4
.. , -. ',' .. ' . ·AppeaLIS Made·To · · · · Ct)mmliiiity:,For · '· .· · FurnitUre . · · (ol_lege 9bserves ·Day M. ·A. Huggins Spoke To Students, Faculty · Townspeople ... , ·- ·. au ._, ... . . . ;,. . . ' . -: ·* .*·' - •• ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I._ '. lor. Second row: Kathleen Trex- ler, Jane. Frazer, Bertha Garret, Meredith Boaze. .Third row: Frances Bickett,· Patsy Crews, .Ann Johnson, Willie ·Ruth Ed- wardS. · World Student": Service Fund . Thursday . ' . . p·atricia Sleezer Wili ·Be By The Phi· Society Is T :Pilot Escapes'Without · Injury. Result Of Emergency Landing A P-47 on' a flight from. Sey- mour Johnson. Field, Goldsboro, crashed on highway·98 about two miles from _Youngsville at ap- proximately Wednesday afternoon. The · pilot, Lt. M. · A. Power§.. of New York City, escap- ed witHout ' The plane was headed north ac- cording to Willis Mynor, farmer, who noticed just as it came down. Mynor said the ·engine was sputtering like his car did when it "gave out of gas. Capt. R. E. Barrow and three enlisted men from . the Army Fi- nance School were sent to guard the plane as soon as the army was notified. They were later re- . placed by M. P.'s from Ca!}lP But- ner. Plane Hit Sign · From evi.dence, the plane might possibly have landed successfully had it not for a highway sign which the .right wing hii, up- setting the balance· of the plane. For 100 yards north up the high- way towards the · wreck were marks of the left wheel, and the right wheel straddled the ditch- bank. Neither wheel gave indica- tion of having turned over . after ·brakes were applied. The plane flopped over diagonal across · the ditchbank. All f6ur blades of the propeller were bent, two of them being buried half way up in the ground. The nose of the ship was Patricia Sleezer of New York ·The first dance open for en- dented in where it had borne the City, traveling secretary of the tire studen,t·body since the winter weight of· the plane. World Student Service Fund, will of 1942 will be given by Pan- Damages Noticed speak in the Phi Hall next Thurs- Hellenic Council tomorrow night. day, December 2, sponsorerl hy This , is the Pan-Hel fall dance. The left wing tip was demol- Phi Society. . The music will be featured by Carl ished; the r\ldder crumpled, and According to . Secretary Ed S. Pritchard and his Music Makers, the left elevator broken. Glass was King of the State College YMCA. who supplied the music i:or the shattered and lying on the grnund who arranged her visit to Wake Pledge Dance. around the cockpit. The·left wing Forest, the WSSF is an interpa- - .. Orginally. the plan ·of, .Pan- dug up the- highway where it hit. tiona!; non-sectarian;- and· non-pc:.. Hel Council-after the close of the Virginia Merritt, colored obser- litical organizatiofl, which "pro-' rushing period was that all frater- ver saw the plane hit the highway Vl .des relief for students ani and bounce into the air before nity activities were to be exclu- professors who are· victims •>f war sively .for fraternity men. How- settling down. She said there was and joins with stude)lts of other ever, since there ha:s been no so- dust everywhere, coUntries in raising funds fo,· stu- c:ial affair for the entire :::tudent The wing flaps and landing gear dent relief." body since Mid-Winters of 1942 , were down, indicating that the pi- Visits N. C. College it has been decided by the Coun- lot anticipated the landing. Appar- Duril_lg her two-week stay in cil to open this dance to every- ently he planned to taxi up the For the first time in the memory North Carolina, Sleezer will one. All non-fraternity men are highway, heading north. H'ld it of anyone who is now connected appear at State College, Campbell, cordially invited to attend the hop. not been for the roadsign, he might with the College, a chapel service Meredith, W. C., ECTC, Duke, The admission to the dance will have straightened the plane out. was held on Thanksgiving Day Pfeifer, Atlantic Christian C01Iege, be $1.50. desiring <_J. tick- The inspection, by officials :for the student body and the mem- and others. et for admissron to the bail may from Seymour Johnson Field, was bers of the faculty. The church Miss Sleezer is a graduate of the see aJ?YOne of the following men: 1 held between 4:30 and 5: 30 Wed- people had theirs in connection class of '41. She was a member Charlie Parkex, Russell Perry, nesday afternoon. ·· with them this year. The speaker State University of Iowa in the Charlie Morris, Roscoe Mason, . was Mr. M.A. Hugins_, of the class of Phi Beta Kappa, and an inter- Howard Martin, and Ray Oddono. of 1911, General Secretary oi the collegiate debater of note. She did Sponsors' .. nd dates for the dance Baptist State Convention, of Ral- graduate work at Yale, and has are: Barbara Harrington of South .ei.gh. worked with student projects since Boston, Mass. with Roscoe Mason, The service was opened with the finishing college. She travelled in Sigma Phi Epsilon; Elizabeth :singing of "Come, Ye Thankful Mexico and Cuba two sum. mers as Bryan of urake Forest, with Hey- Peple;· Come" and "Now Thank worker· in peace educatron and ward Smith 1 Sigma Phi Epsilon· We All Our God". and a respons- for the A!'fler- Lynn Riddle, of Raleigh, ive Thanksgiving reading. A special 1can Frrends Servrce Comm1ttee .. 1 nest Boyette, ·Pi Kappa Alpha; · offering was taken for the YW_CA at West Fran Taylor of Oxford, with Wat- Carolina Baptist Orphanag_e, after Vrrgmra· Umvers1ty . kins Pryor, Pi Kappa Alpha; Kath- which\ the Glee Club sang "The 43. She has been regronal leen Trexler, of Granite Quarry, Earth Is the Lord's" by Nikolsky. man of the Chr.1stran with J. c. Fesperman, Alpha Kap- Mr. Olive then introduced the Movel!lent, attending many pa Pi; Jane Frazer, of Winston- speaker. . · collegiate conferences. Salem, with Charles Morris, Alpha Mr. Huggings opened his speech ·words, "Can .one be Kapa Pi; Bertha ·Garret, of Ham- FLASH! Wake Forest lost to the University _of South Caro- lina yesterday 13-2. WSSF SPEAKER COMES THURSDAY· .. *' * * T To Offer Noveltiis .. Specjal Numbers To Be Given By . Brass Quartets, and ''Potato" ·soloist . · .._ -B.y Leslie Fowler- The Wake Forest College concert band .will make its debut tonight af the high sehool auditorium under the direction· of frof .• Thane McDonald. The program will vary in scope froni the classics to modern marches and novelties. Two ensemble groups will appear in -novelty numbers and Charlie l\1orris will play· a potato (ocarina) The program will begin at 8:30. · · Because of wartime shortages in musicians, transportation, and other difficulties the band has not been presented at football games as has been traditional. In spite of that, the band is one of the most well balanced that has been presented here, Mr. .McDonald says. Instead of playing the usual marches and pep songs the organization has been changed to a concert band. The program tonight will not only be one that every student will enjoy but one of which we can be proud. . Special Numbers ' · Taken from the band are two ensemble groups, a clarinet and a brass quartet and soloist which will appear. The clarinet quar- tet is composed of Bob Green, boy who played "The Flighfof the Bumblebee" at the fall concert, John Swain, B. Humphries, :;n(l A T!!,lr>r. The P"roun will nlav an arrangement of. "Three The clarinet quartet- Swain, Green, Humphries,· T_aylor. · Mice" followed by "Ca-1 as a "sweet. J,>O· price". Rumor has it that the tato . If grven. encouragement . Charlie, who usually plays cornet, boys have _g1vep. the last number will demonstrate his versatility'.by a good gomg that they playing a baritone . with several will follow with an original ar- other boys in a Glenn Miller· ar- rangement-a la Benny Good- rangement of Brown Jug." man. The brass quartet composed of Ernest Nott, Charlie Morris, Char- lie Meisenheimer , and Harold Hayes will pla'y an arrangement of Stephen Foster melodies. The band will open with a sacred number, "Come Sweet Death," a chorale by Bach. A preview of the Christmas season is offered in "Noel" which is a medly of familiar Christmas Carols. Continuing the holiday I mood the band will play a Tllanks- giving march, "The Pilgrim". Two soloists, Jolm Swain on the alto sax, and Ernest Nott _on the cor- net, are featured on the next num- ber, "Cabins", an American rhap- sody by James Gilette. Mixed Selection The remainde1· of the program consists of four novelty numbers, The group of novelty numbers will conclude with the playi.Iig of "A Jolly Good Fellow" or "l'he Only Tune the Band Can Play." This tune , will be played in five different ways, as a street parade, as it would be played in concert at the "Oprey'' house, a march, at the home talent -minstrel show; and at the Saturday night dance. This is a repeat of a ·hit novelty tune of last year. T,h& program wil conclude with "Sou- sa's immortal "Stars and Stripes Forever" and "Dear Old Wake Forest." · thankful in the world today? 5IR ( M b -see DANCE, page 4- ..... When hell itself seems to. breathe em ers out contagion to our world?" . · · · · • • the first of which 'is "A Litle Vod- ka"; "A Russian Mixup" by Schu- maker. In this number there are strains of everything from "The Nutcracker Suite" to Raclunanoff's A preview of tonights pertorm-· ance will be given for the benefit of the high school student at the high school auditorium at 10:30 this morning. The band will appear in uniform playing a few numbers to be played on the program to- night. AttendN.C, .·Mee.t Uncle Genatps Et·UX. ceniing thank:fulness: We can be thankful for some things and yet . Five members of the Interna- Observe· Golden Fete we ought not to be in these times, tiona! Relations Club attended a "Prelude in C Sharp Minor", "Old McDonald's Farm" (no reference to music director) is featured in the next number which is "Opera Y. Bingham Wins "How-Do" Contest we can be thankful for some things and ought to be; and there are North Carolina Conference held By R. H. Brantley t · f hi h ht under the auspices of the North . . many hings or w c we oug Carolina Council of Churches at "We've stood it these here iifty to be thankful at all times. years, so I guess we didn't make In connection with the first Livingston and Catawba Colleges mistake," grinned .A:unt Betty. November 19-21. - point Mr. Huggins .said, "As a na- ou see, Aunt Betty and Uncle tion we can- be thankful that we The theme of the conference Genatus have just celebrated their aren't like other nations. And also -was "Building Tomorrow's World golden wedding anniversary and that we are not poor and starving Today,'' wijh the meeting center- "reklections" have been commg like others.'' But for these things ed around the idea of winning the thick and fast. we ought not to be. peace of World War II, placing In their more formal hves He stressed his second statement special emphasis on India and they're known as the Rev. and by saying that we can be thankfUl China. Noted statesmen expound- Mrs. James Robert Dent, but to for the beauty of the earth, the e9 on each of the ideas presented, all their friends it's just plain and round table discussions .were A t B tt d u cl G t vigor of the body, and health of un · e Y an n e . ena us. the·mind. "We can and ought to be held following each speech. At 'We'uz born, raised, and gOtma :iie these periods representatives from d h " 1 · d u c1 G thankful for a country which rec- aroun ere exp ame n e- the thirty-two colleges present t h b rttl hi 73 ognizes the value of the human asked the speakers arid the forum o iste l est. s lk yeards personali n•, for the discoveries of wr lS ar ocra 1c wa an •;, leaders questions collcernin? the 1 1 ul t' · ' modern SCl ·ence, for art, literature h w k h d" . · ca m, ca c a mg vorce. speec es. . or s op · 1scussrons u 1 G tu..s d A t B tty and music, for churches where we were held at regular. intervals· nc e an e can gather together and worship, throughout the three dars. At found eac o her over l Y years and for freedom of worship. 'For these discussions ideas were work- ago last Monday, and accordir:g to all th thing · d'd t toil d t the groom they had a "gorgeous ese s we 1 no ' e ou · . time" at the anniversary oartv. neithisth.er did Thhane Wa,l{e Forest Delegation I It seems that almost everybody -of campus as een e 0 The representatives from Wake. in Wake had a hand in giv- us; we are merely heirs. For au Forest were C. E. Driver, Roscoe! ing this party; colored and white this are we grateful. Mason, J. C. Fesperman, Joe I alike. Engraved invitations, multi- . Our Opportunities ·· Christian, and Rudd Friday. Well tudinous presents, beautiful music, Mr. Huggins then gave his sec- over half of the conference was and just plain folks all combined ond point by saying that the things held at Livingston College, a j 1 to honor the couple in the best for which we ought to be thankful North Carolina college for negroes. fashion. at all times are our oportunities. During the week-end there were j Everything was most :fornai, "To us have been handed· certain two banquests, group sings, and what with Uncle :md idealS. Take them, preserve them, entertainment offered by musical Aunt Betty dressed in Sunday besl ·enlarge on them, live by them, and artists. and all the guests offering their pass them on. The idealism of one I "It is believed by many," said congratulations in a reserved but -See OBSERVES, page 4- . -see MEET, page 4- most sincere manner. For the fir&t .. time in 25 years, Aunt Betty said, in the Barnyard." In this there are "my hand looks like it did when representations ?f the Yates Bingham, transfer from I was married." You see her sons quackmg of ducks, the croy.rmg of Wingate Junior College, this quar- gave her a new wedding band roosters, and even the rattle of a- ter won the Know-Your-Fellow- which has "initials and all" carved Ford. Student Contest. He edged . out inside. Potato Solo Earl Parker by a score of aa·to·S2. All this "shfudig" wasn't just to Next, Charlie Morris will. play Yates, a junior from Monroe, have a big time either, for Uncle an ocarina solo. The instrument is displayed his ability to know his Genatus and Aunt Betty have liv- fellow students by winning over ed one of those lives of service all the other students who had which shows you just how good ,_.,, s k Q been here several terms. He will folks can .Qe. Uncle is \II pea s n be awarded a gold pin by the Min- first and foremost a Baptist isterial Conference at an appro- preacher who . considers it his priate time. ' · · duty to "spread the gospel to all '' Th F E t ,, l Runner-ups in the contest were: regardless of nomination." 'lhen e ar as W. N. Cosley, 73; Peyton. he's been a "raiser of chillun, phi- 72:. John Hardaway, 72; Charlie losopher, and .all around hard 1 Dr. Everett Gill spoke this '-''eek Williams, 70; George "69; working man." at the Ministerial Conferen<?e on Tom Marshburn, 69; Billie ColUer, Aunt Betty is at her best when "The Far East" emphasizing the 68; Joe Alexander, 68; and E. C. she's fulfilling the role of "mam- importance_of llnd Watson. my" to all of the Patterson chil- Asia as a whole. -------- dren. Mr. Patterson is registrar He declared Eurasia the of -the College-that makes Aunt mass of the globe, the origi- Betty pretty important as she'£ nal home of the human race. the "nigh about been a second mam- home of all great civilizations, my to all of his chillun.'' Then and he added that there will be she's seen to it that all of her decided the destiny of the l":wnan boys and girls have been hMest race. He also made the statement hard working Negroes and that's that America was a prolongation a "terribu! hard job.'' of Europe. · Monday night and golden wed- Resolution made by the Confer- ding are memories now: The Rev. ence was: "In so much as our and Mrs. James Robert Dent are chapel exercises for this qu"lrter Uncle Genatus and Aunt Betty have been exceptionolly meamg- once again. Incidentally, he· does ful we go on record as fa\"r:'!:ing not know how he acquired the strictly worship programs Jn the name of Genatus. future." ·. Clonts Speaks J. W. Clonts, guest speaker at the weekly meeting of the Club last Monday-even- ing, presented a section of a diary which he wrote while traveling in Russia in the summer of Of special interest was his eval- uation of the Russian military system and his forecast of what would happen in case of war.

au. - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · Pan-Helleni~1Hop Is T oniorrow.Nig~t :Pilot Escapes'Without · Injury. ~s Result Of Emergency Landing A P-47 on' a flight from. Sey mour Johnson. Field,

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Page 1: au. - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · Pan-Helleni~1Hop Is T oniorrow.Nig~t :Pilot Escapes'Without · Injury. ~s Result Of Emergency Landing A P-47 on' a flight from. Sey mour Johnson. Field,

lck .. :he 'he ,

-.

',' ..

'

. ·AppeaLIS Made·To · · · · Ct)mmliiiity:,For · '·

. · · FurnitUre . ·

· (ol_lege 9bserves ~Thanksgi\fing ·Day

M. ·A. Huggins Spoke To Students, Faculty ·

Townspeople

... , ·- ·.

au._, ... ~· . . .

~. ;,. ~:~~ ~ . . '

. -: ·* .*·' --~.-- ~ ·~.· ·~~e~tJ.s e~·-JJ~Jz..fk: M~~~~-• • •• • • ~ • ' ' • ~ ' ~ ' ' • • • • ' ' • I._ • '.

lor. Second row: Kathleen Trex­ler, Jane. Frazer, Bertha Garret, Meredith Boaze. .Third row: Frances Bickett,· Patsy Crews, .Ann Johnson, Willie ·Ruth Ed-wardS.

· World Student": Service Fund . Spea~er T.oBeHe'-~ Thursday . ' . .

p·atricia Sleezer Wili ·Be Spon~or~d By The

Phi· Society Pan-Helleni~1Hop Is T oniorrow.Nig~t

:Pilot Escapes'Without · Injury. ~s Result Of Emergency Landing

A P-47 on' a flight from. Sey­mour Johnson. Field, Goldsboro, crashed on highway·98 about two miles from _Youngsville at ap­proximately t.·o·c~ock· Wednesday afternoon. The · pilot, Lt. M. · A. Power§.. of New York City, escap-ed witHout ~jury. '

The plane was headed north ac­cording to Willis Mynor, farmer, who noticed i~ just as it came down. Mynor said the ·engine was sputtering like his car did when it "gave out of gas.

Capt. R. E. Barrow and three enlisted men from . the Army Fi­nance School were sent to guard the plane as soon as the army was notified. They were later re­

. placed by M. P.'s from Ca!}lP But-ner.

Plane Hit Sign · From evi.dence, the plane might

possibly have landed successfully had it not b~n for a highway sign which the .right wing hii, up­setting the balance· of the plane. For 100 yards north up the high­way towards the · wreck were marks of the left wheel, and the right wheel straddled the ditch­bank. Neither wheel gave indica­tion of having turned over . after ·brakes were applied. The plane flopped over diagonal across · the ditchbank. All f6ur blades of the propeller were bent, two of them being buried half way up in the ground. The nose of the ship was

Patricia Sleezer of New York ·The first dance open for thr~ en- dented in where it had borne the City, traveling secretary of the tire studen,t·body since the winter weight of· the plane. World Student Service Fund, will of 1942 will be given by th~ Pan- Damages Noticed speak in the Phi Hall next Thurs- Hellenic Council tomorrow night. day, December 2, sponsorerl hy th~ This , is the Pan-Hel fall dance. The left wing tip was demol­Phi Society. . The music will be featured by Carl ished; the r\ldder crumpled, and

According to . Secretary Ed S. Pritchard and his Music Makers, the left elevator broken. Glass was King of the State College YMCA. who supplied the music i:or the shattered and lying on the grnund who arranged her visit to Wake Pledge Dance. around the cockpit. The·left wing Forest, the WSSF is an interpa- -.. Orginally. the plan ·of, th~ .Pan- dug up the- highway where it hit. tiona!; non-sectarian;- and· non-pc:.. Hel Council-after the close of the Virginia Merritt, colored obser­litical organizatiofl, which "pro-' rushing period was that all frater- ver saw the plane hit the highway Vl.des d;~ect relief for students ani and bounce into the air before ~ nity activities were to be exclu-professors who are· victims •>f war sively .for fraternity men. How- settling down. She said there was and joins with stude)lts of other ever, since there ha:s been no so- dust everywhere, coUntries in raising funds fo,· stu- c:ial affair for the entire :::tudent The wing flaps and landing gear dent relief." body since Mid-Winters of 1942, were down, indicating that the pi-

Visits N. C. College it has been decided by the Coun- lot anticipated the landing. Appar-Duril_lg her two-week stay in cil to open this dance to every- ently he planned to taxi up the

For the first time in the memory North Carolina, Mi~ Sleezer will one. All non-fraternity men are highway, heading north. H'ld it of anyone who is now connected appear at State College, Campbell, cordially invited to attend the hop. not been for the roadsign, he might with the College, a chapel service Meredith, W. C., ECTC, Duke, The admission to the dance will have straightened the plane out. was held on Thanksgiving Day Pfeifer, Atlantic Christian C01Iege, be $1.50. ~y~me desiring <_J. tick- The inspection, by officials :for the student body and the mem- and others. et for admissron to the bail may from Seymour Johnson Field, was bers of the faculty. The church Miss Sleezer is a graduate of the see aJ?YOne of the following men:

1

held between 4:30 and 5: 30 Wed-people had theirs in connection class of '41. She was a member Charlie Parkex, Russell Perry, nesday afternoon. ·· with them this year. The speaker State University of Iowa in the Charlie Morris, Roscoe Mason, . was Mr. M.A. Hugins_, of the class of Phi Beta Kappa, and an inter- Howard Martin, and Ray Oddono. of 1911, General Secretary oi the collegiate debater of note. She did Sponsors' .. nd dates for the dance Baptist State Convention, of Ral- graduate work at Yale, and has are: Barbara Harrington of South .ei.gh. worked with student projects since Boston, Mass. with Roscoe Mason,

The service was opened with the finishing college. She travelled in Sigma Phi Epsilon; Elizabeth :singing of "Come, Ye Thankful Mexico and Cuba two sum. mers as Bryan of urake Forest, with Hey­Peple;· Come" and "Now Thank worker· in peace educatron and ward Smith1 Sigma Phi Epsilon· We All Our God". and a respons- ~ecreati?nal directo~ for the A!'fler- Lynn Riddle, of Raleigh, withEr~ ive Thanksgiving reading. A special 1can Frrends Servrce Comm1ttee ..

1

nest Boyette, ·Pi Kappa Alpha; · offering was taken for the ~orth -S~e :w~s YW_CA ~ecretar;y at West Fran Taylor of Oxford, with Wat-

Carolina Baptist Orphanag_e, after Vrrgmra· Umvers1ty d~mg 19~2- . kins Pryor, Pi Kappa Alpha; Kath­which\ the Glee Club sang "The 43. She has been regronal r~- leen Trexler, of Granite Quarry, Earth Is the Lord's" by Nikolsky. man of the Stu~ent Chr.1stran with J. c. Fesperman, Alpha Kap­Mr. Olive then introduced the Movel!lent, attending many r~ter- pa Pi; Jane Frazer, of Winston­speaker. . · collegiate conferences. Salem, with Charles Morris, Alpha

Mr. Huggings opened his speech with~'the ·words, "Can .one be Kapa Pi; Bertha ·Garret, of Ham-

FLASH! Wake Forest lost to the

University _of South Caro­

lina yesterday 13-2.

WSSF SPEAKER

COMES THURSDAY· ..

*' * * Bj_~td Deb~t T Ofli9~;t To Offer Noveltiis

.. '"~

Specjal Numbers To Be Given By Clarinet'·And~ . Brass Quartets, and ''Potato" ·soloist . :~· ·

.._ -B.y Leslie Fowler-

The Wake Forest College concert band .will make its debut tonight af the high sehool auditorium under the direction· of frof .• Thane McDonald. The program will vary in scope froni the classics to modern marches and novelties. Two ensemble groups will appear in -novelty numbers and Charlie l\1orris will play· a potato (ocarina) ·~olo. The program will begin at 8:30. · ·

Because of wartime shortages in musicians, transportation, and other difficulties the band has not been presented at football games as has been traditional. In spite of that, the band is one of the most well balanced that has ev~ been presented here, Mr. .McDonald says. Instead of playing the usual marches and pep songs the organization has been changed to a concert band. The program tonight will not only be one that every student will enjoy but one of which we can be proud. .

Special Numbers ' · Taken from the band are two ensemble groups, a clarinet and

a brass quartet and soloist which will appear. The clarinet quar­tet is composed of Bob Green, ~he boy who played "The Flighfof the Bumblebee" at the fall concert, John Swain, B. Humphries, :;n(l A T!!,lr>r. The P"roun will nlav an arrangement of. "Three

The clarinet quartet- Swain, Green, Humphries,· T_aylor. ·

Mice" followed by "Ca-1 com~onl;r ~own as a "sweet. J,>O· price". Rumor has it that the tato . If grven. encouragement

. Charlie, who usually plays cornet, boys have _g1vep. the last number will demonstrate his versatility'.by a good gomg over~and that they playing a baritone . with several will follow with an original ar- other boys in a Glenn Miller· ar­rangement-a la Benny Good- rangement of "~ittle Brown Jug."

man. The brass quartet composed of

Ernest Nott, Charlie Morris, Char­lie Meisenheimer , and Harold Hayes will pla'y an arrangement of Stephen Foster melodies. The band will open with a sacred number, "Come Sweet Death," a chorale by Bach. A preview of the Christmas season is offered in "Noel" which is a medly of familiar Christmas Carols. Continuing the holiday

I mood the band will play a Tllanks­giving march, "The Pilgrim". Two soloists, Jolm Swain on the alto sax, and Ernest Nott _on the cor-net, are featured on the next num­ber, "Cabins", an American rhap­sody by James Gilette.

Mixed Selection The remainde1· of the program

consists of four novelty numbers,

The group of novelty numbers will conclude with the playi.Iig of "A Jolly Good Fellow" or "l'he Only Tune the Band Can Play." This tune , will be played in five different ways, as a street parade, as it would be played in concert at the "Oprey'' house, a fun~ march, at the home talent -minstrel show; and at the Saturday night dance. This is a repeat of a ·hit novelty tune of last year. T,h& program wil conclude with "Sou­sa's immortal "Stars and Stripes Forever" and "Dear Old Wake Forest." ·

thankful in the world today? 5 I R ( M b -see DANCE, page 4- ..... When hell itself seems to. breathe em ers out contagion to our world?" . · · · ·

• • the first of which 'is "A Litle Vod­ka"; "A Russian Mixup" by Schu­maker. In this number there are strains of everything from "The Nutcracker Suite" to Raclunanoff's

A preview of tonights pertorm-· ance will be given for the benefit of the high school student at the high school auditorium at 10:30 this morning. The band will appear in uniform playing a few numbers to be played on the program to­night.

Hema~J:;~~entscon- AttendN.C, .·Mee.t Uncle Genatps Et·UX. ceniing thank:fulness: We can be

thankful for some things and yet . Five members of the Interna- Observe· Golden Fete we ought not to be in these times, tiona! Relations Club attended a

"Prelude in C Sharp Minor", "Old McDonald's Farm" (no reference to music director) is featured in the next number which is "Opera

Y. Bingham Wins "How-Do" Contest we can be thankful for some things

and ought to be; and there are North Carolina Conference held By R. H. Brantley t · f hi h ht under the auspices of the North .

. many hings or w c we oug Carolina Council of Churches at "We've stood it these here iifty to be thankful at all times. years, so I guess we didn't make

In connection with the first Livingston and Catawba Colleges -~ mistake," grinned .A:unt Betty. November 19-21. • - point Mr. Huggins .said, "As a na- ou see, Aunt Betty and Uncle

tion we can- be thankful that we The theme of the conference Genatus have just celebrated their aren't like other nations. And also -was "Building Tomorrow's World golden wedding anniversary and that we are not poor and starving Today,'' wijh the meeting center- "reklections" have been commg like others.'' But for these things ed around the idea of winning the thick and fast. we ought not to be. peace of World War II, placing In their more formal hves

He stressed his second statement special emphasis on India and they're known as the Rev. and by saying that we can be thankfUl China. Noted statesmen expound- Mrs. James Robert Dent, but to for the beauty of the earth, the e9 on each of the ideas presented, all their friends it's just plain

and round table discussions .were A t B tt d u cl G t vigor of the body, and health of un · e Y an n e . ena us. the·mind. "We can and ought to be held following each speech. At 'We'uz born, raised, and gOtma :iie

these periods representatives from d h " 1 · d u c1 G thankful for a country which rec- aroun ere exp ame n ~ e-the thirty-two colleges present t h b rttl hi 73 ognizes the value of the human asked the speakers arid the forum n~tuhsh'!' o iste l est. s lk yeards personalin•, for the discoveries of wr lS ar ocra 1c wa an •;, leaders questions collcernin? the 1 1 ul t' · ' modern SCl·ence, for art, literature h w k h d" . · ca m, ca c a mg vorce. speec es. . or s op · 1scussrons u 1 G tu..s d A t B tty and music, for churches where we were held at regular. intervals· nc e hen~ an f~~ e can gather together and worship, throughout the three dars. At found eac o her over l Y years and for freedom of worship. 'For these discussions ideas were work- ago last Monday, and accordir:g to all th thing · d'd t toil d t the groom they had a "gorgeous

ese s we 1 no ' e ou · ~ . time" at the anniversary oartv. neithisth.er did w~hspinb·." Thhane bde~u~y Wa,l{e Forest Delegation I It seems that almost everybody

-of campus as een e 0 The representatives from Wake. in Wake Fores~ had a hand in giv-us; we are merely heirs. For au Forest were C. E. Driver, Roscoe! ing this party; colored and white this are we grateful. Mason, J. C. Fesperman, Joe I alike. Engraved invitations, multi-

. Our Opportunities ·· Christian, and Rudd Friday. Well tudinous presents, beautiful music, Mr. Huggins then gave his sec- over half of the conference was and just plain folks all combined

ond point by saying that the things held at Livingston College, a j1 to honor the couple in the best for which we ought to be thankful North Carolina college for negroes. fashion. at all times are our oportunities. During the week-end there were j Everything was most :fornai, "To us have been handed· certain two banquests, group sings, and what with Uncle Genatu~ :md idealS. Take them, preserve them, entertainment offered by musical Aunt Betty dressed in Sunday besl ·enlarge on them, live by them, and artists. and all the guests offering their pass them on. The idealism of one I "It is believed by many," said congratulations in a reserved but

-See OBSERVES, page 4- . -see MEET, page 4- most sincere manner. For the fir&t .. '·

time in 25 years, Aunt Betty said, in the Barnyard." In this there are "my hand looks like it did when inst~ental representations ?f the Yates Bingham, transfer from I was married." You see her sons quackmg of ducks, the croy.rmg of Wingate Junior College, this quar­gave her a new wedding band roosters, and even the rattle of a- ter won the Know-Your-Fellow-which has "initials and all" carved Ford. Student Contest. He edged . out inside. Potato Solo Earl Parker by a score of aa·to·S2.

All this "shfudig" wasn't just to Next, Charlie Morris will. play Yates, a junior from Monroe, have a big time either, for Uncle an ocarina solo. The instrument is displayed his ability to know his Genatus and Aunt Betty have liv- fellow students by winning over ed one of those lives of service all the other students who had which shows you just how good ,_.,, s k Q been here several terms. He will folks can .Qe. Uncle Genatu~ is \II pea s n be awarded a gold pin by the Min-first and foremost a Baptist isterial Conference at an appro-preacher who . considers it his priate time. ' · · duty to "spread the gospel to all '' Th F E t ,, l Runner-ups in the contest were: regardless of nomination." 'lhen e ar as W. N. Cosley, 73; Peyton. R~yal, he's been a "raiser of chillun, phi- 72:. John Hardaway, 72; Charlie losopher, and . all around hard 1 Dr. Everett Gill spoke this '-''eek Williams, 70; George Womble~ "69; working man." at the Ministerial Conferen<?e on Tom Marshburn, 69; Billie ColUer,

Aunt Betty is at her best when "The Far East" emphasizing the 68; Joe Alexander, 68; and E. C. she's fulfilling the role of "mam- importance_of Eurasia,.Europ~ llnd Watson. my" to all of the Patterson chil- Asia as a whole. --------dren. Mr. Patterson is registrar He declared Eurasia the lar~est of -the College-that makes Aunt ~apd mass of the globe, the origi­Betty pretty important as she'£ nal home of the human race. the "nigh about been a second mam- home of all great civilizations, my to all of his chillun.'' Then and he added that there will be she's seen to it that all of her decided the destiny of the l":wnan boys and girls have been hMest race. He also made the statement hard working Negroes and that's that America was a prolongation a "terribu! hard job.'' of Europe. ·

Monday night and golden wed- Resolution made by the Confer-ding are memories now: The Rev. ence was: "In so much as our and Mrs. James Robert Dent are chapel exercises for this qu"lrter Uncle Genatus and Aunt Betty have been exceptionolly meamg­once again. Incidentally, he· does ful we go on record as fa\"r:'!:ing not know how he acquired the strictly worship programs Jn the name of Genatus. future."

·.

Clonts Speaks Prof~ssor J. W. Clonts, guest

speaker at the weekly meeting of the Rot~ry Club last Monday-even­ing, presented a section of a diary which he wrote while traveling in Russia in the summer of 193~

Of special interest was his eval­uation of the Russian military system and his forecast of what would happen in case of war.

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Founded January 15, 1916, as the official stu. dent newspaper of Wake Forest College. Publish­ed weekly during the school -year except during examination periods and holidays as directed by the W.ake.,:O:oreiW'RP~;e Pub!icatiorn! Board.

--------~~---------------------MARTHA ANN ALLEN ••••••.•••• , • • • • . . . Editor R. H. BR.Allo"TLEY, JR. • • • • . • . • Business Manager

Betty StLnsbury, associate editor.

Say,JohnFrosh! · HaveY ou Seen .. [

By Alice Holliday

Say there, John Freshman,

Old Gold and Black . . ' ··~ .

,. . ' ' . . .. : ,\'." ",.

Frid, av,NiJVember·!$~lf4t'· . ' . ., J . ' '' t

-···.

Deacs '=Gree}tS. By .liMMn;J HULlN

~. .•.

. J'he percentage of dates a'ro11I!4 ~t th~;;K~ _

Editorial staff: Lib Jones, Charlotte Easley, Jimmy Hulin, Emily Crandall, Durward Reed, Beth Perry, Bet~v Williams, Bill Bellamy, Charlotte Boone, John Hall, Bill Padgett, Nan Lacy Harris, R. H. Brantley, Jr., Alice Holliday, Woody Woodall, Woody Wall, Leslie l<'owler.

Sports editor: P. B. White; assistant, Al Jennings.

Business staff: Mary Grace Caudle, Heyward Smith, Maynard Edwards.

Art editor: Maynard Edwards.

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, Box 232, Wake l<'orest, N. C. All business matter should be addressed to the business man­ar;er, ~me address. Subscription rate: $2.00 per Yllar, 40 Issues.

what do you really know about Wake Forest? Have you ever heard of the Old Mill Wheel, Rock Springs and the Slave Gallery? Wake Forest is full of interesting landmarks but you have to search to find them. They make the College and surrounding territory romantic and picturesque. •

The Old Mill Wheel, located about a mile southeast'of the town, used to be one of the students' favorite spote. It is a. serenely beautiful place found in an open­ing of the woods. The old wheel broke years ago and is now solidly embedded in the sand of the stream. But the mill stream still flows along over the floor of rock. The Old Mill was famous for the parties and suppers held there. Until a few years ago that was where the senior class held its an-

house doesn't seem to be· as)arge as it 'wd fbi' the last dance, however, ·the brothers_ are lookbtg_ forward to a big week end: Congratulations are in order to CaroL Wall who has lo~t his pin tti' ·

.a more feminine sweater than . his own, .ttie' sweater belonging -to ·a certain little girl by the name of Sadie Bowman . . e The Sigma:Pi~s have , •. elected new officers · who are: Ray Oddono, . Sage; Jim Cooke, First Council; Charlie·· ware,· Second Col,lncil; Bob Turnage; Third,Council;

\Joe Fleetwood, FourtJ;t Council; and T~rry Cer­nugel, Herald. A big party has been_planned for Friday night 'With the AKPi's ·• PiKA .. :. Six

PHONE 304-6, l<'or Important news on Thurs­days phone 256-1. 'l.'he Record Publishing Co., Zeb­ulon, N.C.

Entered as second class mall matter January 22, 1916, at the post office at -..vake Forest, North Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879.

new members· were taken into the frat Tuesday · -night, namely; Herbert Barbour, Harold Bren­, ·del, Bill Denning, Linwood Harrell, Fred Isaacs,

and ·MacDonald Perry. New officers were in­stalled at that time also. Everyone .is anxiously awaiting the big week end and the party-­quite a few of the alumni are expected to b~ present at the gala affair. All the brothers are wishing Russ Perry good luck in his final foot­ball game as a Wake Forest player. e The Kap­pa Sigs finished Hell-Week on Tuesday, and the formal initiation was given last night. There seems to a slight deficiency in dates this week en.d, but the football-pfayers, who were unable to attend the last dance, will· be present this week end with dates. Those men who were ini­tiated last night were: Charlie Horton, Buster _Mabe, Will Fowler, jack Isely, and Ray Mans­

Member Intercollegiate Press, 1943-44

nual supper. Fraternities still have outings there. • Unusual Graves

Stu -1entPnz'sone""' '}. TnedAid Two miles east of Wake Forest U4 1 ro l.Vb there are two graves of unusual

I interest. The first is hollowed out The World Student Service Fund is the ~f fa.J~~e t~o:~ Y~~ h;:a~!o a1i~t

recognized channel for aid to student prisoner~ The other grave is that of a man of war believing that students have a special who had requested ~t no tomb-

' stone be bought for h1s grave. In-responsibility for their fellow students. stead, he wanted each person who

Dance Week Pimorama·

Next week we will have on our campus Pa­tricia Sleezer as a representative of the Fund. She is 1!. woman who is well-equipped to inform us about the condition of fellow students all over

.?--------------------_,-\ fields. ·• All AKPi pledges have finished hell­week arid it prbved to be successful, except two of the pledges haven'j:. come from· the last as­signment yet. A party is going to be given with the Sigma Pi's tinight. Many of the alumni are expected to return for the dance this week end. The pledgfJ will take .the ritual for membership

visited his grave to lay a stone on it. Today the pile of stones is immense, and ,provides a monu-ment that money ~ould not buy. Every Monday night the name I be overly~proficient; consequently,

world, being sent out from the national head­quarters to present the facts to colleges over the kind. She believes that the ideal of brother-hood is at stake, and that the World Student Service Fund is a means to the realization of it in a very practical and real way. She is also a very pretty redhead, according to E. S, King of the State College Y. M. C. A.

Behind the stadium is the lovely of Bobby Brunson, freshman, is when they realized that the boy spot called Rock Spring. It is now called out on the roll of the Eu So- sitting· next to them was more in a part of the College property and ciety. The name of Bobby Brun- the know than they were, they has long been a favorite place for son is also called out on the roll sought his aid by sidelong move­outings and hikes. There is a of the Phi Society every )Jronday ments of the eyes. When Rudd Fri­plaque dedicated to this spring in night. It -seems that Bobby could- day marched gown the aisle they the bursar's office. n't make up his mind which of the felt that it wo~ld be blasphemy ~o

Picturesque Graves literary societies to join-so he cheat about him. They knew his The Forestville Baptist Church joined both of them, taking time ide~tity, but not his when;abou~,

was very popular and outstanding about attending each: His picture as 1t were. They· tore thell' han-, in its day. Long ago before the has been taken with each group J they groaned, they wept. Satan College was started at Wake For- for the annual. Bobby knew that :.vorke~ his magic again, and over est, Forestville was a thriving little both· of them were literary socie-, went. their roving eyes to the smart town. The church was the most ties and he thought it didn't make gentle~an's pap~r. "Rudd. Friday, picturesque spot there. It is an in- any difference-after all who was Dallas was wntten on 1t. The teresting church, beautiful in its he to show favoritism? 'He knew •

1

two ~oys deci~ed t~at it ":auld ~e simplicliJ. It had an old pump he could get twice as much good. all r1ght to chisel JUSt a little b1t, organ and village choir. Weddings from two as from one. maybe, but seeing as it was Rudd, were performed here in all their . r they didn't want anyone to know glory. When people still owned Jimmy Anderson pulled a good about it, so on each paper went slaves the church had a special one last week. He made a date down in big, bold letters, "Rudd gallery for them. It's like a bal- with one of the Meredith "angels", Friday, Texas. "Well, Podner! cony today, covering three sides got all dressed up, and arrived in Draw your gun!" of the church. Their masters sat Raleigh at six o'clock, in order to downstairs during the services have plenty of time to get to Par­while they stayeq upstairs and gy and Bess. He called for his date, joined in the worship. when, (oh, no, not that!) he re­

Today one church is still being membered that his tickets were used. The choir and organ have still at home. In Jimmy's own disappeared but the traditions are words,

next week.

With The Men In Service

The World Student Service Fund is spon­sored by the United States section of the World's Student Chrisitan Federation. This organization contacts students who are prisoners of war in Germany, Japan, Canada, India, the United States; students who are refugees in France, Switzerland, India, the United States; students who are interned in Switzerland, Spain, Aus­tralia, New Zealand; students who are dispos­sessed in China, Russia, the United States. These students are furnished with books to equip themselves for the future in the belief that "stu-dents are the builders of tomorrow."

still carried on. "I made about five telephone Another focal point of interest calls to Wake Forest. And finally

is Crenshaw Hall, which is located

1

the tickets came, on a local fre!ght a mile and a half out on the Dur- train. The girl went to the fre1ght ham highway. Major Crenshaw, office with me in a taxi, and we

The other day we saw a student down at Hardwicke's Drug Store quite surprised and amazed. He saw what he thought was a big chocolate cake on ·the counter. About this time a lady came by, picked up "the cake," placed it on ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ her head, and proceeded to con­tinue on her way. Our friend gulped and stared as he watched the lady with her new style hat

Go to hear Miss Sleezer whether you con­tribute or not, because . she will bring a nf!w awareness of the perils of war, and disturb our seemingly complacency as students in America.

the former master of this beautiful made it-just in time." home, was the first Wake Forest · walk out of the store.

student to register at the College. He was short, squareheaded, and We knew that Nan Lacy Harris It is said that he walked to school very black. To curtail a long de- was thoughtful of others, but we every day to attend his classes. The scripti<?n he was just _another didn't know she'd go this far. In

Even if not more than $10.00 is collected house once was the Wake Forest· shoeshine b?Y· On en:termg the the Old Gold and Black· office when she speaks Thursday, the day will be well post office. place of bu~mess ?e grmned, then 1 Wednesday night she found a pair

Historical. ann~unced In_ a h1gh falsetto a re- of glasses lying neglected on the spent. One dollar contributed to the World Stu Outside of town there is a dirt ductwn of Ius rates and that he table. "They might get broken" dent Service Fund will buy a phonograph re- road which Wake Foresters refer would "appreciate" some busines~. she thought. So she put them ~n

. . . . to as "the road around the bend." Mos~ of the gr.oup thought. thls and wore them for the next hour. cord which Will brmg entertamment to more Located 011 this road is the home comical and a ~It cle~er; that 1s all When the owner of the glasses fi-than 2,000 mentally weary student prisoners. It of Mrs. Jack Harris. It is an old but the ,r,roprlet?r. Ge~ out and nally walked in, she handed them · · · · colonial home with aged box- stay out. was hls greetmg to the back with a sigh, "My eyes are Will supply the notebooks required by a pnsoner

1

bushes and cedars lining the walk small !Jlack busU:ess man., The awfully tired," she exclaimed. of war for six months. Fifteen dollars will sup- to the front door. Several years shoeshme bor, philosoph.er that he

· t s ere dis- must be, grmned moplShly and ply for a month a kerosene pressure lamp around I ago somd,ethancienhipahper wd t be shuffled out Once outside he mut-. . covere ere w c prove o · · -· · Ch h D ' ' which forty Chmese students can study. of hi~torical consequence. It had tered s~~et~n~ ~bout ,wonder~g Ul'C eczszon

h · I slave quarters away from the why a darkle couldn t do bus1-

Lt. Charles M. Allen of the Army Air Corps was married to Miss Clara David, the daughter of Mrs. Harry Lee David of Bennettsville, South Carolina, on November 11th at Bennetts­ville.

Lt. Allen graduated from Wake Forest Col­lege in 1939 anci was a teaching fellow in the Department of Biology until he was called into the Air Corps in October 1942.

Lt. Walter K. Sutton, now doing recruiting work in the state of Ohio, is at present station-' ed at Salem, Ohio. Lt. Sutton~s work is that of recruiting WAC's. The Recruiting Team consists of one WAC officer, two sergeants, and Lt. Sut· ton. This group campaigns fro·m U>wn to town remaining in each town about . ffiree or four days. '

As students ourselves we s ould be con- h h' h b - used today ness without being cursed and . ouse w 1c are emg · The members of Wake Forest

cerned with the development of the minds of for storerooms. Many interesting shoved around by Whlte folks. Baptist Church voted Wednesday William !:f. Wall, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. • . 1' h b di d the Then he dwadled on down the W"Jl' H W II f W k F h b fellow students who are temporarily depnved re t~s ave een scover:e. re t t at the weekly prayer meeting 1 Iam . a o a e orest, as een com-

. 0 . . datmg back before the C1vil War. s ree · service to mark out the item on the missioned a second lieutenant'in the Army's Fi-of their work. ur contrtbutJOn may be the The Old Hotel, now being used budget giving a donation of $25

. widow's mite. for Officer's Quarters, was once Yes; sir, Old Gold and Black was to the North Carolina Council of nance Department following graduation from .

known as Purefoy Hotel. Students right on the spot when the army Churches. The pastor, the Rev. the officers' candidate school at Duke Univer­resided here, along with towns- plane crashed five miles out ?f Eugene Olive ope11ed the question sity. Lt. Wall was inducted into the army on people. The students, w~o usua~ly town la_st Wednesd~y. Sports E_di- and ~sked for discussion. The January 9, 1941, and formerly served as chief have nick-names for the1r favonte 1 tor Wh1te walked mto the offlce, questwn was voted on and re- · l k f h f' ff" F S spots of interest, gave their home "Did you hear about the plane jected by the members. Mr. Olive c er O t e mance o Ice at ort tory, Va. at that time the nick-name of "Pa- crash?" he inquired calmly. "Plane' suggested that individuals who

What Are· We Here For? radise." crash!" Editor Allen and Reporters wished to contribute to the organ­

What're we doing in college, anyway? If In the north wall of the campus Jones, Harris, Holliday and Boone ization could do so at their own one of the soldiers or other visitors who wander is a plaque dedicated in loving stampeded out of the office nearly discretion. · around the campus on week ends asked us, could we give a satisfactory answer? Do we know why we're here? Are college students nec­essary? ·

With so much going on in the world, it's imperative that we be prepared to stand up to the world and give an account of ourselves. About 99 students enrolled in Georgia State Col­lege for Women this fall. Why? If the proverbial man from Mars were to drop out of the blue, would he find us drifting from one class to the next, living only for week ends?

Are the months we intend to spend here this year, and maybe during the other war years, really for the general good? We've asked our­selves, and possibly each of us has her own indi­vidual answer. Buy why are we here? Why are we allowed to stay when every American citizen should be finding the place in the general scheme of things where she can do the greatest good?

"Educati~n is a nation's first defense," a statesman told the English Parliament two cen-

memory of Doctor Tom. He was a trampling over Ji~my Hulin, who ·. The.pastor concluded the meet­negro janitor and caretaker .for had been wonderm& how he d be mg wlth -a ~u~mary of the pur­the College for aproximately f1fty able to get a typewnter. They _co~- pose ~nd prmc~ples of the North years. He planted trees with lov- nered Charlie Barbour, who d1dn t Caro~~a Council of Church~s, e:n-

-8ee JOHN, page 3- have half a chance, ~d dragg~d Ph!151Zmg ~at: the orgaruzahon

Play Ciroup Gives First Radio Drama

him out to his car. White stood m ex1sted prrmarily to promote fel­the hall and laughed; he thought lowship and mutual understanc;ling it was just a rumor. among all Protestant cfenomma­

"Faster, Charlie," and at the ur- tions of North Carolina. gent request he got the car up to

B.S. U. almost 37. When they stopped to ask for directions at a rural filling station, up drove Business Manag­er Brantley in the car with MJ;.

A radio drama, Tom Tom was Snyder. They wouldn't be left the main feature of the weekly even if it meant cutting class for All members of the different meeting of the Little Theater last Hooey and closing up the book Training Unions on the campus evening. The play, the first of its store for Snyder. are urged to be present Sunday kind ever presented by the dram- And Old Gold and Black was on night. Elections of officers for atic group, had as its setting .a the spot again, scooping all daily _the .n_ext quarter wil~ be held. In missionary's hut in South Afn- papers. (They gave the story to additlo~ to t~e elec~wn the_ Ho~­ca. Associated Press anyway). The ard Uruon will contmue thell' diS­

The cast of characters included rest was mere routine. They found cussion· on "What Jesus Taught Beth Perry as Sarah, Alice Holli- the major wouldn't talk;, they sym- A~out GiV:ing." The Reid U~on day as Jada, Lib Jones as Mary, pathized with the pilot; they will be m char~e of .Betty L1de Woody Wall as the doctor, and Ed- snooped around while watc~l and ~ev. T. H. Kmg will lead .the Cohen as the witch doctor. MP's peered suspiciously; they m- devobonal thought for the Uruon.

The play was broadcast from an terviewed farmers, colored and Don't forget VESPER in" the ev-outside room to the Little Theater white; and they guessed, "Well it ening at 6:30. group who listened from a loud- must have happened like this." The Sunday School lesson for speaker. No sound-effects or mu- For ·results, see the story on page this Sunday is "Tellin~ t~,e T~th sic was used except for the con- number ONE. In: Speech and In Prmt , which stant beating of a tom tom. Ed will be taught by Dean Bryan. Cohen acted as announcer and There was a small, select crew The GOLDEN TEXT-"Wherefore

turies ago. Our nation's faith in this principle Jack White as commentator. attending the Know-Your-Fellow- putting awa! l~ing, ~peak every • Ids W ' h ' 'f h f · h After the meeting the Alpha Students contest on Wednesday. man truth with hiS neighbour; for

stlll ho · ere ere to JUSt! Y t at a!t · Psi Omega held a pledging cere- Among those present were two we ar~ members one of another." -From The Colonnade, Ga. State College mony. _ · young men who did not seem to -Ephesians 4:25.

Lucy Poole Ball, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Poole of Wake Forest, was sworn into the Marine Corps Women's Reserve Nov. 10 at the Marine Corps Procurement Office in the Post Office Building at Raleigh. .

Pvt. Ball is employed at the Army Finance Post Exchange in Wake Forest where she will be until she reports for "boot" training at Camp· Lejeune, New River, N. C.

Marine Corps Women Reserves are releas­ing men for active duty by taking over their du- · ties in ground aviation, motor transport, per­sonnel work, draftsmen, electricians, mesengers, motion picture operators, photographers, sten­ographers, and many other assignments.

Pvt. Ball is the fourth member of her family to join the·service while her husband is a 2nd Lt. in the Army Air Force.

Lt. (j.g.) E. F. Brissie has been transferred to the South ·Pacific area after having served a year and a half with the Atlantic Fleet. He sends the following address: U.S. S. Bunker Hill, C-o Fleet Post Office, San Francisco, Calif.·

A letter from Fred Eason, class of '41, when he was captain of the baseball team, gives an interesting picture of life in the tropics. Fred's address· is: Ens. F. j .. Eason, MTB Ron 1(), Fleet Post Office, San Francisco, California. _He says,

"As I sit here in my island paradise I have -see MEN, on page 3-o

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Old-,Gold and·Btaek Page Three

Fi~~n(iersJoM,. Arq~y Finance E .. • _ • --· cs h , d 1 0

_ 9 11 1943 2: 93. . :s·~ . . ·w·. , 13 · 6 xam1nat1on _ c e u e, ec. .. ,

·_. rd 1gna~Co.- · · ·. IDS, · .... , . . s:oo-1o:oo 1 ~1:00-l:oo 3:oo-5:oo · ·~ • I · ' · · · Dec. g· 11:00 daily classes 8:30 TTS classes 3:00 daily classes.

Tomorrow the - Mmy Finance ' 11:00 MFW classes 11:' 00 TTS classes 3:00 MFW classes By P. B. WHITE football team· will :play hosts ·to D.afea-""s M.o. or. e. General ·· th . 293· d s· 1'1 1· C frd ""· " Dec. 10 2:00 daily classes 2: 00 TTS classes 12:00 daily classes · e r Ig a ompany m 1 . f_ootball-'T. "e' am L·ast Camp Butner in Groves-Stadium. , 2:00MFfclasses 3:00 TTS classes 12:00 MFWclasses Game tiine is 2:30. · Sunday · · The Financiers,· fresh from last

. . Yestetd~y; tw~. · W8ke Forest football ~btyers -played their week's victory over Moore Gener.- .,; .Jas't. O:aifte.forWake Forest (wiless w. e play .. in the Orang· 'e]Jo. wl) al Hospital will be out tq make it The Wake Forest Army Finance

~> two in a row. All players came,out School took advantage of the ··and huDg~up their ~leskins .. These tw~- Dea_coru.,.Russ Percy of. the game uninjured with the and defeated the Moore

. .d. Bill Starf d. ha bee th , - ta .f th . Wake F t exception of Perrin wl:ro has .11 Hospital of Asheville 13-6 · ·an .. Or.at ve · n e mams 18._0 e ores chipped bone in his shoulder, He Sunday m Groves Statdium . . •te~ .. this year. When the· going got tough ~d the road seemed· a will probably. not be in uniform Army Finance School, fight-

. · · little rocky it was always Bill and RuSs who .called for time out, Saturday: The line, which took their first victory in four r ·. • ' , . . · • , bad ·beatmg last week, has recov- fought'-<9. clearly- superior

-talked 1t oyer Wllq the boys, and put the.-~ns back m the ball ered and all players are expected Hospital eleven, made the breaks game. Russ will be leaving for, medical school iit January and Bill .to be in- top shape. Practice. tpis go their way, and then came fr<:>m

•' · • .. · • h- · th L~.;.17- - d. te-..:lc ·week has been spent on Signal behind to win the ball game. With goes liJto the marmes •. And With. t em go e tuw~ ~ e . 1 wu drills and defensive work. · see, Mendenhall, and Hess bear-

. · gratitude of Wake Forestfor .befug the boys they are and playing Little is known of the team from ing the brunt of the attack, the ·ball- ha · Camp . Butner except that they Fm' anci'e potted the boys from th~ they ve. _ have played .two games .. The ·first, rs 5 * * * they.lost"to Fort Bragg·by a score ~~;~;0~-%~ch~~::· ~~~ upth~~

Dec.ll 8: 30 daily classes 9: 30 TTS classes 8:30 MFW classes 12: 00 TTS classes

9: 30 daily classes 8: 30 MFW classes

"No deviation from this posted schedule is allowed except by spe­cial authorization of the Executive Committee."

. Re-exami1wtion· permits shouLd. be secured from the Registrar's Office prior tO· the opening of the examination _period.

Pre. Meds Plan i Howarth Inspects ~i~nic Tomorrow Working facilities

, of 73-0. In 'their only other appear-: showed· their defensive strength h · · 'b'l' h f t d h Final plans were made for the · It has come to our attention that t ere IS a posst 1 1ty t at ance, they were de ea e by t e by stopping a 65 yard t_ouchdown 12th R 1 t c t 28 o Gamma Nu. Iota picnic to be held Wake Forest may play in the Orange Bowl. The rumor 'had been · ep acemen en er, -: · ; drive just four yards short of the tomorrow at 3 p. m. At fort·Harrison

m:akin,g the rounds of the campus_ for several days and n_o one goal line. Final initiation was held for the - f• .. -~ H . -~- · ~d·t· · H ·•~1 Scor F' t new members and pictures were Lt.-Colonel A. E. R. Howarth seemed to know how the news got started or where it came from: IrS . ow er· 8;1 I or 0Spll4! es Irs made·for the '44 Howler also. has- been at Fort Benjamin Bar-This week, howe~er, the story broke the headlines .. Wak For.est 'is, · · · · ' Moore Hospital scored. first, in New members who have now rison, Indiana. inspecting facilities -R t . T ( ' ' the second quarter. The ~pme was completed initiation are s. J. Cal- for the new class of the Army Fi-being considered ·as a possible B{)Wl contestant. Whether or not e urns I 0 ampus played on even terms for one quar- vert, E. T. Marshburn, Jr., W. w. nance School, which has begun vie get the bid and whether or n_ ot we play, the fact. still remains · ~er and then t~e AFS openll.d up Rayle, J. A. Fleetwood, Jr., H. s. work there, and supervising· the

. Its f~med passmg · a~ta<*-. After, Anderson, G. I. Hanes, Jr., C. W. installation of _the sc~ool. He w~nt .that Wake Forest is at least receiving ~he recognition that it so The. flrst editor of The Howler! I ~ovmg to the ,...Hosp1_tal 20 yard Joyce, D. M. Roberts, and B. N. to Fort Harnson with the f1rst richly deserves. For years now, Wake Forest football_-teams have was on the campus last week, Dr. lme, See dropped ~ack to pass, Hipps · [group to make the move. · · · Charles P. Weaver of Smyrna,. and Stenson intercepted and raceq · Pending Lt.-Col. Howarth's of-been held in the background as a result of l,laving two larger Ga., -author of "Gentle Mother." up the :sidelines for. 80 yards and line again showed their superiori-l! ficial transfer, Capt. Funke is com-

- schools nearby. These sc~ools have had the advantage over Wake Once an active educator, he is now a touchdown. The try for the ex- ty and held for downs. , manding officer at the Finance F t . th tt f enrollment- money . and publicity gentleman farmer, spending his tra point was blocked. . . The credit for the victory must! School at Fort Harrison. In Lt.-

ores 111 e rna er 0

• . . • · . • -_ time. between writing books and Army Finance came back to tie go to See and Hess for it was I Col. Howarth's absence Major The Wake Forest teams, under the d1rect10n of Coach Walk.- I growing prize chickens. . up the score a few seconds later these two who directed the offen- Loomis Carroll is in command at

er have always played ·good ball. They have played clean ball and · -The Howler began as a _one-page wl).en ~inkston,_ who played one of sive all the way. through. The line. the Wake For~st school. . Captain ' . . . - anonymous newspaper Without an the best defens1ve games of the af- though saved ·the game time , Crampton Tramcr has f1lled the

they have played hard and With a will to WID. So, .whethe~ or not editor, without circulation, tacked ternoon, ~roke through to block a and t~e again rising to the oc- i post of adju~ant smce the trans-we get the call from down Florida way, the fact Still remams that '!!P on an old o~ tree known B:S Moore k1ck. ~ID:d recover on the casion and stopping a power-laden fer of Captam Funke.

... · . f. h b The Howler" m front of Wru.t seven. After bemg set back by an Hcspital eleven - 1 First Group Gon the present edition of the Demon Deacons ~s one o t e est Hall. ':The Howlers" _were made offside penalty, tl~e F~anc~ School/ . · . _ e ·civilian teams in the country. on~ big sheet of cardboard about moved to the two-yard line and . Startmg Lmeups i The first .. echelon, co~posed of · * , * * 16 mches. by 2~. They w7re made Hess blasted through for the sc?re. Wake Ftn. SchooL .Moore Hasp. selected officers an(l enh~ted men,

_ . . · by boys m thell' spare tune, cut- The kick for extra point was wide. LE Mendenhall Pase~a has gone to Fort Harrison. The · . · . ting pictures from magazines to LT Erwin Brantley 57th class is now hard at work Two· weeks ago when Army played the Sampson Naval Train- .illustr_ate jokes about students and Deeiding Break LG Tarn Lakatos there. As the 55th and 56th classes

ing Station," two former Wake Forest Athletes were playing in the faculty, the entire bulletin dedi- - . . 1c Madison Kopsle /graduate, no new classes will come · . h . tart• I' f th T · · cated to "Freshmen, Fools, Facul- In the third period, the break 1 RG Ledgerwood Nevins to Wake Forest to replace them. A

game. Ed Royston was m t e s mg meup or e rammg .ty." · that decided the ball game came. RT Munson Danka second echelon of officers and en-School and AI Nemetz played for the Cadets. Nemetz, by the way, It Disappeared Hollars fumbled on the Moore 17, RE Pi~ston Frye li?ted I?ersm_mel will move to In- -

lis•~-'~ · f th tars of that week's performance by vir· According to Dr. Weaver, a new and Mendenhall broke thro~h to LH Robmson Taylor diana m m1d-December, and the was ·a.cu as one 0 e s • newspaper came out after the last r.ecover on the 17. On a series of QB Hess Hollars final group will go in January. tue of having recovered a blocked forw~ pass m the end zone one had deteriorated. If a student lme bucks,- ~he Army ~oved .to ,the RH Murie Conine The Finance School .worked on d ·• cJ'al moment of the game to put Army in the lead. didn't like a particular joke, he one-_Yard lme. At this pomt, a ·FB Packard Skidmore Thanksgiving day as d1d the Col-unng a cru . would snatch it out eventually holding penalty moved them back lege. * * * leaving nothing but 'a se.def. of back to _the sixteen yard line: Then _Score by periods: ---'------;;-------

holes. And so another editor would Hess pitched a perfect strike to Fmance School 0 6 7 0-13 Hess, Mendenhali. Extra point: Last week, the Army Finance School won its first game by defeating the Moore General Hospital of Asheville .. They played good ball and won the game. This week we would just like to say "hats off" to boys like Mendenhall, See, Hess, Pinkston, Perrin, Munson and all the _rest who have stuck together and managed to find time for football in the midst of all the work that they .have to_do as mem~ers of _the .. armed forces. They have do.ne well and certainly· deserve all the credit in the world.

sit up night~ composing the next Mendenhall for the game deciding Moore 0 6 0 0- 6 Mendenhall. (on pass from Hess). edition. "The Howler" was always touchdown. Hess also threw to Finance scoring: To~chdowns- Moore: Touchdown-Stenson. put up during chapel period so Mendenhall for the extra point. _________ _.:.. ________________ _ that no one would know who m~de I After the kickoff, Moore at­it. The .oak tre was a good sh1eld tempted to rally and score but the from spies. . . Finance line was too much. When . Dr. Weaver was co-editor of the they found their ground attack

first re~~ Howler, and ~e says th!it stalled, the Hospital team took to Curley Anderson fmancE'd It, the air and carried to the Finance

just hoping that it would pay for four-yard line. Here the Army

. * * * itself. Dr. Weaver declares that there never has been a duller look­ing book than that first annual.

When .here, and even now, Dr . Weaver is one of the most ~oyal members the Phi Society ever had. He said that the Phi motto. I'll find a way or make a way' had made a great deal of difference to his life. ·

He Looks at Coeds When asked his reactions to

girls at Wake Forest, Dr. Weaver said he was slow to convert to the idea of co-education. He sa1d that when he returned to Wake Forest after a long absence he was talking

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. The gods of fortune smiled kindly UJ)<ln this coluinn last week by allowing us .to make good on '18 out of 19 games pre­dicted. There were two games which had no results listed. Our old standby, The Football News did not cilrry the sco~es of th?se games and we don't know how they went. Anyway, if that kind of luck holds out, we are going to call Everette Snyder's bluff and risk a nickel on a game sometime. This week's predictions are: Navy over Army; Del Monte over California; Georgia Tech over Georgia; W. Virginia will beat Maryland;,Seahowks will take Minnesota· Oklahoma over Nebraska; North Carolina should take Virginia; Southwestern over Rice; March Field to beat San Diego NTS; Southern California over U. C. L.A..

to ole Dr. Tom, and he thought~~~~~~:=~~~~~~ the old colored man summed the situation up nicely. "Since you has been away Mr. Charles, we has ladies here. And I is the matrom and my wife, she hopes me." ·

JOHN -Continued from page 2-

ing hands and felt a personal re­sponsibility for each one. He was popular for his philosophy and of­ten gave very good advice to both faculty and students. Dr.-Tom was a most unforgettable · characte~ and in honor of him the alumn1 presented this plaque to the Col­lege,

Dr. Weaver has had connections A •. F. s. Schedules with Wake Forest for a long time. His grandfather, Rev. Amos John-a k b II (i son, was in the North C&rolina as .. et a ames legislature when the' granting of the Wake Forest College charter

The Army Finance School bas- came to a vote. Rev. Mr. Johnson ketball team, which was organized cast the deciding ·vote, though he last week, has announced a sched- was a Methodist at that time. Later ule of games. The first is to be he became a Baptist preacher, and played tomorrow night in Durham founded the First Baptist Church with the Wright Automatic Ma- in Greensboro. His name is chinery Co. team, in the Durham perpetuated in thf! Amos Johns<:>n

MEN Y. M. C. A. . Building, which was give~ ~y ~~1 -Continued from page 2- Fi1.'e. games in all have been Johnson, who was name or Is

h h scheduled and S-Sgt. Merrill Pa- great-grandfather. . a feeling of pity tor you w ~ aye den reports that he expects to play At present Dr. Weaver Is work-to continue to live a prosarc life at least fifteen games here before ,ing on three books, one of e~­back in the States. There are coco- the school is moved to Ft. Harri- says, f~bles and poetry. In h!S nut palms everywhere I ·look and son. One half .of the College gym I ~ook Wtt and Humor-he plans to several banana trees within a few has been vacated and plans are mclude from 30-60 tnalets. yards of my hut. For these are the glamorous south Sea Islands, the being made to play there with land where it's always afternoon seats being added to accommodate .and Dorothy Lamour peers seduc- the crowds. ti.vely from behind every palm. The team is composed mostly of What a lot of tripe! It seems that men with high school and semi­l've forgotten something-oh, yes, pro experience. There are now 13 the .clouds of mosquitoes, the b,og- men on the squad with the possi­gy marshes, the mala:ia den!ll;le bility of more reporting. S-Sgt. and jaundice, the co1_1tmuous ram Paden is acting coach.of the team .and the intense burnmg heat. For and has been busy for the las~ two it's geting on towarc;l summer here, weeks in drilling the boys on floor as if it made any difefrence. . work and defensive strategy.

"Nor are the natives the beaut!- Against the Wright ·Automatic ful simple creatures depicted in team, he will probabiJ: send a team the' movies. God knows they're made up of Wells, Miller, B?rges, simple enough and quite friendly· Bersted, Eddleston and KU'sch-but that's as far as it goes. They _b;;;a;;;um:,;;;;;.:,;;;;;:,;;;;;:,;;;;;:,;;;;;:,;;;;;:,;;;;;:,;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;.., are rather short, somewhat under- "!!

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nourished coal black creatures with big: flat, triangulru.: fe~t. Their means of becoming mtoXl~ cated is to chew betelnuts. I hav~­n't tried it but it leaves thell' teeth and gJms a brilliant ugly-~ed Those llesiring to marry advertise the fact by dying their hair the same color. As a result they look like a collection of squat, red head­ed negroes. They seem to be pretty touchy about their women, al­though they're really sad·looking soggy sacks if ever saw such. The natives seem to like them though, 1

so it'tos allhis rwnighlno~ti'0th0 ,~e. Evay •------------------------~ ....................... ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ man .• o . ,.

Prop. In Town RALEIGH, N. C.

Page 4: au. - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · Pan-Helleni~1Hop Is T oniorrow.Nig~t :Pilot Escapes'Without · Injury. ~s Result Of Emergency Landing A P-47 on' a flight from. Sey mour Johnson. Field,

Old Gold and ·niack -_

W.oody Wall And Ernest Glass I o Lead Societies Next Quarter ~ • I.

Phi's Choose Society _ _ _Day Speakers

: -in the reilJ]_ar meeting ol the Phi Societ¥- en Monday nigh~, the following were elected to office for the winter ·quarter: · President, "Woody" Wall: vice­pres., Frank Dqwning; secretary, ¥ary Gay; treasurer, Billy Simms; chaplain, Leo Hawkins; supervisor, Campbell McMillan; asst, sup. J.am:es,Mattox; English critic, Man­lY Brtmt; expression critic,- Bob BuriiS::-; James- Mattox and Leo Hawll.ins, "fflth· Frank Downing as alte~nate won:fu the tryouts for the oratory c;ont.~t"- fol" Soc~ety Day Momlay.

·Inter-American ;. -University Plans­:: .. Materialize Now . .... ~ ... -Panama City. (I. P.)-When the

new -'Inter-American University bpened. its doors here recently, it

Whitaker, Retiring Prexy, Now Sgt.-At-Arms

Officers were elected fot· the fall quarter in the Euzelian Liter­ary Sodety last Monday eveaj}g. The following were elected to of-fice: - -' President, Ernest Glass; Vice­pres., E. C. Watson; sec., Viola Hopkins; critic, Nancy Easley: cen­sor, ,Gilmore Beck; chaplain, Bill Smith; treasurer, Calvin Knight;· sgt.-at-arms, Bruce Whitaker .

Ration Reminder SHOES--:-Under a new ruling,

customers must give dealers ra­tion.payment for shoes boug.ht UD'-

der lay-away or will-call orders within 30 days of the ord~1·. On special orders, they must gtv<! up ration coupons within 30 days of the time the shoes become avail­able for delivery.

marked the fulfillment of a dream Form~rly, the deadline for pay­long.cherished by American states- ing shoe ration stamps for shoes men- and educators. Plans for the new- institution, which is sponsor- on these types of orders was the

· ec(jointly. by the American repub- end of the current. ration period. lies, were.submitted by Panama as Now, with shoe stamps Va!iCl- in­early as 1812. definitely, OPA had to set a sp~-

lnauguration of the new univer-1 cific time limit for ration payment sity. coincides· w~th the _opening This continues the original pur~ sess10n of a hemtsphere-wtde con- . . ference of American Ministers of pose, which JS to keep shoes from Public Education, to be h_eld here. being taken out of circulation by Dele?ate~ wil study the r?le of ~d- customers who might select them ueation m the pos~war world, m- and have them set aside until a tellectual cooperation among the Americas, visual education and new ration stamp becomes valid. new teaching methods. '

. The proposal for an inter-Am- Turkeys May Be Scarce erican University to act as a -Even though the embarg!J on common ·meeting-ground for edu- trukeys for civilians has been

Discarded Clothes Needed Overseas A regular collectiOn of discard­

ed clothing to be sent- ove·rse.'ls to needy_ people in foreign courLtl'ies­is being sponsored here by the salvag~ committee, headed by G. S. Patterson, in addition to the regular scrap drive • now tmder way. _

A list of the types of clothmg desired will be posted on the bul­letin board in the student center, in the post office and in the '.'Vin­dow of the bank within ~>everal days. _

The drive will close on Decem­ber 4. Anyone who has old -:·lath­es :to -contrib'llte is req1,1ested to leave them at once with -one of the dfy cleaners in town. The cleaners wiE clean the clothmg and ship it- to distribution centers.

Chemists Are In· Growing Dema

Rochester, N. Y.-The supply of chemists and chemical engineers is drying up at the source, and with­in a year or two there will be no more fully trained graduates ·in these fields, says a report of the committee on the professional training chemists of the Ameri­can Chemical Society. Professor W. Albert Noyee, Jr., of the Uni­versity of Rochester is chairman.

It is. impossible, the committee points out, for students to meet the tr!l-ining requirements estab­lished by the Society within the time limitation of 24 monthS," it is explained. "It is the opinbn of the committee that the presen1 re­quirements cannot be met in less than two and two-thirds calendar years which would include eight semesters in an accelerated tri­semester schedule.

cators and students from all the lifted, there is no certainty that "At present freshman ai;~d soph­American nations, was formally there will be a plentiful supply of omores become eighteen years of presented for the first time to the . . . _ . age before they are within 24 Third Pan American Scientific the tradlbonal Thanksgivmg din- months of graduation and cannot Congress, meeting in Lima in 1924. I ner bird this year. be deferred. The stream •..1f tech-Dele~~:ates to that conference were Quoting from a War Fo:>d Ad- nical. students is therefore drying quick to endorse the plan, which . . . up at the source; already enroll-they termed "a means of binding mmistrahon report, Theodot& S. ment is down to about one-thord all the countries of the Western Johnson, district director of the of normal. Unless some provision Hemisphere." Office of Price Administration, is made for a longe_r period of d~-

Further aproval was given to disclosed that a late spring hatch, I ferment _fa~ chemists and engt­the project by the Eighth Pan Am- neers, wtthin one or two more erican Scientific Congress held in heavy purchases by the a't'med years, there will be no fully Washington in 1940, and by the forces and lack of labor to dress train~d ~~duates in th~se techni­Conference of Central American the birds are the main re&sons cal fields. The comm1ttee urged Ministers of Education, held at for the shortage. men already in service to plan to Costa Rica in 1942. A special com- return to college late_r to complete inission of the Pan American un- The result, is likely to be ar.. in- the standard. . requrrements for ion was named in Washington to crease in normal consumption in complete trammg. mal!;e a detailed study of the pro- sections near turkey producing ject; On ·the strength of the com- areas where birds will be sold di­IP-ililsion'l! findings, the Governing Board of the Pan American Union un{lnimously aproved the plan on March 3, 1943. ,-, Panama City was selected as the site of the institution because of its central location in the New World, affording readly accessibil­ity .by land, sea and air from all parts Of America. ·

The University, with a faculty drawn from outstanding scholars, scientists in all the American re­public, will function largely as a l;lollt -graduate and professional center, with four institutes and three professional center, with four institutes and three profes­sional schools as its nucleus. Pres­ent plans call for the organization of summer school classes. -. The three professional schools will include the Inter-American School of Culture and Diplomacy, dy, the Inter-American School of offering a five year course of stu­vice and the Inter-American Sanitary Sciences and Sociel Ser­School of Veterinary Science.

Of the four institutes, the most comprehensive will be the Insti-tute of American Studies, offering facilities for study and research in american geography, history, eth­nology, archealogy, anthropology, linguistics, edueation, arts, and contemporary civilization. : .ln Institute of Social and Econo-mic, social, commercial and indus-trial problems in the Western Hem isphere, and an Institute of Cam-parative Law. will offer courses in AnglQ-Saxon and Hispanic law. Cotirses wil cover such fields as aviation, radio and communica-ti~,- transportation and maritime law.

..

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rect from farms, either dressed or on the hoof, because growers lack the labor to prepare the bird:! for shipmen tto the larger terminal markets.

As a protection for the consum­er against the possibility of run­away turkey prices, OPA has al­ready set commUnity prices on both live and dressed turkeys for all sections of the Raleigh dis­trict.

In the Raleigh area, the OPA statement said, top legal prices on live turkeys range from 43 to 47 cents a pound while ihe ceiling price on dressed birds is from 60 to 64 cents a pound.

Gamma ~ig __ Party · Gamma Sigma Epsilon, the hon­

orocy chemistry fraternity, is planning a party tonigh!. All members both old and new will at­tend this social.

With.Byrd One of the co-eds was h·wing

a little trouble handling he: elate propefly the other night. After asking this gentleman (?) to please behave himself, he turned to her and said, smiling, "Why didn't you know? I was with 2.yrd when he explored the South Pole!''

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-M_ o·-_n_ da-__ --y--·_Nig·h __ ·_.t_ -_l_n_ . re~!~~~~:th~,·~p~ci~-to ~der~- · ·.·. · . . . -.. ,.:, ·.:.

s~and., thatJha:e-&re:certam pfin7 .. - •:- ~.MEET.:'.,,\~·.· . 0. t'• '_ -D .'b,..- t. , . Clples.: "~e;·high~:·:~n~s· .are-al- .:..:Co~tmue<I-ft(;Di'-~~i~::l- ./ ra Ions e a e -J\ldgmg_ --an:~·cond .. .,..,.._,.._,.. __ the . . - · · .. · ···· ... ·.· " . ' ·: ·

. . I- .·. " . '-HI"''"r on~; -~he:high~on-;~esus . Rudd Frl~~y, ~~wd~t.oJ.~e- ~~---- -.--- _ h"'"""''tyet_pecome:~y'e;li_u,t·~ou._ cB;~ I?C,_ :~t·;-suc~;::.c~~~es< ... ::

New. :·Features-Added and I have the· oppcir'tuD.ity'cif'see:. will -~t~ate:: bett.~--' r~l,iitit;mS-p:f :·: '• . ing th~m translated mtc( a r~ty. ,t?e var1qus races,.-.o~, .-l'{oJi',~ ,Caro::. .

Are Declamations And For. this we ought to be thankful:'' liila, and that ~oi1h,,fJU"0lin8 c91 .. .-... ~: R d • _ Each of_ us al.llo has the oportun- .lege stude!lt~ will -be ll~le: .~ gabi, >. . e8 lngS ity to . change. OUr preserit~;values.. a ~bette: Vle~ ,of ~he-worlq ...

A lib al d -- · -. · , the- things: tl:iat. we ,are figilltiilgc:.--· ~r .·e ucat~on may.be,defin- for; .. and the ·practicality.

The Philomathesian and h."uze- as~ s~archfor. v~ues.: ---.__ :·· . posed just and.lasting.peacu lian·Lit~rary Societies will obserV-e Our- third oportunity_·lS to see· aries." " , · --- ·· their annual Society Day Ml)nday, to it .that America fulfills its;inis,.· ·: · · November 29. sion ·in ~the,world. "AriieriCa·has a ~ · ·--·~ ~--· ~n the program for Society Day, mi:>sio~ ~f ~try to .our.worla; 7 . . , ..

there will be included ·special to "hrtstiaruze- our , world." If _we _ . . . . .. · i;. , ·· _. : · ·<<>.· -.events for both societies,.whei'ein ODI~e~~s~ it,_ d~.dica~·9ur~elve8 to : ::: f.o-·· ·sR--_E- -s·: ;,-' members of both · groups witt we _can do 1t. "Pod pitY: us un- : ., :. . :- ' .. - · _ ·-compete in ' debate, declamation, yre look ,ahead and see 'to it ' ·' . -. - _.. .. . . - ' . oration, and readings. Preliminary America:fillfills its missfon" · · - · ··· · . · :' '· -· ,· -· try-outs have been held in both . Last/but not least, we' sho.uld .Qe - . -.T-- H:E~·a:· ·:y:::R;·E::' halls, and the day promises to be thankful . unto God for his -un- · ·- · · _ -- · ·, · one filled with enthusiasm, col- si>ea}t:ible'gift, the .Lord Jesus. · •. · -· -· · • ored by the proceedings of the "The .more sensitive ·and respons- Wak' -..... ·-:: t,-: N- ·c' --day. ' ive we become to the unseen Per- e .._, 0~ • ~- '

In the afternoon at foUr · p. m. feet One, the mar~ loving and the groups will meet in the Phi helpful we become. to the seen im­Hall for declamation, orathr._ and perfect ones.·: For this ~et us be reading contests, and again at th~ -today." . _· seven p. m. in the Eu Hall; the so- The service .was. closed -with the· cieties will" convene for the ~nriu~l singing_of "My God, I Thank Thee; debate c;ontest. The query for-,the Who Hast Made Me" and the of~ debate IS resolved: .THAT '!HE feting -.of the Benediction by Mr UNITED STATES SHOULD CO-· · . OPERATE WITH THE UNITED Olive. . NATIONS IN ESTABLISHING AND MAINTAINING AN TN'l'F.lR.;..' NATIONAL-- PODICE 'E'URCE UPON THE -DEFEAT OF TiiE AXIS POWERS; The Euzelians will uphold the negative side, with Ernest 'Glass, and C. C. Whitley speaking. The affirmative will be upheld "by the Phi speakers Ed Davenpart and Morris Elliott. Not only should this o~casion arJuse interest for the separate societies. but because of tl:ie importauc:e of this subject in· world affairs it should prove helpful as weH as entertaining. Vistors are cordial­ly urged to attend the proceed­ings of both meetings.

Those declaiming for the Phi's are Leo Hawkins and James Mat­tox, with the Eu representat1ves being Nancy Easley and Luther Walker. Declamations will be giv­en, along with readings by Peyion Royal, Sybil Jolly and Rachel Thompson.

POTEAT IN NEW YORK

Dr. Hubert Poteat left for New York City Wednesday night to at­tend the National Interfraternity Conference which will be held at the Commodore Hotel November 25-27.

OBSERVES

D.~NCE -Continued from- page 1- -

let, with Roy Muse, Kappa Alpha; Meredith B9aze, of Lexington, with Charles Parker, Kappa Al­pha;· Frances Bickett, of. Raleigh, with Bob Turnage, Sigma Pi, Pat­sy Crews of Richmond, Va., with Buddy Northingto~, Sigma Pi; Ann Johnson, of Reddick, Fla., with Howard Martin, Kappa Sigma;

Th~sd~y .and•Friday ·- . Sahara•: -· ·

with:HWn'phrey~Bogart ·.

Friday'- OWL SHOW .. · Ravaged Earth . . '- .

Saturday-· . . South of the Border·

with· Gene Autry­MYSTERY. BROAD~AST ..

Sunday Bombers' Moon-- ..

George Montgomery and ' · ·Annabella

Monday Spotlight ScandaJ_s

with Billy· Qilbert -. Tuesday

.·· Always A Bride's ·· · 'Maid .· with the Anrews Sisters ·

Cash Award $200 bond and $10.00 in stamps

Wednesday Mad Ghoul-

with Evelyn Ankers . Thursday . and Friday

Coney Island with Betty Grable and· George ~ontgomery

-Continued from page 1-generation becomes the realism of another." We have placed the ideals of Jesus in a - show case. They are beautiful to look at, but JOB P. WYATT & SONS. CO.

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