University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC)

 - Class of 1895

Page 1 of 214

 

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1895 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collectionPage 7, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collectionPage 11, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collectionPage 15, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collectionPage 9, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collectionPage 13, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collectionPage 17, 1895 Edition, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 214 of the 1895 volume:

THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL THE COLLECTION OF NORTH CAROLINIANA PRESENTED BY Irs. John Hull McLean r m i |r UNIVERSITY OF N C AT CHAPEL HILL 00033984699 FOR USE ONLY IN THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLEC PRESS OF E. A. WRIGHT, PHILA. ' Darsitv? L ' cll: Hachie! Hackie! Hackie! Sis Boom Bah! Carolina, Carolina ! %ah! Kah! %ah! ' Darsits Colors: White and Blue. J o -g o io 0 tbe Ibon. lEben alexan er, Envos BxtraorDinar anD Iftinistcr BMenipotcntiar to ©recce, TRoumania, anJ) Servia, our processor an frienD,. this volume is respectfully DcDicateD. f 011. lirii imnihcr. JRN at Kno.wille, Tennessee, March 9, 1851. Son of Judge Ebenezer and Margaret McClung Alexander. Entered the preparatory department of East Tennessee University in 1S67, and finished the Freshman year at that institution. Entered with the Freshman Class at Yale in 1S69, graduatino in 1S73. Was a member of Brothers in Unity (one of the two general Societies at Yale), and of the i ' ollowing fraternities : Freshman, Gamma Nu (local) ; Sophomore, Phi Theta Psi (local) ; Junior, Psi Upsilon (chaptered) ; Senior, Skull and Bones. Instructor in Ancient Languages at the Uni ' ersity of Tennessee, 1873-77 ; Professor of Ancient Languages there, 1877-S6 ; Chairman of the Faculty, President State Teachers ' Association of Tennessee, 1885-86. Resigned Professorship to accept the chair of Greek at the University of North Carolina in 1886. Granted leave of absence by the Board of Trustees in 1893 to ser e as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Greece, Roumania, and Ser ' ia. Residence, Athens. Married October 15, 1874, at Knoxxille, Tennessee, Marion Howard Smith. They have two sons and two daughters. In 1893, the Uni ersity of North Carolina conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Laws. ( ) U . z_-c — -- $ bilnr$. ]EMtor=in=Cbief. DUDLEY LINDSEV, AKE. 36usine6s IDanagera. J. W. McALISTER, ATi2, F. F. BAHNSON, 2AE, W. C. KLUTTZ, 4 ' ] ' A. Bssociateg. E. C- GREGORY, Z% L. T. HARTSELL, K2, V. A BATCHELOR, Ben, T. F. SANFORD, KA. W. R. WEBB, SN, A. H. EDGERTON, 2X. J. F. NOOE, HKA. imnnnlfiBS, Erecutivc (Committee. J. W. McALISTER, W. R. WEBB, F. F. BAHNSON, E. C. GREGORY, A. H. EDGERTON. ©uotation Committee. V. A. BATCHELOR, f. ■ T. F. SANFORD. mtblctic Committee. E. C. GREGORY, L. T. HARTSELL. Ibumorous Committee. W. C. KLUTTZ, W. R. WEBB, A. H. EDGERTON. Oriiani ation Committee. W. C. KLUTTZ, L. T. HARTSELL. J. F. XOOE. •flllugtration Committee. J. W. McALISTER, T. F. SANFORD, W. R. WEBB. Subscription Committee. V. A. BATCHELOR, . - T A. H. EDGERTON. 6 m ' E fet ' l that a peculiar responsibility devolved upon us in the duties of the I)ublication of this sixth volume of The Hellenian. With no experience in such an undertaking, we ha ' e used our feeble powers as well as we were able to do under the circumstances, and if we can add one laurel to the former editions we will not have toiled without reward. Whatever may be its imperfections, we have endeavored faithfully to avoid mistakes. We are glad that our task is done, and proffer our most earnest thanks to those who have given helpful advice and contributed in any way to the subject-matter and appearance of this annual, thus aiding in anything of merit it may possess. In the brotherly spirit of college fellowship we present this volume, trusting that the facts given shall prove interesting and the jokes furnish enjoyment. We invite a perusal of our labors in kindliness to our deficiencies, and sincerely hope that in coming days this souvenir of college life— its scenes, sports, and achievements — during the year ninety-five will serve as a pleasant and inspiriting reminder of college days gone. Proud of the prosperity and progress of our Alma Mater, chronicled in the annals of educational history, we rejoice in the year ' s benefactions which will add to her great usefulness and power. In this centennial year may the alumni and friends rally to her support by extending the scope of influence. Her past success only gives promise of the possibilities of the future. We believe that the student-body is bound together by such friendly ties of regard and common sympathy that the best interests and welfare of the University are upon their minds and hearts. We are, with cordial respect and every good wish for the highest personal happiness and success of our readers, The Editors. f Mi 0| i B f islnri| of tbe ' Glnivcrsitv ' ot Tllortb Carolina. HE fouiKlation stones of the University of North Carohna were hiid in the darkest hour of the Revolution, after the defeat of the American army on Long Island, before the victories of Trenton and Princeton shed a ray of light into the general gloom. In enacting the fundamental law of the new free State, the patriots of 1776 saw that liberty could not exist among a benighted people. Hence we find in the constitution ratified in December of that year, All i ;,v useful learning shall be duly encouraged and promoted in one or more Universities. They realized the impossibility of ha ing public schools without teachers. They further realized that no government can be intelligently conducted without instructed leaders. Owing to the troublesome times of the war and the po ' erty which was its heritage, the University charter was not granted until 1789. The convention of the people sitting in the same town of Fayetteville, where the ( jeneral Assembly was legislating, in the same month voted to make North Carolina a member of the American Union. The Draughtsman of the charter was William Richardson Davie, an eminent lawyer who had been a gallant cavalry officer in the Revolution, after- wards Governor and Minister to France. By his influence, the land warrants granted to the Revolutionary soldiers, who had died without leaving heirs, were set aside on an endowment for the new institution. As these were to be located in West Tennessee, on lands then claimed by the Chickasaw Indians, it was long before they became a source of revenue. It was through Davie ' s powerful advocacy that the Legislature loaned |io,ooo (afterwards made a gift) to be expended in buildings. The Trustees met for organization December i8, 1789, Charles Johnson, of Chowan, grandtather of the late eminent Dr. Charles E. Johnson, of Raleigh, being the chairman of the meeting. Davie handed in warrants for 20,000 acres of West Tennessee lands, the gift of Benjamin Smith, a Revolutionary hero, afterwards Governor. At the next meeting, November 15, 1790, Col. William Lenoir, Speaker of the Senate, was made President of the Board of Trustees. It so happens that this excellent man, having on him scars received at King ' s Mountain, was the last survivor of the forty of North Carolina ' s best citizens who constituted the first Board of Trustees. At the meeting of the Board in August, 1792, held at Hillsborough, steps were taken to locate the Uni ersity. It was agreed to elect one commissioner from each of the eight judicial districts whose duty it should be to select a site within a circle ot thirty miles diameter. The center of this circle was to be chosen by the Board by ballot. The following centers were voted for : Raleigh in Wake County, Hillsborough in Orange County, Williamsboro in Granville, Goshen in Granville, Pittsborough in Chatham, Smithfield in Johnston, Cyprett ' s Bridge in Chatham. Cyprett ' s (or Cipritz) Bridge, now Prince ' s Bridge, on the Raleigh and Pittsborough road, over New Hope Creek, was adopted. The Commissioners of Location were Wm. Porter, of Rutherford ; John Hamilton, of Guilford ; Alexander Mebane, of Orange ; Willie Jones, of Halifax ; David Stone, of Bertie ; Frederick Hargett, of Jones ; Wm. H. Hill, of New Hanover ; James Hogg, of Cumberland, afterwards of Orange. Of these, Hargett, Mebane, Hogg, Hill, Stone, and Jones acted. They reported in favor of New Hope Chapel Hill, in Orange County, at which point 1180 acres had been donated by Col. John Hogan, Benjamin Yergin, Matthew McCauley, Alexander Piper, James Craig, Christopher Barbee, Edward Jones, Mark Morgan, John Daniel, and Hardy Morgan. The great-granddaughter of one of these (Mark Morgan), Mrs. Mary E. Moore, has recently donated to the University his old homestead and about 800 acres of valuable land. The first buildings were the Old East, the Old Chapel, or Person Hall and the President ' s dwelling, now o ccupied by Prof Gore. The cornerstone was 9 laid with imposing ceremonies on the 1 2th of October, 1793, by Wm. Richardson Davie, then Grand Master of the Masonic Fraternity. Rev. Dr. Samuel E. McCorckle, who in addition lO parochial duties, had a flourishing school called Zion-Parnassus at Thyatira, six miles west of Salisbury, was the Orator of the Day. The doors were opened for students on the 15th of January, 1795. Rev. Dr. David Kerr, acted as President, with the title of Presiding Professor. The winter was of extreme severity. Not a student was present. In a few days, Hinton James, of Wilmington, whose work as civil engineer may still be seen on the Cape Fear, appeared, the first student. By the end of the term in July, the members had increased to about one hundred. Rev. Dr. Kerr remained only one year, became a lawyer, and by the appoint- ment of Jefferson was the Federal Judge of the territory of Mississippi. The Professor of Mathematics, Charles W. Harris, was a superior man, but he went off into law and died early of pulmonary consumption. By his advice Rev. Joseph Caldwell, then a tutor at Princeton, was chosen Professor of Mathematics and Presiding Professor. In 1804 he was, on the motion of Wm. Gaston, afterwards an eminent Judge of the Supreme Court, made President. For years the young University rested almost entirely on his shoulders. Dr. Caldwell in 18 12, in order to have time to write a book on Geometry gave up the Presidency and confined himself to the Professorship of Mathematics. Rev. Robert A. Chapman, D.D., was then President until 1816, when he resigned the office to Dr. Caldwell, who held it until his death in 1835. Dr. Caldwell was an active and enlightened man. In 181 1 he traveled through the State and raised $[ 2,000 for finishing the South Building. In 1824 the Trustees sent him to Europe for the purchase of scientific apparatus, the affairs of the University being then in a prosperous condition. During the latter part of his term the institution was in great straits, but in the year of his death the lands owned by the institution in West Tennessee came into market, and after paying its debts left an endowment of about $150,000. Ex-Governor David L. Swain, began his administration in 1835 under favorable auspices. During the flush times between 1850 and i860 the number of students rapidly increased, reaching 461 in 1858. The Old East and the Old West buildings were enlarged one-third in 1848, Smith Hall (the Library) was finished in 1852, and the New East and New West buildings in 1S59. 10 When the Ci il War began nearly all of the students and one-third of the F ' aculty olunteered in defence of the South. Out of the ninety-five Freshmen of i857- ' 8 only ten remained to graduate; out of the eighty of the Freshmen of 1 858- ' 9 only one ; out of the sixty-eight Freshmen of 1 859- ' 60 only five. Still the Faculty under great privations kept the doors open until Kilpatrick ' s Cavalry in April 1865, rode into Chapel Hill. Although the endowment was lost, the doors were reopened in the summer of 1865 but the salaries of the professors not being paid, some of the ablest obtained work elsewhere and the number of students in i867- ' 8 w as only ninety-two. When the State government was reconstructed in July, 1868, the old Trustees were turned out of office, and the new set appointed under the constitution of that year vacated all the chairs. President Swain died the 27th of August, in consequence of being thrown from his buggy by a runaway horse. In the spring of 1869 the doors were again opened under a Faculty of which Rev. Dr. Solomon Pool was President. The experiment did not succeed, and in 1870 the exercises were suspended. In 1875 a new Board of Trustees, chosen by the General Assembly under an amendment to the constitution, elected a new Faculty, Rev. Dr. Charles Phillips being Chairman, and again invited students. The Secretary and Treasurer, Kemp P. Battle, succeeded in raising $20,000 mainly from the Alumni for the repair of the buildings, which was done under the superintendence of Mr. Paul C. Cameron. In 1S76 Dr. Battle was induced to accept the Presidency. In 1881 was procured from the General Assembly an annual appropriation of $5000, which added to $7500 a year interest on the Land Grant enabled the institution to expand to some extent. In 1885 was procured $15,000 a year in addition, but the succeeding General Assembly founded the Agricultural and Mechanical College, at Raleigh, and transferred to it the interest on the Land Grant, leaving the University $20,000 per annum, in addition to tuition and interest on endowment funds about $5000. In 1890, the History Chair was endowed with about $33,000 by Alumni and others, and Dr. Battle, being wearied with fifteen years of active executive duties resigned the Presidency and was unanimously elected Professor of History. Dr. George Tayloe Winston was the same year, 1891, with similar unanimity, made President. From 1877 to 1885 there were held by Uni ersity authorities Summer Normal Schools, attracting from three hundred and fifty to four hundred teachers and those preparing to teach. In 1885 Memorial Hall was dedicated ; in 1887 the Gymnasium was finished, and an addition made to Person Hall, the Chemical Building, and other laboratories fitted up. The Law School has been greatly enlarged and last year numbered sixty-six students. A Medical department has been added and a dissecting room erected. The Library room in Smith Hall has been fitted with alcoves and the libraries of the two Societies have been consolidated with that of the L niversitv. New Professorships have been added from time to time. In fine, the University ranks with the best. It has a flourishing Summer School for Teachers, one of Law, one of Geology, and one of Biology. It has a Scientific Society (the Mitchell), a Historical Society, a Shakespeare Club, a Philological Club, a C lee Club, and an Athletic Association. Hmumil nf If 04 iaroHiia. ESTABLISHED I793. Urustees. Gov. Elias Carr, Ex-officio, President. Hon. J. C. Scarborough, Ex-officio. Richard H. Battle, Secretary and Treasurer. A. B. Andrews, Richard H. Battle, Julian S. Carr, C. B. Aycock, A. D. Belts, W. H. S. Buro-wyn, Chas. A. Cook, Jno. D. Currie, W. S. Black, D.D. C. M. Cooke, R. T. Gray, R. A Doughton, T. J. Jarvis, LL.D. K. P. Battle, LL.D Chas R. Thomas, Marsden Bellamy, G. S. Bradshaw, Marion Butler, W. R. Allen, A. B. Andrews, R. H. Battle, Jacob Battle, J. P. Caldwell, Deceased. Executive Committee. Go -. Elias Carr, Chairman, ex-officio. John W. Graham, Thos. S. Kenan, R. H. Lewis, M D , 1895. Geo. Davis, LL.D., W. T. Faircloth, M. H. Holt, Jno. W. Graham, h. a. Gudger, Thos. M. Holt, Wm. Johnston, A. Leazer, W. S. Long, C. D. Mclver, 1897. H. C. Jones, Wallace Riddick, P. D. Gold, Robt. W. Scott, P. L. Murphy, M D , F. S. Spruill, Wm. J. Peele, N. A. Sinclair, Wm. D. Pruden, F. H. Busbee, B. Cameron, Jno. W. Fries, R. M. Furman, Thos. S. Kenan, Julian S. Carr, Wm. H. Day, S. M. Finger, R. D. Gilmer, A. W. Graham, J. L. Stewart, 1899. 1901. R. H. Lewis, M.D. J. A. Mclver, W. N. Nebane, A. H. Merritt, J. D. Murphy, A. W. Haywood, Wm E. Hill, E. Jones, T. A. McNeill, Thos. Mason, C. D. Mclver, J. C. Scarborough, Jas. W. Wilson. H C. McMillan, J. Manning, LL.D. R. B. Peebles, Sol. C. Weill, F D Mnston. I. R. Stravhorn, S. McD. fate, N. J. Rouse. J. W. Todd, M.D., H. D. Williamson. Fred Phillips, J. L. Patterson, Jno W. Starnes, Z.B.Vance,LL.D. Jas, W. Wilson. Paul B. Means, Lee S. Overman, Jas. Parker, D.D. T. H. Pritchard, D G. Worth. XhuiB , GEORGE TAYLOE WINSTON, LL.D. President and Professor of Political and Social Science. Student, U. N. C., 1866-6S ; B. Litt., Cornell, 1874 ; AM., Davidson College ; Instructor Math , Cornell, 1874-75 ; Assistant Professor Literature, U. N. C, 1875-76 ; Professor Latin and German, 1876-85 ; Professor Latin, 1885-gi ; President U. N. C, 1891; President N. C. Teachers ' Assembly, 1879-88; LL.D., Trinity College, N. C. ; Phi Soc ; X l Fraternity ; PBK Society. KEMP PLUMMER BATTLE, LL D. Professor of History. A.B., U. N. C, 1849; Tutor Math., 1850-54; A.M., 1852; LL.D.; Lawyer, 1854-75 ! Member Convention, 1861 ; President Chatham R. R. ; President State Agricultural Society ; Author ; President U. N. C, 1875-91 ; Professor History, 1891 ; Di Soc. FRANCIS PRESTON VENABLE, Ph D Professor of General and Analytical Chemistry. University of Virginia, 1874; University of Bonn, 1879; A.M. ; Ph.D. ; University Gottingen, 1881 ; Attended University of Berlin, 1889 ; Fellow London Chemical Society ; Member Cierman Chemical Society, American Association for Achancement of Science, American Public Health Association. Has published |)a])ers in the following periodicals : American Journal Analytical Chemistry, Elisha Mitchell Scieyitific Society Journal, Journal oj A nerican Chemical Society, North Carolina Medical Journal, London Chemical News, Berichte der Deutschen Chem- ischer Gesellschaff, Chetniker- Zeitung , American Jouryial of Science; Author Qualitative Chemical Analysis; History of Chemistry; Chemist to N. C. Geological Survey ; N. C. Board of Health ; Phi Soc. ; J A ' ii ' Fraternitv COLLIER COBB, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy. A.B., Harvard, 1889; Student U. N. C, 1880-81 ; Principal Waynesville Academy, 1881-83 ; Teacher in Wilson Graded Schools, 1883-85 ; Superintendent, 1885-86 ; Student at Marine Biological Laboratory, Annisquam 1885 ; Harvard, 1886-92 ; Assistant Geologist, U. S. Geological Survey, 1886 ; Assistant in Geology, Harvard, 1888-90 ; Instructor in Summer School of Geology, Harvard, 1891 ; Instructor in Geology and Palaeontology, Mass. Institute of Technology, 1890-92 ; Lecturer in Boston University, 1891-92 ; Assistant Professor of Geology, U. N. C, 1892-93 ; Professor Geology, 1893 ; Phi Soc. WILLIAM CAIN, C.E. Professor of Mathematics and Engineering. Graduated N. C. Military and Polytechnic Institute, 1866 ; Active Engineer- ing Work, 1866-74 ; Professor Mathematics and Engineering, Carolina Military Institute, 1874-80; Railway Locating, 1880-82; Professor Mathematics and En- gineering, U. _N. C, 1889. Has written several treatises on Arches, Bridges, and Retaining Walls; Contributor to Van Nostrand ' s Magazine and other scientific journals ; Mem. Am. Soc. C. E. ; Phi Soc. 14 JOSHUA WALKER GORE, C.E. Professor of Natural Philosophy. Richmond College, 1871-73; C. E., University Virginia, 1875; Fellow in Mathematics, Johns Hopkins University, 1876-78 ; Professor Natural Science, South- western Baptist University, 1878-81 ; Assistant Professor Mathematics. University Virginia, 1881-82; Professor Natural Philosophy, U. N. C, 1882; Phi Soc. KA (southern). HON. JOHN MANNING, LL.D. Professor of Law. A.B., U. N. C, 1850; A.M., LL.D., 1883; General Assembly; Member Convention, 1861 ; Member Congress, 1871-73; Convention to Codify Statute Laws of North Carolina, 1881 ; Professor Law, U. N. C, 1882 ; Phi Soc. REV. THOMAS HUME, D.D., LL.D. Professor of English Language and Literature. A.B., Richmond College; A.M., Richmond College; Graduate University Virginia ; D.D., Richmond College ; LL.D., Wake Forest ' College ; Professor Latin and English, Chesapeake College ; Principal of Petersburg (Va.) Classical Institute ; Principal of Roanoke Female College ; Professor of Latin and English, Norfolk College ; author of Hints and Side Lights to the Study of Shakespeare, and many other pamphlets, etc. ; Phi Soc. WALTER DALLAM TOY, M.A. Professor of Modern Languages. University Virginia, M.A., 1882 ; University Leipsic, 1883 ; University Berlin, 1883-84; University France (la Sorbonne), Paris, 1885 ; College de France, Parish 1885 ; author Text Books ; Phi Soc. ; A ' ' ' Fraternity. RICHARD HENRY WHITEHEAD, M.D. Professor of Anatomy and Materia Medica. A.B., Wake Forest College; M.D., University Virginia: Phi Soc. ;- i A Fraternity (Southern). REV. HENRY HORACE WILLIAMS, A.M., B.D. Professor of Mental and Moral Science. A.M., U. N. C, 1883 ; B.D., Yale, 1888 ; Williams Fellow, Harvard, 1889; Professor Mental and Moral Science, U. N. C, 1890 ; Member Harvard Philosophic Club ; Phi Soc. I K1 Fraternity. HENRY VAN PETERS WILSON, Ph.D. Professor of Physiology and Biology. A.B., Johns Hopkins, 1883; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1888; Member Johns Hopkin s Alumni Association ; Member American Society Naturalists ; Member American Morphological Society ; Member Boston Society Natural History. KARL POMEROY HARRINGTON, A.M. Professor of Latin Language and Literature. A.B., Wesleyan University, 1882 ; A.M., Wesleyan University, 1885 ; Student University of Berlin, 1887-89 ; Traveled and Studied in Greece and Italy, 1889 • Graduate Student, Yale, 1890-91 ; Teacher of Greek and Latin, Public High School, ' Westfield, Mass., 1882-85; Professor Latin, Wesleyan Academy, 1885-87; Latin Tutor, Wesleyan University, 1889-91 ; Professor of Latin, U. N. C, 1891 ; Author of ' ' Helps to the Intelligent Study of College Preparatory Latin; Editor roth edition of the songs of the Psi Upsilon Fraternity; Vi ' ; Mystic Seven; l BK; Phi Soc. IS JOSEPH AUSTIN HOLMES, B.S. Lecturer on Geology of North Carolina. B.S., Cornell, 1874 ; State Geolog-ist. EBEN ALEXANDER, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Greek Language and Literature. A.B., Yale, 1873 ; Ph.D. (Honorary) Maryville College, 1886 ; Instructor in Ancient Languages, University Tennessee, 1873-77 • Professor Ancient Languages, LIniversity Tennessee, 1877-86; Professor Greek, U. N. C, 1886; Di Soc. ; ' I ' T ; Skull and Bones ; Minister to Greece, Roumania, and Servia, on leave of absence from the University. EDWIN ANDERSON ALDERMAN, Ph.B. University of North Carolina, Professor of the History and Philosophy 01 Education, 1882 ; Principal Goldsboro High School, 1882-85 ; vSuperintendent Golds- boro Graded Schools, 1885-Sg ; President of North Carolina Teachers ' Assembly, 1885-86, 1886-87 ; Superintendent Asheville Normal School, 1885-87 ; Super- intendent Newton Normal School, 1888 ; State Institute Conductor, 1889-92 ; Professor of History and Literature, State Normal and Industrial School, 1892-93 ; Professor of the History and Philosophy of Education, University of North Carolina, 1893 ; Corresponding Secretary Saunder ' s Historical Society ; Corresponding Member Maryland Historical Soci ety ; I ' KI. CHARLES BASKERVILLE, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry. B.S., U. N. C, 1892 ; Student University Mississippi, 1888 ; University Virginia, 1889; Vanderbilt Lhii ersity, 1890; L niversity Berlin, 1893; Ph.D., U. N. C, 1894 : Phi .Soc, J v ' Fraternity. FRANCIS K. BALL. Professor of Greek Language and Literature. A.B., Harvard University, 1890; A.M., ibid. 1891 ; Ph.D., ibid, 1894; Instructor in Latin, ibid, 1892-93. THOMAS R. FOUST. B.E. Instructor in Mathematics. B.E., U. N. C, 1892 : Principal Clinton (N. C.) High School, 1893 ; Di Soc; (I ' l ' A Fraternitv. THOMAS J. PUGH, A.B. Instructor in Latin. A.B., U. N. C, 1893 ; AH(l . Phi Soc GEO. S. WILLS, Ph.B., N. Instructor in English Language and Literature. HERMAN H. HORNE, Phi., A6(l . Instructor in Modern Languages. GEO. H. KIRBV, 2A ' . Assistant in Biological Laboratory. CHARLES R. TURNER, I KI A P. Assistant in Physical Laboratory. THOMAS CLARKE, Assistant in Chemical Laboratory. 16 Class ©rgantsation. 7 ilass 4 ' 95. Edward Warren Myers . p. c r z ' William Jackson Weaver Daniel K. McRae . Holland Thompson 3 ' 77 Herbert Bingham . Charles Faucette Tomlinson James Osborne Carr Colore. I ' iuk and Light Blue. l!Jcl[. Boom, Rah, Rae ! Boom, Rah, Rive, Sizz ! Boom! Tiger! Nine-ty-five-e ! flDotto. Cor I nitm. Viae Diversae. ©fficers. President. Vice- President. Secretary- Treasurer. Historian. Prophet. Poet. Orator. ]S nskr i of ' 96. OON the Class of ' 95 will be no lono;er an active factor in college life. Four years are ended, and an e -entful four they have been. The class and the administration of George Tayloe Winston began together, and they have grown together in strength and influence. The years have been years of growth and development. As the present strong, self-reliant executive has come from the scholarly Professor of Latin, so the thirty- nine men of ' 95 to-day are a part of the eighty-eight boys that began college life so short a while ago. ' ' • Greater in numbers than any other class since the reopening, it contains, perhaps, a larger proportion of honor men than any for many years ; possibly, the largest percentage in the history of the institution, but other opportunities for culture than those afforded by books have not been neglected. The influence of the class has been decidedly felt in all phases of the Uni •ersity life. It has not hesitated to discard precedent when adherence would ha -e cramped the expanding lite, but it has established better customs instead. While the channel of college life has been widened, yet the workers have been conservative. Above all, the members have culti ' ated self-respect, and next, respect and love for the Uni ersity. But the course here is done. That the time spent here in our little world has gi en us power to work better in the broader scope and fiercer competition of the great world without, and ability to meet the presented issues squarely, is our parting hope. H. T. 19 This list gives address, age, weight, height, intended profession, membership, or organizations, and honors taken during the course. Alexandf.r, Joe Eli, Columbia, N. C; 20 years ; 130 lbs., 5 feet, 7 inches ; Law ; Phi AOiI) ; Shakespeare Club ; Class Essayist, ' 9i- ' 92 ; Hi.storian, ' 92- ' 93 ; Vice-President, 93- ' 94 ; Sophomore and Junior Honors ; Representative Medal, ' 93 ; Inter-Society Debater, ' 94 ; Debater ' s Medal, Phi Society, ' 94 ; Editor irhite and Blue, ' 94 ; Editor-in-Chief, ' 94- ' 95. Allen, Wilmot B., Florence, S. C; 20 years ; 143 lbs., 5 feet, 9 inches ; Medicine ; Di ATi2 ; Shakespeare Club ; V. M. C. A. Bingham, Herbert, Mebane, N C; 22 years ; 140 lbs., 5 feet, lo inches; Teaching; -Di, Ben, AGO ; Y. M. C. A.; Shakespeare Club ; Declaimer ' s Medal, Di Society, ' 91 ; Represent- ative, ' 94 ; Marshal, ' 94 ; Editor Tar Heel, ' 94 ; Secretary, Class, ' 94 ; Prophet, 94- ' 95. Borden, Murray, Goldsboro, N. C; 19 years ; 130 lbs . =5 feet, 7 inches ; Undecided ; Phi, Zl ' , ONE ; Y. M. C. A.. German Club ; Marshal, 94. Bristol, Lucius M., Binghampton, N. Y.; 22 years ; 125 lbs., 5 feet, 6 inches ; Ministry, A AO t ; Director Mandolin and Banjo Clubs. Broc den, Lautrec Cranmer, (ioldsboro, N. C; 23 years ; 125 lbs., 5 feet, 6 inches ; Teaching; Phi; Y. M. C. A.; Class Prophet, 9i- ' 92 ; Orator, ' 92- ' 93 ; Representative, 94; Library Assistant, ' 94- 95. Brown, Thomas Evans Westman, Asheville. X. C; 21 years ; 140 lbs., 5 feet, 6 inches ; Undecided ; Di, Ben ; Shakespeare Club, Marshal, ' 93. Bryant, Henry Edward, Pineville. N. C; 22 years; 162 lbs., 5 feet, 8 inches ; Law; Di ; Shakespeare Club ; Class Elssayist, ' 92- 93 ; Editor U hite and Blue, ' 94. Carpenter, George Humphrey, P anklin, N. C; 25 years ; 175 lbs., 6 feet, 2 inches ; Law ; Di ; Y. M. C. A.; Shakespeare Club ; Scrub Foot-Ball Team. Carr, Frederick Louis, Greene County, N. C; 21 years ; 160 lbs., 6 feet, 1% inches ; Law; Di, 2N, AB ; Shakespeare Club ; German Club ; Sophomore and junior Honors ; Editor Magazine, ' ()yg=) Editor-in-Chief Hellenian, ' 94 ; Library Director, ' 94- ' 95 ; President Inter- Society Debate 95 ; Secretary, A0 J , ' 94-95. Carr, James Osborne, Duplin County ; 25 years ; 160 lbs , 5 feet, 11 inches ; Law ; Phi ; Y. M. C. A.; Shakespeare Club ; Class Poet, 91-92 ; Representative, ' 94 ; Junior Honor ; Editor While and Blue, ' 94- ' 95 ; Editor Tar Heel, ' 95 ; R. G. Class Foot- Ball Team, 94 ; Inter-Society Debater, ' 95. Farrell, |ohn Thomas, Graham, N. C; 27 years ; 195 lbs., 6 feet, 1% inches ; Teaching ; Di ; Shakespeare Club ; L. G. Class Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. Graham, William Alexander, Hillsboro, N. C. ; 20 years ; 147 lbs., 5 feet, 8 inches ; Medicine ; Zt, ONE, Gimghoul ; Ball Manager, ' 93 ; Chief Ball Manager, ' 94 ; Vice-President German Club, ' 93- ' 94 ; Class President, 93- 94 ; F. B. Class Football Team, ' 94. Horne, Herman Harrel, Clayton, X. C. ; 20 years; 154 lbs., 5 feet, 7 inches; Teaching; Phi, AH ; Y. M C. A.; Shakespeare Club; ' ice-President Class, ' 9i- ' 92 ; De- claimer ' s Medal, Phi Society, ' 93 ; Sophomore and Junior Honors ; Inter-Society Debater, ' 94 ; Representative Medal, ' 94 ; Magazine Essay Prize, ' 94 ; PZssayist ' s Medal, Phi Society, ' 94 ; Vice-President Y. M. C. A., ' 93- ' 94 ; President, ' 94- ' 95 ; Instructor in PYench, ' 94- ' 95 ; President, A(W , ' 94- ' 95 ; Introductoiy Washington ' s Birthday Orator, 95. Howell, Harry, Goldsboro, N. C; 19 years ; 137 lbs., 5 feet, 8 V inches; Teaching; Phi, Zt, Ae } , Gimghoul ; Shakespeare Club; Y. M. C. A.; Class Historian, ' 9i- ' 92 ; Business Manager Hellenian, ' 94 ; Junior Honors ; Editor Tar Heel, ' 94 ; Business Manager, ' 94- ' 95 ; Assistant Manager Base-Ball Team, ' 95 ; Glee Club, ' 95. Kimball, Ashbel Brown, Hargrove, N. C; 21 years; 140 lbs., 5 feet, 5 inches; Journalism ; Phi ; Shakespeare Club ; Class Secretary, ' 9i- ' 92 ; President, ' 92- ' 93 ; Glee Club, ' 9i- ' 93 ; Marshal, 94 ; Business Manager White and Blue, ' 94 ; Editor, Ditto, ' 94- ' 95 ; Editor- in-Chief, Ditto, ' 95 ; Editor Tar Heel, 95. Kluttz, William Clarence, Salisbury, N. C; 19 years ; 146 lbs., 5 feet, 8 inches ; Medicine; Di, V ■, Y M. C. A.; Pitcher, Class Base-Ball Team; Business Manager Hellenian, ' 95 LiNDSEV, Dudley, Frankfort, Kv.; 21 years ; 156 lbs., 6 feet, 4 inches ; Undecided ; Di, AKE, AG , Gimghoul ; Y. M. C. A.; Shakespeare Chib ; Glee Club, ' 93- ' 95 ; Junior Honors ; Manager and End Class Football Team, ' 94 ; Editor-in-Chief Hellenian, ' 95. Little, Thomas Robinson, Little ' s Mills, N. C; 20 years; 155 lbs., 5 feet, 10 inches; IMedicine ; Di, ATi2 ; Gimghoul ; Shakespeare Club; V. M. C. A.; (iernian Club; Vice- President Y. M C. A, ' 9i- ' 92 ; President (ierman Club, 93- ' 95 ; Editc r Hellenian, ' 94; Junior Honors ; President xMedical Class, ' 94- ' 95 ; End, Class Eootball Team, ' 94. McAlister, John Worth, Ashboro, N. C; 21 years ; 138 lbs., 5 feet, 6yi inches ; Un- decided ; Di, ATi2 ' ; Gimghoul ; Shakespeare Club; Y. M. C. A.; Treasurer, Y. M. C. A., 93- ' 94 ; Glee Club, 93- ' 94 ; Secretary Athletic Association, ' 95. McAlister, William Claudius, Tatum, S. C; 24 years ; 170 lbs., 5 feet, 11 ' inches Di ; Second ice-President Class, ' 9i- ' 92. McRae. Daniel K., Laurinburg, N. C. ; 21 years; 140 lbs., 6 feet; Teaching; Di Y. M. C. A.; Shakespeare Club ; Class Secretar ' , ' 94- ' 95. Mattocks, John Edward; 20 years; 145 lbs., 6 feet, 2 inches; Teaching; Phi, -X Editor Hellenian, 93 ; I all Manager, ' 94 ; President Cycle Club, ' 94- ' 95. MooKE, John Allen, Oaks, N. C; 19 years ; 170 lbs., 5 feet, 434 inches ; Journalism Di ; Second Football Team, ' 93 ; Business Manager W nte and Bine, ' 94- ' 95 ; Business Manager Tar Heel, ' 95 ; R. H. B. Football Team, ' 94. Myers, Edward Warren, Washington, N. C; 21 years; 155 lbs., 5 feet, 8 inches; Engineering ; Phi, AKE. ONE, AH4 ; Gimghoul ; Ball Manager, ' 92 ; Chief Marshal, 94 ; Junior Honors ; Editor-in-Chief Tar Heel, ' 94-95 ; President Class, ' 94- ' 95 ; 2 B. Class Football Team, ' 94- Nicholson, David Flowers, Westbrook, N. C; 24 years ; 157 lbs., 6 feet ; Undecided ; Phi; Y. M. C. A.; Mandolin Club, ' 94- ' 95. Patterson, John Legerwood, Salem, X. C; Di, I ' AE, AG ; Gimghoul ; Shakespeare Club ; Mitchell Society ; Y. M. C. A.; Glee Club, ' 92- ' 95 ; Ball Manager, ' 93 ; Business Manager Glee Club, ' 93-94 ; Marshal, ' 94 ; Junior Honors ; Elditor Hellenian, ' 94. Ouickel, Augustus Lee, Lincolnton, N. C; 20 years ; 155 lbs., 5 feet, 9 ' 2 inches ; Law ; Di ; Shakespeare Club. Scott, William Levi, Greensboro, . C; Di Ben ; Ball Manager, ' 94. Steele, Robert Thomas Stephen, Rockingham, X. C; 21 years; 190 lbs., 6 feet; Medicine; -X, 9XE ; German Club; R. H. B. Foot-Ball Team, ' 93; ice-President German Club, ' 94-95 ; Tackle, Class Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. Thompson, Holland, Statesville, N. C. ; 21 years ; 173 lbs., 6 feet ; Teaching ; Di, Ae i ; Shakespeare Club ; Y. M C. A.; Secretary North Carolina Historical Society, ' 92- ' 95 ; Editor University Magazine, ' 93- ' 95 ; Class Historian, ' 93- ' 95 ; Junior Honors ; Library Director, ' 94- ' 9- ; Sub-Tackle Foot-Ball Team, ' 94 ; Washington ' s Birthday Orator, ' 95. Tomlinson, Charles Fawcett, Randolph County, N. C. ; B. S. Guilford College, ' 93 ; 23 years; iSo lbs., 5 feet io inches; Teaching; Di, ' J ' rA, AG ; Shakespeare Club; Class Poet, 94- ' 95 ; Centre, Class Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. Turner. Charles Root, Raleigh, X. C ; 19 years ; 159 lbs., 5 feet, % mches ; Den- tistry ; Phi, 1 K2, ONE, AB ; Gimghoul ; Shakespeare Club ; President, Class, ' 9i- ' 92 ; Secretaiy German Club, ' 92- ' 93 ; Ball Manager, ' 93 ; Business xManager Hellenian, ' 93 ; President Athletic Association, ' 94 ; Editor Hellenian, ' 94- ' 95 ; Captain Scrub Foot- Ball Team, ■94 ; Manager Base-Ball Team, ' 95. Weaver, William Jackson, Asheville, X. C; 21 years ; 160 lbs., 6 feet, 3 mches; Medicine , Di, BeiT ; Shakespeare Club ; Y. M C A.; Scrub Foot-Ball Team, ' 93 ; X ' ic -Presi- dent. Class, ' 94- ' 95 ; Captain, Class P ' oot-Ball Team, ' 94. Weil, Leslie, Goldsboro, X. C; 18 years ; 155 lbs., 5 feet, 7 inches ; Medicine ; Phi ; Shakespeare Club ; Chess Club Wicker, Walton Crump. Chapel Hill, X. C; A.B., Elon College, ' 93; :8 years; 135 lbs., 5 feet, 10 inches ; Phi ; Shakespeare Club. Worth, Hiram Ba, Guilford College, ' 94 ; Di ATS2 ; Y. M. C. A.; Shakespeare Club. Yount, Marshall Hill, Conover. X. C; 24 years ; 150 lbs., 6 feet, i inch ; Teaching ; Di; Shakespeare Club ; Editor Tar Heel, ' 94- ' 95 ; junior Honors. Zachary, Robert Edgar, Jeptha, N. C; 21 years ; 135 lbs., 5 feet, 8 inches ; Medicine ' . 1)1 ; Y. M. C. A ; Glee Club, ' 9t- ' 93. %wAiM ' y 2?; ; -y. . - rr-c ' ;rv luiuirs. Class Colors. Orange atid Crimson. 13en. Rah! Rah. ' Rah. ' Rah. ' Rah. ' Rix Siimus Populi! Nineiy-Six ! ©fficers. John C. EUer . Willam C. Smith . R. G. Allsbrook Walter H. Woodson J. G. Hollowell William R. Webb T. A. Sharpe . President. Vice-Preside7it. Orator. Historian. Essayist. Secretary- Treasurer. Prophet. l|islnri| nf ' 96. - N this, the University ' s centennial. ' 96 greets one and all with happy hopes Vf and gladsome confidence. In its endeavor to keep pace with others, and to ' nj touch shoulders with them in worthy comradeship and honorable ri alry, IV ' ' 96 has no ragged record to present. Our year ' s history is one of which we are proud, of which we boast with a good conscience. ' 95 boasts of her large numbers, the largest Senior Class since the w ar ; but with our fifty-six may we not expect to outri ' al e en 95 in the number of graduates? With our many predecessors, we give to Junior year its just award. For us it has been a year of pleasurable profit, a turning point in our college course, a long step forward, let us hope for each of us, on the road of true development and life. We have this year enjoyed larger liberties, wider experiences, — a fitting preparation, we hope, for the dignity of Seniority. The former factions which divided us have been fortunately united, and we present an unbroken front with a single set of class officers. In athletics we are easily supreme. With six men on the foot-ball team and a ' 96 man for captain next year, with four crack players on the base-ball team, with the champion tennis player of college, with men at the front in every department of college athletics, our class pride is not without foundation. Our class foot-ball team, though weakened by our strong representation on ' Varsity and scrub teams, was yet at the front in inter-class games, and might have won the championship, had the lull series been played. Not only, however, in athletics is the leadership of ' 96 felt. In scholarship we challenge favorable comparison with the best classes. Nine of our men are members of the honor society, Alpha Theta Phi. This, the great centennial of the University, anticipates a great commence- ment. The officers of this occasion are fortunately men of ' 96, and in the efficient and worthy men chosen for these duties abundant satisfaction and honor may be expected. To the University student each year appears his best and happiest. So it has been with ' 96, so may it be with her remaining year. May it witness the severance of few bonds of happiness, but the formation and strengthening of many more. Historian of ' 96. 23 mmr mm$ Allsbrook, Richard Gold, Scotland Neck. N. C; Sub-Marshal Coniniencenient, ' 95 ; Declaimer ' s Medal Phi Society, ' 94 ; orator Fresh. Class, ' 93 and ' 94. Aston, MacKay Bernard, Greenville, Tenn. ; Declaimer ' s Medal Di Society, ' 94; Rep. Di Society Com., ' 95 ; Di. Bahnson, Frederic P ries, Salem, N. C; Business Manager Hellenian, ' 95; Glee Club, ' 93, ' 94, and ' 95 ; Business Manager Glee Club, ' 95 ; Sub-Marshal Com , ' 95 ; German Club ; Di, ilAE. Baker, George Spencer, Louisburg, N. C; Essayist of Class ' 93 ; Phi. Batchklor, Van Astor, Nashville, N. C ; Rep. Phi. Society in Inter- Society Debate, ' 95 ; Rep. from Phi. Society Com., ' 95 ; Editor Hellenian, ' 95 ; Orator Fresh. Class ' 92 ; Phi, Beil. Braswell, Thomas Pleasant, Battleboro, N. C; Phi, K2. Brem, Walter Vernon, Charlotte, N. C; Manager of Class Foot-Ball Team for ' 95 ■ German Club ; Di, SN. Buie, Daniel Marcus, Clarkton, N. C. ; Phi. Bryson, Daniel Rice, Bryson City, N. C; President Tennis Association ; Tennis Cham- pion ; Di. Canada, John Willia.m, Summerfield, N. C ; Shakespeare Club; Rep. Di Society Com., ' 95 ; A04 ' ; Di. Carr, Edward Parrish, Durham, X. C; Sub-Marshal Com., ' 95 ; German Club ; AG ■ Di Zt. Carroll, JuDSON Clifford, Raleigh, N C; Sub-Marshal Com , ' 95 ; Phi, Bon. Clarke, Thomas, Winston, N. C; Ass ' t Chemical Laboratory. Cooke, Francis Neal, Louisburg, N. C; Editor of Hellenian, ' 94 ; Poet of Class ' 93 ; German Club ; Glee Club, ' 93 and ' 94 ; Phi, KA. Coble, John Hamilton, Laurinburg, N. C; Di. Coker, Robert Ervin, Darlington, S. C. ; Shakespeare Club ; Associate Editor University Magazine ; AB4 ; Di, Xl-. Eller, John Carlton, N. C ; President Class ' 93, ' 94, and ' 95; Editor of ]Vhite mid Blue; Rep. Di Society Com., ' 94 ; Rep. Di Society Inter-Society Debate, ' 95 ; .Sui)-Ball Manager Com. ' 95 ; Ae ; Di. Emry, Charles Ransom, Weldon, C; .Sul Ball Manager Com., ' 93 ; German Club ; Glee Club, ' 93 ; Mandolin Club, ' 94 ; Banjo Club. 94 ; Phi ; SN. Evans, Leslie Ball.and, Idaho, N. C; Phi. Graham, Eugene Berrier, Charlotte, X. C; L. F. and C F. ' Varsity Base-Ball Team ' 94 and ' 95 ; German Club ; ONE ; 2N. Gregory, Edwin Clarke, Halifax, N C ; First Vice-President of Soph. Class ' 94; Left- End ' Varsity Foot-Ball Eleven ' 94 ; Second Base ' Varsity Base-Ball Nine of ' 94 and ' 95 ; Chief Ball Manager Com.. ' 95; Sub-Ball Manager Com., ' 94; German Club; Editor University Magazine, ' 94 and ' 95 ; Editor Helleni.vx, ' 95 ; Floor Manager Oct. German, ' 94 ; Shake- speare Club ; Gimghoul ; AB ; Phi ; 7. . Guion, Louis Isaac. Charlotte, N. C; Foot-Ball Team, ' 92 and ' 9 ; Rt. Guard ' Varsitv Foot- Ball Eleven, ' 94 ; Elected Captain ' Varsity Foot-Ball Eleven for ' 95 ' ; Di, AKE. Gwyn, James Alfred, Spring Dale, N. C; Treasurer Class ' 93 ; Poet Class ' 94 ; Editor and Business Manager Hellenian, ' 04 : Ass ' t Business Manager Tar Heel, ' 9=; ; Manager Junior F oot-Ball Team ; BNE ; Di, BBH. A ' ' dJ- JC . ' 24 Hartv, Frank Rvan, Charlotte, N. C; German Club; Secretary and Treasurer of German Club, ' 93 and ' 94 ; ONE ; Di, 2AE. HoLLOWELL, James Gatling, Elizal:)eth City, N C; Essayist of Class ' 93; Phi, K2. Jenkins, Robert Paleman, Ellizabeth City, N. C; Ass ' t in Bioloj y, ' 94; Sub-Marshal Com , ' 95 ; Phi. KiRBY, George Hughes, Goldsboro, N. C; Editor White and Blue, ' 94; Sul Marshal Com., ' 95 ; Ass ' t in Biological Laboratory, ' 94 and ' 95 ; Phi ; SX. Lemly, William Belo, Salem, X C ; Di, 2AE. Little, Judge Elder, Long ' s Store, N. C; Foot-Ball Team, ' 93; Rep. Di Society in Inter-Society Debate, ' 95 ; Di. MacCall, Harllee, Statesville, N. C. ; Associate Editor Utiiversify Magazine, ' 95; Di, rA. Mitchell, Wayne Adolphus, Kinston, N. C; Phi. Node, John Francis, Shelby, N. C; Editor of Hellenian, ' 95 ; Sub-Marshal Com., ' 95 ; Ae ; nKA. Powers, Thomas, Tuckaloosa, Ala. ; Di. Rankin, James Guy, Asheville, N. C; Left-End ' Varsity Foot-Ball Team, ' 93 ; ' N ' arsit}- Foot-Ball Team, ' 94 ; Vice-President Athletic Association ; GNE ; Ben. Robbins, Alfred Hargrave, Lexington, X. C; Business Manager White and Blue ; Sub-Marshal Com., ' 95 ; Di. Roberson, Wescott, Chapel Hill, N. C; Phi. Sanford, Thomas Franklin, Mocksville, X. C; Editor Hellenian, ' 95 ; German Club ; Di ; KA. Shaffner, John Francis, Salem, X.C.; Chief Marshal Com., ' 95; German Club; Di, SAE. Sharp, Henry Talbot, Portsmouth, Va.; Di, 2AE, Sharpe, Thomas x-Vllen, PineYille, N. C. ; Centre-Rush, ' Varsity Foot-Ball Eleven, ' 94 ; Foot-Ball Team, ' 93 ; Prophet of Class, ' 93 ; Editor of the Tar Heel, ' 95 ; Di. Shannonhouse, Royal, Charlotte, N. C ; Sub-Marshal Com., ' 95 ; Di. Smith, William Cunningham, Greensboro, N C; Vice-President Class, Fresh. ' 92 and Soph. ' 93 ; Editor of White a?id Blue ; Shakespeare Club ; A9 |) ; Di. Stanly, Benjamin Edward, Kinston, X. C; Foot-Ball Team, ' 92 ; Quarter-Back ' Varsity Foot-Ball Eleven, ' 94 ; Short-Stop ' X ' arsity Base-Ball Xine, ' 93, ' 94, and ' 95 ; Sub-Marshal Com., ' 95 ; Glee Club, ' 94 and ' 95 ; Phi ; AKE. Stephens, George Gullett, Greensboro, X. C; President Y. M. C. A., ' 94; Pitcher ' Varsity Base-Ball Nine, ' 93, ' 94, and ' 95 ; L. H. B ' Varsity Foot-Ball Team Eleven, ' 94 ; President Athletic Association ; Di, 2N Webb, John Frederick, Stems, X. C; Shakespeare Club ; AG ; Di, -N. Webb, William Robert, Bell Buckle, Tenn.; Editor Tar fleet, ' 94; Editor University 3fagazine, ' 94 and ' 95 ; Editor Hellenian, ' 95 ; Vice-President Y. AL C. A.; Shakespeare Club; Captain ' College Second Eleven. ' 93; Captain Junior Eleven, ' 94; Glee Club, ' 93, ' 94, and ' 95 ; Manager Mandolin and Banjo Club, ' 94 and ' 95 ; Gimghoul ; AG ; Di, SN. White, Joseph H. rvey, Graham, X. C; Sub. on Foot- Ball Team, ' 94; Shakespeare Club; Di. White, James Samuel, Mebane, X.C.; Di Wittson, Girard Samuel, Charlotte, X C; Di, K2. Woodson, Walter Henderson, Salisbury, X. C ; Historian of Soph. Class, ' 94, and Junior Class, ' 95 ; Sub-Ball Manager Com., ' 95 ; Di, $rA. Yates, Charles Watson, Wilmington, X.C. ; Di, AKE. 25 vWi Hlhl,), : Uoi ' Liss n( ' 97, Colors. Red and Black. 7 « 7, Rah, Rah, Herculem, Nonagenta et Septem ! ! ! Darius Eatman Lawrence McRae . Fletcher H. Bailey Ralph H. Graves . Thomas J. Creekmore . John A. Butt . ©fficers. President. Vice-President. Stcreiary. Hisforian. Essayist. Orator. 26 ftslmm nil ' 97 HE Class of ' 97 on entering the University in the fall of ' 93, enrolled the largest number of members, which has been seen since ante-bellum days, and at the end of that session it counted a hundred and eighteen men. Of these, forty-eight failed to appear in September, but several new ones have helped to make up the loss. Our otherwise prosperous year has been greatly saddened by the death of two class-mates, William H. Green and James A. West, in both of whom the class has lost most promising members. Since our arrival at Chapel Hill, we have been second to none, either in the class room or on the ball field, and our men are among the first in every branch of college life. During the present year, we have for the most part busied ourselves in wishing to be through with Soph. Greek and Conies, and in longing for the days when all things shall be electi e ' and there will be no more March examinations. In the inter-class football games last fall, we took the second place, and have fair hopes of putting out a good ' ' nine ' ' this spring. On the whole we are passing our time -ery profitably, although one of the professors daily remarks that we are in the usual Sophomoric lethargy. 27 E. L. Abbott, •• Boot; Phi ; Scrub Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. James Addekton, Jim ; Di, I ' FA. A. T. Allen, Hard Times ; Di ; Soph. Foot- Ball Team ' 94 ; Undergraduate Honors, ' 94. J. H. Andrews, Cyclone; Di ; SAE ; German Club ; Sub-BairManager, ' 95; Sec ' y German Club, ' 94- 95. W. H. Austin, Chibiabos; Phi. E. E. Bagwell, Sportv; Phi ; Soph. Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. F. H. Bailev, Fletch i Di ; 2AE ; Soph. Editor U. N. C. Magazine ; Manager Soph. Foot-Ball Team, ' 94 ; Base-Ball Team, ' 94- ' 95 ; Vice President Fresh. Class. A W. Belden, Joe ; AKE ; Hi ; Scrub Base-Ball Team, ' 95. C. E. Best, Charley; Phi ; Poet Fresh. Class ; Undergraduate Honors, ' 94 R. S. BusBEE, Dick ; Phi ; Zt ; Hi ; Prophet Fresh. Class ; Soph. Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. J. A. Butt, Colonel ; Phi ; Rep. .Speaker, ' 95 ; Orator Soph. Class, ' 94- ' 95. D. VV. Carter, Devotion; Phi. H. C. Bear, Bruin. W. G. Clark ; Bill ; Phi ; AKE ; German Club ; Sub-Ball Manager, ' 95. M. S. Clifton, Clift ; Phi ; Soph. F ' oot-Ball Team, ' 94. H. G. Connor, Jr., Tobe ; Phi ; lilAE ; Soph. Editor U. N. C. Magazine ; P ' irst Vice- President Fresh. Class. Burton Craige, .Skinny ; Di ; ilST ; Hi; ; German Club ; Undergraduate Honors, ' 94. F.J. Creekmork, Cheekmore; Phi; Essayist of Fresh. Class, ' 94- ' 95 O X. Crinkley, Rinkle ; Di. L. P. J. CuTLAR, Pee-wee ; AKE. J. H. Daengerfield, Haigh ; Phi; ATi2 ; Sub-Ball Manager, ' 95 ; Glee Club, ' 94- ' 95. D. E.vfman, Darius ; Phi ; KA ; President Class of ' 97 in ' 93- ' 94 and ' 94- ' 95 ; Highest Undergraduate Honors, ' 94; Glee Club, ' 93- ' 94 ; Editor Tar Heel; Leader of Glee Club, ' 9V ' 95 A. H. Edgerton, Allie ; Phi ; 2X ; Hellenian Editor, ' 94- ' 95. J. L Everett, Johnny; 2N ; Glee Club, ' 94- ' 95 ; -Soph. Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. M. N. Falls, Rattler ; Di ; Scrub Foot-Ball Team, ' 94. R. S. Fletcher, Runt ; Di. W. Ferguson, Fergie; Di. A. R. Flowers, Beauty; Phi. E. Forshee, Genie; Di. R. R Gatling, Grand-pa; AKE. E. B. Grantham, Shad; Phi. R. H. Graves, Rachel ; Phi ; Z P ; Hi; ; Undergraduate Honors, ' 94 ; Historian Soph. Class ; Mandolin Club, ' 94- ' 95. V. M. Graves, Vic; Phi ; KA. W H. Green, Jr., Billy ; Di ; ilAE ; .Soph. Foot-Ball Team, ' 94 ; Died Feb. 20, 1895. J. T. Gregory, Jr., Hink ; Phi ; Zt. W. D. Grimes, Dempse ; Phi ; Zt ; Hi; ; Scrub P ' oot-Ball Team, ' 94. F. J. H.VYWOOD, Jr., Fab ; Phi ; Zt ; Soph. F ' oot-Ball Team, ' 94 ; German Club. S. H. Harris, Pig; Phi. E. B. Henderson, Congressman; Di. S. H. Hill, Senator; Phi;Zt; ns:; German Club; Sub-Varsity Base-Ball Team, ' 94- ' 95. • — W. W. Horne, Corporal; Phi; Ben ; flS ; Historian Fresh. Class, ' 93- ' 94. W.J. HoRNEV, Jack; Di. H. HoRNTHAL, Timmy; Phi; AKE. I. N. Howard, Wanamaker ; Phi. W. S. Howard, Stamps ; Phi ; AKE ; Floor .Manager German Club, Fall ' 94. 28 R. H. Hubbard, Dick; Phi. • F A loHXSON Bo ; Ben ; ni ; German Club. , , , , t- • t- t f ' .B. ' Johnson, Ferdie ; AKE ; Rv ; Rase-Ball Team (sub), ' 95; Essayist Fresh. Class. ,, . J. W. Johnson, Ladiesman ; rlii. A. L. Jones, Farmer; I)i ; X. C E loNES, Glass Eye ; t! F. Kluttz, Jr., Theo; Di ; 2N ; Soph. Foot-Ball Team, 94. W. C. Lane, ' ' Cobbie; Phi. G. P. LaRoque, Rook; Phi. W. D. Leggett, Leg ; Phi. J. B. LiNDSEY, Little Legs; AKE. F. M. London, Madame; Di ; -AE. J. D. Lentz, Co-op; Di. J. A. Long, Greece ; Phi. L. O. Love, Set; Di. , -V C McAdoo, Timothy; Di ; Ben. r-i u T. ' G. McAlister, Gipf Di ; ATS2 ; Hi ; Soph. Foot-Ball Team, ' 94 ; German Club. D. McIvER, Mc ; Di. P R McFadven, Old Duck; Phi. , , , n,f i 1 R W. McMullan, Maxima; Phi; Zt ; Glee Club, ' 93- ' 94 and ' 94- ' 95 ; Mandolm Club, ' 94- ' 95 ; Undergraduate Honors, ' 94. T ' McRae ' ' s1v Fox° ' ATii ; ns ; Scrub Foot-Ball and Base- Ball Teams, ' 94- ' 95- , A. W. Mangum, Liar ; Zt ; HZ ; Glee Club, ' 93- ' 94 and ' 94- ' 95 ; Banjo Club, 94- 95 ; Scrub Base-Ball Team, ' 94- ' 95- M.Mansfield, Old Manse; Phi. , ,. , , , JVV. S. Myers, Billy ; Di ; Bon ; Mandolm Club, ' 94- 95- O. Newby, Skeat; Phi. W. J. Nichols, Nick ; Phi. W T. Parrott, Headlight; Phi. W D. Price, Kildee ; Di ; Scrub Base-Ball Team, 94- 95. R. Ragan, Hatchet; Di ; Rep. Speaker, ' 95. T A. Robertson, Sonny ; Phi. T R Robertson, Ross ; KA ; Base-Balll eam, 94. M. SCHENCK, Mike ; Di ; AE ; German Club. S. B. Shepherd, Shep ; Phi ; AKE ; Capt. Soph. Foot- Ball! eam, 94. T. F. Simmons, Tommy ; Phi. u 1- . n u D B Smith D. B; Di ; Editor White and Blue ; Soph. Foot-Ball Team. p ' I Thomas Funk ; ' AKE ; Mandolin and Banjo Clubs. ' 94- ' 95 ; German Club. CTORRENCE, Crown ; Di ; Secretary and Treasurer Fresh Class, 93-94- , W. Underhill, Joshua ; Phi ; Soph. Foot-Ball Team, ' 94 ; Undergraduate Honors, 94. James A. West, Died. Lionel Weil, Dutchman ; Phi. R V. Whitener, Professor; Di. B Wilkinson, Wilkes; Di ; HKA. A. F. Williams, Bill ; Phi. , , r. „ H. T. Winston, Wince ; Phi ; KA ; Soph. Foot-Ball Team, 94. E. P. Wooten, ' Woot ; Phi. S W. Worthington, Sambo; Phi. y. S. Wrav, Glassfront; Di; nKA. ■R H Wright, Bean Pole; Phi; Scrub Foot-Ball Team, 94. T L Wright Tom; Phi; Editor White and Blue. 29 --_ ' ' ( == E. K. Graham . W. G. Peace 3. ' ' P. R. Slocomb . Hartley Skinner R. R. Handy . F. O. Rogers H. P. Harding . im 4 98. Colors. Ora7ige and Black. Icll. Che-ra Re Ha ! Che-ra Re Ha ! Eight and Ninety, Sis, Boom, Bah! flDotto. Dmn vivimus, vivamus. ©fficers. President. Vice-President. Secretary. Historian. Poet. Prophet. Orator. hu n ' 98, HE Fresh class luimbered a hundred and thre men in the faul most of whom returned after the Christmus holodays. 8 new men came in after christmus fetching the role upto 1 1 1 , The class of gty-ate though no cheekier than the average fresh class Q) has had every thing from the first day of our arival to make her so. our flatering reseption at the train by the y. m. c. a. (?) comitte was enouf to create in our MINDS very exalted opinions of our own empor- tance. not-with-standing (t gigantic proporsions these opinions asumed the sofomores allowed them to go through the natural process of shrincage and Evaporashun unaded, And only in extreem cases did They assist by word and deed (allways kindly and gently) in hastening to bring about the desired result i. e. the meak and lowly freshman. When one Sofimore became two filanthropic in this work of reconstructing the Freshman from the green and raw material and was remonstrated with by the fackulty the whole fresh class signed a petision for the tackulty to forgive him. this same enthoosiasm was the indirect cause for holding our first class Meeting. Some of the newspapers said that their was Hazing at the university, so the Fresh Class met and passed resolutions to the affect that the reports w ere without any foundation whatever. It is uncertain who drew up those resolutions. our first class Flexion was an impromptu affair, the men were hurredly drumm-ed up. the sofimores asisted materially in this work and afterwards kindly retired from the room, when the House was called to order, they entered in a body and the usual cerimonys were gone through with. Immediately after this unsuccesfull meeting a croud of energetic spirits went round among the boys and announced that an Flexion would be held that same night, the sofs tho not invited did us the Honor to turn out in full force, but the room was two small to hold both classes so We thought it best to prevent there entrance untill after the Flexion was o ' er, I do not know of anuther case on record where a fresh class have succeeded in carrying out it ' s Flexions so early in the year and at the first real attempt — certanley their is not a recent paralel. President graham called the class together early in febuary for the purpose of adopt- eng class colors, yell and motto, a HISTORIAN was allso chosen at this meeting, febuary 22nd was an eventfuU date in the class History. The exersizes on that day were excedingly interesting and were enjoyd by all. except for the fact that their had benn a plentifuU fall of snow we might have become to exsited and over-heated. As it was — we all kept thuraly cool Many freshmen that day received metals for there qualitys and accomplishments, but I am glad to be able to state that we shared the honors with the upper classmen (a senior was awarded a metal for the Tipical Fresh- man ) may we go through college and through life taking our share of the honors and triumphs and allso generusly sharing them with others is the hope of the Historian of ' 98. Reader will please excuse all errors in spelling and punctuation, as the above was written by a Freshman with special request that no changes be made in the manuscript. — Editors. hu nf ' 98. Class IRoll, J. E. Andrews, E. S. Askew, J A. Baird, H. H. Bass, M. D. Bailey, B. C. Best, J. P. Creedlove, W. J. Brogden, E. L. Brooks, J. P. Canaday, T. T. Candler, C. S. Carr, Eugene Carroll, J. M. Carson, Oscar Carver, S. P. Cooper, Fanning Craig, C. R. Dey, J. K. Dozier, Peter Elly, Adam Empie, D. A Everett, L. Eure, A E. Farrior, G. L. Ferguson, Jr. J. B Ferguson, R. E. Follin, E. K. Graham, Joseph Graham, W. S. Green, (1 ( T- Francis Gudger, R. R. Handy, H. P. Harding, A. B. Harrell, G. A. Harrell, W. G. Haywood, A. Henderson, L. W. Huff, D. M. Johnson, C. H. Johnson, C. E. Jones, C. C. Joyner, R. E. Kearney, S. W. Kenny, E. B. King, H S Lake, F. Lomer, Robt. Lassiter, K. L. Lowing, R. F. Lanier, R. H. Lewis, Jr. Chas. Maxwell, 32 W. E. McSwain, J. G. McCormick, A. D. McLear, E. W. McNairy, J. J. McNeely, F. W. Miller, E. Moize, J. C. Moore, J. G. Murphy, J. R. Murphy, G. E. Newby, . f T. M Newland, E. J. Brixon, J. W. Norwood, Frank Page, G. L. Park, J. D. Parker, W. G. Peace, H. F. Pearce, W. E. H. Pickard, F. M. Pinnix, F. W. Powers, L. C Quickie, F. O. Rogers, George Ruffin, W. T. Rucker, E. E. Sams, Bartley Skinner, y, . R. Slocomb, J. B. Smith, _ , X. B. Southerland, J. D. Sowerby, f. M. Stevenson, P. M. Suttle, W. H. Swift, G. K. Tate, J. H. Tucker, J. M. Turner, E. L. Utley, W. L. Usrey, J. J. Van Noppen, G. McD. Van Poole, H. G. Walker, Jas. Webb, jr. T. X. Webb, W. D. Welch, P. C. Whitlock, F. C. Williams, J. iM. Walker, A. R. Winston, C. G. Winstead, E. J. Wood, Graham Woodard. 33 am un. (1., (J G. H. Price . D. T. Edwards -.T. S. Rollins . D. C. Bradwell O. H. Dockery Earnest Shuford J. N. Hill _ 4 . f-fW. E. Breese Dr. John Manning ' resident. Vice-Prcside7it. Secretary and Treasurer. Hisforiatt. Judge of Moot Court. Associate Judge of Moot Court. Clerk of Moot Court. Sheriff. fudge of Appellate Court. 34 l|islar nf ll ii Jtitiu Slass. HP other members of the law class will agree with the historian that the history of the present class does not begin with its members, but witli our ])receptor, loved by all of his boys as he calls us. The Honorable John Manning was born at Edenton, July 30, m p 1S30. His father was Captain John Manning, of the U. S. Navy. 9. On the passage of the ordinance of secession, Captain Manning resigned his position in the navy and tendered his services to his nati e State. He was commissioned a commander of the navy of North Carolina, but in a short time his health gave way and he resigned his commission and resided at Pittsboro, N. C, where he died. Dr. Manning graduated from the University in 1850. In September, 1850, he accompanied his father to South America ; returned in July, 1851 ; read law and was licensed by the Supreme Court in June, 1853, and in 1854 settled in Pittsboro. He was married in 1856 to Miss Louisa J. Hall, eldest daughter of Dr. Hall, of Pittsboro, and granddaughter of Judge John Hall, late of the Supreme Court. He was a delegate to the convention of 186 1 ; volunteered in the first company that went to the war from Chatham ; was elected First Lieutenant and appointed Adjutant of the Fifteenth Regiment of Volunteers. In October, 1861, he was nominated by Judge Biggs and appointed by President Davis Receiver of the Confederate States, and resigned his position in the army. He was opposed to the secession of the State, and in the convention of 1861 he voted to substitute Judge Badger ' s ordinance for the ordinance of secession, and failing in that and seeing that war was inevitable, he voted to submit the ordinance of secession to the State for ratification. In 1870 he was elected to the Forty-first Congress as a Democrat from the Fourth District. He was elected to the Constitutional Convention of 1875, and was Chairman of the Committee on Privileges and Elections. In 1880 he was a member of the General Assembly and was Chairman of the Judiciary Committee. He was elected by the General Assembly one of the Commissioners to revise the 35 statute laws of the State. In 1881 he was chosen Professor of Law in the University. The degree of LL.D. was conferred on him in 1882 by the University. The historian is indebted to Mr. Jerome Dowd for this sketch of Dr. Man- ning ' s hfe taken from Sketches of Prominent Living North Carohnians. No student having Dr. Manning ' s certificate has e ' er failed before the Supreme Court of North Carolina. The largest number of law students e er collected at the University is justly claimed by the present class since September, 1894. The number being sixty-eight. In athletics the law class has done much for the University. One of our number was manager of the ' 94 Foot Ball Team. Two of our number played on the team. One of our number represented us against the famous tennis players of Yale Unixersity. Another member ot our class is the captain of the Track Athletic Team. The class is said to ha ' e done mcjre work in the study ot law than any ot its predecessors, biU that gloom in these latter days which always darkens the path of a young lawyer will undoubtedly visit us. But in accomplishing so much the class has taken unto itself a great deal of that time which Morpheus calls his own. It is our sincerest hope that Manning Hall, which Dr. Winston spoke of at a bancjuet in his honor, will not be an air castle, and betore manv weary moons we hope there will be such a buikling here tor the manv who will come after we are gone to tight the battles of life in this cold, cold workl. And now, fellow students, at this critical moment of our li ' es, and in con- clusion, we .say good-bye in sorrow and in joy. In sorrow, because we part. In joy for it is, we hope, tor the making of the better man. Hlsforiax of ' 95. 36 Jinut ikss l nll G. G. Anderson, C. D. Bennett, ' D. C. Bradwell, H. C. Bridgers, T. D. Bryson, O. H. Dockery. D. T. Edwards, G. M. Graham, a ( ,7T.W. B. Guthrie, F. C. Harding, L. T. Hartsell, J. X. Hill, S S. Jackson, E. Landis, T. H Long, C. M. McCorkle, W. D. Merritt, E. J. Moffet J. P. Pippin, G. H. Price, J. X. Pruden, J f . S. Rollins, 1894 5, E. D. Stanford, W. E. Shuford, R. E, L. Watkins, A. H. White, T. L. Green, S. F. Austin, R. M. Johnston, J. W. McXeil, Z. I. Waltzer, A. B. Andrews, S. A. Ashe, T. B. Benbow, J. T. Benbow, J. C. Biggs, R. L. Burns, C C. Cowan, C. L. Dockery, M. Erwin, R. G Grady, VVm. Hendren, A. L. Henley, H. R. Ihrie, H. lohnson, G. C. Lee, B. F. Long, E. G. Parker, H. Parker, G. Peschau, J. R. Price, J. X. Rodgers, W. L. Smith, J. B. Sanders, W. B. Snow, H. Staton, D. B. Sutton, Z. Weaver, R. M. Wills, H. R. Darling, C. L. Abernathy, W. D. Buie, W T. Bradsher, P. Burke, (J.t iT k. S. Barnard, C. W. Edgertin, A. M. Moore. 37 a$s of ' 95. Colors, Red and Blue. yell. Hipity, Hipity. Hipity, Red and Blue, We are the nteds Of N. C. U. T. R. Little . J. L. Patterson H. V. Dunstan F. M. Parker . H. T. Hatts . ©fficers. 38 President. Vice-President. Secretary. Historian. Surgeoji. l|i$lan| nf HjbiijHl §ku. S all the other classes in the other departments of college work experienced jL-y an increase in number, likewise the medical class did not fail to receive -- its proportionate share of men, for at the opening of the Fall term our roll showed twenty-five men in the class, thus making us the largest in the history of the department. Year after year, has the excellence of the department been attested by its steady and continued growth, until now the question might be asked, What does this growth signify? It but plainly gives evidence of the fact that its merits as one of the best places for a beginner to learn ' ' Physic ' ' have been and are still being- recognized ; but, after all, what is still more gratifying to his pupils is to be able to say that it is only a continuation of Dr. Whitehead ' s success as a teacher. And just here it is the Historian ' s happy privilege to say that it is his sincere belief (and confident indeed is he that he but voices the sentiment of the class to a man) that no history, however short and incomplete, could justify its appearance without some mention of our able and beloved Preceptor, Dr. Richard H. Whitehead. In him, we have ever found not only a most able teacher, but a kind and sympathetic friend, and a gentleman of the highest type. Upon the Athletic field, the class has taken no very decided stand though in the ' ' Varsity Eleven ' ' we were represented by brothers Denson and Stringfield, both of whom have been honored by having had the occasion to participate in the fierce struggles of the football game ; while in base ball, we have as yet developed no material. As regards our record in the class room, we would refer the anxious inquirer to our honored Preceptor, and we feel no hesitancy whatever in saying that he would credit us as being one of the most studious classes ever under his charge. On reassembling after the Christmas holidays, it was our sad misfortune to find that we had lost one of our old members, one whom Dame Rumor would have us believe, had been assailed so vigorously by wily Cupid, that he had fallen a victim 39 to his snares, and that he now finds the presence of his Better Hah ' much more ag;reeable than the study of the Heahng Art. That their future may be happy and prosperous is the sincere wish of the entire class. In years to come, when we, now embryo M.D. ' s, shall have reached the full development of our hidden prowess, and shall have grasped the Phantom Fame, happy indeed shall we be to give the credit of it all to the valuable training received in the University of North Carolina, where the first principles of the profession were taught us. Historian. 40 Jtkl n thifd Jlu nls. Session of 1894= ' 95. H. H. Atkinson, B. S H. T. Batts M. C. Boy den . S. W. Covington W. W. Dawson E. G. Denson W. H. Dixon . H. V. Dunstan, Jr. J. E. Hart . R. E. Hollingsworth Peter [ohn W. H. Lippitt . T. R. Little Isaac Manning . W. R. McCain . F. M. Parker . J. L. Patterson . Z. B. Richardson Chas. Roberson, B. S. Asheville. Tarboro. Salisbury. Laurinburg. Littlefield. Raleigh. Black Jack. Windsor. Monroe. Mt. Airy. John Station. Pettsboro. Little ' s Mills. Chapel Hill. McCains. Enfield. Salem. Abele. Chapel Hill. Tflnivcrsits of 711. C, 1895. G. M. Rose R. L. Savage T. Stringfield Notley Tomlin W. P. Webb J. Willons . J. F. Williams Altamahaw. Scotland Neck . Waynesville. Olive. Rockingham. Smithfield. Hamptonville. 41 1894. September 4, Tuesday — Entrance Examinations. September 5, Wednesday— Registration. September 6, Thursday — Session Began. October 12, Friday — University Day. October 12, Friday — President ' s Reception. November 29, Thursday — Thanksgiving Day. December 2r, Friday — Christmas Recess Began. 1895. January 2, Wednesday — Entrance Examinations. January 3, Thursday — Registration. January 4, Friday — Second Term Began. January 20, February 3 — EvangeHstic Meetings. January 25, Friday — Annual Glee, Mandolin and Banjo Clubs Concert. February 22, Friday— Washington ' s Birthday Exercises. March 2, Saturday — Inter-Society Debate. March 11-21 — Spring Examinations. May I, Wednesday —Senior Orations Presented. May 22-June I — Final Examinations. June 2, Sunday- Baccalaureate Sermon, (Dr. Phillips ' ). June 3, Monday— Annual Inter-Society Debate, (for Seniors only). June 3, Monday — Meetings of the Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies, June 4, Tuesday — Meeting. Board of Trustees. June 4, Tuesday — Anniversary Meeting of Alumni. June 4, Tuesday — Senior Class Day. June 4, Tuesday — Representatives ' (Society) Orations. June 4, Tuesday — Faculty Reception. June 5, Wednesday — Centennial Day. June 6, Thursday — Commencement Dav. June 7, Friday — ? ? ? ? 42 v , ' VPH, 43 JbIIh °l|n|i}ni jisil0ii Phi Theta Xi Sigma Psi Upsilon Chi Beta Eta Lambda Pi Iota Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho Tau Mu Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi Delta Chi Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Gamma Kappa . Psi Epsilon Sigma Tau Delta Delta . lfoull c at lale, IS44. Yale College. Bowdoin College. Colby University. Amherst College. University of Alabama. Brown University. University of Mississippi. University of North Carolina. University of X ' irginia. Kenyon College. Dartmouth College. Central Uni ' ersity. Middlebury College. University of Michigan. Williams College. La Fayette College. Hamilton College. Madison University. College of the City of New York University of Rochester. Rutger s College. Indiana Ashbury Uni ersity. Wesle}-an I7ni ersity. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Adelbert College. Cornell University. Syracuse University. Columbia College. University of California. Trinity College (Conn. j. Vanderbilt University. Miami University. University of Minnesota. Mass. Institute of Technology. University of Chicago. 44 kin § nfkv. Establis[3C IS51. jfratres in jfacultate. F. P. VENABLE. Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry. CHARLES BASKERVILLE, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemi.stry. jfratres in lllutversitate. Class of ' 93. Dudley Lindsey, Edward Warren Myers. Class of ' 90. Benjamin Edward Stanly, Charles Watson Vates, Louis Isaac Guion. Class of ' 07. Arthur Williams Belden, Williams Grimes Clark, Louis Julien Poisson Cutlar, Robert Riddick Gatling, Herman Hornthal, William Stamps Howard, Ferdinand Badger Johnson, John Brown Lindsey, Pride Jones Thomas, Sylvester Brown Shepherd. Calvert Rogers Dey, Class of ' 98. Henrv Steers Lake. Robert Rathbones Handy, LAW. James Norfleet Pruden, William Mayhew Hendren. SPECIAL STUDENT. John .Stanly Thomas. 45 MEDICINE. Henry Thomas Batts. amma ]Estal)ligbc 1848, at CClasbtnoton an Jefferson College. Color — Royal Purple. Cbapter IRolL Iota Mu Pi Iota Alpha Chi . Chi Nu Denteroii Tan Alpha . Upsilon Omega Nu Epsilon . Theta Psi . Kappa Nu . Alpha . Beta . Delta . Xi Pi Sigma Denteron Bet a Chi . Gamma Phi Beta Mu Epsilon O micron Beta Denteron Delta Denteron Teta D enteron Rho Chi Eta Sigma . Theta Denteron Lambda Denteron Omicron Denteron Rho Denteron Alpha Phi . Teta Lambda Tau Pzi Alpha Denteron Gamma Denteron Mu Sigma . Mu Kappa Tau . Pi Denteron Teta Phi Delta Xi Lambda Sigma Mass. Institute of Tech. Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Amherst College. Union College. Vale University. Trinity (Con. ) College. College City New S ' ork. Columbia College (New York). University of City of New York. Colgate University. Cornell University. Washington and Jefferson College. University of Pennsylvania. Bucknell University. Pennsylvania College. Alleghany College. Lafayette College. Lehigh University. Penna. State College. Johns Hopkins University. University of North Carolina. University of Virginia. Roanoke College. Hampden Sidney College. Washington and Lee University. Richmond College. Marietta Colle ge. Wittenberg College. Ohio Wesleyan University. Denison University. Ohio State University. Wooster University. University of Michigan. Indiana State University. De Pauw University. Hanover College. Wabach College. Illinois Wesleyan University. Kno-x College. University of Minnesota. University of Wisconsin. University of Tennessee. University of Kansas. Wm Jewel College. University of California. Leiand Stanford, Jr., University. Delta . Epsilon Teta . Eta . (5ra uate Cbaptevs. Chattanooga, Tenn. Columbus, O. Kansas City, Mo. Cleveland, O. Southern Alumni Association Grand Chapter Theta . Iota Kappa New York City. Williamsport, Pa. Spokane, Wash. Chicago, 111. Baltimore. 46 (Itt ntfr. Established 1851. Suspended 1861. Re-Established if IS94= ' 05. ifrater in XHrbe. Rev. D. J. Currie, ' 87. dfrater in facilitate. Thos. R. Foust, ' 92. jfratres in XHniversitate. 1895. Chas. F. Tomlinson, W. Clarence Kluttz. 1896. Harllee MacCall, Walter H. Woodson. 1897. James Adderton. 1898. Frank M. Pinnix. Law. Guy C. Lee. 47 tk ¥|iia yi jfounici) at flDiami, 1839. Cbapter IRolL IDistrict H. Harvard — Eta, Brown — Kappa, Boston — Upsilon, Main State— Beta Eta, Rutgers — Beta Gamma, Cornell— Beta Delta, Stevens — Sigma, St. Lawrence — Beta Zeta, Dickmson — Alpha Sigma, Johns Hopkins — Alpha Chi, Hampden-Sidney — Zeta, North Carolina — Eta P eta, Virginia — Omicron, Centre — Epsilon, Cumberland— Mu, Mississippi — Beta Beta, Miami — Alpha, University of Cincinnati — Beta Nu, Ohio — Beta Kappa, Western Reserve — Beta, Washington-Jefferson — Gamma, Ohio Wesleyan — Theta, De Pauw — Delta, Indiana — Pi, Michigan — Lambda, Knox— Alpha XI, Beloit— Chi, University of Iowa — Alpha Beta, Iowa Wesleyan — Alpha Epsilon, Westminister — Alpha Delta, Kansas — Alpha Nu, California— Omega, Leland Stanford — Lambda Sigma. district HH. Amherst — Beta Iota. Dartmouth — Alpha Omega, Wesleyan — Mu Epsilon, Yale— Phi Chi. Colgate — Beta Theta, Union — Nu, Columbia — Alpha Alpha, Syracuse — Beta Epsilon. district 1I1I1I. Stistrict IIID. district V. Pa. State College — Alpha Upsilon, Lehigh— Beta Chi. Davidson — Phi Alpha, Richmond — Alpha Kappa. X ' anderbilt — Beta Lambda, Texas — Beta Omicron. district m. district Dim. Bethany— Psi, Wittenberg — Alpha Gamma, Denison — Alpha Eta, Wooster — Alpha Lambda, Kenyon — Beta Alpha, Ohio State— Theta Delta. Wabash — Tau, Hanover — Iota. ©(strict Uimil. district Hi ' . Wisconsin — Alpha Pi, North-western — Rho, Minnesota — Beta Pi. Chicago — Zeta Alpha Denver — Alpha Zeta, Nebraska— Alpha Tau, Missouri — Zeta Phi. fiin ' $t n iIj,iplBi lE8tabIi8bc as Eta Ipvinic, 1852. ( Star of the South Chapter of Mystic Seven, established 1SS4, became Eta Beta of Beta Theta Pi, 1S89.) Fraternity Colors — ' in and Blue. Hctive iDembcrsbip. Ipost (SiaMiatc. Elisha Battle Lewis. law. Alfred Smith Barnard, William Ikooks Guthrie, Thomas Scott Rollins, William Edmund Breese, Jr. Class of ' 05. Herbert Bingham, William Jackson Weaver, William Levi Scott, Thomas Evans Westman Brown. Class of ' OC. James Alfred Gvvyn, James Guy Rankin, Van Astor Batchelor, Juclson Clifford Carroll. Class of ' 07. Frederick Alexander Johnson, W illiam Starr Myers, Warren Winslow Home, Victor Clay McAdoo. Class of ' 08. Francis Asbury Gudger, Paul Richardson Slocomb, Leonidas Beatty Southerland. 49 Pp iipim f igiiin. Jfoun c at nnivcrsitv of (Pciins lvania in 1850. IRoU of CF apters, Alpha Delta Zeta . Eta Kappa Lambda Mu . Rho . Tau . Upsilon Phi . Psi . Alpha Alpha Alumni Charter University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pa. Franklin and Marshall, Lancaster, Pa. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. Lake Forest University, Lake Forest, 111. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Tulare Lhiiversity, New Orleans, La. University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. Randolph and Macon College, Ashland, Va. North-Western University, Evanston, 111. Richmond College, Richmond, Va. Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa. Washington and Lee L niversity, Lexington, Va. Chicago, 111. 50 mnm mmm. 1Lamb a Cbapter. jFount ' C in 1850. 1Rcorgani5c 1877. IFratres in jfacultate. H. H. Williams, A.M., B.D., Professor of Mental and Moral Science. E. A. Alderman, Ph.B., Professor of the History and Philosophy of Education. ifratrcs in xaniversitate. Law School. Haywood Parker, Henry Johnston, Samuel S. Jackson, Henry Staton, Samuel A. Ashe. Medical School. Isaa c Hall Manning. Academic Department. Class of ' 05. Chas. R. Turner. 51 ifcunticJ at tbc ' Univcrsitv! of Blabama, l85o. Ilncorporatcti 1802. Colors — Royal Purple and Old Gold. Flowkr— Violet. JoiKNALS — The Record and the Phi Alpha {Secret). IRolI of Cbapters. province Hlpba. Massachusetts Beta Upsiloii, Huston University. Massacliusetts lota Tau, Mass. Institute of Technology. Massachusetts Gannna, Harvard University. Massachusetts Delta. Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Connecticut Alpha, Trinity College. Iprovtncc 3Scta. New York Alpha, Cornell I ' niver.sity. Pennsylvania Omega, Allegheny College. Peiuisylvania Sigma Phi, Dickinson College. Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta, Pennsylvania State College. Pennsylvania Delta, Pennsylvania College. Pennsylvania Zeta, Bucknell University. Iprovincc ©amma. Virginia Omicron, University of Virginia. Virginia Sigma, Washington and Lee University. Virginia Pi, Emory and Heiny College. North Carolina Xi, University of North Carolina. North Carolina Theta, Davidson College. South Carolina Delta. South Carolina College. South Carolina Phi, Furman University. South Carolina Gannna, WofTord College. Georgia Beta, University of Georgia. Georgia Psi, Mercer l niversity. Georgia Epsilon, Emory College. Georgia Phi, Georgia School of Technology. Iprovince ®clta. Michigan Iota Beta, University of Michigan. Michigan Alpha, Adrian College. Ohio Sigma, Mt. I ' nion College. Ohio Delta, Ohio Wesleyan University. Ohio Theta, Ohio Slate University. Ohio Epsilon, University of Cinciiniati. Indimia Alpha, Franklin College. Indiana Beta, Purdue University. Illinois Psi Omega, Northwestern University. province Epsilon. Alabama Mu, Universit - of Alabama. Alabama Alplia Mu, Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Alabama Iota, Southern University. Kentucky Kappa, Central University. Kentucky Iota, Bethel College. Mississippi Gamma, University of Mississippi. Tennessee Zeta, Southwestern Presbyterian University. Tennessee Lambda, Cumberland University. Temiessee Nu, Vanderbilt University. TeTuiessee Kappa, University of Tennessee. Tennessee Omega, University of the South. Tennessee Eta, Southwestern Baptist University. (province Zeta. Iowa Sigma, Simpson College. Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri. Missouri Beta, Washington University. Nebraska Lambda Pi, University of Nebraska. province Eta. Arkansas Alpha I ' psilon, Universil - of Arkansas Texas Rho, University of Texas. Colorado Chi, Univeisity of Colorado. Colorado Zeta, University of Denver. California Alpha, Leland Stanford University. California Beta, University of California. Alliance, Ohio. Augusta, Georgia. Savannah, Georgia. Chattanooga, Tennessee. Chicago, Illinois. Blumni Hssociations. Boston, Massachusetts. Kansas City, Missouri. New York, New York. Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. Atlanta, Georgia Cincinnati, Ohio. South Carolina. State Hesociations. Colorado. 52 1 - 1 -; - i. Joi in:nnn ]Establisb«; 1857. Suspcn c IS(?2. 1Rcorllani;,c 1885. ifratev in mrbc. Dr. John H. London. 3fratrc6 in IHniversitate. Law. Claudius Dockery, Ph.B., B.L., Alex. B. Andrews, Jr., B.Litt., Medicine. Oliver H. Dockery, Jr., A.B. James W. McNeill. Hu-h H. Atkinson, B.S., Frederic F. Bahnson, William B. Lemly, John H. Andrews, Henry G. Connor, Jr. Frank M. London, Adam Empie, Edward K. Graham, James M. Stevenson, Thomas Strinyfield. Academic. Class of ' ' 35. John L. Patterson. Class of ' Oo. Henry T. Sharp. Class of ' 07. Class of ' OS. Frank R. Harty, J. Francis Shaffner, Fletcher H. Bailey, William H. Green, Jr. Michael Schenck. Robert E. FoUin, Frank W. Miller, Georse K. Tate. Died February 20, 1S95. 53 jFountct in 1846 at tbc tlnivcrsiU: of tbc Citv; of IHew lL)orl!. Fraternity Color — IVhiie. IRoU ot Hctive Chapters. Phi . Zeta . Delta Sigma Chi . Epsilon Rho . Kappa Tau . Upsilon Xi . Lambda Beta . Psi . Iota . Theta Xi Alpha Alpha Psi Nu . Eta . Mu . University of the City of New York. Williams College, Williamstown, Mass. Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. f. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Colby University, Waterville, Maine. Brown University, Providence, R. I. Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. Tufts College, College Hill, Mass. Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Bowdoin College, Bnmswick, Maine. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. Cornell University, Ithaca, N Y. University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Uni ersity of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario. Columbia College, New York City. McGill University, Montreal, Quebec. Case School of Applied Sciences, Cleveland, Ohio. Yale University, New Haven, Conn. Leland Stanford University, Palo Alto, Cal. Blumiii Bssociatione. Central Association of Zeta Psi Pacilic Association of Zeta Psi North-western Association of Zeta Psi Capital City Association of Zeta Psi Philadelphia Association of Zeta Psi Zeta Psi Association New England Association of Zeta Psi 8 West 29th St., New York City. 310 Pine St., San Francisco, Cal. 306 Opera House Block, Chicago, Cal. 8 Iowa Circle, Washington, D. C. 2107 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Cleveland, Ohio. Boston, Mass. 54 ( CopyriqMj l[|isi{i.iii ifjiijibr. lEatablisbcS 85S. SuspcnScfi ISoS. IReonjaniseb 1885. Chaptp:r Color — Gar iet. XIlni ersit : trustees. W. H. S. Burgwyn, A. B., ' 68, A.M., R. T. Gray, B., Julian S. Carr, i862- ' 64, V. A. Guthrie, A.B., ' 64, A.M., Wm. H. Day, i86o- ' 6i, W. N. Mebane, i,S6o- ' 6i, A. W. Graham, A.B., ' 68, R. B. Peebles, i859- ' 62. Hctiv e IDembers. Law. lames Crawford Biggs, Ph.B., ' 93, Perrin Busbee, Ph.B., ' 93, George Mordecai Graham, Ph.B., ' 91, William Boylan Snow, Ph.B., ' 93, James Norwood Hill. Academic. Class of ' 95. Murray Borden, William Alexander Graham, Harry Howell. Class of ' oc. Edward Parrish Carr, Edwin Clarke Gregory. Class of ' 97. Richard Smith Busbee, Ralph Henry Graves, John Tillery Gregory, Jr., William Demsie Grimes, Fabius Julius Haywood, Jr , Stuart Hall Hill, Adolphus Williamson Manginn, Percy Wood McMullan. Class of ' 98. Sidney Perry Cooper, George Edgar Newby, Joseph Graham, Francis Owington Rogers, William Grimes Haywood, John Hill Tucker, Robert Lassiter, James Webb, Jr., Richard Henry Lewis, Jr., Thomas Norfleet Webb. 55 an unitr n. dfoun c ' isos. Colors— (9 Gold arid Sky Blue. Fraternity Ioirnal — The Palm. IRoll of Gbapters. Beta Delta Beta Beta . Alpha Epsilon Beta Psi . Alpha Omega Alpha Beta Alpha Theta Alpha Zeta Beta Iota . Beta Nu . Beta Epsilon Beta Upsilon Alpha Nu . Beta Kappa Beta Lambda Beta Omicron Alpha Ka]3]ia Alpha Lambda Alpha Omicron Beta Theta Alpha Delta Alpha Eta Alpha Chi Alpha Nu . Alpha Psi . Beta Eta . Beta Nu . Beta Rho . Gamma Gamma Beta Chi . Alpha Iota Alpha Rho Tau . Alpha Upsilon Beta Chi . Alpha Chi Beta Phi . Omega Alpha Tau Lambda . Beta Tau . Beta Pi . Beta . Delta Epsilon Beta Sigma Beta Zeta . Gamma Ejjsilon Gamma Zeta . University of Alabama, Alabama. Southern University, Alabama. A. U. College, Alal)ama. Leland Stanford, Jr., California. University of Florida, Florida. University of Georgia, Georgia. Emry College, Georgia. Mercer University, Georgia. State School of Technology, Georgia. Middle Georgia U. A. College, Georgia. Tulane University, Louisiana. Maine State College, Maine. Adrian College, Michigan. Hillsdale College, Michigan. University of Michigan, Michigan. Albion College, Michigan. Steven Institute, New Jersey. Columbia College, New York. St. Lawrence University, New York. Cornell University, New York. University of North Carolina, North Carolina. Brigham ' s Schoo l, North Carolina. Trinity College, North Carolina. Mt. Union College, Ohio. Wittenberg College, Ohio. Wesleyan College, Ohio. Wooster I ' niversity, Ohio. Marietta College, Ohio. Nebraska. Haverford College, Pennsylvania. Muhlenberg College, Pennsylvania. Lehigh University. Pennsylvania. University of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania College, Pennsylvania. Charleston College, South Carolina. S. C. College, South Carolina. Wofford College, South Carolina. University of the South, Tennessee. S. W. P. University, Tennessee. Cumberland University, Tennessee. S. W. Baptist College, Tennessee. X ' anderbilt University, Tennessee. Washington and Lee, ' irginia. University of Virginia, Virginia. Roanoke College, ' irginia. Hampden-Sidney, Virginia. University of Vermont, X ' ermont. Austin College, Texas. Illinois State College. 56 %YP PiIIb § nfl ]Estalilisl3et 1879. jf rater in Tllrbe. R. S. McRae. Law. Joseph P. Pippen, George L. Peschau. ' 95. ' 97. Thos. R. Little, Laurence McRae, Wilmot B. Allen, Thos. G. McAlister, J. Worth McAlister, J. H. Daingerfield. H. B. Worth, ' ®®- Bartley Skinner, Frank Page, George Ruffin. 57 lupim jn jfoull c ;U 1 ' ClasbmiUon a Xcc nnivcvsitv, ISdo. IRoll of Cbapters. Alpha . IJeta . Gamma Delta . Epsilon Zeta Eta . Theta . Iota . Kap]ia Lambda Mu Nu Xi O micron Pi Sigma . Tau . Upsilon Phi . Chi Psi Omega Alpha Alpha Alpha Beta . Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta Alpha E})silon Alpha Zeta . Alpha Eta . Alpha Theta Alpha Iota . Alpha Kappa Alpha Lambda Alpha Mu . Alpha Nu . Alpha Xi Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va. University of Georgia, Athens, Ga. Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C. Emory College, Oxford, Ga. Randoljih-Macon College, Ashland, Va. Richmond College, Richmond, Ya. Agricultural and INIechanical College, Lexington, Ky. Furman University, Greenville, S. C. Mercer University, Macon, Ga. University of ' irginia, Charlottesville, Va. Emory and Henry College, Emory, Va. A. and M. College, Auburn, Ala. Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas. University of Texas, Austin, Texas. LIniversity of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Davidson College, Mecklenburg Co., N. C University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Southern University, Greensboro, Ala. X ' anderbilt LIniversity, Nashville, Tenn. Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Centre College, Danville, Ky. University of South, Sewanee, Tenn. University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La. William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo. Southwestern Pres. University, Clarksville, Tenn. William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. Westminster College, Fulton, Mo. Centenary College, Jackson, La. Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Millsap ' s College, Jackson, Miss. Columbian University, Washington, D. C. University of California, Berkley, Cal. aiumni (Xbapters. Richmond, Va., Norfolk, Va. Macon. Ga. Mobile, Ala. Raleigh, N. C. New York, N. Y. Atlanta, Ga. Washington, D. C. 5« iimion yimmtr. EfltabliBbcft I88t. SuepcnScs ISSC-. 1Rc=establisbcb tsoi. Colors — Old Gold and Crhnson. jfvatrcB jfacultate. I. W. Gore, C.E. R. H. Whithead, M.D. jfratres in xanlversitate. Class of MO. T. F. Sanford. F. N. Cooke. Class of ' 07. V. M. Graves, H. T. Winston, T. R. Robertson, Darius Eatman. Class of ' • Z. Fortune Lanier Special. W. R. Robertson. Law. R. E„ L. Watkins. 59 lfoun c at v. nc. ii. isoi . (Ibapter Xi5t. Inspector Alpha Beta . Bela Tail Delta . Lambda Tau Psi Inspector . Theta Iota . Upsilon Phi . Beta Phi Beta Theta Inspector . Zeta . Sigma Omicron . Beta Omicron Inspector . Nu . Rho . Chi Beta Gamma Beta Delta Beta Epsilon Beta Kappa Beta Lambda Beta Mu Beta Xi Inspector . Pi Beta Alpha Beta Rho . Inspector Eta . Kappa Mu . Xi Inspector . Beta Beta . Beta Zeta . Beta Eta . B eta Iota . Beta Nu . Delta Theta Inspector Beta Chi Beta Psi ©ivision H. Rudolph Buragardner, Lexington, Va. Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va , chapter dormant. S E. Bradshaw, Univeisitv of Virginia, Charlottsville, Va. John Howard, N C. A M. College, Raleigh, N. C. K. J. Sloan, South Carolnia College, Columbia, S. C. Rudolph Bumgardner. Washington and Lee, Lexington, ' a South Carolina Military Acadeniv, Charleston, S. C, chapter dormant, V. R. Webb, Jr., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. division 1I1I. Fred A. P ' ulghum, Birmingham, Ala. Terry M. Richardson, University of Alabama, University, P. O., Ala. Jas. B. Espy, Howard College, East Lake, Ala. George E. Shelley, University of Texas, Austin, Tex. Wm. M. Marshall, University of Louisiana, Baton Rouge, La. Tulane, New Orleans, La., chapter dormant. F. A. Fulghuni, Alabama A. M. College, Auburn, Ala. ©ivision 111I1I. L. J. Lcnenthal, Jr., Nashville, Tenn. T. Dwight VVitherspoon, (. ' entral University, Richmond, Ky. L.J. Loventhal, Jr., Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. Lodford Trumann, Bethel College, Russellville, Ky. Wm. VVhittaker, University of the South, Sewanee, lenn. 2 ivision W. H. M. Dawes, Columbia, Mo. Ezra W Palmer, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. H. M. Dawes, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa. J. M. Roberts, Missouri N ' alley College, Marshall, Mo. Drake University, Des Moines, la. Wm. F. Baker, Upper Iowa University, Fayette, Iowa. . . J. Graham, Southwest Kansas College, Winfield, Kan. L. B. Ballard, Central Conei;e, Fayette. Mo. G. G. Davis, University of Iowa, Iowa City, la. J. E. Culver, William Jewell College, liberty. Mo. S ivision W. A. L. Ware, South Bethlehem, Pa. Wm. S. Merrill, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa. Vale University, New Haven, Conn., chapter dormant. Daniel Coogan, University of Pemisylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Sivision IDU. James H. Butner, Macon, Ga. C. W. Durden, Mercer L ' niversitv, Macon, Ga. W. P. Price, Jr., North Georgia College, Dahlonega, Ga. W. B. Fender, University of Georgia, Athens, Ga. Fred Morris, Emory College, Oxford, Ga. 2)ivi6ion I31I1I. J. A. Clark, Galesburg, 111. Harve - Carr, DePauw University, Greencastle, Ind. G. H. Kockersperger, Purdue University, La Fayette, Ind. Oscar T. Schultz, University of Indiana, Bloomington, Ind. Perry G. Mapel, Mt. Union College, Alliance, Ohio. Sherman E. Burke, University of Ohio, Columbus, Ohio. J. A. Crum, Lombard LTniversity, Galesburg, 111. S ivision D1I1I1I. E. M. Wdlf, Berkley, Cal. George E. Crothers, Leland Stanford, Jr. University, Stanford, Cal. Ray R. Rogers, University of Berkley, Cal. 60 jf rater in jfacultate. Georoe Stocton Wills, Instructor in Ejiglish. jfratres in lllniversitate. Law Class. Crawford Dunlap Bennett, Henry Clark Bridgers, Augustus Hobson Price. Fred Louis Carr, Walter Vernon Breni, Jr Charles Ransom Emry, John Fred Webb, Burton Craige, Theodore F. Klutz, Charles Stuart Carr, Medical Class. Malcolm Boyden. Class of ' 05. Class of ' OC ' . Class of ' s 7. Class of ' OS. Robert Thomas S. Steele. Eugene Berrien Graham, George Gullet Stephens, William Robert Webb, Jr. John Leak Everett, Harris Taylor Collier. Archibald Henderson. 6i jFount ' C at flftiami ' Universits, 1855. Epsilon Tlieta . Kappa Omicron Alpha Alpha Eta Eta Alpha Theta Alpha Rho . Alpha Phi . Psi . . . Gamma Gamma Si.2:ma Sign;a Alpha Tail . IRoll ot (Ibapters. jflrst iprovincc. Grand Praetor — Cxeo C. Purely, iMiddletown, New York. Columbia University, Washino;ton, D. C. Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, Pa. I ' ucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa. Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. Hobart College, Geneva, N. Y. Dartsmouth College, Hanover, N. H. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa. Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. ScconS province . Grand Praetor — Geo. H. Denny, Charlottesville, Va. University of X ' irginia, Charlottesville, Va. Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va. Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Grand Praetor — Geo. Alpha . Gamma Mu Zeta Zeta Zeta Psi Alpha Ganmia D Ubirft Iprovince. Harper, Cor. Fifth and Walnut Streets, Cincinnati, O. Miami ITniversity, Oxford, O. Oiiio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio. Denison University, Granville, O. Centre College, Danville, Ky. University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, O. Ohio .State University, Columbus, O. jFourtb Iprovincc. Grand Praetor — David Todd, Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. Lambda Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind. Xi DePauw University, Greencastle, Ind. Riio ... ... Butler University, Irvington, Ind. Ciii Hanover University, Hanover, Ind. Delta Delta Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. Delta Chi Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind. Grand Praetor- Omega Theta Theta Kappa Kappa Alpha Zeta . Alpha Iota . Alpha Lambda Alpha Xi . Alpha Pi . Lambda Lambda Alpha Sigma iFiftb Iprovincc. -C. A. Fiske, 269 .South Water .Street, Chicago, 111. Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. University of Illinois, Champaign, 111 lieloit College, Beloit, 111. Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, 111. University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. Albion College, Albion, Mich. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 62 A - mk-i Grand Pr Alpha Beta . Alpha Epsilon Alpha Upsilon . Alpha Omega Eta Alpha Nu . Alpha Omicron Alpha Psi . Zeta . Nu Nu Alpha Chi . Siitb iprovince. etor— John W. Dixon, 31 Montgomery Rlock, Lincoln, Neb. University of California, Berkeley, Cal. University of Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Cal. Leland Stanford, Jr., llniversity, Palo Alto, Cal. Seventh Iprovince. Grand Praetor — Wm. B. Ricks, Nashville, Tenn. University of Mississipjii, O.xford, Mi.ss. University of Texas, Austin, Texas. Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. Washington and Lee Llniversity. Columbia College. Pennsylvania State College. Alpha Alumni Eta Alumni . Theta Alumni Iota Alumni Omega Alumni Beta Alumni Epsilon Alumni Gamma Alumni aiumiti (Ibapters. Springfield, O. Lafayette, Ind. Cincinnati, O. Indianapolis, Ind. Chicago, III. Montgomery Ala. Washington, D. C. New York, N. Y. n mm Establtsbcb 1889. Hca emic. Class of ' 95. J. E. Mattocks. illass of ' 9(?. G. H. Kiri)y. Class of ' 97. A. L. Jones. A. H. Edgerton. E. J. Wood. Class of ' 08. 63 C. E. Jones. 1 ,i|ijin igiim JFoun c in lltal 1400, in Hnierica 1S 37. Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta . Eta . Theta Iota . Kappa Lambda Mil . Nil . Xi . Omicron Pi . Sigma Tau . Upsilon Phi . Clii . Psi . Omega Chi Omega Alplia Beta Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta Alpha Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Kappa Alpha Lambda Eta Prime Alpha Mil Alpha Nu Alpha Xi Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Sigma Cbapter IRolL State University, Baton Rouge, La. Davidson College, Davidson, N. C. Centenary College, Jackson, La. University of X ' irginia, Charlottesville, ' a. Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va. Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn. Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas. V anderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Washington and Lee University, Lexington. ' a. William and Mary College, Williamsburg. a. University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. Emory and Henry College, Emory, Xa.. Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. Tulane University, New Orleans, La. University of Texas, Austin, Texas. Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, ' a. Southwestern Presbyterian Univ., Clarks ille,Tenn. Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. Maine State College, Orono, Maine. University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn. University of South Carolina, Columbia, S. C. Mercer University, Macon, Ga University of Illinois, Champaign, 111 Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. University of Michigan, Ann Harbor, Mich. Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson, Tenn U. S. Grant University, Athens, Tenn. Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt. Trinity College, Durham, N. C. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Wofford College, Spartansburg, S C. Bethel College, Russelville, Ky. Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind. Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me. Ohio State ITniversity, Columbus, Ohio. 64 lapp; w pmnn. Chapter IRoll. State University, Baton Rouse, I ■: Delta Davidson College, Davidson, N. ( Knsi! ' ' : ' •■ ' rr.r College, Jackson, La. ' irginia, Charlottesville, .1. - : . on College, Ashland, Va. 1 1 nberland University, Lebanon, Tenn. southwestern University, Georgetown T ' Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Te . University of Ter ' Washington and 1 V illiani and Mar diversity of Ari- - , ■ . ' V- and Henry Co ' - ,; ;;:ii ' iKire College, ;- ' Jane I ' niversity, New ()v diversity of Texas, Austir ' ■ impden-Sidney College, Southwestern Presbyter Purdue University, L.- Maine State Coll University of the l niversity of Sovi ■ Mercer Unive ' -it- Alpiia Cranv University ' . !pha rj(-!l,; : ' ( nnsylvani . ::: ., ; ' .: Vil ' lia I niversity c Philadelphia, Pa. Alpha ' ■i. I I niversity u. ... i ' rhor, Mich. ■ lpha Theta ' juthwestern U.- ; Jackson, Tenn . S. Gram ' . I: ■)i ' nell Uni University (I Trinity Col! .slpiiaivlu ' niversity o . ■ph.iNu . ' HfordCf ' i Bethel Coll lalf J[$$0tialinns. North Carolina, Louisiana, Tennessee, Texas. Virginia, Hlumni (Ibapters. Yazoo City, Miss., Pittsburg, Pa., Indianapolis, Ind., Dallas, Texas. Concord, N. C. , Philadelphia, Pa., New York City, N. Y., Chicago, 111., Houston, Texas, New Orleans, La. Hlpba jflDu Cbapter. Hn I 803. 2lctix c iftembers. Academic. Class of ' 9(5. G. S. Wittson, LAW. L. T. Hartsell. J. G. Hollowell. Cass of ' 97. P. M. Thompson. Glass of ' 9S. Graham Woodard. 65 T. P. Braswell, MEDICAL. R. E. Hollingsworth. ' i %{ni Ji din. jFolm c at tlnivcrsitv! of liiriiinia lSi37. Alpha Beta Delta Gamma IRoll ot Gbapters. Blumnus Chapters. Richmond, Xn. Memphis, Tenn. Charleston, S. C. LewisburiT, West Va. Alpha Beta Gamma Zeta Theta Iota Mu . Nu . Omicron Xi . Pi . Rho Sigma Tau Upsilon College Cbapters. University of Virginia, Va. Davidson College, N. C. William and Mary College, Williamsburg, ' a. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Southwestern Presbyterian University , Clarksville, Tenn. Hampden Sidney College, Va. Presbyterian College of South Carolina, Clinton, S. C. Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C. Richmond College, Richmond, Va. South Carolina College, Columbia, S. C. Washington and Lee University, Lexington, ' a. Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. University of Nortli Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Alabama A. and M. College, Auburn, Ala. 66 mm mnmim. iDembcvs. Class of ' 06. Jno. F. Nooe. Class of ' 07. Paul R. McFadyen, J. Beebe Wilkinson, Joe S. Wray. Class of ' 98. Claudius Green Winstead, F. O. Carver. 67 iDplomun l[ritl0rnil of hcta 1Ru lEpeilon. jFounJcJ at XlClcslcvan, 1870. Cbapter IRolL Alpha . Beta Gamma Delta . Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta . Iota Kappa . Kappa 2d Lambda Mu Nu Xi Omicron Pi Upsilon Pi 2d . Omega Rho . Sigma . Phi Psi Chi Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Union College, Schenectady, N. Y. Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. University of Rochester, Rochester, N. Y. University of California, Berkeley, Cal . Madison University, Hamilton, N. Y. Kenyon College, Gambler, Ohio Adelbert College, East Cleveland, Ohio Hamilton College, Clinton, X. Y. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, X. ' Williams College, Williamstovvn, Mass Stevens Institute, Hoboken, X. J. La Fayette College, Easton, Pa. Amherst College, Amherst, Mass Rutgers College, Xew Brunswick, N. J. Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa. Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. Wooster University, Wooster, Ohio. Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa. University of Xorth Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. University of City of Xew York, Xew York, X Y. Xorthwestern University, Evanston, 111. Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 6S m lrp r ' si il ft|ibi| of Wlitk n JljisiloiL E8tablisbc 18 33. IDembers. iDcJical ' 95. Huo ' h Hamilton Atkinson. law ' 95. James Norfleet Pruden, James Norwood Hill, William Alexander Graham, Charles Root Turner, Murray Borden, Eugene Berrian Graham, Q,l Thames Guy Rankin, Pride Jones Thomas, David Win field Booth, ' Cameron Farquhar McRae, ' ' Harry Armstrong, Ferdie Badger Johnson, Q j.,7fWm. Edmund Breese, Jr. Gus. Hudson Price. Class of ' (35. Edward Warren Myers, Rob ' t Thomas S. Steele, Thomas Robinson Little. Class ot ' iti . Frank Ryan Harty, a ' 4 y-rj ' ' s Alfred C}wyn. Class of ' 97, John Hawkins Andrews, Arthur Williams Belden, Burton Craige, Thos. Gilmer McAlister, Harris T. Collier, Stuart Hall Hill. M 5 ' B 1 3 Class of ' 98, o ffs z ;: b ! I A X + Left College. 69 G77?i- Gim- Gim- Gim-ghoul. Wmp xrt dq txy tjix onenp Tzq exmd fb wgym ' e go Imfq Soa rae ' f a ypheceamge lejp Bz jhraa ir anj amie fmq Fb mxw bf oe Valmar VI. IRiUers. Thos. R. Little, ' 95, R. John L. Patterson, ' 95, K.D.S. Chas. Root Turner, ' 95, W.S.S. Edward W. Myers, ' 95. K.M.K, Subjects. Charles Baskerville, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. no George Mordecai Graham (Law). 140 William Alexander Graham, ' 95. 141 John Legerwood Patterson, ' 95. 144 Hugh Hamilton Atkinson (Med.) 146 John Worth McAllister, ' 95. 147 Edward Warren Myers, ' 95. 70 148 Charles Root Turner, ' 95. 150 Henry Staton (Law). 151 Harry Howell, ' 95. 152 Edwin Clark Gregory, ' 96. 153 Dudley Lindsey, ' 95. 154 William Robert Webb, Jr. Srbtr nl ' 97. Belden, Arthur Williams Busbee, Richard Smith Craige, Burton Graves, Ralph Henry- Grimes, William Demsie Hill, Stuart Hall (3 -- ' 7 orne, Warren Winslow i Johnson, Frederic Alexander Johnson, Ferdinand Badger Mangum, Adolphus Williamson McAllister, Thomas Gilmer McRae, Lawrence Batts, Henry Thomas (Med.) ' 98. (9. Dey, Calvert Rogers Carr, Charles Stuart Follin, Robert Edward r , Gudger, Francis Asburry Handy, Robert Rathbone Lassiter, Robert . Newland, Thomas Marvin Skinner, Bartley 3. t , T ' Slocomb, Paul Richardson Tucker, John Hill Boyden, Malcolm (Med.) 71 iQO a mmvA i?m. Society 3Ba ge. Greek character delta, the initial letter of duo (two), which is the least grade required for membership. The triangular shape signifies complete7iess, suggesting moulding character into symmetry. Greek Motto — ' Ay,Hzi ' i du uii (Pw -. Latin Motto — Veritas Animi Lux. A. H. i . Society). ©fficcrg. Honora}y President, George T. Winston, LL.D., President Uni ersity. f Eben Alexander, LL.D., V . S. Minister to Greece. TT T - r, -J J Karl p. Harrington, LA., Professor of Latin. Honorary Vice-Presideiits -; I H. C. Tolman, Ph.D., Professor of Greek at Vander- l bilt University. President, Herman H. Home. Treastwer, James T. Pugh. A.B. Secretary, Fred L. Carr. The President is that member of the Senior Class wlio has highest giade. The Secretary is that member of the Senior Class who stands second in grade. 72 nfkv Jisl Alpha Chapter, University of North Carolina. Beta Chapter, Vanderbilt University , Tennessee. Hlpba Cbapter. ©raJuatc Stu6cnts. Charles Baskerville, Ph.D., James T. Pugh, A.M. T. y. Wilson, A.B. J. E. Alexander, L. M. Bristol, Fred L. Carr, Harry Howell, E. W. Myers, Charles Turner, E. P. Carr, E. C. Gregory, W. C. Smith, W. R. Webb, Senior Class. rD , Herbert Bingham, H. H. Home, Dudley Lindsey, John L. Patterson, H. M. Thompson, C. F. Tomlinson. Junior Class. J. W. Canada, J. C. Eller, J. F. Nooe, J. F. Webb, R. E. Coker. 73 otmiit. 1795. Motto — Love of Virtue and Scietice. y OR a hundred years the Dialectic Society has been an integral part of VjPdP the University. Younger by but a few months, the part prospered, 1 declined, and prospers again, just as the whole has done. So closely connected are they that the full histories of the Dialectic Society, its sister society, the Philanthropic and the University must be written together. The only societies of like nature in the United States whose records are equal to those of the Dialectic and Philanthropic, are those of Princeton, the Whig, and the Clio. The Faculty and Trustees granted exceptional privileges a hundred years ago, and a large share of independence has been retained to the present day. The literary exercises consist in debates, orations, declamations, and essay- writing. Interest is stimulated by prizes given each year to the one excelling in each of these arts. Since the inauguration of the first President the regular succession has been maintained. When the Uni ' ersity was about to pass into alien hands in 1868, the offices were filled by loyal alumni who were instructed to reorganize whenever they should deem best. This was done in 1875. There is a direct descendant of James 74 Mebane, the first President, now an active member of the society, and often members can point to three and sometimes four generations represented upon the long roll. The Dialectic Hall contains the finest collection of portraits in North Carolina, these being the likenesses of distinguished members. Among the number are Governors, Judges, Congressmen, Cabinet Officers, Foreign Ministers, a President of the United States, and others distinguished in many professions. H. F. 75 ' ]| y|iknl|rnpiij utiEl . Motto — Virtue, Liberty, arid Science. Color — White, emblem of Purity. N the 1 2th day of February, 1795, the doors of the University were formally opened for the admission of students, and on August i, of the same year, W. C. Alston, David Gillespie, Evan Jones, Henry Kearney, George W. Long, Nicholas Long, and Edwin J. Osborn formed the Concord Society with Gillespie as first President ; but on August 29, 1796, the name was changed to Philanthropic Society, and Richard Eagles was its first President. The Society thus originated continued its regular weekly meetings till 1868, when, until 1875, it was suspended during the dark days of the L ' niversity. It now has a membership of iiQ- Its objects, as originally enunciated, were the cultivation of literary and social virtues. The eminent positions of Vice-President, Senators, Governors, Judges, Clergymen, and all the avocations of life abundantly testify to the thoroughness of its training. Naturally many changes have taken place during its hundred years of existence, for all organizations must conform to the changed conditions of the times. Among the more recent may be mentioned the making of membership non-compulsory ; the turning over of the Library to the University ; the negation of many rigid restrictions, and the imposition of more enlightened ones. In all these things it may truly be said that the Society has done eminently well. 76 As now constituted, the Society has but one aim and function. In this literary sphere it is in keeping with the spirit of the age. It has come to share the honors of College supremacy with the press, the athletic field, a diversity of special studies, and the other societies of the University. Nevertheless, its purpose is more definite ; the summoning of its energies for the attainment of one aim more certain ; and the ultimate realization of that purpose irresistible. . ,. ' I ©tticevs. President, Professor Thomas Hume. Vice-President, Professor W. D. Toy. Secretary, Mr. George S. Wills (succeeded by Mr. K. H. Home). Treasurer, Mr. Herbert Bingham. j. .T; These officers and the following additional members constitute the Executive Committee of the Club : Messrs. H. H. Home, F. L. Carr, M. H. Yount, and Professor Ball. 78 il| j||HkB$pflr ilnlt. HE Shakespeare Club is an integral part of the University life. It has been so long established, and is so successful and interesting a factor that we would not know how to do without it. Apart from its relation to scholarly investigation and general culture, it helps us on the side of social fellowship. For that is the best stimulant and preservative of social fellowship which excites and supports it, while some other high and well-defined end is gained besides mere enjoyment. These literary, historical, and scientific clubs have then a real value for us as human people living with and for one another. But the Shakespeare Club has for its specific object the careful examination of the plays of the great dramatist, of the characteristics of his period, of the relation of the ancient classical drama to the modern romantic drama. Its work thus includes Greek and Latin plays, French, (icrman, and other plays, any literature than can throw light on the development of the drama, and its relation to life. The last year ' s programme has been of much interest. The English historical drama was first reviewed. Historical places in Richard the Third were well described, and we enjoyed a fine comparison of Sackville ' s allegorical method of treating Buck- ingham ' s fall with Shakespeare ' s picture of it. The ethical element in the historical tragedy of Richard was strongly presented. We saw the irony of fate as the retri- bution for his crimes swiftly overtook him after he had destroyed his minions, and justice and honor triumphed at last. But we were pleased and touched as we worked at the lyrical tragedy of love and death, and heard some very good papers on the social environment of Romeo and Juliet, on the direction of Romeo ' s love, impas- sioned though it was, by moral sentiment, on the ice-cold Mercutio, on the skillful handling of minor characters in bringing out the chief actors into full relief, on Juliet as a study in the natural history or the physiology of intense, yet wedded love, on Friar Laurence as no didactic moralizer, but a good fatherly old friend of the family, and especially of the sweet young lovers, and on the play as a whole, in its peculiar character as a tragedy relieved by reconciliations and heart mendings, in the midst 79 of heart-rendings and death. How not to do it (dramatically) was next shown in a study of Spenser as contrasted with Shakespeare, and then the brave, frank Orlando and the melancholy Jacques well offset each other. George Sand ' s Comme II J ous Plaira was proven to be a fascinating perversion oi As You Like It, the wise fool, Touchstone, was delightfully portrayed, and the French and English style of presenting types of character and sentiment well discriminated. The Marlowe Night was not a bad one within the hall, whatever it may have been outside. The mighty line of Shakespeare ' s forerunner was exemplified, and the rise of dramatic blank Aerse intelligently worked out. Two weak kings, Edward the Second and Richard the Second, were seen to pro ' e that e ery like is not the same. Ditto, the two queens of these same kings. Mortimer and Gaveston and Bolingbroke were ma de more real to us. Marlowe ' s Dr. Faustus was treated as illustrating his love of the impossible. Goethe ' s great drama of the soul, Faust, and the sneering devil, Mephistopheles, were critically reviewed. The refined pantheism of Goethe ' s view of wit, Marlowe ' s lyrical intensity and sweetness, were other subjects of interest. Time fails to tell of the Greek night of the Club, the discussion of the rise of classical tragedy, the sublime moral conceptions, the Ivrical beauty, the excellent illustrative readings of professor and students, and of the closing nights when the Moor ' s fateful experience and Hamlet ' s mystery, and the relation of the novel to the drama, and Sheridan ' s adaptation of French situations and dialogues gave us a charming variety. The Club has done excellent work, and is worthy of a better representation than this hasty sketch supplies. 80 agit ii;tl Professor Walter D. Toy Professor Thomas Hume Professor Karl P. Harrington President. Vice- Presiden f. Secretary and Treasurer. TTTHE Philoloo-ical CIuIj meets on the last Tuesday night of each month in the J- academic year, except December and May. Its membership consists of the instructors and ad -anced students in the ' ari(jus language departments ot the University. The object of the club is to stimulate original investigation in philology and literature, and to afford an opportunity for the interchange of xaews on subjects relating to such work. At each meeting papers are read and discussed. All persons interested in the work of the Club are invited to attend its meetings. Si y n iil tll Dr. R. H. Whitehead .... President. Dr. H. V. Wilson .... Vice-President. Dr. F. P. Venable ..... Secretary and Treasurer. Dr. Charles Baskerville .... Corrcspo7iding Secretary. TTTHE Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society was founded in the year 1883 for the pro- -Jl motion of scientific studies and the encouragement of individual research in the State of North Carolina and the South. It has numbered among its members many students and professors in the learned institutions of the State, and has published more than twelve hundred pages of scientific articles in its journal. It has collected over eleven thousand books and pamphlets in exchange for its journal. These are now placed in the University library. This is the twelfth year of its existence. Its meetings are held on the second Tuesday of each month, and these meetings have always been well attended by students and professors, affording a means of intercourse and of improvement out- side of the class room. 82 Wlp j ' ' ' ! inijnliim Ifisbrmtl nnnli[ Professor Kemp P. Battle ..... Presideiit. Professor Geo T. Winston j t - • r , ... Vice-Presidents. Professor Edwin A. Alderman j Holland Thompson ...... Secretary. Y O one of the numerous societies for special culture at the Uni ersity is more 6 popular than the Historical Society. Its monthly meetings are always well attended by interested members and friends, and the contributions made to historical knowledge are important and ' aluable. Some noteworthy j apers have been read during the past year, among which maybe mentioned The North Carolina Railroad bv the late Oen. Rufus Borringer, The Huguenot Families of North Carolina, by Dr. Hume, and Wliy North Carolina believed in the Mecklenburg Declaration, by Alexander and George W. Graham. Some of the papers have been published during the year, and others are expected soon. Unlike the other organizations, this Society is more than a University affair. It is really the State Historical Society, incorporated by the Legislature, with members throughout the State. H. T. 83 rr %nmniiti fii rman link T. R. Little R. T. S. Steele W. S. Howard John Andrews President. Vice-President. Treasjirer. Secretary. 84 German, October 17, ISiH. Leader E. V. Myers. Floor Managers E.G. Gre.jjory, W. .S. Howard. Gcnnan, HAov ' Cinbcr lo, 1804. Leader .............. W. .A. Graham. Floor Managers . M. Borden, R. T. S. Steele. German, Bpril 10, lSi 5. Leader C. R. Turner. Floor Managers T. R. Little, R. T. S. Steele. 1l3onorarv fiUcmbers. Charles Baskcr ille and Isaac Mannin ' . nnembers. J. H. Andre v.s, V. F. Bahnson, M. Borden, M. C. Boyden, W. V. Brem, Jr., Si .TTW. E. Breese, Jr., H. C. Bridges, R. S. Busbee, E. P. Can-, F. L. Carr, W. G. Clark, H. T. Collier, F. N. Cooke, B. Craige, L. J. P. Cutlar. C. R. Dey, C. R. Emry, E. B. Graham. G. M. Graham, W. A. Graham, E. C. Gregory, J. T. Gregory, Jr., W. D. Grimes, n ..fW. B. Guthrie, ' ]■ A. Gwyn, F. R. Harty, F. y. Haywood, A. H. Henderson, S. H. Hill, H. Hornthal, W. S. Howard, (3 ij-f ■ - Johnson, ' ' H. S. Lake, R. L. Lassiter, T. R. Little, F. M. London, J. E. Mattocks, T. G. McAlister, E. W. Myers, J. L. Patterson, G. H. Price, |. N. Pruden, 3( ' .TT- G. Rankin. T. F. Sanford, L Shenck. j. F. Shatlner, jr., R. T. S. Steele, J. L Stevenson, P. |. Thomas, C. R. Turner. 8.S 86 Hiisiijal irqiniixafians. dec (Ilub. Musical Director Leader . Btisiness IManaser First Tenor. E. L. Askew, J. H. Dangerfield, J. D. Lentz, A. W. Mangum. Second Tenor. Darius Eatman, Hariy Howell, R. E. Kearney, W. R. Webb. First Bass. A B. Harrell, Dudley Lindsey, P. W. McMullan, J. L. Patterson. Prof. K. P. Harrington. Darius Eatman. F. F. Bahnson. Second Bass. F. F. Bahnson, J. L. Everett, C. M. McCorkle, B. E. Stanley. nUauDolin Club. Leader . L. M. Bristol. Business 3Ianager W. R. Webb. First Mandolin. Second Mandolin. Guitar. L. M. Bristol, C. R. Emry, P. J. Thomas, H. S. Lake, H. T. Batts, J. B. Lindsey, Jr., C. R. Dey. R. H. Graves. G. S. Wills, P. W. McMullan. Violin. Mandola. Violoncello. 0_ ,;7W. S. Myers. D. F. Nicholson. Banjo Club. R. E. Kearney. Leader H. S. Lake. First Banjo. Second Banjo. Guitar. H. S. Lake, C. R. Dey, J. B. Lindsey, A. W. Mangum, F. F. Bahnson. P. J. Thomas, C. R. Emry. Mandolin. H. T. Batts. 87 P. W. McMullan. Iprooram, U. N. C. Medley . The Three CiL asses Sleigh Ride Galop, Imitative A Catastrophe White Star Line March The Banjo Club. The Wandering Singers ' Patrol The Glee Club. Roses and Thorns Schottisch The Mandolin Club. Ipait II. The Glee and Mandolin Clubs. The Glee Club. The 3 audolin Club. The Glee Club. Nuit d ' Amoir The Sweet Tum Tum . Weber .Ma .irka. f a. IUa, Baa, Black Sheep b. Hev, Diddle, Diddle . Ipait 1111. The Mandolin Club. The Glee Club. The Banjo Club. Andah sia Waltz Patriotic Poti-otrri The Glee Club. The Mandolin Club. The Glee and Mandolin Clubs. . K. P. H. Fischer. Louis Tocaben. . Sprague. [ rooks and Denton. . Willis Clark. . rr. bj- G. W. Persley. Ch. Graziani-Walter. Newconib. Geibel. Geibel. Chas. Le Thiele. Anon. Chapel Hill, January 25 Louisburg, January 30 Henderson, January 31 Oxford, February i Raleigh, April 15 Greesboro, April 22 Salem, April 23 . Winston, April 23 Asheville, April 24 Asheville, April 25 Charlotte, April 26 Chapel Hill, June 6 %o wX Concerts. Olcc, lnlan olin, an Kanjo Cluba. Gerrard Hall Opera House. V. y . C. A. Auditorium. Opera House. . cademy of Music. Graded School Hall. S. F. A. Chapel. Opera House, (irand Opera House. Battery Park Hotel. Y. M. C. A. Auditorium. Gerrard Hall. 88 stage Managers, n A E. B. Lewis. F. R. Harty. Musical Mangers. P. J. Thomas. D. Lindsey. Musical Directors. D. Eatman. Bones. Interlocutor. Tambourines Lishe Lewis. Hopsy Price. Pat Harty, Legs Lindsey. Chorus. Bandy Brown. Mangum, Askew, Handy, Howell, Eatman, Patterson, IMcMullan, Orchestr. . Stanley, Bahnson. Dey, Myers, Lindsey, Lake, Kearney, Thomas, Batts, McMullan. Maneum. program. Ipart H. Grand Opening Chorus. Solo— Girl I Left Behind Eatman- Solo AND Chorus— Johnny, My Old Friend, John Harty. Quartette— Selection from Robin Hood . . Mangum, HozcelL Patterson, and Bahnson. Comic Song— The Trials of a Typical Freshman E. B. Lewis, i. p ,JJ Love Song— Love Me Little, Love Me Long John Patterson. Comic Song — P,ake Froggie Wilson ' s Chicken Pie Thomas. Tragic Song— He Wore A Wearied Look Legs Lindsey. 89 Iprooram. Ipart -flU, Stump Speech Lishe Lccuis. ' i- MrsiCAL Specialty Act Lake and Mangum. T, f Stephens, Brem, Lindsey, Ttmbling Mangum. Stanley. Joe Graham. Base Ball Game Between the Bi tton Busters and the Never Sweats. Clog and Break-Down Lindsey Brothers. Popular Song Ballet . . Hopsy Price, Legs Lindsey, Munk Bailey, Baby Handy. The Coon Town Fancy Ball (not leaving; out razors). ) XTouv of tbe flUinstrel ©roauisatiou. Calamazoo December 25. Skanschatka February 2. Timbucktoo March 8. Chapel Hill Commencement. Leader First Mandolin. Calvert Rogers Dey, Harry S. Lake. ©clta Ikappa JEpsilon. ©rcbestra. C. R Dey. Second Mandolin, Henry Thomas Batts. John B. Lindsey, Pride J. Thomas, Guitars. W. Stamps Howard, Ferdie B. Johnson. First Banjo. Harry S. Lake. JBanjo Club. Second Ban;o. Calvert R. Dey. First Mandolin. H. T. Batts. P. J. Thomas. Guitars. 90 John B. Lindsey. Hiiiu rsilii y rinbi als. XTbe IHniversitp OUaoasine. in ontb(v!. 3fountlC 1844. Prof. Collier Cobb, Managing Editor. y. M. Oldham, Assistant Managing Editor. JEMtors. Phi. Di. F. L. Carr, 95, Holland Thompson, ' 95, E. C. Gregory, ' 96, W. R. Webb, Jr., ' 96, H. G. Connor, ' 97. F. H. Bailey, ' 97. Bssociatc Editors. Harry Howell, ' 95, R. E. Coker, ' 96, Leslie Weil, ' 95, H. MacCall, ' 96. Blumni (Siuarterlp. 3Foun c 1805. Prof. F. P. Venable. Collier Cobb, V Executive Cotnmittee. K. P. Harrington, ) Registrar E. L. Harris, Business Manager. Xlbe Xlar Ibeel. ■Umvcrstt? of IRortb Carolina. PuBLisHf:D Every Thursday by the General Athletic Asscjciation. Edward W. Myers, Editor-in-Chief. George S. Wills, A. B. Kimball, n i,;; ' Elisha B. Lewis, J- O. Carr, M. H. Yount, J- C. Filer, Darius Eatman. business flDanagers. Harry Howell, Jno. A. Moore, . y.yi7as. A. Gwyn. 91 Zbc IHnivcvsityj press. Hon. John Manning Rev. Baylus Cade, Maj. W. T. Patterson, A. H, Thompson, Prtsidenl. Manager. Treasurer. Foreman. Ipublicaticns 1Is5lle . The North Carolina University Magazine, The Abwini Quarterly, The Tar Heel, U. N. C. Catalogue, The University Handbook, The V. M. C. A. Handbook. 92 H. H. Home V. R. WV bb, Jr, J. V. Canada R. E. Coker . J. S. Wi-ay . ssntinlinn. President. Vice-President. Treastwer. Corresponding Secretary. Recordifig Secretary. 7AHE religious life of the University centers here. The membership is near two J hundred, the largest in its history of nineteen years. Devotional meeting ' s are held four evenings a week, with an average attendance of fifty. Its work is done through eleven Committees. Monthly sermons are provided for the student body, and community at large from the best available pulpits. Five Bible Classes are an important feature of its work. It sent twenty-two delegates to the State Con ention in Raleigh in March. In two respects specially it has done great things for the University this year. In Januar) ' , the services of Evangelist Pearson were secured for ten days. A revolution was made in the religious life of the Institution, there being near a hundred professions. On February 24th a mass meeting was held in the interest of a building for the Association, the greatest need of the University of to-day, says our President, Dr. Winston. In less than twenty-four hours, twenty-five hundred dollars had been pledged toward a twenty-thousand dollar building. Now six thousand has been pledged, mainly by students. Alumni of the Institution are expected to help the Building Committee materialize this plan. 93 for tbe lOOtb annual Commencement, 1895, IDarsbals. J. F. Shaffner. Jr., Chief. DiALKCTic Society. F. F. Bahnson, E. P. Can-, J. F. Nooe, A. H. Robbins, R. G. Shannonhouse. Philanthropic Society. R. G. Allsbrook, . y. TTj. C. Carroll, R. P. Jenkins, G. H. Kirby, B. E. Stanly. Ball fmauacjcrs. Edwin C. Gregory, Chief. Dialectic Society. J. H. Andrews, W. H. Woodson, J. C. Filer. Phi. Soc. V. A. Batchelor, R. G. Allsbrook, J. A. Butt. Philanthropic Society W. G. Clark, S. H. Hill, J. H. Daingerfield. IRcprcseutatives. Di. Soc. M. B. Aston, R. R. Ragan, J. W. Canada. 94 Mlmjs 0IJ 1|b f ilbiiiaii. flssucS anmiallv 115 tbc jFiatcvnitics. Dudley Lindsey, AKE, Editor in Chief. Associate lEDitors. E. C. Greg-on.-, Zt, L. T. Hartsell, K2, V. A. Batchelor, Ben, T. F. Sanford, KA, W. R. Webb, 2N, A. H. Edgerton, 2X, J. F. Xooe, nKA. Business Iftanagers. J. W. McAlister, ATi2, F. F. Bahnson, SAE, W. C. Kluttz, ' i ' TA. 95 lUiiijiicl I0 ytasiiinil l|inslniL Con ' Uctc b ! Class of 05, tl. Itt. C. Committee of Hrranoements. Holland Thompson, Dudley Lindsey, John A. Moore, Joe E. Alexander, j .TT T. E. Broun. proovamme. Toast Master Dr. Battle. Toasts : 1. Waterloo 2. University ' s Triumph 3. The University and Edication 4. The University and State Mr. E. n. Leivis. ' 2- ' Mr. Joe E. Alexander. Prof. IVil iatns. 1 ' resident J I ins ton . Music by Mandolin and Banjo Clubs. 96 1][imirrsifi ll lrlii: ssnnaliuiL G. G. Stephens O. ' J. G. Rankin J. W. McAlister President. Vice- President. Secretary and Treasurer. Charles Baskerville Jesse M. Oldham , !3_ , 7Wm. E. Breesc Geo. M. Graham . L. I. Guion . Chas. R. Turner . Harry Howell Captain Foot-ball Team. Captain Base-ball Teatn. Captain Track Athletic Teafn. . Manager Foot- ball Teatn. Asst. Manager Foot-ball Team. . Mcmager Base -ball Team. Asst. Mayiager Base-ball Team. Btbletic H i5or Committee. Dr. F. P. Venable, J. T. Pugh, G. G. Stephens. 97 ;|Iniin of M. Charles Baskerville Geo. M. Graham E. C. Gre ory, ' 96 J. T. Puo:h Post Grad. L. I. Guion, ' 96 . T. A. Sharpe, ' 96 H. T. Colher, ' 97 Jas. Baircl, ' 98 W. D. Merritt, Law, B. E. Stanley, ' 96 G. G. Stephens, ' 96 J. A. Moore, ' 95 Chas. Baskerville, Post Grad. ' 3. f?-77: r K. i -TL-w — .t ' il J ' - Rankin, ' 96 H. M. Thompson, ' 95 Geo. M. Graham, Law E. G. Denson, Medicine E. B. King, ' 98 . Substitutes. C Captain. Business Manager. Left end. Left tackle. Left guard. Centre. Right guard. Right tackle. Right end. Quarter back. Left half back. Right half back. Full back. Uk. ' C End Tackle. F71II back. Halfback. Guard. 98 ' Tarsili| l rrorli. U. N. C. vs. A. and M. College, at Chapel Hill. October 12 U. N. C. vs. A. and M. College, at Raleigh, October 20 U. N. C. vs. Trinity College, at Chapel Hill,- October 24 U. N. C. vs. Sewanee, at Asheville, October 27 . U. N. C. vs. Lehigh, at South Bethlehem, Penn., October 31 U. N. C. vs. Rutgers, at New Brunswick, N. J., November r U. N. C. vs. Georgetown, at Washington, D.C., November 3 U. N. C. vs. Richmond College, at Greensboro. November 10 U. N. C. vs. U. of Virginia, at Richmond, November 29 44 too 16 to 28 to 36 to 4. 6 to 24. to 5. 20 to 4. 28 to 0. to 34. Colleoe or Second Eleven (HItas Scrubs ). Chas. R. Turner C. R. Turner, L. E. W. J. Wright, L. T. G. H. Carpenter, L. G. J. H. White, C. D.J. Craig, R. G H. H. Atkinson, F. B. Captain. E. L. Abbot, R. T. Thos. F. String-field, R. E. J. F. Shaffner, O. B. W. D. Grimes. L. H. B. M. N. Falls, R. H. B. ■ Subs. .fTE. B. Lewis, O. B. J. C. Bradwell, H. B. J -7- L. B. Southerland, H. B. 99 ibss Jihmm hr 1894, A I W. |. Weaver .... T. R. Little, L. E. R. T. S. Steele. L. T. I. T. p-arrell, L. G. E. W. Myers. O.B. W. C. Kluttz, . „ ., J. W. McAlister. i - - ' • E. J. Woodward, End. W. R. Webb . W. H. Woodson, L. E. R. E Coker. L. T. A. H. Robbins. L. G. W. R. Webb, r,T, W. B. Lenily, -• • E. B. Graham, L. H. B. as, Caplain. Dudley Lindsey J. L. Patterson, R. E. a.y.7rW. J. Weaver. R. T. J. O. Carr. R. G. C. F. Toinlinson, C. W. A. Graham. R. H. Dudley Lindsey. F. B. Leslie Weil, Tackle. Manager. Subs. 96, Capiat n. ijf]. A. Gwyn . . . Manager. ' T. W. Powers. R. E. E. P. Carr, H. B.. S. B. Shepherd T. F. Kluttz. L. E. J. L. Everett. L. T. A. T. Allen, L. G. W. H. Green, Jr.. O. W. V. Brem, F B. Subs. ( .; ' . A. Gwyn, R. T. J. C. Eller, R. G. J. Van Noppen. C. C. R. Emry, R. H. B. H. Mac Call. C. 97, Captain. F. H. Bailey . D. B. Smith. R. E Manager. F.J. Haywood, Jr., L. H. B. R. S. Busbee. H. B. F. O. Rogers .... J. B. Ferguson, L. E. J. C. Seagle. L. T. J. M. Walker. L. G. E. E. Sams, O. B. Chas. Johnson. 1 , i, i F. Lanier, - - ' J. C. Currie, End. S. B. Shepherd. F. B. Subs. E. E. Bagwell. R. T. W. [. Nichols. R. G. R. R. Ragan. C. F. H. Bailey, R. H. B. W. Underbill. Guard. 98 Captain. F. Lanier .... 0..:?w T. M. Newland, R. E. G. S. Furgerson, R. T. H. S. Lake. R. G. C. C. )oyner. C. W. G. Peace. C. R. Dey, F. O. Rogers, F. B. Subs. F. Page. End. Manager. I R. H. B. Class aames. (Series llncomplctc. 95 vs. ' 97, October 19 „ 96 vs. ' 98, November 16 ' ' 4 to 4 95 vs. ' 97, November 23 ....... ' . , ' . ' . ' . to o 100 ikss onl- nll (§ m . The following are the agreements upon wliich the Class Games were played : — (i). The Seniors were to play the Sophomores, and the Juniors the Freshmen, the number of games to be decided by the mana- gers of the opposing teams. (2). The winning teams were to play a series of three games for the championship. (3). Any difficuUies arising were to be settled by a meeting of the eight managers and captains, and in case they could not agree, the point in question was to be referred to the advisory com- mittee of the general Athletic Association. As seen by the record of games the Seniors won from the Sophomores, and the Juniors tied with the Freshmen. For some reason they never played off this tie. This action on their part prevented the agreement being carried out, according to the second part. The Seniors would not consider them (the Junior and Freshmen teams) in the race for the championship until they carried out their first agreement, and this not being done, the Senior Class Foot Ball Team claimed the championship, and the Sophomores claimed second place. Taken from an article in Tar Heel, signed by the Managers and Captains of the Freshmen and Junior Teams. lOI ' THi|siti| llmt nf ' 9 X Jesse M. Oldham, ' 94 Chas. R. Turner, ' 95 Harry Howell, ' 95 Captahi. Ma?iager. Assistant Manager. F. H. Bailey, ' 97 . E. C. Gregory, ' 96 B. E. Stanley, ' 96 nyJi p. R. Slocumb, 98 W. A. Graham, ' 95 E. B. Graham, ' 96 H. T. Collier, ' 97 G. Cj. Stephens, ' 96 J. M. Oldham, ' 94 S. H Hill, ' 97 F. B. Johnson, ' 97 J. W. McAlister, ' 95 Substitutes. First Base. Second Base. Short Stop. Thi7 ' d Base. Left Field. Centre Field. Right Field and Pitcher. Pitcher and Right Field. Catcher. Pitcher. Infield. Outfield. :l fk} nf §am $ for asnii ' 9 D. u. N. C. vs. u. N. C. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. u. N. c. vs. Uni ' ersity of Vermont, at Greensboro, March 30 Boston League Nine, at Charlotte, April i Lafayette College, at Raleigh, April 2 Lafayette College, at Chapel Hill, April 3 Lafayette Colle ge, at Chapel Hill, April 4 Lehigh University, at Chapel Hill, April 13 Lehigh University, at Greensboro, April 15 Franklin and Marshall, at Chapel Hill, April 25 Franklin and Marshall, at Chapel Hill, April 26 N. C. A. and M. College, at Chapel Hill, April 27. Oak Ridge Institute, at Chapel Hill, May i. . Guilford College, at Chapel Hill, May 4. University of Virginia, at Greensboro, May 18. 4 to I. 3 to 17- 1 to 9- 3 to 4- 6 to 3- 2 to I. 6 to 3. 22 to 5 12 to I 12 to o. Scores ot tbe (Barnes of Season ' 94 tbat were plaveft after tbe publication of Ibellenian, ' 04. U.N. C. vs. University of Virginia, at Lynchburg, Va., May 4, 1894 . U. N. C. vs. University of Virginia, at Charlottesville, Va., May 5, 1894 U. N. C. vs. Richmond College, at Richmond, Va., May 7, 1894 . U. N. C. vs. Latayette College, at Greensboro, May 8, 1894 . U. N. C. vs. Lafayette College, at Greensboro, May 9, 1894 . 103 4 to 2 2 to 10 6 to 3 I to 2 6 to 5 nit Wnmiis ssorinlian. E. W. Myers . H, C. Rridsfers I J rf James A. Gvvyn ' resident. Vice- President Secretary and Treasurer. XTournamcut of 1894 ' 95. jfratcrnitics ■tRcprcscntc . Zeta Psi Kappa Alpha Beta Theta Pi Alpha Tau Omega Deta Kapjia Kpsilon Kappa Sigma Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Nu A. W. Mangum and R. H. Graves. T. R. Robertson and H. T. Winston. Herbert Piingham and Paul Slocum. T. R. Little and T. C;. McAlister. D. Lindsey and W. S. Howard. T. S. Witson and J. G. Hollowell. VV. C. Kluttz and W. H. Woodson. H. H. Atkinson and John Patterson Henry Clark Bridgers and A. H. Henderson Prize : Silver Cup. — To be won l)y one and the same fraternity three successive seasons before becoming its property. Season ' 93- ' 94 was won by Zeta Psi, Kappa Alpha being second. Season ' 94-95 was won by Zeta Psi, Delta Kappa Epsilon being second. 104 Wt mm ioiujls. H)elta IFxappa lEpsilon. E. W. Myers W. S. Howard ........ F. B. Johnson ........ Baby Handy and Muncher Dey Zeta lp si. A. W. Manguni ..... R. H. Graves . . . . . R. H. Lewis, Jr. Senator Hill and Bob Lassiter . President. Vice- President. Secretary and Treasurer. Ball Chasers. President. Vice- President. Secretary and Treasurer Ball Chasers. Beta Ebeta pi. E. B. Lewis ....... P. R. Slocumb W. S. Meyers L. B. Southerland and C. McAdoo Sitima IRu. H. C. Bridges .... B. Craige ... J. L. Everett .... Hops Price and Tom Steele President. Vice- President. Secretary a?id Treasurer. Ball Chasers. President. Vice-President. Secretary and Treasurer. Ball Chasers. Ikappa Hlpba. T. R. Robertson ....... President H. T. Winston ....... Vice-President. V. M, Graves . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer. T. F. Sanford ........ Ball Chaser. Ikappa Stoma. J. G. HoUowell . . . . , . . . President. G. S. Wittson ........ Vice-President. L, T. Hartsell ....... Secretary and Treasurer . T. P. Braswell ........ Ball Chaser. 105 Sioma Hlpba lEpsilou. H. H. Atkinson .... F. R. Harty W. B. Lemly Jim Stevenson and .Snap Andrews Hlpba Uau ©mecia. L. McRae .... T. R. Little .... J. W. McAli.ster Gilp McAlistei and Geo. Ruffin Slocum. J. H. Coble L. B. Evans A. H. Robbins President. Vice President Secretary and Treasurer. Ball Cliascrs. President. Vice- President. Secretary ayid Treasurer. Ball Chasers. Presideyit. Vice-President. Secretary and Treasurer. lEurcMa. Ralph Graves President. Clarence Klut tz Vice-President. Eugene Denson Secretary and Treasurer. most EnXi, ; W. A. Mitchell President. W. T. Parrott . . .• Vice-President. G. P. La Roque ....... Secretary a?id Treasurer. E. P. Wooten Ball Chaser. io6 , l[nm0r$ili| im Sluit ( . ©tficcrs. President, H. C. Bridgers. Vice-President, D. R. Bryson. Secretary and Treasurer, 7 Thomas S. Rollins. lanivcrsitv ITeam. 1 Bridgers, 13-15- 13 . 2 Brem, 11-13-12 i f 7 ' T) Rankin, 13-11-12 4 Atkinson, 11-13-12 . 5 Dockery, 9-8-9 Substitute. Xy.Tf, Southerland, 11-5-8 njlembcrs. 4 5 1 Atkinson, Hugh H. 2 Brem, Walter V., Jr. s Bailey, M D. Bridgers, Henry Clark. Bryson, D. R. Brown, T. Bingham, H. B. Bradwell. 9 Carr, Ed. P. 10 Dangerfield, Haigh. 11 Dockery. 12 Farrior. 13 Henderson. 14 Lake, H. 15 Long, N. C. 16 Mitchell, W. A. 17 Page. 18 Parker, Fred M. fj ,rr 9 Rankin, Guy. 20 Stevenson, J. M. 21 Skinner. (ig,if ' 22 Southerland, L B. ifl.ff i Weaver. 24 Winston, H. P. 91% 80%. 80%, 80%. 55%. 107 Stop, EFORE perusing what is to follow the reader must be in the proper T frame of mind, and must remember that in every joke somebody must be the g-oaL We have tried not to drag any one too much, but it we or our artists have done aught that would be taken excep- tion to, we beg lea ' e to refer any one to our Committee of Three, who have promised to settle any and all disputes. The Committee is composed of James Corbett, Kirkj)atrick, and Wince, and these gentlemen will be glad to see you at any time. P. S. — Better make arrangements with your undertaker before calling on them. io8 log ]h f lijiitl From QJuIorii s SBoijb V ijlljiiij. {Slightly paraphrased, by the permission of the Author.) Chapter 6. How Sir Win ' ce arrived into the Town of Sir Walter, for TO furnish the Battle with Sir Christopher, and how Sir Wince FOUGHT against SiR CHRISTOPHER AND FINISHED HIS BaTTLE, AND HOW Sir Christopher was beaten. A ' OW turn we to Sir Wince, who rode with his bundle of papers to the L l eastward, and as he came to the great town of Sir Walter, and there LpL, stayed for many days, and each day did he right gallantly do battle against many valorous knights, upholding his cause against them all. And on the tenth morn Sir Christopher sent unto Sir Wince and bade him make ready. And so Sir Wince arose and armed him, and there was a mass sung afore him, and he brake his fast, and mounted his horse, and went unto the court of the castle, where they should do battle. So there was Sir Christopher, already, clean armed, on horseback, with his spear in his hand, and so they encountered, and whereas Sir Christopher brake his spear upon him. Sir Wince held up his spear, and touched him not. Then Sir Wince ran to .Sir Christopher and smote him so that horse and man fell to earth. Then did Sir Wince alight down, and bid Sir Christo- pher yield or he would slay him. When Sir Christopher saw he might not escape the death he yielded him to Sir Wince, and he kneeled down and put the ponnnel ol his sword to Sir Wince, and so he received him. And so, he promised Sir Wince never to be foe to the University, and thereupon, at Whitsuntide after, to come, he and his sons, and put them at Sir Wince ' s grace. That, wit ye well, is the story of the meeting of Sir Wince and the Duke, who is known in this country as Sir Christopher Columbus Durham. The Committee Room. AO.V. Ml O (BTHHt l-tW H «NO-STAWO POjEAfTEl MCMN ' SA LL iSC JL ff flDotto : Eat, rtnl , an be mcrns. All mt ' inljei ' s requiretl to participate in each contest Score ot last contest nuarcb 3lt 1895, Biscuits Slices Ham Slices Beef Pounds Butter Pies ( whole ) Chickeiip (whole; Geese Remarks A. H. Price, Pres . . lO 9 6 3 6 3 2 Half sick. Babv Ruth, Vice- Pres. 9 10 8 3 5 z ' A 1 2 Had toothache. Bear Collier q ' 12 18 5 H 2 Second prize. P G Graham 6 II 9 I ' 4 I In base-l)all trainina . Entrails White 4 14 25 4 7 4 I Winner. Strawberry Steele 12 6 8 3J 6 2 ' 2 Had to watch PG. lanettv Dawson lo 4 10 %. 5 I ' A No more room. Patrick Henry Ragan, 7 8 12 5 8 2 Too scared to eat. Collier Cobb, (Honorary 18 8 6 Don ' t need any. Grub gave out before Member) 40 20 he finished Rules: I. Contests take place three times per day. Members are expected, however, to stay full all the time. II. In every contest, rapidity as well as quantity is considered. III. Any member scoring less than thirty (30) points in any contest shall be imme- diately e.xpelled. IV. Any member scoring sixty (60) points or over in any contest, shall be placed on the honorary list. While our Honorary member ' s record is put down, he is not counted as an active contestant, as he is so far ahead that no member of the club can hold a light to him in the contest. See rule IV. ot tbc XHniversitv ot Ittortb Carolina. T f Typical Partner . faster Overseer . Chief Tenant Gardener Head Plowman Wagon Driver Yard Boys . Cozv- Caller and Milk- maid . . . . Onion Skinner Swine Herd . Poultry Managers Ed Carr. Cyclone Andrews. Beaut ' ' Bridgers. Harry Lake. Tom Steele. Pat Harty. f Paul Slocumb. F . Latiier, Josephine Beldeii. Judge Little (Swallows the Hulls] Ross Robertson. Dunstan and Stringfield. ]£i:=plo vmen. (Which by no means is to say that they will not in the future be similarly occupied.) Bill Clark. ' Set Love. Bob Lassiter. ' Short-Stepper ' ' Long. T. P. Braswell. Tobe Connor John Everett. Huckleberry Johnson. Sidney Cooper. D. M.Buie. Boccaccio lohnson. Geo. Ruffin. Farmer Jones. Eli-sha Lewis. ■ ' Little Muncher Dey ' ■ Lawyer Moore. Walter Brem. Prank Patre. Requisite for Membership. — Every member must be a wearer of high-water pants, a C-Mo Jacket, yellow shirt, red cravat, brogan shoes, and streaked socks to match pants and jacket. No person who has failed to attend at least one circus, and ho has e er omitted going to town on the fourth Sat ' dy need apply for membership. Object of the Club. — Mutual sympathy and attempt at a perhaps possible enlightenment in the ways of the world (that part outside of the rural districts). 113 mrd intk-Fir yiii JssnrinliaiL High Cock O ' Lorums, Drs. Dunstan and Atkinson. Physician and Surgeon, Licked Chicken Chaser. Eye Opener, Seconds, RabbtV ' Strtngfield. Judi e P ' ' Docket y. Put Harty. HoHingsworth and Jaht. Ring Master and Stakeholdhr, Stochboldcrs. VVilkie Caldwell, (Col.), Seat Barbee. John Patterson, Cyclone Andrews, Harry Lake, Prof. Dunstoii, (Tonsorial Artist), Beiinie Booth, ( ( ,7I Bandy Brown, ■ SSOCIATION meets every fifteen tninntes m the day, (Sundaysincluded),oii the bloody arena ' Scat Bat bee. Sid Cooper, Eli Merrett, Robert Lassiter, Mrs. T . Cocks borrowed Pfroni the roosts must always be fought at dav-break. Anyone having a iifteen cent game-cock for sale apply to Sainpy Menitt. Secretary and Treasurer of the Association. Backers will always deposit bets with Seat Barbee, Stakeholder for the Association. Any one wishing an account of the fi.i hts with a treatise on cock- fighting as applied to Psychology, will address Horace Williams, Reporter of the Aerial Cock-fighting Association. xrbe CbicUcn Club or IRoostcr 36rioa e. Wotto: H qutck ban6 ant a sure cv,i., Ilf vou want to bavc a cblchen pic. E. W. Myers XlUalbinii (sometimes tunnitti)) Delegates. Pride Thomas, Tom Little, Tom Steele, Legs Lindsey. I. II. 111. ©oose Sttatcber. fc tj-ijr. W. E. Breesc. President . eatbec iptcltcrs. Sid Cooper, Baby Handy, Pewee Cutlar, Chef— Harry Lake. If you suddenly run into a barb wire fence you must not drop the chicken. Meetings are always held in the still hours of the night as our business is affected by light. Never allow the chickens to talk back or argue with you, as we do not wish to disturb anybody ' s rest except tbe chicken ' s. •Mr. Myers has unanimously been elected President, as he is the most skillful among us and has been in the business longer. 114 II| Dinair$ Pquirlmtnl. Conducted by Miss Frances M. London. Miss Victoria M. Graves, } Madame Empie. - Assista7iis. In the spring a young girl ' s fancy Sadly turns to thoughts of tan, Sea shore, boating, freckles, yachting. And the absence of a man. M. L. H 1Rou cau. If I were he, that great and mighty he, I ' d wash this wicked world and hang it out to dry, I ' d sweep the earth from sea to sea. And dust the cobwebs from the sky ; Without, within, a model man, my part I ' d play So wise and well, and true and brave, that she Would never have a chance to moan and say, If I were he. A man and a maid, A leafy nook, A word that ' s said Beside the brook. Her eyes downcast Have happy look, He ' s won at last Beside the brook. He ' s carried the day, With joy he shook, A stone gave way, He fell in the brook. Sweet (Bivl Gra uates. In feminine minds there is burning A dangerous fever of learning. Poor creatures ! Their features Once pretty and innocent were — Now see them — a sapient blurr Man evolution, State revolution. No subject too vast to be captured By maidens with knowledge enraptured, All histories, All mysteries, All sciences, knowledges, arts. Are dear as the Lord of their hearts. In fevered haste, No time to waste, They swoop upon Darwin and Spencer. And erudite Germans much denser. From causation To damnation, Abhoreut of everything secular, Thev bound with a motion molecular. 115 bucrlisrmtiils. T RILBY. OKINNV CRAIG ' S ANTI-FAT r ' pO ARTISTS wishini; I ' rilliy models and _i_ people wishing; to learn the Trilby pose, apply to ■ Mrs. THOMPSON. LESSONS given in the Art of Blushing. FANNIE GUDGER. LESSONS given in the Art of Love Mak- ing. Mrs J. STANLEY THOMAS. MISS VICTORIA M. GRAVES, In- structress in Organ Playing. Having now obtained exclusive right to use the chapel organ I am prepared to give lessons to any one vvlio may ai ply, at any liour of day or night, except during morning prayers. I use Skinny Craig ' s Anti-Fat, and reconi- mendittoall. ' BABY RUTH. IESSONS given in Dramatic Art. J Miss RICARDO SHEPHERD. MADAME EM PIE is prepared to furnish cut llowers to any one in any quantity, at Room 26 South l.uilding. If the Madame is not at home, you may be acconmiodated m the flower line by Misses LONDON and GRAVES, at Room 14. A TISS FRANCES M. LONDON will give IVjL lessons in China Painting ; also, in the Art of Interior Decorating. Ciiina Sets, painted to order, cheap. 116 ,f i|0ii umnl b %}o il nsli- Mo RACE how to run a cock-pit. Gregory whence his title Knight of tlie Order of the Oarter. Hill Clark how he said grace at the Normal. Tucker to write an essaj ' on Chapel Hill by Moonlight. Legs Lindsay, What ' s that? Rahnson to tell a joke. MacCall what he got on Psychology. Pat Stanley how many ice-creams he ' ll take. Bristol if the Mandolin Club can play without HLM. fi, r ' Boccaccio whence his name. Askew how to cut dresses. Browne Shepherd to give you the Ricardo act, or write, Seignor, write. Murray Borden how to obtain kisses. Kluttz if he ' s married yet. W. R. Webb to vacate his room. Funk ' ' to study afiy lesson. Johnny Moore wliat kin he is to Sugishita. Colonel Braswell where he gained his title. 3. . 7 Bandy or Colonel to stop a hog. Bill Clark about don ' t appoint. Will return by next train. Cyclone Andrews if his demijohn has turned up. Fanny London if sunsets are ever artistic. Chick Woodson how and why Bahnson cut him out. Henry Sharpe how he likes Latin and Math. Adderton if he (7 er stood an examination. The Musical Club how they enjoyed their Western tour in February. .Mrs. T y to sell her white rooster. Clarke, Wittson, and Brooks how to catch white owls. Ned Myers his opinion on woman. - yff Cljf Carroll why Bancly Brown moved out. Pride Thomas about his insomnia. Bill Clark what Bc tdielor saw through the window of the waiting-room at Selma. It was discovered too late to remed that this is a mistake. ' ' Funk always has been and now is too lazy even to get mad. 117 BLESSED be niirthfulness. It is one ot the renovators of the world. Men will let you abuse them if only you will make them laugh. — The Editors. None knew thee- but to love thee, None named thee but Xo praise. — Dr. Manning. I have much in myself, much that pleases me. — Prof Alderman. A laugh costs too nnich when Ixtught at the expense of ' irtue. — {Mr. Blank.) He carries a stone in one hand, and offers bread with the other. — Wince. None but the Ijrave deserves the fair. — Baskerville. Slowness personified. — E. L. Harris. By their fruits ye shall know them. — A i l and Veayer and Sharf s Math. Club. Beware, lest you see in print what you tell him. — Collier Cobb. ii8 Serenely full. — ' ' Mike Schenck. I ' m Mammy ' s fat baby boy. — ' ' Fatty ' ' Carroll. In conversation, I surpass all. — Edgar Newby. For thy sake, tobacco, I would do anything but die. — P. W. McMullan. The frivolous work of polished idleness. — Cyclone Andrews. My knowledge is my power. — ' ' Set Love. ' Tis a shameful thing for men to lie. — Dolph Mangum. The flower of meekness on the stem of grace. — Skeats Netvby. From the crown of his head to the soul of his feet he is all mirth. — Grimes Haywood. A thousand hearts beat happily, and when music arose with its voluptuous swell, Soft eyes looked love to eyes that spoke again And all went merry as a marriage bell. — Commencement Balls. And formed for all the bewitching arts of love. — Profs. Toy and Cain. The helpless look of blooming infancy. — ' ' Little Mitch. Sweet pouting lips whose color mocks the rose. Rich, ripe, and teeming with the dew of bliss ; The flower of love ' s forbidden fruit which grows Insidiously to tempt us with a kiss. — Commencement Girl. Explaining metaphy sics to the nation I wish he would explain his explanation. — Prof. Williams. The end of mirth is the beginning of sorrow. — Going on Prob. 119 Ne ' er ride, ne ' er fall. — ' ' Pony. ' ' I am not in the roll of ordinary men. — Bristol. A sweet, attractive kind of grace. — ' Cub Bear. He was so fresh that full grown blades of grass Turned pale with envy as he chanced to pass. — Coxey (alias (i. K. Tate). Whistle to me my lad, and I ' ll come. — Rambler ' Tucker. Mine own face often draws me to the glass. — J. N. Hill. Brass impregnable. — Tom Steele. Lost, strayed, or stolen. — Utley. An ap])le cleft in twain is not more t in than these two creatures. — Misses Graves and London. I want to be tough. — Tom Little. See! Who comes here? A country lad. — E. P. Carr. Is seldom seen with a shirt. — Pride Thomas. It is a great plague to be too handsome a man. — Wittson. Necessity is like Dockery in that it knows no law. — Lazv Class. Hath any man ever seen him at the barber ' s? — ' ' Pat Stanly. Assume some virtue if you have it not. — Rambler ' Tucker. Only a wee bit of nonsense. — Mobile Bailey. Does he not hold up his head, conceited youth, and strut in his gait. — Ralph Graves. I am no flatterer — not at all politic. — BillJ reese and Fred Johisoti. On the four aces doom ' d t(j roll. — McMullan. Makes use and fair advantat e of his days. — ' ' Pat ' ' Harty. Know you he lo ' Cs her ? I heard him swear his atfection. — ' ' Little Minister Thomas {not Pride). A quart of rye is a dish for a kin . — Man on Pledge. Balm of my cares, sweet solace of my joys. Hail, juice benignant ! — XXXX. Arma xirumque cano. — Normal Girls. Drink to-day and drown all sorrow. — J. W. Canada. ' Tis silence that wins (when you want a kiss). — Murray Borde?i. They never taste who always drink ; They always talk who never think. — R. T. S. Steele ' Tis the voice of the sluggard ; I heard him complain, You have waked me too soon, I must slumber aaain. — W. G. Clark. None but himself can be his parallel. — H. M. Thompson. What is a man, If his chief good, and market of his time, Be but to sleep and feed ? — Bob Lassiter. Old gold hair, polka-dot face, and very green ways. — Sp orty ' S cott. ' (P, n I to myself am dearer than a friend. — Haigh Dangerjield. God made him, and therefore let him pass for a man. — Utley. Soft words, with nothing in them, make a song. — Glee Club. 121 There is nothintj; insignificant — nothing. — Joe Graham and ' Motik ' Bailey. These are the times that try men ' s souls — Examination Period. What a spendthrift is he of his tongue. —PauLSlocomb. .yjrfJ • Shoot folly as it flies, (or if not on a pledge, shoot half the Fresh. Class). — Upper Classmen. Purposes, like eggs, imless they be hatched into action, will nm into decay. — University Senate. Silence your opponent with reason, nf t with noise. — Hopsy Price. Oh, popular applaust; ! What heart of man is proof against thy sweet seducing charms. — Banjo Club. Let him play the instrument who can. — ' ' ' Billy ' Cain. A big nose never spoiled a handsome face. — J. N. Hill. A lazy boy and a warm bed are difficult to part. — ' John Pat. He that loves glass without g, take away 1 and that is he. — ' Fresh Cooper. Mad love ! I for you and you for another. — P. G. Graham. Loving and singing are not to be forced. — Chapel Choir. A great talker is a great liar. — ' I Ashe Leivis. ' - J. . • He may lie boldly who comes from afar. — ' ' Boccacc io J ohnson. A glorious de ' il, large in heart and brain. — « ' Atkinson. Lo ! what giants stand amongst us ! — ' ' ' Joe Monk Dick Baby Pewee. i Out of nothing, nothing comes. — Archibald Henderson. ( Why do you laugh ? Change but the name, and the story is told of yourself. — Frank Rogers. Greater men than I may have lived, but I do not beheve it. — Paid Sloco mb. , — ' Tis said all creatures have their use. (The exception ])roves the rule). — Utley. The soul of this man is his clothes. — ' ' Little Munch. ' ' There be the pretty genii of the flowers. — London arid Graves. The empty vessel yields the loudest sound. — Frank Rogers. Let him that itches scratch himself — Giidgnr. p A broad hat does not always cover an honorable head. — Fortune Lanier. Owned without dispute Through all the realms of nonsense absolute. — Lish£ _M£wis. Shadwell alone of all my sons is he Who stands confirmed in full stupidity, The rest to some faint meaning make pretence, But Shadwell never deviates into sense. — ' ' ' ' Baby Ruth Craig. A thing of beauty is a joy forever. — Hollowell. 123 nr My son ' s chance of leading the Fresh class. — Dr. Carroll. A Fog-horn vox humana voice. — Joe Belden. One full set of good (?) looks.— s zw Patterson. }Ay five on Geology. — Butt. A Living Encyclopedia (?). — Converser Neivby. Full instructions in Electrical Engmeering. — Gns Bingham. A few choice fives and sixes on Math. — lVea2i£r, ScqjU, and Sharpe. One fine iiomjiadour — A. B. Harrell. ■ A limited (?) number of Hellenians. — Editors. Half interest in my legs. — Mc idux). Z. . 7 Unlimited verdancy. — Archie Henderson. A large sujiply of purloined Base-ball goods. — Ratter. ' ' Fifty pounds number A brass. — Coxey Tate. Engagements for Commencement,— an unlimited number. — Gregory. A pair of game (?) cocks. — Lassiter and Cooper. A wearied look. — Weary Yates. A barrel of clay pigeons. — Gun Club A set of poker chips. — Pearson Convert. A newly patented phonograph, warranted ne er to run down — locomb. ry A few first tenor singers. — Harrington. ' • tMy Commencement rag. — Ball Manager Clark. A large supply of Huckleberries. — y 9 «.w of Sampson. My services as a base-ball pitcher.— ya tzV Ball. Bow-legged hams, cross-eyed spectacles, double-liarrel goose-eggs, left-handed gimlets, hand-me-down plug hats, second lianded P. G. Graham-worn pants, a fiill set of whiskers deaf phonographs, asthmatic accordions, eucalyptines, Mellin ' s baliy food for Freshmen, Bologna sausages, dish-water diamonds, pewter worm gourds, Peet Co. ' s clothing (himiming- liirds in the lining) guaranteed not to rip, tear, split, or nm down at the heel, knock-kneed pants, creasers, and banjo-strings jerked by request from vox humana Tom-cats. And ' taint no joke. If you don ' t believe it all Just call on Jakie I5all.— 7V ' Co-operative Store. Buyer will bt- a public benefactor. t Only Normal Girls need apply. 124 9 ' 8 Sporty Scott to Dr. C. — When we get to heaven will we have win. i;s ? , ij-) ' ' -S Dr C. — Of course, Sir, we will. Sporty Scott.— Well, I ' ll bet you ten dollars that I will beat you flyin;.;. South IJcthlehem, Pa. Foot ILvll Player. — Say, Mr., when does the train leave for Chapel Hill ? Washi)tgton, D.C. Voice in the Hotel Hall.— ' ' Will the N. C. entleman who borrowed my garter please return it Dr. Venable on General Chemistry. — Mr. Schenck, how was this element discovered? Mr Schenck. — It was discovered by the use of sceptiscope. Freshman Page (knowing Sugishita ' s hatred of the Chinese). — Sugishita, are there not a lot of Chinese in Japan? Sugishita. — Yes Freshman Page — Oh, Yes ; ' birds of a feather flock together ' Sugishita.— What? What?? Oh, I see, negroes in America, ' birds of a feather flock together. ' Fresh Jones. — Sugishita, how do you name people in Japan ? Sugishita. — Each person selects his own name. P ' resh Jones — That ' s nothing ; I selected my own name. -Sugishita. — Well, I certainly would have gotten a better one. J Dr. Manning — What is owlintr? ' ' ■J v Mr. B-s?:.— It is going around at night, looking for owls. Dr. Manning. — What are the husband ' s rights in the wife ' s property? Mr. B — The right of free ingress and egress Little Muncher.— Uncle, how do you kill a bug? Big Muncher.— Why, you take some object like a book, which has a flat surface, usually four sides and some thickness. Let me impress upon you the importance of the surface being flat, for if the surface is convex the physical law that the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of deflection would cause a division of the electromotive force, but we will pass over that point. Now right quickly, strike the bug to the ground and when you see that he is reposing on terra firma, steal upon him unawares with your right foot, and press him gently until he cracks. This is a very important point, to press him just right. If you get this point right clearly in your head you will never be troubled with it again. 125 { } incident of Ye Olden Tynes, ' as found recorde.i in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of the Second Book of Chronicles. ) ND it came to pass that in the days of Ulysses the King, there was born ui the Land of Buncombe a man-child ; and his face was comely and fair to look upon, but his legs were crooked like unto the bow of King David. And the child grew and waxed strong and Ijeautiful, so that he was called the IJeau of Blue Ridge, and verily the hearts of the Femalites went ■ out after him. And his mother looking ujion him, communed with her husband, saying : Now is our son grown strong and l eautiful, and verily the Femalites seek him, how they may capture him. Beliold tliere is in a distant land, called Chapel Hill, a school over which the Prophet Winston reigneth. Wherefore let us take counsel together to send thither our son, that he may be brought up in the way of his fathers, even the way that the Lord loveth ; for he is pure in heart and fair to look upon. And the thing pleased his father, for verily he loved him. And in the ninth month of the second year of tlie reign of Boss Grover, the father fell upon his son ' s neck, and kissed him and bade him farewell, sending him to abide with the great Prophet. Now it come to pass that there sat at the feet of the proj)het one J. C, a near kinsman to a priest of the tribe of the Durhamites, a miglity man and truly a son of Anak. And the Prophet communed with himself, saying, Verily 1 have received the care of i. s pearl of great j rice, and now it behooveth me to see that it is not defiled by contact with iminirity. And lie cast his eyes upon the young men of his company for a companion for this pearl, and his eyes fell Upon J. C, and he chose him, for he said, Here is an unblemished lamb from the flock, for he wot not what manner of men they were. And the young men of the company marvelled greatly at his blindness for verily they were onto ' etn. ' And of a truth the latter end of those two was more than the first. And it reached the ears of his mother that her Beau, even her precious pearl had been polluted, and she rose up in her wrath and commanded him Siiying, ' Get ye out from abiding with him and dei art and be ye separate, for it is written. Thou shalt not be unevenly yoked with unbelievers. And her son was sad at these words, for he loved J. C. even as a brother ; nevertheless he obeyed, for of a trutli she was his mother and verily she carried the bag. And there was great amazement throughout the school at these things, and the young men marvelled greatly among themselves saying, What shall befall the Lord ' s people when there hath arisen one who can lead further astray the Beau? And they were astonied. 126 ,c - NCE upon a ni.y:ht so dreary, VVliile I pondered, weak and weary, Siltinj; thinking of the days that are no more 1 was nodding, nearly napping. Suddenly there came a tapping As if some one gently rapping. Rapping at my chamber door. ' Tis some visitor, I muttered. Tapping at my chamber door, Only this, and nothing more. Enter, sir, I said, and truly, If waiting you ' ve been kept unduly, your pardon I implore ; Truth is, I was napping, And so softly you came rapping. So gently came your tapping. Rapping at my chamber door. Scarce was I sure I heard you. ' And I opened wide the door. Darkness there, and something more. Open wide I flung the portal. In their stepped an ugly mortal That I have long detested, and will hate forever more ; In there stepped a beastly bummer, He had the cheek of a Chicago drummer, Had this ugly, beastly bummer, To come rapping at my door. Wish I hadn ' t heard him, But I opened wide the door, And will he leave me, never more ? Not a moment stopped or stayed he. Not a word of greeting said he To me, standing at the door ; But he straightway fell to smoking My pet pipe ; ' twas so provoking That I almost felt like choking Him. with him wiping up the floor ; Or kicking the ugly, cheeky bummer, Both of these, and a few thmgs more. And that bummer still is sitting. Talking, smoking, chewing, spitting. Cumbering my chamber floor ; I wish that straightway he would leave me. Not a bit ' 11 the parting grieve me. But 1 fear he ' ll not relieve me, Take himself without the door. And he ' s nearly run me crazy. He talked two hours or more ; And I fear that he will leave me Never, never, never more. 127 NCE upon a time, in tlie reign of the good King Bourhon, there Hved a little man named Tom. He was one time gazing from a second-story window of his home, and seeing a well near by, and feeling thirsty, he thought he would get a drink. He reasoned that the shortest distance between two points being the straight line, he would save time by going according to this well-established principle. He started, but the Genii, gravitation, seized him, and mother earth arose in such a manner that he had to push her back with his person, and verily the last state of this man was worse than the first. Moral : When reasoning out the pyschological relation between a bottle of whiskey and a parabolic curve, never use yourself as a practical example, ( For a fuller dissertation on this subject, ap])ly to T. C . ) It came to pass on one cold winter night, in the reign of Cleptomaniac III, that two boys were shivering by an empty fireplace, trying to warm themselves by thinking of Tobe Connor ' s hair. One said to the other : — Why freeze we here when they of two thousand dollar salary per month fame have fuel in jilenty and to spare? Let ' s up and borrow a couple of scuttles. No sooner said than done ; and they filled their buckets with fine, large lumps, and returned in great joy. But before they reached home a wicked Genii changed their coal into brickbats, and there was great sorrow and lamentation when they found it out. Moral: When borrowing Faculty ' s coal be sure to provide yourself with a buck-eye lantern. Stamps and Funk.  Dearest, when I gaze upon thy form, and see the hyperbolic, parabolic and elyptical curves that form your outline, I am transformed into a state similar to that when working out variables to their limits. Thou art a wonderful variable, whose limit is beyond my comprehension. Oh, let my arms and thy waist be synonymous curves and be not forever my asymptote. The ' drunken sot Belabors not. To collect his thoughts ' Twas vain ; He could not think, Could only drink. And now he ' s down again. And as he lay You could hear him say. One more drink I crave, I ' m almost full. Just another pull, And I ' ll be out of the way. [Written by a member of the Prevention of the Aging of Whiskey Club, when he was slightly intoxicated.] a Extract from a manuscript found in a bottle. 128 OST of the work on the Annual was done between the hours of one and four in the morning, and whatever it amounts to, the credit is due to the few editors who stayed up through the wee small hours and worked till the chickens crowed for dawn, and not to those who were conspicuous by their absence. Espe cially ar thanks due to Mr. Hartsell for his steady work ; for without him and a few others the ' 95 Hellenian would never have been published. They may rest assured that the work they have done is appreciated, and will ever be remembered by the Editor-in-Chief. 129 -HERC J-Hcy eo AE- Mbo? 16 OUR ADVERTISERS WHO ARE THEY? Patronize Them, for Verily Our Liberal Friends, through whose aid we are enabled to publish this annual. 130 Ey CIRC pEOPliE Ube 1Dinivcr8it of flortb Carolina HE Uni crsity has t vciity-ci_! ht teachers, four hundred and sixty- eight students, eleven buildings, eight laboratories and museums lor scientific study and research, two literary societies the Shakespeare Club, the Philological Club, the Mitchell Scientific Society, the Young ' Men ' s Christian Association, a Library of 30,000 volumes, open ten hours daily ; a Reading-Room with sixty papers and journals ; a Gymnasium with skilled instructor ; Athletic Grounds for base-ball, foot-ball, and sixteen Tennis Courts. There are three general courses of study, six brief courses, a large number of optional courses, with special and professional courses in Chemistry, Law and Medicine. The Chemical Laboratories are fully equipped for all kinds of work ; the Law School has two classes with daily recitations, and lectures for each day ; the Medical School offers daily lectures, and requires students to dissect the human cadaver. Discipline is firm, but manly and self-respecting. There is no demerit system nor espionage. .Students are treated as gentlemen, and are expected to behave as gentlemen. Students from other institutions of recognized standing are credited with such work as they ha ' e performed at those institutions. Over seventy scholarships are available for needy boys of talent and character ; sixteen thousand dollars to be loaned to very needy and very talented boys. Time granted to those whose means cannot be used at once. The University .Summer .School for teachers and others offers fine opportunity for study to those who are unable to attend the regular sessions of the Uni ersity. The Summer School is held at Chapel Hill during the months of June and July. Address President Winston, Chapel Hill, N. C. VISITS CHAPEL HILL IN THE LITTLE St McALISTE% A ents. FALL AND SPRING. H. H. Cartland, m evcbant bailor And dealer in . . cr ' s,«E°REr GREENSBORO, N. C. GENTS ' FURNISHING GOODS. CANES AND UMBRELLAS. CHAS. E. MOORE. - B. MCKENZIE. ITlnivcrsit IF eabquauters, 71 r P jiyr r _.,- , im THE CLOTHIERS AND . .. Moore McKenzie m m y-s outfitters. 233 South Elm Street, Greensboro, N. C. matter D. 36rcm anC Q co. 0. Stcpbens, ' BaXs. Cbapcl JHill, 1W. C. 132 D. McCAULEY, Dealer iu General Merchandise. Everything kept that you will find in a tirst-class retail store. Gents ' Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, Clothing, and a full line of Shoes. ZEIGLCR 4. DOUGLAS SHOES a spEcrALTv Chapel Hill, N. C. HOTEL CARROLINA DURHAM, N C HOWELL COBB, Prop A Hotel of the first class and striLtK up to dale. Rates, $3.00 to $4.00 per da pine $500 OXFORDS pootLuear. $2.00 LADIES ' FINE TO SHOES AND GENTS ' FINE SHOES $3.00 TO $6.00 ehildren ' s and Misses ' , Youth ' s and Boys ' fine shoes, in every ij;rade. Patent Leather, and Tan shoes a specialty. Largest stock in the State. Lowest prices and most elegant goods. Complete line of Trunks and Valises always on hand. H Shoe House 25 years. GIIiI EATH CO., Charlotte, H- C. 133 PIANOS AND Organs a specialty. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE AND PRICES. E. 0). ANDREWS, Carries the largest stock of • • pupnitupe t o be found in the Ca ro 1 i n as. Can suit all classes and professions i.!S «?! ' ' ' 3- ' ' ' ..,J: ' il i6 and i8 WEST TRADE STREET. (Tharlott ' e, n, c. a) ' el70ol • fopGi[®I ?- ADDRESS THE RECTOR, Rev. B. SMEDES, A.M. Raleigh, : {. (7_ 134 The Man in the Moon would be happier if he could have a supply of Cool Fngrant and Soothing Blackweirs Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco For over twenty-five years the standard smoking tobacco of the world To-day More Popular than Ever. To have a good smoke anytime and everytime it is only necessary to get Bull Durham. It is all good and always good sary to BLACKWELL ' S DURHAM TOBACCO CO. DURHAM, N. C. ' W. A. SLATER COMPANY DURHAM, N. C. CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS, SHOES, AND HATS. If it is the correct style, you will find it at SLATER ' S, and the price will be tempting. Messrs. BINGHAM WEAVER are our agents at Chapel Hill and will cheerfully serve you. H. nflniEK, Matches, Jewell- , Silveiware, Dianionbs. RALEIGH, N. C. Maker of Medals, Badges, and Emblems, and Special Work in Gold and Silver. Medal Catalo,gue on application. 135 ]£imcr 8. Hmen6 •••o 205 to 211 Ub r Bvc, Cor. of I8tb Street, Ittcw lt)orM. CHEMICALS. Importers aad Manufacturers of Sole United States agents tor Carl Zeirs famous Micro- scopes and accessories. Franz Schmidt Haensch Sugar Testing Instrumenis, Polariscopes, Schlacher and Schuett ' s Filter Paper. Qotr-i Ai T.cc . German and Bohemian Glassware; Royal Bullion and Meissin China, French; SPECIALTIES. I ( p Hammond Platinum, Balances, Weights, etc. Quotations submilted on any of the above artic ' es upon application. LAMM CO. CHICAGO, ILL. YH cvcbant XTailors Give universal satisfaction in every particular — fits, style of make up, quality of goods, etc , etc. A full line of their samples can always be found at Room No 26, Old East Building (under English Room) They can furnish you with anything in the clothing line, and guarantee perfect fits. A LINE OF SUMMER GOODS consisting of Alpacas, Worsteds, Lintns, and Duckings, etc., just received. CALL AND LEAVE YOUR ORDERS . . . ' -36 POND ' S BEWARE of imposition. Take POND ' S EXTRACT only. Extract. The Leading y Metes say that alt Soreness stiffness, or Swelling is prevented or almost instantaneously removed, if after exercising, the muscles are thoroughly rubbed with .... POND ' S EXTRACT IT IS INVALUABLE FOR Rheumatism, Wounds, Bruises, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Piles, Sore Eyes, Catarrh, All Pain a nd Imflammations and Hemorrhages. POND ' S EXTRACT CO., 76 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK. fl. fl. Kluttz, AT THE GLASS FRONT IS HEADQUARTERS FP_R ALL TH E_BOOKS_ USED IN THE UNIVERSITY AND THE COMMON SCHOOLS. Also Stationery and Students ' Supplies. I have a full line of . , . Blair ' s Tablets and Note Books, Wirt ' s Fountain Pens, Perfection Students ' Lamps, Pratt ' s Astral Oil, A complete line of Men ' s Furnishing Goods, Fancy Goods, and Toilet Articles, Confectioneries, Fruits, Cigars and Tobacco, Potted Meats, and Pickles, Fine Hats and Hand-made Shoes a specialty, Brownie Scarf Pins, from lo to 25 cents, Brownie Link Cuff Buttons, 50 cents. Haviag served the boys aad the public for a aumber of years, lam prepared to offer a line of goods unsurpassed in quality and at prices to suit the times . . . Respectfully, My motto THE BEST GOODS FOR THE LOWEST CASH PRICES. ' A A. KLUTTZ. 137 Tm )1TT Reliable Goods. Lowest Prices. C@-@rEii Ti¥E SoCDETT, OLD WEST BUILDING. The Society ' s Store is conducted by students, for their own benefit. Goods are sold as near wholesale rates as the actual expenses of the store permit. Agents for Rogers, Peei Co., of NeivY ' ork, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Dress Suit Cases, etc., at New York Prices. Agents for A. B. Dick Company, Mimeo- graphs, Type-writing Supplies. Athletic Goods of all kinds. Duck Trousers. COLLE iE TEIT i ST TIOINIE ETCc, ETC SECOND-HAND BOOKS BOUGHT AND SOLD. The jni tepsity liaLU School, Summer Session begins July I, 1895. Regular Session begins on the first Thursday in September, 1895. © ' uring a regul resident pro iar session, three professors : during the summer, two. Students in attendance during session of 1894-Q?, sixty eight. For particulars, address John Manning. chapel hill, n. c. (Rogers Company, CLOTHIERS AND FURNISHERS When in Charlotte . . s f you need anything in their line, give them a call. They can supply you with anything in the way of gents ' furnishing goods. 138 Chapel rlXXl (ANNEX.) Hotel W. W PICKARD, PROPRIETOR, Headquarters for all traveling people. Prices Moderate. Table furnished with the best the market affords. Large and comfortable rooms. Polite and attentive servants. Chapel Hill, N. C. Carriages to Meet all Trains. Pickard ' s Livery, Sale and Feed Stable, HORSES, BUGGIES, AND CARRIAGES TO LET AT ALL HOURS. Rates low CHAPEL HILL, N. C, Carriages meet every train. Stationery Department, FRATERNITY CARDS, MENU CARDS AND INVITATIONS. College and Fraternity Pipes and Canes. J{ Iso hundreds of Designs in college and fraternity Novelties in gold and silver, i! 139 SEND FOR SAM PLES THROUGH YOUR CHAPTER Carry one of the largest, finest, and Cheapest stocks of CLOTHING, HATS, AND GENTLEMEN ' S FURNISHING GOODS in the South. They have all the latest styles and best makes. Suiis Made-to - Order and Fit Guaranteed. Agents for Knox $5.00 Hat. When in Greensboro, N. C, don ' t fail to give them a call, and look through their beautiful store. Their stock is immense. ALL MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. FISRBLSTG ' FOR an( OF ALL THE LATEST STYLES, GO TO G. 1 . FiSBBLATC ' S, Leading Clothier and Furnisher, 230 South Him Street, GI HHlviSBOf?0, IS. C. WILL R. RANKIN, Manager. Durham, N. C. CHAPEL Hill, N.C. Siruggist anb pbannacist. One of the largest and most complete stocks of Drugs in North Carolina. HOIWEOPATHIC I EJVIEDIES. HUYLiER ' S DELiICIOUS BOr4-BONS. We use Only the Finest. MAIL OROCP DECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION, W, J. UPMBB, TKe Clofkier M Furni$Ker, Main St., Durham, N. C. Cloihing of all kinds, Hats, Shoes, Neckwear, Underwear, etc. Hanan ' s fine Patent Leather and Tan Shoes. Summer Outfits, White Duck Trousers, While Caps and Belts, Negligee Shirts. Tailor-Made Suits a specialty. Salesman makes periodical visits to Chapel Hill. Howell and Graham, the University agents, keep samples of goods and receive orders at any time. The Durham store is the headquarters for University men. Call there when in the city. 140 PATTERSON ' S Motel, CHAPEL HILL, N. C. NEAREST HEADQUARTERS OTEL . 3Boar bv tbe montb . . ? , , ,., TO THE TRAVELING STATION. . tor St ents ♦ men. A convenient distance from the college buildings. Newly furnished. JUST THE PLACE TO STOP AT COMMENCEMENT. J. §. Bfber • • • pbotoGrapber, P)IRST- CLASS WORK OF . . ALL KINDS R0RP8I1K, Wfl, SPECIAL RATES to university students. Ffog yOUP ( AND HEARTILY WE USE ; RECOMMEND TO Throat ' 141 Co L Liff iS T. Gents ' Furnishing Goods. Furniture a specialty. Pictures and Picture Frames. COTTON BUYER. DEALER IN Drf Goods, General Merchandise, Clothing, Boots, and Slioes. CHAPEL HILL, P 14 use-, Lishe Lewis Lishe Lewis, Mouth Rogers, Legs Lindsey, bc Jfu9iont0b cain. Challenges the World. Manager and Captain. nuembcvs ot Ucam. Joe Graham, Towser Sharp, Munk Bailey, Baby Handy, ' ' Hopsy ' ' Price, Guts ' ' White, Each man is expected to play every position in the diamond. The change to be made at any time seen fit. Admission free. Children hall price. To young men bringing a pretty girl to the game a j iece of chewing gum will be given, also a chromo. They have won e ' ery game played. Fusionish vs. Red-headed Men .... Fusionish vs. Bald-headed Men .... Fusionish vs. One-legged Men .... Fusionish vs. Faculty ...... Fusionish vs. ' Varsity, ( ' Varsity were afraid to play). 142 27 to II 27 to II 27 to II 27 to II a rt in vSteel Bngravin ® The attention of Colleges and Fraternities is especially invited to the artistic effect of our invitations, Class Day and Ball Programmes, also Heraldic Plates and Illustrations for College Annuals and Fraternity uses. We aim at correctness and refinement in all designs. C A. Wri I)t No. 1033 Oe tnat street peciatiySt in Cotte e iE n ravin Pl)itadetp ia and Printing (ouer) •C L Uff i)Si I, Gents ' Furnishing Goods. Furniture a specialty. Pictures and Picture Frames. DEALER IN Dry Goods, General {Merchandise, 103 Cbestnat 3treet I T iri(yl)f S PI)ila lelpDia g ngravtng Has become the recognized leader in unique styles of College and Fraternity Engravings and Stationery. Long practical experience, combined with personal supervision, is a guaran- tee that all work will be executed carefully and with most artistic effects. ....... College and Class Day Invitations Engraved and Printed from Steel Plates. Class and Fraternity Plates for Annuals. Diplomas Engraved and Printed from Steel or Copper Plates. . . . . College and Fraternity Stationery. Programmes, Menus, etc. Wedding and Reception invitations, An- nouncements, etc., etc. PROCESS HND HALF TONE ENGRAUIHG AND rRINTIMC nrne st A. u;rigf)t EXAMINE STYLES AflD FRIGES BEFORE ORDERING ELSEWHERE 1032 Cbestnttt 3treet, PI)tladelpl)ia 50 VISITINQ CARDS PROM NEW ENGRnUED PLHTE FOR $1.00 (ouer) Fusionish vs. Faculty ...... Fusionish vs. ' Varsity, ( ' X ' arsity were afraid to play). 27 to II 142 ■ - ' vsJLtR3 -£AA 143 ' t m mM j


Suggestions in the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) collection:

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 1

1892

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1893 Edition, Page 1

1893

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1894 Edition, Page 1

1894

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 1

1896

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 1

1897

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1898 Edition, Page 1

1898


Searching for more yearbooks in North Carolina?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online North Carolina yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.