24

1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina
Page 2: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

W \KI·: FORE T COLLEGE ALl' )l'\1 :-EW . October. 1952

Editor· Et 01:"' OLin, 10

Puhlhht·d in Odohcr. Det.·emlu:r. :\larch, and .IUih.' hy th~ \\'ake Fnr{'St CAllc:"~c \ Jumni \ ssodaUou, \\'instun-Sah·m . • •. (_

Suh:-,.~rJption P'riCP ( >rll' Dollar n Y t•ar

}:nt •rt·d .e.. secooud-dm~s matter 1t th(" Po~t Otlict• at \nn,ton-Salt.-m. '\nrth (.'urdlinn

Arldrtu ull rommunirntion1 to Wake Porr1t Collt'!l' \t l'''""' '\t.ws, H'ir~.!l/an ... ,trm, ..Yortli CcrrolirHJ.

\Ll'.\1. 'I \SSCJ( l.\'1"10" OFFICFRS

Prt'•uf,nt Dr. \'t>rnon Tuylur, .Tr. ·~; Pird l·irt J>roidtn/-Egh~rt I , Oa\·is, .Tr. '33 ,..,·,roud J•irr-Pre•irluJI f);n·id Hrltt. '3 i lmmrdia/(l Pn1t Prnidtut-.\ddison Il cwlett, Jr. '·t) /Jirtrlor uf Alumni .ddit·itit•, trrHI Sern/nry-

Eu!-='t"I1C UliVL·. '10

Elkin \\'in .., ton-Salem

Fairmont Wilmington

\\' inston- nlem

)JJ- ~lllERS o~· TilE !- :U:CU"li\'E CO~DIITTEE ( In additiun tn officers)

Pn·sidcnt l Inrold W. TribbJc, 1 r offirio \\'illiarn Conrad, Jr. '13, rr offirio Dr .1. Rivins H elms '3\ ( 19.53) ,\ .. I. Hutchins ' 12 ( 1953) Do·an Pudt·n '18 (1953) .1 ohn K nntt ·z:J ( 1951) J ames ~lnson '88 (195 1) Dr .. J. H. Suund<"rs '2.1 ( 19.51) A. Ynt..s Dowell '17 ( 1955). Dr. lll"nth D. Bumgardner ' 10 ( 1955) Robert D. ll olleman '36 (1955) 0. 0 . \llshrook '20 (1955)

\\'akc Fore.' t \\'inston-Salem

)1orgnnton Canton

\tlanta. Ga. Charlotte

Laurinburg Richmond, Va.

\\f U'-hington, D. C. Philadelphia, Pa.

Durham \\' ilmington

IN THIS ISSUE Dr. Chilton C Pca r.-;on

Editorials:

Ctmtrnd for Chemistrr Building Let

'I hunks for Encouragement, by llnrold \\'. Tribble

~ew Frontiers for American Medicine,

hr llobc rt A. Moore, M .D.

Belon•d 'IL'Uchcr Lenve.s Classroom

In Trnnsition, by A. C. Reid

Living for One Hundred Ycnrs

Silwlnir Conlt>y Shines in Isolation

Among the Alumni

New FnC'ulty )lember!:.

Beginning Another Year

Necrology

Jnformntlon '\bout Former \VFC Studl.'nts

These \\rcre ;\tarried

Future \\' nke Foresters

Officer:; of Alumni Organizations

Front Cover

3

10

II

12

12

15

18

19

20

2'2

23

u

Page Two

\ football tangle with Xnrth Carolina tah· ut \\'"ukr Forest furnbht•, for older

Homecoming November First

und younger alumni n pt:rft•r t o:.·t·asion for homecoming. Who doe' not n •call "liC'h cnnt" of former n·ars? Xostnlgiu bcf:(ins ut ll.t' n·ry thought. En•n when tlw "<'U;~ was unsntlsfndor)·. there was a. sort of unity in thl.' pain tlf di.,ap­pointrnent that hound tog«-~thn Old Gold nnd Bind.: fnn .... 'S'on·m· b1.•r I _,Jwul:l h1.• n ,:raJa du~- thi-. )"t'Ur •. \ good chHnCl' of a Deacon ,-ictory. oppnrtunity to rt•nt·w d LI friendships nnd revin· enthu­:.in,tir h•~ulti.-.. horn on th,· old campu .... a visit to ''-'t"IIC' mcan­in~tful ;Uld rnn~-ht• ~dt'red these are .. trung cnnh. to draw alumni to \Ynk~.· Fon•s t for tht• I lomecoming (;arne-. \ thou .. and timt•"i wl'lt•oml' 1

\ffalrs conne-cted with the alumni office will he directed henceforth from \\'in~ton-

Alumni Office In Winston-Salem

alt•m \II rt>corcl' and t.'C)Uipuw11l hdung­ing ttl lhl' d<"pnrtment of Publit· Hdntions nncl .\Jumni ,\dh·ities wae mo\"cd during tlw pu't •mmmer to .Amo ... ('ottnl!t' nn the Grnylyn F."'tnte wher1.· tht>n· ;... ampl1.· nnd conn·nit-nt ' JUH''' fnr lht•

narll-d functions of the ch.>purhm•nt. Ht•r(" rtlsu ar,· ht•adqunrter .. for fund -ruh;ing nnrl husirh·.,s ndh·ities 1\!-sOdnl\.'d with the con­

s truction uf huildins;rs on tl.c new rampus. OffiC'e .. fur the two ,-ice-prc ... idt•nts· Loyde 0 .. \ukermnn and Robert (i. Ot•yton 11fl'

in thb building. 1'hb is..,Ul' of \LI ' 'I:s-1 ~•:ws i!' published in \\~in ... ton~ uJcm and mnilctl frum till' new lot·ntion. Thl' moiling nddn•s"' i"- simply " \\.ake Fort· .. t Collegt>, \\•in ... tun-Sulem, ~orth

Carolina •· \II corre.\pondcnrt· rela ting to ulurnni ,,tfair.. such as reque.-.L for cooperation in pro,·iding programs for alumni meet~

inJ..'S, the orgnnizntion of new chuptt"rs. nl'Ws about nlumnl. notic<"S of chan~t·.., in uddresses, und inquiric' for any sort of information the offil'C' c-un .. upply· ·should he directed to \\'inston-Snlt•m. Liberal use will he modt• of official ... and facult~· tnemher:-, at \\'ake For~t in nn effort ltl ns .is t local alumni oqrunizations '' ith their pro­gr11ms. llcquests received in \\"inston- alem for ~uch ossi..,tunce will be given prompt attention. J-l enlthy alumni chnptl'rs through­out Xorlh Carolina and in ()thcT !<ttntcs where \Yakc Foresters can get together periodically for feHowship~ to l!nin up-to-date information 11bout their ulmn muter, und for comradeship in ]lTOj­ecb designed to strcnJ:lhen the ('ollegc in ib mh~ion b the aim of ofticials of tht· Alumni A\isociation. Cull on tht•m for "u{q:!estions and n~si~toncc and join them in th('ir undcrtnkin~~

Grateful For Good Friends

Thi!:. mOf!:UZine has been printed from the- be­ginning by tlw distingaished firm of Edwards & Broughton Company of Rnlci~h . The late

Dr. Charles Lee ..Smith, a \\'akc Fore.st alumus, n former collt"ge president and eminent educator, was president of thl' compuny during- this pt.·riod until his denth n little more than a year ago. A son-in-lnw, Jn-ieph fl. H ardison. and two sons, Olin~r and Churles Lee SmiU1, Jr., have been through the years and ore ... uu members of this firm with which the College hn!<t had the pleusnnh·st uf re­lationships. Conferring with these gentlemen obout printing prob~ )ems has been like talking with undcrstuncling partm.' rS who share your own obj~ctivcs and are eager to aiel you in their achieve­ment. Tl1c so me thing con be snid or the shop forl'num, ~lr.

Barrow, nnd the numerous other persons in the I urge t..· ... tnhlish­ment who!)C combined cooperation was l>£"ntinl to the production of thi ... mn~n:zinl'. In tranderrin~ the alumni office to \\'in ... ton­Snlem, it I\ nece..,..,nry to publish ancl mnil . \J. llll!'-'"1 Z\u,·s from the: new location. To l)C\'Cr rclntion..,hip ... that haYc bt•cn "to sntis­fnctor)" und of .!.Uch long ... tanding is not easy . . \t least, it cannot be done without yielding to the impulse- tu l~ :\.pre-.... for \\·akt• Fores t College and its thousands of alumni son~~.· words of ap­preciation for l''tcemed friends.

Page 3: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

listening booths for records, a chart and map room, a student lounge for light read­ing, a faculty lounge and se,·eral faculty workrooms.

On the rna in floor le,•el will he the public entrance to the building, the main circula­tion desk, card catalogs, e.xhibit cases, rend ing rooms, book stocks and a periodicals wing.

~ Six classrooms and seven Sl'minar rooms

Larson and President Tribble a re frequent observers of prog ress on the construction \\ ork. Here they are seen looking at the Chapel foundations in the early stages.

CONTRACT FOR CHEMISTRY BUILDING LET Construction Proceeds on Chapel and Library

Less thun four months a fter construction ncti\·itics began a t its new cnmpus si te in \\' inston-Solcm, " ' ake Fores t College could report to its friends thnt the foundation of the fin;t building was virtually com­plete, cxt'n \·a tion work hod begun on the second, and liH' building contract had been lc:t for tht• third.

(!"cu rs thnt this summer's nation-wide !\l ce.:l s trike would hopelessly snarl and de­In,. R c\•nolda construction plans were cle­m~l ishc.cl wht•n the College undertook other work on the grounds during the six-week period when s teel shipments for the Chapel wl'rt' lwld up. A s a result, the over-all time st•hedule for the Development Program hns been kept intact.

Grading of the basic roads nnd of the hnmcdiatc campus areas, which had been !-.C heduled for Inter, was begun as soon u'> the s teel shortage began slowing clown work on the Chapel ond immediately huge ''pans" or grading inst ruments, bull dozers, nnd trucks began to scoop off the tops of hills and fill in the low spots. Landsca p­ing of the entrunce to the campus was also !') tnrtcd and last month 20 elm trees were

moved from spots to be occupied by build­ings to the " plaza" a rea which lies between the Chapel and the University Center.

Midway in the grading and landscaping work, the steel shortage lessened nnrl n cur­loud of 12 tons of reinforcing .. ted urrived, allowing the construction on the Chapel to rc!\ume once more. Since then two more ~hipmcnts of s teel ho,•e ar rived and by the t•nd of los t month foundation wnlts were bl'ing brought up to the g round level. It wus neccssn ry to remove more than 2,000 c-ubic feet of ea rth to buiJd the foundntion.

By mid-September, sufficient progress hnd been made to allow workers to move to the site of the Library, second building to be constructed on the campus, und cx­cuvation work there is proceeding rapidly.

Considered to be one of the most func­tional buildings of its type, the four-floor Library will eventually house 00,000 vol· umcs and will bl· completely air-conditioned und trentcd to eliminate as much sound as possible.

The ground floor of the building will open onto the lower campus and will house reserve rending rooms, a newspaper room,

wilt take up the major portion of the sec­onrl floor temporarily. " rhcn the full campus is completed and sufficient class-room space is available elsewhere the rooms wi11 be converted to other libmrr uses . • \lso on the 5.econd floor level will be a wing for the College's rare books collection nnd the librarian's office .

. Additional temporary classrooms will oc­cupy most of the third floor of the build­ing together with eight faculty ~tudics and a faculty lounge.

The Librury is being built by George \\' Kunc of G reensboro, whose firm nlso holds lhl' contract for the Chapel. Co:;t of the huilding has been set at $1,691,567

Plans for the third unit in the program, the Science Building, were last month au­thorized by the Architect's Committee and npprovcd by the College's Board of Trus­h'es which has let the contract for the .·soo.ooo structure to Fowler-,Tones Con­st ruction Company of '\' inston-Salem.

'fhe building will contain five classrooms, a large lecture hall, several laboratories, and space for a science librnry on the top floor. \Vhile the complete campus plan enlls for two more science structures to house the biology, physics, and mathematics departments of the collegc1 the first build­ing will t empora rily be used for ull sci-ence act ivi ties when \Vake Forest first moves to the new campus. E"entua lly it will house only the chemistry and resea rch ckportmcnts.

Other highlights in the De\'clopment Pro­gram during the summer included the trnns­fl·r of two million dollars from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation to the college for use in. its building activities. Although it wns the first actual transfer of money from the foundation to \Vake Forest, it did not represent n new gift but was the net incoml' whi<.'h had nccumula tcd since No­n·mbcr, 19 l6, when the agreement was made to move tht~ College to \\'inston-Salem.

Accord ing to foundation officiuls, Uw monev was turned over to \Vuke Forest College because it had met the agn~ement cnlling for the beginning of actual construc­tilln nt Rt~ynoldu by July 1, 1952.

ATTEND THE ALUMNI DINNER

5:45 p.m. Tuesday, November 11

Robert E. lee Hotel, Winston-Salem

Page 4: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

ExcaYating ror the Librar). pictured above, is alread)' complete and roundations are bein g laid.

Thanks for Encouragement, Constructive Help By HAROLD W. TRIBBLE, President

'ly job i• often tough, frequently dls­couro~ting, sometimes exasperating, but it is made much easier and more pleasant thl\n it otherwise would be by alumni and other frie-nds of " ' ake Forest Ccllege who are constantly thinking of ways to help. This afternoon os 1 sit here in the office lookin~ out on the old campus nnd dream­Ing of the new, some recent disappointments almost overwhelm me and then I am re­minded of several demonstrations of gen­erous loyalty that hove brought inspiration and hdp to me per:;onaJly and to our great program. T should like to tell you about some of the..<;e experiences, with the thought that In this ''-'ay I shall be expressing grate­ful appreciation, and perhaps arousing other!'; among our great group of alumni and frirnds to render similar help.

First of nil, I should like to tell you about the delightful month that we enjoyed at Dlowing Rock this summer. Lex Marsh, a loyal alumnus and n warm personal friend in Charlotte, devised a plnn whereby he enabled the College to give Mrs. Tribble nnd me n month's vacation a t Blowing U.oek. Now I believe in inspiration, and there Is no doubt in my mind that this is an evidence that occasionally heaven I ,. bree1.es do blow upon fertile ~nd responsiv.e human minds, guiding them to do things that produce celestial happines!ii. \Ye not

only enjoyed the month in the mountains, but 1 wn'< able by being there to work more intensively upon prospects for our Enlarge­ment Program in that area. I know the College made some friends during the month, nnd it is my conviction and fervent pruycr that from these contacts will come ~Ignlficnn t gifts in the months and years ahead.

Another Joyal alumnus and close personal friend ha:; been putting his mind on the matter of encouraging people to write \Vnke Fore~t College into their wills . As the re .... ult of his interest along this line one very signiflcnnt contribution has been made to the College and a promising plan has lwcn inaugurated whereby o friend's estate will become o part of the resources of the C'oliL•ge in the future. l am hoping and prnying that mony other lawyers ancl bank­t•rs and business people generally will follow tht.> noble exnmple of this flne alumnus. If we could get a large number of our friends to write their wills and make definite pro,•islon for \Vake Forest College It would he in some respects the greatest source of !oitrength that could be provided In terms of our flnnncial program.

\nothcr alumnus months ago wrote me thnt he knew a person who might become interested i.n giving $26,000 to \Vnke Forest College. 1 replied askJng him to take me

to call on this frirnd and he did so. In the months since the negotiations with tills friend have been altogether pleasant and I belie\·e thot we shall receive the $25,000 gift.

Another friend, not an alumnus but a Jo,•al friend of \\'oke Forc!'<;l College-, four or' five years ogo gave the College some !'!lock in a North Carolina Corporation. The ~tift at that time was worth $1,000. He advised the Trustees not to ~en it until it should be needed in the building program. \\'c have kept it and it is now worth $3,760. In the meantime we have received dividends on thi!t stock. Xow that wa.s a fine thin~

for that friend to do. I do not know how much the -;lock cost him, but I am confi­dcnt it was much less than 1,000. You !tee, by gh·ing stock to the College he did two things: he got credit for the value of the gift at the time and avoided paying the capitol gains tax on it; and he also ,rn.,·c the College something that had definite proanise of improdng in \'nlue. I am hop­ing nnd praying that many other friends will follow this noble e."ample. It may be that some real estate could be given to the College which if !>old would impose the necessity of paying a cupital f:tRins tax, but which the College can sell without the necessity of puying a tEL'\: ond the donor would recch•e credit on his income tox r('port for the gift of the land nt its current ' 'alue rather than at the price he paid for it. Or it may be that someone could gh·e

(Continued on Page 8)

Page 5: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

In this and

The contract has been let and construction will begin soon on the Chemistry lluilding in which all the sciences 'vill be housed temporarily.

New Frontiers for American Medicine

By ROBERT A. l\100RE, M . D.

Dean, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri

(Substm1re of em address dl'livorod to Bowman Gwy Srhool of l!edirim•

at tlu• 1902 Commo11cenw11l.)

Not !'\O many weeks ago )1rs. Moore, our 15 ycur old son Cnh•in, who exp~cts to be a physicinn, and I were visiting a small rural hospital in one of the countries of Southea"t t Asia, ubout 12,000 miles from where we are sitting toduy.

Colvin unci l were invited to go through the wards in which there were about 15 patit•nts. There was one patient whom I shall nc,•c r forgel. 1n the corner of the men's ward was 8 25 year old married man. li t! wus a perfectly developed, robust, clean cut young man, sprcnd-eagled on a bed consist ing of a solid wood base without springs or mattress. There were no sheets or pillows and u thin rnttan mat was the only item of what we would call linen. H e wa~ swenting profusely and had an smxious c!>.pn:ssion on his face. The heart rute wus ubout 120 as counted from the ''isible pound­ing impulse on the chest wull. Hespirntiuns were about 80 uncl short and labored. I ('Ould not understand him and he could not under:.tnnd what I was saying, but his ap­pealing cyt!li spoke 8 uniYersal language­"Can you not do something for me? I am

desperately ill. I want to live." I glunccd nt the chart held bv our host, and sow a temperature plot with a straight line for two weeks 108 . I started to reach for the chart, but the physician rend my thoughts and said, "No1 he is not receiving chloromy­ectin . \Ve do not have any."

\Ve left the hospital a short time Inter and 1 shalt probably never know the end of the story . But, if l know any medicine, the outlook was poor, and I suspect he died in the next few duys of hemorrhage or per­fornlion.

1'o my mind1 in this simple t rue story there nrc ull the elements of the problem which we of the free world face today in Asia.

Firs t, there is proof that C\'Cry aspect of modern life is ine.xorably tied to every other aspect. Second, there can be no iso­lationism in our attock on disease. And, third, medicine is closely allied to world politics nncl must take its place as a social science in helping to solve the problems of a sick world.

rt io;; this opportunity which I have termed h~c,,.· Frontiers for American Medicine.1·

For the century or more since modern mNlicine emerged from the chaos of mysti­l'i~m. l(•nclership was held in Europe suc­cessivl'ly by France, England, and Gcr­mnnr. Some of you in this room studied th('fl' nnd rt"ceived some stimulation and ~park for your own careers. 1 freely ac­knowll'dgc my debt to Vienna and her medical great for the yenr I spent there in 1931-32. After the First 'Vorld \Var one rein of lendership was dropped and after I he Second World \Var the second rein slippl'd from their g-rasp. If we act now :md nd decisively, America can nssume world leadership, not just for the pride of lwing the leader, but for the pride that we have hnd a part in making the world a better place in which to live.

Just fourteen months ago, the \\7ashing­ton University School of Medicine signed a contract with the Mutual Security Agency of the United States government to assist in one small segment of this new frontier­medical education in Thailand (Siam). Since thl!n my own education on the intri­cn<"ies of modern life has been 8 liberul one.

If someone had told me two years ngo thut the dean's office of an American medi­cal school would be v-itully concerned with a revolution in far-off Thailand, T wouJcl have told him he was crazy. But. in June and November of 1961 and in March of 19521

the long distance lines between St. Louis

Page 6: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUM~! NEW , October, 1952 Page Six

and se't·cral government offices in \\"ashing~

ton Wl're humming with exchanges of in· form ation and questions. Revolutions were rcportl'd in Thailand, we were most in­terested in the safety of our faculty. and everyone was interested in probable causes and possible effects.

Again, if someone hRd told me two years ago that my own life and plans would be influenced by a vote in the parlianu·nt of the Republic of Indonesia, 1 would hn,·e que..,.tioncd the logic of that person. How­ever, this is exactly what happened in :Feb­runrJ nod March of this year. \\'hen the professor of pathology at the medical school in Djnkurt~ Indonesia, learned that I was to be in outhcast Asia, he im·itcd us to visit him. The visit was arranged. but in the meantime the parlinment of hi-. l.'ountry votNl to reject all assistance from the Mutunt Cl'Urity .:\gt•ncy. Inasmuch ""' I was t nnding under orders of ~t.S.A ., there was doubt that I should go to DjokRrta. The difficulty was resolved and we had n most ph·nsnnt visit with Dr Sutomo sand his colleagues nt the medical school for two days.

Let us return to the patlt•nt with typhoid fe\·cr on the \vards of the small hospital in Soulhca~t Asia. You may have drown the infen·rwL' that I think it is the responsihility of the l'niled Stales to supply t·nough chlororuycdin to cure every pntient with typl1oid in the world. In foct, 1 httd hoped you would accuse me of that thought so thnt 1 may deny it \Vhal I reall~· believe is thut we should so help other countries as to HHtke it possible for them to monu­facturt• their own chloromycetin.

It h just this difference between doing it for tiH'm and helping them to do it tlwrn­sd\'es that will make or break our entire foreign policy. To do it for other nations is nothing more than a contiuation of the hated cnlonial imperialism. To help other notions hf'come self-sufficient I the true ~pirit uf the commonwealth of free nntions, which is our objecti\'e,

This commonwealth of free notions is today wnging a campaign against a di">cno.;c whkh threatens to become pandemic nnd engulf n large segment of mankind. In som1• l'ountries this diesense is nlrcudy in epiclt·mlc proportions, while in others ·it is only cndt•mic or sporadic in nature. 'I'hls diseuse is not one of the usual sort such us cholera, plague, or yellow fever nfft•cling the body biologic but it is a disease of society affecting the body politic. The dist·nsc is known as communism.

If physical disease and social diseuse are annlogous, and I believe they arc, we shou ld be able to learn something of how to handle a disco'c of society from a review of how the great epidemic and pandemic diseases of the past hove been brought under control.

------------------------------------------The Conquest of Plague

\\'lwn the world was very large, figura­tin!ly speaking, the world wide sweep or the intt>rcontitwntal spread of a disease was unknown and therefore was no problem. Ench l'ommunity and each nution l'Rmt to live in n sort or symbiosis with its diseuses. To many of them some degree of racial immunity or resistan<'c was established. Complclt•ly isolated communities were rela­th·ely free of rnnny of the diseases which we ft·nr today

" rith the beginning of world trnde and world e:'\plorntion by the eountries of \\'est· ern Europe, the diseuse of one community were curried to another c.•ommunity.

(Dr. 'loore here discu,.scs in detnil the spread to rnuny parts of the world and finn! comtm•..,t of bubonic: pla~rue, mnlarin and otlwr plngues by t>cit•nlific menns and through co-operation of go,·crnments.)

In otlwr words, ognin, the job wns nc· complfslwd not hy i"olntionism but by internntionul co-operation and first nllnck­ing the ngt·nt of dist•nsc nl the point of dcpnrturt• on another contint•nl~ nncl, src­ond, mnkin~ it impo..,sihlc for tht• nJtcnl to ... univc nt the point of clepnrture.

The Technique of Conquest of a Disease

Tn cnda of the two examples <'itcd the conqlu·st hns been at·complished in two !'ootngt·s~ flrst, a careful ... tudy of n11 <."On· ditions undt•r which tlw disca..,c Ol'<'Urrt•d und of the nwt•hanism of trnnsrni-.sion ~ nncl st•cond, currcC'tion of the unfavorable con­ditions which fnvor di\cuw nnd brenklng the eyrir of trnnsmission.

lt is my ~inc<•rc belief lhnt these tech­niques nrc us applicable to the conquc...,t of dis~nsl' of the body politic nco thcv hu,·e hccn of dist•ttst•s of the body biologic. Re­search iuto the funclnmcntot cnuscs nnd proct·s~L·s of clh.turbunccs in society is ju\l us ~o;ounc:l 11s it is of cli~turbnnccs in the heurt, or lin·r. or kidrwys.

I du not propose to know nil the unswt•rs to the questions of why people turn to communism. but I bclic\'t' n•c.-cnt expcrienct•s hnvl' poinh·d out some nnswrrs. ln other worclc;;, w~: nrc in a position to begin the flrst stagl'-"R cnrcful study of n11 conditions un­der wl il'h the disense occurs ond of the mt·chuni'm of lrnnsmbsion.

One rNason is so C\'iclcnl lllllt the Jh'Oplc of \\1cslcrn Europe hnve n SJWcin l nnmc for it-stomach communism. Any individunl or communi!\' of individunls who do not hove enough tc; l'Ht themselves or for thl•ir cllil­dren will lwlieve any promise" made by a propnf.(nndist, no malta how fantastic or impo<i!sihlt• the)' may be. Our gm•ermnent, through General George ~lnrshull. snw the r;~usc und effect in s tomnrh communism und innugnrnlcd the Economic Co-operation Administration to raise the standard of livin~ in Wt.•,tcrn Europe. The result hns been most promising. In each dection since

the '\farshalJ Plan was initiated the per­centage of those \'Oting communistic has decrca.o.;t•d in Italy, France, and Belgium. Here is t'XJlt'rimcntal proof of a sociologic prohlem thnt the degree of communistic support l.!o. in inn·r~e ratio to the standard of livin~ and economic well-being of a populace.

\ sct•ond reason is not so well recognited, but I hclie\·c it has equal validity with the first It is Illness communism. If we ar­rnnt!e the mortality rates, that is, deaths per year per 100,000 living population in decrt•a..,ing sequence, most of the countries nfllictcd by or threatened by this disease of society ·communism· -are in the top hnlf, tmd most countries relatively free of the dist•a.sc nrc in the bottom half. •ro my mind this rclntion is not nn accident of statistics.

"'hat group of mothers who knew that 7 out of 10 hahies born to them would die in infnncy nnd t•hildhood, would not listen to promist•s of '1 ht!lter way of life? \Vhat group of men, whose l•ffil'iency to earn a li,·inJ!" wu~ dt·creascd to half or less because of dtrnnic malaria, Kaln-ntar, or schistoso­min'!'i.is would not welcome un opportunity to Jiq• hdter, prorni~cd by o silver tongued oratur? " 'hat father and mother will sit icllr hy rmd watch their childrt'n die of ~tarvatiun nnd not wish that there were soml' wnr to prc,·ent thic;;? The communistic form of go\"t'Tiltnt•nt cannot pre,·ent this as weB no; the demuC'rntic forrn of gcn·ernment uc;; pnwed hy mortality rntes, but the ~inking mnn dot·s not stop to exnmine the logic of n promise: mack to him.

.\ ample of Health in the Orient

Wl' in thr Cnitcd Stutes with our high stundnrd of living and our high quality of public health und medical care are likt•ly to minimize the situation in other parts of th<~ wor1d. Let me draw n t•omposite pic­ture of u h)1JOthcticnl country or the same size ns tht• l'nited States. thnt is, 150,000,000 from n medicul standpoint.

\Vould we be happy, could we suppnrt our industrial economy, could we mnintnin our stnndard of ll\'illA" if there wt>rc -~2.000.000

victims of chronic mnlnritt in'-.teud of the 5,000 we do hnve; if tht'rt' w(•rc SW,OOO dt•ath~ frorn mnlnria a y('ar instcnd of a few; if the life expectancy nt birth wt•re 27 ycnrs instead of more than 60 yNtrs ~ if there wen• 11.000.000 persons with active pulmonnry tubcr<'ulosis in,lcnd of nn esti­mated 1,125,00()-0.76% in population~ if lht•re were 1,200,000 suffering from lrprosy ins tend of n few hundred; if there were 5,000,000 blind individuals in..,tl•nd of nn t•..,timuh•d 250,000; if the on•r-aH nnnunl death rnte were about 20 per 1,000 liv­ing persons ruther than 10 which it Is; if there Wt•rc I phy..:;icinn per ~5,000 popu­lation instencl of I per 750 ~ nnd if there were 1 hospital bed per 16,000 people In­stead of I per J25?

(Con tinued on Pu~e 9)

Page 7: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

,_ u ~

i:

____ ,_,_· A_K_-_E_ FUBE T COLLEGE ALUMNl XEWS, October, 1952

Beloved Teacher Leaves Classroom After 36 Years as WFC Professor In June of this year Dr. C. Chilton P\.'8T­

son, known ntfectionately to thousnnds of \Vnke Forest students as ·~ kinny Pear­son," r etired from acth·e teaching after thirty·six yenrs as H ead of the Department of Social Sciences. Two generations of Deucons han· already enjoyed recounting the innumerable anecdotes, piquant rcmnrk.'O, and pungt:nl observations of their Pucki~h professor, who inspired, stimulated, amused, and tcnified them at one time or another.

I lis gn·at number of devoted students, his colleagues among the Wake Forest College faculty, and countless other friends will dcrply regret his retirement and wish him many yt:nrs of desened happine..,s.

Dr. Penrson became a member of the ""·1kt· for(>st College faculty in the faiJ of 1916 .• \ nnth·e of the Rappahannock coun­try in th· tidewater section of Virginia. he had n cc•ivcd degrees from Richmond nnd Yak, and taught at " rashington and l .ee und t1l Ya lt> bcfort• coming to 'Vnke Forest. \t the tinw of his ent rance into the 'Vake f"nrt·s t Collc·gr fucuJty lw took O\·er the work of t wo men. Cnder hi~ direction. the So<'iltl Scicnct' D epartment became nnt' of the lor,rc!'..l cll'pnrtmcnt.'\ of the ColleJn.· both in number uf faculty members and studl'nl enrollment. Two of the subjects orhdnall~

tuuJ!ht in the department. cconomks and sociology. now constitult- separah· depurt­mt:nb., the chool of Bu~ine,.., .·\dminis­tration !lnd the Dcpartml·nt of Sociology The Socinl cience Department. noncthe­Ie .. -., nt the time of Dr. P ear:-.on ' c;; re tire­mt·nt continued to be one of the largest of the College.

A n Incom par able Teache r

Or. Penrs,,n wao;. a great teacht'r. llis brillinnt. nnnlytical mind ne,·er fail ed to ~t>pnrnte significant matters from none-s­sential ddnils. \\' hen he expounded on a subject in his informal, deliberative manner, his student'\ lbtcned with rapt attention to his profound wisdom. orne of them mny not hn"e comprehended all that he said but they lbtened any·way.

His method of teaching wa .. bast•d pri­marily on 8 desire to make the ~tud~nt

study, think. and present clenrly and ac­curately his information and his thoughts. \Vhen Dr. Pearson entered his clASsroom th«:>re was always n dead silence. No student wished to att ract attention for fear of being cnlll·d on to recite. The Dol'tor'-. fnce and his e\·cry mo,·e were watched with in­tt>nse ~uspt.•nse and his initinl word mi~ht

in~pire peals of laughter or produce a scen" of Jendl·n j!loom.

\\rriting in 8 re-cent issue of the Studt'nf , one of Dr. Pearson·s students paintrd a word picture of him in his classroom. 'C}iis deliberate, barely audible ">Oice," wrote the

Dr. Chilton C. Pearson

slluknt "i' the perfect me-dium for the sly comnwnb lhnt climax suspenseful situa­ti on!'>.

"Tia· t.•fft"ct nf Dr. Pl·nrson's droll com­nwnt-. and mu-.trntion.;;," l'untinued the studt.•nt. "wouJcl he grenUy ll'"'~t'ncd without hb ph)-~kal as .. t'ls to accompany them " ·hethn cle\·l'loped for the suke of t.'ffcct or n nuturnl te-ndency. there is llll air of e:drt"mc clclilwrntion about everything he clne.!t. J Ji -. word" seem heavily weighed oncl M·lected before: their utterance: thi._, plu'\ his low. di.,tinct \·oice creates the familiar cln"'\room atmosphere with C\!cry student on tlw edge of his seat_, straining to cntch t.•n·ry word u:-. it is spoken."

lie will lung be remembered R!i. he sat behind hi -. Jccturc desk, knees cros:-.ed, both fee t flat on the floor, his thick brow drawn together in a thoughtful, distan t gM.e before h1rning to .:-.peak in low mcllsurcd tones or to chortle over a humorou~.> rcco l1 ection .

"But life in 'Skinny-'s' classes h not con­Si!.tcnlly gny,'' wrote the obser\'ant student. ''Tho:-.e piercing, questioning- eyes nrl" rarely hrou~ht to bear on a student with a calm heart." Good as well as poor student..:; 40sufl't•r C:\.tremc nen·ousness from his in­sistenl'C upon the significance of historical mnterinl, rather than rote recitation. And the fri,:ht e:\.perienced upon a casual ques­tioning i" (t-. nothing to the humility of the awful dny when not one, but n series of probing qu<"rie' are shot at the numbed brain . This may- lost ns long as the whole period, or onl~· a part of it; but the: day has been ruined in either case.,.

Acth·i ties Outside the Classroom

If one undertook to name all the distin­gui!'>lu:tl historians, lawyers, educators, poli­tidan,;; and other alumni who ha,·c been s:rah·ful for the help received under Or. Pl·Hrson', nttention the list would become intc.·rminnbly long. But Dr. Pearson has <"nntrihut<·d much more to the Colle~e and tlw l'Ommunity than his work as a great tt·m'hl'T. From the time of his initial connec­tion with \Yake Forest he has served on the most important facuJtv committees, often o.s <'hairman, acted as adviser to student or­l!&niuitions. coached 5ome of the Col1ege's DIO!->l successful debate teams, and organized ~orne of the most useful institutions in the rommunity. As a scholar he har.; hel·n na linnally rccognit.ed. But beyond these, there has hetn the pervading "spirit of Pearson" which influenced colleagues and students alike to feel an aversion for shallowness and shnm nnd to find joy in the learning process and in creative thinking.

\\'hen Dr. P earson came to Wake Forest Colll'J!c.• to replace Professor E. \V. ikes and \ ssociate Professor Clarence D. Johns, eal•h l:l('arlemic department was known as a. sehoul. As Associate Professor of Political

cience he was the only teacher in the school of P olitical Science, which embraced eight courses in history, economics, govern­ment, and sociology. Although the enroll­ment increased rapidly, no help was secured until 1920. Meantime, Dr. Pearson bad been mRdl· Professor of P olitical Science and chnirmnn nf the faculty committees on the Lihrary nnd on Graduate Studies.

The quick recognition of Dr Pearson's nbility was the result of his excellent trnin­intr ns <l historian and his notable qualities nf lendcrship. Still further training wns

Sl'curcd during the twenties bv n rear o f study rtt the University of P cnns)·Jvnnia, wht.·n· he held the H arrison resea rch fellow­ship. 'Xot the least valuable of his varied t.-'\.pcricnces, which included E u r o p c n n tmvel, was the period of time spent on a rand1 in Texas broadening his knowledge of human nature and developing sk ill in llur!.t·mnn,hip.

During the busy early years as a member of th~ " "ake Forest faculty Dr. Pcar.son rt·prc~cnted the College at meetings of Bupti .., t A ssocia tions, spent a summer nt the hcndqua rlers of the National ecuritr Lent-'Ue in New York, taught in a summe.r :-.es,ion of Trinity College, established a College Book Store, organized the P olilicnl Science Club, and carried on an extensh·e publi.:;hing program. As a member of the ~ntional Security League he compiled a hundbook of information designed to stir the wartime patriotism of the: American people. The Book Store, which he organized

Page 8: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

\\'\hI', FORF.ST C'Oll EGI': \Ll"":\1 '\;E\\'S. Ortohcr, 1952

in lluntrr Dormitory ulong tht• Jines of an nrmy ('Rnteen, immcdiatei~· hl·cnme popular nmong thl" students.

Formed by Dr Pe.trson from tlw lt·lldinl! !'ltucll'nt.s in his clnssc.-., the Pnlilit•nl Science Cluh wns for years the oubtrmding student vrganitnlion on tlw t·ampu..,. lt was hen­thut " 'ukc Fon..•sl dl·bnter!-, condH~d by Dr Pcar"tlll nnd justly uoted for their nccomp· lishrncnt.~. n·cein·d much of their trnining. Till" £·hurter member of this t•luh ns pic­turC'd in the 19J'i lluwlt:r Wl"rl'

Frund!i H . Bnldy, Darlington, S. C. BnsiJ )J. Bo~·d, ~lecklenburg County IHing E.. Carlyle, Wake County J. Uaird Edwards, )ladistm County .James M Haye.;;, \Vilkcs County R,,hcrl L. Humber, Pitt County Chnrlt"S ~1. Kendrick. \\'nkc County .lt·ssc Alfred )lrKaugh: ''· '-""orfolk, Yn. Hubert E Olive, J ohnston ("ounty ,\lhert Clayton Rdd, Donicl~on County

Edwin ( Robinson, S11mpson rounty n,. il ::n. " 'ntkin ..... \\ lt)'JH' C'nunty

THANKS FOR ENCOURAGEMENT

(Continm·d from Pa~-te 1) surnL' luck whieh could wdl he ~pnrcd 1t

thl!o time, and by giving it to Uw C,ollt,·!!c

tlu· tnx could be SA\'Cd, whi<.•h would hcnt'flt t1u: Collt>gc in a definite wn)· nnd make ghin,r much ea..c;;i(• r for the donor!iO.

.\nothcr alumnus and good friencl M1JI·

J!f'~lt·d to me sometime a.a-o thnt nn appt.·al

to u family group in term -. nf the huildin~t

ll ow Or. Pe-arson found lime hetween J91i nncl lfl21 t o see his doctoral d isserta­tion, Thr R~twlju~tPr Jfot'I"Jrll' lll in T'"irginia , throuf.!'h tl:e Ynle Presc.. and puhlish fin• nrtidt'!. in fh(" South Atl(w/ir Quartl'rly and tht· p,.o,., t•tli"!f·' qf tht North ('nrolirta Stnt~ {,ilt rnr.IJ '"'d J/i:tlnriral A~tlnri(ttioll defies tlw imnJ!inution.

Dr P ('u r son hru; ulwnys enjoyed sports. IlL· owru:d thf' fir.,t sl'l of golf clubs in Wake

Fnn·o.,l und led in the con. trul'tlon of a golf cour:.t.·. Tn the amusement of unilinted ob­'>Cr\'l'r!<. he htf!Un playing golf in the field which luy l"R.'>t of Fnculty A\'enue; then ,

with the help of a fen· othL·rs, huilt three hnle. on th(' Durhnm highwny Lnlt"r sL'\

rnorl· hules und also nn attrncti\'e cl ub house, whkh !'.l'f\'l'!) wdl <IS n community center 1;ntil burnl"d hy the "firebu~· in the thir­th:~. Wl'rt' udd(.>'d. ln tlm!'ot' t•arly yea rs mutl'lll'~ with fuculty mcmhl·rs from the l'ninr ... ity of ~orth Curolinn nnd _\ nnd E . Colll'J!l' wt.•rc highlights of the p;ol f season.

Dr. Pt•ur .. nn, who for 11 tinw 'l' fVt•cl Rfi

pru;.rrurn might produce good rcsuJLo., He and I di...c:u .. -.cd the mntter ut so rn(_· length 1111d tlu.•n he helJwd me to nrrnnJ!l' a meeting with t1w family . ..,\ .,. n reMllt Wt: shn11 hnve a n·ry ullra;•th·e und l'XCCcdingl)· import­nut huiltling on llu: Ill'\\' cumpu" donuted by this line f11mi!y group. '\'ow thnt wns a J!•·nuinL· in!ooopirntion nll tht:' wny through. \ litth: hit Iuter I !<. lutll write tl n urticlc

lor tlri" mu~n1:ine concL•rning that pnrticu­lar project. In tlu· nu•tlntime I breathe a pra\·l·r nf thunk..,~iving for frit'nrl~ who are

Pnj!'c Eight

chuirmnn of the faculty committee on .\th­lctlcs, is still an nt~utelr intere ... ted obcoen·er nt many College nthcletic e\~e nts nnd is as competent a Monday morning ttunrterback as nny of his colleagues.

Other institutions and organizations hnve recognized Dr. Pearson's ability as teacher und scholar. For fifteen years he taught in the ~ummer sessions of the CniVL·rsity of \ '"i rginin nnd Duke l'nin•rsity. The edi­tors of the monumental Dirtiouury nf

A mtrirnn Bio_qru1'h.11 turned to him for ~kdchcs of men he knew well. The Univer­sit~· of llichmond elected him a member of Phi Beta Knppa. In recognition of a dis­

tinguished career as an educator, he was rect'n tly clectl"d President of the lli!iOtorical

Socidy of North Carolina.

Dr J>cnrson married Miss arab Cul~om nnd their dnughter, Virginia Chilton, is t.·ntering college this fnU . The family n•o.,idcs in un nttrnctin· coloninl houw on ~orth

Cnlk~c Street.

thinkin,t! Sf.'riou..,J~· nhout tht.• greater \Vnke

Forest Co11egc.

Tlwn I think of thC' m<"n who lutVL• hdped

.... o Yalinntly in cnmpnigns in their oren~.

Surhc of tlll'm hn\'c <.'on tinut•d tlwir t•fforts

through the month" -.inct· the local <.'11111-

pni~:--.,ts were fi~t lnunclu-d. One of them,

E. Z. tines in Asht.•\·illc. hn-; con·rl"d n wide

oren nround hi" town, e:\.tcnding into .,c\'t-ral

countic.-.. stirring up intcrc-.t nncl orgnnizing

Below: Exec uth•e Comm itt ee of the General .Alumni Associati on m eeting in \Vins ton-S nlem Octobe r 4. Left to rig ht, sen ted : Egbert L. Davis, Jr., 1s t vicC·J)rcsidcnt : Dr. Vernon C. T ay lor. Jr., J>rcsident : D avid Britt, 2nd vice-president ; E ug ene Olive,

director of a lumn i ac ti vi ties nnd secretary. Standi ng: P r esident H."' · T ribble, J a mes Mason, Dr. J . R. S a unde r s, A. J . Hutchins, A. Yntcs Dowell, 0. Q, Allsbrook. Dean Pnd en, Rober t D. Hollem a n, Dr, n ea th D. Bum l:'a rdn er . and Vice President Loyde Auker­man . Not J>resen t '' e r e AddiRo n He,\ lett. Jr., Dr. J. Bivi ns He lm s, a nd John Kn ott.

Page 9: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

The \Vnshington, D. C., area .Alumni Chapter meets quarterly. Here members and their families are picnicing in July. An Oc· tober meeting was held in the home of a member with barbecue and an attendance of 75.

committees. \\rhen 1 think of how busy all these men nrc I am doubly grateful for their support.

And now I want to speak of a smaU but growing group of alumni and friends who nrc doing three great things for \\rake Forest. They are giving liberally, they are providing generously for the College in their wiiis, and they are working diligently and constantly to enlist others in giving. \Vhat more could we ask? Two of these great souls in Charlotte are inspiring their friends to follow their superb e.~amplc. Another told me a few days ago that he has recently written his will so as to provide for 'Vake Forest. Still others nrc planning similar action. This is exceedingly important and valuable. It is my pra)rc r that their num­ber will increase rapidly. By giving out of sa,•ings, or out of an estate, one can be sure of a larger and more lasting share in build­ing a greater \\'ake Forest tbnn might otherwise be possible. If a hundred people should put the College in their wills \Vake Forest would huve a strong and enduring guarantee of support.

So 1 am sitting here looking out at the old magnolias and dreaming of the new campus with the lovely new buildings and the oncoming generation of students. As I drcnm I think of these alumni and friencls, and many others like them who are not

only making my job easier but who arc also

hu\·ing a large share in insuring lhc u.ltimute

succtss of our Enlargement Program. May

their numbers increase rapid.ly! If these

lines should inspire any reader to offer a

su{!'gestion concerning a potential gift or a

plan for securing gifts, or a proposal to

dbcuss with me the possiblity of making o

cont ribulion to the Enlargement Program,

1 urge such renders to respond to the im­

pulse at once and write me a letter or

telephone me.

NEW FRONTIERS (Continued from Page 6)

These figures I have given are not hypo­thetical , but nrc the actual figures for India and China.

To Practice Our Way of Life

Many other examples of types of com­munism or the fundamental causes of a turn to communism might be given but these two -btomach communism and illness commu­nism-will suffice at the moment to illustrate mr general thesis: by actual fact the west­ern way of life provides better food and a healthier life than the communistic way of life.

M~· second thesis is that it is not enough that we tell people about this way of life but that we must go to them and help them to learn to lh•e our way.

Let us not forget the lessons learned in the conquest of pandemic diseastl. E'•ery attempt to exclude a disease from our countn· or an,· conutry which depended on is~lationisn~ and a. waH around the country, has utterly fai1ed. Success has only come wh(·n we hnve gone out into the world and helped those who wish to be helped to stop or eliminate the disease there. Plague was not conquered by a. quarantine at our shores, but b)' elimination of the disease from the ships sailing the seas. The threat of )•cllow fever in our port cities was not met by quarantine but by help to the nations of South America to wipe out the disease in those countries.

One hallmark of the intelligent, logical man is that he learns from the past, he learns from his mistakes, and he applies his pro\'en knowledge to new problems.

From medicine, the past experience in the control of disease of the body biologic is clear. We mu. t apply this knowledge in combating a new disease of the body politic which threatens the heritage of the \Vestern

\\'orld from the tune of ancient republican G reece.

The Secondary Problems

.Many have said that a program of this type will create more problems than it will soh·e. Firs t and foremost, a lower mortality rate will create an overpopulation which cannot be supported on the land and then many more will stanTe to death. Again, 1 do not propose to know all the answers to this question but I do know that the density of population in Holland is 6 6 per square mile and they live very well, and that the present density of population in China is JO~ per square mile or almost c)ne-~nenlh of that in Holland. The answer is clcnrly not one of total population but of greater utilization of what is available.

Medical Statesmanship and New Frontiers

There nrc the new frontiers for American medicine. 1~here are the opportunities for .\mcrican medicine and American phy­sicians to become leaders and to enter into the field of medical statesmanship. Political stnte..,manship and Armed Forces alone have not pro\·cn equal to the task-one of the mo!\t important tasks we have·today-to win tht• people of Southeast .Asia into the com­monwenlth of free nations. Indeed, the pence of the world could well depend on it. South(·a~t Asia (that is Indochina, Thailand, Burmn, nncl 1\Inlaya) in other hands, as it was in 19l2, opens the great plains of India and Pakistan, the islands of Indonesia and the Philippines and the continent of Aus­trnJin to conquest.

Medicnl statesmanship is not the only additional weapon at our djsposal but it is a significant one which has not yet been fully utilized. .

To those of you who in a few minutes arc to acquire that coveted designation of doc­tor of medicine, I commend the concepts of mediral internationalism and medical statesmRnship. Broaden your sights beyond

Page 10: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

\\ \KI· FOHF.S'J' COLI FGF .\! t;'l'\l :-\EW • Od"l,..r. 1952

the locul seem·, help mt•dit'inc to take it!' plan· n_,;; n -.ocial ~cienc«.·; m•,i<>t dirt·etly or indin·ctly, physicllll)· ur muraU~·· to hold the fret" world and lhl' paramount ri~hts of tlw indhidual; piny your role in tht· prcscr­Yntiun of n A'O\•t•rnment by und for the p<'ople, not a people by nnd for tlw gunrnmrnt.

In Transition B.r1 A C. REID

l'rnf",·.uor of Phi/o.<oplr,y at Tr'akt Fore.,t College

The rt·mo,·al of \\'ake Fore~t Colll'gc to n difft•rcnt site and the transition of the Col­l<'J.!t• tu 11 m•w situation awaken in some of us clwri..,Ju~d memories and stimulate ... scri­ou .. imnJ!inntinn.

It wn about forty years n~o thnt smnc of U!-., no\\ known as the present oltlt-r mcrnlwrs of the faculty. cnnw to \\'akt• Fon· ... t. In the Collt'gc Wt' found ~rl"al h"nC'ht•r:-. . They were men of unu ... unl inld· lrctual ... tnture- and high ideal.., who knt·W din·ctiun .... understood \'lllUt>"i, and stn·-.s\.•tl quality. These men, ha\'ing ncceptt>d nn ncadt•mic t~nd ethical tru"t frnm )!iants whn prN't·th·d th<·m, e.-.tnhlislwd the ('niJt•J!t', in nputution and in fact, in hurmon)· with Uw Truth. To recnll brit•fly sornt· nf tlwsc mt·n whu hu\"e passed on i-; to nffirm tlw gn·atnt·s' of the ColleJ!C, and mnkt· drar Uw fnet thnt ~?rent teaclwr:-. 11re inclispcns­Rlllt· to a J!Ood school.

" 'illiu m B. Royal moq•d nhnut with ft>chle Jimh..; and pnrtinlly hlinded t•ye . .-., hut his pt•r-;cmulity WR"i strong, his knuwlt:ciJ!C' of Grt•t•k wos profound, and his spirihull "ision wns t'lt•tlr. ,John B. Cnrl)·le taught Lutin efTt•ctivdy, nnd his untiring and sncrificia l dt·\·utinn made him one of our immortals. L. ft. :\till" assigned students St'rinus tasks, tau~ht mnthematics. with firmnt"ss nnd t~xact­ncf>S, nnd snid that existence conforms to a unin·r..,al formula de-.ig:m·c.l by the Di\"ine Mind. Chnrh.~ E. Bn•\\C'r rt'\"t•nlt·d nlike the law:-. nf cht·mistry and the ''ndurin,: '"alut' of n pt•r-.on's Jife. .J olm F I .nn ncHu t•m­hndit•d stately di,:mity as he J!R7A·d at tlw stars ,lflcJ ns he ~poke: in lon~-mt•osurl'd

tont>'> nf the creuthe source of tlw uni\"cr-;t·. R. \\' Sikc.·s moved with ginnt ~tridcs ulong tlw wnys of history, and also t•onfessc:d his tonvictlun that man's world Is n part of a mnml uni\"l'rse.

Oenjftnlin F. Sledd loved greul literature unci philosophy with a passion thnt would not It-t him ~o, and his nffcctiun for the winrHHvt•d wisdom of the agt·s recorded on the printt·d page mode his students hungry for it. !'t•edham Y. Gulley tnu~ht u host of students legal sto1tutcs. und nt the same time he affi rmed that nothing is more cer­tain thnn the existence of ethicnl uhsolutcs in which ~nund legal code" must properly

Wake Fore>! fncultl about 1905.

rest. J. II . GorrcJI worked hurdl'T in tt·uch­ing Frt~nl·h nnd Gumun thun did nn)· of his st udt.·nts; of more impurtnncc, he tnugh t, by prcc.·\.•pt und b)- t.•xnmple, the di~nity

of work, lhc \'Ulue of thrift nnd JHOp£-rty, ond lht• primnc:y of fnultl t·!'t~ per..,onul in­tegrity. ,l. W. Xowdl wus CJniet, rcscrvt.•d and thorough in his work in chemienl sci­

ence; he often ~poke of " the still small

voice" nnd his students km·w thnt he lis­

tened to it. They all r(' ... peett•d him nnd

loved him hecnuse of his unnlfected good­

ness. Jnmt•s L. l.nkc kut•w phy .... ks, und

tht·rl' i"i nu douht thnt t·n~ry per_,on who knt•w l.im reulized that ht• wus n Chrh;tion gt·ntlt•mnn.

J \\' Lynch wns n pnrn~ton of pulpit dr:ctut•nc.•c; he wns a rnrc unci amazing synthr<..is of the wisdom of n o.;l'lmlar and thl· 'bion of n pod nncl th(' ... out of a Christinn. U. B. \\"hitc tnu~ht law so dt·~~rly thnt some of his ~ tatt•mento;. were

UM.·d as nwclds for th<' opinions of the

!':orth Curolinn Suprerut." Court, while his

hnhitual !'.)'11lpnthy nnd grnciousncss c.·oused

muny pcoplt• to feel thnt God called him

Page 11: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

Thaddeus Ray Bowers '71. Left, a characteristic pose; rig-ht, firmly refusing to go into yard for lOOth birthday celebration.

Living for One Hundred Years Thaddeus Ray Bowers, Oldest Living Alumnus

Nobody ~et·m~ to rcmt·mlwr when n " 'nkc Forest Collt-gc nlumnu~ hud the pri\'ilcgc of cnjo~·in~ <l one hundn·dth birthclny celebration.

'J'huddt·u~ ll1l)' Bowers h!tcl that dblinc­lion Jurw II, 1952, when nine sons, thn•t• do ugh l '' r s, twcnty-!'icven grnnclchi1dn•n, twcnty-fi\'c grcnt-grandchildn•n, ;mel many intimate friends and neighbors ns~t·mbled nl th<' Bowers' home near Littleton and lis­tened to n ~lowing tribute rend by one of the sons, Or. Bnrtlette A. Bowers of Ridge­crest.

Tables were set to sen•e 100 guests on the spacious ln.wn of the Bowers' homeplace.

The chiJdrcn, all of whom were present, nrc Or. Bartlettc A., Hidgecrest; J. \\'at-

to preach. Elliott B. Earnshaw combined thoroughnc.~s and kindness; he united firm­ness with love; he joined lhrifl tu souncl prol!'r<'s~: Hncl C\'Cr)' person who knew him r l·SpC'clcd him nnd gained ~trcngth from him. ('Imrie ... E. 'I'Hylor, for mnnr ycurs Presidt•nt nntl Professor of Philosophy. hrn rcl lmmun \'Oices indistinctly and ~poke with quunring \'Oicc. But no mnn l'\'Cr felt that Or. '1 n)·lor failed to hcur di..,tinttly the voic(• of tht.• Lord, or thnt he sopkc in uncertain tones the truth which he lived nnd tuught nnd made the centrul objective of the Colll'g'C. \\'iiJiom Louis Potent wn~ the essence of culture and Christian humili· ty. J-le reflected the high couruge, the illum­inating wisdom, the Jo,•ely st•rcnily, and the solid fuith of o man who io.; a unity of scholarship und 10\·e And consccrntion.

These men represented a " 'uke ForeSt Collcg(• fulJy committed to the truth. They were men; they commanded re.,pcct ancl confitlcnces: tlwy hud a supcrior conception of values; they were inspiring teadwrs.

Tht•y knew educational icknl-. ancl princi­

ples. Tlu.:y stressed liberal education, e~pt'­

cintly the busic courses of study in the

College of Lihcrnl Arts, as foundational to

sound thou~ht, to culture. to endurin,; hif!h

son, Littleton; Ezra . ..-\she,• illt~; ;\frs. B. P. Bowling, DuThnm; Jacob 0., Xorfolk, \~u .;

\\"ilcy P. and Lewi'\ L., Littleton; Dr. T. R., Bristol, T'·nn.; ~Irs. ,J. . .-\ . \\"hitc, Sr., Littlc­t.on; G(:n. C'lnudt• 'J'., \\'Hrrcnton; L. Wal­lnt•c, Norlinn; nnd M. Currie of the home.

Dr. Burtldlt• Bowers, in paying a hcuuti­ful tribuh· to his father and their mother, decca~ed many years ago, mndc, among others, tht• following statement<.;:

"The gathering here today brings back pleasant memories to many of us. It was here that tift• bt'gnn, and the foundation and principles wert" laid down and taught that have borne fruit in the live.s of 13 children. \\~e were indeed fortunate to ha"e lo,·ing, socrificing, and understanding parents.

idc£tl". nnd to professional growth.

These men knew that the preservation of human rights and freedom-. depends upon frt•e ml'n· ITI('Il who are frt·c to .sl·urch, to dist·ovu, to e,•nlunte. uncl to teach. llc­"itrieted only by tin· principlt•.., of tlw truth it , t•lf, thl:'..,t' tea hers mad" \\'akt~ Fon•st College nn im.titution thstt feurles..,Jy sou~ht tht• truth in fucts, in relations, in ntlues, unci in faith; nnd they courRgl'ously pro· e!aimed tlw truth. Such great mind"i and lofty s.ouls mode the Colh·gc worthy of the nnme Christian.

Thc~c men were our tcuchcrs und our friends. \\'e becnmc their coll eague~. B~·

forco tlU'y pn1'tscd on, they pluccd in our hnnds the sncrecl heritage of the College, unrl chorg'('(l us to guard it can·fully. We nrc proud tu bclic\'C thnt we IHt\'C' r~spected their confidence in us.

A few of us, immediate successors in time to tlw ginnts who mnck the College worthy uncl h(lnorccl, arc left. Memories of uur dist·o,·t• ry of that treasure, a treasure of which Wl' ln·cnme a port, mokC' us proud. For the lu·ritngc j.., tlutt of the Truth, given to u~ hy nwn who were clt'\'Oted to the Truth, in the interest of nn institution com· mittecl to the Truth.

"\\'c look back 75 years to a balmy day in June when Thaddeus Rny Bowers and ';\Iary Eliznbeth Dowtin were united in Holy :\l!ttrimony. This union wn.s of tht• Lord, so in l'~tublishing their home they ga,·c God first placl~. They joined the Bear Swamp Baptist Church und under the worshipful influt•nce of this church they brought up thl'ir family.

"Let us pause here a minute to pay tribute lo one of the finest and best mothers that God C\'Cr f!R\'C anyone. She lived for others. c ·pecially her husband, he r children and her God. It would be wonderful if she could be here today. I know that each of us would express our lo,·c and appreciation of her in a bigger way than we did before she went away. I am sorry that she did not live to enjoy the comforts and plt•nsures of life that we could give her now. 'Ve thank God ft>r n wonderful mother.

h\\~e ore thunkful to God for sparing our fnthcr to see his lOOth birthday, and we are glad to ha ve! euch of the 12 living children present with the in·lawsJ grandrhildren, greut·grandchildren, and other rclath•es and friends.

" In honoring our father today, we look hark over thc~e 100 years and our hearts swell with pride for he has always set for us o good e.:..omple in honesty, truthfulness nnd clean li\•ing. He pro,,ided a good home. There was always an abundance of delicious food. The members of this family have always understood each other and they have nlwnys enjoyed a fine spirit of fellowship.

"ln a material way we arc presenting you a ~tift of money. Besides the bills you will find a sack containing 100 silver dollars­one for each year that you ba,•e lived. May the richest , tenderest, and sweetest blessings of Heaven continue to abide with you."

Former College President Dies

Dr. 0.-.t·ar E. Sums, 75, since 1950 belO\•ed resident a nd vice·president of Mars llill CoHcge, died ;\larch 1, 1952, after an illnt·ss of mnny yenrs.

Dr. Sam's cnreer included the pre~idency of C.aro.;nn-i\'cwman College from 1920 to 1927 when enrollment increased by about 90 pcr cent and about $500,000.00 was raised for debts, endowment, and buildings.

For three years thereafter he wns presi­dt·nt uf Bluefield College in \Vest Virginia, returning in 1930 to Mars Hill , in which community he wns raised, ns vice presidl~ nt of the college. As a youth he had helped mnkc the brick used in the early buildings

II is pastorates included churchC'S in llnr­ri!;burg and Lynchburg, Virginia; Johnson City, Tennessee; and churches near ~faTS IJill after his semi-retirement because of ill lwnllh. Fclr the past few years he hnd hcen partially paralyzed, but continued to render

Page 12: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

\\'A KJ;; FORE T COLLEGE \1 l'~l ' I :-IEWS, Oclohcr, 1952

valuable service as fr iend and counselor to Mars Hill students.

\ ftt>r leaving \\'ake Forrst, Dr. ams atlt>ndcd Rochester Theological Semina ry. H onorary degrees were conferred upon him by both C.nrson-Newman and \Vnke Forest Collrgrs.

Dr. Snm~ had been held in highc.!:il es teem by the p«.·ople of )[ars HiiJ, especially clur­ing the yc.lrs of his affi.liction which he bore with the patience of a saint, even though he \\'O'i in constant and intense pain. He

wus n loynl alumnus of Wake Fore!'>t College nnd Rttt'ndl·d the 1-0th nnnh·crsnry o f his g-rncluntinn at the 1938 commencement. Even then he walked with great difficulty and could hardly feed him!,elf.

li e wn, mnrricd in 1906 to Pauline La~ey Com· of Rh·crton, Yirginin, who sun•ives him. Tlu.•ir two sons nn· Osrnr E . Snms, Jr., re.-.enrch associate with Rriltonico Film Company. and Conway nms, professor of mnthcrnotics nt \Ve!ilt Michigan College at Kalamazoo.

Sinclair Conley Shines in Isolation .. I nm ~pendin~ my last year:-. tench­

inJ,: nt ;t most isolated place, Lo~t CoYe." is the way Sinclair B("ll Conley speaks of th(· community where hie; work nnd ex­pl'ric.·m·l".s hn\·c been signi fican t c.·nou~h to lw hc.·rnldcd in feature a rtide c:. publi"hecl in lht.· ('/mrlolft'l Obun.•er, the Orrr 1!JfiJr1 ro /JuiJ.v .Y(U'I, the Snli~lmry P oJf/, tlw RurnR­rill" Rt~trrpri.'le, l.Jialf' )frrgn:-i11r nncl tlw .1 J,f'illr ritiun--Timclc

• \c,·nrclinJr to the Burns\'illC newspaper: "F.nch mornin~r a sun-worn fnrmer up nt .Tnt"k'r. Crt•ck stops his chores nhout o'cloC'k, <'hnnges into his bhu.• suit. ties up n hrlght four-in.-hand and rlriw•s l'ight milt·:-. tn s<· hool, carrying ll hig brown fnldt·r full of his poe-ms .. H e's on his W<l) tn dass at the School of Fine \ rts . a G9-yc.·nr-old coed a t the " "mn ·tn's C'ol­lt•gt· of th<• l'nh·ersitJ of North Carolinn. Goin11 to c:hool in the midcllt> of th~ !ium­UH'r, nr nny time at all, isn ' t odd for him

lw's hct•n in education as a .student and a collegt• lt•nC'hcr a nd a dcnn for more thnn hnlf n <•t.•ntu ry ''

Spt•nking of himself ns a teacher, farmer, nncl pol't, ~1r .. Conley's career includes also tltc follnw ing aCli\'itics in chronologicnl or­clc.·r R. \ \Vnke Fore.!»t College 1907 : prin­cipnl nf schools in Erwin, Tenn., 1907-08; l(rncluutt.•d from Roches ter Thcoloj1iC'nl Sem­inary, 1911: pastorate in Elbn, ~. Y., 1910-IH; pustorntc in Buffalo, N. Y., 1913- 16; a s tuden t in the University of Chicago, 19Hi-211. tenching part of the time in )1nyo C'ollegc. Cl!icngo; n training offi<.'cr of the U S. Yt•te rnns Bun·nu in C'hicugo, 1920-21), an inst ructor in psychology nt the Uni­\'ers lty of Florida, 1925-26; h<.•ad of the de~ pnrlnwnt of psychology nnd education nl OkluhomR. Bnptist University, 1926-27; dcnn of Biltmore College, 1927-a2. Since

thut time he has engaged in scienti fic farm­

ing · rRislng corn, tobacco, alfalfa, purebred

Guern&cy~, Poland China hogs, poultry, bees and fruits.

l\fr . Conley has published poems In nu­

merous newspapers and in eight nnthol-

ogles. Tlwse nn· to he found in the l.ihrnr) at \\'ukt.• Forest.. A \'o}umc of pot.•m-. i!>. now rendy for publicntion.

To t1 ncwspnpt.•r corn·spuncll·nt, )I r Con­Icy slutcd conct•rning hi" work nt tlw lit­tle sehuol wht.•rc he is now lt•nt·hinJ!, thut llf· hus 11 striving for "n nulurHl situntion frc.''' nnd uncrnmped.

"llul I lt·nch them thnl we mut..t not wt in n way that will interft•rc with the other fellow.

"To rnnke education 'lake' in the grnm­mnr ~rnrlco, or in collC'gc work, you've got to sll·p outside the book. \ \'hC'n I teach nrithmi•tic 1 get the prohlcm from C\'cry­dny life--from selling hog., or mcnsuring pl~nks. Give them somethi ng concrete und

they'll he interested."

At the nge of 69 Mr. C.onley finds that

he is really lh·ing. \\' hcther he was teach­

ing in the large unh·e rsitles or In n one­

room school, us at present, his one goal

h1:.., been to find freedom and look for truth nnd he (')aims that he knows it now wherever lu.• sees it. "As long as our minds arc ncth·e and creathe we really lh•e," he stnte~ ..

Mr. Conley is married to Miss ~1ary Lee .. The) nrc parents of the following chil­dren: )fnrgi<.>, age 16: Ri<:hard, age Hi ~Jury Elizabeth, age 10: Kenneth, age 8; Carolyn, ll~C .5; Phyllis Ann, age a; and Jonn Yvonne, age nine months.

)lr. C-anlt•y is considering the possibility of flnding n rural home- nenr \\rin!-.ton­Snlt:m where these children will hove an op­portunity to ntlend WFC. \\'ith such in­J.!''-'Iluity as he ha.s displnyed during the pust ~ear-;, this dream of his does not ap­Jwnr nt all as an impossihilit)" .

AMONG THE ALUMNI nn . .IOfl:-> ALD"ER~IA:--' I'REEMAN,

' IU, nntivc of Rnlcigh who rccctvcd his Ph.D. nt Duke, tuu,::ht at Tulane in "\few Orlt•nns nnU at the l'nin.• rsity of Louisiana at Baton ROUJ!l.', has ,ioincd the fnrulty of Winthrop C'ollo!'e, Rock I !ill, S. C'. Dr . Fn·c.·ulnn taught in thl' Deparlmt.•nt uf Bioi­Of!). nt \\"ukc Forest for St:\·erai yt"'nrs be­fore f!Oing to Loui..,inna. ~Irs. Frct:'mnn is the former Grnrc Beadmm who will be n •nwrnbt•rt.•d in 'Ynkc Fore~t nnd t.'lsewherc n" n writt.·r of di!"tinction. They ha,·e four childrt•n.

K C W!I.KIE, ' II, pn,tor of the Ken­nedy llome Baptist Church near Kin!iiton for thrt!e )"C'Brs1 became ns.,ucintional mis­s ionury of the i\Iount Zion llnptist Associa­tion on August 1. A nnli,•c of Rnlt.'iflh nnd nn nlumnus of )fills Home at Thomn<wille, ~tr. \\'ilkie will work with the thirty-eight <'hur<'hes located in Alnmnnce And Ornnge Counties. lie attended the seminnry nt Fort \\~orth, Texas. At K ennedy llomc he ~(" r n•d ns recreation director nnd wrote a wcc.·kly column for Ch<rrily mul Childrf 11.

~1 r.,., \\'ilkie is the daughter of Rev. nnd ~~ rs. J I. l\'1. Stroupe of Sprue(• Pinl~ and hn.s tnught music nt Kennedy J lome .. Their two children nrc E\·erett, n~-rc 5, and Lou Elll'n, n~e 2. The 'Yilkit•s will mnke their home in Burlington.

,J. H.. 1\JcD .\ ~IEL, 'IJ2, who ftlr u num­ht.•r of y(•nrs tnught school in ccnt rnl nnd cnstcrn North Carolina nnd for the past f'i~ht )'t'nrs has been engngcd in the C"<'nw­tery business in Raleigh nnd Durhum. he~

came a~socintcd in Augu..,t with tlw Over­by ~"'unerul H ome in llnlcigh.

BEDFORD " '· BLACK, '12, Kannapolis, has been exceedingly active in recent months as director of the Special Projects Division of the Young Dcmocrntic Clubs

Page 13: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

itt Page Thirteen

of North Carolina. Appointed to this posi­tion by "'illiam V.'. Staton, '38, of San­ford, former president of the YDC, his responsibility was to assis t state and re­gional organizers and local club presidents in making clubs more active throughout the year. Mr. Black was in a close contest for the presidency of the state YDC. He has been asked to make recommendations on publishing a yearly handbook and a monthly publication after completing stud­ies of the factors inYolved. He has been active in state and national YDC affairs. Largely under his direction every county in Xorth Carolina organized a YDC.

JOHN D. LARKIN , JR., ~9, Trenton attorney, is president of the North Carolina Division of the American Cancer Society. )fr. Larkins has been active in the volun­teer work of the state cancer control group for se,·eral years. He served as state chair­man of the 19·&.7 and 19·18 fund-raising cam­paigns and further demonstrated his organ­izing ability in the successful management of two statewide Jackson Day dinners. In the 1951 General Assembly he !:en•ed as chairmun of the appropriation <; committ<"e of the Senate and was instrumental in securing an appropriation of $50,000.00 for the renovation of a building in Lumberton to be used for a nursing home for incurable indigent cancer cases.

CARI,TON MITCHELL, '43, for the past se,•eral years pastor of the Zebulon Baptist Church and Lieutenant in the Na­val Hf'serve, was called last summer for two )'l'ars of active duty with the Nn\'y. li e had pre,·iously served during the war for almost one year as chaplain in the Nn'')'·

)IRS. SOPHIA CLIFTON PIKE, '52, wife of J. C. Pike, manager of the Forest Furniture Company at \Vake Forest, was amon~ the graduates of the College in Ju.nc. She is the mother of five chi1dren, the eldest of whom has completed two years as a student in the College, two a rc in the public schools and the other two are of pre-school age. H er first two years of college work were completed at Louisburg College where she made an "A" a,•cragc. After <·oming with her husband to \V ake Forest, she en rolled in the College in the fall of 1950. carrying a full schedule with a major in English and a minor in Physi­cal Education. She kept house, cared for her children, made an "A-" a\'ernge and engaged in extra curricular acti\•ities. In the spring of 1951 Mrs. Pike pro\'idc~l ex­tra mont'\' for herself and family by work­ing from. 3:00 p.m. to n :00 p.m. at Bur­lington Mills, a position she still holds. During examination week last year, she set tobacco plants between examinations.

WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUM:\'! NEWS, October. 1952

ARTHUR (ART) HOCH, '51, former \\~ake Forest baseball player, is now re­serve coach for all three sports at Hanes High School in Winston-Salem. He has completed work on his M.A. degree in Physical Education at the University of North Carolina. Hoch played shortstop for the Deacons on the team which advanced to the NCAA finals at \\Tichita, Kansas, before losing to Texas. In the summer of 1950 he played professional baseball with the Raleigh Capitals. Last summer he managed a team in the Canadian League. H e had some basketball experience while coaching an army team during his two ~ ·ears in the sen·ice and played football with Petersburg High School in Virginia.

Dr. Vernon C. Taylor, Jr., '36, Pre•ident

WFC Alumni Association

LlEl' TE:-IAl\'T JA~lES 0. )JATTOX. '16, of Rocky )1ount, left his honll' lnst spr:ng for Japan to continue his scn·ice with the Arm,\· Chaplains· Corps. Afte-r graduating from the Louis\'ille Seminary in 1950, he attended the Army Chnplains' School in N'l'w York and J;er"c ~l thereafter as chaplain nt Fort Eustice and later at Fort Stor.\', Virginia.

DR. D. C. KIRK;\·tAN, '47, who attended \\'nke Forest College one year, graduated from the Ohio College of Chiropody, Cleve­land, Ohio, in 1951 and is now loe11ted in Lexin~rton. Dr. Kirkman left \V FC to enter the ~a''Y where he ser\'ed for three and one-half year., in \V'orld \\'ar 11, spending much time in the Pacific Theater. He is married to the former Pauline Booth of \\

1 alnut Co,·e.

LT. COL. REX L. DOWTJ ', '37, U. S. Air Force officer from Arden, rep orted for duty last spring on the staff of Adm. Lynde D. l\fcCormick, Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic, at Norfolk, Va. Dowtin, son of Mrs. Agnes L. Dowti.n, is an ass is tant plans officer in the staff's plans, policy and op­erations division, was operations officer a nd squadron commander at the Eglin, Fla., Air Force Base before reporting for his most recent assignment. A veteran of twelve years in the Air Force. Dowtin flew on B-29 raids over Japan during \\ro rld \Var II, and last year participa ted in t he Eniwetok Atoll atomic bomb tests as op­erations officer of an experimental ai rcra ft unit. For his combat services he was awarded a Commendation Ribbon for t he part he played in what were the firs t of the peace-time A-bomb tests. Afte r study­ing at \Vake Forest College, he entered the Air Force in 191-0 as an a'•iation cadet . Since then, he has ser\'Cd at Fort Ril ey, Kansas, the Canal Zone, South America, Guam, and state-side stations in New :\lexi­<'o and Florida. During the las t wa r he 'ilso flew patrol missions from Centrnl 11nd outh America. He and his wife. the former :\1 iss ::\Iildrcd Maxine .Mooneyham of Ashe,·ille, han• two children, Rex. Gay­lord , age 6, and Lynn Suzanne, age four nnd one-half.

G. DURHA)l RATLEY, '35, was elected to the position of solicitor of the Red Springs recorder's court lnst summer, a position which he held previously from 1936 to 19\0, after receiving his Law degree at \Vake Forest. Mr. Ratley was associated with the U. S. Ci\'il service commission from 191.2 to 19~9 in Washington, D. C., and in Pennsylvania. From 19l9 to 1951 he served as town clerk of Red Springs.

C. ED\\'ARD HARP, '48, was ordained to the Order of Deacons last summer by the Rt. Rc\'. Thomas H. \Vright, Bishop of the Dioce~e of East Carolinn, in St. John's Episcopal Church in \Vilmington. Before entering \\'ake Forest College. Mr.

harp had attended the Uni\'ersity of North Carolina. La ter he graduated from the Divinity School of Yale Unh·crsity and completed n year of special study at the Virginia Theological Seminary in Ah:xan­dria. On August 1 the Rev. r.rr. Sharp began his ministry as deacon-in-chunge of churches in Lake Landing, Swan Quarter. Sladesville, and Fairfield in H yde County.

RlCHAHD (DICK) McCLEl\'EY, '51, former \\'ake Forest baseball star and na­tive of Chadbourn is now baseball and bas­ketball coach at Chadbourn High School. During the summer he was on the pitching staff of the '\-rilson team in the Coastal Plain League. He will also serve as a~-

Page 14: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

\Y\Kl·: FUllEST COlLEGE .\Il \1'1 '~:\IS, Oclnhcr. 1952

si:-.tunl fonlhnll coach in ('hndlwurn. . \s u hiJ!h ..,chunl studl·nt lw Wit' a o;tar plu~ t.•r in all thret.• ~port!-.. At \\'nkc..· F'un· ... t .\l c· Clt•rwy wnn letter:-. four ~·c.:urs on till' hu ... t·­hull team nnd wn ... •1 n·trular nu·mht·r of th· lt·am thnt pnrlidpah·d in tlw finals of tlw '\(' \ .\ ''-·rit: ... in \\'ichita, 1\.rm.,a-.. Ful luwing hi' J!rnduntiun frnm \\'akt · Fun· ... t )u· siJ!•wcl a prufc!'>:o.ionnl cuntrnt'l with tht· Philatldphi11 Philli1..·~ nnd wns M·nt lu '1\·rn· ll nult· antl then optiom•d tu \\•itsnn so thnl IT miJ!hl c..·untinuc his work for n llllt..,lt·r ut nrts d~tJ!TI.'l' nt En't Curolin1~ t'nllt•~t·.

lit• t·xpt·t·ts to ,ioin Tt•rrc lluuh· in till' ('Ja-.s B Three-I League m·:\t "prin~t. \Jt' Clt·ru.·r is mnrriccl to the fnrnll'r :"\urmn I lnj!ht•.., nf Chndbou rn.

.JOJI'\T 1-l Cl..\YTO~. 'l2, of Ourhruu, i nnw pn•sident of the ~orlh Cnrnlit111 .\c;­:-.nr intion of L1fc Unclerwrilc-rs . I It: luHi pn·vinusly srncd as prt.·~idcnt of llll' Dur­hnm A~sol·iation and as ,·kt•-pn·.-.idt·nt n(

thl' central region of the Slate .\sl'u<•intlun. ('(nylon was the first undcrwrih·r in Jlur­han'l to recch·c Clwrterccl Life l'nclt'rwritl·r

ch:o;iJ.tnnlion and hns helpt.'d orj:!:ttnizt· CJ.U

study g-roups in the Durham urf'n.

\DDISQ;o..' IIEWLETT, 'O J, \l'ihnln~lon,

is in his thirty-sixth year of scnit.•c HS n ml'Olbt..• r o f the New H anover Bourd of County Com missioners. For thirty ·two H'"llrs he hns served as chnirrnun of the ilonrd nnd hns announced his plans lo retire nl the end of this yea r. Mr. llc·w­lett 's position requires his full tinw. 1 l is work is very much like that of n count) manngtr. A new~ item from \\' ilmingtun stntc1t that "l\tr. H ewlctl '!i direction of the board has been marked by his mode rution , his refusal to get excited, his gcnuint•, im­pnrtinl, nnd unremitting fricndlin e.ss to­ward the ot11cr members of the boa rd. li e l111s o faculty for O\'Crlouking, fo r forgl'l· tinJZ" thing~ said in the heal of orgum('nt. .Some of the county coznmissioncr.s, pos t and present, IHl\'C been tcmpcrnmt•ntnl; I lt.•wldt nt·'·e r hus been. li e hns Itt the ollwrs du mo!)t of the talking; hut when he spcuks it is uo, uully to offer sonwlhin~

ncccptnhle to hoth s ides, the logknl l'nd nf the a rgument. Time and ngnln, he hns Joi nt quieti)' unci pa tiently while tlw loud voict.·~ d chlllt!d on either side, lht•n snid in hi ~.; clr)·, !lnt \'oicc: 'Gcntlt-mcn, wlml do ytlu thi~ak of letting this go O\'t'r until next tinw~ Mnybe gh·e us timt· to think nhout it. )l nyhc let us ca lm down u liltlt•. Whnt d n you think of that '' And the loud vokt•s .s ubs iclt·, the heated memhers start ' 'ooling off ' I guess thnfs right, )fr. Add.' they suy. Chnirmnn ll cwlett l:ns ~mid thut his retirement will be de,•o tcd to 'doing n lit­tit.· fis hing'.,.

Dr. Sherwood Githens

Former Wake Forest Professor at Duke

Dll. 11 gnwooo GITIIENS. teuch<r n{ physit•s nt " 'a kc F o rl!s l from 1936 to t!ltl, hns been apointcd Chief or the 1-:lt·t•trunic:, Brunch, Phy~icttl Sc..·ic•nccs Di­vi ... inn, Oflil'C nf Orclnnll<'C H.e!-icnrch nt Dukt• l' nin:r.s it~·. \ nnth·(' of Philndclphin, Dr. l;ithens did unclcrgraclunte work in mulhc­mntks, php.i<.•s, nnd chcmi~try nt Buckrwll l 'n h·t•r:-.ity, sct·uring his A.B. d egree tlu.•rc in J9:ll. IIi!. Ph.D. degree followed in 1986, nt tlw l'nin:-r:,ity of ~orth Carolina. lie t·unw..: tu OOH from Baylor llnivcrsit)· nt \\' ru.·o, wh'-'re he ·has been professor nnd d111i rmnn of the Depnrtmenl of Physit' .. , sin<'t' 19 19. During the..· wur, lw Wit' nl­lnl'lwd to the \ ir l;oort•c ns in,trul'lvr in ttlfl'rHft l'!t•ctrical systt.·ms, Air Corps 'l'l'l' h ·

nicnl Command, nl C'hunutc Field, Ill., ond lnh·r nt Sht•ppurd Field, Tcxus. From 1912-1/'i , Lc..· M.' rn•cl nt ll urvurd Uni\'cr.sity II'

lt •t.•turt• r un l'l ed ronic~ in n trnining prt>­~rom in l'OmmunicHtion cngincerin~; for rndnr ullict· .... Luter, he continued ot ll nr­, ·nr<l duing resettrch in comll)unicnlion t•n­~-tilh't•ring nt lht.> Cruft Lnbornttlry, nnd us nn inst ruetor in graduutc phy~ics nncl com­muuit•u tion engineering. From 19l6- l9, Or. Githt.•ns \\"ll" u research physit.'h.t ut the John~ llopkins Applied Physiel-t Uaborn· tory, Siln•r Spring, ;\lnrylund, doing tt•chni­cul liuison work in the field of bruidccl mis­flile rcst•urch, which included organi<wtion of the Solid Propellant lnformulion A~cncy 1110 u pooling nnd distributing ngeney for scientific liternhirc in the propcllnnt Oeld.

Pnge f'ou rh•en

I•; I)\\ ARD D. (;o..'ED) Cll \\I PIO', '50, who:-.l' popular " \\'a..x Trnin '' pruJrrHm used to lw lwurc.l in Hnleigh over \\'~ \(), now i~o> ('hid of tht• radio section at \lwrdt·en P rn,· inJr Grnund, ;\fa ryland. 1 h~ dnt•" fnur ~how.., w._:ckly m·t·r " ' \SA for till' Prn,· in~o: (;rnund. Pfc:. Champion, son uf '\I r .... Snlh \\ Chumpion of ll7 X. :.\ll'Dowdl st., Hnlt·il!h , is married to the former Pul!c Wt•n th l• r .. by of Ruleigh.

1311 L GEOHGE, '52, Dil-L ~I II I b~ R . ','i2, nnd 1~ 1) B ll.A DLEY. '1)0 , forml'r Dl·n­t'on ~ ridiron ~tars, nrc plnyinl! with tlw ChiC'nJ!o Heurs thi~> scnson. On Sl·ptt•mhl·r f) 111/lll). ~o rth Cnrolino fun s sow the thn•t· uf tht·m in action when the fir .... t proiC'"s­:-.innu l footbnll game in N"orth Cnrolinn WHS

pltayt•d in the Duke studium. Tht· llcnrs cldt:nh•d tht• Philndclphin En,~tlt· ... hy n st.•orc of :11 to 7. Bill )·JiiJc-r. the forme-r Wuke r•~u r,•-. t fuJJbuck, picked up thirty· thrct• ynrd-. in fi n· tric..., nnd wus the Bt'urs' big­~e .. t indi\"idunl ground gniner. Both Gt.'or~t·

nnd Brndh•y sow con!->idernblc action in the guml..' unci .'i hnrc-d gencrou~ly rt.•~,ponslhilit)

for the win o\'l•r the Eugks.

CIL\RLES .\ . IIOSTF:Tf Ell. ' 19, who hn ~.; pra<'tkf'd luw in llneforcl :-.incc hh. g-rnriuntion from the Low School nt " 'nkl' Forc•st , wns <l ppointcd by lm.urHnt.·l· C'om~

mbsioncr 'Vnlclo Check, ':·:U, u ... l' hil"f dqmty t•ommis~ioncr of insurAnce. ll o~tetlt•r i'> n son of Mr. nncl ?.lr!-1. Bnrl ll ostclll'r of Jlnlrigh, n n·lcrun of \\'orld \\'a r I I , und hns been net in· in ch·ic and politicnl n ffnirs ~ in('t• beginning his pructice in Hneforcl.

.\:'\'"TF'ORD 1\1 \HTI:X, .JH ., ' 17, "l'n of ~lr. nncl ~fr-.. Snntford )JHrtin of \\' Jn..,tun· Snlcm, Wlh appnintf'"d n~ct•ntly t h n..,..,i~.;tnnt

in llw dt' ' t•lopnwnt JHilgrnm nf '-:orth Cnrulinn StHte Collt•gt· in Hnlt•igh. \ ('l'Or(l­inJ: tu C'hnncdlur Hnrn•)..,un-, ~1nrtin will wurk on \"urious prnjet.'l-. of thl· I)P\'l'lop­mt.·nt Cnuncil, int'luding till' t'nmpilution of uffkiul collt•gt' publknlion ... i"""'-'d in t·on· lh'Ctinn with thl~ Couru.:il 's progrnm. h·· l'orclin~ to thl• unnoun('t'mt·nt, tht• Dt.•\"dup­uH·nt Cuunt·il is un or~wni1.ntion ci,.,·tltl·cl to the long·rilllf!l' n.ch'lllll'l'I11Cilt of tht· C'ullqn·. ' l' lw Cuunl'iJ'.., :-.l'('n•tury i' 1.. L. R nY , ns si,tnnt to the ChtuH!"f'llor unci dirt•t· tor uf fnundnticm;,. Murtin rccci\'t•d both B. A. uncl ~1. A . dcgn•t•s at \\'nkt• Fort•..,t, tnu,:t"hl l •: nJ.{Ii~h nnd .inurnulism unci M'rvt·d "' pub· lil'ity (lircctnr of Gurcln(•r-Wd1h C'olh•~c.

nncl wus infurnHttiun clin·l'tor for the \:orth Curolinu Alcoholk Hl'lmhilitution Pro,:rnm uf the :\urth C'nrolinu I £o..,pituh Bourd of Control be fort• H"o,uming hi-. prt'"t•nt posi­litm. li t• wu.s former)~· editor of lllt' tlllrJry,

North Curolinn's fir~t journRI on nlcoholism. It t• hns hnd thret• yt•nr-.' sn\"iCt' in the l '. S. Army. Martin '!' fnthn has ll('t'll editor for mnny ~·cur~.; of thr " rinqon-Solcm .fournnl

Page 15: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

nnd i .... an alumnu .. of \Lak(' Fun· .. t C'o~.,Hege of tlu• cJa..,., nf 1911.

)IRS. RO~ I LD C. !I ILL, ' 17, fonncrly F.\·d ,·n Pittmnn, ha .. ht•cn appointt:d along with. her hu .... bund by the Soutlll·rn Bapti'\t ForciJ.!Il ~lh ... ion Board for mission work in Ttudluncl. llcre they will spend five )'eurs hcfon· rdurning to thi~ country. The.'· and tlwir two l'hildrcn. Robert Dnvicl and !":eal Timotin·, !>ollilt•d from Snn Frnndsco Sep­tcmbn. 28. Their fordgn address will he 5 I Suludnt•nsr Road, Bansrkok, Thniland.

WI LBER D . CO~~- "19, <>f Zebulon, hos been etnnmis.;.ioned a .... econd lieutenant following ,::rncluation from the 26-wcek En­srint•cr Officers Candidate chool at the ~\rmy'.;;, Engineer Center, For t Belvoir. Y a. Before cntt'Ting the Army fifteen months ngo, Lieutenant Conn was a ~tucl,•nt at \\~nkt• Fore~t Collegt" and was employed by Snnrlt·rs )t utor Company in Rnleit!h.

F IR ST I.T CH AHLES II . T AY LOR, 1 ~9 .... on of ~l r. und ) frs. Paul Taylor, 706 X C.ollege St., K in:-.ton, hn"' been assigned to tht> 7th -Infantry Dh·ision ru, the n~sbl­ant ~t11 ff judgt• ad,·ocntt>. Ht• previously se r n~cl with the judj!E' nd\'ocatt' st•ct ion in Eisrhth .\ rmy headquarter~.;. A vdcran of \\•orld \\'nr 11, he was with the 32Hh T roop Cnrrit•r Squadron, C. 5. \ i r Force, scning in llu1~·. France nnd Germany and la tt"r Httt•ndcd tht" judg-t.• adYocnte ~chool at For t )l n·r. Ya, His wife, the fo rmer .Jenn Joyner." ' t9, lin•!. at ~2 H oH)· .r\ Yenue, \\"in~ton-Snlcm.

C I PT I! ~ OSC.I R L. .I PP, ~L D. "17 R owrnnn G rnv Schoo] of ) l cdicinl·. \rmy .. u rsrt•on, whos.c wife lin•..; at 910 C'our tJund

tn·d, Gn·cn..,boro, rccentl~· nrrh·t·d in .Ta­plin from Kore:1 and reported for duty nt St..'llChu. C'apU:•in Sapp j, 8!'.'-ii-'11Cd to the mt•dknl M'Ctinn of X \'' 1 Corp" ht•adquur­h•r... H t· .. t•ncd in K url'a from .Tune 1951 to ;\ l ay of thi., n·nr, winninl! the Rrom~e Star ~ l t•clnl. J-1~ wm. graduntcct in 19 l7 from tlw nnwmHn Grny Sdwol of )fecli­cirw nf \\·ake Forest C.olle~t·. llt.'fon.• en­lt•ring llw \ rmy in Apri1, 1951, lw WIL' a prncticinl! ph)·sicinn at Guilford C'ollt'~e.

li t• j, a nwmlwr of Phi Chi ) h•dicul Fra­tl'Tnih, till' \ nwricnn )J edicnl .rhsncint ion nnd till' outhern ) ft•dical .\ ,.,ocintion.

COlli'OR ,\f. RI CH IH D II OWLE , .JR., • Hi, whn .. e wife. L uuist.•, and pu rcnts lh·c nt 20.1") \\~<-,t End BouJe,•n rd. WiTt!.lon­Snlt·m . rt•t.•c ntly nr r in-'d in Kort•a and wuJo. aJo.siJ!Ilt'cl to tlw Fifth R t"l!imt•ntotl Combat T t•am's )h·dit•ld Compnn) l l i .. unit hn!-o -'UJ purlt:cl t'H" t Y dh·ision in Kon•a :-.incc ar­r i\ iiiJ: in the combat zonc in AUJ!U't• 1951. Cn rpornl I low lc, who Ht rivt'd in Kon•n on \I n\· 17 cnh.•rt•d t he Arm,· in Dect.'mbt•r , ~ g;;( l, nnd rc:-ceh·ccl ba...,ic tr.ninin~ at Camp P olk, l .uui.,iann.

New Faculty Members

Following- is n list of new fru:ult)- nwm­bers now teaching at \\•akc Fore~t .\ few of tht·m nrc replacing teaclwrs who han· either resigned or are on lea,·t". Otlwr~ an· being add~,.>d to the faculty to meet the incrt'R'\inJ! dcmunds of n Jnrsrt•r .student body :mel to offer additional rnnr~ .. ·~.

PA l'L S. ll O!H~SO~. \ cting Din·ctor of ~1 m .. ic. Dr. Hobinson is from Xc-w \ \"il­mington. Pcnnsyh•ania, when• lw rf'cch·t'd his Bachelor of Arts degree from \\'e..,t­min..,tcr College, graduating with the set.•­ond hil!hc .... t honors in hi .... cla..:o.;. He it. n Bachl'lnr of )l usic graduate of the Curti~;,

lnstitult.• of )l usic where he majored in orguu. li e rccei\'ed tht' clegrt·c~> of ) l n,.ter of Sacred ~~u~ic and Doctor of ncred )1 u"tic f rom l'nion Theolog-ical St.·minnry in New York. Dr. Robinson has sen·C'd us church nrgnnbt fur many year.-. and has bt•t•n urgnnbt at Duke l;nh·ersity durinJ.! 10 summcr :-.c"t<;ions. He comes to \\.nke For­e!-tt from the eniversity of Tc.·xns where he t<lUJ,:ht uq:wn in the Depnrtmt.•nt of ' fu..,ic.

) !l" R RAY KE~~ETH COX . \ cting A~sodntc Profes'ior of Busincs., \ dmin­i~trution. :\l r. Cox recched the Bachelor of Scienct• nncl the ) l aster of Business \ d­mini!..lrntiun degree" from :-..rorth Te-xas State C'ollel!e. lie expects to n·cc-h·e the degr('(." of Doctor of PhiJo,.oph)· from the l'nin•r-,ih· of Texas wlwre he hn.;; st.·rvcd as purt-time \ o:;..,istant Profeco:.;;ur of ) fnn­agcnll' nt and Stati....,tics while t.>Tl~llg"t'd in g rnclunt c.• studit.•s.

C. II. RI CHARDS, J R ., Associate Pro­ft.•ssor of Sot'iul Sciences. ~lr. Hichards is u g rad untt• of Texas Christiun eniH•r:-.ily and hu~ rt•c.·eh·ed hoth his )1astcr of _\ rts and Doctor of Philo~ophy degret•, at Duke L'nin•r ...,itv. Jle is n member of Phi nctu. Knppu R;ul wns a Fellow of the General Educution Board whiJe studying nt Duke where ht· ulso serYed a., A .. si!<.tant Profes­sor flf J>oiitical Scic.•net".

lll ( ll.\ llD D. Gl l.Ll \~1 •• JH., \ ,soci­ut t" P rofessor of Law .. \ llnch~Jor of Arts and Bnchdnr of Laws g raduate.· of the L"ni­' 'c r ...,i ty of \~irginio. )lr. Gilliam spent two \"Car .. n-. a G rndunte Fellow in the Y ule l .TniH•r.,i ty Luw Sdtuo1. H e hus .;.t•n·cd tls

Court J.iuison O ffice r with the U. . A rmy ) l ilit n ry Government in K or1..•n. II <.• comes to \ \'oke fi"'«) rcs t from t he Unhcrsity of Kcntuckr where he has been A!>sociatc Pruft· ...... o·r of Law. D ean \Veathers stales thnt hl3 broad legal e.xperience both in t he prnctict• and jn go,·ernmcnt scn ice emi­nently qualifies him for !<.t r englheninJ! the fAculty of t he \\'ake Forest Lnw chool.

Wti.F HED ,J. RI TZ, . \ ssiJo. tant Profc3sor of Law. A graduate of \Vashinbrton nnd

(Cont inued on Page 16)

Or. J ames C. O"Fla he r t)

O'Fiaherty Author Of Learned Volume

Wakt• Fort-sl profl!ssors carry hc<ny classroom dutit•s, hut many uf them find ti1m· fur 'cholnrly rc~earch nnd wrilinf! for puhlirutinn in ma~tnzines nnd buoks.

l"uity i11 L1111guagi · .1 Study ill thr

Phifmruph.ll of Jollmw Geor[l I/nmnu11. is the weif,!hty titlt· of the equally "t.·i~hty work of Dr. ,J amt.·s (. O'Fiahert)· of the Dcpttrt­mcnt of German of \\"akt• Fort•sl Collc-gt.• and publi,hed h~· the Departnu·nt of Ger­man uf tlw enh·ersity of ~orth Cnrolinu at Chnpc-1 llill. This \'Olume b the sixth of a snies in the Univer<:.ity of i'..-orlh Carolina Stuclit.·..., in Gl"rmnnic Lnngullgt.·~ uncl I.it­l"rntun·s.

Fril-ncl 11nd contemporary of lmmunucl Kant, Hnmunn was a German philosoplwr, philnlnf!i<:.t, and tlwologinn who...,e wider in­llut·nc.·c.· in Europe than in .\ mnica hno; ht.•en n•flt•t:h•d in the thinking of .. uch men us (iu.·tlw, Kierkt·gaarcl, und more lntdy by Emil Brnnnt.•r.

Proft··:o.t)r ()'Flaherty'~ hook hn' tlw cn­dorst•nwnt uf some of the lwsl II ttmann "cholnr..... \monv these nrc Profes-.or \\'ni­ter l.u\\ ric. t.•minf;'nt Kic.-rkt·gnnrd sd10lnr and hioJ!rapher of Hamann. who lup;. writ­ten an introductory note to O'Finhcrty•c;; \'olume: nnd Erwin )f etzkc. nhlc Gnmnn nu thority on ll amann, who rend the manu­scrip t nucl t·xpresscd t.•nthusiasm l"nnccrn­ing- t ht.• \ alut> of O'Fluht•rty\ work. It is not t•xpcrted thut such 8 ''olumt• will find widt.• 1111tl pnpulnr audicnct•. hut it i..., al­n•J&d)' n·C'nb'1li1.l·d in "l"holurly circle:-. u-. n di.;.tincth t' contribution to the undt>r .. tnnd­in~ nf tlllt!' who_ .. f' influenct• upon thought and it.. t·xpn•_.,.,ion in lnnf!'URJ!t" hu-. bt.•cn con!<.iclt.•rnhll•.

\\"akt.· Fl)rcs t College nnd its alumni np­pln ud Or O'Finhcrty fo r hi._ achic.~n·mcnt.

Page 16: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

W.\KE FOREST COLLEGE ALU~t 'I :-'EWS, October, !952

1-1 is tent•hing and infJuence as a member of the \\·ake Fort·st faculty since 19~7 have het>n cfft•ctive and wholesome. He rc­cein~d his Bachelor 's degref' from George­town Collt•gc (Ky.), an M. A. degree from the Vni\'C'rsity of Kentucky, and a Ph. D. from the University of Chicago. He has studied nlso at th(' Unh·ersity of Heidel­berg and at the Southern Baptist Semi­nury For one year he was an instructor in Gcore:ttown College and has had some )·car ... of experience as a pastor Mrs. O' Flnherly is an artist of ability and has dont' ... n~e excl'llcnt portraits .. They and thdr ·un Dan have become real \\rake For­t·:-;h;r .. nnd their many friends on the cam­pus and in the community have receh·ed tlu·rn into the family in the hope that they will bt~ permanent members.

New Faculty (Continued from Page 15 •

,-ersit)· Jo'cllow nod research assistant. \\'.\LTER n. HEIL~lAN, JR., Instruc­

tor in Romance Languages. :'tlr. Heilman grnduatcc.J at Davidson receiving his M. A. degree from the L·nivcrsi ty of Tennessee and is n candidate for the Ph. D. degree at the Cniversily of North Carolina in 1953. At Chapd Hill he wos an instructor in Spanish. H e has traveled in England, France, Belgium, Germany and Italy.

KENNETH KEETON, rnstructor in German. An A. B . graduate of George­town College and a Master of A rls gradu­ate of the University of Kentucky, Mr. Keeton comes to ·wake Forest from the Iotter institution where he wns a graduate assistan t .

GENE \V, MEDLIN, Instructor in Mathcmutics. A magna cum lattde gradu­ate of " 'ake Fores t College and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Mr. ~Jedlin received his M . A . degree at the University of ~orth Carolina and expects to receh1e the Ph. D. degTee in 1953. At Chapel Hill he was an instructor in Mathematics.

CECIL W , ALFORD, Instructor in So­ciology. A Bachelor of Arts and Master of .. \rts honor g·raduate of Texas Christian L'ni\·ersity, Mr. Alford is a candidate for the Ph. D. degree at Duke in 1958. He has taught pre\·iously at T. C. U. and at

Page Sixteen

\\'nke Forest. H e was a lso a departmental as~i!'.tant while doing graduate work at Duke.

E~!METT W. HAMRICK, Instructor in Religion. ~1 r. Hamrick is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and has received his Ph. D. degree from the Duke University Dh·inity School. He is a Fellow of the American chool of Oriental Re­search in Jerusalem, and comes to " rake Forest from a year of study in P alestine. He is o member of Phi Beta Kappa.

:-'AN LEONARD, Instructor of Re­ligious Education. Miss Leonard, n grad­uate of \Yake Forest College, received her M . A . degree from Yale University. She comes to 'Vnke Forest from Charlotte where she was Minister of Education for the Elementary Department at Myers Park Baptist Church.

LAWRENCE HIGHFILL, part-time Instructor in Philosophy and Psychology. A graduate of \\'ake Forest College and of the Southern Baptis t Theological Sem­inary, Mr. Highfill has taught pre\·iously at Mars Hill and at \Yake Forest. He comes

from Duke Unh~ersity where he has com­

pleted his courses and resident require­

ments for the Ph. D . degree.

Lt"t" t:nhe rsity and of the L a\v Schools at the U nhe rsity of Richmond and at B ar· \·ard. )lr. Ritz e."(pects to receive the S. J D. dt.>p-ree nt Har\•a rd upon the completion of his disse rtation. H e has had experience ''s D irt·ctor of Research and Industrial Di­rec tor of the Virginia tate Chamber of Commerce ond os a member of the Indus­trial Committee of the Advisory Council uu \~i rgi ni n Economy. During ' Vorld " 'ar lJ he served in the U. . Air Force. ll is experience in the field of taxation and v.rrit­i n~ qualifies him to do excellent work as a tclll·her of Taxation, Negotiable Instru­ments, Conflict of Laws, Legal Bib1iogra­phy a nd Criminal Law.

Loss of Professor Lake and Mrs. Paschal

TIIOM \ S J TURNER, Assistant Pro­fessor of Physics. Son of the late Dr. James B. Turner, recently pastor of the First Baptist Church of Laurenburg. Dr. Thomas J. Turner receh~ed his B. S. de­gree at the University of orth Carolina, ~~ S. degree a t Clemson College and his Ph. D. degree a t the University of Vir­brinia. Before coming to " rake Forest he was assistant professor of Physics at the UnhTersity of New Hampshire.

)IAUY FRA 'CES McFEETERS, In­structor in French. A .tum,ut cu.m laude: graduate of \\1 ilson Cotlege, Miss McFeet­ers recehed the l\1 . A. degree from Syra­cuse University and completed there also the course requirements for the Ph. D. de­gree. She received the French Government Scholarship and the Fulbright Tra,rel Grant for a yea r of study in Paris. At Syracuse University she was part- time instructor of French and Spanish.

NOBLE E. CUNNI NGHAM, JR., In­structor in Social Sciences. An A . B. grad­uate of the Univers ity of Louisville and n ~las te r of Arts and Ph. D. graduate of Duke University, Dr. Cunningham has trav­eled in England, Scotland, Holland and France. 'Vhilc at Duke, he was a Unl-

At the age of 91 Professor James L . Lake, teacher of Physics at 'Vake Forest Collt.·~e from 1 99 until his retirement in 193:2, passed away at his home on Faculty A venue September 1. In recent months in­firmity had confined him to his home, but he will be remembered by almost every liv­ing alumnus ns a familiar and well-loved figure either ns teacher in the classroom or R<t superb gentleman on the campus and in the community.

For many of his ~~ounger years Professor Lake sang in the " 'ake Forest Church choir and wn~ n member of the famous fa culty quartet, nlon#r with the late Drs. \\' . L. Poteat, Charlc." E. Brewer, and Profc..~!;O r Darius Eatman. Later members of the quartet incluclcd Professor J. Henry High­smith nn cl Dr .Hubert ~[. Potent. Profes­sor Lake's cl<•ar tenor voice of the earlier clnys increuscd in depth ns he become older, but he continued to sing 'vith zest n · n memlwr of the congregation until two or three years ago when weakness made his attcndunce nt church irregular und, more rcr~ntly, impossible.

In the classroom Professor Lake was tre­mendously interested in his students, as well as in the subject matter he taught them. By precept and example he c.xerted the wholesome influence of the fine, cul­tured Christian gentleman he was. Until the ' 'c ry close of his life he found pleasure in tulking of Christian faith and its oppli-

cation to 1ifc. ::'\eighbors and many of his former students "isited him often in recent ~·ears and he found in all of them great delight.

Only las t commencement announcement was mude in thr alumni meeting that Pro­ft'Ssor Lake receh·ed his Muster of Arts degrcl' at Hichmond College uv~n('l years ngo! He did grnduate work at Chicago and Juhm. H opkins unive-rsities. Before coming to \\'ake Fores t h(' taught for brief periods at L' rsinus College in Pennsylvnnia and at Bethel College in Kentucky. But it was at " 'nke Forest that he in\'CSted his life, reared n fine family, and spen t his year~

of retirement as an honored and beh,\·cd gentleman.

Professor Lake is StiT\·i\•cd by his widow, Virginia Caldwell Lnke, three sons and two duughters- ,Jnmcs L., Jr., of Alamogordo, l. ~1.. John C. of Grenada, 1\Ii.,.s., T. nc,·­

erly, Mrs. John Lake, and Mrs. Grady S . Patterson of ·wake Forest. There nrc a lso eleven grandchildren and two g rcnt-grnnd­childrcn.

~IRS. GEORGE W. PASCHAL Most or the lh·ing alumni h1n·c known

Dr. George \\'. Pn:.ehal and memhn'\ of his fnmily. Mnnr of thC"m huvc knO\\*n that Mrs. Paschal had been in ill health for the past scvf'rn l year!-' and wns eonfincd most of the time at home. Her passing cnmt• on September 16.

Mrs. Paschal came as a bride to the

Page 17: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

1111

at

rin of

ha;

llk~

J ..

,,

\ Vnkc Forest community in 1905 where she ..,pent the re"'t of her life and won the af­fection of ht:>r many friends. Her husband, profes~or l'mt•ritus of Gret•k in the College, ~uffered nn accident more than two ycnrs ngo resuhinll in a fractured hi1> which has kept him \'irluully in confinement since thul time. He nnd the following children sur­\'i\'e ~lr~. Pnschul: Laura Helen, Catherine, nnd )lnry of \\'nkc Forest; .Mrs. Emmett S. Lupton of Gre-ensboro; Robert Allen, Paul Shorey. and Harry Edward of \ Vakc For­l'.'.t; GcorJlC \\',, Jr., and .Toe! Franl'is of Raleigh, nnd Richard of Burlington.

~nti,·e of Marion, S. C., Mr~. Paschal was formt.>rly Miss Lauro J\llcn, daughter of the late Re''· and )Irs. Joel 1. Allen, and a graduate of the GrecJl\'ille \\'oman's College, now n part of Furmnn University. Both Dr. J>nschnl and all the children of the family recci\'ed degrees from \Vake Fort•st College.

Among the Alumni (Continued from-Page 15)

Fln T LT. WILLIA~f P. SHORE, .In., \50. who!-c purents live at 221 \Vc"'t Street, Wim.ton-Snlcm, hns been named inlclli­genct· officer ( -2) of the Second Battnlion, 160lh Tufantr~· Regiment. Shore, who ur­rived in Koren Jns t N'ovember, wn-s rnlled into federal ~cT\·ice from the ~""ntionnl

Gunrd iu ~\ ugust, 1950. lie first entered thr .\ rmy in Mny, 1914-. During \\'oriel War 1 J he served twenty-one months o,•er­scns in the Mediterranean Thentrc where lw wns nwnrclcd the Bronze Stnr )Jcdnl, Pnrph~ J I cart, nnd Combat Jnfantrpnnn Bndgc. Licntcnnnt Shore received his corn­llliS..,ton nftt~r grncluuting from Officers C'nnclidoh· School nt Fort Benning, Georgia, in P'l'hrunry, 19 1 L Mrs. Shore lives nl 626 Sun~ct \ vcrult', A .. llt:boro.

DR. E. B. LATTIMOHE, '93, Shelby, was nnmed for the second straight ycor "General Prnctitioncr of the YeAr" by the Korth CurolinA Medical Society in its meet­ing ln~t spring. Thi~ ma¥azinc carried a hi­o,rraphicnl skctd1 of Dr. Lattimore nftcr his fir~t ~clcdion for this honor. ln 191; 1 Dr. Lattimore cnme within a few \'otes of election by the .\mcrican .;\lcdicnl Associ­ation nc... "General Pntctitioner of the Year."

GEO RG E W . COGGIN, '0 1, retired lnst summer ns stntc supcrvi.sor of trodc and industrial cclucnfion. ~Jr. Cof!gin begun his work with the State Depnrtmt'nt of Public Jnslrurtion in 1919 when he W0'5 ght:>n the task of setting up a program of trade nnd industrial educntion following the pnssnge of a federal net providing for n program of vocu tlonnl l'ducation in the various states.

Chaplain Ra)mond Long, '32. Top: (I) Chapel at Ladd AFB, Fairbanks; (2) \\ith Eskimos. Bottom: (1) On Bering Sea "ith Eskimo and sea ls; (2) with his men at Nome.

Following gruduntion from Wnkc Fdrt•st College in l!l0 1, Coggin did grilduute \\'Ork nt the l 'nivt• rs ily of 'J'cmH·ssct~, s('Tn.~cl n~

principlll of Allwmorlc grndcd "c hool .,, as supcrinlt-ndcnt of schools in J31nch,·illl•, ~orth Auf.!u sta, und EHslcy, South Carolinn. lie held the choir of indu~trinl education nt Clemson College 1918-19.

REV. C. C. CROW, '33, of Shelby, hns been named "Rural .Minister of the Yenr" for North Carolina by Tllr Progr~~~ivr

Parmer magazine. He is pnslor of Oak Grove a nd ~It. Sinai Baptist churches. ll e will receive in connection with the nwnrd tl scholarship to the Town and Country School for Mini c; tcrs from Cundler School of Theology, Emory Univt>rsity . .At1anta, Georgia, July 29 through August 1 &-. 'rhr llev. Mr. Crow was cited for "leadership in rural l'lmrch building, und for unu -.; unl results in the Lord's Acre mo\•cmcnt, arul for effecti\'C scn•ice os pastor of rurnl churches.''

DR .. f. STHEET BREWEH, '17, Rose­boro, Wll~ ins tnllecl as prC'-.;idcnt of the Medical Society of the sh1 tc of North Carolina in its annual ~ession last spring.

\ nnounct.•mcnt hus been made prc\'iOu-.;ly in this mngnzint.· nbout his .!>Crvicc us pn.•..,i­dt•nt-elcct during the present yenr. DH. GIWHGE II' PASCHAL, .1 fl., '27, Hu­ll'il!'h, wus l'lt·ctecl as first dce-pn•sident of thi~ stll'il'h

DH. Bf'R~ARD L. HALLMAN, B. S. '~3 nnd )J D. '-J6, Allnntn, has been ap­pointed as in<>tructor in nu·dicine in the Emt>r~· rniYcrsity Department of Medicine.

ED\1" 1:--- G. WILSON, ' 13, instructor in J~:nf.!Jish HI \\'nke Forest, received his Ph. 0. dt.•gn·t~ nt IlurYurd Univcrf-iity in .Jum• of this )'l'nr.

IL-\RRY L. HINSON, ' l2, re(·civcd tht· dl·gree of Doctor of Dental Mcdichw ut I l llr\'llrd University at commencement t'\.­

crcist.>s on .June 19.

COME TO W.F.C. ALUMNI DINNER

5:45 p.m. Tuesday, November 11 Robert E. Lee Hotel, Winston-Salem

Page 18: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

W AKE FOREST COLLEGE ,\LU)IXI NE_W_S_,_o_c_t_ob_c_rc...,_l_95_2 __________________ _ Page Eighteen

\\' DE A:-1 WILLIS. '-13, formrr busi­m•ss mfln&Jrer of Blnck )l ountain, rcsi~cd that po~ition us of Septcmht."r 1 to lwcome husim·s:s administrator fur the Fi r.-.t Bap­tis t Churc:h of Dallas, Texas, la rgest Baptist church fu r white people in the world . ~Jr.

\\rill is will he- in char~t· of al l the bus iness affairs of this churrh of 9,600 merubt.> rs and will supt·rvise nil funds nnd property be­longlnfr to the church. As \ ()wn manager in nlaek ;\fountain since 19-1-7, Mr 'Will is has mndc .m excellent reco rd . In \\'"orld " rn r 11 h(' stnf'd in the Army for thirty+lhree mnnths, twenty-two of which were spent in Jh~llli. Other acth· ities in Black ~loun tnin

includrd membe rship on tht" Board of Den­c·ons. holdinJ.! the posit ion of <'hurch treas­url"r, superintenden t of the young people's kpnrtment, member of the choir, of the

Juniflr Chamber of Commerce, the Amrr­rop [.~,.•!!ion. and thr Lions Cluh. In 1951

the .Tny s nnmed him as " Mnn of the Yf'Hr" in Rlnrk )J ountnin . :'\Irs " ..,. illls is tht• dnughtt· r of the- R everend and ~Irs.

Tom R. "~n1tcrs . Tht·y are p nn•nts of twn (•hihl rein, P atty nnd Elaine, ages four )'1'1\rS nnd i months , r especth·ely.

\\' K. ( BILL) )!cLEA,._, '25 ,of As he­villl"- fonne rly solicitor of the 19th Judicial

Oi .. tri<:t, has been named by Go,·ernor cott a' a fi J'Il'Cinl uperior Court judge to suc­cn·d .Judge Harold K. Bennett. :'\I cLean wn !\clt"cted solicitor in HH6 on the GI tickl·t nnd was re-clectt.'d in 1950. Edu­cah·d in Buncombe County schools, Elon College, Bcauanne University Jn Franc'-'. 1111cl \\rake Forest College, he was admitlcd to the bar in 1929 and prnctlced fn Polk nnd 'ladison counties before establishing luw offices in Asheville He wa selected to the Stnte enate from Polk County in 1931, ll r also taught school in Polk Coun· ty, ho c; ~ened os president of the Buncombe Countr Young Democrats, and has been n superintendent of the Sturgill Lumber Olm­pnny in Yancey County He snw military ser\' icl' in \Yorld "'ars 1 and II.

C \ P"l \1:-.- \YTLLJ ,\)J B . Hll.L. '37, a noth·e of Yashington, has been named Protc.'; tont chaplain 11t the American J"\ ir Forcc Base in \Viesbadcn. Germany Cap­tain llill, who attended \Vnkc Fon•st Col­l t' ,:tt·. hns ha d n long \rmy se nil-e nt.. chnp· lain, bt· ing firs t assigned to the 1 Hh \r­mon·d Dh·ision at Camp C'hnffec, .\rknn~u s,

in 1912. H t>- Inter sern·d in the Pacific Tht·n h•r

BEGINNING ANOTHER YEAR "•ith an orientation program beginning

Friday, September 12, under direction of Prof J G. CarroU as faculty chairman and .foe !ttnuney as student chairman, and continuing through eptembcr 16, the 119th s~ssion of \Vake Fores t College wo e; ready for its official opening. RcgistTntion f ol ­lowed on the 16th and 17th. At the first formnl convocation for faculty nnd students Dean D- B. Bryan, beginning his 25th yea r in his official capacity, delivered the ad­dress. Dean Bryan also pre-.rnted to the s tudent. fifteen new members of the fncully

During the days of orientation, President Tribble, Dean Bryan, Dean Lois .Tohnson, Dr. J . A. Easley, Acting Dean of the School of Religion, Carroll \\1• \Veathers, Dean of the School of Law, Dr Gaines M. H.ogers , Dean of the School of Busine's Administration, Dr. C. C. Carpenter. Dean of Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Dr. J. Glenn Blackburn, Chaplain of the Col­lege, Paul S. Robinson, Acting Director of Music, and \Villiam C. Soule, Professor of Law, made talks to new students. Place· ment tests were given on September 18.

On the social side, receptions were given

by the Student Council, the Baptist Stu­

dent Union, and President and Mrs.

Tribble.

F. n ley nddressed the new students at 10:00 a.m. in the Chapel on "Your FaiU1 and Your '\' ork.n

Tlw last day of orientation, eptember 15, gave leaders of many student organ­izations an opportunity to acquaint new students with various c.xtrn -curricular ac­tiviti!'s, Athletic Director Jomes IJ. \Vea­vcr and Assistant Director of Physical Education .Tames Long introduced new stu­dents to the physical training program of the College.

\ddressing students and faculty of the Colh.·ge and of the Southeastern emiuary on eptember 19 was Dr. T. G. Dunning ot London, leader of youth work in the Baptist 'Vorld Alliance for a quarter of n century. President Tribble spoke to the students on September 22 at which time he introduced three new foreign students, one ench from Japan, Okinawa, and ~ lombin.

Registration figures, as of eptember 2-h nrt• us follows:

.1\·len \ \'omen Total College of Liberal Arts 11 28 291 1419 School of Law ............ ...... 81 I 82

Total at Wake Forest 1209 Bowman Gray School of

Medicine, Winston·Salem Medical Technology Students

292 1501

208

On Sunday, September 14, Dr. J. A. Total enrollment ·· ··-·-· " ' " 1717

Jesse A. William•. 1901

Rt'prescnted in the !'ttudt•nt bndy nt \\' ake Forest nre 9l of lhl• 100 ('Ountit·., in ~orth

Carolina. twt"nty-fiH· stall.."' utlu.•r than ~orth C.llrolinn. the Dbtrict of (nlumhia, nnd fi\'(• foreign countric!'>,

Stuclenh. enrolled in the SouthPnstern Buptist ... cminary, housed in the ~lu.,ic and Heltgion Building on the \\' nke Fore!'t cnmpus, number 216, e'\ndly the same number as the total in the :\ledicnl School, including tht• !'tudents in Technolo,p·. J lcnl..'t', 1117 young men nnd young women an• li\"ing in the \\"uke Fore~t community nnd nth·nding da.sscs in the College build­ings. There is no officio! relation, of course, bctwt•t•n the ColJege 1tnd the Seminnry. The lnltt•r institution occupies the campus jointly with the Collegt• at present und will tnkc O\'er compll'tely when the new rumpu" in \\'inston-Sult•m 1 .. n•nclr for oc­cupancy

Law School Items of Interest

The \\'uke Forest LO\\ •.:hool is proud of its r.:cord on tht> recent tutt~ Bnr examina­tion held in A ugusl.

'J'he Law School had 38 of it!' students graduating in 1952 who took the Stnte Bar examination in August. Of these 3S stu­dents, 84 succ("ssfu1ly pnso.;,cd the c..xami­nation nnd received their lice-nsl'. l n nd· clition, nnothcr 1952 graduate succc~sfullv

passed the Ohio tnte Bur e-xnminntion i~ June.

Dean \Yeathcrs and Profe.,sors Lee. oulc and Gillinm attended the nnnual meeting of the Southeastern Conference of Law Teach­er' held at \Yillinmsburg on September 8, l,

Page 19: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

..,.

of

Page .Nineteen WAKE FORE T COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, October, 1952

and 5. De1m 'Ycathers was one of the speakers on the Conference program. The C()nference is composed of law teachers of member school.;; of the As~oc.iation of Amer­ican Law chools located in the south­eastern Jttates.

Profc!-tSOr Leonard S. Powers, of the Law School, is :,cn·ing as a member of the Corporation Law Drafting Committee of the

tate. which is drafting a new Corporation Code for the State of ~orth Carolina to be

submitted to the General Assembly for its consideration. The Committee sen~es under the direction of the General tatutes Com­mi~sion of the tate of North Carolina.

Dr. Robert E. Lee has returned to his dnties in the Law School after a fifteen month's len,·e of absence during which time he served as Chief .\ ttorney of the Office

of Price Stabilization, Fourth Region, at

Richmond, Virginia.

Wake Forest Magnifice nt Against Baylor B.y TO)f BOST, JR.

Although " 'oke Forest has ye t to win a footba1J game from a Texas team, the 1952 club came within an eyelash of breaking the monopoly of victories of teams from the Lone Star State.

The surprising Deacons did a terrific job before bowing to t he highly favored Baylor Bears in the season's opener at \Vaco, Texas, on aturady, September 20. Only ten months ago Baylor gave '\\'ake Forest one of its worst beatings in hi~tory-l2 to 0. It was a diffe rent story altogether this t ime as the Bears had to come from behind twice before winning by the scant margin of a fie ld goal-17 to J.l.

Some 37 players made the long, 1,300 mile p lane t r ip to \Vaco and they won the heart.s of Texas' sports fans as well ns their own suppor ters for t hei r spirited pt>rformnnce under a hlnzing Texas sun. 'fhe Deacons were in t rouble throughout the first quarter but they fought back savagely to stop two scoring threats within their ten-yard Jine.

A flcr u scoreless fi rst quarter. ' \'ake Forest took the ini tiative early in the sec­ond period nnd marched 67 yards in nine pluys for the game's firs t touchdown. The score came on a 27-ya rd touchdown P""" from Qunrterback Charles ( onny) George to Captain Jack Lewis, brilliant all-around end. Gcor!Ze con\'erted to make it 7-0 for the underdog club from North Carolina.

Baylor finally scored in the fina l few seconds of the second quarter. A five-yard penalty whkh put the ball on the one g:n·e the Bears their scoring opportunity and they tallied on second down with only th ree seconds remaining in the half. L ine-Backer C. 0 . Brocato mndc the extra point and the teams went in to the intermission in a 7-7 tie.

'Vake Forest moved in front for the sec­ond time midway of the third quarter on a 45-ynrd ncho nce. A 12-yard pass f rom George to E nd " 'cs Ledford ca r ried to the one to se t up the score which George made on a quar te rback sneak. George again added the extra poin t to make it l ~ to 7 in fa,~o r of t he Deacons.

Baylor came r ight back in the early minutes of the fou rth qua r te r to tic the score at U-nll. The teams battled evenly down to the fina l minute of the game. But

Baylor got :mother break and capitalized on it to gain the decision. A bad roll on a Jthort punt by Fullback Joe Koch J!n'·c Baylor the ball on the ""ake Forest 2i. i\ 17-yard pass from Billy Hooper to .Terry Cood~· nnd a se\'en-yarcl run by· lloopc;or ~n"e the Bears the ball on the three with only 18 seconds re-maining. Brocato entered the game again and calmly booted n field goal to break the tic and clinch the dctory lt marked the first and only time Baylor mo\'ed in front during the entire game.

The Deacons missed a !!Olden opporhmity to score a third touchdown. Following Baylor's second touchdown the North Curo­linians almost scored on the kick-off. Half­back Lnrr~· Spencer took the ball on the three and hl'l1ind a host of blockers ran GB ~·ards to the 29 before he was finally brought down by Don Carpenter. Spencer ~lected to run to the ri~-!ht of Carpenter, the only man between him nnd the goal. Spencer bellc\•ed he would huve scored hnd he waited for his blockers to get Carpenter out of the wny. The pres" box obscn•ers fe lt that way, too.

All in all, the player~, conches nd sup­porters were pleased with the team's show­ing in its 1952 inaugural. Conch Tom Rog­ers snid his team showed as much fight as uny \\7 nke Forest club he has e\·cr tu­tored c..·ithcr as line coach or head conch. Captain .l ack Lewis, Bob Ondilla. Ed Stowers, Lorie Simmons, )litton \\'are, Bob Gnonn, Ken llridges3 Doh Ba r tholomew, Foyle \Vngner , Clyde Pickard. Bill Link. .Toe Ba rkOl')', Bill Finnance, Tom Donahue, .Timmy Zrnkus, Charles (Sonny) George, Bruce ll illenbrnnd, \\'es Ledford, .Joe Koch, Bobby Frederick, Bobby Brincefield, Jim Bland, Billy C'hurm, James (Pete) Coker, Nick ) 1nrnvic and others a ll had a part in t he excellen t showing.

The Deacons nre in the midst of p robably the toughest !.Chedule in thb institution's history. \\'illinm and :\J ary's I ndians, Bos­ton College. Yi11ano,•a, North Carolina, N.C. Stale, 'fexos Christian, Duke, Furman, and South Carolina a ll must be met before the 1952 ~eason is history. It's a back­breaking schedule but the Denes are off

R. Le roy Jlfcllfillan, 1909

to nn excellent !:~tart.

Since the foregoing was written3 a bril­liant and hard-fought battle gave the Dea­cons n Conference "ictory O\'er the lndians of \Yilliam & Mary's strong team by a score of 2 to 21 eptember 27, at ' VilJiarns­hur~

(Tom Bost will ha\·e more to say about this one in the ne.xt issue and will gi,•e a final report for the season.)

Necrology Re,·. J oseph Gordon Benfield, '99, Gr a n ­

ite Falls, died July 14, 1952.

Wi llia m C. Bray, '33, Cordova, d ied J une 14, 1952.

J ohn Ma rch an t Brewe r, '9 , \Vake For­est, died June, 1952.

J oh n Howard Ca mpen, '04, Whiteville, died July 14, 1952.

Dr. lennie C. Chaplin, '20, Columbia, died July 1, 1952.

R. D. Dixon, '25, Edenton, died July 27, 1952.

Theodore Lewis Dunn, '03, A rka ns as, died June 30, 1952.

Jose ph Collin Eagles, '92, Wilson, died June 14, 1952.

Rc,·. Rayborn Parchell Ellington, '11 , Graham, died July 14, 1952.

Dr. Clyde Henry Fryar, ' 16, Ca rolina Beac h, died Augus t 10, 1952.

Charles Gentry Gilreath, '04.. Wilkes· boro, died Februar y 19, 1952.

Page 20: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

RPY. Newton Ernest Gresham, •20. Chin­quapin, died Jull 22, 1952.

ReL George Henry Johnson, '10, Buf­falo, . C., died July 15, 1952.

Dr. Walter Nathan Johnson, '99, Ra­leigh, died June 23, 1952.

Sam Boaz Kitchin, '09, Phoebus, Ya., died April 3, 1951.

James Carl \!cLean, '16, Rockingham,

died February 2 , 1952. George Bismarch Sanderlin, '99, \Vash­

ington, D. C .. died J anuar) 26. 1952. Jame:; Muritte Sharpe, '0 , HeidM~i lte,

died August 8, 1952. Nolan J. igmo~ 'l6, Newton, died June

19. 1952. Dr. James Baxter Turner, '07, Raleigh,

died June 27, 1952.

Information About Former WFC Students 1896

J \'U:S .SEEDH1\:'tl TOL.\R, MadU;on, Oo . llnlsrN. Retired 1942 . Teacher 1800-98 Mat­hews. Pns torat~ . Fatrmoot. Beaufort, Mt

(Jill'(', 1898-0ol. Attended Louisville Sem 1904-05 Pru; tora tes tn S . c . 1904-33. Tau~ht Bible EdLsto Jr. Col Pastor In Madlson. On 1933--10. Led ln cona and remodellng or 5l'\'t"r&l church~. Mnrrted Mary Branch. Children · Marton B '19. prof . In Fenn Col. Clcn~lfmd. Ohio. for more than 20 yrs.: Mary Inez. widow or lat e Oov. E . B. Jackson or s . c. Be \\'Tit<"4: • Bksslngs on you and your work . I do not llke the pict u res you have In the NEWS or the old boys They look too old and gre;•. 1 do not belong to them. I am only 82 In a few mouths' 1 nm sendlng thl.S to W"F Old Umere .ftnd U ha rd to think of Winston-Sale-m M th<" homt- ot WFC."

1891

fOil~ THOl\L\S BUFF, M 0 . CEL"l&r. Retlred phYJ.Iclan after practice or 45 yrs ln South nod Nor t h Carollo&. Now In decllnlng health. Marrll"d t o Adn Dixon. Chtldren: Joml"S Ed­-ward t LLD) Mrs . Pauline Brown (RN)

JY\LES Kr.NNEDY HENDERSON. Scotlnnd Neck Retired minister and teacher. Attended S('mlnary one year. served rural churches. taugh t at Dabney, Roanoke Raptds, Fnrmvllle, Fountain . Stant.onsburg, Sawyer's Creek, Ham­ilton, In western N c., and with lndln.ns ln Robeson Co. Ha.s written unpub1Lshed works, mOt;tly In ven.e. slnce retirement. Con!Sldl"re l'"I\·Jog manuscripts t.o WFC. Bapt. Married t.o Hel£>n Perry tdec . 1910) and Annie Joocy Chlldrl·n . Mary Fowle (dec.), Jesse Perry, and Jomt:J Kennedy, Jr. (dec.)

PH.t:.:STON STEWART VJ.\NN, 1621 Brandon R 'd , Charlotte 7 Salesman. Former .school­man. Served as prtn. Robeson Inst.. Llberty­Pit.'dm ont lnst.; supt. or Pub. 1nstructlon In Davtdson, Gate$. and Pasquotank Counties; ffi(•mber of faculty and Pres. Chownn Collc~e; buUder or Bchools and conductor or tn .. tttutea for tuchers. Bnpt., Mason. rormer member or Elks, MoOtie, & Patriotic Sons of Amertcn Clerk or Mecklenburg Asso. 12 yra .. 8. s. teach­u and lender or 8. S. tratntng courses, deacon Ma.rrl f" d to Katie Lee Alley

1899

\VILLI.\l\1 l\1. AUTRY, Box 82, Wauchula. Fin . Retired. Taught Union H. s .• Sampson Co., 1899-00; groc. clerk 1901-07; employed In nnvnl btore 1908-13; farmer 1913-18; naval store 1918-25; wholesale fish dealer 1925-51 Bapt. Member WOW Married Janie M. Maxwell Children • B E.; J. H.; Wm., Jr . R. L.; Annie Marla Page; Mary Va. Henry; Jnnte Kate Cowart .

1900 EVfo~RETT J . BRITT, Lumberton. Atty.,

rannt>r, blUl.ker. B. L. WFC '02; member Bd or Education 1901-02; Legislature 1903-05; Mayor Lumberton 1907; Co. atty. 1004-26; Ma&on­Scottlsh Rite-Sudan Temple-Grand Omtor 1930; dtst. deputy Dtst. It Bn.pt, SS teacher 1906-14, 1940-52; SS supt. 1920-40. Married Besba Hedgpeth. Children; Everett J .. Jr.; lo'lrs. Susan Mae Welch; Rowland C.; Th~. M.; Lauten Rhodes au or Lumberton

ADOLPIIUS PfLSTON GODWIN, Oatesv11le. Retired atty. Started practice 1900; cashier Bk of Oates 1905, vtce-pres. and director 1904-42; Senator First Sen. Dlst. 1907-09; Judge Oates Co. Crlmtnol Ct. 1932-42; Dlr Golden Cr088, EUz. City Dtst. 1938-42. Meth .; Rurltan Married Mabel Clatre Hayes. Chlldren A P .• Jr., WFC '37: W. Hayes, WF"C '36; F. Marne. WFC '39; Edward R. and Phllltp P . WFC.

CJIARLJE ROSS TAYLOR, Burgaw. Rettred minister. Attended 8, B. T . S. '01; S. W Bapt. Scm. Inter, receiving Th. M. & Th . D. degrees:

M A Baylor: teacher '01- '06. Pastorate. Aln­mQM:ordo, N M.; Blooming Oro,·e. Graham, Stamford, and Mexia. Texn~; Returned to N C 1924. ser\'lng Riley'!~; Creek M pn.t:itor 23 yn1. where new brick building and pn.ator's home han~ been constructed: al50 pastor or Mill Cret'k. Brunswick As.so. Married to Bt-!ale Estell £'I Edmondson f Baylor '03l Children Mary EHzabeth, John Edmond.~on. Martha Ellen IMN. Loren Patel, Mlna Estelle tMra M 0. Bane 1. Writes: "God bless you and dear old Wnkt- Forest Hope when ln Wlnsoon­Salem lt..<t spirit and tradition~ will stlll SUr\'h't•"

1901

JESSE A. WlLLAMS, Waxhaw Banker Tauf{ht at Wingate High Sch .. now Wingate Jr. Col 4 yrs. Now VIce-Pres and Cashier Waxhaw Banking and Trust Co. for many yn. Bapt , Mason; Tru!'{tee Ellen Fitzgerald H08p. Monroe. Bachelor.

1902 FRED QUINTON B.\RBEE. 1211 N Mnngum

St. Durham Retired. Principal of htttb chools In S. C .. Va., and N C .• respectively.

for 30 yn; .. Co. Supt. or Pub. Schools or Bladen Co. for 2 yrs.; teacher of Men's Bible ClaM and member or church choir In ench town he ll\'ed In during teaching career Bapt. Married Belen Moore. Children Hudson L .. Rev J. Ru~sell. Robert M .. and Walter E.

LEWIS T.\TE ROYALL, Smithfield, Snles­man Taught sch. about 20 yra; supt. or John­ston Co. schools about 10 yrs. Bapt.. Mason nod member Jr. Order. S. S. teacher Married Flo&.<tlt' Abnell; Mary Black. Children Rebeccn C and Cha.s. Richard.

DELOS W. SORRELL, 602 Watts St., Our­hom Lawyer. Orand Chane. Knights ot Pythlns. 1921; Pres. Kiwnnls, 1925; State Coun­oiJor Jr. Order, 1929; Mayor 1931-33. Ohurch of Christ. Member: Durham Bd. ot Adjust­mt'nt; N C., Amer., and Durham Bar AAsns. Married Margaret D. Holloway

190..1 WALTER LEE BEACH. Rose Hill Retired

teacher Served 31 yrs. In pub. schools as prln. and teacher Retired 19-18. Begnn as prln. Atlantic Inst .. Morehead City; 9 yrs. bull mgr or Dell School, Delway. Taught in s. 8 60 yrs.; church treasurer since 1926. Married to E'mma Teachey. Children: WllllA Lee, Mary B. Fulford, Oscnr Allen, Joseph Edward

1905 BURRUS ALLEN CRITCHER, Wllllomston

Atty. Bnpt. Married Ozella Proctor. Cbltdren: B. A .. Jr., WPC '48; Mrs. H. E. Harrington .

WALTE H EVERETT GOODE, Scotland Neck Retired minister. Pastorates : Lenksvtllc, Mar­shall, Spring Bill. Aberdeen, Maxton. Roxboro, Reidsville, Scotland Neck Retired 1945. Bnpt. Klwnnlnn. Married : Essie Hamrick. deceiU:Icd 1933; Bessie Futrell. Daughter · Mra . C. E. Saunders.

1907 J. \VlLDUR DUNN, 1501 Iredell Dr, Rnletgh.

Atty. Co. atty. 6 yrs.; member 1913 Legis . and 1017 State Senate: chairman Wake Co. Oemo­cmtlc Exec. Comm. past 10 yra; otty tor \VFC past 12 yrs. Bapt. Clvltan. Married Maude Da\•ls. Children: Nancy E., Julian \V., Jr ., Dr D. F .. Dottle M.. , Thos. D.

JOli N T HOMAS BYRUM, 109 Edwnrd St., Belhaven . Pastor. Held pastorates at Ram­seur; Franklinville: White's Memorial: Cedar Falls; KernersvUle; Madlson: Elllsboro; Shiloh; Walkertown, Winston-Salem; Ohowan Co.: Elizabeth City: Belhaven. Organized and built Union Orove Ch. near Oak Ridge nnd new Greenwood Ave. Ch. Ln Winston-Salem . Mar­ried Isa V. Ward. CbUdren: Paul Thomas, John Ward, Clltrord Conwell, David Edwln,

Charles Conant Josey, 1913

and Porter Brown JOHN ROBERT GREENE, 117 Ma.llette St

Chapel HUI MJntster. Pastomtes Clyde; BIlls b oro; Jacksonville; BoJllng Springs; Orexf"l; Ky: Newberry. S. C : 2 yr.. In S.B.T.S. Bnpt Married: Elizabeth Andrews. Children Mrs. Arthur Daniel and Phltllp Arden. Mlnls­tcr for 56 yrs. O~C;\R JENNlNGS SIKJ:::~. Albemarle. Atty

Judge Co. Ct., Prosecutlng Atty. Co. Ct.; ntty tor Stanly Co.; Mover Albemorlf"; Chmn Stanly Co. Bd or Educ., Stanly Co. Rond Bd Stanly Co. Democrattc Exec. Com.; !iCn1ed to Legal Dept. A.A.A.: Trustee WFC. Wingate Jr Col .• Jackson l'rntntng Sch.; S. S teacher. charter member Lions Club Bnpt Married Della Kendrick. Children: 0. J . Jr .. and Kath­erlnf" Sikes Crutchfield. Fl\'e gr•mdchtldren

1908 WILLIAl\1 JACK ON JONES, Plnelnnd Col­

lege. Salemburg. Pastor Emeritus Snlemburg and Roseboro churches and President Emeri­tus Pineland Col . Salemburg. Pastor: Red Mountr.ln 1902-0-1: Wise, 1904-08; Macon. 190-1-08; Salemburg, 1908-35: Roseboro, 1908-35 : White Ot~k to 19-15. Unl\'. or Chtca~o grad work 1909; ordained 1902 Bnpt. Lion. J.O.A M Prine. Salemburg Acad ; organizer and bulldf"r Plnelnnd Col. and Edwards hfil. Inst and Its system or schools from 1908-49; l&t pres. M~d('l Community Org. or Salemburg. Married Mollle Roberts. Daughter Allee Freeman 1 Mrs 0 N Ashley)

1909 \VILLlAl\1 T HOJ\JAS HUR T, Pltt.sboro. Rt•­

tlred. Pastor and teacher 1900-07; missionary under Home Bd. or Jackson co., 1909: State missionary In Johnson Co.; assn. missionary Ln Sampson Co.: thence bock to teaching In H . S. and preaching; teache:-t Men·., Bible Clns.~. Bopt. Mason. Member Jr 0 U.A M Married to Delio. Broxton Children Ml'!\ . lone H. Vann; Mrs . Iva H. Robertson

ROBERT LE ROY I\J cl\ULL;\ N, 1810 Pnrk Dr, Raleigh. Atty. Received LL.B. de({l'ee Colum­bia Unlv . Law 8ch. 1917: prof law WFC 2 yra.: lecturer on Business Lnw at N. C State 3 yrs.: trustee N. C. Sch. ror Bllnd for many yrs.; past nnd now trustee N C. Bnpt. State Conv. Bapt. Member : Woke Co. (pnst pres.), N. c .. and Amer. Bar Assns; Amer. Legion (past N. C. dept,. cmdr. and nat'l vice cmdr.). past chmn. and or member \1artous dept.'\. and nat'l. committees and commiMions: N C. State Dlr ClviUan Def World War 11 ; 3Upt S. S. 10 yrs. and since teaches Mf"n's Blb1e CIB"s; past precinct chmn. member Wnk~ Co. Democmtlc Exec. Com.; chmn N C. Recre­ation Comm. since formatton. ~tarried Mary Lee Swann. Children: Archibald, Alexander, '41 WFC; Robert Leroy. Jr., '44 WFC.

NOA II A. MELTON, Rt . 2. Hendersonville. Pastor. teacher. Teacher Fruitland Inst. 1909-10 nnd prln. 1910-28; prln. Fletcher H. S. 1928-39; Teacher EdneyvUle B. S. 1939-40; prln.

Page 21: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

Poge Twenty-one -----

Green Creek H. S. 1940~43; supt. schools Polk Co. 1943-49; pastorates: Fruitland slnce 1909, E. Flat Rock. Saluda, French Brood, Mud Creek, Elkin. Refuge, Salem, Mt. Moriah , MJ.lls River. Green Creek, and Etowah; moderator Carolina Assn . 1911~12. 1921-24. hlstortan 1949-52; teaching now Fruitland lost. since 1949. Married Allee Shugart. ChUdren : James, Helen, Thelma. lrls, Mary, and Emma Allee.

JAMES BENNETT lVI.LLIS, Hamlet. Minis­ter. Pastor First Chureh Sanford 6 yrs, More­head City 4 yrs., First Church Hamlet 30 yrs:., pres. N C. Bnpt. Pastor's Cool.; preached Con''. sermon; was trustee WFC 20 yrs., Or­phanage 4 yrs.; member several yTS. N. C. Bapt. Gen . Bd. ; pres. Rotary: several yrs. on Rich­mond Co. Wellare Bd .; chmn. Richmond Co. Library Bd. of Trustees; granted S.B.T.S . 1911. Married Marie Thornton. Daughter : Miriam Wills

1910

FRANKLIN EDWARDS, Franklin, Va. Comm of Revenue. For 33 yrs. Comm. of Rev South~ ampton Co .• Va. Bapt. Rotarian. Member: Country Club, Cotillion Club. Secy .-trea.s. Bible Class. Unmarried

ARTHUR R. WlLLI.AAIS. 4004 Friendly Rd .. Greensboro. Retired. Taught sch. 5 yrs.: Wake Co. 2 yrs., Nash Co. 1 yr., Greensboro, 2 yrs.; govt. toerv. 1n U. S. Treas. Dept. 1934-50; re­tired 1950. Bapt. Married: AnnJe Bell Carter, lOll; Addle Morrls, 1944. ChUdren; F. Carter, Turner G., Arthur R. Jr., Mrs . Ellen Sander.

1911 JAMES CLAXTON BRETT, 403 W. Main,

Ahoskie. Secy.-treas. Production Credit Assn After grad .. wtth ctvU eng. dept. of Norfolk­Southern-Virginian & A.C.L. rrs. 2 yrs.; Adams & Southern Express Cos. 2 yrs.: since 1915 some farming; s ince 1934 with Ahoskie Pro­duction Credit Assn. Bapt. Rotarian. Married Nancy Louise Benthall. Daughter : Virginia Lout.se O'Neal.

\VlLLlAM DARE BOON"E, Wlnton . Lawyer. Served wtth !18th Field ArtWery World War I; member Hertford Co. Bd. of Edue. 12 yrs .• trustee Chowan Col. 14 yrs.: Deacon and s . S. teacher 30 yrs,; judge Hertford Co. Recorder's Court since lts formation ln 1934; fannlng on Aide. Bapt. Member : Rurtta.n , Amer. Legion Married Louise C. Vann. ChUdren : Louise Vann; WUltam Dnre, Jr.

GEORGE CLEVELAND BUCK, Box 124, Hert­ford. Retired. Asst. prln. Wingate Jr . Col . 1911-14; B.S. deg. N C. State Col. 1916 ; prtn. Salemburg H. S. 1916~18; Radio Oper. U. S. N 1918-19; prln. & Vocational agrlc. teacher Cas~ talla B . S. 1920-24; a.grtc. teacher Contentnea Cons. Sch. 1924-32; agrte. teacher Perqulmans Co. B S. 1932-52. Bapt. Past pres. Hertford Lion&; past master Perqutmans Lodge. Mason . Member · A.V.A. & N.C.V.A. ·Married Henrietta Tucker. Chtldren: Cleveland, Jr., and Mar­jorie Johnson.

J. BEN ELLER, Coats. MJ.ntster. Th.M.. de­gree 1916 S.B.T .S. Pastorates 1n : DanvUie. Va ., 1911-13; DurhAm . 1916-19; Salem, 1919-22 : St.atesvllle. 1922-34; Greensboro, 1934-50; at Coats tolnce 1950 Former trustee of Va. Ba.pt . Orphanage, Mars HUJ Cot.: ch.m.n. Exec. Com.m . S. Yadkln Assn.; exec. comm. Piedmont Assn .; exec. eomm. Mt. Zion Assn. and Llttle River : pres. N. C. Bapt. Pastors' Cont. 1920; vice-pres . N. C. Bapt. Conv. 1934-JS; pres. Mars Htll Alumni Assn. 1932-33; member: Education Bd., Oen. Bd.; com. to Amend Constitution of S. B . C. Married Ruth Cozart. Children : Judith Sarah Freeman; Ruth Batley; Luke Branson; Jane Byrd; James.

RlCFIARD HEl\"RY LEWIS, 1202 Hill St., Greensboro. State agt., Nat'l Union Flre J.ns . Co. Chamber of Commerce and newspaper work until 1924. Fire Ins. slnce. Presby. Mar­ried Daphne Waters. Children: Mrs. R W Rudolph, Mrs. Kalman L. Levitan, Dacia Lewls .

F1~.0~ft~t:t:r~T~~~:C~':.r50ts;· &>:fn~0:e~ce;?nhg at Unlv. of Shanghai; pastor City Park Ba.pt. Church, Denver, Colo.: prof. Social Ethics Crozer Theol. Sem.; pastor First Bapt., Lewis­burg, Po .: member lneulty Bucknell Unlv.; now mlnt.stcr Tourist Church, Daytona Beach; author \ Greatheart of the South, Home Let­ters from China (Doran), We Preach Not Our­~elves (Harpers). contrlbutlng editor The In­terpreter's Bible, !\tarried Helen Carruthers. ChUdren. Annie C.. PrlscUla B .. Wallace B., Elennor G .. VIda P

1912

.'\RTII UR T. ALLEN, 1 Sussex Rd., Avondale Eotote!\. Oa Retired. Tb.B. 1914 & Th.M 1915 S B.T.S.; pastor Swift Creek Bapt. Oh., DarlingtOn Co, S. 0., 1914-21; Pt.rst Ch., Edge­tleld, S C., 1921·26; Central Ch .. Chattanooga, Tenn. , 1926-35; Jackson Htll Cb., Atlanta , Ga., 1935-40; Bell Ave. Ch., Knoxville, Tenn .• 1940~ 48; organlzed and pastor Park Lane Ch .. Knox~ vllle, UHS-49; lntertm and supply Mt. Ollve

WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS, October, 1952 ---Ch., Knoxville. Grant Park Ch. and First Ch., Avondale; member Bapt. Exec. Bd. o f s t ate and Exec. Comm . or Bd.; past. pres. Chatta­nooga Bapt. Ministers' Cont.; member Exec Comm. Ocoee Assn .; past vice-pres. Tenn Bapt. CoD\'. and preacher of COO\'. sermon, past pres . Atlanta Bapt. lo.flnl'iter's Cont.; member Home Mission Bd.. a£soclatlonal B .T.U. pastor and writer of weekly devotional column for Christian Index 3 yrs. Bapt. Kt­wanta.n Married Nelle Carter. Children Dr A T ., Jr.; and Glenn Carter.

JAl\lES TALBOT JOHNSON, Aberdeen. Atty. Practice of law steadily slnce Aug. 1912 Presby Klwanlan. Member A.mer . Bar Assn ., N. C. Bar Assn ( past vice pres.); State Bar Aac:;n.: past pres . Kiwa nis Club; pres. Moore Co Bar Assn. s ince 1950; former mayor. town Aber­deen, town atty., etc. Married Kate Holcombe. ChUdren; M.lrlam C Burlingame. Betsy All­port, Lawrence MeN.

ROY STUART Sl\fiTH, Rt. 2, Buntersv111e. Secy-trcas. Flrst Fed . Savings and Loo.n Assn VIce-pres. Independence Trust Co.; secy. Char­lotte Kiwanis 23 yrs; secy. Chnrlotte Shippers Assn. 10 yrs.; treas. OaslS T emple-Shrine 10 yrs; secy-treas. First Fed. Sa\'. & Loan Assn. 12 yrs. M.eth . Kiwanlan Member: Country Club; City Club. Married Kate Shatton Son· R . S., Jr

1913 GEORGE N. lfERRlNG. Easthaven Hosp .,

Richmond , Ind . Phys ician. Jefferson Med . Col., M D. 1915 ; Intern Brooklyn Hosp., Brooklyn, N Y ., 1915-17; Grey Stone Park H05 p ., Morris Plains, N J ., 1917; U. S . N., Crusler & Trans­port Foree, Lt. cMCl 1917-20; Ox-ner Mem Hosp. Plngtu, Shantung, Chinn (F M B., S..B.C.) 1926 ; gen. practice Pierceton, lnd., 1926-52; Member sta ff Easthaven Hosp. Mar­ried Marton P. Poulson . Sons; Fred . C. and Arthur W . Writes : " My father was D . W . Rerrlng who graduated from WFC about 1882 and from S .B .T .S . about 1885. He was a mls· stona.ry tn China with G M & F M B., S.B .C."

ELIAS DODSON JOHNSON, Tarboro. Supt. schools Edgecombe Co. Ashevllle H S . 1913-17; World War I 1917-19 (1st Lt.): supt. Lincoln­ton City Schools 1919-26; prtnc. China Grove Sch. 1926-29; prtnc. Marshville Sch . 1929-35 ; supt. Union Co. Schools 1935-39: prine. Rae­ford Sch. 1939-41; supt. Edgecombe Co. Schools since 1941. Bapt. Klwanlan Clvltan . Mem­ber : American Legion, Farm Bureau. NCEA Married Berta Butler Chlldren Wllllam James, '47 WFC; Nancy M.c.M.Ulan .

CHARLES CONANT JOSEY, 301 Buckingham Dr., Indianapolis , Ind. Prof. Received M.A 1918 and Ph .D. 1921 Columbia Unlv.: lnstr Psychology, Dartmouth Col. 1921-22. asst. prof. 1922-23; prof. Philosophy, Unlv. S .D 1923-32, head or dept. 1932-39; bead of dept. Psychol­ogy, Butler Ontv. since 1939. Author : TIJE Role of Instinct in Social PhUosophy, '21; The

~~~:~nJ~~rf3~r~fr.~b~~st;~~~loi:;orR:~flgfo0n~ '27; Psycholo;y of Normal People (eo-author), '40: Psychological Battlefront ot Democracy, '44 ; Psychology of Successful Living, '48, '52; and numerous reviews and articles. Member Congregational Ch., Jndlanapolls Southern Club, Ind. Academy or Science, lnd Psycho­logical Assn., Mid-western Psychological Assn., Amer . Psychological Assn .• Phi Kappa Phi , Phi Beta Kappa . Married lo.filler Jeannette Lynch. Children: Mrs. Elizabeth Bruce Johnston, and Charles Conant, Jr .

JOSEPH J . WOFF, Shenandoah, Va Phy­sician. M 0 . Untv. of Md ., 1915; Capt. U. S. Army, World War I ; gen. practice Holland. Vn ., 1920-22; gen. practice Shenandoah, Va ., since 1922. Bnpt.; Mason; Rotarian. Member A.M .A Married Mary Elizabeth Hopk.ln&. Son : Joseph J .. Jr., 12 years

1914 OSCAR PIERCE CAMPBELL, ST., 6253 Marm~

aduke Ave., St. Louts 9, Mo. Mlnlster. M A. Unlv. of Pa.: B.D . Crozer Theol. Sem. : with Texas Bapt. Conv. as student pastor and Bible teacher nt Uolv . of Texas 1919-23 : establll\hed John C. Townes Bible Chalr and organized nrst B .S .U. while In above position ; nfter grad. study at Yale, served as Dlr. Christian Ed. & as.c;o. secy. connecticut Bapt. Conv. 1924-42; dlr. Chrlstlan Ed. Third Bapt. Ch ., St. Louls , 1943-49: pastor Clifton Hgts. Christian Ch .. St. Louts, since 1949; served on numerous boards and councils. Married Carolina Web­ster Chtldren : Wilbur Evans and Oscar P ., Jr ., '47 WFC.

DOC'J'OR 1\rAC JOHNSON, Enfteld. Atty Member State Leglslatlve Session 1929-31 : St.ate Senate 19-13. Bapt.; Lion; member co., &tate and national bar associations. Married Osu Lang. Children : Ellen Katherine and Osu Mae.

ISAAC C. PREVETTE, SR., 215 National Bldg., Pontiac, :M.teh. Phystcta.n. MD degree N. Y. UnJv. 1916: practice of medicine and

0. W. Yates, 1914

surgery, Pontiac, MJch .. after 1 YT In Char­lotte. Writes : " AH three of living sons hnve attended \VFC, two having graduated from Bowman Gray Med. Sch." Oakland Co. Coro­ner s ince 1942; Boy'& S. S . Class teacher. Bnpt. Member Amer. Med. Assn., OakJand Co. Mer . Soc., Mich . State Med. Soc .. active statr Pon­tiac G en. Bosp. and St. Joseph's Mercy Hosp Married L11ltan Caner. Chlldren : l !'&aC c .. J r., WFC '46~ William C., WFC '42; Jane Alice: John E., '47 WFC; Martha Ann: Ruth E1atne· and Nancy Elizabeth. '

GORDON B. ROWLAND, Raeford. Atty. Mayor Raeford 14 :yrs.; proseeut!Jl~; atty. to Co. Court 8 yrs.; member Bd. of Directors of Farm Credit Admtnls .. Columbia, S. c .. G yrs.; closing atty. & administrative asst. to 0 . S. Govt. 4 yrs. during World War D ; at present chmn. Hoke Co. Bd. of Elec tions; general practice of law. Bapt.; Mason. Married Sallle Thomas.

NEWTON JACKSON SHEPHERD, Weldon Hardware merchant. Chmn Weldon Sch Bd 25 yrs.; chmn. Bd. of Deacons Weldon Ch. 30 yrs.; supt. S. S . 26 yra.; Co. Commissioner 12 yrs.; Bapt.; Rotarian Married Pauline More­h ead. Children : Margaret Shepherd Dover , Robert Morehead , and Susan S . Smltb.

JUNlU EVERETT Sl\UTU, 1106B Pittsboro Rd ., Chapel Hill . Farming. Supt. prlne. noel t.eacher In Htgb schools 12 yrs.; buying and se111ng real estate; Norfolk Naval Ship Yards 19-14-46; taught S . S . and S . S . teacher training

Junius Everett Smith, 1914

Page 22: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

W \KE FOHEST COLLEGE _\LUMXI NE WS, October, 1952 Page Twenty-two --------------------~

scb. 12 yrs.; organized B.Y.P.U. In Greensboro: now runs smlll l apalry ( 11 colonies o! bees) and Is amateur tree ~urgeon nnd rrult tt('t' propagator and hybridizer of plants and trees Bapt. Member Improved Order o r Red Men.

1914

J . R. V.\NN, Box 86, Sprlng Hope. Pbyslctnn. Jefferson Med. Col. 1915-17; M.D. 1917: Intern one yr. Meth.-Spts. Bosp., Philadelphia; cnpt 1n Army overseas 1 yr.; 3 mos. post-grad. work at Edlnzurgh Unlv.; returned to home In Fay­ettevt11e, then to Spring Hope In 1923; hns tnken \'Brlous post-grnd. courses In Pediatrics, mally at Sou. Pedla.trlc 5emlnar. Bapt. Mem­ber: A.M .. A.: N. C. Med. Assn.; pa.st pres Edgecombe-Nn.sh Med . Society; treas. Vester­Wbele s Post No. 91. Amer. Leg. Married Matilda Mayo. Daughter, Matilda June, age 14

0. w. \' \TES. 158 N. Arcadia Pk. Lexln~ton, Ky. P8.6tor. Tb.M. and Th.D. from S.B.T S. Louts\·UJe, Ky.; Ph.D. from George Peabody C11l.. Nnsh\'11le. Tenn.; taught Bible and Greek Bethel Col. Russelvllle, Ky., 1918~34; head of Bible Dept. Ouachita Col., Georgetown, Ky .• recclHd D.O. from Georgetown College 1930; now pru;tor Rosemont Bapt. Church. 1\lnrled M.nrgnret Culley. Daughters: Anne Culley (Afrs Eugene Inlow) and Margaret Ellzabe-th

1915

GlLBFRT :\1. BILLING , 405 S Sterling St, Morganton . Ear. eye, nose and throat &peclal· 1st. M.D. Tulane Onlv .. Nbw Orletuls. La .. 1919; psychtatrtst. State Bosp .. Morganton, l!H9·29; gen. practice, Morganton. 1929·34; re.stdent. foi'ew York Post·Grad. Hoap .. 1935-37 ; certlfit>d Amer. Bd. oC Otolaryngology 1939; Amer. Aca.d· emy Ophthalmology and Otolaryngolagy 1939; prl\"ate practlce, Morganton. 1937; Chief of Sen•., Grace Hosp., Morganton, 1937; Ch1er or Stati, 1950; \'lsttlng consultant nnd .surgeon, State H08p .. Morganton. nod Valdese Bosp., Valdese; Oculist, Southern RR. Morganton. listed ln · Who's Who, Who's Importnnt In Med .. Who'~ Who tn the South and Southwest, International Blue Book. Who's Who In Med. Jntematlonal Who's Who. Bapt ., Klwanlan Member: Chamber of Commerce, Executlns Club; Jr. Order; Elks; Mimosa Ootr Club; Burke Co. Med. Soc. (past pre,;). Catawba Valley Med. Soc. (past. pres.); N.C. Med. Soc., A.M.A.; Pan Amer. Assn. or Ophthalmology; Pan Amer. Congress o! Otolaryngology; As.sn Southern RR Surgeons; N. C Eye, Ear. Nose & Throat Soc. Married Charlotte Elmore Children Gllbert M ., Jr., James W .; Mary GOOdson 1 Mrs . Ernest Morris)

1915

ERVIN L. WARD, 3822 St. Charles Rd., Bell· wood. Til. Asst. Engineer. T aught Cedar Rock, 1916·1'1: served 27 mos. World War I with 15 mos. overseas; 2 yrs. with U.S. Army Con~ structlon Dlv .; 1 yr. with highway comm. o! Ky; 30 yrs. with Sante Fe RR, located a.t present In Chicago. Bapt..; Mason; VPW. Ma r­ried Edna Edwards. Children Howard, age 23; Allan, nge 17

1916

J . HERMAN BARNES, Rt. 3, FayettevUie Retired. Pastorates: field or churches ln and around Raleigh 1916·18; field or churches In Bertte Co. wtth Riverside Bnpt. Church as center 1919·23; Knoxv1Ue, Tenn., 1924 -25 ; Gar­land field In Sampson Co. 1926-29; Rose HUI In Duplin Co. 1930·39; field or churches In and around Fayetteville 1940·48. A.B . degree Car· son-Newman Col.. 1924 Bapt. ; member Gen Bd. of Bapt. State Conv. for six yrs. Married Mlss Pauline Kimsey.

D.\ VII) RUSSELL PERRY, M . 0 ., 1120 8th St .. Durhom. Physician. M. D. Jefferson Medl­cnl College 19; Internship and residency 19·21, served as health officer Davtdson Co. 21-23; conducted clinic tor N . c. State Sanatorium o.nd Extenstnn Dept. 23-25: p rivate pract ice lnternnl medtclne at Durham s ince 25. Mem­ber staff of Watts Hospital and or Lincoln Hospital; medical advisor for local draft board. Bapt., deacon, Mason ; member Jr. Order , Ser­tomn Club. Amer Legion, local, state. l\nd national medical al'soclatlons. Has served as trustee of Campbell Col .. N . C. Bapt. Bosp., N . C. Sanatorium , W . F. Col .. as pres. or WFC l.fed. Alumnl As8o ., as member Durham City Council, athlettc officer. post commander. post vtce~commonder , and post service commander ot A mer. Legion In Durham, and as N C. dept. vice-commander o.nd national vice-com­mander or Amer. Legton: os pres. NC chapter J efferson Medical College Alumni Asso.: at present pres. Deacon Club CWFC) Durham Co. Married to Sarah Otbel1a Mcintosh (de ­ceased) and Mary Gertrude Mcintosh Lee. Children or ftrst marriage: Olma Elizabeth (Mrs. Wm. M . Upchurch) 43; Dav id Russell , Jr .. M. D., (WFC 45, Bowman Oray 46 ); Frances Hunter 49,

Gilbert M. Billings, 191 5

These Were Married John Gilc hrist Barrett, ' 13. to Lottie

)lae Bue. Paul Buchner Bell, ' I , to Betty ue

Trulock. \Villiam Leftis Bennett, ' 18, to Doris

Fa) e Pa lm er. Henry Worth Boyce, Jr .. '51, to Henri­

etta J ean Murph y, '5 2. Dewey Herbert Bridger, Jr., '5 2. to Au­

drey Claude!! Caison, '52. James Ernes t Bridgers, Jr. , '5 l, to Jane

Elliott, '51. Joseph Garrott Browder, '13, to Carlotta

Rose Pa lmer. Glenn \\'illiam Brown, ' 19, to E'•elyn

Myrl) n Davis. Bryon Bullard, '5 1, to Carolyn Timber­

luke, '5 1. Madison Earl Bullard, ·~9. to Nell Gar ­

rell. Gra ha m Va nce Byrum, ' l , to Betty Jean

McCormick. Frederick Garland Chamblee, ' 17, to

Ann Marie Upchurch. Gera ld Reid Chandler , '5 1, to Marga ret

Ann Hatley. Lee Biggersta ff Copple, '•12, to Margaret

McCall. Albert Newton Corpening, Jr., '52, to

Mary Charlie Patte rson, '52. James Lee Councilman, ' 15, to Barbara

Jane Allred. George Cowsert, '49, to Hilda Kathryn

Bean. Dennis Carlyle Downing, '50, to Anne

Marie l\'lcGugan. Robert Lee Edwards, '45, to Frances

Jnez Ha1r .

Sam E. Edwards, Jr~ '52, to Bettie Catherine Hamrick.

Thomas T. Ferguson, '5 1, to Mildred Bullard.

Dover R. Fouts, Jr., '42, to Amparo Gar~ cia Aramburu.

~I arion Car lisle F ranks, '5 t, to Irma Ruth Jones .

Jack Dunlap Gentry, '50, to Barbara Jane Francis.

J ames Hart Getzen, '50, to Vh•ian Joyce Bailey.

Thomas H. Gibson, '19, to Doris Inez Keezli ng.

Jame~ Garland Goodwin, Jr., '50, to June Eugeni a Batson_

Paul Putnam Griffi n, ' ·19, to ~1ar~aret Delle Braswell.

Alton Carlyle Hall, Jr., '49, to Dorothy Bra).

Billie ~lcGee Harmon, ·~ , to Margaret Fa) e McPhaul.

Halph W. Harrell, '51, to Hosalind Knott. Norman Bryant Ha·rris, '52, to Sara Isa·

dora Jordan. J esse F. Hasty, Jr., '.18, to hirley Eve·

lyn Hill. C harles . Hauser, '51, to Darriell Cor·

nelius. Hoy Edgar Hedrick, Jr., '51, to Ruth

Upright, '52. W illiam Johnston Helsabeck, H, to

Roberta Ann Hobbs. Robert Brevard Hethcock to Beth Win­

frey J ones, '48. J a mes Relerford Helvey, Jr., to Doris

Anne Line, '52. Harold Heid Hoke, '49, to Betty Ann

Horton. George Marvin Bolt, Jr., to Mary Grif­

fin Bryan, '50. Thomas Russell Howell, ' I , to Annie

Ruth McPhatter. William Joseph lgoe, '53, to Joyce Casey. Alton Kornegay, '52, to Norma Lee

Cla rk. E s tus Bruce Lassiter, '53, to Lottie

Ma theson. Lloyd S. Liles, '4 3, to Grace Doris

auful. Seth E dwards Lippard, '50, to Marjorie

Lee Williams. \Vortham Clarence Lyon, Jr., to Jean

Ford Little, '48. Elmer Wayne llfcCaskill, '52, to J a net

Sessoms. Eugene James McDonald to Dorothy

Laryce Henderson, '55. William Thaddeaus McLean, Jr., ' IS, to

Mabel Cathryn Colwell. Jack N. McWhirter, '37, to Martha Anne

Banner.

William Gardner Montgomery, '49, to Mary Elizabeth Meeler .

John Benjamin Moore. Jr., '49, to Doris Ann Blanford.

Clyde Mozingo, '41, to Bertha Godwin.

!. B.

r, pt

;. 'I! 6!

Page 23: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

Page Twent~·-three

John Curtis Newsome, '40, to Phyllis Jane Holloway.

Jack Earl Norwood to Gloria Aber· nethy, '-t9.

Richard Nicholas Ognovieh, '4 , to Phyl­lis Ann Hodgson.

Jack Bardin Overman, '51, to Lois Jean Gardner.

Herbert Richard Paschal, Jr., '50, to Dorothy Ann Stauffer.

John Edward Payne, '49, to Rebecca Adair Lane, '43.

\\ illiam T. Pennell, '50, to Margaret Alspaugh peas.

Richard Eugene Roberts to Virginia Ann nyder, 52.

Carl Davis Ro enbaum, Jr., '49, to Betty Rose "\\'ilkerson.

Roy Lankford Rudd to Hilda Boone, '51. David mith Sheets, '52, to Iris Ly·

nam, '46. Frank Leslie Shope to Winifred Ruth

Hollowell, '17. Frederick Nennan Sigman, Jr., '4.7, to

Patience .Ann Westall. William Gallatin Simms, '52, to Mary

Lucinda Driver. Wayne Alonzo Slaton, '48, to Lucy E,·e·

lyn Hamrick. Leonard Collins Small, '52, to Helen

Charlotte Leary.

\1'.\KE FOilEST COLLEGE ALL'~I:\'1 :\'E\1' , Octobor, !952

William Lennon Starling, Jr., '-16, to Ju . lia Catherine Britt.

Herman Benjamin Stephens to Bett~ Jean \\'allace, '52.

Perry Rickman Tharrington to J e \\ ell Ann Brinkley, -'51.

Da,·id Clayton Thoma , '51 , to Willie Lee Little, '5·1.

Stacy Neal Thomas, '·19, to ophia Ge· ne\'3 \\'illiam , '·19.

Will iam Br)an W addell, '52, to Bell) Bridges Holliday, '54.

William H apton Wagoner, '49. to ~lade­line Hodges.

Charles Franklin \\'alters, ' I , to arah Katie )J oore.

Cy ru" Leslie \\'alton, Jr., '-19, to Fran­ces Loui~e \\' ilson.

Milton Clay Williamson, '50. to Jo)ce Hinegartner.

~la"hall Burns Willis, '50, to Elctha Rose Bullard, '5 1.

Jack Br)an Wooten. Jr., '59. to Shi rley Elaine Wooten, '52.

Benjamin Franklin Yandell, Jr., '50. to Marga re t Ann Lee.

\Villiam Perdew Young, '52, to Barbara .Margaret Lake, '53.

Willis Kenneth Young, '5 I, to Ca rolyn Olivia Greenway.

Future Wake Foresters Da,•id William Carroll, born -25-46;

Rhuea Anne Carroll, born 9-25-48. Fa­ther Archie Carroll, '32, 2227 Briar· wood Rd., Charlotte.

Virginia Alice Cheek, born 11-27-37; Lewis Alexander Cheek, born 5-9·51. Father, Dr. John 111. Cheek, Jr., '41, 2411 Shenandoah Al·e., Durham.

Walter C. Cox, Jr., born 7-10-48. Fa­ther, Walter C. Cox, '33, 1006 Rhem

t.. Kinston. Barbara Joan Davis, age 15; Jimmy

Davis, age II. Father, Dr. Vernon Davis, ' 28, 306 E. Main St., Moorestown, N. J.

J. Winfrey Davis, born 2-2-47. Father, Kenneth E. Davis, '47, 704 Locust Ave., Charlottesville, Va.

Ste,•e Doyle II, born 12-17-48; James F. Doyle, Jr., born I -17-50; David F. Doyle, born 1-19·51; Cherry Doyle, born 2-29-52. Father, James F. Doyle, '44, Box 53, Virginia Beach, Va.

Steven C. Gross, born 10-46; Nancy ue Gross, born 2-50. Father, Jerome

S. Gross, '12, RFD 5, Cherry Lane, Huntington, N. Y.

Michael Thomas Haire, born 8-23-51. Father, William C. Haire, Jr., '49, 2618 Philip St., Winston-Salem.

Carolyn Speight Hartsfield, born 5-16-52. Father, Marshall B. Hartsfield, '49; mother, Florence B. Hartsfield, '49, 620 Smede's Place, Raleigh.

Linda Loui e and Clyde P. Hatcher, Jr., twins, born 7-15-47. Father, Clyde P. Hatcher, '36, 808 E. Seventh St., Lumberton.

Carl Partin Hollem an, Jr., born 3- -5 2. Father, Carl Partin Holleman, '49, Apex.

Susan Elizabeth Hyams, born 6· -52. Father, Robert P. Hyams, '49, 2350 Me· Clintock Rd., Apt. 4, Cha rlotte.

Margaret Elizabeth Langston, born 5·7-52. Father, Warren B. Langston. '50, Willard.

Kathryn Love Lumpkin, born 4-25-49; George Thomas Lumpkin Ill , born 7-10-52. Father, George Thomas Lump· kin, Jr., '40, Laurel Hills Road, Ra leigh.

Kitzi Ruth llliller, born 4-21-35. Fa· ther, B. K. Miller, '23; mother, Kitzi McLamb Miller, '24, Charlotte High· way, Asheville.

Dean Lincoln Minton, Jr., born 2-18-52. Father, Dean L. Minton, '5 1; mother, Patsy Hawkins Minton, '52, Apt. 311 Judson Hall, Godfrey Ave., Louisville 6, Ky.

Paul B. Nickens, Jr., born 9-7-10. Fa­ther, Paul B. Nickens, '37, Plymouth.

Clarence Hunter OJh~e, age 1 ~. Fa­ther, Dr. Clarence Sedberry Oli~e, 1311 E. Pershing Road. Cheyenne, Wyoming.

Martha Holton Pearman, born 7-31-52. Father, Harvey R. Pearman, Jr. , '51; mother, Martha L. Bolton Pearman,

Clarence Hunter Olive, before and after getting WFC sweater.

'46. 10 I Lakeview Blvd., Winston-Salem. Carl Byron Perry, born 4-14-52. Fa­

ther, Edwin F. Perry, '38, 3906 Brook­field Ave., Louisville 7, Ky.

Cecil Glenn Perry, born 6-19-51. Fa­ther. Cecil McGee Perry, '27, Ridgecrest.

George Franklin Phillips, Jr., born 5-18-52. Father, George F. Phillips, '51, 102 Gloria Ave., Winston-Salem.

Nancy Bowman, born 7·6-52. Father, Dr. \Villiam R. Pric~ '43, Parris Is land, s. c.

Jimmy Ray, born 12-2-42. Father , J:tmes B . Ray, '3 , Mars Bill.

Carol Sue Riddle, born 4-21-14 . Fa· ther, Major Hasty W. Riddle, '·13, 8206 New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring, Md.

Page 24: 1 :-EW . October. 19 52 · ~ew Frontiers r American Medicine, hr llobc rt A. Moore, . e lond 'IL'Uchr Lenv e.s Classroom ... 23 u Page Two \ fo o tball tangle with X nrth Carolina

W \Kf: FOREST COLLEGE .\I t:MNI NEWS, October, 1952 Page Twtnty-four

OFFICERS OF ALUMNI ORGANIZATIONS {Please assist us l.o keepln' a correct list or

all alumni orcanlzatlons and officers. A card addressed to THE ALUMNI OFFICE, WAKE FORE T COLLEGE, WINSTON- ALEM. N. C., giving names and addresses or offiC'ers will be appreciated. end us also reports or meetings, photographs or alumni croups, and news or interest . Call on us for up-to-date mailing lbts and any ass istance we ean give In provid­ing pro&rams for alumni meetings.)

ALAMA.SCE COUNTY Dr. C. S. Crls&mo.n , VIce-President

G raham. North Carollna ASHE-\\' .\T..\UGA-t\LLEGHANY

W ade E. Brown , President Boone North Carollna.

D r C E Th ompson , VI ce-President ATL.\NT -\, GEORGIA, AREA

Dr. Wyatt c . Whitley, President 18-16 Ore~ t.on e Roo.d Atlanta. Georgia

Edwtn F . Holma n . VIce-President Mrs. Bo ward M. Phllllps, Secretary Ben H Elliot t . Treasurer

CAT \\\'8...\-LINCOLN Fred D. CBidwell . Pres ident

Malden. North Carotl..na Ed Hurrell. Secretary Rich ard Williams, Treasurer

CLLVELi\ND COUNTY Robert Forney, Pres ident

Shelby, North Carol!na C. C Horn , VIce-Pres ident J . A. West. Secret.ary Q _ V. Ha mrick, Treasurer LcP B. Weathers. Publlclty Chairma n E. e('uthe CommJttce Robert Forney 0 M. Mull Dr Wyan Wac;hbum C 0 . Greene Dr. D. T Bridges B N. Barnet B T Fa ll Jr

COLl 'MB.\ , SOUTH CAROLINA Ht•nry She iTUI , President

"i l B Monroe Street Columbia, South Carolina.

COLU:\tBUS COUNTY A. Paul Rogers. Sr., President

Tabor City , North CaroHna Ar thur W. WUlamson, VIce-President P nu l Wyche, Secretary-Tresaurer

Stephen Hughes S impson, born 5-l-52. Father, William B. Simpson, '49, 1859 We,! Smallwood Dr., Ra leigh.

Gail Marie Stanfield, born 7-9-52. Fa­ther, Edward M. Stanfield, '•19, Box 606, Roanoke Rapids.

Joel Edwin Stephens, born ~- 1 9- 1 7;

1\largaret Janice Stephens, born 9-21- 19. Father, Edwi n W. S tephens. ' 19, 169A Alabama Ave., 1\f e mphis, T enn.

Harry Williams Stubbs I V, born 7-1-52. Father, Ha rry W. Stubbs Ill, '11, 107 Vance St., Greenville.

1\lartha T urner Tate, born 9-17- 12. Sister, Phyll is Tate, '52, lOS . Spring St., Concord.

Debra Lynn Thompson, born 3-22-52. Fath er, Henry E. Thompson, ' 16, U Linkhaw Apts., Lumberton.

Catherine McNeill Washburn, born 3-27-51. Father, Harry E ugene Wash­burn, '50, Boiling S prings.

Henry Burton Watkins, Jr.., born 8-31-52. Father , H enry B. \\'atkins , '50 ; mother, E lizabeth Stone \Va tkins, '51, 310¥, Watts St., Durham.

DAVI DSON CO{Jli..'TY Judge Hubert E. Olive, President

Lexington. North Carollna

OURIIAM COUNTY Mra. W . M. Upchurch, Jr., President

608 Club Boulevard Durham, North Carollna

Floyde Fletcher, VIce-President Mlke Thompson, Secretary John Clayton, Treasurer

FRr\NKLfN COUNTY Dr. Marvin Pleasants, President Lou~burg, North Carolina

John Matthews, VIce-President o. M Benm. Jr .. Secretary-Treasurer

GRAzr-.'V I LLE COUNTY Dr. James Pruitt. President

Oxford, North Carolina

GU I LFORD COUNTY Ray Manlerl. President

1301 Cornwallis Street Greensboro. North CaroUna

Rod M. Bute, VIce-President 0 . B . Teague, Jr. Secretary Wallace Freeman. Treasurer

llERTFORO·NORTRAl\lPTON COUNTlES Gilbert T. Stephenson. President

Pf"ndle-ton. North Carolina O::u~ar Creech. Vlce·Presldent J . Raynor Woodward. Secretary F.-xecutlve Committee David Gay Dr R. B. Outlaw Judge Dare Boone Dick Newsome

LEE COUNTY Wllllnm W Staton. President

Sanford North Carolina LENOIR COUNTY DE.-\ CON CLUB

BUI GlbMJn. President Kln§ton, North Carollna

Dr. Mtke Lee. VIce-President J B Wilder Secretary·Treasurer

MECKLENBURG COUNTY Ouy T Carswell. President

Law Building Charlotte. North Carollna

James F Justtce. Vlce-Preatdent C. C Hope, Jr. Secretary-Treasurer

P ITT COUNTY C . 0 . Wnrd, President

209 FMtern Street Oreem·Ul~. North Carolina

Di ane T1visda le Whi te, born 10-3-51. Mother, Hazel Twisda le White, ' 17, 10 I Bre'' er Ave., S uffolk, Yn.

Daniel E rnest Youn g, born 8 -31 -52. Father , Charles G. You ng, ' 16, 601¥2

Dr A M Mumford, Vlce-Pretildent H B. Duncan. Secretary·Trea.surer

RI CHMOND, VffiGINIA Dr. J. Rudolph Saunders, President

Westbrook Sanatoriu m Brook Road Richmond, Vlrglnla

Or. Donald F. Bunn, VIce-President Harold Farley, Secretary J W Chamblee, Treasurer

ROBESON COUNTY Da\•ld M Britt, President

Falnnont. North Carolina

R OCK ING HA M CO UJ\'T Y Dr. Frnnk T Webster. President

Madlson, North Carolina Lee Greene, Secretary

TlDfo: WATER. VIRG(NlA Robert F Babb, President

1008 Park Avenue South Norfolk, Vtrgtnla

E. Otl.s Buroughs, Jr .. VIce-President Ellen Jean Vaughan, Secretary

\V:\K E COUNTY Claude F Gaddy, President

2626 St. Mary's Street Ralelgb. North Carollnn

Adrtam J. Newton, Vlce~Presldent Paul S. Daniels. Secretary

WAS HINGTON, D. C. A Yates Doweu. President

3028 Newark Street Washington. D. c.

Gordon W Grnnt, First Vlce-Pre."ldent John Hubert Prince. Second VIce-President Mt'8. Thomas B. VanPoole, Jr Secrt>tary E\·elyn Bouterse. Treasurer H w Baucom, Chaplain

OTRECTORS James E. Cloer. Jr. Wade B. Hampton Dr. P A. McLendon S. Lewlo; Morgan, Jr Altan V Oberholtzer William Yates Webb

WESTERN SORTH CAROLINA Webb Ell~. President

51 N onmng Bh1d Asbe\'llle. North Caro11na

W. T Duckworth, Jr., Vlce·Pre"ldent W. K. McLean, Secretary-Treasurer

Hollownl St. , Durham. Brend a Joyce Young, born 5-22-50;

J a mes E rskin Young II, born 10-29-51. Mother, J o Garrell Youn g, '49, Box 21, Tabor City.

FUTURE WAKE FORESTERS \\'c wunt nnmcs of 'Future ' Vnke Foresters. n~cs from birth to dntt.• of entering

l'ollt·~t·. A 9-iTH.'h "~ukt• Fore'it pennant will bt• sent to each and till' nnme of t'n(.'h will nppenr in the next issue of ALI''ISJ Nt~w ...

Dntc of Birth

Nnmc

Ontc of Birth

l"nthcr Class

M other Clnss

..-\ddn•ss