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

 - Class of 1913

Page 24 of 398

 

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 24 of 398
Page 24 of 398



University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 23
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Page 24 text:

Y-YACK the briefness and incompleteness of an article of this nature makes it not feasible to expand further than giving a few sentences to each of the other steps contributing to the making of a Greater University. With the rapid expans on of the institution in increased number of students, and the annexat ' on of new branches of work, the year has recorded the erection of three new buildings. The first of these, the Caldwell Hall, has provided sufficient accommodations for the growing medical school. The new dormitory, whose three sections are named after Pres. K. P. Battle, Gov. Zeb B. Vance, and Gen. J. J. Pettigrew, has been com- pleted, and contains quarters for seventy-two students. Then, too, the erection of a new educational building, made possible by the Peabody Fund, will mark the rise of the school of education. The activities of the faculty have set a standard unsurpassed in previous years. This standard was voiced by a younger alumnus in his speech on University Day, when he asserted that there was a prevailing sentiment in the State that the University should, like the University of Wisconsin, spend itself more directly in the service of the people. It is doing this, in solving the problems of public health, in bringing about better methods of taxation, in giving expert advice to townships and counties engaged in the construction of highways, in carrying literature on all kinds of everyday, actual problems to any citizen in the State who might be in need of special information; in doing all those helpful, needful things embraced under the head of intelligent University Extension. TWENTY-SIX

Page 23 text:

organization of all the County Clubs. The work devolving upon this newly-created organization of Association of County Clubs is aptly expressed in the preamble of the Constitution adopted by the Association: The members of the County Clubs in the University, being keenly aware of their obligation to the State that is training them, to the communities in which they have been reared, and to themselves as individuals in a demo- cratic society, and knowing the difficult problems that stand in the way of progress of the variou s counties and the State; and being eager to serve intelligently through a more accurate knowledge of conditions, do organize this Club, to be known as the North Caro- lina Civic Association of the University of North Carolina. The officers of the organiza- tion are: I. M. Bailey, of Smithfield, pres : dent; Frank Graham, of Charlotte, first vice- president; G. B. Phillips, of Trinity, second vice-president; F. W. Morrison, of Spencer, secretary; E. M. Coulter, of Connelly Springs, treasurer; Prof. E. K. Graham, C. L. Raper, and M. C. S. Noble, executive committee. University Law Class Wins Prize The Univers ' ty Law Department numbers its leaders in councils of State and Nation by the thousands. Each year since the founding of the school more than a half- century ago its sons have been products of the best legal talent in the State or Nation. The class of 1912-1913 will add a memorable chapter to this proud record of fifty years ' standing of the Law School. The class, through its display of legal talent, has already obtained national recognit on through the medium of the mock trial contest of The Case of Jennie Brice as instituted by Everybody ' s Magazine. Other than receiving the h ' gh honor of national recognition, the class was awarded the first State prize of $100.00 in the Union-wide contest. Credit for th ' s distinct triumph is duly attached to the following young attorneys: John W. Hester, of Hester; James W. Morris, of Tampa, Fla. ; W. L. Warlick, of Newton; Horace E. Stacy, of Shelby; George H. Ward, of Waynes- ville; L. A. Swicegood, of Salisbury; J. J. Henderson, of Mebane; and W. F. Taylor, of Faison. The University Dramatic Club Convincingly true is the contention that athletics and debating are vitally essential in the make-up of student activities; just so has dramatics an important role in the develop- ment of student life. Revived and rejuvenated, dramatics as expressed in the very best dramatic talent picked from a wide range, embracing a hundred or more candidates, has contrbuted abundantly to the things that have made the year an eventful one. The single production of the comedy, What Happened to Jones, alone will outdistance the bounds of a brief college year, and set a high standard for dramatic talent of the years to follow. Other Changes There are many other history-making events in the college year 1912-1913, that ends with the crowning event of a visit from Vice-President Thomas R. Marshall, that are of equal significance as those already treated separately and somewhat in detail; but TIVEN7 Y-FIVE



Page 25 text:

BOOK TWO THE CLASSES 0 ' THE UNIVERSITY

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, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916


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