High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 31 text:
“
DEAN GRDVER BEARD; School of Pharmacy Since Grover Beard entered U.N.C!. as a freshman in iy(l3, he has been actively connected with the university. Besides this connection he has been secretary of the State Pharmaceutical Association since 1912 and managing editor of the N, C, Journal since 1919. He is a firm believer in pharmacy as a profession. Athletically he leans toward golf and can play a good game. At heart he is a farmer and spends much time after office hours in his garden at home. His great love is his Great Dane dog. DEANS DEAN W. deB. MacNIDER; School of Medicine Everyone knows Dr. MacNider ' s reputation and ability inside the laboratory, but few know that he is an ardent tiller of the soil. His garden as well as his collection of knives and baskets is the en y of every Chapel Hillian. A folksy man who is interested in everyone, his walls are covered with pictures of his friends. Happy in his work, happy in his hobbies, Dr. MacNider is probably happiest in the role of parent of Sallie. DEAN M. T. van HECKE; School of Law The fact that The Dean , supported by little Miss Shewmake, played third base in the recent Student-Faculty Day law baseball game is not indicative of his role in the daily routine of law school. His keenness of judgment is rivalled only by his never-failing good humor. He is as well-known for his friendly wink in the hall as he is for his Restatement of the Injunction Against Torts. DEAN W. W. PIERSDN; Graduate School Pontifical Pierson, who can strut sitting down. They may say that he lives on an academic diet, that he is adamant to student petitions, that he plays his cards so closely that he scorches his best. But for all this, the Dean, who hails from Alamaba, is an able administrator, an authority on Latin America, speaks Spanish fluently, appreciates the nuances of political theory, is possessed of a rare wit, an analytical mind, a profound store of general knowledge, and is a real human being. 27
”
Page 30 text:
“
UEAN A .W. HDBBS; School of Arts and Sciences It may have been a sore arm, a broken fishing Hne which lost a big one, never getting a shot at a turkey, any of all three, which drove this sportsman to the teaching of mathematics. There is an affinity between the vivacious statements of fishermen and mathematical reasoning. It is more difficult to explain how such a man could sink to a deanship, an office in which there is no vacation, in which meetings come thickest and fastest when hunting season is most inviting. He bears the burdens of this office with the quizzical expression of a balky mule, a Gulliver among the Lilliputians, but he remains forever the hunter, believing that students and faculty can be trained to follow the scent of truth. DEANS UEAN CDRYDON PERRY SPRUILL; General College An acquaintance thinking of Dean Spruill would think m such terms as fairness, reliability, common sense, kindness and tact. One who knew him better would underline these terms and would add another. He would add an unfailing, quiet sense of humor, and a fight for quaint, ironic quips — attributes which would lighten the hard days and make it possible for the Dean to practice all the virtues named above in his trying and responsible position. Besides, he is an Oxonian without an accent and a crack gymnast without vainglory. DEAN DeWITT DUDLEY CARRDLL; School of Commerce Growing acquaintance with Dean Carroll showed that his talk to us as fresh- men on Twenty-four Hours a Day expressed his own achievement in full and efficient living. Founder and head of the School of Commerce, earnest thinker, sundown golfer, and vigorous participant in business and civic life of Chapel Hill, he knows the answers and makes them work. DEAN SUSAN AKERS; School of Library Science Miss Akers has two middle names — the one is energy, the other is patience. Her boundless resourcefulness and ability command such respect that one is willing to work and work hard for her. She can bring forth a bit of humor to liven up every occasion. The great variety of her interests makes it a pleasure to talk with her.
”
Page 32 text:
“
' - 7 CAROLINA ALUMNI ASSDCIATIDN 2. HE University Alumni Association draws its membership from some 23,000 living alumni, ranging in age from Thomas S. Norfleet ' 69 to the youngest graduate of last June. These alumni live in each of North Carolina ' s 100 counties and in every state of the federal union. Basic units in the Association are the permanent classes and the local alumni clubs. Every alumnus is listed with some University class and each class ar- ranges reunions at commencement on a definite schedule. Organized alumni clubs exist in the ma- jority of North Carolina counties and in larger centers of alumni population outside the State. Active dues-paying alumni compose the Association ' s membership. General officers are elected annually by mail ballot of the members. Directors are chosen by class and club organizations. The individual member in addition to voting privileges receives the Association ' s maga- zine, The Alumni Review, which is published monthly during the academic year. The Association ' s Executive Secretary is J. Maryon Saunders ' 25, who also is Editor of The AluDiui Review and in charge of the Central Alumni Office at the Carolina Inn. Elected officers during 1939-40 are: President, C. W. TiUett ' 09; Past President, J. C. B. Ehringhaus ' 01; Vice Presidents, Fred I. Sutton ' 08, W. A. Blount ' 20; and Treasurer, George Watts Hill ' 22. Directors in 1939-40 are Wm. R. Kenan, Jr. ' 94 (Honorary), Dr. Hubert Haywood ' 05, R. C. deRosset ' 18, L. F. Abernethy ' 06, Leo H. Harvey ' 20, Charles R. Jonas ' 25, Ben Sloan ' 29, L. T. Hartsell, Jr. ' 22, George Stephens ' 96, D. Edward Hudgins ' 28, John W. Umstead ' 09, E. Earle Rives ' 21, Gordon Gray ' 30, Thomas Turner, Jr. ' 23, T. A. DeVane ' 13, Ben K. Lassiter ' 05, T. J. Pearsall ' 27, Dr. J. C. Tayloe ' 18, J. T. Gresham ' 28, ' W. B. Ellis ' 11, Lenoir Chambers ' 14, and W. D. Carmichael, Jr. ' 21. C. W. TILLETT FRED I. SUTTON W. A. BLOUNT J. M. SAUNDERS Alumni elected by the Association to the University Athletic Council are E. Earle Rives ' 21, Bowman Gray ' 29, and Dr. Foy Roberson ' 05.
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.