8
WELCOME Slc;;MA.CHI * * * * \ . BOWL BOUND DEACONS Volume XXXIV. Number 8. Wake Forest, Friday, November 12, Telephone . \ EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE BOWL D Zeta Chi. Will iio National ·.As of Siilma ·Chi Display of . Offensive · Wins New Year's Invitation High Off!cials I Poteat . Presents Trustee Expl·res To Aid In InstallatiOn j , and Banquet . . .Marc Connelly's In Oxford Home T Formation Given Credifi For Making Deacons -:"'Surprise : !-._ Formal installation of a new The Demon Deacons of Wake . chapter of Sigma Chi at Wake For- Green Pastures Of Heart Attack. Forest have accepted a bid to play est will taek place ·Thursday, Fri- · in Birmingham's Dixie Bowl New day, and Saturday, November 11- Year's Day. Holt Rast, Dixie Bowl with more than 200 members of .. . _, committee chairman, said that Sigma Chi, including many top Monologue Interpretation Poe Dies While Listening. F?rest was chosen for its officials of the fraternity, . of :Qialect Play Shows To Wake Forest-Duke display of power. to be in attendance at .. the m1txation N F' ·t· h G .d G Th1s power for movmg the ball has rites. The new Wake Forest chap- egro ai ri arne made the Deacons the No. 1 sur- , ELECTION DAY-Freshmen on the campus went all out in their ter will be the !13th active chap- . I · prise team of the Southern Can- ter of Sigma Chl, one of the na- Dr. Hubert Poteat again held a call).paigns offices in . Class. Scene ab.ove shows The Reverend William Dowd ference. tion's largest and best-known col:- large group of students, faculty typical scene Student Umon BuilQ.mg as Betty Jo Rmg dresses Poe, 68, a trustee of 'IVake Forest Coach Peahead Walker's decis- legiate· social fraternities. The new members and townspeople spell- up the lobby outside of the OLD GOLD AND BLACK for the comfort and graduate of the class of 1906 ion to cast aside the single wing chapter will be called Delta Nu. 1 bound last Monday evening with of hopeful vqters. -Staff Photo. died at his Oxford home Saturda; /formation in favor of the more of- Dr. William B. Ricks of Nash- his. annual reading of Marc Con- from a heart attack suffered while 1 fensive T has paid off .handsomely ville, Tennessee, will be the chief nelly's Green Pastures. d '-_ w II B listening to a broadcast of the by bringing Wake Forest its sec- installing Dr. Ricks, prom- . Interpreting this very human Thespian Come y QIStoliia i e Wake F<?rest-Duke football game .. ond extra-season game. Wake For- inent educator and _play with remarkable skill, Dr. He had served as a Baptist min- est met and defeated South Caro- past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the inaugural game in the and ·one of the best-loved men in vividly the Negro conception of Is H·t· ost 0 ginia for 35 years. He served Gator Bowl in ,Jacksonville Fla .• the fraternity, has been largely God among his "chillun" on· earth, V · . e' churches in Granville County for January 1, 1946. The seasons sines responsible for organizing in-: a God who speaks to them plainly, · . I · 22 years. At the time of his proved the Deacon's lack of punch stalling about 40 chapters, mclud- in their own dialect. The play qe- , ' · B ti Stud t to ·M he was pastor at Enon and Hester, on the ground. There has been no ing those at the University of picts "down-to-earth" . heaven, Little Theaters ap st en s eet two large churches. Some 'such laek this season with Walker's North Carolina, N. C. State Col- where there are fish fries, pick- I Production to Appear At Church During time ago he gave up the pastorate flashy T picking up yardage on anninies and "ten-cent November 18-19 Afternoon of the Knott's Grove Baptistlnearly every play. . Ricks, as be IS :fanul!arly calleu by and where "de Law:d" rules with , . Church. He came to Oxford in.1926 Wild Season·- , all who love him, is a native of a loving but very firm. hand his . 1 from South Hill, Va., where he had . Wake Forest's 1948 season has Nash County, North Carolina. contented subJ'ects while he keeps By George Mallonee. The BSU State Convention meets been pastor of the Baptist church b 'ld . hi h D ' j - th' eek d · th F' st B t · een a WI one In w c the ea- Tests Are Held a sad and watchful-and some- "Arsenic and Old the IS w -en m e Ir . ap lS He formerly was a member of h t t 1 f 165 times wrathful-eye on his latest, Wake Forest College Little Thea- CJ:;Lurch ; of .. beginning the General Board of the Baptist atheoi·r op- The installation program will creation, the lowly earth: ter's ·nau«nral produ tion. if the W:Ith Friday afternoon. Convention and had served as t Th D begin Thursday afternoon in Wait • • I . o 1 Approximate! fifty Wake· Forest . . ponen s. e eacons have won Hall where oral and written tests Wake Tradition 1948-49 season Will hit the boards: Y trustee of Meredith and Campbell six and lost two and an opponent · . . of the Wake Forest .High School· students _plm: to attend.. . ·College. For l2 :y:ears, prior to his has yet to. hold· them scoreless The 'fill be given to all active mem- Presented each year by the Auditorium Thur-sda·y· and .F. n·day From time that Mllton.Bhss, resignation .. he acted as moderator D . . . . ..... ; : . . bers of the petitioning Zeta li L't s · 't D Po- . .. · . - . · h · fr ·c· 1 ·'H'll - •· . .-- . eacons ave owo remammg Chi,· _R_obe_rt M. Cqy:ner,_ Euze an. . oc.w. - rr, nights· of next \ve·el\:· 'Novenib'er 18 om nape z of the Flat.RIVer Baptist Assocza- games Clemson at Winston Salem .T. teat's"rE!a"ding ·of-Gre.en Pastures and 19 ' starts-leadmg the conventwn del- tion. . . . . secretary, with the assistance of has become· a tradition at Wake , · egates -in a song service at 7:00 . tomorro:w, and South. <?arolma m members of the State College Forest Suggested by Roark Brad:.. The comedy, a recent: Friday night the "Amen" of Dr., Native of Chatham Columbia on ThanksgJ.vmg Day chapter of Sigma Chi. · 1 , .. 01 , M Broadway h1t by Joseph Kesser- , · s Rast said the Dixie Bowl com- . Formal initiation ·ceremonies fords southern ·sketches, an ling is a "side-splitting" farce Ward Barrs sermon on unday He was born in Chatham Coun- m''tte ·s ns'de . g Okl h Adam an' His Chillun," Green the life of a fam.il of morn.iil:g everyone will find a·bout ty, the son of the late D. M. Poe I. co 1 rm . a oma, attempts .to. "ce:- hilarious !aniacs. When first ten for each minute of allot- an.d Hen:ietta Poe. He re-, Baylor, tam aspects of a livmg religw:r- m duced at the Fulton Theatre New ted trme. ceived his educahon at Campbell, a P s e oppone for . e or Saturday. Dr. Rickus will be assist- the terms of its thous- York on the niaht of 10 I For the conferences on Satur- 'IVake Forest, and and the Southern estl. Eacdh of. tlleldse teamks IS powtehr- ed by many notables .of the fra- ands of Negroes .in the deep 1941 ' "Arsenic'•"'was ·mmediately' day morning, called "Frontiers for Baptist. Theological Seminary, fut dan . wout rna e a wor Y ternity. Prominent among them S th, . ' l s . 1 A , th t · hi L . . 11 K tu k . s an agamst he Deacons. ·n b :J hn N 1 C mpbell of ou . . proclaimed a comedy riot ocza c IOn, e op man zn s ouzsV1 e, en c y. "W , h tt' WI e 0 ea a Those who heard the readmg The la 0 ens with eren field will b'e there to lead discus- Mr. Poe was one of the most e are ovez: ge mg Chicago, chairman of Sigma Chi's on Montlay evening in the church scene laid inp the livin sions on controversial topics. beloved Baptist ministers in the Wake Forest, Rast sazd. "The executive .committee; Chester auditorium were the: the old Brewste home 1n Meditations and the Calendar of state. His whole life was dedicated arf one the Hough, past grand .consul, and J. spirit of reverence m the llyn: There the maiden. aunts Events fie a new to. work with rural churches, and 0 ensiVe . earns m coun ry Russel Easton, grand secretary, all and ':"Ill agree that Martha and Abby are quietly en- year. Slides I he had done much to promote their atnhe of Chicago, Hamilton Douglas, Its reverent spirit, Its drama and tertaini the Reverend Dr Har- mg each pomt under consideration I welfare. . . · . . Y president of Atlanta I.:aw School its comedy could. find no ?etter per. It many moments: how- wit a dialogue will add He is survived by his wife, the means of expression than m the ever before the picture changes spice to the program. former Douglas Thornton of them." c mi ees were eyemg praetor; Field Secretaries Milton narrative skill of Dr. Hubert Po- into'one of complete madness and I Truth and Life· Blackstone, Va., two daughters, E. Raup of Harrisburg, Pa., and teat. ' comedy. "Christ, Mrs. Henry D. Ward of Lumberton , Won First Game Robe rt M. Coyner of Indianapolis; N' Old L d" . Way, the Truth, and Mrs. Nelson Thomas,' .Jr., of The Deacons won their opener . lCe a 1es r 1 and the Life, IS the theme for the Oxford· a son William Edward with George Washington 27-13. L. G. Balfour of Attleboro, Mass., Local Debaters The two charming old ladies are I entire meeting. . . (Bill) p' oe, a st'udent 'at the Har- Th D tt k past grand consul and the only S f th ak t art e eacon a ac was marred by man to head the National Inter- quietly attending to their own bus- o e . ers o P 1c1- vard Law School; two brothers, a few opening-game mistakes, but fraternity Council twice; Fredner' A d T iness: taking care of the old pate m i!Onventi_on are Dr. M. H. M., and Ralph Poe, both of the game proved that the T for- Fl Hen ourney, ster home; tending to their nephew T. . executive s_ecretary, Apex; a sister, Mrs. Bessie Harris mation was the answer to Walker's B. Allen of Jacksonville, a., Teddy, who not only looks like Forergn Missron Board, Richmond, of Durham· and four grandchild- longrun problems. grand praetor of the Georgia-Flor- Theodore Roosevelt but thinks 1 Va., Dr. Ted Adams, pastor First ' - In their second game, the Dea- ida Province of Sigma'Ohi. Dr. Roy .... that he is the President and is cur-l Baptist Church, Richmond, Va., services were conducted cons went down stubbornly before B. McKnight of Charlotte,· grand Members of the Wake Forest de- rently occupied with the construe- 1 Rev. Charles A. Maddry, pastor at the Oxford Baptist Church at 3 a heavy Boston College team 26-9. praetor of the North Carolina- bate .team, Hen1...,, Huff, Bill Wag- tion of the Panama Canal in the First Baptist Church, Wilming- d h E 1 h d t ball South Carolina Province; and Rob- ·J I G G ti p.m. Mon ay. T e ag es a o play alert ert Workman, grand tribune and oner:· Gordon- Kelly, and Bob basement, and finally, gallantly ton, . . reer, ve to check the progressing Deacon retired rear-admiral. Mr. Work- Crouch, departed last night for helping tired old men to find peace serretary, Business Foundation of d T attack. . f Columbia, South Carolina, where through death. This peaceful ex- UNC, Chapel Hill, Rev. Ma-xie Col- Covete Award The Wake Forest T came into man is also spiritual advlsor or they will attend tlie Carolina In- istence is bru.tally interrupted by lins, excutive secretary, South own in the game with William and Sigma Chi. Dr .. F:ank of vitationai Debate Tournament at the appearance of two fugitives Carolina Federated Forces, at Mary. The Deacons de!eated the. Raleigh is th: assistant mstalling the University of South Carolina from justice, Jonathan, a long lost Columbia, S. C., Mr. Robert S. Won by Dr. Br•ltt favored Indians 21-12 in a tightly· officer and ism charge of today and tomorrow. brother of Teddy, anci his compan- Denny, associate secretary, South- played ball game. ments for. the event. Dr.! Topic· for ·the debate is: "Re- ion, a suspicious plastic-surgeon, wide Student Department, Nash- Wake Forest suffered its second· ·Powers IS bemg asslsted by Ed- solved that the Federal Govern- who has ''altered .Jonathan's fea-' ville, Tennessee, Dr. Harold Bas- defeat against Carolina. It was ward .w. secretary of the ment 'should adopt a policy of tures so that the unfortunate man den, Mississippi College, Clinton, Dr. H .. G. Britt, of the Biology after the Tar Heels defeated the alumm chapter. equalizing educational opportuni- now has an amazing likeness to Miss.,· Dr. Phil Elliott, president Department, received the William Deacons that AP listed Carolina Qffieial Banquet ties by means 1 of annual grants." Boris Karloff. Gardner-Webb College, Boiling Louis Poteat Award at a faculty first in the nation. The Tar Heels After the installation proper, a Also taking part in the tournament -See THESPIAN, Page 8--· . .-:.see B.S.U., Page 8- meeting which was held last Mon- scored early in the game to get banquet in the Carolina Hotel is are teams from North and South day. The award, which was pre- the jump on the Deacons. The scheduled for saturday night at Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia. E c d A sented by the' North Carolina al score was 28 _ 6 . 6:30 p.m. During the ceremonies The group will return to Wake aaer oe . $ waa·t Academy of Science, was given for . af.ter the banquet, the official Forest over the week end and on I!J . the most meritorious research pap- Duquesne Game' charter will be presented to Bax- Monday will begin to make wire er presented to the Academy. . The Deacon attack caught . fire ter Finch head of the petitioning recordings for their entry in the Sad•·e Baw,·k·· DS Day· The award was made possible by in the game with Duquesne. Wake group. D;, Ricks will preside, and National Intercollegiate Debate _ the Phipps and Bird Company of Forest rolled up 20 points in the the invocation will be spoken by Tournament sponsored by Texas Richmond, Virginia, who gave it first quarter. At the end of the . Dr. Carlyle campbell, president of Christian University. to the North Carolina Academy to game the Deacons had put the By Leigh William$ vember 20, when the "ketched" ak th t Th d D k d t th t f 41 5 Meredi th College. The Rev, M. 0. urll'· e Reco.rdi·n,.. m e e presen a 1on. e awar u es own o e une o -1 . · h n ... A mild form of mass hysteria is takes the "ketcher'' to a Square · d f D w L p t t h I an exc 1 ·tm· h · Sommers, president of the Rale1g IS name or r. . . o ea , w o n g omecommg ex- alumni chapter and pastor of the Debator Bob Crouch will record seizing the men o'f the college as Dance in the College Gymnasium was the first president of the hibition with State College, the Presbyterian Church, will three affirmative speeches to be the fatal day of Friday, November which is being sponsored by the North Carolina Academy of Deacons got revenge for two pre- ..._ t t A t• u · ·t De 19 Sadi'el HawkinS. Day that is Women's Government Associati'on. s · I·o d-.. t Th h d · welcome the dinner guests. The sen o ugus Ina mversi y, - ' Cienc.e. v us =ea s. e ar runnmg principal speaker will be Hamil- Paul University, and Purdue Uni- draws' nearer as relentlessly as The dance will carry out the Remarkable Paper Deacon team took that one 34-13. ton Douglas of Atlanta. T.he guests versity .. In return the squad will mid-term grades. :t;:ager coeds, Dogpatch theme as all comers are The crowning achievement for will include official delegations receive three negatives on about however, are remaining cool and expected to dress as one of the The paper is judged on the bas- the Deacons this season was their from active Sigma Chi chapters at November 19 from St. Olaf Uni- collected as they carefully study various characters of the AI Capp is of research and the manner of defeating Wallace Wade's Blue the University of Virginia, Caro- versity and Texas Christian Uni- the merits of the miserable bach- comic strip. An important part of presentation, and it must ·be of ex- Devils of Duke in an ultra-excit- lina, Duke, the University of South versity, At the end of· the six de- elors whom they will legally pur- all the costumes -will he the com- ceptionally high quality as a re- ing game in Duke stadium. The Carolina, and N. c. State College. bates all winnets will be announc- sue in the annual Dogpatch styled pulsory absence of shoes due to search paper. Deacons had not been able to turn The State College group will be ed and the top four will meet in race. the delicate condition of the gym- Dr. F. G. Hall of Duke Universi- the trick since 1942. The game too in charge of the initiation. The the semi-finals. . ' Each girl will be given a "this nasium floor. And, fellows, as on ty, who was president of The marked the end of the Wade jinx. banquet will conclude the Plans are also bemg 'i?Y the one is tooked" at the beginning of Sadie Hawkins Day, it won't cost Academy of Science last year, ·at- Before last saturday a Walker ceremonies. group to UmverSity ?f the day and the first eligible bach- you one red cent. · tended the meeting. Dr. Paul .J. coached team had never defeated Zeta Chi, the petitioning group, Vermont Invrtational Forensic elor she catches will be ''Pinned It's really goirig to be a novel Krammer, vice-president-elect and a Wake coached team. was established at Wake Forest in 1 Tournament November 19 anti 20, up" with the sign; After a male is experience for all the students. Dr. Reinard Harkema, SecretarY of coach D. c. "Peahead" Walker 1946 from the remnants of the at Burlington, Vermont. The run to ground once, h«: is The weaker female sex will have the Academy, were also present. was born and reared in Binning- war-depleted Esquire Club. Before Forest team is the only m ated the will its long awaited chance to strike Dr. 0. C. Bradbury of the Wake ham. He played football there for the local was established, howev- the south which has been mVIted be CODf!Idereci a of back at that "special'' fugitive Forest Biology Department is now Birmingham-southern and Ho- -See ZETA CHI, Page 3- to atten4 this tournament. ownership on Saturday Dlght, No- I. -See CHASE, Page 8- president of the Academy. -see BOWL, Page 5-

BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

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Page 1: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

WELCOME

Slc;;MA.CHI

* * * * \ .

BOWL BOUND

DEACONS

Volume XXXIV. Number 8. Wake Forest, N.C.~ Friday, November 12, H~48 Telephone ~04-S

. \

EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE BOWL D Zeta Chi. Will iio National

·.As C~lpter of Siilma ·Chi Display of . Offensive Pow~r ·

Wins New Year's Invitation High ~ra~ernity Off!cials I Poteat . Presents Trustee Expl·res

To Aid In InstallatiOn j ,

and Banquet . . .Marc Connelly's In Oxford Home T Formation Given Credifi

For Making Deacons -:"'Surprise

: !-._ Formal installation of a new The Demon Deacons of Wake

. chapter of Sigma Chi at Wake For- Green Pastures Of Heart Attack. Forest have accepted a bid to play est will taek place ·Thursday, Fri- · in Birmingham's Dixie Bowl New day, and Saturday, November 11- Year's Day. Holt Rast, Dixie Bowl ~3, with more than 200 members of .. . _, • committee chairman, said that Sigma Chi, including many top Monologue Interpretation Poe Dies While Listening. W~e F?rest was chosen for its officials of the fraternity, .e~~ec~d; . of :Qialect Play Shows To Wake Forest-Duke nn~hty display of o~fensive power. to be in attendance at .. the m1txation N F' ·t· h G .d G Th1s power for movmg the ball has rites. The new Wake Forest chap- egro ai ri arne made the Deacons the No. 1 sur-, ELECTION DAY-Freshmen on the campus went all out in their ter will be the !13th active chap- . I · prise team of the Southern Can-ter of Sigma Chl, one of the na- Dr. Hubert Poteat again held a call).paigns fo~ offices in t~e ~reshm~n . Class. Scene ab.ove shows The Reverend William Dowd ference. tion's largest and best-known col:- large group of students, faculty typical scene I~ t~e Student Umon BuilQ.mg as Betty Jo Rmg dresses Poe, 68, a trustee of 'IVake Forest Coach Peahead Walker's decis­legiate· social fraternities. The new members and townspeople spell- up the lobby outside of the OLD GOLD AND BLACK for the comfort and graduate of the class of 1906 ion to cast aside the single wing chapter will be called Delta Nu. 1 bound last Monday evening with of hopeful vqters. -Staff Photo. died at his Oxford home Saturda; /formation in favor of the more of-

Dr. William B. Ricks of Nash- his. annual reading of Marc Con- from a heart attack suffered while

1

fensive T has paid off .handsomely ville, Tennessee, will be the chief nelly's Green Pastures. d '-_ w II B listening to a broadcast of the by bringing Wake Forest its sec-installing o~icer. Dr. Ricks, prom- . Interpreting this very human Thespian Come y QIStoliia i e Wake F<?rest-Duke football game .. ond extra-season game. Wake For-inent educator and ch~rchman~ _play with remarkable skill, Dr. He had served as a Baptist min- est met and defeated South Caro-past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the inaugural game in the and ·one of the best-loved men in vividly the Negro conception of Is Br~~~t..adway H·t· ost 0 ginia for 35 years. He served Gator Bowl in ,Jacksonville Fla .• the fraternity, has been largely God among his "chillun" on· earth, V · . • • e' churches in Granville County for January 1, 1946. The seasons sines responsible for organizing ~nd in-: a God who speaks to them plainly, · . I · 22 years. At the time of his death~ proved the Deacon's lack of punch stalling about 40 chapters, mclud- in their own dialect. The play qe- • , ' · B ti Stud t to ·M he was pastor at Enon and Hester, on the ground. There has been no ing those at the University of picts "down-to-earth" . heaven, Little Theaters Inaugur~ll ap st en s eet two large ~ural churches. Some 'such laek this season with Walker's North Carolina, N. C. State Col- where there are fish fries, pick- I Production to Appear At Church During time ago he gave up the pastorate flashy T picking up yardage on lege,Duke,a~dDa':"i?:son."D"\ddy" anninies and "ten-cent seegar~", November 18-19 Afternoon of the Knott's Grove Baptistlnearly every play. . Ricks, as be IS :fanul!arly calleu by and where "de Law:d" rules with , . Church. He came to Oxford in.1926 Wild Season·- , all who love him, is a native of a loving but very firm. hand his . 1 from South Hill, Va., where he had . Wake Forest's 1948 season has Nash County, North Carolina. contented subJ'ects while he keeps By George Mallonee. The BSU State Convention meets been pastor of the Baptist church b 'ld . hi h D

' j - th' eek d · th F' st B t· t · een a WI one In w c the ea-Tests Are Held a sad and watchful-and some- "Arsenic and Old Lace~" the IS w -en m e Ir . ap lS He formerly was a member of h t t 1 f 165 times wrathful-eye on his latest, Wake Forest College Little Thea- CJ:;Lurch ; of .. Gasto~ia' beginning the General Board of the Baptist Pc~~~ts ~vg~i~~f ~~7 afo~ atheoi·r op-

The installation program will creation, the lowly earth: ter's ·nau«nral produ tion. if the W:Ith registrat~on Friday afternoon. Convention and had served as t Th D begin Thursday afternoon in Wait • • I .,~ . ~ o 1 Approximate! fifty Wake· Forest . . ponen s. e eacons have won Hall where oral and written tests Wake Tradition 1948-49 season Will hit the boards: Y trustee of Meredith and Campbell six and lost two and an opponent

· . . of the Wake Forest .High School· students _plm: to attend.. . ·College. For l2 :y:ears, prior to his has yet to. hold· them scoreless The 'fill be given to all active mem- Presented each year by the Auditorium Thur-sda·y· and .F. n·day From t~e time that Mllton.Bhss, resignation .. he acted as moderator D . . n· . . ..... ; : . . bers of the petitioning lo~al, Zeta li L't s · 't D Po- . .. · . - . · h · fr ·c· 1 ·'H'll - •· . .-- . eacons ave owo remammg Chi,· b~ _R_obe_rt M. Cqy:ner,_ ~i.eld Euze an. ~ er~.! . oc.w. ~· - rr, ~····- nights· of next \ve·el\:· 'Novenib'er 18 musi~A(!_,ai;rman om nape z of the Flat.RIVer Baptist Assocza- games Clemson at Winston Salem

.T. ~ teat's"rE!a"ding ·of-Gre.en Pastures and 19 ' starts-leadmg the conventwn del- tion. • . . . . secretary, with the assistance of has become· a tradition at Wake , · egates -in a song service at 7:00 . • tomorro:w, and South. <?arolma m members of the State College Forest Suggested by Roark Brad:.. The three~act comedy, a recent: Friday night to~ the "Amen" of Dr., Native of Chatham Columbia on ThanksgJ.vmg Day chapter of Sigma Chi. ·

1 , • • .. 01, M Broadway h1t by Joseph Kesser- , · s Rast said the Dixie Bowl com-

. Formal initiation ·ceremonies fords southern ·sketches, an ling is a "side-splitting" farce Ward Barrs sermon on unday He was born in Chatham Coun- m''tte ·s ns'de . g Okl h Adam an' His Chillun," Green con~ernin the life of a fam.il of morn.iil:g everyone will find a·bout ty, the son of the late D. M. Poe ~ I. co 1 rm . a oma,

~ni~~fe~g~,d s~~~~~gc~~01{~:o H;~: P~stu.res attempts .to. prese~t. "ce:- hilarious !aniacs. When first ~ro'- ten ~ses for each minute of allot- an.d Hen:ietta E~ore Poe. He re-, Mis~~~~f Baylor, ~fd V~:ov; a~ tam aspects of a livmg religw:r- m duced at the Fulton Theatre New ted trme. ceived his educahon at Campbell, a P s e oppone for . e or

Saturday. Dr. Rickus will be assist- the terms of its believer~ thous- York on the niaht of Janua~ 10 I For the conferences on Satur- 'IVake Forest, and and the Southern estl. Eacdh of. tlleldse teamks IS powtehr­ed by many notables .of the fra- ands of Negroes .in the deep 1941 ' "Arsenic'•"'was ·mmediately' day morning, called "Frontiers for Baptist. Theological Seminary, fut dan . wout rna e a wor Y ternity. Prominent among them S th, . ' l s . 1 A t· , th t · hi L . .11 K tu k . s an agamst he Deacons. ·n b :J hn N 1 C mpbell of ou . . proclaimed a comedy riot ocza c IOn, e op man zn s ouzsV1 e, en c y. "W , h tt' WI e 0 ea a Those who heard the readmg The la 0 ens with ~ eren field will b'e there to lead discus- Mr. Poe was one of the most e are ,~PPY ovez: ge mg Chicago, chairman of Sigma Chi's on Montlay evening in the church scene laid inp the livin ro~m ~ sions on controversial topics. beloved Baptist ministers in the Wake Forest, Rast sazd. "The executive .committee; Chester auditorium were impre~sed ~Y the: the old Brewste home 1n Broo~- Meditations and the Calendar of state. His whole life was dedicated Df~aco~s arf one ~f the great~st Hough, past grand .consul, and J. spirit of reverence in~hlled m the llyn: There the .,~0 maiden. aunts Events w~ fie presez~.ted ~n a new to. work with rural churches, and 0 ensiVe . earns m ~he coun ry Russel Easton, grand secretary, all ?-udienc~, and t~';!Y ':"Ill agree that Martha and Abby are quietly en- ~anner thi~ year. Slides ~llustr~t- I he had done much to promote their at~~ltsffe;Ievecoteuamldn~tgiwveasyteou atnhe of Chicago, Hamilton Douglas, Its reverent spirit, Its drama and tertaini the Reverend Dr Har- mg each pomt under consideration I welfare. . . · . . Y president of Atlanta I.:aw School its comedy could. find no ?etter per. It i~not many moments: how- al~ng wit a dialogue will add He is survived by his wife, the ~I=lm si;!m~t:hem beca~se ot~er ~'!J~st ;;a~tl~':t~~l~::n:~a-::d means of expression than m the ever before the picture changes spice to the program. former Douglas Thornton of them." c mi ees were eyemg praetor; Field Secretaries Milton narrative skill of Dr. Hubert Po- into'one of complete madness and I Truth and Life· Blackstone, Va., two daughters, E. Raup of Harrisburg, Pa., and teat. ' comedy. "Christ, Mrs. Henry D. Ward of Lumberton , Won First Game Robert M. Coyner of Indianapolis; N' Old L d" . t~~ Way, the Truth, and Mrs. Nelson Thomas,' .Jr., of The Deacons won their opener

. lCe a 1es r 1 and the Life, IS the theme for the Oxford· a son William Edward with George Washington 27-13. L. G. Balfour of Attleboro, Mass., Local Debaters The two charming old ladies are I entire meeting. . . (Bill) p' oe, a st'udent 'at the Har- Th D tt k past grand consul and the only S f th ak t art e eacon a ac was marred by man to head the National Inter- quietly attending to their own bus- o~e o e s~e . ers o P 1c1- vard Law School; two brothers, a few opening-game mistakes, but fraternity Council twice; Fredner' A d T iness: taking care of the old Brew-~ pate m t:~?-e i!Onventi_on are Dr. M. H. M., and Ralph Poe, both of the game proved that the T for-

Fl Hen ourney, ster home; tending to their nephew T. ~ankli~, . executive s_ecretary, Apex; a sister, Mrs. Bessie Harris mation was the answer to Walker's B. Allen of Jacksonville, a., Teddy, who not only looks like Forergn Missron Board, Richmond, of Durham· and four grandchild- longrun problems. grand praetor of the Georgia-Flor- Theodore Roosevelt but thinks 1 Va., Dr. Ted Adams, pastor First ' - In their second game, the Dea-ida Province of Sigma'Ohi. Dr. Roy .... that he is the President and is cur-l Baptist Church, Richmond, Va., re~uneral services were conducted cons went down stubbornly before B. McKnight of Charlotte,· grand Members of the Wake Forest de- rently occupied with the construe- 1 Rev. Charles A. Maddry, pastor at the Oxford Baptist Church at 3 a heavy Boston College team 26-9. praetor of the North Carolina- bate .team, Hen1...,, Huff, Bill Wag- tion of the Panama Canal in the First Baptist Church, Wilming- d h E 1 h d t ball South Carolina Province; and Rob- ·J I G G ti p.m. Mon ay. T e ag es a o play alert ert Workman, grand tribune and oner:· Gordon- Kelly, and Bob basement, and finally, gallantly ton, D~. . . reer, exe~u ve to check the progressing Deacon retired rear-admiral. Mr. Work- Crouch, departed last night for helping tired old men to find peace serretary, Business Foundation of d T attack.

. f Columbia, South Carolina, where through death. This peaceful ex- UNC, Chapel Hill, Rev. Ma-xie Col- Covete Award The Wake Forest T came into it~':; man is also spiritual advlsor or they will attend tlie Carolina In- istence is bru.tally interrupted by lins, excutive secretary, South own in the game with William and Sigma Chi. Dr .. F:ank ~owers. of vitationai Debate Tournament at the appearance of two fugitives Carolina Federated Forces, at Mary. The Deacons de!eated the. Raleigh is th: assistant mstalling the University of South Carolina from justice, Jonathan, a long lost Columbia, S. C., Mr. Robert S. Won by Dr. Br•ltt favored Indians 21-12 in a tightly· officer and ism charge of arra~ge- today and tomorrow. brother of Teddy, anci his compan- Denny, associate secretary, South- played ball game. ments for. the t?ree-d~y event. Dr.! Topic· for ·the debate is: "Re- ion, a suspicious plastic-surgeon, wide Student Department, Nash- Wake Forest suffered its second· ·Powers IS bemg asslsted by Ed- solved that the Federal Govern- who has ''altered .Jonathan's fea-' ville, Tennessee, Dr. Harold Bas- defeat against Carolina. It was ward .w. Ruggl~s, secretary of the ment 'should adopt a policy of tures so that the unfortunate man den, Mississippi College, Clinton, Dr. H .. G. Britt, of the Biology after the Tar Heels defeated the Raelelg~ alumm chapter. equalizing educational opportuni- now has an amazing likeness to Miss.,· Dr. Phil Elliott, president Department, received the William Deacons that AP listed Carolina

Qffieial Banquet ties by means1 of annual grants." Boris Karloff. Gardner-Webb College, Boiling Louis Poteat Award at a faculty first in the nation. The Tar Heels After the installation proper, a Also taking part in the tournament -See THESPIAN, Page 8--· . .-:.see B.S.U., Page 8- meeting which was held last Mon- scored early in the game to get

banquet in the Carolina Hotel is are teams from North and South day. The award, which was pre- the jump on the Deacons. The fin~ scheduled for saturday night at Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia. E c d A • sented by the' North Carolina al score was 28_6. 6:30 p.m. During the ceremonies The group will return to Wake aaer oe . $ waa·t Academy of Science, was given for . af.ter the banquet, the official Forest over the week end and on I!J . the most meritorious research pap- Duquesne Game' charter will be presented to Bax- Monday will begin to make wire er presented to the Academy. . The Deacon attack caught . fire ter Finch head of the petitioning recordings for their entry in the Sad•· e Baw,·k·· DS Day· The award was made possible by in the game with Duquesne. Wake group. D;, Ricks will preside, and National Intercollegiate Debate _ the Phipps and Bird Company of Forest rolled up 20 points in the the invocation will be spoken by Tournament sponsored by Texas Richmond, Virginia, who gave it first quarter. At the end of the

. Dr. Carlyle campbell, president of Christian University. to the North Carolina Academy to game the Deacons had put the By Leigh William$ vember 20, when the "ketched" ak th t t· Th d D k d t th t f 41 5 Meredith College. The Rev, M. 0. urll'· e Reco.rdi·n,.. m e e presen a 1on. e awar u es own o e une o -1 .

· h n ... A mild form of mass hysteria is takes the "ketcher'' to a Square · d f D w L p t t h I an exc1·tm· h · Sommers, president of the Rale1g IS name or r. . . o ea , w o n g omecommg ex-alumni chapter and pastor of the Debator Bob Crouch will record seizing the men o'f the college as Dance in the College Gymnasium was the first president of the hibition with State College, the

F·•~st Presbyterian Church, will three affirmative speeches to be the fatal day of Friday, November which is being sponsored by the North Carolina Academy of Deacons got revenge for two pre-..._ t t A t• u · ·t De 19 Sadi'el HawkinS. Day that is Women's Government Associati'on. s · I·o d-.. t Th h d · welcome the dinner guests. The sen o ugus Ina mversi y, - ' • • Cienc.e. v us =ea s. e ar runnmg

principal speaker will be Hamil- Paul University, and Purdue Uni- draws' nearer as relentlessly as The dance will carry out the Remarkable Paper Deacon team took that one 34-13. ton Douglas of Atlanta. T.he guests versity .. In return the squad will mid-term grades. :t;:ager coeds, Dogpatch theme as all comers are The crowning achievement for will include official delegations receive three negatives on about however, are remaining cool and expected to dress as one of the The paper is judged on the bas- the Deacons this season was their from active Sigma Chi chapters at November 19 from St. Olaf Uni- collected as they carefully study various characters of the AI Capp is of research and the manner of defeating Wallace Wade's Blue the University of Virginia, Caro- versity and Texas Christian Uni- the merits of the miserable bach- comic strip. An important part of presentation, and it must ·be of ex- Devils of Duke in an ultra-excit­lina, Duke, the University of South versity, At the end of· the six de- elors whom they will legally pur- all the costumes -will he the com- ceptionally high quality as a re- ing game in Duke stadium. The Carolina, and N. c. State College. bates all winnets will be announc- sue in the annual Dogpatch styled pulsory absence of shoes due to search paper. Deacons had not been able to turn The State College group will be ed and the top four will meet in race. the delicate condition of the gym- Dr. F. G. Hall of Duke Universi- the trick since 1942. The game too in charge of the initiation. The the semi-finals. . ' Each girl will be given a "this nasium floor. And, fellows, as on ty, who was president of The marked the end of the Wade jinx. banquet will conclude the fo~al Plans are also bemg m~de 'i?Y the one is tooked" at the beginning of Sadie Hawkins Day, it won't cost Academy of Science last year, ·at- Before last saturday a Walker ceremonies. group to atten~ ~e UmverSity ?f the day and the first eligible bach- you one red cent. · tended the meeting. Dr. Paul .J. coached team had never defeated

Zeta Chi, the petitioning group, Vermont Invrtational Forensic elor she catches will be ''Pinned It's really goirig to be a novel Krammer, vice-president-elect and a Wake coached team. was established at Wake Forest in 1 Tournament November 19 anti 20, up" with the sign; After a male is experience for all the students. Dr. Reinard Harkema, SecretarY of coach D. c. "Peahead" Walker 1946 from the remnants of the at Burlington, Vermont. The W~e run to ground once, h«: is .e~- The weaker female sex will have the Academy, were also present. was born and reared in Binning­war-depleted Esquire Club. Before Forest team is the only sq~a~ m ated fro~ the ~ace. Thi~ ~gn will its long awaited chance to strike Dr. 0. C. Bradbury of the Wake ham. He played football there for the local was established, howev- the south which has been mVIted be CODf!Idereci a ~cate of back at that "special'' fugitive Forest Biology Department is now Birmingham-southern and Ho-

-See ZETA CHI, Page 3- to atten4 this tournament. ownership on Saturday Dlght, No- I. -See CHASE, Page 8- president of the Academy. -see BOWL, Page 5-

Page 2: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

. '

Page Two Old Gold and Black Friday, Novem~r. :i2, 1948 · ·

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Founded Januan· 15, 1916, as the official st~dent

newspaper of \\'al<e Forest College. Pubhshed weekly during the school _year except durin~ examination periods and J:ohdays as dtrected h~ the \Yake Forest Puhlicattons Boanl.

Bob Grogan .. .. .. • .. . .. . . .. . . . .. .. • . .. • Editor

· \tories in its series with. Duke that it's sacrilege the Sat~rday victory should have been tainted by official decision. The winning touchdown was set up on a play that hinged· totally on of­ficial decision. That's not unusual, except that this case was handled about as gracefully as a

Isham ·A(quires Fine Colledion

New Light Is ·ThroWJi on Literary .. Genius of

'Reynolds Herb Paschal, Alice Puryear. .

\Valt I~riedenhcrg .......... Asststant Editors Editorial Staff: Jimmy Barnes, Alec Biggs,

Lamar Caudle, Ed Friedenhurg, B.ob H;_o,~ren, Clarence Lane, George Mallonee, Dt~k. Ne\\ to~, Carol Oldham, Vivian Snuggs, ~- . B. '' tllmm_s. Bul Bethune, Et·ma Lanier, Jewell LtYmgsto';', Jo~ Tiuth Gra~-. Horace Denncq, ~~omulus ~\. eatherma:', Elizabeth Gertner, Davtd hu.ckner, :--;e.tl Gahht!t t, I~eigh 'VillinlllS, Ht.~tty ,Jo !1111~.

Staff Photographers ... Alex Kiser, ;lim Turner Starr Artist ................ Jos<'l'h \V. Brubaker .Bill Hensle~· ...........•.•. , . . • . Sports Editor

S!lOrts St,~ff: D:t\'C Cla~·k, Doh Hoi~. Jack Gl;;nn. Johnny Dillon, Bill Nort'l>', .John Gtbson, '\\ tley ,\ .. :u·ren. .

::.r.·mhcr A. C. P. and X. C. C:.:,·,.;l:_'·':;--.,.,------;­. l~epr.::!sentt:d ~or national atlYerti!·~-!ng- })~ .. Xutio1~u~

Ad'\·crtising- St~rv1ce~. Inc., Colleg~ 1~ uh]tshcrs T Hep. rescntalive~. -t:JO :\l:.ulison AYe .. ~cw ~ork. N: "Y.,

Chieag"H. nnstun.J....l!oi..,os Angeles, San FranClSCO.

Printed h:,· Thco! 'lr-·>vis Sons, Zebulon. N. C. .~~w~wNY~~--~~~-~-~

CLASS CUTS TOMORROW

gorilla would play a zither.

Just a little over tw:o minutes were left 1

when Jack Maunie drove from the Duke six to I the Duke ten. Referee J.D. Rogers charge.d into By Horace $ennett the mass of players, apparently called the' play The acqUisition by Lieut. Col.

Ralph H. Isham of two great por-dead and was in the process of lining up the next tions of the archives of .Parnes ' play. Wake Forest players charged him, holler- i Boswell is an event of the first ed and pointed furiously toward Umpire Gus importance to literary and histqr­

ical scholarship. There has now Tebell, who had signalled weakly toward the been completed the greatest col-Duke goal, indicating the ball had been fumbled lection of manuscript material that and belonged to Wake Forest. has ever been assembled about a

e> • single man or single period. They conferred, and Referee Rogers, who 'fhe news of Col. Isham's 'ac-

had been on top of the play, allowed himself quisition .comes at a time when in-· to be overruled by Umpire Tebell, who had been terest in eighteenth-century stud-

fi · ies is ah.dy at a high tide. So ten or fteen yards away. Maunie had lost the avid is the appetite for .information ball to Bob jones officially, and·on the next play / concerning Johnson and Boswell li'like Sprock galloped home with the clinching ~ th~t a periodical summary of re-TD ... Duke players squawked at the decision cent developments, published un-

1

c;ler the title of "Johnsonian News with no result. l\1ounie later said he never ac-~ Letter" and edited by a staff of tually lost possession of the ball, and other Duke I . trained men headed by Prof.

· · · b J \ N X 'James Clifford of Columbia Uni-players ms1sted the whistle had sounded efore ·, versity, has.g~ined a wide circu-Tebell raised his unenthusiastic signal .. . . lation.

Deacon players, however, insisted that i~ was a ~ .. ..:.-----.... ·(\ ·---------- "-----.""'\t- · The bulk. of the first Malahide' clear-cut fumble, and that jones had made a -. !) ...., -JI...r -.,_ find was of journals by .Boswell I ecovery before the whistle. and letters written or received by

him. The letters were for the most Tomorrow the Deacons meet one of their Wallace Wade was not bitter about it, to ..., -

1. part,·froni contemporaries of les-

toughest tests of the season: in hthe <;:lemson the contrary, turned a neat quip about it in the ·I H. 'ht·· . ht i f D k (j ser import_ance. Tigers. We feel quite certatn t at ~~eryo.ne dressing room ... While fumbling around his 1g 1g $ O U e . ame Over 100 Letfers is aware of the magnitude of the game 10• Wm- pockets, he discovered he had lost ·his spectacle · . There are more- than a hundred ston, but we'd like to take this opportuntty to I case .. "Well," he said, eyes a-twinkle, "maybe "'"--------------------------- letters written by Samuel John-

b d f t son to twenty of his correspond-express the thanks of the student .0 Y or. wo I gave it to Peahead. ·Everybody else was giving 1 To~ start with the highest light I to ring the bell at Wait Hall, but ents other than Boswell, carefully acts that demonstrated a lot of bigness nght him something today" .. _ I of the whole Duke game was the couldn't get in, so went to a Negro collected by the biographer after

'h re on the campus. Two acts that are a credit . -Charlotte News. well-earned victory the Baptists church and rang ~ts bell for about Johnson's death as raw material e . . · d understanding brought back to Deacon D~ll. The an hour, announcmg to the world for the "Life." There are hitherto

to the spirit of cooperation an joy of the Deacons was complete and Wake County at large that unknown juvenile poems by John-here at Wake Forest. Mr. Ray Howe when they came from behind to th Demon Deacons had come home son which illustrate the early de-

C tulations should go first to John Mat- Sports Editor win and carry Coach Walker from with everything but Duke Stadium. velopment of his poetic gift. There . ongra. , I was he Charlotte News the field on their shoulders with are printed works by Johnson of

thts, prestdent of the student body. t his protests of "This is far enough, For Carroll Blackerby, it was which•no copies have previousJy who took it upon himself to personally canvass Charlotte, N. C. boys" ringing in their ears. a day long to be remembered. He been known to exist, and even a the heads of each department in the college and Dear Mr. Howe: not only played the best game of brief chronicle by Johnson of his

d · f tion 1 _ T~e "all the way-"_ yell is be- 'his career and_ helped PI_.tch Wake own early life. request that they consent to a tscon mua · g t bl th ll t F t t b t h th Many other figures of the John-' I do not know of your status of feeling mnm~ ? ossom WI a sor s ores o a wm, u IS mo er, of classes on Saturday. The job wasn t an easy . . of vanat10ns but those at Duke father and brother were there to son circle emerge in ,a new light. one. From the start, John ha~ no idea what towards Wake Forest, but It has always seemed Saturday top all the ones we've see him do it; after having driven The' manuscripts by ·Sir Joshua kind of reception the proposal would meet with favorable to me. I think you have done a good heard to date. First we heard, "all all night to get here from Besse- Reynolds found among the new

job of publicizing the Deacons this year and in the way, Deacons," then "all the mer, Alaoama. papers are of such importance and~ either with the administration or with the de- . . " way ,Sprock," next came "all the ---- quality as to advance him into the-' partment heads themselves. He certainly had years past, but the article entitled Deacons way, referee," as the men in The big.gest disappointment of first rank among authors. An un-no assurance that the blame for instigating the Licked Blue Devils by a Decision" which ap- .striped-shirts and knickers were the day came for Bill Gregus when published character sketch of 01-

'f h peared in thC! .Monday edition of the News is goose~tepping tow.ard Wa~e's goal: he didn't _go "a:U the way" _on ~is iver Goldsmith, extending to plan could not have been laid at his feet 1 t e 1 • • • late m the- game, and shll later 177 yard kick-off return. Said Bill, twenty-eight ·pages, 'catches the

Plan had met with disfavor. one of the most preJudtced and poorest stones "all the way, clock," because the "I saw those red .flags, but I just personality of the subject as viv-

lt took a day of work and a lot of walking I have ever read. I seconds seemed never to get away. couldn't make it." , idly on pape_r as the greatest Rey-:

. The "cor~er" for this pile of yells This corner does not ··hesitate to nolds portraits preserve his sitters tp get the names of each department head regis- I have no tdea who wrote this article and came early in the game when the state that if Folger had tried to on ~anvas and to support his rep-tered. Phone calls and repeated visits finally it seems a little irrelevant. But when articles of Duke stands set up the chant, "all tackle Gregus 40 yards back up the utatwn as an outstanding artist in

d f J h this type are allowed to be published it does not the way, Dero." Duke must at field, "Fearless Freddie" might words. · completed the job late Tues ay a ternoon. 0 n least have a "tackle-around" play have gotten what happened to 'the ------'----deserves a world of credit for his effort in se- do justice to you, Wake Forest College, or any- they didn't use. little boy. the calf ran over.'! curing this "holiday" for the student body. He ·one concerned. Florida 'Gators'­

Clu~ Organ,ized had no personal incentive. Being in Law School, How. can anyone say that we ~eat Duke by where cuts aren't counted, he could have gone 2 referee's decision? If the truth were told, we to the game himself with no complications. Now nearly lost to Duke by a decision. If you saw those students who could not have afforded cuts the game, it was very obvious that the officials can see the game along with him. Our thanks were nearly as prejudiced for Duke as the person

The sweet music to Baptist ears The entire game can be summed was being sounded as the team ar- up in the few words Coach Walker rived back from Durham. We un- said to his boys after the game:• derstand from some sources that "Well, we had to do it the hard it had been ringing for some little way, but we did it and won!" time before the team got back and ·

· By Lib Gertner that Dean R. E. Lee of the Law (The following ditty is a perfect School was "number .1 man" on example of "How Corny Can One "If you're from Florida, you're to you, john. that wrote the article in question. the Wait Hall bell rope. Get.''-SPORTS EDITOR's NOTE.) in!" That, according to the newly-

Equally as understanding and in teres ted in the way that the student body felt about getting. o 'Winston Salem were President Kitchin, Dean Bryan, and the heads of the various departments. Both the President and the Dean gave their O.K. Both said that if the proposal met. the approval of the faculty, it met their fullest sanc­tion. Our thanks to the administration.

Finally, the faculty baa to grant their con­sent befor-e the plan could go into effect. Once again, we had the chance to see that college pro­fessors are just college students that graduated a little before our time. They roo were interest­ed in the game and realized how the students felt about going to Winston. Almost to a man, they gave their consent freely.· Our thanks to

-the faculty.

A NEW FIGHT SONG One of the greatest contributions that could

be made to the life and spirit of Wake Forest College would be the writing of a new fight song.

This fight song should be entirely new in hoth lyrics and music. There is no demand for -another edition of Georgia Tech's fight song. There are too many editions of it already~ One has but to recall a few of these copies to realize ·that ''I'm ·a rambling Deac from up the creek" would probably be one of the better lines.

The publicity and good will which such fight songs as "On Wisconsin," Notre Dame's "Victory March," and Georgia Tech's "'Rambling Wreck" have obtained for their schools are beyond mea­

sure.

THE USE? (Ed. Note: The following article appeared

in Monday's issue of the Charlotte News, con­cerning the football game _between Wak: Forest and Duke. The letter following· the arttcle was sent to the sports editor of the News in reply. It summarizes the feeling existing on the cam-

pus.) There have 'been so few Wake Forest vic-

Every time Wa_ke Forest threatened we were A-HEM (or, a hymn) 1 adop~ed constitution, is the single penalized. On several occasions two officials The joy of winning was almost "Yield not to D~es' Devils, requirement for membership in favored us on a close play only to be overruled too much for cert~in members of For yielding is sin. Wake Forest's newest organization

, . the team. In fact, It was 6:30 Sat- This victory will help you -the Gator Club. Mainly social by the referee. Take for example the followmg. urday night before a certain player Some others to win. in purpose, the group has also a plays after Gregus' long kickoff return. On ·realized he hadn't played. Fight manfully onward, , more serious aim-"to acquaint the third down with one yard to go for a first down _ . _Dukes' tuuchdowns subdu~. Florida students with one another

, . . Another story of bell rmgmg Give the football . to <!.regus, in order to promote a more con-and the ball on ~uke s 12 yard hne, Mtke Sprock comes about William Thomas, a I He will carry it through." genial group, to assist new students carried the ball for a 3 yar.d gain. He passes I janitor here at school, who tried 1 E. LaNier. from Florida· in adjusting them ...

selves to college life, and to coop.:. the first down marker by 2 yards and his forward I • erate in every way possible in or-motion _was stop?ed at t~is point. Sprock was Dr. Pearson Replaces dertopromoteastrongerandmore pushed back behmd the marker by several Duke unified Florida alumni association

of Wake· Forest College." linemen and the referee place~ .the ball where Outmoded Ant···que Car Officers for the organization, he was finally brought down mstead of.where · elect_ed at a preliminary meeting, · his forward progress was stopped. · consist of Mack Parrish from Oca-

- la, President; Bland Lewis from One official had already signaled that the

play gave the Deacs a first down, but he evidently had no word in the matter. Anyway, we lost the ball on downs after this decision had stopped our scoring move. Duke took over on the next series of downs and fumbled anq we scored on a ten 'yard run on the first play.

Can you possibly say that Wake won on a decision? The Deacs played heads up ball and the winning touchdown was set up by an 80 yard kickoff return. Is this luck? Check the statistics if you want further propf. Your readers that did not attend the game must now think th~t Wake Forest Vfas very lucky last Saturday:

Wake Forest has always received the lesser of a game write-up whether tpey won or lost if they were playing another schooJ in tl'!e ]3ig Four. Raleigh has always favored State; Durham is unquestionably prejudiced beyond words for Duke. Both cities favor Carolina. Where does

By Jewell Livingstone flivver has been seen on the Wake Jacksonville, vice-president; Ele-To most people, antiquity is a Forest campus, making its daily anor Mahoney from Miami, secre­

magic word which brings to mind jaunt in spite of snowstorms, rain- tary;. and Betty Head from St. relics of the pre-historic era, the storms, tornadoes, and other freaks Petersburg, treasurer. days of Adam and Eve, or perhaps of nature- that ~re typical of this The first regular meeting of the even Alley Oop's dinosaur, Denny, college commumty. In the course "Gators" held last m·ght t w t b t f th "Sk' " p • a oo -u to the -average Wak!:l Forest o e_ y~ars, mny earson; en's hometel, was typical of those student it can mean only one and his Jalop! h~v.e_ beCOIJ?.e as to be held there once each ~onth. thing: Dr. C. C. Pearson's car. much of an InstitutiOn on the Dispensing as qui'ckl "bl

P. h -f - - cam u th li t Y as possi e .er aps I you mqwre among P s as e· magno a ; rees with the necessary business, name-some of the students who were I themselves. · · Iy ratification of th t'tut' under-gra~s back in :so! you might ~ast wee~ this antiquated insti- the twenty-five fun-~o~~~; ~lo:f~~ get a detailed description of that tution receiveg. a fatal blow. DR. ians soon turned to light th' stream_-lined beauty that had just PEA~SON BROUGH~ A NEW Beautifully_ colored ~desmg~f made _1ts ~ebut on the . campus. At I CAR. The news of th1s purchase Florida scenes were . shown to the that _h.me It was the obJect of more shocked the student body as much group by Jack ·Bracey, fellow admmng glances than.,~ny glam- as the propo~ed removal of. the Floridian f:r;om Winter Garden. ourous coed wh_o graces ·che, camp- college to Wms~on.-Salem chd a Following these came the highlight us . today. This sleek, dark '?l~e fe~ years ago. ThiS act upset tra- of the evening's entertamment­Bmck y.ras really a mechamstic ditwn. . . . the consu:rping of an enormdus masterpiece. When placed beside the shinnmg I amount o{ juicy Florida oranges.

Lots of Stories ne':' Chev:r:olet co~pe,_ the old In· closing the group joined enthu-':l;oday, if this product of steel, ~uick 1?oks rather dilapidated, but . siastically in singing their newly­

iron and chrome could talk, many Its sentunental value exceeds that' designated club song:O...."We are the would be the adventures with of the new car a thousand-fold. gang from old Florida." which it could hold your facina- Purchase Reason To these meetings; whi~h will be tion. Perhaps it would tell o~ fre- In the search for the "why" of held every second Tuesday at 6:30

this leave us? quent treks to Richmond and other tl;le new car, it was discovered that at Wooten's, the "Gators" heartily ''It leaves Wake Forest out in the cold. Wake !points, in th~ "hey-day'' of Dr. it was not bought because the old welcome any and all visitors-even

. · . . . Pearson, or of 1ts prowness on the one was incapacitated, Quite the North Carolinians! Forest is the. school ·without· a City behind Jt. golf course. (If coaxed, it might contrary, for it seems that "old Down here we have always counted upon Char- give 'details of the latter.) And if faithful" has only recently passed

1 tte' and Winston-Salem as "our" cities. Now it shoul~ . conse':lt to reveal its through the inspection line. To 0 • • most thrilling moment, the old tell the truth, the purchase was

it seems that you have fatted us tn the matter Buick might tell of the night that made because Dr. Pearson was of unbiased news reports. . this professor proposeci to his wife, next in line on the dealer's list,

and then of ,the week following a-nd because "new cars are the that it stayed in the shop recuper- style this season." Sincerely,

ating from emotional strain. Despite the fact that the ancient For eighteen years this little Buick's quarters are cramped, its

Bill Hensley Sports Editor, Old Gold and Black ,.

style is not, for its familiar rattle still pervades the campus. Due to his great attachment to it ·(and perhaps protests from the stud;. ents) Dr. Pearson· has not parted with his old car. To revise the old saying a bit': "Cars may come and cars may go, but "Skinny's" goes on . forever."

/

FrhJ~

Litt~

"Hey. I've hii you're· policem Jonatha Karl off, sists arJ law. Bo· ed. Thi pared to the ear· the re: (Teddy

-trayed 1 teristic . rehears<

The sl harried is (no, 1

rector 'I tlie procl have' tot

.. roots an will the nervous .propert;, ger, cos chairma has bee1

'Theater the mel the mol campus their lir coopera1 on a pla

These bove, ""' I' ••

PJ

Page 3: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

/

Fri(Jay, N~v~mber .12, 19~· . !

Little Theater's Fall Produdion '

· Gives· Headac~es ·To ·Producers ,,

Old. GoJd. and Black Page Three

I while to ·.spend ~n evening wit~ them arid enjoy the fruits of their labor.

ZETA CHI

become the same officers .in Sigma I and. George Johnson. . Bent_on, William Morrison, Joseph Chi are Baxter . Finch, president; Pledges of Sigma Chi will be Cabaniss, Samuel Gillam and Charles Kirkman, vice president; Edgar ,Chandler,• Matthew Del- Richard Harris. ' Donald Bland, secretary; Alex bridge, Charles Thames, and Her- Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin will Kiser, treasurer; and Lawrence bert West. make a talk welcoming Sigma Chi Kiser, 2nd vice-president and cor- In addition to .the active mem- to the campus, and Cary Dowd of responding secretary. Sigma Chi's bers . and pledges, a number of Charlotte will speak for the alum-

"Hey, quit strangling that guy. j the cast endures to satisfy Little (Continued from Page 1) representative to the· Pan-Hellenic alumni of Zeta Chi will be initiated ni groups. Large delegations of I've hit you over the head and Theater members, take place twen- er, a group of fraternity-mindea Council.will be Dan Hamrick, and into the new order. They are alumni members of Sigma Chi are you're out cold!l" the big brave ty-four hours a day, seven dl!-YS a students conferred with repre- the' hisl;fJrian will be Bill Herring. Claude McClure, Alexander, Bon- expected from Charlotte, Greens­policeman, Paul Griffin, shouts as ·week, or so it .$eems to the cast. sentatives of Sigma Chi. It was! The following members of Zeta ner, Wilbur Doyle, Clyde Hardin, boro, and Aslieville, in addition to Jonathan Brewster, alias B.oris Actually rehearsals cons~e ·Only learned at this meeting that Sigma· Chi will be initiated into Sigma Robert S~wyer, Horace Seitz, Fr!=!d the Raleigh alumni group. Karloff, alias Clyde Rand'olf, re- twelve hours a day, sLx day~ a Chi looked favorably. upon W~e Chi: Milton Acree, Bill Alden, ------------------,--.,------------­sists arrest by another arm of the week and everyone has ample time Forest, and on the basxs of that m- . . · +-•-"_"_,_,_.,_.,_.,_,_,_,._,_.,_,_.,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,._,+ law. Bobby Poole. Don't be alarm- for term papers and exams which' formation the group founded Zeta ClJ'(ie Early, Bxll Beachman, Don- J I ed. This is mild, oh! so mild, com- occur two tr three times daily at Chi with a charter from Sigma Chi aid B~and, Decatur Blanchard, Ray ·~r' Bedd.·ngf••eld .Fun~ral Home II pared to the bloodcurdling screams, niid-term because of a long stand- as their ultimate goal. Cole, William Cole, John Chiappy, _ : the ear-splitting bugle blasts, and ing conspiracy among' facul!Y The members of Zeta Chi have Charles DeLoatch, Hugh Dover, f" :I the resounding call, "Charge'.' members to curtail as much 'of the been greatly assisted in reaching Baxter Finch, Steward Fisher, Bill (Teddy Roosevelt, of course, por- students~ time as possible. their goal through the guidance Fisher, Grady Friday, Robert =, T enty four Hour. Ambulance SerVI"ce =,

r·. w - =, 'trayed by Harold Powell) charac- So t" ~ t 1 and encouragement of Dr. Ricks, Groves, Bill Herring, James How-teristic of "Ar¢enic and Old Lace" me Imes n ee Dr. Roy McKnight, ana Dr. Frank ell, Lawrence Kiser, Charles I . (CORNE. R SOUTH MAIN AND ELM ST.) i rehearsals. Some rehearsals are of a more Powers. These men have taken a Kirkman, Alex Kiser, John Lanier, :&

genteel nature than the one des- personal interest in the welfare of Earl ·Martin, Neil Pait, George f ~ Little Bit Bald cribed above. There is, for exam- Zeta Chi, and .they have been ex- Phillips, Eddie Page, Bill Rice, f

The Slightly· bald fellow with the ple, the scene in which Julian Bur- tremely helpful with suggestions Lawrence Shadrach, James Simp- ,. n··-1 246 6 w k F t roughs, in t:l).e role of Dr. Harper, and advice. · son, Eugene Wade, C. V. Williams, !"·--~·-'iLl·-·-· _-··-·-·-·-·----·-·-·-·-8·-e·-·-ores,; __ i harried look· seen rushing across quietly sips tea with the two spin..: SAME OFFICERS · Robert Butterworth, Harry Nich-

is (no, not Judson Trueblood) di- ster sisters, Harriet Smith and The officers of Zeta Chi who will olas, Dean Hamrick, James Geary, r~ctor To~y Johnson, who aft~r Mary Ward, and. the one in which I _____ __:_ _________ .-----------·----=~----------------------::-----tlie P,roductxons Nov. ~8 and 19.will Mortimer, Paul Moyle, tries to ex­have torn his last _hair out by the plain to his aunts that killing old

.. roots and paced his last step. He men by poisoning their wine has will then be c~rted away, ~other ·gotten to be a very bad habit. nervous wr~ck, alon~ With. the It's really quite interesting; so in­.property chairman,. busmess m~~a- . teresting in fact that the female ger, costume ·chairman, publiCity members of the cast have. taken chairman. and every~ne. e~se ~ho up knitting to pass away the time has been connect.ed With ~~~ Little when they aren't on stage. ·Theater production. It 1sn t that the members of the cast· aren't' Hard at:Work the most talented actors on the Seriously, the cast has worked campus or that they don't know and is working long and hard to their lines or that everyone isn't make the production equal to the cooperative1 it's just that putting excellence of the play itself, as on a play is a hard job. are all committee chai.rffien and

These rehearsals, mentioned a- everyone ·affiliated with the pro­bove, which are routine matters ject. It will be well worth your

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Page 4: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

Page Four Old Gold and Black ,, .

~day, Novem~r 12i 1948: "'

Deacons Meet Undefeated Tigers In ·Important Game;· Duke Loses

Deal.ing with the Deacs By BILL HENSLEY

Bowl Bid Hinges On Outcome of , Tomorrow's Tilt!

. . Those who saw last Saturday's triumphant affair in Duke Stadium have already. in all probability. chalked that game up as the best they have ever seen. The drama of that game can never be told in all is glory by any narrator or writer. 0t)e !lad to see both teams in action to really appreciate what went (\fl in rolling up forty-seven thrilling points. The Dea.cs played their best game of the year in defeating the Blue Devils. and to borrow Charlie justice's favorite phrase, "it was a team victory."

Deacs Want Second Place and Tigers Want Bid

27-20 Victory Is Greatest Thrill in ·Coaching

for Walker

One of Duke's biggest mistakes was laying too much for Bouncin' Bill Greg·us. The Big Blue had a right to try and stop Gregus and knew that if they didn't their chances for a victory were very slim. But this one factor proved to be their downfall. While Duke was sending two men with Gregus and O'Quinn on every play, the Baptists pulled out their one-two punch and sent Mike Sprock through the openings in the line. Little Mike looked great, and it was through his efforts that the winning touchdown

was scored.

Had a few of the boys, who picked the All-Americans been watching AI DeRogatis Saturday, they would have seen the Deacs' "Baby Tank" Cicia hold the big tackle to his worst day. The Duke captain made only one tackle the entire first hitlf and did not see any action in the second half. Cicia and Allen teamed up to stop the man who had nearly wrecked the Rambling Wreck.

to Bowl

\Yake Forest supporters are The old adage that "the best de-hopeful the Deacons will continue fense is a strong offense" was their red-hot brand of ball for the I higb,Iy in evidence last Satui·day third consecutive week when the when the Demon Deacons of Wake Baptists face Clemson's undefeated 1 Forest traveled to Durham and and untied Tigers in Bowman Gray\ chalked up a 27-20 victory at the. Memorial Stadium in Winston- I expense of the Blue Devils of Salem tomorrow afternoon at 2 Duke University. The win was o'clock. · the second Deacon triumph to be

Interest is running high for this . I scored over Duke in 21 years, and important Southern Conference Bob Jones, left, and Mike Sprock are two of the big guns in ·the the first that a Walker-coached game, and a capacity crowd of 27-20 victory over the Duke Blue Devils. Jones recovered a Duke eleven has gained from the .charg-15,000 fans is ~xpected to view fumble in the final minutes "of the game to set up the touchdown which es of ·wallace Wade. the contest. This will constitute! was made by Sprock on a lO·yard jaunt around right' end. . The Deacs, who are now very the largest crowd ever to attend. ·much in the running for the a game in Winston-Salem. · Southern Conference title,. again!

When Wake Forest romped over I A ff th Is Awful' Agony· got· the· jump on their opponents N.C. State 34 to 13 two weeks ago U ar by scoring in the early minutes of many fans believed the Deacons the .game. The Big Blue refused had hit their peak and would not T 0 • L• M to beco~e discouraged, however, ?e able to regain it in the :emain- 0 pposlng lne ates·· and proceed.ed to push over two mg games. But the Baptists had markers of Its own in the second other ideas and came up with an period to go into a 13-7 lead. Wake even more impressive performance I Forest retaliated with its second to beat Duke's strong Blue Devils By Wiley Warren Jr. touchdown, and the half ended .25 in a wild-scoring affair, 27 to 20 ... There is a lot at stak~ this yeai: 'seconds later with the score stale-

Clemson's Peak ! as far as guard Bob Auffarth of Out on a Limb mated at 13 all.. • . Likewise, Clemson has appar-1 the Deacons is concer~ed. . ~or Score m Third

ently hit its peak during the past I upon !he sho.ulders of this asprrmg B BILL BETHUNE The Deacons erupted again in hvo week-ends with impressive collegiate gn_dder rests. one _of the Y the third quarter and a ·long conquests of Boston College 26_19 toughest assi~~ents 1magmable, touchdown pass put them in the and Furman 41-0 The Tiger illlthat of retammg the renowned , · lead again, 20-13. It was then· be battling furio.usly to maisn~in reputation held by las~ year's Last week was just one of those that Coach Wade, who has here­their fast gait and indications guargs, Wedel, Royston, and Leon-' ·bad weeks, except for the Deacons. to~ fore been a staunch believer point to one of the most excitin : etti. · . ' . I As things worked out, the locals in the single wing method .of of­games of the fall g I But performing in the shadows· were the only team in the Big fensive play, sprung a surprise on

Clemson has ~ great deal at I of such notables is nothing new to 1 Four to come up without tears in

1

the Deacons by unveiling a new Coach Walker described the game as one of his greatest thrills stake in this contest The Tigers Auffarth who ap~ears to be carry- their eyes after it was all over. version of the T-formation. , The

in the coaching profession and said the boys on both teams played are one of only five. major teams ing the burden gracefully. "Seems They were all smiles, and we were new Duke offense, which- was not

One of the main factors in the Deacon win was the almost unbelievable pass catching of John O'Quinn, Jim Duncan and Ed Hoey. Red helped booster his national standing with six. catch­es and another touchdown. Duncan and Hoey made the game's most spectacular catches to set up and score the tally that tied the game at 13-13 just before the half ended. When Wake Forest com­bined their passing game with a potent ground attack the T for­mation was really rolling in high. gear.

in the nation that are both unde- it's always been that way," added smiling too, but not _about last Fri- supposed to be· used by the Blue mighty hard. After \Vallace Wade sprung his n~w formation on feated and untied this seaso A Bob, "even in high school." day's selections. As we said be- Devils until they met Carolina, the Baptist in the second half, the Deacs had just a little trouble victory over Wake Forest n. uld From the. lo·oks of his record, fore, it was just one of those lean proved to be very effective. With solving it at first, but after Friedlund's 82 yard jaunt the Wakes put the Tigers in line for thew~on- he really established himself as days. This '?leek a new slate. A only four minutes rem.P,ning in

. h . h h d h , ference championship for onl c·t quite a high school football playe;r. new chance to bolster percentages the game, a Duke halfback broke got ng t down to stopptng t e most unort o ox system t ey ve adel stands .in the way an~ t~; At Patter~on ~a:r:k High, of Balti- on a tough card ... Will we? Well, ~oose on an 8~ yard touch~own met aU year. · Bulldogs would not l'kel s t more, which mcidentally has sent maybe. Jaunt that agrun pulled the Blue

Bill Gregus' kickoff return in the closing minutes of the game them. · The .Tigers w~ul% ;tJ:,e~y I several more outstanding athletes WAKE FOR:EST-C~EMSON -~ Devi_ls into a knot with the Deac-• . • · . finish the season with f t to Deacon Hollow, Auffarth be- The Deacs, With their eye on a ons, 20-20.

brought 20,000 mad spectators to their feet With tberr hearts m record P "d d th a perthe'? I came a favorite with fans there- bowl bid and with last week's Wake Forest was determined not • • rov1 e ey can cop IS . . . . • thell" throats. Many people have remarked that another game like game. The Tigers are high in the abou~s because of his . sparklmg tnumph over Duke s:Ill warm, to settle f~r a tie, howevel", and that would be just too much to go through again In summino- up running for a New' Year's Da' · p~form~nces., -In .1946.;,.he ... cap- meet ~:me of t~e seasons roughest a 77 yard ki.ckoff return by ~regus

• "" game Y tamed his Patterson Park mates to tests m the Tigers. Clemson', as paved the way for the wmning the game, the phrases of "a real thriller," "a wonderful victory," ' nine consecutive wins and the one of the five major unbeaten, tally. Sprock's 10 yard end sweep etc. are not enough praise for the boys in old gold and black. It Win Means Much Maryland state championship, untied teams in the nation, would with only seconds remaining gave

Proved they could sc be th h" d d b On the other hand, a win would However, individual laurels were be a tough cookie any time, but the Deacons their final touchdown

. • ore w n e c Ips were own an w ere mean a great deal to the Deacons. even greater for Auffarth, who'in this Saturday their claws wili be ~md the ball game that 20,000 yell-there's a Will there IS a way. It would enable them to take over his senior year was picked on the sharper than ever. The game's a ing spectators· acclaimed to be one

The news of Wake Forest accepting a bid to the Dixie Bowl second place in the Southern Con-11946 mythical All-State eleven and natural, and everything about the of the greatest ever to be played in. Birmingham Ala. is probabl'y J·u t a I" ttl t 1 b t th ference standings and if Maryland I won . the coveted McCormick fray is interesting except p~cki~g in the Old North State. \ ..

' •. . . s 1 e. s a e now, u e should upset North Carolina the. Blockmg Trophy presented each the score. However, our faith IJ?. 4-Yard Punt honor that accompamed the b1d Is not. In bemg selected to par- Deacons would be tied for first· year to the best blocker in Balti- the locals grows in direct propor- With a strong wlnd at their ticipate in the New Year's day game the bowl scouts showed a place with the Terps, 1 more. tion to the number of times they balks, the Deacons decided to kick definite interest in Wake Forest. Eve'n after the Deacs have lost By virtue of its victor~ over Bos-· More Fan-fare I try out the T. 'We think.the:v:'re off from the south goal. The Blue

. ton College, Clemson will be fav- B t th the better ball club. We thmk Devils were unable to gain and two games and have two more tough ones coming up the scouts, o,red to beat Wake Forest which · u e sound of his fan-fare they'll win. Fr. eddie' Folger's ki'ck from hi. ·sown·

" , d did not stop here; it spread said, you 11 do for our dough, win or lose." i ropped a 26-9 decision to the throughout the surrounding states. Devils to Blaze· twenty was grabbed by the wind

Thus far an opponent has not been selected to face the Deacs Eagles. .Hdowebver, the Deacons In fact more than ten major col- DUKE - GEORGE WASHING-: to carry only four yards to the 24. ·· are consi era ly stronger than 1 h TON T Duk ak ' Five plays late aft H D

if the conference rules it OK for Wake Forest to make the trip, they were against Boston College eges soug t the services of this h - he es m f e their last da and Bill G:eguse~ darry b.owd-

b t tb likel f S wil b od h th 1 d h quiet-natured gridder, including orne appearance o the season a com Ine

· u more an y a team rom the outhwest 1 get t e n • w om ey P aye t e second the coaches from Deacontown. and the only appearance of a Big to move the ball down to the Anyone's guess is good at this time, but Baylor iooks pretty good ~~;~eesof \he ~~ason. S~me of the Through the efforts of Ed Royston Four tean)' in the area on Satur- Duke 2 yard line, Gregus took Tom from here. Other teams mentioned were Villanova, Oklahoma Rega:~eess ~la::o a o_ss-u~ Auffarth was finally persuaded day. George Washington has Fetze:'s pitcho:xt a~d went ov~r

• . are lik 1

wms, ans . to further his education and foot- shown a big improvement ov'er standmg up. Big Bill George split and MISSOuri. . . . . .. e Y to see one,of the most ball knowledge at Wake Forest last year, .but not enough to top the.upright and the ~eacons mov-

If the plans for the Deacs m the D'Ix1e Bowl work out sa tis- exciting contests of the season be- College. the Devils in front of the home ed .mto a 7-0 lead With only three . tween two elevens who are of- ' H . . . minut nd f t f' d f

factonly a good many students have already planned to see the fensive-minded i th . b d f e has been one of the mam- folks. We pick Duke by• at least . es. <l: or Y.- I~e secon s o 1

. . . n elr ran ° stays in the Deacons' forward wall I two And you? playmg time havmg elapsed, game. t would be mce to see t~e Baptists repeat thetr ~erform- play.

1

this season and here, too, has won CAROI:.INA ~ MARYLAND _I . Duke's Folger yras u~able to ance of the Gator Bowl and brmg back another bowl vtctory to the hearts of. the fans because of Maryland, like Tennessee, is re- ki~k very e~fectively mto the

'Deacon Hollow. i .. Coed Ho(key Team 'I his s~irit and hustle. When asked ported to be saving its biggest guns wmd, hence his .boots were unable T th D , t th · b"O' f h . whom he thought to be to be the for the Tar Heels. We think that to k;eep the Deacons ~ut of Duke

' omorrow e eacs ge etr I.,gest ~est o. t e _season . (h 16 M b. best back that he'd ever faced, the Terps have a go,od ball club, t~rntory.for the remamder o~ the "ben they meet the undefeated Clemson Tigers In Wmston- OOSeJ em ers Bob quickly replied "Charlie and, like William and Mary they first p~r10d. The Deacs marched Salem. Should Clemson beat the Deacons an Orange Bowl bid . I Justi~e of. Carolina. ~e does ev- could be the. team ~hat actu~lly t~ the Big Blue'~ 22 with the aid ·would be almost certain for the TiO'ers and the Southern Con- Sixteen girls compose the va~- erythmg well and IS about the dumps the high flymg Carolma ?. a ~6 y~d .aerial from !fetzer to·

. . . . "" ' . • sity hockey team for this ear ac-. hardest fellow to tackle that I've crew. Still, with the tie game of Red 0 Qumn, but this threat ference champiOnship would be m the bag. Now that William and cording to Me 1 S'l Y ,. ever seen." last week still smarting the boys was halted when Dowda fumbled Mary bas spoiled the Tar Heels' record. Clemson is the only team of the Woman'sr ~ec:e:~~~~ ~:s~:. To Be Minister under Tatum have their' work cut and Ed ~ustin recovered for the in the league with a perfect slate. It's up to Wake For~t now to ciati~n, which sponsored the tour- Unlike many college football ~ut f~ them against Carolina. The Blue DevSils. .

to th Ti d I b

1 S h ney m that sport 1 th . . ar eels want revenge. They · econd Stanza

s p e gers an p ace t emse ves near the top of the out - They are: Me~le Silvers Candy Pf atyherhs, hi~ hsenous-mmded A~- won't be as keyed up as in the Duke went on the offensive in C nf , ar as s eart set on the nun- 't d h t' · ern o erence. Scarboro, Huldah Lineberry Judy istry instead f th 1 f pas an , w a s more unportant, : the second stanza when Mounie Cl 'I F rt b ck J 1 ' ' 0 e usua pro es- thev'll lick Maryland b t 1 t d h d 42 d t th w emson Wt l be trying to break a jinx tomorrow also. Frank· 0 en a er, ewe 1 Adams, Fern sional grid career "Don't O'et - _ . Y a eas as e yar s o . e ake For-

Howard has never beaten the Deacs since he has been at the A I ~~:n~~~ Ge~~~ne~~rn~e 3t~nny ~rongfit exclaimed Bob. "F~otb~ two T.uW:s.olves ·to H I ~;r:·Fe~~;k:p~~~t~::!/:,::s!Y d M h I f S C

. W ' a ers, lis a ne game and I'm grateful! ow r an. sc oo o outh arohna. Walker had never beaten ade Co~nie ~~rt, Marylyn Suttle, for what it has done for me, but STATE-DUQUESNE-This time from going all the way. Fetzer pr10r to Saturday either. Word from Clemson has it that the Tig- Leigh WI~ams, Betty Holiday, I I just don't want to make it a you can take. State's defense, I ~as hrn.:t on the play, and. most of

. ers are bringing a screeching halt to this jinx come~tomorrow Bess Ab~lilia, Peggy Jo Weeks, I career." . wh~ch ~h~y wo:J;t't J:eally need, take his duties for the ~emamda: of . . ., . . and. Sylvra McManus, And we're proud of you too their limited offense, which they !he game were confined to kick-

afternoon. If th1s IS the year of JinX breakmg, the Wake team wtll Fma!s in t~e hockey tourney re- Bob, for your choice to bec~me ~ won't need very much, and credit I mg. . · .have to be at their b.est to beat Clemson. suted In a VIctory ,for the Alpha minister. There's no need wishing them with a victory over the weak A goal line. stand. by the Dea~s

Clemson has a well balanced offensive backfield and can Stella team, mana~ed by Jenny you all the luck in the world at Dukes. If the cards are right they 1 halted the Blue Devils mon:enta;l'I­. • . . Johnson and captamed by Fetn it either because everyone kno should top .the Pitt crew by at ly, but they were not to be demed boast ~f more speed than Carohna. Paced by tnp]e threat Bobby Dowell. · 1 that Ro'bert Frederick Auffa:r~ least three. , I a. second time. Bill Cox ran for Gage the unbalanced single wing has worked wonders this season. Soccer and speedball were has what it takes to be tops ·~ ARMY-PENN-As we said be- frfteen yards on a play that saw

Th ' b" f It h be th · l k f d f b t k launched this week, and the daily ' fore Penn would get beat twice the Deacons offside .. The penalty

. e one Ig au • as en etr a~ 0 pass e ense, ~ now- practices have been attended by a this' year .. Penn state turned the 1 was naturally refused and Duke mg Wake Forest like they do. the Tigers have been working hard number of coeds. Four points Trophy Selected 'frick last week but Army will! had a first down on the Wake For-to throw up a defense that can stop the Deac~ aerial circus. With. toward WRA jackets were award- ~·really show the' Quakers what it est 14. Mounie battered his way.

O'Q . t hi , d F t d BI k ·b "tcb' th h ed for attending the sessions. means to be on the short end cf into the end zone four plays later

umn ca c ng an e zer an. . ac ei Y PI . mg e s ow Volleyball practice ~ill begin An individual trophy will be a score at Franklin Field this Sat- for Duke's initial score. Souchak should be the best of the year-If 1t's at all possible to top last' Monday with the first meeting be- awarded the best-all-round girl urday. Stuffing" the bailot box missed his attempted placement week's affair. in~ held ~t 4:30 in the gym. Rules athl~te on the ~ampus by. t~e Wo- for the cadets by three again: . and the Deacs were still leading,

D H. h b d th · h' t ff f th Wlll be discussed. · mans Recreation Assoc1at10n at NAVY _ COLUMBIA _ Hold 7-6. ,

· on , 1pps as een nam~ to e coac mg. s. fl 0 • e . The Outing Club, newest organ- the end of the Spring semester, it I your breath, but Navy comes up, The Deacon lead was a short, Eastern htgh school All Stars m the annual Opttmtst Bowl m I:ed br:anch,of WRA, met for. the was announced by .Me:le Silvers, with the first win in oh-so-manyllived one as it was only one min­Asheville. Jim Cornogg, former Deacon tackle on the 1946 squad, first time last Thursday mght.llprexy of the. orgamzatwn. games this Saturday. It's been ute and 15 seconds after their

d f the Duke game and spent the week end in Bap· Betty Hawks, manager of the club, At ~ meetmg of the executive· a long time and the Middies de- first marke~ that the Blue Devils

came own or . . . announced that a cook-out will; council of the WRA Monday after-~ serve .to win this last one. The I chalked up touchdown nlimber tist Hollow. South Carolina ttckets must be purchased bef~re be held as thefirst project of the noo?, t_h: trophy was selected and game with ,Army doesn't count. two. A 20 yard pass :fiom Cox to November 17. The winners of the fraternity an'd non-fratermty new group. · an mdividu~l honor. key was also · Hughes after Bill Gregus' fumble

b 11 h · sh"p will play for the campus title in Groves chosen. This key Will be awarded' By careful computation and dill- had been recovered by Duke, was

foot a c ampton 1 . • • • · Patronize the advertisers of the to any coed who earns 250 points gent study we find there -remain 35 complete in the end zone, moving Stadium, November 16, at 4:00. Everyone lS mvtted to attend. Old Gold and Black, in the organization.· shopping days until Christmas. -See GAME, Page 6-

\·,

Bil

The .sportii loss, ·c: BiddiE Colum

The over t and N a 14-: lina's The B ord, ~

Clems• a 27-2

The one of iR the

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Page 5: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

....

Page Five _Pri_·.·_·a_.a_y,_._N_o_ve_· m_be_r_l2..:..,_1_·9_48_· ----,----..,--,----~--_:__ __ -=-Old Gold ·and Black

Baby Deacs Play.· Biddies member that 40 yard TD jaunt graduation. When we· spoke of against State., hobbies, Miller regretted that he

In league Affray Tonight The Wake Forest Baby Deacs, 16' 4", 210~pound quarterback. All

· sporting two victories and one observers r.p.te Bo~le as the best loss, clash with the South Carolina aerialist Sf'!en in the Southern Con­Biddies in Carolina Stadium at ference in a · decade. Tqmmy Columbia at -3: 15 o'Clock tonight. Woodlee and Jimmy Cooper, half-

B~t despite all his !ccomplish- couldn't match some of his team­ments, Miller is an extremely hard mates .as a songster and thus win boy to interview. During half an a position in George Owen's glee hour spent with him while he was club; but he admitted that he did donning his grid equipment, he enjoy sleeping,~and we wondered did his best to impress upon us if there is a sleeping club around that he wasn't very interesting, on which he and your reporter although we found contradictory might, try for positions.

The Baby Deacs hold triumphs backs, and Chuck Preziozo, full­over the yearlings of Duke 32-7 back, add_ the ground punch to the and N. C. State, 19-7, b1,1t d;opped little Gamecocks' offensive !ire­

material in Tom Bost's office. In spite of his modesty, however, we learned from him that he plans to take the Business Administration course here at Wake in prepara­tiol?- ~or a business career . after

Duchess U., in their game with Warn-boogie, inaugurated a new Lipton Tea formation featuring a twelfth player concealed in a referee's uniform.

a 14-13 decision to North Caro- wor-ks.· .. !ina's Tar Babies two weeks ago. Billy "Nub" Smith continues to I The Biddies have an identical rec- set the pace for the Baby Baptists ore!, with a 19-6 victory over with four touchdowns and 142 Clemson, 14-0 over . Furman, and yards gained passing and running. a 27-26 edging by the Tar Babies. He is also the leading pass receiv- 1

The South Carolina frosh have er with five catches good for 73 \ Bill Gregus is .pictured above as he skirted his own left end after one of the finest freshman passers yards. Charle~ "Bozo" Roberson taking a hand off from Tom Fetzer and marking up the first Deacon

R the country in Joh~ Boyle, ,a ~s the outsta~ding ~round gainer touchdown. Gregus had the way cleared by Jim Duncan (54) who is

1·--'"-"-':-"-··-·--·-.. -+ or the ~eaclets w1th 166 yards 1 throwing a shoulder block on a Duke lineman. Al DeRogatis (72) is

t i

.1. amassed m 18 rushes for an aveJ:"- watching the· play. -Staff Photo.

FEEL B.L U E, . ag~ .carry of 9.2 yards per try. _ ___ ·-----• l Dick Travagline has added 158

·. ' t h .I yards for a 5.4 average and Bill - e 0 - .1 Miller, with 122 yards, can be

EAT AT counted on for 5.2 yards every

i time he carries the ball. i i

Hits 15 Tim~

Baby Deacs . Have ''D ,, oc In Person· of Bill· Miller

, BROWN'S :l_

t WAKE FOREST, N: C. 1

Dickie Davis has completed 15 aerials out of 29 -attempts for 219 yards, three' touchdowns, and a 52 per cent completion mark., · By Dave Clark l baseball and basketball; and in Davis\ has also punted 12. times His teammates call him another the offseasons for. those sports, he for an average boot. of 38.9 yards. Doc Blanchard because he looks performed in an independent foot-

+--·-·---·-·-·--·~·--.-.1-

WANTED TO RENT

APARTMENT FuTnished ·or Unfurnished

Beginning Spring Semester January 1949'

Veteran and Wife

No ChildTen or Pets

C. A. Kimel • Box 217

C~ach George Owen, who will like him, they ~ay. Upon meetin:g I ball league. It was in this league em.t:>loy the two-team ~ystem h:re Bill Miller, one might well agree 1 that he got his start as a gridster. t?mght, announced his offens~ve 1 that the ·purely physical resem- One-Tenth Ton lmeup. Ed McClure and Spiro·\ blance is there all right; but after . . . ', . Asimenios will start on the flanks; seeing him batter the State and . Standmg 6 feet tall, and y-relgh-Wood Beasley and Ed Listopad. at I Carolina frosh this year, one us- mg abou_t 205 pounds,. Bill has. the tackle slots; Tom Szacowny ually agrees that his running can made an ImpressiVe rushmg record and C:Iyde . Pickard, guards, ~ill ~lso be taken to be a reasonable I already i~ the f~eshman. "~obacco sandwich ~m Zrakas at ~e p,1votl 'facsimile of that of the Black Tnangle.. Agamst, _carolina, . at position, and Davis, quarterback, I Knight of the· Hudson. 1 Fa,yetteville, he earned the pig-Smith and Roberson . halfbacks I p f II b 'lt f t d skm 18 times for a 97 yard total and Miller fullback will start\' .,ow~r ~ :.ft ~-li as •'h antt and a 5.4 average. His season's m the Bah; Deacs' offensive line- sthomewl at As 1 yt, 1 e~ wllabs ko fer rushing average is 5.2. He has

. an as ugus as a ~u ac or d · t d' t 'th th ball up... Ot~ers sure to see plenty of I Suffield Academy in Suffield Con-I crnl·osse In oh pay Ir wf 1 ~11 act10n mclude Kenneth Bridges I t" t d tl h' t \ o y once, owever; ans WI re-. nee wu ; an consequen, y e a- __ _ ~nd Raymond Ward, ends; ~ugus-1 tracted the attention of one Her~ ' tme Carave~lo _and~Kenneth Hux- man Hickman, who subsequently! · ,. ley, ~ckle_s,. Rtchard Warren ?nd tipped "Peahead" off to his poten- JACKSON'S ao·'RIST Lora~e Diehl, guards; Travagline, tialities. "Peahead," of course,, .·

P. arker' s Hardware Co. Francis s_carton and John Solek, lost little time in describing to the I BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS

I halfbacks, Bob Stutts and George "little· Doc" the many attractions and ,Bartels, fullbacks, and Ed Kissell, of Deacon Dell, and so the "Con-USE OUR

Lay-Away Plan FOR

quarterback. necticut Yankee" brought his foot- Corsages oft All Kinds ball talents south. a

BOWL. Miller's hometown is the same PRICES YOU LIKE as that of t~e Academy :where he j Opposite Hunter Dorm starred, Suffield, Connecticut. Here *BICYCLES

*TRICYCLES AND

*OTHER TOYS

(Continued from Page 1) ward University. It is no doubt

~ with pleasure and a great deal of pride that he takes his team to his hometown for their debut in the Dixie Bowl.

he went to high school for 3 years 11· Phone 390-6 befor: going to the Academy. Since ' wake Forest the htgh school was too small to field 'h football team, he played • • • • • • • • • •

That Certain Party My Be_!lt Girl

Benny .St-rong

Tower No. 1271 ................ 82c

It's Too Soon to Know I Can't Go On

ELla Fitzgerald Decca No. 24497 ................ 82c

The Cli.ck Song Here Comes the Milkman

Sammy Kaye Victor No. 20-3017 ............ 78c

STEPHENSON'S MUSIC STORE

~ lbalby today tJfll, aclult

tomorrow YouR young son or dougllter

will be part of a better world you are helping to build for tomorrow. They will succeed or fail according to their education and ability. Wise parents ore providing now to assure their children a secure place in to­morrow's world. You can do likewise with Jefferson ' Standard's Educator Plan and spread the cost by making small deposits while your child is still young. At no cost to you, let us come by and talk with you and your wife about it.

C. K. STEELE 423 Durham Road

P.O. Box 762 WAKE FOREST, N. C.

EFFERSO.N. STANDARD LIFE INSURAICE COMPAiiY .QRKENSBORO, HORTJI CAROLINA

Wake Forest will b'e playing in the second Dixie Bowl classic. Some 18,000 fans saw, Arkansas beat William and Mary in the in-

!. augura~ Dixie Bowl contest last New Year's Day. ,

-Legion Field, which will be converted into the Dixie Bowl on January 1, holds 45,000 people. Rast 'said the ticlret sale was rap- I. idly increasing and that' $30,000 1

worth of tickets had been sold. I Tickets to the New Year's Day game are selling at $4.20, $2.50, · and $1.24. '

we have a complete line of the latest

RECORDS, SHEE~ MUSIC . .AND BAND INSTRUMENTS

Drop by and h~ve a look, students!

E .• ·R. Poole Music Co. 17 E. Martin St. - Raleigh, N. C.

STUDENTS Make an appointment for your . .

CHRISTMAS PORTRAIT!! Deadline for appointments is December 1

Waller & Smith Studios , Raleigh, North Oarolina

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~~ done the FORD WAY ••• with Wfr1f' special.fORD equipment and finishing materials. Reasonable

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MILLER MOTOR COMPANY Phone 2581 Wake Forest,· N.C.

' WE NOW HAVE IN STOCK

THE LATEST THING ·.m

THOR. Automagic Washers

-and-

DUO-THERM Oil Heaters

GLOVE,R'S . .

RADIO and APPLIANCE W~ke Forest, N. C.

eYes, 'Camels are so mild that a nationwide 30-day test of ht;~ndreds of smokers revealed not one single case of throat irritat.ion due to smoking Camels! The people in this test - both men and women­smoked Camels exclusively for 30 consecutiv:edays. Smoked an average of one to two packages of Camels a day. Each week their throats were ex­amined by noted throat specialists-a total of 2470 exacting examinations. From coast to coast, these throat specialists reported

NO THROAT IRRITATION

DU£ TO SMOKING CAM£1S!

Page 6: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

Page Six

. ,... . ....... Alumni Dinner

The Forsyth County Alumni Association is spon­soring a banquet for all alumni of Wake "Forest Col­lege at noon saturday in the · Y. W. C. A. cafeteria. Meals will be one dollar or less. Write or call cafeteria for reservations.

GAME

(Continued from Page 4)

the Blue Devils into the driver's seat. Souchak made his placement good this time and Duke led 13-7.

With only four minutes left in the ·half, the Deacons staged a bat­tle with the clock to come from behind and again throw the game into a deadlock. Fetzer started the fireworks wheri he intercepted ·"a Bill Cox pass and returned it to his own 44. The Deacs lost five yards for delaying the game, but Carroll Blackerby, who had just entered the game replacing Fetzer, heaved a long pass to Ed Hoey

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I ~

' --Old Gold and Black

- ' ; ~ - 'i ·Friday,' November ·12~ 19~--~

. that the ball was ja. Ned from his! ball down 'to the W~e Forest ·24~ II intact' after the game was over . I grasp. -~hen the 'play was ·un- ·but the game ended before they ~d he had comple~d eigh(of 18' tangled, Pee Wee" Jones was in I could come from behind a third I passs againstlthe Blue Devils. JohJ!. possession of the ball o~ the Duke time. :'Red;' O'Quinn played his usual 10. Mike Sprock took Blackerby's I Carroll Black_erby and Mike brilliant game and caught six pi~cho_.rlt . on . the next play and I Sprock were the big guns for I aerials to regain his po::;ition at skirted h1s nght end· for the win- Wake F'orest: Blackerby's needle-! the head 'of the nation's pass re­ning touchdown. Bill George add·- threading passes to the Deacon re-I ceivers. Mike Sprock's churning ed the extra poi!2t for good mea- ceivers contributed a good portion· legs ate up a large amount of the sure and the Deacons were in_front of the ground gained by Wake 162 yards that the Deacons .gained to stay, 27-20. · Forest. Carroll's record. of never on the ground. Wake Forest's 21S

The. Blue D1vils tried several having a pass intercepted wh!1e he ~ards 'through the air was very. last mmute pass.es that moved the has been at Wake Forest was still superior to Duke's 79.

End "Red" O'Quinn, the nation's top pass r~ceiver, catches one of. Carroll Blackerby's tosses after faking two Duke defend~s out. The Asheboro forward had a field day along with Hoey, Bradley, and ' Duncan, showing the Blue Devils how the flanks should be played.

who made a beautiful catch on the 1 Forest supporters were revived i Duke 19. Again Blackerby faded when the Toledo Tornado, Bill and tossed another beauty, this Gregus, lived up to his nickname time to "Moe" Duncan, who grab- by returning Duke's kickoff 77 bed the ball in back of the Duke yards to the Blue Devil 16. Their secondary for the second Deacon hearts sank, however, when a six-pointer. Bill George's place- fourth down pass fell from the ment was blocked as the first half, eager grasp of "Red" O'Quinn and ended with the two teams tied Duke took over on the 10.

13-13. On~ More Score Only two minutes and 40 sec­

onds of playing· time remained when the Deacs pulled one more trick out of the bag. They hit Mounie so hard on the first down

Midway of the third period, the Deacons started a drive on their own 12 yard line that resulted in another Wake Forest score. In only seven plays, the Deacs ate up the yardage between them and the Duke goal line. Bud Lail and -·--------------Mike Sprock moved the ball to the 24 for a first down. Blackerby then uncorked his pitching arm and tossed a 28 yard pass to "Red" , O'Quinn on the 48. Two cracks at' the line and a five yard· penalty I found the ball still on the 48, so

I Blackerby pitched again to Q'- • Quinn, who had slipped behind the Duke safety man to run the rest of the way unmolested. George kicked his second placement and

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Wake took the lead, 20-13.

Final Duke Tee Dee , Telephone 3-3727 l SJw.u..1J)~ Taking over on their own eleven I ~.:===~=========~:"~=~~:::~:::~::-::::::::-::::::::-::::::::-::::::~::::::-::::::~::::::::~:::::::::::::::::~::::~::::::::::::::::-::::::::::::::::::::-::::::~~-~,.- _

where a Deacon threat had stalled, -

the Blue Devils lost no time in 0;.4/fllPU$ . 0\~~~ making their final T.D. to come · from behind for the second time. . • A pass from Frye to Austin was good to the 18. On the next play, Friedlund took a handoff from

· Frye, shot through a hole in the Deacon line, and out-raced Harry Dowda the remaining 82 yards for the score. Souchak's kick was good and again the game was all tieq up with only three minutes left to play.

It seemed that a tie was all that

•• ///

• the Deacons were ,going to salvage from the hard fought contest when they lined up to receive the kick­off. But the hopes of all Wake

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~------------------------~

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Important date--yea, Man! •. , the day you adopt the bold look in Jarman's rugged "Bold Soles."

See them in our window ••• try a pair today.

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BEN'S of

Wake Forest ---11"1'""'" ......... "Ben Wants to See You"

CITY BARBER 6

SHOP j

I ----------------

No two individuals are alike when it comes to life insuran~e requirements. That'~ why your Jefferson Standard representative specializes in "Planned Pro­tection"-the service that tailors the plan to fit your particular situation. Under the plan. your needs are an­alyzed first and a program is then designed that will take care of them. At no cost to you. your Jefferson Standard representative will be · glad to talk with you and help you wor!£ out your ''Planned Pro­tecEion" program. 'Call or wrlto hJm today,

C. K. STEELE 423 Durham Road

P.O. Box 762 WAKE FOREST, N. C.

JEfFERSON STANDARD LIFE t~SUFIAiiC£ CO!IPA~Y l.~LLii~~;:£G )lf'!11i' C.o\I:OlllliA

'Tl-WII<S! JOHNNY, FOR. THE J>S MAD HELP. BUT MY TERPStclloRs SEO\USE OF MY HAS RUN OUT ON ME.

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HYMENEAL - PerJaining to wedding bells.

FLAGELLATE -To b'eat up systematicaff,y •

OSCILLATE- To shake •

HY_GROPHANEJTY -The state of being transparent when wet.

TERPSICHORE . }Come now, folks. We PULCHRITUDINOUS !oen:=. hove to explain

CIGARETTE HANGOVER - That stale smoked-out taste, that tight dry feeling in your throat due to smoking.

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per,

'I . pants Ugly ettes · throng might

w

Page 7: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

• • • . . ' ' . !

J!riday, November 12, . 1948, ,, Page Seven

Bensley· Never .~ets_ Cheers· Go ·To Read

Thi'Pi Kappa Alphas stretched their ~eaten string to 7 games with twin victories over the week to clinch the Fraternity League Championship. The PiKA power-

house piE!jed together a 14-0 win game ·of the season with a forfeit victory over the Zeta Chis.

Six forfeits marked the week's schedule of eight games as int~rest

(Ed. note: As the majorettes have er could do. when we interviewed appear.ed in the pages of this pa- 'him to get a few statements per, we th:ou'ght it appropriate to from him, little things like "Give -"run" an article on the tittle man me . a darn good write-up be-. in":front of the band Photograph- cause I'~ the greatel!t thing to bit e-rs tried to get the same pose· in tl:iis campus." pic.) · 1 "In case anybody ever . n·oticed

By Walt Fri~enberg The world-famous Wake Forest

Band, ably led by The McDowell, marched out onto the field, their

. instruments and the seats of their ' pants shil'!ing in the sunlight. As

Ugly Bill Hensley and the major-. ettes · prance up and down, the

throng 'knocks theirself out, you might say. Wherever· the band ap­pears Bill wins admiring glances from all'sides. But the cheers nev­er go to Bill's head, and anyway he insistS that some/ of th~ ap­piaU:se is for the four gir!s.

Just like all the other majorettes, Bill is modest. It was an this writ-

Have You. Tried the Food That

them, ·although their ~!!forts are frankly second..:rate, I really ap-1 prec1ate them going out there and 1

workin' with me. They're really in there tryin'." ·

This. gawky snaggle-toothed bru­nette is from Asheville (incident­ally, Bill was bor.n in Asheville and has lived there all his life). He is hulking goof with blood-shot eyes, a bloated figure, an·d a cute shuffing walk n"ianeuvered in· 12 D's. He has a pleasant l;>elching voice and speaks in an excellent diction. People are always telling bim he looks like Harpe Marx.

When we asked him what he did in high school he said. "Pffff­ttt!" Later we learned that he was a member of the Executive. Com­mitte of the Camera Club, first vice-president of. Sigma . Omicron .

D Beta, and secre'tary of the jun-The Humpty umpty1

, ior class in .. his.freshman year.,

'.

Offers YO'U~?

'-'It's Delicious!!" Dinners ::- ShoTt Orders

-·STOP BY-R·aleigh-Wake Forest Hi~ay

For Quick

·Efficient Service~

-It's-

CAUSBY'S LAUNDRY

Amazing Routines Bill has· a variety of amazing

routines which he uses to thr:ill the· crowds at half time. In one of them he throws the baton, into

. the air, it falls to earth he knows not where. In another he takes the baton in one hand, places it in the other hand, drops it on..,the

. MODEST MAJOR--d3ill Hensley, pictured above in his majorette .attire, is the young man who marches in front of the four majorettes who march in front of the band. Staff Photographer Alex Kiser captured this unusual phot?·

ground, picks it up, ·takes it in I ·one hand, places it in the other water!" We find out, how- This boy whose ability and hand, drops it on the g~ound, ever, that he caught the baton on leadership · cannot be hidden, has picks it up and so ori. Bill holds his felt toe in a Command Per-! a knack of· being well-known all' the Southe~n Intercoll~giate. rec- . formance before the King and! over ~he campus. He also has a ord for this e~ent--:- the sm~le Queen ·of England at the Polo 1 few fnends. · · 4_and drop" _37 times. m a ~5 mm- grounds in September 1940. But ]leadership which cannot be hidden ute haJ! .ti:ne penod. Bill sa!s, on the other hand he has never , Yes, Bill, with your ability and '?'hat's nothm'_- I make a predic- been stung by a bee a few hours;. (and your skill in twirling that tion that I Will top that number before game time. i little old bat~n) you will go far.l next yeaz:." ~.u.ccess Formula ! Good luck, Bill!

When we asked Bill what his - -------Wake Forest, N. C. greatest thrill was he said{' "Oh, go When' we asked Bill just what Patronize Old Gold advertisers. I

~:::::::======::::==~~s~o~ak~~y=::o~u~r_h~e:_:a:d~in~a~b~u::c:k~~t~of his formula for success is he said, --,- · - · .' · "x-yvll:j:§abc.,:• He attributes his

l--.. -, .. -·u-·-s·-·T-·-o"-·-M·-·~·-M .. _,_A.,-:~D·-E·-·----1 ~~:~~~c~~. ~~s ~::i~:ti~:· as~~~=:~~· I l\mET ME AT !

j

1-

· : '- . ;1• '"All you kids that wanna do like· S H 0 R T Y 1 S

: I do, practice eigl?-t hours a day, I ' .. , ao extensive resear~h, and accum-,

J ulate , experience through the Bold., Shirts -~. Top -Coats Suits

Ties Pants

Discount will be given to Wake Forest men who place their order ~fore December '15

BRICE~KEESEE

. 1 years." And he added slyly, "You j don't have 'to run this as an ad­: vertisement; but I give lessons I every Tuesday afternoon at $4.37 ! an hour. Just for girls. I can't fool ! with boys. They'll have to pick it J up for theirs,elf." ·

FOR-QUICK SERVICE -

ANDTASTY .. FOOD

it's

ShortY's

t J . . "Desig_ners and T_ailors" !

L330S. ~isb~ Phone_:!~~ We Will Have Everything For

A Beautiful thanksgiving Dinner

~ ·~

-~

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... tk CK~~~~ BOSSE JEWELERS

107 Fayettevllle Street RALEIGH, N. c_.

AUTHORIZED l:uii5~ J ~ W .E ~ E R S

* All ingre~ients are in for homemade fruitcakes * Place your order early for a turkey

ALL THIS .AND MORE CAN BE FOUND

-at-

Hollowell' s· Food Store. Wake Forest r Phone 2521-25~1

t i .

I College Book Store II 10 II

:TEXACO. GRILL Drop In For

DINNERS AND SHORT ORDERS We Specialize In

STEAKS CHOPS SEAFOODS Raleigh Road Wake Forest

Diek Frye's Restaurant Wake ,Forest's Finest

STEAKS ;.... CHOPS - SEA FOODS.

Special Prices from 5 p.m. - 8 p.m. daily

All Student Waiters

·SPECIAL!! 100 per cent Wool Gray

FLANNEL SLACKS

.,riced From $9.95 Pleated Front & Welt Seams It's-a regular $12.95 value!

Raleigh~$_ Ne.west Clothjng Store

Pause That Refreshes· Is· Part of the Party·

.Ask for it either way ••• both trade-marks mean the same thing.

BOrnEO Ut-IDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY

Capital Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Inc., Raleigh, N.C. @> 1948, The Coca-Colo Company

-~-·

Page 8: BOWL BOUND * * * * D EACONS ACCEPT BID. TO 1949 DIXIE …past grand consul of Sigma Chi Poteat made his listeners sense . • H ' B 5 u ister in North Carolina and Vir- lina in the

,.

Page Eight

Joslin To Hear First, Moot Court

Defendant Plans Appeal From M•anslaughter

Charge

The first moot court session of the semester will be held next Tuesday, Nov. 17, with William .Joslin, Raleigh attorney a'nd form­er law clerk to Justice Hugo Black, U. S. Supreme Court, acting as chief justice.

The session will be an appellate coc.'l·t. The defendent is appealing from a conviction of manslaughter. Counsel for the defense is Murray Tate and Nathan Cole, for the state is Warren Casey and Glenn Brown.

The case is purely hypothetical, one involving two fishermen: Trout and Bass, and a bird lover called Doakes- Joseph Doakes.

It appears that Trout and Bass were fishing out of season and one of Trout's bad casts hooked his friend and pulled him into the water. Bass, poor fish, drowned.

Joe Doakes, an amateur orni­thologist, happened to be taking moving pictures of birds in the vicinity and filmed part of the in­cident. On his way home Doakes was killed in an automobile ac­cident. His camera was saved and the film developed.

Film Is Shown At the trial the film was shown.

Trout promptly denied that he and Bass had been fishing and insisted that the pictures must have been of another party . .Joe Doakes could not testify and the pictures did not show final phases of the acci­dent. Trout was convicted.

The main issue in the appeal will be the admissc>'·'lity of the movies as evidence, :.~at is, was it legal to show the pictures in court. Trout's counsel objected in the first trial when the movies were offered as evidence.

The argument will be similar to argument before the North Caro­lina Supreme Court.

Two faculty members will sit with Mr. Joslin as justices. After the appeal Mr . .Joslin will speak to law students on writing an ap­pellate brief. A Columbia gradu­ate, Mr. Joslin is an expert on ap­prellate briefs by virtue of hls experience as law clerk to Justice Black.

The session will start at 7: 30 in room A of the Law Building. All interested persons are welcome.

The Physical Education Club is taking a lab course in massage, it was disclosed this week by Con­nie Hart, club president.

The course is being taught by Ernie McKenzie and is held every Tuesday night at 7:30 in the gym.

Forest Theatre WAKE FOREST, N. C.

Week of November 13

Old Gold and Bl~ek

Episcopal Club· Elects Temporary Chairman

discussion. This floor debate was I CHASE 1 with Elaine and Mortinier's love ·a first year law student from

provoked by persons interested in affair, and even that cannot re- Winston-Salem, will appear 'as the outcome of _the Amsterdam (Continued from Page ·1) main serious in this situation. Jonathan Brewster, a 'homicidal World Conference. There has been from the .Jane gang· Snyde Richard Lockridge wrote of maniac, wht'le ht's assi'stant Dr. orne q est' as t th · f llib'li ' r, over "A · s u ton · 0 • e m a I - at the College Book Store; will be rsemc and Old. Lape" in the Einstein will be Bill Iley, a sopho-

.James C. Howell, Clearwater ty of the z:esults of this Conf~rence. ·taking in coed cash for ice-cream New York ~un, "It is .a noisy,: more from Harrisburg. Fla., freshman, was named temp- Grady Fnday, pr?gra~ ch~rman, I and cokes instead of the usual preposterous, mcoherent joy. You 1 Harold Powell, a freshman from orary chairman of the Canterbury arranged _the topic diScusston for male-money· and the men - yes wouldn't believe that homicidal Raleigh will create the famous

the benefit of both member a d · · ' · · · ' · ld b ' Club at an organizing meeting . 't H 1

'd d s t~ ·Its gomg to be a novel experience. I mama cou e such great fun." charac.ter of Teddy Brewster . .ru-November 3rd. VlSI ors~l' e a _so p:esi e. over e Marrying.Sam, chairman of the' T·he vehiCle, under the direction lian Burroughs, freshman from

The Reverend George Workman, 11 ~toup t' ~scussrodn m which many Sadie Hawkins Day rules and reg- of Tommy Johnson, brings to· the Rockingham -will appear as Rev.

. . . . meres ma an opposing ideas 1 t' · · w k F t t D H ' ·· mimster to the Episcopalian stud-~ - "' t d u a Ions committee, has declared a e ores s age a •mass of r. arper. Byron Russel, semor ents at Duke, addressed the group were presen e · classes and chapel "off bounds" promising talent, much of which from Graham, 'and Douglas Hall, discussing a program of religious because of the acute shortage of is new to this audience. The two Wilmington freshman, will be two study for Episcopalian students. B S U cuts in the cases of certain stud- "sweet" old Aunts will,be protray-1 of. the victims, Mr. Gibbs and Mr.

Bobby Helm of the psychology • • • ents. Also, the use of firearms and ed by Mary _Ward, junior from I Witherspoon rli)spectively . department will be the next . bear traps has been declared ille- Bessemer City, and Harriet Smith, · The three poli_!:emen in the farce speaker. He will address the meet- (Contmued from Page 1). ?al. due to the fact that the college sophomo~e fr?m Danville, Va. The will be Bud Grainger, Louisburg ing to be held November 17th at Springs, N. c., Mr. Fred Smith, mfirmary nurses are not expected love aff~rr. Will be handled as us-· sophomore, Bob Pool, Smithfield 7:30 in room 210 of the Music- executive vice-president, National I to be on duty. (Every girl gets a ual_by VIvian Snuggs, Wake Forest! freshman, and Pauf Griffin, senior Religion building. All students are Foremen's League, Dayton, o., and crac~ at_ ti;e men you know.) Oth- semor, and Paul Moyle, senior, from Morehead City. Ray .Tones, invited to attend. Mr. James Ray state student sec- erwtse, It rs a race for the survival from ·west Palm Beach, Fla., both· sophomore from Elizabeth City

retary, Raleigh: N. c. 1 of the fittest. Come Sadie Hawkins of whom . are familiar to local will portray Lieutenant Rooney:

Lovelace A "Chicken-in-the-basket'' sup-IDa~, everybod! is goir,tg to be on theater audienees. Clyde Randolph, the detective on the case.

per is scheduled for Saturday night the run, runnmg fas.t ... or suffer -'--------Stroupe Lead

and IRC

with the express purpose of help- the consequences. " m••••• Discussion ing everyone get acquainted. Del-

egates from all campuses in North THESPIAN Drs. Marc Lovelace and Henr Ca~olina which ·have BSU organi-~ .

Stroupe were guest spaekers ~I zatwns are expected. (Contmued from Page 4) the regular meeting ·of the In- T~e- W~ke. Forest students are From that point on the __ play is ternational Relations Club Wed- particrpat.mg I~ a p~ol·of _charter-~ a _race of laughs and hysterics nesday night in the Recreation • ed buses m cooperatiOn ';'lth stud- while the characters commit one Room ents from Duke, Meredith, State murder after the other.

In ~onnection with 'the current and Shaw. . The only serious element enters

question, they spoke on the posi- +-··-··--··-·-··-··-·-.. -··-:-·-----··-~~~-~~-~~~-·-••-n--··-·+ tion of religion in international j · } politics. Representing the religion j OUR WORK IS OUR BEST department, Dr. Lovelace voiced' ADVERTISEMENT

QUALITY CLEANING ALWAYS

Cleaners

the opinions that religion should not be left out in affairs of any na­ture. It is believed that religious leaders all over the world take the stand that witho~t the teachings of the Bible as a fundamental basis, no government or administration can progress. Dr. Stroupe of the History Department argued the One Block Behind Edward's Phannacy points of the opposite side.

th~t~fub t;:~c~:a~~~~n 5~~~~~~ +~~~~~~~:,:_,,_,_,,_,,_,~"--·-.. -~~~~~~~ .. +I ------------------~~~-------

11CHESTERFIELD • IS

building another big, new factory for us smokers who like· the MILDER cigarette •••

It's !II cigarette.11

RADIO'S FAVORITE SON STAR OF C~BSTERFIELD'S

ARTHUR GODFREY TIME

·,

SATURDAY- /I ·-DOUBLE FEATURE­

Shows Continuous 1 to 11

"Rocky" Lane in I Carson City Raiders

Freddie Stewart in I Campus Sleuths

--- ---· - ----SUNDAY-

Shows 2:00 & 3:45 9:00

Donald O'Connor-Olga San Juan

Are You With It MONDAY & TUESDAY- --If­

Donald Culver-Veronica Lake

Isn't It Romantic W_E_D_N-ESDAY- _ --~

Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00 I Roy Rogers-Lynn Roberts

Eyes of Texas Short & Serial

THURSDAY & FRIDAY-=-------.

Larry Parks-Ellen Drew

The Swordsman

Collegiate Theatre SATURDAY-

Shows 7: 15 & 9: 00

Betty Grable-Doug Fairbanks Jr.

That Lady in Ermine

MON., TUES., & WEDNESDAY-Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00

Barry Fitzgeral~-Dorothy Hart

Naked Gity

THURSDAY­Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00 Roy Rogers-Lynne Roberts

Eyes of Texas

-~'I wish l could-take you in my Navion plane over the big, new-factory Chesterfield is building at Durham, N. C. It's a honey. It will help supply the· e·ver- increasing .demand for the !JIILDER cigarette.''

..