4
r d e - t - s d e e n- n m :-: / •,· ; .. . .. · Hits. Sheet ' . ' . Tomorrow Published by the StJidents <lf Wake Forest College :z 538 .. WAKE FOiiEST, .N.' c., ,FRIDAY, MAY 13,1938 · . Face-Lifting ... . Press Bapquet· ,.ot.C_a:mpus · · · · · A.ddition ·To Boost uOld Gold". Rating , .. :·Almost Done Symmetry, .Beauty · 'Keynote Of '···New Airangement ' .. .. Storv .. ?f Old Negro Builder Recalled By Work On W'all . ,. . Med Build- ing Planned New Wing To Be Ready For Use By Fall_Semester. This Is The Last Old Gold & Black Until September Ten Cent8 Per COgJ Finals Speech By Dr. Tigert More Addresses; Binkley, Johnson, Kitchin, Weathers Dr. John J. Tigert, president of the 'University of Florida and former United States Commis- sioner of will deliver ) the commencement address here on Tuesday morning, May 31, ac- cording to the commencement pro- gram released this week by Presi- dent Thurman D. Kitchin. Com- The recordings of the Wake Forest College songs and greetings from the re- tiring professors will ar- rive soon, probably within the next week, Professor A. L. Aycock, who made the recordings, announced yes- terday. Orders may be placed with Jack Sawyer, Box 321, Wake Forest, and in addi- tion, these records will be placed on sale at some cen- tral location,. probably the College Book Store. A room-to-room canvass will be held within a few days in order to solicit or- ders for the records. The price is $1.00, with 15c extra for mail orders. All profits are to be diverted use by the band• /

W~y :z .N.' c., ISt- Spb~sor Press Bapquet· A.ddition ·To ... · J o us BcO'l"T ... Immediately after the stowing of the oats ... Austria for your growing pains."-Davidsonian. TIME

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Page 1: W~y :z .N.' c., ISt- Spb~sor Press Bapquet· A.ddition ·To ... · J o us BcO'l"T ... Immediately after the stowing of the oats ... Austria for your growing pains."-Davidsonian. TIME

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Published W~y by the StJidents <lf Wake Forest College

:z 538 .. WAKE FOiiEST, .N.' c., ,FRIDAY, MAY 13,1938

· . Face-Lifting ... Spb~sor . Press Bapquet· ,.ot.C_a:mpus :· ~-< · · · · ·

A.ddition ·To Boost uOld Gold". Rating , ..

:·Almost Done Symmetry, .Beauty

· .· Ar~ 'Keynote Of '···New Airangement

' ..

..

Storv .. ?f Old Negro Builder Recalled By Work On W'all

. ,. .

Med Build­ing Planned New Wing To Be Ready For Use By Fall_Semester.

This Is The Last

Old Gold & Black

Until September

Ten Cent8 Per COgJ

Finals Speech By Dr. Tigert More Addresses; Binkley, Johnson, Kitchin, Weathers

Dr. John J. Tigert, president of the 'University of Florida and former United States Commis­sioner of Edu~ation, will deliver

) the commencement address here on Tuesday morning, May 31, ac­cording to the commencement pro­gram released this week by Presi­dent Thurman D. Kitchin. Com-

The recordings of the Wake Forest College songs and greetings from the re­tiring professors will ar­rive soon, probably within the next week, Professor A. L. Aycock, who made the recordings, announced yes­terday.

Orders may be placed with Jack Sawyer, Box 321, Wake Forest, and in addi­tion, these records will be placed on sale at some cen­tral location,. probably the College Book Store.

A room-to-room canvass will be held within a few days in order to solicit or­ders for the records.

The price is $1.00, with 15c extra for mail orders. All profits are to be diverted f~>r use by the band •

/

Page 2: W~y :z .N.' c., ISt- Spb~sor Press Bapquet· A.ddition ·To ... · J o us BcO'l"T ... Immediately after the stowing of the oats ... Austria for your growing pains."-Davidsonian. TIME

PAGE TWO

<!&lb ~olb anb Jilatk underwear days, the "chameleon squirm" and David Morgan will solo the "ptomaine trample," a variation of J a&: Sawyer's famous "diddler's drag."

ST.AFF TED PHILLIPS ••.....•...•..•.....•. - ..••••...•.•...•••••••..••...•....••• .Editor BILL STATO:s' •••.....••......•.......•...••••••... - .... .BU8,11U8 Ma11ager

Commenting on the banquet Crater said, "The women will be visions. I hope we find none vision they hadn't come."

EDITORIAL ST.AFF BILL HUYPHRIES ••.••.......••••....•••......•....•.. ..A.ssociate Editor DA nD MoRGAN -----------·--··------··---·--------·-·-----A.ssociate Ed-itor JACK SAWYE& ••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••. Assocfute Editor R.~\ y STitOUI'E .••.•...••..•••.......••...•.•..•.•••••••.•.•. Ma.naginu Editor FRANK .MCC'ART!JY ••••••••••.••••..•.••••••.••••••..•.•.• .Spo'rts Editor GORDO:S A. PJIILLIPS .......•.......... Assistant Sports Editor PniLI.IP .r. LA1"'l'o\ •••••••••••••••••••••••••• A.:,·sistant Sports Editor

JAlU:s COI,PLE EAI~L E·rnERlDGE HAY Pl'l'T:\IAN E. l\1. }'LOYD

REPORTERS ,JA)!ES GREEN DWIGUT lVES .1 OE ]lll1'CHENER PHIL HIGlll-.lLL

SPORTS REPORTERS

FRAX1~ Tno~tPSOX FATE BEAL JACI' Kl~S·n:lt .......................................•...•......... u ••••••••• .!rti-st J o us BcO'l"T ........................................................ •• P hotoman

BUSIXESS STAFF N. L. DRITT SllERWOOD STATO~

FRAXK HBSTJ·:ll. Tno~l.-\S J. B\"U.XE, Cin:tllation Mana.gtr

ll!ember of KOHT][ CAUOI.IXA !XTERCOLLI:GL\.1"E PRESS ASSOClATlO~

..:.\.ppro\"ed by ).!EI~CH.\!'1'5 .\.~SOCllTlOX, HALEIG!I

Rl'preSC'Ht('d for Xati(mal Advertising by Nationnl Ad· vcrti~in;.; Sen·ic:c, In<.!., Collc~e Publishers HeprcsentatiYe, -l:lll )ladi~on Avenue, New York, X. Y.; Chicago, Bo~tou, ~an Franci~co, Los .Angeles, Portland, Seattle.

Ent~.:re1l tts second-class matter January 22, 1016, nt tl1c po::-tot1i•·e <It \Vnkc Forc:-;t, N. C., untlcr the act of :March :J, 187U.

. .:\11 mnltl•rs of husinP~::: should lJC addressed to the Bu~in~~s 1l:tnager, Dox ::!IS, ntHl all otht:r matters should be adlln'S)':Ptl to the Editor-in-Chief, Box 218. Ad\'ertising rates qnotell on request. SulJscription due in ad"rance. Halei;;h offic~: Edwurds & Broughton Company,

And Stills In Spite of the near drowning last week, no life-savers are

on duty at the college swimming pond; no life­

rings, no alarm signal, no boat, no depth-markers,

no roped off areas for non-swimmers. A boy near­

ly drowned at the pond last week-nearly drowned

as two score swimmers were about him on the raft and in the water. Someone just happened to no­

tice the youth and he was rescued in time. A reg­

ular life-saver would have taken care of the diffi­

culty before the student came as near to dying as

he did.

The raft and shore-float are so dried out that

there are many dangerous splinters inviting blood­

poisoning. On the step-down to the water's edge

several pieces of plunking are missing and that

no oue has had a painful and mutilating injury

to date is little short of miraculous. If some per­

son well-disposed toward the college wants to do

students a real favor he might make a donation

towards remedying the bad conditions existing at

the pond. And not only students would benefit.

Townspeople, and the children of townspeople

bathe there. Just the other day a tiny tot who looked hardly able to walk under the weight of a

sunsuit was thirty feet out into the water fl.oating

on an inflated inner tube-happily oblivious of what would happen should she be spilled from her

precarious perch. Perhaps the little child could swim-from all appearances such was doubtful.

Along many highways this sign appears-"Drive Carefully; . W c Lo,·e Our Children!" With the reminder that highways areu't the only scenes of death the OLD GoLD AND BL-~m;: leaves the stage for three months, hoping that on its return it will :find the college's back yard as modern and beauti­ful as its front.

Double Honors For the OLD GoLD AND BL.\CK during the past week as both the Korth Carolina Collegiate Press asso­ciation and the Associated Collegiate Press gave this paper awards. It was rated top member paper in the state in the NCCPA judging, and in the ACP contest it was giwn second honors.

StndP-nts very often fail to appreciate some of the difficulties undtr which this paper works. It hasn't, as have many colleges, its o'm type­setters, printing presses, telephones, teletype ma­chines. The OLD GoLD AXD BLACK hasn't cYen one l!fZJClcriler of its own. Staff members have to use their own. The editor is given a very small re­muneration, which varies with the lean and fat years in the advertising cycle and the changes in college budget allotments. His salary is never more than 1/7, often only 1/20 of what the editor of, for instance, the Dui·c Ch 1·onicle iR guaranteed. The business manager who hits a year in which advertising is poor may find himself at his fiscal year's end with little more than he started with, save a few more wrinkles in his forehead.

And on top of these and many more problems is the good old Saturday morning editor who tells staff members how much better he could have done had he worn the executive eyeshade that week.

We think that Messrs. :Morgan, Staton and Folk and the members of the staff who worked on the paper during 1937-38 may be perfectly justified iu doing a. little self-back-patting. They can write -30-to their stay in office with the knowledge that they've done a great piece of work.

The Second Annual Press banquet which will be held tonight in Raleigh, is under the sliperrision of that genial Elkin neurotic, Student editor, senior and general salve­insect, Rufus Crater. Speeches will be taboo, and beyond the . election of next year's publications officials, and the presentation of keys to publi­cations staff members, talking in general will be scant. Immediately after the stowing of the oats the tables and chairs will be relegated to outer darkness, shoes will come off and general dancing will begin. Smith Young, Howler editor, will give his interpretation of that throwback to red-

Skits, a feature of last year's gridiron banquet, \Yill not be presented this year. More than fifty

P.D.Q.

SCISSORED ILL-WILL CLUB

Two ye:u·s ago the "Veterans-of Future Wars," who asked for their bonuses in advance, was found­ed at Princeton. Last week two Emory University students,11·ith a zest for bloody burlesque organized the "Institute for International Ill-Will." Its object is to organize other chapters to help burles­que modem war and international diplomacy. One of its first acts was to draw up a telegram for ~\.dolph Hitler, aclYising him "to quit stalling and fight Austria." Two wire companies refusecj_. to send it. Undaunted, our exponents of ill-will drew another draft which has been reported accepted hy one of the companies. It read, "We are all behind ~-ou and the eight ball. We recommend Austria for your growing pains."-Davidsonian.

TIME WILL TELL IY e know a fellow here who says he's proud of

his prejudices-racial, political and economic. He's a sophomore;. He has two more years at Carolina.-Daily Tar Heel.

WELL-INFORMED The "Drahma'' defender of a New England col­

lege paper had occasion one day to flag a trip to K ew York. While there he thought it might not be a bad idea to intel'\·iew one of his dream dis­turbers. He managed to secure ten minutes of her time. Questions from his lips flew swiftly. Unfortunately the lad could not resist the impulse to sprout part of his English training, with the result that the actress was slowly beaten back by such words as "magnanimous," "vociferous," and the like. In a daze she heard him ask: "What do you think of Sarah Bernhardt .P•

Instantly she brightened. "Sarah Bernhardt," she repeated. "Isn't she running today at Santa Anita in the third race?"-Ilu.ron (S.D.) Alpha­mega.

CORSAGES? Patterson and the junior-senior dance commit­

tee rallied behind the German club· yesterday in turning "thumbs down" on corsages for dances. Howm:er, the committee will expect men partici­pating in the figure to send their dates corsages. At first the German club group considered lead­ing the way by completely prohibiting befl.owered dates on their dance floors. Can the mere recom­mendation of the dance committees or any com­mittee break down, on short notice, a custom four years old ?-Daily Tar Heel.

ON READING I

Not so long ago, the remark was made that schoolgirls seemed to be uniformly ignorant of current events. No one challenged the statement. A few muttered something about "not enough time"; others said that they read the funny pa­pers, for relaxation.

In a time that demands an interested, eager, well informed youth, we find attitudes ranging from a sincere interest in the happenings of the world to spasmodic concern and utter indifference. Making ourselves interested in the world is their inheritance. To read is to learn; to learn, is to »e interested; to be interested is to know. Form­ing our own opinions from reliable information is merely ordinary, common intelligence. There are many schoolgirl attributes that will be worth our while to keep. Keep that schoolgirl vivacity, eagemess, and love of life, but banish that school­girl ignorance.-Belles of Saint Mary's.

BYRON'S BELLES Isn't education funny? The class discusses

Byron's infatuation for some hussy and they call it learning the English classics.-Charlotte Ob­scrtoer.

Here's Special Cachet

As a part of the national observance of .Airmail Week this week, Wake Forest has been issued a special cachet (s"hown above) which will be stamped on every airmail letter sent out of here thi~ week. The reproduction here is about three­fifths the size of the cachet, which is stamped in purple. According to J. R. Wiggins, postmaster of Wake Forest, these letters may be of some value to stamp collectors in years to come. Special airmail envelopes are available at the post office and those wishing the seal applied to their en~ velopes must address their letters to the right that the seal may be applied without obliterating the address.

. OLD GQLD AND BLACK

RECORD? One Year Ago This Week

Dr. A. C. Reid addresses the Southern Baptist Convention's annual assembly in New Orleans.

The town's Methodist-Episco­pal Church is rising fast just

Isbell To Head Chemical Society

Dr. Nevill Isbell of the Chem-l . istry department recently became the :first Wake Forest man ever to be elected chairman, or president, of the N o~:th Carolina section of the American Chemical Society.

south of the town limits. Until Cutter, Anderson its completion services are being v· "t M d D held on alternate Sundays in the lSl e ean theatre here. Dr. William D. Cutter, secre-

Crowds set for the coronation cruise are disappointed as R. M. Barefoot, cruise director, fails to see through plans for the trip to England, Yia Route 1, and the river Neuse. Student opinion is divided as to whether the whole thing is a hoax or whether the steamer met disaster on the tricky Neuse reefs.

Dr. W. E. Speas, head of the physics department, is elected president of the N. C. Academy of Sciences.

Ex-editor Arch M. Mc:M:illan is lauded by national big-wigs including Senators J. W. Bailey and R. R. Reynolds; Congress­men H. D. Cooley and J. H. Kerr, and native-son Secretary of Com­merce D. C. Roper for the high OLD GoLD AND Br.ACK rating re­ceived in the Associate Collegiate Press competition of the National Scholastic Press Association. J

College officials kill Perrow's BSU boxing battles to raise funds for the proposed senior dance as far as the gym is concerned. The fights, says Perrow, will go on, probably at the theatre.

Capt. Dallas :Morris, Doyt }Iorris, Preston Chappell, Por­ter Sheppard, and George Maun­ey finish Wake Forest baseball careers he.re next week. Carl Byrd and Hal Warren, though not being graduated, will prob­ably matriculate with the Philly A's next fall.

The boxing teams request for slight material recognition of their tough schedule and services during the past year is being blithely ignored.

Law school holds a banquet in Raleigh with members of the state Supreme Court as guests of honor.

Pennsylvania State College stu­dents consume 100,000 spoonfuls of ice cream at one meal.

SHOE REPAIR - Men's l/2 Soles and Heels $1.00

ALL WORK Gt1ARAN:t'EED OALL FOB. AND DELIVEl!.

Smith's Electric Shoe Shop PHO:I;'ll 375-6

tary of the Council on Medical Education of the .A.MA, flying froW: Chicago to Raleigh with his

·'0 ' '

• SALE SPRING

SUITS \

• Entire Stock ~AT-

$}6.60

$J9.90

$23·30

• VALUES TO $35

PATRONIZE The

College Barber Shop (Located Next to College Book Store)

OPERATED BY STUDENTS

' associate, Dr. Anderson, visited velopments in medical education · the local m~dical school this week and for a look at. improvements in. for a conference with Dr. C. C. the local school during the past Carpenter on the most recent de- year: ·

FOR RENT LOST Seven room h'ouse, two baths, furnace heat. Phone 3291 or addr_ess Box 175, Wake For-

A GOLJ;> Cigarette Case near the lake. Return to

AL BANER est, N. C. · REWARD! •

THEM GOOD BUTTER TO.ti.STED SANDWICHES

COLLEGE BOOK STORE 'iThe Friendly Place;'

• You Are Always Weleome at

·ourPiaee

ALWAYS RETURN BOTTLES

Shearons Dairy GR .A_ DE

PRODUCTS

PHONE 2561

TWO DAILY DELIVERIES

fllways Call for Shearons Products

T HE whole college is talking about them -the low fares, we mean! And no

wonder, with the back-home movement almost ready to begin! You can travel the Greyhound way-in Super-Coach comfort, at only 1/3 the cost of driving, at far less than by other public transportation. See your Greyhound agent today-or tomorrow anyway-about schedules and savings for .~ur~p home! _______ _

Sample One-Way Fares

Washington, D. C .... . $4AO Richmond, va. • ... • . . 2.45 Wilmington. N. C ...... 2.70 Charlotte, N. 0.. . . . . • 3.25 Greensboro, N. c ...... 1.75 Winston-Salem, N, 0 ... 2.25 Charleston, 3. 0.. • • . . 4.15 Allhev!lle, N, C ........ 4.35 New York ..•••••.•• 6.95 Philadelphia. • . • .. •.• • 5. 75 -·----·

.·.···············Q··············"··············································,.. Restoration of

Antique ,furniture

'50th Anniversary

1888 1938

T. E. Holding & Co. DRUGGISTS

' WAKE. FOREST, N. C.

Our Reproduction Deportment tan reproduce any old piece of furniture to its original condition and give it the old time rubbed finish. See first how your furniture will look. We have hundreds of sample pieces about 2411x24" from which you can select.

Let us give you an estimate of the cost. Our representative will call on you without

cost or obligation '

Jut Plume or Write

H. E. MONTSINGER 6 SON FURNITURE

Hillsboro Road .. DURHAM, t'IORTH CAROLINA

TRUCK SERVICE TELEPHONE J-489'Z

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Baseb: dolph-M ,. . Lee, 5-(

i

,'•' Camp be <'track-]

' frosh te *Deno~

·virgi11 ·wm. j

ClimilXi -the State 1 Deacons, .Jim Wea oaubbing fc

.. :who is rec den illness Mary Co11· in a Soutl

The Des :second wir ing defeat<

Joe Tal ·the moUll hurler won in the we<

' ' .

Lexingt< Wirtz, ma· ~n the w tional no-] the WashiJ here today ~n to cross

In the' Generals I

were Mill who did i Dickens; , walk in _tl

Walt Cl :field, smac :in four til pree got o:

Ashland. dolph-Mac• strongest 1 season, bl: today, 5-0.

:Pitcher men, was a who mana~ Pedigo fan

Irving with two l was the OJ

to make rn

D Riehm on

fast travel Wake Fore tage of eve: to down th1 University

It was a out with J ners match Marchant,, ' Talley, 1 was invinci fanned 131

AlDov To Tri Linksr

Al Do~ walked off country ch swing into qualifying golf toll)."nE Carolina c next four <

Wake Fo represented varsity golf entered in Carlton, Ca and Bobby the fairwa~ country clu

And 1

ABu It remini

ity of the l coaching.

Now, tal D; C. (Pef spend the t• piloting h~ to the top loop-as so ·grid mentor

Murray _guide, is all'< metto Stau his Great F:

Phil Utl, present phYJ -onlythej anter, so to s

Page 3: W~y :z .N.' c., ISt- Spb~sor Press Bapquet· A.ddition ·To ... · J o us BcO'l"T ... Immediately after the stowing of the oats ... Austria for your growing pains."-Davidsonian. TIME

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r . •. .. OLD GOLD AND BLACK PAGE THRBB

NEXT WEEK

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RESlJi.TS Baseball-Richmond, 3-1*, Ran-·

··dolph-Macon, 5-0, Washington & Lee, 5-0•; frosh,, Carolina, 4-1, Campbell, 23-8*, Dq.ke, 7-2*; ** ·nrts jforest **

'With the e~ception of varsity baseball all sports have either coRcluded or will conclude their seasons tl1ls week-end. Varsity baseball: ~'uesday, N. C. State, there; We1lnesday, State, here (tentative). -'

<' track-Randoph-Macon, 74-52*; frosh tennis-State, 8-1*. · *Denotes Deacs wln.,

* * * .. Deae.s End Series Today In. Virginia 'Virginia Invasion Closes With ·wm. & Mary This Afternoon

Climaxing a we~k's invasion of*'-----------­ihe State of Virginia, the Demon Deacons, under the tutelage of .Jim Weaver, Athletic Director :subbing for Coach Jolill Caddell

.. :who is recuperating from a sud­den illness, will face William and :Mary College there this afternoon in a Southern Oonfe1·ence tilt.

The Deacs will ·be seeking their :second win over the Indians, hav­ing defeated them 6-4last March.

Joe Talley will probably _take · the mound. today. The lanky :hurler won over Richmond earlier in the week, 3-1.

/ Wirtz Shines Lexington; Va., :May 11:-Geo.

Varsity Season Comes to A Clos'e NexjWeek

The varsity baseball team closes its s e a s o n next Wednesday afternoon on Groves Field unless officials. agree to cancel the engage­ment due to the fact that the outcome will have no bear­ing on the Big Five cham­pionship. Should this be the case, the Deacs will meet N. C. State on Tuesday in a regular scheduled tilt on Freshmen ·Field, Raleigh, in the season's finale.,.

Wirtz, making 'his season's debut ()n the mound, pitched a sensa­tional no-hit, no-run game over =--------------..! ihe Washington and Lee Generals :here today, while his mates .went D 1 t on to cross the plate five times. eac e s

In the 5-0 shut-out orily two D £ t I Generals reached base all;d these e ea m ps were :Mike . Tomlin, shortstop, ' who did it on a wild- throw -by On Top By 7-2;

COMPLETE COVERAGE OF THE DEACONS AFIELD

-* FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1938. * * * * Spike10en Set For A Cinder Finale Meet Emory-Henry Tomorrow As Season Comes To Close ------------------------* Three Records Are Broken During Season

College records broken or tied this season by Wake Forest trackmen:

100-yard dash: Tied twice by Step Castelloe at 10 sec­onds.

200-yard dash: Broken by Castelloe at 22.2 seconds; record formerly held by Blaney Rackley, football luminary, who held the mark since 1925, at "22.4.

880-yard run: Broken by Bill Staton at 2 minutes 4.2 seconds; formerly held by Dr. Fleming Fuller since 1933 at 2.4.4.

Shot Put: Broken by Ru­pert Pate at 42 feet 3 inches. Formerl;y held by Manly Jones sin'e 1937 at 41 feet 8 inches.

Defeated but once this season, that to Catholic University, 70-56, last Saturday, Coach Phil Utley's band of spikesters will Yenture to Emory, V a., tomorrow to climax the . current season when they engage Emory-Henry College.

Twenty-two men left Wake Forest yesterday for the dual af­fair. Coach Utley was in a jovial

r mood as the squad departed say-1 ing that his boys would ''bring home the bacon" in the '38 Dea-con track finale.

The Deacs should be strong to­monow for the squad will be at full strength, and fresh from their triumph over the ·hard­running Randolph-llfacon aggre­gation on Monday.

Another Win

Dicke~s; Jack. Dangler drew a Season Over walk m .the e1ghth.

Seven Deac varsity baseballers conclude their dis­Terrors of N. C. State on Tuesday •• Joe Talley has third sacker, heads the team batting averages wlth center fielder, following close behind. Fred Hoyle has l!Iumford and Forrest. Glass have come through in be filled next season.

mond careers when the home guard meets the Red !....------------..! been outstanding on the mound, while Tallie Dupree, Smut Aderholt, second baseman, and Virgil Payne, W · By "SCOOP" PHILIPS alt Clayton, playing in right

:field, smacked out three safeties Durham, N. C., March 12-in four times at bat, Tallie Du- Closi~g their season as eonspicu-

played a consistent game in left field, and Boots F h N f the pinches as pincll-hitters. Seven wide gaps must . ros e men

. pree got one-for-two. ously as it was opened, the Baby s s I s B Deacons defeated the Blue Imps wan ·anq s. , ung y

Blanketed· of Duke University, 7-2, here this

Ashland, Va., May 10.-Ran- afternoon in a game that was a p · t • s · t Ed • t dolph-M.acon, cl~ime~ t? _be t~e thriller th~oughout .. The Wake ar 1ng por . . ~· or· S strongest team m VIrgmia thlS F . .

bl nk t d W k F t orest yearlmgs have won 13 out ------------season, a e e a e ores • today, 5-0. of 14 games this year. Better Now

Pitcher Pedigo, star mounds- Behind the six-hit pitching of men, was a-puzzle to the Deacons, Tommie Byrne the Deaclets who managed to get only five hits. started out strong ·in the first Pedigo fanned 10. ning when Royle and Galovitch

Irving Dickens, short stop, singled and scored later on a wild with two hits in four attempts, pitch. was the only Wake Forest man The Imps scored in their half to make more than one hit. of the opening frame when Pierce

connected with the first pitch for a circuit drive.

And Coaches Will Spend A Busman's Holiday Soon

By FRANK THOMPSON

It reminds one of the busman's holiday-the fact that the major­ity of the Wake Forest coaches will spend their summer.vacations coaching. More than forty lettermen, six claime,d by faculty members and Hickman, formerly of the Deac

Now, take for instance Mr. • coaches and nine guests, will cele- many alumni, it will be the most staff and now with N. C. State. D; C. (Pe~head) Walker. He'll such apt pupils in the summer brate the "re_birth" of the ~ono- powerful ?r~anization on the Bill Holding, former Wake bas~ spend the torrid summer months h 1· · gram Club m Durham With a campus Within the next two ketball and baseball luminary· il · h" s sc 00 session. B t ext W d d · ht "d d · · · • G d ' p otmg 1S now Hill Billies J" ....,. d Ro anque n e nes ay mg , years, proVI e 1t mamta1ns Its or on (Scoop) Philips and

th f . nn "eaver an Tom gers 1" · f ths f · v D · · ' to e top o the Coastal-Flam . . c nnaxmg our mon o ac- present progress. Bill an endr1es will be present loop-as sort pf a warm-up to are a bit dubious about there en- tivity of the organization since On Wednesday night, Presi- for the occasion. grid mentor duties in the fall. suing vacation. Jim'll maybe um- its refounding last January. dent Frank McCarthy will abdi- May initiates will be formerly

Murray Greason, basketball pire or fish or-well, it's a gam- During the past months the cate his ()ffice in favor of J. Smith welcomed into the club· these _guide, is already down in the Pal- ble; and Tom'll _probably' play club has grown rapidly to take Young, nolf first vice president, are: Jim Denning Haroid Far­metto State whipping together pro ball somewhere. its place beside other organiza- who will head the club next year. ley, and Tallie ~pree baseball his Great Falls mill team. John Caddell has the best idea tions and fraternities throughout Besides the regular members, lettermen; Bob Harr;ll golf·

Phil Utley will resume his of the troupe-he's going to spend the college campus. Since its Coaches Jim Weaver, D. C. Dave Harris, Max Robi~on, Ed present physical education duties a restfulj summer on his farm on renaissance the club has doubled Walker, Phil Utley, John Cad- Castelloe, Taylor Braswell Earl -only the job will be a bit pleas- R.F.D. :Tfo.-1, and relax as only its membership, has men holding dell and Tom Rogers of the Wake Hart, Jack Roberts Henr;. Day anter, so to speak, for co-eds make a man ca; relax l strong political offices, and, it is Forest staff; Coach Herman and Clau<ie Byerly: track.

To Play Imps; Undefeated LocaletsUntouched In Four Starts

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Page 4: W~y :z .N.' c., ISt- Spb~sor Press Bapquet· A.ddition ·To ... · J o us BcO'l"T ... Immediately after the stowing of the oats ... Austria for your growing pains."-Davidsonian. TIME

. OLD GOLD AJID BLACK ,

"Deacon town union College Cliff Everett .At present, Everett has h~d A contest is being conducted . "Legion Beauty''

M b F. ' . (Continued from page three) offers to man.;;e ~ever~! r;Iubs m on the University of New Mexico strong invaded the Colgate Uni-·i·:, em ers orm b r f ·'- h the South. e lS un,..eclded as campus to :find the male student versity men-only campus for the- .,

M G e 1e tu.at t e able manager's ad- to what he will do further alonv 'th A I' t I · Odern 0 t · ld th ·a o Wl we ug 1es egs. annual junior prom.

By

ROSS HILL

V • VIce won row asi e any un- this line. Hal Roberts was his favorable looks from the geds. assistant. --~---------.: _____________ _::,.

Sc~enectady, N. ~· - (ACP) Caddell remarked, "Cliff has -Umon College students have b th b t th t I C t' t St t C 11 streamlined their d d een e es manager a onnec Icu a e o ege co-

. t Un ergra nate have ever had to work with me. eds SliCCessfully protested the im-govermng sys em. H' b'l' · · f fi fi f h 1

B t f th t d t b d IS a 1 1ty as an orgamzer wns posmg o ve cent nes or ~ es y a vo e o e s u en o y, · I'll · h • d · 11 f h · d · d d t h d d superior_ miss Im next ma e m wa s o t eu ormitory

un ergra ua es ave a opte a 8 a 0 , rooms.

EPITAPH 't · h 'd f e s n. new consh ut10n t at provi es or

· · · That inseparable summer flmctional and proportional rep- ------------------------­With heart racking sobs shak- srhool duet, N orm:m and Wil- resentation, petition, referendum

ing his weary old frame and fond ]' h d b t Iamson, were on an . . . u and recall. memories of the da,YS when he ] J::r t? J K' cr-'

., ,h· f I~ H 1 1) ""1e~·e. was :1.Un · · · · ere mb 8 The new constitution provides ".ts c IC '>..cy o c cepcr on musicians <prcad rhvthm around f t d 'I f f the campus running tltrough his . . • , • . or as u ent counci orm o gov-mincl, the great Winchell Wells ernment, in which eleven council- -has taken his 1910 tvpcwritcr --- I men. are to be ele?te~ by extra-under Lis al'ln and h.ibernated I Congratulations to the APD's, currwu~ar orgamzattons sup­with some fifteen or t11·eutv law who will be granted a charter ported Y student tax, twenty-five books, a Ballyhoo .. and a" lVilcl from Delta Sigma Phi, national eflected ondthe basfis of one for eac~ lv ll' k · 1 f · h · orty stu ents our class presi-est ee ·ly to do some arduous I socra ratermty, t IS week-end; 1 d 'a . ·

t. ±' ld v· · 1 t f D lt s· Ch'' rents an a stu ent tax committee prepara 10n or yc o e ng·mny a so o ormf.'r e a 1gma Is, h . F 1 .. d' B E 'l'h f C tl ffil' t d · h S' p· C an•man. acu ty COOl' mator of ar .xam. e sage o rewe, reccn y n Ia c Wit 1gma 1. t d . · . .11 d . b

ROLLS DEVELOPED Anv 9iee :rolf kodek film a.e.e.Joped, 2 5 J, ' eight neve!'· fade V elox prinlll f'OI' ouly '

Low pr>c. Oil Clllldi<l fil"'-~ maili~~g et&t/elopu Jum&1ted.

VALUABLE PRBMIVIIS ~

V . · · R 1'h · 1 h s u ent activities WI a vise ut IrgmJ:t, oute 1, plans to hang ree nat1ona s ave seen fit to . h .1 ' h . h' 1 · h 11 h t bl' h l h not vote m t e counc1 . -----------------------IS s mg e m t c o < ome town es a IS c tapters on t e campus -and hope. Before leaving he within the last three months, and wants to kno,,· who started the rumor has it t4at se1·eral other Swan Song Sung rumor that Winchell wrote up local lodges have opened negotia­little girls in his column to get tions which might be expected to late dates? Wells denies all and materialize early next year. A says that Boston's gift to great deal of credit is due the humanity, Goose PenderGAS, men in these organizations, and originated the filthy fib. to their respective faculty ad-

Along the Greek Letter Front The KA's annual spring

formal will be held tomorrow

Yisers, whe no doubt assisted a great deal in the proceedings necessary in securing a charter.

night at the Washington-Dook in Strictly Behind the Eight Ball

Dur~am, scene of the_ Tri-Fra- Dapper "Snapper" Hunt, fresh ~ermty dances. ,Frank1e Gerard from triumphs in the field of IS the band. Its the last event GoYernment and Economic~ con-

h . . 1 1 d ,, on t e sprmg SOCia. ca en ar, templates running for Senator. and a goodly turn-out 1s expected. He advocates a combination of

Wake Forest and Meredith; the

(Continued rrom page three) In 1937, Philips was chosen as

sport editor under David Morgan. McCarthy was his assistant and both worked hand in band to give Wake Forest the best in sport coverage and pictures. John Scott, as fine a fotoman as ever snapped a shot, soon · was acquired for picture taking.

Phil Latta, Weston Hatfield, Les-, lie Cansler and Fate Beal all be­~me a p·art of the department. Close to forty stories a week were written by the staff for publication. Every nook and corner in Wake Forest was turned over for inside information.

l'hiUps Back Thus, with the awards and prog­

ress made, McCarthy will leave Philips to carry on alone. "Red" ex­pects to enter the newspaper field. On the other hand, Philips has one more year in the law school and will continue to direct the sport de­partment.

President Thurman D. Kitchin remarked, "I want to congratulate the sport editors of the college pa­per for putting out a page that won national recognition. They have done fine work."

The staff and the college will cer­tainly miss "Red," who not only put his all in Deacon sport news, but also played his best for Wake For­est on the' gridiron as a blocking

PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF MAY 16, 1938 Monday-Tuesday : KAY FRANC.IS - PAT O'BRIEN in

IIWOMEN ARE ll KE THAT11

MGM NEWS . COMEDY

Wednesday-BANK NIGHT - $75.00 ~ GLORIA STUART - MICHAEL WHALEN in

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Thursday-Friday 111N

FOX NEWS

TYRONNE POWER- ALICE FAYE in OLD CHICAGO"

COMEDY

Saturday-DOUBLE FEATURE DAY Ann Sheridan in 1/MYSTERY HOUSE"

-Also-Bob Custer in 11SANT A FE Rl DES AGAI N11

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COMING: "Kentucky Moonshine" "Adventures of. Robin Hood"

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AKPi Dance Echoes: Happy new institution to be known as Hal Thurston and l1is Rocky Merry Forest ... what happened Mount crew swingcopatetl for to the St. Mary's conncdtion, this one. . . . AKPi's Latta, kid? . . . Smiling Henry Hoi­Stephenson, Durham and Shields lingsworth's current l1eart throb warbled wistfully to the "Old .. :lp- is one of the Jh·e co-eds at State pie Tree in the Orchard." . . . Collich . . . competition should Latta did the Yariations . . . be plentiful. ... Meredith boy they registered high on the ap- T. "Som" Guy has a putrid pun plause meter .... "Doc" Bran- in answer to last week's query nock, eminent llhilosopher and regarding· the mtme of Jim tree-climber, ga1·c. UIIparallelecl Hayes' diminutiYe mongrel, demonstrations of the Small Ap- "They named him 'Whiskey' be­pie ... while Trunzo guarded cause he was such a goocllicker." the door .•.. Lo,·ely lass Edith ... Word came along the grape­Helm was there with "Bookie Yine that there is another side to Shields • . . and his real name the de bated :Med School elections is J nsper . . . then there was ... besides the ·one presented by the blond Raleighite that had Wells last week ... a~k some Phi the stags waiting in line to dance. Chi. . . . Publications Board ... Katie :.\IcBryuc, also a Ha- will hold their annual feed this leigh belle, attended with Phil' eYe at the Woman's Club . . . Latta .... "Tommy Trout" Fitz- all members wishing dates see gerald squired a Peace Imtitute Rufus Crater .... In their semi-

back. ?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-il!!=======~5======================:!!l

cutie. . . . nightly meeting under the --- Howler office, the Lonely Hearts

Further out Hillsboro Street club elected the following of­the belles of St. l>Im·y's rollicked fleers: President, Smith Young; a11d frolicked at their Junior- Vice President, Smith Young; Senior ... the gals were gorgeous. Secretary and Treasurer, Smith •.. Wake Forest was well rcpre- Young; ... that evidently didn't sented. . . . Fairmont's Peggy botl1er him for word reaches me Holmes littlc-appled the whole that he was keeping company evening .... Great golfer Bobby with a suicide blond at the Press Harrell, alleged woman hater, Comention in Charlotte , .. not received a bid by telegram, finally any happenings from the con­broke down and gave the femmes wntion ... everything is either a treat .•.. Somebody else took too good or too bad to print. ... Doris Butler, so "Little Slick" I Happy Vacation boys ..• and Britt went stag-heart broken. • adios .• , •

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h'"'i~th·ese inexperienced ~ 'we ,yill be lucky' to w I will be satisfied , point m,arghi in our i expecting plenty from their seven ve

... frankly. I am worrie1 outeome a great deal.

against the Yell ow-. 1 will be aided by lett

and · Powers at the r ··posts. .

Along with Wirtz i field will .be Marshal pl_unging, Iine-rippinJ Tony Gallovich, spe and Jimmy Ringgold· way with vicious ·blocking.

The center of· the Ii lifted bodily from State-champion: fresh Which means that But the center post, will b1 guards by "Tummy'' Louis Trunzo. Gettin boys will be like tryin~ of Alcatraz ·with a file.

At the end posit' John Jett and Bill Va Vanden Dries has bee from an injured shoulc

1 minute reports have it be in there when I

blows. But that's not all.

berry will be called ' again to boot the ball and out of· danger as 1 do it. Bill Eustler, M1 Irvin Byrd, Fred Jo'hn and Jim Pittman service before the game ia. not likely that I who suffered a bro· Tuesday's scrimmage, · tion. John Penderg Walker's extra-point been shifted to cente study. Clark, while JoE is being made into back. Both of these learning rapidly nt the sitions.

Eddie W oolbert and ers at ends; Clem Cr Larry Pivec, tackles; onis, Elwell Webb a1 Spruill, guards, will pi deal of ball.

Deacon hopes are hi ear is tuned for the col peal "Victory" when th Gore. Field go out toni~ sophomores, have the st1 to·win ball games, but tion still remains whic night can answer: ' year's Freshmen entere sity class?"

We think they have, l g9 take:a good look.