8
., .. 1 . , ., , . .. ,. 1•. .HOME, ALUMNI .- Volume XXXIII. Number 6 * '- ·* * * Wake Forest, N.C., Friday, October 24,1947 . . * BEAT DUKE BLUE DEVILS Phone o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest in His- Frat Sponsors To Get Wake Forest, Eleventh Ranking Team inN ation, Out \ tory; Frats Entertain Alumni With Da1,1ce To Explode "Jinx" Myth;. Crowd of 25,000 · In Raleigh After Game . . ' Expected to Attend -·. More than 24,00 fans, including -thousands of old grads. of Notice at Dance " Wake Forest's Demon Deacons and the Blue Devils renew Wake Forest College will be in Groves Stadium tomorrow after- their annual bloodbattle in one of the top Southern Conference noon for the top game of the Southern Conference. The number Tri'bute To Be SuPVe" Indicates attractions of the season when the two teams clash in Groves of alu}llni turning out for_ the Homecoming Day game will set a Played m Honor of J Stadium afternoon at 2 o'clock. new record in th.e history of the College. With a sellout in the . · 22 .Girls Lower' Food Cost A Homecoming Day crowd of nearly 25,000 is expected to be ticket the camJaUS will be· jammed .from the time the in the stadium for the 25th encounter between the two rivals. celebration b'egins toqight•at the pep rally. Informal parties, Twenty-two sponsors will be The Deacs will put every effort into this game to halt the dances and other festivities are scheduled before and after the honored by a special dance num- Because of the rumor that our biggest jinx in Wake Forest football history. Duke has carried· . . .• . . - ber when Randy Brooks and his f t - · · e ns1'derably · g ame, by several fratermtles and orgamq;atwns on the campus. . ' ca e erla prices ar co all of the honors in the 25-year-old rivalry axcept for one game. . . natiOnally known orchestra play higher .than the prices charged The game, of course, will co.minand most attentiOn,· but a for the annual_Homecoming Dance in similar shoals of the state Mr. In 1942 the Deacs came through to mark up·a 20 to 7 win over the of other events are on the agenda for the weekend .. Fes- be the Raleigh C. V.·Cummtngs, manager of the Blue Devils.· Then, in 1930 the two teams fought to tie. · · . . · . 1al Aud1tor1Um on Saturday mght 1 1 f t · d ted - tivities actually began last mght when Deacon rooters met m the 0 2 · ' oca ca e. e:ra, con uc a Sl;il" Otherwise, the Methodists have won every game withi'n the last . . . , . ctober 5: vey pertauung to the relative new chapel for the best pep rally of the curren,t season. Dtrf?Ctor Randy Brooks, the man with the I prices here and at Lenoir Dirl- 19 ,years. . McDonald lmd the OLD GOLD AND BLACK band were on ha11d "Golden Trumpet," and his art- ing Hall, largest at U. N. C. The The past records of the two schools offer, a puzzle even to the to assist Head Lyn- ists have just finished an engage- results differed greatly from the · 1 experts ip. gridiron thinking. wood Harrel} in arousing the en- . ment at the Hotel Pennsylvania rumors. z Ch Wake Forest has come up with thusiasm of the student body. Faiths To Hold in New York.,His orchestra is The survey showed that the eta i IllS several teams that were rated All ten social fraternities on the known for its smooth, sweet music. prices .there on some. items vary above the neighboring rivals in campus plan parties for tonight A J • M .• . John social chairman, from 20 per cent to 100 per cent Grades Award pre-game standings. But, as the as well as entertainment for re- . Olll_ t eting announced at the Pan-Hellenic higher than the prices here. Of story goes, the Deacons had not turning alumni before and after _ Council meeting Tuesday night course, there are a few items with come through when the final the. ·game on Saturday. A dance . . that three rows of seats have been identical costs, but ·these whistle blew. . originally scheduled for . tonight . moved in the auditorium to make are the exception rather than the Last year the Deacons rated as at 'the local Community !House Representatives of Sever- more room for the dancers. The rule. On only one article was the Annual Scholarship Tro- pre-game favorites over the "hard has been cancelled, it is under- al Sects to Meet Here limited amount of space, however, Wake Fores.t price higher than the phy Presented. Frat for luck" Blue Devils. However, the stood. -• Sunday has made it im,.Possible. to open other. The students at Chapel Hill _ Accomplishment Durham boys trimmed the Deacs . The Baptist Student Union will . . the dance to any but fraternity pay seven cents for a 13 to o. hold open house in the recrea- men, their guests, and alumni. half-pint of milk while we pay . . . . Again this season · sportswriters · tion Room of the Music-Religion Representatives from the Bap- -See FRAT SPONSORS, Page 8- SURVEY, Page 8- Zeta Chi soc1al fr?-termty has. are sticking out their necks to Building after the game tomorrow tist, · Catholic, Methodist, and won the Scholarship Trophy give Wake Forest the advantage. ana all fraternities will observe Jewish Faiths .will participate in D R P, awarded each year by the Pan- ·They believe the Deacs will for- the same courtesy throughout the an "Inter-Faith Meeting" which r. otea.t to . ·rnsent Hellenics, according to an an- get the long jinx. The "old tim- weekend. will be held Sunday afternoon, I I ICi nouricement made this week by ers" rate the game as a toss-up Following a "long-established 1947, from 00' until Daniel Lovelace, chairman of the Furthermore, Coach D. c. custom, all will have 16:00 p. m. I? the "l7_ea r[y Rea- J_l·ng 71 Ion .,Jay Scholarship Committee. er has never beaten a Wade- their houses or sections decorated of the MUSIC and. Religlon Build- _l f I ' u 1 r .1. u f The Zeta Chi chapter, a local coached team. The onsurging for the Homecoming weekend. A ing. fraternity organized last year and Deacons will be giving their all . group of three will The .them.e of the Inter-Faith now preparing to be receied into to break this This year the rounds to each Satur- Meeting is "Exploring Areas of . . _ . . . Sigma Chi national fraternity, hi,.d Walker has the reserve day to inspect .each dif?play and Cooperation between· Religions." · By Leliion Ktrk condemned ls as. sacr:- a total of 45 members for the Fml power to meet· the Duke team.. name ·one lodge to rec!ive the Those responsible state that·. their Monda.y. night. at 7:30 Dr. Hu- but a few :ecogmzed m and Spring semesters of last year Never before have the Deacons Council's for is . to bring- :-a- bert McNeill_ :poteat .will gi"l:'e· .Jt_ .farth and mag:- They were· chosen to able to this adyantage 1 havmg· . the .mo.st .. atzyacti.ve ... and · .:..,bru_ng, oLlV!'al:c .. JJnagery . Q.f -. the .. award .. 'J;'he Blue Devils· are not. to be original . decorations. CO)Lpeti:. about undersfanding among the' Green Pastures in the village Bap- Neg!'O conceptions of the Blble found to have an average (in underrated in any. phase of tlie tion is usually keen this year faiths on the campus. . tist church, · following a practice story. quality point ratio) of 1.5, or the game. After getting off to a slow· will be no exception. The riame Dr. Sankey L. Blanton of the which has become an annual tra- The is based upon Roark numerical average of 85. start at the first of the season, of the winning fraternity will be Religion Department states: "I dition as surely as any other sin- ·Bradford's book, OZ' Man Adam Alpha Sigma Phi, with an aver- Duke has since turned in sparkling announced at half-time Saturday feel that it (the meeting) offers gle event. on the Wake Forest cal- and His Chillun-a series of sket- age of 1.37, was runner-up for the performances against Tennessee afternoon. possibilities in matters of com:... endar. · ches portraying the ideas of award. and Navy. The Navy team placed .cRandy ·Brooks and liis Orches- mon understanding;" he added, Tbe program Monday will last Louisiana darkies concerning God The scholastic average of the the only blot on the Duke .record, tra will play for the Pan Hellenic "they are trying to explore ave- approximately an hour and a and heRven. . fraternity group as a whole is. the two. teams playing to ,a 14-14. Council's Homecoming Day dance nues of cooperation in the inter- half, to allow the inclusion of Hubert McNeill Poteat, born a considerably higher than the aver- tie in Baltimore two weeks ago. in Raleigh's Memorial est of mutual respect and under- the most important scenes of the. Southerner, steeped in the spirit age attained by the student body, And, last week the Duke team tomorrow nigq.t from 8 until 12 standing and are ,JJOt dealing with play. of the South, the spirit of Un- Lovelace pointed out. The nine toppled the previously undefeated -See DANCE, Page·s- matters of dogma and faith. The When Marc Connelly's great and cle Remus, gifted with a. sense fraternities on th,e campus had a Maryland team to climb high in Clothing For Men Opens Approximately four .. hundred Wake Forest students attended the · formal opening of Ben's · new men's clothing store, Tuesday ·night. The new establishment is located opposite Bolus Depart- ment Store. It is owned by Mr. Ben T. Aycock and will be. ope- rated under his management. The crowd that attended the opening party consisted of college ·students, members of the family, and citizens of the town. During the two hours in which the store was open, refreshments were serv,- ed and .free prizes were award- ed to Mrs. Johnnie Knight, and Ray Royston, who received a hat a tie. and a pair of socks, respect- ively. Mr. Aycock, whose store had its formal opening on Wednesday morning, attended the Army fi- nance school here _in ' 1943, and returned in 1946. He married a local girl, Leila Holding, and has made Wake Forest his home since that time. His home was origi- na).ly in Pantego, North Carolina, where he worked for 15 years in a _different type of store. SENIORS It has been found neces- sary to have a runoff in the election of the Outstanding Seniors of 1943. In Tues- day's voting only five stu- dents of the twenty nomi- nated received clear majori- ties. · For the runoff a special session of the senior class will be held at chapel per- iod Tuesday, October 28, in the auditorium of tlie Johnson Medical· Science Building. discussion will deal with matters spiritual folk play, The Green par excellence of the human dra- total membership of 805 for last the national ratings. . concerning . civic and community Pastures, was first presented fu. ma of situations, is superbly well year, which is about 32 per cent Duke has been gaining strength enrichment, which are matters of New York, it immediately arous- to read such a play as of the total membership of the since the State encounter. The -See MEETING, Page 8- ed a storm of controversy. Many -See POTEAT, Page 2- -See ZETA CHI, Page 8- Blue Devil-·offense is much im- Martha Sin:k / .Mrs. Hiram Ward Polly He1tdrix Ann Plumpo Thelma Hedgpeth Sponsor's to be lntPoduced As ·Halftim_e FeatuPe at Stadium Introduction of the Homecoming 1 If the weather permits, the span- Day sponsors will be a feature of sors and their escorts will be car- the halftime attractions at the ried to the stadiUm by a fleet of Wake Forest-Duke game in Groves convertibles. During the game, Stadium tomorrow afternoon. the couples will sit on the side-· Following the parade of the lines. Elizabeth City, Duke and Wake Sponsors and their escorts from Forest bands, twenty sponsors, Duke University will be: Marge eight representing Duke and i Frey, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pres- twelve representing Wake Forest, ident of Women's Student Govern- will be escorted to the center of ment from Toledo, Ohio, with Jack the gridiron. -See GAME SPONSORS, Page 2- Betty Witliams Mrs. Ed Royston Carolyn Twiggs . Emily McMilla11. Mary! Lou Thompson My-rt Davis proved. Coach Wallace Wade al- so brought something new into his offense last Saturday when he added a double-wing variation to the established singlewing forma- . -See GAME, Page 2- Frosh Election Takes Run-off The names of six candidates for freshman offices will appear on the final election ballots next Wednesday, after one of the most highly publicized and colorful campaigns in the history of Wake Forest College. . The primary election· held Wed- nesday, October 22, determined that those contending for the three positions would be: Bob Mauney and Ray Jones for the presidency; Doyle . Bedsole and Dave Clark for Vice-president; and Carol Oldham and Jan Young for Secretary-Treasurer. The official count at the pri- maries showed that little more than half the freshman class turned out to cast their ballots. Therefore, student officials again want to urgently ·stress the im- portance of fair representation in the choice of class governing of- ficials. This aim can be ahieved only if each and every freshman goes to the polls and votes next Wednesday. OPEN There will be an open house for all students, alum- ni, and visitors in the Rec- reation Room of the Music- Religion building, Saturday evening from 8:30 to 10:30 sponsored by the Baptist Student Union.

o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

  • Upload
    vonhu

  • View
    217

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

.,

.. 1 . ,

.,

,

~ .

..

,. 1•.

.HOME,

ALUMNI

.-Volume XXXIII. Number 6

* '- ·* * * Wake Forest, N.C., Friday, October 24,1947 . .

*

BEAT ,THOS~

DUKE

BLUE DEVILS

Phone 304~6

o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . ..

Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest in His- Frat Sponsors To Get Wake Forest, Eleventh Ranking Team inN ation, Out \ tory; Frats Entertain Alumni With Da1,1ce To Explode "Jinx" Myth;. Crowd of 25,000 ·

In Raleigh After Game . . ' Expected to Attend

-·. More than 24,00 fans, including -thousands of old grads. of ~Special Notice at Dance " Wake Forest's Demon Deacons and the Blue Devils renew

Wake Forest College will be in Groves Stadium tomorrow after- their annual bloodbattle in one of the top Southern Conference

noon for the top game of the Southern Conference. The number Tri'bute ~umber To Be SuPVe" Indicates attractions of the season when the two teams clash in Groves of alu}llni turning out for_ the Homecoming Day game will set a Played m Honor of J Stadium to~orrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. new record in th.e history of the College. With a sellout in the . · 22 .Girls Lower' Food Cost A Homecoming Day crowd of nearly 25,000 is expected to be ticket depar~ment, the camJaUS will be· jammed .from the time the in the stadium for the 25th encounter between the two rivals. celebration b'egins toqight•at the pep rally. Informal parties, Twenty-two sponsors will be The Deacs will put every effort into this game to halt the dances and other festivities are scheduled before and after the honored by a special dance num- Because of the rumor that our biggest jinx in Wake Forest football history. Duke has carried·

. . .• . . - ber when Randy Brooks and his f t - · · e ns1'derably · game, by several fratermtles and orgamq;atwns on the campus. . ' ca e erla prices ar co all of the honors in the 25-year-old rivalry axcept for one game.

. . natiOnally known orchestra play higher .than the prices charged The game, of course, will co.minand most attentiOn,· but a for the annual_Homecoming Dance in similar shoals of the state Mr. In 1942 the Deacs came through to mark up·a 20 to 7 win over the

numb~r of other events are on the agenda for the weekend .. Fes- ~0 be h~ld ~n the Raleigh .Me~or- C. V.·Cummtngs, manager of the Blue Devils.· Then, in 1930 the two teams fought to a~l3-13 tie. · · . . · . 1al Aud1tor1Um on Saturday mght 1 1 f t · d ted -

tivities actually began last mght when Deacon rooters met m the 0 2 · ' oca ca e. e:ra, con uc a Sl;il" Otherwise, the Methodists have won every game withi'n the last . . . , . ctober 5: vey pertauung to the relative

new chapel for the best pep rally of the curren,t season. Dtrf?Ctor Randy Brooks, the man with the I prices here and at Lenoir Dirl- 19 ,years. . McDonald lmd the OLD GOLD AND BLACK band were on ha11d "Golden Trumpet," and his art- ing Hall, largest at U. N. C. The The past records of the two schools offer, a puzzle even to the to assist Head Chee~l~ader Lyn- ists have just finished an engage- results differed greatly from the ·

1

experts ip. gridiron thinking. wood Harrel} in arousing the en- . ment at the Hotel Pennsylvania rumors. z Ch w· Wake Forest has come up with thusiasm of the student body. Faiths To Hold in New York.,His orchestra is The survey showed that the eta i IllS several teams that were rated

All ten social fraternities on the known for its smooth, sweet music. prices .there on some. items vary • above the neighboring rivals in campus plan parties for tonight A J • M . • . John ~irchett, social chairman, from 20 per cent to 100 per cent Grades Award pre-game standings. But, as the as well as entertainment for re- . Olll_ t -~-eting announced at the Pan-Hellenic higher than the prices here. Of story goes, the Deacons had not turning alumni before and after _ Council meeting Tuesday night course, there are a few items with come through when the final the. ·game on Saturday. A dance . . that three rows of seats have been identical costs, but ·these whistle blew. . originally scheduled for . tonight . • moved in the auditorium to make are the exception rather than the Last year the Deacons rated as at 'the local Community !House Representatives of Sever- more room for the dancers. The rule. On only one article was the Annual Scholarship Tro- pre-game favorites over the "hard has been cancelled, it is under- al Sects to Meet Here limited amount of space, however, Wake Fores.t price higher than the phy Presented. Frat for luck" Blue Devils. However, the stood. - • Sunday has made it im,.Possible. to open other. The students at Chapel Hill _ Accomplishment Durham boys trimmed the Deacs . The Baptist Student Union will . . the dance to any but fraternity Colleg~ pay seven cents for a 13 to o. hold open house in the recrea- men, their guests, and alumni. half-pint of milk while we pay . . . . Again this season · sportswriters

· tion Room of the Music-Religion Representatives from the Bap- -See FRAT SPONSORS, Page 8- ~ee SURVEY, Page 8- Zeta Chi soc1al fr?-termty has. are sticking out their necks to Building after the game tomorrow tist, · Catholic, Methodist, and won the Scholarship Trophy give Wake Forest the advantage. ana all fraternities will observe Jewish Faiths .will participate in D R P, awarded each year by the Pan- ·They believe the Deacs will for-the same courtesy throughout the an "Inter-Faith Meeting" which r. otea.t to . ·rnsent Hellenics, according to an an- get the long jinx. The "old tim-weekend. will be held Sunday afternoon, I • I ICi nouricement made this week by ers" rate the game as a toss-up

Following a "long-established ~ctober 26~ 1947, from ~: 00' until Daniel Lovelace, chairman of the Furthermore, Coach D. c. Walk~ custom, all frat~rnities will have 16:00 p. m. I? the Recr7a~l0n R~om "l7_ea r[y Rea- J_l·ng 71 Ion .,Jay Scholarship Committee. er has never beaten a Wade-their houses or sections decorated of the MUSIC and. Religlon Build- _l f I ' u ~ 1 r .1. u f The Zeta Chi chapter, a local coached team. The onsurging for the Homecoming weekend. A ing. fraternity organized last year and Deacons will be giving their all . group of three judge~ will -~ake The .them.e of the Inter-Faith now preparing to be receied into to break this jin~- This year the rounds to each l:).ou~e Satur- Meeting is "Exploring Areas of . . _ . . . Sigma Chi national fraternity, hi,.d Co~ch Walker has the reserve day to inspect .each dif?play and Cooperation between· Religions." · By Leliion Ktrk l~~tantly condemned ls as. sacr:- a total of 45 members for the Fml power to meet· the Duke team.. name ·one lodge to rec!ive the Those responsible state that·. their Monda.y. night. at 7:30 Dr. Hu- ~lg10us, but a few :ecogmzed m and Spring semesters of last year Never before have the Deacons P~:Hellenic Council's a~ard for ~urpose is . to bring- s~dents :-a- bert McNeill_ :poteat .will gi"l:'e· ~is .Jt_ ~hEt,<!.eep-:~oote~ .farth and mag:- com~ine~. They were· chosen to b~en able to boa~t this adyantage

1 havmg· . the .mo.st .. atzyacti.ve ... and geth~. ~ · t~at :t:~ey,._. c~ .:..,bru_ng, ·-ann.:u.?l,-~~adllig oLlV!'al:c .. elPnneHy.~~;AW;"*.~i;,-.hu~~- JJnagery . Q.f -. ~-!1:~ .r.~ce.lve the .. nnn~ award Jj~Tbe~Q.- .. 'J;'he Blue Devils· are not. to be original . decorations. CO)Lpeti:. about undersfanding among the' Green Pastures in the village Bap- Neg!'O conceptions of the Blble found to have an average (in underrated in any. phase of tlie tion is usually keen ~d this year faiths on the campus. . tist church, · following a practice story. quality point ratio) of 1.5, or the game. After getting off to a slow· will be no exception. The riame Dr. Sankey L. Blanton of the which has become an annual tra- The pl~y is based upon Roark numerical average of 85. start at the first of the season, of the winning fraternity will be Religion Department states: "I dition as surely as any other sin- ·Bradford's book, OZ' Man Adam Alpha Sigma Phi, with an aver- Duke has since turned in sparkling announced at half-time Saturday feel that it (the meeting) offers gle event. on the Wake Forest cal- and His Chillun-a series of sket- age of 1.37, was runner-up for the performances against Tennessee afternoon. possibilities in matters of com:... endar. · ches portraying the ideas of award. • and Navy. The Navy team placed

.cRandy ·Brooks and liis Orches- mon understanding;" he added, Tbe program Monday will last Louisiana darkies concerning God The scholastic average of the the only blot on the Duke .record, tra will play for the Pan Hellenic "they are trying to explore ave- approximately an hour and a and heRven. . fraternity group as a whole is. the two. teams playing to ,a 14-14. Council's Homecoming Day dance nues of cooperation in the inter- half, to allow the inclusion of Hubert McNeill Poteat, born a considerably higher than the aver- tie in Baltimore two weeks ago. in Raleigh's Memorial Au~torium est of mutual respect and under- the most important scenes of the. Southerner, steeped in the spirit age attained by the student body, And, last week the Duke team tomorrow nigq.t from 8 until 12 standing and are ,JJOt dealing with play. of the South, the spirit of Un- Lovelace pointed out. The nine toppled the previously undefeated

-See DANCE, Page·s- matters of dogma and faith. The When Marc Connelly's great and cle Remus, gifted with a. sense fraternities on th,e campus had a Maryland team to climb high in

Clothing Stor~ For Men Opens

Approximately four .. hundred Wake Forest students attended the

· formal opening of Ben's · new men's clothing store, Tuesday ·night. The new establishment is located opposite Bolus Depart­ment Store. It is owned by Mr. Ben T. Aycock and will be. ope­rated under his management.

The crowd that attended the opening party consisted of college ·students, members of the family, and citizens of the town. During the two hours in which the store was open, refreshments were serv,­ed and .free prizes were award­ed to Mrs. Johnnie Knight, and Ray Royston, who received a hat a tie. and a pair of socks, respect­ively.

Mr. Aycock, whose store had its formal opening on Wednesday morning, attended the Army fi­nance school here _in ' 1943, and returned in 1946. He married a local girl, Leila Holding, and has made Wake Forest his home since that time. His home was origi­na).ly in Pantego, North Carolina, where he worked for 15 years in a _different type of store.

SENIORS It has been found neces­

sary to have a runoff in the election of the Outstanding Seniors of 1943. In Tues­day's voting only five stu­dents of the twenty nomi­nated received clear majori-ties. ·

For the runoff a special session of the senior class will be held at chapel per­iod Tuesday, October 28, in the auditorium of tlie Johnson Medical· Science Building.

discussion will deal with matters spiritual folk play, The Green par excellence of the human dra- total membership of 805 for last the national ratings. . concerning . civic and community Pastures, was first presented fu. ma of situations, is superbly well year, which is about 32 per cent Duke has been gaining strength enrichment, which are matters of New York, it immediately arous- -~equipped to read such a play as of the total membership of the since the State encounter. The

-See MEETING, Page 8- ed a storm of controversy. Many -See POTEAT, Page 2- -See ZETA CHI, Page 8- Blue Devil-·offense is much im-

Martha Sin:k ~oontz /

.Mrs. Hiram Ward

Polly He1tdrix Ann Plumpo Thelma Hedgpeth

~Game Sponsor's to be lntPoduced As ·Halftim_e FeatuPe at Stadium

Introduction of the Homecoming 1 If the weather permits, the span­Day sponsors will be a feature of sors and their escorts will be car­the halftime attractions at the ried to the stadiUm by a fleet of Wake Forest-Duke game in Groves convertibles. During the game, Stadium tomorrow afternoon. the couples will sit on the side-·

Following the parade of the lines. Elizabeth City, Duke and Wake Sponsors and their escorts from Forest bands, twenty sponsors, Duke University will be: Marge eight representing Duke and i Frey, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pres­twelve representing Wake Forest, ident of Women's Student Govern­will be escorted to the center of ment from Toledo, Ohio, with Jack the gridiron. -See GAME SPONSORS, Page 2-

Betty Witliams Mrs. Ed Royston Carolyn Twiggs

.

Emily McMilla11.

Mary! Lou Thompson

My-rt Davis

proved. Coach Wallace Wade al­so brought something new into his offense last Saturday when he added a double-wing variation to the established singlewing forma-

. -See GAME, Page 2-

Frosh Election Takes Run-off The names of six candidates for

freshman offices will appear on the final election ballots next Wednesday, after one of the most highly publicized and colorful campaigns in the history of Wake Forest College. .

The primary election· held Wed­nesday, October 22, determined that those contending for the three positions would be: Bob Mauney and Ray Jones for the presidency; Doyle . Bedsole and Dave Clark for Vice-president; and Carol Oldham and Jan Young for Secretary-Treasurer.

The official count at the pri­maries showed that little more than half the freshman class turned out to cast their ballots. Therefore, student officials again want to urgently ·stress the im­portance of fair representation in the choice of class governing of­ficials. This aim can be ahieved only if each and every freshman goes to the polls and votes next Wednesday.

OPEN

There will be an open house for all students, alum-ni, and visitors in the Rec­reation Room of the Music- ~ Religion building, Saturday evening from 8:30 to 10:30 sponsored by the Baptist Student Union.

Page 2: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

Page Two Old (j_ol4 and Black

Little Theater Stages Second One Act Play Thursday Night

I 'The Death Cup,' a Trage-1 _ ....... ._ ........... __ ......... ___ _ dy, Stars Crumpler PHI DELTA

and Burris

The Little Theater will present the second in its ·series of one act plays Thursday night, October 30. This series is open to the public and is sponsored by the Little Theater group to interest more students in dramatics;

Dean ·R. E. Lee, Dean of the college Law School,.,.will address Phi · Delta Omega, pre-law fraternity,. at 7:30 Thursday, October 30, in Room B of the Law School. All pre-law students are cordially ·invited.

MR. ABC TO VISIT HERE NEXT-WEEK

Mr. •A. B. C., a representative of the Chesterfield company, will vis­it the campus next week. ·He will stop different students on the cam­pus and if they are carrying a package of Chesterfields, they will receive a package free of. charge. If, at the time· they are stopped, they are actually smoking a Ches­terfield, they will receive two free P<\Cks. , ..

CHAPEu PROGRAM FEATURES ENVOYS

Miss Vivian Nowell, Wendell, N. C., missionary to Nigeria, West Af-

The play, "The Death Cup," dif­fers greatly· from the previous pro­duction, "The Red Lamp," being a tragedy with a surprise ending and having a limited cast of only three parts. The part of Andrie will be portrayed by Jim Burris, that of Olga by Candy Crumpler, and Jo­seph, the villian, by Clyde Ran­dolph.

. rica, spoke in chapel on Vlednes-1 00 WF Students day concerninl!( mission work in

Africa. She has been serving for rr aT' SteheT' Sz'n?, six years as secretary to the Sec­.l.l e 0~ retary of Mission Work in Africa.

This production will be directed by Kitty Jo Beasley, a senior from Louisburg. Kitty .Jo is a Little Theater pledge and has had lead­ing parts in "Blithe Spirit" and "One Mad Night." Active in High School dramatics, she has had previous experience in dire4;:ting and all types of stage craft. Also, she is chairman of the make-up committee for the, coming Little Theater production, "Kiss and Tell."

GAME SPONSORS

Eleanor Steber opened the Ral­eigh season of Civic Music con­certs Monday night to an increas­ingly enthusiastic audience which included more than one hundred Wake Foresters. • The buxom and lovely radio

and opera singer, though she op­ened her program with a brittle and almost emotionless group by Mozart, warmed to her art dur­ing the evening and before she finished displayed warmth and charm coupled with technical ex­cellence.

Miss Steber has a stage presence which is at once reserved and gracious; everything she sang Monday night was presented with

(Continued from Page 1) understanding and colour; · she Shehee, Sigma Chi, business man- chose a well-balanced program ager of the Chanticleer from Chat- and added to it encores which had tanooga, Tennessee; Jane Bruce, popular appeal, wit and artistry. Zeta Tau Alpha, President of Wo- In her first group, two arias men's Pan Hel, from Palatka, Flor- and a love song by Mozart, she ida, with Gordon Smith, Phi Delta displayed her vocal facility and Theta, President of Men's Student grace from the beginning. It was Government Association, from as any Mozart group necessarily Chattanooga, Tennessee. is-somewhat chilling.

Shirley Shapleigh, Zeta Tau AI- Her second group, songs by pha, from Wilmington, Delaware, Richard Strauss, received more with Chuck White, Alpha Tau 'l!ital treatment, and her singing Omega, President of Men's Inter- of a scene from Manon was supple fraternity Council, from Rochester, and full of rich hues.

At present she is on her .second leave from her wo.rk and will· re­turn to the field in January.

Present also this week under the sponsorship of the Young Women's Auxiliary was Miss Hilda Mayo, Young People's Secretary for the Baptist State convention. She con­ferred with all YW A officers on their work.

Under the direction of Margaret Crumpler, a tea was held Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. G. Carroll between the hours of 4:30 and 6:00. Miss Mayo was the guest of honor ..

POTEAT (Continued from Page 1)

this. His voice, which can purr at will-and at will thunder-is perfect to portray both the"digni­ty of "De Lawd" arid the sultry come-hither of "Gain's- Girl."

Officially, Dr. Poteat is -a

Mason and KI:\ight Templar, Past says, '"forget about · worsmpping Grand Master of North Carolina God in spirit and truth an·d begin and a member if the intemation- to· worship Him in ragtime . ·and al board ·ot'directors of the Shrine, in jazz." John Arch McMillan he will be. the Shrine's Imperial wrote in the Alumni News last Potentate in 1950. , year "It is impossible for a per­

Merely incidentally, Dr. Poteat son to attend worship at Wake has written seven books and many Forest Church for four · years magazine articles-and he is one without losing all taste for rag­of the three Poteats listed in the time and jazz. (Dr. Poteat was 1947 edition of Who's Who in organist there ·for nearly forty America. years.) Certainly no other man

But no recital of statistics, how- in the South' has done so much ever notable, however impres- to elevate church music as has sive, can possibly reveal the D1·. Hubert. M. Poteat." spirit of this man .. Still living he He is particularly fond of Wag­is. a Wake Forest legend. More ner, Tschaikovsky and Grieg. He tall tales-all affectionate - is an invet~rate chess player, a apocryphal and otherwise, have raconteur w 1thout peer, a match­grown up about him tl,l.an about less teacher-and he scarcely e'l!·er any other faculty member Wake doodles. Forest ha,s ever had, except pos- Perhaps it is no wonder that sibly Dr. Bill Speas and the late with such a teacher in front the Dr. Sledd.. sweating scholars who, unprepar-

Larnbasts Classes ed, pray the highest tnat they He lambastes his classes at won't be called upon, Wake For­

times, categorizing the members est classical language co:m-ses have been for sqme time 'tleen the

as jackasses, henbrains and oth- largest-not in proportion to en-er fauna-and his classes, realiz- 1 -ing he is right laugh uproarious- ro lment, but in total-in the

• country. ly. He accuses all undergraduates D · p t t' di f th

1 of having a maximum vocabular:Y whi~h h~ ea.~ rea .. ng 0 e P ey­of sixteen words-and his students . Wil agam _read .. Monday absorb phililogy, semantics and a rug~t has ~ecome, like hlS organ healthy regard for the English I recltals until re_cently, . ~ part of language from him. - , · th~ Wak~ Forest tradit10n-and

"Dr. Hubert," as most students will contznue to. be as long as he sooner or later begin to call him chooses to read It. -not because. it is. the affection­ate thing to do but because for some yet unexplained reason it

GAME is the natural thing to do--is a · (Continued from Page 1) ranking classical scholar in the tion. This . new change moves the country .. Yet he has fought for blocking back out wide and pro­nearly half a centuzy an unceas- vides the surprise element. From ing fight against the sterility this formation the backs can run which is so rife in Latin class- and pass, in a greater variety of rooms. He has a stern and un- plays. compromising aversion to anything In the defensive department the which would destroy the spirit of Blue Devils rate with the Deacons, what he teaches. His· textbook each team giving up 28 points notes, like his classroom lectures, for the season. The Deacons hold are filled with genteel humor; with a slight edge in rushing, however. the apt phrase to . illuminate They have yielded an average of blazingly the point he is making. 28 yards per game which ranks

Resounding Greeting them second· in the nation. The game tomorrow will find

His regarcf and love for his stu- the two teams taking to the air, dents as individual.is well-known. Duke probably more so than Wake More than one alumnus walking Forest. The Blue 'Devils have the campus has been impaled in come up _with a potent aerial at­his tracks by the resounding t k hi greeting thrown him by his old ac w ch is a threat to any

. team.

double wingback . formation or Wade's. Buddy .. Mulligan· is a fast and triCky rUtiner from the wingback position.. ·-

In the backfield .. the Deacons can match the power of the Blue Devils. At the tailback post Tom Fetzer and Bud Lail · get first call ' by '\-irtue· of their passing, run­ning and punting ability. Fetzer is among the top ten in the na­tion in pass completions and yards gained, and was this week se­lected as the AP's "Football Player Of. the 'week." 'He ' also handles the punting end of the game.

.Lail is equally as good in the, air and has power and drive on the ground. These two boys have shared the duties of the tailback back spot. However, Bil} Gregus has been receiving more and more attention at the post and will probably see much action to­morrow.

' Seen Much Action George Pryor, Tony DiTomo,

Jeff Brodgen and Michael Sprock handle the fullback pos1tion. All four have seen a great deal of action this season, and Sprock received the runner-up honor of ·. the United Press "Freshman of the We,ek" release due to ~s per­formal.ice in the George Washing­ton g;~me last-week.

Nick. Ognovich, Don Hipps and Bud Phillips handle the block­ing back chores. Ognovich com­mands the position on offense and defense. For tWo successive years the flashy little back has walked off with the Jacob's Blocking Tro-phy. .

Harry Dowda and Carl Haggard operate from the wingback. The . two men have carried the burden in that position.

In the forward wall the Dea­cons may hold a slight ·edge -over the Blue Devils. However, the Duke team has shown considera.., ble improvement in this depart­ment also, as demonstrated against Maryland. -Wake Forest's strength· has been in its heavy and rugged line, offensively and defensively.

New York; Lindy Stivers, Zeta Tau After the intermission Miss Ste­Alpha, from Maplewood, New Jer- ber's accompanist, James Quillian, sey, with Jack Quaritius, Sigma played three works by Debussy Alpha Epsilon, business manager and a nencore of his own com­

teacher of Latin. He has taught that language and its literature for more than forty years. Even his vital statistics are impressive. He was born the son of William Louis and Emma James Purefoy Poteat, in Wake. Forest, 12 De­cember 1886. He received his B. A. in 1906 from Wake Forest Col­lege, where h,is father was presi­dent for twenty-two years, his M. A. from there in 1908. From 1908 unti1·1910 he was the Dris­ler Fellow in Classical Philoology at Columbia University. .While working on his dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Phiiisophy (which Columbia gave him in 1912) he was master of Latin at the Hotchkiss School, Lakeville,

teacher out the classroom wmdow. In "Random . Reflections of an Old Fogy," an article in Educa­tion (November 1944), Dr. Po­teat says: "I am fully aware of the fact that in our . . . institu­tions personal contact between professor and student is not al­ways easy; it is also quite un­fashionable. This state of affairs seems to me a matter for d~ep

regret . . ~ In Latin, dacer~ is fol­lowed by iwo accusatives-and the boy comes first."

Disregarding the statistics, the game tomorrow afternoon will be a hard-fought affaj.r with both· teams seeking victory in the all-

Enco!"e Wanted important clash. The winner of . the contest will no doubt go on to of the Chronicle, from Rockville position.

Centre, New York. The balance of the program pro-

Conn. ·

Pat Way, Kappa Alpha Theta, ceeded with the fire most of the editor of the Chanticleer, from first half l!acked-some modern Winnetka, Illinois, with Bob French songs, well balanced to Maschmeier, president of Beta contrast power and quietness; a Theta Pi, from St. Louis, Missouri; stunningly presented group of folk Gina Mims, Kappa Alpha Theta, music and finally the "Un bel di" from Memphis, Tennessee, with from Madame Butterf(y, done el- Has Two Sons BUI Robertson, Phi Delta Theta, oquently. , l On 26 June '' '

1912 he married fr'om Louisville, Kentucky. Encores Chosen Well Essie Moore Morgan; they have

Mary Ann Duncan, Pi Beta Phi, from Greenville, with Jim Groome, Miss Steber chose her encores t(wnoo sodn~, Hubert h MtcNeill, ,Jr.

I w 01ng researc a Bowman football squad, from Greens boor; well-and the full house demon- Gray) a d w·lr M (

and Love Lindsey, Zeta Tau Alpha, strated its appreciation-the practic" n tt 1 Iam_ organ a from Ocala, Florida, with Frank Brahms "Lullaby," Gershwin's mg a orney In Greens-Trechsel, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, I "Summ.ertime," and the restrain..: \bvohroom) · Hhee ha_s two granhds1on~-1° f fr B . · h "1 b d d 1 · ""r M s W"th 1s overw e m1ng y om rr.mmg am, .-,. a ama. e an yrrc vv ere Y ong 1 proud-w·n· L · II d

Misses Love Lindsey, ;Lindy ~ti-J Wings Provided." After the Puc- Robert M~~a~ ( omsf D' ~n vers, l\1:ary Ann Duncan, and Gma I' cini aria she presented two num- teat J er sons 0 r. o-Mims are all mem.bers of the beau- bers gracefully full of wit-Ver- H,

1·5r.)a. me b f. th · Cl .

1 t ' t · , t' . e m er o e assrca Y cour . gr~ Thompson s set mg _of a poem I Association of the Mid-west and

Wake Forest Sponsors (sw) by G:rtrude. Stem and at South (president, 1937,.38), the subtle musrcal satire masquerad- British Class· 1 A . t"· th Wake Forest sponsors are: Mar- · "th' th t. · f "L rca ssoc1a un, e

Dr. Poteat is a musician, a high­ly-regarded organist who holds the distinction of being one of the few men living who can play Wagner on the organ and make him sound like Wagner. He has been an outspoken protagonil?t for the progressive forces which are attempting to raise the level of music used in the South's church services. His lecture in Church Music has electrified more than . one audience. Many people, he

rng WI m e s rams 0 ong, American Phil 1 a· 1 A · t· tha Sink Koontz, of Greensboro, L Acr " o o,Lca ssoc1a 10n. with Horace R. Kornegay, Presi- ong ,o. He has been executive councilor WANTED dent Of Student Body·, Polly Hen- There are those who ar~ prone I of Kappa Alpha fraternity and

to compare the art of M1ss Ste- . . • drix, of Raleigh, with Glenn b , f. ld 'th th d'ff t typ rs a member of Om1ron Delta Kap- Apartment for Ex-GI and Wife

V. 'd t f St d t er s ,re WI e I eren e pa and Phi Beta Kappa. He ·was See DWIGHT CLARK Body·, Mary Ann Plumbo, of b t \" t At M B b ' Brown, rce-presl en o u en of work done by th_e somewh~t I president of the LL"terary and Hr's-~

more ro us 'v a~nerran s ars 1n torical Society of North Carolina r. ar ee s

Northfield, New Jersey, with Joe an attempt to belittle. W~en one 1 ~·n~;1;9;4;4;. ;;;A~;;;t;h;i;r;t;-2t;hi;·r;d;;;d~e~r;e~;;~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;.;~~ Plumbo, Secretary of Student remembers that "star drffereth I Y g e Body. from star in glory"-not only on'

Thelma Hedgpeth of Fairmont, the Milky Way but on the concert I Special Offer for Wake Forest Students with Douglas Mcintyre, Treasurer stage-he will realize that indi-of Student Body; Betty Williams, vidual artists must be judged by 1 C L I P T H I S C 0 U P 0 N of Charlotte, with Kermit Cald- the standards of the art they at­well, President of Senior Class. tempt. By that criterion, Miss

Mary Lee Thompson, of Chapel Steber presented an excellent re­Hill with Larry L. Williams, Pres- cita1 Monday, and performed it ide~t of Student Bar Association; well. Mrs. Hiram Ward, of Wake Forest ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiii-;;;i,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ with Hiram Ward, President of A

Pan-Hellenic Council; Myrt Davis, of Tabor City, with Elwood Orr, President of Baptist Student Un­ion.

Emily McMillan ,of Wilmington, with Bynum Shaw, editor of OLD

1 GOLD AND BLACK; Carolyn Tv,;iggs, of Raleigh with Tommy Stapleton, Student Legislature; Mrs. Harry Clark, of Wake Forest with Harry Clark, co-captain of \Vake Forest football team; and Mrs. Ed Royston, of Wake Forest, ·with Ed Royston, co-captain of I Wake Forest f~otball team.

ONE DAY SERVICE

Kodak Finishing 6 or 8 Exposure Rolls ...... 25c 12 Exposure Rolls -··········· 35c 16 Exposure Rolls ............ 45c · Extra Prints ...................... 3c

Envelopes Furnished

Skyline Photo Service

Winston-Salem, N. C.

For Leadership In

QUALITY DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, GIFTS

PROMPT, EFFICIENT WATCH REPAIR SERVICE

It's

BOSSE JEWELERS 107 Fayetteville St. Raleigh

Genuine 8"x10"" Silvertone Portrait - Reg. $5.00 FOR ONLY $2. Choice of 4 Glamour Poses.

Special Hollywood Lighting THIS COUPON EFFECTIVE THROUGH NOV. 7

All Work Guaranteed

REMBRANDT STUDIO Only One to Customer Open 10 A. M. to 6 P. M.

W. H. EVANS, Manager Under New Management and Ownership

RALEIGH, N. C.

W. Martin St. Phone 2-257 4

WELCOME ALUMNI ! HELP CHEER THOSE DEACS ON

TO VICTORY!

We will be open after the game

for emergency repairs and service

Miller Motor Co. Phone 2-581

WAKE FOREST, N. C.

_If the Deacons can come through win the Southern · Conference w1th an encore .to the 19 to 7 vic- 'championship. Win or lose the tory ~ver the highly touted North game has its importance in the· Carolma ':r:::X Heels, they can standinE:s of the conference. break the Jinx.

Fred Folger of Mount Airy has led the Blue Devils from his tailback . position with his spec­tacular running and passing. The speed.ster took over the tailback spot when George Clark was forced ·out of action by injuries. Folger paved the way in the vic­tory over Maryland last Satur-day. ~l·

Paul Stephanz has _ performed exceptionally at the fullback spot and has seen much action this season. John Montgomery ope­rates from the blocking back po­sition, and fig'ures in the new RALEIGH

PASSENGERS ·RELY ON .COCA-COLA AND

TRAVEL REFRESHED

PLEASE return empty bottles promptly

BOTTlED UNDER AUTHORJTV OP THE COCA·COLA C0/0\PANY B~ Capital Coca-Cola Bottling Co:, Inc. Raleigh, N. C.

@ 1947. The Coca·Cola Company

·I

I.

,,

s s

A

A

A

Tl

A

.I

-

Page 3: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

,.

,.

' ·:.:. (,".,, "-<' •• -:

Ftid~y,: Octo~·· 24,.1947 · :..._ ____ _

Forest · and

C:oUe11iate theatres

Saturday-.:at COLLEGIATE­Shows 7: 15 & 9:00

Humphrey Bogart, Laureri Bacall ''DARK PASSAGE"

Saturday- , Shows Continuous i-to Il

Adm. Child, 14c; Adult Mat., 30c; Night'40c '

Jon Hall, Victor McLaglen "MICffiGAN KID''

Short and Serial

Sunday-Shows: Mat. 2:00, 3:45; N:ight 9 . Adm.: Child 14(); Adult 40c;

. , All Shows · Ruth Warrick, Walter Brennan

''DRIFTWOOD'' .

Monday & Tuesday-Shows: Mat. 3: 15; Night 7: 15 & 9 Adm. Child, 14c; Adult Mat., 30c;

· Night 40c · B~bara Stanwyck, David. Niven

"THE OTHER LOVE"

News · ~--------~ -----= Mon. & Tues. - at COLLEGIATE

Shows: 3:15, 7:00, 9:00· Adm. Child, 14c; Adu~t Mat., 30c;

Night 40c Larry Parks, Ev~lyn K,eyes ''THE JOLSON STORY"

Pictured above are the sponsors for the Pan-Hellenic Council's Annual Homecoming Dance. They are, top row, left to right: Laura Ha;rvey, Marion Gaither, Patricia Paton, Mary Plumbo, and.Polly Hendrix; Second row: Mrs. Fred D. Turnage, Virginia Dickens, ·Mrs. William D. Walters, Sue Jarvis, and Lillie Turner; third row: Thelma Jeffreys, 'Nell Sw~in, Judy De Hart, Dorothy Laws and Nancy Harris; fourth row: Marie Whitman, Mary Allen Warren, Vivian F. Snuggs, Mildred Bumgarner, and Lou Lane. Spronsors not pictured are Emma Lou Taylor and Frances Swain.

Wednesday-Shows: 3:15, 7: 15 & 9: oo

Adm. 'Child, 14c; Adult Mat,, 30c; N{ght 40c

Gene Autry, in "S.ADDLE PALS"

Short & Serial

Open 7 A.M. Close 8 :3p P.M.

Dick Frye's f .

Resturant Wed. & Thurs.-at COLLEGIATE ~~~~~~~~~~~~

Shows: 3: 15, 7: 15 & 9 Adm. Child, 14c; Adult Mat., 30c;

Night 40c Bette· Davis, Humphrey Bogart

"MARKED WOMAN"

Thursday & Friday- , · · Shows: 3:15, 7:00 & 9:00

Adm. Child, 14c; Adult Mat., 30c; Night 40c

. Rex Harrison,, Maureen O'Hara "FOXES OF HARROW''

.-.. Ne,ws

A Hearty Welcome

to all Alumni

and Visitors

From

JON.ES HARDWARE

Fayetteville St. Raleigh •

1st Store on Fayetteville St.

For Your

Recordings (Popular, Jazz and Classical) .

School Supplies (Lamps, Stationery, Pens

and Pencils)

Greeting Cards­(for all occasions)

James Eo Thiem 105 Fayetteville St.

Dial 22913 Raleigh, N. C.

Welcome Back Alumni

Best of Luck

Deacons

FOR YOUR

HABERDASHER NEEDS Visit

Outfitters jOT.

Men and Boys

RALEIGH, N.C.

Our Atmosphere Is Good-Our Service Is Better-

Our Food Is Superb· For Good Chicken, Steaks, Chops, Bar-B-Q, Oysters

and Sandwiches - Visit

WAKE FOREST INN 1 Mile North of Wake Forest on U. S. No. 1

"COOKED AS YOU LIKE IT"

HARPER'S · SHOE SHOP Lo,atf!d. 1 Blo'k Behind ·Bank

TO SAVE ON THAT LAUNDRY EXPENSE·

visit

WAKE FOREST AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY 9 Lbs.-40c

B. & E. ClEANERS Successors to Mtlrray ·

Alterations - Repairs - Dyeing

PHONE 3072

. For Pick-Up and Delivery Service by Six Campus Representative~

.A-ARROW SHIR.TSI

••• with, the famous usuSSEX" collar Designed for men who enjoy a. change to a. widespread collar. .

· Suasex looks especially well :with an. krow tie made u,B in a smooth Windsor knot. ··-·- , -'-- ..

Come in and see us for all Arrow products. ..

--.----;;:r-;.-:--. -.. ~ .... ' ..,..-- ..

---ARROW SHIRTs·-----'

Page Three

WIL:J{INSON CLEANERS . Opposite R. R. Underpass Phone 375-1

1924 . Wake Forest, N. C.

"G. I. TRAINING CENTER" All Modern Equipment - Experienced Perso:r;mel

I SEE BILL RUCKER OR BOB BRYANT FOR EXCELLENT DELIVERY SERVICE

· Will gladly serve you in any capacity and greatly appreciate same.

1947

STOP LOOK READ· Buy Direct lrom Your Florist

and Save 25 Percent

WAKE FOREST · FLORIST OPPOSITE HUNTER DORM

Good Luck.

DEACONS! Clip this a~d Keep Score at the game.

Wake Forest I I Duke o 1-o I o 0

WAKE FOREST PRESS '

Upstairs Over Shorty's

Telephone 203-6 Wake Fores,t

• • - - • • • ·- ••-~•..-J!-•-11!11-•~~-~--· ....... •---•~ • e,;..e • • I

I

I

I

I

I

I I

I

·I I

I

•• I

'I '• "I '' ; I .. • I 'I ·. I d II ,, 'I it ' I ·t I

·' .. I

I

I ·I I

I ' I

. I

'I

: I I I

•• I ,• 'I it II . I ,, .I ., ; .. il I

I

I

I I I

I , I 'I I' •• ! •. .I ,, • I

.. I I I

'tll•

'I . ; . ~

·- ·, .. ' . ~_. I

: .. ~:~.!.:: .. .- ....... · ,•

'FOr 1pot11 or for those / ple~sanl leisure mo•

. ~-: . rments, "BoJany" !!rand '.l~~.,_ - t:; • ....._ I .

/fo.A. 8lacka offer- -exJta spoli~ ::,·· ·wear value.:.featuring su.~,

. •"f perb "Botany!' Brand flannel•,

gabard1ne1 and checked worstedi.

r• ~· ,,

, . '. ·' ••• • • ~·I ,I •• •• • •• •• 'I I •• ,, I

• !-.. , • '" •• r-1 I

·'· • .. ' I t ·: • t

t 1•1 • .. , • "' • " •• • ,, • , . I •• I ,, .... ~· I ~I 'i(i

.~! li

·~r il I •• ~l

Jtel the fafnlc and You'ILfeeUhe :Difference

ll : *13-::0 UP II : B. & S. DEPT. STORE 1: I ~ ..

·~ WAKE FOREST, N •. C. I I ; I . -•Reg, 0. S. Pat. Off. ' I • • • • •. • • --·-•-•;:"'~•-'l!!'"'•..;.e..::.•"'-•-•-•~•~•-=•=•.

Page 4: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

Page Four Old Gold· and Black Friday, Oe~ber ·24~ 1947.

• ... • .,. .. ¥

Old Gold and Black Founded January 15, 1916, as the offlchtl ~tu·

dent newspaper of "'ake Forest College. Put>lislwd wecl5IY during the school ~·ear except during e"am· lnattnn periods and holidays as directed l>y the "'ake Forest Publications Boat·d.

I., ... ;~;~~:~~~~~.~~;~;~:~:;; Th: .~~.ve~ ~ into something of importance wbeh religious By GeoTge Mallonee 1 Mar~el Humber, William Jones, The -v1llage will be fat tomor \ KAPPA SIGMA I Mitchell King, Forrest Lancaster, row. She couldn't wear a: girdle t:>·num l:;llaW ........ , • • • • • • • • .. • • • Editor

.Jesse Gla:;gow ............ Associate Editor Don Paschal ...•..•.•.••.•.•...• Art \Vot·l< Dick Harris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PllotogTaJJher E:llitot·ial staff: Jim Hawkins, Harold T. P.

leaders. of divergent faiths meet here Sunday. The Kappa Sig's concluded one _James Lee, Bland Lewis, ·Giles ~ven if she had one. Homecom This is not something which the serious stu- of the most successful rushing sea- Lewis, Raymond Stone, ·Robert ~ng crow~s always make h7r bu}ge

Hayes, H. Lcldun Kil"l~. George :,\[a!lonec, Samford :\lartin, Lucy Hawiings, 13ill Hol.Jbins, Jimmy She!· t~>n. Tonmw Swpicton. E:. :\IcPaniel \\"nnl, Bol> Grogan, Carol Oi<lham, Lamar Caudle, Herb Pas­chal, Clart:!nt·e Lune.

Hill Bethune • • • • . . . • . . . . . . • • Sports Editor Sports Staff: Dave Clark. Tommy Cr"ecl, John­

ny Dillon. :\Iil<e Seit2. \\'ill Eschen. Dick \Yillinms ••.•.•••.• Dusiness l\lanag~r Johnny G~trdncr .••••• Asst. Bus. 1\lanag-er Carlyle ;:uorris ...•...• Circulation l\Ianag<:r Business Staff: Paula Jean Uui..,, .Jimmie Dur-

sons in many years on Monday, Townsend, Roy Tuck William In the middle, and sometrmes on dent can afford to overlook. Anyone who bas night when thirteen freshmen 1 Wiggs, Alger Willis a~d Charles the sides: But she enjoys it. Ai any interest whatsoever in the field of rel!gion were pledgeq.. These men, in\Wrenn. A warm welcome is ex- ter all, it happens· only once a

addition to eleven upperclassmen tended t9 all. The Homecoming year. · . will do well to be on hand. · who were pledged the previous issue of the Sig Ep Review· Saying hello to an old grad is

None, whatever his belief, should be so os week, make a total of 24 men for has· been distributed to the alumni the easiest social duty in the - Kappa Sigma this year. The men and. actives. Plans ·are all com- world; for he's all smiles, we're

trich-like as to close his eyes and ears to the pledged were: Buck Harris, How-, pleted .for Homecoming and the all smiles, and the campus itself fact that there are other faiths besides his own, ard Helms, Carl Hubbard Tom decoration committee is hard at chuckles through the rustle of a faiths held by persons who are just as sincere in Gibson, Buddy Ho~ding, Bud Lail, work. All Sig Eps wish Brother magnolia and the "swish-sway• ris, Charlotte Duling, Eliznbelh Gertner, Jo Ann

llorgan, Paul Moyle, Tim \Yrenn All etlitorial matter should be addressed to the

etlitor, P. 0. Dox 12S. 'Vnke Forest, N. C. All business matter should be nddressed to the busine,;s manager, same addt·ess. Subscription rate: $2.00 per year.

Phone 30-t-6. !<'or important news on Thursday phone 2561, Theo. Davis Sons, Zebulon. N. C.

Larry Wright, Robert Walker, Al Hines a speedy recovery from walk of the excited Coeds. their thinking as he. It is important to him, Bob Pope, Max Stroupe, Bill Un- the injuries of his right hand. Con- . That's the picture before the then, that he exa!Iline these other doctrines, com- derwood, Harold Talton Ed Tins- gratulations to brother John b1g game. The score usually pare them with. his own, and determine exactly ley, Frank ~ukoski, .Tr.,.. Frank-Gardner for pinning up Bennie paint~ t~~ picture after the _game

Holding, Frank. Roberts, Miller 1 McGougan, Meredith College. The And 1f 1t s a Wake Forest victory why he holds the views he considers correct. Ingram, Al McCotter, Bob Mims, Sig Eps won their second with the faces which were smiles be

Entered as second class mail mattet· January 22, Hll6, at the post office at \Vake Forest; Xorth Carolina. under the act of :i\larch 3. 1S7ll.

).lember 'Associated Collegiate Press ::\I ember N. C. Colle~iate Press

Chances are this meeting may turn out to Jimmy Street, Jack Oliyer, Curry the Kappa Alphas. . come almost hilarious laughter b r h 1 d" b" 1 I Mebane, Linsey Ferguson, Jack I ALPHA SIGMA PHI and shouts and old heels kicked

e s Jg t Y Jstur mg to some peop e. t may Bullard. Uuder the expert super- The Alpha Sigs wish to wei- up by young spirits. even shake the views of some. If that be true, vision of ~ill Castellaw the work come th'e nineteen new pledges But there ~ave been other ~ic then the meeting will have b,ad a very stimulat- ?f r~m.odellng the chapter rooms into the fraternity. The football tures. ·The kmd that were pamt ing effect, because no beiief which cannot stand IS gammg headv:ay on the Friday' team is still holding its own; hav- ed QY a Wake Forest defeat. :What

Represented for national ad,·ertising by Nation­al Advertising Services, Inc., .College Publishers Hepresentntlves, 420 Madison Ave., N'ew York. N. Y., Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles. San Francisco.

*-·L ~ o

Homecomins, 1947

a~ternoon deadline. The Kappa . ing received no . defeats. Sigma dusty sc;enes they were. Faces the test of comparison deserves to be adhered to S1gs are expecting over two hun-1 Pi played an equal game, how- looked mto th~ ground. Mouths

We do not advocate that Wake Forest stu- dred guests on Sa~rday and the ever, on Wednesday, 'leaving the w~re drawn tight and }ips were dents go to this gathering with the belief that greatest Homecommg Day in the score at 6-6. The Alpha Sigs are thm. _Some. actually cried. Some

history of Delta Omega. plaaning an· Alumni Supper in were msensxble. A?d some just· they are going to be proselyted ~to any other be- SIGMA PI the near future and a royal' time shuffle~ towar?- therr car! or no

ltl the many years that have passed since

this school opened in 1834, thousands of men lief. But we do insist that they attend sympa- Eleven men were accepted as is expected. At present however where In particular, With the

1 d t l ' ' crowd •

theticall P e ge_s a a ceremony ast Mon-. no definite plans have been made. . · ' y. day rught. These men were Hu-1 The fraternity won second place Silence was the order. Rever

Actually there should be little to disturb bert Humphrey, Ronald Densmore , on the honor roll for last year ent sadness 'was the contagious even the mind of the most impression abe per- I. G. Turnage, Ralph Cerrato, Mul~ i with an average of 1.36. • decorum of the old grads as they

lins Tanner, Bill Settle,. "Skip". , . _ KAPPA ALPHA . bumped shoulders and mumbled son. The program bas been planned along lines Rogers, Ben Elliot, L. v. High, A.\ The KA's are expecting a large pardons :'lnd fell prostrate· under

over to the Great Homecoming. But many hun- which need not lead to anything controversial; D. Barber, and -Don Kohler. Un- number o:f alumni to visit the the, steermg_ wheels of their cars dreds will be back at Wake Forest this year,.some its topic, Interfaith Good Will, is certainly a der the coaching of Bob Pate and chapter over the weekend. New I

11 never forget a scene I wit-

have entered its halls, stayed for four, five, six,

eight years and left, some with degrees, some

without. Scores of those alumni have passed

. . . AI Saleeby, the' Sigma Pi football ·couches and card tables have been nessed la.st year after! the State for the first time, some for the last, and others timely one. If people 0~ rehgiOn cannot get along team has played successfully, de- secured and the chapter room is College VIctory over us. The gen

together there is little hope for nations to rec- feating Kap_pa Sig 6-0, and play- in top condition. Monday night tleman ;1nust. have been 70 years oncile their differences. i~g the. Delta Sigs ~nd the Alpha the Kappa Alpha's ple.dged nine- o_ld. His barr must have· been' for one of a number of annual visits."

Let us attend the mJeting with an unpreJ·u Slgs to a scoreless tie. A hallowe-. teen men. The list consists of: light gray before .the game. It - en party has been planned for l Herbert Paschal, . Charlie Wil- ~as completely white when I saw

ing there is a certain amount of nostalgic sad- diced mind and show our good will by giving the Friday night to start off the,week-: Iiams, Paul Williams, Dan Denton, !lim. . . . ness, and on the part of those coming back to visiting clergymen a cordial welco1ne. Perhaps end. The party is to be held iri Ray Jones, .rrr., fRichar~ Cl;ark, He was sltting ~n the runnmg the fraterluty chapter room. Fin- I Sterling Gates Eugene Hooks board of a car which had appar

In all the bustle and activity of Homecom-

old Alma Mater, a tender wistfulness. These are we can send them away with the feeling that ishing touche~ have been put on Lynn Holcomb~, Henry Cooper: ently been washed and po~~~d the halls that echo the silent footsteps of ·de- Wake Forest, at least, is a place where any man the Home~ommg decorations, 'un- Bobby Black, Dave Clark, Don· be:(or~, he left.. home for the big

is admired for the strength of his convictions. der the direction of Brother Les- Early, George Gentry, John York, g~rpe. It w~s dusty and gray parted students as they trudged fearfully to ter Stewart, and Sigma Pi plans Don Burden, ·Paul Bennett, Fred when. I saw 1t. You could tell

to make a . good showing to all Harrison and Ed Griffin. Friday that lt h3d sparkled before the the returning alumni. night the ·chapter will have a' game.

SIGMA PHI EPSILON · dance at the Tar Heel Club to T~e o~d grad was holding his Max Nance, Asheboro· Don I start off Homecoming There will hat ll1 his hands. It looked new

Latin, to government, to physics, to Chaucer.

These are the walls that enclosed their Thanks8ivin8 Holiday OLD GOLD AND BLACK backs the Student Phelps, Creswell; John Graeber, be open hou~e all d~y Saturday, It had pr?bably been bought for

C "I • • d . . - Chi~a Grove, and Bill Hobbs, ! followed by a buffet supper at the H?mecommg: Hundreds ~f s~uf ounc1 m tts ects1on to request of the adminis Smithfield, were formally initiat-l community house. Saturday night fling. feet thi'ew. ~ust on 1t with

tration a Thanksgiving Holiday. ed into the. fraternity Monday' the brothers and new pledges will out even apo~ogu:mg. But the

laughter, their budding ambitions, their bull ses-

sions, their prayers.

grounds that still yield red clay in the winter, At present there is none specified in the night. and now proudly wear the journey to Raleigh for the Home- o:d fan contmue_d to_ turn it

C 11 , . Sig Ep Heart. The pledge oath coming dance. We extend a cor- sow y between hls fmgers and

o ege catalogue; not even Thanksgiving day was administered Monday night· dial welcome to the alumni this lo?k _fo:r; an . answer somewhere itself has been designated as free time for the to sixteen new men: Doyle Bed- weekend. Everyone is anxious to within.lts bnm.

These are the grounds that they loved, the

~hat bear the woeful mark of autumn's passing,

but that blossom forth in the spring with more

beauty and more meaning than any other place

ln the world ..

students. , sole, Luke Eller, William Foster, see them again. . . He neyer ~ooked up. Not once • . -. . did he lift his face from. the dust. We cannot understand why no provision He coughed a couple of times and

was made for this obviously important time of Exodus of Fat Bob Listed Amon -o reached for his handkerchief and h W D blew his /nose slowly and medi-That is a lot to come back to, and today and

tomorrow the sons of Wake Forest will be com­

ing back to pay her homage. Perhaps after all

t e year. hile it may be argued that a holiday M L H Ch · tatively. You can blow your nose woud disrupt classes for days both before and any ate OffieCOffiing . anses like that after you've lost to State after Thanksgiving if one were grantedf it is College. But he never looked up. ·u I couldn't help but wonder

they will be coming back not so much for build- stl true that there are students who will go By Harold Hayes students and grads know, tentative where his family was. Surely he home to be with their families, re-gardless of Homecoming. All the boys are plans were being laid for its con- wasn't alone on a day like that. whether the college sanctions their absences or coming back. All the girls are struction back during the admin- Yet, at that particular time on . ings, or people or for any single thing. Mainly

they will be coming back to join once more in

the spirit of Wake Forest.

The student body has a great responsibility

~n this Homecoming, one handed down from

generations of students past. It will be our

duty to prove to the alumni that they are still

just as much a part of this college as we are, that

this soil, that this place, that this Wake Forest, is theirs, and that t};ley are Wake Forest's.

Speak to them when you pass, for there is -no better way to make a person feel at home than a friendly word of welcome.

Freshman Election There has never been a more extensiv,@ po­

litical campaign staged here than the one just waged by the twenty-two candidates for three freshman class offices. OLD GOLD AND BLACK commends the students responsible for the interest thus aroused. Even though these are comparatively insignificant offices, it shows that some freshmen are interested in school politics.

This is, of course, one road to good student ~overnment: ·In the past many candidates dis­·tinctly qualified for positions refuser;l. to cam­paign and were resultantly defeated.

Another side to the story, however, is dis­heartening. After the most propagandized elec­·tion in school history only 188 freshmen turned out to cast their votes. 188 out of a class of over

500.

coming down. All the decorations istration of Dr. Taylor, and to- that particular Saturday afternoon will be up. All the tickets' will day, the dreams of those build- all Wake Forest men were alone, not.

It seems to us that Thanksgiving is a time when students should go home, too. Even though no recognition was given the old ~ustom in the col!ege schedule, :fhanksgiving remains in the hearts of Americans a family tradition that is as important as any American belief. One might say that the family circle is happiest at the au­tumn festival, and that the gathering of children in the home contributes a great deal toward re­taining the unity and entity of this most basic of social groups.

be sold out. Joy will abound. ers have materialized. even in the milling crowds. How unlike the gay carefree For where there was once At first I thought I was seeing days of old will this homecoming nothing but magnolia trees and things. The old man's lips· began be, the days that went out with air molecules now stands a state- to quiver. And then he blew his the Little Apple, and JapaJ;J,ese- ly, architectural masterpiece. (It nose again and casually brushed made toys. is rumop~d, however, th~t a ;new the handkerchief across his eyes.

For the sake of returning alum- device will be installed in the The dust, surely it was only the ni, it seems fitting to mention a doors. This device an electric dust, irritated his ·eyes.

Many other colleges are allowing students to go home; some of them convened almost two weeks later than Wake Forest and many of them will be dismissed in the spring at about the sa:me time. Perhaps that is just indicative of the fact that Wake Forest students are. getting a better education than the graduates of other schools We don't know.

We do ask the administration, however, to give serious consider~tion to the plea of the stu­dent council. Most students seem to want to go home.

Telephone Service For years parents of Wake Forest students

have lived in dread of having to locate their sons or daughters in an emergency. This dread is not ill-founded, for locating anyone in Wake Forest by telephone is a long, Involved process with suc­cess never guaranteed. Even today the quick­est, and surest, way to reach a local student is to write a letter.

few of the highlights of the four photo cell, will co'unt the stu- · Very soon his lips began to year transition from ante-bellum\ dents as they go in. If the elec- Il\ove. He was-talking to him­to post-bellum. tric·\.aves are broken by anyone self. He had come a long way

Perhaps the most appalling in-' I going out before 10: 30, an alarm -perhaps from the western part cident of ~oteworthy event vias will ring, the fire horn will of the State. His heart and even the graduation of Fat Bob Wilson. blow, and seventeen monitors his aging voice had been filled W~lson, known to il::ttimates as and the Student Council will be on with the. old college songs and Ramsey Quagmire, one-time Wake hand to apprehend the dirty memories on the drive down· tO Forest representative to the Inter- sneak.) "dear old- wake Forest." American Youth Conference at Ca- And then the coeds came. For Some sons love Wake -·Forest racas, Vene:z:uela, was almost a each man who was called away to more than others. That son, se permanent fixture at Wake Forest. answer his country's call ~0 arms, venty ·and white and sad, loved Every man who has passed· under a coed was registered to take his Wake Forest enough to sit in the these magnolia trees in the last place. Slowly at first and then with the old collage songs and seventeen years has known Fat like a large body o'f ethereal dust and turn his hat in his hand Bob. But like death, graduation fairies, they descended and and wipe his eyes with his hand is one· of those things we must brought with them the companion- kerchief and talk enough courage all face eventually. Wilson, a ship and beauty for which every into himself ·to drive home in the fre~hman in 1930, !aced it last man thirsted. The campus chang- night. sprmg, and now, he 1s gone, gone, er over night. Perhaps he was old-fashioned. gone. · Curtains, venetian blinds and Maybe he was too sentimental for

But to the lighter side! Wake potted petunias adorned the win- a day and a wofld which sneers Forest has a new chapel. As most - See EXODUS, Page 7 _ at. sentiment. But he was loyal;

Your Student Council ·CONCERTS

The Sunday School ge~eral as- The Student Council passed a sembly worship will be a discus- resolutiQn this week calling for a sion of mission work in various petition to be sent to the collegels areas of North Carolina. Board of Trustees asking that an

• * * appropriation be made to span-The BTU worship service will sor a series of lectures and con­

be several tableaux on "Letters certs on the campus during the from Missionaries." next 'school year. Gene Medlin

* * * and Kyle Yates, senior members

for he was there, and he saw, and he felt the results enough to sit in the dust. ,

My greatest wish today is this­that no Wake Forest men or wom­en, old or young, will have to sit in the dust this afternoon.

Beat Dook!

This is not a road to good student govern­ment. If men and women cannot learn while they are in college to exercise their franchise it is improbable that they will learn afterward.

In the minds of' many ·who did no't ballot there is a belief that such child's play as fresh­man class elections is too minor to bother with. That is certainly not true. Wh~ever contends that it is would be the man who claims that gun­nery practice does the navy no good.

We urge that in the ,future students review the candidates listed, turn out to the polls and vote. Only in that way will Wake Forest student government lie 'trt'l.ly' r!ptt:s~ntative.

This week the Student Council took a step in the right direction toward allevi.ating this situation. The Council is petitioning the college to installation of a private telephone exchange. The proposed exchange would provide tele­phones in all dormitory sections and other build­ings on the campus frequented by students.

The campus newspaper lends its support to this recommendation and eagerly awaits the day when a student may 'receive a long distance tele­phone call without being the object of a ca~pus­wide manhunt.

Dr. W. R. Cullom, professor o:f the council, were appointed to emeritus of the Department of Re- prepare the petition. ligion, will speak at the. meeting TELEPHONES -of the Cullom ,Ministerial Confer- The Council passed another mo­ence next Tuesday evening in the tion calling for a "petition to be Little Chapel at 7: 15. sent to the college requesting that

• • • a separate telephone exchange be The Christian Service Group installed for use in all buildings

will hold a pJcnic at 5:30 p. m. on the campus. The inadequacy Thursday, October 30. All who of the present communication sys­plan to attend should see Irene tem was pointed out by memb~s Flowers, Ruby Lippard, Frances of the council and the motion Carter, or Ruoy Flo'w~s by Octo- passed without a dissent.iilg vote.

To· the gentleman about whom I have just endeavored to write-­Sir, if we win and if you happen to read this and remember that dusty Saturday afternoon last Fall, you have a most cordial in­vitation to· meet me at Gate 1 on the Wake Forest side from where I shallt gladly try to ride you on my back to Gore Gymna­sium in what, I believe, would be a very appropriate victory race for both of us. I'll recognize you.

LOST Beige raincoat lost in Stu­

dent Center. Please return to Iris Hobgood, care Old Gold and Black office.

ber 26. . / - See COUNCIL, Page 5 -

.•.

..

Page 5: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

·•'

..

Fridat,. O.ctober ·24, 1~.41 Old Gold. and Black · Page Five

ShaPps &Flats~ l Editor · stop sign shows. ·

Old Gold and Black. A $25.00 fine will be drawn by B Disc Jockey Dear. Sir: . any one who speeds more than 35

Y It IS requested.,that your paper MPH in a residential section, 20 Whether it's raining in the tra- publish the follo,wing traffic reg- MPH in the business section. A

ditional Wake Forest style or • ulations for Wake Forest. We be- $25.00 fine will be imposed on whether there's a beautiful'sunset, lieve this service will help the any one who drives an automo­there will always be the magno- . students as well as the Police De- bile at such a slow speed as ·to lias the :football heroes and mu- partment. impede or block normal and rea­sic 'for the Wake Forester. It is not our desire to issue sonable movement of traffic, ex·-

No doubt as you have wander- traffic tickets for violations, and cept when reduced speed is neces­ed across the campus in the early we feel that this noj;ice Will help sary for safe operation. ·evening with your-"favo~:ite" you put a s:op to infringements of the In school zones during the have heard music drifting down regulations. hours preceding ·and following from the tower of Wait Hall. This As you know, Wake Forest is the dismissal of schools, speed daily event has come to be an in- over cro:vded with . people and should ~e r~duced to _20 MPH. A stitution within itself for all the automobiles and the only solu- $25.00 fme Is the penalty for run"" students. After a long and hard tion to .the traffic problems is for ning through a traffic light when. collegiate day of tests, labs,· or every driver to do right and it is RED. whatnot there's nothing more re- obey these laws; by doing so, it A $1.00 fine will be imposed laxing than to find this particu- will show courtesy and every one for the violation of any of the lar spot under the favorite mag- concerned will appreciate this co- following traffic , regulations, if nolia. and listen to the music that operatiol!.. the violator reports to the Traffic would inspire even Hoagy Car- An towns in North Carolina have Bureau within 48 hours. . michael. . . tr~c _laws and they are enfo1:c- 1. Do not park too far from

These programs each evemng re- ed; It .Is ~Y duty and the, duties curb; quire no tickets; there are no of the off1cers .under me to en- . buses for. the coeds to miss - force the traffic laws for ,Wake. • .2. Do not .park on the_ left in fact it's all yours for just a Forest. I am .calling on you to Side of the street. willing ear. siJ.ppoz:i; me in this matter. . 3. Do not park too close ,to

Next week you will have the I~ the future, a warrant Will the comer. opportunity. of hearing the follow- be Issued for t~e person who gets

4 Do t k. f" .

ing selections: · a traffic ticket and fails to re- • no par at Ire by-Sunday October 26: 4-6 p. m. port to the Traffic Bureau ~ith- drant. , Bach BranderbeTg Concerto No. in 48 hours. · 5. Do not park on ''parking

-. 2· Liszt ConceTto No. 1 in E Fl.a.t A $10.00 fine or ten· days in lines." Ma30T; .' Rachmaninoff,· Rapsodje jail will be. administa:ed to any 6. Do not block driveways. on a Theme of Paganini; Beetho- one who vwlates section 20-158 7. Do not block traffic . vens Symphcmy.No. 3 "Eroicc:; se- Mo~or. Ne.!llcle. La'Ys .o:f N. C. 8. Do not ·double park: lections by st. Luke Chorister; w~ch forb~ds_ tlie failure to stop 9. Do not park parall I. and a recital on Donald Pfohl at mtersecbons where• an octagon angle a k' e In an

p r mg zone.

11. Do not park in emergen­cy area.

12., Do not 'park in a load­ing zone from 6 A M. to 6 P. M. .

13. Do not park where ~'No Parking Signs".are marked on the streets. .. • 14. Do not park on curves.

giving. The council had receiv­ed a large number ·of requests from students asking that such action be taken.

CHEATING One. Wake Forest ·student, a

freshman, was placed on proba­~ion . after being found guilty of violat,ng the honor code. The .student plead guilty to cheating on a religion quiz which was giv­en last week.

council. ·Wood will be charged with seeing that the sound equip­ment is kept in good condition and available for ·use. It is to be stored 'in the BSU's mimeograph room.

Jtzrk, Wamboogie tailback, once ran 109.8 yards for a touchdown.

Phone 3-1274

15. Do not park over three hours on White Street be:: tween Owens and Waite Sts. (Edwards Pharmacy to Post Office.) · · 16. Do not park on the North side of Jones Street.

P. A. SYSTEM

I Bill Wood, junior representative to the council, has been placed in charge of the public address sys-tem recently purchased by the

JACK 1 S TAILOR SHOP Thanking you for your kind co­

operation, and call on us for ser­vic~ at any time.

. '

Respectfully .yours, ·Thomas A. Jones

Chief of Police

COUNCIL (Continued from Page 4)

THANKSGIVING A third petition was authoriz­

ed, this one to be addressed to the college faculty requesting : three days vacation for Thanks-

GRESHAM RESTAURANT

"On The Lake" Between Wake Forest

· ancl Raleigh .. ~

Good Food at Reasonable Prices

. BUS STATION CAFE

Open 7:00 PLATE LUNCHES and

SANDWICHES J. W. FORT, P~oprietor.

\

WELCOME· BEAT

Repair and Remodel Fur Coats Repairing of All Kinds

330 S. Salisbury St. RALEIGH, N. C.

'

. -.. ~:::::::::=:: ALUMNI!

DUKE! For Whitman's ancl Gale1 s Amiirican

Custom Candies, Visit

Edward's -Pharmacy

. '

c~~~ay October 27i· 6:45-7:15 54 buckram albums in which to. 10.- Do not.park angle in a

p.m. ' . . keep '!he rec.~rds, a four~way in- ~~p~ar~~all~el~p~ar~k~m~g~zo~n~e~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·nukas Sorcerer's Appentlce; B1- dex file of composer, tttle, me-set Carmen Fanta.sie; Selections· dium and form," and a ·special 'by 'Fred Waring and his Glee Club. two-cabinet phonograph for in­

Tuesday, October 28: 6:45-7:15 door programs.

WELCOME . ALUMNI ! Button-up for Winter with our

Protective Fall Check-Up p. m. · ' · So one can easily see just how Gershwin; Selections from PoT- fortunate . we 'are in having such :

gy and Bess; Grofe, Grand Canyon facilities at our disposal. Why,' Suite, "Cloudburst" and Sunset"; don't you pause :at the. "well!'' Wagner, Evening Star. • next week and y~u will hear

Wednesday, October 29: 6:45- ,these things that you like most. '7:30 p. m. · · In the. event that your favorite

Ravel, Bolero; Wagner, Prel'lf-de doesn't come through, you are in-1 to Lohengrin; Tschaikowsky, Sym- vited i;o come by 205 Music-Re­phony No. 4 .in F Minor; Selec- ligion· Building and leave your re- · tions by Russian Imperial Singers. quests-if you have IDOthing. jn , Thursday, October 30: 6:45-7:45 mind particularly 1 you'll find it p. m. ' fascinating to check the ·Music

Brahms, .. Academic . .Festival Library and see just what a · Overture; Chopin,. Les Sylphi'des wealth Wagner, Chopin, and even

Ballet M'USic; Beethoven, Sympho- Gershwin have left us. Without ny No. 6 in F Major, "Pa.storat." further adieu I'll just say that I'm

Friday, October 31: 6: 45-7:'45 p. yours for syncopation and disso-m. nance from Da Capo Al Fin(!.

Schubert~ Uil.fi'iiished' Symp'fiOTCy, -::;;:~;;;:;;;;;:;;:~;;;:;;;;;:;;:~;;;:;;~~;;;:;;~ 1st Movement; Debussy, Prelude to Afternoon of a Faun; Mozart, Ein Kleine Nachtm'USik; Wagner,

. Seigfried's Rhine 'Journey, Magic Fire M'USic; Strauss, Tod und VerklaTUng.

S. W. Brewer & Son I The Music Department is able

to bring you these programs through the Carnegie Library and the Donald Pfohl Memorial set. Mr. Donald Pfohl preceded Prof. Mac as director of Music here at Wake Forest. After Mr. Pfohl's un-

Dealers in

FEEDS, SEEDS and

STAPLE GROCERIES ' I

WELCOME FRIENDS AND ALUMNI .

May the Deacons Win

. ~ e Are Rooting For You

SUPER MARKET Phone 266-1

Phone 269.,.1

WE DELIVER

Button up for COMFORT- heaters and winJ"er gear lubrican-ts

Button up for . POWEJt -·Texaco Gas

winter grade oil

Button up for SAFETY- Anti-freeze.- bat-

tery- tires and spark plugs

checked or replaced

Service Chevrolet Company timely passing away in 1940, his I family donated this set of electric ~~--:·:·~~::~~~~~::~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~c~~~~~ chimes and public address system • ., , . in the spring of 1941. Since that time recorded music has been the The Three Suns ~ '" I inspiTation for many a Phi Beta. ~~ fi~"- ~,, I ·

WAKE FOREST, N. C.

-reading down: { p!!JfP The record library was greatly Mony Dunn' ry ~ enlarged in the summer of 1942 ~ * when the Carnegie Corporation of ~e Dunn ff!J.~~ ~(} , jiM'~~t; . ;{ New York City presented the de- AI Nevins ~ partment with a set of over 650 records. With the?Je records was included a walnut cabinet with

yea~ deacons

·KILL',

DEM

DEBBILS

OH

you gals

you slay 1 em too

in

FOOTBALL

FASHIONS

from·

~

••• latest disk ~y The Three Suns for-RCA Victor

BACK in '25 everybody was humming 'bout that "Sleepy Time Gal" Now "Gal" is back in a new and wonderful

record. And here's another favorite with a great record: cool, mild,

flavorful Camel cigarettes~ ·More men and more women are smoking Camels than ever before.

Why? The answer is in your "T-Zone" (T for Taste and T for Throat).

Try Camels. Discover for yourself why, with smokers who have tried and compared, Camels are the "choice of experience"! lt. J. ReTZ:~olde Tobacco Co., Wlnatoo-Salem, N. a.

I lEARNED BY

EXPERIENCE THAT '

CAMELS SUIT ME BEST I

More peork .are s..tokiKg CAMELS tlca"' ever before!

Page 6: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

Page Six Old Gold and Black . ;Friday, October··24, 194'7 ·. ---

the BILLBOARD. ·l 'This Week' s·

Visitin~ ·Quarter back ' ..

By BILL BETHUNE

. . It's in bad taste we know, what with meatless Tuesday on the

menu once again, to admit our ignoran_ce of the world situation right in front of the alumni, but since last weeks parlay card left us with that K ration complex, chances are that our hungry look will pass us for patriots anyway. Any blow-by-blow account on· our part of the current bout between Uncle Sam and Uncle joe would be strictly third rate, while the mention of Engish problems only sets us to wondering why Amber coildn't have been born after the days of Jolly Cholly and helped out in the current coal short­age. Sad to relate, our inventory of international relations seldom goes beyond the specuation as to what Ben Hogan and the rest of the pros would give to have Bobby Locke back on the other side of the Atantic.

;, By JACK HORNER Sports Editor, Durham MoTning HeTald

W.hats Duke got? That question has been. worn out so many times this season

that it ought to be tossed into the ash can, but Bill Bethune qf OLD GOLD AND BLACK asks that we come forth with our two­bits worth o{ info on the Dukemen sin~e they run smack into highly-regarded Wake Forest in the Baptist stronghold this Sat­urday in a battle of the undefeated.

Well, here we go! The Duke team Col. Wallace Wade sends onto Groves Field

at Wake Forest Saturday is no great Blue Devil aggregation by any -stretcch of the' imagination.

However, trying as we are to remain humble in the learn­ed presence of the alumni, there is one thing that we might bring to light, feeling. sure that the tiny South African links champ would bear us out. Its hard to realize, living this close to Durham, buf the rest of the world generally regards· the average American as a pretty good Joe. He's tolerant toward dull profs, never wakes the wife after "working late" and he might, just to make the little girl feel good, ask the best look­ing brunette on the campus for a date now and then. Nice guy, you say. Well, so does Hassen Ben Homme. From Has­sen's canvas cottage in Arabia to the bon'Irie "belles" of Scot­land, and all stops in between, Joe really rates.

You just couldn't picture such an amiable person ,as Joe offer­ing any serious competition to the antics of Nero back in the bloodthirsty days of Rome, but the man ~ho payed the hottest fiddle in history would have had to have hocked half a dozen '"a­little-below-the-knees" togas for a six weeks course in calisthenics and a fire-siren to keep up with Joe when Saturday afternoon rolls around. There's something about a football game that changes our boy Joe, arid everyone else. into a different man.

Tomorrow is no exception to the rule. We know full well what nice, self-respecting folks our alumni are. Solid citizens in every sense of the word. Still we are aware of the fact that, like Joe, nothing would sUit them better than to see the Deacons tear the Blue Devils limb from limb. For two hours on the morrow prominent preachers, eminent educators,. doc­tor, lawyer and indian chief, in short anyone who proudly calls Wake Forest his alma mater, can go Nero one better and howl like th~ blazes for the Back and Gold. It's a great opportuni­ty to let your hair down. No real restraint ~hould be felt and the oldest alumnus can, if he f~~ls up to it, lend a hand to help the youngest freslunan tear up the concrete down in Groves Stadium.

Such is the spirit of this game calle.d football and such, we trust, are the sentiments of the alumni. Possibly they have seen or will see the Deacs play other ball games this season, but we want them to know that this is .their show. As it stands the tussle tomorrow will generate a lot of interest outside of Wake Forest, but even if it didn't we feel they'd be here just the same. Class reunions, pink teas/and the like are very much in kepeing with a homcoming spirit, but deep down we know that in spite of minor attractions, the alumni are really back to see the team BEAT DUKE! With that we say welcome home!

Quite a host of the nation's select fell from the upper crust of the class last Saturday. Vanderbilt, Yale, Minnesota, and N.C. State were among the many that had their feelings hurt but bad. Tomorrow, unless the big something happens, the railbirds will see one more undefeated club go the way of all flesh in Groves Stadium. Try as we might, we j~t can't help but feel that the game with Duke is the turning point in ,, our football fortunes. It seems to mark the great divide be­tween a record making year and ~ust another football season, and thus the tension mounts.

This year we feel that the Deacons have really rolled into high gear and along with the shift they regard the Dukes as just an­other ball club on a tough s·chedule. We'll go along witn you and admit that last year the Deacs didn't play their best brand· of ball over in Duke Stadium but this year the scene, and the. outcome, promises to be different. The "jinx" should take a one year vaca­tion and the Deacs a ball game on the morrow.

I Picture~ above is Nick Ognovich, Uniontown, Pennsylvania, Sen-ior, who will play his fourth and final game against Duke tomorrow. Nick, a two-time winner of the Jacobs Blocking Trophy, appears as one of the top contenders for the honor again this year.

Nick, The Blaster, Paces All Conference ·Blockers c

With a few exceptions ,it is the same squad which dropped five ball games last year. But the boys have more fight and spir­.it, and they are willing to put forth· more effort. In short,' Coach Wade has had enough time to in­still some of the old Wade ginger into this year's team.

The Blue Devils have been able to overcome their shortcomings wit}J. hustle and determination. They'll scrap. Wake Forest will have a first-rate battle on its hands with the Wademen.

This Duke team had enough in­juries at the start of the season to take the heart out of it. The big losses were Al DeRogatis, called by Coach Wade the greatest Duke

By DAVE CLARK 1 crinty, now or the Chicago Bears, tackle since .._Freddie Crawford, Nick Qgnovich's girl calls him I at the tailback post that season. and the first three tailbacks.

"baby," but it's a safe bet that you. In '44 and '45, Ognovich ·also was The tailback situation was so couldn't find any of his football op-, a member. of the l?~sketbal~ team alarming that Coach Wade had to ponents who would string along here, playmg a b1g part m the shift a third string wingback to with the young lady's misleading Deacs' upset of the Carolina White the all-important position. But, description. However, in spite of 1 Phant?ms in_ the annual tourna- as it turned out, it was a master Nick's football powers, J. R. Jones, 1 ment m Rale1gh. stro:fi:e. Freddie Folger, Jr., wound one of Coach Walker's reserve 1 As for the future, Nick's plans up the 1946 season with a minus footballers, does declare that he is call for several seasons of ball in 26 yards rushing, has· been the the best looking boy on the cam- the play-for-pay loops along with real sparkplug of the Duke attack pus. a study of physio-theraphy. The in its first four games· to date.

As we said before the men are New York .Yankees would be the Shows Improvement few and far betwee~ who would !logical club for him since Top- In fact, Folger, a Mt. Airy call this Uniontown senior a baby.l Pi?g's crew adheres to the single youth, has been improving so im­Tbe five foot, nirie inch, 175 pound wmg system. pressively that the three tailbacks, bundle of grid dynamite is about In regard to tomorrow's bout now all .recovered from their in­as far from being in three corner- with Duke, Ognovich says: "The juries, are playing second fiddle

The men up front will be out to rush pitchin' Tom Fetzer, gifted Wake Forest passer, but the BlU:e Devil forwards have suffered so many injuries that Coaeh Wade hasn't known who he could de­pend on from one week to the next.

Fred Hardison and Bill Duncan have turned in some fine defen­sive work at end, while Ed Austin and Ben Cittadino haven't been far behind. John Reese, Dick: Gardinier, Lloyd Eisenberg and Louis :Allen have split duty . at tackle, although- Allen has been hurt off and on, just like Citta-dino, the en·d. · ·

There has beerr no standout at guard for the simple reason that so many of the men have been hurt from time to time. Manning, the posts, however, and dividing the work will be Bill Davis, Tom Chambers, Jimmy Knott and Ted Marshall. t

If Fletcher Wall is ·unable to go at center, Car} Perkinson and his brother, Seth Perkinson, will·han­dle the pivot duties.

As we have said before, this isn't a great Duke team. Not by any means. But it has been com­ing along fast and· with most of the injured men back in harness, it will give a good account of it­self against Wake Forest.

Best' Te3.m. Yet ed pants as Coach Walker is from boys on the team won't be super- to the slender youngster. . In our opinion, the 1947 Dea­being a threat to take the lead in stitious about Duke's blue uni- The . three tailbacks, George cons may be the best team Coacli the next production of the Thin forms. With the spirit of the team Clark, Howard Hartley, and Ro- Walker has developed since :he Man. over the last few days as an indi- land Hodges, will be available for came out of little Elon College in

Winner of the .Jacobs Blocking cation, it seems that we are really the Wake Forest game. That's 1936 to put Wake Forest on the Trophy for the past two years out to win this one. Whether we good news to the Blue Devils and football map, and in a big way. picked on the All-American block~ win, or lose, we'll be doing our bad news for the Demon Deacons. So there's no. under-estimating the ing team last fall with "Bubber" I very best." But DeRogatis is sidelined, along strength of the Deacons ',in the Blanchard of Army, Lowell Tew·of Some of the sidelights of, ot.ir with. a few other topnotchers. Duke camp. '· . . . Alabama and Steve Magliola of conversation: Tennessee was the Shll, the Dukes will be the The Blue Devils know they are Texas, Ognovich is set to repeat hardest game that Nick figured strongest, physically speaking, in for a tough afternoon. in this, his fourth year of varsity that he was ever in. He also named they have been for any game this If you want our personal opinion competition. During the past sea- Blanchard, Davis and Otto Gra- year when they: clash with Doug- 1 on the ball game, it shapes up as sons, Nick has probably rendered ham, Northwestern's great star las Clyde (Peahead) Walker's one of those thriller-dillers. as great a football service to the whom Nick play.ed against at Car- charges. There may not be as much scoring Black and Gold as any Wake For- olina Pre-Flight, as, the best op- Folger will spearhead the of- as you might expect, for both. est great in years past. ponents that he hp.s faced with fensive, doing most of the kick- teams have strong lines which

The blocking back de luxe hails Felix Anthony being the hardest ing, passing and running, while may over-shadow the classy ar­from Uniontown, Pennsylvania, runner that he has ever tackled. he ~ill be ably supported in the ray of backs. But we don't look where he began his athletic career

1

· runn:ng department by Buddy for any scoreless deadlock. as a member of the Uniontown Approximately sixty candidates Mulllgan, , one . of ~he Southern. In fact, we expect th~ s.c~re­High - School football, basketball I reported for the first basketball Confe~ence s top wmgbacks, and board to read 13-7 at tt;e fimsh. and track teams. He was elected I practice session held in Gore Gym- P_l~ngmg Pau~ ~tephanz and bus- Yo~ can t_ake. your p1ck as to captain of the basketball squad his nasium Tuesday night. Among tm ~en W1lhams. at fullback. which team 1t w.1ll favor. junior year and of the track team those working out nightly are Blockmg backs Will be Johnny In o:ur book, _1t rates a toss-up. in his senior year. His basketball! Deran Walters, 6' 5" center, Jack Montg_omery, T<;>mmy Hughes .and I Yes, 1t loo~s like anybody'~ ball team won the state championship Gentry, Willard Kaylor, Dub GeorgJ.e Swalchlck.. game. May the best team w1n. during Nick's last two years. Hicks, Warren Holmes, Ronnie '

Ognovich came to Wake Forest Dinsmore, Jim Patton, and Bill !:"""-i?..;;, •• ,'!>~-~--.;=ii~~~~~fjj~ in 1944 and launched upon his col- Walker. ; orful athletic career that fall. 1944, Several freshmen with spark­incidentally, was the only year i ling record~ behind them will be that Nick failed to nail a first

1

pressing the above mentioned string spot on Coach Walker's var- players for berths on this year's sity. He alternated with Nick Sa- squad. .

-....

You're the man most likely to succeed/

••• In Van Hensen Shirts

Girls cut in on man! Why? Look at that Van Heusen Shirt! Admfrc that smprt sewmanship • ;; • that low-set collar (in

• many new models) • ;; • that action-tailorillg ••• that figaro fit! No wonder they can't resist. Sanforized fabrics, laboratory tested 1500 times a month. A new shirt £reo if your Vm Heusen shrinks out o£ size. $3.25 • $3.95 • $4.50

SPAt/JIN~· ·$E16 THE PA#L

INSNJRT$

• j

,,

••

Dl Res~

39-Them

mon De a9-7 vi1 Washing­ington : offense tled up 1

Playin hard fil Deacons 25 minu vaunted loose fo1 period • half.

Tassin 7 out of touchdm O'Quinn fourth definite! which Cl ·forty n squad : serves ; ball. B1 Eill Gre the Dea• big Wall proved fensive ~Col< gained c

The running :for 10 n until Fe piss to .six pain the ex1 in the l1

Georg right b~ ter Bill back 78 took t: .and ra line hE from hE :play w~ but th pass b:y left ei yar.ds a loi).ials.

In ti cons Fetzer­binatio: ing, Tc Red, ' G. W. yards a lead at

Aft ex Forest on the Pryor 1 other r. of pla with a coverec scored with a· left enc from F

In th Sprock two .C over j

Clark 1 Lail an make: eight touchdc had re• on thE Gregus 22 yare a sem yard blasted good OJ

George Althc

look i there v ibre of ing ja RoystoJ George and Je:

Page 7: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

'j

"

••

Old .Gol!-1 arid. Black .;..

Page Seven . . .

DEACS DUMP- COLONIALS . . . I RANK ELE~ENTH 1"- ··NATION Reserves· Star

39-7 Triumpl1

RED O'QUINN

sources . ... Unbalanced Line

Coach Snavely had been using an unbalanced line, single wing, in previous years. Therefore all possible plays derived from this formation were graphed as an aid in the scouting. Tb.e next move was to have scouts attend all the Carolina games possible, during which tfme they recorded all pass play~, trick plays, and plays vary­ing from the information already secured. Personal reports were again drawn up, including such information as players' ability on offense and defense, passing tech-

In the second quarter the Dea- nique, and ability, average kick­cons once again relied' on the ing length, strong and weak spots Fetzer-O'Quinn touchdown com- in the line and .any ·information bination to put them ahead. Toss- which might cause trouble or of­ing , Tom completed a beauty. to fer opportunities. For instance, if Red who was behind the entlre Walt Pupa was in the kickoff spot G. 'w. secondary, to cover 48 our tailback 'Yo11ld take his posi..: yards ;u;_d give the Deacons a 13-7 tion in the end zone, as Pupa nor­lead at half time. mally kicks near the end zone.

After the half it was all Wake Charlie Justice excels in end runs, Forest with the Deacons rolling therefore our defense v.7ould-in­on their unbeaten way. George elude a weak center and fortofied Pryor bucked three yards for an- ends. Weiner, being the Tar Heel other marker after three minutes pass receiving King, would be the of play. Fetzer set up the score key to passing action. with a pass to Harry Dowda that - Negative Example covered 45 yards. Carl H~gard An excellent example of the ef­scored the fourth Deac touchdown fectiveness of scouting was dem­with a beautiful 7-yard run around anstrated in . a negative manner left end after taking a 35-yard toss when Wake Forest played George-· from Fetzer to set up the TD. town in the season opener. Being

Last Quarter the first game of the season it In the last quarter it was Mike was almost impossible to scout the

Sprock who bulled over the last Hoyas to any extent. They· had two Deacon scores. He bucked previously been using the unbal­over from the one after Harry anced- line sing~e wing formation. Clark had intercepted a pass and Therefore we set up our defense Lail and Spr-ock had alternated to couesponding to this type of of­make 30 yards on the ground in fense. This year Georgetown eight plays. The sixth Deacon used a spread formation which touchdown came after E.d Hoey nec·essitated a last minute re-ar­had recovered a Colonial fumble ran~ement of the Deacon defense. on the G. w. 35. Bouncing Bill Consequently, there was bewilder­Gregus ran and threw passes for ment _until Wake ~orest properly 22 yards to Jim Duncan, who made organ.Ized an effechve defense. a sensational catch to the two-· Before. the Deacons entered Ke­yard li11e, from where Sprock nan Stadn-:m they had opport:mity blasted it over. Qgnovich made to study films and data pertment good on two of the placements and George one. on defensive play as the Deacs

Although the Deacons did not tossed the Colonial runners back look their best in the first half for a total minus 10 yards in there was no doubt about the cal- the last half. ibre of the club . with their scar- The overwhelming victory gave ing jaunts in the second. Ed Wake Forest the nation's lead in Royston, Bob Leonetti, Bill rushing defense and placed them George, Bill Dye, Nick Ognovich, 11th in the nation among the rna­and Jeff Brogden were singled out jor football {lOWers.

'

PHILIP MORRIS is so much •

- better to smoke I

CALL FOR

Pick your favorite pattern-.

Choose your favorite style-

Enjoy .MADE- TO- MEASURE

Real satisfaction! Yes, sit, there's nothing like the satis-­

faction of wearing a made~~;o-­measure suit, designed for your taste and tailored ·for your figure!

And you'll be .pleasantly sur·

prised at how reasonable the. prices are for Fall. Plenty of fabrics to choose from, includ· ing 'rich, dear-faced worsteds, gabardines and flannels, ·

. ·: .·.

BEN'·s OF WAKE FOREST

Because ••• PHILIP MGRRJS is the ONLY leading cigarette

recognized by eminent nose and throat specialists as definitely

less irritating.

And . . . LESS irritation means J'f9Rf enjoymep.t

for r.ou!

TRLA I!ACK. ·-· IODAY

Page 8: o·EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING EACS MEEl DUKE IN ANNUAL HOMECOMING BATTLE; PARTIES, ·DANCE TO BE HELD IN HONOR OF ALUMNI . . . .. Homec~ming Crowd Expected to\ Be Largest

Page Elght . Old Gold an<J Black "-·

Two Howler Delegates Attend National .Press Convention

Glenn Brown,. Phi Alpha 'Delta; Forest, with I?ick Chesson, Kap­Mrs. Fred Turnage, Wake Forest, pa Sigma; Miss Mildred Bumgar­

. with Fred Turnage, Phi Alpha ner, Goldsboro, with Clyde White­Delta. • ner, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Miss Lou

Miss Virginia Dickens Wilson Lane, Stantonsburg, with Jim with Mack Parrish, Pan~Hel rep.: Henry, Sigma Phi 'Eps~lon; ~iss Alpha Sigma Phi; Mrs. William EJ?ma .Lou ;r'a¥lor, ),'tobmsonville,

Judson Trueblood and Walter 1 perience through the sharing of a Walters Statesville with William w1th Jim Wilkerson, Pres., Alpha Friedenburg left for Minneapolis, thousand problems in college pub- Walters: Delta Siiroa Phi; Miss • Si~ma Phi; Miss .Frances Swain, Minnesota last Tuesday to attend lications with authorities in the Sue Jarvis, Hickory, with Sidney Wmston;-Salem, ~Ith Nathan Cole, the National Collegiate Press Con- field as well as novices is lin- Martin, Vice-pres., Zeta Chi; Miss Delta Sigma Phi.

H. Darden, Edgar Estes Folk, III, chain to wh,ich. our cafeter~a . be;- · and Wade ·E. Vannoy, Jr. The 'longs has come here to· co~t Kappa Alpha Order came second Cummings concerning .the ·rates . with two men, Thomas S. John- As a result o;e th~ study ·and ston and Francis L. Newton; and consultation, the prices have Sigma Phi Epsilon and Pi Kappa been lowered to a level which is Alpha each placed two men: as low as is possible to enable George M. Stamps and Sam Beh- them to continue to operate at a rends, Jr., respectively. profit.

vention. equalled for promising young Lillie Turner, Bassett, Va., with SJJRVEY The assistant editors of the 1948 journalists. Wilbur Doyle, Pres., Zeta Chi; ZETA· CHI

Howler were sent to the three The HOWLER feels fortunate Miss Thelma Jeffreys, Goldsboro, · (eontinued from Page 1) day meet with hopes of more ful- this year to be able to give these with Linwood Harrell, Pi Kappa .. ) ly preparing key men on the two men the chance. to widen their Alpha; Miss Nell Swain, Thomas- (Continued from Page 1) eight cents. . . Wake Forest yearbook staff for own experience for their work and ville, with George Teague," Pres., student· body. According to the From. a list of twenty-six types work with the vast problems con- thus in turn present a better ,Pi Kappa Alpha; Miss Judy De averages computed by Mr. Pat-. of servmgs which are offered nected with the production of an 'I yearbook for Wake Forest Col- Hart, Draper, ·with Ed. Harris, terson, the Greek organizations as· mo~t frequently, .it, was seen that annual. lege in 1948, Campbell McMillan, Theta Chi; Miss Dorothy Laws, 1 a whole averaged, in quality their rates average thirty-one per

The Associated College Press, rearbook editor, told a reporter King, with Kent Bennett, Theta' point ratio, 1.24, or the numeri- cent higher than those of--the Wake which sponsors this convention Their conscientiousness may be Chi; Miss ·Nancy Harris,' Duke cal average of :32. - Forest C~~teria. ,. An ·average annually, extends invitations to 1 demonstrated by their willingness University, with 0. K. Whitting- Also, in individual scholastics meal cons1s~mg of roast beef, college yearbook, magazine, and I to miss this Saturday's football ton, Jr., Lambda Chi Alph~; Miss the fraternities placed seven ,nen baked potaties! corn, cheese salad, newspaper staffs all over the na- game with Duke in order to help Marie Whitman, Wilmington, with in the group of sixteen students bread and m1lk costs $.57 here tion. The opportunity to gain ex- the HOWLER. Bill Willis, Lambda Chi Alpha. chosen for the highest scholastic and the same meal costs a C;:troliria

Mr. Cooley also announced that, as costs drqpped, prices would drop accordingly.

GLOVER 1 S . Radio & Appliances

Radios - Records-Hot Plates

G-E LIGHT BULBS

Phono Amplifier For Rent

For Dances DANCE can bring about health, recreation,

beautification, prosperity, etc. ~Continued from Page 1) 4. Contributions of religion to

Miss Mary Allen Warren, Gar- honor, Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Pi man $.73, 28.per cent higher than land, with Theo Hill, Kappa Sig- led the group by having three here. · ma; Miss Vivian Snuggs, Wake men receive the honor: Thomas . Mr. E .. ~F.:._-~C~oo~l~e~y~,~o~wn~~e::r_:o~f~~t~h~e~~=::::=~:::_:_.:::_:.:::::::::::::::::::

individ:uai security. midnight. The dance will be the 5. Possible contributions to in-annual pledge dance as well al- ter-faith cooperation on this cam­though returning alumni and fac- pus. ulty members have been invited. Faculty members, students and

Brooks comes south to play- for all others who are interested are the Wake Forest dance directly invited to attend the meeting and from; an engagem~nt at New a Good Will Dinn'er, sponsored York s Pennsylvama Hotel, ac- by the Methodist Student Fellow­c?rding. to Johnny Birchett, s~-~1 ship, which will follow the gene­eta! e~airman of the Pan H~l~emc eral meeting. The dinner will cost Counctl. A number of add1bonal/ fifty cents per plate. seats have been removed from the · auditorium to provide added floor space in view of the large crowd exp~cted.

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

MEETING

FRAT SPONS.ORS

(Continued from Page 1)

I All members of the faculty have

I also been extended a cordial in­vitation to attend.

(Continued from Page 1) Announcement was also made at common concern to all men of j' the meeting that the co-eds will good will." be permitted' to leave the campus

Dr. Hubert M. Poteat said, "I 1 Saturday night after 7:30 in or­am delighted that such a meeting 1 der to attend the dance which is to be held. We learn the hard I will begin at 8:00 and end at mid­way the need for cooperation' night. It is expected that the among the faiths. This school has I heavy traffic will be somewhat always stood for complete freedom I alleviated by this hour and that for everyone to believe as he · safer transportation will De as­pleases." Dr. Poteat added, "it I sured. is better to fight ·evil than to The names of the sponsors, their fight one another." escorts, and the fraternities rep-

The agenda, as outlined by Roy resented at the dance, which will Glass, who will act as chairman, top a weekend of festivities as is arranged so that each faith will Wake Forest greets its old grads, have a part in the planned discus- are as follows: Miss Laura Har­sion. The following points will vey, Kinston, with Ralph Bland, be used: Pres. of Kappa Alpha; Miss Mar-

l. War-time cooperation, a ion Gaither, Newton, with Clifton common religious contribution to Parker, Kappa Alpha; Miss Fa­victory. · tricia Paton, Fayetteville, with

2. Possible contributions of re- John Phillips, Sigma Pi; Miss ligion to the peace of the world. Mary Plumbo, Northfield, N. J.,

3. How the faith council, with '~th Joseph Plumbo, Sigma Pi; the cooperation of the community, Miss Polly Hendrix, Raleigh, with

FOR THE BEST IN

FRIED CHICKEN DINNERS FULL COURSE DINNERS

AND ALL KINDS OF STEAKS VISIT

Located on U. S. 1-A

Between Wake Forest and Raleigh

WELCOME ALUMNI

AND VISITORS! YOUR LOYALTY AND

ENTHUSIASM KEEPS

THE DEACONS

OUT IN FRONT,

As Our Customers Keep·

HOLLOWELL'S CAS~i FOOD STORE

OUT IN. FRONT

"I'M A. CHESTERFIELD FAN

BECAUSE THEY REALLY SATISFY"'

!~fl~ SEE BARBARA STANWYCK IN

WARNER BROS. PICTURE

.. CRY WOLF"

ALWAYS .MILDER • BETTER TASTING e COOLER. SM.OKING

;

Copyngbt 194-7, ~ & NYDS TOIIACIXO Co

~

\

<I

.. ., \

]

~

o: n: iz D c b• m E:

w A; P< ju to HI 2!i H• Gc

gr 19 ce th of nc

M: Cc se1 an St: m• jUI er' fie

RE M. pi: R~

F c lo' ful thl col fir. an

cei thE col St~ ne1 aw Sta 'at tqr pre on o\,lt y~

gra dat itY, am low Wh<

'I an;y sioz or stuc Ph.: fess ers late mu: mal

s sele froz gioz be~

, gro ~eg will ~

S•

d ll

E J o: F E lE c