set school records in both, and

anchored the winning free style relay which added a pool record to its school mark. Hereceived a cup as the most valuable swimmer in the meet. Jim Barclay won the 200 for

Carolina's other first, and was third in the 400 behind Emmet and Billy Stone.

Fleming Stone and Jim Barclay were elected co-captains of the team for 1940, succeeding

Ed Mueller.

WRESTLING C.

BLACKMER, CAPTAIN

AROLINA'S wrestling team, this year, won four out

of seven matches and captured the Big Five Championshipand the State Championship.

The wrestler's opening match against VPI resuUed in a

25-13 victory for them, as they dropped but two bouts.

Pick HamUn (121), Charles Tillet (128), Wah Blackmer

(136), Gordon DeLoach (145), Clarence Idol (155), and

Roger Weil (165) won; while Winston Broadfoot (175)and Steve Forrest, regular 165 pounder, lost.

Navy was hot on January 20 when the Carolina wrestlers

lost a hard fought match by a 29-3 count. Walt Blackmer

saved the UNC boys from a shutout defeat by a decision

over Navy's 136-pound fighter. Tillet, Sasser, Hamlin,

DeLoach, and Broadfoot put up scrappy fights, but were

overpowered.

Against 'VMI Carolina's wrestling forces started off like a

house afire. Devant, breaking into the 121-pound class,

and Tillet won the first two bouts. Blackmer fought his

opponent to a draw; but from then on the cadets took full

control. They defeated Carolina liyi'lVl-

Nearly shutting out Davidson, 20-8, with clean-cut, accurate

wrestling Carolina lost only two bouts and they were in the

heavier weights. In the feature bout of the match, Mac-

Fayden decisioned Weil of Carolina. Except for this and

defeat in the unlimited bout, the Carolina wrestlers proved

superior to Davidson.

In the W. & L. match the wrestlers fought one of the finest

bouts of the season, but lost 18-12. Gene Davant's 121-

pound victory was the feature bout as Davant rallied after

injury to win by decision. Tillet, McNeil, and Torrey each

won in a convincing manner.

Pint Row: Johnson. Hamlin, Tillet, Urqhart. Blackmer.Devant, Broadfoot. DeLoach. Kemper

Second Ron-: Coach Quinlan. Torrey. Gregory, Hill. Forrest.

Weil. Mors. Cooper. Taylor

State's team was easily defeated, I6V2-7V2. esen though

State won the first bout, in the 121-pound class, and Mur-dock fought Tillet to a draw, for from then on the match

was all Carolina; except for State's win in the 175-pound

class.

Just preceding the final meet, Blackmer was elected captain

for the season; and then the team shellacked Duke for the

State and Big Five titles as Tillet, Weil, Forrest, and Greg-

ory won decisive victories. Duke forfeited in the 121- and

136-pound classes, Blackmer was decisioned in a close, hard

fight, and Don Torrey was decisioned by Bolo Perdue.

Thus the season closed with a pleasant victory over Duke,and since only Walt Blackmer graduates. Coach Quinlan is

looking forward with optimism toward next year's season.

FENCING

For the third successive season Carolina

best in the South.

Fencing Team is the

Varsity Record:

UNC Opponents

81/2 Winston-Salem YMCA 81/2

10 South Carolina 3

16 Virginia . 11

8 William & Mary 19

151/2 Loyola III/2

15 Johns Hopkins 12

14 Hofstra 13

13 Rutgers 14

71/2 Seton Hall 19V2

Eastern Intercollegiates, Easton, Pa.

North Carolina, third.

Individual Foil—Joe Boak, 2nd.

Epee—Henry SmernofF, 3rd.

Richard Freudenheim,Saber—Allan Bloom, 2nd.

3rd.

South Atlantic Tournament, Chapel Hill, N. C.

North Carolina first. (Team winners in foil and saber.)

Individual winners were: Foil—Allan Bloom and Joe Boak, firsts;

Dave Malone, 2nd. Epee—Henry Smernoff, 2nd. Saber—Bloomand Boak firsts ; Lome Payne, 2nd.

S/.niding: Mgrs. Stoff.Wise ; Sears. F a r r i s ,

Stich. Spicer, Vinokur.Fischer

Sealed : Finch, Freud-HEiM. Whvte, Co-Cap-tain Bloom and Boak.Malone, Payne, Tol-MACH, Williamson

Coach Staff: Stoff. Im-brez, McDuffey, Easter-ling, Wallace, Ebel

FRESHMAN RECORDUNC Opponents

5 Augusta Military Academy 43 Augusta Military Academy 64 Wardlaw Prep 5

^yeskman

First Row: NICHOLSON,Miller. Wolf, Petti-

grew. Whitten. Levine,

O'Hedy. Pesha. Pecora,Coach Tatum, CoachBarclay

Secoiid Rou-: Johnson,Cooper, Jones. Hey-mann, rothey, mi-

CHAELS, Frye. Snyder,Webb. Fisher. CoachJamerson

Third Rou : EvANS. CoOK.Briggs. Thomas. Graham.Saunders. Sigler. Heim-OVITCH. GeNSBERG

Fourth Rou: Linewine.Adams. Crowson. Rivikis.

Shanlser. Berkely.Barksdale. Vogt. Mar-shall

Fijth Rou-: Bennett.Bullock. Austin. Hod-ges. Traisen. White.Coach Morrios

UootLil, 1939Record

October 13

UNC19.

Opponent

V. P. 1 6

.Wake Forest 25

.N. C. State

.Virginia 14

Duke _0

45

Firsi Rou-: Perry. Miller.Paine. Antolini. Moore.Schnell. Marks. Black-stone, Mgr. Snyder

Second Row: CoACH SlE

wart. Honan. NelsonCurry. Byerly. SaunDERS. HuBER. KeNSFIELD,Suggs, McCachrenCoach Mollis

BaiLtlall, 1940UNC Opponents

35 High Point High 27

33 Wake Forest 48

42 Durham High 68

55 N. C. State 51

-is Wingate Junior College 25

41 Wake Forest 38

35 Chattanooga High 28

52 Davidson 29

45 Duke 32

44 Lees-McRae 33

41 N. C State 39

47 Campbell College 40

27 Duke 23

SPORTS

EasaUtl, 1939

Coach—Hammond Strayhorn

RECORDWe

March 2^ >X'ardlaw* 6

28 Wardlaw* 23

29 Wardlaw* 6

They

April 5 Burlington High School* 10

UN. C. State 2

14 Belmont High School* 5

19 Greensboro High School* 6

20 Durham High School* 17

26 Oak Ridge* 4

May 1 Wake Forest 6

4 Wake Forest* 5

•5 Duke* 9

6 Charlotte High School* 6

*Home Game

First Row: Snipes, Moore,Blond. Meyers. Frye.

Geisten

Second Row: Sherman,Carraway, Secher. Pope.Benton. Cox. Miller

Third Row: CoACH Stray-horn. Mgr. Cantor.Stallings. Thompson.Reynolds. Femister,Finn. Edwards. Farrell.McCombs

Fir it Row: Eddy. Hut-chinson. Brantley. El-

liot. Wise. Wells. Mc-IvER. Sherman. Coxhead.Branch. Geis

Second Rou-: Smathers.Stahler. Craft, Raynor.Whitney, Eddy. Vawter.Demari. Hopkins. Spar-row. McLeod. Ricks.Daughtery. Stepp

Third Row: Sims. Whar-ton. Suntheimer. Adams.Olive. Mergel. Harvey.Cole. Daniels, Diamond.Earle. Partridge, Weil,Leaming. Lewis

IJ^acl, 1939UNC65,.62. .

Opponents

Duke 61

. Duke 64

Carolina's A, A. U. Meet: Carolina Freshmen, 1st.

Duke Freshmen, 2nd.

J'i'eskman

Wredlin^, 1940UNC

25 .

151/2-

36 .

13 .

26 .

26 .

Opponents

v. P. 1 13

.V. M. 1 121/2

. Davidson

.W. & L 19

.N. C. State 10

.Duke 10

Firs! Row: Redfern, Hen-derson, Co-Captain Mc-Keever. C o - C a p t a I nClement, Gleisher, Ja-

cobs, Yates

Second Row: WiLKERSON,KuLP. MoRDiCAi, Staples,

Gravely. Taylor, Coop-er. Coach Quinlan

f/n/ Ron: Coach Ron-man. Britt. Levine. Har-ris, Pittman, Krause,Mgr. Richter

Second Row: Mgr. Silver-

man. Edwards. Brooks,Requa, Bagby, Pethick,

Mgr. Cohn

i^oxinf, 1940UNC

3 ..

3 . .

41/2 . .

5 . .

.N. C State

.Virginia . .

.V. P. I. .. .

Opponent>

.5

.5

.Duke 3

MDNDGRAM CLUBT. Ill have w(in varsity letters

and t'l \v(irk toward better

ut (if school ; Dave

DAVE MORRISONPresident

HE Monogram Club is composed of all students v

in an intercollegiate sport at Carolina.

Its purpose is to provide closer ties between the athletes

spirit and more outstanding teams for the future.

Early in the fall quarter illness forced President Zink to drop

Morrison acted as president for the rest of the year.

In the fall the Monogram Club sponsored the grid-graph report of the U. N. C.

Tulane game and was host to graduate monogram men at the homecoming game.The club has devoted most of its time this year to plans for the furnishing of the

Monogram room in Wollen Gymnasium. Lack of funds has caused delay in com-pletion of this project.

The Annual High School Monogram Club Conference was sponsored by the letter-

men in March. The aim of this meeting is to acquaint North Carolina boys with

Carolina and especially with its athletic system, so that they may carry current

ideas back to their respective schools.

One bit of progress which has been instituted is the substitution of one large

annual awards meeting in the spring for the previous quarterly awards programs.

A banquet for the lettermen is being held on this occasion.

Officers: President—George Zink; Mie-Prendtnt—Dave yionison; Secretary—Royce Jennings ; Treasurer—Jimmy Howard; Repretent-

Mire on the Athletic Council—Fred Hardy.

Members: O. H. Allen, L. F. Abernathy, D. C. Baker, J. A. Barclay, T. N. Brafford, A. A. Bershak, R. H. Bridges, Walter Blackmer,

Mike Bobbit, D. H. Bowman, D. H. Boyd, Henry Branch, Julian Brantley, W. G. Broadfoot, R. E. Clark, R. L. Connor, B. M. Cooper,

Bill Corpening, W. R. Cowper, G. L. Coxhead, Tom Crockett, F. M. Cuneo, Gene Davant, Jim Davis, C. W. Dawson, M. D. Drucker,

D. D. Desich, E. R. Dickerson, Charles Diffendale, E. B. Dilworth, Harry Dunkle, J. D. Elliott, Bill Fairchith, R. A. Farris, C. E. Fink,

S. T. Forrest, Andy Gennett, Robert Gersten, J. G. Gifford, Dan Gilliam, George Glamack, W. J. Gordon, S. T. Gregory, W. L. Groves,

J. L. Gudger, F. T. Hardy, Neal Herring, R, E. Hermson, J. T. Hilton, W. W. Hines, E. N. Hoffman, F. M. Holmes, Tom Holmes,Jimmy Howard, E. A. Hubbard, Hal Jennings, Royce Jennings, J. C. Johnston, J. M. Joyner, Gates Kimball, J. T. Kirpatrick, ChuckKline, Clarence Kluttz, Jim Lalanne, B. M. Lee, Whitlock Lees, W. H. Lewis, Jim Mallory, Harry March, Al Mathes, George Meyer,

Court Mitchell, T. A. McQuade, Dave Morrison, E. R. Mueller, C. E. Mullis, J. M. Nash, A. G. Nowell, G. B. Patrick, E. V. Patterson,

Henry Pessar, W. J. Peters, George Radman, W. A. Raney, George Ralston, W. 'H. Rawlings, C. A. Rich, Powell Richards, W. R. Richard-

son, C. F. Rider, Foy Roberson, F. M. Rogers, O. B. Ross, R. T. Rose, K. C. Royall, Jr., J. B. Russell, S. H. Sadoff, D. E. Sanders,

Claude Sapp, Paul Severin, L. J. Scheinmann, R. C. Sieck, C. A. Slagle, Leo Slotntck, Bob Smith, R. E. Snow, George Stirnweiss, Billy

Stone, F. Stone, Charles Sunstein, Carl Suntheime;-, Charles Tillet, Matty Topkins, Don Torry, W. M. Thompson, L. W. Turner, B. Urqu-hart, I. E. Vawtcr, N. M. Walker, W. C. Wagner, G. W. Watson, Jim Woodson, R. Weil, R. C. Worley. R. A. White, V. S. Winborne,Wallace Winbourne, E. G. Winstead, W. A. Winstead, A. L. Wise, Noel Woodhouse.

A.&

_ (

INTRAMURAL RECORDS

MANGUMDORMITORY

TAG FOOTBALLCHAMPIONS

S.A.E.

TAGFOOTBALL

CHAMPIONS

SPRING 1939

Dor»i

Tennis Medical School . .

Playground Ball B. V. P

Track MangumHandball Everett

Fraternily

. St. Anthony Hal

. Zeta Psi

. Zeta Psi

Phi Delta Theta

FALL 1939

Tag Football Mangum

.

Swimming Lewis . . .

Wrestling 'K"

Handball Lewis . . .

.SAE

SAE.Zeta Psi

LEWIS DORMITORYBASKETBALLCHAMPIONS

KAPPA SIGMABASKETBALLCHAMPIONS

Basketball . . .

Volley Ball. .

Table Tennis.

Foul Shooting

WINTER 1940

Lewis Kappa Sig

Lewis Chi Psi

Mangum Sigma Chi

•K" SAE

TERRELL EVERETT

7;HE Women's Athletic Association during the

year 1939-1940 was very progressive in that for the

first time in the history of the organization, a con-

stitution was made up and adopted. The constitution

sets forth the purpose of the organization, how the

organization functions and the requirements for par-

ticipation and receipt of awards, which are made

every two quarters.

WOMEN'S ATHLETIC

ASSOCIATION

In the fail, a representative, select group of girls at-

tended a Play Day at the Woman's College in

Greensboro. Members of this group won positions

in badminton, archery, shuffleboard, tennis, and swim-

ming.

Basketball was the main feature during the winter

quarter, with a series of games between the dormi-

tories, the sororities, and the town girls. The tourna-

ment was won by the graduate girls, and they

received the placque offered to the winners. The

outstanding girls from each group were awarded let-

ters and made up the university co-ed team.

During the spring quarter the W.A.A. sponsored

Sadie Hawkins day, having a Play Day in Woolen

Gymnasium, and concluding the day with a dance.

Letters and awards were made in the spring quarter

to all girls who were outstanding in activities during

the previous quarters. A tournament series similar to

that held in basketball during the winter quarter was

held in badminton, golf, archery, and tennis.

Firii Row: Mrs. Beard, Moore. Everett, Lewis. Holmes.

Second Rote: McGibony, Williams, Gates, Knight, Johnston. Messenger.

Dalton and Johnston. . .li's

a rackett

ConceiHratioii . . .Tense moments

En Garde

^ ^

THE FUN WE HAD

^ ^

%^.

ALPHA DELTA PIijeta LApsiion L^kapL

^daUlikei 1939

Date Fraternity Founded: May 15, 1851;

Publication: Star And Crefceni:Flower: Lily-of-the-Valley ; Colors: Em-erald Green and White.

s.ARAH FRANCES . . . photogenic . . . coo . . . Betas

. . . "Copy"; Britt . . . miniatures . . . Mary RiceTexas . . . the theatah . . . bridge; Margaret . . . whiterats . . . chocolate sundaes . . . psychology; Marytidbit . . . diet . . . punchy; Marie . . . sailing . . . Maine. . . artistic; Diana . . . skiboots . . . Vassar . . . thor-

oughbred; Betty . . . dream girl . . . scholastic ... en-

thusiasm; Sarah . . . heavy operator . . . "It" . . . nifty;

Alice . . . V. P. I. . . . golf . . . poise; Martha . . .

Florida . . . football . . . model; Frances ... my Bill

. . . Raleigh . . . optimist; Helen . . . dimples . . . charm

. . . fashion; Hallie . . . initiative . . . dependable . . .

aesthetic; Dot . . . limelight . . . Tar Heel . . . phone;Sis . . . Camay . . . wholesome . . . Auburn; "G" . . .

Mademoiselle . . . genuine . . . conservative; Frannie

. . . McCelland Barclay . . . bracelets . . . smooth; L. Mae

. . . nail polish . . . featherbrain . . . sleep; Blanche . . .

Emily Post . . . amicable . . . refined; Bettie . . . Alabama. . . Bill . . . straightforward; Georgia . . . Citadel . . .

natural . . . lovely; Virginia . . . law school . . . coaching

. . . sincere . . . worth . . . contralto . . . "Oh Hell" . . .

dynamo; Kitty . . . vivacious . . . Village Inn . . . social

work; Breazie . . . Beta Kappa . . . S. C. . . . dependable;

Bobby . . . dark . . . lipstick . . . unusual . . . streamline;

Caroline . . . confident . . . delectable . . . Wellesley.

Bason Bothwell Breazeale

Brogan Brown Buckelew

Burroughs Chandler Clampitt

Graduate School: Liidie Bothwell, Mary Rice Brogen, Elizabeth Carr. Helen Greever

Copenhaver, Sarah Frances Crosby, Espie Fuller, Sarah Bellamy Hall, Margaret Hen-

derson, Mary Leona Ruffin.

Juniors: Mary Burnham Bason, Marie McClelland.

Pledges: Barbara Burroughs, Mary Louise Breazeale, Betty Brown, Frances Selma

Bucklew, Hallie Chandler, Martha Bryan Clampitt, Mary Alan Clinard, Blanche

Martha Cook, Caroline Landon Dalton, Frances Dyckman, Diana Harrison Foote,

Evelyn Virginia Mary, Elizabeth Gentry Moore, Helen Virginia Plyler, Georgiana Pent-

large, Georgia Stithe Poole, Julia Antoinette Porter, Dorothy Pratt, Sarah Frances

Ruark, Adelaide Hayden Sanford, Laura Male Shaver, Alice Bond Wells, Katherine

Pretlow Williams, Virginia Etheridge Worth.

Clinard CookHall Henderson

Pratt Plyler

Copenhaver Crosby

McClelland Mary

Ruark Sanford

Dalton Dyckman

Moore Pentlarge

Shaver Wells

Foote Fuller

Poole Porter

Williams Worth

277

ALPHA TAU DMEGA.^ydlp/ia ^Jelta L.tiapter

^itaLLU 1879

,*-<-

Date Fraternity founded; September 11,

1865 ; Publication: Palm; Flower; White

Tea Rose; Colors: Sky Blue and Old

Gold-.

<%^IFE at the ATO house begins at 8:30 A. M. and

continues noisily for twenty-four hours with great hall

"bull-sessions" ruling as the favorite pastime ... re-

minding us that Brother Jones can shoot more bull in

one minute than any other brother can in ten. Scenes

reminiscent of the 1939-40 season depict BMOCDavis

"Buccaneering" . . . "Deacon" Patrick warbling bless-

ings over food which Chick declares unfit for even a

pledge . . . Year Book Editor Lynch pleading with the

Dean about Soph picture fees . . . Brother Yount, house

dictator, chasing kitchen raiders . . . the Diffendals tee-

ing off . . . Moze waking up just in time to miss his

twelve o'clock class . . . Stinfonian Carpenter sponsor-

ing Fritz Kreisler . . . Davenport and Ashby as smooth

as ever . . . German scholar Wright being easily per-

suaded by Pledge Lord to go to Harry's . . . McClinic

smashing swimming records . . . Burgyn and Lewis

Raleigh-bound . . . Jitter-bugs Crews and Cam truckin'

... all combining to make an excellent college year.

Allen Anthony Ashby

Bridgers Britt Burgwyn

Carpenter Crews Davenport

Faculty: Oliver Kelly Cornwell, Gwynne Harris Daggett, Charles Perry Erickson,

James Gilbert Evans, Keener Chapman Frazer, Fletcher Melvin Green, Howard Rus-

sell Huse, Dougald MacMillan, Gerald Raleigh McCarthy, Atwell Campbell Mcintosh,

Danield Allen McPherson, Floyd Theodore Siewart, Thomas James Wilson, Jr., Rex

Shelton Winslow.

Law School: James Hinton Pou Bailey.

Medical School: Alvis Barnes Dickson.

Seniors: John Gay Britt, Willis Thomas Carpenter, James Evans Davis, Charles Ed-

ward Diftendal, Jr., John Franklin Lynch, Jr., Powell Murchison, Thomas Broadway

Royster, Ralph Chalmers Tolar, Thomas Marshall West, Ernest Harshaw Yount, Jr.

Juniors: Robert Strange Bridgers, William Trammel Davenport, John Charles Grier,

Philip Wiley Haigh, William Erwin Jones, Thadeus Tuttle Moser, Ralph Clinton Pat-

rick, Clarence Leroy Shuping, George William Shipp, Jr., George Lee Simpson, Jr.,

Hamilton Polk LInderwood, Vincent Brown Wright.

Sophomores: Thomas Walton Alien, Marvin Pope Anthony, Percy Rudolph Ashby,

Henry King Burgwyn, James Washington Crews, John Walker Diffendal, Cameron

Murchison, Robert Milton Olive, Armistead Burwell Smith, Jr., John Franklin Thomp-

son.

Pledges: Harry Miller Bryant, Jeremiah Devel Griesemer, George Pickard Hogan,

Phillip Alston Lewis, Forrest Battle Long, Ernest Grier Lord, William Newton Mc-

Clintic, Jr., Robert Lee Saunders, William Downing Watkins, Henry Williams.

Davis

BETA THETA PI

(L-itaDlisnea 1832

Date Fraternity Founded: August 8,

1839; Publication: Beta Theta Pi;

Flower: Rose; Colors: Light Shades of

Pink and Blue.

®.• ETA drags on in true dragon fashion with "Little

Ole Lady" Mom Owsley—grinning "Worm Felts"

Percy the Passion Flower Stockton—Cash and Carry

Butler—A. C. Hall, corrupted casanova—Committee-

man Garland—Penn, self-help student—Ham-noseSpeight—Battling Bledsoe—Ears Foran—Esquire Hines

—Charlie McCarthy Winkler—The beautivul Rossnick

—Grady, "the Red" Stevens—Dopey Swain—Old ManCole—"Lovin' Lois" Ballard—Wilmer Webb—"Dick"

Disney—Lt. Lulu Wilson—

"Doc" Humphries—Bing-

ham Reeves—Hugh "Mahatma" Hole—Small Florida

Brooks—

"Jabo" Webster—Dangerous Don Sager—Pea

Head Lambeth—Deb-chaser Horton—

"Boo" Little

"Pebble" Grant—Brain Trust Woodroof—Petty See-

man—

"Pig" Hahlon Long—Procrastinating Cowhig

"Rabbi" Person—Pew on Pou—Roberts the roule—Sir

Malcolm Schenk—Catfish Dalton—Dead-end Woodall

—Mr. P. J.White—Personality Kid MiUis (Chops)—

Reverend CoUett—Cutie Bowles—Main Line Harvey

Dog House Bayne—Happy Dave Reid—Big Chris

Atomizer Siewers—Onebush Singletary—Docs Sambo

and Curtis and Speedy . . . Any mention of persons

living or dead is purely coincidental and not subject to

suit.

Bowles Bledsoe Butler

Cole Collett Cowhig

Daltiin Felts Garland

Faculty: Kent James Brown, William Lange, Edwin Shephard Miller, Robert

Sharpe.

Law School: James Wiggin Coan, John Griffith Johnson.

Graduate School: John Bourke McDevitt.

Seniors: William Medearis Butler, Walter Francis Cole, Roger Alpine Grant, Alonzo

Cleveland Hall, Jr., William Walker Hines, Frank Reid Penn, James McCausland

Ross, Albert Cecil Woodroof.

Juniors: Thomas Ruffin Bledsoe, Hargrove Bowles, Jr., James Rountree CoUett,

James Boyce Garland, Charles Oliver Humphries, Walter Moore Lambeth, Jr., Wil-

liam Hartv,'ell Little, Henry Albin Millis, Jr., Christian Fogle Siewers, William Vance

Singletary, Norman Vaughn Stockton, Jr., Harry Winkler, Jr.

Sophomores: David Clarke Ballard, Wesley Vansant Disney, Walter Edge Foran,

Hugh Stanley Hole, Mahlon Harris Long, Jr., William Henry Seeman, Randolph

Louis Speight, William Grady Stevens, Donald Frank Wilson.

Pledges: Hugh Gayle Bayne, Richard Lawrence Cowhig, Frank Dalton, William

Lacy Felts, Fredrick Bell Harvey, Malcus Sylvester Horton, Robert Harry Norris, Rich-

ard Becton Person, Edwin Smith Pou, Landon Haynes Roberts, Donald Lee Sager,

Paul Wilfong Schenck, Robert Stringfield Swain, Joseph Bartlett Webster, Richard

Alan White, Thorton Sanders Woodall.

Grant Hall Hines Hole Hubbard Humphries Lambeth Millis Person

Pou Reeves Roberts Ross Scherer Seeman Siewers Singletary Speight

Stevens Stockton Webb White Wilson Winkler Woodall Woodroof

^^ yd

CHI DMEGAC^piiion iSeta (chapter

C^itabtiiked 1923

Date Fraternity founded: April 5, 1895;

Publication: Elevsis; Flower: White

Carnation; Colors: Cardinal and Straw.

ThHAT first day back at school with its happy renewal

of friendships, exchanges of confidences, avid interest

in the new girls who from all available sources are

reported to be cuter than ever before and feeling in-

clined to agree after careful inspection, and just plain

pure joy at being back in Chapel Hill . . . First big prob-

lem, how to fit last year's thirty-hve pledges into a four-

teen girl house . . . Second big problem, the inevitable

rush week with its hectic sessions but happy outcome.

Rush parties with Mary Wood's clever version of the

Wizard of Oz, Lois Barnes and Mickey "Warren as

prissy school marms, and Terry Everett's incessant

candid camera shots . . . Happiest recollections, the Chi

O pledge dance at the 'W^ashington-Duke, the smoothy

football breakfast at the Carolina Inn given by the

pledges for the actives, and the slumber-house party

where we did everything but slumber . . . Glumest recol-

lections, as always—exams, and worse yet—compre-

hensives, and Chapel Hill's rainy season resulting in

uncurled locks and wet feet . . . Orchids: to Jo Martin

for a swell job of leadership, to Mrs. Klutz for careful

concern for her girls, especially those Sunday morning

breakfasts, to Mickey Warren for being the first coed

to hold a class office, and finally to our pledges, whose

grand cooperation make this year a happy and success-

ful one.

Ames Barnes Blair

Bowman Brown Burrus

Easley Everett Fountain

Graduate School: Mary Farley Ames, Mary Deborah McColl.

SuNiORs: Lois Barnes, Elizabeth Shearer Blair, Mary Erdene Bowman, Eloise Mc-

Gowin Brown, Blanche Evelyn Burrus, Sylvia Burt Cullum, Lucy Gary Easley,

Terrell Oliver Everett, Susan Rankin Fountain, Jeanne Charlotte Herrmann, Altajane

Holden, Peggy Holmes, Margaret Louise Hudson, Sarah Hurdis, Marian Igo, Mary

Carlton Jackson, Helen Ann Jacobs, Martha Laetitia Kelly, Margaret Jane Leonard,

Josephine Martin, Jean Gordon Mclndoe, Elizabeth Fentress Orton, Mabel Eloise Par-

ish, Mary Emma Robbins, Ruth Curtis Robeson, Marian Dorothea Sedwick, Mary Jane

Taylor, Nancy Scull Taylor, Margaret Christine Thompson, Elizabeth Murray Warren,

Elizabeth Milton Weaver, Mary Dorothy Wood, Eleanor Frances Worthington.

Pledges: Pattye Rachel Bryant, Marjorie Lovelace Burrus, Ladye Barnard Carpenter,

Virginia Dare Gates, Mary Tilson Edwards, Mary Anne Hawkins, Mary Frances Heath,

Rosalyn Pearl Holmes, Marjorie Elizabeth Johnston, Jean Morse Littell, Emogene Mc-

Gibony, Mariana Farrell Milner, Ernestine Irene Noe, Sarah Jane Putman, Florence

Jane Rumsey, Louise Dudley Smith, Ella Keen Steel, Louise Stiefelmeyer, Janet Mary

Watson, Ann Elizabeth Williams, Isabella Bea Wolf, Zoe Ellen Young.

Hawkins Herrmann Holden Holmes Hudson Hurdis

Kelly Leonard Loaring—Clark Martin Mclndoe Orton

Sedwick Stiefelmeyer Taylor, M. J. Taylor, N. Thompson Warren

Igo

CHI PHI^^tpka ^^Ipka L^kapter

L^itaoUiked 1858

Date Fraternity Founded; December 24,

1824; Publication: Chjcketl; Colors:

Scarlet and Blue.

Alexander Brown

Cooper Cross

Burnette

Donovan

^u'LPHA ALPHA CHAPTER of Chi Phi is the

modern successor of the old Alpha Chapter which was

one of the first fraternities on the Carolina campus.

Since 1924 the chapter has been located at its present

home.

A few of the more widely seen Chi Phi's on the campus

include chapter president, Bob Sloan, who mixes soci-

ology and campus politics; Tex Cooper, a Connecticut

Yankee who doesn't object to feminine southern hospi-

tality; Bart Cross, whose only drawback to the title of

Chi Phi's gift to the women is a slight case of falling

hair; Bud Wills, who believes that the two main parts

of an education are co-eds and week-end parties; Bro

Hargrove and Bob Alexander, who can be seen jitter-

bugging at any campus dance; and P. Rufus Brown,

who has never been known to catch an 8:30 class or

miss a 1:30.

Graduaie School: Willis Anderson Sutton, Jr.

Law SrHOOi.: Philip Edward Lucas.

Skniors: Robert Alexander, Arthur Barton Cross, Vincent Montsinger, Alfred Win-

ton Perry, Robert Stanley Sloan, John Marion Taylor, Jr.

Juniors: Pinckney Rufus Brown, Archie Raymond Burnette, Jr., John Raymond

Cooper, Walter Clark Hargrove, James Edward Perry, Jr., Alfred Edward Phelps,

Brewster Rogerson, John Wilson Smith, William James Walker, Allen Wills.

Sophomores: Richard Henry Farley, George Grotz, IH, John Moultrie Oliver, Wert

Baxter Rhyne, James Sheek, Stephen White Siddle, Jr., Rogers Terrell Smith, William

Jennings Swink.

Pledges: Charles Joseph Donovan, Leon Hartson Height, Jr., Roger Wilkinson King,

John Donald Scouller.

Farley Grotz Hargrove King Lucas Perry Perry Rhyne Rogerson

Scouller Sheek Siddle s|,,an smith I W Smith, R. T. Sutton Swink Taylor Walker

1M tf2

CHI PSI^iama (chapter

(LitabUsked 1855

Date Fraternity Founded: May 20, 1841;

Publication: Purple and Gold; Colors:

Purple and Gold.

J. HE lodge is located on the highest spot in ChapelHill, a former plantation site, and is in the center of a

three-acre lot noted for its large boxwood and ancient

oaks.

Identified as the last stop before Carrboro on the juice

boy's route, Chipsies find that living away from the

campus and fraternity groups is conclusive to closer

companionship among its two score members. The boys,

natives of ten states from Texas to Maine, are able to

correlate successfully a membership made up of equalparts of in-state and out-of-state students.

President Phil Walker, letterman hurdler and Phi Bete,

was joined on the track team this year by Tool Eddyand Jack Stabler. The basketball squad counted BenDilworth, Bill Watson, Bill Neely, and Chuck Harnden(also on the tennis team), among its mates. Easy to

find politicking on Franklin Street were junior class

vice-president Chunk Jenkins, Davis and Damon of the

freshmen, and in Graham Memorial Jim McAden of

the publications and CPU. Letterman Gwynn Nowelland Jun Gugert work the year round for Coach Ray-mond B. Wolf. When not washing windows or raking

oak leaves the pledges could be found on the frosh

tennis, cross country, track, basketball and boxing teams.

Ackerman

K

Faculty: Robert Erwin Coker, William Chambers Coker, Arthur Russell HoUett,

William Gardner Mor^qan, Walter Spearman, Geort^e (]ofiin Taylor.

Law School: Samuel Richardson Leager, John Albert McRae, Jr.

Seniors: Donald Godfrey Ackerman, Hal Byerly Armentrout, Humphrey Butler

Brown, Ben Bentley Dilworth, James Wardlaw Perrin, Jr., Philip Alfred Walker.

Juniors: Brooks Francis Burtt, William Clayton Farris, William Gould, Charles

Elmer Harnden, Jr., George Pressley Jenkins, Archie Lindsay, Archie Nock Mcintosh,

Donald Holmes Neill, Frederick Page Seymour, George William Watson.

Sophomores: John Allen Eddy, Marc Edward Ferrand, Francis Albert Gugert, Don-

ald Howe Morse, William Collins Neely, Alton Gwynne Nowell, John Edward Ferry,

Frederick Kenneth Schmidt, James Steck Sherwood.

Fledges: Thomas Elliott Andrews, Harrison Porter Baker, Cale Kight Burgess, John

Franklin Davis, Wilton Evans Damon, Robert Miles Heitzeberg, Robert Warren Judd,

Edward Hollis Keator, John Fawcett Kenfield, Jr., George Wright Meyer, Taylor

O'Bryan, George Henry Paine, Richard Bliss Pethick, John Rainear Stabler.

Everett

DELTA KAPPA EPSILON

vSeta L^kapter

(L-staoUsnea 1831

Date Fraternity Founded: June 22, 1844;

Publication: Delta Kappa E p s i I o n

Quarterly; Flower: Pansy; Colors: Crim-

son, Blue, and Gold.

"AJeLTA kappa EPSILON was founded in 1864 at

Yale University. One policy of the national chapter

established at this time was that of selecting institutions

for new chapters before selecting men to whom a charter

should be intrusted. And so Beta of Delta Kappa Ep-

silon was founded at the Universit)' of North Carolina

in April, 1851, founded in the atmosphere of an excel-

lent University and intrusted to outstanding students.

At once Beta's activity on the campus toward the ful-

fillment of Delta Kappa's goal was apparent. That there

might be that proper balance which forms a well-

rounded, cultured gentleman, members of the chapter

combined good fellowship, genuine scholarship, and

campus attainment; but were temporarily interrupted

by the Civil War. (Of 103 living members 77 certainly,

and probably 87, served in the Confederate ranks.) In

1866, after the turbulent time of carpet bag days, Beta

was reestablished and began moving again toward its

goal. The progress of this movement and the distinction

of its success, which proclaim Beta's preeminence, are

characterized and traced in the lives of prominent mem-

bers who have been outstanding in life as Carolina men

and as Dekes.

Alexander Bobbitt Brawley

Carlton, G. Carlton, P. Carroll

Davis, J. W. Davis, R. L. Ghegan

Faculty: Dr. William Morton Dc-y, Frank Dulfcy, Rogers Dey Whicliard.

Graduates: William Capchart Harney, James Leake Woodson.

Law School: Donncll CWlliam, Jr., Joseph Bunn Ramsey, Jr., Claiborne Royall, Jr.

Seniors: Drury Willis Ghegan, Thomas Dupree Higgins, Peter Sterling Hitchcock,

Kenneth Claiborne Royall, Jr., Lawson Withers Turner, Jr.

Juniors: Sydenham Benoni Alexander, J.imes Shober Brawley, Philip Rahm Carlton,

Jr., Benjamin Robert Carroll, William Wilis Green, Jr., William Ludier Hand, Jr.,

Clyde Gates Kimball, Raymond Otho Linker, Edwin Napoleon Maner, Jr., James Per-

rin Quarles, Jr., Wescott Henry Wright, Jr.

Sophomores: Blackwell Markham Brogden, Robert Lang Davis, Truman McGill

Hobbs, Cyrus Dunlap Hogue, Jr., Richard Leon Kendrick, Calvin Blackwell Morrisette,

Jr., William Pettrway Jones Peete.

Pledges: Robert Lee Bobitt, Graham Maxwell Carlton, Thomas Henry Crudup.

Junius Weeks Davis, Jr., Lemuel Hardy Gibbons, Charles Cooper Harris, Jr., Edward

Henry Hobbs, Samuel Huntington Hobbs, III, Elmer Percy Hollingshead, Simmons

Baker Jones, Brockton Reynolds Lyon, Hugh MacRae Morton, Donald Planner Patter-

son, Eugene Milner Requa, Jr., Camillus Holiday Rodman, John Baker Saunders, Her-

bert Barrow Turner, Harvey O'Neal White, William Caldwell Young.

Gibbons

DELTA PSI

(Litabliiked 1854

Date Fraternity Founded: January 17,

1847; Color: Light Blue.

(JlJe members of St. Anthony Hall are a cosmo-

politan group. Uncle Tony gathers his sons from the

bayous of Louisiana through the cotton fields of Geor-

gia, north to the fir trees of New England, west to the

lakes of Wisconsin, across the Pacific to China, and over

the Atlantic to the heather of England.

To identify a St. Anthony man on the campus is not

difficult. Invariably his hair is crew-cut and just as in-

variably he is wearing a tweed coat, grey flannels that

have seen better days, a knitted tie, and the oldest saddle

shoes he can find.

Athletics and studies have a definite place in our life,

but it is rare that one of us dies in competition or is

found buried under a stack of books in the library.

Although week-ends often take us away from the Hill,

Carolina has and always will have the support and love

of St. Anthony men.

Amoss

Faculty: Herman Walker Schncll, Harry Kitsun Russell.

Seniors: James Palmer Balding, Jr., Randolph McLeod Dick, Hugh Hill Foss,

Henry Laurens, Jr., John Laurens, II, Edward Townsend Moore, David Reid Murchi-

son, Jr., James Mallory Nash, Walter Francis Off, Jr., Emile de Pianque, John William

Ryan, Henry Haines Stockton, Grayson Spencer Waldrop, Edwin Godley Winstead.

Juniors: Harold Lindsay Amoss, Jr., Butler Parnell Crittenden, Jr., Henry McCor-

mick Gross, Jr., Hamilton Jones, Edwin Pliny Seaver, III, Donald Fuller Torrey, Jr.,

Nicholas Misplee Walker, Hubert Brooks Wheeler.

Sophomores: Douglas Petit Bournique, Henry Branch, II, John McRae Bridger,

Thomas Edens Russell, Holstein Harvey, III, Micheal Ernest Jenkins, Arthur Melville

Jordan, Jr., Armando Mayorga, Fernando Mayorga, Robert Dutilh Torrey, Joseph

Bond Philips.

Pledges: Henry Gibson Barnard, Jr., Frank Lanier Branson, Jr., Henry Poor Chandler,

Jr., Franklin Davenport Laurens, Jesse Nalle, III, George Lee Peabody, John Hartman

Staples.

Crittenden de Pianque Dick

Jordan Laurens, F. Laurens, H.

Peabody Ryan Staples

Edens

KAPPA ALPHAbipiilon (chapter

C^stabliikea 1881

Date Fraternity Founded: December 21,

1865; Publication: The Kjppj Alflni

Journal: Flowers: Magnolia and Red

Rose; Colors: Crimson and Old Cold.

nAllen Booghcr Bounds

Calhoun Chesire Church

Dickson Dixon Foote

AKING a swift glance backwards, Kappa Alpha

remembers that during the past year . . . the fraternit)'

hit the jackpot with twenty-three pledges and celebrated

with a gay old banquet at the Inn . . . our Bob Page was

designated as a candidate for appointment to West

Point . . . the sparkle-eyed brunette movie star, Linda

Darnell, was elected by all the brothers at the conven-

tion as the official Kappa Alpha sweetheart . . . The

boys had a tuxedo banquet in honor of the Fall Ger-

mans and femininity . . . the brothers played a football

game with the Duke Kappa Alpha chapter and beat

them . . . Tom Hayes sprained both ankles in a hand-

ball game when he stooped to tie his shoelace . . . the

fraternity bet a pennant with K. A. boys of Tulane on

the Carolma-Tulane football game and came out even

... the fraternity bet a pennant with the K. A. boys of

Duke on the Carolina-Duke football game and came

out in the hole. Reasons apparent.

Faculty: jDsepli Gregoirc dc R. Hainiltun, Edgar Wallace Knight.

Law S( hool: George Samuel Heatty, Jr., Robert Jones Lovill, Jr., Hal Hammer

Walker.

MiiDicAL S( hool: Thomas Hall Holmes, Jr.

Slniors: Henry Lyles Allen, Godfrey Cheshire, Jr., John Edward Goode, William

Linville Holt, Rudolph Ashworth Howell, Thomas Williams Mason Long, Jr., John

Willard Magoffin, William Henry Shull, Frank Lucius Turner, Carl Young.

Juniors: Howard Vincent Bounds, Jr., Johb Trammel Church, Thomas Clifton

Hayes, Jr., William Newton Middleton, William Kendall Minnick, Robert Query Ran-

son, David Walter Seifert, Jr., John Edward Tyler, James David Van Kirk.

Sophomores: Arthur Wilson Dixon, George Anderson Foote, Samuel Thorne Greg-

ory, John Hawkins Gribbin, Corrie Vernon Holt, Jr., Ernest Hodges Leggett, David

Burton Ricks, Joseph Emmett Sebrell, William Wright Williams, Jr.

Pledges: HoUey Mack Bell, Richard Samuel Bell, Richard Whaley Bradham, Charles

William Bradshaw, Wallace Andrew Brown, Elbert Willis Griffin Eoogher, Jr., Wil-

liam Cozart Calhoun, Brice Templeton Dickson, Roy Sam Gibson, Quentin Gregory,

Jr., Arthur Winston Jacocks, George Browne Johnston, Thomas Green Lynch, Risden

Allen Lyon, Charles Elbert Massey, Edward Graham McGoogan, John Hinton Page,

Robert Newton Page, Junius Page Shamburger, Walter Lincoln Sheffield, Jr., Hamp-

ton Shuping, Charles Frost Speissegger, Bonner Havens Thomason, Jr., Burges Urqu-

hart, Jr.

Gregory

KAPPA SIGMA.^J4lpka lu y^naptef

(CdJLU 1893

'^? p J

*Hi~

-,jW»h'

Date Fraternity Founded: December 10,

18 69; Publication: The Caduceus

;

Flower: Lily-of-the-Valley ; Colors: Scar-

let, White, and Emerald Green.

©i'EAR DAD:—Here's a brief account of the activities of us Kappa

Sigs . . . Twenty pledges . . . Mitchell, Flourney, Beas-

ley Smith, Downey and Dalton are having a gay time

in the penthouse (third floor) . . . Henry May in Fall

Germans figure . . . Jim Lalanne performed wonders

on the gridiron, as did Bill Faircloth . . . Les Branson

and Bob Rose were our contributions to Carolina's

White Phantoms . . . Buzz Mitchell and Noel Wood-

house swam on the varsity . . . Intramurals have been

a great success, everybody participating . . . Pinch-Penny

Sumner, University Party prexy, put the house in tip-

top financial shape . . . German Club vice-president

Julian Coghill's truck and the station wagon were great

boons to Kayzee travelers . . . Besides circulating quite

well, Larry Ferling is assistant secretary-treasurer May

Frolics, at which our party was a huge success . . . TomHeath, Frank Holton, our president, and Coghill are

members of the dance committee . . . Maestro Charlie

Wood and Bill Alexander were class officers . . . Bert

Bennett played end for the freshmen . . . Bob Thomas

was Daily Tar Heel deskman and Jack Holland was an

assistant manager ... All in all, there was big operating

going on . . .

Love,

Son

Alexander

Fac'ULT'i': John Cjrover Beard, Samuel Thomas limory, Robert Allison Fetzer, Har-

old Benedict Gotaas, M. L. Jacobs, Sturgis Elleno Leavitt, John Morris, Marcus (iicero

S. Noble, George Shepard, Edward James Woodhouse.

Law School: William Anderson Allen, Frank Petty Holton, Jr., Frederick Mort-

imer Parish, III.

Graduati; School: Ernest Marvin Allen, Bruce Johnson Downey, Gilbert Stanley

McCutcheon.

Seniors: Julian Baxter Coghill, Jr., Robert Norfleet Flournoy, Charles Walker Gun-

ter, Jr., James Carl Hambright, Jr., Thomas Woodley Heath, Jr., Courtney Mitchell, Jr.,

Eugene Cleapor Roundtree, Wiley Smith, Robert Ernest Sumner, Charles Edward

Wood, III, Cecil William Wooten, Jr.

Juniors: James Harold Austin, Britton Ferebee Beasley, Bertum Lester Branson,

Boyce Albert Brawley, Masten Refus Dalton, Drewry Lanier Donnell, Jr., Sherwood

MacDonald Edwards, Lawrence M. Ferling, Simile Alexander Gregg, III, Roland Gra-

ham Hodges, John Lanier Jeffress, James Francis Lalanne, Robert William Sills, Noel

Robert S. Woodhouse.

Sophomores: William Cress Alexander, Douglas DeVane Batchelor, Henry Strat-

ford May, Richard Alvis May, Talmadge Edward Newton, Jr., James Taylor Vernon,

Abram Hewitt Rose, Ramsey Weathersbee.

Pledges: William Moore Beckham, Bertum Lester Bennett, Robert Dedrick Godwin,

Dorman Thomas Hall, Felix Harvey, Jr., James Burwell Holland, Phil Hughes, Frank

Link Johnson, Jr., Zebulon Vance Jones, Robert Long, William Lee Mann, Charles

Mitchell Neaves, Lawrence Erwin Neese, William Haskell Porcher, George WadeReynolds, Robert Lloyd Rose, Joseph Dillard Self, Isaac Montrose Taylor, Robert Wal-

ton Thomas, Livingston Vernon, William Holt Faircloth, Alonzo Dillard Folger, Jr.

Dalton

LAMBDA CHI ALPHAC/amma r/u ^eta L^kapter

C^stabliiked 1922

^jr^^ ^^cl\

Date Fraternity Founded: November 15,

1911; Publication: The Cross and Cres-

cent; Flower: Violet; Colors: Purple,

Green, and Gold.

\^ AMMA NU'S otherwise successful year was sad-

dened by the death of Brother I. J.Kellum. An unusu-

ally large senior class was the distinguishing feature of

our group. The merger with Theta Kappa Nu, which

formerly had a chapter on this campus, was number one

item of national fraternity importance. Our pledge class

consisted entirely of prep school boys. Phil, "Phil the

Fencer," Clegg and Jimmy "Little Caeser" Madden par-

ticipated in freshmen fencing and boxing respectively.

Seniors Pike and Flynt ended college careers made out-

standing by extra-curricula activities.

Superlatives:

Best All Around—Thompson. Best Looking—

"Boxer"

Jim Bryant. Best Athlete—Illman. Best Matured—Mc-

Carthy. Biggest Eaters—Masten, E. Minges. Biggest

Bull Shooter—Herndon. Best Student—Buffey. Longest

Sleepers—Welfare, Illman. Best Yankee—Terhune.

Ladies' Man—Patterson. Most Carefree—Batchelor.

Most Unselfish—Hall. Most Likely to Succeed—Morris.

Brother Rat—Simkoe. Most Original—Putney. "Big-

gest" Politician—Ashburn. Most Conscientious—Pike.

Hardest Worker—Masten.

Ashburn Batchelor Bryant

Buffey Butler Clegg

Faculty: Franklin Curl Erickson, Carl Hartley Fussier, Arnold Kinsey King, Albert

Ray Newsome, Rupert Bayless Vance.

Craduati; School: (!harles Branch Clark, John Caldwell McCiamphell, Francis

Stewart Saunders.

Shniors: Rufus Guy Flynt, Ernest Merrick Illman, Isaac James Kelluin, Jr., Charles

Jerome McCarthy, William Britton Morris, Nicky Demus Patterson, Jr., Jesse Miller

Pike, Paul Crabriel Simkoe, John Frank Terhune, Edward Trainer, Jr., Douglas Sharpe

Welfare.

Juniors: James Spencer Bryant, Stanley Eugene Hall, Roger Adams Hitchins, II,

James Louis Masten, Neil Howard Thompson.

Sophomores: Wiston Odell Batcheior, Tliomas Wells Cobb, Edwin Lester Minges,

Herman Setzer Minges, William Witt Putney.

Pledges: Warren Davie Ashburn, James Preston Butler, Ralph Herbert But'fey, Philip

Hatfield Clegg, William Douglas Conrad, Theodore Kantack Danford, James Francis

Madden, John Thomas Minges, Rush McClure Rankin, John Henry Small.

Cobb Flynt Hall Illman Madden Masten McCarthy Minges, E.

Minges, J. T. Morris Patterson Pike Putney Terhune Thompson Trainer Welfare

DMEGA BETADounJeJ 1939

I.

0,'MEGA BETA FRATERNITY was founded in

April, 1939. This past year was its first, and the eight

charter members, Jimmy Schleifer, Hal Warshaw, Al-

fred Buck, Bob Lerner, Ivlurray Secher, Carl Sherman,

Whit Lees, and Marvin Mendelsohn had quite a job

in store for them. The first rushing season was a suc-

cessful one, nine men having pledged at the time this

went to press, with several more expected to pledge in

the near fLiture.

It had been the intention of the members, from the

beginning, to make the fraternity a chapter of the Pi

Lambda Phi National Fraternity, which was founded

at Yale University in 1895.

The University's time requirement—that is, that a fra-

ternity must remain local for a year—expired in April,

and by now the group has been inducted into the na-

tional organization. It is Omega Beta's hope to be able

to uphold the traditions of Pi Lambda Phi, to maintain

a high standard of scholarship, and to serve the Llniver-

sity by furnishing men for athletic teams, and for all

extra-curricular activities.

Biel

Capen Dube

Shnior: Alfred Buck.

Juniors: Robert Zelden Lerner, Leonard James Schleifcr, Harold Clinton Warshaw.

Sophomores: Whitlock Lees, Jr., Marvin Raymond Mendelsohn, Murray Richard

Secher, Carl Sandor Sherman.

Pledges: Leonard Biel, Leonard Elkins Copen, Jackson Elliott Dube, Morton H.

Golby, Sanford Goldberg, Howard Imbrey, Erwin Mack, Aaron Raisin, Donald Selig

Schlenger.

Golby Goldberg Imbrey Lees Lerner Mack Mendelsohn

Raisin Schleifer Schlenger Secher Sherman Warshaw

jfliP^HB M^^^W^k ^^^^^^\

Cj lTI ITD

299

PHI ALPHA

C^dabiisked 1928

Date Fraternity Founded: October 14,

1914; Publication: The Phi Alpha

Quarterly; Flower; Rose; Colors: Ma-

roon and Blue.

CL/2 FFRATERNAL organization that ranks unusually

high, botli in scholastic and athletic circles, is the boast

of any Phi Alphan on the University of North Carolina

campus. When it comes down to the "A", "B", and "C"

of things, the members of our house can look with

pride to the unusually high rating of this fraternity in

the annual scholastic rankings.

It is in athletic circles, however, that the house achieves

its unique position. Over one-half of the members are

either letter men or have a vital part on the University's

athletic teams. Sidney Sadoff, president of the house, is

very well known as the varsity fullback on the football

team; Murray Drucker, a senior, is finishing up his

second year on the swimming team; Allan Bloom, a

senior, is the co-captain of the fencing team; v^hile Stan

Whyte, likewise graduating this year, is winding up his

athletic career on the fencing team; Ed Hoffman, an-

other letter man, returns to the track for another year of

competition. Well represented on the Tarheel, the band,

the Hillel Cabinet, and other organizations. Phi Alpha

can easily be regarded, we believe, as a more than well-

balanced fraternity.

Bloom

Glazer

Drucker

Fk-ishm.in

300

Mi!DirAL School: Hillard Gold.

Shniors: Allan Ira Bloom, Murray Don Drucker, Edward Norman Hoftman, Sey-

mour Klein, Stanley Sheldon Whyte.

Juniors: Sidney Henrick Sadoft', Morton Lawrence Turteltaub.

Sophomores: Irwin Alfred Fleishman, Milton Glazer, Morton Irving Petuskc, Robert

Franklin Sears, Rufus Shelkoff.

Pledges: Alan Belmarsh, Milton Bernard Harris, Hyman Leinwand, Harold Nathan

Kushin, Robert Leo Lippmann.

Harris

Pctuske

HufFman

Sadoff

Kushin

Shdhoff

Leinwand

•rurtcltaub

Lippmann

Wliyte

PHI DELTA CHI—Mlpka Ljamma (chapter

(CddLLJ 1923

Date Fraternity Founded: 1883; Publi-

cation; The CoinmiiiiiCiilor: Colors; Old

Gold and Dregs of Wine; Flower; Red

Carnation.

TnHINGS got off to a fine start this year for the boys

in PDC. Somehow three carpet bagging Yankees crept

into our midst this year—namely "Bashful Bill" Shef-

field, "Hole Card Harry" Tee, and "Slapper-mouth"

Greene. The social life of the fraternity was limited to

football week-ends during the fall quarter. In the winter

quarter activities were even more limited, but in the

spring quarter, when all of us were sure of being in

school for three consecutive quarters, social life was

resumed in all of its stages. However, spirits were con-

stantly being dampened by Brer Fox's constant nagging

over monetary matters. President Royall spent most of

his spare time thinking of things that we ought to do,

but never doing them. By popular vote, "Rameses"

McGowan and Herb Scoggin were voted the most

industrious, but by no means the quietest members of

the fraternity. Johnny Biggs, a Math 3 major, also con-

tributed his part of hard work and nonsense to the

members at large.

Briggs

Fox

Dees

Greene

JuK'iORS: John Waller Smallwood Biggs, Junius Claude Fox, Edwin Rudolph Fuller,

George Edwin Royall, Jr.

SoPHOMORi-s: Frank Arthur Greene, Jr., Alfred Henderson King, Jack Webster Mc-

Adams, David Foy McGowan, Thaxter Sain, Herbert Palmer Scoggin, William John-

son Sheffield, Harry Cleveland Tee.

Pledges: Robert Rothey, Edwin Tate Sessoms, Jr., Stuart McGuire Sessoms, Foster

Joel Simmons, John Arthur Terrell, Jr.

Kelly King

Sessoms, E. T. Sessoms, S. M.

McAdamsSheffield

McGowanSimmons

Royall

Tee

Sain

Terrell

Scoggin

Whitford

h^^iMA

PHI DELTATHETArloftk (^arou'na £5eia L^napier

C^itablidked 1885

Date Fraternity Founded: December 26,

1848; Publication: The Scroll of Phi

Delia Thcta: Flower: White Carnation;

Colors: Argent and Azure.

'^.,USHING . . . Rush Chairman Walt Clark

coaches us . . . smile and shake hands . . . meet Byrd's

brother, "the last of the Merrills" . . . Stu Richardson

comes through in the Duke game . . . Bill Ward and

the Un-Americans . . . Bill resigns . . . Pledge Noland

Ryan argues about democracy . . . Fascism . . . anything.

. . . Don't see much of McGaughey between Tar Heel

work and the new radio studio . . . heard him debate

the team from Oxford though . . . Sapp stars in intra-

murals . . . we'll hear him talk about catching that pass

from now on . . . Zan Carver showing off his abdominal

muscles on the tennis courts . . . even having pho-

tographers snap them ... Bill Thompson of the swim-

ming team splashing about in Bowman Gray pool . . .

Johnny French in that long winter underwear garb

jogging about the track . . . Muscle-man Frank Rogers

taking his daily three-hour workout . . . Holding "chap-

ter meeting" around the radio during the Jack Benny

program . . . Gennett starving to keep down to his

boxing weight class . . . "Geechie" Willeford talking

in his native Charleston tongue . . . Cutler Watkins

protesting when we threaten him with a blind date for a

house dance . . . That's Phi Delta Theta, and it's Phi

Delta Theta for aye!

Booth Carver Clark

Dewey C. Feuchtenberger J, Feuchtenberger

French Gennett Gregg

Faculty: Linton Lomas Barrett, Alfred Beerbaum, Preston Cooke Farrar, James

Fesler, Thomas Felix Hickcrson, William Irwin, Rosselle Parker Johnson, William

Frederick Prouty, James Allen Williams.

Graduate School: Maurice Dykes.

Law School: William Blount Campbell, Herschel Harkins, Lewis Sneed High, Frank

Thomas Miller, Edward Harding Seawell.

Medical School: Abe Conger.

Seniors: Thomas McCoU Adams, Alexander Henry Carver, Jr., Walter Clark, IH,

Wick Exum, Wilford Harris Gragg, Jr., Charles Allen Humphries, Max Frederick

Jones, Julian Jay Lane, Duncan Donald McColl, Frank Mandeville Rogers, Claudius

Napoleon Sapp, IV, Frederick Booth Stem, Jr., Cutler Watkins.

Juniors: Orin Watts Booth, John Eugene French, Andrew Gennett, Jr., Robert Bur-

ton House, Jr., Carroll Bradford McGaughey, Byrd Farmer Merrill, Calvin BynumPhillips, Edmund Lloyd Pincoffs, John Rossison Rawls, Henry Latimer Rudolph,

George Marshall Stratton, William Manley Thompson, Edward Woodman.

Sophomores: Thomal Arrington Avera, Jr., Charles William Feuchtenberger, John

Robert Howard, Cowdery Kent Merrill, Elbert Randolph Partridge, Jr., Robert Wil-

liam Powers, Enoch Blair Rice, Stewart Shaw Richardson, William Ira Ward, Richard

Lindsay Wharton, John Warner White, Floyd Gilbert Whitney, Raymond Willeford.

Pledges: Charles Beyer, Henry Bryan, William Cleveland, John Feuchtenberger, Wil-

bur Glass, Campbell Irving, Blake Jones, Beverly Landstree, Gamewell Lemmon, Wil-

liam Merrill, Carroll Milam, Noland Haynes Ryan, Remer Scruggs, Byron Grant Sher-

man, Dan Richardson Thomason, Charles Tull, Gene Tyler, Duncan Walker.

Howard

PHI GAMMA DELTAC^piilon (chapter

(Litablisked 1851

^\ r^^

"^

«,(Hi

'."'-y ^^

f a 1«!.

fni»ir' n ^^V1

^*.

Date Fraternity Founded: April 22,

1848; Publication: P/:?/' Gamma Delta

Quarterly; Flower: Heliotrope; Color:

Royal Purple.

Baker Boren Brantley

Caudill Clark Craver

Darden Deyo Elliott

Zy^T.T VANCE HALL, we have seen ... A new and

attractive housemother to keep us in Une . . . Joe King

opens up a Gifte Shoppe . . . Jules Caudill breaks all

records with 37 consecutive dates . . . Jules Brantley

wins an intramural boxing title, and Lacey Morrow a

title in wrestling . . . Phi Gams enter social whirl by

entertaining A. D. Pi's, Chi O's, Pi Phis and Thetas

from Duke . . . Repetition of "Bundle Day", Gene

Williams' brainchild, with more success than ever . . .

Fijis star in sports—Paul Severin in football and bas-

ketball, Ed Dickerson in boxing, Charlie Idol in foot-

ball, Bickett Idol in wrestling, Bob Hutchinson in track

and cross-country. Frosty Snow in golf, Freshman Rich

"Van Wagoner m track . . . Art Jansen and George Deyo

blossom into vocal stars in Glee Club . . . Stuart Gregg

takes out his skis at the first sign of a snow-ilake . . .

"Goat" Greenwood Bob Hutchinson, Ed. Dickerson and

Gene Williams vie for scholastic honors.

Faculty: James Bell Bullitt, John Warfiekl Huddle, Ernest Lloyd Mackie, Sterling

Aubrey Stoudemire, Irvin Zimmerman.

Law School: Arthur Owen Cooke, William Owen Cooke, William Lunsford Crew,

James Kye Dorsett, Robert Craig Mclnncs.

Seniors: Julian Chisholm Brantley, Julian Terrell Caudill, James Henry Darden, Ed-

ward Ray Dickerson, Eugene Stuart Gregg, Robert Piatt Knickerbocker.

Juniors: George Elting Deyo, Charles William Idol, Arthur Lincoln Jansen, Thomas

Lacy Morrow, Thomas David Ramsey, Paul Vincent Severin, Rodney English Snow,

Joseph Gordon Whitsett, Eugene Bomberger Williams.

Sophomores: Horace Mitchell Baker, Robert Fence Craver, James Brooks Green-

wood, Eugene Ramsey Hardin, Charles Allen Headlee, Charles Edward Hussey, Rob-

ert Stuart Hutchison, Clarance Bickett Idol, Joseph Gilbert King, Charles William

Loaring-Clark, Walter Linton Parsley, Clarence Lee Ruffin, Allan Wright Webb.

Pledges: Charles Columbus Bean, Charles Kemp Boren, John Robert Bourne, Wil-

liam Brantley, William Edward Elmore, James Irvin Groome, Paul Leon Hammer,

Richard Warren Hurdis, Leroy Parker Kennedy, Bradford Forbes McCuen, Robert

Johnstone McLean, Edward Hallet Morley, Raymond William Owens, Adam Reynold

Tucker, Jack Russell Wilkinson.

Greenwood

PHI KAPPA SIGMAoLambda L^hapter

C^stabliiked 1856

yit

Date Fraternity Founded: October 19,

1850; Publication; Phi Kappa Sigma

News Letter; Flower: White Carnation;

Colors: Old Gold and Black.

r.HE Phi Kap Scene:

Memories: Some of the best ever . . . party at Mid-

Winters . . . another at Junior-Seniors ... the pledge

dance was fun . . . week-end teas after football games

which alumni attended, and also people we never saw

before . . . bull sessions . . . the South alu'ays won . . .

rushing and dumb freshmen . . . Chapel Hill mud, et

cetera.

Heart Throbs: Freddie Berdan never without Kathleen

L. . . . "Bus" Bolicks week-ends in Salisbury . . . Phil

George and Flossie P. . . . Dick Carter and W. C.'s

Margaret Chaffee . . . Buddy Lyerly can't seem to make

up his mind . . . Charlie Wilkerson travels to Washing-

ton, D. C. . . . Jim M;icCallum squires Marion G. from

Greensboro . . . "Fig" Newton is a familiar iigure at

G. C. . . . Spence Jones' O. A. O. lives in AsheviUe . . .

Harry Lee Clark won't tell . . . Hank Coble lost his

gal . . . Courtland Dawson has a string of "fiUys" that

are sure winners, but he never plays favorites.

Orchids: To Mrs. Andrews for being a swell House

Mother ... to Jim Mallory, Bob Smith, and Mike Bob-

bitt for tine work in football ... To Jim MacCallum for

making Beta Gamma Sigma ... to Fred Berdan for

being Co-Captain for the Lacrosse team.

Barrington

FACULT^: English Bagby, Joseph Merritt Lear, Isaac Hall Manning, Donald Frazer

Martin, Gregory Lansing Paine, Samuel Seldon, Robert Howard SherriU, Henry Hor-

ace Williams.

Si'NiORS: Fred Herdan, Oscar Whetzell Bolick, Carney Blake Carter, Harry Lee Clark,

Henry Luther Coble, Courtland Wharton Dawson, John Philip George, Philip Hogh-

ton Gunther, Donald Cade Hicks, Jr., George Spencer Jones, James William MacCal-

lum, W^illiam Sims Newton, Charles Bayne Wilkerson, Jr.

Juniors: Jack Pershing Bedea, Harry Robert Billica, Norman Marshall Bolick,

George Marion Cooper, Jr., John William Curtis, James Baugh Mallory, Robert Wil-

kinson Montgomery, Robert Carl Rutter, Robert David Williams.

Sophomores: Joseph Hill Barrington, James Norment Britt, Charles Everett Dame-

ron, Matthew Thomas Geis, Freeman Anson Godfrey, John Sylvester Hopkins, Wil-

liam Horace Hoskins, Miles Smith King, Russell Hayes Livermore, Jr., Raymond Jones

Martin, William Woodrow Montgomery, III, Charles Gildea Pyle, Edward Albert

Smith, John Franklin Thompson, Jr., Maximillian Gustav Weber, Jr., Douglas Hailing

West.

Pledges: John Charles Andrews, Hej'wood Gilbert Bland, Maurice Eugene Bobbit,

Edward Barrett Colby, Wallace Duncan Gibbs, William Henry Krauss, Vernon Hor-

ace Lackey, Jr., John William Morrison, Albert Saunders, Robert Braxton Smith, Ralph

Stephens, James Henry Stillwell, Wilson McCall Wagner.

Cooper, G. Cooper, M. Cenfis

Hicks Hopkins Jones

Pyle Rutter Smith

Dameron Dawson Geis George Godfrey Gunther

Lyerly McCallum Montgomery, R. Montgomery, W. Martin Newton

Stillwell Stephens Weber West Wilkerson Williams

C O f^? '^

.^:^

PI BETA PHIr lortk L^arolina ^^Ipka i^kapter'

(Litabiiiked 1923

Date Fraternity Founded: April 28,

1867; Publication: The Arrow; Flower;

Dark Red Carnation; Colors: WineRed and Silver Blue.

CSJ-E NOMINATE: for successor to Model-T Barkis

—Fairfax Foster's Lincoln Zephyr; for ever ready

bridge fourth—Championship winner Nan Lathaw;

for legal advice—Clover Johnson and Bee Merrill whowill probably be found munching on hamburgers and

banana splits respectively; for campus secretary—MaryLewis who has her busy fingers in several local pies;

for president, with brains and beauty combined—Mel-

ville Corbett; for campus socialites—Spencer Watkins,

Stacy Crockett, "Prof" Patten, Judy Duke and Dolly

Erickson; for a social minded chairman—Barbara Lis-

comb; for a girl who would grace anybody's beauty

section—Bobby Wenton; for scholarship, as attested by

the highest fraternity scholarship rating, for beauty, as

attested by our "Pi Phi Misses" at the Pledge dance, for

fun, versatility, any imperative jaunt or gay party

most any Pi Phi.

We find ourselves blessed besides with a refrigerator,

Susie and Ray, three bridge tables, and our own "MamaG."

Arnold Cobb Corbett

Crockett Davis Duke

Elliott Erickson Evans

Graduate School: Nancy Latham.

Law School: Phyllis Jane Campbell, Clover Johnson, Bertha Moore Merrill.

Seniors: Mary Janice Cobb, Melville Fort Corbett, Sarah Clement Griffith, Louise

McGwigan Hall, Janet Lawrence, Mary Newton Lewis, Barbara Liscomb, Mary Wad-

leigh RaOLil, Roberta Winton, Mary Jane Yeatman.

Juniors: Fairfax Foster.

Pledges: Margaret Cornell Arnold, Mary Stacey Crockett, Marjorie Hayward Davis,

Julia Elizabeth Duke, Elinor Olive Elliott, Eleanor Erickson, Sally Anna Evans, Addie

Lee Feaster, Mary Mitilda Hines, Mary Tudor Hudson, Ann Worthy Johnson, Rose-

mary Johnson, Eleanor McLure Jones, Elizabeth Keesee, Martha Le Fevre, Henrietta

Logan, Virginia MacDonald, Eleanor Virginia Maupin, Julia Elizabeth McConnell,

Florence MiUicent McKendry, Eunice Patten, Mary Sue Robertson, Helen Sears, Jessie

Skinner, Sara Adolpha Summerlin, Mary Spencer Watkins, Mary Louise Wilson.

Foster

PI KAPPA ALPHA^aiA, Chapter

C^dabiiiked 1891

-^^

Date Fraternity Founded; March 1,

1868; Publication: Shield and Diamond;

Flower: Lily-of-the-Valley; Colors: Gar-

net and Old Gold.

:/"

W, W. AUgood J. B. Aycock J. R. Bailey

C. L. Ball C. F. Bradbury W. T. Conley

J. L. Cooper J. A. Creel J. S. Currie

TnHERE are six states represented amonq the II K A's

this year. They are: North Carolina, Florida, West Vir-

ginia, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey.

Among the social events of the year, most prominent

was the pledge dance which was held on the third of

February. Other events included a hay ride and a week-

end house party.

The II K A's are especially proud of two of their mem-

bers who distinguished themselves in wrestling. Robert

Hill was champion of the 145 pound intramural class,

and Gordon deLoach was a member of the varsity, and

also won second place in intramural wrestling.

Walt Messerole, who has been a member of the varsity

tennis team for three years, has done some remarkable

work the past season.

Faculty: John Riwin Carroll, Jr., George Waverly Poland, Jr.

CiRADUATE ScHOOL: Jamcs Sloan Currie.

Law School: David Harrison Armstrong, C'.orbett Carlton Cannon, (^Tarlton Ellerbe

Huntley, Marshall Vivian Yount.

Seniors: Lonnie Davis Dill, Robert Hugh Hill, Jr., Philip Brown Holbrook, Walter

Briggs Meserole, Robert Shervv'ood Wilkins.

Juniors: William Walton Allgood, James Ruffin Bailey, Charles Lee Ball, Jr., Wil-

liam Tate Conley, James Gordon deLoach, Grover Cleveland Godwin, Jr., John Torrey

Riel.

Sophomores: Jesse Bardin Aycock, Jr., Robert Shields Hicks, Rowland Bellamy Ken-

nedy, Jr., Frank Mathewson Lawrence, Jr., Oscar Lindsey Owens, Jr., Louis Scheipers,

Pledges: Joseph Franklin Blake, Charles Freeman Bradbury, Jr., John Livingston

Cooper, Joseph Andrew Creel, William Leonard Davey, William Benjamin Duke,

Julian Arthur Harvey, Hurst Bunn Hatch, Jr., James Fremont Jones, Willis Holt

Kimrey, Jacques Gilbert LaSauce, Whit Coffield Purvis, Jr., Thomas Reynolds, Jr., John

Leon Rogers, Charles Henry Sloan, Jr., Bruce Wellington Snyder, James Monroe Starke,

Robert Estes Whitten.

W. L. Davey J. G. deLoach L. D. Dill W. B. Duke G. C. Godwin J. A. Harvey H. B. Hatch R. S. Hicks R. Hill

P. B. Holbrook J.F.Jones R.B.Kennedy W.H. Kimrey J. G. LaSauce F.M.Lawrence W. Meserole O.L.Owens W.C.Purvis

T. B. Reynolds J. T. Riel J. L. Rogers L. Scheipers C. H. Sloan B. W. Snyder J. M. Starke M. V. Yount

^Jl\^-.»* * I ',

313

SIGMA ALPHA EPSILDN

flodk L^arolina A.i i^kapter

(L-itabliiked 185 7

Date Fraternity Founded: March 9,

1856; Publication: The Record; Flower:

Violet; Colors: Purple and Old Gold.

sROTHERS, do you remember-

"Pulse" Carr and "Shelly" Young leading us to an all-

campus championship in tagball . . . "The man's gonna

fix the radio this week, sometime" . . . the pledge party

with everyone toasting, "It's Bull Pyne night tonight"

. . . Bull's tasting the gravy at Hundley's Hash House

and calling it delicious soup . . . Bob Strange breaking

records as we won the intramural swimming champion-

ship . . . Rex, and his titanic house-rocking struggles

with Lemo . . . Bull and Ed. Hughes assembling a first

place homecoming exhibit . . . social chairman "Doc

Turkey", his parties and after game coffees . . . Coach

Boyd, intramural czar, pushing his grapplers to a sec-

ond place in intramural wrestling . . . those weekly

crusades of Jess and T-Bone to Athens . . . Brother

Royster learning to smoke a pipe . . . those rolling bones

. . . the orations of Demosthenes Nice . . . the times we

made Milwaukee famous . . . the many nights we stood

with shoulder firm to shoulder and hand clasped fast in

hand . . .

Barnes Bartlett Boyd

Broadfoot, W. G. Broadfoot, W. Brown

Carr, A. H. Carr, G. W. Carr, R. W.

314

Faculty': George Frederick Horner, Almont Howell, Edward Mack, Jr., George

Movvry, Olin Terril Mouzon, William Pierson, Charles Wettach.

Law School: Alex McCowin Gover, William Thomas Minor, Vaughan Sharp Win-

borne.

Medical School: William Lunsford Long, Jr.

Commerce Graduate School: Alexander Guerry, Jr.

Seniors: Darwin Hudson Boyd, Jr., George Watts Carr, Jr., William Washington

Chisholm, Robert Martin Cox, Jr., Jesse Lamar Fulenwider, Jr., John Randolph Hall,

Jr., George McDuffie, Samuel Dace McPherson, Norris Tabeau Pindar, IIL James Mine-

tree Pyne, Foy Roberson, Jr., Thomas Sampson Royster, Marshall McLaney Shepherd,

Hubert King Turley, Jr., James Adams Wallace, James Perry Willis, Dolph MooreYoung.

Juniors: Clark Bartlett, William Gillies Broadfoot, Jr., Winston Broadfoot, Wil-

liam Moye Darden, Jr., Isaac Bates Grainger, Jr., James Alexander Gray, Jr., Paul

Erastus Jones, Jr., William Roger Richardson, Hughes Roberts, Jr., James Parish Rob-

ertson, Jr., Robert McDavid Smith, Lawrence Archdale Tomlinson, Jr., William Dead-

erick Van Dyke, Colvin McAlister Worth.

Sophomores: Aiden Emmett Barnes, III, George Rowland Brown, III, Austin Heat-

on Carr, Robert Winston Carr, William Church Croom, Jr., Murdock McRae Dunn,

Hundley Rankin Gover, Frank Borden Hanes, Thomas Vincent Heard, James TrumanHolland, Jr., Lennox Polk McLendon, Jr., Thomas Samuel Means, Jr., Clayton Moore,

Jr., Charles McKinney Nice, Jr., Michael Corbett Stovall, Robert Strange, Jr., Charles

Walter Tillett, Jr., Thomas Brodie Winborne.

Pledges: Stephen Shepherd Adams, Theodore Garrett Brown, Hugh Hammond Du-

Bose, Henry Martin Garwes, Jr., Louis LeConte Gibbes, Robert Strudwick Glenn,

Samuel Ervin Hall, Howard Latham Hodges, Harry Perryman Horton, Michael Mc-

Cormack Nolan, Russell Daniel O'Dell, Henry Plany Osborne, Jr., Dave McKenzie

Rumph, Robert Mills Saunders, Hugh Percival Smith, Kenneth Murchison Sprunt,

Frederick Leroy Swindal, William HoUaday Thornton, George Williams Worth.

Chisholm

SIGMA CHI

CdalLkei 1889

m

Date Fraternity Founded: June 28, 1855;

Publication: Sigma Chi Quarterly:

Flower: White Rose; Colors: Blue and

Gold.

r.EAR STARTS . . . Bucket moves in, drums and all

... no more sleep . . . Brud returns—hearts a-flutter

among local girls . . . Robinson appears with Dot—the

wolves howl—Dot leaves with Jiver . . . Beadles, Heb-

bard, Latham, Edwards, Smith, Wall, and Dennis movein on the Penn Sigs for a great week-end, WOW! . . .

Larry Clinton plays at the house, the house plays for

Mary Dugan—successful? . . . Colonel Bunk loses his

best girl, the Queen Mary . . . Our Golden Anniversary

celebrated by outstanding set of dances . . . Thumb-nail

sketches: Big Stoop Hoot—Gravel-mouth Davis

Sponging Swan—The Red A. Lentz—Beef-trust, the

deadhead, bull brothers Dawson—The laughing-boy

twins, Bunk and Plonk—The Right Reverends Scales

and Robinson—Snake artists, Beadles and Davis

"Lighting" Beard—Little-man-in-a-hurry Edwards

The Chicken, S. Jenrette—

"I-have-spoken" Rider

Baby Newell—Porky-Pig Barnes—The Dead-End Kids,

Hebbard and Orr—Windbag Smith—Self-righteous

Ross—Grasping Latham . . . All this and Heaven too!!

Barnes, J. B. Barnes, J. W. Beadles

Beard Brooks Carr

Council Crabtree Davidson

316

Faculty: Herman Glenn Baity, Wesley Critz George, James Logan Godfrey, Fred-

erick Henry Koch, John Wayne Laslcy, Jr., Frederick Hays McCall, Roland Prince Mc-Clamrock, Earl Anderson Slociim, Delos Wickens.

Mhdical School: Jack Hughes.

Law School: Benjamin Wyche.

Graduate School: John Alexander, Charles Zimri Falls.

Seniors: Nicholas Aston Beadles, Howard Melton Davidson, Jr., John Lorraine

Davis, Jr., Franklin Lemuel Dennis, Victor Fisher Harllee, John Leslie Latham, Jr.,

George Webb Plonk, Philip Franklin Robinson, Jr., Otho Bescent Ross, Jr., Charles

Franklin Rider, James Shelton Scales, William Lawrence Seawell, Jr., Warren Matt-

son Smith, Jr., James Tawes, Jr., William Rudolph Teague.

Juniors: Peter Richardson Carr, Lawrence Edward Crabtree, Collins Taylor Daw-son, George Robert Dawson, David Ernest Early, Thomas Edwards, Bunk Gardner,

in, Russell Edgar Hebbard, Joseph Malphus Jenrette, Lucian Lentz, George MastenMillaway.

Sophomores: Cyrus Simmonds Beard, Danny Logan Deaver, Burton Myron Newell,

William Charles Orr, Jr., Jesse Swan, Cornelius Dickinson Thomas, Jr., Robert Man-ning Vail, William Bethel Williamson.

Pledges: Edward John Antolini, Don Baker, Joseph Willard Bales, Jack WatsonBarnes, John Roger Brooks, Jr., Wade Kennerly Conrad, Robert Harward Council,

Richard Walter Freeman, William Frederick Herpel, Townsend Stanley Holland, Jr.,

Oliver Perry McKinnion, George Shelton Miles, Jr., Oren Austin Oliver, Jr., Carl Park-

er, Warren Steele, Charles Jackson Tucker, William Charles Vail, Charles KennethWall, Robert Hardaway Wright.

Davis Dawson, C. T. Dawson, G. R. Deaver

Herpel Holland Latham Jones

Ross Seawell Smith Swan

Dennis

SIGMA NU/^/' (chapter

C^itabuiked 1888

rsTfT

Date Fraternity Founded: January 1,

1869; Publication: The Del/.i: Flower:

White Rose; Colors: Black, White, and

Gold.

ThSNAKES ALL!

HERE'S "Ready" Ficklen who counts as his friends

Becky and Nancy and Fannie

And the SaHsbury Stanback headache heir

Intimately known as "Stanie"

There's "Stinkmeal" Gant from Raleigh he hails

And "Like Father Like Son ' William Dees

And "One Robm Skinflint" Norvell himself

Who rates with no girl that he sees

There's Walt Blackmer, IH, Charlie Atlas himself

And the one we all call "Slick" Gilliam

As well as "Turk" Holmes and "Count" Von Loock

Whom nobody knows as William

That leaves "Ikey Boe", Sigma Nu, NCUAnd Coxhead who plans every meal

And Hinkle and Robbins the Old East boys

To Franceses both of them kneel

And now we have changed the saga of Snakes

Who live in their house on the Hill

Who are banded together for better, for worse

Through friendship, love, and goodwill

Adams Blackmer Blount

Bruner Chambliss Cocke

Coxhead Dees Efird

Faculty: Arnold Borden, Millard Breckenbridge, Walter Creech, Jr., Edward Mc-

Gowan Hedgepeth, Archibald Henderson, John Coriden Lyons, William DeB. Mac-

Nider, Earle Ewart Peacock, John Brooks Woosley, Trezevant Player Yeatman.

Law School: Robert Wilson Wells.

Graduate School: Harry Clay Yeatman.

Seniors: Leroy Franklin Abernathy, Walter Steele Blackmer, III, Frederick Alexan-

der Blount, Louis Stuart Ficklen, Kenneth Gant, Jr., Frank Marion Holmes, Frank Jolly,

Thomas Lynch Murphy, Thomas Melville Stanback, Jr.

Juniors: William Wallace Bruner, William Archie Dees, Jr., William Lee Gilliam,

William Joslin, Malcolm Donald McNaugton, Edward Emerson Murray, Edwin Over-

man Norvell, William Davis Snider, Garland Scott Tucker.

Sophomores: Rayford Kennedy Adams, John Randolph Chambliss, Dudley Dubose

Cocke, Jr., George Leavell Coxhead, Joseph Bivens Efird, Edmund Conger Forehand,

North Smith Hinkle, Harry Howard Lackey, William Arthur Loock, Jr., Benjamin

Franklin Park, Louis Julian Poisson, Jr., Charles Austin Robbins.

Pledges: Thomas Benjamin Baden, Everitt Edward Briggs, Floyd Edward Cohoon,

Jr., Joseph Harold Conger, Jr., Harry Newton Dunkle, Robert Thomas Grimes, James

Francis Leaming, Edwin Stuart McCoach, Jr., Robert Avery McNaughton, Joseph Kyle

Orr, III, John Raymond Sears, James Marvin Shaw, II, William Charles Stanback,

Leslie Dodson Worthington, Byron Columbus Shouppe, Edward Augustine Moynihan,

Jr.

Ficklen Forehand

Lackey Leaming

Park Poisson

Gant Gilliam Grimes

Loock McNaughton Moynihan

Robbins SHliw Shouppe

Hinkle Holmes Jolly Joslin

Murphy Murray Norvell Orr

Snider Stanback, T. Stanback, W. Tucker

TAU EPSILDN PHI\Jm-eaa i^kapter

C^itabiLiked 1924

Date Fraternity Founded: October 19,

1910; Publication; The Plume; Flowers;

Lily-of-the-Valley and Violet; Colors;

Lavender and White.

mwWILL present the school year in verse;

We haven't much room so it has to be terse.

Back from vacation we came in September;

The joys of reunion we'll always remember.

The week-end in Philly—a house without men;

The score was terrific—remember it, Penn?

The house party came, and the house party went;

Except for the Duke game, our time was well spent.

King Winter descended with a magnificent roar;

Equilibrium and windows tumbled galore.

The pledge dance came—a great success;

The freshmen lost out for lack of finesse.

Spring-time bright with all of its splendor.

Our thoughts went from books to something more

tender.

With Spring dances o'er, though we had lots of fun,

For the year 1940 our socials were done.

The one sorrowful note in this year of good cheer

The departure of nine of our brothers so dear.

Omega will flourish, of that we don't fear,

But the memory of '40 we'll always revere.

ila

•)«

Seniors: Ralph Alperin, Leonard Bernard Baron, Seymour Eisenberg, Harold Irvin

Gross, Bertram Charles Halperin, "William Marshall Karesh, Horace Richtcr, Morris

William Rosenberg, Chester Sidney Svigals.

Juniors: Seymour Brown, Henry Morris Kamins, Lionel Melvin Katz, Eugene Sil-

verstein, Howard Raymond Stadiem.

Sophomores: Warren Howard Bernstein, Gerald Cohen, Lester Philip Etter, Stanley

Edward Fuchs, Louis Smith Harris, Edward Lazurus Kalin, David Pearlman, Bernard

Richter, Albert Rose, Morton Bruce Ulman, Oscar Charles Zimmerman.

Pledges: David Michael Arner, Richard Ernest Bernstein, Sidney John Heimovitch,

Sylvan Hugh Meyer, William Schwartz.

Fuchs

ZETA BETA TAU

(CdJLU 1927

Date Fraternity Founded: December 29,

1898; Publication: Zela Beta Tan Quar-

terly: Colors: Light Blue and White.

eyiLLPHA PI CHAPTER of Zeta Beta Tau says,

"Come see us" . . . Wieder Sievers, our flaxen-haired

Romeo, is student representative of the Playmakers and

on the Advisory Board of the campus radio station . . .

Charles Sunstien has served as wrestUng manager . . .

Billy Weil leaves us the memory of several swing bands

. . . President Harry Lasker, among the juniors, has been

an officer in the Glee Club, Choral Society, and other

organizations . . . Adrian Spies is a Tar Heel columnist

and Carolina Magazine contributor . . . Bob Neuman, a

geologist with a soul, is our "rockbottom" man . . .

Among the sophomores, Bill Schwartz chases ads for

the Tar Heel in Durham . . . Handsome Ray Rosen-

bloom is a varsity lacross man . . . Ralph Levy, Zeke

from the Tennessee mountains, is sophomore boxing

manager . . . Gene Munver took a trip to Iceland with

Capt. Bob Bartlett once . . . Rocky Mount Bob Rosen-

bloom remains our most conscientious lady's man . . .

We won't say anything about our ten freshmen, but we

hope they will have plenty to say for themselves in a

few years.

AltschuU

Edwards

Bluch

Jacobs

Colin

Landy

Si;niors: Wieder David Sievers, Charles Gerstlcy Sunstein, William Raul Weil.

Juniors: Harry Lasker, Robert Ballin Neuinan, Adrian Clharles Spies.

SoPHOMORi;s: Ralph Levy, Eugene Neal Munves, Raymond Martin Rosenbloom,

Robert Luke Rosenbloom, William Bernstein Schwartz.

PLKDGiiS: Herbert AltschuU, Frederick Lionel Bloch, Howard Cohen, Sinclair Sar-

torius Jacobs, Charles Landy, William Lasker Rosensohn, Marshall Henry Solomon,

Sylvan Paul Stein, Gene Leonard LJsdin, Warren Winkelstein.

Lasker Levy Munves Neuman Rosenbloom, R. L. Rosenbloom, R. M. Schwartz

Sievers Solomon Spies Stein Sunstein Usdin Weil Winkelstein

^ ^ O f^ml

'^Cxf:\.f^.f^.Cyci

ZETA PSIUpiiton (^kaptef

C^itabliiked 1858

m

"^-^A

^r^j*". iw-^

S»k^N'l^W»

s«M* --

Date Fraternity Founded: 1847; Publi

cation: The Circle: Flower: White Car

nation; Color: White.

cOMMUNIQUE 1940. Somewhere in Chapel Hill.

In a hard fought battle, the Zetes made a considerable

advance toward their objective, the retirement of the

Deke Trophy. Led by General "Lodi" Philips, they

maintained their position in scholarship and secured

many spoils of war in the field of Intramurals. During

lulls in the battle, recreation was provided for the

soldiers by "Molapper" Wilkinson, President of TheMay Frolics Committee, and "Val Val" Sutton, Secre-

tary and Treasurer of the German Club. Casualties in-

cluded "Gimbo" Wilson and "Buddy" Blalock, who led

unsuccessful attacks on the coed front, and "Bennie"

Hamilton, who died in action defending Gimghoul

Castle. General Philips commended the deeds of "Fat"

Carr, intramural manager, "Bunk" Anderson, political

manager, and Logan Howell, in charge of provisions.

The battle was marked by courageous fighting on the

part of the Juniors, Sophomores, and Pledges.

For further details consult Boss Hill.

Anderson Blalock Browning

Carr Clodfelter Davis

Fuller Hackney Hamilton

324

Faculty: Edward Tankard Brown.

Graduate School: Herbert Stacy McKay.

Law School: Joseph Blount Cheshire, IV, Alexander Hawkins Graham, Jr., Junius

Daniel Grimes, Jr., Logan Douglas Howell, Henry Hyman Philips, Jr., John KenyonWilson, Jr.

Medical School: Gus Evans Forbes, Jr., Asa Riclimond Parham.

Seniors: William George Anderson, William Rennie Blalock, Jr., Albert Gallatin

Carr, Paul Larkin Clodfelter, Jr., Frederick Bruce Hamilton, Alfred Llewellyn Hob-good, Jr., Louis Valvelle Sutton, Jr., George Alexander Wilkinson, Jr.

Juniors: Edward Palmer Davis, Jr., Thomas Jennings Hackney, Jr., Thomas HoltHaywood, Jr., Thomal Palmer Nash, Jr., Edwin Anderson Penick, Jr., William TrentRagland, Jr., Pembroke Graves Rees, William Alfred Upton, William Neilson Vog-ler, Jr.

Sophomores: Marion Miot Fuller, Jr., Jarvis Aubrey Hanes, Curtis William How-ard, Jr., Wallace Bruce Lea, Jr., Harry Little Martin, Jr., Samuel Fox Mordecai, Charles

Parks Reece, John William Sasser, Nelson Ferebee Taylor, James Preston Thorp, JohnDaniel Thorp, Hubert Cozart Walston, Harry Frederick Weyher, Jr., Isaac Clark

Wright.

Pledges: George Hackney Adams, Leslie Edwards Babcock, Jr., Benjamin HowardBrowning, Jr., Alexander Shuford Davis, Hugh Dortch, Jr., John Wood Foreman, Ed-

win Morton Fulghum, Lloyd Lee Gravely, Jr., Charles Hamlin Hancock, Henry Blount

Hunter, Jr., Robert Gilliam Kittrell, Jr., Cameron McRae, Jr., Frank Faison Mordecai,

Marion Arendell Parrott, George Dial Penick, William Albert Redfern, Jr., James Al-

fred Self, Marion Jackson Trotman, Thomas Anthony Wadden, Jr.

Hanes

J, /,nieni^aLey'nitemit^

L^ouncil

LOUIS STUART FICKLEN

Officers: Louis Stuart Ficklen, President; Christian Siewers, Vice-President;

Horace Richter, Secretary; Tom Long, Treasurer.

Members: Ernest Yount, Alpha Tau Omega; Christian H. Siewers, Beta

Theta Pi; Robert Alexander, Chi Phi; Marc Ferrand, Chi Psi; Kenneth

Royall, Delta Kappa Epsilon; David Murchison, Delta Psi; Tom Long,

Kappa Alpha; Frank Holton, Kappa Sigma; Jesse Pike, Lambda Kappa

Alpha; James Schliefer, Omega Beta; Sid Sadoff, Phi Alpha; Wilford

Gragg, Phi Delta Theta; Julian Brantley, Phi Gamma Delta; Philip

George, Phi Kappa Sigma;J.

R. Bailey, Pi Kappa Alpha; T. S. Royster,

Sigma Alpha Epsilon ; George W. Plonk, Sigma Chi ; Louis Stuart Ficklen,

Sigma Nu; Horace Richter, Tau Epsilon Phi; Harry- Lasker, Zeta Beta Tau;

Hyman Philips, Zeta Psi.

OFFICERS

J. HE Interfraternity Council had as its function the

governing of all the men's Greek organizations on

the campus. The Presidents of each house make up

the membership of the group. This Council had the

power to try breaches of its by-laws and to punish

such breaches by fines or other means which it

deemed wise.

The year 1939-40 was a rather hectic one for the

Council because the end of a trial plan for conduct

of Co-eds in fraternity houses brought the need of

drafting a completely new plan. This work took about

five months. A plan M'as agreed on whereby the house

was to see that there were no violations of the Co-ed

agreement rather than leaving the execution of the

plan up to the individual Co-ed. Fraternities were held

responsible to the Interfraternity Council rather than

to the administration or any other body. Permission

for House Parties or other social functions came

directly from the President of the Council.

The Council controlled rushing regulations and ail

other matters which were of interest to the fraterni-

ties as a group. This governing body worked closely

with the Dean of Students, the Faculty Committee on

Fraternities, and the Student Council.

Each year the Council sends representatives to the

National Interfraternity Conference in New York.

Another very notable work of the body was the occa-

sional setting up of scholarships and donations to

worthy campus organizations.

INTERFRATERNITY

COUNCIL

l^ankellenlc L^ouncii

Officers: President: Josephine Martin, Chi Omega; Secretary-Treasurer:

Mary Jane Yeatman, Pi Beta Phi.

Members: Josephine Martin, Chi Omega; EHzabeth Warren, Chi

Omega; Polly Raoul, Pi Beta Phi; Mary Jane Yeatman, Pi Beta Phi;

Sarah Frances Crosby, Alpha Delta Pi ; Helen Copenhaver, Alpha Delta

Pi.

OFFICERSYEATMAN

RAOULMARTINCROSBYWARREN

COPENHAVER

J. HE Panhellenic Council of the University of North

Carolina is composed of representatives from each of the

sororities on the campus. It is an organization established

"To maintain on a high plane fraternity life and inter-

fraternity relationship, to cooperate with college authorities

in their effort to maintain high social and scholastic stand-

ards throughout the whole college, and to be a forum for

the discussion of questions of interest to the college and the

fraternity world".

The work of the present Panhellenic has been to adapt

itself to the increased enrollment of girls at the University,

to establish itself upon a firm and permanent basis, and to

strive for the recognition of women's groups and of women's

activities on the campus. Its efforts have been to emphasize

Panhellenic values by showing its worth to the fraternity

through interfraternity relationships and mutual apprecia-

tion; to the campus, through emphasis on the fine things

that all the groups have in common, thus building a loyalty

which is larger than any one group loyalty. Finally, Pan-

hellenic fosters a spirit of cooperation and interest in college

activities for the common good of fraternity and non-

fraternity women.

THE GREEKS HAVE A NAME FDR IT . .

.

Key: Hold 'em, freshmen.

Magician's admirers; Juice boy, Hugh Foss; A.T.O.tea hounds; Collegiate technique, undeveloped; Oneof those all night games, "Who hid the chips?"

Woims eye view; Pass the other beans; You reckon

we'll have to enlist soon?

QUS RQLCS HRMGGYCS HVTVWP HVAYHFTFUAFVVVVGREBVVTVME AUR AOK

VVMVECFVALMARLII

RULERS

547 James Perry Willis

552 Thomas Sampson Royster.

546 Harry Russell

550 George Watts Carr

551 Lawson Turner . . .

K. D. S.

. ...W. S. S.

. K. M. K.

N. G. P.

SUBJECTS

174 Archibald Henderson

241 Joseph G. deR. Hamilton

255 Frank Porter Graham

315 Robert W. Wettach

319 William W. Pierson

328 Francis F. Bradshaw

331 Thomas Felix Hickerson

343 Dudley DeWitt Carroll

369 William F. Prouty

373 Allen Wilson Hobbs

385 Robert Edwin Coker

405 Charles S. Mongum

417 George Coffin Taylor

439 J. Penrose Harland

442 Robert B. House

453 H. G. Baity

468 Herman Walter Schnell

490 Fletcher Meivin Green

548 Frederick Bruce Hamilton

549 Randolph McLeod Dick

553 George Alexander Wilkinson

558 Frederick Alexander Blount

559 George McDuffie

560 James Alexander Gray

561 Thomas Henry Wright, Jr.

562 Louis Valvelle Sutton, Jr.

563 Edward Townsend Moore

564 Kenneth C. Royall, Jr.

565 WilliamTrent Ragland, Jr.

566 James Shober Browley

567 Harold Lindsay Amoss, Jr.

568 Isaoc Bates Grainger

O^ornan'0 nm 4^

DAVID REIDMURCHISONPRINCEPS

WILLIAM WALKER MINEQUAESTOR

GODFREY CHESHIRE, JR.

SCRIPTOR

CLARK BARTLETT

ALBERT GALLATIN CARR

GODFREY CHESHIRE, JR.

WILLIAM WASHINGTON CHISHOLM

CHARLES EDWARD DIFFENDAL, JR.

EVANS DAVIS

rCORMICK GROSS, i

•/ALKER HINE

FRANK MARION HOLMES

TJ^MAS JENNINGS HACKNF>

DAVID REIDMURCHISO

THOMAS "

HENRY

THIRTEEN CLUB MEMBERS

HAMILTON JONES President

Wl LLIAM WALLACE BRUNER. Sec. -Treas.

CYRUS SIMMONDS BEARD

HOWARD VINCENT BOUNDSHENRY BRANCHGEORGE ROWLAND BROWNWILLIAM WALLACE BRUNERDUDLEY DUBOSE COCKEJOHN RANDOLPH CHAMBLISSJAMES WASHINGTON CREWSWILLIAM CHURCH CROOMLOUIS STUART FICKLEN

TOM JENNINGS HACKNEYPHILLIP WILEY HAIGHVICTOR FISHER HARLEECHARLES JOHNSON HARRIS

THOMAS CLIFTON HAYESRUSSELL EDWARD HEBBARDROBERT STUART HUTCHINSONHAMILTON JONESLUCIAN BOYD LENTZJOHN FRANKLIN LYNCH, JR.

SAMUEL DACE McPHERSON

EDWARD TOWNSEND MOORETHOMAS L^CY MORROWDAVID-REIDMURCHISONTOM PALMER NASHEDWIN OVERMAN NORVELLHENRY HUMAN PHILLIPS

THOMAS BROADWAY ROYSTERJOHN WILLIAM SASSER, JR.

EMMETT SEBRELL

RODNEY ENGLISH SNOWARMISTEAD BURWELL SMITH, JR.

GEORGE MARSHALL STRATTONJESSE FRANCIS SWANJOHN THORPEDONALD FULLER TORREYHUBERT KING TURLEYBURGES URQUHARTALLAN WRIGHT WEBBJOHN WARNER WHITETREZ PLAYER YEATMAN

dbAer of thI^sheiks

ISAAC BATES GRAINGER

JAMES PERRIN QUARLES

DAVID WALTER SEIFERT

SYDEN HT^RTALESi^^DER

WILLIAM CRESS ALEXANDER

MARVIN POPE ANTHONY

ROBERT STRANGE BRIDGERS

HENRY KING BURGWYN

ALBERT GALLATIN CARR

^AUSTIN HEATON CARR

WILLIAM DAVENPORT

w

w

w

la^ES EVANS DAVIS

;y LARRY MONSANTO FERLING

GEORGE ANDERSON FOOTE

WALTER EDGE FORAN

GUS FORBES, JR.

ANDREW GENNETT, JR.

WILFORD HARRIS GRA(

ISAAC BATES GRAINGER, JR.

SAMUEL THORNE GREGORY

ALEX GREGG, JR.

CYRUS DUNLAP HOGUE

LTER MOORE LAMBETH

tCHARD ALVIS MAY

HOMAS SAMUEL MEANS

CALVIN BLACKWEJ^MQglSSETTE

PANIOftNN^r?::

ROBERT WILLIAM POWERS

JAMES MINETREE PINE %JAMES PERRIN QUARLES, JR.

DAVID WALTER SEIFERT mMARSHALL McCLANEY SHEPHERD

: WILLIAM HENRY SHULL 'M^

' LOUIS VALVELLE SUTTON ^/

WILLIAM GRADY STEVENS

**^«i*J:<5^.AWS0N WITHERS TURNER

WILLIAM NEILSON V0GLE|

HUBERT COZART WALSTON

FLOYD WHITNEY '

CHARLES EDWARD WOOD, III

ISAAC CLARK WRIGHT

333

ORDER OFTHE MINATAURSTHOMAS HENRY WRIGHT, JR M. W. H.

WESCOTT ROBERSON WOLLEN M. W. U.

THOMAS HOLT HAYWOOD B. T.

ACTIVE MEMBERS

WINSTON BROADFOOT

JULIAN BAXTER COGH ILL, JR^

JAMES ROUNTREE COLLETT

MASTEN RUFUS DALTON

JESSE LAMAR FULLENWIDER, JR.

BUNK GARDNER, JR,

FREDERICK BRUCE HAMILTON

WILLIAM WALKER MINES

FRANK MARION HOLMES

WILLIAM JOSLIN

CHARLES EDWARD LYNCH

GEORGE McDUFFIE

JAMES McCAUSLAND ROSS

KENNETH CLAIBORNE ROYALL, JR.

ROBERT McDAVID SMITH

ROBERT ERNEST SUMNER

GARLAND SCOTT TUCKER

GEORGE WILKINSON, JR.

HUTSJACK WATSON BARNES

JAMES TAYLOR BERNON

EDMUND CONGER FOREHAND

FRANK BORDEN HANES

RICHARD LEON KENDRICK

MAHLON HARRIS LONG, JR.

TALMADGE EDWARD NEWTON

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN PARK

CHARLES PARKS REECE

WILLIAM HENRY SEEMAN

JAMES PRESTON THORPE

CHARLES JACKSON TUCKER

334

EARL CARRDL

Vanity Fair for the 1940 Yackety Yack was selected by Mr.

Earl Carrol of Hollywood. A contest was staged, the plan of

which was to have each school here represented submit its

five most beautiful girls. From each of these groups Mr.

Carrol selected one to appear as Beauty Queen of her school.

These selections make up this year's Vanity Fair.

335

miifiiii" TrnTlimiiiAiiiMfiTiii

MISS MARY SWAN DDDSDN

of St. L^otieiam i K^olleqe

336

MISS FRANCES DYCKMANof tke Liniueriitu of 1/loMi L^arolina

357

MISS RUTHE HENSLEY

of J^u/eet Uj>nar i^olleae

*

MISS ANN HUGHSDN

*

339

MISS NDEL JOHNSONof .UJuke lAmversitu

*

340

[irTr''^ir'^Mgi

MISS LA VON OSBORNE

of Ljr'eensboro L^olleae

*

341

^'^ ^^*

MISS HOWARD PERKINSDN

of f\ana.olnk rl/lacon Woman i L^otle^e

342

MISS MAMIE GRACE SMITHo/ l/[/oman '5 L^olleae of the LAniuefiitu of- riortk L^arotif

343

3avoy^i'tes

Miss Eleanor Badger

Miss Frances BucMew

Miss May Hampton Caldwell

Miss Louise Craft

Miss Stacy Crockett

344

Miss Ethel Grace Laidlaw

Miss Peggy LeDnard

Miss Janet Kelly

Miss Alice Murdock

Miss Betty Gray Parker

Miss Margaret Royall

345

au .UJa'i

ueen

*

nHE natural beauty of its outdoor setting and its colorful pageantry

have made May Day an outstanding spring event at the University. It is

presented annually around the first of May and is sponsored by AlphaKappa Gamma, the women's honorary sorority. The entire program is

written and directed by the students. Dances, songs, and pantomime are

designed to carry out various themes.

Beauty and charm characterize the Carolina May Queen. She is a senior

selected by a campus election. In viewing the lovely queen with her maidof honor and attendants, one can realize the refuted beauty of the co-eds

is completely justified.

In a setting depicting the facade of a Southern home of the ante-bellum

period, Miss Olive Cruikshank of Raleigh was crowned queen. Miss Molly

Albritton of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, was maid of honor. The attendants

included the Misses Jane Hunter, Miriam Durette, Ethel Laidlaw, Betty

Redfern, Barbara Winton, Melville Corbett, Janet Lawrence, Helen

Jacobs, Elizabeth Gammon, and Burnice Brantley. Before the queen and

her court and a large audience of interested spectators was enacted sev-

eral scenes related to plantation life.

Now an annual affair May Day is anticipated by the campus both for its

interesting program and its recognition of the loveliness of the womenstudents of the University.

{Le\itoR,ght}~U\m.kM DURETTE, JANE HUNTER, ETHEL LAIDLAW, ELIZABETH GAMMON, HELEN JACOBS, MOLLY ALBRITTON,OLIVE CRUIKSHANK, BERNICE BRANTLEY, MELVILLE CORBETT, JANET LAWRENCE, BARBARA WINTON, BETT^' REDFERN,AND CHILDREN.

347

HEN the hush of a week-end falls on the campus and the melodious harmonies of an orchestra makes

Bingham Hail shudder, you know that the dance week-end is here. The co-eds grit their teeth—those who

haven't yet learned to flaunt their charms for invitations—while the imports mosey in and out of the fraternity

houses in disreputable skirts and sweaters.

But with the late afternoon and night, a change is made. Gone with the wind are the disreputable clothes and

each young miss strives to look her best in formal attire. While her date manages either to look comfortable

in a bat-wing or simply relaxes in a turned-down tux, the ladies sway in their Sunday best.

On tlie rostrum, surrounded by a knot of admirers and lovers of the jive, a man keeps the down-beat going

with a smooth stick. He looks bored, but to us gen'men of Carolina what he manages to give is far from a

moan of ennui. The man is Larry Clinton, Glenn Gray, or any other you may name. Few are the big orchestras

who haven't played for the dances at Carolina, and fewer still are the students who haven't enjoyed these week-

ends, who haven't carried away memories of roaring good times.

So, for the dance-set boys of Carolina and for our own Nellies, the co-eds whom we really love, we present

for your entertainment and pleasure—the dance week-end!

348

/ UNIVERSITYDANCECOMMITTEE

N 1925 dances at the University were suspended by the Execu-

tive Committee of the Faculty because of their rough character.

Several members of the faculty, seeing the injustice of this, sought

to inaugurate some method of continuing dances. As a result of

their efforts a dance committee was formed, composed of fifteen

students and three faculty members. Dr. W. S. Bernard was asked

by President Chase (then head of the University) to head this

committee. In order to accept this position, which he deemed a high

honor, Dr. Bernard resigned from the Executive Committee of the

Faculty. President Chase thus granted the University Dance Com-

mittee its charter with the provisions that the Executive Committee

of the Faculty and the Student Council should have no jurisdiction

over it.

The main object of this committee was, and is, to maintain order at

all University dances and see that they are conducted on the highest

level possible.

Today the University Dance Committee is one of the most repre-

sentative organizations on the campus as well as one of the most

successful. Its members are elected by the various organizations to

represent them on the committee.

At present the committee consists of eighteen students and three

faculty members. The members, together with the organizations

which elected them, are: R. C. Worley, Order of the Grail, Chair-

man of the committee ; Leon Galloway, Graduate Club, Secretary of

the committee; W R. Blalock, holdover member; J. B. Goghill,

German Club; G. L. Coxhead, Sophomore class; H. E. Dillon,

Interdormitory Council; L. S. Ficklen, German Club; E. E. Erick-

son, Junior Class; T. W. Heath, Order of the Grail; J. A. McNeill,

Pharmacy School ; F. P. Holton, Interfraternity Council ; Cy Jones,

Order of the Grail; W. E. Meehan, Law-Med. School; J. M. Pike,

holdover; B. L. Premo, Senior Class; L. V. Sutton, German Club;

P. Thompson, Holdover, Gates Kimball, Head Doorman. The

members of the Faculty Committee on Dances are: Dr. E. L.

M.ickie, Chairman; Dr. H. K. Russell, and Herman Schnell.

Blalock, Coghill, Coxhead, Dillon, Erick-

SON, Ficklen, Galloway, Heath. Holton,

Jones. Kimball, McNeill, Meehan, Pike,

Premo, Sutton. Thompson. Worley,Mackie, Russell, Schnell.

Tyt^HV irfe

349

FFICERS: Louis Stuart Ficklen, President; Julian Cog-

hill, Vice-President; Louis Sutton, Secretary-Treasurer; and

Tom ^X'right, Assistant Secretary-Treasurer.

Executive Committee Members: Godfrey Cheshire, Ed

Dickerson, Charles Diffendal, Sam McPherson, Dave Mur-

chinson, Lynch Murphy, Warren Smith, Lawson Turner,

and Jimmy Ross.

GERMAN CLUBEXECUTIVECOMMITTEE

The men named above were responsible for the welfare of

the German Club for the year 1939-40. When the year

opened the organization was in the red. It was the under-

taking of this group to restore the club to its feet. They

undertook a sound reorganization plan and made the club

once more a prosperous organization. The work which they

did in putting on good dances on a sound financial basis

and bringing good bands to the campus was indeed a re-

markable undertaking.

They brought us, for Fall Germans, Larr)' Clinton. We will

all rem.ember the "Dipsy Doodler" with pleasure. At Mid-

Winters we heard Glen Gray and the Casa Lomans. For

Finals an excellent year was topped off when Glenn Miller

and Eddie Duchin furnished the rhythm.

Remember: Graham Memorial . . . Bob Magill . . . Nine-

Hundred Dollars . . . Comprehensives always conflicting

with dances . . . The Secretary-Treasurer's accident . . . The

turning over of the reins at Finals . . . Meeting deadlines for

the Yackety Yack—Joke . . .

Cheshire. Coghill. Diffendal, Ficklen,

McPherson, Murchinson, Murphy, Smith,

Sutton, Turner, Wright,

iim

350

FALL GERMANS

XVURING November the excite-

ment of both the German Dances and

the Carolina - Duke Football game

was interwoven into the same week-

end. The eventful week-end was

started with a rousing pep rally of

which Kay Kayser was the honored

guest. The weather was warm for

November and unusual for Chapel

Hill for it was dance week-end and

no rain! Larry Clinton's music did

much to upheave the dampened

spirits caused by loss of the game to

Duke Saturday. All in all and with

the exception of the football game,

the week-end was a social high light

of the year.

The leaders of the dance set were:

Robert Strange with Miss Mary Cor-

bett; Henry May with Miss Fay Lin-

berg; Clark Ballard with Miss Lois

Wilkins; George Foote with Miss

Ethel Lindsay; Jess Swan with Miss

Jane Moody; George Coxhead with

Miss Shirley Bailey; John Ditfendal

with Miss Mary Lewis Millis; Fere-

bee Taylor with Miss Josephine Peo-

ples; Cyrus Hogue with Miss Eliza-

beth Jones.

Coxhead. Miss Bailey. Diffendal. Miss

Millis. Foote, Miss Lindsey, May, Miss

LiNDBERG, Strange. Miss Corbett. T.^ylor.

Miss Peoples.

351

MID-WINTERS

J_ HE music of Glen Gray echoed

through the cold air of the Tin Can and

another dance week-end had begun at

Carolina. The Tin Can, decorated with a

Valentine theme and filled with a capacity

crowd lent an air of complete relief from

a dismal quarter and added much joy to

the occasion.

The week-end was highlighted by the

Duke-Carolina Boxing match. Remember

that Kimball-Bailey fight? Numerous

other activities both athletic and social

made the week-end one of many fond

memories.

The leaders of the Friday night dance

were: Tom Nash with Miss Gwyn Watts,

Bill Davenport with Miss Jean Dulin,

Perrin Quarles with Miss Hordenia Jef-

feries, Ed Seaver with Miss Courtney

Owens, Sonny Lambeth with Miss Mar-

garet White, Matt Dalton with Miss

Harriet Sutherland, Lucian Lentz with

Miss Eleen Self, Malcolm McNaughton

with Miss Betty Kelsee, Tommy Hayes

with Miss Mary Marshall Jones, and

Winston Broadfoot with Miss Frances

Warren.

The Leaders of the Saturday Night dance

were: Lawson Turner with Miss Frances

Moses, Louis Sutton with Miss Nancy

Maupin, Charles Diffendal with Miss

Pauline Douglas, Tom Wright with Miss

Louise Bennett, David Murchison with

Miss Johnson, Julian Coghill with Miss

Alexa McColl, Warren Smith with Miss

Mary Emma Robbins, Lynch Murphy with

Miss Nancy Leonard, Studie Ficklen with

Miss Louise Debrell, Godfrey Cheshire

with Miss Beth Caldwell, and Sam Mc-

Pherson with Miss Nancy Wrenn.

Cheshire, Miss Caldwell, Diffendal, Miss

Douglas, Ficklen, Miss Debrell, Murphey,

Miss Leonard, Sutton, Miss Murdock,

Turner, Miss Moses.

i ^

•^ * ^^ft -vs .-f

k^^^^Jmt4

Davis, Miss Davis, Ferling, Miss Phillips, Hall, Miss Minges, Royali.. Miss Boykin, Royster, Miss

Williams. Wilkerson, Miss Thiem

MAY FROLICS

ciyz FRed-letter day on anybody's

calendar at Carolina is the annual

May Frolics, always held in the

middle of April. May Frolics is the

official welcome of spring at Carolina. Imports swarm

into Chapel Hill leaving a few co-eds to attend the

dances. This year Tommy Dorsey and his Band were

brought to the campus for this event. White tie and

tails lent an air of formality to the

occasion while T. Dorsey and his

rhythm increased the joviality.

The Leaders of the figures were:

John Davis with Miss Davis, Larry Ferling with Miss

Phillips, A. C. Hall with Miss Mmges, Kenneth Roy-

all with Miss Boykin, Thomas S. Royster with Miss

Williams, and George Wilkerson with Miss Thiem.

FINALS

• •

CAMPBELL, DANIEL, DAVIS, HANCOCK

sAD but happy thoughts of commencement set the scene for the final Ger-

man Club presentation of the year. Jimmy Lunceford and Will Osborne offered

the rhythm for the occasion. As life at Carolina slowly became memories. Anote of joy and gladness was added by the dance week-end preceding com-

mencement. This set being the last three day dance set at Carolina proved also

to be one of the year's best.

The Seniors leading the figure were: Keith Eustler with Sarah Ruark, Bill Raney

with Becky Davis, Wills Hancock with Marianna Hancock, Bill Campbell with

Blevins Vogler, Harold Sager with Pat Brown, Bill Davis with Helen Jennings,

Bill Hendrix with Marion Galloway, June Tillery with Margaret Brandon,

Johnson Harris with Marian Sedwick, Louis Sutton with Sarah Sutton, and Bill

Daniel with Martha De Golian.

(* ^^ ^' n :^ n.U

HARRIS HENDRIX

SAGHR TILLERY

355

PHI ASSEMBLY BALL

M HE annual Phi Assembly Ball

was held on the evening of Novem-

ber 1 1 . Midshipmen from the Naval

Academy and the University of Ox-

ford Debating team attended as spe-

cial guests making the dance a color-

ful occasion. Jimmie Farr and his

orchestra played for the event which

turned out to be the most successful

dance in the Assembly's history, and

one of the most delightful affairs of

the fall quarter.

The leaders of the dance were: Joe

Dawson with Miss Shirley Hobbs,

Ott Burton with Miss Jo Austin, Bob

Farris with Miss Frances Gibson,

James Ellison with Miss Eloise

Brown, Art Clark with Miss Eliza-

beth Orton, Bob Sloan with Miss

Marion Igo, and Jimmie Pittman

with Miss Virginia Gates.

Burton. Miss Austin. CL.^RK, Miss Orton.

Davcson. Miss Hobbs. Ellison. Miss Brown.

Farris. Miss Gibson. Pittman. Miss Gates.

356

Dillon. Miss Ci ick. Farris. Miss Gibson. Hardy. Miss Burns. Morrison. Miss Carraway. Stewart,

Miss DonsoN. Stroud. Miss PrTHicK. Vincent. Miss Harris

INTERDDRMITDRY DANCES

67)XJ LEAK February brought to the

Campus Al Donahue and Bubbles

Becker for the Interdormitory

Dances. The Friday night dance,

with music rendered by Bubbles

Becker, was preceded by a banquet honoring mem-bers of the Interdormitory Council and their dates.

A tea dance was held Saturday afternoon and the

Grail honored the Interdormitory boys with a dance

Saturday night. Al Donahue contributed the music

to both.

The dance leaders participating in

the figures were: Red Stroud with

Miss Pethick, Jack Towell with

Miss Jessie Skinner, Shelton Dug-

ger with Miss Ruby Reese, Leon

Russell with Miss Jeanne Connell, "Piggie" Briggs

with Miss Martha Showalter, Mickey Wagner with

Miss Margaret Carraway, Hal Pope with Miss Sara

Hudis, Bob Farris with Miss Frances Gibson, Richard

Aiken with Miss Dorothy Foust, Ott Burton with

Miss Dorothy Kimpall, and Phil Ellis with Miss

Marion Igo.

357

FRESHMAN DANCES

jf HE social season of the Spring

quarter was opened by the Freshman

Dance, first of the spring quarter.

Held the week-end before elections

in the new gym, all the dance lacked

was a politicians' no-break. Rain, in

tlie usual Carolina fashion, accom-

panied the freshman event. Dean

Hudson's orchestra played for the

dance and as an added attraction

accompanied Marjorie Johnston to

"My Heart Has Told Me So" from

Sound and Fury's original campus

presentation, "One More Spring".

The leaders for this event were:

Tommy Crudup with Miss Peoples,

Floyd Cohoon with Miss Bateman,

Page Shamburger with Miss Charles

and Campbell Ir^'ing with Miss Fris-

sell. These were assisted by Buck

Osbourne, George Adams and J.B.

Webster.

Cohoon, Miss Bateman. Crudup, Miss Peo-

ples, Irving, Miss Frissell, Shamburger,

Miss Charles.

Alfxander, Miss McNeely. Batchelor, Miss Bush. Elliot, Miss Malildin, Hobbs. Miss Gannon,HoLLiNGSwoRTH, Miss HiERS, Martin, Miss Sexton. McKinnon, Miss Barnes

SDPHDMDRE DANCES

'^,,AIN USHERED in the

Sophomore Dance week-end. The

crowded dances in Wollen Gymwere held on the day before

the Carolina-State Football game. The music was

rendered by Dan Gregory. After the game Saturday

Dean Hudson played for the tea dance. Saturday

night the Grail held a dance in honor of the sopho-

mores and their dates. Hudson

again rendered the harmony.

Those who led for this occasion

were : Bill Alexander with Miss Mc-

Neely, Doug Batchelor with Miss Bush, Pinkey Elliott

with Miss Mauldin, Truman Hobbs with Miss Gannon,

Lloyd Hollingsworth with Miss Hiers, W. T. Martin

with Miss Sexton, Bill McKinnon with Miss Barnes.

359

JUNIDR-SENIQR

BOWLES DAVIS FAIRLEY GRAINGERHARMON HOWARD HUNTER IDOL

Q IRLS . . . Music . . . laughter . . . girls ... at last spring and Junior-Seniors

had come. Besides Jan Savitt and his music, Beer parties, house parties, and

hayrides were in order for the day. Dances come in the morning, afternoon,

and on into the night. Both imports and co-eds joined hands to render the

week-end in the characteristic Carolina fashion. In the spring a young man's

fancy turns to thoughts of Chapel Hill in full bloom, Junior-Seniors, and

tripping the light fantastic . . .

360

The leaders from the Senior Class for the week-end were: Jim Davis, Jack

Fairley, Martin Harmon, Benny Hunter, Ed Megson, George Ralston, and

Billy Wmstead.

Representing the Junior Class were: Skipper Bowles, Ike Grainger, Jimmy

Howard, Charlie Idol, Kenan Williams, and Paul Severin.

KIMBALL

PLAYGROUND OF THE SDUTH . . .

Key: Old South, pre-Civil War style.

Boy, ain't she a wow, though?; It's Noe, know 'er?;

The South—Gerard, "Brenner Pass"; South's daily

sunners.

Chapel period; politics, bull, gossip; A.C. and Sarah;

It's on page six; Bet they're from home; Sailor, be-

ware; Don't worry, we see you; Helen Ann worships

he-man; Ten thirty rendezvous; Jean and the current

choice; Time's haven't changed much.

DDRM LIFE AS WE LIVED IT IN 1940 . . .

Key: Old East cornerstone.

Upper-quad court, political inferno; Now smile;

He's got that petroleum sheen; Listening in, Caro-

lina-Tulane game.

364

Pie-eyed piper; Club Steele Store, Frank Ledbetter

presiding; Lazy bones, just sitting and gumming;

Saturday Night; Smith and Balzac; Mangum's morn-

ing mail; A symbol of our heritage; Spencer's spin-

sters; Just like Stirny's.

amnu6p. J^napskotdip

PREPARED PILL PEDDLER'S PICTORIAL PAGE .

.

Key: Expecting your folks?

Female Pharmacists, my, my; Leap year lover; Rose

and Jesse smiling as usual; I think we're being fol-

lowed; Lay down. Bud; We'll miss Alta Jane

Hold'em; "Hitler invades Norway, Sweden ..."

366

SPRINGTIME PASTIMES . . .

Key: Phi Gam ringers.

Don't look now, Don't look now, Don't look now!;

Simon Legree and child labor; And so far into the

night; Hmm, she might; Thelma Brammer and

stooge; Come up'n see me, beeg boy; Look at the

ball, Phillips; Ivlaybe they are part owners.

A Chapel Hill Institution, Dur Student Union

Key: That last minute pressure.

Graham Memorial's trend of the times; JVIac, of the

Grill, and victim, Grubbs; D.T.H. ad collectors; Tar

Heel and B»c bigwigs; No. 5, in the corner pocket;

That one vote week-end; The B/zc takes shape; Vot-

ing, machine age style.

CARDLINA'S SMOOTHIES IN ACTION . . .

Key: That brotherly sisterly feeling.

Come on, it's free; Business manager Halperin, and

business; Gates and Martha, "Just walking"; Won't

be long now; Two birds in a cage; "God save the

King"; Rex, and social climbing Cocker pup; Three,

and still trying.

I569

WEEK-END SPDHTIN', CDURTIN', IMPDRTIN'...

Key: Beat it out!

Larry Clinton and dipsy-doodlers; Stopl You're

breaking my heart.

Campus ^nap^kotdip p^

Sunrise serenade; Carolina, third down and fifteen

to go; Gates, Alice, and Jim tete-a-tete; ATO's fete

their pledges; Morning-after boredom; Necks, please;

Time out for the Yackhty Yack; Think hard, sister,

she'sl!; Look what I've done; We ain't mad at no-

body; I've got my eyes on you; The ever subtle Moe.

I'^omL WORKS Aomv

I^INING ^HALL

CARDLINAS OVERNIGHT EXPANSION . . .

Key: Pennies from Heaven.

Renovated Alumni; Woman's Dorm No. 3; Where

Med. students burn midnight oil; Woman's DormNo. 1 ; New Med. building.

372

"H", of the lower quad; Meat, two vegetables . . .

two bits; Power plant; Woolen Gym; Zoology build-

ing; K, "Kayser", dorm; Inn annex.

K^ampud J^napdkotdvp p^

TIN CAN TINTINNABULATIONS .

.

Key: Got a match?

Hero worship a la male; That self-conscious after-

figure dance; Take it oft; Hero worship a la female;

Little apple in full swing; Sanford "interviews"

singer; He must eat at Swain; Student-Faculty day

committee at work.

CAROLINA SIDELIGHTS . . . .

A.';').- How bout a pat, bud ?

Al Carr, and not in Harry's; Bastille, Fleet Street,

Sing Sing, Devil's Island; Itsie footsie hurtsie?; Youhomesick, fellah?; Boy, that's food for thought;

Geology field trip; Terry, candid camera fiend; The

Dashiells chaperone.

CHAPEL HILL'S LDDP DISTRICT .

.

Key: So DRINK chug-a-lug, chug-a-lug, chug-a-lug.

State college; We're in the peerade, now, We're not

behind the plow . . .; 1 :30 class M-S; P.O., remember

their building it?; Street walkers, headed for E. Car-

rington's; Clyde, Moze: Bring me those D finan-

cial reports; The usually deserted side; Ab's, "Offices

of contempo"; Gee, you're beautiful.

NATIVES AND FURRINERS . .

Key: Boop-boop-a-doop, it's May day.

That's right, you're right, it's Kay; Gatton and prize

catch, Taft; It's a habit: John and Martha; Let's

gooooo, Carolina!; Leap year, it's on me; The poor

overworked guy; Let's watch 'em go by.

AND THE SNOWS CAME -Key: What a snow, fourteen inches.

Come on, after 'em . . . ; Go 'way, it's not finished

yet; Snow bound; As seen from Dorm No. 1.

L^a/npud ^napdkoidipf^

378

AND CAME . .

Pity the poor opposition; Carolina's unusual winter

robe; Thawing it out; Snow ball free-for-all; K.A.,

Kappa Sig assault on Phi Kappa Sig; Visibility zero,

pulchritude plus; It's just too, too delightful; She's

probably from Florida; Sally Ford Mc's cohorts at-

tack Dekes; The European war got competition here.

WE EVEN ATTENDED CLASSES .

.

Key: South, 12:53.

A.K.; Lover's acre, southwest entrance; PLEASE!

Keep Off The Grass; Swindle, conjugate amo; As

the prof sees us.

BELIEVE IT DR NDTMackie, freshman Math, idol; Bingham to Peabody,

seven minutes; Embryonic psychologists leaving NewWest; Fodder for this scientific age; There's myhometown; No dogs allowed; Typical ten thirty "Y"

crush; Foster with the old evil glint.

(^ampud J^napdkoidip p^

WE TDDK IT EASYKey: Gee, I feel better already.

Wish she'd move that phone; Are you sure it's not

ham?; Simons Lucas Roof, Jr. converses with na-

ture; Cam, two to four any day; Lil' Abner at eight

twenty; C.P.U.'s Gatton takes the count; But Dead

Eye Dick crept stealthily . . . ; Sociology 62 Lab.

}82

CANDID CATCHESKey: Sunning on the pier, Hogan's lake.

Exam week; Dorm Two's triumverate—Doris, Dot,

Ann; 'sno man, Peggy; It's a terrible life; Beer on

whiskey; Going to church, Phil?; Mother's little

helper; Poor embossed Bossy.

im^

'GENTLEMEN, THE CAROLINA COEDS!'

Key: It's Meta, didja meet 'er?

We're pals, everybody; Student-Facully nifties and

ogling hoipoloi; Camera conscious coeds; Nancy,

Stieffie, Mary Wood, and Droopy.

L^am.pu.6 J^napdn^otdT P^

384

Doris, etc., probably reading Doris* column ; Admiral

Foote's daughter rides again; A.D. Pi's holding an

at home gab fest; Thou shalt not wait in vain; I

ain't lonely at all, very much; Raleigh's Carolina

embassy; Bet it's getting cold; Wonder what they

talk about; Dare you to push her; Dot Pratt and

Eleanor Maupin.

WDDLEN, ATHLETICS FDR ALL . .

.

Key: Sarge, equipment room hander-outer.

Coed field and Lacrosse players; Round and round

we go; Squash racquets devotee; Gimme 1926 and a

clean 32 shirt; Intramural Sharkeys; A practice

round.

386

v--»5Sf « "IKf

It'll never make it; Southern Conference phantom

hurdlers; Sure, it's gorgeous George, 1940 All-Ameri-

can; Tuff gals, they're the athletic type; Collegiate

splashers, kiddie pool style; Ready, aim . . . ; Allah

is alllllll mighty!

L^a/npud ^napdkot^tp p^

388

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answers to your smoking pleasure with Chesterfields . . . the

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'WISHING

THE CLASS OF 1940

THE BEST OF

LUCK AND SUCCESS'

A FRIEND

393

"THINKING OF

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KAY KYSER

394

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DURHAM, N. C.

GEORGE WATTS HILL, President

G. W. Munford Walter Sledge Bascom BaynesVice-Pres. Treasurer Exec. V.-Pres.

Frank B. DMts, Secretary

STROWD MOTOR CO.

BRUCE STROWD

404

Phone F-9801

PET DAIRY PRODUCTS CO.

Pasteurized Dairy Products

Pet Ice Cream

Taste the D/fJereuce

DURHAM, N. C.

TRY

THE UNIVERSITY CLEANERS

for

Quality Cleaning and Pressing

At Moderate Prices

For Excellence In Food

MEET YOUR FRIENDS

at the

UNIVERSITY RESTAURANT(Next to Post Office)

MARTIN HARMONEditor of Daily Tor Heel

BAGWELL HEATING & PLUMBING CO.

UNIVERSITIES

AGREE 0]\ THIS POII^T

Educational institutions all over the country

may dift'er widely on questions relating to methods of

instruction, comparative merit of various text books

and even upon the extent to which athletics may

properly be emphasized. Not so, however, on the

selection of steam generating and fuel burning equip-

ment, where the evaluation of design, construction

and performance seems to have led so many to an

identical conclusion, i.e.. Buy C-E.

During the past 10 years more than 70 American

universities, colleges and other institutions of higher

education have selected C-E equipment for their fuel

burning and steam generating requirements. This

widespread recognition by so large a group of

discerning purchasers is significant of the quality of

design and construction which characterizes all equip-

ment manufactured by Combustion Engineering.

A small but representative cross-section of purchasers

in this category is shown in the list below.

University of Alabama

UNIVERSITY PRINTERY

Carolina Steel & Iron Co.GREENSBORO, N. C.

Structural Steel for Buildings and Bridges

1500 TONS MONTHLY CAPACITY 3000 TONS STOCK ON HAND

IFe Are Also Distributors for the Following Products

Elevator Doors Steel Windows

Tin Clad Fire Doors Toilet Partitions

Chain Link Fence Stair Treads

Ash Hoists and Equipment Gratings

Steel Lockers and Shelving

Wire Guards and Drills

Vault Lights

Rolling Steel Doors

Ask for

LftMnce

PEANUT BUTTER SANDWICHESat your

Soda Fountain,

Service Station

or

Grocery

BENNY HUNTERPresident of Senior Class

HARRY GATTONChairman of Carolina Political Union

"THE 1940 YACKETY YACK

IS BOUND IN A

KINGSKRAFT COVER"

UNDERWOODTYPEWRITERS

MADE BY THE TYPEWRITER LEADER OF THE WORLD

UNDERWOOD ELLIOTT FISHER CO.Typewriters, Accounting Machines, Adding Machines,

Carbon Papers, Ribbons and other Supplies

One Park Avenue, New York, N. Y.

Soles and Service Everywhere

37 Years of Service

410

yytficlat l-^kotoarapkeri tor the /940 Lyachetu {/jack

WOOTTEN -MOULTONPhotographers

PORTRAIT HOME PORTRAITS

ILLUSTRATIONS COLLEGE ANNUALS

ILLUSTRATED TALKS

NEW BERN, N.C. • CHAPEL HILL, N. C.

411

First Truck Load of Yackety Yack's Are Distributed

412

J^c kooi

on6

The many high awards won each year by school

publications produced by us is the result of many

years' specialization based on a comprehensive

knowledge of art motifs, design, layout and publi-

cation trends.

A modern printing plant, operated by highly effi-

cient craftsmen in every department, provides a

quality and distinctiveness that is unsurpassed.

The LASSITER PRESS, Inc,

QUEEN CITY PRINTING COMPANY

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA

printer of tke 1940 ijacLtt^ VjacL

413

414

INDEX FOR ADVERTISERS

Anonymous 393

Atlantic Marble & Tile Co 396

Bagwell Heating &: Plumbing Co 405

Balfour Co 399

Bank of Chapel Hill 390

Block's (Southland Mfg. Co.) 401

Book Exchange 395

Carolina Beauty & Barber Shop 409

Carolina Inn 400

Carolina & Pick Theatres 402

Carolina Steel & Iron Co 408

Chatham Mfg. Co 393

H. L. Coble 407

Coca-Cola 401

Combustion Engineering Co 406

Depositors National Bank 407

Al Donahue & Band 407

Efirds 398

Fidelity Bank 396

Finchley 409

Five Point Sinclair Station 390

Foister Photo Co 401

Gibson Insurance Co 390

Hanes Mills -391

Home Savings Bank 406

Home Security Life Ins. Co 403

Huntley-Stockton-Hill Furniture Co 400

Jahn & Oilier Engraving Co 412

Johnson Motor Co 406

King Cotton Hotel 402

Kingsport Press 409

S. H. Kress 402

Kay Kyser 394

Lance's, Inc 408

Lassiter Press • 413

Laundry Dept 403

Liggett & Myers Tob. Co 389

Martin Jewelry Co 390

Model Market 401

Wm. Muirhead Construction Co 406

Penders Grocery Store 398

Pepsi-Cola 396

Pet Dairy Products 405

Robert E. Lee Hotel 399

Seemen Printery 396

Seven-Up Bottling Co 409

Stroud Motor Co 403

Underwood &: Elliot Fisher Co 409

University Cleaners 405

University Dining Hall 399

University Printery 407

University Restaurant 405

Walgreen Drug Co 405

Washington-Duke Hotel 395

Wilbert's Cigar Store 407

Winston-Salem journal 398

Wootten-Moulton 411