Duke University - Chanticleer Yearbook (Durham, NC)
- Class of 1936
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Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 392 of the 1936 volume:
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f- 0i aih 2ou .. • ' ■- ; r • ' . -i • • . 4 - « v flP ' «r MM |jtejM% H E.: !!K e-iUMii ■c- ' r ' liA ad r ' m i -?3 Hrti. ...• Lv. J -- - - ■■%-, s ■;_.: ' - ««■. ' ?5 ' . •• T -: A $. • e vT ono : From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten r OiL LUU} CHflflTICLGGR I Q 3 6 Published annually by the Student Body Duke University, Durham, North Carolina Volume number twenty-three... Spring 1936 Ernest Cruikshank and William E. Woodnilf, Editors • E. Hyatt Mossburg. Business Manager m jC-?v fi2i ' rrf ' (■' -: The glamour of the coastal region, with vistas of the Atlantic, its swamps, live oaks and Spanish moss, scene of an early American colony . . . the Piedmont, land of roll- ing hills and farmlands, humming with industry . . . the western mountains, scenes of grandeur that are beloved by so many admirers . . . this, the scenery of North Carolina, is the theme of the Nineteen Hundred and Thirty-six Duke Chanticleer. From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten CONTENTS Book One UNIVERSITY Book Two ACADEMIC Book Three FEATURES Book Four ACTIVITIES Book Five ORGANIZATIONS X On Of: or O ♦. Book One UNIVERSITY -HE great Atlantic sea- board of eastern North Carolina affords a beauty that is varied and exotic. Deep, crystal lakes . . . treacherous sounds and inlets . . . expansive beaches, silvery and iridescent . . . isolated islands, rich in the lore and tradition of an early American Colony . . . silent sand dunes, dazzling in the whiteness of a noon-day sun . . . ■%£sSS : From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten ■;s 7 . HE main gate- way . . . entrance to the West Campus . . . Duke ,. r,- ' HAPEL, Student Union and Administrative offices. r -- ' !S „j- CLOSE-UP of the Union . . . center of activity when there are no classes to attend. mm m fm mr? .JJJ ! Mj i ji.p_y!w . (_ ROWELL Tower at the west end of the quadrangle rising above and adjacent to dormitory houses on all sides. MKr ' I Ml ' %- ' • a!S 7 HE Law School and Library viewed from the terrace of the Medical School. ■r I 1 l!K iiU ' , ■vi- ' inii-4l. HI 71  ' W: ih ' ! f __ 1 VIEW of the north side of the West Campus quadrangle look- ing toward the Medical School. p0-- i ' m - A 1 ' ■w 4:« ' H rt , 31 ' ' tt-i ' riy t« ,iii  iiic«W « ? 5 !aas«H«nK - CLOSE-UP of Kilgo and Crowell, two of the dormitory houses. CLOSE-UP oi the Medical School, sit- uated at the east end of the Quadrangle. 7 J Yi E D u k e Bowl, with the Gym- nasium and Field House in the background. ir%,. 7 A— HE Union on the Women ' s College campus, a mile and a half east of the Duke Univer- sity West Campus. I ' ■- ■-- fc ,AST DUKE . . . the Administration build- ing on the campus of the Woman ' s College. Dr. William Preston Few has served as President of Trinity College and Duke University since 1910; last December Dr. Few celebrated his twenty-fifth anni- versary as head of the institution. He received his A.B. Degree from Wofford College in 1889, A.M. from Harvard in 1893, and Ph.D. in 1896, his LL.D. from Wofford College in 1911, Southwestern University, 1912, Allegheny College, 1915, Syracuse University, 1928, Ohio Wesleyan, 1928, and University of North Carolina, 1932, his Litt.D. from Birmingham Southern College in 1930. In 1933, he was President of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, and for 1935-36 he was named President of the Southern University Conference. WILLIAM PRESTON FEW A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. President of Duke University 37 ADMINIS- Robert Lee Flowers THE BUSINESS DIVISION Much of the untiring effort which has made possible the transition from Trinity College to Duke University has been expended by the Business Division. The offices of this division are responsible for the supervision of loan and scholarship funds, the collection of accounts, the provision for classrooms, rooming and boarding accommodations, the purchase of supplies, and the care and maintenance of the East and West Campus buildings and grounds. Robert Lee Flowers, Vice President in the Business Division, was graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1891. He resigned from the Navy to accept an instructorship in mathematics at Trinity. He is also Secretary and Treasurer of the University, Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees, a Trustee of the Duke Endowment, and of several other institutions. Henry R. Dwire, Director of the Department of Public Relations and Alumni Affairs, graduated from Trinity College in 1902, and received his M.A.degree the following year. One of the outstanding figures in Southern journalism, he is Managing Editor of the South Atlantic Quarterly, and Editor of the Duke University Alumni Register. Charles E. Jor- dan, Assistant Secretary, has direct supervision of the correspondence with prospective students. C. B. Markham, Assistant Treasurer, has been greatly instrumental in organ- izing and directing the Treasurer ' s Office, and in conducting the business of the University. Frank C. Brown came to Trinity College in 1909 as Professor of English, but for many years has been Comptroller of the University. Henry R. Dwire THE EDUCATION DIVISION The history of Duke University is marked by several distinct stages. After its beginning in 1835 as Union Institute, it became Normal College in 1851, and Trinity College in 1859. During this period the college was located in Randolph County, N. C; but in 1892 it was transferred to Durham. Duke Uni- versity was founded in 1924 as a result of the Duke Endowment provided for in the will of the late James B. Duke. Trinity College is the name still retained to designate the division of undergraduate instruction. William H. Wannamaker, Vice President of the University in the Education Division and Dean of the University, has been a part of Duke University for thirty-seven years, first as Professor of German, and later as Dean and Vice President. He received his A.B. degree from Wofford College in 1895, and his M.A. degree from Trinity College in 1901 and from Jordan Brown Markhani 38 TRATION William H. Wannamaker Alice M. Baldwin Harvard in 1902, and his Litt.D. degree from Wofford in 1917. Alice M. Baldwin, Dean of the Woman ' s College of Duke University, received her A.B. and M.A. degrees from Cornell University, and her Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago. Dean Baldwin came to Trinity College in 1924 as Dean of Women. She became the first Dean of the Woman ' s College of Duke University in 1930. Herbert J. Herring, Dean of Men, is a graduate of Trinity College. After receiving his A.B. degree in 1922, he went to Columbia University, where, in 1929, he was awarded his M.A. in College Adminis- tration. He assumed the office of assistant dean in 1931 and in 1935 became Dean of Men. Walter K. Greene, Dean of Curricula, was grad- uated from Wofford College in 1903. He received his M.A.degree from Vanderbilt University in 1905, and his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Harvard in 1921 and 1923. For eight years he was Dean at Wesleyan College, and in 1928 he came to Duke University as Professor of English. In 1930, Dr. Greene became Dean of Undergraduate Instruction. Alan K. Manchester, Dean of Freshmen, first entered college at Southwestern University and received his A.B. degree from Vanderbilt in 1920. At Columbia University he received his Master ' s degree and later he earned his Ph.D. degree from Duke University. Dean Manchester first came to Duke in 1929 as instructor in History. In 1934 he became Dean of Freshmen. Mrs. Ruth S. Smith, Assistant Dean of Women, received her A.B. degree from Agnes Scott College in 1912. Then going to Columbia University, she received her A.M. degree in 1927, and soon after became a member of the Duke University faculty. Miss Mary G. Wilson graduated from Winthrop College, receiving her A.B. degree in 1921. She came to Duke as Acting Dean of Women in 1929, and in 1930 she became the Social Director of the new Woman ' s College. Herring Greene Manchester Wilson 39 DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY Dr. Blomquist, B.S., Ph.D., head of the Botany Department, studied at the Pasteur Institute, in Paris, held a fellowship and became an instructor at the University of Chicago before he was elected to the Duke faculty in 1920. As an author, he contributes to the Botanical Gazette, Elisha Mitchel Journal, and Botanical Abstracts, in addition to writing The Liverworts of North Carolina and Grasses of North Carolina and Their Distribution, read before a meeting of the Botanical Society of America in 1932. Dr. Blomquist is a member of the following organizations: A.A.A.S., Botanical Society of America, American Association of Geneticists, Sullivati Moss Society, and is a Fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Blomquist DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY Dr. Paul M. Gross, head of the Department of Chemistry, came to Duke from Columbia University in 1919. He holds a B.S. from the College of the City of New York, and the A.M. and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia University. He is prominent in the field of chemistry, being a member of the American Chemical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is also a member of the American Association of University Professors and Phi Lambda Up- silon. He has served as Director of Research for Liggett Myers Research Foundation. DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Dr. W. H. Glasson, Dean of the Graduate School and head of the Department of Econom- ics, first came to Duke University in 1902. Before his connection with this University, he had earned his Ph.B. at Cornell University and his Ph.D. at Columbia University. Dr. Glasson is the author of numerous books, among which is the Pension System of the United States. He is widely known for his frequent magazine articles and addresses on economics. Gross DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Glasson Holton Dr. Holland Holton, head of the Department of Education and Dean of Summer Schools, is a graduate of Trinity College. A faculty member since 1912, he has written many articles for North Carolina Education and is a popular speaker at educational gatherings. Under the capable directorship of Dr. Holton, the Duke University Summer -— School has expanded enormously during the tSK SS f - - past few seasons. Editor of the Trinity Alumni — °— d ' «rifcfi « Register for a number of years. Dr. Holton is a member of the following honorary organiza- itfCaflBs I ' g? tions: Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Kappa Alpha, L jBSBQr - « Kappa Delta Phi, Phi Delta Kappa, and the North Carolina Education Association. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY Dr. Laprade has been a professor of European and English history at Duke since 1909. Many historical and educational societies, including Phi Beta Kappa and the Royal Historical Society of England claim Dr. Laprade as a member. Author of the best English history by an American, British History for American Students, he is a frequent contributor to historical and political science reviews. He is a favorite of all audiences, and his nimble wit adds an informa- tive interest to his courses. Laprade 40 DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY Dr. William McDougal, head of the Department of Psychology, attended Cambridge University, England, from 1890-94, and there received the degrees of M.A. and Ph.B. He received the degree of M.B. from St. Thomas Hospital in 1898. His wide teaching experience, previous to his work at Duke University, includes four years at the University of London, twelve years at Oxford, and six years at Harvard. During the World War he held the commission of Major in the Royal Army Medical Corps. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of London. His many works on physiological, social, and abnormal psychology have caused him to be considered one of the outstanding psychologists in the world today. DEPARTMENT OF RELIGION Myers Ellwood Professor H. E. Myers joined the faculty of Duke University in 1926 after a most successful series of pastorates. He is now Professor of Biblical Literature in the School of Religion. A grad- MacDougal uate of Duke, class of 1915, Professor Myers received the degrees of S.T.B. and S.T.M. from the Boston University School of Theology, in the pastorate of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He has served a number of important charges, the last being the Duke Memorial Church of Durham. DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES Professor Albert M. Webb, head of the Romance Languages Department, has been a member of the Duke faculty since 1903. He holds the A.B. and A.M. degrees from Yale. Through the efforts of Professor Webb the department has risen to a position of prominence on the Duke Campus. DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY Dr. Charles A. Ellwood, head of the Sociology Department, has gained international fame in his field. After graduating from Cornell, Dr. Ellwood studied at the University of Chicago, University of Berlin, and the University of London. He holds degrees of Ph.B. and LL.D., and before coming to Duke, he held faculty positions at the University of Nebraska, Columbia, Chicago, University of Missouri, Colorado, Utah, and the University of Wisconsin. Since 1931, Dr. Ellwood has presided over Pi Gamma Mu. A prolific author, he has written many articles for Encyclopedia Americana in addition to his numerous texts. Dr. Ellwood was elected president of the International Association of Sociologists in 1934. Webb DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY Dr. George Thomas Hargitt, head of the Zoology Department, came to Duke in 1930 from Syracuse, where he was a professor of Zoology. He was, previous to that time, an instructor in the Zoology Department at Harvard. His degrees include an A.B. from Syracuse, an A.M. from the University of Nebraska, and a Ph.D. from Harvard. Dr. Hargitt is the co-author of the widely used text, Outline of General Biology. k T y Hargitt i 41 Seeley Brown DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Walter James Seeley, E.E., M.S., head of the Department of Electrical Engineer- ing, has long been an outstanding figure in his field. During the World War, he gave his services to the United States in the capacity of electrical engineer in the submarine division. Since he has been connected with Duke, his untiring efforts have brought about numerous advances in the Department of Electrical Engineering, rapidly bringing it into widespread recognition. DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY Clarence Ferdinand Korstian, head of the Department of Forestry, received his B.S.F. degree from the University of Nebraska in 1911, and his M.F. in 1913. In 1924 he obtained his M.A. from Southeastern Christian College. He was Research Fellow at Yale University, receiving his Ph.D. in 1936. He came to Duke in 1930 as Director of Duke Forest and Professor of Silviculture. He is a member of the executive council of the Society of American Foresters, was Chairman of the Appalachian Section of the Society in 1928, and has held several other positions of importance in the organization. Among the organiza- tions of which he is a member are: the American Forestry Association, the North Carolina Academy of Science, the Ecological Society of America, the North Carolina Forestry Association, the Botanical Society of America, and the the American Societ y of Plant Physiologists. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH Dr. Frank C. Brown, head of the English Department and Comptroller of Duke University, came to Trinity College in 1909. He holds the A.B. degree from the University of Chicago. Dr. Brown is a former president of Omicron Delta Kappa, national honorary fraternity, and is also a charter member of the chapter established at Duke University several years ago. As Comptroller of the University, he has been actively identified with the life of the institution and the community in various ways. DEPARTMENT OF GREEK Dr. Charles W. Peppier, head of the Greek Department in Duke University, received his A.B. and Ph.D. degrees at Johns Hopkins. He has studied at the University of Berlin and traveled extensively in Europe. Dr. Peppier came to Duke from Emory University in 1912. As well as being a contributor to such periodicals as The American Journa l of Philology, Classical Philology, Classical Weekly, and the South Atlantic Quarterly, he is a member of the following organizations: American Philology Association, American Classical League, American Association of University Professors, and Phi Beta Kappa. DEPARTMENT OF GERMAN Dr. Clement Vollmer, head of the German Department of Duke University and one of the most popular speakers in the faculty, is widely known in academic circles. At Heidelberg College, in 1909, he received his Bachelor of Arts degree, and at the University of Pennsylvania, in 1914 and 1915, earned both the A.M. and Ph.D. degrees. Prior to his connection with Duke University, Dr. Vollmer taught at Cornell University and at the University of Pennsylvania. He is author of The American Novel in Germany, and is widely recognized as an authority on German literature. Vollmer 42 DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS William Whitfield Elliott, acting head of the Mathematics Department, received his A.B. degree from Hampden-Sidney College in 1918, his M.A. from the University of Kentucky the following year, and his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1924. His teaching career began in 1919. He came to Duke from Yale, where he taught during the year 1924-25. Member of the American Mathe- matical Society, the Mathematical Association of America, the North Carolina Academy of Science, and Sigma Chi. He has been a constant contributor to many important mathematical journals. DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Harold C. Bird, head of the Department of Civil and Mechanical Engineering, received his Ph.B. degree from Yale in 1908, and his C.E. degree two years later from the same university. Before he came to Duke he had held an Assistantship in Sheffield Scientific School. Later, at Pennsylvania Military College, he held the successive positions of Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Pro- fessor of Civil Engineering. That he is an outstanding figure in the world of engineering is evidenced by the fact that his name appears in American Men of Science, Who ' s Who in Engineering, and Who ' s Who in Education. DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY Alban Gregory Widgery, head of the Department of Philosophy, received his M.A. from Cambridge University. He was Burney Student and Burney Prize- man at Cambridge, and has also studied at the Universities of Jena and Paris. During the year 1914-15, he was Instructor in Moral Philosophy at the University of St. Andrews. From 1915-22 he was head of the Department of Philosophy in Baroda College of the University of Bombay, and, from 1922-28, Stanton Lecturer in Philosophy in Cambridge. In the year 1929-30 he was Professor of Philos- ophy at Cornell, and came to Duke in 1930. He was President of the Baroda University Commission from 1926-28, and is, at present, Vice President of the American Theological Society. DEPARTMENT OF LATIN Dr. Raymond R. Rosborough, head of the Latin Department, received his A.B. degree from John B. Stetson University in 1915, and his M.A. and his Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. He was C.R.B. Fellow at the University of Louvain in the year 1921-22, and Docteur en Philologie Classigue. From 1922- 24 he was a Fellow of the American Academy in Rome. After holding the position of Professor of Latin in the University of North Carolina in the year 1924-25 he came to Duke, where he has remained since, with the exception of a year spent as Visiting Professor at Cornell University. DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE Dr. Robert R. Wilson, departmental head in Political Science and graduate of Austin College, received his M.A. degree from Princeton and his Ph.D. from Harvard. He was registrar of Austin College until 1925, when he came to Duke. Extremely successful as a teacher. Dr. Wilson has carried on extensive research into various subjects in his field. He follows closely the state of world affairs and centers his interests on international law. Elliott Widgery Wilson 43 Zack Thomas President Experience has shown that the best method in which to handle student problems and to gain harmony throughout the student body- is through the students themselves. This was the fundamental purpose for the organ- ization of a system of Student Government at Duke University in 1922. MEN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT Over the span of fourteen years, this organization has grown and prospered until today we feel proud to say that we have a form of government in which student partic- ipation has been a great benefit. But the supervision of various problems among the student body is not the sole function of the Student Council. The pur- pose and aim of the Student Government Association as stated in our constitution is to create an effective organization for ad- ministrating student self-government, to sup- port athletics, to foster literary endeavor, to encourage all other worthy student activities, and to promote the best interests of the University and the student body. Yearly, the Student Council takes part in the orienta- tion of freshmen. Enthusiastic work has been done to create a series of lectures and other literary entertainment. In the fall of the year the freshmen were feted at a Student Government Freshman Dance, made possible through the coopera- tion of the Men ' s and Women ' s Student Councils. Later in the fall semester the annual Victory Ball was enjoyed by the entire undergraduate membership. In the line of social activities for the members of Council in Session 44 MEN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT the Student Government, this year ' s Student Council has initiated a new idea and one which has proven to be very- satisfactory; namely, that of presenting a series of dances, the music being furnished by a nationally known orchestra. The Student Government Association of Duke University has not confined its workings to matters of local interest. Since 1930 it has been a member of the National Student Federation of America. From time to time our representatives have held offices in this national organization. Duke University was one of the first to help establish the North Carolina Federation of Students, which has been declared the most powerful body of its kind. The Student Council of 1935-36 has found it necessary to make several inevitable changes in the rules and by-laws of this organization. The former system of a House of Repre- sentatives has been disbanded and replaced by a more strict system which has shown itself to be more efficient. The En- gineers ' Council has been given a non-voting representative at the weekly trials. Minor rules of the constitution have been changed at various times when the need for more proper legislation has arisen. As Duke University has grown in size and position, so has the organization of the Men ' s Student Government Association grown in importance. Splendid cooperation between this body and the administrative officials has gained for this group a just solution for any problems that have arisen before it. Thus the purposes of this department are many in number, serving a vital need in University life. Jack Alexander Vice President Bob Wood Secretary-Treasurer Thomas Mervine Taliaferro Perry Montgomery Wood Simmons Alexander 45 WOMEN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT Annie Laurie Newsom President The foremost aim of the Wo- men ' s Student Council this year has been centered around the wel- fare of three varied yet sim- ilar groups: the University, the Woman ' s Col- lege, and the Individual, working on the principle that our college life and its problems are comparable in its own setting to the life and problems of the citizens of his nation, state, and individ- ual affairs. No action was taken and no decision was reached before reflection was made as to the possible good or bad effects on the University as a whole, the Woman ' s College as a group, and the student as an individual. Although the Student Council was neces- sarily concerned with the welfare of the group as a whole, it has striven to give the highest possible amount of attention to the happiness of each individual student. With the recognition that every woman student is a part of a larger organization, the Council endeavored to cooperate with the Men ' s Association and with the staff and administra- tive body of the entire University. Though revering custom and tradition, the Council took nothing for granted and was ever conscious of the constant need for studying and testing all phases of life with which the women were confronted. Where change was needed, change was advocated; where custom and tradition were the sounder, custom and tradition were upheld. Progres- siveness with rational progress was the aim. The Council tried to focus its attention and energy not on one particular phase of life, but on the intellectual, social and extra- curricula activities. By the use of various methods it endeavored to stimulate student interest and social responsibility, to solicit student opinion on various problems, and to keep in touch with the trend of affairs and questions with which other college and uni- versity students were concerned. In short, the policy of this year ' s council has been generally neither radical nor conservative, but an attempted policy of identification with the highest and best in every situation. In connection with the Executive Board, Auld Whitmyre Faires Culbertson 46 WOMEN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT presided over by the president of the Wo- man ' s College Government, is a Judicial Board, presided over by the vice president. This body deals with major offenses and matters referred to it by the Executive Body, and is composed of the president, the record- ing secretary, the house presidents, and a member-at-large. While there are a few automatic penalties for various offenses, and while the board endeavors to hand down judgments as uni- form as possible, each offense is carefully studied and considered from all angles with the aim of arriving at a penalty which will prove of the most benefit and aid to the individual. In 1934-1935, the first Student Forum Com- mittee was organized and has been continued with the following purposes: to lead group discussions among the students, to gauge student opinion, and to act as an inter- mediary group between the Student Council, the administration, and the student body at large. One of its most beneficial and pri- mary functions is to plan a series of lectures for the women students, financed by the women students. OFFICERS Annie Laurie Newsom, President; Eleanor Eleanor Barrett Vice President Barrett, Vice President; Mary Auld, Treas- urer; Martha Jane Culbert- son. Assistant Treasurer; Betty Faires, Recording Secretary; Katherine Whitmyre, Cor- responding Secretary; Mary Frances Ivey, Chairman of Social stand- ards; Inez Abernethy, President of Town Girls ' Club; Walton Bowen, Chairman of Point System; Dallas Knight, President of Jarvis House; Clary Peoples, President of Giles House; Katherine White, President of Alspaugh House; Paula Bassett, President of Pegram House; Martha Bailey, President of Bassett House; Jane Haislip, President of Brown House; Louise Warren, President of Aycock House; Edith Snook, Junior Class Representative; Fan Auld, Sophomore Class Representative; Larry Jackson, Freshman Class Representative. Knight Abernethy Auld Peoples Bowen Ivey Bailey Haislip Jackson Snook White Bassett 47 SOCIAL STANDARDS COMMITTEE Mary Frances Ivey Chairman The commit- tee on Social Standards is composed of women selected from the stud- ent body at large on a con- sideration of so- cial leadership by the Chair- man and the So- cial Director. As representa- tives of the social sororities, classes and various student groups, the members have as their objective the guidance and regulation of social activities of the Woman ' s College. This goal implies encouragement toward the development of a fine social relationship among the students of both campuses. Because of the varied environments from which students come to Duke, an adjustment to college life must be accomplished, and the Social Standards Committee functions in this process. It is this body which first introduces freshmen women into the social life of the university. During Freshman Week at the beginning of the 1935-36 year, a series of tea dances in the Ark was spon- sored by the committee with the purpose of facilitating introduction to the Duke men. One of the major accomplishments of the group is the sponsoring of the traditional Co-ed Balls, which are given in the fall and spring of each year. Prior to this year, the committee assumed part of the responsibility for the Ark with Sandals, honorary sophomore organization. This year Social Standards has, however, initiated a new project in the Woman ' s Col- lege Union. Efforts have been made to improve the appearance of the lobby by adding and rearranging the furnishings, and the building has also been opened for dating. The Social Standards Committee was or- ganized in 1930, when the Woman ' s College was opened. The Chairman, who is elected by the members of the Women ' s Student Government Association and who is a mem- ber of the Student Council, is a medium between the students and the governing body. Since the establishment of the com- mit tee, the following women have served as Chairman: Edith Parker, 1927-28; Courtney Sharpe, 1930-31; Leonore Murphy, 1931-32; Carlotta Waters, 1932-33; Helen W y a 1 1, 1933-34; Eleanor TornpkinS, 1934-35; and Mary Frances Ivey, 1935-36. Knight Mewborn Wannamaker Hughes Sills Peterson Zecher Farnum Byrn Riley Henry Sutton Ramsauer Boyd Sasscer Newsom Lewis Love Wagner Kleinmans Applewhite Brooks Small Plyler Richards Burgess Burger Reist 48 S ' Or o : Book Two ACADEMIC I C H , fertile valleys , flanked by the low, undulating foothills of the beautiful Blue Ridge mountains . . . stately, white columns of ante-bellum Colonial mansions . . . sleek, fat livestock . . . golden -yellow grain at harvest time . . . these are but a few of the beauties of the Carolina Coastal plain. fe ' i ' ' fei From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten SENIORS MEN ' S SENIOR CLASS HISTORY We, the Class of 1936, watch the approach of June the eighth with a confused feeling of anticipation and dread. We are happy at the prospect of having completed four years of training, of culture, and of profitable experiences which have prepared us, in some measure at least, for what lies beyond. We rejoice at the thought of graduation into that higher university of Life for which we have been preparing ourselves, and yet we dread the moment that will mean a breaking away from the old manner of living, a rupture of the friendships and associations that have ccme to mean so much. Surely, no matter where we go, no matter what conditions may confront us out there, we shall never forget this school, its meaning to us, its association into a part of our very selves. We hope it will not forget us. The Class of 1936, coincident with its own mental and cultural growth over a four-year period, has witnessed and taken an active participation in many of the changes inci- dental to the growth of Duke University. During the session of 1933-1934 there oc- curred drastic changes in freshman rushing rules, including a minimum scholastic aver- age of C as prereguisite to eligibility, postponement of rush week until the second semester, and housing of the freshman class as a unit in a single group of dormitories. We have seen Duke rise into national prominence in its athletic activities, perhaps best exemplified by the immortal eleven of 1933 which came so near to the attainment of a perfect schedule of vistories. Each year of our residence has witnessed an increase in student enrollment over that of the pre- ceding term until further expansion of dormitory facilities has become a necessity. Frank Sizemore President Perhaps the greatest single thrill of our four years happened one rainy sixteenth of No- vember, an event so great that this year might well be called The Year 25-0. As a class we have striven to establish a closer cooperation between ourselves and our classmates of the East. With them we have presented to our school a memorial gift of a planting of oaks between the cam- puses. And so it goes, another June approaching and another class graduating. Just another class? We hope not. We cannot fully appreciate the untold good our Alma Mater has given to us until maturity brings a deeper wisdom. OFFICERS James Henry Vice President Tom Murray Treasurer Joseph Hiatt Secretary Jienry Hiatt Murray 54 Ruth Phillips President HISTORY Another Senior Class takes its place in the annals of Duke University history as the class of 1936 steps over the threshold of undergraduate life into the ranks of alumnae. The growth and development of the Uni- versity has been so rapid that the students themselves have felt the tremendous pres- sure. It has been a problem to successfully deal with this rapid expansion, which is one of the challenges the Class of 1936 has competently met. Instead of becoming a disintegrated group of students within the WOMEN ' S SENIOR CLASS complexities of our modern University life, the classes of the Woman ' s College and Trinity College have become more closely united than ever before. In scholastic en- deavor, in organizations, and in social life their purposes have been closely related, and they have achieved together rather than separately. The oak trees along the University drive between the campuses were planted by the Seniors of the Woman ' s College and Trinity College symbolizing a permanent and lasting cooperative spirit of the women and men of Duke University. ' [ ■' ..;■, The painting of the portrait of Dean Alice M. Baldwin, a project begun by the class of 1935, has been completed by the Senior women with the helpful cooperation of the underclassmen. Under the auspices of this class, the Presi- dent ' s Club has been organized, with the President of the Senior Class as permanent chairman. In the field of athletics this group has excelled. The athletic banner has displayed the numerals ' 36 for the past two years. The oak s planted are still young saplings and our only regret is that we cannot remain to see them grow into trees. Like them, we are still young twigs, nurtured on the Duke Campus. But the achievements of the Class of ' 36 will flourish and grow in a larger world. ■- ■r. . OFFICERS Dorothy Gray- Vice President Margaret Waldrep Treasurer Elizabeth Sutton Secretary Waldrep Gray Sutton 55 THE CHANTICLEER Edwin B. Abbott Birmingham, Ala. Business Adnriinistration Alpha Tau Omega; Alpha Kappa Psi; Class Vice Presi- dent, 1; Beta Omega Sigma; Student Council, 2; Chronicle, 1, 3; CHANTICLEER, 2, 4; Pan- Hellenic Council, 4, Treas- urer 4. Inez Abernethy Durham, N. C. Teaching Delta Delta Delta; Sandals; Social Standards, 3; Town Girls ' Club, Treasurer, 2, Secretary, 3, President, 4; Women ' s Stu- dent Council, 4; Women ' s De- bate Council, 3, 4, President, 4; President ' s Club, 4. Charles Wiley Ackley Vineland, N. J. General Delta Sigma Phi; Football, 1; Archive, 1, 2, 3; Polity Club, 3,4. Jack Alexander Asheville, N. C. General Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Tombs; Foot- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Student Govern- ment, Vice President, 4. Abbott Ackley Huntingdon College, 1 Choir, 4. Abernethy Alexander Ellis L. Andrews Mobile, Ala. Religion 2, 3; Glee Club, 4; Henry M. Andrews, Jr. Mobile, Ala. Pre-Medical Glee Club. Fredrick H. Andrus Akron, Ohio Pre-Medical Delta Tau Delta; Pegram Chemistry Club, Treas- urer, 4. Ida Shaw Applewhite Halifax, N. C. General Alpha Phi; Delta Phi Alpha; Sorority Pan-Hel- lenic Council, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Pres- ident, 4; Music Study Club; Dean ' s List; Social Standards, 4. E. Andrews H. Andrews Andrus Applewhite 56 DUKE UNIVERSITY Will Harman Artley Savannah, Ga. Civil Engineering Delta Sigma Phi; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Engineers ' Club; American Society of Civil Engineers; Dean ' s List. Mrs W. M. Baker Mebane, N. C. General Phi Beta Kappa; Dean ' s List. Martha Bailey Thomasville, Ga. General Alpha Delta Pi; Bassett House President, 4. Charles P. Ballenger, Jr. Greenville, S. C. Civil Engineering Kappa Alpha; Beta Omega Sigma; Delta Epsilon Sigma; American Society of Civil Engi- neers, President Duke Chapter; Engineers ' Student Council, Secretary; North Carolina Con- ference of American Society of Civil Engineers, President. Ernest D, Barnham, Jr. Newark, N. J. General Tennis, 1; Golf, 2. Eleanor A. Barrett Stamford, Conn. Business Administration Kappa Alpha Theta; Women ' s Student Govern- ment, Vice President, 4; Dean ' s List. Artley Baker Othmar B. Bart East Orange, N. J. Business Administration Phi Kappa Sigma; Boxing, 1, 2. Irving W. Bearse Hyannis, Mass. Civil Engineering Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; American of Civil Engineers; Delta Epsilon Sigma; List. Barnham Barrett Bart Bearse 57 THE CHANTICLEER Margaret Anne Becker Upper Darby, Pa. General Zeta Tau Alpha; Polity Club; CHANTICLEER, 3, 4; Chron- icle, 3; Junior Council; Dean ' s List. Henry S. Bender Germantown, Pa. General Cross-Country, 1; Baseball, 1; Soccer, 3, 4. George F. Beneke Wheeling, W. Va. Pre -Legal Lambda C h i Alpha; Pan- Hellenic Council; Tennis, 1, 2, 3. Ruth Bennett Clarksburg, W. Va. Honors Alpha Phi; Student Forum; League of Women Voters, Pres- ident; Dean ' s List. Becker Beneke Bender Bennett Elihu Bernstein Burlington, N. C. Business Administration Delta Phi Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4; Archive, 1; Symphony, 1; Musical Clubs, 1; Sophomore Honors; Junior Honors; Dean ' s List. Cyril Edwin Black Sofia, Bulgaria General Columbia Literary Society; International Club; French Salon. James C. Black Durham, N. C. General Andrew Lane Blair Weston, W. Va. Pre-Legal Phi Kappa Psi; West Virginia University, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Bernstein C. Black J. Black Blair 58 DUKE UNIVERSITY U. Benton Blalock, Jr. Wadesboro, N. C. General Kappa Sigma. James K. Boling Siler City, N. C. Pre-Legal Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Foot- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming, 1. William Fleming Bowman Aberdeen, N. C. Business Administration Kappa Alpha; Davidson Col- lege, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Fred E. Bratzel Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Pre-Medical Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4. Betty Brill Manhasset, N. Y. General Bradford Junior College, I, 2. Joseph Grayson Brothers Wilmington, N. C. General Columbia Literary Society, Secretary, 3; Trident Club, 2, 3; Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Cabinet. Blalock Bowman Dorothy Lillian Brown Clarksville, Tenn. General Delta Delta Delta; Y. W. C. A. Publici man, 4; Duke Players, 4; Glee Club, 4. Barbara Marian Browne Hickory, N. C. Teaching Pi Beta Phi; Lenoir Rhyne College, 1, 2 Club, 4. Brill Brothers Brown Browne 59 THE CHANTICLEER William K. Brumbach Belleville, N. J. Pre- Medical Delta Tau Delta; Freshman Council, President; Sophomore Y Council, President; Beta Omega Sigma; Pegram Chem- istry Club, President, 4. Eleanor Wade Bruton Biscoe, N. C. Teaching Kappa Delta; Sophomore Honors; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Music Study Club. Josie Brunnfield Tylertown, Miss. Teaching Phi Theta Kappa; Alpha Sig- ma Delta; Whitworth College, 1, 2; Delta Phi Rho Alpha; CHANTICLEER, 3, 4; Archive, 3; Chronicle, 3, 4; Publications Board, 4; Senior Council; May Day Committee, 3; House Com- mittee; Dean ' s List. Walter P. Budd, Jr. Durham, N. C. Pre-Legal Kappa Sigma; Golf, 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tombs. Brumbach Bruton Brumfield Budd Kathlyn Buice Charlotte, N. C. General Alpha Delta Pi; Glee Club, 2, 3; Sandals; Polity Club; Student Council, 3, 4; Student Forum Com- mittee, 4; Student Director of May Day, 3; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council, 4; Giles House President. Jean Morton Burd Pottsville, Pa. General Sandals; Class Secretary, 3. Robert Burge, Jr. Westfield, N. J. Business Administration Kappa Alpha; Alpha Kappa Psi. Lucille Butler Shreveport, La. General Kappa Kappa Gamma; Arlington Hall, Music Study Club, President, 4. Buice Burd Burge Butler 60 J K E U N I V E R S I T Y William D. Byrne Fred Cady New Rochell iness Admi e, N. Y. nistratior L Syracuse, N. Y Law Sigma Nu; Alpha Kappa Psi; Chronicle, 1, 2; Trident Club; Columbia Literary Society; Sen- ior Council; Dean ' s List. Lawrence J. Caruso Brooklyn, N. Y. Pre- Medical Pegram Chemistry Club. Phi Kappa Sigma; Columbia Literary Society, Vice President, 2, Treasurer, 3; Chronicle, I, 2; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3; De- bate Team, 2; Debate Council, 3; Junior Council; Dean ' s List. Mary Ann Gates New York, N. Y. General Randolph-Macon College, 1; Dean ' s List. Byrne Caruso Cady Cates Ann Chalker Durham, N. C. Teaching Town Girls ' Club. Phi Mu. Gwendolyn Clark Durham, N. C. Teaching James Rush Chandlee Gaithersburg, Md. Civil Engineering Kappa Sigma; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; American Society of Civil Engineers; Wrestling, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 4. John Totterdale Cole Warren, Ohio Pre- Medical Lambda Chi Alpha; Duke University Musical Club, Secretary-Treasurer, 3, Vice President, 4; Choir. Chalker Chandlee Clark Cole 61 THE CHANTICLEER Richard J. Conradi Irvington, N. J. General Sigma Phi Epsilon; Football, 1; Beta Omega Sigma; Choir, 3; Glee Club, 3; Baseball, 1, 2, 3,4. Edward W. Cooey Wheeling, W. Va. Pre-Legal Lambda Chi Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; 9019; Duke Candidate for Rhodes Scholarship, 4; Dean ' s List. Robert W. Cook Cooperstown, N. Y. General Sigma Nu; Duke Players, 1. Gerald Cooper Durham, N. C. Honors Iota Gamma Pi, Treasurer, 4; Dean ' s List. Conradi Cook Cooey Cooper Irene Cordray Point Marion, Pa. Teaching Glee Club, 1, 2; CHANTICLEER, 1, 2. Frank Cottier Chelsea, Mass. General William G. Crawford Detroit, Mich. General Sigma Chi; Alpha Kappa Psi; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3, 4, Business Manager, 4; Beta Omega Sigma; Glee Club, 1, 2; Choir, 1, 2. Ernest Cruikshank Raleigh, N. C. Business Administration Alpha Tau Omega; Alpha Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma, Delta Phi Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa; CHANTICLEER, 1, 2, 3, 4, Copy Editor, 2, Assistant Editor, 3, Co-Editor, 4; Chron- icle, 1, 2; Sophomore Honors; 9019, Treasurer, 4; Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council; Pub- lications Board, 4; Columbia Literary Society, 1; Dean ' s List. Crawford Cruikshank 62 DUKE UNIVERSITY John C. Cummings Detroit, Mich. Business Administration Alpha Kappa Psi; University of Detroit, 1. Margaret Cuninggim Nashville, Tenn. General Kappa Alpha Theta; Sandals; Gold D Club; Polity Club; Delta Phi Rho Alpha; Women ' s Athletic Association Board, 2, 3, 4, President, 4; Archive, 4; President ' s Club, 4; Dean ' s List. Wm.. K. Cunningham, Jr. Appomattox, Va. General Dean ' s List. CO. Dailey Sussex, N. J. Business Administration Swimming, 1, 2, 3, 4, Cap- tain, 4. Barbara Daniel Claxton, Ga. General Kappa Kappa Gamma. James M. Daniel Henderson, N. C. Business Administration Pi Kappa Phi; Basketball, 1; Baseball, Assistant Manager, 1, 2, 3, Manager, 4; Trident Club, 2, 3; Junior Council; Commencement Marshal, 3; Pan- Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Publications Board, 4; Tombs. Cummings Cunningham Lora Frances Davis Quincy, Fla. Pre-Legal Cuninggim Dailey Distaff, 1, 2, Circulation Manager, 2; CHANTI- CLEER, 3; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; University Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4. James A. Dearborn Brookline, Mass. Business Administration Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Trident Club; Football, 1; Track, 1; Wrestling, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dean ' s List. B. Daniel J. Daniel Davis Dearborn THE CHANTICLEER Irving Owen Dein Atlantic City, N. J. Pre-Medical Phi Sigma Delta; Pi Mu Epsi- lon; Delta Phi Alpha; Beta Omega Sigma; Pan-Hellenic Council, Secretary, 4; Swim- ming, 1, 2. Robert H. Dick Canton, Ga. Pi Kappa Phi, Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Beta Kappa; Iota Gamma Pi; Pegram Chemistry Club; 9019; Dean ' s List. Dorothy Dosch Somerset, Pa. Glee Club, 1, 2; Choir, 1, 2 ; Bar Association, 4. Charles C. Eberly, Jr. Chester, Pa. Phi Kappa Sigma; Pan-Hellenic Council; Cross Country, 1, 2; Track, 1, 2. 64 DUKE UNIVERSITY Dorothy Louise Edwards Durham, N. C. General Dean ' s List. George Bain Everitt Winnetka, 111. Honors Delta Tau Delta; House of Representatives, 3; Publications Board, 4; Chronicle, 1, 2, Soci- ety Editor, 3; CHANTICLEER, 4; Beta Omega Sigma, Secre- tary, 2; Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3; Junior Coun- cil, 3; Junior Pan-Hellenic Council; Pegram C h e m i at r y Club. Nan Evans Riverton, N. J. Social Service Glee Club, 3, 4; Choir, 3, 4 Music Study Club. George Reed Failing Luke, Md. Business Administration Kappa Sigma; Soccer, 3, 4. Fairchild Albert Royal Fairchild, Jr. Glenside, Pa. Business Administration Beta Omega Sigma; Football, 1, 2, 3. Sara Louise Falls Shelby, N. C. General Kappa Delta; Polity Club, Secretary, 4; Debating Club; President ' s Club. 65 THE CHANTICLEER Robert E. Farrell Boston, Mass. General Beta Omega Sigma; Chron- icle, 1, 2, 4. Frances Farthing Raleigh, N. C. Teaching Choir; Glee Club; Freshman Adviser. Newton E. Faulkner Elmhurst, N. Y. General Delta Tau Delta; Delta Phi Alpha; New York University, 1, 2; Baseball, 3; Dean ' s List. Rubye Fogel Georgetown, S. C. General Alpha Epsilon Phi; Chi Delta Phi; Women ' s Student Council, 3; Publications Board, Secre- tary, 4; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Junior Big Sisters, Treasurer, 3; Music Study Club; Chronicle, 2; Archive, 1, 2, 3; Distaff, 1, 2; May Day, 3; Fresh- man Honors; Gold D ; Dean ' s List. Farrell Faulkner Farthing Fogel Norma Forbes Brooklyn, N. Y. General Russell Forrest Bloomfield, N. J. Pre -Medical Zeta Tau Alpha; Packer Collegiate Institute, 1, 2. J. B. Ford Savannah, Ga. Pre- Medical 1, 2, 3; Cross Country, 1, Pi Kappa Phi; Track, 2, 3; Tombs. Phi Kappa Psi. Margaret Franck Durham, N. C. General Kappa Delta; Theta Alpha Phi; Duke Players, 2, 3, 4; Town Girls ' Club; Dean ' s List. Forbes Ford Forrest Franck 66 DUKE UNIVERSITY Lewis O. Funkhouser Hagerstown, Md. Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon. Darwin C. Gallup Pittsfield, Mass. Business Administration Alpha Kappa Psi; Dean ' s List. Lawrence L. Gent Cold Spring, N. Y. General Phi Kappa Psi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Band, 1, 2; Symphony Or- chestra, 1, 2; CHANTICLEER, 2; Beta Omega Sigma. Wrestling, 1. 67 THE CHANTICLEER Don Glass Johnstown, Pa. General University of Pittsburgh, 1, 2; Assistant Manager Wrestling, 3, Manager, 4; Columbia Literary Society; Band, 3, 4; Symphony Orchestra, 4. David Watson Goddard Portsmouth, Ohio Pre-Medical Phi Kappa Psi; Band, 1, 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra, 1, 2, 3; Glee Club, 1, 2; Football, 1. Page Gooch Henderson, N. C. General Kappa Delta. Evelyn G. Goode Statesville, N. C. Social Service Kappa Delta; Converse Col- lege, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Glass Gooch Goddard Goode Jane Goode Lincolnton, N. C. General Alpha Delta Pi; Greensboro College, 1, 2; Trans- fer Adviser, 4. Joseph Roland Goode, Jr. Alexandria, Va. Business Administration Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Com- mencement Marshal, 3; University Choir, 1, 2; Assistant Baseball Manager, 1, 2, 3. Mary Kay Goodman Ashland, Ky. Chemistry Delta Delta Delta; Sandals; Social Standards, 2; Women ' s Student Council, 2, 3; CHANTICLEER, 2, 3, 4, Co-ed Editor, 4; Student Forum Committee, 4; Pegram Chemistry Club; Duke Players, 3. Robert Walton Goodwin Norv ay, Maine Business Administration Delta Tau Delta; CHANTICLEER, 1; Track, 1. Jane Goode J. R. Goode Goodman Goodwin 68 DUKE UNIVERSITY Dorothy Fairfield Gray Summit, N. J. Business Administration Kappa Kappa Gamma; Wom- en ' s Athletic Association Board, 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 3; Sandals; White Duchy; Delta Phi Rho Alpha; Junior Big Sisters, Class Vice President, 4. Edward Lee Gray Bahama, N. C. General Chris Greutker Kenmore, N. Y. General Tennis, 1. Richard P. Griffin Swarthmore, Pa. General Lambda Chi Alpha; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 2, 3, 4; Track, 1; Columbia Literary So- ciety; Chronicle, 1, 2. Dorothy Gray Greutker E. L. Gray Griffin George Edwin Griscom Trenton, N. L Business Administration Kappa Sigma; Soccer, 3, 4. Mary Rebecca Groves Charleston, W. Va. Teaching Beaver College, 1; Polity Club. Jane Haislip Lumberport, W. Va. General Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Freshman Honors; Sandals; Freshman Adviser, 3; Women ' s Student Government, 4; White Duchy; Music Study Club; Eko-L; Dean ' s List; Brown House President. Irwin Read Hale Greenfield, Mass. General Phi Kappa Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kap- pa; Basketball, 1; Track, 1, 2, 3; Wrestling, 4; French Club; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4; 9019; Dean ' s List. Griscom Groves Haislip Hale 69 THE CHANTICLEER Betty Halsema Baguio, Philippine Islands General Alpha Phi; Pi Mu Epsilon; So- cial Standards, 3; Sorority Pan- Hellenic Council, 2, 3; League of Women Voters, Treasurer, 2, Vice President, 3; Eko-L; Dean ' s List. Henry Grady Hardin Columbia, S. C. Religion Sigma Chi; Archive, 1, 2; Sophomore ' T Council; Un- dergraduate Ministerial Fellow- ship. Sue Hardy Rome, Ga. Social Service Kappa Alpha Theta; Shorter College, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Christine Elizabeth Harris Coral Gables, Fla. General Kappa Kappa Gamma; Flor- ida State College, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Halsema Hardy Hardin Harris Henry Laurens Harris Albemarle, N. C. Honors Pi Kappa Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle, 1, 2; Assistant Boxing Manager, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Jannes M. Hatch Charlotte, N. C. Pre-Medical Sigma Nu; Phi Eta Sigma; Dean ' s List. John Reynolds Hathorn Ballston Spa, N. Y. General Sigma Phi Epsilon; Beta Omega Sigma; Basket- ball, 1; Track, 1; Pan-Hellenic Council. Nancy Grimes Haywood Concord, N. C. Teaching Kappa Delta Pi; Converse College, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Harris Hatch Hathorn Haywood 70 DUKE UNIVERSITY Mary Ada Heard St. Petersburg, Fla. General Zeta Tau Alpha. William Nason Heffner Northport, N. Y. Pre-Medical New York University, 1. Margaret C. Helvenston Ocala, Fla. General Delta Delta Delta; Oberlin College, 1, 2, 3; Music Study- Club, 4; Nereidian Club, 4; Glee Club, 4; Dean ' s List. Hayward Webb Henderson Lynchburg, Va. General Pi Mu Epsilon; Lynchburg College, 1, 2; Musical Clubs, 3, 4; Quartet, 3, 4; Choir, 4; Glee Club, 3, 4. Heard Helvenston Heffner Henderson Martha B. Henderson John Hennemier West Roxbury, Mass. Savannah, Ga. General Business Administration Ita Pi; Tufts College, 1, 2. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tombs, Secretary, 4. Mary Elliott Henderson James E. Henry Hickory, N. C. Nazareth, Pa. General Alpha Delta Pi; Chronicle 1, 2, 3, 4, Co-ed Editor, 4; CHANTICLEER, 3; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 3; May Day Committee, 3; White Duchy; Dean ' s List. General Phi Kappa Psi; Basketball, Assistant Man- ager, 1, 2; Junior Council, 3; Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil, 3, 4; Class Vice President, 4. Martha Henderson Mary Henderson Hennemier Henry 71 THE CHANTICLEER Thomas W. Herb Wyomissing, Pa. Business Administration Delta Sigma Phi; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Band, 1, 2; Orchestra, 1, 2. Vincent P. Hippolitus New Haven, Conn. General Phi Kappa Sigma. Joseph S. Hiatt, Jr. Lenoir, N. C. Pre- Medical Delta Sigma Phi; Kappa Kap pa Psi; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3 4; Band, 3, 4; Archive, 2, 3, 4 Junior Council; Senior Council Class Secretary, 4; Commence ment Marshal, 3; President, Seventh District of Kappa Kappa Psi. William Sabine Hodde Highland Park, Mich: Pre -Legal Highland Park Junior Col- lege, 1; Basketball, 2, 3. Herb Hippolitus Hiatt Hodde William L. Holler Columbia, S. C. General Edward Thompson Howard Lexington, Mass. Pre-Medical Debating, 1; Columbia Literary Society, Secre- tary, 2, President, 3; Archive, 1, 2, 3, 4, Associate Editor, 2, 3, Managing Editor, 4; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3,4. Richard Emmett Horton Peekskill, N. Y. Pre -Legal Pi Kappa Phi; Dean ' s List. E. M. Hoyle Durham, N. C. Religion Holler Horton Howard Hoyle 72 DUKE UNIVERSITY Robert Turner Hoyle Durham, N. C. General Classical Club. W. L. Huiskamp Keokuk, Iowa Business Administration Kappa Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; Red Friars; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; Class Treasurer, 3. Nancy Hudson Greensboro, N. C. Honors Chi Delta Phi; President, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa; Duke Players, I; Distaff, 1, 2; Archive, 2, 3, 4, Co-ed Editor, 3, 4; Glee Club, I; Dean ' s List; Eko-L. Porter B. Huling, Jr. Williamsport, Pa. Business Adniinistration Sigma Nu; Band, 1, 2, 3; Sym- phony Orchestra, 2, 3; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Wrestling, 2. Hoyle Huiskamp Hudson Huling Alma Hull Harrisburg, Pa. General Kappa Alpha Theta; Hood College, 1; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 3, President, 4. Lucille Ivey Hickory, N. C. Teaching Davenport College, 1; Greensboro College, 2; Women ' s College Orchestra. John William Hulme, Jr. Jackson Heights, N. Y. Pre-Legal Sigma Phi Epsilon; Dean ' s List. Mary Frances Ivey Durham, N. C. Honors Pi Beta Phi; Junior Big Sisters, President; Soror- ity Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4, Treasurer, 4; Wom- en ' s Student Council, 4; Social Standards, 2, 3, 4, Chairman, 4; Town Girls ' Club; Dean ' s List. Hull Hulme L. Ivey F. Ivey 73 THE CHANTICLEER Margaret Izard Durham, N. C. Business Administration Hortense Jacobus Caldwell, N. J. General Polity Club. Club; Town Girl: Rolf Johnson Harrisburg, Pa. Pre- Medical Lambda Chi Alpha; Pegram Chemistry Club; Swimming, 1, 2, 3; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3. James Henry Johnston Winston-Salem, N. C. General Beta Omega Sigma; Red Friars; Tombs; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 4; Wrestling, 1. Izard Johnson Jacobus J. Johnston Alice Jones Petersburg, Va. General Zeta Tau Alpha; Duke Players. Anne Jones Birmingham, Ala. Social Service Alpha Theta; Shorter College, 1, 2. Sara L. Jordan York, Pa. General Kappa Delta; Sandals; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3, 4. Sidney L. Kauffman Swarthmore, Pa. Civil Engineering American Society of Civil Engineers; Engineers ' Club. Alice Jones Anne Jones Jordan Kauffman 74 DUKE UNIVERSITY Frederic R. Keator Wayne, Pa. Business Administration Sigma Chi; Tombs; Manager Track, 4. Gilbert Keith Wilmette, 111. General Phi Delta Theta; Beta Omega Sigma, President, 2. Fred N. Kellmeyer Wheeling, W. Va. Business Administration Lambda Chi Alpha; Tennis, 1, 3, 4. Claire Kennedy Big Stone Gap, Va. General Forum Club; Debating Club. Keith Kennedy Roy C. Kimmerle Buffalo, N, Y. Business Administration Pi Kappa Phi; Basketball, 1; Track, 1; Glee Club, 1, 2. John Belding King Cristobal, Canal Zone Mechanical Engineering American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Duke Engineers Society; Cosmopolitan Club; Dean ' s List. Keator Kellmeyer Evelyn Katherine Kleinmans Ridgewood, N. J. General Social Standards, 3, 4; May Day Committee 3; Freshman Adviser, 4; Dean ' s List. William N. Klove Oak Park, 111. Pre-Legal Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Chronicle, 1; Class Pres ident, 2; Junior Council; Senior Council. Kimmerle King Kleinmans Klove 75 THE CHANTICLEER Dallas Knight Ambler, Pa. General Sigma Kappa; Social Stand- ards, 2, 3, 4; Junior Big Sisters, Vice President, 3; Freshman Adviser, 3; CHANTICLEER, 1, 2, 3, 4, Co-ed Business Man- ager, 4; Student Council, 4; White Duchy. Donald M. Kramer Reading, Pa. Business Adniinistration Delta Sigma Phi; Orchestra. Al Konopka Camden, N. J. Pre-Medical Football, 1; Basketball, 1; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs. Lloyd Kraushaar Rochester, N. Y. Pre-Legal Pi Kappa Phi; Football, 1; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming, 1, 2; Wrestling, 3, 4; Soccer, 4; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; Senior Council. Knight Konopka Kraushaar Charles R. Kunkle Johnstown, Pa. Pre-Legal Sigma Chi; Red Friars; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs, President, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Cap- tain, 4; Track, 1, 2; Tennis, 1; Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil, 3, 4; Omicron Delta Kappa, President, 4; Student Council, 3. Raynnond W. Laird Gulfport, Miss. General Sigma Alpha Epsilon. David W. Lamb Rochester, N. Y. General Sigma Chi; Centre College, Baseball, 4. 1, 2; Soccer, 4; Gene Martin Laney Sanford, Fla. General Delta Delta Delta; Wesleyan College, 1, 2; Chronicle, 3, 4; Duke Players, 4; Transfer Adviser; Dean ' s List. Kunkle Laird Lamb Laney 76 DUKE UNIVERSITY June Langfitt Clarksburg, W. Va. General Kappa Kappa Gamma; Deni- son University, 1, 2; Junior Council; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4, President, 4. Arthur Carl Lee, Jr. Charlotte, N. C. General Alpha Tau Omega; Football Manager , 4; Tombs. Charles Loring Lemperly Lakewood, Ohio Business Administration Senior Council; Dean ' s List. William A. Lewis Durham, N. C. Law Kappa Alpha. Helen Josephine Lieb Elizabeth, N. J. General Delta Delta Delta; Chronicle, 1; Glee Club, 1; Polity Club; CHANTICLEER, 1. John Francis Litle Washington, Pa. General Kappa Sigma; Boxing Manager, 4; Tombs; Dean ' s List. Langfitt Lemperly Gretchen Little High Bridge, N. J. General Sandals; Women ' s Athletic Association Board, 2, 3, 4; Student Government, 3; Jarvis House President; Pegram Chemistry Club. Robert A. Little Lincolnton, N. C. Business Administration Kappa Kappa Psi; Glee Club, 1, 2; Choir, 1, 2; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4. Lieb Litle G. Little R. Little 77 THE CHANTICLEER Robert S. Long Frankford, Del. Pre- Medical Sigma Nu; Track, 1. James Russell Lowe Elon College, N. C. Teaching Polity Club, 3, 4. William O. Luly Vero Beach, Fla. Pre-Medical Pi Kappa Phi. Stephen Stringer Lush Mahwah, N. J. Business Administration Beta Omega Sigma; Football, 1; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4. Alan M. MacQuarrie Upper Montclair, N. J. Sigma Phi; Cross-Country, 1; Chronicle, M. C. A., 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 3, Presi- Dean ' s List. Bion William MacWhirter Charlotte, N. C. General Epsilon; Columbia Literary Society; Dean ' s Dick McAninch Marion, Ohio General Kappa Sigma; Beta Omega Sigma; Freshman Council; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 3; Base- ball, 1; Track, 1, 2, 3; House of Representatives, 1; Tombs. Jim McCall Oklahoma City, Okla. General Kappa Alpha; Omicron Delta Kappa; Red Friars; Beta Omega Sigma; Boxing, 2, 3, 4; Tombs; Pan- Hellenic Council, President, 4. MacWhirter McAninch McCall 78 DUKE UNIVERSITY Charles M. McCallister Youngstown, Ohio General Youngstown College, 1, 2; Duke Players, 3, 4, President, 4; Dean ' s List. Samuel G. McCaskill Camden, S. C. General Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tombs. John R. McClain Philadelphia, Pa. General Marian McClenaghan Raleigh, N. C. Social Service Kappa Kappa Gamma. McCallister McClain McCaskill McClenaghan John R. McCrary Lexington, N. C. General Alpha Tau Omega; Chronicle, 1. Myles Francis McGrail Brookline, Mass. Pre-Legal Tombs; Beta Omega Sigma; Football, 1, 3; Wrestling, 1, 2, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4. Robert Frenriont McKinney Scranton, Pa. Pre-Medical Glee Club, 3, 4; Choir, 3, 4; Orchestra, 3. Cole McMartin, Jr. Des Moines, Iowa General Alpha Tau Omega; Theta Alpha Phi; Drake University, 1, 2; Duke Players, 3, 4, Vice Pres- ident, 4. McCrary McGrail McKinney McMartin 79 THE CHANTICLEER Samuel G. McQuade Morristown, N. J. Pre-Forestry Freshman Council; Engi- neers ' Club. Paul Maness Yanceyville, N. C. Pre-Medical Wofford College, 1; Sopho- more Y Council; Dean ' s List. Alphonso Mann, Jr. Durham, N. C. General Boxing, 1, 2, 3, 4, Co-Captain, 4; Southern Conference Boxing Champion, 3; Tombs. John E. Mann Greenwood, Miss. General Sigma Chi; Dean ' s List. McQuade A. Mann Maness J. Mann O. DeWitt Mann, II Whitakers, N. C. General Lambda Chi Alpha; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3; Archive, 1, 2, 3, 4. Lylton E. Maxwell Pink Hill, N. C. Pre -Legal Dean ' s List; Frank E. Mazuy Newton, N. J. Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon. B. Frank Meacham Roberdell, N. C. Religion Boxing, 1, 2; Undergraduate Ministerial Asso- ciation, 1, 2, 3, 4. O. Mann Maxwell Mazuy Meacham 80 DUKE UNIVERSITY Rachel Meetze Charlotte, N. C. Teaching Phi Mu; Sandals; Polity Club; Women ' s College Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4, President, 2, 4; Music Study Club, Secretary, 3; Soror- ity Pan-Hellenic Council, 2, 3, 4; Dean ' s List. Robert C. Mervine East Orange, N. J. Business Adniinistration Delta Sigma Phi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Tombs; Student Council; Head Cheer Leader, 2, 3; Swimming, 2, 3, 4; Soccer, 4; Commencement Marshal, 3; Sophomore Council; Duke Play- ers. Robert M. Meiklejohn, Jr. Westfield, N. J. Civil Engineering American Society of Civil Engineers. James B. Messick Smyrna, Del. Pre-Legal Sigma Phi Epsilon; Track, 1; House of Representatives, 3. Meetze Mervine Meiklejohn Messick Edward Joseph Migdal Erie, Pa. Pre-Medical Beta Omega Sigma; Football, 1, 2; Track, 1. Robert P. Miller Lincolnton, N. C. Pre-Medical Sigma Nu; Kappa Kappa Psi, President, 3, 4; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Symphony Or- chestra, 1, 2; Beta Omega Sigma; Commencement Marshal, 3. Margaret W. Moore Clarendon, Va. Business Administration Delta Delta Delta; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3, 4 CHANTICLEER, 4; Dean ' s List. Ernest Thompson Moorey Bridgeport, Conn. Civil Engineering American Society of Civil Engineers. Migdal Miller Moore Moorey 81 THE CHANTICLEER George L. Morelock, Jr. Nashville, Tenn. General Kappa Sigma; Pan-Hellenic Council; Trident Club, 1, 2. Emmy Lou Morton Charleston, W. Va. General Zeta Tau Alpha; Sorority Pan- Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Social Standards, 1, 3; Sandals; Class President, 3; Dean ' s List. Robert Moon Morris Philadelphia, Pa. General CHANTICLEER, 2; Glee Club, 1; Undergraduate Minis- terial Fellowship, 1, 2; Classical Club, Treasurer, 2; Columbia Literary Society, 1, 2, 3, 4; Sec- retary, 3; President, 3; Senior Council; Debating, 3, 4. Rom F. Moser Zebulon, N. C. General Kappa Kappa Psi; Band, 2, 3, 4; Columbia Literary Society, 1, 2, Secretary, 2; Football, 1. Morelock Morton Morris Moser John E. Moss Mobile, Ala. Pre-Medical Sigma Nu; Pan-Hellenic Council. Eugene Hyatt Mossburg Chevy Chase, Md. Pre-Legal Pi Kappa Alpha; Omicron Delta Kappa; Red Friars; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; Assistant Man- ager Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Manager, 4; CHANTI- CLEER, 1, 2, 3, 4, Business Manager, 4; Track, 1; Junior Council; Publications Board, 4. Mary Avon Motlow Lynchburg, Tenn. General Kappa Kappa Gamma; Ward-Belmont, 1, 2. Thomas T. Munson Detroit, Mich. Pre-Legal Sigma Nu; Wayne University, 1, 2. Moss Mossburg Motlow Munson 82 DUKE UNIVERSITY Thomas Jones Murray Philadelphia, Pa. General Phi Kappa Sigma; Freshman Council; Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle, 1; Archive, 1; Sopho- more Council; Junior Council; Trident Club; Intramural Sports Manager, 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming, 1; Wrestling, I; Class Treasurer, 4; Publications Eoard, 4. Peter Ernest Naktenis Hartford, Conn. General Delta Sigma Phi; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kappa; Basketball, 1, 3; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tombs; Beta Omega Sigma; Athletic Council; Dean ' s List. George Wesley Nance Asheville, N. C. General Pi Kappa Alpha; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 2, 3, 4. Norman Nathanson Long Branch, N. L Pre -Medical Delta Phi Alpha; Iota Gamma Pi; Pegram Chemistry Club; Dean ' s List. Dorothy Louise Ne£f Washington, D. C. General Delta Delta Delta; Duke Players, 3, 4. Malcolm Newbold, Jr. Manhasset, N. Y. Pre-Medical Columbia Literary Society; Glee Club, 1, 2, 4; Choir, 1, 2. Neff Newbold Newsom Annie Laurie Newsom Durham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa; Class President, 1, 2; Chronicle, Co-ed Editor, 2; Sandals; Women ' s Student Government, 3, 4, Assistant Treasurer, 3, President, 4; White Duchy; Polity Club; N. C. F. S., Treasurer; Dean ' s List. Douglas S. Nisbet Philadelphia, Pa. Pre-Medical Iota Gamma Pi; Pegram Chemistry Club; Fresh- man Council; Sophomore Y Council; Dean ' s List. Nisbet 83 THE CHANTICLEER Herbert S. Nusbaum Clarksburg, W. Va. Honors Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Duke Players, 2, 3, 4; Symphony Orchestra, 1, 2, 3; Archive, 1, 2, Associate Editor, 2; Musical Club Key Award, 3; Beta Omega Sigma Scholastic Gold D ; Dean ' s List. Jean W. Ogburn Dover, Del. General Glee Club, 1, 2; Band, 1, 3, 4; Baseball, 1, 3, 4. Edgar J. Oliver, Jr. Savannah, Ga. General Phi Kappa Sigma; Virginia Military Institute, I; French Club. James W. Ouzts Marion, N. C. Business Administration Alpha Tau Omega. Nusbaum Oliver Ogburn Ouzts Sarah Ann Overshiner Hopkinsville, Ky. Pre-Legal Pi Beta Phi. William G. Owens Clarksburg, W. Va. Honors Hugh A. Page, Jr. Clayton, N. C. Pre-Legal Delta Sigma Phi; Polity Club; Trident Club. Jack Ward Page Rowland, N. C. Religion Dean ' s List. Overshiner Owens H. Page J. Page 84 DUKE UNIVERSITY Frances Paist Wayne, Pa. Social Service Zeta Tau Alpha; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 2, 3, 4; Dean ' s List. John B. Paist, Jr. Lansdowne, Pa. Business Administration Kappa Sigma; Cross-Country, 1, 2; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4. J. R. Pankey Bluefield, W. Va. Pre-Legal Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Theta Alpha Phi; Duke Players, 1, 2, 3,4. Charlotte Evelyn Parker El Paso, Texas Pre-Medical F. Paist Pankey J. Paist Parker Elizabeth Jane Parks Kew Gardens, N. Y. General Kappa Kappa Gamma; Sandals; Glee Club, 1, 2; Distaff, 1, 2. George R. Parrish, Jr. San Antonio, Texas Pre-Legal Sigma Nu. Helen Louise Parsons Altoona, Pa. Social Sevrice Kappa Kappa Gamma; Dean ' s List. Thomas C. Parsons Altoona, Pa. General Sigma Chi; Beta Omega Sigma; Tennis, 1, 2, 3 4, Captain, 4; Tombs. Parks Parrish H. Parsons T. Parsons 85 THE CHANTICLEER Ruth Eleonora Patterson Durham, N. C. Social Service Music Study Club; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Business Manager, 4; Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4. Ernestine Paul Colmar, Pa. General Phi Beta Kappa; Kappa Delta Pi; Eko-L; Music Study Club; Glee Club, 4; University Choir, 4; Dean ' s List. Douglas Bernhard Paulsen Baldwin, N. Y. Civil Engineering Walter Price Payne, Jr. Milford, Conn. General Football, 1. Patterson Paulsen Frances Elizabeth Pearson Sanford, Fla. Social Service Zeta Tau Alpha; Woman ' s College of Alabama, 2; Chronicle, 3. Dorothy Peck Huntingdon Valley, Pa. Social Service Kappa Alpha Theta; Beaver College, 1, 2. Robert L. Peck Binghampton, N. Y. General Keys Club; Phi Eta Sigma; Pegram Chemistry Club; Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Coun- cil; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3; Band, 1, 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra, 1, 2, 3; Cross-Country, I, 2; Dean ' s List. Cecil M. Peek West Palm Beach, Fla. General Phi Eta Sigma; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3. Pearson D. Peck R. Peck Peek 86 DUKE UNIVERSITY Marie Kollen Pelgrim Coral Gables, Fla. Teaching Kappa Kappa Gamma; Kappa Delta Pi; Glee Club, 1, 2; Duke Players, 1; Miami University, 3; Dean ' s List. Clary Webb Peoples Asheville, N. C. General Delta Delta Delta; Women ' s Student Council, 4; Dean ' s List. Clifford W. Perry Winston-Salem, N. C. General Phi Delta T h e t a ; Omicron Delta Kappa; Beta Omega Sig- ma; Golf, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tombs; Student Council; Southern Con- ference Golf Champion, 2, State Champion, 2; Dean ' s List. Ruth Phillips Wheeling, W. Va. Social Service Kappa Kappa Gamma; San- dals; Class Treasurer, 3; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 3; Junior Coun- cil; Social Service Conference, Secretary, 3, President, 4; Women ' s Athletic Association Board, 4; Class President, 4; President ' s Club, 4, President, 4; May Day Committee, 2. Elizabeth Wright Pierce Weldon, N. C. General Alpha Delta Pi; National Park Seminary, 1, 2. Nettie Pinnix New Bern, N. C. General Zeta Tau Alpha; Duke Players, 2, 3, 4. Pelgrim Perry Ella Pearl Pinson Hapeville, Ga. General Wesleyan College, 1, 2. Richard C. Piper Ridgewood, N. J. Business Administration Lambda Chi Alpha; Chronicle, 1, 2, Sports Edi tor, 3; Tennis, 1; CHANTICLEER, Sports Editor, 4 Peoples Phillips Pierce Pinnix Pinson Piper 87 THE CHANTICLEER John H. Plump Pearl River, N. Y. Business Administration Delta Tau Delta; Delta Phi Alpha; Glee Club; Track, 1, 2, 3; Pan-Hellenic Council, 4. Mern Plyler Durham, N. C. General Kappa Delta; Social Stand- ards Committee, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Town Girls ' Club, Treasurer, 3, Vice President, 4; Duke Players, 4. Herbert A. Pohl Rutherford, N. J. Honors Sigma Pi Sigma; Phi Eta Sig- ma; Delta Phi Alpha; Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Beta Kappa; Peg- ram Chemistry Club; Glee Club; Choir; Open Forum Bible Class, President, 2; 9019; Iota Gamma Pi; Dean ' s List. Harriette Violetta Pollard Washington, D. C. General Plump Pohl Plyler Pollard Joe G. Powell Moorestown, N. J. General Lambda Chi Alpha; Track, 1; Golf, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Vice President, 3; Tombs; Trident Club, Secretary, 3; Junior Council; Senior Council; De- bating. Rufus Heflin Powell, HI Durham, N. C. Honors Delta Sigma Phi; Beta Omega Sigma; Debate Council; Class Vice President, 2; Winner Fresh- man Oratorical Contest; Debating, 3; Columbia Lit- erary Society; Sophomore Y Council; Dean ' s List. Alan Christian Puryear Washington, D. C. Business Administration Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Glee Club, 1; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4, Vice President, 4. Kathryn Queen Waynesville, N. C. Pre -Legal League of Women Voters, I, 2; Polity Club; Debating Club, 3; Debating, 3. J. Powell R. Powell Puryear Queen 88 DUKE UNIVERSITY Genevieve Ramsaur Jacksonville, Fla. General Chi Omega; Florida State College, 1, 2; Social Standards Committee; Dean ' s List. Mary Alice Rhodes Chattanooga, Tenn. General Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Freshman Honors; Soph- omore Honors; Chronicle, 1, 2; Forum Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Pres- ident, 4; Polity Club; Eko-L, President, 4; CHANTICLEER, Assistant Co-ed Editor, 4; Pres- ident ' s Club, 4; Dean ' s List. Catherine Rankin Mount Gilead, N. C. Teaching Alpha Phi; Peace Junior Col- lege, 1, 2; Glee Club, 3, 4, Treasurer, 4; Music Study Club, Treasurer, 4; Choir, 3, 4. G. D. Richardson Ashland, Ky. Business Administration Pi Kappa Alpha; CHANTL CLEER, 4. McMurry S. Richey San Benito, Texas Religion Phi Theta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Brownsville Junior College, 1, 2; Undergraduate Ministerial FelloviTship, President, 3, 4; Fellowship for World Peace, President, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Dean ' s List. William P. Ricks Rocky Mount, N. C. General Phi Delta Theta; Cross-Country, 2. Ramsaur Rhodes Helen W. Rigg Wayne, Pa. Social Service Glee Club: University Choir. Rankin Richardson Henry Schroder Robinson Upper Montclair, N. J. Honors Phi Beta Kappa; Classical Club, President, 4; 9019, President, 4; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Honors; Dean ' s List. Richey Ricks Rigg Robinson 89 THE CHANTICLEER Ralph Leon Rockett Gastonia, N. C. Business Adniinistration Delta Sigma Phi; Tennis, 3, 4. Marion Roe Clermont, Fla. Social Service Phi Mu; Phi Beta Kappa; Glee Club, 1, 2; Choir, 1, 2; Music Study Club; Polity Club; Eko-L, Secretary-Treasurer; Dean ' s List. John S. Ross Queens Village, N. Y. Pre -Medical Phi Kappa Psi; Swimming, 1, 2, 3; Pegram Chemistry Club. Harry Roush Winston-Salem, N. C. Pre -Legal Phi Eta Sigma; Symphony Or- chestra, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dean ' s List. Rockett Ross Roe Roush Margaret Lavinia Rudisill Cherryville, N. C. Teaching Kappa Delta; Lenoir-Rhyne College, 1. William H. Rue Bryn Mawr, Pa. General Sigma Chi. Earle I. Runner, II Wheeling, W. Va. General Lambda Chi Alpha; Sigma Upsilon, President, 4; Archive, 1, 2, 3, 4, Editor, 4; Chronicle, 2, 3; Duke Players. Robert H. Rushmer Johnson City, N. Y. Electrical Engineering Sigma Pi Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Iota Gamma Pi; Delta Epsilon Sigma; American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Dean ' s List. Rudisill Rue Ri Rushmer 90 DUKE UNIVERSITY Philip M. Russell Durham, N. C. Pre-Legal Kappa Alpha; Omicron DeHa Kappa; Archive, 1, 2, 3, 4, Busi- ness Manager, 4; Beta Omega Sigma, Treasurer, 2; Sophomore Council, 2; Class Secretary, 3; Junior Council; Assistant Boxing Manager, 1, 2, Manager, 3, 4 Tombs; Publications Board, 4 Commencement Marshal, 3 North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Treasurer, 4; CHANTICLEER, 4. William A. Sager Hagerstown, Md. Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon. Robert T. Rutherford Charlotte, N. C. Pre -Medical Pi Kappa Alpha; Delta Phi Alpha; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dean ' s List. David N. Saleeby Monroe, N. C. Pre-Medical Pegram Chemistry Club Dean ' s List. Frank G. Satterfield, Jr. Durham, N. C. Pre-Legal Pi Kappa Phi; Tau Kappa Alpha; Winner Intra- mural Oratorical Contest, 3, 4; Wrestling, 2; De- bating Team. Fan Scales Stoneville, N. C. General Salem College, 1, 2. Russell Sager Joe Andrew Scales Monroe, N, C. Business Administration Football, 1. Robert E. Scattergood Burlington, N. L Electrical Engineering Pi Mu Epsilon, Vice President 4; American Insti- tute of Electrical Engineering, Vice President; Iota Gamma Pi, Vice President; Sophomore Honors; Delta Epsilon Sigm.a, Secretary-Treasurer; Dean ' s List. Rutherford Saleeby Satterfield F. Scales J. Scales Scattergood 91 THE CHANTICLEER Edwin H. Schaeffer Roselle Park, N. J. Civil Engineering Pi Mu Epsilon, President; Del- ta Epsilon Sigma; Iota Gamma Pi; Symphony Orchestra, 1, 2, 3; American Society of Civil Engineers; Dean ' s List. Daniel B. Schafer Fort Wayne, Ind. Business Administration Phi Delta Theta; Swimming, 3; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Senior Council. Evalyn Schaffle Asheville, N. C. Teaching Theta Alpha Phi; Sandals; Nereidian Club, Secretary, 2, President, 4; Duke Players, 1,2, 3, 4; May Day, 1, 2, 3; Pres- ident ' s Club. Herbert Theodore Schnninke Ridgewood, N. J. Business Administration Dean ' s List. Shaeffer Schaffle Schafer Schminke Donald Schnaitt White Plains, N. Y. Teaching Boxing, 3, 4; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4. Carl H. Schneeweiss Clifton, N. J. General Emil Lee Schuerman Leonardo, N. J. Mechanical Engineering American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Iota Gamma Pi; Dean ' s List. Anne McElroy Scott Waco, Texas General Pi Beta Phi; Baylor University, 1, 2, 3. Schneeweiss Schuerman Scott 92 DUKE UNIVERSITY Mary Covington Secrest Monroe, N. C. Teaching Chi Delta Phi; Meredith Col- lege, 1, 2; Archive, 4; Chron- icle, 4. Thomas Duncan Sellers Norfolk Va. Pre-Medical Kappa Sigma; College of Wil- liam and Mary, 1, 2; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3, 4; Trident Club, 3; Dean ' s List. Harry Wells Severance Lake City, S. C. Business Administration Delta Sigma Phi; Baseball, 1; Columbia Literary Society; Glee Club, 1. Garfield Shafer, Jr. Norfolk, Va. Pre -Legal Kappa Sigma. John Joseph Shortell Hartford, Conn. General Delta Sigma Phi; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basket- ball, 1; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; House of Rep- resentatives, 3. Frances Isobel Shriner York, Pa. General Delta Delta Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Eko-L; Music Study Club, President, 4; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3, 4, Co-ed Literary Editor, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Chapel Choir, 1, 2; Polity Club; Duke Players, 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 4. Shortell Shriner Silleck Eleanor Lane Silleck Peekskill, N. Y. Delta Phi Alpha; Chronicle, 1; Glee Club, 3, 4; Choir, 3, 4; Music Study Club; Dean ' s List. Patti Marie Sills , Nashville, N. C. Pre-Medical Delta Delta Delta; Delta Phi Alpha; Pegram Chemistry Club; Socials Standards, 4. 93 THE CHANTICLEER Paul E. Simpson Ridgewood, N. J. Pre -Medical Glee Club, 1, 2; Choir, 1, 2; Track, 1; Basketball, 1; Pegram Chemistry Club. Charles T. Sinclair, Jr. Carthage, N. C. Business Administration Alpha Kappa Psi; Chronicle, 1; Commencement Marshal, 3. Frank Sizemore High Point, N. C. Business Administration Phi Delta T h e t a ; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa; Beta Omega Sigma; Red Friars; Football, 1, 2; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Co-Captain, 4; Athletic Coun- cil, 2; Class President, 4; Dean ' s List. Kappa Alpha; University of Arizona, 1, 2; Band, 3, 4. 94 DUKE UNIVERSITY F. Colton Somers, III Haddonfield, N. L Electrical Engineering Pi Mu Epsilon, Secretary, 4; American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Secretary, 3, Chair- man, 4; Iota Gamma Pi; Delta Epsilon Sigma; Engineers ' Council, 4; Track, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Gladys Estelle Souder Macon, Ga. General Delta Delta Delta; Chronicle, ], 2, 3, 4, Co-ed Business Man- ager, 3; Publications Board, 4; Duke Players, 1, 2, 3, 4; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4, Sec- retary, 4; President ' s Club, 4. Elgar Clyde Soper Olney, Md. General American University, 1, 2; Undergraduate Ministerial As- sociation; Dean ' s List. Hilda Spence Goldsboro, N. C. Teaching Delta Phi Alpha, Vice Pres- ident, 4; Dean ' s List. Edger Robert Stallings Augusta, Ga. Pre-Legal Pi Kappa Phi. Oscar Grant Stallings Augusta, Ga. General Dean ' s List. E. Stallings O. Stallings Steeg Phi Kappa Psi; Alpha Kappa Psi; De Pauv versity, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Eleanor Stevenson New Bern, N. C. General Zeta Tau Alpha; Hollins College, 1 95 THE CHANTICLEER Theodore L. Stritzinger Norristown, Pa. Business Administration Delta Sigma Phi; Tennis, 4; Dean ' s List. Elizabeth B. Sutton Harrisburg, Pa. General Phi Mu; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 4; PoUty Club; Womens ' Ath- letic Association Board, 3, 4; Social Standards, 4; Duke Play- ers, 3, 4; Senior Executive Com- mittee; Class Secretary, 4. George Foster Sutherland Grundy, Va. General Hiwassee Junior College, 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Ernest C. Swiger Clarksburg, W. Va. Pre-Legal Kappa Alpha. Stritzinger Sutton Sutherland Swiger Horace E. Tabb Elizabethtown, Ky. - Pre-Legal Sigma Nu; Basketball, 1. Ralph A. Taylor Summit, N. J. Business Administration Lambda Chi Alpha; Tennis, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basket- ball, 1, 2; Beta Omega Sigma. Margaret Willard Taylor Chester, Pa. Teaching Alpha Phi; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 4; French Salon Treasurer, 4; Glee Club, 3, 4, Secretary, 4; Choir, 3, 4. Harold K. Terry Bahama, N. C. General Sigma Pi Sigma; Pegram Chemistry Club. Tabb M. Taylor R. Taylor Terry 96 DUKE UNIVERSITY Jeannette Te Selle Gainesville, Fla. Pre -Legal Kappa Delta. William Dalzell Trader Elmira, N. Y. General Theta Alpha Phi; Dean ' s List. R. Zack Thomas, Jr. Rock Hill, S. C. General Sigma Phi Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kappa; Track, 1; Football, 1; Beta Omega Sigma; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Red Friars; Musical Clubs, President, 4; Class Treasurer, 2, President, 3; Student Gov- ernment President, 4; Vice Pres- ident Southeastern Region of N. S. F. A., 4. Joseph A. Trainor, Jr. High Bridge, N. J. Mechanical Engineering Phi Eta Sigma; American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers, 2, 3, 4; President, 4; 9019; Delta Epsilon Sigma; Iota Gam- ma Pi, President, 4; Glee Club, 2, 3; Southgate Council, 1, 2, 3, 4, President, 4; Dean ' s List. Katherine E. Trousdale Florence, Ala, Teaching Sigma Kappa. William W. Turner, Jr. Montclair, N. J. Mechanical Engineering Delta Sigma Phi; Pi Mu Epsilon; Chronicle, 4; Manager Swimming, 4; Iota Gamma Pi; Delta Ep- silon Sigma; Engineers ' Club; American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Duke Players; Dean ' s List. Trousdale Turner Turpit W. James Turpit Hastings, Neb. Law Alpha Tau Omega. Martha Van Vactor Marion, Ind. Business Administration Northwestern University, 1. 97 THE CHANTICLEER Jane Vonderlieth Glen Rock, N. J. Business Administration Margaret Ann Waldrep Hammond, La. General Kappa Delta; Delta Psi Omega; Whitworth College, 1,2; Class Treasurer, 4; CHANTI- CLEER, 3, 4; P u b 11 c a t i o n s Board, 4; Senior Council; May Day Committee; Dean ' s List. Robert Eugene Walsh Elmira, N. Y. General Symphony Orchestra; ram Chemistry Club. Peg- Thurman L. Ward Galax, Va. General Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Tombs, Vice President, 4; Beta Omega Sigma; Track, 1; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4. Charles Ransome Warren Chatham, Va. Pre-Legal Football, 1; Polity Club; Cheer Leader, 2; Col- umbia Literary Society. Chandler Washer, Jr. Maplewood, N. J. Mechanical Engineering Engineers ' Club; American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers; Dean ' s List. John Clarence Watson, Jr. Charlotte, N. C. General Pi Kappa Phi; Basketball, 1; Track, 4; Band, 1, 2, 3; Glee Club, 1, 3; Choir, 1, 3. Kenneth D. Weagly Waynesboro, Pa. General Sigma Phi Epsilon. Warren Washer Watson Weagly 98 DUKE UNIVERSITY Harmon M. Webb Philadelphia, Pa. Business Administration Pi Kappa Phi; Football, 1, 2. John M. Webb Durham, N. C. Teaching Alpha Tau Omega; Track, 1, 2, 3; Cross-Country, 2, 3; Polity Club, President, 4; Com- mencement Marshal, 1, 2. Richard F. Weil Buffalo, N. Y. Business Administration University of Buffalo, 1, 2. Nathan Irving Weinstein St. Augustine, Fla. Pre-Legal Zeta Beta Tau; Delta Phi Alpha; Pegram Chemistry Club; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Symphony Orchestra, 1, 2; Jun- ior Council; Senior Council. Walter H. Weintz Austinville, Va. Honors Sigma Upsilon; Antioch College, 1; Chronicle, 4; Archive, 4; Columbia Literary Society; Dean ' s List. Ida Welsh Deal, N. J. Pre-Legal Duke Players; Debating Club. Weintz Welsh Wentz Earle Jerry Wentz Danville, Va. Omicron Delta Kappa; Tombs; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Beta Omega Sigma; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; All- Southern-End, 3, 4; All-American Honorable Men- tion; Dean ' s List. Carl R. Wesselhoft Bayshore, N. Y. Pre-Legal Pi Kappa Phi. Wesselhoft 99 THE CHANTICLEER Ethel Weyant Cedarhurst, N. Y. Pre-Medical Adelphi College, 1, 2; Delta Phi Rho Alpha, 3, 4, Vice Pres- ident, 4. Charles Edgar White Hertford, N. C. Social Service Lambda Chi Alpha; CHANTI- CLEER, 3; Tra ck, 1, 2; Columbia Literary Society. George Edward White, Jr. Bradenton, Fla. General Delta Phi Alpha; Theta Alpha Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Council; Chronicle, 1; Duke Players, 2, 3, 4; Dean ' s List. Herbert G. Whiting Mountain Lakes, N. J. Pre -Legal Lambda Chi Alpha; Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3; Archive, 1, 2; Swimming, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dean ' s List. Weyant G. White Dean ' s List. C. White Whiting Robert M. Whitley Stantonsburg, N. C. Pre-Medical Austin Robert Whitmore Toledo, Ohio General Sophomore Y Council; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Columbia Literary Society; Undergraduate Ministerial Association; Dean ' s List. Katherine Janet Whitmyre Indiana, Pa. Teaching Kappa Kappa Gamma; Pennsylvania State Teachers College, 1, 2; Women ' s Athletic Asso- ciation Board, 3, 4; Student Council, 4; Freshman Adviser, 4; White Duchy; Nereidian Club. Fred A. Wildnauer East Orange, N. J. Business Administration Keys Club; Alpha Kappa Psi; Junior Council- Archive, 3; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Alpha Kappa Psi, President, 4; Track, 1; Glee Club, 3; CHANTI- CLEER, 2. Whitley Whitmore Whitmyre Wildnauer 100 DUKE UNIVERSITY Luther K. Williams Durham, N. C. Business Administration Football, 1, 2, 3; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Beta Omega Sigma. Melvin J. Willianns Durham, N, C. General Beta Omega Sigma; Wres- tling, 1, 2, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Football, 1; Undergraduate Min- isterial Association; Junior Council; Sophomore Y Coun- cil. A. Gray Wilson Indiana, Pa. Business Administration Phi Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kap- pa Psi; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4. Virginia Elizabeth Winfree Lynchburg, Va. General Sigma Kappa; Sorority Pan- Hellenic Council, 3, 4, Vice President, 4. Ernest A. Winton Miami Beach, Fla. Business Administration Keys Club; Glee Club, I, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Student Director Musical Clubs, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Swimming, 3, 4. H. W. Witcover Darlington, S. C. Honors Alpha Kappa Psi; Dean ' s List. L. Williams Wilson Ellen Witwer Tulsa, Okla. General M. Williams Winfree Kappa Kappa Gamma; Phi Theta Kappa; Gulf Park College, 1, 2; May Day Committee. William Egleston Woodruff Winston-Salem, N. C. Pre-Medical Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Co-Editor-in- Chief CHANTICLEER, 4, Assistant Editor, 3; Iota Gamma Pi; Sophomore Honor Scholarship; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 2, 3, 4; Publications Board, 4; Dean ' s List. Winton Witcover Witwer Woodruff 101 THE CHANTICLEER Herbert M. Woolf Providence, R. I. Pre -Legal Chronicle, 1; Archive, 1; Soc- cer, 3, 4; Tennis, 1; Dean ' s List. Madge Woolsey Glen Rock, N. J. General Zeta Tau Alpha; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4. A. Lyman Wright, Jr. Elmira, N. Y. Business Administration Delta Tau Delta; Alpha Kappa Psi; Freshman Council; Sopho- more Y Council; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3; Chronicle, 1, 2, 3, 4, Assistant Advertising Man- ager, 3, Office Manager, 4. Fred C. Wright, Jr. Hagerstown, Md. Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon; Basket- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tennis, 3, 4. Woolf A. Wright Woolsey F. Wright J. Malcolm Wright Westfield, N. J. General Football, 1; Baseball, 1; Beta Omega Sigma; Freshman Council; Sophom.ore Y Council. William B. Wright, Jr. Raleigh, N. C. General Kappa Alpha; Kappa Kappa Psi; Sigma Upsilon; Band, 3, 4; Symphony Orchestra, 4; Chronicle, 3, 4. William Norman Yelverton Eureka, N. C. Business Administration Alpha Kappa Psi; Dean ' s List. Esther Zuckerman Durham, N. C. Teaching Town Girls ' Club; Dean ' s List. J. Wright W. Wright Yelverton Zuckerman 102 SENIOR NURSES THE CHANTICLEER SENIOR NURSES Evelyn M. Cadle Augusta, Ga. Ona M. Gates Mebane, N. G. Mary Elizabeth Gorbett Kinston, N. G. Ruth Elizabeth Gambill Peoria, 111. Cadle Gorbett Gates Gambill Frances Randolph Hunter Marlinton, Va. Mary Alice McGain McGormick, S. G. Hunter King Mary Emily King Magnolia, N. G. McGain 104 DUKE UNIVERSITY SENIOR NURSES Margaret Carolyn Moore Norfolk, Va. Sarah Elizabeth Strother Waxhaw, N. C. Elizabeth May Thompson Durham, N. C. Alice Rosabelle Wehunt Cherryville, N. C. Mary Cornelia Williams Greensboro, N. C. Williams Margaret A. Zirkle Petersburg, Va. Yat€ 105 DUKE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF NURSING The Duke University School of Nursing was established in nineteen twenty- five in connection with the School of Medicine of the University. The first class was enrolled in nineteen-thirty. The plan of the School is to give a sound basis course in Nursing Education which will prepare young women to give intelligent nursing care to the sick in hospitals a nd homes of the community, as well as an introduction to the problems of community health and preventive medicine. Two courses are offered: the Three-Year Basic Course leading to a diploma in nursing, and the Five-Year Course granting a degree of Bachelor of Science in nursing. There has been a steady growth in the enrollment of the School, and each year shows a wider distribution of states represented. The students who have graduated have either gone on to further study, or entered some of the various fields of nursing, such as Institutional, Private Duty, or Public Health Nursing. Since nineteen-thirty the Diploma in Nursing has been conferred upon fifty- five persons. Sixteen will graduate this year. JUNIORS Juniors D. Adams R. B. Adams R. Adams W. R. Adams Akin Alberts Alexander Althoff Ambler Anderson Andrews Andrus Appleford Ardolino G. Armstrong M. Armstrong Arnold Ashby Dorothy Adanis Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Randal B. Adams Washington, D. C. Chronicle 1. Ruth Adams Esterly, Pa. Pi Mu Epsilon; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Willis R. Adams Clarkesville, Va. Elizabeth Akin Detroit, Mich. Delta Delta Delta; Freshman Adviser 3; Duke Players 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Chronicle, Co-ed Business Man- ager 3. Jack Alberts Hoboken, N. J. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Wendell W. Alexander Villanova, Pa. Pi Mu Epsilon; American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Engineers ' Club. C. Clair AlthofE Hanover, Pa. Delta Phi Alpha; Swimming 1, 2. Wayne H. Ambler Abington, Pa. Kappa Sigma; Baseball 1, 2, 3; Soccer 3; Tombs; Athletic Council 3. Marie Anderson Jacksonville Fla. Delta Delta Delta; Chronicle I, 3; Duke Players 2, 3, Co-ed Business Manager 3; Dean ' s List. Vernon Liles Andrews Mount Gilead, N. C. Bettie Andrus Columbus, Ohio George B. Appleford North Andover, Mass Delta Tau Delta; Pegram Chemistry Club. John C. Ardolino Metuchen, N. J. Sigma Chi; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; Wrestling 1, 2, 3, Captain 3. Gary Arnistrong Selma Ala. Kappa Delta; Distaff 1; Social Stand- ards Committee; CHANTICLEER 2; Dean ' s List. Mary Engle Arnistrong Binghamton, N. Y. Kappa Delta; Randolph-Macon Wo- mans College 1; Freshman Adviser 3. Lee Arnold Chicago, 111. Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Beta Omega Sigma; Football 1, 2; Honors in Mathematics; Dean ' s List. Henry Nicholson Ashby Durham, N. C. Alpha Tau Omega; Tennis 1, 2, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Archive 1. 108 Juniors E. D. Atkins J. M. Atkins Bailey C. H. Baker Barber Barnes Atkinson Auld Austin Baeder W. R. Baker J. P. Baldwin R. L. Baldwin Ballard P. Bassett E. R. Bassett Bateman Bean Emmet D. Atkins, Jr. Gastonia, N. C. Alpha Lambda Tau; Kappa Kappa Psi; Georgia Tech. 1; Band 2; Sym- phony Orchestra 2; Chronicle 2. James M. Atkins Asheville, N. C. Basketball 1, 2, 3; Cheer Leader 1, 2, 3. John V. Atkinson Pueblo, Col. Sigma Pi Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Pegram Chemistry Club; Band 1, 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra 1, 3; Dean ' s List. Mary E. Auld Charleston, W. Va. Zeta Tau Alpha; Student Govern- ment 3. Richard E. Austin Delm ar, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sophomore Y Council; CHANTICLEER 1, 2, 3. Fred N. Baeder Nutley, N. J. Delta Phi Alpha; Sophomore Honors; 9019; Dean ' s List. George Robert Bailey Rockville Centre, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi; Swimming 2, 3; Dean ' s List. Charles H. Baker South Orange, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi; American Society of Civil Engineers; Engineers ' Club. William Russell Baker Bronxville, N. Y. Band 1, 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3. John Paul Baldwin Rochester, Pa. Phi Kappa Psi; Geneva College 1, 2. R. L. Baldwin, Jr. Durham, N. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football 1, 2, 3. Chadwick Carroll Ballard Exmore, Va. Delta Tau Delta; Columbia Literary Society. Horace Barber Glens Falls, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta; Basketball 1; Fresh- man Council; Soccer 2, 3. John I. Barnes, Jr. Clayton, N. C. Paula Bassett New York, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Music Study Club; Student Government 3; Glee Club; Sandals; Dean ' s List. Edgar Rees Bassett Scarsdale, N. Y. Oliver Jerome Bateman, Jr. Byron, Ga. Delta Phi Alpha; Pegram Chemistry Club; Dean ' s List. Robert T. Bean Louisville, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega; Archive 1, 2, 3. 109 J u n 1 o r s Beard Beazley Beck Beich Bennett Birn inghanri Bistline Bode Boeker Books Bowen Boyce A. L. Boyd J. C. Boyd Boyle Boylston Brinn Broughton Francis Dean Beard Durham, N. C. Assistant Football Manager 1, 2, Tennis 1, 3. 3; Richard L. Beazley South Orange, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi; Junior Council; Amer- ican Society of Civil Engineers; Dean ' s List. Willard Sperring Beck Beverly, N. J. Sigma Chi. Paul M. Beich Bloomington, 111. Lambda Chi Alpha; Tennis 1, 2, 3. Albert Edward Bennett Brooklyn, N.Y. Phi Kappa Sigma; Delta Phi Alpha, Treasurer; Archive. William G. Birmingham Liberty, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta. James Adams Bistline Cumberland, Md. Phi Eta Sigma; Kappa Kappa Psi; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Hon- ors; Band 2, 3; Columbia Literary Society, President, 3; 9019; Freshman Y Council; Sophomore Y Coun- cil; Y. M. C. A. Treasurer 3; Dean ' s List. Helmuth H. Bode Weehawken, N. J. Lambda Chi Alpha; Delta Phi Alpha, Treasurer 2, President 3; American Society of Civil Engineers; Heidel- berg University 2; Football 1. Robert Otto Boeker Seymour, Conn. Phi Delta Theta; Beta Omega Sigma; CHANTICLEER 1, 2; Chronicle 3; Duke Players 1, 2; Junior Pan-Hellenic Council. J. Wesley Books Haddon Heights, N. J. Phi Kappa Sigma; Columbia Literary Society; Chronicle 1; Archive 1. Walton Bowen Macon, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi; Y. W. C. A. Vice President; Women ' s Student Govern- ment; Sandals. Stanley F. Boyce Baltimore, Md. American Society of Mechanical En- gineers, Treasurer; Engineers ' Club. Anna L. Boyd Jacksonville, Fla. Pi Beta Phi; Nereidian Club, Vice President; Social Standards Com- mittee; Dean ' s List. James C. Boyd Huntington, W. Va. Phi Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Football 1, 2, 3. Kenneth MacDonald Boyle Arlington, N. J. Delta Sigma Phi; Pi Mu Epsilon; Soc- cer Manager 3; Glee Club 1. B. F. Boylston Aiken, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Sara Brinn Hertford, N. C. ' Kay Broughton Hertford, N. C. St. Mary ' s Junior College 1, 2. 110 u n 1 o r s E. W. Brown J. F. Brown J. W. Brown Brundage Bruner Burger Burgess Burke Burrell Burwell Bynum Byrn Callahan Garden Carrigan Buck Bussell Chamblis Edwin Wells Brown Asheville, N. C. Jean Fontaine Brown Fort Benning, Ga. Sigma Kappa; George Washington University 1. James Walter Brown, Jr. Gatesville N. C. Beta Omega Sigma; 9019; Pegram Chemistry Club; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Honors; Track 1; Phi Eta Sigma; Dean ' s List. Jesse Powell Brundage Chester, Pa. Kappa Sigma; Chronicle 2. Jerome Bruner Forest Hills, N. Y. Chronicle 1; Track 1; Dean ' s List. Robert E. Buck Fort Washington, Pa. Pi Mu Epsilon; American Society of Civil Engineers. Ill Josephine Terry Burger Baltimore, Md. Kappa Delta; Delta Phi Rho Alpha; Women ' s Athletic Association Board 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Freshman Adviser 3; Social Standards Com- mittee 3; Distaff 1; Choir 1. Woodrow Burgess Royal Oak, Mich. Delta Tau Delta. Joe F. Burke Detroit, Mich. University of Detroit 1; Duke Ambas- sadors Orchestra Leader. Clayton J. Burrell Manistigue, Mich. Delta Tau Delta; Northwestern Uni- versity 1, 2; Dean ' s List. George Allen Burwell Warrenton, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi; Glee Club 1, 2; Assist- ant Manager Swimming 1,2; Manager Swimming 3; Dean ' s List. Wilsie Florence Bussell Durham, N. C. Freshman Honors; Sophomore Hon- ors; Chronicle 1; Town Girls ' Club; French Club; Dean ' s List. Eva Page Bynum Rockingham, N. C. Delta Delta Delta; Randolph-Macon Woman ' s College 1, 2. Mary Lalla Byrn Mayfield, Ky Kappa Kappa Gamma; Ward-Bel- mont 1, 2; Woman ' s College Orch- estra 3; Social Standards Committee; Dean ' s List. Peter E. Callahan New York, N. Y. Kappa Sigma; Rutgers University 1. Campbell Carden Chattanooga, Tenn. Pi Kappa Alpha. Margaret H. Carrigan Jersey City, N. J. Sizer Chambliss Lookout Mt., Tenn. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3. Juniors Cheek Clayton Condit Childs Cleaveland Cone Clark Cline Connell Clarke Cobb Coppedge Clay C. Collins W. A. Corbett S. Clay H. R. Collins W. H. Corbett Herbert Nash Cheek Durham, N. C. Sigma Chi; Beta Omega Sigma; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, 3; Tombs. Frances Childs Durham, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta; Forum Club, Vice President 3; Town Girls ' Club; Dean ' s List. Fred Clark Maplewood, N. J. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Beta Omega Sig- ma; Symphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2; Tennis Manager 3. Claire Belle Clarke New York, N. Y. Phi Mu Sorority; Pan-Hellenic Council. Arthur Thomas Clay Indianapolis, Ind. Pi Kappa Alpha. Stafford Clay Beckley, W. Va. Pegram Chemistry Club; Glee Club 2, 3; Dean ' s List. Edgar Lawrence Clayton Bayside, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Psi; Band 1, 2, 3; Sym- phony Orchestra 1, 2. Fred N. Cleaveland Orange, N. J. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Omega Sigma; 9019; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3; Duke Players; Dean ' s List. Gwen Cline Charlotte, N. C. Kappa Delta; Sandals; Class Treas- urer 2; Women ' s Athletic Association Board 2, 3; Nereidian Club, Secretary 2, 3; Chronicle 3; Dean ' s List; Delta Phi Rho Alpha. Charles D. Cobb Greenville, N. C. Curtis Collins Jacksonville, Fla. Phi Delta Theta. Harold Reeves Collins South Seaville, N. J. Phi Eta Sigma; Dean ' s List; 9019. A. Nelson Condit East Orange, N. J. Glee Club 1, 2; Choir 1, 2. Arthur Read Cone, Jr. Buffalo, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta; Track 1; CHANTI- CLEER 1, 2, 3. Margaret Nowell Connell Charleston, W. Va. Eleanor Browne Coppedge Cleveland Heights, Ohio Kappa Delta; Southwestern College 1, 2. Waddell Albert Corbett Wilmington, N. C. William Horace Corbett Wilmington, N. C. 112 Juniors Cornett Cox Daniels Cornish Craven Dator Corriher Crum David Cosgrove Culbertson Davis Cottingham Cummings Donna Day Cowan Curtis Doris Day B. H. Cornett Bluefield, W. Va. Sigma Nu. Donald Cornish New Rochelle, N. Y. American Society of Mechanical En- gineers. W. Douglas Corriher Charlotte, N. C. Phi Eta Sigma; Sophomore Y Coun- cil, President; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3; Columbia Literary Society; Minis- terial Fellowship, Secretary 3; Dean ' s List. Walter A. Cosgrove Southampton, N. Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Junior Pan-Hel- lenic Council. Tom Cottingham Douglas, Ga. Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Council, President; Glee Club; Choir; Soph- omore Y Council; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3. Robert L. Cowan Newport, Tenn Sigma Phi Epsilon. H. Morris Cox Mount Olive, N. C. Dean ' s List. . Isobel Craven Lexington, N. C. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Glee Club I, 2; Choir 1; Archive 1; Dean ' s List. Emilie Crum Orangeburg, S. C. Alpha Delta Pi; Junior Big Sisters, Treasurer; Sandals; May Day Com- mittee 2. Martha Jane Culbertson Cincinnati, Ohio Kappa Delta; Sandals; Student Coun- cil 3; Dean ' s List. Robert W. Cummings Lynbrook, N. Y. Pi Mu Epsilon, Treasurer 3; American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Paul Makepeace Curtis Greensboro, N. C. Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council; Columbia Literary Society. Robert P. Daniels Elizabeth City, N. C. Assistant Manager Baseball 1, 2. Frank Dator Mahwah, N. J. Football 1, 2; Track 1, 2, 3; Cross- country 2, 3; Freshman Council; Columbia Literary Society; Sopho- more Y Council. J. K. David, Jr. Jacksonville, Fla. Dean ' s List. George D. Davis Pittsburgh, Pa. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Glee Club; Choir. Donna Day Bradenton, Fla. Delta Delta Delta; Chronicle 1. Doris Day Bradenton, Fla. Delta Delta Delta. 113 Juniors Deneen Desvernine Duckett Duehring Edwards M. Edwards Marg. Edwards Etter Farrar Fennell Ferris Findlay V. Duehring Eastwood Faires Farmer Fisher W. H. Fisher Russell Sanders Deneen Bakersville, N. C. Phi Eta Sigma; Sophomore Honors; 9019; Dean ' s List. Eugene Desvernine Marianao, Havana, Cuba Pi Kappa Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; 9019; Dean ' s List. Sara Duckett Charlotte, N. C. Alpha Phi; Delta Phi Alpha; Pegram Chemistry Club; Woman ' s College Orchestra; Music Study Club; Dean ' s List. Frederica Elizabeth Duehring Washington, D. C. Alpha Phi; Wilson Teachers ' College 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Virginia Atwell Duehring Washington, D. C. Alpha Phi; Wilson Teachers ' College 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Howard Eastwood, Jr. Burlington, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi; Glee Club 1,2; Assist- ant Track Manager 1, 2, 3; Class Secretary 3. Frances Edwards Miami, Fla. Kappa Alpha Theta; Mary Baldwin College 1. Malcolm Edwards Scarsdale, N. Y. Delta Epsilon Sigma; American Soci- ety of Mechanical Engineers, Vice President 3; Wrestling 1; Southgate Council 2, 3, 4; (Omitted from Senior Section by Mistake). Margery Edwards Greensboro, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi; Archive 1, 2; CHAN- TICLEER 1, 2; Freshman Adviser 3. Harry Etter Shippensburg, Pa. Phi Delta Theta; Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle, Issue Editor 3; Track 1. Betty Faires Drexel Hill, Pa. Kappa Alpha Theta; Student Council 1, 3; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council 2, 3; Sandals; Dean ' s List. Willis G. Farmer Bailey, N. C. Phi Kappa Psi; Track 1. William Baker Farrar, Jr. Summerville, Ga. Kappa Alpha; Pegram Chemistry Club. George Fennell Mamaroneck, N. Y. Duke Players. Douglas Willson Ferris New Rochelle, N. Y. Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; Chron- icle 1; Cross-Country 1, 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3. Betty Findlay Bethlehem, Pa. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3. John L. Fisher Lakewood, Ohio Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Omega Sigma; Glee Club; Pe- gram Chemistry Club. William Henry Fisher, Jr. Centreville, Md. 114 u n 1 o r s Flanagan Frantz Gantt R. Flanagan Fraser Garmon Fletcher Flowers Friedlander Fryer Gates George Folsom Fuller Gibbons Fox Fulmei Gibsor Harriet Flanagan Rockville Centre, N. Y. Phi Mu; Adelphi College 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Ruby Flanagan Lynchburg, Va. Phi Mu. Albert W. Fletcher Scarsdale, N. Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Track 1,2; Soccer 2, 3; Wrestling 2; Band 1; Glee Club 1; Choir 1. Harold Flowers Hickory, N. C. Kenneth P. Folsom Washington, D. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Assistant Box- ing Manager 1, 3. L. Palmer Fox Harrisburg, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha; Archive 1; Base- ball Manager 1. Ivan D. Frantz Clarksburg, W. Va. Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Pi Sigma; Delta Phi Alpha; Iota Gamma Pi; Pegram Chemistry Club; Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council; Band 1, 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra; 9019; Dean ' s List. Hortense Fraser Elizabeth, N. J. Delta Delta Delta; New Jersey College for Women 1, 2. Irwin Friedlander Moultrie, Ga. Zeta Beta Tau; Phi Eta Sigma; 9019; Wrestling 2; Debating Club 3; Dean ' s List. John C. Fryer Richmond, Va. Stephen Fuller Chevy Chase, Md. Kappa Sigma; Baseball 1, 2, 3; Foot- ball 1. William Henry Fulmer Savannah, Ga. Pi Kappa Phi; Basketball 1; CHANTI- CLEER 1, 2, 3; Pegram Chemistry Club. Hazel Ann Gantt Durham, N. C. Dean ' s List. Esther Garnion Charlotte, N. C. Alpha Gamma Delta; Queens-Chi- cora College 1, 2. Margina Gates Macon, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi. Judson George Laurens, S. C. Track 1, 2, 3; Cross-Country 2, 3, Captain 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Tombs. Julius J. Gibbons, Jr. Wilson, N. C. Kappa Sigma. Gordon M. Gibson Chatham, N. J. Chronicle 3. 115 u n 1 o r s Gilbert Gill Gillander Gillespie Goddard Goldstein Goodson Gorringe Graeter Green Gregory Griffith Earl S. Gilbert Atlanta, Ga. Charles H. Gill Newport, R. I. Kappa Alpha; Tennis 1, 2, 3; Pan- Hellenic Council 3; Publications Board 3; Tombs; Alpha Kappa Psi. Robert C. Gillander Pittsburgh, Pa. Sigma Chi; Football 1; Pan-Hellenic Council. J. Stuart Gillespie Stamford, Conn. Archive 2, 3; Chronicle 2; Duke Players 1. Willard Merrill Gillies Melrose, Mass. Delta Sigma Phi; Chronicle 1, 2, 3. Richard B. Gilpin Maplewood, N. J. Sigma Nu; Class Secretary 1; Track 1, 2, 3; Football 1. Marjorie Goddard Brooklyn, N. Y. Phi Mu. Samuel Goldstein Salem, N. J. Duke Players. Georgia Goodson Winston-Salem, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta; St. Mary ' s Junior College 1, 2. James N. Gorringe East Orange, N. J. Delta Sigma Phi; Head Cheer Leader 3. Seynnour Bernard Gostin White Plains, N. Y. Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council. Robert D. Gourley New York, N. Y. Gillies Gilpin Gostin Gourley Guerin F. L. Guerin Annadale Graeter Richmond, Va. Alpha Delta Pi; Duke Players 1, 2, 3; CHANTICLEER 1, 2, 3; Archive 1, 2, 3, Business Manager 3; Glee Club 1. W. Thornton Green Louisville, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega; Chronicle 2, 3; Pan-Hellenic Council. Rolfe Gregory Petersburg, Va. American Society of Mechanical En- gineers; Engineers ' Club. Erma Griffith Lebanon, Va. Debating 2; Debaters ' Council, Vice President 3. B. Bowman Guerin Mendham, N. J. Phi Eta Sigma; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Fre s h m a n Honors; Football 1; Freshman Coun- cil. Frederick L. Guerin South Orange, N. J. 116 Juniors Gwin Hanes Havrkins Haas P. H. Hanes Heddesheimer Haines Hall Hallock Hardy Harris R. K. Harris Henson Hermann Herrick Ham Harrison Hessick Anne Gwin Natchez, Miss. Alpha Delta Pi; Dean ' s List. Richard G. Haas Youngstown, Ohio Lambda Chi Alpha. R. Frith Haines Bayamo, Cuba Wrestling, 1, 2, 3. Robert F. Hall Charleston, W. Va. Pi Kappa Alpha; Football 1, 2; Junior Pan-Hellenic Council. Charles Benjamin Hallock Elmira, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta; Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle 2, 3; Assistant Basketball Manager 1. Newton Henderson Hanes Winston-Salem, N. C. P. Huber Hanes, Jr. Winston-Salem, N. C. Alpha Tau Omega; Beta Omega Sig- ma; Track 1, 2, 3; Football 1; Baseball 1; CHANTICLEER 1. Carter Hawkins Asheville, N. C. Mars Hill College 1, 2; Dean ' s List. George H. Heddesheimer Yonkers, N. Y. Columbia University 1; Chronicle 2. Frances Henson Rahway, N. J. Johnnie Mae Hardy Gulfport, Miss. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Gulf Park Delta Delta Delta, Maryyille College College 1, 2 ' ' 1®® lub; Orchestra. Mary Trapp Harris Cuthbert, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi; Andrew College 1, 2; Archive 3. R. Kennedy Harris Nev port, Ark. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Gayle Louis Hermann Cleveland Heights, Ohio Albert Louis Herrick Lebanon, Ohio Sigma Chi; Freshman Council; Chronicle 1, 2; Beta Omega Sigma; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Tombs. Alan W. Ham, Jr. Milton, Mass. Lambda Chi Alpha. Charles L. Harrison, Jr. Cape Girardeau, Mo. Chronicle 1. Lucile Hessick Washington, D. C. Alpha Delta Pi; Chronicle; Archive. 117 Juniors Hinck Hooten Hunter Hinnant Horneffer Ibbeken Hintermeister Howard Jackson Hoffman Hoyle Jacobs Holt Hughey Jantzen Hooks Hunt Jenkinson Robert H. Hinck Short Hills, N. J. Kappa Sigma; Soccer. Willianri W. Hinnant, Jr. Raleigh, N. C. Pi Kappa Alpha. Richard Fredrick Hintermeister Brooklyn, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta; Dean ' s List. Johnny Hoffman Fort Wayne, Ind. Sigma Chi; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Golf 1; Chronicle; Beta Omega Sigma. Cicero T. Holt, Jr. Burlington, N. C. Edward H. Hooks Ayden, N. C. Football 1, 2, 3; Chronicle 1; Omega Sigma. Beta Charles Edwards Hooten Bloomfield, N. J. Keys Club; Swimming 1; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3. Grant Horneffer Westfield, N. J. Kappa Sigma; Beta Omega Sigma. Robert Glen Howard Washington, D. C. Sigma Nu; Sigma Upsilon; Delta Phi Alpha; Cross-Country 1; Track 1; Dean ' s List. Alton Reid Hoyle Asheville, N. C. Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council. Mattilee Hughey Statesville, N. C. Mitchell College 1, 2. Betty Hunt Germantown, Pa. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Robert Gray Hunter Lansdowne, Pa. Phi Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi Assistant Manager Baseball 1, 2, 3, Trident Club 2; Duke Players 2, 3 Archive 2; Freshman Council; Soph omore Y Council. Gunther Henry Ibbeken Haddon Heights, N. J. Sigma Chi; Bucknell 1; Baseball 2, 3. Frederick R. Jackson, Jr. Charlotte, N. C. Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Beta Omega Sigma; American Institute of Electrical Engineers; 9019; Iota Gam- ma Pi; Dean ' s List. Albert Gentel Jacobs Germantown, Pa. Phi Delta Theta; Assistant Cross- Country Manager 2, 3; Assistant Track Manager 3. Nelson R. Jantzen Philadelphia, Pa. Pi Kappa Phi; Freshman Council; Chronicle 1, 2; Beta Omega Sigma; Cheer Leader 1-3; Class Treasurer 3. Richard D. Jenkinson, Jr. Bellevue, Pa. Phi Kappa Psi; Beta Omega Sigma; Junior Pan-Hellenic Council; Junior Council; Assistant Basketball Man- ager 1, 2, 3; CHANTICLEER 1, 2, 3; Sophomore Y Council; Dean ' s List. 118 Juniors Jennings J. L. Jones Ketchann Johnson R. L. Jones Ketchum R. R. Johnson Justin Kiker Johnston Johntz Jones Kay R. E. Kay Kellogg Kincheloe King Kirkpatric William Champe Jennings Westfield, N. J. Alpha Tau Omega; CHANTICLEER 1, 2, 3; Freshman House President; Freshman Council; Glee Club 1, 2; Class Treasurer 2; Pegram Chemistry Club. Claude W. Johnson Fort Thomas, Ky. Roy R. Johnson, Jr. Upton, Mass. Phi Delta Theta; Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle 1, 2, 3, Issue Editor 3. Betty Anne Johnston Doylestown, Pa. Kappa Delta; Glee Club I; Choir 1; CHANTICLEER 2; Dean ' s List. Frederick F. Johntz Winston-Salem, N. C. Delta Tau Delta; Chronicle 3. Arthur S. Jones Metuchen, N. I. Beta Theta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon. 119 Kappa List. Jane Lee Jones Belleville, 111. Delta; Duke Players; Dean ' s Robert Lyon Jones Murfreesboro, Tenn. Kappa Alpha. Walter Justin Scr anion, Pa. Louis Kay Watseka, 111. Beta Omega Sigma; Football 1, 2; Chronicle 1, 3. Robert Eynon Kay Wildwood, N. J. Lambda Chi Alpha; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, Secretary-Treasurer 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Sophomore Y Council; Columbia Literary Society 1, 2, 3, Vice President 3; Y. M. C. A. Vice President 3; Dean ' s List. Mitchell Kellogg New Canaan, Conn. Wrestling 1, 2, 3. Fredrick Ketchann Fishkill, N. Y. Freshman House President; Glee Club 2, 3; Choir 2, 3; House of Representatives 2; Sophomore Y Council; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Soph- omore Council; Junior Council. Paul F. Ketchum Washington, D. C. Sigma Nu; Phi Eta Sigma; Freshman Council; Cabinet, Chicora Council; Sophomore Y ' Chronicle 2; Y. M. C. A. Secretary 3. Marion Kiker Reidsville, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi; Queens College 1. Mary Lou Kincheloe Clarksburg, W. Va. Alpha Phi; Y. W. C. A. Secretary 3; Glee Club 2, 3; Choir 2, 3; Student Volunteers 2, 3; Dean ' s List. John Cheves King, Jr. Charleston, W. Va. Pi Kappa Phi; Golf 1, 2; Junior Pan- Hellenic Council. Catherine Kirkpatrick Salisbury, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta; Glee Club Dean ' s List. 3; Juniors Klock Kritzer Laing Kneipp Koehler Koonce Korstian Krampf Krizek Kueffner Kuhn Kurtz Lackey Laird Lambeth Larzelere Leidy Leinbach John Douglas Klock Walker, N. Y. Sigma Chi; Beta Omega Sigma; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2 3; Assistant Manager of Wrestling 3 Musical Clubs 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1 Track 2. John A. Kneipp Washington, D. C. Kappa Sigma; Sophomore Council; Boxing 1, 2, 3, Southern Conference Champion 3; Track 2, 3; Tombs; Junior Pan-Hellenic Council; Chron- icle 1; Class Vice President 3. Grace George Koehler Fort Hamilton, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Gamma. John E. Koonce, Jr. Chadbourn, N. C. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Band 1, 2, 3. Kenneth C. Korstian Durham, N. C. Isobelle Krampf Drexel Hill, Pa. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Morton Daniel Kritzer New York, N. Y. Delta _ Phi Alpha; Duke Players 1; Dean ' s List. William L. Krizek Schenectady, N. Y. Union College 1; Track 2, 3. Charlotte KueHner Durham, N. C. Zeta Tau Alpha; Town Girls ' Club. Harold H. Kuhn Charleston, W. Va. Delta Tau Delta; Pegram Chemistry Club. Harold K. Kurtz Lebanon, Pa. Swimming 2, 3; Tombs. Archer E. Lackey Christiansburg, Va. Kappa Alpha; Beta Omega Sigma; Dean ' s List. Bess Laing Charleston, W. Va. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Music Study Club; Class President 3. Knight Laird Jonesboro, Ark. Alpha Tau Omega; Kappa Beta Phi; Washington and Lee 1, 2; American Society of Civil Engineers. James E. Lambeth, Jr. Thomasville, N. C. Phi Delta Theta; Freshman Council; CHANTICLEER 1, 2, 3; Beta Omega Sigma; Columbia Literary Society; Band 1, 2; Golf Manager 3. Helen Claire Larzelere Jacksonville, Fla. Pi Beta Phi; Chronicle 3; Dean ' s List. Joseph V. Leidy Philadelphia, Pa. Pi Kappa Phi; Track 1, 2, 3; Beta Omega Sigma. Emeline K. Leinbach Watsontown, Pa. Bucknell University 1; Glee Club 2, 3; Choir 2, 3; Pegram Chemistry Club. 120 Juniors Leland Lengler Lentz Lewis Lindsay Lins Litaker Littell McCallum McCowan McElwrath McFadyen Liana Litterst McGraw Liller MacNuti Mclntyr Roderic S. Leland New Canaan, Conn. Lambda Chi Alpha; Chronicle 1, 2, 3; Assistant Baseball Manager 1, 2, 3; Dean ' s List. Robert Edward Lengler Scranton, Pa. Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Dean ' s List. Beth Lentz Albemarle, N. C. Kappa Delta; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council; Chronicle 2, 3. William F. Lewis Providence, R. L Frank Liana Brooklyn, N. Y. Football 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, 3; Tombs; Boxing 1. Melvyn Henry Liller Hershey, Pa. Frances Gordon Lindsay High Point, N. C. Chronicle 2, 3. Harriet Jane Lins West Palm Beach, Fla. Alpha Epsilon Phi; Sorority Pan-Hel- lenic Council 3; Social Standards Committee. Roy Litaker Charlotte, N. C. Phi Gamma Delta. Ernestine Littell Cooperstown, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Harry Bertrand Litterst Arlington, N. J. Delta Sigma Phi; Junior Pan-Hellenic Council 3; Dean ' s List. ' ■Doris MacNutt Ridgefield Park, N. J. Phi Mu; Sandals; Delta Phi Rho Alpha. Russell Paul McCallum West Roxbury, Mass. Sigma Chi. Jean McCowan New York, N. Y. Phi Mu. Brooks McElwrath Mayfield, Ky. Pi Kappa Alpha. Oscar L. McFadyen Fayetteville, N. C. Kappa Sigma. Ralph William McGraw Johnstown, Pa. Evelyn Mclntyre New York, N. Y. Phi Mu. 121 Juniors McKee McMaster McWreath Mackie Maryott Marshall Martin Matulewicz Meyer Meyerson Michler Miller Maher Mayes Maier Menaker E. S. L. Miller J. M. Miller Sterling E. McKee Bessemer, Pa. American Society of Mechanical En- gineers; Band, 1, 2. Gerald Thomas McMaster Philadelphia, Pa. Beta Omega Sigma; Baseball 1, 2, 3. Harry C. McWreath Washington, Pa. Joseph Richard Mackie Philadelphia, Pa. Delta Tau Delta; Beta Omega Sigma; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Sophomore Council; Junior Council; Football 1. John J. Maher Washington, D. C. Delta Tau Delta; Track 1; Chronicle 2; Trident Club. George Maier, Jr. Bridgeton, N. J. Phi Kappa Sigma. Arthur A. Maryott Augusta, Ga. Junior College of Augusta 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Charlotte Marshall Ashland, Pa. Kappa Alpha Theta; Dean ' s List. Robert Doane Martin Westfield, N. J. American Society of Mechanical En- gineers; Track 1, 2, 3; Tombs. Ray C. Matulewicz Mt. Carmel, Pa. Boxing 1, 2, 3, Co-Captain 3. Eleanor Mayes Durham, N. C. Kappa Delta; Town Girls ' Club, Cor- responding Secretary 3. Jerome S. Menaker Harrisburg, Pa. Duke Players; P e g r a m Chemistry Club; Sophomore Honors; Columbia Literary Society; Dean ' s List; Delta Phi Alpha Joseph W. Meyer East Orange, N. J. Delta Tau Delta. Stanley Meyerson Spartanburg, S. C. Kappa Kappa Psi; Georgia Tech. 1 Chronicle 2, 3, Society Editor 3 Band 2, 3; Columbia Literary Society Symphony Orchestra. Ruth Michler Easton, Pa. Pi Beta Phi; Archive 3; Dean ' s List. Mary Miller Flushing, N. Y. Nereidian Club; Dean ' s List. Edmund S. L. Miller Hamburg, Pa. Phi Kappa Sigma; Glee Club; Choir; Wrestling. Jean Marian Miller Washington, D. C. Alpha Delta Pi; May Day 2; Social Standards Committee; CHANTI- CLEER 3. 122 Juniors V. E. Miller W. J. Miller Milnes Montague M. Moore Mary Moore Morris Morse Muse Myres Neuburger Newbold F. P. Moore H. H. Moo: Motley Munster Newcomb Newton Virginia Evelyn Miller Marion Moore Newark, N. J. Charleston, W. Va. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Pi Beta Phi. Music Study Club. William J. Miller, Jr. Philadelphia, Pa. Mary Moore Delray Beach, Fla. Alpha Delta Pi. Jesse P. Muse Savannah, Ga. Delta Tau Delta. Hillman Myres Gainesville, Fla. Track 1, 2, 3. Randolph Gilman Milnes Rahway, N. J. Rutgers University 1, 2. Harry Morris Chester, Pa. Kappa Sigma; Soccer 3; Phi Eta Sigma. Kathryn Louise Montague W. A. Morse Durham, N. C. Lakemont, Ga. Kappa Delta Pi; Dean ' s List; French Track 1, 2, 3; Cross-Country 1, 2, 3; Salon, Secretary 3. Tombs. Charles Rentall Neuburger Maplewood, N. J. Delta Tau Delta. Arch Newbold Raleigh, N. C. Fredrick Porter Moore, Jr. East Gardner, Mass. Phi Kappa Sigma. Huber Hanes Moore China Grove, N. C. Track 1, 2, 3; Tombs. Carvelle Douglas Motley Charleston, W. Va. American Institute of Electrical En- gineers. Ralf F. W. Munster Savannah, Ga. Heidelberg University; Dean ' s List. Virginia Newcomb Hilton, N. Y. Holmes E. Newton Summit, N. J. Delta Tau Delta; CHANTICLEER 1, 2, 3; Dean ' s List. 123 Juniors Nicholas Nicholson Ondek Ould L. Parker T. Parker Nicks Nothdurft O ' Brien Ockermann W. Owen M. Owen Pait Palmgren Pate C. Patterson G. Patterson R. Patterson Donald Y. Nicholas Scranton, Pa. Mariana Nicholson Statesville, N. C. Kappa Delta; Peace Junior College 1,2. Robert Lee Nicks Cedar Grove, N. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Chronicle 1; Freshman Council; Sophomore Y Council. William Herman Nothdurft Salamanca, N. Y. Delta Phi Alpha. James Coyne O ' Brien Rochester, N. Y. Pi Kappa Alpha; Soccer 2, 3. Kenneth Russell Ockermann Berea, Ky. Sigma Nu; Berea College 1, 2. John P. Ondek, Jr. Pittsburgh, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha. Dorothy Sue Ould Roanoke, Va. Delta Delta Delta; Penn Hall Junior College 1, 2; Glee Club 3; Duke Players 3; Dean ' s List. William N. Owen Schenectady, N. Y. Margaret Owen Cuthbert, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi. James A. Pait Baltimore, Md. Choir 2, 3; Classical Club 2, 3; Dean ' s List. Einar Alexander Palmgren, Jr. Charlotte, N. C. Band 1, 2, 3; Columbia Literary So- ciety; Kappa Kappa Psi. Lentz Kegley Parker Pembroke, Va. Virginia Polytechnic Institute 1, 2; Dean ' s List. Tekla Parker Philadelphia, Pa. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Nancy Pate Raleigh, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta. Carroll Patterson Miami, Fla. Pi Beta Phi; Florida State College 1, 2. George E. Patterson Macon, Ga. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Beta Omega Sigma. Richard A. Patterson Glens Falls, N. Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon. 124 Juniors Pell Penabaz Pepper Perine Petersen Peterson Pettit Phillips Phinney Pippen Plaster Plumb Podger Pollard Poole Powell Prindle Pruitt Joseph A. Pell, Jr. Pilot Mountain, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi. Fernando D. Penabaz Jobabo, Cuba John Pepper Memphis, Tenn. Kappa Alpha; Dean ' s List. Everett G. Perine East Orange, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi; Track 1; Cheer Leader 1, 2; Chronicle 1, 2, 3, Editor 3; Fresh- man Council; Publications Board 3; CHANTICLEER 2. Arthur M. Petersen Lynbrook, N. Y. Kappa Sigma. Nancy Peterson Woodbury, N. J. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Class Vice President 3; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council 2, 3; Social Standards 3. Paul Hereschel Pettit Ocean City, N. J. Delta Tau Delta; Pegram Chemistry Club; CHANTICLEER 1. Helen Phillips Lexington, N. C. Kappa Delta; Choir; Glee Club. Carleton C. Phinney Newtonville, Mass. Phi Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi. Jean Ann Pippen Charleston, W. Va. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Theta Kappa; Gulf Park College 1; Nereidian Club 2, 3. William Emory Plaster, Jr. Leesburg, Va. Phi Kappa Sigma; Archive 2, 3; Duke Players 2, 3. Charles S. Plumb Edgewood, R. I. Delta Tau Delta; Beta Omega Sigma; Band 1, 2; Symphony Orchestra 1; Tennis 1; American Society of Civil Engineers. Kenneth A. Podger Kenmore, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta; Basketball 1, 2, 3. Betty Pollard Durham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi. Helen Poole Troy, N. C. Dean ' s List. Elizabeth Powell Shreveport, La. Pi Beta Phi; Centenary College 1, 2; Dean ' s List. William M. Prindle West Barrington, R. I. Delta Tau Delta; Pegram Chemistry Club; Track 1; Soccer 3. Charles E. Pruitt Frederick, Md. Alpha Tau Omega; Track 1, 2, 3; Cross-Country 1, 3; Beta Omega Sigma. 125 Juniors Ramsey Reeves E. Riley Rauschenberg Reist J. Riley Rawls B. Rice Ritchie Rea B. Rich Roberts Reade W. Rich Rogan Reel Richey Rogers William H. Ramsey, II Bryn Mawr, Pa. Delta Sigma Phi. Lucy Rauschenberg Atlanta, Ga. Kappa Alpha Theta; Sandals; Fresh- man Adviser 2; Women ' s Athletic Association, Treasurer. Ashburn L. Rawls Norfolk, Va. Ruth Rea London, Ohio Pi Beta Phi. Marion Reade Durham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi. W. Wiley Reel Pittsburgh, Pa. Sigma Chi; Band 1, 2, 3. Virginia Reeves Canton, N. C. Kappa Delta. Anne Louise Reist Lancaster, Pa. Kappa Alpha Theta; Chronicle 1, 2, 3; CHANTICLEER 2, 3; Editor Fresh- man Handbook 3; Social Standards, Co-chairman 3. Learning M. Rice, Jr. Wildwood, N. J. American Society of Civil Engineers; Engineers ' Club; Dean ' s List. Barbara Rich South Orange, N. J. Delta Delta Delta; Music Study Club; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Delta Phi Rho Alpha. Walton Rich Port Henry, N. Y. Phi Kappa Sigma; Intramural Man- ager 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1; Choir 1. Virginia Richey Corinth, Miss. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Glee Club; Ward Belmont School 1, 2; Choir. Elizabeth Riley Durham, N. C. Zeta Tau Alpha; Kappa Delta Pi; So- cial Standards Committee; Chronicle 2, 3; Town Girls ' Club; CHANTI- CLEER 3; Dean ' s List. Joseph W. Riley Collingdale, Pa. Phi Delta Theta; Basketball I, 2, 3; Golf 1,2; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs. Billy Ritchie Binghamton, N. Y. Sigma Kappa; Delta Phi Alpha; Wo- men ' s Athletic Association Board 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council 3; Delta Phi Rho Alpha. R. Winston Roberts, Jr. Birmingham, Ala. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Swimming 1; Sophomore Y Coun- cil; Dean ' s List. Edna Carlton Rogan Baltimore, Md. Delta Delta Delta; Sorority Pan-Hel- lenic Council. Edwin D. Rogers Marlton, N. J. Keys Club; Dean ' s List; Delta Phi Alpha. 126 Junior FTi n Rose Schlesinger Sharp Salmon G. R. Scott Shaw Sapp J. G. Scott Shehan Sasscer Scull Shelnutt Sawyer Seymour Shemet Schaub Shapiro Shepherd Merrill Mitchell Rose Lancaster, S. C. Tau Kappa Alpha. George Gilbert Salmon, Jr. Maplewocd, N. J. Sigma Nu; Chronicle 1, 2; Pegram Chemistry Club. Clarence J. Sapp Albany, Ga. Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Pi Sigma; Peg- gram Chemistry Club; 9019; Soph- omore Honors; Parker Physics award. Elizabeth Anne Sasscer Chevy Chase, Md. Kappa Alpha Theta; Chronicle 3; Social Standards Committee; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council 3. Walter W. Sawyer Elizabeth City, N. C. Berkley V. Schaub Westfield, N. J. Sigma Nu; Chronicle 1, 2, 3; Trident Club; Glee Club. Willard Raphael Schlesinger Brooklyn, N. Y. Phi Eta Sigma; Duke Players; Basket- ball 3. George Ryland Scott Detroit, Mich. Kappa Sigma. John G. Scott, Jr. Tamagua, Pa. Sigma Chi. Thomas R. Scull Somers Point, N. J. Freshman House President; Football 1; Freshman Council. Dorothy Seymour Plainville, Conn. Sandals; Nereidian Club; Pegram Chemistry Club, Secretary 3; Delta Phi Alpha; Dean ' s List. Martin Z. Shapiro ' ' New York, N. Y. Assistant Manager of Tennis 1, Man- ager 2. Annie Hill Sharp Reidsville, N. C. Registered Nurse; Graduate of Duke Hospital. Philip S. Shaw Lawrence, Mass. W. Mason Shehan Easton, Md. Sigma Chi; Track 1, 2, 3; Beta Omega Sigma; Tombs; Sophomore Council; Junior Council. Harold Harper Shelnutt Tryon, N. C. Phi Kappa Sigma. Alexander Michael Shemet Jamaica, N. Y. American Institute of Electrical En- gineers, Secretary. Ashby Lee Shepherd Bristol, Md. Keys Club. 127 Juniors Shields Skinner Frances Smith Sholes Slater F. Smith Shore Slay H. H. Smith Shuff Slingluff H. F. Smith Siehler Small K. Smith Simmons C. M. Smith W. R. Smith Richard A. Shields, Jr. Lewes, Del. Band 1, 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3. Dillard McCary Sholes, Jr. Durham, N. C. Wresthng 1. Culver C. Shore Thomasville, N. C. 9019; Dean ' s List. Charles Wesley Shuff, III Greenville, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi; Sigma Upsilon; David- son College 1; Chronicle 2, 3; Ar- chive 2, 3. Charlotte Siehler Baltimore, Md. Delta Delta Delta; Chronicle 3. Williann P. Simmons Bainbridge, Ga. Sigma Nu; Alpha Kappa Psi; Student Council 3; Columbia Literary Society, Treasurer 3; Chronicle 2; Dean ' s List. Virginia Elizabeth Skinner Durham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi. Helen Slater Detroit, Mich. Zeta Tau Alpha; Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council 3. James Matthew Slay Greenville, N. C. Sigma Nu. Hambleton Slingluff, Jr. West Hartford, Conn. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Delta Phi Alpha; Dean ' s List. Elizabeth F. Small Wyoming, N. J. Zeta Tau Alpha; Social Standards Committee; Chronicle 1, 2, 3. C. Manning Smith Charleston, W. Va. Pi Kappa Alpha. Frances Smith Easton, Pa. Pi Beta Phi; Distaff 1; Archive 2, 3. Franchelle Smith Charlotte, N. C. Woman ' s College, University of North Carolina. Haddon H. Smith Maplewood, N. J. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Kappa Kappa Psi; Delta Phi Alpha; Beta Omega Sigma; Band 1, 2, 3; Archive 1; Dean ' s List. Helen Eraser Smith Thomasville, Ga. Pi Beta Phi; Chronicle 2, 3; Swim- ming 1. Kirby Smith, Jr. Washington, D. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; American So- ciety of Civil Engineers. Wilham R. Smith Asheville, N. C. Football 1, 2. 128 u n 1 o r s Smoot Snook Snyder Southgate Speir Stallcup Steenrod Steiger Stephens Stewart H. J. Stone M. E. Stone Strother J. Stube W. Stube Sullivan Suplee Taliaferro William I. Smoot Seaford, Del. Phi Delta Theta; Sophomore Council; Beta Omega Sigma, Treasurer; Assist- ant Basketball Manager 1, 2, 3; Fresh- man Council. Edith Snook Summit, N. J. Student Council 3; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3; Sandals; Music Study Club; Glee Club 1, 2; Dean ' s List. George P. Snyder, Jr. Ridgefield Park, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi; Delta Phi Alpha; Cross- country 1; Freshman Council; Soph- omore Y Council; Columbia Lit- erary Society. Tom F. Southgate, Jr. Durham, N. C. Alpha Tau Omega; Beta Omega Sig- ma; Class President 1, 3; Student Council 2; CHANTICLEER 1, 2, 3. Ross C. Speir Birmingham, Ala. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Mary Jane Stallcup St. Petersburg, Fla. St. Petersburg Junior College 1. 129 Robert L. Steenrod Liberty, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta; Pegram Chemistry Club. Howard P. Steiger Williamsport, Pa. Phi Kappa Psi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Bucknell University 1; Band 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra 2. Merrill York Stephens Portland, Maine Phi Kappa Psi; CHANTICLEER 3; Portland Junior College 1, 2. Robert P. Stewart Charlotte, N. C. Kappa Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Omega Sigma; Sophomore Council; Sophomore Y Council; Band; Sym- phony Orchestra; Archive 2, 3. Harry James Stone Durham, N. C. Mary Elizabeth Stone Worcester, Mass. Nereidian Club. Edith Angeline Strother Durham, N. C. Town Girls ' Club, Recording Secre- tary 3; Dean ' s List. Joy Stube Niagara Falls, N. Y. Dean ' s List. William Stube Niagara Falls, N. Y. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. H. G. Sullivan Anderson, S. C. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Ruth Suplee Narberth, Pa. Dick Taliaferro Columbia, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi; Beta Omega Sigma; Football 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1; Student Council 3. Juniors Teed Toner Thoman Thomas Thompson Thornton Tobin Tritle Turlington Ulmer H. Upchurch K. M. Upchurch Vail Van Nostrand Vickers Wade Shirley Teed New York, N. Y. Kappa Alpha Theta; Duke Players 1, 2. John B. Thoman Youngstown, Ohio Alpha Kappa Psi; Mount Union Col- lege 1; Football 1; Glee Club 1, 2, 3. Hayden Thontas Munhall, Pa. Basketball 2, 3. Frances Gayle Thompson Greensboro, N. C. CHANTICLEER 2. Wilfred H. Thornton Jackson, Ga. Pi Kappa Alpha; Band 1, 2; Pegram Chemistry Club; Glee Club 1, 2. Mary Tobin Princeton, W. Va. Delta Delta Delta. Aimee L. Toner Garden City, N. Y. Zeta Tau Alpha; French Club; Duke Players. Catherine Tritle Erie, Pa. Zeta Tau Alpha; Chronicle 2, 3; Duke Players 1, 2, 3, Secretary 3; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. David J. Turlington, II Clinton, N. C. Football 1; Tennis 1. David Ulmer Moorestown, N. J. Chronicle 1, 2; Archive 1. Herbert Jackson Upchurch Durham, N. C. Kappa Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma; Delta Phi Alpha; Beta Omega Sigma; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Archive 1, 2, 3; Fresh- man Council, Secretary; Sophomore Y Council. Kathrine M. Upchurch Durham, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1, 2, 3, Treasurer 2; Women ' s Athletic Board 2, 3; Sandals; Delta Phi Rho Alpha; Class President 2; Junior Big Sisters, Secretary. Charles Rowe Vail Ocean City, N. J. Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; 9019; Freshman Honors; Sophomore Hon- ors; American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Engineers ' Club. Norman W. Van Nostrand, Jr. New York, N. Y. Phi Kappa Sigma; Sophomore Hon- ors; Trident Club; Junior Pan-Hellenic Council; Alpha Kappa Psi. Mary Vickers Oxford, N. C. Kappa Delta; Nereidian Club 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1; Choir 1. Charles B. Wade, Jr. Morehead City, N. C. Kappa Kappa Psi; Band 1, 2, 3; Symphony Orchestra 1, 2; Columbia Literary Society 1. 130 Juniors A. Wagner Washburn J. Wagner Waters K. White Waits Welfare M. White R. Walker Wenrich Whitley C. Walker Weston Wilkes Warren Whitaker Ann Wagner Jamaica, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Social Stand- ards Committee. Josephine Wagner West Chester, Pa. Harriet Waits Andalusia, Ala. Kappa Delta. Richard Leigh Walker Philadelphia, Pa. Sigma Nu. Clark Walter, Jr. Washington, D. C. Phi Kappa Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Omega Sigma; Duke Players 2, 3; 9019; Dean ' s List. Mary Louise Warren Richmond, Va. Dean ' s List. Margaret E. Washburn Hempstead, N. Y. Kappa Delta. Ella Harriss Waters Washington, N. C. Zeta Tau Alpha; Sandals; Social Standards Committee. Bradley Welfare Winston-Salem, N. C. Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle 1, 2. Charles D. Wenrich Washington, D. C. Sigma Chi; Beta Omega Sigma; Chronicle 1, 2, 3; Assistant Basketball Manager 2, 3; Track 1; Freshman House President. Robert Lewis Weston Kensington, Md. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sigma Pi Sigma, Richard B. Whitaker Whiteville, N. C. Katherine E. White Elizabeth, N. L Zeta Tau Alpha; Sandals; Student Government 3; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir; Alspaugh House President; Delta Phi Alpha; Dean ' s List. Marge White Jenkintown, Pa. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Nereidian Club; Sandals; Women ' s Athletic Board, Vice President; Delta Phi Rho Alpha, President. Carl M. Whitley Clayton, N. C. Baseball 1, 3. John Edwin Wilkes Trenton, N. J. Kappa Sigma; Norwich University 1; Rutgers University 2; Chronicle 3. 131 Juniors Wilkinson M. Williams P. H. Williams W. R. Williams S. E. Williams Willis Wilson Womack Womble D. L. Wood R. C. Wood Woodard Wright Wunder Zambone Zecher Robert A. Wilkinson Millburn, N. J. Delta Tau Delta; Duke Players; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3. Mildred Cordier Williams Greenville, Ky. Debating 2; Debating Club 2, 3; Dean ' s List. Pleasant H. Williams Ashland, Ky. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football 1, 2, 3. William Robert Williams Laurel, Del. Alpha Tau Omega; Archive 1; Trident Club. Sarah Elsie Williams Elizabeth City, N .C. Kappa Alpha Theta; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Chior 1, 2, 3; Dean ' s List. Rebecca Willis Shreveport, La. Pi Beta Phi; Centenary College 1, 2. Donald Ross Wilson Greenlawn, N. Y. Pi Kappa Phi; Swimming 1, 2, 3; Tombs. Sarah Sue Womack Murfreesboro, Tenn. Delta Delta Delta; Ward-B el m o nt College 1, 2. William F. Womble Winston-Salem, N. C. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Eta Sigma, Pres- ident 2; Beta Omega Sigma; Chron- icle 1, 2, 3; 9019; Dean ' s List. Doris L. Wood Mount Morris, N. Y. Sigma Kappa. Robert C. Wood Lev isburg, W. Va. Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Eta Sigma, Vice President; Delta Phi Alpha; Peg- ram Chemistry Club; Beta Omega Sigma, Pre sident; Student Council, Secretary-Treasurer 3; Publications Board 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3. Harry Clanton Woodard Louisville, Ky. Football 1; Track 1, 2, 3; Tombs. Walter C. Wright, Jr. Wenonah, N. J. Phi Kappa Sigma; Glee Club 2; Band 1; Choir 1; Polity Club; Dean ' s List. Clarence Edmond Wunder, Jr. Ardmore, Pa. Sigma Chi; Cross -Country, Manager 3. Joseph Harry Zambone, HI Vineland, N. J. Swrimming 1, 2; Track 3. Margaret Ann Zecher Lebanon, Pa. Delta Delta Delta; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choir 1, 2, 3; Music Study Club 3; Social Standards Committee. 132 SOPHOMORES Sophomores Adams, Aitken, Allen, Anastor, Anderson, H. Anderson, M. Anderson, Andrews. Arnold, R. Arnold, Atzrodt, Auld, Baggs, Bailey, Baird, Bane. Barnett, Barry, Baum, Beard, Beatty, Becker, Beebe, Belding. Bell, Bender, Beneke, Benton, Berkowitz, Beyer, Bierstein, M. Bierstein. Margaret Adams, Esterly, Pa. Lois Aitken, South Orange, N. J. Zeta Tau Alpha Jayne Kathryn Allen, Miami, Fla. Delta Delta Delta Fan Auld, Charleston, W. Va. Zeta Tau Alpha Genevieve Baggs, Newark, Ohio J. Eugene Bailey, Fort Wayne, Ind. Pi Kappa Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma. Herbert P. Anastor, Vineland, N. J. j n W. Baird, Henderson, Tenn. A. L. Anderson, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi Howard A. Anderson, Mullins, S. C. Mary Anderson, New Bern, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta Melvin B. Andrews, Goldsboro, N. C. A. G. Arnold, Martinsburg, W. Va. Robert H. Arnold, Wilkinsburg, Pa. R. A. Atzrodt, Clarksburg, W. Va. Alpha Phi David Morgan Bane, Uniontown, Pa. Hoyt Barnett, Lakeland, Fla. Edward Earl Barry, Lansdowne, Pa. Sigma Chi Ralph E. Baum, Kitty Hawk, N. C. Edward P. A. Beard, Rockville, Md. Alpha Tau Omega Robert Rowe Beatty, Charlotte, N. C. Kappa Alpha Kathryn Becker, Chicago, 111. Estella Beebe, Lewes, Del. Gordon Belding, Summit, N. J. Mary Bell, Greensburg, Pa. Mary Charlotte Bender, Lititz, Pa. Sigma Kappa C. C. Beneke, Wheeling, W. Va. Annette Benton, Fremont, N. C. Sylvia Berkowitz, Allentown, Pa. Alpha Epsilon Phi Emil C. Beyer, White Plains, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta J. F. Bierstein, Jr., Harrisburg, Pa. Marie Bierstein, Shenandoah, Pa. 134 Sophomores Bishop, Blackburn, Blanchard, L. Blanchard, Bliss, Bodine, Boger, Bogert. Bolte, Bowen, Bowers, Bowman, W. Bowman, Bradsher, Brahany, Bransford. Braznell, Bremer, Bretz, Brinn, Brooker, Brown, Brundage, Buckingham. Buell, Buffington, Burns, Butler, Bynum, Caldwell, Cameron, Campbell. Virginia Bishop, Vineland, N. J. L. E. Blackburn, Fayetteville, N. C. Irvin C. Blanchard, Portsmouth, Va. Lillian C. Blanchard, Hertford, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi Joan Bliss, Nashville, Tenn. Kappa Alpha Theta William B. Bodine, Cranford, N. J. Kappa Kappa Psi Paull B. Boger, Morganton, N. C. Phi Delta Theta Betty J. Bogert, Ridgewood, N. J. Zeta Tau Alpha Henry F. Bolte, Elmhurst, N. Y. Dan D. Bowen, Atlanta, Ga. L. R. Bowers, Whiteville, N. C. 135 T. E. Bowman, Jr., Harrisburg, Pa. Sigma Chi; Kappa Kappa Psi. W. M. Bowman, Lumberton, N. C. A. B. Bradsher, Jr., Montreal, Canada Alpha Tau Omega Mary J. Brahany, Washington, D. C. Alpha Delta Pi Paul W. Bransford, Anderson, Ind. Phi Kappa Psi Virginia Braznell, Miami, Fla. Kappa Alpha Theta Roger Edward Bremer, Elmira, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi George W. Bretz, Bethlehem, Pa. William J. Brinn, Sanford, N. C. Roberta Brooker, Evanston, 111. Kappa Kappa Gamma William E. Brown, Newtown, Pa. Oliver Brundage, Upland, Pa. Kappa Sigma Walter Buckingham, Bradford, Pa. Marion Buell, Rochester, N. Y. Kappa Delta Adelaide Buffington, Berkshire, N. Y. Arthur G. Burns, Upper Darby, Pa. Frances Butler, Camilla, Ga. Phi Mu G. T. Bynum, Winston-Salem, N. C. John C. Caldwell, Greensboro, N. C. Edward Cameron, Pine View, N. C. Isaac J. Campbell, Clover, S. C. Sophomores Campbell, Cannon, Carl, J. Carl, Caroon, Carpenter, Carson, Carter. Carter, Chapman, Clark, H. Clark, M. Clark, R. Clark, Clay, Cleaver. Clement, Clements, Clover, Cobleigh, Cockrell, Coen, Coffnrian, Cole. Colson, Cooke, Cooley, Cooper, Cope, Courtney, Couse, Cousins. Jean Campbell, Douglaston, N. Y. Zeta Tau Alpha E. Cannon, Murlreesboro, Tenn. Herbert A. Carl, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Joseph M. Carl, Harrisburg, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha W. J. Caroon, Jr., New Bern, N. C. John G. Carpenter, Hague, N. Y. W. L. Carson, Cleveland, Ohio Phi Kappa Sigma Mary E. Carter, Nashville, Tenn. Kappa Alpha Theta Virginia Carter, Wadesboro, N. C. Pi Beta Phi Lucy Lake Chapman, Richmond, Va. Alpha Delta Pi George W. Clark, Waterloo, N. Y. H. V. Clark, Jr., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Phi Kappa Sigma McCauley Clark, Philadelphia, Tenn. Richard S. Clark, Philadelphia, Pa. Albert G. Clay, Mount Sterling, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega Helen Paul Cleaver, Merion, Pa. Robert Clement, Durham, N. C. Madge Clements, Buena Vista, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi Carl Clover, Knox, Pa. N. S. Cobleigh, White Plains, N. Y. Lambda Chi Alpha Helen Cockrell, Detroit, Mich. Alpha Delta Pi T. G. Coen, Jr., Bay Shore, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta Julia Coffman, Clarksburg, W. Va. Kappa Alpha Theta Jeanne Cole, CoUingswood, N. J. Phi Mu James T. Colson, Jr., Brunswick, Ga. Phi Delta Theta Russell Y. Cooke, Jr., Kenilworth, 111. Pi Kappa Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma Eleanor Cooley, Berwyn, Md. S. A. Cooper, New London, Conn. Jane Cope, McKeesport, Pa. W. M. Courtney, Charlotte, N. C. Delta Sigma Phi Ruth Couse, Baltimore, Md. Pi Beta Phi James F. Cousins, Durham, N. C. 136 Sophomores Covington, Cox, R. Cox, Cozart, Crannell, Crawford, Critcher, Cure. Curtiss, Daniel, Darling, Davis, P. Davis, Dearstyne, DeCamp, Dennis. Densberger, Deupree, DeVoe, Dewey, Diamond, Dick, Dickerson, DiSabatino. Dives, Dodd, Doniger, Doyle, Drake, Draper, Dunn, Eakin. J. W. Covington, Rockingham, N. C. James C. Davis, Greenville, Pa. Nathan Cox, Clarkton, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi Robert L. Cox, Mount Olive, N. C. David L. Cozart, Jr., Raleigh, N. C. W. H. Crannell, Jr., Albany, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta A. C. Crawford, Elmira Heights, N. Y. Phi Eta Sigma R. A. Critcher, III, Williamston, N. C. Jack C. Cure, Pine Hill, N. Y. Gordon W. Curtiss, Jr., Atlanta, Ga. Delta Tau Delta Annie Whitty Daniel, Durham, N. C. Kappa Delta Byron C. Darling, New York, N. Y. 137 Pauline Davis, Roanoke, Va. Phi Mu Ruth Dearstyne, Port Chester, N. Y. Jean DeCamp, Clarksburg, W. Va. Kappa Kappa Gamma Frank D. Dennis, Morristown, N. J. Phi Eta Sigma R. S. Densberger, Kenmore, N. Y. William J. Deupree, Ft. Mitchell, Ky. Charles W. DeVoe, Warren, Ohio Sigma Alpha Epsilon Marguerite Dewey, Goldsboro, N. C. Kappa Delta Shirley Diamond, Jamaica, N. Y. Alpha Epsilon Phi Dorothy Dick, Copperhill, Tenn. Zeta Tau Alpha Jean Dickerson, Schenectady, N. Y. Pi Beta Phi M. A. DiSabatino, Wilmington, Del. Ann Dives, Reading, Pa. Phi Mu Donald R. Dodd, Allentown, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha Walter J. Doniger, Passaic, N. J. Robert S. Doyle, Washington, D. C. Phi Delta Theta Carl R. Drake, New Rochelle, N. Y. Nona Ruth Draper, Richlands, Va. Zeta Tau Alpha Idaliza Dunn, Chapel Hill, N. C. LeRoy Eakin, Washington, D. C. Alpha Tau Omega PO Sophomores East, Edwards, J. Edwards, L. Edwards, W. Edwards, Eltinge, Emerson, Ewing. Eager, Fair, Farnsworth, Farrar, Faulkner, Feagins, Ferguson, R. Ferguson. Fernalld, Fickes, Fine, Finn, Fite, Fischer, Fitzpatrick, Fleniing. Flenner, Forness, Foster, Foulke, Fox, Frampton, Franz, Eraser. Jane East, East Orange, N. J. Pi Beta Phi Fred C. Edwards, Bloomsburg, Pa. Phi Delta Theta J. Francis Edwards, Oxford, N. C. L. M. Edwards, Jr., Durham, N. C. Phi Delta Theta W. Joe Edwards, Clearwater, Fla. William S. Eltinge, Kingston, N. Y. Alpha Kappa Psi Dorothy Emerson, Atlanta, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi Nathaniel D. Ewing, Vincennes, Ind. Phi Delta Theta Joseph S. Fager, Camp Hill, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha D. Arthur Fair, Altoona, Pa. T. A. Farnsworth, Camden, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta R. Danny Farrar, Youngstown, Ohio Sigma Alpha Epsilon Clifford Faulkner, Elmhurst, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta Carroll S. Feagins, Baxley, Ga. B. Troy Ferguson, Jr., Raleigh, N. C. R. E. Ferguson, Jr., Clinton, S. C. Thomas D. Fernalld, Norwich, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta William H. Fickes, Newport, Pa. Milton Fine, Hattiesburg, Miss. Zeta Beta Tau; Phi Eta Sigma Thomas D. Finn, Shelton, Conn. Jane Fite, Jasper, Ala. Kappa Alpha Theta C. H. Fischer, Jr., West Haven, Conn. F. J. Fitzpatrick, Jr., Maplewood, N. J. Roy Fleming, Wenonah, N. J. Kappa Sigma G. B. Flenner, Jr., East Orange, N. J. Cameron Forness, Drexel Hill, Pa. Kappa Kappa Gamma Helen Foster, Asheville, N. C. William T. Foulke, Collamer, Pa. Marguerite A. Fox, Ardmore, Pa. George T. Frampton, Scarsdale, N. Y. Lambda Chi Alpha Carl H. Franz, Jr., York, Pa. Kappa Sigma Elizabeth Eraser, Fort Bragg, N. C. Alpha Phi 138 •m- Sophomores I . Jill Fritz, Fulton, Funkhouser, Gair, Gale, Gannon, Garber, Gassaway. Geraci, Gerard, Gibbons, Gillis, Glagola, Gonder, R. Gonder, Gorin. Gould, Graber, Grainger, Graves, Gray, W. Gray, Greenawalt, Greenfield. Greenwood, Griffin, Griffith, Griffiths, Groves, Gutierrez, Haardt, Hackney. Albert R. Fritz, Brooklyn, N. Y. Virginia Fulton, Roanoke, Va. Phi Mu J. O. Funkhouser, Hagerstown, Md. Sigma Phi Epsilon Russell A. Gair, Jr., Norwich, N. Y. Elmer Thomas Gale, Clinton, N. C. Phi Kappa Sigma Paul Gannon, Glen Rock, N. J. Murray R. Garber, Bradford, Pa. Phi Eta Sigma Jane Gassaway, Nashville, N. C. Kappa Delta Salvatore U. Geraci, Pittsburgh, Pa. Frank T. Gerard, Jr., Grenada, Miss. Kappa Alpha; Kappa Kappa Psi Betty Gibbons, Wilson, N. C. 139 Philip Hugh Gillis, Arlington, N. J. Kappa Sigma Charles Glagola, Rahway, N. J. Lindsay A. Gonder, Oakland, Md. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Richard J. Gonder, Oakland, Md. J. J. Gorin, Christobal, Canal Zone Zeta Beta Tau Robert Kent Gould, Hamburg, N. J. H. T. Graber, Jr., Detroit, Mich. Virginia Grainger, Washington, D. C. Delta Delta Delta James E. Graves, Richmond, Va. Sigma Alpha Epsilon - Betty Claire Gray, Gastonia, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi W. A. Gray, Jr., Ridley Park, Pa. Robert Greenawalt, Harrisburg, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha B. H. Greenfield, Philadelphia, Pa. Phi Eta Sigma W. Greenwood, St. Albans, N. Y. Pi Beta Phi Virginia Griffin, Baltimore, Md. Kappa Delta James Griffith, Harrisburg, Pa. W. H. Griffiths, Great Neck, N. Y. Joe A. Groves, Charleston, W. Va R. E. Gutierrez, Merida, Yuc, Mexico Werner W. Haardt, Montclair, N. J. Alpha Kappa Psi Elmore Hackey, Durham, N. C. Phi Delta Theta Sophomores Hadley, Hall, Hamilton, Hammond, Hardwicke, Hargett, Harrell, Harris. Harvin, Hathaway, Hawks, Hawley, Hayward, Hedrick, Heise, Hempelnnan. Hench, Herring, Herrmann, Hess, Heyward, Hickey, Hill, D. Hill. Hill, Hoag, Hock, Hoffman, G. Hoffman, R. Hoffman, Holden, Holland. Otto E. Hadley. Wallkill, N. Y. Charles Edward Hall, Ashland, Ky. R. A. Hamilton, Ridgefield Park, N. J. Delta Sigma Phi Wilmer Hammond, Selbyville, Del. R. E. Hardwicke, Fort Worth, Texas Sigma Alpha Epsilon Le G. J. Hargett, Forrest City, Ark. H. L. Harrell, Rich Square, N. C. Joe Frank Harris, Raleigh, N. C. Marie Harvin, Summerton, S. C. Sigma Kappa George W. Hathaway, Bellaire, Ohio Phi Kappa Psi Brenna Hawley, Kenilworth, 111. Doris Hayward, Delanco, N. J. Dorothy Hedrick, Salisbury, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta Kenneth C. Heise, Berwyn, 111. Marion Hempelman, St. Louis, Mo. W. S. Hench, Jr., Harrisburg, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha B. M. Herring, Greenville, N. C. Ruth Herrmann, Baltimore, Md. Pi Beta Phi Robert E. Hess, Fairmont, W. Va. Sigma Chi Charles E. Hawks, New York, N. Y. M. G. Heyward, Asheville, N. C. A. J. Hickey, Staten Island, N. Y. Alan Hill, Westfield, N. J. Davidson Hill, Sasser, Ga. Sigma Nu Dora Hill, Cuthbert, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi J. E. Hoag, Holyoke, Mass. Charles W. Hock, Bluefield, W. Va. C. Robert Hoffman, Fasten, Pa. Phi Kappa Psi Gish N. Hoffman, Elizabethtown, Pa. Richard Hoffman, Cincinnati, Ohio Delta Tau Delta Charlotte Holden, High Point, N. C. Mary B. Holland, New Bern, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta 140 Sophomores Hollmeyer, Hollowell, Holly, Holt, Hottenstein, Houchens, Hubbell, Hudson. Huffman, Hughes, Hutchinson, Hunsicker, Huntington, Hutchinson, Idema, Jenkins. Jenkinson, Jerome, Johnston, Jones, E. Jones, L. Jones, M. Jones, T. Jones. V. Jones, W. Jones, Josephs, Kale, Kaye, Keane, Kelleher, Kelly. A. Hollmeyer, Mountain Lakes, N. J. Kappa Kappa Gamma L. Robert Hollowell, Hertford, N. C. Pi Kappa Alpha Helen K. Holly, Harrisburg, Pa. Sigma Kappa Betty Holt, Wayland, Mass. R. L. Hottenstein, Millersburg, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha Douglas Houchens, Richmond, Va. Robert Hubbell, Decatur, Ga. Boyd E. Hudson, Jr., Bellehaven, Va. Dorothy Huffman, Asheville, N. C. Ann M. Hughes, Foxboro, Mass. R. A. Hutchison, Forest Hills, N. Y. R. W. Hunsicker, Ft. Washington, Pa. Louise Jones, Charlotte, N. C. Eleanor Huntington, Rutherford, N. J. Sigma Kappa W. H. Hutchinson, La Grange, 111. Pi Kappa Alpha Mary L. Idema, Grand Rapids, Mich. Kappa Alpha Theta Barbara Jane Jenkins, Scranton, Pa. Kappa Kappa Gamma Harvey T. Jenkinson, Bellevue, Pa. Phi Kappa Psi W. G. Jerome, Winston-Salem, N. C Lambda Chi Alpha Nancy C. Johnston, Lexington, Ky. Kappa Alpha Theta Curtis H. Jones, Townsend, Va. Lambda Chi Alpha Elizabeth Jones, New Bern, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta Margaret L. Jones, Durham, N. C. Kappa Delta Thomas O. Jones, High Point, N. C. Virginia Jones, Wheeling, W. Va. Pi Beta Phi W. W. Jones, Wilmington, Del. Alex Josephs, Charlotte, N. C. Beta Theta Pi Richard B. Kale, Troutman, N. C. Pi Kappa Alpha D. Griffith Kaye, Troy, N. Y. Delta Sigma Phi Richard C. Keane, Petersburg, Va. Ruth Kelleher, Audubon, N. J. Edward H. Kelly, Brooklyn, N. Y. 141 Sophomores Kenney, Kerman, Kern, Kerr, Kimbrell, King, Kirkpatrick, Kirkwood. Kirsch, Klemme, Knapp, Knight, R. Knight, Koger, Koop, Kraemer. Kuemper, Kuperman, Kurtzmann, Lacks, Lambert, Lampe, Landis, Larsen. Laupp, Lowder, Lawrence, Leavenworth, Ledbetter, Leiby, Leiter, Lenox. Helene Kenney, Ridgewood, N. J. Kappa Alpha Theta H. D. Kerman, W. Palm Beach, Fla. Jean Kern, Washington, D. C. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Chi Delta Phi J. L. Kerr, Winston-Salem, N. C. M. R. Kimbrell, Jr., Charlotte, N. C. Ruth King, St. Pauls, N. C. Frances Kirkpatrick, Salisbury, N. C. Merle Kirkwood, Hattiesburg, Miss. Delta Delta Delta Jack Kirsch, Rockingham, N. C. Evelyn Klemme, Belleville, 111. Alpha Delta Pi Robert S. Knapp, Belleville, 111. Arthur W. Knight, Durham, N. C. Richard W. Knight, Middletov n, N. Y. Robert McM. Koger, Charleston, S. C. Charles T. Koop, Islip, N. Y. Charles G. Kraemer, Scranton, Pa. M. Lee Kuemper, New York, N. Y. Jesse P. Kuperman, Jersey City, N. J. Zeta Beta Tau; Phi Eta Sigma Beverly Kurtzmann, Maplewood, N. J. Pi Beta Phi Bernard S. Lacks, Quincy, Mass. Doris E. Lambert, Ironton, Ohio Kappa Alpha Theta William Lee Lampe, Harrisburg, Pa. Phi Delta Theta W. B. Landis, Jr., Scranton, Pa. Phi Kappa Sigma Doris Larsen, West Englewood, N. J. Kappa Kappa Gamma Ann Laupp, Wheeling, W. Va. Pi Beta Phi R. C. Lowder, Havre de Grace, Md. Mary Lawrence, Reading, Pa. Kappa Kappa Gamma R. Leavenworth, New Haven, Conn. Lambda Chi Alpha Martha Ledbetter, Rockingham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi Rowland W. Leiby, Jr., Raleigh, N. C. Roy A. Leiter, Jr., Hagerstown, Md. Walter S. Lenox, Richfield Park, N. J. 142 Sophomores Lentz, Lewis, J. Lewis, Leyrer, Licht, Little, Littlejohn, Lockwood. Long, G. Long, J. Long, Love, Lucas, Lundy, E. Lundy, Lutz. Lyon, MacBride, MacDonald, McAdams, McArthur, McCann, McCaskill, McCauley. McChesney, McComb, McCoy, McCracken, McDonough, McFalls, McGarity, McGarrity. Julian C. Lentz, Jr., Durham, N. C. Germaine Lewis, New York, N. Y. Pi Beta Phi Jessica Lewis, Baltimore, Md. William C. Leyrer, Bay Shore, N. Y. Philip C. Licht, Stapleton, N. Y. J. C. Little, Raleigh, N. C. Kappa Sigma Ethel T. Littlejohn, Leesburg, Va. Kappa Delta John A. Lockwood, Verona, N. J. Phi Delta Theta Arthur R. Long, Birmingham, Ala. Sigma Alpha Epsilon George B. Long, Harrisburg, Pa. Sigma Chi John William Long, Norfolk, Va. 143 Jane Love, Washington, D. C. Alpha Delta Pi Chester L. Lucas, Hopkinton, Mass. Phi Kappa Psi Edwin Lundy, Maplewood, N. J. Eleanor Lundy, Troy, N. Y. Kappa Delta Carl Lutz, Brooklyn, N. Y. Eugene Lyon, Durham, N. C. Lucy MacBride, Nutley, N. J. Zeta Tau Alpha R. W. MacDonald, Bl ' mf Id H ' Is,Mich. Eloise McAdams, Belmont, N. C. R. M. McArthur, Winston-S ' em, N. C. Walter R. McCann, Petersburg, Va. Pi Mu Epsilon; Delta Phi Alpha David D. McCaskill, Marianna, Fla. Kappa Alpha J. Y. McCauley, Hagerstown, Md. Alpha Delta Pi Ruth McChesney, Freehold, N. J. Martyne McComb, Bluemont, Va. John O. McCoy, Glen Jean, W. Va. Kap pa Alpha Charles W. McCracken, Merion, Pa. B. W. McDonough, Terryville, Conn. John B. McFalls, Gastonia, N. C. John H. McGarity, Charlotte, N. C. Jack A. McGarrity, Trenton, N. J. Sophomores Mack, Main, Mangum, Mann, Mansell, March, Marchant, Marshall. Martin, Mason, Mathews, H. Mathews, Mathey, Maxwell, Meiklejohn, Miller. C. Miller, K. Miller, R. Miller, Ruth Miller, Minor, Moffitt, Molloy, Moneyhun. Montgomery, Moran, Moritz, Morris, Morton, Muelberger, Meuller, Mullinax. E. V. T. Mack, Rutherfordton, N. C. J. Fulton Main, Kingston, N. Y. Doris Mangum, Rougemont, N. C. J. Wilton Mann, Durham, N. C. Jack Mansell, Maplewood, N. J. Sigma Phi Epsilon Margaret Ann March, Mobile, Ala. Alpha Delta Pi Charles K. Marchant, Verona, N. J. William Marshall, Vinton, Va. Sigma Phi Epsilon Charles Martin, Leaksville, N. C. Fred C. Mason, Upper Darby, Pa. E. G. Mathews, Hamden, Conn. Lambda Chi Alpha H. S. Mathews, Charleston, W. Va. F. M. Moffitt, Rockville Centre, N. Y. Frank A Mathey, New York, N. Y. Lambda Chi Alpha W. Maxwell, Clarksburg, W. Va. Kappa Alpha Theta Louise Meiklejohn, Cheraw, S. C. Kappa Delta Dorothy Miller, Bethlehem, Pa. Phi Mu Charlotte Miller, Miami, Fla. Pi Beta Phi Kenneth R. Miller, Endwell, N. Y. R. W. Miller, Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Kappa Kappa Psi Ruth Miller, Newburgh, N. Y. Kappa Delta Ruth Minor, Batavia, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Gamma R. Margaret Molloy, Iveyland, Pa. Phi Mu Ariel Moneyhun, Johnson City, Tenn. Kappa Alpha Theta J. S. Montgomery, White Plains, N. Y. William J. Moran, Richmond, Va. John M. Moritz, Enka, N. C. Delta Sigma Phi J. Terry Morris, Florence, Ala. Margaret Morton, Charleston, W. Va. Zeta Tau Alpha Anna Muelberger, Maplewood, N. J. Zeta Tau Alpha Carl H. Meuller, Lakewood, Ohio Sigma Alpha Epsilon B. L. Mullinax, Greenville, S. C. 144 Sophomores Murphy, Myers, Nailor, Naudain, Neel, Newens, Newsom, Nixon. Noble, Northrup, Opper, Ormond, Orton, Owens, W. Owens, Pace. Parades, Parker, S. Parker, Patrick, V. Patrick, Pattillo, Pedersen, Pengelly. Perry, Peters, Pfann, Plumb, Pope, Potter, Price, Priest. V. L. Murphy, South Coventry, Conn. Dorothy D. Myers, Philadelphia, Pa. Irvin L. Nailor, Jr., Camp Hill, Pa. Lambda Chi Alpha L. P. Naudain, Haddon Heights, N. J. Phi Delta Theta Marguerite Neel, Thomasville, Ga. Alpha Delta Pi -- Richard S. Newens, Ithaca, N. Y. Sigma Chi Mary Toms Newsom, Durham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi Pennington M. Nixon, Rome, Ga. Kappa Alpha Paul Noble, Fort Wayne, Ind. R. W. Northrup, Rutherford, N. J. Sigma Chi Nellie A. Opper, New Rochelle, N. Y. Delta Delta Delta Margaret Ormond, Durham, N. C. Kappa Delta Stuart Orton, Rahway, N. J. Lambda Chi Alpha Alfred Lemuel Owens, Wilson, N. C. W. R. Owens, Jr., Covington, Va. Martha Pace, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Sigma Kappa P. E. Paredes, San Pedro Sula, C. A. Kappa Alpha Ruth Parker, Rockingham, N. C. Sarah Anne Parker, Vineland, N. J. Delta Delta Delta Patricia Patrick, Baltimore, Md. Sigma Kappa Virginia Patrick, Baltimore, Md. Sigma Kappa Robert R. Pattillo, Jr., Atlanta, Ga. Peder M. Pedersen, Durham, N. C. Donald A. Pengelly, Zanesville, Ohio Phi Kappa Psi. Norvin A. Perry, Jr., Carrollton, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega Frank S. Peters, Nanticoke, Pa. Harry F. Pfann, Mountain Lakes, N. J. Lambda Chi Alpha John J. Plumb, Hackensack, N. J. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Harrell Pope, Dunn, N. C. Trudie Potter, Evanston, 111. Robert M. Price, Scranton, Pa. Sigma Chi Virginia Priest, Onset, Mass. 145 Sophomores Pulliam, Purnell, Quick, Rankin, Rebman, Reinfeld, Richards, Richwine. Ricker, Rine, Ris, Ritter, Rocke, Roesch, Roesti, Rogers. Rohrbaugh, Rohrer, Rollings, Rose, Rosenthal, Rouse, Rouzer, Russell. Ryon, Sackman, Sager, Salmon, Sauer, Sawilosky, Sawyer, Scanlon. Samuel T. Pulliam, Richmond, Va. Oliver J. Purnell, Rockville, Conn. Leon W. Quick, Watertown, N. Y. Sigma Chi Sara E. Rankin, Gastonia, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta A. Fred Rebman, Courtland, Ala. Kappa Alpha G. Reinfeld, Jackson Heights, N. Y. Jean Richards, West Hartford, Conn. J. R. Richwine, Mechanicsburg, Pa. Robert E. Ricker, Elizabethtown, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega Clyde S. Rine, Pittsburgh, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega Howard C. Ris, Freeport, N. Y. Phi Eta Sigma Richard Ritter, Vineland, N. J. Phi Delta Theta Helen Rocke, Norfolk, Va. Zeta Tau Alpha D. R. Roesch, West Brighton, N. Y. Max Roesti, San Francisco, Cal. J. Bruce Rogers, Moorestown, N. J. A. B. Rohrbaugh, Chevy Chase, Md. Kappa Sigma Ivon D. Rohrer, Hagerstown, Md. W. W. Rollings, Jr., Pinewood, S. C. Jim V. Rose, Scranton, Pa. H. E. Rosenthal, Winston-Salem, N. C. Arthur B. Rouse, Jr., Erlanger, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega Elmer E. Rouzer, Hagerstown, Md. Kappa Sigma H. Russell, Jr., Washington, D. C. Thomas S. Ryon, Washington, D. C. Kappa Alpha, Alpha Kappa Psi M. D. Sackman, Garden City, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi Thomas C. Sager, Hagerstown, Md. Sigma Phi Epsilon Frances Salmon, Manila, P. I. Alpha Phi Betty Jane Sauer, River Forest, 111. Alpha Delta Pi Gertrude Sawilosky, Durham, N. C. Alpha Epsilon Phi Thomas B. Sawyer, Greensboro, N. C. R. L. Scanlon, Brooklyn, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta 146 Sophomores Scarbrough, Schmidt, Schworer, Scott, D. Scott, Sewell, Shearin, Sheehan. Shields, Shilliday, Shilling, Shockloss, Sidbury, Sirapson, Sisk, Sledge. Small, Smith, F. Smith, H. Smith, K. Smith, W. Smith, Somerville, Souders. Southgate, Span, Sparks, Spencer, Spurgeon, J. Spurgeon, Stack, Stallcup. M. M. Scarbrough, New Haven, Conn. W. I. Shockloss, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Martha K. Schmidt, Louisville, Ky. Pi Beta Phi Donald Schv orer, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon Aileen D. Scott, Norfolk, Va. Donald J. Scott, W. Palm Beach, Fla. Frances Sewell, Atlanta, Ga. Zeta Tau Alpha C. D. Shearin, Rocky Mount, N. C. D. H. Sheehan, Upper Montclair, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma Lois Shields, Lewes, Del. James G. Shilliday, Pittsburgh, Pa. Alpha Tau Omega Edward W. Shilling, Dover, Del. Pi Kappa Phi 147 Rowena Sidbury, Wilmington, N. C. Kappa Kappa Gamma E. A. Simpson, Jr., Hightstown, N. J. Helen Sisk, Waynesville, N. C. Frances Sledge, Whiteville, N. C. Philip Small, Charlotte, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi Edward Smith, Dunn, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi Fred F. Smith, Orange, N. J. Delta Sigma Phi Harwood T. Smith, Petersburg, Va. Kenneth Smith, Barnesville, Ohio William G. Smith, Haverford, Pa. Sigma Chi W. B. Somerville, Cumberland, Md. Lambda Chi Alpha Betty Souders, Fayetteville, N. C. Kappa Delta Loula Southgate, Durham, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta Samuel Span, Paterson, N. J. Ray Sparks, W. Palm Beach, Fla. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Hugo J. Spencer, Savannah, Ga. Allen C. Spurgeon, Uniontown, Pa. John L. Spurgeon, Uniontown, Pa. Warren C. Stack, Monroe, N. C. Marjorie Stallcup, St. Petersburg, Fla. Sophomores Stamaton, Stamey, Starke, Stauffer, Steckel, Stedman, Steele, Stephens. R. Stephens, Stetler, Stine, Stocks, Stokes, Stone, R. Stone, Storie. Stowell, Strauss, Stutson, Sultner, Sundholnri, Sutton, Sykes, Tantum. Taylor, F. Taylor, H. Taylor, S. Taylor, Thonrias, Thompson, W. G. Thompson, Thornhill. Jack C. Stamaton, Stamford, Conn. Robert H. Stamey, Lawndale, N. C. Helen Starke, Ridgewood, N. J. C. C. Stauffer, Washington, D. C. Sigma Chi Wells S. Steckel, Freeport, N. Y. Ruth Stedman, Moncure, N. C. Anne L. Steele, Rockingham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi Hal C. Stephens, Morristown, Tenn. R. H. Stephens, Wilmington, Del. Sigma Chi Keith H. Stetler, York, Pa. Betty Stine, Wilmington, Del. Kappa Delta William L. Stocks, Jr., Altoona, Pa. Sigma Chi Elmer M. Stokes, Savannah, Ga. Phi Delta Theta Betty Wyllys Stone, Clarindon, Va. Alpha Delta Pi Russell D. Stone, Wilmington, N. C. James C. Storie, Liberty, N. Y. Betty Ann Stowell, Foxchase, Pa. Phi Mu Carol Strauss, Winston-Salem, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta Irene Stutson, Suffolk, Va. Alpha Epsilon Phi Isabel Sultner, York, Pa. Delta Delta Delta ]. Edward Sundholm, Brooklyn, N. Y. Kappa Sigma Wilton Carey Sutton, Jackson, Miss. H. A. Sykes, Jr., Queens Village, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta E. C. Tantum, Cream Ridge, N. J. Curtis S. Taylor, Addison, N. Y. Phi Eta Sigma Francis S. Taylor, Durham, N. C. Hoy Taylor, Jr., Milledgeville, Ga. Sherwood B. Taylor, Scranton, Pa. Charles A. Thomas, Jenkintown, Pa. Sigma Chi Walter R. Thompson, Marion, N. C. W. G. Thompson, Portland, Maine G. T. Thornhill, Bluefield, W. Va. Lambda Chi Alpha 148 Sophomores Tice, Timberlake, T. Timberlake, Tolson, Towner, Townsend, Treut, Truax. Turnage, Turner, M. Turner, Turley, Ulrich, Van Camp, Van Lill, Vaughn. Von Glahn, Wade, Wagner, Walker, Wallace, Walter, Wannamaker, Watson. E. Watson, Waugh, Webster, Weidner, Weil, Weinstein, Wells, W. Wells. Mary Tice, Bethlehem, Pa. Phi Mu Lloyd F. Timberlake, Columbia, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi T. H. Timberlake, Columbia, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi G. A. Tolson, New Bern, N. C. Zeta Tau Alpha Robert C. Towner, Nunda, N. Y. R. Townsend, Staten Island, N. Y. Walter E. Treut, Rutherford, N. J. Delta Tau Delta O. W. Truax, Martins Ferry, Ohio Roy Turnage, II, Ayden, N. C. Charles F. Turner, Birmingham, Ala. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma Milford P. Turner, Clayton, N. J. Sigma Chi 149 E. W. Turley, Parkersburg, W. Va. Harvey E. Ulrich, Haddenfield, N. J. Robert C. Van Camp, Scranton, Pa. S. J. Van Lill, III, Baltimore, Md. Phi Delta Theta Enoch S. Vaughn, Washington, N. C. H. D. Von Glahn, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Delta Phi Alpha Luther Irwin Wade, Elkin, N. C. Harold E. Wagner, Riverton, N. J. Remsen W. Walker, Tarrytown, N. Y. Sigma Phi Epsilon Ann E. Wallace, Charlotte, N. C. Sigma Kappa George Walter, Washington, D. C. Phi Kappa Sigma Louise Wannamaker, Durham, N. C. Alpha Delta Pi Ann Watson, Cheraw, S. C. Delta Delta Delta E. L. Watson, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Muriel Waugh, Maplewood, N. J. T. P. Webster, Jr., Tappahannock, Va. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma John H. Weidner, Reading, Pa. Helen Marie Weil, Goldsboro, N. C. Alpha Epsilon Phi Maurice A. Weinstein, Salem, N. J. Simeon H. Wells, Raleigh, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi William W. Wells, Elmira, N. Y. Sigma Chi Sophomores West, Wherrett, Whitaker, White, J. White, M. White, Whiting, Widgery. Widmark, Wiley, A. Wiley, Williams, B. Williams, J. Williams, R. Williams, M. Williams. Willis, Winburn, Windsor, Winston, Wooldridge, Woolfolk, Worthington, Wright. M. Wright, Yoder, York, Young, J. Young, Zerbach, Ziegler, Zinn. James Kilgo West, Asheville, N. C. Delta Sigma Phi N. L. Wherrett, Wilmington, Del. Phi Kappa Psi Ruth L. Whitaker, Dravosburg, Pa. Donald White, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Joseph M. White, Portsmouth, Va. Sigma Chi Margaret White, Ridgewood, N. J. Kappa Alpha Theta Lois Whiting, Mt. Lakes, N. J. Zeta Tau Alpha Rhoda Widgery, Durham, N. C. Kappa Alpha Theta Walter L. Widmark, Verona, N. J. Arthur L. Wiley, Jr., Norfolk, Va. Avis Wiley, Sharon, Conn Berry C. Williams, Fayetteville, Tenn. Bill J. Williams, Fayetteville, Tenn. Joseph Lake Williams, Easley, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi Ralph F. Williams, Jr., Delmar, Del. Manley C. Williams, Rahway, N. J. Cecile Willis, Daytona Beach, Fla. Robert J. Winburn, Midville, Ga. Thomas B. Windsor, Cambridge, Md. Phi Kappa Psi Marjorie Winston, Roanoke, Va. Alpha Delta Pi Lee Wooldridge, W. Hartford, Conn. Kappa Delta Beth Woolfolk, Lynchburg, Va. Zeta Tau Alpha G. S. Worthington, Washington, D.C. Delta Tau Delta Evelyn Wright, Delmar, Del. Margery Wright, Clarksburg, W. Va. Alpha Phi J. Russell Yoder, Jr., Esterly, Pa. Raymond E. York, Asheville, N. C. Hubert P. Young, Scarsdale, N. Y. Lambda Chi Alpha Jeanne Young, Cleveland, Ohio Alpha Delta Pi Dorothy Zerbach, Rocky Mount, N. C. Anne Ziegler, Farmer City, 111. Kappa Kappa Gamma Ruth Zinn, Brooklyn, N. Y. Alpha Epsilon Phi 150 FRESHMEN Freshmen Abarca, Abbott, Abele, Abernethy, Adams, P. Adams, Ade, Agar, Agnello, S. Agnello. Agostini, Alverson, Ameden, Applewhite, Arthur, Atkins, R. Atkins, W. Atkins, Aycock, Ayers Bailey, Baker, L. Baker, Baldwin, Ball, Ballenger, Bard, Bariscillo, Barkle, Barnes. J. Barnes, Barnhill, Barnum, Barrett, M. Barrett, Barry, Baskerville, R. Baskerville, Battle, Baugh. Baylor, N. Baylor, Beaman, Beatty, Bechara, Beckel, Becker, Bell. First Row: Enrique Abarca, Jr., Santurce, Puerto Rico; John Alfred Abbott, Birmingham, Ala.; Charles Henry Abele, Yorktown Heights, N. Y.; Beatrice Abernethy, Durham, N. C; Gwendolyn Adams, Martinsburg, W. Va.; Priscilla Adams, Jacksonville, Fla.; William Henry Ade, Jr., Chicago, 111.; John Curtis Agar, Black Mountain, N. C; Joseph A. Agnello, Knox, Pa.; Samuel Anthony Agnello, Jamestown, N. Y. Second Row: Emil Anthony Agostini, New York, N. Y.; Jesse M. Alverson, Jr., Harlan, Ky.; James Paul Amaden, East Hampton, N. Y.; Elizabeth Applewhite, Halifax, N. C.; Sara Arthur, Zanesville, Ohio; Lloyd Jackson Atkins, Gastonia, N. C.; Robert Serls Atkins, Middleburg, N. C; Wade Winston Atkins, Jr., Greensboro, N. C; Benjamin Daniel Aycock, Goldsboro, N. C; Carlton Royse Ayers, New Rochelle, N. Y. Third Row: Edgar Lee Bailey, Lexington, N. C; Ellis Thomson Baker, Baltimore, Md.; Louise Baker, Concord, N. H.; William Edwin Baldwin, Jr., Dunn, N. C; Elizabeth Ball, Maplewood, N. J.; Henry Grady Ballenger, Greenville, S. C; Donald Gibson Bard, Jr., Pleasantville, N. Y.; Virginia Bariscillo, Asbury Park, N. J.; John Egbert Barkle, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Dorothy Barnes, Charleston, W. Va. Fourth Row: Jack Carlisle Barnes, Greensboro, N. C; Lola Barnhill, Wilmington, Del.; John Pierpont Barnum, Jr. West Hartford, Conn.; John Lee Barrett, Gross Pointe, Mich.; Mary Dean Barrett, Stamford, Conn.; Frank Coates Barry, Sag Harbor, N. Y.; Dorothy Baskerville, Lutherville, Md.; Robert Dortch Baskerville, Warrenton, N. C; Guy Arthur Battle, Sumpter, S. C; Robert Eberhart Baugh, Youngstown, Ohio. Fifth Row: Clifford Moses Baylor, Washington, N. J.; Norman Stanley Baylor, Washington, N. J.; John Robert Beaman, Morehead City, N. C; Hilton Arnold Beatty, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Jose Bechara, Jr., Mayaguez, Puerto Rico; Willis Spangler Beckel, Huntington, Pa.; Doris Becker, Upper Darby, Pa.; George E. Bell, Jr., Rockville, Md. 152 Freshmen Bender, Bennett, M. Bennett, Berger, Bergman, Berini, Bessemer, Bew, Biddle, Birmingham Bishop, J. Bishop, Blackley, Blair, Blake, Bobbitt, Boger, Booth, Bowen, Brandon. Braynard, Braznell, Breedlove, Briggs, Britton, Britz, Brogan, Brooks, R. Brooks, Brothers. Brown, K. Brown, M. Brown, T. Brown, Brugh, Bryan, Bunn, Burgess, Burhans, Burleson. Bushnell, Butler, W. Butler, Butt, Caddell, Cahill, Cairns, Campbell. First Row: William Andrew Bender, III, Upper Darby, Pa.; Helen Bennett, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Mary Bennett, Babson Park, Fla.; William Arthur Berger, Rahway, N. J.; Russell Bergman, Madison, N. J.; Joe Frank Berini, Durham, N. C; James Joseph Bessemer, Larchmont, N. Y.; David Fitzsimmons Bew, Margate City, N. C; Mary Duke Biddle, New York, N. Y.; G. G. Birmingham, Jr., Liberty, N. Y. Second Row: Hamilton Loomis Bishop, Garden City, N. Y.; John Livermore Bishop, Wrentham, Mass.; William Ormand Blackley, Durham, N. C; Barbara Blair, Monmouth, 111.; James Peter Blake, New Hartford, N. Y.; Mildred Bobbitt, Durham, N. C; Freda Boger, Philadelphia, Pa.; John Merritt Booth, Pollocksville, N. C; James Darrel Bowen, Williamston, N. C; Minnie Brandon, Blackstone, Va. Third Row: Francis Osborn Braynard, Glen Cove, N. Y.; Jane Braznell, Miami Beach, Fla.; Caroline Breedlove, Durham, N. C; Frances Briggs, Durham, N. C; John Bossard Britton, Sumpter, S. C; Matthew Leopold Britz, Winston- Salem, N. C; James Michael Brogan, Raleigh, N. C; Frances Brooks, Warsaw, N. C; Ray Brooks, Durham, N. C; Robert Carlton Brothers, Wilmington, N. C. Fourth Row: Betty Jean Brown, Blanchester, Ohio; Kathleen Maidee Brown, South Orange, N. J.; Morrison Ropes Brown, Swampscott, Mass.; Theron Hart Brown, 111, Jackson Heights, N. J.; Louise Brugh, Montgomery, W. Va.; William Lyttle Bryan, Durham, N. C; Charles Ivy Bunn, Spring Hope, N. C.; Lucille Burgess, Summit, N. J.; James Lewis Burhans, Dunbar, Pa.; Norris Mervin Burleson, Port Allegany, Pa. Fifth Row: Edward Brooks Bushnell, Hartford, Conn.; Jack Floyd Butler, Canandaigua, N. Y.; Willis Butler, Shreveport, La.; Dorothy Butt, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Langdon Dowd Caddell, Hoffman, N. C.; John Andrew Cahill, Brookfield Center, Conn.; George Francis Cairns, Sunbury, Pa.; Carl Capper Campbell, Asheville, N. C. 153 Freshmen Campbell, Carpenter, R. Carpenter, Carter, Caskey, Cayce, Cendoya, Chambers, Chapman, Chason. Chatham, Chestnut, Chickering, Chubb, Churchill, Clarke, R. Clarke, Clay, Clayton, Cloud. Cobb, Coleman, Constien, Cook, R. Cook, Cooke, Cooley, Coolidge, Coppedge, Coppersmith. Costigan, Courtwright, Cowlin, S. Cowlin, Cramer, Craven, Crawford, Cree, Creery, Crilly. Critcher, Crocker, Culp, Cure, Curtis, T. Curtis, Daane, Dadmun. First Row: Martha Campbell, Bradenton, Fla.; Albert J. Carpenter, Attleboro, Mass.; Ruth Carpenter, Garden City, N. Y.; Clyton Cann Carter, Centreville, Md.; John Thomas Caskey, Washington, D. C; Edgard Evans Cayce, Virginia Beach, Va.; John Cendoya, Jr., Santiago, Cuba; William Frederick Chambers, Peeksklll, N. Y.; John Walker Chapman, New Haven, Conn.; Virginia Chason, Elizabeth, N. J. Second Row: Alex Chatham, Jr., Elkin, N. C; Doris Chestnut, Durham, N. C; Charles Gordon Chickering, Wilmington, Del.; Katherine Chubb, South Orange, N. J.; Howard William Churchill, Portland, Maine; Finley T. Clarke, Jr., Morganton, N. C; Richard Norton Clarke, Montclair, N. J.; Mary Drew Clay, Macon, Ga.; Charles Manning Clayton, Harrisburg, Pa.; Dorothea Cloud, Kennett Square, Pa. Third Row: Irvin Wilson Cobb, Winston-Salem, N. C; Margaret Coleman, Kenosha, Wis.; Helen Constien, Ashland, Pa.; David S. T. Cook, Kenmore, N. Y.; Richard Warner Cook, Washington, N. J.; Benjamin Anderson Cooke, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Erma Cooley, Frenchtown, N. J.; Emily Coolidge, Greenfield, Mass.; Everette Peter Coppedge, Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Irma Coppersmith, Elizabeth City, N. C. Fourth Row: Carroll Costigan, Bloomington, 111.; Monroe Courtwright, Columbus, Ohio; K. S. Cowlin, Massillon, Ohio; Sidney Eugene Cowlin, Massillon, Ohio; Wellington Morley Cramer, Brooklyn, N. Y.; James B. Craven, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; Virginia Crawford, Flushing, N. Y.; John Franklin Cree, Sunbury, Pa.; Dorothy Creery, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Warren Lee Crilly Altoona, Pa. Fifth Row: Robert Francis Critcher, Buffalo, N. Y.; Martha Crocker, Tulsa, Okla.; Raymond Beatty Culp, Harris- burg, Pa.; Arnold Grant Cure, Pine Hill, N. Y.; Evelyn Curtis, Cawthorne, N. J.; Thomas Alfred Curtis, Dalton, Pa.; James Dewey Daane, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Roy Francis Dadmun, Baltimore, Md. 154 Freshmen f :.f ' ■% 3 Banner, Darden, Davenport, J. Davenport, Davis, G. Davis, T. Davis, Dawson, Dean, DeHuH, Denny, Der Tatevasian, Deutsch, Dibeler, Dobbins, DoUard, Donnelly, R. A. Donnelly, Donovan, Down. Doyle, Drake, W. Drake, Duke, Duncan, Dunstan, Dusenburg, Duttenpofer, Dworsky, Eager, Earle, Eckersley, Edwards, Elder, Elmiger, Emery, Emory, Erion, Evans, Falciani. Farrell, Ferguson, Few, Findlay, Finefrock, Finger, Finn, Fischer. First Row: Edgar LeMoyne Danner, Larchmont, N. Y.; Harry McMillan Darden, Littleton, N. C; Clifton Albert Davenport, Victoria, Va.; John Purinton Davenport, Chevy Chase, Md.; Betsy Hale Davis, Baltimore, Md.; George Siward Davis, Durham, N. C; Thomas Edgar Davis, Rockingham, N. C; Archibald Nail Dawson, Lakewood, Ohio; James Robert Dean, Tazewell, Va.; Catherine DeHuff, Cynwyd, Pa. Second Row: Dan Denny, Harriman, Tenn.; R. A. Der Tatevasian, Braddock, Pa.; Muriel Deutsch, New York, N. Y.; Vernon Hamilton Dibeler, Roselle Park, N. J.; James Wilson Dobbins, Greenville, S. C; John Taff Dollard, Washington, D. C; Raymond William Donnelly, South Norwalk, Conn.; Richard Augustus Donnelly, Brielle, N. J.; Frederick Reynold Donovan, Newark, N. J.; Martha Down, Pleasant Ridge, Mich. Third Row: William Stowell Doyle, Lowell, Mich.; Elmer Frederick Drake, Roselle Park, N. J.; William Exall Drake, East Orange, N. J.; Robert Campbell Duke, Harrisonburg, Va.; Leroy Edward Duncan, Jr., Norfolk, Va.; Garland Harrington Dunstan, Elizabeth City, N. C; Jane Dusenburg, Miami, Fla.; Francis Sennett Duttenpofer, Cincinnati, Ohio; Bernard Ezra Dworsky, Durham, N. C; Howard Eager, Jr., Washington, D. C. Fourth Row: Elizabeth Earle, Hermansville, Mich.; Floyd Roland Eckersley, Scranton, Pa.; Clyde Edwards, Durham, N. C; Guy Hampton Elder, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; Marguerite Elmiger, Bayonne, N. J.; Elizabeth Emery, Sanford, Maine; Earl LeRoy Emory, Jr., Chocowinity, N. C; Mary Elizabeth Erion, Orchard, N. Y.; Grace Evans, Windber, Pa.; Romeo Alfred Falciani, Hammonton, N. J. Fifth Row: John Cahill Farrell, Norwich, N. Y.; Denzil Morton Ferguson, Terre Haute, Ind.; Kendrick Sheffield Few Durham, N. C; Robert Blackman Findlay, Woodcliffe, N. J.; Charles Raymond Finefrock, Massilon, Ohio; Margaret Finger, Maiden, N. C; Walter Finn, Palmyra, N. Y.; Adolphe Gordon Fischer, Baltimore, Md. 155 Sl jMf A «S Jfi, t.H A a« « m Freshmen Fisher, R. Fisher, Fitzgerald, Fleet, Fleetwood, Fliflet, Floyd, Fogarty, Fogg, Foote. Foreman, Forlines, Forsberg, Fox, Franck, Franson, Fraser, L. Fraser, Freidlin, French. Friedman, Fuller, Fuller, Furlong, Gager, Gaines, Gallo, Gamsby, Gardt, Garlock. Garver, Gatewood, Gattis, Gaudreau, Gayle, Gerard, Gibbs, Gibson, L. Gibson, Gillin. Gingland, Gisriel, Glaser, Glasson, Goehrig, Goldstein, Goodale, Goode. First Row: Dorothy Fisher, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Robert S. Fisher, South Orange, N. J.; James Morgan Fitzgerald, Wilson, N. C; Gertrude Fleet, Winter Haven, Fla.; John Kenneth Fleetwood, Seaford, Del.; Arne Thorlief Fliflet, Mountain Lakes, N. J.; Hal Stanfield Floyd, Fairmont, N. C; Daniel Brown Fogarty, Jacksonville, Fla.; Charles Watson Fogg, Bethlehem, Pa.; Theodore Foote, Orange, N. J. Second Row: William Woodley Foreman, Elizabeth City, N. C; John Arthur Forlines, Durham, N. C; Raynor Morgan Forsberg, Pittsburg, Pa.; William Maxie Fox, Roxboro, N. C; William Franck, Durham, N. C; Eric Carl. Franson, Hackensack, N. J.; Ethel Jean Fraser, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Louise Fraser, Fort Bragg, N. C.; Julius Freidlin, Jacksonville, Fla.; Charles Ferris French, Mountain Lakes, N. J. Third Row: Charlotte Friedman, Asheville, N. C; Elizabeth Fuller, Arlington, Va.; Robert House Fuller, Rochester, N. Y.; John Hamilton Furlong, Chester, Pa.; Rachel Clark Gager, Yantie, Conn.; Jay Haydon Gaines, Evanston, 111.; Frederick John Gallo, Vineland, N. J.; John Woodruff Gamsby, New Haven, Conn.; Wylie Gardt, Bradford, Mass.; Harold George Garlock, Lockport, N. Y. Fourth Row: Margaret Garver, Iveyland, Pa.; Robert Charles Gatewood, Mt. Sterling, Ky.; Walter Robert Gattis, Durham, N. C; Gerard Lawrence Gaudreau, Westbrook, Maine; Miles Alderman Gayle, High Point, N. C; Frank Hight Gerard, Upper Darby, Pa.; Gibbs Crabtree Gibbs, Mt. Airy, N. C; Jeptha Nelson Gibson, Jr., Gibson, N. C; Lillian Gibson, Elizabeth, N. J.; Hazelle Gillin, Bangor, Maine. Fifth Row: Richard Parsons Gingland, Hackettstown, Pa.; Harper Gisriel, Baltimore, Md.; Audrey Glaser, West CoUingswood, N. J.; John Glasson, Durham, N. C; John Appleget Goehrig, Trenton, N. J.; Joseph Goldstein, Salem, N. J.; Helen Goodale, Jacksonville, Fla.; Richard William Goode, Newton, Mass. 156 Freshmen § Gore, Goree, Gorton, Graebner, Graham, Grahl, Gregson, Griffin, Grimm, Groesbeck. Groupe, Groves, Haas, Hammond, Hancock, Hanig, Hanshaw, Hardin, Haring, Harris. H. Harris, Harrison, Hartlieb, Harvey, Haskell, Hatch, Hatcher, Hauser, Hawkins, Hayes. Henry, Herman, H ibberd, Hiergesell, Hill, Hinshaw, Hitch, Hobbs, Hobgood, Hoggan. Holland, Holmes, Horack, Horn, Home, Horsting, Howard, J. Howard. First Row: Henry Grady Gore, Jr., Washington, D. C; Mary Goree, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Jeanne Gorton, Great Neck, N. Y.; Paul Decker Graebner, Lakewood, Ohio; Pauhne Graham, Hampden, Highland, Maine; James Samuel Grahl, Americus, Ga.; Jack Roger Gregson, Morristown, N. J.; Gerald Laurens Griffin, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Thomas Robert Grimm, Jr., South Orange, N. J.; William Francis Groesbeck, Ilion, N. Y. Second Row: Vincent Groupe, Philadelphia, Pa.; Carolyn Groves, Red Hook, N. Y.; Robert Otto Haas, New York, N. Y.; Homer Humphrey Hammond, Garden City, N. Y.; Albert Delos Hancock, Port Washington, N. Y.; William Fred Hanig, Elmhurst, N. Y.; Frank Wayne Hanshaw, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Hilliard Hardin, Clover, S. C; T. Alton Haring, Hackensack, N. J.; Douglas Leroy Harris, Fort Pierce, Fla. , Third Row: Herschel William Harris, Douglas, Ga.; Doris Harrison, Crosswicks, N. J.; Robert Louis Hartlieb, Wantagh, N. Y.; Jack Wendell Harvey, Oak Hill, W. Va.; Ruth Haskell, Washington, D. C; John Palmer Hatch, White Plains, N. Y.; Elizabeth Hatcher, High Point, N. C; Edward Michael Hauser, Glenside, Pa.; Jane Hawkins, Marietta, Ga.; Kiffin Rockwell Hayes, Charlotte, N. C. Fourth Row: Dorothy Henry, Atlanta, Ga.; Samuel Herman, Savannah, Ga.; Chris Hibberd, Durham, N. C; Richard Mason Hiergesell, Roselle Park, N. J.; Dan Winfield Hill, Asheville, N. C; Esther Hinshaw, Winston-Salem, N. C; Robert Arthur Hitch, Jacksonville, Fla.; Frederick Thomas Hobbs, Wilmington, N. C; Arthur Alton Hobgood, Durham, N. C; Laurence Edward Hoggan, New Haven, Conn. Fifth Row: Sherrill Reid Holland, Jr., Statesville, N. C; Reid Thomas Holmes, Wildwood, N. J.; Benjamin Shambaugh Horack, Durham, N. C; Margaret Horn, Cleveland, N. C; Stephen Francis Home, F ' armington, N. C; Jane Horsting, Willmette, 111.; Constance Howard, Forest Hills, N. Y.; John Couper Howard, Savannah, Ga. 157 Freshmen Howe, Howell, Hoyle, Huck, Hudson, Hulme, Hutchinson, Hyde, Ingham, Inglis. Ingram, Irwin, Jackson, C. Jackson, S. Jackson, James, R. J. James, W. James, Jancsics, Jessup John, Johnson, E. Johnson, W. Johnson, Jones, H. Jones, J. Jones, P. Jones, Jordan, Kahle. Kaplan, Kasik, Keister, Kelley, Kennedy, Kerr, Kidd, Kilduff, King, Klemm. Klepp, Koehnlein, Koerner, Kohler, Koonce, Koop, Kouwenhoven, Kreiser. First Row: Elliot Harroun Howe, Fulton, N. Y.; Jean Howell, Atlanta, Ga.; David Wade Hoyle, Durham, N. C; William Richard Huck, Bloomfield, N. J.; W. Hill Hudson, Jr., Shelby, N. C; William S. N. Hulme, Jackson Heights, N. Y.; John Grosvernor Hutchinson, Ballston, Va.; Lorraine Hyde, Interlaken, N. J.; Alfred Walker Ingham, New York, N. Y.; Edward Sylvester Inglis, Great Neck, N. Y. Second Row: John Edgar Ingram, Lewes, Del.; William Madison Irwin, Sunbury, Pa.; Cecil Banon Jackson, Durham, N. C; Clarinda Jackson, St. Augustine, Fla.; Stevens Pell Jackson, Larchmont, N. Y.; Robert Lewis James, Petersburg, Va.; Robert Johnson James, Bedford, Va.; Walter Delos James, Washington, D. C; Mathew Joseph Jancsics, Newark, N. J.; Julian Clyde Jessup, Hertford, N. C. Third Row: Helene John, Uniontown, Pa.; Edward Harold Johnson, Jr., Orlando, Fla.; Eloise Johnson, Glenburnie, Md.; Walter Christopher Johnson, Jr., Chattanooga, Tenn.; Curtis Scott Jones, Greenlawn, N. Y.; Horace Ellis Jones, Spring City, Pa.; James Elwood Jones, Jr., High Point, N. C; Paul Kingsbury Jones, Salem, Mass.; Macon Jordan, Mt. Airy, N. C; John Roscoe Kahle, Columbus, Ohio. Fourth Row: Lillian Kaplan, Mt. Gilead, N. C; Charles Kasik, Jr., Milwaukee, Wis.; Robert Stanley Keister, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Jane Kelley, Atlanta, Ga.; Robert Freeman Kennedy, Montclair, N. J.; Walter James Kerr, Rumson, N. J.; Stephen Kidd, Penns Grove, N. J.; Barbara Kilduff, Waterbury, Conn.; Dwight Bradley King, Waterbury, Conn.; Betty Klemm, Bloomington, 111. Fifth Row: Alfred Klepp, Arlington, N. J.; Betty Koehnlein, Kenmore, N. Y.; John Maxwell Koerner, East Paterson, N. J.; Sue Kohler, Charlotte, N. C; James Leonard Koonce, High Point, N. C; Chester Sedgewick Koop, Islip, N. Y.; Jean Kouwenhoven, Scarsdale, N. Y.; C. Frederick Kreiser, Lebanon, Pa. 158 Freshmen Krummel, Lacock, Laing, Lambert, Lambeth, Landreth, Laning, Lanning, Laprade, Lavenstein Lavinder, Laws, Leckie, Lee, LeGwin, Lemonier, Lentz, Leon, Levinson, Levitt. Levy, Lewis, Liipfert, Lindhjem, Littler, Liverant, Livingston, Logan, Lohman, Long. Longworth, Lose, Love, Lovell, K. Lovell, P. Lovell, Lowe, Lowenstein, Lutz, Lynch. Lyons, Lyttle, MacClements, MacLeod, D. MacLeod, MacMuUen, McDaniel, McGimsey. First Row: Mary Eleanor Krummel, Durham, N. C; John Griffith Lacock, Washington, Pa.; James McAlpin Laing, II, Lewisburg, W. Va.; Ralph Colin Lambert, Columbia, S. C; Ralph MacAuley Lambeth, Thomasville, N. C; Charles Elmer Landreth, Winston-Salem, N. C; Eugene LaRue Laning, Jr., Bridgeton, N. J.; Donald Day Lanning, West Trenton, N. J.; Nancy Laprade, Durham, N. C; Esther Lavenstein, Petersburg, Va. Second Row: Thomas Curtiss Lavinder, Abingdon, Va.; Virginia Laws, Moravian Falls, N. C; James Alexander Leckie, New York, N. Y.; Francis Brown Lee, Monroe, N. C; John Bunyan LeGwin, Rockingham, N. C; Charles John Lemonier, Weehawken, N. J.; John Luther Lentz, Durham, N. C; Virginia Leon, Westfield, N. J.; Joseph Herman Levinson, Benson, N. C; Helen Levitt, Petersburg, Va. Third Row: Leonard Daniel Levy, Durham, N. C; Richard Quarles Lewis, Annapolis, Md.; William Joseph Liipfert, Fort Valley, Ga.; Carolyn Lindhjem, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; James William Littler, Manlius, N. Y.; Freda Liverant, York, Pa.; Ruth Livingston, Philadelphia, Pa.; John Charles Logan, Kenmore, N. Y.; Robert Lohman, Birmingham, Ala.; Max Bickford Long, Roxboro, N. C. Fourth Row: Jean Longworth, Copperhill, Tenn.; Robert Norman Lose, Philadelphia, Pa.; Bobbie Jean Love, Nashville, N. C; Ernest James Lovell, Jr., Raleigh, N. C; Kenneth D. Lovell, Florence, Ala.; Paul Abbott Lovell, Quincy, Mass.; Harold Thomas Lowe, Rutherford, N. J.; Herbert Roof Lowenstein, Irvington, N. J.; Elizabeth Lutz, Ridgewood, N. J.; John Cooper Lynch, Jr., Stockbridge, Mass. Fifth Row: Wilbur Allan Lyons, Ridgewood, N. J.; John Logan Lyttle, New York, N. Y.; Mary Helen MacClements, Charlotte, N. C; Betsy MacLeod, Buffalo, N. Y.; Duncan Kennedy MacLeod, Buffalo, N. Y.; Miriam MacMullen, Maplewood, N. J.; William Kirkwood McDaniel, Scarsdale, N. Y.; James Franks McGimsey, Morganton, N. C. 159 Freshmen McGinnis, Mclnnis, McKee, McLain, McLaughlin, McMackin, McMillin, Mack, Maddox, McGraw Manbeck, Manville, Margolis, Markham, Marks, Marlatt, Marlowe, Marshall, B. Marshall, G. Marshall. Martin, S. Martin, Martz, Marx, Mason, W. Mason, Massie, Matheson, Mauser, Maxwell. Meldrun, Mellen, Merchant, Mewborn, Miles, R. Miles, Mille r, D. W. Miller, G. Miller, R. Miller W. Miller, Milliette, Millner, Minor, Mitchell, H. Mitchell, Mize, Mizell. First Row: Madeline McGinnis, Montclair, N. J.; Alex Nott Mclnnis, Gulf Hammock, Fla.; James Elder McKee, Norristown, Pa.; William Campbell McLain, Columbia, S. C; Byron Howard McLaughlin, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Frank Joseph McMackin, Jersey City, N. J.; Elbert Raymond McMillin, Fayetteville, Tenn.; Harold Dwight Mack, Jr., Haw- thorne, N. Y.; Robert Earle Maddox, Greensboro, N. C; Mary McGraw, Carlsbad, N. M. Second Row: John Norman Manbeck, Lewistown, Pa.; Ruth Manville, Tryon, N. C; Kathryn Margolis, Passaic, N. J.; Frank Turner Markham, Tiptonville, Tenn.; Geneva Marks, Sanford, N. C; Mary Marlatt, Larchmont, N. Y.; James Robert Marlowe, Thomasville, N. C; Archibald George Marshall, New Haven, Conn.; Betty Marshall, Hender- sonville, N. C; George Fox Marshall, Durham, N. C. Third Row: Catherine Martin, Rochester, N. Y.; Sidney Coke Martin, Washington, D. C; Edward E. Martz, Pine Grove Mills, Pa.; Gloria Marx, River Edge, N. J.; Howard Patrick Mason, Hollywood, Cal.; Walter Harrison Mason, New York, N. Y.; Ottis Howard Massie, East Waynesville, N. C; Emily Matheson, Atlanta, Ga.; Frances Mauser, Catasaugua, Pa.; Jean Maxwell, Clarksburg, W. Va. Fourth Row: George Boysen Meldrun, Langhorne, Pa.; James Demetrios Mellen, Everett, Mass.; Robert Eugene Merchant, Wilkinsburg, Pa.; Grace Mewborn, Snow Hill, N. C; Charles N. Miles, Seymour, Conn.; Robert Irving Miles, Glenside, Pa.; Dorothy Miller, Wilmington, N. C; Dudley Webb Miller, Jr., White Plains, N. Y.; Garfield Lankard Miller, Coral Gables, Fla.; Reed C. Miller, Brookline, Mass. Fifth Row: William Ellsworth Miller, Jr., Sunbury, Pa.; Jeanne Milliette, Drexel Hill, Pa.; lone Millner, New Rochelle, N. Y.; John Travis Minor, Batavia, N. Y.; Phil Mitchell, II, Rock Island, III; Henry Raid Mitchell, Jr., Wash- ington, N. C; Willie Lee Mize, Durham, N. C; Louise Mizell, Opp, Ala. 160 Freshmen M p ] Mooney, Moore, H. Moore, Moorhead, Moreton, Morgan, Morrison, Morrow, Morton, Murfree. Murphy, Murray, Myers, Nath, Neikirk, Nelson, Newber, Nichols, Nixon, Nugent. Oak, Oliver, Olson, W. Olson, O ' Mara, O ' Neil, Ord, Ordway, Osburn, Orton. Oviatt, Pack, Part, Parker, R. Parker, Parsons, Paschall, Patterson, M. Patterson, Pawling. Payne, Pedeflous, Peebles, Peffer, Pennell, Perdue, Perrell, Perry. First Row: Thomas Harrison Mooney, Philadelphia, Pa.; George Sorrell Moore, Charlotte, N. C; Hervey Studdi- ford Moore, Jr., Sea Girt, N. J.; Charles Albert Moorhead, Sunbury, Pa.; Jeannette Moreton, Erie, Pa.; Clinton Wilkins Morgan, Lombard, 111.; Virginia Morrison, Rockingham, N. C; George Samuel Morrow, Jr., Scarsdale, N. Y.; Eugene Laughlin Morton, Lakewood, Ohio; Matthias Brickell Murfree, Murfreesboro, Tenn. Second Row: John Irwin Murphy, Scottsdale, Pa.; James Murray, Jr., Port Washington, N. Y.; John Pohly Myers, New York, N. Y.; Lawrence Haig Nath, Middletown, N. Y.; William Irvin Neikirk, Hagerstown, Md.; Helen Nelson, Loganport, Md.; John Frederick Newber, Wilmington, N. C; Arthur Dewey Nichols, Jr., North Abington, Mass.; Claiborne Merrell Nixon, Elizabeth City, N. C; Allen Edward Nugent, New Haven, Conn. Third Row: Eleanor Oak, Bound Brook, N. J.; Ann Oliver, Westfield, N. J.; Harlan Haworth Olson, Le Grange, 111.; Wallace Bruce Olson, Plainfield, N. J.; Robert James O ' Mara, Ashland, Ky.; John Raymond O ' Neil, Haverhill, Mass.; Jean Ord, McKeesport, Pa.; Arthur Dana Ordway, Douglastown, N. Y.; Mary Kathryn Osburn, DuBois, Pa.; James Richard Orton, Lewes, Del. Fourth Row: Arthur Oviatt, West Haven, Conn.; Harrell Pack, Winston-Salem, N. C; Marion Part, Leland, Miss.; Eunice Parker, Goldsboro, N. C; Richard Parker, El Paso, Texas; John Robert Parsons, Jr., Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Taylor Hill Paschall, Durham, N. C; Edward Verno Patterson, Spring Lake, N. Y.; Mildred Patterson, Durham, N. C; Arthur Pawling, Westfield, N. J. Fifth Row: John Howard Payne, Jr., Washington, D. C; Marie-Louise Pedeflous, Watchung, N. J.; Emilie Peebles, Chevy Chase, Md.; George Whitesell Peffer, Jr., Youngstown, Ohio; Elizabeth Pennell, Fort Bragg, N. C; Maxine Perdue, Canton, Ohio; Francis Arthur Perrell, Miami, Fla.; John Silver Perry, Rocky Mount, N. C. 161 H(iP Freshmen Peters, P. Peters, W. Peters, Petrey, Pharo, Phillips, S. Phillips, Pifer, Poerner, Porterfield. Powell, J. Powell, Powers, Pray, Price, Preyer, Proctor, Prosser, Puckett, R. Puckett. Pugliese, Putnam, Quinn, Radtke, Rague, Ramsey, M. Ramsey, Rand, Rathbun, Rawdon. Ray, Reed, S. Reed, Rees, Reese, J. Reese, Reisner, Rescorla, Rettew, Reiger. Rhodes, Richardson, Riggs, Riley, Robbins, Robertson, S. K. Robertson, Roe. First Row: Margaret Peters, Jacksonville, Fla.; Paul Robert Peters, Lehighton, Pa.; William Anthony Peters, Elizabeth City, N. C; Donald Sanford Petrey, Alexander City, Ala.; George MacPherson Pharo, Moorestown, N. J.; Herbert Graham Phillips, Charlotte, N. C; Susan Phillips, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Lewis Weaver Pifer, Durham, N. C.; Edward Russell Poerner, East Orange, N. J.; Frances Porterfield, Durham, N. C. Second Row: Dorothy Powell, Detroit, Mich.; Joe Reade Powell, Durham, N. C; William James Powers, Scranton, Pa.; Harold Erwin Pray, Oak Park, 111.; Claire Price, Durham, N. C; Al Ohem Preyer, Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Sarah Jane Proctor, Durham, N. C; Josephine Prosser, St. Michael, Pa.; Nell Puckett, Charlotte, N. C; Robert Stephens Puckett, Kenmore, N. Y. Third Row: Nola Pugliese, Philadelphia, Pa.; Ann Putnam, Washington, N. C; Jesse Melvyn Quinn, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Robert August Radtke, Detroit, Mich.; John Raymond Rague, Queens Village, N. Y.; Charles S. W. Ramsey, Charlotte, N. C; Mary Lee Ramsey, Durham, N. C; Robert Collom Rand, Lombard, 111.; James Potter Rathbun, Fredonia, N. Y.; Janet Rawdon, Oberlin, Ohio. Fourth Row: George Irving Ray, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; Jack Calvin Reed, Greensboro, N. C; Sam Hantz Reed, Charlotte, N. C; Hal Collins Rees, Fayetteville, Tenn.; Charles Clifford Reese, Wilmington, Del; Justin Reese, Newark, N. J.; William Harry Reisner, Hagerstown, Md.; Betty Rescorla, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Janet Rettew, Harrisburg, Pa.; Vivian Reiger, Staten Island, N. Y. Fifth Row: William Luther Rhodes, Estill, S. C; Richard Kenneth Richardson, Durham, N. C; Thomas Jeffries Riggs, Huntington, W. Va.; William Joseph Riley, Jr., Hollis, N. Y.; Martin Albert Robbins, Lakewood, N. J.; Sam Robertson, Clayton, N. C; Sally Keith Robertson, South Norwark, Conn.; Jane Roe, Moundsville, W. Va. 162 Freshmen f ' t if !f 9 1 , g , j i 3HiP Rogers, Rogerson, Rohrbach, Rosch, Ross, R. Ross, Rowley, Ruark, Rucker, Rue. Rumsey, Ruskin, Russell, Rynd, Saleeby, Samuels, Sandidge, Schaefer, Schendorf , Schoenberger Schuck, Scott, R. Scott, Seaman, Seeberg, Semmel, Senff, Sewall, Sexton, Shackelford. Shackleton, Shannon, Shapiro, Shepard, Sherron, Shoemaker, Shortlidge, Shuff, Shuford, Silver Silvernail, Simmons, R. Simmons, Singletary, Sink, Slaner, Slatkin, Slay. First Row: James Forbes Rogers, Upper Montclair, N. J.; Walter Bryant Rogerson, Petersburg, Va.; John Deer Rohrbach, Sunbury, Pa.; Beatrice Rosch, White Plains, N. Y.; Carleton Playfair Ross, Kenilworth, 111.; Robert Enright Ross, Baltimore, Md.; Kenneth Johnson Rowley, Hamden, Conn.; Frances Ruark, Park Ridge, 111.; Alfred Morgan Rucker, Petersburg, Va.; Willard Hubert Rue, Imlaystown, N. J. Second Row: Herman Rumsey, Atlanta, Ga.; Alvin Richard Ruskin, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Woodard Fleming Russell, Durham, N. C; Laurence Rynd, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Helen Saleeby, Monroe, N. C; Irving Leonard Samuels, Baltimore, Md.; William Leete Sandidge, Lynchburg, Va.; Martha Schaefer, Nutley, N. J.; Hilliard Arthur Schendorf, Rahway, N. J.; Ruth Schoenberger, Lawrenceville, N. J. Third Row: Mary Schuck, Coconut Grove, Fla.; LeRoy Alexander Scott, Kannapolis, N. C; Ruth Scott, Waynes- burg, Va.; Allen Lang Seaman, Madison, Conn.; Gordon Allan Seeberg, Ansonia, Conn.; Myron Semmel, New York, N. Y.; Tom Prewitt Senff, Mt. Sterling, Ky.; Elizabeth Sewall, York Village, Maine; Edna Earle Sexton, Zebulon, N. C; Daniel Owen Shackelford, Durham, N. C. Fourth Row: John Henry Shackleton, Jr., Springfield, Pa.; Charles Eugene Shannon, Monroe, N. C; David Joseph Shapiro, New York, N. Y.; Vitol Shepard, Palm Beach, Fla.; Roger Jackson Sherron, Jr., Durham, N. C; William Barton Shoemaker, Natrona Heights, Pa.; Elizabeth Shortlidge, Lincoln University, Pa.; Landon Earle Shuff, Greenville, N. C.; Betty Shuford, Conover, N. C; Louis Wilson Silver, Durham, N. C. Fifth Row: Charles Roy Silvernail, Dalton, Mass.; Clarence Frederick Simmons, Jr., New York, N. Y.; Ruth Simmons, Wilmington, Del.; William Edward Singletary, Winston-Salem, N. C; Henry Harrison Sink, Greensboro, N. C; Alfred Philip Slaner, Hobart, Okla.; Robert Edward Slatkin, Weehawkin, N. J.; Ronald Joseph Slay, Greenville, N. C. 163 Freshmen Sloan, R. Sloan, Smith, E. L. Snn.ith, E. Smith, H. Smith, M. Smith, P. Smith, V. Smith, Smither Snider, Snyder, R. Snyder, Sommers, Southworth, Spangler, Spies, Spruill, Staley, Stamets. Stankowitch, Stearns, Stecher, Steele, Stewart, Stickell, Stine, Stokke, Stone, G. Stone. Storb, Stovall, Strayer, Strickland, R. Strickland, Stringer, Struble, Stubbs. StuU, Sullivan, Surles, Swindell, Szepesi, Tabor, Taylor, G. Taylor. First Row: Harvey Fronfield Sloan, Bellevue, Pa.; Robert Love Sloan, Waynesville, N. C; Charles Edward Smith, Palmyra, N. Y.; Edward Lewis Smith, Whiteville, N. C; Ellen Smith, York, Pa.; Helen Baxter Smith, Virginia Beach, Va.; Maryln Smith, Shelby, N. C; Pauline Smith, Philipsburg, N. J.; Virginia Smith, Baldwin, N. Y.; Lucy Smither, Winston-Salem, N. C. Second Row: Jean Snider, Meyersdale, Pa.; LaTour Snyder, Leighton, Pa.; Richard John Snyder, Palmerton, Pa.; Paul Adams Sommers, Maplewood, N. J.; June Southworth, Edgewater, Md.; Robert Frank Spangler, Newport News, Va.; Charles Webb Spies, Boyville, N. Y.; Sara Spruill, Goldsboro, N. C; Edwin Lewis Staley, Harrisburg, Pa.; Grace Stamets, Avalon, Pa. Third Row: William Adelbert Stankowitch, Ridgefield Park, N. J.; James Coleman Stearns, Jacksonville, Fla.; Clark Kipp Stecher, Weehawken, N. J.; Orlando Lester Steele, Lakewood, Ohio; Winburn Earle Stewart, Jr., Macon, Ga.; Clarence Middlekauff Stickell, Hagerstown, Md.; Doris Stine, Hagerstown, Md.; Robert Bergan Stokke, Freeport, N. Y.; Dorothy Stone, Biddeford, Maine; George Henry Stone, Worcester, Mass. Fourth Row: Mary Storb, New Holland, Pa.; Sidney Stovall, Virgilina, Va.; Edwin Milton Strayer, York, Pa.; James Millard Strickland, Rocky Mount, N. C; Roscoe Lee Strickland, Jr., Maplewood, N. J.; Henry Jerome Stringer, Jr., Baltimore, Md.; Albert Struble, Westfield, N. J.; Dan Hamer Stubbs, Jr., Lenoir, N. C. Fifth Row: Richard John Stull, Washington, Pa.; Harry Brownell Sullivan, St. Albans, N. Y.; Hugh Sexton Surles, Rocky Mount, N. C; Edmund Slade Swindell, Jr., Durham, N. C; Jean Szepesi, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Countess Tabor, Boessevain, Va.; Dorothy Taylor, Wilmington, Del.; George Evans Taylor, Huntington, W. Va. 164 Freshmen rpfi k M Tepper, Terry, Thomas, J. Thomas, J. H. Thomas, Thompson, C. Thompson, K. Thompson, Thonis, Tipton. Titus, Townson, Tracy, Tripp, Truesdale, Turner, W. Turner, Utley, Vantine, Van Voorhis. Vaughan, Veirs, Vincent, Waits, Walker, R. Walker, Wallace, J. Wallace, Jean Wallace, Ward R. Ward, Warth, Washburn, Watson, Webb, N. Webb, Weber, Webster. Weichel, Weischer, Weingarten, Weller, Wellman, Wenzel, Whedbee, Whiddon. First Row: Ruth Tepper, Baltimore, Md.; Emerson Woodworth Terry, Montclair, N. J.; James C. Thomas, Durham, N. C; James Bartholow Thomas, Frederick, Md.; John H. P. Thomas, Huntington, W. Va.; Betty Lou Thompson, Gastonia, N. C.; Claire Thompson, Miami Beach, Fla.; Kearns Reid Thompson, Jr., Reidsville, N. C; Joan Thoms, Hawthorne, N. J.; Eric Gordon Tipton, Petersburg, Va. Second Row: Aileen Titus, Washington, D. C; Quentin Townson, Murphy, N. C; William Edward Tracy, Stockbridge, Mass.; Francis Harvey Tripp, Jr., Moorestown, N. J.; Sidney Louis Truesdale, Asheboro, N. C; Stanley John Turner, Upper Montclair, N. J.; William Joseph Turner, Whitehall, Va.; Frances Utley, Lynchburg, Va.; Ora Jean Vantine, Great Falls, S. C; Robert Henry Van Voorhis, Rutherford, N. J. Third Row: James Robert Vaughan, East Aurora, N. Y.; Charles Clifton Veirs, Jr., Rockville, Md.; Orville Holt Vincent, Oak Park, 111.; Sara Waits, Andalusia, Ala.; James Bradley Walker, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Richard Cuthbert Walker, Moorestown, N. J.; Arthur Wallace, Elizabeth, N. J.; James Mathews Wallace, Moorestown, N. J.; Jean Wallace, Newark, N. J.; Robert Bruce Ward, Baltimore, Md. Fourth Row: Robert Stuart Ward, Roselle, N. J.; Henry Kent Warth, Bal timore, Md.; Benjamin Washburn, Durham, N. C.; Jack Lawrence Watson, Charlotte, N. C.; Jeannette Webb, Ridgewood, N. J.; Nancy Webb, Greenwich, Conn.; John Joseph Weber, Newark, N. J.; Christopher Rowland Webster, Tappahannock, Va. Fifth Row: Robert Ludwig Weichel, Scranton, Pa.; Virginia Weischer, Montrose, N. Y.; Bernard Weingarten, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mary Elizabeth Weller, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Henry Marvin Wellman, Jr., Morganton, N. C; Herman Godfrey Wenzel, Jr., Rockville Centre, N. Y.; James Carson Whedbee, Jr., Rowland, N. C; Clyde Lee Whiddon, Ft. Pierce, Fla. 165 Freshm en Whitaker, H. Whitaker, White, L. White, Whitley, Whitted, Whitten, Wichum, Wilby, Will. Williams, M. Williams, W. Williams, Williamson, Wilkins, Willis, Wilmot, Wilson, H. Wilson H. M. Wilson. M. Wilson, Winston, Winters, Winterson, Withers, Wolford, Womble, Wood, Woodard, Woodbridge Wooddy, Woods, Workman, Wright, J. Wright, M. Wright, Wriston, Wulfers. Wyche, Wyman, Yearns, Yoder, Yorke, Younts, Zecher, Zuckerman. First Row: Elizabeth Whitaker, IndianapoHs, Ind.; Howard Whitaker, Jr., Windsor, Conn.; Evelyn White, Bradenton, Ha.; Leon Sammuel White, Peterborough, N. H.; Woodrow Lacy Whitley, Wendell, N. C; Hugh Edwin Whitted, Jr., Durham, N. C; Edwin Emery Whitten, South Portland, Maine; Carolyn Wichum, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Alma Wilby, Atlanta, Ga.; Daniel Carl Will, Drexel Hill, Pa. Second Row: Denny DuBose Williams, Richmond, Va.; Martha Jane Williams, Easton, Pa.; William Orrin Williams, Southold, N. Y.; James Clay Williamson, Jr., Gastonia, N. C; Dorothy Wilkins, Rockville Centre, N. Y.; Andrew Hunter Willis, Jr., Erie, Pa.; John Hibbard Wilmot, River Edge, N. J.; Abraham Samuel Wilson, Durham, N. C; Helen Hall Wilson, Beaver, Pa.; Henry Merryman Wilson, Charlotte, N. C. Third Row: Mark Douglas Wilson, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Kennon Winston, Minneapolis, Minn.; Jane Winters, Greenwich, Conn.; Howard Martin Winterson, Oradell, N. J.; Earnest Lee Withers, Waynesville, N. C.; Isabelle Wolford, Elizabeth City, N. J.; Olivia Womble, Winston-Salem, N. C; Melvin Nichols Wood, Dalton, Mass.; Mary Elizabeth Woodard, Wilson, N. C; Winifred Woodbridge, Grosse Point Park, Mich. Fourth Row: Arthur Overton Wooddy, Baltimore, Md.; Lydia Woods, Durham, N. C; Fred Louis Workman, Jr., Kenilworth, 111.; Donald Bowman Wright, Scarsdale, N. Y.; John Wright, Jr., Mahwah, N. J.; Margaret Wright, Orangeburg, S. C; Muriel Wriston, Albany, N. Y.; John Wilbur Wulfers, Morristown, N. J. Fifth Row: Paul Early Wyche, Albemarle, N. C; Robert Bruce Wyman, Arlington, Mass.; Wilfred Buck Yearns, Jr., Louisville, Ga.; William Eugene Yoder, Millersburg, Pa.; Fred Grant Yorke, Bartley, W. Va.; Jack Spurgeon Younts, Greensboro, N. C; Dorothea Zecher, Labanon, Pa.; Ethel Mae Zuckerman, Durham, N. C. 166 fe, T on oa Book Three FEATURES EIRD . . . silent . . . still as death, except for the occasional flutter of a bird, or the gentle rustling of gray moss that hangs from the giant limbs of century-old cypresses and oaks . . . the dismal swamps of North Carolina provide an enchantment and beauty that eludes description. From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten SPONSORS - FAVORITES ' «??■MRS. ERNEST CRUIKSHANK To the Memory of my Mother LORA FERRELL WOODRUFF i MRS. CLAUDE E. MOSSBURG MISS OLIVE CRUIKSHANK MISS MELISSA ANNE MOSSBURG STAFF Miss Nancy Talbert Miss Ulna Saintsing FAVORITES Miss Laura Lyon Miss Katharine Covington Miss Jean Miller Miss Margaret Morton BEAUTIES MISS DOROTHY PECK MISS MARIAN McCLENAGHAN MISS ANNE WAGNER MISS BETTY FAIRES MISS CHARLOTTE SIEHLER MISS MARGUERITE DEWEY V- ' MISS LOIS AITKIN MISS MARGUERITE NEEL MISS BETTY EARLE SNAPSHOTS li e . t m] _n,f- ' rrr [ • s lO- Slushing to classes The Band More snow 4 uin .1111 nil • If ji nil lilt I iiii III! iiiij IIII i] )! ' ■' A ■fc. . Vs - i . .;- - V r - -| L A ■Hf V ' - l B V 1 B ' H ' V ' mm H Dr. Crane attracts an audience Who dat? Heaven r-ii r SLi : ill .«• -. II ' •- ajr- ljgH, Season ' s first snow Puzzle — find Miss Wagner THE I ' mnf- Expensive haircut Chronicle at work— ' Oh yeah! Lazy weatht ■■Prexy in the flesh iiii Kii nil ] w One of the 8 snows Come on out, you sissies Wi A Duke orchestra aboard S.S. Majestic A. K. Psi dance on the air Much ado Way down South in Dixie ! Maestro Joe Lookers-on at pep rally and Turpit Spirit Frank and the Senior Class — pardon, just Frank and the flag Snowballing and what Esquire is now promoting Enthusiasn Eight ball Arch Our six-sport Ace Cruikshank on the job Save me a stick, sister ' I Co-Ed ball under way Dr. Brown and Dr. Greene — Co-ed Ball -™ . WC Bl ' ni . t.«. A ' i •■■j i ? ,  -ii4i F. « iA s: - sAjlmt- K6| 4 9 :j f ,, . Ml- tiA u ' • r Duke 7— State S9BI i%i lL Men on the flying trapeze Senior float f i 1 4) m i 11 U tl ' ■' • 1l M M Baldy the banker Delta Sigs give dance s V Edythe Wright of Dorsey ' s band Football men ' i ms . WXa Tension at Raleigh School spirit mi vr I (ifi ' —ffl) - , It i k« W «i J. B. Duke statue dedicated 1 ■■n 1 1 Attaboy, Jack Cheek to cheek ' «cr Discussion on Peachtree Street It wasn ' t hot enough on oa M •. ' jf ' . Book Four ACTIVITIES NDUSTRY . . . activity . . . progress, contrasting with the quiet beauty of fecund valleys and stately wooded hills. Huge tobacco plantations . . . parks and wild game preserves . . . educational institutions, sedate and aloof . . . cities and hamlets, bustling with the activity of commerce, all combine to make the beauty of the Carolina Piedmont truly one of many forms. From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten nWWW V iS i p ' 1 p pH ( « H L . g rt fc { 1 u d ' s 1 s s i PUBLICATIONS Earle Runner Editor STAFF OFFICERS William L. Holler Associate Editor Nancy Hudson Co-ed Editor Walter Weintz Book Review Editor THE ARCHIVE EDITORIAL STAFF Sinceits birth some decades ago, the Archive has been the primary medium for printing the creative writing of Duke University undergraduates. Under several editors there existed the policy of printing the work of outside writers, but during the past three years the pages of the magazine have been devoted entirely to the writings of campus men and women. Three years ago the Archive was metamorphosed from a plain booklet to a magazine approaching its present characteristics. The editorial staff for the past year has endeavored to collect the best student writing and to print it attractively; thus lending its mite of aid to the gradual metamorphosis. One of the most violent yowls against the Archive has for years been the quality of the fiction. During the 1935-36 scholastic year, we have attempted to find a solution to the evil. It remains for the campus itself to prove that there are enough sincere writers at Duke — enough writers who can add their essential morsels to the potage and prove that Duke deserves its appellation, University. For a final word, we do say that we ' ve seen quite an increase in the Archive readers. Four years ago the monthly distribution was followed by miniature paper storms in every dormitory. To illustrate the increase in popularity, we proudly divulge that the perenial playboy, Joe College, was caught reading this year ' s March and April issues. Owens Holler Weintz Hudson 222 Upchurch Stewart Nixon Ryon Jones Rebman Bean Mann Graeter THE ARCHIVE BUSINESS STAFF This year ' s Archive business staff has completed what it believes has been a very successful task. Together with the Co-ed business staff, it has solicited more national and local advertising than any previous Archive. This good fortune has made it possible to set up a larger budget than in former years, thus appropriating a rather large amount to the publica- tion of what the staff feels and earnestly hopes has been a better Archive. We feel that these increased expenditures, such as funds for varied covers, en- gravings, and photographs of Duke University and other points of interest, have not been foolishly squandered if the students have derived increased satisfaction as a result. This year, there has been closer cooperation between the business and editorial staffs. Con; tributions have been entered from both campuses, resulting from encouragement and a greater chance for advancement of those men and women who wish to try out for staff positions and who are interested in the business world. However, we feel that much credit should go to the Co-ed business staff, which has completed an enormous amount of work, and without whose help a successful task could not have been accomplished. The Archive, after a successful business year, looks forward to the rise in prestige of the publication in the future. STAFF OFFICERS Annadale Graeter Co-ed Business Manager DeWitt Mann Circulation Manager Phil Russell, Business Manager 223 Everett Ferine Editor The 1935-36 staff of the Duke Chronicle has attempted to perpetuate certain high standards of journalistic endeavor which have characterized the paper throughout its thirty years of existence. In so doing, the staff has found it necessary to make severe i innovations adopted for the purpose of developing the Chronicle on the basis of modern newspaper THE DUKE CHRONICLE EDITORIAL STAFF efficiency. The benefits of the change from a weekly to as semi-weekly publication — a switch which was made a year ago — were realized during the present season. The organization of the staff into two groups, separated to ease the burden of an ever-increasing amount of work, has been done successfully. These groups have worked under common leadership, and have maintained a high standard throughout the year. The editorial columns have been marked by a tone of definite conviction. At the same time, they have been rather conservativ e and have successfully brought rewards through their influence. The same columns purposely have reflected a balanced view which has not unduly offended any particular group. An attempt has been made through the medium of the editorial page to make the Duke Chronicle an organ of student opinion through which the student body may express, without reservation, their candid obser- vations on any and all subjects pertaining to general or specific problems of University life. Defects still remain and room for improvement may be plainly seen, but the present staff feels itself justified in believing that it has contributed toward creating a true center of enlightenment and educa- tion at Duke University. This has been the aim of the staff of 1935-1936. It is hoped that future staffs will be guided by the same ultimate goal. Shriner Wenrich Johnson Siehler Boeker Henderson Leland Hessick Etter Hallock Frampton Trifle 224 Akin Cobleigh Womble Wright Lentz Green Larzelere Nixon Gorin Carson Mathews Cockrell Small Harrison Bramer Montgomery Gillies THE DUKE CHRONICLE BUSINESS STAFF The success of the 1935-1936 Chronicle, as a business venture, has been largely due to the con- scientious efforts of the entire business staff. The fine cooperation of the members of the staff has resulted in less work for everyone concerned and more advertising than during previous years. The paper was published under great difficulty during the first semester because of a decrease in local advertising; local advertising, however, was greatly increased through the fine efforts on the part of this staff. The organization of the business branch has undergone a radical change which has given a larger number of individuals more responsibility. This action has aroused a keener interest and a greater feeling of personal importance in the work, essential to the cooperation and ultimate success of the entire group. Even before the fall semester began, a concentrated campaign had been launched by the subscription manager resulting in an increased circulation of over thirty-six hundred copies. The fine work of the advertising manager has already been mentioned. The office manager performed his duties of account- ing, billing, and collecting in an efficient manner. The circulation manager, in charge of the freshman staff, has overcome the handicap of inexperienced men and has satisfactorily accomplished his task. A great deal of credit must be given the Co-ed business manager who has established a precedent by maintaining a large and active Co-ed staff, which has proven to be a valuable asset. The entire staff hopes that it has succeeded in its sincere endeavor to publish a paper worthy of Duke University. William Crawford, Business Manager 225 Ernest Cruikshank Co-Editor William Co THE CHANTICLEER EDITORIAL STAFF In presenting this, the twenty-third volume of the CHANTICLEER, the staff hopes that it has succeeded in its purpose, which has been to present a yearbook that will serve as a treasured memoir of student days at Duke long after those times are past — a pictorial chron- icle of a year ' s names, faces, and events to be enjoyed now and in the future. It is for the seniors, especially, that we have prepared this 1936 CHANTICLEER, that the memories of their joys and sorrows, their friends, their work here might go through life with them. How well the staff has achieved its ideals the readers will have to judge. Although discouraging moments have arisen, during which we have felt unable to cope with the problems at hand, we hope that this final result of our labors will be acceptable. Besides the number of faculty and students who have aided us, the staff wishes to gratefully acknowl- edge the valuable assistance of: Bill Bradley, of the Photo-Process Engraving Company, Atlanta; Joe Hardison, Edwards Broughton Company, Raleigh; H. A. Siddell, Siddell Studio, Raleigh; and D. R. Mann, photographer for the Durham Herald-Sun, Durham. E. Woodruff •Editor Lambeth Newton Jennings Fulmer Piper Goodman Stack Reist Mack 226 Knight Austin Bradsher Eaby Greenfield Southgate Abbott Jenkinson Carpenter Rouse Crannell Everitt Curtiss Cone Graeter THE CHANTICLEER BUSINESS STAFF The task of the business staff of the CHANTICLEER is one that may make many of the members unpopular at times, involving as it does the necessity of collecting money from students, but it has been the aim of this year ' s staff to make it possible for the student to have an excellent yearbook, comparable or superior to the 1935 volume, which was awarded the coveted All- American Honor Rating, and at the same time to reduce substantially the fees paid by the seniors, while making no increase in the fees paid by underclassmen. Another criticism which it is hoped will be averted this year is the shortage of copies of the book which occurred last year, and to a lesser extent the year before. This year almost 2,500 copies of the CHANTICLEER are being printed , and it should be possible for all students to obtain copies of the 1936 edition. The business staff is justly proud of the amount of both local and national advertising which it has obtained this year. It is deeply grateful to the firms and persons who have helped to make the publica- tion of the yearbook a financial success. The staff urges the readers of the CHANTICLEER to give consideration to those business firms who advertise in this book, and takes pleasure in recommending their products and services. Hyatt Mossburg, Business Manager 227 ALL AMERICAN CHANTICLEER The 1935 CHANTICLEER, first Duke University year- book ever to be entered in competition, received the All-American Honor Rating. Annually, for the past fifteen years, the National Scho- lastic Press Association, at the University of Minnesota, has conducted a Critical Service, before which have come fifteen thousand college and university yearbooks for judgment. The judges, after careful consideration of theme, make-up, editing, financial status, and mechan- ical considerations, award a rating to each book according to its relative excellence. These ratings are: All-Ameri- can, First Class, Second Class, and Third Class Honor Ratings. Fourth Class books receive no honors. Last year ' s CHANTICLEER, entered in the class of colleges having an enrollment of less than twenty-five hundred students, distinguished itself, along with the yearbooks of the United States Military Academy and the United States Naval Academy, by being awarded highest honors. It is with much pride that we of the staff of the 1936 CHANTICLEER advance our book as representative of the work of Duke University students, hoping that this newest edition of the CHANTICLEER is of the same high calibre as the preceeding ones. Natimial grljolaatir frpfiB AHHOriation 193. ALL-AMERICAN YEARBOOK CRITICAL SERVICE ra cciflffl-iCL; In recognition of its merits ' is awarded M American J|onor i ating in the Fifteenth ISational Yearbook Critical iServlce of the National Scholastic Press A ssoclatlon at the University of M.lnnesota, Uepartment oj Journalism, this tlrst a ay oj TSovemoer, 1955. irtral (UsM ' - Eurtltat Vawtk auaa Va •  «« ■zeo sj: (h oMy ' L A.ffy 228 DRAMATICS and MUSIC DUKE PLAYERS Charles McCallister President With the largest associate member- ship of their his- tory to encourage them, the Duke Players have en- joyed a most suc- cessful season. The group is or- ganized and main- tained by the students them- selves and serves to direct the in- terest in drama on both the East and West campuses. The program for this, their fifth year, has included a balanced selection of four major productions. The Torchbearers, the popular comedy whose clever, brilliant humor lifted its author, George Kelly, to theatrical fame more than a decade ago, was the initial offering. An attractive set, designed and executed by George E. White, Jr., made the presenta- tion pretentious as well as entertaining. The Duke Players point with especial pride to their second production, Ceiling Zero, by Frank Wead. Through early arrangements with the publishers they were able to secure a professional manuscript, make their own copies and produce the amateur premier of this melodrama of the airway industry which has since appeared as a successful movie attraction. Sound effects were imported from New York, and special equipment and professional advice were secured from the Federal Airlines at Raleigh, N. C, in order to make the presentation as technically colorful as possibl e. A dramatic favorite of the American and London stage, A Bill of Divorcement, was the third. Intense study and rehearsals were necessary in handling this work because of its difficult but very effective dramatic sequences. A. T. West, director of the Players, was included in the cast of this per- formance which was enthusiastically received by the University ' s theatre-going public. Plans for the May Day presentation were made indefinite by the receipt of information which cancelled preparations for a revival of the old favorite, After Dark, or Neither Maid, Wife, nor Widow. Several substitutes were to be considered, including Ladies of the Jury and the two melodramatic masterpieces of the old time temperance variety, Ten Nights in a Bar Room and The Drunkard. These productions are manifestations of the work that is carried on within the Duke Players ' organiza- tion. Meetings which are held every other week during the school year and to which those interested in the theatre are invited, have become very popular. At these meetings one-act plays are presented under student direction and management offering an oppor- Shriner Farnsworth Menaker Schaffle Pankey Lutz Jones Plaster White Plyler 230 Opper Franck Sutton Anderson McMartin Hunter Edwards Welsh Graeter Maier DUKE PLAYERS tunity for experience in the various phases of play production. Members of Theta Alpha Phi, the national honorary dramatic fraternity, offer their services by v ay of helpful suggestions to the inex- perienced actors and by conducting classes in scenery designing, construction, and make-up. Theta Alpha Phi conducted a one-act playwriting contest this year in an endeavor to stimulate interest in that field of drama. The response by the students was very gratifying to the organization and plans were made for producing the best of the plays for the entertainment of the University community, a cash prize to be awarded the author of the play most enthusiastically received. In addition to their ama- teur productions, the Duke Players sponsored the appearance in Durham of the Federal Theatre ' s performance of the new historical drama of the South, Jefferson Davis. The future of the Duke Players appears to be promising, for this year ' s freshman class has shown an exceptional interest in the work of the organiza- tion. Elementary plans for next year have already been discussed in order that the new season might offer a wider variety of activities for a greater number of students. MEMBERS Elizabeth Akin, Connie Allaire, Marie Anderson, Dorothy Brown, Carl Clover, James Davis, Dorothy Edwards, Al Farnsworth, Joe Fretwell, III, Annadale Graeter, Jerry Griffin, Mrs. J. W. Hirst, Robert Hunter, Alice Jones, Jane Lee Jones, Carl Lutz, Charles McCallister, Jeanne McCauley, Cole McMartin, George Maier, Jerry Menaker, Eleanor Myers, Dorothy Neff, Nellie Anna Opper, John Pankey, Emory Plaster, Mern Plyler, Peggy Price, Sam Reed, Evalyn Schaffle, Isobel Shriner, Gladys Souder, Elizabeth Sutton, Micky Tobin, Billie Welsh, Evelyn White, George E. White, Jr., Ada Whitmore, Mildred Williams. OFFICERS Charles McCallister, President; Cole McMartin, Vice President; Isobel Shriner, Secretary; Marie Anderson, Co-ed Business Manager; Ada Whitmore, Historian. I A. T. West, Director 231 MEN ' S GLEE CLUB The Men ' s Glee Club is fast be- coming one of the most prominent or- ganizations in the field of student ac- tivities at the Uni- versity. The program for this year has shown considerable ex- pansion over that of last year. Start- ing the 1935-36 season v ith many of last year ' s accomplished singers, the squad was closely contested in all departments. Upon close examination one finds that even the seasoned veterans were hard pushed and often replaced by fresh talent. During the month of January, the Duke University Musical Club, composed of Glee Club and Orchestra, gave a concert in Farmville, Virginia. A similar trip was carried out in the spring, its itinerary includ- Zack Thomas President ing the major cities in North Carolina. Under the capable leadership of J. Foster Barnes these trips have proven a success both to the club itself and to the school which it represents. The newspaper com- ments were quite favorable and the critics unanimous in their praise of the balanced strength of the Club The Glee Club has also shared, in cooperation with other musical units of the college, in the annual spring production of a musical comedy. . ■, •■MEMBERS The Glee Club is composed of the following mem- bers: Heyward Henderson, Ernest Winton, J. D. Klock, George Davis, Dick Newens, Don Schmitt, Miles Gayle, H. Winterson, W. Mason, Ellis Andrews John Cole, Joe Mackie, Fulton Main, Al Preyer, R. E. Kay, Charles Hooten, Donald Hirst, Tom Windsor, C. Finefrock, Jack Barkle, J. P. Wagoner, Herbert Upchurch, Zack Thomas, Sizer Chambliss, L. L. Turner, George Worthington, Frank Dennis, C. Kraemer, J. E. Koonce, W. Bigger, T. Curtis, E. Franson, B. B. Guerin, G. Herman, Terry Morris, Morgan Rucker, C. Shopmeyer, J. L. Lyttle, Tom Cottingham. wmm t •  « vim Men ' s Glee Club 232 Women ' s Glee Club WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB As the Women ' s College of Duke University has expanded, the Women ' s Glee Club has increased proportionately. At the present time the group con- sists of over a hundred members under the capable direction of Mrs. J. Foster Barnes. For the past several years, the Glee Club has appeared in a musical concert on the East campus, and each spring has joined the Men ' s Glee Club in presenting an operetta in Page Auditorium. The Women ' s Glee Club is also important in the Chapel Choir, which furnishes music for the Sunday services. The formation of this club has given women a chance to apply their musical talents and to progress accordingly with the growth of the musical organiza- tions on the men ' s campus. It is hard to carry out a well-rounded education without devoting a sub- stantial proportion of one ' s time to the study of music and participation in various phases of the field of music. Today, as in the past, it adds color to work and play, besides playing an ever more important role in culture and recreation. MEMBERS Adams, Allen, E. Applewhite, I. Applewhite, Arthur, Baggs, Barrett, Bassett, Bell, Bogert, M. Brown, B. Brown, Butt, Burger, Findley, Fisher, B. Eraser, H. Fraser, Garver, Gillin, Goree, Grainger, Greenwood, Griffin, Helvenston, Harrison, Henson, Hawkins, Holden, Hooker, Hughes, Home, Kincheloe, Leinback, Littlejohn, Laws, Mauser, Maxwell, Phil- lips, Porterfield, Pugliese, Rankin, Rich, Roe, Ruark, Richie, Salmon, Sidbury, Silleck, Shields, Snider, Stone, Sewell, Smith, Sultner, Tabor, M. Taylor, D. Taylor, Thompson, Titus, Varnes, Wallace, White, Willis, Wilson, Williams, D. Zecher, P. Zecher. Ida Shaw Applewhite President 233 KAPPA KAPPA PSI Kappa Kappa Psi was founded at Oklahoma State College in the fall of 1919, with the purpose of recog- nizing college musicians of out- standing ability and, by their fra- ternal efforts, to foster greater and finer band music. During the seven- teen years of its existence, the fraternity has enlisted thirty-three chapters, and its roster of membership includes some of the world ' s outstanding bandmen, such as the late John Philip Sousa, Henry Fillmore, Captain Taylor Branson, and William J. Stannard. The Duke chapter, Alpha Gamma, was established on the campus in 1929. G. E. Leftwich, Jr., was the first president of the chapter and began its initial progress here; in 1933 Mr. Leftwich was named Vice Robert P. Miller President President of the National Grand Chapter. This year Joseph S. Hiatt, Jr., was elected President of the Southern District at the National Biennial Convention of the fraternity. Through the activity of the fraternity in cooperation with Director Robert B. Fearing, the Duke University Band this year has made definite progress toward the development of a greater and bigger unit than ever before. In collaboration with the administration of the University, the fraternity sponsored the plan whereby eligible members of the Band will be awarded keys for their service; likewise. Kappa Kappa Psi has been the active organ in procuring new instruments and uniforms for the Band in the forth- coming year. OFFICERS Robert P. Miller, President; Stanley P. Meyerson, Vice President; Joseph S. Hiatt, Jr., Secretary and Treasurer. • ' HONORARY MEMBER Robert B. Fearing, Director of Instrumental Music. Hiatt R. W. Miller Meyerson Atkins Bistline Wright Little Bowman Palmgren Clayton Rushmer Gerard Steiger Moser Bodine 234 r .. Coach Wallace Wade DEPARTMENT OF Leading the South in its recent rise to athletic equaUty with the other sections of the country, Duke University ' s athletic teams have, in the past five years, come into the national limelight through outstanding perform- ances. So rapid has been the rise of Duke in the athletic circles of the country that it is now ranked as one of the foremost in this section. In the belief that a strong athletic program is an integral part of a well- balanced educational program, the administration made adequate arrangements, a few years ago, to make the Duke department as strong as any in the South. The administration ' s initial step toward this goal was select- ing Wallace Wade as director of athletics at Duke. Coach Wade, who is ranked as one of the foremost football mentors of the country, is a firm believer in athletics for everyone and, in an effort to give every student an opportunity to develop physically as well as mentally, brought to Duke Kenneth Gerard to develop a system of intramural athletics. The growth of this department under the guidance of Coach Gerard has been remarkable and it now ranks on a par with that of COACHES Gerard Mann Coonribs Voyles Caldwell Hagler 236 ATHLETICS— DUKE other great colleges of the country. In addition to the varsity and intramural teams, All-American and junior varsity squads have been formed in the various sports to give those who do not have the ability for regular varsity competition opportunity to enjoy athletic contests. The junior varsity teams, the first of their kind in the state, play regular schedules with smaller colleges. On the gridiron the fame of Duke University and its Blue Devil teams has spread from the Atlantic to the Pacific coasts, from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, and the great 25-0 victory over Coach Carl Snavely ' s 1935 Rose-Bowl-bound University of North Carolina football eleven left no doubt that Duke well deserved the honors. In a game which found 47,000 fans feasting their eyes on the great annual classic, Duke rose to the greatest heights ever attained by a Blue Devil team. Ever since Eddie Cameron took charge of basketball at Duke, the Blue Devil cage teams have enjoyed successful seasons. The Duke teams have not only been sectionally prominent but by their conquests of powerful non-sectional foes have won national repute. Again and again have Coach Camer- on ' s men invaded other sec- tions to register enviable records. Under the capable leader- ship of Jack Coombs, one of the greatest all-time pitchers in the diamond history, base- ball has become a tradition through its fine teams and the COACHES 1 1 JRWHk - ' H 11 Warren Hendrickson Ashworth Waite Wentz Persons Polack • Rogers Chambers Kelly 237 number of players who every year have gone into the major leagues to make their marks. Duke ' s most recent contributions to the major leagues of the country have been Ty Wagner, captain of Duke ' s 1935 team who is now asso- ciated with the Albany nine, and Lovill (Chubby) Dean, of the Philadelphia Athletics. Track likewise has produced outstanding per- formers at Duke. The annual Southern Con- ference meet staged at Duke has become one of the sport ' s most interesting spectacles. The winning of the conference indoor meet and the possibilities for a great out door season point to the best track season ever enjoyed at Duke. Minor sports are not neglected and with com.petent coaches at their helms have become very popular with the fans and the students. The outstanding minor sport at Duke is boxing. Under the direction of Add Warren, a former ring great, boxing has been advancing so rapidly that it has won tremendous popularity and interest on a par with that enjoyed by the Johnston, Capt. Kunkle, Capt. George, Capt. Lee, Mgr. Mossburg, Mgr. Wunder, Mgr. Lambeth, Mgr. Perry, Capt. Matulewicz Co-Capt. Litle Mgr. Turner, Mgr. 238 major sports. During the past season the Duke gym was filled to capacity every time the Blue Devil leather-pushers were found performing at home. Although working under many handicaps Jack Persons has always produced swimming teams which rank high in the conference. Wrestling also comes in for its share of interest and attention. Strong teams in tennis and golf have advanced the athletic name of Duke University through the South and other sections of the country. Every year Duke produces golf and tennis players who win national recognition. Several stellar players have gone on after graduation to make themselves and their school famous. The cross-country team has also done notable work. The latest Duke hill and dale team won the conference meet and scored impressive victories over conference and non-conference opponents. At Duke, athletics are destined for a greater part in college life, and the great progress made along this line has been encouraging, indicating that this branch of endeavor will take prom- inent part in the future growth of the University. Ambler, Capt. Boyle, Capt. 239 Daniel, Mgr. Keater, Mgr. Clark, Mgr. Glass, Mgr. Huiskamp, Capt. Sizemore, Co-Capt. Parsons, Capt. Ardolino, Capt. Cheerleaders Duke Band 240 FOOTBALL £j H ri ? IT 4 ■-rj.i, k . , 4, . ■•. -, southern carolinI -LOH oo ' } 4 H;: -..iO ' ; .: - :jonferencei big five i Wl Parker I Durner Alexander Captain Johnston West Duke 25— Carolina The 1935 grid season was one of the best in the history of the institution . . . under the capable mentorship of Wallace Wade . . . the Blue Devils annexed eight victories . . . INCLUDED IN WHICH WAS THE CRUSHING 25-0 TRIUMPH OVER CAROLINA ' S TAR HEELS ... to v in the North Carolina BIG FIVE ... and the SOUTHERN CON- FERENCE gridiron crowns . . . their lone defeats of the season were the one-touchdown setback by Georgia Tech and Auburn. . . . On the Blue Devil victory string hung the scalps of Washington and Lee . . . Clemson . . . North Carolina State . . . Wake Forest . . . Davidson . . . Tennessee . . . South Carolina . . . and North Carolina. There were many highlights in these gruelling contests . . . but the spectacular 90-yard touch- down snake-hipping of Jack Alexander in the Carolina-Duke classic . . . after having intercepted Jackson ' s heave . . . was without a doubt the most eye-catching . . . and pulse-guickening of the sea- son . . . which saw Duke University regaining the laurels worn in 1933. Curtain Raiser Under the glaring mazdas of War Memorial stadium ... at Greensboro . . . Duke University ' s Blue Devils cracked their 1935 football campaign wide open with a 26-7 victory ovef a . . . gritty but powerless Wake Forest eleven. ... It took the Devils the better part of three cantos to get going . . . but led by Ace (Clarence) Parker . . . who raced across the Deamon Deac final chalk-line on three occasions . . . and Silver (Harwood) Smith . . . the latest thing in Wade machines left the Deacs crumpledby the wayside. . . . First Big Five triumph! . . . The lone six-pointer of the enemy came in the final period via Morris. Track Meet A highly-touted South Carolina team came . . . saw . . . and was conquered . . . 47-0. . . . The inexhaustable Duke powerhouse attack left the visitors stunned . . . and sent them back to the Gamecock State still wondering if it was a hurricane they had encountered. . . . The Dukes rolled up seven touchdowns in rapid succession that featured 244 Ward r Taliaferro , Jack Alexander ' s 42-yard goalward trot. . . . Par- ker ' s touchdown return of Captain Bud Alexander ' s long punt . . . Honey (Elmore) Hackney ' s fumble . . . recovery . . . and run through the entire Gamecock flock to raise the final tally to 47-0. Duke Takes Richmond The undefeated Duke team journeyed to Richmond and completely outclassed a giant General team of Washington and Lee. . . . Last year ' s Southern Conference champs were no match for the Blue Devils in kicking, passing, and toting the pigskin. . . . The re sult, a 26-0 verdict for the Durham aggregation. . . . The Wade forward wall showed stone-wall qualities in holding the Generals to downs after Parker ' s punt had been blocked in the hot zone . . . the Duke 15. . . . Features of the conflict in Richmond were: the high brand of ball which two Vir- ginia boys . . . Ace Parker, of Norfolk, . . . and Jule Ward, of Galax . . . put on display to thrill fellow- Virginians and a band of Duke-zealots who had ' ' Alexander picks up eight yards 245 « Boyd Brunansky McAninch Boling Cannon trekked to the Old Dominion capital . . . and a 40- yard heave, Parker to Ward, put the Dukes in a scoring position . . . with Parker making the grade from the 16 . . . Harwood Smith thrilled the crowd with a 50-yard dash which was called back. ... A 58- yard touchdown jaunt by the tow-headed Ward rang up the last score of Duke ' s first major Southern Conference clash. Ace is Ace and West Is West A great Duke end answering to the name of Ed West shone with brilliance in Duke ' s next conference tilt . . . the 38-12 victory over Clemson . . . when he grabbed Troutman ' s punt . . . and wiggled 67 yards through a pack of Tigers to register. . . . Honey Hackney accounted for the second long scoring run of the game ... a 59-yard march. . . . Folger and Pennington each contributed to the Tiger score from around the Duke two-yard mark. . . . NEXT STOP, Georgia Tech! ! ! The Old Jinx As in the great 1933 season . . . the Yellow Jackets of Georgia Tech proved the undoing of the Blue Devils. . . . The jinx came through and lateraled itself to a 6-0 victory over the visiting Blue Devils. . . . The score at the half was 0-0 . . . Honey Hackney replaced Ace Parker . . . who was nursing an injury ... in the third canto. . . . Tech got its break when a terrific tackle by Jones caused Hackney to fumble on the Duke 25 . . . Jones recovered and with triple and quadruple laterals . . . that amazed the visiting Dukes . . . marched across the Devil goal line . . . 6-0 (the same score as in 1933). Plainsmen Slay After the heartbreaking loss on the foreign field of Georgia . . . the Devils returned home grimly determined to again court Lady Victory . . . but the Plainsmen of Auburn had their own ideas . . . and eked out a 7-0 win as ever-surging Gantt blocked one of Ace ' s punts with Williams scooping the bounding ball for the lone tally of the game . . . the giant boot of the Auburn tackle, Paterson, helped to harness the Dukes. . . . For three quarters bodies swayed back and forth with the exchange of the ball . . . deadly blocking . . . powerful line plunges . . . from 246 McCaskill Clark Power Badgett stonewall to impregnable defence . . . failed to change the score. Homecoming Two losses behind them and the HOMECOMING fracas with the crack Tennessee eleven next on the card . . . the picture looked black for the Devil gridders. . . . But Durham ' s own Elmore Hackney hacked and zoomed his way through a stern Vol team to wear the garland. . . . The score tied at the half . . . 6 to 6 . . . Hackney netted 47 yards on three plays to give the onlookers something to look at . . . and repeated his touchdown spree in the final period . . . Elmore literally gave the game to the Dukes, 19-6. HOPES ROSE AGAIN AT THE APPROACH OF THE DUKE-CAROLINA CLASSIC! Wildcats Caged Playing before a Homecoming crowd of Davidson alumni . . . the Blue Devils felt it incumbent upon them to repeat their win . . . the fleet-footed Hack- Parker carries the ball 247 Smith « Hartness Hudgins Hackney Fischer ney showed his heels to the ' Cats on a 64-yard run . . . passed neatly to Herbert Hudgins . . . aided by the perfect blocking of Frank Liana ... for the first touchdown . . . Liana broke into the scoring column with an end-around play . . . and the Azure Wave rolled on to a 26-0 victory. ... Duke, 25— Carolina, Then came the annual Duke-Carolina classic . . . amid a steady drizzle . . . 47,000 zealous football fans watched a perfectly oiled and timed WADE machine smash Carolina ' s Rose Bowl hopes . . . 25-0 . . . even Jupiter Pluvius smiled at times as the Wade legion completely out-classed the supposedly invulnerable Tar Heels. . . . There were many heroes that day . . . thirteen of them: Jack Alex- ander . . . Clarence Parker . . . Jule Ward . . . Ed West . . . Jack Hennemier . . . Gus Durner . . . Elmore Hackney . . . Sam Gardner . . . Sam McCaskill . . . Joe Brunansky . . . Captain Jim Johnston . . . Joe Cardwell . . . and Dick Talia- ferro. ... As befitting a great All-American pros- pect . . . Ace Parker set the stage for the first Duke touchdown ... in the second quarter, Jule Ward, on a reverse, hot-footed it 47 yards to hang up the precious six-pointer. ... A jam through center by Jack Alexander ... in the third stanza . . . boosted the Duke score to 13. . . . In the final quarter occurred the play which electrified the crowd and had the sports scribes taking the silencers off their pencils . . . Jack Alexander intercepted Don Jack- son ' s toss and, with his mates giving him perfect interference, ran 90 yards to score . . . Parker followed with a 30-yard touchdown parade to ring the curtain down on one of the greatest gridiron games of the year in the collegiate circles of the country. . . . Long after the pages of this book have turned to brown . . . the 1935 Duke gridiron season shall be referred to as DUKE, 25— CAROLINA, 0. Curtain Falls In a post-climax to the brilliant 1935 grid season ... the Blue Devils eked out a 7-0 win over Hunk Anderson ' s North Carolina State footballers, with it annexing the Big Five and Southern Conference crowns. . . . The only score of the otherwise slow game: Jack Hennemier intercepted Berlinski ' s pass on the State 41 for Duke . . . and Ace Parker cut 248 John Johnston Lipscomb through left tackle for the lone score . . . Sam Gardner kicked the extra point. . . . The Wolfpack again and again stormed at the Blue Devil goal zone only to find the Wade defense impossible to crack. On the Honor Rolls The conclusion of the 1935 grid season saw Duke ' s mighty quarterback, Clarence (Ace) Parker, being named on practically all All- American selections. ... In addition Parker was unanimously awarded the quarterback position on the Southern Conference team. . . . On the first team . . . besides Parker . . . Gus Durner, tackle . . . Captain Jim Johnston, guard; . . . second team: Ed West, end . . . Jule Ward, back; . . . third team: Jack Hennemier, center . . . Joe Cardwell, tackle . . . Jack Alex- ander, fullback; . . . honorable mention: Joe Brunansky, tackle . . . Elmore Hackney, back. Letters were awarded to: Jack Alexander . . . Clarence Badgett . . . Jim Boling . . . Joe Brunan- sky . . . Joe Cardwell . . . McCauley Clark . . . Tense moment — Duke-Carolina game 249 Gus Durner . . . Sam Gardner . . . Willard Earn- gey . . . Charles Fischer . . . Elmore Hackney . . . Carl Hartness . . . Jack Hennemier . . . Herbert Hudgins . . . Captain Jim Johnston . . . Frank Liana . . . Woodrow Lipscomb . . . Richard McAninch . . . Sam McCaskill . . . Clarence Parker . . . Thomas Power . . . Harwood Smith . . . Richard Taliaferro . . . Jule Ward ... Ed West . . . and Carl Lee, Jr., student manager. B Team In the first year of its organization . . . the B team . . . which gives men a chance to play com- petitive football who might not otherwise see action . . . won its spurs. ... Its season shows four losses and a single victory. ... In the opener, Lenoir Rhyne rolled over the B team 9 to 6 . . . but the Seconds would not be denied . . . and won a game that resembled a track meet . . . from Campbell College . . . 39 to 0. . . . Elon proved too much for them, however, and they went down 13-0. . . . They lost to Oak Ridge, 13-0 ... and Navy B team, 18-0. Johnny Johnson was outstanding throughout the season . . . accounting for three touchdowns against Campbell College . . . and Hal Stephens turned in nice playing in the backfield. ... To Coach es Shipwreck Kelley . . . and Earle Wentz ... go our congratulations. W Fourth Row: Hackney, Davis, Earngey, Williams, Germino, Greenwood, Cardwell, Crawford, Hudgins, Lipscomb, Finn, Hooks, Lenox Third Row: Badgett, Harris, Gregson, Hartness, Clark, Eakins, Fischer, Brunansky, Cannon, Carpenter, Burton, Bowers, Baldwin Second Row: Liana, Taliaferro, Durner, Ed. West, Ward, Power, Johnston, Hennemier, McAninch, McCaskill, Boling, Alexander, Parker First Row: John Johnston, West, Boyd, Smith, Meng, Gardner, Stephens 250 BASKETBALL Kunkle Podger Herrick Huiskamp Cheek BASKETBALL Sports Stars None of the Duke 1935-36 athletic teams . . . had a better start than Coach Eddie Cameron ' s Blue Devil cage team. . . . With only two regulars back from the crack 1934-35 team . . . the Duke mentor moulded a team which scored a string of thirteen consecutive victories before being defeated. . . . Taking all things into consideration . . . Duke had a very successful basketball season . . . the Blue Devil floor team scoring twenty wins in twenty-five starts. . . . Some of the outstanding cage teams of the country . . . which fell before Duke were . . . North Caro- lina . . . Yale . . . Army . . . Catholic U. . . . Princeton . . . University of Richmond . . . and . . . Baltimore University. . . . Satellites During the hard campaign, the playing of the following Blue Devil cagers was notable . . . Cap- tain Charlie Kunkle . . . who was second high- scorer of the team . . . Billy Huiskamp . . . given honorable Southern Conference tourney mention . . . Ken Podger . . . high scorer and tourney choice . . . Fred Edwards . . . sophomore forward . . . Bud Herrick . . . Clarence Parker . . . Duke ' s famed AU-American footballer of the 1935 season . . . Joe Riley . . . Duke ' s flashy basketeer . . . and Johnny Hoffman. Duke opened its 1935-36 campaign with an impres- sive 39-36 win over the strong Catholic University five and on the following night defeated Baltimore U. 49-29 . . . before laying off for the Christmas vacations. . . . With the resuming of school, the Blue Devils topped the Elon College guintet, 58-42. . . . The next night in the Duke gym, a visiting Eli team of Yale University was able to give Coach Cameron ' s boys little more than a practise session ... as the game ended in rout of the Elis, 52-17. . . . Three days later . . . Duke administered a 36-28 win to V offord College of South Carolina. . . . 252 BASKETBALL . with an impressive Wildcats of Davidson Opened its Big Five season . 46-24 triumph . . . over the College. Deacs Downed A gritty Wake Forest quint was next to fall before the onslaught of the Blue Devils . . . 37-19. . . . In their first Southern Conference tilt . . . the Devils routed the Virginia Cavaliers . . . 54-29 to rise on the conference horizon as possible champions. . . . On its second Northern trek . . . the Blue Devils trimmed the Tigers of Princeton University . . . 40-26 . . . and bettered the veteran West Point Cadet team . . . 31-29 . . . with Huiskamp and Podger in the shining roles. . . . For the next ten days . . . until January 25 . . . the Duke basketeers busied themselves with mid- semester exams ... it was during this period that Duke ' s diminutive forward . . . who had rung up a game record of 10-points per . . . was obliged to undergo an appendicitis operation . . . breaking up the Duke starting lineup. Huiskamp Out Without the services of its high-scorer . . . Duke resumed its cage schedule on January 25 . . . faced N. C. State at Raleigh. ... In a bitterly fought and brilliant tussle . . . Duke suffered its first defeat of the season . . . when N. C. State ' s last minute rally gave them a 36-33 win. ... In their next tilt . . . Duke defeated V. P. I. by the double score of 40-20. . . . However, a stubborn Old Liner team of Mary- land University . . . surprised the Devil five . . . and managed a 38-34 victory over the visiting Durham aggregation. ... U. N. C. Classic Then came the annual Duke-North Carolina classic! ... In one of the finest floor games staged this year . . . Duke out-fought and out-smarted the Tar Heels Edwards Dean Riley Parker Wood 253 BASKETBALL to earn a 36-34 win ... in an extra period session . . . over ultimate 1936 Southern Conference cage champions. ... It was a great game in which Duke showed just what it was capable of. . . . In their next two games . . . the Blue Devils defeated the University of Virginia for the second time . . . 44-21 . . . University of Richmond, co-champions of Vir- ginia . . . 31-27. . . . Before meeting North Caro- lina in their second game of the year . . . Duke trimmed Davidson College . . . 36-33 ... in a hard-fought fray . . . University of Florida ... 42 - 31 . . . and Wake Forest . . . 42-27. U. N. C. No. 2 On February 21, Duke and North Carolina met in the Duke gym . . . and the visiting Tar Heels evened the seasonal scores . . . eking out a victory from the Blue Devils . . . 30-28 . . . N. C. State ... in another second half rally . . . bettered the Blue Devils . . . and the 32-29 victory went into the coffers of the Red Terrors. . . . Duke brought its season to a close . . . with a tussle with the powerful Washington and Lee cage team in Lynchburg, Va. . . . The Generals staged their greatest game of the year . . . defeating the Devils . . . 43-27 ... to establish themselves as the pre-tourney favorites of the Southern Conference tournament. . . . Duke was eliminated in the first round of the tourney . . . when a hard-passing and battling University of Maryland guintet . . . took the game by a 47-35 verdict. LETTERMEN Griffith Ashby Thomas Wright Hoffman Eakin Herbert Cheek, Fred C. Edwards, A. L. Herrick, John Hoffman, C. W. Huiskamp, C. W. Kunkle, Clarence Parker, Kennet Podger, J. W. Riley, H. Mossburg, manager. Front Row: Podger Cheek Riley Kunkle, Captain Wood Parker Huiskamp Back Row: Mossburg, Manager Herrick Quick Caldwell Edwards Hoffman Schlesinger 254 i BASEBALL BASEBALL MARCH ON As March went out like a lamb . . . the Duke baseball team started their trek toward the Big Five championship. . . They downed Chatham Mills 6 to 4 . . . and 11 to 10 . . . on succes- sive days at Elkin ... in characteristically ragged openers . . . and prepared to twist the visiting Clemson tiger ' s tail . . . in the first clash on their home diamond ... to open their Southern Conference crown race. APRIL FOOL Poor fielding prevented a double victory ... as they dropped a 3-0 decision in the nightcap . . . after a 12 to 8 win in the April opener. . . . The nine went on to crush Elon easily . . . 10 to 2 . . . George Barley making his varsity debut in a six- hitter . . . against the University of Michigan . . . Pete Nak- tenis with his freak delivery . . . hurled nine innings of good ball . . . and gave the Devils a 4 to victory ... in a near- no-hit no-run game. ... A fluke hit in the third spoiled his ticket to the Baseball hall of fame. QUAKER VICTORY On April 10 the Demon Deacs mixed two safeties with four walks in the second inning ... to count all runs . . . and gain a 5 to 1 decision over the visiting Dukes. . . . Next, against Guilford College ' s Quaker Club . . . The Devils eked out a 6-4 win . . . in a game that was contested all the way ... by a surprisingly strong Guilford nine. W. Huiskamp Parker Cheek Center Ambler Shorten Naktenis Right Wentz Liana Corbitt 256 BASEBALL In a contest featuring the annual spring blossom festival . . . the Devils made two wins in a row . . . over Davidson, with a 6 to 3 decision. . . . Ace Parker cracked out a triple and a homer to lead with the pole . . . after a win the previous day . . . 5 to 1 . . . the first defeats the Wildcats had suffered in ' 35. . . . A WAITING GAME The State nine tried to escape defeat by delaying the game . . . according to the umpire ' s decision . . . who awarded. Duke the game . . . 9 to . . . before darkness set in. . . . The game was in the tenth frame, with the Dukes ahead, 13 to 7 ... A single by Don Mitchel with Pete Naktenis scoring from third gave Duke a 3-2 decision over Davidson ... in a ten- inning game. . . . And the following afternoon, the Devil nine took a batting practice . . . swamping the Wildcats 13 to C . . . making it six wins in a row and strengthening the Devils ' hold on the Big Five leadership. EASTER BUNNY The Blue Devils celebrated Easter Monday by scampering off with 13 to 1 and 7 to 2 verdicts over the University of South Carolina . . . running their win streak to eight tilts. . . . A win over Wake Forest . . . 8 to 6 . . . made it six con- secutive ... in the Big Five . . . with a loss only to Wake Forest . . . Reynolds May, stocky right-hander . . . blanked N. C. State for six innings before the Wolfpack counted four to Duke ' s ten. Left Konopka Barley Morris Center Landon McMaster C. Huiskamp Right Conradi Ewing Rasberry JSl 257 BASEBALL Duke counted a run in the ninth to draw into a tie and ward off defeat and then . . . bunched hits four innings later ... to take a clash from Wake Forest . . . 10 to 7. . . . The Blue Devils opened their an- nual Northern invasion with a win over . . . George- town . . . 4 to 1 in their twelfth straight victory . . . but were bombarded by the University of Maryland . . . who came from behind to defeat the Devils . . . 12 to 4. NORTHERN INVASION In a May day clash . . . the Dukes invaded Princeton and came out with a 13 to victory as George Barley . . . fanned ten and gave three singles. . . . The next day the Dukes pounded three Fordham hurlers . . . for twelve hits which reg- istered ten runs to the Rams ' four. On to Annapolis the roving Devils sank the Navy . . . 3-0 in a dual between Reynolds May . . . and the Middie moundman . . . McGowin. . . . Duke defeated State for the third time, May 8 . . . 11 to 5 . . . taking the lead in the Big Five flag race. . . . ARCH-RIVALS In a closing series with Duke ' s arch-rivals from Chapel Hill . . . the Devils took all three games: 7 to 2 ... 4 to ... and 14 to 0. .. . Ken Weafer, who pitched last season ' s win for the Blue Devils . . . checking a 26-game Tar Heel win streak . . . tossed. Letters went to Wayne Ambler, George Barley, Herbert Cheek, Claude Corbitt, B. O. Cornelius, Dixon Dailey, Sam Ewing, Bill Huiskamp, Al Konopka, Rod Landon, Reynolds May, Dave Michael, Don Mitchell, Pete Naktenis, Clarence Parker, John Shorten, Ed Taylor, Captain Ty Wagner, Ken Weafer, Earl Wentz, Jerry Marion, student manager. ' %f ' tt % iWiC mJ ' t . y ' j, I i JA ' CT i. r Coach Coombs Parker Cornelius Liana Davis Thompson McMaster Konopka Ambler Ogburn C. Huiskamp Corbitt Shortell Morris Ewing W. Huiskamp Dailey Weafer Landon May Captain Wagner Taylor Mitchell Red Merrill 258 TRACK TRACK SUCCESSFUL START With an extra week of training . . . occasioned by the cancellation ... on account of snow ... of a meet scheduled for March 8 with V . M. I . . . the Duke tracksters met William and Mary in the Duke stadium . . . and rang up the curtain on their 1935 season with a 71 1-3 to 54 2-3 win. The Blue Devils took 12 out of 14 second places ... to overcome the heroic efforts of Monk Little . . . who rang up 20 points single-handed for the visitors. . . . The Williams brothers and Kraushaar swept the field in the shot put . . . and Shehan, Pruitt, and Winstead came through in the 440 ... in the only clean sweep to the honor of the Dukes. . . . Field and running honors were practically divided. LANDSLIDE Having tasted of victory, the harriers swept on ... to a landslide victory over a visiting W. and L. sguad . . . with the final count 97 to 29. . . . The Devils were, however, not impressive on a slow track . . . Martin captured the honors for the Blue and White sguad going over the high hurdles in 15.5 seconds. ... All firsts except the mile and two-mile . . . which went to Dick Dunja, one of the South ' s best distance runners . . . and the discus . . . went to Duke with most of the seconds. Left Center Right West Kraushaar Sizemore Pickard George Morse Myres Woodard Shehan Hackney 260 TRACK NEMESIS The Nemesis, North Carolina University team, however, broke the Devil ' s win record . . . defeating them 73 to 53 ... at Chapel Hill. . . . The Duke team took an early lead with its strength in the field events . . . but was passed in the running and hurdles. . . . Woodard took first place in the 100 and 200-yard dashes . . . and Leidy, Moore, Myres, McGrail, and West captured blue ribbons for Duke in the field events. CONFERENCE MEET In the conference meet at Chapel Hill the champion Tar Heels surged ahead to nose out the Duke cinder path and weight men ... to take their 14th consecutive conference championship. The Blue Devils showed surprising strength in the preliminaries . . . setting the pace for the meet. . . . The Chapel Hillmen still held the odds, however. ... At the end of the first eight events . . . Duke held the lead . . . but ... a clean sweep of all four places in the half mile . . . gave Carolina first position. Harry Williamson . . . Carolina ' s brilliant runner . . . and Woodard, the Blue Devil dash ace . . . ran up high-score positions for themselves . . . with ten points . . . gained by two firsts each . . . Woodard took the 100 and 200-yard dashes. . . . Final scores: Carolina, 75 1-2; Duke, 67. Left McGrail Koop Moore Johnston Center Krizek Leidy Right Fischer Hanes Stroud Pruitt 261 TRACK REVENGE The Duke harriers . . . still smarting under their pair of disappointments . . . took into camp a totally- unequal Davidson team . . . 101 to 25 at Davidson. . . . The Dukes started by sweeping the 100-yard dash . . . and maintained their lead for the entire stretch . . . Moore broke the Duke pole vault record . . . with a leap of 12 feet . . . and Myres jumped 6 3-4 feet ... to set a new high jump record. ' 36 OPENER The Devil trackmen started their ' 36 season with a vengeance . . . taking the indoor track meet in Duke gymnasium . . . defeating the defending cham- pions of North Carolina ... by the margin of 17 points. . . . The Demons from Duke had won the meet . . . after ten of the twelve . . . events had been run off. ... Eight new records were set and one tied . . . Duke ' s score of 48 points . . . it ' s the highest ever made ... in the seven years of the games. . . . Frank Sizemore amassed six points ... to be high scorer for the Devils. AND THEN . . . Although all Conference records stood as far as the Devils were concerned . . . University records were broken in many fields . . . Martin jacked up the high-hurdles record to 15.5 . . . West heaved the javelin to 250 feet, 5 inches . . . Moore pole- vaulted to a new record of 12 feet, 7 3-4 inches . . . and Myres high-jumped to 6 feet 3-4 inches. TRACK LETTERMEN— 1935 Richard Atkinson, O. C. Britton, Judson George, Huber Hanes, Jack Heritage, Jack Kneipp, Lloyd Kraushaar, Joe Leidy, Robert Martin, Myles McGrail, Huber Moore, William Morse, Hillman Myres, Edward Peabody, John Pickard, Charles Pruitt, Al Reichman, Mason Shehan, Frank Sizemore, Elmer Tarrall, Harry Woodard, and Joe Shieferly, student manager. Coach Voyles, Heritage, West, Datoi, Kiuashaar, Sizemore, Atkinson, Myres, Shehan, Martin, Stoneburner, George, Stroud. Morse, Webb, Tarrell, Pickard, Carman, L. Williams, Captain Reichman, M. Williams, Winsted, Kneipp, Pruitt, Leidy. 262 MINOR SPORTS Manager Wunder Ferris Morse Pruitt Dator Naudain Captain George Koop Coach Ashworth CROSS-COUNTRY CROSS-COUNTRY SQUAD UNDEFEATED The Blue Devil cross-country team won itself a place in the University hall of fame . . . going through an undefeated season . . . and sweeping on to first place in the Southern Conference meet. It was Coach Charles Ashworth ' s first Devil sguad of hill and dalers . . . which toppled the defending North Carolina University champions ... in the North Carolina run ... by a three-point margin to garner the crown. . . . Led by Bill Morse . . . the Azure wave swept in ahead of all opposition. The Devils opened their season . . . with a 36 to 19 win over the Galloping Gobs at Annapolis . . . with Morse and Charles Koop . . . both Dukemen . . . tied for first . . . and Captain Georg e cutting the tape third. In their first home meet, they completely outclassed a band of Richmond runners ... 42 to 20 .. . and followed this victory with a win over the North Carolina State harriers ... 44 to 19. Not until they met the Carolina Tar Heels were the Devils hard pressed. . . . The outcome of that meet was in doubt until the last man was home. In the Southern Conference clash, the Tar Heels were favored to retain their crown . . . but the Blue Devils took seven places . . . and set a record on a snow-covered . . . wind-swept . . . course: Morse romped in first . . . Koop, second . . . Pruitt, sixth . . . Captain George, eighth . . . Ferris, ninth . . . Dator, twelfth . . . and Naudain, thirteenth. . . . Bill Morse set a new record of 26:25.9 to take the blue ribbon. . . . With all the runners in the conference meet returning in 1936-37 . . . and a capable sguad of freshmen coming up . . . prospects point toward a repetition of the historic season of 1935-36. CROSS-COUNTRY LETTERMEN— 1935 Frank Dator, Douglas Ferris, Judson George, Charles Koop, William Morse, Parker Naudain, Charles Pruitt, and C. E. Wunder, student manager. 264 Mervine Bender Fletcher Kraushaar Lamb Thomas Hinck Garden O ' Brien Morris Ambler Beatty Huiskamp Fuller SOCCER Th e first official soccer in Duke history was insti- tuted in 1935 . . . when a squad . . . coached by Jerry Gerard . . . rang up an impressive record ... of four wins . . . a tie . . . and a single defeat . . . which was at the hands of High Point . . . 4 to 1 . . . Davidson-Duke played to a scoreless tie. Concurrent with the University opening in Septem- ber . . . came a movement for athletic-board-spon- sored soccer . . . which was finally successful . . . and Jerry Gerard was called upon to field a team to wear the blue and white ... in inter-collegiate competition. . . . After a few weeks practice, the novice team locked horns with one of the oldest aggregations in the state . . . High Point . . . and defeated the visitors . . . 3 to 2. . . . Duke ' s first official soccer season was under way! In a return match with the Panthers at High Point . . . the Devils ran up against a 4 to 1 defeat ... in which Culler . . . Panther captain . . . played in- spired ball that baffled the visitors. One week later . . . the Devils returned to High Point ... to meet the strong Y team there . . . and won . . . 2 to 1 . . . on a quick kick by Morris that gave the Dukes the lead which they did not relinquish. The Blue and White rode on the crest of victory over: Durham Y . . . 2 to 1 . . . and Davidson ... an upset . . . 3 to 1 . . . setting up the Devils as one of the outstanding teams of the state . . . with stars in Ambler and Morris. The 1935 season ended at Davidson . . . with a scoreless deadlock which stood, despite valiant efforts by both teams to waft the sphere into paying territory. Graduation takes only two men from the ' 35 squad . . . and Coach Gerard will have nearly his entire first team available . . . with more experience behind them ... to draw on ... for a veteran ' 36 squad . . . which will probably play a bigger . . . and tougher . . . schedule than the first soccer year. 265 Al Mann Matulewicz Schmitt Koger Kneipp Farrar W. Mann Coach Warren Price BOXING Led by its co-captains . . . Ray Matulewicz and Al Mann . . . the Blue Devil boxing team registered one of the finest records ... on the Duke athletic books. ... It was undefeated in dual meets . . . and was classed as one of the finest ring teams ... in college circles. ... At the annual Southern Con- ference tournament . . . Duke copped a second place . . . with Jack Kneipp and Ray Matulewicz carrying off lightweight and light heavyweight crowns, respectively. . . . Danny Farrar . . . rated as one of the outstanding candidates for the U. S. Olympic boxing octet . . . and world ' s amateur welterweight champion . . . through an unlooked- for eye injury . . . was not able to compete in the finals of the tourney . . . thus weakening Duke ' s chances of winning the conference title. . . . Co- captain Al Mann . . . defending 155-pound cham- pion . . . reached the finals of the 165-pound class . . . only to lose a close decision to Novich ... of North Carolina University. Coach Add Warren ' s Duke boxers started their 1935-36 season . . . with an impressive 6-2 victory over South Carolina . . . administered a 6-2 drub- bing to the University of Richmond Spiders . . . riddled the strong Catholic University leather team, 6-2 .. . received an 8-0 forfeit from the N. C. State team . . . and fought to a 4-4 draw with the great University of West Virginia boxing team . . . East- ern Inter-collegiate champs . . . and one of the finest in the country ... in a spectacular meet. The annual bout with the University of North Carolina was cancelled. In dual meets . . . three members of the squad . . . Danny Farrar, Jack Kneipp, Al Mann . . . were undefeated . . . Kneipp and Farrar scored every one of their dual wins . . . via the k.o. route . . . and from lightweight to light heavyweight became known as the Murderers Row. . . . The personnel of this great team was made up of . . . Bobby Koger, bantamweight . . . Bobby Price, featherweight . . . Jack Kneipp, lightweight . . . Danny Farrar, welterweight . . . Wilton Mann, jun- ior middleweight . . . Co-captain Al Mann, middle- weight . . . Co-captain Ray Matulewicz, light heavyweight . . . and Don Schmitt, heavyweight. With the entire team back next year . . . Coach Add Warren . . . himself a great boxer in past years . . . should enjoy . . . along with his boys ... a greater and even more successful season. BOXING LETTERMEN— 1935-36 Danny Farrar, Raymond Matulewicz, Al Mann, Jack Kneipp, Wilton Mann, Don Schmitt, Robert Price, Robert Koger, and Francis Little, student manager. 266 Coach Neely Downs Haines Katz Manager Glass Stevenson Windsor Ardolino Mascot Brown Friedlander WRESTLING The Duke wresthng squad was swept before an overwhelming band of Washington and Lee matmen . . . who blanked the Devils ... as both squads opened their 1936 seasons. . . . The Generals took seven falls . . . and one time advantage ... to roll up 38 points. The Blue Devils showed considerable improve- ment . . . when they met Davidson . . . although they were on the unfavorable end of a 16 to 12 decision. . . . Trailing 5 to 12 at the end of five matches . . . the Wildcats went to work and scored 11 points in the next three events. In their third meet of the season . . . the grapplers lost a 14 to 12 verdict to N. C. State ... in Franklin Thomas Memorial Gymnasium. . . . There was only one fall scored in the meet . . . that by Thompson . . . who threw Haines to break a deadlock and give State a safe advantage. The rival Carolina matmen took Duke into camp ... 16 to 14 .. . after trailing 5 to 11. . . . In the last clash before the Southern Conference meet . . . the Dukes fell before the attack of the V. M. I. mat men ... 27 to 3 ... in the Duke gym. With the conference meet ... a family affair between W. and L. and V. M. I. . . . the Duke wrestling team was able to show only three points. Although the Duke matmen were defeated in all of their major meets and failed to win any crowns . . . they showed good form and general improve- ment with each succeeding encounter . . . with the entire team back next year . . . Coach Neeley is expected to turn out a representative wrestling squad. Varsitymen who were awarded letters were: Captain John Ardolino, . . . Irwin Friedlander, . . . Gilbert Katz, . . . Roberts tevenson, . . . and Don Glass, student manager. 267 Lampe Glagola Blanchard Poe Powell Deupree Perry Manager Lambeth GOLF SEVEN OF ELEVEN The Duke golfers took seven of eleven inter- collegiate matches in 1935 and captured the State and Conference titles. . . . They started the season right with a win over Furman ... 10 1-2 to 7 1-2 . . . but slumped in the following clash . . . losing to Georgia Tech ... 10 1-2 to 7 1-2. . . . The next day . . . they romped over Emory ... 14 1-2 to 3 1-2... and continued to win over Georgia, 2 1-2 to Duke ' s 15 1-2 .. . Florida, 4 1-2 to 13 1-2 .. . and N. C. State 1-2 to 17 1-2 .. . Georgia Tech again upset them . . . but did not take the decision . . . gaining only a 9-9 draw . . . North Carolina University . . . two days later . . . did overcome the Duke golfers . . . 10 to 8. . . . The Devils came back in the two following meets ... to down Furman ... 11 1-2 to 6 1-2 . . . and N. C. State ... 16 1-2 to 1 1-2. At the State meet . . . Duke lead the teams home . . . reguiring only 612 aggregate strokes ... to do the stretch ... to 619 for N. C. U. . . . and 635 for N. C. State. In an interval between the State meet and the Conference meet . . . the Devils gained another victory . . . over N. C. U. . . . 10 1-2 to 7 1-2.. and went on to set the Southern Conference crown securely on their heads . . . with a lead of 13 strokes over N. C. State . . . their nearest rivals. . . . The Devils came through in 613 strokes . . . and the Statesmen took 626. Letters were awarded to: Clifford Perry, Bayard Storm, Walter Justin, Joe Powell, T. D. Pimper, student manager. 268 @ 9 Tzy. ' T tNNis I Tennis . 15 1 mi N mi nu i TfNNis ; , Tennis j Coach Fogleman Beich Gill Caton Wright Parsons Kellmyer Ashby TENNIS The Blue Devil tennis team opened its 1935 activ- ities in a tie with the Ohio State raqueteers . . . 3-3 ... by virtue of a finals doubles win with Nick Ashby and Charlie Gill figuring. . . . Their next meet . . . with the Carolina Tar Heels ... set them back to a 1 to 5 loss ... in a match cut short by rain . . . before Duke could send in its strong doubles scorers. Two days later . . . thirsting for their delayed, victory . . . the courtsters journied to Southern Pines ... to take the State tennis team into camp . . . 9 to . . . sweeping clean all classes. . . . And on April 30 . . . the Devils repeated their 9-0 performance . . . over Wake Forest. . . . They again swept through the Deacons on May 3. They were unable to withstand a strong attack by the University of Virginia courtsters . . . who eked out a 5 to 4 victory . . . taking all the singles . . . and losing to Duke in the doubles. . . . With their usual all-or-nothing spirit . . . the Devil raqueteers went on to blank William and Mary . . . and took a 7 to 2 win from George Washington University. At Princeton, they again met a Waterloo . . . dropping a match to the Tigers ... by their usual score . . . but with themselves on the small end of the 9 to score. The Tars of Annapolis sank 2-7 under the attack of the fighting Devils . . . fresh from a smarting defeat in the hands of Princeton . . . and the Dukes rang down the curtain on their 1935 season with an 8 to 1 victory over the North Carolina State netters. TENNIS LETTERMEN 1935 Donald McNeil, James Martin, Thomas Parsons, David Caton, Charles Gill, Nicholson Ashby, and Martin Shapiro, student manager. 269 Manager Turner Doniger Jones Kuemper Kurtz Ginsberg Kraushaar Bailey Stokes Winton Burwell SWIMMING The Blue Devils opened their swimming season inauspiciously . . . with a 30 to 51 loss to Virginia ... in their own pool . . . and went on to William and Mary ... to open their season on foreign fields. . . . The Williamsburg team was a little too speedy for the visiting Dukes . . . who dropped the decision 42 to 41 ... in a heart-breaking meet . . . espe- cially to Dailey . . . who broke the W. and M. pool record of 2:37.3. Returning to North Carolina . . . the Duke mer- men faced N. C. State in a dual meet which they lost ... 51 1-2 to 30 1-2. . . . The State quartet set a new pool record winning the 400-yard relay . . . and Captain Carroll Dailey, of Duke, set up a new pool record in the 200-yard breast stroke . . . registering Dukes only first place in the meet. Smarting under their bad streak on the records . . . the mermen unmercilously trounced the V. P. I. natators . . . with Dailey again turning in a pool record . . . 2:41.7 . . . and leading the Devils to a 53 to 31 win . . . and Colson, of Duke hung up a new pool record in the 220. also Duke paid a surprise visit to the W. and L. mermen . . . who took them over the traditional rocks . . . 54 to 30. . . . The Generals were not expecting their visitors . . . due to a mix up in arrangements . . . and the meet was delayed while the swimmers were gathered together. After a rest occasioned by a cancelled meet with the Goldsboro Y. M. C. A. . . . the Dukes locked horns with Clemson and came out on the pleasant end of a 44 to 39 count. Then came the conference meet in the Duke pool. . . . With four losses to half as many wins . . . the Devils were not favored to show to advantage . . . in the conference meet ... in their own pool . . . BUT . . . they pulled a surprise out of the bag . . . and trailed the championship W. and L. team . . . to take second place from State . . . which had trounced them earlier in the season. . . . 270 FRESHMEN SPORTS =? •  «-£ — ■■' ■■, ■.. ,„ l„ „ y ■— — . — ' 41 Tir ■■B T -irair -- ' - rr — - ' WW a II ■iMi iiiiwiiiiii ' ' ii|jiywwW r %S| 4 !iK) i!if ! ' l t ti  i « 1935 Freshman Squad FRESHMAN FOOTBALL LITTLE FIVE CROWN For the second consecutive year . . . the Duke Frosh gridders won the Little Five championship . . . defeating Oak Ridge . . . swamping Wake Forest . . . overcoming N. C. State . . . romping over Davidson . . . and eking out a victory over the fighting Tar Babies. They registered 107 points to their opponents six. . . . Assisting head coach Hershel Caldwell to mould the championship Imp aggregation were . . . backfield coach Horace Hendrickson . . . and line coach Tom Rogers . . . both ex-Devil gridmen. FIRST PERFORMANCE The Imps gave the first account of themselves . . . downing a visiting Oak Ridge team, 13 to . . .in a game that showed their possibilities . . . but in which they showed little of the form that made them champions. . . . Don Petrey and Bob O ' Mara raced into the promised land once each . . . and Clay Nixon booted the 13th point. IMPS ANNIHILATE DEACS Next . . . they piled up 40 markers over Wake Forest ' s Yearling eleven . . . who were able to pass for a lone tally. . . . The first string steam- rollered to 20 points in five minutes . . . and the subs got their chance to prove their prowess. . . . Bill Bailey ... Dan (Red) Hill ... Bob Spangler. . . . Ken Lovell . . . and Bob O ' Mara ... all car- ried the pigskin over. . . . The lone Deac score came when Fuller snared a pass over the double stripe. WOLF CUBS OUTFOUGHT Heralded as the best freshman grid team in North Carolina . . . the N. C. State Frosh . . . were nevertheless unable to cope with the onslaught of the determined Caldwell eleven . . . result, a 14-0 win for the Imps. . . . Both touchdowns came via 80- yard drives ... a lateral. . . . Tipton-to-Maze-to- Spangler gave the first six-pointer with Lovell cross- ing the final chalk mark for the second. . . . Willie Mize and Clay Nixon each hit the cross-bars for an extra point. . . . The spectacular all-round playing of Eric, Speedboy, Tipton and Ken Lovell were the features of the afternoon in the Raleigh stadium. IMPS RAIN PASSES The following Saturday afternoon . . . t he Imps took the Wild Kittens of Davidson over . . . 33-0. . . . The feature of the fray was the Gross-to- Wallace passing combination. . . . Johnny Gross, Jesse Quinn, and Wallace accounted for the Duke touch- downs . . . the Imps were on their way to their second consecutive crown. SAME OLD STORY The annual Duke-Carolina freshman game . . . this time played at Carolina . . . proved itself the same old story . . . two teams battling their hearts out in a traditional tilt. . . . Carolina took the lime- light the first half. . . . BUT . . . the Imps came, back strong. . . . Bob Haas and Clay Nixon blocked a Carolina punt . . . Nixon fell on the bounding pigskin behind the Tar Heels ' goal line and the 0-0 tie was broken . . . Nixon converted giving Duke the 7-0 victory . . . and with it the Big Five crown. TWENTY-EIGHT NUMERALS At the conclusion of the season, the following men were awarded numerals: Fred Yorke, Al Russell, Robert O ' Mara, Alex Chatham, William Shoemaker, Eric Tipton, Ken Lovell, Bill Bailey, John Gross, Bill Wallace, Al Carpenter, Bill Jessup, Carl Ayers, Edward Martz, Tom Riggs, Seymour Robinson, Robert Spangler, Walter Rogerson, Dan Hill, Robert Ala- baster, Robert Haas, Donald Petrey, Jack Lange, Robert Baskerville, Claiborne Nixon, Jesse Quinn, Robert Ward, and James Bowen. 272 1935 Basketball Squad FRESHMAN BASKETBALL BIG FIVE CHAMPIONS Starting the 1935-36 season with a 25-17 win over a strong Newport News High School five . . . Coach Herschel Caldwell ' s Blue Imp cagers swept through ... to win the freshman Big Five championship of North Carolina. ... In the deciding game . . . the Imps trimmed the N. C. State yearlings . . . 30-26. After winning sixteen straight tilts . . . the Imps dropped their final game of the season ... to a hard-fighting Baby Deac quint of Wake Forest . . . the score of this tussle . . . which had no bearing on the championship . . . was 34-29. The Blue Imp victory string contained the scalps of Newport News High, 25-17 . . . Raleigh High, 41-26 . . . Wake Forest frosh (first game), 32-29 . . . Greenville High, 36-19 . . . Oak Ridge Mili- tary Academy, 41-28 . . . Irwin Red Birds, 43-19 . . . Durham High, 28-20 . . . N. C. State Wolflets (first game), 42-35 . . . V. P. I. freshmen, 31-16 . . . Belmont Abby, 43-13 . . . Newport News Training School, 37-16 . . . Newport News High (second game), 35-24 . . . William and Mary frosh, 39-28 . . . Morristown High, of Tennessee, 27-19 . . . N. C. State yearlings (second game), 40-18 . . . North Carolina freshmen, 30-26 . . . Wake Forest frosh (second game), 34-29. During this very successful season ... a number of Coach Herschel Caldwell ' s Imps put on excellent floor exhibitions . . . but outstanding throughout the season were the performances of . . . Johnny Logan, sterling guard . . . Bob O ' Mara, high-scoring tor- ward ... Ed Swindell and John Thomas, forward and guard respectively, and former Durham high school hardwood stars . . . and John Minor, the elongated Blue Imp center. At the conclusion of the season . . . numerals were awarded to twelve members of the freshman squad: John Logan, . . . Robert O ' Mara, ... Ed Swindell, . . . John Thomas, . . . Walter Finn, . . . R. M. Frosberg, . . . Walter Kerr, . . . Maurice Loh- man, . . . Richard Gingland, . . . John Minor, . . . Herbert Phillips, . . . and Russell Bergman. 273 FRESHMEN BASEBALL Although the 1935 Duke University freshman base- ball squad was not as successful as the Blue Imp basketball and football teams, it tallied nine victories out of sixteen engagements for a mediocre season. . . . The Imp victories were scored against the freshman nine of Wake Forest . . . North Carolina . . . N. C. State College . . . Augusta Military Academy of Georgia . . . and over the high school teams of Durham and Petersburg. Standing head over shoulders above his mates . . . during the 1935 season . . . was Lovill (Chubby) Dean, a crack diamonder who excelled in pitching and outfielding. . . . His batting average for the season was slightly over the .400 mark. . . . Coach Jack Coombs, of the Duke varsity, was depending on Dean to help bolster the Blue Devil varsity nine, riddled by graduation, but a sudden turn of events saw the promising frosh baseballer tossing his lot in with the Philadelphia Athletics. ... In his first year of professional playing. Chubby Dean has been making rapid strides. . . . Besides Dean, Coach Herschel Caldwell had an able hurler in Dave Smith and a good catcher in Hans Wagner. In one of the best freshman games of the North Carolina Big Five League . . . Duke yearlings defeated the N. C. State first year players, 1-0 .. . with Lovill Dean hurling a no-hit, no-run game. After opening their season with a 11-4 defeat at the hands of the strong Oak Ridge Military Academy diamonders . . . the Blue Imps smacked a 4-3 win over the Baby Deacs of Wake Forest . . . N. C. State was next to fall, 1-0 . . . Durham high School was swamped, 22-4. The Cadets of Augusta Mil- itary Academy eked out a 6-5 win from the Imps with Wake Forest following suit, 5-4 . . . N. C. State was again humbled, 3-2 and Wake Forest being defeated in succession, 9-2, 5-4. . . . Petersburg High nine of Virginia was the next victim of the Imps, 10-9. ... In their next game with the N. C. State yearlings, the Imps dropped a 11-5 verdict when the Wolflets banged across seven runs in the seventh inning to sew-up the game . . . the next Duke-N. C. State game went to the ' mps, 5-4. ... Of the three games played between the Duke and the North Carolina frosh, the Tar Babies won the first two but the Imps came back strong ... in their final game of the year to register an 8-7 win. 274 I N T R A M U R A L S INTRAMURALS Intramurals at Duke had their birth five years ago . . . when Wallace Wade . . . believing that intra- murals have a definite place in the program of educa- tion . . . brought Kenneth C. Gerard from the University of Illinois ... to take charge of the infant program . . . which has since grown to rival any in the country. The opportunity offered to such a large group of students . . . has been a prime factor in its rapid rise ... to a position rivaling even the varsity sports. . . . Established to bring out the gualities of fair play . . . cooperation . . . respect . . . sacri- fice . . . and loyalty. . . . The program has this year enlisted more than 1,500 men ... in the wide variety of athletic eliminations and tournaments. . . . More than 2,400 entries have been made . . . showing the extensive participation of many men. During the 1935-36 season . . Touch football . . . Basketball . Wrestling . . . Fall track . . Swimming . . . Water polo . . Horseshoes . . . Spring tennis ball . . . Spring track . . . and Golf contests gave every Duke man a chance to participate in his favorite sports. The program which celebrates its fifth birthday Fall tennis . . . . . Boxing . . . Handball . . . Volleyball . . . . . Playground in 1936 is definitely growing . . . and is encouraged to continue to expand. . . . The gymnasium in use at present was originally intended for use only as an intramurals gym . . . showing the plans of the administration for this branch of Duke athletics. . . . A varsity gymnasium was intended to be built on the present Freshman baseball diamond. Interest in the intramurals program has received much of its intensity from the rivalry between the Greek organizations . . . which expend great energy on their teams . . . and regard the ribbons and cups highly. . . . The freshman houses also enter teams and often develop unusual rivalry . . . although not as continually as the fraternities. . . . In addition to the team awards which are coveted by organizations ... on the campus . . . the many individual awards . . . for instance, in . . . boxing and wrestling . . . are vigorously fought for by the contestants . . . who enjoy competition ... as well and as much as their big brothers on the varsity teams. Coach Carl Voyles . . . varsity track coach . . . and assistant football coach . . . was a prime factor in the institution of the present system of intramural competition when he came from the University of Illinois five years ago. 276 INTRAMURALS An unusually full program of intramural competi- tion . . . gave to every student on the Duke campus ... a chance to demonstrate his ability and enjoy the sports of his choice. ... It also gave the varsity coaches a chance to watch the students . . . and select those with possibilities of developing into first-string material. Working under Coach Jerry Gerard . . . through the intramurals office ... a staff of house athletic representatives provided the contact between the administration and the participants in the tourna- ments. . . . The representatives were elected at the beginning of the year by the students of each dormi- tory or fraternity. The first event of the season was a touch football league which aroused an unusual amount of interest . . . and saw Kappa Sigma fraternity and House P sharing the University championship . . . Sigma Chi won the blue ribbon place in its division. Kappa Sigma again proved its sports prowess in spring track . . . when a team representing it won the first place. ... In the individual scoring, how- ever, Clark, an independent, was first . . . Stephen- son, independent, second . . . and Griffin, Hauser and H. Moore ... all frosh tracksters . . . third. The pugilistic instincts of the Duke students were then catered to in a boxing loop which, perhaps, drew the most interest of all the events. . . . Besides a large enrollment in the loop . . . the large audi- ences that saw the fights filled the small boxing room to overflowing every night. Kappa Sigma again took the first team place. In the 115-pound class . . . Russo, Southgate . . . won, and in 125 . . . Morelock, K. S, . . . placed first . . . with two more Kappa Sigs . . . Gannon and Blalock first in the 135 and 145 respectively . . . and three Southgate men taking the heavier weights . . . Poerner, 155 . . . Truit, 165 .. . and Washer, 175 .. . and Glenn, representing Ep worth winning the unlimited class. The runners-up starting with 115 were . . . Der Tatavasian . . . Gillis . . . Groves . . . Ardolino . . . Melrum . . . Ross . . . Morris . . . and Champion. After a long campaign ... a tennis tournament, which started the new semester, ended with Graeber at the top of the singles heap . . . and the Beich- Taylor combination in the doubles lead. . . . Follow- ing Graeber were Beich and Hulme . . . and second in doubles competition . . . were Seeberg and Staley. 277 . ■;) On Ofi Book Five ORGANIZATIONS LEAK, sand-swept rocks . . . towering mountain peaks . . . expansive fields of native Rhododendron . . . saintly shepherds and their tiny flocks . . . rustic, ancestral log houses, passed on from father to son through generations of hardy, unhurried mountaineers . . . are but a few of the simple and impressive beauties that reward the visitor to the Little Switzer- land of North Carolina. NX iJ From a Photograph by Bayard Wootten FRATERNITIES FRATERNITY PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL Jim McCall President The belief that the best interests of Greek-letter fraternities of Duke University, with respect both to our individual chapters and to the general organiza- tions, would be fostered by the organization and functioning of a body of duly constituted repre- sentatives from the various active chapters at Duke was the basis for the organization of the Pan-Hellenic Council. The Council is composed of one representative from each of the local and national fraternities repre- sented on the Duke campus. After serving one year as a junior representative, the member is well trained for his responsibilities as senior member. The Pan-Hellenic Council sponsors several impor- tant dances each year, with both local and outside orchestras. Frank Dailey played for the fall series, and the spring dances featured Jimmie Lunceford. These dances are important elements of the social life at Duke. Serving as a common meeting ground on which the various problems of fraternities are discussed and performing regulatory duties in matters relating to rushing, pledging, and initiation of men are very important functions of the Council. The deferred rushing system was introduced to the fraternity system at Duke two years ago. In connection with this system, a C average requirement for one semester ' s work for rushees was established. Slight modi- fications have been made since the inauguration of the deferred rushing plan. Puryear Kunkle Beneke Abbott Schafer Hale Winton Daniel Hathorn Richardson Dein Henry Weinstein Morelock Hiatt Moss Plump 284 SORORITY PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL Souder Applewhite Ivey Winfree Morton Peterson Ferness Lentz Regan Faires Meetze Fogel Slater Lins Larzelere Ritchie Buice Plyler Sasscer Clarke June Langfitt President The Sorority Pan-Hellenic Council, the governing body of intersorority activities, is composed of two representatives from each of the eleven sororities. These girls are selected by their respective groups. Officers on the council rotate from year to year, thus avoiding unnecessary rivalry. The Council makes and enforces rules concerning rushing, pledging, and initiation of all girls. At the end of each year the Council formulates new rushing rules based on those of preceding years, but with those changes which the Council considers will be advantageous to the sororities and the student body as a whole. During the past summer the eld Crowell Science building was converted into a Sorority Pan-Hellenic House, and there the sororities have had social functions throughout the year. The Council spon- sored a Pan-Hellenic dance this year which was enjoyed by everyone. A scholarship cup is awarded semiannually to the sorority having the highest scholastic average for the preceding semester. Each year, the Council awards a scholarship of $100 to some senior. This award is based on the grades of the Junior year and the first semester of the Senior year. Eleven National sororities are represented on the campus, and the Council feels that in the future a closer cooperation will bind them together more and more. The new house has done much to foster a better spirit among all of the sorority members. 285 ALPHA TAU OMEGA Class of 1936 Edwin B. Abbott, Birmingham, Ala.; Ernest Cruik shank, Raleigh, N. C; O. Lawrence Dortch, Columbia. Tenn,; A. Carl Lee, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; John R- McCrary, Lexington, N. C; D. Cole McMartin, Jr., Des Moines, Iowa; James W. Ouzts, Marion, N. C; W. James Turpit, Hastings, Neb.; John M. Webb, Durham, N. C. Class of 1938 ' Edward P. A. Beard, Rockville, Md.; Albert G. Clay, Mt. Sterling, Ky.; Leroy Eakin, Jr., Washington, D. C; N. A. Perry, Jr., Perry Park, Ky.; Robert E. Ricker, Elizabethtown, Pa.; Clyde S. Rine, Jr., Pitts- burgh, Pa.; Arthur B. Rouse, Jr., Erlanger, Ky.; James G. Shilliday, Pittsburgh, Pa. Class of 1937 H. N. Ashby, Durham, N. C; Robert T. Bean, Louisville, Ky.; Arthur B. Bradsher, Jr., Montreal, Canada; W. Thornton Green, Jr., Louisville, Ky.; P. H. Hanes, Jr., Winston-Salem, N. C; William Champe Jennings, Westfield, N. J.; Knight Laird, Memphis, Tenn.; Charles E. Pruitt, Frederick, Md.; William H. Sellers, Anniston, Ala.; Thomas F. Southgate, Jr., Durham, N. C; W. Robert Williams, Laurel, Del.; Robert C. Wood, Lewisburg, W. Va. Pledges Alec Chatham, Jr., Elkin, N. C; John F. Cree, Sunbury, Pa.; Robert C. Gatewood, Mt. Sterling, Ky.; M. Bickford Long, Roxboro, N. C; Alex N. Mclnnis, Gulf Hammock, Fla.; Howard P. Mason, Hollywood, Cal.; Phillip Mitchell, II, Rock Island, 111.; Harlan H. Olson, La Grange, 111.; John S. Perry, Rocky Mount, N. C; Robert Radtke, Detroit, Mich.; Thomas P. Senff, Mt. Sterling, Ky.; Howard J. Whitaker, Windsor, Conn. , FACTS Number of active chapters, 94; Number of alumni associations, 71; Total membership, 31,010; A. T. O. founded, September 11, 1865; Xi at Duke, March 2, 1872; Colors, sky-blue and gold; Flower, white tea rose; Publication, The Palm. HISTORY Alpha Tau Omega was the first fraternity established after the Civil War. Founded at Richmond, Virginia, by three young Confederate soldiers, it was projected as a national organization which should know no bounds, and the first chapter was placed at Virginia Military Institute. The fraternity now extends among college groups in forty-four states, and was the first Southern fra- ternity to maintain successfully chapters in the North. The first fraternity to become incorporated, it was granted a charter in 1879 by the Supreme Court of Maryland, at the instance of the fraternity members assembled in Congress at Baltimore. A. T. O. has been a member of the Inter-Fraternity Conference since the initial meeting of that body. Xi Chapter is the oldest fraternity on the Duke campus. It was the ninth Alpha Tau Omega Chapter to be established, and is now the fourth oldest in the order of existing ones. Originally North Carolina Alpha Chapter, the name was changed to Xi in 1890, at the end of the anti-fraternity period at Trinity. 286 Dortch McCrary Ouzts Cruikshank Abbott Webb Bean Southgate McMartin Turpit Lee Laird Wood Hanes Williams Jennings Pruitt Shilliday Green Ashby Beard Bradsher Ricker Rine Eakin Rouse Clay Perry 287 KAPPA SIGMA Class oi 1936 Een Blalock, Raleigh, N. C; W. P. Budd, Durham, N. C; Al Burford, Texarkana, Texas; George Failing, Luke, Md.; George Griscom, Trenton, N. J.; William Huiskamp, Keokuk, Iowa; Francis Litle, Washington, Pa.; Richard McAninch, Marion, Ohio; George Morelock, Nashville, Tenn.; Jack Paist, Philadelphia, Pa.; Boyd Pierson, Caribou, Maine; Duncan Sellers, Norfolk, Va.; Garfield Shafer, Norfolk, Va. Class of 1937 Wayne Ambler, Abington, Pa.; George Bailey, Lynbrook, N. Y.; Floyd Bennett, Richmond, Va.; Jess Brundage, Upland, Pa.; Peter Callahan, New York, N. Y.; Stephen Fuller, Chevy Chase, Md.; J. J. Gibbons, Wilson, N. C; Robert Hinck, Short Hills, N. J.; Grant Horneffer, Westfield, N. J.; Carl Huis- kamp, Keokuk, Iowa; Jack Kneipp, Washington, D. C; Oscar McFadyen, Fayetteville, N. C; Harry Morris, Chester, Pa.; Arthur Petersen, Lynbrook, N. Y.; Ryland Scott, Detroit, Mich.; Robert Stewart, Charlotte, N. C. Class of 1938 Oliver Brundage, Upland, Pa.; Carl Franz, York, Pa.; Roy Fleming, Wenonah, N. J.; Philip Gillis, Arlington, N. J.; James Little, Raleigh, N. C; A. Ber- tram Rohrbaugh, Chevy Chase, Md.; Elmer Rouzer, Hagerstown, Md.; J. Edward Sundholm, Brook- lyn, N. Y. Pledges John Carpenter, Hague, N. Y.; Braxton Craven, Charlotte, N. C; Robert Finn, Palmyra, N. J.; Paul Gannon, Glen Rock, N. J.; Walter James, Washington, D. C; Curhs Jones, Greenlawn, N. Y.; Garfield Miller, Coral Gables, Fla.; Richard Stull, Washing- ton, D. C; Sidney Truesdale, Asheboro, N. C; John Wilkes, Trenton, N. J. FACTS Number of active chapters, 107; Number of alumni chapters, none officially; Total membership, 36,051 Kappa Sigma founded, December 10, 1869; Eta Prime at Duke, 1873; Colors, scarlet, white, and emerald-green Flower, lily-of-the-valley; Publication, The Caduceus. HISTORY The University of Virginia campus was the scene for the founding of Kappa Sigma. The founders are known in its literature and traditions as the five friends and brothers. During the first years the members were noted for their high social status in the South. Kappa Sigma was the first southern fraternity to attempt northern expansion. There are now chapters in forty-five states and one in Canada. Kappa Sigma at first followed a policy of direct establishment of chapters, and it was nearly fourteen years before a chapter was established from a local society. The fraternity maintains funds for keeping in close touch with individuals and chapters. Scholarship is stressed. The patriotic sense is embodied in the fraternal order, and each chapter displays an American flag. Eta Prime of Kappa Sigma ranks second on the campus in point of age. It also has the distinction of being the third Kappa Sigma chapter. Since the establishment of an intramural sports department here, the Duke Kappa Sigs have been outstanding. 288 Failing Li tie W.Huiskamp Sellers Blalock Shafer Griscom Morelock McAninch J. Brundage Fuller Gibbons Budd Hinck Kneipp Horneffer Callahan McFadyen Paist Sundholm Petersen Morris Ambler Scott Franz Stewart Gillis Little Rohrbaugh Rouzer Fleming O. Brundage 289 •■!! PHI DELTA THETA Class of 1936 William Few, Durham, N. C; Gilbert L. Keith, Wilmette, 111.; Clifford W. Perry, Winston-Salem, N. C; William F. Reavis, Waycross, Ga.; W. P. Ricks, Rocky Mount, N. C; Daniel B. Schafer, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Frank Sizemore, High Point, N. C; William E. Woodruff, Winston-Salem, N. C. - - •• Class of 1937 Horace Barber, Glen Falls, N. Y.; Robert Boeker, Seymour, Conn.; Curtis Collins, Jacksonville, Fla.; Harry Etter, Shippensburg, Pa.; Charles Hallock, Nunda, N. Y.; Albert Happel, Blue Ridge Summit, Pa.; Albert Jacobs, Germantown, Pa.; Roy R. Johnson, Upton, Mass.; James Lambeth, Thomasville, N. C; Kenneth Podger, Kenmore, N. Y.; Joseph Riley, Collingdale, Pa.; William Smoot, Seaford, Del.; William Womble, Winston-Salem, N. C. ■■, ■■• Class of 1938 Emil Beyer, White Plains, N. Y.;. Paull Boger, Morganton, N. C; James Colson, Brunswick, Ga.; Robert Doyle, Washington, D. C; Fred Edwards Bloomsburg, Pa.; L. M. Edwards, Durham, N. C. Nathaniel Ewing, Vincennes, Ind.; Elmore Hackney Durham, N. C; Herbert Hudgins, Norfolk, Va. William Lampe, Harrisburg, Pa.; Jack Lockwood Verona, N. J.; Parker Naudain, Haddon Heights, N. J. Dick Ritter, Vineland, N. J.; Robert Scanlan, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Malcolm Stokes, Savannah, Ga.; Stephen Van Lill, III, Baltimore, Md. Pledges Don Bard, Pleasantville, N. Y.; Elmer Drake, Roselle Park, N. J.; Kenneth Few, Durham, N. C; Jay Gaines, Evanston, 111.; Robert Haas, New York, N. Y.; Alton Haring, Hackensack, N. J.; Ben Horack, Durham, N. C; Hill Hudson, Shelby, N. C; Gene Keefe, Sioux City, Iowa; Ralph Lambeth, Thomas- ville, N. C; Wilbert Lyons, Ridgewood, N. J.; Herman Rumsey, Atlanta, Ga.; Clarence Simmons, Rockville Centre, N. Y.; Robert Weichel, Scranton, Pa.; Daniel Will, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Howard Winterson, Oradell, N. J. FACTS Number of active chapters, 106; Number of alumni clubs, 146; Total membership, 42,772; Phi Delta Theta founded, December 26, 1848; N. C. Alpha at Duke, 1878, May, 1926; Colors, azure and argent; Flower, white carnation; Publication, The Scroll. HISTORY The founding of Phi Delta Theta was at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, the fraternity being one of the members of the celebrated Triad. At present Phi Delta Theta has about the largest number of initiates and the widest Canadian expansion of any fraternity. It was intended in the beginning that the fraternity extend to other institutions, and this policy was entered upon forthwith. Before the opening of the Civil War a sound foundation for growth had been laid, although the hostilities checked further development. In the history of Phi Delta Theta is the only instance of bicameral fraternity chapters. This was an exigency of the sub rosa nature of the chapters at anti-fraternity institutions. North Carolina Alpha chapter, the third oldest national fraternity at Duke, has had two periods of existence. The first ended in 1879, when all fraternities were banned at Trinity. The second period began when the local body, Epsilon Alpha Sigma, was granted a charter and the original name in 1926. 290 Perry- Sizemore Schafer Ricks Woodruff Keith Podger Etter Johnson Boeker Lambeth Riley Smoot Womble Barber Jacobs CoUins Hallock Hackney F. Edwards Beyer Doyle Van Lill Lockwood Colson Scanlon Lampe Ewing Naudain Stokes L. Edwards Bog er 291 m KAPPA ALPHA Class of 1936 Charles P. Ballenger, Greenville, S. C; William F. Bowman, Aberdeen, N. C; Robert Burge, Westfield, N. J.; William A. Lewis, Durham, N. C; Jim McCall, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Philip M. Russell, Durham, N. C; Walter A. Smith, W. New Brighton, N. Y.; Ernest C. Swiger, Clarksburg, W. Va. Class of 1937 Philip R. Cook, Pasadena, Cal.; William B. Farrar, Summerville, Ga.; Charles H. Gill, Newport, R. I.; Robert Lyon Jones, Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Archer Lackey, Christiansburg, Va.; Richard H. Owen, Clarksville, Va.; John R. Pepper, Memphis, Tenn.; Herbert J. Upchurch, Durham, N. C; William B. Wright, Raleigh, N. C. Class of 1938 Robert R. Beatty, Charlotte, N. C; John O. McCoy, Glen Jean, W. Va.; Dexter McCaskill, Marianna, Fla.; Pennington M. Nixon, Rome, Ga.; Robert R. Patillo, Atlanta, Ga.; Fredrick Rebman, Courtland, Ala.; Thomas S. Ryon, Washington, D. C. Pledges Ellis T. Baker, Baltimore, Md.; Jack C. Barnes, Greensboro, N. C.; Frank T. Gerard, Grenada, Miss.; Walter C. Johnson, Chattanooga, Tenn.; John W. Johnston, Roanoke, Va.; Charles E. Landreth, Win- ston-Salem, N. C; Reid Mitchell, Washington, N. C; Clinton W. Morgan, Jr., Lombard, 111.; Matt. B. Murfree, Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Paul E. Paredes, San Pedro Sula, Honduras; John R. Parsons, Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Woodard F. Russell, Durham, N. C; William E. Singletary, Winston-Salem, N. C; Robert L. Sloan, Waynesville, N. C; Robert B. Ward, Baltimore, Md.; Henry K. Warth, Baltimore, Md. FACTS Number of active chapters, 67; Number of alumni chapters, 87; Total membership, 25,492; Kappa Alpha founded, December 21, 1865; Alpha Phi at Duke, October 18, 1901; Colors, crimson and old gold; Flowers, magnolia and red rose; Publication, The Kappa Alpha Journal. HISTORY The Southern Order of Kappa Alpha, in contradiction to the smaller fraternity of that name which exists principally in the North, was founded at Washington College before that institution became Washington and Lee University. The aim of the founders was to preserve the basic southern characteristics, other than sectional, in a fraternity confined to the southern states. The three chapters in California form the main exception to this principle. As far as individual membership is concerned, statehood is not a restriction. Indeed, the alumni associations are nation-wide in scope. Kappa Alpha was not so fortunate in its infancy as some other fraternal organizations, for in many institutions where chapters were placed, anti-fraternity legislation shortly went into effect. Thus, it was left to a small nucleus of chapters working together to effect its permanent organization. Alpha Phi chapter is the fourth oldest fraternity on Duke campus. It was organized soon after the edict against fraternities here was repealed by the Trinity College Board of Trustees. 292 yilN 1 J J Ballenger Pepper Bowman Russell McCall Lewis Lackey Rebman Smith Burge Beatty Ryon Gill Swiger Jones McCaskill Upchurch Farrar McCoy Parades Nixon 293 PI KAPPA ALPHA Class of 1936 Henry Harris, Albemarle, N. C; Hyatt Mossburg, Chevy Chase, Md.; George Nance, Asheville, N. C; Douglas Richardson, Ashland, Ky.; Thornton Ruther- ford, Charlotte, N. C; Cecil A. Williams, Chicago, 111. Class of 1938 Eugene Bailey, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Russell Cooke, Kenilworth, 111.; Robert Hollowell, Hertford, N. C; Warner Hutchinson, La Grange, 111.; Richard Kale, Troutman, N. C; Joseph Scott, Live Oak, Fla. Class of 1937 Arthur Clay, Indianapolis, Ind.; Robert Hall, Charleston, W. Va.; William Hinnant, Raleigh, N. C; Harry Horton, Albemarle, N. C; Brooks McElwrath, Mayfield, Ky.; James O ' Brien, Rochester, N. Y.; G. Manning Smith, Charleston, W. Va.; Wilfred Thorn- ton, Macon, Ga. Pledges Campbell Garden, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Howard Eager, Washington, D. C; Willis Holding, Raleigh, N. C; James McGimsey, Morganton, N. C; George Ray, Charlotte, N. C; Robert Ross, Baltimore, Md.; George Stone, Worcester, Mass.; Dennis Williams, Richmond, Va. FACTS Number of active chapters, 78; Number of alumni chapters, 82; Total membership, 19,000; Pi Kappa Alpha founded. May 1, 1868; Alpha Alpha at Duke, November 26, 1901; Colors, garnet and old gold, Flower, lily-of-the-v alley; Publication, The Shield and Diamond. HISTORY Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, founded at the University of Virginia, was the outcome of the close friendship of five men who served together in the Confederate Army, notably in the Battle of New Market. The initial chapter was the governing authority for some years, granting charters, installing chapters, and determining policies. The Pi Kappa Alpha convention of 1889 limited expansion to the southern states, so as to further a concentrated development. Later the field was opened to include the southwestern states, and has since been broadened to permit growth throughout the United States. One of the chapters possesses a unigue meeting place. It is a replica of a Pueblo Indian council chamber and is located on the University of New Mexico campus, only initiates being permitted entrance. Pi Kappa Alpha has an intricate organization which extends even to each individual member and pledge, including a uniform pledging ceremony, a form examination, and numerous awards. Alpha Alpha chapter is fifth in age among the fraternities at Duke. 294 Harris Mossburg Richardson Rutherford McElwrath Hall Nance Kale O ' Brien Thornton Cooke Bailey Hutchinson Hollowell Clay 295 SIGMA PHI EPSILON Class of 1936 Richard R. Conradi, Irvington, N. J.; Lewis O. Funkhouser, Hagerstown, Md.; John R. Hathorn, Ballston Springs, N. Y.; John W. Hulme, Jr., Jackson Heights, N. Y.; Frank E. Mazuy, Newton, N. J.; James B. Messick, Smyrna, Del.; William A. Sager, Hagerstown, Md.; Roy Z. Thomas, Jr., Rock Hill, S. C; Kenneth D. Weagley, Waynesboro, Pa.; Frederick C. Wright, Jr., Hagerstown, Md. Class of 1938 Robert H. Black, Montclair, N. J.; J. O. Funkhouser, Jr., Hagerstown, Md.; Edward W. Isom, Jr., Scarsdale, N. Y.; John C. Mansell, Maplewood, N. J.; William Marshall, Vinton, Va.; Thomas C. Sager, Hagerstown, Md.; Donald V. Schworer, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Harold D. Von Glahn, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Remsen W. Walker, Tarrytown, N. Y.; T. Preston Webster, Jr., Tappa- hannock, Va. Class of 1937 Frederick Clark, Maplewood, N. J.; Walter A. Cosgrove, Southampton, N. Y.; Robert L. Cowan, Newport, Tenn.; Albert W. Fletcher, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Roger K. Harris, Newport, Ark.; Gerald T. McMaster, Overbrook, Pa.; Richard A. Patterson, Glens Falls, N. Y.; Hambleton Slingluff, Jr., West Hartford, Conn.; Haddon H. Smith, Maplewood, N. J.; Henry G. Sullivan, Anderson, S. C; Robert L. Weston, Ken- sington, Md. Pledges J. Carlyle Burton, Wilson, N. C; Peter Coppedge, Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Leroy Duncan, Jr., Norfolk, Va.; Richard Goode, Newton, Mass.; Thomas Grimm, South Orange, N. J.; William Hulme, Jackson Heights, N. Y.; Edward Ingles, Great Neck, N. Y.; Robert Kennedy, Montclair, N. J.; George Morrow, Jr., Scarsdale, N. Y.; William Neikirk, Hagerstown, Md.; Frank Perrell, Miami, Fla.; Cristopher Webster, Tappahannock, Va. FACTS Number of active chapters, 68; Number of alumni chapters, 25; Total membership, 16,862; Sigma Phi Epsilon founded, November, 1901; North Carolina Gamma at Duke, 1909; Colors, red and violet; Flowers, American Beauty rose and violet; Publication, The Sigma Phi Epsilon Journal. HISTORY Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity was founded at Richmond College, now the University of Richmond, from a local society called the Saturday Night Club. During its first two years the parent chapter encountered a great deal of opposition, both sarcastic and even directly hostile in character, from members of the college community. The fraternity, however, has managed to survive and expand rapidly, until now its scope is nation-wide. The early chapters were formed for the express purpose of joining Sigma Phi Epsilon. The granting of charters to local petitioning bodies has been the most frequent method of inception for the later chapters. A remarkable innovation is the Sigma Phi Epsilon Plan of Finance. Under this system the financial affairs of all the chapters are administered by their alumni. It has relieved the undergraduate of a consid- erable burden and has proved profitable in cases where there has previously been loss. North Carolina Gamma chapter, sixth in age of nationals here, was installed from the local group. Beta Nu . 296 HHK Thomas Conradi Hathorn W. Sager Messick Weagley Mazuy Wright Sulhvan Hulme L. Funkhouser Smith Slingluff Fletcher Clark Cosgrove Weston Harris Marshall T. Sager Cowan Patterson Walker Webster Schworer Von Glahn J. Funkhouser Mansell 297 SIGMA CHI Class of 1936 William G. Crawford, Detroit, Mich.; Alexander D. Deemer, II, Brookville, Pa.; H. Grady Hardin, Colum- bia, S. C; Frederic R. Keator, Wayne, Pa.; Charles W. Kunkle, Jr., Johnstown, Pa.; David W. Lamb, Ro- chester, N. Y.; John E. Mann, Jr., Greenwood, Miss.; Thomas C. Parsons, Altoona, Pa.; William H. Rue, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Class of 1937 John C. Ardolino, Metuchen, N. J.; W. Sperring Beck, Beverly, N. J.; Robert C. Gillander, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Albert L. Herrick, Lebanon, Ohio; John E. Hoffman, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Gunther H. Ibbeken, Haddon Heights, N. J.; John D. Klock, Walker, N. Y.; Russell P. McCallum, Jamaica Plains, Mass.; Howell X. Rasberry, Kinston, N. C; W. Wiley Reel, West View, Pa.; John G. Scott, Jr., lamagua, Pa.; W. Mason Shehan, Jr., Easton, Md.; Charles D. Wenrich, Wash- ington, D. C; C. Edmond Wunder, Jr., Ardmore, Pa. Class of 1938 Edward E. Barry, Jr., Aldan, Pa.; Thomas E. Bowman, Jr., Harrisburg, Pa.; Willard P. Earngey, Jr., Rockford, 111.; R. Eugene Hess, Fairmont, W. Va.; George B. Long, Harrisburg, Pa.; Richard S. Newens, Ithaca, N. Y.; Richard W. Northrup, Rutherford, N. J.; Robert M. Price, Scranton, Pa.; Leon W. Quick, Watertown, N. Y.; Charles C. Stauffer, Washington, D. C; Robert H. Stephens, Detroit, Mich.; William L. Stocks, Altoona, Pa.; William G. Smith, Riverton, N. J.; Charles A. Thomas, Glenside, Pa.; Milford P. Turner, Clayton, N. J.; William W. Wells, Elmira, N. Y.; Joseph M. White, Portsmouth, Va. Pledges Herbert N. Cheek, Durham, N. C; Robert C. Downs, Harrisburg, Pa.; Robert M. Lohman, Fort Wayne, Ind.; John T. Minor, Batavia, N. Y.; Robert O ' Mara, Ashland, Ky.; Thomas J. Riggs, Hunting- ton, W. Va. FACTS Number of active chapters, 96; Number of alumni chapters, 128; Total membership, 31,000; Sigma Chi founded, June 28, 1855; Beta Lambda at Duke, March, 1912; Colors, blue and old gold; Flower, white rose; Publication, The Magazine of Sigma Chi. HISTORY Sigma Chi is a member of the Miami Triad of national social fraternities that found origin at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Within six months after the mother chapter was first organized, a second chapter of Sigma Chi was brought into being at Ohio Wesleyan. The fraternity was incorporated in 1899 under the laws of Illinois as The Grand Council of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. Its expansion throughout the United States has been effected mostly through the granting of charters to petitioning groups. The Magazine of Sigma Chi has gradually developed from a local journal (1881) into the publication of all the chapters, edited several times a year. Phenomenal in fraternity histories was the Constantine chapter, composed of Sigma Chis serving in the Army of the Tennessee, having for its institution the Confederate Army and for its fraternal meeting- place the battlefield. Beta Lambda is seventh in age among the chapters of national fraternities at Duke. It was the sixty- eighth group to be chartered by Sigma Chi. 298 Kunkle Hardin Rue Mann Gillander Ibbeken Klock Lamb Keator Crawford Parsons Ardolino Herrick Scott Hoffman Shehan Long Bowman Reel Mc Callum Newens Wunder Barry Beck Thomas Wenrich Smith Stocks Turner Hess Northrup White Price Quick Stauffer Wells Stevens 299 PI KAPPA PHI Class of 1936 James Martin Daniel, Henderson, N. C; Robert Dick, Canton, Ga.; Joseph B. Ford, Jr., Savannah, Ga.; Francis Rodman Landon, Clinton, N. C; William Oliver Luly, Vero Beach, Fla.; Frank Griffin Satter- field, Jr., Durham, N. C; Edgar Robert Stallings, Augusta, Ga.; John Clarence Watson, Jr., Char- lotte, N. C. Class of 1937 George Allen Burwell, Warrenton, N. C; William Henry Fulmer, Savannah, Ga.; Nelson Rudolph Jantzen, Philadelphia, Pa.; John Cheves King, Jr., Charleston, W. Va.; Joseph Victor Leidy, Phila- delphia, Pa.; Joseph Andrew Pell, Jr., Pilot Mountain, N. C; Charles Wesley Shuff, III, Greenville, N. C; Richard M. Taliaferro, Columbia, S. C; Donald Ross Wilson, Greenlawn, N. Y. Class of 1938 Nathan Cox, Clarkton, N. C; Newton Weldon Edwards, Chicago, 111.; Edward William Shilling, Dover, Del.; Philip Arthur Small, Charlotte, N. C; Lloyd Flinton Timberlake, Columbia, S. C; Thomas Howard Timberlake, Columbia, S. C.; Joseph Lake Williams, Easley, S. C. Pledges John B. Britton, Sumpter, S. C; Harold R. Collins, South Seaville, N. J.; Eugene Desvernine, Marianao, Havana, Cuba; Guy Elder, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; Fletcher N. Eure, Beaufort, N. C; John Hamilton Furlong, Jr., Chester, Pa.; Benjamin M. Herring, Greenville, N. C; Robert A. Hitch, Jacksonville, Fla.; Francis S. Home, Farmington, N. C; John C. Howard, Savannah, Ga.; Lloyd A. Kraushaar, Rochester, N. Y.; Wm. Campbell McLain, Columbia, S. C; William L. Rhodes, Jr., Estill, S. C; Landon Earle Shuff, Green- ville, N. C; Henry Sink, Greensboro, N. C; Edward Lewis Smith, Whiteville, N. C; Robert Bruce Wyman, Arlington, Mass. FACTS Number of active chapters, 38; Number of alumni chapters, 22; Total membership, 6,330; Pi Kappa Phi founded, December 10, 1904; Mu at Duke, 1915; Colors, gold and white; Flower, red rose; Official Publication, The Star and Lamp. HISTORY The only national fraternity ever founded in the State of South Carolina, Pi Kappa Phi began its existence at the College of Charleston. Up to 1927, when anti-fraternity statutes were stricken from the body of state legislation. Pi Kappa Phi was faced with the stern opposition to fraternities which was the feeling among the educational institutions in South Carolina for about thirty years. Now, with the changed attitude. Pi Kappa Phi has made rapid headway in its mother state. It has had a steady and consistent growth outside. This has been more pronounced in the South, though not by inten- tion. Membership in Pi Kappa Phi is limited to initiates, there being no honorary members. It is interesting to note that its three founders were all warm friends from earliest school years in old Charleston. Their desire was to clothe their friendship in permanence, and conseguently they established this fraternity. Mu chapter at Duke ranks eighth in age among the national groups on the campus. 300 Watson Satterfield Luly Daniel Ford Stallings Dick Jantzen Taliaferro Leidy Wesselhoft Fulmer Burwell Pell Wilson King Shilling H.Timberlake L.Timberlake Shuff Williams Small Smith Cox 301 ••■■- ,-. J-J t --.•• r ' Pt ' T DELTA SIGMA PHI Class of 1936 Charles W. Ackley, Vineland, N. J.; Henry C. Gillies, Jr., Melrose, Mass.; Thomas W. Herb, Wyomissing, Pa.; Joseph S. Hiatt, Jr., Lenoir, N. C; Donald M. Kramer, Reading, Pa.; Alan M. Mac- Quarrie, Montclair, N. J.; Robert C. Mervine, East Orange, N. J.; Peter E. Naktenis, Hartford, Conn.; Hugh A. Page, Jr., Clayton, N. C; Rufus H. Powell, III, Durham, N. C; Ralph L. Rockett, Gastonia, N. C; William T. Smithdeal, Jr., Richmond, Va.; John J. Shorten, Hartford, Conn.; Ted L. Stritzinger, Norris- town. Pa.; William W. Turner, Jr., Montclair, N. J. • • ,- ■' .■Class of 1937 ' , ■Kenneth M. Boyle, Arlington, N. J.; Willard M. Gillies, Melrose, Mass.; James N. Gorringe, East Orange, N. J.; Ernest L. Green, Jr., Media, Pa.; Harry B. Litterst, Arlington, N. J.; William H. Ramsey, II, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Class of 1938 William M. Courtney, Charlotte, N. C; William N. Horsley, Belmont, N. C; Duncan G. Kaye, Troy, N. Y.; John M. Moritz, Enka, N. C; Frederick F. Smith, Maplewood, N. J.; James K. West, Asheville, N. C. Pledges Jack L. Barrett, Grosse Pointe, Mich.; William A. Bender, III, Upper Darby, Pa.; James M. Brogan, Raleigh, N. C; Theron H. Brown, III, Jackson Heights, N. Y.; John W. Gamsby, New Haven, Conn.; Jeptha N. Gibson, Jr., Gibson, N. C; Robert A. Hamilton, Jr., • Ridgefield Park, N. J.; Laurence E. Hoggan, Jr., New Haven, Conn.; Elliott H. Howe, Fulton, N. Y.; William M. Irwin, Jr., Sunbury, Pa.; Walter J. Kerr, Rumson, N. J.; Eugene L. Laning, Jr., Bridgeton, N. J.; Joseph R. Powell, Durham, N. C. FACTS Number of active chapters, 42; Number of alumni chapters, 19; Total membership, 9,500; Delta Sigma Phi founded, December 10, 1899; Alpha Epsilon at Duke, January 24, 1920; Colors, nile green and white. Flower, white carnation; Publication, The Carnation. HISTORY The College of the City of New York was the founding-place of the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity, an order of thirty-five years ' existence. The fraternity has had a substantial development, although its policy of expansion has been conservative. Since 1906 Delta Sigma Phi has been extended for the most part through the admittance of local groups by charter. Some of these had been well established organizations even before giving up their local identity. It is noteworthy that the Alfred University group had been started in 1901 as the Ku Klux Klan. Though place names were given the chapters as they were admitted up to 1906, the Greek letter nomen- clature was adopted then with one exception. This is the Hilgard chapter at the University of California, so designated because of the profound respect in which its chief patron ' s name is held. Alpha Epsilon of Duke is the ninth oldest national on the campus. 302 i m MacQuarrie Mervine Page T. Gillies Hiatt Naktenis Smithdeal Kramer Ackley Stritzinger Powell Rockett Turner Shortell Herb Hamilton Gorringe Litterst W. Gillies Courtney Moritz West Boyle Ramsey Smith Kaye 303 LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Class of 1936 George Beneke, Wheeling, W. Va.; John T. Cole, Warren, Ohio; Edward W. Cooey, Wheeling, W. Va.; Richard P. Griffin, Swarthmore, Pa.; Rolf Johnson, Harrisburg, Pa.; Fred N. Kellmeyer, Wheeling, W. Va.; Oliver D. Mann, Whitakers, N. C; Richard C. Piper, Ridgewood, N. J.; Joseph G. Powell, Moores- town, N. J.; Ralph A. Taylor, Summit, N. J.; Charles E. White, Hertford, N. C; Herbert G. Whiting, Mountain Lakes, N. J. Class of 1937 Paul M. Beich, Bloomington, 111.; Helmuth Bode, Weehawken, N. J.; Richard Fager, Camp Hill, Pa.; L. Palmer Fox, Harrisburg, Pa.; Richard G. Haas, Youngstown, Ohio; Alan W. Ham, East Milton, Mass.; Robert E. Kay, Wildwood, N. J.; Roderick Leland, New Canaan, Conn.; John P. Ondek, Pittsburgh, Pa. Class of 1938 Joseph M. Carl, Harrisburg, Pa.; Nelson Cobleigh, White Plains, N. Y.; Donald Dodd, Allen town. Pa., Joseph Fager, Camp Hill, Pa.; George T. Frampton, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Robert Greenawalt, Harrisburg, Pa.; William Hench, Harrisburg, Pa.; Rahn L. Hottenstein, Millersburg, Pa.; Walter Jerome, Winston-Salem, N. C; Curtis A. Jones, Townsend, Va.; L. Hunter Kevil, Princeton, Ky.; Robert Leavenworth, New Haven, Conn.; E. Gilbert Mathews, Hartsdale, N. Y.; Frank A. Mathey, New York, N. Y.; Charles Murphy, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Irwin Nailor, Camp Hill, Pa.; Stuart Orton, Rahway, N. J.; Harry Pfann, Mt. Lakes, N. J.; William Somerville, Cumberland, Md.; George Thornhill, Bluefield, W. Va.; Hubert P. Young, Scarsdale, N. Y. Pledges Arthur Collins Brown, Bethel, Conn.; William L. Bryan, Durham, N. C; Richard N. Clark, Montclair, N. J.; Gish N. Hoffman, Elizabethtown, Pa.; John E. Ingram, Lewes, Del.; Paul A. Lovell, Quincy, Mass.; John N. Manbeck, Lewistown, Pa.; Archibald G. Marshall, New Haven, Conn.; Charles A. Moorhead, Sunbury, Pa.; Allen Edward Nugent, New Haven, Conn.; Gordon A. Seeberg, Ansonia, Conn.; Clar- ence M. Stickell, Hagerstown, Md. FACTS Number of active chapters, 84; Number of alumni chapters, 41; Total membership, 16,649; Lambda Chi Alpha founded, November 2, 1909; Gamma Theta Zeta at Duke, March 3, 1924; Colors, purple, green, and gold; Flower, violet; Publications, Cross and Crescent, and Delta Pi. HISTORY Somewhat unusual was the origin of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. It was founded at Boston University, growing out of the Cosmopolitan Law Club, which had been active there for several years. It was made a Greek-letter society with a view to national expansion. The fraternity did not establish further chapters, however, for more than two years; but, when expansion did take place, a great many of the chapters were formed from existing clubs. The former clubs were augmented by the granting of Lambda Chi Alpha charters to petitioning groups. Lambda Chi has had a remarkable growth, no chapter, up to 1930 at least, having become permanently inactive. There are chapters now in thirty-eight states of the Union; and, with the establishment of a Toronto chapter in 1927, the fraternity became international. Lambda Chi is a charter member cf the Inter-Fraternity Conference. Gamma Theta Zeta is tenth in age among Duke fraternities. Before 1924 it was the local fraternity Beta Pi. 304 Whiting Cole Piper Johnson White Mann Kellmeyer Cooey Powell Runner Taylor Ham Bode Griffin Beneke Beich Greenawalt Thornhill Fox Haas Kay Carl Young Somerville Leland Ondek Jones Dodd Orton Mathews Hench Leavenworth Mathey Frampton Hottenstein J. Fager 305 DELTA TAU DELTA Class of 1936 Fredrick Andrus, Elizabeth, N. J.; William K. Brumbach, Belleville, N. J.; George B. Everitt, Winnetka, 111.; Newton Faulkner, Elmhurst, N. Y.; Robert W. Goodwin, Norway, Maine; Harold H. Kuhn, Charleston, W. Va.; John H. Plump, Pearl River, N. Y.; A. Lyman Wright, Elmira, N. Y. Class of 1937 George B. Appleford, North Andover, Mass.; Richard E. Austin, Delmar, N. Y.; Chadwick Ballard, Exmore, Va.; William G. Birmingham, Jr., Liberty, N. Y.; Woodrow Burgess, Royal Oak, Mich.; Clayton J. Burrell, Wetmore, Mich.; A. Read Cone, Buffalo, N. Y.; Richard F. Hintermeister, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Frederick Johntz, Winston-Salem, N. C; Joseph R. Mackie, Philadelphia, Pa.; John Maher, Washington, D. C; Joseph W. Meyer, East Orange, N. J.; Jesse Muse, Savannah, Ga.; Charles R. Newberger, Maplewood, N. J.; Holmes E. Newton, Summit, N. J.; Paul H. Pettit, Ocean City, N. J.; Charles R. Plumb, Providence, R. I.; William M. Prindle, West Earrington, R. I.; Rob- ert L. Steenrod, Liberty, N. Y.; Robert A. Wilkinson, Millburn, N. J. Class of 1938 Thomas G. Coen, Bayshore, N. Y.; Wilbur H. Crannell, Jr., Albany, N. Y.; Gordon W. Curtis, Jr., Atlanta, Ga.; T. Alber t Farnsworth, Camden, N. Y.; Thomas D. Fernalld, Norwich, N. Y.; Clifford R. Faulkner, Elmhurst, N. Y.; Russell A. Gair, Jr., Norwich, N. Y.; Richard S. Hoffman, Cincinnati, Ohio; Harold A. Sykes, Queens Village, N. Y.; Walter E. Treut, Rutherford, N. J.; George Worth- ington, Washington, D. C. Pledges John Barkle, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Willis Butler, Shreve- port, La.; Clayton Carter, Centerville, Md.; Robert Critcher, Buffalo, N. Y.; Dewey Daane, Grand Rapids, Mich.; William Doyle, Lowell, Mich.; Eric Franson, Hackensack, N. J.; Albert Hancock, Port Washington, N. Y.; Herbert Lowenstein, Irvington, N. J.; Robert Merchant, Wilkensburg, Pa.; Hervey Moore, Sea Grit, N. J.; James Murray, Port Washington, N. Y.; Paul Sommers, Maplewood, N. J.; William Williams, Southold, N. Y. FACTS Number of active chapters, 74; Number of alumni chapters, 59; Total membership, 24,000; Delta Tau Delta founded, 1858-1859; Delta Kappa at Duke, December 7, 1928; Colors, purple, white and gold; Flower, pansy; Publication, The Rainbow. HISTORY The Rainbow or W. W. W. society was founded in 1848 at the University of Mississippi. It was about ten years later that the parent chapter of Delta Tau Delta was organized at Bethany College, within the present limits of West Virginia. After lengthy negotiations the Rainbow fraternity in 1886 united with Delta Tau Delta. By this union the Rainbow chapters were entitled to membership in the Greek-letter order, though there is a distinction between these and the duly invested Delta chapters. This merging of national groups is unigue in fraternity annals. The Rainbow, because of greater age and different characteristics, was a valuable initiate into the conventional fraternity, and in truth members of the latter may well trace their fraternal lineage from both sources. Delta Tau Delta exists in all parts of the country and has expanded into Canada. The Duke chapter. Delta Kappa, is eight years old. In all of the Delt chapters a periodical is published at least once a year. 306 Plump Brambach Wright Everitt Andrus Goodwin N. Faulkner Wilkinson Cone Kuhn Birmingham Plumb Prundle Hintermeister Pettit Maher Newton Burgess Mackie Ballard Newburger Curtiss Fernalld Meyer Farnsworth Steenrod Austin Worthington C. Faulkner Muse Johntz Hoffman Treut Appleford Coen Sykes Crannell t 307 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Class of 1936 Jack Alexander, Asheville, N. C; James K. Boling, Siler City, N. C; James A. Dearborn, Brookline, Mass.; Joseph Roland Goode, Jr., Alexandria, Va.; John M. Hennemier, Savannah, Ga.; William N. Klove, Oak Park, 111.; Raymond W. Laird, Gulfport, Miss.; Alan C. Puryear, Washington, D. C; Thurman Ward, Galax, Va. Class of 1938 Charles W. DeVoe, Warren, Ohio; Danny Farrar, Youngstown, Ohio; Frank J. Fitzpatrick, Jr., Irvington, N. J.; James Graves, Richmond, Va.; Robert E. Hard- wicke. Fort Worth, Texas; A. Robert Long, Birming- ham, Ala.; Carl H. Mueller, Lakewood, Ohio; John J. Plumb, Hackensack, N. J.; Charles F. Turner, Birm- ingham, Ala.; Donald H. White, Brooklyn, N. Y. Class of 1937 R. Lynwood Baldwin, Durham, N. C; Fred N. Cleaveland, Short Hills, N. J.; John L. Fisher, Lake- wood, Ohio; Kenneth P. Folsom, Washington, D. C. Robert L. Nicks, Cedar Grove, N. C; John R. Pankey, Bluefield, W. Va.; George E. Patterson, Macon, Ga. R. Winston Roberts, Birmingham, Ala.; Joseph Selser, Jenkintown, Pa.; Kirby Smith, Jr., Washington, D. C. Ross C. Speir, Birmingham, Ala.; Pleasant Williams, Ashland, Ky. Pledges John Robert Beaman, Morehead City, N. C; Bedford F. Boylston, Aiken, S. C; John Thomas Caskey, Washington, D. C; Lindsay Gonder, Oak- land, Md.; Richard M. Hiergesell, Roselle Park, N. J.; Robert McArthur, Winston-Salem, N. C; Eugene L. Morton, Lakewood, Ohio; John Howard Payne, Jr., Washington, D. C; Robert Stephens Puckett, Birming- ham, Ala.; Gilbert Ray Sparks, Jr., Palm Beach, Fla.; James Coleman Sterns, Jacksonville, Fla. FACTS Number of active chapters, 108; Number of alumni chapters, 110; Total membership, 40,298; S. A. E. founded March 9, 1856; N. C. Nu at Duke, February 20, 1931; Colors, royal purple and old gold; Flower, violet; Publication, The Record. HISTORY Eight students at the University of Alabama were the founders of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. From this first chapter, which was given the name of Mu, the fraternity has had a rapid and constant growth. S. A. E. now exists in forty-six states. The wartime history of Sigma Alpha Epsilon is of absorbing interest. When the Civil War came, whole chapters, and parts of others went into service, there being members in both armies. A Kentucky girl who kept intact the documents of one of the chapters during the war period was rewarded with membership and the distinction of being the fraternity ' s only woman member. The World War battlefield was the scene of two S. A. E. initiation ceremonies, one in a German castle and another in a French chateau; and alumni associations were also formed on the Continent. North Carolina Nu chapter, when it came into existence five years ago, was formed from the local club, Psi Delta Sigma. 308 Goode Boling Dearborn Pankey Alexander Laird Klove Hennemier Puryear Ward Baldwin Cleaveland Williams Boyleston Fisher Nicks Patterson Speir Smith Roberts DeVoe Gonder Folsom Graves Hardwicke Turner White Long Plumb MacArthur Mueller Farrar 309 SIGMA NU Class of 1936 William D. Byrne, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Alfred H. Fuller, Hartford, Conn.; James M. Hatch, Charlotte, N. C; Porter B. Huling, Williamsport, Pa.; Robert S. Long, Frankford, Del.; Robert P. Miller, Lincolnton, N. C; John E. Moss, Mobile, Ala.; George R. Parrish, San Antonio, Texas; Horace E. Tabb, Elizabeth- town, Ky. Class of 1937 Baron H. Cornett, Bluefield, W. Va.; Richard B. Gilpin, Maplewood, N. J.; Robert G. Howard, Wash- ington, D. C; Paul F. Ketchum, Washington, D. C; George G. Salmon, Jr., Maplewood, N. J.; Berkley V. Schaub, Westfield, N. J.; William P. Simmons, Bain- bridge, Ga.; James M. Slay, Greenville, N. C. Richard L. Walker, Philadelphia, Pa. Class of 1938 L. Jack Hargett, Forrest City, Ark.; D. Davidson Hill, Sasser, Ga.; Forest A. Irwin, Trenton, N. J. Pledges Carl R. Drake, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Charles R Finefrock, Massillon, Ohio; John A. Goehrig, Trenton N. J.; Duncan K. MacLeod, Buffalo, N. Y.; Thomas T Munson, Detroit, Mich.; William Powers, Pleasant ville, N. Y.; Ronald J. Slay, Jr., Greenville, N. C. Harvey F. Sloan, Bellevue, Pa.; Emerson W. Terry Montclair, N. J.; Stanley J. Turner, Upper Mont clair, N. J. • FACTS Number of active chapters, 98; Number of alumni chapters, 75; Total membership, 32,100; Sigma Nu founded, January 1, 1869; Gamma at Duke, November 21, 1931; Colors, gold, black and white; Flower, white rose; Publication, The Delta. HISTORY Sigma Nu fraternity grew out of a secret society established at Virginia Military Institution in 1868 called the Legion of Honor. The Greek letter designation and other college fraternity characteristics were adopted on January 1 of the very next year, the official date of founding of Sigma Nu by three western men. The Delta was so named because of the triangular relationship between the Alpha, Kappa, and Lambda chapters who collaborated in publishing it first in 1883. The official fraternity song is the recently written White Star of Sigma Nu. Sigma Nu has active chapters in all the forty-eight states. Early in its history, growth was stimulated in the West, and the East was later exploited. The original Gamma chapter having ceased to exist, the Duke group, formerly the local Goblins, was formally installed as Gamma chapter of Sigma Nu. Bearing the name of the third oldest chapter of their fraternity, the Sigma Nus are one of the newest nationals on Duke campus. 310 Huling Long Moss Miller Byrne Parrish Hatch Tabb Schaub Howard Salmon Simmons Gilpin Ketchum Walker Cornett Hill Slay Hargett 311 PHI KAPPA PSI Class of 1936 Andrew L. Blair, Weston, W. Va.; Russell J. Forrest, Bloomfield, N. J.; Lawrence L. Gent, Cold Springs, N. Y.; Howard Getz, Nazareth, Pa.; David W. God- dard, Portsmouth, Ohio; James E. Henry, Nazareth, Pa.; John S. Ross, Queens Village, N. Y.; C. Van Wyck Smith, Rockville Centre, N. Y.; Louis Steeg, Toledo, Ohio. ■. , ■Class of 1937 G. Robert Bailey, Rockville Centre, N. Y.; Charles H. Baker, Newark, N. J.; John P. Baldwin, Rochester, Pa.; Richard L. Beazley, South Orange, N. J.; Howard Eastwood, Jr., Burlington, N. J.; Willis G. Farmer, Bailey, N. C; Richard D. Jenkinson, Jr., Bellevue, Pa.; Frederick R. Lauther, Lebanon, Pa.; Everett G. Perine, East Orange, N. J.; George P. Snyder, Jr., Ridgefield Park, N. J.; Howard Steiger, Williamsport, Pa.; Merrill Y. Stephens, Portland, Maine. Class of 1938 Albert Anderson, Pelham Manor, N. Y.; Paul W. Bransford, Anderson, Ind.; Roger E. Bremer, Elmira, N. Y.; John D. Coe, Hartford, Conn.; George Hath- away, Bellaire, Ohio; C. Robert Hoffman, Fasten, Pa.; Harvey T. Jenkinson, Bellevue, Pa.; Chester Lucas, Hopkintown, Mass.; Donald A. Pengelly, Zanesville, Ohio; M. Douglas Sackman, Garden City, N. Y.; Donald Sheehan, Montclair, N. Y.; Norman Wherrett, Wilmington, Del.; Thomas Windsor, Cambridge, Mass. Pledges David F. Bew, Margate City, N. Y.; Edgar L. Danner, Larchmont, N. Y.; A. Gordon Fischer, Baltimore, Md.; Theodore Foote, Orange, N. J.; John Kahle, Columbus, Ohio; Robert N. Lose, Philadelphia, Pa.; Herman Wenzel, Jr., Rockville Centre, N. Y.; Arthur O. Wooddy, Baltimore, Md. FACTS Number of active chapters, 52; Number of alumni chapters, 40; Total membership, 25,250; Phi Kappa Psi founded, 1852; N. C. Alpha at Duke, November 10, 1934; Colors, Hunter ' s green and cardinal red; Publication, Shield. HISTORY Phi Kappa Psi was founded at Jefferson College, Washington, Pa., now Washington and Jefferson College, February 19, 1852. At the time it originated, there was an epidemic of typhoid fever at the college, and the warm friendships arising under the conditions of such trying times and from the close contacts between the afflicted and the friends ministering to them ripened into fraternal sentiment leading to the foundation of Phi Kappa Psi. The Civil War was a trying crisis in the affairs of the fraternity, with all southern chapters becoming extinct, and a large proportion of the fraternity ' s membership enlisted in the Union or Confederate armies. In the following forty years, however, expansion was rapid. Sigma Delta, a local fraternity, was founded at Duke University in the spring of 1928, the object of the founders being the petitioning of a well-known national fraternity. Its efforts were early directed toward Phi Kappa Psi; in the summer of 1934 its petition was formally accepted, and in the fall of 1934 Sigma Delta became North Carolina Alpha of Phi Kappa Psi. 312 Getz Henry- Goddard Gent Steeg Forrest Ross Blair Smith Steiger Beazley Baker Bailey Stevens R. Jenkinson H. Jenkinson J. Baldwin Snyder Wherrett Eastwood Anderson Bransford Sheehan Windsor Lucas Sackman Bremer Hathaway Hoffman 313 PHI KAPPA SIGMA Class of 1936 John J. Bruns, Jr., Baltimore, Md.; Fred C. Cady, Syracuse, N. Y.; Charles C. Eberly, Chester, Pa.; Irwin R. Hale, Greenfield, Mass.; Thomas J. Murray, Philadelphia, Pa.; Edgar J. Oliver, Jr., Savannah, Ga.; A. Gray Wilson, Indiana, Pa. Tryon, N. C; Norman W. Van Nostrand, Jr., New York, N. Y.; Walter C. Wright, Jr., Wenonah, N. J. Class of 1938 William L. Carson, Cleveland, Ohio; Harry V. Clark, Jr., Richmond Hill, N. Y.; Elmer T. Gale, Clinton, N. C; William B. Landis, Jr., Scranton, Pa. Class of 1937 Albert E. Bennett, Brooklyn, N. Y.; J. Wesley Books, Haddon Heights, N. J.; Robert G. Hunter, Lansdowne, Pa.; George Maier, Jr., Bridgeton, N. J.; Edmund S. L. Miller, Hamburg, Pa.; Frederick P. Moore, Jr., East Gardner, Mass.; Carleton C. Phinney, Newtonville, Mass.; W. Emory Plaster, Jr., Leesburg, Va.; Walton O. Rich, Port Henry, N. Y.; Harold H. Shelnutt, . . Pledges James C. Boyd, Huntington, W. Va.; Woodrow W. Hayes, Durham, N. C; Fred R. Jackson, Jr., Charlotte, N. C; John B. Jones, Tyrone, Pa.; Lawrence H. Nath, Middleton, N. Y.; Roger J. Sherron, Jr., Durham, N. C; Robert H. Van Voorhis, Rutherford, N. J.; Clark Walter, Washington, D. C; George Walter, Wash- ington, D. C. FACTS Number of initiates, 190; Number of alumni, 154; Colors, black and gold; Flower, white carnation; Founded, September, 1933; Number of initiates into Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity, 39. HISTORY In the spring of 1926, Pi Epsilon Pi was established here. From the time of its organization the fraternity took its place among the other social fraternities on the campus as an active and promising organization. The fall of 1928 saw the founding of another local, Sigma Alpha Omega, at Duke. This organization was founded with the purpose of petitioning a national fraternity. After two years of negotiations, Sigma Alpha Omega was permitted to change its name to Phi Kappa Sigma Club of Duke University. It was on Monday, May 13, 1935, that these two strong locals combined resources to form a unit. The new organization bears the name Phi Kappa Sigma Club. The Club is petitioning Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity, and is becoming more closely connected to the national organization by colonization. By means of this plan, most of the members of the local have been initiated into Phi Kappa Sigma by the Lambda chapter at the University of North Carolina. The fraternities on this campus await with pleasure the addition of a new national to their number. 314 Murray Bart Eberly Hale Cady Edmonds Wilson Oliver C. Walter Shelnutt Van Nostrand Miller Hippolitus Wright Maier Clark Jackson Moore Bennett Rich Landis Gale Hunter Plaster Books Stone Carson G. Walter 315 KEYS CLUB Class of 1936 Calhoun Ancrum, Quantico, Va.; Robert Peck, Binghamton, N. Y.; Fred A. Wildnauer, East Orange, N. ].; Ernest Winton, Miami Beach, Fla. Class of 1937 Charles Hooten, Salisbury, N. C; Edwin Rogers, Marlton, N. J.; Ashby Shepherd, Bristol, Md. FACTS Number of initiates, 50; Colors, gold and black; Keys Club founded, February 15, 1932. - , ,. HISTORY The Keys Club, youngest social body on the Duke campus, was organized in 1932 by a group of first-year men with the assistance of the late Dean Moxley Arnold. Although not a fraternity in the strictly accepted sense, the Keys are taking steps toward national brotherhood by petitioning Beta Theta Pi. Winton Rogers Wildnauer Hooten Peck Shepherd 316 SORORITIES ■' V ALPHA DELTA PI Class of 1936 Martha Bailey, Thomasville, Ga.; Kathlyn Buice, Charlotte, N. C.; Jane Goode, Lincolnton, N. C; Mary Elliot Henderson, Hickory, N. C; Annie Laurie Newsom, Durham, N. C. , ■■Class of 1937 Walton Bowen, Macon, Ga.; Emilie Crum, Orange- burg, S. C; Margery Edwards, Greensboro, N. C; Annadale Graeter, Richmond, Va.; Virginia Grow, Lebanon, N. H.; Anne Gwin, Natchez, Miss.; Lucile Hessick, Washington, D. C; Irma Johnson, Washing- ton, D. C; Marian Kiker, Reedsville, N. C; Jean Miller, Washington, D. C; Mary Moore, Delray Beach, Fla.; Betty Pollard, Durham, N. C; Marian Reade, Durham, N. C; Virginia Skinner, Dur- ham, N. C. Class of 1938 Lucy Chapman, Richmond, Va.; Helen Cockrell, Detroit, Mich.; Dorothy Emerson, Atlanta, Ga.; Dora Hill, Cuthbert, Ga.; Jane Love, Washington, D. C; Margaret Ann March, Mobile, Ala.; Jeanne McCauley, Hagerstown, Md.; Betty Jane Sauer, Lakewood, Ohio; Betty W. Stone, Clarendon, Va.; Louise Wannamaker, Durham, N. C; Marjorie Winston, Roanoke, Va.; Jean Young, Lakewood, Ohio. ■' Pledges Priscilla Adams, Jacksonville, Fla.; Nancy Arthur, Zanesville, Ohio; Mary Agnes Bennett, Babson Park, Fla.; Martha Campbell, Bradenton, Fla.; Elizabeth Durant, Mobile, Ala.; Nancy Jo Ford, Asheville, N. C; Martha Virginia Gates, Macon, Ga.; Betty Claire Gray, Gastonia, N. C; Mary Trapp Harris, Cuthbert, Ga.; Dot Hastings, Durham, N. C; Jean Howell Atlanta, Ga.; Martha Ledbetter, Rockingham, N. C. Emily Matheson, Atlanta, Ga.; Madeline McGinnis, Montclair, N. J.; Marguerite Neel, Thomasville, Ga. Mary Toms Newsom, Durham, N. C; Margaret Owens Cuthbert, Ga.; Margaret Peters, Jacksonville, Fla. Betty Shuford, Conover, N. C; Lucy Gray Smithers, Winston-Salem, N. C; Anne Louise Steele, Rocking- ham, N. C; Mary Teer, Durham, N. C; Betty Lou Thompson, Gastonia, N. C; Evelyn White, Braden- ton, Fla.; Olivia Womble, Winston-Salem, N.-C. FACTS Number of active chapters, 57; Number of alumni chapters, 80; Total membership, 12,000; Alpha Delta Pi founded, May 15, 1851; Omicron at Duke, 1911; Colors, pale blue and white; Flower, purple violet; Publication, Adelphean. HISTORY Alpha Delta Pi, one of the largest and oldest national sororities, was originally the Adelphean Society, founded May 15, 1851, at Wesleyan College, Macon, Ga. The Adelphean Society, being the first secret society for women, founded at the first college for women, holds an important place in the early development of national sororities. The members of Alpha chapter applied for a charter and the society became nationally known as Alpha Delta Pi. This name was later changed to avoid any misunderstanding regarding a fraternity existing under the same name. As Alpha Delta Pi it has grown and expanded throughout the United States, and it became international with the installation of several chapters in Canada. The Adelphean, the national publication, is issued guarterly. Omicron chapter of Alpha Delta Pi has the distinction of being the first sorority on the Duke campus. It was installed in 1911 when Duke was known as Trinity College and has developed and expanded with the school. Since its installation approximately two hundred girls have been initiated into Alpha Delta Pi by Omicron. 318 Bo wen Bailey Goode Henderson A. Newsom Buice Moore Owens Graeter Pierce Miller Emerson Crum Young Reade Hessick Grey Winston Wannamaker M. Newsom Neel Brahany Pollard Chapman Stone Kiker Harris Edwards Love Skinner March Cockrell Blanchard McCauley Ledbetter Hill Clements Sauer 319 KAPPA DELTA Class of 1936 Eleanor Bruton, Condon, N. Y.; Sara Louise Falls, Shelby, N. C; Margaret Franck, Durham, N. C; Page Gooch, Henderson, N. C; Evelyn Goode, Statesville, N. C; Sara Jordan, York, Pa.; Mern Plyler, Durham, N. C; Margaret Waldrep, Ham- mond, La. Class of 1937 Gary Armstrong, Selma, Ala.; Josephine Burger, Baltimore, Md.; Gwendolyn Cline, Charlotte, N. C; Eleanor Coppedge, Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Martha Jane Culbertson, Norwood, Ohio; Jane Lee Jones, Belleville, III; Beth Lentz, Albemarle, N. C; Eleanor Mayes, Durham, N. C; Helen Phillips, Lexington, N. C; Alma L. Ranson, Charlotte, N. C; Jeanette TeSelle, Gainesville, Fla.; Mary Vickers, Oxford, N. C; Harriett Waits, Andalusia, Ala.; Margaret Washburn, Hempstead, N. Y. Class of 1938 Mary Armstrong, Binghamton, N. Y.; Marian Buell, Rochester, N. Y.; Annie Whitty Daniel, Durham, N. C; Virginia Griffin, Baltimore, Md.; Ethel Little- john, Leesburg, Va.; Eleanor Lundy, Troy, N. Y.; Louise Meiklejohn, Cheraw, S. C; Margaret Ormond, Durham, N. C; Betty Souders, Fayetteville, N. C; Betty Stine, Wilmington, Del. Pledges ' Mary Drew Clay, Macon, Ga.; Irma Coppersmith, Elizabeth City, N. C.; Marguerite Dewey, Goldsboro, N. C; Betty Erion, Orchard Park, N. Y.; Jean Eraser, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Jane Gassaway, Nashville, Tenn.; Jeanne Gorton, Great Neck, N. Y.; Mattilee Hughey, Statesville, N. C; Betty Ann Johnston, Doylestown, Pa.; Phoebe Kent, Washington, D. C; Nancy Laprade, Durham, N. C; Virginia Laws, Moravian Falls, N. C; Dorothy Reed Miller, Wilmington, Del.; Ruth Miller, Newburgh, N. Y.; Louise Mizell, Opp, Ala.; Virginia Morrison, Rockingham, N. C; Marianna Nicholson, Statesville, N. C; Ann Porter, Greensboro, Md.; Maxine Perdue, Canton, Ohio; Virginia Reeves, Waynesville, N. C; Frances Ruark, Park Ridge, 111.; Margaret Rudisill, Cherryville, N. C; Betty Short- lidge, Lincoln University, Pa.; Sara Waits, Andalusia, Ala.; Lee Wooldridge, West Hartford, Conn. FACTS Number of active chapters, 68; Number of alumni chapters, 66; Total membership, 13,083; Kappa Delta founded, October 23, 1897; Sigma Delta at Duke, April 19, 1912; Colors, olive green and pearl white; Flower, white rose; Publication, Angelos. HISTORY Kappa Delta Sorority was founded by four girls at Virginia State Normal, Farmville, Virginia, on October 23, 1897. Through personal friendships of the Virginia girls with those of other colleges, new chapters were rapidly added to the organization. The first convention was held in Richmond, Virginia, in 1904, at which six chapters were represented. Since that time the society has established chapters throughout the United States. The journal of Kappa Delta is the Angelos, which was first published in 1904. Virginia is the center of Kappa Delta philanthropic projects because it is the state of the sorority ' s founding. In Richmond, Virginia, the national organization maintains a ward, a dental room, and a gymna- sium in the Richmond Crippled Children ' s Hospital. Aside from this, individual chapters of Kappa Delta carry on community charitable work. Sigma Delta of Kappa Delta was installed at Trinity College, now Duke University, on April 19, 1912, by two members of the national council, Misses Cora Vaughn and Jean Coltrone. Kappa Delta was the second sorority to be installed on the Trinity College campus, and since that time has grown steadily. 320 Bruton Franck Falls Plyler Rudisill Vickers Waldrep Jordan TeSelle Gooch Washburn Jones Lentz Cline Burger Phillips Little John Culbertson Mayes Armstrong Ormond Daniel Stine Souders Lundy Coppedge Goode Waits Buell Meiklejohn Griffin 321 ZETA TAU ALPHA Class of 1936 Margaret Becker, Upper Darby, Pa.; Alice Jones, Petersburg, Va.; Emmy Lou Morton, Charleston, W. Va.; Frances Paist, Wayne, Pa.; Eleanor Stevenson, New Bern, N. C; Madge Woolsey, Glen Rock, N. J. ■' ■Class of 1937 Mary Auld, Charleston, W. Va.; Norma Forbes, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Charlotte Kueffner, Durham, N. C; Virginia Lytle, Jacksonville, Fla.; Elizabeth Riley, Durham, N. C; Helen Slater, Detroit, Mich.; Elizabeth Small, Wyoming, N. J.; Catherine Tritle, Erie, Pa.; Ella Waters, Washington, D. C; Katharine White, Elizabeth, N. J. Class of 1938 Fan Auld, Charleston, W. Va.; Elizabeth Bogert, Ridgewood, N. J.; Jean Campbell, Great Neck, N. Y.; Dorothy Dick, Copperhill, Tenn.; Margaret Morton, Charleston, W. Va. Pledges Lois Aitkin, E. Orange, N. J.; Dorothy Barnes, Charleston, W. Va.; Doris Becker, Upper Darby, Pa.; Betty Brown, Blanchester, Ohio; Louise Brugh, Mont- gomery, W. Va.; Virginia Chason, Elizabeth, N. J.; Katherine Chubb, Maplewood, N. J.; Dorothy Creery, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Jean Dipman, Montclair, N. J.; Nona Ruth Draper, Richlands, Va.; Jane Dusenbury, Miami, Fla.; Betty Earle, Hermansville, Mich.; Eliza- beth Fuller, Arlington, Va.; Lillian Gibson, Elizabeth, N. J.; Mary Louise Goree, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Helen Leslie, New York, N. Y.; Lucy McBride, Nutley, N. J.; Elizabeth Marlatt, Larchmont, N. Y.; Anne Muelburger, Maplewood, N. J.; Jean Ord, McKees- port, Pa.; Eunice Parker, Goldsboro, N. C; Dorothy Powell, Detroit, Mich.; Helen Rocke, Norfolk, Va.; Jane Roe, Maundsville, W. Va.; Frances Sewell, Atlanta, Ga.; Edna Sexton, Zebulon, N. C; June Southworth, Washington, D. C; Doris Stein, Hagers- town, Md.; Aileen Titus, Washington, D. C.; Gene- vieve Tolson, New Bern, N. C; Frances Utley, Lynchburg, Va.; Lois Whiting, Mountain Lakes, N. J.; Helen Wilson, Beaver, Pa.; Beth Woolfolk, Roanoke, Va. FACTS Number of active chapters, 61; Number of alumni chapters, 58; Total membership, 9,918; Zeta Tau Alpha founded, October 15, 1898; Phi at Duke, June 4, 1915; Colors, turguoise blue and steel gray; Flower, white violet; Publication, Themis. HISTORY Zeta Tau Alpha was founded at Virginia State Normal School, Farmville, Virginia, on October 15, 1898. For several months after its founding it was known as the ??? (The Three Question Mark Girls). Before April, 1899, the Greek name was adopted, and on March 15, 1902, Zeta Tau Alpha was chartered as a legal corporation by the legislature of Virginia. Thus it was not only the first women ' s fraternity to be chartered in the state of Virginia, but the first chartered by a special act of the legislature. Northern sororities had become well established by the end of the nineteenth century, but the southern field was left practically open. Zeta Tau Alpha was one of the first sororities to fill this need of organization in the South, and for several years continued its expansion in the southern states. The first northern chapter was started at Boston University, February 22, 1912. Zeta Tau Alpha became international in 1929 with the Installation of Beta Rho Chapter at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The magazine of Zeta Tau Alpha, Themis, is published quarterly, and was first issued in 1903. 322 Woolsey Heard E. Morton Pearson Small Pinnix M. Auld Sewell Paist Kueffner Toner F. Auld Riley MacBride Forbes Woolfolk Tolson Becker Stevenson Jones White Slater Waters Dick Whitmore Campbell Bogert M. Morton 323 KAPPA ALPHA THETA Class of 1936 Eleanor Barrett, Stamford, Conn.; Dorothy Brown, Neemah, Wis.; Margaret Cuninggim, Nashville, Tenn.; Lenora Fanning, Asheville, N. C; Jane Haislip, Lumberport, W. Va.; Susan Hardy, Rome, Ga.; Anne Jones, Birmingham, Ala.; Constance Patton, Wilmington, N. C; Dorothy Peck, Huntington Valley, Pa.; Mary Alice Rhodes, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Audrey Speicher, Rockwood, Pa. Class of 1937 Frances Childs, Durham, N. C; Frances Edwards, Miami, Fla.; Betty Faires, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Charlotte Marshall, Ashland, Pa.; Nancy Pate, Raleigh, N. C; Lucy Rauchenberg, Atlanta, Ga.; Anne Louise Reist, Lancaster, Pa.; Elizabeth Anne Sasscer, Chevy Chase, Md.; Shirley Teed, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Sarah Williams, Elizabeth City, N. C; Katharine Upchurch, Dur- ham, N. C. Class of 1938 Joan Bliss, Nashville, Tenn.; Virginia Braznell, Miami, Fla.; Mary Elizabeth Carter, Nashville, Tenn.; Julia Coffman, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Margaret Epple- man, Haddonfield, N. J.; Mary Brent Holland, New Bern, N. C; Mary Louise Idema, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Nancy Johnson, Birmingham, Ala.; Elizabeth Jones, New Bern, N. C.; Winifred Maxwell, Clarks- burg, W. Va.; Ariel Moneyhun, Knoxville, Tenn.; Sara Rankin, Gastonia, N. C; Loula Southgate, Durham, N. C; Margaret White, Ridgewood, N. J.; Rhoda Widgery, Durham, N. C. Pledges Mary Anderson, New Bern, N. C; Mary Dean Barrett, Stamford, Conn.; Mary Duke Biddle, New York, N. Y.; Jane Braznell, Miami, Fla.; Carolyn Breedlove, Durham, N. C; Frances Briggs, Durham, N. C; Faye Espenchied, Washington, D. C; Jane Fife, Jasper, Ala.; Georgia Goodson, Winston-Salem, N. C; Carolyn Groves, Red Hook, N. Y.; Frances Hahn, Toledo, Ohio; Dorothy Hedrick, Salisbury, N. C; Margaret How, Cleveland, Ohio; Lorraine Hyde, Asbury Park, N. J.; Jean Kouwenhoven, Scars- dale, N. Y.; Betsy McCleod, Buffalo, N. Y.; Jean Maxwell, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Jean MacDonald, Cleveland, Ohio; Jean Milliette, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Sally Robertson, White Plains, N. Y.; Anna Shuford, Gastonia, N. C; Carol Strauss, Winston-Salem, N. C; Winifred Woodbridge, Detroit, Mich.; Nancy Webb, Greenwich, Conn. FACTS Number of active chapters, 63; Total membership, 25,000; Kappa Alpha Theta founded, January 27, 1870; Beta Rho at Duke, 1928; Colors, black and gold; Flower, black and gold pansy; Publication, Kappa Alpha Theta. HISTORY Kappa Alpha Theta, the first Greek-letter fraternity known among women, was founded at DePauw University, then Asbury College, at Greencastle, Indiana, in 1870. Although at that time there were three other women ' s fraternities in existence, these did not adopt Greek letter names until somewhat later. Kappa Alpha Theta was founded in a co-educational institution where the same needs which led to the establishment of Greek letter societies among men were felt by the women; therefore, Theta was the first society for women organized with principles and methods akin to those of the Greek-letter fraternities. The magazine, the Kappa Alpha Theta, is published quarterly, the first issue being in 1885. In 1925, a local, Sigma Tau, was formed, which petitioned Kappa Alpha Theta. In 1928, the petition was accepted and Sigma Tau was installed as Beta Rho chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta. Since 1928 Beta Rho has initiated one hundred girls into Kappa Alpha Theta, and has always maintained a high standard, both scholastically and socially on the Duke University campus. 324 Haislip Cuninggi: Teed Edwards Kenney Breznell Williams Barrett Hardy Jones Idema Reist Sasscer Hull Hahn Peck Rauschenberg Marshall Strauss Childs Coffman Maxwell Rankin Lambert Pate Holland Fite Carter Rhodes Faires Johnston Upchurch White Anderson Jones 325 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Class of 1936 Lucille Butler, Shreveport, La.; Barbara Daniel Claxton, Ga.; Bessie Graham, Palm Beach, Fla. Dorothy Gray, Summit, N. J.; Christine Harris, Coral Gables, Fla.; June Langfitt, Clarksburg, W. Va Marian McClenaghan, Raleigh, N. C; Betty Parks, Long Island, N. Y.; Helen Parsons, Altoona, Pa. Marie Pelgrim, Coral Gables, Fla.; Ruth Phillips Wheeling, W. Va.; Kathryn Whitmyre, Indiana, Pa. Ellen Witwer, Tulsa, Okla. • ■Class of 1937 Barbara Armstrong, Morgantown, W. Va.; Paula Bassett, New York, N. Y.; Isobel Craven, Lexington, N. C; Dorothy Davis, Richmond, Va.; Betty Ann Hunt, Philadelphia, Pa.; Bess Laing, Charleston, W. Va.; Frances Merrill, Charleston, W. Va.; Althea Nolde, New Orleans, La.; Tekla Parker, German- town, Pa.; Nancy Peterson, Woodbury, N. J.; Jean Ann Pippen, Charleston, W. Va.; Anne Wagner, Long Island, N. Y.; Margery White, Philadelphia, Pa. Class of 1938 Barbara Blair, Monmouth, 111.; Mary Jean DeCamp, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Cameron Forness, Drexel Hill, Pa.; Grace Grant, Hartford, Conn.; Katherine Hadley, Washington, D. C; Doris Larson, East Engle- wood, N. J.; Ruth Minor, Batavia, N. Y.; Rowena Sidbury, Wilmington, N. C; Louise Varnes, Wil- mington, Del.; Patricia Witte, Rahway, N. J. Pledges Gwen Adams, Martinsburg, W. Va.; Mary Lalla Byrn, Mayfield, Ky.; Margaret Coleman, Kenosha, Wis.; Carroll Costigan, Bloomington, 111.; Martha Crocker, Tulsa, Okla.; Betty Emery, Sanford, Maine; Johnnie Mae Hardy, Gulfport, Miss.; Anne Hollmeyer, Mountain Lakes, N. J.; Clarinda Jackson, St. Augus- tine, Fla.; Barbara Jenkins, Scranton, Pa.; Betty Klemm, Bloomington, 111.; Grace G. Koehler, Fort Hamilton, N. Y.; Mary Lawrence, Reading, Pa.; Carolyn Lindhjem, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; Mary Magraw, Carlsbad, N. M.; Helen Nelson, Logansport, Ind.; Eleanor Oak, Bound Brook, N. J.; Elizabeth Pennell, Fort Bragg, N. C; Virginia Richey, Corinth, Miss.; Helen Roberson, Durham, N. C; Claire Thompson, Miami Beach, Fla.; Betty Whitaker, Indianapolis, Ind. FACTS Number of active chapters, 71; Number of alumni chapters, 95; Total membership, 24,000; K. K. G. founded, October 13, 1870; Delta Beta at Duke, October 25, 1930; Colors, light and dark blue; Flower, fleur-de-lis; Publication, Key. HISTORY Kappa Kappa Gamma is one of the oldest of the Greek-letter sororities. It was founded at Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois, in 1870. Kappa was the first sorority to call a Pan-Hellenic Congress, to hold a national convention, to institute a central form of government, to publish a sorority magazine, to form a uniform budget system, and to send coorganizers to assist new chapters. A complete history of Kappa Kappa Gamma was presented to the national convention of 1930. The Key, a guarterly publication, contains news-letters from all active chapters, and discussions of sorority problems and events, both national and local. Kappa maintains two funds: one set aside to assist needy Kappas; the other, to give deserving students an opportunity to complete their education. In 1928, a local sorority, Sigma Beta, was organized on the Duke University campus with the express purpose of petitioning Kappa Kappa Gamma. The official petition was submitted in March, 1930, and on October 25, of the same year, Sigma Beta became Delta Beta chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma. 326 Whitmyre Parsons Phillips Daniel Parks Gray Motlow Langfitt McClenaghan Harris Craven Pelgrim Butler Bassett Witwer Parker Peterson White Littel Byrn Wagner Minor Kern Hollmeyer Laing Richey Ferness Pippen Hardy DeCamp 327 SIGMA KAPPA Class of 1936 Josephine Eaby, Lancaster, Pa.; Dallas Knight, Ambler, Pa.; Katherine Trousdale, Florence, Ala Virginia Winfree, Lynchburg, Va. , . Class of 1937 Jean Brown, Fort Benning, Ga.; Charlotte Mark- ham, Durham, N. C; Camilla Ritchie, Binghamton, N. Y.; Doris Wood, Mt. Morris, N. Y. ■. ' ■. Class of 1938 - - Mary Bender, Lititz, Pa.; Helen Holly, Harrisburg, Pa.; Eleanor Huntington, Rutherford, N. J.; Martha Pace, more, Wilkes-Barre, Md. Pa.; Virginia Patrick, Balh- . ■' Pledges Lola Barnhill, Wilmington, Del.; Catherine DeHuff, Philadelphia, Pa.; Grace Evans, Windber, Pa.; Delina Heiss, Neffsville, Pa.; Betty Koehnlein, Kenmore, Pa.; Sue Kohler, Charlotte, N. C; Patricia Patrick, Balti- more, Md.; Nell Puckett, Charlotte, N. C; Betty Rescorla, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Janet Rettew, Harrisburg, Pa.; Ruth Simmons, Wilmington, Del.; Grace Stamets, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mary Storb, New Holland, Pa.; Dorothy Taylor, Wilmington, Del.; Virginia Wei- scher, Peekskill, N. Y.; Dorothy Wilkins, Rockville Centre, N. Y. • FACTS Number of active chapters, 44; Total membership, 8,459; Sigma Kappa founded, 1874; Alpha Psi at Duke, January 4, 1931; Colors, maroon and lavender; Flower, violet; Publication, Triangle. HISTORY Sigma Kappa stands among the pioneer Greek-letter societies for women. It was founded in 1874 at Colby College, Waterville, Maine, by the first five women enrolled there, and became a member of National Pan-Hellenic Congress in 1904. Since that time Sigma Kappa has become international, having chapters located in Canada. The chief publication of the sorority is the Triangle, a guarterly magazine issued first in 1907, giving a full account of Sigma Kappa activities and interesting personalities. In 1918, Sigma Kappa adopted as its national philanthropy the educational work of the Maine Sea Coast Missionary Society. This work is centered among the fisherfolk on the many small islands off the New England coast. In 1922, a scholarship fund was established for the purpose of aiding members of Sigma Kappa to com- plete college courses. As an incentive to encourage high scholarship, a national committee makes an annual award of a scholarship cup to the chapter having the best record. The local sorority. Delta Psi, was organized in February, 1929, with the purpose of petitioning Sigma Kappa for a charter. The petition was accepted in December, 1930, and on January 4, 1931, Delta Psi was installed as Alpha Psi chapter of Sigma Kappa. 328 Knight Eaby Winfree Huntington Trousdale Ritchie Brown Patrick Pace Holly Bender Wallace Harvin 329 DELTA DELTA DELTA Class of 1936 Inez Abernethy, Durham, N. C; Dorothy L. Brown, Clarksville, Tenn.; Kay Goodman, Ashland, Ky.; Gene Martin Laney, Sanford, Fla.; Helen Lieb, Elizabeth, N. J.; Margaret Moore, Clarendon, Va.; Dorothy Neff, Washington, D. C; Clary Peoples, Asheville, N. C; Pat Sills, Nashville, N. C; Gladys Souder, Macon, Ga.; Isobel Shriner, York, Pa. Class of 1937 Elizabeth Akin, Detroit, Mich.; Marie Anderson, Jacksonville, Fla.; Page Bynum, Rocky Mount, N. C; Mary W. Chapman, Durham, N. C; Donna Day, Bradenton, Fla.; Doris Day, Bradenton, Fla.; Barbara Rich, South Orange, N. J.; Edna Rogan, Baltimore, Md.; Charlotte Siehler, Baltimore, Md.; Margaret Zecher, Lebanon, Pa. Class of 1938 Virginia Grainger, Cynwood, Pa.; Merle Kirkwood, Hattiesburg, Miss.; Nellie Anna Opper, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Sarah Ann Parker, Vineland, N. J.; Isabelle Sultner, York, Pa.; Ann Watson, Cheraw, S. C. Pledges Beatrice Abernethy, Durham, N. C; Minnie Brandon, Blackstone, Va.; Maidie Brown, South Orange, N. J.; Margaret Helvenston, Ocala, Fla.; Jane Horsting , Chicago, 111.; Frances Henson, Rah- way, N. J.; Betty Hopkins, East Radford, Va.; Ann Oliver, Akron, Ohio; Sue Ould, Roanoke, Va.; Hortense Eraser, Elizabeth, N. J.; Doris Harrison, Crosswicks, N. J.; Josephine Prosser, St. Michael, Pa.; Marion Park, Leland, Miss.; Dorothy Sawyer, Ken- osha, Wis.; Ellen Smith, York, Pa.; Virginia Smith, Baldwin, N. Y.; Janet Rawdon, Oberlin, Ohio; Dorothea Zecher, Lebanon, Pa.; Muriel Wriston, Albany, N. Y.; Jean Thorns, Hawthorne, N. J.; Clyde Lee Whiddon, Ft. Pierce, N. C; Sara Sue Womack, Murfreesboro, Tenn.; Mary Tobin, Princeton, W. Va.; Jane Allen, Miami, Fla.; Ruth Kelleher, Audubon, Pa.; Erlene Ellis, York, Pa. FACTS Number of active chapters, 87; Total membership, 20,780; Delta Delta Delta founded, November, 1888; Alpha Omicron at Duke, November, 1931; Colors, silver, gold and blue; Flower, pansy; Publication, Trident. HISTORY Delta Delta Delta was founded at Boston University on Thanskgiving Eve, 1888. Tri-Delta has never been a sectional organization. Founded in the East, its first charters were distributed over all sections of this country, and three chapters were established in Canada. Tri-Delta has alumnae chapters in all of the larger cities. Delta Delta Delta was one of the six sororities represented at the first Pan-Hellenic Congress which was held in 1891. In the first history of the sorority, published in 1907, there was a chapter devoted to the develop- ment of the Pan-Hellenic movement. The other publications of Delta Delta Delta include the quarterly magazine, the Trident, published since 1891. A song book and various secret publications are also issued. Delta Delta Delta accepted the petition of a local. Delta Upsilon, formed on the Duke University campus, and Alpha Omicron was installed November 7, 1931. Since that time the sorority has grown in membership and prestige. The excellent work of the chapter in the past bespeaks of a successful future. 330 Abernethy Shriner Nett Leib Siehler Tobin Rogan Doris Day Zecher Akin Parker Souder Moore Brown Goodman Sills Laney Fraser Anderson Rich Donna Day Helvenston Ould Watson Bynum Kirkwood Opper Sultner 331 PI BETA PHI Class of 1936 Mary Frances Ivey, Durham, N. C. Class of 1937 Anna Boyd, Jacksonville, Fla.; Helen Larzelere, Jacksonville, Fla.; Ruth Michler, Easton, Pa.; Carroll Patterson, Miami, Fla.; Ruth Rea, London, Ohio; Frances Smith, Easton, Pa.; Helen Smith, Tifton, Ga. Class of 1938 Ruth Couse, Baltimore, Md.; Jane East, E. Orange, N. J.; Betty Gene Gilbert, Chatanooga, Tenn.; Wini- fred Greenwood, St. Albans, N. Y.; Ruth Herrmann, Baltimore, Md.; Beverly Kurtzmann, Maplewood, N. J.; Ann Louise Laupp, Wheeling, W. Va.; Helen Lewis, New York, N. Y.; Charlotte Miller, Miami, Fla.; Betty Pohlman, Chicago, 111. Pledges . ' Betty Ball, Maplewood, N. J.; Barbara Browne, Hickory, N. C; Margaret Carrigan, Jersey City, N. J.; Jean Dickerson, Schenectedy, N. Y.; Hilliard Hardin, Clover, S. C; Dorothy Henry, Atlanta, Ga.; Virginia Jones, Wheeling, W. Va.; Jane Kelley, Atlanta, Ga.; Miriam MacMullen, Maplewood, N. J.; Sarah Ann Overshiner, Hopkinsville, Ky.; Elizabeth Powell, Shreveport, La.; Martha Kate Schmidt, Louisville, Ky.; Anne Scott, Waco, Tex.; Polly Smith, Phillips- burg, N. J.; Dorothy Stone, Biddeford, Maine; Ruth Whitaker, Dravosburg, Pa.; Martha Jane Williams, Easton, Pa.; Rebecca Willis, Shreveport, La. FACTS Number of active chapters, 79; Total membership, 25,792; Pi Beta Phi founded, April 28, 1867; Beta at Duke, February 17, 1933; Colors, wine red and silver blue; Flower, white carnation; Publication, Arrow. HISTORY Pi Beta Phi, the oldest national fraternity for women, was founded April 28, 1867, at Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois, under the name of I. C. Sorosis. In 1883, the Greek name was adopted as a sub-title. Five years later, the name I. C. Sorosis was discontinued, and in 1889 the fraternity was incorporated under the state laws of Illinois as Pi Beta Phi. The journal of Pi Beta Phi, the Arrow, which was first printed in 1885, is published quarterly. As an encouragement for high scholarship, the fraternity maintains a number of scholarships and fellowships for its members. North Carolina Beta of Pi Beta Phi had its origin in the local sorority, Mu Lambda, founded April 22, 1929. The purpose of the founders of Mu Lambda was to obtain a charter of Pi Beta Phi, and to this end they persevered, refusing unsolicited offers of charters from other national fraternities. A form.al petition was presented to Pi Beta Phi on January 14, 1933. On February 17, 1933, Miss Amy Burnham Onken, National Grand President of Pi Beta Phi, formally installed Mu Lambda as North Carolina Beta. 332 Moore Brown Larzelere Patterson Ivey H. Smith Scott Overshiner Lewis Dickerson Schmidt Carter Boyd Michler Greenwood Kurtzmann Laupp Powell Herrmann East Miller Rea Jones F. Smith Willis Couse 333 PHIMU Class of 1936 Gwendolyn Clark, Durham, N. C; Ellen Farnum, Asheville, N. C; Virginia Johnson, Lexington, N. C; Rachel Meetze, Charlotte, N. C; Marion Roe, Cler- mont, Fla.; Hilda Sally, Durham, N. C; Rachel Sink, Lexington, N. C; Elizabeth Sutton, Harrisburg, Pa. Class of 1938 Frances Butler, Camilla, Ga.; Jeanne Cole, Col- lingswood, N. J.; Virginia Fulton, Roanoke, Va.; Margaret Molloy, Ivyland, Pa.; Betty Stowell, Fox Chase Hills, Pa.; Pauline Davis, Roanoke, Va.; Dorothy Miller, Bethlehem, Pa. Class of 1937 Claire Clarke, New York, N. Y.; Ruby Flanagan, Lynchburg, Va.; Marjorie Goddard, New York, N. Y.; Doris MacNutt, Ridgefield Park, N. J.; Jean McCowan, New York, N. Y.; Evelyn Mclntyre, New York, N. Y.; Ada Whitmore, Durham, N. C. Pledges Ann Dives, Shillington, Pa.; Helen Goodale, Jack- sonville, Fla.; Betty Marshall, Hendersonville, N. C; Mary Helen MacClements, Charlotte, N. C; Jean Moreton, Erie, Pa.; Emilie Peebles, Chevy Chase, Md.; Ann Putnam, W ashington, D. C; Catherine Raine, Rainelle, W. Va.; Helen Baxter Smith, Virginia Beach, Va.; Sara Spruill, Goldsboro, N. C; Mary Tice, Bethlehem, Pa. FACTS Number of active chapters, 59; Total membership, 10,238; Phi Mu founded, January 4, 1852; Gamma Epsilon at Duke, November 10, 1934; Colors, rose and white; Flower, pink carnation; Publication, The Aglaia. HISTORY Phi Mu, the second oldest secret organization for women, was founded January 4, 1852, at Wesleyan College, Macon, Georgia, under the name of the Philomathean Society. Later the members applied for a charter, thus establishing the foundation of the national organization of Phi Mu. The Aglaia, the national publication, is issued guarterly. The fraternity, through the Alpha Memorial Fund, affords loans to the members to complete their college courses. The National Philanthropic Endow- ment Fund assures a permanent national philanthropy. In April, 1933, a local sorority. Delta Epsilon, was founded at Duke with the purpose of petitioning a national fraternity. The local received many offers of charters from outstanding national fraternities. On July 2, 1934, a petition was presented to Phi Mu at their National Convention, and on November 9, of the same year, Mrs. C. R. Rader, former national president, installed Gamma Epsilon of Phi Mu. 334 Meetze Farnum Sink Sutton MacNutt Goddard Roe Clarke Flanagan Mclntyre Butler Davis Cole Clark Dives Molloy McCowan Tice Fulton Stowell Miller 335 ALPHA PHI Class of 1936 Ida Shaw Applewhite, Halifax, N. C; Ruth Bennett, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Betty Halsema, Baguio, Phil- ippine Islands; Catherine Rankin, Mount Gilead, N. C; Margaret Taylor, Chester, Pa. Class of 1937 Sara Duckett, Charlotte, N. C; Frederica Duehring, Washington, D. C; Virginia Duehring, Washington, D. C; Mary Lou Kincheloe, Clarksburg, W. Va. Class of 1938 Rebecca Atzrodt, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Betty Fraser, Fort Bragg, N. C; Frances Salmon, Manila, Phil- ippine Islands; Mary Elizabeth Smith, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Margery Wright, Clarksburg, W. Va. Pledges Elizabeth Applewhite, Halifax, N. C; Jean Beebe, Lewes, Del.; Helen Bennett, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Dorothy Butt, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Emily Coolidge, Green- field, Mass.; Louise Fraser, Fort Bragg, N. C; Mar- garet Garver, Ivyland, Pa.; Caroline Hagy, Imboden, Va.; Constance Howard, Forest Hills, N. Y.; Susan Phillips, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Dorothy Reed, Roxbury, Maine; Jean Snider, Meyersdale, Pa.; Countess Tabor, Boissevan, Va.; Miriam Weckeser, Durham, N. C; Jane Winters, Greenwich, Conn. FACTS Number of active chapters, 36; Number of alumnae chapters, 64; Total membership, 8,500; Alpha Phi founded, October 10, 1872; Beta Nu at Duke, May 11, 1935; Flowers, lily-of-the-valley and forget-me-not; Colors, bordeaux and silver; Publication, Alpha Phi Quarterly. HISTORY Alpha Phi, one of the first Greek -letter sororities, was founded at Syracuse University, October 10, 1872. It was the first to call an Inter-Sorority Conference, in 1902. An organization was formed at this time which later changed its name to National Pan-Hellenic Congress. Alpha Phi was the first woman ' s fraternity to build and occupy a chapter house, to have a visiting delegate system, to have an Endowment Fund of $50,000, and to publish a History of the First Fifty Years. The Alpha Phi Quarterly is published for the purpose of keeping Alpha Phis in touch with one another, with the rest of the Greek world, and with recent events and trends in education. Three funds are maintained by Alpha Phi. The Founders ' Loan Fund serves as a chapter house loan fund and assists Alpha Phis who need financial aid. The Clara Bradley Burdette Scholarship Fund helps new and old chapters which are in need of assistance, and encourages graduate study. The Martha Foote Crow Memorial Fund presents an annual gift to the Syracuse University Loan Fund. In 1933, a local sorority, Xi Omicron, was organized on the Duke University campus for the purpose of petitioning a national sorority. A formal petition was submitted to Alpha Phi in March, 1935. On May 11, 1935, Mrs. Grace Colton Gordon, National President, formally installed Xi Omicron as Beta Nu chapter of Alpha Phi. 336 Bennett Applewhite Halsema Rankin Duckett Taylor Atzrodt Smith Kincheloe F. Duehring V. Duehring Salmon Wright Fraser 337 ALPHA EPSILON PHI Class of 1936 Rubye Fogel, Georgetown, S. C. Class of 1937 Jane Lins, Bradenton, Fla. Class of 1938 Sylvia Berkowitz, Allentown, Pa.; Shirley Diamond, Jamaica, N. Y.; Frances Josephs, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Gertrude Sawilosky, Durham, N. C; Irene Stutson, Suffolk, Va.; Ruth Zinn, Brooklyn, N. Y. Pledges Frances Brooks, Warsaw, N. C; Gertrude Fleet, Winter Haven, Fla.; Audrey Glaser, West Collings- wood, N. J.; Helen Levitt, Petersburg, Va. • ■■- FACTS ' ■, ' Number of active chapters, 23; Total membership, 2,958; Alpha Epsilon Phi founded, October 24, 1909; Alpha Epsilon at Duke, 1934; Colors, green and white; Flower, lily-of-the-valley; Publication, The Columns of Alpha Epsilon Phi. • ' . HISTORY Alpha Epsilon Phi was founded at Barnard College on October 24, 1909. It has the distinction of being the oldest and largest Jewish sorority in existence, having chapters in both the United States and Canada. Scholarship, citizenship, and service are among the ideals stressed in chapter life by Alpha Epsilon Phi. The chief publication of the sorority is the Columns of Alpha Epsilon Phi. The national organization has undertaken many philanthropic endeavors, and also has several diversified scholarships for members on campuses where chapters are located. Alpha Epsilon Phi accepted the petition of the local sorority, Nu Beta Phi, and Alpha Epsilon chapter was installed in 1934 on the Duke campus. Stutson Glaser Fogel Diamond Lins Sawilosky Zinn Weil Berkowitz Brooks Fleet 338 NON-SECRET Y. M. C. A. CABINET Alan MacQuarrie President The present Duke University Young Men ' s Chris- tain Association was organized in old Trinity College in 1887, and soon after that time became a member of the National Council of Student Christian Associa- tions, which is a part of the World Student Christian Federation. The local Y seeks to promote the ideals and purposes of the Student Christian movement and offers the campus an extensive program built around the ideal of a well balanced religious, cultural, and social life. The Y. M. C. A. has sponsored seven outstanding projects this year: Freshman Week: Twenty-five Y men, assisted by members of Beta Omega Sigma, returned to school early to aid freshmen in their orientation program and to help them feel more at home during their first week on the Duke campus. Reading Room in the Union: Realizing a long-felt need in the Union building for a reading, smoking, and reception room for the visitors and students, the Y. M. C. A. took the initiative in providing funds through contributions toward the refurnishing of the room, aided greatly in the interior decorating by Mrs. F. M. Hanes. The latest periodicals are provided for the new reading room. Peace Week: From November 7 to 11, in coopera- tion with the Duke Fellowship for World Peace, the local organization brought Dr. McNeill Poteat and the Rev. Tom Sykes to this campus to emphasize the need for peace-action among college students. Assembly programs were also conducted on this line. Dr. Toyohiko Kagawa: In collaboration with the Ministerial Association, the local Y made possible the appearance of this famed world Christian leader on the Duke campus during his stay in America. Bratzel Corriher Ketcham Whitmore Cottingham Wilkinson Ketchum 340 Y. M. C. A. CABINET Everitt Cleaveland Bistline Wildnauer Davis Lengler Richey Robert Kay- Vice President Religious Emphasis Week: In March, the Rev. Dr. Henry H. Crane, of Scranton, Pa., returned for the fourth consecutive year under the auspices of the Y to conduct the services of the week. The campus turned out en masse to hear Dr. Crane ' s interesting, dynamic, and powerful addresses. Open forums and private discussions for various campus groups were also held. Dad ' s Day: For the purpose of bringing together the fathers of Duke men, the Y. M. C. A. sponsored Dad ' s Day over the Easter Week-end for the second time. All Duke Dads were invited to participate with their sons in a representative round of college activities in order that a better understanding of common problems be developed between fathers, sons, and faculty. Southern Peace-Action Movement: Under the direction of Douglas Corriher and McMurry Richey, the Duke Y has been the center of a peace-action movement extending over seven southern states. Peace-Agent, a mimeographed news bulletin, has been published bi-weekly and distributed throughout the South. In addition to these projects, the Social Committee has sponsored bi-monthly Open Houses which have been very popular among the students. The Recitals Committee has presented free of charge four Tuesday evening recitals to the University community. The Peace Committee brought Dr. Joseph Artman to the campus for discussion with various groups. Maga- zines are furnished the Student Infirmary and South- gate Dormitory. The Y also publishes the Duke Handbook and the Student Directory. Thus continuing it s program of expansion, the Y. M. C. A. seeks to spread Christian ideals into every phase of student life on the campus. 341 SOPHOMORE Y COUNCIL William Fickes President The Sophomore Council of the Duke University Y. M. C. A., which was organized in the fall of 1933, is the latest addition to that organization. It is, more or less, an intermediary step between the Freshman Council and the Senior Cabinet. A limited number of the Freshman Council who have shown interest and aken an active part in Y. M. C. A. work are selected each year to make up the Sophomore Council. Its members serve as assistants to the committee chair- men of the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, which is composed of juniors and seniors. Besides serving as assistants to the Senior Cabinet, the members of the Sophomore Council have a definite part to play in various activities sponsored by the Y. M. C. A. This year the Council has taken an active part in Freshman Week, Thanksgiving Day service in the chapel, and Religious Emphasis Week. The Council sponsored on the Easter Week-end the second annual Duke Dads ' Day, an event which has become one of the most popular on the campus. Dads ' Day was started last year by the Sophomore Council and met with more approval and success than had been anticipated. Dennis Spencer Stokes Bowman Rohrer Lampe Sommerville Fair Bierstein Roesti Clark McDonough Yoder Roesch Kraemer Heise Mason Gould McCracken 342 FRESHMAN COUNCIL Moore Foote Williams Warth Craven Snyder Stovall Shepard McKee Hudson Bunn Lewis Bushnell Laing Van Voorhis Turner Brown Whitaker Strickland Hulme Moorhead Markham Miller Groupe Terry Butler Pawling Cree Holmes Jones Gibson McGimsey Wood Britz Rynd Duncj Slaner Williams Simmons F np Matt Murfree President The primary purpose of the Freshman Council is to stimulate among freshmen a feeling of Christian fellowship. In this manner the organization is creating lasting friendships among first year men, and training future workers for the Y. M. C. A. The council has been extremely active in extra- curricular activities. The programs of the group have been of great variety, including speakers representing the faculty and the students, smokers, informal discussions, socials, and hikes. The Council was active in getting the Southern Conference to permit the broadcasting of football games. Another worthwhile activity that it orig- inated was a Prep-School Day, a day on which the members of high school and preparatory school seniors who were interested in a college career might become familiar with Duke University. The Council has also sponsored tours of the Duke Hos- pital, and has donated a Christmas tree for the lobby of the Men ' s Union. The Freshman Council is a highly cosmopolitan group which, through the varied programs offered, has gained insight into the ideals and functions of the Y. M. C. A. Thus it serves as an intermediary between new students, the Y organization, and its own work. .je.2- ft.. 343 Y. W. C. A. CABINET Alma Hull President The Young Women ' s Christian Association of Duke University, a member of the Young Women ' s Christian Association of the United States of America and participant in the World Student Christian Federation, declares its purposes as follows: We, the members of the Young Women ' s Chris- tain Association of Duke University, unite in the desire to realize full and creative life through a growing knowledge of God. We determine to have a part in making this life possible for all people. In this task we seek to understand Jesus and follow Him. The work of the Y. W. C. A. is carried out through an Advisory Board composed of members of the faculty and women of the community. The Cabinet is composed of the chairmen of various committees. These committees, social, publicity, social service, worship, program, freshman, and the interracial committees, are the means of carrying out effec- tively the work of the Y in its various branches. Particularly outstanding has been the work of the Social Service Committee in securing contributions of clothes, offering other services for local welfare agencies, enlisting the volunteer services of the students for palyground work at Wright ' s Refuge, and in connection with the Duke Hospital and Legal Aid Clinic. Sutton McCauley Bowen Rauchenberg Strauss Kinchloe Lawrence Taylor Brown Winston Carter 344 WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC flSSOCmTION White Gray Rauschenberg Eaby Stine Sutton Cline Cleaver Strauss Ritchie PhiUips Upchurch Briggs Little Whitmyre Burger Margaret Cuninggim President The Women ' s Athletic Association was founded in the spring of 1929. Its membership has increased during these six years to such an extent that it is now one of the leading campus organizations. The Association now has over three hundred members. Three of the greatest incentives for the promotion of athletic interest are: the field days which are held in the fall, winter, and spring; the awarding of letters, numerals, and sweaters; and the athletic cabin. In the fall, events in hockey, soccer, swimming, and riding are held while basketball and volley ball tournaments are held during the winter. The final events, tennis, archery, baseball, and track, are held in the spring. In giving awards, a point system has been estab- lished which gives class numerals to the fifteen girls who have the most points in each class. A black D goes to each of the ten girls who has the most points regardless of class. Old English D ' s are given to the six junior girls having the most points at the end of the year. These girls comprise the All-Duke Honorary Team. The class having the largest total of points for the year has its numerals placed on the banner which is in the gymnasium. As an organization for promoting the interest of students of the Women ' s College in athletics, the Women ' s Athletic Association is performing a valuable service on the East Campus. 345 TOWN GIRLS ' CLUB Inez Abernethy President In 1927, the Town Girls ' Club, composed of all of the town women students, was organized under the direction of Mrs. Hazen Smith. Since that date the Club has functioned as an integral part of the Woman ' s College, being represented on the Student Council by its president. The Club aims to keep girls who live off the campus in close connection with university life and to promote a spirit of good will among its members and the dormitory girls. To encourage the girls in various activities, the Club offers a prize to the member who has the greatest number of points in leadership and scholarship for the year. This point system is outlined in the undergraduate handbook. Under the leadership of its officers, the Town Girls ' Club has placed itself in a position of prom- inence as one of the leading organizations on the East Campus, not only in point of membership, but also in point of its activities. It has provided an invaluable connecting link between the town girls and the resident students, and has thus provided a further incentive for Durham girls to attend Duke University. Childs Montague Edwards Ivey Izard Clark Mayes Pollard Zuckerman Patterson Gantt Plyler Franck Reade Newsom Upchurch Riley Strother Skinner Kueffner 346 HONORARY-PROFESSIONAL Thomas Kunkle Sizemore Mossburg McCall Johnston Huiskamp 348 Eaby Knight Gray Whitmyre Henderson Newsom Haislip 349 ACTIVE Jack Alexander, Ernest C r u i k- shank, Billy Huiskamp, Charles Kun- kle, Jim McCall, Bob Mervine, Hyatt Mossburg, Pete Naktenis, Cliff Perry, Phil Russell, Frank Sizemore, Zack Thomas On Junior Standing: Henry Shroder Robinson, Herbert Strassburger Nus- baum, Betty Friemel, Ruth Frances Bowman, Mary Alice Rhodes, Ernes- tine Catharine Paul, Marion Roe, Ellen Cogswell Farnum, Ernest Cruik- shank, Edward William Cooey, Jane R; Haislip, Robert Hillyer Dick, Frances Isobel Shriner, Irwin Read Hale, Albert Lee Burford, William Egleston Woodruff, Frank Julian Size- more, Annie Laurie Newsom, James Joseph Brennan, Jr. On Senior Standing: Herbert Ack- land Pohl, Mrs. W. M. Baker (Virginia Kirk), Nancy Richmond Hudson, Elihu Bernard Bernstein, Henry Law- rens Harris, Ethel Williams. DELTA PHI ALPHA Helmuth Bode President Delta Phi Alpha has completed its fourth year of existence on the Duke campus. Having developed from the local German Club, which lost its identity in the spring of 1931, it has attempted to perpetuate and to extend the ideals of that body. The organiza- tion is honorary, its membership comprising those students who have earned a minimum average of 2.25 guality points through the second year of German language, particularly in German literature and culture . The basic purpose of the organization is to bring together such students, providing them with advantages denied them as individuals, and to help sustain and broaden their interest. This year. Delta Phi Alpha has sponsored a society for the advancement of interest in German, membership in which is voluntary. The colors of the organization are red, black, and gold. The key, bearing the coat of arms in three colors, is the complete emblem of the fraternity. The German Eagle in gold is raised on a black back- ground. In the center of the eagle ' s breast is a shield upon which the three Greek letters. Delta Phi Alpha, are engraved. In point of membership the organization is one of the largest on the campus, having over forty members whose interest and scholarship in German has made them eligible for membership. With the raising of membership requirements the society should be even stronger in stimulating interest in German. Upchurch Pepper Sills Spence Nothdurft Menaker Cruikshank Bennett Dein Seymour Snyder Ritchie Nathanson Smith K. White Althoff Plump Silleck Baeder G.White Weinstein Faulkner Kritzer Bateman Von Glahn McCann Frantz Bernstein Fleming Rogers 352 MUSIC STUDY CLUB Laing Rich Rankin Fogel Bogert Paist Silleck Bassett Meetze Gibbons R. Miller Bruton Foster Beebe V. Miller Jenkins Evans Cockrell Paul Greenwood Patterson Zecher Snook Helvenston Roe Stutson Allen Shields Butler Lewis Isobel Shriner President The Music Study Club was organized four years ago for the purpose of arousing and encouraging an appreciation of music among the women students of Duke University. Besides holding monthly meetings at which various kinds of talented musicians are presented, the Club has sponsored several concerts by noted artists. In this organization we see embodied some of the aims and ambitions that unfortunately are fast dying out in the changing system of education. The general attitude is becoming one of popular dependence on the other person to entertain rather than an active participation or effort to entertain one ' s self, as was previously necessary before the advent of the radio and the motion picture with sound. The idea is prevalent that only the weaker human beings seek this study as a last resort. Were there a greater turning to the fine arts and especially to music by the public as a whole in the form of creative study and interest, there would be a real cultural improvement. In our educational system such interests have been allowed to slip, due to a popular demand for mate- rialism. A turn back, as in this Club ' s step, is a welcome relief, at least to an idealist. This year the club has sponsored several gatherings which were welcomed with great pleasure not only by the women but also by the men, especially the concert in which Nino Martini appeared. Such concerts have filled a real need on both campuses, and we feel that the Music Study Club has done a great service to the University in sponsoring them. 353 DELTA PHI RHO ALPHA Margery White President Delta Phi Rho Alpha is a local honorary athletic sorority which was created as a sister organization to Tombs, the athletic fraternity for men. This sorority was founded at Old Trinity College in 1921, and since then has become one of the traditions on the campus. There is constant need for women ' s interest in outdoor sports and athletic activity. This organization comes as an answer to such a demand. Through exercise, one of the fundamental bodily needs, it promotes health. Every year, seven new members are chosen after consideration of their leadership in athletic ability. Annually, it is the custom for these pledges to appear in the traditional goat costume — a middy blouse, cotton hose and tennis shoes — and to carry the symbolic rolling pin with the Greek inscription. Delta Phi Rho Alpha, inscribed upon it. This year, the sorority has sponsored a tennis tournament, presenting a silver loving cup to the winner. Each year, in addition, an inter-class basketball tournament is fostered. The winning team is awarded a banner with class numerals, providing an admirable sense of class consciousness. This promotes an interest in athletics which stimulates friendly rivalries and participation in healthful sports. 354 EKO-L Haislip Hudson Shriner Baker Helsema Farnum Eaby Roe Paul Mary Alice Rhodes President Elko-L was founded at Trinity College in 1914, with the purpose of encouraging and rewarding women of the college who had attained a marked degree of scholastic achievement. Its establishment came as an answer to the demand for recognition of those who had reached a mark of excellence in their under- graduate work. It served supreme in this capacity for six years, at which time it was partially supplanted by the establishment of Phi Beta Kappa. Eko-L then assumed a position similar to that of 9019 on the men ' s campus, in that both are local societies drawing their membership from the two upper classes. The membership of Eko-L is quite select, and it is recognized as a great honor to become a part of this society. Since the year of its founding it has main- tained a high standard of leadership as well as scholarship on the Duke women ' s campus, and it is duly proud of the record which has been made by those who have been deemed worthy of membership. In past years, this society has sponsored interesting and worthwhile contests throughout the schools of the state in the writing of short stories and poetry. These contests serve not only as a means of scholastic recognition, but also as a means of advancing the interests of Trinity College and Duke University among the people of the state. It may be seen, therefore, that Eko-L serves as an active organization as well as being a reward for scholarship of a superior type. By not confining itself purely to the honorary type of organization, Eko-L performs an additional service to the University. 355 NEREIDIAN CLUB Gwendolyn Cline President The Nereidian Club was founded in the spring of 1930 for the promotion of better swimming among the women of Duke University. This is an honorary organization and membership is based on ability in swimming, which is determined by various tests of strokes, dives, and speed. The members of the Club are the sole participants in the swimming meets given in cooperation with the Women ' s Athletic Association. In the spring and fall of each year, the Nereidians sponsor a traditional water pageant to which all the student body is invited. In order to determine those worthy of membership, various tryouts are given twice each year. Each potential member is judged by ten or more members of the Club and two faculty members. Then grades are averaged and the new Nereid is voted upon by the club in regard to ability in swimming and per- sonal factors. The colors of the organization, red, gold, and blue, are embodied in the head of a Devil Fish which is the emblem worn on the suit of each member. This year ' s Nereidian Club feels that it has accom- plished much towards encouraging aguatic sports, and it earnestly hopes that its members will continue to promote the best interests of the organization. HoUmeyer Atzrodt Boyd Bliss Jackson Stone Millar Becker Whitmyre Creery Helvenston Cleaver White Vickers Costigan Pippen Schaffle Seymour Pennell 356 BETA OMEGA SIGMA Northrup Stauffer Farrar Scanlon White Beyer Fickes Webster Bradsher Steckel Boger Stocks Walker Little Montgomery Griffith Quick Mathews Hackney Ryon Clay Colson Edwards Lockwood Eakin Rebman Windsor Hess S Bob Miller President Beta Omega Sigma was organized as an honorary sophomore fraternity at Trinity College in 1917. The underlying principles of the organization are: to honor freshmen who lead in extra-curricular activi- ties, to supervise freshman discipline, and to aid in furthering tradition and school spirit on the campus. This year B. O. S. members gave their services to the freshmen during the first week of school. Their work, however, did not stop with Freshman Orienta- tion. The fraternity met each week with the house officers of the various freshman dormitories. These meetings rendered a great aid in fostering a splendid spirit in the freshman class. B. O. S. assisted during home-coming day by offering three prizes for the best decorations on the campus. It also cooperated with Sandals, the similar organization for women, in sponsoring a benefit dance. In addition, the mem- bers have begun a movement to expand the organiza- tion into a national fraternity. The Class of 1938 feels that it has accomplished the results expected of it, and is ambitious for the continuance of its work by the Class of 1939. With a tradition of respect and service behind it, B. O. S. looks forward to a future of increased activity and campus usefulness. 357 PHI ETA SIGMA Preston Webster President Phi Eta Sigma is the only national freshman honorary scholastic fraternity in existence; and, since it was founded at the University of Illinois in 1923, it has grown rapidly. There are now thirty-five chapters situated in various educational centers throughout the United States. Membership in Phi Eta Sigma is extended to those freshmen who show by their scholastic achievements that they are endowed with exceptional intellectual ability. The requirements for membership are prac- tically equal to a Phi Beta Kappa average for one semester or an average of 2.25 quality points per semester hour of work carried. Phi Eta Sigma is not an end in itself, however, but only a beginning. Grades as such are unimportant; but, as an indication of ability and sincerity of purpose, they are very important. In 1932, after a year ' s existence as a local chapter, Alpha Eta, a petition was granted, whereby the Duke chapter of Phi Eta Sigma was established, the result of the efforts of the late Dean M. Arnold, who was the faculty adviser and an honorary member of the fraternity. Since his death. Dean Alan K. Manchester, also an honorary member, has ably filled the position of faculty adviser. Last spring Phi Eta Sigma held its fourth national convention at the University of Oklahoma; at which our vice president represented the Duke chapter. Although the fraternity has been primarily an honorary organization during the four brief years of its existence on the Duke campus, it has ably provided an incentive for good scholarship among freshman men. Greenfield Ris Kuperman Dennis Crawford Cooke Taylor Atkinson Bailey Turner Sheehan Garber 358 SANDALS Auld McCauley Winston Love Opper Strauss Holland Morton Muelberger Larsen Baggs Minor Daniel Stine Young Richards Lawrence White Helen Cleaver President Sandals is an honorary sophomore organization which was started by the Woman ' s College Student Government in 1932. Its twenty members are girls chosen at the end of their freshman year for out- standing leadership in scholarship, general attitude, and activity on the campus. They assist the Student Government, help during Freshman Week, and co- operate with Social Standards in maintaining the Ark, a recreational center on the East Campus. An outstanding innovation this year was a Sandals- Beta Omega Sigma dance, which, it is hoped, will become a tradition. Their project of improving the Ark consisted in building a stairway to the balcony, which was painted and improved for use, thereby giving more room for the ping-pong tables upstairs and providing greater dancing space with a better position for the orchestra. The lighting system is scheduled to be changed, and improvements in interior decorations are to be made. The proceeds from the joint dance are to go into a fund for this purpose. The Ark is being used more and more, and fills a vital need in the social life of the college. The Sandals have created for themselves a very real place among the campus organizations in the short time of their existence upon the campus. The society looks forward with confidence to the future with the belief that its scope of service and usefulness to the University will be increased as its traditions become more firmly established. 359 IOTA GAMMA PI Joe A. Trainor, Jr President Iota Gamma Pi was founded in October, 1922, by a group of students in scientific departments of Trinity College. Previous to this time there was no organization of any kind devoted primarily to the interests of students in the different scientific fields, and there was a feeling among a few interested students that there should be some society or group which would promote fraternal interests between men in the fields of science. They also desired to recognize scholarship and leadership in this work. This fraternity is composed of twenty or twenty-five men from the junior and senior classes of Trinity College who have excelled in scholarship and leader- ship, and who are primarily interested in some branch of scientific study. At the bi-monthly meetings of the fraternity the students give talks and discuss the latest developments in their own fields of study. Through these meetings, the members of the fra- ternity gain valuable knowledge concerning what is going on in other lines of work, and at the same time each student has an opportunity to discuss his own findings. In stimulating interest in scientific studies and in rewarding with membership those students who demonstrate their proficiency in such subjects. Iota Gamma Pi is endeavoring to further enthusiasm for what it believes to be the primary purpose of college training. If the fraternity succeeds in its ideals, it will have performed a worthy service to the University. Cooper Schuerman Rushmer Dick Turner Woodruff Nathanson Jackson Schaeffer Scattergood Saleeby Frantz Somers Nisbet 360 ALPHA KAPPA PSI Cruikshank Wilson Yelverton Crawford Gill Haardt Wright Abbott Boyd Austin Thoman Simmons Van Nostrand Bean Smith Steeg Burge Hunter Sinclair Eltinge Phinney Gillis Witcover Ryon Byrne Ulrich Gallup Davis fmm Fred A. Wildnauer President Alpha Kappa Psi is the oldest and largest national professional commerce fraternity. From a small group of ten founders at New York University in 1904 It has grown into an international organization numbering forty-three college chapters and fourteen alumni chapters with a membership of more than 10,000. Beta Eta chapter was founded at Duke University in December, 1929, and since that time has inducted 134 members. The purposes of the fraternity are two-fold: to fur- ther professional development in fields of commerce, accounting, and finance; and to foster higher stand- ards of business ethics. Alpha Kappa Psi affords a medium through which men with common interests can form beneficial contacts. The official publication of the fraternity is The Diary of Alpha Kappa Psi, which contains many educational items concerning current business prob- lems written by active and alumni members. The fraternity offers annually the Alpha Kappa Psi Scholarship Medallion to the senior maintaining the highest average in economic studies at Duke University. This year, the local chapter, in collab- oration with Dr. Nichol, of the Economics Department, established a bookshelf in the University library which is devoted to vocational guidance. The program on the campus includes bi-monthly smokers at which prominent business men and professors discuss current economic problems. 361 CHI DELTA PHI Nancy Hudson President Chi Delta Phi, national honorary literary sorority, was founded in 1919 at the University of Tennessee. The purpose of the sorority is to bring together repre- sentative college women who, by their literary interest and creative ability, shall uphold the highest ideals of a liberal education. There are at present thirty-eight chapters of Chi Delta Phi, the Duke chapter having been established in 1922. The publication of the sorority is the Litterateur, issued quarterly; the badge, a five- pointed star in blue, bearing on its face a lamp and the three Greek letters of the name in gold, the whole being surrounded by a gold or pearl circle, with a pair of quills across the pin beneath the star. The national colors are blue and gold; the flower is the pansy. The national organization holds annual poetry and prose contests, entries being received from its own chapters and from those of Sigma Upsilon, a similar literary organization for men. In an effort to stimulate literary interest on the campus, the Duke chapter has held a series of open meetings at which authorities in different phases of literary activity have spoken before the group. Honorary members of Chi Delta Phi have addressed the organization, and during the fall semester the sorority sponsored an exhibit of children ' s books in connection with National Children ' s Book Week. Graham Fogel Henderson Taylor Lindsey Ranson Secrest Kern 362 9019 Cruikshank Trainor Cleaveland Sapp Dick Cooey Pohl Cox Upchurch Womble Bistline Walter Collins Vail Friedlander Deneen Brown Shore Hale Goldstein Menaker Arnold Frantz Baeder Desvernine Corriher Jackson yyiiy Henry S. Robinson President The order of 9019 was founded many years ago on the campus of Trinity College, before the institution was moved, in 1892; from Randolph County to Durham. The purposes of the organization are the fostering of scholarship and the support of all movements in college, city, or state which are aimed at cultural or intellectual advancement. Membership in 9019 is granted on the basis of two consecutive years of study at Trinity College with an average grade of B plus, or as recorded by the Uni- versity, of two and one-quarter quality points. The roll book of the society lists over five hundred and twenty-five members, of whom thirty-two are now undergraduates in the College. Once every year, 9019 Day, February 21, many of the alumni members gather on the campus for a reunion and banquet and for a discussion of the accomplishments of the past year and the plans for the one to come. The program of activities, not strictly limited to 9019 members, has included in former years a state- wide oratorical contest for high school seniors. More recently the group has sponsored a series of Current Events Forums in which topics of national or international interest in the fields of politics, eco- nomics, foreign affairs, and so forth, have been presented before enthusiastic audiences. By con- tinuing and broadening such programs as these, 9019 hopes to become, more and more, an influential factor in the University life and to assist in raising the cultural and scholastic standards of the College. 363 Charles Kunkle President Jule Ward Vice President Jack Hennemier Secretary Peter Naktenis Treasurer TOMBS Tombs, a local athletic fraternity, was established at Trinity College in 1905. Founded primarily as an honorary athletic organization. Tombs has evolved into one of the outstanding, beneficial brotherhoods on the Duke campus. No longer purely honorary, the organization bids athletic letter- winners. This past year the society drew up a new constitution. In addition to fostering better relationship in sports between Duke and other universities, Tombs endeavors to build up school spirit, to implant more firmly the traditions of old Trinity, and to create new ones for the rapidly growing Duke University. The one night of freshman reverence for this organization and the traditions for which it stands, Tombs Night, has been eliminated. This year Tombs sponsored a movement against smoking in the gymnasium. A high school invitation track meet or basketball tournament has also been proposed. Though there are inscribed on its rolls the names of many celebrities of national sports, the men who are invited to Tombs are not only those who star on the athletic field but also, in many cases, those who are leaders in campus government and scholarship. Thus is made an effective answer to the cries of over-emphasis of sports in the leading universities of the country. Back Row: Podger, Shortell, Corbitt, McGrail, Riley, Parker, Ford, Naktenis, Daniel, McCaskill, Herrick, Cardwell Center Row: Ferris, Hennemier, Ward, Alterman, Liana, George, Ardolino, Mossburg, Keator, Powers Front Row: Stevenson, Cheek, Pickard, Johnston, Morse, Parsons, Shehan, Huiskamp 364 ADVERTISEMENTS 1936, Liggett Mvers Tobacco Co. J HANES SHORTS WON ' T CUT YOU IN HALF! You ' ll sit tight with Hanes from the first pair you buy, because you don ' t sit tight ... if you get what we mean! Mister, you ' ll never be seat-bound. That goes for the crotch, toot Jump into a pair of Hanes Shorts • . . button them up . , . and check us up. Stoop for your shoes, reach for the light (climb a ladder if you want) — nothing pinches or parts! Even if you did strain on the seams, they ' re sewed too tight to let go. And Hanes gives you a color-guard ... a guarantee that the dyes won ' t run! You need shirts with your shorts. Hanes makes as comfortable ones as you ever pulled over your head! 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FOR MEN AND BOYS FOR EVERY SEASON The GRILL FOUNTAIN n 1 East Main Street Phone J-0721 Approved for Co-eds ' BEACON OF THRIFT FOR ALL SOLE OFFICIAL JEWELER TO DUKE UNIVERSITY ' aciurersor ?c ewelry iozievy General Offices and Main Plant — Owatonna, Minnesota Service Offices Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Fargo, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Rochester KOOL CIGARETTES MILDLY MENTHOLATED CORK TIPPED Save the Coupons in Each Package SIR WALTER RALEIGH SMOKING TOBACCO The Mild Burley Blend Kept Fresh in Gold Foil Duke University Laundry Specialists in the care of College Men ' s Clothes Mill Supplies-Machinery Plumbing - Heating Equipment Contractors Supplies Wheelbarrows, Picks, Shovels, Scrapers, Pumping Equipment for every purpose. Pipes, Valves, Fittings, etc. Collection and Delivery Daily in All Dormitories by Student Representatives SEND US YOUR ORDERS AND INQUIRIES —WE HAVE THE GOODS AND BACK IT UP NnH THE SERVICE DILLON SUPPLY CO. Phone L-993 DURHAM, N. C. J. H. JUDD, JR., ' 24, Manager Meeting the Printing Needs of Business for over Fifty Years Reeves ' AMERICAN INN • GOOD FOOD GOOD SERVICE • CHAPEL HILL STREET, NEAR FIVE POINTS TIP TOP TAVERN SEA FOOD A SPECIALTY LIGHT WINES and BEER Ploy Billiards for CLEAN Recreation 315 Chapel Hill Street Durham, N. C. THE SEEMAN PRINTERY Incorporated Durham, North Carolina J. Southgate and Son, Inc. and Home Insurance Agency Insurers for DUKE UNIVERSITY JiJuKc A c CciC Jtc title r oiid lax JLa 4MA — ai ciaaA uaad. HOTEL WASHINGTON DUKE Delightfully reminiscent Of the Old South, Quaint of fixture, furnishing and Costume, Food deliciously prepared And graciously served. Combining everything you ' ve Dreamed of to make an eating Place alluring. Drop in today, Bring your friends, or Sweetheart. Enjoy a rare mood And a meal you ' ll never forget. Priced to help you come often! WASHINGTON DUKE TAVERN EVERY DELIGHT A MEAL AFFORDS A la Carte Service Blue Plate Lunch 45c DRINK IN BOTTLES 9,000,000 Coca-Colas Sold Daily DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. DURHAM, N. C. We invite the patronage of Duke University students, organizations and faculty HOME SAVINGS BANK Efficient and Capable Service RESOURCES OVER $2,200,000 JOHN SPRUNT HILL, President WM. W. SLEDGE, Vice President T. C. WORTH, Cashier Satisfaction Guarantee AN important part of any business — giving satisfac- tion. If you are satisfied with a purchase you ' ll go back. You ' ll find it here in our FOOD, PRICES and SERVICE. PENDER ' S STORES FISHER RIDING CLUB ERWIN ROAD Phone N-2604 Catering to Duke University Community INSTRUCTION AND TRANSPORTATION FREE The Depositors National Bank of Durham Durham, N. C. MEMBER Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation OFFICERS Robert H. Sykes, President Scovill Wannamaker, Cashier M. A. Briggs, Vice President C. .1. 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Duke University Stores EAST CAMPUS WEST CAMPUS HOSPITAL Owned and Operated by Duke University SERVICES ... Offer ... CONVENIENCE PAR PRICES OUR GREAT SEAL . . . AND WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU Fidelity, according to the dictionary, means faithfulness to trust or obligation. That is the first principle of this bank. The Fidelity seal stands for that — and more. It stands for Experience, Judgment, Manage- ment; for a bank with a long record. It means that experienced and skillful hands are handling your banking affairs, whether it be a savings account, commercial account or a trust agreement. Behind the imprint of the Fidelity seal is the group judgment of our officers and directors; broad ex- perience and training not easily acquired — all of which is available to every customer of the Fidelity. JiDELITY F. D. I. C. DURHAM, N. C. J. A.MURDOCKCOMPANY INCORPORATED ICE AND COAL Main Office and Plant — 518 Morgan Sfreef F-4011 — TELEPHONES J -0341 BE LK-LEGGETT COMPANY A most pleasant and profitable place to shop Main through to Chapel Hill Street AN OLD DUKE TRADITION ' Riding the Bus with Skipper ' DURHAM PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY Lakewood Dairy milk, the standard of quality in Durham for over a generation. LAKEWOOD DAIRY Phone F-9801 Sinclair at Five Points . uaKanteed c aiiMaction Tomorrow ' s Styles — Today 1911 : CLOTHIERS FURNISHERS : 1936 Washington Duke Hotel BIdg. Durham, N. C. PASCHALL BAKERY Mallie J. Paschall, Proprietor BREAD CAKES PIES Be Sure That it is Paschall ' s Pride New Plant: Corner Duke and Morgan Streets Durham, North Carolina Always call for WAVERLY ICE CREAM and you ' ll get the best Made its way by the way it ' s made ' Manufactured by WAVERLY ICE CREAM CO., INC. 320 HOLLAND STREET Durham, N. C. MOLLOY-MADE COVER QUALITY is still serving the best books in the land — just as it did in the pioneer days of the modern yearbook. The cover on this volume is a physical expression of that fine quality and workmanship which the Molloy trade- mark has always symbolized. The David J. Molloy Plant 2857 NORTH WESTERN AVENUE Chicago, Illinois The University Unions A DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AT THE CENTER OF CAMPUS ACTIVITIES I in Dining Rooms 5 Among the most beautiful in America. T I in Food N C T I The best food tastefully prepared. in Service The dining room personnel is limited to courteous and N efficient student service. The Women ' s Union The Men ' s Union on on The East Campus The West Campus The Coffee Shoppe (WEST CAMPUS) Continuous a la Carte Service Both Unions Provide Unusual Facilities for Special Luncheons and Dinners of Any Size ' Union Service is the Best Service Aerial View of Duke University Duke University Curricula, equipment and expense information may be obtained from The General Bulletin The Bulletin of Undergraduate Instruction The Bulletin of the Graduate School The Bulletin of the School of Religion The Bulletin of the School of Law The Bulletin of the School of Medicine The Bulletin of the School of Nursing The Bulletin of the Summer Schools The Bulletin of the Departments of Engineering The Bulletin of Forestry Address applications and inquiries to DUKE UNIVERSITY THE SECRETARY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA PATRONIZE DURHAM SHELL SERVICE STATIONS CLAIBORNE HURST, DUKE ' 32 Chapel Hill Street and Yates Avenue TROY S. MIZE Mangum and Haywood Streets WESLEY VICKERS East Main Street JOHNSON - PREVOST CLEANERS - PRESSERS TAQUIPMENT ti XPERIENCE JJ FFICIENCY flEKVICE Vkill kJPEED 424 W. Main Street, Phone 1. 6451 1106 Broad Street, Phone Jf 5451 DURHAM, N. C. HAPPY - SNAPPY - SERVICE STANDARD CHAIR CO. Wholesale Manufacturers PORCH ROCKERS CHAIRS BREAKFAST ROOM SUITES Thomasville, North Carolina The C hair Town CAROLINA ' S LARGEST PHOTOGRAPHIC CONCERN ® SIDDELL STUDIO RALEIGH, N. C. OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS for CHANTICLEER [) 0T0-P OCB5 £N AVIN CO. 115 -119 LUCKIE STREE T • ATLANTA GEORGIA ..4 ' JSiie- :r!UWpf: j s7 ' ' r i i ' ' ' ; ' • .c ' . ' ■-T .■' ■■- • ' . - i?n ' v rv-W
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