Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 5, 1909, edition 1 / Page 3
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the Tar heel COMMENCEMENT DAY (Continued from First Pago) rate. Preventics have already added about twelve years to the life of man. Work is being- done in the study for prevention of tuberculosis. This wil be prevented to a great degree by san itary : conditions. Dr. Welch states that the greatest neod now is for train ed health officers. ' With a view of the position of i physician Dr. Welch closed. He point eu out mat the M.U. now occupies a much broader position in regard to so ciety than formerly. son. Georire ,Oroon Ki)crs. Colin ANNOUNCEMENTS President Venable then made the announcement of the following ap pointmenls and resignations; Dr. C Alphonso ; Smith resigned from the chair of English Language and Liter ature; Lucius Polk McGehee, LL.B., Professor of law. Dr. Venable ex pressed the University's regret at the loss of two of its faculty. He then announced the appointment of; Edwin Minis, Ph.D., Professor of English; John M. Booker, Ph.D., As sociate Professor of English; Oliver Lawles, Ph.D., Associate Professor of French.''''- '" ' "' '"'';"; Promotions were as follows: George Weston Mitchell, Associate Professor of Drawing; Royall Oscar Franklin Spruill icnt; iiivis, associate iroiessor or General Chemistry. bachelors of science Instructors appointed were: James. Lafayette' Burgess, Joseph George Kenneth Grant Henry, Lat- Spencer Mann, Duncan MacRae, Ben in; Claude Howard," English. jamin Walton Jones, Vincent Melanch The assistants were: thon Montsing-er, William Joel P;ir- Botanv, Elden Bayley; Geology, W. ish, Robert McDowell Watt. son Coffin, ( Jonas MacAulay Costner, Jr., Oliver Cromwell, Cox, William David Cox, Clement Gibbon Credlo, Jerry Day. Victor Clyde Edwards. Cyrus Clifford Frazier, William Mon roe Gaddy, Frank Porter Graham, William Presslev Grier. Bollinj?- Hall. James Gordon Hams, Samuel Walkei Hurdle, William Borden Jerman, Milo Jones, James Arthur Keig-er, Cleve land Fane Kirkpatrick, Bruce Huf nam : Lewis, Abbott Edward Llovd. Jr., William Lunsford Long, James Howard Mc Lain, John Hall Mannin Henry P. Masten, William Wilson Michaux, John Alexander Moon Eugene Joseph Newell, William Mer cer Oates, David Dickson Oliver, Hen ry Plant Osborne, Joseph Alle:i Pari er, Donald Fairfax Ray. Jeremiah Bas- com Reeves, Russell Mat able Robin ALUMNI DAY (Continued from First Pjifje) this class were present that they did not have any exercises. The class of 1904 now took the stage. Mr. Albert Cox of Raleigh read the roll of the class irivinir the statistics Bradley Ruffin, James Lawrence Sim mons, Walter Gwynne Sparkman, Charles Booker Spiccr, Norman Vaugnn Stockton, Wallace -Hearten Strowd, William George Thomas, Jul ius Faison Thomson, Charles Walter Tillett. Jr., John Wesley Umstead, Jr., Harvey Bryan Wadsworth. Charles Digl.y Wardlaw. Norman Lee Willis, Robert McArthur Wilson. Francis Edward Winslow. BACHELOR'S OF PHILOSOPHY William Arthur TTrmrV T Carolina was third in wealth. Manu factured products were greatest in the . ..imvcMaonsnea me of each man. In the absence of any fact hat industry, even under hard other officer Mr. E. S. W. Dameron of t !5': "0t ,rel t0 U,e SUtl1' Turlington presided over his class. 1 110 North Carolina boy was even a w .. t , , . . - ouuicosiiig a icw remarKS to nis et g.caterin defeat. No small state fellow class-mates and the audience eyer yet naade a greater sacrifice than Mr. Dameron adjourneiI the mcetin cZ " t, I"; miadC LSt The c,ilss of '4 which graduated fifty Cause. The last charge was by the three men mustered fourteen at their North Carolina boy; more muskets first reuniU. This closed the Alumni were surrendered by him than by any Mllft.ieM L. n -,, 4. other state. The figure of tli Snntv.. ,.i .....' - J,?.- , - , v.wnvu, II. Fry; History, C. E. Mcintosh; Lat in, W. S. Coulter; Physics, W. R. Ed monds, J. S. Koiner, A. L. Feild; Zoology, II. F. Boatwright,' C. F. Rirkpatrick; Library Assistants, L. C. Kerr, F. N. Cox; Chemistry, W. M. Oates, Duijcau MacRae, T. P. Nash, W. A. Smith; Anatomy, II. C. Rob erts; German; F. E. Winslow; Gym nasium, V. W. Osborne. The President then made announce ments of prizes, medals." and scholar- BACHHLOKS OF LAWS Martin Francis Douglas, Cyrus Clif ford razier, James Lathrop More head. . - ,; - GRADUATES IN PIIAKMACV John Grover Beard, Myrtle Hall Cox, Hugh Alexander Griffin, Lester Boyd Mullen, Charles Ilarman Reed, William Lewis Wetzell. ern soldier will hold the word forever. Such men we call our fathers. Thus we. have the heritag-e of a jrood name. The South will never be subsidized for the lesson of the past has been learned by heart. We know that ra triarchal society is helpless in a me chanical age, and that heroism in war cannot take the place of industrial civ ilization. In education, industrj', and agricul re tlic bouth is making a construc- ive eifort. Education is coming- more and more to be a training for 1if, The training to be aimed at is man hood. One fifth of the e vnonrliftirpc for education has been for the negro. There are no more frontiers; explo ration has been completed. New land and cheap land have vanished. Op portunity lies in the development of uuaiy icaiizeu resources. The re sources of North Carolina are exeat. anjj her greatest one is her children. Tlie care of the South now, and that ofNorth Carolina, is for fulness. She needs all kinds of A. G. SPALDING & BROS. The Spa 1 d i n g Trade-Mark 01 Are the Largest M aim f acturers in the ""orld of Official is known through out the worlo as a Guarantee of Quality Equipment For All Athletic Sports and Pastimes If You U: MASTERS OF ARTS ' I in V Ul T ,Pl it! 1 A .1 C PI -i fir a I, m, . tt . " ..I ' T vi. i i mun.is s,"P.:. -ne: n arris prize, Arnold wtntt n.vw pn. o-. oi , -att-.., lvudUL-iit: ounonion Tii v ii r Ip t 'IFaircs, Claud Howard, Harvey The -Worth pmo, Tj Armstrong; IIatcher Hughes; Ovid Winficld Jones' ,;,r ti r S " P ' Urestcs Pearl Rhyue, Jeannie Whe d.A.uii.Ki.i 1 II Ili (Hi III i.r III! ... i i ' i i r TV I T .i muni, jJL iijtl- English, L. N.' Morgan; The Brad- min Earl Washburn, George deus Whitley. MASTER OP SCIENCK Julian Colgate. Hines, Jr. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Stroud Jordan. Thad- 3 DOCTORS OP MEDICINE Wade Hampton 'Braddy,' William ham prize, J. G. Beard; the Henry R. Bryan prize, S. F. Stancell; Prizes in N. C. Colonial History, 1st, D. D. Ol iver; 2nd, F. E. Winslow; Mathemat ics Medal, O. P. Rhyne; the Toch Fellowship in Chemistry, E. J. New ell; The Sutherland Fellowship in Chemistry, 11. N. Dumas; Fellow in ' TIT T T T t t- 7 ' C -- .V W. G. Sparkman, G. T. Whitley; Burdette Chapin, Lucius Victor Dun the W. J. Bryan prize, O, C. Cox; the laP' Charles Sidney Eagles, Bayard Bingham prize, W. R. Edmonds; the Cleveland Johnson, Braxton Bynum Mangum medal, K. D. Battle; elected Lloyd," John 'Moses Maness. Arthur to membership in the Phi Beta Kappa Eugene Riggsbee, Frederick Brunell Society, 1909. T. P. Nash. Jr., A. II. Spencer, William Amick Strowd, John Wolfe, O. W. Ilyman, J. W. Lasley, amuei 1 alloy, John Melvin Thomp Jr.. L. McCullnch. C S. Vpnahlp. son. Certificates were given to the fof lowing: In English, G. T. Whitley; French', J. W. Umstead, Jr., C D. Wardlaw; History, J. W. Umstead, Jr., N. L.' Willis; Latin, W. M. Gaddy, J. F. Thomson; Pedagogy, E. S. Welborn, N. L. Willis; Zoology, C. F. Kirkpat rick. . . . ;, .--' wirk, all kinds of men, to lead and to low. Upon the soil hallowed by t centuries of inspiring history let 1 , " usuedicate ourselves to the service of Nflrth Carolina. At the conclusion of the Alumni ad dress the class reunions began. The hrst class to take the stage was the diss of 1879. After thirty years they mustered eight men at their reunion. i neir president Mr. Wm. J. Peele of Raleigh presided over the class me:t ing and first called on the class secre tary, Francis D. Winston of Windsor, to call the class roll. Before calling this roll Mr. Winston made the an nouncement that it had been agreed among the members of the class tiat the man in the class who could lav claim to the largest household at the end of thirty years after graduation should be awarded a prize. The mem bers of the class had been striving va liantly for this prize and as ,a result there was a tie. Ten years more w?re given in which to get off ibis tie. The secretary then called the class roll which included many men of State rep utation. At the conclusion of the roll President Peele asked the secre tary to record a fine of five are interested in Athletic Sport you should hare a copy of the Sjxdding Cukdog. IV s a complete encyclo pedia of What's New in Sport and is sent free on request. A. G. Spalding & Bros. 74 N. Broad Street Washington A L V A R I T A THE CIGAR OF QUALITY SOLD feY UNIVERSITY DRUG COMPANY Durham Ggar Store Company - Durham, N. C. Distributors - The University OF North Carolina. ...1 7 89 ... HEAD OF TUB STATE SYSTEM EDUCATION. OF ...1909... CONFERRING OF HONORARY 'DEGREES' DOCTORS OF LAWS . Judge William 1 Alexander Hoke, Associate " Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina; Judge George H. Brown, Associate Justice of the Su preme Court of Nor t h Carol i n a ; n ci- ui. lx. ii. vvnirenead, l'rolessor of Degrees were conferred in courses: . , ur or Anatomy and. Dean of the Medical bachelors of arts " Department ".'of the University of Vir- Jerry Harrison Allen, Thomas ginia; Joseph Austin Holmes, Chief Na James Armstrong-, Jr., Harvey Clyde Barbee, Kemp Davis Battle, George Urias Baucum, Jr., Chesley Calhoun Bellamy, Hal Fullerton Boatwright, Frank Kennon Borden, Stuart Vann Bo wen, Edward Cleveland Byerly, of the technologic hranch of the tional Geological Survey: ! 'A You should see the fine line of all. wool spring. and summer suitings before you buy. International -Tail f T-v Ktu, IJickson and McLmh ;The University stands for thdroughnoHS and all that i best in education and the monldiji of charuetnr Tt ;u : i dollars 10 "unrigs, now Water works ctn. against each member of the class not " 4 iluailn' 0 ect.nc hShU. Eleven Sei- present, this sum to be used to pre- . work. The Facul tj? " ZZ74 t sent the University with a telescope, dents 730. Library of 45,000 vo'luml"' Mr. Peele then read extrarts frnm t),n One librarian and fmn- nUa';ut.,., ml'. . . ....n kny, i - - inra.lUMlin, rillO Kalcigh News of JuneSth, 1879, show- ( I , J. ci . iwbrajy .oocicnes. There is an active Y in- what was thought of thf r1as f , ; V' f 1 con uctcd W tWj students '79 when they graduated. ; iinJ Ioflna f necly an, The next class to assemble upon the - For information, address rostrum was the class of 1884 who re- i p dvrm.V " li i f, . i . it ic, president ... ...... - .uon.c UL iwuiiiy". hve years. The class president Prof Chapel Hill, N. C. The Athletic Store , j viiui: vw, .1 Henry Koopman Clonts, Oscar Jack-jjagts, 13 0. JR. Jas. U Lyove of the Mathematical De part of Harvard presided. He called . , , f- O 1 T " . j " . "a i. oamuei iv. jaiiis class sec-l retary. Seven men of the class of '84 Invites the stucents to give it the same answered the roll call. After calling j liberal support in the future as they Zl tne roil tne secretary read a brief his- in tlm tory of his class, Although none of W o .,v,i,. i: its members had become greatly dis- ; tinguished yet each one was acting ( G YALNASIUM GOODS - wen uis . pdiiin ine community in n- which he dwelled. ! blve our onager your order for V The next class called was the class ! PiUr ofR,nl hw- of '89. However so few members of Seville, Manager
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 5, 1909, edition 1
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