4
140 ball ·EDITORIAI8:- ...... -AH, CROOL FATE COLLEGE .PRESS .. _ ...... ...... _ ___ _ - . ' I NEWSMEN WILL GF:.I' AT BANQUET TONIGHT Vol .. XXIii. No.· 21 - Z-538 WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1940. . .; PRICE: TEN CENTS PERCOPY · In .Super - Rally .At Wake Forest HERE ARE THE RUINs Student Features To Give Elections Are Just ========== Story By_Paschal Exhibition MaJch . . On Life of Sledd For High Around th·e Corner County Wide Gathering To Be :Addressed By Prominent Figures Brissie Says Spring Issue Band Concert To Feature Along With Spring Will Contain 28 Local High School Pages · Tourney ALL CANDIDATES WILL BE INVITED CENTER SPREAD IS GIVEN TO "SLICK" TWENTY DEBATE TEAMS IN MEET EXTRA HOWLERS Hatfield, Mayberry, Bob Goldberg Mentioned As Candidates ====== Broughton, Eure and Pou Among Those To Speak Says . Article {)u Coach Caddell Written By Norris, Durham Speech Director Writes Appreciative Letter Bill Poe, editor of the 1940 Howler, announced IBBt night that . there had been requests for extra copies of the Howler. NOMINATIONS TO BE BEFORE RECESS .The Wake Forest High School auditorium will be the scene on Wednesday, :March 27, at 7:45 p. m:, of a ";uper'' rally sponsored by the Wake Forest College and Wake County branches of the Young Deptocrats Club. The program of the rally, which is now being arranged by a special committee, will feature as speak- er a well lmGwit poJ.itical figure, to be obtained through the Demo- cratic Speakers' Bureau ·in Wash- ington, D. C. . According to a statement releas- ed to the Old Gold and Black by the Young every mari who has announced his candidacy for political .office in either the state Wake County has been or will be invited and will be given a chance to speak on , the program if he so desires. · Convery Thursday of next week will bring_ tl)e first day of spring and the spring issue of The Student, which, Editor Brissie disclosed, will contain a total of twenty- eight pages with something like ten distinct features. > w,orking toward the presenta- tion of a unique spring number; the staf:Q_· has secured a fitting cover, along with appropriate verse by .Mrs. Edith Earnshaw, depicting the spirit of spring on the Wake Forest campus - with the coming of magnolia blossoms. In this fifth issue of the year Dr. George W. Paschal's second special artiele on Dr. Sledd will- be offered by The Student. Center spread space has been given to Dr. l'aschal, as he takes up the life of Dr. Sledd after his coming to the Wake Forest campus fifty Candidates To Appear Pictured are the charred timbers and melted seats belong- years ago. Dick Telfair, president of the ing to the Collegiate Theatre, which was gutted by fire early Editor Writes Story Wake County Young Democrats Weilnesday morning. ·The building belonged to Shorty Joyner. A story written by the editor Club, has already .received letters and dea!ling with the life of Dr. -of acceptance from the following DJ 'T' U ld Charles Lee Smith, who was ed- candidates: Thomas E. Cooper, yy ztacre· rtans l Q flO itor of the fifty-six .of Wilmington, J. M. Broughton years ago, iE also included in the of Raleigh,' and w. P. Horton of 1111 v. De pr"te l.leaV''\1 L 'ss March issue. Accompanying this Pittsboro, three of the candidates J.YIO le S flj .T 0 article is a 1 tory on Dr. Smith's for Governor; R. L. Harris of * rare library, which the scholar Roxboro, and L. A. Martin, can- . To B dT Ch and educator has spent a lifetime didates for Lieutenant Building Belongmg oar 0 . oose in building and one which has cosL Thad Eure, incumbent and candi-. Shorty Joyner Is thousands of lollal·s. date for reelection as Secretary of Burned Pubii"cati·on Men Another of 'the interesting ar- State; Walter ("Pete") Murphy, ticles for this issue will be a story ·candidate for S!!cz:tary of State; Rebuilding of the Collegiate and personality sketch of John C. Geor;!l'e· Ross Pou, and Theatre, completely _gutted this Elections To . Come Off re- candidate for as week by flames fo!lowmg aJ,l O M d A . 1 s1gned· from· his actiVIties m J!Ul· Auditor; C: w._ Ml:ler, Jy,_moming : j n ay, ... · "uary._ is told __ for State_· Auditor, and Kerr pleted in the next forty- days' With · -. teepih: · · N-orns and '€'onve17,- -as Scott, incuml;lent and candidate :tlor 410 seats and all brand new based on records of Coach John \ · reelection as Commissioper of Ag- equipment,' according to C. C. Election of men to the six rna- during his eighteen years as base- riculture. . Whitacre, manager· of the enter- jor publications positions open to ball pilot of the Demon Deacon Even though some of the po- tainment house. Wake Forest students wil! take camp, and from conversations and tential candidates for county of- Off . th brand of place. at the April 15 business personal tributes paid the coach by fice have · not .made formal an- . ermg eh same . meeting ,of the Publkations Board. a of his "men". f t h · d' d mov1es, by t e same compames. nouncements o ell' can 1 acy, . 1 d' M G M Paramount R Candidates for the six places avail- For the first time in a college th will b 'ted d ·n rob- me u mg · · ., ' · 1 · ey e lllVl. an WI p . K. 0., F-ox, United Artists, aud able must fie their applications publication, the "discovery" of ably be present, It 18 stated. Warner F.irst National, Mr. Whit- by Friday night, April Wake Forest is revealed in the \ Many Leaders Here acre plans a new· building with a The places open to students are magazine. Based on records dug The coming rally will be out- 90-seat colored balcony. rest rooms those of editor of The Student, up from library volumes, Phil Bll;anding in that it will mark the on the mezzanine floor, and 300 The Howler and Old Gold and Highfill traces a journey taken first occasio11. on which the Dem- seats downstairs. Black, and business manager of by John Lawson in 1700, the first ocrats of this section of the_ state Losses in the blaze, which spread each of the three publications. white. man to through North wiDl had opportumty of quickly over the whole building All other publications positions Carolma, he d1d come through meetmg and. heanng so many po- following an explosion and which filled by of the what has become Wake Forest. litical leaders of the state and na- 1 t 1 t f hand b for·e e<htors or busmess managers ln Issue Contains Verse was comp e e y au o e tion. The Ypung Democrats urge 1 t t . .d student fire-. charge of the separate organs. In addition, there will be poetry . h . . te ted . 10 un eer own an R . t f 11 •• that everyone w o IS m res m ld b . h to b r are eqmremen s or a pos1tions by Nanney, Freeman, and Mrs. . . men cou · nng oses ea , . the affairs. of olur _govebrnment otr estimated about. $12,500 by the ad;de tessentiatllyh the samle. All Earnshaw; . thel'e will be a very in the ection e presen . building owner, "Shorty" Joyner, 1 a es mus ave at east a interesting essay by G. G. M.or- The hosp!tahty and arrange- and Mr. Whitacre $ 4 500 of which average al\d must have worked on gan, who tells of an experience as ments committee for the rally was covered with insurance by the publication on which they are a mill hand in a rayt>n plant. will consist of members of Young Building value was es- seeking an office during the past And Seavy Carroll comes to the Dem.ocrat Club chapters through- timated at $ 7 , 500 , and destroyed year, that is, during the school front again, after doing a bit of out the state and the Wake equipment of Mr. Whitacre's at year 1939-40. In addition, no exhaustive research, to give stu- est College chapter. The pres1- $ 5 ,000, .including 900 new seats in- person below junior standing will dents the low-down on "congres- de:nt of the Forest c_hapter, stalled in September. pre- be considered for any position. sional unnecessities," under the Bi.ll will na_me his com- jection equipment in the firepl·oof Requirements Are Given title cf "Congressional Appendici- m1ttee dunng the commg week. room and all films. which were In the case of the business man- tis." The 1lfficers of the Wake Coun- carried out unhurt, ;vere not de- agerial posts, candidates must Art work by Ellington and pho- ty Young Democrats are: R. B. t ed have sold forty per cent of the tography by Dr. Nlwill Isbell Bl\d (Dick) Telfair, president; Mrs. s roy : , . •local advertising during 1939-40 Royall Jennings are also to be Emma Holding Fairbanks, first i F•re Long Undiscovered for The Student and Old Gold and displayed in the new issue of the vice-president; T. W. Alexan<.I.,l.: The fire was discovered about Black, and twenty-five per cent of magazine. Jr., second vice-president; l :15 A. .M. Wednesday by night The Howler. Sinee a limited number of the An exhibition meeting between yearbooks are printed, it is Caroltna State an<YWake necessary that all such extra Forest debaters, plus a Wake For- orders be placed not later tban est College band concert, will b.J April 15, 1940. . added features on the agenda of The price of the annual is the second annual high school $5 per copy. poiemic tournament, Professor ------------- Marshall.Durham .and Bill ·Poole To Run -For Other Places George Copple, speech director, announced recently .. Professor Copple also stated that blanks have 'been sent out to over twenty high schools which have accepted invi- tations to participate in the debate joust, scheduled to take place here April 4-6. He made it clear that these dates do not conflict with North Carolina triangular debates or the_ finli!J. tournament at ·chapel Hill. ·with the coming of spring come elections. Heads of the various student-goveniment organizations S Sch I on the campUs announced this ummer 00 week dates for meetings of the The exhibition clash betwee11 Wake Forest debatt!rs ,led by Manager Bob Goldberg, and• the State College interl<>eutors will take place in, the local Baptist church, official toul'!lament head- quarters, at 7:30 p. m., April 4. Pfohl's Band To Play Director Donald Pfohl's colleg£ band will perform in a concert on April 5 at 5 p. m. · Among the twenty-odd high school speech teams which will witness these features are groups from the following sehools: Cen- tral High, Charlottr.; Boyden High Salisbury; Lee Edwards High, Asheville; Hugh Morson High, Raleigh; Needham Brough- ton High, Raleigh; Durham High, and Greensbora High. In sending· out invitations to high· schools, Pro. fessor · Copple described the pur- pose of this second high school tournament. He wrote: "For a -number of years the high school principals, the high debate coaches, the college debate direct- •Ors, and many of the debaters themselves have felt that the pres- ent debate and speech program in most North Carolina high schools is inadequate. The criticism that the present system encourages stilted, declamatory speeches and discourages extemporaneous, di- rect-clash debating, has come from many quarters ... In this tourna- ment, undertaken at the sugges- tion of the North Carolina Asso- ciation of Teachers of Speech and with Wake Forest as host, we have tried to give North Carolina high schools the beginning of an enlarged and more effective de- bate and speech program." Opportunity For All Each school with a part in this program wHl be· given an oppor- PI R al d groups which will determine :the ans eve e class .and student body -officers , for ·next year. Director Bryan Discloses High Optimism For Session Optimistic plans for the coming summer session, the :final feature of Wake F.orest's 107th year, were announced this week by Dr. D. B. Bryan, as the summer school cata- logue went to press on Monday. The cataLogue, which will be available here in one week, an- n,ounces that the summer quarter will begin on Wednesday, June 5, one week after graduation exer· cises of the regular school session. The school will continue through the first week in August. A feature of the summer ses- sion wi!J1 be the graduate courses which will be offered for the first time £or the large number of students who will work for the master's degree. Courses will be offered in five departments: English, history, philosophy, edu-. cation, and religion. Music Offered Courses an ·music,. leading to a B. A. in that field, will be record- ed in the catalogue, Dr. Bryan an- nounced. These courses will be taught by Professor Dcmald Pfohl, who is now serving his first year here as head of the music depart- ment. Professor Pfohl has for- mulated elaborate plans for sum- mer school choruses and vocal and instrumental extra-curricular ac- tivities. The summer school faculty is to be enlarged, Dr. Bryan stated, in to insure adequate instruc- tion for a much-increased student body. Indications thus far are that last summer's enrollmem, made up of approximately 300 men and 300 women from over 50 col- leges, wiH be exceeded this year. Advance registration began sever- al months ago. If plans for the local swimming pool materialize, summer school attendance will probably be fur- ther increased, the Dean pointed out. Pete Davis, when questioned as to the date for the student body elections, said that they would probably be held some time before the spring holidays. :mnst .be held, according to. the 'by-laws of the student .government consti- tution, before April 12. Rumor hath it that Bob Gold· berg Wlill run against Red '!fay. berry for .presidency of the student body, and there .has been quite some talk of a . candidate chosen from those not in the ranks of the Greeks. Thoae in the know say that this -will ·be Weston Hatfield·. Rumor.also .says that Marshall Durham will tun tor the vi<:e-presidency and Bill Pllole for the secretary's position. Juniors Meet April 9 A meeting of the junior class to nominate officers for next ·year's senior gtoup will be held Tuesday, April 9, according .to Bob Gold- berg, president of the ,juniors. At this meeting plans for .the junior-senior dance will be dis- cussed ·and ·referred 'to an appro- priate . committee for dispatCh. Archie McMillan and· Hll'!!ld :Me. Manus are expected to run for the presidency -of .next year's seniors. The vice-presidency iSI as yet open, but there ·is plenty· of ·time before the meeting:for·the cseason- al politics to gain headway. On Monday, April 8, the l)reaent sophomore class wiU meet to nominate candidates for heads of the junior class• next year. Jim Bonds, president, n.is that there will be some important .discU88ion in regard to .the junior-senior dance and other matters, and all members are urged to ·.attend in order to expedite matters. Cross and ·nuncavage Jimmy Cross and Joe Duncavage will have it out foo- the presidency of .the juniors, 10r so .the talk goes, with Jol¥t Galloway expected to be passing out the .cigars with an eye .on the vice-presidency. tunity to debate six rounds on the News To Appear The freshmen will gather on April 11th to make their tenta- tive arrangements for taking over the government of the sophO'tRore class next year, Frank Xlincheloe, president, announces. It is . ru- mored that John Conley and Billy Primm willl be candidates for president. Harry Lovelace is ex- pected to run for the vice-presi- dent's office, and Bill Ayres· may run for secretary. query: "Resolved That the Fed- The Wake Forest News, summer era! Government Should 0?."ll a11d school weekly publication, will be Operate Railroads." printed· again this summer, it was Original orations will also be also learned. This paper was first presented, as well as poetry and put out in 1934. A two year reading for girls, extempore 1apse came during the summers speeches and original orations on <lf 1937 and 1938. Six: issues of the general subject of "America the paper are planned for the and the European War." coming summer. The final round of the tourna- Dr .• Bryan pointed -out two ad- A-lma Patrick, secretary; and policeman D. J. Brown, who sum- . Editorial candidates must be Miss Mary Helen Keller, treas- moned Fire Chief John Taylil>' recommended by their editors, and urer. and students to aid in fighting it. must have sold advertising to the Fonner Eus Will Address Society Practically the entire fire depart- extent of ten doll:us for The Howl- men of V•olunteers and many stll- er and for Old Gold and Black, dents helped in saving valuables and five dollars for The Student. and handling the hoses. 1\fr. Whit- Further in:f'crmation concerning acre expressed his a!l!H'eciation to the offices and their qualification all who helped in the work. l\fany requirements may be obtained by other students and .town people applying to Ferd Davis, secretary Newsmen To Get Awards Tonight ment will be over Sta- vantages of summer school attend- tion WRAL in Raleigh, and wir.- ance .. First, he said, students who ners of various events will be pre- attend three summer school ses- sented awards, certifcates of dis- sions are able to complete their Presentation of publication keys tinction and medals. college courses in three years. Presidents of the various groups urge all students to attend the meetings. Grads ToT aik Fohr graduate students and (Continued On Back Page) of the Publications Board. former Euzel:ians wiU make talks -------------------------- on various subjects to the Euze- D J d D th T J T !ian Literary Society_ Monday night lSCQ rae ea Yf agon section program, next week. A_. fel- Drags Deacons to Dances low m b1ochem1stry, who 1s also well known his verses; will a talk on "Poetry is Personality.'' It cost seventy-five dollars; it paraphernalia and six members cf Nolan P. Howington, who is can make the trip from Greens- Bill's orchestra to and from the now doing grsduate work in phi boro to Raleigh in two and one- scenes of their performances. losopl1y and religion, will talk on 'half hours; it has a one In addition to these trips, plans the "Old Country Parson." thirty-seven inch wheel base; the are under way to condition the Washburn to Speak co.st of operation varies inversely bus for several spring expeditions Wlth the cube of speed; and pnor of the Barefoot type. One which to its recent purchase by Bill.V an- is most enthusiastically sup pert-: den Dries' Ol'chestra, it was in the ed by financial experts is a ern- service of an undertaker. In other sade into the Harricane to wrest words, "The Flying Corps" (pro- the control of tree tops from the nounced "corpse"), as it is affec- Wanga Wanga. Anllther is to be tionately called by Bill and his for the transportation of the Jub band, is nothing but· a has-been Jub birds from the salt flats of hearse. Utah to Beaufort, the best fish- Wyan W. Washburn will address the h8ill on "Forensics vs. Medi- cine." Washburn graduated from the college in 1934 and is a past Euzelian president. He is IIIOW a member of the first year class in medical school. Finally, Beamer Barnes, who is .now studying in the Law School, will speak on the subject of "The Big Bad W:olf Unmasked." A full society ball is expected :for the night's program. All stu- dents are invited. But under the new management ing section of North Carolina. the duties of "The Flying Corps" Bill also announces that his bus are DfOre varied and, as Bill puts will leave the curb in front of Miss it, "less depressing". The main Jo's cafeteria each afternoon for function of the vehicle is now to the Ambassador theater J"n Ra- transport the instruments, other (Continued On Back P e) \ to the faithful of The Stude'lL, Writing to the Wake F.orest The second advantage which the The Howler, and Old Gold and spel!Ch department, Mrs. Belle C. dean enumerated was financial Black will highlight the Publica- Gholson, speaking coach at the saving, no tuition but only matric- tions Banquet and Dance at the (Continued On Back Page) ulation fee being charged. Raleigh Woman's Club Saturday---------------'------------ The banquet win Dean Squelches Rumors The members of the Publications A b Board voted at its meeting Wed- out Moving and Money nesday night of this week to give , keys to those men who, in the opinion of their editor and busi- ness manager, have done sufficient work to merit an award. Only those men who attend the banquet, however, will receive keys. The group first voted to give no award to the collegiate journal- ists, but rescinded its action. A rush order was placed in order that the medallions will be ready by banquet time. The banquet program will fea- ture a short talk by "Red" Pope, a toast by Wayne Collier, togeth- er with an after-dinner speech by Tom "Boredface" Davis. In addi- tion the editors of the three stu- dent publications will match their voices with those of the three bus- iness managers in two renditions of "Sweet Adeline." Isn't it funny how rumors can get out? And isn't it funny how they can spread and grow and spread and become distorted all at the same time? Well, that's just what is occurring. Many Wake Forest students have undoubtedly become excited and jubilant over the most recent ma- jor rumor on the campus - that the college is going to be moved to Winston-Salem and become rich and be called Reynolds University. (They say Mr. Reynolds is offer- ing millions to the Deacon school if it'll consent to being moved and having its name changed). In oth- er words, we'U have handsome, ex- pensive buildings and will sudden- ly rise to unsurpassable fame, they think. Some are for it, this wonderful step which they have probably thought will take place. These people like the idea of being in the spotlight for a while, of being able to vie with Duke in every- thing which requires money. Then there are those who are virtually mourning over this new fate they are afraid is going to take place. What will become of these lovely magnolia trees and this wonderfully friendly attitude here? They are thinking that Wake Forest will be just the "little town who wasn't there," for what will be left if the college is removed? Will Campbell Col- lege, oi Meredith, or Wingate, be here, or will they form a (Continued On Back Page) At Lawyer's Club The Current Law Forum will h<rld its regular meeting next Thursday night at seven-thirty. The program will be entirely dif- ferent from that which is usually presented. Instead of the sta- dents presenting the talks, the forum will have as guest speak· ers several members of the gradu- ating classes of recent years. John Lawrence, a member of the class of 1939, who is now connect- ed with the firm of Smith, Leach, and Anderson, in Raleigh, will give his impressions of legal practice. James E. "Hap" Tucker, also a member of the class of 1939, and who is in the Recodification Section of the North Carolina De- partment of Justice, will deliver a talk on the "Recodification of North Carolina Statutes." R. Bruce White, Jr., son of Pro- fessor White .of the law school, and a member of the class of 1937 will give "Some Aspects of the Functions of the Probation Com- mission." White is now a DfStriet Probation Officer of· the North Car.olina Probation Oommiaion.

Wake Forest University · 2018. 3. 20. · TEAMS IN MEET EXTRA HOWLERS Hatfield, Mayberry, Bob Goldberg Mentioned ===== As Candidates Broughton, Eure and Pou Among Those To Speak

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Page 1: Wake Forest University · 2018. 3. 20. · TEAMS IN MEET EXTRA HOWLERS Hatfield, Mayberry, Bob Goldberg Mentioned ===== As Candidates Broughton, Eure and Pou Among Those To Speak

140

ball

· EDITORIAI8:-......

-AH, CROOL FATE

~TD. COLLEGE .PRESS .. _ ...... ......_ ___ _ •

-. '

I

NEWSMEN WILL GF:.I'

~mimYS

AT BANQUET TONIGHT

Vol .. XXIii. No.· 21 - Z-538 WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1940. . .;

PRICE: TEN CENTS PERCOPY

· ~:Democrats·.Meet In .Super - Rally

.At Wake Forest

HERE ARE THE RUINs Student Features Deb~t~~ To Give Elections Are Just ========== Story By_Paschal Exhibition MaJch . .

On Life of Sledd For High S~ools Around th·e Corner County Wide Gathering

To Be :Addressed By Prominent Figures

Brissie Says Spring Issue Band Concert To Feature Along With Spring Will Contain 28 Local High School Pages · Tourney

ALL CANDIDATES WILL BE INVITED

CENTER SPREAD IS GIVEN TO "SLICK"

TWENTY DEBATE TEAMS IN MEET EXTRA HOWLERS

Hatfield, Mayberry, Bob Goldberg Mentioned

As Candidates ====== Broughton, Eure and Pou Among Those To Speak

Says P~esident .

Article {)u Coach Caddell Written By Norris,

Durham Speech Director Writes Appreciative

Letter

Bill Poe, editor of the 1940 Howler, announced IBBt night that . there had been requests for extra copies of the Howler.

NOMINATIONS TO BE BEFORE RECESS

.The Wake Forest High School auditorium will be the scene on Wednesday, :March 27, at 7:45 p. m:, of a ";uper'' rally sponsored by the Wake Forest College and Wake County branches of the Young Deptocrats Club.

The program of the rally, which is now being arranged by a special committee, will feature as speak­er a well lmGwit poJ.itical figure, to be obtained through the Demo­cratic Speakers' Bureau ·in Wash-ington, D. C. .

According to a statement releas­ed to the Old Gold and Black by the Young ~mocrats, every mari who has announced his candidacy for political .office in either the state ~-r Wake County has been or will be invited and will be given a chance to speak on , the program if he so desires.

· Convery

Thursday of next week will bring_ tl)e first day of spring and the spring issue of The Student, which, Editor Brissie disclosed, will contain a total of twenty­eight pages with something like ten distinct features.

> •

w,orking toward the presenta­tion of a unique spring number; the staf:Q_· has secured a fitting cover, along with appropriate verse by .Mrs. Edith Earnshaw, depicting the spirit of spring on the Wake Forest campus - with the coming of magnolia blossoms.

In this fifth issue of the year Dr. George W. Paschal's second special artiele on Dr. Sledd will- be offered by The Student. Center spread space has been given to Dr. l'aschal, as he takes up the life of Dr. Sledd after his coming to the Wake Forest campus fifty

Candidates To Appear Pictured are the charred timbers and melted seats belong- years ago. Dick Telfair, president of the ing to the Collegiate Theatre, which was gutted by fire early Editor Writes Story

Wake County Young Democrats Weilnesday morning. ·The building belonged to Shorty Joyner. A story written by the editor Club, has already .received letters and dea!ling with the life of Dr. -of acceptance from the following ~~~he DJ 'T' U ld Charles Lee Smith, who was ed-candidates: Thomas E. Cooper, yy ztacre· rtans l Q flO itor of the mag~zine fifty-six .of Wilmington, J. M. Broughton years ago, iE also included in the of Raleigh,' and w. P. Horton of 1111 v. De pr"te l.leaV''\1 L 'ss March issue. Accompanying this Pittsboro, three of the candidates J.YIO le S flj .T 0 article is a 1tory on Dr. Smith's for Governor; R. L. Harris of * rare library, which the scholar Roxboro, and L. A. Martin, can- . To B d T Ch and educator has spent a lifetime didates for Lieutenant Govern~r; Building Belongmg oar 0 . oose in building and one which has cosL Thad Eure, incumbent and candi-. Shorty Joyner Is thousands of lollal·s. date for reelection as Secretary of Burned Pubii"cati·on Men Another of 'the interesting ar-State; Walter ("Pete") Murphy, ticles for this issue will be a story

·candidate for S!!cz:tary of State; Rebuilding of the Collegiate and personality sketch of John C. Geor;!l'e· Ross Pou, m~umbent and Theatre, completely _gutted this Elections To . Come Off ~addell, base~all ~o~?h ~ho re­candidate for reel~ctlon as ~tate, week by flames fo!lowmg aJ,l ~ar- O M d A .1 s1gned· from· his actiVIties m J!Ul· Auditor; C: w._ Ml:ler, ca~<hdate Jy,_moming exjJ'1()~ion, :w~~ ~'·~~~ : j n -Fi~fn ay, ~-~~~' ... · "uary._ !~~ s~~~ is told b¥ __ :ve~ls_ for State_· Auditor, and Kerr pleted in the next forty- days' With · -. teepih: · · N-orns and ·~mcent' '€'onve17,- -as Scott, incuml;lent and candidate :tlor 410 seats and all brand new based on records of Coach John

\ · reelection as Commissioper of Ag- equipment,' according to C. C. Election of men to the six rna- during his eighteen years as base-riculture. . Whitacre, manager· of the enter- jor publications positions open to ball pilot of the Demon Deacon

Even though some of the po- tainment house. Wake Forest students wil! take camp, and from conversations and tential candidates for county of- Off . th brand of place. at the April 15 business personal tributes paid the coach by fice have · not . made formal an- . ermg eh same . meeting ,of the Publkations Board. a numb~r of his "men".

f th · d' d mov1es, by t e same compames. nouncements o ell' can 1 acy, . 1 d' M G M Paramount R Candidates for the six places avail- For the first time in a college th will b -· 'ted d ·n rob- me u mg · · ., ' · 1 · •

ey e lllVl. • an WI p . K. 0., F-ox, United Artists, aud able must fie their applications publication, the "discovery" of ably be present, It 18 stated. Warner F.irst National, Mr. Whit- by Friday night, April 5· Wake Forest is revealed in the

\ Many Leaders Here acre plans a new· building with a The places open to students are magazine. Based on records dug The coming rally will be out- 90-seat colored balcony. rest rooms those of editor of The Student, up from library volumes, Phil

Bll;anding in that it will mark the on the mezzanine floor, and 300 The Howler and Old Gold and Highfill traces a journey taken first occasio11. on which the Dem- seats downstairs. Black, and business manager of by John Lawson in 1700, the first ocrats of this section of the_ state Losses in the blaze, which spread each of the three publications. white. man to com~ through North wiDl ~ve had til~ opportumty of quickly over the whole building All other publications positions Carolma, a~d he d1d come through meetmg and. heanng so many po- following an explosion and which ar~ filled by a~pointment of the what has become Wake Forest. litical leaders of the state and na- 1 t 1 t f hand b for·e e<htors or busmess managers ln Issue Contains Verse was comp e e y au o e tion. The Ypung Democrats urge • 1 t t . .d student fire-. charge of the separate organs. In addition, there will be poetry . h . . te ted . 10 un eer own an R . t f 11 •• that everyone w o IS m res m ld b . h to b r are eqmremen s or a pos1tions by Nanney, Freeman, and Mrs. . . men cou · nng oses ea , . the affairs. of olur _govebrnment otr estimated ~t about. $12,500 by the ad;de tessentiatllyh the samle. All ~~C~; Earnshaw; . thel'e will be a very in the com1~g ~ ection e presen . building owner, "Shorty" Joyner, 1 a es mus ave at east a interesting essay by G. G. M.or-

The hosp!tahty and arrange- and Mr. Whitacre $4•500 of which average al\d must have worked on gan, who tells of an experience as ments committee for the rally was covered with insurance by the publication on which they are a mill hand in a rayt>n plant. will consist of members of Young Joyn~r. Building value was es- seeking an office during the past And Seavy Carroll comes to the Dem.ocrat Club chapters through- timated at $7,500, and destroyed year, that is, during the school front again, after doing a bit of out the state and the Wake Fo~- equipment of Mr. Whitacre's at year 1939-40. In addition, no exhaustive research, to give stu­est College chapter. The pres1- $5,000, .including 900 new seats in- person below junior standing will dents the low-down on "congres-de:nt of the Wak~ Forest c_hapter, stalled in September. Howev~r, pre- be considered for any position. sional unnecessities," under the Bi.ll Bu~, will na_me his com- jection equipment in the firepl·oof Requirements Are Given title cf "Congressional Appendici-m1ttee dunng the commg week. room and all films. which were In the case of the business man- tis."

The 1lfficers of the Wake Coun- carried out unhurt, ;vere not de- agerial posts, candidates must Art work by Ellington and pho-ty Young Democrats are: R. B. t ed have sold forty per cent of the tography by Dr. Nlwill Isbell Bl\d (Dick) Telfair, president; Mrs. s roy : , . •local advertising during 1939-40 Royall Jennings are also to be Emma Holding Fairbanks, first i F•re Long Undiscovered for The Student and Old Gold and displayed in the new issue of the vice-president; T. W. Alexan<.I.,l.: The fire was discovered about Black, and twenty-five per cent of magazine. Jr., second vice-president; Mis~ l :15 A . .M. Wednesday by night The Howler.

Sinee a limited number of the An exhibition meeting between yearbooks are printed, it is

Nm~th Caroltna State an<YWake necessary that all such extra Forest debaters, plus a Wake For- orders be placed not later tban est College band concert, will b.J April 15, 1940. . added features on the agenda of The price of the annual is the second annual high school $5 per copy. poiemic tournament, Professor -------------

Marshall.Durham .and Bill ·Poole To Run -For

Other Places

George Copple, speech director, announced recently ..

Professor Copple also stated that registrat~on blanks have 'been sent out to over twenty high schools which have accepted invi­tations to participate in the debate joust, scheduled to take place here April 4-6. He made it clear that these dates do not conflict with North Carolina triangular debates or the_ finli!J. tournament at ·chapel Hill.

·with the coming of spring come elections. Heads of the various student-goveniment organizations

S Sch I on the campUs announced this ummer 00 week dates for meetings of the

The exhibition clash betwee11 Wake Forest debatt!rs ,led by Manager Bob Goldberg, and• the State College interl<>eutors will take place in, the local Baptist church, official toul'!lament head­quarters, at 7:30 p. m., April 4.

Pfohl's Band To Play Director Donald Pfohl's colleg£

band will perform in a concert on April 5 at 5 p. m. ·

Among the twenty-odd high school speech teams which will witness these features are groups from the following sehools: Cen­tral High, Charlottr.; Boyden High Salisbury; Lee Edwards High, Asheville; Hugh Morson High, Raleigh; Needham Brough­ton High, Raleigh; Durham High, and Greensbora High.

In sending· out invitations to th~ a)ld·:~ther- high· schools, Pro. fessor · Copple described the pur­pose of this second high school tournament. He wrote: "For a -number of years the high school principals, the high s~hool debate coaches, the college debate direct­•Ors, and many of the debaters themselves have felt that the pres­ent debate and speech program in most North Carolina high schools is inadequate. The criticism that the present system encourages stilted, declamatory speeches and discourages extemporaneous, di­rect-clash debating, has come from many quarters ... In this tourna­ment, undertaken at the sugges­tion of the North Carolina Asso­ciation of Teachers of Speech and with Wake Forest as host, we have tried to give North Carolina high schools the beginning of an enlarged and more effective de­bate and speech program."

Opportunity For All Each school with a part in this

program wHl be· given an oppor-

PI R al d groups which will determine :the ans eve e class .and student body -officers , for ·next year.

Director Bryan Discloses High Optimism For

Session

Optimistic plans for the coming summer session, the :final feature of Wake F.orest's 107th year, were announced this week by Dr. D. B. Bryan, as the summer school cata­logue went to press on Monday.

The cataLogue, which will be available here in one week, an­n,ounces that the summer quarter will begin on Wednesday, June 5, one week after graduation exer· cises of the regular school session. The school will continue through the first week in August.

A feature of the summer ses­sion wi!J1 be the graduate courses which will be offered for the first time £or the large number of students who will work for the master's degree. Courses will be offered in five departments: English, history, philosophy, edu-. cation, and religion.

Music Offered Courses an ·music,. leading to a

B. A. in that field, will be record­ed in the catalogue, Dr. Bryan an­nounced. These courses will be taught by Professor Dcmald Pfohl, who is now serving his first year here as head of the music depart­ment. Professor Pfohl has for­mulated elaborate plans for sum­mer school choruses and vocal and instrumental extra-curricular ac­tivities.

The summer school faculty is to be enlarged, Dr. Bryan stated, in ~rder to insure adequate instruc­tion for a much-increased student body. Indications thus far are that last summer's enrollmem, made up of approximately 300 men and 300 women from over 50 col­leges, wiH be exceeded this year. Advance registration began sever­al months ago.

If plans for the local swimming pool materialize, summer school attendance will probably be fur­ther increased, the Dean pointed out.

Pete Davis, when questioned as to the date for the student body elections, said that they would probably be held some time before the spring holidays. Th~y :mnst .be held, according to. the 'by-laws of the student .government consti­tution, before April 12.

Rumor hath it that Bob Gold· berg Wlill run against Red '!fay. berry for t~e .presidency of the student body, and there .has been quite some talk of a dark-h~rse . candidate chosen from those not in the ranks of the Greeks. Thoae in the know say that this -will ·be Weston Hatfield·. Rumor.also .says that Marshall Durham will tun tor the vi<:e-presidency and Bill Pllole for the secretary's position.

Juniors Meet April 9 A meeting of the junior class to

nominate officers for next ·year's senior gtoup will be held Tuesday, April 9, according .to Bob Gold­berg, president of the ,juniors. At this meeting plans for .the junior-senior dance will be dis­cussed ·and ·referred 'to an appro­priate . committee for dispatCh. Archie McMillan and· Hll'!!ld :Me. Manus are expected to run for the presidency -of .next year's seniors. The vice-presidency iSI as yet open, but there ·is plenty· of ·time before the meeting:for·the cseason­al politics to gain headway.

On Monday, April 8, the l)reaent sophomore class wiU meet to nominate candidates for heads of the junior class• next year. Jim Bonds, president, n.is that there will be some important .discU88ion in regard to .the junior-senior dance and other matters, and all members are urged to ·.attend in order to expedite matters.

Cross and ·nuncavage Jimmy Cross and Joe Duncavage

will have it out foo- the presidency of .the juniors, 10r so .the talk goes, with Jol¥t Galloway expected to be passing out the .cigars with an eye .on the vice-presidency.

tunity to debate six rounds on the News To Appear

The freshmen will gather on April 11th to make their tenta­tive arrangements for taking over the government of the sophO'tRore class next year, Frank Xlincheloe, president, announces. It is . ru­mored that John Conley and Billy Primm willl be candidates for president. Harry Lovelace is ex­pected to run for the vice-presi­dent's office, and Bill Ayres· may run for secretary.

query: "Resolved That the Fed- The Wake Forest News, summer era! Government Should 0?."ll a11d school weekly publication, will be Operate Railroads." printed· again this summer, it was

Original orations will also be also learned. This paper was first presented, as well as poetry and put out in 1934. A two year reading for girls, extempore 1apse came during the summers speeches and original orations on <lf 1937 and 1938. Six: issues of the general subject of "America the paper are planned for the and the European War." coming summer.

The final round of the tourna- Dr .• Bryan pointed -out two ad-

A-lma Patrick, secretary; and policeman D. J. Brown, who sum- . Editorial candidates must be Miss Mary Helen Keller, treas- moned Fire Chief John Taylil>' recommended by their editors, and urer. and students to aid in fighting it. must have sold advertising to the

Fonner Eus Will Address Society

Practically the entire fire depart- extent of ten doll:us for The Howl­men of V•olunteers and many stll- er and for Old Gold and Black, dents helped in saving valuables and five dollars for The Student. and handling the hoses. 1\fr. Whit- Further in:f'crmation concerning acre expressed his a!l!H'eciation to the offices and their qualification all who helped in the work. l\fany requirements may be obtained by other students and . town people applying to Ferd Davis, secretary

Newsmen To Get Awards Tonight

ment will be broadca~t over Sta- vantages of summer school attend­tion WRAL in Raleigh, and wir.- ance .. First, he said, students who ners of various events will be pre- attend three summer school ses­sented awards, certifcates of dis- sions are able to complete their

Presentation of publication keys tinction and medals. college courses in three years.

Presidents of the various groups urge all students to attend the meetings.

Grads ToT aik

Fohr graduate students and (Continued On Back Page) of the Publications Board. former Euzel:ians wiU make talks --------------------------

on various subjects to the Euze- D • J d D th T J T !ian Literary Society_ Monday night lSCQ rae ea • Yf agon section program, next week.

Jo~n A_. Free~an, resear~h fel- Drags Deacons to Dances low m b1ochem1stry, who 1s also well known f~ his verses; will giv~ a talk on "Poetry is Personality.'' It cost seventy-five dollars; it paraphernalia and six members cf

Nolan P. Howington, who is can make the trip from Greens- Bill's orchestra to and from the now doing grsduate work in phi boro to Raleigh in two and one- scenes of their performances. losopl1y and religion, will talk on 'half hours; it has a one ~undred In addition to these trips, plans the "Old Country Parson." thirty-seven inch wheel base; the are under way to condition the

Washburn to Speak co.st of operation varies inversely bus for several spring expeditions Wlth the cube of speed; and pnor of the Barefoot type. One which to its recent purchase by Bill.V an- is most enthusiastically sup pert-: den Dries' Ol'chestra, it was in the ed by financial experts is a ern­service of an undertaker. In other sade into the Harricane to wrest words, "The Flying Corps" (pro- the control of tree tops from the nounced "corpse"), as it is affec- Wanga Wanga. Anllther is to be tionately called by Bill and his for the transportation of the Jub band, is nothing but· a has-been Jub birds from the salt flats of hearse. Utah to Beaufort, the best fish­

Wyan W. Washburn will address the h8ill on "Forensics vs. Medi­cine." Washburn graduated from the college in 1934 and is a past Euzelian president. He is IIIOW a member of the first year class in medical school.

Finally, Beamer Barnes, who is .now studying in the Law School, will speak on the subject of "The Big Bad W:olf Unmasked."

A full society ball is expected :for the night's program. All stu­dents are invited.

But under the new management ing section of North Carolina. the duties of "The Flying Corps" Bill also announces that his bus are DfOre varied and, as Bill puts will leave the curb in front of Miss it, "less depressing". The main Jo's cafeteria each afternoon for function of the vehicle is now to the Ambassador theater J"n Ra-transport the instruments, other (Continued On Back P e)

\

to the faithful of The Stude'lL, Writing to the Wake F.orest The second advantage which the The Howler, and Old Gold and spel!Ch department, Mrs. Belle C. dean enumerated was financial Black will highlight the Publica- Gholson, speaking coach at the saving, no tuition but only matric-tions Banquet and Dance at the (Continued On Back Page) ulation fee being charged. Raleigh Woman's Club Saturday---------------'------------

~~~!' :!a~~~o~6· The banquet win Dean Squelches Rumors The members of the Publications A b

Board voted at its meeting Wed- out Moving and Money nesday night of this week to give , keys to those men who, in the opinion of their editor and busi­ness manager, have done sufficient work to merit an award. Only those men who attend the banquet, however, will receive keys.

The group first voted to give no award to the collegiate journal­ists, but rescinded its action. A rush order was placed in order that the medallions will be ready by banquet time.

The banquet program will fea­ture a short talk by "Red" Pope, a toast by Wayne Collier, togeth­er with an after-dinner speech by Tom "Boredface" Davis. In addi­tion the editors of the three stu­dent publications will match their voices with those of the three bus­iness managers in two renditions of "Sweet Adeline."

Isn't it funny how rumors can get out? And isn't it funny how they can spread and grow and spread and become distorted all at the same time? Well, that's just what is occurring.

Many Wake Forest students have undoubtedly become excited and jubilant over the most recent ma­jor rumor on the campus - that the college is going to be moved to Winston-Salem and become rich and be called Reynolds University. (They say Mr. Reynolds is offer­ing millions to the Deacon school if it'll consent to being moved and having its name changed). In oth­er words, we'U have handsome, ex­pensive buildings and will sudden­ly rise to unsurpassable fame, they think.

Some are for it, this wonderful step which they have probably thought will take place. These people like the idea of being in the spotlight for a while, of being able to vie with Duke in every­thing which requires money.

Then there are those who are virtually mourning over this new fate they are afraid is going to take place. What will become of these lovely magnolia trees and this wonderfully friendly attitude here? They are thinking that Wake Forest will be just the "little town who wasn't there," for what will be left if the college is removed? Will Campbell Col­lege, oi Meredith, or Wingate, be mov~ here, or will they form a

(Continued On Back Page)

At Lawyer's Club The Current Law Forum will

h<rld its regular meeting next Thursday night at seven-thirty. The program will be entirely dif­ferent from that which is usually presented. Instead of the sta­dents presenting the talks, the forum will have as guest speak· ers several members of the gradu­ating classes of recent years.

John Lawrence, a member of the class of 1939, who is now connect­ed with the firm of Smith, Leach, and Anderson, in Raleigh, will give his impressions of legal practice. James E. "Hap" Tucker, also a member of the class of 1939, and who is in the Recodification Section of the North Carolina De­partment of Justice, will deliver a talk on the "Recodification of North Carolina Statutes."

R. Bruce White, Jr., son of Pro­fessor White .of the law school, and a member of the class of 1937 will give "Some Aspects of the Functions of the Probation Com­mission." White is now a DfStriet Probation Officer of· the North Car.olina Probation Oommiaion.

Page 2: Wake Forest University · 2018. 3. 20. · TEAMS IN MEET EXTRA HOWLERS Hatfield, Mayberry, Bob Goldberg Mentioned ===== As Candidates Broughton, Eure and Pou Among Those To Speak

PAGE TWO

Published weekly during the school year except during examination periods and holidays, as direct­cU. by the "\Vake Forest College Publications Board.

FERD DAVIS-------.~-- Editor FHANK J. HESTEH, JR. - - Business Manager

EDITORIAL BOARD:­Eugene Brlssle \Vayne Collier

REPORTERS:­Paul Early Bill Ayres Phil Sawyer Bob Kelly John Ccnlcy ·

SPORTS:-

Phil Highfill 'Vel1s Norris

Wyan Washburn John McMillan Bob Galllmore

E. M. Floyd, Jr. Harry Lovelace

Les Canslet", li:ditor Hod Buie

Glenn ·Mlllc·r, Associate John Donald

BUSINESS:­D. E. Ward Horace Floyd

Billy Primm

Howard Andrews Tom I. Da\·ls

R!:PAESENTED FOR NATIONAL ACV!ATI61NQ BY

National Advertising Service, Inc. CoOege PNblishers Represenl41i.,

420 MADISON AVE. NtW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO • BoSTOJI • LO$ liiiGILI& 0 SUI FIAJIIC:ISCO

· Member of NORTH CAROLINA INTERCOLLEGIATE

PRE!'.'S ASSOCIATION Approved b)'

MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION, RALEIGH Entered as second class matter January ~2, 1916,

at the postofflee a.t Wake Forest, North carolina, under the act ot March 3. 1879.

All ma.tters of business should be addressed to the Business :M&llager, Box 218, and all other mat­ters ohould be addressed to the Edltor-ln-Chiet. Box 218.

J:\~socialed Collet)iale Press Dimibutor of

(blle5iate Die>est

HONORABLE MR. CHAMBERLAIN --o--

AII our lives we have heard about the Bull­Dog Briton and his unequalled ability for "mud­dling through" difficult situations. The old-time Briton, that was - The Englishman of the Vic­torian-Regina-rule-Brittania-stout-fellow days when the old Empire ruled the seize and the lion was still rampant on Albion's coat-of-arms. Of course, "appeasement'' was still a word in the lexicon meaning "pacify" then, and not in the Englishman's vocabulary.

Now, we don't pretend to know anything abo-ut E1,1ropean-power-politics in their present state of awfulness, but not since the days of Fainting Phil • Scott, Britain's fool­around fighter, have we seen anybody with a more positive genius for sticking his chin jn the other fellow's glove and popping up with a cheery smile and a ready alibi, as the Right Hon­orable Neville Chamberlain, Esq. With Finland's fall, fell an important bastion of the Allied fort, but was Mr. Chamberlain perturbed? Not no­ticeably. It seems the the British were just fool­ing with that talk about sending an expedition­ary force to Finland after all, and that, accord­ing to Mr. Chamberlain, the Allied cause was

:"helped" by Finland's demise.

Now, with logic like that, if the British would just persuade France to let the Nazis march into Alsace, and disband their far-eastern forces and sell the Navy for scrap and equip the poilus with water-pistols, the war would be over before the· first blue-bird flies over the Maginot line.

just one more thing, and we'll let poor old Mr. Chamberlain alone: His record in public school ~bows that he didn't play any sort of ath­letic game. In not doing so, he deprived the

·team of the best rugby half-back of the country. With an ability to reverse field such as that man possesses, he could have made our Polanski look like Shirley Temple with a broken leg.

----OO'o----

THE COLLEGE PRESS --0-- .

Old Gold and Black again was singled out among newspapers of the collegiate fourth estate recently when the March Collegiate Press Re­view quoted among reprints of the "most inter­esting and most valuable ... comments on the undergraduate press" of recent months an edi­torial published in the Old Gold and Black issue of December 9, 1939.

The editorial said in part: "We {the editors of the Old Gold and Black) have taken the atti­tude this year that our primary purpose was not to try to keep readers entertained, but to try to keep them informed on current campus happen­ings. If there are those who can appreciate only keyhole and yellow journalism, we blush for them. But we have reason to believe that our present policy is pleasing, to those we care about pleasing, and we shall continue it."

Also quoted by the Collegiate Press Review were, in the order given, the Dartmouth College Dartmouth, the Simmons College News, the Au­gustana (Ill.) College Observer, the College of New York Reporter and the Clark University Scarlet. Their comments are condensed below.

The Dartmouth: "College boys are generally presumed to think pretty highly of their own opinions, but of all college boys, those most like­ly to believe themselves capable of settling great affairs with absolutely finality are the group which edit the college paper .•.. College editors are willing and ready to speak the last word on. .... anything ... that may call for expert knowl­edge during a six day week .... College editors never admit that they were wrong."

. The News: "Student opinion on national and world affairs ... is extremely important. The student opinion today is world opinion of tomor­row ••.. rhe most a college nell.•spaper cl!n hope to do is to help crystallize the multiple ideas so that the world opinion of tomorrow will not dis­agree on too many points."

The Observer: "Glancing through. a number of the score-and-a-half of -college papers which

' ~.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1940.

flood the Observer mail box each week, we were ============= Ah c· l '£' -surprised recently to find that nearly a third of THE GREEKS HAVE A , TOO r afe the papers carried no editorial column •... We Pity the Poor Student ---contend that elimination of editorials reveals WORD FOR IT Tragedy has struck, twisting the lives of

eleven hundred· men! For, while the Castle theatre is closed for repairs, a malignant fate has let the Collegiate burn down .... and there is nothing to do, absolutely nothing! Beca~se now the -only movies within fifteen miles are those which. Peahead Walker sorrowfully shows the boys, while he gently points out their mis­takes in letting that man through tackle.

matter what burns down. Of coursel there's the gymnasium, the golf course and the· tennis­courts, though we hasten to admit that they are for extremists. Over-exercise .is dangerous for those of us who are. unused to it. There's no use crippling the entire student body. After all, we'll be exhausted enough, goodness knows, what with the intra-mural basketball and ping­pong tournaments and everything.

either the inability of editors to write interest­ingly, their sheer indolence, or their unwilling­ness to speak their convictions and assume re­sponsibility for their beliefs."

The Reporter: "It is the duty of the college paper to sift the truth from the mass of con­fused and distorted ideologies which inhabit any college. A college paper which neglects this task is useless and destroys its raison d'etre.''

The Scarlet: "As soon as it truckles in poli­tics, as soon as it cheapens itself for the unin­telligent, and as soon as it falls under the con­trol of higher forces within its own environment, the college newspaper has ceased to justify its existence and becomes an insult to its heritage."

Full of praise for this year's Wake Forest Student was the Meredith issue of The Student's sister magazine, the Meredith Colleg~ Acorn.

Said the Acorn!

This week all Grecian noses are directed toward spring dances, as plannings among the letter clubs for these social events progress.

Dance dates are now definitely settled for all the fraternities, and all that remains is t~> aiTange gal affairs- for these .gala· affairs.

Also in preparation, new fur­nishings are being insta~J.Ied in many ol: the chapter rooms. Ren­ovations in the frats include an abundance of new rugs, new rec­ords, sofas, scrap books, and other luxuries condu!live to softening the strain of college work.

As for news of the individual fraternities-Pi Kappa Alpha

Of course, the glee-clubbers. can sing, the writers can write, the tooters can toot, and the debaters can bull their heads off. And if worst comes to absolute rock-bottom worst, everybody can - hold tight' now! - everybody can study! Well, there, it's out, andthough we'll concede that it's a crack-pot idea on the face of it, there must be some merit to the study system. It's not so long now until mid-term, and as painful as the process may be, it has to be done at least once during a semester, and if we can dq it in several weeks instead of a few nights, so much better for the nerves. "We approve efforts which have been made

lately to clean it up and restore it to its former position, a literary magazine. We realize that the process has been necessarily a rather gradu­al one, and so are not casting any aspersions on last year's staff. But this year's staff has put forth some fine efforts and .... put out a splen-· did magazine .... We like the make-up of your

There always seems to be some news about frat mascots, and Red Mayberry's red terrier is no ex­ception. In fact, the terrier, "Pika", is the cynosure of fra­ternity mascots. Bought by May­berry during the football season, "Pika" has spent most of his Hie in a fraternity. In fact, the dog has a special box in Mayberry's room in which to pass away the idle hours.

And yet, one is constrained to wonder if it doesn't tak\! great catastrophes like this to draw men closer together, bring out their com­munal spirit, tax their ingenuity. Of course, it will take a terrific amount of ingenuity to keep the student-body entertained while the two theatres are being rebuilt. The road to Raleigh will see a vast student hegira every afternoon and night, but we're talking about those who can't get away to Raleigh every day. Think of the hardship they will endure. (After all, there are only ten pool tables in Wake Forest, and poker palls on one quickly.)

Naturally, we will be called radical for our We suggest (for those few who like this stand on this matter; those who advance new

sort of thing), that they hie to the library ... for ' and startling ideas always are. But we don't that's one b.uilding that won't be crowded, no mind.

PI KAPPA DELTA PLEDGES FROSH

PFOHL TO PLAY

magazine ... The subjects are varied and inter-The Pikas will install a complete

new outfit of furnishings in the chapter room this spring.

The graduate committee of· Har­vard University has selected Se­

Professor Thlnald· Pf.ohl will nior Benjamin Carnn of Wake Last Thursday night at the reg- represent Wake Forest College in Forest for a scholarship for tlnr

ular spring meeting of the Pi Kap- the North Carolina Symphony coming year. esting .... We, its sister magazine, are allfor it.''

The Acorn especially liked the articles, "A Man, A Princess, and A Lock of Hair," by Ray Pittman, and "Of Human Beings," by Student editor Eugene Brissie. Both these articles ap­peared in the November issue of The Student.

----000'----

INEFFICIENT READERS --o-

A company, using a mechanical device, re­cently examined the freshman class of Harvard University, testing its members for efficiency in reading. The machine, which makes its report through the use of a graph chart, revealed that an astoundingly large per cent of the class were sadly lacking in ability to read, and these men were immediately put into a reading class.

There was no trick to it. It merely proved that there were common faults among a large percentage of the students, and this, no doubt, handicapped their work in all fields of study. In other words, here was a huge group of students at one of the nation's outstanding _universities who didn't know the basic principles of plain reading.

Taking Harvard as an example, we must admit that a large percentage of our students are thoroughly incapable of efficient reading. If this be true, then there is no wondrr that pro­fessors hear constant complaints when they as­sign lengthy lessons, or advise special attention to some portion of an assignment.

In the study of literature, it is little wonder too, that so many students turn up their noses at masters of the pen, as Tolstoy, Sir Walter Scott, Maxim Gorki, Shakespeare - and many others who gave lengthy contributions to some of the greatest literature of all time. These men were men who had something to say, and their styles would not allow them to be incomplete. Perhaps we should think more of their works if we were careful and more efficient readers.

----0001---­

THEY DESERVED BETTER -o--

With the map changing every day and thus making more and more complicated the study of world history, a group of speakers had to add further to high school students' troubles last week by imposing upon them several ideas rang­ing from the bizarre to the silly. The Beta Club (worthy organization that it is, and we fully rec­ognize and pay tribute to its honorable directors and leaders) was holding its fifth annual con­vention in Raleigh last week, and several of the host speakers who appeared before them were en tire!y out of place.

W. Perry Crouch, head of reli­gious education of the Baptists in North Carolina, led in a forum discussion Qast Wednesday for Pika members.

pa Delta frate~nity, national hoi•- Orchestra which ril be heard in a Carlin was selected on his schol-orary forensic group, it was voted · astic merits. He led: his class last to take George Spottswood Butts concert at Meredith tonight. . Ben year and is specializing in proper-

£ h~is~~of·~~tylaw. · and Billy Windes into the rater-The Pikas' main contribution to

the baseball season coming up to bat soon is their president, Bill Eutsler, who will be one of the mainstays in the outfield.

nity. Other inatters of business whi7h . is made ~p principally o'f Before coming to Wake Forest, were also discussed.- . prof~~sional music teachers and Carlin attended Bates College,

musicians. from all North Caro- where he received his B. A. de-Willis Benne.tt was made a Ii~.-. Several mt;n from all, Big J gree. · ·

pledge of the frat~rnity and .will ]'1v~ colleges will be in the or-become a full-fledged memb~. chestra. Professor Pfohl plays -,;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\

Kappa Alpha next year. ·. . the flute. "FROM OLD TO NEW The membership of Weston Hat-Extensive plans are being made

for all I\ A's to attend the Pr<>vince Council, which is ~o be held at Greenville, S. C., on the week end of April 5 and 6. The Council Commander, Dr. Nevil IsheH- of the chemistry department, wm preside.

field and Phil Highfill was consid- All men wishing to join a cam­ered. Hatfield is a transfer stu- pus movement ,for a state-wide· dent here and was farmerly a Pi Young Communists' Club are ask-

IN ANY SHOE"

SMITH'S SHOE SHOP

Kappa Delta member. Highfili, ~id~t~o~s~ee~B:o~.~b~K~e~II~Y-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ who was formerly a member of the local chapter, dropped out of school for .one year and retw·ned

Alpha Kappa Pi A party \Vas held last night in

the chapter room, with girls invit­ed from Rale·igh attending.

The man at the helm of the AKPi's this year, Dick Darling, celebrated his birthday this week, at which time he came of age.

The Chi chapter, local, had its picture in the AKPi magazine, "The Alpha", in one Qf the recent issues. A new addition to the chap­ter room is a mammoth scrap book, which is already pretty well filled with pictm·es of fraternity membel"s and "oth.ei·s". Sigma Pi

"Why didn't I study harder last semester?" This is the wail waft­ing around the Sigs' house this week. A Scholarship Party, slat­ed for next Wednesday at 8 p. m., provokes all of the wailing. To

this year. The fraternity was un­certain-whether or not these men could ·be considered members of the local chapter. It was voted to have Secretary James Gilliland writi to National Pi Kappa Deli;a headquarters to ascertain the standing of these two fonner mem-bers.

George Butts and Billy Windes have distinguished themse1ves as debaters this year. Bath are freshmen.

Near the close of the meeting plans were discussed for att.ind- · ance at the 'national Pi Kappa 'Del­ta in Atlanta during the Easter holidays. Debate Coach Gllorge Copple will take a selected group of men with him to this meet. The list of men who will make the trip has not yet been announced.

LUMBER -· BRICK - WOOD

* WE DELIVER ANY QUANTITY

* CITY FUEL AND SUPPLY-' CO.

Across From Water Plant

PHONE 152

cover party expenses, all Sigma Latest safeguard for birdlife in I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I'i's with a "C" average will be Wake Forest is manganese hird 1! required to pay 20c. If the aver- shot. When wild fowl swallow lead age is under "C", the unf,ortunate shut, they become afflicted' with frat man will pay 50c. All stu- lead poisoning; also when fired up­dents with five quality points on. above "C" will be exempt from taxation. Poor scholars can at by the fraternity as a new pledge. least say: "If we were at! super- It cost only a penny, but to brainstorn1s, the party ~auld~ not Kappa Sig Charlie Wilkins it was be paid for, We, therefore, are a deadly purchase. It happened martyrs." at the beginning .of the week. zSigma Pi will put two baseball Charlie bought a one-cent choco­players into the field-Jack Wil- late "Tootsie Roll". Hungry Wil­liams, center fielder; and Jess kins bit into the roll, but instead Tarnish, pitcher. of the roll rolling down his eso-Kappa Sigma phagus, a tooth roNed out. "Toot-

Mr. Crouch, though a very busy sie" won; "Toothie" lost. Re­man here last week, took time to suit: Charlie has been at home speak to Kappa Sigs .on Thursday seeing a dentist for most of the night. Aspects and problems of week. college life were discussed. in an Chi Tau open forum. Dr. Harold Trivell Hodge A. Newell of Henderson, of the Louisville Theological Sem- a former Chi Tau, who is now at inary, spoke on this same occasion Randolph Field, 'Texas, in the ar­last year. j my air corps, visited the local

Instead of giving high school honor students

something which they might find useful to them 1 --=~=llllll=llllll=llll!l=llllll=llllll=llllll=llllll=llllll=llllll=llllll=l!llll=ll!lll=llllll7111=111=111111=111111=11llll=llllll=lllll=llllll=llllll=ll!lll=illlll=-:-",:.::

in their period of preparation, one man told =::: = Billy Primm has been accepted chapter this week. ''They've just got win.d of

GREYHOUND'S -them that "all novels were trash,'' and another == == took advantage of their courtesy to bring his THE THING TO DO--senatorial bear-fights to the convention. Taking ==: for granted that even Senator Reynolds realized

where he was, we wonder why these men picked Eat - Give - Send out a group of high school students to hand out such philosophy.

WHITMAN'S CANDY OUR EASTER CANDY NOW ON DISPLAY

We are in no way condemning the program committee and their work. We do think that better programs could be prepared for the 1000 members of that state organization, but worst of all is the idea that - after they are assembled for a convention - they must be burdened by

·speeches from men whose interests begin and· HARDWJCKE'S PHARMACY die within the realm of pugnacious politics, or • · uncultured living. , ~

----ooo We Deliver Thus far in the Second World War Norway .

LOW FARES For

SPRING· VACATION TRIPS" Round T tip fflrel

Charlotte ......... $2.75 \Vilrnfngton . • . . . . . !:.00 Luml>erton . . . . . • . 1.70 Pittsburgh . . . . . . . 7.10 New York . . . . . . . 6.95 Washington . . . . . . . 3.50 Richmond . . . . . . . 1.85 Philadelphia . . . . . 5,30 Wallace . . . . . . . . . UO

HARDWICKE'S PiJARMACY l.

e You can't afford to hang around college tbis vacation-when it costs &0 little to get away I Hop the very next Greyliound buo and head for home-or in the opposite direction if the wanderlust's got you. Small change is all you need to make a big change in your surroundings- Grey­hound's low fares keep your capital prac. tically intact! Have more fun where you're going-with the money you save getting there by Greyhound!

. . . . . : .. ·.,. . ·.. ·. .· - .

··.· GRE'}jHOUND··.· · · -· ·. .-._ i~ll'.i_ ··: .. - _ '. 1:·-~r':"· · . . . . . ,· ·. ·, ' '' '. .-: · ...... :-· ·. - .

has lost 52 ships, Sweden _35• D8enm ~ r k 2Z, H ol- ~rliiJIIililllllliiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilliliff land 16, G~~e 18, EsWn1a~ elg1um 6,lt~y ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5, Lithuania 3, Rumania, Yugoslavia, Latvia, and II Spain I each. All these countries are neutral.

Almost all these ships were lost by German action. This does not mean that the Nazis enjoy sinking ships more than the Allies, but that they are forced to sink them because they have no ports in which to search the vesels for contra­band, as do the English and French.

Result: the neutrals will come into the camp of the Allies, for while they do not like for their ships to be seized, they are much angrier when

theyaresunk. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'

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SA1

'J

11 appro at De up th that·,

them

Fali and box

T mendc gilisti 27, 19 of bo large had tc

edg ing Chri Rey1 midc warc witb Boxi

A: greatll spurre team pretty and bo would

01 Coach •lege f(

cludi bit top.po Wak' Jim Chri.! Mick Mor~

Th draw I

--two attracti was pu·

In history cons de a retur: of figh1

' Utley meet of tl has e score.

Arc to Dea suppose match ters at Pittman J.D. Cl Wilke ( through in the and Pit1 the Uni bow.ing

h thi fil On th pea eel

In an indiro E'St dis1 ()of ·an dashed t

Sim the spo dropped Wake F,

Page 3: Wake Forest University · 2018. 3. 20. · TEAMS IN MEET EXTRA HOWLERS Hatfield, Mayberry, Bob Goldberg Mentioned ===== As Candidates Broughton, Eure and Pou Among Those To Speak

' 1940. =

~nt e·s· the tennis-ey are us for e's no :er all, ;nows, ping-

g, the 1d the worst ybody ;tudy! ncede there

It's ainful : least , it in much

>r our ~ new don't

cHar­'d Se­Wak~ ~r the--

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SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1940. ~~~~~==~~~~------~----·--------· ........................................................ OLD GOLD & BLACK. PAGE THREE

SCHEDULE

p·oRT LES CANSLER, Editor \ "FOLLOW THE -DEACONS"

March 18-Guilford College, here (tennis) -March 21-Pennsylvania, here (baseball) March 23-U. of Richmond~ here (tennis) March 23-West Chester, here (baseball) March 25-Michigan State, here (tennis) March 25-N. C. State, Raleigh, (baseball)

GLENN .MILLER, Assistant

Ye Ed Writes On Boxing Chi Tau, Prophets Lead REMEMBER Table Tennis· Tournament Gets Off To Good Start .More than once this year this typewriter pounder has been

approached concerning the subject of intercollegiate boxing here fit Deacon town. So often, .in fact, has this subject been brought up that here are a few~·rambling facts ab~ut sport-a. few facts that 'quite a few of the older students remember .... If you ask them about the subject.

In- Hot lntramu ral Race ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Fi;;;;;;;ve;;;;;;;Yea;;;;;;;rs;;;;;;;A;;;;;;;go;;;;;;;This;;;;;;;' ;;;;;;;We;;;;;;;ek;;;;;;,

The whole history of, boxing at· Wake Forest goes back to the Fall of 1935 when Coach Phil Utley. surprised the student body and the colleg; as a whole by: announcing plans f()r a colleg~wide boxing tournament t() be held for Deaeontown fight fans.

*------------------------Kappa Sigma, Phi Chi De Nm· e ·Plays

1\IJ.ove Up in Fraternity lC standing~· Opener Thursday

Kappa Sigma and Phi Clri blast­ed out • victories over Gamma Eta Gamma and Pi Kappa Alpha to go into a percentage tie with Clli

Justin Drake, star Wake Forest runner, gains fourth place in non-conference mile run at Car­olina, after getting off to bad start.

Coach Jim Weaver reorganizes Monogram Club. Jim Blunt chosen president.

------------------------* Racketmen Meet ! Guilford Monday . .

Glee Club Trip Causes Postponement of Sev­

eral Matches

The idea was just short of sensational. The resp;onse was tre­mendous-so large in fact, that night classes w&e started in the pu­gilistic art. By the time the tournament rolled: around, on February 27 1936, the campus was filled to the point of bursting <l!l the subject o/ boxing. More and ·more students were joining in the fun and so large was tlie field of tourney entrants t~at severai1 preliminacy houts had to be run off in order tD reduce the field.

1'au for the Fraternity Basket­ball League this· week. However, the House of Tau kept a clear lead by winning their third straight contest of the season without a defeat.

In the Non-Fraternity League the Braves lllld the Home Ec bGy& won decisions over the White Phantoms and the All-Stars, re­spectively, to go into a tie with the Prophets, who defeated the Nas­sif Boys for the loop lead.

With the opening game with the University of Pennsylva11ia less than a week off, the Wake F<>rest baseball squad is repidly romtding int~ shape~ Bad· weather has hin­dered outdoor practice for the 'past few days; however, Coach Grea­son has been- working his charges in the gym.

Batting practice has been stress­ed in the workouts, and the squad as a wh<>le bas shown up excep­tionally .well with Polanski, Reid, Eason, and Denning consistently

Three Years Ago This Week -Big Five Champs open season with Drexel College of Phila­delphia.

One Year Agl) This Week­Aft~r leading 29-23 at the half, Deacs lose to Ohio Buckeyes 64-52 in the National Collegiate Basketball Tournament in Phila­delphia. Owen gets 19 points; Waller fouls out early in second half after getting 14 points.

When the Wake Forest tennis team clashes with Guilford Col· lege here Monday afternoon in th~ opening game of the 1940 schedule, it will be facing one of the most p·owerful tennis clubs in this sec­tion.

· Paced by Captain Howard Pe­trea, the Quakers will line up a team of veterans against the Dea­cons-a team that lost only to Davidson and Wofford in last

Although nine of the twenty scheduled first r<>und table tennis matches had to be postponed due to the Glee Club trip, the tourna­ment got under way last W ednes­day night.

The best match of the evening was that between Reid Cheek and W est<>n Hatfield. Cheek finally won in the fifth gamP., after Hat­field staged a fine comeback. Cheek won the first two games, and was apparently the master of the sdtuation. Then Hatfield broke through and took the next two to tie the match up. Cheek rallied to take the deciding game.

**** And rhe· Winners Were-

All the fights were held. iD. the local gymnasium and attract­ed gi)Od sized crowds. ·After all the cheering was over, the fGllow­ing winners were c~o_wned in· their respective divisions: J. D. Christian; bantamweight; . _N. H .. Dobson, featherweight( Mickey Reynolds, lightweight; Sail! Turner, welterweight; Lamar Nair, middle~eight ; and Maynard · Daniels, unlimited. For their re­ward, the above -men were presented miniature silver boxing gloves with. their names- and weight O!assifications engraved thereon. Boxing was on the campus - seemingly to stay.

Perhaps the best contest of the week was the Home Ec-All-Stnr encounter. The Home Ec club came through in the waning mo­.ments of the ,game to win 26-23. 1'he Caddellmen made their initial appearance by beating the Ar· gonauts 39-18. The Managers wun by forfeit over the Simmons Su­permen.

pounding the -horsehide. ------------------Fior the opening game the in­

field shapes up with Bob Reid' at first, John Fletcher at the keystone sack, "Roosteru Hoyle at short, and John Polanski holding down the hot corner. Big John has

Handball Tourney Planned By Utley

missed the last three practice8 Pairings for the annuai Hand­due to a tonsil operation, but will ball Tournament will be posted probably be ready for the opener. early next week, Coach Phil Utley Williams, Eason, and· McCall are announced yesterday. However, slat!!d to- open in the outfield with a definite date f<>r play to begin

year's tennis wars. Against this powerful combina­

tion Coach Folk will likely trot out the same squad that bore the Wake Florest colors last year.

Cold Weather Hindrance

Rod Buie and John Pegram al· so had a very close match. Pe­gram won the first two without

Hindered by cold weather and any tnouble, but Buie came back lately rain, the Deacons will go in- to take the next two and make the to the match with a minimum of match a deadlock. Pegram then practice. However, playing on

1

came through and won the last the home courts will- go a long game . ways in offsetti!_lg this dil;advan- Shucks! Betty Lost tage. Betty Stansbury, one of the two

Mter the tournament boxing interest hit a snag and dropped greatly. However, · several _ of the · better men kept in training­spurred on by the rumors that Wake Forest would organize a regular team in 1937. By the end of sch<>ol that rumor had developed into pretty much of a settled fact. Probability had developed into reality and boxing fans left in the Spring wondering just what the next year would bring.

Non-Fraternity Stapdings: Team W L PF PA Prophets 2 0 82 41 Home Ec Boys 2 0 · 66 44 Braves 2 0 93 25 Caddellmen 1 0 39 18 V gilantes 1 1 69 66 Nassif Boys 1 1 41 50

Eutsler and Bonds in reserve. has not been set as yet. Tommy Byrne will probably Thus far about twenty entrii:s

open against the Quaker State have been received. C. M. John­boys. Denning and Vivian are al· ·son, winner of the tournament for so likely to see artion o:r th~ the past ~two years, has graduated, mound .. Bub Sweel· and· . J1mmy leaving the cha]llpionship to be Cross Will handle the catchmg du- decided from the present entries. ties. Coach Utley ann<>unced that if

The men on the squad have been ranked arbitrarily to begin the season with the six first team men of last year placed first, ac­cording to their positions in the last match of last season. The rankings form a ladder up which members of the squad can climb until each finds his own position. This method has been used for sev-

girl entrants, was defeated by Robert Frye after winning the first g.ame. She put up a ftne . battle and might have won had she not had a bad attack of tour­nament fright in the second game.

In the other matches, Mackie eliminated Kelley, Brewer defeat­ed Nanney, Carlton won a f<>ur­game match fr<>m Iloredface Da­vis, Bullock beat Galloway; Nance

On October 8, . 1936, after school had gotten well under way, Coach Utley sent out the first call in the history of Wake Forest Col­•lege f<>r candidates f<>r a boxing team.

**** The Results Were Quite Gratifying

· Results were very gratifying. Quite a few men reported, in­. eluding some very fine praspects. For a few weeks there was a

bit ()f "weeding out" of undesirable candidates, then work was topped ·off as "Coach Utley. annomtced the first boxing squad of

. Wake Forest. That squad was composed of the following men: Jim Pittmmn, Claude McCall; N •. H. D.obson, John Xanthos, J; -D. Christian, Raleigh H!irrington,_ Woody Davis, Charles Twiddy, Mickey Reynolds, Jack Kester, Tom IpGk, Vernon Spruill, R. B. Morgan, Jim Perrow, and Andrew Helms.

Managers 1 1 24 40 White Phantoms 1 1 53 82 Simmons Supermen 0 1 0 0 College Hall 0 2 40 83 All-Stars 0 2 38 42 Argonauts 0 2 30 74

Fraternity League: Name W Chi Tau 3 Kappa Sigma 2 Phi Chi 2 Alpha' Kappa Pi 2 Lambda Chi Alpha 1 Pi :J{appa Alpha 1 Sigma Pi 1

l(appa Alpha · 1 Delta Sigma Phi 0 Gamma Eto Gam'a 0

Leading Scorers:

L PF PA 0 88 71 0 68 80 0 50 32 1 87 62 1 47 4\i 1 37 48 2 66 78 2 44 62 3 33 63 3 60 72

Not much is known about the enough entries are received a Pennsylvania nine, but all reports doubles .tournament will also 'be indicate that they have another of held. their typical powerful teams, thus assuring the Deacons of a full af-ternoon.

TODAY'S PRIZE YAWN

Scarborough Coaches Tabor City To Title

eral years instead of a tourna- was awarded a bye due to a mix­ment. up in the draw, and Bunn defeat­

The rankings: 1-Louis Alex- ed Jarvis. ander, 2-Ralph Earnhardt, 3- The entrants who were out of Dick Darling, ,4-Pete Davis, 5- town due to the glee club trip Bob Cahoon, 6-Arch McMillan. have until noon of next Wednes

Rae Scarboi'Qugh, former Wake The following men are als'o ranked day to play their matches. These The MiUer-Eason doubles team, Forest pitcher; who is now tea~h- in order: Dexter Moser, sopho- matches can be played in the stu­

which aspires to win the table ing and coaching at Tabor City more; Prichard Ca-rleton, former dent center at any time, with any tennis doubles championship, re- High School, proved his worth as candidate who has returned to one of the seeded players acting ceived: a. setback in an unofficial a basketball coach this season Law School; Broadus Jones, WH- as referee. In most cases the op­match the other night. The com- when his pupils walked off with liam and Mary transfer· James ponents of 'these boys were at the bination of-Eleanor ·Reid aii~: Bet- •the Columbus County basketball -.Brower; Wingate transfe;; Ralph gymnasium last Wednesday,; and ty Stansbury defeated them 21-17, championship. Brumet sophomore· Reid Cheek so unless the matches are played winning the last three points on This is Scarborough's first sea- so11hom~re; and 'Tom Johnson' off by the deadLine, forfeits will

The next thing in front of the newly-formed boxing squad was to draw up a schedule. A~cordingly, a 4-match schedule was arranged --two of the matches here, two at other colleges. It wasn't such an attractive schedule, but it was a pretty stiff one for a college that was putting its first team into the ring.

Fraternity League-- iiliiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiMiiliiiliiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil McClelland, 3 games, 34 points, A. K. Pi,

Miller's serve. son as a coach. Mars Hill transfer. ' be awarded.

Doubles Begin

ASIDES BY THE STAFF In mid-January, 1937, the first intercollegiate boxing meet in the

history of Wake Forest took place at Wilson, N. C., when the Dea­cons defeated Atlantic Christian College by a 5-3 score. A week later a return match was held· in the local gymnasium before a large group of fight fans. The Deacons took that one, too, 6 1-2-1 1-2.

**** The. Lone Defeat

Very much delighted with their ~bowing up to that date, the Utley.men journeyed to Washington, D. C., early in February to meet Columbus U ninrsity. There they received their lone defeat of the season-and the only defeat a Wake Forest b(}xing team has ever sustained. The capital fighters won the match by a 5-3 score.

Aroused by their misfortune, the Wake Forest fighters came 'back to Deacontown and a week later avenged their loss by defeating a supp11sedly powerful Guilford College ·outfit 6 1-2 to 1 1-2. With that match they closed their first and last regular season. Awarded let­ters at the conclusion of the season were: Glen Wagner (mgr.), Jim Pittman, Mickey Reynolds, Vernon Spruill, Jim Perrow, Jack Kester, J, D. Christian, Woody Davis· (irosh), John Xanthos, and Howard Wilke (frosh). Of this group We. uy Davis and Vernon Spruill went through the entire season without ·; . .J~Ing a single fight. Davis fought in the welterweight class, Spruill in the unlimited class. Christllln r.nd Pittman were entered in the annual Southern Conference meet at the University of Maryland and did very well for themselves before bow.ing out.

**** ,,

The Lull Before The Storm

In al~ it was a very creditable squad that hung up its gloves th~ first of ~larch. But tliere is always a lull juat befDre a storm. On this occasion it was from March to June that things remained peacefuL 1

In June, at the meeting of the college trustees, the axe fell. In an indirect and round-about way, the group demanded that Wake For­est di.soontinue boxing from its curriculum. In one sweep the hopes (}f all fans at Wake Fo~st who appreciated the ring sport were dashed to pieces. _

Since that fateful June there have been three attempts to revive the sport . here in Deacontown, but each time the idea was finally dropped in order to avoid possible difficulty with the trustees. To Wake Forest students boxing is still the "Lost Sport At Deacontown.'' .

Crabtree (Chi Tau), 2 games, 23 points.

Williams (Sigma Pi), 2 games, 23 points.

Alexander \Gamma Eta Gam­ma), 2 games, 17 points.

Thomas (~ Kappa A>lpha), 2 ,games, 17 points.

Non-Frat-Blanchard (Prophets), 2 games,

43 points. Rideout (Vigilantes), 1 game,

16 ~ints. Staffo (Managers), 1 game, 16

points. Wilkie (Home Ec), 2 games, 27

po.ints. Jones (Braves), 2 games, 25

points.

Duke, William and Mary, North freshman pitcher · of last season; by the time of the Southern Con­Car~t1ina, and Washington and Lee allowed two runs, one hit and fet·ence track meet, which will be are aU after Durham High's four walked three in tw-o innings in his held at Williamsburg, Va., this senior members of the crack bas- initial appearance with the Phila- year ...

delphia Athletics ... Davidson Col- The girls at Randolph-l'IIacon ketball team - and to think Paul lege is boasting a ~ouple of 1

1'nc-

- are treated often with visits by Sykes, Wake Forest graduate, men who will weigh over two hun- Jim (Sweet) Lalanne, Carolina coaches these boys!.,.Wake For- dred next fall ... What will Clem gridder ... Ken Smith, playing for est officials . had a merry time Crabtree do with his time now the White Phantoms in the Wake keeping Pat Preston, ace freshman that the theater burned?· ... Jim- Forest intramural basketball pro­tackle, hidden from Carolina's Ray my Davis, Carolina track star, gram the other night, dropped Wolf ... Northwestern appears on should be pushing Glen Cunning- one in the bucket for the oppos-D k • 1941 f tball h d I ham's world record for the mile ing team ... John Donald.

u e s oo sc e u e. . ... -;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;::=========~-=::-::c------------------Pete Mitchell, ace Wake Fore~t •

This coming Wednesday the tournament is expected to shift into high gear, as all twelve of the players who drew first round byes swing into action. In addi­tion to that, the dq,ubles tourn!l­ment gets under way.

Heading this week's bill will be the match between fourth-seeded Vance Dawkins and Pritchard Carlton. Carlton looked very ef­fective in beating T. Ivy Davis, and will probably give Dawkins plenty of trouble. He plays a very unusual type game, hardly moving out of his tracks.

Track Star Goes Domesteck Wins Egg Beater By .Heck

An<>ther match that 10ught to provide plenty of excitement is the <>ne between Fred Eason, seed­ed sixth, and Reid Cheek. This will be the first appearance for

PREPARE YOUR GARDEN NOW_ Eason, who is rated by many as Lawn Brass, Bone Meal, Vigoro, and the dark-horse of the tourney.

The tournament committee aski ALL GARDEN TOOLS that all boys be sure and wear

JONES HARDWARE Co gym .shoes. This is not only for

By GLENN MILLER

1\fany old-timers will say that modern athletes are not the same rugged individualists that the stars of "the good old days" were. On the other hand, there are those of the present generation who maintain most emphatically that today's heroes are just as much he-men as· any of them.

The upholders of this latte1 point of view were dealt a severe blow last week when it was ru­mored and later verified that Cap­tain Emeritus Earl Hart of the track team is setting up house­keeping. Not only that, but it al­B{) appears that ''Whitey", as he is better known ,is going to take over the kitchen chores.

It all started· last Monday night. "Whitev" and Bob Kelley, seeing a sign ~dvertising a high school bridge tournament, decided they would step over and take care of the prize. ·

A Compact, By Gad! Playing his usual superlative

game, the erstwhile captain breez­ed through, copping one of the awards. Upon opening , it, he found that it contained, much to his jiliagrin, a young lady's com­pact. Not using cosmetics, Earl decided that something had to be done. Accordingly, he engineered a trade with another prize winner. What was his surprise when he found that he was now the pos­sessor of an egg-beater.

Whitey no-w goes around dream­ing of that little cottage/ with

a the p1•otection of the floor, but to roses and running water. Until eliminate the danger of someone

such time when his dream sllall -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;s;li;p;pi;n.;g~an;d;,ig;e;tt;in;g;.iiiini;;J·uiiiriiiediii.iiiiiii~ become a rea>lity, the egg-beater I will occupy a place in the Mono-gram club room, beside Jimmy Ringgold's bl~cking trophy.

Bub Sweel, Deacon basketb:.ll captain, received honorable men­tion in the recent All-Ameri= Basketball Team vote.

MIDNIGHT SNACK?

Then See '

EDDIE &J. R.

BE PREPARED FOR SPRING---

ORDER YOUR EASTER SUIT N 0 W !

We Have Scores Of Different Styles and Colors

College Book Store "ON THE CAMPUS"

Easter Candies of All Kinds OUR SELECTION IS VARIED IN PRICE AND SIZE OF

PACKAGE BUT NOT IN QUALITY.

AT THE SAME TIME REMEMBER OUR ·DELICIOUS MILKSHAKES AND BUTTER-TOASTED

SANDWICHES

COLLEGE SODA· SHOP

Page 4: Wake Forest University · 2018. 3. 20. · TEAMS IN MEET EXTRA HOWLERS Hatfield, Mayberry, Bob Goldberg Mentioned ===== As Candidates Broughton, Eure and Pou Among Those To Speak

' PAGE FOUR OLD GOLD AND BLACK_

Y. D. C. Prepares Faculty Accepts "BOSS" COLLIER

Snappy Program! Eulogy On Sledd With c. wayne comer-~=:-J . ing out cigm·s, the W alte Forest --

Minstrel Debates Brissie I Tile faculty this wec·k adopted a chapter of the Future Teachers Everybody is invited to the car-

BSU Men Present / Carnival, Angels

Dialog~es Law Profes- 'I resolution eulogizing the late Dr. of America 1,iaeed two men ·in ni\-al and everything is free! The ' •h I Benjamin Sledd. The resolution, key positions in the state organ- presence of upward of two hundred

sor On Sc edu e i presented by Dr. H. B. Jones of ization. }Ieredith Angels and a gym full

I the English department, follows: The new st<!>te president is of s-ide shows, midway features, MemiJel'& of the Young DcmJ· We record with regret t-he pass- Harold Bailey of W>!l{e Forest. and rides. are the attractions be-

crats Club will meet ag:~in Wed- illg of om· tolleagwc, Dr. Benja- Secretary of the group is Grover ing .offered in the Wake Forest nesday night ,us m~mbcrs of the mi!! Sledd. who died on Januarr -!, 1 G. 1\-lorg·an, also of Wake For- carnival this evening at 8 p. m. in program committee have prepared 1~1-10. after a lon6 am! tlistinguish-1 est. The office of vice-president Gore gym, being sponsored by the an hour of ~ntertainmcnt compri~- i crl tareer as a member of the went to Margaret Simpson of Wake Forest BSU, with the An-

DEBATERS TO GIVE

(Continued From First Page) ; Durham High School, recently ex­pressed the ' general opinion of schools which took part in la~t year's tournament. She· saiil, "Your gracious hospitality, cour­teous attentions, helpful sugges­tions from expert judges and d~­lightful contacts with other rep­resentatives - all are included in our hea1'ty and · sincere 'thanks for everythin(."

DEAN SQUELCHES RUMORS ing "local talent" fr0m the loc,rl! f:te·nlt,- or Wal;e Forest College. Dul•e. Dr. A. l\I. Proctor of gel BSU cooperating.

politici:ms. ]),_._ Sledd "·as born in Bedford Duke is the faculty. sponsor. John FhJtcher has been in charge (Continued From Page One) According to the program r2- · C•ltc~1ry. \'irp:inia, on August 2-1, ~~--- of plans for the carnival and they new establishment, probably like

leased by Beamer Eames, >YJ:,, JSG 1. Hi" e:'l:e:rc~ aPt! nnivcrsit)· M El d I are rare and plenteous. Special an Institute for the Advancement with the a,,;istance nf John Sncw i tl'::ining: were, r~eei\'cd at Wash- emory ecte I buses have been scheduled to bring I of Education in Females? What and lblph Earnha1·clt, has eun·' !n:;ton ·anti Lee G11iversit:;, where I the •ladies from Raleigh to Wake if the college is -just demolished? piled the program, a total of seven i he wa" given the dc:;-rce of :IIast.cJ· B t p •d t I Forest for the evening. They will Will the town move up to the snappy features will be induded.j d' Arts in l8SG, ::nd at ,Tohns e a resJ en anive about 7:45 p, m., and, ac-~1 mill and will trains stop here?

Jin_r Williamson, erstwhile a~~~ Hnt>kins Uni,·ersity. He was __:__ conling to rumor and Brother Who will feed and look after 'Joe ter-dn:ne~· speaker, \\'Ill lead ott J :w:anied the' deg-ree of Doctor of Nine Hundred l\'Iembers Fletcher, the Deacons are expect-

1 anl Confucius and Magellan?

by brmgmg to the ar.dJCnce what 1 Let tl'l'S by Washingtcn and Lee Of Cl b Att d d B _ ed to greet them upon their ar- They are pondering this ques-i_s· promised to be one of tl}; b~st I in lllOG. He "':lS traveling ~'ello:l' u 4 en e. an rival. tion seriously, ibut their mental features on the progTum. I o fol- of tho Albert Kahn foundntwn m quet In R~aleigh 1 Entertainment in the gym will pains can be quietly eased. There low up in anothet· vein, a two-man 11~1-l-13. --- be varied, Side-shows, including just ain't_ nothing to it. As Dea·n debate has been arrang-ed, with in- I Sledd's Career Told Professor _J. L. Memory; Jr. was such freaks as the biggest lady in Bryan says, "It's just a foolish ternational fig-ures taking part. Dr. Sledd's connection with eJected prcslden~ of_ the Nol'th Ca- captivity, played by Bill Poole, old woman's rumor." "Rabbi Ben" Ussery, noted for his Wake Fo1esL Colleu:c began in r~lma Board of Directors of ~he six foot five inch junior from But even the rumor has caused totalitm·ian nature, will take th2 1888. when he beca•m· l'rofessal' ;-.;_atwnal_ Beta Clu~ at a mee:n;g Dunn; some mystery booths; the no . end of trouble and anxiety. part or Hitler in the argument, cf Modem Lang-uages. Six yGars of the ~Irectoi·s \\ ednesday mgnt ball-dodging colored b~y. Delta Your reporter tl'tldged over a mud-

h '1 h. t "Z' h l " · p f m Ralelgh. - · d d to f' d t ' h t 't · 11 w 1 e IS opponen , wnt ee .:· latcJ'. m 18!!4 he !JC'camc ro es- Kappa Alpha· and some ndes· y roa m ou w a 1 Is a Gaddy will represent Prime i\Iin- 5111_. of the Et;g~ish La:1guagc and J .Th,e Beta Club is an_organiz~tion. "punny" dialo;ues by James "Ber: ~bout fr·om. Dr. H. B. Jones, who ister Chamberlain. From all indi- Li!Prature. H1s active servrce 111<1de up of approximately 25u0 I gen" Kirk and his "Oscar"; Rev. mformed !urn that he knew noth­cations, a fight to the finish looms continued until June, 1D38, when re)n-csentatives of 800 North Car- Tooki Solow, weight gueser;. and ing about it and gave him an aw­between these militaristie cag·les. he became professor rmeritus. olina. high scho~ls. Member~hi~ iol a game of bingo for "restfuls" ful feeling of fail~e as he pl?d-

Bob Scott To Star Dr. Sledd's publicalio<Js include rcstrwted to high sehool JUDJOrs are a few of the attractions of the {jed home, s~Jaking wet With A minstrel dblogue, in which ''From Cliff allCI Seam·: a Collec- and sen-iors whose ave1·age is nine- carnival type. Another type of ~larch rain.

Bob Scott and Ed Collins will play ticn of Verse" (18D7). "The ty or above. attraction is to be furnished by And then Thursday night he ran blackface, slapstick rdes. is ihe \\'atch9 r, of the Hearth'' (l !102), have registered to attend the an- the Meredith Angels in their first and walked spasmodically in _the next vart Rchedulcd on the pro- "At Lexington~ a ~Iemm·ial Pn- nual banquet-meeting at the Sir invasion of Deaeontown en masse downpour to Dr. Kitchin's resi-gram. Follo\\'ing their offering·s, c-·m'' (lfll3), "The }'ire from Hea· \Valtcr Hotel in Raleigh tonight, of the year. denee to leal'n for good that there Gene Bris,;ie will give a slwrt di"· ven: a Pla)' in One Act" (1930), William Watkins of Winston-Sal- was nothing to it. "Somebody course handled in a humorous :uJ<l mi>ccllaneous contributions to tm state director of the Betas, just said that he wished Mr. Rey-manner. ;1eriodi'·"L Sdections fi·om his ,;aid. The Wake Forest octet will MINISTERS HEAR nolds would do that," said Dr.

Striking another form of enter- noetl'\' hav~ been intluded in the appear on the program, and Pro. KITCHIN ADDRESS Kitchin, "and it spread until peo-lainment, Sim Cal<lwcll and his :.Libr.::ry pf Southern Literature" fe,sor :Memory will be the master pie began to say that we were go-quart~t will perform in a musk:,[ a:Hl in ;1thc:· :mtholog!es. i\Iost of or ceremonies. The Roanoke-Chow~n Ministeri- ing to do it." \nty for the boy5. Caldwell, who the poetry, \\·hich. it i~ believed, Besides Professor l\lemory and al Association in Tarboro heard And so' the tension is eased. is lmown aB quite a weal artist in rq1 r~"ents his hb:hest athieve- Illr. Watkins, L. E. Andrews, su- Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin, presi- Tire won-i\Jd ones need worry no some circ-les, will make his il;itial nwnt in lit~mture is <till in mam1- perintcndent of the Lexington city dent of the coHege, last Wednes- more; and your reporter has a appcarunce before the Democ·rnt· ,,.,.;pt. school and another Wa)o;e Forest 'I day night tell of the progress star)'. As for those who dreamed ic group on Wednesday 1Iight. Dr. Sledd wao eminently fitted man, Dr. Frank Graham, president which Wake Forest has made dur- of wealth and fame--well, you

To top off the cvcnin.:r of fun for the uniqac and distinctive of the Unive1·sity of North Caro- ing the past year. try to become ·satisfied. with our and cntclininment, p,·ofc;csot· Ed- co~<t:·ilmtion which he made to the iina, and Clyde Erwin, state su- N. E. Gresham, Edgecombe 1nagn olia trees and friendly old gar W. Timberlake of tlw law buildiug d Wake Forest College, porintendent of public instruction, County school superintendent, pre- buildings - or pack up and -go on <Chon] will SJlt>ak to the J!T<Hlp, lllld he gave himself without rc- make up the board. sided ever the meeting in the ab- to Harvard or Oxford. discus;-.;ing- srYeral fac:tns indi:-:- =-L·nre to the ser\"il:e of the Colleg·e ·

1 sence of Dr. J. L. Peacock

1 Tar-

pensablc to the youn'-': party kad- .;!ld tu 111 ,mr g-eneration.< of "tu- \V !\KE PROFESSOR bo:·o First Baptist Church minis-, WHITACRE PLANS TO HOLD cr,. dents wha rcceiwd instrud.i.m :md • GETS FELLO'\<VSHIP ter, who was called In the ~iddl?-1 . .

Winborne MadP Talk - west because of, death m hts .. I,O:ntmued From Ftrst Page) i~!spiraLion from hun. t

Last week the clubstcro had the \\'e ohare with his family the -.-- . family. were awakened by the blaze and I Pl-'a". ut·e of lJA,.,,.,·n_L_•· St'tli'•"),' Win· f · 1 d Professcr Bmnerd Currie of the 1 Dr. Kitchin asked t!Jat the Min- noise, and went out in the drizzle ..... "' 1..;- ,, ~ ~ ._ sdl~e o persowu oss, an we ex- k I h l f 1 l)orn", state tttJ·],·t)· cotntl1'-·<,'<.t'oJlCJ', d Wa ·c Forest aw sc_· 00 ·ac_ u ty isterial Association aid Wake For- of rain to be ready for emergen-... L, tend t.o them ou~.· PL•pest s~·mpa- h who discussed the ncces,ity of has· bceu awar·ded a fellows lp at est in founding a badly-needed cies and to watch. g·overnmcn m e pod Ica t:ssuc.:. Signed: 41 t d t · th ''t· 1 · thy. Columbia Unin_rsity for the 1940- chapel and urged them to assist I Volunteer work of man'y col-of the future. Plans are al!·eady H. B. JONES enn, actor mg ~0 Rn announce- in the building of the new hospital lege students with the three hoses

EDGAR E. FOLK ment made here tlus week. . in Winston-Salem. and other apparatus was instru-under way for the next p1·ogram. at which time it i~ hoped that Cong-rcssma n Ha rolrl Coole)' 1\'ii! he guest of th,. Wa!;P Forr't o:-­g-anization. ~ cgotia tion~ for a visit from him have bQen undet way for s01ne tjn1e. Prc-si<k:i L Burgwyn disclosed.

The public is inYited to attend th0 Wednesday nig·ht display uf Ioeal talent.

DISCARDED DEATH WAGON

l'rofe ssor Currie'~ a ward IS l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllmiiiiiiiliiiiilli.iaiiJiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii~ H · l\1. POTEAT the sec-ond consecutive award to be ~ Commiltt•e.

lHUD SLOWS DOWN WORK ON STADIUM

made to a Wake Fol·est man by Columbin. la~t yeu1·

Lake, who D. deg1·ee.

Au <.nvanl was made to P mfessor Beverly

i,; working- for a J. S.

Such awards arc made to onli ''Gcn(·rul Mud", w!1rJ failed la15t four or five men in the entire na­r~dl tu retard lienn:my's ad.Yunce

in l'oland, was SLICTC':::sfui 1H:rl' la~t \'.'eek in slowing- Jown work un \\-ake Forest's new 15.000-capatil>• .;tadium nnw under L·nnstl'udi011

on Sk\- HilL

Dd~re "Gene!a] ~Iud'' arrived Always Found {!Cl' Collcg·e, where he received his work progressed rapidly. To date, h . B. A. and L. L. B. deg-rees. prw:tically all the tret':-i on t e site

ha\'e be~u ~ut down, their slump~ · AT All men wishing ~o join a cam-

SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1940.

mental in halting_ the fire before it Ted Kunkel climbed the ladder and spread into the Chevrolet Garage braved the clouds of smoke .and or the ,.Jones HaXdware Store, heat to hold. their hose to the which are immediately adjacent to flame; ·Crowds IJ.f students bad -· the theatre. Old Gold and Black gathered by the time the third was staff members on the scene ob- in place .,abo11t 2:16, and used bQth served various students helping. in the front, and in playing water

·Called by Policeman Brown im- through the small ventilation win­mediately after the explosdon from_ dows beside the projection room. ShOrty's and· theif hamburgers, .Stewart Simms helped place· the Jim Bonds and Vinnie Convery hose and connect it at the bank helped Chief Taylor get int<> the corner when he took time off from Chevrolet place and drove several handling a nozzle on the roof, of the cars out when it was feared Les Cansler helped in holding the the fire would spread immediately hose and in keeping it at the to the oil-covered floor · of the flames in front of the theatre. garage. Olin Reid and others Mr. Whitacre is attempting to helped the Chevrolet men with the resume showing immediately by cars also. Across th~ street was leasing the high school gymnasi­carried the cash register and office urn for a theatre until his build­valuables. Frank Castlebury help- ing is completed. ed in this before he grabbed a ·hose. ~-------------

Hoses Taken On

The first hose gotten by the volunteer fire department was played on the front of the theatre building.· Billy Gibson was on· one hose, and went in with it when headway was made against the flames. A second hose was car­ried over the roof of the garage about 2.00 A. M., and played into the heavy flames rising from the theatre roof by several students. Carl Givler, Harold Early, and

ttac cwa »me w:ao s

Every day people the world over stop a mo­ment •.. enjoy an ice-cold Coca-Cola ••• and go their way again with a happy after·sense of complete refreshment. The pause that refreshes is a real idea, really re­freshing.

HAMBURGERS COLD DRINKS

HOT DOGS POOL

at

SHORTY'S ===

THE PAUSE THAT

Botdecl under alllhoriiJ' of The Coc;a.Cola Co. bT

CAPITAL COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., INC.

(Continued From Pagc One) leigh untiWthc opening of a cine­ma house in \Vake Forest. Those \\:ho wish to make ilw ti'ip may do so pro\·iding· that tho)' will share expense of gas :mrl oiL If as many as twelve tal'e advantap:,• of this opportunity en Pach trip, Bill figm·rs that tlw cost 1\'ill be approximatei;- five head.

dollar·s per

·RALEIGH, N. C. ron<,\'cd und )';!':!:ling· bcp;t\' • , nus movement for a statewide 1 KEITH'S MEAT MARKET

The etadnun 1" ex pee 0

' ~ 0 oc y ung Socialists' C!ub are ·ask~d

cumnlcteu nexl fall and wtll lle j 0

• t '-~-t~h~~~~-1-~~· ~h~f~'l~' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!~~!!!~=========================== • . , h· to commumca e WI 1 1g 1 1, th\.! ~ccne of ga1ncs w1tn sue. -------~eh~ nb as Duke, Cicm~on, Fur-

Campus To Be Toured

An enterprise to estahlbh :t

man and 2\Iar~hal.

COACH JOHN BETTER; SITS IN WHEELCHAIR

tour of tlw 'Vake Flll'est campus, designed to 11Jt'ct the needs of the students. is planned fer ~Um'll<'l :o:cho0l. A (lrin~ Hl'Oil!HI the <·:u~~-' pus for twenty-fivt' C(~Jlt·:.:. couph·d \ Coach JulD Cactddl, \'('t~run with a five-minutt· park on th._• ;;a::.Pball ('0~tt·h, ha-s shown great golf course fc)l' an additional fif- irnpro\'emcnt lu the last l\\"tl Jays, ty cents, is expected to h1~ mw or' ~Ji,.'Hl1:-:. ·said rl·::t~rduy. the most popular excursio!ls nf th.· lle v:as able t" sit in a wh~ei­<4See America Thi~ Year" pr·.- ~-hair Ia~t Saturday ::nd, throug-h g·rnm. 1 num~rons biot11l tran~fusions, has

If anyone will su>;g-c~t a 1wnv• i lH:en able to regain >ome ~f the fm· BilJ\;; bus whieh he thinks a:1 i ~:Ll\.'~lg-th lost in h.L"' r.L'<.'ent Jllnc:-:~. impro\'l.:ment ovc1· 1l1c inlprovi·:ur 1 ('.l,'.ch .John':; w1i'h 1s t.o be ·.·:cd "The Flying Corp .. -:''. hL' pro1ni ... t .-; ,·nf'l"~h to ::~tlt,:H_l the 1lp::•nin:2· to furni~h said rlonor with a tii·l.,;-: 11,1 ... ·l'h·JJ _rr;~uw bet·.v·.:-t•n \Vakc Fm·~ et to the first. dance- to lw held in' t'.~t <J~:ri t lw Unh·L·J·:.-ity of )'vnn-the Wake For<!st gym.

--·~ --~-- -- ·-·- ··--.

I I

NOW DJRECT

SCHEDULES K\ST AND \VEST

PROM WAKE FOREST

B''S .-.~0 1''11:,.,.., 1 "t ~ ..ii..'L ~ i ... ~~:. ..... (.\

HARDYfiCKES PHAR1IACY

Copyri~hr 19 to, LIGGtTT & !\h'Ul!

Tos~t.cco Co.

clfliss ffazel.BmoJs ••• photographed at New York's nt»w municipal airport. MISS BROOKS is chief instructress of stewardesses for American Airlines and one of the busi· est people in America's busiest airport. Her passengers all know that Chest­erfield is tile cigarette that satisfies

'

Chesterfield is today's Definitely Milder • •• Coofer-Smolcing

Better-fasting Cigarette

Flying East or West, North or South, you'll always -find Chest· erfields a ·favorite of the airways.

You'll never want to try another cigarette when you get to know Che$terfield's right combination of the world,s best tobaccos. You can't buy a better cigarette.

COOLER-SMOKING

'

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;

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FOil

Vol. x:

Fac1 Ne· Ti

Lowe1 Ap

INN{ UJ

Only

A pls est un< Lower l viSion v ty at tl made p1 this we1

Then arate t~ accordin prepare ed for acoordill have no on senic for juni some in tw() yea The neVI and Up: to cope

The I of stude omore r•

· sian wil iws. 01 catalogu 19 will J

the Low only tho excess o students

- cept by

Studer should c1 and hav, in ·courSI proceedi1 but they only 63 in the Lt pepnitte, vison cia

In ord sary pre: er divisi three ho hours of trance in

The s1 U!led to 1

needed f1 division.

All st1 sian sht :science; : jor in sci medicine to take t the Lowt foreign ' should rE course in Thosewh ister for they are required for the foreign 1: in high : One_ year required Lower Di a doctor':

c Studenl

will be a Prof. J:c committe1 Counsel v problems tions will tD the R1 ses. At tl the advisE will turn ed the r1 mto the advisers their maj advisers mendation will makE the last t Upper Di-

Student Call<iidate! hove ente and the a into the l to the apr mi'.tf'e. Bt admitted the. catalo. a candid1 make a At least 6 completed in course: hers exceE

MONl

There classes 1tl der that 1

N.C. Su Bryan_stl