Library
OF THE
University of NortK Carolina
This book was presented by the family of the late
KEMP PLUMMEB BATTLE, '49
President of the University of North Carolina
from 1876 to 1890
IS ^ UP/
UNIVERSITY OF N.C AT CHAPEL I
This book mustnot be B| taken from the Library building
:
26M«r46 '
THE YACKETY YACK
Volume Thirteen
Nineteen Hundred and
Thirteen
COPYRIGHT, 1913
A. L. M. Wiggins I. M. Bailey, and M, T. Spears
YACKETY YACK I
• EDITED BY THE • DIALECTIC AND PHILANTHROPIC LITERARY SOCIETIES ANDTHE FRATERNITIES OF THE
U NIVER SITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
• CHAPEL HILL-
DIVISION OF BOOKS
6
BOOK ONE Our University
+
BOOK. TWO
The Classes
BOOK THREE
The Professional Schools
BOOK FOUR Athletics
BOOK FIVE Organizations
BOOK SIX College Life
Cls-^Hjl^
To
Junius Parker
of New York and Nortk Carolina
tke Editors offer tkis volume
as a reminder of years spent at tke University
and as a token of esteem and respect
for a strong and loyal son
of Alma Mater
Junius Parker
f^^*'*' HE YACKETY YACK for 1913 is fortunate in associating with itself the M ^m name of a loyal son of the University, who represents with honor to her and to the State her best traditions in a distant and exacting field — Mr. Junius Parker, of New \ ork, N. Y., general counsel of the American Tobacco Company.
Junius Parker comes by inheritance to the legal profession. His father, CapL Edward S. Parker, is a prominent lawyer of Graham, who has filled the office of Solicitor of the old Fifth District, and has served in the State Senate.
Junius Parker was born September 24, 1867, at Smithfield, but he entered the University in 1 885 from Graham. As an undergraduate student, he remained only two years. He returned, however, to study law under Dr. Manning, and was admitted to the Bar in 1889.
Mr. Parker practiced his profession for about five years at Durham. Those years were most important in his future life, since they brought him into contact with Mr. James B. Duke, the head of the American Tobacco Company, and Mr. W. W. Fuller, who as general counsel of the Company so ably conducted its legal affairs. Yet not for several years was he to become connected with that Company. In 1 894, he removed to Knoxville, Tenn., where in a short time he built up a large and remunerative practice. He married, in 1 899, Miss Mary W. Locke, of Knoxville; and the same year he removed to New York as assistant general counsel of the American Tobacco Company. Two years ago, when the United States Supreme Court rendered its decree in the famous case of the American Tobacco Company — a case which Mr. Parker argued before that Court with Messrs. John G. Johnson and DeLancey Nicoll — the Company was dissolved in conformity with the decree, and Mr. Parker became general counsel of the American Tobacco Company as reorganized.
During his residence in New York, Mr. Parker has maintained a warm and loyal interest in the affairs of his native State and of his Alma Mater. He is a member of the New York Southern Society, of the North Carolina Society (of which he was president in 1909), of the University of North Carolina Alumni Association in New York, and of the New York Alumni Chapter of the Southern Kappa Alpha.
In spite of the conspicuous ability which Mr. Parker has demonstrated in the position he occupies, his friends may naturally feel a sense of disappointment that his devotion to the affairs of a single great corporation has prevented his taking the position
before the public as an advocate and as a leader of the bar to which his powers and acquirements would have surely entitled him. His capacious intellect, his acute powers of analysis and mastery of legal principles, together with his happy and lucid method of exposition, make in many particulars the ideal equipment of a great lawyer. Some of the readers of the YACKETY Yack who heard his admirable address as alumni speaker two years ago will remember his rich, flexible, and impressive voice, and his winning manner of speaking.
As Mr. Parker has had few occasions to appear in the courts of his native State in recent years, the impression which he made upon one of our most distinguished judges, in the trial of a long and intricate case two years ago, will be of interest. Judge Connor, of the Federal District Court, in a letter to the writer speaks of having been impressed when he was on the Superior Bench in the early days of Mr. Parker's career "with his remarkable clearness of mind, his grasp and comprehension of legal principles, and his power of expression," and of having his impressions confirmed when he recently appeared before him as leading counsel in the case mentioned. After referring in detail to Mr. Parker's masterly conduct of the case, both in regard to its facts and the principles of law involved, his courtesy and tact, his strong and clear statements, his frankness and fairness on the trial, he adds: "Upon the whole, as a lawyer and a man, I have met, during a somewhat extended experience on the bench, but few who have impressed me more strongly and favorably. The only feeling of regret which I experienced in my associa- tion with Mr. Parker was that he had gone from his native State, and was not a member of the North Carolina Bar."
Mr. W. W. Fuller, whose experience has thrown him in intimate associat'on with many of the greatest leaders of the American bar, declares of Mr. Parker that "Considering his knowledge of the law, and his wisdom in applying it; his love of justice, and ability to distinguish it; his fairness, his courage, and his candor, Junius Parker is the best lawyer that I know — or have known."
To this laus a laudalis viris there is nothing to add as to Mr. Parker's professional ability. The writer's thoughts turn rather to an old and tried friend, a delightful com- panion of wide sympathies and keen intellectual interests, to hours of pleasant intercourse, lit up by the play of his genial, quiet humor.
— L. P. M.
/
In M
emonam
James Alvis Walker, '53 Alfred Moore Waddell, '53 John Douglass Taylor, '53 Richard Henry Battle, '5H George H. Gregory, '58 M. L. Eure, '59 A. K. Edmondson, '61 W. H. S. Burgwyn, '68 James Randlet Monroe, '85 Hal F. Boarwright, '09
H. E. Riggs, '12
I. W. Rand, '16
TOTKE SOItS s'THE UNIVERSITY WHO ENTERED
/ [THE WAR V I86I-65 WHOSE HEROISM TAUGHT THE LElSONyTHBRJ
GREATCDMMANDERTHAT DUTY 15 THE 3UBLIMESTWORDINTHE ENGLISH LAMGUA6Ef
BOOK ONE
THE PRIDE 0' CAROLINA
OUR UNIVERSITY
awl *PB»* *mam*
-LittJns**-*-*-
Faculhj
Francis Preston Venable, Ph.D., D. Sc, LL. D President
Kemp Plummer Battle, A.M., LL.D Professor Emeritus of History
Walter Dallam Toy, M.A. Professor of the Germanic Languages and Literature
WILLIAM Cain, A.M Professor of Mathematics
Henry Horace Williams, A.M., B.D Professor of Philosophy
Henry VanPeters Wilson, Ph.D ..Professor of Zoology
COLLIER Cobb, A.M Professor of Geology and Mineralogy
Charles Staple Mangum, A.B., M.D Professor of Anatomy
Edward Vernon Howell, A.B., Ph.G. Professor of Pharmacy
Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble ..Professor of Pedagogy
Isaac Hall Manning, M.D Professor of Physiology
GEORGE Howe, Ph.D. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature
Joseph Hyde Pratt, Ph.D Professor of Economic Geology
CHARLES HOLMES Herty. Ph.D., Smith Professor of General and Industrial Chemistry
Nathan Wilson Walker, A.B... Professor of Secondary Education
William DeBerniere MacNider Professor of Pharmacology
„,,_.,_._ I Professor of Economics
Charles Lee Raper, Ph.D. ■,' , , _ . „ , ,
| Dean of the Graduate School
„ „ _ ... f Professor of English
Fdward Kidder Graham, A.M. { „ , _ ,, . ., , .
( Dean of the College of Liberal Arts
William Chambers Coker Professor of Botany
Archibald Henderson, Ph.D Professor of Pure Mathematics
Joseph Gregoire deRoulhac Hamilton, Ph.D Alumni Professor of History
a ii i-. » » m I Professor of Physics
Andrew Henry Patterson, A.M ' , . _ . , .. , ,
I Dean of the School of Applied Science
Henry McGilbert Wagstaff, Ph.D. ...Professor of History
Patrick Henry Winston Professor of Laxv
WILLIAM Morton Dey, Ph.D Professor of the Romance Languages and Literature
Marvin HENDRIX Stacy, A.M Professor of Civil Engineering
James Finch Royster, Ph.D.. Professor of English
Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B J ro'essor °> aTV
I Dean of the LaTV School Charles Wesley Bain, A.M. Professor of Greek
Atwell Campbell McIntosh, A.M... Professor of Law
Harry Woodburn Chase, Ph.D Professor of the Philosophy of Education
Tom Peete Cross, Ph.D Professor of English
Warren Stone Gordis, Ph.D. ...Professor of Latin
Wade Hampton Brown, B.S., M.D Professor of Pathology
Louis Round Wilson, Ph.D ..Professor of Library Administration
Alvin Sawyer WHEELER, Ph.D Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry
Thomas James Wilson, Jr., Ph.D... ..Associate Professor of Latin
William Stanley Bernard, A.M ..Associate Professor of Creek
ROBERT Baker Lawson, M.D Associate Professor of Anatomy
George McFARLAND McKlE, A.M Associate Professor of Public Speaking
John Manning Booker, A.B Associate Professor of English
Olive TOWLES, A.B Associate Professor of the Romance Languages
THOMAS FELIX HlCKERSON, A.M. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering
PARKER Haywood DAGGETT, S.B Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering
JAMES MUNCIE Bell, Ph.D Associate Professor of Physical Chemistry
Kent James Brown, Ph.D Associate Professor of German
George Grant Kenneth Henry, A.M Instructor in Latin
John Grover Beard, Ph.G Instructor in Pharmacy
Vivian Leroy Chrisler, A.M. ...Instructor in Physics
Theophilus Randolph Eagles, Jr , A.B. Instructor in Mathematics
George Mark Sneath, A.M Instructor in English
John Wayne Lasley. A.M Instructor in Mathematics
John E. Smith, M.S Instructor in Geology
Charles Scott Venable, A.M Instructor in Chemistry
Wilbur High Royster, A.M Instructor in Latin
Daniel Huger Bacot, Jr., A.M Instructor in History
Alexander Morse Atkinson, A.B Instructor in Drawing
Wesley Critz George, A.B Instructor in Zoology
FELLOWS AND ASSISTANTS
Burke Haywood Knight Fellow in Chemistry
William Lewis Jeffries, A.B... Toch Fellow in Chemistry
James Talmage Dobbins, A.B LaDoux Fellow in Chemistry
Lucius Eugene Stacy, Jr. Fellow in Organic Chemistry
TH/R7EE.X
Victor Aldine Coulter Babbitt Fellowship
Clarence Ballew Hoke Assistant in Chemistry
Cornie Blake Carter Assistant in Chemistry
Jackson Townsend .. Assistant in Chemistry
Paul Roby Bryan.. Assistant in Chemistry
Frank Daniels Conroy Assistant in Chemistry
Grady Rudicill Roberts Assistant in Anatomy
William Battle Cobb Assistant in Botany
John Madison Labberton .....Assistant in Electrical Engineering
Louis DeKeyser Belden, S.B Assistant in Physiology
Robert Campbell Jurney Assistant in Geology
John Jay Henderson Assistant in German
James Stevens Simmons Assistant in Histology
John Robert Gentry _ ......Assistant in the Library
Jesse Forbes Pugh Assistant in the Library
Thomas Michael Ramsaur .....Assistant in the Library
Edgar Ralph Rankin Assistant in the Library
George Pickett Wilson.. Assistant in the Library
William Walter Rankin, B.E. Assistant in Mathematics
Julian Nolley Tolar .....Assistant in Pathology
GREENWOOD, A.B.... Assistant in Pharmacology
James Blaine Scarborough Assistant in Physics
Jesse Lewis Phillips Assistant in Surveying
Allyn Raymond Brownson Assistant in Zoology
Robert Cannon Sample ..Assistant in the Infirmary
THOMAS SPURGEON HUGHES Assistant in the Gymnasium
CARL Duffy TAYLOR Assistant in the Gymnasium
OTHER OFFICERS
Julius Algernon Warren. Treasurer
Charles Thomas Woollen Proctor
Thomas James Wilson, Jr., Ph.D Registrar
Marvin Hendrix Stacy, A.M. Recorder of Absences
Edmund Pleasant Hall, General Secretary of the Young Men's Christian Association
FOURTEEN
a turning from the old, tirr.e-beaten ways of managing athletics at Carolina were represen- tative alumni gathered from all points of the compass. By names they were: Walter Murphy and Staple Linn, of Salisbury; Albert L. Cox, Dr. Claud Abernathy, and Perrin Busbee, of Raleigh; Brent Drane, George Thomas, and J. A. Parker, of Charlotte; W. F. Carr and Dr. Foy Roberson, of Durham; J. M. Thompson, of Graham; and James A. Gray, Jr., of Winston-Salem. Representing the faculty at the meeting were President Venable, Professors Herty, Mangum, Raper, Howell, Henderson, Royster, Graham, Patterson, and Winston. Student representatives were: L. P. McLendon, graduate manager; W. E. Wakeley, pres'dent of the Athletic Association; W. S. Tillett, former capta'n of the football team ; and the new captain, L. L. Abernathy ; Walter Stokes and Frank Graham from the Greater Council; and G. L. Carrington, Editor of the Tar Heel.
The significant, far-reaching step taken by these members of the alumni, in con- ference with representatives from the faculty and students, in its ultimate analys's, signifies the gaining of a large control of the administration of athletics at the University by the alumni. It was the cropping out and realization of a feeling that has been silently nurtured by the alumni of the State that they should be duly recognized in the administraton of athletic affairs at Carolina. They were hostile to any view that athletics should be an open-and-shut-game between faculty and students. The plan as submitted by the alumni, and approved by students and faculty, provides for the adoption of an alumni system of coaching to the degree of: providing for an alumni council com- posed of four alumni, a member of the faculty and two students ; this committee to have complete control of coach'ng and provide for the expenses of coaching : then with representation on a resident committee, with the power to make schedules, purchase supplies, make local arrangements, etc., the alumni are assured a large hand in controlling athletic affairs. The plan thus adopted, in its final form, is an admixture of the plans of administration of athletics in force at Harvard and Princeton Universities. Additional to the inauguration of a distinct feature of the alumni system, the year has furnished the athletic system with the long-desired virtue of a contmuity in the management of all athletic teams and all athletic activities by the method of providing for a graduate manager and treasurer. These offices are capably filled, respectively, by L. P. McLendon and Proctor C T. Woollen. Still another advanced step towards building athletics on a more substantial basis is the newly instituted five-dollar fee for membership in the Athletic Association, which entitles every member to see every athletic contest on the home grounds.
riVE.vry- three
Commenting on this "home-source revenue plan," Frank Graham, writing in the Alumni Review, says: "With this more substantial financial basis, and with concentrated respon- sibility in an efficient council to supplant what proved to be desultory, inexperienced, and unbusinesslike management, athletics at the University are on a foundation for gradual growth into greater effectiveness."
The Greater Council
Paitly as an outgrowth of the stu- dent council proper, and in a large measure a branching off into a distinct field of its own, the present college year has given birth to a student organization known as "The Greater Council." The function of this new creation, arising to meet the demands of the increasing con plexily of college life, is not of judgment for the rightng of grievances or the punshment of evildoers, but is an organization of rep- resentative students striving to offer solutions for the problems of student life — endeavoring to associate harmoniously the units of college life, relate them, and thus promote interests of the University as well as student life on the campus. A typical illustra- tion of the work undertaken by the "Greater Council" can be ascertained from a para- graph in the November issue of the University Magazine, by the president of the council, Walter Stokes, Jr., under the nom de plume "R. J. Sekots Retlaw": "We are striving for perfect social health. The social health of our community is more solid now than at any previous time during the writer's sojourn in it. Yet we must evolve further if we would have perfect social health. The whole, composed of systemat'zed, well-balanced units, may be a forward step." Then Mr. Stokes proceeds to offer a salient remedy towards bettering social life by making the academic classes the units of the whole through the medium of having the classes room by themselves. This is only one of the many problems of campus l'fe to which The Greater Council will direct its careful attention; and its activities in many fields of reform imke it unmstakably certain thai it has a mission in college life, and is an organization here to stay. This year's Council is composed of the following students representing the various classes: Regular Council, W. G. Harry, Frank Graham, A. L. Hamilton, J. N. Tolar, D. H. Carlton, Phillip Woollcott, and Walter Stokes, Jr. ; Graduate Class, P. H. Gwynn, Jr. ; Senior Class, M. T. Spears and G. B. Phillips; Junior Class, Leno:r Chambers, Jr.; and S. W. Whilmg; Sophomore Class, W. P. Fuller and T. C. Boushall; Medical Class, J. S. Milliken; Law Class, J. T. Johnston; Pharmacy Class, C. L. Cox.
The Central Organization of County Clubs
Analagous to the other definite movements of the college year toward weaving the University and the State into a Siamese-twin relationship, is the perfection of a central
TirE.XTr-FtTR
organization of all the County Clubs. The work devolving upon this newly-created organization of Association of County Clubs is aptly expressed in the preamble of the Constitution adopted by the Association: The members of the County Clubs in the University, being keenly aware of their obligation to the State that is training them, to the communities in which they have been reared, and to themselves as individuals in a demo- cratic society, and knowing the difficult problems that stand in the way of progress of the various counties and the State; and being eager to serve intelligently through a more accurate knowledge of conditions, do organize this Club, to be known as the North Caro- lina Civic Association of the University of North Carolina. The officers of the organiza- tion are: I. M. Bailey, of Smithfield, pres:dent; Frank Graham, of Charlotte, first vice- president; G. B. Phillips, of Trinity, second vice-president; F. W. Morrison, of Spencer, secretary; E. M. Coulter, of Connelly Springs, treasurer; Prof. E. K. Graham, C. L. Raper, and M. C. S. Noble, executive committee.
University Law Class Wins Prize
The Univers'ty Law Department numbers its leaders in councils of State and Nation by the thousands. Each year since the founding of the school more than a half- century ago its sons have been products of the best legal talent in the State or Nation. The class of 1912-1913 will add a memorable chapter to this proud record of fifty years' standing of the Law School. The class, through its display of legal talent, has already obtained national recognit on through the medium of the mock trial contest of "The Case of Jennie Brice" as instituted by Everybody's Magazine. Other than receiving the h'gh honor of national recognition, the class was awarded the first State prize of $100.00 in the Union-wide contest. Credit for th's distinct triumph is duly attached to the following young attorneys: John W. Hester, of Hester; James W. Morris, of Tampa, Fla. ; W. L. Warlick, of Newton; Horace E. Stacy, of Shelby; George H. Ward, of Waynes- ville; L. A. Swicegood, of Salisbury; J. J. Henderson, of Mebane; and W. F. Taylor, of Faison.
The University Dramatic Club
Convincingly true is the contention that athletics and debating are vitally essential in the make-up of student activities; just so has dramatics an important role in the develop- ment of student life. Revived and rejuvenated, dramatics as expressed in the very best dramatic talent picked from a wide range, embracing a hundred or more candidates, has contrbuted abundantly to the things that have made the year an eventful one. The single production of the comedy, "What Happened to Jones," alone will outdistance the bounds of a brief college year, and set a high standard for dramatic talent of the years to follow.
Other Changes
There are many other history-making events in the college year 1912-1913, that ends with the crowning event of a visit from Vice-President Thomas R. Marshall, that are of equal significance as those already treated separately and somewhat in detail; but
TIVEN7 Y-FIVE
Y-YACK
the briefness and incompleteness of an article of this nature makes it not feasible to expand further than giving a few sentences to each of the other steps contributing to the making of a Greater University.
With the rapid expans on of the institution in increased number of students, and the annexat'on of new branches of work, the year has recorded the erection of three new buildings. The first of these, the Caldwell Hall, has provided sufficient accommodations for the growing medical school. The new dormitory, whose three sections are named
after Pres. K. P. Battle, Gov. Zeb B. Vance, and Gen. J. J. Pettigrew, has been com- pleted, and contains quarters for seventy-two students. Then, too, the erection of a new educational building, made possible by the Peabody Fund, will mark the rise of the school of education.
The activities of the faculty have set a standard unsurpassed in previous years. This standard was voiced by a younger alumnus in his speech on University Day, when he asserted that there was a prevailing sentiment in the State that the University should, like the University of Wisconsin, spend itself more directly in the service of the people. It is doing this, in solving the problems of public health, in bringing about better methods of taxation, in giving expert advice to townships and counties engaged in the construction of highways, in carrying literature on all kinds of everyday, actual problems to any citizen in the State who might be in need of special information; in doing all those helpful, needful things embraced under the head of intelligent "University Extension."
TWENTY-SIX
BOOK TWO
THE CLASSES
0' THE UNIVERSITY
icers
Walter Stokes, Jr.... President
Miss Watson Kasey Vice-President
J. Y. Caldwell Secretary
Horace Sisk Treasurer
D. J. WALKER - Statistician
M. T. Spears Historian
Miss MARGARET BERRY Architect of Last Wdl and Testament
J. C. Busby Class Orator
S. R. BlVENS Class Poet
A. L. M. WIGGINS - Class Representative
I HI \ TY-NINE
CI
ass roem
* * * Haply some day we meel again; Yet ne'er the selfsame men shall meel; The years shall make us other men.
— Sir Richard Burton
Ah, 'tis true, the years will change us.
We shall never meel again; Bui would time be held quiescent.
Though together we remain? Let there be no sense of sorrow.
For the present self, we find. E'er remains, and liveth only
In the kingdom of the mind. It is not ourselves hereafter
That we know and love at heart; And the men We are at present
Neither space nor lime can part.
Through the menial panorama.
In the years. We'll walk at will; There with college friends and classmates
Live in sweet communion still. They'll inspire our best endeavor.
Lend us hope life's load to bear; There they'll join in joy and laughter.
And the dropping tear will share; There the co-eds will enchant us
For they'll still seem young and fair.
Each has been a mutual helper
Through the years together passed; Each will tone the other's spirit
While our life's long labors last. So we drift not on an ocean,
Leaving friends We've made behind. All are staid, are firmly anchored.
In the harbor of the mind.
-S. R. B., *13
•
Senior Class History
, i* - HIRTEEN ! ah, it makes one shudder to think of that number. If we had been
■ '^k given our choice, we would probably have refused " 1 3" as our class numerals,
^■^^ but it was a case of "have to" with us, so we cheerily paid our money to the
Bursar, and at the same time made up our minds that we would prove that the number
"13" does not always bring misfortune and disaster.
The first few nights we spent on the Hill were literally a "reign of terror" for us. The Sophomores "rose nobly to the occasion," and gave us a warm reception. They seemed glad to see us, and even took special pains to find every one of us, even if we did spend the night in Battle's Park. After a few days, we mustered up courage enough to meet under the cover of darkness on the outskirts of the town, and
elect our officers. After much politicking, "Nap" Vann was SENIORS DECIDE TO chosen as the leader of our class, which numbered 1 88. START SOMETHING
As Freshmen, we were treated in a similar way to those
who had preceded us. In fact, the Sophomores were always "on Al a Class Smoker They Re- the job," and we never lacked attention at their hands. During solve to.Qoit Knocking
this year, we exhibited nothing that would distinguish us from and Boost
the average Freshman Class. We were simply Freshmen, and
we were treated as such. It was during the Spring of this year that death visited our ranks, and saddened our hearts by taking from our midst two of our most prom sing mem- bers, W. T. Dortch and William Cameron.
After the summer vacation, we returned to the Hill much delighted to be Sophomores. Our class now numbered 1 55. R. W. Scott was elected to pilot us through this year. We, as a class, passed resolutions pledging ourselves not to engage in hazing. This was one of the most important acts of our class. It was truly a forward step in the right direction. From now on we were a class that believed in change, :n progress.
In athletics, our class did not develop any stars. Our class football team again failed to cross their opponents' goal line. It seemed like the numerals "13" were truly a Jonah for our football team. But we got together during the Spring, and man- aged to capture the class baseball championship. Our men were now beginning to take an active part in all phases of college
THIRTY-ONF.
UNIVERSITY &£ NORTH CAROLINfi
'ACKETY-YACK
MR. WARREN'S PARTY CAUSE UlM TO BE ADOPTED BY THE SENIORS Mingling insrlhri in Hie best
■ hiKlil
!,!« bj ,
ailing
by all prcsi especially enjoya several side
of four pages from "Hufftr Book ol Pons" by Doug Rights, the christening o! Mr. Warren asl -Ibe first child born to Ibe Class of 1'iijbv M T. Sticars, and the' obstinate refusal of Jim Carter
•r, ;_».. of Uib CliSS Miss
activities. We were beginning to place ourselves, and to find out our duty to ourselves
and to the University. The true meaning of college life was gradually dawning upon us. Another summer passed, and we again gathered around the well, but there was
a feeling of sadness in our hearts, for death had visited our ranks during the summer and
claimed as its victim Melvin Buckley. The beginning of our Junior year was signalized
by the unanimous election of "Bob" Huffman as president. This
election exemplified the sentiment of the class, and was an index
to the fact that the spirit of harmony prevailed among us. During
the fall of this year, we furnished to the varsity football team,
Tillett, Strange, and Ritch. In class football, we were again
unable to cope with our opponents, but the record made by our
varsity representatives fully offset our poor showing on the class
field. With the coming of sprng, the desire of change which has
characterized our class agam manifested itself, in that the class
after much wrangling and discussion decided that the Junior
"Prom" must go. In its place was substituted a reception given
to the Seniors and members of the faculty. In class baseball, we failed to win the championship as in the pre- ceding year, but our team was, nevertheless, a creditable one. To the varsity baseball team we gave Swink, and to the track team Blalock. Thirteen of our men were elected to membership in the (") B K. This was the largest number ever furnished by any class here, and we were justly proud of this fact. Although by abolish- ing the Junior Prom some dissension arose between some of our members, yet this was soon forgotten, and our class again became a compact body, and harmony once more prevailed among us. We now prided ourselves on the fact that we were a democratic body. The spirit of progress again showed itself in our ranks. This time it decreed that we hold our class election in the spring, and thus have everything in readiness when we returned in Sep- tember to resume our work. Walter Stokes, Jr., was selected a.: the one best able to uphold the dignity of our class. Miss Kasey, one of our co-eds, was chosen vice-president.
Summer passed, and eighty Seniors answered to the roll call. We were now on our last lap, and as we entered it, we d d so
Jv>»'-..'.-- . '- V »,,
->. .
THIRTY- TirO
UNIVERSITY y
RTH CAROLINAr-J,
YACKETY-YACK
fully resolved that the spirit of haromny, progress, and unity which had characterized us thus far should continue to prevail in our class. To further this idea, we instituted the custom of class smokers. They proved to be a success in every sense of the word. To the varsity football team we gave Tillett (Captain) and Strange. On the class field, our football team again fa led to cross their opponents' line. Thus we hold an "unparallelled record."
Our men are now actively engaged in many phases of college life. D. L. Rights is president of the Y. M. C. A., and also editor-in-chief of the Magazine. G. L. Car-
nngton is editor-. n-chief of the Tar Heel. A. L. M. Wiggins is editor-in-chief of the YACKETY Yack. All these men have filled their respective positions with honor and credit to the class.
We have gathered around the festive board
for the last time as undergraduates. We can
^■*"VlcttinD .1 />• hardly realize that our college career, which has
"s "TP^*1''" V 7 a /"•"> been intermingled with joys and disappointments,
■. 5 wm^mVmi'/""- w'" soon ^e a tnmS °f tne Past- As we go forth
from these sacred walls to make our way in the world, we do so with a feeling of sadness, for during these four years here we have come to love and cherish this institution and the many friendships formed while here. May God's blessings go with each and every one of us, and may we prove a credit to ourselves, an honor to our University, and loyal and patriotic citizens of our State.
— M. T. S.
THIRI V I IINl I
Ernest Hamlin Alderman Greensboro
Age 21; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 134 pounds
"/ have my soul a lordly pleasure-house IVheretn for aye to dwell."
"Ernest" is the champion non-fuss raiser on the campus. Believes in keeping a still tongue and a cool head whether we beat Virginia or not. After two or three trials, he finally domesticated Math 1, and has had smooth sailing ever since. Ernest is really an "earnest" worker; a quiet, solid chap; and a credit to the class. He says he is going to study pill- rolling, and we look for all sickness to vanish soon after he learns the art of doctoring.
Di. Society; Athletic Association ; Guilford County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Magazine Board: L. W. Medicine.
LOWRY AXLEY Murphy
Age 23; he.ght 5 feet 10" 2 mches weight 165 pounds
"Lool?, then, into thine heart, and Jvrite."
You can tell by his soulful eyes that the "Lad" a poet. Will talk to you for hours about Eng- s into hysterics when you Some unfeeling fellow ," but that does not keep him three years. He takes life in a calm, undisturbed, optimistic way. He is especially fond
sh and poetry, but mention Physics I. dubbed him "Mutt, fr
plays, and girls, bination which to beat — that is. in proper doses.
of art, a corn- is hard f taken
Di. Society; Varsity Track (I); Class foot- ball (3) ; Associate Editor of Magazine (4); Class Prophet (4); Ath- letic Association; Dram- atic Club; Press Asso- ciation.
Isaac Mayo Bailey Smithfield
Age 21 ; height 6 feet weight 1 50 pounds
"There is always room fo
"Bailey" is another c D's of our class. You ca written on his countenanc him on the campus you w fellow. Won't graduate doesn't want to, not because he can t big ideas he is going to give a try- these days.
of numerous John ee "strictly business" but if you waylay find him a congenial 'ith us — because he Has some
Swade Emmitt Barbour Clayton
Age 20; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 160 pounds
"Ma
jbstance clad in shadows"
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t of J |
ohnston |
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Club (4) |
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in.ger Y |
ACKETY |
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YACK; |
L. W. L |
1W. |
"Swade" is a decidedly unobstreperous youth. Slightly resembles "Seal" Barbee in form, but insists there is no relat on. Was a charter mem- ber of "The No. 5 South Building Club"; but with this handicap he might have made the * B K if it hadn't been for Johnny Booker. Is well-liked, but loves Math, too well to be bothered with anything else. His daily menu is Patter-son for break- fast, Major for dinner, and Daggett for supper.
Athletic Association; Oak Ridge Club; Sec- retary Oak Ridge Club (3) ; Johnston County Club, Preside-' <^1 • *A6.
(3);
THIRTY-FIVE
Stein Hughes Basnight Newbern
Age 21 i height 5 feet V/2 inches weight 1 37 pounds
"Pleased with a rattle; tickle J with a straw" "Bas" won the belt for Simon-pure freshness in his freshman year, and has held it against all new-comers. He is as tenacious as a bull pup, and this quality has brought him a place as trap- drummer in the college orchestra. Be ng the hottest sport of the class, he has had several love escapades during his pursuit of higher education, but still looks as well as the most of us. He is a likeable chap, and though we don't know whether he will further cultivate his taste for trap-drumming, or pur- sue the eternal feminine, we do know that he will
make friends wherever {?*
he goes.
Phi. Society; Athlet' Association; Band Press Association Orchestra; Tennis Asso iciation; Glee Club Dramatic Club.
Paul Archer Bennett Winston-Salem
Age 20; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 121 pounds
of his mouth, and keeps
furnace u bur nil
"Who wake his chit
Four years ago little Paul, blissful ray of sun- shine, arrived at number five Old East, under the careful guidance of Lyman Whilaker and Tommy Slade. He soon grew up to blessed young man- hood. For one whole year he was unquestion- ably Collier's pet, to the extent of two healthy "4's." Ask him about the Pickwick tragedy, and he will say: "Fine — yes —$6.95." Paul might have been champion
loafer of the he fell from j Senior year.
but
his
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rsyth |
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nly |
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Aviation. |
THIRTY-SIX
Margaret Kollock Berry Chapel Hill
Age 20; height 5 feet 3 inches weight 1 10 pounds
"Hon> pretty her blushing was, and how she blushed again."
Miss Berry took a degree at the Normal, and then decided lo come and graduate with us. To do this, she has worked in literature and astron- omy. Blinds Johnny Booker regularly, but has a great habit of blusrrng when she does. In fact, she is rather shy among her classmates. Her win- some looks have added much to the appear- ance of the campus. We are glad she forsook the Normal.
Samuel Robert Bivens Monr
Age 29; height 5 feet 11 inches
right 156 pounds "/ would the gods had made i
poetical"
"Sam" is a rare combination of poet, farmer, philosopher, and stump speaker. He has of late
led a hermit's lif. experiments, juit to his pen and snatch' " Possums in Unic politics. Sam is in h for his friends, and
B. S. Slate Normal College, 1912; Reader of Last Will and Testa- ment of Class.
Chemistry Hall. Between hile the time away, he takes off two or three poems on ' or "Cel.nda's Eyes." In element, but he politics only as never allowed himself to be run for office, which goes to show that he is the right kind of a poli- tician. Sam says he is going to be a farmer; we believe him. He fur- ther asserts that he is going lo be a good farmer; again we believe him.
Di. Soc.ety; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation ; Educational Club; Geological Jour-
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n a 1 |
Club; Chemical |
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lal Club; President |
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n County Club (4) ; |
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Poet (4); L. W. |
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Agr, |
:ulture. |
THIRTY-SEVEN
David Remus Blalock Rougemont Merritt Edward Blalock, Jr Norwood
Age 27; height 5 feet 6 inches weight 140 pounds
"Next to faith in CoJ. is faith in labor"
"Davy" started out with 1912. and reformed by dropping out a year, and now he is with us. He rooms out in town somewhere — we don t know where; but he comes on the campus to attend classes, football games, and a few other things. Has made prog- ress as a debater here, and may be depended upon to keep it up.
Age 23 ; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 132 pounds
"Put your best foot foremost"
Speaking of deer, have you ever seen "Molly" run? Be it football or be it track, he is there
Ph.. Society. Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Historical Society.
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with |
the |
goods. He is a satellite c |
n the |
:inder |
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path |
for |
there he is at his best. In |
other 1 |
vords. |
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you |
have an athlete. But you |
haven' |
t said |
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all. |
He |
just goes about his business |
without |
com- |
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men! |
d. |
regarding the "grandstand |
absol |
utely; |
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and when y |
>u hear deed |
about |
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him it's hi |
and |
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not his mou |
th you |
hear. |
Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Track Squad (1); Varsity Track Team (2, 3); Assistant Manager Track Team (3); Class foot- ball (1); Scrub football (2, 3. 4) ; Wearer of N. C. ; Horner Club.
THIRTY-EIGHT
Bryan Goldsbo
Age 22; height 5 feel II weight 135 pounds
"It
eJs brains to be
real fool:
"Kildee" is the slimmest embodiment of pro- longed physique in the class. His body strings out like a watermelon vine ; but he has a good head tacked on lo him, and uses it. He has taken every bull chemistry course in the curriculum, and swears by "Captain Charlie." Has an eccentric- ity of exploding dangerous chemicals. Yet, Paul is a good mixer, both chem- ically and socially.
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Wayne |
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County |
Club; |
Secretary |
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nty Club |
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Vice |
- President |
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Kodak |
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Dramatic |
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Geolog |
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Alembic |
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ate Mem- |
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Elisha |
Mitchell |
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iy (3.4); |
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Assistant in |
Chemistry |
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(3. 4) |
; A X |
2. |
John Carroll Busby Salisbury
Age 21; height 5 feet II inches weight 135 pounds ''Continued eloquence worries" "Calhoun" has demonstrated fully the qual- ities of his nicknamesake. He has cultivated the noble art of articulation until Professor McKie can point with pride, and say to all the world: "Good for you. Mr. Busby." The lure of the footlights attracted John, and he has starred both as actor and promoter of dramatics. His greatest ability is shown as a debater. For four long years he has plucked platform honors, and shows no signs of cessation. He will be heard from in this Old North State.
Di. Society; Press Association; Athletic Association; Tennis As- sociation ; Class Tennis Team (3, 4) ; Dramatic Club (2. 3, 4); Presi- dent (3) ; Manager (4) ; Freshman. Fresh-Soph, Soph-Junior, Commen- cement, Washington and Lee Debaters; Carr Oratorical Contest; Winner Bingham Medal; Debating Union; Class Orator; Rowan County Club; TKA; L. W. Law.
THIRTY-NINE
Joe Yongue Caldwell Statesville
Age 20; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 140 pounds
" 'Ttvas the noblest Roman of them all"
"Joe" pulled down the medal for being the most dignified man in the class, and deserves the honor. Has been treasurer of every organiza- tion from the Press Association to the League of Pickwick Theater-goers. He still looks pros- perous, however, and wears "1 ve-just-had-a-bath expression. We were go ng to say that he s a good fellow, a good stu- dent, and all that rot, but Joe deserves higher praise, so we'll have to leave the rest to the imagination.
Di. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C A.; Class Treasure! (3); Class Football (2 3) ; Associate Editoi Yackety Yack; Am photerothen ; Commence ment Marshal; A. T O.; L. W. Law.
George Carmichael Wilmington
Age 20; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 130 pounds
"The /(Tiom/eJge of thyself will preserve thee from vanity"
The ladies cry for "RosSY." Where the light fantastic is, there George reigns supreme. "Rossy" appreciates to the fullest "the wild joys of living," and yet he has his ups and downs that he must tell about. Likes to appear before the public well-groomed, and does it. But never you mind, ideas are born in that head that hit the spot, and when he "spresses hisself" he's 'most generally right.
Athletic Association ; New Hanover County Club ; German Club ; Vice-President German Club (4); Leader Ger- man Club Dance (4); Coop ; G i m g h o u 1 ; 2 AE.
George Lunsford Carrington Durham
Age 20; height 6 feet 3 inches weight 1 78 pounds
"Of all those arts in which the wise excel. Nature's chief masterpiece is writing well."
If "Lengthy" just wouldn't try to sing! Once a week he takes pen in hand, quietly folds up his legs — ten parasangs long — and evolves some hieroglyphics, which being interpreted are editorials for the Tar Heel. Is conspicuous in class football and varsity basket-ball. But find him when you will, he is always working and accomplishing something, from editor-in-chief of Tar Heel to 6 B K.
Phi. Society; Ath- letic Council; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Class Fool- ball (2, 3, 4), Captain (3); Varsity Basket-ball (3. 4); Wearer of N. C.J Amphoterothen ; Golden Fleece; Asso- ciate Editor Yackety Yack (4); Tar Heel (2, 3); Editor-in-Chief Tar Heel (4); BBK;
.Morganton
Carnie Blake Carter
Age 22; height 5 feet IO'/2 inches weight 160 pounds
"Patience, and shuffle thy feel"
"Carnie," "C. B." If you want him, you'll find him in the chemical laboratory; if he is not there, he is sick, and bad off, too. He has been seen on the campus once or twice, but this was in his Freshman year, and he wanted to show the bloodthirsty Sophs that he wasn't afraid. Comes from Morganton, but if you read the frequent contributions that Carnie makes to the Journal Club you'll decide that Morganton is well rep- resented in the gray matter line. An unas- suming lad; he says noth ng and saws wood, and is as safe and as dependable as they make 'em.
M e m b er Chemical Journal Club; Alembic Club; Blue Ridge Club; Assistant in Chemistry; AX 2.
FORTY-ONi.
";;->^V
James Washington Carter.
Morganton
Age 24; height 5 feet II inches weight 160 pounds
"Alas! n>e are the sport of destiny"
"Jim" is a great artist in certain lines. Among other things, he is a specialst in writing model love letters. He is also something of a geologist. His greatest fault is in his exhibition of geologi- cal training by telling stale jokes.
Class football team (2, 3); Di. Society; Blue Ridge Club.
Ellis Merton Coulter Connelly Sprngs
Age 21; height 5 feet 6 inches weight 135 pounds "For knowledge is of things, a part" "Mert" lispeth in a childish tenor, and has been accused of singing duets every morning with his roommate, Euless. Mert is a campus busybody. Sticks up Y. M. C. A. signs, runs down sketches for the Magazine, and was man- ager and official sponge-bearer of the Senior football team. Upheld his dignity as a Senior until he was caught playing Hull-Gull with a Freshman. Thinks that studying is as much a duty as attending Y. M. C. A. meetings or going home Christmas. En- joys a good laugh, and often indulges.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- elation; Assocate Editor Magazine (4) ; Manager Class Football Team (4); Recording Secre- tary North Carolina Historical Society (4) ; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Secretary Archi- bald D. Murphy Edu- cation Club; Dramatic Club; Secretary and Treasurer Blue Ridge Club; L. W. Teach- ing; Law.
FORT}'- Tlfi
Victor Aldine Coulter Newton
Age 20; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 145 pounds
"A good heart's north gold"
"Vic" is one of our best students. His industry and love of learning made him secretary of 8 B K. He is rather hard to get acquainted with, but you like him when you know him. Bids fair to make a successful chemist. He has a strong mental endowment, for he has roomed for four years with Bob Huffman, and has not yet succumbed to his villainous puns.
Di. Society; Y. M C. A.; Athletic Asso ciation; Chemical Jour nal Club; Elisha Mil chell Scientific Society Geological Journal Club Holder of Babbitt Schol arship (4) ; Associate Editor nf Yacketv Yack (4) ; Secretary of O B K ; Alembic ; A X — ; L. W. Chemistry.
Gilliam Craic
Age 19; height 5 feet \QY2 inches weight 140 pounds
"This fellow pectus up mil
pige
Gilliam acquired the title of "Shakespeare" by his diligent work in Shakespearean research. Sometimes adorns the class baseball field witS his presence. He has been accused of straying into a serious mood once, but declares that he can prove an alibi.
Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Union County Club; Class Baseball.
FOKTV- THRlili
Fields Lilburn Euless Bell Buckle, Te
'The
weight 145 pounds always iallf v>ho never ih'u
"Useless" claims sunny Tennessee a native State, but is a real Tar Heel in other way. Is working the "Tar Heel" f it is worth, and is going to make it self-su| ing, thereby breaking all precedent. Is the of courtesy, with his angry red hair, and is a favorite with dreamy-eyed ma-dens. We him, too, except when he is talking insuran some other wildcat scheme. A great and business man is "Use- less," and he would have made the 9BK, only somebody told him there was no money in it. For further information about this extraordinary char- acter, see statistics be- low.
> his every
pink
great
like
Di A.; lion; tion;
Society; Y. M. C.
Athletic Associa- Tennis Associa- Secretary and Treasurer of Tennis Association (3) ; Webb School Club; Assistant Manager Tar Heel (3) ; Business Manager Tar Heel (4); Historical Society; L. W. Insur- ance.
Robert Frederick Gray Wadesboro
Age 18; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 132 pounds
"Patterned after a cherub" "Fred" came to Chapel Hill a "wee bit of a tot" in short pants. He was then young and bashful. Three years of college life have worked wonders, and he is now almost big enough to play senior football. He worked faith- fully in the gym up to this year, but has given that up as unbecoming to a Senior. He is a great reader of fict'on. but not of the "Diamond Dick" kind. Has passed his work with ease, espe- he began to
cally sir dabbl,
Cha
Athletic Association ;
FORTY-FOUR
Alvah Lawrence Hamilton Atlantic
Age 24; height 6 feel 2 inches weight 184 pounds
Woodfin Grady Harry Gv
"Tho
n>ho hast the fatal gift of beauty"
Tall,
"Ham" upholds the dignity of our clasi and distinguished looking, he has never done any- thing more derogatory to his dignity than to take an occasional smoke. Reminds us of Charles Lee Raper — very particular about particulars. Ham has achieved some success as a debater and a politician. He has only one regret in his college life— and that is Phy-
23; height 5 feet 10 inches weight 150 pounds
"A deep
ited
for all things tru
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Class Secretary (4); Soph- Junior De bater (2) ; Whitse Club; Press Associa tion; High School De bating Committee; Mem ber of Council.
Behold the champion Bull Moose of the Uni- versity. Won great fame in the debate with the Wilson Club by his defense of the peerless Teddy. "W. G." is one of the strong men of the clars, who is not afraid lo say what he thinks.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Cleveland County Club; Athletic Association ; Tennis Association ; Dramatic Club; Educational So- ciety; Senior Represen- tative on Council; Presi- dent Progressive Club; Political Club; L. W. Law.
FORTy-FJl I.
Edwin Badger Hart Winslon-Salem
Age 20; height 5 feet 10 inches weight 156 pounds
"He does it Tvith a good grace; but I do it more natural."
Hart is an adopted brother, welcomed most heartily by the best class ever — er — modesty pre- vents any more. He has an attachment for the sciences; indulges freely in chemistry; and, since he has moved to Winston-Salem, will pass aM geology.
Martin Armstead Hatcher Rose Hill
Chemical Journal Club; Alembic Club; American Chemical So- ciety; Geological Journal Club; Athletic Associa- tion ; German Club ; AX 2 (Chemical); *18.
!I; height 5 feel 11 weight 160 pounds
"To truth's hou
the
ngle doo
'Martin" walks around the calm and self-possessed that
ampus. looking
ou would think
nothing in the world could rattle him. He left
us the first half of his Junior year, but didn't
let a thing like that keep him from being with us
at the drawing of the sheepskins. Is a good
friend to those who
know him.
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Educa- |
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Class B |
aseball. |
FORTY-SIX
Fred Huffman Higdon Higdonville
Age 21 ; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 1 72 pounds
Clarence B. Hoke Lenoir
"Obs
ed life sets down a lijpe of bliss"
"Fred" is not quite so loquacious as some people, but he "gets there" just the same. Is a good student and good fellow. Worked up quite a rep on the class football team last year but will probably live it down.
Age 23; height 5 feet II inches weight 1 5^> pounds
"Ever)) m "C. B.'
the
chitect of his own fortune"
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation ; President Macon County Club; Class Football; Scrub Football; Class Base- ball; Press Association.
inhabits the chemical laboratory, and is never seen farther south than the Old West Building. Never lets anyone think for him, however; and this quality ought to help him along. Plays the games of class football and class poli- tics with equal fervor, and in the meantime tries his hand at chemical experiments. Hoke has done four years of hard, consistent work, and shows no signs of let- ting up, which, being in- terpreted, means he will have something worth while to his credit at the final settlement.
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Athletic |
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Assoc |
lation |
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iss Foot- |
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(4); |
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Club; |
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smbic |
Club; |
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Chemical J |
ournal Club; |
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Chemis- |
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FORTY-SEVEN
Troy Jay Hoover High Pomt
Age 23; height 5 feet 10 inches
weight 160 pounds
"Man is free who is protected from injury"
"T. J." stands up for principle. A cl stay, even though he d"oc body. All
"T. J." stands up for principle. A class main- stay, even though he doesn't agree with every- body. All was proceeding nicely until he joined the ranks of the Bull Moosers. He defended the cause, even to Armageddon. Troy is unas- suming; he takes things with a level head. Quite a bit of logic stored up near his hatband. Has the hobby of other great and near-great men, viz., seeking comfort in the depths of solitude.
Robert Obediah Huffman Morganton
Age 22; height 5 ft. 10 ins.; weight 140 lb. "How subject we old men are to this vice of lying" "Huff!" Behold the scholar! Somebody called him "HufTmaniac" ; and he must be, for a man who can't keep from making ones on his work is different from most of us. Bob is a Duke's Mixture sort of a fellow — plays the fid- dle, sings be — o — otifully, chews tobacco, spits German like a native, mixes with everybody.
puns disgustingly, change of the mo else to occupv hi:
Di. Society; Athlete Association; Scrub Foot- ball (2. 4) ; Class Foot- ball (1, 3).
to the Noi When he hasn e, he studies a makes ones. nostication is quick wits a disposition v him do som. usual before then we'll b<
every
tht
t anything
little, and
Prog-
ihat his id likable ill make thing un- long, and
glad of l these
ets.
Di. Societv: Athletic Asso.; Mgr. "Class Base- ball (2); Assl. Mgr. Varsitv Baseball (3) : Mgr. Varsity Basketball Team (4); Class Pres. (3) ; Class Football (4) ; Glee Club; Orchestra; Band; Eben Alexander Greek Prize; Golden Fleece; Pres. * B K.
FORTY- EIGHT
Age 21 ; height 5 feet 6 weight 1 35 pounds
/0H>
"Death nWl/i /lis /ance n>ouW /a\j Be/ore /'J yield me lo a foe."
"Tommie" can oullwisl a corkscrew. Went in the gym when he arrived here, and has been there ever since. But ask him about "her." and you'll see by his blushes that the "line of the skirt" has a hold on him, too. He doesn't lose any sleep about books, but rather enjoys the simple life, unmolested by class-room cares. He much prefers to stand on his left hind eyebrow. and wiggle his right lit- tle toe.
(2);
Age 21 ; height 5 feet 10], 2 inches weight 153 pounds
'The glass of fashi,
nd the mould of fo
Gym Monogr, Captain Gym Te
(3) ; Instructor in Gym
(4) ; Baseball Squad (1); Class Football Team (3) ; Athletic Association; Phi. So- ciety; German Club; Tennis Association ;
<t>se.
"Speicht." Dressed in neatness itself, he gambols o'er the campus green with airiness that almost makes the birds sing. Is of grand oper- atic variety himself, so gives the Glee Club all the music of h.s soul. Skilled in the intricacies of tennis, he emphasizes that pastime. Is good- looking, ;ets it off with the best clothes; but, be assured, he gives his books their full dues.
Athletic Association; President Tennis Asso- ciation (3) ; Class Ten- n s Team (2, 4) ; Class Baseball (I, 2, 3); Captain Baseball Team (2); Guilford County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Assistant Manager Glee Club (3); Manager Glee Club (4) ; German Club; Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3) ; Commencement Mar- shal (3); Ben.
Mitchell Roy Ingram Taylorsville
Age 24; height 5 feel 5 inches weight 135 pounds
"1 am myself indifferent honest"
"Mitch" was crowned with the title of "Bee" by virtue of his studious habits. Buzzes hither and thither, and acquires knowledge galore. Will take two degrees this year. Although quite diminutive physically, "Bee" has patriotically represented the class on the gridiron this Fall. In his studies he is somewhat partial to French.
Robert Waldon Isley Liberty
Age 28; height 5 feet 6| /> inches weight 1 36 pounds
"Our ideals are our belter selves"
"Robert" is famous as a leading spirit in a club formally known here as the Bull-Moosers. Bob's capacity for "learning" is probably unexcelled in our class. He has the tenacity of a bulldog, and usually gains his point. Courteous and pleasant to all, he attends strictly to his own affairs. "Billygogy" is his specialty.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Historical So- ciety; Blue Ridge Club; Archibald D. Murphy Educational Society; Dramatic Club; Class Football (4); Le Cercle Francaise.
Whitsett High School Club; Y. M. C. A.; Alamance County Club; Educatonal Club; Di. Society ; Debating Union ; Commencement Debate; L. W. Teach-
Elisha Wiley Joyner Nashville
Age 28; height 5 feel 8J/2 inches
weight 150 pounds
"He's armed without who's innocent within"
"Elisha" has a good name, and tries hard to live up to it. Is a little late at times, due to the infirmities of age, no doubt, but is behind every worthy movement. Has periodic fits of bellow- ing, alias singing, but everyone escapes before the performance begins, except at Y. M. C. A. meet- ings, and down at the Methodist Church. Earn- est, conscientious, and diligent hard work has always been commend- ed, and we know that it will have its reward in Elisha's case.
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation; Press Associa- tion; Elisha Mitchell Sc.entific Society (4); Archibald D. Murphy Educational Society (4) ; President Twin- County Club (4) ; Pres- ident Whitsett Club (4); L. W. Teaching.
Robert Campbell Jurney .Winston-Salem
Age 25; height 5 feet II inches
weight 150 pounds
"Few things are impossible to diligence and sf(ill"
"Bob" comes from Salem, and can't play a
horn, but has a lIJ B K key which is just as good.
Bob never tires you with his presence; if you
want to see him, you will have to ambush him
at the Geology laboratory. Fell into the wily
graces and slimy caresses of Collier Cobb early
in life, and is destined to remain a geologist as
long as he lives. He'll make a good one, though,
if he survives the stories (?) about huge dinosaurs
and lizards thousands of
feet
Bob
We hope rill "succeed in find- ut what this old is. anyhow; be- all of us have a ty to know.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Forsyth County Club; Historical Society; Elisha Mitchell Scienti- fic Society; Assistant in Geology (4); Geologi- cal Journal Club; Ath- letic Association; L. W. Geology ; * B K.
Watson Kasey Houston, Va.
Age 22; heighl 5 feet 2 inches weight 108 pounds
"A fool more light, a step more true
Ne'er from the healh-flomer dash'd the Jew"
"LITTLE Kasey." Take a keen intellect, add worlds of self-composure, mix in the daintiness of the dandel on's petal, and flavor with a smile for everybody — there you have her, this bit of feminin ty that can "out-Billy-Cain" calculus, that can preside over a class with all the grace in the world, and can make things happier by a right word in the right place. Withal, a true woman.
James Clyde Kelly Carthage
Age 25; height 5 feet 10 inches weight 140 pounds
"A loyal, just, and upright gentleman"
"Kelly" is a typical Moore County Scotch- man, who loves a laugh as well as the average Scotchman likes his — . In fact, he loves It — the laugh — belter than he does his studies; but he has done enough of the latter to have the laugh on many of us. Don't know what his final obituary will be, but he thinks straight, and you know the story.
Associate Editor of the Tar Heel; Vice- President of Class.
Phi. Society: Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A,; Moore-Lee County Club; Raeford Institute Club; Class Baseball Team (2, 3); All-Class Baseball Team (2).
FIFTY- Til'
Frank Hunter Kennedy Houstonvill
Age 20; height 6 feet 11 2 inches weight 165 pounds "To Jo nothing is in every man's pov/er." "Frank" professes an unnatural fondness fo John Busby, but nobody knows why. Since b made the * B K without any troubl erally take his word for everyth Rooms with the old patriarch, D. J plays class ball; and is popular really worth knowing. Quiet and ur is as solid as Uncle Sam's Treasurj that his head has other uses than mf hatrack. Will make a big fuss in the cold, cold world.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Secretary-Treasurer Tennis Association (4); Oak Ridge Club; Treas- urer (3) and President (4) Iredell County Club; All-Class Baseball Team (2); Scrub Baseball (3); Chief Marshal (3); <I'BK; L. W. Law.
William Albert Kirksey Morganton
Age 23; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 140 pounds
"Neither our virtues nor vices are all our orvn"
|
>Ie, we gen- |
"KiRK" has bee |
n too busy or too retiring in |
|
g he does. |
disposition to mix |
with or know many of us; |
|
J. Walker; |
however, those of |
us who know him find him a |
|
ecause he is |
jolly good fellow. |
He is a German "Bull," has |
|
assuming, he |
taken all the Gern |
an courses in college, and has |
|
, and thinks |
made ones on them |
Incidentally, he picked up a |
|
-rely being a |
* B K key. It is |
rumored that Bill is the cham- |
|
pion checker player in |
||
|
his town. |
Di. Society;
John Madison Labberton Winston-Salem
Age 19; height 5 feet 10 inches
weight 1 30 pounds "Behold! a verp proper person" "Lab" is so prim and neat that we call him "Johnny." and he's Johnny-on-the-spot when it comes to Math. If you talk to him for a few minutes, he puts a bad taste :n your mouth; talk with him longer, you'll finally agree that he's about right. As an instructor, he has Mullican, Scarborough, and the like, beat a country mile. It is said that he is something of a ladies' man. and that they all like him; and if love-making is a science we don't wonder a bit, for he knows every science from Physics to Chris- tian Science. You can -rest contented that Johnny will turn his talent where it will count most.
Forsyth County Club; Elisha Mitchell Scien- tific Society; Electrical Engineering Society; German Club; Di. So- ciety; *BK.
Albert Rosenthal Marks Newbern
Age 19; height 5 feet 8 inches weight 137 pounds
"/ am a pari of all thai I have not"
A little trip now and then, early to bed, and late to rise, relieves the monotony of 'most any situation in which Albert finds himself. Just simply gloated over Eddie Mims. and right then and there a literary seed takes root. The secret of his success in class work lies in his discretion in choosing courses in which he does not have "to tie his little bull out-
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Asso- ciation ; Athletic Asso- ciation; L. W. Busi-
FJFTV-FOLK
Matthew Locke McCorkle Newlon
Age 19; height 5 feel \0]/z inches weight 142 pounds
"Music the fiercest grief can charm"
"Mac" was not satisfied with a degree from Catawba. He showed his good taste by joining us on the last lap. Plays any instrument from an accordeon to a graphophone, and uses a rich bass voice as an accompaniment. He is a born lady-charmer, who intends to take medicine as a side line.
John Wesley McIver Sanford
Age 19; height 6 feet
weight 155 pounds
"The march of the human mind is slow"
"Mac" — for description. see last year's
Yackety Yack. "Slow and gentle, will stand
without hitching." Came here as Charlie Gun-
ter's boy, and instantly gained notoriety as the
president, general promoter, and end man of
"The No. 5 South Building Club." Said club
furnished entertain defunct Pickw.ck.an program every ever
Glee Club; a; BB II.
ith
tied and
change of Those days are gone now, and Wesley reads sporting life, and muses. An ideal side- linesman ; he knows everybody's batting aver- age from T. Cobb to C. Cobb, Sr. Is as harm- less as a jack rabbit, except when he tackles Daggett's math — but he makes the fur fly then. We wish him well, knowing full we he wishes t h e good luck for body else.
Y. M. C. A.
letic Association Society; Tennis ciation; Class ball (3); 2KA
II that
same
every-
Ath-
; Di.
Asso-
Base-
FIFTV-FIfE
Arnold Artemus McKay.-- Maxlon
Age 22; height 5 feel II inches weight 140 pounds
"1 dare not mrile As funny as I can"
Distinctively literary, even unto cut plug and flowing locks. Won a Magazine prize in his Freshman year. Sampled English courses freely. Applied his Senior literary genius to The Mag- azine with skill and ab lity. He has the goods, and needs only the inspiration. An enthusiastic member of the "I-Can'l- Stand-Pat Club."
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Historical So- ciety; Tennis Associa- tion; Athletic Associa- tion; Press Associaton; Associate Editor Tar Heel (3) ; Associate Editor Magazine (4); Chairman High School Debating Union; Presi- dent Robeson County Club; Treasurer Dram- atic Club; — T.
Banks Holt Mebane... Spray
Age 21 ; he.ght 5 feet 10 inches weight 140 pounds "Poetry is evidently a contagious complain!" The eternal quest on : "Where is Banks?" The inevitable answer: "I don't know." He moves, lives, and has his being enshrouded in mystery. In him a faint glimmer of poetic fire once flickered, but it seemingly expired. In its place the flame of oratory sprang up, and burned victoriously. Now the warm glow of philoso- phy exists in this man of thoughts and deeds. He has become the leading Epicurean phil- osopher of the class.
Di. Society; V. M. C. A.; Manager Class Football (1); Assistant Dance Leader (2) ; Class Tennis (2); Class Poet (2) ; Bingham Club; Tar Baby Board (3) ; Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3) ; Assistant Editor Tar Heel (3); Vice- President Class (3) ; Winner Junior Oratori- cal Contest; Assistant Manager Varsity Foot- ball (3) ; Manager Var- sity Football (4); Gol- den Fleece; Gorgon's Head; 2 T; Z *.
FIFTY -SIX
Fred Wilson Morrison Spe
Age 22; height 5 feel II inches
"Literature
weight 155 pounds is the thought of thinking souh"
A real genuine (I> B K "bull" courses in the i conclusively that hard wc it be Fourth Math, or F. would be a grind if it w he antidotes stud'es with gym stunts, and als with a wonderfully pleasant sociability. H works when he works, and plays what littl tme he has left.
man. He took all the jrnculum. and proved k secures ones, whether urteenth English. Fred re not for the fact that
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation; Class Baseball (2); Class Football (3); President Rowan County Club; Associate Editor Tar Heel; 'I'BK.
Thomas Hart Norwood Goldsboro
Age 20 ; height 5 feet 7 inches weight 140 pounds
"Each mind has its onm method''
"Tommie" came to us after a year at Wake Forest, adding one to the list of good men of 1913. Funny, but he never has had the least des re to return. He is president of the Wayne County Club, but he w.ll probably outlive this. Expects to be a banker, and as there are seven other successful bankers in his family we know he will also succeed. Can be found any after- noon reading Charlie Lee's dope in the library. "Tommie" is quiet, greets you with a pleasant smile, and is well liked.
Phi. Soc-ely; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation; Tennis Associa- tion; President Wayne County Club; Associate Editor Yackety Yack. (3) ; C o m m e n cement Ball Manager (3); Ger- man Club; *A9; L. W. Banking.
FIFTY -S/ I I. \
James Oliver Overcash Stalesville
Age 22; height 5 feet 6 inches weight 135 pounds
"InJustry can Jo anything genius can Jo"
"Polly" — we can't explain his cognomen; it followed him from Stalesville. Polly is another of our number who has stuck to the printed page. He is a hard worker, and also somewhat of a ladies' man. Quiet and reserved, but loves to talk about his girl to his best friends. Makes language a specialty, with "Bully" Bernard the favorite. Polly has the stick-lo-it-iveness requi- site for success.
Di. Society; Ath- letic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Treasurer Ire- dell County Club (3).
Virgil A. Perrett Whitsett
Age 28; height 5 feet 8 inches weight 1 50 pounds
"Adversity's sweet milk — philosophy"
"Father" is not as old as he appears to be, but he has had a rich experience with life. He comes as near knowing everybody in college as can be imagined. He is sincere in his mquisitive- ness. Is a steady fellow, does good work, and promises to be able to absorb all the shocks that rubbing against the world may bring to him.
Y. M. C. A.; D, Society; Whitsett Club Alamance County Club Woodrow Wilson Club Educational Club; His torical Society; Clas Baseball (3); L. W Teaching.
FIFTY-EIGHT
Hubert Connor PETTEWAY....Brooksville,
Age 20; height 5 feet 8J/7 inches weight 145 pounds
"Silence is more eloquent than words'
lie
e come the Petteways. "H. C." is the partner and closest adviser of his uncle.
W. R. Like his uncle, he is addicted to the debating habit. He has made so many debates that he will never recover, and he won't be satis- fied until he makes this old world sit up and take notice of his siren song.
Walter Raleigh Petteway. Tampa, Fla.
Age 21 ; height 5 feet 6 inches weight 150 pounds "There is no gambling lil?e politics" "Walter Raleigh" hails from the Land of Flowers and Alligators. A native from Caro- lina, who returned to get started right. Has a laugh all his own. but uses it so often that every- body is used to it. He is a politician from the ground up. and can give inside information con- cerning any cand date. He is short of stature, but makes up for it by frequent long arguments. He is the kind of stuff out of which good law- yers are made.
Phi. Society; Tenni Association; A th 1 e t i Association; B iv i e ' Creek Club; Florid Club; Class Footbal (4); Freshman Debate Sophomore Debate Commencement Debate Washington and Let Debate ; T K A ; L. W Law.
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Associa- tion; Historical Society; Vice-President of Flor- ida Club (3); Secretary of Florida Club (4); " ek
(4 (2
Fres
man Debate Prize; Fresh-Soph. Debate ( I ) ; Soph-Junior Debate (3) ; Commencement De- bate (3); President of Debating Un:on (4) ; L. W. Law.
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Pr |
side |
nt |
Buie's |
Creel |
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Ac |
aden |
IV |
Club |
(4) |
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Class |
Sec |
retary |
(2) |
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|
w |
nner |
of |
Phi. |
Fresh |
FIFTY-NINE
Guy Berryman Phillips Trinity
Age 21; height 5 feet II inches weight 1 70 pounds "Measures, not men, have always been my marl?" Erect a monument to "G. B." on the class athletic field. He was a martyr to the forlorn hope of our class reputation, and was captain of the Senior team. Boosts the Y. M. C. A. suc- cessfully; therefore, he is good. Boots George McKie unsuccessfully; therefore, he is bad. Which? Neither, for Guy is the "guy" that lives in contradiction to the current idea that to be a Sunday School teacher is to be puny.
Jasper Louis Phillips Kinston
Age 22; height 5 feet 9 inches weight 130 pounds
"My mind to me a kingdom is"
Early in his college course, "J. L." became attached to the gods of mathematics, and he has been a devout worshipper ever since. Is not seen much on the campus, because his time is taken up with serious things. However, he always attends class games, and roots lustily for 1913. Is one of the hardest students :n the class.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Associa- tion; Press Association; Dramatic Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Presi- dent Randolph County Club; Educational Club'; Class Baseball (1.2. 3); Captain Class Baseball Team (3) ; Catcher All- Class Baseball Team (2); Class Football (3, 4) ; Capta:n Class Fool- ball Team (4); Greater Council.
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Press Associa- tion; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society ; Assistant in Surveying (4) ; Vice-President Re- publican Club (4) ; * B K ; L. W. Civil En- gineering.
<^7
William Nicholas Post Wil
Age 20; height 5 feel 7 inches weight 120 pounds ** 'jTi's a cute itoench"
|
Give "Nick" |
250 pages of lessons, come back |
|
in an hour, he |
can recite it verbatim, et literal m, |
|
et punctuatum. come back in |
Give "Nick" some math lo work, an hour, he can do it. G ve |
|
"Nick" a Seni an hour, he car a dress, el cele the metamorphc easiest, because nation may be |
3r stunt to work up, come back in deliver the goods. Give "Nick" a, comes back in an hour, behold sis into a girl. That last is the he really is ladylike. Procrasti- the thief |
|
of time; but stole from th:s |
he never m^mj^mmmm |
Thomas Michael Ramsaur ..China Grove
Age 20; height 5 feet 10 inches
weight 161 pounds
"Happiness is the natural floTvcr of July"
Answers to ihe name of "Mike," and is very
friendly. The girls say he is "cute," but not
know ng what that means we guess they are
right. He is a devout worshiper at the shrine
of Venus, but is nevertheless on speaking terms
with his books. Possesses such magnetic power
over the fair sex that "for tre love of 'Mike'"
they will do most anything. A corking good
|
Phi. |
Society; |
Y. M. |
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C. A. |
; Athletic |
Asso- |
|
elation |
Tennis |
Asso- |
|
ciation |
Dramati |
: Club; |
|
New |
Hanover |
County |
|
Club; |
German |
Club; |
|
* B K |
K A ; L. |
W.Ar- |
chiteclure.
nd clean youth is "Mike,* and if the heathen Ch nese don't get him, we expect to hear a chapel talk about him some day.
Di. Society; Press Association ; Dramatic Club (3, 4); Assistant Manager Varsity Base- ball Team (3); Com- mencement Marshal (3); President Rowan County Club (3) ; Assistant in L.brary (3, 4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet ; Class Tennis Team (3).
Edgar Ralph Rankin ....Gastonia
Age 21; height 5 feel II inches weight 165 pounds
"An unrestrained but quiet man"
"Ralph" is one of those Rock-of-Gibraltar type of fellows who never ?ays a word unless he means it. He thinks it a sacred duty to pass all his work with good marks, but doesn't let that keep him from being sociable. He became inter- ested in the High School Debating Union this year, and was largely instrumental in making :t a success. Belongs in class A- 1.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation; Press Associa- tion; Historical Society; Class Football Team (3, 4) ; President Caslon- Uncoln Club (4) ; Vice- President Murphy Edu- cation Club (4) ; Asso- ciate Editor Tar Heel (4) ; Library Assis- t a n t (4) ; Secretary High School Debating Committee (4) ; 2 T.
Leland Brown Rhodes Chapel Hil!
Age 21; height 5 feel 10 inches weight 135 pounds "Taste the joy that springs from labor" Someone found him while doing chemical research work in the dark room last Spring. At first he was thought to be a new element, but he insisted that he had been here three years; whereupon he was dubbed "Helium." He asserts emphatically that he did not establish the Rhodes Scholarship. Sometimes he has been seen scooting across the campus, or performing with boa-constrictoral contortions at the gym. He believes in being seldom seen and. never heard. When he learns anything important, he records it in his notebook. He takes college life seri- ously and, although a recluse, is very agree- able.
Phi. Society; Chemi- cal Journal Club; Ten- nis Association ; Alembic Club; L. W. Chemistry.
Douglas L. Rights Winston-Salem
Age 21 ; height 5 feet 6|/2 inches weight 130 pounds
-Cod hath made thee a noble man"
"Doug" is one of the rankest punsters that ever dallied with a word. "Douc" runs the Magazine and the Y. M. C. A., chases the pig- sk'n, and fills the air with barbarous sounds of fife and other inhuman instruments. He is the hvest article in the class, notwithstanding the fact that he is going to be a preacher.
President Musical Association; Band; Glee Club; President Y. M. C. A.; Assistant Editor Tar Heel; Editor-in- chief University Maga- zine; Hunter Lee Harris Medal; Class Football; Class Baseball; Minis- tenal Band; Orchesha Director; Di. Society; A t h 1 e tic Association; Golden Fleece; Secre- tary Press Association; Pres dent Forsyth County Club; Class Secretary (3); 2T; <I>BK.
James Hunt Royster Townesville
Age 20; height 6 feet weight 160 pounds "The motto of chivalry is also the motto of wis- dom; to serve all, but love only one" Quiet, calm, and deliberate, "Jim" has wor- ried through four long years, trying to suppress his masculine pulchritude so as to keep out of the snares of visiting "Prom" girls. He even took to wearing glasses, hoping that the added dignity in his appearance might help him in his task. In reality, however, those glasses were not altogether for ornamentaticn, for Jim is a good student, and pores over his books religiously and method- ically. However, Jim takes lime lo mix with the boys on certain occa- sions, and sometimes with (he g rls.
Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Class Foot- ball (3. 4); Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3) ; Warrenton High School Club; German Club; L. W. Medicine.
SIXTY- THRl I
James Blaine Scarborough Mount Gil
Age 27; height 5 feet II inches weight 170 pounds
"In mathematics he Tvas greater ih Brahe or Erra Pater"
i Tycho
Doctor" s untrue, fed.
Last year a Y. Y. drag said that worked while others slept. That was untrue for "Doctor" worked while others loafed. H< capured the Wlliam Cain Math, medal in addi tion to a coveted * B K key. Unless "Doctor' marries a wife who will love him unreasonably we are going to hear from him.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation; Tennis Associa- te (I. 2); Pre.s Asso- ciation; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; Cain Math. Medal (3); Licentiate in Phys-cs (3) ; Assistant in Phy- sics (4); *BK; L. W. Mathematical Physics.
Age 22; height 5 feet 4 inches weight 145 pounds "Thy modesty is a candle to thy merit" "Shamy" hails from Biscoe, where mostly Pages grow. However, there are other things which make him like the cigarette, "d;slinctly individual." He has the only boot on old man Archer, which he got by the mutual swapping of yarns the long winter evenings of his Fresh- man year. He has faithfully upheld the chapel choir, and through his persistency secured a place in the Glee Club. He is a good student, and somewhat of a gym bull. Is always a "hail fello well met.**
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D,. |
Society; Y. M |
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C. A |
; Tennis Associa- |
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tion; |
Athletic Associa- |
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tion; |
Class Tennis |
|
Team |
(1); Manager |
|
Class |
Tennis (2. 3) ; |
|
Class |
Baseball (3, 4); |
|
Glee |
Club (4); UK A; |
|
L. W |
Capitalist. |
Horace Sisk Waco
Age 28; height 6 feet
weight 175 pounds
"Our self-made men are the g/orlj of our inslitu-
"Horace" worships at the shrine of the god of smiles, and in fact is a high priest in his sanc- tuary. It is rumored, among other things, thai he is a good student, and that he will use his talents to instruct the rising youth in the way that they should go. Horace is a man of great business sagacity, as :s shown by the fact that the class made him chief of its financial depait- ment. Be it said, how- ever, that this is not the
only dist: ferred on h class; but vents, etc.
Di. Society; Association; Y. A. Cabinet (4); atic Club; Class urer (4); Clas ball (3. 4); Presid Cleveland County Club (2, 3); Rutherford
College Club: Press Association; Historical Society; Educational Club; High School De- bating Committee; L. W. Teaching.
by
Athletic
M. C
Dram
Treas
i Fool
Peyton McGuire Smith Elzal
Age 21 ; height 5 feet 10 inch,
weight 163 pounds
"We cannot all be
masters
Lured nlo the maze of Math. "Peyton" has trod all the puzzling paths, and comes out with only one scar — curses on second! A good ath- lete, but he refused to try until last Fall, when he got to going very good on the gridiron. "Peyton" worries nobody, and nobody worries him. Is as steady as he looks and, man, he loves a joke!
Class Football (1, 2, 3); Scrub (4); Gym. Team (4) ; Gorgon's Head; A K E.
SfXTi I 1 1 I
?v!arshall Turner Spears Lillington
Age 23; height 5 feet 8 inches
weight 128 pounds
"Art ma)) make a suit of clothes,; but nature must
produce a man"
"Spurgeon" is a man of many interests. In
every department of his activity he is valued as
a hard, earnest, and efficient worker. His friends
are many. They congratulate him upon his
splendid managing of this book, and above all
on his exemplary citizenship. We call his kind
"gilt edge," and we predct for him great success
"after the last handclasp."
Athletic Association; Phi. Society; Y. M. C A.; Secretary of Debat ing Union (3) ; Assist ant Business Manage Tar Heel (3); Assist ant Editor of Magazine (3); German Club; Cla;s Historian (4); Greater Council; Busi- ness Manager of YacKETY Yack; Coop; Ampholerothen ; Gor- gon's Head ; K A; L. W. Law.
Walter Stokes, Jr -..Nashville, Tenn.
Age 21; height 5 ft. 1 I ins.; weight 131 lbs. "Cod never made anything ehe so beautiful as man" Here is the consummate realization of a man. Born and bred in a sister State, he came to us unheralded. But his live idea:., h s genuine spirit. and his real popularity predicted him inevitably our senior president, in which capacity he batted a "thousand." Here's to the "Pres.", attract- ive to the most freakish, anvable to the most snobbish, sensible to the most simple, genuine to the core, and a true University man.
Phi. Society; Debat- ing Union ; Junior Ora- torical contest; Dram- atic Club; Asso. Ed. Yackety Yack (3) ; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Mgr. of the Star Course; Pres. Webb School Club; Leader Easter German (3) ; Mgr Varsity Track Team; Athletic Council; Cheer Leader; Class Football (2. 3); Tennis Asso. Pres, Student Council Pres. Greater Council Coop; German Club Gorgon's Head; Amphc terothen ; Golden Fleece Chairman Pan-Helleni Council; Pres. Sen c
Cla
A K E.
Thomas Edgar Story Blowing Rock
Age 24; heght 5 feel 10 inches weight 143 pound;
"To be most useful is the greatest virtue"
"Mike" is a conscientious fellow, who has car- ried on his school work, and likewise made him- self indispensable at the Baptist Church and in the Y. M. C. A. He is a remarkably strong, defensive politician, a devoted disc-pie of "Teddy." His indomitable energy will count in life.
Robert Strange, Jr
Age 21 ; height 5 feel
..Wilm inches
weight 150 pounds n'st not then be false to any man" vho can combine a football N. C. ball managership with the best egg is out of the ordinary. When you
"Thou
A man and a ba in the class is add social su
insight, and base it all on a dalion of character, you have acqu sition to any institution, out like a klaxon, his smile is Barbee. and his eyes take i
nd th
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation; Educational Club; Dramatic Club; Class Football (3, 4); Class Track (3); High School Debating Com- mittee; L. W. Teach- ing.
politician's keen rock-bottom foun- the "Bishop," an His laugh rings lile is as broad as "Seal" lake in everything from feminine charms to tariff legislation. All the way and back again, he is a credit to the University.
Y. M. C. A.; Ath- let:c Association; Ten- nis Association ; Phi. Society; Firemen's Union; Commencement Marshal ; Class Foot- ball (I. 2); Varsity Football (3. 4); Assist- ant Baseball Manage. (3) ; Varsitv Baseball Manager (4) ; Wearer N. C; German Club; Ampholerothen ; Coop; Gimghoul; Athletic Council; Golden Fleece; 1 A E
Rachel Lawrence Summers Statesvil'e
Age 22; height 5 feel 5] 2 inches weight I 16 pounds "She wears the face of beauty like a smile" "Rachel," although no one dares call her by that part of her name, is one of the Trinity. She made her debut among us in our Junior year; but so much preferred her own companionship to ours that few of us knew much about her beyond the fact that she was a co-ed. This year, how- ever, through the beneficence of physics, botany, and class smokers, we have come to know her belter. Needless to say. all her classmates like her greatly, and predict for her, as for everyone who receives a "senior write-up," a glorious future.
W.lliam Smith Tillett Charlotte
Age 21 ; height 5 ft. 1 1 ins.; weight 145 lbs. "He stood four square to every mind that blen>" Seven square inches of form contour, contain- ing five thousand Ions of fight, is "BoXEY," and our greatest athlete. To gam five yards, or to accomplish any other task, he can equally be depended upon. W orse than Frank Graham in his aversion of limelight, he has a hard time escaping its discriminating glare. "Boxey" has
He
and a peculiar strength i
a good student, and to
he is the best of fellows
fast friend. We
i stat- ^hom-
Member of County Club.
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alsc |
add |
that the |
adies |
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tin |
ik hi |
T> "th |
utest |
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thir |
g I < |
ver saw." |
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^lass |
Footb |
all |
and |
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Ba |
seball |
(1) |
Scrub |
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Ba |
seball |
and |
Foe |
tball |
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(2 |
; Class |
Baseball |
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(3] |
; \ |
arsity |
Fo |
Dtball |
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(3, |
4); |
Capt. |
V |
arsity |
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Fo |
>tball |
(4); |
V |
arsity |
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Ba |
»ket-ba |
11 (2, |
3, |
4): |
Track Squad (3) ; Asst. Mgr. Basket-ball (3) ; Wearer of N. C; Ath- letic Asso.; Mecklenburg Co. Club; Webb School Club; German Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Di. Society; Gol- den Fleece; Gimghoul; Cood; 2T; Z A E.
SIXTX-BIGH1
H. R. TOTTEN Yadkin College
Age 20; height 5 feet 6}/2 inches weight 135 pounds
"A Christie
the highest style of man"
"Tot" is preeminently a botanist, a connois- seur of mushrooms, so to speak. Diligence contentment, and a fiery red head are his adorn- ments. He has tendencies toward the now pro verbial Booker-trot. If he continues in In- direction, he had better beware, for the ladle; may give him cause to worry.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Asso- ciation; Davidson Countv Club; Class Football (4).
Jackson Townsend Marietta
Age 23; height 5 feet 10 inches weight 140 pounds
"The first step to greatness is to be honest"
"Jack!" Test-tubes, acids, molecules, and chemical equations obey bis every command with- out a murmur. The Chemistry "lab" is his paradise, where he revels. Lo. and behold, he brought forth a '!' H K key. Doesn't worry so long as he has "Vic" Coulter and his pipe. Remove them; he'll not say much, but he gets down in ihe moulh. He could be a big noise, but prefers the simple life.
Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Chemical Journal Club; Press As- sociation; Geological Journal Club; Dramatic Club; Robeson County Club; Oak R.dge Club; Assistant Manager Uni- versity Magazine (3); Manager University Magazine (4); Elisha Mitchell Scientific So- ciety; Alembic; * B K; A X 2 ; L. W. Chem- istry.
SIX! Y-NINE
II
Daniel Joshua Walker Union R dge
Age 25; height 6 feel weighl 1 70 pounds
"Sleep that (■noBs no waging"
So there appeared in our midst a mighty man of valor, whose name was Joshua, of the house of Walker. And he did many wondrous things, often discoursing exhaustively on the merits of the "best girl in the world." Did indulge strenu- ously in athletics, chief among which was sleep- ing— a sport in which he excelled greatly. Was honored and loved by all as the one great patri- arch, l' e man who made Alamance famous.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Associa- tion; Oak Ridge Club; Alamance County Club; Vice-President of Class (2) ; Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3) ; Commencement Marshal (3); Class Statistician (4).
Archibald Lee Manning Wiggins Durham
Age 22; heghl 5 feel 8 inches weight 130 pounds
"He has a head to contrive, a tongue to persuade, and a hand to execute"
"A. L. M." is the man who made work famous. He is everywhere, all the time, doing everything. A freak? No! A genius? No! Name him for yourself. Anybody who can be Editor-in-chief of the Yackety Yack ; run the print shop and dramatic club; take law; inci- dentally graduate; and be about the best egg on the campus, is more than a freak or a gen us. Brimful of business, and bubbling with content- ment, he is the limelight itself.
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3, 4); Treasurer Y. M. C. A. (4) ; Athletic Council (4); Manager Univer- sity Press (2, 3, 4); Editor-in-chief Yackety Yack (4); Class Rep- resentative (4) ; Presi- dent Dramatic Club (4) ; Amphoterothen ; Golden Fleece ; 2 T.
S£ VENTY
Isham Rowland Williams
Age 22; height 5 fe
weight 145 pc
"Truly (/lis world can go or
would but think so"
"Rody" is the bureau of
campus doings, from the pe
crowds up to faculty meetings
He can put to s'lame any
comes to predic
friends with ev.
•ithoul
Fais
if me
they w " of the
onnel of blacking
md college politics.
airvoyant when it
ng election results. He makes
ybody, no matter what kind of
"Rody" is one of the "good
Albert Robert Wilson, Jr Greensboro
Age 22. height 5 feet II inches
weight 1 30 pounds
-Idleness h the sepulcher of a living male"
"NevV is lo "Red" as a hollow tree is to a hibernating bear. He will substitute a chat w'th "Nat" for any pleasure this old world has lo offer him. He keeps his pockets full of his own opinions, and gives to him who asks. In spite of his abstinence from study, fives are not in his line. Flour'shes in "Chaseology," and droops in "Bookerture."
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Vice-President Athletic Association; President H. M. S. Club (4); Class Base- ball (I. 2); Captain (I) and Manager (2),
|
Class |
Baseball; |
All- |
|
|
Class |
Baseb |
nil |
(2); |
|
Capta |
n Scrub |
Be |
seball |
|
(3) |
Commenc |
ement |
|
|
Marsh |
al (3) |
Class |
|
|
Footb. |
II (4); |
'm. |
nager |
|
Class |
Football |
(3) |
Ger- |
|
man |
Club; |
Treasurer |
|
|
(4); |
Coop; |
Asso~iat* |
|
|
Editor |
Yackety |
Yac:< |
|
|
(3. 4) |
; 2 T ; |
K 1 |
Guilford Count' Club; Athletic Asso elation.
George Pickett Wilson Soudan, Va.
Age 24; height 5 feel 6 inches weight 125 pounds "Employment gives health, sobriety, and morals" "G. O. P." rooms with the poet-philosopher of our class — "Mutt Axley"— which accounts for his philosophical turn of mind. George is a deep- dyed student of French. His repertoire of French courses is as complete as he can make it. He is small of stature, but dignified and self- possessed and — assistant professor of the library. George :s a quiet, steady-going fellow, the kind you can depend on.
John Hilary Andrew Workma
..Che
iches
yville
Age 25; height 5 feet II weight 1 70 pounds
"Thou art a fellow of good report"
"CalaRITy" hails from Gaston County, and s proud of it. He distinguished himself early for his interest in practical economics, and has not lost that distinction yet. Though he may not appear so, he takes seriously such things as the world, love affairs, and pedagogy. Has an alto- gether good boot on "Billy" Noble, which will probably cause him to be a "Billygogist."
Phi. Society; Press Association; Dra"ia:i- Club; Le Cercle Fran- caise; Buie's Creek Academy Club; Edu- cational Club; Assistant Editor Magazine (3) ; Associate Editor-in-chief Magazine (4) ; Assist- ant at Library (3, 4).
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Secretary Gaston- Lincoln County Club (4); Class Football (3, 4); Historical Societv; Reading Conference; Archibald D. Murphy Educational Club; Pied- mont High School Club; Progressive Club; County Club Associa- lion; L. W. Teaching.
s/ / EA I Y- III'
TH CAR.OLINA-J3- YACKETY-YACK
>emor
Vote
M ■TTER the smoke and cinders of a hot campa.gn, the clouds of election have
J*—M rolled away and exposed to the world the results of the Senior vote.
W J Of course there was electioneering, cheap cigars, and, according to
' Horace Sisk, some Steam-Roller work. However, notwithstanding the
manifold capacities, accomplishments, acquirements, and eccentricities of the Univers ty's
greatest class, the distinguishing character'stics have made possible a selection satisfactory
to all candidates.
To begn with, the most popular member of the most popular class is, of course, Walter Stokes, Jr. Not content with this, however, he played the Woodrow Wilson act with the position as the biggest ladies' man, although closely pursued by M ke Ramsaur.
The class united in pliant* the well-deserved wreath of laurels on the brow of our best athlete. Bill Tillett. As to the question of good clothes, the tailors' art has reached perfection in the attire of Speight Hunter. Quite a wrangle ensued over the favor of Venus. Scarbor- ough tried to cap the position with two votes, Paul Bryan put in a claim, Euless traded a year's subscr ption to the Tar Heel for one vote, while Lee Wiggins evidently voted for himself. Hamilton came dangerously near settling the question, but Mike Ramsaur — golden-haired, tender- eyed, lovable Mike — was awarded the Golden Apple. Nick Post defeated the enemy at her own game, and exulted even oxer Miss Watson Kasey in being the most ladylike.
From unmistakable evidence, it seems that Jim Carter defeats fourteen other can- didates for biggest bluffer. 1 here are only three good business men in the class. Wiggins led; Euless put up a strong fight; Bennett made a bad third, with one vote. All-round men are numerous, but Doug Rights used some of the greatest politician's (Lee Wiggins') cigars successfully for this position. Patrons of John D.'s midnight fluid range from Fred Morrison down to Ahoskie Parker, odds decidedly in favor of the former. Edgar Story's saintly express;on gave him victory over even the president of the Y. M. C. A. as the most religious. John Workman didn't have any trouble; only John Labberton made any creditable show against him for tightest wad. The ready pen of George Carrington marks him as our best writer. The emblem of ',r«A dignity presents itself in Joe Caldwell. Banks Mebane controls a strange comb-nation, truly a triumvirate — best orator, laziest man, and biggest rounder. Scarborough made another unsuccessful attempt at the grindstone; Morrison likewise — for J. L. Phillips outgrinds all
SEVENTY- Til REK
\±EJ£
A -13- YACKETY-YACK
grinds. No, John Busby didn't get best orator's place, but he sho' did corner on the debating question. After unsuccessful attempts for a position. Bob Strange got just what he deserved, position as best egg. Hot air is abundant, but two members of the Busy B. Club, Busby and Basmght, came first and second respectively as gas bags of greatest magnitude. There was no question about the hottest sport; that was settled the first day Stein H. Basnight struck Chapel Hill. Some anxiety was occasioned about the hookworm question ; Fred Morrison was mentioned, but Brush Wilson is proclaimed the biggest loafer. But hush! Behold the Ananias Club! Enters Huffman, closely followed by Busby, leading Pa Bennett. The Prevarication Chorus, Bivens, McKay, Hamil- ton, Marks, Wilson, Phillips, G. B., and Jim Carter, sing cheerily. Loud noise from rear ; enters our hero, Horace Sisk. All rush from stage, leaving Horace playing a lyre, and sing- ing "I Did It With My Little Hatchet."
Biggest Punster: Huffman, 35; Rights, 24; Work- man, 1 .
The most popular member of the faculty is Professor Graham. Professor Williams is second favorite.
It is really surprising to learn what 1913 eats for breakfast. Here is the menu of favorites: Puffed rice, beef gravy, fried chicken, cakes, hen fruit, oak leaves, steak, any- thing but steak, dill pickles, don't like breakfast at all, first thing ready, grape fruit, pickled prunes, grits, ham, fried cabbage (Bob Strange), actually includes E. K. Graham.
With its high reputation, the class accordingly is temperate. The prohibition vote numbers eighteen. The soft goods variety includes the popular chocolate shake, hard cider, coco-cola, tea, grape juice, coffee, and buttermilk. But shades of Carrie Nation! Hold your breath while the official vote records these favorites: peach brandy, vodka, Scotch highball, "\ mountain dew, rye whiskey on rising in the morning, milk punch, Budweiser, "mixed," Upper Ten, Jefferson Club, champagne, while someone modestly scribbled "not for publication."
Notwithstanding the past season of smokers, nineteen members are not smokers, while the votes elicited from the co-educational department the declaration that they are perfect adies. For those afflicted or gifted with the habit. Prince Albert stands the favorite, followed by a multitude of con- temporaries. Bull Durham, Royal Robe, Cinco, Retino, EI Pnstno, Piedmonts, El Toro, Nurica, Cheroots, a "44"
Gooch's special, id one paper
SEVENTY-FOUR
UNIVER
R.OLINA-
cigar. La Preferencia, corncob pipe, any good cigar, Philip Morris's cigarettes, rabbit
tobacco, black smoke, and train smoke are ment oned as favorite smokes.
In the field of literature, numerous authors were mentioned as favorites. Robert
Burns and O. Henry are the accepted leaders, while the various tastes demand this wide
variety of favorites: Guy de Maupassant, Bud Fisher, Carlyle, Carlisle, Scott,
Steinmetz, A. Conan Doyle, Stevenson, Shakespeare, Wordsworth, John Fox, Jr., Poe,
Dickens, Hugo, Kipling, Major Cain, George Barr McCutcheon, Hines and Noble,
Tennyson, Emerson, Board of YACKETY Yack Editors, Harold Bell Wright, Cooper,
Irving, Gouverneur Morns, Browning, Rostand, and Sam Bivins. Books likewise include a wide range. Although this
is a college community, seven members express a preference for
the Bible. Of the variety of literature included, these samples
bear witness: Cyrano de Bergerac, Vanity Fair, bank book,
Ivanhoe, Sartor Resartus, 'Simmons and Taters (Bivins),
Kipling's Jungle Book, the Dictionary, Lucille, Freshman
Bible, That Pup, Trail of the Lonesome Pine, U. N. C. Mag- azine, Les Miserables, Carhart's Physics, David Copperfield,
and the YACKETY Yack (Miss Kasey).
What to do next year is answered by twenty-three
students "Instruct the youth of the land." Those who intend
to continue studying, or a pretense of same, are thirteen in
number. For nine members there are no plans for the future.
The remainder of the class has such intentions as: Live, do
the Colonel for another year, office work, civil engineering,
geologize, capitalize, insurance bus;ness, what father says do, be a good boy, whatever
is foreordained, work or teach, and work or starve.
After careful cons'deration, five men have come to the conclusion that the biggest thing they have done in college is "nothing." The answer came from four more "loafed." Then comes a joyful mention of battles won and courses passed. Math I, Physics I, Latin 2, English 14, and Math 2, come in for full applause.
Other great things done were: Learn a few men, broaden my view, gained twenty pounds, tell one successful joke, <I> B K, pass public speaking 1 , stay sober, giant's swmg, room in Old East, mix my activities, earn a living, and make Senior Football team. One member states that the biggest thing he has done is Fatty Bagwell.
In spite of the beauty and attractiveness displayed by the class, the majority have never reached that station next to matrimony. Twenty- two admit that they have been engaged, some as many as three or four times. For some reason, quite a number refuse to answer.
SEVENTY- FIVE
TH CAROLINA-/3- YACKETY-YACK
The range of income five years from now rises thus: nothing, two cents per day, $3.43 exactly, $5.00 per, $1000, not less than $3000, less than I hope, $5000, $10,000 conservative estimate (C. B. Carter).
The lowest price paid for a college education was $600. Moreover, thirteen members got through on less than a thousand dollars. The majority, however, ranged between $1000 and $2000. The h'ghest was $3,500.
The Sunday night's occupation was generally conceded to be attending church and writing letters. In response, however, more answers read: various and sundry things, study. A suffragist vote states suggestively, "Go to church first." Some few members, however, admit that they sleep on Sunday night.
The favorite walks include the principal points of interest and beauty, and some more. The wide extent of perarrbulat'ons include Battle's Park, to the postoffice, any old place, Cameron Avenue, Faculty Row, King's Mill, Coker's Tower, Piney Prospect, Venable, haven't one. Chemistry Hall, Purefoy's Mill, and any old place. To the boarding-house is the most popular.
Regarding matrimonial expectations, nearly everyone is optimistic. Euless says not later than 1915; Paul Bryan, June 30, 1913; Perrett, at the first opportunity. Others say: When a girl with a million comes along and agrees to face privation, hard- ship, toil, and starvation with me; she has not decided; at night; pretty durned soon; first chance (co-ed) ; on my fiance's birthday (also a co-ed) ; and when I cease to be single. Nine cold-hearted monsters croak with the Raven "Nevermore."
Under normal conditions, the class does most of its sleeping between 1 1.30 p. m. and 8.00 a. m.
Harvard is the second favorite school. A. & M. takes next place. There are also mentioned Yale, Columbia, Princeton, Davidson, Wake Forest, Vanderb'lt, and oh girls! Elon, Meredith, G. F. C, and State Normal, not to mention Keeley Institute.
Thus endeth the scroll.
s/ I / WTY-SIX
mm Slliili
%
Officers
D. H. Carlton President
Frank Drew Vice-President
L. R. Johnston Secretary
J. A. Holmes Treasurer
B. D. Applewhite Historian
W. S. Beam Poet
SEVENTY-SEVEN
Histonj o{ Hie Junior Class
S*^^*'' HEY met at the seashore during the sumrrer of 1913. It was night. He was
A <"^^ happy. The lapping of the waves, a brand new silver moon, the brine-spiced
m W breeze, a stray wisp of her hair brushirg his bronzed cheek now and then —
all made him happy. His heart swelled within h;m, and he longed to tell her
something, anyth'ng, everything. Yes; you know that feeling! Anyway, he felt very
proud when she toyed over his shining new class pin, the one he had purchased just before
he left the University in June.
"Which class? " she asked, smilng up at him — w;th a dimple.
"1914! " he promptly answered, swelling out his chest proudly at both the query and the touch of her soft, dainty fingers, as they played at the pin on h s breast. He was thr lied into immediate speech, and gushed forth, while she listened in rapt attention — mirroring two little moonbeams in the soft depths of her eyes.
"1914 — dear old 1914! " he began. "Why, to me it is the best old class there is, was, and ever shall be. I am going to recall through all my life its friendsh:ps, trials, work, and fun. Just let me tell you of the year we landed at the University as Freshmen, green as the very grass that grew beneath the Old Davie Poolar. We had a gay, turbu- lent tirre the night we elected our class officers out at the little depot, surrounded by a yellirg handful of upperclassmen. The Sophomores charged at us; and one time Porter, the Varsity fullback, charged right through us, ard came out on the further side of our ranks without his — er — er — trousers, if you prefer."
"O-oh ! " she whispered, and laughed softly.
"Then," he continued, "after we had once settled down, we began to wake up as a Class, ard as an 'ntegral part of the University. For the following three years we did rotable deeds in practically every college activity. As Sophomores, we were the first Cl?ss to allow the Freshmen to meet in the chapel. As a body, we have never coun- tenanced hazing, and in mary ways have tried to prevent this d sreputable practice. In scholarship, we have stood high as a whole, and have a large number of <t> B K honor men. We have done well in literary activities. In athlet'cs, we have established a bis? record, and set an example for succeeding classes — having eighteen men to make "N. C." sweaters in the:'r first two years at the University. We have won three Inter-Class Champ OTishps — in baseball, track, and football.
"We h»d 203 men in our Freshman year; 139 men in our Sophomore year: a^d 85 men in our Jun:or year. We are going back next year to get our dips. Some of the fellows won't be back — fellows that we used to greet daily on the campus. Our thoughts, however, will bring them back to mind just the same, in the spirit of dear friendship and jolly rerrin'scence. Say," he finally blurted out, "1914 is a great old Class!
She smiled up at him, nodding her head coyly. He unfastened his shining new class pin, ard handed it over to her.
Well, that is how the "affair" began. — HISTORIAN
SEVENTY-BIGHT
lumor
CI
ass
Lonnie Lee Abernethy Charlotte
Y. M. C. A.; North Carolina Club; Varsity Football (1, 2, 3); Track Team (1, 2); Treas- urer Oak Ridge Club (2) ; Mecklenburg County Club; Secretary Cla:s (2).
Reynold Tatum Allen Kinsion
Associate Ed tor Yackety Yack ; Athletic Association; Class Football (I, 2, 3); Class Baseball (1, 2); Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; K2.
Troy Monroe Andrews Chapel Hill
Lewis Angel Franklin
Scrub Basket-ball Team; Class Baseball Team; Class Football Team (3); Secretary- Treasurer Macon County Club (3).
Blake Deans Applewhite Wilson
Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Wilson County Club; North Carolina Club; Winner of Freshman Prize in EngFsh; Press Assocation; Manager Class Football Team (1); Scrub Baseball Team (1); Track Squad (1, 2); Historian of Class (3); Dramatic Club; Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3); Asrociate Editor Magazine (3) ; Associate Ed'tor Tar Heel (3) ; Varsity Football Team (I. 2. 3) ; German Club; 2T; * A fi.
Benjamin Franklin Aycock Fremoni
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Wayne County Club; Class Baseball (I. 2).
George Alderman Barrier Bowman, Tex Tennis Association; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Secretary-Treasurer Webb School Club; Class Football Team.
Reuben Holland Bell Swan Quarter
Phi. Society; Athletic Association.
Octavius Blanchard Bonner Chapel Hill
Horner Club; Manager Class Baseball Team (2); Clas= Baseball Team (I. 2); Secretary- Treasurer Cotillion Club; German Club; Athletic Association ; — K A.
Allyn Raymond Brownson ...Asheville
Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Elisha Mitchell Society; Zoology Club;
Y. M. C. A.
SEVENTY-NINE
III!
Junior Class
John Scott Cansler Charlotte
Athletic Association; Di. Society; Mecklen- burg County Club; President Tennis Associa- tion; Ben.
David Hill Carlton Kernersvill
Di. Society; Press Association; Y. M. C. A. Dramatic Club; President Oak Ridge Club Secretary Student Council and Greater Council President of Class (3).
Joseph Lenoir Chambers, Jr Charlotte
Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Sub. Football Team (I); Football Team (2); Scrub Baseball (1); Basketball Team (2. 3); Captain Basket-ball Team (3); Tennis Association; Tennis Team (2. 3); North Carolina Club; Associate Editor Tar Heel (2) ; Manag ng Editor (3); Vice-President of Class (2); Asso- ciate Editor Yackety Yack (3) ; Amphote- rothen ; German Club; Coop; Gimghoul ; — T; 2 A E.
Collier Cobb. Jr Chapel Hill
Phi. Society; Athletic Asociation; Y. M. C. A.; Varsity Track Team; Secretary-Treas- urer North Carolina Club; Warrenton High School Club; Cross Country Team (3).
Hubert Walter Collins Holly Springs
Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Wake County Club.
Frank Davis Conroy Cullowhee
Athlete Association; Elisha Mitchell Scien- tific Society; Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Alembic Club; AX 2.
Henry Leon Cox Cullowhee
William Frontis Credle Swan Quarter
Athletic Association; Phi. Society; Y. M. C A.
Paul Clifford Darden Fremont
Y. M. C. A. (I, 2. 3); Ph.. Society; Class Baseball Team (I, 2); Assistant Manager Foot- ball Team; Class Football Team.
Thomas Ashford DeVane Red Springs
Athletic Associaton; Tennis Association; Ph. Robeson County Club; Football (1. 3); Scrub b Varsity (2); Sub.
Band (1);
C. A.; Class
(I, 2); Sc
Society
Y. M.
Foolbal Varsity Club (3); ATS.
Football (3); Glee Club (3); German
Junior Class
George Frank Drew Live Oak. Fla.
Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; German Club; Secretary-Treasurer Florida Club (2) ; Vice-President of Junior Class; Associate Editor Yackety Yack Assistant Manager Varsity Football Team Pres,dent Florida Club (3); Athletic Council Assistant Leader of Fall German; Gimshoul A T o
Macon Rush Dunnagan . ...Yadkinvil)
D.. Society; Secretary Press Association Corresponding Secretary Forsyth County Club Tar Heel Editor (2); Class Historian (2) Dramatic Club; Assistant Manager Magazine.
Wiley Benjamin Edwards Wilson
Oak Ridge Club; \thlelic Associaton; Varsity Baseball; Football Squad (I. 2); North Carolina Club; Captain Baseball Team (3); $ 111.
James Eldr:dge Dunn
Phi. Society; Press Association; Secretary Johnston County Club (2); Treasurer Johnston County Club (3).
Clayton Wiley Eley Menola
Phi. Society; Tennis Association.
John Gilmer Feezor Silver Hill
Di. Society; Vice-President Davidson County Club; Press Association; Education Club; Secretary of Republican Club.
Thomas Wiley Ferguson Kendal
Di. Society; Historical Society; Y. M. C. A.; Oak Ridge Club; Blue Ridge County Club; Class Football (2. 3); Athletic Association.
iiiii
Arthur J. Flume Palatine Bridge. N. Y.
John Robert Gentry Waynesville
Charles Benjamin Green K:ttrell
Athletic Associaton; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society.
EIGHTY-ONE
Junior Class
Harry Barnette Grimsley Greensboro
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Guilford Counly Club; Class Football f08-'09) ; Manager Class Football C08); Class Baseball ('11); Varsity Track Team ('10); German Club; 2 N.
Meade Hart _ ...Mocksville
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Rowan County Club; Education Club.
Samuel Grady Hartley Yadkin Cottage
John Thomas Hatcher Rose Hill
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Class Football (2); Scrub Football; Athletic Association.
John Albert Holmes Graham
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Alamance County Club; Class Football (3); Class Treasurer (3).
James Eugene Holmes Graham
Di. Society; Alamance County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Press Association; Ministerial Band.
Ralph Wendell Holmes Graham
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Alamance County Club.
George Ricks Holton Winston-Salem
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Forsyth County Club; Class Football (2, 3); Tennis Association.
Clinton Kelly Hughes Asheville
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.
Albert Warren James Laurinburg
Athletic Association; Warrenton High School Club; Education Club.
EIGHTY- TWO
Junior Class
Roy Lemuel Johnston ...Haw River
Athletic Association; Alamance County Club; Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Manager Class Track Team; Assistant Business Manager Tar Heel; Secretary of Class (2); Corresponding Secretary Alamance County Club.
Troy Isaiah Jones Helton
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Dramatic Club; President of Blue Ridge Club; As:ociate Editor Yackety Yack.
Daniel Lamont Knowles Mount Olive
Ph:. Society; Tennis Association; AtMetic Association; Wayne County Club; Scrub Foot- ball (1. 2); Class Football (3).
hrnmEB
Robert Law Lasley Wentwort'i
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Press Association; Rockingham County Club.
Oscar Leach Raeford
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Press Assoc;alion; Manager Varsity Ba:eball Team; Ampholerothen.
Joseph Ira Lee Four Oaks
Phi. Society; Johnston County Club; Pro- gress^ Club.
James Crover Lee Roxboro
Freih-Soph. Debate; Phi. Society; Y. M. C A.; Press Association; H slorical Association.
Henry Cyrus Lonc, Jr Charlotte
Di. Society; Mecklenburg County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Cla:s Fool- ball (I); Class Baseball (I); Scrub Football (2, 3); Vars.ly Basket-ball (I); North Carolina Club; Assistant Manager Baseball (3); Asso- ciate Editor Yackety Yack; German Club; K A.
Albert Anderson Long Farmington
Class Baseball (1.2); Class Track Team (2)j Tennis Association.
William Campbell Lord Wilmington
Scrub Baseball Team (3); Class Football Team (I, 2, 3); Class Baseball (I, 2); German Club; YACKETY Yack Board; New Hanover County Club; Phi. Society; Athletic Associa- tion; — N.
EIGHTY- THREE
Junior Class
John William McIntosh Denver
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Associa- tion; Tennis Associaion; Ass-stant Manager Tar Heel (3); Vice-President Gaston-Lincoln Club; Press Association.
William Peter McKay Red Springs
Malcolm Norval Oates Charlotte
Athletic AssociaLon; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; Mecklenburg County Club; Class Football (3); Associate Editor Yackety Yack; Varsity Tennis Team (2 3); North Ca.olina Club; German Club; Scrub Football (I); B6 II.
Frank Redding Owen Yadkin College
Di. Society; Davidson County Club.
Walter Ray Parker Goldsboro
Phi. Society; Wayne County Club; Dramatic Club; Press Association.
Elbert S.dney Peel Williamston
Henry Austen Pendercraph. Durham
Edwin Jerry Perry Wilson
William Franklin Pitt Macclesfield
Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Class Baseball (2); Class Football (2, 3); Warren- ton High School Club.
Madison Hampton Pratt Madison
Horner School Club; Rockingham County Club; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society.
EIGHTY-FOUR
Junior Class
Joseph Robert Prevatt Lumberion
Class Baseball (2); Class Football (3); Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Robeson County Club; Athletic Association.
William Nelson Pritchard. Jr Chapel Hill
James Turner Pritchett Lenoir
Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; Athletic Assoc'a- tion; Glee Club (3); Class Football (2); Scrub Football (3) ; Wnner of Freshman Debater's Pfize; Secretary of Intercollegiate Debating Club.
Jesse Forbes Puch Old Trap
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Dramal c Club; Tennis Association.
Lucius Henry Ransom ...Huntersville
D.. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Afso- cahon; Scrub Basket-ball (I. 2); President Mecklenburg County Club; Class Baseball (2, 3); Class Football (I. 2); Football Squad; Track Team (2. 3); Assistant Manager Basket- ball Team; Press Association; Dramat c Club.
Me
Robinson Atlanta
Kenneth Claiborne Royall Goldsboro
Phi. Society; Athletic Assoc'ation; German Club; Tennis Association; Wayne County Club; Class Football (2); Class Tennis (3); Soph-Junior Debate (3) ; YacKETY Yack Board (3); AK E.
Luther Vernon Scott Silvan
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Historical Society; Education Club.
Royal Crady Shoaf Lexington
Di. Society; Davidson County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Press Association.
Harold Thomas Sloan Franklin
Di. Society; Macon County Club.
•
inn
F.IGHTY-FIVR
Junior Class
Q
Benjamin Belver Sears Como
Class Football (1); Captain Track Team (2); Varsily Track Team (2); North Carolina Club; Horner Club; 2 K A.
Junius McRae Smith Charlotte
Assistant Manager Glee Club; Mecklenburg County Club; Athletic Asso:ialion; Vars.ty Ba=kel-ball (1, 2); North Carolina Club; Y. M.
C. A
(2. 3) A X 2
Cla3S Tennis (1, 2); Class Football Di. Society; Scrub Football Team (3); 2 A E.
Ralph Case Spence. Kpling
Phi. Soc:ety; Tennis Association; Athletic Association; German Clb; Class Treasurer (2) Manager Class Football; Freshman Debater Track Team (1, 2); Cross Country Team (3) North Carolina Club; Y. M. C. A.; A K E.
George Vaughan Strong Raleigh
Phi. Society; Athletx Association; German Club; Gym. Team (I, 2); Varsity Track Team (1, 2); North Carolina Club; Yackety Yack Board (2. 3); Class Football Team (3); Assislant Leader Fall German; Gorgon's Head; * A 6.
James Arthur Struthers Grists
il'.i
Lewis Holmes Swindell, Jr Swan Quarter
Carl Duffy Taylor Newbern
Class Football (1, 2); Varsity Gym. Team (1, 2. 3); Assistant Instructor in Gym. (3); North Carolina Club; Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball Team (3); Electrical Engineering So- ciety; German Club; Athletic Association; 2 N.
William Bartel Townsend Red Springs
Athletic Association; Phi. Society; German Club; Robeson County Club; Y. M. C. A.; K 2.
William Clarke Thompson Lewiston
Warrenton High School Club; Athlete Asso- ciation; Coop; K A.
Willjam Reid Thompson Teer
Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society, Press Association.
j-:n;f/rv-six
lumor
CI
ass
John Alfred Walker Germantown
Athletic Association; Di. Society; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Treasurer Forsyth County Club.
I
Felix Litaker Webster...., W-lkesboro
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Oak Ridge Club; Blue Ridge Club; Athletic Association.
William Pell Whitaker, Jr Durham
Gym. Team (2. 3); Class Baseball (2); Gimghoul ; Assistant Manager of Track Team (3); Z*.
Seymour Webster Whiting Raleigh
Fresh-Soph. Debater (I); Soph-Junior Debater (2); Athletic Association; Track Squad; Cross-Country Team; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Associate Editor Yackety Yack ; Debating Union.
Henry Stuart Willis High Point
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Track Squad (2. 3); Class Track Team (2); Guilford County Club; Athletic Associaton; Soph-Junior Debater (3).
E1GHTY-SEVE.X
Philip Woolcott
C. E. Ervin
B. L. Field
G. B. Whitaker W. P. Fuller
Off
icers
President
Vice-President
Secretary Treasurer
Historian
EIGHTY-NINE
A— 13
History o{ Hie Sophomore Class
IN THE Fall of 1911, two hundred and ten atoms of verdant ignorance collected from the various streams of life to rejuvenate and perpetuate this pool of knowledge. From Persia to Florida were they gathered. The first thing was to organize. Following the time-honored custom, meetings were held in trembling and stealth at the depot. There, factions, representing a negligible minority, attempted to rule. Candidates sprang up on all sides, secret meetings were held, petitions circulated, rumors winged around. But all this plotting and counter-plotting was stopped when the Sophomores took the unprecedented step of allowing the Freshmen to meet in peace. In Gerrard Hall they met in "peace," amid a shower of books, gravel, and epithets, and elected "Pres." Jones as leader of their college babyhood. After the confusion and excitement of college opening, the class members began to settle down and take their places in the various activities of University life. Thus they labored quietly for a year.
When the class next gathered, it was seen that fifty-three had perished in the whirlpools and cross-currents of the sea of knowledge, and only one hundred and fifty- seven had reached Sophomoric shores. Here they organized anew, and wisely chose "P." Woolcott as their President. They faced this troublesome year with sentiment over- whelm'ngly against hazing; but Fate, as if in mockery, sent an awful calamity in the shape of death to sadden and chasten all. Who or what may be to blame it is hard to say. At all events, the class as a whole did its little best to repair what had been done. Through and on account of all of these experiences there has grown up a close and strong union, which becomes greater and greater as the various individuals of the class begm to become prominent in the recitation-room, on the athletic field, on the platform, and in the Y. M. C. A. Truly the class is proud of its record.
— Historian
Sof>k
omore Ulass
a
Richard Blythe Abernethy Charlotte
Y. M. C. A. (I, 2); Oak Ridge Club; Mecklenburg County Club; Sub. Varsity Football; Scrub Baseball; Class Secretary; Varsity Football.
Thomas Harllee Anderson Statesville
DeWitt Roy Austin Charlotte
Di. Society; Young Men's Christian Association.
Kenneth Hubert Bailey Wakefield
Daniel Long Bell Graham
Y. M. C. A.; Dramatic Club; Phi. Society; Alamance County Club; Secretary Alamance County Club.
Luther Avon Blue Wilmington
Claud Alfred Rosemond Enfield
Thomas Callendine Boushall Raleigh
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Tennis Association; German Club; Freshman Debater; Fresh-Soph Debater; Soph-Juniar Debater; Manager Class Tennis Team; President Wake County Club; Greater Council (2); Associate Editor YacKETY YacK (2); - N.
Joseph Shepard Bryan Scotts Hill
Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Horner School Club; Dramatic Club; Member of Dramatis Personae; Press Association.
Bacchus Bright Byrd Swiss
Di. Society; Athletic Association.
Austin Heaton Carr Durham
Class Football (1); Y. M. C. A. (I); Di. Society; Manage. Freshman Baseball Team; Athletic Association (1. 2); Vice-President Durham County Club; German Club; Business Manager of Y. M. C. A. Student Directory; Z *.
Frank Winfried Carter Maxton
\/.\j:t) rii'
Edgar Thomas Campbeli Jessaca
Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association.
Richard Willard Cantwell Wilmmgton
Athletic Association; Phi. Society; German Club; - N.
Robert Floyd Coats Angier
Edwin Fuller Conrad Winston-Salem
Di. Society; Woodrow Wilson Club; Secretary Forsyth County Club.
Howard Clarance Conrad Pfafftown
Di. Society; Dramatic Club; Forsyth County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Woodrow Wilson Club
Robert Edward Lee Cook Tarboro
Glee Club; Brotherhood of St. Andrew; Corresponding Secretary Twin County Club; Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Warrenton High School Club; * A 0.
Tom Craven Charlotte
Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Oak Ridge Club; Scrub Football (I); Scrub Baseball (I).
John Robert Crawford Goldsboro
Wayne County Club; Tennis Association; Warrenton High School Club; Athletic Association.
Alfred Ewing Cummings Winston-Salem
Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Oalc Ridge Club.
John Tucker Day. Walkertown
Official Wood-Sawer Commons Hall; Licensed Barber; Second Vlce-President Forsyth County Club; Di. Society; Press Association; President Republican Club.
James Gillespie Dickson ...Raeford
Earlie Deck Edgerton Fremont
Gurvey Everett Edgerton Fremont
Walter Clink Ellington Sanford
V/A'i I ) I IIKI I
George Willard Eutsler Greensboro
Bascom Lee Field Greensboro
Di. Society; Secretary Class; Scrub Football; Class Football; Y. M. C. A.
Robert Greeson Fitzgerald. Linwood
Adger Carter Forney Greensboro
Tennis Association; Di. Society; Guilford County Club. Henry PRICE FoUST Greensboro
Y. M. C. A.; Atblehc Association; Tenn's Association; German Club; Manager Class Football Team; Class Baseball; B 0 II.
Walter Pling Fuller Bradentown, Fla.
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Florida Club; Scrub Basket-ball (1); Captain Class Base- ball (1); Class Football (1. 2); Winner of Fieshman Prize in English; Assistant Editor Tar Heel; Greater Council; — T.
Alfred Long Gaither.., Statesville
Thomas Ethridge Gilman Jacksonville
Walter Leon Goldston Goldston
Henry Lewis Graves .Carthage
Wilson Gregory Guthrie Charlotte
Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Mecklenburg County Club; Webb School Club; Class Football (I, 2).
Graham Harden Burlington
Di. Society; Tennis Association; n K A.
Willie Reing Harding Yadkinville
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association.
Allen Bastic Harper Chapel Hill
William Henry Harrell ...Williamston
Donald Ryan Harris Arden
Athletic Association; German Club; Dramatic Club; Football Squad; A K E.
XIXETY-FOUR
R.OLINA
Aubrey Carlisle Hatch Mount Ol
ive
William Snelling Hicks Raleigh
German Club.
Thomas Fuller Hill Durham
Brantson Beeson Holder Wilkertown
Di. Society; Secretary of Republican Club.
Curtis Avent Holland Greensboro
James Boettner Hughes Black Mountain
William Oliver Huske Cumberland
Christian Leonard Isley Burlington
Charles Lewis Johnston Knoxville, Tenn.
Di. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; - K A.
Abraham Ottie Kanner Sanford, Fla.
Phi. Society; Florida Club.
Edward Yates Keesler ..Charlotte
David Herbert Killeffer Bradentown, Fla.
Y. M. C. A.; Brotherhood of St. Andrew; Phi. Society; Chemical Journal Club; Dramatic Club; Press Association; Secretary-Treasurer Florida Club.
Wade Kornegay Chapel Hill
Clifton Samuel Kurfees Germantown
Gabriel Deloro Lambert High Point
Di. Society.
Henry Dionysius Lambert Angier
Phi. Society; Johnston County Club.
James Oliver Latham Huntersville, Ala.
Di. Society; Athletic Association; Webb School Club; Y. M. C. A.; Class Football (2).
James Augustus Leak Wadesboro
.X/.XFTY-FrrE
Charles Dennis Lee Faison
Edmund Jones Lilly, Jr Fayetteville
Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; German Club; A Tfi.
SlGMUND Bach LlNDAU Greensboro
Sterling Albert Lipscombe Durham
Robert Eugene Little Wadesboro
Freshman Football Team; Scrub Football Team; German Club.
Edward Willis Lupton... Swan Quarter
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Press Association.
Frederick Bays McCall Charlotte
Di. Society; - K A.
John Marion McCants Guthriesville
James Reginald Mallett Salisbury
Di. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Ministerial Club; Orchestra: Rowan County Club.
Frederick Cain Manning Durham
Athletic Association; Durham County Club; Class Baseball; Class Football; German Club; Z*.
Owen Meredith Marshburn.. Knightsdale
Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Dramatic Club; Wake County Club; Buies Creek Club.
Dennis Raymond Martin Elizabeth City
Phi. Soc:ely; Y. M. C. A.; Class Football.
Grover Adlai Martin East Bend
Di. Society; Winner of Freshman Debate; Tennis Association; Athletic Association.
Harry Augustus Martin Asheville
William Owen Baldwin Maxwell Charlotte
George Allen Mebane Spray
Class Football Team; Class Tennis Team; Class Baseball; Manager Class Track Team; Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; German Club; Z *.
NINETY-SIX
Thomas Lenoir Michael.. Canton
Thomas Yancey Milburn Washington, D. C.
Charles White Millender Asheville
David Columbus Moore Greenville
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Class Baseball Team; President of Pitt County Club.
John William Moser Rural Hall
Ophir Carmal Nance High Point
Di. Society; Progressive Club.
Albert Roy Newsom Marshville
John Daffie Odom ..Rocky Mount
William Mansfield Owen Welcome
Di. Society; Class Football; Y. M. C. A.; Davidson County Club.
Benjamin Care Parker Monroe
Roscar Edward Parker Selma
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Johnston County Club; Conference on Reading.
Mercer Craynor Parrott Kinston
Dramatic Club. B. F. Patv Tullahoma, Tenn.
Di. Society; Y. Pvl. C. A.; Athlete Association; Tennis Association; Second Vice- President of Webb School Club; Class Football (2); German Club; AK E.
Lewis Banks Payne Norfolk
Jesse Shephard Pell Spartanburg, S. C.
Emmett Judson Pope Mount Olive
Joseph Robert Prevatt Lumberton
.V/.\7-;7>'-.S£I7T.V
James Valentine Price Spray
William Nelson Pritchard, Jr Chapel Hill
William Dossey Pruden, Jr Edenton
Phi. Sociely; Y. M. C. A.; Alhletic Association; Secretary-T.easurer Webb High School Club; Class Football (2); German Club; AK E.
William Trent Ragland Salisbury
William Henry Rhodes Chapel Hill
Clarence Robinson Atlantic
Oscar Holt Ragland Oxford
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Horner School Club; Granville County Club.
Joseph Vance Rowe Small
Phi. Society.
Leon MaROOT SAHAG Teheran, Persia
Phi. Society; Yackety Yack Artist.
Samuel Floyd Scott Haw River
John Frank Sinclair Maxton
Phi. Society; Robeson County Club; Oak R dge Club; Y. M. C. A.
Charles Austin Sloan Garland
Claiborne Thweat Smith Scotland Neck
Athletic Association; Manager Class Football; President Halifax County Club; President Warrenton High School Club; Press Association; '/ 4".
Major Thomas Smith Reidsville
Samuel Spence Kinston
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.
Robert Baxter Spencer Hobucken
Samuel Clarence Spoon Haw River
William Raney Stanford Teer
Matthew Augustus Stroup Cherryville
NINE! Y-EIGH1
•— Tii—Hiiir
John Benton Stacy Ruffin
Di. Society; Tennis Association; Freshman Baseball Team.
William Raymond Taylor Louisburg
Franklin County Club; Ph\ Society; Dramatic Club.
Frank LaFayette Thigpen Tarboro
Athletic Association; Tennis Association; VX arrenton High School; Twin County Club.
William Wayt Thomason Charlotte
James Alfred Thompson Haw River
William Lewis Thorp Rocky Mount
Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Wairenton High School Club; Geiman Club; A K E.
Edward Lloyd Tilley Bahama
Athletic Association; Durham County Club; Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.
Jesse Eli Turlington Benson
Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Phi. Society.
Bertram Edward Twine Edenton
Phi. Society; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.
William Copehart Walke Avoca
Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Soph. Tennis Team; German Club; K A.
Basil Manly Walton Morganton
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Ministerial Band; Brotherhood of St. Andrew; Horner Club; Blue Ridge Club.
William Farel Warlick Reepsville
Gaston-Lincoln County Club; Di. Society; Director of Brass Band; Orchestra.
Albert Thomas Weatherly Gorman
Phi. Society.
Clifton Forrest West Dover
George Bottom Whitaker Winston-Salem
Thomas Bascom Whitaker Oak Ridge
NINL I Y-NINE
Zack Lomca Whitaker Oak Ridge
Paul Linwood White Scotland Neck
Phi. Society; Halifax Counly Club.
James Vivan Whitfield Wallace
Phi. Society; Dramatic Club; Athletic Association; Tennis Associates; Homer Club.
John Allen Wilkins Draughan
Warren Rand Williams Sanford
Philip Woollcott. Raleigh
Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Class Track Team (I); Manager Class Track
Team (I); Varsity T.ack (I. 2); Class Football (I. 2); Member North Carolina Club;
President of Class (2); Tar Heel Board (2); Student Council (2); Vice-President Wake County Club; Y. M. C. A.; iKE.
Richard Becton Yelverton Fremont
Roy Lee Yelverton Fremont
ONE HUNDRED
off
..icers
B. P. Beard President
J. L. Huske Vice-President
C. W. BECKWITH Secretary and Treasurer
ONE HUNDRED ONE
History of Hie Freshman Class
,^«^fev' HE career of a Sophomore Class is usually shaped by circumslances; the character of a M ^^k Junior Class is often determined by its peculiar environments; and the destiny of a Senior ^^^^^ Class may be molded by the hand of one strong man.
But the life of a Freshman Class — oh my muse, what a theme! All other classes a,e open to the effects of a thousand and varied influences; so that in the writing of the history of any one of them much is to be said that has never been said before. But the history of one Freshman Class is (he sad history of every other. They all conform to one miserable little pattern. Years may come and years may go; but. alas! Freshmen are Freshmen forever. In them there is no change, no chance of change.
What, then, can be our history, that I should care to write it, or you to read it? And yet, because I must, here goes.
We came timidly straggling up to the Hill on or about September the ninth, of the year past. From North, South, East, and West we came, in groups of two and three, or singly. Having arrived, we devoted the first few days to silent suffering, as it was only right and proper that we should. For the exclusive right to be utterly miserable is the only privilege to which we Freshmen have a clear title; and that is our birthright, as it were.
And in those first days we were scared, every one of us; scared down to the very marrow in oui bones; and now we are honest enough to make this humiliating confession to the public because we know — well, we know that the public already knows that of course we were.
So then, after a due period of time had been given over to indulgence in homesickness and general misery along all l.nes, a meeting of the Class of 1916 was called (or rather whispered), for the purpose of pulling the class spirit out from under the bed, so that it might be induced to stand up and take a look around. This first meeting accomplished its end, and at a later convention the class officers were elected. It is a matter of little or no concern on whom these misfortunes fell. Every worthy cause must have its martyrs, and a Freshman class mus-t have its officers.
At this meeting, too, a mot. on was laid before the house that the class levy an assessment to the amount of one quarter per capita, the proceeds to cover current expenses. This proposal met with more or less opposition at the time, but was finally carried through by the progressive wing of the class. It is rumored that the president and the treasurer have been able to collect between themselves fully two dollars and thirty-three cents already.
And, so, for lack of funds, this writing must come to an untimely close. I leave you to infer that volumes have been left unsa d.
— Historian
UXF HLWDh-ED TWO
"**>:*■•"
Freshman Class
Herbert Edwin Allen Asheyille
Andrew Vance Anderson Eagle Rock
Benjamin Franklin Auld Baltimore, Md.
Herbert Victor Bailey Neuse
Lawrence Corbin Barber Buncombe
Rudolph Barnes Clayton
Brvce Parker Beard Salisbury
Clifton Warren Beckwith. Raleigh
Eric Franklin Bell Dunn
ORVAL BYRD Murphy
Hoke Barrvmore Black Greenville
William Wentmore Black.. Cherryville
James Cornaro Blaine Franklin
Lacy William Black Ramsaur
Tully Daniel Blair Greensboro
Hubert Morse Blalock Raleigh
Sheppard Allen Booth Oxford
Francis Churchill Bourne Asheville
Zebulon Vance Bradford Huntersville
Francis Foster Bradshaw Hillsboro
George Grady Brinson Reelsboro
Robert Plato Brooks Woodsdale
Marcellus Buchanan Sylva
Joseph Nicholas Bynum ...Farmville
Claude Carl Canady Benson
William Jonothan Capehart Roxobel
Edward Francis Capps Lucama
Whitfield Chapman Carmichael Asheville
John Wesley Carter Maxton
Allen Thurman Castelloe Aulander
Fred Oscar Christopher Murphy
Ralph Vivian Clark Clarkton
Francis Osborne Clarkson Charlotte
Louis Heyl Clement, Jr Salisbury
William Barden Cobb ..... Goldsboro
Charles Lee Coggin Salisbury
JOHN HAYNES COLLETT Sal sbury
Howard Johnson Combs Columbia
HERMAN CONE Greensboro
David Homer Conrad Lexington
ONE HUNDRED Fi <l R
Frank Hayes Couper Washington
George Long Cooper Graham
James Allison Cooper Henderson
James Gerald Cowan Asheville
James Mormanduke Cox Norfolk, Va.
George Winston Craig Asheville
Rush Floyd Crouse Nile
Edward Holt Currie Raeford
James Elmer Crutcher. - Whitakers
William Bennett Dalton — Madison
Bryan Grimes Dancey. Baltimore, Md.
Douglas Beaman Darden .' Fremont
Robert Vernon Davis Fremont
Fred Hyams Deaton Statesville
Charles Nelson Dobbins. Yadkinville
Julius G. Deas .....Grantsboro
MYNOR CECIL DONNELL Greensboro
Herbert Jackson Drew Live Oak. Fla.
Wade Stafford Dunbar Oak Ridge
Early Edward Walters Duncan Woodsdale
George Soloman Duncan Holly, Tenn.
Thurston Forney Duval Whiteville
John Overton Dysart Lenoir
Henry Lee Edwards Holly Springs
Aubrey McCoy Elliott Charlotte
Floyd Howard Elson Hendersonv lie
Charles Eugene English Asheville
Preston Herschell Epps Durham
Stephen Edward Eure Taylor
William Robert Everett Palmyra
Archie Blair Fairley Monroe
Leslie James Farmer Wilson
Amos Greyson Fearington Edenton
Clyde Lathrop Fore. Charlotte
Manly -Fulcher Atlantic
Jacob Fulton, Jr Walnut Cove
John White Ganily Hope Mills
Paris Cleveland Gardiner Shelby
John Melvin Glenn Marion
Winston Cleveland Garrett Jul an
Osborne Leroy Goforth Mooresville
James Frank Hackler Sparta
Harvey Hamilton Atlantic
d.v/i' trr.xnRED mi
""^r%*l
RTH CA ROLINA-JJ- YAL
Franklin Well Hancock Oxford
Henry Grady Harding .....Mocksville
Henry Herman Hardison Wadesboro
James Archibald Hardison, Jr Wadesboro
George Arthur Harper Chapel Hill
William Troy Harper Chapel Hill
Bumer Clifford Harrell Marshville
Joseph Johnson Harris Louisburg
James Leftwich Harrison Raleigh
Jackson Bruce Hash Piney Creek
Roy Washington Hayworth Asheboro
Joe Wertz Hendrix Concord
John Walkes Henson, Jr Leaksville
Hugh Bryan Hester Hester
Ernest Glenn Hogan Chapel Hill
Edward Nicholas Holt. Greensboro
John Ranson Holt Princeton
Walter Lawrence Holt, Jr. Fayetteville
Roy McRae Homerwood Burlington
James Clarance Hooks Fremont
William John Hoover Bell Buckle, Tenn.
Albert Graham Horton Wakefield
Robert Burton House Thelma
Hinton Gardener Hudson Smithfield
John Melville Huff ..Henderson
Edward Outlaw Hunt Oxford
David Wells Hunter Greensboro
William Lewis Hunter Fayetteville
Wade Russell Hunter Alexander
John Harris Hurdle. Reidsville
John Manning Huske Fayetteville
Joseph Strange Huske Fayetteville
John Frank Jarreli Chapel Hill
Herman Jernigan Benson
Herschel Vespasian Johnson Charlotte
Julius Johnson, Jr , Yanceyville
Frank Carlton Jones Plymouth
John Haywood Jones Newbem
Edward Grey Joyner Littleton
Robert Thomas Joyner ..Rocky Mount
William Henry Joyner Princeton
Robert Campbell Jurney Winston-Salem
Van Buren Jurney 01;n
ONE HUNDRED SIX
William Clarance Canoy Biscoe
John Archelaus Kent Lenoir
Baston McGee Lockey Lincolnton
Charles Edward Lambeth Fayetteville
James Horace Lassiter Rich Square
Joseph Rose Latham Belhaven
Isaac Laurence Lawrence Pilot Mountain
Alvis Thaddeus Lewallen Asheboro
McDanjel Lewis Kinston
Robert Lee Link Salisbury
Thomas Calvin Lynn Salisbury
Risen Tyer Bennett Little Wadesboro
Giles Mebane Long Charlotte
James Franklin Love Lincolnton
William Parrett Love Shelby
David McPherson McArthur Red Springs
John Dob McCurrie Marion
Roger Atkinson McDuffie Greensboro
Joseph Dixon McGlohon Greenville
Joseph Boyd McLean Whitsett
Joseph Ernest Mann New Hill
Edward Baxter Marsh Salisbury
Luther Grier Marsh Marshville
Philip Bool Marshall. Winston-Salem
Sidney Eure Matthews Winston
George Curtis Meckel Anderson, Ind.
Oscar Von Hochtitzky Merritt Mount Airy
Louis B. Meyers Endfield
Harry Miller Stony Point
Barney Cooper Moffitt Sanford
Julian Allison Moore Wilmington
James Bernice Moore.. Burgaw
James Roy Moore Lenoir
Paul Newhill Morgan ..Burlington
Carlyle Morris Fremont
Marner William Morton Roxboro
Charlie Lee Cole Murphy Salisbury
Robert Wells Neilson Winston-Salem
Samuel Raphael Newman Washington
Frank Wisconsin Norris Jacksonville, Fla.
Evan Wilkins Norwood Goldsboro
Don Franklin Odom Mount Olive
ONE HUNDRED SEVEN
Robert Newton Page Biscoe
John Merrel Parker Bradentown, Fla.
William Baylies Parker Goldsboro
William Edward Pell Winston-Salem
Claude Pfaff Pfafftown
Samuel Clarke Pike Liberty
William Barney Pitts Charlotte
Harney McKay Pleasants. Rowland
Edward Farrior Powell Whiteville
Joseph Hampton Price Monroe
Ralph Craven Pridgen.. Tarboro
William Isaac Proctor Raleigh
Oscar Holt Ragland Oxford
Isaac William Rand Smithfield
Paul Roberts Raper Lexington
Zeno Owen Ratcliff Pantego
James Clyde Ray Hillsboro
Edward Soloman Reid, Jr Charlotte
Samuel Leslie Reid Lowell
William Kirkpatrick Reid Gastonia
Daniel Raynor Raleigh
Charles John Roberts. Lyons
Morins Emmet Robinson Goldsboro
Walter Bryan Rouse Chapel Hill
James Parks Rousseau Wilkesboro
George Claiborne Royal, Jr Goldsboro
Beverly Sanford Royster Oxford
David Wyeth Royster Shelby
William Cecil Rymer HendersonvJle
FRANK SABISTON Jacksonville, Fla.
HAWAY Grey SANDERFORD Creedmoor
LEROY Edgar ScHIFFMAN Greensboro
Moses Shapiro Winston-Salem
George Graham Sharpe Burlington
William Trantham Shaver.. Salisbury
Harry Olim Sheely. Chapin, S. C.
Jacob Philip Shiago Goldsboro
Roger Shove Siddall Sumter, S. C.
Enoch Spencer Simmons Washington
Luther Raleigh Sims Lenoir
Cleveland LaFayette Smith Indian Trail
George Wallace Smith Wilmington
William Oliver Smith Raleigh
ONE III \PRF.D RIGHT
Elias Carr Speight Whitakers
John Porterfield Stedman Oxford
Charles Leary Stevens... Indiantown
Charles Edward Stuart Pembroke
Eugene Silfax Sugg Chapel Hill
David Thomas Tayloe, Jr Washington
James Alexander Taylor Oxford
Herman Burton Temko Greensboro
Alonzo Thomas, Jr Beaufort
Earle Hinson Thompson Red Springs
Malcomb James Thornton.. Newton Grove
Adam Tredwell Thorp Rocky Mount
Francis Justice Timberlake Youngsville
James Cleohpas Tifton Bumsv lie
Richard Hugh Towns Murphy
Roy Aaron Traywick Marshville
Henry Clay Turner Norwood
William Bradley Umstead Bahatm
Robert Candler Vaughan Winston-Salem
Elbert Lambert Veazey Stems
Charles Ernest Walker Morganton
Leroy Byron Wall Tobaccoville
Henry Clinton Warlick Newells
Maurice Dunstan Watts Wilhamston
Wiley Person Mangum Weeks Washington, D. C.
Bascom Covington Weill Rockingham
Robert Henry Winborne Welch Hertford
Benjamin Fletcher Wellons . Smithfield
Robert Andrew Wellons Smithfield
Thomas White Oxford
William Stronach Wilkerson Rocky Mount
Norman Grady Williams Franklin
William Christopher Williams Durham
Harry Wilson Durham
Hillary Goode Winslow ...Hertford
Fred Philips Wood Edenton
Julian Wood, Jr Edenton
Joseph Ernest Wooten Snow Hill
Robert Hazelhurst Wright Nashvlle, Tenn.
John Lamens Wright. Wilmington
Nathaniel Bayard Yar^orough Cary
Robert Samuel Yarborough. Lexington
Allen C. Zollicoffer Weldon
ONE HUNDRED NINE
Isaac William Rand
Born September 1, 1892
Died September 13, 1912
ONE Hi SDRF.D TEN
Co-Ed Roll
Lelia Leavitt Barnes Norfolk, Va.
Margaret Berry Chapel Hill
ROSABELLE SlMONTON FaIRES Chapel Hill
Watson Kasey Houston, Va.
Hazel Patterson.. Burlington
Rachel Lawrence Summers Statesville
ONE HUNDRED ELEVEN
'■>■ i yiY-.-f-— .«i-.7-a-."g>- - i iii !■ ii ir»- tfgajaM^—M
Graduate Department
Name Year Cobb, William Battle ..1 Chapel Hill
A. B. 1912; Botany; Geology; German; Candidate for A.M.
Cox, Rufus Carson 1 Liberty
Ph.B. 1903, Elon College; Education; History; English; Candidate for A.M.
Dobbins, James Talmadge 2 Yadkinville
A.M. 1912; Chemstry; Physics; Geology; Candidate for Ph.D.
George, Wesley Critz.. 2 Elkir.
A.M. 1912; Zoology; Physiology; Bacteriology; Candidate for Ph.D.
Henry, George Kenneth Grant 5 Chapel Hill
A.B. 1900; A.M. 1904; Hamilton College; Greek; Candidate for Ph.D.
Jeffries, William Lewis .2 Edgefield
B.A. 1910; M.A. 1912; Chemistry; Physics; Mineralogy; Candidate for Ph.D.
Knight, Burke Haywood 2.. Williamston
A.B. 1911; Chemistry; Geology; English; Candidate for A.M.
Lasley, John Wayne, Jr 2 Burlington
A.B. 1910; A.M. 1911; Mathematics; Candidate for Ph.D.
McLendon, Lennox Polk 1 Wadesboro
B.S. 1910; A. and M. of North Carolina; LL.B. 1912; English; Philosophy; Economics; Candidate for A.M.
McMillan, Thomas Ellwood 1 Ben Franklin, Tex.
A.B. 1911, East Texas Normal College; History; Economics; Education; Candidate for A.M.
Miller, Herbert Craig 1 '. Newton
A.B. 1910; Leno'r College; Education; English; Economics; Candidate for A.M.
Rankin, William Walter • 2 Charlotte
B.E., A. and M. of North Carolina; M. A.; Mathematics; Physics; Education; Can- didate for Ph.D.
Stacy, Lucius Eugene, Jr. 1 Shelby
A.B. 1912; Chemistry; Physics; Economics; Candidate for A.M.
Stanbury, Walter Adair .2 Chapel Hill
A.B. 1908; Trinity College; Philosophy; Greek.
Starr, Homer Worthington 2 Chapel Hill
English; History; Economcs; Candidate for Ph.D.
Venable, Charles Scott Chapel Hill
A.B. 1910; A.M. 1911; Chemistry; Candidate for Ph.D.
ONE HUNDRED TWELVl
Special Students
Name Year Course
Barnes, Lelia Leavitt . 1 Special ... Creswell
Beard, Bryce Parker 1 Special Norfolk, Va.
BELL, Eric FRANKLIN 1 Elective Pharmacy Salisbury
Black, William Wetmore 1 Special Cherryville
Brittain, Basil Frank ...1 Elective Law Asheboro
Bynum, Joseph Nicholas 1 Special Farmville
Canady, Claude Carl 1 Elective Law. Benson
Cantwell, Richard Willard 2 Elective Law Wilmington
Cole, FURNIE 1 ...Elective Law Beasley
Cole, Nathan 1 Elective Law Beasley
Credle, Blount I Elective Law ..... Hyde
Daniels, Charles Albin 1 Elective Law Newbern
Davis, Oryille Thomas 1 Law Waynesville
EDWARDS, Opie Gray 1 Elective Medicine Spring Hope
Edwards, Wiley Benjamin 2 Special Wilson
Faires, Mrs. RoSABELLE German Chapel Hill
Gardner, Paris Cleveland 1 Elective Law Shelby
Hash, Jackson Bruce 1 Teaching Piney Creek
Jones, Leslie Edward 2 Law Swan Quarter
Kanner, Abraham Otto 2 Elective Law Sanford, Fla.
Lindsay, Charles Lee 1 Law Chapel Hill
LITTLE, R. E., Jr '. 2 Special Wadesboro
McArthur, D. McP 1. Special Red Springs
Meeks, Marcus Henry 1 Elective Law Nashville, Tenn.
Moore, Charles Joyce 1 Elective Law Washington
Payne, Lewis Banks 2 Medicine Norfolk, Va.
Rouse, Walter Bryant 1 Elective Law Chapel Hill
Stacy, John Benton... 2.. Elective Law Ruffin
Stroup, Matthew Augustus 2 Law. Cherryville
Traywick, Roy Aaron. 1... . ..Elective Law Marshville
Wall, Leroy Byron 1 Elective Law Tobaccoville
Wellons, Ben Fletcher I ...Law Smithfield
Winters, Sellie Robert 3 Elective Journalism.. Stem
ONE HUNDRED I mi; 1 1 I \
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Officers
E. A. THOMPSON, President Mount Holly
Miss Grace Dry, Secretary Garner
Miss Charlotte Young, Historian Cullowhee
J. L. ORR, Poet Mars Hill
I. P. Davis, Treasurer Milton
ONf ill WAV D in 1 1 I \
y-YACK
University o{ North Carolina Summer School
^^^•"^ HE first summer school for teachers founded in connection with a University M *^k in the United States was opened at Chapel Hill, June, 1877. Prof. John J. ^^^^ Ladd, Superintendent City Schools of Staunton, Va., and a graduate of Brown University, was in charge. The State appropriated $2,000 annually for its support, and out of the Peabody funds Dr. Barnas Sears gave $500 annually to help students who needed such aid. A bureau of education was established in connection with the school. It was here that Mclver, Joyner, Noble, and Alderman received then- training for their future service to public education.
In 1 880, Professor Ladd was succeeded by Judge Henry E. Sheperd, Super- intendent of Baltimore City Schools. The average attendance at that time was from two to four hundred. In 1884, the funds were divided, and schools located at Asheville, Newton, and Elizabeth City, which continued a few summers longer. Another summer school was opened while Dr. Winston was president of the Univers'ty, with Prof. M. C. S. Noble in charge. Its object was to prepare students to enter the University. It con- tinued but a few years.
' \ /■. HUNDRED S/XTE£ \
UNIVER
The University of North Carolina Summer School for Teachers, under the present regime, was opened in 1 908 by Prof. N. W. Walker, Professor of High School Education in the University. The session of 1912 was very successful, showing a growth in the five years from 53 to 463. Besides the twenty-six counties of North Carolina sending students, the following States, South Carolina, Virginia, Mississippi, and Florida, were represented. There were twenty-seven instructors, and twenty special lecturers, instruction being given in fifty-four courses.
Besides the serious work in the class, there are other things which make this session memorable. There was that day when the fire department was called out to save the power-house. And there was the ovation given Mr. Vermont on the morning following the success of his play, Esther Wake. And who can forget the day of the election of officers, when Meredith's daughters turned suffragette, and marched en masse to Gerrard Hall, ostensibly to capture the offices — horse, foot, and dragoon? But it turned out to be a joke. And there was the sixteenth of June, with its bonfires and mass meetings, and "Rah! Rah! Rah! " for Dr. Howe, when the news was flashed that Wilson had been nominated. All this is now but a memory; yet those days on the pleasant campus and within those hallowed walls will live in responsive hearts forever.
— Historian
' \ / III MIR l ■:// SE I h.XThli.X
f.TTTT- \'
SACKETY-YACK
Summer School
FACULTY AND OFFICERS
Francis Preston Venable, Ph. D., D. Sc, LL.D President
Nathan Wilson Walker, A. B Director
Oscar Leach Secretary
Mrs. Clifton L. Whitaker Matron Can Building
Mrs. J. T. YEARGAN Matron Mary Ann Smith Building
INSTRUCTORS
George Howe, Ph.D. Nathan Wilson Walker, A.B.
Joseph Gregoire deRoulhac Hamilton, Ph.D.
Andrew Henry Patterson, A.M. Marvin Hendrix Stacy, A.M.
Adolphe Vermont, A.M. Louis Round Wilson, Ph.D.
Miss Mary Goodwin Griggs Thomas Perrin Harrison, Ph.D.
Harry Woodburn Chase, Ph.D. Thomas James Wilson, Jr., Ph.D.
Miss Mary Owen Graham George McFarland McKie, A.M.
George Thaddeus Whitley, A.M. Collier Cobb, A.M.
James Finch Royster, Ph.D. Henry McGilbert Wagstaff, Ph.D.
Henry Patrick Harding, A.B. James Muncie Bell, Ph.D.
Edwin R. Jackson, B.S. Vivian LeRoy Chrisler, A.M.
Mrs. Lenore A. Eldred Karl Jansen
Miss May Alexander J. H. Woodruff
Elizabeth Burtt Hagedorn Gustav Hagedorn
SPECIAL LECTURERS
Robert Diggs Wimberly Connor Charles DeGarmo, Ph.D. Lautrec Cranmer Brogden Dr. Watson S. Rankin
Joseph Addison Bivins Miss Winnie W. Leatherman
Edwin R. Jackson
PUBLIC LECTURERS
Dr. F. P. Venable Dr. P. P. Claxton
Dr. J. Y. Joyner Dr. Kemp P. Battle
Dr. J. I. Foust Hon. Josephus Daniels
Dr. Edwin Mims Mr. Edward Kidder Graham
Mr. A. H. Patterson Mr. Collier Cobb
Mr. Edwin R. Jackson Mr. Karl Jansen
Prof. Harold Barnes Mr. M. C. S. Noble
Dr. Joseph Hyde Pratt Dr. Charles DeGarmo Dr. William Perry Reaves
O.XE HUNDRED EIGHTH EX
University of North Carolina Students, 191!
iwmmcr
Sen
001
Abernethy, Francis Abernethy, Lucy Aiken, Hattie Alexander, Hattie Alexander. May Alspaugh, Stella Anderson, Dora A. Arthur, Lucile E. Ashburn, Hattie F. Atkinson, Katie E. Avent, Fannie Aycock, Wm. B. Baccett, Sara Baker, Lelia M. Banks, Etta Ruth Barker, Floy Barkley, Sallie Barnhardt, Maggie Barnhill, Sallie C. Barrett, Mabel Bassett, Claude Battle, Sallie H. Baucham, Maggie Sue Beam. Mike S. Beam, Wm. Speight Benson, Stella Best, Mary J. Bidwell, Beulah Birdsonc, Heber Bivens, C. L. Bivens, S. R. Black. Mrs. T. B. Blake, Irene Blalock, Blanche Blalock. H. M. Blanchard, L. E. Bobbitt, Bettie Bobbitt, M. T. Bobbitt, R. W. Bolick. Mary Bost, Mabel Bourne. M.*ry P. Bowen, Margaret Prewer. H. L. Bridges. I. B. Brght, Carrie H. Broadfoot. Kate H. Brown, Mary Ethel
Brown, Mary K. Bruton, Winnie D. Bryan, D. B. Bryan. Mrs. D. B. Bryan, Mary S. Buchan. Ethel L. Buchanan, Anna Met Buck, G. C. Bulla. Lillie E. Bulwinkle, Muriel Bethea, Curtis Burgess, Blanche Burcess. C. K. Burcess, Cletus Burkett, Sallie O. Burnette. Mary Burns. Ada May Burt, Mabel Byrd, T. Ethel Campbell. A. C. Campbell. L. H. Canaday. Emily J. Carlton. Emma G. Carter, D. V. Carter, T. C. Chandler. Bessie B. Chandler. Emma Clark. Nell B Clayton, Janie H. Clayton, R. H. Ciinard. W. B. Coats, Bessie D. Cobb. Fllen D. Cobb. Mallie P. Cobb. Margaret E. Cobb, W. B. Coke, Louise D. Collier, Mayme Cooke, Annie R. Cooke. Mary M. Cooper. W. L.. Ir Coulter. Victor Covington. Mary Cox, Olivia Cox, Pearle Craver, H. O. Creole, B. A. Cridlebaugh, W. L.
Crudup. Lillian Crumpler, Martha L. Dalrymple. Janie Dameron, Temple H. Daniel. Mary L. Darden. Martha E. Davis. I. P. Davis, L. C. Davis. Lucy E. Day, Jerry Dees. W. A. DeLoatch. W. S. Dimmette, Walter Dixon, Alice L. Doccett, Eva Donnell, Mrs. G. E. Dowd, J. E. Dowd, Mrs. J. E. Duncan, Joseph L. Dunford. Mary N. Dunford. Ruth Dry, Grace D. Edcerton, Annie May Edwards. Dolly Edwards, J. F. Edwards. Mamie C. Eldridce, Bertha E. Ellis, Ruby C. Evans, Eunice L. Evans, Rebecca W. Evans, Will'etta Farrior, John A. Farrior. Kenneth McK. Feild, A. L. Fenner. Kate N. Ferguson, Kate Fercuson, Mamie L. Finch, Era G. Fisher, C. O. Fitzgerald. Stella Fonville. C. C. Fountain, Alma Franklin, E. R. Franklin. May B. Franklin. Minnie L. Freeman. Alice Freeman, J. W. Funderburk, Ray
ONE HIWDRED NINETEEN
Garrard, Lorena Garrett, W. C. Gattis, Ethel Giles, Ola Gill, Leila May Goodwin, Minnie Goodwin, Pearl Gorham, Fannie Gosney, Minney S. Graham. Belle Graham, Mary Graham, Violet Grantham, Emma Green, Allene B. Green, Vercie E. Griffin, Lola Griffin, Mavis Grimes, Alice Grinnan, Isabelle R. Guess, W. C. Gulledce, Mary W. Hall, Bessie Hamrick, Euzel'a Hare, Frank Hargrave, L. L. Harper, Annie Lee Harper, W. T. Harris. L. Maud Harris, Susie S. Harrison, |. L. Harrison, Mamie Harrison, Neva 1. Harrison. T. P., Jr. Hassell. Edith Hawley, Florence Hawley, Louise Henderson, Mrs. L. D. Hendley. Chas. J. Henry, Vance Herman, Bertha Herrinc, Annie F. Herrinc. Clyde Herring. Margaret Herty, C. H., Jr. Hicks, O. V.
HOLEMAN, HaLLIE
Holeman, Jean Holloman, Mjna Holman, Bertha Holman, Mary B. Hooten, Evelyn Hooten, Maude Horney, Magcie E.
Howard, Gladys Howell, Rosalind Hudson, Bertha Hudson, Martha A. Hume, Thos., Jr. Hummell, Magdalene Hunter, Ngrfleet Hunter. Susie F. Hunter. W. R. Huske. Eleanor Hutchison, C. C. Irwin, Mary L. Ives, Claude L. Ivey, Bessie F. Jarvis, Annie B. Jarvis, Margaret S. Johnson, Addie Lois Johnston, Annie M. Johnston. J. H. Jones, Annabel Jones. H. B. Jones, Laura M. Jones, Margaret C. Jones, Pauline Jordan. Sallie M. joyner. g. h. Kelley, Anna Lee Kennedy, Mary H. King, Annie Kiser, Lucy
KlTTRELL, Fl.ORlE E.
Kittrell. R. G. Koonce. Lucy Kornegay, Mrs. L. T. Lackey, Pearl Lambeth, Mary M. Lansdell, Nan Leach, Corrie Leach, Floy J. Ledbetter. Belle Ledbetter, J. C. Lee. Mamie F. Lee. Nancy D. Leighton. A. F. Lindsay. Annie O. Lindsay. Katie Lindsay, S. G. Lippard. David S. Llewellyn. Fi.izabeth P. Long, Jesse M. Lucas, Elizabeth Lunsford, Jennie Lynch, Rachel S.
Lynch, Thomas Mallett, Fmma Mallett, Siddie Markham, Lela Bell Marrow. H. B. Mason, Allie Mason, Edith Massey. H. J. Massey, Iola Massey, Jessie E. Massey, Mamie Massey, Winona G. McCallum. Grace McCauley, Mrs. Carr e McColman, Sallie McCullers, Alice McEachern, Gladys McEachin, Karleton McGoogan, Mary S. McIntosh, Fannie McIntyre, Cara McIntyre, Lutie McKeown, H. H. McKeown. Laura J. McLean, Marion McLeod. Isabelle McLeod, W. G. MacNeill, Archie McNeill, Sallie W. McNeill. R. S. McWhorter Jaynie Merritt. R. P. Miller, Mary S. Mitchell, Mata Mizelle, Margaret Moffatt, J. S., Jr. Moore, Agnes Moore, Alice Moore. Fannie B. Moore. Laura E. B. Moore. Lucille R. Mocre, Rosa L. Moore. W. E. Moore, W. P. Morgan, H. G. Moose. Lena E. Morr's, Bessie Morrow, Byrd Morrow, Effie Morton, Bertha Morton. M. Embra Moser. J. W. Moss, Mattie
ONE HUNDRED TWENTY
UNI
■■. : lin.
Moss, Z. V. Mullen, Flaud Lee Nash, Bettie L. Nash, Mary Armond Nelson, C. E. Norwood, Annie Olive, Loula B. Olive, L. B. Oliver, Lannie Ormond, Mabel Bessie Orr, J. L. Orr. O. H. Outlaw, Mvra Outlaw, Ruth Owen, Henrietta Owens, Annie J. Page, Florence N. Page, Minnie Paris, Addie Paris, Nemmie G. Par.sh, Katie Parker, Grace R. Parker, Josie C. Parker, Pearl Parker, S. I. Pasmore, [ulia Paul, J. D. Payne. Annie B. Pearson, L. W. Penland, F. A. Penny, Celestia L. Perry, Fronie Perry, Mattie Phillips, Ardell Pike, Dorothy E. Prevost, R. W. Price, Jennie Pritchard, W. N., Jr. Proctor. R. S. Ranson, R. E. Ratcliff, Ina Ray, Artee Ray, J. C. Redford. Laurie Reeks, Josephine Rhodes. Cora Lee Rhodes, G. W. Rhodes. W. H. Rhodes, W. H.. (r. Richardson, Jessie E. Richardson. Frances Richardson, Nellie Roberts, Lena V.
Robertson, Kathleen Robinson, Elizabeth H. Rodgers, J. O. Rogers, G. O. Rowe, Mary Royster. Sall;e Rudisill, J. A. Ruffin, Ida Ruffin, Mamie Russell, Mrs. Lucy P. Sawyer. Lila Searcy, Corrie Setzer, Pearl Sharp, Cora I. Sharp, Lizzie J. Sheetz, Nannie Shields. Madge Shine. Mary Lee Shu ford. C. L. Shuford, N. C. Smith. Alma Smith. Mildred Smith. Sadie L. Smyre. Clara R. Spauch, Ethel Spencer. Robert B. Springs. Marguer'Te Stacy, L. E. Starr, Hannah J. Steppe, N. F. Stewart. Horace Stipe. Lui.a M. Stone, Lila May Strider, W. E. Stroud, M. Wellons Sugg, Annie R. Sucg, Eugene S. Sugg. Mattie B. Summerell, Mary Sykes, Hettie Sykes, Mattie Tadlock, Mamie L. Tayloe. Bessie Taylor. Beryl M. Taylor, Kader W. Taylor. Mary Teague. C E. Teague, J. S. Teague, Pearl Teague, S. F. Thomas, Alma Thomas, Louise V. Thomas. Mary P.
Thompson. Earl Thompson. Edna A. Thompson. Ida A. Tinnin, Mary I. Tolson, H. A. Townsend, Jackson Trexler, Daisy E. Trivette, D. T. Tucker. Harry Tucker, Lottie Tuttle, Dora Umstead, Urma Vann, Eddie May Veasey, Maggie Veazey, Ora A. Waddell, Gussje Waldo, Effie Wall, Cordia Wallace, Euna Watkins, Sue H. Watson, Helen G. Watson. Pearla Weaver. J. R. Webster. Annie G. Weeks, Mary Wellons, Vealarie Wells, Swann West, Annie I. Whitaker. C. L. Whitaker, C. L., Jr. Whitaker. Margaret Whitaker, Susie White. Lucy OB. Whitehead, Margaret Whitley. Marina R. Wicker, Valesta Wiggins, Alienne Williams. May R. Williams, Jessie Winkler, Claudia A. Wise, Nola Mae Withers, May Woodard, Mary O. Woodward, Mary J. Wrenn, Lula C. Wright, G. A. Wright. Hattie Wynne, Daisey Yearcin. J. T. Yeargin. Mrs. J. T. Yoder, Fred R. Young. Charlotte Yount, M. E.
ONI HUNDRED TWENTY-ONE
EsHier Wake
/*^r^^"^ HE play, "Esther Wake," was presented on the campus, on July 4, 1912,
A ■ by the Summer School Dramatic Club. "It is of special interest, because
^^ ~ it deals with local affairs during the Revolution, because of its historical value,
and more especially because it was written by Mr. A. Vermont, Superintendent of the
Smithfield Graded Schools, and Professor of the Modern Languages at the University."
— Winston-Salem Journal.
In the play, Esther Wake, the sister-in-law of Governor Tryon, sympathizes with the oppressed people of the colony, and although the fiancee of Colonel Fanning, enemy of the Regulators, pleads the cause of the latter, and comes to love their leader, James Pugh. He is condemned to die on the scaffold. Pugh refuses the proffer of mercy if he will flee with Esther, and dies with his friends on the gallows. Esther leaves her brother's coutt, and returns to England, and in her going Fanning loses her hand.
W;th Miss Martha Hudson, of Smithfield, in the title role, and Messrs. G. M. McKie, I. C. Moser, and William Rhodes playing the parts of James Pugh, Governor Tryon, and Colonel Fanning, the play was admirably rendered. The support throughout was good, and to W. B. Clinard as a servant, N. C. Shuford and W. P. Moore, the turbulent Regulators, special applause was given.
The play is splendidly conceived, and rich in stirring situations. It is in essence a play of the people. While its theme is local, and in that respect of peculiar interest to North Carolinians, it is also universal, in that it represents the feelings of a great people rising in their might against oppression.
The porch of the Law Building served as a stage. Those who have not seen the stately columns of the fine old Greek Temple, nor watched the effect of the starlight upon the wind-stirred festoons of ivy falling from the cornice, can little imagine the beauty of the scene.
The play is still in manuscript form. The author is at work, however, on its revision. By the time this number of the YACKETY YacK appears, it may be in the hands of the printer, and probably in the hands of the public.
On the request of numerous spectators, the play will be repeated more gorgeously and elaborately on the coming Fourth of July.
0.\E Hl\\DA'l-:i> TWENTY-TWO
Esther Wake
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Governor Tryon 1. C. Moser
Parson Husbands, a Quaker Preacher I. C. Moser
General Waddell J. Townsend
Colonel Caswell W. P. Moore
Pearson, a Farmer S. R. Bivins
William, a Boy T. P. Harrison, Jr.
James Pugh, a Gunsmith G. M. McKie
Fanning, Clerk of the Court _ W. H. Rhodes
Wood, Sheriff W. E. Strider
Allan, Old Servant I. P. Davis
Dick, Old Servant W. B, Clinard
FlTZNOODLE, an English Count W. B. Cobb
Courtiers W. B. Cobb. S. I. Parker, G. O. Rogers, H. B. Marrow
Esther Wake, S;ster-in-Law to Tryon Miss Martha Hudson
Marcaret, a Sapor's Widow Miss Lelia M. Baker
Effie, Daughter of Margaret Ara Hooks
Court Ladies Misses Jayne McWharton, Bertha Morton, Sallie Barnhill, Sallie Burkitt
D„ dc f Messrs. W. B. Cobb. Hoyt Roberson. J. W. Freeman
Keculators and British Soldiers •! i d r-> i\r r c it; o /-
I 1. P. Davis, W. E. Str der. W. B. Clinard
Director, A. Vermont
Costumers. A. T. Jones & Sons
ONE HI 'NDRl n 1 WENTY- THREE
PHARMACY
A VV
BOOK THREE
THE PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS
V THE UNIVERSITY
Law Class Officers
Fall Spring
W. L. Warlick President W. F. Taylor
G. H. Ward Vice-President T. B. Woody
W. F. Taylor Secretary-Treasurer J. R. Branch F. P. Graham, Representative on Student Council MOOT COURT OFFICERS
Judges: Professors McGehee, McIntosh, and Winston
John W. Hester Sheriff Z. V. Babbitt
H. E. Stacy Solicitor P. H. Gwynn. Jr.
E. F. McCulloch Clerk J- L. Roberts
O.Y£ HU.XDRED III I \ I I SI: 1/ ^
^.'i i .■■■ iw.tJiiii, .i'iiiii OT'awta.riJag^^dL^J
The School o{ Law
^^^™""* HE University of North Carolina Law School has lived the allotted three
■ 'M score and ten years, having been established in 1 843. At its head then was
^^•^ Hon. William H. Battle, father of the boy who at that time had not yet
entered the University, but who was destined to become its head and to give it many
years of loving and useful service — President Kemp P Battle.
At the time Judge Battle was chosen head of the law school, he was a judge of the Supreme Court. He was appo:nted a justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court in May, 1848, but his commission expired in December, 1848, and he was re-elected to the Superior Court at that time. In 1853, he again became a justice of the Supreme Court, and served until the reconstruction in 1868.
During this period, there had been an average of twelve or fifteen law students. In announcing the course in 1845-46, the catalog states that, "The Professor of Law and members of the Independent Class will not be subject to any of the ordinary college regulations."
At the reorganization of the University in 1875, Judge Battle was again announced in the catalog as Professor of Law. In 1881, Dr. John Manning took charge of the school, and the number of students increased from eighteen to eighty at his death in 1 899, when the late Judge James C. MacRae was chosen dean of the school. At his death, in 1909, Prof. Luc us P. McGehee was chosen dean, and is now serving in that capacity, being assisted by two professors, all three men giving their full time to teaching in the Law School. The number of students has steadily increased, and the school is now in a flourishing condition, with a total of one hundred and th:rty-nine students, an increase of fifteen over the preceding year.
— P. H. Winston
ONE HIWDRED TWENTY- EIGHT
■EMI
Karl Braswell Bailey Elm City
Age 22 ; height 5 feet 8 inches weight 1 35 pounds
"Of plain, sound sense, life's current coin is made"
"Rabbit" certainly lives up to his nickname by the way he bobs around the keystone sack, but the ladies say "he slows up on the bases" in society. "Rab- bit" holds the record in passing hours in his Senior year, and his luck is still with him in Law. He will surely make a success in practice, for no amount of evidence will ever convince him that he is wrong.
Kenneth Ravnor Ellington Clayton
Age 24 ; height 5 feet 1 0 inches weight 1 50 pounds
"Hail fellow, Kelt mei"
"Red" smashed consistency into splint- ers when he was not born rich. He creates the impression of being the laziest man in college, and is as good a fellow as he is lazy. The personification of indifference, he is known to only a few. Those who really know "Red," see beneath his apparent inertia a most super'or bunch of ideas, and above all a gentle- man of the highest tone.
Phi. Society; Oak Ridge Club; Class Tennis (2, 3); Varsity Tennis (4. 5); Captain Class Baseball (2); Scrub Baseball (3, 4): Varsity Baseball (5); A.B. 1911.
German Club; Class Baseball (2); Yackety Yack Board (3); Coop; Johnston County Club; Leader Gorgon's Head Thanksgiving Dance (4); Lukulux; Firemen's Union; Ogle Club; McGinnick (2); F. L. (4); Phi. Society; Gorgon's Head; K A,
ONI III VDRED THIRTY
Wilson Lee Warlick
Newton
Age 21 ; height 6 feet weight 1 70 pounds " They that govern most make least noise "Coot" blew in on us from Lenoir, and registered for the straight Law Course. He has stuck to it l'ke a man. Was one of the seven who survived the Slaughter of the Innocents in 1912. Has an ora- torical turn as well as a predisposition toward bulldogs, hosiery, and vests. However, he is president of his Class, and makes a practice of winning his Moot Court cases and passing his exams.
Thomas B. Woody Bethel Hill
Age 22; height 5 feet 10 inches weight I 40 pounds
44 Books cannot always please, however good ; Minds are not ever craving their food"
Some take the citations as an outlet for nervous energy ; some out of courtesy to the professors; some for future reference. "Woody" takes them to read, and reads them. He also reads the texts, the ency- clopedias, and looks up words in the dic- tionary. His motto is "You can't down a workingman." He is as steady as an eight-day clock. The canons of descent and the statute of limitations have no terrors for him. He is another one of those rare specimens who survived the Slaughter of the Innocents. In spite of it all, he retains his good sense of humor.
Cerman Club ; Athletic Association ; Class Di. Society ; Y.
Treasurer (I); Class President (2); A. B. ball 1912; Law
Catawba College, 1910; AT!) President Law Class
M. C. A.; Law Class Ba: Librarian 1912-13; Vi< 1913.
ONI HUNDRED THIRTY-ONE
Senior Law
Molton T. Alexander Creswell
Carl Braswell Bailey Elm City
William Babbitt Byrd ...Asheville
Watson Lewis Daniel Winston
Frank. Porter Graham Charlotte
Harry Baywyn Hannah Siler City
John William Hester Hester
John Edward Hines Pollocksville
John Thomas Johnson Chapel Hill
Luke Lamb Williamston
James Ward Morris Tampa, Fla.
Robert Johnson Ship ...Newton
William Henry Smathers Waynesville
Percy Townsend Stiers. Wentworth
George Hahn Ward . ...Waynesville
Wilson Lee Warlick Newton
Lloyd Armstrong Wells Wilson
Thomas Brooks Woody Bethel Hill
ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-TWO
Junior Law
Virgil Gustavus Beckham Hiddenite
James Rebert Branch Wilmington
Charles MacDonald Coffey North Wilkesboro
George Herbert Cox Winterville
Orville Thomas Davis Waynesville
Gaston Lewis Dortch .... Goldsboro
Alan Chase Emerson Wilmington
Paul Charmichael Garrison Goldsboro
Samuel Mallett Gattis Hillsboro
Cecil Norwood Gibbs Lake Landing
John Bell Glover, Jr Statesville
Alexander Hawkins Graham Hillsboro
Harry Springfield Harkins ...Asheville
Edgar Thomas Harris Pinetown
Julian Gilliam Hart Mount Airy
John Jay Henderson West Lafayette, Ohio
Julius Fig Horney High Point
John Richard Jordan Winton
John Rockwell Kenyon Newton
Robert Ruffin King, Jr. Greensboro
Joseph Gilmer Leatherwood Waynesville
Charles Lee Lindsay Chapel Hill
Henry Alexander McKinnon Maxton
Frederick Hamilton May Wendell
Carl Donna Moore Charlotte
William Holt Oates Hendersonville
Alexander Bate Outlaw Elizabeth City
Thaddeus Shaw Page Biscoe
ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-THREE
Ezra Parker Benson
Earl Victor Patterson Burlington
Jesse Lee Roberts Wentworth
Julius Addison Rousseau. Wilkesboro
John Andrew Scott Statesville
Paris Cecil Smith Swannanoa
Jesse Clyde Stancill Charlotte
Charles Miller Strong Charlotte
Lewis Alexander Swicegood Salisbury
Walter Frank Taylor Faison
Henry Albert Tolson Newport
Jesse Clinton Webber Earl
FURMAN ERASTUS WEST West Mill
William Claud West .. West Mill
Floyd Gilbert Whitney Bessemer City
Cicero Arthur York High Point
Special Law Students
Zebulon Vance Babbitt Bayboro
Stein Hughes Basnight Newbern
William Speight Beam Shelby
Richard Willard Cantwell Wilmington
Edgar Franklin McCullock White Oak
Albert Rosenthal Marks Newbern
Charles William Martin Touchet, Wash.
John Watson Mitchell Winton
Horace Edgar Stacy Chapel Hill
Julius Faison Thompson Faison
Daniel Joshua Walker Union Ridge
Archibald Lee Manning Wiggins Durham
ONE H V.XDRED 7H/R1 V-FOL R
Officers of Medical Classes
Second Year J. N. Tolar W. E. Wakeley W. G. Francis W. H. House
President
Vice-President
Secretary- Treasurer
Interne
Chapel one
First Year A. B. Greenwood P. W. Fetzer A. H. Moore C. W. Eley Dr. C. S. Mangum
t'.VF III XIiRED THIRTY-FIVE
\CK
The School of Medicine
ONLY after a long and hard struggle has the Medical School reached its present enviable position. The beginning was indeed humble, when in 1879 Dr. Thomas Harris attempted for the first time to give a two years' course in medicine in Chapel Hill, which was a complete failure. In 1890, however, the school was reorganized by Dr. R. Whitehead, as a one-year course in elementary subjects. Later a two-year course, and in 1 902 the full four years was again given. Owing to the lack of clinical material, the last two years have been done away with since 1909, and all the efforts of the department are concentrated upon the first and second years of medicine. Nor have their efforts been in vain, for today the school ranks with the best, has a splendid new building fully equipped with modern apparatus, is in charge of a competent faculty, and best of all turns out a class of men who average well when compared with those from other schools.
ONE HUNDRED THIRTY SIX
M
Second -Year Medical Class
Louis deKeyser Belden Wilmington
Baxter Israel Bell Swan Quarter
Ernest Linwood Bender Pollocksville
Alexander McNeil Blue Carthage
Octavius Blanchard Blue Chapel Hill
William Ernest Brackett Townsdale
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Cleveland County Club; P.edmont High School Club; Member of Medical Society.
Russell Mills Cox Washington
Forest Elliott Shelby
V. M. C. A.; Cleveland County Club; Piedmont High School Club.
Carl Edgar Ervin. Troutmans
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Iredell County Club; Horner Club; Press Association (2); Track Team (1); Sub. Varsity Football Team (1. 2); Vice-President of Class (2).
William White Falkener Warrenton
Ollie Edwin Finch Kittrell
Medical Society.
William Gifford Francis — Waynesville
Secretary and Treasurer of Medical Class; Vice-Pres dent Medical Society; Y. M. C. A.
John Ray Hege Lexington
Medical Society; Davidson County Club; Y. M. C. A.
Wooster Hassell House Stokes
Pitt County Club; Phi. Society; Medical Society.
Chester Lawrence Lassiter Wilson Mills
Medical Society; Treasurer Johnston County Club (2); Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.
Charles Preston Mangum Kinston
William Everard Massey ..Rock Hill, S. C.
ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-EIGH1
James Shepard Milliken Pittsboro
German Club; i: X ; * X.
Thomas Lacy Morrow Mebane
Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Alamance County Club; Medical Associat on.
Ralph Waldo Oldham Raleigh
Ivan Marriett Proctor, Jr Raleigh
Grady Rudisill Roberts Lincolnton
Di. Society; Treasurer Medical Society; Assistant in Anatomy I.
Robert Cameron Sample Hendersonville
B.S. Davidson 1911; Medical Society; Assistant in the Infirmary; * X.
James Stevens Simmons Graham
B.S. Davidson; Med:cal Society; President Alamance County Club; Assistant in Embryology 1912; Assistant in Histology and Pathology 1912-13; Associate Editor YacKETY Yack; German Club; Pan-Hellenic Council; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; K 2; * X.
William Henry Sloan Garland
Ralph Edwin Stevens Sanford, Fla.
Medical Society; Florida Club; Mus:cal Association; Football 1912; * X.
Tracy Stockard Reidsville
Thomas Johnson Summey Brevard
Medical Society.
Roy DeWitt Sumner Fletcher
Medical Society.
John Moorley TAMRAZ Tabriz, Persia
Phi. Society; Tennis Association.
Julian Nolley Tolar Sanford, Fla.
President Second-Year Medical Class; Florida Club; Musical Association; Medical Society; Assistant in Histology and Pathology (R.P.) ; * X.
William Eaton Wakeley Orange, N. J.
ONE IIIWDRI l> THIRTY-NINE
i 'Mil A- . . ^■W"g::::;ffllia
ROLINA-J3- YACKETY-YACK
First -Year Medical Class
Eddie Basil Barker Trenton
Jonas Herring Barnes Kenley
Vernon Meredith Barnes Taylor
David Andrew Bigger Rock Hill
Joseph Dozier Boushall, Jr Raleigh
Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Wake County Club; President First-Year Medical Class; German Club; * X ; UK V.
Harry Lyndon Brockmann Greensboro
Albert Othel Bryan Battleboro
Thomas Preston Burrus Fairfield
Auley McRae Couch Roberdel
Robert Eddens Devereux Spencer
Opie Gray Edwards Spring Hope
Clayton Willard Eley Woodland
Phi. Society; Tennis Association; Class Football (2); Class Historian.
Victor Elmo Everett Plymouth
Paul William Fetzer Reidsville
Eugene Littlejohn Flippin Mount Airy
Adolphus Barte Greenwood Asheville
Mark Alexander Griffin Wingate
Lucius Caleman Hall Webster
Amme Bernice Hamilton Atlantic
DeWitt Talmage Hunter Matthews
Di. Society; Union County Club.
Fairley Patterson James ..Laurinburg
Oliver Henry Jennings.. Paris Knob
Henry Richard Kritzer Spencer
Roy Hamilton Long Monroe
William Peters McKay Red Springs
Benjamin Whitehead McKenzie Salisbury
Di. Society; Rowan County Club.
ONE HUNDRED FORTY
" JA^
ROLINA-/3- YAC YACK
Walter Guy McLead Maxton
Allen Hoyt Moore Washington
German Club; Secretary Class- Kodak Club; AT"; •!■ X.
Henry K. Morrison ...Harrisburg
William Clyde Oates Grover
William Lehman Oppenheimer Rocky Mount
James Gibson Pate Gibson
David Franklin Perrel Germantown
D. Society; Whitselt Club; Forsyth County Club.
Paul Vernon Phillips Goldsboro
Thomas Sampson Royster Townesv:lle
German Club; Chemical Journal Club; A.B. 1912; Philological Club; Phi. Society; II K A.
William Alexander Smith ..Goldsboro
Class Treasurer; K i: ; ■{• X ■ A XX
Henry Frank Starr Salisbury
Dialectic Society.
Lewis Holmes Swindell, Jr. Swan Quarter
Ph.. Soc.ety; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Class Ba eball.
Harry Gordon Thigpen Tarboro
Edward Foy Uzzle Raleigh
Y. M. C. A.; Wake County Club.
Fred Gwynn Woodruff... Sparta
Junius Holt Wright Siler City
)NE HUNDRED FORTY-TWO
Officers of Pharmacy Classes
Second Year L. H. Winstead C. L. Cox Caney Foster F. H. Lunn
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
First Year R. C. Canady J. L. Henderson Paul Brantley W. S. Wolfe
ONE HUNDRED FORTY-THREE
School of Pharmacy
S*^^-* HE School of Pharmacy, founded in 1897, was opened for students in Sep- d '^ tember of that year. The University assures to the students the most modern ^^^ scientific instruction, with all the laboratory facilities of the undergraduate department, as well as courses of instruction in the allied branches. These opportunities meet the requirements of a large number of the students, who were compelled heretofore to obtain their pharmaceutical education in other States.
Only seventeen students enrolled for the first session's work in 1897. Up to and including the year 1912-1913, 4 1 6 students had registered for the Pharmacy course. Of this number, 340 have taken one years work, 127 have continued in the second year, while 5 1 have graduated with the degree of Ph. G. The faculty of the Pharmacy School is composed of seven Professors,~three Associate Professors, two Instructors, eight
Assistants, numbering altogether twenty.
Courses are offered in the various branches of pharmacy and chemistry, in bot- any, materia medica, pharmacology, physics, physiology, zoology, and bacteriology.
The degree of graduate in pharmacy is conferred upon those students who satis- factorily complete the work required during the two sessions of nine months each. The department was moved during the summer of 1912, from the new West Building, which had been occupied by the school since its establishment, to Person Hall, its present quarters. This building affords three large, well-ventilated laboratories, two lecture-rooms, two experimental-rooms, a large prescription-room, which is equipped with desks and all the apparatus necessary to carry on prescription work, and a well-selected library and reading-room, inaugurated by the class of 1897.
ONI HUNDRED FORTY- FOCR
Charlie Lee Cox
Warsaw
Age 2 1 ; height 5 feet 1 0 inches
weight I 40 pounds
"My hair is red. and my eyes are blue ;
I am a pill-roller through and through."
There never was another just like "Red," for Nature made him and then broke the model. He is the life of the class, and we are proud of him. He is always at the postoffice during mail hours, and is always expecting a letter from his girl. He has a smile for each day in the week, and glides along in his advertant way with no thought of tomorrow. "Red" is a good egg, and will leap a great har- vest in the end.
Caney Foster
Asheville
Age 24 ; height 5 feet 7 inches
weight 1 35 pounds
"If he had any faults, he has left us in doubt."
"Foss" is a great joker, and very talkative. He can do anything from telegraphing to mixing medicine. He knows Pharmacy from alpha to oxega. He is generally found in the lab., and can make anything from a corn salve to a face cream. He came to us from the Class of 1911, and was gladly wel- comed. He passed the North Carolina State Board in December.
Vice-President of Cla Pharmaceutical Society.
Willi.
Simpso
Secretary of Class (2) ; Pharmaceutical Society.
William Simpson
ONI HUNDRED FORI Y-FIVE
Frank Halliburton Lunn
Wilkesboro
Age 22 ; height 5 feet 9 inches
weight 1 36 pounds
"The surest wa\) to hit a woman's heart is to ia\e aim kneeling."
"Frank" is a man who never tires in his work. He studies from morn till night; and is fond of Tennis, and plays when he has time. He has to blow his own horn, for he belongs to the band. He has no special loafing place, but can be found mostly in the lab. at third Chemistry. He has not failed to make good grades, and was there with the goods at the North Carolina State Board in December.
William Simpson Pharmaceutical Society; Blue Ridge Club; Band; Tennis Association; Class Treasurer; - K A.
ONE HISDRFD FORTY-SIX
FirsV-Year Pharmacyj Class
Richard Homer Andrews Chapel Hill
Robert Lloyd Brinkley Elm City
Paul Brantley Wilson
Olinan Byron Butler Clinton
Ralph Clarence Canady Benson
Joseph Palamountain Carden Clayton
Lester Fisher Concord
Arnold Pugh Foy Pollocksville
David Heath Rock Hill, S. C.
John LeCrand Henderson Hickory
HUMMEY BYRD HlGGINS Leicester
Ralph Parker Hilliard Clayton
Henry Odessa Holland Apex
Robert Stroud Houston Monroe
Joseph Hunter Jones Reidsville
Kennith Alexander Kirby Marion
Thomas Richard Koonce Chadburn
James Edison Lytch Rowland
Fred Harold Manley Lenoir
Alexander Simmons Monroe Rockingham
Herman Leslie Redman Marshall
John Lambeth Rogers Creedmoor
Edward Harvey Ward Tarboro
Junius Campbell Warren Benson
Frazier Williams Goldsboro
Lamar Herbert Winstead Wilson
William Samuel Wolfe Mount Airy
Elmer Clifton Worthington Ayden
ONE lll.MiRri) FORTY-SEVEA
Hnfcagww ntu ma ■ iiWiJii i an<jjjipip— waa-i iimpx
BOOK FOUR
ATHLETICS
AT THE UNIVERSITY
Athletic Council
L. P. McLENDON Graduate Manager
W. E. WAKELEY President of Athletic Association
Frank Drew Manager Football Team
Robert Strange, Jr Manager Baseball Team
Walter Stokes, Jr Manager Track Team
R. O. HUFFMAN ...Manager Buskel-Ball Team
G. L. CARRINGTON Editor-in-Chief of Tar Heel
A. L. M. WlGGINS Representative-at-Large
Dr. C. H. Herty Faculty Member
OFFICERS OF THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
President W. E. WAKELEY
Vice-President I. R. WILLIAMS
Secretary J. Y. CALDWELL
Treasurer C. T. WOOLLEN
ONE III SDRED III TY-ONE
COACH CARTMELL Nat J. Cartmell, one of the world's greatest sprinters, developed at Pennsylvania under the master hand of Mike Murphy. He twice won both the 100- and 220- yard dashes at the intercol- legiates, and he twice repre- sented America at the Olym- pic Games. Since becoming professional, he has raced with the best runners in this country and abroad, and has more than held his own. He came to Carolina in the Spring of 1910, and has had wonderful success in coaching track teams. In 1912, he was made Athletic Director. He holds the world's official professional record for the 220 — 21'/2 seconds — made at Stoke-on-Trent, England.
COACH MARTIN W. C. Martin first gained athletic prominence at Whit- man College, where he was a member of the Football and Track teams. At Notre Dame, in 1910, he played a star end on the team that beat Michigan, and his sprinting ability on the track gained for him wide fame throughout the West. He won the 1 00-yard dash at the National Ama- teur games at Pittsburg in 1910, and the same thing at the Pennsylvania Relay Meet in 1911. He went to the University of Pennsylvania in 191 1-1912, but was unable to compete on account of the one-year rule. He coached the Carolina Football team in 1912.
COACH CLANCY
Charles A. Clancy played on Western High School of Washington, D. C, and later on Georgetown University. His professional career covers a wide field: The Connecticut League; the Northeastern League ; Montreal in the Eastern (now International) League; Rutland, Vt., in the Northern League; Wilming- ton, Del., in the State League. In 1910, he managed the Fayetteville team in Eastern Carolina League, and won the pennant; in 1911 and 1912 he managed the Win- ston-Salem team in the Caro- lina League, winning the pen- nant one year and finishing second the other year. In 1911 and 1912, he coached the Carolina Baseball team.
ONE HUNDRED FIFTY- TWO
FOOT BALL
Varsity Football Team, 1912
Left End HusKE
Left Tackle.. STEVENS
Left Guard. JOHNSON
Left Guard DoRTCH
Center Jones
Right Guard . JENNINGS
R;ght Tackle Abernathy, L. L.
Right End Hc-MEWOOD
Right End Strange
Quarter TlLLETT
Left Half Taylor
Left Half Wakeley
Right Half ..Moore
Full Abernathy, R.
Full Applewhite
4- -1- *
FOOTBALL RECORD, 1912
University University University University University Univers ty University University
of North Carohna 13
of North Carolina 9
of North Carolina 47
of North Carolina 0
of North Carolina 10
of North Carolina 6
of North Carolina 0
of North Carolina 0
85
Davdson 0
Wake Forest 2
Bingham 0
Virginia Polytechnc Institute 26
Georgetown 37
South Carolina 6
Waslrngton and Lee 31
Virginia 66
WE HUNDRED FIFTY-FOUR
BASE5ALL
:k
Varsity Baseball Team, 1912
Pitcher J. R. Lee
Pitcher E. H. Wood
Catcher J. H. SwiNK
First Base J. A. Leak, Jr.
Second Base K. B. BaILEY
Third Base W. B. EDWARDS
Shortstop L. H. WlNSTEAD
Left Field G. P. Irby
Center F^eld T. S. PAGE
Right Field .....J. W. Hanes
Substitutes
Pitcher J. C. Lanier Outfielder W. B. YoUNG
First Base J. C. WHITAKER
4* 4" ~ir
BASEBALL RECORD, 1912
Universiy University University Un'versity University Un versity University University University Un'versity University University University University University University University Un versity
of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North
Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolna Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina
Horner 0
Wake Forest 1
Swarthrrore 0
Swarthrrore .... . 3
Amherst 5
Amherst iO
Randolph -Macon Virginia
0
|
0 |
3 |
|
|
4 |
....... 0 |
|
|
n |
....... 4 |
|
|
0 |
1 |
|
|
4 |
5 |
|
|
7 |
....... 2 |
|
|
6 |
5 |
|
|
? |
5 |
|
|
8 |
Virginia Polytechnic Institute Virginia Polytechnic Inst'tute |
6 6 |
ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-EIGHT
pai-r^--- ^r».-.-..— -,.***■*
The Athletic Situation at Carolina
{Continued from page 1 56) Experienced and well coached football material, however, Carolina has never had, and probably will not have for years. North Carolina is not a football State in the sense that it is a baseball State. Every North Carolinian plays baseball as soon as he can run, but football is essentially a city and a school product, and North Carolina has neither large cities nor good preparatory schools. The high schools are beginning to play the game scientifically, but they are just beginning, and up to the present time they have furnished but little available material. It is from country boys who have never been under a coach that Carolina draws her players, and very obviously such players, however well equipped physically, cannot easily be transformed into a winning team. The average Varsity man has served his turn on class and scrub teams before he learns the game well enough to become Varsity material. As soon as he begins to get a fair working knowledge, he is ready to graduate, or, because he wants to play on a winning team, he goes to another institution.
(Continued on page 164)
O.XE HV-\DRED SIXTY
T R~ AC IV
L . _
Track Team, 1912
George B. Mason 100- and 220-yard dashes
B. B. Sears 100- and 220-yard dashes
S. I. Parker 220-yard dash and quarter
W. E. WAKELEY Quarter
G. T. Clark Quarter
R. C. SPENCE _ Half and mile
S. W. Whiting Half
L. H. Ranson Half
E. V. Patterson Half and mile
Collier Cobb, Jr. Mile and two nv'les
H. S. Willis Two Miles
M. E. BLALOCK Broad jump
PHILIP WOOLLCOTT High jump and hurdles
T. M. Price Hurdles
George V. Strong Pole vault
Walter Carter Pole vault
B. C. Parker Weights
L. L. Abernathy Weights
RECORD OF TRACK TEAM, 1912 DUAL MEETS
University of North Carolina 82 Wake Forest 35
University of North Carolina 66 Virginia Polytechnic Institute 51
STATE MEET
University of North Carolina 671/? Davidson 12
Wake Forest 33 Trinity ... 4
Agricultural and Mechanical 24'/2 Guilford 2
SOUTH ATLANTIC MEET
Johns Hopkins 48'/i Virgina Polytechnic Inst'tute. ..23'/2
University of North Carolina 28 Washington and Lee 15
Agricultural and Mechanical 24 Georgetown 13
ONE HUNDRED SIXTY- TIVO
Trie Athletic Situation at Carolina
(Continued from page 160)
In the face of these facts, the coaching system in the past has been based on altogether the wrong idea. Northern stars have been hired at large salaries and short terms of service. A Pennsylvania man would come for a year, be unsuccessful, and leave. A Yale man, trying it next, would face material half familiar with one system. He would have to go back to the beginning and teach fundamentals, and the season would be half over before the team would begin to progress. The result has been year after year of humiliating defeat, culminating in the 66 to 0 slaughter of last Thanks- giving Day.
Not until then was the right step taken. With a fine sense of loyalty, the Alumni came forward and demanded a share in Athletic control. They propose the only plan that can hope to produce winning teams at Carolina — a system of coaching character- ized by