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. ' ,, WAKE FOREST COLLEGI LlB.RA.Rl ·>n··. •,, I ·, '. ' . au ' . ' ' ' ' . : _,..._ :: MAY 4 '46 . . . . : -: : . ' . . . .. . . :.· .... ·.No. 27 * -* "0••'-' U. u.· Wake Forest, N. C_., Friday, May 3, 1946 Phone 304-6 * . : . · . . :·: fi!' Music Week· !J1,·> .·· ·· To< Be ·ObserVed · Here ·· .. W·h S Nichols Eled·ed Vice. President Cherry To Speak · Jo WF·Students At Chapel SOon· ··-· . w- New Election C•lled For By Harry Thomas :·:::.< .. _It .... e At ft\id-Weik Chapel On Final Count Veterans Request· SEma- Women's Government As- . College ·Glee Club to Sing · · ,. In -Raleigh On,. . .ROOMS ·' tors' .,Support of OPA; sociation Will Meet On Picnic Planned Next :.- · · ... M. ay9 · .. ·: :. · ' Al Copeland, president of the The . final tally of the election Girls living)n 'f' th' f f th E t' c Climax In Stu· dent Body Meeting On Monday . /}::.:: .. ... Music Week, May 5-12, who plan to come to summer Veterans Club,. was noti ted lS or OL.UCers 0 e xecu lVe oun- . •. ·.·. :;• ·:·'·will., be_· o'bserved by the Wake For- week that the Hon. R. Gregg ell of Women's Government Asso- . .. est M_usic Dep'artment Wl'th the school'. must · pay for their Cherry, governor· of North Caro.:. ciation mi Wednesday, April 17, ·presentation of four programs by . s::rwt;K lina, would come to Wake Forest showed ties for the offices of t "e faculty' and the· Glee Club. · . on FridaY., May. 17, to speak to th!! vice-president, secretary, treasur- u . be · · released to applicants · · d h · · 1 t . . . The first concert, to be ;given at · from other. schools. student body at its morning chapel er, an c a1rman of soc1a s an- '.:· the sdn'day eveiiing·service of the ' .. . _ service. Copeland had previously dards committee. The run-off · · · Wake Forest Baptist Chur.ch, will · ' stated that the governor .would eiection was held last Friday. be . a joint piano and. organ recital - appear here at an unannounced In the run-off election Mary by- Professor· Thane McDonald date. Nichols defeated Eugenia Johnson -- ·. , and Miss Albertine'Le:fler. . (on·. test . The governor's letter read as for the office of vice-president. · · · · The program . includeS . thl-ee pi- follows: As · secretary, Vivian Kerbaugh ·. ano selections playen by Miss Le!- "Replying to your letter of April won a majority over Virginia Best. ler: "Nocturne 'in E. flat" .(Cho- To ·ae· He' ld-He' re 23rd, I find that it will be pas- Reda Umstead defeated Frances pin), "iUack Key Etude" (Ch0:. . sible for me to visit \vith the stu- Perry for treasurer. "Tut" An- ·, pin), · and·"Ballade in G. minor" . dent body of Wake Forest College derson became chairman of the · . The fourth annual campus sing, on Friday, May 17th, at 10 "l'clock, social standards committee with a Th d · t f th gr am maJ· ority over June Freeman •. e secon par o e pro am, followed by a Glee Club concert, · · ·· f · · b.· b p "I will attempt to prepare a talk T.h 1 t 1' t f w offic a group o organ· num ers y N- will be held at 7: 3Q on Thursday e comp e e 1S o ne - :f McD . ald b M- h of about fifteen or twenty minutes. · p 'd t ·· · essor . · on , w e arc eveninx,. May ··16,' on the steps of ers now 1s: res1 en , trgmta ftom'·"Dramma per Musica" (J. S the Wake Forest Baptist Church. I appreciate the opportunity to Norment; vice-president, Mary Each); Bible Poem No. 1-"Abide A . new trophy will be awarded. meet with ·you, the faculty, and Nichols; Secretary, Vivian Ker- with us", inspired by Luke 24:29 the. organization whose the student body of Wake Forest." baugh; treasurer, Reda Umstead; < (Weinberger) ; ·.Voluntary oa "Old pants are ·judge<i best in tlie· The chapel program on that chairman of the social standards Hundr&lth" ·(Purcell): "Prelude test The.Euielian Literary•Soci- morning will be in charge of the committee, "Tut" Anderson; Rep- iii D. Minor" (Clerambault). ety, who w. on for three years in Veterans Club.- Governor Cherry resentative to the Studen,t Council, . "P b. , (Edm ds ) will be iritroduced by_ Dr. T. D. K · W'll' h ax · o lScum un on succession, . have been made per- ay 1 1ams; sop omore repre- will be played by Professor ·manent owners of the original tro- Kitchin, president of the college, sentative, Janet Wilson; junior Donald as the offertory number. who ·will be presented by Cope- 'representative, Dot Vaughn; Town Th 1 . d' 1 t• f th phy. land on behalf of the. veterans or- · ls' t t' D th e cone u mg se ec ton o e Any··· organization complying g1r represen a 1ve, oro y :program will· be the first move- ·with the -rules listed below may ganization. Dr. Arthur S. Jones. · , ment (Moderato) . of Rachmani- · pie, college chaplain, will lead the. There will be a meeting of the . :noff's . "Second. :Piano COncerto" enter the smg. . . . . devotional service. Wiley :ray lor, Women's Government .. ll . .ssociation ·played : by :both Miss Lefler. and 1 : Any campus Ernie Pittman, Eli Galloway, and next ·Thursday during the chapel Professor MCDonald. . .. social or honorary, may be repre- Murray Severance will represent pe,.iod in the chapel auditorium. sented. th 1 b · ti ··tte =-- .. _,The.Rachm_ anmoff Concerto_ wil_ ·1 2 N. · d' .;d 1 ti . e c u as a recep on comm1 e. All co-eds are required to attend ·· . o m 1v1 ua may par c1- · · be .. repeated_ for the students on pate in more than one competing , · Approve the meeting. Monday, May 8, at the moniing group. Following .a lengthy disc'\lssion ------------- chapel service. . 3. Each entering group must of the office of Price Administra- have a .minimum of eight partici- tion and its fight for survival now pants... · being in congresi:;, the ·Thursday evenirig, May 8, at _4. Three required songs will be erans voted . almost unanimously · .. 7:36,· Glee Club will sing in -sung in the following order: (at their-regular ... . Wed- .... the .Memorhif'Aiiclltoi.-ium 'for. the '(1) A" Wake 'Jrcirest"5c1lo61 song. hesday. night) to' request both Raleigh Garden Clubs annual ex- (2) A stunt song or novelty North Carolina senators to sup- hibit. The program is as follows· number. port the OPA. Sing In Raleigh "God the All Terrible" (Lvoff) (3) An exami?le · of musical The following resolution has ous level. Discontinued Regula- tions mean Discontinued Educa- tion. We cannot meet continued inflation." T.he action was prompted by. a letter received by the club .from the Anchor and Eag:te Club, vet erans organization of Duke Uni- versity. This group had taken similar action and pointed out that servicemen's clubs on the cam- puses of many of America's major colleges and universities are ac- tively supporting the continuance of the OPA. - by the Glee Club; "The Garland Americana. (The music of this been drafted and sent to Senators I Send Thee". (Cain), "Fireflies" song, and the words if possible, Bailey and Hoey: "Request your (Russian Folk Song) by the must be American in origin. Sug- support·of the OPA. Glee Club; "Go Pretty Rose. gestions: hymn, folk-song, popu- mg the OPA now means reducmg (Marzials), duet by June Freeman lar song, Stephen Foster patriotic condition of veterans in and Billie Barnes; "Who'll Buy song, etc.) ' American universities to a hazard My Roses" . (Traditional), based 5. Each group will be allowed --------------------------- on three melodies from. ·Hungary, eight minutes including entrance . Holland, and Italy, by the Girls' and exit. .Glee Club; ·"Oh Italia, Italia" 6. Any instrument or instru .. .(Donizetti) by the double cictet; ments except the piano may be "Onward, Ye Peoples" '(Sibelius) used for accompaniment.· "by the Glee Club! 7. Entrants will be judged 01 Practice ·Teaching Is Hard On The Nerves SILK The Student Council in special "Seattle,· April 21. - An- other consignment of silk from Japan will arrive !n Seattle early in May for shipment to mills in Pater- son, N. J., it was learned yesterday. It will consist of 1,100 bales and 200 cases and will be landed by the steamship Wake Forest tory. The silk shipment is coming from Kobe." - The Seattle Times. · last night decided to call a general assembly of the student body to meet during the regular chapel period on Monday for the purpose of discussing in detail the protests that have arisen over last week's election. Wake Forest Has Tops In Forensics Sam Behrends, senior member of Wake Forest's debate team, has been chosen as one of the several best debaters who participated in the Pi Kappa Delta Forensic Con- vention at Georgetci\\rn, Kentucky, last month. The ai).IlOuncement was made by Prof. A. L. Aycock, faculty adviser of forensic activi- ties, who received notice from tournament officials this week. Prof. Aycock also announced that Nancy Easley, co-ed member of the squad, compiled the highest composite score of any woman en- trant at the convention. Miss Easley placed second in extem- 'pore and· after dinner speaking, third in impromptu, and · fourth in oratory in a field of twelve schools. She was the only woman who entered each division and won high acclaim from the judges for her speaking ability. Miss Easley, who appeared in Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities and holds member- ships in numerous campus organi- zations, was recently elected to Phi Beta Kappa . Team Takes Third So far as is known the council has taken no definite action on the motion made in chapel Wed- 'nesday to disregard the election of April 24 and io hold a new elec- tion "in which all the rules and regulations governing student body elections be strictly adhered to." The motion made by Harry ThJ- mas and passed by a substantial majority of those students pres- Emt at the regular chapel assem- bly came as a complete surprise to most of the student body who looked on last week's election as final. New developments have brought out the fact that another attempt was made to declare the election illegal when an anonymous tion was presented to the student council at a called meeting on Thursday night following the elec- tion. Grounds for the protest were that the election ·was not conducted in the exact manner prescribed by the constitution. The constitution stipulates the use of the Australian ballot in stu- dent body .elections, and the pro- test maintained that such a ballot was not used. ·However, the council saw fit to vote down the prot_est. Constitution Violated A heated discussion developed in chapel on Wednesday as .a re- sult of Thomas' motion which most students considered an. at- tempt to fight the fraternity cau- cus's control of every major cam- pus election. Thomas stated that he was not concerned with the technicalities involved but rather the principal that the constitution is being violated year in and year The Wake Forest .debate team out. · Robert Crapps, senior min- was third in competition with six- isterial student, had raised the teen other colleges and universi- question as to whether or not the At the· conclusion of the pro- the following basis: _ gram, June Freeman and Coit (1) General quality of singing Troutman,· carl-ying Wake Forest -50 points banners, will lead the Glee Club Enu11ciation (20) ties. The squad, with Behrends constitution had been• violated to 1 and Kermit Caldwell presenting the extent that the election was They are different from other the word "hysterical" in a sen- the affirmative case and Behrends decided through irregularities. students, these practice teachers, tence, she received the reply, "Our and Dick Williams defending the Thomas, whg is himself a min- and it is easy to tell who they are teacher makes the hysterical facts negative side,_ debated seven isterial student, repeatedly immediate.ly. When you see one interesting for us." Yet in spite 0f times, winning on five occasions: phasized the fact that he was act- of your classmates coming, loaded it all, her comment about teaching The national debate question for ing for himself and not as the down with books under one arm, was, "I love it. I wish I could 'reach this year was "Resolved, that the spokesman for any particular papers under the other and a until school· is out." foreign policy of the United States group. His purpose, according to scholarly look on his (or her) face, One of the teachers is confronted should be directed toward the es- his statement, is to prevent a re- you may know that you are being with a serious problem. The girls tablishment of free trade among currence in the future of any dis- approached by what is commonly in her class are seated on one side .the nations of the worlji." crepancies that have been appar- referred to as a "P. T." . of the room and the boys on the Wake Forest's representatives ent in campus elections in the from the stage down the ma:n , Balance of voices (10) aisle of the auditorium. Expressiveness (10) · The campus activities of Na- Sincerity (10) · tional Music Week will be con- (2)•0riginality of presentation eluded on Sunday evening, May (25). (choice of songs;- instru- 12, when Professor McDonald will mental soloists, etc.) present three groups of organ (3) Appearance (25). (Stage numbers· at the Temple Baptist deportment, directing, etc.) Church in Durham. Professor 8. All entries must be filed in McDtmald will be assisted by the the Musical Director's office not coliege male octet. later than one week prior .to the .American Legion · Post Organized 'Ben IV. Cole; who is acting com- rmmder 'of the American Legion PO!t being activated here on the campus, has called a special meet- ing of the post for 7 P. M. WM- nesday,' May 8 in the Religio11 .Building· Auditorium. Severo! ;pressing matters are to be consid- ered, among them the ..election of . officers, the adoption Qf a name :for the post, and the adoption •)f :a program for the post to take. Final corrections are to be :made in the application for the post's ·charter also. Cole 'states that the :fifteen new memberships have been secured and that fourteen :men who have joined other posts lhave expressed their desire to transfer their membership to the campus group. New members elude: James A. Bracey, Jack M. Byrd, Ben N. Cole, Bernard berg, T. J. Fletcher, Richard H. Gallimore, ·Jesse E .. Glasgow, Philip P. Godwin, Lehman- 0. Green, Albert W. Hargrove, .James A. Hawkins, LaWrence R. Kiser, Neil J. Paft, Jr., .Ernest :H. Pittman, Braxton .c. Shlplkle, sing. 9. The trophy shall remain in the hands _of the winning group for one year. To retain it per- manently a group must win it three times. · 10. All must be bonafide member!] of the group they represent. -------- Phi Bete Banquet, Initiations FridiiY ' The Phi Beta Kappa banquet and initiation will be- held next Friday night. · For the first time the society is permitting the ini- tiates anti members to invite guests to the banquet, which will be held at 6:30 o'clock in the High School Cafeteria. Coit R. Troutman, and Henry M. Ussery. These men plan to become char- ter members of the Wake Forest post although they have· joined other posts before entering school: Richard F. Bass, Fred M. Benton, Ernest C. Chappell, AI B. Cope- land, Rufus M. Fisher, John E. Galloway, Tom Faircloth, Richard Mitchell, W. M. Severance, Verne E. Sbive, W. G. Smith, .Julian Spence, and .Richard A: Williams. These are the students who are other. The students, she says, lost first to the team from Otter- past. When his motion was on now beginning to sympathize with spend more time looking on the op- bein College of Westerville,· Ohio. the floor during the meeting Wed- their old grammar and high school posite. sides of the room than at This team went through all tourn. nesday, he stated that he wanted teachers for whom they used to their books. t tit' d f t d d to brl'ng to the attention of the make life miserable. They are One teacher tells of her most amen compe Ion un e ea e an was named winner. The team student body exactly what had learning also that students are not embarassing moment. This parti- from Bowling Green State Uni- been taking place in campus elec- the only ones who have daily cular teacher had assigned charac- versity handed the Wake Forest tions and that he was not merely horne work to occupy what is ter sketches to be written by each d . th d f t d th terested in having this particu- otherwise known as leisure time. I member of the class. The clay came squa lts 0 er e ea an us . One practice teacher, while when they were due. The class was won second place in the tourna- lar election illegal. but beating her brains out try- very anxious to have the teacher ment standings. Quorum Not Present ing to explain Shakespeare's Ju- read a sketch by a pupil who was Behrends Chosen Because any such action was lius Caesar to her class, almost not considered too timid by the Following the debates, tourna- entirely unexpected, barely half gave up in despair wlien asksd teacher to read his own. In vain ment judges chose the eight best of the student body was preset&t by one bright pupil why the play the teacher asked the author to debaters participating :from the at the assembly, despite the fact wasn't written in goOd English. read his work. As a last resort the group of more than fifty speakers. that it was a regularly scheduled This "P. T." learned one· thing teacher began to read the sketch. Behrends, who spoke on both the chapel meeting with compulsory while teaching-namely, she docs Everything went well until the affirmative and negative sides for attendance for all students. When not want to be a teacher. teacher realized the sketch w:>s Wake Forest, received nomination the motion was passed .by a rna- Another of the practice teachers about her and that the author as one of the most outstanding jority of those students present, }las her room so filled with papers wanted to know if the hard sub- speakers at the convention. an attempt was made to declare that friends are no longer able -to ject of English or red-headed boy Behrends, who has been out- the entire procedure illegal on pay their respects. "My children," friends made the teacher the way standing as a speaker throughout the grounds that a quorum of the as she fondly calls her students, she was. The teacher's then his college career, also placed student body was not present. "have a pin mania. They put pins matched the hair before mention- second in extemporaneous speak- The vote on the motion was 278 in the ends of pencils and then ed. · inng. A veteran of three years" for and 139 against it, making a proceed to make use of them. By Even some of our football heroes service in the. army air force, he total of 417 students participating the till).e- the class is half over all are among that elite group who ,is president-elect of the Wake in the voting. The student body of them look as if they have St. will someday earn their daily Forest student body and a mem- numbers more than 1000 students. Vitus' Dance." ... bread by transmitting knowledge. ber of Omicron Delta Kappa, In_ many respects Wednesday's And so with both beds and desks One of them was standing in the honorary leadership fraternity, chapel session was reminiscent of piled high with. papers the P. T. hall before going in to his class and Pi Kappa Alpha, social fra- the nominating session held two sits calmly -on the floor c.orrecting when one of his students ap- ternity. weeks previously. It was marked the papers while her roommate proached him timidly. The boy by the same apparent lack of par- stands in the corner tearing her gazed up at him adoringly, put his Jimmie Mattox will be in liamentary procedure, resulting hair. It is hard to tell which of the hand out, then stepped back mut'- charge of the BTU opening assem_ in a badly disorganized meetirig. two will be gladder when the or- muring, "Gee, I touched him!" bly at 6:30 Sunday night in the This may be attributed somewhat deal is oyer. , There is only one question to be auditorium in the Religion build- to the fact that Wednesday was Then there is the practice teach- asked of these pilgrims dunng ing, The story of the hymn, "0 not the day for a student body er who was· giving her class in- their progress. Who is learning Master Let Me Walk With Thee,". meeting, and the president of the structions on the correct use of 1 more, the students or the _practice will be presented. Jimmie will student body had not been in- words. On asking one. boy . to . use teachers? play a violin solo. formed as to what was coming up.

·>n··. au' . WAKE FOREST COLLEGI LlB.RA · a joint piano and. organ recital - appear here at an unannounced In the run-off election Mary by ... f essor . · McD. on ald , w e m·

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WAKE FOREST COLLEGI LlB.RA.Rl

·>n··. • •,, I • ·,

'.

' . au' . ' '

' ' . : _,..._ ::

MAY 4 '46

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. ::&t')~.~·: : -: : . ' . . . . . . . it'~~,~:·1,ri :.· V~I~e·.xxx .... ·.No. 27 * -* "0••'-' U. O,;"'fJ"~ -~~ u.· _M,.~Mu.".

Wake Forest, N. C_., Friday, May 3, 1946 Phone 304-6 * *· . ~--·' : . · . . :·:

fi!' .:·"N~ti;nal Music Week· !J1,·> .·· · · To< Be ·ObserVed · Here Jj~p ·· .. W·h S vera.l·~~Conclrts

Nichols Eled·ed Vice. President

Cherry To Speak · Jo WF·Students At Chapel SOon·

··-· . w-

New Election C•lled For By Harry Thomas

:·:::.< .. _It .... e At ft\id-Weik Chapel

On Final Count Veterans Request· SEma- Women's Government As-.

College ·Glee Club to Sing ~,-------'"' · · ~- ,. In -Raleigh On,. . .ROOMS ·'

tors' .,Support of OP A; sociation Will Meet On Picnic Planned Next Th~rsday :.-

· · ... M. ay9 · .. ·: :. · ' Al Copeland, president of the The . final tally of the election

Girls living)n dorniitori~s 'f' th' f ~~· f th E t' c Climax E~eted In Stu·

dent Body Meeting On Monday

. /}::.:: .. ~ ... Nati~~al Music Week, May 5-12, who plan to come to summer Veterans Club,. was noti ted lS or OL.UCers 0 e xecu lVe oun-. ·~·,:_·.· •. ·.·. :;• ·:·'·will., be_· o'bserved by the Wake For- week that the Hon. R. Gregg ell of Women's Government Asso-

. . . est M_usic Dep'artment Wl'th the school'. must · pay for their Cherry, governor· of North Caro.:. ciation mi Wednesday, April 17, ·presentation of four programs by . :~::ay f~~ J!~ s::rwt;K lina, would come to Wake Forest showed ties for the offices of t"e faculty' and the· Glee Club. · . on FridaY., May. 17, to speak to th!! vice-president, secretary, treasur-

u . be · · released to applicants · · d h · · 1 t . . . The first concert, to be ;given at · from • other. schools. student body at its morning chapel er, an c a1rman of soc1a s an-

'.:· the sdn'day eveiiing·service of the ' .. . _ ~ service. Copeland had previously dards committee. The run-off · · · Wake Forest Baptist Chur.ch, will · ' stated that the governor .would eiection was held last Friday.

be . a joint piano and. organ recital - appear here at an unannounced In the run-off election Mary by- Professor· Thane McDonald date. Nichols defeated Eugenia Johnson

-- ·. , and Miss Albertine'Le:fler. . ·~Singing· (on·. test . The governor's letter read as for the office of vice-president. · · · · The program . includeS . thl-ee pi- follows: As · secretary, Vivian Kerbaugh

·. ano selections playen by Miss Le!- "Replying to your letter of April won a majority over Virginia Best. ler: "Nocturne 'in E. flat" .(Cho- To ·ae· He' ld-He' re 23rd, I find that it will be pas- Reda Umstead defeated Frances pin), "iUack Key Etude" (Ch0:. . sible for me to visit \vith the stu- Perry for treasurer. "Tut" An-

·, pin), · and·"Ballade in G. minor" . dent body of Wake Forest College derson became chairman of the (Chopin)~- · . The fourth annual campus sing, on Friday, May 17th, at 10 "l'clock, social standards committee with a

Th d · t f th gr am maJ· ority over June Freeman •. e secon par o e pro am, followed by a Glee Club concert, · · ·· f · · b.· b p "I will attempt to prepare a talk T.h 1 t 1' t f w offic a group o organ· num ers y N- will be held at 7: 3Q on Thursday e comp e e 1S o ne -

:f McD. ald m· b M- h of about fifteen or twenty minutes. · p 'd t v· · · · essor . · on , w e arc eveninx,. May ··16,' on the steps of ers now 1s: res1 en , trgmta ftom'·"Dramma per Musica" (J. S the Wake Forest Baptist Church. I appreciate the opportunity to Norment; vice-president, Mary Each); Bible Poem No. 1-"Abide A . new trophy will be awarded. meet with ·you, the faculty, and Nichols; Secretary, Vivian Ker­with us", inspired by Luke 24:29 the. organization whose partici~ the student body of Wake Forest." baugh; treasurer, Reda Umstead;

< (Weinberger) ; ·.Voluntary oa "Old pants are ·judge<i best in tlie· con~ The chapel program on that chairman of the social standards Hundr&lth" ·(Purcell): "Prelude test The.Euielian Literary•Soci- morning will be in charge of the committee, "Tut" Anderson; Rep-iii D. Minor" (Clerambault). ety, who w. on for three years in Veterans Club.- Governor Cherry resentative to the Studen,t Council, . "P v· b. , (Edm ds ) will be iritroduced by_ Dr. T. D. K · W'll' h ax · o lScum ~ un on succession, . have been made per- ay 1 1ams; sop omore repre-will be played by Professor Me~ ·manent owners of the original tro- Kitchin, president of the college, sentative, Janet Wilson; junior Donald as the offertory number. who ·will be presented by Cope- 'representative, Dot Vaughn; Town

Th 1. d' 1 t• f th phy. land on behalf of the. veterans or- · ls' t t' D th e cone u mg se ec ton o e Any··· organization complying g1r represen a 1ve, oro y :program will· be the first move- ·with the -rules listed below may ganization. Dr. Arthur S. Gilles~ Jones. ·

, ment (Moderato) . of Rachmani- · pie, college chaplain, will lead the. There will be a meeting of the . :noff's . "Second. :Piano COncerto" enter the smg. . . . . devotional service. Wiley :ray lor, Women's Government .. ll . .ssociation ·played : by :both Miss Lefler. and 1: Any campus or~amzation, Ernie Pittman, Eli Galloway, and next ·Thursday during the chapel Professor MCDonald. . .. social or honorary, may be repre- Murray Severance will represent pe,.iod in the chapel auditorium.

sented. th 1 b · ti ··tte =--.. _,The.Rachm_ anmoff Concerto_ wil_ ·1 2 N. · d' .;d 1 ti . e c u as a recep on comm1 e. All co-eds are required to attend ·· . o m 1v1 ua may par c1- -· · · be .. repeated_ for the students on pate in more than one competing , · Approve OP~ the meeting.

Monday, May 8, at the moniing group. Following .a lengthy disc'\lssion -------------chapel service. . 3. Each entering group must of the office of Price Administra-

have a .minimum of eight partici- tion and its fight for survival now pants... · being wag~d in congresi:;, the vet~

·Thursday evenirig, May 8, at _4. Three required songs will be erans voted . almost unanimously · .. 7:36,· ~he Glee Club will sing in -sung in the following order: (at their-regular ... zn~eting . Wed-.... the .Memorhif'Aiiclltoi.-ium 'for. the '(1) A" Wake 'Jrcirest"5c1lo61 song. hesday. night) to' request both

Raleigh Garden Clubs annual ex- (2) A stunt song or novelty North Carolina senators to sup-hibit. The program is as follows· number. port the OPA.

Sing In Raleigh

"God the All Terrible" (Lvoff) (3) An exami?le · of musical The following resolution has

ous level. Discontinued Regula­tions mean Discontinued Educa­tion. We cannot meet continued inflation."

T.he action was prompted by. a letter received by the club .from the Anchor and Eag:te Club, vet erans organization of Duke Uni­versity. This group had taken similar action and pointed out that servicemen's clubs on the cam­puses of many of America's major colleges and universities are ac­tively supporting the continuance of the OPA. -

by the Glee Club; "The Garland Americana. (The music of this been drafted and sent to Senators I Send Thee". (Cain), "Fireflies" song, and the words if possible, Bailey and Hoey: "Request your (Russian Folk Song) by the Men'~\ must be American in origin. Sug- ~trong support·of the OPA. Dit~h­Glee Club; "Go Pretty Rose. gestions: hymn, folk-song, popu- mg the OPA now means reducmg (Marzials), duet by June Freeman lar song, Stephen Foster patriotic fin~ncial condition of veterans in and Billie Barnes; "Who'll Buy song, etc.) ' American universities to a hazard My Roses" . (Traditional), based 5. Each group will be allowed --------------------------­on three melodies from. ·Hungary, eight minutes including entrance . Holland, and Italy, by the Girls' and exit. .Glee Club; ·"Oh Italia, Italia" 6. Any instrument or instru .. .(Donizetti) by the double cictet; ments except the piano may be "Onward, Ye Peoples" '(Sibelius) used for accompaniment.·

"by the Glee Club! 7. Entrants will be judged 01

Practice ·Teaching Is Hard On The Nerves

SILK

The Student Council in special "Seattle,· April 21. - An­

other consignment of silk from Japan will arrive !n Seattle early in May for shipment to mills in Pater­son, N. J., it was learned yesterday. It will consist of 1,100 bales and 200 cases and will be landed by the steamship Wake Forest Vic~ tory. The silk shipment is coming from Kobe." - The Seattle Times.

· s~ssion last night decided to call a general assembly of the student body to meet during the regular chapel period on Monday for the purpose of discussing in detail the protests that have arisen over last week's election.

Wake Forest Has Tops In Forensics Sam Behrends, senior member

of Wake Forest's debate team, has been chosen as one of the several best debaters who participated in the Pi Kappa Delta Forensic Con­vention at Georgetci\\rn, Kentucky, last month. The ai).IlOuncement was made by Prof. A. L. Aycock, faculty adviser of forensic activi­ties, who received notice from tournament officials this week.

Prof. Aycock also announced that Nancy Easley, co-ed member of the squad, compiled the highest composite score of any woman en­trant at the convention. Miss Easley placed second in extem­'pore and· after dinner speaking, third in impromptu, and · fourth in oratory in a field of twelve schools. She was the only woman who entered each division and won high acclaim from the judges for her speaking ability. Miss Easley, who appeared in Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities and holds member­ships in numerous campus organi­zations, was recently elected to Phi Beta Kappa .

Team Takes Third

So far as is known the council has taken no definite action on the motion made in chapel Wed­'nesday to disregard the election of April 24 and io hold a new elec­tion "in which all the rules and regulations governing student body elections be strictly adhered to." The motion made by Harry ThJ­mas and passed by a substantial majority of those students pres­Emt at the regular chapel assem­bly came as a complete surprise to most of the student body who looked on last week's election as final.

New developments have brought out the fact that another attempt was made to declare the election illegal when an anonymous pet!~ tion was presented to the student council at a called meeting on Thursday night following the elec­tion. Grounds for the protest were that the election ·was not conducted in the exact manner prescribed by the constitution. The constitution stipulates the use of the Australian ballot in stu­dent body .elections, and the pro­test maintained that such a ballot was not used. ·However, the council saw fit to vote down the prot_est.

Constitution Violated A heated discussion developed

in chapel on Wednesday as .a re­sult of Thomas' motion which most students considered an. at­tempt to fight the fraternity cau­cus's control of every major cam­pus election. Thomas stated that he was not concerned with the technicalities involved but rather the principal that the constitution is being violated year in and year

The Wake Forest .debate team out. · Robert Crapps, senior min­was third in competition with six- isterial student, had raised the teen other colleges and universi- question as to whether or not the At the· conclusion of the pro- the following basis: _

gram, June Freeman and Coit (1) General quality of singing Troutman,· carl-ying Wake Forest -50 points banners, will lead the Glee Club Enu11ciation (20)

ties. The squad, with Behrends constitution had been• violated to

1 and Kermit Caldwell presenting the extent that the election was They are different from other the word "hysterical" in a sen- the affirmative case and Behrends decided through irregularities.

students, these practice teachers, tence, she received the reply, "Our and Dick Williams defending the Thomas, whg is himself a min­and it is easy to tell who they are teacher makes the hysterical facts negative side,_ debated seven isterial student, repeatedly em~ immediate.ly. When you see one interesting for us." Yet in spite 0f times, winning on five occasions: phasized the fact that he was act­of your classmates coming, loaded it all, her comment about teaching The national debate question for ing for himself and not as the down with books under one arm, was, "I love it. I wish I could 'reach this year was "Resolved, that the spokesman for any particular papers under the other and a until school· is out." foreign policy of the United States group. His purpose, according to scholarly look on his (or her) face, One of the teachers is confronted should be directed toward the es- his statement, is to prevent a re­you may know that you are being with a serious problem. The girls tablishment of free trade among currence in the future of any dis­approached by what is commonly in her class are seated on one side .the nations of the worlji." crepancies that have been appar­referred to as a "P. T." . of the room and the boys on the Wake Forest's representatives ent in campus elections in the

from the stage down the ma:n , Balance of voices (10) aisle of the auditorium. Expressiveness (10) · The campus activities of Na- Sincerity (10) · tional Music Week will be con- (2)•0riginality of presentation eluded on Sunday evening, May (25). (choice of songs;- instru-12, when Professor McDonald will mental obligato~?, soloists, etc.) present three groups of organ (3) Appearance (25). (Stage numbers· at the Temple Baptist deportment, directing, etc.) Church in Durham. Professor 8. All entries must be filed in McDtmald will be assisted by the the Musical Director's office not coliege male octet. later than one week prior .to the

.American Legion · Post Organized

'Ben IV. Cole; who is acting com­rmmder 'of the American Legion PO!t being activated here on the campus, has called a special meet­ing of the post for 7 P. M. WM­nesday,' May 8 in the Religio11 .Building· Auditorium. Severo! ;pressing matters are to be consid­ered, among them the .. election of

. officers, the adoption Qf a name :for the post, and the adoption •)f :a program for the post to under~ take. Final corrections are to be :made in the application for the post's ·charter also.

Cole 'states that the ne~ary :fifteen new memberships have been secured and that fourteen :men who have joined other posts lhave expressed their desire to transfer their membership to the campus group. New members in~ elude: James A. Bracey, Jack M. Byrd, Ben N. Cole, Bernard Eisen~ berg, T. J. Fletcher, Richard H. Gallimore, ·Jesse E .. Glasgow, Philip P. Godwin, Lehman- 0. Green, Albert W. Hargrove, .James A. Hawkins, LaWrence R. Kiser, Neil J. Paft, Jr., .Ernest :H. Pittman, Braxton .c. Shlplkle,

sing. 9. The trophy shall remain in

the hands _of the winning group for one year. To retain it per­manently a group must win it three times. ·

10. All partic~pants must be bonafide member!] of the group they represent.

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Phi Bete Banquet, Initiations FridiiY

' The Phi Beta Kappa banquet and initiation will be- held next Friday night. · For the first time the society is permitting the ini­tiates anti members to invite guests to the banquet, which will be held at 6:30 o'clock in the High School Cafeteria.

Coit R. Troutman, and Henry M. Ussery.

These men plan to become char­ter members of the Wake Forest post although they have· joined other posts before entering school: Richard F. Bass, Fred M. Benton, Ernest C. Chappell, AI B. Cope­land, Rufus M. Fisher, John E. Galloway, Tom Faircloth, Richard Mitchell, W. M. Severance, Verne E. Sbive, W. G. Smith, .Julian Spence, and .Richard A: Williams.

These are the students who are other. The students, she says, lost first to the team from Otter- past. When his motion was on now beginning to sympathize with spend more time looking on the op- bein College of Westerville,· Ohio. the floor during the meeting Wed­their old grammar and high school posite. sides of the room than at This team went through all tourn. nesday, he stated that he wanted teachers for whom they used to their books. t tit' d f t d d to brl'ng to the attention of the make life miserable. They are One teacher tells of her most amen compe Ion un e ea e an

was named winner. The team student body exactly what had learning also that students are not embarassing moment. This parti- from Bowling Green State Uni- been taking place in campus elec-the only ones who have daily cular teacher had assigned charac- versity handed the Wake Forest tions and that he was not merely horne work to occupy what is ter sketches to be written by each d . th d f t d th m· terested in having this particu-otherwise known as leisure time. I member of the class. The clay came squa lts 0 er e ea an us . One practice teacher, while ~ll when they were due. The class was won second place in the tourna- lar election decl~red illegal. but beating her brains out try- very anxious to have the teacher ment standings. Quorum Not Present ing to explain Shakespeare's Ju- read a sketch by a pupil who was Behrends Chosen Because any such action was lius Caesar to her class, almost not considered too timid by the Following the debates, tourna- entirely unexpected, barely half gave up in despair wlien asksd teacher to read his own. In vain ment judges chose the eight best of the student body was preset&t by one bright pupil why the play the teacher asked the author to debaters participating :from the at the assembly, despite the fact wasn't written in goOd English. read his work. As a last resort the group of more than fifty speakers. that it was a regularly scheduled This "P. T." learned one· thing teacher began to read the sketch. Behrends, who spoke on both the chapel meeting with compulsory while teaching-namely, she docs Everything went well until the affirmative and negative sides for attendance for all students. When not want to be a teacher. teacher realized the sketch w:>s Wake Forest, received nomination the motion was passed .by a rna-

Another of the practice teachers about her and that the author as one of the most outstanding jority of those students present, }las her room so filled with papers wanted to know if the hard sub- speakers at the convention. an attempt was made to declare that friends are no longer able -to ject of English or red-headed boy Behrends, who has been out- the entire procedure illegal on pay their respects. "My children," friends made the teacher the way standing as a speaker throughout the grounds that a quorum of the as she fondly calls her students, she was. The teacher's fac~ then his college career, also placed student body was not present. "have a pin mania. They put pins matched the hair before mention- second in extemporaneous speak- The vote on the motion was 278 in the ends of pencils and then ed. · inng. A veteran of three years" for and 139 against it, making a proceed to make use of them. By Even some of our football heroes service in the. army air force, he total of 417 students participating the till).e- the class is half over all are among that elite group who ,is president-elect of the Wake in the voting. The student body of them look as if they have St. will someday earn their daily Forest student body and a mem- numbers more than 1000 students. Vitus' Dance." ... bread by transmitting knowledge. ber of Omicron Delta Kappa, In_ many respects Wednesday's

And so with both beds and desks One of them was standing in the honorary leadership fraternity, chapel session was reminiscent of piled high with. papers the P. T. hall before going in to his class and Pi Kappa Alpha, social fra- the nominating session held two sits calmly -on the floor c.orrecting when one of his students ap- ternity. weeks previously. It was marked the papers while her roommate proached him timidly. The boy by the same apparent lack of par-stands in the corner tearing her gazed up at him adoringly, put his Jimmie Mattox will be in liamentary procedure, resulting hair. It is hard to tell which of the hand out, then stepped back mut'- charge of the BTU opening assem_ in a badly disorganized meetirig. two will be gladder when the or- muring, "Gee, I touched him!" bly at 6:30 Sunday night in the This may be attributed somewhat deal is oyer. , There is only one question to be auditorium in the Religion build- to the fact that Wednesday was

Then there is the practice teach- asked of these pilgrims dunng ing, The story of the hymn, "0 not the day for a student body er who was· giving her class in- their progress. Who is learning Master Let Me Walk With Thee,". meeting, and the president of the structions on the correct use of 1 more, the students or the _practice will be presented. Jimmie will student body had not been in­words. On asking one. boy . to . use teachers? play a violin solo. formed as to what was coming up.

Page Two

' Old Gold and Black Founded January 15, 1916, as the official stu­

dent newspaper of Wake Forest College. Publish­ed weelcly during-_ the school year except durin~ examination Jtcriuds and holidays as directed by the Wak9- Forest College Publications Board. ·

Betty HorRiey ................. Editor. or this issue Sue .Marsh J.ll g<.hlie Folk Bettie Horsley Richard Brinkley

.............. Editorial Council

William E. (Bill) King· ........ Business Manager Editorial Staff: Kitll' Jo Beasley, Sam Behrends,

~uth Dlount, Rebecca Brown, Madge Conrad, Kay Garland, Jesse Glasgow, L. R. Grogan, Jr., Jon Hall, James Hawkins, llfary Lou Howell, Mary Lee James, Anne Johns, Leldon Kirk; George Jllal­lunc~. Sarah Elizabeth Miles, Bill Poe, Bill Robbins, Jean Shelton, Jo Shelton, Helen Tucker.

Spurts Staff: Hock Brinl<ley, Paul Allsbrook, llerucrt AJJ]ltmzeller, Fran!< Gregory, Charlie Mor-r·is~ · i'Uul Canady ......... Assistant Business Manager \\'. L. (Zero) Crumpler • Dot Vaughn .......•... Local A!lve\·tising Mgrs. Lucy Rawlings ............... Circulation Manager Ernest Chappell, Benjie Evans, Libby Gertner, Uilmet· Parrish, Ha.lph Slawson.

All e!li to rial mutter should be addresseu to the editor, P. 0. Box 5Ul, WaJ(e Forest, N. C. All uusine~s matter should l.Je addressed to the busi­ness manager, same addt·ess. Subscription rate: $1.50 a year.

I' HUN E 304-6. I•' or important news on ~'burs­days phone 2561, The Record Publishing Co., Zebu­lon, N. C.

l!Jntered as second class mail matter January 22, rn6, at the post office at ·wake Forest, North Carolina, under the act of l\iarch 3, 1879.

Member Intercollegiate Press Member Associated Collegiate Press

Represented for national advertising by Na­tional Ad\•erllsing Service, Inc., College Publishers l{epresentative, 420 l\ladison Ave., New York, N. Y., Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco. ' ~· , _________________________ _,

· ..

Old Gold and Black .

Here's Why ' Letters· to the· Editor

. A number of complaints have been made j

about the fact that an announced action made '~------------~------.----­in an early issue of this paper has been unful­filled.

A few hopeful persons, havin~ read this article, stating that electricity, water and dressing rooms would be provided for a trail­er .. camp for veterans, bought rolling homes and began the trek for Wake Forest.

After a prolonged wait during which !!O action was taken they began to make com­plaints, some of which came to members of this staff.

Called upon for an explanation, Mr. Earn­shaw, College Bursar, came through with this explanation:

Fa~ilities down at the old football stadium are designed for a much larger gr_oup than those

I few who showed up in their trailers for this semester. Costs of operating such a. lar&e es­tablishment would be so great as to be prohibit­ive for so few people.

Next year there will probably be enough trailer owners to make this plan feasible.

To the Editor To the Editor: In response to the editorial, Hot water every day used to be

"Need for a Y," in last week's considered a luxury. Today it is a. OLD GOLD AND BLACK, the necessity. 'B. S. U. wishes to express offici- For some time, and for the last ally its opinion on the subject. two weeks particularly, there had.

Those who know how the "Y" been little or no hot water in Siro­is functioning on other campus~s nions Dormitory. Off hand this say that it has served itS day. It may be considered a mitlor prob·­is being replaced by· ·an Inter- lem, but after so long a time it Faith Council composed of one vr become a matter of great import-two representatives from each or- ance. , ganized denomination on the cam- This week one of my professors pus. This Council promotes a gave me a razor with the remark unified program between these that he hoped I would use· it. I groups. would like to shave, if there were

Furthermore, the B.S. U. Coun- hot water. cil has attempted to work in co- Each student in Simmons pays operation '?lith other religious or- forty dollars a semester for roo'll ganizations on the campus. At ·rent. This is a reasonable amount. preset~t, there is a representative But it is understood that modem from· the Methodist Student Fel- facilities will go with the room. lowship on the Council. Financial Appeals have been made to the au­support has been offered to this "thorities, but it seems to do no group, but it ·was refused. A rep- good. · resentative from the Canterbury Won't somebody do something! Club has been invited to work Signed: H. L. Regist~r with the B. S. U.

The B. S. U Council appreciates the interest shown by the editors,

To the Editor:

rr_ Othe,., Colle·?.e'S organization r PO m I. 0 Sincerely yours,

. .' ' . \ . . '·

lhiday, May ··a, t94G: ·.· ·., '. .. .

Rehearsals' ... . . . ..

For Claudia .

- .. ..

Nea·r 'finis .-II,. , ... ·

. -

Rehearsals, !or the forthcoming. Little Theatre production, ''Claud ia·,, by Rose Franken; are coming along nicely, says Bill Moody, di rectoT. The date of the per formance has been set for May 3 at the High School auditorium. · ·The cast is putting the finishing touches on the second act of the three act play at the present. Each act is being taken · sepa- · rately and rehearsed untU ~, the lines and . actions are firmly in the minds of the cast. During the last week of rehearsals the play will be put together and. rehearsed ori. the stage of the High Schoolauditbr1um. ·

Kay Garland has been given the part of Claudia's sister-in-law, Julia. This part was originally as­signed to Sybil Jolly who gave it up because of ·lack of time. Kay Garland has h_ad much experience in amateur dramatics both here and at Mars Hill. I and invites suggestions for the

l promotion of such a cooperati"e

TJ_ 'T''h D.' / Bill Roberson, Representative rirst 1..~ in8s rll'St ------- Baptist Student.Union

In previous years, the College Book Store stayed open at night until 10:30. Now that the student body is again normal in size, an1 labor is available, why can't those hours be resumed?

Bill Poe.

FoJ" the first time in Little The­atre history the director' is using the flats in the rehearsals that will be used on the night of the pro- · duction. These flats have been set up in the Alumni Building on the · same scale as they will be. set up .. in the High School auditorium. This gives the cast the chance to become familiar with .the setting. of their performance before the final week-of rehearsals.

The action taken in chapel Wednesday was the first of its sort in the history of the school. Never before has an election of the major campus officers been contested. The question of the legality of the election had been present­ed earlier to the Student Council, and after conferring with a professor in the law depart­ment, the Council had declared the matter a closed incident. No evidence had been present­ed to them which proved that any part of the election was not in strict accordance with the constitution and regulations governing Wake Forest elections in the past. There was the nsual dissatisfaction on the part of a few of those supportLng the losing side, but that is not grounds for declaring the election illegal.

However, in spite of the Council's investi­gation of the matter, a resolution was present­ed to less than half of the student body at a time regularly scheduled for chapel services tbat the entire election be held over. No evi­dence of irregularities in voting was presented·, no specific charge was made; instead the very abstract word "spirit" was brought into play and it was stated that the "spirit of Wake For­est" had been violated in the election. That phrase is thrown round rather liberally, but never is it defined. Just how it was violated was not defined at that time.

The student body was not informed earlier that such important matters would come up in chapel. Not even the president of the stu­dent body had been informed and he was not prepared to deal with the situation as he would have been, had he known that it would be pre­sented. No parliamentarian was present. The faculty member who had been asked to speak was forced to relinquish his time in order that it could be spent in heated arguing back and forth between the various factions. And the result of all this confusion? Approximlttely a fifth of the student body voted to hold a reelec­tion-278 backed the resolution. There is no doubt in anyone's mind about the legality of rhat move.

We see in the EMORY WHEEL that Sigma ' Pi Fraternity is being reactivated on the Emory ,./ Campus.- It became inactive in june, 1945, when nearly all the members had been taken Deacs Who Are Greeks into the armed services.

by George Mallonee Lloyd Bailey. The Delta Sig's "Since it is not recognized by those who The have also inducted Eben Rawls.

fraternity houses are un- Although this semester is near-have seen how it works as justly honoring abil- usually qu1et this week as every- ly over the fraternities ar~ still ity and achievement on campus, the so-cailed one is recuperating from the very pledging new boys. The Delta 'Who's Who Among Students in American Uni- strenuous and very much enjoyed Sig's recently pledged Bill John-

. . . week-end. The dance on Satur- son; 'the AKPi's, Rufus Mitchell, versJtJes. and Colleges, should ~ot be recogn~z- day night 'in Memorial Auditori- and Charlie Roberts, and the KA's ed by thrs college or should rad1c~Ily change 1ts urn in Raleigh was a huge success Sonny Martin and Tommy Johns­underhanded methods of showing favoritism in due mainly to the delightful musi~ ton. dealing out pseudo-honors. As survivals of the of Sully Mason and his orchestra. From the romance department

. . . . This dance was attended by many comes th~ news that Pledge Bro-un democratiC soronty and fratermty Idea and as of the students who will not at- ther Dick Herman of the PiKa's falsely .claiming to be literary organizations, tend another fraternity dance recently married Betty Fulgum of the societies should be abolished; they per- while_ they are students at Wake Raleigh. Word also comes that form no worthy function which cannot be car- Forest College. Charlie Powell of the AKPi's is ried on adequately by other more suitable or- The dances of the week-end now engaged to Roslin Miller.

were attended _by many alumni. The Kappa Sig's were very re-ganizations already in existence. If next year's Jack Stearne, Walter Byrd, Tut gretful to hear that Mrs. Rea, wife chapel programs continue to improve a~ much M;yers, Royal Jennings, Billy of Dr. L. A. Rea, faculty adviser as this year's ones have done, chapel attend- West, Jack Baldwin, and Charlie of the Kappa Sig's, is seriously ill

Wilkins w~re guests of the Kappa in Duke Hospital. Pledge Brother ance will not suffer too much from the respon- Sig's. Ed Royster and "Hotdog" "Cac'~ Young of the K;A's is recov-sible freedom ·of unlimited chapel cuts; if not, Hargrove E-ntered on bids from ing very rapidly from his appen-chapel programs should no longer be presented. the AKPi's. Admiral Frank Nash dectomy in the Baptist Hospital of Unlimited cuts should be extended to cover class and Beverly Ball were invited by Winston Salem.

attendance in recognition of both our claim to individual responsibility and to the honesty of our original intention in entering an educational institution." Seems as though the students at W. C. U. N. C. have the same complaints as we do.

the KA's. The PiKA rooster of Uncle Sam made an exchange alumni inciuded Jim D,1yle, Liv- this week rather than an increase. ingston Jr hnston, Muck Biggs and Jim Rhoades, an AKPi, came out Billy Royle. The SPE guests in- of the Army after only four days eluded Ralph Earnhardt, Bedford of service, and Grady Patterson Black, Paul Bell, and T. H. Gib- Jr. was discharged from the Na­son. Mr. and Mrs. Carlyl\l Kin- vy. Grady is to enter summer l'iw were. not able to attci1ri the school here. The losses include d.rmes but recently visit·d. tht! Arnold Smith, a KA, who will S·g.~ta Pi's. leave for the Marine Corps Men-

The Converse College commencement The Kappa Sigma fraternity re- day, and Bill Hough, another KA, speaker will be Carl Sandburg, of distinction.

poet and author cently elected officers to setVe the who will go to the Navy soon. next term. Calvin Staley will The dances atWoman's College, serve as Grand Master, Paul Alls- Greensboro College, Salem Col-

Bobby Wooten, editor of the State TECl-f­NICIAN, has resigned his position due to "scholastic difficulties."

A plan for awarding honors to graduat­ing seniors in the degrees summa cum laude, magna cum laude, and cum laude was approved by the faculty of W. C. U. N. C., and 37 seniors will graduate with honors this spring.

Honors will be indicated on the commence­ment program and will become a part of the student's permanent record.

brook as Grand Proctor, Jack lege, and St. Mary's College will Acree as Grand Master of Cere- find a great number of Wake monies, Forest men among its folds ....

Crenshaw Thompson. as Grand The Sigma Pi's plan to ent~r the Scribe, Paul Carter as Grand' All Campus Sing .... The frat­Treasurer, and ·Paul Allsbrook and ernity softball league is now ·un­Harold Reddick as "Pan-Hell rep- derway with all bets down on resentatives. The Sigma Pi's are Sigma Pi. very proud of Brother Brantley The SPE's have put out a frat­Jolly who was recently elected to ternity newspaper; the Sig Ep Rev­serve as President of Pan-Hell for vietv made its initial showing on next year. Saturday, April 27, and was pro­

Two fraternities on .the campus nounced a big success by the ac­recently held initiations ceremo- cepting readers. Brother Bud King nies. At the Kappa· Sig ceremony is acting as Editor, and Brother Chris Maroulis, G. C. Caddell, Bill King is Business 'Manager.

However, these incidents are merely a continuation of the whole situation ex1stmg · since before the election. The heated politics · has always existed and perhaps it has not been entirely approved of by everyone. But that it should be judged illegal by those who lost an election is a departure from the old sense of sportsmanship displays in the past.

To Omar Khayyam Helen Tucker

and Bill Robertson were initiated, The fraternity plans to publish while the KA's initiated John Wil- the paper at least every two Hamson, Lawrence Warrick, and months if not oftener.

Phi Delta Omega

Proceeding on its previous ~e­cision to sponsor a dance in. the near future, Phi Delta Omega, pre­lega·l fraternity, formulated pla11s this week for holding the event next Friday night at the local Community House.

To Sponsor Dance

The Wake Forest Home Demon­stration Club will observe National Home Demonstration Club Week with a "Share-Your-Food" tea at the Community House on May 9 from 3:30 w1til 5:30.

0, ancient sage of yesterday Whose tents adorned the sands of time, The songs you wrote were not in vain Or wasted on the desert clime. You looked inside the souls of men; Your vision reaching clear and far, And studying with insight deep, You saw the souls; for what they are. Then as you wrote your verses. down, Engraving them upon •the heart, You left a heritage behind By leaving your immortal art.

The dance will be closed, with each member of the organization receiving three bids, one for him­self and two to be at his own dis­posal. No one will be admitted to the affair without an invitatio"l, fraternity officials stated.

Dancing will begin at 8:30, ac­cording to present J?lans, which also include provisions for refresh­ments. Music will be by trans­cription.

There will be attractive exhibits of party food and favors, needle craft, baby clothes, canned foods, and other displays showing the different phases of Home Demon­stration Club Work.

In addition to these exhibits, there will be displays of war sou­venirs contributed by returning veterans.

.The public is invited to attend and bring a tin of food, whk!h will be used for world relief.

Mary Lee James, secretary of Little Theatre, is assisting Bill Moody, the director. She has .had experience both as actress and be­hind the scenes in previous Little Theatre productions. _______ .. State BSU Elects

Hobbs President Dewey Hobbs was elected pres­

ident of the' North Carolina State BSU Convention at the annual BSU spring retreat held April 26-27 at the First Baptist Church in Greensboro.

Wake Forest Colleg{; was repre­sented by ten members of the re­tiring and newly elected council. Those making the trip were Bill Roberson, Coit Troutman, Luther Morphis, Murray Severance, Wil-. helmina Rish, Evelyn Pittman., Dick Kelly, Dorothy Hayworth and: Virginia Norment.

The theme of the convention w!ls: "This One Thing I Do." The pro-. gram got underway with a "Pick­up Supper" at the First Baptist: Church followed by a party and: a ·"Singspiration." During the. evening there were two devotional!. messages, a panel discussion and Rev. Mr. R. 1'. Howerton spoke on: "Reunion at Ridgecrest."

Following a third devotion&!. message on · Saturday morning: several students took part in a se­ries of talks explaining various: types of work of the BSU. Vir:­ginia Norment spoke on "Extension. Work." An open discussion on: "The Spiritual Needs of Today's: Campus" followed. Group con­ferences were held later in t)le­morning, Luther Morphis, Sunday­School superintendent, led the­group discussion on the work of: the Sunday School.

Follo'll{,ing the afternoon session of another devotional message and group conferences an installation service for the new officers was held.

The other officers elected for th~ state convention were as follows: First vice-president, Ed Smith from State College; second vice­president, Frances Thompson from Meredith College; third vice-pres'­ident, Vera Lovings from W.C. U.N.C.; secretary-treasurer, Anrn Sherrin from E.C.T.C.; publicity­chairman, "Don Shropshire from Carolina; Baptist Student repre-­sentative from Bowman Gray School of Nursing; and music chairman, Julian Motley from Campbell College

League Standings FRAT LEAGUE: W L Sigma Pi .............................. 2 0 SPE .................................... 3 1 Kappa Sig ·"'--···········-··········· 2 1 A K Pi ···-···················-········· 2 1

If there is dissatisfaction with the rules governing elections, with the constitution gov­erning all campus procedures, declaring an election illegal is not going to prevent s reo.-:­curence of a similar situation. If the opinion of the students is that the election was illegal, and if they honestly desire the solution of un­satisfactory elections, then the action taken Wednesday is not the proper action for the so­lution. The root of the trouble is in the law rules controlling the metho~s of voting rather than in the way in which this past election was held. A constitutional amendment is the one all-time remedy for a situation which evident­ly is not approved by all of the students._ Would not this change bring about the desired improve­ments? Only such an amendment could insure elections which would be above the suspicion of everyone.

And now from year to year the same, You live through all the ages long, And living still you give to us Your wisdom poured into a -s_ong.

Ed Stanfield, Wiley Taylor, and Horace Kornegay constitute the committee on arrangements.

The event will mark the first entry of Phi Delta Omega into so­cial affairs of this nature. The

It consists of pre-law students seeking an introduction into prob­lems encountered in law school.

PiKA .................................. 0 3 K A_ •......•..................•.. ~:....... 0 3 NON-FRAT: W L

e

------------------- fraternity organized six _years ago.

At its meeting Tuesday night the group also beard that casting of fraternity keys is now ir{ pro-ce!15.

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Old Gold and'inack • Page Three

·Covering the Field Trackmen-Head for Virginia to Face Indians witn Rock

. . The teams in the newly organized Big Four league are near­Ing the half-way point in their battle for top honors. At this point, it loois•as though it will be Carolina's pitching against State's balance and. Duke~s hitting. ·

Deacons ·Face First Match; . '·

Prospects Are Fairly_ Good -Herb Appenzeller-

A full squad of Deacon tracks-If I had to .select a favorite, I would pick Carolina. In Monk ters left this morning for their op- Baseballers Trip

White Phantoms wh · h <~ H c 1 c · h f h b ener against the William and Mary. . 1te art an.u amp o eman, aroltna as two o t e est Indians at Williamsburg, Virginia. pitchers if not the bestt in ·.the entire league. The Tar Heels coach Phil Utley is optimistic ov­hitting hasn't been· anything to attract big league attention, and er the chances of his untried squa::i. they have appeared jittery in the field at times. However, with The squad is supported by several

standouts''who, along wiih the new Rock Btf.nkley men like· Cleetwood and Hayworth, they ought to get enough meii, should give the Indians a ter- The Demon Deacons went to runs for· their pitchers to cop the crown. · rific battle. visit the Tar Heels ori Wednesday

--- William and Mary, a perennial and upset their hosts to the tune of Many people favor State to cop the title because of their po~er-house in' track, lost to a 5-f. It marked the first victory

adequate material at each position:. They have one of the tight- strong Maryland team last week. for the Deacons after four succes­est infields in the league. While Richkus is the only boy' In losing to 'Maryland the Indians sive losses in the new Big Four

· · · · · · revealed certain weaknesses in the League. among them that smacks the ball constan~ly, the others are ci.an- dashes and the distance runs. lt is Little Mac Grandy was the biu, gerous at the platter •. In Edwards they have the best all-around in these events that the Delicons star of the game as he ~et the catcher in 'the loop. If Johnson continues to show the form appear the most fortified and Carolinians down on one hit for

· · the fo "h t" t t · ti six and one-third innings, The that' exhibited 'in shuting out Carolina on two hits, he wili go . r; re ~ 0 · cones ts an - dazzling quality of Grandy's hur:-. . . · , . f ctpa.ed. _ .

a long way Ill hftmg some of the bur!}en off the shoulders o It was feared that the cindermen ing can be seen in the fact that big· Curt Ramsey. The outfield shapes up as good as the rest would be hampered by a lack of he faced only sixteen men in the in the league. . Yes keep yoitr eye on the W olfpack · they are weight-men. This week, however, first five innings. In the sixth

· · ' . . . · . ' the "big boys" really hit their stanza his control began to slip, at the head of the league now. w1th four wms as agamst one lost, strides and the once weak iield de- and he was replaced in the seventh and they will be hard ·to dislodge, partment has taken on a bright with one away. Skelding caine in

outlook. -to finish, allowing two hits and The traveling squad will be one run.

made up of approximately twenty The Deacons reached Colemfl.n boys. B. Billings, Pat Patterson, for one marker in the top of the Mac Grandy and Herb Appenzeller second when George Edwards will carry the burden in the dash:. crashed a triple and rode home on es. Dwight Price, Oscar campbell, Lail's single. From then on W. B. Herring and. George Wilson through the fifth it was a pitchers' will represent· the Deacons in the battle between Grandy and Cole­middle distances; man. In the sixth, however, the

Colonials lead, SP' s Unbeaten

A. P. Allsbrook

The Sigma Pi's are out in front in the Fraternity League with two wins and no defeats. Sparked by an air-tight infield and timely hit­ting, the boys of Sigma Pi have racked up victories over the Pi­KA's . and the KA's in their first two starts. The SPE's, K::tppa Sig s, and AKPi's have each dropped one loop tilt.

Sigma Pi had an easy time roll­ing over the PiKA's by a ~-f score in the first game of the season for both teams. Griffin and Appen­zeller held the PiKA's to 6 scat­tered· hits. The Sigma Pi's scorej in every inning except the sixth and the PiKA's tallied their lone run in the second.

In a free scoring affah· the Sig­ma Pi's continued their winning ways with a 19 to 12 win over the KA's. The Sigma Pi's racked up

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17 hits, scoring in every inning except the. first. The RA's also · showed power at the plate by col­lecting 11 hits and staging a 9th inning rally in which they scored 7 runs. ·

The SPE's had a field day as they rolled over the KA's 15 to 2. "Fireball" Nesbit, the SPE. ace hurler, was in fine form and lim­ited the KA's to five scattered hits . The SPE's infield looked e;;pecially good, and their hitting was just a little too much for the weaker KA team.

The SPE's made it two in a ro~v with an 8-2 win over th\l PiKA's. The SPE's scored three runs in the first inning and led throughout the game. The PiKA's just couldn't connect with Nesbit's fast ball and collected only five hits. Both teams looked good in fielding, but the SPE's hitting won the game.

The Blue Devils of Duke are the best hitting team in the league. ·With such hitters as Vann, Frye, Erickson, Little, and Smith, they are enough to worry any pitcher. However, the Blue Devils lack depth in the pitching depart~ent, and this is the weakness that wm ·cost the ·Durham boys the crown. In Lefty Lee Griffeth they have one of the prize pitchers in the loop, but they can't expect him to win them all. I expect the Blue Devils to finish somewhere behind ,State and Carolina.

The Deacons pulled , a surprise when they beat Carolina Wednesday, and in doirig so they uncovered a boy· t~at may go a long way in strengthening the team. That boy is Mac Grandy, a curve ball pitcher ·from Laurinburg. The Deacons just aren't strong enough in any department to overcome their however, seem destined to finish the season in last place. They weaknesses in the other departments: However, the Deacons, are strong enough to make it hot for the other teams by upset­ting them occasionally.

In the mile and two mile the Baptists scored three runs on one Deacons will send Rudolph Pruitt, hit when Carolina's defense fell · Rogers ·Chenault, Eli Galloway and through behind Coleman and com­W. Sankels. "Mayor" Ray Manieri mitted three errors. The eighth and·J. T. Joyner are the nominees saw Wake Forest get its final tally for the low hurdles while Joe when Whitner walked and scored Erickson and Stamples will-handle on Cochran's double. the high ·hurdles. In the jumping Carolina got its only score in events Stamp&, Billings, Jim Wat- the bottom of the same inning

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As l have. said, 1 take the Tar Heels because of their strength on the mound.- It is the belief in baseball that pitch­ing wins in. a short series of games, and since each cluJ.> is going to play the others only four times, the· boys from Tar Heelia seem to have the edge.

The standing of the league is as follows:

State Duke Caroli.!la

··wake Forest

W L 4 r 3 2

2 .4

The Deacon track team makes its first appearance four years in Williamsoorg, Virginia, tomorrow, apposing the strong Wil-

-uam and .Mary Indians. Naturally, not having a team· in four years, the Deacons will suffer from the lack of experience, llut anyone who has seen how hard these boys have worked in preparing for the matches can't help but think th\lt they will make up in fight what they lack in experience.

The ·boys who are sure to learn their share of points barring :injuries are Herb Appenzeller and Rogers Chenault. These boys !have the ability to be better than average trackmen, and at the tend of the year they should have made a name for themselves jn Southern Conference. track circles. They are also a few oth­~er veterans out for the team, Ray Manieri, Eli Galloway and Bob

·!Leonitti to name a few. . This team bears watching ·and don't be surprised ir' they pull

:an upset or two before the season is over.

Short shots ... When Mac Grandy found himself facing Hamp Coleman in. a pitchers battle at Chapel Hill Wednesday, it was like a repeat performance, for these two rivals faced each other last year in the American Legion circles, and as on Wednesday, Mac came out on top then, too .•. While speak­ing about 'Grandy, he is also one of the sprinters on Coach Phil Utley's track. In fact, he is being counted on to bring the tracters a lot of points. The boy is quite athletic .•. Carolina ought to be getting used to being knocked-off by the Deacons when they least expect it, for it was the Deacons who bumped the Tar Heels out of the Southern Conference Tournament •.. jack "Chick" Cicarelli pitched a no hit game in the non-frater­nity softball league.· His Colonial Clubbers, by the way, are the class of the league.. The team is composed largely of football players ... The students will have two good football games in their own backyard next fall. State and Clemson are paying visits to the local stadium ... Wake Forest's spring athletic teams are finding the road to success very rough in their ef­forts to revive the sports. The baseballers are the only ones

. who have grabbed a ·victory ... Buck Garrison is about ready to sign with the Pittsburg Steelers of the National· Professional Football League. It seems that Buck lias been a holdout ..• If you want to hear a funny story, get Dr. Poteat to tell you about the time he took. two (not one mind you but two) British ladies to the Polo Grounds to see the Giants and Dodgers play baseball ... Curt Ramsey, the State, flinger, has the best pitching record in the league, three wins and no loses. Tw!> of these wins came at the expense of the Deacons .•. Tex Guess, the pitcher whp looked great against the Marine Institute, is .suffering from a pulled muscle in his arm •..

son and Manieri are slated to per- when Cole .singled ·and covered -;;;;;~~~~~;;;~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~~;;~~;;;:;;;;;;;;~ form. Dick Fc.rl'man, Bob Leonetti, the rest of the way on an error ·and-Stamps, .Man.l~ri and Er1ckson a hit by Gregory. throw the weights. Whitner led the Deacons at bat

The team spirit is high and the with two hits and two walks in boys are keyed up to make the m- five times up. He also scored two vasion of Will.iam and Mary a sue- runs and stole two bases. tessful one. The Deacons dropped their

____ ___ fourth straight game on Monday

The Tzerlgblub· tribesmen, who live near Wamboogie Institute, wear G-strings made of ostrich feathers.

when they lost to the Blue Devils 8-2. Team: r he Wake Forest - 010 003 010- 5 6 2 Carolina - - - 000 000 010- 1 3 4

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Page Four

"I purpose to find the best in life" Will be tl:J.e theme of the devotional for the Sunday School general assembly Sunday morning at 9: 45 in the auditorium of the

UNDERPASS SERVICE STATION

"We Give Goad

Service"

Phone 9121

Wake Forest, N. C.

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Religion building. Those taking part on the..program will be Mur­ray Severence, Kay Covert, Jane Taylor and Bertha White.

r Forest & l Colleaiate I Theatres I Thursday and Friday, May 2-3-

Children 14c; Adults 40c Shows 3:15, 7:15, 9:00

Gene Tierney, Vincent Price

Dragonwyck Held Over Saturday at Collegiate

Saturday - Double Feature­Continuous 1 to 11

Children 14c; Matinee 30c; Night 40c (Tax Inc.)

Wild Bill Elliott

Colorado Pioneer.s Jesse Baker in

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Raleigh, N. C.

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The Hoodlum Saint Latest News

Held Over at Collegiate Tuesday

Tuesday, May 7-Shows 3:15, 7:15, 9:00 Admission 14c, 30c, 40c

Roy Rogers in

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Wednesday, May 8-Shows 3:15, 7:15, 9:00 Admission 14c, 30c, 40c

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Sheriff of Wake. County

Democratic Primary,

May 25, 1946

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Baby Food - Eggs - Cereal - Dried Beans

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Coffee, Sugar and Tea

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