4
' ,' ', ' ' ',. :.·.- . . ' 'i.' ' ' ' '. : ', .-H;.ER:E N:INiE' AFTER INA- RATION - /' - . . -- - . ·_ -- :Council -·Men.- , . · Is Down, The Jap Emblem Remains . ·_ ·d · · .,p ·· · r. A 'triple bouquet of orchids is due Student Body-President Un er'• atton '-'Billy Joe Patton, Councilman Gii;Borton and Chairman Johnny it would have been completed in a matter of weeks instead of nine months. . · · . . -"· . . Walker ·Qr the Freshman Advisory Committee for their efforts . ·: M.'. L ' s·. ' .. .. . this 'week in' oonwletini-the ,war bond drive. These men did not . • a Ke . p U rt delegate others to. get- out 81ld collect mol!ey· for the iJ?nd. They . . . · . · . . . g·ot out and devoted hours on end of the1r personal tune to col- Today, nine months the lecting it themselves. ·. Beginning· Tuesday night, they prit on a equivalent of an entire school concerted drive and raised the money necessary to complete the year its -iriauguration on total of the bond fund in aJi.ttle over three ·days. Had the same Dec.-1 2 , four days after'the United sp .. irit of .. sacrifice and concentrated effort been shown when the States entered the war, the war · bond fund drive ·is completed.· bOn(fdJive WaS started, with. the cooperation of th,e student body Student Body President Billy . .. The money for the war bond has been raised and the Ger- man emblem has come down, true, but the Jap emblem remains . . OLD GOLD AND BLACK pledged itself last summer not to take down this emblem until the student body has_ done so'me- thing to redeem itself for its disgraceful response to the recent drive. What the student body can do to redeem itself for its (See EMBLEM, Page 4) .. .L· __ ._;o· went .to press that-less .than $30 .. : · · · : . : · . remained to be' collected, and he . ' ' .: .. ' . assured the paper that the entire · . · ·· · . . .: bon!i fund would be· raised by this ·· · morning. . . . . GOLD AND BLACK * * * In tlieit drive to collect the bond sum total by this week end· Pat- toll, Councilman Gil _Horton and ·Freshman ,Advisory Committee Chaiiman Johnny Walker· began . Tuesday 'night ·a thorough canvass of the campus,. setting their · goal ·volume XXVII. No. 9 Wake Forest, N. C., Friday, September 18, 1942 Phone 304-6, all offices Miss -Rowland Army ·Reserve ·CI · V - El t:• · that$93.50hadbeen:collected.in ·. . ass acancy ec IOnS Starts First. May Be Called · · · · · no complete figures, but did make . ' ' . ' . r . ' . than. $ 30 Girl- Glee Club In Near Future T -· 8 H . ld "0 . T d. · ToBuyBondNextWeek ..•. ·. . 0 e e . n ues ay He did not·say when the bond . McJ?onald Annou!'ces . Navy; Marine, ' would·be boilght, but·said that he PeriOds for Hearmg Guard Plans Will· thought -it would ber sometime h · C t" A U -----------·----------------, during the coming week. P onograph on mue s sual _ _ _ Polls Open At Following is a list of the names · R 0 t - 1CIJ t G of those who have contributed to The first girls' glee club' ever to To squelch rumors circulating a r laD 5 Jl:l ec reen . the bond' fund since the beginning be organized 'at -Wake Fores! be- around the campus ·to the effect 9 Cl of the currerit term: gan rehearsals this week under that members of all the reserve T H d S h a. m. ose Lawrence Nichols, Jim North.:: the direction of Miss Ethel Row- corps of the country's armed ser- 0 ea out ern Area ' ingtOn, Richard Phillips, •RUSS land, newly-appointed assistant in vices will be called up at the end . ' . - At 12·30 p Poole, Johnny Walker, Martha the department of music. . of the current semester, Dean D. ffi. ,. Ann Allen, Bill· JohnSon, Jack Miss. Rowland, who is also B. Bryan released this week the President of Dil teaching . ·voice, has announced latest official bulletin of the G ts U Ba1dwin, Jim Hulin, Bookeor - that·"a few more girls" will be ad- American 'Council on Educatt"on'. e nammous DR._ GREEN Nominations for two coed Stu- lard, · Bill Craig, Marion wen, · V t t M t' dent Co n il b mitted to. the club after the According to th 15 bulletm·, the 0 e a ee Ing u c mem ers, one senior Joe Plumbo, Hairfield, McFadden, Stude t C ·1 ifi t try-outs· with her and that re- only reserve whl'ch 1 ·s likely to be n ouncr o ce, one junior H. McCord, Bob Barrpws, Stree ill b h C '1 b d t hearsals w· e held eac week at called up at the end of the current Specia' to Old Gold and Black ouncJ mem er, an reasurer of Jones, Leo Hawkins, Norman FM- 4 M d d w dn · the J·un' r 1 t Wak F L p. m. on on ay an e es- semester is the .Army Enlisted Re- 10 c ass go e orest num, Don MatthHsi LeOit . ee, day at the Baptist Church. serve Corps, and only those C. Sylvester Green, a graduate politics off to an early start Bill Robins e ps u At ' the same' time Professor . bers of this. corps -who ,are of of Wake Forest College (A. B.. the 1942 session as members of the Bill R(lbins, ·G. C. Anges, R. -Thane McDonald ot' the· rtnisib de"..· draft age w:.ill be called. There '2:i), took· ·office 'iri. July" as clis-· division of the college met Miksenas, M. Tatten, Milton Bul- partment announced that the 600 is no indication that the navy, trict governor of Rotary Interna- in the Baptist Church last Tues- lock B.-Ball, Ed Gurganus, Lewis records of the Carnegie Music marine and coast guard reserves tional, world-wide organization day night. Cox' John Stephens, Bill Poe. Study Set, acquired last summer, will be called except according to which has more than 5,000 clubs Lois Bradley, Betty Lou Wil- Jones, Van Burges, have been indexed and may }Je original plan _ that is, when and 210,000 members. Dr. Green, Iiams, Iris Willis, Betty Stansbury, Cook, Henry Anderson, E. heard by students in · room 305, members have completed their who is president of Coker College and Helen Campfield were nom- Dick Glenn, L. Bullard, J. P1erce, Wait Hall, at 7:15 every evening college educations, or as other- in Hartsville, S. C., is a member inated as the coed George Stamps, Fred Hoffman; except Tuesday. It is also plan- wise stipulated. of Omicron Delta Kappa, Kappa on the Student Council. Two· of John Garmany, Jim Henry, John- ned, he said, to have the music Delta Pi, Theta Phi and Sigma these girls ,.;m be elected solely ny Ferguson, Wiley Biles, room opened for record listening Draft Age Set at 20 Tau Delta fraternities. for the purpose of representing Pittman, J. Staton, Bryan Sandlin. on Sundays at 4 p.m., this pre- Draft age for the Army Enlist- Unanimously elected at Rotary's campus coeds, while the other will H: Miller, J;_ohn Beavers, Jack ceding the weekly recital on the ed Reserve Corps is interpreted as recent convention in Toronto, be a regular represent. Hunt, Bill Shore, Roscoe Mason, Pfohl Memorial Chimes at 5:30 20 years and six months. Begin- Canada, by delegates represent- Seniors Contest for Office Jim Darden,· H. Tyner, Sam Beh- ning at the end of the current ing Rotary clubs in more than 50 Seniors who will contest for the rends, Tom Bland, Clyde Potter, semester, members of this corps countries of the world, Dr. Green student government office left, Wyche·Ray, Demming Ward, Don ·SOLDIERS' DANCE will probably, although not def- will devote much of his time dur- - Bradsher, Bill Walton, L. Highfill, initely, be called when they reach ing his year in office to visiting and committeemen on the activi- vacant when George Veitch failed Simmon Venters, Jim Rawles, the The next to the last of ·a se- the 49 Rotary clubs in South and ties of their clubs. He will serve tv return to school are Frank Rev. King, Haris Parker, Bill Me- ries of dances being held by the -See ARMY RESERVE, Page 4- North Carolina, which comprise as district governor until shortly Kincheloe, Ed Hobgood, Larry Clanahan, Bob Turnage, Doc Wake Forest Reception Commit- the l90th district of Rotary Inter- after Rotary's 1943 convention in Williams and Jack Baldwin. A dams, Jack Cleckley, Forest Ste- TUBERCULOSIS national, and advising officers Philadelphia, Pa., in June. Named to contest for Bill Starnes' tee for Soldiers for the person- position as junior councilman phens, Larry Dixon, Gene Turner, nel of the local Finance School were Rufus Redfearn, Melville Reece Contributes and Wake Forest town and col- Every student is requested to p He( c '*I N Broughton, Bruce Warlick, and Kemp Reece, Bill Gray, Griffin. lege men in the armed services be present for the annual Tu- an- OUDCI ames Bob Lassater. Harry Waller, John Whitfield, will be held in the town Com- bers1,1Iosis check-up which will , The position of junior treasurer Warren Smith, Bill Alder, Jinl munity House tomorrow night be held in the college infirmary Mille·r Pr' eX T ue s d y will go to either John Drake, Bil: Wentz, Walter Cashwell, Bruce from 9 p.m. to 12 a.m., it was Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 28 Padgett or George Whit Tobey. Warlick, Bill· Dewitt announced last night. and 29. '!'his skin test, which This position was left vacant when Trivette, Dan Primm, D. Nye, G. Special hostess for toinorrow requires only a minute to give, . Ad p . Paul Holland entered west Point. ' M. Hill, Kenneth Williford, Bill night's dance will be Mrs. R. L. has no ill effects. All positive ams ICe- resident, Elections will take place at the Byrd, David Freeman, Frank Gay. Other hostesses will be reactors will be X-Rayed on Justice Secretary, and Student Center next Tuesday, and Downing, Walter Douglas, Clif- Mesdames W. D. Holliday, Phil Oct. 6. A charge of only $1.00 Donnell Is Treasurer MUSIC MEMBERSHIP the Student Council has stressed ford Gaddy, Paul Chapman, Eu- Utley, W. W. Holding, D. F. will be made to help defray the the fact that the time for these gene Glover, Jack Byrd, Robert Stansbury, Elizabeth Savage, expense of X-Ray films. H · elections will be from 9 aJn. until A ck D c Th · · d f ll orace Miller, Sigma Phi Epsi- All memberships must be ar- --See BOND DRIVE, Page 4- D. B. Bryan, . L. Ayco , . . e test M reqmre o a lon from Asheville, and Norman d f th 12:30 noon, the polls not being Walker, Sam Sidenberg, and Freshmen and new students, and "D , Ad range or e Raleigh Civic open in the afternoon as former- M T J · d d f r all upper oc ams, 1gma Pi from Music Association by Saturday, rs . .a...ee ones. IS recommen e o - B lt' Md · Iy. Only coeds will vote for the Th 1 t d ill b h ld I S . thi · th 1y a 1more, ., were elected to Sept. 28, it was announced th1 's e as ance w e e a c assmen. mce s IS e on th 'd d coed council members. week from tomorrow night. clinic being held this year, it e presl ency an vice-presi- week by the music association. dency, respectively, of the Pan. St d t b h' · b It is emphasized that all ser- will be important to hold these u en mem ers 1ps may e vice men in Wake Forest, dates in mind. The clinic is Hellenic Council Tuesday night! obtained for $3.30 and may be after they had first resigned their t t th - t' h d whether or not they are attend- being sponsored by the N. C. o e assocta 1on ea - - m . g the Finance Schoo 1 are in- State Sanitorium and the Amer- posts as treasurer and secretary 1 quarters at the Sir Walter Ho- . ., of the organization in order that t 1 · R 1 · h b h d vited to attend these dances. ican Student Health Association. e m a e1g Ol' may e a it might elect a clean new slate of from Professor Thane McDon- <Departments and organizations officers for· tl1e current school ald, d1'rector of must'c here, at siring notices In this column are re- year quested to notify OLD GOLD AND · 0 0 Mlller and Adams were elected __ ro-·o_m_3_o_I,_w_a_it_H_al_J. ____ _ BLACK by 10 p.m. on the Wednesday ld s ll G h night tlrecedlng the Friday on which or "S t• o•ng to t e omen to fill the posts of Ray Morris, Pi they are to be published_in the paper.) It " Kappa Alpha from Rutherfordton, president, and Tom Jones, Lamb- Day-, Acco"'"d;n:u t AJJot• t JJ lt da Chi Alpha from Winton, vice- Vespers in church auditorium I : ,. l) 0 UUJ Jons 0 C acu y president, both of whom were at 6:30 p.m.· elected to their positions last Carnegie Foundation records New eVidence in support of the ,------------- 'Spring and failed to return to available from 7:15 to 8:30 p.m., p pos't'on that the orld 15 gom· g school. Morris is now working except Tuesdays, in room 305, was this week Carolina. During the past sum- with the Consolidated :Aircraft Wait Hall. when it was discovered that of the mer she attended a special session Corporation in Elizabeth City and NOTICE TO SENIORS Registrar Grady S. Patterson reports that all seniors did not make application for their de- grees during registration and· requests that those who did not do so call at his office and apply as soon as possible. CLUB DISCONTINUED The faculty of the college voted Monday to · suspend for the year the faculty dinner club which has met monthly for the past several years. Reason given for the suspension is the fact that faculty members this year are busier than they have ever been before in the history of the college and do not have extra time to devote to the interests of the club. The club up to this year met once a month fo1· din- ner followed by a special pro- gram. Sunday, Sept. 20-- four new additions to the faculty at Duke University, where many Jones has transferred to the Uni- Sunday school at 9:50 a.m. for the current year the women students were Spanish-speaking versity of Virginia. Services in church auditori1m1 outnumber the men three to one. natives of South America. Also elected Tuesday night were - at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Only new male member of the Rowland from Meredith -see PAN-HEL, Page 4- B. T. U. and Forum at 7 p.m. teaching staff is Mr. John Free- Miss 'Rowland, who came to Think a Miss is as Good as a Mile? Coeds Good for Distance to Boston Monday, Sept. 21- man, addition to the chemistry de- Wake Forest from Meredith Col- Girls' glee club rehearsal at 4 partment, • while there are three lege, from which she received her p.m. in church auditorium. women, Miss Nell Dowtin, of the B. M. degree, has taught at Coker Eu society meeting at 7 p.m. in Spanish department; Miss Ethel College and at schools in the Mid- society hall. Rowland, teacher of music; and west. She has also attended the Phi Society meeting at 7 p.m. in Miss Lois Johnson, Dean of Wo- Westminster Choir School in New h n men. Jersey. Aside from her class- 22- Mr. w:vedF his tB. Sd room duties here, Miss Rowland . Student body electi"ons from 9 in chemiS . Y a . e ort;s will also direct the girls' glee also rece1ved his M. S. m b1o- club and the choir in the Pullen a.m. to 12: 30 p.m. in student cen- chemistry here. He has done Memorial Church in Raleigh. ter. graduate work in chemistry at the Miss Johnson, new Dean of Wo- Cullom Ministerial Conference University of North Carolina· and, men, graduated with a B. A. from meeting at 7:30p.m. in' room 103, before coming to Forest, Meredith College, receiving her M. Wait Hall. was head of the physical chem- A. from Columbia University. · Wednesday, Sept. 28- istry department of Louisburg She haS also done extensive work Girls' glee club rehearsal at 4 College. in the University of Paris and p.m. in church auditorium. Miss Dowtin received her B. A. will teach in the department of Prayer meeting at 8 p.m. in the from Erskine College and her M. ' church auditorium. A.· from the University of South -See FACULTY, Page 4- FRESHMAN BADGES At the Student Council meet- ing Wednesday night members A miss is a good as a mile? voted unanimously to see that Not Wake Forest misses! all freshmen will be required to Each is as good as at least .five wear their freshman badges un- miles a day. Every week the co- til notified by the council that eds who live at the Powell House they can remove them. Council walk almost the equivalent of the President Patton said that all distance from Wake Forest to freshmen who do not have Boston. On the average, each of badges now may get them at the eighteen girls who live at the chapel period Wednesday free house walk to the campllS or down of charge, but that every fresh- town three times a day: From man found without his badge the drive to the end of the boule- on after that time will be duly vard is one-half mile, three-quar- reprimanded by the council. ters of a mile to Miss Jo's, and ------------- one mile to the post office. Counting one trip to the post office and at least two the dis- tance of Miss Jo's, the combined distance of the eighteen girls amounts to 90 miles a day. Al- lowing for two trips amounting to four miles on Sunday per per- son, we have a total of 72 miles for the group on Sunday. Without consideration of the distance walked once the destina- tion is reached, our co-eds walk 612 miles every week.

i.' ' ' ' .-H;.ER:E N:INiE' lt~NTHS AFTER INA- RATION · H. McCord, Bob Barrpws, Stree hearsals w· ill b h e held eac week at called up at the end of the current Specia' to Old

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Page 1: i.' ' ' ' .-H;.ER:E N:INiE' lt~NTHS AFTER INA- RATION · H. McCord, Bob Barrpws, Stree hearsals w· ill b h e held eac week at called up at the end of the current Specia' to Old

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,' ', ~ ' '

',. :.·.-. . ·:-~. '

'i.' ' ' ' ~;:;) '. : ',

.-H;.ER:E N:INiE' lt~NTHS AFTER INA- RATION - /' - co\\~~lL . . -- - . ·_

-- :Council -·Men.- -~~ ~~\te-~o~~t , . · ~The ·Germ~n Emble~ Is Down, Bu~ The Jap Emblem Remains . ·_ ·d · · .,p ·· · r. A 'triple bouquet of orchids is due Student Body-President Un er'• atton '-'Billy Joe Patton, Councilman Gii;Borton and Chairman Johnny

it would have been completed in a matter of weeks instead of nine months.

. · · . . -"· . . Walker ·Qr the Freshman Advisory Committee for their efforts . ·: M.'. L ' s·. ' .. . . . this 'week in' oonwletini-the ,war bond drive. These men did not . • a Ke . p U rt delegate others to. get- out 81ld collect mol!ey· for the iJ?nd. They . . . · . · . . . g·ot out and devoted hours on end of the1r personal tune to col-Today, nine months the lecting it themselves. ·. Beginning· Tuesday night, they prit on a

equivalent of an entire school concerted drive and raised the money necessary to complete the year ~,after. its -iriauguration on total of the bond fund in aJi.ttle over three ·days. Had the same Dec.-12, four days after'the United sp .. irit of .. sacrifice and concentrated effort been shown when the States entered the war, the war · bond fund drive ·is completed.· bOn(fdJive WaS started, with. the cooperation of th,e student body

Student Body President Billy .

.. The money for the war bond has been raised and the Ger­

man emblem has come down, true, but the Jap emblem remains . . OLD GOLD AND BLACK pledged itself last summer not to

take down this emblem until the student body has_ done so'me­thing to redeem itself for its disgraceful response to the recent drive.

What the student body can do to redeem itself for its (See EMBLEM, Page 4)

;~e tt~onG~~un~y~~~R o· .. ~-~ .L· .· __ ._;o· went .to press that-less .than $30 • .. : · · · : . : · . remained to be' collected, and he . ' • ' .: .. ' . assured the paper that the entire · . · ~.. · · · . . .: bon!i fund would be· raised by this ·· · • morning. . . . '· .

GOLD AND BLACK * * *

In tlieit drive to collect the bond sum total by this week end· Pat­toll, Councilman Gil _Horton and ·Freshman ,Advisory Committee Chaiiman Johnny Walker· began . Tuesday 'night ·a thorough canvass of the campus,. setting their · goal

·volume XXVII. No. 9 Wake Forest, N. C., Friday, September 18, 1942 --------------~~------------------

Phone 304-6, all offices

·1f~g~.nri-~~~y~~~:rt~ Miss -Rowland Army ·Reserve ·CI · V - El .· t:• · that$93.50hadbeen:collected.in ·. . ass acancy ec IOnS $38~o-:a~o.sp~;te~a;inte·o:a~ Starts First. May Be Called · · · · · no complete figures, but did make . ' ' . ' . r . ' . :~a~e~t~ebe~~tc~~:~. than. $

30 Girl- Glee Club In Near Future T -· 8 H . ld "0 . T d. · ToBuyBondNextWeek ..•. ·. . 0 e e . n ues ay

He did not·say when the bond . McJ?onald Annou!'ces . Navy; Marine, Co~st ' would·be boilght, but·said that he PeriOds for Hearmg Guard Plans Will· thought -it would ber sometime h · C t" A U -----------·----------------, during the coming week. P onograph ~cords on mue s sual _ _ _ Polls Open At

Following is a list of the names · R 0 t - 1CIJ t G of those who have contributed to The first girls' glee club' ever to To squelch rumors circulating a r laD 5 Jl:l ec reen . the bond' fund since the beginning be organized 'at -Wake Fores! be- around the campus ·to the effect 9 Cl of the currerit term: gan rehearsals this week under that members of all the reserve T H d S h a. m. ose

Lawrence Nichols, Jim North.:: the direction of Miss Ethel Row- corps of the country's armed ser- 0 ea out ern Area ' ingtOn, Richard Phillips, •RUSS land, newly-appointed assistant in vices will be called up at the end . ' . - At 12·30 p Poole, Johnny Walker, Martha the department of music. . of the current semester, Dean D. • ffi. ,. Ann Allen, Bill· JohnSon, Jack Miss. Rowland, who is also B. Bryan released this week the President of Cok~r •

Dil teaching . ·voice, has announced latest official bulletin of the G ts U • Ba1dwin, Jim Hulin, Bookeor - that·"a few more girls" will be ad- American 'Council on Educatt"on'. e nammous DR._ c.~- GREEN Nominations for two coed Stu-lard, · Bill Craig, Marion wen, · V t t M t' dent Co n il b mitted to. the gl~e club after the According to th15• bulletm· , the 0 e a ee Ing u c mem ers, one senior Joe Plumbo, Hairfield, McFadden, Stude t C ·1 ifi

t try-outs· with her and that re- only reserve whl'ch 1·s likely to be n ouncr o ce, one junior H. McCord, Bob Barrpws, Stree ill b h C '1 b d t hearsals w· e held eac week at called up at the end of the current Specia' to Old Gold and Black ouncJ mem er, an reasurer of Jones, Leo Hawkins, Norman FM- 4 M d d w dn · • the J·un' r 1 t Wak F L p. m. on on ay an e es- semester is the .Army Enlisted Re- 10 c ass go e orest num, Don MatthHsi LeOit . ee, day at the Baptist Church. serve Corps, and only those ~menr- C. Sylvester Green, a graduate politics off to an early start fo~·

Bill Robins e ps u At ' the same' time Professor . bers of this. corps -who ,are of of Wake Forest College (A. B.. the 1942 session as members of the Bill R(lbins, ·G. C. Anges, R. -Thane McDonald ot' the· rtnisib de"..· draft age w:.ill be called. There '2:i), took· ·office 'iri. July" as clis-· uppel~ division of the college met

Miksenas, M. Tatten, Milton Bul- partment announced that the 600 is no indication that the navy, trict governor of Rotary Interna- in the Baptist Church last Tues-lock B.-Ball, Ed Gurganus, Lewis records of the Carnegie Music marine and coast guard reserves tional, world-wide organization day night. Cox' John Stephens, Bill Poe. Study Set, acquired last summer, will be called except according to which has more than 5,000 clubs Lois Bradley, Betty Lou Wil-Jim~ Jones, Van Burges, ~im have been indexed and may }Je original plan _ that is, when and 210,000 members. Dr. Green, Iiams, Iris Willis, Betty Stansbury, Cook, Henry Anderson, E. G~mn; heard by students in · room 305, members have completed their who is president of Coker College and Helen Campfield were nom-Dick Glenn, L. Bullard, J. P1erce, Wait Hall, at 7:15 every evening college educations, or as other- in Hartsville, S. C., is a member ina ted as the coed representative~>· George Stamps, Fred Hoffman; except Tuesday. It is also plan- wise stipulated. of Omicron Delta Kappa, Kappa on the Student Council. Two· of John Garmany, Jim Henry, John- ned, he said, to have the music Delta Pi, Theta Phi and Sigma these girls ,.;m be elected solely ny Ferguson, Wiley Biles, Grah~m room opened for record listening Draft Age Set at 20 Tau Delta fraternities. for the purpose of representing Pittman, J. Staton, Bryan Sandlin. on Sundays at 4 p.m., this pre- Draft age for the Army Enlist- Unanimously elected at Rotary's campus coeds, while the other will

H: Miller, J;_ohn Beavers, Jack ceding the weekly recital on the ed Reserve Corps is interpreted as recent convention in Toronto, be a regular represent. Hunt, Bill Shore, Roscoe Mason, Pfohl Memorial Chimes at 5:30 20 years and six months. Begin- Canada, by delegates represent- Seniors Contest for Office Jim Darden,· H. Tyner, Sam Beh- ning at the end of the current ing Rotary clubs in more than 50 Seniors who will contest for the rends, Tom Bland, Clyde Potter, semester, members of this corps countries of the world, Dr. Green student government office left, Wyche·Ray, Demming Ward, Don ·SOLDIERS' DANCE will probably, although not def- will devote much of his time dur- -Bradsher, Bill Walton, L. Highfill, initely, be called when they reach ing his year in office to visiting and committeemen on the activi- vacant when George Veitch failed Simmon Venters, Jim Rawles, the The next to the last of ·a se- the 49 Rotary clubs in South and ties of their clubs. He will serve tv return to school are Frank Rev. King, Haris Parker, Bill Me- ries of dances being held by the -See ARMY RESERVE, Page 4- North Carolina, which comprise as district governor until shortly Kincheloe, Ed Hobgood, Larry Clanahan, Bob Turnage, Doc Wake Forest Reception Commit- the l90th district of Rotary Inter- after Rotary's 1943 convention in Williams and Jack Baldwin. Adams, Jack Cleckley, Forest Ste- TUBERCULOSIS national, and advising officers Philadelphia, Pa., in June. Named to contest for Bill Starnes' tee for Soldiers for the person- position as junior councilman phens, Larry Dixon, Gene Turner, nel of the local Finance School were Rufus Redfearn, Melville

Reece Contributes and Wake Forest town and col- Every student is requested to p He( c '*I N Broughton, Bruce Warlick, and Kemp Reece, Bill Gray, Griffin. lege men in the armed services be present for the annual Tu- an- OUDCI ames Bob Lassater.

Harry Waller, John Whitfield, will be held in the town Com- bers1,1Iosis check-up which will , The position of junior treasurer Warren Smith, Bill Alder, Jinl munity House tomorrow night be held in the college infirmary Mille·r Pr' eX y· T ue s d a· y will go to either John Drake, Bil: Wentz, Walter Cashwell, Bruce from 9 p.m. to 12 a.m., it was Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 28 Padgett or George Whit Tobey. Warlick, Bill· Goodwin~ Dewitt announced last night. and 29. '!'his skin test, which This position was left vacant when Trivette, Dan Primm, D. Nye, G. Special hostess for toinorrow requires only a minute to give, . Ad v· p . Paul Holland entered west Point. ' M. Hill, Kenneth Williford, Bill night's dance will be Mrs. R. L. has no ill effects. All positive ams ICe- resident, Elections will take place at the Byrd, David Freeman, Frank Gay. Other hostesses will be reactors will be X-Rayed on Justice Secretary, and Student Center next Tuesday, and Downing, Walter Douglas, Clif- Mesdames W. D. Holliday, Phil Oct. 6. A charge of only $1.00 Donnell Is Treasurer MUSIC MEMBERSHIP the Student Council has stressed ford Gaddy, Paul Chapman, Eu- Utley, W. W. Holding, D. F. will be made to help defray the the fact that the time for these gene Glover, Jack Byrd, Robert Stansbury, Elizabeth Savage, expense of X-Ray films. H · elections will be from 9 aJn. until A ck D c Th · · d f ll orace Miller, Sigma Phi Epsi- All memberships must be ar---See BOND DRIVE, Page 4- D. B. Bryan, . L. Ayco , . . e test M reqmre o a lon from Asheville, and Norman d f th 12:30 noon, the polls not being

Walker, Sam Sidenberg, and Freshmen and new students, and "D , Ad s· range or e Raleigh Civic open in the afternoon as former-M T J · d d f r all upper oc ams, 1gma Pi from Music Association by Saturday, rs . .a...ee ones. IS recommen e o - B lt' Md · Iy. Only coeds will vote for the

Th 1 t d ill b h ld I S. thi · th 1y a 1more, ., were elected to Sept. 28, it was announced th1's e as ance w e e a c assmen. mce s IS e on th 'd d coed council members. week from tomorrow night. clinic being held this year, it e presl ency an vice-presi- week by the music association.

dency, respectively, of the Pan. St d t b h' · b It is emphasized that all ser- will be important to hold these u en mem ers 1ps may e vice men in Wake Forest, dates in mind. The clinic is Hellenic Council Tuesday night! obtained for $3.30 and may be

after they had first resigned their t t th - t' h d whether or not they are attend- being sponsored by the N. C. ~en o e assocta 1on ea --m. g the Finance Schoo1 are in- State Sanitorium and the Amer- posts as treasurer and secretary 1 quarters at the Sir Walter Ho-

. ., of the organization in order that t 1 · R 1 · h b h d vited to attend these dances. ican Student Health Association. e m a e1g Ol' may e a it might elect a clean new slate of from Professor Thane McDon-

<Departments and organizations de-~·,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==~==========::=: officers for· tl1e current school • ald, d1'rector of must'c here, at siring notices In this column are re- year quested to notify OLD GOLD AND · 0

• 0

Mlller and Adams were elected __ ro-·o_m_3_o_I,_w_a_it_H_al_J. ____ _ BLACK by 10 p.m. on the Wednesday ~ ld s ll G h ~ night tlrecedlng the Friday on which or "S t• o•ng to t e omen to fill the posts of Ray Morris, Pi they are to be published_in the paper.) It " • Kappa Alpha from Rutherfordton,

president, and Tom Jones, Lamb-E~ery Day-, Acco"'"d;n:u t AJJot• t JJ lt da Chi Alpha from Winton, vice-

Vespers in church auditorium I : ,. l) 0 UUJ Jons 0 C acu y president, both of whom were at 6:30 p.m.· elected to their positions last

Carnegie Foundation records New eVidence in support of the ,------------- 'Spring and failed to return to available from 7:15 to 8:30 p.m., p pos't'on that the orld 15• gom· g school. Morris is now working except Tuesdays, in room 305, t;~he ~omen was s~n this week Carolina. During the past sum- with the Consolidated :Aircraft Wait Hall. when it was discovered that of the mer she attended a special session Corporation in Elizabeth City and

NOTICE TO SENIORS Registrar Grady S. Patterson

reports that all seniors did not make application for their de­grees during registration and· requests that those who did not do so call at his office and apply as soon as possible.

CLUB DISCONTINUED The faculty of the college

voted Monday to · suspend for the year the faculty dinner club which has met monthly for the past several years. Reason given for the suspension is the fact that faculty members this year are busier than they have ever been before in the history of the college and do not have extra time to devote to the interests of the club. The club up to this year met once a month fo1· din­ner followed by a special pro­gram.

Sunday, Sept. 20-- four new additions to the faculty at Duke University, where many Jones has transferred to the Uni-Sunday school at 9:50 a.m. for the current year the women students were Spanish-speaking versity of Virginia. ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::=J.=:::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Services in church auditori1m1 outnumber the men three to one. natives of South America. Also elected Tuesday night were -

at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Only new male member of the Rowland from Meredith -see PAN-HEL, Page 4-B. T. U. and Forum at 7 p.m. teaching staff is Mr. John Free- Miss 'Rowland, who came to Think a Miss is as Good as a Mile?

Coeds Good for Distance to Boston Monday, Sept. 21- man, addition to the chemistry de- Wake Forest from Meredith Col-

Girls' glee club rehearsal at 4 partment, • while there are three lege, from which she received her p.m. in church auditorium. women, Miss Nell Dowtin, of the B. M. degree, has taught at Coker

Eu society meeting at 7 p.m. in Spanish department; Miss Ethel College and at schools in the Mid-society hall. Rowland, teacher of music; and west. She has also attended the

Phi Society meeting at 7 p.m. in Miss Lois Johnson, Dean of Wo- Westminster Choir School in New h n men. Jersey. Aside from her class-

~:fay,aSept. 22- Mr. F:~mant w:vedF his tB. Sd room duties here, Miss Rowland . Student body electi"ons from 9 in chemiS . Y a . e ort;s a~ will also direct the girls' glee

also rece1ved his M. S. m b1o- club and the choir in the Pullen a.m. to 12: 30 p.m. in student cen- chemistry here. He has done Memorial Church in Raleigh. ter. graduate work in chemistry at the Miss Johnson, new Dean of Wo-

Cullom Ministerial Conference University of North Carolina· and, men, graduated with a B. A. from meeting at 7:30p.m. in' room 103, before coming to W~e Forest, Meredith College, receiving her M. Wait Hall. was head of the physical chem- A. from Columbia University.

· Wednesday, Sept. 28- istry department of Louisburg She haS also done extensive work Girls' glee club rehearsal at 4 College. in the University of Paris and

p.m. in church auditorium. Miss Dowtin received her B. A. will teach in the department of Prayer meeting at 8 p.m. in the from Erskine College and her M. '

church auditorium. A.· from the University of South -See FACULTY, Page 4-

FRESHMAN BADGES At the Student Council meet-

ing Wednesday night members A miss is a good as a mile? voted unanimously to see that Not Wake Forest misses! all freshmen will be required to Each is as good as at least .five wear their freshman badges un- miles a day. Every week the co­til notified by the council that eds who live at the Powell House they can remove them. Council walk almost the equivalent of the President Patton said that all distance from Wake Forest to freshmen who do not have Boston. On the average, each of badges now may get them at the eighteen girls who live at the chapel period Wednesday free house walk to the campllS or down of charge, but that every fresh- town three times a day: From man found without his badge the drive to the end of the boule­on after that time will be duly vard is one-half mile, three-quar­reprimanded by the council. ters of a mile to Miss Jo's, and ------------- one mile to the post office.

Counting one trip to the post office and at least two the dis­tance of Miss Jo's, the combined distance of the eighteen girls amounts to 90 miles a day. Al­lowing for two trips amounting to four miles on Sunday per per­son, we have a total of 72 miles for the group on Sunday.

Without consideration of the distance walked once the destina­tion is reached, our co-eds walk 612 miles every week.

Page 2: i.' ' ' ' .-H;.ER:E N:INiE' lt~NTHS AFTER INA- RATION · H. McCord, Bob Barrpws, Stree hearsals w· ill b h e held eac week at called up at the end of the current Specia' to Old

Page Two Old Gold and Blaclt -Friday, Sepfe1t1ber .18, 1942

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Paragraphs WILSON ON WAKE FOREST:

e I e

Fuunth>d ,January 15, 1916, as the official student 1lPWSJHtllt.:r or \Va!~e Ti"ort'St 'College. P.ulJUshed ~vee~Jy tlur·iug the ~a·hnol year except durtng exarnmat10n periods and holiday£ as diret.:tcd by tile \Vake Forest College Public:llious Board. ----------------------non nAI~LDJOl-tE ............................ Editor Zl:JlJ J c•:\ ES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business Manager

The Student Council.conceived a drive and nin_e months later gave birth to a war bond. Well, well.

***

SOME JERKS OVER. AT ·JO'S· OUGHT- TO WISE UP SOON

J h.•r'l>t-~'l ThUllllJ!)Oll, associate cditur; Bill Prinnu, sport~ editor. .

.. \.lal'lua ..-\ nn Allen, Sant Hchl"ends, J. D. Dav1s, <:harlottt• Easley, Jt.·~t~ Gla~gO\\:, .EllZtL~eth Jones, K•·n ;.; dsun, H. t;. Parrott, Dill l'lnlhps, Bill Robbins, L:c·h !:!a wy••l', l:elty ::>tansbury Johnny Walker, Ed \\"ii~uu, edllorial staff.

lJuu!;' ~lclutyr~, H.oy Mu~e. Demming ·ward, l.ms­inc~~ stan:.

--------~~~~~~~~ .\ll'm!J~r of the .\ssociated Collegiate Press and

di"ll'iiJUtor of Cu!l~giate Dige~t. Memuer of the l':orth Carolin<L Cullcgiat~ Press Association. Repr~­,;cntcu fur national au\·ertising by the National Ad­Yel'lb.:.iug- Ser\·jcc, ln\!. ---------------

Ali editorial mattt:r should be addressed to. the \!di lor, .Uo.x 2:J:!, \\" ake 11'or~st, N. C._ All bust ness IH:J.tl"r should l.J., addressed to the busmess ma':'ager, s<•lllu atl!lrcss. :Snloscl'iption rate: $1.50 post pmd for tile school Y<:ar. -·--------·------------------

l'H0:\'8 30·1-ti, all offices. For import!ln~ news on 'J'hUl'$lay ui!;hts Jlhonc The n~cord Pubhsiung Com­puny, ZeiHilon, X. C. ·- -- --------- -·--·------------

.l!.:Jttt·rt~d as St~cotu.l class l'llail matter January 22, J!llt; at the pust office at Wake Fo1·est, North Car­olin~~. unUer the act ot: l\Jarch 3, 1879.

Week ago we wr9te what we called a face­tious editorial bemoaning the fact that the realm of the Fourth Estate is going to• the women. This week we had~.thrown in our laps evidence that the situation is worse than we thought it was.

Late Tuesday night Has-Been Bill Ayers,

the boy who edited this rag last year, blew in I from Anniston, Ala., where he had reported several days before to work on his uncle's paper, the Anniston Star, on which he had some experience as a reporter two summers ago. He had worked one day, and 'quit. "I couldn't take it," he said. "The staff was full of women. I They called me their little favorite and wanted to make me their copy boy!"

When we asked Ayers what he was going to do, he told us he was going down to Elizabeth City to work for Herbert Peele, an old Wake

Civilians Should Show Flag, Anthem Courtesies

It has been observed that not all students and townspeople have shown the proper cour­tesies to the flag and to the national anthem during ceremonies conducted on the campus by the personnel of the Finance School. Since it is to be assumed that this is true largely due to ignorance of the proper procedure, OLD GOLD AND BLACK herewith prints sections of War Department Bulletin No. 33, which prescribes the customary courtesies for both those in the service and civilians:

1 Forest grad, on the Daily Advance. "That won't be . any better, though," he said. "Peele wired me that I'd be the only man on the staff!"

"Sec. 5 ... During the ceremony of hoist­ing or lowering the flag or when the flag is passing in parade or in review, all persons pres­ent should face the flag, stand at attention, and salute. Those present in uniform should render the right-hand salute: When not in uniform, men should remove the headdress with the right hand, holding it at the left shoul­der, the hand being over the heart. Men with­out hats merely stand at attention. Women should salute by placing the right hand over the heart. The salute to the flag in the moving column should be rendered at the moment the flag passes.

"Sec. 6 ... When the national anthem is played and the flag is not displayed, all present should stand and face toward the music. Those In uniform should salute at the first note of the anthem, retaining this position until the last note. All others should stand at attention, men removing the headdress. When the flag is displayed, the salute to the flag should be given.

"Sec. 7 ... the pleoge of allegiance to the flag ... (should) be rendered by stand-ing with the right hand over the heart; ex­tending the right hand, palm upward, toward the flag at the words 'to flag' and holding this position until the end, when the hand drops to the side. However, civilians will always show full respect to the flag when the pledge is given by merely standing at attention, men re­moving the headdress. Persons m uniforms shall render the military salute."

Finance School Property It' has been reported that numerous stu­

dents of the college have been found wander­ing through the buildings occupied by the Fi­nance School at various times. It has also been reported that a bed has been stolen from Hunter dormitory, which is one of these build­ings.

The buildings occupied by 'the Finance School have been leased by the government with a contract calling for their use for a pe­riod extending until six months after the close of the war, which means that these buildings are now government property and subject to the jurisdiction of the authorities in Washing­ton. Any theft and damage to this property will have to be reported to the FBI for investi­gation unless the party responsible is known and proper reparation made.

Dean Bryan asks that, in order to avoid unnecessary trouble and embarrassment, stu­dents refrain from entering Finance School buildings unless they have specific and authori­tative permission. There is no desire upon any­one's part to impose upon the rights of stu­dents, but certain curtailments of privileges

are necessary under the present emergency conditions, and this is one of them. The full cooperation of the student body is requested.

See what we mean?

1 ------ IT AIN'T So! --------

NooJ/e4 - 1ke P~ (!)jll/J MaH.Iun.J

Spaghetti, flattened out, becomes noodles. Making noodles is a domestic art, · which means a woman is known by her noodles in the same way a man is known by the company he keeps.

This makes is necessary for all noodles to be homemade. The thought of a noodle being created by anyone other than a mother with flour on her hands and her hairdo awry is repellant, like mass-produced pie. lt is not good mer­chandising.

Noodles may be used in many ways, _ but the best thing to do with them is to

eat them. This is done in connection with l) chicken, 2) beef, and 3) soup. The noodle does not stand alone, being notori­ously limp.

Thus, while it is well suited for being served in connection with other things, the noodle is poorly adapted to the me­chanics of eating. Rich and poor, old and young, lean and fat, happy and sad, male and female, Democrat and Republi­can, all face the same problem.

The doomed noodle is animate in its frantic efforts to escape the probing fork, the murderous knife, the gouging spoon. It wriggles and squirms. It does everything but whimper to excite pity and compassion.

But all this is of no avail. A short noodle may be stabbed with a fork and conveyed, squirming, to the mouth. Mak­ing short ones out of long ones has been mankind's . brutal answer to the noodle problem.

There are those, however, who would rather be reckless than safe. A medium or long noodle is a challenge to them. They are willing to try catch-as-catch-can, sometimes called noodles-is-where-y~u­find-them. Anything goes, as in war, ice hockey and love.

The knack of success lies in a quick powerful suction applied to the loose end of the noodle, causing it to whip into the mouth as though drawn from above by some inexorable force, which is the case. This eliminates gathering up loose ends and leaves both hands free to pursue the next noodle.

The way to master the suction trick is to practice saying "shhh' in reverse, in­haling the breath. Do this for the count· of 10, then whisper "yoop"-"shyoop"! This is the universal cry of the noodle eater, a warning to stand back and not get splash~d.

Some think America was built on noodles, but the thought is not reassuring. They are too slippery, too evasive, too hard to pin down. America was built on mashed potatoes, good, honest chicken­and homemade noodles as an added at­traction. ·

-Truman Twill.

OUR DEMOCRACY byMa~ . Our Belts. Are As Tight As Anyone Else's ·

I PULLING All TOGETHER I {g'oR. DEMOCRACY IS BASED ON- THE STATES

GIVING CERTAIN POWERS TO THE FEDERAL .GOVERNMENT,

KEEPING OTHERS THEMSELVES.

(While it does not always disagree, Ol~D GOLD AND BLACK does not necessarily eudorse the ideas express­ed by Wilson in this column.-Ed.)

BY ED WILSON · Old Gold and Blac~ Staff Writer

JERKS: Standlng in line twice every day in and out of Miss Jo Williams' cafeteria are sorrie three or four hundred students, impa­tiently shifting the weight of their bodies from one foot to the other as they painsta~ingly wend the:u· way to the food counter. With boarding houses at a premium at Wake Forest, the business of get­ting dinner and supper is fast be­coming a physical drudgery.

And now that cafeteria space has been cut in half by the infil­tration of.the soldiery, the trail is beginning to assume the propor­tion.s of a breadline at a refugee camp as the row of students ex­tends from the food shelves aero~~ the cafeteria and the lobby half­way to the street.

Occasionally some bright fel­low, thinking . himself hungrier than any of his classmates, man-

~ >-·.:::<- ages in an underhanded maimer 6• ..;- _ -- to squirm into the line ahead of

1 • dt ;_·, ~-: · -- m~nyt wh1o havehbeen waiting for

mmu es onger t an he has. That (alur SOVEREIGN AS THEY ARE IN MANY WAYS, the belts of his associates are

OUR. STATES PULL TOGETHER:-IN ALL OF drawn just as tightly as his ap­parently makes no difference to

THEM TODAY THE DESIRE IS : this public pest. His main object FUll SP££!JAH£AD FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE. in life is food, anct he drives on

~~========================= relentlessly to satisfy his cravings. Somebody ouJht to tip off these trespassers that their place is at

JUST BETWEEN us least as far bac:c- as the end of the line. It is high time for them to wise up.

We have a sugegstion to make to Peahead Walker.

We feel somehow that we real­ly shouldn't make any more sug­gestions to Peahead, for we re­member with a violent twitch the last hint we made to that south­ern linguist. It was back last fall when our patriotism was an immensely novel and rather flip­pant faith in the Stars and Stripes, the National Anthem, and khaki uniforms. Our suggestion to Pea­head back in that day of easy liv­ing was that he get his jerseyed boys to go onto the field in V-for­Victory formation.

God forbid! That was before we went to work in a newspapeJ' office and a man from our native Johnston County walked in with a leaf of spotted brown tobacco, and pointed to an indenture in the leaf where the worms had sampled generously.

V-for-Victory That, he said, was the V-for­

Victory that the leaf had grown. But Peahead was telling us the

other day that he's been racking Murray Greason's brain to find his boys a 'way over to Kenan Stadium on the 26th for that tus­sle with Carolina.

Back in normal times, there were plenty of Greyhounds. But that was before all the drivers got caught in the rush for seats. That was before Mr. Greyhound's last tire- blew out-while our friends onr leaders were arguing about whether to use potential liquor or potential all-bran to ma~e synthetic rubber.

Even before that era of nor­mal times, there was an era when governors and senators and girls used to charter a whole train to come to Wake Forest for Society Day debates. But Pat Preston and his boys shouldn't attempt ·to board a train for Chapel Hill. Since Franklin D. has begged people not to drive to football games this fall, everybody will be going on the train. There prob­ably wouldn't be room for the players.

Suggestion

.. _,

final lap or two to do some last­minute scouting for Coach Jim Tatum.

Banquet

* * * NAMES: At the first of every year, almost before they have learned the location of Wait Hall or the identity of Dean Bryan, all freshmen are handed cards with a ribbon attached. The rib­bon is for color; the cards are for a specific purpose. Freshman rules require that all first-year

We could arrange a banquet for men wear this insignia on all oc­the boys at Carolina Inn Friday casions. night after they get to the Hill, Yet certain members of the and all the newspapermen could class of '46 ..have made it a too write about the revolutionary frequent habit to leave their new roadwork technique of Coach badges at home, or else they have Peahead Walker and his Iron found it more interesting to flout Men. Some industrious press upperclassmen with their brazen­photographer would take a pic- I ness than to humbly accept what ture of Johnny Perry as he is their customary due. munches his lettuce and tells It is the duty of every freshman about the trip through Durham to have this college emblem pin­County. ned to his shirt at all times. It in-

Or maybe you think, Peahead, dicates h!s place in a student that a Flying Fortress and 29 ny- b?dY of e1~ht hundre~. It helps lon parachutes would get your h1!11 to realize ~hat he rs, after all, boys oyer there better. Oh, well, still an untrred. neophyte. An~ it was only a suggestion. when he can. fmally ca~t awa)

the colors wrth no strmgs at-* * * tached, he can more f~lly appre­ciate his new status of campus Some day, when Wake Forest is

a great coeducational college and girls start transferring here from finishing schools, somebody ought to builft a big bronze statue in front of the Women's Quad­rangle in honor of the freshman who led a bunch of fellows out to that end of town the other night to serenade our first regular co­eds.

The News Bureau hasn't re­leased any particulars yet, but we understand it all happened about 1:30 Sunday morning, and that Dean Johnson was jerked so rude­ly from her sleep that she pro­ceeded the next day to lay down an extra law or two for her girls.

What we can't understand is why the freshmen didn't get around to this romantic gesture sooner. After all, they had the advantage on us. They were just out of high school and still were used to women.

equality. · Then, too, unlike upperclass­

men, the freshman is practically unknown for the first few weeks of the school term. With over two hundred strangers in their midst, sophomores, juniors, and seniors find it hard to remember names and faces by just hearing them once or twice. The card the fl:eshman wears identifies him constantly both as a member o.f his class and as an individual Wake Forest student. If he wants to be known, this label is his best opportunity.

* * * MUSICIANS: Eugene Orman­

dy and the Philadelphia Sym­phony, the Philadelphia Opera, the Ballet Theatre, Alexander Brailowsky, Jan Peerce, Lansing Hatfield, Joseph Szigeti comprise the roster of entertainers offered by Raleigh's Civic Music Asso­ciation for the 1942-43 season. Admission to all seven concerts is $3.30 (including tax). It's a good bargain.

* * :!:

. Even at that, the girls thought once that night that they would misil the show. Two of them ad­mitted on the q. t. that they were awake when the procession of newishes filed by the Powell ERRATA: OLD GOLD AND place, and that the boys went BLACK, "covering the campus right on to the Mills', next door, like the magnolias," passed out to huddled besides a downstairs win- each registrant an information dow and eased into the strains of card, requesting specific answers "At Last." to all questions asked. If the stu-

And now to get back to that dent didn't know the correct· re-suggestion which we have, after Head Pops Out ply to the query he was to write deliberation, decided to offer "Don't know." Peahead. Things were just fine until a Freshmen took OLD GOLD lit-

The ball players, since they rather elderly head popped out of erally. When asked "What fra­got here a we!!k ahead of us and a bedroom window upstairs in j tentity do you belong to?", one have been getting more fresh air typical beat-me-daddy, eight-to- replied "I don't know." Another than we have, should be in pretty the-shotgun style and demanded supplied the same answer to good shape by now. We think if it were either Christmas Eve questions about his address at they should take an early break- or Hallowe'en. Nobody knows Wake Forest. his major, subject, fast Friday the 25th, and-with who it was, because nobody his profession, his fraternity, his Peahead in the lead-and little stayed to watch. father's college affiliations; in Murray Greason, Jr., bringing up But the elderly head must have each case the freshman wrote, "I the rear as waterboy-hike over been a boy once, for it growled: don't know." to Chapel Hill. There's a nice, "If it's the girls you're looking At least two others were better quiet route by country roads via for, they're next door." informed about Greek-letter life Leesville and Morrisville, and The newishes took the hint and and their part in it. One filled in: it'll give the boys plenty of time that's when Dean John~on and "Prospective Delta Sig." Another: to enjoy the beauties of Wake her pretty protegees woke up. "Prospective Kappa Sig." With a County nature and let Peahead Maybe our freshman hero mud- lot of men 'like that on the cam-remind them of their signals. dled his little job a little bit, but pus, rushing ought to be an easy

The Navy pre-flight boys take we still think he should have a job this year. 15-mile hikes these days, and we statue. Anybody that's gaii)e --------could get Commander Kessing to enough to walk out that far our/ht Socks darned by Betty Stans · post some of his boys along theta have a statue. bury, 5c each.

are

Page 3: i.' ' ' ' .-H;.ER:E N:INiE' lt~NTHS AFTER INA- RATION · H. McCord, Bob Barrpws, Stree hearsals w· ill b h e held eac week at called up at the end of the current Specia' to Old

-Friday, September 18, 1942

By BILLY PRIMM.

WHERE DO THE DEACONS-STAND?

It's been many a football season since sports scribes could­n't at least agree on one or two teams to lead the country. But m·aybe the big battle has given the boys in the press box the jit­ters or perhaps taken their minds off the pigskin game.

· Anyway the boys-who-know have rated everybody from Michigan, Notre Dame, Georgia and a few more almost down to Colorado State Mines College as the leading gridiron contender

. of 1942. ' -

Here- in the South the change has been most pronounc-ed. No longer do Duke's mighty Blue Devils dominate the pre-seas()n predictions. The Wadeless-Dukes have lost 18

·lettermen and have been ranked from second by Red Grange

· on down to fifth by the Williamson system.

All of which brings us around to the question of how will our boys stack up this fall. And again the experts can't seem .to agree.

Red Grange has this to say about the Demon Deacons: "Wake Forest is the third ranking team in the Southern-­

Conference. The sophomore. contingent. is. strong with Frank Fisher and Russ Perry gunning for-regular backfield duty. Capt. Pat Preston is the- hub of the line which is big and has speed." · • '

The Illustrated Football Annual doesn't go that far but its write-up is favorable._ Here it is:

'• ,;

. Old Gold and Black

Pat Preston, shown above, captains the Wake Forest foot­ball team this fall in the first season of war-time play. The

big tackle broke into the start­ing lineup as a sophomore and has played brilliant ball in his two years as a regular.

Deacon Baseball Stars Did. Well ·This Summer

Page Three

·Ragged Blocking HatidicapS Deacons

Still showing only flashes of power and coordination the Demon Deacon gridmen face a week of hard work before' they can expect to be ready for the Carolina game which looms only nine days off. ·

Exadly half of Wake For­est's thirty football squad­men are North Carolinians. Four of thEse - Pat Preston, Johnny Perry, Russ Perry, and Don Hipps - are hold­ing down first-team berths at the present time. Even so,

-the Old North State is better represented this year than last in the Deacon line-up . Preston and Johnny Perry are the only North Carolina men who were on the 1941 starting team.

Invest qour motteqin U~tit£»a States WARS~l\N~ BONDS. AND STAMPS!

Not since the Deacs began prac­tice two and a half weeks ago have they consistently shown that they are developing into a well­rounded ball team.

The main trouble confronting Deacon Mentor D. C. Walker seems to be the blocking of his men. Even though he has drilled his linemen daily in blocking drills against the frosh, Coach Walker has not been satisfied with their work. AU have looked good at times, but only a few have consistently shown their ability to block.

Drill on Passes

Even though drilling overtim.o on blocldng assignments, the Dea­cons have still spent plenty of time on their passing, both of­fensively and defensively. The freshman backs and ends have drilled against the varsity backs in defensive passing drills and have met with little success.

Cochran and Pruitt have shown that their passing arms are in fine shape in practice the past week. Throwing against the frosh, Cochran and Pruitt have repeat­edly connected to ends Copley, Dougherty, Wells and Capps and to backs Johnny Perry, Sacrinity, Whitener, Hipps and Barbour.

Barbour Hurt

The Wake Forest. boys who Winter flying jackets for both the "thr th t ball" d " k th H ULE Army and Navy Air Corps are regu.

Injuries have again cropped up in the Deacon camp, the latest be­ing Elmer Barbour, blocking back, who injured his knee in practice Wednesday and will be forced to take things ~asy for a few days. Barbour joins Bill Starford on the "injured knee" list. The big center is still limp­ing but is expected to report Monday.

0 "j'/ , a an roc at 1942 FOOTBALL SC ED · lar equipment for our aviators. They

'A fine crop from the '41 freshmen assures the Deacons of a team almost up to the average, despite severe depletion of the veteran ranks. A big and fairly fast line is operating ahead of two trim and nimble backfields. C~ptain Pat Preston, who leads the blocking on most running plays, is one of the ablest of tackles. Jim Copley is a smart flank­man ·and a crack pass catcher. Tony Rul:tjno and Elmer Jones, tackles turned guards, and Bill Starford, center, are seasoned athletes."

agate m baseball termonology • seemed t h h t 6 C · li Ch 1 Hill cost from $12 to $18 and are made of 0 . ave c osen a war- orn Sept. 2 - aro na, ape horsehide leather lined with sheep summer se~on_ i~ which to per- I Oct. 3-Dul•e Wake Forest shearling.

Starford's injury has forced Coach Walker. to move Jim Camp, second string end, to center in the event that Starford may be out longer than expected.

**** WATCHING THE DEACS GO BY

form rather brilliantly. For while •. - ' G viii many of this institution's older ···Oct. 10-:Furman, reen e, Purcha·se of one $18.75 War Bond, sons were pitching "pineapples" S. C. • for which you receive $25 in 10 and hitting ~ bunch of slant-eyed ~'Oct. 17-N. C. State, Raleigh years, will pay for one of these jack-"d~es" with considerable sue- Oct. 24:-Boston College, Bos- ets so necessary for our airmen fly. cess somewhere in the world," ton Mass. ing at high altitudes and in northern the boys who were fortunate *O 'C W F climes. So you and your neighbors enoug~ to y:ear the flannels pro.v: .. ct. 31- lemson, . ·. orest can do your bit by investing at least ed ~herr diamond worth in many Nov •. 7-V. M. 1., Wm.-Salem · 10 percent of your salary every pay s._ectwns of the United States. *Nov 14-Geo. Wash. U day in War Bonds to help pay the

With only seven practices re­maining before the opening game, the Deacons will more than likely hold heavy scrimmages tomorrow, Monday and Tuesday, then ease up for the remainder of the week.

Bob Reid Bats .326 ' W h' !!t D C ., cost of this equipment for intrepid Now that we've seen what others think of our lads, let's Bob Reid, last year's first base- as m, on; • • American flyers. Join the parade,

give them the once-over ourselves. -man here, J?anaged to hit a .32G Nov. 26-;-S• Car?l!na, Charlotte and help top the War Bond Quota in From last year's starting team six men have departed. Pat clip for Wils~n of !~e Bi-State ('IhanksgiVmg) your county.

Geer and Jack Ciccarelli, ends Co-Captain Carl Givler and Lea~e . an~ m ad~rbon earned ~'Night Games Gas masks which came into use . , • . . the distmchon of bemg chosen on

Frank Kaprtva, guards, blockmg back Ray Mamert and full- the loop's all-star team while . in warfare for the first time when ",j 11oft I!IISII"I'f IUriiC'Ifl llll"IIY u:mrl1"

• -ll(!Jle back john Polanski are gone. Six out of eleven starters. his first season of profession~ the Germans used poison and mus·

ball. Bob's sidekick, , ex-Deac * * tard gas in World War I, are much

Despite these losses Coach Walker can put a veteran. team on the field which will include at the most only four sophomores. Two of these first year men· have practically sewed up starting berths. Fullback Russ Pen-y and block­ing back Don llipps are almost sure bets to be in .there when kickoff time rolls around. BiJI Dougherty, end, and tackle Jerry Novick are having stiff competition for their jobs. Letterman Burnie Capps, who reported only last Mon­day due to sickness, has already served notice that he is out for a first string position. And George Owen refuses to re- · linquish his tackle position to Novick for any lengthy pe­riod of time.

The remaining positions will be-held down by. men who have proved their worth through previous games. ·jim Copley will be at one end, Captain Pat Preston at his regular tackle spot and Buck jones and Tony Rubino at guards.

c ta· • n 1 J/. -"''Jf n n~J-.1./~ improved today over those used ap m 'Rooster" Hoyle, was c.. ·vvncu. (UI.J,:)IUI. -IIVUH. then. The Chemical Warfare Branch

member of the league-leading ··7 Wilson outfit and wound up with WAR BOND of the War Department issues these a .340 average to . capture the [! gas masks to every man in the serv· league batting championship. Dick Ll ice. We are taking no chances. was- also chosen on the Bi-State * * The type pict;r~d here Is the all-star team. Barbed wire used by Uncle Sam's "can" and "elephant nose" mask · Carl Ray, Yankee property and fighting forces is vastly different and costs about $9.25 each. The ex-Wake Forest hurler was sup- from that used on American farms. headgear is transparent; made of posed to hurl for Bingbampton of Army and Marine barbed wire is material resembling cellophane and the Eastern League but wound up much heavier and the barbs, about does not cloud with the breath. You pitching for Uncle Sam's navy. three inches in length, are more can buy two of these gas masks with

"Lefty" Art Vivian, slender vicious than ordinary barbed wire. th h f $18 75 w B d southpaw who registered two vic- . e pure ase o an . ar on . We need thousands of them. Don't

tories over Duke last year among fail to give at least ten percent of his other triumphs, had to forego your income every pay day for War a pro career and entered training j Bonds. Buy them at your bank or as a U. S. Marine. ffi 1 1 Conley's a Pitcher Again posto ce, regu ar y.

U.S. Treamry D•~arlftt•"l Billy Primm, last year's key-

Right now the center position seems to be the weak spot with letterman Bill Starford still out due to a wrenched knee. But Bill swears like a sailor that he will ~e ready to go against the Tar Heels, bad knee or not. Dick Foreman and Harry Clark are struggling for his position at present. Both are sophomores.

stone mate with shortstop Jolumy Fletcher, played Industrial League John Conley, pitcher turned cat­cher last season, went back to the ball in his native state of Georgia. mound and won four games with an airplane engine manufacturing outfit in Connecticutt. -

1942 WAKE FOREST FOOTBALL SQUAD

Deacon fans need not worry about Wake's passing game as long as Red Cochran and J. V. Pruitt are pitching that pig-skin. Both are triple-threats and dangerous every min­ute of the ball game. Johnny Perry will again be at wing­back and will probably alternate with Coehran and Pruitt with the kicking.

However, it will be up to the sophomores of the second team to supply the reserve strength. And whether they are able to give the ·regulars a breathing spell may mean the difference between victory and defeat for the Demon Deacs this fall.

Flankmen Don Wells and Jim Camp, tackle AI Nemetz, guards Ed Royston and Bud Wedel, blocking back Elmer Barbour, wingback Bo Sacrinity and fullbaek Jeff Brogden form the nueleus of the reserves whQ may make or break the Deacons.

The squad is small. The schedule is hard. But the material is.- there for a fairly successful season. The Deacs won't win them all. But· just how many they win is up to the boys them­selves. With plenty of hustle and the will to win the Deacs could play better than .500 ball this fall.

w:1•r• UNITED STATES

WAR BONDS

AND

STAMPS

•Ill'

Locally a summer school squad of Wake Forest students, includ­ing Charlie Green, 1942 freshman chunker, Johnny Farrar, transfe1· student last year who served as part time freshman coach, Clyde Whitener, Morganton lad who plays varsity football for the Deacons, Russ Perry, frosh first sacker last year, and Bob Mc­Clain, expected to flU the short­stop gap this coming year, played surrounding summer school out­fits, including the Naval Pre­Flight team of Chapel Hill and came out with a good record.

l Men are dying for the FoUl Freedoms. The least we can do here at home is to buy War Bonds-10% for War Bonds, every pay day.

OG&B Issues Wanted Editor Bob Gallimore needs

Issues nwnber 8, 22 and 25 to complete his files of OLD GOLD

· AND BLACK for last year (1941-42). If you have copies of these issues on hand and want to sell them, bring them around to the office of ·the paper and he will be glad to buy them from you

- provided, of course, your price is not too steep. Several copies of issue number 25 are wanted; if you have extras, bring them with you.

The Marine Corps pays fifty cents for each twelve yards, or 36 feet of this specially manufactured barbed wire. The Army and Marine Corps needs thousands upon thousands of feet for defensive warfare. Your purchase of War Bo11ds and Stamps will insure sufficient quantity for their needs. Invest at least ten percent of your wages In War Bonds every pay day.

A. scout car l~ a low-slung motor car armored with Mavy steel plate, used ttl transport troops from one point to another. It is of low sil­houette and gives protection against machine gun and other ground fire. A scout car costs $5,000.

You and your neighbors joining together can buy one of these vehl· cles for the Ordnance Department of our army with your purchase of War Bonds. We need hundreds of U1em and need them quickly. Put Ill least ten percent of your wagPs or income into War Bonds every pay day and help y<mr fellow Americans

. top the War Bond Quota in your ,_.o, ....

'. Name and Home Town

*Jim Copley, Weston, W.Va. *Burnie Capps, Chadbourn, N. C. Jim Camp, Clairton, Pa. Bill Dougherty, New Brunsw'k N.j. Don Wells, Fort Pierce, Fla. Buster Currin, Oxford, N. C. Walter Clark, Canton, N. C.

*c. Pat Prestnn, Thomasville, N. C. Jerry Novick, Frackville, Pa. AI Nemetz, Hopewell, Va.

*George Owen, Birmingham, Ala. Bill Webb, Tarboro, N. C.

*Tony Rubino, Elizabeth, Pa. *Buck jones, Buffalo, N. Y. Bud Wedel, Fort Pierce, Fla Ed Royston, Baltimore, Md. Joe Smith, Allentown, Pa.

Pos. E E E E E E E

T T T T T

G G G G G

*Bill Starford, Grafton, W. Va. C Dick Foreman, Albemarle, N. C. C Harry Qark, ~'adesboro, N. C. C

*John Cochran, Birmingham, Ala. HB * J. V. Pruitt, Wilson, N. C. HB

Otis Sacrinity, Reidsville, N. C. HB *Johnny Perry, Raleigh, N. C. HB Clyde Whitener, Morganton, N. C. HB

Don Hipps, Canton, N. C. Elmer Barbour, Durham, N. C. Wilbur Carr, Mars Hill, N. C.

Russell Perry, Durham, N. C. jeff Brogdon, Hopewell, Va.

BB BB BB

FB FB

DEFINITION- Bigamy- Hav- *letterman ing one wife too many. Monogamy -same thing. Manager: Bob Brooks

Ht 6-1 6-1 5-11 5-11 6-2 5-9Y2 6-

6-2 6-6-5-11 5-11

5-10 5-11 5-11 5-11 5-9

6-2 6-2 6-

5-11 5-11

6-5-tt 5-11

5-8 6-6-

5-11 6-l

Wt. 205 200 190 185 195 165 180

205 190 190 205 210

207 210 190 185 210

210 185 185

175 185

185 175 170

185 195 180

180 188

Yr. Age 2 22 2 21 1 19 1 21 I 20 3 20

19

3 21 I 21 I 19 2 22 I 19

3 21 2 21 I 19 I 19 I 18

2 21 I 19 I 19

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Page 4: i.' ' ' ' .-H;.ER:E N:INiE' lt~NTHS AFTER INA- RATION · H. McCord, Bob Barrpws, Stree hearsals w· ill b h e held eac week at called up at the end of the current Specia' to Old

,. '

Page Four Old Gold and Black . . :Friday, Septe~ber'18,_1942·':~ ' . . ., ..... ' ' \

-BOND DRIVE

With t:he , Greeks (Continued from Page One)

Off the Campus Newsom, Jim Clark, Albert Medlock, Pelham Jones, LXA-The Lambda Chis have

Ed Craig, Horace Boone, Harold finally gotten everything in the Evander Arnette, Bill Sparrow, new house in order. The boys

'-------By Betty Stansbury --------' Kelling, Reece, Royce Chesser, are prepared for a year of bi­'E. C. Watson, L. J. Newton, Tom- cycling and thumbing to get to

Miss Emily Crandall, of River­side Drive, N. Y., was in towu for a few days as a guest of Miss Nan Lacy Harris. They left Thurs­day for Greensboro, where they resumed their studies at Woman's College.

Mrs. R. W. Wilkinson, Sr., bas returned to Wake Forest after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harold Co­burn at their summer lodge, Yan­Dix, at Laconia, N.H.

Mr. and Mrs. James Waller are mie Jones, Lee, Joe Wishon, Mar- and from the campus ... Rush­in town for a few days. Mr. Wal- ace Ellis, Bob Smith, Lingle, Jack- ing plans under Rush Leader ler, former basketball star for son, F. Green, Billy Primm, En- Rudd Friday are ~ full swing Wake Forest, is now connected sign :r. I. Davis, '40, and the- lodge expects to get its with the FBI and has just been Charles Allen, John Barrett, Bill full share of the new men .. ;·. transfered to New Orleans, La. Scarborough,"Charles Parker, Gil- Meantin1e Bill·Brantley and frank Mrs. Waller is the former Miss bert Billings, Bill Holloman, Musselman are to be initiated ~ext Jane Vann of Wake Forest. George Whit Tobey, Lowry Mal- week. .

Mr. and Mrs .. G. W. Hooks, Jr., lory, Johnny Perry, John Drake, ---announce the birth of a son, John Ed Hobgood, Herb Thompson, I KA-The Southern Order is L~wis, born Sept. 1. at Rex Hos- Bob Wilson, Charles Froneberger, carrying on a full rushing cam­pita!. ~rs. Hooks lS the forn1er John Conley, Bob Lassater, Ladd paign from its new quarters next Ella Spencer Gill. Hamrick, Lynnwood Cherry, S1d w Miss Jo's. Cafeteria ... Six of

' - .. '

Wentz and A1 Nemetz ..• : Und~ · such Captain Hoyt Dozier the boys are really out meeting the ~osh ... Inciden~y, the fratermty's fears 'over being far· out on the Raleigh road have vanished. They feel they are' right on the campus when they.look at some of the other "lodges~ ·

KS-Open . house for coeds will be the order tonight at the·.-Kappa Sig house, as the fraterJ:?-ity con­tinues its strenuous rushmg cam­paign, which: .bas . been goif;lg strong since the ·first . .. . Bill Clarke Hugh· Currin and Dan Primrd will be inducted into the fraternity shortly.

· Photography· for : class por- <: · traits to be'included in the 1943>.· Howler will begin· next Mon- · day irlternoon, it has· been an­nounced by Ed Wilson, yearbook· editor. ·

Photos will be taken in the Faculty Room of Wait Hall-from: .2 to 5:30 p.m. and from 6:3o·to ., 10 p.m., Wilson said •. Each' :Stu- . dent beginning with the fresh- .. man' class and proceeding. 'in. -alphabetical order, will be 'noti.,. · ;,.-. fied by niail of. the time of .his ·. : . appointment. ,_, _ : ·

For their portrait sittings stu- .· . dents' are requested to -wear · · dark coats, dark ties,. and white . shirts. ·· · ·

Capt. C. S. Black returned to this city last Monday on a five­day leave. He is connected with th~ Chemical Warfare School,

/ The Wake Forest Civic Club Johnson, Chester Morrison, ~he boys have banded together to

met Thursday. night at the High Forbes HeJps Out buy a ~ar and are looking for a SPE-The SPE's have started FREE SUBSCRIPTIONS · Sch~ol Cafetena. The 'F!;ev .. A. R. Robert Forbes, Phil Sowes, Ed 1~an with a. lot of. extra gas and off with a .bang, already pledging . . . ::. Galhmore spoke on Bemg a I Williamson Charlie Parker Ben tires ... With thel.l' eyes set on six men: Jolniny Jones, Bobby BegJ:nnm. g' this ·Weelt, . OLD.,. Prisoner of the Japanese." ' t J·- v' p tne intramural football trophy, . D T

Mr. Robert Vann, of Winston-! MtorLganR, SW. hl\;!t· DJorOon,W · t ·c ru- the KA's are already putting their Creech, Joe Christian, ~n Y- . GOLD AND· BLACK --will be Salem, formely of this city, visit· it I l·e, . es • aro- eleven to work daily. singer, Jim Stubbs and Jesse Sta:- sent free of charge to any Wake

Edgewood Arsenal, Md. Mr Billy Poteat was in town

two days of last week. He is now at Sound School, Key West, Fla. ed in town this week. lyn Vick, John Swain, L. G._Mel- ___ ton ... Initiated into the fra- Forest mati now in the coun-.

vin, Larry Williams, Kenneth ternity were Jinuny Henry,. John- try's services. If you hav~. a._ -~------------·----------Davis, Bennon Vaughn, Ray Col- se~~~Ain ~~:;'~'sh~e ~~it~~ ny Ferguson, Bryan Sandlin, Bur- Wake Forest relative or fnend­lins, John Fowler, Jack Cafcdy, nette Harvey, Joe Smith, Bob in the army, the navy, the ma-Brant Hodnett Barbee, has been

promoted from the rank of Pri­vate 1st Class to Technician 5th Grade. He has been in training at · Will Rogers Field since May, 1942.

T B tt Oli C h across from tl!e high school and Gallimore, Cotton Strickland and · d ~m. urne e, ve rews, o n fo!'lnerly the home of Dr. Vann of Archie Nesbit ..• The boys are rine -corps or the coast guar ;

Wlllwms~ Bob Irey,. the medical school. The . boys settled . in their new home and drop by the paper's office. and Joseph:me H~nry, Gordon Town- I consider themselves fortunate to are p~anning a b~g year, espe.c~al- leave.·his address and be will oe

se.nd, Bill Pnce, Dave .M.arshal1, fl·nd such an abode and are tak- ll t ill put on the m_ ailing list immedi-B ll H T G ff R ly with their new ce o ex ce ng.

BSU Activities Begin Eor Fall With Social James R. Cramer, junior of last

year, is among the naval aviation cadets who are undergoing in­tensive training at the "Annapolis of the Air" at Pensacola, Fla. Following this training he will re­ceive his commission.

1 enson, ommy r.I m, oy ing this housekeeping business se- ately. Ward, MY:'on Folger, Jrm Hayes, riously ... Arthur· Adams, Bill SIGMA PI:_Russ Poole, recent- -------------Red Ga~1ns, Roy Glass,_ Bobby Umphlett and Moody Owens will ly called to tlie army, is going to ~==:::::::::=:::::::::::~ Jones, Gilmer BranCle, Nelle :K:el- be initiated into the bonds next be missed around the house. He.

Sunday Classes Have Fair Attendance; 196 Men Hear Lessons

Wake forest's Baptist Student Union began its activities for the fall term last week with a social, organization of Sunday meetings, and a successful program of ves­per services.

Ray Whitley, a PiKA of several years back, is a captain at the Army Air Force School at Monroe, La.

ly, Joh.'l James, Jack Maxwell, week ... With the loss of Ed was a ''veterari" member. Rush- Save -G· as and TI'res '· ·.·1 .. Jac~ Beck, ~enry Bouill;s, George Gavin to the Army, the PiKA's ing. is going ahead well and the Irvm, Franc1s Cox, Marma Haw-· have chosen as their leader for smoker is planned for October 7. CALL kins,_ ~etty Williams, Iris Willis, the semester Furman Biggs, se- Plans for Homecoming and intra-

Wlllte Ruth Edwards, Ruth ~ia- nior from Lumberton ... Rushing mur.al football are already being' TOM'S TAXI cett, Mary Grace Caudle, V10la is in full swing and the boys look made. ·I··· ._ Hopkins, Ernestine Upchurch, Joel forward to,a big year. Don Brad- _ At Hardwicke's Powers, J. H. Deane, Don Tysin- sher aud D. E. Ward are expected AKPi-Ed Royston, Art Ches- Phone:336-1_ ger, Ralph Young, Gordon Hasty, to visit. son, Charles Powell, 'Horace K:o~- "====:::::.:·=·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·~• John Blanton, Robert Nowell, Gill --- negay and John Conley were m1- -

The social, held last Saturday evening at the home of the Rev. Eugene Olive, college chaplain, at­tracted .approximately 100 fresh­men and transfer students. In charge of the program, which con­s;sted of games and singing, was BSU Social Chairman Carleton Mitchell. Short talks concerning the BSU were given by the Rev. Olive· John McMillan, state BSU president; and Harold •rowns~nd, president of the local orgaruza­tion.

196 Attend Classes On Sunday morning a total of

196 students and soldiers attended the five Sunday School classes which meet in the church audito­rium and in Wait Hall. Twenty­five were present at the Christi~n Service Group in the afternoon. and on Sunday evening 88 gath~ erecl in the church auditorium fur a combined mectinl! of the Bapti::;t Training Unio:1s.

Daily vesper services proved so succes:o:ful during the first week of ~chool, according to Elbert Wethington, devotional chairman of the BSU, that vespers will also be held on Sat.urday evenings J'rom now on.

Col. Frank A. Armstrong . of Hobgood, Wake Forest graduate of 1922, was awarded the Silver Star for his part in the raid on a German-held railroad yard in France on August 17.

Joseph S. Lennon, 1939 gradu­ate, is a second lieutenant attach­ed to the 40th Armored Regiment in the U. S. Army.

First Lt. James Q. Simmons, Jr., has been assigned to duty with the 11th Armored Division at Camp Polk, La. Lt. Simmons received his B. S. from Wake For­est and his M. D. from the Uni­versity of South Carolina in 194l.

First Lt. Donald Lurton Arey, 1932 graduate, has been placed with the new Army Air Forces Flexible Gunnery School at Fort Myers, Fla. While in school here he was a member of LXA social fraternity and the Phi Rho Sigma at Camp Toccoa, Ga. He was an ODK and a member of Gamma Eta Gamma.

Seavy Carroll, who was elected to be president of the law school this year, is now a private in the medical department of the army

Horton, William Hoosier, Paul DS-The Delta Sigs are starting tiated Wednesday night. Delmar Garrison, Dwight Harrell, Hugh off the year with a bang by initi- Bland and John Blanton w~re Haggerman, W. R. Eborn, Walter ating nine men into the fraternity. pledged. The boys ar~ gomg Garrad, Pete Clark, Mac Crowder, They include Don Matthews, J. E. ahead with weekly meetmgs at-

Glasgow Gives, Too McLean, Pat Preston, John Fowl- though they are .working under Jesse Glasgow, Neil Williams, er, Ed Williamson, Herbert the handicap of being without a

Al Sweel, Baird Paschal, Jimmy Thompson, Warren Smith, James house. Stubbs, Bois Henry, the Rev. A. R. Gallimore, Porky Caddell, "Shy­lock," .r. R. Jeffreys, James Crisp, A Word a Day A. B. Reaves, W. E. Bradley, Bill By PROF. WATT A. NUTT Phillips, Hugh Ramseur, Beth -Special to Old Gold and Black­Perry, David Moody, Owen Hipps, , A xylograf is an engraving on Dean Lois Johnson, Arthur Ches- wood, while xylographical means son, Chester Overby, pertaining to wood-engraving. Be

R. G. Purrus, Joe Blackshear, sw·e to watch next week for an­;;-0e Edwards, Rawls Frazier, Bob other exciting word! Gilliam, Ellis Harrell, Joe Fleet-wood, Joe Woodward, Jim Ed- -------------wards, William Bellamy, Robert I GETS SCHOLARSHIP Edwards, Jack Isley, A. L. ·Den-ton, Jr., Harold Lloyd, Bill Water­field, Glynn McFadden, Clarence Roberts, Darius Womack, Larkin Crum, Carl Bailey, Robert Sheets, Hubert Gibson, Edgar Bridger, Robert Creveling, Joe Pointer, Lever Lee, Hugh Kegler, Henry Rodger, Gilmer Brouet, Lloyd Liles, Thomas Bland,

John J. McMillan, senior here and president of the North Car­olina Baptist Student Union,

ADMEN WANTED Peck Sherrill, business man­

ager of The Ho!J'ler, announces that advertising sellers for the yearbook are needed badly and asks that' those with previ.ous experience . selling advertise­ments who are interested apply to him for positions on the bus­iness staff.

Clothes Make the Man

lnsur~ Your Clothes

---::;::;::;::;::;:::::::::::::::: at CampToccoa, Ga. He was an r • ODK and a member of the Gam-

Wayne Daugherty, J. A. West Russell Howell, Henry Adams, T. c. Britt, Graham Battle, Earl Bal­lard Earl Searcy, Auzmon Grady, Bill,Davis, Bob Turnage, Bob Gil­liam and many anonymous donors.

· was awarded this week the $200 Elizabeth Lowndes scholarship given annually by the Margaret Fund Committee of the South­ern Baptist Convention to the Margaret Fund student who has during three years of. college most distinquished himself in scholastic work, leadership, per­sonality and character.

McMillan, who was chosen from several hundred Margaret Fund students in colleges and

OF LONG WEAR AND GOOD LOOKS

With the Boys In the Service

Captain Dallas Morris, 28, Charlotte native and former Wake Forest athlete, was fatally injured in a plane crash near Nashville, Ga., last Friday while mak­ing a routine training flight. He was stationed at Moody Field, Valdosta.

Prior to his enlistment in De­cember. 1939, Morris attended Wake Forest and starred in foot­ball. basketball and baseball. During his senior year he was captain of the baseball team. Lat­er he played professional ball in the Coastal Plain League.

He is survived by his mother, Mrs. J. L. Morris, of Charlotte, and several brothers and sisters.

This week Ferd Davis, 1940-41 editor of OLD GOLD AND BLACK, writes that he is at the Army Air Force field at Monroe, La., as an aviation cadet, second in command of his squadron. He says that there is one consolation to army life at Monroe: "The food is the best I've had since lea':'ing home."

Col. Caleb B. Haynes, many­times-decorated 1917 graduate of Wake Forest, was nominated Sept. 14 by President Roosevelt for temporary promotion to the rank of brigadier general in the Army Air Force. Haynes is now chief of the American Bomber Command in China.

ma Eeta Gamma.

PAN-HEL

(Continued from Page One)

Jim Justice, Lambda Chi Alpha from Hendersonville, to the post of secretary, and Jack Donnell, Pi Kappa Alpha from Climax, to the post of treasurer.

ARMY RESERVE (Continued from Page One)

that age. It is emphasized, how­ever that they will be allowed to c~mplete the semester in which the age is reached. The set-up, then, is this for members of the Army Enlisted Reserve:

1) Those now of draft age will probably be called at the end oi

' universities all over the South, made grade A in 75 credit hours and grade B in 24 here to take the scholarship.

The Margaret Fund is a scholarship fund for the sons and daughters of Southern Bap­tist missionaries who have serv­ed extensively on home and :for­eign fields. McMillan's fat?er is stationed in Soochow. Chma.

See GLENN ROGER on White Truck of Service or Call

Wilkinson Cleaners

Phone 375-1 Opposite R. R. Underpass

Wake Forest, N. C. Further business transacted

Tuesday night as the Council met for elections included an amend­ment to the constitution, which formerly stipulated that all offic­ers of the organization must have served on it for at least a year before their election. As the con­stitution now reads after amend­ment, only the president and vice­president must have served a year before election.

the current semester. ~~~~~~~=~~~=~ 1,.._...-------------~ 2} Those who have not yet j=

FACULTY (Continued from Page One)

French in addition to her regular duties.

reached draft age will probably be called the semester after that m which they reach that age, but not until.

EMBLEM (Continued from Page One)

disgrace OLD GOLD AND BLACK does not know. This is 1

a problem for either the Student Council or the student body tCo solve. One thing, however, is sure: whatever step is taken toward ~e­demption it must be a step which is a de&ite and substantial con­tribution to the war effort. No half-way measure will do.

Members of the faculty who are absent this year, pursuing war du­ties, are: AI Dowtin, Alumni Sec­retary, with the FBI in Cali­fornia;_ Dr. C. S. Black, professor of chemistry, with the Chemical Warfare School at Edgewood Ar- From our correspondent in the senal in Maryland; Dr. Nevill Is- tiny kingdom of TZYPTHD comes bell, professor of chemistry, with the welcome news that the people the Chemical Warfare Division, of that lovely little country don't U. S. A., Dill Field, Tampa, Fla.; like Hitler either. W. C. Archie, professor of French, ;::::::===========::;

w~ A. YORK "A Good Watchmaker"

"Ask the Seniors" with

WANTED: Two attractive, neat waitresses for Bus Terminal in Clarks­ville, Va. Apply to

J. B. GILL Of Clarksville, Va.

For A Good Snack or Dr.ink

Come to

SHORTY'S

ED D-I·E' S

Welcomes You-

Students See Us For

A Square Meal That Can't Be Beat

'

Compliments of

S. W. Brewer Heavy - Fancy

Groceries Wake Forest, N. C.

Forest Theatre Wake Forest, N. C. -

Fri., Sept. 15-Joel McCrea, Barbara

Stanwyck in . THE GREAT MAN'S LADY

Sat., Sept. 19-Double Feature Gene Autry in

CALL OF THE CANYON Bruce Bennett in

SABOTAGE SQUAD

Sun., Sept. 20-Linda Darnell, John

Sheppard in THE LOVES OF EDGAR

ALLEN POE

\

Mon., Tues.,· Sept. 21-22-Diana Barrymore, Robert Cum­

mings, K~y Francis, in BETWEEN US GIRLS

Also latest issue of MARCH OF TIME

Wed., Sept. 22-Dorothy Lamour in

CHADH...WNA

'-

Thurs., Sept. 24-Cary Grant, Jean Arthur,

Ronald Coleman in THE TALK OF THE TOWN

Francis Mackie, younger broth­er of Dr. G. C. Mackie, college physician, is an aviation cadet at the Army Air Force field at Mon­roe, La. He graduated in 1941, a member of Kappa Alpha fraterni­ty.

assistant director of the airplane I mechanics school at Sheppard Field, Tex.; Coach Hank Bartos, enrolled in the Pre-Flight Naval Training program at the Univer­sity of North Carolina; and Coach Bub Walker, who is work­ing in a Birmingham, Ala., de­fense plant. Dr. C. A. Seibel't has also resigned from the French teaching staff to become head of the modem languages department at the Lake Placid, N. Y., prepara­tory school.

Brawley Jewelry Co. 235 Fayetteville St.

Raleigh .JONES

Hardware Co MILLER MOTOR COMPANY

.... __ --... James G. Early, business man-ager of the 1941 Howler, has re­cently been commissioned an en­sign in the Naval Reserve. He was listed in "Who's Who in American Colleges and Univet'si­ties" his senior year here.

Roy Powell of Wake Forest has been promoted to staff sergeant at Fort Jackson. He has been in the army since September, 1939. .. ~-

Another Wake Forest. boy,

A two-line filler isn't the easiest thing in the world to write.

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