VOLUME XXII. NO. 4

Center Right-

on Which

Construction

Wos Begun in

Winston-Salem

Early in June

Dormitories

in Foreground WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUM I EWS, June, 1952 Page Two

Cost Trends Wake Forest College was engaged peace- fully with another annual commencement in the Colleges program when of lililahe 111nrrst C!tnllrgr June 1 reached the village "in a forest of Wake" bearing on its first page an article under the ominous title, "Grave Fund Crises Confront Colleges." Benjamin Fine, educational editor of The Times, had summarized in it conclusions based upon information 1\lunttti Nrws secured from an extensive survev of 600 liberal arts colleges and universities in America. A bit on the pessimistic side, especially for the independent liberal arts colleges, the report attributed financial difficulties to mounting operating costs and, in most cases, declining Editor: EUGENE OLIVE, ' 10 enrollments MoM of the colleges were busy with efforts to obtain needed funds from private sources and a majority of them reported fund-raising more difficult than a year ago. tudents themselves were Published in October, December, M_a rch, and June. by Wake the primary source from which efforts were made to !tecure funds Forest C ollege, Office of Pubhc Relauons and Alumm Activities, to meet rising costs. Thi~ may be ~een from the fact that tuition and Wake Forest, N. C. fees have been increa~ed, on the average, about 70 per cent within Subscription Price: One Dollar a Year the la~t ten years. Students are paying more than ever before for educational opportunity, but this is true of about everything else Entered as second-class ma tter at the Post Office at \Vake Forest, they and other people are purchasing. North Carolina. Address all communications to ALU M N I N EWS, WaJ.:e Forest, North Carolina. Woke Forest's Church-related colleges. according to The Times survey, are in Je ~ · jeopardy than the ALUMNl ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Stotus Sound institutions under private control. This is true especially of \Vake Forest College and for very sound reasons. President-Addison Hewlett, Jr '33 ...... Wilmington First Vic.-President-Dr. Vernon Taylo r, Jr. '36 ...... Elkm ( 11 It is owned, controlled, supported, and patronized by people Second Vic.-President-Egbert L. Davis, Jr. '33 ...... Winston-Salem who are bound together in a great religious denomination. lts Immediate Past President-Henry Lites. '32...... Greensboro character and functions will be determined by the Baptists of North Carolina. A portion of every gift made through the Co-operative EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Program by any individual in any church is alJocatcd for Christian Offic ers na med above and- Education and divided among the colleges belonging to the Baptist Wake Forest Harold W. Tribble, ex officio State Convention. lt is certain that a far larger percentage than ever Hubert E. Olive '18, ex officio...... Lexington Judge Chester R. Morris '25 (1952) .... Currituck before of the 730 000 Baptists in the state are sharing in the support Dr. D. R. Perry '16 (1952) ...... Durham of the Baptist colleges. It is reasonable to assume that the expanding Dr. J. Bivens Helms '24 ( 1953 ) .. Morganton program of the churches, as illustrated in the progre&ive Nine A. J. Hutchins '12 ( 1953) ...... Canton Year Plan adopted by the last Convention, will strengthen greatly De .Atlanta, Ga. an Paden ( 1953) the work John Knott '23 ( 1954) ...... Charlotte of the colleges both in the matter of current support and James Mason '38 (1954 ) ...... Laurinburg in helping to supply their capital needs. A ma tter of tremendous Dr. J. R. Sa unders, ( 1954 ). Richmond, Va. ~ignificance is the fact that many thousands of individuals have A. Yates Dowell, (19551 \\ ashington, D. C. shared in the movement to raise through the churches $1,500,000 Philadelphia, Pa. Dr. H eath D. Bumgardner. ( 195 5 l for the building fund of the Ne" Wake Forest College in Winston­ Eugene Olive ' 10 Secretary ...... Wa~e Forest Salem, and that more than S 1.000,000 of the amount has been paid already. It is a healthful situation for any institution to belong to a strong and growing constituency that believes in it, supports IN THIS ISSU E it. looJ..s to it for the training of its youth, and is committed irrevocably to the success of its high mission. The Chapel Front Cover ( 2) Loyal alumni of \Vake Forest College, many of whom are Editorials: Cost Trends in the Colleges in the group considered above, are among its Mrongest assurances Wa ke Forest's Status Sound of health for Lhe future. One was heard to say in a recent alumni Construction is Begun on the cw Campus. meeting in \Vashington, D. C .. that no influence in his life, Pre ·ident Tribble Honored 4 save that of his parents. had alfected him so tremendously for Commencement Speakers Heard 4 good as \Vake Forest. That te:,timony is no isolated one. It is Honorary Degrees Conferred. 5 repeated frequently in one way or another. These devoted sons Jim Turner Retires .. 6 and daughters of the College are discovering in greater numbers Activities of the Facully...... 7 that they can find no surer way to prove both their gratitude for Admini ~ trativc Offices Opened in Win~ton - Salem ... 7 what they have received and their desire to make the wiseM The Challenge of a Liberal Education possible investment in a brighte1 and better tomorrow for man­ By Roy E. Snell, '52 .... 10 l-ind than to share their material possessions for the health of Among the Alumni II their alma mater. By special and regular gifts, through bequests Inside the Roc~ Wall 13 and 15 mtlde by will, out of trust funds, business profit , and othcr\\ise L. Y. Ballentine Makes Headlines. 13 the alumni are building monuments 11 more lasting than bronze." Bennett Becomes Chief of Chaplains. .. 14 (3) Another and growing group upon which Wake Forest Football Schedule .. 17 College leans with confidence is composed of individuals, families, Thc ~ e Were Married ... 18 corporations, and foundations other than tbo~e previously men­ Information About Alumni 18 tioned who are keenly aware of the values of Christian education ecrology 23 and of the wisdom and soundness of generous support of it. Future \Vake ForcMers 24 According to The Times survey, the sources of contributed funds Second of tbe new buildings to be slsrted this SlllllJller is tbe library, (center), adjacent are classroom buildings.

Construction Is Begun on the New Campus Robert C. Deyton

Months have passed since the ground a trustees' room, ventilating equipment. the Vice-President breaking ceremonies of October 15 when master clock for the campus and space for and Controller thousands witnessed the spading of dirt at carrilons. Re) nolda symbolizing the beginning of con­ Library to be Erected Vice-President and Controller Robert C. ::.truction of the new Wake Forest College. Deyton assumed Within a few weeks construction will be­ his new duties early in ow, however, vi;itors to the site where gin on the four-floor library building, ac· May and is located in Winston-Salem where the celebration was held will find workmen cordmg to architect, J. F. Larson who has administrative offices have been set up in the Amos Cottage at Graylyn. busily engaged with materials which are drawn plans for several such buildings on being assembled from day to day looking to­ campuses of leading colleges in the country. Mr. Deyton is • Baptist, a graduate of ward the erection of tbe Chapel and class­ This structure will be in many respects an Duke University and of the Harvard School room building. improvement over any existing college li­ of Business. He is best known in North This structure will cost a little less than brary, he states. lt will house as many as Carolina as Assistant Director of the Budget 1,500,000 and will provide a seating space 800,000 volumes. The contract price, ap· for the State for about 16 years prior to for 2,500 people. The educational section of proved by the trustees, is $1,691,567. the present administration. In recent years the building will contain a meditation George W. Kane of Greensboro is to be tbe he was held an import'*nt executive position chapel, quarters for the school of religion builder of both tbese structures. with the Ecusta Paper Corporation and and all other student religious activities. Details of plans for tbe science building comes to his Wake Forest post with an ex­ Here also will be housed on Sundays tbe are practically completed and authorization cellent background of training and experi­ various educational departments of tbe Col· bas been given by the trustees to the archi· ence. lege Church which is to be organized on tbe teet's committee to approve this contract as The new official will represent !be College campus. soon as satisfactory details can be com­ in all business matters connected with the The tower will include a reception room, pleted. construction program in Winston-Salem and

to non·tax·supported colleges are listed in Ibis order: general word "Christian" to "privately supported education." Because this subscriptions, alumni, business and industry, and foundations. is true, generous benefactors of Wake Forest College are to be Educators generally are agreed !bat private and church schools found among the ablest business and professional men outside tbe must not receive financial aid from government, except in the ranks of Baptists and alumni. They are investing liberally in form of scholarships paid to individual students. One of tbem trust funds for its permanent support and in buildings which will expresses an opinion that seems general: "Privately supported stand for generations as memorials to their wisdom and to tbeir .educational institutions must look more to industry and business sense of mission. for financial suport. They must sell the idea tbat the philosophies Now that construction is actua1ly in progress on the new of privately supported education and of free competitive enterprise campus, renewed interest and support from all tbree of tbese are compatible-indeed, tbe same. If one is to survive, botb must sources of Wake Forest's strength may be expected. From the 5nrvive. lf one gives way to encroacbi.ng government control, the smallest gift to one which makes possible the erection of one of other cannot hope to remain free." Friends of Wake Forest include tbe major buildings, contributions will be received in tbe months many persons of large and small financial resources which tbey ahead with profound gratitude and a renewed determination on the are sharing gladly witb tbe College because tbey believe heartily part of !bose who are guiding tbe affairs of tbe College to build in this concept. Most of tbem would go even furtber and add the wisely and to serve efficiently and faitbiully. \\ AKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI EWS, June, 1952 Page Four

"The basic principles of the free capita· President Tribble li'>tic system which we have developed in the United States affords opportunity to the Honored By Duke individual who is willing to use his talents and UNC and desires to produce, to accumulate some­ thing to invest in a home, a farm, a factory. On Wake Forest's last Commencement in savings accounts, bonds and other se­ Day similar exercises were being held at curities, life insurance. the education of his Duke and at Carolina. In addition to the children, a nd the comforts of life. And when regular activities required of the President I speak to th e free capitalistic system, 1 am at Wake Forest, Dr. Tribble took time out thinking also of the millions of investors in to attend the Duke Commencement exercises our corporations and companies, who there­ in the morning where the honorary degree fore are part owners of these corporation~. of Doctor o f Laws was conferred upon him. Our\ is the most democratic financial or­ He returned to Wake Forest in time for the ganization the world has devised. clo,ing part of the Alumni luncheon, pre­ " ince the beginning of our industrial omd 'cientific development, thi !-.i'-'ed over the graduating exercise~ at Wake s American Forest, and then returneJ to Chapel Hill in 'Y~tem, brc,ed on individual freedom initia· time for the Commencement program there. tive, and ingenuity, has given to the world held in the evening. where he received more of the comforts and convenient~ of another honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. life than mankind had received in the pre­ ceding five thousand years." The Citation read by President Edens of Mr Holding pointed out the duties and Duke was as follows: Robe rt C. Deyton, Vice-President and re~ponsibilities of busine~. labor and govern­ Controller ment, admonbhing b..is listeners to remember l/AROLD WAYLAND TRIBBLE has that "all betterment of ma nkjnd is predicated brought /righ purpose ami scholarly visiofl will give general direction to business affairs upon the full development of individuals." to his numerous pastoral and academic re­ of the College as a whole. In speaking of the individual and wealth, sponsibilities. Trainee/ in Germany, in Switr:.­ \lr De)ton i' held in high esteem by his he said, .. Financial success, as such, is a rel­ erland, ami in Scotland, as well as in the many acquaintanc es throughout the State, ative matter. Immense wealth is not a United States. he is a notable theologian ,,J and 0\pceiall y by business men who have bad requisite of a successful life, but I do say opportunity to know of his qualifications in a wise administrator. As President of Wake that rea~onable security is of prime im­ m atter~ involving large construction pro­ Fort•st College Ire now leads that institution portance to everyone. ~1oney provides not in its challenging clays of transition. grams and business affairs in general. Wake only the material necessities of life, but also I confer upon you the degree of Doctor Fore~t b considered fortunate in securing provides for leisure, luxury, power, and for' of Laws. the se rvices of such a capable official and ideals. because even idealistic ventures must A . HOLLIS EDENS, President. fine Christian gentleman. be financed." Mr. Holding noted that there bas been a tendency on the part of many to attempt to relieve the individual of bis re!it ponsibilities Commencement Speake rs Heard By Seniors and still leave him with all of his rights. Dr. George D. Heaton, pastor of the recipients of an education for love. "This trend," he pointed out, "if allowed to Myers P&rk Baptist Church of Charlotte, " You have learned to be concerned about continue to grow, could be disastrous to delivered an inspiring baccalaureate sermon the spirit of CO \'etousness lest it destroy your our American way of life, for just so often to the members of the graduating class ~oul. You have learned to beware of a as wt: accept something for nothing from our Sunday evening June 1. religion of form that inspires no warmth government, just so often do we surrender He stated, "We must learn to live in love toward other people. You have learned to be part of our individual freedom. All history or we perish in hate. We should be concerned concerned about the divisions of class against as well as logic tells us this.'' about many things. We have been led to class, and group against group. believe that Christianity has accomplished " In you we feel that there is hope and more than it really has. Actually ChriMi anity you muM bridge the chas ms that separate Dr. I. B. Lake, assistant Attorney-General has a hold on on ly a s mall segment of the us." of North Carolina a nd a former professor in world. There is very little Christianity in the Wake Forest Law School, is author of a the Orient for it has been conquered by ROBERf P. HOLDING SPEAKS ON "THE new book, North Carolina Practict! ""l eth­ another faith, and we know only too well GooD RoAD" ods. This volume is intended to serve as a that governments of many other nations are Robert P. Holding, of S mithfield, a native North Carolina practice guide "covering a 8 not motivated by a Christian philosophy. of \Vake Forest whose forebears lived he re wide field of actions and office practice 8 ·•w e are living today in an age of com­ almost one hundred years, based his message matters with copious court rulings and sta­ pression where people are aU jammed to­ to the seniors upon bis experiences and ob­ tutory citations." According to the pub­ gether and where time and space are of no servations as banker and business man. lishers, West Publishing Company, St. Paul, consequence any more," Dr. Heaton con­ Speaking on the topic, "The Good Road," Minn., this is the "how" book of North c tinued. "The really educated man is a person he sta ted: Carolina prac tice and presents practical Cl \\hO has been taught to live in this time ''\Ve must realize-and you future leaders methods for handling numerous matters of great compression. The greatest aim of no less-that our high standard of living has which most often confront the North Caro­ life is to be educated for love. been obtained only by industry, by working lina lawyer. The impression made on one "The road that leads to hate and to the and paying for what we ·want, and that \\hO i~ without legal training when looking ,, magnification of differences and to force is only by industry and integrity can we hope over the chapter headings is that the publi· b; the wrong road," he declared, "but it is my to continue under the capitalistic system cation of this boot.. will be welcomed heart­ PI firm belief that you graduates have been the upon which our country was founded. il\ by the legal profession in orth "'de its important committees. He is in wide de· mand for his platfonn sen·ices both within and "'ithout his denomination. He has served as president of the Durham Ministerial Association, on the m3yor's comruit1ce for the general improvement of the City of Durham. He is dist inguished as a preacher and ns nn efrective undcrshcpherd of his flock. He is presented, Mr. President~ for the de~ree of Doctor or Divinity.

1\lr. \Villiam Augustus Devin attended the Left to right: President Tribble, J. Winston Pearce, J. Grafton Love, R. P. Ho lding, com­ Horner l\lilitary Academy, \Vake Forest mencement speaker, Chief Justice \V. A. Devin, and Sydnor L. tealey. Colonel G. Foster College, and the Lan School of the Uni· Ha nkins was unable to be present for the exerdses due to illness. >ersily of North Carolina. He nas an attorney in Oxford 1899-1913; The conferring of honorary degrees at \\ Ork in \Villinm Jewel College, receh•ed mayor of Oxford 1903-1909; elected to the Commencement was accompanied by the the 1\-faster or Theolog} degree from the North CaroHna General Assembly in 1911 and in 1913. following citations which were read by Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Oenn 0 . B. Bryan: Louisville in 1927; the Ph.D. in 1932. Re He was superior court judge of ortb was ror some time an instructor in the Carolina from 1913 to 1935; and bas been justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court Mr. J. Grafton Lo,•e was born and reared Seminury; later professor of Church His­ tory. since 1935. in Elizabeth City, • C. He attended Wake Mr. President, for his long, distinguished He h as served ns pastor or the First Bap­ Forest College and received the B.A. de­ career as a public servant and ror his emi· tist Church or Bloomington, Ind.; the Bain· gree in medicine in 1925. He received the nent posilion today as Chief Justice of the bridge Street Baptist Church, Richmond; the M. D. degree from the University of Peon­ State's highest tribunal, he is presented for First Baptist Church of Raleigh. sylvania in 1927. Since 1928 he bas been a the Ho norary degree of Doctor of Laws. n1cmber of the staff of the Mayo Clinic in He was for sometime member of the Ex· Rochester, Minnesota. At the present be is ecutive CommiUee of the outhern Baptist Neuro-Surgeon in the Mayo Clinic. Convention. He is author of Epistemology, Colonel G. Foster Hankins is a lifelong He combines with notable success the Biblical and Modern; Lessons on the Bible. citizen or Lexington, orth Carolina. He practice of neurological surgery, scientific He is a teacher, author, preacher of dis­ entered Wake Forest College in 1890; rese.arch, and writing for publicatjon. In the tinction, and administrator - now Presi· 3rtenYard for a short time taught school in pnst twenty years he has published in col· dent or the Southeastern Theological Semi­ \Var~a\\; established his permanent business laborat.ion, or otben\ise, more than 120 tlr· nary, Wake Forest. office in Lexington in 1898; was elected twice ticles on neurolo~ic ~ll surgery and related He is presented fo r the degree of Doctor to the State Legislature; once to the State subjects. These articles have appeared in 23 of Divinity. Senate. He was appointed to the Governor's Medical Journals both in America and in staff in 19"05. He served ten years as a mem· European countries. Lately he has presented her of the Lexington City Council; fifteen Mr. J. \Vinston Pearce, born in Franklin pnpers before the International Conference years on the Board of Trustees of A. and T. County, attended Campbell College; re­ on Psychosurgery at Lisbon, alsO before the College. ceived the B.A. degree from \Vake Forest Fourth International curologicaJ Congress In addition to his varied interests in pub· College in 1934; r eceived the Tb.G. degree held in 1950. lie scn · ice be bns been a creator and sharer in the Southern Ba ptist Theological Semi· He is a member of the National honor in t11 e State's industrial revolution. Through nary; and tl1e B. 0 . degree from the Uni· these long years be bas found time to cui· societies of O.O. K. and Phi Beta Kappa and versity of Chicago. numerous professional and teamed societies. tivate n growing interest in scholarly In recognition or his remarkable achieve­ He has done graduate nork in the Union achievements, the classics, literature and ments be is presented, Mr. President, for the Theological eminary, ew York; the Yale philosophy; to blend Christian culture into Honorary degree of Doctor of Science. Divinity School; the Diversity of Edin· bminess and business into communjty wei· burgh. fare. He is deeply interested in higher edu· He bas served 22 years in the ministry, cation and through it the promotion of social Mr. Sydnor Lorenzo Stealey received tbe 12 years in the First Baptist Church in Our­ progress. Bachelor of Arts degree from Oklahoma ham. He is a recognized lender in the State He is presented for the degree of Doctor Baptist University in J920; did graduate Convention and has served with abilit-y on of Laws.

Carolina. lt contains 36 chapters which dis­ Or. Walt N. Johnson, '99, a former Forest Church building was constructed un­ cuss procedure for the numerous transactions pastor of the Wake Forest Church, and der his guidance ond largely as a result upon which lawyers are called constantly to for many years an able leader among Bap­ of his vigorous effons during his Wake give advice. tists, p assed away at R ex Hospital in Raleigh Forest pasterate, 1909-15. For five year.< Dr. Lake's long experience as an able on June 24. His illness bad been considered be wa. the General Secretary of the Baptist teacher of students for the legal profession critical for a month, but be had been in State Convention. Later years of his life has qualified him admirably to produce this semi-retirement for the past few years, liv· were devoted largely to teaching and writ­ publication. We predict for it widespread ing in Raleigh where be had continued to do ing. Funeral services were conducted in the use among North Carolina lawyers and stu· a considerable amount of writing. Of special First Baptist Church, Raleigh, and at the dents in law sc hools. interest to alumni is the fact that the W ake Wake Forest cemetery. WAKE FOREST COLLEGH ALUMNI NEWS, June, 1952 Page Six

bany, Ga. A few years later he returned to North arolina as pastor of the Hayes Barton Baptist Church in Raleigh and un­ der his leadership the present church build­ JOg was conslTucted. From Raleigh be went to the Fir:>t Church of Griffin, Georgia, and from Griffin, after a pastorate of 13 years, came to Laurinburg in 1942. During the years Dr. Turner has served on a number of boards and committees both on Georgia and in North Carolina. He bas been a member of the Wake Forest Col­ lege Board of Trustees, a member of the board of Mercer University. and is current· ly a member of the board of Meredith Col­ lege. He was a member of the General Board of the ortb Carolina Baptist tate Con\'ention for 5 years and also a member of the same body in Georgia for some years. It! He is now and bas been for some time a member of the Home Mission Board of the "J outhern Baptist Convention. Dr. Turner has been actively concerned with civic and community affairs wherever he has lived. He was a charter member and first president of the Kiwanis Club of Greenville, commander of the American Le­ gion in Alban)· and Griffin, and is a past president of the Laurinburg Rotary Club. Dr. and Mrs. Turner have three sons: James B., Jr., a captain in the U. S. Marine Corps, now living in Arlington, Va.; Eu­ gene H., executive director of the Beasley Foundation, Portsmouth, Va.; and Thom­ as J., who will join the Department of Phy­ 'Sics at Wake Forest in eptember of this year. A review of Dr. Turner's career would be incomplete wi thout mentioning his interest and participation in sports. \Vhile in college James B. Tumor, '07 he played var;ity baseball and wa' rated ao all-time first baseman by coach John Cad­ Genial Jim Turner Retires-Moves to Raleigh dell He :.Va, also a pitcher of more than ordinary ability. Through the years he bas As we go to press, we hove just received ncftS of Jim Turner's death. been an ardent supporter of all sports events James Baxter Turner, class of 1907, re· then studied law at Mercer University and of the College and of the local teams where­ ured the last of May from the ministry of obtained a license to practice in the ~tate of ever he has lived. the Fir;t Baptist Church of Laurinburg, Georgia, but he never practiced law. The editor of The Umriflbttr.~ Exchange where he has been pastor since August, He say, that the thought of becoming a \illd the following words about Jim Turner: 1942. Dr. and Mrs. Turner, the former minister had been in hts mind for some '' lmpr ~ible is the word for Dr. Jim. There Helen Quattlebaum of Aiken, South Caro­ time, so after talking it over with Brother rna) have been moments when be bad his lina, are now living in Raleigh where Dr. Gene and hi"' mother in \Vake Fore~t. he doubts, or the clouds shut off the sunshine, Turner was the first pastor of the Hayes sold his law books and entered the eminary but no one ever detected It from his man­ Barton Baptist Church. at Louhvillc where he remained for four ner. A hearty bandshale, a greeting across Dr. Turner came to Laurinburg after a year\, After receiving the Th.D. degree at the street, or face to face, n ~mile that spon­ long pastorale at the First Baptist burch Louisville. Jim became pn-ttor of the Baptist taneously buo>t into peals of laughter, a pat of Griffin, Georgia. He is a native of Pam· Church in Beaufort, . C., but soon joined on the back and the inevitable 'God bless lico County but moved to Wake Forest the Army Chaplain\ Corps and was \hipped your heart' were as unfailing as the sunsets shortly after his father's death, and attended over~ea.s in 1917. He was given a commis· and the dawns. public schools here. During his second year \ion as chaplain at General Pershing's "He was not just the pastor of the Bap­ in high school the building burned and headquarters in France, and was assigned to tist church, but an institution and he be­ young Jim transferred to Buie's Cree~ the famous 30th Division. Two years later longed to the whole of Laurinburg. Many Academy, now Campbell College, and then Jim returned to tbe States and became alum4 will wish that he might have found it con­ back to Wake Forest where he became a 01 secretary at Wake Forest College for a venient to live out the years of his retire­ student and graduated in 1907 with a B. A. year. He then left to become pastor of the ment here in this community. But his heart degree. rn 1911 he received his LL.B. de­ Immanuel Baptist Church in Greenville, is set upon old and familiar places, close to gree. For a time he was coach and teacher N. C., and from there in June, 1922, was the haunts of his boyhood and his youth. at Locust Grove Institute in Georgia and called to the First Baptist Church of Al- Some months ago he and Mrs. Turner ac- quired a home in Raleigh, close to a church be once served as pa tor, close to Wake For~ est which he loves with a passionate devo­ tion, and among friends of other years."

Activities of Faculty President Harold W. Tribble bas had a busy schedule throughout the entire college year. Work with the Enlargement Program, including many speaking engagements, has kept him away from the campus much of the time. Summer engagements include an address to the city-wide luncheon sponsored by the Rotary Club in Winston-Salem on June 3 in recognition of the opening of the administrative offices of Wake Forest Col­ lege 10 that city; the baccalaureate sermon at North Carolina State College in Raleigh June 8; working with the Enlargement Pro· gram in Western North Carolina June 9·11 ; meeting with campaign workers in Lumber­ ton June 12; participating in Commence~ men! exercises at the Medical School in Winston-Salem Citizens Celebrate Winston-Salem June 15; preparing for a campaign in High Point June 16·20; preach· Formal Opening of Administrative ing in the Roxboro Baptist Church June 22; conferences and meetings in Winston-Salem Unit of Wake Forest Colle·ge June 23·26. Dr. and Mrs. Tribble attended the graduation exercises at Andover-Newton June 3 was the date on which one hun~ to officials of tbe College who are already Theological School, Newton Centre, Massa· dred and fort y civic leaders of Winston­ located there. cbusetts, the latter part of May when their Salem, under the sponsorshtp of the President Tribble spoke to the group for son. Harold, Jr., received his Bachelor of Chamber of Commerce and Rotary Club, the new officials and pointed out the signi~ Divinity Degree. On June 28 they will be extended the city's first official welcome to ficance of the event and of the future opera­ present for his marriage to Miss Muriel the actual opening of a unit of the new tion of the College in Winston-Salem in Martin in Wilmington, . Miss Wake Forest College. terms of financial, cultural and educational as well as of the opportunity Martin received the Bachelor of Arts De· The Bowman Gray School of Medicine of opportunities, and responsibility offered by the existence gree from Radcliff College in 1951 and the Wake Forest ollege bas had a very suc­ of such an institution in Winston..Salem to Master of Arts Degree from Harvard in June cessful career of more than ten years in that render a tremendous service both to their 1952. Mr. Tribble is a graduate of the Uni­ city, but now offices have been opened in own citizens and to the public generally. ver\ity of Richmond and of Andover-New­ the Amos Cottage at Graylyn in which ton. He is pursu ing further graduate work at President Tribble will spend a portion of his Mr. Gray referred to Wake Forest Col­ Boston University and is serving as pastor time and where vice-presiden t and control­ lege as "an institution we have long needed" northwest North Carolina. He stated that of the Bapti>t Church in East Gloucester, ler Robert G. Deyton and Loyde 0. Auker­ in the citizens of Winston-Salem have long Massachusetts. President and Mrs. Tribble man, vice~president and director of Public For­ plan to spend July in Wake Forest and will Relations, wiiJ maintain permanent head­ been aware of the benefits that Wake be in Blowing Rock during the month of quarters. est College will bring to that city and that Augus.t where they will occupy a cottage they have also felt that they could help Ma ~ ter of ceremonies on this occasion which has been provided for their usc Wake Forest College expand and prosper. was James G. Hanes, chairman of the through the courtesy and hospitality of the Mr. Gray also praised "the many people hamber of Commerce co-operation com­ Mecklenburg ounty Alumni Chapter of the of Winston-Salem who have worked bard mittee. J ames A. Gray, chairman of the Coll ege. On August 31, Dr. Tribble will and long to make this move possible" and board of directors of the R. J. Reynolds to­ preach in the Waters ide Theatre at Roanoke he thanked "the thousands of people Islan d. bacco company, was spokesman for the city throughout North Carolina who have of Winston-salem in extending a welcome helped." Professor Hnrold M. Barrow, of th e Ph ysical Education Department, will be on leave for the next year to do graduate work Missions Conference Bible Hour July 31- and has engaged in the usual scouting and at the University of Indiana. He has been August 6. visiting for the football team. He has also granted a non~teaching fellowship and ex­ attended a number of alumni group meet­ Dean D. B. Bryan has this spring supplied pects to return to Wake Fore~ t for the sum­ mgs. This he will continue to do during the the Grace Baptist Church in Durham, and mer sc%ion in 1953 . at sum mer session. has delivered commencement addresses at the Troy, Green Hope, and Plymouth high Or. J. Glenn Blackburn, Chaplain of the •chools. Professor Elton C. Cocke has been pro· College, delivered two addresses in April at moted recently from associate professor to the South Carolina B. S. U. Retreat. He will Football Cooch John T. Cochran coached full professor of Biology, and was elected a be on the program at the Ridgecrest Foreign the Junior Varsi ty baseball team this spring, honorary member of Omicron Delta Kappa Page Eight in May. During the year be has attendeJ the Reviews association of Southeastern Biologists, Ag­ of Professor Patrick's Book nes Scott College. and the North Carolina Academy of Science where he read a paper Numerous and Favorable before lhe Botanical Section. He plans to AI COHOL, CULTURE. AND SOCIETY. by en forcement. state liquor stores, graduated teac h in the summer session at Wake Fores t Cla rence H Patrick, is the title of the book tax according to alcoholic content, divorce and to attend the fn~titute of American Bio­ referred to in the last issue of ALUMNI NEWS of liquor taxation from revenue-raising mo­ logists at Cornell University early in Sep· which has been . widely reviewed. The New tives, no liquor advertising, permits for pur­ tember York Times Book Review of May 25 was chasers of hard liquor, a label on all liquor most favorable in its comment under th! bottles to the effect that tbe stuff is dan· Dr. J. Allen Easle), of the Religion De· topic '"What Drives a Man to Drink."" Sam· gerous. removal of liquor control "in the partment, bas supplied recently at the Red uel T \Villiamson, the reviewer, states that highest degree from politics and tbe spoils Springs Baptist Church, the Brush Creek the author .. examines drinking customs ~ystem.'" Baptist Church near Siler City, the Wake through the ages and the world over and Union Baptist Church, the First Ba ptist A concluding remark of this reviewer analyzes the explanations as to why men Church of Goldsboro, and the First Baptist states that "the author is thoughtful and drink. He asserts that physical. biological Church of Fairmont. He will teach in the thorough and pretty well bides personal and psychological fore"" may produce needs summer session at the College. prejudice in a subject where fanatics can that in many societies alcohol is supposed to work themselves into blind intoxication with­ satiSfy, but. he concludes. ' It is tbe group or Professor Dwiglll L. Gentry, of the School out tbc lift of so much as a bottle of beer."' \OCiety that determines whether alcohol or of Business Administration, recentl y re­ something else will be employed to satisfy The International Student of May is most ceived his doctorate [rom the Uni\'ersity of those needs.' complimentary in a review covering almost Illinois. For the last two semesters be has " If society is re>ponsible, only society, if three pages in that publication. The editor taught courses in management and market­ it 1s a free one, can control. This should be a states that this volume "offers a balanced ing, advertising and salesmanship which are understanding reasonable conclusion to mo ~ t fair-minded of alcohol as no other book of being offered for the first tune in the School people. But how? Mr. Patrick lists some sug­ the past thirty years." Other reviews appear of Business. He has written an article on Air gestions which 'deserve consideration'; for­ in the Biblical R ecorder, the Raleigh News Cargo Transportation which is appearing in mation of a concrete plan for tbe nation as and Observer, The Durham Herald. and a the July issue of the Journal of Jfarketing. a whole, but providing for local option and number of other publications. He plans to teach during the summer c;;es. sian.

Dr. George J. Griffin, of the Religion ingham High School, on the National Lay­ roles Committee to make a survey of paroles Department, has preached recently in Rock· men's Day at the Raeford Methodist systems and report recommendations for the ingham and in Lumberton. He has delivered Church, to the student body at Campbell orth Carolina Paroles System. During the baccalaureate sermons in the Rolesville, College, and has attended sessions of the summer months he will travel from Wake Wake Fore>!, and Erwin High Schools. He State of ortb Carolina Merit System Coun· Forest to Little Rock, Ark., to Oklahoma pl ans to teach in the summer session at the cil. City, Okla., to Sante Fe, New Mexico, to College Gallup, New Mexico, to Zni. ew Me,.ico, Or. John W. No"ell, of the Chemistry to Sacramento, Calif., to Salem, Oregon, Under the direction of Professor Thane Department, has recently attended the Sec­ to cattle, Wash., to Helena, ~lantana, to McDonald of the Music Department, the ond ational Conference on Pre-Medical Pierre, South Dakota, to St. Cloud, Minn., to ., College Choir made its fifth annual spring Education at Buck Hill Falls, Pa.; the South­ Madison, Wis., to Columbus, Ohio, to Cbar­ w tour and also presented several additional eastern District Conclave of Omicron Delta lestov.:n, W. Va., and back to \Vake Forest. pbj Sunday night programs in several Baptist Kappa at Tallahassee, Fla.; and the Advis­ lht

churches throughout the State. In Washing 4 ory Council Meeting of tbe Order of Kappa Or. Percival Perry, of the Social Science tac ton, D. C., the Choir was taken on an in 4 Alpha, Louisville, Ky. Department, has served during the academic teresting tour of the Capitol under the year as president of the local Humanities guidance of Congressman C. B. Deane. Tbe Dr. James C. O'Fiaherty, of the Modern Club o{ Wake Forest College. He took an I Choir gave ils annual presentation of "The Languages Department, has recently de­ active part in planning the ground-breaking Crucifixion" this spring in the Church. Pro­ livered baccalaureate addresses at the Roles­ ceremonies for the New Wake Forest Col­ En fessor McDonald gave a Baccalaureate ville, Townsville, and Salemburg ltigh lege campus in Winston-salem, and has ac­ den the organ recital on Sunday afternoon before schools. His book, Unity and Language : A cepted a number of committee assignments. commencement. He plans to introduce Dr. Swdy in the Philosophy of Johann Georf He has written and presented a paper on Fot Pau l S. Robinson to the position o( Acting Hamann, was published by the Germanics "' McCarthyism and the Threat to Higher Pni Director of Music before be leaves the first department of the University of North Educatio~" to the North Carolina Baptist of July for in New Carolina; the introductory note was written allege Conference which met at Meredith ""'StaJ York City where he plans to spend a year by Dr. Walter Lowrie, eminent Kierkegaard College last fall. He attended meetings of completing Graduate Study for the Doctor authority. ln April Professor O'Flaherty the North Carolina Historical Society which '"'lht of Education degree. read a paper at the Fifth University of Ken­ met in Wake Forest and in Raleigh. As a Sou tuck.y Foreign Language Conference in Lex­ recipient of a Carnegie-Grant-in-Aid for re· IQ Professor Jasper L. Memory, Jr., of the ington, Kentucky. He plans to spend the search during the current year. be bas spent 'Pi> Education Department, has recently made ~u mmer vacationing and preparing some ar­ some time in research on "The Naval Stores commencement addresses at the Wake For­ ticles for publication in professional journ­ fndustry in the Antebellum South, 1789- of"" est, Robert B. Glenn, Winston-salem, Pine als. 1860." This spring be was notified that be Level, Penderlea, Ellerbe, Townsville, and bad been chosen as one of 50 in the United '"' Fairmont high schools. During the semester Dr. Cl arence H. Patrick, of the Sociology States for an all expense paid study grant for he bas spoken on Career Day at the Rock- Department, is chairman of the Advisory Pa- an Economics-in-Action Program to be ht

given for six weeks at Case Institute of Technology, Cleveland, Ohio, during tho summer. Uport the completion of this pro­ gram be hopes to make a tour of the mid­ west, including visits to the Bad Lands of the Dakotas, the Black Hills, Mount Rushmore Memorial, the Great Sand Dunes National Monument in Colorado, and a return trip through the Indian Reservations of Okla­ homa, the Ozarks, Hot Springs National Monument in Arkansas, the Civil War bat­ tlefields in the vicinity of Memphis and Chattanooga, and then back home to Wake Forest. Some members of the Half Century Club. Front: W. M. Beach, T. H. King, J. Clr.de Turner, Dr. Hubert i\1. Poteat, of the Classica l John A. Oates; Back: W. L. Carmichael, S. B. Quillen, J. C. Beckwith, Addison Hewlett, Sr., J, C. Kittrell, E. F. Mumford, H. V. Scarborough. Languages Department, has during the aca­ demic year made an address to the Univer­ be wiU be enrolled for graduate study at the sity of North Carolina chapter of Kappa College Library." Now she is retiring per­ University of Florida. manently from this latter Alpha on Lee's birthday, read Green Pas­ position and writes beautifully under date of tures in the Wake Forest Baptist Church June 3 to Friends Professor William C. Soule, of the School of the Library: and at Meredith College, made a Masonic of Law, was the speaker at the Annual In­ "Jt is late afternoon; long shadows address in Henderson, attended the annual lie dustrial Conference in April at North Caro­ across the grass as one saunters down the meeting of the Masonic Service Association lina State College, Department of Industrial familiar paths of the campus, which is prac­ in Washington, D. C., as ~n executive com­ Engineering. This conference was sponsored tically deserted at this hour. Magnolia missioner, addressed the Men's Class at the by student chapters of the American Insti­ blooms gleam whitely against a background Methodist Church in Roxboro and the con­ tute of Industrial Engineers and the Society of polished leaves; one is reminded of St. gregation of the First Baptist Church in for Advancement of Management in co-op­ Mark's Square in Venice as pigeons wheel Roxboro, the Grand Lodge of North Caro­ eration with the Greensboro chapter of the and flutter in the fragrant air. lina in Greensboro~ the Men' Fellowship Society for the Advancement of Manage­ "At such an hour, one wonders whether Club of the First Baptist Church of Mar­ ment. the old trees arching overhead do not whis­ tinsville, Va., the Junior-Senior Banquet of per to each other of past times in Wake Wake Forest High School, made the Colonel J. S. Terrell, professor of Mili­ Forest; of the train of noble men who Maundy Thursday address to the Scottish tary Science and Tactics, reports that both founded the College, nurtured its childhood, Rite Society in Winston-salem, addressed the Annual Formal Inspection of the ROTC and sustained it until it attained maturity - the Eta Sigma Phi (Classical Fraternity) at unit by a team of four officers from Head­ who passionately loved the institution and Wake Forest, the District Meeting of Lion's quarters Third Army and the Annual prayed for it 'through peril, toil, and pain.' Clubs in Wake Forest, the Garner High Ordnance Technical Inspection of ordnance "The old trees remember, too, the stu­ School Commencement, the Louisburg Col­ equipment was held late this spring, Dr. dents who have passed beneath their shel­ lege Commencement, the Wake Forest Ma­ C. S. Black, of the Chemistry Department, tering branches, and who now are scattered sonic Lodge, played an organ recital at the was the reviewing officer at a ceremonial throughout the world. Some lie on far-off Wake Forest Baptist Church. Dr. Poteat had battalion parade on May 13. Col. Terrell battlefields; for them the wind hymns a re­ · planned to teach in the summer session at presented to Cadet Captain Estus B. Lassi­ quiem. the College but suffered a slight heart at­ ter the Armed Forces Chemical Association ''Thus musing, one comes to the Library, tack during Commencement Week and will Award for outstanding achievement in mil­ the oldest building on the campus. Just in­ rest for several weeks under doctor's orders. itary and academic studies. Five members of side the doorway is displayed a recent ac­ the ROTC instructor Group will report to quisition, a copy of the so~alled "Kelmscott Professor Franklin R. Shirley, of the Fort McClellan, Alabama, for instructional Chaucer." With woodcuts from drawings by duty during English Departmtnt, served during the aca­ the summer months. Sir Edward Burne-Janes, and from designs demic year as governor of the Province of by William Morris, this copy is one of forty­ Dr. the Southeast of Pi Kappa Delta (National \Vilfred B. Yeams, Jr., of the De­ eight especially bound in white tooled pig­ Forensic Fraternity). He presided over the partment of Social Sciences, published an skin by the Doves bindery. The purchase of Province Convention and directed the Prov­ article in the January issue of the Louisiana the magnificient volume was made possible Historical Quarterly, entitled ence Forensic Tournament at Mississippi "Charles Gay­ through the gift to the Library of $1,100 .... State College for Women in Columbus, Mis­ arre, Louisiana's Literary Historian." ''You and I have now come to the parting sissippi. He served as program chairman for of the ways. Before leaving my library desk the sectional meeting on Forensics at the Professor Henry L. Snuggs, of the English on July I, may I express my heartfelt thanks Southern Speech Association Convention Department, was on the program of the to those of you who tbtougbout days of in Jackson, Mississippi, and there was Southeastern Renaissance Meeting held this depression, of war, as well as those of peace, appointed chairman of the Finance Com­ year in April at Duke University in Dur­ have kept our Friends of the Library organi­ mittee for next year. He is also a member ham. zation alive. Especially gratifying is the fact of the executive committee of the South­ that, thanks to your generosity, our present ern Region of the American Forensic Mrs. Ethel Taylor Crittenden, who re­ status is a healthy one. Association. He delivered the commence­ tired from the position of librarian in 1946, "One word more: may I not bespeak for ment address for the senior class of Berea a post she had held since 1915, bas been in my successor the loyal support you have High School in Granville County. He will charge of the Baptist collection and the pro­ given me. 1 can but believe that you will :)pend the summer months in Florida where gram called "Friends of the Wake Forest continue to make the Friends of the Wake WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NE WS, June, 1952 Page Ten

Forest College LibraT) a vital force in the i\ held in hi gher esteem. His wholesome in­ life of the institution." flue nce upon the lives of his students has Two Timely Books mat ched the excellence of his teaching Recently we found about 100 copies each Professor Edgar \V. Timberlake, '01. was through all the years. of two books piJblished by the Wake Forest featured as "Tarheel of the Week" in the College Press. We believe that Wake Forest Or. A. Raleigh News and Obsen ·er. May 1 8. Sim­ C. Reid has conducted in recent College alumni will be allllious to get the mons F entress, '45, wrote the a rticle about months the Sunday morning service in Sage two books and, at the same time, assist in a the popular teacher of law who has been a Chapel, Cornell University; addressed the worthy objective. mem ber of the Wake Forest faculty since Cornell University Ba ptist Students Associa­ The Wake Forest Seminar on Christianity 1906 and has given in ~ tru c tion to more tion, F irst Ba ptist Church, Ithaca, N. Y.; contains a Foreword by Dr. W. R. Cullom, North Carolina l awyers than any other liv­ addressed the Men's Brotherhood, Church an Introduction by Dr. A. C. Reid, an In­ ing person. One of his fo rmer s tuden~ is of the Good Shepherd, Raleigh ; gave the troductory Devotional Service by Dr_ J. W. quoted as saying: "He bas a s harp clear charge to th e new officers of the chapters of Lynch, and lectures by the Rev. E. Norfleet mind and he\ an excell ent lec turer He or­ the Kap pa Alpha Order of the University of G a rdner, Dr. Olin T. Binkley, Dr. W. 0. ganize~ his mat erial so well that the stu­ North Carolina, Duke Univers it y, Davidson Ca rver, Dr. Sankey L. Blanton, Dr. John T. dent\ don't need to study much except hi s College, ta te College and Wake Forest Col­ Wayland, Judge Johnson J. Hayes, Dr. Hu­ notes. They learn a great deal under him lege, at the insta ll ation conv ocation in bert Me eill Poteat, and Mr. lrving E. Car­ and he's one of the most popular profcs~ ors Cha pel Hill; a ddressed the Rotary Club, lyle. Christ and the Present Crisis, by Dr. we have." Ma rtinsville, Virginia; conducted the even­ Reid , contains an Introduction by the late Although Profe;,or Timberlake has com­ ing service, First Ba ptist Church, Rale igh; Dr. Bernard W. Spilman. pleted 46 years of s ervice in lhe classroom. and the devot io nal services at meetings of he is expected to continue his teachi ng for the Baptist Fellowship Group at Wake For­ While these books were publi; hed more at leac;t another year. No one on the campu\ est. tha n ten years ag o, they are timely now. For example. Dr. Poteat's address on "Rome and the Christi ans" is a s uperb treatment of the su bject, in which this peer of great scholars included the extant references in Roman lit­ The Challenge of a Liberal Educat io n erature to Christ a nd Christians. B) ROY E. SNELL, '52 and streptomy cin. Many of us a re incl ined Edwards & Broughton and Dr. Reid , who to criticize negativel y the advancements of own the two books, ha ve agreed to give all ( Deli>·ered in College Chapel as part of ~ciencc, e~ p ecia ll y the d estructive pote n­ receipts from the sale of the two volumes to inter-~ocitl)' speaking contest in April ) tialities; but when we do, we are actually a worthy educational objective. Order the revealing more about ma o's moral, s ocial books from the Alumni Office or the Col­ Many of us were born during a depres­ and intell ectual failures than we are reveal­ lege Book Store. The two books will be sent, Sion, went through high school during the m g about science. I can think of few postpaid, for $2.00. bitter years of war, and n ow have come to greater challenges that liberal education of­ college during a time of great uncertainty. fers t oday than that of thinking clearl y, I I remember very well the mornin g that I am convinced that if our civilization is to caught the real spirit of truth and who have came here, drove into the circle, went e\cape annihila tion, we must think clearly, th dedicated their lives to the teaching of that rough Wait Hall, and beheld Wake Forest plan wisely and act courageously in our de­ truth. 1 leave this question with you: ls it College. There burst before my eyes a beau­ votion to something that is greater than our­ possible for a student to attain a mastery of tiful chapel, magnolias, students, professors, o;; clves. administrators, li brar ies, laboratories, ten­ his own language, or to learn of the beau­ Clear thinking is necessary not only for nis courts, and fraternity h ouses. On th ties of good art, music, and literature. or to at the preservation of our inheritance but also mo rn ing I thought I bad seen Wake Forest acquire scientific skill without experiencing for intellectua l progress. The frontiers in College, an inward desire to lead others to these dis­ science, religion, esthetics, go ve rnment, ed­ Of course, material facilities are neces­ coveries? ucation, and o ther fields a re ever-present. sary for the opera tion of a c ollege, but these The li beral a rts college must present this Obeying Moral and Ethical Stan dards buildin gs, microscopes, map s, books. and cha llenge to think clearly a nd then do some­ The third challenge of the liberal educa­ balances alone arc not Wake Forest Col­ thing a bout H . tion is to obey the moral and ethical stand ~ lege. If these mate ri als are our co llege, what ards of God. If we are to obey these do we call our id eas, id eals, attitudes, devo­ Seeking the Truth sta ndards, we must first beHeve that a moral tio ns, and services? The second challenge is that of seeking order does exist in the universe. I can see l believe that t he most important parts of the truth for the love of the truth. A Prince­ no reason for the continued existence of any li beral arts college are the challenges ton University graduate wrote to \Voodrow Christian colleges if the student's moral and ll that the institution presents to its students Wilson "'1 will have nothing more to do with ethical training is neglected. Many of us Bap and the prepara tion that it provides for its Princeton. You are turning my dear old col­ have come to regard a liberal education as a COot students to meet these cha llenges success­ lege into an educational institution." process of the professor pouring various in­ l

E. J. GURGA.>"'US, '43, Williamston lawyer, active in civic and professional activities recently received the honor .. Out­ standing Young Man of 1951." The presen­ tation was made by MAYOR ROBERT COWEN, '33, on behalf of the Williamston Jaycees who annually co-sponsor this award with the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce.

DR. LYN\\OOD E. WD..LIAMS, '37, Forty years ago these members of the class of 1912 received their diplomas. Left to right: Kinston physician, has been honored recent­ \ViUinm J. Crnin, Cary; R. S. Lennon, \Vnke Forest; J. . Edwards, Troy; 0\\eo Od~ , ly as the Lenoir County Medical Society's Coats· R. tt-1. Buie, Sr., Greensboro; T. Sloane Guy, r., \Vad esboro; Dr. M. A. Hugg~ , annua.l selection Raleigh; L. G. Bullard, Raleigh; Gaither B~am, r., Louisburg; Tom Osborne,. Knoxville, as "the outstanding general Tenn.; and W. D. Boone, \Vinton. Others 1.0 attendance at commencement faded to get practitioner of the year." A Lenoir County in the picture. native, Dr. Williams took up the practice of medicine this spnng fi'Om the Baptist Tbeologtcal and science teaching and the organization of in Kinston after graduation from Wake Forest Semmary in Louisville. the program of student teaching in this state. College and the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. A graduate of Wake Forest College, he DR. IRVING ALBERTS, '34, phys ician holds an M.A. degree from Duke University for the City of Miami Beach, bas been ap­ and is doing work towards a Ph .D. at the DR. BRUCE E. WHlTAKER, '44, chair­ man of the pointed to the Florida State Board of Med­ University in Chapel Hill. division of religion and philoso­ ical Examiners. He is a member of the Jack­ phy at Belmont College, has been named son Memorial Hospital staff, the Mt. Sinai R ELL H. BRANTLEY, '45, bas been assistant to the president and professor of sociology and religion at Shorter staff, and the Mercy Hospital staff, and recently appointed managing editor of the College, Rome, Ga. He holds an A. B. degree has been practicing in lhe Greater Miami Dnrham Morning Herald. A member of the from Wake Forest CoUege and area for 15 yea rs . Dr. Alberts is a graduate Herald-Sun organization since 1945, Brant­ the B.D., Tb.M. and Tb.D. degrees from the Southern of Wake Forest College and the Emory Uni­ ley joined the Durham Morning Herald as Bap­ tist Theological Seminary in Louisville. versity Medical School. assistant city e'Btor and bas since served consecutively as city editor and as news edi­ . F. RANSDALL, '33, of Fuquay­ H. VERNON HART, 51 , was recently tor. He was cb..i.ef of the Durham Morning Varina, was recently made Paroles Commis­ elected pres1dent of the newl y organized Herald legislative bureau during the 1951 sioner of North Carolina by Governor Scott. Guilford C ounty Young Republican Club. General Assembly. A native of Winston­ Formerly Ransdall was State Salem, Brantley is a graduate of Wake For­ Probation Commissioner with offices in the Justice RAYMOND L. PITTMAN, '40, Washing­ est College. Mrs. Brantley is the daughter of Building in Raleigh. A conscientious farmer ton, D. C ., died April 16 at the Mount Alto Dr. a nd Mrs. H. B. J ones of Wake Forest. and lawyer, be bas served in the General Hospital in Washington. Pittman, a native Assembly and is loyal and bard-working. of Orrum, N. C., was a reporter on the ELDRED E. PRINCE, '33, prominent Washington Post and was formerly on the Loris, S. C., businessman, was a candidate news staff of the Richmond Times Dispatch. for the South Carolina State Senate from He graduated from Wake Forest College in Horry County. Mr. Prince is associated with Inside the Roc k Wall 1940 where he was editor of the College his brother in the operation of Prince Motor Dr. Percival Perry, associate professor in paper, Old Gold and Black. He served over­ Company in Tabor City, N. C., and the the H istory Department, bas received a seas as a lieutenant in the U. S. Coast Guard Prince Chevrolet company in Loris. He study grant for this summer from the Case during World War 11. was born in Columbia, S. C., but moved to Institute of Technology in Cleveland, Ohio. Fair Bluff at an early age and was educated Dr. Perry was one of fifty coUege professors THE REVEREND J. E. M. DAVE in the public schools of Columbus County east of the Mississippi chosen to take part PORT, '94,. retired Baptist minister, died and at Wake Forest CoUege. in the Economics-in-Action program to be recently of a heart attack at his home in held by the Institute from June 23 to Pineville. He was a native of Tyrrell County AR!'\1Y CHAl'LAIN JAMES 0. MAT­ August I. The program which will include and was graduated from Wa'e Forest Col­ TOX, '46, has left for Japan to continue his lectures by prominent economic experts, is a lege and Crozer Theological Seminary. He services with the Army Chaplain Corps. three-fold one. It will feature problems in held a number of pastorates in the eastern ~ Mattox entered the Chaplain Corps aft er economics, the study of individual indus­ part of North Carolina during his long min­ \ graduation from Wake Forest College and tries in the Cleveland area, and the study of istry and after his retirement served as sop­ 8 the Southern Baptist Theological eminary, new techniques for the teaching of econ­ ply pastor for churches in that section. at Louisville in 1950. After attending Chap­ omics which the business world bas devel­ lain's school in New York, he was stationed oped. SUPERINTENDENT W. M. JE KJNS, at Fort Eustis, Va., and then at Fort Story, ol where be was Post Chaplain. ti '31, of the Durham County Schools, was a Professor Franklin R. Shirley, director of II visiting lecturer in the University of North debate and head of the Speech Department, Carolina School of Education during the DAVID McKE ZIE CLARK, '5 1, was has been appointed 1952-1953 chairman of .. E. academic year. Jenkins assisted in the gen­ one of 78 Navy men recently commissioned the West Point invitational Debate Tourna­ d< eral area of teacher education with particu­ with the rank of ensign at the Coast Guard ment for District SL't. Dist rict six is com­ lar assignments in the field of mathematics Academy at New London, Conn. Ensign posed of eight Southern States includmg North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky and Mississippi.

The fifth annual Magnolia Festival was -composed this year of two dramatic events, two concerts. an art C\hibit and the corona­ lion of the queen of the festival. The College Theatre opened the week with its annual Shakespearean production, "Romeo and Ju­ liet," which was followed by the art exhibit featuring photography and art work by stu­ dents and townspeople. The Opera Work­ shop presented "A Waltz Dream" by Oscar Strauss in the College Chapel. Sara Page Some of the members of the Class of 1927 who attended the 25th anniversary of their Jackson, Elizabeth City senior, was crowned graduation on June 2. Left to right: Dr. R. L. \Vnddell, Galax, Va.; M. B. Stevens, Varina; Magnolia Court Queen at an impressive D. E. Buffaloe, Gamer; Everett nyder, \Vake Forest; J. S. Pitt::trd, Raleigh; J. A. Bajle)', ceremony on the College campus; she was Burlington; I. 0. Brady, Raleigh; J. H. Harris, Jr., Troy; Dr. A. B. Peacock, Moorestown, N. J.; Dr. M. C. llladdrey, Roanoke Rapids; B. W. Walker, Leaksville; John A. Hallman, attended by maid of honor, J ulie Watson, Vale; D. V. Walker, Charlotte; and T. J. Williams, Grifton. Thomasville, Georgia. junior. The week's festivities closed on Sunday with two con­ certs by the Music Department. The College "Stag" Ballentine Makes the Headlines Glee Club, Orchestra and Band gave a con­ cert in the afternoon on the Chapel steps L. Y. Ballentine, '21, North Carolina an additional tax for research,' Ballentine and the Choir gave an evening concert in the Commissioner of Agriculture, has been ac· says, 'it showed they are staying abreast of Chapel. tive and prominent in affairs of the State in progress. With alert people like ours, there's recent months. Back in January he received no limit to the advances we can make.' Twelve Greek and Latin studenlS were the Progressive Farmer A ward as the "man .. Perhaps the most unique contribution initiated by the Wake Forest chapter of Eta of the year" for 1951. Ballentine has made bas been in improving Sigma Phi, national honorary classical fra­ Editor Clarence Poe has the following to marketing and processing of farm products. ternity. Following the in itiation ceremonies, say about him: "Hale, hearty L. Y. 'Stag' 'Farmers can·t continue to do a horse-and­ the neophytes and other members heard Dr. Ballentine is a farmer who has demonstrated buggy marketing job in this day of mechan­ Hubert Poteat, head of the Latin Depart­ that sound leadership can spring straight ized production,' be emphasizes. 'Nor can ment, read a paper entitled uHannibal from the soil. In North Carolina, a s tate they afford to let all processing profits go to Thrice Mighty." Dr. C. B. Earp, bead of the with the largest rural population in the na~ other groups. That's why betier marketing Greek Department, is faculty adviser of Eta tion, he is one of the few state officials who and processing are major goals of my ad­ Sigma Phi. actively operates a farm - and can still do ministration.' a first-class job of milking a cow as was told "As a dairyman himself, Ballentine bad Twenty high school students won honorary on page 15 last month! been active in Bang's control and in milk scholarships to the College for the 1952-1953 "Jt's not essential, of course, that a North marketing advances which have brought the school session. The winners were chosen Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture be a state a 33 per cent increase in Grade A milk. from a group of 40 selected North Caro­ good milker. But if be is, farm people feel production and sharply cut imports of milk lina high school seniors from all sections of doubly sure he understands their problems from out of state. He has also been active the State who took final examinations and and wants to lead them on to richer and bet­ in helping to stimulate increased storage and were personally interviewed here on the ter farm living. processing facilities which have enabled campus. They were selected on the basis of "How is 'Stag' Ballentine helping farm movement of North Carolina corn and small scholastic records, competitive examina~ foll-..s" Well , as commissioner of agriculture grain in national and international trade. tions, all~round achievements and personal in addition to directing vital regulatory work It is estimated that the value of this service interviews. of the department he's stressing three alone will in time be worth millions of dol­ things: 1 ) co--operation between all agricul­ lars to our Tarbeel farmers. The students elected Charles "Red" Bar­ tural agencies to speed up farm progress, 2) "\Vith the sta te rapidly increasing produc­ ham, Raleigh law student, president of the development of better and more extensive tion of livestock and poultry, Ballentine bas student body for 1952-1953 by a majority agricultural research, and 3) streamlining lent warm support to development of mar­ of 61 per cent of the votes cast at the polls. and strengthening marketing and processing keting and processing facilities for beef, Vice-president is Joe Mauney, Shelby junior; of farm products. pork, broilers, and eggs. He bas also stressed secretary is Clara Ellen Francis, Rocky " •North Carolina bas made amazing farm proper grading and packaging of all North 1 Mount junior coedi treasurer is Jack Lewis, progress recently,' B allen tine says, but much Carolina farm products. Daily market re­ Birmingham junior football star. remains to be done. The only way to ad­ ports play a vital role in enabling farmers to vance farther is through full co-operation of sell their products wisely. Ballentine also Professor Leonard Powers of the School all agricultural agencies and farm folks takes constant delight in the great work a of Law is the new chairman of the Execu­ themselves.' really modern State Fair can do in drama­ tive Committee for the Religious Emphasis "As vice chairman of the State Board of tizing North Carolina rural progress - and Week to be sponsored next fall by the Bap­ Agricultural Organizations and Agencies, which the new 9,500-capacity judging pavi­ tist Student Union and the Faculty. The Ballentine has demonstrated his sense of lion will enable the 1952 State Fair to be Executive Committee organized the 14 stu­ teamwork time and again. Recently be spoke better than ever. A self-made, down-to-earth dent-faculty committees which have already all over the state in support of the 'Nickels sort of man, BaUentine packs a lot of work begun to plan next year's Religious Empha- for Know-How' program. 'When our farm into a day. He keeps an 'open door' to all (Continued on page 14) folks voted 7 to I for this proposal to pay visitors, travels widely over the state dis- WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, June, 1952 Page Fourteen cussing farm progress. and stays close to the the keynote address before the State Dem· Congregational churches. Both Bennett and soil by over;;eeing his 225-co\\.' dairy near ocratic Convention which met in Raleigh, the man be succeeds, Major General Roy H. Raleigh. May 22. On this occasion be reviewed in out Parker. are Southern Baptists. Bennett was line much of the history of the state's awarded the D.O . degree by Wake Forest .. 'A new and better day b ahead for our achievements within the past half century College at the Commencement exercises in farmers' Ballentine says. ' Co-operation, re­ and pointed out some lines of progress which May 1949. search, better marketing and proces::;ing - be believes should be followed 10 the future. All of us here at Wake Forest extend our plus hard work - a re bringing orth Caro­ '"Su rel y this is the time when we should re­ heartiest congratulations to Major General lina into its own as a truly great agricultural consecrate ourselves to larger service Bennett and are proud to claim him as a state! I am delighted to help other groups through greater deeds, realizing that the only member of the \\'ake Forest fa mily. carry forward this great movement.' " true measure of the worth of any philosophy Ballentine r eceived signal honor from the or party is its service to humanity under Democratic pa rty by being chosen to deliver God." INSrDE THE ROCK WALL (Continued from page I 3) '>b \Veel. Wake Forest. as a result of an application filed last December. is one of Bennett Becomes Chief of Army Chaplains the more than 20 colleges and universities all over the country selected by the Univer­ Branch General Ivan Loveridge Bennett. class of , now named Friendship Baptist sity Christian Mission of the Na tional 1916, was nominated for the po" of Army Church. Bennett went to Winterville High Council of Churches of Christ to be assisted chief of chaplains by President Harry S. chool. which at that time was a Baptist in the planning of its Religious Emphasis Truman in April of this year. Bennett, who -chool for boys and girls. Then be attended \Veek. The University Christian Mission is now holds the rank of major general , was Wake Fore.>! College and it was here that he an organization which aids in obtaining formerly ;tatooned in Tokyo where be was definitely made up his mind to enter the speakers and in planning programs for Chief of Chaplains of the Far Ea51 Com­ ministry. campus religious focus periods. mand. He is a native of Ashe, North Caro­ At the outbreak of World War I be mar­ lina , and was ordained a Baptist mini ~ ter ried his childhood sweetheart in 1917, ap­ The local circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, after graduating from Wake Forest C ollege. plied for the chaplaincy and was appointed national leadership society for men. elected He ;orved as a chaplain in World War I and on 1918 and assigned to a unit in tbe I Otb six College students for membership in the wa~ commissioned in the Ch a p lain·~ Corps Division and was ready to go overseas organization and five alumni to honorary of the regular Army in 1920. when the Armistice was signed. For 11 membership. Andrew J. "J ack" Lewis. Jr., Following the Senate's action early in months following the Armistice he remained Birmingham, Alabama~ junior; Billy J. '"Joe" April, Bennett took into his hand> all the out of the service. Shortly after, be was ap­ Mauney, Shelby junior; J. Carl Meigs, Jr., affair> of the more than 1,000 Army chap­ poonted a chaplain in the Regular Army and New London senior; Virgil H. Moorefield, lain s on a world-wide front. Recently the bas been there ever since. During the peace­ Jr., Hopkinsville, Ky., junior; Fred M. Up· Tar Heel took over his quarters in Wash· time years. Bennett served at posts up and church, Greensboro junior; and Brigbtie E. ington's Pentagon and be and Mrs. Ben­ down the Eastern Seaboard and also in the \Vhite, Jr., Morganton junior, were the six nett moved to Alexandria , Va ., where Philippines, where he was division chaplain. students selected. elected as honorary mem­ they will live. Major general and Mrs. Ben· With the outbreak of World War IJ, be bers after nomination by the members bon­ nett grew up together in Brunswick County. went to Australia as a member of the sta ff o[ oris causa He is the son of the late Henry Ireaell Ben­ were Egbert L. Davis, Sr., and General MacArthur. In this capacity be fol­ Egbert L. Davis, Jr nett and Zillah Russ Bennett of that county. ., of Winston-Salem; Basil lowed the troops of the Southwest Pacific Watkins, of Durham ; Dr. E. C. Cocke of The Bennetts have been Baptists (or a long from Australia to New Guinea, the Philip­ time. The chaplain's great-grandfather, the Biology Department of the College; and pines and, finally, to Tokyo. For his work Judge Hubert E. Olive of Lexington. grandfather, and father were all Baptists and as supervisor of chaplains in the Southwest were deacons in the same church, Long Pacific, be was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal. When MacArthur took com­ Three coeds were tapped by Tassels, high­ tl mand of the entire Pacific in July, 1945, est honorary society for \Vake Forest wom­ Bennett became director of chaplains in the en. Carol 1'.-loore, sophomore from Raleigh; " whole area, a position be held until 1946, Betty Jo Ring, senior from High Point; and when be returned to this country. For this Betty MacAfee. a euse junior were the work be received the Legion of Merit. Fol­ three selected. Candidates for membership lowing his return to the States in 1946, in Tassels are cboseo on the basis of charac· tl Chaplain Bennett served with the First, Sec­ ter, scholarship and intelligence, service and ond, and Fourth armies. In 1949 he went leadership in campus life. d back to Tokyo, serving there until be re­ ic turned to this country in April. bi Walter Barnard, Camden senior, and B. Chaplain and Mrs. Be nnett have three James Malcolm Clifton, January graduate !iOns: Dr. Ivan L. Bennett, assistant profes­ from Kelly, were recently awarded graduate sor of medicine at Yale; Ca pt. John C. scholarships by the General Education Bennett, USA, teacher at West Point; and Board. The scholarships will include pay­ hi Richard Bennett of San Antonio, Texas. The ment of tuition, fees, travel expenses and 1\ Bennetts also have five grandchildren. $125 each month for nine months for sub­ His appointment as Chief of Army Chap· sistence. Recipients of the awards are free "Ill lains makes him the fourth Baptist to hold to study at any college or university in the thi s top post since the Corps was organized United States. Candidates for the scholar· in 1920. There bas been one each from the ships were chosen locally from among Major Genera l Ivan L. Bennett Roman Catholic, Methodist, Episcopal and approximately 12 applicants. Three Wake Page Fifteen WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, June, 1952

Forest students were nominated by a faculty committee. The General Education Board, Golfers Had Successful Season which was established by John D. Rocke­ feller in 1902, invited 60 'southern colleges By TOM BOST, JR. place in the Southern lntercollegiates and tied for second place 10 the Conference to submit nominations for the awards. Two Wake Forest's 1952 golf team impro\ed tournament. of Wake Forest's three app1icants were se­ considerably on the 3-11 record of its pre­ lected. decessor. Others showing up well during the sea~ son were Jim Flick and Bob Yancey, sen .. The 1952 linksmen bad a highly success­ iors; Charles (Sonny) George, sophomore; Phi Beta Kappa, highest national honor­ ful season with 12 victories in 16 ma tches. and Allen Birmingham, Alexander (Sandy) ary scholastic fraternity, elected 19 College They also made an impressive showing in Burton, and Charlie Strack, seniors to become members of the group. the Southern lntercollegiates finishing fres hmen ~ Those named by the group were: Joe Efird fourth behind North Texas State, Georgia George, Birmingham, Burton, and Strack will all be back for the 1953 season but Whitley, Albemarle; Hubert W. GarreU, and Louisiana State and placing second be· Tiddy, Edens, Yancey, and Flick completed East Rocl..ingham; William Blair Bryan, hind North Carolina in the annual South­ their collegiate careers this s pring. Battleboro; Victor S. BatcbJor, N ashville; B. em onference tournament. Luanna Breeden, Rutherfordton; Jam es The Deacons also enjoyed the distinction In dual competition the Deacons de­ Malcom Clifton, Lexington; Elizabeth E. of being the only team to defeat Carolina feated East Carolina College twice, and Stevenson, Statesville; Jeanne F. S. Garrell, in a dual match this season. After losing the Davidson, North Carolina, N. C. State, East Rockingham; Maxie Randall Mintz, fi rst match between the two teams at Chapel outh Carolina, Ohio University, The Cita- Fayetteville; Charles A. Glanville, Bal ti­ Hill , Wake Forest avenged the defeat in the del, Kentucky, Michigan, Rollins and the more, Md.; William N. Austin, Wadesboro; feturn contest on the Carolina Country Old Town lub of Winston-Salem. The four Julia A. Higdon, Franklin; Estus Bruce Las­ Club Course in Raleigh. The Tar Heels had defeats came at the bands of Duke, North siter, Jr., Potecasi; Mary Lou Harris, Wins­ a I 7·1 record for the season. arolina, Georgia, and Purdue. ton-Salem; Billy Gene Amos, Kings Moun­ Frank Edens of Lumberton and Dick Tid­ Burton shot a six-under-par 66 on the tain; Mrs. Hildegarde Webb, Wake Forest; dy of Charlotte paceJ the individual per­ Finley Golf Course at Chapel Hill for the John S. Kaufmann, Hartsville, S. C.; and formances on the 1952 club. Edens won 15 best individual performance of the season. Charles A. Wilkinson, Wake Forest. Dr. matches and lost only one while Tiddy bad Tiddy and Edens broke 70 several fimes Henry L. Snuggs of the College English II victories compared to four defeatcs and during the season. Department is president of the local chapter, one tie. Tiddy had the better record in tour­ Athletic Director Jim Weaver directed the H. N. Parker is vice-president; and Carl­ nament competition as he tied for fourth team to its successful season. ton P. West is secretary-treasurer.

The College Entertainment Committee ha brought to the campus during the year Dmner" by Moss Hart and George Kauf­ lege, the Beta Xi chapter of John B. Stetson the following series of outside entertain­ mann. For its winter production the group University, the Beta Omicron chapter of Mi ... ments: the Don Cossack Chorus in Octo­ presented Christopher Fry's "The Lady's ami University, and the Beta Gamma ber; John Jacob Niles, Ballad singer, in Not For Bu rning," and for its Shakespear­ chapter of W.C.U.N.C. November; Lucille Cummings, contralto, in ean Magnolia Festival perform ance, the January; the N. C. Little Symphony Or­ group gave "Romeo and Juliet." A letter written by Edith Taylor Earn­ chestra, in February; May Hutchinson, dra­ shaw in 1914 includes: "I wish you could Alpha Ps i Omega, matic monologist, in March; John Temple honorary dramatics have been at church this morning to bear Graves, journalist and lecturer from Bir­ fraternity, initiated six new members and Father. His subject was Wake Forest and mingham, in April. elected officers for the coming year. ini­ his motto - he would not let us call it a tiates were Betty Faye Lentz, Spartanburg, 'text' -was: 'The lines have fa llen unto me S. C.; The Kappa Theta chapter of Alpha Phi Eleanor Geer, Boone; EUen Barnes, in pleasant pl aces; I have a goodly heritage: Omega, service fraternity, officially became Cerro Gordo; Bill Waddell, Galax, Va. , Bill It was so beautiful. He began by describing the first such service fraterni ty that bas ever Hendrix, Statesville; and Bob Solomon, the days when there were only a handful of come to the Wake Forest College campus A>heville. Betty Jo Rmg is outgoing presi­ hm"es in the village, a nd only about eighty and community. Outstanding projects of the dent; other officers are Bob Swam, vice­ students, and he urged the people not to let organization during the year have been : th~ prC.)ident, and unny Snyder, secretary. the \Vake Forest 'spirit' die out, for he em .. cleaning up of Rock Springs, the picnic area phasized the fact tbat since 'A man's life started by Dr. Bud Smith several years ago, Dean Carroll W. Weathers, of the Law con~i!>teth not in the abundance of things the collection of clothing for the clothing cbool, bas been named chairman of the that be hath' so the College depended on drive in conjunction with the Christian Serv­ Association of American Law Schools Com­ other things be~ides equipment in the form ice Group, the file on all students who gave mittee on Revision of Library Standards. of fine laboratories, etc." blood and their blood type, and the new Professor Robert E. Mathers of Ohio State Boo!.. Exchange whic h wi ll swing into full University offered the chnirmansh1p of this President Tribble received under date of operation next fall. committee to the Wake Forest D ean. The 1ay 23 a letter from Mr. and Mrs. R. 0 . group is charged with the task of raising Baker, Sr., 2317 Barry Street, Charlotte, the law library standards The Wake Forest CoUege Little Theatre in all accredited which speaks eloquently of parental wisdom, law schools in the United bad as its principal speaker D r. Elizabeth tates. devotion. and sacrifice, as well as of ap­ Welch of Salem College, who spoke on preciation for Wake Forest College: "Just school dramatics and the teaching of dra­ The Eastern district of Beta Beta Beta, a fe\\ lines to tell you how much we appre­ matics. Bob Swain, junior from Atlanta, Ga,. national biological honorary society, held its ciate \\'ake Forest College and what it bas wa~ installed as new president of the group annual convention on the Wake Forest meant to my three sons who have graduated at this meeting. The College Theatre bas campus early in March. The Eastern dis­ from it. You probably do not know that for pre~e nted three major productions this year. tnct includes the Beta Rho chapter of Wake each of the past three years I have bad a In the fall it gave "The Man Who Came to Forest, the Psi chapter of Winthrop Col- son to graduate from this College: Ra- WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, June, 1952 Page Sixteen

leigh 0. Baker, Jr., class of '50; Charles or better. In this group were Liptak, Wood­ Cecil Baker, class of '51; Joe Jlhlton Baker, Liptak/ Woodlief lief, Brown, First Baseman Hugh (Buddy) class of '52. June the second will be a great Smith, Stallings, and Reserve Infielder Ben day for me to see Joe receive his diploma. I and UNC Tatum. will have seen all three of my sons receive The Deacons found the going particularly Third Baseman Jack Liptac and Pitcher that which l never bad the opportunity to rough against their neighboring Big Four Don Woodlief were the leading performers receive. You probably would like to know rivals with the result t hey won only two in hitting and pitching on the Wa ke Forest about Raleigh, Jr. He will be a senior at games while losi ng ten. However, four of baseball team which wound up its 1952 sea­ Southwestern Seminary at Fort Worth ne"

the order in which they stand are: Pennsyl­ vania, 24; Florida, 23; New Jersey, 22; New York, 22; and Georgia, 19. Ten are reg­ 1952 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE, WAKE FOREST COLLEGE istered from the District of Columbia. Mecklenburg (which includes Charlotte) Date Opponent Place of Game is the second ranking North Carolina Sept. county, with 47 students. FrankHn and 20 Boylor University...... Waco, Texas Sept. 27 William & Mary Robeson are tied for third place with 38 ...... Williamsburg, Va. each. Fourth are Guilford County, with 36 Oct. 4 Boston CoUege ...... Winston-Salem and Forsyth County, which also bas 36. Oct. 11 Villanova ...... Philadelphia, Pa. Oct. 18 Buncombe and Cumberland Counties tie for University of North Cnrolina ...... Cbapel Hill fifth place with 33 each, while Gaston is si.,tb Nov. I 'orth Carolina State...... WAKE FOREST with 32. Nov. 8 Texas Christian Univcrsity ...... -.Fort \Vorth, Texas Counties standing seventh through tenth ov. IS Duke University ...... WAKE FOREST are: Rutherford, 27; Columbus 26· Halifax o'. 22 Furman Un.il•crsity ...... GreenvilJe, S. C. 23 and Rockingham, 22. ' ' ' ov. 29 ni,ersity of South Carolina ...... Winston-Salem North Carolina counties and the number registered from each county are: INFORl\lA TION REGARDING PRICES AND ORDERS FOR TICKETS Alamance, 21; Alexander, I Allegbeney, Game Admission Time I; Anson 12; Ashe, 1; Avery, 1; Beaufort, Baylor University ...... $3.60 2:00 p.m. 5; Bertie, 10; Bladen, 7; Brunswich, 5; William and Mary ...... 3.00 2:30 p.m. Buncombe. 33; Burke, 12· Cabarrus 17· Boston College (Night) ...... 3.50 8:15 p.m. Caldwell, 13; Camden, I; Carteret, 6; ' Cas: Villanova ...... 2.60 2:00 p.m. well, 3; Catawba, 13; Chatham, 5; Cherokee, University of North Carolina ...... 3.50 2:00 p.m. 3; Cbowan, 7 Cleveland, 16; Columbus, 26; North Carolina State ...... 3.50 2:00 p.m. Craven, 8; Cumberland, 33; Currituck, 1. Texas Christian University ...... 3.60 2:00 p.m. D avidson, t 3; Davis, 5; Duplin, 17; Dur­ Duke Uni> ersity ...... 3.50 2:00 p.m. ham, 19; Edgecombe, 12; Forsyth, 36; Furman University ...... 3.00 2:00 p.m. Franklin, 38; Gaston, 32; Gates, 5; Guilford, University of South Carolino ...... 3.50 2:00 p.m. 36; Granville, 13; Greene, 1; Hallifax, 23 ; Harnett, 13 Haywood, 15; Henderson, 6; Check Hertford, 9; Hoke, 4. or Money Order Must Accompany All Orders. Add Ten Cents Mailing Fee. Mail Orders to Athletic Ticket Office, Box 592, Wake Forest, N. C. Iredell, 14; Jackson, 1; Jones, 1; Lee, 2· Lenoir 15; Lincoln, 15; McDowell, 1; Macon, 2; Martin, 5; Mecklenburg, 47; Montgomery, 4; Moore, 3; Nash, 18; New With the assistance of Miss Ida K. Jordan, Orie nt ation Programs, Student Handbooks Hanover, 1,777; Northampton, 1 J; Onslow, 8; Orange, l. Elizabeth City, . C., a member of Student to all new students entering Wake Forest Orientation Committee, he is sending letters, College this fall. Pamlico, 2; Pasquotank, 9; Pender, 1; Perquimans, 4; Person, 12; Pitt, 6; Polk, 3; Randolph, 8; Richmond 7· Robeson 38· Rockingham, 22; Rowan,' 7; 'Rutherford, 27~ These Clanton Jones l\1cJnnis, '39, to Alice De· Sampson, 14; Scotland, 5; Stanly, 1 8; Were Married Shong Pugh, '44. John Surry, 12; Swain, I; Transylvania, 2; Tyrrell, George Carlyle Barrett, '48, to Johtmna Charles Mitchell, '49, to Mollie Dean Shannon. 2; Union, 13; Vance, 7; Wake 191; Warren, Ruth Storner. 8; Washington, 2; Watauga, 5; Wayne, 14; Thomas Chandler Muse, '49, to Mary Jean Paul Buckner Bell, '47, to Betty Sue Wilkes, 4; Wilson, 7; Yadkin, 13; Yancey, 4. Wilson. Trulock. Alabama, 5; Arkansas, I· California 2· Harry J. Nicholas, '53, to Virginia Cla)1oo, Alexander Montague Bonner, '48, to Mar­ Conne~ticut, 6; Delaware, '1; Florida, '23; '54. Georgta, I 9; Illinois, 2; lndiana, 3; Kansas, jorie Jane Umbel. David Russell Perry, '16, to Mrs. Gertrude 1; Kentucky, 5; Guy Avono Cain, '50, to Rachel Odeo Louisana 3· Maryland 12· Mcintosh Lee. Massachusetts, 4. ' ' ' ' Bowen. Paull Perry, '51, to Margaret Lee Pruett. New Hampshire, 2; New Jersey, 22; New William Harry Cnusey, '33, to Emily Mexico, 1; New York, 22; Ohio, 2; Pennsyl­ Nicholls Smithwick. John Dalton Phillips, '49, to Shirley Ann Fox. vania, 24; South Carolina, 25; Tennessee, 4; Gerald Coates, '51, to Leatrice Purifoy, Vermont, 1; Virginia, 67; Washington, D . C., Samuel Doughtie, Jr., '49, to Janice E. Hal Watson Pittman, '43, to Timona Miller. 10; West ~irginia, 3. Willoughby. Glenn Rae to Loraine Bennett, '51. Canada, 2; Costa Rica, I; and Japan, 1. Glenn Ray Flack, '50, to Evelyn Bullard. Wilbur Thaddeus Shearin, Jr., '50, to Bettie Robert Charles HoUoman, '51, to Jewell Lou Hamilton. Livingston, '51. James Grover Carroll, May 3, 1952, at­ Wayne A. Slayton, '48, to Evelyn Hamrick­ James J. Howerin, Jr., '48, to Marion Smith tended meeting of North Carolina Academy Swain. BoUvar Stark, ID, '51, to Hazel Dean Cole. of Science at W. C. U.N. C. in Greensboro. This Summer using his vacation to visit Charles Ottis KinJaw, '51, to Billie Jean Stacy Neal Thomas, '49, to Sophia Geneva Margaret Carroll at University of Oklahoma, Olive. Williams, '49. Tyners and Carrolls making the trip and on Joseph Thomas Lewalle, '51, to Barbara Charles Herman Wellons, '52, to Alice Re­ to the West Coast. Marie Maness. becca Williams, '53. WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, June, 1952 Page Eighteen

Cyrill James Wyche, '48, to Blonnie Dale Frank J. L uboski, '52, to Ruth Irwin Edward E u gen e Silver, ' 50, to Julia Dell Dunn. Rayne. On eo. Coyte Goode Abernotby, '48, to ancy Ed\\ in 1-1. Tinsley, '49, to H el en Lyon. Oa ru el Rei d Simpson, '51, to Mary Alice Williams. Billy Last Mason, '51, to A nn Green. Leonard. Bobby Dolson Allen, '50, lo arab Lor· idney Wyu tt Mayna rd, '49, to A no Mag· Ogburn Fletcher Sta£rord, Jr., '52, to raine Britt, '50. dalcoe Gulley. PickeH Eugenia C ro uch. Josepb Alger Barnes, '49, to Irene Flow· Ernest Pa r-rick ~fc D a oi (' l , 'SO, to Julia Autbur Taylor, ' 53, to Hilda Funder· ers, '51. Marie Spen ce. burke. James Carey Blalock, '37, to !1-lary Lou· Robert Ult oo M oose, '49, to Kathleen TI1omas Tobey, '51 , to Jacqueline Vir~ ise Broome, '49. Dell inger. gi nia Durden, ' 52. Gilmer C. Brande, '51, to WiniJred Powell John Hen ry M urphy to teUa D e B aylo, Harry R oscoe Tucker, ' 52, to Lou Grady Ellington. '51. Th ompson, '51. Robert Ragland Brunson, J r., '47, to Eliza· Paul Calv in 1e"ton, '49, lo Edna Frnoces farion D avid Varnadoe, '47, to Eleanor beth Anne umner. ~ickols. Ki ng. Riley Dee Burgess, '51, to Dap hne Col· \\ ootcn larion Odum, '43, to Ma rie Allan Brockman \Vall, ' -49, to Ruth l\1arie Jette l\tatbews. Thome Perry. \ l asten, '51. William Cary Byrd, '47, to Dorothy Joseph \Va li er Pearce, '48, to Dora Dean Robert Lewis Walton to Belen Hayes Elaine Hollingsworth. House. mold , '51. George Corl to Jeanne Black, '48. Henry LeRoy Register to Martha Ann Harry \VeUott, Jr., '51, to Rebecca Free· Dougl!lS Thom!lS Council, '5 3, to Mary Vick, '4 7. mnn, ' 51. Louise Carver. Rob ert Leary Re id, ' 51, to Marguerite Calvin C. White, '47, to Sophia Pearce. Dennis Carlyle Downing, '50, to Anne Leatherman. lrn Otis Wilkerson, '48, to Doris Bizzell. !1-larie McGugan. Charles Kenneth Royal, 'SO, to Virginin E. J. Williams, '41, to Betty Sue Murray. Samuel Kitchin Ed wards, '51, to Bertha mitb. Robert Lee Williford, '51, to Betty James Coleman. Jncksoo Askew Sharpe, '48, to Peggy Bruch. Glenn Charles Fincannon, '51, to Doris G r ay. Theodore Bnxter Willis to Mary Lee Mel•a Allman. Robert F r ederick ha rpe, '53, to E lsi e Howell, 146. John terling G at es, '5 1, to Elizabetb Ann Morgan. Thom as J. Young, '51, to Delores Cle­ Burns Isbell, '51. Da" id beets to Iris Lynam, ' 46. ment. Jack Dunlop Gentry, '50, to Barbara Jane Francis. John Louis G riJfin, ' 51 , to Rutb Elaine Hardy. Information About Former WFC Students Eugene Hager, Jr ., '49, to Lou Bagwell. 1892 1906 Horace Douglas HnU, '47, to Dorothy LESTON JACK ON, 2128 Park Pl., Fort st~\'~~~~ ~~~!!~£n~~~~~ ~!!c~er~~~~ Worth 4, Texas. Merchant. Oflice Maeh ine Knox chrum. tired). -1 yrs. SBTS. D. D. Univ. of Richmond, 19 1915. Studied at Unlv. of Cblcago and Union ~f; tec:,~·"Wt. ,1Jor?h~~.fe:Ub:fi:PeF:,~\te \v~~ James Robert Harris to Zandra Coupland, Seminary, , Travelled abroad. Executive Assn.; Chamber of Commerce; 1907. 1914, 1924. Member of Dr. Sherwood Texas Orfice Machine Dealers Assn. (former '51. Eddy's American Seminar in Europe, 1924. P-res): Nat'l OCCJce Machine Dealers Assn . Raymond Al exander Harris, '50, to Vi ~~~fh~o':i~F·o/ 8~~~ 9~8ia~~grki?ro~~r "~Va~; ~~~escl~uC~lom,~~~u8t~: ~~~~: w~~l~ ~l:; Haynes"orth Barringer. ide Heroism" in Charity and Children, 7 1 ;: Executive Club; Scottl.sh Rite Club. Bapt yrs. Has given several series of lectures In Shriner Marned Mar-y Cecile Green. Wi lmer L. Harris, '51, to Je.,cll Mitchell. ~~U~fis~ a~:~~~;c~f:ic~~ub~~~t~~~~~~ IIUBER T MCNEILL POTEAT, 523 N. Donald Michael Hayes, '50, to Kathryn Frances Farmer Ch ildr en: Edward Former; Mnln St., Wake Forest. Teacher. Ph.D. Co­ Eliwbeth; Nancy F r ances Harris, Sarah Vir~ lumbia UnJv .. 1912. Prof. of Latin. Summer Arlette Barrier. ginlo Pearson. 1898 ~e~hoo~~· Jr~!~~~.ia w~"fv··a~~~~·-:Jti., OJ8n~~~ Cli.ne McFarland Hendrick to Ann Eltiott, JO l-IN MARCHANT BREWER, Woke For~ Prof. or Latin, \VFC, since 1912. Member: '51. est. Agent ror Northwestern Fire Assn. Was Classical Assn. of the 1\tlddle West & South (Pres., 1937~38}; N. C. Literary & Historical William Gay Hendrix, '52, to l)byl is Ann ~~~riv:dbu':i~~ssh~ !:~~~j~~ s~~~~: p~~~= Ao;sn. (Pres., 194.4); Phi Beta Kappa; QmJ. 8 0 Smitb. ~:~~t ~~r '';fokr~h~~~~;;n /t~~ - Asr.:~.t J~mb~~:: ~{x e'!:utte,!!;' ~;tfJ'~i~o~.ap/:s tA~~~~~~:sef: (~~~ Prison Board, 1925-29; State Legislature, Charles Horton, '49, to Susan Burnette. 1927·28; Board of Town Commissioners sev· ~~~ss~~~e~oe~sg~;th~~e'!~hl~ '~~e a~5h~on"s~~~ ernl yrs. Bnpt., Shriner , Mason (32nd degree demand for lectures and addresses_ Bapt., Sam F. lludson, Jr., '49, to Miriam l\for· of Scottish Rite). Married: Mary Pureloy Mason (33rd degree. Grand Master of N. C., 1923·24), Shriner {Imperial Potentate o f the ris, '49. ~:ft~~~~n ~i~~t ~~!~:~n. (~~c~.asjg~:n rrdr:~ Shrine of N. Am .. 1DSO·SU. Married Essie ceased). (Mr. Brewer passed away June 12, Moore Morgnn. Sons: Hubert McNeill. Jr., James L. Joh nson, '38, to Lois Neal 1952). William .Morgan. Rogers. T H OMAS IJ AROEN KING, Wake Forest. 1907 Fred ormnn J oyce, '50, to l\·fary El iza· Minister (retired). Served as pastor: La· Gran~, Falling Creek, Ayden, Winterville, betb Clark. SL~V~a~:~~r~sYG.f~'!~her ~~~:du~lc ~~~':J~~tt~ ~~~d~ o;~.;2n~t~axr· ~ IO's·~;:~~~~~~gn.S115 ~~~~l1 o'tk~r::. 19l~2~~~7 ~h'f:~~hyn'f;h;:~~; Louis B. J oyner, '50, to Betty A ll isoo. yrs. Bapt. Married ?'annie R. Sledge. Chll· dren: W. G.; Mrs. Kathleen Faircloth; Robert Clemson College, 1913·20; Prof. of Physics. Burgess Leonard, Jr., '35, to Irene Meek· W. ~~~'ty~t~c~, ~~~· J~~~a~e~~g~~·xrh~~~.t 190 1 Acndemy of Science (Pres.. 1938). Bapt., ins. Married Iono Wells. Daughters: Alice, 16 yrs.: Melindo, 14 yrs.; Frances. 10 yrs. William Douglas Livengood, '44, to Rachel Arlen Key. JOUN BURD ER RlPPS, Southeastern Bapt ~:~~~~i . \~~::1t&~re~~a~(ac~~~ePri~~~~:~ Thomas Drumwright Long, '49, to Betty school), Pennington Gap, Va_, 1907·10. Hubbard, '48. T h .M., SBT S, 1913. S .T . M., UnJon Theo Sem· lnnry, 1921 M.A.. Columbia Unlv.. 192 6. Page Nineteen WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, June, 1952

Theo. Seminary. Author Element.s of P$31- chology • Chri.st and th.e Present CrisU: Sem­ inar on Christianity, (Ed.); Invitation to \Vorship; Resources for Wor$hip, and nu· merous articles published in learned journals. ~~r:;bn~~l;hiK~~baa.K~~:n st<~:u~~ ~We: York RJte, Shrine}. Married Eleanor Frances Jones. Children: Eleanor Frances R. Forrow; Albert Clayton. Jr. 1918 CHARLES SPURGEON BLACK, 203 W. Sycamore, Wake Forest. Teacher Artended w:~~~a~~ ~~0~~2~:t1{est::r~i~gF~!;: NJ:y: o! Wisconsin, 1927~28; Ph.D. Univ. of Wis- i~R~~O : 19r~·tn~t~~c~ r c~e~it~~trcni~~;f Va., 1920-23: Ass't. Pro!. of Chemistry, Miss. A . & M. College, 1923-24. Teaching at WFC since 192-5. Now Prof. of ChemJstry. Served in World War 11, 1942-45. Member: Am. Chemical Society: N. C. Academy_ Bapt. ~.arB~~ ; ~6fler~~t.b . Ch.ildren: Betty Jean

\VILL[E l\IADJSON SATTERWHITE, Wake Forest. Banker and farmer. Member o! Civic g~fdre~~P~Iu: 0 ~~r~.: tt~r;;!~~~ry3 ~~: 1920 CHARLES TOLBERT Wll.KJNSON, 507 S. Main, Wake Forest, Physician and surgeon. Hospital Apprentice 1st Class. 1st World War. M.D., Tulane Unlv ., 1922. Gen. Internship, Charity Hosp. of New Orleans, La., 1922-23. ?9~'k ~;gu~~y~f:lz~~ = ~~~~~~~~~ ~~n1~~ Sta. Hosp. ln Austrialia and New Guinea !or R. E. Brickhouse, "10 30 mos.: Post Surgeon, Fort Reno, Okla., 11 mos.: discharged as Col. Member: Civic D.D., WFC, 1935. Appointed missionary to Club; Am Legion; Wake Co. Medical Soc.: China, July, 1913. Professor of 0 . T. lnter- N, C. State Medical Soc.: Chamber of Com~ merce; Seaboard Railway Surgeons Assn.: &f:rt; ~io1g- 1 ~-~~ng~:~nB~t. s~~~~ ~~f92~~~~ :g~~.n~at~l:~inlo~u~~rtc~A~a~~;d ~k ~~r.or ~~\'d~onph~f anfje~f1:1~:. 1~~~9~ P~~? Line Railway since 1925. Bapt., Rotarian, Mason. Married Ursula Florence Bernstein. =~.~~O~~~~~a~:~e~a~~ar~~r:'~~a:~·st~g~ . Sons• Charles Albert, age 19; Harold Arthur, Sons: Robert Owen: Jackson Stroh age 16; Tolbert Siener, age 11. 1908 ROBERT WATSON WILKINSON, JR., 503 S. Main, Wake Forest. Physician and sur- JAMES GROVER CARROLL, 111 W. Sy~ camore St., Wake Forest. Teacher. Taught: 8 0 Wingate H. S .. 1908~18; Math and Physics, !~ie ~:~b&~ . flj, h'r~~o ~i~~~l'"itA~-DT~ Gullford College, 1918-19: Physics, Clemson rector Wake Forest BuUdin~ & Loan. 26 College, 1919-20. Did Y.M.C.A .. Anny work, ~: ~~i;!~~~.n s~~~r~0 ~~ L}~: ~~K.t ·· c~~ Camp Sevier. summer 1918. M.A., Columbia 27 yrs. Married Estelle Frances Foutaee. g~k"e · -6~e:. cf9~K.1 et~~ac~f~:u~~u~vox,~p~.~ Son, Robert Watson, m . WFC, since 1920. Now Assoc. Prof. Member: 0 1921 ~Bt~e~;u~:md'tu~~: sj,i?n~e.l ~~!;~0~ ~~:~ JASPER L IVINGSTON 1\1£1\tORY, Wake Forest. Teacher . M.A., Columbia Univ., 1925. ~ful~~!~onivi=~~lc7 C~ur~: <¥:ct~~e :rdg,!"isc~~ General Education Board Fellow and grad­ Lambda ChJ and Monogram Club. Chm. Fac­ uate student. Columbia UnJv., 1927-28. State ulty Orientation Program, N C. Licensed l~s~;~~~arf s~~~~u~.h<:~:~s-a~a;es~~~6~ ~~~~oDau~~f~r. J1:;:~et. Married Janie of Medicine, 1950: Prof. o! Education, WFC. since 1929. Since 1942 has served a'i chmn of 1909 Merit System Council o! N C. Member: Panel of Arbitrators o! the Am. Arbitration Assn.; DANIEL GRAliAl\l BLAND, Lumpkin, Ga. of State o! N C.: Lumber Manulacturer, Insurance & Real Es­ panel of Arbitrators tate Associated with J . F. Alexander, Forest Am_ Assn. of Untv. Professors: Phi Delta until his Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa. Edited Se~ CitY in lumber manuJacturing lccted Prose of John Charles McNeill . Listed ?ae~t~ri~g 1 T~ 5 L~~~:f:t~a~~~u~b1~sm:~d B':.{ri: In Who's Who In Am. Bapt. Married Mar­ bridge, Ga. Pres. Columbus Nat'l. Life Ins. geret Durham Son, Jasper Durham, age 15 Co., Columbus, Ga. Develoglng water front 1925 ~f:~ei~~es P~~t M~~ir~ea§erv~~ : PE;t;,rs~(:fe I SAAC BEVERLY LAKE, 401 N. Main, Legislature, 1929-35; Ca. State Senate, 1940~ Wake Forest. Ass't. Attorney General of 42 Moderator Summerhi11 Bapt. Assn .. 1930~ N C. Graduated Harvard Univ. School of 36. Served as Sunday School Supt., Lumpkin Law, 1929 Practiced law, Raleigh, 1929-32. for several yrs., also Chm. Board Deacons. Prof. of Law, WFC, 1932~51. LL.M., Colum­ Bapt .. Lion. Mason, Shriner, Married Willie bia, 1940. S.J.D., Columbia, 1947. D istrict Wall (deceased); Margaret Bailey Children: 1 Henry Wall; Stephen Graham: Harriette B ~~~g_m~~. AJ}fi~~eyo! a1»dric~ s!{~~in~t~~ft~nn~ WUUamson. Raleigh, 194.3~45 . Attorney-Adviser, Nat'l. Production Authority, Dept. of Commerce, ARTHUR RAYMOND GALLIMOREJ Woke Washington. D. C ., 1951 . Member: Town Forest. Minister and Missionary. Teacher, Council, Wake Forest, 1943-45; N. C. State Mountain Mission Schools, 1910-12. Th.M., Bar; N_ C. Bar Assn.; Am. Bar Assn. Ass't 19 1 1 0 1 Attorney General of N . C. since J an. 1. 1952 ~~~·. 1sfB . "i~f~;~!~d b~ Sj~ p"a~lse nm~B~;~ Author- N C . Practice Methods: Df.scrimfna­ ln Canton, China, 1951. Repatriated, 1942. Uon by Railroads and Other PubUc Utilities, Retired on account o! Ul health, 1947. Au­ and several articles in law journals. Mar­ thor {in manuscript) Kwangtung-A Story ried Gertrude Bell Lake. Son, I . Beverly, of the South Chfna Mbsfon, and humerous Jr., age 18 articles. CirculaHon Manager, The Commis­ 1926 sion. 1942-43. Member China Society of Am ANDREW LEWIS AYCOCK, 405 Du.rham ~~~;;:~~~~- s~~~· R~~~Jegtep~:::on:G*'t~h~ Rd .. Wake Forest. Teacher. Taught in Selma ard Harris PubJic Schools, Selma, Ala., 1926-27. M A., 1910 Tulane Univ., 1928. Robert Sharpe Teach­ Ing Fellow, Tulane Univ .. 1927~28 . Attended: 8 Harvard Univ., 1929-30; Johns Hopkms Univ. M::~~f-~ar~:rlTH:SR~~~~ a': ~:m1~~e~tf 3 Wake Forest School Board. Commissioner ~:gt ~oxe~~~~~ :rr:,,~hu~~g: ··o :v~~c s~~~~ and mayor of the tow_n o! Wake Forest. He seum of Art since 1941. Director of Forensics, is now servine as D1rector, W F. Bulldine WFC, 1941-48. Member: Civic Club; PI Kappa WAKE FORESf COLLEGE ALUM 1 NEWS, Juoe, 1952 Page Tweoty

Delta; Omicron Delta Kappa; N C. State HENRY Sl\UTB STROUPE, 107 W. Juniper. ~n~o~ -s~~- ~~taU~i;, _ ~~';.~~~~so~;n~a~~ Wake F o rest. Teacher. Ins tructor WFC and English Teachers. Serves as Town Commis ~ ~~~U:.te6~~~enrln?v~e1Jljg~·o. ~~~J~ - g~kve sloner BapL Married Lucile Hasselvandcr Daughters: Della Lucile, age 19; Sara Jane, ~~~c·. ~:02i ~;uMs\o~~c(J _s s_ceN~;;~ - 1~~~ age 15. 46 (Training aviation cadets and writing CAREY El\'KIRK DODD, 102 North St. ~~~\o~i~~ "t~~~~~~;i~~ ~gc_w~tl-J:e~~ Wake Forest. Pharmacist. Graduated in Phar­ Southern Historical Assn.; N. C . Historical macy (rom Medical College of Va., 1929. Now and Literary Assn.; ODK {Secretary since 1946}; PhJ Beta Kappa (Executive Commit­ g~~b;~'k~f~r~ _ngfrt,r~~~st~~aP~~~~:~~ tee Wake Co. Ph.i !Seta Kappa Assn.). Bapt. ricd Elizabeth Green. Daughters: Franclnn tS.S teacher ). Author: The Beginning.s of N., 13 yrs,. Harriet B .. 10 yrs.; Mary Ella, ReLigious Journalism in N. C ., 1823-1865. 4 yrs. Married Elizabeth Denham. Sons: Stephen Denham. age 7; David Henry, age 6. MURRAY CROSSLEY GREASO:"oo', North St., Wake Forest. Coach. Coached at Lexing­ 1936 ton H. S ., 1926-33. With Athletic Dept. or WFC since 1933 Now basketball coach. fiUBERT !\lACON BECTON, N College, Episc., Mason. Married Elizabeth Hackney Wake Forest. Interviewer. Empl~yment Se­ Son, Murray, Jr, 15 yrs. curity Commission.. Connected With the Em­ ployment Securi!J' Commission o_C N. C . smce GEORGE CARLYLE MACKrE, Wake For­ 0 est. Physician. MD.. Univ. of Pa.. 1928. fi':r~tb'y Sh~~r~n _e~~u~i~ : ~Y.~~~ Reside nt Pa. Hosp., 1930-33. Interned Phila­ Delia, 3 yrs. delphia General Hosp., 1928-30. Pro!. Physi­ ology and Pharmacology, WFC, 1930-40 H. GRADY BRITT, Box 125, Wake For- College physician since 19-H. Fellow Am. ~~~C.T~~~~38. T~for r~ 0 8io~gy~ 1 'W1t: College oC Physicians since 194:0. Bapt Mar­ 1938-40. Du Pont Research in ried Kathleen G Fellow Biol- RobinSon. Sons· James 1 40 4 Wilson, age 15; George Carlyle, Jr., age 11. gpya., u1"s %:i . ~~a-Pr~~ ;;} -Bl~ro~·. ~;; 0 HENRY LAWRENCE S 'UGGS, 509 N. Col­ }~:~~~~gt~?sitf~~~~of 'or th~o~~~ · U~v ~~i lege St.. Wake Forest. Teacher. M.A.. Duke N.C .. summers 1946-47. Teaching \VFC, since Univ .. 1928. Ph.D., Duke Unlv., 193<1 Taught: 1947, now Assoc. Pro! . o! Biology. Member: Elon Colle'=e. 1~31-34; Oklahoma Bapt. Unlv., 45 0 ~~:a ; BA~.o~ak~:~a s~~Ka~~; ~ 1!~:;- !f;~; i94~~a~~~! ~s!.ngt~r~c. m,~nt w~~C o r Parasitologists; Am. Assn. Cor the Ad­ vancement of Science: N . C. Academy or s~~~;r ~~=~~i'r!ts~~~ J~ed~i~in~"es~!tfn~ F. M. Huggins, '11 studies or Renaissance literature, \\.'riling ~~~~~;;: ~~~~eiJni~~d~i ,j"!e;mt~fui:~ar~oJG and a ddressing learned societies. Member· Poteat Award, 1948, N. c . Academy or Mode rn Language Assn.; A.A.U.P.; Phi Beta Member o! Am. Legion . Catb., Lion. Married Scjence. Listed in: American A-fen of Science; ~~~paituf:.mi~fgRo~ 1 taD~~r . 8e.f!ia~ag~ Eliz.o.beth Bolus. Who Knows and What; \Vho's Who in the Pate. 1931 South- and Southwest. Professional interest CLARENCE DLXON i\IATUENY, Rolesville. Cytotaxonomy of the Trematoda; Animal 192.7 Auto Dealer. Taught Rolesville School. 1926- Parasitology (publications in each of these EVERETTE CA ' OY Sl\TYDER, 210 S. Col­ 35 Chev dealer, Wake Forest since 1935 Cields 1. Bapt lege, Wake Fot-est Owns and operates the College Book Store. Worked for Charles ~~~n~er~ ~~i~~ ~u~~:;Jm;~;:ie~a~au~.. ~~~· DON P. JOHN TON, JR., 21 Washing­ Stores Co , New York. Ba.pt. Married Ruth Daughter Betty Jean. ton Ave.. Cambridge -10, Mass. Minister Lowdermi1k. Daughter, Frances Ruth, age B .A .. Princeton, 1939. S.T.B .. Harvard, 1951 20. CLARENCE HODGES PATRICK, Box 783, Now attendlng Boston College. Am. Field 1928 Woke Forest. Teacher. B .D .. Andover New­ Service, British Purchasing Commission, ton Theo. Seminary, 1934. Ph.D .• Duk ROLASD LAFAYETTE GAY. 315 West e Unlv., U. S . Army. Brierly in business. Entered a Ave., Wake Forest. Teacher. M.S., N. C. S tate ~~~~~4r.ro~.is~~n So'i!~~~~Or Mse:~~il~p~o&.1~ : ~~~~~fsc~~~~~je~ :rili~o~~th~nc ~0o~ni~~- CoJI~ge, 1931. Studied Duke Univ .. summer 19'16-47 Prof. Sociology, weaah>. 3 of \Y'FC,t:rn_ce 1947. =~~~oni93~~ 1reJ;g~~?e~ig~!tlpi ;dW!·p p~~~ ~o~~b;.r~- ~pttJn~~~~~~?ess~~~~ict~ Epsilon; PI Mu Epsilon: Gamma Sigma T:::;_ Epsilon: advisory council for lower dlvJsion 0 1 0 Cu~'co~ · J~r~?> S .\\'~EE~~:du;~d ~a~~- v1; work. Bal>t- Married Betty W Jenkins. Chil­ ~o~:;!f, rt'urrl~;~ C:ndc focl~i~:nM.a~~~~hdrBe~fy mos. overseas service as a non-commissioned dren Patsy, age 12; Jerry, age 7; Carol, o!Cicer in 1\fed. Detachment or 105th Combat age 4 Fle~~h,~f"8uP~o~rt~~A~~~-aFr!ir!: c. c .). Engr. Bn. of 30th Infantry Div. (awarded Wake Forest. Secretary and housewife. Mem­ Silver Stnr for action in Seilried Line bat­ ber WFC Club. Bapt. Married C . C. Pearson. tle). Summer student missionary among La- w:k~G~~re~i. J~:;,~t~r~·s~~:e~ra;u~;~~i:a\· Daughter , Virginia Chilton Pilot School. 1928-29: Drewey H . S., 1929-30; ~r;::n ~~¥;~~ rdcocNfi~ec~~ c~g~~uf~~~h Wise H. S., 1930-31; Woodland H . S., 1931- 1933 Cor Christ. Just finished first term as mis­ 34; Jackson H S., 1934-35. Served as pastor BRUCE FLEMING PEARCE, Rt. 1, Wake sionary to isolated jungle tribe to whom no Harrellsville Ch , 1935-43: West End Ch . Forest. Work; with Burlington Mills, Wake one has preached before. Now on a year's w furlough a t 134 Furman Ave., Asheville. I" High Point. 1943-45. Employed by WFC. Finish ing Plant. Connected with Nat'l Bapt. s since 1945. Now treasurer oC D eacon Club Linen Service Corp (Raleigh; Dallas, Texas; p Foundation. Inc. Member Board Trustees. 1931 Chowan College, 1941-43. Bapt., Mason Mar­ ~~Y~~~~~ · :ou~g~· J~nJr~O · ~~! : !!:~rr1e1~ PERCIVAL PERRY, Box 328. Wake For­ r ied Kathalecn Murphy_ Children: Ro8-er R., Donald, age 7; Larry and Bar-ry, age 3. est. Teacher Graduate Ass'tship, History Jr., age 24; Joyce J Lane, age 23; Faye, II'. age 19; Kathryn, age 15: Rachel, age 6. 1934 g.ef~Uc~~t~rirs S~~l' s~ie~CesRu~~~C ,' fl:3~ JOB KITCHIN SAVAGE, JR., 1217 W. 40. Ph.D., Duke Univ., 19<17.' U. S. Anny, ' ROBERT LELAND JONES, Wake Forest Dayton, Madison, Wis. Student. Agrtculture 1942--15 : 14 mos. overseas as a member of Hardware Dealer_ Alumni advisor of Lambda the Ordnance Section . XU Corps Hqs., Third Chi Alpha Frat. Member: Committee or Wake ~~t A1~ile~~37 1 Army. Teaching Social Science Dept .. \VFC F~rest Boy Scouts: Chamber or Commerce: · C~rPsY· e~ie~m~S :";~ : since 1947. Now Assoc. Pro!. Travelled in CJvic_ Club. Bapt, Mason , Shriner, Rotarian obtained rank o! Cast., AnU-Ai.rcract Auto- Europe, U. S ., Mexico, Canada Recipient or Ma rrted Hazel Elizabeth King. ~~~fcs~Ve~o~- BS'tate . s .c~nue~~~c~J~~~e ~cS.: 95 19 0 :tt~~dnerc~n~~~:{ri:~~~0 ~ ~~~i-a~~n&!~ ROBERT E. J,.. EE, 102 Wingate, Wake For­ fn· ~~~t\'i;re i~On~~rcs w~{kf!n1v . "ocP~-~~ 0 0 est. Teacher, M .A ., Public Law, Columbia consin. Married Agnes McCann Chasten. ~:~\tgt;2 . ~Ir:ig~~ : ~g;a~~~ ~~~~nfp;~~~ Univ., 1929. LL.M., Duke Univ .. 1935. S J .D ., State Literary and Historical Assn., N . C.; Duke Univ., 1941. Attended NYU, 1928-29; Southern His torical Assn. Bapt. Married Univ. ol Pa .. 1930-31. Taught: Temple Unlv., 1935 Margaret Ruthven. 1929-45; U. S. Army Unlv, at Shrivenham, JOHN GLENN BLACKBURN, Wa.ke For­ est. Minister. Tb.M., SBTS. 1938. Ph.D .. SBTS, ROBERT E. SHJ)..NKS, Box 61, Kuala ~:;f~~~die~~~s-~r : a':s~~'cesl~eJ::i~n~t ~~1:r Lumpur, Malaya. Oil Business. Pilot, Air Counsel o! OPS, with headquarters In RJch­ !:4 ~~~~~~~~ru~b.. s~~~b~;~~~~ 1 . 1::r:--4~~ Force until 1945: 77 combat mJsslons over mond, Va. Bapt. Married Louise Gattis Ch.ll­ 0 Bouganvtlle, RabauJ, New Guinea, Philip­ dren : Bobby, age 18; Chuck, age 9; Betty, ~::~ee 1~~8~s~;~b:rn'kactl}I~P~~oc~c of li~; : pines, Celebes, Ambon. etc.: left Air Force age 5. g~:gf:~s. orea-Jt., c .R~~~dn, L~~-n .19c~:~r~ as Capt.; has visited more than 30 forelgn 1930 Married . Margaret McKinney. Sons: Glenn, ~¥~~::-'e:i~~~ce 1 Ji~( · ~~eny~th~d~~:nt~ni; OLIVER JACKSON MURPHY, 3201 Tuck­ Jr. 10 y r s.; James L .. 7 yrs. asecgee Rd., Charlotte. Minister. Served as 0 4 7cfir~8> Ft~J~stNo~~r:ta~}~ra:~~ M~~ IV, Nat'l. Foreign Trade Council; Social and IS ft'!r~ l!~~~e~pili~ f~~in~~~~:!n~~o'n~e T~~~~; st~~o~~~o:!~. E¥ea~:e•[~~B - ~~~.fis . i1.3\n 5 B.D., Yale Univ., 1938. Attended : Columbia ~~r~a.Jl~: P . ~ha~a~~~au~~~~~~~za~:fh ~! ~~~~~n-~eE~d~rlyc~~i-\e . c~~wchi~~~tf!. Univ .• 1940; Oxford Unlv., 1947. Ph.D. Edin­ Lane, age 6. r Bapt. burgh Univ .. 1948. Served as pastor, Zebulon Ch., 1938-46. Travelled In Europe, 1947. As­ At ELLIS NASSIF, Wake Forest. JAMES L. WARREN, Wake Forest. Ass't. At Lawyer soc. Prof. or Religion WFC, since 1948. Mem­ Mgr., Durham Bank & Trust Co.. Wake Been practicing law since graduaUon, with ber: Civic Club; Soc. of Biblical Literature. o!fJce in Raleigh. Served in Army, 1944-45 Forest Branch. Taught: Holly Springs: Con­ . Bapt. Married Elizabeth PopHn. tentnea, 6 yrs. 3 yrs. U. S. Army with 358th ly Page Twenty-one WAKE FO~T COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, Juoe, 1952

Fig:hter Gp. Bnpt., Lion. Married llildn Smith Children. James Smith. age 5; Mary Allee, ters of Am. Revolution: Wake Fore~t Gar- age 2 ~~?di;~~~-on~'W~·llet;t~~i~?er,'~;~,te:ge ~;nter 1938 JAMES W. CARTER, Rt. 1, Wake Forest. IIELEN CURRIER RUSUER (Mrs. Vernon Farmer. Taug ht school U S. Army. J.), 1726 N. Qumn St.. Arlington. Va., Secre­ l09' Worked m OCiice of Defense Transpor- 1939 M'etAon,E~V~hanM:Jtiki~· 'fcofo.f.r ~~s~~~~~o':tr 0 1 5 1 1 0 C .. since 1946. Member Beta Sigma Phi' No~h ~ t~ w~~~Nfor~f.R~~~t~~~~· c'~l.ra c t~ Presby. Married Vernon Ru or. Attended N. C. State College, 1939-40. Has J. sher . ~~:~ - r:a~ e ~~ s~~c~:n~F~~ t~e~~~~tof"J\~ 1946 Little Theater , 15 times: Ass't. Director Nat'l. War Training Courses. WFC durlng B ~ -~ FsUFfT{ · t~fo~TJtu:e~re~:~~~ ~~:fi:t~~ 5 ~~E~~~~~~ ~~~~1e~lu~~~~ft~a g~ne~i~: ~:49:~~~YNo~r';,ea~to~ afa~~~nl:.~ft~e~a Bi~t: :i Married Juanita Lois Elliott. Daughter, Mar­ WORTH HART COPELAND, Wake Forest. garet Lots, 4 mos. Bursar, WFC Jns tructor, Mathematics, WFC. 1939-42. U . S Navy, 1942-46. Instructor 1947 Math. Dept., WFC, 1946-47 Ass't Secretary JOliN TIIURl'\JAN" COCURAN, JR., Box & Bursar, WFC, 1946-52 Now Secretary 532, Wake Forest. Ass't. FootbaU Coach and Bursar Member ODK. B a pt. WFC. Played professtonal football with Chi~ b:~gbaOROTHEA SHELDON STROUD (Mrs Emily Jo, age 3; Billie Leigh, age 11 ~. JAMES BRYAN COOK, JR., Box 70, Wake Forest. Ass't. to the Bursar, WFC. Instruc­ David). Box 286, Wake Forest. H ousewife· Member Beta Rho. Bapt. Married David MERLE HEDRICK SWETT, 118 South St .. to r in Chemistry, WFC. 194.4-46. M A .. Univ of N C .. 1948 Ass't_ to the Bursar WFC, lt~~ ~~c fe~i~d~ennd ?a~Ji\h~~~~o~, m3os.yrs .. ~:t~ ~~~~~~ · Jea~~e~e&~a~:~ri!at /_ ra~~ since 1948. Member Phi Beta Kappa Episc. Swett Sons; Frank M., Jr., 9 yrs.; Samuel P ., 7 yrs. NINA TEPHENS LIDE, 327 NE 18th St., . GEORGE ~AROLD \VAL~ , Box 434 Roles- Miami, Fla Social worker for Travelers Aid 1942 Soc. M .A., Univ. o! N. C .• 1951 in Social ~~~etO~uM~~~~-s~,e~~~~a~~fe~hh~;Jtl:nJ·o:i'r~~ AILEEN ELIZABETH ROGERS, Rt 1, Work Member Professional Club. Wake Forest. Dietitian. U . S. Navy CHARLES 0 . WHITLEY, Mt. Olive. Law- (W.A V.E .S .I , 1943-46. Now dietitian Frank­ CLEMENT HUNTER WESTON, 911 E Ma­ R:P!;LPh't 1 lln Memorial Rosp.. Lou~:o burg . Member son St Franklinton. Merchant Operates Col- ~:fn~r:S.p~Y"le·ta2 ~ffa ~~~ ; Am Home Econom1cs Assn Bapt. N. C. Bar Assn.: Wayne Co. Ba r Assn ~~~~ri :3d~e~:0 \}h ~~dps~;illOa~:~ei-sM~~~. 0 1 ~~ ~~~~7o~ ~e tit~or~i . ~rnveLe~~<;."r;,b~~a~~ 1943 garet Alston, 3 2 yrs .• Mary Patterson, 10 mos. Commerce; Jaycees (Pres l. Elected Mt 0 7 011\·c's " Young Man of the Year " 195 1. LuTc~ l}1~ :r~i rfe':t~f. N& ~~ N~~~ · ~~IJ ·~ DOROTHY G . BLALOCK, Wake Forest ~~~~-e~~i. teache r ), Mason_ Married ' Audrey 45. Attended Marquette Univ., 1945-48. In­ 1 terned Watertown, Wise.. 1948. Sr. Staff 'f:#i-~~~ J,~~~h Fo~~Lktf943::~s-~~b EQ!~~e 1949 Dentist. N . C. Public Health, 1949-51 U.S A F . School ,' since 1950. Bapt. since 1951 Member: Delta Sigma Delta; 0 0 A OA. Bapt, JOHN WESLEY CHANDLER, Box 774, a:XNf3t~~~~ ~or~s~~~~c. State Park_ U S . Army. 1943-46. Salesman, B D Duke Univ., 1952. Instructor in Phi- Wes tern Auto Supply Co., 1946-47. lnter- JOliN WARREN HARDY, Box 131, Woke 1 ~~~~ ~~~vep~1c~g~~e l~F~On~:~~: !?o~t For est L aw student. \VFC. Member Phi r~~B.'lft· . ~3r~ · s~~~~e sl~~P ira~e~~st~c1j3'!ct on PhD at Duke Univ. Member: A .A U.P ; Delta Phi Bapt. Married Ann Blanton Married Elizabeth McEiman Carnes. Daug~­ Phi Beta Kappa, Omic ron Delta Kappa Bapt ter, Alice Eliwbeth (Betsy), 3 yrs. Marrie d Flore n ce Gordon. w~t~Lfo~:s t ug%:tr:~R d!~s~ ~~~~·mggrx; ~?:~ 1 0 AARON MAYNARD CONN, Box 752. Woke 1c Club; Am. Legion Bapt , Lion, Elk. Mar. w:~: ~!estE~ea~~e~:V~~. J~ ~ {sf43-~t·; Forest. Minister and Ass't . Mgr.. College 15 moo_ In Europe; Communlca'trons office Book Store. M A ., WFC, 19 49 . Served os S~~~ 2 C)~~lyn Dean Vtck Son. Walter H , aboard L . S.T, released to inactive duty as pa~tor Atlantic Assn.; Ta r ruver Assn Lt. (~). M.A ., oC Unlv. N. C. 1947. Instruc- Taught in Rolesville H . S. Member : Eta WILLIAM AMOS HOUGH, JR., 810 Wil­ Sigma Phi; WFC Square and Compass Club mar Dr Concord Low student, WFC. ~it'end0~JalS;~~~~e s~~f~il ~g ~~~: f8:~ . Bapt. Mason. M orrted Mavis Bartholomew. Atte nded Brookings Institution Seminar, 1951 Now on year's leave o! absence after CAROLYN VICK ffOLDlNG (Mrs W H l. so~~~~~;~~ sf~~!C~"~or~;~Rfc':.~~er. Jg:~~: being awarded a Ford Fellowship to study Wake Forest HousewiCe. Taught W F ua te work, George Peobodv College for for Ph D . at UNC. Member: Am. His torical Elementary School. 412 y rs Member Dough- Teachers, Nashvllle, 2 sumri1ers. Teaching WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, June, 1952 Page Twenty-two

Wake Forest H. S., 3 yrs. Member: Pi IRENE BLANCHE FLOWERS, 165 Lock­ ~:frf.~ A.:~~~a;PsF~~~gac~1~~~a Dramatlc land Ave .. Winston-Salem. Employed by N. C. ~:~l.J~~~~ - _.{3a~~r~~~mber of choir). Mar- WTLLIA.'I \ \ rERY PARHAM, Box 206, Wake Forf"st. Instructor of Music, WFC. ERI\lA ISABELLE GOODSON, Box 103 Member· ~igma Phi Epsilon: N. C. Band­ masters As5:n. Bapt. ~~f s~~7ie;eAfshoe~C~~ct1~~a~i~;c~~~dors~f l:Seta Club. Member: N.C.E.A, N E.A. BF,J\,'1\,E EDWARD PLEDGER, Box 340. Wake Forest. Minister. Entered Duke Divin- ALTON DAVENPORT HARRIS, (Candi­ 5 date J 44183952. Co "B." A.O.C. Dept., The {~. $cit~JelT{~h .. g~a~~:~oo~· tas:gr;~a;e P~:~ Armored School, Fort Knox, Ky. Officer Candidate StudenL Enlisted in the Army J:n..~sea~tau1~c;;i~~ltY cs~~g~~t~f~[ ~- ~-~ July 27, 1951 fc.r the purpose of attending ried Willie Eakes. the Armored Officer Candidate SchooL Went to For-t Jackson, S. C . to attend Leadership DAVID STROUD, Box 286. Wake Forest . School for 8 weeks. After used car salesman Treas. Cub Scouts. graduating was Member: Chamber of Commerce; Patriotic ~ehds~v~~e~e\v:n~ ~~ af&o~~~~t ~~ Order Sons of Am. Bapt., Mason. Married Dorothea Ela.in• Sheldon. Children: David :g~ 1 0 0 Sbeldon, 3 .)I'S., Annyce s~gjl ;~:e ~o~~d ~a~~s ~illo~~~fe Jean and Paul April 9 , 1952 as a 2nd Lt. In the Armored Thomas, 5 mos. Department of the Army. w!L~~~est~R~~s~d~X~1 ~em~~~· ~~~ DAVID SCOTT HUMPHRIES, 201 Queen Beta Kappa; Phi Alpha Delta. Bapt St.. Beckley. W . Va. Student. Graduate asst. in Dept. of Biochemistry, School of MedJcine WARREN THOMA BU H , Box 6-t. Wise. of the Univ. of W . Va. Minister. Third yr. at Duke Divinity School JEROME TAYLOR RODWELL, 522 Nash is~. ~~Jg:nfJf:! c~~aniJ'k~~~e,~~~re~~~~ Cb.. Bapt. "'\1C~rried B ess Ruppelt. Daughter ~~Ve~~~T~~~~-to:-t~~t~r_- c~·D~Pt:O~ite~~ Nancy Louh•e. 5 mos. enue since Sept. 1 1951. Bapt. BETTY Ll EBERGER, 1422 Piedmont ELLSWORTH KENT ROGERS, 211 9th Ave., NE, Atlanta, Ga. Teacher. Taught in fe~iOn~ntg~Se~~l 1 Mecklenburg Co. system, 2 yrs. Moved to At- V~· lf~ud~~\Ja~ :J'er Ifc:-~ 0 0 1 ~~ae ga?.t!~fng~l~~1 s~'?t~ol 0X'tJ!~~hegP~~~ feC, ~~~~~~~o:'t;' ~ar c\ ~in~~~~t~,~~~ several in Biological Sciences. Has been accepted weeks tn Call!. 1950 J. 0. Corter by Northwestern Unht. in School of Dentis­ ( ee issue of June 1951) try. Bapt. HARRY BANKS MORRl , JR., Cigarreria l\forazan, San Salvador , C. A Cigarette Mf~ Meth. :Married Harry B . Morris. Jr. ChUdren WA.:-.:0..-\. LOU BOWI\L\.N PlllLLlPS (Mrs. WlLLLAl\t RALPH SMJTD, 2121 Pebrican Harry, Ill. age 5; Mary Robin. age 1. Baxter C.}, Box 1092. Housewile. Secretary Ave .. Cheyenne, Wyo. Air Force Instructor. to Dr Henry Walden, N. C . Bapt. Conven­ Joined Air Force. Jan. 3, 1951. Enlistment RENA POITRAS l\lORRIS, Clgarrerfa tion tRu.ral Ch. Dept.) until March 1. be up Jan. 2, 1955. Presby Married Ruby G Mora.zan, San Salvador, C. A. Housewife. 1952. Bapt. Married Baxter C. Phillips. Adcock. Meth. Married Harry B . MJ'rris. Jr. Children : Harry. III age 5; Mary Robin, age 1. PADOISO!< WADE PRESTON, 314 S . Wln- WlLLIAI\1 CANNON \VU:lTE, (Pfc.) . AF- 0 5 8 1'1410530. 3390th Student Sq., Box 152. Kees- ~~~~s, '';ak:rs~ Jfs~'bar~~~ch8s uist Lt~ ~~ Pa~~Rgfy~~-LI~a~R~2a~~.f:a~h::.d ~~:i. Capt. Ln Marine Reserve. Played profes­ ~~r 1~~·I~~~~t;ln~le~~!t~rcAir E;J~~~.d ~~'kt~ football coach. .Tr. Varsity. Ohio State sional football, Chicago Bears, 1946-49. Won land AFB. San Antonio. Texas. Sent to Univ., 1949. Now football basketball coach 0 4112lh Operations Sq .• Ma.rch AFB. CallJ., and teacher at Paden City H S. Member: Ie~.~-~ tif.~·. t:~~e . Afl9i3~uW~~v r::,~~aii American Assn. for Health and Physical ~Se~d~~~C6~?" K~!s~~~s~J~ ,~\be~;:}~ Education: Elks. Married :Martha C. Ward g¥.,eK~o~cahPt.wr,~i-r~~m~~kg:f: ~~t~~ s~~; to March AFB upon graduation. Bapt. Michael Paddison. 2 J 2 yrs., Andrew W1Uiam. 8 10 mos. ~~gr:n~~ic~!r sL~~:ePa'~eS~fr~ey, 3 ~:: JAMES FOSTER Gregory Russell, 2 yrs. BULLOCK, 424 Durham 0 5 Rd , Wake Forest. Law student, \VFC. SARAH 33~oR~~\} R'b~~v~tru~ro~"b"~. ~akJ f;i: LORRAINE BRITT ALLEN, est. ROTC Instructor and Supp~y Sgt., ROTC MARlON JORNSON DAVIS, 433 Durham (I\ffiS. BOBBY DOTSON}, Box 444, Bule's Unit, WFC. Recalled Creek. to active service. Oct., Rd , Wake Forest. Law Student WFC. Tf'acher. Attended U.N.C. first sum- Member Phi Delta Phi. Married Carrie Cham­ .. §~t~~~e~oer~ Bfa~~uc~~in tr~~:~~r~~Pl~ berlain. Daughter, Martha Ann Joslin. ~ee;t ag:~pf{,~fucf;{re~e.T~~~sM~~~dsW~~ ROTC, WFC. Member Lambda Chi Alpha by D otson Allen. (Pres , WFC chapter). Bapt. Av~~~LRa'e~R~~~~~i . tf.4 s~-~~ 1950 EDWARD VICTOR BAUBLI , 45 S . Pop- mos. Atten~ed N. C. State College. At present LYNTON YATES BALLENTINE, 232 Wind­ r~itto\~at~· :::~~~~~e J~.n~dl9~~ri:e~a·~~in~:~ working at Walker Martin, Inc., Raleigh. sor Dr., Fayetteville. Now Pvt. 4th Signal Church of God. Married Starr Faye Stone. Bn., X Corps He will be serving with the ~~~~gs~~r ,~~~: r~11lm0 rsl'J~~l~~n~~i~!~~; Radio and ~essage Center Operation Co. Adminis tration. Money of the Battabon, which operates became a problem Ie~~. ~~~es~ .A!J~E~ie;~~ !arog; and main­ 0 tains communications between X Corps and ;~!!~{~I~~ r~emt w~er~ne;fr};>~~e~tatft:n~r: ~fwilie &E~~f~ C~~a~gtl:;.M~~s~~~Or~ other units In Korea. Was formerly assigned Gas and to the Eta Jima, Japan Signal School. Electric Company, a public utili­ Professional Women's Club (sec.). Bapt. (S. ty, as a statistician. I attend classes at S. teacher). College Pork on Saturdays; in this way • I RICBAitO THOMAS BRAY, JR., Box 883, hope to graduote In June with my masters BUFORD TERRILL HENDERSON, II, Box Wake Forest, Minister. Serving as pastor: degree." \Vake Cross 1007, Wake Forest. Law student, WFC. Roads: Trinity Ch., Benson. In Pres. 1st yr. law class. Member: Sigma Phi y~~esg ~~ :~din~t':,~~d;h~cbw!~e~~ FRED CARROLL CRISP, Rt. 3. Zebulon, Epsilon -. ODK (Pres.); Phi Delta Phi (Pres.). 0 1 Married Betsy Pool. Daughter, Ann Marie, Roads. Member: -8etta Kapga~ha: Epsilon ~~~~~·c:tow S~~~~~~~ So;8~~~ster;; 0 ::fn~ 18 mos. ~~n~W'Mfatm 1Jr~~."as~~~~e 6; Tnhao~~v~~~ ~~~pelddn~s~et~~~ri~o;hucc~:~ ·- B't\'~it:r:~~ val to, age 22 mos. RUSSELL LEE HINTON, Rt. 2, Leaksville. Brenda, age 7; Fred Carroll, 0 tChip), age 2. Minister. Attended Southeastern Theo. Sem- WU.LIAM R . EATON, Box 1092, Wake ROBERT PETE PRICE, Box 32. Norlina. ~~-~Yr.~:~!~~fie . 5~~t a~f~~!~r tfnf!sb~ Forest. Minister and student. Attends South­ Coach. Teacher. Leads a program of base- Mc.Alhaney. eastern Ba~. Theo. Sem.inag; {Gen. Chmn. 00 ~~~~nd~~ncif~i~~·s~u::;:~~ ti~~e~~~f. ifat~ JEWEL EMERSON HOLDEN, Burlington. ~i s~:~~pe t'hrir~a~~~rkraiZ: ~d~:Str part in community activities. Bapt. Chemical analyst for Bennett. Western Electric. CLYDE WINFRED WIDTENER, 304 S. BETTY ROSE HOLLIDAY, 405 N . Main, ELIJAH D. FLOWERS, JR., 20 College Ct. Center St., Goldsboro. Teacher-Coach. Wake Forest. Case ·worker for Wake Co. Apts., Wake Forest. Minister. Graduate stu­ Played professional baseball with Goldsboro Dept. of Public \VeUare. Member N . C. Assn. dent, WFC. 1950. Student, Southeastern Bapt. and Johnson City. Tenn. Married Mildred of Case Workers. Bapt. Louise Bumgarner. Daughter, Cynthia Gail, ~~~~· ~~~~nara . ~9¥~~~~r:esB:- t . P~~;~ 18 mos. MARGARET (PEGGY) KEENER NELSON, ried Ellen iftng. Sons: Elijah D ., M. 8 yrs.: 2103 Park Ave., Richmond, Va. Secretary Charles Milas. 6 yrs. 1951 at State Planters Bank & Trust Co. Member JAMES RUSSELL BURLESON, Pikeville. of State Planters Club. ECKENER BRYANT PEARCE, U. S. Teacher Scoutmaster 9! Troop 15 since 53079579, Hqs. Battery, 91st Armored. Field Sept., 1951. Teaches Science, Pikevtue. BAXTER CARSON PHILLIPS, Box 1092, Artillery Bn., Ft. Hood, Texas. Formerly Presby., Lion. Married Margaret Waller. Wake Forest. hfinister. Employed by State connected wlth REA, Wake Forest. Entered Children: Sandra K., age 4 yrs.; .Tames R., Hwy, & Public Works Conuhlsston, Jan., service, April, 1951. Bapt. .Tr .• age 18 mos. 1951-Sept.. 1951. Attended Southeastern Page Twenty-three WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUM I N E WS, June, 1 952

Dr. John Bethune (Jack) Carl) le, '22, Burlington, died December 1, 1951. Fountain 0. Cox, '05, Chattanoog::a, Ten­ nessee, died Moy 4, 1951. Elliott Brantley Eamshan, '06, \Vake For­ est, died January 3, 1952. Charles Lee Guy, '14, Dunn, died Jan­ uary 22, 1952. Hiram Johnson Hall, "51, Yadkinville, died February, 1952. Henry Russell H:uris, '03, Seaboard, died January 30, 1952. Dr. Lewis L. Highsmilh, '10, Kingsport, Tennessee, died December, 1951. Rev. Benjamin Logan Hoke, '98, Gaff. ney, Soulh Carolina, died July 28, 1951. Lt. Robert l'rice Larkins, '47, Oak Ridge, died NOl'ember 24, 1951. Dr. Oscar A. Kafer, II, '32, New Bern, died December 29, 1951. Doc Berry OJiver, 'g1, J>ine Level, died December 12, 1951. Ruth A. Billig, ' 48, received an M.D. degree Rev. Benjamin Randall Page, ' 15, \Vake from the Hahnemann Medicnl College and }"or~ l , died January 7, 1952. Hospital, Philadelphia. She will continuo W. Randall !'age, '37, Fa)'etteville, died her medical training as an intern at the Hahnemann Hospital. December 31, 1951.

ROY ALBERT PROPST, JR., El.m St., Wake Dr. Arthur B. Ray, ' JO , Port \Vashing­ Forest. Minister. Serves as pastor of Holly ton, L. 1., New York, died December 24, 8 ~~~!;:g~e~l;aar~.ttfrsdt:g2 _ sl\~~~~r:Jtb~vie ~~ 1951. B. Ennis, Jr., "47; mother, Reda Umstead Morrison. Ennis, '48, !ted Oak, N. C. Ednin Ferebee Shan, '04, Henderson, LUDWELL ROGERS, 326 A RAYMOND died December 30, 1951. Frances Ann Finch, born 2-24-52; Jam,es ~i~d N~0 1 ~a~~~nzfe~~ · D C. Accountant. Ma r- Russell Finch, born t-19-49. Mother, Doris WILLARD ALLEN WILDER, Box 1101, SenJ!o Finch, '44, 1438 J'inehurst Drive, S\V, Wake Forest . Law student, WFC. Membe r: Atlanta, Ga. Phi Alpha Delta ~ Wake Fo res t Stude nt Ba r Assn . Bapt. Married Doris Moore Wilder. Future Wake Foresters Thomas Brent Funderburk, born 5-22-52; 1952 William Michael Funderburk, born 5-22·52. JANE ANDERSON EDWARDS (Mrs. Ju­ Parncl::. Loui.!oc Archer, born 4-8-52. Fnllter, C. T. Funderburk, Jr., '49, 2316 lius 0 .), Colonial Beach, Va. Teache r . Molhcr, 1ildrcd l\lorton Archer, '48, Apt Belfast Drive, Charlotte. 42U, Colony Forest, Columbia, S. C. Paul Hudson Gulley, born 12·20·51. Edward l'urkcr Best, Jr., born 2-2-52. Futher, Marcus M. Gulley, '47; mother, Necrology F:1 ther, Edward P. Best, '50, 403 Carolina Sally Hudson Gulley, '48, 409 S. 9th Street, A venue, Ahoskie. Thomas A. Avera, '15, Rocky Mount ~ died Philadelphia, Pa. April 4, 1952. Dicky Belhune, born 4-23-52, Facher, Donald M. Ellington, Jr., son of Mr. and Bethune, '27, 221 2 Saint i\1aQ 's Street, Rev. Benjamin F. Bray, Jr., '19, L)nch­ J. C. i\trs. Donald Ellington, Charlotte; nephew burg, Va., died January l, 1952. ltaleigh. of Tom J. Bead, '50 and 1\-lary Frances Combs Head, ' 46, Lumberton. Dr. Rupert Fr.mklin Carter, ' 16, New Bruce Monroe Bradbury, born 11-1-51. Father, Kenneth R. Bradbury, '48, l400A York, . Y., died April 19, 1952. i\Jary Frances Head, born 12-51. Father, Summit Avenue, Fayetlelille. l'aul Price Davis, '07, Yadkinville, died Tom J. Head, 'SO; mother, i\J.ary Frances May 19, 1952. Denise Anneue Britt, born 4-8-52. Combs Head, '46, 1404 Barkers Street, Mother, Lorice Fogleman Britt, '46, Kings Lumberton. James Merrill Peace, '21, Henderson, died Mountain. 2-4-51. Fat11er, April 4, 1952. Kenneth Bryant Hite, born Mary Lucile Burinsky, born 3-29-52. Kenneth Gra) Hite, Jr., ' 49, Greenville. Raymond Lee Pittman, Jr., '40, Silver Futher, Lawrence P. Burinsky, '50; mother, Thomas G. Honaker, Ill, born 1·25-52. Springs, Md., died April 16, 1952. Marjorie Foster Buriusky, '49, 604 i\'lns­ Father, Thomns G. Honaker, Jr., '44, 663 George Jones Spence, '06, Elizabeth City, coutnh A ''euue, Belleville, Illinois. ltockbridge St., Bluefield, W. Va. died March 1952. !toy Grady Burrus, Ul, born 10·9·5 I. Cl)de Bernard Johnston, born 9-23-51. Dr. Charles B. \VUJiams, '91, Lakeland, Father, Roy G. Burrus, Jr., '47, 1315 Fair­ Fnther, C. D. Johnston, '48; mother, Syhria died April 4, 1952. Fla., view Road, NE, Atlanta, Ga. McManus John~1on, '5 1, 207 Gnmer Street,

Thomas Mann Arrington, '121 \Vake For­ Lida Ha)es Calvert, born 10·26·47; lteyn­ Houston, Texns. est, died February IS, 1952. olds Sermons Calvert, born 11 -14-51. Michael !tile) Jordan, born 2·21·51. Thomas Edwin BobbiH, '12, \Vake Forest, Mother, Lena Sermons Calvert, '46, 108 N. Fater, Rile) 1. Jordan, '47, Raeford. died January 29, 1952. Fairview Circle, Tarboro, . C. Grn)son Gordon Kelly, born 12-21·51. Edgar E. Broughfoo, '92, Decatur, Geor­ Sam Gregory Ennis, born 8-5-49; John Fnfher, Gordon Bennett Kelley, '51, 1327 gia, died Februal') 3, 1952. Thomas Ennis, born 8-5-50. Father, \Villiam i\'lordecni Drh'e, Raleigh. WAKE FORE T COLLEGE ALUM I EW , June, 1952 Page Twenty-four

,-

Thom as G. Honaker, Ill; TI10mos B. VanPoolc, OJ; Donald l\1. Ellington.

Ronn ld Colvin Knight, born 8-10-51. Clifton Gene Parker, Jr., '48; mother, Jewell usan R ebecca Thompson, born 7-19-Sl. f tbcr, Calvin S. Knight, '45, Route 2, Rox­ \dams Parker, 'SO, Box 4, \Voodluud. Father, J. Pat Thompson, '50; mother, boro. lurguret Lois Potts, born 2-5-52. Father, Mn•is Sykes Thompson, '49, 2119V. Fair­ view Rood, Raleigh. J.'lea nor Celia Lennon, born 2-25-52; Rufus F. Potts, '46, Barnesville. Thomas Bennett VnnPoole, 111, born 1· John Larry Lennon. 3 years of a ~e . Father, John Thomas Reynolds, born 2-26-52. John Lennon, '42, Prospect Hill 7-52. Mother, Mary Gilmer Cocke Van­ Furb ' ~7 , er, Fred M. Reynolds, 625 Brussels Poole, '49, -*209 13th treet, South, Arling· lobo Holmes McCrimmon. Jr., born J . Street, Clifton Forge, Va. ton, Va. 19-48. Father, John Holmes \1cCrimmon, Beebe tnnfield, born 6-21-42; Susie Stan­ Homer Bra~nell Vernon, born 12·7·.a9. '41 , Hollister. field, born 2-27-45. Father, L. B. Srnnfield, Mother. Helen Brns\\ell Vernon. '46, \Vbit· Laura Dell Parker, born 3-28-SZ. Father, '35, 2840 Wlllo" Drive, Charlorre. akers.

George O'Hn, of football fame in the ho" I turnc:d out-what a c;urprhc--to me of you are ever near DeFuniak Springs, 1940's, write'S under date of June 17 to too. In Walton County they even elected come lo ~ee me. Wife and I have two large "Dear Mr. Patter!)on. Ea rnshaw, opt!· me president of the Count) Teachers' As· bedroom>~ e:\tra at all times a nd we Jove la nd, and All · ~ ocia tion thb past yea r. I'm reall y h appy company. Hope to ee \Orne of you. .. Just a note to \ay hello. Of course I down here-tell the boys 10 h1t Florida­ A~ ever. would likt: to have an an~wer but knov. the water's fine. Well, 'o long to all. If any George." how bu\y you mu\t be, or else trying to relax, \O you need not really bother. Ju\t want to say old George Owen thinks of you all so often and keep~ thinking that orne day I mu\t come back before Wake Forest FUTURE WAKE FORESTERS i~n't really Wake Fore~t at \Vale Fore\t­ but of course to me it shall always be We ,~,-·an t nam e~ of Future Wake ForeMerc;, ages from birth to date of entering there, I am really doing fine-have a swell college. A 9·inch Wake Forest pennant will be sent to each a nd the name of set up in a little rural Jr. High chool a.., each will appear in the next issue of ALUMNI News. Principal- yeah. me-a laugh, eh'_, Don't fall to let all in Math. and Education kno"' Name ......

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ame .... PLEASE LET US KNOW Date of Birth ..

YOUR CHA GE Father .. Class Mother Class IN ADDRESS