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SADIE1HA WKINS · .
.DANCE
TONIGHT
... ... .. . ..... , * * * VolumerX~XIII, Numb• 8
Nineteen Students Are Selected . I
Who's. Who In ·Chapel Service Presented Here La.st Monday
I
Those Chosen to ·Have ·Grades Will Be'. N1ames Presented in -· . .
Publication Ready . Tuesd)ay Four law students, thirteen se- ...
niors, and two juniors were -R.. · G" · · chosen this week by· a SJ?ecial com.:. . epo~t~ to Be .1ven by mitt~e appointed. by t~e- ~ean of Reg1str~r and Class , ·the college for mclus1on m the Advisors 1947-48 edition of Who's Who in American Universities and Col- Mid-"term grades will be given
··Jeges. The nineteen students so at 10. o'clock on Tuesday, Novemhonored were formally recognized at a solemnly conducted tapping ber 14• according to an announce
ment made this week 'by the ceremony at the chapel hour on Registrar's ·office. Monday.
.Glenn Brown, Kermit Caldwell, Juniors and ·seniors may· .Pick up ·their grades in the lobby of
Henry Huff,· and Larry Williams, Wait Hall at 10:00 Tuesday. The law ·students; Ralph Bland, Har"- Registrar's offic~ will be open ry Clark; Jesse Glasgow, Dati Ha- for conferences with seniors about worth, Campbell McMillan, Doug Mcintyre, Elwood Orr, Ed Royston, their grades during the remain-
der of the· week. . Bynum Shaw, Tommy Stapleton, Freshman and ..,sophomores are Reda. Umstead, Cl~de Whitner, to report to their respective adand ~yle Yates, semors;_ and_'~~a visers at chapel ·period Tuesday
:Herrmg and Mack Parrrsh, JUm-. November 11, to obtain their ors, are the students chosen for "d te · d Th' ·n b · · hr d mi rm graes. 1s wr e ~e . f~rst trme. · Sam Be en s, the only time freshmen- can 'get VIvran K.erbaugh,. Dagwood Kor- their grades. After that time the negay, Bill dR~bm~~~~:y w~~~ reports will se sent home to their verance, an ay parents picked last year and will be in- · . · . . . 1 d d · th" f ll • The lowe!;" ·drvisron advisors and
c u e agam • Is a ·• . ~he rooms in which they. may be Chmce BasiS· ·seen are as follows: Ashcraft,
· Each year Dr. D. B. Bryan, _Wait 211; • Aycock, Wait 203; dean of the college, is one- of Britt, Johnson 21; Brown, Alumapproximately 600 college officials ni 3rd floor; Carroll, Wait 213;
riitb ~lark ... "'\"
MID-TERM
GRADES APPEAR
' ' TUESDAY
* * ....
Wake Forest, N.C., Friday, November 7, 1947 Phone 304-6
Student Political Party Meeting 'of SemeSter
To Thursday
Hold First Night
. . - .
CAST OF LlTTLE THEATER PRODUCTION Purp~e Announced As Early Perfection of Po
litical Organization
The Student Political Union will hold its first meeting of the current year at 7: 00, next Thursday night in the .Johnston Auditorium. All stud~nts . who are not already members of the Fraternity Party are invited to attend.
Kermit Caldwell, Chairman of S. P. U. Executive Committee, stated that the purpose · of' the meeting is to begin the perfection of a campus wide political organization which will give every stu-· dent who does not already belong to another party an opportunity to express his wishes and be able to· give such wishes effect in a political organization which will be for the purpose of placing in · office in the spring elections those men best qualified to fill the positions.
This meeting is for organizational purposes; nominations for officers of the S. P. U. will .be' taken and the offices filled by majority vote. The offices to be filled are an Executive Committee of three, including its chairman, a secretary and a treasurer • The amount of the required membership fee will be voted on and a plan for issue of membership cards discussed.
J:lemocratic Selection · in the United States an~ .Canada Clonts, Sopial Science I; ·Cocke, Shown above at dress rehearsal are the members of the cast of ·the Little Theater production "Kiss who are asked to hav~J selected Johnson 23; Drake, Alumni, 23· and Tell." T.t:J.ey are, left to right, kneeljng, Leldon Kirk, as Uncle George; Ray Jones, as Willard; Clyde one percent of the student body Wait 301; Helm, Philosophy De~ Mitchell, as Pvt. Airhart·, Emily Oli_'ve, prompter,· and Mack Parrish, director. In the same order,, stand-
tut. artm t · · Plans will be made at this at their respective insti rons to P en · ing, are Carol Oldham, as Louise; Vtvian Snuggs, as Mrs. Pringle; Jim Hobbs, as Mr. Pringle; Gilmer receive this sign~ honor~ . Selec- Lovelace, RelUgion 1; Nowell, Cocke as Mrs. Franklin; Carlyle Morris as Mr. Franklin· Virginia Dickens as Mildred Pringle· Paul mpa~~~~Pg at~~~ ~~o~~g n~~~fi~: tion is based on outstandmg ef- Lea lecture -room; Parker, Alum- ' ' , ' ' . . . '. :(:ort and accomplishment in aca- ni 9; Smith, Johnson 27; Snuggs, .Moyle, ~s Lenny -:u-c?:r; Marshb~s, the Arch:r s dog; Lansford Jolly,_ as Dexter Franklin;_ Fi:fi Crerghton, for spring elections. Every perdemic work, extracurricular ac- Wait 201 .... Stroupe. Social Science a~ Corli~s ·Archer, Billie Bryan, as Mrs. Archer, and Johnny G~rdner, as Mr. Archer. ~ssmg from the son who is a member of the party tiv1ties, and-service to· the school.' 2; O'Flagherty, Wait 305; Yearns, PI~ture Is George Mallon~, who takes the role of Ra:y:mond Pnn,gle. (Staff Photo by Jtm Turner) w:ill have an opportunity to help • This year's selections comprises Social Science 2. in the selection of party nominees ·an impressive group of student · L h by means of a Primary which will
leaders.drawn__;u-om nearly ev- DR.~POTEAT NAMED ittle T·_ e, atRr To 'Pres~n-t Broadway ~:u~':.priortotheregularnomi-ecy college acti"lty_ . PRESIDENm OF PBK _.
Glenn Brown, second year law. ·~ . · .' The Student Political Union
~~~e~:::~tu~~~\~~;,lc·:~::~: The annuru·business meeting of C._omeay--..lri ·. Initi.a,.l.Prod uction·This _Fall ::s ~~~~~~oem~~;ar:th~~i~~~ ber of the Student Council and the Phi Beta .Kappa Society of pus groups, it was inactive dur-.the Student Legislature, and an Wake' Forest' ·college was held ing the war years but was re"\lit..: officer in his professional frater- last Thursday· evening, October alized in 1946. The purpose of nity, Pi Alpha Delta. Kermit 30. According to Mr. Carlton P. Group to Present "Kiss the s. P. u. as stated in its con-Caldwell, first year law student West, College Librarian and Sec- PARKING and Tell" on Wednesday RECITAL stitution, is "to sponsor, secure. :from Maiden, is president of the retary-Treasurer of the Phi Beta ,and Thursday · and maintain a student govern-senior class, the Veterans Club, Kappa Society, the main feature There is a "No Parking" Mr. Claude K. Cook will ment representative of the stu-Phi Delta Omegq, and the Euze- of the meeting was the election zone in front of the college presei:J.t the third in a series den.t body." It was organized for
· lian' Literary Society, and is a of officers for 1947-48. Those f The fall production of the Wake purely political purposes, and was bookstore. Poll·ce o fi'c•"als of piano recitals at 8: 00 p. t Stud t C selected were: President, Dr. H. Forest C.ollege Little Theater WI'll reorganz'zed and brought to life member of bo h the en oun- announ.ced last week that m. next Thursday evening,. cil and .Student Legislature. M. Poteat; Vice President, Dr. aft tL:;.. • th be given Wednesday and Thurs- in 205 Music-Religion Build- because some students recognized
Class Pr..mdent Edgar E. Folk; Secretary-Treas- er um warmng e pro- day nights, 12 and 13 November, the necessity of having at least """"' · · hib'ti · "II be t · tl ing. The following program treasurer, Mr. Carlton P. West. I on Wl s nc Yen· in the village high school auditori- two political parties on the campus Henry Huff, second year law ·The Society's membership con- forced. Court summonSes urn at ·g o'clock. The production has been announced by Mr. to insure the highest type of lead-
tud t f Washington D C C o o k: B a c h, Allemande s en rom ' · ., sists of twenty-two members of Wl.ll be ISS" ued to violators. will be F. Hugh Herbert's Kiss ership. · "d t f hi class ht"s so I from 3th English Suite: Bee-Is presr en o s • - the faculty and two graduate stu- and.· Tell, a three-act comedy. ' L" 'ted M be hi cia! fraternity, Lambda Chi Al- dents. Tickets for advance sale may be thoven, · Sonata Op. 53 mu em rs p pha and of ·Pi Kappa Delta; he h d t th c 11 B k (Wa_dlstein), Allegro Con Last year the membership l·s a' Southeastern and ,National pure ase a e 0 ege 00 Brio,· Chopin, Scherzo in B-
Bl B ' M • St 1• Store, or from any Little Thea- was limited due to the relatively champion debater and student ue arron s USIC y Ing ter member. Flat Minor; Turina, Minia- short time to effect an organiza..: manager of the debate squad. Lar- The- plaY, Hugh Herbert's long- tu7es (Soldiers are Ap- . tion and have it ready to partic-ry Williams, law school s~i()r E. L. , E d proaching); and Friedman- ipate in spring elections. In spite from Waynesville, is president asy. on IStener s ar ruins run Broadway comedy later made Gartner, Viennese Dance No. of the limite~ membership and of the Wake Forest Bar -Associa-. ~ntol· a pthopulalr moving picture, lateness of getting started, the tion a member Of O~;cron Del- mvo ves e c ose scrapes- and p l"t· U .
......... · Student· o 1 1cal mon, through to K' appa, formerly president of mix-ups of one Corliss A~cher, · B f S d D Th • c d 1 the support of the students on the local IRC chapter. and for- and or tu ent ance .· es·pian ast a o esc_ent,· and her boy-friend, c t t 0 the campus who recognized the
merly the speaker of the House Features "Music of Yes- Dexter Franklin - the rest of on es s pen need for such an organization, was Of Representatives in the N. c. T " e the cast gets involved because it . bl t 1 .f.J..{-..4-..
~rday and oday El. t Off" can't help itself. T WF w •t a e o carry e even of ~·;r-Student Legislature. ec _S leers The troub!e really begins when 0 r1 ers three.
Ralph Bland, pre-D;l~d senior Corliss and her friend Mildred In making a statement for the from Goldsboro, is chairman of Blue Barron, stylist of the Prt"ngle have a booth t a ch rr"t -' present union, Caldwell said. the Freshman Advisory Commit- "Music of Yesterday and Today," a a Y • tee and president of both his so- will be featured with his orches- At a meeting of the Theta Orne~ bazaar and sell (instead of guest Three contests are open to stu- -See POLITICS, Page 5-ciai fraternity, Kappa Alpha, .tra in the Raleigh Memorial Au- go Cast, Wake Forest's chapter towels as they are supposed to) dents whose talents and interests and the Willi.am Am' os .Johnson ditoriumltnext Saturday night, No- of the national honorary dramatic kisses. Corliss' mother decides c d G.
f t ·ty AI h p · o 1 t M'ld d · di turb· 'nfl are concentrated in the literary · t Pre-Medical fraternity. A repre ... vember 15, in the first inajor ra erm ' p a Sl mega, as 1 re lS a s mg I uence oe s 0 IVe -See WHO'S WHO, :~;>age 2- dance to be sponsored by the stu- Thursday Mary Gilmer Cocke was on her little darling, and cordial field.
: dent body of Wake Forest College. elected director for the coming -See COMEDY, Page 2- The first is the annual contest D { M . •tt year and drew up a list of can- sponsored by Tomo7row magazine ance or en
Raise· in Band ap~~~t~:n:~~ ~:~~~~~a~~ ~~~a;~~l~~tir::~:~:::~;~I~:rt.ng RED CROSS OPENS ;~c~e~~fe~~o~t$S~t~r~rs!~!~t!~~ by ·student body president Dag- The new director, a J'unior BRANCH IN TOWN Th · t b t t
A d wood Kornegay, went to work on from W, like Forest, past sub-di- T~ next ets. en ry receives $~0~. Roy Cole's Carolinians have ·credi•t Howe the plari "to provide an all round rector of Alpha Pst·, directed the 11 s con ells dis opden to all offrci- been secured to play for a gala · 1 lif f th campus" The The Wake County Chapter of a Y enro e . un ergra.duate col- Coed Ball wh1'ch wr·ll be held from so cia e or e · summer Little Theater maJ· or pro- th Am · R d C d 1 d t th
committee sought . to secure ~top ductr'on, Out of the Fry'ng Pan. e encan e ross opene Allege stu ~n s m ebUn:ted States.,g until 12, Friday night, November fli ht b nd d did So by obtain • a branch office in Wake Forest entrres must e m by D. e .. 14, r·n the Wake Forest Hr"gh A ndatl'on for an r'n g a an - She has also done acting wr"th the last week a d' t H L M"l c b 31 19•7 All t recomme - . Bl Barron ' ccor tng o . . I - e:n er ' . <± • mam-:scr~p s School Gynl. This ball which
crease in credit for band from mg ue · group, and has been make-up ler, local business man and a di- wrll ?e .co~srdered for publicatiOn, will be free to all men on' the the present one-half hour to one· The Barron, who features that and costuming chairman for the rector of the Wake County Chap- and It rs likely that a few others . b . hour was passed on October 28 by "~ello'Y music/' comes to R.al- Thespians. ter. th~n winne~s will be acceptabl~- at c~n-:;du~o;s b e~~g c~~~nsored and a Curricular Committee, Prof. ergh With a llst of outstanding Mack Parrish, ASP, a junior The new Red Cross station will pnces rangmg upwards from $125. P Y Y e s. . Thane MacDonald ·-of the Music e~g~gei?ents• to his credit .. T~e from Ocala; Florida, was elected be located in the cot.:.nty clinic .Stories should not exceed 5,000 A spokesman for the planmng Department announced this week. dlstmchve Blue Barron styling rs sub-director of -the chapter. He is office of the Wilkinson building words should be typed in stand- committee announced that the
He said that 1;10t more than a_ big factor i.n the ba~d's c;on- past president of both Little and trained staff workers from ard m~nner, and should carry on girls . have been enjoying soci_!l]. four hours of this credit could tmued populanty at leading mght Theater and Alpha Psi and is di- the Raleigh office will be on duty both manuscript and envelope the functwns staged by the men for· be use.d toward graduation.· clubs, hotels and theatres from :cecting the fall . production Kiss each Thursday afternoon from phrase "College Contest." The so long that they have decided to
The band will go to Durhatn coast to coast. and. Tell. He has also been make 1:00 til 4~ 00 p. m. j writer's name, college, and ad- repay them by staging this af-Saturday to represent Missouri A wax specialist, Blue ~s re- up chairman. The services of the Red Cross dress should be accompanied with falr. • at the Duke-Missouri game. It corded such memorable songs as Tommy • .Tohnson, a sophomore will be made available to all per- a self-addressed, stamped enve- Roy Cole and his Carolinians has also been invited to play in "Walkin' Thru Mockin' Bird from 'Suffolk, Va., was elected sons needing their help; however, lope. All entries should be ad- are well known in Carolina colan Armistice Day Parade in Ral- Lane," "Mean To Me," "You Wa,_lk cast business manager. He is the prime need which prompted dress to TOMORROI~ MAGA- lege circles for their sweet brand eigh on Tuesday, November 11. ~y," and many others. His mu- publicity director·' for the local the opening of the Wake Forest ZINE, 11 East 44th Street, New of music. He is well remembered
He also· said that small vocal src has already , graced many Little Theater and has worked on Branch was to offer Closer as- York, 17, N. W. here for his excellent perform-ensemble groups were selected broadcasts. · stage, technical and make-up sistance to. servicemen's families, I . The second in this series of ance at the summer dances. The last week :from this year's Glee Blue jumped early into "swing- committees. veterans, and their families with literary competitions is sponsored committee said it felt fortunate to Club. The groups and their dom" playing. in various college Emily Olive of Wake Forest, claims for government benefits by Mainstream, a literary quar- have secured his services for this members are as ·follows: Male outfits while attending Ohio Uni- Kitty .To Beasley ft;om Louisburg, and other personal and family terly. The editors of this mag- "Twirp Season" dance. octet, Tommy Stapleton and versity. The hysterical tendency George Mallonee from Winston- problems_. azine are offering two awards of The plans for the dance which. Kenneth Wilson, 1st tenors: Rob- of most bands to blare and blast Salem and .Johnny Gardner from Mr. Miller and Mrs. A. C. Reid, $150 each for the best" unpublish- will be informal are no~ in the ert Orr and Gerald Grose, 2nd their way thr_!lugh melodies grat- ·Lum.berton were named candi- volunteer Red Cross worl~er, will ed short story and poem or group I hands of sev~ral committees tenors· Jason Ross and A. C. ed on Barron's nerves and he for- dates for membership following dir~ct the activities in the local of poems submitted, by students Dean Johnson has gi"\len the coe~
~ee BAND, Page 2-· -See D~CE, Page 8- -See THESPIAN, Page 2- office, -see CONTESTS, Page 5- . late permission till 12: 30.
\
, Page Two Old Gold and Black • Social Group To Give Dance
I two of them elope. national convention. Harry Clark, champion After Diilner Speaker, tee,• the BSU Council, .the PanOld man Archer has in the senior from Wadesboro, is co-cap- he has been an assistant in Hellenic' Council, and the Intra-
meantime brought home one tain of the Deacon football team the English and German depart- mural Athletic · Counci~ He is young and sprightly Jimmie Ear- and has played varsity football ments. · Tommy Stapleton, senior preside:n.t of Alpha Psi Omega and
Friday, N~yember 7, 1947"
heart. Corliss begins meeting for three years. , Formerly a ministerial student from Mars the Little Theater, and was . him for shrimp cocktaiis (which member of the varsity ,baseball Hill, is a member of the Stu- president of his sophomore class. plays havoc with her digestion). squad, he ·is also treasurer of dent' Council, the Freshman Ad- -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Forest and
_Collegia.-e A Dogpatch-style Sadie Hawkins
Day costume dance will be given tonight by the Social Club at the Community House where Buddy Johnson and his orchestra will play from 8 until 11: 15. This will be the fourth in the series of Friday night dances sponsored by the club this fall.
The Archers and the Pringles the Monogram Club. visory Committee, the BSU Coun- • are going to be grandparents- Jesse Glasgow, senior from cil and the Howler and Old Gold only they don't know it. An ac- Monroe, is president of the Pub- and Black staffs. Formerly presiquaintance of the Archers' sees lications Board and a member of dent of the Philomathesian LitCorliss snidely sneaking out of 'the staffs of The Student, The erary Society, he is also State the office of one Dr. Fabling, ob- Howler, and Old Gold and Black. Music Director of the Baptist Stu
The Sadie Hawkins Day theme will be the motif of the dance. The club suggests that dancers wear Dogpatch costume or some rough clothes which shoUld add greatly to the festive air 'of the occasion. Girl break dances will probably feature the affair,
Girls are being asked to bring the boys and pay for their admission. However, stags both boy and girl will be welcome. The usual admission fee of seventy-five cents stag or drag is being charged.
The Social Committee of the Student Council has given its approval of these dances and has laudeci the efforts of the club's mmbers in providing this added entertainment for Wake Forest.
stetrician. Papa Archer particu- A member of Omicron Delta Kap- dent Union. larly doesn't take the news with pa and last year's editor of The Reda Umstead, co-ed senior good grace. He begins to prepare Student, he is also a member of from ,Roxboro, is president of to request court martial for pri- the Student Council and Student the Women's Government Associavate Earheart-when Corliss an- Legislature. Doti Haworth, co-ed tion and is a member of the Stum:iunces that "it isn't Jimmie!" senior from Knoxville, Tennessee, dent Council and Tassels, local Father, out of a somewhat un- is a member of Tassels, local hon- honorary leadership fraternity for derstandable natural curiosity orary leadership fraternity for women. S:tie served as secretary wants to know then who the heck women, and !has been an as- of her freshman class and was it was. At that opportune mo- sistant in the library, the Eng- formerly treasurer of the Women's ment Dexter, emitting a mating lish department, and the Religion Government ;Associatio'p. Clyde call the like of which hasn't 'been department, and has been promi- Whitener, senior from Morganheard around here since freshmen nent in Little Theater activities ton. is chairmap. of the Intram.ural stopped paying' homage to Tom and training union and Sunday Athletic Council, secretary of the Dixon's monument. Dexter's elect- School work. Monogram Club, and a letter-ed. Campbell McMillan,·· pre-med man in v~sity baseball . and An~ after that the plot beg!ns senior from Whiteville, is edi- football, and has been a mem
to thtc~en, or as George. !atk1ns tor of the 1948 Howler, secretary ber of the Student Council. tells h1s freshme;; class.es. Comes of the Publications Board, a Kyle Monroe Yates, Jr., !!enior the denoument. . Thmgs really member of Omicron Delta Kappa pre-med student from \Houston, get hot for a while. · Sigma Pi Alpha and the Willian{ Texas, is a member of the Stu-
But if you think the play gets Amos Johnson 'Pre-Medical fra- dent Council, president of the hot (so the following is duly re- ternity .. He has also been promi- Baptist Training Union. and· BSU ported to this purely disinterested nent in religious and musical ac- Extension Director. He was for-
GAMMA SIGMA EPSILON obser_:-·er), you ought. to s«:e play tivities. Doug. Mcintyre, senior mer~y pre.sident of ife Pl:_lilom~-
HAS. NINE NEW MEMBERS practice. One show 1s gomg on from Lumberton is treasurer of thes1an Literary Society and h1s on the practice stage in the Alum- the student bod~ a member of Sunday School class. . ni B~ilding, a second. is put o_n the Student cou'ncil, vice-presi- Bea He~ring, ~o-ed j~nior The Gamma Sigma Epsilon, hon
orary chemical fraternity, in a meeting last Thursday even}-ng, ~nitiated into its membership mne students. Those· to receive formal initiation were Marietta Crowder, Donald Davis Harry Carpenter, John Hardaw~y, Campbell McMillan, Bill Moody, Joseph Plumbo and J. R. Quisenberry.
by ;o1rector _Mack Parrish. who IS dent of his social fraternity, Pi fro~ Fa1rmont, 1s , devobo~al rapidly pulling the peroxide ou,t Kappa Alpha and formerly busi- chairman of · the · BTU, soc1al of his hair and the third goes on ness manage~ of Old Gold and chairman of the BSU, · a Sunday in the back of the room, where Black. School class president, and has l:,lalf a dozen eager women gather, Elwood Orr senior minister'al been prominent in religious acwhen they're not on stage, to ex- 5 tude n t from Ro ky M
1 t tivities on the campus for the
change the latest ways to prepare now president of the ~SU Co~~ past three years. Mack Parrish, crepes suzettes. cil after serving a term a~ its junior from Ocala, Florida, is . a B~uncing little C~rliss Creigh- vice-president. He has been a member of the S~dent Coun~1l,
THESPIAN ton JUSt keeps bouncmg along, re- member of the Ministerial Con- the Freshman AdVIsory Commitplying with sober words of wis- ference and the Christian Service ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' dom to Lanceford Jolly's alter- Group for the past two years. Ed nate "Holly Cow"s and "Gee Royston senior from Baltimore ONE DAY SERVICE
(Continued from Page 1) whizz's." Father Johnny Gardner Marylan'd, is co-captain of thi~ the fall production. Mr. Harry K. Archer storms around the stage, year's Deacon football team and Dorsett of the Raleigh Little voici~g gentle "Ga.d"s lik_e Fa- has been a member of the varsity Theater and Meredith College ther m ·the moVIe versiOn of squad for three years He is also· faculty has been elected an hon- "Life With". 'Demure . mother vice-president of his. social fra
Kodak Finishing 6 or 8 Exposure Rolls .....•. 25c 12 Exposure Rolls ............ 3,5c
orary member of the local chap- Billie Bryan Archer keeps asking ternity Alpha Sigma Phi. ter. Dr. Parker of the physics abo_ut a certain night i:n 1918· Byn~ Shaw, senior from department is faculty adviser. Mal~ ~arol O~dham, . who keeps Bath, is editor of Old Gold and
16 Exposure Rolls'··········- 45c Extra Prints ···-··············~·- Sc
Envelopes Furnished
Pledge ritual will be· Thursday, r~mmding Fehx-Corliss ,th~t si;e Black and a member of both the· November 13, following the diapered her, keeps dashing m Howler aild The Student staffs. production of the play, and for- and out to ask whether or not He is president of Omicron Delta
al · ·ti t' will b bout a the Archers are at home. .
Skyline Photo Service
Winston-Salem, N. C. m lm a lOn e a Patiently looking on is George K_appa and a former president of
week later. Raymond Mallonee, a preco- FP~1~K~a~p~p~a:D~e~lta~. ~A~S~o~u~t~h~e~as~te~rn~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~ BAND cious little-brat. He thinks "it's ~
all very dumb". And says so.
(Continued from Page 1) Hall, Jr., baritones; Cludy Hardin and Carlyle Morris, 2nd bases.
Girls' sextet: Onita Mussel-white and Billie Barnes, 1st sopranos; Miriam Smith and Delena Jones, 2nd sopranos; Mavis Sykes and Emma Brauer, altos.
The College Quartet: Kenneth Wilson, Tommy Stapleton, Jason Ross, and Carlyle Morris. The Quartet is scheduled to give a short musical program on Tuesday afternoon, November 11 at the Baptist State Convention in Winston-Salem.
Other luminaries are Gilmer Cock~ as Mrs. Franklin. ' Carlisle Morris as Mr. Franklin, Vivian Snug_gs as Mrs. Pringle, Jim Hobbs as the Mr., Paul Moyle as the dashing Lennie, Virginia Dickens as Mildred, Ray .Tones as the painter in the first act-in fact the first person you see will be he--Leldon Kirk blusters in, inopportunately, as Uncle George, and one Marshbanks (kind loan of Dr. Beverly Lake in a weak moment) plays the dog. · Seriously, the cast has been working hard on the fall Little Theater production, and expects to do a good job for the performances Wednesday and Thursday nights-a cordial invitation has been extended to both College COMEDY
1-and townspeo' ple.
(Continued from Page 1) 1
relations between the Archer and WHO S WHO, Pringle clans break off. Mildred is allegedly in love with Lennie, Corliss' air-force-good-lookinglieutenant-older-b :t o t h e r. He comes home on furlough, and the
(Continued from Page 1) sentative of his fraternity to the Pan-Hellenic Council, he has also served as delegate to its
WE ARE GRATEFUL FOR THE PATRONAGE
Given Us By Wake Forest College
Campus Organizations The Students
We Try at All Times to Merit Your Confidence
WAKE FOREST PRESS Upstairs, Over Shorty11s
Phone203-6
We are now equipped to cut and fit
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Wake Forest, N. C. .
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thea.tres Saturday: at COLLEGIATE-
. Shows 7:15 & 9:oo
Betty Grable - Dan Dailey "MOTHER WORE TIGHTS"
Saturday-Sho_ws Continu~us 1 to 11
Adm.: Child 14c; Adult Mt. 30c.Night 40c
Charles Starrett-Smiley Burnette'RIDERS OF THE LONE STAr
• Short & Serial
Sunday-:-Shows Mat .. 2:op & 3:45i Night 9:0~
, . Adm. Child 14c, Adult~4oc All Shows ·
Groucho Marx-Carmen Miranda. "COPACABANA"
Monday & Tuesday-Shows 3:15, 7:15 & 9:00
.Adm. Child 14c; Adult Mat. 30c,. . Night40c .
Anne Baxter - William HoldeD ''BLAZE OF NOON"
News
Mon. & Tue. at COLLEGIATE-1. \ Shows 3:15, 7:15 & 9:00 Adm.: Child 14c; Adult.Mat. 30c,..
Night 40c Claudette Colbert-Henry Fonda
''DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK"
Wednesday-Shqws 3:15, 7:15 & 9:0 Paul Kelly - Kay Scott
"FEAR IN THE NIGHT" Short & Serial
Wed. & Thur. at COLLEGIATEJean~Harlow -Ben Lyon
''HELL'S ANGELS"
Thursday and Friday-Shows 3:15, 7:15 & 9:00
Tyrone Power - Joan Blondell . "NNGHTMARE ALLEY"
News
B. & S. DEPT. STORE AT COLLEGIATE-
Wake ·Forest, N. G. November 24, 25, 26 ,
Linda Darnell in
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'Frida
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:Hugh '74~
Hugh ·_graduat ·died M< in Reici ·Of the :succuml
At th .a Bapti -original .lege, h• i:ion. I ·the pa: Baptist
Son • -and Rh .Scott er .and wa master Scott at -days w much f
-quality .At' that ·Or mor .study o ·Classics .also se1 for the
Folio' ·.studied "IDond H home a
.Justice began l: ·worth t Vance 1: .ate. '
Hew:: and a J
·Carolina ·vid Sett .Scott, ' oldest 1
:Forest, law boo]
1 Funer:
Monday 'The bui ·Cemeter ·ow, th• a daugh .and two ville.
GE 'Gra
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Frlday, ;Nove:m,ber .. 7, 194 7 Old Gold and Black· Page Three
;Oldest W,ake Forest· Graduate Dies ~~!ct~a::eo:!~~;~~u~o~tinue to Patroni1e your Old G~ld advertisers. Other. articl~s in the issue are: ~:;;:;;:;:;;:;;;::;;:;:;:;;;:;;::~;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:::;;:;:;:;;;:;;::~;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:::;;:;:;:;~~;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:::;;:;:;:;~~~~;;::~
,-------..,...----------.....--------- Football· Prospects and Roster, by, <' Tom' Bost, Jr.; Campus and Classroom Echoes, by 'Thompson Green- · wood; 581 Alumni Have Relatives Enrolled; News notes from Schools
:Hugh Reid Scott -Class of will be the amount needed up to 'Alum' lll. New's '74 S b t' H $1500 annually with a grant of
~ccum. sa. ome ,· $500 'for scientific equillment br m ·ReidsVIlle oth~r related expense. Necessary Of Oct .. l·S ou· t
loans will be made. All aplilica-Hugh Reid Scott, the oldest t~ons ~om · students should be·
·_graduate of Wake Forest College; f~led Wlth the. Dean who in tu~ ·died Monday morning at .his home files ~hem with the . Fellowship The October iSsue of the Alumni in Reidsville. The last member Comnuttee. together With a ~tate- News has just been released .• Jas.:. ·Of the class of 1874 Mr. Scott ment. nax_n~g- the t''fo applicants. per L. Memory, Jr., editor of the :succumbed at- the age of 92. . best q1.1,a~:l;I~d to recelVe ~e awa:d. magazine, announced in this issue
At the death of Dr. R. T. Vann, All applica~Ions must be filed With that the Rev. Eug(me Olive, who .a Baptist minister and one of the the Committee ?Y January 1, resigned recently as college chap-original founders of Meredith Col- These fellowships are n?t in- lain and as pastor of __ the Wake .lege, he came· into this ~istinc- tended. for- those now holdmg . or I F()rest B.aptist Church, has been i:ion. Dr. Vann was at one time expectmg to ho~~ f~llows~ps elected dxrector of the new depart.; ·the pastor of the Wake Forest ~eat7r than the tuition at the ~- ment of. Public Relations for the Baptist Church. stitution ~here research wo* 1s college. Prof. Memory says that he
Son of the late. William Scott tp be ~arr~ed on. . will return to full-time teaching -and Rhoda Settle Reid :Scott, Application~ ma! be obtamed .Scott entered Wake Forest in 1871 from the deans office .. . and was graduated in 1875 with . master of arts honors. · Mr. · Willie Dummkopf, Wamboogi~ scott attended Wake Forest in the Institute substitute tailback, has -days when it was noted not so m~9e good· o~ 78 of his 79 extra much for its facilities but the pomt conversiOns. The 79th try -quality of men which it produced. y.ras ruine¢1 by :'1 p~licS;n. swallow.At' that time, some seventy five mg the ball while m ~light. -or more students - pursued. the · .study of Latin, Greek and the ·Classics in a single buildingwhich · .also served as rooming quarters for the students.
Following his graduation, he .studied for two years at Rich-; ~ond Hill in Yadkin County, the home and law schoel ·Of Chief .
. Justice Richmoni:l Pearson. He began his law practice at Went·worth two years before Zeb Vance last ran for the U. S. Sen-ate. '
He w:as a former State Senator and a nephew of oz:!e of North ·Carolina's. former· governors. Da. vid Settle Reid. A year ago Mr. Scott, who was at that time .the oldest living graduate of Wake
:Forest, presented his library of law books to Rockingham County.
Funeral services were held last
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Regular Meals Open 7 A.M.
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Monday at the home at Melrose • ..._.. .. • •• • .. • .~ 'The burial was in Greenview ~=~=~~~~===~~::;;:;:;:::;;:;::;;;:::;:::~::;;:;~::;:::;:;::::;;:;::~
Raleigh
·Cemetery. Surviving are his wid- -:; ·ow, the former Flossie Brewer;
· a daughter, Mrs. William ,Hester; .and two grandsons, all of Reidsville.
GE Fund Aids 'Graduate Work
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.. Ul~~~~ VA~-~ wd wa:z:n,(./h
••
..Page Four
·."' ...
Old Gold and Black Founded Januar;· 15, 1016, as tho official stu
dent ncw:;paper of \\'alte Forest College. Published weel,ly during the school year except during examInation puriods anu holidays as directed by the \\'ake Forest Publications Boaru.
Bynum Shaw ...................... Editor Jesse Gla~gow ............ Associate Eclitor Don Paschal ........•..... , ..... Art \Vork Dicl• Harris . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • . Photographer Editorial staff: Jim Hawldns, Harold T. P.
Hayes, H. Lelclon Kirl;:, George l\Iallonee, S::mtford lllartin, Luc~· l{aw!ings, Dill Hobbins, Jimmy Shelton; Tonm1~· Stapleton, E. :.\lcDanicl \\'ard, Bob Grogan, Carol Olclham, La.mar Caudle, Herb Paschal, Clarence Lane.
Bill Bethune .•.....•..•....• Sports Editor Sports Staff: Dave Clarlt. Tommy Creed, John·
ny Dillon. l\lilte Seitz, \\'ill Eschen. Dicit \Villia.ms . . . . . . . . . • Business 1\Ianager 'l'om 1\luse · .......•........ Asst. Bus. l\lgr. Carlyle l\Iorris ... : . •.. Circulation Manager Business Staff: Paula. Jean Buie, Jimmie Bur-
ris, Charlotte Duling, Elizabeth Gertner, Jo Ann 1\Iorgan, Paul Moyle, Tim \Vrenn '
All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, P. 0. Box 128, \Vake Porest, N. C. All business matter should be addressed to the business manager, same address. Subscription rate; $2.00 per year. '
Phone 304-6. Por important news on Thursday ·Phone 2561, Theo. Davis Sons, Zebulon, N. C.
Entered as second class mail matter Ja,nuary 22, 1916, at the post office at \Vake Forest, North Carolina, under the act of l\larch 3. 1879.
Member Associated Collegiate Press l\lember N. C. Collegiate Press
Represented for national advertising by National AdYertising Services, Inc., Colle,v;e Publishers Representatives, 420 l\Iadison Ave., New York. N .. Y.. Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco.
Social Flop?
.. ~ -~
Old Gold and Black . i
Friday, November 7, 1947
Who is Un-A·merican The current Red hunt being conducted by
the House Un-American Activities Committee
has brought forth evidence of a grave danger to
the American way of life. Wide publicity has
been given to the hunt and notice has been taken
I of the committ~e's discoveries out of all pro
portion to their importance.
But few have seen wherein lies the real dan
ger. No person who is not afraid of his own
shadow, in his right mind, could really fear the
pitiful handful of crackpots, malcontents, and
parlor pinks, who call th~mselves Communis'ts.
No, the real danger lies with those who have
taken the Red scare as an opportun~tr to go
"witch hunting," with those.who call Communist
everyone more liberal than they, those who have
taken this same furor as grounds for attacking
I the fundamental American rights of free speech
and thought. These pepole constitute the real
menace to the American way of life. And of all
these the most un-American is the House Com-
THETA CHI- [ . LAMBDA CHI AL'PHA Clarence Carow<m, past presi- At the regular meeting Monday
dent of Theta Chi, paid the col- night, a letter from the traveling any a visit last weekend. The fra- secretary was read and his recternity offers congratulations to ommendatioU$ were approved. Brother Carlos Cooper upon his Plans are under discussion for a engage!Uent to Miss Marjorie Wil- proposed dance with the Duke and Iiams of Miami. Fla., and Mere- University of North Carolina chapdith College. Bill Staton -~as ters to be held early in Decemone of the "Disappointed" at the ber, and the social plans for the William and Mary game last remainder of the semester have weekend, but he and a number been formulated· by the soci~ of other Brothers are planning t9 committee. tr3" again with the Boston College ga!Jle next Saturday.
SIGMA Pili EPSILON Congratulations tcf Brothers
Clyde Whitener : and Campbell MacMillan on their election to Who's Who and to Brothers Bill Robbins and Campbell MacMillan on being selected as two .. of the 10 outstanding seniors. The S~E's fourth football game ended in a tie with the Zeta Chi's. The chapter is stressing an improvement in scholastic ability and all members and pledges hr;tve pledged their support; Brother John Yeattes is Scholarship officer. Congra-
ALPHA SIGMA PHI
. ShaPps and
Flats By Disc Jockey
Often I have wondered just how many of the ordinary things of life have served as an inspiration for the great musicians. Certainly things that we wouldn't turn to rietice have prompted the writing of the great symphonies and concertos. To me there is a spot on the campus that could easily be termed Inspiration . Corner, not necessarily for ,the mu-· sically minded but for any lover of beauty. ·
Probably no one will understand when I say that this place is a small Math Office on the Third Floor of Wait Hall. But this little room has a large windowa window that affords a view far out across the campus - a window that catches the spirit of Wake Forest--one just forgets the high walls of the office, the big awkard desks and the odd shaped little geometric figures sittmg around the room.
mittee on Un-American Activities. tulations are in order for Brother Phil. Mason for pinning up Miss
A report of the Campus Social Committee At present the spotlight is turned upon Hol- Bertha Fulford of Beaufort and
At the last meeting Charlie Carroll was voted the outstanding pledge of 1946 both in sports and scholarship. Charles Parnell was elected director of the pledge glee club. A hayride will be held. Friday night· and all members, pledges and their dates are cordially invited,. Brothers White and Richardson announced. Congratulations are in order for Brothers 'Ed .Royston and Mack Parrish who were ):"ecently. selected for Who's Who. At a recent pledge meeting Brooks Gillmore was elected President; Jim Alexander, vice president; Amos Daniel secretary-treasurer. Other pledges are: Sam Edwards, Charles Parnell, Buddy Worsham, Arnold Palmer, Bill Pearson, Doug Sttiart, Earle Bradley, Zeb Morgan, Gerald Coates, Lib Toler, Ed Butler, Gus Grose, Francis Garvin, Emmett White and Bill Barnes.
As one peeps around the limbs of the tall slender cedar just ·autside the window; there is always the towering steeple of the New Chapel framed by the· beautiful pink clouds of a . sunset, or the liquid rays of a harvest moon. In the earlytohours of the evening as music takes over for a few minutes, the world seems to lose all of its reality from this little corner -- and one is back in the · nineteenth century with . . . even
this week shows that up until Wednesday less lywood. And it is there thai: this committee is Raleigh, and Brother Dewitt Cas-1 ton to Miss Miriam Johnson of
than twenty students had indicated a desire to making its most blatant offenses. What its pur- Peace College.
attend the Committee's first function, the all- pose is, in attacking wartime movies which were PI"KAPPA ALPHA Brother Lynn Kerbough was
camp'us ·dance following the State Game. ap~roved by our government a1' a means of brought into ·the lodge at a for-
d h. . d h bringing closer cooperation between Russia and mal meeting Monday night, and
We cannot understan t IS att1tu e on t e [ · Doc· Murphy has been added to SIGMA PI Dvorak. · the U. S., we have no way' of knowing. A good the roste f 1 dg f th' part of the students. For years the hue and cry · r 0 P e es or Is sea-
' 1. h b h " h ,
1
guess we think is that the purpose is political. son. The PiKA's have already be-A scholarship committee, con
sisti~g of George Greene, George Mallonee, and Dan Lovelace, was recently appointed by the president. Pledge I. G. Turnage has been elected pledge captain. Coach Bob Pate announces that the foot-
Antonin Dvorak was born on September 8, 1941, the son of an inkeeper in Bohemia. His father ,had destined him to succeed to his estate, but on his own initiative the boy Dvorak persuaded the village schoolmaster to teach him to play the violin and to sing. At twelve he was sent
neath these magno 1as as een t at t ere s , gun making plans for a Christmas . , A h But whatever the cause, unless those of-~ party and the big Christmas dance. nothing to do. long comes a group w ose . Pl 1 d
. h . f1cious 'individuals who make up that committee ans are a so un er .vray for the sole function IS to give t e students somethmg purchase of a plaque to honor all
give over these dangerous tendencies, the Ameri- the members bf the fraternity who to do in those odd hours, and what happens?
Can it be true that the feeling is, "Now
we've got it, we don't want it?"
OLD GOLD AND BLACK would rather be-
lieve that this situation is only a manifestation
of student procrastination. Undergraduates on
ly get moving at the last minute, when the de
mands of time weigh down upon them. At least
we are confident that more than one score stu
dents will be at the dance.
We call upon students once more to support
the venture. If Wake Forest is ever to have an
active social life, the first steps must be taken
now and this dance must be made a success. The
principle that is involved is far more important
than the dance itself.
Neither Blue Barron nor. Bob Sawyer nor
th,e Student Council nor the editor of OLD
GOLD can put this thing across alone. Only the
student body, giving solid support, can do that.
I?. S. V. P. Ever since the famous Mecklenburg Decla
ration they have been doing things in a big way
down around Charlotte.
Word comes this week that the Mecklenburg
Chapter of the Wake Forest Alumni Association
has declared for a big barbecue in the Charlotte
Armory on Thanksgiving for the express pur
pose of getting together ,a'host of Wake Forest
fans and singing songs, giving yells, and gen
erally having a good time of the first magnitude.
To this pork-and-slaw fiesta are invited not
only the alumni but ·also the present student
body. That, we would say, is a very generous
attitude for the Deacons of Mecklenburg to take.
It is an optimistic attitude, however, as far
.as the students are concerned. There are very
few of us fleet enough to hop down to .the Queen
City for a bit.of good fellowship between classes,
can public, disturbed from its slumbers, will rise
in wrathful indignation and, using its still. guarded right to vote, remove the members of that co.mmittee from the positions of power which they have so ignobly abused.
l?eli8ious Understandins Two weeks ago Sunday, ,approximately 65
students met in a discussion body that called itself the Inter-Faith Union, and undertook to explore the areas of cooperation between the various faiths. The inquiliY was made from social and cultural approaches, knd those who gathered to par~icipate in and partake of the study left untampered the undermining quarrels of a doctrinal nature.
It wan an honest, searching, and fruitful conference between persons who found security in "differing religious codes, but they realized that variance of doctrines did not imply conflict. And they met and conducted their conference with a degree of intelligence and wisdom that commended them as one of the most constructive groups to attempt the making and keeping of peace and mutual respect in the world.
But our commendation must stop here. Is it true, that evidence would indicate, that only G5 out of 1800 students on the Wake Forest campus are interested enougn in informing themselves and in sharing their ideas with others to attend such a meeting, the first 9f its kind to be held here? Has Wake Forest's earned reputation for educating students to think actively declined to such a point? -
Let us pray not. Let us hope that'it was the aftermath to the Homecoming turmoil and other somewhat justifiable excuses that kept away the majority of the student body.
We propose that a similar conference be held on the final day of this spring's Religious Focus Week, as the culniniation of a week's progressive research down religious avenues. And we propose that no excuse be found or offered to prevent every thinking student from throwing his full SU!)port behind this forward move.
Kiss and Tell
were lost in the war. -See GREEKS, Page 5-
to a nearby town to pursue his
Martha . ·Harrels. on Chosen musical studies :in earnest, and in 1857, after much parental dis-cussion ~e went to Prague to study
Quee' n Yam by Tabor Cl' t"'\;T I with the idea of making music his J life work. It was not his inten-
. · tion to become a virtuoso, for -----,--- composition interested him to a
Wake Fores.t is now f~rging with the floats and bands that I greater extent; and so as time ahead in the field of. potatoes, or marched through the streets of·the went on, his activities centered at least is represented in - the city. She rode in a convertible more and more aroimd his chos- ... growing effort to brii?-g the sweet ·accompanied by her attendant en field. He was thirty-two bepotato into its own.· For Mar- Jane Parham, the new Miss Tabo: fore. he· attracted particular attha Harrelson, Wake Forest fresh- ity. tention as a composer. From then :r;nan co-ed, was the object of ·
1 Then at noon, . Martha, who on he rose from practical obscur
coronation in the mid-way cere- was unanimously selected to be ity to the cognizance of musicians rnony that · was the highlight of I Queen by the producers apd buy- already established, and before Tabor City's Tater Day last Fri- ers in Tabor City, was crownj!d by long became known in England da:y. 'Congressman J. Baird Clark, and and in America.
Queen Yam. assured her title witn then was presented a huge chry- Dvorav's Symphony in E Minor an easy dignity as she ruled for santhemum corsage, by the city's was written in America during a day over the world's largest Merchant Association. December 1892, and the early sweet potato market. She won That afternoon the eighteen year months of 1-893, with finishing that title on last year's Tater old coed officiated as guest of touches in May of tha,t year, at Day for raising more potatoes honor at the football game played Spillville. Iowa, whither the per acre than any other youth in between the local high school and compbser had fled from New York Coumbus County; her record was Hallsboro, and in the evening was in a period of homesickness. In 360 in one acre. Too, she had Queen of the Ball, held in the the following December, the Symalso been elected as this year's Tabor City's. Legion Tut. · phony "Frof the New World" Mis~ Taber Ci~y, bl:lt modestly 1 Martha's home t<?wn. incidental- was given its· first performance, declmed the r1ght to wear two
1 ly, claims the. unique distinction m New York City by the Phil
regal crowns in the annual cele-l' of being the only town we know. harmonic Society of New York. bration. of whose people have an .agree- You will be interested in, hearing . Miss Harrels_on's officiating du- ~· ment to have potato pie on their this ,symphony next Friday even-
ties opened w1th her appearance tables on every single Friday of ing. . in the morning's par~de, in line the year. · The complete program from this
· "Christ the Great Difference" will be the theme of the Sunday School assembly worship ser\rice Sunday morning, Nov,ernber 9.
* * * Prof. M. E. Delgado, of the
Spanish department of the college, will speak to the Cullom Ministerial Conference ·at its regular meeting Tuesday evening at 7:15 in the Little Chapel.
* * * "Faith" will be the topic for
discussion in the Forum Group Sunday: evening. The· Group is a part of the Training Union and ·meets with the Training Uni,on in general assembly. The discussions are held in 104 Wait Hall.
* *
APound :the Campus
EU SOCIETY
little corner next week will include the following selections:
Sunday, November 9, 4:00-6:00: Debussy, "Reflects dans l'eaq"; Chopin, Ballad No. 1 in G Minor
., and Polonaise; Moussorgsky, Boris Godounofj, "Prayer "of Boris" and
~ "Death of Boris"· Frank Symphony in D Mindr. Monday, No.:. vember 10, 6:45-7::15: Grieg, A Minor Concerto... Tuesday, November 11, 6:45-7:15, Tschaikowsky, Nutcracker- Suite. Wed.,. nesday, November 12, 6:45-7:30; Beethoven, Symphony No. 9, Last Movement, and Appas;rionata Sonata (Arturo Rubinstein, Pianist), Strauss, Tod und Verklarung. Thursday, November 13, 6:45-7:15: Rachmaninoff, Concerto No.
On Monday night of last week, the Euzelian Literary' Society gave a program presented by Program. -
The program was presented by Hubert Humphrey. Those taking part were Rudolph Fisher and Lib Gill. Also included in the program were recoz:ds of the former glee club, and speeches by Dr. Sledge and Dr. Cullom. ' D~ing the business meeting,
Rudolph Fisher was elected. Sergeant at Arnis, and Jim Moore was elected critic. · Plans were also made for Founder's Day which will be held from Decem~
-See SHARPS, Page 5--
PRESBYTER~SELECT
FELLOWSHIP OFFICERS
Dr. Sankey L. Blanton, Dean of not even to see the football game ~ith South / With anticipation we note the arrival next the School of Religion, will be C 1• · h' h · · 'd t 1 / the speaker at the meeting of Del-
ber 8 to 12. It was planned that Jack Wilson was elected P.resithe week will begin with a joint dent of the newly formed Westmeeting of the two · literary so- minster Fellowship last Sunday cieties for a debate and end with night. ·Other officers. who will a banquet at the cafeteria on Fri- serve for the remainder of the
ara ma, w 1c IS an mc1 en a event on the Wednesday and· Thursday of the sear.on's dra' K ~ - ta appa Alpha, honorary min-
.agenda. matic highlight, by name Kiss and Tell. isterial fraternity, Friday, at Th · d d' · h 6:30 p. m. in the Philomathesian
That seems to us slightly ludicrous, that a e castmg an . JrectJOn seems to ave Literary Society hall. New rnem-f tb 11 g h ld h b · h d 1 d been done with competence, and by the number bers will be initiated. oo a arne s ou ave een sc e u e at a · . . . of notes and pleas appearmg on the L~ttle Thea- ··· * *
t1me when the student body could not possibly ters bulletin board in the. Student Center we The Training Union general as-d · h · I sernbly worship service will be an
atten wrt out cuttmg classes. It has always judge that many wheels have been turning and informal sketch of Wake Forest b.een our impression. that an athletic team con-I mu~h painstak.ing work has gone in to this first students at the State Baptist StusJsted of representatives on the field of the stu- major production of the Fall~ dent convention held last week at
the First Baptist church in High dents in the stands. Such appears not to be the Several other theatrical flutterings have her- Point.
aided its arrh:al in the form of short plays pre- * * * case.
O.LD GOLD AND BLACK expresses the appreciation of the Student Body of. Wake Forest .College fC?r the kind invitation of the Mecklenburg Chapter of the Alumni Association but regrets _that .because of previous engagements in classes we will be unable to attend.
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sented free to all. Rep.orts on them have been Reid Union invites you to an interesting program Sunday even-
favorable. ing immediately after the general A dramatic presentation on this campus assembly. All members please be
should be regarded as an even:t of importance present in Room 5 of the Music-• Religion building. ·.
We recommend Kiss and Tell to the student body and assure everyone inter~sted that the production will ·be worthwhile:.
I
Wamboogie Institllte .is .Io.cated in South Africa, just north of .zam~we!a.
day. semester are Sam Lanier, vice-PHI SOCIETY I president and ' Louise Ramsey,
The regular meeting of the secretary and veasurer. Philornathesian Literary Society The Fellowship, an organization·.• was held at 7:·15 Monday night in for the 106 Presbyterian .students the Phi Hall. A program was pre- on the campus, meets every Sunsented, consisting of one. extern- day evening at 6:45 o'clock in pore and three irnpromptl). Room 210 of the Music and Re-speeches. ligion building.
Boyce Medlin delivered an irn..: The Wake Forest Westminster promptu on the subject "Balance not Westminster · Follewship of Power Among Nations-A Se- will send representatives to the curity for World Peace," and the s;Ynod conferences. throughout the extern~oraneous talk was given by year. Curtis Fitzgerald on "The Mis- Programs and social activities conception of Love." Two other for the' year are being planned. impromptus were presented: As a part of home mission work, ':America, Europe's Food Depot," the group will distribute Thanksby Hugh Dover; and "Will De- giving and Christmas baskets mocracy Survive the Onslaught of among the needy. Con..mUnism?" by Carl Sharp. All .Presbyterian students on the
Elimination contests for dramat- campus and other students who ic reading and poetry reading· are not affiliated with a church ~ere also ~eld Monday ev~g, are urged to attend these weekly lD.. pr.eparation for .:Society Bay- . . . . serwces. .. . - . .... .
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pace been will unde: ed'tit dome knitt: die, migh arei.J have color ment stripe ally. quiet
·inch pleas we s; mara blue featu was< low a ofcrc for v up·IJ sizei
Or. versi color cent< Arg:y fa VOl nus, than quitE slacl! flam
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News in
Camp_us Wear By 0. E. SCHOEFFLER.
Old Gold and Black
'Maid Of Cotton' Is Sought· ' ... . - - .
Irt Southerri . College Area Men's Apparel Editor, Esquire
Magazine By Bob Grogan I girl King _Cotton's looking for to serve as his 1948 fashion ·and good
It may be-that the appearance of· Ordinary li"ing- cQnditions fol- will ambassador. And that, colundergraduates' wives and off- low on~ slogan. afte~ ~noth~r. lege lassie, is nothing less than spring on the university scene has One cant turn his ~adio dial With- the internationally celebrated had a b . g ffect on clothes out someone blastmg out the Maid of Cotton."
. so . errn e 0 words, "Light up an Old Copper." s th · a catch to ·I·t._ fabric designs for college men. r An th t . t b . t "Ar . ure,. ere IS . . hift . th o er WIS rmgs ou e you F' t th l'ttl 1 b t b 1t may be an en masses 1n e. b 'th d "th "d . di t" ? Irs, e 1 e am mus e preferences of America's univer- 0 ere Wl aci m. ge~ 1<?~· between the ages of 19 and 25 s·t :£ om the bold and blatant If so, try. Dr. Rachmarunoff s m- and who- has never been married. I Y men r . tro-glycerme " patterns they favored to the qmet- . · . A few of the Wake Forest earn--er tones prevalent for Fall. Or just The titles _that o~ fair young pus cuties cpuld' meet these re; call.it a charige of pace. Whatever women seek 1n tl_le fie!d of ~;>eauty quirements. B\lt, the folder conthe reason and small matter what vary from the field @f radio an- tinues. Next, it states that the apyou term it,. the university man's nounce~ents and take on ti~les plicant must be at least 5 feet, 3 Fall wardrobe can scarcely be dis- resembling government agencies. inches tall, and must not weigh tinguished from that of a young The young lassie _with ·.long, m~re than 125 pqtc.nds. Never business man on his way up, or any blonde, curly locks might wm the can tell about Wake Forest for succ~ssful you n g professional title of "Miss Platinum" (or that may eliminate another hun-man's wearing apparel. "Miss Peroxide") of 1947. Yet, dred. , .
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she might win the title of "Miss If one breathes after the intraWho We · Would Like To Be duction, the release describes the Stranded On A Desert Isle With world of gifts in store for the winOf How River High School Of ner. · Now, just sit back, girls, and
_,. 1947." (They never say Miss- don't everyone ask questions at Vl(hom.") ~ once. It might be said that the
Little titles like those mention- winner receives a trip to England ed pop up every day in the news- where she will see the cotton tradpaper and radio. Now, a good two ing center of Manchester. Furmonths before the - first of the 1 thermore, she will not have first year, a 'notice of the "1948 Maid class reservations on the streamof Cotton" comes to attention. lined_ cattle boat, · but she will The objective of the officials of travel deluxe in an Air France the National Cotton Council, locat- luxury liner. , ed in .Memphis, Tenn., is ·. to · Of course, the "Maid of Cotarouse -enthusiasm among the ton" will visit New York for a
.,
KING -COTTON IS CALLING
"lambs" in the cotton:-producing month's training in fashion model- Awaiting some Cotton Belt girl with the right combination of states and, thus, gather together ing and to be fitted for a beauti- beauty and brains is the title of 1948 Maid of Cotton, one of the most
_ contestants for the big affair of ful :'11~-cotton war~Obj:!. ~he will sought-after assignments in the entire girl contest field. Here scenes the year. 1 exhibit her beauty before count- . . .
B t h t . thi · f t . le h t h d .11 from the 1947 Ma1d of Cotton tour mdiCate the glamorous futme ahead u , w y men IOn s ac m ss P o ograp ers an w1 ap- , , . . . . Wake Forest? First thing 'you pear on both radio and tele~sion for Jlext years Maid. Top, 1947. Mat~ _Hiln:a Seay-now a semor at know every little lassie on the shows. The list continues. Southwestern College at Memphts-visits wtth Jack Carson, left, and campus will be on the '~bumming Where does the cotton enter the Dennis Morgan in Hollywood. On the left below, she poses in a glamor
A careful glance at the uhlver- corner" .. with thumbs pointed in picture? .Well, ''the wii:(ner re- ous cotton formal by Louella Ballerina, one of the topflight American sity man's jacket for Fall campus a manner to be· in accordance ceives a wardrobe of <!11-cotton designers ~oing the Maid of Cotton wardrobe. And at the right, she wear sees three obvious facts: with the latest rules of etiquette clothes. And, judging a woman's stands with Robert Petin, Air France official, in the shadow of the first, that it's a quiet, small pat- and yelling in" their best southern wardrobE_!, brother, that's a lot renowned Eiffel Tower in Paris. All this and more will go to the girl temed tweed; second, that it hangs drawl, . "Say, ·you all going to 0.f cotton. Can'_t you imagine the winning the 1948 Maid of Cotton title January 6 at Memphis, the Nastraight down and has little, if any, MeAmdphis?" bl" ·t f th t ftgtle lady walkl~~ acr~sstttl~e ~'!- tional Cotton Council reports. To enter, you must be a native of a cot-padding in the naturai shoulders· vance pu lCl Y rom e co - e e campus WI a o o ' t t t b tw th f 19 , d 25 d . d A li
· ·. · '· ton ·headquarters appears in this probably beret without boll wee- on s a e; e een e ages o an ' an never marne · PP ca-and third, that tt's a smgle-breast- f . ·1 tt bi d i · _ tion forms are available from National Cotton Council Box 18, Mem-ed three-button model In contrast orm. - . VI • co on ouse rna e o Im . · , . ' t th 1 · all tt. f · k "Say honeychile have ya got ported Peruvian wool, ankle phis 1, Tennessee. o ec anon-c pa ernso Jac- 't· t• , '. t"l , Ah 1 th kirt f th b t d ----------------------------et fabrics of fbrmer years, the new a cap IVa m, sc~n, I latin, eng s o ~ es cor uroy,
Fall versions are quite mild but means a really-ratm , below the cotton coat of mink, cotton knee far from meek. There's. plenty of, ~aSOil~Dixon P!'!rsonality? And e~gth stockings an~ co;ton shoes character in those newer shades' of IS your. softly-spoken, easy-go- With cotton shoestrmgs. brown, tan and blue, and the blue- ing southern. drawl what "they" Mammy, press my old cotton grey just arriving on the campus like about the South? pantaloons and dust off my co~-is go· g to have quite a few fast "Then listen to you' mammy, ton fabric umbrella, for Ah 1s frien:. lamb. You sound just like the off to Tennessee .
Lancaster, Billings, Martin, Holt, Green, Weathers, and Wrenn with
CONTESTS former Deacon gridiron greats (Continued from Page 1)
Page Five
a Community or Region." The essays may concern a per
son, colony, society, or organization, past or present, which has exerted an influence on a community or region in the United States or Canada. All contributions should be addressed to Essay Contest, Swedish American Line, 636 Fifth Avenue, New York 20, N.Y.
SHARPS
(Continued from Page 4) 2; Wagner, Tristan and Isolde. Friday, November 14, 6:45-7:45: Brahms, Hungarian Dance No. 1; Selected Spirituals, Dvorak, Sympho:ny No. 5 in E Minor "From the New World." .
Won't you join me during Inspiration Time next week?
POLITICS (Continued from Page 1)
Wake Forest College elections are always characterized by much rivalry between the political parties on the campus. They are carried on in such a manner as not only to elect 'students to office but to give invaluable political experience to those who are interested in becoming active participants in politics after leaving schooL Forthose who do not plan to enter politics but only to become good citizens or those who wish to be good members of the student government, we urge you to take part in politics on the campus in order to learn more about what your student government is, how you officers are elected and how your campus go"ernment is carried. on.
"We· feel that there are those who are not in· a position to belong to a Fraternity party but who desire active political participation in student government and we are offering you an opportunity to join the Student Political Union and become an acti'{e political participant."
When a Wamboogie reporter tried to interview Prof. Zbzk Fssk after his first ·unsuccessful parachute jump, he was unable to com• tnent.
THIEM'S ically tl_1ese same men will manage to mject a single note of color in their ties, or socks, or perhaps in their shirts, and thus manage to stay 'way out in front as one of the country's chief inspirations for newness in men's apparel.
~mt Camp, Mig B~llings, and Legs. in American colleges and univerar e:r,-. sities. This year's competition Society pages are featuring the will end March 21 1948. The
impen~ng appearance ()f Broth- winning stories wili be published ers Mmton, Caudle, Drake, and in Mainstream. 1st Store on Fayetteville St.
game, and also one in Charlotte Paul Griffin in Danville, Va., this Manuscripts should be addressed For Your
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GREEKS (Continued from Page 4)
10
ball team is progressing admirably and has been greatly strengthened by the new pledges. ·
Neckwear is in for a change of pace too. And one type that hasn't been around for quite a while and will decorate the ncklines of the undergraduate body is the crocheted' tie. Crocheting, as .the texts on domestic science will tell you, is knitting with a single hooked needle, and the results are mighty, mighty. good-looking. Or so they are in the new Fall- ties. Not only have they been fashioned in wide color ranges, but various arrangements have been made in their stripes. Some stripes run horizont- · ally. Others are diagonals. All are quiet narrow, and spaced about an
· inch and. a half apart. There's pleasant color in them too, and· one we saw made on a background of maroon had alternating horizontSel blue and gold stripes. Another featured a blue background and was diagonally thin striped in yellow and red. That roughish texture of crochet ties makes them naturals for wear with tweeds. They knot up· nicely too, and the accepted size is a bit on the large side. ,
One compromise with the university man's ~nstinctiv~ liking for color in his apparel seems to have centered around his ankles. Wool Argyle plaid socks, the c'::!mpus favorite as far back as any alumnus wishes to recall, is in stronger than ever for Fall, and they're quite sensible with plain colored slacks. Since most men prefer grey flannels, socks made of brown
-wool with blue and red diamonds· are a good bet. And for variety, grey, black and red make an excellent auxiliary pair.
The all ·over,Picture then, is one of quiet and rather inconspicuous 'dignity. Which will suit most university m.en ~elL But ch.cu:actePs't-
DELTA SIGMA PHI The chapter has begun plans
for a banquet and party in Winston-S-alem prior to the Duquesne
Thanksgiing. The lodge was sorry weekend. ito the Mainstream Awards Com-to hear that·: Pat · Preston, now f 1 s th G tl The power u ou ern en ~- mittee, 832 Broadway, New York Recordings playing with the Chicago Bears, men under ClJach ~ats Martm 3, N. Y., with accompanying return received a serious back injury in cr~shecL the aggress;tve Lambda postage. (Popular, Jazz and Classical) the Washington game. The foot- Chis 6-0 Wed_ nesday afternoon. The third opportunity is a con- School Supplies ball team still walks undefeated. Pl b f 1 t d f The house l·'s unusually quiet this ans are emg ormu a e or test sponsored by The Swedish L St t" p
Tau to play tqe KAs from Duke American Line to commemorate ( amps, a 10nery, ens week following the let down fol- in the Beer Bowl after Thanksgiv- The Swedish Pioneer Centennial. and Pencils) lowing Homecoming and the sad · trip made by some of the Broth- mg. W th h The three groups are eligible, Greeting Cards
Brother Harry ea ers as J"udged separately. 1. College un-ers last weekend. A few of the b f d t 1 h 1 f (f ll · ) een orce o eave sc oo or dei:graduates·, 2. High school stu- or a occas10ns boys are planning a trip to Boston th · d f th F 11 e e
' e remam er 0 e a s m s- dents,· 3. Adults. Six free trips Jam· es E. Th.lem hoping. to see the team r. ise to its t b f 'lin er ecause o 1 ess. to the Scandina-vian countries in former guory. KAPPA ALPHA the summer of 1948 will be the 105 Fayetteville St.
Limping away from the William Recent research shows that Geo. first and second prizes to each Dial 22913 Raleigh, N.C.
and Mary stadium last weekend 1 _w~h~a~m~b~'o~o~g~~·e~w~a~s~t~h:.:_e_f_o_un_d_e_r_o_f~g~ro~u~p~f~o=r~th~e~b~e~s::t~.e~s~s_a:=y~s~o~n:::'~'T~h~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Brothers Dowding, _:_Wamboogie Institute. ~Influence .of Swedtsh Settlers on
It's GORDON MacRAE'S Lates~· Capitol Rele~se j
... "£ sr.&b r;gr dff/JU}17ffq
M ARK the name: Gordon MacRae. You're going to be hearing more and more of him, for this
newest platter of .ltis is really a record for the books. Another record for the books is the fact that all over
America more men and women are smoking Camels than ever before!
Why? You'll find the answer in your "T-Zone" (T for Taste and T for Throat). Try Camels. Discover for yourself why, with smokers who have tried and compared, Camels are the "choice of experience"!
CAMELS SUIT ME
BEST!
I.
Page Six· . Old Gold and Black. Friday; Nove~ber 7,1947
the BILLBOARD By BILL BETHUNE
Jovial Jim Returns· .. To Bolster Deac Wall
.. S-aturday Sketchbook By JOHNNY DILLON
Out in Kentucky last Saturday the greatest horse ever to 1 · by M~ke S~itz 1
To~orrow afternoon; at Braves Field in Boston, the Demon grace the American turf rolled over and died. Up in Virginia, the be~e~~e fa~:c: ~;1Ji;:eJa::;:;,e~~- Deacons will attempt to hit the comeback trail against the Boston Deacons' Conference hopes followed suit and it wasn't a pretty scrappy, aggressive blocking back College Eagles. sight. For Man O'War it was the second time in thirty long years of.the Wake Forest 1942-43 Fros~ _Now in its 84th ye'ar, Boston ~ollege traces its history back that he had been forced to ru11 out of the money. For the Deacs f:t~~r ~~u1a9~3 ~;;m:~~ ~:~~:~i:!:~ to 1847 when members of the Society of jesus first came t~ Bos- . it was the second time in two short weeks. The death of the gal- as one of the finest blocking backs ton. Superior of the. group, the Rev. John McEroy, founded the lant "Red" came as no great surprise to a lot of us but the capitu- on· the tea~ that season: college in .1 863 on the present site of Boston College High School
. . ' - . Before Jim began his football · h C"t ' S h S"d F lat10n of the Walkermen left a multitude of blank expressiOns and career for the Deacs he played ln t e f Y s. out 1 e. rom a ~umble beginning with 22 stu-no small amount of grief. It's always a sad moment when you three years of outstanding football· ,dents, the Cl!tholic institution flourished· and at the turn of- the realize that the life has «;lbbed out of a great contender and, unless for Clairton (Pennsylvania) High 'century the jesuit Fathers were seeking additional space and a
School. In the three years he more collegiate environment. The r---------~----the unbelievable comes to pass, our chances to cop the circuit played for Clairton, he became present picturesque setting on crown are as dead as the once-mighty stallit;m. the team's most skillful block\ng Chestnut Hill was purchased and .................................. ~-w..------......
Three weeks ago, after Carolina took their second one on the chin from the locals, the destiny of the Deacs seemed to be so definitely on the upgrade that Michigans Wolverines wouldn't have been too much to cope with. Actually, our star was at its zenith for, barring a short intermission in the nation's capital, that was the last time that we came out on the long end of a family scrap. No one figured things the way they happened, and we had all looked for better days, but Oc· tober the eleventh was the high tide of the current campaign here in Deacontown.
The loss to the Blue Devils was a heavy blow to take for any number of reasons but, except for the few who had their hearts set on getting to a Bowl game, it wasn't a fatal one .. Wake Forest plays a total of seven conference con tests to six for William and Mary and five each for Duke and Carolina. Even then, with the one decision against us, it wouldn't have taken a very high I. Q. to hav.,e figured out that several promising possibilities were still lying around.
Our getting by William and Mary would have meant that they would have lost two loop contests and could defiqitely
· be counted out of the running. Carolina has already been downed and, even if they took the remainder of their card in the conference, they would still be only four up on the credit side. Duke was the big "if'' in the speculation and if the
. Methodists fell before the improving Tar Heels, they too would have a record of four wins and one loss. Counting the Homecoming defeat as our only setback, we would have had a loss to reckon with also, but it, unlike the other reverses, would have been backed by six wins in the family. It's so easy to see how we could have been inked in the top spot! Unfortunately the Indians had some ideas of their own about who should go to the head of the. class in December.
The cutting edge of the Deacons' offensive was completely dulled all afternoon, as neither their ground game nor their vaunted aerial circus netted consistent yardage. Coach Walker himself said that the Deacs were topped in every department. The question naturally arises as to why all this was so and, as usual, it's a lot easier to ask than to answer. Speaking stirci:ly off the record, we figure that the letdown after Duke is the most logical solution, although it might not have been that entirely. The Deacs played their best game of the season against the Wademen, and it was a heartbreaking loss to file away. Still, with a foe such as the high riding tribe facing them, it would have been well to have forgotten all that went before.
The Duke game was pointed for. Whether any special emphasis had been laid on the game or not, it was the big . thing in everyone's min~ That was natural, for a lot went with winning over the West Durham crew. We firmly believe that Coach Walker, along with any other s~t-thinkiug coach, likes to play them as he comes to them with an equal amount of importance being placed on each tilt as it comes along. But there are some that just .don't go that way. As we said so long ago, the pointed games are bad medicine, for win, lose or draw, they always leave a hangover •. That's hard to shake.
As for the game itself, there can be no doubt that the Deacs were up against a big, tough William and Mary team that would :have given them a busy sixty minutes regardless of what fram·e -of mind they were in. The tribe was out to capitalize on every break in the books for, like the locals, they had their backs to the wall in this one. The Indians got the jump, 'played hard football and stayed out in front over the lifeless Deacs all afternoon. If the Tar Heels do take the Dukes the crown goes north and you might find it in a little town by the name of Williamsburg!
And now a word in another direction. A lot of incentive is out of the remainder of the season right at the moment, but none of us should forget that things could be, and could get, a lot worse. The average football fan seldom· employs what little foresight he has. He tends to keep his mind on last week's scoreboard and let this weekend take care of itself. On top of it all he claims to be right much of a rear view quarterback.
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When the Deacons play a good game we like to talk about it. When they lose we have to talk about it, like it or not. Still we shoul_sln't lose sight of the fact that the team has turned in a good many more good performances than bad ones since September and chances are they~Il turn in several more good ones.
Even the Diehards aren't smiling over the prospects of Boston Cdllege. The way in which the Eagles ran roughshod over Georgeto~ l~ds us all to P,Onder the outcome of Saturday's game from a none-too-optimistic viewpoint. • If the Deacons do mean to hit the comeback trail Saturday, they couldn't have picked a tougher outfit to spill.
back - the sturdy boy that could in 1913 the college inoved to its FIRST TIME always be counted on to check present site.
,/ the opposition, however rough it Since peace was declared there Nick Ognovich, the Deacs' might become. has been a sharp rise in the num-
Upon completion of Jim's fresh- b!'!r of students and· at University "iron man" blocking back, left the playing field in a horizonta.l position for the first time in his playing career at Williamsburg last Saturday. Nick, who averages fifty-five minutes 'in every contest, was chilled, oddly enough, by his own team mate, Ed Bradley. Ed charging a play to halt th~ Indians' Jack Cloud, was un:. able to apply the bral{es ·in time to prevent the collision with the rugged Pennsylvani~m.
man year at Deaconville, he enter- Heights the enrollment today num-ed the Army Air Corps. There he hers 4,000. Upwards of·1,500 more actively served with a P-51 Fight- are attending the downtown and er Group for nearly three years. graduate ·divisions.
After "Camp's" discharge from The 1947 season marks the 50th the Air Forces last year, he. began year of Boston College football. training once again with Walker's I The sport was. officially recogniz-gridmen. With the blocking back _____ J_IM __ c_AM __ P ___ --,- ed in 1893: Since then teams have position well filled, Jim fell into represented B. C. annually' with line at one of the guard positions. Bachelor of Science Degree this the exception of the period 1903-Jim now weighs in at two-hun- June. A pre-dental student. Jim 1907. The all time record stands dred-fifteen pounds; and his plans to enter the University of at 229 wins, 143 defeats, 25 ti.es. weight counts in the mammoth Pittsburg Dental School next ·fall. Deac line. Very well liked by his He is certain to succeed in his pro- Past Powerhouses fellow team-mates, he does a fine fessional field ·if 'he exhibits the job of holding down one of there- same ability as he does on the serve slots. football field.'
Jim hails from Clairton, Penn- Jim is an active. member of the sylvania, and is a neighbor to Delta ~igma Phi fraternity and alNick Ognovich, and Bob Leonetti. so a member of the Monogram Camp, a senior, will receive his Club.
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE
FRATERNITY LEAGUE
In past seasons the Eagles have been rated as one of the East's powerhouses. In 1939 Boston Col- --------------lege won nine games while losing c·oeds Compete only one, but then dropped a thrilling battle to Clemson in the Cotton Bowl, 3-6. 1940 was THE .In ''Play-Day" year for the Maroon and' Gold. That fall B. C. downed every one of their opponents and then trounced Tennessee i'h the Sugar A spirited group of' co-ed DeacBowl, 19-13. The 1942 outfit won, onesses headed for Greensboro last eight while losing one, but was Saturday to compete with other beaten in the Orange Bowl 21-37 colleges and universities of the by Alabama. , state in the first "Play Day"
Last_ year Boston College re- sponsored by the Athletic Federaturned to normal competition for tion of. College Women. . This the first time since the war. They event, soon to become a regular opened the season with a loss to occasion, proved to be a successful
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE With a llttle more tl:i.an a week the Deacs 6-12. Then they won venture, bringing together repre-STANDINGS • of play remaining interest mount- the next five games on their sentatives from Duke, Greensboro
W L· T Pet. ed in the fraternity football league schedule, beating Michigan State, College, E.C.T.C, W.C.T.C.,' Flora Filthy Five 4 0 0 1.000 this week with three games of 34-20; Kings Poi1_1t, 56-7; Vil- MacDonald, W.C.U.N.C., Guilford Bearcats 2 0 0 1.000 great importance being reeled off. lanova, 14-12; N. Y. U., 72-6, and arrd'Wake Forest. · Ramblers 1 0 0 1.000 As the situation now stands the Georgetown, 20-13. Tennessee Wake Forest was represented in Ahoskie Swampers 1 0 0 1.000 winner of the Delta· Sigma-Sigma downed them 13-33, but 'the E~gles every event except hockey. MatchHunter Vagabonds 1 0 1 Phi tussle should go on to take upset Alabama, 13-7, only to lose es were conducted in archery ten-Boodlers ' 1 1 0 .500 the frat crown, since both clubs to Holy Cross, 6-13, for a sl!ason's nis, and swimming. ' . Chapel Team 1 2 0 .333 have not lost a game as yet. record of six victories against The most brilliant showing of Flying Saucers 0 2 0 .000 Nov. 3.-Alpha Sigma• Phi com- three setbacks. the day was made by Wake For-Dippy Dogs 0 3 0 .000 pletely. outclassed the Theta Chi . Dropped One est's Lois Faulkes, who outdid ev-Panthers 0 3 1 .000 team this afternoon to walk away ery .other entry .in an archery After three weeks of Intra-mural with a 24-0 triumph. The scoring This year the Maroon and Gold tourney that lasted the whole day.
football, five teams remain unde- parade began early in the first has. dropped only one contest in Archer Faulkes defeated the highfeated. Of the twelve games period when ASP tailback Wendell their six games to date. L.S.U. ly favored Duke team and walked scheduled by Clyde Whitener In- Sloan fired to C. D. White for a edged them in a thrilling 14-13 away with the highest score, givtra-mural Athletic Director, 'only score. Sloan· also figured in the battle. Before that the Eagles ing Wake Forest an enviable first • three of those have been played remaining three scores by tossing had beaten Clemson, 32-22. Kan- place in one of the three major to a result. Nine have been for- to Coffield and Gross in addition sas State fell next to the tune of events. ieits, this being due to the fact to his touchdown run. Theta Chi 49-!3. Strong Villanova was W 11 R that one team did not present it- threatened once in the third quar- stopped, 6-0, and Georgetown was e epresented self on the field with sufficient ter, but lacked the necessary of- trounced last week, 27-6. The others, although not as sue-~ players to participate. fensive punch to carry the ball '!he beefy Demon Deacons will cessful, were as well represented.
The league may see a two team over. face the only team on their sche- Mrs. Helen Smith, president of the r:ace between the "Filthy Five" Nov. 3.-The boys of Kappa AI- dule with a heavier line than their local Woman's Athletic Associaand the "Bearcats". Each club is pha and Lambda Chi squared off o_~n tomorrow. ,. The big Eagle tion, advanced to the semi-finills bolstered by members of last this afternoon in a rough and tum- line averages 221 pounds from end in tennis, barely missing the conyear's teams, several of whom ble affair with the KA crew taking to en~ and they have a reputation solation decision · in the finals. made All-League selection. End a '6-0 win. A pass from 0. B. of bemg tough, rough and nasty. Grac-e Jacobs was invaluable in Paul Livick and back Carl Teague to Culler provided the ?utst~nd!ng am?~ these giants the same field. Phibbs, both AU-League in 1946, K.A.'s with their only score, but 1s their s1x foot s1x mch 240 pound Wake's swimmers. severaly hanare standouts for Coach Will Es- this proved to be sufficient. cent~r, Ed Kennedy, who, is slated dicapped by a lack of practice, chen's "Filthy Five". Known last Nov. 4.-There was plenty of fpr All-American honors this fall. held up surprisingly well against year as the ·"Gym Jammers", the offensive maneuvering in the Mario Giannelli, who stands six- the more· qualified dolphins of "Filthy Five" is now defending its Kappa Sigma-Alpha Sigma Phi o~ and weighs 240, is at left Duke and W. C. Judy Fortentitle of Campus Champs. Livick contest this afternoon, but both guard, while at rlght guard is 220 ba~er, Dorothy Fulton, and Sally and Willard Kaylor, other F. F. teams had to be content with a pound Dominic Papaleo. A pair Hudson were the ones responsible end, are leading scorers of the scoreless tie. Each team threaten- of 220 pounders hold down the for keeping Wake Forest's head league with 12 points each. ed on several occasions, but each tackles, John Kissell at left ·and above water in the swimming
Meanwhile the Bearcats. under time the defenses proved to be too Ernest Stautner at right. Two events. · the able leadership of P. A. Cline, strong .. Wendell Slof!n carried the "little" 195 pound ends complete Miss Crisp, women's athletic in-have their sights set for the league offensive burden for ASP while the line. structor, was well pleased with the crown, and . will be out to upset Kappa Sigma relied on Charlie Other Extreme success of the Greensboro trip. the Fivers.· Don Thompson; All- Medlin and Bill Walker to lead Going to the other extreme, She said, "It is good that Wake League end last season, is back, their attack. . Boston College boasts of a light Forest's coeds are being represent-along with Joe Barnes, Paul Grif- and very fast backfield. Ed Clas- ed and recognized in the state's fin, and Cline, who are the main You are urged to always patron- by at quarterback, is the brains, athleti~ fu_nctions. We are new, cogs in the "Bearcat" line-up. ize our advertisers. who makes the Eagles' T forma- but _this tr1p has proved that ~e
tion click. He is an· excellent' a_re J~st as cap~bl~, as any associapasser, completing 33 out of 61 tlOn m the region.
OUT ON A LIMB WAKE FOREST ---- must beat ---- BOSTON COLLEGE CAROLINA------ continues comeback over ______ STATE-DUKE ____ pleases the alumni by beating ---- MISSOURI
GEORQIA TECH ----------- gets by ----------- NAVY GEORGIA -------------- flays -------------- FLORIDA KENTUCKY ------ romps over ------ WEST- VIRGINIA
• MISSISSIPPI ---- deepens the gloom at ---- TENNESSEE PENN --------- breaks the string of --------- VIRGINIA WILLIAM AND MARY ________ .wallops-------- V.,M. I. MICHIGAN -------- still on top over ___ _: ____ INDIANA NOTRE DAME-------- gets revenge over-------- ARMY COLUMBiA _____ _: __ better than -------- DARTMOUTH MARYLAND ---- will·dunk the Dukes of ---- DUQUESNE PENN ST~TE -------an easy nod over------- TEMPLE YALE ------------ the same over ------------ BROWN OKLAHOMA------ to triumph at------ KANSAS STATE S.M. U. ____ proves it can repeat over:_ ___ TEXAS A.&M.
TEXAS ---:-------- wins this time at ---------- BAYLOR WISCONSIN -------- a 'safe· bet against -------- lOW A SOUTHERN CAL---- sure to beat a weak---- STANFORD W AMBOOGIE __ _:_takes---- WOOKER T. BOSHINGTON
tosses last year for 426 yards. Left Patronize Old Gold Advertisers. l:lalf duties are handled by Joe Dominick, who doesn't pass or r;;:;~;;;;;:;;~;;;;;:;;~:;:;;:;;;;;:;;::;;::::;::;:;:;;:~ kick, but is rated as a fine, fast and elusive broken field runner. Maurice Poissant starts at right half for the Eagles, and southpaw passer Bob Palladino is a fullback.
In their _last three ga~es with Boston College, Wake Forest -won last year's contest, but the Deacs were beaten 26-6 in 1941 and 27-0 in 1942. The locals will be going into :the cattle as the underdog for only the second time this season, the other time being against North Carolina.
GRESHAM RESTAURANT
"On The Lake" Between Wake Forest
and Raleigh
Good food at. -Reasonable Prices
TO SAVE ON THAT LAUNDRY EXPENSE
visit
WAKE-FOREST AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY ·' 9Lbs.-40c
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Friday, Nov~mber 7; 1947 · Old Gold and Black Page Seveil.
INDIANS BLANK DEACON$, 21~0;. B. C. MET ·SATURDAY Hand Baptists · Second Setback
' ' \ Tribe Crushes Wake For
est Hopes to ·Cop Cir· cuit Crown ·
FEATURED: IN POST Catholics Offer Stiff Opposition
GRADES Midterm reports are being
stamped with students' class standings as they appear at ):lresent on th Registrar's records. If there is any discrepancy the· student concerned should go by the Regi:otrar's office and check his credits.
throughout the month of Novem· ber. He will, as previously stated in this paper, stop various students on the campus, and award them a free pack of Chesterpelds if they are carrying a pack. at the time. Two packs will be given if they are smoking a Chesterfield.
Intramural Football League Schedules Are Now Posted
The Oemon Deacons experienced their second taste of defeat at Williamsburg-last Saturday afternoon as the William and Mary Indians, used the passing ~ms of Henry Blanco and Stan , Madg-
Coach Peahead Walker will lead his Deacons, two-time losers'in as. many weeks, into the land of the "bluebloods" tomorrow afternoon for an intersectional tilt with an opponent of no little worth: the Eagles of Boston College. The The schedules for league games game is to be played on Braves MR ABC TO CONTINUE are posted on the bulletin boards Field starting at z: 00 o'clock. • STAY· ON WF CAMPUS in the Gymnasium and in the Boo~
· The Deacons will be ranked as Store. Managers are requested to .-underdogs tomorrow for •the first look for these every Saturday time since the Carolina fra-,, a po-: Mr. A B C, a representative· of I morning so they can contact
.. zi.ak and · the flying heels of Jack Cloud, for three touchdowns ~ts whiCh gave the Bt'aves a· 21-0 victory over Wake Forest. The battle was witnessed· by _19,-000 shivering fans. · · ~
sition which no doubt pleases their the Chesterfield Company,- will enough p)ayers to hold a game stocky mentor since his clubs seem continue to visit the campus when scheduled. to perform better in that role than ------------------'-------------:in any other. It was as a fourtee~
The William. and Mary Tribe started their first touchdown march after intercepting a ~ake Forest pass, and r.acked up the third recovering a Deac fumble. The second tally was the . day's thriller,, however: Jack Cloud, W. and M. fullback, intercepted a Fetzer pass on his own 32 and sped 68 yards down the left sideline for the marker.
point long shot that the Deacs were able to paste a 19-7 licking on Carolina three weeks ago. ·
Since then, however, it has been a different story. After losing a heartbreaker to Duke, two weeks ago, 13-6, the Walkermen were outclassed by William ·and Mary at Williamsburg, 21-0, last Saturday.
Beat Georgetown
First Touchdown The first TD of the game came
Boston College, on the other hand, romped in their last outing to an impressive 26-6 triumph over Georgetown, a team which Wake
in· the final four minutes of the · 1 first half when Magdziak. passed Caught in a pensive mood, Peahead Walker, the Deacs' popu ar 20 yards to Vito Ragazzo, who mentor, might be taking a glance at what Collie Small has to say about
' took the toss in the end zone. his colorful career in this weelj:'s Saturday Evening Post. Walker is The two serious s~oring threats featured in a· fine article which should be of considerable interest to
which the 'big Walkermen manag- sport fans _locally. ed to stage came in the fiilal quar- ____ ..:__ _______________________ _
• ter. With Fetzer hitting Dowda, · · H · D ~~: ::~in?~~~~/~h: b~:C~! State Plays ost to ~acs style exhibited in their four vic-tories of the season, the Deacs I I · t t F •1 s ;o:~~ ~0~3 :~g~~1!;s.t~:: n .rnpor an ami y crap
··---Wolfpack Met in Riddi~k
Stadium Week From · ·~aturday_
Sprock got in two runs during the ·- passing fury for eight and seven yards, his last carrying hiln to a Wake Forest first-down on the 23. '11hen Fetzer faded to pass. The Indians intercepted iust inside the end zone for an automatic touchback, which shat- Riddick Stadium, on the North tered Deac hopes for averting a Carolina State College campus, shutout. This was only tempor- will be the scene of batle when arily stalemate as one more· Wake Forest's "Demon Deacons" chance was presented, to the lo- tangle with State's ."Wolfpack" cals. next Saturday, home-coming day
Out of Bounds 'for State Alumni and students, at two p.m. ':chis will mark the for-
Magdziak kicked out of bounds tieth meeting of the two institu.on the Wake Forest 4i and Fetzer tions.
TICKETS Students are reminded that
Monday; Tuesday and Wednesday of next week are the only three days that will be allotted for the distribution of student tickets f'or the N. C. State game Novembe~ 15. Be sure and bring your activity books, but leave any requests for guest tickets at home. None will be on hand for this one.
passed to O'Quinn on the Tribe's coacli. walker's squad w:ill' be af-36 and then spotted Phillips on ter their . fourteenth conquest of the 24. Duncan too~ a_short t?ss this long series, and a bit of re-' -------------at the 19, _and . spmmng Mike venge fer the 14-6 defeat inflicted Chattanooga game last Saturday. Sprock ca;rr1ed f1ve yards to the upon them by Coach Beattie Should N. C. State score, or get 10 for a first down. Sprock then Feathers' Gator :Bowl team last 'thi fi ld al d t b
Forest whipped only 6-0 in their initial contest this season. In fact, the Bostonians have taken only one beating this fall, and that was by one point at the hands of LSU.
As has been his wont before most of this campaign's contests, Coach Walker has closed the gates on his practice sessions all week. Along with the job of concocting new "stuff" to run at or around his opponents Saturday, his will be the job of finding capable boys to fill the shoes of two of his best substitutes who will be out of the lineup due. to injuries. The men who are out are Carl Haggard, who has a blood clot in one of his legs, and Bud Lail with a badly cut leg. Haggard sees lots of action at the wingback slot, while Lail is o_ne of two tailbacks who see a good deal of duty behind Tom Fetzer.
Wake Forest and Boston College have met three times previously. In 1941 BC came out the winner by pili~ up a 26-6 score. Again in 1942, they downed the Wake men, this time by a 26-0 count. Last year, Wake Forest, led by the great Red Cochran, turned the ta· bles, gaining a 12-6 verdict. Coch-ran, incidentally, was a great favorite with Boston fans during these three games, but deSPite his absence Wake Forest is expected to draw· a large crowd in the "Hub" City, when they tangle with Coach Denny Meyers' Catholics in an attempt to halt their losing streak.
made six yard~ over right guard. year. Incidentally, State's upset Wl ~ e , g~ _rang~, o no e Gregus came m fo~ Fetzer _and victory last season was their first surpnsed either If t~s same Mr. drove to the 1-yard line over nght since 1938 when the score board Palmer attempts the placement. tac~e. :with .Gregus earring credited them with a 19-7 trium,Ph. Wak~ Forest backs, Pryor! Gr~g. In Wamboogie's last game with a1gam
1,1_SazlGo broke dthrougfh on bthe -In the interim, Deacon elevens had ut s, hLa1l a~t';'l J:?owthda Wlll fmdf Transvaal Tech Willie Dummkopf
, . pu mg regus own rom e- garnered six wins and had played o_ug opposi IOn m e pers?ns o kicked a 49-yard field goal in the hind. a scoreless tie in 1942 Bill Stanton, George Blomqwst, AI 1 t 3 d t . :for Wamboo · · · · · as secon s ow1n -
Ed Hoey blocked and recovered Rivalry Renewed ~hillips and June Cheek, all unex- gie, 3_2. Tech had scored a safety an Indian punt· to give the Dea- - nenced flank men; Ted Dostanko, th . g k k ff · cons a long-distance opportunity Next week, however, the rivalry veteran tackle, Bernie Watts, All- on e openm IC 0 . •
from the 4 7. in the final minutes will· .be · renewe~ and past per- Southern candidate at guard, John -;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' . of ttie game but the Walkermen formances mean little. Each team Wagoner and Charlie Musser could advan~e no further,than th~ will be "keyed up", pointi,Dg f~r guards, and Saunders, center. Sup~ Tribe 33. • the game. Coach Feath~rs outfit porting these linemen will be tal
has beaten Clemson, Davidson and ented backs Charley · Richkus Chattanooga thus far, while l~sing George Allen, Bob Bowlby, Osc~ two close games to Duke (7-0, and Bozeman and Frosh star "Jar-.B. C. BOSS Florida (7-6) · Tomorrow they :ring" John -Huzvar. The latter is rrieet the Carolina Tar Heels. a recuperating from an injury susJnuch improved team sine~ the tained against Chattanooga, and · Deacons overwhelmed them 19-7 should be ready for action against on Octob~r 11. the Demon Deacons,;
Fun & Fancy Free -And Mimi
Dinning Sisters Capitol Record
No. 466 ........................ f.65 Love & the Weather Forgiving You
Harry James Columbia Record
No. 37588 .................... $.78 The Old Chaperon L-L-L-LA
Tommy Dorsey Victor Record '
No. 20-2468 .................. $.65
A_s the Wa~er-le~ team goes Richkus and Palmer, fair passagamst a strong lme this week-e':d ers, will handle the aerial attack up ~assach~setts way, so :W1ll which will undoubtedly be thrown they ,1n_ Raleigh next wee.!>;:. Smce against the Baptists. Ends AI early m the season, State h~s Phillips and Blomquist, and Wingbeen among the top ten teams m back Bozeman have been the fathe nation that have yielded, on an vorite targets for these two.· tossers. average, the least number of yards The huge Wake Forest line will per g~e on the ground. Anot_her have its hands full breaking defensive weapon, and a very rm- through the formidable forward portant on~, possesse~ , by ~he wall developed by former All-
Wolfpack 1s the proficient pm- ~~e~r~ic~a~n~B~o~b~S~uf~f~r~id~g~e~~· ::;;;;~;;:;;;:~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~ point punting of Leslie "Footsie" .- · Palmer, currently ranking among
STEPHENSON'S MUSIC CO.
Pictured abov.e is Denny Myers, popular Boston College coach, who leads his high-flying Eagles against the Deacons tomorrow afternoon in the Hub City.
the first five punters in the U. S. Pa~mer will cause additional
worry, too. with his passing and running game - Coach Feathers having converted the lanky fullback into a tailback prior to the
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All Kinds of Fruit Cake Mix Priced Reasonable
.. Hollowell's Food Store GOdD FOOD DELIVERY SERVICE
PHOTOGRAPHERS TO THE
WAKE FOREST STUDENTS
.Redmon's. Studio, Inc. of Elkin, N. C.
"Your Year book Photographer"
You'll Give 3 CHEERS For the 3 BIG Styl~ Points S c o r e d h y •• -..
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MARTIN'S 305 Fayetteville St.
RALEIGH
Page Eight
BARBE 0 U E C 0 U p·o N Before Monday, Nov. 17, Mail to:
Fred H. Hasty 806 Law Bldg. Charl~tte, N. C.
Enclosed. is$ ____________ for which please reserve--------places for me at the Wake .Forest Barbecue on Thanksgiving at Charlotte ($1.50 a plate).
Name=---------------------------------------~--------· Full Address: -----------------------------------------
Charlotte Alumni ·Plan Barbecue After Game
Plans have been made by the Mecklenburg County Wake Forest Alumni Association· for the staging of a mammoth barbecue immediately following the Wake Forest-South Carolina · football game at Charlotte on Thanksgiving day.
The barbecue will be held at the Charlotte Armory, which adjoins the football stadium, and all Wake Forest alumni students, their families and their· friends are invited to attend. A first-class barbecue dinner with brunswick stew and all the trimmings will be served those who make reservations at a cost of $1.50 per plate.
In addition to the "big feed," the alumni have lined up a fine program that will ag~in revive the Old Wake Forest spirit fGr former students of the college and give present day students a glimpse of what that spirit was like in the "good old days." The program will also bring everyone up to date on the moving of the college to Winston-Salem.
Mr. Fred H. Hasty, president of the Charlotte alumni unit, announces that none will be served except those who have made reservations. In order to make a reservati~.Jn simply fill out and mail the self-explanatory coupon which appears on this page, enclosing check or money order to cover the cost of the dinner. All reservations must be made before November 17.
GLOVER'S Radio & Appliances
Radios - Records-Hot Plates
G-E LIGHT BULBS
Phono Amplifier For Rent
For Dances
Family Barber Shop (the friendly shop) ·
B. & E. CLEANERS Successors to MuTTay
Alterations - Repairs - Dyeing Phone 3072
For Pick-Up and Delivery Service See
ELLEN WALKER - 3rd Floor New Dorm
EVELYN FAULK- 110 Bostwick
MAXINE HAYES - 106 Bostwick
MEAL HOURS Breakfast 7:00-8:30
lunch
Supper
Lunch
Supper
11 :~0 -1:30 5:00-6:30
Sunday
11:30-1:30 5:00-6:30
WAKE FOREST CAFETERIA
Button-up lor Winter with our Protective Fall Check-Up
Button up- for COMFORT - heaters and winter gear lubricants
Button up for POWER- Texaco Gas -winter grade oil
Button up for SAFETY -Anti-freeze- battery- tires and spark plugs
checked or replaced
Service Chevrolet (ompany WAKE FOREST, N.C.
·, ' ..
Old 'Gold and Black Frl.day, November 7, 1947 DANCE
(Continued 'from Page 1) mulated then and there his policy of respect for the listener's eardrums. This theory heiped him to the pinnacle he now occupies as a leading bandleader.
After graduation, Blue started his own booking business in Cleveland and carried on until the urge to get back into the band world sent him on the search for talent to organize his own orchestra. Not long thereafter Blue was "on his way up." He was one of the youngest band leaders ever in history to achieve top rating. At the tender age of 22 he was. rated as one of the foremost name bands in the country.
At the peak of his success, the young maestro was called into the service of his country and has only rE!cently exchanged his khaki uniform for his civies. In the intervening period members of his band held the orchestra together. !?' -- ----- -· ----
Following the State football game, Blue will play his music of renown for the students of Wake ,Forest College ¥lnd their guests. ' The informal dance "is strictly an experiment," as Bob Sawyer, chairman of the Social Committee said. It is designed to determine whether or not the student body will support such activities in force. T~is is the first dance with a
name band to be sponsored by the student body. If this fails, social' life will continue to be restricted to fraternities or such groups as can afford to hire name bands.
The Social Committee announced Monday afternoon that mem- · bership tickeis for the dance will
BUS STATION CAFE Open 7:00
PLATE LUNCHES and SANDWICHES
J. W. FORT, Proprietor
'
be placed on sale tomorrow morn- The committee is seeking to. ing. The price will be $3.QO. solve another problem. The ob- • The membership card of the jective is io see that every coed '~Magnolia Social Club" will en- who wants to go to the dance will title each member to attend the have an escort. Sawyer did not. dance with a guest of the opposite state how this would be handled. sex. A student may pprchase , "''L--------more than op.e membership. Wamboogie Institute, held to a
Two coeds from each class were net of 9 yards rushing and 2 :Yards: elected to sponsor for the dance. passing by Camel College · last The classes met yesterday to name week, capitalized on 14 Camel their 'sponsors. fumbles to win by a 98-0 score. ·
1924
WILKINSON CLEANERS Opposite' R. R. Underpass Phone 375-1
Wake Forest, N. C. I
"G. I. TRAINING CENTER" All Modern Equipment - Experienced Personnel·'
SEE BILL RUCKER OR BOB BRYANT FOR EXCELLENT DELIVERY SERVICE
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1947
VOTED TOPS! -CHESTERFiELD mE LARGEST SELLING VIGARETTE
IN AMERICifS COLLEGES : (BY NATI(JN-WIDE SURVEY)
&ALWAYS MILDER J ~3 BETTER TASTING'· @ C~OLER. SMOKING
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