6
' . '-Tenible New8 ··Page· six n : Volmpe XXVI. ·. ;:.::.: ... Forest, N. C., F:riday, January 9, 1942 ___ ;...__ _________ .. .. ·.•. : . College ·· fo Emphasize Summers ·Terrible News Page ·six Number 14 During War Dean Bryan Explains Program In Newspaper Interview Wake Forest Has New War-Related Set-Up For Summer j Courses Will Be School, Dean Says Added Shortly In an interview following Wed- Fully explaining Wake Forest's nesday's student body convocation, part in an America at War, Dr. Dr. D. B. Bryan, dean of Wake Thurman D. Kitchin, college pres- Forest College, explained in full- ident, and Dean D. B. Bryan, in er detail the content. o{ the pro- 1 a convocation held last Wednes- gram held to define the wartime 1 day morning, declared that Wake policy of the college, with· special Forest will "expect every student reference to emphasis' on the sum- to attend summer school" in or- mer division and its advantages. der to reduce college training to a To give a clear picture of the period of three years. changes. which will be made, OLD At the same time the adminis- GOLD ANb BLACK presents the I tration officials announced that interview, with Dr. Bryan's an- new war-related courses will be swer to questions, in the following . added to the college curriculum simplified form: I and that a wartime college advis- Q. "Dr. Bryan, what changes ory board has been set up to as- will be made in college calen- sist students in answering current FAMILIAR SIGHT-Appear- ing often over the south Tex· as plains .are the low winged m.onoplanes -of the Army Air Corps,· for at Randolph Field are more than 4000 future pi- lots. Fourteen North Carolina collegians are now training at Uncle Sam's "West Point of the Air," which has increased its pilot training facilities ma- ny times in the last few years. Flying cadets pile up 70 hours of flying time in 10 weeks and after seven months' training receive their wings and sec- ond lieutenant bars. North State cadets come from the University of North Carolina, Duke, High Point, Mars Hill, State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A. "No changes will be made. Dea Br D 0 T Binkl n yan, r. . . ey, Wake Forest, unlike many other professor of religion and Profes- colleges, already has the perfect T. J<t.Tt:::l/tN:_ sor J. L. Memory, professor of ed- set-up and .structure for this. SUMMER-Emphasis will be ucation and director of the News There are two 18 week semesters be placed on the college sum· Bureau. They will assemble in the and a nine weeks summer school. mer session says dean's office in Waite Hall each If students attend three summer President Kitchin. night from 7 o'clock to 8 o'clock U I schools and six regular semesters to meet with students who have S J.u' dent 'Recreation nlon 5 PastorCancels 1; . more than the normal nine hours I . rf·• c .I Sl.ates of Dance Date n · r 1ng, ouncl Tony Pastor wil not play for · AINING * average of 16 hours each semester, the Wake Forest Mid-Winter stating that the announcement of SUCCESS TO DEPEND ON OBT M h D r . he will have 127 hours when he he wired the college Pan- them would await action by the Of .. COLONIAL INN; NOW EMPTY at . semester system pref- thus C erable to the quarter system then killed for the present long-awaited will keep your minds thinking By BOB .GALIJMORE * . 0Uf5e5 . eg1n in .a three-year college course?" hopes of obtaining a top flight or- along· the lines of what the gov- . · · · IF - Ed• J. N s · A. for to adopt a quarter chestra for a local dance. ernment wants of college men." If It IS pOSSible tO .carry OUt ormer ext: emester system to three years, courses Reason for the decision, it is be- Old courses will be revamped to plans, Wake Will shortly . . must be rearranged." li d r . th fact that Wake meet new requirements. have ·a· Student Umon: . K··lled I If w> ar '"'Free l,Uition.· To'Meri. "''-'Q, .. ".Will it· be possible to take I a --depiisif of' Other matters in the new war- This was the unammous de- more than the usual nine hours nl , $ 500 while his usual de- time program will not be revealed cision arrived at by J k H t h" First In Classes, States of the _of 12 hours in fee $ 1 , 000 _ Ttotal cost for until acted upon by the college of the Student Council m their ac U C InS Professor Carro.ll the summer dlVlswn?" /the dances would have been $ 2 _ board of trustees, Dr. Bryan week 1 y, meeting Forest Man Two defense courses, surveying A. "Although students are not ooo. ' stated. night, Student Body President To Die In New War and mechanical drawing, will be supposed to take courses in excess , Wire MCA The convocation was called Elliot Galloway announced as With America's death toll in open to students at Wake Forest of one hour per week per credit, Immediately upon notice of Pas- Wednesday by Dr. Kitchin after OLD GOLD AND BLACK went during the second semester, it has greater flexibility will be allowed tor's decision, dance leaders wired he and Dean Bryan had returned World War II mounting steadily, been announced. They· will be in individual cases." f Am . from a national conference on to press. . the Music Corporation o en- S Tcally the Council's decis- wo.rd has been received here that be under the direction of Profes- Q. "Does this mean that a junior ca, in order to secure another of higher education and the war, ion 1 this. It will make every Jack A. Hutchins, of Spencer, sor J. G. Carroll, who will be as-· who at the end of next semester its bands . A cheaper outfit is de- held in Baltimore, Md., under the effort to secure the use of the old. Wake Forest graduate of 1937, and sited by other members of the lacks fifteen hours of work would sired on account of national de- direction of the American Associ- Colonial Dining Hall, across the editor of the 1937 Hopwleifr: wDas math department. probably be allowed to finish in fense, they stated. ation of Colleges and Universities. street from the chemistry building, killed in action on the lC e- A chemistry defense course may the summer division, for ex- It is possible that Teddy Pow- All branches of government mili- d Convert l ·t to a un 1 'on - cember 11. He was the frrst Wake ample?" tary. service were represented at an also be added to the curriculum ell's orchestra will furnish the corporating a small dance hall, a Forest man to die. at Wake Forest, it was stated by A. "If he is passing all his work music for the annual event Febru- the meeting. lounge and offices for student or- Hutchins, a second -lieutenant the chemistry department. I and is willing to push himself, ary 20 and 21 at the Raleigh Me- "The government fully recog- . navigator on a four engine bomb- this might be a ca f fl. "bTt , morial Auditorium. nizes the necessity of keeping col- ganlZa 1ons. Professor Ruggles of the State se 0 ext 1 1 Y leges running in order to keep a (The Student Union is to be dis- er operating from a base in the C 1 f ult h · · charge Exp""t T Atte d o lege ac y, w 0 Is m I "" O n . full and steady stream of men tl ·nanished from the Student Poli- Pacific, had been in the army air d f . N rth Caro Q .. - of e ense courses m o . - . "In the convocation Wed- from colleges graduating and en- tical Union, a purely political or- corps since the summer of 1940. d' . la th Dr T B Cl" . fl lina, in 1scussmg P ns WI · nesday, Dr. Bryan, you stated that lniC: tering as officers into the navy g anization. Having nothing to do After brief duty following his Y- C S Bl ck d D W J Wyatt t H t h. . . a an r. · · • you 'expect' all studen s now in and .marine corps," Dr. Kitchin W ith politics, .the Student Union ing cadet training, u c ms was 'd th t h e could be 1 d A tuberculosi·s cli"nt"c wt'll be th Ar sa1 a sue a cours co lege to attend the summer ivi- said, adding that "no one has ever Will be merely center of student selected as navigator on e my d if - t tu h ld t th 11 · activities incorporating social fa- om er w 1c ew om as - ak ·t All. tud t . . . f M d J 12 t b b h. h fl. fr W bing installe as many as en s - sion. What makes you think that e a e co ege m trmary 1 thought of discontinuing colleges" t t L d d M d dents want to t e 1 . s en s students wtll be willmg to do rom on ay, anuary , o during the present crisis. cilities.) on °d than onldru:- oscdowb aakn I who are interested should speak this?" Wednesday, January 14, for the ; C l "al In ar.oun e wor m recor re - . t d b f't th d t b d D 1 Hinges on o om n . t' . 0 t b f 1 t j to a member of the chellliS ry e- A. "If they are of draft age or ene 1 of e stu en o y, r. , . t d t th t plans mg !me m c o er o as year. . . G C k' d I It is to be porn e ou a After complet'ng his undergrad- partment. nearmg draft age, they Will see eorge . ""ac Ie announce "The government," he said, "de- for the Union hinge on whether or uate work, the :ormer Howler ed-1 Students taking that. i_t is to their own advant_age this week. The tests will be I sires to dislocate colleges as little not the old Colonial hall can be itor enrolled in the Wake Forest will be given free to fmrsh as soon given from 9 a. m. until 5. p. m. I as possible. But since the colleges Little Dislocation secured. Whether or not it can School of Medicine for one year, tu1 hon but will be charged regular [Contmued On Page nve] 1 [Continued On Page Six] it is thought probable that it can. Hutchins took part in many cam- mester, and, in addition, for If the Colonial hall can be se- dd"t" 1 1 t 1 d d P us activities. He was a member each a 1 wna 1our no me u e cured the main feature of the Un- d f k of the football squad his freshman in the e ense wor · ion it will house will be the dance tw 1 d t t t year here, a member of the Philo- e ve wen Y s u- hall, in which will be installed a mathesian Literary Society, editor dents Will be admit_ ted_ to each nickleodeon. This hall will be s li t h of the Howler his senior year, sec- course. even ca tons ave open to all students at all times retary of the publications board already been rece1ved for the sur- By DONALD BRITT 1 be used to purchase a suitable me- Sloan, Defense Bond Commends College On $1,000 Savings Bond Campaign .and will be available for small his senior year, member of the veying course and 28 for the draw- With Wake Forest College's de-l moria! in tribute to Wake Forest private dances and banquets. college glee club, of Who's Who in ing course. If the demand re- fense saving bond drive, launched , men who are serving in the pre- ,Qpening into the dance hall will d U quires, another course in engineer- shortly before Christmas holidays, I sent war. .... e the lounge, which will probably American Colleges an niversi- "' t d f K A1 h f t ing drawing may be added. getting under way officially this Replies To Letter be furnl .shed through gifts. ies, an o appa p a ra ern- "t Begin January 26 week as a student executive com- In reply to a letter written by d . 1 y. The offices for stu ent orgam- ·----·---------------- Surveying will give college cred- mittee was appointed, and a spe- student Bob Sawyer, Sloan v.Tote: zations will include student gov- ------------- it of 12 hours, while the total hours cial Mond Day was set aside, com- "Your letter of December 12th to ernment offices and rooms for of work are 480 . I mendations on the move came President Roosevelt has been re- committee meetings. . NEED ARTIST Recitation will be conducted ten from Eugene W. Sloan, director ferred to me. The Defense Sav- College administration support hours per week, from 8:00 to' of Washington's defense savings ings Staff wishes to congratulate of the Student Union will be Announcing that the February 10:00 a. m. daily through Friday.! staff, who declared that the action the students of Wake Forest Col- sought, President Galloway said issue of The Student will appear Field and office work will be 20 demonstrates a fine spirit of pat- lege on their pledge to purchase Wednesday night, and it will prob- during the week end of mid- hours per week, 1:30-4:30 p. m. riotism. a $1,000 Defense Savings Bond. ably be financed through .Student winters, Editor Neil Morgan daily. 'In addition to Sloan's congratu- This action demonstrates a fine Council appropriations and fees threw out this week an urgent Engineering drawing will give' latory message, Dean D. B. Bryan spirit of patriotism. Such whole- collected for private dances and call for men who can draw. college credit of 10 hours. The I in a Wednesday convocation stated hearted support by college stu- banquets. He emphasized the fact Wedding bells during Christmas course wil be divided a:;; follows: on the drive that he thinks "that dents throughout the Nation would that the Union, if established, will holidays rang for Bill Ellington, (1) mechanical drawing, 10 this will go down in the record of help greatly to make the Defense be for the benefit 'of the entire Raleighite who for the past four hours per week, 8: 00-10: 00 a. m., the country as one of the finest Savings Program a success." student body and not for any par- years has been art editor of the daily through Friday; (2) shop moves made by this or any other The stuednt committee which is ticular group. nionthly magazine. mathematics, 11:30 a. m. to 12:30 institution." in charge of the drive met in the The Union will be somewhat Morgan requests that all men p. m., daily; (3) descriptive geo- The purpose of the campaign is faculty room of Waite Hall last 'designed after that at Duke, --or co-eds-who have had any metry, 1:30-3:30 p. m., Monday to raise $1,000 from members of Wednesday night and formulated ·though its facilities will not be drawing experience drop by the and Wednesday; (4) shop work, the student body and with the plans for the campaign. The com- nedrly so extensive. The Union publication's office, across from 1:30-3:00 p. m. Tuesday and money to purchase a United States mittee is composed of John Flet- . at · includes a theater, various the College Book Store within Thursday; (5) lettering, freehand defense savings bond, aiding the cher, Lewis Coleman, Eli Galla- rooms and reading rooms, the next five days. drawing and blueprint reading, country in its war. The bond, way, Ed Wilson, Chester Morri- a cafeteria. 1:30 p. m., Friday. when it matures in ten years, will son, Roy Truslow, George Eddins, Warren Pritchard, Bedford Black, and Pat Geer. Bedford Black was elected chairman of Bond Day, a day set aside next Tuesday for emphasis on student donations for the drive. Will Canvas All ;'Every student and every cam- pus organization will be canvassed until the $1,000 is raised," stated Black this week. He added that the Monogram Club has already contributed $5.00 to the fund, and that the fraternities, publications, and literary societies are urged to follow suit. All dormitories boarding houses, and private homes are to be canvassed for do- nations to the fnud. "Each and every Wake Forest student and faculty member is urged to give, give, give-the lar- gest amount possible - to this worthy cause, a cause which shall lead to a memorial io our boys in the present war," Black concluded. The following is a partial list of those who have thus far con- [Continued On Page Si:c]

College ·· fo Emphasize Summers During War€¦ · State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A

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Page 1: College ·· fo Emphasize Summers During War€¦ · State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A

' . '-Tenible

New8 ··Page· six n

: Volmpe XXVI. ·. :~··;':'~".;, ;:.::.: ... :~3 iYj':'~..d;~~~<~Y~ke Forest, N. C., F:riday, January 9, 1942 ___ ;...__ _________ ~)··:' ~Wl-~'5i!h;·:<'?::~':'.''· .. :~.· .. ·.•. : .

College ·· fo Emphasize Summers

·Terrible

News Page ·six

Number 14

During War ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~*Admin~t~tonAnnounceNewStudentAdv~oryCouncll;

Dean Bryan Explains Program In Newspaper Interview Wake Forest Has Good*·~-----=------* New War-Related Set-Up For Summer j Courses Will Be School, Dean Says Added Shortly In an interview following Wed- Fully explaining Wake Forest's

nesday's student body convocation, part in an America at War, Dr. Dr. D. B. Bryan, dean of Wake Thurman D. Kitchin, college pres-Forest College, explained in full- ident, and Dean D. B. Bryan, in er detail the content. o{ the pro-

1 a convocation held last Wednes-

gram held to define the wartime 1 day morning, declared that Wake policy of the college, with· special Forest will "expect every student reference to emphasis' on the sum- to attend summer school" in or-mer division and its advantages. der to reduce college training to a

To give a clear picture of the period of three years. changes. which will be made, OLD At the same time the adminis-GOLD ANb BLACK presents the I tration officials announced that interview, with Dr. Bryan's an- new war-related courses will be swer to questions, in the following . added to the college curriculum simplified form: I and that a wartime college advis-

Q. "Dr. Bryan, what changes ory board has been set up to as-will be made in t~e college calen- sist students in answering current

FAMILIAR SIGHT-Appear­ing often over the south Tex· as plains .are the low winged m.onoplanes -of the Army Air Corps,· for at Randolph Field are more than 4000 future pi­lots. Fourteen North Carolina

collegians are now training at Uncle Sam's "West Point of the Air," which has increased its pilot training facilities ma­ny times in the last few years. Flying cadets pile up 70 hours of flying time in 10 weeks and

after seven months' training receive their wings and sec­ond lieutenant bars. North State cadets come from the University of North Carolina, Duke, High Point, Mars Hill, State, WCTC, and Wake.

dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. ,

phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A. "No changes will be made. Dea Br D 0 T Binkl n yan, r. . . ey,

Wake Forest, unlike many other professor of religion and Profes-colleges, already has the perfect T. D~ J<t.Tt:::l/tN:_ sor J. L. Memory, professor of ed-set-up and .structure for this. SUMMER-Emphasis will be ucation and director of the News There are two 18 week semesters be placed on the college sum· Bureau. They will assemble in the and a nine weeks summer school. mer session hereafte~:, says dean's office in Waite Hall each If students attend three summer President Kitchin. night from 7 o'clock to 8 o'clock

U • I schools and six regular semesters to meet with students who have

SJ.u' dent 'Recreation nlon 5 th~;,~:~d~:t~e~e:~:;ioe~~~ PastorCancels !:~tio~sconcerningtheirpartsin 1; . more than the normal nine hours

I. a· rf·• c .I Sl.ates of wo~::~~~~;; ;~::" Dance Date N!::::::m:::chT:i~~::dd-n · r 1ng, ouncl ~ ho~"%~ !r:es~~:~:k:dn: Tony Pastor wil not play for ~~y~: t;i~ s~~:0~a~U:r~u~,~

· AINING * average of 16 hours each semester, the Wake Forest Mid-Winter stating that the announcement of SUCCESS TO DEPEND ON OBT M h D r . he will have 127 hours when he d~ces, he wired the college Pan- them would await action by the

':~> Of .. COLONIAL INN; NOW EMPTY at . e8ren~e gr~~~~~e~~e semester system pref- .H~::i~a~:cub:~; ::~~~ thus ~~r~~~~~~e;:~~e~·ou!~;:;~;i C erable to the quarter system then killed for the present long-awaited will keep your minds thinking

By BOB .GALIJMORE * . 0Uf5e5 . eg1n in .a three-year college course?" hopes of obtaining a top flight or- along· the lines of what the gov-. · · · IF -Ed• J. N s · A. '~Yes, for to adopt a quarter chestra for a local dance. ernment wants of college men." If It IS pOSSible tO .carry OUt ormer ·~or ext: emester system to three years, courses Reason for the decision, it is be- Old courses will be revamped to

plans, Wake Fores~ Will shortly . . must be rearranged." li d r . th fact that Wake meet new requirements. have ·a· Student Umon: . K··lled I If w> ar '"'Free l,Uition.· To'Meri. --~'· "''-'Q, .. ".Will it· be possible to take I F~;:st sl=~t mPas~or' a --depiisif of' Other matters in the new war-

This was the unammous de- more than the usual nine hours nl , $500 while his usual de- time program will not be revealed cision arrived at by th~ ~embe~s. J k H t h" First In Classes, States of the maxim~~ _of 12 hours in ~osit fee i~ $1,000_ Ttotal cost for until acted upon by the college of the Student Council m their ac U C InS Professor Carro.ll the summer dlVlswn?" /the dances would have been $

2 _ board of trustees, Dr. Bryan

week 1 y, meeting Wedn~sday Wak~ Forest Man Two defense courses, surveying A. "Although students are not ooo. ' stated. night, Student Body President To Die In New War and mechanical drawing, will be supposed to take courses in excess , Wire MCA The convocation was called Elliot Galloway announced as With America's death toll in open to students at Wake Forest of one hour per week per credit, Immediately upon notice of Pas- Wednesday by Dr. Kitchin after OLD GOLD AND BLACK went during the second semester, it has greater flexibility will be allowed tor's decision, dance leaders wired he and Dean Bryan had returned

World War II mounting steadily, been announced. They· will be in individual cases." f Am . from a national conference on to press. . the Music Corporation o en-S Tcally the Council's decis- wo.rd has been received here that be under the direction of Profes- Q. "Does this mean that a junior ca, in order to secure another of higher education and the war,

ion p~~s 1

this. It will make every Jack A. Hutchins, of Spencer, sor J. G. Carroll, who will be as-· who at the end of next semester its bands . A cheaper outfit is de- held in Baltimore, Md., under the effort to secure the use of the old. Wake Forest graduate of 1937, and sited by other members of the lacks fifteen hours of work would sired on account of national de- direction of the American Associ­Colonial Dining Hall, across the editor of the 1937 Hopwleifr: wDas math department. probably be allowed to finish in fense, they stated. ation of Colleges and Universities. street from the chemistry building, killed in action on the ~c lC e- A chemistry defense course may the summer division, for ex- It is possible that Teddy Pow- All branches of government mili-

d Convert l·t m· to a un1'on m· - cember 11. He was the frrst Wake ample?" tary. service were represented at an also be added to the curriculum ell's orchestra will furnish the corporating a small dance hall, a Forest man to die. at Wake Forest, it was stated by A. "If he is passing all his work music for the annual event Febru- the meeting. lounge and offices for student or- Hutchins, a second -lieutenant the chemistry department. I and is willing to push himself, ary 20 and 21 at the Raleigh Me- "The government fully recog-

. t· navigator on a four engine bomb- this might be a ca f fl. "bTt , morial Auditorium. nizes the necessity of keeping col-ganlZa 1ons. Professor Ruggles of the State se 0 ext 1 1 Y • leges running in order to keep a (The Student Union is to be dis- er operating from a base in the C 1 f ult h · · charge Exp""t T Atte d o lege ac y, w 0 Is m I "" O n . full and steady stream of men tl·nanished from the Student Poli- Pacific, had been in the army air d f . N rth Caro Q

.. - of e ense courses m o . - . "In the convocation Wed- from colleges graduating and en-tical Union, a purely political or- corps since the summer of 1940. d' . la th Dr T B Cl" • . fl lina, in 1scussmg P ns WI · nesday, Dr. Bryan, you stated that • • lniC: tering as officers into the navy ganization. Having nothing to do After brief duty following his Y- C S Bl ck d D W J Wyatt t

H t h. . . a an r. · · • you 'expect' all studen s now in and .marine corps," Dr. Kitchin With politics, .the Student Union ing cadet training, u c ms was 'd th t h e could be 1 d A tuberculosi·s cli"nt"c wt'll be th Ar sa1 a sue a cours co lege to attend the summer ivi- said, adding that "no one has ever Will be merely a· center of student selected as navigator on e my d if - t tu h ld t th 11 · r·

activities incorporating social fa- om er w 1c ew om as - ak ·t All. tud t . . . f M d J 12

t b b h. h fl. fr W bing installe as many as en s - sion. What makes you think that e a e co ege m trmary

1

thought of discontinuing colleges" t t L d d M d dents want to t e 1 . s en s students wtll be willmg to do rom on ay, anuary , o during the present crisis.

cilities.) on °d than onldru:- oscdowb aakn I who are interested should speak this?" Wednesday, January 14, for the ; C l "al In ar.oun e wor m recor re - . t d b f't th d t b d D 1 Hinges on o om n . t' . 0 t b f 1 t j to a member of the chellliS ry e- A. "If they are of draft age or ene 1 of e stu en o y, r. ,

. t d t th t plans mg !me m c o er o as year. . . G C "~~" k' d I It is to be porn e ou a After complet'ng his undergrad- partment. nearmg draft age, they Will see eorge . ""ac Ie announce "The government," he said, "de-

for the Union hinge on whether or uate work, the :ormer Howler ed-1 Students taking ma~hematics that. i_t is to their own advant_age this week. The tests will be I sires to dislocate colleges as little not the old Colonial hall can be itor enrolled in the Wake Forest de.f~nse cour~es will be given free to fmrsh ~chool as soon as~~ossJble given from 9 a. m. until 5. p. m. I as possible. But since the colleges

Little Dislocation

secured. Whether or not it can School of Medicine for one year, tu1hon but will be charged regular [Contmued On Page nve] 1 [Continued On Page Six] ~~~is~~~~~ ~~in~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~---------------------------~-------------it is thought probable that it can. Hutchins took part in many cam- mester, and, in addition, ~3.00 for

If the Colonial hall can be se- dd"t" 1 1 t 1 d d Pus activities. He was a member each a 1 wna 1our no me u e cured the main feature of the Un- d f k of the football squad his freshman in the e ense wor · ion it will house will be the dance tw 1 d t t t year here, a member of the Philo- Betwe~n e ve ~ wen Y s u-

hall, in which will be installed a mathesian Literary Society, editor dents Will be admit_ ted_ to each nickleodeon. This hall will be s li t h

of the Howler his senior year, sec- course. even a~p ca tons ave open to all students at all times retary of the publications board already been rece1ved for the sur- By DONALD BRITT 1 be used to purchase a suitable me-

Sloan, Defense Bond Direc~or, Commends

College On $1,000 Savings Bond Campaign .and will be available for small his senior year, member of the veying course and 28 for the draw- With Wake Forest College's de-l moria! in tribute to Wake Forest private dances and banquets. college glee club, of Who's Who in ing course. If the demand re- fense saving bond drive, launched , men who are serving in the pre-,Qpening into the dance hall will d U quires, another course in engineer- shortly before Christmas holidays, I sent war. .... e the lounge, which will probably American Colleges an niversi-"' t d f K A1 h f t ing drawing may be added. getting under way officially this Replies To Letter be furnl.shed through gifts. ies, an o appa p a ra ern-

"t Begin January 26 week as a student executive com- In reply to a letter written by d . 1 y. The offices for stu ent orgam- ·----·---------------- Surveying will give college cred- mittee was appointed, and a spe- student Bob Sawyer, Sloan v.Tote:

zations will include student gov- ------------- it of 12 hours, while the total hours cial Mond Day was set aside, com- "Your letter of December 12th to ernment offices and rooms for of work are 480 . I mendations on the move came President Roosevelt has been re-committee meetings. . NEED ARTIST Recitation will be conducted ten from Eugene W. Sloan, director ferred to me. The Defense Sav-

College administration support hours per week, from 8:00 to' of Washington's defense savings ings Staff wishes to congratulate of the Student Union will be Announcing that the February 10:00 a. m. daily through Friday.! staff, who declared that the action the students of Wake Forest Col-sought, President Galloway said issue of The Student will appear Field and office work will be 20 demonstrates a fine spirit of pat- lege on their pledge to purchase Wednesday night, and it will prob- during the week end of mid- hours per week, 1:30-4:30 p. m. riotism. a $1,000 Defense Savings Bond. ably be financed through .Student winters, Editor Neil Morgan daily. 'In addition to Sloan's congratu- This action demonstrates a fine Council appropriations and fees threw out this week an urgent Engineering drawing will give' latory message, Dean D. B. Bryan spirit of patriotism. Such whole­collected for private dances and call for men who can draw. college credit of 10 hours. The I in a Wednesday convocation stated hearted support by college stu­banquets. He emphasized the fact Wedding bells during Christmas course wil be divided a:;; follows: on the drive that he thinks "that dents throughout the Nation would that the Union, if established, will holidays rang for Bill Ellington, (1) mechanical drawing, 10 this will go down in the record of help greatly to make the Defense be for the benefit 'of the entire Raleighite who for the past four hours per week, 8: 00-10: 00 a. m., the country as one of the finest Savings Program a success." student body and not for any par- years has been art editor of the daily through Friday; (2) shop moves made by this or any other The stuednt committee which is ticular group. nionthly magazine. mathematics, 11:30 a. m. to 12:30 institution." in charge of the drive met in the

The Union will be somewhat Morgan requests that all men p. m., daily; (3) descriptive geo- The purpose of the campaign is faculty room of Waite Hall last 'designed after that at Duke, --or co-eds-who have had any metry, 1:30-3:30 p. m., Monday to raise $1,000 from members of Wednesday night and formulated ·though its facilities will not be drawing experience drop by the and Wednesday; (4) shop work, the student body and with the plans for the campaign. The com­nedrly so extensive. The Union publication's office, across from 1:30-3:00 p. m. Tuesday and money to purchase a United States mittee is composed of John Flet­. at · includes a theater, various the College Book Store within Thursday; (5) lettering, freehand defense savings bond, aiding the cher, Lewis Coleman, Eli Galla-

rooms and reading rooms, the next five days. drawing and blueprint reading, country in its war. The bond, way, Ed Wilson, Chester Morri-a cafeteria. 1:30 p. m., Friday. when it matures in ten years, will son, Roy Truslow, George Eddins,

Warren Pritchard, Bedford Black, and Pat Geer.

Bedford Black was elected chairman of Bond Day, a day set aside next Tuesday for emphasis on student donations for the drive.

Will Canvas All ;'Every student and every cam­

pus organization will be canvassed until the $1,000 is raised," stated Black this week. He added that the Monogram Club has already contributed $5.00 to the fund, and that the fraternities, publications, and literary societies are urged to follow suit. All dormitories boarding houses, and private homes are to be canvassed for do­nations to the fnud.

"Each and every Wake Forest student and faculty member is urged to give, give, give-the lar­gest amount possible - to this worthy cause, a cause which shall lead to a memorial io our boys in the present war," Black concluded .

The following is a partial list of those who have thus far con­

[Continued On Page Si:c]

Page 2: College ·· fo Emphasize Summers During War€¦ · State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A

Page Two Old Gold and Black

--------------------------~----------------~-------Students Ready for Bombing

1

OLD GOLJ;> 0. BLACK Published weekly during the school year excepting

examination periods and holidays as directed by the Wake Fore<t College Publications Board.

131LL AYERS -·- - - - - - --- - - - - Editor D. E. WAHD-- ·-------Business Manag.,•·

13ill Primm, sports euitor; Bob Gallimore, Xewbill 1\'iliamHon, managing editors.

Sani I::chrends, Sea \'e;,: Carroll, L<'e Copple, E\izabeth ,Iones, Santford .:Vlartin, John :1-'lcMillan, Neil :Olorgan. !Jonalcl Britt, GeL•rge Stamps, Heruen 'l'hompson, Ed Wilson, Owen Hipps, ed!t<:>rial staff ..

John Conley Ken Nelson Bill Phillips, sports depart­ment.

Barry Davis, J. D. Davis, Richo.rd Gallimore, Harrel Johnson, ZeiJ Jones, Demming 'Vard, business staff.

Member of Associated Collegiate Press, distributor C>f Collegiate Digest, member of North Carolina Collegiate l'ress Association. ------------·----------------

Entered as second class mail matter January 22 1~16 at tbe post office of Wake Forest, North Carolina, und~r the act of March 3, 1879.

All matters of business should be addressed to th•: l:lUS1ness J\lauager, BoJ' 232; editorial matter to th•! ~·:_di_w_r, __ B_o_x_232_: ______________________ _

DEFENSE BOND DRIVE

When praise came to Wake Forest student> this week from Eugene Sloan, national director of defense savings, and from college administrators for the decision to buy a $1000 government de· fense bond, Chester Morrison, originator of the idea, Bedford Black, chairman of Bond Day, John Elliott Galloway, student body president, and other leaders in the movement must have had a guilty feeling. For at that time only $1750 of the needed amount to buy the bond had been col· lected. At the last count only $33.00 had been

contributed. This is only a small amount. There are still

$717 necd~d. Yet Wake Forest students can raise this amount-if they get busy. And they can raise it before the end of January, which means that interest on the bond will date from January 1. OLD GOLD AND BLACK, which will week· ly prine names of contributors, joins with the de· fense bond committee in urging every student and

every campus organiz.ation to give can to the campaign immediately.

SUMMER SCHOOL DIVISION

whatever they

OJ All Japanese Cities By JOE BELDEN, Editor ; of the U. S. air force bombing 1

'Japanese cities?" · Student Surveys of America 1 Approve ............................ 63%

AUSTIN, Texas, January 8.- Approve, but military · The great mafority of American objectives only ............ 29

~i)~~~~~~;;. ... ~ college students is ready for the Disapprove ........................ 6

U. S. air force to bomb Japanese TUhnedepcrid0

ebdlem .. s .... 1_.n ... v ..

0 .. 1.v .. e .. d ... -m. 2sm· g-1

cities, the latest national poll of By BOB GALLIMORE Student Opinion Surveys of ling out military objectives, of the I

Married: William Hunter Ell- America reveals. geographical difficulties of attack-ington, staff artist to all three Much was said, before World ing the Japanese Islands from the campus publications and last year War II. earnestly jgot underway, air, are, of cou;se, not taken up in president of the Glee Club, to about the advantages and disad- this survey. All that is reflected Nancy Virginia McCrary, daughter vantages of dropping explosives is the general attitude of college of Mr. and Mrs. Marion De Bern- over civilian population centers, students, many of whom, since the iere McCrary of Raleigh; Dec. 21, but events of recent months and army and navy air corps prefer in Raleigh. weeks have shown that bombing college-trained men, are the po­

Born. to Thomas Frederick Wil- of cities has become an integral tential pilots who will participate liams, Soda Shop owner and one- part of modern war strategy. in the raids already promised the time (1935~36) business manager A few days before the Japanese Japanese. of OLD GOLD AND BLACK, a 1 bombed Manila, after it had been It is of interest to note a slight daughter, Nancy Ellen; Nov. 26, in declared an open city, Student but significant difference of Wake Forest. As business man- Opinion Surveys completed a opinion among the college youth ager of OLD GOLD AND BLACK poll in which more than nine out in the eastern and western parts Williams is reputed to have made of every ten students interviewed of the country. Perhaps it is the more money than any manager favored retaliation. No doubt feel- propinquity of the Pacific con­before or after him. ing has flared still higher since flict to westerners and realization

Married: Frank J. Hester, last the attack on the Philippine capi- .of their own danger from the sky year business manager of OLD tal. that makes more of them say, GOLD AND BLACK, to Sara Mar- Bomb War Objectives Only "Bomb Jap cities, but not indis-garet Cole, daughter of Mr. and Of those who answered in the criminately- only military ob-Mrs. W. G. Cole of Canton; Dec. affirmative, it is important to jectives:" 31, in Canton. point out, a little less than half At Last specified that although they were

By unanimous vote of the Stu- in favor of bombing Nipponese dent Council Wednesday night urban centers, fliers should make Wake Forest was given what in it a point to strike at military ob­the minds of many on the campus jectives only. This is how it has needed for a long time, opinion divides:

Approve of bombing

East u.s

cities ...................... 65% Military objectives

onty .;...................... 27 Disapprove ................ 6 Undecided .................. 2

West u.s.

56%

35 6 3 needs more than a chapel: a Stu- ''Do you approve or disapprove

dent Union (see story, front page, ----------------=---------------In TIME, Oct. 31).

No pretentious establishment wm be the Union. In it will not be found the numerous game rooms, reading rooms, cafeteria and theater to be found in such Unions as that of Duke. Only a converted dining hall and room­ing house will be the Union, and in it will be found only a lounge,

By Ed Wilson

Gerald Johnson's Roosevelt: Dictator or Democrat? is po· litical dynamite for New Dealers. This Wake Forester, class of 1911, has presented a trong case against the Roosevelt Ad­ministration and has has then systematically proceeded to .tear a small dance hall (which can be

used as a ballroom) and a few offices. But it is a starter, and it down all the points of this opposition. The result is a clear-cut, is hoped by its promoters that I well-defined argument in behalf of the New Deal theory of gov· someday, somehow, it will grow. ernment.

_When . e~tablished, t~e Uni?n I Among recent recordings are*----· ---------­

To t:he Edit:or

\

Friday, Janu~ry 9,1942

By P. T. 0.

Dear public, inasmuch as there are examina­tions coming up in the not-quite-distant-enough fu­ture, and inasmuch as I am not exempt from going through the formalities, regardless of the indisput­able fact that they are in my case superfluous, not ~o say silly, The Column will this week be. sadly curtailed, if not downright nipped in the bud.

First I want to say some little quiet something on a subject w:hich has been paining me quite a good deal during the weeks since you last devoured my output to the last syllable. To tell the honest truth, it gripes me:

Have you heard of Leon Henderson? Have you heard of price control? What do you ml!ke of it, Watson? ·Have you heard of Germany in 1924? Inflation? War-millionaires? Bad, huh? Unde­sirable, no? You know how inflation comes about? Simply because you and I aiJ.d the fellow· who runs the corner drug store are greedy.

For instance, suppose that I have two dozen egg-plants. }Jl right, I don't know what an egg­plant looks like in the raw. But, for the sake of argument, suppose I do. Furthermore, suppose that egg-plants have been selling for 10c apiece. And I have been in the habit of leaving you a doz­en and Mrs. ·Querp a dozen and Mrs. Cadwallder a

·dozen and Mrs. Twitchit a dozen . . . at a dime apiece.

But this week, see, I only have two dozen for you and the Mesdames Querp, Cadwaller, and Twitchit. It is, therefore, my painful duty to ap­prize you of this fact when I come around this Sat­urday. "What," you say, "only six egg-plants to feed my ravening family of twenty-seven? It's those people in Washington." Then you say, smirking slyly, "I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll give you twenty cents for the other six." Being weak and human and coming from a large, poor Ar­menian family on the east side of Cincinnati, I can­not resist your offer. But when I call on the good Mrs. Querp she raises a great outcry and demands to know what is to be done. And then-you guess­ed it, you lucky boy-she offers me 40c more on the dozen. And so on up, up, up, until the egg­plant market is paniced, or is it panicked? I be­lieve it is . . . Anyway, it's stampeded, and you'd think from the howl going up that egg-plant had taken the place of hash on the national menu.

It's hard to whittle a square peg down to fit a round hole. Yet, speaking figuratively, that',; what a number of colleges and universities 1n America are having to do today. They are re­vamping their curriculums, re·outlining their cal­endars, and sometimes changing th11:ir admission and graduation requirements-all in an effort to place college education on a three-year basis r,o

that men may be speeded through and then do their parts--the parts of college-trained men-fa~

wlll be mdrrectly the first fru1ts i two albums of works by contem-1 of the Board. of Trustee~faculty-j porary American poets. Edna St. I student comm1ttee set up last Fall Vincent Millay reads her own to study soci~l. conditi_ons on the "Ballads of Harp Weavers,"! . January 6. Well, my children, that's the way it works. campus-spec1f1cally, 1f not ad- "Renascence , "Make Bright the 1 Dear Srr: • That's the way the wheels go round. Always happy

'ttedl t tudy the d e u ' It il t b to give you the inside dope on anything, as long as ml y, o s anc q es- Arrow," Sonnets from "Fatal In- is a great priv ege o e an tion, Though the Union-to in- terview," and selections from American in these stirring times. you profit by it. And working on the ancient the-an America at war.

Wake Forest also desires for students to complete their work in three years, it was an­nounced by President Thurman Kitchin and Dean D. B. Bryan in a college convocation last Wednes• day. Yet, unlike other educational institutions, Wake For.::st is not having to make radical changes in its administration. With the semester system and the nine weeks summer division already a part of the college program, the perfect structure for the

three-year system exists.

! d a d n h 11 · f t k ory that a word to the wise is suffic1'ent I have

c u e a ce a as a mam ea- "Second April," "Wine from I is li ewise a great privilege to t

'th d used several hundred words on you. ure-was ne1 er propose nor These Grapes," "Figs from This- be in college, one which is denied

promoted by the committee itself, ties," and "The Buck in the many of our more deserving fel- In order not to dilute this pregnant message the Board of Trustee and faculty Snow." Carl Sandburg also low American youths. Therefore, (there's a mixed metaphor there somewhere, but members indicated in a session makes a contribution: a group of the time has come when you and never mind) I will close it up for this week. Only Ia~t Fall that they thought such an excerpts from his 1936 book on I must consider the responsibilities. one more thing: you lower-case dopes will .be institution might be a good thing, America, The People, Yes. which are ours ,as the leaders of treated to a rare privilege-or privileged to par-and quiet work on the part of Stu- New Book-of-the-Month is tomorrow. take of a rare treat, either way you want it, next dent Body President John Elliot The Ivory Mischief, an "intimate" What should be the part which week. I ~m leaving for a sabab~ical few days at a Galloway, a member of the com- story of two beauties, a blonde we, as students, should play in the swank sk1-resort near Lake Plac1d, and my shoes­mittee, resulted in the Student and a brunette, in the luxurious present struggle? Can we, the in- n~, no, . I shall need my shoe~-my fountain-pen Council's decision to promote its court of France's Sun King, Louis heritors of a glorious past pur- w1ll be filled by a guest colummst. None other, no establishment. XIV. New book dividend is the chased with blood· sweat' and less,. than our friend and creditor, Everett Snyder, Thus this is the advantage which Wake Forest

has : three-year college training here will in no wa)' mean a lowering of peacetime educational

The establishment of the Union much talked-about Treasury of ' ' pres1dent and general manager of the college book will mark the first step in the so- Gilbert and Sullivan, probably the tears, do less than the students of store.

standards. lution of a social problem-the best music volume of the year. other colleges? WAKE FOREST ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;; dance problem-peculiar to Wake · Musica) Musings. HAS A DEFINITE PLACE TO Forest. Its indirect approval by 1941 was by far the most profit- FILL IN THIS STRUGGLE. We ACROSS OUR DESKS the Board of Trustee and faculty able year the record companies d th · 1 t" 1

can o more an simp y con mue ·--------------------members of the Committee to In- [Continued on Page Four] [Continued on Page Five] HAPPY HAPPENINGS

Happy events have been happening during re· cent days in the lives of former and present OLD

GOLD AND BLACK members. Unto Ferd Davis, editor in 1940, and his

wife, the former Selma Ann Harris, also a staff member, was born a son. It was a daughter with Fred Williams, business manager in 1935·36.

Unto Frank Hester, business manager in 19-39-40, was given a wife. It-marriage-likewise happened to Billy Ellington, staff artist and for·

mer reporter. \Vhile of course wishing well to all of these,

the present staff is jealous. What have we to look forward to? The Naval Reserve, where marriage is verboten during training, or obituaries : "killed in action," which is not a very pleasant thought.

WAR HYSTERIA

vestigate Social Conditions consti-tutes the first tangible sign of lib­erality on the part of an adminis­tration whose hands are tied by the fear of the disapproval of the State Baptist Convention, many of whose members directly or indi­rectly control many of the strings I to many of the purses of the col-~ lege.

Dancing on the campus may come to Wake Forest yet. In the past year several members of both the Board of Trustees and the i State Convention who formerly opposed it but no longer do have i indicated that their opposition was j merely the result of a lack of j understanding of the situation i'

here. As more and more under­stand the situation more and more join the ranks of those who favor dancing. And war usually has a

President Thurman Kitchin this week killed liberalizing effect on social think­a nasty little rumor which had him saying: Quote, Wake Forest will be forced to close its doors nex.t

year, unquote. It was the same type of rumor which declares

that Japanese bombers are over San Francisco, that they are over New York, or that faculty mem· h:-rs are Na::i agents. It was nasty and it was lit·

tle.

ing; after World War 1 came the fraternities, which before the war were thought unthinkable.

Supreme Sacrifice When Campus Politico Bedford

Worth Black was selected to draw up the resolution by which the students of Wake Forest pledged I their support of the Administra­tion in its war effort he presented j

But it was a typical example of war hysteria, a draft which read in the section just as hasty, unthinking enlistment of college men relative to the purchase of the $1,­in armed forces is often war hysteria. This decid· 000 defense bond: edly and emphatically is no time for hysteria of ". . . the proceeds · · · of the

· d Th' · · h · 11 ff' · 1 bond . . . are to be used in the any kin . 15 1s a tune w en, as co ege o 1c1a s . f 'al t th . .. . erectmg o a memon o ose have adVIsed, students should keep thetr feet on students who will give their lives the ground." [ [Continued on Page Four]

;~;f>RoF.!SAAC M.

CCXHMN OF CARLEfON COLLEGE ENTERTAINS BY SOLO­ACTING SCORES OF SAAKES'PEAREPN ANb MODERN PLAYS. HE' HAS' MEIKJRIZED OVER. 1,000,000 WORPS!

~T OHIO STA'TS U. A 'TREE IS PIJ!NTEI> ON

11-\E CAMPO!~' IN HONOR . OF EJlll.l sruDENT

NAMED OJ Ml AU.­AMERICAN FOOTBAll. •

'TEAM.'

'PR:f. CtlcHRAN USES NO fAAKEUP AND BY INfON­

A"TIONS At-!D Ac:TIONS LETS HIS' AUDIENCE REOOGNIZE ···~~···

CO-EDUCATION-Professor W. J. Wyatt was returning his chemistry quizzes. The grades were good as a whole.

Most noticeable exceptions were the papers of the two co-eds in the class, one of whom made 11, the other two out of a possible hundred. Chemis-

1

try was evidently not the strong subject of either of the ·girls.

Professor Wyatt looked doubtfully at the pa-pers.

"Sometimes," he remarked to the class, I "don't

I know whether I believe in co-education or not."

COLLECTING-Somewhat similar to Wake Forest's defense bond plan to aid its country in war is that devised by members of the French Club at Alfred University in New York. They are collect­ing .stamps-four thousand of them to date, with one million as their objective. These, when sold to collectors, are valued at $100, and, when turned over to proper authorities, the proceeds will be used in helping post-war France.

ARGUMENT-Here's an argument for not put-. ting the proceeds from Wake Forest's $1,000 defense bond (upon maturity ten years hence) into a statue commemorating war dead. It's from the University of Cincinnati:

"College papers in Pittsburgh, Pa., and Oxford, Ohio, please copy. If it's any satisfaction to Car­negie Tech and Miami University pranksters, paint they applied to Mack and Mick, famous stone lions guarding the entrance to the University o( Cincin­nati's Micken halls, has defied the best efforts of the city highway department's high-pressure steam cleaning equipment.

"Operators worked for several hours with 'cold steam' and chlorinated lime to remove gen­erous traces of excess football enthusiasm tlt the form of green and red paint. Although the lioDll. do look whiter, the clashing colors are still easily discernible." '. .,

I

I

I

Page 3: College ·· fo Emphasize Summers During War€¦ · State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A

I

...

Friday, January 9, 1942 Old Gold and Black Page Three ~------------------------------------------------------------------~---------~~~---------------------------------

Students May Join Navy A~d Remain In School 100 Seek InFormation_ Fr~rn Ensign In· Faculty Room Meeting T uesd~y

*-------------------------------------------------*-------------------------------------------------

Approximately 100 students reported to the faculty room of Wait Hall Tuesday for information concerning the United States nava_l reserve, the representative ensign stated at the end of the conferences which began early that morning. --;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;======='* The meeting followed an an-

1 nouncement that college students 1 would be given a chance to com­

~~~~ 1 plete work for a degree if they en-listed now, and in addition would · be given rank of an officer upon . going into active service. How­ever, there is no guarantee that those enlisting will not be called

"A crackr.ll bell can ncL'er 301111d trc!!" before finishing school. In addition to being an Ameri-

JANUARY

. 8-Two governors inougu. a I, rated in Louisiana, 1877.

9-First South American t\1~i 1 postal congress meets at I' · Montevideo, 1911.

-----.:\!~Allied governments state 17ii'~~~-- . tenns of peace. 1917. s;. .. ~.:' ~ ..

JL 11-Francis Scott Key, author Star Spangled Banner, dies, 1843 ..

' 12-Pennsylvania R. R. Hud· • ~· son River tunnel excava· .-..: lion completed. 1908. · c--4'~ 1:3-Chartero!Colonyo! New ~ Plymouth qranted. 1629.

~~ 14-First wireless telephone - ,1 ~\-...... message, New York to

.1 - London, i 923. !' WNUSf.nl~

Pro Humanitate [Continued from Page Two]

have ever had: The New York Times states that Tschaikowsky's B. Flat Minor Concerto sold in two months nearly four times as much as did all Victor albums in 1933. The same-newspaper nominates as the year's best recording the Bu­dapest :=;tring· Quartet's perform­ance of Beethoven's brilliant C Sharp Minor Quartet.

Next Civic Music Association concert features Lauritz Melchoir and Lotte Lehman in a joint re­cital. The date is Thursday night, January 22.

CINEMA ITEMS ·The New York Film Critics

have selected as the best picture of the year "Citizen Kane." This choice is a distinct tribute to its producer, Orson Welles, who also directed it, wrote it, and starred in it. Acting honors went to Gary "Cooper for Sergeant York" and to Joan Fontaine for "Suspicion."

can citizen between the ages of 19 and 28 and meeting the physical requirements, those applying must possess a Bachelor's degree of Arts, Science, Engineering, Philo­sophy, Business Administration, Commercial Science, Journalism, or Laws, or be a junior or senior enrolled in a course leading to one of the degrees. One full year of college mathematic~ and one course of trigonometry of either college or high school grade must be ·offered.

Must Not Marry Applicants must agree not to

marry prior to ·completion of Re- 1

serve Midshipman training . The course consists of 30 days'

elementary training at some navy activity prior to_ assignment to a Reserve Midshipman School and 90 days' intensive study at one of the Midshipman Schools.

In this enlisted capacity men will be instructed in the funda­mental military discipline and of naval customs and usage. During this period they will be given an insight i.ti.to life aboard ship.

May Be Discharged Those not appointed as Reserve

Midshipmen are discharged or may be transferred at their own request. If, however, they are ap­pointed, they are furnished books, uniforms, ration allowance, and pay of $65 a month. At- the end of Reserve training they are com­missioned as Ensign in the Naval Reserve and will be subject to ac­tive duty immediately.

The applicant's college back­ground will determine the course the Bureau of Navigation desig­nates for him to follow. The Re­serve Midshipmen training is di­vided into Deck and Engineering training. Sure-fire contender for 1942

awar'ds is the recently released ''H._ M. Pulham,· Esquire," a well- Juniors and seniors who fail to adapted version of John P. Mar- complete their college work will quand's best-seller. Certain se- be transferred to another class of quences contain some of the most Naval Reserve. All enlistments sucecssful satire the screen has 1

1 are for the duration of the presen~

witnessed, and Robert Young's. emergency. _ performance is sincere and ac-j -complished. 1

i Next week's program at the ;

Forest Theatre is particularly no- i ticeable because it features ( 1)

11

the return to the screen of Shirley Temple, (2) the best musical comedy of the season up to this date, and (3) the outstanding murder mystery of 1941. The of­ferings are respectively "Kath­leen," "Louisiana Purchase," and "The Maltese Falcon."

A nationwide debate for college students has been scheduled by the American Economics Founda­tion. Any college or university which takes part is to select an undergraduate student as repre­sentative. The student is to write a 500-word brief on the question, "Does Youth Have a Fair Oppor-tunity under Our American Sys-tem of Competitive Enterprise?" The judges will select the eight best affirmative briefs and the eight best negative briefs and will eliminate half of these in local radio debates designed to test the speakers' ability before the mi-crophone.

The remaining eight contestants will then submit full briefs, and the four best-two affirmative

New Physics Course Dr. William Speas, professor

of physics, announces the intro­duction of a new course in the physics department for next se­mester, a course in elementary applied mechanics. The pre­requisite for this course is Phy­sics 1 or the equivalent, taken either this .year or any previous college year. The new course will probably be conducted at 11:30 on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and will be good for four credits. · Dr Spease points out that the

new course ought to be especial­ly valuable to those planni;:g to enter the air service.

·cupid Wreaks Havoc on

Campus During~ Holidays Cupid played havoc at Wake Mary Viriginia Shearon who is

: Forest during Christmas holidays.] employed in the bursar's office re­Five local girls received engage- l ceived her diamond from Ray­ment rings. mond L. Averette, who is em-

The engagement of co-ed Dor- played at Fort Bragg. othy Mitchell, of Rolesville, to IT 15 FITTING THAT THE

UGHTHOUSE SERVICE, OLDEST PART 01= THE COAST GUARD, WAS

· Roger Bell was announced. Eleanor Pierce and Herbert

Holding, both of Wake Forest, an-

' FAT .. ER.ED BY GEORGE WASHINGTON HIMSELF.

THE COAST GUARD RULE IS­AL.WAYS BE PREPARED. WASHINGTON WAS A REAUST WITH VISION, •. HE THEREFORE COUNSELLED PREPAREDNESS AND PERSONAL THRIFT·

fNDIVIDU~L AMERICANS HAVE PRACTICED PERSONAL FORESIGHT SEYOND ANY PEOPLE. FOR EXAMPLE, THEY OWN TOGETHER TWO-THIRDS OF ALL THE LIFE INSURANCE IN THE WORLD., AND AS A NATION AMERICANS TODAY CONCENTRATE ON THIS C'OAS7 GVARD PRINCIPJ..E OF BEING PREPARED.

HumberT alks to Federation

Says President to Call International Meet For Peace Plans Just twenty days after the at­

tack on Pearl Harbor, the Feder­ation of the World, led by Robert Humber, class of 1918, met on Pivers Island, near Beaufort, N. C., for the first anniversary meet­ing.

In his address to the members present Humber gave a report to the Federation of the progress made since its beginning Decem­ber 27, 1940. Starting 'vith his first address on behalf of the movement, he gave a detailed ac-

FELLOWS!

Come in To See Us for

• JACKETS

count of the advancement of the movement among the towns and cities of North Carolina and of its l passage in the general assembly of I this state.

The President of the United I States is to be petitioned through Congress to call a meeting of rep­"resentative~; from the world pow­ers in order that plans for a last-

SHORTY'S

ing peace might be mutually agreed upon and a world police force be established to enforce the laws drawn up by this in,terna­tional assembly, Humber said.

After reporting on the tentative plans for the ~ovement in the fu­ture, Humber ~owed his scrap book containing newspaper arti­cles and letters that he had col­lected and received expressing the feeling of the general public to­ward the Federation of the World.

In closing his report, he said 1

that in his mind there could be no I more fitting principle for the youth of America to give their all to than the sincere hope that in-, ternational peace, understanding, and a community of nations be the ! outcome of this conflict through i the Federation of the World. j

nounced their engagement.

Vera Misenheimer, of Wilming­ton, who formerly lived in Roles­ville, is to marry Ernest Lee Wil­son of Wake Forest.

Louise Weaver, of Wake Forest, is to marry Erwin Cole of Wake Forest ..

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and two negative-- will appear on .a nationwide broadcast May lOth. HARDWICKE'S PHARMACY r: YOUR FORD could talk you'd learn in

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any replacement parts used are gem~iM Ford parts, best every time for your Ford. So if you want your Ford to last longer, run

First prize will be $1000; sec­ond prize will be $500. Further details may be had from the American Economic Foundation.

Some fifty students took seats in front of Simmons yesterday and watched with glee as car after car tried to take the icey corner too fast and broke into skids. Amid •n,.,,,,..,..,;inl!" shouts from the stud­

a huge trailer-truck banged an electric pole and smashed

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Page 4: College ·· fo Emphasize Summers During War€¦ · State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A

' . • .,

Page Four Old G-old ·and Black ·.

Friday, January 9, 1942 ·

DEACONS, COLONIALS- PLAY TONIGHT ----------*!----------*G. W. -1~· Seeking S~cond

FROM THE

SIDELINES BY BILLY PRIMM

. Came the New Year and what happens? Duke gets overcon­fident and loses to Oregon State. And another of my predictions goes awry. All I did was to pick Duke to win by at least two touchdowns. Oh, well, I wasn't by myself.

But here's the good news. Our Deacons must have made a few resolutions among themselves and decided to reverse proc€edings. After losing their pre-Chris~as games, the Deacs have won their only two starts of this new year. And what's more they have looked better each game in winning.

However, our guess is that Herb Cline made the difference. Herb miseed out on the early season drills and just now is round· ing into pretty good shape.

But don't take our word for it. Just read the basketball preview in the LOOK magazine. LOOK rates Cline as "one of the best guards in the South."

We'll make another guess and say that the boys of Coach M.urray Greason ought to have a good season-much better than last-and will be trouble for somebody when that Southern Conference Tournament rolls around.

The Deacons will be pretty tough to stop. Why? Well, they have George Veitch and Ray Koteski to shoot those long ones and draw that defense out. And don't think they .can't hit that basket from way out either. And under that basket ready for that rebound is lanky Herb Cline. Then Jim Bonds and Lefty Berger are pretty fair ball players in any league at that.

Romney Wheeler, Associated Press writer, turned out a good article on southern basketball a few days ago. Everyone thought the Tennessee Vols were riding high after their 36-32 victory over the Long Island University team in the Sugar Bowl game at New Orleans. But here comes Duke along and knocks off the Volunteers. Now where would that put Wake Forest if the Deacs win over the Blue Devils? You figure that out.

Cedric Loftis, of the Blue Devil team, is making a strong start for the Sophomore "basketball player of the year'' in the Southern Conference. But my guess is that he will have plenty of competition from Wake's George Veitc~ and State's Bon~ McKinney.

Uncle Sam's draft has begun to take boys away from the Wake Forest campus, boys who are known just a little better than the average student'-the athletes.

Jack Ciccarelli was the :first to go, and yesterday George Edwards left to join the fighting forces of the United States. They're the first but they surely won't be the last.

That's the reason athletics are so uncertain in the world today. Uncle Sam is taking the college coaches and pro­fessional football like fleas. Bernie Bierman, head man at Minnesota, assistant coach Woodruff of Tennessee, Steve Pet'k and Charley Stanceau, of the New York Yankees, have joined such notables as Gene Tunney, Bob Feller, Hank Greenberg, Major Bob Neyland and others already in the forces.

So we'll just have to take it, that's aU.

But there's one consolation I can find out of the New Year. The Georgia Bulldogs simply romped on the Horned Frogs of Texas Christian in the Orange Bowl. Yessir! The boys from the home state showed folks they knew a little something about this game called football.

I

And for you fellows who ·have contended all along that Steve Lack is a better football player than Frankie Sink· wich, just remember that Frankie threw three· touchdown passes, ran 43-yards for another, and then didn't play all the game.

Psychologist Gives Six Ways To Keep Our Morale High

Minneapolis, Jan. 8.-(ACP)-, 1. Center your attention on Dr. Irving J. Lee of Northwestern your task-at-hand and seek new U n i v e r s i t y has outlined six ways of helping. rules for maintaining wartime ci-l 2. Don't feel that the whole vilian morale. For a number of burden rests· on you. Just do years Dr. Lee, who is an expert on something, however small, and the psychology of anxiety, has ap- the net result will be great. plied the principles back of these 3. Worrying about a situation rules to many cases of stage dissipates your energy, leads to fright with amazing success. more worry, and saps your effici-

"The position of many Ameri-, ency for necessary work. cans today," he points out, "is an- 4. Don't expect too much. Pre­alogous to that experienced in pare for bad news. It isn't the stage fright. This situation, if pain, but the surprise coming of permitted to continue, might lead the pain that hurts. Remember to a deterioration of civilian mo-. that the anticipation of danger rale." has a protective effer:t. .

Points to be remembered by all 5. Question all rumors. Don't civilians during the crisis, accord- let them affect you emotionally. · t D Le 6. Trust those in authority. mg o r. e, are:

Victory Over. Greason men Coach Murray Greason's Deacon five will take the .floor

tonight against George Washington University's mighty Colo­nials seeking to avenge a 52-?7 setback suffered at the hands . of these same Colonials before Christmas. The opening tip-off is slated for 8:30 o'clock. * · '

' Opening the program at 6:50 o'- iF h D r- t: clock will be a clash between the i ros erea . Wake Forest freshmen and the · Raleigh High School Caps. w•1 48 33·

The Demon Deacon quintet has I son -

SHARPSHOOTER-That's what Co-Captain Jim Bonds is.

co;me a long way down the road of improvement since that early season defeat by George Washing­ton and will enter the game to­night conceded a good chance to win. Wake Forest supporters point to the fact that in that first set-back the Deacons were hand-icapped by. the loss of Co-Captain Herb· 'Cline, lanky center who is rated among the best basketeers in the South. Cline was suffering from a football injury and played only a few minutes in the game.

Long Jim Lyles, six foot, five­inch center from Asheville, rang UP. 12 points for the Wake Forest freshmen Wednesday night as the Baby Deacons defeated Wilson High, 48-33.

The Deaclets were ahead most of the way and held a 20.:15 lead at halftime, increasing their lead as the second half went on.

Morton was high man for Wil­son with ten points.

Cochran Leads Conference In Total Offense For 1941 Zuhlc Leads Colonials ---------:----

The records of the American Football Statistical Bureau, released this week, revealed that Red Cochran, Wake Forest sophomore back, was the leading Southern Conference player in total offense for the 1941 season.

Averaging 5.1 yards per play,* ____________ _

Cochran ran up a total of 1252 ------------­yards to place seventh in the na­tion. Duke's Tom Davis, nearest Big Five player to Cochran, was 17th. Booty Payne of Clemson was ranked 12th and was the only other Southern Conference player in the first 20. C~hran's Passes Rank Too Cochran's total of 1090 yards

passing was second only to Schwenk's of Washington. The Deacon halfback was one of four in the nation whose passes gaineg over a 1000 yards.

Also seventh in the nation, and first in the Southern Conference, was Wake Forest's average gain of 133.5 yards per game on passes. The Deacons completed 45 per cent of their passes during the sea­son. Herb Cline, Wake end, caught 19 passes for a gain of 439 yards to rank 18th in the nation in pass receiving.

Edwards Drafted George Edwards, slugging

Wake Forest outfielder, left yesterday for Burlington, N. C., for induction. into the United States Army. Edwards received notice to report· only this week.

Arthur Vivian,· one of Coach Murray Greason's ace ,port for army service on Jan· pitchers, was scheduled to re­uary 17, but has applied for admission into the V -7 train· ing of the Naval Reserve and is awaiting word from his

draft board for final instruc­tions.

Jack Ciccarelli, sophomore football end, left last week for the army.

However, the Deacons wlil be plenty busy tonight if they intend to hold down Captain Matt Zunic and the other Colonials. Zunic dropped in seven field goals and five charity throws for a total of 19 points against the Deacs. For four games this season Zunic leads the team in scoring with 57 points, on 23 field goals and 11 foul shots. Last year Zunic had a season total of 243 points.

And Ed Gustafson, six-foot, three-inch sophomore center, will bear watchi,ng, too. He accounted for 12 markers and runner-up honors to Zunic in that first game.

Though George Washington has lost its last three games, it still ranks as the darkhorse in the Southern Conference race. Con­sideration will have to be taken in the fact that all three losses came at the hands of top-flight teams of the country. Oklahoma A. & M. Oklahoma University and the Un­iversity of Indiana administered lickings to the Colonials.

Deacs Win Two

Founders' Day Set For January 27

Since the New Year rolled in, the Deacons have 'mustered two victories against no defeats. The Deacs handed the McCrary Eagles a 44-30 defeat last week and Tues­day night pulled one out of the fire from a strong Hanes Hosiery

Cl.lne's Baskel. team in Winston-Salem, 54-52. The annual Founders' Day ex- 1; Tonight the Wake Forest boys

ercises of the Philomathesian and w• f w k will be after their first Southern Euzelian literary societies are I Ins or a e 'Conference win. And the Coloni-slated to come on the afternoon als will be striving for their third and night of January 27, the sec- Goal In Last Seconds straight. In addition to a previous ond day of the second semester Gives Deacs 54-52 win over the Deacons, the Coloni-

als defeated Davidson in confer­registration, it was announced by Victory Over Hanes society officials this week. I ence play.

Co-Capta~ Herb Cline sank a Probable starting lineups:

lntramurals To Start Late

Intramural basketball cannot get underway until after the pres­ent varsity basketball season is over, according to word received from Coach Ph)l Utley this week. Since both courts in Gore Gymna­sium must be used during the in­tramural schedUle, it will be im­possible to begin until after the Deacons finish their schedule. However, plans are being made for intramural ping pong to begin after examinations are over.

With as much information as possible the Athleti~ Council an­nounced the final standings for the fraternity league. Kappa Alpha finished first, followed in order by Kappa Sigma, Alpha Kappa Pi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Delta Sigma, Lambda, Sigma Pi and Pi Kappa Alpha.

Pi Kappa Delta Picks New Men

Eight members of the college de­bate team were this week issued invitations to membership in the N. C. Beta Chapter of Pi Kappa Delta, honorary national forensic fraternity.

In order to become a member of this organization each man must have participated in at least five intercol.legiate debates.

Bell Invit~ . Tentative plans call for the ora- field goal in the last 32 seconds of tions and debates to be held in the Wak F t play Tuesday night to give his e ores afternoon between 4 p. m. and Wake Forest· team a 54_52 win Bonds (co-c.)

George Wash. Receiving invitations were Paul McNeill Bell, Sam Behrends, J. M.

{c.) Zunic ·Broughton, Jr., J. D. Davis, Bur­Gustafson nette Harvey, C. C. Hope, Bynum

Gilham Shaw and Larry Williams.

5: 30 p. m. Phi president Dewitte over a strong Hanes Hosiery team Berger Trivette will preside over the ac- in Winston-Salem. Cline (co-c.)

f f

tivities, and Eu president Lansing Veitch Hicks will act as secretary. Facing a big lead to overcome

c g g

Banquet Planned

According to the schedule a banquet will be held for members of the societies and their dates at 6 p.m. The Wake Forest-Carolina basketball game highlights the evening entertainment.

as the clock read fifteen minutes left to play, the Deacons turned on the steam with their fast breaking offense to tie up the game 52-52 before Cline dropped in his game­winning marker.

Koteski Gallagher

Esquire Club Prepares For Open House

The Esquire Club, in prepara­tion for an open house smoker af­ter examinations, has recently

Nine Wake Forest men are pre­sent members of the organization. They are Seavy Carroll, Bruce Brown, Bedford Black, Ralph Brtimet (president of the N. c. Chapter), R. A. Goldberg, William: Windes, Professor A. L. Aycock Zon Robinson, and Phil Highfill:

Both societies will have tryouts for debates and orations at their weekly meetings Monday night.

George Veitch, with 13 points, paced the Wake Forest attack, fol­lowed by Berger with 11. Bonds racked up nine points, and Cline and Koteski each rang up four field goals for eight points apiece.

completed renovation of their -------·-----­

Professor McDonald Will In TIME Give Concert January 11 [Continued from Page Two]

chapter room on the third floor of Bostwick Hall.

In addition to having reuphols­tered furniture purchased from Phi Rho Sigma, medical fraternity, the club has sanded and varnished

Charles E. Brock Takes Own Life in Auto Trunk

I the floor of the chapter room. 1 Draperies and rugs will be secured

Professor Thane McDonald of in this great fight for freedom." soon. the Wake F?rest_ College depart- Many student leaders, not lilt- Plans are also underway for ne­ment of music will present an or- ing to think that Wake Forest men gotiation with the Pan-Hellenic

Charles E. Brock, Wake Forest sophomore of last year, was found dead last. Monday in the trunk of his automobile, parked near the Rocky Mount fair grounds. Death was attributed to suicide by car­bon monoxide poisoning.

gan . recital Sunday, January 11, I will actually die in the war, op-1 Council for affiliation with that Brock, who lived in Rocky at 7.30 p. m. posed his last clause, instructed group. I Mount and who was employed by

The program consists of the fol- him to change ·it to read "who an electrical concern, was 21 years. lowing selections: ''Voluntary on will serve in this great fight for --

1 old.

the Hundredth Psalm Tune," Pur- freedom." - me Decide to Send ! The body was discovered short-cell; a chorale prelude: "My In- Black commented, "What the Ten Delegates to UNC 1: ly after noon after a Negro hunt-most Heart Doth Yearn," Bach; heck, they will die, won't they?" . . er had reported seeing the empty Prelude and Fugue in E Minor," and in the convocation called for At a meetmg Wednesday night, car with the motor running Bach; "Rustic March," Boex; the vote of the student body on the. International Rel~tions Club!' Brock was the son of ~ .. and ''Lento (Orpheus);" Gluck; "Cho- the resolution read, pausing before decided to send approximately ten Mrs. Charles Brock of Rock . rale No. 3 in A Minor," Franck; the last clause: ': ... the proceeds delegates to· the Carolinas' IRC J Mount. y Ave Maria," Verdi; "Improvise- ... are to be used in the erecting conclave January 31-30 in Hotel! tion at Chapel," Riker; "0 Zion," of a memorial to those students Selwyn in Charlotte sponsored by;------·----------­Miller; "Study on an Old English of Wake Forest College who are the International Relations Club i If you think this weather is cold Folk Tune," Milford; and "Toe- called upon to make the Supreme of Winthrop College, Keith James, i you should try the Russian winter. cata," by Reger. Sacrifice in this greatest fight for Club president ,announced. ! There the thermometer goes down

The Navy needs men! The Army needs men! The Marines need men! All guys with brains are requested t.o finish their education.

freedom." J d I 1 ames sai that this would be i so ow it take the mercury 43 days The student body voted to ac- the first meeting of its kind in the j to rise high enough t~_be seen

cept the resolution. The clause two Carolinas and is being initiat- ' when held over a flame. The had been changed only slightly, ed by the Winthrop club this year.! soldiers begin to sweat and still conveyed the idea of death, Invitations have been issued to I their coats when the ten:tpt!rl but no one objected. every IRC in the two CarOlinas. ·rises to 50 belo~.

a f

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tb te Cl liE as or

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Page 5: College ·· fo Emphasize Summers During War€¦ · State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A

..

Friday, ~anuary_ 9, 1942 .... Old Gold and Black :Page Five

' .Ametl.ica's War Victims

Appeal for Y~Qur Help

\FORUM.

.,, - '.', >' :

-First war poster of the new World '!Jar, painted by the distinguished artist James Montgomery Flagg, carries an appeal for a $50,000,000 war fund to aid the victims of aggression upon the United States , and Its

· - island possessions.

To aid the victims of warfare be­Ing wagf,!d upon America and her island possessions, the American Red C_ross has Issued an appeal for

$5n,ooo.ooo war fl!nd, Cbairman Norman H. Davis announced from the national headquarters In Wash· lngton.

Mr. Davis urged men, women and ~blldren to give to this mercy fund tllrough their local Red Cross Chap· ters. These funds wlll support the Chapter's war work with the fami· lies of men In the military services, as well as the broad relief program or the national Red Cross.

President Roosevelt, who is pres­Ident of the American Red Cross, issued a proclamation urging all citizens to give to the Red Cross war fund.

In launching tile appeal, Chair· man Davis said:

.. There are millions of our c!tl· zens who desire today to demon· strate their wlll to victory over the enemy. Not all can be In the armed forces, and not all can volunteer their services for humanitarian work. but all can volunteer their dollars to arm the Red Cross to be their representative at the scene of battle and distress.

"Today is the day to demonstrate our high morale. our unity, our de­termination not alone to support our President and our fighting men at the front. but also to Insure to our wou~ed. homeless and su1fer· ing fellow citizens In our Paclftc Islands that we stand one hundretJ per cent ready to aid them throng' the Red Cross.··

[Continued from Page Two]

our collegiate careers. I offer the . following suggestions:

l. ' . The . Athletic Department i should immediately initiate a pro-[ gram t'lf regular calisthenics for 1

ALL students of the college. This 1

program should supplement the I regular requirements. for first and j second year men

2. There should be an immedi­ate contact made with the Office of Civilian Defense, to the end that classes in this vital work be started on the cam~us.

3. All students subject to the draft act should consult members of the faculty relative to their qualifications for particular branches of the service, and con­sequentiy concentrate upon weak points in their equipment. This effort will assure the placement of volunteers or Selectees in posi­tions where they can render the most effective srvice.

4. There should be organized a committee of students and faculty

·members to act as a steering,com­mittee and clearing house for all defense activities on the campus.

5. Campus politics should be held to a minimum during the ·present crisis. This, in my opinion, would require a drastic change in the present system of ~tudent gov-ernment. ..

6. We, as students, should "re­think" our present habits, in that the burden, which will continue to be more difficult for those respon­sible for our education,, might be lessened.

CHET MORRISON.

Christmas vacation will continue to be long so that boys can work during holidays."

Q. "Will any changes be made in the regular session courses?"

A. "New courses will be added, but I am not at liberty to say what the subjects will be yet. Hyphenated courses - courses which require two semesters' work for credit-will be broken down so that a student may enter and withdraw from college at any time and earn full credit for the work he does. Old courses will put new emphasis on problems of the day-such as in the history de­partment-and new courses will put emphasis on science and me­chanics."

Q. "Why were requirements for the naval and for the marine re­serve read at Wednesday's convo­cation? It sounded. somewhat like a recruiting office."

DEAN SPEAKS \ sion students return for the sum­! mer divisitm, how will the girls

[Continued from Page One] i be accommodated?"

A. "That was not the intention at all. · The idea was to let the students know that college men have something to look forward to, that by finishing college they may become officers." 1

and become qualified ~or the i Q. "Regular session enrollment naval reserve or the marme re- will decrease to some degree, so serve. Othen-tisP, I believe the that even if all students attend

WARONWASTE IS AID FOR DEFENSE. ._ ___ ., - . _ _,,,

. ITS AS . SIMPLE AS THIS:

EVERYBODY WHO

PREVENTS AFIRE-

EVE.R.VBODY WHO

CONSERVES OR

PREsERVES

EVERYBODY WHO

PREVENTS OR AVOIDS AN ACCIDENT-

Available .. Britt Has Epistolary Syndicate

Available Britt is available! Not that the Fort Bragg Negro in Life had anything to do

with it, for Available Donald declares that his idea is original. To be specific, Britt is contemplating a letter-writing syn­

dicate to occupy his spare time between letters to his women and to brush up on his style.

Euzelians Pick Hicks Prexy Trivette Will Preside; Hicks Chosen To Act As Secretary For Day In one of the most important

meetings of the school year, Eu­zelians Monday night elected Lan­sing Hicks, senior from Raleigh, to the presidency for the spring se­mester and at the same meeting approved a number of changes in the society's constitution as pre­sented by a committee headed ·by retiring president George Eddins. ,

Hicks has been active in the work of the society for four years, and he served as vice-president during the fall term. In addition, he has represented the society in several occasions in competition with the Philomathesian Society. He succceeds George Eddins, a senior from Jackson Heights, N. Y., under whose leadership the so­ciety has had one of its most suc­cessful terms in recent years.

Tobey Is Vice-President i Other officers named at the i meeting Monday night incluuded: ! vice-president, Manly Tobey; sec-1 retary, Lawrence Highfill;. treasur-er, Robert Lasater; censor, John Dixon Davis; chaplain, Bryon Kin­law; critic, Paul Bell; sargeant-at­arms, George Eddins.

Proposed changes in the consti­tution were discussed and passed on in a heated two-hour session. Other business of great import­ance which was discussed at the meeting included plans for Found­er's Day. A special call meeting was announced for Wednesday night, and at that meeting the so­ciety further discussed its part in the activities of the day. At that time Monday night was set aside as the time for try-outs for both debates and orations in competi­tion to choose representatives for the society.

The Available Jones admirer*-------------

d . •tat 1. •t t d d th t ! he is not responsible for the re- GOLD AND BLACK reporter re-an 1m1 or so 1c1 s ra e an a 1

b . . . th f f 1 tt I plies received. Futhermore, he quests a cut of the profits.

usmess rs m e orm o e ers . . to write. He is well versed in the does not require th~t he be allow- And, on top of that, he will have art of all letter writing, incll.lding ed to read the replies. to pay the photographer for any reminders home for money (a cut I And Available Britt :;ledges se- pictures used for publicity pur­on which is anticipated), love let-[ crecy in all transactionF in the poses. Then, there's the cost of ters to girls, letters rejecting wo- letters he writes. his roommate's stationery. men, blessing outs, letters of sym-1 But the epistler may run into B t A "I bl B ·u ill t b pathy, congratulation, etc., mostly II difficulties. d"scu gvadJ a He . rr _w t no e

1 oura e . e 1s gomg o carry etc. , He hated to have to run an ad 1 out h. 1

Will Furnish Stationery 'in the paper. Someone suggested I 15 P an.

Available states that he will that a feature would serve the At least he hopes to earn enough furnish the stationery and will do same purpose. But the OLD to cover his own mailing expenses. happy letters for ten cents per page, mizzuble letters for fifteen cents. He will type them himself, have them signed, and even mail them for three cents extra.

He doesn't guarantee results and

fellows should take the same at- summer school the numbe~ will titude toward that they do toward i not be as great as during peace-

d · r th t• ~~ efense program-rea tze a time. Furthermore, many girls Does Your Hair Need Cutting?

1t lS what .the governme~t. wan~, schools are also going on the and you m1ght say, that 1t 1s therr three-year program. Even if a patriotic duty." large number do come here they

Q. "Will expenses be the same: can be housed in private h~mes." for a three-year ccllege course !~ i Q. "Will vacation p_eriods ;re­they are for a four-year course. 1 main the same?"

COME IN TO SEE US

We appreciate your business

CITY BARBER SHOP "Down Town Wake Forest"

A. "No; they will be less. We! A. "Yes, there will be a month estimate expenses for one full: between the summer division's Y_ear, exclu~~ the summer divi~ j end and the beginning of the reg-

~n~: ~tioo~b-$1~,ul~a:r~~~s~~~o~n~in~S~e~p~t~e~m~b:e:~~~T~h=e~==================~~~~~==~l food, $225; books, $30; and room,! _ $75. This.is a total of $495 ior 1

one year, or $1980 for four years. "Summer school expenses we

estimate as: fees, $22.50; books $10; food, $50; and room, $13.50. For one summer this is $96, and for three summers, $288, or $207 less than one full year.

"Thus while four full years cost an estimated $1980, three yl!ars and three summer divisions would cost only $1773."

Faculty Larger Q. "With more emphasis on

summer school, won't it be neces­sary to keep a larger faculty than usual for the division?"

A. "Yes." Q. "Will that not mean that

summer school expenses will have to be raised?"

A. "I don't think so. In the summer, while the faculty will be larger, other expenses which are nec:essary during the winter will

less. There will be no heat­costs-:-they are tremendous-­.there will be a smaller light as well as other economies. ·do raise fees, we will make only a small raise."

''Will girls continue to be ad­to the summer session?"

"Yes." "If, as the college has re­

a majority ot regular ses-

Each time you taste Ice-cold Coca-Cola, you are reminded that here is the quality of genuine goodness. Experience ••• many a refreshing experience ••• has taught people every• where to trust the quality of Coca-Cola.

IOTTLED UNDI!R AUTHOIITT OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IY

Capital Coca-Cola :Bottlin¥ Co., Inc. Raleigh, N. C.

Have fun-be friendly Treat yourself and

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Page 6: College ·· fo Emphasize Summers During War€¦ · State, WCTC, and Wake. dar to accommodate the new em- ·problems. , phasis on summer school'?" Members of this board include A

Page Six

Governor Puts Memory on War Group

Professor Will Aid In Coordinating High School Activities

Old Gold and Black

:---.I Here's The Bad News Here's the bad news we've been waiting 18 weeks for.

According to an announcement, by Registrar Grady Patter­son, final examinations will begin Friday, January 16, !'It 9 a.m. and end Friday January 23.

From the current catalogue, page 35: "No deviation from this posted schedule is allowed except by

special authorization of the Executive Committee."

The schedule follows:

Friday, January 9, 1942

College To Emphasiz.e [Continued from Page One]

have the material needed, some dislocation is inevitable." .

years. Therefore, there will be ao change in tjle program; there will only be . added emphasis on summer schooi.

Enter In June · Dr .. Kitchin· read requirements "Freshmen will be expected to

enter school neXt June." he said, for entrance to the naval reserve, instead of in_ September. "Other sections V-5 and V-7, and the ma- students will also be be expected rine corps reserve, showing that to attend summer school."

Professor Jasper L. Memory, Jr., director of the College News Bureau, was appointed last week by Governor J. Melville Brough­ton as a member of a committee

men with college degrees have op- Dr. Bryan also stated 'that the portunities of becoming officers. conference· in Baltimore . was of At the same time, he pointed out, the opinion that "there are some their education will not be inter- draft boards which have been ra-

Morning. 9:00-12: 00 Aft~rnoon 2: 00-5:00 ther cantankerous · in deferring. 16 R li · 1 & 5 All s rupted if they enlist in these serv-English 1, All sections January e gwn • ecs. college students."

T S Cl ices. 1:30 T T S Classes January 17 10: 30 T ass.es "There was a feeling that selec-

"to co-ordinate high school activi-1 9: 00 M W F Classes January 19 2:30 T T S Classes The government expects col- tive boards have not been ration-l 11:30 T T S Classes January 2q 11:30 M W F Classes leges to carry on their work, Dr. ally selective," he said. Therefore,

ties under the defense and war

program."

11 10:30 M W F Classes January 21 2:30 M W F Classes I h 1 · d the conference de Bryan said in his address. "How e exp arne ' -

9:00 T T S Classes January 22 8:00 M W F Classes ,. ?" cided to appeal to draft boards, J 1:30MWFClasses January23 8:00TTSClasses are they to carry on. he_asked, ointin- out the need of college 1 and answered the . · questwn by P g ff' · ·

Only other college official on Pictured above is Professor\ -·--- ------------·-·--·---·---·---- t t' th t th t " t r men as o leers. h 'tt · C 1 el J W hi f f . f . ·S a mg a ey dmus,, s ream me Dr. Bryan concluded,· "We are

t e comrm ee ls 0 on · · Jasper L. Memory, Jr., c 'e 0 1

Montgomery, Ala., Jan. 2.~Wil- Upon the complebon o courses m the college calen ar. 'd ak g ·ng to keep Harrellson, dean of State College. 11 N B h . w1 e aw e; we are 01

the Co ege ews ureau, W 0 liam Howard Stogner of 100 Ev- primary, basic and advanced 11

While. other colleges ar" having our feet on the ground. You can The remaining members are state d k b G · "" · h 1 was appointe last wee Y OV- erett street, Rockingham, N. C., is schools, he will be awarded a com-1' to make radical changes in this· count on the college to do its best department officials and sc oo

-superintendents. emor Broughton to serve on now enrolled as an aviation cadet mission as a second lieutenant inTstreamlining, he said, Wake For- for the government's interest, your defense committee for high in the Army Air Corps Replace- the Army Air Forces. ! est already has the structure for interest and the interest of so-

"The broadening of the Selec- schools, · He was a sales manager before I fully training college men in three ciety." ment 'Tra1'ning Center at Maxwell · '1 · ------------tive Service ages," the Governor he entered the Army. He partici- - --·----- _____ c__ -

stated in a letter to Prof. Memory,. Field, Ala. pated in football in high school i "has made it inevitable that a; J b A o 1 Cadet Stogner, who attended and college. large number of our high school: 0 s re pen I Wake Forest College, will leave ;;;;;;;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;·:;-1 graduates will go. directly into . • soon for primary school for the army and navy service. This In Civil SerVICe first phase of his flight training. seems to indicate the need for some immediate changes in and supplements to our high school courses of instruction."

To Improve Bodies

While the committee has not yet planned its work, Mr. Memory predicted that specific changes to be introduced immediately will center around activities in upper grades of the high school and will result in better physiques among high school students.

"A better knowledge of how to care for their bodies and more practical information about first aid measures, the care of the sick, and more technical information about projects of especial war­time value will be emphasized," Professor Memory stated.

Personal Positions Are Available For College Men Annual Civil Service examina­

tions in the field of personnel, "Junior Professional Assistants" and "Student Aid" are now avail­able, the Civil Service Commission , has announced. I

!n the field of personnel the po­sitions available are Junior Occu­pational Analyst, $2000 a year; for the Federal Security Agenc;r, Personnel Assistant, $2,600 a year to $3,800 a year; and Personnel Clerk at $2,300 a year, for various government agencies. All appli­cants for these positions must have had responsible experience in a regularly constituted person­nel agency. Provision has been

State high school inspector from made '"to allow college study to 1925 to 1929, Memory founded the qualify for part of the experience Wake Forest College News Bureau and for the acceptance of applica­when he came here as professor tions from senior students who of education in the fall of 1929. will graduate prior to July 1, 1942. He has been prominent in high No written test will be given for school activities of the State. these positions. ____ -·---------- __ The jobs available under the

Sloan Commends College Bond Campaign

[Continued from Page One]

tributed $33.00 to the Wake Forest College Defense Savings Bond drive. Other names will appear in a later issue.

Junior Professional Assistants classification include agricultural economist, chemist, geologist, state department assistant, and statisti­cian. Applicants must have com­pleted a four-year college course leading to a bachelor's degree. I

Student Aid positions, include engineering, political science, pub­lic administration and 'statistics.

Bedfo1·d Black. $1.00; Bob Gold- Applicants must have completed berg, $1.00; Bill Burgwyn, $1.00; three years of college study. Gene Tomlinson, $1.00; Norman Persons Qua!ijied Drake, $1.00; W. F. West, $1.00; Persons qualified for Govern­Lowry Mallory, $2.00; Charles ment service are urged to get Giles, 50c; Bob Gallimore, $1.00; copies of examination announce-

Forest Theatre Fri., ·Jan 9

ANN CORIO - JACK LaRUE

"SWAMP WOMAN"

Sat., Jan 10 - Double Feature

CHARLES STARRETT IN

"Prairie' Stranger" WEAVERS BROS. - ELVIRY

'TUXEDO JUNCTION'

Mon., Jan. 12 SHIRLEY TEMPLE

HERBERT MARSHAL

"KATHLEEN" Also $65.00 Jack Pot

Tues., Jan 13 FREDRIC MARCH LORETTA YOUNG

"A Bed Time Story"

Wed., Jan. 14 ROSELYN RUSSELL WALTER PIDGEON EDWARD ARNOLD

"Design for Scandal"

Thurs, Jan 15 BOB HOPE

"Louisanna Purchase"

Fri., Jan. 16 HUMPHREY BOGART

MARY ASTOR

"The Moultin Falcon"

Notice: All pictures will be held over at the COLLEGIATE

the next day. J. E. Tate, 50c; F. E. Bishop, I ments at any first or second class $1.00; Bill West, $1.00 Eli Gallo-, post office not later than January

way, $1.00; Everett Snyder, $1.00; I 11! 5~, ~1~94~2~.:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:::;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D. B. Bryan, $1.00; George Stamps, ; ----$1.00; Clyde Whitener, $1.00; Chester Morrison, $1.00; Harry Waller, $1.00; Louis Cox, $1.00; Ed Arendt, $1.50; Hugh Transou, $1.00; Mac Byers, $1.00; Jimmy Jones, $1.00; John Fletcher, $1.00; Murray Goodwin, $1.00; A. B. Cross, $1.00;

Dewitt Trivette, $1.00; W. J. Douglas, $1.00; D. D. Gross, $1.00; Jack Little, $1.00; Gladstone Hill, $1.00; Bernice Bass, $1.00; Bob;

, Sawyer, $1.00. I I

SPECIALS

Peacans ------·---- ·-- ____ lOc

Salmon ------· ·-·---- 20c can

OVERBY'S (Beside Coach Phil's and Dean Stansbury's)

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

FOR THE VERY BEST IN FOOD

"Our Food Is Our Advertisement" ..

HOLLOWELL'S SPECIAL COFFEE, ground in our store _________ 20c lb. FRESH KILLED FRYERS ---·------------·-----·----------·-··--· 25c lb.

QUART MIXED PICKLES _____________ 25c jar

HOLLOWELL'S CASH FOOD STORE ' ....

"GOOD THINGS TO EAT"

Phone 252-1 and 253-1

TRY THIS

TASTY

COMBINATION

Delicious, generously

seasoned hamburger on fresh toasted bun.

JUST lOc

EDDIE'S HAMBURGERS

Milder Better-Tasting .•. that's why

?IUtS}t;ifr

Learn

Ball Room. Dancing

• JENNETTE'S STUDIO

OF DANCE

New Location

213 HILLSBORO ST.

Formerly Owned by

LOUISE N. WILLIAMS

Class Lessons - 25c Hour

Tuesdays and Fridays

DOROTHY McGUIRE , , , popular star of John Golden's hit play"Ciaudia," says Merry Christmas to her many friends with tha cigarette that Satisfies.

· &Hanr lis Chesterfield ·

••• it's his cigarette and mine

This year they're saying Merry Christmas with Chesterfields.

For your friends in the Service And for the folks at home What better Christmas present Than these beautiful gift cartons Of 10 packs, 3 packs, or 4 tins of 50. -

Nothing else you can buy Will give more pleasure for the mcme:y

Buy Chesterfields For your family and friends Beautifully packed /or Christmas ..

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