i
ALUMNI NEWS
OS
WINTER 1968
University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Jkllamnl Jlleuig
Locks are for keys, and all kinds of keys are being fashioned by the i
School of Home Economics on the Greensboro campus. Ever since ^
the first key was forged in ancient Egypt some four thousand years
ago, keys have been the symbol of education, the kind of education
that opens new doors on old values and new theories, the kind of
education the School of Home Economics is offering today in five
different programs.
As keys have opened doors, the School of Home Economics has
swept ahead in a new leadership role that has attracted the interest
and approval of industry in the state as well as far from North Carolina
borders. It's something of a quid pro quo relationship: industry needs what the School
and the University have to offer, that is, educated minds with fresh ideas, professionally
trained men and women capable of analyzing and resolving complex problems; and the
School and the University desperately need the financial support of industry. Examples
of industry's generosity — financially through the Home Economics Foundation as well
as by lectures, seminars and intern programs are featured in this issue.
Leo Heer, managing director of the Southern Furniture Exposition Building in High
Point, observed during his recent term as president of the Home Economics Founda-
tion: "It is increasingly clear that there is a great mutual interest between the School
of Home Economics . . . and all branches of commerce and industry that in any way serv,e
the American home." He further noted the need for "financial underwriting to supple-
ment the channels of normal State and governmental support."
This issue of TJie Alumni News explores only a portion of the new programs of the
School of Home Economics. The spring issue will cover other activities, especially those
reflecting sociological concern and community service.
VOLUME FIFTY-SIX
NUMBER TWO
WINTER 1968
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
COVER NOTE: Education, the key that unlocks
many doors, is the cover theme designed by
Baylor Gray of Hall Printing Company, High Point.
Edrtorial Staff
Gertrude Walton Atkins MFA '63 Editor
Carolyn James News Notes
Barbara Parrish '48 Alumni Business
Judith A. May Circulation
School of Home Economics
Focus on Man Dr. Naomi G. Albanese 2-3
Industry Aids Education Dr. Eunice Deemer 4-5
Job Opportunities Varied/Vital Dr. Pauline Keeney 6-7
Clothing and Textile Graduates 8
Textile Industry Has Keen Interest g
Sewing by the Book Barbara Clawson 10
Research in Foods and Nutrition Dr. Aden C. Magee 11
Institute in Middle America Dr. Franklin D. Parker 12-14
A Student View Karen Smith '68 14-15
The Outing Club: Respite from Academe William E. Kingsbury 16-19
Which Way Student Government '68? Jane Ann Ward '68 20-21
The New Theology Thomas J. C. Smyth 22-23
Experimental University
Civil Liberties Dr. Margaret A. Hunt 24
Jujitsu Dr. Claude Chauvlgne 25
Buddhism Dr. Lenoir Wright 26
Russia Before 1861 John Robertson '69 26
Bookshelf 27
News Notes 28-40
Spartans Spark Campus Spirit Back Inside Cover
A member of the American Alumni Council.
THE ALUMNI NEVI/S is published in October, Janu-
ary, April and July by the Alumni Association of
the University of North Carolina at Greensboro,
1000 Spring Garden Street, Greensboro, N. C.
27412. Alumni contributors to the Annual Giving
Fund receive the magazine. Non-alumni may re-
ceive the magazine by contributing to the Annual
Giving Fund or by subscription: $2 per year;
single copies, 50 cents. Second class postage
paid at Greensboro, N. C.
Alumni Association Board of Trustees: Margaret Plonk Isley '34, President; Martha Kirkland Walston '43,
First Vice-President; Cora Stegall Rice '45, Second Vice-President; Martha Fowler McNair '49, Recording
Secretary; Emily Campbell '67, Margaret Hudson Joyner '26, Hester Bizzell Kidd '51, Katharine Morgan
Kirkman '31, Mildred Templeton Miller '33, Anne Braswell Rowe '41, Betsy Ivey Sawyer '46, Betty Anne
Ragland Stanback '46, Charlotte Wilkinson Toler '32; and Barbara Parrish '48, Executive Secretary.
Editorial Board: Armantine Dunlap Groshong '44, Leiah Nell Masters '38, Betty Anne Ragland Stanback
'46, Margaret Johnson Watson '48; Louise Dannenbaum Falk '29 and Elizabeth Yates King '36, past chair-
men; Mrs. Elizabeth Jerome Holder, faculty representative; Margaret Isley, Barbara Parrish, and
Gertrude Atkins, ex officio.
The Alumni News: Wintek 1968
Naomi G. Albanese,
Dean of the School of Home
Economics, is one of the most
prominent home economics ad-
ministrators in the nation and
is at present vice president of
the American Home Economics
Association. Since her arrival on
campus from Ohio State Uni-
versity in 1958, she has made
many changes in the undergrad-
uate curriculum and placed new
emphasis on graduate work. A
handful of faculty Ph.D.'s ten
years ago has grown to 17 today,
and she constantly entices undergraduates to work toward higher
degrees, including the Ph.D., the first of which was awarded by
the University in the field of Child Development. The Ph.D. pro-
gram now is available in each of the school's five departments: Child
Development and Family Relations, Clothing and Textiles, Foods
and Nutrition, Home Economics Education, and Housing Manage-
ment and Interior Design. The Dean maintains a tie with students
through two means: a 12-member student committee which recom-
mends curriculum changes and acts as a bridge between adminis-
tration and students; and a non-credit senior seminar which focuses
on "the student's role as responsible citizen in world affairs."
School of Home Economics
FOCUS
ON
MAN
by Dr. Naomi G. Albanese, Dean
School of Home Economics
MAN is the central theme of anything tliat is designed.
The old engineering practice of building a device
and then giving it to the user so that he can learn how to
use it is no longer realistic. Today, one studies the capabil-
ities, limitations, and desires of the human and then builds
the system to suit the man. For example, the design of
spacecraft depends partly upon engineering and physical
tolerances of gravity and lack of gravity, the ability of the
human to sense, perceive, and act upon particular stimuli.
There exists a need for trained persons in the design
field who will think routinely of human factor reasons for
design. These individuals would assist in drawing out in-
formation about human behavior, human interests, and
human capabilities and would translate this information
into guidance which can be used to optimize the designs
of homes, furnishings, and accessories.
It was with these basic concerns as an impelling force
that a program in interior design was initiated in the Uni-
versity at Greensboro. The impetus for such a program —
which would place emphasis on capabilities and limitations
of individuals, their physical requirements in terms of
light, heat, space, and sound, and their preferences and
cultural backgrounds — came from two outstanding fumi-
tiire industrialists, Henry Foscue, president of the Globe
Furniture Company', and Leo Heer, managing director
of Southern Furniture Exposition Building, both in High
Point.
This four-year curriculum at die University is unique
in that it is based in the humanities and sciences as well
as art and designing. It has as its focal point the individual
and the setting in which he finds himself. Sixty-six per
cent of the 122 semester hours required for a bachelor's
degree is in liberal arts, for training and education only
for an occupation is illiberal, narrowing, and crippling to
the inquiring and inquisitive mind. The remainder of course
requirements is concentrated in housing and design within
the School of Home Economics.
With a cxu-riculum which combines the liberal and
professional emphasis, graduates are prepared to work
directly with contractors and architects, co-ordinat-
ing exterior house designs with interior layouts, fur-
nishings, and accessories, all planned for a designated
family. The evidence of theory and application was seen
in the January and February 1965 issues of the Brides
Magazine, which featured a home designed by students
in the program. Each member of the class submitted a
house design, and, from these, one was selected for a class
project to which each student contributed his creative
abihties. An architect and a design coordinator from the
Greensboro area served as consultants for the students.
The two-story contempnarary home which the students
planned is now the home of a family of four. Two other
homes "built" by students were featured in McCall's
Magazine (November 1958) and Living for Young Home-
makers (October 1959).
, The dieory and the art of furniture have their places
in the curriculum, and each graduate must be knowledge-
able concerning its historical contributions. During their
studies the students are required to do perspective,
mechanical drawings, and inkings; and, periodically, each
must complete an assigned project, such as the design for
an apartment, office, bank lobby, or home. For these
projects students select paint samples, fabric swatches,
This article is adapted from a speech delivered at the 55th annual
meeting of the Southern Furniture Manufacturers Association in
New Orleans, Louisiana.
The UNH'ERsrrY of North Carolina at Greensboro
It's the outside loorld that concerns the University's
School of Home Economics. A dynamic program in
arts and sciences dealing with every phase of family
living brings industry and higher education close to-
gether.
and furniture from existing lines — all within a restricted
and specified budget.
THE broad scope of study required includes such di-
verse courses as lighting and wiring, textiles, and
household equipment and laboratory courses that provide
in-depth study and actual participation in the refinishing,
upholstering, and tailoring of fiu^niture. The course offer-
ings also provide opportunities of exploration in the physio-
psycho-sociological areas. For example, students come face
to face with cold reality as they visit housing projects in
which every apartment is alike and in which every kitchen
is alike. These apartments are occupied by people from
different ethnic groups, from different socioeconomic strata,
and from different cultural backgrounds. By studying how
these people make use of the space and how they furnish
their surroundings, the students begin to sense that in-
terior design extends far beyond the physical surroundings
in that it permeates the thoughts and feelings of the
occupants.
Questions have been raised about design education.
It is wise for the interior-design student to become a
specialist? The best arguments for this point of view are
based on an awareness of the varied roles the interior
designer must assume in the practicalities of the profession
today. The designer's specialty lies in integrating the skills
of many others; and his education, training, and experience
must prepare him for doing this.
Field trips to various industries are an integral part of
the students' program to develop a sensitivity for and some
knowledge of the many facets of the home furnishing in-
dustry located in the South. Seminars scheduled eacli
week are planned with cooperating industries and are held
at the basic resource plant location, whether the product
be rugs, textiles, or fiuniture. Because industries them-
selves have been so enthusiastic in their response, the
program has been enriched by a continuous source of
classroom materials, guest lecturers, and instructional tours.
Design majors gain much from supervised work ex-
periences with practicing designers, manufacturers, photo-
graphers, and architects. In these experiences theory and
reality come into focus and exercise of skills, knowledge of
facts, and the inculcation of activities and ideals are
blended to meet individual and social needs sufficient to
our time. This experience may also become a vehicle for
exciting adventures into a design career.
Upon graduation, career opportunities exist at the
manufacturing, the wholesale, and retail sales levels; with
architects, contractors, or independent decorators; on
journalistic staffs of periodicals; and with consultants of
home-planning centers. Every interior-design graduate has
found a niche in the profession from New York to Cali-
fornia.
The editorial staff of the Home Furnishings Industr)'
Committee, after interviewing the interior-design students,
commented that the students themselves were enthusiastic
about then- courses and quite realistic about tire profession
they have chosen. "Some few high priestesses of decorating
may indeed peipetuate the myth of exclusivism, but these
design majors represent the new breed of decorators,
oriented and trained to provide services for Mr. and Mrs.
Typical American." Interior design is much closer to the
daily life of the so-called "average" American than it was
a generation ago. It has become an essential ingredient for
t^ventieth century living. D
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
Interior design majors visit the Southern Furniture Market
in High Point twice a year to observe fashion and to see
how fashion changes. Here also they have an opportunity
to meet furniture designers and to visit Alderman Studios
where publicity and advertising pictures are made. Above,
they Usten and learn from Florence Anderson '61, at right,
interior designer for Alderman.
Linda Martin of Raleigh, working on a room plan at the
drawing board, receives advice from Margaret Masalonis
of Fayetteville, left, and Christine Stadelmaier of Raleigh.
Students coordinate color, design, light and fabrics from
ceiling to floor, using sample swatches of carpet, fabric,
floor and wall coverings supplied by manufacturers as
another service to the School.
Industry Aids
Education . . .
a joint venture
by Dr. Eunice Deemer
School of Home Economics
Home Economics Foundation
Contributors
Industry — Foundations
Beaunit Fibers, Research Triangle Park
Blue Bell Incorporated, Greensboro
Burlington Industries, Greensboro
Carolina Power Company, Raleigh
Carolina Steel Foundation, Greensboro
W. J. Carter Fund, Greensboro
Duke Power Company, Greensboro
Ferguson Gear Company, Gastonia
Furniture Foundation, High Point
Groen Manufacturing Company, Chicago
Guilford Dairy Cooperative Association, Greensboro
Home Builders Association, Greensboro
Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company, Greensboro
Martha and Spencer Love Foundation, Greensboro
Lowe's Foundation, Norch Wilkesboro
McCrairy-Acme Foundation Incorporated, Asheboro
Madison Throwing Company Incorporated, Madison
Mount Airy Furniture Company, Mount Airy
North Carolina National Bank, Greensboro
Pilot Life Insurance Company, Greensboro
Shaw Manufacturing Company, Charlotte
Southern Furniture Exposition Building Inc., High Point
J. P. Stevens and Company, Greensboro
Virginia Electric Power Company, Richmond
The UNivERSiTi' of North Carolina at Greensboro
A textile seminar, sponsored by W. F. Fancourt
Company in November, is typical of
cooperation offered by industries who sponsor
several seminars throughout the year.
At right. Dr. Ralph Beaumont, Fancourt
vice president in charge of research and
development, talks to Linda Dick of
Greensboro, left, Leslie Ann Myers of Garden
City, New York, Judith Ann Blankenbaker of
Washington, and Dr. Victor Salvin, textile
chemist who joined the faculty in September.
m
"ANY of North Carolina's industries have collab-
orated to provide generous financial assistance, edu-
.cational information, encouragement, and good will
to the home economics program at the University at
Greensboro. A charter, signed by 122 prominent North
Carolinians, was issued to the Home Economics Founda-
tion, Inc. in 1946. This corporation was founded to aid
in the projection and expansion of the home economics
program at that time. The funds were allocated for train-
ing, studies, and research in the interest of developing
strong and eminent teaching and research programs, of-
fering short-term service courses, pubhshing and distribut-
ing service bulletins and research reports, and sponsoring
specially selected projects — all for the improvement of
home and institutional life. The Foundation emphasized
at that time that it could "serve in an appreciable way the
State's textile industry, its construction industry, its food
processing industry, its fisheries, its public utilities, its
clothing manufacturers, its fmniture and household goods
producers and many others."
The first annual report of tlie Foundation commented
further that the "results of the research which the Founda-
tion will be equipped to accomplish will be of inestimable
value to those industries whose products aie made for the
added beauty, economy, convenience, and serviceability
of the home."
To use one case in point, a textile industry has con-
tributed shares of stock to the Foundation and provides
a $2,000 yearly grant designated as a salary supplement
and for the expenses of research of a professor in textiles. In
addition, it has contributed funds for a salary supplement
for a second textiles professor. The company also provides
the opportunity for fourth-year textile majors and graduate
students to work in its Greensboro laboratories. Frequently,
company personnel are guest lecturers for University
seminars. Finally, the industry also has donated many
fabrics for use in textile classes and provides a textile
products display at the University.
Aside from the tangible assets provided by the 25 to
30 North Carolina industries in any one year, as well as
additional out-of-state-based industries, each of these
businesses creates a spirit of enthusiasm which is ex-
tremely contagious to educators working cooperatively
with the industries. It is impossible to the personnel of
any of these businesses and remain unaware and insensitive
to their vision of the merger which can and should exist
between education and business. This vision can serve as
a fountainhead of inspiration to supply the key to unlock
the planned purpose of education — eradicate rutted pat-
terns of thought and procedures — lest colleges and uni-
versities fall into decadent troughs of recession and be-
come known justifiably as obsolete fact factories.
We must not turn the key to lock ourselves in an ivy-
covered hall and claim academic immunity to the prob-
lems of society. We are, as all of society, enmeshed in a
ferment of change which is affecting the curriculum, the
instruments of education, the technological machines for
instruction, the organization of colleges and universities,
and the philosophies and goals of education.
Educators and businessmen recognize that school is
no longer the citadel for accumulating most of the knowl-
edge a person needs in his lifetime. It is now predicted
that much of what a person will need to know during his
life has not been discovered yet, and much of what is
expounded in college classes today either is or soon will
be irrelevant for meeting the changes which are increasing
at a rapid pace. We cannot turn back. We must accept
the fact that change is now our way of life.
The amount of knowledge itself is a change of stagger-
ing dimension. With knowledge doubling each ten years,
the emphasis of all educational levels, and particularly
the objective of higher education for liberal and profes-
sional programs, must be altered.
By accepting changes and by joint ventures with in-
dustries, we can capitalize on new opportimities. This in-
teraction will be the key to enable educators to guide the
graduates of colleges and universities to become com-
petent, incisive in thought, lucid in speech and writing,
confident in their chosen specialization, preceptive and in-
terested in learning new fields when necessary, and able
to transfer intellectual interest and inquiry from the class-
room to business and industry situations. D
This review of industry cooperation is based on a speech
Dr. Deemer made before the annual meeting of the American
Home Economics Association in Dallas, Texas, in June 1967.
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
CLOTHING AND TEXTILES
Job Opportunities
Are Varied /Vital
by Dr. Pauline Keeney
School of Home Economics
At ThaMmerS Lydia Prltchett of Elon College,
( photo at right ) checks unit conti-ol procedures with Mrs.
Cordelia Erwin, right, who is in charge of the perpetual
inventory of stock on the fashion floor of one of the lead-
ing Greensboro department stores. Above, Jeannie Randall
of Kinston and Roxie McMahon of Morganton admire a
gown in the Bridal Department, one of a dozen depart-
ments to which they were assigned during their six-weeks
assignment. They marked merchandise, worked in per-
sonnel and advertising, checked payroll, typed stencils, sold
sportswear, arranged displays and finished with a thorough
understanding of the total operation of a large department
store.
THE Clothing and Textile area of the School of Home
Economics, only nine years old this year, has been
keeping pace with the rapid expansion of the Uni-
versity at Greensboro. With the School's location in the
heart of North Carolina's textile manufacturing Country,
courses in this broad area of study are planned to provide
learning experiences for those interested in fashion and
in textile products used for both apparel and home furnish-
ings.
Students with imagination, creativity and a real in-
terest in clothing design usually prepare for careers in the
world of fashion. Courses offered in the Clothing major
include the study of costume and textiles of past centuries
as well as the economics and sociological and psyological
factors which influence the clothing needs of our current
age. Students electing courses in economics, marketing and
retailing are well prepared for careers in fashion merchan-
dising.
The Univebsity of North Carolina at Greensboro
Through the generosity of Piedmont industries, students observe
firsthand manufacturing techniques and consumer problems.
The Textile major is designed to appeal to those stu-
dents with interests and abilities in the sciences. With
the increased attention of the entire textile industry on the
scientific approach in the design and development of tex-
tile products, there is an increasing need for technically
trained personnel. Textile courses supplemented by courses
in chemistry, physics and mathematics aid in understand-
ing the array of new fibers, fabrics and fabric finishes on
the market. Emphasis is placed upon the specifications,
standards and legislation established to protect the con-
sumer.
Students in either major may elect a course in Super-
vised Field Experience. This course provides actual work
experience with department stores (see photographs on
this page) or in the laboratories of textile industries. The
opportunity to learn under the guidance and direction of
leaders in their chosen field is a valued supplement to the
academic program.
Four recent Clothing and Textile graduates who are
pursuing varied and interesting careers are featured on
the next page. They are: Beverly Bethea '59, a department
store buyer; Jean Pierce '64, a sewing instructor; Shari Dee
Hoenshell '64, a textile technologist; and Diane Hendricks
Boyland '67, a product evaluator. Other graduates are em-
ployed by Harris Research Associates in Washington, J. P.
Stevens and Company in New York City, the Good House-
keeping Institute, Dow Chemical Company in Greensboro
and many others.
Expansion of the graduate program now offers an op-
portunity for intensive study of Clothing and Textiles at
both master's and doctoral levels. Courses at this level are
highly specialized, offering many opportunities for in-
dividual study and research. Students completing these
advanced programs are prepared for careers in teaching
and research at the college level and for careers in re-
search or consumer service programs of the textile and
apparel industries. Ann Pulliam '65, who is in charge of
tlie wear-test program of the Blue Bell Corporation in
Greensboro, is enrolled in a graduate course taught by
Dr. Victor Salvin ( see page 9 ) . Much of what she is study-
ing she can apply directly to her work at Blue Bell.
Many graduates remain in the School of Home Eco-
nomics to direct research projects. Current research in-
cludes an Experiment Station project dealing with the
serviceability of bed sheets made from cotton of four dif-
ferent types; a pilot study, financed by a grant from the
National Institute of Dry Cleaning, on the effect of dry
cleaning on garments treated with durable press finishes;
and a grant from Beaunit Fibers to support research in the
area of color fastness of carpets when exposed to influences
such as light and atmospheric contaminants.
One of the unique features of the Clothing and Textile
program has been the proximity to both garment and
textile industries. Through the generosity of the industries
of Piedmont North Carolina, students at each academic
level have the opportunity to observe current manufactur-
ing techniques and to investigate problems related to the
utilization of the products of the textile and apparel in-
dustries. With such advantages, students become well in-
formed consumers and, following graduation, are well
quahfied for positions relating to consumer interests in
Clothing and Textiles. Q
At PragO-GuyeS Julia Graham of Roseboro and Pamela
Kirby of King adjust mannikin display in shop window.
At Meyer's Patsy Perry of Nashville, Barbara Tanner of
Wilson and Mary Alice Thomas of Magnolia observe Copy-
writer Linda Moore '65 of Reidsville in the advertising
department.
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
Diane Boyland '67 "in the Spring semester of my
senior year I took a Work Experience Course with Cone
Mills Corporation which brought to attention the many
phases of the textile industry. Upon completion of this
work course, I wanted to make Textile Research my
career. In June I received my B.S. degree in Home Eco-
nomics (Textiles) and I was offered the position as Prod-
uct Evaluator in Cone's Research and Development Divi-
sion. At the present time I am responsible for Cone's Wear
Test Programs, which involve four major stages: (1)
plaiming; ( 2 ) setting up; ( 3 ) conducting; and ( 4 ) evalu-
ating garments. Needless to say, I find my job challenging
and rewarding." Diane is photographed at left with Alice
Moore Cress '43 and Jeanne Jenkins McNairy '61, also Cone
employees in Research and Development. Alice is head of
the Technical Information Section and Jeanne is a technical
information specialist.
Jean Pierce '64 "I left the field of merchandising in
August to become sewing instructor in the Atlanta Con-
centrated Employment Program, a federally-funded pro-
ject directed toward the consistently unemployed. I have
planned my curriculum and set up my lab entirely on my
own and find great personal satisfaction in my work."
Jean may be putting to use some of the programmed
instmction in sewing developed in the School of Home
Economics ( see page 10 ) . A basic adult education program
is planned to supplement the approved program in
existence.
Clothing and Textile
Graduates of recent
years , . .
Beuerly Bethea '59 "As
buyer — department man-
ager for the Bridal Salon
of Rike's, a division of Fed-
erated Department Stores
in Dayton, Ohio, I help
plan and sell the attire for
several tliousand weddings
a year. My staflF includes 27
consultants, assistants, and
secretaries. It is creative,
rewarding, sometimes
nerve-racking, but my job
is never dull."
m
J . ..-.,.
- £^
Shari Hoenshell '64 "This past June I joined Fabric
Research Laboratories in Dedham, Massachusetts, as a
research associate in textile technology. Our company is
involved in various programs of research and development.
These include programs in biology, physics, and chemistry
—the organic and inorganic fibrous, structural, and mechan-
ical materials. Each program is unique in some way. My
work runs the gamut from tire cords to delicate spider silk.
In this photograph I am characterizing chemical and phys-
ical properties of silks from various species and gathering
data which possibly may be used in die development of a
new synthetic material. There's so much to be learned in
this field and I enjoy a fine challenge being part of it".
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Textile Industry Has Keen Interest
In Salvin Research
NORTH Carolina's billion dollar textile industry has more
than a passing interest in research conducted by Dr.
Victor S. Salvin, well-known textile chemist recently ap-
pointed as a professor in the School of Home Economics.
Dr. Salvin, who has been studying the air pollution
problem for the textile industry for 15 years, is credited
with the discovery that ozone, derived from sunlight work-
ing on gasoline fumes and oxides of nitrogen present in
the air from combustion gases, can cause considerable
fading of color and color changes in many fabrics and
fibers.
"The color change was first found in dyes on cellulose
acetate as a fiber," explained Dr. Salvin. "It was vulnerable
to color change, mostly in blue dyes which were attacked
by oxides of nitrogen and were turned from blues to
reds. The solution to the problem could only be derived
from the synthesis of new dyes which resisted this change.
In this field, I carried out my work on dye synthesis. It
resulted in several dyes which were originally produced
for cellulose acetate and are now in wide use with polyester
fibers."
Later it was found that atmospheric fading occurs in
many other fibers. "The fading of dyes on nylon carpets
is currently a problem which concerns the tufted carpet
industry," the chemist observed. "This fading is noticed
more in warm, humid chmates. It is due to the absorption
of ozone present in these atmospheres upon certain blue
dyestulfs widely used for nylon."
'The textile industry is aware of the problem, and it
is attacking it by means of the use of dyes and finishes
which give little or no change," Dr. Salvin said. "It also
is setting up test procedures, developed in laboratories such
as ours in the School of Home Economics, to predict the
behavior of the fabrics in actual service."
Dr. Salvin is the chairman of a committee set up by
the American Association of Textile Chemists and Color-
ists, which has the responsibility for these procedures.
"The problem is of interest not only to the textile industry
in the United States, but also in Europe," he stated. His
findings have been published in European journals, and
he has spoken to members of the industry in Europe on
the problem.
According to Dr. Salvin, North Carolina has certain
areas where government tests have shown a high percent-
age of atmospheric contaminants. He said that the U.S.
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare plans ex-
tensive research facilities in North Carolina, including the
transfer of the air pollution laboratory from Cincinnati,
Ohio, to the Research Triangle.
"The textile industry is one which is conscious of con-
Ann Pulliam '65, who is in charge of Bhie
Bell Corporations wear-test program, with
Professor Victor Salvin and Blue Bell execu-
tive Jatnes Bolton.
The Alumni News: Wintee 1968
sumer needs and satisfaction. With identification of a prod-
uct as a brand name or derived from a widely publicized
fiber, the marketing effort is completely destroyed when
the garment or home furnishing is unsatisfactory due to
the fading of color. The textile industry is often not in-
formed by the consumer when unexpected fading takes
place," Dr. Salvin said, adding that the industry can only
take measures to give liigher performance when it gets
a feedback from the consumer. This may require extra
processing and more expensive dyes and finishes.
"Essentially, this is one of the functions of the School
of Home Economics in the research programs and the
training of students for the textile industry, so that they
may inform the industry about consumer problems and
needs. In brief, what is good for the consumer is good for
the textile industry."
Dr. Salvin explained that urbanization and the increase
in the number of automobiles have caused thousands of
tons of atmospheric contaminants to be poured into the
air. Approximately ninety per cent of urban population
lives in localities having air pollution problems, and few
cities are immune to the problem, whether large or small,
industrialized or rural.
"We in Greensboro are very fortrmate that the com-
bination of wind conditions and good policing by air pol-
lution control authorities give the result that the amount
of pollutants in the air is very low," he said. He also be-
lieves that it is only a matter of time before all automobiles
will have controls on the exhaust systems to cut down on
pollutants. He mentioned city laws on the burning of trash
and special attention to the problem by all industries as
other preventive measiu-es.
Dr. Salvin, a research chemist with Celanese Fibers from
1936 to 1966, was a research consultant with Sandoz, Inc.
before coming to the University. He received his Ph.D. de-
gree from Yale University and an M.A. and a B.S. from
Wesleyan University. Dr. Salvin has 48 patents on dyes and
finishes and has published extensively in his field. D
EDUCATION
Senior Diane Whitehurst
of Stokes studies blouse instructions
Sewing by the Book
Publication of a self-instructional program. Sett-
ing Step-by-Step, by Ginn and Company in August,
was a final step in a program which began over three
years ago and originally was described in an Alumni
News article, "Revolutionary Idea Explored through
News Research Grant," by Dr. Hildegarde Johnson.
The project was carried out by Dr. Johnson, now on
a teaching leave in Japan, Barbara Clawson MSHE
'62, Mrs. Sarah Shoffner BS '62, MSHE '64, and six
graduate assistants.
by Barbara Clawson MSHE '64
Purpose of the programmed instruction project, funded
by the United States Office of Education, is to develop
a self-teaching program in the area of beginning clothing
construction and then to appraise the program by means
of a field experiment. The program uses the latest findings
in learning theory as well as the best of traditional class-
room procedures in home economics. It combines the
techniques of programming — self -instruction, active re-
sponse and immediate reinforcement — with teacher guid-
ance at crucial points. The subject matter, presented in
a series of easy-to-digest steps called frames, allows the
student to progress at her own rate of speed.
The program guides the stvident through a series of
learning experiences which teach her to operate a sewing
machine, to purchase and use patterns, and to perform
basic construction processes. When she has completed the
program, a garment has been completed. Thus, the teach-
ing of facts is combined with the teaching of a skill. Em-
phasis throughout is on understanding the reasons for
recommended procedures along with the principles and
generalizations involved, awareness of how the product
will look when procedures are followed correctly, and the
development of good work habits.
Unique features of the program include a series of
visual aids, called panels and exhibits, to which students
refer at points when it seems important to see, feel, or
evaluate realistic examples. An active teacher role is built
into the program via "hand" frames which remind the
students to call tlie teacher to check answers or work on
garments. The inclusion of many illustrations helps in both
teaching and evaluation sequences.
The program was used by 57 students in six high
schools during tlie second year of the project. The purpose
of the field experiment was to compare the progress of
students taught by their teachers with the progress those
taught by the program. In each school a class was divided
into two sections for a seven-week period. The teacher
taught one section by traditional methods, and a researcher
supervised the other section while students proceeded
through the program. Students in both sections made
blouses which were later scored by trained researchers at
the University. Four tests, two based on performance and
two written, were given to students in both sections.
When the test and blouse scores were statistically
analyzed, the results indicated that the achievement of
the students taught by the program was superior to that
of students taught by a teacher. Relatively consistent re-
sults were found in all schools participating, making it
safe to generalize that the program "works."
Because the program was designed for use with be-
ginners in clothing construction, two studies were planned
which would give adults an opportunity to use it. The
adults in one of the studies were contacted through tlie
Cooperative Extension Service and used the program in
their homes. The reaction of the women toward this
method of learning to sew was generally favorable, and
one month after the completion of the program four of
the ten participants had completed additional sewing proj-
ects. The quality of the blouses constructed by these
women compared favorably with those of the program-
taught students in the field study.
The purpose of the second study was to test the use
of the program with a group of disadvantaged adults.
These women met at a Y. W. C. A. with a non-home econ-
omist present to administer the program. Reactions of
these adults were enthusiastic and their garmets were also
satisfactorily constructed.
The possible uses for the program are varied and
people in a variety of positions have expressed interest in
it. Plans are being made for its use in adult clothing con-
struction classes being taught as a part of a community
college adult education program, classes in technical high
schools, vocational home economics adult classes and, of
course, in junior and senior liigh school home economics
classes. The possibilit}' of devolping an edition for use in
basic adult education programs is also being explored at
the present. D
10
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
FOODS AND NUTRITION
Current research in foods
concerns the effects of
steam cooking and
dehydrated food products.
The Effects of Steam
Cooking
The School of Home Economics, in cooperation with
the Groen Manufacturing Company, is currently conduct-
ing research involving food service cooking equipment.
Purpose of this research effort is the comparison of nutrient
retention of various food products prepared in a high-
pressure steamer, a low-pressure steamer, and a steam
jacketed kettle.
by Dr. Aden C. Magee III
School of Home Economics
Dehydrated Food Flavors
Why do some dehydrated food products, such as
sweet potato, carrot, and ichite potato flakes, develop
of -aromas and of -flavors during storage? What com-
pounds in these dehydrated products are responsible
for these types of deterioration which can render the prod-
ucts unattractive to the consumer?
These and other related questions are basic to some
of the current research being conducted by the School of
Home Economics in cooperation with Dr. A. E.
Purcell, Senior Chemist of the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture Food Crops Laboratory at North
Carolina State University.
The Main objective of the project is to determine
whether or not carotenes are the precursors of the off-odors
and off-flavors of some dehydrated food products. If food
technologists know the nature of these precursors, there
is the possibilit)' that the processing sequence can be
altered to remove them from the final product, thereby
yielding a product which would not deteriorate.
At the School of Home Economics, work on this re-
search project, which was started in 1966, involves various
types of sensory evaluation studies on dehydrated food
products and component parts of these products. The
initial study was conducted by Nancy Jones '67, a graduate
student, under the direction of Mrs. Sheron Minich. The
primary purpose of this study was to develop testing pro-
cedures to be used with specific phases of the research
project. n
Claudia Patterson, senior from Bryson City, operates a
high pressure steam cooker in a nutritive study project.
Three types of steam cooking equipment, similar to
those used in food service kitchens for quantity food pre-
paration, were furnished by the Groen Company to be
used for the preparation of the food products. The School
of Home Economics is providing research personnel and
general testing equipment and supplies and is responsible
for determining how the research will be conducted to
answer questions which have been posed by the Groen
Company relative to certain food preparation methods.
The initial phase of the project will be a comparison of
the effects of the three steam cooking methods on the
mineral retention of vegetables. In addition to mineral
analyses, color, flavor, and texture comparisons of the
vegetables prepared by the three methods will be made.
It is anticipated that the research will be expanded to in-
clude vitamin studies on vegetables, as well as vitamin and
mineral studies on other types of foods which can be
prepared by steam cooking methods. Information concern-
ing other nutrients may be sought in the future.
The initial formulation of the research project was
made by Dr. Naomi Albanese, Dean of the School of
Home Economics. Personnel in the School of Home Econ-
omics directly concerned with research effort. Nutrient
Retention of Food Products Prepared by Steam Methods
— 2 are Mrs. Mary Dickey ('51), Dr. Faye Grant, Mrs.
Wilda Wade, and Dr. Aden Magee. Graduate students
majoring in foods and nutrition will pursue individual re-
search problems which will contribute to the research
project. Mrs. Artliur C. Jenkins ('39) of Fayetteville, a
member on the Home Economics Foundation board, is
serving as a technical consultant to the project. D
The Alximni News: Winter 1968
11
Institute
by Dr. Franklin D. Parker
Department of History and Political Science
Guatemala City Tegucigalpa
Managua
San Salvador *
EL SALVADOR
San Jose
Panama
BarranquiKa
Bogota
For more than two years a faculty committee has
studied the feasability of establishing a University summer
school in a Latin American country. Last summer one of
the committee, Dr. Franklin D. Parker, professor of Latin
American history, traveled at his own expense with his
wife to San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador, to in-
vestigate the cost of classroom buildings, food, lodging,
medical facihties, and other factors which had to be known
before a decision could be made. Four students who, also
at their own expense, volunteered to serve as an additional
scouting party for the venture, met the Parkers in El
Salvador (see next page). With firsthand information
gleaned by the six travelers, the faculty committee en-
thusiastically endorsed El Salvador as location of the first
University Latin American summer school. The following
months were spent getting the necessary approval to make
the summer session a reality. Inquiries for additional in-
formation should be addressed to the Institiite in Middle
America, 213 Mclver Building, University of North Caro-
lina at Greensboro (27412).
Q. Why should the University at Greensboro offer sum-
mer classes in Spanish America?
A. To provide the natural setting for courses treating the
Spanish-American language, the civilization, and the
area, and to enable both teachers and students of tlie
Institute to help meet the needs of that area and of
fields related to that area back home.
Q. Why will the Institute be located deep in Middle
America?
A. Deep, because as one travels farther away from
United States borders, the back home influence lessens
and the more thoroughly Spanish - American at-
mosphere emerges. And in Middle America (rather
than farther south), to keep the cost moderate.
Q, Why has San Salvador been chosen as a beginning
locale?
A.
Q.
San Salvador is a national capital in a developing area,
closely surrounded by attractions for virtually anv
field of study. Communications are good, especially
paved-road connections to nearby lands whose cul-
tures also will be studied.
What courses, according to present plaiming, will the
Institute offer?
A. In its first session, June 17- July 26, 1968, two com-ses
each are contemplated in anthropology, history, and
literature. In sessions to follow, economics, geography,
and language study will appear, and, eventually, art,
political science, and sociology.
Q. To what extent do these plans depend upon enrollment
figures?
A. The Institute counts on a minimum of thirty students,
enrolled by April 1, 1968, to caixy through its com-
mitments for the first year. The greater the enroll-
ment, the larger are the odds that the Institute may
grow into the varied structure it should become.
Q. What Avill be the chief items of cost for a member of
the Institute?
A. Registration and tuition fees, plus food and lodging
for the six-weeks' stay in San Salvador, and transpor-
tation from the stvident's home.
Q. What specifically wiU the student pay for fees and six-
weeks' living?
A, The registration and tuition fees will be the same as
those for one summer session in Greensboro, with the
understanding that each person will enroll for six
12
The Uism'ERsiTi' of North Carolina at Greensboro
n Middle America
First Session of University's Summer School
South of the Border" Scheduled June 16 - July 26
hours of credit. Food and lodging are available in four
recommended hotels, at prices ranging from $4 to $7
per day. It is hoped that arrangements can be made
for living in recommended private homes at prices
no higher.
Q, How expensive is the journey to San Salvador?
A. By jet airliner, roimd-trip New Orleans-San Salvador
is $152 per person. This trip takes fom- hours each way.
By car, round-trip Greensboro-San Salvador costs
roughly $200 for auto expense, in addition to about
$120 per person for 18 days' food and lodging; this
trip takes nine days each way.
Q. What provision is there for persons of higher or lower
budgets?
A. In San Salvador and most points along the way, deluxe
accommodations are available for those who wish to
pay; These entail some loss of the Spanish-American
atmosphere. Food and lodging prices can be minimal
for those who wish to save, as the four-girl expedition
of August-September 1967 proved (see adjoining
page); generally, this scale of living entails some loss
of comfort, but has its own rewards.
Q. What specifically are the advantages of travel by land?
A. For a price Httle higher than the air fare in a group
of four or five, the traveler from Greensboro can see
much of the magnificence Mexico and Guatemala
have to ofi^er, using a lowland route in one direction
and a highland route in the other. For those who can
afford the time and money, Honduras, Nicaragua, and
Costa Rica can be reached, like El Salvador, by paved
road, after the Institute session is ended.
Q. To travel by land, or to attend the Institute, must one
be acquainted with the Spanish language?
A. A knowledge of Spanish is neither necessary nor (aside
from Spanish courses) required, but to make the trip
easier, the entire experience more worthwhile, every
student is expected to use every opportunity to study
the language.
Q. What special appeal will the Institute have for stu-
dents of geography?
A. It will offer a first-hand knowledge of the manner in
which human beings derive an existence from a trop-
ical, geologically varied, isthmian land. El Salvador
has volcanoes, some of them ahve; a large coffee crop,
to which the volcanoes have been kind; an even larger
human population, whose needs have not been met by
coffee alone; and recently, a determination to push on
through other resources to a self-sufficient Hving.
Q. What special appeal will the Institute have for stu-
dents of anthropology?
A. It will offer a first-hand knowledge of the conceptions
persons of the isthmus have held of the worth of
varied aspects of their own lives. For the study of
olden times, there are impressive aboriginal remains
available through field trips - to Copan of the Mayas,
to Iximche of the Cakchiquels, to Tazumal of unknown
origin, or to Tenampua, of as-yet unknown design.
For the study of recent times, there are the hving
peoples around — the Mayas and the Lencas of neigh-
boring lands, the Pipil nation of El Salvador, the many
campesinos, and the great city population of all kinds.
Q. What special appeal will the Institute have for stu-
dents of history?
A. It vvill offer a firsthand knowledge of the development
of isthmian peoples through consecutive periods of
time. Interviews with informed persons and observa-
tions of the scene at hand provide valuable keys not
only to an understanding of nineteenth-century dff-
ficulties and twentieth-century problems but to a com-
prehension of the classical indigenous cultures, die
immediate pre-Columbian age, and the influences of
the Spanish colony.
Q. What special appeal will the Institute have for stu-
dents of economics?
A. It will offer a firsthand knowledge of the phght of
poverty-stricken persons in an economically-depen-
dent land, along with the measures being taken to
rescue them. The Central American Common Market,
supported by the Organization of Central American
States whose headquarters are in San Salvador, has
received hemispheric attention as an entity resolved
to find answers for this isthmus' basic business prob-
lems. Its activities contrast sharply with the wide-
spread subsistence living yet found in every isthmian
land.
Q. What special appeal will the Institute have for stu-
dents of Spanish-American literature?
A. It will offer a firsthand contact with an ehte com-
munity which considers this literature its own. Cen-
tral American writers have earned notice in the out-
side world; witness the fame of poet Ruben Dario, or
the recent Nobel award to Miguel Angel Asturias,
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
13
novelist of merit. But more import:antly, an association
with isthmian authors can help unlock their appreci-
ation for the entire span of creativity of which they
form a part.
Q, What advantage might there be in studying art,
political science, or sociology in a Middle American
setting?
A. In art, there are fresh techniques and inspirations; in
poUtical science, opportunities for the study of power
in nations still strugghng toward democracy; in soci-
ology, means for testing hypotheses against a novel
hiunan background.
Q. How may a development of all these interests "enable
both teachers and students of the Institute to help
meet the needs of that area and of fields related to that
area back home"?
Social studies and language teachers can do much
to bring about a real comprehension of Spanish
America to young people living in the United States,
once the teachers have a firsthand understanding of
their own. Others, who may choose to make Spanish
America a specialized part of their living, can expand
the frontiers of knowledge to the benefit of everyone.
Institute In Middle America
SUMMER SESSION FACULTY
Jose' A. Almeida, Assistant Professor of Spanish; Ph.D., University
of Missouri; teacher at University of Missouri, Baylor University,
and Ebnira College N.D.E.A. Institute; contributor to Cuademos
Hispanoamericanos and the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Cientificas Revista de Literatura.
Harriet J. Kupferer, Professor of Anthropology; Ed.D., New York
University; Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill;
teacher at University of Connecticut; field director of University of
North Carolina Fieldvi'ork School of Anthropology; contributor to
Social Forces, El Palacio, Anthropologica, American Anthropologist,
and Political Anthropology; author of The Principal People: 1960:
A Study of Cultural and Social Groups of the Eastern Cherokee
(U. S. Bureau of American Ethnology, 1966); field research in
Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo, Mexico, 1967-8.
Franklin D. Parker, Professor of History; Ph.D., University of Illinois;
teacher at University of Illinois; Fulbright lecturer in Trujillo, Cuzco,
and Arequipa, Peru, and Bogota', Colombia; contributor to The
Hispanic American Historical Review, the sociedad de Geografia e
Historia de Guatemala Anales, Encyclopaedia Britaimica, and
Encyclopedia Americana; author of The Central American Republics
(O.xford University Press for the Royal Institute of International
Affairs, 1964.)
Courses To Be Offered
(Three hours credit each)
Anthropology 352. The Peoples of Latin America.
Anthropology 551. Dynamics of Culture Growth and Change.
History 502. Problems of Latin America.
History 540. Middle America.
Spanish 520. Spanish Lyric Poetry to 1700.
Spanish 535. Twentieth-Century Spanish Theatre.
(Spanish 207 and 208 are prerequisites for the Spanish courses
listed. 500-level courses are for both graduate and upperclass
undergraduate students; 300-level for undergraduates only.)
It is expected that economics, geography, and language study will
appear in future sessions of the Institute, and eventually art, political
science, and sociology.
A Student View
Four seniors traveled to San Salvador last summer
to help lay the groundwork for a University sum-
mer school. One of them reports here on their
experience combining business with pleasure.
by Karen Smith '68
What can you do when you discover there is a pos-
sibility that the University at Greensboro wiU have
a Latin American Extension, and soon? There was only
one thing to do: volunteer as a scout! We wanted, first, to
demonstrate that the plan had the enthusiastic support
of the students, second, to help Dr. Franklin Parker with
some of the legwork in San Salvador, and third, to prove
that women students could travel alone to Central America
by land with little difficulty and very Httle money.
Talk began early in the spring term, but plans were
vague until we acquired the loan of a 1967 Volkswagen
bus from Mrs. Dolly Hickman of Charlotte. A group of
seven, maximum load (with equipment) for the bus,
became four by the end of the term. (This turned out to
be the perfect number for die space).
Our group had varied experience and interest which
helped get different perspectives. A senior Spanish major,
Cynthia Brown of Greensboro, had the opportunity to see
how much better a language can be learned, even in the
short span of six weeks, away from die classroom situation.
Her camping skills and resourcefulness in making livable
many of the primitive places we stayed were amazing.
Katherine Wetzel of Richmond, Virginia, was our mechan-
ic-cook par excellence. A senior advertising major with a
special interest in photography, she was the only member
of the group who spoke no Spanish. Immersed in the cul-
ture and language as we were, she had little difficulty
learning. Judy Hickman of Charlotte, a senior anthropol-
ogy major with special interest in the ancient cultures of
Latin America, was our only driver, a condition we had
to accept in order to use the bus. Because she was ac-
quainted with Mexico, we stayed with several of her
friends en route. Karen Smith from Camp Lejeune is a
senior painting and art history major with a strong in-
terest in Latin American politics and culture. Her pre-
vious experience living in Latin America and her talent
for cooking were also handy for the group.
We traveled a total of 10,200 miles, as far south as
San Jose, Costa Rica. Gasoline and repairs were chief
expenses. Out of a "kitty" of $410, we spent appro.ximately
$250 on gas and oil. The rest went for tolls, car repairs,
14
The UNrvERsnr of North Cabolina at Greensboro
some food and for "luxuries" we used in common, such as
bottled water and ice for the cooler. We paid nothing for
lodging; ingenuity, luck, and friends took care of that.
Each girl brought as much above the amount for the
"kitty" as she could scrape together. Fifty dollars for six
weeks was the lowest figure. Larger groups traveling to-
gether could do it for less.
Out of the entire six weeks, we slept in beds five nights;
accommodations ranged from a glorious night in a hotel
to the front office of a large shirt factory and a Red Cross
ambulance garage. Sleeping in the bus proved to be un-
comfortable for anyone over three feet tall. Where we
could, we pitched tents and slept in sleeping bags, especi-
ally nice on beaches. Our food came mainly from local
markets. We cooked on a borrowed camp stove no matter
where we were. Before we left, kind friends gave us a
case (24 cans) of Sloppy Joes. By the third week, the
mere mention of this delicacy brought a jaundiced ex-
pression to every member, but we ate it with relish many
nights when we had nothing else. We dressed in rough
clothes except when we came to the larger cities. Showers
were always a godsend! Hot water was generally non-
existent, and we washed in the ocean, in rivers, at gas
Four students, Cynthia Brown of Greensboro, Katherine
Wetzel of Richmond, Virginia, }udi Hickman of Charlotte
and Karen Smith of Camp Lejeune, pose with the Volks-
wagen bus which carried them 10,200 miles last summer.
stations, in whatever was available. On the days we looked
the worst, we convinced ourselves we were destroying the
popular image of rich Americans overseas.
We reached El Salvador ten days after crossing the
United States-Mexican border, taking a scenic central
route through Monterrey, Saltillo, Guanajuato, Mexico
City, Oaxaca, Tapachula, and into Guatemala. In San
Salvador we had the good luck to stay in a private home.
The capital of San Salvador, where the classes will be
held, is cosmopolitan and yet small enough to enable stu-
dents to know their way around quickly. Transportation to
all otlier parts of the country by bus is extremely inex-
pensive, and one can get to the farthest point in a few
hours. The city itself is a lovely contrast between the very
modern and warm colonial styles. We received a warm
welcome from everyone we met.
Our quartet definitely proved that students can travel
on little money, learn a tremendous amount and still
have fun. We highly recommend that students who plan
to attend classes at the summer school extension in El
Salvador in coming years investigate the land route. The
saving in money is a small gain in comparison to the
excitement and experience of meeting every kind of person
imaginable and seeing the lands of Central America. D
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
15
The Outing Club:
Respite from Academe
by William E. Kingsbury
Department of Romance Languages
Judi Hickman, senior from Charlotte, and Beth Bauman,
sophomore from New York City, brace against a rock
boulder along the bank of the New River near the Virginia-
North Carolina border.
THE purpose of the Outing Club is to get away from
the anxieties of academic hf e and artificial dormitory
living. We believe that the best way to relax is to do
something different. Just sitting is not effective. By be-
coming engaged in an activity entirely unrelated to our
usual one, we experience a sort of "psychological bath."
The anxieties of studying and teaching are forgotten as we
become totally involved in the new experience.
The majority of our trips are for more than one day;
therefore, we camp out, sleeping in tents or under the
stars, and prepare meals over open fires, even in winter.
This total change from the usual daily routine leaves the
impression of having spent much more time away from
campus. There is a sort of rejuvenation, resulting in a
willingness to tackle the demands of university life more
readily.
I am often asked, "What kind of person is attracted to
the Outing Club?" There is no stereotype. Academic in-
terests do not determine whether a student or faculty
member would be inclined to join us. The first faculty
advisor was Charlas Adams, Head University Librarian.
I am an instructor in French. Other faculty members are
in art, anthropology, French, and Spanish. The students
come from every imaginable field of interest, ranging from
home economics and the sciences to music, foreign lan-
guages, English, and art. Surprising to some is the fact
that we have had only one student in physical education.
Most have had litde experience in camping, but a
few students have been camping — with their families
16
The UNrvERSFTY of North Carolina at Greensboro
^4^1
...?*i^*.""'.-:%i
'"■ ' »'»!<•. J
"■^^^1^^ : ' ■':';»
riafe*^-
A Noveinber trail ride through Love Valley.
or as camp counselors. I have been surprised at how many
want to "go primitive," that is, without tents and other
sophisticated equipment, in cold weather as well as in
mild seasons. On oui third outing on the New River in
October, we felt the bite of 20 degrees when we got up
in the morning. A group of climbers at Seneca, West Vir-
ginia, in November found the mercury well below zero
and winds up to fifty miles an hour. Some of the girls take
long trips. Judi Hickman (Charlotte) and Cynthia Brown
(Greensboro) drove with two other students all the way
to El Salvador last summer, camping all the way.
Favorite activities of the Outing Club are hiking,
canoeing, "kayaking," horseback-riding, and technical
rock-climbing. Camping naturally is a large part of each
activity. The highlight of last year's program was an
Easter trip to the Florida Keys. The club rented a 24-foot
Rainbow class sailboat and sailed from a base camp in
the John Permecamp Underwater State Park. James Mc-
Leod, an instructor in anthropology, spent many evenings
in the University pool giving lessons in skin and scuba
diving in preparation for the trip. He also served as sailing
instructor when we reached the Keys, giving every mem-
ber an opportunity to master the crewman's duties and take
a turn at the helm, if he wished.
Mr. Kingsbury, faculty sponsor of the Outing Club, spent several
years in France, did graduate study in Montreal and Mexico City,
before coming to the University two years ago.
Most everyone spent one day in camp helping to pre-
pare our fine cuisine. The sea provided a plentiful supply
of fish which were prepared succulently, and I introduced
the camp to French Fondue Bourguignone, but by far
the best feast was prepared by Tom Fiddler, student at
Guilford College, whose Hawaiian Luau was so authentic
that eating utensils were made on the spot from leaves
and bark of palm trees. The sunny days and moonlit
nights were clear, but unusually strong winds prevented
swimming near the ocean reefs, confining us to sailing
and swimming in the protected sounds. (So successful
was this venture that another trip to the Keys is planned
this Easter.)
In the spring of 1967 the Student Government Associ-
ation gave us funds with which to buy much-needed
equipment, including two folbots ( light kayak-like boats ) .
We elected to buy two kits and assemble them ourselves
rather than invest in one factory-built boat for the same
money. Our flotilla now consists of one of the club boats
( the other is not yet finished ) , my own f olbot and a canoe
owned by Cindy Brown of Greensboro. We have made
more than a dozen trips on local rivers and lakes since
September, 1966. Our favorite river is the New River in
Northwest North Carolina. Overnight river trips are im-
doubtedly the most popular. Good camp sites are easy
to find in the wooded areas along the banks, and farmers
along the way let us draw water from their wells if we do
not trust the springs. Before planning trips, we phone
storeowners along the route who are happy to tell us river
conditions as they see them from their river-side vantage
The Alumni News: WnsmEB 1968
17
Sailing: Most ambitious of the club's outings was an Easter
trip last spring to the Florida Keys. Above is the 24-foot
sailboat which was rented for (day) sailing.
Camping: Barbara Leary, senior from Richmond, Virginia,
coaxes a fire during an outing last summer through Grand
Teton National Park. At right (on opposite page), Barbara
scales a mountain in the Grand Teton range.
and as they hear them from fishermen who stop in the
stores every day.
There have been several hiking trips in the Smokies.
The size of the group ranges from three to twenty-five,
and the distance of the hike varies from 12 to 60 miles.
Last fall Judi Hickman lead a hike to Mount LeConte in
the Smokies. Five members of the club and two guests
took the Appalachian Trail to Charlie's Bunion, then to
LeConte via the Boulevard Trail, to Ice Water Springs,
and down to Newfound Gap. A week later I lead a trip
of 13 to Spence Field in the Smokies. We spent Friday
night in our base camp in Cade's Cove, then hiked the
six miles to the highest point on Spence Field. We prepared
our dinner of lightweight trail food (noodles, dehydrated
meats, and vegetables) over an open fire and watched a
beautiful sunset. The next morning we rejoined the three
campers who had decided not to hike but to remain in
base camp to relax and study. An important policy of the
club is that no member be required to participate in all
activities on an outing. He may go along just to get away
from campus, take short walks, read or pick away at a
guitar beside a stream or brook.
Marsha Holder (High Point) has lead us on several
great horseback-riding trips in the vicinity of Love Valley,
an authentic Western Town near Statesville, complete
with jail, blacksmith's shop, saloon and a nine-room hotel,
the "Lazy L." The livery stable is run by B. H. Vanhoy who
has a string of 16 good riding horses and one mule, Ruth,
which is the favorite mount of Beth Blauman ( New York
City ) . Some groups go for a few hours, others for a whole
day, and a fev.' camp along the trail or in one of the many
deserted houses found in die hills. We can prepare our
own meals or Van will serve them chuck-wagon style any-
where along the trail.
At about every other meeting of the club someone
shows slides that he has taken on an outing. Among the
most spectacular are those taken by a group who climbed
Popocatepetl and Orizaba in Mexico at Christmas last
vear, and bv another group who went on the "Grand Teton
Expedition" last summer. Locally, we have training and
practice climbs at Hanging Rock, Pilot Mountain, and the
favorite in the East, Seneca Rocks in West Virginia.
In each activity there is an adviser who is a specialist
but not always a student or faculty member. The con-
stitution provides that persons in the community or from
other colleges may belong to the club if they serve as
advisers. Any group wishing to take an outing first confers
with the ad\dser to determine that all organizational and
safety considerations have been met. The adviser makes
the decision as to who among the members is qualified to
lead the outing and to be responsible for the safety of
the members and the care of the equipment. One of the
best signs of progress in the club is the increasing number
of leaders.
In the interest of conservation of the wilderness con-
fined in the Great Smokie Mountain National Park, the
18
The UNn'ERSiTY of North Carolina at Greensboro
Outing Club officially has opposed the Trans-Mountain
Road proposed by the Park Commission and local in-
terests just north and south of the Park. To this end, we
participated in the demonstration against the Trans-Moun-
tain Road held in the park at Clingman's Dome in the
fall of 1966. We support the Carolina Mountain Club pro-
posal which provides a good north-south road without
destroying the plant, animal and geological evolution in
that part of the park, and which would seem to give the
inhabitants of the local area an unlimited and well-
deserved opportrmity to expand commercial interests. We
will always stand firm in our belief that the National Parks
belong to all Americans of all generations and that it, there-
fore, is not only our right, but also our duty to help find
a responsible solution to this question.
(EDITOR'S NOTE: On December 10 Secretary of the Interior
Stewart L. Udall announced that he would not approve a Trans-
Mountain Road across the Great Smoky Mountains National Park
which the author and many conservationists have opposed. Instead
he directed construction of a road along the north shore of Fontana
Reservoir, westward from Bryson City, to Montieth Branch where
a marina and other facilities would be developed on Fontana Lake.
Some opposition to the approved route remains for, as one ardent
conservationists. Dr. HoUis J. Rogers of the Biology Department,
explained, "There is ample evidence that even this route, going
north of the Fontana reservoir and penetrating a valuable wilder-
ness area, will cause irreparable damage to its natural condition,
and, furthermore, disrupt normal stream flow and cause siltation
and pollution of the mountain streams. It would still appear that
the Carolina Mountain Club proposal for a route south of the lake
would meet both needs: for a high^vay between Bryson City and
Townsend and for conservation of a natural area which has at-
tracted tourism making the highway necessary.")
In order to remain well informed we have invited
speakers to appear before us in our meetings and club
members attend meetings outside our own club. We heard
Keith A. Argow of the State University at Raleigh faculty
speak about the National Conservancy Agency. Vick Lutz,
a former faculty member, now with the Greensboro
Y.M.C.A., recently reviewed latest developments in the
Pilot Mountain Project. This historical landmark is private
property now up for sale. The government is willing to pay
the larger part of the purchase price, but the public
must contribute the remainder. The Outing Club, recog-
nizing the need for a good park near the Winston-Salem-
Greensboro area, has voted to donate funds from dues and
to ask each member to make a small personal contribution.
Another contribution to conservation is helping PATH
(Piedmont-Appalachian Trail Hikers of Greensboro) in
the maintenance of sections 11 and 12 of the Appalachian
Trail for which it is responsible.
Our activities vary constantly, according to the in-
terests of our members. From a membership of 5 in 1965,
we number well over 70 active members with another 50
inactively involved. In keeping with the spirit of innova-
tion inherent in our club, we are looking forward to a
spring semester filled with new and varied outings. D
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
19
Which Way Student
Government in '681
by Jane Ann Ward '68, President
Student Government Association
As Jane Ann Ward of Lincolnton, president of the Stu-
dent Government Association, discusses on these pages the
new directions of student government, it is interesting to
look back to 1914, the first year of student government on
campus, and note some of the regulations governing stu-
dents of that era. According to Elisabeth Ann Bowles' A
Good Beginning, there was a walking period from 4:30
to 5:15 every day except Saturday, an evening study from
7:00 to 9:45, and midday chapel from 12:40 to 1:00 p.m.
Lights were out at 10 during the week and 11:00 on
Saturday night. Students remained in their rooms to "rest
and meditate" during a quiet period from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m.
Sundays. Students had to request permission to use the
telephone, and could receive long distance calls only from
their immediate family. They could not sit on building steps
nor walk on Spring Garden Street or Walker Avenue. Trips
to town were limited, and they could not dine in res-
taurants, attend the theatre or "moving picture shows".
THE change from the Woman's College to the Uni-
versity of North Garohna at Greensboro has brought
about a difficult period of transition for the student
body as well as for the administration, the faculty, and
alumni. And, as the student body and its ideas change,
its representative governing body, the Student Govern-
ment Association, has changed also.
Students are beginning to think of themselves as stu-
dents of a university, not a college; somehow, the atmos-
phere seems to encoiu-age more freedom of thought and
expression, and this additional freedom demands more
responsibility from each individual. Possibly the presence
of male students is responsible for some of the change.
Witli this and various other forces interacting among stu-
dents, the direction of Student Government has been tow-
ard issues on a national and international level as well as
a local one.
The rising interest in issues of the day does not mean
that school and class traditions have been lost. However,
SGA is not as class-oriented as it once was, although the
traditions of Jacket Day, Rat Day, and Ring Day still exist
as routine activities to be carried out by the class govern-
ment. While continuing the traditional projects, the Student
Government Association has added a good many more in
order to best serve its constituency.
SGA is trying to be-
WitL TEACH
YO&n
2. >liwp oveii 'flDt)y
come a meaningful part
of the educational pro-
cess of the University.
Several of the programs
underway deal with
aspects of the educa-
tional reform movement
sweeping campuses
across the nation. For ex-
ample, last spring a
group of interested stu-
dents started an Experi-
mental University, cover-
ing areas of interest N.
requested by the stu-' /^\i
dents themselves. The / M
courses are non-credit/ /
and varied, and most of
them are not included in
the regular academic cur-
ricula of the University. A few of the classes are conducted
without professors, but most use professors as resource per-
sonnel for the class.
A new concept of grading is under study by several
student groups who are investigating the pass-fail system
and its possibilities on our campus. Some students are
working on other courses which might be added to the
University's academic curricula, mainly, courses involving
some type of community work. Several students have been
working with the faculty and the administration to estab-
lish a religion department in the academic curriculum.
In an attempt to educate the student body to the issues
of the day, the Student Government Association has spon-
sored a series of "Issue Seminars". These programs give
students and faculty an opportunity to come together in
an informal setting to discuss their own ideas and listen
to tlie ideas of others about current issues. The first pro-
gram was a lecture on "The Status of Women" by Dr.
Margaret Hunt, professor in the Department of History
and Political Science. The second program was a panel of
students and administrators who discussed the subject of
20
The UNrvERSPTY of North Gabolina at Greensboro
". . . Stvidents also have had, for many years, tlie
right of self-government with its training for responsible
citizenship. They have always had the right of petition
and, as years have passed, have assumed more and more
the responsibilities of community citizenship, until today
there is no problem involving student life, academic or
social, which students may not help solve. That 'Re-
sponsible Freedom' is the motto of student government
is not lacking in significance."
by the late Miss Vera Largent
from Introduction to
The Walter Clinton Jackson Essays
having no closing hours for the women's residence halls.
( Incidentally, a bill for "no closing hours" for certain res-
ident women students was recently passed by the Student
Legislature and awaits approval by Chancellor Ferguson. )
Early in November the National Students Association,
under SGA auspices, sponsored a Black Power Forum.
Authorities on the Black Power movement from all parts
of the country discussed in panels and in lectures the
history and present and future implications of the move-
ment. Another seminar is planned February 12 through 14
on the question of the Vietnam War with a final seminar
on Student Drug Involvement in late spring.
The judicial branch is operating for the first year under
a revised system featuring three courts: a Women's Court
and a Men's Court of social regulations and an Honor
Court. Each court has one chairman and one executive
secretary. For the first time the judicial system features
a group of investigators, one of whom investigates each
case before it comes to trial. In addition, there is a staff of
defense counselors if the defendant requests a defense
representative in court. The entire system is headed by a
Judicial Co-ordinator.
In commemoration of the University's 75th an-
niversary on October 5, 1967, the Student Government
Association gave money
to develop and landscape
a plaza at the comer of
Spring Garden Street and
College Avenue. The ori-
ginal bell used by Pres-
ident Charles Mclver to
summon students to class
three-quarters of a cen-
tury ago will be bronzed
and a monument will be
erected on the site. Land-
scaping is expected to get
underway shortly, for
commencement.
The Executive Cab-
inet has been most active
in planning activities and serving as adviser to the Stu-
dent Government President. Composed of executive of-
ficers, class presidents and heads of clubs, organizations
and publications, the Cabinet has helped to set the direc-
tion of student government for 1967-68. In every activity
there is the understanding that SGA sponsorship carries
with it neither approval nor disapproval of a given project,
but is concerned with the student's right to hear and
discuss ideas.
The SGA has worked closely with the Student Develop-
ment Council, a project of the Golden Chain, to elevate
the status of the University throughout North Carolina. The
Student Government Association also has dealt with prob-
lems arising from the introduction of intercollegiate athlet-
ics for men, such as selection of a cheerleading team. The
response to our first home basketball game was so en-
thusiastic, it was necessary to work with the Department
of Health, Physical Education and Recreation to appoint
a committee to choose an acting cheering squad until
official cheerleaders can be selected in early spring.
"B 5aiiepn&z:>>
Undoubtedly, alumni will find a great change in student
government activities and areas of interest. However, I do
not feel that it has changed a great deal from what the
organization it originally was designed to be. Dean Harriet
Elliott's famous "responsible freedom" remains the underly-
ing support of student government. Ideally, the rules and
regulations are passed, carried out and enforced by tlie
students themselves. The Student Government Association
of the University at Greensboro must be committed to the
ideals of higher education in order to be meaningful to
its representative student population and to justify its
existence. D
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
21
I I
The New
by Thomas J. C. Smyth
Episcopal Campus Chaplain
Frank Stella's "Study for Shaped Canvas"
is a recent Dillard acquisition displayed
in Weatherspoon Gallery during the 1967
Art on Paper Invitational.
THE other night when Bert Carpenter gave a lecture
cor.cerning the Art on Paper exhibit on display in the
Weatherspoon Gallery, he spent most of his time
talking about two avant-garde works. Neitlier of them, it
seemed to me, had any real place in an art exhibit. One
is a typed symbolic description of a garden of some sort,
and the other is a geometric string and wash design. The
gist of Mr. Carpenter's remarks was that these particular
works are representative of the "school" that would take
the emotional out of art and attempt to express reality
or to be existential.
Dr. Paul Tillich once said that the "artistic realm is
the most sensitive barometer for the spiritual climate of
any age." This is certainly borne out by much of the
"gutty" modern poetry, contemporary music, and other art
forms. When on March 17, 196.3, The London Observer
published an article by the Bishop of Woolich, John
Robinson, with the headline "OUR IMAGE OF GOD
MUST GO," he was saying the same thing as the artist
is saying.
Each of you has read either Ved Mehta's The Neiv
Theologian or Robinson's Honest to God. While I do not
think they are among the best books ever written, they
do give us a birds-eye view of the ferment that is going
on in the religious world. Bishop Robinson's book was
an instant success and caused a good deal of theological
debate in the ecclesiastical and the secular world. This
is because, as one writer put it, "Traditional western
theology has tended to identfy with the status quo. It has
seen meaning in order rather than change and has tended
to condemn all thought of change as if the dynamic
process of change were a threat." This then is the mood
of the New Theology: root questions are being asked, the
foundations are being examined to try to justify their
continued existence. Bishop Robinson speaks of "the ten-
sion that always must exist between the fixed and the
free, the constant and the changing, the absolute and the
relative." He goes on, "We need not fear flux; God is in
tlie rapids as much as on the rocks and, as Christians,
we are free to swim and not merely to cling." This kind
of thinking is not confined to the Protestant and the
Anglican world. We find much of this in the statements
of the Vatican Council and again in the utterances of
many Reformed rabbis.
THE first area of concern in the New Theology is
language: traditional God-Language is just inadequate
for the modern student. The One who is "out there" and
yet whom we feel and call to be "right here" seems to
many a frustrating contradiction.
William Hamilton sees an analogy between the dimin-
ishing range and confidence of such modern novelists as
Albert Camus, William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway
(in contrast to James Joyce and Thomas Mann) and his
own unwillingness to make strident, confident pronounce-
ments about God. He says, "In the new generation of
novelists we find a retreat to the knowable, the polishing
and perfecting of tlie little that is known, the careful
attempt not to write and say everything in the large and
confident way." Bishop Pike has wrestled with the same
question. He pleads for new word forms to convey the
Treasure.
22
The UNrvERsm.' of North Cabolina at Greensboro
Theology
This article is based on Mr. Smyth's remarks on The New
Theologian by Ved Mehta, which he reviewed for the
Alumni Book Discussion program in Alumnae House No-
vember 22. He also is teaching a course in the Experimental
University (see pages 24, 25 and 26) on Morality: Otd
AND New.
This untitled drawing by the late Arshile
Gorky, also recently added to the Dillard
Collection, and Stella's work on the
opposite page are the two avant-garde
works referred to in the first paragraph
of Mr. Smyth's article.
-:^-
>.
t/j
>*-,«■•
Rudolph Bultmann, the great demythologizer, sees the
inability for man to accept the myths of the Bible in the
light of his learning in today's world. He contends that
the Gospel is as true as it ever was but the fact that
it is surrounded by the first century world view puts
men off for they cannot accept the world view. He does
not, as I understand him, discard all myth, but he sees
it for what it is, and he insists that it be interpreted in
terms of man's understanding of his own existence and
possibilities.
Perhaps this zeroes in then on another of the striking
things about the New Theology. The emphasis seems to
be more on the presence of man than on the presence or
absence of God. How do we account for this change?
In part, by the fact of war, of the crushing defeat of the
idealists, of what Walter Lippmann would call the bank-
ruptcy of Wilsonian Idealism, of winning the eternal peace
or making the world safe for democracy. Probably Deitrich
Bonhoeffer in the Nazi Prison brooded more over this
question than any other. While his work is incomplete
and far from systematic, as would be expected from any-
one under confinement, it has had an influence on the
New Theology that is not yet fully assessable.
DURING the Renaissance, according to Bonhoeffer, man
began to come of age. He began to refuse to accept
the authority of the Church over him. He discovered
that he no longer needed the props of religion — miracles,
ceremonies, dependence. What was needed was for man
to understand God in a nonreligious sense. So he speaks
of "religionless Christianity." He claims that "religious
people" speak of God when human resources fail, when
human understanding reaches an impasse. Every attempt
on man's part to bribe or trick God into entering his
religious life is doomed to fail. When men seek to do so
they are trying to use God and God refuses to be used,
His insistence then is that God is to be found in the
events of the world.
As others tried to interpret Bonhoeffer and the exist-
entialists, they were led to go farther — to what some have
called the "secular mind." Thomas J. J. Altizer, the "Death
of God" theologian, speaks of the world being 'Taathed in
the absence of God." To say that God is dead is to be
willing to undergo the darkness of the divine absence
from the world and to await the possibility of a new
showing forth of the presence and power of God. The
effect of the New Theology upon the Church is yet to
be seen in any fulfillment.
There are always the two great choices: security —
which simply draws on what has gone before and stays
on safe ground; or insecurity in tlie world which comes
with moving out. To put it another way, the church is
either a fortress against the world or the servant of the
world. How then is the church to talk to the ^^'orld? The
New Theologians say they are almost unanimous in
contending that it is self-defeating to tr>' to verbalize
the faith in traditional language. Indeed, the so-called
radicals would say you have nothing to say anyhow. But
all would say, "You cannot talk it; yon can only live out
the faith."
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
23
Experimental University
Civil Liberties
Dr. Maigaret A. Hunt
Department of
History and Political Science
Last year many University students and faculty mem-
bers participated in several meetings and discussions con-
cerning educational reform, touching on many issues. One
proposal developing out of the meetings was the Experi-
mental University.
The major purpose of the Experimental University is to
provide a forum for joint student-factdty exploration of
subjects of mutual interest. For a variety of reasons, these
subjects cannot or should not be included in the regular
university curriculum. Participation is entirely voluntary.
The classes meet at a mutually agreeable time, and the
course lasts as long as the participants wish.
WHEN I was asked to participate in the Experimental
University program, I agreed to conduct a class in
Civil Liberties and Individual Responsibilities. My choice
of this subject arose from my own concern regarding the
need for greater understanding of the problems in the
field of race relations and the need to consider our in-
dividual responses to these problems. Certainly the rela-
tions between the variety of racial and ethnic groups in
this nation is one of the most critical problems which we
now face. Moreover, present evidence indicates that more
and more communities must face these human relations
problems for years to come. While laws and ordinances
are useful in shaping responses to these problems, their
resolutions ultimately rests on the attitudes and actions
of individuals in their own communities.
Since today's students will face these problems as
tomorrow's citizens and community leaders, they need
to gain additional insight into the variety and complexity
of these problems in human relations and their own re-
sponsibilities regarding these problems. They certainly
need to gain exposure, even if this is secondhand exposure,
to the experiences faced by other young Americans. The
major purpose of the course is to make the students more
aware of the need to re-examine their own attitudes and
responses to members of other races when the traditional
patterns of communication, or non-communication, no
longer suffice.
Participation in this course depends on individual stu-
dent interest rather than fulfillment of academic require-
ments, so the students who enrolled have varied academic
backgrounds. For this reason it is not always possible to
work on some of the more theoretically and methodologic-
ally complex studies in race relations. Moreover, the major
purpose of the course is to encourage the students to gain
personal understanding and insight into their own at-
titudes, so the emphasis has been on a selective list of
readings which are directed towards the interested non-
academic reader. The reading assignments are relatively
light, but the students may not agree with this last state-
ment.
So far we have read selections by Charles Silberman,
W. E. B. DuBois, Malcolm X, and James Baldwin. Each
week a different student has the responsibility for direct-
ing the one-hour discussion of that week's reading. By
now we have established tlie rapport necessary for very
free and open discussion. Frequently the comments are
not only spirited and vigorous, but also refreshingly blunt.
In one important sense this course has offered a
valuable opportunity to supplement the students' formal
academic training. By the emphasis on their own relation-
ship to a major contemporary social problem, it encourages
the participating students to scrutinize the impact of their
actions and attitudes on the resolution of that problem.
Certainly the students have shown their interest and have
participated.
There are, in my estimation, two major drawbacks to
the course. Since all of the students have regular course
work in addition to their E.xperimental University work,
they cannot always do the necessary reading or attend all
of the classes. The irregular preparation and attendance has
slowed us down at times. The second drawback is that
the course has undoubtedly attracted students who are
already favorably disposed towards the civil rights move-
ment. While it has perhaps served as a means of reorienting
the attitudes of these students, it has certainly not reached
students who are indifferent or negatively disposed to-
wards this movement. This course could be more valuable
to the participants if we had a broader representation of
student opinion.
On balance, I do consider that the Experimental Uni-
versity does serve a valuable function for this academic
community. For a teacher it provides opportunity for ex-
perimentation in new subjects and new teaching methods.
For the students it provides broader opportunities for
intellectual and personal development. D
SDr. Hunt's major areas of interest are in American politics and
government. She is co-author with Andrew M. Scott of "Congress
and Groups: Image and Reality." She is a member of the North
Carolina Commission on the Education and Employment of Women.
Her Experimental University course deals with what happens to
graduates when they leave the liberal confines of the University.
24
The UNrvERsnr of North Caholina at Greensboro
Jujitsu
Dr. Claude Chauvigne
Department of Romance Languages
o,
NCE there lived by the palace at Kyoto a wise
man whose knowledge was great and reputation con-
siderable. One afternoon as he was meditating, a
warrior came to him boldly:
"It is said you know everything. So,
tell me, old man, what is the differ-
ence between Hell and Heaven."
"Who are you?" replied the wise man.
"Well! Can't you see I am a great
warrior of the Imperial Guard!"
"You! You, a warrior of the Imperial
Guard!" and the old man laughed
very heartily.
"Do not mock me, old man! I am a
captain."
"A captain! a captain with a wooden
sword!" the wise man laughed even
more, and kept ridiculing the solider
until this one, angry, drew his
sword. . .
"You can't even hold that and you
shake like an old woman . . ." and
more laughter.
The soldier raised his terrible weapon as to strike the
wise man. At this moment, when the sword shone
high, the wise man said:
"Now, captain, you stand at the gates
of Hell!"
Startled, the soldier froze, then lowered the sword,
put it back into its scabbard and bowed deeply.
"Now, said the wise man, you stand at
the Gates of Heaven."
Senior Judi Hickman of Charlotte demonstrates a Jujitsu
hold, one of some 30 which must be passed before gradu-
ating to the Yellow Belt. Taking a fall is James McCleod
(sociology and anthrolopolgij) who is teaching a course in
the Experimental University on the biological and sociolog-
ical considerations of race.
Jujitsu, or Judo which stems from it, is one of the
Supple Arts that originated in the Orient and is now
cultivated throughout the world for its unmatched physical
and mental qualities. It is a very demanding discipline
that requires perseverence, and teaches the art of self-
defense. In its physical aspect, the study of Jujitsu is
that of the logical application of sound principles of
physics and psychology in order to defend oneself. Thus,
one learns to use the strength of an aggressor against
himself, the effect of the centrifugal or centripede forces,
the power of yielding, etc. Then, one masters techniques
of submission-throws, locks, nerve control, and, if need
arises, more ultimate means of defense. But here one
must note a beautiful result of the study of the Arts:
as the student gains confidence, he is not likely to misuse
his knowledge.
Indeed, more important than these obvious benefits,
Jujitsu, as well as the other Supple Arts, is a philosophy,
a Way of Life. Its study rapidly transcends the mere
physical training and leads to a full revelation of one's
abilities and weaknesses, to a sincere acceptance of his
fellowmen, to a greater understanding of nature, and the
fulfillment of the highest aspirations. By its very nature,
Jujitsu lowers the proud and raises the humble; it lessens
the evils and enhances the good inherent in our human
condition. □
Dr. Chauvigne was bom and spent his early life in Central Africa
and France before coming to the United States for advanced degree
work. One of the few fourth-degree Jujitsu Black Belts in the
country, he also received his Judo Sandan degrees from the
"Kodokan", world organization of Judo. He recently opened a
Jujitsu school in Greensboro which has attracted considerable
interest.
The Alumni News: Winteh 1968
25
EXPERIMENTAL UNIVERSITY
Buddhaism
Dr. Lenoir C. Wright
Department of History and Political Science
I confess that I had some reservations concerning the
philosophy behind the "Experimental University." The
motto of the University student sponsors of the project
was: "If you are fed up with your courses, join the 'Ex-
perimental University!' Instructors also were invited to
express their discontent over the "System" and to teach
courses focusing on their special interests. Wliy not devote
this energy to existing courses? Furtlier, I felt that I was
already teaching courses in which I was vitally interested.
The thought then occurred that, while I did not find myself
"deprived," perhaps my students found my courses dull.
It could very well be!
In any event, when students honored me by inviting
my participation in the new "Experimental University," I
happily consented. When a student body such as ours
which has been traditionally apathetic suddenly comes to
life, it appeared that the least the faculty could do was
to support the venture, at least on a trial basis. I will con-
cede that I had a x^ersonal reason as well. I find myself
gready excited by the civilizations of Asia courses I teach,
the first semester of which deals with traditional religion,
philosophy and art of India, China and Japan. However,
in such a survey course, it is impossible to go in depth
into such subjects as Buddliism. I welcomed the opportun-
ity to offer an "experimental" course in original Buddhist
sources. This interest in Buddhism had been sharpened
by the fact that I spent part of last summer's visit to Japan
living in Buddist temples. As was the case with previous
visits to Japan, this proved a most interesting and reward-
ing experience.
If I assume the role of "Guru" in leading our study
group, it is only because I have worked a little more in
the Buddhist material than the other members. We try
to operate on a policy of equality, and this is expressed
in taking turns in reading and in providing the light re-
freshments which we share. I have been delighted to find
that students who in regular classes seem shy or reluctant
to ask questions, now blossom in the more informal at-
mosphere. Our approach is to examine original sources,
i.e., Buddhist Sutras ( in translation of course! ). This seems
preferable to reading secondary material. One interesting
by-product has been to open up discussion on a com-
parative basis of the principles of Christianity.
All in all I have found this a happy learning experience.
Not only have I come to know some interesting students,
but I have been forced to do considerable rethinking about
Buddhism. D
Dr. Wright spent some time as a guest in Buddhist Temples in
Japan last summer during travels before and after a seminar and
lectures at Sophia University in Tokyo.
EXPER/MENTAL UNIVERSITV
Russia Before 1861
John C. Robinson '69
IN order to get away from the normal, structured Russian
history course which dominates the classroom situation
because of the great amount of material which must be
covered, the Experimental University's Russian history
seminar examined Russian culture through a study of
native literature prior to the Revolution. Participants
received a reading list when they enrolled last spring
which includes both reference works dealing with the
IDolitical histoiy and a number of novels from which
four were chosen by the class for study and discussion.
The four works chosen were The Cossacks and The Raid,
Fathers and Sons, A Hero of Our Time, and two short
stories from The Diary of a Madman. In addition to
literature, the class studied the development of the Russian
Orthodox Church in the Kievan state from the eighth to
the thirteenth century. Plans are to travel to Winston-
Salem before the end of the term to tour an Eastern
Orthodox Church.
Since native cuisine usually is omitted from Russian
history courses, the class held a Russian Christmas party.
Each student brought food, a game, or a custom to share
with other members of the seminar. Tlie result was a
many-course Russian dinner, complete with imported
vodka, and an evening of entertainment to which all
contributed.
Although the time needed for regular class work
conflicted with the time available for extracurricular
studies, an experimental course of this sort both helps
the seminar members to absorb information in greater
detail and motivates them to further individual study.
In this respect, we believe the Experimental University
is a success. D
John C. Robinson, junior, has a special interest in Russian history.
26
The Unhtersity of North Carolina at Greensboro
t^.yr }ff> t-> ,M i^ / )■ > ,: > f ^'-n
Alumni-Faculty
Bookshelf
RANDALL JARRELL, 1914-1965, ed-
ited by Robert Lowell, Peter Taylor and
Robert Penn Warren (New York: Farrar,
Straus & Giroux, 308 pages, $6.50). The
reviewer. Heather Ross Miller '61, has a
new novel scheduled for January, GONE
A HUNDRED MILES. Royalties from
her recent book of poetry, THE WIND
SOUTHERLY, have been donated to the
University's Randall Jarrell Writing Scho-
larship. Royalties from this collection also
will support the scholarship fund.
When Boris Pasternak was a child, he
had glimpses of the great German poet
Rilke who was a friend of his father. Later
he came to connect the wonderful poetry he
found in a book with the black-caped figure
of his childhood. And even later, after
Pasternak himself had become a poet, he
humbly wrote:
"1 do not present my reminiscences to
the memory of Rilke. On the contrary, I
myself received them as a present from
him."
Pasternak also wrote that biography
belongs to heroes and that poets caimot be
presented in such a way. The recorded life
of a poet does not lie down in a straight
line with easy, predictable facts. It has to
be made up from seeming unessentials,
form subconscious things that are hard to
measure, and "composed of all that is hap-
pening to his readers and which he does
not know."
The charge has been made that die
people who put together this book were
more interested in themselves than in the
dead poet Randall Jarrell. Reed Whitte-
more in Saturdmj Review complains about
a pretentious "club" tone in the book. And
someone called Terry Baker headlines his
review in the Atlanta Constitution with
"Look, they say — Jarrell knew me."
Both are interesting, and I must confess
I was fearful the book might be overstuffed,
full of sticky tears, and flawed by the rav-
ings of people who were eager to own a
piece of the Randall Jarrell reputation.
My fears were unfounded. The book is
put together in good taste. The contributors
are made up of Jarrell's peers. They include
not only intimate friends like Robert Lowell,
Peter Taylor, Robert Watson, and Hannah
Arendt, but also Jarrell's critics and associ-
ates in modem Uterature, people who had
never met the man but who had met his
works.
It is true that Randall Jarrell was the
student of John Crowe Ransome at Vander-
bilt University in the late 1930s and that
he came into contact with Allen Tate and
Robert Penn Warren. But he was no Fugi-
tive; and while a bom Southerner, no agrar-
ian. Thus he was no "club" member. And,
as his wife Mary Jarrell says, he never
joined things "unless you count Phi Beta
Kappa, the National Institute of Arts and
Letters, and the Army."
I found no prevailing "club" tone in the
book. And it is saved from sentimentaHty
by the inclusion of critical essays and re-
views on Jarrell's works, poetry, criticism,
translations, and chOdren's books. Some of
the people writing these pieces are Leslie
A. Fredler, Cleanth Brooks, Denis Donog-
hue, P. L. Travers (the author of the "Mary
Poppins" stories), and a nun. Sister M.
Bemetta Quinn O. S. F.
Perhaps the most interesting essay is that
of Karl Shapiro, who was neither Jarrell's
friend nor his enemy. Indeed Shapiro's
essay alone (from his memorial lecture at
the Library of Congress) would destroy
both Whittemore's complaint of a "club"
and Baker's wisecrack of a headline. In it
he pays much attention to Jarrell's influ-
ence in our contemporary poetry, to both
his criticisms and his contributions:
"We were of the same group, so to
speak, and had fought all the same wars,
and he had a right to cry Whoa! when I
came galloping by."
And Jarrell cried, "Whoa!" at lots of peo-
ple that had no right to be galloping by.
Shapiro was and still is an e.xcellent poet.
But Jarrell attacked him (as he did most
everyone) and challenged him to get better.
Needless to add that Randall Jarrell had
plenty of enemies.
John Berryman says diat "we're going
to witness during die months to come an
unusual spate of publication of really bad
poetry . . . people who have been holding
their books up for years while they waited
for Fate to come and deal with that terrible
person, Randall Jarrell."
Then Berryman goes on to say that it
was Jarrell's "criticism of praise" that really
mattered. And Robert Lowell says of him:
"Randall was the only man I have ever
met who could make other writers feel that
their work was more important to him than
his own. . . . What he did was to make
others feel that their realizing themselves
was as close to him as his own self-realiza-
tion, and that he cared as much about
making the nature and goodness of someone
else's work understood as he cared about
making his own understood."
Perhaps this was the single aspect of
Randall Jarrell's genius: the will and the
energy to keep the spark going in other
people. He never paid much attention to
what was fashionable in the Hterary market-
place. And he never attached too much
importance to honors and prizes. Every-
thing he did was in some way tied in with
his teaching. Lowell points out "He gloried
in being a teacher, never apologized for it,
and related it to his most serious criticism."
North Carolinians should realize that
Randall Jarrell was an unworldly man
when it came to teaching. He could have
gone to Sarah Lawrence, to Antioch, to
Stanford. But he chose Greensboro and
what was then known as the Woman's Col-
lege of the University of North Carohna.
And he stayed with it for near to 20 years
while his literary reputation ballooned and
circled all over the nation.
Other poets might have considered them-
selves as birds-in-a-cage locked up in the
midst of a "Southern female seminary."
But it was a comfortable place for Jarrell
to be. He said of it, to a fellow teacher
and poet, Robert Watson, "This college is
like Sleeping Beauty."
And this is what is lacking in the book:
Randall JarreD's students. But perhaps the
voices of the students are to be heard in
another book with a difi^erent perspective.
In any case, the royalties from the sale of
this one will be donated to the Randall
Jarrell Writing Scholarship at UNC.
This book, which is neither biography
nor eulogy, does not lie down in a straight
line. It gives an unpredictable portrait of
an unpredictable poet. Boris Pastemak
wrote his autobiography, something caUed
"Safe Conduct;" and he died in his bed at
the age of 70. Randall JarreU never wrote
a thing about himself; and he was struck
down at the age of 51, on a dark street
in Chapel Hill.
But in conclusion, I will have to cast
my thoughts into those of Pasternak's: I
have no reminiscences to give to those of
die poet Randall Jarrell. And those which I
have were given to me by him.
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
27
'96
Next reunion in 1968
In Memoriam ; Alice Denny Crews (x) died
on November 12.
'00 Next reunion in 1968
Lewis Speight Morris, Jr., grandson of
Emma Speight Morris, and Margaret Alex-
ander Myers were married on November 25.
In Memoriam: Lelia Judson Tuttle died on
November 8. A former missionary, LeUa
taught at Davenport College, and spent
more than thirty years as a teacher at Mc-
Tiere Girls School in Shanghai, China, and
at Soochow University in China. She re-
turned to the United States when China
was occupied by Japan, and taught in
Caldwell County schools for a number of
years before her retirement.
'02
Next reunion in 1968
In Memoriam: Lizzie Spencer Fox (c) died
on November 10.
Nevt reunion in 1968
'04
Sympathy: Mary Boddie Smith's (c) daugh-
ter, Sarah Smith ('35) died in September.
Next reunion in 1968
'07
Sympathy: Clara Spencer Whitaker's (x)
sister Lizzie Spencer Fox ('02c) died on
November 10.
Next reunion in 1968
'08
In Memoriam: Marion Moring Stedman
died on September 29.
Next reunion in 1968
'10
Sympathy: Annie Moring Alexander's sis-
ter, Marion Moring Stedman (OSx), died on
September 29.
Next reunion in 1968
'12
Address Changes: Rosa Vera Gathings
White (x), Rt. 1, Morven.
'24 Next reunion in 1968
Address Changes: Willie May Stratford
Shore, 4628 Walker Rd., Churchill Downs,
Charlotte.
In Memoriam: Eleanor Morgan Phipps
died on November 14. Eleanor had taught
in the North Carolina Public Schools, Uni-
versity of Oklahoma, Mississippi State Col-
lege for Women and Randolph-Macon Col-
lege, but most of her life was spent in
lUinois. A memorial service was held in
the Unitarian Universalist Church, Urbana,
111.
25 Next reunion in 1968
This year, 1967, is the mid-year between
our Fiftieth and Fifty-Fifth reunions, we
decided to have a big "Round-up" of mem-
bers. Of our thirty-seven living members
whose addresses we know, we have seen
twenty-six and had communications from
eight others. We are still hoping to locate
Kate Bullard and Florence Hughes. If any-
body knows anything about them please
tell us!
This is the story: In early October Hildah
Mann Jones and Julia Bryan Futrell, both
of whom live over the border in Virginia,
traveled together to Raleigh. There they
saw Belle Walters GrifBn and Susie Rankin
Fountain. Mazie Kirkpatrlck Gainey drove
up to Raleigh and took Hildah and Julia
to her home in Fayetteville for a three-day
visit. All three then came to Lake Junaluska
to see Edith Haight. The next day, Sunday,
the four of them and Dr. Edith Williams
who was later adopted as 1915's Mascot,
had dinner in AsheviUe with Vonnie Mc-
Lean Hipps and Martha Dicker Kanipe at
Vonnie's home. The following day, Monday,
the traveling five went to Brevard for a
visit with Berthel Mitchell McLain and
her husband.
On Tuesday Mazie left us to visit rela-
tives and return home while the remaining
four drove to the home of Bessie Wright
Ragland ia Salisbury. Mamie Eaton Flem-
ing, Margaret Willis Alexander, Ethel
Thomas Abemathy, Pauline Shaver Moore,
Susie Rankin Fountain, and Cora Belle
Sloan Caldwell joined us there. Bessie,
Mamie, and Margaret had made arrange-
ments for us to have a delicious buffet
luncheon at the Country Club. Afterwards
the whole group went to the home of
one bedridden member, Margaret Linker
Wyatt, for a visit. In the evening those
of us who were remaining in Salisbury
for the night had a beautiful and tasty
"red and white" supper at Bessie's.
Wednesday morning the traveling four
and Cora Belle picked up Lena Glenn
Pratt in Winston-Salem and went to
Greensboro where Gay Hohnan Spivey,
HalUe Beavers Alhed, and Vera MUlsaps
were waiting at the Alumnae House to
welcome us. Cora BeUe and Gay had made
all arrangements with the invaluable help
of our wonderful Alumnae Secretary, Bar-
bara Parrish. We had such a nice luncheon
served in the Ball Room of the Alumnae
House. Afterwards the president of Stu-
dent Government came to welcome us to
the campus and to introduce two students
who were our guides for a bus tour of new
developments on the campus. After the
tour Vera and Hallie had to leave for their
homes. The rest of us enjoyed a dehghtful
supper with Cora Belle and her sister in
their home.
After a most comfortable night in the
Alumnae House and breakfast served in the
Gold Room we set out for Chinqua-Perm.
Bessie and Cora Belle's sister joined us
for the tour of Chinqua-Penn. It was a re-
warding experience. Anyone who has not
been there should certainly make a special
effort to go before any changes are made.
Our car load returned to Greensboro and
the other car with Julia, Hildah, and the
two Ediths drove to Oxford for a brief but
pleasant visit with Helen Hunt Parham. She
still had some bruises from her recent fall
but seemed quite herseff. From there they
went to Chapel Hill and checked into a
motel for the night after leaving Julia at
her daughter's home. Hildah and the two
Ediths spent a happy evening with Janie
Stacey Gwyim and her husband.
HUdah left us to return to Norfolk the
following morning and Juha rejoined us.
We drove to Gary to see Mamie Morgan
Poole and from there went to Wilson's Mills
to see Inez Hoiuine Parrish. Neither Mamie
nor Inez had seen us since the day of our
graduation fifty-two years ago. Inez and
her daughter took us out to lunch before
letting us depart on the final lap of our
journey. We had called Juha Holt Black
Davis and learned that she was doing sub-
stitute teaching and Ruth Harriss Tyson
had written that she would be out of town,
so we crossed Carthage from our list and
headed west.
We made a brief stop in Graham to see
the nice house and garden where Vera
MUlsaps and her sister Uve and arrived
at Lake Junaluska that evening.
Juha had seen Ernestine Cherry not too
long before she started this trip and Edith
had seen Louise Whitley Rice. Louise had
planned to be with us at both Salisbury
and Greensboro but something unexpected
interfered. Gertrude Carraway was too busy
to join us but sent her greetings and good
wishes. Lillian ElUs Sisk was doing sub-
stitute teaching and Ruth Gaither McLeod
was away from home on business. Alice
Sawyer Cooper hves in Florida — too far
away to join us every year — but sent a card
of greeting. We heard also from Julia Can-
nady. Watch out for her new book in 1968.
'\Q Next reunion in 1968
In Memoriam: Mary W. Gwynn died on
September 24. She was a former high school
teacher, a secretary for the YWCA for sev-
eral years in various cities including High
Point, and operated Camp Gay Valley, a
children's camp in Brevard for the past
twenty-five years.
Sympathy: Lucy Hatch Brooks' husband
died on November 11. Sara Gwynn
Dininny's sister, Mary Gwynn ('16), died
on September 24.
28
The Univebsity of North Carolina at Greensboro
17
Next reunion in 1968
Address Changes: Gertrude Smith Mitchell
receives mail in Box 475, Pilot Mountain.
'18
Next reunion in 1968
Address Changes: Susie Brady Brown,
Blind Brook Lodge PL, Rye, N. Y. Eliza
Collins, Apt. D-2, Oleander Ct., Wilming-
ton.
19
Next reunion in 1969
In Memoriam: Georgia McMillan Dukes
(x) died on July 17.
'20
Next reunion in 1970
Sympathy: Frances Long Klipstein's (x)
sister, Marjorie Long Benbow, died on
September 17.
'21
Next reunion in 1968
Sympathy: Elma Critchfield Gwynn's (x)
sister-in-law, Mary Gwynn ('16), died on
September 24.
'22
Next reunion in 1968
Address Changes: Mary Edith York, 404
N. Ridgeway St., Greensboro.
'23
Next reunion in 1968
Grace Albright Stamey was the
AsheviJle Citizen's "Woman of the
Week" in mid-November. Although
she is not really an "Asheville citi-
zen" (she hves in WaynesviUe), her
activity in and contribution to Western
North Carolina are, indeed, worthy of
regional note. For 41 years, before her re-
tirement in 1965, she taught science on
both high school and college levels and
served as a school supervisor. She has
taught courses for teachers in Haywood and
surrounding counties. Active in church (she
is vice-president of Women of the Church
of Asheville Presbytery) and community
affairs, an assortment of organizations ac-
claim her membership: the Mental Health
Association, Red Cross Volunteers, Waynes-
viUe Woman's Club (she's now president).
Alpha lota Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma
(she's president of this, too), WaynesviUe
Council of Garden Clubs, and WaynesviUe
Business and Professional Women's Club
(she was the founding president some 19
years ago). A life member of the National
Science Teachers' Association, she has been
invited to attend the meeting of the Asso-
ciation for Science Education, a British
organization, in London in January, one of
twelve participants from the United States.
'24
Next reunion in 1974
Sympathy: Elizabeth Groome Arthur's (c)
husband died on November 7.
'25
Next reunion in 1972
Address Changes: Pauline Tarleton Ellis,
Box 784, Wadesboro.
'26
Next reunion in 1972
Mildred Little Hendrix, Duke University
organist for the past twenty-three years,
was retired from that post and has been
named university organist emeritus. She
wiU continue her academic association with
the university through the assistant pro-
fessorship she has held in the Department
of Music since 1958.
Holy Trinity Episcopal Church in
Greensboro honored its Organist-
Choirmaster Emeritus, Hermene
Warlick Eichhorn, at a unique serv-
ice on November 19. All of the
music for the service of Evening Prayer
(thirteen selections) was composed by Her-
mene, whose active service at Holy Trinity
spanned the years from September, 1926,
until July, 1967. Two of her compositions
were performed during the service for the
first time. (She has more than 50 pubUshed
works and has recently completed a book
of anthems containing forty choral numbers
adapted to the ecclesiastical church year.)
Her family figured prominently in the sei-v-
ice: son, Richard, is the present organist
at Holy Trinity; daughter-in-law. Eve- Anne
(Allen) '49, is soprano soloist of the Senior
Choir; granddaughter, Deborah, is a mem-
ber of the Senior Choir; and grandson,
Richard, Jr., is in the Youth Choir. A
congregational reception, arranged by the
Women of the Church, followed the serv-
ice, and on display at the reception room's
entrance was a portrait of Hennene, done
in 'TDrush oil photography," which has
been hung in the church's choir room.
Address Changes: Clara Matthews Naylor
(x). Box 343, Roseboro.
Sympathy: Ruth Henry's brother-in-law,
William D. Smith, died on November 20.
'27
Next reunion in 1971
Address Changes: Pauline Whitaker
Moose, 200 N. Main St., Mt. Pleasant.
Sympathy: Meta Gibson Gibson's (x)
mother died on October 31.
'28
Next reunion in 1971
Lucille Boone Lewis' daughter, Alice Ray
('67) is teaching art in Charlotte this year.
Sympathy: Louise Gibson Neal's (c) mother
died on October 31. Constance Gwaltney
Huntsberry's husband, Brig. Gen. Walter
A. Huntsberry, retired, died on October 16.
Gen. Huntsberry was a logistic expert, a
veteran of World War II and helped plan
the invasion of Normandy. He was with
the First Division when it landed on the
Normandy Beach. Elizabeth Lewis Huffines
father died on November 12.
'29
Next reunion in 1971
Ava Brannock Burke has been elected sec-
ond vice president of the Southeast Regional
Conference of Women in Chambers of
Conunerce.
'31
Next reunion in 1970
Betty Brown Jester has a new grandchild —
her first grandson. Her son John and his
wife had the baby in November. Eva
Woosley Warren was named treasurer of
the North CaroUna State Nurses Association
at a meeting held in Asheville in October.
Address Changes: Daisy Farr McEwen.
818 Sherbrook Dr., Richardson, Tex. Ethel
Fleishman Vatz, 2525 Dartmouth Dr., Fay-
etteville. Nancy Stoner Little, Rt. 1, Box
330-A, Statesville.
In Memoriam: Mae Finison Gay (x) died
on October 24.
Sympathy: Patricia Braswell's mother ched
in April, 1967. Mary Benbow Mooney's (c)
mother died on Sept. 17. Sara Henry
Smith's husband died on November 20.
'32
Next reunion in 1970
Address Changes: Gilma Baity Brown,
Raleigh Tovrae #33, Wade Ave., Raleigh.
Susie Jackson McClenaghan, 15 Dameron
Ave., Greenville, S. C.
Sympathy: Alice James Crews' mother-in-
law, Alice Denny Crews (x) died on No-
vember 12. Frances Weddington HeUig's (c)
husband died on Sentember 17.
'33
Next reunion in 1970
Constance Herritage Eddy's daughter,
Stephanie, was graduated cum laude from
Bryn Mawr College in May. Katherine
Timier Jones' daughter, Suzanne K. Jones
('66) and Sanford Kent Walker were mar-
ried on September 15.
Address Chances: Beulah Welch Bean,
4400 Lee Highway, Apt. 204, Arlington,
Va. Katherine B. NoweU, 1712 Park Rd.,
Apt. 3, Charlotte.
In Memoriam: Lucille Tyson Whitesides
died on September 18. Rebecca Braswell's
mother died in April, 1967.
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
29
'34
Next reunion in 1970
'38
Next reunion in 1969
'41
Next reunion in 1973
Helen Whitener Zink was initiated into
Delta Kappa Gamma at a ceremony held
in the Alumnae House, UNC-G, during
October.
Address Changes: Isabelle Fried Vatz (c)
1817 Tryon Rd., New Bern. Margaret
Spencer Clare, Pelham.
Sympathy: Louise Bundy Jones' (c) father
died on September 20. Margaret Kemodle
DeChard's father died on October 4.
'35
Next reunion in 1969
Address Changes: Genevieve Corbett Cov-
olo, 116 Pinehurst Ave., Apt. J52, New York,
New York.
In Memoriam: Sarah Smith died during
September, 1967. Frances Kemodle Blunk's
father died on October 4. Martha Tyson
Hagler's sister, Lucile Tyson Whitesides
(33), died on September 18.
'36
Next reunion in 1969
Betty Griesinger Aydelette was initiated
into Delta Kappa Gamma at a ceremony
held in the Alumnae House, UNC-G, dur-
ing October. Elizabeth Harvell Miller is di-
rector of cafeterias for the Greensboro City
School System.
Sympathy: Evelyn Sharpe Bumgamer's (M)
father-in-law died on October 2.
Next reunion in 1969
The Hannah G. Soloman Award of
the National Council of Jewish
Women was presented to Betsy
Dupuy Taylor on November 6 in
recognition of her service as organ-
izer and projects director of Women in
Community Service (WIGS) in Greensboro.
The award, which honors the women who
founded the Council of Jewish Women
seventy-five years ago, is given to those
who perform outstanding service to their
communities in areas of youth and family
life. Betsy has been the "guiding force" in
Greensboro's program of recruiting and
screening area girls for Job Corps Training
Centers. The Greensboro section of WICS,
a national organization of Protestant, Jew-
ish, Catholic, and Negro women, is the
agency which launched the area's pilot pro-
gram in Job Corps cooperation two-and-a-
half years ago.
Address Changes: Elizabeth Gant Bennett,
181 Library PI., Princeton, N. J. Mar>'
Witherspoon Brown, 13 Fairgreen Place,
BrookUne, Mass.
Sympathy: Edna Carpenter Baker's father
died during November.
Sympathy: Evelyn Hammond Dukes'
mother-in-law died on July 17. Evelyn
Kemodle Pratt's father died on October 4.
Frances Truitt Smith's husband died on
November 7. Frances Womble Reich's
mother died on September 18.
'39
Next reunion in 1968
Address Changes: Rose Dunn Harrison,
814 Lake Boone Trail, Raleigh. Virginia
Livingston Muse, Box 27, Laurinburg.
Marjorie Pye Bogle, 1516 Dogwood Dr.,
Jacksonville, Ark.
Sympathy: Lucille Bethea Whedbee's hus-
band died on January 5, 1967. Carolyn
Dukes Ahlin's mother died on July 17.
'40
Next reunion in 1968
Sarah Turner Hysong's (x) son Jim and
Page Bowden ('66) were married in Decem-
ber, 1966.
Address Changes: Rebecca Anderson
Sokolowski, N. Miami Hospital Annex, N.
Miami, Fla. Eunice King Durgin, 315 W.
End Ave., Apt. 4B, New York, N. Y.
In Memoriam: Dr. Marjorie A. Swanson, a
former associate Professor of biochemistry
at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine,
died November 23. She received the first
M.S. degree awarded by Wake Forest Col-
lege through its medical school. She then
went to Washington University in St.
Louis and was awarded a Ph.D. in 1946.
Dr. Swanson was taking residency training
in psychiatry at Albert Einstein Medical
Center in New York at the onset of her
illness.
Sympathy: Helen Gray Whitley Vestal's
father died on November 15.
In Producing a television documen-
tary focusing on "The Years of
Change" at the University at Greens-
boro, which was shown in early Octo-
ber, just before Founder's Day,
WMFY-TV (Channel 2 in Greens-
boro) focused on four generations of
students — all in the same family.
Kathryn Imogene Pritchard of Hick-
ory, a senior majoring in social
sciences, shared the spotlight with her
mother, Imogene Cashion Pritchard
'41, and her grandmotlier, Katherine
Rockett Cashion '14, and her step-
great-grandmother, Beatrice Coltrane
Rockett '07x. Earlier the Pritchard-
Cashion-Rockett recollections had
figured "front and center" in the Class
of 1968's Junior Show, entitled "Times
Are A-Changin'."
Katy Ruth Grayson, former director of re-
ligious education at First Baptist Church
in Goldsboro, has accepted a similar position
at Hayes Barton Baptist Church in Raleigh.
Mary Miller (M) is a new faculty mem-
ber in the School of Home Economics at
UNC-G this year. She states she enjoys
being a student and she is presently a
doctoral student at Columbia University.
Address Changes: Mary Miller, 3222
Lavmdale Dr., Apt. 9-B, Greensboro.
Sympathy: Mary Elizabeth Jordan Regan's
mother died on November 1. Millicent
Miller Benbow's mother-in-law died on
September 17.
'42
Next reunion in 1972
Lou Hardy Frye has been reappointed to
the State Board of Juvenile Correction. Lou
has served on the Moore County Board of
education and the Moore County welfare
board. Eleanor Southerland and Robert Ivey
Powell of Clinton were married on Novem-
ber 4. Until recently, Eleanor was a pro-
gram specialist with the foreign training
division, international agricultural division
of the USDA and Mr. Powell, former
mayor of Clinton and a fighter pilot in
World War II, is owner and operator of
Powell Shoe Store in Clinton. The couple
live in CUnton at 405 E. Powell St. Miss
North Carolina, Sally Stedman, daughter
of Sarah White Stedman, has accepted an
invitation to appear with the Radio City
Music Hall symphony orchestra for a five-
week engagement next year. Sally was
named the most musically-talented per-
former in the Miss America Contest in
Atlantic City in September.
Address Changes: Josephine Howard Staf- '
ford, 225 Acacia St., Sunlake Park, Lutz,
Fla. Iris McGinley Carrubba (,x), P. O. 1574,
Quarry Height, Canal Zone. Lois Reeves
Landreth (c), Rt. 2, Sparta.
Sympathy: Marjorie Benbow Luxom's (x)
mother died on September 17. Cassandra
Kemodle Ricketts' father died on October
4. Eloise McGehee's father died in Decem-
ber. Sarah White Stedman's mother-in-law,
Marion Moming Stedman (08x) died on
September 29.
'43
Nejct reunion in 1968
Dr. Harriet Kupferer, recipient of one of
UNC-G's research leave grants, spent the
fall semester on Isla Mujeres, off the Yu-
catan coast, studying Mexican Indians. Julia
Pepper Smyth's husband, Rev. Thomas J.
C. Smyth, N. C. diocesan chaplain for
Episcopal college students of the Greens-
boro area, was named the new chairman of
the board of trustees of St. Mary's Junior
College in Raleigh in October.
Address Changes: Marguerita Laughridge
Stem, 100 E. Front St., Oxford. Ruth Shul-
man Levy, 1922 Rhodes St., Hermosa
Beach, Calif. Carolyn White Southerland,
Lancaster Place, High Point.
30
The University of Nobth Carolina at Greensboro
'44
Next reunion in 1969
Address Changes: Frances Bailey Teale,
3508 Say-ward Dr., Durham.
Sympathy: Josephine Collins Beamer's
mother-in-law died on November 22.
'45
Next reunion in 1970
Bemice Anthony Foxx and George O. Bixby
were married September 26. The couple live
in Northampton, Mass., 37 Pomeroy Ter-
race, where Mr. Bixby is a refrigeration
engineer. Dr. Kathryn Eskey, a member of
the School of Music faculty at UNC-G,
presented an organ recital on campus in
November. Pat Rothrock has been a Metho-
dist Missionary in Congo since 1959. Pat
receives mail at B. P. 2156 Lubumbashi,
R. D. Congo, where she is Conference Di-
rector of Christian Education.
Address Changes: Dianne Page Bench,
1627 Acapulco, Dallas, Tex.
'46
Next reunion in 1971
Address Changes: Olive Kimbrough Bab-
bitt, 824 Gilchrist St., Laurinburg.
Sympathy: Lucy Elmore Jordan's mother-
in-law died on November 1. Faye Tyson's
(c) sister Lucille Tyson Whiteside (33) died
on September 18.
'47
Next reunion in 1969
Carolyn Page Setzer was initiated into Zeta
Chapter of Delta Pi Epsilon, national hon-
orary graduate fraternity, at a meeting on
the UNC-G campus in October.
Address Changes: Mary Elizabeth Brittain
Gurley, 2615 Grant Ave., Raleigh. Jane
Joyner Burton, 3256 Robinhood Rd., Win-
ston-Salem. Mary Lambert Cooper, 313
Dogwood Dr., Boone.
In Memoriam: Dorothy Reynolds Phillips
died in an airplane crash in Vietnam in
December.
Sympathy: Mary Jane Venable Knight's (c)
mother died on November 6. Alice Womble
Holman's (x) mother died on September 18.
'48
Next reunion in 1968
Martyvonne Dehoney (M) is an assistant
professor of art at Drew University, Madi-
son, N. J., and she was featured in the
faculty art show which opened the school's
year-long series of exhibits. Martyvonne
has taught at Carthage College and Mere-
dith College and has been hsted in "Who's
Who in American Colleges and Universi-
ties." Ronny Dick, son of Jean Peters Dick,
recently became the first high school stu-
dent to become a member of a Chamber
of Commerce committee. Roimy's appoint-
ment to the Forum committee of the
Greensboro Chamber of Commerce resulted
from his many successes in Junior Achieve-
ment.
Address Changes: Betsy Barnes Simpson,
503 Kemp Rd. West, Greensboro. Barbara
Clegg Hinton, 8121 Pennington Dr., Knox-
ville, Tenn. Catherine Coulter Hattaway,
1417 Knob Hill, Forest Hills, Rt. #4, San-
ford. Ellen Stirewalt Dawson, 2618 Robin
Hood Dr., Greensboro.
Sympathy: Emily Bundy Cone's father
died on September 20.
'51
Next reunion in 1968
'49
Next reunion in 1968
Nancy Beam Funderburk Wells was
awarded a Master of Arts degree in Teach-
ing by Fairleigh-Dickinson University in
June, and she is now teaching history in
Raritan High School in Martinsville, N. J.
Address Changes: Jeannette Hanks
Weaver, 4405 Green Forest Rd., Greens-
boro. Candace Hatsell Pevato, 17341 New-
land St., Huntington Beach, Calif.
'50
Next reunion in 1968
Jean Farley White, former instruc-
tor in English at Hollins College, is
one of five contributors to a new
volume of poetry entitled "The Hol-
lins Poets," published in October by
the University of Virginia Press.
The anthology includes ten poems by each
of the contributors, all of whom, with the
exception of Jean, are members of the Hol-
lins faculty. Jean, whose husband is associ-
ate editor of the "Kenyon Review," has
had poems in the Nett) Yorker, the Hopkins
Review and tlie Kenyon Review. Jean holds
an M.A. degree from the Johns Hopkins
University.
Lydia James (M) has been appointed
Administrative Secretary for the N. C.
Symphony Society. Martha Jordan receives
mail at 5427 Penwood Dr., Raleigh, where
she is associate supervisor. Education of
Visually Handicapped Children in Special
Education Section, N. C. Dept. of Public
Instruction. Betsy Newman Nagel visited
Dr. Meta Miller and Miss Bemice Draper,
professors emeriti, during a visit in the
United States in late October. A resident of
England now, Betsy, has been teaching for
some time, but this year she is devoting her
full time to her family and her home at
35 Thornton Way in Cambridge. Ann Roy-
ster has been appointed director of music
in the First Methodist Church in Hender-
son. Allene Neal Self and James Richard
Scarce, a graduate of Virginia Polytechnical
Institute, were married on September 30.
The couple live at 2686 Banchory Rd., Win-
ter Park, Fla., where he is a field represen-
tative for American Mortgage Insurance
Company.
Address Changes: Dorothy Callahan
Fisher, Rt. 3, Box 363, Rocky Mount. Betty
Shuler Scott, 1738 Lafayette Circle, Rocky
Mount.
Sympathy: Dr. Elizabeth Bowles' father
died on October 22. Mary Shuler McMil-
lan's mother-in-law died on July 17.
Nancy Preas is a graduate student at N. C.
State University and her address is P. O.
Box 12262, Raleigh. Uta von Tresckow,
who was a student during the 1950-51 ses-
sion, is combining a career in medicine with
marriage (her husband, Karl von Aretin, is
a professor at die University of Darmstadt)
and motherhood (her daughter is almost six
years old).
Address Changes: Emmalynn Gettys Com,
6 Over Ridge Ct., Rockville, Md. Francie
Lynam Huffman, 511 Benner Rd., Allen-
town, Pa. Elizabeth Memory McKay, 853
Woodlake Dr., Jackson, Miss. Colleen Ren-
egar Moon, 516 Barksdale Dr., Raleigh.
Anna Secrest Holden, 6622 Ribda Ave.,
Charlotte. Betty Wimbish Warner, 1606
Milan Rd., Greensboro.
Sympathy: Opaleene Beamer's mother died
on November 22. Nancy Burton Hockett's
father died on November 12.
'52
Next reunion in 1972
Anne Carter Pollard (M) won a purchase
award for the Dillard Collection of the
Weatherspoon Art Gallery's 1967 "Art on
Paper" Exhibition at UNC-G. James L. Nel-
son (M) was initiated into the Zeta Chapter
of Delta Pi Epsilon, national honorary grad-
uate fraternity, at a meeting on the UNC-G
campus in October.
Address Changes: Lucille Gay Richards,
2808 Winstead Rd., Rocky Mount. Marcia
Hermann Bobman (x), 1230 Glenbumie
Lane, Dresher, Pa. Mary Joanna Phillips
Hutchison, 613 Anson Ave., Rockingham
Betty McKnight Riddle, 1544 Huntingdon
Trail, Dunwoody, Ga.
Sympathy: Margaret Arthur Miller's father
died on November 7. Emma Orr Nelson's
(M) husband died on October 7.
'53
Next reunion in 1972
Ruth Farmer is Mrs. R. L. Robertson and
receives mail in Box E, Nashville. Patricia
Hocker Lore had a daughter in Greensboro
on November 16. Jean Howard Taylor has
a new address in Hazel Crest, 111,, 3409
Hazel Lane. The Taylors moved from At-
lanta to Illinois where Jim is employed with
Illinois Central Railroad. Mary Lou John-
son Needham receives mail at 907 Forest
Hill Dr., Greensboro, and she had a new
.son on August 11. Edna Stephens Hattley
hves in Lake Jackson, Tex., and she is presi-
dent of tile County Medical Auxiliary this
year.
Address Changes: Ruth Sevier Foster, 21
Pheasant Dr., Oak Forest, Asheville. Nancy
Yelverton Thorpe, 508 Smallwood Dr.,
Rocky Mount. Nancy Simpson Hurt, 2610
Cherbonne, Greensboro.
Sympathy: Margaret Lewis Sparrow's fa-
ther-in-law died on September 29. Jean
Thacker Haithcox's father-in-law died on
September 25. Sara Wright Haithcox's fa-
ther-in-law died on September 25.
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
31
'54 Next reunion in 1972
Merle Gates Frazier was initiated into Delta
Kappa Gamma at a ceremony held in the
Alumnae House, UNC-G, during October.
Marian Fortune's plans for teaching over-
seas this fall were somewhat changed by
the eruption of matters between Egypt and
Israel during the summer: she is overseas
all right, but she is in London rather than
in Tripoli as iirst assigned. Her address:
Central High School, 7500th Air Base
Group, APO New York 09218. Betty Nunn
Shelton receives mail c/o 252 Pleasanfburg
Building, Suite 300, Greenville, S. C., where
she is teaching a fifth grade at Lake Forest
School and husband, Don, has been made
divisional manager of Financial Programs,
Inc., a mutual funds investment company.
The Sheltons have one son, Donnie, who is
a first grader. Anne Rothgeb Peschek of
Vienna, Austria, gave a concert on UNC-G
campus on November 27. Anne presently
combines keeping house for husband and
two-year-old, Martina, with recital and con-
cert work in Vienna, the opera capitol of
the world. Joann Scott Taylor (M) had a
daughter on September 30.
Address Changes: Ruth Davis Stephenson,
315 Dogwood Dr., Spray. Suzanne Weiss
Silver, 1073 Sweetbriar Rd., High Point.
Rose Michalove Deal, 8181 N. W. So. River
Drive, Miami, Fla. Dora Wiley Brown,
557-C Wakefield Dr., Charlotte. Barbara
Gilliam Hodge (c), 503 Helen St., Kanna-
poUs. Claudine Nichols Day, 3001 Veazey
Terr., N. VV., Washington, D. C. Alice
Griffin Myers, 86 Willow Terrace Apts.,
Chapel Hill. Ruth Mangum Hockaday, Rt.
8, Box 105-W, Raleigh. Clelia Garrison
Hand, 67 Rutledge Ave., Charleston, S. C.
Agnes Lee Far'hing, 824 E. Lexington Ave.,
High Point.
Sympathy: Anne Tripp Summers' (M)
mother died on November 24.
Next reunion in 1971
'55
James Rayford Coggins (M) is the principal
of Trinity High School and resides in Ran-
dleman at 121 Oak Lane.
Address Changes: Thomasine Strouther
Rendero, 1360 Ogden Ave., Apt. F-1,
Bronx, N. Y. Doris Durham Seabolt, 33-B
Colonial Apts., Chapel Hill Rd., Durham.
Suzanne Myers Cheek, 306 W. 32nd St.,
Lumberton. Carolyn Gravely Clodfelter,
1608 Hobbs Rd., Greensboro. Gloria Aime
Weaver Fisher, 905 Burrage Rd., N. E.,
Concord. Rosalie Kizziah Laughlin, 3719
N. Delaware St., Arlington, Va. Martha
Washam, 1919 Academy St., Apt. 19, Win-
ston-Salem. Cornelia Reece Wooten, RFD
1, East Bend. Mary Bivins Bridgman, 72
N. W. 20di St., Homestead, Fla.
Next reunion in 1971
'56
Nancy Bolick Smyre (c) had an addition to
her family on March 1, 1967. Amy Lynn
joined John Macon, age six and Laura
Catherine, who is four. Dr. Lee Hall, associ-
ate professor of art and chairman of the
department of art at Drew LIniversity,
Madison, N. J., heads the John F. Kennedy
Library-Drew University study on the in-
fluence of President Kennedy on art, and
she is founding director of Drew's new Art
Semester, based in New York City. Donald
Reid joined Carolyn Shepard Chisholm's
family on November 10.
Address Changes: Betty Jean O'Kelley,
Box 417, Rt. 1, Candler. Margaret Grouse
Bray, 1211 N. Centennial St., High Point.
Mary Ann Sides Wallace, 937 Kingston St.,
High Point. Kay Finch Patseavouras (x),
724 Florham St., High Point. LaTrelle
Smith Cawthon, 2481 Wood Acres Rd.,
Atlanta, Ga. Nancy Mitchell Reiners, 11008
London Dr., Burnsville, Minn.
prize in the First Union National Bank
Sculpture Composition on his sculpture
"Hera" in Charlotte this fall.
'57
Next reunion in 1971
A son was bom to Judge and Mrs. Herman
G. Enochs (Doris Crews) of Greensboro on
October 2. Minnie Currin Montgomery lives
at 503 Clayton Ave., Roxboro, where Mr.
Montgomery is extension chairman for
Person County. Gwen Harrington Bland
has moved to 450 Flyntvalley Dr., Winston-
Salem, where husband, Bill, is a vice presi-
dent with Wachovia Bank and Trust Com-
pany. Keith Asbury Jones was bom to
Billye Keith Jones (C) on October 6. Mr.
and Mrs. William E. Lane (Mary Sue
Rankin) had a son, Alan Scot, on August 28.
The Lanes have one other child, Paul, age
6, and reside on Rt. 2, Apex (Box 225).
Address Changes: Barbara Prago Sohn (x),
1906 Medhurst Dr., Greensboro. Margaret
"Jo" Duncan, 1011 Canterbury Rd., Ra-
leigh. Margaret Tandy Catling, 440 Hop-
kins St., Lakeland, Fla. Delia Canada Free-
man, 101-3 Gramercy Court, Minot AFB, N.
Dak. Patricia Lentz Stehman, II Birchwood
Dr., Fairfield, Conn.
Sympathy: Mabel Meredith Jones' (M)
brother, W. Lee Meredith, died on Septem-
ber 30.
'58
Next reunion in 1968
A daughter joined Peggy Brewer Joyce's
family in Stokesdale on September 29.
Ehzabeth Fox joined Jane Hoke Bultman's
family on November 9. Susan Kimberly
was bom to Shirley Pearman Hunter on
September 21. Patricia Ann Swart Evers is
teaching and her address is Rt. 1, Box 197,
Castle Hayne.
Address Changes: M. Diana Stampley
Walden, 1915 Sterling Rd., Charlotte. Maj.
Hilda L. Walker, Tripler General Hospital,
APO San Francisco 96438.
'59
Next reunion in 1969
Helen Jean Freeman and Dr. Robert Alvin
Orr, a graduate of Wake Forest College
and Southern Baptist Seminary, were mar-
ried on October 14. The couple live at
4724 W. Longdale Dr., Nashville, Tenn.,
where he is program and curriculum con-
sultant for the Training L'nion Dept. of
the Baptist Sunday School Board in Nash-
ville. Marilyn Mallard Kehoe had a son on
September 25 and husband, John, associate
professor of art at UNC-G, won a purchase
Next reunion in 1970
'60
Lisa Ann joined Jan Bland Stanton's family
on July 3. After teaching seven years, Jan
says its great to be a housewife and care
for Lisa Ann. Nellie Grissom Brown and
Bertram Dantzler Radford, were married in
Greensboro on October 1. The couple live
in Greensboro at Palms Apartments.
Johanna Raper has been awarded a North
Carolina Public Library Scholarship Grant
to attend an accredited Library School of
her choice. Johanna has been a Curatorial
Assistant at the N. C. Museum of Art since
1963. 18 Pond St., Apt. #16, Jamaica Plain,
Mass. is the address of Carolyn Steele
where she is doing clinical work at Massa-
chusetts General Hospital's Department of
Psychiatry. A son, Walter, was bom to Doris
Teague Mottinger on September 5. David
Ray joined Betty West Groce's family on
September 3.
Address Changes: Lynne MahafiFey, 4625
Furman Ave., Columbia, S. C. Ngo Thi
Hong Chang, 106 Glocester Rd., SW 7,
England. Alma Jo Martin Franklin, 703
W. 20th St., Lumberton. Betty Jean Whit-
ley, Carthage. Evelyn Matheson Styan,
3720 Foss Rd., N. E., Minneapohs, Minn.
Sue Mincey Hewitt, 3604 Pinetop Rd.,
Greensboro.
Sympathy': Synda Hall Tripp's mother-in-
law died on November 24. Sue McCarthey
Richmond's four-year-old daughter, Laine
Sue, died on September 5.
Next reunion in 1971
'61
Anne Milton Bryant and G. Peter Johns, Jr.,
a graduate of Purdue University and Uni-
versity of Indiana, were married on October
7. The couple live in Rochester, N. Y., at
533 Allen's Creek Rd., where Anne
teaches. Bom to Julia Ann Gardner Pindell
a son, Jason Scott, in Wilmington on May
26. A second son, Joel Douglas (Jody), was
bom to Jan Graham Smith in November,
1966. Jan tells us their dream home will be
completed in January and their new address
wiU be 399 Peninsula Rd., Gainesville, Ga.
Emily Herring Wilson's husband. Dr. Ed-
win G. Wilson, was appointed provost of
Wake Forest University in October. Edna
Huffine Pegram (M) was initiated into Delta
Kappa Gamma at a ceremony held in the
Alumnae House, UNC-G, during October.
Geneva Leek Gilley had a daughter on
September 12. Sarah Long Wi'herspoon
had a son, Andrew Vaughn, bom August
22. Betty Nash Mclver of Washington and
North Wilkesboro became the bride of
Thomas PavJ Luning of Washington and
Chicago on Oct. 14. Mr. Luning graduated
from Xavier University, Cincinnati, Ohio
and Georgetown University' Law Center,
Washington, D. C. The couple hve in
Washington at 115 12th St., SE, where he
is clerk to die United States Court of Ap-
peals for the District of Columbia Circuit
and Betty is a writer for the Voice of
America. Emily Ann Leigh McLean rec-
ently completed die provisional course of
the Junior Welfare League of Florence,
32
The University of North Cabolina at Greensboro
S. C. This year's course was designed to
better equip the young women for com-
munity service and the welfare committee
prepares layettes for new-bom children of
welfare patients. Zona Quinn Jenkins of
Warsaw (N. C.) had a son bom September 5.
Address Changes; Joan Degenaar Durfee,
U.S.S. Twining (DD-S40), FPO San Fran-
cisco, CaUf. 96601. Janiece Pithman Ballard,
2404 Gracewood Court, Greensboro. Sarah
Long Witherspoon, 1536 Barberry Court,
Charlotte. Marion Moss Elliott, Lawndale.
Sarah McAulay, Bo.x 285, Huntersville.
Margaret Paris Stevenson, 4511 Sangamore
Dr., Washington, D. C.
In Memoriam; Mary Bea Heeden died on
October 20.
Sympathy: Amelia Heilig Miller's father
died on September 17. Patricia Smith Cole-
man's (c) father died on November 7.
'62
Next reunion in 1972
Judith Carol Bason and Dermy Claude
Wise, a graduate of N. C. Wesleyan Col-
lege, were married on September 15. The
couple live in Durham at Apt. 3309C, Mor-
decai St., University Apts., where he ex-
pects to complete work for the Master of
Divinity degree next spring at Duke Di-
vinity School. Thelma Houpe Foster (M)
was initiated into Delta Kappa Gamma at
a ceremony held in the Alumnae House,
UNC-G, during October.
Address Changes: Linda Wilson, 16 Fran-
cis Ave., Apt. 6A, Nyack, N. Y.
63 Next reunion in 1968
Margaret Drummond and Robert Calder
MacKenzie of Timonium, Md., a graduate
of Johns Hopkins University, were married
on July 8. The couple Uve at 2436 Coming
Ave., Apt. 104, Oxon Hill, Md., where
Margaret teaches school in Silver Spring
and he is a graduate student at The Amer-
ican University in Washington, D. C.
Anthony Joseph Celebrezze, III, joined
Lou Godwin Celebrezze's family on Sep-
tember 13. Lucy Little Ayers' (M) husband,
Moir^ M. Ayers, was named "Boss of the
Year" by the American Business Women's
Association, at its annual banquet in Greens-
boro on October 10. Margaret Anne Poteat
and David R. Griehsbach, who attended
Charlotte College, were married on Octo-
ber 21. The couple live at 357 Lakeside Dr.,
Matthews, where he is a project engineer
and Margaret teaches at Randolph Junior
High School. Kristin Ann joined Ann Sarratt
Gamer's family on October 15. Ruth Turner
and Richard Clyde Clemmons, a graduate
of Guilford College, were married on Oc-
tober 14. The couple hve in Greensboro at
3108 Lawndale Dr., where he is a resident
agent in the OflSce of Security of the U. S.
Department of State and Ruth is a home
economist for Pubhc Service Company of
North Carohna.
Address Changes: Courtney Jones Mullin,
3212 Ruffin St., Raleigh. Anne Straughan
Meadows, 1607 Hollandale Rd., Richmond,
Va. Sally Gay Bumette, 70 Crestline Dr.,
Apt. 49, San Francisco, Calif. Susan Foe
Tamplin, 307 Ardennes Circle, Ft. Ord,
Cahf. Brenda Winstead Spence, 600 N
Franklin St., Whiteville.
Sympathy: Sally Gay Bumette's mother,
Mae Finison Gay (x), died on October 24.
Martha HeiUg Sidner's (x) father died on
September 17.
'65
Next reunion in 1970
'64
Next reunion in 1969
A daughter. Heather, was bom to Betty
Calloway Ehle on September 9. Judith
Currin Parker has an addition to her family
and a new address. The Parkers returned to
Charlotte from Mobile, Ala., last April and
John Edgar Parker, Jr., was bom on August
28. Joanne Davis and Frederick E. Firman,
a graduate of Union College, were married
August 12. The couple live at 9007 C Con-
tee Rd., Laurel, Md., where both work for
the Department of Defense. Linda Davis
Kiiegsman of Greensboro had twin daugh-
ters on October 8. Mary Carol Jones and
Winfried J. Pope, a graduate of N. C. State
University, were married on September 2,
The couple live at 141 -C Jones Franklin
Rd., Raleigh. Linda Joyce Martin is work-
ing toward a Masters degree at UNC-G
and receives mail at 1402 Spring Garden
St., Greensboro. Sandra Holmes Merritt and
Lawrence Richard Brown, a graduate of
Kenyon College and Emory University,
were married on June 10. The couple live
at 33-H Shore Dr., Peabody, Mass., where
Sandra is a housewife and Mr. Brown is
employed by Coca-Cola Company. Frances
MoUen Spar had a daughter, Elizabetli
Anne, bom August 18. Arthur Mark joined
Bonnie Moses Rubin's family on Septem-
ber 19. Anne Prince Miller was elected
chairman of die Durham County Alumni
Chapter in late October. Linda Carol Rees
is a graduate student in Graphic Design
and receives mail at 211 W. Olive St., #8,
Inglewood, Calif. Anne Vanderburg has
been awarded a scholarship by the National
Mathematics and Science Foundation to
the University of Montana in Missoula.
Anne's address in Missoula is 708 S. 2nd W.
Address Changes: Glenda Sutton Burgin,
2617 Girard Ave., Apt. 1-C, Evanston, 111.
Mary Hunter Owen, 4110 Summerglen Dr.,
Greensboro. Harriett Munder Gray, Box
424, Nags Head. Jeanne Tannenbaum, c/o
Personnel Office, Peter Vent Brigham Hos-
pital, Boston, Mass. Frances Mollen Spar,
9008 Breezewood Terr. #203, Greenbelt,
Md. Nancy Towery Anderson, 41 1 1 D Con-
way Ave., Charlotte. Patricia Ann Ray Pred-
more, 102 James Ct., Spartanburg, S. C.
Sandra Estes Moravec, 609 Shoshoni, Apt.
A, Cheyenne, Wyo. Irene White, 345 W.
48th St., Apt. 4C, New York, New York.
Jeanne Tannenbaum, Apt. 33, 36 Highland
Ave., Cambridge, Mass. Emily Moore,
Pusan American School, APO San Fran-
cisco, Calif. Helen Stanfield Sclienck,
1902-A N. Ehn St., Greensboro. Ina Von
Mclnnis Tabibian, 16576 Chattanooga PL,
Pacific Palisades, Calif. Frances Moolen
Spar, 6302 Breezewood Dr., Greenbelt, Md.
Helen Washburn Yamada, #83 Alhson
Apts., Marlton, N. J. Carolyn Wilder Gann-
away, 1641 Newborn Rd., Kingsport, Tenn.
Judith Currin Parker receives mail in Char-
lotte at 850-B McAIway Rd.
Sandra Bargamian Pace has left Florida
and resides at 842 New Dover Rd., Edison,
N. J., where Mr. Pace is a graduate re-
search assistant in Plant Pathology and
Sandra is a member of the faculty at Doug-
lass, the Woman's College of Rutgers Uni-
versity. Frances Carter Buchanan had a
daughter on October 9. Nancy Frank Craig
receives mail at 414 E. 10th St., Mesa, Ariz.,
where she is a physical education teacher
and working on a Masters at Arizona Slate
University. Anne Davis Sites lives in Apt.
G3A-University Apts., Duke University Rd.,
Durham, where she is a dietitian at Duke
Medical Center. Judy Gray Bowling re-
ceives mail at 52 Brookwood Forest, 1700
N. WiUiams St., Valdosta, Ga., where she
is a teacher in the Lowndes County (Ga.)
School System. Nancy Jane Hatley is now
Mrs. Clyde D, Carelock and hves in Elcn
College (P. O. Box 302), where she is
teaching a second grade at McLeansville
School. Karen Hayes and Phillip Gordon
Iversen, a graduate of the University of
Arizona, were married on September 29
in Chicago. The couple live at 21 W.
Goethe, Apt. 15G, Chicago, where both are
employed by Honeywell, Inc. — he is a
sales representative and Karen is a com-
puter programmer. Emily Heath EUis re-
ceived a master of arts degree from Ohio
State University in September. Nanette
Jackson Minor and Richard Holder Godwin,
a graduate of N. C. State University, were
married in Charlotte on September 2. The
couple live in Charlotte at 3129 Minnesota
Rd., where Nanette is a piano teacher and
Mr. Godwin is an industrial engineer with
Union Carbide's Consumer Products Divi-
sion. Mary Clyde Overman and Ronald
Charlton Hodkinson, a cum laude graduate
of Elon College, were married in Greens-
boro on October 15. The couple live at
5705 Sanger Ave., Hamlet W., Alexandria,
Va., where Lt. Hodkinson is stationed at
the Pentagon. Elizabeth Rean Watson (M)
won a purchase award for the DUlard Col-
lection of the Weatherspoon Art Gallery's
1967 "Art on Paper" Exhibition at UNC-G.
Helen Stegman received a Master of Arts
in Speech Patology and Audiology from
Case Western Reserve University in Sep-
tember. Judith Wainscott Melvin had a son
on September 22.
Phyllis Wheeler and Richard Charles
Peterson were married on July 29. Dick
received his B. S. from the University of
Nebraska and his M. A. from Rutgers Uni-
versity and he is a math instructor at Kent
State University. Phyllis is employed as a
social worker in a Cleveland state psychia-
tric hospital after having received a Master
of Social Work from Rutgers University in
June. The couple reside at 551 W. Jackson,
Apt. 302, Painesville, Ohio.
Address Changes: Vivian Monts, 641 Hen-
derson St., Apt. 5, Columbia, S. C. Linda
Moore, 715 Robin Hood Rd., Reidsville.
Evelyn Snow Simpson, Box 54-D, Rt. 307,
Cullovvhee. Jean Barnes Komett, Knob in
die Woods, Apt. G, 7143 Shrewsbury Lane,
Indianapolis, Ind. Phyllis Wheeler Peterson,
55 W. Jackson St., Painesville, Ohio. Phyllis
Shaw, 18091/2 Grace St., Wilmington.
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
33
Thersa Foster Pearson, 3700 28th St., Apt.
A, Meridian, Miss. Lois Ann Bartlett Lee,
Apt. 12D, Liberty Drive, Thomasville.
PhylUs HaU KeUy, 2605 Chantilly Place,
Greensboro. Joyce Pendergrass, 3514 Gor-
don St., Falls Church, Va. Jo Angela Sills
Baucom, 2000 Carolina Ave., Kannapolis.
Susan Stentz Evans, 317 McCauley St.,
Chapel Hill. Ann Bennett Sronce, 607 W.
19th St., Apt 4, Temple, Ariz. Janice Bau-
com Mai-kusic, 13 Bayview Dr., Niantic,
Conn.
'56 Next reunion in 1971
Jackie Abrams Wilson had a son, Phillip
Malcolm, on October 19. Paul W. Brewer
(M) was elected supervisor of Instruction
for Weldon City Schools in October. Anita
Brown Nicholls lives in Oklahoma City,
Okla., at 5620 N. W. 10th, Apt. 101, where
husband, Tim, who finished law school in
June, is an attorney in the Chief Counsel's
Office, Internal Revenue Service. Patricia
Byers and Williain Lawrence Pollard, a
graduate of Virginia Polytechnical Institute,
were married on August 26. The couple
Uve at 301 Shellum Dr., Raleigh, where
Patricia is a programmer for Burlington
Industries and Mr. Pollard is an agricultural
statistician for the State. On June 17th Vir-
ginia Cummings and Raymond John Polcha,
a graduate of Cleveland State University,
were married in Sacred Heart Chapel at
the U. S. Naval Weapons Laboratory in
Dahlgren, Va. The couple make their home
in Bayberry Estates and receive mail in
P. O. Box 506, Dahlgren, Va. Lois Anne
Cutler, and Wilham Kevin McLaughlin, a
graduate of Susquehanna University, were
married on October 21. The couple live
at 113 Taylors St., Morehead City, where
Lois is teaching a fourth grade and he is
a heutenant in the Coast Guard. Alexandra
Faison Fabbri and Malcolm Rea Ferrell,
who attended Duke University and is pres-
ently a student at American University,
Washington, were married in Darien,
Coim., on September 2. The couple reside
at 2508 Coming Ave., Apt. 204, Oxon Hill,
Md., where he is in the Marine Corps Re-
serve and is an employee in the office of
Sen. B. Everett Jordan and Alexandra is
teaching a ninth-grade at LaPlatta, Md.
Eileen Faulkner and Daniel R. Rubey, Jr., a
graduate of Union College, Schenectady,
N. Y., were married on September 23rd at
the Community Presbyterian Church, Atlan-
tic Beach, Fla. The couple Uve at 500 N.
Grant, Bloomington, Ind., where he is at-
tending graduate school at the University of
Indiana. Nancy Sue Franklin is back from
a trip to Europe and is working in the blood
bank of Moses Cone Hospital in Greensboro.
Ella Martin Gaylord is Mrs. WUham Griffin
Ross and her address is 7D Southside Court,
Cusseta Rd., Columbus, Ga., where she is
teaching at Ft. Benning.
Elizabeth Gayle Hatcher and Lt. Dono-
van J. Willis, Jr., who attended N. C. State
University, were married in Sarasota, Fla.,
on May 6. The couple live at 3209 Skinner
Mill Rd., Augusta, Ga., where he is sta-
tioned with the Army at Ft. Gordon and
Gay is teaching a third-grade. Virginia
"Ginger" Hicks and Charles Marshall
Brooks, a graduate of Auburn University,
were married on September 9. The couple
reside in Memphis, Tenn., at 186 Hillview
Ave., Apt. 4, Valley Forge, where the
bridegroom is manager of Armour Agri-
cultural Chemical Company. Suzanne Kath-
erine Jones and Sanford Kent Walker, a
graduate of Guilford College, were married
on September 15. The couple hve at 604
N. Tremont Dr., Greensboro, where Suz-
anne is a programmer for Burlington Indus-
tries and he is employed by Western Elec-
tric Co. Kathryn Law Shoemaker has moved
to 2 Flemington Rd., Chapel HUl, where
husband, Raleigh, is a student at the UNC
School of Law. Betty Lowrance receives
mail c/o Dept. of Microbiology, Bowman
Cray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem,
where she is a graduate student. June Lee
Mathis was an August graduate from the
Duke University Medical Center. June has
accepted a position with the N. C. Coopera-
tive Agricultural Extension Service as Foods
Specialist with a major responsibility for
4-H Foods and Nutrition Program. June's
address in Raleigh is North Hills Terr. Apts.
Jean Meyer Stewart has moved to 816
George White Rd., Greensboro, where hus-
band, Bruce is Director of Admissions at
Guilford College. Arlene Alice Miller and
Richard Albert Stein, a graduate of Ecole
Polytechnique de Lausanne and did gradu-
ate work at Cornell University and Penn-
sylvania State University, were married
on August 19. The couple live at 119-H
University Village, Iowa State University,
Ames, Iowa, where Arlene is an instructor
of clothing. After spending the summer in
Europe, Toni Oster is teaching in Atlanta,
Ga., where she receives mail at 1615
Moores Mill Rd., N.W. Marcia Roe is a
graduate student at the University of Ten-
nessee, but she receives mail c/o Mrs. B.
Clarence Roe, 205 W. Miner St., Apt. 3,
W. Chester, Pa.
Martha Ross Ramsey is teaching at Quail
Hollow Junior High in Charlotte. Mavis
Ruesch Gehl of Greensboro had a son on
October 9. Carol Jackson Shell is now Mrs.
Arthur L. Latham, III, and receives mail at
Amo, Amo, Marshall Islands 96960, where
both are serving with the Peace Corps.
Rachel Teague Fesmire (M) is heading a
unique program on the campus of UNC-G,
training teachers for Head Start programs
in eight states. Operating under the exten-
sion division of the university, Rachel heads
one of thirteen such training stations in the
nation. Elizabeth Jane Theiling and John
Donald Anderson, a graduate of Furman
University, were married on October 28.
The couple Hve at 3730 N. Sharon Amity
Rd., Apt. G-4, Charlotte, where she is a
medical technologist at Charlotte Memorial
Hospital and Mr. Anderson is employed
by the State Beauty and Barber Supply Co.
Johnston Union Free Will Baptist Church
was the setting for the September 10th
wedding of Sue Underwood (c) and Wilham
Daniel Warrick, a graduate of N. C. State
University. The couple live at 515 Lee St.,
Smithfield, where she is a secretary for Fed-
eral Land Bank Association. Millie Lou
Wilson (AAS) and John Lawrence Frierson,
III, a graduate of N. C. State University,
were married on September 9. The couple
live at 8401 N. Ariantic Ave., Cape Ken-
nedy, Fla., where he is an aerospace engi-
neer with Boeing Aircraft.
Address Changes: Elizabeth Brogdon,
4616 Saunders Rd., Greensboro. Margaret
Bowden Litaker, Box 66, Danielsville, Ga.
Beverly Hankins Meyer, Parcelamiento El
Reposo, CabaUo Blanco, Retalhuleu, Guate-
mala. Susan Beattie Bartlett, 1000 Clove
Rd., Apt. 4N, Staten Island, N. Y. Mary
Ellen Guffy, Pinehurst Apt. 4014-E, Provi-
dence Rd., Charlotte. Lucile N. O'Brien,
3319 S. 28th St., #202, Alexandria, Va.
Mary Alcott Ferger, 156 Rodney Court,
Madison, Wis. Nancy Carolyn Smith
Whiton, 3672 Malibu Pahn Dr., #201, Vir-
ginia Beach, Va. Linda Kay Morse Hinson
(c), 1105 FayetteviUe Rd., Rockingham.
Anne Abrams Schwartz, 110 Martin St.,
Apt. 103-B, Winston-Salem. Linda McCui-
ston Deahl, 8I2-B Pecan Circle, KiUeen,
Texas. Barbara Sellars Gornto, Box 171,
Wrightsville Beach. Alethia Ann Clough
Basnight, 325 Madison St., Roanoke Rapids.
Nan Rufty, 625 Carrington Lane A, Win-
ston-Salem. Ann Reynolds Whaley, Sey-
mour-Johnson AFB, Goldsboro.
Sympathy: Carole Whedbee Ellis' father
died on January 5, 1967. Frances W. Hei-
lig's father died on September 17.
'67 Next reunion in 1972
Linda Alley Hemrick (AAS) is a registered
nurse and hves at 3731 Auero Ave., Win-
ston-Salem. Neill Andrew is Mrs. Paul L.
Donahue and her address is 55 David
Terrace, Apt. 25, Norwood, Mass. Kathleen
Asbell Killebrew (M) is teaching and her
address is 1509 Pinehurst Dr., High Point.
Harolene Atwood and Larry H. Tucker, a
senior at UNC-CH, were married on Au-
gust 27. The couple hve at 2 Justice St.,
Chapel Hill, where Harolene is a secretary
of the Public Healdi at UNC-CH. Rebecca
Anderson is a graduate student at Wake
Forest and her address is 5002 Bethania Rd.,
Apt. 23-C, Mountain Lodge Apts., Winston-
Salem.
Judith Aydelett is a math teacher at In-
dependence High School, Charlotte — and
resides at 4943 Park Road, Hamilton House
Apt., Charlotte. Patricia Bailey is a secre-
tary and receives mail at 1322 Parkview
Circle, Salisbury. Virginia Bailey is a sec-
retary and her address is Rt. 2, Stokesdale.
Joyce Baldwin is back on campus this year
working toward a Master and her address
is 2011 C Maybrook Apt., Greensboro.
Catherine Bardin is a recreation worker
with the American Red Cross and her
address is American Red Cross Clubmobile
Unit, 9th Admin Col. 9th Infantry Div.,
APO San Francisco, Calif. 96370.
Linda Barker is a music teacher and her
address is P. O. Box 573, Valdese. Joyce
Barwick is a graduate student at UNC-G
and receives mail at 405 Dameron St.,
Spray. Joanne Barnes and Buddy O'Neill
Mann, a graduate of Virginia Polythechnic
Institute and N. C. State Univ., were mar-
ried on August 26. The couple live at 2400
Maplewood Ave., Winston-Salem where he
is on the technical staff at Bell Telephone
Laboratory and Joanne is a public relations
assistant for R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Com-
pany. Ann Birmingham Hipp is teaching
and her address is 172 Bagley St., Chapel
Hill.
34
The UNivEBsiTi' of North Cabouna at Greensboro
Barbara Ann Blalock is teaching this year
and her Raleigh address is 2810 Conifer
Dr., Apt B. Home service advisor for Duke
Power Company is the occupation of Linda
Blanton and her address is 404 Hebron St.,
Apt. #3, Hendersonville. Mildred Block is
Mrs. Jack Levin and her address is 906
Avery PI., Greensboro, where she is work-
ing with the Mental Health Clinic. JoAnn
Bonnet is Mrs. Michael Sullivan and her
address in Rochester, N. Y. is 140 Arbor-
wood Crescent. Judith Brandt is a systems
engineer with LB.M. Corp. and lives at
2810 Carriage Dr., Apt. H, Winston-Salem.
Edith Brannock (M) is an assistant pro-
fessor of home economics and receives mail
in Box 216, Elon College. Zelle Brinson
is a systems engineer trainee and Hves at
700 Anson St., Apt. F-1, Winston-Salem.
Carol Broad (M) is a teacher at Northwest
Cuilford High School and lives at 5038
Pine Ridge Dr., Winston-Salem. Carolyn
Brown is a graduate student at Howard
University Medical School and hves at 751
Fairmont St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
Rozanne Busch (M) is an instructor at Buf-
falo State College and her address is 17
Amherst Court, Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Betsy Bunting receives mail c/o Chil-
drens Hospital of Philadelphia, Phila., Pa.
Karon Bush lives at 1102 Salem Valley Rd.,
Apt. C-13, Winston-Salem where she
teaches at Reynolds High School. Leslie
Burg is a VISTA volunteer and her address
is 178 Kearny Ave., Perth Amboy, N. J.
Johnna Butler is a graduate student at
Michigan State University and her address
is 315 East Pointe Lane, E. Lansing, Mich.
Judith Ann Butler Nichols (M) is a teacher
and lives at 745 NE 5th Ave., Ft. Lauder-
dale, Fla. Willine Carr is a research analyst
and her address is 2705 Rhode Island
Plaza, 13th St., N. E., 402, Washington,
D. C.
Ann Cassell is teaching a fourth grade
in Charlotte and lives at 1400-D Eastcrest
Dr. Irma Chapman is teaching in the Hope-
well, Va., City Schools and receives mail
at 3315 W. Broadway, Hopewell, Va.
Sandra Charlene Clifton and Lt. Donald
Eugene Morrisey, a graduate of Holy Cross
College, were married on July 23. The
couple live at 114-2 Sirocco Dr., Minot
AFB, Minot, N. Dak., where he is a pilot
in Strategic Air Command. Harriett Cheek
Abbott is teaching and she receives mail
c/o Lt. James W. Abbott, Gen. Depot,
Genmensheim, Germany, APO New York
09102. Helen Cheek is a graduate student
at UNC-G and her address is Cone Hall,
UNC-G, Greensboro. Melinda Claburn Aus-
band (M) lives at 6440 S. Claiborne Ave.,
Apt. 303, New Orleans, La. where she is
employed in the field of vocational rehabili-
tation. Elizabeth Cockerham is teaching a
sixth grade and her address in Reisterstown,
Md., is 202 Sunnyking Rd.
Diana Cook Mizell is a speech therapist
for Guilford County and her address is 2011
Maywood St., Apt. F, Greensboro. Carole
Crain and 2nd Lt. Clyde Lee Clem, III, a
graduate of UNC-CH, were married on
August 5. The couple live in Mesa, Ariz.,
at 325 W 5th St., Apt. 117 where he is
in flight school at Williams Air Force Base.
Edenton Street Methodist Church was the
setting June 24th for the wedding of Mary
Sue Compton and James Edward Williams,
Jr., a graduate of UNC-CH. The couple
live in Winston-Salem at 3816-1 Country
Club Drive, where Mary is teaching at Dal-
ton Junior High School. Beverly Sue Cox
and Ralph W. Hartgrove, Jr., a graduate
of N. C. State Univ. were married on July 1.
The couple Uve at 609 Broce Dr., Blacks-
burg, Va., where he is a graduate student
and Beverly is a research technician. Sue
Cox is a secretary for IBM and her address
is 2810 Conifer Dr., Apt. B, Raleigh. Nell
Craven Hunnicutt (M) receives mail P. O.
Box X-253, APO San Francisco, Calif.
96666. Patricia Ann Criddlebaugh is teach-
ing diis year and her address is Rt. 2, Box
370, High Point. Rose Grouse Dewar (M)
is teaching at Page High School, Greens-
boro and her address is 3600 Dogwood Dr.
Jayne Crump and Michael Molinsky, a
graduate of East Carolina College, were
married on August 13. The couple live in
Burlington, Apt. 22-D Brookwood Gardens,
where Jane is a second grade teacher.
Martha Curto is a teacher and her address
is 333 Whitmire St., Brevard. Shirley Ann
Childress (AAS) and Michael Joseph Crom-
well, a graduate of the University of Rich-
mond in Virginia, were maiTied on October
28. The couple live in Greensboro at 3513
Battleground Rd., where Shirley is a nurse
at Cone Hospital and he is employed by
Burhngton Industries.
Dorothea Davenport is a graduate stu-
dent and receives mail in Chapel Hill at
202 McCauley St. Jane Darnell smd David
William Reams, who attended Downtown
Guilford College, were married in the Flor-
ida Street Baptist Church, Greensboro, on
August 12. The couple live at Buie Creek,
P. O. Box 483 where Jane is teaching and
he is a computer operator for Blue Bell, Inc.
Judy Ann Davis and James Allen Wall, Jr.,
a graduate of Davidson College, were mar-
ried on June 17. The couple live at 3420-F
Mordecai St., Durham, where Judy is a
graduate student in Biochemistry at Duke
University and he is working toward a
masters at UNC-CH. Robert Wesley Darsch
(M) receives mail in Box 246, KemersviUe.
Alma Deal is a caseworker for the blind
and hves at 429 N. Edgemont St., Gastonia.
Barbara Decker now lives at 405 E. 63rd
St., Apt. 2-C, New York, New York. Ann
Doss is an interior designer and her address
is Rt. 1, Haw River, where she operates
"The Drapery Boutique" with her sister-in-
law. Marion Dotson Wells is employed as
a hbrarian and receives mail in Cambridge,
Mass. at 99 Bratde St. Patricia Dreyman
Freeman is a teacher and lives at 1705
Haywood Rd., W. Ashevdle. Camden Eades
Greer is a graduate student at University
of Calif. (Berkeley) and her address is
1130-G San Pablo Ave., Albany, Calif.
Wanda Ellis is a recreation aide, American
National Red Cross and her address is
1614 Cape Gloucester, Tarawa Terrace,
N. C. Student — Columbia University is the
present occupation of Carolina Elliott. Her
adclress is 80 Haven Ave., Apt. 4E, N. Y.
Betty Evans King (M) is an elementary
teacher and her address is Rt. 1, Box 161,
Asheboro. Bank Examiner, Federal Deposit
Insurance Company is the occupation of
Ann Faber and her address is 4609 Curtis
Dr., Virginia Beach, Va. Kay Featherstone
is teaching in child development and re-
ceives mail c/o Community Action Pro-
gram, Box 427, Cherokee. George Ferger
is studying at the University of Wisconsin
and his address is 156 Rodney Court, Madi-
son, Wis. Virginia Finne is a graduate
student and her address is 211 Short St.,
Chapel Hill.
Rosalyn Fleming is a graduate student
and her address is 802 Granville Towers
East, Chapel HUl. Emily Folger is Mrs.
William Simpson and her address is #13
Rosemary St., Apts., Chapel Hill, where
she is a library assistant. Barbara Fonvielle
is teaching English at Goldsboro High
School and receives mail at 1703 Rose St.,
Goldsboro. Hal David Foster, Jr. (M) re-
ceives mail in P. O. Box 1161, Lake Worth,
Fla., where he is employed by Palm Beach
Junior College. Robin Futrell is teaching a
first grade at Aycock School and lives on
Rt. 1, Summerfield. Corinna Gant Stokes,
is teaching a third grade and receives mail
in Virginia Beach, Va., at 105 75th St.
Eliza Gidden is a service representative with
C & P Tel. Co. and her address is 5604
Albia Rd., Washington, D. C. Janet Glaze-
ner is a graduate student at UNC-G and
her address in Greensboro is 121 Mclver
Apt. 6. Barbara Goode is in school at North
Carolina Baptist Hospital and Uves at 2112
W. Florida St., Greensboro. Helen Abell
Grant has a new address — 2111 St. Charles
Ave., New Orleans, La. Donave Greene is
a graduate student at UNC-G and her ad-
dress is Box 522, Spencer Annex, UNC-G,
Greensboro. Nancy Greene is assistant to
Dean of Home Economics, UNC-G and
receives mail in Box 522, Greensboro.
Ginger Grier is a graduate student at
UNC-G this year and her address is Box
523 Spencer Annex, UNC-G, Greensboro.
Patricia Hand is a biologist with Gillette
Research Institute and receives mail in
Washington, D. C. at 2805 "Q" St., N. W.,
Apt. 3. Judith Harsey is teaching and her
address is 428 Kings Mill Dr., Newport
News, Va. Teacher Sedgefield Junior High
is the occupation of Mary Susan Huffer and
her address is 1400 Kentland Lane, Apt. 3,
Charlotte. Eloise Kay Hale is Mrs. G. L.
Holsclaw, II and her address in Greensboro
is 1404 N. Flam Ave., where she is an
elementary teacher. Second Lt. Ann L. Hall
completed an Army Nurse Corps - Army
Medical Service Corps Officer basic course
in September at Brooke Army Medical
Centur, Ft. Sam Houston, Tex. Ann receives
mad at 6-H-3418 MESS, Ft. Sam Houston,
Tex.
Sara Halsey is teaching English and
her address is Rt. 1, Box 28, Piney Creek.
Ann Hammer Ipock is teaching this year
and her address is 50iy2 Lee St., Gastonia.
Judith Harrell and CoHn Kelly Batten, a
graduate of N. C. State Univ. were mar-
ried on June 10. The couple live in Raleigh
at 412V2 Chamberlain St., where Judith is
teaching at Gamer Elementary School and
he is a part-time graduate student at N. C.
State and is employed there as a research
assistant in the Department of Plant Path-
ology. Ronald Harris (M) is an assistant
management consultant, Baptist Board, and
receives mail at 1204 CUfton Lane, Nash-
ville, Tenn. Mary Hasell is Mrs. Roger
Webb and receives mail in Greensboro,
5625 Atwa'.er Dr., Box 116.
White Memorial Presbyterian Church in
Raleigh was the setting for September 23rd
wedding of Barbara Amelia Hassell and
Richard Thomas Duemler, graduate of
The Alxjmni News: Winter 1968
35
Washington Univ. in St. Louis. The couple
live at 315 W. Newhall Ave., Apt. 7, Wau-
kesha, Wis. where Mr. Duemler is with
Federal Bureau of Roads. Frances Josephine
Hatcher hves in Greensboro at ISlSVa
Roland Rd., where she teaches at Kiser
Junior High School. Kelly Haynes is teach-
ing at Dudley Senior High School and re-
ceives mail at 603 Kenilworth St., Greens-
boro. Alison Hayward and Thomas B.
Mimms, Jr., a graduate of UNC-CH were
married on July 22 in the Main Post Chapel
at Fort Bragg. The couple live at 308 W.
105th St., New York, N. Y., where he is a
second-year student at Columbia University
Law School. Carol Anne Hinson is teach-
ing an eighth grade at Guilford High School
and her address is 3204 Lawndale Dr.,
Palms Apts., Apt. 5-A, Greensboro. Toni
Honey and S. Cameal Downey, Jr., a sen-
ior at N. C. State Llniversity, were married
in May. The couple live at 2713y2 Vander-
bilt Ave., Raleigh. Bonnie Alice Horner,
who majored in Home Economics and
Clothing, has taken to the air in the high
fashion uniform of a Pan American World
Airways stewardess. Bonnie is serving
aboard Jet CUpper flights from New York
southward across the Atlantic to Latin
America and the breeze-swept resort islands
of the Caribbean. Bonnie receives mail in
Queens, N. Y. at Apt. 4-A 118th St., Kew
Gardens.
Toba Horwilz is a social worker at Doro-
thea Dix Hospital and Hves at 901 E. Club
Blvd., Durham. Dottie Howard is employed
by the Charlotte Area Fund and her address
is 1351 E. Woodlawn Rd., Apt. 108, Char-
lotte. Susanne Howard is attending gradu-
ate school, UNC-G and received mail Bo.x
6816, Cone Hall, Greensboro. Linda Hunter
is a secretary and her address is 475 York
St., Apt. 2-B, Williamsburg, Va., Janice
Hutchins and George J. Levine, a graduate
of UNC-CH, were married on August 19.
The couple Live in Carrboro at 111-A Sue
Ann Court, where Janice teaches at Cha-
tham High School and he is a law student
at UNC-CH. Christine "Josie" Hutchins
MiuT)hy is a secretary at UNC Medical
School and receives mail at 704 N. Colum-
bia St., Chapel Hill. Mary Joe Hutchins is
a substitute teacher and lives at 1749 N.
Pleasant St., Winston-Salem. Dearma Jo
Isley, and Beverly C. Moore, Jr., a gradu-
ate of UNC-CH, were married on August
19. The couple hve at 863 Massachusetts
Ave., Apt. 35, Cambridge, Mass., where he
is a student at Harvard Law School. Mary
Jarrett and Gary Trawick, a graduate of
UNC-CH, were married August 19. The
couple Hve at 128C Purefoy Rd., Chapel
Hill, where Mary is a nursery school
teacher and he is a law student at UNC-CH.
June Carolyn Jones is a teacher and lives
at 3304 Lawndale Dr., Pahns Apts. 5A,
Greensboro. Nancy Kelly is a secretary in
the Law Departmgnt of Hotel Corporation
of America and her address is 1055 Beacon
St., Brookline, Mass. Peggy Kepley Savas
(M) is teaching in Chapel Hill School
System and receives mail at 3022 Chapel
Hill Rd., Apt. 20B, Durham. In August
Patricia Gail Kikcr was named School Food
Service Director with the Burke County
Schools. It will be Pat's duty to coordinate
the operations of the fourteen county school
cafeterias with the assistance of the Cafe-
teria Supervisor. Burke County is among
the first in North Carolina to adopt central-
ized cafeteria operations. Pat hves in Mor-
ganton and receives mail at 106% S. Ander-
son St., Apt. 204. Nora Jane King (M) is an
assistant professor at the University of Okla-
homa and her address is 712 Parsons St.,
Norman, Okla.
Rivka Kolarie Kutchie (M) lives in
Greensboro at 3311 Watauga Drive. Phyllis
Komov is a management trainee. Wood-
ward & Lothrop and lives in Washington,
D. C. at 4101 Cathedral Ave., Apt. 603.
Cynthia Kouns is an interior designer and
her address is 908 Woodbine Dr., Chapel
HiU. Alice Ray Lewis is teaching Art at
Spaugh Junior High and her address in
Charlotte is JamestowTi Apts. 1207-L, Green
Oaks Lane. Dell Landreth McKeithan (M)
is Dean of Women at Chowan CoUege and
receives mail in Box 161, Muifreesboro.
Moya Jean Lavin Parmele is teaching and
her address is 6420 Whitehall Rd., Fayette-
vUle. Martha Elizabeth Lawing is a first
grade teacher at Tropical Elementary in
Merritt Island, Fla., and receives mail at
494 S. Atlantic Ave., Apt. 211, Cocoa
Beach, Fla. Diana Lawrence is a secretary
and her address is 8720 Waterford Rd.,
Alexandria, Va. Linda Lockhart Smith is
employed as a mathematician at the Na-
tional Security Agency in Washington,
D. C, and husband, Robert is doing post-
graduate work at the University of Mary-
land while teaching in suburban Washing-
ton. The Smiths receive mail at 9875 Tele-
graph Rd., Apt. 2, Lanham, Md.
Patricia Ann Lundy hves in Gastonia at
1196 Fern Forest Dr., Apt. F, where she
is employed by the Gaston County Mental
Health Clinic. Muriel Bishop Livingston
(AAS) and David W. Hoag, a graduate of
Davidson College, were married on June 11.
The couple hve in Cambridge, Mass., c/o
E.T.S. 99 Brattle St., Box 48. Anne Carol
McFadden and Walter G. Roberts, a junior
at N. C. State University, were married on
August 20. The couple hve at 3508 Horton
St., The Palms, in Raleigh where Anne is
teaching in the Wake County Schools. Lois
McLean is working on a Masters at West-
field CoUege, University of London and her
address is 404 Wimbledon Park Rd., Lon-
don, SW 19, England. Joan Mackay works
in the library at UNC-CH and her address
is 633 N. Columbia St., Chapel Hill.
Patricia Jean Macon (AAS) is a registered
nurse and her address in Greensboro is 3108
Lawndale Dr., Apt. G.
Claudia Madeley is a psychological
technician and receives mail in Box 858,
Wrightsville Beach. Glenda Faye Matthews
is a social worker and receives mail at 2302
Woodland Ave., Sanford. Betty May is an
accountant and her address is 1010 Lamond
Ave., Durham. Mary Avelene Medlin is a
teacher and receives mail in Merritt Island,
Fla., at Country Club Apts., A204. Elizabeth
Anne Melvin is teaching this year and her
address in Baltimore, Md., is 551 1-A Sarril
Rd. Olga Parfenchuk Myerovick (M) is a
violinist with Chamber Symphony of Phila-
delphia and her address is Country Place
Apts., Bancroft #3, Black-wood, N. J. Joan
Nailling is a photographer for Retina Asso-
ciates and her address is 1055 Beacon St.,
BrookHne, Mass. Elizabeth Norman is a
secretary for Eastman Kodak and her ad-
dress is 5320 Roswell Rd., Apt. P-2, Adanta,
Ga. Ann EUzabeth Parry and John Malia, a
graduate of the Philadelphia College o£
Textiles and Science, were married on July
15. The couple Uve at 1209-D Alfred Ave.,
Yeadon, Pa., where he is employed by the
Control Switch Company of Philadelphia.
Carol Ann ParceU and John Quincey Ball,
who attended Danville Technical Institute,
were married on July 2. The couple live at
2403-B Spring Garden St., Greensboro —
where Carol is teaching. Claire Beverly
Parrish hves in Richmond, Va., at 1409
Wihningion Avenue. Kay Phillips Penning-
ton is teaching a third grade and her ad-
dress is 3943 Persimmon Dr., Pinewood
Plaza, Apt. 104, Fairfax, Va. Jan Peeples
lives at 769 Percy St., Apt. G, Greensboro
and she is working as a legal secretary.
Beverly Pinnell is a student at George
Washington University and her address is
2805 "Q" Street, N. W., Apt. 3, Washing-
ton, D. C. Faye Hayes Powers (M) is a
teacher and receives mail Rt. 2, Box 58,
Bermett. Elva Putnam is a social worker
with the Adanta Employment Evaluation
and Service Center and her address is 1111
Clairmont Ave., Apt. A-3, Decatur, Ga.
Dorothy Richardson (M) is a teacher and
receives mail Womens Dept. of P. E. Uni-
versity of Mass., Amherst, Mass.
Carol Roach is teaching school in Char-
lotte and her address is 1342 Abbey Place,
Apt. 2, Charlotte. Lola Roberts is teaching
a third grade and her address in Charlotte
is 2221 Sharon Rd. Linda Jean Robinson is
working with the Peace Corps and receives
mail Peace Corps Hdg. 728 Kalyr Herrin,
Manila, Republic of Philippines. Donna
Louise Rogers is a secretary for S. D. War-
ren Company and resides at 1055 Beacon
St. (Apt. 7), Brookline, Mass. Mary Ann ■
Russell is teaching at Southeast High School I
in Greensboro and her address is 769 Percy '
St., Apt. G. Margaret Ellen Rudd, 3126
Park Rd., Cimmaron Apts., #209, Char-
lotte, is a school psychologist for the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System. Vic-
toria Sandford is a social worker and her
address is 26 Kearney Ave., Whippany,
N. J. Elizabeth Schadel is a hbrary assistant
at UNC-C and her address is 624 Uni-
versity Dr., Apt. 60, Greensboro. Mary
Elizabeth Sise (M) is a physical education
teacher and receives mail c/o Dept. of
Physical Education for Women, University
of Arizona, Tucson, Ariz. Reuben Slade (M)
is an assistant principal and his address is
108 Salem St., KemersviUe. Marjorie Sharff
is teaching this year and her address is
6200 Wilson Blvd., Apt. 311, Falls Church,
Va.
Joyce Elaine Shields is teaching at W.
Forsyth High School and her address is
3628 Old Vineyard Rd., Winston-Salem.
Agnes Shipley and David Moore, II a grad-
uate of UNC-CH, where he was a More-
head Scholar, were married on August 27.
The couple live on Rt. 1 out of Chapel
Hill (Box 340-C) where Agnes is working
in dental Research and David is a second-
year law student at UNC-CH. Leonard
Simmons (M) is a school principal and re-
ceives mail on Rt. 3 out of Burlington.
Marjorie Skinner is an accountant and her
address is 100 S. Ocean Ave., Apt. 4R,
Freeport, N. Y. Grace Methodist Church in
Greensboro was the setting for the Septem-
ber 9th wedding of Helen Frances Smith
36
The University of North Cabolina at Greensboro
(AAS) and Frank James Irvin, Jr., a grad-
uate of Guilford College. The couple live
in Winston-Salem at 1102 Salem Valley
Rd., Apt. C-10, Winston-Salem, where
Helen is a nurse at Forsyth Hospital and
he is teaching at Reeds Elementary School
near Lexington. Ray Turner Smith is an
instructor at Greenville Technical College
(S. C.) and receives mail at 709 N. Main
St., Greer, S. C.
Lila Ann Smith and Kenneth David
Nichols, Jr. a senior at Elon College, were
married on June 10. The couple hve in
Elon College, Box 553, where Lila is a
French Teacher. Mildred Snider Smith (M)
is a teacher and lives in Danville, Va., at
119 Westmoreland Ct. Frances Margaret
Snyder and Roberto Alcala, who attended
the University of Guadalajara in Mexico,
were married on June 18. The couple hve
at 249 Berkshire Rd., Charlotte, where
Frances is teaching. Paul Southern is work-
ing in the banking field, and his address
is Rt. 2, Stokesdale. Nancy Southworth
Carlton is teaching a seventh grade in
Waynesville this year and her address is
P. O. Box 798, Cullowhee. Diana Ruth Stein
(x) is Mrs. Harvey Morgan and her address
in Greensboro, is 2409-D Patriot Way
where she teaches at Page Senior High
School. Lynora Parks Stiles is a sales man-
ager for Richs and her address is 2479
Kingsland Dr., Doraville, Ca. Robert Street
is a teacher and his Greensboro address is
703 Walker Ave., Apt. 3. Julie Stuart is an
editorial assistant — I.C.C. and her address
in Washington, D. C. is 2805 "Q" St., N.
W., Apt. 3. Judith Swann is an assistant
buyer at Davidsons, Atlanta and her address
is 5320 RosweD Rd., P-6, Atlanta. Barbara
Jean Swicegood, is a student at Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary and receives
mail in P. O. Box 335, Eden ton. Andrea
Swiss is working for the Defense Depart-
ment and her address is 14011 Bramble
Lane, Apt. 201, Laurel, Md. Ann Taggart
is now Mrs. Jerome Klawitter and her ad-
dress is 207 Calhoun St., Clemson, S. C.
where she is a housewife. Joyce Thomas is
an analyst with the Dept. of Defense and
her address in Laurel, Md., is 8805 Hunt-
ing Lane. EmilUe Thornton is a graduate
student at UNC-G and lives at 1009 Idle-
wood Dr., Greensboro.
Edith Tucker is presendy employed by
Blue Bell and her address in Greensboro is
803 Rankin Place. Sonja Lee Turner, re-
ceives mail in Gaffney, S. G. at Rt. 2, Box
102. Sandra Sue Turner is a teacher and
resides at 333 Beachmont Dr., Newport
News, Va. Kathryn Thompson receives mail
at Kyung puk, Kimchor, Moamdong 140,
Piano House, The Republic of Korea.
Frances Ann Trivette and C. Robert
Payet, a graduate of UNG-CH, were mar-
ried on August 5, at Central Methodist
Church in Albemarle. The couple live at
1914-B Orchard Apts., Urbana, 111., where
he is a graduate student and Frances is
teaching math at Urbana Senior High
School. Allen Tyndall, Jr. (M) is principal
of Ameha County High School and his ad-
dress is P. O. Box 1, Ameha, Va. Janice
Van Home is a graduate student and re-
ceives mail at 1907 Capers Ave., Apt. 6,
Na.shville, Term. Mary Vamer Walker (M)
is teaching and her address in Lexington
is 310 W. 5th Ave. Judy Vaughn O'Bryan
is a home economist with the Guilford
County Health Department and her address
is 310-G Greenbriar Rd., Greensboro. Fifth
grade teacher is the occupation of Clarissa
Vandenburg and her address is 1351 E.
Woodlawn Rd., Apt. 108, Charlotte. Anita
Vanderschaaf lives in Greensboro at 5408-H
Friendly Dr., Greensboro. Susan Wagoner
is a graduate student at Southern Illinois
University and her address is c/o Heritage
Motel, 1001 W. Main St., Carbondale, 111.
Jacqueline Sue Walker Pritchett (AAS) is a
nurse and her address is 2302 Golden Gate
Drive, Apt. A, Greensboro. Mary Waters
is an elementary teacher and her address
is 1512 Palm St., Goldsboro. Mary Watters
Ross (M) lives at 1200 Ruayne Rd., Greens-
boro. Gwendolyn Weathers is employed
by the Guilford County Welfare Depart-
ment and resides at 527 Overlook, Greens-
boro. William West is teaching and his
address in Winston-Salem is 137 Stanley
Ave. Nancy Whetstine Prushinski is teach-
ing at Hickory High School this year and
her address is 30 20th Ave., N. W., Hickory.
Barbara Wickholm is a graduate student
at the University of Florida and her address
is 1216 S. W. 2nd Ave. Sally Jo Wiesner,
6 Chantilly Court, Greenville, S. C. Mary
Elizabelh Wilber (M) is a home economics
teacher and her address is R. F. D. 1, Flen-
ridge Road, Scotia, N. Y. Carolyn Ann
Wood is a graduate student and receives
mail at 114 Whitehead, UNC, Chapel Hill.
Jane Elaine Wright is Mrs. Charles L.
Myers and lives at 1420 Oakhurst Dr.,
Richmond, Va.
Clyda Marie Hopper King is teaching and
her address is Box 1144, Liberty. Judith
Lynn Hopson is teaching high school drama
and speech in Newport News, Va., where
she lives at 24-Beverly Hills Dr. Sandra
Horton is a social worker and receives mail
in Greenville, S. C, at 103 Sequoia Drive.
Anna B. Hostettler is Mrs. Michael Kenneth
Hooker and is presently a graduate student
in Chapel Hill. Ernst Hostettler (M) lives
in Charlotte at 607 Queen Rd. Evangeline
Houser is Mrs. William McMahan and lives
in Greensboro at 311 S. Mendenhall St.,
Apt. E, where she is a teacher of biology
and chemistry. Barbara Howell is a gradu-
ate student at Rutgers University and her
mail should be directed to 1206 Alderman
Dr., Greensboro. Joyce Howell Fowler is
teaching and her address is 103 N. Charter
Rd. Apt. H, Glen Burnie, Md. Annie Hud-
son Seaford (M) lives in Granite Quarry,
Box 57, where she is a home economics
teacher. Margaret Ellen Hudson and Nor-
man R. Bunting, a graduate of the Univers-
ity of Delaware, were married on June 10.
The couple live at Rt. 1, Box 223, Bishop-
ville, Md., where Margaret is teaching high
school math. Rachel Hudson and Norman
Ellsworth Clayton, a graduate of Barring-
ton College in Providence, R. I., and re-
ceived a Masters degree from Westminister
Choir School in Princeton, N. J., were
married July 8. The couple live in Newton
Center, Mass. (55 Truman Rd.) where
Rachel is a music consultant for the New-
ton Public Schools and Mr. Clayton repre-
sents Fidelity LTnion Life Insurance Com-
pany at Boston Univ. Sharon Patricia
Hughes and Charles E. Killian, a graduate
of UNC-CH, were married on May 28. The
couple hve at 292 W. Bay Ave., Apt.
103-H, Norfolk, Va., where he is an ensign
in the Navy and Sharon is a computer pro-
grammer. Margaret Hunsinger Davidson
(M) lives in Hendersonville, Rt. 1, Box 73,
where she is a vocational home economics
teacher. Janet Alspaugh Hunter is a social
worker — N. C. Vocational Rehabilitation,
and lives in Winston-Salem at 4136 Old
Vineyard Rd. Susan Marie Hunter is now
Mrs. John T. Mitchell and receives mail at
1050 S. J St., Apt. 106, O.xnard, Colo. Anna
Hyer is a graduate student at UNC-G and
her address is 2205 Oak Hill Dr., Greens-
boro.
Diane Hyldahl Marley is a legal secre-
tary and her address is 2510 Netherwood,
Greensboro. Rita Hyman is a teacher and
her address is 533 Rosser Ave., Waynes-
boro, Va. Mrs. Henry M. Middleton, III
(Dorothy Ingram) is a lab technician, dental
school and lives in Chapel Hill at 233D
Jackson Circle. Betty Ivie is an executive
secretary for the City of Winston-Salem
and lives at 2820 Pelham PL, Georgetown
Apts., Apt. K. Mary Jackson is a secretary
in Los Angeles, Calif, and her street is
3980 Ingraham, Apt. 102. Willy Jacoebee
receive mail c/o Dept. of French, Uni-
versity of Colorado, Boulder, Colo., where
he is a graduate student (teaching associ-
ate). Elaine James Barbour (M) is a speech
therapist and lives in Charlotte at 325 Sen-
eca Place. Sandra Jeffreys is teaching at
Sumner School, Guilford County, and her
address is 4662 Brompton Dr., Greensboro.
Patricia Diane Jerman and Harold Cray
Harrison, Jr., a graduate of GuUford Col-
lege, were married on September 9. The
couple live at 3503-C Parkwood Dr.,
Greensboro, where Diane is employed as
an accountant by Container Corp., and her
husband is a stockbroker with Bache &
Co., Inc.
Evelyn Johnson is a UNC-G student and
her address is Rt. 2, Box 229, Four Oaks.
Katherine Johnson lives at 141 Ticknor
Dr., Columbus, Ga., where she is a social
caseworker, American Red Cross, Martin
Army Hospital, Ft. Benning, Ga. Martha
Rose Johnson is a teacher and her address
is 3151/2 W. Arhngton Hts., N. Augusta,
S. C. Mary Louise Jones is working for the
Greensboro Daily News and her address
is 640 University Dr. Nancy Lou Jones
(M) is a therapeutic dietitian at Wake
Memorial Hospital and her address is 209
Ramblewood Dr., Apt. 82, Raleigh. The
sanctuary of Graves Memorial Presbyterian
Church was the setting for the June 24th
wedding of Mary Elissa Joyner and Winton
Douglas Gouge, Jr., a graduate of L'NC-
CH. The couple live in New York City at
34 8di Ave., Apt. 3-B, W. Greenwich Vil-
lage, where he is employed by Johns Man-
ville and Mary Elissa is in the executive
training program at Lord and Taylor's.
Mary Caroline Justice is a home economics
teacher at Wheaton High School, Wheaton,
Md. and lives in Arhngton, Va., at 3315 N.
Brandywine St. Mary Kale Pollock has a
new baby and will be tutoring during the
school year. Mary's address is 2310 Chero-
kee Dr., Greensboro. Hope Marie Keeton
lives in Glen Bumie, Md., at 308 Main St.,
SW, where she is a French teacher at
Brooklyn Park High. Mary Anne Kellen-
berger Cox lives at 200 Elm St., Apt. 8,
Auburn, Ala. Brenda Kelley Benton is
teaching and lives at 2002 Weststone Drive,
Charlotte. Elizabeth Kemp is a graduate
student and receives mail at 8718 Harts-
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
37
dale Ave., Bethesda, Md. Sonya Nell Ken-
nedy and David M. Best, a graduate of
UNC-CH, were married on August 6. The
couple live at 3 Berkley Rd., Chapel Hill,
where he is a graduate student in geology
and Sonya is teaching school. Patricia Gail
Kiker is Director of School Food Service
for Burke County Schools and lives in
Morganton at lOGVa S. Anderson St. Ruth
Kime Aldridge is a teacher and receives
mail in Box 36, Liberty. Clara Delores King
lives in Roanoke Rapids at 34 Harvey Cir-
cle. Ruth Ellen Koenigsberg (M) is a teacher
and her address is 5127 12th St., NE Wash-
ington, D. C. Peter Kopak is an executive
trainee and his address is 22 Wallkill Rd.,
Sparta, N. J. Patricia Mae Largent (AAS)
is a nurse and lives at 1109-D Olive St.,
Greensboro. Alice Susan Laughter is a
reservationist for Eastern Airlines and lives
at 3126 Park Rd., 209 Cimarron Apt.,
Charlotte. Linda Laycock (AAS) is living
in Greensboro at 1137 Church St., Apt. B-6,
where she is a registered nurse. Susan Lee-
mon is now Mrs. James M. Dowtin, Jr.
and lives in Knoxville, Tenn. at 1575 High-
land Ave., Apt. I, where she is teaching
physical education. Mary Coke Leigh and
Robert Lincoln Blake, Jr., a graduate of
Duke University, were married on June 10.
The couple live in St. Louis, Mo., at 5106
Westminster Place where he is a medical
student at Washington University and Mary
is teaching math at Roosevelt High School.
Sara Elizabeth Lindau is a copywriter and
receives mail at Lloyd's Advertising, Inc.,
1351 E. Morehead St., Charlotte. Kay
Camille Liverman and Raymond Terry
Bennett, a graduate of William and Mary
College, were married June 17. The couple
spent the summer in WiUiamsburg, Va., and
now live at 2824-C Teakwood Court, Win-
ston-Salem, where Kay is teaching at Rural
Hall Elementary School. William Lohr (M)
receives mail in P. O. Box 189, Jamestown.
Rowena Love was recently named Assistant
Home Economics Agent for Montgomery
County and her address is Route 2, Box
144-A, Stanfield. Bertha Lyons Maxwell (M)
lives in Charlotte at 1901 Haines St., and
is principal of Morgan Elementary School.
Joan McAllister lives at 245 E. N. Mul-
berry St., Statesville. Mildred McCanless
Wood lives in Universal City, Texas, 446
E. Lindbergh Blvd., #37 George Washing-
ton Apts. Gloria McGarter is a teacher and
lives at 117 N. Myrtle School Rd.,
Gastonia. Judith Warren McGonnel and
William M. Bishop, Jr., who attended
Greensboro Div. of Guilford College, were
married on August 5. The couple live in
Swansboro where Judith is teaching and
he is with the Coast Guard. Mary McCrac-
ken Ballou had a daughter, Colette Pene-
lope, bom August 14 and her address is
204 Columbia Hts., Apt. 4-A, Brooklyn,
N. Y. Mary Beth McDaniel (Mrs. Thomas
White) is teaching a third grade at Gen-
eral Greene School and resides at 504-B
Forest St., Greensboro. Judy Ann McDon-
ald, former Alumni Scholar, works for
Dept. of Defense at Ft. Meade, Md., and
receives mail in Riverdale, Md., at Auburn
Manor Apts., Apt. B-202, 6829 Riverdale
Rd. Susan McDonald is teaching and her
Atlanta, Ga. address is 241 Rumson Rd.,
N. E. Helen McDowell is a computer
specialist at 2300 S 24th Rd., Apt. 446,
Arlington, Va. Judy McFarland Anderson
is connected with the Food Supervisory
Program at Marshall Fields and lives in
Wheaton, 111., at 1040 Garner St. Nancy
Louise Mclnnis is teaching English and
her address is P. O. Box 242, EUerbe. Jane
Elliott Mclver and Arnold Flemin Robert-
son, who attended Elon College, were mar-
ried on August 5. The couple live at 3104-B
Summit Ave., Greensboro, where he is an
auditor with N. C. National Bank and
Janie is teaching school. Carolyn McKenzie
(x) and Harvey Alexander Carpenter, III,
who will graduate from UNC-CH in Janu-
ary, were married on August 19. The cou-
ple live at 114 Hanna St., Carrboro, where
Carolyn is working with the interior dec-
orating department at UNC-CH. Sue Gra-
ham McLeod is a speech therapist and her
address is Glenwood Apts. B-2, 1155 Wood-
land Avenue, NE, Atlanta, Ga. Joyce Ma-
haffey is teaching this year and her address
is 3030 D Karen Court, Briar Creek Apts.,
Charlotte. Phyllis Mahafiey (M) is teaching
and lives at 2330 Good Hope Rd., SE #608,
Washington, D. C. Linda Jane Maness is
Mrs. James Gamer and lives in Greensboro
at 622 N. Tremont where she is a first grade
teacher. Linda Sue Marlin is Mrs. John E.
Marshall and lives at C-3A Emerywood
Court, 1205 N. Main, High Point, where
she is an interior designer with Country
Furniture. Mary Beth Martin is a graduate
student at the University of Pennsylvania
and her address is 3921 Pine St., Phila-
delphia. Penelope Ann Martin is a second
grade teacher and lives in Arlington, Va.,
at T 921 Arlington Towers. Victoria Martin
is an interior designer and lives in Danville,
Va. at 926 Main. Carol Marvin is Mrs. Ken-
Watson and her address is 832 Teasel Dr.,
Apt. C-6, #8, Kingsport, Tenn., where she
is employed by Tennessee Eastman Com-
pany. Patricia Massey Blackburn (M) re-
ceives mail at 1004 Wood view Court, High
Point. Harry Mathis (C) is Chairman, Busi-
ness Department, Rowan Technical Insti-
tute and receives mail P. O. Box 406,
Granite Quarry. Jeanne Matthews is a
graduate student at Penn State this fall
and her address is 3037 Hazelton St., Falls
Church, Va. Emily Maultsby is Mrs. Cecil
Caison and her address is 501 North 5th
Street, Mebane. Joseph E. Meador, Jr. (M)
is principal of Pelham Elementary School
and receives mail in Reidsville at 507
Sherwood Road. Susan Mehring is teaching
at Jordan High School in Durham and her
address there is 1007 W. Trinity Ave. Ruth
Merrill is now Mrs. Clyde Oliver Fulk, Jr.
and lives in Johnson City, Tenn., 308 W.
Pine St. Sarah Meyland receives mail at
615 Kimberly Dr., Greensboro. Teacher in
Yadkin County is the occupation of Rita
Miller, who lives at 3709 N. Cherry, Win-
ston-Salem. Alice Moffatt is a secretary and
lives in New York City at 117 Bank St.
Nancy Mohr Davis lives at Oxford House
Apts., Apt. J, 0.\ford Place, High Point.
Thomas Molyneux (M) is a teacher and
receives mail at 33F S. College Ave., New-
ark, Del. Barbara Moran Reid lives at 19
Grove St., Bangor, Maine. Candace North
Morgan (AAS) is a nurse at Cone Hospital
and lives at 3108 Lawndale Dr., Greens-
boro, Apt. G. Margaret Anne Morgan be-
came Mrs. Forrest Patterson in March and
receives mail at 5606 Bloomfield Dr., Apt.
204, Alexandria, Va. Margaret Gail Morgan
lives in High Point where she is an interior
designer and receives mail at 222 E. Park-
way. Ruth Dodd Morgan is Mrs. Charles
Candler McConneU, Jr. — her address is Box
1552, CuUowhee where she is employed as
a secretary. Hubert Morrow (M) is an
assistant principal and hves at 619 Kenil-
worth, Greensboro. 3509 Burner Dr., #10
Charlotte, is the address of Mary Elizabeth
Morton where she is a speech therapist
for Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools.
Jean Frances Moulton is a speech thera-
pist in Raleigh Public Schools where she
hves at 507 Peartree Lane. Anne Lee Muir
and T. Daniel Hudson, a senior at UNC-G,
were married on August 5. Anne is work-
ing in the accounting department of Jef-
ferson-Carolina Corp. and the couple live
at 222 College Place, Apt. 1, Greensboro.
Loretta Myers Martin (M) is a business
teacher at Thomasville Sr. High and lives
on Rt. 1, Lake Rd., Thomasville. Mary
Ruth Myers is teaching and hves at 2113
Chambwood Dr., Charlotte. Paula Myrick
teaches a fourth-grade at Archer School in
Greensboro and her address is 4662 Bromp-
ton Drive. Carolyn Nelson is teaching art
in Atlanta and lives at 5320 Roswell Rd.,
NW, Apt. P-6, Atlanta. Kaye Nelson is a
personnel counselor in Greensboro and her
address is 108 N. Mendenhall St. Peggy
Nichols Foister (M) is an employment coun-
selor in High Point and lives at 416 Rock-
spring Rd. Aldryth Ockenga is Mrs. Thomas
W. Molyneux and receives mail in Newark,
Del., at 337 S. College Ave., where she
is a housewife. Carol Ann Oehman is an
elementary teacher and lives at 1342 Abbev
Place, Apt. 2, Chariotte. Glennie Kaye
Overman is now Mrs. Michael Dean Dan-
iels and her address is 4222 Oakland Ave.,
Greensboro. Betty Owen is a teacher and
her address is 100 W. Jay St., Leaksville.
Mary Owen (M) is an adult education
coordinator and her address is 806 North
Berkeley -Edge Hill M, Goldsboro. Gladys
Owings Hughes (M) is teaching and
receives mail in Box 111, Elon College.
Mariejean Pankonin (M) lives at 1011%
Franklin, Normal, 111., and is an instructor
at Illinois State University. Donna Paoli is
a graduate student and her address is 433
N. Columbia Ave., Chapel Hill. Joan Park
is a secretary for Celanese Corp. and her
address is 405 East 63rd Street, Apt. 2-C,
New York, New York. Frances Lee Parker
is teaching French and lives in New ■
Bern at 2012 Opal St. Judith Fay Parr's 1
occupation is social service at Cone Hos-
pital, Greensboro, where she hves at 717
Chestnut St., Apt. B. Michael Parrish (M)
is working toward a Ph.D. and his address
is 1000 Plaza Dr., State College, Pa.
Athelene Payne Marlowe (M) is teaching
a fourth and fifth grade and lives on Rt. 3
out of Thomasville. Nelsie Pecker Roths-
child (M) is head cataloger at Guilford Col-
lege and lives at 603 Woodvale Drive,
Greensboro. Barbara Louise Peckworth is in
medical technology training in Atlanta, Ga.,
but receives mail at her parent's home:
1241 Rollins Ave., Charlotte. Nancy Peeler
is teaching in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Schools and her address is 1351 E. Wood-
lawn Rd., #128, Charlotte. Sandra Penny
is a management trainee and her address is
4500 Grove Ave., Apt. 15, Richmond, Va.
Jerry Peoples (M) is assistant principal,
West Forsyth High School and lives on
Rt. 1, Clemmons. Marcia Perry is a reserva-
tions agent for Eastern Airlines and lives at
4943 Park Rd., Apt. 711, Charlotte. Patricia
Perry is an executive trainee at Meyer's and
38
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
her address in Greensboro is 305 Wood-
bine Court. Alice Phillips is an interior de-
signer and lives at 5320 Roswell Rd., Apt.
P-6, Atianta, Ga. Bob F. Phillips (M) is
teacher-coach (swimming and baseball) at
Page High School, Greensboro and lives at
2212 Hubert St. Ann Pickett Wilson had a
daughter, Anna Kristine, bom June 16, and
her address is Rt. 2, Box 37-A, Trinity.
Dewala Pierce is teaching at Cochrane Jr.
High School and her address is 3030 D
Karen Court, Briar Creek Apts., Charlotte.
Ann Pirtle Hucks lives at 1006 Sherrod
Avenue, High Point. Mary Katharine Pool
is teaching and receives mail in Elizabeth
City at 812 Ba.\ter St. Laura Poole is a
graduate student at UNC-CH this fall and
her address is 303 Kenan Dorm UNC,
Chapel Hill. Margaret Lou Poole lives in
Charlotte at Apt. 711, Hamilton House
Apts., 4943 Park Rd., where she is a reser-
vations agent with Eastern Airhnes. Flor-
ence Posey lives on Rt. 3 out of Bryson
City (Box 161). Armie Lee Boston is Mrs.
Willie Franklin Lucas and her address is
2107 Carpenter Court, Greensboro, where
she is a teacher. Lois Poteet is a graduate
teaching assistant at N. C. State and lives at
2300 Avant Ferry Road, Apt. 4-a, Raleigh.
Linda Ann Powers is teaching in Atlanta,
Ga., where she lives at 1683 Briarcliff Rd.,
Apt. 3 NE. Henrietta Presnell is a student
at University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla.,
but her mailing address is Box 187, Ashe-
boro. Rosemary Price (AAS) is a nurse and
her address is 1111-F Olive St., Greensboro.
Susan Prince is a medical student at
Duke University and her address is Box
2836, Duke Medical Center, Durham.
Laura Pritchett Smith is a home economics
teacher and lives on Rt. 2, Gibsonville.
Sue Proctor Morris Uves in Harrisburg at
Rt. 1, Box 465-B, where she is a teacher.
Emma Pugh Routh (M) is general elemen-
tary supervisor, Randolph County, and lives
on Rt. 1 out of Franklinville, Box 374.
Judith Pyrant Cornell is teaching and re-
ceives mail in Box 554, Providence. Claudia
Ann Raines (AAS) is a nurse in Greensboro
and her address is 305 Anchor Dr. Ruth
Elizabeth Rainey Lawhom hves in Char-
lotte at 1401 N. Tryon St., where she is a
community developer with Charlotte Area
Fund. Whitty Ransome and Robert Lee
Gamer were married on September 2 at
Christ Episcopal Church in Riverton, N. J.
The couple live in Chapel Hill, Box 1061,
where Whitty is a graduate student. Andrea
Ray is teaching a seventh grade at Men-
denhall Junior High in Greensboro and lives
at 4222 Oakland Ave., Apt. 1. Barbara
Reed is a caseworker and her address is
308y2 E. Nash St., Southport. Jane Reed is
working for Atlanta Federal Savings &
Loan and her address is 774 Yorkshire Rd.,
N. E., Atlanta, Ga. Barbara Ann Renfro
has a teaching associateship — Indiana Uni-
versity and receives mail c/o Department
of Enghsh, Ballantine Hall, Indiana Uni-
versity, Bloomington, Ind. Bradford J.
Reynolds (M) is the vocational rehabilita-
tion Sheltered Workshop Supervisor at
John Umstead Hospital and receives mail
in Box 351, Butner. Lawrence J. Reynolds
(M) lives in Lynchburg, Va., at Rt. 3, Box
217. Lynn Carol Rezac and Daniel Clayton
Smith, a UNC-CH graduate, were married
on June 17. The couple live on Rt. 4, Box
306 out of Matthews where Lynn is an
interior designer and Mr. Smith is in the
Air Force. Shelby Jean Rice is a graduate
student at Florida State University, Talla-
hassee, but receives mail on Rt. 1, Box 250,
HoUy Ridge. Janice Sue Richardson and
Robert Lee Ward, a graduate of Wake
Forest, were married on September 10.
The couple reside in Raleigh at 913
Brookside Dr. Sara Richardson and A2/c
Jerry Douglas Reynolds, who attended
UNC-CH and Guilford College, were mar-
ried on June 25. The couple live at 12000
E. 14th Ave. Apt. 4, Aurora, Colo., where
he is stationed in the Air Force and Sara
is teaching in a private school. Phyllis
Roberson has been assigned as Field Direc-
tor, Girl Scouts, to Lee, Moore and Hamett
Counties and her address is 109 Ramble-
wood Dr., Apt. 54, Raleigh. Annette Rogers
is Mrs. Alton R. Pittman and her address
is 205 S. Chapman St., Greensboro. Nancy
Rogers is working for the N. C. Highway
Department and hves at 1013 Chaney Rd.,
Raleigh. WiUiam Pitt Root (M) is an assist-
ant professor of Enghsh and receives mail
at 1016 Michigan Ave., E. Lansing, Mich.
Helen Roseman Snider (M) is a school
hbrarian in Davidson County and lives on
Rt. 1, Linwood. Wyclifle Rountree, Jr. (M)
receives mail in Charlotte at 1513 Ivey
Drive. Linda Holmes Rowland (AAS) is a
staff nurse at Cone Hospital, Greensboro
and lives at 1139 Church Street, Apt. B-6.
Sarah Rowland Hodges lives at 300 N. Main
St., Carrboro and works as a speech thera-
pist in a Chapel Hill Clinic in connection
viith the University of North Carolina.
Jeannette Rowles and Richard A. Vaugier,
a graduate of Southern Illinois University,
were married on July 1. The couple hve
at 180 Polk St., Apt. 9, Syracuse, N. Y.,
where Jeannette is an interior designer for
Fleishman's of Syracuse. Joyce Lynn Sadler
and Eugene Russell Kenney, IV, who at-
tended N. C. State University, were married
on August 19. The couple hve in Pensa-
cola, Fla., at 5816 Flaxman St., where
the groom is stationed with the Navy. Route
1, Jamestown is the address of Sylvia Jane
Saferight (M) who is an elementary teacher.
Ruby Sartin is a teacher — her address is
Park Springs Road, Providence. "Dot" Saw-
yer is a school teacher and receives mail
in Charlotte at 1809 Garibaldi Avenue.
Barbara Lee Satterfield is a resident hall
graduate assistant. East Grogan, UNC-G,
and is working on an MFA in graphics.
Linda Scher lives at 112 W. 74th St., New
York, N. Y., where she is doing editing
work for New American Library — Signet
Books. Maryenne Schvmim (M) is a physical
education instructor at East Stroudsburg
State College and her address is RD #1,
Bushkill, Pa. Margaret Scott and Lewis G.
Murray, II were married July 29. He is a
graduate of N. G. State where he was a
member of Alpha Phi Omega fraternity.
The couple live at 3429 Chiswell Rd., Apt.
204, Laurel, Md., where Margaret is work-
ing for the government. Kathleen Seawell
Pope lives in San Antonio, Tex., at 229 El
Montan Dr. Elaine Sells Stiller (M) is a
supervisor in Rowan County Schools and
receives mail in Box 913, Salisbury. Susan
Shellington is now Mrs. J. Y. Blankner,
lists her occupation as housewife and
teacher and receives mail at 1637 Hull
Circle, Orlando, Fla.
Frances Shelton is a mathematician and
her address is U. S. Naval Weapons Lab,
Civilian Dormitory, Dahlgren, Va. Mary
Ellen Shelton is teaching at Chatham High
School (Va.) and lives in Danville at 642
Amett Blvd., Apt. 4-B. Betty Simmons is
a graduate student and her address is 2712
Carver St. Ext., Durham. BiUie Simmons
is a graduate student at UNC-G and lives
at 919 N. Ehn, Greensboro. Martha Simp-
son is a school teacher and lives at 159
Salisbury St., KernersvUle. Morrell B. Simp-
son (M) is teaching and receives mail in
Greensboro at 3110 H Lawndale Dr. Nelan
Singletary Chappell is a Spanish teacher
and receives mail in Raleigh, Box 811,
Beckanna Apts., 3939 Glenwood Ave. Juli-
aima Skogland receives mail in Box 54, Bat
Cave. Barbara Smith is a 6th grade teacher
and lives at 1111 Clairmont Ave., A-3,
Decatur, Ga. Helen Smith Irvin (AAS) is
a registered nurse at Forsyth Hospital and
lives in Winston-Salem at 1102 Salem
Valley Rd. Linda Smith is teaching art at
Reynolds High School and her address is
Apt. 17D 2353 Salem Court, Ardmore Ter-
race, Winston-Salem. Nancy Smith is a
research assistant and lives in Chapel Hill
at Rosemary Apt. #9, W. Rosemary St.
Patricia Smith and Samuel Lindsay Hall,
a graduate of UNC-CH, were married
June 17. The couple hve at 213 North-
ampton Terrace Apts., Chapel Hill, where
he is attending law and Patricia is teach-
ing. Priscilla Jeanne Smith (AAS) and
Vernon Boyd Braimon, II, a graduate of
UNC-CH, were married on June 3. The
couple hve in Charlotte at 1344 P. Green
Oaks Lane, where she is a nurse. Rachel
Smith receives mail on Rt. 1 out of Mayo-
dan (Box 5). Sherry Smith Myers is a
teacher and her address is 765 W. 48th St.,
Norfolk, Va. Suki Smith is a stewardess for
Pan American Airlines and her address in
Miami, Fla., is 6845 S. W. 129 Terr.
Thomas Clifton Smith, Jr. hves at 2204
Jane St., Greensboro, and he is an account-
ing supervisor. Karla Sokol Lipp is a social
worker and her address is Apt. 408, Cha-
teau Royale, Gadsden St., Pensacola, Fla.
Dorothy Somers is teaching in Fairfax, Va.,
and lives at 3943 Persimmon Dr., Apt. 104.
Vicki Sorenson Alex hves in Burlington at
Townhouse 30 — Greenbriar. Mona Sorkin
is teaching in Atlanta and her address is
2586 BriarclifE Rd., NE. In September, die
U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) appointed Jackie B.
Sparkman as a housing intern assigned to
its Region II office in Philadelphia. Jackie
receives mail in Philadelphia at 152 N. 53rd
St. Dorothy Ann Spates Wilbur hves in
Pinckney, Mich., E. S. George Reserve.
Choice Townley Spratt and Travis Water-
bury Moon, a graduate of the University
of the South, were married August 26. The
couple live at Seville Court, Jacksonville,
Fla., where he is teaching and coaching
football at Episcopal High School. Melanie
Spruill is a social worker at Jackson School
for Boys and her address is 226 Union St.,
S., Concord. Beverly Virginia Stanley is a
teacher and lives at Apt. B, 641 Westover
Hills Blvd., Richmond, Va. Mary Lynn
Stanley (AAS) and Ricky Jordan Hagwood,
a senior at East Carolina, were married on
August 19. The couple live at 14-C Strat-
ford Arms Apts., Greenville, where Mary
Lynn is working as a registered nurse.
Karen Leigh Stark (M) can be reached at
2 Tyler Dr., Noroton Heights, Darien,
Conn. Sunday, June 25, was the wedding
day of Marilyn Diane Stegall and Wilham
The Alumni News: Winter 1968
39
Irvin Griffin. The couple live on Rt. 3 out
of Marshville where Marilyn is a home
economics teacher and he is employed by
Griffin's TV and Appliance Center. Gloria
Stephenson Stell receives mail at 1302-B
Eaton Place, High Point, where she is teach-
ing a fifth grade. "Libby" Elizabeth Femi-
ster Stewart is a graduate student and re-
ceives mail at Boyd Hall, W. Green, Ohio
University, Athens, Ohio. Carole Stiner
and Robert A. Gilliam, Jr., were married
on July 1 in Decatur, Ga. The couple live
in Burlington at 9-D Greenbriar Apts.,
where Carole is teaching and he is em-
ployed by Acme Feed Mills. Emmetta
Stirewalt lives in Charlotte, 3300 Central
Ave., Apt. 3-C where she is a first grade
teacher at Hickory Grove Elementary
School. Barbara Sutton Davis is a teacher
and lives at Lake Waccamaw (Box 141).
July 15th was the wedding day of Sandra
Jean Sutton and Lt. (j.g.) Frank M. Dur-
rance, Jr., a graduate of University of Flor-
ida. The couple live at 100 Peachtree Rd.,
Kingstown, R. I.
Ann Wells Swain lives at 509-A N.
Hamilton St., Richmond, Va., where she is
Unit Manager at Medical College of Vir-
ginia Hospital (in charge of coordinating
patient services). Lois Elaine Sweet Beut-
tell is a secretary and lives at 1220-H Mor-
reene Rd., Durham. Patricia Ann Swink is
teaching in Greensboro and her address is
2219 Apt. A, Walker Ave. Lena Marie
Swofford is Mrs. Richmond S. Gordon and
lives at 214A Wake Forest Student Apts.,
Winston-Salem, where she is teaching a
first grade. Maude Talley is an elementary
school teacher and lives at 5410-C Friendly
Manor Dr., Greensboro. Hazel Tate Poteat
(M) is a guidance counselor and lives on
Rt. 1, Box 335, Reidsville. Jane Taylor and
Homer Woodrow Brookshire, Jr., a senior
at Wake Forest University, were married
August 5. The couple Uve at 4125 Student
Drive, Winston-Salem, and Jane teaches
at Mt. Tabor High School. Robbie Dianne
Taylor is Mrs. Larry Martin Land and lives
at 805-C Daniels St., Raleigh, where she
is an English teacher. Suzanne Teague
Frazier lives on Belmont Dr., High Point,
where she is teaching. Fern Tepper re-
ceives mail at 1125 Heatherwood Circle,
Florence, S. C, where she is teaching
school. Carolyn Thomas is a high school
teacher and lives on Rt. 1, Box 546, Indian
Trail. Susan Thomas is a speech therapist
in the Logan County Schools (W. Va.) and
lives at 1306 Kanawha Ave., Dunbar, W.
Va. Charlotte Ruth Thompson and Gary
B. Bailey, a graduate of Daytona Beach
Jr. College (Fla.), were married on August
13. The couple live on Rt. 1 out of Knight-
dale and Charlotte is a fashion illustrator
with Hudson Belk's in Raleigh. Elizabeth
Ann Thompson is an elementary teacher
and lives at 1331 Abbey Place, Apt. 7, Char-
lotte. Sharyn Thome (AAS) is working at
Cone Hospital as a registered nurse and
her Greensboro address is 1139 Church St.,
Apt. A-2. Susan Elizabeth Tiller is Mrs.
Floyd Thomas Jenkins and lives in Greens-
boro at 1831 VOla Drive. Brenda Todd is
a graduate assistant at the University of
Tennessee and receives mail at Yadkinville,
P. O. Box 547. Sandra Willeen Todd and
Robert Lichauer, a student at UNC-G, were
married on August 5. The couple live at
24 W. Locke Apts., High Point, where
Sandra is color consultant and coordinator
for Huffman Wallpaper and Paint Com-
pany. Frances Ann Tomlin (M) is an in-
structor at the University of Oklahoma and
receives mail at 712 Parsons, Norman,
Okla. Diane Leslie Tremitiere lives at
419 Holly Drive in Wyckoff, N. J. Tomye
Trivette is working for IBM and hves at
1023 J. F. Kennedy Blvd., Apt. 1, Endwell,
N. Y. Cherry Lynn Tucker is a teacher in
Atlanta, Ga., and receives mail at 1683
BriarclifF Rd., Apt. 3. Donna Tucker Whit-
ley lives in Chicago, 111., 1000 Lake Shore
Plaza, Apt. 26-C, where she is employed as
a secretary. Katherine Tucker is a special
student at UNC-G and her address is 303
Kensington Rd., Greensboro. Glenda Tudor
is a social worker at Western Carolina
Institution and lives on Rt. 3, Box 854,
Morganton (Hillcrest Trailer Park). Beatrice
Tomlinson Turner and Julian Lee Lokey,
Jr., a UNC-CH graduate, were married
July 1. The couple live at 909A Dawes St.,
Chapel Hill, where he is a medical student
at UNC and Beatrice is teaching. Virginia
Lee Underwood's address in Greensboro is
120 Mclver St., however, later this fall she
is leaving for Munich, Germany. Mary
Glenn Unferth (M) is a 4th grade teacher
and hves on Rt. 1, Box A-267, Charlotte.
Andrea Fay Untz and Gerald Winston Lit-
tleton, who attended East Carolina and who
graduated from Infantry Officers' Candidate
School, were married June 3. The couple
live at 113 N. E. 46th Ave., Mineral Wells,
Tex. Mary Upright Eagle is teaching at
Central High in High Point, but her address
is 1820 Walker Ave., Greensboro. Sylvia
Valentine and Mack Edward Smith, III,
recipient of a degree in business adminis-
tration from Mars Hill College, were mar-
ried August 12. After a trip to the Bahamas,
the couple returned to Charlotte where
Mr. Smith is with Transmission Supplies,
Inc. Sylvia is teaching at Coulwood Junior
High in Charlotte and the couple receive
mail in P. O. Box 21041. Barbara Jean
Vaughn is teaching and lives at 305 W.
"I" St., Newton. Phyllis Wagner is em-
ployed by Eastern Airhnes Reservations
Center and lives in Charlotte at 2922 Allen
Rd., S. Marsha Wakefield is a business
teacher and lives in Woodbridge, Va. at
509 Monroe Dr. Eleanor Walker Bwynn
(M) is a teacher and her address is 813
Bellaire St., Greensboro. Elizabeth Mor-
row Walker is a student at Bowman Gray
School of Medical Technology and receives
mail at Kembly Inn, Room 212, 2000 Beach
St., Winston-Salem. Thomas Walker (M) is
an instructor at Guilford College and lives
at 511-C, University Dr., Greensboro. Anita
Cheryl Wasserman (AAS) lives in Greens-
boro at 1137 Church St., Apt. B-6, where
she is a nurse at Cone Hospital.
Judith Annette Watkins and William
Routhton Thompson, a graduate of East
Carolina College, were married in Greens-
boro on February 11. The couple live at
Rt. 8, Box 91-B, Greensboro, where Judith
is teaching and Mr. Thompson is physical
education teacher and coach at Smith High
School. Dina Watson is a home economist
and lives at 427 S. Second St., Albemarle.
Diana Louise Watts lists her occupation
as elementarv art teacher and receives mail
in Roanoke, Va., at 827 Welton Ave., SW.
Marilyn Watts spent the summer in Europe
and her address is Rt. 6, Box 414, Sahs-
bury. Rebecca Watts Stanley is a teacher
and lives at 520y2 Stirling St., Apt. 2,
Greensboro. Monette Weaver is a graduate
student in recreation for the handicapped
and receives mail in Chapel HiU at 104
Stenson St. Ext. Gail Weber is a systems
engineer for IBM and hves in Greensboro
at 819 N. Ehn. Kathleen "Kay" Wharton is
doing graduate work in music history and
Uterature at the University of Michigan and
receives mail at #2112 Coman (Coman
House) 1440 Hubbard, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Gary White is teaching in Atlanta, Ga., and
receives mail at 155 Laurel Forrest Circle,
N.E. Ellen White Day (M) is a school h-
brarian and receives mail in Box 577, Elon
College. Kathryn White is teaching this
year and lives at 217 Mountain Ave., SW,
Apt. 7, Roanoke, Va. Sarah Wicker is a
physical education teacher at Jackson Jun-
ior High School in Greensboro and fives
at 210 S. Chapman St. EUzabeth Ann Wil-
cox Jensen (M) receives maU in Box 90,
Bryson City. Barbara Wilkie (M) is an in-
structor of physical education at HoUins
CoUege and receives mail in Box 606, Hol-
lins, Va. JuUa Williams is teaching and
hves at 400 N. Gulf St., Sanford. Instructor,
Winston-Salem State College is the occu-
pation of Mary Jane Williams (M) and her
address is 2315 Gerald St., Winston-Salem.
Royce Ann Williams is teaching and her
address in Charlotte is 1331 Abbey Place,
Apt. 7. Linda Winstead is teaching and
fives at 809 N. Rountree St., Wilson. Bar-
bara Ann Wise (M) is a home economics
teacher and fives at 2305 N. Ehn in
Greensboro. Aima Wolff Dixon lives at
1816 Independence Rd., Greensboro. Linda
Wolff (AAS) and Dolana Jean Workman
(AAS) are nurses at Cone Hospital, Greens-
boro, where they live at 2200 ComwaUis
Dr., ComwaUis Manor, Apt. 218. JoAnn
Workman Dewar is a housewife and fives
at 6118 Sunset Rd., Greensboro. Abbie
Worley Flynn is working in medical tech-
nology and her address is 168 Piccadilly
Dr., Winston-Salem. Gail Wright receives
mail at T921 Arlington Towers, Arlington,
Va., where she is a management intern
for Agency for International Development.
Judith Ellen Wright is teaching at Randolph
Junior High in Charlotte where she fives
at 6716 Linda Lake Dr. Charles Wyrick, Jr.
(M) is employed by the Virginia Museum
of Fine Arts, and lives at 1603 Park Ave.,
Richmond. Nancy Lee Yates and Robert
Thomas Martin, Jr., who will graduate
from Guilford College in January, were
married on June 17. The couple live at
2200 Comwalfis Dr., Apt. 319, ComwaUis
Manor, Greensboro, where Nancy is a sec-
retary with N. C. National Bank and he
is a planning assistant with Pilot Life
Insurance Company. Barbara Ann Yoder
receives maU in Durham at 2303 Lednum
St., Apt. C-C, where she is Director of
Recreation at Butner. Carole Young fives at
1103 N. Elm St., Greensboro where she
is a student — medical technology at Moses
Cone Hospital. Jeanne Young is an analyst
for Dept. of Defense and lives at 8805
Hunting Lane, Apt. T-4, Laurel, Md. Mar-
garet Young is Mrs. Jerry S. Price and her
address is Rt. 1, Summerfield, where she
is teaching in the Summerfield Elementary
School. Carolyn Yount Thomas (M) is
a commercial teacher at Parkland High
School in Winston-Salem and she lives
at Rt. 1, Polaris Rd., Pfafftown. Yvonne
Zezefellis is a teacher and her address is
2723 Oleander Drive, Wilmington.
40
The University of North Carouna at Greensboro
Tom Martin, Greensboro native and Curry High School
graduate, takes a shot at the basket. Tom, a junior, trans-
ferred this year from Gardner-Webb College.
Jimmi Ann Duffy, sophomore from Norfolk, Virginia,
clenches fists in anticipation while Diane Steelman,
sophomore from Harmony, keeps both eyes on the ball.
FIRST INTERCOLLEGIATE GAME
Spartans Spark New Spirit
WHAT it was was basketball, the first home game of
the University Spartans in their first year of collegiate
basketball. What it did was pack a cheering student body
into Coleman Gymnasium with a display of enthusiasm
that undoubtedly ranks the University at Greensboro at
the top among colleges in the state for loyalty-to-team.
Coach James Swigett, hired this year to coach the
first men's varsity team, lined up a schedule which began
November 20 against St. Andrews College in Laurinburg.
The first home game on the Greensboro campus Novem-
ber 29 brought the girls out cheering from the opening
tap to the final whistle.
"I have never seen anything like it on campus before,"
Senior Betsy Cox of Shelby exclaimed. "The boys are
doing well considering this is their first year and a lot
have not played against competition for a couple of years."
Deedee Davenport, a senior from Spruce Pine, thinks
it's the greatest thing that ever happened to the University.
"Playing basketball and having a wrestling team will help
put the name of the school in front of the public all over
the South and help draw better athletes, even though we
don't give scholarships."
Other students envision pep rallies and future games
in a larger facihty, such as the Greensboro Coliseum,
perhaps as a preliminary game for a double-header. Cheer-
leaders have been appointed temporarily until an oflBcial
cheering squad can be selected.
Chancellor James Ferguson helped lead the cheers
near the Spartans' bench opening night. "We made the
Methodists earn everything they got," he observed, referring
to the final score of 77 to 74 in a hard-fought game.
"The boys had the spirit, and it was good to see so many
students in the stands. I am proud of the boys and the
coaching staff."
The Spartans offer a sharp contrast to the University's
first basketball squad, the Naughty-Naughts, established
at the turn of the century. As Virginia Terrell Lathrop '23
of Asheville wrote in Educate A Woman, "The Naughty-
Naughts were so successful with the sport of basketball,
despite their fulsome costumes, that they presented a
trophy to inspire succeeding classes to greater heights —
both in basketball and skirts." Skirts have certainly soared
to record heights, and perhaps the Spartans will soar too,
realizing the great expectations of that pioneering team
in 1900.
Serials Dept*
Wo.Tian's Collage Library
Greensboro, NC
The University Calendar
FEBRUARY
7 Mu Phi Epsilon Fashion Show:
Cone Ballroom, 7 p.m.
8 Russian Lectuhe: Dr. Vasa Mihail-
ovich, "Fifty Years of Russian Litera-
ture," Phillips Lounge, 7:30 p.m.
11 French Theatre: Le Tartuffe, Tre-
teau de Paris, Aycock, 8 p.m.
12-14 Viet Nam Seminar: Cone Ballroom,
8 p.m.
13 Archeolocical Lecture: "The
Crown Jewels of Iran," Dr. A. D.
Tushingham. Library Lecture Hall,
8:15 p.m.
13-14 Penick Lecture: Dr. Chad Walsh,
author and educator, Beloit College,
Alumnae House, 8 p.m.
14 Wildlife Film: Audubon Society,
Library Lecture Hall, 8 p.m.
15 Philosophy Lecture: "Philosophy
and Ideology," Henry Aiken, Alex-
ander Room, 8 p.m.
17 Concert: Dionne Warwick, Aycock,
8:30 p.m.
18 Scholastic Art Awards: Cone Ball-
room, 3 p.m.
20-22 Harriet Elliott Lecture: Aycock,
8 p.m.
26 Music: Norman Luboff Choir, Civic
Music Society, Aycock, 8:30 p.m.
27 Theatre: The World of Carl Sand-
burg, The Bishop's Company, Cone
Ballroom, 8 p.m.
28-29 Univehsity Symposium: Cone Ball-
room, 8 p.m.
MARCH
1-2 Sophomore Parents' Weekend.
2 Wildlife Film: Audubon Society,
Library Lecture Hall, 8 p.m.
5 Faculty Wives' Fashion Show:
Elliott Hall, 8:30 p.m.
6-10 University Theatre: MacBeth.
Taylor Building TTieatre, 8:30 p.m.
8 Music: Festival of Contemporary
Music, Cone Ballroom, 8 p.m.
10 Concert: Roger Williams, Memorial
Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.
11 Concert: N. C. Symphony "Pops
Concert," Aycock, 8:30 p.m.
13 D.ance: Fnja, Yugoslav Folk Danc-
ers, Aycock, 8:30 p.m.
14 Philosophy Lecture: Charles Fran-
kel, Alexander Room, 8 p.m.
14-15 Dance: Dance Group Concert, Tay-
lor Building Theatre, 8 p.m.
18 Japanese Movie, Library Lecture
Hall.
19 Phi Beta Kappa Convocation: Ay-
cock, 7 p.m.
ART CALENDAR
WEATHERSPOON GALLERY
Irene Rice Periera: Paints and
Drawings February 4-29
Student Exhibit of Woodcuts and
Etchings Fehrtmry 3-14
Matisse Graphics from Permanent
Collection February 11-March 3
Scholastic Art Awards
February 18- March 3
Museum Purchase Fund Exhibition:
American Federation of Arts
February 25-March 17
Bocour Artists Colors Collection
March 17 -April 9
Paintings by: Bert Carpenter/Giorgio
Cavallon; Sculpture by: Dustin Rice
March 10-April 1
Bernard Gottfryd: Photography
March 24-Apra 10
London Crafica Sale April 3-4
Gallery hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily,
2 to 5 p.m. Sunday.
ELLIOTT HALL GALLERY
Scholastic Art Awards
February 18-March 3
Bocour Artists Colors Collection
March 19- April 9
Gallery hours: 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily,
2 to 10 p.m. Sunday.
21 Spanish Movie, Library Lecture
Hall.
21-22 Gary Faculty Panel: "Background
of Communism," Alexander Room.
25 Music: Orchestra Festival, Aycock.
27 Lecture: Demonstration Dance, Ay-
cock, 8:30 p.m.
27 Institute on Alcoholism: Exten-
sion Division, Alexander Room, 9
a.m.
28 Dance: Norman Walker Dance
Company. Aycock. 8:30 p.m.
29-30 State Chor.\l Festival: Cone Bali-
room and Aycock, 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
30 Choral Concert: Aycock, 7:30 p.m.
APRIL
2 French Poetry Reading: Pierre
Viala. Cone Ballroom, 8 p.m.
2 Archeolocical Lecture: "Neolithic
Cultures of Scandinavia," Homes L.
Thomas, Library Lecture Hall, 8:15
p.m.
4- 5 Writers' Forum : Peter Taylor, nov-
elist, and William Meredith, poet,
Elliott Hall.
4- 6 Aquatic Ballet: Dolphin-Seal Pag-
eant, Coleman Gym Pool, 8 p.m.
5- 7 Unu'ehsity Opera; Mozart's The
Magic Flute, Taylor Building Tlie-
atre, 8 p.m.
6 Concert: Glee Club Spring Concert,
Cone Ballroom, 3 p.m.
8 Music: New York String Sextet,
Chamber Music Society, Recital Hall,
8:30 p.m.
19 Music: Tri di Balcano, Chamber
Music Society, Recital Hall, 8:30
p.m.
23 CoNf:EHT: University Band Concert,
Gone Ballroom, 8 p.m.
24-27 University' Theatre: "An Evening
of Absurd TTicater," Taylor Building
Theatre, 8:30 p.m.
26 Dance: Grcenslxiro Civic Ballet, Ay-
cock, 8 p.m.
30 Music: University Symphony, Ay-
cock, 8 p.m.