6
r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ .. . .. ·--·· : - f! .. .. ; ·< :WOLFP ACK :. '• . . . .-·' . ! .. .,. .. ,.' Volume XXX. 'No.5 * * ··: " - /./: .. NO COAL- COLD Telephone 304-6/. · Hope'-'. l . . . . .... For Shiplrient· Ctal S'Qon i Wake C., .. Friday, October 19, 1945 'C:haotic.'!'eet . College To Trek Ralt!ighward Ne(85Sitates J. S J - ;M .. - ··w If -- k FirstSecondEndof· ·o ee eam . 0 pac ·Re-nom'l·nat·lon . . ·.·' •. . Present Stock Should Be · s-ufficient· If W..arm 2 9:00 '9:10 10:00 ::ptli · In County Rivalry Tomorrow 6 2:5o 3:oo · &:5o Class ·· •Weather J,.asts Whole State Short The College administration has done all within its power to se-- enougn fuel to keep VVake Foresters comfortable. However, "the war doesn't seem 'to be over -as far as. coal is concerned", Mr. Earnshaw said. He has contacted -the College's fuel dealers in Nor- folk. imd Raleigh and has put forth every effort to secure coal. He says: "It's no go at present". Alumni Dinner VVake Forest, however, is in. no worse position than other places A.- Wake Forest College dinner in the state. Durham reports that for students, taculty, and towns- . her swank VVashington-Duke Ho- people wlil be held at the S & W tel has had neither heat nor hot Cafeteria in Raleigh at 6: 00 o'clock water in more than a week. On on Wednesday, November 14. This Wednesday the Raleigh News and will be during the week of the ObserVer· reports that• some Baptist State ·parts of. the state there is suffi..: · No are necessary. .cient coal to keep only hospitals Those who wish to attend !he din- :supplied. ner will go down the regular serv- · . . !lre hopeful that the ir;g line, pay the cashier for the Eleven Students se·le,.ted :situatwn will be merely an un- dinner, and then go to the TRAY 1 pleasant memory within a few SHOP off the mezzanine. . . professor helpfully report- $ 220 oo'oR . d For Colle•e Who's Who ted that he had a solution. Said eCelVe If ;be: : "Use oil". ' . - ' Due to devastation caused by the Civll VVar, Wake Forest Col- lege -suspended its exercises in May, 1862, and did not resume them until January, 1866.- For a year or so, the one College build- ing was occupied as a hospital for wounded soldiers. The Wake Forest Baptist Church membership, in 1865, was as fol- lows: Whi,te males twenty-nine, of whom seven were studentS; wlii.te females colored males seventeen;'colored females · .. .nineteen; total ninety-one. --· . /' ' --- Subscriptions toward Wake County's $5QO,OOO goal in the Wake Forest $7,000,000.00 Enlargement G_ampaign have >:eached $220.000. :!his is an excellent beginning, re- ports Mr. Eugene Olive, Dire()tor of the Wake County Division of the Enlargement Program. Sub- zcriptions hi Raleigh have .reached approximately $85,000.00 How- ever, Mr. Olive plans soon to close the Raleigh Office and major in the Lumberton Section of North Carolina. · " Many large donations are being received, .and many smaller ones have helped toward the. goal. VVm. M. McGill, speech activi- Eleven students have been ty; H. B. Mabe, student govern- chosen to represent Wake Forest ment; Milton C. Marney, athletics, in Who's Who Among Students in student.governme11t; Luther Mer- American Universities and Col- phis, ·religious activity, student leges, a directory of outstanding governmen; Sallie Vaughan, stu- students published annually in dent government. Alabama-. This year's quota was Three students who were elected 11. They are: Eugene Deese, re- last year will be included.- They Ugious activity; J. Dewey Hobbs, are Nick Sacrinty, Nancy Easley, athletics, religious activity; Anne and John Chandler. Inman, student government and The qualifications for election student math assistant; Mrs. Ma- call"for junior or senior standing. cy Lee James, women's student The students elected were judged government and English assistant;' on: scholarship, leadership, char: Anne B. Johns, journalism, reli- acter, participation in extracurric- gious activitY, student govern- ular activities, and indication of ment; J3etty Lide, !lcholarship; future usefulness. Each Team Hopes to Halt ·Losing Streak; Capacity Crowd Expected Gillespie T q Tell . Of lmprove1nent Thirteen students began a two week period of observation Tues- day prior to starting practice teaching. The • practice will last about six weeks, the students teaching one period each day. Maxine Hudson, Qilbertine Har- , "Seven Months in A Japanese dy, Sallie Vaughan, Helen Bras- Concentration Camp" will be the well, Louise Jameson, Verdie Mae subject of Dr. A. S. Gillespie's ev- Chapman, Lois Hall, Mary Gay, ening church service on October Mary Ben f!urris, Bea Gulledge, 21. · ·· and Maylon McDonald are teach- Or. Gillespie, who graduated ing in the high school .. Alvin Pitt from Wake Forest in 1926, went to Jessie Motsinger are teaching China as a missionary in 1931. mg the grammar school. While there he taught in the Chi- I · na Baptist Theological Seminary. I . r----------... In January, 1943, he was intern. ed by the Japanese in Shanghai. He was released and returned to New York on the repatriation ves- sel S.S. Gripsholm in December 1943. . - ' Dr. Gillespie is now· serving as pastor of the Wake Forest Baptist Church and is the chaplain of the College. He taught New Testa- ment during the summer session. Dr. Gillespie ex].:lects to return to China and resume his mission- ary work as soon as it is possible to do.so. · Chapel Next Week The chapel schedule for next week is as follows: Monday - Student Coun- cil in charge. Wednesday- Dr. Edwin E: Aubrey, President of Cro- zer Theological Seminary of Penn., is speaker. Friday- Prof. J. L. Mem- ory, speaker. · ·•

For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;ro · r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ ..: -f! ~--'· .. \~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ,.' ;.~ Volume -----~~~-----·

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Page 1: For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;ro · r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ ..: -f! ~--'· .. \~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ,.' ;.~ Volume -----~~~-----·

r, .

j

.,

'"';-,,'

.< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ .. . . . ·--·· ~; : - f! ~-- '· ..

\~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ; ~. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ~, :. '• . . . .-·' . ! ..

,•'/#~·· .,. ..

------~~~-------· ,.' ;.~ Volume XXX. 'No.5 * * ~--: ··: " ·--~ - /./: ..

U£ NO COAL­

COLD

Telephone 304-6/. ·

{~(ollege Hope'-'. l . . . . ....

i~. • For Shiplrient· '· ~of. Ctal S'Qon

i Wake For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;rorest, N~ C., .. Friday, October 19, 1945

:·~~:::::~ 'C:haotic.'!'eet . College To Trek Ralt!ighward i:~:Mondaywillbeasfol- Ne(85Sitates J. S J - ;M .. - ··w If -- k

FirstSecondEndof· ·o ee eam ~eet . 0 pac Pe~iod ~~~ ,:~~ cr:~g~ ·Re-nom'l·nat·lon . .

·.·'

•.

. Present Stock Should Be · s-ufficient· If W..arm

2 9:00 '9:10 10:00 ::ptli l!:~ ::·~ · ~~r:ad3;~m:ons In County Rivalry Tomorrow 6 2:5o 3:oo · &:5o Class · ·

• Weather J,.asts

Whole State Short The College administration has

done all within its power to se-­cur~ enougn fuel to keep VVake Foresters comfortable. However, "the war doesn't seem 'to be over -as far as. coal is concerned", Mr. Earnshaw said. He has contacted -the College's fuel dealers in Nor­folk. imd Raleigh and has put forth every effort to secure coal. He says: "It's no go at present". • Alumni Dinner

VVake Forest, however, is in. no worse position than other places A.- Wake Forest College dinner in the state. Durham reports that for students, taculty, and towns-

. her swank VVashington-Duke Ho- people wlil be held at the S & W tel has had neither heat nor hot Cafeteria in Raleigh at 6: 00 o'clock water in more than a week. On on Wednesday, November 14. This Wednesday the Raleigh News and will be during the week of the ObserVer· reports that• ~ some Baptist State ~onvention.

·parts of. the state there is suffi..: · No r~ervations are necessary. . cient coal to keep only hospitals Those who wish to attend !he din-: supplied. ner will go down the regular serv- · .

. Of~cials !lre hopeful that the ir;g line, pay the cashier for the Eleven Students se·le,.ted :situatwn will be merely an un- dinner, and then go to the TRAY • 1pleasant memory within a few SHOP off the mezzanine. . .

:-w~~· professor helpfully report- $220 oo'oR . d For Colle•e Who's Who ted that he had a solution. Said eCelVe If ;be: : "Use oil". ' . - '

Due to devastation caused by the Civll VVar, Wake Forest Col­lege -suspended its exercises in May, 1862, and did not resume them until January, 1866.- For a year or so, the one College build­ing was occupied as a hospital for wounded soldiers.

The Wake Forest Baptist Church membership, in 1865, was as fol­lows: Whi,te males twenty-nine, of whom seven were studentS; wlii.te females twenty-s~ colored males seventeen;'colored females

· .. .nineteen; total ninety-one.

--·

. /' ' ---

Subscriptions toward Wake County's $5QO,OOO goal in the Wake Forest $7,000,000.00 Enlargement G_ampaign have >:eached $220.000.

:!his is an excellent beginning, re­ports Mr. Eugene Olive, Dire()tor of the Wake County Division of the Enlargement Program. Sub­zcriptions hi Raleigh have .reached approximately $85,000.00 How­ever, Mr. Olive plans soon to close the Raleigh Office and major in the Lumberton Section of North Carolina. · "

Many large donations are being received, .and many smaller ones have helped toward the. goal.

VVm. M. McGill, speech activi-Eleven students have been ty; H. B. Mabe, student govern­

chosen to represent Wake Forest ment; Milton C. Marney, athletics, in Who's Who Among Students in student.governme11t; Luther Mer­American Universities and Col- phis, ·religious activity, student leges, a directory of outstanding governmen; Sallie Vaughan, stu­students published annually in dent government. Alabama-. This year's quota was Three students who were elected 11. They are: Eugene Deese, re- last year will be included.- They Ugious activity; J. Dewey Hobbs, are Nick Sacrinty, Nancy Easley, athletics, religious activity; Anne and John Chandler. Inman, student government and The qualifications for election student math assistant; Mrs. Ma- call"for junior or senior standing. cy Lee James, women's student The students elected were judged government and English assistant;' on: scholarship, leadership, char: Anne B. Johns, journalism, reli- acter, participation in extracurric­gious activitY, student govern- ular activities, and indication of ment; J3etty Lide, !lcholarship; future usefulness.

Each Team Hopes to Halt ·Losing Streak; Capacity

Crowd Expected

Gillespie T q Tell . Of lmprove1nent

Thirteen students began a two week period of observation Tues­day prior to starting practice teaching. The • practice will last about six weeks, the students teaching one period each day.

Maxine Hudson, Qilbertine Har-, "Seven Months in A Japanese dy, Sallie Vaughan, Helen Bras­

Concentration Camp" will be the well, Louise Jameson, Verdie Mae subject of Dr. A. S. Gillespie's ev- Chapman, Lois Hall, Mary Gay, ening church service on October Mary Ben f!urris, Bea Gulledge, 21. · ·· and Maylon McDonald are teach-

Or. Gillespie, who graduated ing in the high school .. Alvin Pitt from Wake Forest in 1926, went to ~nd Jessie Motsinger are teaching China as a missionary in 1931. mg the grammar school. While there he taught in the Chi- I · na Baptist Theological Seminary. I . r----------...

In January, 1943, he was intern. ed by the Japanese in Shanghai. He was released and returned to New York on the repatriation ves­sel S.S. Gripsholm in December 1943. . - '

Dr. Gillespie is now· serving as pastor of the Wake Forest Baptist Church and is the chaplain of the College. He taught New Testa­ment during the summer session.

Dr. Gillespie ex].:lects to return to China and resume his mission­ary work as soon as it is possible to do.so. ·

Chapel Next Week The chapel schedule for

next week is as follows: Monday - Student Coun­

cil in charge. Wednesday- Dr. Edwin

E: Aubrey, President of Cro­zer Theological Seminary of Penn., is speaker.

Friday- Prof. J. L. Mem-ory, speaker. ·

·•

Page 2: For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;ro · r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ ..: -f! ~--'· .. \~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ,.' ;.~ Volume -----~~~-----·

Page Two

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

dent newspaper of Wa~c Forest College. Publish­ed '~eek_Iy durl!lg the school year except during exammat10n periods and hol!days as -directed by :he Wake Forest University P•lblications Board.

Sue :Marshall Eddie Foll• Bettie Horsley Richard Brinkley

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

William E. (Blll) King Business l>lanager

Editorial Staff: Herbert Appenzeller, Kitty Jo Beasley, Ruth Blount, Rebecca Brown, Madge CoJlrad., Kay Garland, !!~rank Gregory, L. R. Gro­gah, .Jr., Jon Hall, 1\Iary Howell, Mary Lee James, Anne Johns, Sibyl Jolly, Leldon Kirk, Sarah Eliza­beth .:'<Iilcs, Jean Shelton. Jo !:>helton, Lewton Smith, Helen Tuckcrr \\"ade Vanna~-. Frances \'i\·ian Wollett, Bill Clark.

Sports Staff: Rock Brinkley, Paul Allabrook, Jim Harris, Milton llfarne~·-

Business Staff: Paul Canady, Vivian Carter, Ern~si Chappell, Barbee Council, Dorothy Freeman; Brantley Joll~·. :Margaret Little, Miriam Morris, J immr Strnpe, James Hobbs, circulation.

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, P. 0. Box 591, Wak& Forest, N. C. All IJUsine~s matter should he addressed to the busi­ness manager, same address. Subscription rate: $1.50 a year.

PHO:-IE 3il4~G. For important news on Thurs­llays phone 2561, The Record Publishing Co., Zebu­lun, K. C. ·

Entered as second class mail matter January 22, 1UJG, at the post office at Wake Forest, North Carolina, under til& act of March 3, 1879.

Member Intercollegiate Press Member Associated Collegiate Pre_ss

. '·

Old Gold--and_ Black ·? . ' ,-. '.

,' in t~ pli.st know the rfch fellows~ip such meet~ ings provide. New acquaintances are mad~ and old ones are renewed.

This year the convention should be :well at­. tended because the gas restriction has been

DeWey .. Li,kes:·His , .. •.yp}fEUNfr\''. Brothers, ~'Ginny'' lifted and special buses are a~ailable.

It is hoped that a considerable number will attend this year. In order to have a strong BSU it is necessary to have well-trained leaders. -by Si.byl Jolly- ing been turned down. by the

. Al'my in Augus~- '43. Upon ar-Last year only twenty students attended the He heartily dislikes people ·who riving here, he went out for foot-

aislike food because fo~d is, above b 11 t• d . d th . d

COLLEGE ...

.-by_Mary Lee James-convention from Wake Fores.t.. This year we all. else, his favorite like. . One a prac 1ce, an rna e e squa

·because of. t_he .. scarcity· 9f· men, . . . . . . ,. _ . . want, at the very least, to· double that number. ·can well understa,nd. this because says Dewey, but we know better. · ·~· . ·· . h · f b h · r d A forrner·aJ;ia;:·prisonei~okwar;·. · ... , Classes will be. excused So make your e Is a arm- ?Y> avmg· ~ve. on Hobbs has proven himself a capa- Hamlin R.· Cathey, ,J"unior'· fro·m·-.

. · - "'· a farm four m1les from· Wilming- ble and terrific blocker on· offense ~ · plans to go to Salisbury on Friday morning, Oc- ton most of his life. Ho~g and "solid as a rock on defense". Charlotte, entered W!Mt~Forest + b 26th . was his favorite hobby, and his H · · - d ts th!s;fall to P.!-'eJ?ar~ ~olfor .. tlle,

_,.o er . d il h . f _.,_, fift h , e 1s a JU~or now an expec . m1rustry.· Stationed J.J;L.'Eng\andr, .11 •• a Y c ore was ee"' ... g_ Y un- to garduate- m June '47. Here at th. ;..,"" ~'f~

gry-husky porkers tw1ce a day. Wake Forest, he. has taken an out- months with e 8th ·n.U.:::-_Force,.

Watchin8 The Collel;es Hotn.ecoming is the word· in colleges all ov­

er the South. From North Carolina to the Mis-

B t t t f t th Cathey flew twenty mis~ons:be.: u we mus no ~rge • e cows ·standing . part in the .religious fore .b.eing shot. dQwn. ov~ .. fJ:W.,;, th~t had to · b~ milked_ an& f~d a_ctivities and is president of many. _.ije .. · w~s. taken,'?-.· ..... ;.u.ner . .;· , . . ·daily : .. he had a spet:Ial wa~ m s:s.U. He is also a Sigma Pi - ...--.. SI_>eakmg to old bossy; . she lik_ed fraternity man, .treasurer. of the anc~ placed in Statag-:t;tift No• ~ . hrm very, t:nuch ... kicked him Monogram Club and a member of in East Prussia where he.remain- · ?nly _three times during .nis Uillk~ the Student Council. ed for-=one year. . . . . mg career H bl h d .1 d ftly h In Mqrch of ... t\$ ;vear:-Cfa~y. •. J .· . e· us e ' sml e -so ·s ow- along with; th.e-rest. Qf .. "-"-"'"lSOll·_. ·_,_ · · · d · d · · th He was born .oseph Dewey · · h' "H bb " . d" · 1 h - . ~.,. "'"' · · "'· · SISSlppi, stu ents are plannmg ecorattons, e H bb J M h 2 1925 mg . ts o s .. Ul).p e~ w en ars, was· evacuated- to •·-prevent · .. ·

"big game", and the midnight balls. 'ke \e~e~n ne~:r having· had questillonked abouh~ hils l~v~ life.t~s, )iberation by:the :Rt~s .. ''1;4ey -- - t b t h . . d tl d .we a now, IS ove lS res mg were kt!pt on, the. march ''by the Enlargementplansnowspeakinterms.of aey.slSers, u elSar.en Y e- peacefullywithal·ecentgraduate Q ' h · t' ·r ··. b

• • , _ • · Th. · · voted to .his two little brothe~s of Welte Forest who is now teach~ : erma~,. avmg o seep 1D. arns stone, bnck, and archttect s drawtngs. e one and t~o.years younger than mg his "Hobbs" dimple when -?,nd belJlg.,yery .poQrlY:·f~t~tll Twig announces that··"dfere is .a possibility h~ resp~chvely. He spent mos~ of "Ginny. with the light' brown· ~eyl·~Are l.ibeyat~:- bil¥::·~6-eC.Ml.th . .g- .

. - blS childhood days separatmg h - , - 1can · st . !DY qn ...,.pr , _.. .I! __ ey ... that work on the new buildings .!_O be const~uct- them when fighting. In the end, aU". says that .th~ day, o~, ~b~l.!,tiQii, ed on the Meredith College campus as a part df however, i~ was he who had to was -the q~pp~est. qf,-his.-life. - ·

. . . pay the pnce because he was the D J J H -C~:~they wa~ · grad'ij~Wd; _ fi.'!l~ ... the expansiOn program wtll begm. nex~ March oldest,' When Dad came from the r urt ~orth- Greenville Jupror c;oqei!~· · or April." barber shop, the.boys always told • • • m 194~. He· entered, the:;_~ .

. . . different · versions of their scrap Corps m September of th~ ~(!Jlle ~

.. '

Hard, Clean Play Postwar dreams beconre-reabttes as student and in order to get the guilty per- L d c 11 g . year and took his basic. t~i; _' _

magazines, long dormant,. begin to appear on son, Dad .always "attended" to the aU 8 Q , e · e at St. Pe~ersburg, Fl~. -·He W~, ' . ~-- .·

T u · · · f S · matter personally and to . each . Jthen st~t1oned at . Stoux .. FallS, -several campuses. he mverslty o . outh with a. nice juicy, tentier birch. _ s .. P.; Kmgman, Ar~ •. S~t-~ake· ...

The Deacs have lost three great games this Carolina starts anew with Th~.Carolina Review, H ''B'n1' Head · Dr. John ·Jeter Hurt, who was C1ty; Utal:J, Moses. Lake, Wi!$1Wli- .. A h · · · 1 · h h · h · · · as;. 15 ' -.given .his honorary. Doctorate of ton, Harvard, Nebr., and· Carney, year. t t e same time they have inJ~Cted new a_ maga~:ne w tic as _as 1ts purpo~e t e. pro_v~- . He is one of the friendliest men Divinity in ig21, spoke ·wednesday Nebr. He was awarded the; Air

· life into their long-standing rep-utation as a ston of an outlet for literary creatiOn and Crltt- .on the aampus; he·,greets every- morning to a· chapel convocation Med~l and the Purple Heart. team which plays clean football. cism" and encouragement of work: in these .on~ ·invariably with a cheerful of the student bodr !Ind. faculty. -- ·*

, . · smile and ~a·--soft-spoken -"Good- Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin, Pres- . · Last Saturday's game was a far cry from fields. f. · . morning.'.' He is also· one of the- ·ident of the coll.ege, introduced Dr. Fqrmer .naval a~1ator Bl'!lce Me-

the first game played by a back-yard squad The South Carolina GameCock comes to the ·l~rgest -men·-~n •campus ~ith his Winston· Pearce, pastor of .tlie -Don~tld /at~ ~bttof dturmGg.dalthe • • • • • • - • · SIX feet, two mches m· he1ght and First Baptist Church in Durham, wors o · _e- a e a ua -

sixty years ago. In those years the College has front, agam, With an editOrial m ·pratse. of the two hundred twenty pounds in who led m prayer .-and iQ. turn ill- canal. Stabon_!!d on·'~' battle-· grown much in influence, in tradition, in college faculties in World War Two. weight. His head ·requires a size traduced . the speaker,'· scam;_l!-f ~-aratog~ for. the· gr~~

. • 8 hat, but he does not own one ~-Hurt, president of the Union part o, 1s. ser\tH:e overseas, ..... c-prowess on the football field. Demon Deacons The wnter says. because he, has .. never-been able University_ in 'l'ennessee, and long Donalds . squadron w~s; the. only has become a formidable and respected name in "They haven't fired a gun. They don't to .purchase one large enough. pastor· of the First Baptist naval squadron ~or ~,.t~eand..had

, · Coach Walker has. had a difficult Chilrch£-s in Durham and Wil- the help p~ only a·limi~d.number the world of sports. wear a Purple Heart. Th~y haven t had to time· in obtaining a: football bel- mington, spoke of his love for the of army pilot_s. .. .

Wake Forest men on the gridiron are as shelter themselves in foxholes: They ·haven't met .that was comfortable. As a college and remarked tm the F McDonaldd Its ad ~atiwv~,._o:fFW~ tt f f t this · "th fir t · · orest ·an a en e~ qAe· ores~ tough as they come - they play hard but clean. shared the glory and glamour of paradise and rna er 0 · ac 18 e s year presence of the large number of c 11 f •

38 t ,

40 :u ... _

. · . . Dewey has. had a new helmet, co-eds on the campus of Wake o ege rom . . . o .. ;o-.,e. en So far this year they have lost less than seven- umforms. Soldiers retij.rn as heroes, they smk even though an ol;'der has been in Forest this session. · ter~d the Naval. A!f C_{lr.Qs ~.A..I!~ ty five ya d It' d t f th 1'nto obscurJ"t for. more than two years. The Dr. Hurt also lauded at length of 41 and recelV~d h~,tr~ at_

- r 8

on pena Jes an mos 0

ese " . ~· . company refused to make one that Wake Forest's football · team, Pens~~~a.Jllld, -1'411~~. Fla .. " After have been for offsides, none for unnecessary Little. time have they had for recreation. large. . . praising them for the show of return~g to the stat~s he .s~ed -roughness. No vacations have been awarded them.· Doc- He. wears a siZe thU"teen shoe, courage .and. sportsmanship . in ~s kan mt~c~r at ·til~ashees -aroU?d.

but he thinks. his feet q,re. quite ,their game with Duke University ac so~v e, a~ un r --'rec-;1v-Yes, Wake Forest has lost three games - tors have ordered many of them to stop work- small, because his-brothers; Je~e .here :last Saturday.· In pa~icular ed a -c:i~l!harge m .D~~b~. 44.

in touchdowns but not in toughness; in score ing so constantly, fearful that it would.injure and JDhn,.·wear size fifteen. '-!'hey he praised th~ passmg of half- He :was awar:c:ied the D~~lltieiJ b . · have: to; order. them· especially. back Nick Sacrinty. Flymg Cros11 and a Pres,9~ al ut not in spirit. Her sons they are many ... their .health • . . made. from. Freeman Shoe com- Taking as his text for the brief Unit Cita~ion and; .~ttailled .Ule

but they are still unrivaled by any as far as we "Although additional administrative bur- P!iDY;· ·Yes! Dewey's. brothers ~re devotiqnal portion _of _the ~d,Ql'ess,. rankA of ~11elltent.~dt, lt,g. ,...cD nal. d , _, d · · . · - not _only., taller than .. qe,but .weigh Dr.: Hurt read: "I,will~ al'l.Se-and .· pre- aw. s tj _en · ··~ . ~. _ . :' .

are concerne . dens were placed upon their shoulders as JUnior many pounds more, and Dewey go to my father ... I have ·missed re-en~er~d. Wake. Ji'orest this· fall . Deacs, we are proud of you! faculty members departed for the armed forces, persists in calling them his "little" Jhe mark," from the parable of as a J\UllOr.

with grim faces they determined to uphold brothers. . . . the prodigal son. * . h 1 · · dl f h 1 , A ReligiOn MaJor ------'Pe·n, Coo 7 -z'es,· A ,.,t sc o asttc standards regar ess o t e oss • • . He enjoyed especially his grati1- A veteran of 31 months. serVIce in the Air Corps ·in Italy, Gray Roberts of Kannapoli$ en~ed Wake Forest as a !freshman U:tis.

1. E u /C 1 Woman's College of the University of mar school days because he at- ABSENCES ,... .. . . . North Carolina has taken a galloping step to- tended three different schools and ror the first time m the history of Wake' . · . . was able therefore -to meet and fall; A chiet clerlt of ~ Bo!Db~d-

Forest Coli g ·t d t h'b't h ld I ward unproved faculty-student relations Wtth learn many types of pe~ple. High . e e a s u en art ex I I was. ~ its establishment of a joint committee of the school days were spent m the New

The Absence Committee refers ment Squadron, Roberlil att~ineli students to the section on Absenc- the rating o~ ~~aff Sergean~,_While es on pages 38 and 39 in the cur- in Italy he was stationed at . Cer­rent catalogue. Each year a few ignola, · ~pproxirp.ately 16Q. ~iles

111 • the Art Gallery of the johnson Bu1ldmg Hanover High School...::.the largest last Sunday afternoon. Oil water color crayon two. in the state, boasts De';'ey-where

. - . ' ' Twenty students and twenty faculty mem- he was secretary of his freshman and .pencil pamtmgs by the students and sev- class, student council represents- students ov,erlook .the importance ·from Naples. . . . . .

of filing statements in the Dean's . Roberts.rece1ved_ his bas~c tram­Office "immediately after tbe oc- mg at K~(!~er F1eld, MISS •. ~d currence of the absence or ab- was . stationed ~t Denvt;r. Co~o., .sences along with the statement Blythe Army AU" Base. 1n Calif., of a physician or: some· other per-· Pyote, T_exas, McCook;Nebr., Tus­son competent to certify the facts con, Anz., and. Char~esto.u, S. C. ,as to the ·emergency." Requests Rob~rts' ~nit~recetved two Presi­for consideration concerning ab- dent:ial Citations; He perso~y sences will not receive the atten- rece1ved the Bronze Star·and·ell(ht tion of ·the Committee if they· are campaign stars on his E~opean filed after the last day of classes Theatre of Operations ribbon.

era! recent alumni were displayed. bers will serve in the capacity of a steering tive. of the sophomore class, an~i' . . committee designed" to deal with all problems p.res1dent o:t the student counc1l

Sunday afternoon about 150 persons VISit- during his senior year. He began ed the exhibit. It was so successful that re- concerning the. two. his football career at New Han-

The Carolinian states: over where he played four years quests were made to have two more showings: one last Wednesday afternoon, and one to be held this Sunday afternoon from 3 to 5. Last year an exhibit of local talent was shown, but this · year only student work was displayed.

"The .theory behind the enterpri$e, too; is of varsity tackle. Upon entering college, however, he had no idea

excellent, indicating the respect "for the student of continuing his football career. point. of view." Wake Forest was the college he

had chosen to study for a major in Religious Education, after hav-

Alumni returning to Wake Forest for the Home- Many people were quite willing to accept coming weekend ambled through the room, the fact thaf "believing what you see is true". amazed at the drawings_ exhibited along the I r all happened on a recent afternoon around walls and on the table in the center of the 4 in the afternoon. A group of students were room. Students, faculty and townspeople ad- walking uptown when one of the girls comment­mired the talent of numerous Wake Forest Col- ed that her nose was cold and she must be kin lege students. to a dog. The fun then began. The cute little

Browsing slowly through an exhibit of blonde laughed and pointed at an object usually this nature, drinking hot tea and munching used by dogs, and said, "Well?',. cookies served by the art'" class, one wonders A merry chase led throughout the streets why this idea of a student art exhibit cannot be -of Wake· Forest. ·People turned to stare, shak­continued in years to come. Through a display ing,their heads "and muttering "Crazy students". of this type one discovers the oftentimes hidden The walk back to the campus was as merry ability of. perhaps, one's roommate! judging and funny as the one to town. The cold-nosed from the interest this year given student con- girl and a boy were walking behind the other tributions a similar exhibit should become, at three in the party. Every time the three in least, an annual event on the campus. front passed some one -~they -would all turn

Wanted: 40 To Go The annual Baptist Student Union Conven­

tion is to be held in Salisbury next weekend. The purpose of this meeting is to provide fel­lowship and instruction.

around and call, hands snapping and becko~­ing, "Here, Fido, here, Fido".· The result: a cute redhead co-ed now has a. nickname of "Fido". People are wondering wlty, and this is the reason.

in the semester.

Dear Diary:lt Was GPeat,HomecominB

IN _cpASSING The ~utumn. leaves fall 4ei:ul anll

cold To lie in their winter shroud,

And the bright hues of red and gold _

Are CTUShed by the passing crowd. ·

'llhe dreams of youth fall tife'less iiful. The palatial mansion of the too -SPE's was almost hidden Ctoo bad When the winds of age are col.d,

-· -By Helen Tucker-

Dear Diary, it wasn't) by a· large "Welcome And die away as all dreams do The gala homecoming weekend Home" strung up between two When the hopes of youth grow

is over but it measured up to-ex- trees. The AK;Pi's displayed a old. ,_ pectations iri every ppssible w}ry. football player in each window The festivities .began with the gay an!l a sign "forbidding Blue Devils tTom.orrow's child will build more pep rally on Friday night. After from entering their sanctuary. It dreams, listening to some seven hUndred was the KA's decoration how- New- leaves wiU come in the students yelling -their brains out ever, that won the prize. ' There spring, ' in the gym, everyone went down were two elevators with the And blossom jar a time it seems-­to the bon fire and watched .the Deacon _getting on the one going · Wit~ the pleasures that ~eu Devil go up in smoke. Of course, up, while the Devil was goil).g bnng. . the fl:esbmen.got the usua!.amount down. · of exercise running around the The alumni swarmed over the fire. campus like bees returning to a

Another autumn with the frost Spreading over like a cl{n.&d,

Then leaves and dreams again are lost -

And crushed by the pas$ing crowd.

-Helen_ ~ucl.ter ------NAMES DIDN'T COUNT

The program has been well planned this year and interesting speakers have been sched­uled. The forum discussion groups are con­cerned with pertinent topics.

Dr. Frank H. Leavell, Southwide student secretary from Nashville, Tennessee, is the main speaker. Dr. Leavell has written a num­ber of books and is well acquainted with prob­lems BSU leaders face.

The rlances on Friday and Sat- hive. Every alumnus who .£Quld urday nights were superb, and the .possibly come back did. The dis­football game_ Saturday afternoon couragingly long lines at Miss J o's was · one of the best ever played were fl.lled with familiar faces of at Wake Forest. At the half Dr. many of our dear departed. It Kitchin made a talk over the loud was natural to see the one and speak«:rs welcoming back the only Hooey Brantley strolling out, alumni. Even though the Deacons and Leslie Fowler and Charlotte didn't }Vin the game they SU<:.- Boone resumed their gossip over ceeded in scaring the Devil out '"the dinner" table. Lib Jones, Lib of D~e. Bryan, Nan Lacy Harris, and

A tour of the campus, -provided Heyward Smith returned to cheer one could find the way among the for .their team . And didn't it seem throngs of ·people, revealed the like old times tC' see Emily-Cran­

The wind has long since been. a servant of fraternity_ houses dre~sed up for dall wandering around 'With her . , ·the occas1on. If touriSts happen- ukel 1 s·ng· "Fl · g .... ..-_, "?

Dropping into a restaurant which \v.as with­out mear aad butter and still rationed sugar, a veteran of the war was overheard to say that the advocates of a "tough peace" were evident­ly having their way.

At Fox Hill, on the tip of Vir­ginia where Chesapeake Bay joins the Atlantic, J. L. Johnson laid out a subdivi~ion. All was right with.the world and Fox Hill at the' sta~:t. So first streets were named: Health, Wealth, Happiness.. ,But· things weren't so rosy at the ;fln­jsh. The subdivision ended on Gloom St.

These programs are designed to help pres­ent and future leaders become, not only, more mature Christians, but better and more capable leaders of the administrative phase of BSU work.

Those who have attended these conventions

mankmd. Now that they ve harnessed .the_ ed to be passing through our little And\[a;th~nXnn ::nBob'T:U: dangerous atom can anything be .done with a city, they must have thought -half age looked _so married,.

• ':l ' the population had passed away. hurncane · In the Kappa Sigs' front yard was . The Student Council had a par- Ex-President Herbert Hoover bit

No, no, Aunt Martha, i.t was "not .geraniums they used in the atomic bomb, and you can go right on raising them in peace: • -

Wonder how the discharged veteran feels when he applies for a job and finds strikers won't let him go to work?

a grotesque -cemetery for the pur- ty Saturday night in .the Rec. fro~t pages with a. ~hi~gQ sPeech pose of laying away the Blue room of the Religion building for advising· a cautious debt settle-Devils. In front of the Sigma ~Pi those_ who didn't go to -the dance. ment and loanpolicy. - -house a funeral was under way; From out of this noisy room came 'First, he'd wait five YearS. iben the Deacon Burial Association was the str~ of everything from the with world affairs clearer, . w-;, a~inistering last rites. ov~r the .latest Jazz to the oldest hymns. could dispose of lend-lease and coffm of Duke. The PiKA s had We~, goodnight, dear diary, and. other , WRJ: debts. He didn't. think a grave. yard fo~ Duke players, I ~on t ~X:.Pect. to write an~g Uncle Sam would get back mucn a,nd ~e floral tribute ?n George I thiS exc1~g m your pages till of his lend-lease tiillions but he Clarks grave was especially beau- homecormng next ·year. · · wouldn't cancel anything' now.

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Page 3: For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;ro · r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ ..: -f! ~--'· .. \~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ,.' ;.~ Volume -----~~~-----·

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Wait~TayloP,Home Is -· 100 Years ~ Old

. .~

:Many: Students_. Hear Opera· Star

·-By Leldo~t Kirk- men have· been lighteQ down the Director; JoHy Announces years and. warmed to the cha1~·

That:Date.::For Play-Is ·- Houses are like liv~g things •. 'lenge of the-aeons. .

Over 60 Wakesters Enjoy . Hearing B~utiful

Songstress ... Their· walls seem to breathe and After. ·the : War between the

November 15 tneir wiridows to glo\v. with the S~~ Dr. Charles E. Taylor. with More than seventy-five Wake -souls. who have loved and lived hlS wife, came to this College in Foresters were ·among the four

November 15 has been announc- and' been born and died within· the. Forest of' Wake. He bought thousand who heaJ'd coloratura .. ed' _by dir~ctor Sibyl Jolly as the weir sheJ.ter. · · · · this house about which we write. Patrice Munsel in concert last

date:for presentation .of·One Mad On FacUl(y avenue th~:re stands So overpowering was his person~ week in Raleigh's Memorial'Audi .. Night,.cbniedy being rehearsed by a house wluch has seen the pass- ality and -magnetism; so long did torium. Almost without excep~ members · of the Little Theatre. mg of many years and of many he live in these rooms that his tion they returned with only su­Cammittee · heads have_. chosen . men. Of it, a young man wrote house is not known as "the Wait. perlatives to praise her artistry ·co~ttee.memoers and backstage on the first day of August.in 1845' House," it -is "the Taylor Home." ·and graciousness.

• work- is already underW-ay. · '"l have just been to see ?.fi:J:. Wait . Dr. Taylor was a man of giant - Vivacious, lovely "Princess Pat -Classes· 'in:_make-up will be ancf his family. T.hey are settled intellectual stature, a man of much of the M~t", is the opera's young~

started:-·on. arrival on individual in their new home". That ·is the beautiful simplicity, a man of un~ est star. Her debut at the age of - make:.up:kitS, for .. members of the :-first notation known of the simple swerving devotiolf to right, a ;nan eighteen called _forth an eight~

cast.>· .. Director. Jolly, who· . has· home of the College's first presi~ full of a quiet love for hi~ ·God. minute ovation. studiectlnake-up under Charles of dent, Samuel Wait. · He had a phrase for his home She sang first a group of early the',·Ri'tz in New York will teach , It is not a pretentious house; it and his life, characteristic: plain classics by Haendel, Mozart anci this.cotirse. · · · . · '· stands white and quiet, serene and living and. high thinking. Benedict; followed. by a gro?l? of ._:: .. Coniihittee; heads and their surrounded by magnolias on its In the rooms of this house were later French c~assic. romanticiSts; workers are: . ·. - ·slight hillock. . Dr. Taylor's daughters born- on closing the first half of the recital

,- Stage·. Crew: cbairman, Tom · The brooding spirit that inhabits the adjoining lots around this with the Mad Scene fr?m :'Lucia Arrington; assistant stage mana~ this house is the facet of its life house their homes were built as di ·Lammermoor" (Domzetti) · ger,·Jimmy_.Taylor; W. P. Stevens which holds' our interest- he:re they reached, woman's estate and After. the intermission her ac­J.r.,·.Jqhn Blri:m, Jerry Insco,. Guy -is a noble.'home!- In it. have been took · to themselves husbands. comparust, Stuart Ross, played a Ham:ri~., George Rouse, Brosie born and teared happy, lovely There .they. stand today - the. group of five number~. He w~ JQp.es, .. Le:w Smith, _Kitty Jo Beas- childt·en .. In it have \lied tired Earnshaw home, the Gorrell home tre~endously well rece1ved by tlie ley, Gilmer Parrish, Dwig!J.t Price, ·men and women, happy to enter and others. · audi~nce. · Gilbertine J;Iardy, Kay Williams, · their long home: . . . . _Miss Munsel clos~d the program Edith Rawles, . Verdie. Mae Chap- Those who have lived here - Like . aged people. aged hous~ w1th a group of lighter !fl-Odem m:;m;. ,Joyce Howell, Dot Jones, and -tills is one reason for the -'- ho~Eli- may be mellow. This classics, foll~weci by an ana from B'obbie Wood Ruth Blount Dot mellowness of the .house: it halO house lS as mellow and r-estful and Verdi's Traviata. Fi-eeiii~u:l,·Loi~ Lahe,·Vivian'car---bee;t lived. in in the fullest. and quieting as Rembrandt's ''Face of - As a result of the unpredented ter,' Mrs:· Mary Lee James, Belle most. beautiful sense of the word St. Matthew" • or his "Face of an sell~out this season, officials an­Linebergef, Lucy Rawlings, Ann -were fl:lll with intellectual-curi~ Aged. Woman":·. nounced that an .extra concert will Burns, ·~Vic Andrews, Bill Sharpe, osity. • So then a house _ a house of be given in March, von Flotow's Mariah .JohnSon, Robert Caisson, The. libary is a mellow room, the firSt president of this college, opera, Martha. :D~ck Letaw, .Lawrence Warwick, with a fireplace, inviting bright later the home of another presi~ --------Joe. Morris, Kent Bennet, Robert brass andirons, and a :lire qn a dent _ has seen a hundred years F · M 1(i

· Ausband, .qeorge Malloner. . . cold night. The walls are -lined of laughter and tears, of life and . armers ay et ·:Technicians, under chief techni~ with books whose title-pages bear. death, of dancing children and of

.• Cian W:P. Stephens Jr., are: John the copper~plate script lf New the quiet sitting after the trip to Lo·a· ns on Cotton Bunn; Guy Hamrick, George England clerics and school-teach- the grave-side. Ro1Jse, .. Dwight Price, Kay Wil- ers. These are books which ~ave Revelant of the nature of this Iiams, -Edith Rawls, Bea Gulledge, been read and loved and ~ved. and Bill King. There are ·books of the ancients, place of boards and nail and glass ·.Make-up: ·chairman, Dot Free- 'and books of philosophy. And and shingle is the scene at the Farmers of Wake County may

man; Dot-Price; Vivian Carter, Bea there are books of the lands of bedside Of Dr· Charles E. Taylor obtain· government loans on their Gulledge, Jo qarrell, Lew Smith, the master English novelists. - father, teacher, friend: a man 1945 cotton crop which is stored on Babe Weaver, and Joyce Howell.· Dr. Wait'was a man of foresight who has lived with an insatiable their own farms, Russell Powell,

.costumes will be arranged_by and courage. He made a college thirst to know is now ready to die. Chairman, Wake County AAA .Ruth Blount and, prompting will in a farmhouse in the Forest of As he closes his eyes quietly, his Committee, said today. _ be i:lone by Eyelyn McDaniel. Miss Wake. It was a college of w~ch 'lifelong friend and physician lays "The loans are- being made by Albertine Lefler will be in charge a man wrote at its conce.I>tio~: his ·hand on his shoulder. Softly, the Commodity Credit Corporation qf music; .. · ' ''They have made a light!" It. lS "You will know everything .now, through the. Wake County AM ; Properties chairman is. Becky. a college by the light of which_ol_d_fr_i:-en_d_._"-...,--------- Committee," ~owell said,. "and all Brown and her committee is as "" .... cotton on which a loan· iS-~granted follows: Joyce·· Howell, Ruth • 1 All is placed under chattle mortgage." Blount, Kay Williams, l{jt Isbell, New ..... Rett•remeot Fam·· y ow-ances Under the Farm Storage Plan

,- Macy 'Gilmer Cocke, Edith Rawls, . .· the loan rates are the same as Lew Smith, and Bill King. · loan rates on cotton stored in com~

:PUblicity and business: chair- Plan· Announ· ced ·'Offered· by- t.rmy mercia! warehouses. The farmer man, Bill King, Paul Canady, Jim- receives the storage fee of 10 cents niy Strupe, Dot Freeman, Vivian bal · th 'd d the Carter, Bud King, Barbee Council, per e per mon • provl e · cotton is eventually turned over to Margaret Little, Miriam Morris, Ail Act_ cited as· the "Armed the Corporation. · ... WU. Js:urhean.rs will.B!=~:r~wnetty' Crouch,· Forces Vol'Untary Recruitment Act _,.Family allowances are being. au.. The basic loan rate in North Sarah watson, Kent Bennett, anci of 1945", has been passed. -thorizedloJ dependbn~s· of.::i' ~e~ Carolina is ·21.58 ·cents -per pound

Oren .,...,.,,, Original enlistments and reen~ ~otw then tsA no O'!'t etng l u.c ed for 15-16 inch middling in the LUU listments may be made in the Reg~ m 0 e rmy, ·I was announce Eastern North ·carolina· area and

Alumnus Is Cast For Raleigh Play

·The second member of The ·wake Forest Little Theater to join ·.the Raleigh Little 'Theater Players, Shelton Lewis, a sophomore last year,' .is now rehearsing his part in their forthcoming presentation; ~·snafu." Among his co-workers is Lib Jones, 1944 graduate of Wake Forest and former member of. The Wake Forest Little Thea­ter;·

ul Ar f th · d f 18 today by Brig. Gen. Leonard H. 21.63 cents per v.ound in the West-ar my or e perio s 0 Sims, USA, Director of the War

months, or two years, or three Department Office of Dependency ern Area, the differential being due years, from male persons not less Benefits. That activity of the Of~ to :freight charges. Premiums and than 17 years of age and not over fice of the Fiscal Director, Head- discounts are in effect for cotton 34. Men 17 and under 1q. must · grading and stapling better or less liave a written consent from their quarters, Army Service Forces, lo~ than 15-16 inch Middling. The parents. or guardians. Any mili- ·Cated in Newark, New Jersey, ad- basic loan rate for Wake County tary person qualified and accep- ministers soldiers' benefits for the is 21.58 cents per pound. table member of the AUS vl' com- entire Army. Producers placing their cotton ponent thereof who has performed · "The Servic~men's D~enden:ts stored on theit own farm under active service therein of not less Allowance Act of l942, as ameod~ loan will- be required to exercise than six months may upon appli- ed, is still in: effect," General Sims normal care to prevent loss or cation be accepted for enlistment stated. ..Under this law, wiv~s, damag.::. All structures ~ whic;h period of one year plus the period children, dependent parents and cotton lS stored ~ust be mspec~ed of any furlough granted at the be~ other dependents of all enlisted by the county mspector working ginning of such enlistment. Men men and women and aviation under the Wake County AAA Com~ honorably discharged and enliSted cadets are entitled to family al- mittee. The loan inspector for this within twenty (20) days of dis- lowances. . county is Mr. W. R. Britt. charge will be enlisted in the "This applies of course tO men All loans are due .on July 31, highest grade, permanent or tem~ and -women now entering the Ar~ 1946, but may be called by~the porary, held by him at the time my as well as to those who were Corporation before ~hat date. In of such discharge provided reen- inducted before the war ended , the event the cotton 1s turned over listment is made prior to 1 Febru~ he explained. ' to the Corporation in payment of ary 1946. Men discharged"'under The wife and children of an en- the loan, the producer must agree the point system since the 12th listed man are elialble to receive t.o deliver it to .any ware.house des-of May'1945 and prior to the 6th .,. t db th c t L of October 1945 may also be re- family allowanc!! payments as his 1gna. e Y e orpor~ iOn. o~

.. Page .. Three . '

Deacs Who Are Greeks By HERBERT APPENZELLER

·..a The PiKA house was the scene

of much activity this past week . Last weekend the PiKA's were host to the numerous returning alumni, and five Delta Sigs. Among the returning PiKA men were Jim Doyle, Rul:ls Perry, Vance Hollingsworth, Harold Johnson, Bob Shackleford, Jim Jeffries, anc;l Pledge Brother Rob~ ert Farrel. The fraternity mem~ hers were proud of their fourteen pledges who worked to clean and decorate the chapter room. The boys reported that the past week~ end was a great success and one that will be long remembered by fraternity men and. alumni.

The PiKA's have a pte~war General Electric radio for sale. Anybody who desires to purchase the radio can get· additional in­formation from CaroL Worthing­ton.-

The. KA's are prouci. of their showing in the decoration: contest on homecoming day. The KA's won a beautiful loving cup as first prize in the contest. Bl•b Jones, Joe Alexander, Bill Bellamy, Ralph mand, Tom Fetzer, and Carroll Wall visited the fraternity last weekend Carroll who was last year's president, 'is getting married Oct.. 16. After the Duke­Wake Forest game the KA's from Duke visited the chap~er room. Although ol' man winter is draw­ing nigh, · the boys decicied to plant grass seed in front of the house. The plans for the jtJlnt ban­quet with the Kappa Sigs are nearing CO!llpletion. The Novem­ber 3rd dance promises · to be a gala affair: The tall drum major who can be seen strutting in front of the band is KA Horace Hall.

Bobby Eure has been· seen with­out his fraternity pin for the past

..oiill Stick McLean was elected captain of the football team. The SPE's plan to· visit the State chapter ot the SPE's after the State~Wake Forest game. The boys plan to hold a joint party with their State b:c.others. The fraternity welcomed back Bill Wood, Wiley Rayle, Paul Horne, Waldon Joyce,· Bedford Black, and Bill Hayes. Bob Neil­son, a post graduate, ·has pledged the fraternity. Brother Paul Can­ady recently had JUs deluxe A~ Model Ford rep!!-inted. He. must like the Yuletide colors !or he has painted the car red and green.

The Kappa Sig's were surprised at the great number of alumni who visited the fraternity during the dance weekend. A committee led by Buster Mabe is making the final preparations for the dance on November 3. Brother Adrian Newton of Raleigh, the district adviser for the Kappa Sigs, was among the many aluzru1i present at the chapter room last weekend. Brother Carver Staley is in the Greensboro hospital, recovering from a recent operation. The coal shortage has hit the Kappa Sigs and all the fireplaces in the house are in operation.

The AKPi!s have begun discuss­ing plans .for a dance with the PiKA's and Sigma Pi's. The dance y.ril~ be ~eld in the near future, 1t Is beheved. Football practice 1s m full swing and the team is looking good. The pledges are busy making their paddles. The fraternity was greatly pleased by the splendid passing of brother Nick "Atomic Bomb" Sacrinty against Duke. The fraternity wel­comed many alumni and the boyi._ reported tne dance to be a great'" success.

week, and the Sigma Pi's are The fraternity spirit on the afraid he has "lost" it for good. Wake Forest campus is so thick Then again it may be in' White- you could almost cut lt with a ville! Brothers Pa'Ul Moyle, Billie knife. Harmon, Stacy Kinlaw, Bob 0n Monday night a boy was Turnage, and Kenneth Dickson leaving Wake Forest to g0 home. visited the fraternity this week. At the t.fain station the boy told Clyde Coppecige, -a recently dis- me that the best thing he did. charged veteran, has -returned to while at school was .to join a school, and he is planning to be~ fraternity. He said that he was so come active in fraternity life homesick he didn't know what to again. As· yet the boys haven't do, but his brief association with elected a caJ?tain for the intra- the fraternity helped greatly to lift mural fraterruty league. his spirits. "There's nothing like

Th , it," he stated. . e SPE ~ held a hard workout· Just then two ooys were. walk­m preparation for the KA foot- ing across the tracks, intent on ball gam.e Th.~ te~ .~ been their conversation. Suddenly they bolstered 'i?Y D1ck Griffm, burly spotted the boy who was depart­guard. It lS report~;d tha~ _nobody ing and immediately walked up to has gone through his pos1t1on yet. him. It became evident that these.

Five Theologians Make Recordings Wake Forest's theologs tried

their hand at "hearing themselves as others hear them" on Tuesday night when Professor Aycock re~ corded several members of the group reading passages of the scripture on the regular program. The records were tl;!.en played back - with an additional record of the ·opening song and prayer (made without the knowledge of the group.) · Members report that the result was a liberal education if not an altogether painless one. I

Men who read were: Bill Me~ I

boys were his fraternity brothers. The boys .wished him the best of luck and told him to come back and visit them. After the boys departed, this same boy, now choked with emotion, said once again, "See what I mean, there's nothing like it."

--, ' Well Kept H121ir

Means A Well Groomed Man

Oscar Alston .30 YEARS EXPERIENCE

AT BARBERlNG

Gill, Eugene Deese, Lauren 'I

Sharpe, Arnold Smith and 0. W. ' Funderburke.

Wilkerson Bldg.

Opposite Bus Stop

I"

Lewis, who is now working at )lis father's furniture store in his ·home town of Wendell, hopes to .enter in January, Goodman, thea­:trical branch of the Chicago Art .Institute.· During his two years at Wake Forest he was active in The Little Theatre-and became a mem­'ber of Alpha Psi Omega, national :dramatic fraternity. .

enlisted in the highest permanent Class A dependents, the ODB Di~ repa~d before matur1ty bear m-01. temporary grade held by him rector said. Parents, also broth- terest at 3 percent per annum. ,t1 at the time of discharge pr.ollided ers and-sisters (under certain con- In. cases where farmers ~ot that they reenlist before the 26th ditions) are eligible only if they obtam ~e loan or purchase prices ,, Awarded a tuition scholarship,

Shelton studied and worked at the. Priscilla Beach theater in Massa­chusetts for 12 weeks this summer. ·Directors· and colleagues consider~ t!d hlm a "quick study", which is ,their way of saying that he learn­ed.hfS lines rapidly.

of October 1945. rely on the soldier for chief or for thetr cotton on the local m~~. substantial support. ket, Powell urges them to obtain

. · Amon~ numerous parts which 'he play.ed in productions while here at Wake Forest is the role of Danny in "Night Must. Fall," which was. presented before ser­vicemen of Fort Bragg in Jarr-.uary of 1945. ·

While at Priscilla Beach Thea~ ·.ter Lewis studied poetry appre~ · ,ciation under the world famed :lecturer, Reginald King of London, England,· and Seattle, Washington. His picture appeared with his co­

·workers iri the Sunday supple-ments of national newspapers in an article on this. theater.

Reenlistment furloughs will. be granted to those with not less than six months. service provided they reenlist within twenty (20) days of discharge. The length of the furlough wilf be computed on the basis of thirty ( 30) days for each completed year's service not to exceed a 'total of ninety (90) days furlough.

Reenlistment allowance payable for persons enlisted or reenlisted within ninety (90) days of ~­charge on or after 1st o~ June 1945 is $50.00 for each year o.f complet­ed service. In computing the ser­vice all continuous active Federal service in the AUS or component thereof whether enlisted, commis~ sioned or warrant grades will be credited if honorably performed.

. ·-seems that once upon a time The Gl Bill of Rights is extend-ed to anyone who enlists or re~

there lived a man and his wife enlists within one year after the who '-*ere overly blessed with passage of the Act and is extend~ children. Finally there were so ed to cover the individuals first many k.ids around the house that period of enlistment or reenlist­

'pop's paycheck was stretched much ment. :too far. . . Any enlisted man of the Regu~

Finally he told his wife: "I'm Jar Army who has completed not worried sick. We got not enough less than twenty (20} or more food. We got not enough clothes. than twenty-nine (29)/ years of

·our roof leaks. My pen leaks. If 'active service may, upon his own · there's another bab;r born here request be transferred to the en-I'm going to kill myself!' listed reserve corps and at the

The usual number of months same time be retired from Regular · passed and lo! another baby was Army with annual pay equal to

born! · , 2 1-2 per centum of the average Pop was drowning his anguish annual enJ»ted pay including

in drink when he remembered his longevity pay he was receiving . threat made months before. He for the six months immediately took out his pistol, and, standing preceding his retirement multi~

.. befpre the mirrow, raised it to his plied by a sum equal to the sum · head with a shaking hand. He of the number of years ··of active :, ,stood there in silent thought for a service performed. - . ~ moment - then, lotNering the gun, All active Federal military' ser­:;be said: "Don't shoot, Pete, you vice performed in the Army of the )night be.killing an· innocent man!" United States, the Navy, the Mar~ ' ' .

The . ODB administers Class E farm storage or warehouse loans allotments as well as family al~ an~l sell. their c~tton later when lowances, he pointed out. These pr1ces may have mcreased. allotments are voluntary assign-ments from soldiers' pay; noth~ ~ i.ri,g is added by the government.

ine Corps or Coast Guard or any component thereof counts toward retirement.

It is suggested that all discharg~ ed veterans and male civilians be: tween the ages of 17 and 34 call at the U. S. Army Recruiting Sta­tion, 304 ·Post Office Buildi'hg, Raleigh, N. C., or the nearest Army Recruiting Statoin for more information.

WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER

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Call 375'-6

WAKE FOREST, N. C.

Official HOWLER cphotographers

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New cars will be out soon. SALES and SERVICE

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SPECIAL LINE OF LADIES' STATIONERY Get yours today.

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Page 4: For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;ro · r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ ..: -f! ~--'· .. \~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ,.' ;.~ Volume -----~~~-----·

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Page Four ..

Covering· the Field with Rock· I

Duke Probable i .

Gridiron Champ · =:

Devils Are. Now Iii·· Tie With VMI -For 'fop

Place

Duke seems to be headed toward

: Fraternity Teams Got Off·· . . To -J:ighting .:.start· ·

· Yesterday " ' '~ .,

The battle that took place last Saturday in Groves Stadium

will go down in history as the most exciting battle ever to take

place between the old rivals, Wake Forest and Duke. It was nip and tuck throughout, al).d the spectators stayed until the of­ficials called a halt to the gruelling struggle. It was as close to be.ing a perfect game as they come - the only fault is that the Deacons lost. It was a game that had everything - long runs, long passes, and brutal tackling. Even the weather was perfect and the 18,000 fans shouted themselves hoarse.

another Southern Conference championship, after defeating Wake Forest, .her closest con­tender, last Saturday, by a score of 26-19. At present she is tied with V. M. I for top place iil the Conference, both teams having two victories against no losses.

Intramural football began yes-terd_ay afternoon 'with PiKA batt-: . · · .­ling Sigma Pi, SPE tackling ~ •.

I and the Kappa ~igs. playing the

. boys from AKP1._. OLD.- GOLD

V. M. I. pulled a minor upset last week by defeating the favored North Carolina State Wolfpack. Lynn Chewning and Bob Thomp­son were the big· guns in the Ca­dets' attack and rallied their mates tO' come from behind twice and win the contest 21-14 ...

Wake Forest rooters groaned as George Clark, "Mr. Of­fense" for the Blue Devils, took the ball on the open1hg play and ran 68 yards from scrimmage for a touchdown. It looked like a repeat performance from last year when this same .Mr.

Clark started Duke off to a 34-0 victory over the Deacons with A strong Clemson team, playing 94 d hd • h · · on its home field, served notice a -yar touc own gallop. This time it didn t take t e spmt that it would give anybody trouble

out of the Deacons; it only made them mad. They got their by edging out a 7-6 win over hands on thepigskin and they didn't give it back io the Blue Pensacola Naval Air Station. -The

• Tigers were led by All-Southern Devils until they had marked up a six-pointer to tie the score. center Ralph Jenkins, who played

' AND BLACK went' to press too · · · i early to publish·the scores.· · · · .. :

. The Greeks have really put their . ~ hearts and souls into this fraterm;.,· ·

league, sponsored' by the"Pan• .. Hel Council, and when the season. · cfraws to a. _close it should pro-· ' duce some fine results.· At· :the :··= · · present little is known of·. the rel;;. ' ative !ltrength of the te~ .but . from this corner it looks like the ·" . Sigma Pi eleven will be the team::· to win. .. .: -- ·

Some of the teams have turned' · Jil a squad list of as many a8 for- .. ty .players; so . there should be . plenty of reserve strength · all'' ·· dow!). the··J.U:~. . . . ·

., :· •;

·~~·-· ~;

Nick Sa~rinty was ~he big ~oy in th~ Deacon attack, and he I his usual. outstanding game. looked hke a throwmg machme throwmg passes to Bruno and William and Mary went ~o Rich-Harris. • mond and routed an outclassed

4 Non-Frat Teams . , _ ... The. non-fraternity league had- ·;. ..

hopes. of put'ting four elevens·~n · the field, but ~at present. there are .~

V. P. I. team in. a game which was a track meet from the start. For­kovitch and Korcgowski paced the Indians' attacl(,' scoring ill every period and amassing a total of 38 points, while their opponents were held· scoreless. The "Old Liners" of Maryland defeated a scrappy Merchant Marine Academy eleven 22-6 in an interesting game at College Park, Maryland. They remain undefeated in Conference play with a win over Richmond, which was idle over the weekend

only two clubs. The Lions are the., .. , '"'·'''·=···i''·"~ pre-season favorites, but· they· tied .

"'''''·'',.,,,,,., .. ,,.,,,,., with the· Screwballs yesterday;. It was a tribute to the Blue Devils that they fought back the

way they did to erase a Wake Forest lead and go on to take the ball game. ·It was a tribute to both teams that the game wasn't marked by any unnecessary roughness. There were o~nly two fifteen-yard penalties, one against Duke for holding and the other against Wake Forest for clipping.

....

The game was built up as a duel between the rival tailbacks, Nick Sacrinty and George Clark. It turned out to be a greater duel than expected, and both of jhese boys deserve a world of credit, although you can't overlook the blocking of the respective lines nor the great job turned in by the Deacon ends, Bruno and Dave Harris. Also don't forget the magnificent punting of Gor­don Carver, who averaged 42 yards from the line of scrimmage -good kicking in any league.

The two Universities of the Car­olinas went up against leading teams of the nation, and both went down in one-sided defeats, South Carolina being crushed by Ala­bama 55-0, while Penn smothered North Carolina 49-0. Both teams were highly outclassed and proved easy victims.

Howard Turner will be at the tailback spot for the State College Wolfpack Saturday night. It Iooked for a while as if. the Rocky Mount ace wouldn't be ready to ploy in that vital position against the Deacons because of a hand.:injury received in the Virginia game three weeks ago. Since that time, he has been at wingback. ·

State has missed their triple-threat from his regular position, which was demonstrated by their three straight losses .. Turner was All-Southern last year and he is muking a determined bid for the honor again. This is his third year on the State varsity, ang. the· slender little halfback seems to be improving, with age.

In Coach Feathers' T formation, Turner has the difficult task of handling the ball under center. This shows the complete faith which Coach Feathers has in this scatback. .

Look for him Saturday night He will be wearing number 22 on his jersey. If Wake Forest is to win, they must stop this 165 pounder, for it is a well known fact thl!-t as. Turner goes-so goes State.

lege, where he ~ad won letters in J Legislature in Raleigh next month three major sports. · I are urged tc be present at the next

These boys are gunning for a crack at the fraternity elevens and they will bear watching •. There should be at least two more. teams . . in the league 'by next week, so . from then on it will be full speed · ahead. .::· ·

_Thus far-it is too early to ~edict · the stars, but by next week at thiS · time there should be some .prettY clear ideas as to which boys will , i'eceive the glory .... Our hats are off to Coach Utley, who is doing a splendid job of , directing the league.

I~ "\ FORT'S- B Q. __ .

"A Good Place _!o Eat" · PLATE LUNCH, HOT D_OGS . 1 c

. Come Over; Stay for Dinner ' .. ,. All in all, it was a great game and a credit to both teams. It

was a shame that the Deacons had to lose, but in a game of that type someone has to lose, and the Blue ·Devils had the reserves.

Last week Southern Conference teams met ;(our outsiders and were victorious in two for a percentage of .500. This is an improvement, considering the fact that they did not win an outside game the pre­vious week.

Dave operates from the strong ~eetin~ at 8: 30 p.m. ~n _Tuesday side of the Wake Forest offensive, mght m the Law Building. At and his sharp blocking, coupled that ~ime plans will b~ formulated with his. exceptional ability· as a relatmg. to the draftmg of ,pro-pass receiver, makes .him a key posed bills. , .~ man in the Deacon attack. ·

**** Meet ·the Deac:s Rock Brinkley

Dave is the newly.:.elected pres­ident of the Monogram Club. He is. a .senior at Wake Forest; his major is ·mathematics, which sub­ject naturally ranks second in im­portance to his home life - he has been married for almost a year. West Point beat .Michigan "only" 28-0 Saturday, and right I

away the experts said the Army team wasn't up to par and that this year's team is inferior to last year's eleven. They also re­marked that without Davis and Blanchard in the line-up it is just another ball club; ·

Displaying this season the same offensive brilliance .that won for him the right end berth on the

At fullback is Rock Brinkley 1944 All-Southern team, Dave 1

the hardest driving back Wak~ may well be on the way to even Forest has had in many years greater honors in the 1945 season. Rock is a 200 pound sophomore from Norfolk, Virginia. A regular

Nothing could be farther from the truth. This year's Army on last year's edition of the Demon . . Deacons, he gained recognition

team IS better, because the boys are a year older, and this year throughout the south and was the of experience makes for more seasoned players, which in turn, leading scorer in the Southern b · b tt k AI h b · d Conference. , rmgs e er team wor . so, t e oys_are stronger an more. Wake Forest's opponents are

Just Who Won And Who Lost?

King Uzwogkooglo of the tiny country of Yyz, in a statement to correspondents, put himself on re~ord as opposed to girls in slacks.

.

UNDERPASS Service Station

We Have DEPENDABLE SERVICE

Wash, Polish, Grease Phone !j121

WAKE FOREST, N. C.

'

mature. Blanchard and Davis are undoubtedly the two best I well awar.e of Rock's ability ~o backs in the country but there are nine other fellows on that 1 buck _the lme,_ for he seldom fwls . -- ' ~

Amateur philosophers, take -.~~~=========~-' 1 to gam that needed yardage for a team who are vital to its success. The Army line is the best in· first down. His kicking is good the country, and it is probably the most overlooked forward wall and he h~s a ni~e punting a!'er;;

note. We've got a problem: r During the recent publications

elections, one man elected won. over his next-ranking opponent by one vote. The loser is walking around the campus these ·days in a quandary (and, incidentally, so are we), wondering -

· · . age to his credit. Great things Ill the htstory ~f great football teams. are expected of this power-laden

fullback, · and Rock is sure to come through when the chips are

Getting back to the Michigan game, Army won by three do0wn .. th R k . ll

hd W I n e campus oc iS we touc owns. hat more do the experts want? They exp~ct the known and liked, since he takes Cadets to beat every tea.m that they play 50-0 and march up ·and !I an active part in extra-curricular d h f" ld "Jl T · ' · · d h activities. This year Rock has own t e ie at WI • here ts no doubt m my mm t at proven himself a competent sports

Because he voted for his candi-1•

date, his man won - and he lost. If, on the other hand, he had voted • for himself, he would have won! - but his candidate would have lost ..

Wake Forest Beauty Shop

Permanents -

, - Cold \Vaves-Army couldn't have beaten Michigan by forty or fifty points if editor for OLD GOLD AND they were keyed up to a high pitch but a team doesn!t reach its BLA_CK. He_ is a mem'f?er of Kap-

. ' pa Sigma soctal fratermty. peak but once or twice in a single season. So why don't the "~x-perts" wait until after the Navy game before they start criticiz-· ing the West Pointers?

Bo Saerinty ·

It's too deep for us. Now every­body's mixed up, especially Eddie r... .~·

Folk, who voted for Rock Brink- -'~;;;;;;;===~~===~"

-Machine Waves Phone. 2716

i3o Sacrinty, who hails from Reidsville, N. C., is Coach Walk­

ley. Rock got 65 votes, Eddie 64. ~

.I '

**** er's choice for the starting wing Pre .. Law Students back position. You can readily see why if you have observed this A Ch 190 pounds of dynamite in action. . GCept ' arter His ability to run the famed Dea-

BEAT STATE

S C c'on reverse has made him a tate allege has lost three straight games to only fair op- standout in Southern football cir- J Q N E s '

ponents. While Wake Forest has also lost three in a row, they cles. ~s year Bo's blo~ng ~as Members of Phi Delta Omega, · have played the best teams in the country Past records won't been super.b, fo~ . tealll?lg w1th Pre-Law Fraternity, accepted their

' I Dave Harris, bnlliant nght end, new constitution tentative to a mean .J11UCh when these arch-rivals meet in any sort of co-ntest, the defensive tackle is made to later meeting when· the ronstitu- HARDWARE CO.

YouNeedFoocl We Need Business.

' Let's C()C)perate ·

HarrisonLs Grocery

Phone 306-1

Watch Wake Forest .

Grow

'· FIX STATE!. We'll Fix The S~Ies

H-ARP E.R'S '"SHOE SHOP

One Block Back of Bank . Wake Forest, N.C. --

The very best in shoe Tepairs

-WE'VE GOT EVERYTHING!

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LET'S BEAT

STATE Bring Us You,. Dirt. We'll Take It Out.

WILKERSON'S. ·CLEANERS.

Phone 375-1 so you had better throw. them out the window. Wake Forest lead a bar~ life. tion will be submitted for final h ld . b 'f . A startmg back_ on the out- approval and ratification. Wake Forest, N. C.

s ou wm, ut 1 they do, they wlll have to stop one of the standing 1942 team- Bo entered the All pre-law students who are ' ~. '

h~u~k~~in~&~. k~d b~~~b~as~ ~in~t~er~e~s~~~d~i~n~a~t~te~n~~~·~g~th~e~S~t'u~d~~~tS~~~=~===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~ Wake Forest, N.C.

The man to ·watch tomorrow night in the State line-up is Howard Turner, the Rocky .l't\ount flash. Turner was All-South· ern last year, and he seems to be even better this year. Wake Forest must stop this boy's passing to beat State, as he is con­sidered to be one of the best. It will be interesting to compare him with the Deacons' Nick Sacrinty. The Wolfpack is always dangerous when they tangle with the Deacons, so with these J>oys pit~hing passes all over the lot you can expect a real aerial cir­cus out there Saturday night.

* *·* *

There he served as a second lieu- -tenant until he received his dis- ~ charge and returned to Wake For-est. Here he took up his old du­ties, and once again is showing the fine "form which he exhibited in the past.

Wherever you see Eo ·on ~he ' campus you will find his face -· wreathed in a big smile, not seem­ing to bave a care in the world. This trait has mad"e him a favorite among his fellowrstudents.

Dave Harris At right en!J the Demon Dea­

cons boast an All-Southern per­former, selected by many sports writers in the South as the finest

The Deacons will be playing on enemy soil tomorrow night, end produced by Wake Forest in d th t d t b d h 1 1 b · · h · 11 th years. Dave, an aggressive 200 an e s u en ~ y can e p a ot y glVIng t e tea~ a . e pounder ,hails from Statesville,

vocal support possible. All the Wake Forest students will be m North Carolina. He is a veteran one section over there, so let's back the team all we can . . • •

1

of three years varsity experieJJ.ce, LET'S SKIN THE WOLFPACK. having ~ansferred in 1943 from

Appalachian State Teachers Col-

The Supei Market_. FRESH MEATS FANCY GROCERIES

Sea· Foods Our Specialty .-.

OUR CUSTOMERS ARE OUR FRIENDS-LET'S BE FRIENDS .

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. ·liliE ·. nw · .·.De~

- ··:<-:~;.q

·-. ,· run . · .. ·:thi·

'·'"on ·. -:::. ::wa. ~ pai;:

. • Sac : .. : ·.l>la:

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;,; .pas:

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T this touc six the 16. COUI dOVi pasl Har 36;" faill Saci this whc Eva Iy . and .end to t ·whc ·ven gam

Tl ,retu · yar< kick safe con SaCJ and side. a \\ by l the haul er. fo~ 5, I agai dow ;Start

· denl ·-whil :ris i odefle .cent -the·: ·plet1 kick :Punt the plet1 the l tion Duk' Wak last 1ake

· of t Har1

A~ ger: retu1 Sa cr. insid Duk1 ty tc on ti

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Page 5: For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;ro · r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ ..: -f! ~--'· .. \~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ,.' ;.~ Volume -----~~~-----·

Again Carver kicked out of dan­ger for the Blue Devils; Sacrinty returned to the Duke 48. Bo Sacrinty went off tackle on an inside reverse that carried to the Duke 34. From this point Sacrin­ty tossed down the slot· to Harris on the Duke _10. Harris was ap­:pare:ttly snowed Wider by Duke

. tacklers, but he still managed to duplicate Bruno's feat· of the first quarter as he lateraled to Deme-

-·_Bus Station -.

- Western Union

Phone· .336-1 -~

.. ., --

.

. -~

'

/'

Page Five.· I • ·... ·-:-1' , ......... ·- ,_ . -

la~e~esting Sidelights <Oa ·,Duke-Wake· Game

Wha~;. the. world needs is some kind· of radar. that. will assist a person in picking_ out a. ~antaloupe that is just. righ_t for eating.

- BRING YOUR WATCHES.TO.

W. R. Lanier . . ·· for

~ ._ ~

Your ~Ad Ia lhis. Space-

Would Be· ·Read

By Wake Forest

Tile~ World

.FOREST & Collegiate THEATRES Wake Forest

Friday, Oct. 12...:.... Kelly, Sinatra, Grayson, in

Anchors Aweigh Held Over at. Collegiate Sat. Chil. 14c; Mat. 30c; Night 40c Sat., Oct. 13-Double Feat.-

. One o'clock till eleven Rod Cameron

Renegades of Rio Grande

William Gargan Midnight Manhunt

Chil. 14c; Mat. 30c; Night 40c Sunday, October 14-. Shows 2:00, 3:45, 9:00

Bells of Rosarito Roy Rogers and· mrrigger"

Chil. 14c;.Mat~ 30c; Night 40c Mon. & Tues., Oct. 15-16-

A Thousand and One Nights

Evelyn Keyes, Paul Silvers, Adele· Jergens, Cornel Wilde Child'n 14c; Mat. &·Night40c Wednesday, October 1'1-

Bargain Day- 14 & 25c The Woman In Green

Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce

BEAT SlATE

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Dial 22913 ~08· Fayetteville St. . Raleigh, N-. C.

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Page 6: For~st·,Collec~ Libra~·;;ro · r, . j ., '"';-,,' .< ... _( : __ ~~~r~~~;~-~:~~1-. :\~ .'~ ..: -f! ~--'· .. \~ 1;-;2i~~~ .. ~c::. ·< :WOLFP ACK ,.' ;.~ Volume -----~~~-----·

Page Six I " l

Pix Will Be Made On November 5-15

...... ;

Old Gold: and Black \

' . ·. ·~ f'

3. Naval Alumni· .Return To States. Heres What Those

Bellowin!Js ·Mean, The Navy D~partment announ.c-ed this week that three Wake . Forest College men who have been The Eu's had a short business The Phi's ·heia an extensive

The Ho10ler staff is making preparations to begin work un the pictures for the '45-'46 annual. The photographer, Damel and Smith in Raleigh, will be on the

. campus from November 5 until 15. The pictures will be taken at night.

serving in the Western Pacific ' meeting · before carrying ' out · the bu~iness. meeting ~ol'iday J#gb.t at aboard the El:;sex ~lass. carrier planned program. A committee Which tune. were. discussed ·mea- • USS Hancock will retum to the headed' b-y Bill McGffi was ap- sures to stop "leaks in ·the ciilliilg: .. , . ' United·States October. 24 when pointed by President· Smith to re- The purpose of new curtains,- and:

The senior boys are requested to wear dark suits and the girls should wear dark sweaters. For the pictures of the other three ' classes the boys will wear suits and the girls will wear white blouses. Group pictures of all the clubs on campus will also be tak­en. An announceme11t of the schedule and time for the pictures

Students who have· heard the "elephant trumpeting" have wondered just what it meant, and townspeople have. counted the "bellows" without knowing where the fire was. OLD GOLD AND BLACK is herewith printing a list of the fire-alarm boxes an~ the dis!ricts.

their ship al"rives . in San . Pedro. vise the roll. Also on ·the"ebmmit- . the cleaning of the draperies were · . , ·-:-Bay from Tokyo Bay. te.e were Eugene· Deese, ~albert elsa discussed. · .

will be posted soon. _ Two new members have been

added to the Howler staff. W. 1T .. McLean is the production editor, and Jeanne Wall the campus edi­tor.

The first staff meeting was held T~ursday night to make plans for the annual. The dummy is to be sent to Chicago to the t!ngravers October 20. Editor-in-chief Dick Griffin refuses to divulge the se­cret of when the HowleT is com­ing out.

Ford Motor Co.

District: , !:.!-Corner by Willis Johnson's home (northeast part of town) 13-Corner of North Main Street with Campus 14-Corner for Sky Hill - Pine and Middle Streets( north-

west part o~ town) 15-Corner of North Main and Cemetery Streets 16-North end of North Main Street 17-Corner of Negro Church and Percy Messenberg's Store 18-Corner by Allen Young School / 22-Catholic Chur~h 24-Corner by Dr. A. C. Reid's home 31-Corner by Hardwicke's drug store 32-Corn~r by Post Office 33-Filter Plant 34-College Hall on South Main Street 35-South Main Street: around I. 0. Jones' home 36-South Main Street and Campus 37-Wingate Street by Gymnasium 51-Rolesville Road ·52-Corner of Hig~ School and Sycamore Street

They are: Lieutenant Com- Smith, and Lanneau Newton:·\ President Gene' Meillin· ·chill- . mander .Hubert Poteat, USN, of Racine Rroym, program . .chair- lenged the Eu's to a football-game~ Wake Fol"est, E,arl T. Wilborn, nian,. introduced the speak~l'S,. Arnold :Sm1th was· elected captain St\)l'ekeeper (Disbursing).."' tlrst Clyde ·Brook · and Leldon Krrk. of the team. Other. ·te~ mem- · class~ USNR, of ~ightdale and Brook~ spoke o~ "~Dlr\e Don'ts. of bers include: Thalburri McSwain, llale~g~, and J~hn H. Marshall-, ldeal Persona.llty . A?d K1rk ·Junmy Godsey, Gene 11/!edlin,· spec1ahst (x) th1rd class, :ps~R, · sp<?ke, on "The Fort1tude To Dwight Price, Hank Gar!'iti, Riley. Navy ~orrespon~ent,. of Rale~gh Anse. · . . • Cox; Crate Jones, Bobby Craps, and Elizabeth C1t:y. After the critics report, the vis- Bill Sharpe, Preston White;' ·Bill

The three Wake Forest men itors were ·excused, and there was Moyle, Ralph Byrd, George James •. hav~ ·been aboard the outstanding a formal initiation for new mem- and Hermai;J. Dilday, . -· ' camer which destroyed 732 bers: Torice FolgeJ!.Ian, Ruth The vice-president, Betty 'Lide~ planes, 32 merchant ships, nine Peele, Al Copeland, Claude Wil- sent in her resignation explaining warship!J, and .was less than 100 liams, Marcelle Millway, and Bet- that she was teaching class and · miles frbm Tokyo at the time of te Lineberger. . could not attend regularly. Crate . · · surrender. Since that date their · The Eu's meet the Phi's on the Jones· was elected the new vice-ship has been patrolling the Jap- high school field this ·afternoon at pr~sident. . anese coast cover.i.rig occupation 4 p.in. All loyal Eu's are urged ---~--=-· __;_ _ ___; troops and dropping food, medical to be there, and cheer the boys:

Eugene Deese, Kent Bennent and Charles Pearce and Claude Wil­liams.

supplies and clothing to prisoners Mal bert Smith is ·Captain. Oth~rs of war. They also visited ·Japan include: Jiin Frisbie, Racme going ashore at Yokusuka, Yoho- Brown, John Chandler, Dick Le­hama and Tokyo, . ·taw, Donald · Bas, AI Copeland, The trio are entitled to wear ..:__:_ _____ _:_ ________________ -:----

Religious Focus Week last spring, will lead a Panel· Quiz.

itation period which will close. the afternoon activities. .

,..: .

To Aid Disabled '2 Professors Debate Q·uestion Recently Chosen

the America Area, Asiatic-Pacific (with four stars) and Philippine Liberation (with two stars) cam­paign bars. The keynote address of the

evening will be delivered by Rev. Mr. Warren T. Carr. His subject will be, "Christ, My Impeiative."

-" S:itur(l.ay evening· after a song service and worship, Peggy-Rogers of Appalachian State Teachers! College, will -~peak on . "Everyday· Christian Living." Mr. Hcwerton will lead the panel quiz· ·after. which the keynote addres:;; Will' be ''The Home's Imperative· Need". The day will come to a close as:

Henry Ford has notified the Mil­ler Motor Company here that ''no man who lost a limb in the armed services of our country in this war is going to have to pay. any­thing extra to drive a Ford auto­mobile"

The F;ord Motor Company will provide free, special automobile driving equipment for veterans who have lost ·arms or legs in the war. _

This equipment can be installed in any Ford automobile, including Mercurys and Lincolns, and in new or :)Jre-war models. Varia­tions have been developed to com­pensate for every known combina­tion of amputations, and they will not interfere with normal opera­tion of the car.

Mr. Ford's statement followed an announcement in Washington recently by the Office of the Sur­geon-General, to the effect that while automotive engineers have made it possible for armless and legless men to drive automobiles, the extra charge "in many cases" may be cOilsiderable.

The Surgeou-General's office asked the Society of Automotive Engineers to work on devising ap­pliances sa that men with ampu­tations could drive automobiles. The SAE, in turn, called upon the Ford Motol" Company and other automob:le manufacturers to work as a committee on this.

BSUNOTES I -by Anne Johns-

Attend. the BSU Convention in Salisbury

"~od in Nature" is th& general top1c of the vesper services next week. The following sub-topics will be discussed during the week: Monday, Nature Tells of God's Laws; Tuesday, The Impartiality of Go~'s Love; Wednesday; Seeing ·God m Everything· Thursday Quietness Helps Us t~ Know God! Friday, Mountains Make Men: Saturday, We Need More than Na~ ture's Revelation.

Mis Lefler will play the organ Monday .throu~h Friday evenings. H. L. K1rk w1ll serve as organist Saturday evening. Herman Dil­d~y will . sing a solo Tuesday mght. Bill McGill will sing on Wednesday evening"' and Billie ~arnes and George Adams will smg a duet on Friday evening. . Vesper services are held at 6:45· m the church auditorium each evening Monday through Friday.

· Everyone is invited to attend.

.The Christian Service Group wil~ ~eet T~ursday night in the Rehgwn Auditorium at 7:30. The meeting was not held on October 11th because of the concert in Raleigh. All members are asked to be present.

The Howard Union has charge o~ the program at BTU Sunday mght at 6:30. Silhouettes of Biblical incidents will be shown. Spf7ial music will be provided durmg the program. Those taking

~ -part on the program are H .R. Cathy, Jack Manley, Kay Covert, Bettye Crouch and Bill Roberson. Evelyn Pittman is in charge of the· program,

All students who have not yet joined one of the unions are cor­dially invited to do so. Last Sun­day night there were 82 present at. the traiuing union.

A T'T E·N T I 0 N SUNDAY SCHOOL GOERS: Please, please be on time next Sunday The opening assembly starts at 9:45. Miss Wilhelmenia Rish has charge of the opening program. "Builders of the Home" is the topic for next Sunday,

Don't forget to make your

Speak To Vets •.

Dr. D. B. Bryan and Professor K. T. Raynor were guests speak­ers at the veterans meeting Wed-nesday night. .

The national inter-collegiate de­bate question, recently chosen by ballots cast in all Pi Kappa Delta chapters is: "Resolved: that the policy of the United States should be ·directed toward the establish­ment of free nations of the world," it was annow1ced to the· debate club.

Med Dance Activities will begin at 8: 50 Sat­urday morning with a song and worship service. A p1·ogram c·on­cerned with the BSU on the local campus follows.

Bowman-Gray's biggest soci~,J.l The following forum discussion event' of the year in the form of the tenth animal Phi Chi Medical groups will be held Satur-day Fraternity dance will oe held in morning:· "Ghristian· Fact and·

G Modern Doubt" led by Dr. Ralph the Reynolds rill, Winston-Salem McClain, Head of the Religion De-on October 20. · partment of Meredith College;

ThEf sponsors will be: Miss "Building a Christian Home;" Evelyn Whittenton, Dunn, with '"Christian Action Toward the New Bill Bingham, Pl'esiding Senior; World Order:'. led by Willram H. Miss-"Ann Rees, York, Pa., with ·

Luther Morphis again leads the ·: meditation period.

At 9:45 Sunday· mornin,g Sun­day School classes will meet in the Catawba College Auditorium. Luther Morphis is in charge of the · opening worship, The Cpnventioilt . will be adjourned after the morn- • ing worship service of which Mr;; Howerton has charge. ·

Dr. Bryan welcomed all the new veterans to the campus, remark­ing how lUcky·he thought the col­lege is in having so many v~teraps on its campus. He urged all men to consult any of the old veterans in matters that were worrymg any of them. If a veteran is having trouble in any subject it was ad­vised that he consult the profes­sor of that subject, and difficulties might be immediately ironed out. Keeping oneself busy in any way possible is the best way to read­just to civilian life, Dr. Bryan told the· club. He concluded his talk by urging all veterans whCJ have problems to talk them over with their professors at one~.

The Wake Forest chapter of PiKD met Wednesday afternoon to discuss plans for the semester. These plans include an intramural debate tournament to be held in November, and entrance in the Dixie Tournament to be held in Charlotte in December. The date for the North 'Carolina Student Legislature h·as not been·annowic­ed but Wake Forest will be repre­sented by those interested in pub­lic speaking.

George Mundorf, Presiding Junior; P~teat, Assistant Secretary of the Miss Peggy Johnson, Arlington, Chapel Hill Y.M.C.A.; "My C:.:hurch Va., with Walter Coker, Secre- and Today's Needs" led-.by R. A. j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:::=;;;;;;;;;~ tary; Miss Patsey Wil2iamson, Ellis; "Attaining Spir,itual Maturi- ,~ Winston-Salem, with Fagg Now- ty" led by Dr .Fraqk: H. Leavell.

Professor Raynor's talk was mainly a welcoming to the vet­erans· to the campus and club. Being the club's adviser, Mr. Ray­nor urged all veterans to attend the meetings. The men ·are older and willing to help anyone in any way possible.

P1·esident Rufus Potts conclud­ed the meeting by advising the veterans to take heed to Dr. Bryan's talk and consult the fac­ulty concerning difficulties. .

The club is to have charge of the chapel program MOJ1day. An interesting program has been planned, according to Wiley Tay­lor, program chairm':ln·

SPA TO MEET

1an, Treasurer; Mrs. Gwen Young, After a recess period, llEv. Mr. Harry Y. Gamble of· Statesville

Winston-Salem, with \.Harold will speak. Luthe1· ·Morphi~ will Yount, Judge Advocate; Miss El- .close the morning's meeting with len Brannock, Mt. Airy, with a meditation period. Douglas Holbrook, Alumni Secre- A concert of sacred music will tazy. be presented on Saturday after­

Tne debate club is still open for membership and President Bill McGill urges all students inter­ested to attend the next meeting on Wednesday at 4 o'clock.

Library Additions

To cultivate sYmpathy you-must be among living creatures, and thinking abo:ut .them . .,.... Ruskin.

BSU (C.ontinued from Page l)

the Convent~on is "Chd&t, My Many new additions to the Imper~tive•:. .

Wake Forest College library have _Reg1stra~wn Will be held ~.t the just been received. They are as 1 Fust ~apt1st Church of which R. follows: Religion: "The Bible and A. Ellis IS p~stor. . . The Common Reader" by Chase, At 6:.30 Fnday a~ mformal ban­"Can We Keep the Faith~" by quet Will be held ID the Catawba Pratt, "Some Elements of the Re.- College Dining Hall. After the ligious Teaching .of Jesus" by banquet, ~lorence: Gordo!l, State Montefoire, "Lord's Supper in BSU Pres1d~nt, will pres1de over Protestanism'' by Freeman, "Re- a. song servi.ce .and program re­vivalism in America" by Sweet. v1ew. ·At th1s t~e Dr. Frank H. Social Science: "What the Negro Leavell, Southw1de ~tu?ent Sec: Wants" edited by Logan "How w retary from Nashv1lle, Tennes Live" by Clark and Rimanoczy~ see, will be presented. Rev. Mr. "The American Presidency~' by R. T. Ho'Yerton, a member of !~e Laski. Pure Science; "Introduc- team wh1ch served here dur1 g

noon. After the concert, Dewey Hobbs will speak on "Everyday Christian Living." Dr. Charles E. Maddry, Field Secretary of the Foreign Mission· Board, will de­liver the afternoon· address, "The Missionary Imperative of Christ". Luther Morphis will lead thE med-~

,,J •

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Raleigh, N. C. The Wake Forest chapter of

Sigma Pi Alpha, honorary mod­ern language fraternity, will meet Monday night at B: 15 in the Re­ligion Building. - All members are urged to attend.

tion to Mathematics for reachers" by Boyer. Useful Arts: "Riddle of Cancer" by Oberling. Fine Arts: '"Oil Painting for the Be­ginner" by Taubes, "Bibliography of Early Secular Amefican Mu-

Dui'ing the days of the Ku Klux sic" by Sonneck. Literatu:::-e: "The Klan, a Wake Forest student, Bolinvars" by Bayliss, "Cass Tim­David S. Ramseur, was reported berlane'' by Lewis, "Pale Horse, by a traitor as being a member. Pale Rider" by Porter, "The Red He was arrested one evening while Pony" by Steinbeck, "Complete taking part in a debate at a meet- Writings" by Whitman. History ing of the Euzelian Literary So- and Travel: "The Life of Greece" ciety. Being tried and found by Durant, "The English Yt>oman" guilty, he was sent to a prison in 1 by Campbell, "Three Tours Albany. Two years later, as a Through London" by Lewis,· result of a personal plea made by "Central Union of Europe" by Dr. Taylor to President Grant, he Jordan.

CANTON CAFE WELCOME, ALUMNI ! COME IN AND SEE US

was released. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;-

Here's the story of the brillia"nt Spanish student. In class last week, the prize student forgot the Spanish word for Friday while re­citing a poem in Spanish ..

Pupil: What comes after Thurs­day? .(Asking for Spanish word.)·

Miss Dowtin: Friday, of course, senor.

plans to attend the BSU Conven­tion in Salisbury ~om October 26th to 28th.

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