4
1e Ill :J.- C-· m :m ld ts' c- c-. be r- ld 00 ne .es Jn u- it b.e - rt - - - '• .• -. n •' .... au ar Nominees * --: \. ... ' " Take ·v. M.. I. ·" lo111orrow * tAe .eihe the * * ic •' - Volume XXIX. No. 9 Rushing Week Smokers Set ' For Next Week Fraternities Draw Lots -For Nights For En- tertaining -The fraternities' rushing wee!c will begin officially next Monday, and will extend to the following Monday. During that time the members of the campus fraterni- ties will rush freshmen and trans- fers •prior to pledging them. Rushing is, generally speaking, the meeting of new boys by the members and · the making of friends with them. The time for the rushing period was fixed by the Pan-Hellet!ic Council Tuesday night, at which time the fraternities drew lots for nights foi· smokers. Alpha Kappa Pi will hold its smoker on the first day rushing officially begins Monday, followed by Sigma Phi Epsilon on Tues-- day, Sigma Pi on Wednesday, Kappa Sigma on Thursday, Pi Kappa Alpha on Friday, and Kap- pa Alpha on Monday, October 23, the last day of rushing week. -- Pictured above is Herbert R. Baer, who returns to the Wake Forest law school faculty. Pro- fessor Baer will serve as acting dean replacing Dr. Dale F. Stans- bury who is now on the Univer- sity of Tennessee law staff. For the past three years Pro- fessor Baer has been an OP A at- torney in Raleigh. He is a B. A. of Cornell, a L. L. B. of Har- vard, and was teaching fellow in law at Cornell. Before the out- break of the w.ar he taught at Wake Forest. Wake-Forest, N.C., Friday, October 13, 1944 _Men In Service Want Donate To Send It To Them The Old Gold and Black staff I Lt. William C. Stanback, Navy started a campaign Wednesday j Medical Corps, writes from some- night to raise money to send the where in the South Pacific, Old Gold and. Black to service I "What's going on in dear ol' Wake men. Everyone on the campus is 1 Forest'! I would certainly appre- being asked to contribute to this ciate it if you would send me worthy cause. Each year a cam- some copies of the Old Gold and paign of this sort is conducted by Black. When you're as far from the Old Gold and Black in order home as I am, you really appre- that alumni may keep up with eiate hearing all about what your I the College and its news. If there Alma Mater is doing." · I a certain person that one would Ferd Davis, now serving in the · like to have the College paper South Pacific theater of war / Ee!lt to, he may turn in the name writes: "I'd give anything to re- With the ·others are ask- ceive the Old Gold and Black. I' ed to contnbute to the general Would it be possible for you to fund to send the paper to the · send it to me? There's nothin-< many boys who write for it. I like keeping posted on the news"' All donations should be given , you know!" ' to Fred Hoffman and R. H. Brant- 1 - r ley, business manager and editor! _ . . above is Benjamin 'r. of Old Gold and Black. Every, . Lt. Joe. Ward, Greensboro attorney, who cent of the . donated money is from Ita_ly. Wake 1s or;e has l;leen elected president of the used for postage, which runs to nof the fond that . I Jl general alumni association of nearly $2 for an overseas sub- ever forget, even m the m4dst Wake Fqrest College. He has scription and less for one in this of war. Someday I hope to. come served two terms as a of country.' back graduate, but m thi! lihe board of la:v exammers of To stress the importance of this meantime, would you send 1 . the North Ca}-'olma Bal.', drive, here are what some of me .the Old Gold and Black. and was a lieutenant m World the boys "over there" as well as really be War I. . . those serving in the armed zlu"?g thrs, yeai. with all t!"le vrc- OI!.!i._ of .the. chref promoters m in this country have to say about tones we ye up. Just hope the orgamzatiOn of the Wake it: . we keep 1t up- Forest College ba?d, he received Pvt. W. B. "Billy" Primm writes Lt, Herbert B. Cline,, Jr., now the B. degree m 1919 and the from Belgium: "I don't know stat10ned at Maxwell Field, Ala., LL .. B. m 1920: In college he was Telephone 304-6 Pan-Hel Dance To Have Band Of Jerry Wald Nationally Known Or- chestra to PI1ay at Fall's Only Formal Because it will be the only for- mal dance sponsored by the Pan- Hellenic Council this fall, Jerry Wald and his twenty-two piece band has been obtained for the Homecoming Day dance on No- vember 4. The dance, the first with a na- tionally known orchestra since Frankie Masters and his band played at the Memorial Auditor- ium in Raleigh in 1941, be held in either the Community House or the larger High School Gymnasium. Since the faculty has suggested that the number of dances be reduced this year, the fraternities decided that a well-known orchestra should be chosen. Then, beginning Tuesday, Octo- ber 24, comes the quiet period, a time during which no fraternity man shall talk to any. prospective pledge about anything concerning the. fraternity. At. the end of this brief period the students shall go to Dean D. B. Bryan's office to state their preference of frater- who's editor of the Old Gold and said, "I got quite a thrill watch- an debater, mem- c PI Black, but I'm writing to him or ing our team rur: over tl;e Bull- ber of the glee club, senior ed!tor Ommlttee ans he_r and enclosing some money . down here m G;eorgra week of. the yearbook and Asso. editor . · for this year's issue. 1 don't know bef,ore last. Now I'd like .to see an of Old Gold.: . . Jerry Wald, whose clarinet style resembles Artie Shaw's, has appeared at the Paramount Thea- ter in New York, the Hotel Sher- man in Chicago, and the Pala.;. dium in Hollywood. He has played over the radio recently as the Coca-Cola Spot- light Band. · much about what's going on at 91a and .Black tellmg about marned M1ss Josephme Ch I P Wake so how about keeping me rt-not JUSt this week, but every Reid, of Wake Forest, daughter A record-maker for Decca, his best known selections are "Trains in the Night" and "Mad About Him Blues." ape rograms _ . week. Could you send it to me?" of Mr. J. L. Reid, Seaboard ra!l- Sgt. John Conley, who is in Cpl. Wait Brewer, Jr., home on way_a""'g_e_n_t_h_e_r_e_. ------- nity. France, writes: "I would appre- leave for a few days, told us, Appointed by the Student ciate it if you'd let me · know "Getting the Old Gold and Black Council, a committee composed of whether .. or not you received my is the high-light of my week. Just I R-C·- o.·scusse·s At present at the Frolic Club in Miami, Florida, he will play in Charleston, S. C., before coming here. Local News Sent To Men Overseas Dewey Hobbs, Virginia Gilley, story that I wrote for the Old/ hope they keep coming. It's great and Simmons Fentress worked Gold and Black. (P. S.)-we did!) reading all the news and finding --- ' - out the following schedule for I wish you'd see that I receive the i out where all my buddies are in >Pia--- 0 ·- f y Student Government chapel prl)- OG&B this year." ' I the Service Men's Column." - s or ear F p grams through December 11, the -' . : o. renSIC rogram last student assembly before the Christmas holidays: 7\. i Tew· Class 7\ Tom l·n· ees CurrSiectuiAumsi·dRe eBqyuirTehmeents Attratlts Interest This week the college News Bu- October 16-The Eu Society _L l' _L f f " -reau, under the direction of Prof October 23-The Phi Society Club Jasper L. Memory, Jr., is mail- October 30-The Band and Or- ll b ll t . t chestra B · M d Ti d With the activities on Wake ing twot1° ems · 0 ap- November 6- The Minister- 0 e arne - ues ay The Wake Forest In-ternational Forest campus assuming a more proxima e Y ' servicemen 1'a! Associ'ati'on Rei t' Cl b h ld ts normal P t th' f who have at one time attended the · a Ions u e i first as ec Is year, one o college. November 13-The Pan Hellen- of t.he semester Thursday the gr?UPs in this pro- O f th b . . . ic Council mght, October 5, in room 29 of gram Is the Forensic Squad. ne 0 , e ·-- u:u_etins. a l.Dtn].- _. ,cNovember 20 ---: .. The Glee Cl_ub the Law Building. The meetin" On Tuesday night about twen- eograpllec, sheet,·contammg short -November · 27 __::.--The ·Little ·- · -- ·. · ·. · - · ·- -: ·-.• .. ,:;::.,::- .. __ -::_:-.--,-----:-_ -_--------- was --presided over by presicier 1 t ty-W/e persons met with items of college news entftled Theatre Disqualification of Candi- 1 1 Simmons Fentress and was pri- sor A. L. Aycock, faculty director ''Campus News." Such items :lS December 4-The International dates Nec.essitates Student Coone·· I marily concerned with outstand- of speech activities, to survey the faculty changes, the football Relations Club ing business and the formulation possibilities for an active intra- schedule, football the lat- December 11-The Monogram Meetmgs A 0 · of plans. for the operation of the mural and intercollegia:te deba;e est developments m the enlarge- Club cts n Elect•lons IRC durmg the coming year. an.d this year. At ment and the fall en- These chapel programs are b The Junior and Senior Classes 1 Membership .was the principal th1s meetmg was made .10llment are . be presented by the respective will hold meetings during the 1 1tem up for drscussion, and the I of Carolma Student bulletm Is a campus organizations during tha regular chapel period next Tues- 1 . vote.d to refrain from plac- • Asse':Jlbly be held .Pictures _of the regular Monday morning Student day morning in order to hold 1 follow_m.g resolution, mg curriculum requirements as m Raleigh sometune this fall. Un- mgs to be mcluded m the enlar.,e Government chapel period an-i nominations for the various the f!llmg .of vacant a basis for membership' any time til the emergency, Wake Forest ment A letter on the will be planned so as to consume cancies which now exist in the tlons m the Juntor anci Semor in the !'fear future. The names of had always been well represented cover 1s "To about twenty minutes each. This class officerships. 1 classes and the of likelv prospects for club admis- -at this event, and indications are m Military Service. -schedule has been approved by ,Only the presidency of the Ju- recent nommees for these sion. were brought before the that we will revive the standing Quotmg from the letter: · 'both the Student Council and nior class .is now vacant and thus! pos1hons, was_ up by Clar- group. this year. "Your friends on Wake For- Dean D. B. Bryan, and is printed the Juniors will only hold nom- I ence Bowen, president of stu- Professor F. w. Clonts of the Mention was made of two pos- est can:pus appreciate what you at the request of Dean Bryan. "inations to fill that position. / dent body, and passed Department, faculty ad- speech tournaments: the are domg, Wish for you a safe In the Senior class, however, ly by the .stu.dent m Its vrser for the club, was present Dixie at Charlotte, return, and desire to be of J?erviee the situation is different, with ' mght meetmg. ut the meeting and led the dis- and Rock Hill, S. C., and tne to you not only in the post-war· four positions to be filled in I Resultmg .from. a lack of cussion. Various suggestions werl'! Grand Eastern Tournament. Both adjustment period but also now.'' here at government expense. Tuesda meeting. Those positions I quate understandmg concermnJ made by him regardine: several of these tournaments are sponsor-- The letter continues by saying "We are always deligh.ted .tn . ! 'd 1 . the class status of a number of h - d b th st b L af s that any desired address of any have letters from our men m mil- are .. Ptesi ency of the c ass, VIce- nominees selected in the recent P ases of club operation It was e Y e raw erry e a- servicemen will be supplied on itary service and we want to give of the. class, and two class meetings several of the per- that the En- of Winthrop College, Rock request. "Almost 3,000 ot Wake more. space to this in semor to the Stu- sons were declared ineligible, dowment will continue to send the Htll, S. C. At these tournaments, Forest's 10,000 living alumni are ture 1 ssues of Alumm News Co_uncli. The; second vacaJ?.CY consequently necessitating re- Wake Forest club literature con- many types of · spea_king are wearing the colors, and we can Please send us p 1 ctures, semor representation nominations and a postponment sist!ng of books, pamphlets, and scheduled Some tell you where practically all of per clippings, and anything else was created this week by the ?-n- of election day. periOdicals this fall. This litera- of these are radto, s1tuatlon ora-- them are." · is a member of the big Wake For- nouncement of. Smith, I The Student Government ap- tme will be placed in the IRC tory, after dinner, impromptu, ex- The former Deacons are told of inter.est. After all, of us 1 . one o! the council J predates the fact that these per- section of the library for use in tempore, Any- _ that they may obtain that Alumni est family, and we are entitled to sentahves, tha;t he would. ;;o\>n sons have withdrawn from the the preparation of programs. one who ts mterested m any of . News without any charge if they know how its individual sons are school to enter . m1htary contest and have shown a splen- Sibyl Jolly, club secretary, an- these phases of forensics is eligt- will request it. The letter con- faring. Thus. the Semor Class did spirit of cooperation. nounced that she will receive or- l:le to become a member of the tinues: - "And when your furlough rolls · wli.l t.o fill four vacant Those who are eligible will re- ders during the next few days for Wake Forest Speech Squad. "You'll be interested to know around, put Wake Forest your I whr.e, main on the list of nominees, but club keys, and advised any desir- Letters Awarded that Wake Forest has signed a schedule (as many men m the the :Jumors wrll nommate only a I the Senior and Junior classes will ing these to see her immediately. As an added inducement for contract with the War Depart- service are doing) and come by 1' president .. . . . I meet Tuesday at 10: 30 for addi- Dick Griffin was appointed by participations in speech contests ment which provides for G. I. the office, Nommees Disqualified ! tiona! nominations. president Fentress as program su- at Wake Forest, the college training here. We have already middle section of Walt Hall. 1 ·: The reholding of nominations. The following offices will be pervisor for the club and will be awards letters to those who do enrolled this session a number Jf be glad to see you. Et;- i next Tuesday in the Junior open for these nominations: presi- in charge of all IRC program'; outstanding speech work as rep- war veterans who have been dis- closed IS a sheet we hope you 11 Senior classes will occur as a re- : deney of the Senior Class, vice- -see PLANS, Page 4- -See INTEREST, Page 4- charged and are being educated find interesting." suit of the disqualification of · presidency of the Senior Class, ------------------------------- Paper several of the previous nominees two Senior representatives to the for these class offices because of . Student Council, the presidency Ret -u rns Home an insufficiency in number of of the Junior Class. . credit hours to establish them as We suggest that if you are not members of the classes in whica certain of the standing of some- Societies On Up C1 Up they' were running. Junior class · one you wish to nominate, please becoming nominations were previously held check by the ·Registrar's office. By J. L. Memory, Jr. erary societies slackened. There Tuesday. morning, while the Se- · This will prevent further errors were crack debating teams, to be Academic life was cramped upstairs. By Emily Crandall The prodigal has come home to In the meantime, the Howler roost, and the Old Gold and Black and the Student partitioned ther't' at last feathers its nest in its old otfice and became;- more or less, home. The other day moving next-door neighbors. - vans, in . the shape of huma::1 The Old Gold hung up its hat bodies, were busily moving the in its little office, passed it off newspaper and its surrounding with, "C'est la guerre.' ", and elements into its old 1 continued to hum. It was a .dandy passing on the way other movmg little of1ice, homey and fnendly, vans who were transporting the with pictures hung up all over Howler and its surrounding eh1- one wall; but there was just one ments down to the 0. G. and 3. trouble. . .the staff was a little sanctum. too b1g for its quarters. Every Four years ago the Great Swap Wednesday night it took place. What has hitherto sembled a bottle of m been known as the Howler of- that it overflowed, sendmg mem- fice was once one big room, with bers of the staff into the no partitioning wall. Therein the b.Qoths in the hall. - members of the newspaper staff And they kept 011 putting out court every yv ednesday a good newspaper. rught and sang lullabies, as al- L . th Student magazine wavs as they put the paper to ast year e . bed They decided however that stretched and and dec1d- . · 'b t ' th ed to take a httle snooze for a two offices would e be ter h'l Th t 1 ft the Howler to one and they traded places w1th w 1 e. a e . rt the' Howler and the Student. rule the roost. alone, m so l Happily ensconced in its new grandeur, Old G quarters, the Old Gold proceeded went its . way With rts exuberant, to hum, as usual. Their stay thel'e staff. Then, at last, was short, however, because a practical measures were adopted, year before the soldiers came to and there occurred the Great Wake Forest, Dr. L. 0. Rea, Pro- Swap of 1944. fessor of Economics,-moved down- And so the Old Gold and Black stairs into one offices. The -See PAPER, Page 4- niors met and held nominations which, if occUlTing again, . The of interest in sure, but none of that old-time a week eaarlier. simply mean further delay." literary at Wake Forest "special train" interest Following is a list of the offi- has taken a backward cia! resignations of the nominees COUNCIL TO HOLD Backward, but in the right This session, however, the who were forced to surrende!· d1rechon-toward the year . 1900 tables have turned. The Eu's their candidacy because of a lack· MONTHLY DANCES when there was keener rivalry have thrown down the gauntlet of 'credit hours. In order to clear ' between the college's two his-tor- to the Phi's. They have roped in up the situation OLD GOLD AND i Th St d t C . 1 ic societies than now exists ::tt !J9 new members, which added to BLACK is printing the actual . e u e! 1 oun<: 1 in its 'f Fivr fr<;tball game-. their 35 old ones gives them a to- words of the candidates as they : Wt;dnesday mght meetmg voted In those days when representa- tal of 134, all their hall will hold. appeared !!hove their signatpres: : to sponsor student to of Wake Forest's Philoma- They have a waiting list for To the students of the Senior : place at th: Commu?-Ity Hou.,e thesmn and Euzelian literary so- prospective members and have Class: monthly for the the ciet;es were to appear in a debate placed an order for 70 new chairs. I Ozmer Henry, Jr., hereby, _PrOVJdmg !s. ,no in Raleigh against some other At their Monday night meeting -See NOMINEES Page 4- ' With the act.IvltJes college, it was- necessary for a two of their members contrasted ' 1 of Pan. Hellemc Counc!l and special train to be sent out to the Republican and Democratic .... , ....... , ...... ,...,., .... , ...... ,...,., .... ........ ...... ,,.,., ....... ..,.-; : the Coeds m the presentatiOn or carry the "rooters." The fact that platforms which was followed by SORRY, EMILY Old Gold and Black apolo- gizes to Emily Potter Cran- :lall for leaving her name out of the list of people who .vere chosen for Who's Who Among American Colleges and Universities. Emily is 1rominent in publications, the Little Theater, the music :iepartment, and was presi- :ient of the IRC for one ::tuarter. these monthly . so many of the debates were an open forum, and earlier in .The Council wil_l worl>. scheduled in Raleigh itself indi- the session they heard Dr. Hu- Wlth pean Lms J?hnson m the , cat"s that the opposing debaters bert M. Pote<!t on "Intel- . of a socml and: regarded it safer to speak outside i lectual Matunty! and Professor . with the Pan Hellemc Coun- the campus walls. A. L .. discuss "Effective 1 m order that there be. no con- And a day two before col- Speakmg. , 1 fl!ct between the Cotmcil lege opened each fall, zealous up- The Phi's have accepted the 1 es or other social percbssmen themselves challenge and are rapidly filling func.h.ons which the coeds or fra- at neighboring railroad points i.n their hall. i termhes may have planned. order to intercept the incoming There was a football game be- , freshmen and inbue them with tween the two societies this i Lt. (jg) Hubert King, class of the spirit of "Dear Old Mother week; and picnics, socials, and : '44, is stationed in San Diego, Cal- Euzelia" or "Philomathesia," ao; other interesting activities are on . ifornia. the case may have been. tap. i Lt. (jg) W. T. Charles, class of But in subsequent years, :;>_t President of the Eu's is Jack t '40, is teaching meteorology at the Wake Forest, as at all colleges, oth-1 Southard of Leaksville. The Phi's I Naval Air Station, Corpus Christie, er campus organizations made in- are headed by John Friday of I Texas. roads, and popular interest in lit- Dallas.

n au ar Take I. - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · mgs to be mcluded m the enlar.,e Government chapel period an-i nominations for the various va-~· c.ermn~ the f!llmg .of vacant po~I-a basis

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Page 1: n au ar Take I. - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · mgs to be mcluded m the enlar.,e Government chapel period an-i nominations for the various va-~· c.ermn~ the f!llmg .of vacant po~I-a basis

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Take ·v. M.. I. ·" lo111orrow * ~- ~ coW·~~AJe/14 tAe -e~ .eihe the M~" * * ic

•' - ~~~---------------~----------·--~--------------------------------------------------~ Volume XXIX. No. 9

Rushing Week Smokers Set

'

For Next Week Fraternities Draw Lots

-For Nights For En­tertaining

-The fraternities' rushing wee!c will begin officially next Monday, and will extend to the following Monday. During that time the members of the campus fraterni­ties will rush freshmen and trans­fers •prior to pledging them.

Rushing is, generally speaking, the meeting of new boys by the members and · the making of friends with them.

The time for the rushing period was fixed by the Pan-Hellet!ic Council Tuesday night, at which time the fraternities drew lots for nights foi· smokers.

Alpha Kappa Pi will hold its smoker on the first day rushing officially begins Monday, followed by Sigma Phi Epsilon on Tues-­day, Sigma Pi on Wednesday, Kappa Sigma on Thursday, Pi Kappa Alpha on Friday, and Kap­pa Alpha on Monday, October 23, the last day of rushing week.

~~"-e - -

Pictured above is Herbert R. Baer, who returns to the Wake Forest law school faculty. Pro­fessor Baer will serve as acting dean replacing Dr. Dale F. Stans­bury who is now on the Univer­sity of Tennessee law staff.

For the past three years Pro­fessor Baer has been an OP A at­torney in Raleigh. He is a B. A. of Cornell, a L. L. B. of Har­vard, and was teaching fellow in law at Cornell. Before the out­break of the w.ar he taught at Wake Forest.

Wake-Forest, N.C., Friday, October 13, 1944

_Men In Service Want N~ws; Donate To Send It To Them

The Old Gold and Black staff I Lt. William C. Stanback, Navy started a campaign Wednesday j Medical Corps, writes from some­night to raise money to send the where in the South Pacific, Old Gold and. Black to service I "What's going on in dear ol' Wake men. Everyone on the campus is 1 Forest'! I would certainly appre­being asked to contribute to this ciate it if you would send me worthy cause. Each year a cam- some copies of the Old Gold and paign of this sort is conducted by Black. When you're as far from the Old Gold and Black in order home as I am, you really appre­that alumni may keep up with eiate hearing all about what your I the College and its news. If there Alma Mater is doing." · I i~ a certain person that one would Ferd Davis, now serving in the · like to have the College paper South Pacific theater of war / Ee!lt to, he may turn in the name writes: "I'd give anything to re­With the m~ney. ·others are ask- ceive the Old Gold and Black. I'

ed to contnbute to the general Would it be possible for you to fund to send the paper to the · send it to me? There's nothin-< many boys who write for it. I like keeping posted on the news"'

All donations should be given , you know!" ' to Fred Hoffman and R. H. Brant- 1 - r ley, business manager and editor! _ . . above is Benjamin 'r. of Old Gold and Black. Every, . Lt. Joe. ~~nnerman wn~es u~ Ward, Greensboro attorney, who cent of the . donated money is from Ita_ly. Wake ~orest 1s or;e has l;leen elected president of the used for postage, which runs to nof the fond memor~es that . I Jl general alumni association of nearly $2 for an overseas sub- ever forget, even m the m4dst Wake Fqrest College. He has scription and less for one in this of war. Someday I hope to. come served two terms as a m~mber of country.' back ~nd graduate, but m thi! lihe board of la:v exammers of

To stress the importance of this meantime, would you pleas~ send 1

. the North Ca}-'olma St~te Bal.', drive, here are what some of me .the Old Gold and Black. T~at and was a lieutenant m World the boys "over there" as well as :~orts ~age ~ust. really be s~- War I. . . those serving in the armed force~ zlu"?g thrs, yeai. with all t!"le vrc- OI!.!i._ of .the. chref promoters m in this country have to say about tones we ye prl~? up. Just hope the orgamzatiOn of the Wake it: . we keep 1t up- Forest College ba?d, he received

Pvt. W. B. "Billy" Primm writes Lt, Herbert B. Cline,, Jr., now the B. ~- degree m 1919 and the from Belgium: "I don't know stat10ned at Maxwell Field, Ala., LL .. B. m 1920: In college he was

Telephone 304-6

Pan-Hel Dance To Have Band Of Jerry Wald

Nationally Known Or­chestra to PI1ay at Fall's

Only Formal Because it will be the only for­

mal dance sponsored by the Pan­Hellenic Council this fall, Jerry Wald and his twenty-two piece band has been obtained for the Homecoming Day dance on No­vember 4.

The dance, the first with a na­tionally known orchestra since Frankie Masters and his band played at the Memorial Auditor­ium in Raleigh in 1941, w~ be held in either the Community House or the larger High School Gymnasium. Since the faculty has suggested that the number of dances be reduced this year, the fraternities decided that a well-known orchestra should be chosen.

Then, beginning Tuesday, Octo­ber 24, comes the quiet period, a time during which no fraternity man shall talk to any. prospective pledge about anything concerning the. fraternity. At. the end of this brief period the students shall go to Dean D. B. Bryan's office to state their preference of frater-

who's editor of the Old Gold and said, "I got quite a thrill watch- an mter-colleg~ate debater, mem-c • PI Black, but I'm writing to him or ing our team rur: over tl;e Bull- ber of the glee club, senior ed!tor Ommlttee ans he_r and enclosing some money . do~s down here m G;eorgra week of. the yearbook and Asso. editor . · for this year's issue. 1 don't know bef,ore last. Now I'd like .to see an of Old Gold.: . .

Jerry Wald, whose clarinet style resembles Artie Shaw's, has appeared at the Paramount Thea­ter in New York, the Hotel Sher­man in Chicago, and the Pala.;. dium in Hollywood. ~

He has played over the radio recently as the Coca-Cola Spot­light Band.

~ · much about what's going on at 91a Gol~ and .Black tellmg about ~e marned M1ss Josephme

Ch I P Wake so how about keeping me rt-not JUSt this week, but every Reid, of Wake Forest, daughter A record-maker for Decca, his best known selections are "Trains in the Night" and "Mad About Him Blues."

ape rograms infor~1ed?" _ . week. Could you send it to me?" of Mr. J. L. Reid, Seaboard ra!l-Sgt. John Conley, who is in Cpl. Wait Brewer, Jr., home on way_a""'g_e_n_t_h_e_r_e_. -------

nity. • France, writes: "I would appre- leave for a few days, told us, Appointed by the Student ciate it if you'd let me · know "Getting the Old Gold and Black

Council, a committee composed of whether .. or not you received my is the high-light of my week. Just I R-C·- o.·scusse·s At present at the Frolic Club in

Miami, Florida, he will play in Charleston, S. C., before coming here. Local News Sent

To Men Overseas

Dewey Hobbs, Virginia Gilley, story that I wrote for the Old/ hope they keep coming. It's great and Simmons Fentress worked Gold and Black. (P. S.)-we did!) reading all the news and finding --- ' -~.· -out the following schedule for I wish you'd see that I receive the i out where all my buddies are in >Pia---

0·- f y

Student Government chapel prl)- OG&B this year." ' I the Service Men's Column." - s or ear F • p grams through December 11, the -' . : o. renSIC rogram last student assembly before the

Christmas holidays: 7\. i Tew· Class 7\ Tom l·n· ees CurrSiectuiAumsi·dRe eBqyuirTehmeents Attratlts Interest This week the college News Bu- October 16-The Eu Society _L l' _L f f " -reau, under the direction of Prof October 23-The Phi Society Club Jasper L. Memory, Jr., is mail- October 30-The Band and Or-

ll b ll t . t chestra ~ B · M d Ti d With the activities on Wake ing twot1° eg~55u0 ems ·0

ap- November 6- The Minister- 0 e arne - ues ay The Wake Forest In-ternational Forest campus assuming a more proxima e Y ' servicemen 1'a! Associ'ati'on Rei t' Cl b h ld ts normal P t th' f who have at one time attended the · a Ions u e i first meet-~ as ec Is year, one o college. November 13-The Pan Hellen- i~g- of t.he semester Thursday the gr?UPs in this ~enewal pro-

O f th b . . . ic Council mght, October 5, in room 29 of gram Is the Forensic Squad. ne

0 , e ·-- u:u_etins. 1~ a l.Dtn].- _. ,cNovember 20 ---: .. The Glee Cl_ub the Law Building. The meetin" On Tuesday night about twen-

eograpllec, sheet,·contammg short -November · 27 __::.--The ·Little ·- · -- ~--· ·. · ·. · - · • ·- - · -: ·-.• _;.:-,~ .. ,:;::.,::-.. __ -::_:-.--,-----:-_ -_--------- was --presided over by presicier1t ty-W/e persons met with Profes~--

items of college news entftled Theatre Disqualification of Candi-1

1 Simmons Fentress and was pri- sor A. L. Aycock, faculty director ''Campus News." Such items :lS December 4-The International dates N ec.essitates Student Coone·· I marily concerned with outstand- of speech activities, to survey the faculty changes, the football Relations Club ing business and the formulation possibilities for an active intra-schedule, football ~cores, the lat- December 11-The Monogram Meetmgs A 0 · of plans. for the operation of the mural and intercollegia:te deba;e est developments m the enlarge- Club cts n Elect•lons IRC durmg the coming year. an.d speec~ ,progra~ this year. At ment prograt;~, and the fall en- These chapel programs are b The Junior and Senior Classes

1 • Membership .was the principal th1s meetmg ment10~ was made

.10llment are mclude~. . be presented by the respective will hold meetings during the 1

1tem up for drscussion, and the I of ~he ~orth Carolma Student Th~ ~econ~ bulletm Is a s~eet campus organizations during tha regular chapel period next Tues- 1 . • ~lub vote.d to refrain from plac- • !-egtsla~Ive Asse':Jlbly ~o be held

~ontammg .Pictures _of the bull~- regular Monday morning Student day morning in order to hold 1 T~e follow_m.g resolution, co~- mg curriculum requirements as m Raleigh sometune this fall. Un­mgs to be mcluded m the enlar.,e Government chapel period an-i nominations for the various va-~· c.ermn~ the f!llmg .of vacant po~I- a basis for membership' any time til the emergency, Wake Forest ment p~ogram. A letter on the will be planned so as to consume cancies which now exist in the tlons m the Juntor anci Semor in the !'fear future. The names of had always been well represented cover 1s ?ddres~~d, "To 'Yak~ about twenty minutes each. This class officerships. 1 classes and the ~neligibility of likelv prospects for club admis- -at this event, and indications are Fore~ters m Military Service. -schedule has been approved by ,Only the presidency of the Ju- sev~~al recent nommees for these sion. were brought before the that we will revive the standing Quotmg from the letter: · 'both the Student Council and nior class .is now vacant and thus! pos1hons, was_ dr~wn up by Clar- group. this year.

"Your friends on ~he Wake For- Dean D. B. Bryan, and is printed the Juniors will only hold nom- I ence Bowen, president of t~e stu- Professor F. w. Clonts of the Mention was made of two pos-est can:pus appreciate what you at the request of Dean Bryan. "inations to fill that position. / dent body, and passed una!u~o~s- ~istory Department, faculty ad- sibl~ speech tournaments: the are domg, Wish for you a safe In the Senior class, however, ly by the .stu.dent Cour~cll m Its vrser for the club, was present Dixie Tour~ament at Charlotte, return, and desire to be of J?erviee the situation is different, with ' W~dnesd~y mght meetmg. ut the meeting and led the dis- and Rock Hill, S. C., and tne to you not only in the post-war· four positions to be filled in th~ I Resultmg .from. a lack of a~e_- cussion. Various suggestions werl'! Grand Eastern Tournament. Both adjustment period but also now.'' here at government expense. Tuesda meeting. Those positions I quate understandmg concermnJ made by him regardine: several of these tournaments are sponsor--The letter continues by saying "We are always deligh.ted .tn . ! 'd 1 . the class status of a number of h - d b th st b L af s that any desired address of any have letters from our men m mil- are .. Ptesi ency of the c ass, VIce- nominees selected in the recent P ases of club operation It was e Y e raw erry e a­servicemen will be supplied on itary service and we want to give pre~1dency of the. class, and two class meetings several of the per- announ~ed that the Carn~gie En- ci~ty of Winthrop College, Rock request. "Almost 3,000 ot Wake more. space to this subjec~ in fu-~ semor rep~esentahves to the Stu- sons were declared ineligible, dowment will continue to send the Htll, S. C. At these tournaments, Forest's 10,000 living alumni are ture 1ssues of Th~ Alumm News ~ent Co_uncli. The; second vacaJ?.CY consequently necessitating re- Wake Forest club literature con- many types of · spea_king are wearing the colors, and we can Please send us p1ctures, newspa-~m semor Co~nc1l representation nominations and a postponment sist!ng of books, pamphlets, and scheduled beside~ de~atm~: Some tell you where practically all of per clippings, and anything else was created this week by the ?-n- of election day. periOdicals this fall. This litera- of these are radto, s1tuatlon ora-­them are." · is a member of the big Wake For- nouncement of. Heywoo~ Smith, I The Student Government ap- tme will be placed in the IRC tory, after dinner, impromptu, ex-

The former Deacons are told of inter.est. After all, eac~ of us 1

. one o! the se~10r council re~re- J predates the fact that these per- section of the library for use in tempore, ~n~ m~ny o~ers Any- _ that they may obtain that Alumni est family, and we are entitled to sentahves, tha;t he would. ;;o\>n sons have withdrawn from the the preparation of programs. one who ts mterested m any of

. News without any charge if they know how its individual sons are lle~v~ school to enter . m1htary contest and have shown a splen- Sibyl Jolly, club secretary, an- these phases of forensics is eligt-will request it. The letter con- faring. se;~viCe. Thus. the Semor Class did spirit of cooperation. nounced that she will receive or- l:le to become a member of the tinues: - "And when your furlough rolls · wli.l hav~ t.o fill four vacant cl~~s Those who are eligible will re- ders during the next few days for Wake Forest Speech Squad.

"You'll be interested to know around, put Wake Forest o~ your I offJcers~ps n~xt Tu~sday, whr.e, main on the list of nominees, but club keys, and advised any desir- Letters Awarded that Wake Forest has signed a schedule (as many men m the the :Jumors wrll nommate only a I the Senior and Junior classes will ing these to see her immediately. As an added inducement for contract with the War Depart- service are doing) and come by 1' president.. . . . I meet Tuesday at 10: 30 for addi- Dick Griffin was appointed by participations in speech contests ment which provides for G. I. the alumn~ office, ~econd flo~~{ Nommees Disqualified ! tiona! nominations. president Fentress as program su- at Wake Forest, the college training here. We have already middle section of Walt Hall. W~ 1·: The reholding of nominations. The following offices will be pervisor for the club and will be awards letters to those who do enrolled this session a number Jf be mig~ty glad to see you. Et;- i next Tuesday in the Junior and~ open for these nominations: presi- in charge of all IRC program'; outstanding speech work as rep-war veterans who have been dis- closed IS a sheet we hope you 11 Senior classes will occur as a re- : deney of the Senior Class, vice- -see PLANS, Page 4- -See INTEREST, Page 4-charged and are being educated find interesting." suit of the disqualification of · presidency of the Senior Class,

-------------------------------

Paper several of the previous nominees two Senior representatives to the for these class offices because of . Student Council, the presidency Ret-u rns Home an insufficiency in number of of the Junior Class.

. credit hours to establish them as We suggest that if you are not members of the classes in whica certain of the standing of some-

Societies On Up C1 Up they' were running. Junior class · one you wish to nominate, please

becoming nominations were previously held check by the ·Registrar's office. By J. L. Memory, Jr. erary societies slackened. There Tuesday. morning, while the Se- · This will prevent further errors were crack debating teams, to be

Academic life was cramped upstairs.

By Emily Crandall

The prodigal has come home to In the meantime, the Howler roost, and the Old Gold and Black and the Student partitioned ther't' at last feathers its nest in its old otfice and became;- more or less, home. The other day moving next-door neighbors. -vans, in . the shape of huma::1 The Old Gold hung up its hat bodies, were busily moving the in its little office, passed it off newspaper and its surrounding with, "C'est la guerre.' ", and elements into its old quart~rs,

1 continued to hum. It was a .dandy

passing on the way other movmg little of1ice, homey and fnendly, vans who were transporting the with pictures hung up all over Howler and its surrounding eh1- one wall; but there was just one ments down to the 0. G. and 3. trouble. . .the staff was a little sanctum. too b1g for its quarters. Every

Four years ago the Great Swap Wednesday night it sli~htly r~­took place. What has hitherto sembled a bottle of Pep~I-Cola m been known as the Howler of- that it overflowed, sendmg mem­fice was once one big room, with bers of the staff ou~ into the no partitioning wall. Therein the b.Qoths in the hall. -members of the newspaper staff And they kept 011 putting out h~ld court every yv ednesday a good newspaper. rught and sang lullabies, as al- L . th Student magazine wavs as they put the paper to ast year e . bed They decided however that stretched and y~wned and dec1d-

. · 'b t ' th ed to take a httle snooze for a two offices would e be ter ~n h'l Th t 1 ft the Howler to one and they traded places w1th w 1 e. a e . rt the' Howler and the Student. rule the roost. alone, m so l ~~~

Happily ensconced in its new grandeur, wh1l~ ~he Old G quarters, the Old Gold proceeded went its . way With rts exuberant, to hum, as usual. Their stay thel'e overf~owmg staff. Then, at last, was short, however, because a practical measures were adopted, year before the soldiers came to and there occurred the Great Wake Forest, Dr. L. 0. Rea, Pro- Swap of 1944. fessor of Economics,-moved down- And so the Old Gold and Black stairs into one of~ offices. The -See PAPER, Page 4-

niors met and held nominations which, if occUlTing again, will~· . The pend.ul~tm of interest in sure, but none of that old-time a week eaarlier. simply mean further delay." literary so~JetJes at Wake Forest "special train" interest

Following is a list of the offi- Co~lege has taken a backward cia! resignations of the nominees COUNCIL TO HOLD s~vmg: Backward, but in the right This session, however, the who were forced to surrende!· d1rechon-toward the year . 1900 tables have turned. The Eu's their candidacy because of a lack· MONTHLY DANCES when there was keener rivalry have thrown down the gauntlet of 'credit hours. In order to clear ' between the college's two his-tor- to the Phi's. They have roped in up the situation OLD GOLD AND i Th St d t C .1 ic societies than now exists ::tt !J9 new members, which added to BLACK is printing the actual . e u e!1 oun<:1 in its 'f E~i~ Fivr fr<;tball game-. their 35 old ones gives them a to-words of the candidates as they : Wt;dnesday mght meetmg voted In those days when representa- tal of 134, all their hall will hold. appeared !!hove their signatpres: : to sponsor student dan~es to t~e tivc~ of Wake Forest's Philoma- They have a waiting list for

To the students of the Senior : place at th: Commu?-Ity Hou.,e thesmn and Euzelian literary so- prospective members and have Class: monthly for the ~emamder ~f the ciet;es were to appear in a debate placed an order for 70 new chairs.

I Ozmer Henry, Jr., hereby, scme~ter, _PrOVJdmg ~here !s. ,no in Raleigh against some other At their Monday night meeting -See NOMINEES Page 4- ' c~nfllct With the ~ocral act.IvltJes college, it was- necessary for a two of their members contrasted

' 1 of th~ Pan. Hellemc Counc!l and special train to be sent out to the Republican and Democratic ....,.......,......,...,.,....,......,...,.,.... ........ ......,,.,., ....... ..,.-; : the Coeds m the presentatiOn or carry the "rooters." The fact that platforms which was followed by

SORRY, EMILY

Old Gold and Black apolo­gizes to Emily Potter Cran­:lall for leaving her name out of the list of people who .vere chosen for Who's Who Among American Colleges and Universities. Emily is 1rominent in publications, the Little Theater, the music :iepartment, and was presi­:ient of the IRC for one ::tuarter.

these monthly affair~. . so many of the debates were an open forum, and earlier in .The Studen~ Council wil_l worl>. scheduled in Raleigh itself indi- the session they heard Dr. Hu­

Wlth pean Lms J?hnson m the , cat"s that the opposing debaters bert M. Pote<!t ~peak on "Intel­. plam11~g of a socml cale~dar and: regarded it safer to speak outside i lectual Matunty! and Professor . a~so. with the Pan Hellemc Coun- the campus walls. A. L .. Ay~ock discuss "Effective 1 c1~, m order that there be. no con- And a day m· two before col- Speakmg. , 1 fl!ct between the Cotmcil da~c- lege opened each fall, zealous up- The Phi's have accepted the 1 es a~d dan~es or other social percbssmen st:~tioned themselves challenge and are rapidly filling

func.h.ons which the coeds or fra- at neighboring railroad points i.n their hall. i termhes may have planned. order to intercept the incoming There was a football game be-, freshmen and inbue them with tween the two societies this i Lt. (jg) Hubert King, class of the spirit of "Dear Old Mother week; and picnics, socials, and : '44, is stationed in San Diego, Cal- Euzelia" or "Philomathesia," ao; other interesting activities are on . ifornia. the case may have been. tap. i Lt. (jg) W. T. Charles, class of But in subsequent years, :;>_t President of the Eu's is Jack t '40, is teaching meteorology at the Wake Forest, as at all colleges, oth-1 Southard of Leaksville. The Phi's I Naval Air Station, Corpus Christie, er campus organizations made in- are headed by John Friday of

:....------------~ I Texas. roads, and popular interest in lit- Dallas.

Page 2: n au ar Take I. - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · mgs to be mcluded m the enlar.,e Government chapel period an-i nominations for the various va-~· c.ermn~ the f!llmg .of vacant po~I-a basis

Old Gold And Black Founded Janu:\ry 15, 1nG, as the official stu­

dent ll!:\\'Sjlapcr of 1\'ake b'orest College. Publish­ed weMdy during the s..'twol year excevt <luring examination vori,ds and holidays as directed by the \Vake l!"ore"t College l'ulllications Board.

H. H. Bl{ANT!,EY, JH. ..................... Editor l"HED l!U!Cl\IAX:-; ....•.•...•... llusiness ,lllu.nas-er

Editorial Staff: Alice Holliday, Leslie Fowler, Nan Lac,· Hanis, Charlotte Boone, Emily Crandall, Eddie Folk, Si!Jyl Jo!l>·, Jon Hall, Jimmy Jeffries, LE-w Smitlt, ~l. A. Liles, R. Blount, Becky Brown, F'rault Gregor)', Bill .Korrl~, Rella. Umstead, Arthur Go1·e, SillUllon:::; Pentress.

Sports Staff: AI Jennings, editor ; Charles J,, 1\lorrls, Barl Hester, Le\Vis Grogan.

·------Business Staff: William McLean, Jimmy Little­

john, Bill ltoyal, Jttmes Hobbes, advertising; iV!l­liam Watson, circulation. .

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, Uox 23:!, Wal>c Forest, N. C. All business matter shuuld lJe addrel:lsed to the business man­age•·, same alldrtss. Subscription rate: $2.00 per y t:ar, 40 issues.

PHONE 304-G. l•'or impot·tam news on Tlmrs­days !>hone 2561, The Record Pulllishing Co., Zebu­lon, N. C.

Entered a~ second class mail matter January 22, 19I6, at tile J.>Qst office at Wake l<orest, North Carolina under the act of !\larch 3, 18i9.

Member Associated Collegiate Press

~---------------------------Well Rounded G-rowth

---·- "';<'"'·

. Old Gold and Black. :" --;·' .

' ·- ~. ('

. , . .. . .. ' 1111 •

Miss Lefler •

There has been comment around the cam-J _As The Staff Sees Cam_pus-:Life

pus this week concerning the excellent perform- The other day in class Professor ler noticed th:at there were--several' ance of the College Band last Saturday after- Klontz. put this question to $e coeds standing there. Instea~ of noon. There are none of us whose pulses do geniuses under his tutelage: "What ·oriving-off, however, he exclalDl-

d 15 an abyss?" Woody Woadall 1ed indignantly to the passengers, not quicken to the sound of martial music, an beamed at him and explained that 'Look at those coe_ds out the~e 11 the band did much to give vitality and spirit to an abyss was the wife·.of an ab- who haye been :waiting _all this_ the game. Much of the credit goes to Mack Par- bey. time to go to-Raleigh! ~d look at

· you .lazy people sittmg down! ·

Irish, high-stepping drum major and director of There was an unusually large Moye o-ver! Give ~em some room!" the band. . . . w h T M crowd waiting for the Raleigh bus. ~e. surprised seated ,ones obliged;- , . •It he en It was in fact, so ·large that· it and some of the coeds sat on -th~

j Behind the band and all other· music activ- made o~e almost weep to think of arms of the seats, others·sat in ··· · "' 1 ities on the campus stands Miss Albertine Lef- In SerV.ICe

1

the forlorn souls that would be laps. Finally tM bus was ready-to 1 • • • f P f left behind And it made one leave. The driver put his hands i ler. M1ss Lefler, m the absence o ro e~sor . g to thlnk of the crabby, in- on his hips once' more and said:.

· · · h d crm e h d tin t' f th' b · Ra i Thane McDonald, who IS In t e arme services, 1 suiting bUs driver'_s words as ~e "~ e _es a 10n o _1s wr·lS - __

·assumed the duties of music instructor, and . J beheld the madding throng m llergh. And ~ dare any of you ~ 1

• Electrician's Mate Second Class front of him. The bus finally ar- pull the. cord before we get-there. ; band, orchestra, and glee club director last sum- Paul O. Davis, form~r Wake Forest. rived, J!nd it wa~ noticed that it And no o:qe did. . mer. In last summer's concert she demo.nstrat- student has liad many exciting lwas extre_mely crowde4: d ~he i D G iff , English

21 cl

'ed not only her talent as pianist, but her re·N adven1tRur' es. sir:cetebnlif'stingthienwtarhe~~oe~t~t~~1~tgs~~~~~1 fu~~ive~rl1 wasr~tud~in~:arly American;~ : l l b ava eserve JUS e ore · this ti ul d th markable ability to direct a band and g ee c u . He left the States in May, 1941, He stepped out. of. the )Jus and 1 e~s. O_n par c .ar ay e

: Miss Lefler is teaching several music cours-1 with the second division of U. ~- loqke~ arhoJ?ld.h Puttilm gd hisdhan.dds i disdu~sgsito:e c%!~rcf:yds ~tt~~~t 'A. ·

; · Naval Reserves· he operated m on h1s Ips, e sm e an sai , • . 1 es and directing one of the largest glee clubs m i the North Atl~ntic prior to the "Come on, get 0~." People era~-~ ch~d, ~upposedly possessed V.:Ith I the history of Wake Forest College. She has or- declaration of war and was with I med themselv~s mto. the bus UJ?-tU i evil spmts, ~as see~ ,walking I · · • · I the first Navy expeditionary fore-. it was utterly 1mposs1ble to recelve, around and her feet wer:en t touch­, gan1zed a small orchestra. All the musiC actJVI- t th S th Pacific February , any more passengers. A crowd of I ing the ground. An upper cla!;s-1 ties are under her supervision. Although Miss ~~42~ e ou ' ' 1 fifteen was left outside. The driv- :-See CAMI?US Page 4-Lefler is young in year~, she has shown in the After ret1.1rning t~ the Stat~s by --..- • ... • short time that she has been at Wake Forest way of ~outh An:enca, he _shipped

out agam to Afnca. Dav1s saw / that she is capable and willing to work. Our 1 action for four days on the beach

Along with the Meredith-Wake Forest pro- I bats are off to her! She is a good musician and at Port Lafayette.- From there he · - went to Casablanca, and returned posed merger there came an argument from a good Wake Forest man. to the states. ·

Deacs whoaTe·Gre·eks students that Wake Forest would not be the After being in the States for a same with such an enlarg.:ment. They argued 1· short time_~_eshipped again tot~ f ... ___ .,.,.,, __ .._. _______________ ~ __ ..,.,

I South Pacific, to New Caledoma, that Wake Forest would lose the close contact Gossip .Column _New Hebrides, and was bombed ·SPE ... The Brothers have attempted to improve the·chap~

by Jimmy Jeffries

that it has so long maintained between students j' eighteen days at Gua~alcanal l?Y ter room's looks by the addition of a riew table and lamp ~o . .the Japanese. After this he agam

and the faculty~ _and_ th.at the ~o~lege w~~ld not I There are those on the campus who see~ to (returned to tpe Stat~s in order to match ... The second issue of the chapter's publication, .The·Sig be able to mamtam Its traditiOns, spmt, and. feel that the Old Gold and Black isn't lively 1 attend the submanne school at Ep Review, in mimeographed form, is expected to be. finished.

1 · h W k F t h 1 I · h' h · d :New London, Conn. · · d d B h B b C h ' genera a1r t .at a e ores men ave a ways 1 enough, that 1t lacks somet mg, t at It nee s a 1 While in New Caledonia he saw soon ... Cong~atulations are exten e_ to rot ers o reec been proud of. more personal touch to appeal to the students. I the guillotine that was used in and Haywood Smith on being elected to Who's Who.

There is something of value in this com- As a remedy for this distressing condition, it France during the. Reign of Ter- AKPi ... Ralph Tate was formally initiated into the chap•

plaint-the value that always comes from bon· has been suggested that a gos~ip c?lumn be i~- ro~n Thanksgi~mg Day, Davis and ter last Monday nigltt ... The brothers recently· ;visited Broth~r est and truthful criticism. It causes us to stop eluded. A gossip column, it IS pomted out, IS, three of his buddies .were invited Francis Hargrove, '44, who is recuperating from a boke~ back and contemplate om positions and stands. half the fun of a college newspaper, and it en-) to ~i~ner by a native in the South which he received in an automobile accident two weeks ago. The

• • • , 1 Pacific. However, they got on the · d Yet, the merger would not necessanly 1 ables ~he s~udents to keep m more d!rect con I wrong island and conseq1:1ently chapter extends sympathy to him and wishes him a spee y recov-

bring with it these evils. Abrupt changes in I tact With h1s fellow students. A gossip column ~ere lost for _four days m the ery ... ·Th~ boys have what they hope is the winning fraternity · · · JUngle. They fmally found the _ long standing traditions come only with abrupt 1 IS rather VItal to the personality of the paper. beach and followed it to clviliza- football t.eam rounded into fine shape.

growth and Wake Forest would not spring up I It is needed. So they say. tion. KA ... The chapter wishes to. extend congratulations tOJ ' . . . H' h ' f k I Davis has service bars for three I h · l · h · mushroom-like. Rather", the expansiOn would 1 Ig school papers were great un to wor theatres of war _ American, Eu- Brothers Carroll Wall and Jack Cob e on t e1r e ection to t e po ....

be slow and accomplished with its own muscles. I on, and they were great fun to read. And prob- ropean, and Asiatic - and a sition of junior vice-president and junior secretary-treasur-er, re- · Th h. h w k F l ably the person who had the most fun of all was 1 Bronze A for American defense; spectively ... Brother Wait Brewer visited the Chapter ·room e past t Irty years ave seen a e or- . . he has been on .active duty for

est triple the size 6f its student body without l that prymg soul who wrote the goSSip column- three years. this weekend after the game •... Leslie Bullard was recently the l·oss of the · 't that m kes it a great

1

while he was writing it. After the paper came Paul is from Washington, p. C., taken in as a pledge. sp1n a . . and attended Wake Forest m the

school. Future years will undoubtedly s~e it o~t, hands. were at h~s th~oat from every dm~- fall of 1940 and early 1941, KS ... The Kappa Sigs entertained at an open house for the grow but along with it slow and carefully j tJon, and It served him nght, because from hiS . . . . coeds on this past Sunday from 3 to 5 o'clock. The boys enjoyed

' s om · · t t f 1 h k k ·r t Promotion from first lieutenant d 1 d h h ld h · B othe .,. thought out material growth there will come the j mscten s~a. o gory e too ~ m e o e~· to captain in the Army Chaplains it a great ea an ope to o anot er one soon . . • r r~ spirit that shall forever make Wake Forest standi ery throat Within a reasonable radius. And slit corps has just been announce~ at Jack Baldwin and Bill Cia~:k. visited the chapter after the game: h. h · th y· ld f d · it with the utmost pleasure After graduation headquarters of the San FranCisco this weekend ... The chapter room was recently visited by· Adri-Jg In e 1e o e ucatJOn. . · · Port of Embarkation Fort Mason, . · from h1gh school, when all the hard feelings,, for Chaplain James 'a. Everett, a an Newton, District Adviser of the Kappa Sigma fratermty.

Campus Politics and especially the hurt feelings had melted into ·:former minister at. Eli~abeth CitY,

1 SPi ... The Sigma. Pi's ~ntertained at an open ·house 'Satur-

th b k d h · 1 ff d d who entered serv1ee m .ranuary, . . · . h f h . · . e ac groun , t e goss1p co umn a or e 1943. He recently was transferred :day mght, with Dr. Parker actmg as c aper~ne or t_ e occas1o~

more and more pleasure to look back upon. 'to duty at th': San Franc~co Port I· .. The chapter room has recently been pamted and the furm~ The students of Wake Forest College are otft ~mbarkadhont. CfhWaplkamFEo~eers-t ture temporarily rearranged ... Richard Price (Dickie) Larkins~, W. h h f · d "d e IS a gra ua e o a e • . , ..

It t e ratermty caucus un er cons1 • supposedly mature men and women who have College. Jr., was pledged last week ... Bother Stacy Kmlaw VlSlted the: erable criticism from both the faculty an~ stu- left their high school days in the past, and not 1: d t chapter room during the weekend ... The ~hapter congratulates:' dents W'th o o mo s about coali' . d h . h . k Th Marcus W. Floyd, 1936 gra ua e Who' Wh Cl B d . • I rum rs up n ru ~ . . - carne t em m t e1r poe ets. ose who work :of Wake Forest College, and for- three members elected to s o: arence owen, stu ent

twns to buck the caucus, and With the JUniOr on Old Gold and Black like to feel that they are mer history teache~ at Hu~h Mor- body president;· George Owen, sage; .and Carlyle Kinlaw, for-coeds meeting to discuss elections, campus poli- working on a real newspaper not a shallow i son high school m ~aletJgh, hast mer sage • · 1 · · · · · · . ' ' ; been promoted to 1st lreu enant a ·

:xes has nsen to a new height of actiVIty and I quJckly-forgo~ten pulp tha~ ~oes to press once 1 Truaz Fie_Id, an. AAF-Trainin:g PiKA ... Th~ brothers wish to ~ongratulate ~rothers .Elmer Interest. a week to satisfy the associative urges of nosey j Com_mand mst~llatwn, whe_re h~ lS Barbour AI Jenmngs and Hooey Brantley on the1r selection to• F · f · h b ld h · . servmg as assistant post h1stoncal ' .

or some t1me ratermty men ave e t e k1ds. And on a real newspaper there IS no place officer. Who's Who ... Milton Marney and Shelton Lewis were recently-responsible positions in the student body. Their for a gossip column. . I A native of Lumberton, Lt. taken in as pledges . . . . The chapter was recentl}f caucus has formed the only political unit that There is nothing high-class about a gossip 'i FF~olydd, be~re C?mingt SttoPTeruterasx visited by' Dr Mille~ State President of the Pi Kappa Alpha . ·-has been closely kmt enough to put ItS men m- column. It may start off on the right foot, and burg, Fla.; Sioux Falls, S. ~.; Brothers Furman and Murk Biggs and Roland Pittman visited!

. . . Ie , was m service a . - · ' ·

to office constantly. When the war took many great resolutions may be made about keeping Le~sburg Air Base, Fla., and Ml- the chapter over the weekend. d f h t t d t b · h mm Beach, Fla. goo men rom t e campus mos s u en s e- It on t e up and up ... but give it several --- ,

gan arguing that class standings should not weeks, at best· a month, and it cannot even vie Promotion to first lieutenant t d · h • f d · t' G · h . . I was recently announced at Head-s an In t e \\ay o propose nomma 1ons. en- wit a mud puddle for cleanlmess. 1t 1s a nas· quarters of the san Francisco

era! feeling had it that in this manner the best ty, insidious thing, written partly in fun, partly Port of Embark~tion, Fort Ma7on, men could be put up for office regardless of with malicious intent If one has a special foe for Robert E. Gnce! Jr.,_ AsthheviArlle,

· . . · · ' who has been servmg In e -thetr class. It IS not at all difficult for him to place a well- my Transportation Corps at this

At the nominations held Monday and Tues- aimed blow through the medium of the printed Port since October, 1943.

Literary Societies d · · 'f · . · A former student at Wake For­ay mormngs there were some nommees or page. If the gossip column were a person and est Lt. Grice began his military

class offices who did not hold the necessary could walk and talk there could be only one ser;,ice as an enlisted man. By Jon Hatt Prof. A. L. Aycock, of the Eng-quality points or hours to be considered mem- thing to be said about him: "He is so low that LiLeutenant E. c. Hill, Jr., class The Pholimathesian Literary lish department, spoke to the Eu-bers of the class they were to represent. For it would take a special dispensation from Provi- of •40 is teaching meteorology at Society held its third mee.ting of zelian Literary Society Mondzy

PHILOMATHESIAN EUZELIAN

' · ld v· t · the semester Monday night. Dis- night. the first time in some years there were students dence to raise him up to the level of total de- the Aloe Armu Air Fie ' IC ona, cusswn of business centered The purpose of Prof. Aycock's: and faculty members who were interested! pravity." Texas. .

1

around the purchase by new initi- talk was to giv~ the new: soc~ety o h t th · k d w d d !' I · J ·K R veteran of nine ates of Phi keys. These have now members some pomts on speakmg.. en ug

0 see e m1sta e, an so e nes ay n other words: Sorry, no go. We are try- · · ~use, t C M m 'I'al been ordered for the new mem- In his talk he named three essen-

. h h b f · hd 1 · 1 years service a annon e or . . . . . ak' mg t t ere were a num er o Wit rawa no- mg to run a NEWSpaper. , YMCA, is now back at the main~ bers an~ wlll be received m a tials of effecbve spe mg: (1) tices turned in to Old Gold and Black. Fraterni-1 · \desk of the "Y" after a period of short wJ:ule. 'rhe ,annual football k_nowledge, (2) sense of se¥-con-

. I absence in wh'ch he saw 18 months game With the Eu s also came up fidence, and (3) skill, which he ty men, as a whole. expressed the Idea that they f . . • 1 • k , ith the for discussion and Gene Funder- divided into skill in speaking, and ' • I o service m supp y wor .v . f th Phi k'll . th tte f . . were not trymg to put anything over on the· 'Ph D • D k R :Civil Air Patrol. burk, captam o e team, s I m e rna r o. orgaJll2lrng

student body R th th tt f t I .1 J e zm, 'aP ast i After leaving Kannapolis, Rouse made a report to the hall on the the speech, In conclUSIOn, Mr. A!-. · a er • ey we:e a emp mg

0 ! was stationed at Beaufort with the team. and the game T~esda~ after- cock _stated that he could speak

fmd the best and most responsible men to rep- The love bug stung me in my seventh year . CAP for one year. From there he noon, af~er confer!mg With the all rught on how _to_ make taJ.!ts, resent their party M d · · h L - was _sent to Monogram Field at Eu footballers durmg the early but one. had to put It mto pracbce

· Y ays were rapturous Wit OUJe near. N 1 A" St t' N folk I part of the meeting The game in order to learn to be a good I · I · · h h · · the ava Ir a IOn, or , · , t IS a so mterestmg to note t at for t e I read to h1m each day ... beloved habit! va. His last assignment was at p~ayed Tues~ay afternoon on ,the speaker. . .

first time we know of coeds held a political I I thought that he loved m~ not Peter Rabbit. Hyde Field, near washington. h1~~ school f1eld, was won by the . Monday _we~k th.e soc1ety IS_go-. h' k A · 1 · ' I Rouse was released as ':l master !PhiS 7-0, mg to g1ve Its frrst debate m a. meeting t Is wee·. pprox1mate Y 25 JUniOr One day I thought with a seductive smile, t "The program for the evening, long time. The title will be an-.

girls met at Bostwick Tuesday night to discuss I 'Twas time that I was marching down the aisle! se~~:e · received a Bachelor of unde_r the d~ection of program su- nounced later. The Eu's also• the nominations Apparent! they were dissat·

11 And I h d h d h Science degree from Wake Forest p_ervu;or S1mmons ~entress, con- e~ected Dr. Poteat as facUlty ad-.

• • • · • Y • , as c ase my ero roun t e room, in 1931. sisted of a debate w1th the query: VlSer. . . IS~ Jed . With _the m~nner In which s?me men . re-1 I hollered, "Louie! Will you be my groom?" Resolved - That the Fe~eral g~w- s.everal_new me~bers JOrne~ th~ ce1ved their offices by acclamat10n argumg He looked me up a d do d' d · f 11 Pvt. Billy Primm, '43, former ernment shall ass~e 1mmediate soctety Monday rught. President.

, ' 1 n wn IS am u y, editor of Old Gold and Black, control of the pubhc school sys- Jack Southard announced that the, tbat an attempt was made to railroad other And bluntly he refused to marry me. and second baseman on the var- terns now being operated by the first degree of initiation will be1 prospective nominees. Then elected Jean Brr- My dream of love was shattered through and sity nine, writes that he is Jearn- il_ldividual states .. The affirmative given at 7:00 Monday ~ht t01

· · · · · · · · gr h the h· rd way He side of the quesbon was debated those who haven't yet had 1t. Im-ant ·.as their representative to explam their through, ~~ g:ov~~ Y with th~ First Army by A. C. Hall and Norton Smith, mediately after it, the second de-opinion on the matter at chapel in the coming 'So I resolved to bid the boys adieu. from England, to France, to Bel- w~ile the negative was up~eld by gree will ~-given .to all 'Students

. renomination date. One girl expressed the .feel· I thought it best to lead a manless life gium, and is thinking of studying Bill Sharp and Hank G~~Ity. Af- who have JOmed this fall. · · . ' the geography of Germany and ter heated debate the declSlon went Names of all the new members ing that they met not to dec.1de whether to vote S1nce lazy Louie didn't want a wife. then the South Pacific. He says I to the negative team. will be listed in the next issue of for. a fraternity man or a non-fraternity man, • • * the Belgians "really treat us lil!;e Program Director Fentress an-;;;; th::::is~p"'aper~.:.· ----------

. · · · kinas." nounced that the program for next but to see that the1r mterests were fully pro- Canadian woods one summer I explored "' Monday will consist of accounts of subjects .. Three society members tected. 'Twas then my cousin Johnny I adored. Sgt. John Conley, '43, former t~e~ of _the _greatest murders _and will be in charge of the pres.enta-

. b . th . d tha th se Th c d II h' h • d teaching fellow in French and SUICides 10 history. The assassma- tion of these talks •. .. ~ There IS muc more Jn e wm n e e ran a name rose· 1g er in my mm • · baseball catcher, also writes from tion of Julius Caesar, the suicide The Phi Society is scheduled to

·~::;:;'. incidents indicate. l glowed with light of love toward all mankind! France, where he is with a signal of Cleo.Patra, and the assassination have charge o( the chape~ pro:. · .. \~ · ' · -: -See PAST Page 4-- -See MEN Page 4- of Abraham Lincoln 'will be the, ~am Moaday·m~g; Octol:ier 23 .. .. ~ --~

' "~t.~ '

. '·'-..

Page 3: n au ar Take I. - wakespace.lib.wfu.edu · mgs to be mcluded m the enlar.,e Government chapel period an-i nominations for the various va-~· c.ermn~ the f!llmg .of vacant po~I-a basis

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. ·-~'

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:_· ~ ..... - ' . ..;. ,-

- .. ·., Oicfd~icl·arti Bla~k . • r - ' '

·oeacs Run Wildly; Deacons Clash With V. M.l. ed the number 14 team in the nation by the famed Williamson System.

Probable Starting Line-ups .

Tomorrow At Greensboro ·Tally _39, Points : Wake Forest Pos._ V. M. I. Bruno e Quisenberry Owen 1!; Florence

Against.Maryland with AlJennings

Vi~tory Places Wake For-)......., ________ ......... _______ .J est At Top of The

. The Oreatt;:r University's Board of Trustees recently met in

Raleigh to consid~r certain matters pertaining to the betterment

of education in North Carolina.

Conference

by Al Jennings

The mighty Deacons rolled ,over the .Ole Liners of Maryland

F . k B- 1 S "d M 39-0 here last 'Saturday afternoon 1rst spea er · .was enton Stacy of Reidsvi le. · a1 r. before a disappointing crowd of

Stacy; "This is some.thing that has been b'otherirrg me for a long only 1500 persons. This victory ·-- . · · · put the Deacs at the top of the

by Charlie Morris

The undefeated Demon Deacons of Wake Forest travel to Greens­boro tomorrow night to meet the unpredictable Keydets of Virgin­ia Military Institute. The Keydets lost their opener to little Cataw­ba, but bounced back into the win column last week with an upset over the University of Richmond, one of the V-12 bolstered teams of the Southern Conference.

The Keydets are manned by 17 and 18-year olds, many of whom have played little or no footbalL In. last Saturday's game

has also done well for himself in this week's practice sessions.

The Wake Forest team "is favor­ed tomorrow night, after having handed '·impressive defeats to North Carolina, Georgia, and Maryland. The Deacons are rat-

All Political

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Garrison Jg Thompson li'oreman c Woodard Ratteree rg Ball D. Hobbs rt Mills D. ·Harris re Grimenstein Barbour qb (C) Ellis Smathers rh Butterworth ::>gnovich lh Kozarra Mabry fb Johnson

time. Here is Carolina sending against great teams in the nation Southern Conference standings · · · · with two wins and no defeats m

a football tearp that is a shame and a disgrace. It's humiliating! conference play. they nosed- out the favored Uni- ;~~::~::-~~~:;;::~~ versity of Richmond, 26-20. The game_ was packed with ·many • • ~-

For Secretary of

Freshman Class

Carolina alumni want good coaches and goodplayers and' less in- Maryland never had a chance, as the Deacons rolled to tw•J

thrills, and even the manager of the VMI squad scored a tquch­down in the first quarter on a 33 yard run .

terference and more· management. The. people of this s_ tate are. touchdowns in the first period, three in the second, and finished

. disgusted. What chance do we stand against teams like Army, up their scoring for the day with N. avy, Georgia Tech, Tulane?" ·- another tally in the third quarter. The relatively light VMI squad

Hearing Governor Bro}lghton almost strangle, the chairman gave him the floor. The Governor· was short and to the point as he chirped, "AND WAKE FOREST."

john Umstea~: •;1 m9ve that the trustees vote to permit Carolina and State C.ollege to pay up to $12,000 a year for a head

. · . footba(coach." ·The motion was passed unanimously.

David Clark: "I move that we adopt a resolution making · this football action off the record." This resolution also passed.

Walter (Pete) Murphy: "I saw my 638th football game the ot~er day, !i!nd I also playe_~ on Carolina's first football team. But I've got a high sch-ool football tearri 1n 'Salisbury that can

. beat that team that Carolina has now. I move that we place in the h.ands of the administrative head.s.of the University and of the Athletic Council this matter of getting a ·winning team."

Umstead:· "Bo.th Carolina and State College are embarrass­ing North Carolina with their lack of.· football successes. I fa-: vor including State College in any action of the board. The trustees have been hiding behind the argument that we can't pay a coach more money than we pay a faculty member. If we ,are not...going to pay for football, then let's schedule games with Elon' and Guilford and some other small teams~ but if we are go­ing t9 play the Army and Navy, let's pay for a coach."

Dr. Frank Graham, president~of the University: "I am the - one to blame for th~ present policy ·of paying the coaches no

more th!ln the salary' of the top faculty man. And I still stand by that policy. ....

The powerful Deacs started has a fine passing attack, and will ·rolling in the opening minutes of proba-bly rely on it tomorrow the game. Bob Smathers received night. . The passing attack ac­the opening kickoff and ran the counted for two touchdowns 1n bal1 back 28 yards to his own 42- last Saturday's game, with Elmer yard line. Fullback Buck Mabry Kozarra hitting his receivers 10 gave Wake Forest a first down by times in 23 tries. Kozarra also smacking the line three times and turned in large gains on the moving the ball to the Maryland . ground. . 45. · Bob Smathers picked up ten ; The Keydets have been hard at yards and a first down on a re- work this week on· the Deacons' verse around left end. After plays. The main cogs in their 'de­Maryland received ·a five-yard fense against the Wake Forest penalty for offsides, Mabry drove power plays are tackles Chi Mills, to the 20 for another first down. of New Orleans, and Don Flor­Ognovich followed with a 12-yru:d ence of Birmingham, Ala. Mills, dash around left end for another who was elected captain at a first down, the. ball moving to squad meeting just before the the Maryland eight. Ognovich Richmond game, was the best gained . five yards in three plays, lineman on the field in VMI's anci Bob Smathers went over opener . with Catawba, and play­tackle to score from there. ed another fine game against Cliff Hobbs' attempt for conver- Richmond last Saturday. Florence, sion was good, and Wake led 7-0. whp played with no re}ief against

Near the end of the first quar- Catawba, has been provided with ter, Smathers re~urned Ryan'.3 an able substitute in John Gar­kick six yards to the Deacon 34. man. With Ognovich and Smathers I Coach ·Hubert is also well running those famous reverses of -pleased with the end play of Er­Coach Walker, the Deacons push- nest Quisenberry, a converted ed down to the Maryland 17. Ma- tackle, who graboed one of Ko-bry plowed through the entire zarra's passes and ran it over for Maryland line for 11 yards and a touchdown, against Richmond a first down on the Ole Liners \l. last Saturday. Quisenberry also In two tries at the line, Mabry showed up well on defense. Jim .moved the ball to the one-yard Ball and Manager Ed Powers line, and on third down he prac- ha":c been doing ~ell in rece;'lt tically drove over the Maryland scnmmages, and will see plenty .line for· a score. Cliff Hobbs' tri of action tomorrow night from placement went wide. The The Deacons defeated VMI last I score was 13-0. year in Lynchburg, Va., 21-r.

·· After a few minutes had passed Nick Sacrinty was one of the in the second quarter, Rock stars in that game, and-he manl! Brinkley got off a great kick that the longest run of. the week whe'l went 58 yards, rolling dead on he ·dashed 94 yards for a touch- I'

the Maryland three-yard line. down.

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.

FRESHMEN VOTE

Earlis Jones -. for

Class President

F,RESHMEN

Your Choice for

TREASURER

is

John Bunn ...

Paul Moyle is

YOUR CHOICE for

SECRETARY . Freshman

Harvey Chaney

Here1s Your Man,

Fteshmen,

for President

Paul Griffin

,. FRESHMEN

VOTE

George Barrett for

Vice-President

FRESHMEN VOTE

On the next play, Maryland kick- The Wake Forest Squall has ed out to their own 47. Smathers worked hard this week, and with returned to the 57, and Wake was the exception of Sacrinty will be

· , on its way again. at top strength for VMI. Sacrin- _ Then josephus Daniels brought up a very, very pertinent · BriDkley hit the line · four ity will probably see action by "·~·~::;::;~~~~~·:·::::·~::;;

point. "If we are going to pay. the coaches that much, what are straight times and moved the ball next week, but an old knee in- -; to Maryland's one. On the next jury will hold him back tomor-

we GOING TO PAY THE MATERIAL?" The board was silent, play he smashed over his own row night. . . officially·, on that matter. right guard for a score. Hobbs' The number one tailback 1s

&; again missed his try for extn Nick Ogno~i~h, a freshman from point, but Wake still led 19-0. Pennsylvama. To~ ~etzer, a

(Ed. Note: T~is account com~s from the only reporter pres­ent at the meeting of these illustrious trustees as they consi!iered the above weighty matter of education.)

In the words of Stacy, it is ."a shame and a disgrace. It is humiliating." . , , J ~ •

Midway in the second period, freshman from ReidSVIlle, N. C. Maryland managed to advance to the Wake Forest 42, but here the big Deacon line held, and Mary- .it was the Deacons' ball on their land was forced to punt. Smath- own 45. ers returned the kick from his On the first play, Fetzer fired

d h D 1 h d a 39-yard pass to Smathers wh:> 20 to 38, an t e eacs aunc e was stopped in his tracks. on the another touchdown drive. · Maryland l5. Mabry slammed

Maryland was penalized five through the weakening Mary­yards for too many time-outs, and on the next . play, Brinkley land line to the 7, and Smathers

ATTENTION, FRESHMAN

Your Choice for President is

Hugh P. Griffin

. Jerry l_nscoe for

President

Bill Royal for

Secretary • Treasurer

***** We noticed that the sportswrjters of the country placed

Wake Forest 17th among the nation's football teams. The noted Paul Williamson listed the Deacons at 14th. Now consider the ups and downs of the Deacons. After d~feating Carolina, Wake Forest was ranked 14th by Williamson •. Then Georgia. went down before the mighty Deacs, and Wake Forest dropped to 23rd. And, now, after taking Maryland so decisively, here they are right back where they started. Doesn't it pay to win ball games

d t th raced around end for six yards broke loose for 27 yar s o ·~ to the Maryland one .. Ognovich Maryland 30. However, Wake was scored for the Deacons from ~~~~~~:;;;::::;;~===~~~~~~~;:::~~~~~~ offsides, and the play was called . there. Mabry's placement was ~ .. , •. • • back. Fetzer picked up four yards good, and Wake led 39-o. · in the line. On the next play, Fet- Wake Forest, with reserves zer faded back and heaved a long playing the remainder of the pass to Doug Livengood on the game, threatened three more Maryland 20. Livengood to•Jk the times, but Fetzer's passes wer2 ball and trotted over for the scoN, either incomplete or intercepted. and the Deacons led 25-0, Hobbs The ball game ended with Wake missing his try for the extra in Maryland territory and driving

any more.? !.

**·*** It looks as if Coach Walker has come up with an<~tber dis­

covery. All of the Deacon fans were moaning over the loss of Russ Perry and that valuable kicking toe of his to Bowman Gray. Well,. look at the kicking average of the Deacons against .Mary­land last Saturday. Rock Brinkley c~me through with a 58-yard punt that rolled dead on the Maryland three-yard line, and Fresh­man tailback Tom Fetzer averaged a mere 40 yards per kick to give the Deacs a grand average of 44 yards per punt- and broth­er, that ain't hay. Against Georgia, Wake Forest had a 34-yard average. This doesn't seem such a great figure, but the fact that the Deacons were kicking out of bounds in that game must .be considered. In that game also, Brinkkley got off a beautiful :punt, the ball rolling out on the. Georgia two-yard line.

***** According to the latest figures, Rock Brinkley is tied with

J:atk Bruce of William and Mary, and Charles Suttenfield of Ricbmond, for third place i~ Southern Conference scoring. In­cidentally. the conference scoring record is held by joltin' John Polanski, one of the greatest football players ever to come out of Wake ,Forest. Polanski, who played f!:!-llback, scored 91 points in I 1939, and his record has never been seriously threatened.

***-** Comment of the week: Coach Walker to Doug Livengood,

who scored on a 65-yard pass ,Play last Saturday: "I swear, Doug, I believe that you were more surprised than I was when you

'caught that pass." ·

point. · th A few minutes later, Fetzer in- for ano er score. d d In all, Wake Forest rolled up

tercepted a Marylan pass, an 19 first downs to two for Mary­Wake Forest had the baH on the Maryland 20. On the next play land, having a net rushing gain

th of 260 yards to 32 for the Ol·i Fetzer passed to Marney on e Liners. Although the Deacons goal line, and Marney fell across completed only five out of 19 with two · Maryland tacklers passes, those five completions hanging onto him. Hobbs' try f 7 d from conversion w~s good, and were good· for a gain o 1 4 yar s. the Deacons held a 32-0 lead. W'ak-e Forest P~s. Maryland

Early in the second half, Mary- Bruno I.e • Doory land intercepted a Fetzer pass on :Jwen It Srmmons the Marvland 25 and ran the ball l3arrison lg Cooper back to· the Wake 40. An off- li'oreman c M~lone sides penalty. gave Maryland t~t! 1 Ratteree . rg. . . ~1lson

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Fred Hofman Sigma Phi Epsilon ball on the Deacon 35, but agam

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D. Hobbs · rt · Bishop the big Deacon line sti~fened, and --See RUN Page 4-

Maryland lost possess10n of the ~-;;;;:;;;-;;;;:;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;:;:;~~~ ~::::::::::::::::::::::~:?;====:::~:::::::::=:==~ ball to the Deacons on the Wake \ 35. h 1" After three attempts at t ~ me failed to gain, Fetzer kicked from his own 30 to the Maryland 35. Maryland kicked bacl~ after j tb<ee tutil• attomp~ to g,m, and I

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Page Four Old Gold and Black

Alumni Office Does Good· Job

. . · . , L , l H ld, ,.VETERANS CLUB I I saw that from the first it ~as ro-President Kitchm Miss el a 0 lng I I mance, . . . . Goes to· Washington · 1 ELECTS OFFICERS .o\nd worshipped my exponent of

W di N Y k 1· the dance. President Thurman Kitchin of e ll eW Or In its first official meeting, ·He mastered all his steps extreme-

Wake Forest College left last Sun- the Veteran's Club last Tuesday j ly well, .

he tilted his · chair against ·the wall. With two such backbones as EEF and Hooey, the Old Gold would feel at home on ·the banks · of the Neuse River.

;

Corrects Addresses Of Servicemen and Over

17,000 Alumni

day for Washington, D. C., to at- elected temporary officers. Until And rumbaed lik~ the Angel As-tend a three-day meeting, Octo- __ Miss Leila Holding, who until the Constitution which is being : . trophe~. ber 9-11 of a special committee recently has been an assistant in written by Basil Watkins, Dur-

1 H1s new-diScovered basso left. me

in the Veterans Administration the Bursar's office, was married ham lawyer, the president will be; weak · · · . which will formulate policies con- in New' York City at 5:30 o'clock Brantley Jolly, veteran of the, I marveled at the fuzz upon his cerning the ~dministration of last Monday to Lieutenant Ben T. Arm:v; the vice-president is Henry; cheek. tho~e laws gra~~mg_ courses_of vo- Aycock, formerly of Raleigh. The Napier; the secretary and treasur- !'Twas puppy love! Our ".dogs" catrcnal rehabrhtah<!n to d1sa~~ed marriage ceremony was in The er Lew Smith; and the chaplain, alone kept beat; .

The office isn't lined with satin draperies, and there. aren't any fur rugs on the floor, and there aren't even enough typewriter~. It's a far cry from a palace, but we've got a King and a Prince of Wales who hold court in the grand manner • . : .and some day we shall have Petty girls on the walls. yeterans ~nd education .and tram- .Little Church Around the Corner. Ernest Chappell. Men should lead, yes, but not Wlth

In June of this year the Board mg benefits to other veterans. . After several days in New York George Owen and Rufus Potts just their feet! -:;:::;.:;::;::::;::::;::;:;;::;.:::;.::::;::;:;;~;::;:~ of Trustees of Wake Forest plac- Other members of the comm1t- City the couple went to Presque suggested th~t a?yone who had, . -Emily Crandall. ed alumni work in the hands of tee, appointed by General Frank Isle, Maine, where Lt. Aycock is been at 1;my time m any branch. of , Professor J. L. Memory, Jr., who T. Hines of the Veterans Admin- a finance officer. . the serviCe should be accepted m:. PER has edited The Alum1li News for istration, are Dr. Horace S. Ford, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Holding! to the club. F<?rmer Wac~, _Waves. 1 PA the past few years. vice-president and business man- of Wake Forest attended the wed- • Spars, or )VIannes are eligible for I __ (_C_o-n"'ti_n.:..u-ed-:-:f:-ro_J_n-=P:-ag-e-:1:-:-)--

ager of Massachusetts Institute of ding. ,1

: membership and are . urged. to i • • . Miss Ruami Squires, local girl, Technology.; Dr. Rufus C. Harris, iV • A

0 k . th dauo-hter of • come to the next meetmg whtch: is home again and

1s purrmg like

was chosen at the same time t) president of Tulane University; : J.IS. ~c c 1~ e "' i will be held next Tuesday. . : an old spinster over a cup of tea. take charge of the alumni files Dr. Robert G. Sproul, president ~rs. · T. K. Holdmg _and the late i The club now has a memberslnp ' When the staff ·members first She will also serve as associate of the University of California at r. ,E. Hol~mg, . ±ormer banker I of twenty-two. walked in to look it over, it editor of the Alumni News. Three Berkley; Dr. R. w. Kent, and D.·. here. She 1s a graduate of Mere-

1 med qu'te strange to them be t d t · t' t th present u · dr'tll College. 1 see I • • • -s u en s ass1s mg a e Robert B. Stewart of Purdue m- [ __ ---·-·--------- - --- ----· ---- cause the tmy office at the end

time in the news department for versity . . . of the hall had become pretty two hours a day are Frances ----- · I My ever_Y hour was frlled w1th ut- much a part of them. It was rath-Downes, Anne Johns, and Mary do not know the requirements for: ter JOY, er strange to walk into a big Ben Burris. NOMINEES membership in the fraternity, the· F'or I at last had found the per- double o!fice on Wednesday njght,

Since June, a fairly complete (Continued from Page l) !allowing section from the i feet boy. . and perhaps some of them felt list of Wake Forest men in the amendment as passed by a vote The day I left, he shyly krssed my lost and homesick in it. . service has been compiled by the withdraw my name from the list of the chapters is given nere: "A I cheek, But when the typewriters be­Il:ews offi~e. At the present the of nomin'ees for president of the student shall be eligible during i And, reminiscing on that .perfect

1

gan to buzz like queen bees, and list con tams 2,550 names. These ' senior class due to the fact that . the present emergency for elec-1 week, i lively reporters and lazy feature­records show . the name, rank, I have an insufficient number of l tion to membership in Pi Kappa' 1 sternly said, "This love can nev -~' writers began to mill about, it branch of servrce, present address, hom·s to be classified as a senior. Delta if he has prepared and de -I er be. seemed more natural again. And home town, and years. of attend- Ozmer Henry, Jr. liver~d under the supervision of 1 They'd call it incest, biologically!": it was truly home again for those ance at Wake Forest of each ma,l. To the Student Body of Wake the director of forensics two * * * 1 who had never known tt as such

A major undertaking has been: Forest College: speeches of si.x minutes or more; No sooner had I sworn to love no when Dr. Folk walked in with hi.s made to locate all of the 17,500; I, Richard W. Griffin hereby three speeches of four minu!es, or more ' pipe in his mouth and his hat. L'1 former students of Wake Fares~. : withdraw my name f1·om nomi- four speeches of three mmu~es,; Than Donald came a-knocking at his hand, and began conferrmg Questionnaires were sent out in nation as the president of the Se- on two different subjects dealmg my door. with the editor, who was balanc­the early summer to some 9,00J · nior Class due to the fact that I with the war effort o~ the ensu- His flaming hair' was kindled by ing his typewriter on his knees as alumni or relative? whose ad-:- ha·;e found m;,rsel~ . to be ineligi- ing reconstruction perrod." the sun . . . -:::::;;::::;:;;;:;;::;;:::;;::::;:;::;:;;:;:::::;:::.::;;:::;:~ dre?s~s and occupations w~r~ no;; ble to hold this offrce. 1 thought him rather nice ... but , -defrmtely known. Approx1111~t~ly Richard W. Griffin, III not the one. 6,000 h~ve bee~ returned. The m- To the members of the Senior RUN He. dogged my footsteps every formatr~n receJVed h~s be:n re: Class: (Continued from Page 3) chance he got; cor~ed m the maste~ .. card f1le. I, Simmons Fentress, because Th' 'equited love grew much Vanous college offrcrals have on an insufficiency in number of D. Harris r~ , Daly 1\ ut~ t' c~>Op~rated wi!h t~e Alum_ni 0£- credit hours necessary for mem- Barbour qC) Fastuca

0 doo ~ ·f d h' standing at

f1ce m collectmg mformahon. bership in the Senior Class, do Ognovich 1'1 Love ne ay hl 0dllll lm · · h h k d h b 'thd d'd my s ou er . · -The Alumm Off1ce. as. c _ec e ere Y WI raw my can 1 acy Smathers m Ryan

1 frowned; this ruddy rogue was

all current . s_tate dJrec!JorJes of for the position of .vice president Mabry fo Troll, getting bolder! teachers, mmrsters1 lawyers, and of that class. Simmons Fentress Statistics With time's swift flight we two doctors, from wh1ch they have Md. W. F. . 't attaclred· made lists of Wake Forest men To the Student Body: First-downs 2 19 , gi~w qu: e . . . ,;, weren't in these four major professions. Monday morning during chapel Net yards rushing 32 260 Twas JUSt p1oxrm1ty. e Lists of these men which are now period I, Robert Creech, Jr. was Passes attempted 18 19 I well matched. available show that 911 men have elected by acclamation as the rep- Pas'ses completed 2 5 My mi_nd, ~he gypsy, pondered not graduate.d from Wake Forest as resentative to the Student Coun- Yards gained passes 6 1·74 I th1~ thm~, doctors, 800 lawyers now practic- cil from the Senior Class. Due to Passes int. by opp. 3 2 ; But ga1ly . smffed the atmosphere ing in North Carolina are Wake the fact that I was at the infir- Punting average 35 44: of spr:ng. . Forest graduates, 453 Wake For- mary during chapel period, I was Yds. all kicks returned 7 761 I soon retned my heart, still sound est ministers now reside in the not able to stop this election. Opp. fumbles recovered 0 11 and pure, state, 344 of whom are actively Since I am not of senior standing Yards lost by penalties 15 35 • For manufactured love cannot en-serving as pastors, and that 114 I hereby resign my office. dure. public school officials including Robert Creech, Jr. county superintendents, city su- To the members of the Junivr perintendents, and principles, are Class: • also Wake Forest men. I, Carol Alexander "Buck"

A meeting of the Wake Forest Ganison, because of a lack of Alumni Association has been credit hours necessary for Junior scheduled for November 15 in the rating, do hereby resign as pres­Hotel Charlotte at Charlotte. ident of the Junior Class, to More than 300 men are expected which position I was recently to .attend. B. T. Ward, Greensboro elected. ' lawyer and president of the Wake Forest General Alunmi Associa­tion will preside. One speech bill has been scheduled to be pre­sented by Governor J. Melvilc Broughton.

LIFE (Continued from Page 2)

"Buck'' Garrison

INTEREST (Continued from Page 1)

rescntatives of the college. These 1 etters are given to those persons who have qualified for the De­gree of Proficiency in Pi KappJ. Delta, the honorary forensic fra­

Il ternity of which Wake Forest is I a member. It is not necessary for

* * ~ PLANS That winter I enrolled at dancing

school And memorized Dot Parker's her-

(Continued from Page 1)

during the coming semester. Fen-1

rid rule tress announced that the pro-, That manly . molecules will not grams for this term will be se-1 make passes wcted on the basis of their im- At those unfortunates in need of portance to the current inter- I glasses. national srtuation so that they: I doffed my specs and stepped may be as interesting and infor-~ from my cocoon, mative as possible. Thus charming my Prince Charm-

The next meeting of the In- 1 ing none too soon! ternational Relations Club will br! held at 7: 00, Thursday, October 19 in Room 29 of the Law Burld-ing. All students who are intere.st-

1 ed in IRC work and would lik?. to associate themselves with th~ 1

club were advised by Fentress to be on hand for this meeting.

PAST

"The Newest in Sportswear,

Reasonably Priced" man in trying to explain the situa­tion said, "Maybe the law of grav­itation hadn't been passed at that time." I

a person to be a member of P. K. D. in order to receive a letter, but a person must fulfill the re- (Continued from Page 2) quirements for this degree as es- . bl

RHODES • COLLINS

FURNITURE CO.

301 S. Wilmington St. RALEIGH, N. C.

Ambassador Theatre

Now-Oct. 13-14-IN SOCIETY

Bud Abbott & Lou Costello

Sun., Mon., Tues., Oct. 15-16-17-

FOLLOW THE BOYS George Raft, Jeannette Mac­

Donald, All Star Cast

Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat., Oct. 18, 19, 20- .

SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS In Technico!or

' ~

There Is a growing wartime shortage of· doctors ••• be pre­pared to help yourself with ade­ttua te first aid supplles! •

HOLDING'S DRUG-STORE

FOREST THEATRE

Friday, October 13-Buffalo Bill

Joel McCrea_ Maureen O'Hara

..

Sat., Oct. 14-Double Feat.-Song_ of Nevada

Roy Rogers and Triggex The Black Parachute

Larry Parks

Sunday, October 15-· The Impatient Years

Jean Arthur, Charles Col-burn, Lee Bowman

Mon. & Tues., Oct. 16-17-Song of the Open

Road Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy Bonita Granville

Wednesday, October 18-The Hairy Ape

William Bendix Suzan Hayworth

Thurs. & Fri.~ Oct. 19-20-Greenwich Village

Don Ameche Carmen Miranda

lecture .... The room was very present time there is only on·~ My Wild- delight I s1mply could It happened dm·ing psychology tablished by the fraternity. At the This gay Adoni~ realty _was _super .

1 quiet ... the students were taking student member of the fraternity not curb. •

Fine's Men's Shop

down every word Dr. Reid uttered on the campus and he was award- I sought the learned daisies every , Suddenly, the professor said some- ed the letter in foren~ics by th<! J day I f-::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::~~:::::~::""~ City Barber Shop thing that didn't quite fit the chap- college two years ago. To see if Johnny's love had come -ter "Sensation." It went something Those who are interested in the' my way. I·----·-·-· ............................. -.................. -., like this: "Mr. Bradsher, I don't prospective acthfvities of ~he ....... .. I mind your looking at your watch speech squad t is ye~r are In-occasionally to see the time, but \ vrted to attend a m~etmg !!'nda~ I do resent it when you pick it up att~rnoon at four o clock m. 2_03 and give it a terrific shake to see /Wart Hall where more detmrte Have Your Fall I if it's stopped." 1 plans for the year's work Will be I

MEN (Continued from Page 2)

made. Clothes Dry-Cleaned I Pi Ka11pa Delta Now!

Wilkinson Cleaners

.... ~-· - --~Sl:~~~.-~-:gjl' ga&l ·w~;:-; Ot .LIOliJ.JCI

ClVC:; :·i:i'l liNiN .I.Si/1\ l9 l

SA\:ZN TuVO.LOO:I JH.L O.L SH30ll0 (JN3S

spuo~~o~.eN uo Ad~ l;ld 'St

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KEEP'EM

WALKING

Your shoes should bt! able to set mileage rec­ords for you this winter. You'll be walking more than you ever did. Don't let your shoes get in a condition where they can't keep up with you!

HARPER'S SHOE

SHOP

HAIRCUTS - SHAVES - SHAMPOOS

Two Barbers

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR- SPECIAL PRICE New shipment~ Aunt Jemima, Ballard's 8(l.d

Pillsbury's Pancake Flour. Attractive Prices on Potatoes and Onions.

Phones 252-1 'and ·253-1

Hollowell's Food Store BUO(I~IIM'tl • INO:If) OAUD(liiiiii»Y I ' qua=m~ ~ eenq~~ • N~pe~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ U3dVdS4\3N 'l'JVR~OOd A'lli33A\ V ~........ ... -:. 111

R. R. Friday, class of '44, is Pharmacy 3-c and is stationed at Chelsea, Mass.

Come in and Have

Your Christmas

Pictures Taken at

Denm~rk Studios

i 3rd ~LOOR

1!

..... .....

]ames E. Thiem Sheet Music-Bibles-Recordings-Stationery

Dial22913 Raleigh N.C. 108 Fayetteville St.

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OUR SPECIALTIES -Hot Cakes, with Butter

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U. S. AA Choice Western Steaks.

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