4
pent dith •me. lt l- I " ;o ;o ,, -.J) ,. :• '- \ / ,I r II ,, I Intercollegiate Press · and College. Humor Mail Service of North <?.,,..·qJina Collegiate ' ...... 0 <(' ani) mtarh .... 0) -====:U - Published Weekly by the Students of Wake Forest College ... Ten Cents Per Copy Vol. XIV, No.4 WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1930 Club Officers Pan-Hellenic Council Exact Dramatic To Poteat Principal Speaker For Year Chosen; A T R h. PI d . Present First Play I v •t s·· M.ll . Have Experience S 0 US e gtng. Novemb.er D , erg1 .1- I Forty-two Merr Qualify Twenty-two ,Men In the Initial Club Initiated By Phis Rules Strict To A void 'Nothing But the Truth,' Among Fra- ternities and Pledges Three-Act Comedy, Decided Upon Eus Plan Change Latin Department Head I Meeting Hour on 'Ver- Try-outs FINAL TRY-OUTS TO BE ABOUT A MONTH .HENCE Manager. Biggs Announces Sev- eral Extended Trips Are To Be Made To Various Sections of North Carolina. The Wake Forest-College Glee Club elected its· officers for the forthcoming season in a meet- ing for that purpose Thursday evening, ·October 9. All those chosen . have seen at least one year of service in the local or- ganization. H. F. Briggs, of Lumbert;on, who was manager of last year's club, was reelected. The office of assistant man- . ager will be filled later. - J. K. Blackburn, of North Wilkes- boro, again chosen student di- rector. · The other officers are as ,follows: E. D. Harrell, Wilson, president; C. H. Stroup, Gastonia, vice president; G. P. Cullipher, Merry Hill, secretary; Lloyd Thayer, Wingate, librarian. Members Selected Forty-two men have been selected to compose the club this year. These were chosen recently from a group of 75 aspirants who reported at the first caJl of Prof. W. A. Potter, di- rector of the organization. Prof. Potter plans to keep the pres· ent number of men in 'the club until the final try-outs about a month hence. He is anxious to secure the very best talent possible. About 35 men will Hayes Elected President of So- l · . · ciety Day; S.mith, Lineberry RUSHING SEASON OPENED HARRELL AND FLETCHER. and Jackson Marshals OCT.15; PLEDGE DAY NOV. I TO DIRECT ORGANIZATION Twenty-two students became full- Council Passes New Law In Re- fledged members of · the Philomathe- sian Literary Society last Friday night when they received the initiation. gard To Rushing; Organized Gatherings Permissible Plans Being Made To Enter olina Dramatic Association Next Spring n _ gil and H1s .Influence' Debate Right of Government To Protect Property of Individ- VERGIL HAS SUFFERED · uals On Foreign Soil FROM PSEUDO CRITICS Lloyd Thayer, president of th9 Eu- Dr. Poteat, Concludes Speech By z9lian's Tuesday section, presided over Reading Tennyson's Poem, the initial program meeting on Tues- 'T V "1' o erg1 day, October 14. Mr. Hendricks took As soon as every initiate had had revealed to him the meaning of the . th'e secretary's chair in absence of mystic word the entire society walked The Pan-Hellemc Council of .. The Dramatic Club of Wake Louis Combs. "No man can estimate the ef- ta the golf links to enjoy a "weenie Wake Forest College held its reg- Forest College completed its or- The business session of the society, feet upon the world's languages, roast." . When all appetites- had been ular bi-weekly meeting at the ganization and set aside a deft- following the program, discussed a literature, ideals, standards, and satisfied, James W. Earp •. of Selma, Chi Tau house last Wednesday nite program of procedure when change in the meeting hour. Several a s p i r at i o n s brought about welcomed the men with a short ni ht Octob 14 Realiz'ng th t •it assembled in the first impor- members advocated a change from through the reading of the mas- address, and th1s was followed by en- g ' er · . 1 .a . · Tuesday night to some other time. thusiastic speeches from others. there has been Widespread dis- tant meeting of the year President Thayer announced, in view ter Latin poet, Vergil, by count- These men were given the initiation: cussion in regard to pledge day Wednesday evening, October 8. of the small attendance Tuesday, that less generations of school chil- R. C. Gupton, C. H. Shepherd, Rob- and the rushing period among The club has laid plans to pre- motions for a different meeting hour dren," said Dr. Hubert Poteat in ert :r. A .. Link, H. w. Bau- the fraternity circles the .council I sent its first play here some time were in order. The members, how- an address· on "The Influence of com, Jr., R. H. Smith, Bartram Robe- . ' 1 d 'd d t t k d fi 't t' Son' Hubert Harmon, Hayes, fully discussed the matter. The next month. ever, ecr e 0 a e no e me ac Ion Vergil," delivered in the chapel 1 untll Saturday when the regular bus- Herman Patty, Harry Sell, Ruffin Ha:r- council has the power to act on Edward Harrell, who was president iness session is held. At that time Wednesday morning celebrating per, James Little, Allie Hayes, S. B. and deten:nine what should con- of the local club last year and who a count will be taken of those who the bi-millennial anniversary of Foster, A. :r. Early, Clayton Rouse, stitute rushing. was outstanding in taking the leading favor some night other than Tuesday the birth of Vergil at Andes, C. L. Beavers, .John Burns, Hadley roles of some of the plays of the for the meeting of the second section. M 0 b H d S A H Rush Period · h t d' t near sntua, cto er 15, 70 BC. ayes, an . award. prevJ.ous season, was c osen ° Irec The program for the evening was as The rush period began midnight of the organization during the forthcom- follows: The first part of Dr. Poteat's address Business 1\lecting October 14, and it will last until mid- ing season. Frank Fletcher, also a Oration-Lloyd Thayer. was taken up with the life of Vergil. The society held its monthly busi- night of October 27. prominent member of the group last Current Events-David Ball. His father had a farm in Andes, and ness meeting Saturday morning, Oc- During this period each fraternity year, was elected president of the Debate: Resolved, That the United Vergil received a good education. After tober 11. has the privilege of extending to first- club.. States Government should refuse to one attempt in court, Vergil left law, Kyle Hayes, president of the society men ordinary social courtesy! Or- Plans are under way among the club give military protection to property took his books, and went to a farm last fall, was unanimously given the dinary social courtesy consists of tak· members to make the local organiza- which is owned by its citizens and in northern Italy. This was ruthlessly · honor of Society Day president. This ing a first-year man to a show, to Ra- tion a member in the Carolina Dra- which is situated on foreign soil. Af- seized in the Agrarian division, and being an even year, it was the Philo- leigh, or to the drug store. A fra- matic .Association as well as to enter firmative, Grady Carriker, Blaine he went to about 41 or 40 B.C. mathesians' 'to choose the pre- ternity man has the right to escort a into active participation on the dra- Jones; negative, Helms, Meekins. to apply to Augustus, who restored siding officer. Marshals who were first-year man to his house or hall matic tournament of the State next Jokes-H. c. vaughn. land to him. Vergil and Augustus chosen to wear the red and for whenever he sees :f;t. spring. A play for this purpose is now Lloyd Thayer introduced the pro- became fast friends. He- returned to Mother Phi on the occasion were Leon- There shall not be held any "organ- being written. It is further hoped that gram with an oration, "The Greatest his farm, and studied and wrote. idas Smith, chief; Jack Lineberry, and ized gathering" for the purpose of in· the dramatic club will find a cotirdi- Are the Little Things." Mr. Thayer His Eclogues, a series of pastoral Irby Jackson. ducing first-year men to become mem- na.ting: group among the glee club mem- stressed the rising materialism of the poems, were written about 41-39 B.C. Monday and Thursday nights were bers of the various fraternities. Any bers and that some efforts in operetta world at present. He cited events In 31 B.C. he completed the Georgics, set for the sectional meetings in order smoker, banquet, or· party given for will r,esult. in history where vice and material an agricultural poem, intended to in- that each member might find a time first-year men shall be determined as Try-outs for the cast of the first corruption caused the downfall of em- fluence the people to return to the '' h -ch d t · f "th h _.organized gathering. HoW1oveT,- ithe Bu. t. the Truth, a. three- -(JoM .. in .. n-• 011 -..n.,., two '_eo ___ untry. T .. he; 1 nrit!ng -th:C. · Ai:neftl.-- w I oes no .Inter ere WI ·a· ea-vy - ... .--"v schedule the· next day. Council passed a new law that goes act comedy, will take place · in the occupied the last ten years of Vergil's compose the final group. r . .,., -.i ,, I First Perfonnance into effect this year which states that Phi Hall as soon as the p)ay books life. He fell sick at Megara and died any of first-year men may be arrive. The club expects to make Dr. Lynch Explains at Brundisium in 19 B.C. According to word received from in a fraternity house at the same time as many as five public performances 'The· Burni"ng Bush' Before he died p.e requested that and it shall not be termed as an or- during the school year. his manuscript of the Al:neid be Manager Biggs, the club will make Dr. H. M. Poteat To many trips this season. The first S ·..t k 0 H I formance will probably be given just __ pea n ymno ogy ganized gathering. At the close of this Mrs. Carpenter, who so ably coached brought to him that he might destroy after Thanksgiving. period there will be a period of silence the group last year, will not be in Compares. Om· Local l\laple Tt•ees To it, for he had not finished his careful The club is at present having two Noted Mnsiciru:'- and Speaker Gives which will last three days. No fra- position to resume her work with the 'The Burning Bush' Viewed revision of the poem. His friends, practice sessions per week. More fre- Lectm.·e At Request of Minis- . quent practice will be held in the near terial Association ternity man will be allowed to com- club this year. Mr. Edward Harrell, By !\loses however, realizing the value of the municate in any way with a first-year her successor, is fully qualified to take manuscript, did not grant his request. future. , This year's club is composed of the following men: man during the-period of silence. Any over the post. Mr. Harrell holds a I " . . "Vergil has suffered more from edi- breach of this law will be punished diploma in expression and has had , God }o:ves an honest m- tions and commentaries and discus- W.l:G. Temples, E. L. Sm_ith, T. G. Dr. Hubert M. Poteat, of -Oontinued on page jour wide experience in dramatics. I terrogatwn r pomt, was _the comment sions and lectures and. essays and Latin, author, musician, athlete, fra- of Dr. J. \\. Lynch, Wake Forest Col- analyses and all the the t t ternal lead,er, and noted speaker, has lege: professor of Bible, when his weapons of the professi:nar Ch;mey, S. A. Howard, M. C. Russell, J. E. Sharpe, J. L. Hardie, R. F. Cran- ford', E. L. Davis, E. E. Harrell, A; V. Washburn, E. R. Jones, C. W. Teague, R. N. Simms, H. 0. Hormann, Tom Dysard, L. Y. Theyer, C. H. Stroup, Jack Humphrey, E. T. Harrell, G. P. Cullipher, Frank Fletcher, A. K. Cheek, George Gronto, C. J. Grey, T. R. Benton, Nelson Parker, Rex Brown, George Noel, Allen Byrd, Carl Brown, W. G. Poole, H. W. Baucom, Jr., Spencer O'Brian, A. L. Wagoner, B. 0. Deaton, E. Y. Fox, Carey Dowd, .John Blackburn, Ellis Page, Bill Day, W. F. Worthinger. accepted the Ministerial Association's cz ( L y; M tent1on was called to one of the cam invitation to deliver his famous lee- ass 0 ast ear ow pus maples which had put on its cloak tban any other genius, ancient or mod- ern," Dr. Poteat declared. He went ture on Hymnology next Wednesday of red.' on to discuss the influence of the night, Octob.er 22. This lecture will Engaged_ In Pro£essr·ons This tree, every leaf aflame, had "pl'ince of the poets" through the ages. be given in the chapel hall and the ,- 4 reminded the theologian of incorrect "It is hard to find a single Roman officers of the association are urging interpretations which many make of poet who does not owe a debt to Ver- not only their own members, but all that portion of the Old Testament gil." he stated. In modern literature students, to attend this meeting. Out of a Class of Ninety-nine, Fifty-five Are At Work In Their concerning Moses and the bum·ing -Oontinued on page two Joint Social To Be Held At Meredith Wake Forest-Meredith Societies To Hold Social On November ·tst Dr. Hubert, as he is affectionately Chosen. Fields, While Forty-four Are Continuing bush-" ... why the bush burns and called by the boys, is one of the most is not consumed, etc." The bush re- popular men on the Wake Forest cam- Studies In Universities !erred to here was the acasia, which pus. The students always consider like our maple in October, he said, it a royal treat to 'hear him speak. W k F t . d" t . Th 1 d 1 1 . of its mem- was woven of blood and fire. "The He has delivered this lecture with a e ores • accor Ing 0 In-1 e c ass .an oca Ion Bible is full of oriental imagery," he te1ling effect in many of the most formation from the registrar's bers asiollows: explained, "which, taken out, would prominent churches in the country. office, rep0rts fifty-five of the 1\iedical Students destroy the soul of it." Christ referred He is a champion of the use· of bet- ninety-nine members of last Jefferson Medical College-J. c. to himself as "The Light of the ter church music. He has for many year's senior class in some re- Ayers, Robert M. Sales, H. M. Patter- \Vor!d," "The Door," "The Truth," etc., years waged an unceasing warfare on son, John M. Phelps, H. K. Young. and in saying "Take up your cross and the jazz type of music used in some sponsible profession which con- s u . . J A G' follow Me," he wasn't talking about h 1 1 h . yracuse niversity- . . Ill, F. churches. fines t em arge Y to t e1r own M. Trady, p_ w. Joyner, G. w. King. shoulq_ering two angular poles." · Dr. Poteat will intersperse this lee- State Forty four men are J Dr. Lynch has no patience with - - Richmond Medical College-W. J. ture with piano numbers, showing tinuing their education in uni- Buffaloe, J. H. Patterson, J. B. Perry, "pious ignorance.'' While praising just how church music should and the heroes of faith who had no op- should not be played. The meeting versities of higher learning, J. D. Phillips, Jr. portunity, he denounced those who will begin promptly at 6:30 o'clock chief amop.g these being medical Duke University-C. N. Adams, J. choose darkness instead of light, and and it is predicted that a large crowd students. W. Joyner, W. R. Wiley. hide it under the cloak of religion. will enjoy and profit by the lecture. Out of the class of ninety·nine, Northwestern Medical University- The literary societies of Meredith Miss Eva Vause, Nurse, and Wake Forest will have a joint so- cial at Meredith College on the eve- Reports On Infirmary thirty are teaching this year, largely J. T. Biggs, P. Y. Greene, C. F. Hawes. in various high schools throughout the Temple Medical University-H. H. State. Many students do this each Brickhouse, H. C. Grubb, W. A. Pitt- year, only as an immediate occupation man. W. H. Ford To Speak At B.S.U. Conference and hoping later to perhaps enter Pennsylvania Medical College-J. S.l . ning of November 1, according to some other field. . 1 Holbrook, Margaret Lineberry, R. B. His Subject At Atlanta \Viii Be 'My Extends a Cordial \Velcome To 'Sick' plans formulated by representatives of Twenty-nine of the class of last year Outlaw. Clll'istiun Duty In t.he Col- the two institutions. It is the desire Students; Vaccination for Colds were medical students and are Universitv of Maryland-Max E. kge Chur<·h' of those in charge to get the society Being Given tinning their study of medicine, largely Whicker. ·-members before the an· M' E V in out-of-State universities. Some of 1 M.A. Med., Wake l<'orest-R. L. \V. Herschel Ford, Wake· Forest nual Society Day: to be held here on ISS .ause, 1_1urse . of in- the more prominent medical schools I EvarlS, l\'1. A. Williams, R. J. Sykes. junior, has recently been invited to November 8. On that ,day local stu- firmary, said m an mterVJew: I do which have accepted Wake Forest sen- . make a speech on the program of dents have the privilege of being hosts not think that is wise to say just I ior medical students are: Jefferson La\1'yca·s the South wide B. S. U. Conference, to their girl friends. how many I could accommodate, because Medical College, Syracuse University, D. , V. Allen, Wilmington; J. M. which is to be held in Atlanta, Oc- Wade Brown, president of the Eu- the boys might think that they would Richmond Medical College, Duke· Uni- Andrews, Laurel Hill; A. L. Aydlette, tober SO-November 2. His subject will zelian Society, and J.' M. Early, Phil· be a nuisance here and go home or versity, Northwestern University, Eliza'beth City; R. C. Brady, Laurel be, "My Christian Duty in the College omathesian Society president, together stay in their rooms. I have had as Temple University, Pennsylvania Med- Hill;.H. C. Carroll, Hamlet; W. W. Ca-l Church." This talk will come on Sun- with other representatives of the two many as 42 here at one time. Just ical College, University of Maryland. boon, Elizabeth. City; C. B. Caudle, day morning at the closing hour of societies, will have a meeting with give them to understand that the in- Three members of the class are in· Wadesboro; Bra.,.ton Craven, Trinity; the- meeting. the Meredith representatives on Mon- firmary is for their use, and if they structing in the biology and chemistry J. L. Duncan, Forest City; J. B. Dula, This conference will be attended by day afternoon to make further plans are sick they may come down here." departments here. T. G. Daniel, Greensboro; R. 2,000 Baptist students from 17 south- for the social. She said that the students were hav- The college awarded degrees to F. Davidson, Charlotte; W. H. Elliott, ern states. This type of meeting is The invitation will be extended to ing more trouble with colds now than twenty-seven men from the law school Jr., Hertford; S. J. Edwards, Ruther- held only once every four years, the all students, whether they are society anything else, and that a few of them last year. These men may be found W. L. Farmer, Wilmington; last meeting being held in Birming- members or not, to be present for the had been vaccinated. Miss Vause is practicing their profession in the va- K. R. Giles, Marion; J. H. Griffin, ham in 1926. Some of the most prom- occasion. This excludes no one. on duty at the infirmary all the time rious cities and towns throughout the Wendell; H. S. Mull, Morganton; inent speakers of the country will ap- According to previous arrangements except from 2 until 4 o'clock in the State. Rhetto Martin, Smithfield; F. R. Me- pear on the program. A number of the literary organization on the two afternoon. Five of t:tre members of the minis- Ninch, Jr., Charlotte; W. H. McElwee, Wake Forest men are planning to at- campuses were to· have a picnic at Dr. Mackie is at the Infirmary at terial class of the preceding year are Alvin Outlaw, Wake For- tend tbe conference. an early date, but through the fine 1 o'clock every day for consultatiQn further pursuing tlleir course in The- est; 1 R. B. Street, Charlotte; D. H. Ford has also accepted an invitation cooperation of Miss Biggers, ·dean of with the students. He will' have this ological seminaries, most of which are Stratnge, Henderson; F. A. Talbott, to speak on the program of the Bap- Meredith, and the presidents of the duty until the middle of November, located in southern territory. There Forest; W. D. Thompson, White· tist State Convention, which meets in societies, the present date when some other doctor will take his are eight of the ministerial class of ville>; B. M. Williams, Ahoskie. · Raleigh in November. His talk will been set. place. last year who are now active pastors. --Oontinued on page t-wo be upon Christian Education. Wake Forest Men Prominent Authors Spilman Collection Contains 301 Books Written By 140 Wake Forest College Men Three hundred and one books writ- ten by 140 Wake Forest College men, among which are the works of Thomas Dixon, John Charles McNeill, Joseph Quincy Adams, Collier Cobb, Gerald Johnson, and Laurence Stallings, form the unique Spilman collection of books in the Wake Forest College library. Thirteen members of the Wake For· est faculty have made their literary contributions to the collection. Num- bered among these are the books in medicine by President Thurman D. Kitchin; the poetry of Benjamin F. Sledd; science and religion, Dr. >Vil- li.am Louis Poteat; hymnology and Latin literature, Dr. Hubert M. Po- teat; Baptist history, Dr. George W. Paschal; German language, Dr. J. H. Gorrell; sociology, Dr. C. Chilton Pear- son. In the group of religious books are included a large number by Leonard G. Broughton, Clarence Dixon, Joseph Franklin Love, Hight C. Moore, Sam- uel J. Porter, A. T. Robertson, and others of note. Dr. B. W. Spilman, donor of the collection, has a number of his own writings in this group. Among the scientific books are those of Irving Hardesty, Carl Murchison, and Hubert A. Royster. An interesting volume is that con- taining the war letters of Kiffin Yates Rockwell, the first American aviator to fall during the World War. Other books 'of especial interest are by Jo- siah Finch, published in 1853; by Geo. 'W. Purefoy, and by Louis Shuck, 1856. '

II I ~nlb ani) mtarh · 2018-03-20 · C. L. Beavers, .John Burns, Hadley ~ roles of some of the plays of the for the meeting of the second section. M 0 b H d ayes, an S • A H

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Page 1: II I ~nlb ani) mtarh · 2018-03-20 · C. L. Beavers, .John Burns, Hadley ~ roles of some of the plays of the for the meeting of the second section. M 0 b H d ayes, an S • A H

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I Intercollegiate Press

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North <?.,,..·qJina Collegiate ' ......

Pres~ 0 <(' ~sociation ~nlb ani) mtarh .... 0)

~~====- ~ -====:U ~ - ~ Published Weekly by the Students of Wake Forest College ·~ ...

==================================================================================================================~~===== Ten Cents Per Copy Vol. XIV, No.4 WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1930

Gle~ Club Officers Pan-Hellenic Council Exact Dramatic ~lob To Poteat Principal Speaker For Year Chosen; A T R h. PI d . Present First Play I v •t s·· M.ll . Have Experience S 0 US -~ng, e gtng. ~During Novemb.er D , erg1 .1- I enn~Um·

Forty-two Merr Qualify Twenty-two ,Men In the Initial Club Initiated By Phis

Rules Strict To A void 'Nothing But the Truth,' Co~fusion Among Fra­ternities and Pledges

Three-Act Comedy, Decided Upon

Eus Plan Change Latin Department Head I Meeting Hour Gi~es Add~ess on 'Ver-

Try-outs

FINAL TRY-OUTS TO BE ABOUT A MONTH .HENCE

Manager. Biggs Announces Sev­eral Extended Trips Are To Be Made To Various Sections of North Carolina.

The Wake Forest-College Glee Club elected its· officers for the forthcoming season in a meet­ing for that purpose Thursday evening, ·October 9. All those chosen . have seen at least one year of service in the local or­ganization.

H. F. Briggs, of Lumbert;on, who was manager of last year's club, was reelected. The office of assistant man-

. ager will be filled later. -J. K. Blackburn, of North Wilkes­

boro, ~as again chosen student di-rector. ·

The other officers are as ,follows: E. D. Harrell, Wilson, president; C. H. Stroup, Gastonia, vice president; G. P. Cullipher, Merry Hill, secretary; Lloyd Thayer, Wingate, librarian.

Members Selected Forty-two men have been selected

to compose the club this year. These were chosen recently from a group of 75 aspirants who reported at the first caJl of Prof. W. A. Potter, di­rector of the organization.

Prof. Potter plans to keep the pres· ent number of men in 'the club until the final try-outs about a month hence. He is anxious to secure the very best talent possible. About 35 men will

Hayes Elected President of So- l · . · ciety Day; S.mith, Lineberry RUSHING SEASON OPENED HARRELL AND FLETCHER.

and Jackson Marshals OCT.15; PLEDGE DAY NOV. I TO DIRECT ORGANIZATION

Twenty-two students became full- Council Passes New Law In Re­fledged members of · the Philomathe­sian Literary Society last Friday night when they received the initiation.

gard To Rushing; Organized Gatherings Permissible

Plans Being Made To Enter Car~ olina Dramatic Association

Next Spring

n _ gil and H1s .Influence' Debate Right of Government To

Protect Property of Individ- VERGIL HAS SUFFERED · uals On Foreign Soil FROM PSEUDO CRITICS

Lloyd Thayer, president of th9 Eu- Dr. Poteat, Concludes Speech By z9lian's Tuesday section, presided over Reading Tennyson's Poem, the initial program meeting on Tues- 'T V "1' o erg1 day, October 14. Mr. Hendricks took As soon as every initiate had had

revealed to him the meaning of the • . th'e secretary's chair in absence of mystic word the entire society walked The Pan-Hellemc Council of .. The Dramatic Club of Wake Louis Combs. "No man can estimate the ef-ta the golf links to enjoy a "weenie Wake Forest College held its reg- Forest College completed its or- The business session of the society, feet upon the world's languages, roast." . When all appetites- had been ular bi-weekly meeting at the ganization and set aside a deft- following the program, discussed a literature, ideals, standards, and satisfied, James W. Earp •. of Selma, Chi Tau house last Wednesday nite program of procedure when change in the meeting hour. Several a s p i r at i o n s brought about welcomed the ~ew men with a short ni ht Octob 14 Realiz'ng th t •it assembled in the first impor- members advocated a change from through the reading of the mas-address, and th1s was followed by en- g ' er · . 1 .a . · Tuesday night to some other time. thusiastic speeches from others. there has been Widespread dis- tant meeting of the year President Thayer announced, in view ter Latin poet, Vergil, by count-

These men were given the initiation: cussion in regard to pledge day Wednesday evening, October 8. of the small attendance Tuesday, that less generations of school chil­R. C. Gupton, C. H. Shepherd, Rob- and the rushing period among The club has laid plans to pre- motions for a different meeting hour dren," said Dr. Hubert Poteat in

ert Holle~an, :r. A .. Link, H. w. Bau- the fraternity circles the .council I sent its first play here some time were in order. The members, how- an address· on "The Influence of com, Jr., R. H. Smith, Bartram Robe- . ' 1 d 'd d t t k d fi 't t' Son' Hubert Harmon, ~Clyde Hayes, fully discussed the matter. The next month. ever, ecr e 0 a e no e me ac Ion Vergil," delivered in the chapel

1 untll Saturday when the regular bus-

Herman Patty, Harry Sell, Ruffin Ha:r- council has the power to act on Edward Harrell, who was president iness session is held. At that time Wednesday morning celebrating per, James Little, Allie Hayes, S. B. and deten:nine what should con- of the local club last year and who a count will be taken of those who the bi-millennial anniversary of Foster, A. :r. Early, Clayton Rouse, stitute rushing. was outstanding in taking the leading favor some night other than Tuesday the birth of Vergil at Andes, C. L. Beavers, .John Burns, Hadley ~ roles of some of the plays of the for the meeting of the second section. M 0 b H d S A H Rush Period · h t d' t near sntua, cto er 15, 70 BC. ayes, an • . award. prevJ.ous season, was c osen ° Irec The program for the evening was as

The rush period began midnight of the organization during the forthcom- follows: The first part of Dr. Poteat's address Business 1\lecting October 14, and it will last until mid- ing season. Frank Fletcher, also a Oration-Lloyd Thayer. was taken up with the life of Vergil.

The society held its monthly busi- night of October 27. prominent member of the group last Current Events-David Ball. His father had a farm in Andes, and ness meeting Saturday morning, Oc- During this period each fraternity year, was elected president of the Debate: Resolved, That the United Vergil received a good education. After tober 11. has the privilege of extending to first- club.. States Government should refuse to one attempt in court, Vergil left law,

Kyle Hayes, president of the society ~year men ordinary social courtesy! Or- Plans are under way among the club give military protection to property took his books, and went to a farm last fall, was unanimously given the dinary social courtesy consists of tak· members to make the local organiza- which is owned by its citizens and in northern Italy. This was ruthlessly · honor of Society Day president. This ing a first-year man to a show, to Ra- tion a member in the Carolina Dra- which is situated on foreign soil. Af- seized in the Agrarian division, and being an even year, it was the Philo- leigh, or to the drug store. A fra- matic .Association as well as to enter firmative, Grady Carriker, Blaine he went to ~ome about 41 or 40 B.C. mathesians' tur~ 'to choose the pre- ternity man has the right to escort a into active participation on the dra- Jones; negative, Helms, Meekins. to apply to Augustus, who restored siding officer. Marshals who were first-year man to his house or hall matic tournament of the State next Jokes-H. c. vaughn. hi~ land to him. Vergil and Augustus chosen to wear the red and whit~ for whenever he sees :f;t. spring. A play for this purpose is now Lloyd Thayer introduced the pro- became fast friends. He- returned to Mother Phi on the occasion were Leon- There shall not be held any "organ- being written. It is further hoped that gram with an oration, "The Greatest his farm, and studied and wrote. idas Smith, chief; Jack Lineberry, and ized gathering" for the purpose of in· the dramatic club will find a cotirdi- Are the Little Things." Mr. Thayer His Eclogues, a series of pastoral Irby Jackson. ducing first-year men to become mem- na.ting: group among the glee club mem- stressed the rising materialism of the poems, were written about 41-39 B.C.

Monday and Thursday nights were bers of the various fraternities. Any bers and that some efforts in operetta world at present. He cited events In 31 B.C. he completed the Georgics, set for the sectional meetings in order smoker, banquet, or· party given for will r,esult. in history where vice and material an agricultural poem, intended to in­that each member might find a time first-year men shall be determined as Try-outs for the cast of the first corruption caused the downfall of em- fluence the people to return to the

'' h -ch d t · f "th h _.organized gathering. HoW1oveT,- ithe .Pla"~·~<.!.lt.I;J.ing. Bu. t. the Truth, a. three- -(JoM .. in .. n-• 011 -..n.,., two '_eo ___ untry. T .. he;1 nrit!ng ~of -th:C. · Ai:neftl.--w I oes no .Inter ere WI ·a· ea-vy - ... ~IN .--"v

schedule the· next day. Council passed a new law that goes act comedy, will take place · in the occupied the last ten years of Vergil's -~ ~ compose the final group.

',,~ r

. .,.,

-.i ,,

I

First Perfonnance into effect this year which states that Phi Hall as soon as the p)ay books life. He fell sick at Megara and died any nm~.ber of first-year men may be arrive. The club expects to make Dr. Lynch Explains at Brundisium in 19 B.C. According to word received from in a fraternity house at the same time as many as five public performances 'The· Burni"ng Bush' Before he died p.e requested that and it shall not be termed as an or- during the school year. his manuscript of the Al:neid be

Manager Biggs, the club will make Dr. H. M. Poteat To many trips this season. The first per-~ S ·..t k 0 H I formance will probably be given just __ pea n ymno ogy ganized gathering. At the close of this Mrs. Carpenter, who so ably coached brought to him that he might destroy after Thanksgiving. period there will be a period of silence the group last year, will not be in Compares. Om· Local l\laple Tt•ees To it, for he had not finished his careful

The club is at present having two Noted Mnsiciru:'- and Speaker Gives which will last three days. No fra- position to resume her work with the 'The Burning Bush' Viewed revision of the poem. His friends, practice sessions per week. More fre- Lectm.·e At Request of Minis- . quent practice will be held in the near terial Association

ternity man will be allowed to com- club this year. Mr. Edward Harrell, By !\loses however, realizing the value of the municate in any way with a first-year her successor, is fully qualified to take manuscript, did not grant his request.

future. , This year's club is composed of the following men:

man during the-period of silence. Any over the post. Mr. Harrell holds a I " . . "Vergil has suffered more from edi-breach of this law will be punished diploma in expression and has had , God .Aimrg~ty }o:ves an honest m- tions and commentaries and discus-

W.l:G. Temples, E. L. Sm_ith, T. G.

Dr. Hubert M. Poteat, pro~ssor of -Oontinued on page jour wide experience in dramatics. I terrogatwn r pomt, was _the comment sions and lectures and. essays and Latin, author, musician, athlete, fra- of Dr. J. \\. Lynch, Wake Forest Col- analyses and all the the t t ternal lead,er, and noted speaker, has lege: professor of Bible, when his at-~ weapons of the professi:nar a~~!~Y Ch;mey, S. A. Howard, M. C. Russell,

J. E. Sharpe, J. L. Hardie, R. F. Cran­ford', E. L. Davis, E. E. Harrell, A; V. Washburn, E. R. Jones, C. W. Teague, R. N. Simms, Jr.,~ H. 0. Hormann, Tom Dysard, L. Y. Theyer, C. H. Stroup, Jack Humphrey, E. T. Harrell, G. P. Cullipher, Frank Fletcher, A. K. Cheek, George Gronto, C. J. Grey, T. R. Benton, Nelson Parker, Rex Brown, George Noel, Allen Byrd, Carl Brown, W. G. Poole, H. W. Baucom, Jr., Spencer O'Brian, A. L. Wagoner, B. 0. Deaton, E. Y. Fox, Carey Dowd, .John Blackburn, Ellis Page, Bill Day, W. F. Worthinger.

accepted the Ministerial Association's cz ( L y; M tent1on was called to one of the cam invitation to deliver his famous lee- ass 0 ast ear ow pus maples which had put on its cloak tban any other genius, ancient or mod-

ern," Dr. Poteat declared. He went ture on Hymnology next Wednesday of red.' on to discuss the influence of the night, Octob.er 22. This lecture will Engaged_ In Pro£essr·ons This tree, every leaf aflame, had "pl'ince of the poets" through the ages. be given in the chapel hall and the ,-4 reminded the theologian of incorrect "It is hard to find a single Roman officers of the association are urging interpretations which many make of poet who does not owe a debt to Ver-not only their own members, but all that portion of the Old Testament gil." he stated. In modern literature students, to attend this meeting. Out of a Class of Ninety-nine, Fifty-five Are At Work In Their concerning Moses and the bum·ing -Oontinued on page two

Joint Social To Be Held At Meredith

Wake Forest-Meredith ~iterary Societies To Hold Social On

November ·tst

Dr. Hubert, as he is affectionately Chosen. Fields, While Forty-four Are Continuing bush-" ... why the bush burns and called by the boys, is one of the most is not consumed, etc." The bush re-popular men on the Wake Forest cam- Studies In Universities !erred to here was the acasia, which pus. The students always consider like our maple in October, he said, it a royal treat to 'hear him speak. W k F t . d" t . Th 1 d 1 1. of its mem- was woven of blood and fire. "The He has delivered this lecture with a e ores • accor Ing 0 In-1 e c ass .an oca Ion Bible is full of oriental imagery," he te1ling effect in many of the most formation from the registrar's bers are~ asiollows: explained, "which, taken out, would prominent churches in the country. office, rep0rts fifty-five of the 1\iedical Students destroy the soul of it." Christ referred He is a champion of the use· of bet- ninety-nine members of last Jefferson Medical College-J. c. to himself as "The Light of the ter church music. He has for many year's senior class in some re- Ayers, Robert M. Sales, H. M. Patter- \Vor!d," "The Door," "The Truth," etc., years waged an unceasing warfare on son, John M. Phelps, H. K. Young. and in saying "Take up your cross and the jazz type of music used in some sponsible profession which con- s u . . J A G' follow Me," he wasn't talking about

h 1 1 h . yracuse niversity- . . Ill, F. churches. fines t em arge Y to t e1r own M. Trady, p_ w. Joyner, G. w. King. shoulq_ering two angular poles." · Dr. Poteat will intersperse this lee- State Forty four men are ~con J Dr. Lynch has no patience with • - - Richmond Medical College-W. J. •

ture with piano numbers, showing tinuing their education in uni- Buffaloe, J. H. Patterson, J. B. Perry, "pious ignorance.'' While praising just how church music should and the heroes of faith who had no op-should not be played. The meeting versities of higher learning, J. D. Phillips, Jr. portunity, he denounced those who will begin promptly at 6:30 o'clock chief amop.g these being medical Duke University-C. N. Adams, J. choose darkness instead of light, and and it is predicted that a large crowd students. W. Joyner, W. R. Wiley. hide it under the cloak of religion. will enjoy and profit by the lecture. Out of the class of ninety·nine, Northwestern Medical University-

The literary societies of Meredith Miss Eva Vause, Nurse, and Wake Forest will have a joint so-cial at Meredith College on the eve- Reports On Infirmary

thirty are teaching this year, largely J. T. Biggs, P. Y. Greene, C. F. Hawes. in various high schools throughout the Temple Medical University-H. H. State. Many students do this each Brickhouse, H. C. Grubb, W. A. Pitt­year, only as an immediate occupation man.

W. H. Ford To Speak At B.S.U. Conference

and hoping later to perhaps enter Pennsylvania Medical College-J. S.l . ning of November 1, according to some other field. .

1

Holbrook, Margaret Lineberry, R. B. His Subject At Atlanta \Viii Be 'My Extends a Cordial \Velcome To 'Sick' plans formulated by representatives of Twenty-nine of the class of last year Outlaw. Clll'istiun Duty In t.he Col-

the two institutions. It is the desire Students; Vaccination for Colds were medical students and are con-~ Universitv of Maryland-Max E. kge Chur<·h' of those in charge to get the society Being Given tinning their study of medicine, largely Whicker.

·-members "acquai~ted" before the an· M' E V in out-of-State universities. Some of 1 M.A. Med., Wake l<'orest-R. L. \V. Herschel Ford, Wake· Forest nual Society Day: to be held here on ISS v~ .ause, 1_1urse . of t~~ in- the more prominent medical schools I EvarlS, l\'1. A. Williams, R. J. Sykes. junior, has recently been invited to November 8. On that ,day local stu- firmary, said m an mterVJew: I do which have accepted Wake Forest sen- . make a speech on the program of dents have the privilege of being hosts not think that i~ is wise to say just I ior medical students are: Jefferson La\1'yca·s the South wide B. S. U. Conference, to their girl friends. how many I could accommodate, because Medical College, Syracuse University, D. , V. Allen, Wilmington; J. M. which is to be held in Atlanta, Oc-

Wade Brown, president of the Eu- the boys might think that they would Richmond Medical College, Duke· Uni- Andrews, Laurel Hill; A. L. Aydlette, tober SO-November 2. His subject will zelian Society, and J.' M. Early, Phil· be a nuisance here and go home or versity, Northwestern University, Eliza'beth City; R. C. Brady, Laurel be, "My Christian Duty in the College omathesian Society president, together stay in their rooms. I have had as Temple University, Pennsylvania Med- Hill;.H. C. Carroll, Hamlet; W. W. Ca-l Church." This talk will come on Sun­with other representatives of the two many as 42 here at one time. Just ical College, University of Maryland. boon, Elizabeth. City; C. B. Caudle, day morning at the closing hour of societies, will have a meeting with give them to understand that the in- Three members of the class are in· Wadesboro; Bra.,.ton Craven, Trinity; the- meeting. the Meredith representatives on Mon- firmary is for their use, and if they structing in the biology and chemistry J. L. Duncan, Forest City; J. B. Dula, This conference will be attended by day afternoon to make further plans are sick they may come down here." departments here. Leno~r; T. G. Daniel, Greensboro; R. 2,000 Baptist students from 17 south­for the social. She said that the students were hav- The college awarded degrees to F. Davidson, Charlotte; W. H. Elliott, ern states. This type of meeting is

The invitation will be extended to ing more trouble with colds now than twenty-seven men from the law school Jr., Hertford; S. J. Edwards, Ruther- held only once every four years, the all students, whether they are society anything else, and that a few of them last year. These men may be found ford~on; W. L. Farmer, Wilmington; last meeting being held in Birming­members or not, to be present for the had been vaccinated. Miss Vause is practicing their profession in the va- K. R. Giles, Marion; J. H. Griffin, ham in 1926. Some of the most prom­occasion. This excludes no one. on duty at the infirmary all the time rious cities and towns throughout the Wendell; H. S. Mull, Morganton; inent speakers of the country will ap-

According to previous arrangements except from 2 until 4 o'clock in the State. Rhetto Martin, Smithfield; F. R. Me- pear on the program. A number of the literary organization on the two afternoon. Five of t:tre members of the minis- Ninch, Jr., Charlotte; W. H. McElwee, Wake Forest men are planning to at-campuses were to· have a picnic at Dr. Mackie is at the Infirmary at terial class of the preceding year are Stat~sville; Alvin Outlaw, Wake For- tend tbe conference. an early date, but through the fine 1 o'clock every day for consultatiQn further pursuing tlleir course in The- est; 1 R. B. Street, Charlotte; D. H. Ford has also accepted an invitation cooperation of Miss Biggers, ·dean of with the students. He will' have this ological seminaries, most of which are Stratnge, Henderson; F. A. Talbott, to speak on the program of the Bap­Meredith, and the presidents of the duty until the middle of November, located in southern territory. There Wa~e Forest; W. D. Thompson, White· tist State Convention, which meets in

societies, the present date when some other doctor will take his are eight of the ministerial class of ville>; B. M. Williams, Ahoskie. · Raleigh in November. His talk will been set. place. last year who are now active pastors. --Oontinued on page t-wo be upon Christian Education.

Wake Forest Men Prominent Authors

Spilman Collection Contains 301 Books Written By 140 Wake

Forest College Men

Three hundred and one books writ­ten by 140 Wake Forest College men, among which are the works of Thomas Dixon, John Charles McNeill, Joseph Quincy Adams, Collier Cobb, Gerald Johnson, and Laurence Stallings, form the unique Spilman collection of books in the Wake Forest College library.

Thirteen members of the Wake For· est faculty have made their literary contributions to the collection. Num­bered among these are the books in medicine by President Thurman D. Kitchin; the poetry of Benjamin F. Sledd; science and religion, Dr. >Vil­li.am Louis Poteat; hymnology and Latin literature, Dr. Hubert M. Po­teat; Baptist history, Dr. George W. Paschal; German language, Dr. J. H. Gorrell; sociology, Dr. C. Chilton Pear-son.

In the group of religious books are included a large number by Leonard G. Broughton, Clarence Dixon, Joseph Franklin Love, Hight C. Moore, Sam­uel J. Porter, A. T. Robertson, and others of note. Dr. B. W. Spilman, donor of the collection, has a number of his own writings in this group. Among the scientific books are those of Irving Hardesty, Carl Murchison, and Hubert A. Royster.

An interesting volume is that con­taining the war letters of Kiffin Yates Rockwell, the first American aviator to fall during the World War. Other books 'of especial interest are by Jo­siah Finch, published in 1853; by Geo. 'W. Purefoy, 1'.~54, and by Louis Shuck, 1856. '

Page 2: II I ~nlb ani) mtarh · 2018-03-20 · C. L. Beavers, .John Burns, Hadley ~ roles of some of the plays of the for the meeting of the second section. M 0 b H d ayes, an S • A H

Page Two OLD GOLD AND BLACK

OOlh (Jinlh anb J!rllark to affiliate himself for the re- originators of the two lines of descent. Jill ~ ests to obtain more favors. Nothing + + mainder of his college days. He says man and woman should be Q ~ l could prove the amendment to classify I · l

The freshman should, first of substituted. pen r orum property to "be more dangerous than Alumni News the fact that its advocates are working

all, observe closely the men in Another freshman earnestly inquired t3:! under cover. +----------------each fraternity and find out in if the revolving doors at the entrance KILL THIS AMENDMENT * * * which fraternity are the most of the ·sir Walter Hotel were run bY The· only person who can vote for B11 D. LACY MOBl,YDE men of the type with whom he electri<:ity. · the "classification" amendment, with

Arch C. Cree, '98, has come back to North Carolina. After holding pas­torates in Gaffney, S. C., Louisville, Ky., Nashville, Tenn., and Moultrie, Ga., he became enlistment secretary of the Home Mission Board of. the South­ern Baptist Convention, continuing in this position for three years. In 1916 he became executive secretary of the ·Baptist State Convention of Georgia with headquarters in Atlanta. He has been an important factor in denomina­tional and civic life wherever he has lived, and Wake Forest welcomes him back to.his native state with all heart-. iness. He is~pastor of the First Bap. tist Church of Salisbury.

Staff JOSMPII M. MINTON .................... --Editor-in-Chief RAY F. B.u:DY ............................ Busincss A-tanager

Staff Oificer·s GRAHAM • M,\RTIN, JR ............. Manag\nU Ed!t<n" C. H. STUOUI'>: .....•.........••••••.••.••••. llfanagu1g Ed•t<n" C. A. WH.t.IA>ts ..... ......•..•.......•••••.• Associate Editor L. L. CJtAIG ...................................... As•ociate I~dit<n" S. L. MoRGAN, JR •..••...•.•••..•...•......... Fcature Editor JoHN H.\Rllli>. .....•..•.....•....••......•...• _ ...••...•. .Art Bditor JOHN Bt~NUb'"R ................... ...•..•..... Excha1tfJf! b•ditor T. W. Wn.cox...-··············· ............... .Sports Editor

Staff \Vriters I. H. o· H.\NOLAN ···-··-········· .. ·····A•sistant Sports GAY Hr~r.=sLr:Y ···-·····--··· ................ Assista·nt Sp~rts E. C. SnAinLE-..• ...•..•..•...••.•....•.. As8'ista11t Sruwts JOHN HARllUL. ....•..•.... -······-········Assistant Spt¥rts D. B. BRYAN ........... - .....•...........•..•.. A ... -istant Sports CHARLBS TEAGU>} ················-·······A•sislant Sport.s To be filled ........................................................ Chapcl F. U. FLBTCHlffi ............................................ - •• - .. Law ELDlmT MCMILLAN .......••......•......•.•..•.......... Medicinc HOWARD PHll.IPS ........... ---------·-······---Fraternitie.s G. A. MARTIN •••..••.•..•.•.••..••..••.•.•••••••••••••.•••••• Th.eatre llonnv BURNS ..• - .............................. - ..•... .Phi Society DnAD Wn.JTE ..... ---------·-·················--·········-Eu. Socict11 E. L. S>IITH ....••..........••.•. _ .. _ ••. Dcbatc and Council W. H. Fono .................................................. Religio.u~ l>lss. E. B. EAJtNSHAW ................................ Al11mn.i LOUISC HOLDING ............................... - ............... Social MRs. E. T. CRJTTENDBN .. Library Correspondent DR. G. W. PASCIIAL ...................... Faculty AdviscT

H~'POJ'tcrs SAM BuxTON HoKJo:: Nomus W. H~ BunROUGIIS ROUEI'T HOLLBMAN

A. v. WASHilURN

1\lanagcrial Department J. W. HowELL .................•...... Advertising Manager G. A. O'BRIEN .................. _ .... Advcrtising Manager C. C. EDDING~'"R ........................ Circulation Manager A. V. Wr.snnuRN ...•..• .Asst. CircuiatitmManagcr

wishes to associate. He should The best interest of the public in his own best interest at heart, is the

b h th . Frosh A insists that Georgia and general and taxpayers in particular owner of intangible property. There

o serve ow ese men ai e re- Georgia Tech are Baptist schools 1>e· demands de~eat of the proposed <Jmend· is being formed a secret organization garded by the rest of the stu- cause their pennants are printed on ment to the State constitution to au- of owners of intangible securities and dents on the campus, whether or\ the cover of the Baptist Student." thorize classification of property for representative industrialists to secure

h • f 1 d t h ta.xation. passage of the amendment. If most

not t eir el ow stu en s ave The proposed amendment is to be taxpayers are sheep, there is wolf in thought enollgh Of them to hon The freshmen got a brief respite - voted on in November, and is to this amendment.

th 'th ffi Al th from wearing caps on Thursday when . or em Wl o ce. so e change section 3, article 5, of the con- Every voter should be sure to vote we beat State College and ·made scholastic average of the frater- stitution which says that "taxation his referendum ballot, because only "a whoopee at the fair. nity should be kept in mind. ot shall be uniform and according to true majority of the votes cast" is required

value in money," and is to substitute to pass the amendment. There will be There have been some cases The student·govern·ment says we can in its place a ~rovision that "uni- two ballots for each amendment. The

in the past where certain fra- spank the frosh with impunity if they formity shall extend only to ench class safe thing to do is to vote the ballot on ternities have disregarded the don't wear caps. We'd ·rather spank 1 of property,. and that the General As· which_ is. printed the words "Aga. i~st

them with paddles. const t t d t tb rulings of the Pan-Hellenic sembly may classify real and personal! 1 u ton amen men au onzmg Council in their frenzied at- property." · classification of property for taxation."

· · TH £ LJB RAR Y The text of the amendment arouses "' • * tempts to induce men to JOln 1 the opposition of most people who read Leading economists whose books are their particular fraternities. So it. The term "classification" itself taught at Wake Forest probably favor far there has been no trouble of These October days- means authority to fix different tax. classification of property for taxation, this sort this year. This is rei- ". . . when skies put on rates on different kinds of property, I but I believe it will be found that no

James F. Greason, '06, who has prac­ticed law successfully in Sapulpa, Okla., for 20 years, is a candidate for the office of district judge.

Lester P. Martin, '18, a physician of Mocksville, N. C., writes to inquire when President Kitchin's inauguration will take place. He wishes to at­tend. atively unimportant, however, The old, old sophis(ries of June" whereas now all property is taxed at economist attempts to advocate unUm-

the same rate. ited authority · to classify as iG. in-for no action can so condemn we turn, voiceless, to the immortal • * * * eluded in the proposed amendment. R. W. Crutchfield, '30, is teacbing at any fraternity in the eyes of the ·singer~ ':'ho can hymn ?ur ~eeling. How The amendment to classify property Weeksville, N. C.

Prospective pledges themselves' we r_eJoJce, once agam, m the sheer is. dangerous to taxpayers and prop- Oscar W. King, '02, medical director

. llovelmess of Keats' "Season of m1sts Class of Last Year Now of the Equitable Life Assurance So-as the actio~ of any m~m~ers and mellow fruitfulness!" and in erty should it become a part of the Engaged In Professions ci.ety, 393 7th Avenue, New York City, of a fratermty along th1s lme.l Shelley'" 1"nspt'red "0 w1"ld West -nr1·nd, supreme law of the land, because it · . ~ - " contains no limit. Under authority of IS anxiOus to secure a copy o. the It is enough to caution the fr~sh- tho: ~reath. of _Autumn's bein~ .... " such ·an unlimited amendment to clas- (Oontinuea trom page one) 1904 Howler. Anyone who knows men to beware of such orgamza-~ ~m1ly Dtck;nso_n, half child, half I sify property the Legislature might -vir- where one of these annuals may . be tions aas have such a sense of sprJte, has WlllmSICally told us that- tually destroy some property by taxa- Educational Students-Placements found will please notify Dr. King. their obligations to thenlselves I "The maple wears a gayer scarE tion and almost exempt other prop. As Teachers Coite L. Sherrill,. '12, is practising

d h ll 11 Th fi ld

1 t erty from duty; whereas, at present Sherman Helms, Franklin County; medicine in Statesville, N. C. His ad- ·

an to t e co ege. e e a scare gown. the requirement that there shall be E. P. Faulkner, Norlina; W. H. Over- dress is 348 North Center street. Freshmen, consider carefully I Lest I should be old-fashioned. only one tax rate makes it obligatory man, Castalia; R. W. Crutchfield, R. V. Moss, '18, who is ·in the lum-

the step you will so shortly take. I I'll put a trinket on." upon the courts to prot:ct al! alike Weeksville; V. E. .Jennings, Gold Sand, ber business in Hickory, N. C., with Your future happiness and wel- * * "' from the hazards of fixmg d1fferent Franklin County; H. D. Jones, Knight- the Piedmont Building Supply Cam-

s h th · 1 t tax rates dale; B. M. Tomberlin, Pensacola; C: pany wrt'tes of h1's prt"de 1·n the growtb fare here may be impaired by i omeone, w e er consctous y or no , . ,

S ll B~CHll"TIO N PRICE:

$2.00 PER COLLEGE YEAR

Member of NORTH CAROLINA INTERCOLLEGIATE

PRESS ASSOCIATION

. . ~ h I left a heritage of beauty when he Both the average individual tax bill S. Phifer, Clayton; J. \V. Gaddy, Jr., of the student body this year and in a wrong ~eClSlOll. • Keep t. e grouped sugar maples and magnolias and the lmndred·million-dollar bill col- Fellowship University of Wisconsin; the record the football team has made. above 1nenboned pOints well Ill together to the east of Wingate Me- lected by the State and its political W. R. Hatley, Anson; 0. S. Townsend, In speaking of the Davidson-Wake For- '"l mind and choose well. I moria! Hall. Now the maples shout subdivisions are· results of continued Brunswick County; W. E. Hollar, Gold est game, he says: "I have not missed '

G. A. M. 1

1

the leading parts in the orchestra, extravagance that cannot longer be tol· Sand, Franklin County; D. E. Jester, I one of these games in years; it is the __ __:===========---... while the graver magnolias support erated; and to "jump from the frying Burgaw; G. W. Denton, Stanly County; bright spot. in our football schedule Approved by 1\lERCHANTS ASSOCIATION, R:ALEIGH

Entered as second-class matter January 22, 1916, at the postoffice at Wake Forest, North Carolina, under the uct of March 3, 1879.

All matters of business should be addressed to the Business 1\.lanager. Box 218. and all other matter should be addressed to the Editor-in-Chief, Box 218.

Ad\·ertising rates quoted on request. Subscriptions due in advance. Raleigh Office: Capital Printing Company,

NOTICE

Tl1e office will be open to receive copy Tuesday night between the hours of 8 and 10. Drinl: copy in at that time. It is \the deadline. Preparation of the copy for press will be done every Wednesday, beginning at 1:00 p.m.

Rushing

,.. ~~and accompany the melody. To com- pan into the fire" by ratifying the 0. J. Murphy, Merry Hill; T. D. Dan- for me."

lr REMARKS plete the fantasy a towering elm di- amendment to classify property is in- ner, Rock Fish High School, .Hoke Edward H. Kunath, 1929·30, writes FAMOUS rects the symphony. capable even of serious recommenda- County; W. R. Walker, Northampton from North Bergen, N. J., of his re------------------' ,. • * tion. County; T. S. Lawrence, Lowe's Grove, gret that he cannot return this session

Of * • • Durham County; Albert Martin, Boone 'd h · d On the approach the two-thou· an wis es the college a happy an

Recent revelations in the Harvm·a If the unlimited proposal to classify Trail; J. H. Smith, Robersonville, f 1 Crimson bring out the fact that 57 saodth birthday of Virgil, we recall property is ratified in November there Martin County; W. H. Burgess, Pas- success u year. per cent of the Radcliffe graduates that in the "Divine Comedy" Dante will be the same shameful practice at quo tank County; T. E. 'Jones, Wa- S. C. Garrison, '11, professor of Edu­who marry take Harvard men for hus·l honored Virgil by choosing him as th G I A bl . . tauga County; A. A. Powell, Ruther- cation Psychology in George Peabody bands. This, however, is not as bad as guide for two-thirds of his journey e enetra,.7 shs~~ Y ~s 1 ~'f ~0W: 1~ College for Teachers, Nashville, Tenn., . . through the realms of the hereafter .. vogue a nas m.,ton m rammg ford County; L. P. Beck, Stanfield; T. announces a change in his address. 1t m1ght be, as 95 per cent of the Rad- . . . ' tariff legislation. Instead of tariff the A. Parker, Louisburg; H. E. 'Vhite, H · cliffe araduates do not marr•· at all.- and m expressmg hts love and veuera-1 1 th" ld b "fi . ;, t e now occupies a house on the col-

"' ' tion lie bas left what is perhaps the pay mg wou e xmg tax ra es Dobson; P. H. \Vilson, Wake Forest; lege campus. lVesleuan Al·yu.~. to fav r certa· k" ds f p t E R Woodard Coinjock· J L Wilson •' · __ w.•·· __ world's most magnificent tribute of 0 • . 10 hm .0 ro~er. ~· , · · c' ' · · • B. Y. Tyner, '08, for a number of

one artist to another. It is fitting still In explammg t e pr esen~ u;D.lform Linwood; C. · Young, Durham. years dean of the Normal College in Man has uncovered no evidence to look upon Vir~il as he appeared to . tax guarantee of the constitutiOn the In Theological Seminaries Fredericksburg, Va., has recently com-

whatever that indicates that death Is Dante, "one who "goes in darkness and Supr.e~e Court says that "it is the pleted a course of graduate student at not the end.-Olare'nc:e Dan·ow. bears a light behind him, and after provJ~lon_ and was the purpose of the Crozier Seminary-A. M. Church. George Peabody College, and entered

him makes the people wise." constitution that thereafter there Southern Baptist Tlieological Sem- upon his duties as dean of Winthrop --W.F.--

It is a virtue to be ambitious, but it is deadly when it absorbs so much of our time that we have none left for conternplation.-Rev. Dr. llenry Dar­

* * ,. s~oul? be no discrimination in taxa-1 inary-R. L. Council~an. . College, Rock Hill, S. c. · •>I}. t10o m tavor of any class, person, or Southwestern Baptist Semmary-J. w. E. Fleming, '14, is principal of· 1

Dr. Paschal is hard at work correct- interest. In this respect the present 0. Carter, R. J. Rasberry. j th ch 1 · F S · N C ' ing proof for his "History of North . e s oo m uquay prmgs. · • constitution allows no discriminations Graduate Fellow in English, Uni· M w E t '17 tt t 1 Carolina Baptists," which is to be is· · · ger on, • a orney a aw. and shows no favor." The courts could -versity of North Carolina:.._c. A. Mad 901 B 11 Bid K "ll T lington. sued next month at the time of the • ur.we g., noxv1 e, enn.,

__ w.F. __ no longer afford this protection if the dry. ·t f 11 "I th" k f th ld centennial meeting of the Baptist State I wn es as o ows: 1n o e o As one woman hater to another, let's Convention. :·classification" amendment is ratified · Past.ors days at Wake Forest with much pleas·

celibate together.-Jdaho ~ryonau.t. I * • .. m November. * * * 1 W. A. Andrews, Princeton; E. F. ure and hope to come back for a re--- w.F. -- The crying need for a depository for ·Baker, Kernersville; E. L. Bradley, union some day."

I · 1

1 · · ·

1 h ld I Bapt'st e d h b 1 d Once already the people of this State Spencer; J. C. Yates, Statesville; Cur- W. L. Powell '27 is business man-

t IS a ways t 1e mmonttes t 1at o 1 r cor s as een amp Y emoo- have defeated a proposal to classify . . . ·' ' · · the ke" of progress. it is always strated during the past few weeks t1s Bnssom, Cumberland, P. T. Wor- ager and publisher of tile D1x1e Un-

' · • • property. Just two years ago such a 11 y ·11 • J H · h E · d 't · d d' t d t th through those who are unafraid to be "'hen church after church has sent us . . re , auceyvt e • . . Smtt ' ver·~- erwn er, a magazlne e lCa e o e

I proposal was defeated, but th1s amend-~ tt . F G \" lk . T R' · t t f • Th :ffi f different that advancement comes to an S.O.S. call for information. Too . ". - " . e s, . . •ra et, ar tver. m eres s o Insurance. e o ces o

• • 1

• • • ment 1s framed to fool people mto the concern are at 113 Salisbury street human socJety.-Raymond B. Fosdwk.' often, alas. such mformatwn IS not voting for it. The popular term "uni- . '

--w.F. -- ·forthcoming, owing to the fact that form taxation" is included but its I Eus Plan Change In Meeting _Raletgh. · · priceless records have been left to the

1

. . • 1 The Clark Umvers1ty Press of Wor-H slighted, slight the slight and love care of irresponsible individuals. It is mention IS or no co~~eq~ence. because I Hour cester, Ma:>S., announces among· its ,.

the slighter.-Szmryeon. the amendment says umformtty as to publications in Psychology for 1930 om: earnest hope that a very large each class of property." · · • • '

--w.F. -- number of minute books will be (Continued trorn, page one) two books by Carl Murchtson, 09, who It is estimated that every person in turned over to us for safekeeping, now . Thel pr?:os~.d am~ndment :a ~uthor- pires. His oration impressed the is professor, of Psychology and direc­

the United States is on the average that the urgency for such a procedure Jz; c.a~sJ dcadl~n o prop:r Y IS n~t thought that happiness is built tor of the Psychological Laboratories in $2.32 poorer than he was a year ago.,llas been shown. ~;en m_ el~ ed ofr any goo purdp?tseh o through the simplicity and love of Clark :University, Social Psychology At least the est .nlate affords a good te mam JO Y 0 taxpayers, an 1 as . ' . . and OrwLina.z Intelligence. Announce-

! ' * " * as a motive one of the most insidious the home. To a nation speclahzmg . d 1 f . 1 d

I

Just at this season of the year it would perhaps be appropriate to consider for· a moment or two the all-important subject of fra­ternities and fraternity rushing. It would be a safe estimate to say that for the next few weeks 75 per cent of the new men on the campus have this subject paramount in their minds. Many of the freshmen have come to Wake Forest with preconceived notions concerning fraternities. In their earlier days most of them have read stories and seen motion pictures depicting cam­pus life which have led many of them to believe ,that fraternity life is three-fourths of college life and that their education is not complete until they have "made" a fraternity.

excuse for not paying that poker debt I Among those who have come to the purposes recognized by political sci· in worldly gain Mr. Thayer says, "We ~e;tbls h~a e ~ 50f 0f SIX vo ~~es .e i' of $2.25 in_curred last September.- library during the past three weeks to ence There is no exaggeration in say may concentrate upon materialism un· :_ e Y. 1m an ° our _PSYC 0 ogtca ~ . Utah ChTomcle. use the material in the Baptist CoHee- ing the amendment is an attempt t~ 'til that is taken from us. What then JOUSroakls. L Bl t ,25 . . '

The Pan-Hellenic Council, the governing body of the fraterni­ties, has acted very wisely in not allowing freshmen to be rushed before October 15. The fresh­men have been in school now for almost a month and have had ample time to look around and see which fraternities rate the best, who belongs to fraterni­ties and who does not, and, of the fraternity men, who belongs to which fraternity.

During this period of two weeks, ending October 27, tl!e freshmen should make some im­portant decisions. The question of paramount importance at the moment among the freshmen is, "Shall I affiliate myself with any fraternity, and if so, which one?" Taking for granted that the first part of the question has been answered affirmatively, let us consider the basis upon which the freshman should select that fraternity with which he wishes

NOTICE To All Organizations

All organi:r..ations desiring to have reports of their meetings and proceedings published in Old Gold aml Black will im­mediately appoint a correspond~ ent to fill this position and communicate same to the editor of this paper.

I tion were: Mrs. Satterwhite, Mrs. Ed- will our· civilization be worth?" an ey · an °0 • • is restgnmg die House, Knightdale; Miss Lillie "put something ov.er" on the public in Various current events were dis- his pastorate in Louisburg, N. C., to These Odd Freshmen general, and that tts passage would be enter upon graduate work in Harvard

1 Harper, Mrs. L. C. Newton, Louisburg; a victory for political immorality in cussed bY. David Ball. Mr. Ball in· University. of Ours Mrs. Swain, Mrs. ~unn, Raleigh; Re-v. corrupting the legislative morals o"f eluded in h~s notes the travels of Mr.

S. L. Morgan, Smtthfield: Rev. Jesse this State. Hoover durmg the week past, reports By E. L. SMITH McCarter, Wendell; W. Frank Black- * • * · of the _judicial department, and a dis·

. . . more (for Rev. R. C. ~aster), ·warsaw;

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The maio argument thus far ad- I ~ussion of Mr. Ford's manufacturing Freshman enthustasttc chem1st Rev. Dowell, Forestvllle; Rev. C. H. vanced for ratification of ·the t mterests in Russia. A yth• y N d I

would like_ t? k~ow if there is any\ Norris, Wake ~orest. '"e have also classification amendment is p::~;r it . The debate of the evening was on n lUg ou ee I marked ?IstmctJ?n between volu~e had a number. of letters requesting the I would result in lower taxes on notes, the query: Resolved, That the United , . an~ velocity. 'Ve d ask the great Em- loan of matenal; * * · bonds, and mortgages. This is true, States Government should refuse .to th PRINTING L• stem. .. . but not many people win vote to lower give military protection to property I e , IRI··

Axel Munthe's much discussed "The\ the tax on intangibles when such which· is owned by its citizens and · A certain young frosh wanted to St?:Y ~f San _Miehele" has been re- would mean more taxes for other prop- which is si!uated on foreign soil.

catch a date at N. c. c. w. He was cened m_ the hbra~y. Says the Satu1·· erty to pay. The other argument for Mr. Meekms and Mr. Helms won for CALL PHONE told that he would have to pay a dol- day Revze;v of L-~terat1t1·e: "When a I ratification is that the amendment the negative side. Both Meekins and 1351 Iar and a quarter an hour for a chap. man combmes the glory of a far-fiung would mean reduction in the land tax. Helms stressed the fact that the when you are ready eron. "Ye Gods and little fiishes!" be: adventure with service to mankind, The latter argument cannot be true- United States, growing in powe1·, must to plal!e an order exclaimed, "Suppose 1 stayed from 8 and,. moreover: in the ~event~ '.iec~de a question proves the fallacy. get rid of :ts old ~~licies of diplomacy. to 12." On learning that 25 cents went of lus hre wr1tes a stlmulatmg bJOg· If, ·through classificq.tion, taxes were Mr. Meekms sa1d that the United to the college and the dollar to the raphy, then we have reason to rejoic:l.'' reduced on timber and intangibles, Sta:tes is ready for an "imperialistic" chaperon, he decided to date a senior then, since expense of government pohcy. The speaker defined imperial-

Quality Service Satisfactiott

he could get out for 25 cents an hour. never goes down, where is the tax re- ism as meaning growth outside the Poteat Principal Speaker duction to come in? The loss in re-v- country's boundaries by peaceful

Those same doors almost caused a freshman to walk himself to death. He went in and kept on walking, wait­ing for the thing to stop, and when it did stop he walked out on the street again and was no better off than be­fore.

A frosh at the football game the other day heard some one mention the coach, and immediately he asked, "'Vhere does he play?"

w·e have mentioned the small frosh, but now we have noticed the corpu­lence of others. They ought to .be labeled so one can tell whether they are rolling or walking.

The greenest frosh here wants to know if the League of Nations ever woo the world series, and who is their leading pitcher.

A studious frosh disagrees with the theory that Cain and Abel were the

i

In Vergil Bi-Millennium enue occasioned by lower taxes on in- means. However, he stressed the need tangibles and pmber land would have of military protection for treaties

(Contimted tro11t page one)

Spenser, Milton, Pope, Dryden, Words· worth, Shelley, Tennyson, and others of the world's grElatest literary figures were greatly influenced by Vergil. ·

The 2Eneid was first publish~d two years after the death of its author. "It immediately became a favorite text book," said Dr. P.oteat, "and ,main­tained its high position in the school curriculum until modern pedagow dis­covered that the construction of cbick­en-coops is a more important s-b.bject than Vergil's immortal poem."

Dr. Poteat concluded his address by reading Tennyson's poem, "To Vergil," which was written at the requ~st of the Mantuans for the nineteent~ cen· tury of Vergil's death. \

Dr. Poteat will speak on "The fntlu· ence of Vergil" again Thursday morn­ing at Lenoir-Rhyne College, and frues­day afternoon, October 21, at the ~Thar-lotte Woman's Club. .

to be made up. Therefore, it seems made in arbitration. that instead of reducing taxes the Mr. Carriker and Mr. Jones upheld amendment would have a tendency to · their side by pointing out the many raise taxes on city property and in· I times imperialism has led to war. Mr. crease the main farm tax. This argo· Jones, in his discussion, stated that PRINTING COMP'NY ment is "bait" to get the farm vote for the best thought of the country is the amendment and fool the town against an imperialistic policy. WAaaltlctea -11 •arcett Streets folks too. The program was closed after the

,. • * reading of jokes by H. C. Vaughn. The property classification amend­

ment is unsupported by either the Democratic or Republican State plat· forms.

This article is sent to papers in sev­eral sections of the State, and if any one who happens to read the same knows, or can find out who claims re· sponsibility for the property classifica­tion amendment, he would do a public service by publishing the name of the responsible party or parties. SQme dark horses are not so bad, bnt the constitution is no place for black horses nor for any other corroded pro­vision that would allow special inter-

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Baptists Severa~ AtWo

Old Gold Eleven: Within J State·Li

MILS 'AND C IN SENf

Benton Stars

He General

Eight Tho1 Fans Witn

A 70-yard . minutes of t gave Wake Fl cons a 7-0 wi before 8,000 Fair Week ml boring college Thursday aft

A 25-yard r Wake County p a pair of pass~ taken by Walt Rockingham f march and put from a touchdo\ nickname come: Te:x!arkana, out gallon hats, w yards on a pia: of State's line the dropkick.

Covington Mills' run il

was the long~

marked by nun sides and few most spectacnl; up the scorin. cons was Covil from Quillen, and set the s trip. It came ' len shot a fiat Covington dive ball, grabbing while almost . the ground. It the Rockingha touchdown drt too, more tha.:t had to fumble

For the Wo performer wae .Sanford youth had much to Deacons from i Not alone was con plays and also proved m up attempted : punting kept of things, alsc ernoon's work and Jeffrey, b: ly in the Tech Lawhorn cont rnn from scri1 when he got a second quarter t.er~the red-h· don't overlook

Deacons Then began

ing march, sta by Quillen, f( Mills' 25-yard around his O' jolts by Bentl 1ive yards, ant scoring line w ton to Covin line plays for ful pass effort Covington did ing-act to pu Quillen to sea:

But the Tee off another s

Che, est ( of tl of c1 21st

Ch SPEC

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ws i ---+ orne back ,!ding pas­Louisville,

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5iness man­' Dixie Un­~ated to the Le offices of :bury street,

ess of Wor­among· its ,.

j' for 1930, on, '09;who

and direc­'oratories in PsychologV Announce­

volumes ed­sychological

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OLD GOLD AND BLACK P~ge Three

Deacons DownState 7-0 InAnnual Fair Exhibit +----------------------------~----------------------------·-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------~----

Baptists Make Several Threats At Wolfpack Goal

Old Gold ·and Eleven Several Times Within Easy Reach of State· Line

MILS AND QUILLEN IN SENSATIONAL ~UNS

F~~s_Itman T~am To Play Netmen Get 5-4 Boiling Springs Oct. 25 • Game To Be Played There Is First V IClory At State

Yearling 'Trip; Strenuous Scrim­mage Sessions Held This Week Vernon, Griffin, Fletcher, Brown

Win In Singles; State College Best In the Doubles

,The varsity netmen of Wake Forest invaded Raleigh last Friday afternoon and emerged the victors of a tennis encounter with N. C. State College by a 5 to 4 score; Wake Forest had won the contest before · the last three matches were concluded, but the whole team fought hard until the last point.

BIG FIVE STANDING

Carolina .••..... Won

1 Duke .......... 1 Davidson ..... .". 1 Wake Forest . . . . 0 N. C. State . . . . . . 0

Lost 0 0 1 1 1

Engagements of

.Pat. 1.000 1.000 .500 .000 .000

Big Five-Teams Deacons Meet Mercer At Wil­

mington Saturday; Mills Is Third In State Scoring

Demon Deacons Victors Over Baltimore In One-Sided Game

+-------------------------------Baptists Easily Get 44-0 Frosh Netters Are

Score From Invad- T 0 Play Wingate ingTeam

HIPPS RETURNS PUNT 70 YARDS FOR TOUCHDOWN

Mills and Quillen Feat1,1re In the Backfield; Slaughter Biggest

Threat of the Visitors

Game Here Saturday; Varsity Plans Trip Into South Car­

olina Next Week

... Benton Stars At Quarterback As He Generals Team To Victory; Eight Thousand Enthusiastic Fans Witness Titanic Battle

Having had the opportunity to see the freshmen in action against Win­gate, Coaches Hayes and Johnson are driving their yearling charges over­time to smooth over ·the defect and weakness shown under fire. A vastly improved team over the one which trounced Wingate 19-6 is expected to face Boiling Springs there in the next game, October 25. The "rats" have offered the varsity valuable experience in running the opposition plays, and in strenuous scrimmage sessions. The second stringers got something in the nature of a holiday Tuesday when they were thrown against Henderson High.

Following the game with Boiling Spring, the Duke Implets journey here for a game November 1, Oak Ridge and Wake Forest give Greensboro fans their Armistice Day football game, while games with, other Big Five fresh­man teams are pending.

Captain Vernon paved the way by defeating his opponent in singles, and, paired with Fletcher, defeated N. C. State's No. 1 doubles team. Griffin, playing No. 1, on FriP,ay thrashed his man without much trouble; Glenn and Brown, playing their first game for Wake Forest, showed up well. Brown defeated Hofman, while Glenn lost a hard-fought match to Hubert Crow. Fletcher brought in the fourth singles victory, and then, paired with Vernon, defeated the Vipond brothers to cinch the match for Wake Forest. Dan Smith, of the Deacons, fought hard, but was finally overcome by Hirscheimer. The scores were as follows:

The Big-Fiv.e teams start· hostilities The Demon Deacons of Wake again today, except for Vvake Forest and the Wolfpack, who played on Rid- Forest overwhelmingly crushed dick Field- Thursday in one of the the invasion of the Baltimore most thrilling and hard-fought games University eleven here Friday of the season. The Blue Devils of afternoon, October 10, by a large Duke University journey to Annapolis

The freshman tennis team will play the Wingate Junior College court-men on Saturday, October 18, here. The match will begin pr'omptly at two o'clock. Wingate is bringing a 3-man team, which will involve the playing of four matches (three singles and one double). The Wake Forest freshmen who will very probablly play singles are: No. 1, Sam Buxton; No. 2, Dan Bryan, and Bert Robeson. The doubles team will be composed of Bux­ton and Robeson.

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A 70-yard march in opening . minutes of the second quarter gave Wake Forest's Demon Dea­cons a 7-0 win over .N. C. State before 8,000 fans in the apnual Fair Week meeting of the neigh­boring colleges on Riddick Field Thursday afternoon.

Yearlings Crush Hende~son Highs

Submerge Visitors Under 19-0 Scor.e; Wilson, Yerger, and

Gaddy Make Touchdowns

While a small handful of "old faith­fuls" went into huddles at each fre­quent shower of rain, the Baby Dea­con Reserves submerged Henderson High 19-0 Tuesday afternoon at the

Griffin, WF, defeated M. R. Vipond 6-2 6-2; Vernon, WF, defeated L. C. Vipon 6-0, 2-6, 6-1; Fletcher, WF, de­feated Perry 6-3, 10-8; Crow, NCS, de­feated Glenn 6-2, 6-4; Hirscheimer, NCS defeated Smith 6-3, 6-3; Brown, WF, defeated Eolman 6-4, 6-3; and Vernon and Fletcher, WF, defeated Vipond Brothers 6-1, 11-9; Perry and Crow, NCS, won over Griffin and Glenn 6-4, 9-7; Merriam and Early, NCS, won over Smith and Brown 6-3, 5-7, 6-4.

A return match with N. C. State will be played here on Friday, October 24.

with the hope of sinking the Navy, af- score of 44-0. Mills and Hipps ter experiencing victorious results featured for the Deacons by against Virginia and Davidson. 'l'he making long dashes for touch­University of North Carolina journeys downs, while the mighty Deacon out of the State today to Athens, Ga., where the Tar Heels will administer line held the northern team to their full strength against the conquer- four first-downs and always ors of Yale. The other Big-Five team, within the shadow of the goal Davidson, will play Citadel at Char- they '\.vere defending. lotte today. ' It had been generally accepted that

Next week Wake Forest takes on the Deacon aggregation would be vic­Mercer at Wilmington, while Duke and torious, but the superior brand of of­Wofford engage· at Spartanburg. Nm:th fensive and defensive tactjcs shown by Carolina, leading in the Big-Five Coach Miller's team was surprising. standings, is scheduled to play the From the kick-off, at 3: 40 o'clock, un­University of Tennessee at Knoxville. til darkness began to descend on dust­Davidson plays a home-coming game covered Gore Field the one thousand with V.P.L, and .North Carolina State spectators were to 'witness a team far plays Mississippi A. and M. at Ra- more advanced in the fundamentals of leigh. football than its visiting opponents.

A trip is being planned for the varsity tennis team, which involves a week's invasion of V!lrious colleges and universities in South Carolina. The team will leave on Tuesday, October' 28, and return the following Sunday. The personnel of this tr~p is yet to be definitely settled. Anyone can become eligible to mal>:e this trip by working his way up the varsity ladder by chal­lenges. Players in the lower 10, or anyone not on the ladder, may climb up by challenging any one of the three men immediately above him. But when the first six are encountered, only one man above may be challenged. All challenges must be answered or a valid reason given for not doing so. The challenger must furnish the balls for the match.

A 25-yard run by Eustace Mills, Wake County product from Apex, and a pair of passes which were adeptly taken by Walter K. Covington from Rockingham featured this Deacon march and put the ball three yards from a touchdown. Tex Quillen, wliose nickname comes from his residence in Te:x!arkana, out where men wear five­_gallon hats, went the three scoring yards on a play through the left side of State's line. Quillen then added the dropkick. old athletic field. The play of the sec- ~~~----~---~~~~~

and-stringers showed much improve- Morris tried a pass which rolled off Covington's Catch Features ment over their efforts against Win· the fingers of Quillen, Deacon back,

Mills, star ball-carrier for the Dea· The Wake Forest team excelled the cons, having scored five touchdowns Baltimoreans during each I quarter of this season, ranks third with the other the game and never was their goal­pigskin toters of the State in scoring. line in any danger.

blocked. Hipps skirted left end for 30 yards and with the aid of his interfer­ence took the ball over the goal line. "Jit" Benton sent the ball soaring through the parallel posts for the ex­tra point. Hutchins, speed demon of the Deacons, got off a beautiful 46-yard run around end for the fourth score of the game. Wake Forest re­ceived the extra point due to a penalty on Baltimore for being off-side.

Mills' run in the scoring advance gate in their first game ten days ago, and was grounded. Dellinger made was the longest jaunt of a game and unless the freshman regulars have two. On fourth down, Morris's effort marked by numerous fumbles on both shown a corresponding improvement for a long pass to Nelms failed. sides and few long runs. But the several new faces are expected to be in The teams swapped punts again and most spectacular of the steps leading the line-up at the opening whistle of Tex Quillen furnished one of the day's up the scoring stairs for the Dea- the next freshman game. features with a pretty 30-yard return cons was Covington's catch of a pass At the . end of the first half the of a Tech punt which he had taken from Quillen, which gained 11 yards score was 6-0, due tb the brilliant run on his own 27-yard line, darted back­and set the stage for Tex's scoring of Wilson. In the second half Yergan wards towards his own goal to give trip. It came on a fourth down. Qui.l- and Gaddie tallied once each, which, his mates a chance to help him out, len shot a flat pass over the line and with the extra marker, a pass over the and then headed through a broken Covington dived headlong toward the .goal, gave the subs their first victory. field in fine style. ball, grabbing Mr. Spalding's product Besides showing a potent offensive the There wasn't much left of the,game. while almost . prcine·-and skidded on Deaclets displayed defensive strength, The Deacons couldn't do anything and the ground. It was a great catch and holding the high school lads in safe kicked to State's 39. State tried three the Rockingham youth's play in the territory during the entire game. successive passes and the third was touchdown drive, and at other t\mes intercepted by Benton, who was too, more than offset a tendencY\ he downed on State's 43-yard line after ·had to fumble every now and then. after a line pla~ ~ailed and Mills an eight-yard trip. The Deacons ran

For the Wolfpack the outstanding, ~oved the ball Wlthm two ~cet of a three line plays to gain three yards performer was Captain Mack Stout, first down. Br~dley made 1t. a first and the final whistle came as they .Sanford youth, whose defensive play do_wn; but _both sides were off-side, and were preparing for another play. had much to do with keeping the Mills divmg effort on the next play The summary:

He is superseded by Magner of U N.C. Slaughter, . fullback on the visiting by the margin of o_ne point, who holds team, proved to be the main threat second place to W1llia~s of Elon Col· against the Deacons. lege by the same margm. · I The Deacons made a 70-yard march

Davidson ..... WakeForest .. Duke ...... . State ...... .

G. TD. EP. PP. OP. through the opposing line to secure its 4 11 5 71 12 first scoTe. The game was hardly five 3 11 5 71 13 minuies old. Mills leaped into the air 3 7 2 44 22 and received a well-timed pass from 4 6 1 37 66 "Jit" Benton, local quarterback. The

Carolina . . . . . 3 12 8 80 49 ball was wide of the goal for the at-

Twenty-seven Men Awarded Degrees

tempted extra point. Quillen, before nine minutes more had elapsed, carried the pigskin over the goal line for an­other six points.

During the second quarter Mills was forced from the game, due to an arm injury. The fifth touchdown was made after a punt by Slaughter had been

The first half ended with the score 26-0, favoring Wake Forest.

Quillen and Mills were the big guns during the third quarter, each getting a touchdown.

"Firpo" Hipps, substitute for Mills, made the most sensational run of the game for a touchdown in the final period, when he received the ball on the 30-yard line and plunged through Dr. J. Henry Highsmith Ad­

dresses Graduates of Tenth S~mmer School Session

the would-be tacklers and the back­more responsive to the needs of the field men of Baltimore to race 70 yards citizens of this commonwealth. The down the field for Wake Forest's final schools, more and more, must reflect touchdown.

Deacons from becoming too Demonish. failed, th.e. ball going over on downs Wake Forest N a St t Not alone was he busy piling up Dea- on the s!:r-yard line. . . Position · · · a 6

Defining a good citizen as "one who con plays and making tackles, but he ~tate kicked dbac~ to md1dMfi~I1d1 , and.dd Brogden .............................................. Duke can pull his own weighdt, bekno hin·

the needs of society and strive increas- Mills, Quillen, and Hipps accounted ingly to meet the scrcial, economic, for two touchdowns apiece, while civic, moral, and intellectual demands Hutchins brought in the other count· of all the children of all the people. ers. Although "Jit" Benton did not also proved mighty good. in breaking ~u1ll~n coun~e s1x an 1 s ~ Left End drance to his fello-ws, an ma e a con-

up attempted passes. Greason, whose ltlkewtLs_e. Qbutillen tghot sevten 1yards

115n Williams .......................... , ................. Cobb tribution to the pJroHgress aHn~ v;h•elf~trhe

punting kept the Techs. in the thick wo , nes, u on e n~x' P ay a . Left Tackle of society," Dr. . enry lg smi • of things, also turned in a good aft- yard penaltyh foDr holdmgb okn WHake Dupree ........................................ Matlack State High School Supervisor, pulled

"Education for the needs of life will score himself, he ably directed the take into account health, vocational ef- plays of the game. Capt. Jack Parker fectiveness, citizenship, scholarship, was outstanding in the Deacon line.

ernoon's work on end, while Dellinger Fore~t set t e eacons ac · ow- Left Guard the curtain on the tenth session of the and .Jeffrey, backs, figured prominent- :ver, the penaltyh pendutluml swuhng the Parker (c) ......................... ~ .............. Espey Wake Forest Summer School.

and character. The line-up:

ly in the Tech secondary defense. Me- othe.r way on. t e nex. P a~ w en an Center A total of twenty-seven men rAceived Lawhorn contributed State's longest officl_al ruled

1_ mte;~ere:ce With a.lp~s~ Levine ........................................ stout (c) degrees from the han.~ls of President

"The value of good health is admit-~W. F. <44 l Baltimore (0) ted by every person. 'l'he establish- Greene .......................................... Novicki

run from scrimmage of the afternoon receiver, ru mg . e eave comp e e. . Right Guard Thurman D. Kitchin. Acc0rding to when he got away for 11 yards in the on thde 24·YalVri~llhne. ~hat mda~e It Webb .............................................. Stroupe I Dean D. B. Bryan, several girl students

ment of correct health habits is recog- 1 Left End nized as being basically important. Cornwell .................................... Cebulesky

second quarter. Red Espey, Tech cen- first ~wn. 1 s was umpe 0~ a Right Tackle have matriculated for the ·B.A. degree, "Many of our high schools and col-ter-the red-head from Hickory-and two-yax~ lo.ss an: o; the next P a~ Gregso:Q ........................................ Greason authorized last June by the Board of leg~s are still in the grip of tradition Hicks ............... ~ft·G~~;d ......... Donohue

Left Tackle

don't overlook him for fine line plays. Morr!~ m:~~eite th a 1:acon pass an Right End Trustees, and some may wear the caps and refuse to admit the value and im- Parker ........................................ Goldstein Deacons March To Score ra~he ;echs o:enede a d~ive from this Benton ................................... _...... Adams and gowns next summer. Heretofore portance of vocational training. Center

Then began the Wake Forest scor- I}oint, with Mc'Lawhorn getting eight Quarter girls have been admitted only ill! the "High school boys and girls must Levine .......................................... Weinzer ing march, started by a five-yard gain yards on each/ of two tries in between Mills ............. L ........................... Dellinger' schools of law and medicine. learn how to do well a part of the Right Tackle by Quillen, followed immediately by which was a· no-gain in effort. The . Left Half 1 The exercise took place at 11:30 at work of the world. If a high school Edwards ........................................ Ringer Mills' 25-yard gain on a wide run Tech line w.as ra. mming its. way at I Qmllen ................................................ Cook '\Vingate Memorial Hall, where faculty boy can learn foreign language and Right End _

d h . 1 ft d h 1 d b th' t f th D 11 got Right Half members and seniors assembled in mathematics, why can't he learn agri- Benton -...... -.............................. Slaughter .aroun IS own e en , e pe y JS s age o mgs e mger · Bradley Jeffrey academ1·c costume. The L'nvocati"on was Q t b k jolts by Benton and Quillen to total five and Morris made seven. A line ............ F~ilb~~k.............. culture and commercial education; uar er ac ·

1ive yards, and really placed near the play didn't :gain, but Wake Forest took Score by the College Chaplain, Rev. J. A. and if a high school girl can learn Mills .......... _ ........... _ ....................... ·Justine scoring line with a 17-yard pass, Ben- an extra time out and was penalized by period: Easley, and the benediction by Rev. English or history, why can't she learn Right Half ton to Covington. Then came two five yards.' McLawhorn failed to gain, Wake Forest .................... 0 7 0 0- 7 Dr. W. R. Cullom. ' hom eeconomics? Quillen ..... --............. _ ................ : .... Mihalco line plays for five yards, .an unsuccess- but he and Webb tangled while tied . .N. C. ~tate .............. -....... 0 . 0 0 O--O Members of graduating class fol- "Training in good citizenship was Left Half ful pass effort, and the pass in which together on the ground and the Dea· ~co~·mg _touchdown: .QUillen. Ex_tra lows: never more needed than at the present Bradley ........... _ ............................ Callahan Covington did the diving-but catch- con drew a 15-yard penalty for Webb's P.mnt. Qmllen (dropklck) · Substitu· Master .of Arts--C. T. Haynes, Clyde; time. But we need to understand that Fullback

. tJons: Wake Forest: Green for Brog- b 1 C , Score by periods: ing-act to put the ball in position for roughness. Th1s made it first down on d C ll f w·n· H h" Ro ert McNair Pee e, onway. good citizenship is more than a matter Quillen to score Wake Forest's 37. en, ornwe or. 1 lams, utc u~s Bachelor of Arts E F Baker Wen Wake Forest.. .................. 12 14 12 6--44 · · H t'h T h ft 1. 1 for Benton, Covmgton for Bradley, - · · • · of voting. That is an important but Baltimore ............ _________ ... 0 0 0 0_ 0 But the Techs had the stuff to keep ere e ec s, a er a me Pay W'll" f C 11 B dell; R. C. Brinson, St. Pauls; H. B. relatively small part of the duty of a off another score. Br,adley got five had failed decided to try the air. 1 Iams ~r ornwe ' rogden for Helms, Monroe; A. J. Martin, Hamp- T Th d T . h Scoring-Wake Forest: Touchdowns,

' Gregson, Hicks for Dupree, Cornwell Ad 0 J c1 1zen. e goo CI 1zen 1s one w o Mills 2, Quillen 2, Hipps 2 (sub for for Williams, Edwards for Brogden, tonville; M. C. Minor, vance; · · can. pull his own weight, be no _hin-

Play Golf -~FREE! . i

·cheviot Hills Golf Ch,1b offers Wake For­est College students an<ft faculty the use of their course for THREE days FREE

·of charge on the following days: October 21st, 22d, and 23d.

l\K h L · b g· B B Par "sh Mills), Hutchins (sub for Benton). Bradley for Covington. N. c. state: "urp y, oms ur ' · · n ' drance to his fellows, and make a con-L · b J H s 'th M · w Point after touchdown, Quillen (drop Rose for Duke, Wilson for Cobb, oms urg; · · mi • ariOn; · tribution to the progress and welfare R nr lk lVI t H D y R kick), one on penalty. Substitutions--Brake for Wilson, Nelms for Greason, · "a ·er, ax on; · · oung, ox- of society. b Wake Forest: Brogden, Dupree, Hipps,

Morris for Adams, Johnson for Del· oro. "Education for the needs of life B h S · M' h 1 B 1 Covington, Hutchins, Peters, Placa,

linger, McLawhorn for Cook, D. uke for I . a_c elor of. Cience-J IC ae 0 u_ s, must provide for character develop- Williams, W. Edwards, Brown, Cng-Rose, Cobb for Brake, LeForte for Mat- Wal,e Forest, H. A. Brandon, Yadkm- ment. Through instillation of ideas, dill, Allen, Joyner, Newsome, Gillet;-lack, Seitz for Stroupe, Greason for ville; D. K. Drum, Newton; E. P_., inculcation of ideals, and the forma- · D M H" k o A 1 I F lk E G H G ah Le p1e, uncan, . IC s, wen, pp e, Nelms, Dellinger for Johnson, Gurneau au ~er, psom; . · · r am; . I- tion of desirable habits, much can be Webb, Lister, and others. Baltimore: for Jeffrey, Nelms for Greason, Sharpe cester, C. J. Hamnck, Mooresboro, T. done in the school to train boys and Bosley, Tierney, O'Brien, ;Hartford, for Dellinger, Jeffrey for Gurneau. Of· B. Helms, Monroe; T. E. Martin, Stone- girls in character. Gils, Sededi. Officials: Referee, Hart­ficial_s: Referee, Str~pper (Ga. Tech); ville; L: D. Wy~i.ck, Greensboro_. "Education today must be given in sell (N. c. State); umpire, Sholar ump1re, Black (Davidson); head .lines- B.S. 1~ MedLcme--W. A. Pittman, terms of an evolving, dynamic civili-1 (Presbyterian); linesman, Graham; man, Menton (Loyola); field JUdge, Fayetteville. zation, and any other sort of education I field judge, Hall (William and Mar¥). Frank (Army). Bachelor of Law-H. C. Carroll, is a failure.' ' Time: 16, 15, 16, 10.

Hamlet; R. G. Cobb, Lumber Bridge; Present this Ad. at ~Club House for your permit to play 18 holes

CLUBS FOR RENT

Teacher (pointing to a picture of a R. J. Scott, Pinnacle; W. D. Thomp-­zebra): "Here is something that son, Whiteville; B. M. Williams, Ahos­comes from Africa. Can anyone tell kie. me wliat it is?" I President Kitchin in presenting Dr.

.Johnny: "It looks like a horse in Highsmith referred to him as "author a bathing suit." and projector of the high school reor­

i CATERS TO~;;-·-·-~

Cheviot Hills· Golf Club

)

Flapper: "He said that when he looked at me he was reminded of Ra­phael's angel."

Young Guy: "Yes; Raphael's angel was painted, too."

ga_nization program in North Carolina, and retiring president of the Asso­ciation of High School Supervisors and Inspectors of the United States."·

Dr. Highsmith spoke on the subject, "Education for the Needs of Life."

People with salaries of below $675 "Education illl the schools of North a year in England pay in taxes each Carolina," he said, "particularly the year, a total of $950,000,000. high schools and colleges, must become

\ Dicks Barber Shop i Located Over Quick Lunch Cafe

i The Home of Collegiate Styles

·:·~-~~-Q··~~-Il-ll_Q_Q_~~......,_..,._., -J ·=·

Page 4: II I ~nlb ani) mtarh · 2018-03-20 · C. L. Beavers, .John Burns, Hadley ~ roles of some of the plays of the for the meeting of the second section. M 0 b H d ayes, an S • A H

Page Four OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Hospl.tal Charges ~~~~~~!l(~d t~h~.:~~:e~~t the plaintiff was !."(

The attorneys representing the Theatrical News ~ A.P.O. Entertains. Won By PI ·• t•ff I plaintiff, Bob Simms. were Tex Quil-aiD I leil aml Bob Wells. l\lr. Simms testi- ~ l:E

I tied that he had been permanently in- treatment Som.ething new in screen jured and disabled and that it would of musical comedy may be seen in

$200 Damages Awarded Victim be impossible for him to follow his '"Love in the Rough," Metro-Goldwyn-1 trade ·as carpenter. Mr. Meekins, wh? Mayer's picturization of the stage hit,

of a Railroad Accident n lived near the place where the. accl~ "Spring Fever," which opens Monday

Honoring Alumni Party Given Following Baltimore

Game; Many College Guests Attend Event Locall\1oot Court dent happened, bore out Mr. Srmms at the Palace Theatre Raleigh, I

J testimony ~s regards hi~ ~juries an~ Although strictly a ~usical comedy, . . lain tiff other deta1ls surroundm., the . a:ct this delightful film betrays none of On Fr1day evemng, Octob~r 10, the

A verdict awarding $200 to P dent. very expert cross-exammmg the stilting devices so commonly noted Alpha Phi OII$ga fratermty enter-for hospital bill was the outcome of was demonstr~ted by all of the attor- in screen transitions of this sort. It tained numerous members· of the stu­the second Moot Court of the year. neys. The rmlroad company had .as . t only hiahly entertainingly musi· dent-body of the college at a party at Th ·ts are held every Thursday its legal representatives Messrs. J1m IS lnlo but pa;ks a thoroughly human the fraternity's house on Faculty Av-

ese coni 1 Cl p 't h d The ca y, Th ff · · primarily · ~ · h econd floor of Nance anl arenc~ . n c ar · stor without intrusions of dancing enue. e a air was glven . mght at t.

30 on. t e s !principal and only Witnesses for the h y t sl w up the story. as an honor to a number of alumm

the Library Buildmg. They are spon- railroad were the engineer and fire- c Torhusest ~ .0s backgrounded With a members of the fraternity who had re-L S hooll h t k Mr

1 e S OI y 1 h B lt' U ' "ty sored by the Wali:e Fore~t aw c ~an of the train t at s ~uc · hilarious golf links plot which affords turned for t e a tmore mvers1

and are open to the public. Snnms. These two men testified that some eyeful glimpses of amazing seen· game. In the action Thursday night the the night was too foggy to fsee very ery The music and lyrics are appeal· A large number of men from the

f head and that after a orm was · fi other social fraternities were present \;vali:e Forest and :Qurham Railroad ar a t' he track ' 1.t \"as impossible ing and contain several sure- re hits, seen on • " particularly "Go Home and Tell Your as guests and the affair proved to be

was being sued for $10,000 da~ages to stop before hitting the f?rm. The Mother" and "I'm Learning a i.ot very delightful to all. · resulting from the alleged neghgence form turned out to be Mr. St~ms, w~o From You." There were several tables of bridge of the defendant. The burden of prov- had collapsed from exhaustron whtle In addition to "Love in the Rough" for those desiring to participate in

. - • . _ ''"a!'" ing from Oxford to ·wake For- M k M M ,_ .. that game. Refreshments, consisting 1 "'as on the plam ' " are a funny comedy, "~ ee r r. een, ing thrs neg tgence . . est. The issues submitted to~ the jury of fruit punch and cakes, were served h 1 t ff and Pathe Sound News. tiff. If the attorney~ for t e·-p am 1 by Judge Gulley are as follows: later. had convinced the JUry that the de- 1 Was the plaintiff injured 'by the * * * The crowd was of a mixed nature, fendant was wholly responsible for ne~ligence of the defendant as alleged Sizzling! Whizzling! Action! Fun! there being young ladies present from this accident, it would have beell; t~e in the complaint? Answer: Yes. Clara Bow in "Her Wedding Night" 'Vake Forest, Louisburg, Raleigh, and duty of the jury to award the plamtl~ 2. Did the plaintiff by his own negli- coming to the State Theatre next Mon· other nearby towns and cities. a pecuniary compensation. But as lt gence contribute to his injury? An- day, 'l'uesday, and Wednesday, is a All present seemed to enjoy them­was, the jury did not find that the swer; Yes. deliciously romantic farce-comedy, selves immensely, and the members of defendant was negligent, but that t~e 3. could the plaintiff by the exer- writen by Avery Hopwood, king of the fraternity, who were the hosts, plaintiff, by his negligence, contrt~- cise of due care have avoided the in- farce. hope to make this only the first of a uted to the injury, and thereby dt· jury? Answer: Yes. "Her Wedding Night" zips in Paris, series of just such delightful social -~~~---~~=--= • .,__~ ·• ~ ,. ;;., l~···~illi~"-.= .-c~.k:.c<i>.= . .., ~·~

~CASTLE I 4. To what extent, if any, should whizzes through France, and winds gatherings to be given during the

the plaintiff be awarded damages? An- up in a merry matrimonial tangle in coming season. swer: $200 hospital bill. Venice. The cast is .superb.

Z p1 4! WAKE FOREST, N.C. ,~

1 ~ m Monday and Tuesday, 20-2 ~

I. "BIG HOUSE" ~ ~ iJ With Comedy · ·

~~~" ~'~.~~ 1 "Wild Women" ~~i

~ 1\olatinee 1\londay, 3 P.l\1. i'd

I I t Wednesday, Oct. 22 f"i ~ "Caught Short" I IR wilh ~

v, I I "Two Fresh Eggs" f.~

~~·~-~·.· ~-·~ M."ltinee 3 P.U. ~4

~~~ Thursday and Friday, 23-24 ~ 1 Stanley Smith and i·i ~ Ginger Rogers ~ · -in- , ~ . ~

"QUEEN HIGH" I Also a Comedy ~ Matinee Thursday, 3 P.M. ~j

~.~ I Saturday, Oct. 25 ~·~

~~ Ken Maynard ~ ~ -in- !•·I

I. "Sons of the Saddle" ~ J

Also a Comedy r·~

, Matinee 3 P.M. ~ l w I Monday and Tuesday, 27-28 ~ ~ MORAN~ndMACK ~I

~~I

,. .. • Social News A great love story set to music is

I the simplest possible description of . , Arthur Hammet·stein's screen triumph,

Misses Laura, Helen, and Kather~ne' "Lottery Bride," coming to the State Paschal entertained at a ~harmmg Theatre next Thursday and Friday. week-end house party. Their guests With magnificent settings and back· were: Misses ~llen Charles.' Coryne grounds, the dramatic operetta runs Rodgers, Bonme Kate Bat nes and its course of song and emotion through Beatrice Burrell of_ Coker College, a highly modern plot that includes Hartsville, S. C.; Mtss Agnes Welch, even the adventure of an Arctic :flight of Gastonia, and Miss Margaret New- and the crash of a giant dirigible. ton, of Enfield. The music composed especially for

Mr. and Mrs .. Tom Holding, Jr., spent the picture by Rudolf Friml, interna-the week-end m Charlotte. tionally famous light opera maestro,

Mrs. W. C. Powell and 1\_{aster W. C. is the climax thus far to Friml's gen· Powell. Jr., are spendmg several weeks with relatives in Columbus Grove, Ohio.

Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Davis, 'Mrs. H. M. Vann and Mrs. I. 0. Jones have returned from a week's motor trip through the Shenandoah Valley of Vir­ginia, Washington, D. C., and other points of interest. ·

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kitchin and Claude, Jr., of Rocky Mount, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Reid.

Misses Lillian and Dorothy Davis of Meredith College spent the week­end at their home here.

STATE RALEIGH, N. C.

"lonllay...;.•.rucsda~·-'V cdnesd.1y

CLARA BOW In "Her Wedding Night"

Ralph Fm·bes-Chas. Ruggles Also

Comcdy-1\lusical Act-News

Thursday and FJ'iclay

Jeanette MacDonald as the

"LOTTERY BRIDE" Also

Football Reel, Comedy Act and News

SATURDAY ONLY "Strange Interlude"

(On the stage)

Prices, 75c to· $3.00

/ j, J• ~~::~,$;· ~~~

ius. . Vocally the entire production is su­

pet·b. the comedy and characterizations deserve praise, and a fine dramatic role is played by Carroll Nye as a weakling brother.

.. * .. Next Saturday will witness the pre­

sentation at the State· Theatre, Ra­leigh, of Eugene O'Neill's unconven· tiona! nine-act drama, "Strange Inter­lude." But perhaps, it would be more accurate to .say, it will be introd1;1ced to local playgoers in the afternpon, for the curtain will rise prompt!JI at 5:30, and patrons have been admon­ished that 5:30 does not mean 5:31. Late-comers positively will not be seated until after the first act is over. At 7: 40, when five acts will have been played, an intermission for dinner oc­curs. Everybody back at the theatre

I by 9 o'clock, when the second half ?f the play will begin. The final. curta1n "descends at 11.

No play in years has aroused so much intere!;t in advance as has "Strange Interlude." It is so entirely different than any other stage offer­ing, not only in its length but also in th.e "asides" by which the characters express their thoughts after voicing sentiments which may be altogether at variance. Then O'Neill, never known

. to mince words, makes generous use of his own remarkable vocabulary in calling a spade by its right name.

* * * "Men of the North," vivid tale of

the North Country, comes to the Pal­ace Theatre, Raleigh, the first three days of next week. The locale is the

,..~~-r

You can bet your ' -.

bottom dollar:~ ~!1 ~J ~ i ~

@)1tsO,LJoanri:MYDSTouiXOCo. ONE will always stand out!

Canadian Northwest, and the narra­tive is built around the pursuit of a fugitive from justice. The famous mounted police have an importa~t

part in the picture, with the usual dog sleds, races of skis, and exciting fighting in snow-clad cabins. The pic­ture whicb was filmed in the Sierras, abo~nds in picturesque scenery of the North country.

"Men of the North" has been filmed in five different languages. Gilbert Roland is pictured as a strong man of the woo·ds-a primitive-like man with the cuJ:iningness of a fox and the strength of! an athlete. He was a son of the woods in love with a daughter of the city. This gorgeous drama of the great pine woods is a relief from the baclc-stage dramas or customary so-called westerns.

On the same program is a funny comedy, "Meek Mr. Meek," and Pathe Sound News.

Pan-Hellenic Council Exact Governing Rushing, Pledging

(Oontinuea from page one)

according to the discretion of the Council.

Bids Sent to Dean According to further new rules and

regulations adopted by the Council, all bids must be sent to fhe Dean's office with a postmark not later than Thurs­day afternoon at six o'clock, October 30. This gives the Dean ample time to notify each first-year man for whom he has bids before six o'clock Friday night. The Dean will then present, at the conference of the first-year men called by him on that night, the bids according to the preference of each first-year man. Fraternity men and first-year men must take special notice of these dates so that bids will be ex­tended and accepted at the specified time. The pledges will appear Satur­day, wearing their buttons.

Articles of Constitution In order for each man to have a

clear understanding of the laws gov­erning pledges and rush period we refer them to the following articles of the constitution: ·

ARTICLE VIII

RUSHING

Section 1. The Council shall have the power to say what shall constitute ''Rushing.''

Sec. 2. The Council regards as rush­ing any act by any member of any fra­ternity that would tend to induce a man to become a member of his fra­ternity, such as smokers, banquets, or­ganized gatherings for social pur­poses.

Sec. 3. There shall be no smokers, banquets, or organized gatherings for social purposes before pledge day.

Sec. 4. There shall be a period of "silence" lasting from midnight three days prior to pledge day.

Sec. 5. No freshman (unless a brother of a member) shall be allowed to room in any fraturnity house until aft2r pledge day.

Sec. 6. Any breach of Article VIII shall be punished in the discretion of the Council.

ARTICLE IX

PLEDGING

Section 1. November 1st shall be designated as Pledge Day after the year 1928-29, during which year ~ledge Day shall be November 20th.

Sec. 2. No freshman or first-year man shall be pledged prior to that day.

Sec. 3. The faculty shall pass on all pledges prior to initiation.

Sec. 4. Any breach of Article IX shall be punished at the discretion of the Council.

Blasting and riveting, the two loudest sounds in cities today, are 10,000,000 times more intense than t·he smallest sounds that can be de­tected by the human ear.

..

Mary Ellen Tea Room C9rner Fa"yetteville and Hargett

RALEIGH Streets

Special Rates On COLLEGE BANQUETS

Luncheon-12 :00-2 :30

Students Patronize U. S. Postal Service

Mr. C. Y. Holden, postmaster at the Wake Forest postoffice, .states th,at in spite of the general depression noted in business, the past few months have registered material gains in postal re­ceipts in the local office.

Dinner:-6: 00-8 :00

least, a distinctly feline character. This blot on the fair escutcheon of the po­etic muse was, evidently, perpetrated by the editor of the aforementioned column. Our only comment is that the editor-in-chief of the "Twig" must have been awfully hard up for ma­terial!

Stagg and Page To Make Line-up

With the infiux of students in Sep­tember, business picked up to such an extent that an increase )if $192.46 was noted for that month alone, as compared .with September, 1929. Chicago-(IP)-Two names fa-

Students are steady patrons of the mous in University of Chicago ath­parcel post service. One of the most letic history, Stagg and Page, prob­frequent uses. of this is observed in ably will be seen in the line-ups of · the large number of laundry cases the Maroon football squad this sea­which make their weekly trips back son. and forth as far north as New York Paul Stagg, son <lf the veteran A. and New JersE!y, and as far west as I A. Stagg, coach of Chicago elevens Chicago. for 38 years, appeared in several

The Loud-Speaker After hearing Dr. Hubert Poteat's

high-speed speech in chapel the other day, we would suggest that he be given the title of "The Floyd Gibbons of Wake Forest."

From the mouth of the Loud-Speak­er comes the timely warning to those freshmen who feel sufficiently inde-

varsity games last year and may win a regular berth this season.

But. Harlan OrviUe Page, Jr., son of Pat Page, former Maroon star and now football coach at the University of Indiana, is only a freshman.

Young Page is a quarterback, as is Paul Stagg, and next year may see them fighting 'for the same post. Bert Cassells, son of an end on the 1899 champion Chicago aggregation, is an­other Maroon prospect this year.

i::dt~~nt~vft~oa::~::i:hc:;:.m~~~d:~~ illlllllllllllillllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllillllllllllllllllllll opinion on this campus is overwhelm-\ ingly in favor of the Freshman Cap idea, and the Student Council has an­nounced that no redress may be had from the council by those unwise freshmen who are bothered by upper­classmen because they won't wear a cap. "Ye that have ears, let. them hear!"

One of the traditions that have grown old with the college has passed into the days that are forever gone

Brantley's For Drugs and Sodas

RALEIGH

We are referring to the custom of lliilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUUiilllllllnllililllill!iiiiiiiiiUIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll painting class numerals on ·the water-tank which used to stand on the east side of the campus. Adventurous and enterprising freshmen from the cur­rent first-year class useq to scale its steel sides once a year, and, braving the heights and the wrath of the up­perclassmen, blazon to the world the fact that a new freshman class had· come to take its place in these revered halls. Alas! No more will the campus vibrate with the whispered conjectures as to who had done it, this year, and boastful accounts of "the year Tom and I painted the tank!"

We were reading the Meredith Twig the other day and, upon turning to a contemporary -column in this illus­trious publication, our vision was as­saulted by an alleged poem, having something-we never did find out ex­actly what'-to do with the name of this C()lumn, which has, to say the

PALAC·E RALEIGH, N.C.

Next Week

Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday

"Love In the Rough" with

Jlobert Montgomme~ \

'Vednesday-Thut'Sday-Friday

"Men of the· North"

w.ith

Gilbert Roland

ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE \

Having qualified as administratrix of the estate of J. A. Jones, hdec:.eased,1 ~ate

of Wake County North Carolina, this is to notifY all persons dvm~ :d'ms against the said • estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the un ers1g': on or before the 16th day of September, 1981, or this notice will be pleaded m bar of their recovery. · · d' t.

All persons indebted to said estate will please make 1mme Jate paymen

This 16th day of September, 1930.MRS. MINNIE W. JONES, Administratrix.

-THE BANK· OF WAKE "The Friendly Bank"

Capital, $2(),000 i

Surplus, $15,000

' W. R. PEARCE, Cashier

I

See O~r Display \

THE

' , -at-

SMOKE SHOP -And hen in Raleigh

Come in to see us!

Huneycutt London Shop

SALISBURY STREETS

.. .

... '

Intercoll and Col

Mail

Vol. XIV, Nc

Student Propos Duke,

Annual l Devils~

Ma)

MEETING A DETERMINl

Council Rea: Feeling ar Be Given This Matt«

The Stud€ special sessic discuss the r tion of the~· Forest-Duke played Novel been a great tion manifes· ing to the game schedu est, earlier i fact that onlj had been pi: in four yearE son for play declare the move to brii to Wake Fm

The Student feeling. of the matter, called fort to lool{ o the student bo to bring the ga hers of the At mul football pi: matter was ( night, October a full meeting letic Council, C<

Rockingham; leigh; Raleigh Carl Tyner, I Can·oll andn Wake F01·est. 0 r the game wi

Biplane 011

Gas Gives C

To Land l bal

Around 4:30 thilig very un athletic field. the bit>lane ty the midst of which was in

It seems th of gas and thE calied down a1 right to land. raising his vo invitation to tj he had circle brought his p without a mon plane was. roll the end of the the pilot cut the bleachers over the bank. landing testifie maneuvered. school tool;: Pi• back to their 1

The pilot w: olina. It is ru \Vest Virginia that he was fr of where he '' intending to <lidn't get thei night.

Vice Cou1 Of Loca The local co

der of Unite< numbers amon tiona! vice cou C. E. Brewer, College. Dr. : ber here in J ~ this council ' been active in

Another pro local council i berlake, .Jr., ~

Carolina Masl l\lason.

The Wake Junior Order n at 7:30 over Visiting Junio to these meet!