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Library OF THE University ' of NortH Carolina This book was presented by the (ariijly of the late KEMP I ' LUMMER BATTLE, Pr :iileut of thp University of North Carolina from 1876 to 1890 py i UNIVERSITY OF N,C AT CHAPEL HILL 0003398491 1 ' sbookmustnotbe ,en from the Library ouilding. ■' .9 hy 39 A S4 •« • •j WWWa ' j j a DEDICATION C ' kaIII C 1 (oi. Qi: 1 hCRTY 1 1 HENEVER a visitor is shown over the University of North Carolina, one of the first places to which he is taken is the Chemistry Building. The reason is not primarily because the building is a good building and the laboratories good laboratories. They are really excellent ; but the main reason is that they are always full of people who are working hard, and seem to be glad of it. The visitor does not need to be told that notable work has been produced and is being produced there. He knows at once that he has struck a live, productive spot. If he is a wise visitor, he doesn ' t ask what peculiar local conditions make chemistry so important. He knows the answer. He knows that the atmosphere of successful, cheerful, hard work must be the reflection of a personality at the head of the laboratories. Dr. Charles Holmes Herty is just rounding out a decade of service as head of the Department of Chemistry. He was born in Georgia, and received his early training in the Georgia Military and Agricultural College, and in the University of Georgia (Ph.B. 1886). He received his doctor ' s degree at Johns Hopkins in 1890, and then studied in Berlin and Ziirich. He was Adjunct Professor of Chemistry in the University of Georgia, and after that, before coming to the University of North Carolina as full pro- fessor in 1905, did practical work in the turpentine forests of the South that may be said to have revolutionized the great turpentine industry. His cup and gutter system of gather- ing turpentine, according to figures given in the World ' s Work, increases the profits of the turpentine business thirteen millions of dollars a year. After making such a contribution to the progress of his section, a man might be excused if he relaxed his energies a trifle. But Doctor Herty has steadily increased and widened his activities. He is a member of the leading organizations in his field of knowl- edge, both in this country and abroad, and a councillor-at-large of the American Chemical Society. In addition to the work of carrying on a department that has three full professors and numerous assistants, Doctor Herty has shown the most loyal and lively interest in all 1 DEDICATION the affairs of the college. In his own student days he was a successful athlete, and ever since he has kept a strong and sympathetic connection with all student activities. The athletic field at the University of Georgia bears his name, and ever since he has been in North Carolina he has given generously of his time and thought to the vexing questions of athletic managen-.ent. He has served on the Faculty Committee on Athletics for almost ten years, and on other committees without number, where his tact, sympathy, and broad-visioned wisdom have been invaluable. It has been the same way in the affairs of the town. In business affairs, and in the affairs of citizenship. Doctor Herty has been a leading factor in bringing to a success- ful issue many things that had long been desired, but that for one reason or another could not be carr:ed out. As school commissioner and as alderman, he was a leader in success- ful campaigns for a better school, for better sanitation in the town, for better roads in the county. Always good-tempered and tolerant, and ready to give thought, money, energy, and whatever else the occasion required. Doctor Herty has been one of the best citizens the town of Chapel Hill has ever had. The Yackety Yack is dedicated to him not merely as a teacher, a scientist, a good citizen; but as a combination of all these. He is the fine sort of college professor that the big men in his special field cannot help but admire, and the average man on the street cannot help hut like. 9iL Si CONTENTS I— BOOK OF NORTH CAROLINA pages 9 to 24 m 5 II— BOOK OF THE COLLEGE YEAR .... pages 25 to ao m B III QOOK OF THE CLASSES pages 4 to we a m l BOOK OF ACTIVITIES pages 149 to 204 m i y BOOK OF ORGANIZATIONS .... pages 205 to 284 m w VI— BOOK OF HUMOR ■• pages 285 to 303 eight NORTH CAROLINA T T . ( APiTn li NORTH CAROLINA MITCHEIL — MONARCH OF THE EAST 6711 FEET ABOVE SEA LEVEL FROM THE MOUNTAINS — ViL NORTH CAROLINA Trs ?r v yi i . ; ' ■? , S l SURF NEAR HATTERAS -TO THE SEA 9iL ]Ki fMORTH CAROLINA llLiNDRED EIGHTV-SIX lU.sHM.s |m INK ( lU I KM ' ORTH CAROLINA ' S NEW AGRICULTURAL REGIME IS LITERALLY DOUBLING THE EARNING CAPACITY OF THE STATE ' S FARMING POPULATION I hamsBum m. NORTH CAROLINA MOUNT AIRY GRANITE QUARRY 01 THE NORTH CAROLINA GRANITE CORPORATION — SURRY COUNTY • ORTH CAROLINA ' S i LDING STONE AND CLAY PRODUCTS ALUE IN ALL STATES EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI. THIRTEEN ss: ]i NORTH CAROLINA BLEWETT FALLS DAM OF lAOKIN RIVER POWER COMPANY — RICHMONU AND ANSON COUNTIES VORTH CAROLINA HAS IN HER WATERPOWER A NATURAL RESOURCE OF GREAT INDUSTRIAL VALUE FOURTEEh ssc NORTH CAROLINA ■FROM THE UNIVERSITY MUST EMANATE THE FORCES POTENTIAL IN OUR DEVEL- OPMENT: THERE ARE MOLDED THE IDEALS THAT DETERMINE OUR LIFE. -LOCKE CRAIG TiL 1 NORTH CAROLINA WHERE THERE IS ALWAYS BREATH OF FREEDOM IN THE A NORTH CAROLINA ' STRANGE THINGS ARE HEREIN REGISTERED ' SEVENTeEI ist NORTH CAROLINA laics ' - %E ]i NORTH CAROLINA NINETEEiN WaL 1 NORTH CAROLINA IS A NOBLE BUILDING ' Hk KC EDWARD KIDDER GRAHAM. ACTING PRESIDENT TWENTY-ONE 3k FACULTY Vac: ( L ' Ty 4- 4- Onio ' Oi ' s ot , ' lii if lsi;ratioa Francis Preston Venable, Ph.D., LL.D President Edward Kidder Graham, A.M ...Acting President Marvin Hendrix Stacy, A.M Acting Dean of the College of Liberal Arts Andrew Henry Patterson, A.M Dean of the School of Applied Science Charles Lee Raper, Ph.D. Dean of the Graduate Schoul Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B Dean of the School of Law Isaac Hall Manning, M.D Dean of the School of Medicine Edward Vernon Howell, A.B., Ph.G Dean of the School of Pharmacy Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble ... Dean of the School of Education ■h + Oi ' iioor.s «)i ' liis ' cruociod Francis Preston Venable, Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D. Professor of Chemistrv Kemp Plummer Battle, A.M., LL.D Professor Emeritus of History Walter Dallam Toy, M.A Professor of the Germanic Languages and Literature William Cain, A.M. Professor of Mathematics Henry Horace Williams, A.M., B.D Professor of Philosophy Henry VanPeters Wilson, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology Collier Cobb, A. M Professor of Geology and Mineralogy Charles Staples Mangum, A.B., M.D Professor of Anatomy Edward Vernon Howell, A.B., Ph.G Professor of Pharmacy Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble Professor of Pedagogy Isaac Hall Manning, M.D Professor of Physiology TWENTY-TWO FACULTY Grorge Howf,, Ph.D - Professor of the Latin Language and Literature Joseph Hyde Pratt, Ph.D Professor of Economic Ceologv Charles Holmes Herty, Ph.D., Smith Professor of General and Industrial Chemistry Nathan Wilson Walker, A.B _._ Professor of Secondarv Education William DeBerniere MacNider, M.D. _ Professor of Pharmacology Charles Lee Rarer, Ph.D Professor of Economics Edward Kidder Graham, A.M. : Professor of English William Chambers Coker, Ph.D Professor of Botany Archibald Henderson, Ph.D Professor of Pure Mathenmtics Joseph Gregoire deRoulhac Hamilton, Ph.D. Alumni Professor of History Andrew Henry Patterson, A.M Professor of Physics Henry McGilbert Wagstaff, Ph.D Professor of History Patrick Henr ' Winston Professor of Law William Morton Dey, Ph.D. Professor of the IRomance Languages and Literature Mar IN Hendrix Stacy, A.M. Professor of Civil Engineering James Finch Royster, Ph.D. Professor of English Lucius Polk McGehee, A.B. Professor of Larv Charles Wesley Bain, M.A., LL.D Professor of Creek Atwell Campbell McIntosh, A.M Professor of Law Harry WoodBURN Chase, Ph.D. Professor of the Philosophy of Education James Bell Bullett, M.A., M.D. Professor of Pathology Aln ' in Sawyer Wheeler, Ph.D. Professor of Organic Chemistry Louis Round Wilson, Ph.D. Professor of Library Administration Ldwin Greenlaw, Ph.D Professor of English Thomas James Wilson, Jr., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Latin TWENTY-THREE FACULTY William Sianlly Bernard, A.M Associate Professor of Creek Robert Baker LaWSON, M.D. Associate Professor of Anatom i George McFaRLAND McKie. A.M. Associate Professor of Public Spealfing John Manning Booker, Ph.D .Associate Professor of English Oli ' ER I ' oWLES, Ph.D Asso ciate Professor of the Romance Languages Thomas Felix Hickerson, A.M., S.B. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering Parker Haywood Daggett, S.B Professor of Electrical Engineering James Muncie Bell, Ph.D. Professor of Physical Chemistry Kent James Brown, Ph.D Associate Professor of German Leicester A. Williams, Ph.D. Professor of School Organization ZebuloN Judd, Ph.D Professor of f-iural Economics Robert L. James, C. E Associate Professor of Drawing Orestes P. Rhyne, Ph.D George Kennith Grant Henry, A.M. John Groner Beard, Ph.G. Vi ' iAN Leroy Chrisler, A.m. William Walier Rankin, A.M. George Mark Sneath, A.M. John Wayne Lasley, A.M. Daniel Huger Bacot, Jr., A.M. Wilbur High Royster, A.M Wesley Critz George, A.M William Lewis Jefferies, A.M._ Instructor in Chen}istr Eugene Fred Parker, A.M. Instructor in the I omance Languages John Eliphalet Smith, M.S. Instructor in Geology James MaRCI-.LLUS Stedman, A.M. -- Instructor in E.nglish Associate Professor of German _ Instructor in Latm Instructor in Pharmacy Instructor in Physics Instructor in Alathentatics Instructor in English Instructor in Mathematics Instructor m History Instructor in Latin Instructor in Zoology TWENTY-FOUR Si ' • ' 1 COLLEGE YEAR s M %e; - - ' - TWENTY-FIVE W ' «) , ■: .- y m ■S S [ i Ss . 1. COLLEGE YEAR Thw - ' -(y b -i tV ■5 J. av ,t SiKA To ec V ' v A ' ' j L b ratc-T-ves, ' Pl(?Tit Of CK peJ Sci TSl .ei ' ViS TWENTY-SIX mr-- j i-S -f m COLLEGE YEAR -.:;:;::::« ' ;::::::::j? N THE mark! Get set! And Carolina is off for the year ' s course — rejoxing as a strong man to run a race. A record registration, a changed attitude toward Freshmen, and high faith in the year at hand marked the start. Of course those little things usual in the start were in evidence — )ck selhng of radiators to the new occupants of a room, letters from parents to esident remmding him to meet William at the evening tram, and certain various ;t-year men who called for rooms at Commons Hall, or who registered the r arch denomination as First Baptist, Second Presbyterian, and Elm Street Methodist, who kept the assigned Chapel seats at mass meetings and public addresses, and could t be gagged into staying away from Chapel on Saturday. Yet through the separate incidents and life mass ran the confident strength and ppiness of awakened life. The Sophomores were among the leaders in helping Fresh- n to register and get settled right. Representative student leaders on College Night reduced the new men to activifes and life of the campus. The reception to Freshmen en in the Library is memorable for its green boughs, flowers, music, and six hundred jple. Out on the Varsity field, the squad was rounding into the second week of early ictice, and the natural fact was developing that the Carolina team would be made gely out of the unsuccessful material of the previous Fall. Over a hundred men were training on the class field. By Wednesday of the second week, it had got into the ide of youthful heads that the class-room rather than the athletic field was the center life here. And the steady pace of the year was on. Catch the significance of an opening in which there was no bell ringing, no random tol firing, no cries of f-r-e-s-h, no bands of even playful hazers, no noise except that ident to the joyful re-meeting of friends, the unloading of trunks, and the stir of jectant life, and you have the year 1913-1914 — off with a bound. f • Hg ' -PHi:.. - i ■f TWENTY-SEVEN l ' — 5 j- ' !ii f M ■■' ■•- . M COLLEGE YEAR - ■) i FACULTY IN DOCTORS (APS AND GOWNS . . ' •:.. ' , f|j h;Jl I ' S fe t . . •: ' T. -■S Sftfe... LUNG DOUBLE I.1 L MARCHING ACROSS IHL LAMPL TWEINTY-EIGHT C |j .% . -- ' ' i ■y i Sc ,:.- -PV C :z:i:: .-: ■.i-i■.i ' SCi. UOLLEGE YEAR UmvERsnY T),AY HE first lap on the race brings us to October twelve, known to University men everywhere as University Day. I wish I could show it to you as I have seen it, felt it — not a holiday, merely. h a long double-line of visitors, faculty, and students marching across the campus into ig building to hear talk after talk about the University, but a day when we celebrate the hundredth-twentieth birthday of this old campus, of that intangi ble feeling we call the iversity. The day starts out about as any other day, except that we feel a I ' ttle strange to be on class as we line up in front of the Alumni Building. The band strikes up, I the procession starts. Alumni, Faculty in Doctors ' caps and gowns, professional stu- its, the Seniors, and so on to Freshmen. It is impressive, you know. Slowly it winds •.r the campus and into Memorial Hall. A new sort of spirit begins to catch hold of The commonplace, everyday campus .seems imbued with an added dignity. We er the big Hall, and file silently into the benches row behind row. The lofty roof; the g cathedral-like windows down to the floor; the marble tablets lining the walls wth names of the soldiers, jurists, statesmen, the University ' s distinguished dead — all )ress us, and lend an air of antiquity to our surroundings. As we bow our head to the ocation. our imaginations turn instinctively to old England ' s Universities — King ' s liege. Oxford, and somebody ' s description of them. Through wide-open windows we ' .e out, and suddenly realize the sunshine of a glorious October day. Then we hear the sing words of our prayer — our University. Amen. We rise: nearly a thousand ces swell forth into the University hymn. Down to the veriest Freshman, our blood ?les, and we feel strangely proud about something. It is not intellectual; we can ' t :n express it; we simply feel it. But it is worth more than the next two hours of eches by alumni, men who have sat where we are sitting, and are come back to try to us what Carolina means. But for the moment we know we have felt the oice of the liversity; and never shall we quite forget it. TWENTY-NINE Sf . ' - A. I! . mA y . Z ' .-:- ¥r i M . ' COLLEGE YEAR Y ' ' ' k= f S A ... Iff In VIRGINIA KICKS OFF f fW nU( ii -V ' i THIRTY ' big rav-rav! everybody in it I I1_ J k y v If .4 COLLEGE YEAR ' iSSJ Om to ll(C;iiV(OMT)! i ' i n wo months of preliminary football, two weeks of more than usually pur- poseful coaching, two days of mass-meetings, and On to Richmond have left the campus, football mad. Such is the situation the day before Thanks- giving. Recitations are a failure; pervading everything is an air of jectancy and preparation which grows more intense as the afternoon advances. It is a ronic annual malady, as inevitable as the poi,son-oak in the spring, and as virulent. For ihere is one relief, and only one — to wit : an excursion ticket, and a half-interest in a rth on the Richmond special. Men who were determined to stay behind, becoming ected with the common spirit, beg or borrow the necessary wherewithal. By nine :lock the streets are full of men in gala attire, and with overcoats and suitcases. Noise d excitement prevail. The members of the band wander about with their instruments torture, making weird sounds. The cafes are full. Jimmy Neville ' s is beseiged by a )wd buying tickets, armbands, and megaphones. In front of the postoffice, a mob is icticing yells for tomorrow. Contrast the scene two hours later. The town seems to ve moved itself bodily to West End. There, in the semi-darkness, confusion reigns Dreme; men stumbling over suitcases trying to find their respective cars and sections; the isting Chapel Hill darkies, now polite to the point of pain, depend not in vain on their oung masters to take them along. Finally all are crowded on. With straining and oaning of the overloaded tra ' n, Carolina is off again on her annual pilgrimage to ichmond. I! x ' ■; COLLEGE YEAR ■• 0 - W h w5 i i lii ' m L THIRTY-TWO - 3 COLLEGE YEAR ' t ( Ml Exams ITH the pleasant stream of autumnal dnersions, the mterest of football, the trip to Richmond, the dances, and finally home for the holidays, we have fallen into rather an easy gait. But now, after Christmas, there is in the air the promise of a quickening, a reckoning immment. Those who are versfd the signs of the times are seen to drag forth neglected text-books, dust-covered, to search r forgotten spots. Then suddenly, about the middle of January, the prophesy arrives its fulfillment. It comes in the form of exams — a nerve-racking cataclysm. Wise with ; wisdom of painful experience, the older heads go about it coolly. They know that to t excited is a probable step toward disaster; that midnight oil is mferior to midnight iep as a passer of exams. But even at that, it is an unrestful time of tension, of anxiety — ten-days ' bad dream. How about the less experienced? For them it is a real night- are. Some, warned in time, have followed the advice of the veterans, and fare as well, thers, mindful of nothing, continue their heedless way. They find the fast pace kill- g; soon begin to stagger and falter in distress. A few by natural strength manage labor along. Many fall by the wayside, borne down by fives and sixes. It is truly 1 awful time. Much more of it, and we feel that life would really not be worth e weary struggle. But it has been said that all things have an end ; and at length en this period of horror expires. The unusual sprint is over. The runners drop ick into the old pace. Notebooks are lost; text-books begin to accumulate the accustomed gnity of dust; the existence of athletics is remembered; we again find time to sit in front Patterson ' s, and admire the Goddess of the Pickwick, as her majesty takes the air. In ort, life is resumed at the same old stand. M . : ' ..-sr •■■Af- mm mm ' ' THIRTY-THREE .. ■■:S. t ' A ' 1? ' ; ' t, 5? ' i VeU, WUV5 -tKe Latei-t? RUNNIM Gc __ Fo R_ M AiV A SlE R. • i ' %  .. K y ' _ COLLEGE YEAR Politics SI EELZEBUB was the first politician. He gained a kingdom, and the title His Satanic Majesty. Here we reap great receipts, and are honored as Manager. Think not, however, that the difference in the rewards noted above is due to a superior native ability of His Honor, the Devil. Far 1 it. The ability we have; our field is limited, and it is the firm belief of many that Beelz himself sits in the gallery of Gerrard Hall whenever any great coup is uted, trusting to pick up some fine points of the game ; and at all elections he has at one reporter. Naturally, we are proud of our politicians. Who else, indeed, could finance our letic Association? This they have done; and have so well managed as to run only housand dollars in debt. And who else could make us a factor (in spite of our rd) in the South Atlantic Championship? Not the athlete. He tried, and failed, the politician — the wily, cunning, subtle politician — this he can and has achieved. ' l et, despite their noble achievements, the politicians have suffered heavily from Ity criticism. One consideration alone has so far saved them. It is argued, and justice, that politics is democratic; it is the only spur under the sun sharp enough to e a man of self-respect greet his greasy fellow, a distant acquaintance of water and tal stranger to soap, with the social salutation, Hail Brother! And we are nothing )t democratic. Would that this were a salutatory, prophecying the glory that will come to all icians; but it is not. The age is decadent, all things noble suffer, and even now the in tolls the knell of parting politics. v ,i THIRTY-FIVE r. ' m 9 ... . ' y ■;- ' f ■■' ■•. ,-. ' W. ■t? ] COLLEGE YEAR Junior Y sex HE used to have a couple of dances Junior Week, the same as after Thanksgiving, thinking that was enough. But my word! that just begins it now. Back m 1909, George Thomas said, Let ' s have a Junior Prom ; and they did. And now, every year, either the Juniors or the Sophs give a mce, depending on which Class has the most dancing men. Of course the German Club mes across, and the Juniors take turn about, and anybody else who has any money turns loose somehow. The Senior Class mixes up every single funny thing that has happened ice the Davie Poplar was a pup, and gets revenge on the faculty in a dazzling dramatic irolina specialty known as the Senior Stunt. And that isn ' t all. Sneath ' s songbirds rrow dress suits, and do their little stunts; and Henry Meeks discusses love in the famous ange blossom tenor. George McKie can ' t have anything put over on him; so he dresses i Weeks and Barney Pitts, and they imitate John Drew and Billy Burke, and think they e getting away with it. The dear old Di and Phi (or Phi and Di) hopped on the band igon two years ago, and now the voice of the orator is heard in the land, a-thundering out Deemockrasee — and all for the honor of the Carr medal. Baseball games and ick meets overflow what is left. And all this in the m ddle of the term? Sure — any nehead can double-cross the faculty. Shift that George Washington Birthday holiday a bit, and bring your Easter Holidays all together, and you will have the greatest part the week free for yourself and the girls. The girls — there ' s the keynote of Junior week. They cause the whole doggone ;ss. They are the ones for whom orchestras play, and Vernon Castles dance, and eeks and Coggins act, and Rabbit Bailey slides, and everything else. They reign areme. They flit from Frat Hall to Frat Hall, raising their dear voices up to the skies, rghing, teasing, and conquering. From Cherokee to Currituck they swarm to Chapel ill to reap the fresh harvest. And bul-lieve me, they can get away with it every day ■the week, and Sunday too. That ' s Junior Week! iP Mil m 0 ' ' ■t THIRTY-SEVEN it Jt m m COLLEGE VE IW m - ii J i-.W ►|Vi f • ' ?C- - ' ; il THIRTY-EIGHT fc ' ' i h: :;s:. ' ;; = ' --. COLLEGE YEAR ' (i ' . ' . ' .ii U ' l ?(M(SH = ]ljl INAL exams are over, and the end of the last lap is in sight. Another year W|l of work and play, of growth and development, is past. But it means more r Pf than that to some of us. It means the culmination of four years of life, in ' many respects the best four years. We entered raw boys; we are leaving lough with the newness of it still with us. Never again, no matter what we encounter, similar length of time mean so much to us. We are too close to it yet to appreciate But even now, as we look back, each is conscious somehow of a feeling of slishment. We have passed our work. We have done something in athletics, ive taken part in varied activities. Best of all, we have rubbed shoulders with nen, all sorts of men, and we have been broadened by the rubbing. And now there a man of us who does not know that it has been worth while. Also, what we ily do not realize, there is not a man of us who will not carry the marks of the four omewhere upon him for the rest of his life. There is a touch of sadness in the picture, too, as we prepare to leave what to us 5n home for so long. Then, we feel rather lost. Heretofore there has always been ing lo fight for, to work for. We stand upon the pinnacle that we have longed for ;ars to reach, and it is for the moment disappointing. The pleasures of anticipation le, and the joys of realization are flat. But it is only for a moment. As we turn a idly from gazing down the slope in the twilight, dawn breaks, and the view opens the front. Instead of at the pinnacle, we stand upon the merest foothill. The lofty ; towers above, still to be won. The world lies before us. The Finish is but the ling; truly we are at the Commencement. ?1 .4 ! -X THIRTY-NINE .r - y y ' ' }tm .v ' ;i - C y v ' ,!! f — v X ' v COLLEGE YEAR P . .s;;is 3 %|. ..t good bye. everybody ! ' s «r V ,V ' ' r- -- . f SEN OR CLASS OFFICERS OSCAR LEACH S. W. WHITING V J. S. CANSLER SECRETARY L. R. JOHNSON TREASURER FORTY-ONE C(,, ' V s l yTCivi OUR years ago, we gathered on this carrpus, fresh and green. To pursue the theme of knowledge, and the gems of wisdom glean. Four years we ' ve worked together, in sympathy and cheer; In fellowship we ' ve striven to surpass each former year. The field is large, and wisdom infinite ; Our brains too small to garner time ' s full store. Yei we have labored with determmed might To gather to our harvest one pearl more. We ' re on the sands of learnmg ' s boundless shore; The ocean depths we have not yet explored ; We ' ve skimmed the surface of ancient lore. But drunk not of the beauties therein stored. What boots it that we ' ve labored w ' th our might, And scanned the wisdom sages handed down, If we do not diffuse a beam of light And in our simple service wear a crown? The ages past have pointed to today ; The present is our time to win or fail. Then ' tis our glorious privilege to say That justice, truth, and mercy shall prevail. In parting now, our faith we plight anew; Each other ' s friendship we will ever need. Our inner souls command us to be true. And bid each one a rexerend godspeed. FORTY-TWO 9il ]iS Senior Top o or Af rv HE human mind is a wonderful thing in its behavior: often comical, always F interesting. But much more wonderful, more com ical, more interesting, is a collection of human minds, when trained upon a common subject. Like the points of a circle, each sees the object at the center from its own angle, with its own separate, private, little individual point of view. And as the points in a circle, so Archibald says, are infinite, and separated by a distance inllnitesimally small, so are there as many points of view on a subject as there are minds grouped around it, separated by dis- tinctions so inllnitesimally small that two often seem identical. And that, you anticipate, is the graph at the senior vote? Not yet. Imagine your circle as composed of only eighty-odd points — think of tha.. Strong, you are merely a dot — each endowed with magnetism according to its own caliber, attracting others to its point of view, or being attracted. The circle is distorted, but more human. Imagine your center, upon which all are trained, changed into a little circle of the same eighty-odd pomts. And — you have complicated the problem. I defy even Collins and Taylor to solve it by the best of their formulae. But let that irregular curve speak, and we shall find out what the Seniors think of themselves. At the question as to The Most Seriou Occupation, verily the lid of Pandora ' s box was smashed in. We have everything from farming to flying machines. We confess, as a favorite way of killing time, to loafing and sleeping principally. But some sug- gestions were unique. One deep thinker is at a loss to choose between hanging and electrocution for the purpose. Thnking of my beloved raves one lunatic, another, too good to be true. We love ch ' ckens — that is, we like to eat chicken. ' Going to church vociferate Also peanuts and elephant ears. In our drinks, our tastes are strange, water being professedly the favorite, with the innocent milkshake second. However, a few desperate characters call for dopes and sloe gin. Nearly half the class are non-smokers, the rest smoking from El Principe to rabbit tobacco. One reckless youth admits that he is satisfied with anything that will burn. FORTY-THREE 7iL 1 In a misguided moment, we asked the question, what is your favorite postmark? Answers galore, from Manteo to Murphy, places we never knew before existed. Did you ever hear of Stern? Where is Lake Landmg? What is your favorite machine? We answered every kind of automobile known, and some that were not known. In addition, there were locomotives, aeroplanes, wheel- barrows, a hay-burner, and one steam shovel. Surely variety is the red-pepper of existence. The biggest thing some of us have done while here is to pass certain dreaded courses, mostly malh. One bragged, however, that he had escaped 4 B K ; another that he had made it. One rejoiced that he had taken Greek; his neighbor boasted that he had had sense enough to drop it. Some were glad they stayed here; one hero that he had got suspended. And so it goes. We are ambitious to achieve many things; fame, honor, wealth; to pass Greek Two; to graduate; to succeed; just to exist; to get out of debt; and any number, ye gods, to get married. We claim greatest indifference to courses we have flunked; to professors who have thrown us; to people and things we dont like; and to what we have not and are not in general. Sixty per cent, either confess, affirm, or boast that they are in love. 1 hirty per cent, deny the charge. One poor soul is uncertain. The rest either inform us that it is none of our business, or keep a discreet silence. Watch these last — they are either incurables, or have just received the Manus Borealis on the back of the neck. For best representative, there are some ten con- testants; but few are more than spasmodic; and Chambers, the reliable, comes up to be crowned, with the others barely in sight. Most popular? Always an interesting question. I wonder what man you would pick. Right! None other ■' ' than the senior president — good old, slow-talking Oscar Leach. These Seniors must have thought most versatile had something to do with beauty ; for half the class voted for themselves. At least, almost that many got one vote. The rest, realizing the true meaning of the term, divided equally for Chambers and Strong. Another question that caused trouble was who has developed most since that September Morn-ing nearly four years ago? Immediately things became as lively as a FORTY-FOUR E ■• T 1 Sophomore election ; and when the smoke cleared away, Strong, chest out and head in the air, led Whiting by two votes, with Ratty, T. I., Spider, both Lees, and all three Holmes ' tieing for third honors. Services upon the gridiron were not forgotten either, and to Big Ab ' s monogram and three stars was added the title of having done the most for Carolina. For the least appreciated. Chambers and Parker tied; but if they get too proud we will tell how few votes they got. Neglected indeed was the man who didn ' t get a vote. In the general argument, a half-dozen votes decided that Leach was the man most likely to succeed; the other twenty contestants had for a solace the thought that the thing was as close as — There was a four-cornered con- test for the wearer of the greatest amount of dignity — Carlton, Whiting, and Cansler pressing Oates close for the honor, at first. But, as the final ballots came in, the only Smack, Sky- Blue Boy, showed that he had been just trifling — that if it came to a show down, not even the Chapel Household Gods, Moore and the Hermes, nor Dr. V. himself, had it on that Orful Oates in the matter of dignity — serene, calm, and unruffled. Little doubt was present as to the best athlete. Chambers ' three monograms, with stars here and there, was too much for even Big Ab. And now. who is to be judged wearer of the laurels at the platform — an important quest ' .on on this campus of glorious forensic history? As de- hubert baler, the largest Holmes, that is to say Albert, easily stands first; wh ' le Webster, like his great predecessor, silences all others by his silver-tong ued oratory. As best writer, there were few aspirants. No one who reads the Tarheel edi- torials could doubt where this title, loo, must rest. His clear, simple, forceful pen has won it for Chambers. There was a hot contest for the premier business man. Johnson and Dunnagan fought for it, nip and tuck; and both were deserving. Johnson at length drew ahead by a shadow — and we think it would have broken his heart otherwise. FORTY-FIVE 7iL 1 Hardest fighter? Ratty Ranson ! unanimous but for two votes. What a pity they could not be disregarded. For pure, bhnd, unreasoning sheer fight his equal is not known. For broadesl-minded. Whiting is the only one with any considerable collection of ballots, a large number being scattered. Likewise, for most independent there were so many entries that no one could get more than a half-dozen votes. With that many. Strong and Jones tied. Then the politicians assembled to choose their champion. But the caucus was scarcely in session before the second raters began to remember engagements elsewhere. In a few mmutes, the floor was left to Drew and Webster. As we go to press, the Tar- heel comes out with an extra, declaring that in the deadlock no signs of a break appear. Further, there is no dark horse with spirit enough to even neigh in the same district as these two battle-scarred champions. Frank swears it is a frame-up against his fa r repu- tation — that the one thing he dislikes is poli- t ' cs. Tick — short for politic — on the other hand is sure he is present through some mistake. And we? Well, we think each doth protest too much. Jealous of his class-room honors, the less fortunate have voted Collins the hardest Grind. It is rumored that Perry ' s middle name is Dissent. Anyway, he is the official class objector. Of romancers, versed in the flowery wiles of mendacity, there was indeed a poodly flock. But none dared crowd upon the heels of the bell-wether, Ike Strayhorn. Jimmy Holmes, president of the Y. -though there was a certain neatly-written little M. C. A., has the religon of the class- vole tor Mr. Dunnagan. Ratty Ranson again bobbed up into the much-sought white glare, th ' s time as most officious member. Then rose the question of who could be depended on, and who would be certain to prove an aHbi — or is it an alias — when wanted? The positive virtue fell to the lot FORTY-SIX 9i£ ISi of Leach. For most undependable, everybody oted for his closest friend, but George Hohon, by virtue of his posit-on as Yacketv ' ack photographer, was presented with the lemon. Hart is the sleepiest member; Struthers the noisest, without a doubt; Peele the biggest bluff. And everybody travels, but Cy Long the most. As to the least productive — well, we fear that many of us would lose some of our self-importance if we could read this long list of names. But it had to be divided between Hart, James, and Andrews. Of course, nobody drmks! But there was a surmse as to who would probably prove the thirstiest. There were many names, but only one who seemed possessed of a genume Sahara Desert, Richmond-on-Thanksgiving-Day, kmd of a thirst. For obvious reasons, his name will remain a dire secret, but — he is a short, dark, tall, blonde, sort of a fellow. Maybe you can identify h ' m. Thus did our magnetized, twisted, irregular circle of eighty-odd dots speak, naming one dot this, calling another that. And if in the verdict one should seem to be exalted high above his fellows, let him be thankful; ' t is high praise; but let him also not forget that he is still but a dot, one of eightv-odd. And if one should seem to be forgotten, let him not be downcast; he is still one of the eighty-odd. And if one should seem to be laughed at, let him laugh with the rest at the joke that was intended as an exidence of friendship to him from the eighty-odd. For they are one circle, a unit for a little while. Let each one feel his part, that it may be a joyous merrory to him long after the circle is broken, the parts scattered to four winds. FORTY-SEVEN 9iZ. 3iS weight, 194. Abby. the best-known and best- loved figure that walks the campus. A big, simple, kmdiy soul; giant in stature; slow, but everlastrngly there. And strong — m playful moods, he tosses one around as an elephant would. Four years of Varsity football, with captamcy m his Senior year, speak for themselves; and Captain Abernathv takes his honored place beside Tillett, Wrn;ton, and other Carolma heroef, a name to conjure with in Tarheel land. Secretary of Class (2); Treasurer Oak R.dge Clib (2); Vars.ly Football (I. 2, 3. 4); Captam Virs.tv Football Team (4); Meck- lenburg County Club; ' l . M. C. A.; Track Squad (I, 2); Vice-Pres.dent North Carolina Club (3). Class Football (I, 2, 3); Class Baseball (I, 2, 3); Varsity Football (4); Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Asso- ciation ; Associate Editor of Yackety Yack (3); Commencement Marshal (3); Bones; K -, FORTY-EIGHT TiUZ ]iS Trov Monroe Andrews Chapel Hill. N. C. Age, 19; height. 5 feet 10 mche weight. 150. Troy is one of the two Trojans our Class. If you simply see him. you would think that he is asleep nearly the lime; but he is not thai sleepy. He will never hurt himself at work. This is nol because he is not able to work, but because he is nol poing to do anything that he can possibly avoid. Di. Society; County Club. Orange Luke came to us a knee-pani lad, but soon outgrew this. He is a great athlete — not that he has made any Var- sity team, but because he has made all of the class teams. History is his favorite study, and has been ever since his Fresh- man year. His home is in the mountains, as you would suppose, foi angels dwell in high places. Macon County Club; Class Football; Class Base- ball; Class Basket-ball; Y. M. C. A. KC FORTY-NINE 1 Age, 20; height. 5 weight. 153. Just because he doesn ' t say any more about himself than he does about any- thing else, you might think that Ben didn ' t do anythmg here on the campus. A very few trips to the baseball field, however, would let you see that he is somebody at Chape! Hill. His silence there can ' t keep you from knowing that he IS our premier pitcher. Ben is the kmd of man whom you ' d judge to have a one and only ; and a quiet rumor says that you are right about it. Brink entered with 1915. but has steamed up above the speed limit in order to have the honor of graduating with us. We thank him for the complii congratulate him on his good work. Since he came here, he has never missed a foot- ball or baseball game, or a Star Course r an opportunity of sleeping through breakfast. Phi. Society; Wayne County Club: Class Base- ball (I. 2); Varsity Base- ball (3); Wearer of N. C; 3 X Phi. Society; ' . M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Wilson County Club. Age. 19; h weight. 155 Brownie. as he is known the mountains. He entered in his early youth. During his sojourn here, he has taken plenty of recreation from his books, but made B K in the meantime. He says that he is going to enter the medical profession, and we be- lieve he will make good. Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association ; Buncombr County Club; Asheville Club; German Club; Zoblogy Club; Elisha Mit- chell Scientific Socipiv; Assistant in Zoology (3); 1 B K. FoHN Scott Cansler 21; height. 5 feet 10 inches; weight. 130. The face of a hermit, the legs of a sparrow, and the clothes of a tailorins model, but the happy possessor of the sanest and best-balanced mental equip- t in the Class. From Malh. I through Philosophy 4. and into Law. they all look alike to this intellectual beauty; facts go in and ones come out; though none of your freakish genius is here. A bit of a lover, too — the quietest on record, and always ready to explain those trips as Glee Club business. General has done his share of developing in the past four years, and he faces graduation with a record that is bound to carry him far. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Mecklenburg County Club; German Club; Pres. Tennis Asso. (3); Class Sec ' y (4); Treas. German Club (4); High School Debating Union (4); Asso. Ed. Tarheel (4); Asso. Ed. Yackety Yack (4) ; Greater Council (4); Mgr. Clee Club (4); Ball Mgr. Pan-Hellenic Council (4); Amphoterothen; Golden Fleece; Sec ' v ' I ' B K ; BOH. gjj™ one of the good Baptist spends a part of his time these days. He is so quiet that some of his classmates did not even know that he was here until he was elected President of the Class at the end of his Sophomore year. He is as dignified as Malcolm Gates. S. imagine how he performed the duties of h,s office. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Class President (3); President Oak Ridge Club (3) ; Secretary Student Cquncil (3); Secretary Greater Council (3) ; Junior Oratorical Contest. FIFTY-TWO Athletic Asso.; Y. M. C. A.: Scrub Football and ket-ball (I); Varsity Football (2); Varsity Ten- nis (2, 3, 4); Varsitv Basket-ball (2, 3, 4) ; Capt. (3) ; Vice-Pres. Class (2) : Historian (4) ; Greater Council (3); Co II Mgr. (3, 4) Yacketv Yack Ed. (3) Asso. Ed. Tarhcd (3) Managinq Ed. (3); Ed, in-Chief (4); Germ a Coop : Amphoterothen ; Golde Club Fleece; Gimghoul ; BK; 2T; i: . K %E ]i .ght. 112. The original Marathon guy had nolhine I this one. Skeet has been famous his Freshman days for his ability to ( ■et over ground. Short of stature, but long of stride, he flings the miles over his shoulder as nonchalantly as Doc Klultz pockets your change. Nat Cartmell is his Czar, and the cinder track his Heaven. Beyond this, he fusses over road engineer- ing, and lives with Bascom Field in a funny little house where in the silence of the nighttime he dreams of ten-foot giants. C, A Association: Warren ton High School Club; Varsity Track Team (1. 2. 3, 4); North Carolina Club: Sec- retary and Treasurer of North Carolma Club (2); Phi. Society: Cross Country Team. Phi. Society: Wa County Club; Y. M. A.: Ehsha Mitchell Scien- tific Society: Class Foot- ball (4) ; Assistant in Civil Engmeering (4); Winner of Cain Mathmetical Medal (3): President of B K . FIFTY-THREE 7iL ! A quiet, dignified attends strictly to his sixteen hours of acad first-year medicine, and Making the ■!■B K w, career of a course in th opened his ing, he is ruffled, neve panionable a deta lan who has slaughte Chemistry building ■outh. Too modest and retir- an almighty worker, never in a hurry, and a most com- when you dig beneath the Henry Leon Cox Cullowhee. N. C. Age, 19; height, 5 feet 11 weight, 148. Kid, or Handsome Harry ( ' will answer to either), came to us froi the wilds of Cullowhee. Born, bred, and educated in the slicks, this veritable child of nature just can ' t help delving into her secrets. Thrives in the fumes of buleric acid, hydrogen sulphide, and carbon disul- phide. But when it comes to sleeping, he has the ancient Somnus beal a mile. His besetline sin is falling in love with every girl he sees. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Asso.; Chemi- cal Journal; Alembic Club; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; Zoology Club; Medical Society; Assl. in Chemistry (3. 4); Com- mencement Marshal (3) ' f BK; . Xi:; ' I ' .X; il A K Di. Society; Alembic Club; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; Babbitt Scholarship; Y. M. C. A.; ' B K ■A X FIFTY-FOUR KC 1 Bill turned his efforts toward Ikey ' s department during his Sophomore year, but his fondness and natural endowment for Math, and Physics redirected his course, and saved him to the academic ranks. Bill has roomed with Swmdi for four years, and he slicketh closer thai a brother. This close relationship ha caused him to be looked upon as Swin dell ' s cradle. If there is anybody in doesn ' t like Paul, he shows hi judgment, and keeps mighty quiet about it. Paul hasn I done many startling things to the College; as far as marks and mono- grams go, he IS not any belter off than most of the rest of us. But what he has failed to gain in fame, he has won in the good-will of the College. He away from here not pins and statistics, but the best wishes of all for his success in life, and, of course, love. Athletic Association Phi. Society; Murphy Edu cational Club; Historica Society; Y. M. C. A. Hyde County Club. Y. M. C. A.; Phi. So- ciety; Wayne County Club: Class Football (2. 3, 4); Captain Class Football (4); Class Baseball (I. 2, 3, 4). FIFTY-FIVE SiC L George Frank Drew Live Oak. Fla. 23; height. 5 feel 10 inches; dt. 155. The genllesl-voiced. mildesl-mannered. best-looking, and shrewdest politician who ever put across a wise deal. Loves to handle men and offices, but is equally suc- cessful on the ballroom floor, or selling football tickets, or ranging the Florida swamps with a shotgun and a camping kit. Carries about forty hours of puds his Senior year, and still keeps up that old habit of not going to bed during exams. A prince of good fellows, a sound business head, and a remarkable capacity to withstand the introduction into his brain of the beauties of Second French. Phi. Society; Y. M. C, A.; Athl. Asso.; Tennis Asso.; Sec ' y and Treas. Florida Club (2); Vice- Pres. Junior Class (3); Yackety Yack Ed. (3); Asst. Mgr. Varsity Foolba (3); Pres. Florida Club (3); Athletic Council (3. 4); Assl. Leader G. Club Dance (3); Asst. Leader Gimghoul Dance (3) : Commencement Ball Mgr. (3); Mgr. Varsity Football Team (4); Rep. in General Alumni Athl. Com. (3, 4); Coop; Senior Order of the Golden Fleece; Leader of Gimghoul Dance (4) ; Pres. German Club (4); Pres. Pan-Hellenic Council (4); Gimghoul; A 1 9.. Mike ' t treat you to a genuinely hearty laugh, fact, he loves fun. and courtesy makes him laugh at another ' s jokes, whether they are humorous or not. As might be ex- pected of a fellow of his temperament, he is a worshiper at the shrine of the fair sex. But to his jollity he adds seriousness of purpose. His good, sound sense got him the position of business manager of the Ma aTine. MiKE is one of the strong, l-headed men of the Class, and he is bound to succeed. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tarheel Ed. (2); Class Historian (2) ; Sec ' y Press Asso. (3); Asst. Mgr. Cnivcrsilt) Magazine (3); Cor. Sec ' y Forsyth County Club; Vice-Pres. Athletic Asso.; Sec ' y Surry-Yadkin County Club; Dramatic Club; Commencement Mar- shal: Senior StunI Com- cittee; High-School Debat- ing Union Committee; Bus. Mgr. Univenilv Magazine Phi. Society; Medical Society; Athletic Asso- ciation; Tennis Associa- tion; Y. M. C. A.; Zoological Club; Claso Football (3) ; Historian Class; i:X; ' l. X. FIFTY-SEVEt- 7iL ISi John Gilmer Feezor Silver Hill. N. C. Age, 25; height, 5 weight, 145. Feezor is one of the hardest workers of our Class. When he is not studying, he IS working at something else. You see him when he comes around after laundry, and hardly at any other time. He knows practically everybody in college, and can tell you where they room. Di. Society: Educational Club; Davidson County Club; Botanical Journal Club. Thomas Wiley Ferguson Kendal, N. C. Age, 25; height. 6 feet; weight, 165. Children are to be seen, not heard; FuRc must think that, in spite of his six- odd feet height, that he is still a child. He can ' t keep people from seeing him. but he certainly can prevent their hearing. He goes about his work, plays Class football, and doesn ' t care a rap what people think, say, or do. In other words, he has ns, and lives up to them. Class Football (2, 3, 4); Di. Society; Historical So- , ciety; Educational Club; Y. M. C. A. FIFTY-EIGHT Til UK Arthur James Flume Palatine Bridge. N. Y. Age, 25; height, 5 feet lYi inches; eight, 140. Flume is the little fellow from the h-Nul vicinity. Immediately after he hit the Hill. he fell in love with .t, even if he .s an admirer of br.llianlly lighted cabarets. A. J. says he is going to be a chemist, and already he has shown his ability by landing a job as assistant in Chemistry while an undergraduate. He has the grit, and will make oood. Alembic Club; [ournal Club; Ehsha Mitchell Scientific Society; Y. M. C. A.; AX:i. John Robert Gentry Waynesviiie, Tn. C. Age, 24; height, 6 feel; weight. 170. Bob is one of the four-year Y. M. C. A. men. He has an expression about him that reminds one of a Sunday School or a Bible Class. Bob has also developed the social side of his nature. If it were not for the ladies ' love of mike (Dun- nagan). he would be the leading ladies ' man of our class. In Class football, he will be remembered as a star. Di. Society: Y. M. C. A.; Class Football (3. 4); Y. M. C. A. Cabmet (3. 4). FIFTY-NINE TiL ISi Di. Sociely; Y. M. C. A.; Guilford County Club; Class Foolball COS. 10. ' 12); Manager Class Foot- ball ( ' 08); Scrub Footba (•09); Sub-Varsitv Foo ball (■|3); Class Baseba ( ' 09. ' 11, ' 13); Varsit Track Team ( ' 10); i: N. TiZ ISi Meade Hart Age. 20: hclghl, Mooresv.lle. N. C. j 5 feel 10 ,nch. weight. 143 When Meade is not in bed. you may look for him at the Library, or at the Peabody Bu.ldmg. These are his ch.ef places of resort. He can tell you when every magazine is due at the Library, whether or not it is on time, and what pictures are in it. He is so fond of edu- cation that he was elected Vice-President of the Archibald DeBow Murphv Edu- cational Club. As a side line, he takes Greek. Philosophy. F.nglish. and Music. J. T. entered the Class of 1913. but dropped out one year, and decided to come back and get his diploma with us. What 1913 lost in him we have gained. He is one of the best players in Class Football. Any one will tell you that Hatcher was the best tackle on the class field. Di. Sonet County Club. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Duplin County Club; Class Football. SIXTY-ONE 9iL of politicking ' into the stage of construc- tive action. Dependable for sound advic and thorough work, which quality the Y M. C. A. recognized, when, taking ad vantage of his good nature, it made h Treasurer. Di Society; President Alam ance County Club (A): Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4V. Greater C ouncil (4); Class Football (3. 4): Class Treasurer (3) Y. M. C. A. Treasurer (4); Commencement Ueb a t e r (3); Wmner o t Bi rsham Prize (3). SIXTY-TWO James Eugene Holmes Graham, N. C. Age. 23; height, 5 feet 8 Inches; weight. 137. JlMMIE is lea der of the famous homely trio, althoui h i n height he cannot compete with hi brothe Albert. Early in his col- lepe CO urse. he became as attached to our neighbo rmg Si nday Schools as Ralph Rank.n IS to o ur State High Schools. In this lie d he V vas discovered to us as a faithfu worker , and we made him Presi- dent ol the Y. M. C. A. Jimmie ' s chief interest now 1 es in aiding and abetting Frank Grahan in plotting against the whites. ' Di. Society; Alamance County Club; Educational Club; Histo cal Society; President Y. M. C. A. (4). SiC 3iS weight. 135 Last of th nol in menial equipment, as witness his B K key. Supports his brothers and the other good citizens in any worthy Class, Di. Society, or Y. M. C. A. effort, but doesn ' t talk much about it. Showed all- ' round development by making the Class football team. Di. Society; Y. M. c. y A.; Alamance County Club; Associate Editor Yackety Yack (4); BK. DI. Society; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Class Football ( , 3. 4); Manager Football Team f4); Vice-President For- syth County Club (3. 4); Educational Club; Athletic Association ; German Club. SIXTY-THREE 9iL ]£« Albert Warren James Laurinburg, N. C. Age. 19; height, 6 feet; weight, 150. Buz exercises exceedingly scrupulous care in selecting how and with whom he shall spend his time. Rumor has it that often his spirit, because of certain irresist- ible attraction, is elsewhere. H that may be, a man who can bat down nini exams, in ten days must have the concen tration that accompanies success. Warrenlon High Scho Club. ; came into his own when Euless d over to him the billheads of the Tarheel. Revels in the music of ihc type- writer, gloats over his Please Remits. and dreams of siening checks. Outside of the business world, he takes himself and Horace too seriously, disagrees with Chase. and has been known to sIid down lo Elon. where he reigns supreme. Energetic, in- dustrious, and efficient, he goes after this business of education in a get-there fashion — as he does everything. Alamance County Club; Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Manager Class Track (3); Assistant Business Mgr. Tarheel (3); Busmess Mgf. Tarheel (4): Tennis Asso. ; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; Sec ' y of Class (2); Class Treas. (4); Commencement Marshal (3). SIXTY-FOUR 7iL 1 Di. Society: PresidenI Blue Ridge Club (3); Press Association ; Asso- ciate Editor Yackety Yack (3, 4). Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.: Tennis Association; Class Football (1); Class aseball (2); Student Washington and Lee (3); SIXTY-FIVE 9iL m Daniel Lambert Knowles Mount Olive. N. C. Age. 21; heighl. 5 feet 10 Inches; reighl. 150. Monte is from Mount Olive, do lere where they raise neaches and tube- you know. But MoNT isn ' t exactly peach, nor is he a tuberose. But he does indle the big mitt as easily as though it ere a kid glove, and came near makin monogram for so doing. He did enough ork to get by with a safe margin, and ed no tears when he made fours. Phi. Society; Tenni Association; Y. M. C. A. Athletic Association Wavne County Club Scrub Baseball (1, 2) Varsity Baseball (3) Class Football (3. 4) Dramatic Association; L W., Medicine. Lasley is in some respects the most in- different man in the Class. In fact, he is so indifferent that he had as soon eat with a knife as a fork. He is a lover of Math, up to the fourth dimension, and thinks that he cannot go beyond this. Di, Society; Rockins- ham County Club; Y. M, C. A.; TK. . SIXTY-SIX KL ]k weight, 130 You just couldn ' t ihink of Orscar doing anything at any time except the thing that was scheduled (or that time. His upright manner of life, and his patient regard for the other fellow ' s opinion, fit him to wear the toga of the mayor of the Campus. W,th Dr. Booker. ' Prof Walker, and several more of the boys backing him, he has risen to such an eminence that he can see Raleigh: and Superintendent Joyner had better walch his job. V, ciety; Baseb. Cabins Counc dent dent Officio Counc othen: M. C. A.; Phi. So- Assislant Managei (3); Y. M. C. A t (3); Alhlet (4); Class P (4); President Stu Council (4) ; Ex ■President Create (4) ; Amphoter Golden Fleece: Ger Club. Society: Y. M. A.: Press Association; Educational Club: Histori- cal Society: High School Debating Union: Fresh- Soph Debate (2). SIXTY-SEVEN 9iL ISi Phi. Society; Y. M. C A.; Progressive Club; Johnson Counly Club. ball (1, 2); Class Track (2); Va Baseball (3). SIXTY-EIGHT 9iCZ ISi 20; height. 5 feel 10 weight, 153. Can ' t you give us some light on this subject. Mr. Long? Cv awakes with a start: Eh? What did you say. Pro- fessor? I did not hear the question. Thai ' s typical. Bui his dreams profit him more than much hard work has done for us; for Cy is one of those gifted few thai have I ' B K thrust upon them. A key looks as natural on him as water in the Mecklenburg County Club; Dl. Society; Class Football (I); Class Base- ball and Class Football (2. 3. 4); Varsity Basket-ball (1); North Carolina Club; Associate Editor YackeTY YacK (3); German Club; Manager Class Baseball (3); Manager Varsity Basket-ball (4) ; Athletic Council; Bones; Oasis; ■t B K; K . . William Campbell Lord Wilmington. N. C. Age. 21 ; height, 5 ft. 91 2; wight. 146. Happy as an arctic day i; fesses that his chief accom- plishment since he has been in has been lo exist, and his chief ambition to keep on existing. From which one might judge that he is lazy; bul rather, we think, a physical economist. He his work as a sort of an unavoid- ble evil, and is somewhat of an athlete II the class and scrub circles. Bul wher e bines is at the dances. His ability as a dancer, along, be it said, with his other charms, is the cause of much distress at Thanksgiving, Junior Week, and Commencement. Sub. Varsity Football (4); Scrub Football (3) Class Football (I. 2. 3) Class Baseball (I. 2, 3) Captain Class Baseball (3) Yackety Yack Board (2); Pres. New Hanover Co. Club (4); Phi. So- ciety; Glee Club and Man- dolin Club (4); Vice-Pres German Club (4); Asst. Leader Spring Dance (3); Asst. Leader Fall Dance (4); Ball Mgr. (4); :: X. 9iL SIXTY-NINE IR Age, 23; he.ghl, 5 feel 8 inches; weight, 150. Frank bulled in from somewhere — we know nol where. Judging from his lalk. one would think he came from South Carolina. But judging from his work, one would think he came from Buie ' s Creek. From the way he is training in Economics, one would think he is going to make a million; but. as a matter of fact, he IS too lazy to cultivate the cash. Class Football (I. 4); Scrub Football (2); Glet Club (4); Di. Society. ady to put across a wise busi- r to pass a soul-nourishing oke and a little game. ? sense than the average col- bv dodgine college smecures. Rooming with Oscar, he has led an upright life. iViAc is a man who carries out what he undertakes; gelic and dependable, he is bound to ke good. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Press Association; Tennis Association; Presi- dent Gaston-Lincoln County Club (4); Assistant Mana- ger Tarheel (3). WL ]f8 Roy Bowman McKnicht Age. 21; height. 5 feel IP, inche weight. 155. Mack Is a mixture of Y. M. C. A.. Bohemia. Geology, and Washmgton and Lee. He is rather fair to look upon, and knows It; but he Is too bashful to push this natural advantage with the pirls. Mack ' .s regrets are two; first, that Collier did not also leach Greek, and second, that basket-ball N. C. ' s are not more plentiful. Ashevllle . N C Age. weight. 21; 140 height. 5 f eel you ha him. for ingly fe Di. Society; Mecklen- burg County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Y. M. C. A. Cabi- net (2) ; Class Football (1. 4); Scrub Football (2); Scrub Basket-ball (I); Sub-Varsity Basket -ball (2) ; Captain Class Basket- ball (4); Geology Semm- ary; German Club; Stu- dent at Washington and Lee (3); i) X. Cholly is such a hard worker that he is seldom seen, and less often heard. You can usually find him at hi; either boning hard or counting his money. On Stale occasions, you may see him strolling around with his friends. But to hear Cholly to appreciate s soft, sweet voice and charm- nine ways place him beyond question In the Boseman. Kerr. M ' Dender trio. He contemplates studying medicine. May his success at [efferson be even more brilliant than his record here. Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Band; Cle Club ; Buncombe County Club; Class Tennis Team (3); O-AH. SEVENTY-ONE 9iZ ISi Age. 20 ; height weight. 150. The most skilled tennis arm. the d ingest feet, and the stiffesi back whereof the University can boast. Voted the most dignified man in the Class, he smiles the ball-room smile, straightens his shoulders impossibly straighter. runs his finger along the razor edge of his trousers, pats his hair down, adjusts his lie one-eighth of an inch to the right, and strides off to P. H. D. ' s lab with Carl and big Ah. Back of it all IS the conscious worker, and, on occasions, the dreamer of dreams, and the lover ' s sigh. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.: Mecklenburg County Club; German Club; Ten- nis Asso.; Coop; Varsity Tennis Team (2. 3, 4); Scrub Football (I); Class Football (2. 3); Gimghoul; Associate Ed. Yackety Yack (3); Wearer of N. C; Pan-Hellenic Council (3); Chief Ball Manager; Ben. Frank Redding Owen Yadkin College. N. C. Age. 22; height. 5 feel 6 ght. 138. Pug is the Horatian of He has taken every course in philosophy that is given here, except one. and would have taken it if he could have gotten it. He is also a member of the Gym. Te You may expect to hear from him as a educational leader, for he has the Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Gym Squad (4); Davidson County Club. SEVENTY-TWO 7iL ]iJ5 Di. Society; Medical So- ciety; Y. M. C. A,; Class Baseball (I, 2); Greater Council: Scotland-Sampson County Club. SEVENTY-THREE 7iL 1 Elbert Sidney Peele Williamslon, N. C. „ . 19; height, 5 feel 10 ,nche weight, 160. Sleep + B. S. = BK + A. B. After seeing this reaction lake place in Peele, Dr. Herly must admit thai alchemy is a true science. Peele received his ear , education at Buie ' s Creek; consequently, he IS good at laughing, bluffing, and debat- ing. He had rather hear a ioke tha lo a fire. Peele says thai he is goii to be a teacher. He will make one. if he can refrain from laughing at and encouraging young America ' s pranks. Phi. Society; Tennis Associallon; Press Associa- tion; Educational Club; Historical Association ; Winner Freshman Debate; Commencement Debater; Debalmg Union; B K. N. C. Age. 3-4; height. 5 feet 10 inches; weight. 155. E. J. is one of the patriarchs of the Class. He keeps to- himself, and has spent his four years almost exclusively in taking two degrees. The fact that he has never been to the Pickwick explains why he has never raised any objection to any of Brockwell ' s methods of operating the Movies. In Perrv, we have an ardent disciple of Charlie Lee. Phi. Society; Secrela Wilson County Club; Cla Poet (4). SEVENTY-FOUR ISt VviLLiAM Fraklin Pitt Elm City. N. C. 22; height, 5 feel II weight, 175. A tower of strength in I9l4 ' s football backfield, and an artist with the ball and bat when spring days come around, BlLLv has grown with the Class, and on many an afternoon has helped to make Class history. He believes in not letting Ignorance interfere with college work, and, therefore, has always held up his end against the teacher. Phi. Society; Class Foot ball (2, 3, 4); Class Base ball {2, 3); Class Basket ball (4); Twm Count) Club; Athletic Association L. W., Medicine. JOSEPH Robert Prev. tt Lumberton, N. C. 21; height , 5 feet 8 mche 140. Pre is a jack-of-all-trades — studies, politics, athletics — the which he touches, values, and passes in his quest for life. His propensity for making himself a part of all that he has met gave him a fair chance to become famous, but he let Sirulhers and Ranson beat him out. However, in one field he is master — and we believe he ' ll achieve heaven by rolling on St. Peter ' s ten. Class Baseball (I, 2, 3); Class Football f2, 3); Robeson County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society. SEVENTY-FIVE 9iL 1 Age, 27; height, 6 feet 1 inch; weight, 145. a quiel fellow, who never im- poses himself upon others. He spends most of his time at his room, and has never believed campus life better than private. He IS one of the solid kmd. and whose word is his bond. He loves Math.. and no doubt he will some day design a big dam or bridge which will add luster to himself and his Class. William Nelson Pritchard. Jr. Chapel Hill. N. C. Age, 21; height. 5 feel 9 inche ' e kmd of a 3u wish lo interview him. you find him working in the Chem- istry Laboratory. He seems lo like Math. I, m that he specialized in it under the regime of Fally. He is also possessed with a fine voice. We are expecting illy to discover one of the unknown ements some day in Chemistry. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A. Journal Club ; American Chemical Society; Glee Club (3. 4); Orange County Club; Assistant in Chemistry (4) ; A X 1. SEVENTY-SIX 9iL ISi Age. 24; height. 5 feet weight, 173. When you want to put a good man be hind a good cause, call on JlM. From hi youth up. Jim has listened the vox populi. and can always give lips as to which way the wind is blowing. A man of public importance; possessed of a superabundance of good- heartedness. which even managing the Yackety Yack hasn ' t evaporated; carry- ing contagious enthusiasm whi hoarse throat can gasp Big ray-ray fo the le-eam! ; deservedly popular with th. whole campus. Y. M. C. A.; Di. So- ciety; Sec ' y Debating Union (3); Pres. Debating Union (4); Glee Club (3. 4); Class Football (2); Scrub Football (3); Asst. Mgr. Track Team (3); Sec ' y Athl. Asso.; Jr. Ban- quet Speaker (4); Pres. Caldwell Co. Club; Chief Marshal f 3) ; Bus. Mgr. Yackety Yack (4) ; Cheer Leader (4) ; German Club; Amphoterothen ; Golden Fleece; . T ! . Miss Puett? Whv, man. she saved from being a co-ed-less Class. Thai ' s but she is more. She ' s rather modest and shy. but a true Tarheel and 1914 product, even if she did come lo us in the last lap. with a degree from Chicora College. S. C. Rumor makes her a good cook. She paints — on paper. She is ays in a good humor, thoughtful, not ly provoked, but— has an opinion of own. seldom expresses it unless neces- sary, and then with a sweet which she denies. These and other good qualities command our respect and admira- tion. A. B. Chicora College, Greenville, S. C; Vice- President Gaston - Lincoln County Club. TiZ ISi Jesse, true lo his name, sweet maiden graces. He h hard, and made English a specialty might infer from the ease with which he bhnds Dr. Booker m Enghsh 10. De- voted most of his Senior year to dramatics and the Library. He will succeed, be- he will work. Tennis Association; ' l . M. C. A.; Ph,. Societv; High School Debating Union: Dramatic Associa- tion; Dramatic Club; Junior Orator ' s Contest; — T. SEVE.NTy-E.ISHT Age. 21; height, 5 feet 6 inches; weight. 126. The Lord never made a fiercer fighter. If his body had been bigger and his head he would be wearino four N. C. ' s nstead of being an eternal scrub. The ivest wire m the Class, independent lo swaybackness. officious, talkative, attend- ing to everybody ' s business. R. TTy has made himself terribly important in athletics. in politics, in running the University, in everything. The Freshmen think him a god. Nat smiles on him with indulgence, and his classmates — oh. they lake off their hat5 in admiration and wonder. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Educational Club; Dramatic Asso. ; Pres. Mecklenburg Co. Club (3); Asst. Mgr. Basket-ball (3) ; Class Track Team (2. 3); Track Squad (2.3); Class Baseball (1. 2. 3); Class Basket-ball (4); Scrub Basket-ball (1. 2); Basket- ball Squad (3); Class Football (1. 2); Scrub Football (3. 4); Cross Country Team (3) ; Mgr. Class Basket- ball (4) ; Press Association. KiC liiC Phi. Society; Archibald Debol Murphv Club. 9iL seventy-nine: liSl Kenneth Claiborne Royall Goldsboro, N. C. Age, 19; height, 6 feet 3 il weight, 1 A man of substance, th ter you know, the more pendent, he forms his own opinions, re- gardless of whom they offend. Once formed, they are the guide of his actions; and from the course they designate, swerve he will not. His mental grasp permits his self-reliance: and the other man admits the error. True and loyal to his friends, he ' s ever sincere, Damascus stee Class Football (2) ; Class Basket-ball (4) ; Class Tennis (3); Soph-funior Debate f 3) ; Pres. Wayne County Club; YacKETV Yack Board (3, 4); Pres, Tennis Asso, ; Phi. Society; e s ; Amphoterothen : Corgons Head; Pan-Hel- lenic Council; f B K ; -IKE. Di. Society; Yadkin- Surry County Club; Ex- ecutive Committee of His- torical Societv; Educational Club. SiC liS Age, 23; heighl, 5 feet 6 inches; weight. 150. Baby came here from Horner, and at once jumped into athletics. He has made some track man of himself, as his stars and track captaincy will show. He is quiet, but congenial; a friend to a friend, and knows no enemies. You should hear him talk about his lady, as some of his in- timates do. Caplam Class Trar Team (2); Varsity Trac Team (2. 3) ; Captain Var sity Track Team (4) North Carolma Club; I W.. Electrical Engineer ing; X. Harold Thomas Sloan Franklin. N. C. Age, 21; height, 5 feel 9 weight, 145. When Harold goes across the campus, with his squat, earthly stride, he plainlv proclaims his origin from ihe cornfields of the Blue Ridge. No one can shuffle a better foot or pick a belter banjo string, or raise more corn to the acre than this true disciple of old Ben. and as for foot- ball, well, we Seniors l ost our chances when HarolJ) broke his leg. They say that he had aspirations for a ! ' B K key. and flirted them away at the Pickwick; but you will have to ask him about that. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Class Football Team (3. 4): Class Baseball (3). EIGHTY-ONE TiUHL IIR President Class (2) ; Medical Soclely; Secretary Wayne County Club; Ger- man Club; Ki;; nX; A X r. Phi. Society; Tennis Association; German Club; Class Treasurer (2) ; Man- ager Class Football (2); Freshman Debater; Track Team (1, 2. 3); Cross Country Team (3); Wearer of N. C; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Treasurer of Fn-I •ear Med. Class; 1 B K ; A K K VaZ. ]£C Society; Durham Club; Historical Society; Student University of Virginia (3); Soph- Junior Debater (2). Phi. Society: Varsity Gym Team (1, 2. 3); Var- nly Track Team (I. 2. 3); Xearer of N. C; Yacketv Yack Board (2. 3); Class Football (3, 4); Asst. Leader Fall German (3); Junior Oratorical Contest; Mgr. Yackety Yack (4); Leader Fall German (4) ; Leader Gorgon ' s Head Dance (4); Ball Mgr.; Ampholerothen ; Golden Fleece; Bones; Order of Gorgon ' s Head; ' ! H K; Z M ' . 9iZ lis Age. 21; weight, 1 38. If you want a big n Speed, too. when he shuts his mouth and shakes his leg. Strut is one of Nat Carlmell ' s disciples, which means that he is a hard worker, and a lover of the cinder path. Has developed a lot there, and even quit making 5 ' s his Senior year —passed first Dutch with a whole 3. Lewis Holmi:s Swindell Swan Quarter. N. C. Swindell is from Swan Quarter, you know where that is. He spea Esperanto fluently. espi Zoology II. Ask Dr. W.lson. He wield the dissecting knife with speed accuracy, and is one of Dr. Char Ten gods. See Swindell ' s treatise The Dissection of Ducts of the Ductle Glands. Swindell is All right. Class Track Team (2. 3, 4); Track Squad (3); Class Football (4); Phr Society; Alembic Club; Horner Club; Y. M. C. A. Y. M. C. A.; Phi. ciely; Medical Soc Class Baseball (1). EIGHTY-FOUR 9iZ 1 Carl Duffv Taylor Newbern. N. C. Age. 23; heighl, 5 feel 8 weight. 158. The rare combination, upon our rather too critical campus, of a popular man and one who does things. His middl is steady, and when he starts out to do anything he is as stubborn as a mule against all opposition. He began making the Gym. Team and Ones on Math, his first year, and has been doing both ever since — that is until he used up all the Math. In his Senior year, with Pap. monarch of mats. rings. and parallel bars. In addition, he managed the baseball team, just to show his versa- tility. A good all- ' round man. Carl ' s four years here have been far from wasted. Both he and the campus are better for his stay. Class Football (I. 2); Gym. Team (1. 2. 3. 4); Assistant Gym Instructor (3. 4): Electrical Engin- eering Society; Assistant Manager Baseball (3) ; Manager Baseball (4) ; Secretary Athletic Council (4); Tar Bahv Board (2); Class Prophet (4); German Club; Gimghoul ; Teer N. C. Age, weight. 27; 150. height 5 f eet 81 2 inch es; Tomihy hails from Chatham. the county for a ; of rabbits. He oke on anybody. IS always re Four months ady of his time has been spent on the campus. and the remainder of it has been roomed as far away from College as possible. He cannot decide which he likes the better. Mathematics I or French II Tommy is always busy, but is never seen studying. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A. KL ISl Norman St. George V ' ann Charlolle. N. C. As-e. 23; heighl. 5 feel 11 inches; weight. 160. Nip, Nap. Tinpan, George. Norman and Red. The Beau Brum- mel of ihe Med. Class. Takes the world as it is. and cares not what a day may bring forth. Associate Professor of Embryology, and holds the chair m the storeroom course. Rubs elbows with the faculty under the slightest pretext, illy Mac and Norman are buddies. All the boys like George. Nap is bright, and you can expect to hear frcm him in his chosen profession. John Alfred Walker Germanton, N. C. Age, 24; height, 6 feel, weight, 150. J-J-Jawn is quiet, unobtr genial, and wholly white. He is a dis- ciple of Benjamin Franklin, and bids fair to do more with that mysterious sub- stance called electricity than did his mighty predecessor. He haunts the lab- oratories all day. and with unalloyed pleasure listens to Nat Carlmcll until bed- Di. Society; Medical So- ciety; Assistant in l mbry- oloBv; German Club; ZoSlogv Club; IIK. ; ■1 ' X. Di. Society; ' . M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Forsyth County Club. EIGHTY-SIX 7iL in Felix Litaker Webster Wilkesboro. N. C. Age. 23; height. 3 feet 8 inches; weight. 137. The spirit of Busby. Hendrix. L, N. Johnson, and Doc Will.ams hves in this son of the everlasting hills, to whom the dear old Di is the law and the gospel, the sun. the moon, and the stars. For fiery oratory, or radical independence, or the secret caucus. Tick Webster is your man — and you will have to get up early in the morning to beat him. A hard fighter against any odds, he delights most m crowds and the rostrum, flapping arms, and Give me liberty or give me death. with tears in his eyes and throbs in his throat. Inevitably destined for legisla- tive halls, and bound to be at least noisy wherever he goes. Di. Society; Y. M. C A.; Oak Ridge Club; Winner Junior Oratorical Contest; Commencement Debater (3); Golden Fleece. WiLLi.AM Pell Whitaker. Jr. Wilson. N. C. Age. 19; height. 5 feet 7 inches; weight. 152. Scarcely the plural of size, don ' t doubt that he is a man. and a good one. Solemn when he is silent, his laugh spo ' ls the effect. It is contagious. As Pap struts his dignified way across the campus, he rather enjoys life. Passes his work in a hurry, lo get il out of the way of his more serious occupations. With Taylor, ioinl owner of the Gym., where he can do anything. But the chief joy of his Ife is checkers. He doesn ' t go out of his way for popularity, but there is some- thing seriously wrong with the man who doesn ' t like him. German Cl b; Cla : Baseball (2); Instructor m Gvm (4): Gym Team (2. 4); Ass ' slant Manager Track Team (3); Manastr Track Team f4) ; Athletic Corncil f4); Coop; Gimg- hoj|; Z ! ' . Ki ISi that wav whi folks a while lo find h would have lo do that, foi Seymour Webster Whiting Raleigh. N. C. Age, 21; height. 6 feel; weighl. 150. It is a question whether he has de- veloped tremendously, or whether he was he came here and it took You Id not come lo lell you about it. Anyway, he has it. Original, versatile, capable, he is characterized by the ability lo think straight into a subject. Also, he goes deeper than most of us, and can be relied on lo be on the right side. Writes and debates well; won a monogram on the track (where he is beauty [? J itself). But his strong point is in the man himself. Combines courtesy with independence, and is probably the broadest man in ihe Class. Phi. Bella Kappa; Var- sity Track Team; Wearer of N. C; Editor-in-Chief of YacKETV YacK ; Asso- ciate Editor Tarheel: Vice- Pres.dent of Class; Greater Council; Debating Union; German Club; ' Bones; Amphoterothen ; Golden Fleece. Small in body, but big in enthusiasm and push. Reared under Ed. Hall ful charge. Stuart has become a mighty factor in Y. M. C. A., campus, and neighborhood action. His grace and good ks make him a successful canvasser. The original head of the Y. M. C. A. Colored Supplement Department. Attends all conventions, from Wake Forest to Kansas City, and is the righthand man of MotI and Weatherford. Guilford County Club; Di. Society; Soph-Junior Debate (3) ; Debating Union; Class Track Team (2); Track Squad (3); Vice-President Y. M. C. A. (4). s c ]fS JUNIORS EIGHTY-NINE 9iL ISi JuN ( Oil ( ' I . A.S.S C)Tr - ( (yi.yits W. p. FULLER G. W. EUTSLER B. L. FIELD PHILIP WOOLLCOTT Pf ESIDENT Vice-President cretary and treasurer Historian es on greater council JUMIOlUS Kenneth Hubert Ba:ley Wakefield. N. C. Daniel Long Bell _ Graham. N. C. Phi. Soclelv; Y. M. C. A.: Alamance Cou.ily Club; German Club; i: X. Ferrall Leighton Blount _ Belhel. N. C. B K. Claude Alfred Boseman Enfield. N. C. Thomas Callendine Boushall RaUigh. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabmel (3); President Wake County Club (2); Freshman Debater: Fresh-Soph Debater (I); Soph-Jun or Debater (2); Secretary Debating Union (3); Greater Council (2. 3) ; Student Representative on Council (3) ; Athletic Council (3) ; Assisfant Manager Varsity Football (3); Associate Editor YackETY YaCK (2. 3); Associate Editor Maga- zine (3); German Club; Ampholerolhen ; -N. Joseph Shepard Bryan Scotis Hill. N. C. Phi. Society; German Club; Y. M. C. A.; Dramatic Club (2); Busmess Manager Dramatic Association (3); Associate Editor Magazine (3): Secretary and Treasurer Pender-Sampson County Club (3); Manager Class Tennis Team (3) ' ; Commencement Marshal. Robert T. Bryan, Jr Chapel Hill. N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Duplin County Club; German Club. Austin Heaton Carr Durham. N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); Class Football (I); Manager Class Baseball (I); Vice- President Durham County Club (I); Business Manager Students Directory (2); .Assistant Man- ager of Glee Club; Order of Oasis; Gorgon ' s Head; Coop; Z ! ' . Wu FONG Walden Clarke Morganton. N. C. Robert Floyd Coats Angie.. N. C. Phi. Society; Johnson County Club. Edwin Fuller Conrad Winston-Salem. N. C. Di. Society; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society: Historical Society; Executive Commitlee Historical Society; President Forsyth County Club. Howard Clarence Conrad Pfatfiown. N. C. Di. Society; Murphy Educational Club; Dram- atic Association (I, 2, 3); Dramatic Club (1. 2. 3); Secretary Dramatic A ssociation; Forsyth County Club. Alkrld Ewing CuMMlNCS Winston-Salem. N. C. John Tucker Day Walkertown, N. C. Di. Society; Murphy Educational Club; Presi- dent Republican Club. M. J. Davis. Warrenlon. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Halifax County Club; Warrenton High School Club. William Carey Dowd Charlotte, N. C. Varsity Basket-ball (3); Wearer of N. C. Earlie Dock Edgerton Fremont. N. C. O. G. Edwards Spring Hope, N. C. GuRNEY Edverett Edcerton Fremont. N. C. George Willard Eustler Greensboro, N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); Man- ager Class Track (3) ; President Guilford County Club (3); .Associate Edilor Magazine (3); -T; - X. Jascom Lee Field Greensboro, N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Guilford County Club; Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society; Assistant Business Manager Tarheel (3); Secretary Class (2); Secretary and Treasurer Class (3); Class Football (2, 3); Scrub Baseball (2. 3); Soph- Junior Debater (2); Commencement Marshal. Robert Creesom Fitzgerald Linwood. N. C. Henry Price Foust Greensboro, N. C. Manley Fulcher Atlantic, N. C. Walter Pliny Fuller Bradentown. Fla. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); Vice- President Florida Club; Captain Class Baseball (1); Class Baseball (2); Football (2); Scrub Basket-ball (I, 2); Varsity Football (3); Wearer of N. C; Winner Freshman Prize in English; Assistant Tarheel (2) ; Managing Editor Tarheel (3); Edllor-m-Chief Magazhe (3); Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3) ; Greater Council (2, 3); Student Council (3); President Class (3); Progressive Club; Dramatic Club; Tennis Asso- ciation; Ball Manager; German Club; Pan- Hellenic Council; Ampholerolhen; — T; 1 ' X. Alfred Long Gaither Statesville. N. C. Laughton Bruce Gunter Phi. Society; Tennis Ass Club; Amphoterothen. Graham Harden German Club; II K . . William Renny Hardin c Raleigh. N. C. ation ; Wake County Turlington. N. C. Yadku Allen Bostic Harper Chapel Hill, N. C. Phi. Society; Historical Society; Correspond- ing Secretary Wake County Club; Class Basket- ball. WiLLJAM Henry Harrell Willlamston. N. C. Donald Ryan Harris Arden. N. C. Dramallc Club (3); German Club; SKK. Thomas Fuller Hill Durham, N. C. Di. Society: Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Durham County Club; German Club; BOn. William Oliver Huske Fayeiieville, N. C. Phi. Society: Leader Sophomore Hop; Varsity Baseball (2. 3); Wearer of N. C. ; German Club; A T !. ' . Charles Louis Johnson. Knoxville. Tenn. D,. Society; i: X. F. S. Johnson Franklin, N. C. Phi. Society; Macon County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; German Club; • A 9. W. DouB Kerr Greensboro, N. C. Edward ' ates Keesler Charlotte, N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Secrelary Mecklenburg County Club (3) ; Scrub Basket-ball; German Club; 1 ' A E. David Herbert Killeffer Bradeniown, Fla. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Florida Club; Associate Editor Tarheel (3); Chemical Journal Club; Alembic Club; ZT. Wade Kornegay ...Chapel Hill. N. C. Phi. Society; Orange County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Freshman Debater; Fresh-Soph Debater (2); High School Debatmg Union (3). Gabriel DeLono Lambert High Pomi. N. C. Dl. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Guilford County Club; Brolherhood of St. Andrew. Henry Dionvsius Lambert ._ ...Angier, N. C. Phi. Society; Johnson County Club; Tenn ' s Association. Edmund Jones Lilly, Jr. Favetieville, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. .A.; Class Baseball (1); Varsity Gym. Team (2); Wearer of N. C; Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball (3) ; Assistant Leader Sophomore Hop; Assistant Leader Gimg- houl Dance (3): Coop; Gimghoul ; ATI!. SlGMUND BaacH LlNDAU Greensboro, N. C. Dl. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Class Football (1, 2. 3); Manager Class Football (3); President Menorah Society. Robert Eugene Little. Jr Wadesboro. N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Class Football (I); Scrub Fool- ball (2. 3); Assistant Leader Sophomore Hop; Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball (3): Chief Marshal; German Club; Oasis; Coop; K-. Edward Willis Lupton Swan Quarter. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A. Frederick Bays McCall Charlotte. N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Dl. Society; Tennis Association; Class Baseball (2); Treasurer Mecklenburg County Club; Associate Editor Yackety Yack ; - X. Frederick Cain Manning Class Football (1); Class Captain Class Baseball (2); Club; German Club; Coop; Head; - ! ' . Raleigh. N. C. Baseball (I. 2); Durham County Oasis; Gorgon ' s Owen Meredith Marshburn Kmghisdale. N. C. Crover Adlai Martin East Bend. N. ( Y. M. C. a.; Di. Society; Winner Freshman Debate; Fresh-Soph Debate f I ) ; Fresh-Soph Debate (2); Debating Union (3); Tennis Asso- ciation. George Allen Mebane, Jr Spray. N. C. Y. M. C. A,; Dl. Soc.ely; Class Football (1, 2. 3); Class Baseball (1. 2); Class Tennis Champion (21; Class Track (2); Manas-er Class Track (2) ; BanqucI Sneaker (2) ; Class YacKETY Yack Representative (3) ; Associate Editor Tar- heel (3); Associate EcJitor YackETY Yack (3); Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball (3) ; Rock- ingham County Club; German Club; Coop; Oasis; Gorgon ' s Head; . M ' . William Owen Baldwin Maxwell Charlotte, N. C. German Club; Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3); A Tn. George Curtis Meckel •I ' e. Henry Meeks Ind. Orphir Carmal Nance High Point, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Di, Society; La Cercle Fran- caise; Class Football (2, 3); All-Class Football (3); Class Baseball (1, 2); Commence shal. nt Ma .Albert Roy Newsome Marshv James Valentine Price, Jr. Spray, N. C. Di. Society; Oak Ridge Club: President Rock- ingham County Club. William Dossey Pruden. Jr. Edenion. N. C. Phi. Society; Assistant Manager Varsity Basket- ball (3): German Club: -i K Iv John Allen Wilkins Draughan, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Class Football (3). Claude B. Woltz Dobson. N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A,; Surry County Club: Class Football (3); Glee Club (3). RoscoE Edward Parker Selma. N. C. Phi. Society: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); John- son County Club; Murphy Educational Club; Class Football (2. 3). B. F. PatY Tullahoma, Tenn. Di. Society; Assistant Manager Varsity Foot- ball (3); German Club; -i K E. XX ' iLLiAM Trent Ragland Salisbury, N. C. Treasurer Tennis Association (3) ; Class Tennis (I); German Club; BB II. William Kirkpatrick Reid Gastonia. N. C. Di. Society; Tennis Association; Gaston- Lincoln County Club. Clarence Robinson. Atlantic. N. C. Phi. Society; Educational Club; Historical Society. Joseph Vance Rowe Small. N. C. Leon Maroot Sahac Teheran. Persia Phi. Society; Dramatic Associ.-lion; Yackety Yack and Magazine Artist. Charles Austin Sloan Lexington. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Vice-President Sampson-Pender County Club; Secretary and Treasurer Warrenton High School Club. Saihuel Floyd Scott Haw River. N. C. William Raymond Taylor Louisburg. N. C. Phi. Society; Dramatic Association; President Franklin County Club; Le Cercle Francaise. 4MES Alfred Thompson Haw River. N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Varsilv Baseball (2); Wearer of N. C; Class Football (2. 3); Alamance County Club. William Raney Stanford Teer. N. C. Claiborne Thweatt Smith Scotland Neck. N. C. President ■arrenton Hi h Schcol Club; Gimg- houl; V.- ' . Xilliam Capehart Walke Avoca. N. C. Class Tennis Team (2. 3); Tennis Association: German Club; K - . .Albert Thomas Weatherly Gorman. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Murphy Educa- tional Club; Dramatic Association; Durham Counlv Club. Willie Person Mancum Weeks. Washington, D. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.: Tennis Association; Member Cast of Dramatic Club (2, 3); Presi- dent of Dramatic Association (3). Zack Lanier Whitaker Oak Ridge. N. C. Di. Society; Class Baseball (I. 2); Manager Class Baseball (2); Class Football (3); Asso- ciate Edi ' or Yackety Yack (3); Guilford County Club; President Oak Ridge Club; .Afsislant Manager Varsity Track (3 ); Ball Man- Paul Linwood White Scotland Neck. N. C. Phi. Society; Halifax County Club. Philip Woollcott Raleigh. N. C. Phi. Sociely; Y. M. C. A.; Soph-Junior Debater (3); Class Football (I. 2, 3); Cap- tain Class Football (3); President Class (2): Greater Council (2, 3); Student Council (2. 3); AssistanI Business Manager Magazine (3) ; Associate Editor Yackety Yack (3) ; Varsity Track (1. 2. 3); Wearer of N. C; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Commencement Marshal; Class Histor- ian; German Club; A K E. James Vivian Whitfield Wallace. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Dramatic Club (2); Dramatic Association; Horner Club; Assistant Manager of Magazine. 3n jHeniorp of BIS going has left a heaviness m our hearts, and an emptiness in our lives. For a week Little Abby came on the football field and fought his hardest, when he knew he was sick. With a determination seldom equaled, he kept fighting until he fainted at break- fast table, in Greensboro, while with the team on the way to play Washington and Lee. Friends tenderly cared for him until he was sent home with the typhoid fever. He was unconscious almost con- tmually until the end. Richard B. Abernathy was born April 16, 1890. He died December 9, 1913. We seldom meet such a quiet, strong, unassuming hero as he was. NINETY-NINE 3 GOOD ROADS DAY IN CHAPEL HILL ONE HUNDRED 7iL 1 SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS 7kL ONE HUNDRED ONE 1 SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORF, Cl. VSS Herbert Edwin Allen Asheville, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Buncombe County Club. Andrew Vance Anderson Eagle Rock, N. C. Benjamin Franklin Auld Baltimore, Md. Phi. Society; Dramatic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Winner of Freshman Prize in English. Herbert Victor Bailey Neuse, N. C. Lawrence Corbin Barber Asheville, N. C. ■I ' A o. Rudolph Barnes Chyton, N. C. Hoke Barrymore Black Greenville, S. C. South Carolina Club; Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Class Orator (2); German Club; .V T V.. James Gornaro Blaine Franklin, N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Macon County Club. Hubert Morse Blalock Raleigh. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Wake County Club; Historical Society; Dramatic Association ; Dramatic Club. Shepard Allen Booth Oxford, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Dramatic Club (1, 2): Tennis Association (I): Athletic Association (1, 2); Granville County Club Secretary (1). Francis Churchill Bourne Asheville, N. C. Francis Foster Bradshaw Hillsboro, N. C. Robert Plato Brooks Woodsdale, N. C. Albert Othel Bryan Battleboro, N. C. William Jonathan Capehart Roxobel, N. C. Phi. Society; Oak Ridge Club; Tennis Association; Athletic Association. Francis Edward Capps Lucama, N. C. Whitfield Chapman Carmichael, Jr. Asheville, N. C. ONE HUNDRED TWO I — SOPHOMORES Allen Thurman Castelloe Aulander, N. C. Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A. Ralph Vivian Clark Clarkton, N. C. Francis Osborne Clarkson Charlotte, N. C. Di. Socely; Y. M. C. A, Cabinet (2); German Club: Vice-President Class (2); Assistant Manager Dramatic Club (2) ; -i K E. Louis Heyl Clement, Jr.. Salisbury, N. C. William Borden Cobb , Goldsboro. N. C. Associate Editor Yackety Yack (2); Tennis Association; Wayne County Club; German Club; Phi. Society; 2 N. Charles Lee Coggins Salisbury, N. C. Secretary Class (2); Vice-President Dramatic Association; Band (I, 2); Dramatic Club (1. 2): Rowan County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; Athletic Association. Howard Johnson Combs Columbia, S. C. Warrenton High School Club; Athletic .Association; Tennis Team. Herman Cone Greensboro, N. C. German Club; Freshman Tennis Team. Druid Homer Conrad ...Lexington, N. C. Davidson County Club; Secretary of Davidson County Club; Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Membership Committee of Y. M. C. .A.; Athletic Association; Class Basket-ball. Frank Hodges Cooper Washington, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Beaufort County Club; , ' thletlc Asso- ciation ; Dramatic Association. George Long Cooper Graham, N. C. James Gerald Cowan .AsheviUe, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; Tennis Association; Class Basket-ball; German Club; - A E. James Marmaduke Cox Norfolk, Va. George Winston Craig Asheville, N. C. Montford Club; Athletic .Association; Class Football (I); Buncombe Club. Rush Floyd Crouse Nile, N. C Blue Ridge Club; Di. Society. ONE HUNDRED FOUR SOPHOMORES Edwin Holt Currie Raeford, N. C. Douglas Beaman Darden. Fremont, N. C. LeeRoy Davis Bladenboro, N. C. Robert Vernon Davis Fremont, N. C. Fred Hyams Deaton Statesville, N. C. Di. Society; Iredell County Club. Julius G. Dixon Raeford, N. C. Charles Nelson Dobbins - ' adkinville, N. C. Herbert Jackson Drew Live Oak, Fla. John Overtan Dysart Lenoir, N. C . Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; Dramatic Club; Fresh-Soph Debate. Graham Burwell Egerton Louisburg, N. C. Secretary Franklin County Club; •!■A H. Lee Henry Edwards Holly Springs, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Wake County Club. Aubrey McCoy Eliot Charlotte, N. C. Di. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Mecklenburg County Club; Soi-lh Caro- lina Club. Floyd Howard Elsom Hendersonville, N. C. Athletic Association; Di. Society: Y. M. C. A.; Henderson County Club. Charles Eugene English - - Asheville, N. C. Athletic Association; Vice-President Buncombe County Club; Asheville Club; Y. M. C. A. Preston Herschel Epps Durham, N. C. Di. Society; Glee Club; Durham County Club. Leslie James Farmer Wilson, N. C. Phi. Society; Tennis Association. Amos Gregson Fearrington Edenton, N. C. ONE HUNDRED FIVE SOPHOMORES Clyde Lathrop Fore Charlotte, N. C. Di. Society; German Club; Class Foolball; BaEkel-ball Squad; Webb School Club: Mecklenburg County Club; — N. John Melvin Glenn Marion, N. C. McDowell County Club; Class Foolball. Osborne LeRoy Goforth Durham, N. C Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Durham County Club; Horner School Club; Treasurer Iredell County Club; Brotherhood of St. Andrew. James Frank Hackler Sparta, N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Blue Ridge Club; Wmner of Freshman Debate; Soph- Junior Debate. Lucius Coleman Hall Webster, N. C. Harvey Hamilton Atlantic, N. C. Franklin Wills Hancock, Jr .Oxford, N. C. Phi. Society; Tennis Association; Class Baseball; Athletic Association; German Club; Vice-President Granville County Club; Horner Club; Warrenton Club; K . . Herman Henry Hardison Wadesboro, N. C. James Archibald Hardison, Jr Wadesboro, N. C. George Arthur Harper... Chapel Hill, N. C. William Troy Harper Chapel Hill, N. C. Joseph Johnson Harris Louisburg, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Dramatic Club; Frankim County Club. James Leftwich Harrison ..Raleigh, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Track Squad; Wake County Club; German Club; -i K E. Hugh Bryan Hester Hester, N. C Oak Ridge Club; Granville County Club; Dramatic Club; Phi. Society; Athletic Asso- ciation; Freshman Baseball Team. Ernest Glenn Hogan Chapel Hill, N. C. Curtis Avent Holland Greensboro, N. C. Di. Society; Guilford County Club; Athletic Association. ONE HUNDRED SIX  r- - -(sS ? - ; : £) i gg SOPHOMO ?£S John Ransom Holt, Jr.. Princeton, N. C. Walter Lawrence Holt, Jr Fayetteville, N. C. Roy McRae Homewood Burlington, N. C. Varsily Football (I, 2); Scrub Baskel-ball ; Class Track; Varsily Track Team; Treas- urer Alamance County Club. William John Hooner Bell Buckle. Tenn. Robert Burton House Thelma, N. C. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Phi. Society; Halifax County Club; Warrenton High School Club; President University Association of County Clubs; Class Football Team; Class His- torian. Hinton Gardener Hudson Smithfield, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis .Association; Dramatic Club; Freshman Debater; Fresh-Soph Debate; Johnson County Club. Da id Wills Hunter Greensboro, N. C. Wade Russell Hunter Alexander, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; Woodrow Wilson Club John Manning Huske _ Fayetteville, N. C. Joseph Strange Huske Fayetteville, N. C. John Franklin Jarrell Chapel Hill, Tenn. Di. Society; Tennis Association; Athletic Association. Herman Jernigan Benson, N. C. Herschel Vespasian Johnson Charlotte, N. C. Di. Society; Athletic Association; Dramatic Association; Dramatic Club; Mecklenburg County Club; North Carolina Historical Society; Class Historian (2); German Club; —X. John Haywood Jones . Newbern, N. C. German Club; Clajs Football (2); 2 X. Edward Gray Joyner Littleton, N. C. Phi. Society; Halifax County Club; Ministerial Club; Brotherhood of St. Andrew. William Henry Joyner. Princeton. N. C. Phi. Society; Treasurer John:on County Club; Class Baseball; Athletic Association. ONE HUNDRED SEVEN s;tz==: gg r % : i g SOPHOMORES William Clarence Kanoy - Biscoe, N. C. John Archelaus Kent. Lenoir, N. C. Di. Society; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Caldwell County Club. Baston McGee Lackey Lincolnton, N. C. James Horace Lassiter . - Rich Square, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Glee Club (1); Phi. Society. McDaniel Lewis Kinston, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Dramatic Association; Athletic Association; Tennis Asso- ciation; Class Football (1, 2); Varsity Scrub Baseball; Historical Society: Assistant Editor Tarheel. Thomas Calvin Linn, Jr Salisbury, N. C. Di. Society; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; President of Class (2); Student Council (2); Magazine Board; Tarheel Board; Yackety Yack Board; German Club; ST; i; . E. Giles Mebane Long Charlotte, N. C. Athletic Association; Tennis .Association; Y. M. C. A.; President of The Company (2); Secretary and Treasurer of the Mecklenburg County Club (I); Glee Club (2); Mandolin Club (2); Tarheel Board (2); Yackety Y.ack Board (2); Manager of Class Football (2); Class Football; Scrub Baseball (1); Varsity Baskel-ball (1, 2); Captain (2); T ; K A. George Barnes Loughran Asheville, N. C. James Franklin Lo ' e Lincolnton, N. C. Gaston-Lincoln County Club; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Class Baseball (1); Sub Varsity (2). Edward Willis Lupton Swan Quarter, N. C. John Dob McCurry -..- Marion, N. C. Ward V. McKee .. .. Leicester, N. C. Historical Society; Buncombe County Club. Edward Baxter Marsh Marshville, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Rowan County Club; Dramatic Club; Athletic Association. Oscar VonKochtityky Merritt Mount Airy, N. C. Y. M. C. A.; Di. Society; Surry County Club. Louis B. Meyer Enfield, N. C. Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Halifax County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Football (1). ONE HUNDRED EIGHT St s t i r M zng SOPHOMORES Harry Miller Stony Point, N. C. Di. Soc.ely; Iredell County Club. Julian Alison Moore, _ __ .___ Wilmington, N. C. Ph,. Society; Alhlelic Association; New Hanover County Club. James Roy Moore Lenoir, N. C. Caldwell County Club; Y. M. C. A. Carlyle Morris Fremont, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association; Wayne County Club. Frank Wisconsin Norris ...Jacksonville, Fla. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A. Greater Council (2); Florida Club; Class Football (I. 2); Captain Class Football (2); Sub- Varsity Baseball (I); German Club; I ' -i H. Evan Wilkins Norwood Goldsboro, N. C. Robert Newton Page, Jr Biscoe, N. C. Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Janitor of The Company ; Class Baseball; Glee Club (I. 2); K - . John Merrel Parker Bradentown, Fla. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Dramatic Club; Class Football (I); Varsity Football (2); Sub Basket-ball (I); Secretary Florida Club; Athletic Association. William Baylies Parker Goldsboro, N. C. Wayne County Club; .Athletic .Association. Hazel Patterson Burlington, N. C. Class Track; Cross Country Team; Varsity Track; Georgetown Relay; .Alamance County Club; Manager Track Squad. William Edward Pell Raleigh, N. C. Samuel Clark Pike Liberty, N. C. Di. Society; Alamance County Club; Dramatic Association; Vice-President Randolph County Club: Class Football. William Barney Pitts Charlotte, N. C. Athletic Association; Dramatic Association (1. 2); Dramatic Club (1. 2); Mecklen- burg County Club; Le Cercle Francaise. ONE HUNDRED NINE gji -IS ' s!t s: : — i SOPHOMORES Harvey McKay Pleasants Rowland, N. C. U K A. Ralph Craven Pridgen Labor, N. C. William Isaac Procter Raleigh, N. C. Tennis Association; German Club; Phi. Society; K A. Oscar Holt Racland Oxford, N. C. Zena Olen Ratcliff Pantego, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Beaufort County Club; Tennis Association; Gym. James Clyde Roy Hillsboro. N. C. Edward Soloman Reid, Jr Charlotte, N. C. Warrenlon High School Club; Mecklenburg County Club; German Club; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Class Football (1); SubVarnty Football (2); :: A E. Samuel Leslie Reid Lowell, N. C. Daniel Reynor - Raleigh, N. C. Dramatic Association; Wake County Club; Athletic Association; Vice-President Menorah Association. John Charles Roberts, Jr. - Lyon, N. C. Marius Emmett Robinson, Jr. - Goldsboro, N. C. Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Editor Students ' Directory; Treasurer Wayne County Club; German Club; Z ! ' . James Parks Rousseau Wilkesboro, N. C. George Claiborne Royall, Jr Goldsboro, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; German Club; Class Football; Wayne County Club; A K E. Benerly Sampson Royster, Jr ._ Oxford, N. C. Phi. Society; Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Class Baseball; KA. David Wyeth Royster Shelby, N. C. Di. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Secretary Cleveland County Club; Freshman Debate; Manager Class Football Team; Athletic Association. ONE HUNDRED TEN ' i - lie SOPHOMORES Thomas White Ruffin Louisburg, N. C. William Cecil Rymer _. Hendersonville, N. C. D.. Society; President Henderson County Club; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Tennis Association. Moses Shapiro Winston-Salem, N. C. Jacob Philip Shrago Goldsboro, N. C. Phi. Society; Wayne County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Menorah Society; Athletic Association. Roger Shore Siddall Sumter, S. C. Di. Society. Enoch Spencer Simmons Washington, N. C. Cleveland LaFayette Smith Indian Trail, N. C. Phi. Society; Treasurer New Hanover County Club; Athletic Association. William Oliver Smith Raleigh, N. C. Phi. Society; Dramatic Association; Freshman Debate (1); Y. M. C. A.; German Club; K . Robert Baxter Spencer Hobucken, N. C. John Porter Stedman, Jr. Oxford, N. C. Phi. Society; Dramatic Club; Athletic Association; Treasurer Granville County Club; Y. M. C. A. SiLFAX Eugene Sugg Chapel Hill, N. C. David Thomas Tayloe . Washington, N. C. James Alexander Taylor Oxford, N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Class Baseball; Glee Club; German Club; K. . Herman BeRTON Temko Greensboro, N. C. Di. Society; Athletic Association; Guilford County Club; Deutsch Verein; Menorah Society. Earle Hinson Thompson ,, Kenansville, N. C. Duplin County Club. Adam Tredwell Thorp Rocky Mount, N. C. ONE HUNDRED ELEVEN gj i l ie SOPHOMORES Francis Justice Timberlake Henry Clay Turner oungsville, N. C. . Norwood, N. C. Stem, N. C. William Bradley Umstead _ Bahama, N. C. Phi. Society ; V ' . M. C. A.; Hislorical Society; Dramalic Association; President Durham County Club; Winner of Freshman Prize in Phi. Society; Soph- Junior . Debate. Robert Cansler Vaughan Winston-Salem. N. C. Di. Society; Forsyth County Club; Dramatic Club; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A. Elbert Lambert Veasey Athletic Association; Phi. Society; Durham County Club. Charles Ernest Walker ...Morganton, N. C. Dramatic Association; Blue Ridge Club. Robert Henry Winborne Welch, Jr. Hertford, N. C. Tennis Association; ' . M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Albemarle Club; Athletic Association. William Stronach Wilkinson, Jr Rocky Mount, N. C. Marshall McDaniel Williams, Jr. Faison, N. C. Phi. Society; German Club; Scrub Baseball; Secretary and Treasurer Duplm County Club; Athletic Association. Hillary GooDE Winslow Hertford, N. C. Phi. Society; German Club; ■. M. C. A.. .Mbemarle County Club; . T H. Fred Philips Wood Edenton. N. C. Phi. Society; Y. M C. A.; German Club; Class Baseball (I); AK E Joseph Ernest Wooten Snow Hill, N. C. John Laurens Wright Wilmington, N. C. Tennis Association; Glee Club; German Club; Secretary New Hanover County Club: Robert Hazelhurst Wright, Jr. Nashville, Tenn. Nathaniel Bayard ' arborough Gary, N. C. Robert Samuel ' arborough Lexington, N. C. Allen Caulincourt Zollicoffer Weldon, N. C. ONE HUNDRED TWELVE 9iL ISi FRESHMEN FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS O VE HUNDRED THIRTEEf ]iS FRESHMEN ' . ' OlCi UMA l IlOLL Walter Jarvis Adams ...Holly Springs, N. C. Harris Percy Alderman Wilmington, N. C. William Reynolds Allen, Jr Goldsboro, N. C. Frank Ewing Allred Aberdeen, N. C. Claud Fleming Andrews High Point, N. C. Ezra Preston Andrews Charlotte, N. C. Ralph Preston Andrews , Chapel Hill, N. C. Arthur Aronson Raleigh, N. C. William Bryant Austin _ Bumthill, N. C. Edward Onslow Bacon ...Newton, N. C. Venon Baggett ;... Salemburg Herbert Victor Bailey Neuse, N. C. Charles Wortley Bain Chapel Hill, N. C Herbert Glenn Baity Harmony, N. C. Thomas Atlas Borden ; ...Burgaw, N. C. James Carl Barnard Franklin, N C. Troy Thomas Barnes Lucama, N. C. William Braddy Barnes Lucama, N. C. Clifton Linwood Bell .. .-, Swan Quarter, N. C. Benjamin Carroll Berry Hertford, N. C. Richard Frederick Bethume... : St. Pauls, N. C. Ernest Spurgeon Booth . East Durham. N. C. Cary Carlyle Boshamer... :..... Statesville, N. C. Da id Brady Durham, N. C. Edgar Burwell Brinkley Elon College. N. C. Burr Coley Brock Farm ngton. N. C. Duncan Douglas Bullock Rowland, N. C. Henry Vernon Burden Aulander. N. C. Charles Earl Burnett Wilmington, N. C. Robert Shepard Burnett Wilmington. N. C. Charles Brown Byrd Live Oak. Fla. Milton Clyde Campbell Taylorsville. James Arthur Capps Bessemer City. Whitfield Chapman Carmichael, Jr AsheviUe, Leo Carr Teacheys, David Vance Carter Liberty, Leroy Clark Wakefield, N. C. ONE HUNDRED FOURTEEN N. C. N. C. N. c. N. c. N c. N. C. N. C. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. a, ' Ga. N. C. N. C. N. C. N. C. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. FRESHMAN Walter Bingam Cochran ...Harrisburg, James Miller Coleman Asheville, Alvah Hobb Combs Columbia, Charles Kearney Cook Louisburg, Horace Baxter Cowell Washington, Adlai Roy Cox Pisgah, George Winston Craig Raleigh, Farrell Moffatt Crawford Cornelia, Carl Brooks Crawford Sugar Hill, Ernest James Dail Kernersville, George Robert Daii . Kernersville, Thomas Richard Dale Morganton, Wilson Bidding Dalton Winston-Salem, Charles Cleares Daniels Wilson, Leland Macky Daniels Oriental, Robert Cowan Da ' is Wilmington, Thomas Paul Davis Burlington, N. C. Charles Oliver Delaney Weddington, N. C. Edgar Alexandria Dobbins . Ledgerwood, N. C. Herbert Jackson Drew Live Oak, Fla. Daniel Eugene Eagle ;..Statesville, Robert Lee Edwards. Guilford, John Grady Eldridge.. Beasley, Miguel Grausman Elias Raleigh, Floyd Howard Elsom Hendersonville, Clarance M. English Asheville. William Harry Entwistle Rockingham, Samuel James Erwin, Jr Morganton, N. Vessel Clyde Ferguson Teer. Charles Mortimer Fleming Wilson, Carl Louis Folger Dobson, Marion Butler Fowler East Durham. Kemp Funderburk Monroe, N. Leslie Paul Gardener Goldsboro, N. C. Russell Leonard Ginn Goldsboro, N. C. John Melvin Glenn. Marion, N. C. Henry Grady Goode Connelly Springs, N. C. Robert Reid Goodson Salisbury, N. C. ONE HUNDRED SIXTEEN r — T i N. C. N. C. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. FRESHMAN Burton McKinnon Graham Rowland, N. C. William Herbert Gregory Stovall, N. C. James Irvin Groome Greensboro. N. C. Paul Ballinger Groom Greensboro, N. C. Coffee Harlan Grvder Taylorsville, N. C. Leroy Parks Gwaltney Hiddenite, N. C Joseph Watkins Hale Louisburg, N. C. Ernest Stokes Hamilton Unionville, N. C. Joseph Hammond Hardison Fayetteville, N. C. Henry Green Harper, Jr Charlotte, N. C. Charles Spurgeon Harris Sulphur Springs, N. C. Julian Earle Harris Henderson, N. C. Joseph Johnson Harris. Laurinburg, N. C. Robert Burton Harris Greensboro, N. C. Matthew James Hatcher Mount Olive, N. C. Joseph Hawthorne Concord, N. C. Frank McKinley Higdon Higdonville, N. C. Charles William Higgins Greensboro, N. C. Dudley Brown Hill Warsaw, N. C. Edward Ashton Hill Winston-Salem, N. C. John Bright Hill Warsaw, N. C. Samuel Huntington Hobbs, Jr Clinton, N. C. James Raymond Hobgood Maplesville, N. C. Samuel Clarance Hodgin Randleman, N. C. G. Skiles Hoffman.. High Point, N. C. John MacCraven Holbrook Huntersvllle, N. C. Kenneth Holloway Raleigh, N. C. Richard Thornton Hood Kinston, N. C. Iames Earl Hoover High Point, N. C. Basil Horsfield Oxford, N. C. Willie Frederick Howell Goldsboro, N. C. Herbert Henry Huff Soudan, Va. Harry Grinmell Hunter HendersonviUe, N. C. BuEL Benners Hyatt Waynesville, N. C. Carl Britt Hyatt Bumsville, N. C. Victor Hugo Idol High Point, N. C. Roy Bynum Isley Burlington. N. C. Webster Nimms Jackson Jarksonville. N. C. ONE HUNDRED SEVENTEE 1 FRESHMAN Henry McNair Johnson Burgaw, N. C. John Gray Johnson Lynchburg, Va. James Martin Johnson Chapel Hill, N. C. Aaron Oscar Jones Stratford, N. C. Eugene Patterson Jones. Lenoir, N. C. Jesse Weimer Jones Franklin, N. C. Francis Cameron Jordan.. ....Greensboro, N. C. Edward Gray Joyner Lillington, N. C. Everett Allen Kendall Asheboro, N. C. Frank Erwin Kendrick Dillon, S. C. Garry Lee Kendrick Cherryville, N. C. James Edwin King Pelham, N. C. William Wilson Kirk Jacksonville, Fla. James Jackson Kirksey Morganton, N. C. Edwin Carlyle Klingman Greensboro, N. C. Ralph Roy Koons Chadbourne, N. C. John Ferebee Lamb Elizabeth City, N. C. Allie Clifford Lamm Lucama, N. C. Chauncey Hoke Leggett Hobgood, N. C. Harvey Lewis Faison, N. C. Alfred Milton Lindau Greensboro, N. C. Donald Dean Loftin Trenton, N. C. Thomas Marvin Lynch Chapel Hill, N. C. Charles Hardy McCurry Day Book, N. C. Ward Vann McGee Leicester, N. C. Duncan Evander McIver, Jr Sanford, N. C. Ernest Lloyd Mackie Yadkinville, N. C. Paul Vestal McPherson Liberty, N. C. George Wea er Mann Prentiss, N. C. BlaCKWELL MaRKHAM Durham, N. C. William Anderson Marlowe Wilson, N. C. Stanley Robert Martin Salisbury, N. C. Dennis Mason, Jr Atlantic, N. C. Murray Hilliard Mathews Florala. Ala. Sanford Eugene Mathews Siloam, N. C. Justin Ward Maxwell . ' Raleigh, N. C. Belvin Womble Maynard Chapel Hill, N. C. Clyde Caswell Miller... Blowing Rock, N. C. ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEEh 7iL FRESHMAN Henry Bascom Mock Pfafftown, N. C. William Galpin Monroe Wilmington, N. C. DuBrutz Cutlar Moore Burgaw, N. C. Tamerlane Moore _ Farmville, N. C. Eli Morgan Morgan Benson, N. C. Frederick Boyden Nims, Jr Mount Holly, N. C. Earl O ' Brient ._ Durham, N. C. Joe Lee Orr Matthews, N. C. Kenneth Peshane Otten Wilmington, N. C. George Facrar Parker Asheville, N. C. James Curtis Parker Monroe, N. C. Noel Edward Paton Fayetteville, N. C. Edward Lapsley Patton Newport News, Va. James Ralph Patton, Jr Durham, N. C John Miller Pierce Warsaw, N. C. John William Perdew Wilmington, N. C. Ely Jackson Perry Kinston, N. C. David Vergil Pike Siler City, N. C. James William Pless Marion, N. C. William Tannehill Polk Warrenton, N. C. Thurman Allen Porter KernersviUe, N. C. Ralph Craven Pridgen Tabor, N. C. Edward Knox Proctor ...Lumberton, N. C. Frank Elbert Ovinn Warsaw, N. C. Isadore Raiff Winston-Salem, N. C. Albert Lyle Ramsey Franklin, N. C. James Graham Ramsay Salisbury, N. C. Olin ' er Rand Smithfield, N. C. Marion Herbert Randolph Charlotte, N. C. James Oliver Ransom Huntersville, N. C. Lennox Daniel Rawlincs Wilson. N. C. James Clyde Ray : Hillsboro, N. C. James Raynor Benson, N. C. Norman Reasoner Oroco, Fla. John Calvin Reed Siler City, N. C. Walter Marion Reed Fairview, N. C. Harvey Jackson Renn Oxford, N. C. Charles John Roberts. Jr Lyons, N. C. ONElHUNDRED NINETEEN FRESHMAN Owen Spencer Robertson Hillsboro, N. C. ToRRENCE Baxter Rogers Lincolnton, N. C. Robert Marion Ross, Jr Shelby, N. C. Moses Rountree. Wilson, N. C. James Parks Rousseau Wilkesboro, N. C, David Blvthe Rovster. Shelby, N. C. Harold Anthony Schiffman Greensboro, N. C. Frank Dudley Shamberger Biscoe, N. C. Howard Sharpe. , Stony Point, N. C. Horace Cleveland Sherrill Lincolnton, N. C. Fabius Busbee Shipp Raleigh, N. C. Henry Isaac Shrago Goldsboro, N. C. Clinton Lockwood Shuford Fairview, N. C. George Adams Shuford AsheviUe, N. C. Bernard Andrew Siddall Sumter, S. C. Clyde Neely Sloan Charlotte, N. C. Carter Siler Sloan. Franklin, N. C. George Slover Newbem, N. C. Joseph Elmer Smith Wilson, N. C. Paul Faison Smith Raleigh, N. C. Sherman Bryan Smithey North Wilkesboro, N. C. Randolph Worth Sparger Mount Olive, N. C. Westcott Oliver Sparrow Chapel Hill, N. C. Robert Baxter Spencer... Hobucker. N. C. Claud Babbington Squires Charlotte, N. C. Robert Brooks Starr... Wilkesboro, N. C. John Spencer Stell Raleigh, N. C. Charlie Leary Stevens... Indiantown, N. C. Henry Leonidas Stevens Warsaw, N. C. Thomas Wright Strange Wilmington, N. C. Walter Roby Strickland Four Oaks, N. C. Willis Clyde Suddreth Lenoir, N. C. Herbert Linwood Swain Jerry, N. C. George Wendall Tardy .- Jacksonville, N. C. Charles Lacy Tate Chadboume, N. C. William Grimsley Taylor Greensboro, N. C. Everett Simon Teague Taylorsville, N. C. ONE HUNDRED TWENTY FRESHMAN Samuel Fowle Telfair Raleigh, N. C. Charles Aycock Thompson Goldsboro, N. C. Lewis Sumner Thorpe Rocky Mount, N. C. Francis Justice Timberlake. _ _ .._ i ' oungsville, N. C. George Washington Tomlinson Lucama, N. C. Ray Sawyer Toxey. Elizabeth City, N. C. Edward Llewellyn Travis Halifax, N. C. Richard Starrey Turlington Clinton, N. C. Arthur Lynwood Tyler Henderson, N. C. Joseph Hezekiah Vance. Huntersvjlle, N. C. Robert Richmond Walker Union Ridge, N. C. Frank Privette Wall Wendell, N. C. George Collins Wall Hillsboro, N. C. Eli Beecher Wardew . Yadkinville, N. C. James Eastham Ware Charlotte, N. C. Henry Clinton Warlick Newells, N. C. Edd Warlick Sioux, N. C. Robert Young Watkins Thomasville, N. C. William Randolph Watson, Jr Darlington, S. C. Jennings Bryan Webster Siler City. N. C. Wilbert Freeman Wellons Selma, N. C. Randolph Leon White .Winston-Salem, N. C. Macon McCorkle Williams Newton, N. C. ViRGiNius Faison Williams Faison. N. C. Allen Davidson Williamson AsheviUe, N. C. Fred Lee Wilson Charlotte, N. C. John Nestor Wilson, Jr. Greensboro, N. C. John Thomas Wilson Rural Hall, N. C. Max Wilson Durham, N. C. Edward Lester Woodall Smithfield, N. C. Floyd Pugh Wooten Kinston, N. C. Herbert Smith Worthington Winterville, N. C. James Thomas Carr Wright. Hunting Creek, N. C. Theodore Oran Wright Pleasant Garden, N. C. William Cullen Wright, Jr Winston-Salem, N. C. Arthur Thomas Wyatt Raleigh. N. C. Grover Cleveland Yates Chadboume, N. C. William Bayard Yelnerton Goldsboro, N. C. ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-ONE SNOW TIME ® ®®® ®® C ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-THREE YaL 1 Law Class Oitficers first term Ezra Parker B. C. Trotter L. E. Jones L. E. Jones SECOND TERM President C. W. HiGGINS Vice-President MiSS MARGARET Berry Secretary A. W. Graham Treasurer L. E. JoNES FIRST TERM SECOND TERM W. F. Taylor Solicitor B. C. Trotter J. G. Leatherwood Sheriff J. M. Williams C. B. BoLicK Clerk J- A. Burnett ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-FOUR gj i l ie im he is always the sam° well-me r. Ezra is a good all-round man makes friends, and has no enemies He is deeply interested in his profession has good prospects, and we hope to hear from him m the future, and to learn ih he has made good. Frank is theoretical, practical, and. if there is any other intellectual element, we are willing to slate he ' s that loo. In short. Frank is an all-round man of the best brand. If any one good quality can be said to st and out above another, per- haps his debating should be placed first. For proof of his efficiency in this respect, we refer you to Pennsylvania and Vir- ginia, both of whose teams fell before his arguments. Phi. Society; President Law Class (Fall 1913): Johnson County Club; President Johnson County Club. A. B. 1911; Pennsvlvania Debater (1910); Virginia Debater (1913); Commencement Debater (1910); Presi- dent Law Class (Soring. 1913); Golden Fleece; B K ; T K A. ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-SIX 9iL 1 Sj NlOTl 1 AV LoWRY AXLEY Murphy Charles Boone Bolick Franklin William Boughan Campbell Washington Claude Carl Canady , Benson Orville Thomas Davis Waynesville WiLKiNs Ferryman Horton Durham Leslie Edwards Jones Swan Quarter John A. Kenyon Newton Joseph Gilmer Leatherwood ...Waynesville Joseph Raymond Lee Faison William Holt Gates Hendersonville Alexander Bate Outlaw Elizabeth City Ezra Parker Benson FiTZRAY Donald Phillips Laurinburg Julius Addison Rousseau Wilkesboro Ernest Cofield Ruffin Whitakers Panes Cecil Smith Swannanoa Walter Frank Taylor Faison Samuel Farris Teague Goidsboro Edward Lloyd Tilley Bahama Henry Albert Folsom Newport Benjamin Carter Trotter Reidsville Ernest Randolph Tyler. Roxobel Fitzhugh Ernest Wallace Kernersville William Claude West Franklin James McBride Williams Godwin ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-SEVEIs 7iL ISt JiJNion Law Clifton Warren Beckwith Raleigh Miss Margaret Hallock Perry Chapel Hill Frank Basil Brittian Asheboro Henry Frank Buchanan Charlotte James Alexander Burke Asheville John Scott Cansler Charlotte Walter Watson Cook Fayelteville William Summey Coulter Newton Joseph San ford Cowles . . Wilkesboro William Henry Harrison Cowles Statesville James Manly Daniel Denton William Cleveland Davis Charlotte Julian G. Dees Grantsboro Alonza Dillard Folger Dobson Tom Ethridge Gilman Jacksonville Lee CuRRiE Gooch Oxford Augustus Washington Graham Oxford Robert Emmett Hamlett Mount Gilead Edwin Sholtz Hartshorne ...Asheville Carlyle Wallace Hicgins Sparta Julius Johnson, Jr .-. Yancey ville Frank Carleton Jones Plymouth LeRoy Joyner Rocky Mount Vester Washington Keith Creedmore Ralph Vincent Kidd ..Charlotte Dallas Cecil Kirby Rural Hall Charles Lee Lindsay. Chapel Hill Sterling Albert Lipscombe Durham Paul McKane Charlotte Lauchlin McNeill Burgaw James Hinton Pou Raleigh Paul Roberts Raper Lexington Thomas Major Smith ; Reidsville Marshall Turner Spears Lillington Moses Stewart Strickland Scotland Neck George Vauchan Strong Raleigh Matthew Augustus Stroup Cherry ville Harry Murden Stubbs.. Williamslon William Clark Thompson Woodville Joseph M. Turb -ville Waynesville James Martin Waggoner Efland LeRoy Byron Wall Tobaccoville Henry Adams Whitfield Goldsboro Seymour Webster Whiting Raleigh Warren Rand Williams Sanford ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-EIGHT ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-NINE 9iL ISi MEDICAL ECONl) Y:CAll iVliCDlCAl, 4- -J- OFFICERS W. A. Smith , President A. M. Couch . Vicc-PresiJeni J. G. Pate Secretary and Treasurer C. W. Eley .,.....:. Hidorian 4. 4. CLASS ROLL Thomas Preston Burrus , Fairfield. N. C. Medical Society. AuLEY McRae Couch Roberdel. N. C. Assistant in Anatomy; Medical Society; Band (I. 2. 3); Richmond County Club. Clayton Will. rd Eley Woodland. N. C. Phi. Society; Medical Society; Athletic Association; Tennis Association; Y. M. C. A.; Zoological Club; Class Football (2); Historian Class; -X; I X. Paul William Fetzer- - Reidsville. N. C. Assistant at Infirmary; Medical Society; ■! X. Adolphus Barte Greenwood _ _-- Asheville, N. C. A. B. 1910; Assistant in Bacteriology and Pharmacology (1912-1914); President Medical Societv; President First Year Medical Class ( 1912-l ' 913) ; President Buncombe County Club; Di. Society; Zoblogy Club; -X; !■X. Mark Alexander Griffin__ - -— Wingale. N. C. Di. Society; Medical Society; Union County Club; President of Pre-Medical Class (1911-1912). Dewitt Talmage Hunter Matthews, N. C, Medical Society; Di. Society; Union County Club. Fairley Patterson James Laurinburg. N. C. A. B. 1912; Medical Society; German Club; i) A E ; X. Olin Henry Jennings - Paris Knob. N. C. Medical Society; Varsity Football Team I9I2). Henry Rowland Kritzer Spencer. N. C. Di. Society; Medical Society; Rowan County Club; Athletic Association. Roy Hamilton Long - Monroe. N. C. Medical Society; Glee Club (1912-1913); German Club; Union County Club; K A; + X. Allen Hoyt Moore -- -- Washington. N. C. Medical Society; German Club; Beaufort County Club; ATfi; X. Benjamin Whitehead McKenzie._ _ Salisbury. N. C Medical Society; Di. Society; Rowan County Club; -X; X. William Peter McKay - Red Springs. N. C. Medical Society; Roberson County Club; Zoology Club; X. ONE HUNDRED THIRTY MEDICAL James Gibson Pate Gibson. Di. Society; Medical Society; Y. M, C. A.; Class Baseball (1. 2); Greater Counc Scotland-Sampson County Club. Thomas Royster - - Townsville. Phi. Society; Censor Medical Society; Warrenton High School Club; German Clt A. B. 1912; A.M. 1913; Zoblogy Club; Pan-Hellenic Council; Chemical Journal Ck Yackety Yack Editor 19ir-12; H K . ; ' ! X. William Alexander Smith -- .— Goldsboro. President Class (2); Medical Society; Secretary Wayne County Club; German CK K :S; X; AXi:. Lewis Holmes Swindell- - - Swan Quarter, Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Medical Society; Class Baseball Team (1). Henry Franklin Starr - - - Salisbury. Di. Society; Medical Society; Rowan County Club; Assistant in Histology. Edward Foy Uzzle Raleigh, Medical Society; Vice-President Y. M. C. A.; Wake County Club. Norman St. George Vann -- --- - --- Charlotte, Di. Society; Medical Society; Assistant in Embryology; German Club; Zoology Cli n K . . N. C. I; N. C lb; lb; N. lb; C. N. C. N. C. N. c. . N. ■b; c. ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-TWO 7iL 3KI FiR.ST • Y ' l . A ;l ? ( ' !C I ) ( Al , + + OFFICERS R. M. Cox ....President H. L. Brockman Secretary R. C. SpenCe Treasurer CLASS ROLL Paul Archer Bennett Winston-Salem, N. C. David Andrew Bigger Rock Hill, S. C. Joseph Dozier Boushall Raleigh, N. C. Harry Lyndon Brockman Greensboro, N. C. Cola Castelloe Auiander, N. C. Thomas Craven Charlotte, N. C. John White Gainey Parkion, N. C. John Melville Huff Henderson, N. C. Christian Leonard Isley, Jr Burlington, N. C. George Grady Johnson Durham, N. C. Robert Thomas Joyner Rocky Mount, N. C Cleveland Fane Kirkpatrick Clyde, N. C. Dewitt KlUTTZ , Chester, S. C. Henry Grady Lassiter Lasker. N. C. Joseph Roscoe Latham Belhaven, N. C. Charles Aycock Litchfield : Aurora, N. C. William Everard Massey Rock Hill, S. C. Samuel Raphael Newman Washington. N. C. Charles Strickland Norburn Acton, N C. Mercer Cranor Parrott Kinslon, N. C. David Franklin Perrell Germanton. N. C ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-THREE Zl John Lewis Rawls Yaiesville. Frank Sabiston Jacksonville. William Trautham Shaver Salisbury. George Currie Singlet ary Chapel Hill. Ralph Case Spence Kipling. Samuel Clarence Spoon Haw River, John Moorhaj Tamraz Tabriz, Henry Clinton Warlick, Jr Newell, Clifton Forrest West Dover, N. C. William Christopher Williams.. Durham, N. C. Junius Holt Wright Siler City, N. C Frank Davis Conroy Cullowhce. N. C. Harry Gordon Thigpen Tarboro, N. C. Russell Mills Cox iWashinglon. N. C. N. C. N. C. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. Persia N. c. ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-FOUR SSE ]fS S5CZ: MEDICAL Pre-Medicai. c ' i,a.s.s E. K. McLean Presidenl + + CLASS ROLL Junius Mebane Andrews Mebane. N. C. FuRMAN Angel Franklin, N. C. Felix Orton Bell Linden, N. C. John Bryan Bonner Bonnerton, N. C. Carl Hendrix Byrd Morrisville, N. C, William Maurice Coppridge Roanoke, N. C. Paul Bern ays Folger ;. Dobson. N. C. Theodore Lyman Harrison Enfield, N. C. Eugene Hawks Mount Airy, N. C. Vannie Monroe Hicks Greensboro, N. C. John Ransom Holt, Jr Princeton, N. C. Frederick Cecil Hubbard Wilkesboro, N. C, Emerson Wiley Jarman Farmville. Va. James Craig Joyner Princeton, N. C. Gabriel Lee Kendrix Cherryville, N. C. Edward Thomas Koonce Richlands. N. C. Benjamin Jones Lawrence Creedmore, N. C. Joseph Kindred Long Seaboard, N. C. Charles M. McCall Charlotte, N. C. Brodie Banks McDade Hillsboro, N. C. BuRRUss Boyd McGuire Norton, N. C. EwEN Kenneth McLean Buia, N. C. Andrew Edward McNamara -. : Jacksonville, Fla. Jasper Talmace Massencill Four Oaks, N. C. ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-SIX g i T i Milton Norman _ Halifax N C Angus Lafaette Payne, Jr Rural Hall. N. C. Harry Wooding PRrrcHETT Danville, Va. Albert Lee Scott PollocksviUe. N. C. Leon Grady Shields Hobgood. N. C. Leslie Ogburn Stone Kliirell, N. C. George Raby Tennent Asheville, N. C. Dennis Roscoe Walff Rural Hall, N. C. Nathaniel Bayard Yarboro Gary, N. C. ONE. HUNDRED THIRTY-EIGHT %E PHARMACY ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-NINE :3 PHARMACY First Year R. W. Jernigan R. A. McDuFFiE.. Pharmacy Ci.as5 OFFICERS Senior President K. A. KlRBY Vice-President .... Paul Brantley R. S. Shaw Secretary and Treasurer R. H. ANDREWS ONE HUNDRED FORTY VtL 1st Stub. one of the youngest Class, but not in knowledge. He is a bright boy. and has a bright future before him. He is a great lover of sport, and can be found when wanted at a punch - board down at the Orange Drug Com- pany, pulling for a home run at five cenls a pull. He is also a lover of art. and often will be found at Foister ' s art store flirting with the lady clerk. But he in- tends to brighten his future by going higher in his profession. Here ' s hoping he will succeed. Red. the most popu Class, hails from X ' lIson. the garden spot of the world for pretty girls. It is uni- versally conceded that he knows more materia medica than anyone else in the Class. So it will be no great surprise if he writes a text-book on materia medica before he finishes his college career. He is a good egg. and well liked by in the Class. It is his intention to make his debut lo the medical world next year. It is felt that Red will make good in this field, and the whole Class wish him much success. Secretary of Class ; Secretary of Orange County Club ; Vice-President Pharmaceutical Journal Club. Wilson County Club; William Simpson Pharmaceutical Society; Journal Club; Y. M. C. A.: German Club; Class Sec- retary 1912; Vice-President; ' 1 ' A B. 0 V£ HUNDRED FORTY-ONE ISS, Age, 22; height, 5 feet 7 weight. 140. Pride goelh before haiighl spkil hef. Cas. as he is commonly known, came to us from the Class of ' 12. having dropped out one year to decide upon what course he might pursue. He finally came Id the conclusion that he would follow (he profession of Pharmacy, and get his diploma. Cas is a constant visitor to the Normal. Why. I don ' t know, unless he has something in view more than merely the trip. Cas is a diligent worker, try- ing to discover something new so as to escape the daily toil behind the prescrip- tion desk. We predict for him a bright and prosperous future. David is a good boy. for he play his harp, but he is a consistent worker. This fact is evidenced by his lal boring — for the Pickwick. Out of the nine-hundred-and-fifty-eight official preparations and crude drug=. he has learned one. sarsaparilla. and he says that if his soap will ever lather, he will put out one of the best shaving soaps that ever went on the market. Wilkes County Club; Historian of South Carolma Club; William Simpson Pharmaceutical Society; Pharmaceulical Journal Club; K i:. ONE HUNDRED FORTY-TWO w. 38! Age. 20; heighl, 5 feet eight. 170. ■■flonesl toil b HiC, ' as he IS best known the brightest boys in his Class. He is a fellow that never gives up, but keeps on trying. If you can ' t find him at his room, you can find him at the Pharmacy Lab. making soap; for he is a fellow that believes m keeping clean. His aim is not Id roll pills behind a prescription desk. but to go higher in his profession, which we all know he will. of fic.ir Kirby looks as lazy as he is. but isn ' t quite as lazy as he looks. Easy going, good natured. and tow-headed. Has a good line of dope. and alvays makes a hit with the ladies. Taking notes on Dr. Howell ' s jokes is his hobby. Kirby is a good egg, and we wish our president a prosperous future. Buncombe County Club; William Simpson Pharmaceutical Society; Presi- dent Pharmaceutical Club; Journal Club; Treasurer of Class; Scrub Football; Class Baseball 1913. President of Class; Greater Council; Student Council; President of McDowell County Club; Y. M. C. A.; ' William Simpson Pharmaceutical Society ; Journal Club; Class Baseball; German Club; . T U. S C ONE HUNDRED FORTY-THREE ISi In ihe Spring a young man ' s fancy Lightly turns to thoughts of love Edison. Do not get him confused with Thomas A. If you did, he would convince you that he was named after him. He has a ladylike disposition, which accounts for the many friends he has made. His favorite stunt is workmg in the Pharmacy Lab. He will some day be a bull Pharmacist. as he has re- ceived experience under Home. Beef. Talks much ; says nothing. He can when he wants to, but seldom wants to. You can find him at the post- office every day. looking for a letter from Peace Institute. He is the largest, ugliest, and one of the brightest members of h.s Class. His aim is high. He in- tends to go to Philadelphia next year. Wherever he goes, he will make good. Robeson County Club; Secretary and Treasurer of Pharmaceutical Journal Club; Greater Council; Vice-President of X ' illiam S.mpson Club; i E. Granville County Club; Y. M. C. A.; Phi. Society; Class Baseball 1912; Cap- lam of Pharmacy Baseball Team 1913. ONE HUNDRED FORTY-FOUR 9iL 1 Age. 28; heighl. 5 feel 8 Inche weight, 150. Wilh the hope of passing the Board, he ' Jags ' along Daddy. as his age indicates, i s the oldest one of the Class. He says litlle. but thinks lots (mostly of the ladies). He claims one never gets loo old to flirt w,lh the girls. His greatest ambition is to pass the Board; for he is always at his room studying. Dad is a good egg. a nd IS liked by all who know him. even the girls. We all wish him much success in the pro- fession as a pill roller. Johnson County Club; Pharmaceutical Journal Club; President of Pharmac- eutical Journal Club. ONE HUNDRED FORTY-FIVE 9iL ISi PHARMACY l n, ' lliV(ACY— ] Wilbur Cable Adams Rowland. N. C. Wilson William Allen Hendersonville, N. C. William Hubert Anderson Mars Hill, N. C. Stroud Otis Brewer ;...Thomasville, N. C. Robert Cooper Covington . Laurinburg. N. C. Arthur Levi Fishel . ...a..... Winslon-Salem. N. C. William Mortimer Fowlkes Rockingham. N. C. Leland Berk Grantham Mount Olive, N. C. Clyde Dale Guin Unionville. N. C. John Robert Hamilton... , Oxford, N. C. John Sugg Harper Snow Hill. N. C. Joe Baxter Haymore ; ; Mount Airy, N. C. William Snelling Hicks .■Raleigh. N. C. Rupert Watson Jernigan Mount Olive, N. C. William Autrey McDaniel Enfield, N. C. Roger Atkinson McDuffey Greensboro, N. C. Ellis Talmage McInnis Troy, N. C. Hector Bruce McPhaul Lumberion, N. C. Norway Morris Atlantic, N. C. Calvin Blackwell Morrisette Elizabeth City, N. C. Lonnie Weightman Murphrey , Raleigh, N. C. James Henry Parsons ..Newton Grove, N. C. Fred Marion Patterson Concord. N. C. George Calvin Peeler Salisbury. N. C, Frank Howard Pender. Jr ' Tarboro. N. C. Fred Smith Petrea Glass, William Crawford Pope Mars Hill. Carl David Rosenbaum Tarboro. RuFus Sugg Shaw Halifax. Hansford Randolph Simmons ' . Graham. Jesse Eli Turlington Benson. William P. Whitmire... ...Hendersonville, N. C. ONE HUNDRED FORTY-SIX gj ' —t ig N. C. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. N. c. X ESTFLOt-T o n C A B M a-r CH APE,u HiLU i ' ij j ' rL ' .s. ' :!! GOVERNMENT GoVICRNiVliNT strict watch on ] answered: A rr This incident of twenty y which created here both the desir maintain it. The campus cons establish working conditLons with terests might operate not antagonisticall] est possible efficiency to the whole bod d in the atmosphere of the Carolina campus went to teach m another When he was about to hold his first examination, the chairman of Committee said to him. You come from Chapel Hill, and I have you have what is called the Honor System, and do not watch men on t remember, we don ' t do business that way here, ' ou must keep a ' our students today. The Carolina man lan whom I must watch I will not leach. ears ago expressed the high sense of honor e for student government and the ability to ciousness demanded that the individuals each other in order that their separate in- but in agreement, giving the great- and the greatest possible develop- FIRST ANNUAL INTER- SCHOLASTIC MEET ment to each part. To attain this result — to secure wort IS the aim of student government. Inevitably, the first toward this result was the adoption of the Honor System, student on his honor lo act like a man, ridding him of the epsionage, and allowmg him to hold up erect on hi Honor System, the Student Council was organized, and was given the poM ditions — tep in progress rh.c.i placed the rutch of faculty own backbone. As ; One Hundred Young Athletes Will Contest For Cups and Medals 6RE1TER council IS DOUG GREil WORI concrete expression of the to act for the student body. Our government was fairly launched. Then came the par- tisan politician. No natural party lines being found in our community, a r 1 1 - ficial ones were set up. The non-fral became the a n t i - fral; the Greek presented a solid front to the bar- barian. Such a condition placed on the Student Council men who became intoxicated while they shipped others for the same of- Student Council Standing: CowLEs, Smith, Leach, Fuller Sitling: LiNN, WooLLCOTT, Boushall fense. Such a con- dition placed in charge of our ath- letic teams men who returned pal- pa b 1 y diminished receipts lo the treas- %: ONE HUNDRED FORTY-NINE ]k GOVERNMENT Slake. nnJeJn ury. burying the Association m debl. Such a condition subordinated efficiency to faction, government in the mud of pohtics. A severe lest confronted ihe student, to prove his abihty to good of the whole. The success of student government was at ward in the campus consciousness. To honor was added fair-n slow in forming, sprang naturally from the first; the sense of student faith in the independent action of his brother. .And thi; ernmenl. It was seen that in order to secure the best results sideralion. When at one time two fraternity men are the only two non-fraternitymen are the only nominees for Class preside! obtained a place among student ideals, and that government v. working conditions for the good of the whole. The genius of government, quickened by the sense of honor, and rounded out by the spirit of fair-mindedness, has expressed its higher power in the organization of the Greater Council. The old Student Council confined its attention to repressing wrong. The Greater Council, composed of members of the Student Council with additional representatives from each Class, is organized as a central committee to work for the constructive promotion of the welfare of college life. But the Council is only a of the student body. Government is not confined to a few; it is the activity of all the students, ever be as high as sti-denl consciousness reaches and as effective as student interest demands. ntain working conditions for the Then a new element came for- sj. This second element, though ght in his own conduct inspired in the afforded a more complete view of gov- section could be banished from con- for manager, or at another time s realized that fair-mmdedness has by better able to attain its end— agent th. Greater Council Top Row: Lytch, Pharmacy; Leach, Senior; KlRBV, Pharmacy; Newsom, Junior; Whiting, Senior; Cansler, La . Sci:onJ Roa: WooLLCOTT. Junior; FuLLER. Junior; BousHALI,, Junior; Holmes. Senior; Rand. Frahnmn. Bollom Ron,: Smith, Mdicinc: Linn, Sophomore; CoWLES, Lan: ; Pate, Medicine ; AxLEV, CraJuale. ONE HUNDRED FIFTY 9iC. ISi vSocjAi, ( (;i !i: SOCIAL LIFE AN is moral, phy- sical, intellectual, and social. These sides of his nature must de- velop harmoniously. The de- nial of any one of them results in deformity. Such are the truths of man ' s nature. From the compelling neces- sity of social life generally, turn to it as expressed here. ou find it existing distinctly within and as a part of the University. How could it be otherwise? The students, severed from their earlier associates, have no opportunity of outside social intercourse, such as is given students located in larger towns and cities. They are driven upon themselves; their social cravings must be satisfied by their fellows. Even though so distinctly a part of the University, social life here is almost in- tangible. In t he outside world, formal calls and part-es do not satiate the social want; what do so are accidental meetings on the streets, neighborly chats, informal card games — anything, in short, not restrained, but natural. So it is with the University. The Y. M. C. A. reception, college day, the dances — neither all nor any constitute the student ' s social life. On these occasions he merely takes his company man- ners out for an airing. His social nature is in reality sat ' s- fied by the everyday meetings on the campus, the athletic field, at meals, at the post- office, and in his room. You old alumnus, dreaming before the fire of days gone by, or you young undergraduate, -ome summer ' s night, you do not remember this or that re- ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-ONE az liS SOCIAL LIFE ception or dance. But how it makes your heart ache, and how it brings tears to your eyes to recall those gather;ngs in your room; to see again the faces of your chums through a haze of tobacco smoke; to almost hear their voices — now serious in weighty discussion, and now gay in quick repartee; to go again to the mail, storm the doors of Commons Hall, cheer on the football team! And such are the things that compose the students ' social life. Essentials are they to man ' s social nature. Without them. University life would be but an unbearable sucess on of endless, irksome tasks. As organized expressions of social life, one finds the Fraternities, but these have largely abandoned their earlier purely social purpose. They have become fields of en- deavor, in which the student may exercise — organizat ons into which one gravitates, drawn by ties of kinship and local influences. They bind their members ; but friendships origi- nated solely through their influence lack spontaneity and that sure foundation of genuine sympathy. The Fraternity is the luxury of social life, as the Pullman is of travel. In the Fraternity, as in the Pullman, life is perhaps easier, more comfortable; but social life outside the fraternal orders is none the less real, is equally as genume, and is actually far greater. ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-TV m cQ- DEBA TING V f.wx :mc, AROLINA should be proud of many of her records; but of her debating achievements she should be proudest of all. Out of thirty-eight debates held with the foremost Universities of the South, and one of the North. Carolina has been victorious twenty-eight times. Virginia, the ancient rival ; Hopkins, the University of national fame; Tulane of the Far South; and Pennsylvania, representing the North, have all fallen before the genius of Carolina debaters. In fact, out of the last nneteen debates, but three have been lost. This IS a record of which any institution would be proud ; but why has there been such marked success? There are at least two fundamental causes that can be assigned for the existence of the boastable record. First, the inter-society debates, of which there are four each year ; and second, the fact that both inter-soc!ety and inter- collegiate debating at Carol na are upon the competitive basis. For a long time the Dialec- tic and Philanthropic Literary Soceties have been holding inter- sociely debates; the Fresh-Soph, the Soph-Junior, and the Com- mencement Junor Debate. Even before a man becomes eligible to these contests, he has an opportunity to try for a place on the Freshman Debate, an inter-society affair, and should he be the most successful of the four speakers he receives a cash prize of ten dollars. At every stage of his college life, a man has a chance here to perfect himself in debating, to try out his oratorical powers; and when he arrives at the senior period he is well qualified to represent Carolina in an inter-collegiate debate. Even this great number of opportunities to become familiar with argument and delivery is not the primary virtue of the Carolma system; for often men in their Senior year have, without preliminary training, been able to repreent the University very credit- ably against the sister institutions. The system is corrpetitive. Every man who is on any debate representing his society or college has won his place in a preliminary contest. ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-FOUR mL DEBATING He is on the team because he can speak best, argue best, put up the best appearance. Popularity, pull, nor politics will aid anyone. He must simply be the best at Carolina, and it is to be said with pride that Carolina ' s best is always better. Competition decides who is best, and competition eliminates every ihmg but men and genius. It is with competition, with a system of development of men in their first college years, that Caro- lina has won out in the past. She can lose twenty out of the next twenty-two debates, and still be ahead of Ty Cobb ' s batting aver- age. And who says that Carolina can ' t win the next twenty-two? T. C. BOUSHALL Debating Union Martin. Di ; Boushall. Phi; Willis, Di; Peel. Phi: Pritchett, Di : Whiting, Phi. C Ui-olioa ' s .Dooatos Against Georgia Against Philo Society of Pennsylvania Against Virginia Against Vanderbilt Against Hopkins Against Tulane ..-. Against George Washington - - Against Washington and Lee ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-FIVE 9iL ]iS Dift i rt FOR i r POUTltlfr IT- 00-r DEBATING ! ( O P K ( M.S . C ) AR O I . (M A I ) :C ' .) AT iC C. W. HlGCINS J. A. Holmes p.ucry Re.SOL ' ED: That the political interests of the United States demand the abandonment of the Monroe Doctrine. Affirmative — CAROLINA Negative — HoPKINS ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-SEVEt ' 9iL ISi DEBATING V ( il c V( iN ( A ■( A ;l c) I , I iM A I ) :-: ) f K. C. ROVALL F. L. Webster Q c.).-y Re sol ED: That the poHtical interests of the United States demand the abandonment of the Monroe Doctrine. Affirmative — VIRGINIA Negative — CAROLINA ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-EIGHT IS C O M iVnCiMC ' IM ;CMT :!■; ' ? AT ' l J. A. Holmes, Di F. L. Webster, DI. 0 iv)ry Resol ED: That those decisions of State Courts of last resort, declaring unconsti- tutional legislation passed by the Slate Legislative body, should be subject to recall by the voters of the State. Affirmative — Dl Negalive — Phi Won by the Affirmative Bingham Medal won by J. A. Holmes E. S, Peel, Phi. S. W. Whiting. Ph, vSoPI (OiV(0;l?r. JuMHlR 1) i ' Vii ATl : Philip Woollcott, Phi. ' . B. Umstead. Phi. Resolved: That Labor Unions are justified in demanding the closed shop. Affimalive — Phi Negative — Dl Won by Negative B. Holder. Di. J. F. Hackler. Di. Yw ; ! (M AN . SOV! lOIVlOR ' l ' 0 ' ) ATll W. O. Smith, Ph V. F. Williams, Phi Qii ' oi ' y Re.=OL ED: That the true solution ot the Trust Problem lies in the regulation of com- b nation, rather than in the breaking up of combination and the restoring of com- petition. Affirmative — Phi Negative — Dl J. F. Hackler, Di. R. M. Ross, Di. Jc iNioii Oii.vroii.s F. L. Webster D. H. Carlton Carr Medal won by F. L. Webster G. v. Strong J. F. 1 ' DRAMATICS ©K 5 a€ ONE HUNDRED SIXTY-THREE DRAMATICS :Ora? (atics Ina has ceased to be a ighl of this space for a ted tha IIF.CAUSE the Dramatic Club of the University of North Ca minor activity in the realm of college activities do we claim th sketch of its history and success. The history of Dramatics at Carolina begins with the unparalleled success o George Broadhurst ' s roaring comedy. What Happened to Jones, produced under ih direction of Professors McKie, Booker, and Cross, and acted by such stars as Coggins and Weeks. Th selection of this play was a fortunate one. It was just the play to give work to inexperienced actors and at the same lime leave the impression that makes the audience look us up again. The Jones year — 1912-13 — has this history: the troop visited nine different towns, p What Happened to Jones eleven different times, pulled the ticket box for gross receipts to the of $1,037. after covering a territory of seven hundred and fifty miles and appearing before more three thousand people. Beginning the season of 1913-14 with more experienced men. and with an established reputation throughout Eastern North Carolina, the faculty committee, composed this time of Professors McKie and Booker, selected the celebrated English Comedy. The Magistrate. by Sir Arthur Wing Pinero. As evidence of the successful presentation of this difficult play, a clipping from the next day ' s issue of the yVeUJs and Observer will suffice; a portion of which reads: Dramatics at the University of North Carolina reached its highest point last night, when the University Dramatic Club successfully staged the cele- brated English comedy. ' The Magistrate. ' in Gerrard Hall, before an audience of over five hundred persons. That the season will have an unparalleled success is at this time evident, though at the time of the writing, only two performances have been given. Whatever happens, the Carolina spirit is behind the Dramatic Club. And with this student support it already has. coupled with the talent which is being con- stantly developed by competent coaches, the students of Carolina will see before many years have passed the Dramatic Club at this institution in the same class, and moving in the same circles, with the Dramatic Club of Yale. Princeton, or Harvard. V ONE HUNDRED SIXTY-FOUR gjr ]iS THE DRAMATIC CLUB ABOUT TO LEAVE THE hILL FOR THE TOUR OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA From reader ' s left to right: I. Slieparrl lirvan (manager): T. A. Caiips. T. F. Pugli, ..I. R. Dunna W. n. Kerr, H. ( . Conrad. 1. F.. Hoovef. T. V. Whitficl.r, C. A. Doscnian, W. B. Pitts, E. I!. Ma II. M. Blalock. r. I. Coggin, .1. M. Cox. ' Till-; u.xivicRsrrv of north c. roi.i. . i.r. m. ii( t i.rn PRICSFXT. ' n SIR AicnnK wixc, imm:r(i C- ST OF ( ii. R. i ti:k.- I The plavcrs come on tlie program in the oriler tliat tliey ai pear on the stage) Beatie Tomlinson la sixtecnyearold music mistress) Claude A. Bo Gis Harrington ( the Magistrate ' s sporty stepson ) W. B. Pitts Wyke (an English Butler) J. A. Capps Popham (the housemaid) J. Forbes Pugh Mrs. Posket (a remarried widow of .ii(?) W. Doub Kerr Mr. BuUamy (a London magistrate) J. M. Cox MR. POSKET (THE MAGISTRATE) W. P. M. WEEKS Charlotte Verrinder (Mrs. Poskefs sister I H. C. Conrad Isidore (a French waiter) J. E. Hoover Blonde (the hotel keeper) E. B. Marsh Col. Lukyn (a retired army officer) Charles L. Coggin Horace Vale (a military captain— Charlotte ' s fiance) J. V. Whitfield Messiter (a police inspector) H. M. Blalock Lugg la sergeant of police) M. R. Dunnagan Wormington ( an old court clerk) Mr. Blalock S ' S ' .VOP.SIS: Act I— Drawing room in .Mr. Posket ' s home. . ct II — Private dining-room at Hotel Des Princes. Act III — Scene i — .Ante-room to courtroom, Mulberry Street; Scene j — Same as Act I. F.XECUTIVE STAFF — J. Shepard Bryan, General Manager: E. B. Marsh, Stage Manager; F. O. Clarkson. Advertising Manager. FACl ' LTV DIRECTORS— Prof. George McFarland .McKie. Chairman: Dr. John Manning Booker. £-| [ r ' [ Dramalic Order of Satyrs is an order composed of men of the very best Dramatu talent m College. Only members of this order are wearers of the N. C. The coaches of the Dramatic Club annually recommend the best actors from the cast, and only the men are taken m if passed on by the order. The organization is secret. The present members arc as follows: Blalock, H. M. Capps. J. A. HARRtss. Dan Parrott. M. C. BOSEMAN, C. A. COCCIN. C. L. JOHN.SON ' . H. V. PtTTS. W. B. Bryan, J. S. Conrad. H. C. Kerr. M. C. Weeks, W. P. M. Whitfield. J. V. :!,,t,5 ' ) tow ' s ' ' •! ' ftt iJS Y BRVANN m i l SAU ■E? i«i. Trip itisiactwy in I l..n Way. f OLK KLIUKIJ AS VUULU Bl IHt PRt.55 GLEE CLUB ' i.V ' .l (yl.C IJ Mr. George M. Sneath. Mr. M. H. Meeks. Jr _ Mr. J. S. Cansler Mr. H. L. B rockman Direclor President Manager .Treasurer ADVISORY COMMITTEE Dr. Howell Messrs. Sneath, Royster, and Meeks ONE HUNDRED SIXTY-EIGHT GLEE CLUB GlS£ Cl.Uii First Tenors: G. Harden E. W. Jarman M. H. Meeks W. A. RUDISILL M. Stubbs W. C. Wright First Bass: C. W. Beckwith p. H. Epps G. M. Long R. N. Page W. C. Lord J. E. Harris Second Tenors: L. H. Clement F. W. Hancock J. T. Pritchett J. A. Taylor E. A. Hill G. M. Sneath Second Buss: H. L. Brockman W. M. Hicks E. P. Jones J. F. Love W. N. Pritchard C. B. WOLTZ Man-lolin CAnh G. M. Long W. C. Wright H. M. Meeks L. H. Clement W. A. RuDisiLL E. P. Jones -I Meeks, Sneath, Epps, Brockman + + Pianist: FIarris W. C. Lord H. Cone J. L. Wright ONE HUNDRED SEVENTH m PUBLICATIONS 7iL ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-ONE ]£S FUlUn CANSLE i miTfiK£R YACKETY YACK BOARD ' ' ' ' 7i J£ff f £5 PATrOM M CAU c OJ jfS MEBANE mr ifG pmcH£rr stromo mjo y lo vo SOUSMLL WIM£5 LWJV MXIV U C0S6 PUBLICATIONS ' TiiE T.ARMEEL Lenoir Chambers, Jr Ed ' .lor-in-Chicf Walter Fuller Managing Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS S. W. Whiting McDaniel Lewis John Cansler D. KiLLiFER T. C. Linn G. M. Long TARHEEL MANAGERS L. R. Johnson _ Business Manager C. E. Erwin Assistant Manager B. L. Field Assistant Manager ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-THREE i -.,, W. p. Fuller Editor-in-Chief LOWRV AXLEY . ..Aisiilant Edilor-in-Chief G. W. EusTLER Literary Editor J. S. Bryan Around the Well T. C. BoUSHALL Literary Editor C. A. BosEMAN Exchariges T. r. Linn Sketches M. R. DunnaGAN Business Manager J. V. Whitefield I P Wnni roTT i Assistant Business Managers ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-FOUR r— — — ATHLETICS ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-FIVE ' fiZ ISi ATHLETICS A ' Tid i ' mas AT yn Umivi ' .ti. ' sity |HEN ihe news of our defeat at Richmond in 1912 was flashed over the Slate, a feeling of discouragement everywhere ensued. Are we never to be able to win from Virginia? was the question heard on all sides. It was not long, however, until there arose out of the , . old rags of despair a new spirit of determination, which made itself felt all over the Stale. - i 1 his manifested ilself in a resolve of the alumni to ascertain the cause of our continued defeats, and lo effect a remedy for ihem. In this respect our defeat had a salutary effect. It awakened everyone to the fact that half-heartedness on the part of the students and alumni m athletics at the University had to end; that only by bard work and enthusiasm was it possible for us to achieve success. In pursuance cf this resolve, a number of representative alumni held a faculty at the University shortly before Christmas. At this meeting, new pla at the University were decided upon. The Tarheel of that date says it wa; that has been taken in Carolina athletics in many years. The definite result joint conference w-th the is for conducting athletics the most significant step )f the conference was the endation thai lw( I committees be formed, on both of which the committee to have charge of procuring coach agement of athletic affairs, schedules, supplies, old system, by which coaches have been secur from another, was unanimously condemned umni are to be represented — one , the other to have actual man- and of looking for material. The red, now from one institution, now The plan proposed by the alumni IS made up from plans now being use tinguished by introducing the feature procured for not less than three years, ing that will be distinctively Caroliniai J at Princeton and Harvard. It is dis- )f continuity. T e head coach is lo be He may thus evolve a system of coach- A nucleus of men who have already been trained shall be left to start the next year with. The alumni agreed to make good the deficiencies beyond a certain limit which the Athletic Associa- tion might make, and decided further that there committee, composed of two faculty members, the dent of the Athletic Association, and the head c the power of making schedules and local arrangerr scouring the Stale for material. should be . graduate m .ach— this c mis. purcha sident athletic er. the presi- nittee lo have supplies, and On January 27, at a second conference between the faculty, alumni, and representative students, Mr. T. C. Trenchard was elected head coach for three years, and several days later he signed a contract to this effect. This first material step toward the revitalization of Carolina ' s athletics was hailed by the students Doggie ' s unfailing interest In the University, his record as a football player, his and his ability to instill fight into a team, had already procla ' med him the man for head in February, Mr. Trenchard came to the Hill, and began his work of pulling Carolina ' s f the rut in which they had been for ten years. ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-Sf. KC L ATHLETICS The new system of athletics was not instituted until after the baseball season began, and. con- sequently, Carohna ' s rather poor showing in that branch of athletics cannot be attributed to the new system. During the Spring, two new institutions were inaugurated at the University, spring foolball prac- tice, and the High School track meet. On the first of March. Spring football started on the class field. The art of passing, catching, and kicking were taught anyone who came out, re- gardless of whether he were a Varsity man or a near-claEs player. In a contest held in May, five sweaters were awarded, one each lo the man who had done the best work m drop kick-ng. in passing, in catching, and in tackling. The High School track meet was an event which did much to focus the attention of the State on the University, and to arouse interest among the high schools of the State in athletics. High schools sent teams to represent them in this contest. As yet. it is too early to estimate the effects of the meet on athletics at the University, but it is hoped that by creating a lively interest in athletics among the high school students (he University may veloped material in- stead of the un- trained men hitherto received. An agitation which r e a c hed successful a plan of a compulsory athleliL fee. suggested last Sprmg. The plan received the endorse- ment of the student body, and subsequently that of the trustees. This amounts to five dollars, half of it being paid at the Fall and half of it at the Spring registration. It admits every stu- dent lo all athletic contests held in Chapel Hill, and while it IS a means of some revenue to the Association, it also secures a large and representative University attendance at all the games. Since football is the most important branch of college athletics, the real test came last Fall. After all the activity of the Spring and Summer, after all the newspaper comment, after all the rumors of the good material coming lo us from the culn last Summer %E ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-SEVEN ISi ATHLETICS prep and high schools, everyone was anxious to kno s jusl what had developed. Football practice began on the first of September, and to those oi us who as yet had not left home, the rumors from Chapel Hill about our excellent team-to-be were, indeed, pleasing. This we knew; If good coaching amount to any- thing. Carolina will show up well. In addition to Mr. Tienchard, head coach. Talbot Pendleton. Tom Wilson, and Arthur Blue- tenthal made the Carolina team what it was last Fall. Pendleton, who comes from Berkley Springs. W. Va., first played football at Episcopal High School. Alexandria, Va.. where he made all-Stale prep, school halfback. In track also he won distinction, making the hundred-yard dash in nine and four-fifths seconds. At Princeton, he played class football during his Freshman year, and in the ensuing years he made the Varsity team, being captain in his Senior year. Tom Wilson, of Bing- hampton. N. Y.. played guard on Dartmouth, and was thus disqualified for playing on the Freshman team at Princeton. Wilson, however, played guard on the Varsity team for two years. After his graduation, he returned to Princeton as head line coach, and during the Fall of 1912 developed, out of the lightest material seen at Princeton in many years, one of the best teams that has ever repre- sented the college. Two weeks before the Thanksgiving game. Arthur Bluetenlhal, of Wilmington, N. C assistant head line coach at Princeton, came down from Princeton to give the Carolina team a final lesson in coaching. Bluey went to Princeton in 1908 from Exeter, where he played center. In his first year he made the Freshman team, and in the ensuing years the Varsity. Although one might think the past season a failure if he looks only at the scores, it has been successful. The past season has witnessed, as it might be termed, a rebirth of Carolina ' s athletics, the overthrow of old methods, the instituting of new. One year at least was necessary to get a working basis for the then untried system. X ' e did not hope to develop a universally successful team last year. Our hope was not so much to make high scores ourselves, as to hold our opponents to small ones. Of similar nature and purpose to the high-school track meet was the high-school football contest, the final game of which was played at the University, and won by Raleigh from Washington. About the baseball season, which is opening just as this book is going to press, it is too early to make prophesies. We believe, however, that with Earle Mack as coach, with the help of the alumni, and with enthusiastic response from the students. Carolina ' s baseball season will be much more suc- cessful than It was last vear. ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY-EIGHT VaL 38! Abernathy Right Tackle Big Ab doesn ' t show it off; he doesn ' t talk about it; but he ' s just there in offense and defense, into the midst of every play. Four years on the team; All-South Atlantic two years; Carolina ' s Captain. Tayloe . Left Halfback Easily the best ground gainer in our backfield. Knows and loves the game. Dave is a good field general, and fitted for the captaincy in 1914. S -1-l.ER . Rjghl Halfback Pling leaped into fame with a seventy-yard n for a touchdown against Virginia. Back of this eclacular performance is the head and spirit of a rd, consistent player. Red ' proves the possibihties of ( Worked three years for 1914. and th. to quarterback the Varsity. Quarterback lass football, n was called Krwin Fullback C. E. is a strong, dependable fullback. Worked up by steady effort, and is now one of the best line plungers m the Soulh. Tandy _ Center Of centers, the best. Excels not in one but in every department of the game. George is the find of the year. ■fc: ' ' S Parker Fullback A play IS a good one that succeeds in getting past Pete, for he is a bulwark on defense. On offensive work also he has shown his ability to make HoMEWOOD Right End Homewook makes the tackle. Time out got pretty familiar at the continuous reports. Not rough- ness, but clean hard lacklmg. Mentioned by several papers for All-South Atlantic. HUSKE Left End You rarely see a better end than BlLLY, in breaking interferences and covering punts. Works with all his might, and has made unusual develop- CowELL .- Left Guard Fatty is a steady and consistent player, both on defense and offense. In interference, he is espe- cially good for a line man. ..,■. ' ] A FousT Foostie won fame by hi; -, opponent ry game, and ga . Right Guard Outpunled his ed much for his Ramsay - - Left Tacl lc Graham. according to Coach Wilson, is the best seventeen-year-old fo country. To have a Freshm much for Carolina football. II player in the of his ability means FOOTBALL ]u:)OTiyALL lAROLlNA m. It doe sure step fri irative showl: alkover at ih. best team (hat Virginia has ever had, is undoubtedly p season gratifying, for the team had more on its shoulders than its own success. A system was at Etake: and the moderate victory for the team was a glorious triumph for the system. Our defeats as well as our victories trace the progress of the team from the beginning to the end of the season. When, on September 27, we defeated Wake Forest only 7 to 0. the prophesies for the season were very dark. The small score was a disappoint- ment, as was the lack of life and practice shown by the learn. A week later, a bright spark of hope came to us. when the team showed good machine work strong line by scoring two touchdowns and a and Carolina well-wishers are well satisfied with the 1913 football not take a very far-seeing mind to read mio the season a swift as well as n the fool towards the head of the Southern football class. If com- l alone formed the criterion, jat is faction is to be expected. From a hands of a fair Virginia team to a hard-fought struggle with about the And not only for its actual scores is the and a safety points Medical Co for 15 the ' to nd a ictory against ckfield - than game of the ' V- ' against Virgin against their 0. Back in the hard fight gave us only a 7 Davidson. Poor generalship kept us from a larger score. On October 18. the team earned mort the 13 to 3 defeat of South Carolina. This showed a very great improvement in the work team. Fumbling was the only art the team seemed to have in the first three quarters of the next game. When they finally did pull together and show football ability, it was too late. The score was V. P. I. 14. Carolina 7. Our team was in almost perfect working order on November I, but poor tactics in taking the defensive too much lost the game to Georgia and McWhorter. 19 to 6. Just about the time we were getting ready to score against Wash- ington and Lee, on November 8. the game was called. But even the 14 to BAPTISTS THIS TIME Usini Many Subslilutes, Tar- lieels Easily Make the Score 29 to ONE HUNDRED EIGHTY-TWO 7iL Hi FOOTBALL against us convinced the doubt- ers that we had a real team. The Varsity, the scrubs. and then some, all helped to beat Wake Forest 27 to on the following Saturday. This game gave some idea of how we had improved during the season. Twenty-six to seven wouldn ' t give the impression of a hard-fought game, in which it was difficult vhich team outplayed; but you are not hearing Carolina ' s side of it alone, when we tell you that ' as the case in Richmond. The game was a fitting climax to a season of faithful training and nt coaching, for ihe team showed its power to fighl, and fight hard. When it comes to give proper praise for our successful season, we cannot but divide it. The persistence and ability of the Varsity squad — not only the letter men, but also the hard-working scrubs, like Lord, Burnett. R.. Boshamer. Reid. Edwards. Grimsley. Philips. Burnett. J.. McCall. and others— the work of all the men who played on the Varsity field deserves the highest credit. These men were CAROLINA LOSES IN A STUBBORN CONTEST AGAINST VIRGINIA Score of 26 to 7 Fails Entirely to Tell tlie Story— Fuller Scores Toucti- down on Seventy -Yard Run — First in Eigtit Years GIROLINA GAINS MORE GROUND ON LINE PLtrS THAN DOES THE VIRGINIA TEAM lo lell such w excelle ONE HUNDRED EIGHTY-THREE ' SiC ISi FOOTBALL the material, and ihanks are due to the coaches — Trenchard, Pendleton, and Wilson — for the develop- ment of a team from it. Finally, manlcs should go from the whole University to the alumni who made possible this system of coaching. 1 WaKe Torest Gra - fj Va. MeoL. GrcLmne PALMETTOS BOW TO TARHEELS Team Journeys to Columbia and Checks Gamecocks, Comeback Crow ONE HUNDRED EIGHTY-FOUR SiC lis Cl. ' Vs. l , ' iV(3 RL.-IIMAN )OOTBA lan.luiK: SlraiiKe, Manager; Williamson, Lett linil ; I ' lOcloi Sub-Cuartl: liurnett. Right Tackle; Arrenson, Sub-Tackle Kullock, Right Guard; Coleman, Left Halfback; Ranson- SuliOuarterback; Hill. Sub-Center; Kluttz, Coach. ittingT Hoffman, Right Halfback; Davis, Fullback; Ware Left Tackle; Stell. .Sub-End; Telfair, Left Guard; Munroi Riuht Knd : IClias, Sub-Center; Smith, Center; .Mdermar ( )nrirterback. ' Goldsboro 21 - Goldsboro 34 Greensboro 51 Greensboro 6 Raleigh 7 HF.SE figures give the success of the Kluttz 1917 machine. With the exception of Junior scores, the champion- ship Raleigh eleven scored the only touch- dovt ' n made across the Freshmen goal line. In the class race, the Freshmen were prevented from winning the championship sweaters by the Juniors. The Freshmen totaled 130 points against their opponents ' 23. Coleman, fullback, was the best feature of the class field. Bullock was a strong for- ward. Hoffman, fleetfooted half, was the surest ground-gainer. Williamson, end, quick-thinking and daring, stood out over any other class player, and with more weight will make the Var- sity stuff. -Sooaoii Oi .)S HE Soph with Ho and Huske in the van charge, easily double- quicked across War- renton ' s goal lines, and were stopped in their class champion- ship stride by the Freshmen. Zolli- coffer was the overtopping center of ihem all, and his defensive play ranged from end to end. Bryan was the third best if not the second best end of the four pairs. Norris was the only punter in Coleman s neighbor- hood. SOPHOMORE FOOTBALL TEAM Tuii Row: Kluttz, Coach; Jones, Right Tackle; Siuil Guard; Pike, Left Guard; Long, LeTt Halfback; I. ;■Rin-ht Guard; ZollicolTer, Center. .Middle Row: Hogan, Right Tackle; Royal, Rigl Loughran, Right End; 1. M. Huske, Right Halfbi wards. Left Guard. I ' .ottom Row: Glenn. Right Halfback; Fore, Fullbacl. Duarterback; .Vorris (Cartain), Left Tackle; Brv I ' lid; Ilarl, Left I ' .uard. Class Ceams JUNIOR FOOTBALL TEAM Top Row: Muore. Coa ch; ance, Fullbacl back: Fitzgerald, Right Tackle; Lipscor Field, Left Tackle; Woltz, Sub-Guard. Middle Row; Gillman, Right Halfback Blount, Sub-End. Bottom Row: Cummings, Sub-Tackle; Thompson, Right End Holder, .Sub-Guard ; Woollcott. Captain and Quarterback Wilkins, Left Guard ; Whitaker. Left End. Paty, Left Half :, Right Guard ; rker, Cente Juniors 10 -- Freshmen 6 Freshmen Sophomores 2 __ Sophomores 7 HE Juniors had the best material of the four classes. Their coach, Allen Moore, was a second-year medical stu- dent; and the only time that a second-year med- ical student has off from work in the week is a little while on Saturday after- noon, which tradition and social pressure have dedicated to a gym shower. The Juniors missed the fierce tackhng spirit of Little Moore, and tied up the race which they should have won. The Juniors were strong in Fitzgerald and Leak, aggressive tackles; Thomp- son, a left-fie!ding end; Nance, de- fensive fulh and Woolcott, with his off-tackle run and drop kick. Seniors Seniors 6 Freshmen 1 3 Seniors 6 Sophomores 10 Seniors 7 Juniors 9 HF Seniors were not in the championship tie- up. The change in mid-season from a bal anced formation to ih Mmnesota shift r ' suited in many di bles. The Seniors e astr hibited a certain stubborn strength, but lacked the punch to put their weight across. Several of them got in some sort of shape to coach high school teams next year. Hatcher, expe- rienced and heavy, was the strongest tackle on the four teams. The center positions were impregnable. For raw men. Reid and Knowles showed un- usual ability. The Seniors never won a game, scored in every game, and lost after hard fighting. SENIOR FOOTBALL TEAM landing: Graham, Coach; Ferguson. Left Tackle; Darden (Captain), Center; Pendereraph. Ulalock. Left Halfback; Angel. Left End; Pitt, Fullback, itting: Strong, Quarterback; Hatcher. Right Tackle: Reid. Fullback; J. Holmes. Left Guard; McKnight, Fullback; Struthers. Quarterback; Kelly, R. Holmes, End; Love, Center. Edwards Shortstop CapTAJN Burr is an especially fast Infielder, with a good peg, and dependable with the stick. Followed Coach to Winston and — well, you know all about him from the newspapers. Bailey, K Second Ba No second baseman in the State has anything i Rabbit ; the team showed good judgment making him next captain. His speed in fielding ai base running is a feature of every game. Leak First Base Jimmy is always the same, and that means that he IS always good. Harbors any kind of a throw to first. Experienced, and always heady. Hart Catche Enthusiastic and hard working. Julian ha started well, and bids fair to go better. A sur man behind the bat. Williams Third Ba Rody ' s first year; but he fielder and a good batter. A showed up as a fast Lire throw from third. iil is«tiL ? ' A ■' _.- Aycock Pitcher Ben has speed, curves, and an effective change of pace. Keeps ihe old head, too; all of which means a first-class pill-lwister. Thompson LefifielJ Shag covers left field to perfection. An all- round ball player; ask Kelly, or Connie Mack. Graves Pitcher Speed and spitball are Henry ' s strong points; absence of control is his weakness. This latter, however, is due to his lack of experience, which time will remedy. Bailey, H CenierfieU Broke up the Virginia game in Greensboro with a ihree-sacker; this is almost a habit of his. Hubert is there in centerfield, loo, every time. Johnston Ri hlfielJ by Phoebe made himself pron the ball. Captains that don ' t kl to run bases. Phoebe attend: Iting him pick him ght field on BASEBALL Baseball O THOSE of us given to prophesying, our baseball team of 1913 seemed destined to travel the same rocky road which had been traversed by the foot- ball and basket-ball teams of the same year. The fact that only three I Varsity men — Captain Edwards, Second Baseman Bailey, and First Base- man Leak — had returned to college, and also the fact that no available Varsity material was in sight, led many of us to conclude that the 1913 team was going to be somewhat below the usual high standard of the University baseball teams. It was a clear case of having to build up a team almost entirely of raw material. In the early Spring, before the arrival of Coach Bowers, Captain Edwards, with his customary pep and ginger, sent out a call for candidates; and, as our pitch- ing staff had been sadly depleted by the loss of all the dependable Varsity men, he urged the pitchers especially to come out for a trial. In response to his call, a great swarm of men, some fifty or sixty in num- ber, reported to the Varsity field. As the practice season advanced, the more unpromising material was by the process of elimination relegated to the class field, and Coach Bowers began to get a line on the prospective Varsity players. They seemed to line up about as follows: Pitchers, Aycock, Graves, and Craven ; Catchers, Hart and Knowles ; First Base, Leak ; SeconJ Base, Bailey ; Shortstop, Edwards; Third Base, Williams, Left- field, Long; Centerfield, Thompson or H. Bailey; Rightfield, Johnson. This represented a much stronger line-up than it was thought possible to obtain from the material at hand. ONE HUNDRED 7iZ ]iS BASEBALL In the first game of the season, the team met defeat at the hands of the Atlantic Coast Lme team in Wilmmgton. The team next went up against the strong Princeton nine, in Greensboro, and was again defeated through combinations of hard luck. Pass- ing over that part of the season before the Virginia games — for the average Carolina student gauges the success of the season not so much by the number of games the team wins or loses as by the outcome of the Virginia games — we will find that Carolina broke even with her ancient rivals in a two-game series. At Greensboro, we defeated Vir- ginia in a beautifully contested game by the score of 5 to 4. However, at Charlottesville, Virginia evened things up by beating us 1 2 to 9. Another game of importance which might be mentioned was the one played in Raleigh with our sister institut on, A. M. College. In this, the first baseball game between the two institutions in seven years, we were forced to accept the smaller end of the score. BAILEY AND AYCOCK LIFT THE GREENSBORO NS, 5 TO 4 Virginia Beaten in an Exciting Game, Bailey ' s Three-Bagger Puts It on Ice, and Aycock ' s Superb Pilcliing Keeps It Ttiere SiE ONE HUNDRED ]iiS BASEBALL zmf VIRGINIA EVENS Princeton 9. . University DiCCDJil CCPICC rennsylvania btate I University bAitbALL itHlt5 Atlantic Coast Une 7 University , ,. , Guilford 9 University Wins a Freaky Game 12 to _ _ , University 8, After Carolina Had a Lafayette 5_ _ .._ Umversity Six-Run Lead Lafayette 3 University Amherst 5 , ..University Davidson ! University Davidson 1 University Virginia Military Institute 5 University Virginia 4 University Wake Forest 8 . University Wake Forest 8 University Virginia 12 University Virginia Military Institute 2 . University Washington Lee 9 University A. and M. of North Carohna 7. University of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North of North Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina Carolina ONE HUNDRED NINETY-TWO 9i£ ISi Track Tlie Team ASON gone! Wakeley. Parker. Price. Barker, and Carter here no more! Six of our Lest men taken from the team. But with Captain Earle Patterson, Cobb. Strong, Spence. Xoollcott. and Blalock — all sweater men — to build around, the prospects were not so bad. Then those hard workers — Whitmg. Struthers. Axley. Abernathy. Parker, and Smith — sticking all the lime, promised wonderful things. And those Freshmen — Little Pat. Wright, and Homewood — all looked good. Practice and condition soon showed that Nat Cartmell had developed a team even better than that of 1912. All these men showed up fine during Ths vScascn The schedule, includmg A. M., V. P. I.. W. A. A. at Baltimore, was cut down to only three meets as folio L.. the Slate el. and the S. A. I. ■i ' ' . Woollcott A T ' a s ' S w i ONE. HUNDRED NINETY-FOUR 9iL ]«: — x ° p 1 2 ° X X -S t 2 o S - Q§ Tm A. ' A M. Mot)t A. M. had a good leam we heard; ihey had hopes, loo, we also heard. Nat kepi quiet, though, until the fourth of April, when his boys walked off with the meet 80 to 36. takino nine first places. Spence took first in the mile and the half-mile. Little Pal look second in the quarter. Sears look first in the 100. and Smith look first in the 220. Big Pat took first m the two-mile. Strong and Blalock the nil A, AND M. FARMERS BEATEN, 80 TO 36 Illy. Strulhers took ihe low hurdles, and Xoollcott the high hurdles and the high jump. A. M. got first in the broad jump, hammer, shot, and quarter. Nat Garlmell ' s Buncli Buns Away From Opponents In First l eet came next, on April 26. again in Raleigh. There was much interest in the meet this year, because of ihe fact that Carolina had twice won the cup offered by the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, and would come into permanent possession of it if she should win again. A. M., Wake Forest, and Trinity were determined to give us a fight for the prize. We were de- termined to gain our third straight victory and our cup. Again Nat had been on the job. Fifty-three and one-half of the 142 points came our way. Thirly-six went to A. M.. twenty-eight and one-half lo Wake Forest, and twenty-four to Trinity. Even in such a big meet, seven first places were won bv Carolina. Baby Sears ran awav with the 100 and 220, Little Pat came back and won ihe quarter from the man who had beaten him in the A. M. meet. Whiting took the half, and ■« 1 Spence the mile. Cobb g-ot second on the two-mile: Axley took second in « mTi- . F ' ■' ° ' - Strong broke the Stale record by vaulting eleven feet flat. Woollcoll won in the high jump and high hurdles. To give a Carolina finish lo a Carolma victory, the While and Blue walked off with the relay, thereby winning another cup offered for this event. The third meet has been won: the State cup is ours. Tho . A, (, -A, .A. iV(«Qt The showing made at Baltimore was not as good as was ex- pected. In 1912. Carolina took second; in 1913. with a better team, she could not place so well. But we can ' t hope for victory all the time. Off days come often in practice; they will surely come sometimes in the meet old But just the same, ou len came up to their : were developed mto hrst-cla places for 1914. eason as a whole was a great success. The ndards; ?ome broke them. The new men athletes; they are now ready to lake their STATE TRACK MEET For Ttiird Consecutive Year Slie Is Champion of the State ONE HUNDRED NIfiEiT Y-SI. VaL i l BASKET-BALL !WsX!i:T!i, ' M.i. HE season 1913-14 in basket-ball opened up with the brightest prospects for Carolina since the introduction of the sport into the Unversity. Chambers, Long, and Homewood were the only relics of last year ' s squad to report at the closing of the football season. Ranson, the only o-Ritch-inal offspring of the game as demonstrated in the early ages, regretfully gave up this one-of-twenty of his pastimes, and decided to devote for once in his life his whole time to one thing; that one thing hap- pened not to be basket-ball. New men were not lacking, however, and the new squad proxed strong. Among the most promising candidates were John- pApniiLi ifTCR TUC son, a substitute, from Lynchburg; Tennent, a member of the Ashe- STATE CHAMPIONSHIP ville team for four years; Edwards, Guilford ' s big center of last Tandy Scores 19 Points Out Of T- 1 r Til- ■1 ■1 . 28 Igainst Wake Forest year; 1 andy, a new man rrom Illinois, and one mentioned for South Atlantic football center for the season; Keesler, Davis, Pou, Goodson, Flemmg. and many others. The results of the first several games were unusually gratifying, and showed Carolina s team up in an excellent hght. VA SWAMPS CAROLINA T c returns from the mid-term examinations almost ruined any WitllOUt a Center Ilia Team P ' ospects for State or South Atlantic honors. On account of the eight-hour law, we lost both of our centers, Edwards and Tandy. As a result, in the midst of our season we were forced to transfer Johnson from his guard position to center, and start over again. Right at this point, before we had practiced a s ' ngle night with our new line-up, we met Virginia, with the strongest team she had ever put out, and a team that was then high on the rungs toward championship honors. Vir- ONE HUNDRED NINETY-EIGHT BASKET-BALL ginia swamped us on the floor at Raleigh. This defeat was a source of stimulus, and with a team, crippled, yet stronger than usual, the rest of the season was finished up in a fairly creditable manner. + + University of North Carolina .Basket-ball Scibedule I913--14 December 9- December 14- December 29- December 30- January 14- January 30- January 31- February 6- February 9- February 14- February 16- February 19- February 24- February 27- February 28- March 2- March 3- March 4- -Elon Chapel Hill — Du -ham Chapel Hill -Charlotte Charlotte —Charlotte . Charlotte —Durham Durham —Guilford Guilford —Elon Elon -Wake Forest Chapel Hill -Virginia Raleigh —Wake Forest Wake Forest -Durham Raleigh -Guilford Chapel Hill -Wake Forest Raleigh — Woodberry Orange -V. M. I Lexington -Staunton Staunton -Lynchburg . Lynchburg -Virginia Charlottesville TWO HUNDRED 9iC ISt GATES AND CHAMBERS Or-MM VSKiiVl ' CiC. ' VM Dr. R. B. Lawson. Physical Director C. D. Taylor Inslrudon W. P. Whitaker MEMBERS R. E. Devereux W. R. Parker F. O. Clarkson C. D. ISLEV G. V. Strong F. R. Owen E. J. Lilly L. B. Rhodes T. M. Price LITERARY SOCIETIES RIVALS BETVYEEK THEMSELVES - BROTHERS BE:foKE THE VtoaLD. TWO HUNDRED FIVE 7i ]K LITERARY SOCIETIES 1 1 ((i,AM-ri (!ioH( . l rncRAiiY Soc(!i rY Holl of Actiy.) iV(-oiiiI) ' .)rs Adams, W. J. Allen, W. R., Jr. Anderson, A. V. AuLD, B. F. Baggett, J. V. Barnes, W. B. Barnes, T. T. Barden, T. a. Bailey, H. V. Bailey, R. H. Bailey, I. M. Bell, D. L. Blalock, H. M. Blue, L. A. Boseman, C. a. boushall, t. c. Brady, D. Brooks, R. P. Bryan, A. O. Bryan, R. T., Jr. Bryan, J. S. Carr, L. Capps, E. F. Castelloe, a. T. Campbell, E. T. Clark, L. R. Clark, R. V. Cook, C. R. Cobb, W. B. Cooper, F. H. Coats, R. F. Cox, J. M. Cobb, Collier, Jr. Colline, H. W. Cradle, B. A. Cradle, W. T. currie, e. h. Dail, E. J. Dail, G. R. Daniel, C. C. Daniel, L. M. Darden, D. B. Davis, M. J. Dees, G. R. Drew, Frank Edwards, L. H. Edgerton. G. E. Edgerton, E. D. Eldridge, J. G. Eldridge, J. Farmer, L. J. Fuller, W. P. Gunter, L. B. Hale, J. W. Hamilton, H. Hancock, F. W., Jr. Harrison, J. L. Harper, A. B. Hatcher, J. T. Harris, J. J. Harris, J. E. Hatcher, M. Hart. J. G. Hester, H. B. Hill, D. B. Howell, W. F. hobgood, j. r. HoBBs, S. H., Jr. Hood, R. T. Hooper, J. A. Holloway, K. House, R. B. Hudson, G. H. HUSKE, J. M. HUSKE, J. S. HusKE, W. O. Jernigan, H. Johnson Johnson, H. M. Jones, Z. B. V. joyner, e. g. Knowles, D. L. KoRNEGAY, Wade Lann, a. C. Lawrence, B. J. Lassiter, H. G. Lassiter, J. H. Latham, J. R. Lee. J. L Lee, J. G. TWO HUNDRED SIX 9iL LITERARY SOCIETIES Lewis, M. H. Lewis, M. D. Lilly, E. J. Marsh BURN, O. M. Mason, D. Maxwell, J. M. Marlowe, W. A. McCants, J. M. McNeil, L. Meyers, L. B. Moore. W, Moore, D. B. Moore, J. A. Morris. C. NORRIS, F. W. Patton. J. R., Jr. Parker, J. M. Parker, W. R. Peel. E. S. Perry, E. J. Perry, Eli Pendergraph, H. a. Peird, J. M. Pearson. L. W. Pre att, J. R. Proctor, W. I. Proctor, E. K. Pruden, W. D. Aycock, B. F. Beckwith, C. W. Cox, R. M. Darden. p. C. Edwards, O. G. GiLMAN, T. E. PUGH, J. F. Rand, O. Ratcliff, Z. O. Raynor, J. Renn, H. J. Reasoner, N. a. Rhodes, W. H. Roberts, C. J. Robinson, C. Robinson, M. E. Robinson, M. Rouse, W. B. RowE. J. V. Royster. B. S. Royall. K. C. RoYALL. R. C. Jr. Shrago, H. L Shrago, J. P. Sloan, C. A. Smith, G. W, Smith. W. O. Smith, J. E. Spencer, R. B. Stedman, J. P. Stevens, H. L. Stell, J. S. Sto ' er, G. Swain, H. L. Taylor, J. A. Taylor, W. R. Thorpe, L. S. Thompson, C. A. Tomlinson. G. Travis, E. L. Turlington, R. S. Tyler, A. L. Umstead. W. B. Veazey. E. L. Wall, F. P. Wellons, W. F. Welch. R. H. W., Jr. Weatherly, R. T. West, R. R. White, P. L. Whitfield, J. V. Williams, V. F. Williams, M. Winslow, H. G. WiLKERSON, W. S. Wilkins, J. A. Warthington, H. S. woodall, e. l. Wood, F. P. woollcott, p. Yelverton, W. B. zollicoffer, a. c. of inactivo ? li ial)ot s Jones, L. E. KiLLIFER, D. H. Lipscomb, S. A. Lord, W. C. Pitts, W. F. ruffin, t. w. Spence, R. E. Strong, G. V. Struthers, J. A. Tamraz, J. M. Turlington, J. E. West, C. F. Whiting, S. W Williams, J. M. TWO HUNDRED EIGHT SiC ]iS LITERARY SOCIETIES Dialectic I., Iterary Society Roll of Act.iv8 ? lemhers Andrews, C. F. Austin, W. B. Baity. H. G. Barnard, J. C. Black, H. B. Blaine, J. C. bosheimer, c. c. Bradshaw, F. F. Brock man, H. L. Capps, J. A. Cansler, J. S. Carleton, D. H. Carter, D. V. Clarkson, F. O. Coggins, C. L. Coleman, J. M. Conrad, D. H. Conrad, E. F. Crawford, F. M. Crowell, G. B. Crouse, R. F. cummings, a. e. Dale, T. C. Dalton, W. B. Davis, T. P. Day, J. T. Deaton, E. M. Deaton, F. H. DeLaney, C. O. Deveraux, R. E. Dobbins, E. A. DUNNAGAN, M. R. Dysart, J. O. Eagle, E. A. Elliott, A. M. Elson, F. H. Epps, p. H. Eustler, G. W. Ferguson. T. W. Field, B. L. Folger, C. F. Fore, C. L. Fowler, M. B. Gentry, J. R. goforth, o. l. Goode, H. G. Groone, J. T. Gryder, O. H. Gwaltney. L. p. Hackler, J. F. Hamilton, E. S. Harper, H. G. Hart. M. Harden, G. Hartshorn, E. S. Harris, R. B. Harris, C. S. Hawthorne, J. HiGGINS, W. C. HOFDEN, S. C. HOGAN, E. G. Holder, B. B. Holmes, J. A. Holmes, J. E. Holmes, R. W. Holland, C. G. Holton, G. a. Hooner. J. E. Hubbard, F. F. Hunter, W. R. Hunter, H. G. Hyatt, C. B. Hyatt, B. B. Idol, V. H. Jarrel, J. F. Johnson, L. R. Johnson, H. V. Johnson. J. M. JoiNES, A. O. Jones, T. I. Jones. E. P. Jones. J. W. Keesler, E. Y. Kendall. E. A. Kent, J. A. Kerr, W. D. King, J. E. Klingman, E. C. Kirk, W. W. KiRKSEY, J. J. Lackey, B. M. Lambert. G. L. Lasley. R. L. LlNDAU. S. B. Lindau, a. M. Linn, T. C. Love F ovelace. O. M. MacKie, O. M. 7iL TWO HUNDRED NINE ISi LITERARY SOCIETIES Marsh, E. B. Marsh, L. G. Martin, G. A. Matthews, M. H. Mebane, T. a. Merritt. O. K. Miller, H. Mitchell, Q. C. McCURRY, J. T. McIntosh, J. W. McKnight, R. B. Nance, O. C. Newsome. a. R. NiMs, F. B. Owen, F. R. Parker, J. C. Payne, A. L. Pell, W. E. Pike, D. V. Pike, S. C. Pless, J. M. Pritchett, J. T. Ramsey, J. T. Ranson, L. H. Ray, J. C. Ross, R. M. ROYSTER, D. W. Rymer, W. C. Sharp, D. H. Siddall, R. S. Siddall, B. a. Sloan, H. T. Smith, C. L. Smithay, H. B. Sparger, R. W. Strayhorn. I. R. suddreth, w. c. Teague, E. S. Temko, H. B. Terleyfell, J. W. Vaughan, R. C. Wall, G. C. Walker, R. R. Warrick, Ed. Watson, W. R. Webster. F. L. Weeks, W. P. M. Whitaker, Z. S. Willis, H. S. Williamson, A. Wilson, J. N. Wilson, J. T. Woodruff. F. G. WOLTZ, C. B. Wright, T. O. Wright. W. C. Wright. J. T. C. Yarborough, R. S. Andrews, T. M. Austin, D. R. AXLEY, L. Bennett, P. A. Carr, a. H. Conrad, H. C. CONROY, F. Cox, H. L. Coulter, V. A. Daniels, J. M. Ervin, C. E. Feezor, J. G. FOLGER, A. D. Graham, A. W. Graham, F. P. Griffin, M. A. Hill, T. F. Iloll of (nnotiv.) Wo:(i l) or.s Hunter, D. T. ISLEY, C. L. Johnson, C. L. Kritzer, H. R. Long, H. C, Jr. McCall, F. B. McDuffie, R. a. McIntosh, J. W. McIVER, J. W. McKenzie. B. W. McLendon. L. P. Dates, M. N. Pate, J. G. Paty, B. F. Perrie, D. J. Price, J. V. Price, L. A. Price, T. M. Ragland. W. T. Rankin, E. R. Rankin. W. W.. Jr. Reid, R. a. Scarborough, J. B. Scott, S. F. Scott, L. V. Shax ' er, W. G. Smith, M. T. Stanford, W. R. Stroup, M. a. Thompson, W. R. Totten, H. R. Vann, N. Wall, L. B. Weaver, J. R. TWO HUNDRED TEN WaL 1 The Young Mwm ' s CHRi nAw Association nd the spiriti l-i-:W facts will tell the central things in the V-.ung Men ' s Christian Association. The I ' .ihle Study work was organized on the group basis, with a total enrollment of three imii.hed and twelve, ana a persisting average weekly attenaance of one hundred and forty. I Ins work was made responsible by a system of group secretarial reports to the chairman, aihl was sustained through the year by three normal classes for the twenty -two student Ir.nlcrs, who held their groups to the end. The motive of the Bible Study work was to I iiKtiicipate the minds of the young men from the tyranny of a mechanical conception of the iiible and religion, and to put them in more individual touch with the lived ideals al personality of Christ as a savior of men to their higher natures. The neighborhood work conducted by the students directions three- and four-mile walks. A training class was very pleasant, among a kind and hospitable people, held during the year. Members of the University faculty The neighborhood work was also concerned with starting country-side. in the rural communities re, or the student leaders met we Box parties, Christmas trees, made talks in the churches a ched out in all •kly. This work ind picnics were , and schoolhouses. ng the boys of the meetings, came three important id Religion ; the second on North Carolina Problems ' ; and the thii e book exchange did a good business, handling over twelve hundred books change continued through the nine months. The self-help department ek for permanent positions and odd jobs. es on The Life Work and $530.00 the lookout dolla had been contributed to the work of Eugene to follow. The reach of Barnett ' s life is inestimable in they give their money to his work at one of the decisive on to be By February the first two hundred and K. Barnett, in China, with a prospective sum raising the faith of the men of this college, as centers of the Cliristian advance. The Association secured Dr. L. R. Wils financial system has been further organized on a business-like realize that it is a business as_ well as a religious organizatio osition that business needs religion. Two other notable things in the year were the evangelistic campaio-n and the Kansas City Con- vention. Mr. E. C. Mercer and Charles D. Hurrey, without the surface stirring of emotions, brought men face to face with the facts of sin and religion and life in a way that will remain. The five students who represented the University at the Student Volunteer Convention at Kansas City came back with a new sense of the spiritual values, with the inspiration of a great cause, and with a vision of the world ' s needs that carried over into the life of every day. nd that there THE WORKERS I. MES E. HOLMES President R. C. If. S. WILLIS Vice-President T. A. FRAXK P. GR. 1I. M Gei SPENCE Secretary HOLMES Treasurer leral Secretarv RELIGIOUS MEETINGS (, i:. I ' . KKKR thairman ' .EDRdE K. IIOLTOX ..Advertising Manager Speakers in the College Men and Religion Prof. II. W. Cb; Ke W. D. .Mos ' Willi: Speakers in the North Carolina Problem Series: Education, Prof. M. H. Stacv and I ' rof. N. W. Walker; People of the Mountain Forests. Prof. C. Cobb; The Proposed Con- stitutional Amendments. Dr. T. G. deR. Hamil- ton; Health, Dr. C. S. Mangum; Religion, Dr. W. K. L. Smith. Speakers in the Series Devoted to the Study of Negro Life in the South : Dr. C. L. Raper, Kev. W. I). Moss, Prof. H. W. Chase, Dr. W. deB. MacXider, Prof. M. H. Stacy, and H. S. Willis. Special Topics: Church Unity, Prof. A. H. Patterson ; Personal Purity, Rev. Homer W. Uni ' Isaiah. Addr by Prof. H. H. Willi; ranged a series For the Spring, were •Life Work ' addresses. For the spring, was given a series of Life Work addresses: Missions in China, W. D. rt ' eatherford and Rev. George Worth; Missions n Japan, Rev. Heckelmann ; and Missions in the A ' ..rl.l. W. 11. Ramsaur. Bible Study: T. C. Boushall. Chm. Leaders of Normal Groups: Men of the Old Testament, Prof. ' H. W. Chase; Life of Christ, Rev. W. D. .Moss; Xew Studies of the Acts, F. P. Graham. Leaders of Student Groups: J. V. Whitfield, F. W. Norris. W. P. Fuller, J. I.. Harrison, G. W. Eutsler, C W. Ileckwith, J. O. Dysart, H. W. Collins, L. H. kanson, J. S. Bryan, R. T. Bryan, 1. E. Turlington, F. O. Clark- son, E. V. Keesler, P. Woollcott, John W. Lasley. J. M. Parker, D. H. Killifer, C. A. Boseman, R. B. House, Roger McDuffie, and W. F. Taylor. S. B. Lindau and R. S. Newman were lead- ers of the local chapter of the Hebrew .Menorali Society, which was devoted partly to a study of the Old Testament- NEIGHBORHOOD WORK V. P. FULLER Chairman i. F. AULD Secretary Clark ' s Chapel; J. M. Parker, N. A. Reasoner, Graham, L I.- Lee, , and J. N. Bynum. Walker, J. V. Scott, anil B. F. Auld. COLORED WORK: H. S. WILLIS Chairman Sunday Schools: T. R. Gentry, ,R. C. Mitchell, and II. S. Willis. Night School— Spelling: C. L. Fore and W. C. Wright. Grammar: Cecil Rymer and Thomas A. Jones, Jr. Writing: Flovd Elsom and B. F. Auld. History: C. W. Beckwith. Arithmetic; S. B. Lindau and R. H. W. VVelcli, Ir. Supply Teachers: C. F. Andrews, P. Wooll- cott. Paul Smith, and Adam Thorpe. arion V owler Rankin ' s Chapel: Frank . U. . h ;Dade, A. L. Tyler Mount Carmel: R. R. V id 11. 1 ' .. Hester. Orange ; K. F. Bradshaw Calvand er: J. E ;. Holmes Ephesus :: R. C. Vaughn ORGANIZATIONS .iVrotjittiimooo ' 0 f 3t, Andiiey -t - REV. W. H. STARR. Rector 4- 4- OFFICERS J. N. Bynum Director F. O. Clarkson Vice-Direclor R. A. McDuFFIE Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS J. N. Bynum F. O. Clarkson E. G. JOYNER D. H. KiLLIFER B. M. Lackey G. L. Lambeth R. A. McDuFFiE W. G. Wilson J. N. Wilson M. P. M. Weeks A. L. Tyler J. J. Harris B. B. Hyatt ■i- HE rule of prayer is to pray daily for the spread of Christ ' s Kingdom among men, especially young men, and for God ' s blessings upon the labors of the Brotherhood. The rule of service is to make at least one earnest effort each week to lead some man nearer to Christ through His Church. TWO HUNDRED FOURTEEN WiL I ' ?i.! (: ' :(;i.iCiN(c: (Ayc MCfi. Frank. Drew, a t q President D. R. Harris, ARE J. S. Cansler, B m n E. S. Reid, :s a e G. V. Strong, Z M. T. Spears, k A G. C. Meckel, A w W. C. Lord, 2 N X ' . P. Fuller, i x D. A. Bigger, k :£ T. S. Rovster, n K , N. S. Vann, J) X 1 H w 1 3 Founded at Yale m 1844 Colors: Crimson. Blue, and Cold Publications: Delta Kappa Eps ' don. Quarlerl]) Journal liotn ( hapi-, ' Oi ' of O ' olta ! .a;)oa osilon Established in 1851 FRATER IN FACULTATE William Morton Dey FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 Kenneth Claiborne Royall Donald Rwn Harris ■VX illiam Lewis Thorp CLASS 1915 B r P Ralph Case Spence William Dossev Pruden Philip Woollcott CLASS 1916 Francis Osborne Clarkson John Manning Hlske Frederick Philips Wood James Leftwich Harrison Evan Wilkins Norwood Robert Hazelhurst Wright. Jr. AX ILLIAM John Hoover George Claiborne Royall. Jr. Allen Caulincourt Zollicoffer LAW AucLsTLis Washington Graham BETA CHAPTER OF DELTA KAPPA EPSILON r Pm Colors: Pinh ami Bhc Flower: Rose Founded al Miami College in 1839 Publication: Bela Theta Pi ■i- ■iiota Chapt.) o ' { iVotn ' ThoU Pi Founded as Slar of ihe South Chapter of Mvslic Seven Fraternity. Consol.dated with Beta Thela Pi in 1889 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Alvin Sawyer Wheeler Ph D Kent James Brown. Ph.D. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 John Scott Cansler Henri Price Foust DuviD Wills Hunter John Roci well kEN ' iON CLASS 1915 Thomas Fuller Hill CLASS 1916 LAW Malcolm Norval Oates William Trent Ragland George Barnes Louchran William Holt Oates ( - wix - ; BETA CHAPTER OF BETA THETA PI FRATERNITIES r LJ c::SS rr::i SlG? lA .A( . !IA l lVS(.l,OM Flower: VioUl Founded al the University of Alabama in 1856 Colors: Old CoU and Purple Publications: The Record. Phi Alpha (Secret) Xi Chaptor of Si; iiva AloUn F.milon Established 1857. Suspended 1862. Re-established 1885 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Edward Kidder Graham. A.M. Vernon Howell Ancrew Henry Patterson. Ph B. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 Joseph Lenoir Chambers, Jr. James Gerald Cowan CLASS 1915 Edward Yates Keesler CLASS 1916 Thomas Calvin Linn, Jr. MEDICAL Fairley Patterson James Frank Davies Conroy Edward Soloman Reid. Jr. FRATERNITIES CHI CHAPTER OF SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 1 ' .ETA l Sl Established 1858. Suspended 1868. Re-orsanized 18S5 Color: White CJo.siloa Chaptor of ' -ota !Vi FRATRES IN FACULTATE Charles Staple Mancum George Howe FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 George Vaughan Strong William Pell Whitaker CLASS 1915 Heaton Carr Frederick Cain Manning George Allen Mebane, Jr. Claiborne Thweat Smith CLASS 1916 Meritus Emmett Robinson Adam Treadwell Thorpe FRATERNITIES UPSILON CHAPTER OF ZETA PSI l , .l(A ' VmJ OiVCCGA Founded In 1865. al ihe Virginia Mil.lary Inslilule Colors: OIJ ColJ and Sky Blue Flower: While Tea Rose Publication: The Palm ■V -i- Alijan Oolcu C,lvai)i-. ' .)r of Ali ha Cnn Oiivo; Ellabl.shed m 1879 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Joseph Hyde Pratt Atwell Campbell McIntosh FRATRES IN URBE R. S. McRae C. F. McRae FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 George Frank Drew, Jr. James T. Pritchett CLASS 1915 Baldwin Maxwell CLASS 1916 Hoke Barrymore Black H. G. WlNSLOW MEDICINE Allen Hoyt Moore PHARMACY Kenneth Alexander Kirby Edmund J. Lilly, Jr Joseph Strange Huske William Oliver Huske Walter L. Holt FRATERNITIES H I M O M I K A P ; A f , 1 ] ( A (.S OU r i [ I.: ;IN) Founded al Washington and Lee in I8b3 Colors: OIJ Cold and Crimson Flowers: Red Rose and Magnolu Publications: Kappa Alpha Journal and Messenger and Special (Secret) IJiWiloii Chaoi ' Oi ' of Kappa Alplia Established in 1881 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Joseph Gregoire deRoulhac Hamilton, Ph.D. Charles Holmes Herty. Ph.D. Lucius Polk McCehee, A.B.. LL.B. D. H. Bacot, A.M. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 Henry Cyrus Long CLASS 1915 William Capehart Walke Luther Avon Blue CLASS 1916 Frank C. Hancock James Alexander Taylor LAW Marshall Turner Spears William Clark Thompson MEDICINE Roy Hamilton Long Robert Newton Page Beverly S. Royster Kenneth Raynor Ellington Paul Archer Bennett William Isaac Procter Giles Mebane Long Joseph Sanford Cowles EmiLrson Wiley Jarman ?r m r FRATERNITIES BETA CHAPTER OF PHI DELTA THETA .gffi m w v f 1 vSkvma ' Mu Founded al X ' nsinia Mililaiy Inslilule m 1868 Colors: SUi. H ' liiU-. and Cold Flower: While Ro e PUBI IC ATIOS : Dc (u uf Sioma A 1 V% Cbapiar of -Si ma Nu L.lablished n. 1888 FRAIRES IN FACULTAl 1. WuLiAM DeBlrnilkl Mai NiDtR, M.D. Archibald Henderson. Ph.D. FRAIRtS IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 William Campbell Lord Harry Barnette Grimsley Carl Dukfy Iavlor CL.ASS 1915 Thomas Callendine Boushall William Tull Grimsley CLASS 1916 William Borden Cobb Clyde Lancden Fore John Haywood Jones David Thomas Tayloe Carl Barden Wilson John Laurens Wright LAXX ' Joseph Raymond Lee MEDICINE Benjamin Whitehead McKenzie FRATERNITIES .x vSuaViA Cm Founded al Miami College m 1855 Colors: Old Cold and 5 y Blue Flower; White Rose Publications: The Sigma Chi Quarlerh: The Sigma Chi Bulletin (Secret) 4- + a ' l] l a Tau Chai ' ioi ' oi Sl; raa Chi Established 1888. Suspended 1901. Re-eslablished 1913 FR.ATRES IN FACULT.ATE James Finch Royster, Ph.D. Wesley Critz George. A.B., A.M. William Lewis Jeffries. A.B., A.M. John Wayne Lasley. A.B., A.M. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE GRADUATE John Wesley MiIver. A.B. Benjamin Franklin Aycocr Karl Braswell Bailey, A.B. Benjamin Belver Sears CLASS 1914 Roy Bowman McKnight CLASS 1915 Fred Bays McCall Walter PlIjNy Fuller William Carey Dowd, Jr. Daniel Long Bell Charles Edgar Erwin Charles Lewis Johnson George Willard Eustler CLASS 1916 Herschel Vespasian Johnson Douglas Beaman Darden James Parks Rousseau MEDICINE Clayton Willard Eley Adolphus Barte Greenwood FRATERNITIES m% I g -isa?;: v ' -a! ifiiiia aiiiHK:. ALPHA TAU CHAPTER OF SIGMA CHI ' m ?; =% ' t:::ao- KaP1V S(CuV(A Founded at the University of Bologna in 1400, and Established in America at the University of Virginia. December. 1867 Colors: Scarlet. While, and Emerald Creen Flower : Lily of the Valley Publications: Caduceus and Crescent and Star (Secret) Alp ' an iV( ( Coaot ' or of Kapoa Si; mn FRATRES IN F.ACULTATE C. T. Woollen M. C. S. Noble Grover Beard FRATER IN URBE L. P. McLendon FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1914 R. T. Allen R. E. Little J. A. Hardison G. L. DORTCH CLASS 1915 CLASS 1916 LAW F. D. Phillips MEDICINE W. A. Smith PHARMACY F. M. Patterson W. B. TOWNSEND Z. L. Whitaker William Oliver Smith F. E. Wallace DeW. Kluttz Hansford Simmons k fi f FRATERNITIES ALPHA MU CHAPTER OF KAPPA SIGMA ■■mX Wi.W :G2£g: P Kappa .Av i ia Founded al Univeisity of Virginia in 1868 Colors: Camel ami Old CnlJ Flowers: Lily oj ihe yalley and Cold Standard Tulip Publications: 77k.- Shi.ld and Diamond. The Dagger and Key (Secret) ■i- + Tau Ciia])t«r of Pi Kappa Alpim Established in 1893 FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE CLASS 1915 Graham Harden CLASS 1916 James Marmaduke Cox Harvey McKay Pleasants LAW William H Cowles MEDICINE Norman St George Vann Sampson Thomas Royster Joseph D. Boushall FRATERNITIES TAU CHAPTER OF PI KAPPA ALPHA -4- r= Colors: Olive Creen Pill Ca ] (Medical) nJ While Flower: Lily of the Valle), Publication: Phi Chi Quarterly nJ leave S ' v .nYA Tivoi;a Chni ' tor of Vh CM FRATRES IN UNIVFRSITATE Rov Hamilton Long Fairle ' v Patterson James U 11 LiAM Alexander Smith Allen Moore CLASS 1914 Clayton Willard Eley Thomas Sampson Royster William Peter McKay Norman St. George Vann Adolphlis Barte Greenwood Paul W. Fetzer Benjamin Whitehead McKenzie CLASS 1915 David Andrew Bigger Joseph Dozier Boushall Henry F. Kirkpatrick Paul Archer Bennett SIGMA THETA CHAPTER OF PHI CHI Colors: Prussian Blue (Chemical) Founded al bnive.s.ly of nconsm 1902 J Chrome ) ' ellnn Flower: Re,l Carnaiion Publication: The Hexagon Established m 1912 FRATRES IN FACULTATE F. P. Venable. Ph.D., LL.D. C. H. Herty, Ph.D. W. L. Jefferies. M. A. J. M. Bell. Ph.D. A. S. Wheeler. Ph.D. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE GRADUATE SCHOOL C. B. Carter CLASS 19U W. N. Pritchard CLASS 1915 W. H. Harrell CLASS 1916 L. C. Hall MEDICINE W. A. Smith J. T. Dobbins A. J. Flume F. D. Conroy V. A. Coulter A L. Cox ORGANIZATIONS ' [ [[■■l 0;0):!:;l 0[ -ri(:C 0, ' VSI.S Sheik Austin H. Carr Wong-Lees F. C. Manning G. A. Mebane M. H. Meeks H. C. Long © Pasha George V. Strong IVo-Langs W. C. Thompson M. T. Spears W. P. Whitaker, Jr. R. H. Long Confucii Strong, G. V. A. H. Carr F . W. Winston, Jr. R. E. Little, Jr. San FORD CowLES P. A. Bennett TWO HUNDRED SIXTY-EIGHT %e: 313 Order of G ' tmgVioviis UcoUuzs bbcUnsnnu D(cfbu cn b i ' ] li zbtjrn — V 1mar XXV HUL£RS K. D. S. r YAIXRIG K. M. K. N. G. P. o 272 PatricU Htnr } Winston ■n 278 CUaricB We c j Bai« 282 Lennox Po McLencion 285 H«rri) Woodburn Cbas ' .Bernard 292 CU born« ThwcaH Swi b d RouWiAC Hon iUon 293 Edmwnd Jones Lill j, Jr. U 295 Davtd Andrew Big «r 296 M« co m Norva 0«t«a 297 Jobn ScoH Cans cr 2 8 Dew.t KluUz T MS (k iUUIN ' . } LiAB ORGANIZATIONS AiVll ' IlOiXXOlMliCiN Dk I ( ' .. deR. Hamilton IVI; 1 . .■WI.AKS C. W. HiCGlNS Oscar I.FArn J. L. Chambers J. T. Pritchett s. V. Whiting J. . I. AN LtK W. p. Fuller T. C Rol SHALL K. C. ROVALL G. V. Strong L. B. GUNTER TWO HUNDRED SEVENTY-FOUR 9i ORGANIZATIONS AU KAPPA ALPHA is a national organization of men who have rep- resented their University in intercollegiate debating or oratorical contests. I Members of the Carolina Chapter are (from left to right) : K. C. ROYALL J. A. Holmes %: MEMBERS R. L. Lasley C. W. HiGGINS F. P. Graham W. F. Taylor F. L. Webster TWO HUNDRED SEVENTY-FIVE liS ORGANIZATIONS Ieta Kappa Founded at William and Mary College, December 5. 1776. Alpha O-f Mori; (1 c ' aroliaa Established 1904 OFFICERS H. W. Collins i _ President J. S. Cansler Secretary T. J. Wilson, Jr., Ph.D Permanent Treasurer ■h MEMBERS F. P. Venable, Ph.D.. LL.D. E. A. Greenlaw, Ph.D. M. H. Stacy, A.M.. ' 02 George Howe, Ph.D., Princeton E. K. Graham, A.M., ' 98 N. W. Walker, A.B., ' 03 W. M. Dey, Ph.D., Harvard L. R. Wilson, Ph.D.. ' 99 C. W. Bain. A.M. H. W. Chase, Ph.D.. Clarke K. J. Brown, Ph.D. J. W. Lasley. A.M.. ' 10 A. S. Wheeler. Ph.D., Harvard T. J. Wilson. Jr.. Ph.D., ' 94 J. B. Bui Lett. A.M.. M.D. W. C. Coker. Ph.D.. Johns Hopkins Mrs. Archibald Henderson. A M.. ' 02 H. M. Wacstaff. Ph.D.. Johns Hopkins .Archibald Henderson. Ph.D.. ' 98 CLASS 1909 Frank Porter Graham CLASS I9II W. F. Taylor CLASS 1914 A. R. Brownson F. D. Conroy H. C. Long. Jr. - J. S. Cansler H. L. Cox E. S. Peele J. L. Chambers. Jr. James Eldridge K. C. Royall H. W. Collins R. W. Holmes R. C. Spence G. V. Strong S. W. Whiting TWO HUNDRED SEVENTY-SIX ORGANIZATIONS {C b ( A W 1 S ( I . O M ( L (- C !CR ATI Y ) Founded al Vanderbill in 1906 Colors: Creen and ColJ Flower: Jonquil 0 ' 1 1 N ' iKioor Clvnf)i-oi ' of.Sl; ian CJpslloa Established in 1907 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Prof. Edward Kidder Graham W. C. George FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE GRADUATE SCHOOL E. R. Rankin J. L. Orr Lowry Axley CLASS 1914 J. F. PuGH [. Lenoir Chambers CLASS 1915 B. F. AuLD G. W. Eustler W. P. Fuller D. H. Killifer CLASS 1916 T. C. Linn G. M. Long TWO HUNDRED SEVENTY-EIGHT s r- T ig ORGANIZATIONS .11 MUMA LI ' : TWO HUNDRED SEVENTY-NINE 7iL im ( ' j:l:UV(AM Om ] R. Bailey, 1. M. Bennet, p. a. Bell, D. L. Bigger, D. A. Black, H. B. Blount, F. L. Blue, L. A., Jr. boushall, j. d. Boushall, T. C Bryan, J. S. Bryan, R. T. Brownson. a Cansler. J. S. Carr, a. H. Cobb. W. B. Cone. Herman conroy. f. d. Chambers, J. L., Clarkson, F. O. Cowan, J. G. DowD, W. C, Jr. Drew, G. F. Ellington, K Erwin, C. E. Fore, C, L. FousT, H. P. Fuller. W. P. Grimsley, H. B Harrel. W. H. R. Harris, D. R. Harrison, J. L. Hart, J. G. Harden, Graham Hicks, W. S. Hill. T. F. holton, g. r, Hunter, D. W. HUSKE, J. S. Huske, W. O. Jones, J. H. Johnson, F. S. Keesler. E. Y. Kluttz, D. W. Leach, Oscar Lilly, E. J., Jr. Linn, T. C, Jr. Little, R. E., Jr. Loughran, G. B. Lord, W. C. Manning, F, C. Maxwell. W. B. Mebane. G. a.. Jr. Meeks. M. H.. Jr. Moore, A. H. McKnight, R. B. Gates, M. N. Page. R. N.. Jr. Parker. W. R. Patterson, Fred Paty, B. F. Prevatt, J. R. Pritchett, J, T, Proctor, W, L Pruden, W. D. Racland, W. T. Reid, E. S., Jr. Robinson, M. E. Royster, T. S. royall, k. c. ruffin, t. w. Spears. M. T. Spence, R. C. Smith, W. A. Strong, G. V. Taylor. C. D. Taylor. J. A. Townsend. W. B. Vann. N. S. Wallace, F. E. Williams, M. M. Wilson. C. B. WiNSLOW, H. G. Whiting. S. W. Whitaker. W. p., , ' 00D, F. P. WooLLCOTT, Philip ZOLLICOFFER. A. C. Jr. S ■..g ' - - y ( ' ■1 M ' isiriiiii ' yvt iS s 5 - ' M |m IWDi . ' n--- ORGANIZATIONS ORGANIZATIONS Coov I I, RR n Nevilix Jrm Stroud Spurceon Spears Avon Blue Yeddy Manning Henri Meeks Smack Oates Dave Bigger Red Ellington -Cock ° ' hc Walk Assisianl MEMBERS Archie Bennett Teg Thompson Kitty Little Doc Kluttz Frank Drew Lenoir Chambers Billy Whitaker Austin Carr Bitty Mebane Joe Boushall Gay Dortch Bob Winston Tad Lilley TWO HUNDRED EIGHTY-TWO HZ St BALL MANAGERS, COMMENCEMENT, 1914 MARSHALS. COMMENCEMENT, 1914 r, ' :ii r4C ' :4 r c ' jt CHAPEL HILL PULLMAN BACK FROM RICHMOND (i ' ootiJaTI ' T rms H GcLr-0 lhcL -4lMe-UP, n TLoucHsMQ TburxK cLovNr. , R G o 3. I Pavv- Catch. LEFFER—SURE . HES A GOOD EGG— IF HIS SHELL IS A LITTLE SOFT Marsh — You say there was a lot of Rough House at the show? Fuller — Yes. Two drunk town fellows were on my left, a drunk clothing agent was behind me, and Tom Gilman was on my right. Dr. Booker — I want some wineglasses, Mr. Patterson. Fitzgerald (tries audibly to smother a roar of laughter). Dr. Booker — That ' s all right, Fitzgerald; you needn ' t take this for anything. These are for the play. Fitzgerald — I would like to join that Dramatic Club, Doctor. (Curtain.) (Pro- longed applause.) •ir ir It This set of questions was put to the Freshman Class, and some of the answers follow. 1. Who pays Trenchard ' s salary? Alumnae. 2. Who elects the Business Manager of the Glee Club? English Departnieni. 3. Is basket-ball a major or minor sport? Generally considered a minor, but players receive monograws. 4. What organization finances the Star Course? Henry Meel(s. Litlerature Sociel}). 5. How much work must a man pass to indulge in Varsity athletics? Four hours. Twelve hours. 6. What is our Scholarship rule in our athletic requirements? Nothing hul tuition. If you mal e the team, you gel your tuition free. No man who has a scholarship may indulge in alhleiics. 7. How many fraternities in college? Twenty-three. 8. Name as many as you can. Golden Fleece. German Club. Fi Kappa Thela. Sigma Kai. Kappa Alph. Law K. A. Kappa Alpha. Zeta Psi. Sigma Nue. Amaihopham. Cogn Head. 9. How are Y. M. C. A. officers nominated? By Faculty. 10. What is the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, and who selects it? The Y. M. C. A. Cabinet is a form of bookcase which contains boolfs. The Secretary usually selects it. 14. What is the Pan-Hellenic Council? To give characteristic names to the Freshmen. It is an organization in the Creel( Department. 15. What officers compose the Athletic Council? Coach Trenchard. E. B. Rankin. %E TWO HUNDRED EIGHT Y-SEVE im I will have this printing done quicker than a lamb can wag its narrative. two dolla -1- •1 ' 4 have a new picture made for the Yackety Yack. A new negative will cost only President — All in favor of the motion say — ParlIAIHENTARIAN — Mr. President, I object. To carry that motion we will have to vote tor the e. and that will kill the motion. ' t 4 ' 4 TyT)o; i ' ai)hical ii rj ' ors Dr. Weatherford ' s two books on the Negro Problem have added much to the geological knowl- of the South. George Eulsler has handled eight hundred and fifty cooks for two hundred and fifty men in the Exchange this year. A 100 Yard . TARHEEL board ? ?- ' V, THE MAN THAT PUT THE BILL IN SOUTH BUILDING THE BELL THAT PUT THE DING IN SOUTH BUILDING PUBLIC OFFICE PUBLIC CUSS •A LITTLE HARD LUCK NOW AND THEN HAPPENS TO THE BEST OF MEN ' THE PRESIDENT TRYING TO PRESERVE ORDER FIRST-HAND KNOWLEDGE OF SPECIFIC GRAVITY WHERE LOGARITHMS FAIL Til;; .Sayu ; .s of Ru ' ty ( I hal IS. ihose ihat are fit lo print.) Sanford (home of his roommale) has morning, noon, and night — nothmg else. Gooch ' s Cafe: I want some flyspecks. We haven ' t any such things. Then take ihcm off your bill of fare. bet ed Cabbage one tii nd he lit ahead. ' Hoskie Parker ' s automobile cylinders talk to each other. What do they say? ' You do il this lime, and I ' ll do it next. ' Coming up a hill the other day 1 heard one say. You ' re a liar. I did it last time. It ' s your turn now. A man died in front of the posloffice at Clayton (friend ' s home town), on Christmas D they found him four days later. v if them iy. and oman nose roams Thai ' s nothing. My father had a cc McIvER: Buttermilk? Sure, what else could she give but hi I went to see the palmist, and got but he got his nose red. his face, a cow that 1 milk hand read, I don ' t k twentv-four quarts of buttermilk. where Rabbit Bailev went; RABBIT: X hat is that thing around the tree for? Rudy: To keep the tree from leaving. BUT IT DIDN T WORK ES MANY RATTYCAL STAT£M£ TWO HUNDRED NINETY SiE 3k ' It takes the powder rag to make her Ian go. Said Pa; and Bill said. Yes, I might say, too. It lakes the ' Powder Rag lo make her tango. And both remarks were made of Sisler Sue. —J. L. Orr 4 4 4 TR AC K TELA M ■iO SLEEPS UP STAIRS? SO DO , vS(if(Ya: oi:i: ' .; .S:v;i:io( 100 -Rea soMS 4o ynoMari A.5 ir Ought to Be. K a. V e IT. THt LATEST COME-OFF I sipped the nectar from her ruby lips. As on the couch we sat; And I wondered if ever another guy Had s;pped from a mug hke that. —Polly Parrot The dance was fast and furious. The negro sat by her lonesome, eating her dish of cream. A gallant buck, who had been furtively eyemg her. sidled up as she was licking the spoon. Is yo program full? he asked. Go on. Nigger, does you think one saucer of cream will fill my program? GEOLOGY STUDENT (.TAKING PREFERRED ROCKER) thank YOU: I LIKE TO ROCK At tin; Oidli ' or ' l ' Sir, do you I ' ke auburn hair? The waitress slyly dared ; And hung with dread an auburn head. Like one who really cared. ' You bet I do, the student smiled, And that ' s why I like you. ou 11 be well tried, the maiden sighed, For there ' s one in your stew. J. L. Orr A sweet suffragette surnamed Anna, While tripping her way through Savannah, Fell flat in the street. And sad to repeat. The cops they proceeded to can her. Then proudly she floated the banner. And said in her manliest manner: I really refuse To admit it was booze. But I must have struck a banana. W. D. Kerr A sprightly young sister named Sparrow Pa ' d pop calls in a wheelbarrow. She sighed with a smile, Though quite in the style, I fear that my skirt is too narrow. W. D. Kerr not . ' ■SAID THE COW. MOO. MOO ' ' such a thing I NEVER DO. ' QUOTH ERVIN BULL SAID MCKNIGHT KC TWO HUNDRED NINET Y-THREiF. IR Now didn ' t he do it, though? He was before the Faculty charged with being drunk. •■I ' ou say vou were not drunk? demanded the President. Yes. sir. oung gentleman, what would you call be ' ng drunk? Well you see. Dotor, a man is drunk when he sees double. Now sec those two men over the they look like four men, you are drunk. ' oung man. there is ontv one man there. At the Summer School, Professor Patterson was slated for a lecture on liquid air. The liquid air was lo be secured from the Government at Washington. During the day. the following telegram was received: Dfessor Patterson Chapel Hill. N, C. The refrigeration plant temporarily supply frozen air. Change to hot- He did. disabled, ir lecture ISN T IT PECULtAR THAT THE STUDY OF ROCKS SHOULD BE CALLED EASY? PrOFFESSOR Howell (discussing the question of taking notes) —Some some by note. I believe 1 prefer those who play by note. 4 4 Professor Sncath had lo miss a Freshman Class of English, but he wanti lesson. He went to W. W. Rankin. Rankin, can you hold my class of En them their spelling lesson? I have a class that hour, but I will be glad to put it on the hoard ft ■d to glish play by ive the ext ho spelln nd , ' ■The secret of Dr. Ra Elephanters. 3 ' s. •ir ' ir ' ir as follow;: Bull Moosers gel I ' ' ir ' ir ' ir Notice — Meeting of the Progressive Party at 12; Alumni at 7.30 sharp. A full attenda cted. . S SCARBOROUGH, -LEG 5URVE VO HUNDRED NINETY-FOUR %c ]K ZliS [i ' roia tlv.) W ' O.h) lM ' (ol)Oolcs Bonnie Doone was Burnss sweetheart. Ballads are kindly superstitious poems. A ballard is a poem that has been handed down. He would not have accompliced anything. Among the best epic poems are Paradise Lost, the Iliad, the Anead, and Bear Wolf (Beowulf). Question: What is the chief use of H-S? Answer: H-S ' s used chiefly in 3A Chemistry. The man started to run, the bullet staking him somewhere between the fence cori.er and front gate, inflicting a superfical wound. The solubility of gas depends on its esthetic properties. Infinity aids the speed of reaction. Polarization is the effect of the hydrogen bubbles which form on the positive plates, causing less surface to be exposed to the liquid, and interferes with the potencity. The molecular theory of magnetism is where the molecules of the magnet become ' ; magnetized are each one a magnet before the bar of iron becomes a magnet. Each molecule is separated from the others, but when magnetized they cling to each other and are a magnet. An atom is the smallest living being. It is so small it cannot be imag ' ned. Atoms vary in size from a small shot to a baseball. There are two theories in regard to the X-Rays. One of these is that the pene- trative powers of the rays is great enough to force their way through certain substances. The other is that certain substances allow the rays to pass through without resistance. A prospective student wrote to President Graham, and said he wanted to enter the Pre-Meditation Class. ANTONYMS: BULLET. FOUR TWO HUNDRED NINETY-FIVE 1 1 W ' Yiint ' s m n Namo? ' — yacilty A sea food m lis uncooked stale — RoYSTER. A pedeslrian — Walker. Thriving manufacturing towns in North Carohna — Graham and Winston. Enjoyed by sport:men — Chase. A fabric used for clothing in a cold climate — Woollen. Used in coloring clothes— DeV. Proclaimer of liberty— Bell. What the bell does — ToWLES. 9. Growth on the north side of trees- Moss. 10. A forty-thousand-dollar prize — Noble. 11. An article of apparel — McIntosh. 12. A child ' s plaything — ToY. 13. A disfiguring appendage sometimes found on the chin of the genus homo — BearD. 14. Nextdoor neighbor lo the moon — Starr. 1 5. What Adam and Eve raised — Cain. 16. Dangerously like a swear word — DacGETT. Billy McNider drinks nothing but cide Ikey and Bobby drink tea. Charley will take any kind of reviver. Bui BullitI says. Water for me ' {V;)( ' ilofi ' .s iCxooriiiioai; Poffloff stood in the laboratory. Whence all but he had fled; He had a pithed frog in his hand And an idea in his head. He amputated froggy s le Hung it on a clamp; And said. Now durn yoi punky camp. He rigged a smoked revolving drum. Pressed froggy ' s loe to it. And with a small induction coil He sent two amperes through it. Frogpv ' s leg waked up at once And— you may think I ' m lying. But on the drum it plainly wrote Tell mother 1 am dying. That ' s not enough. Old Poffloff just add your address, too. Froggy ' s great loe moved again — Bullfrog Street. 2-0-2. ' -P. M. DON ' T CRITICISE THE SOUTHER LROAD GOD MADE ALL CREEPING THINGS- TWO HUNDRED NINETY-SIX JUL ISi SteaDMAN — Let ' s get a cigar. Rankin — Let ' s go over where there is a Humidor. Steadman — I have never heard of that kind. Is i ten-cent brand? O! Horrors! What ' s in a name? A lily by any olher name would be jusl as pure, and a rose just as sweet. But would Chapel be the same if it were called Carborough ? In Chapel Hill, our bell rings every D(e)y. A Battle is on the campus, and a Bullett comes our way occasionally, and this is a Ba(i)n of our existence. Graham raises Cain, and the Sophomores Howell, and since the Seniors are a Noble class, there is a Toy for each of them. Howe they Prat(t) about the things they are going to do after graduation. Rankin(g) themselves with the Ph.D. ' s of Harvard and Yale. Theirs was an easy lot. though when Stacy sailed down the matrimonial Rhi(y)ne, teaching his Bernard, meanwhile, to eat (R)oster(s). Booker T. is a Parker, and Hickerson said to Smith, Law-son, what a Beard you have. Then the Juniors came out, with James as a leader, and did things up Brovm, even wiping up the Campus with a WoUen rag. After the War(r) ' en hostilities were over. Towles ' Walk-er ' Wag-staff, and Herty drove up m his four-wheeler George Wil(l)son be Manning a squad to quell the tumuli. Las(l)l(e)y. I will say that it ' Sneath my dignity to elaborate further on the Ethics of Na )llected from all those who did not eive his share of the Cobb. Henry OUR BEST JOKE FOR SOLUTION. SEE OTHER PACE -fO PUT THE Ff. TWO HUNDRED NINETY-SEVEN 9iL Si ou ' re it! There is no joke about those pictures. We wanted those pictures to go in. ancJ had no other place for them to go; so we just put them there. Why does this picture remind you of Charlie Coggm ' s jokes? A cinch — so shady. EVERLASTINGLY UNDECIDED A TIME EXPOSURE A lla«.k Joke While Prince Albert, the Sovereign of Old Virginia, was ndlng through the Piedmont section on his famous Brown Mule, he met Miss Fatima, the Queen of Omar at the Pell Mell Theater. Leav- ing his mule with Hassen. his slave, with orders to lake it through the old English Curve Cut, by way of Chesterfield, he look her to the Two Oaks above the Old Mill Between the Acts, and they sat down upon the Velvet. While he took off his Tuxedo, on account of the warmth, he said. My dear. I would have to Stag tonight were it not for my queen. You will be the Sensation. Could I leave John, Jr.. and Hen Besides, I am Red J, ' s Favorite. So she IS still the Pride of Reidsvill, It was a Lucky Strike when I met you. Come, be irge as Two Orphans, and go with you? Ne At ilv.) R,oyal Waiter, any soup on that bill of fare? ' No, sir; I just wiped it off. PEN. BETWEEN POST TWO HUNDRED NINETY-EIGHT IKC lis Loi k (I of abo quiet. other pause of to deposit him- ; follows a dis- Bailey, Brinkley, Capps — A pause two minutes to allow stragglers to become Chambers. Dowd. Eldridge — Pause of about three minutes to wail for the Education 5 boys to take their seats. Gentry. Gunler. Holmes — An two minutes lo allow Mr. McNei self and his law books. After the roll is finished, (he cussion of Truth. Yes. says Mr. Williams; all things lead to- gether lo Truth. They are bound to. But the only trouble is that they don ' t. Is that quite clear? Silence gives consent. To proceed, then. Truth is Unity. Mr. McNeil— Bui what is Unity? Mr. Williams — There is none. Mr. McNeil — How about Newlon ' s Law of Gravitation? Mr. W. — There is no Law of Gravitation. It is only a theory, which I myself can defeat when- ever I want to. Mr. McNeil— Then why do apples fall? Mr. W.— All apples don ' t fall. Some are picked from the trees; some dry up on the trees. That, I think, proves that there is no such thing as a Law of Gravitation. Now to go on lo Deduction. Mr. Brinkley. what deduction would you derive from the fact that chickens live on dry land while fish live in water? Mr. B.— Well. sir. I would make the deduc- tion that fish have watery dispositions. I don ' t see that that is at all necessary, in- terrupts Mr. McNeil. Well. proceeds Mr. Williams. We won ' t get into a discussion of that now. Are there any questions? T. I. Jones — Yes. sir; I ' d like lo know how lone It will be before the bell rings. AND OSCAR PERMITTED THIS vIONEY FOR LITERATURE INSTEAD OF PICKWICKS? TWO HUNDRED NINETY-NINE VjL liS Big McCall came up to the Hotel desk in Atlanta during the football trip, and extended the following bill: By 13 trips on elevator ft 10c— $1.30. There ' s a mistake. said Mac. I walked up once. THE HEART OF THE C. MPL S A dog strayed in. Professor Bullett inquired. n very glad lo see yt Pardon me— I can ' t recall your i It was Histology Class, the day after the e What kind of a dog is that? A Bull. Professor. ell run him out of here. He doesn ' t belong in this Class. ' W. B. UlUSTEAD— Good morning. Professor McKie. I am well. Had a nice vacation? Professor McKie— Very nice, sir; thank never forget your face. ■i- 4- Doc Harding (after a futile attempt to solve the problem) — Professor Bacot, w tell me what this is you have written on my paper? Professor BACOT Xhy. Mr. Hardmg. I just said Good history, but bad wi + 4- Professor VIilliams (on 4th)— Mr. Holder, whv didn ' t Christ answer Pilate ' s qi is truth? Holer — Because. I think. Christ was a philosopher. + + Quoth the cold wind to the Third English Class. Take off vour hats to me. Apostle that put Ed in BEd. oking so name, but I ' ll ill you please -iting. jestion, What for I am the bought the Titanic. Peel has the habit of tacking the phrase etc. on the end of his answers, which possibly(?) explains the following: Dr. Booker had blinded the whole Class the day after the big circus in Durham. Did you go to Durham too. Mr. Peel? ' es, sir. and etc.. replied Peel. -t- 4- Billy Pitt — Doc, my feet still hurt. Doctor — Didn ' t that Allen ' s footease help them any? Pitt — Not a bit. and I took a large dose. too. ■|7 — Mr. Parker, does it cost vou much to run your car? HOSKIE— Well, I guess It does. I have worn out eight pairs of shoes + 4- How about ' Too Much Johnson ' for a good play? said the manager. For God ' s sake, no, cried Booker. We had that last year ■i- + Fred McCall was trying to tell an old familiar joke. McIVER (hopelessly)— Noah, come claim thy own. + + Dr. Wilson (on Registration Day) — Mr. Burnett, have you taken Physics? Scipio — Er-er-yes, sir. Ma gave me a dose of salts the day before I left home. ■i- -h Whiting was trying to expound H. H. Wisen. Now. he says, My attitude during the Spring exams, while working for B K, might be described as one of Faith. P. WOOLLCOTT — Well, Seymour; 1 don ' t want to be personal, but it seems to me that your case demanded a good measure of Charity also. AND HE FELL ON HIS NECK AND WEPT S A CUBIST 7 ' ONE WHO TEACHES BLOCKHEADS FOUR COACHES Ratty — Froggie Wilson says that a frog will lay one hundred eggs a week. Fresh — Why not graft a frog on a hen. and flood the market with eggs? Rattv — You fool, the frog would die. Fresh — Then sell the hops to Anhauser Busch. Ratty was making a report on the Kansas City Conven- tion. He discussed the various speakers. I could talk an hour on W. J. Bryan, but 1 will only tell you what he said. First Geology Student — Does Professor Cobb know anything about the geological strata around Chicago? Graduate in Geology — No; but he can tell you all about I hem. just the same. + ■■They say you matriculated yesterday. Fresh — It ' s a lie, I don ' t care who says it. OUR LIBRARY ;S CARNEGIE ' S SOUL CLAIM
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