carl college forest haggard interceptions wake

Transcription

carl college forest haggard interceptions wake
. r.
•
I
~nl~- nub 'Ilurk
.· .BEAT THOSE
·.CAROLINA
TAR HEELS
_,,, .
.Volume XXXIII. Number 4
**
Wa~e
Forest, N.C., Frid•ay, October 10,1947
Frosh Pick Candidates
To· Run For 3 P·ositions
DAMES CLUB
MED.STUDENTS ' :
/
I
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' Polling to Take Place on
Wednesda{; Many
. Compete for _JObs
Profs Are Doing·
Research. Work
DEACONS
SUPPORT
Phone 304..;6
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**
GIVE THE
The Dames Club, known
last year .as the Veterans
Wives'
Club,
wili meet
Thursday afternoon at 3:30
p. m. in the Recreation Room
of the Music and Religion
Building, Mrs. ;Ruth Diz~;
president of the organization
announces. All members of
last year's · organization and
all wives of veteran and nonveteran students are Invited
to attend this meeting and
to bring their children.
Fifi Cre.lghton Chosen
F'or Lead In New Play
The· Coriunittee on Admissions at the Bowman "
Gray School .of 1\!ediclne
will be on the campus early in December for the
purpose of interviewing
candidates for admission
to the class of 1948.
'All i pre-medical students
who.exped. to apply should
complete their applications
,Photographer's Car Debefore November 15.
stroyed by Fire; Much
Blaze Destroys
Howler Photos
Other Members of Kiss
Xnd ·Tell Cast Are • .
Chosen
Fifi Creighton,
junior from
Tmr!een candidates
for
the
Statesville, was selected. at cast:freshman offic~ were chosen by
ings last Monday to play the lead.
the class of ''51 last Tuesday night Carnegie Foundation Aids
ing role in the Little Theater profu the class's nominating convenduction, Kiss and Tell, it has
Studies of Five Fac'"'4 •
tion. From these ca~didates will
been ann·ounced by· Mack ParEquipment
Lost
ulty Members
be choseri
president, a vice
rish, student
director
of the
president and a secretary-treasurAbout forty Howler photographs group.
·er next Wednesday- at polls to be
Five members of the Wake Forwere lost ·in a fire which almost
Fifi, new in dramatics, will
set up in Student Center.
est faculty were engaged in excompletely destroyed the automo- play the part of Corliss Archer•
. Dagwood _Kornegay, student tensive research work in 'their
bile driven by Mr. Tom Redmon, This is her first part in a Little
t, .announced late fields during the spring and sumHowler
photogrqtlher, about 12: 15 Theater production. The part of
body P....dden'
.. ....,..
·
mer months. This
work was
P. M. last Saturday afternoon on Dexter FraDklin went to Lansford
Wednesday nig~t that the fresh- made :P'ossible by-grants from the
the Durham road. No one was :Jolly, junior from Shelby. Jolly,
man. nominations· made W:ed- Carnegie Foundation. Dr. E. C.
injured.
a transfer from Gardner-Webb
nesday had been deelar~ null Cocke (Biology), Dr. Budd E.
Mr. Redmon was returning to Junior College, had several parts
void. This action WaS tak- Smith
(Biology),
Dr. H. S.
"If you don't believe .there';:- a of News Bureau, . Editor of Alumen, he said,- after it was learned Stroupe (History), Dr. :r. A. real Wake Forest spirit, an you ni News, Professor of Education, Elkin, N .. C., with his equipment in plays there.
that, a quoruni of the freshman Easl~ (Relig~on), and Dr. H. L. have to do is move around and Examiner for entering freshmen, and the negatives of two days pic- :Jim Hobbs, .11ast pre.sident and
tures. His assistants, lv.riss Betty. vice-president of the Little TheaclasS . ·was not .present ·at the s_nuggs (~nglish) carried out va- meet the alumni.". These words Director. of Placement Bureau, and Pardue
and Mr. Clifton Woollin ter and .a member of Alpha Psi'
meeting. 'Another reason given rrous studies. .
.
were spoken by a man who (ac- Director of Practice Teaching.
were·
riding
him.
Omega is cast as Robert Pringle.
was that no announcement had Tlle Carne~e ~ound_a..,tion . of cording to legend) kp.ows every During the absence of . the Dean, About halfwith
way to Durham, Mr. :Jim is from Charlotte and has
·d
·
.
OLD
GOLD
AND
New
York,
m conJunctiOn ~th graduate of Wake Forest by his he performed duties which fell in
)
been rna e 1~
. Wake Forest
College. prov1des first name,
'
the province of Dean of the Col- Redmon noticed a small· :flame i!t been active as a member of the
BLA~K stat~J!g t~e place: of the.. an annual fUnd of $5,000 fo! five
:Jasper L. Memory, Professor lege and Director of
Summer the: back seat. When he stopped, Little Theater since entering colthe fire got worse. He began to lege. Mary Gilmer Cocke, alSo
meetmg; which IS reqwred by years . for the purpose of vitaliz- of 'Education and resigping Alum- School.
what he could out.
a member of Alpha Psi and the
constituti«.m.
. ·
ing fustruction in certain colleges ni Secretary, came to Waka ForHis activities before returning pull
All the films except about forty Little Theater, has the role of
Presidential nominees are:
of the south. Wake F6rest is one est in 1929 to teach the buys how to Wake Forest were as varied as of those taken last Friday and Mrs. Franklin. Mary Gilmer di.
Jim B. Alexander, Greensboro, of five colleges chosen to work to teach. He was appoidted by
all of the
identification cards rected Out of the Frying Pan
N. c. Jim
was president· of with the Carolina-Duke Univer- Dr. Gaines to manage the new
were saved. Howevc:r; not only 'which was presented during the
North Carolina and• Greensb<>ro sity Center. The grant is intend- bureau in addition
his teac:h- ·
the car but also
his personal summer sessi.on of '47
, Hi-y last year and has been act.. ed to be used by the regular mem- ing. Since that time, Professor
equipment
was
an
almost total
George Mallonee, junior from
. ive in Student Council .and stu- bers of the faculty who wish to Memory has
played an active
loss.
Few
Burns
Winston-Salem,
is cast as the brat,
dent civic affairs for two years. carry on research in their fields. part in publicizing school a~tiviRaymond Pringle.· George has
. Bev. Barge, Durham, N. C.
Studied AJg~e
ties as well as keeping the alumni
Mr. Redmon suffered a few su- been active in all dramatics, and
Bev graduated . from Riversi,de
Dt:" Cocke made a study of the informed. '
perficial burns while saving the served as · vice-president of the
Military Academy where he par- blue-green algae ,(nyxophyceae) · He h~ld this job for eighteen
negatives. His personal loss · of Little Theater. He also served .. as
ticipated actively in sports, · dra- of ·North Carolina. This· is the years and he~ped shape and create
equipment is far greater than that publicity
chairman of "Blithe
ma, music, and school publica- first work of any extent done in the- Al~mni . News. Eight year~
of the Howler although the exact Spirit" last spring.
tions.
this field in North Carolina. Dr. after h1s arrival, he became the
extent ·of damage had not been
Plays Mr. Archer
Edgar Christman, Jacksonville, Cocke covered 83 counties of the first editor
of the magazine.
determiiled at the last report.
Mr.
Archer
is played by Johnny
Fla.· }l:d
attended Lee · High state and made over 1600 collec- When the offi~of .Alumni SecreLoss of equipment may delay
School where he was president of tions. He identified some 162 tary was cr,eated,
Profe~sor
Gardner,
sophomore
from Lumsome of the rest of the work here
his class, a member of the Na- specimens which had never before Memory contu~u~d ~s e~htor
which includes pictures of a few berton. :Johnny ·is a Little Thea~ional. Honor Society, and ~i-Y, been reported in this state. It through th.e ~drrumstratwns of Mr.
groups and of some' administra- ter member and was in Out oj
m which he_ held several off1ces. seems likely that his res~ar~h has Dowtin and ~he Reverend Mr.
tive officers and some .Fraternity the Frying Pan. Paul Moyle, anHe was also on .the track team brought to light e~ht heretofore Baucome. In 1944, h~ succeede~
officers.
·
·
,other veteran of Out of the Fryi!'-9
~d scho?l pa~.e!'. and took part unknown .. species. on_e paper. has M!'· B~u~~me. ~ _actmg ~ll._ln.nl_ •
. -Mr... Redmon is. e:x.:pected·_ hack Pan, will play the part of Lenny
.m forenSic activ1tie~..
been ·&<:i::epted .for 'publication ,by Secretary _while ·still retaining a ..
at Wake Forest to retake the pic~ Aicher. PaUl~ a· Little ··Theater
Other Candidates
the Journal of the Elisha Mitchell full teachmg schedule.
tures which were lost and to pledge is a junior from Lumberphotograph any others not yet ton. Vivian Snuggs, .the third Fry.
PROF. MEMORY
Bob Mauney, Richfield, N. C. Scientific Society. Three
otlier
The office brought with it the
taken about October 16th. A def- ing Pan returnee, is a Sophomore
Bob was elected president of his papers are in preparation for fu- added responsibilities 'of. attendclass for three consecutive years elusion in later iSsues of this jour- ing alumni meetings throughout those of recent years. After re- inite· statement will be· issued at from Wake Forest. Also a Litand was president of the local nal.. Papers on- this subject will the stat~ and the maintaining of ceiving his B. A. degre~ from a later date regarding the exact tie Theater pledge, Vivian Will
youth organization and F. F. A. be presented before learned so- an elaborate file system of the Wake Forest in 1921, he worked time he will be here to complete play the part of Dorothy Pringle.
He ·has won several honors in cieties in the near future. ·
16,000 Wake Forest graduates. for and received his M. A. at Col- the contracted work.
Uncle George will .be portrayed
by Leldon Kirk of Orlando, Flor.public speaking.
Dr. Smith worked on a new spe- These files are listed alphabeti- umbia University in
1925, and
ida. A senior, Leldon is a LitRay-'Jones, Kinston, N. C. Ray cies of the genus Salix occuring on cally, geographically, by profeS- complete& all the work for his
tle Theater member and has apis a veteran. :ae was not availa- the coastal plain of South Caro- sions of the grc:i.duates and by the Ph. D. except the dissertation. PHI SOCIETY PLANS
One Mad Night and
ole :for further information at lina. This work is partially com- year of graduation:
While at Columbia,
Professor INITIATION MONDAY peared in
other plays. Billie Bryan, fresh- press time, but it was announced pleted but it will necessitate anIt is a well k:bo\vn fact that the Memory was president of the
this week that he has been given other summer's work\ before the professor holds more titles, offi- Southern Club for the 1927-28
In{tiation of new members will man from Wake Forest, was acta part in the Little .Theater's findings can be ready for pubi- ci~l or othe~se, than any other session.
be the feature of tne program in ive in high school dramatics and
coming "production. .
cation. This study has carried Dr. man on the· campus. At present,
Professor Memory's athletic ca. the meeting of the Philomathesian will appear in the role of Mrs.
For vice-president':
Smith to South Carolina and the he is Alumni Secretary, Dil"ector
-See MEMORY, Page a-:Literary Society Monday evening, Archer.' Another freshman, VirDoyle Bedsole, Fayetteville, N. New York Botanical Gardens. '
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __::_:_____:.·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:,_ _ _ _ _~ October 13, at 7:15. Following ginia Dickens, from Wilson, will
c. Doyle is already a member of Dr. Stroupe is preparing a Histhe initiation ceremony, a re•;ep- take the part of Mildred Pringle.
Ray .tones, a freshman from
the Wake Forest band and on the tory df the Biblical Recorder.. The
I 0
tion for old and new membe;s
and. a Little Theater
tumbling team. I.n high school Recorder which was founded in
will be held under thP. general Kinston
he was a cheerleader, a member 1833 has served as an important
direction of Jeane WalkPr, sec- pledge, will portray Mr. Willard.
Private Earheart will be payed by
of the debating team, dramatic means of communication among
retary of the society.
· society, Student Coupcil, Band, the Baptist churches of this state,
At the meeting of the society Clyde Mitchell, a freshman from
team.
,
since its founding in 1-833. The
held Monday, September 29 Joe Charlotte. Louise, the maid will be
Dave Clark, Greenville, N. C. Recorder, the Baptist State ConEditor Campbell McMillan anThis week Old Gold and Black Miller gave an extemporaneous characterized by Carol Oldham,
Dave has participated and earn- vention, and Wake Forest were nounced this week the permanent found diversity of opinion among oration on "Having a P:.Irpose." a Little Theater pledge who ap.) ed letters in ·every major sport, founded within thre~
years of staff of the 1948· Howler. The local caterers in a poll to detetm- The meeting was cut short in or- peared in the Red Lamp. Carol,
.,.
-See FROSH, Page 8-See RESEARCH, Page 8following men have been ap- ine how many of them plan to der that the picture for the year a freshman from Gulf, was active in high school dramaties.
pointed: business manager, James join President Truman's "self-de- book might be taken.
Howerin; associate editor, :John nial" campaign to help feed hun'
Hardaway; assistant editors, Walt gry Europe by observing meatFriedenburg, :Judson Trueblood, less Tuesdays and eggless ThursAll Ed Friedenburg; productions days.
editors, Berne Eisenburg, and Bill
The college cafe~eria led· the
~eks
Clarke; Art Editor, Glenn Willis. way for the rest by joining the
Section' editors for the Howler program last Tuesday, the same
Today marks the eleventh and ing unstintingly of his time while will be: preface, Jesse Glasgow, day the plan appeared in the
By Harpld Hayes
the stalwart students were stand·-twelfth o.E a ~oup of addresses here, in spite of pressing engage- faculty and administration, ' H. press for the f_irst time. Other
The date was August 17, 1947, ing ankle-deep in blood.
being made during the week on ments in other parts of the coun- Leldon Kirk; Law School, Bob La- restaurants, for the most part,
Realizing that the erection of
the ge~eral thesis "A Faith For try.
'
cey; honorary organizations and are ·deciding to· wait a little while only three weeks before school
Ten worried their future home depended apon
Today" by the eRv. Dr. Harold
Dr. Tribble the man is general- fraternities, Mike Seitz; student to see if the idea will catc.h on officially opened.
W. Tr~ble, president of the And- ly quiet. in bearing, and gives activities, Tommy Staplet•m ar:d generally throughout the country. students, Wake Forest men all, their unity and cooperation• they
grievances
and
over-Newton Theological School. one a first impression of a genial, George Mallonee; sports, Bill Me- "Dick frye announces' that he is anxiously awaited a truck-load of mended their
Dr. Tribble, one of the coun- 1well-educated man with conserva. Ilwain; fraternities, George Mallo- willing to observe the plan in his lumber which had been ·due for wounds and set about the contry's best-known religious educa- tive tastes.
·
nee; campus life, Judson '!"rue- restaurant if most of his corrtpe- four days. These men had giv- struction of a six-room house to
be finished and furnished in three
tors; is a Virginian by birth but
But once he takes the pulpit, he blood; special
feature, Bynum tition also decides to cooperate. en up their -rooms for the fall weeks.
semester
intending
to
build
a
a Floridian by adoption, and is is almost a different man. His Shaw.
P. D. Weston feels the same way
T~eir tasks were many. Nails,
house between the summer and
now living in what he calls "the oratory, while not fiery, is notCopy editors will oe Wait Frie- about the situation.
far north."
ed for its vigor and clarity.
' denburg and Ed Friedenburg. Dick ,."Shorty's" assistant says t_hat fall sessions which would accom- boards, piping, wiring, a garbage.
There can and a commode all· had to be
His addresses have been specific
Dr. Tribble's list of attendance Harris will be in charge nf pho- his place will probably coope- modate all ten of them.
sub-heads of his ·general topic- ln educational ins~itutions abroad tography.
·
rate in the plan if the others do. were no carpenters, plumbers cr procured and then placed togeth"Faith in God," . "Faith in the is outstanding: The University ~f
C. W. Fort, however, whose electricians among them; mere- er in such a way that a house
American boys 'vould be standing where now
. Universe,"
"Faith in Christ," Bonn, 1931; the University of
restaurant is in the bus station, is ly ten ·typical
with
red-hot
blood
coursmg there was nothing but ragweed
"Faith in the Holy Spirit," "Faith Basel, 1936; the 'University of Ed- DEBATERS RECEIVE
very definitely .opposed to the
their veins and steely, de- and lost golf balls.
in Self," "Faith iri the Bible,'' inburgh, 1937.
·
·
MIAMI INVITATION conservation plan. He serves through
The E!ectrician
"Faith in Man,". "Faith in God's
Phi Beta Kappa
hard-working people mostly who termined eyes, filled with the
quiet, self-confidence of demoPurpose."
Each man was
assigned the
He is a member of Phi Beta
The Wake Forest ·debate squad need their vitamins, and he,doe'> cratic youth.
task to which he was best fitted.
Daily Convocations
Kappa, i.a Mason ·and Rotarian, has received an invitation from not belieye that .we should feed
Cords of Wood
Posey Downs who once owned a
The daily convocations, morn- and a inemoer of the Beta Theta the University of Miami at Coral the people we hav.e had to "whip"
in
the
war.
Sounds
of an approaching ve- flash-light was given the job of
ing and evening, have been sup- ·Pi, Phi Mu Alpha, Kappa Sigma Gables, Florida, according to an
hicle filled their ears; twenty electrically w1nng the house.
plemented by numerous personal and Tau Kappa Alpha fratermties. announcement made Thursday
· conferences, fora with· specific He is also a member of the board night by Professor Aycock. The ··;.·,_.....,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.,.........,.._.""' eager eyes turned toward 1he When queried as to how l1e did
Durham highway, and there- such a complicated job witn so
groups .of students and with mix- 0f managers, Louisville Children's forensic organization at the Flor-'
FACULTY
way off in the distance--could! little expejience; Posey fidgeted
ed groups and by class visitation. Agency, Kentucky Y. M. C. A. ida school. also a member of Pi
be seen a truck loaded with c0rds with a rusty nail which was imA J;eligious
Emphasis· Week
A professor at the Southern Kappa Delta, expressed·a desire
All faculty memben who
bedded in the sole of his right
and cords of lumber.
without being so
named, the Baptist Theological Seminary in to be included on the itinerary of
have· not been getting their
"Huzzah!" shouted the youths foot and modestly replied: "'Vell,
credit. for the week's activities Louisville from 1929 until 1947, any contest tour that the· Wake
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
as they pounded one another in I just considered each light in
goes :to the Wake . Forest Baptist Dr. Tribblrfs books include: Our squad might make in their direceach week are requested by
glee. Petty grievances and per- the house as a miniature flashChurch's active pastor, the Rev. Doctrines (1929), FTom Adam to .tion. As yet, no plans have been
the editor to call 3046 Wedsonal annoyances with eac·~l oth- light bulb. My only problem then
Mr. Ebgen~ Olive, who leaves his Moses
(1934)
and Salvation made. ·
·nesday afternocm in order to
er, however, found an outlet in was to get juice to each bulb.
·pastorate on 1 Novemb'er to be- (1940).
It-has recently been made pub...
have their names added to
the force of their pounding and by which was easily solved since you
·' come-Alumni Secretary of the ColHe accepted the presidedcy of lie that Henry Huff has been askthe
mailing list.
the time the truck had arrived don'~ need batteries when you allege. At Mr. Olive's, insistence, the Andover-Newton Theological ed by the Wake Forest High.
at the present site of their home,
-See HOUSE, Page 8Dr. Tribble has come and is giv· Seminary in 1947.
--,:H. L. K.
-See DEBATE, Page'8-
a
L. .Memory Retires
Alumni Secretary
and
.....
to
Ed"t
Names c·afes· DI.VI.ded
Yearbook Men On- Meat Plea
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Dr·. Tribble Addresses Students In'
Series of Talks on 'faith Today'
r
Local Students Combine Talents
To Build House In Three W
Old Gold and Black
Page Two
Friday, October 10, 1947
Co-eds Confronted U:i#h High Prices, Low Skirts Council. Appoints Nine
HERE ARE THE NEW STYLES
Guest Editors· Man Social.. Committee
by Bob Grogan
women's
skirts continue :a
ak the newspaper columns m
:aste American daily papers. an~
:find a much more promu:en
. the fall fashion magazmes
place m
on all newsstands nowadays.
Articles of feminine apparel
generally find a place for comment
when members of the, str~ner sel{
have nothing better to expound on
with a certain degree of knowledge. Now, some of the ~omen
. 1.n1·ng hand in. hand w1th the
are JO
men as the subJect of l~mger
kirts-a fad rapidly becomu~g a
~ashion. Back to .the "Gay Nmeties" they are saymg.
. ,
"My look at that classy lass1e s
skirt. ' Another inch ~anger ~n~
she would be steppmg on lt;
prompts one member of the Wake
Forest male population, as _the
passing parade of short, me.dl~
and long skirts traverse the mtncate brick patterns of the_ campus. With that he turns to h1s ?al,
his face marked by several gnmaces.
.
Minutes later the same vo_tce
bursts out "Look at that ch1ck
with the pr~-war skitt." The two
. lads gaze intently as another coed strolls across the campus.
The women are the ones concerned with the drastic change,
excluding the :fashion designers
and manufaCturers who get paid
for such creations. And, what
are the women doing to curb the
new change? In many parts of
the state women organized "Just
Below the Knee" clubs, drew up
petitions and sent the same to
manufacturers. But other women
sat back to observe the hustle and
bustle of activity.
Who Revolted
What class of women revolted to
the change of style;> Professional
women offered the first objections.
Their complaints ranged in the
category of inconvenience in pursuing their duties. The general
consensus indicated that the feminine sex was faced with the possibility of buying a complete new
wardrobe.
The "cafe society" damsel . disregards the criticism somewhat.
Into this class many of Wake
Forest's co-eds drift. They love
the new style, the long skirt so
many inches below the knee, or so
many -...inches from the floor, the
suits with padded hips, the boxpleated skirts and the "semi-bustle" type of <lress.
Two other groups of women
hold varied opinions and tend to
disagree. This third group is composed of the tall girls and the
short girls. First, the tall girls
seem to like the new fashion. Although they decline to comment,
they do not burst forth in unexcusable language. And, from a
man's point of view the tall women have the advantage. The
long skirt worn by a tall girl adds
a touch of race and poise to her
:figure.
-·
· The short girl usually finds her
short stature more noticeable with
the ankle length skirts. The long
Plan of Paper
Dagwood Kornegay, president of
the student ~ody, announced 'last
night the appointment of .a social·
committee, which he hopes to' inaugura!e as a standard committee
every ye~r. .The pu~pose of the
group, thls year and m the years
to come, will be to "provide all
round social life on the campus."
To serve on this first committee
Kornega~ named Reda Umstead:
member from the student COUJOcil;
Lucy Rawlings, chairman of the
Social Standards Committee a
coed group; the four class p;esidents: -Kermit Caldwell, president
of the Senior Class· Charlie- Medlin, president of the Jl.lllior Class,
Bob Drake president of the sophomore clas~, and the yet unnamed
presJ'den t f th e F reshman Class;
two seniors, Kent Benneit and
Bob Sawyer; and one Junior,
John Mathis .
The com~ittee will meet at an
early .date to elect a chairman and
make plans for campus entertainment.
Kornegay emphasized the fact
that this is not a temporary group .
It is hoped that it will be·come a
permanent part of the student
government organization .and be
provided for in the new constitu-
"Everything points to the su~­
cess of the group," Kornegay stat:..
ed. He point~d out ,that the PanHellenic Council has opened its
books to the committee, will help·
in obtaining necessary bands, and
will give advice in any social
:
.
matter that ~onfronts the group.
Under this setup plans can be
ma~e for class dances, ~~~ural~·.
soc~als, and other actiVltles! co-o
or?.mat~d through the . co1~1mttee.
It IS hoped that this will pro"Vid~ ~~r ~~e renew~ of .~ore cl~ss
acbv1hes, ~e sa1d.
It can melude anything that the student
~o~y ~ants, and since. the i~ea is
In Its infancy, suggestions will be
appreciated."
Are you teeming with ideas?
Would you like to see them in a
magazine?
·
"Mademoiselle" fashion maga~l·ne ask's that of the ladies and of
~
the men, if they ~are to explore
the fashion world to find out just
what the best dressed woman will
wear in 1948 or even· this fall.
..td, the magazine asks the question of the girls of Wake Forest
Coliegel
What Demon Deaconess aspires
to have a position of guest editor
of the fashion magazipe? That is
what the magazine has in mind
and for the girls interested in the
fashion world.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j
.•~ houldn't be too difficult
That
.
.
for the girls of Wake Forest. Of
course,
they could tell what
length "jeans" t~e girls of the
ca~pus . are wearmg, what color
Opposite Bus Str,r.tirYn.
pla1d shrrt the. campus beauty faCall For ~d Deliver
vors, or , the slZe teddy bear the
little lady desires on the foot of
or
her bed.
.
Fix
While
You Wait
Ru~or. has It. that ,co?ege fads
are still mcrea.smg, and, -from the
We Specialize in .
looks of Wake Forest campus,
LADIES SHOE REPAIR
there could be no doubt. The
PHONE 3756
hair-dos are still "out of the ttii~on~.-:------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
world."
_
What of the length of women's
skirts this fall? Certainly, the
college girl has some idea or to
what extent the drop should be.
or maybe the "J1ist-Below-theKnee Club" will originate on the
oth
campus as a fad, just as
er
schools are doing.
Wake Forest, N. C.
The surprising part of the whole
set-up is that people get paid for
ZENITH RADIOS dictating what the girls wear, ~v­
en to bathing suits, if they can be
'
called that and retain the original
AND .SAMSON
-See MADEMOISELLE, Page 3-
I
°
ry dancer en]·oyed himself
skirts do nothing to add height, eve
opine many.
almost as much as if ~ex Beneke
Co-eds on Wake Forest campus had been on the podium, it is reTh · ported. Tables for bridge were
fall into many categories.
elr provi·ded for stu.dents not wishing
comments surpass the imagination of the critics. Overhead wit- to dance, and refreshments were
icisms include these:
sold by the host group.
"Why • Myrt, I let tbe hem out
The dance was chaperoned by
Of an old skirt and you can see t?e
t 111 Prof. and Mrs. Thane MacDonald,
old hemline as if it were s
there. Gee, I've pressed it and Prof. Wesley M. Bagby, faculty
pressed it."
advisor of the group, and Mrs. L.
"Boys won't Dad boil when I D. Gill, advisor from the local
tell h~ my old suit is out of church.
style? I simply must have anThe MYF is making plans for a
other suit."
? barn dance, featuring :J;:Pund and
"How do I look, roommate. square·-dancing, to be held at thE.'
Does this new skirt show enough Community House early in Octoof my legs?"
ber. In November, a Sadie Haw... "Gee, honey, what do you sup- kins Day dance will be sponsored
pose Johnny w.ill say when he by
the organization.
Prese:It
sees me in this?"
·
plans call for a MYF-sponsored
"Me I'm not worrying, for I'm dance at the Community· House
just g~nna sit back 'til they strike every other Friday night.
a happy level."
-:;:~:;;:;;:;;::;;;~:;;:;;:~;;;;;:~~;:.:::;::;;::;:;;:~
The last girl surmised the ge~- •
eral thought- sit back 'and wait.
ForaWho ran tell? Before many years
the trend will reverse its dir~ction
QUICK SERVICE
unless fashion designers destte to
force long trains onto the latest
AND TASTY
creations.
Wonder if the Scots are worrying about thei.r kilts nowadays.
FOOD-
METHODIST DANCE
TERMED SUCCESS
SMITH FURNITURE CO.
.
.
THIEM'S
STUDY - BED LAMPS
OIL RANGES
1st Store on Fayetteville St.
For~ur
Recordings
_FURNITURE
Sehobl Supplies
(Lamps, Stationery, Pens
and Pencils)
Greeting Cards
(for• all occasions)
James E. Thiem
it's
105 Fayetteville St.
Dial 22913
Raleigh, N.C.
Formal Clothes
cXIAGARA
Here you will :find the Finest Food in Town, the Tastiest Sandwiches Fountain Service that's Unsurpassed; Pipes of every
kind, ~ake, size, shape, and design; Tobac.cos of all kinds and
sizes· Toilet Articles of all kinds; Stationery, Jewelry; those
bett:r than ever Sheaffer Pens and Pencil Sets; that delicious
Pangburn's Candy, and hundreds of other items you need and
use. Make our store your headquarters, where you will :find
"TOBY" - "VERNON" _:. "LITTLE JOE" -."BILL"
·.
"DONALD" - "L. T." and yours truly, "P. D."!
ready and willing to serve you.
~·
GENERAL
(Popular, Jazz and Classical)
To All Wake Forest Students to Visit the
College Sod.a Shop and. Grill
\
CARD
TABLES
.
AN OPEN INVITATION-
WELCOME STUDENTS, ONE and ALL, to the
SMITH'S SHOE SHOP
Complete Size Ranges
"The ·cafe With a Friendly Atmosphere"
for HOME COOKED DINNERS
and DELICIOUS SANDWICHES
Now In ,Sfock for
'
Your I nspecfion
Visit Us Before
~and After the Game
.
.
OPEN FROM 7:30A.M. ON-7 DAYS A WEEK
Located on·U. S. 1-A-8 miles south Wake Forest
Tailored in the University
manner and priced
to suit your
... .
budget
•
"WF
"'
Iii
Tuxeclos.
$45.00 & $55.00
Personalizec1 Stationery
Full Dress Suits
$65.00
Let us pdnt your p'ersonal stationery to meet
you ro\vn taste and selection. Us~ st~tion­
ery \Vith pric1e, which reflects socml
oTace \Yith
distinction
;:,
.
Desk Blotters -
.•
Rubber Stan1.ps
All Types of Job Printing
Posters, 'handbills, social cards, envelopes,
business forms and recm·ds
WAKE FOREST PRESS
DIAL 203.6
Upstairs OveT Shorty's
WAXE FOREST, N. C.
-1914 Hillsboro
"If I don't bring home Dentyne Chewing C-um;
they attack!"
"Boy! Do these kids ~ake my life miser:l.le if I
forget the D.entyne Chewing G"um! I can't
blame the little shavers, though. I'm a.a.keen aa·
tLey are on that refreshing, loaig-laating Oa'Yor.'
ADd Oe,ntyne helps keep,their teeth wLite, too.~
Dentyne Cum-Made Onl;y b)' Adams
Raleigh
We Have a Lar,ge Stock of
Formal Clothes to Rent
•
\
A
•
,,
.
Old Gold and Black
-
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l
'
MEET THE SENIORS
lJ. W: 0. C. Is Umstead, Co-elf Prexjr
By Carol Oldham
Reda Umstead has to . attend
mor,e meeting~ in one day .than
the average co-ed attends in a
week. This busy girl is president
the Woman's Government Association, a member of the Stu.
dent ·Legislature, oq the Faculty
Advisory Committee, and a i:na~h
major. No wonder every minute
of a typical day in her .life is
of
~rowded!
Ask her what she likes to eat
and Reda will say, "Dill pickles
and fried chicken!" How's that for
a combination?
Hint that you'd like to know
about her favorite pastime and
Reda is silent. Not so her room-·
mate, Kitty J o Easley, who slyly
whispers that it is "strolling under
the magnolias with Bill Innis," a
Wake Forest alumnus.
Reda is preparing to teach·. Her
subjec~s: why, math, of course,
with. a minor in English. The
younger generation will benefit
from Reda's instruction in the
North Carolina high schools after
she is graduated next. spring.
Some day she hopes to get her
Master's Degree.
Who knows? Wake Forest may
have a Professor Umstead in the
Mathematics Department ·before
too long.
It all began wqen Reda entered
·Wake Forest College in the fall of
1944, having graduated from Rox'boro high scho'bl 'in June. Her
·compatriot~ soon recognized a natural leader and Reda was elected
. secretary of her freshman ciass.
Her Junl.or year found her should. g the respons1·b1·11·t1·es of treaserm
urer Of the Wom "n's Government
...,.
Ass oc1·ation and act1·ng as House
President of Bostwick Hall-these,
in addition to being· an assistant.in
the Math Department. There she HUFF NAMED NEW
reached her heights,· popularity
MANAGER
.and dependable · service helped
DEBA,..,E
.a.
1
. elect Reda president of the W. G.
A., which is the highest honor acHenry Huff was named succes.C9rded a Wake Forest co-ed. :
sor to Sam Behrends as student
Physical Traits
manager of debate at the ThursHeight ~s her outstanding physi- day night meeting of the Wake
cal characteristic. A brownette Forest debaters. Huff, a law stuwith. deep blue eyes and a ready dent from Washington, D. C., and
,smile, Reda commands. attention president of the Lambda Chi AIwherever she goes. Another quali- pha fraternity, was Behrends' colty helps her make friends easily- league on last year's cl;tampionher pleasant, congenial voice.
ship team.
Reda's accent proves that her·
The highligh~ of the meeting
was a series of extemporaneous
birthplace was South Boston, Va. speeches proposing way·s to insure
She is the third child of Mr. ·and
. Mrs.. L .. H. Umstead, having made peaceful relations among the naher world premiere on August 19, tions .of the world. , Altogether,
1927. After living in Virginia for eleven speeches were. presented.
.
Many of the first-year men did
,eleven years, she became a per- r~markarbly well, observed Prof.
manent resident of North Carolina, Aycock, debate coach.
and claims Roxboro as her "home
town."
·
Next Thursday a formal debate
Hunting and basketball are Re- will be held to inaugurate the new
,
forensic season.
da s favorite sports. She brought a -::;:;:;;;:;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:~::;;:;:;;;;::;:;:;;;;:~
gun to Wake Forest ervery year c
.... •
until a rule banning the possession
WANTED
-of firearms by co-eds was passed
in 1946, 'Qut· not before she bagged
Student to do part-time earone squirrel and two birds. The
pentery .work. \Inquire
Girls' Intramural Basketball team
WAKE FOREST PRESS
made good_.use of Reda's experi.
Upstairs Over Shorty's
\
I
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ence at Roxboro high school.
··~·":::::;::::=~======~
-,~~~~~,
FOR J.ALE
Baby Carriage >
MADEMOISELLE
(Continued 'from Page 2)
meaning. College girls have that
.taste, not peculiar" to the feminine
sex, of "trying out" the latest
fads of the day as they are placed
on the counters of the clothing
stores.
Yet, the fashion magazine entitled "~ademoiselle", ask~ the
campus cuties to submit a report
.m any"new phases of campus life
especially those pertaining to th~
latest creations of fashion. That
brings to mind the question of
college girls dictating fashions.
Th,e ,change cannot be too drastic .until next August when the
great .editors submit their "new
fangled" ideas. August is the
date. theIfCollege
w Issue rolls off the
press.
ake Forest's young
!adies make the grade of guest
editor, the magazine might as
well
issue. The
f ds ·cancel
t d thed August
b
a .m ro .uce
Y them might be
tooblishockmg for the shopping
pu c.. College campuses all over
Amer!ca might pick up the fad,
espec1ally true if the institution is
co-educational.
"Mademoiselle" goes so far as
to say not only girls interested in
:fashions or merchandising· but
those who are passionately inter-
ogy or anthropology, drama or book ·can get.
child care. Added in parenthesis,
The. 1939 book, edited by Carl
the magaizne. states that. members Dull, was awarded an All-Amerihave to keep .g~a~es up to scratch,. can hon?r rating -bY the National
campus
activ1tles
above par,. ~Ch<:Jlashc Press Association which~
bright futures on their minds.
is the highest honor that can be
How the magaizne makes final given a college 'yearbook.
.•
selections of the guest editOJ:s is
Few Wake Forest men were surnot known. The list of require- prised when the announcement
ments makes. it imperative that the was made for Editor Dull had· been
entrant send a snapshot of her- receiving compliments for q~ite
self and also a list of other inter- some time on one of the best pieces
ests and acti,vities. How long a of work of its kind ever produced
list would the· Wake Forest girls at Wake Forest.
compile, mentioning only a few
Bill Poe was the editor in 1940
interests and "activities"?
followed by Norvell Ashburn in
With world affaiirs in such a 1941. Royal Jennings took over in
state of confusion the best sugges- 1942 and was ably assisted by
tion would be for the girls to ig- Newbill Williamson ·and Ed Wil..:.
nore the opportunity of becoming son. Williamson graduated· that
a fashion expert or editor. The year but Wilson, then a junior,
world can stand just so much at was elected to edit the book for
one time.
11943.
Howler Facts
Wamboogie has amassed a total of 1637 yards gained from
F or six conse:. ... ~Ive years, 1938 rush1'ng 1·n the1·r two operun· g
through 19 43, the Wake Forest games for·· the season· Qu1'te a
Th
scare was thrown 1'nto the tea
yearbook,
e Howler,
was edited
so
six of the
best annuals
ever
publishe1:i at Wake Forest· were
presented.
·
Jl:ach of these annuafs was given
a F'1rst Class honor rating by the,
national association which is the
.
,
second hJghest
rating that a year.'\.
Radios
G--E Light Bulbs
Successors to Murray
'·
Alterations - Repairs - Dyeing
PHONO
PHoNE 3072
For Pick-Up and Delivery Service· by
Six Campus Representatives
AMPLIFIE~
100 PHILIP 1MORRIS
Enter· Contest Now!
Wake Fore~t Florist
Flowers for Those Who Care
IF'S- FUNI IT'S EASYI'
HERE'S· ALL YOU DOl
·Order Early for Horriecoming
Read the words below. They'll give
you some clues· to the puzzle, as
well as some important facts about
PHILIP MORRIS.
When you have filled in all 8nswe.rs,
sign your name, college, class, and
mailing address and send to PHn..IP
MORRIS, Department P, 119 Fifth
Avenue, New Yo.rk. N. Y. lf your
allSWers are cort:eet. you will receive
• 100 PHILIP MORRIS Cigarettes
with oar complimen~.
'!his contest is open only to registered student!. Cigarettes will be
mailed. only to address on campus,
6r to General Delivery, campus post
office. Codtest is limited/to one.entry
per student, and closes at midnight,
October 13, 1947.
~
'
Located Opposite Hunter· Dorm
...
HO Llo·w ELL'S
•
CASH FOOD ST·ORE
"'
•
I~!-
,._
,.
'.. ..
1m . .
~---
a
:so• i.
:,
,
Ia
lit
\
...
1m :nlfffll
.
VERTICAL.
11
.
6
"Good Things To/ Eat"
WAKE· FOREST, N. C.
.•
A
•
We· are glad to· announce ilhat our
Downy Flake 'Donut Department is
bacJD'n operation. We make fresho hot
9 Do:Ruts each day except W ednesd!y. We
use only the best ingredients in 8Ur Donuts. We solicit your or~er. Use them
for pro-ties and get~t~ethers. Let us
serve you.
THESE :WORDS ARE IMPORTANT TO Y,OUI
....
.
0£ all the leadingci~; PmLIP M_c;>RRIS is the ONLY
cigarette sclentifi.Wly jiroved h£ Ie8s irritating to the
nose and throat.
Remember: LESS irritation ~ MORE enjofm.eiit.
That's why the Pmu~·MoBRis smoker really gets what
other smokers only.lioi).e to get. : • better taste, :finer ·
flavor, perfect ~moking plc;astJNI ~·- . "~
Yes! If ev~ smoker knew whatPBII.iP MoRRis smokers
know-they'd all chan~ to P~ MOmuS, AmeZ.ica:s ·
FINEST Cigarette.
. ·-----~· . -----~-
.,.. .
.. ; ..
'
:1 :.' .
,
1 & 1. If every smolc:erlcnew wliat ; ; •••••••• ;.
smokers len ow, they'd all chang it to • • • • • • • • • • ·
12 & 76. First and last names of comedienne storrlal! ·
in Philip Morris' radio program "IT PAYS TO ·
Be IGNORANT."
13. A Frenchman sees red when this LSU man
waves his campus stick.
16. By adding the proper "phial," lienee becomee
a lover of work.
. _17, Add the proper "cuD" and you have the
answer.
18. "The very • • • • • • • • • • of literatur• is making
even wise people forget that If a book is wor1fl
reading, it is worth buying" (Ruskin).
21. Univeroity In tha Blue Grass stall' (Initials).
22. What wa guarantee you'll turn cut to be whM
you change to Philip Morris.
24i' Sir Thomas More created It (pl.).
26. Bob is needed for this fype of winter sport,
28. Much coveted following a t.d.: P• • • ••••
.29. George W. Russell.
30. "When your • • • • • • • • of Blind Desire
Bids you set the Thames afire" (Kipling).
31. Woman in a religious order.
32. Three·toed creature beloved by puzzlers.
33. Preposition.
34. "An ill-favoured •••••••• , sir, but mina own"
(Shakespeare).
31. Add tho propllt' "loa,m'' af!d you'll produce a
famous (or Infamous} donclng girl.
39. Dressed In proper. neatness.
,
41. The •••••• l110dlng cigarette with an exduslVe
difference In manufacture: PltiLIP MOlRIS.
42. Fencing sword.
44. If you add soap, it's hopet ..s (slang).
46. It becomes pNtty stormy when cntachecl t.'Aiaaka Willi.
48. .With a T, this could be hl;hly .,.ploli-.
49. Philip Marris •••••• America's ilneat d.....,._
ISO, Touch lightly.
52. The Wesffm Conference: Big • • • • • • ...
. 1
54. What's -lelt of •a .Hindu prlnc. no lona-t _..
roundotd by ch....
56. Cronstedt distaY~ml this element (c:hMnW
symbol).
•
57. The Philip ·Mcmis smoker really gets - • ...•• smok- only hope to get.
•
5I & 70. Sure as .two cm<l two mcllle fcvr
I
Hw•'• the gal you're Wbhlng for.
, ,\ I
19. Agile.
· • ·'
61. PrepoliiHen.
63. Whclt any player likes to break In a footW
game.
U. She's always wool-gathering.
69. Mr. AmeeN.
i
70. See .58 HeriMntal.
71. A perfume.
75. Hew Britannia rut.. the waves (ab&r.).
76. Sft 12 Horizontal.
•
,.,
,
f.i
.HORIZONTAL
I
,·. Yo
Read below~ ~es •••
.
--
[M
I*
FOR RENT
FOR DANCES
c'IG·ARE-TTES
-
See Us for Your Cold
Weather Needs
Elbow-25c
Stove Pipe-25c
General Electric
Heaters-$8.25
Hot Plates-$2.29
All Types of Stoves
Records . . Hot Plates
News·Bureau
Wait -Hall
.
HA.RDWARE
Open 7: 00
PLATE LUNCHES and
SANDWIC:I:IES
J. W. FORT, Proprietor
Tom Bost
,.-
JONES
RADIO and APPLIANCES
BUS STATION CAFE
. See
'·' l
though in their last game, when a
back missed the pass from center
and it landed in the bullrushes in
the end zone. Opponents scored.
_ _ _ _ _ _--=._;::__ _ _ _ _ __
GLO.VER'S
B. & E. CLEANERS
Altn()st· Bt:!nd New.·
Excellent Price
o'
Page Three
/
i~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~m~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
i~s~te~d~in~~p s~y~c~h~or~s~c~ie~n~c~e~.·~so~c~i~o~l-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2
.
''
How did you,make •
out last week?
1. The klnd.of feeling you llave when you smok•
a Philip .Morrl1.
,
2. Elevert 11!1111 In conference.
3. Hou~on Is tile home of-tho 0 ..... Bcwl •
4. "Pate gave, what Chonca shcill not control,
His •ad • • • • .. • • of· aoul" (Arnold), ·
S. Acqui,. befcre!rand.
6. ·u goes with )Vlghtrnan or Davis.
7. Company,
•
8. "Within thy heart wilt thau hoar
,
1'he • • • • • • of all the world" (Tagore).
9. Railroad (abbr.),
·
10. large lizard.
II, Aotronomical point.
'·
14. The )947 Middies swung a mean ana.
15. Kingpin is a crossword zoo.
19, Hour (abbr.)
20. Thu1.'
Here are file answers
23. Pronoun.
2$; Tha "ayes" have lt.
27. Popeye's ambrosia.
33, Shakv~re mada much of this.
35. • • • • • • are the'"mightoy fallen I
36. Add a ton and you,'ll get'a man of gravity.
38. All that's left to catCh whon something pertin81lt
is ramovad.
40. Within a mere taste of germ·plaJm.
.
41. l..Wmolcer.
45. c;,ollage de;~ree (abbr.)
47, Pronoun.
4!iP. Spinet containing a pedal curve (anag.).
50, Work.
51, Spinning motion.
52. Strain•
53•• The time fa com• fa the aid of the party•
55. H~'s always on-the-spot for Philip Morris.
eo. It chases after the musical "dough."
62. Added to "lb/' it's still the same.
6t. What Navy mert lovo to hit• •••••. k.
ea. You'll never have a comebadc without an H.
"· Ted Huoing's New York hangout.
67. An awfully vague time.
68, If
smoker know wh11t Philip Morris
they'd ••••••. change to Philip
Old Gold and Black
Page Four
Old Gold and Black
Founded January 15, 1916, as the official student newspaper of Wake Forest College. Published
weekly during the school year except during examinatloa periods and hollda:Ys as directed by the
\Vuke Forest Publications Board.
Bynum Shaw ..•...•....•...... ; • . . Editor
Jesse Gla&gQW ....••••..•. Associate Editor
Don Paschal . . . . . . . . . . . . • . .. . . . • Art Work
Dick Han-is . . . . . • . • . . . • • • . . Photographer
Editorial staff: Jim Hawldns, Harold T. P.
Hayes, H, Leldon Kirk, George Mallonee, Santford
Martin, Lucy Rawlings, Bill Hobbins, Jimmy Shelton, Tommy Stapleton, E. ·:'.1cDaniel \Vard, Bob
Grogan, Carol Oldham, Lamar Caudle.
Bill Bethune . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sports Editor
Sports Staff: Dave Clark, Tommy Creed, Johnny Dillon, Mike Seitl'., \\'ill Bschen.
Dick Williams . • . . . • • • • . Business Manager
Jolmny- Gardner ••...• .Asst. Bus. Manager
Carlyle Morris .......• Circulation ~Ianager
Business Staff: Paula Jean Buie, Jimmie Burris, Charlotte Duling, Elizabeth Gel'tner, Jo Ann
Morgan, Paul Moyle, Tim Wrenn
All editorial matter should be addressed to the
editor, P. 0. Box 128, \Vake Forest, N. C. All
business matter should be addl'essed to the business
manager, same address. Subscription rate: $2.00
per year.
Phone 304-6. For important news on Thursday
phone 25Gl, Theo. Davis Sons, Zebulon, N. c.
Entered as second class mail matter January
22, 19IG, at the post office at \Vake Forest, North
Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Member Intercollegiate Press
Member .Associated Collegiate Press
Member N. C. Collegiate Press
Represented for national advertising by National .Advertising Services, Inc., College Publishers
Representatives, 420 Madison .Ave., New York, N.
Y., Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco.
•
T~:;~~;:~n;~~;b:.~;;~.~;:~
•r·•
',\.
Friday, ·October 10, 1947~ ·
I\
I
Th: ~~ve!'
first issue, which will appear for
The weddings I'v~ attended
ZETA CHI
Homecoming. Brother Bill Early c6uld be counted on the ·fingers
Since Zeta Chi is a colony to has given a diamond ring to.Miss of one hand.. · So I may be wrong
in North Carolina, the best that can be obtain- Sigma Chi Sigma Chi transfers to Iris Walker of Raleigh and Alum..: in what. I'm about to say; But
ed, and their total cost amounted to almost four tliis colleg~ automatically become nus brother Grover Page and Miss I've never seen the grooni of any
\ thousand dollars. ·
·
members of the local fraternity. Betty Foster of Hickory were mar-· wedding given a fair de~;tl.
He
d · .
h
f
h Thus Fred Sigmon, formerly of ried last week-end.
happened to be there, and that
T he bursar rna e thiS pure ase or t e the University of South Carolina,
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
was alL And that was as it was
convenience of students, so that they would have and _Paul Godfrey, o_f Emory UniAt the last regular meeting plans because it happened to·. take ~
places to write so that they would be seated vers1ty, became members last for Homecoming decorations were groom to make a wedding comt bl a~d
th t the most can be Qb- M~nd~y night. Prep~rations ~re discussed. Professor Carroll, fac- plete.
.
co~ f or a y,
so
a . . .
.
bemg made to entertam the Slg- :rtlty adviser, and Professor RayAs far as the proceedings of the
tamed from classroom actlVthes.
rna Chi's of Duke following the nor will speak at the Lambda Chi ceremony,
Write-ups in the
Some students, however, fail to appreciate Homecoming game. The chapter smoker Thursday. night at 7:30 papers and the chattering social
the care and skill of our North Carolina crafts- is now redecorating its chapter in . the chapter room. President musts are concerned the hapless
1
room and the latest addition is Henry Huff led a discussion on groom is invariably lost ·,in the
men. ·We have seen evidence of this in scribbled new furniture.
the proposed increases of effici- shadows of the bright and morn..
pen and pencil messages that appear on some
PHI DELTA PHI
ency of the honor system and the ing - star,
Miss Bride-of-the
of the new desks.
The date for the formal installa- plan was approved by the entire Month. An~ his one consolation
tion of this group into Phi Delta group.
Football coach Cliff. lie~ in the ·vital nfjcessity '?f ~
It is our opinion that a college student has Phi has been set· for December 5_ Moone scheduled a practice for bemg there when the umQn IS
passed he stage when he must advertise that The principal speaker wil be 'the Tuesday afternoon and reported ~ade. Other than that-well,
"John loves Mary" on a classroom desk top. He Honorable J. J. Parker, United that the team looks much better JUst read the papers
and look
·
Stat'es Circuit Judge, and many than last year. Two more of last aroun~ you and'see.
has reacl:Ied the age when he can be cons1derate other notables will be present. year's pledges nave been voted in . What I advocate is a revolution
not only of his contemporaries but of the many The chapter was visited during -Bill Fleming and Kent Outlaw. ~ the r,anks ~f all futw:e grooms.
5
students who in later years must use these same the past 'week by Willis Gupton
ALPHA SIGMA PHI
-':llce and
I m smce
s_till young
·(tonatural-:
-~ de.
.
gree)
youth is
desks.
an d F re d Ch am blee - t wo of the
Heart1est congratulations
to ly very impetuous and sometimes
chapter's
three alumni.
TAe Brother Har0 ld Full
h0
We realize that some of this diddling arises smoker held last Thursday night
~r w ' ~:m presumptuous, I'm going to. be so
·
th t'
h
to celebrate acquisition of .the October · 4 ' · was m~rrled to Miss bold as to advocate that all future
Inez . Elliot of Rale1gh. _Fo_otball newspaper wedding reports. flush
f rom a d es1re to pass e tme away w en a proThis ~eek has seen an outstanding series of fessor gets a trifle long-winded. lt can be done chapter quarters was a successful practlc~ ha_s started w~th great the spotlight on ·the groom and
.
h
f
affair attended by all members of enthus1asm m the fratermty; sev.- let the brl'de sink. of swun· m· the·
religious addresses by the Reverend Dr. Har- just as effectvely, however, on a s eet o paper the faculty and many law stu
. as the noble
,- era1 full tearns h ave. b e~n shaped last paragraph just
old W. Tribble, president of Andover-Newton. . . without damage to valua~le property.
dents.
and goo~ results ~em. ':lew. The grooms have been doing. throu hThe week has been, as a· news story elsewhere
PI KAPPA ALPHA
Alpha Sigs are still waitmg for t~e out the ages.
.
.g
The· PiKA smoker for this sea- softball and all sports trophy
in this issue points out, "a religious emphasis
son was held Monday night at the which they won last year and
Sad Trea~nt
week without being so named."
Community House and was at. have not yet received. The chapThat may sound ·harsh. But
Too often a "religious focus" period, sotended by a large n.umber of new ter is goirig ahead full-steam with what the devil! Wha.t kind of
We.didn't believe it until we saw it happen. students. The lodge was honored its plans for the smoker on .Oc- treatment have __ the grooms· been
called, is accompanied by so much pressure hat
We ·had always been told that students will by having District President Mar- tober 15.
,getting since time immemorial?
those students· who do not have a professional
tin H. Green present at the smokDELTA SIGMA pm
I'l tell. you what--hardly more
interest in theological matters become fatigued sign .anything, •but we couldn't believe it, be- er. After a discussion by the
The Delta Sigs have been prac- than slight me~tion in the last
and draw away from the deluge of activities cause we have a naive faith in the intellect of ch apt er on the h onor sy~t em, the tieing behind closed weeds for paragraph
.
.of th. e wedd.mg s t ory .
thrust upon them.
the average Deacon.
PiKl\'s voted wholeheartedly to the past few·weeks under the guid. a?d, If lucky, a place at the
Now, however, we begin to doubt our faith. support the student government. ance of coach "Flying Finn" En- kl~chen table around some cold
Not so this series of a dresses; it has been
The fraternity is now making ickson. The Delta Sigs are proud chicken after the "shower girls"
d
'th
I
d . t ll'
b When 176 students sign a petition without read- elaborate plans for the approach- to have' Nick Ognovich as a ~ave gon~ home. Perhaps what
manage WI
ca mness an
In e Igence
y .
.
. .
h' h 'f
. d
t
ld ing homecoming week-end.
pledge and also to rece;ve Pledge lS needed lS a revolution that will
· 01'Ive. A s D r. T n'bbl e h as pom
· t e d ou t mg It, a pet1hon w 1c 1 carne d ou b.wou .
.
KAPPA SIGMAt
David Giles back into ,the lodge. give
:he worl.d a wedding report
Ch ap I ain
. y mo,,.e th an once, th e w h o e manner In
. ·drown over ten per cent of the •stu ent ody, 1t
of thls n atu re:
publ1c
•
Brother
Dick
Chesson
has
been
It
may
be
due
to
the
influence
of
1
1
which the week's convocations have been ar- must be true that students ,wtll append_ thetr elected grand master to succeed the married couples living in the
Mr. John R. Hossenslinger, son
· h
hl · k
·
· h W k F
names to anything.
John Friday.. Congratulations are house, but a poll shows that there of Mr. and Mrs. _Q. T. Hossenslin.
range d 15 t oroug Y 10 eepmg Wit
a e orW
b ·1
h
h
176
due Brothers Bill Ledbetter, Tom- is a grand total of six fraternity ger of . Quackvllle
and Janie
.
th.mgs .m a quiet
. an d ore do not et eve t at t ere are
stu- my Black, and Bill w·alker, who pins in the lodge. Dr. Black was curvetWlst 0 f B ~zzard' s Gulch,
es t ' s me th o d o f d omg
d
dents in this college who want to be drowned. were initiated into the chapter a major contributor to the sue-, were married in a sunrise cereer1YAw:~~
f
th t"
d th
rp
It must follow that they simply did not read last week. Plans have been made cessful smoker held last Tuesday many at the Quackville Chapel to.
e er man or
e I me an
e pu ose th f'
·· t
to remodel the •house, and Broth. night.
Pinky Funderburk has Bud~ha Monday morning at 5:30.
B
. h ld er Bill Castello has been named b een elected treasurer. A
. party
Blshop B · o · .Washbu
.
rn of D"10-.
Trl.bble I·s uni·- 1 e me prm . .
Dr.
Could not have been Chosen.
.
.
Of course 1t was all a gag.
ut It s ou
·
th
k'
cese No 3 off1c1ated
M R
versally respected by his theological collea&ues.
chairman of the committee for IS in e rna mg fro Friday night
·
·
r.
ay
H h
· tl
t d h
·d
f·
serve to remind all of us 'that the prmted word, remodeling. Brother Don Joyce preceding the Homecoming game. ~reenhorn of Turkeythrn, o~gan-_
· e as recen y accep e t e pres1. ency o one 'f
k
ld 1 d
.
has been confined to the infirmary
. KAPPA ALPHA.
1st, and Mr. 0. K. Twinklevoice
. h
.
,
.
t . .
1
ta en 11g t 1y, cou
ea one mto an emf c h d
. .
o f th e na t !On s supenor
re 1Ig!OUS ratmng
.
.
.
this week with ·a slight case of
The KA's football practice is go- c
on ? er, vocalist, presented
barrassmg
sJtuatwn.
.
fl
Th
t
f
tb
.
the
music
11
11
sc h oo1s
m uenza.
e c ap er oo a ing strong under the leadership of
The
gr~ · ,
th ·
·
· h h" r·
h
. .
OLD GOLD AND BLACK advises that in squad has been working out daily Brothers o. B. Teague and Son- 1
oms mo er gave him
1
1
e
as
IS
mger
on
t
e
sp1ntua
pu
se
not
·n
m
·
L
c
H
the future students read before they write. In-~in preparation for the intramural ny Martin, co-captains, and a
arnage. ucy urvetwist was
only of the country but of this individual camh. h b ·
t
k
her sister's best woman. Ushers
surance companies and such are much more ex- season w rc
~gms nex wee . powerful team is expected to be were Sadie Searsurker and Jo~~pus; and he is able to diagnose with uncanny
.
. The chapter held 1ts smoker Wed- fielded. The KA smoker is sched.
.
.
.~-accuracy our need-and he is able to offer to actmg than the gag men who thought up this Inesday night and was host to a; uled for Friday night, October 10, :::e App~eJack of Bloome:J?SVllle,
·
idea.
large number of prospective with Dr. Hubert Poteat as the p· trlda dGirdlebuster of Glenn"s
us constructive religious suggestions.
. .
an Beulah Land of Rocky
p 1e dges.
prmcipal
speaker.
Vvednesday B me
0 tt'
But even so tmely and important a subject 1
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
afternoon the chapter was visited'
om.
,
could have been misappropriatea by a man of
The Sig Ep smoker, held Friday,\ by Brother Frank Pruitt, alumnus
Groomfo Ensemble
less ability and insight. Dr. Tribble, however, has
October 3, marked the beginning of '46. Brother Jack _Bishop is
The bridegroom wore pinstripe
.
of fraternity smokers for this sea- now getting a '31 Ford convertible trousers with a ·tailor-made cut.
the rigor and unique genius which can take an
One of the most stirring ~eproaches to the son. Housemother, Mrs. Winders,lwith Wake Forest's colors as !he away_ coat designed with a high
idea, fairly prosaic and one generally agreed student body, and to the College for paramoup.t is beaming since her visit to .her new paint job. Brothers Ed Best neckhne and long fitted sleeves
.
.
upon as necessary, and infuse in it his crystal
d
h
h I
. .
d new grandson in Washington last and Wayne Massey attended the ending in points over the hands.
neg 11gence In regar to t e sc oo sptrtt an week-end. Sports director Clyde Glen Gray dance at E.C.T.C. Mon- His thumb-nail scarf of the ex-·
logic and simple rhetoric, to have it emerge to the instruments for making that spirit func- Whitener is having football praC:. day night. All the brothers will port-type illusion was worn with a
fresh and glowing and alive.
tiona!, is the letter to the editor, written by Bob tice in preparation for intramural attend the Carolina-Wake Forest bandeau of orange blossoms. The
Th_e consensus is best summarized by the S
H
h
f
k f ·
activities. The staff of the SIG game Saturday and will]Je pulling groom's lapel corsage was ofsunawyer.
e reproac es us or our 1ac 0 mter- EP REVIEW is busy with the for the Demon Deacons to win.
ripened goldenrods and moonwords of a freshman after hearing Dr. Tribble's est in the College band, a lack of interest that is
kissed dandelions, centered with a
old ones and to accommodate the influx of new
students. Most of them were made right here
by George MallOJlee
l
I
the
In Appreciation
We
player
horn,
·basses
even at
cornet
played
did a'
Fatal Petition
I
l
I
.,
drumsb
.
I
APe You a Deacon?
I
I
·_·B
__·-·su
....
lecture on "Faith in the Universe": "I never preventing the band from being the powerful '~
l
purple dahlia. His ornament was a
f orce t h a~ It
. m1g
. h t b e. H"ts own wor d s are most
\
L (
I
a~
postoffice
key chain . which . had
thought about it that way befor.e!"
b
That is true of all of us. Dr. Tribble can
een worn by his ··father as a '
eloquent.
bridegroom.
take a commonplace statement, a familiar porWe speak out with him, ·not from any beThe bachelor of honor was. Mr.
tion of Scripture, and the clear light of his keen lief that our voice will be more efffective, but
George Washington Curvetwist,
mind' makes it for his listeners as a new thing because we want to join with him in what we
By Tommy Stapleton
brother
of H.
theL.bride.
The grooms.
by Dagwood Kornegay
men were
Clincklerhead,
Mr.
th
f'
t
t"
The'
Sunday
School
assembly
·
St
d
t
B
d
P
sicL
t
·Rumpd
f
ear
or
e
Irs
Ime.
believe
to
be
a
noble
purpose.
u
en
Y
re
en
I.
Q.
Brainswell,
M~.
T.
S.
h
·
D T ·bbl h
·
program for Sunday will ,j:le cut
t
d M C S C
thts.
r. n
e as given
There is no spectacle in connection with short so that class pictures can be
CONDUCT CASES ·
on, an
r. · · · heezewell, all
B ut· kmore than
f
·
d ·
·
.
,
.
of Quackville. Little Mr. Bobby
the qmc sand o ummportant an enervatmg college life that is more effective than an ef- taken.
I;ast Wednesday mght s sess10n, Underslung, nephew of the groom,
controversy wide berth. His manner is so con- ficient and inspired band for awaking latent
* * *
which set a record_ for length by was flower boy.
vinced-he so frmy believes what he has spokh .
International Peace will be the conv~nmg over mto T~ursday
The groom's father wore a "tasty·
enthusiasm and for keeping that ent ustasm at theme of the Baptist Training ~ornmg, heard four cases mvolv- yellow morning suit, fashioned
en to us this week-his tenets are so logical and fever pitch', for stirring in the hearts o.f college Union assembly worship program. mg the ~onor system.
with a bustle effect. His lapel bouso intelligent, that we follow him without dif- men a love for their college. On the other hand,
* * *
One student, charged with an quet was of deep purple violets.
f' ·ld
f h
h
Thehold
Christian
Service meeting
Group a tt emp t t o ch eat , ~as· d'ISm1Sse
· · d M r. Curvetwist, fatner
11
. 1 ·
there is nothing so depressing to that same will
its . regular
of the
f ICU ty mto new le s o t oug t.
Dr. Trbble uses illustrations which are ordwith a severe· reprimand in view bride, wore a taffeta morning suit·
spirit than to see one's own college band poor- Thursday, October 16, at 7:15 of the evidence presented. In two and a !ape bouquet of two dozen
other clleating hearings one was American beauty roses. · Mr.
inary, even "homely," and then transforms them ly functioning, small, and overshadowed by' p. m. in the Little Chapel.
that
of
another
school.
.
*
*
*
found
not guilty and another, Curvetwist appeared to be under
with a few phrases into backgrounds so apt to
Mrs. A. R. Gallimore, former found guilty, was fail~d on the great burden during the entire
his reasoning that his audiences are astounded
ou are a real \Vake Forest man or .wo- missionary to China, will speak course and placed on probation for ceremony.
the Religious Education club on one month.
Reception Afterward.
-and grateful.
man, if you would honestly like to do your part to
Tuesday, October 14, at 7: 15 p.
Because Dr. Tribble has so unfailingly for your alma mater, read Bob's suggestions in m. in Room I of the· Music-ReligDORMITORY INVASION
After the .ceremony reception
. The much publicized case of was held in the chapel parlor.
pierced to the center of the matters he has dis- his "Letter to the Editor"· and see what you can ion building.
* * *
"the man on the hall"' was finally Pepsi-Cola punch and oatmeal
cussed in the pulpit, has so lucidly drawn sane do.
1!!5 girls have been enlisted 5n adjudicated. The defendant, found cookies were served fr~m a roseconclusions from the bedrock foundations of
the nine circles of the Young Wo- guilty of ·entering a girls' dormi- bedecked buffet. The Cola punch
religious faith with which he has dealt this week, 7"7_
?I ?,
?.. /I:
D
men's Auxiliary on the campus. tory without· authority, was found served to enlighten and enliven
oB qn .1 Y.J. PS• .l.\
The newly-elected circle leade£s guilty and put on probation for the receiving line to the point of
his visit here has been one of real and abiding .1. rze
are: Harriet Smith, Virginia DiC'k- the rest of the semester.
utter .democracy before the third
spiritual-growth for Wake Forest.
Mrs. Roosevelt used an effectve allusion in ens, Ruth White, Helen Strau~hn,
Glenn Brown, spokesman for gu~st had arrh-:e?. ~nd those ap.
.
. ..
. Mary Broome, Mary Johnson, the council said that any student pomted to rece1ve did not deem a
hkemng the press to the egg. Where there IS Frances Lovette, Geneva Williams, convicted 'in these· cases has the formal reception line necessary.
right of appeal to the Executive However, goodbyes were said by
a free press, she said, there can· be both good and Frances Carter.
·n
t ff t the
*
*
*
· Committee of the faculty.
Mr. 0. T. Sumberword who held
an d b a d · An d t h e b a d · part WI no a ec
Mrs. Owen F. Herring, wife of
his post illltil the very last.
Later the couple left on a wed.
Last _week this column printed an editor- good·. Where there is govem.ment control, she Dr. Herring ,of the Department of
continued,
the
bad
part
taints
all
the
rest.
Reiigio~,.
wil~
speak
to
the,
Cnlding
trip through the country to
ial, "Literate Graduates," which said among
As
one
who
has
suffered
.from
press
criti1om
Mmisten~l
.Conference
next
the
Falls_
of the Neuse. Th~ groom
othoc things that "the college student often .
.
. .
.
Tuesday evemng on the subject:
wore a 11ght green gab:;1rdme busClSm as severely as any hvmg Amencan, Mrs. "I married a Minister."
The
iness suit with forest green acgraduates semi-literate."
They tell this'' story about the cessories and a white tulip in his
One reader with a keen sense of poetic Roosevelt makes a good defender of our sys- meeting will be held at 7:15 in
Littl~ Ch~pe~ ami all visitors big-wheel editor B. Shaw of OLD lapel.
.
justice indicated the last paragraph ;ts a case tern. Not that it will do .any goOd. Mr. Stalin ' the
are cord1ally mv1ted.
GOLD AND BLACK. He had just
The groom rece1ved a B. S. deree
finished a- leisurely hamburger at in Religion and Legal Ethics at
in point. It read "Judging from some of the Mr. Molotov and Mr. Vishinsky know as well as
Dr. S. Lowe Leake, South Afri- Shorty's and was perusing a comic Burlington College for men in 1946.
gems the gentlemen of the English department does Mrs. Roosevelt that a free press is one of
bas- can scholar, is making a study of book at the magazine counter Last year he serv~d as a junior
turn -up every few days, it's not too bad an the coraerstones of any government that is
·
the ancestry of Professor Zuzu C. when one of the reporters ex. member of the cler1cal department
ed on the people themselves. They do not have Rack.er, head of the zoology de- ciaimed: "Hada't you better be of Montgomery-Roeb1Jck produce
idea."
store in Quackville: During the
That sentence contains what" is recognized that sort of government in the Sovie't, so natur- PartmE1llt ~t Wamboogie Institute. getting back to the office?"
ally
they
cannot
have
a·
free
press
At
this time he has traced back. to . "You're right," he replied, "you past war he was standard-be~r
in some quarters- as a "dangling participle."
N
y
T'
members of the Simiine tribe of :know, for a minute, I thought I for .Quack County Home Guard.
- The
ew or
tmes
anthropoids.
was at the office."
-See ROVER, P~e- '1The column hangs its collective head in shame.
NoteS
voun Stu .Jent.
Councz'/
°
-
a
E·
d
oq_seve /t
I
Literate Editors
They Say .. ,
k
'
I
,'
.
·.'
/
Old Gol'! aJ!:d Black
see what you can d9. If you~· old day~ before the war and beany of this stuff, you might com- .fore we had a music depart·
ment. on the appearance of our ment. Wake Forest used to
band as comparef. ~ith Carolina'!> have a bigger band than we
next· Saturday. Also, th~r'e were h
some candid shots made of the ave no~.
'•
_\.,.._......,.._ _..._____.w.___~.•- - - - - -...., - - , - - - band by the Howler photogi-apher . 3. ~IVe band seh9larships to
Note: The edttor of OLD GOLD very bad back ihjury two y;ears last Friday when we were trying mco~ng freshmen who are de·
.
· AND BLACK missed an appoint- ago and took on the ~g to drill and work out formations servmg.
ment this week with Bob Sawyer, job over protests of her friends· with about 30 in the. band. I dare · 4. Have periodic try-outs for
drum-majors and majprettes,
veteran bandsman. Bob· wrote who knew about the injury Sh you to run one of those prints.
Appeal !rom aWake 'Fore$! cOneOe M~sician
ments such as French horns, basses, drums, bells, baritones, and a
trombone, which can be used by
.band members without cost. We
need help, Bynum.
Mr. Mac
doesn't know that I'm doing. this
and I suspect that he'd be too timid to bring the band problems out
iri the open, so I'll take the responsibility and give . you the
credit if you can help us. Is that
1 fair enough?
Thanks a lot._
with i~parlial judge'!-. This
wo~d stimUlate competition' for
the posithms and would insure
Special Offer for Wiake Forest Students
better performances.
.,
5. Encourage band appearCL'IP THIS COUPON
ances and trips and give them
Genuine 8"x10" Silvertone Portrait - Reg. $5.00
all
'bl
' bli ·
th t
possi ~ pu City 80
a
FOR ONLY $2. Choice of 4 Glamour Poses.
a
the ba~~ will become kno~ to
Special Hollywood Lighting
A mliximum of
prospecti~e students. .
THIS COUPON EFFECTIVE THROUGH OCT. 24
semble is allowed now: but band 'b 6.dsr:!Vl~ io~te hitgh ~h~tl
All Work G'Uil.ranteed
memberS , get 1-2 ho'ur per se- ballan , P
c ~ e a our .LOO •
mester although they meet· for
games. ~
.
REMBRANDT STUDIO
about 1. 1-2· hours,· three ~:-es a
7. Orgamzed a drill
to
Only One to Customer
,
Open 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
wua
ugm t ban f
t
t
W.
H.
EVANS,
Manager
W. Martin St.
week ·dUring football · season, : 00tb!j
orma: IOns a
Under New Management and Ownership
Phone 2-2574
plus pep. meetings
games
and
I
games.
•
'
•
· Most of the kids playing in the
other
public appearances.
now are doing so without ~~::::::::::::::::===========;:::::=::;::::;:-!2. Exempt
members who play band
getting credits. They just want to
for foilr .semesters ~n the band ht::lP out. The majority of the
fro~ havmg to take physicaled- bahd members are taking 17-11)
ucation. This was done in the
this letter giving the facts of the .commented on the fact thai-in:
Improvements Needed
.'lituation he had wanted to disc-uSs. school of 1800 students there
·
are printing it in its entirety should- ·be a band~much'Iarger
H~re are so~e of my own sug.as Bob wrote it,' because we feel. and better equipped than ours gestlons- for Improvement, of. tl;le
- tha.t .,.egardless of how a , staff is now so sh b
t 'drill 'th band, and I daresay tha1: others m
-member edited it, no finer, more
'
.e egan P
WI
the ban~ can augment them;
•
.human appeal' for help in the ~
·
1. G1ve one hour credit per
Wali:'e Forest College band could
~ow someone is going, to semester for band, with limit
.be made.
bnng back . her unifonn and of four hourS to rd
we
hours work and many are premed students.
,
If they ha,ve time for band and
keep their work up (we have
some potential Phi Beta Kappas)
it looks as if.many :>f the ot;!:ler
musicians on the campus could
help out also. We're even willing
to take beginners and train them
on instruments if they're willing
to work.
.
.
The school owns a few instru-
Page Five
a·
'.Dear Editor:
You didii't .show up today, so
I'll give you some of the dope here
that I was going to give you. We
want 'to work for a bigger and
better ,band with more interest
'behind it.
· ·This year we have forty-seven
in it, incJuding seven drum-rnajors and majorettes, b~t w~ have
a glockenspiel player _carrying a
clarinet because we have no glock.
.enspiel for" him and we need men.
We have:a boy carrying a French
horn who has· never pl_ayed any.
thing but bass clarinet in his life,
but we have no bass clarinet. He's
marching to help out. ~
. Manpower Shortage
We have an excellent cornet
player ruining his lip playing bass
horn, because we're short on
·basses and he wants to help out,
even at the risk .of losing his fine
cornet technique.
A boy who
played glockenspiel· last ye_ar and
did a- fine job is havingto play
drumsb this year because we· needdrummers so badly - a:r;1d here's
a good· human interest touch for
ydU:
turn it in for .her. You see, she's
not able to; she's in the infinnary~ losing out on her work,
missing the fellowship of the
other students, because she gave
everythipg to her drumming,
and
back went
She's
very her'
unh
too too
t ·beca.
~~y,
• no
use
0 f ~he pam
In her back, but because she's pennanently out of
the band.
. . .
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After You
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Till the Well Runs Dry
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. I Have But One 'Heart
Tex Beneke
•
Victor Record
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RALEIGH
and
· theatres
, Francis Craig
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Formal H~coming
Dance
·were very hard up for
drummers and so last week a
girl came up and began to play
drums for us-it's hard on a
girl physically. She had had a
Ida Lupino -
team_
When c:n athe~e Is mJured;
someone JUmps m to take his ·
place, but when we lose somebody ;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;:;
out of the band . . . it's just another vacant space, as far as the
students are concerned. There are
probably 75-100 students on the
campus now who have had band
DRESS SUITS
experience in the past but who
FOR RENT
won't come out for the band.
We often are criticized for not
doing intricate formations like
251 Hunter
State, Carolina and Duke, but we
don't have the manpower. I'm
listing several ways in which our
. "Special College
band situation' could be improved.
Rates"
See what you think of theni and
-----.----------
.
We
f':m he.:::
OIL HEATERS
Steaks
OIL STORAGE TANKS .
Chops
(Sizes: 140, 275, 500 gallons)
\Sea Foods
Resular Meals·
, Open 7 A.M.
Close 8:30: P.M:
Dick Frye's
Resturant
FUEL OIL (Nos. 1 . and 2)
I'
See H. L. MILLER at ·
Miller Motor Co.
Bom.ED UNDER A\JlliORITY Of THE COCA·COLA CO/lPAN'f BY
Phone 2-581
Capital Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Inc. Raleigh, N. C.
e 1947 The c-c eo.
Shorts and Serial
SundayShows at 3:15·& 9:00
Adm. Child, 14c; Adult, 40c
· (All Shows)
Nelso:Jl. Eddy - Ilona Massey
Starr
o/'~Club
15'1
Air Sho1ll'
Northwest. Outpost
It's the late$1
di~c for Decca •• ~
11
0N THE AVENUE 11
'Monday and TuesdayShows: Mat. 3: 15; Night, 7:15 & 9 ·
Adrn. Child, 14c; Mat.. 30c;
Night.40c
·
Van Johnson- Janet.Leigh
Romance of Rosy Ridge
Owl Show -
News
Tuesday, 11: 15- ·
Durso's Spook Show
All Seats 50c
Monday and Tuesdayat COLLEGIATE
Shows 3:15, 6:45 & 9
Adm. Child, 14c; Adult, Mat. 30c;
.
Night, 40c
William Prince - Marsha Hunt
Carnegie Hall
WednesdayShows: Mat. 3: 15; Night, 7: 15 & 9
Adm ..Child, 14c; Adult, Mat. 30c;
Night, 40c
;
Mikel Conrad - Althea Murphy
Uittamed Fury
Short and Serial
Wednesday and Thursdayat-COLLEGIATE .
Shows: -\3: 15, 7: 15 & 9:00
Adm. Child, 14c; Adult, Mat. 30c;
Night, 40c
John Garfield, in
Dust Be My Destiny
Thursday and FridayShows: Mat., 3: 15; Night 7: 15 & 9
Adm. Child, 14c; Adult, JY,(at. 30c;
Night, 40c
Victor Mature - Coleen Gray
Kiss of Death
Newa
At the COLLEGIATE
-t Days Starting October 20
i.Jfe With F'ather
terri:fically popular Andrews Sisters have an
individual singing style all their own. When it comes to
cigarettes-well, l~t Patty tell you: "I've smoked many different brands
and compared, and I learned from experience that Canl.els suit the best!"
· With thousands ~? thousands of smokers who·
have compared cigarettes-Camels are the
uchoice of Experience."
,
Try Camels. Let your own experience tell
, you why Cam_els are setting a new record!
T
HOSE
CAMELS
sLtre click
·.A.L
VJ\lll
me •I
\
Page Six
'·
Old Gold,a1:1d Black
..
I
Fri~~y,
.
.
.
.
October 10,1917.
i
Fiid
%is W-eek's
the BILLBOARD
Visiting Quarterback
By BILL BETHUNE
Tea:
.,.,
Disaster struck the other day,
On the old U.N. and C.
The crew had gone through Georgia
and there didn't seem to be
A bit of doubt the line was clear
To the Sugar Bowl and hack,
When a Texas steer just up and knocked
The Choo-Choo off the track.
and Black _Printer
I
There is h widespread belief, carefully nurtured by t}'le script
· writers· o~ Hollywood and the National Broadcasting Company,
that alumni cannot be·referred to as such, at least ;when_they are.·
attending football games; they mus.t be called "old grads."
" ·
The writers, in a halfhearted attempt to compensate' for ·
affixing his opprobrious term to alumni, permit them to .become·
sentimental, both in thought and action. The opinion of the land,
shared by · this week's visiting quarterback, has come to be
that old grads-th.ough perfectly rationaf in most respects.:._always believe· that their. school team will. win every game every
This good
beliefwhen
in unceasing
..
:,,.,., Saturday.
triumph holds
the op-
To hopefully suppose that the above lines would incite anything short of murder in a few staunch hearts locally would be
sheer fantasy, and that doesn't even include the opinion of one
Charlie Justice. There were Carolina fans who had all kinds of
ideas as to where the New Year's Eve fog would roll over them,
and you can be sur,e that they all thought that·the New·Orleans
Richard "Bud" Wedel, outstanding Deacon guard, is playfng his
.
ld b
·
· d d N
h
h
h
d 1 t last year of ball for the Demon Deacons. Bud, who wears ~umber
vanety wou
e very mce m ee .
ot t at w at appene
as 46, is expected to see a lot of action against Carolina tomorrow.
week changed all that. It just looks bad in their Alumni journal. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Seriously though, it does throw a different light on the
week's work around Deacontown. The general opinion had
held sway in these parts that the Tar Heels would come into
As
By FERD DAVIS
<Old Go_Z?-
BUZZ Boy Blld w
k
, rec 8 .
Havoc
. on Enem.y LInes
·
Coabh
two hare
on the
·wa:ke Fe
tomol"{O\
gridiron
of
Car
Kickoff
clock.
With 1
record ~
after a
Heels s
back aga
Forest il
urday's
the Lor
invincibl
hand, VI
stake, ,;
power tc
·and tog
licking
:last year
working
row's tili
more int
At thi~
players
shape. 1
wing bac
ter nurs:
two we'
is bcithE
colds,.nc
change i1
on the T
jurie·s w
however,
should b
Iposition
.uR'll AY
SAT
sKETGHBooK
is of the caliber of The
Citadel;
it
remains
equallyis.stead_;~
fast when the
opposition
fumished by Notre Dame.
The porn·t I·s that w~hile Wake
Forest alumni may not oe.affluent
enough to provide the wherewithal
to·make the Deacons sure winners
every weekend, they are loyal-Or
sentimental - enough to believe
that somehow the team will come
through with more points thao the
opposition. Therefore I predict
that Wake Forest will beat Carolina by six or more points to.
morrow.
r. mightWhat
add else?
that the • above is ·
The oldest state uni"ersity in
the u. s., the University of North
'
Carolina; is tomorrow's Wake ForSaturday's fray the defender of a two yame winniny skein.
est gridiron foe and thus. the subTexas definitely said no, and that l~ves us with some novel
ject for this week's Saturday
Sketchbook.
speculations.
The university was provided for
in
the state
of open1776;.
Just about everyone that has followed football knows that a
By JOHNNY DILLON
athletic powers were not confined chartered
in constitution, and first
1789
team that is riding the crest is an easier team toknock off, and
The so-called "experts" of the to the gridiroh for he also earned edits doors in 1795. The univer- my .conside,red opinion_as well.as
conversely, a club that has taken a set-back ofter's a different gridiron are often wrong when eight more letters for varsity play sity is open for men in all classes; my sentiment~l.belief. None_theless.
f
h d·
h making pre-season predictions. in basketball and baseball. Not be- women are admitted to junior and I am open-mmded as ·well as raproblem. If Carolina had won the Texas game, a ter an mg t e This year, however, all the experts ing content with JUST making senior classes of all divisions and tiona!, and although I am c~rtain
Georgia crew that defeat they might have read a paper or two. agreed that' Wake Forest guards first team in all three sports in to graduate and •professional that two and two make four,''! will
· th e his senior year, Bud was football schools. Approximately 7,5 00 stu- 1"Ist en w1'th meres
· t
t t o th. e man
The papers undoubtedly would have said t h e b oys were_ pretty would b e among th e b est m
and, dents-1 000 of them coeu.1:j-reg1s..
_,_ . ·
hot. The boys, after running through a line or so of descriptive count ry, an d th ey h 1·t THAT pre- captain, basketball captain,
·
w h o can m ake a, goo d case f or two
diction right on the. nose. One of yep, you guessecl it, baseball cap- tered fo; classes thiS fall. The uni- and two making three,' or even
adjectves. that left little doubt in their minds that they were the outstanding reasons for that tain, too!
versity has had 79,000 matriculants five. And I will also listen to the
really the cats whiskers, could have felt a lot less concerned about right pronostication is a 6 foot, 210
Enrolling at Wake · Forest in since it was founded, and some experts who pick Carolina over
a school named Wake Forest.
·
pound right guard - Richard 1941 he promptly made first string 5o,ooo of these have graduated.
Wake Forest.
"Bud" Wedel
guard on that fine frosh outfit
Of the 7,500 students now regThree Reasons
All these factors work in the favor of the underdog.
Bud, who is now twenty-four, which won the state titles of North istered at arolina; 55 are in the
Apparently their reasoning runs
started his gridiron career in his Carolina and Virginia·, winru.·ng Imm
·
ediate ·spotlight as wearers of
Now the Scheme l· s reversed and a few footballers over in
freshman year at Fort Pierce every game they played. In 1942 the Blue and White' on the grid- something like this: Charlie JusOrange County are wondering if Jake Wade's publicity about
(Fla.) High School. During his Bud moved up to the varsity and iron. Crafty Carl Snavely is in t.ice is due for a good day, 'the
their varied abilities was true after all. On the other hand
four playing years there he earned played well in reserve . role the midst of his "fifth coaching sea- Deacon pass defense is non~ tqo
a net of four letters for football. throughout that successful season. son at Carolina wlth the fin~st ag- good; and the Tar Heels figure to
., the Deacs mght be wondering the same thing.
He was als·o named on the AlL
February of 1943 rolled around grEfgation of game winners since b.ounce back h?rd after last week's
There's no doubt about Carolina havng a good ball cluh Confereri~e squad as a first string and Bud became Aviation Cadet h e st ar t e d his college coaching ca- debacle in AuStin.
A casual rebuttal points out that
,. guard as a reward for his stellar Wedel of the Army Air Forces. He reer in 1927 at Bucknell. SnavelyTho~e of us who heard the game last week figured that Carolina play :&or the last two years. Bud's -see BUZZ BOY, Page '7- coached teams have wpn 116, lost Choo-Choo · · has been efficiently
was out of their class. Bobby Kellogg, who took in the battle =----------~------------------ 51 and tied 13. His Carolina coach- stopped on two occasions this year,
down in Austin, said no, that Texas J·ust caugh t f Ire
an d cou ld
ics one week prior to the announc- ing record is just as impressive in the case of Georgia by a line
.
ed opening date of the particular with 28 wins and two ties in 39 that was charged. by Carolini:'!'S
forwards. Coach Kellogg, one of
have taken any team he had ever seen play. And that's a
sport. Also, all names which are games.
the finest scouts in footbal.J., saw.
mouthfull from anybody who has been around the circuit as much
added thereafter must be turned in
42 Lettermen
24 hours prior to the . game in ~crafty Carl had 42 letter~en to both of these games, and knows
as Mister Kellogg. Bob, along with a lot of others, thought that
I
how Justice was stopped. Presum.
which
on ably he has passed ,this informathings would have been different 1"f t h e game h a d b een P1aye_ d
t· · t that ·particular player.· par- turn out for the first.practice
()..
lC'Ipa es.
September 1st. Foremost of these tion along to Coach Walker and
c here in North Carolina.
Clyde Whitener, chairman of the
II. Rules Governing Football.
hopefuls was tlie highly-tou]:;ed the Wake Forest linemen.
b k
Intramural Athletic Committee,
1. Teams shall be composed of Asheville flash, Charlie Justice.
I hasten to add that at times Mr.
.
Team speed did the trick for Texas. I~ their fine ac •
has released a set of rules govern- nine men with five linemen and "Choo Choo," who has.been sl~wJustice has proved more a liabili-'
Perry Samuels, the University has one of the saf~J: bets for
ing the intramural games this four back.
ed to a' walk this year so far, won ty to his team than an asset. The
the 1948 Olympic team in the hundred yard dash that you
year. He emphasized that the rules
2. No football shoes or any other acclaim as '.'freshman of the ye.ar" first time I saw him play. was
will be strictly enforced.
type of cleaood shoes shall be last season." He was a second-string ~gainst an army team in Hawaii.
could find anywhere. The whole first team is a track squad
I. General Rules Governing In- worn.
choice .on se" eral All-American
I looked down the mimeographed
in football gear and when you have tackles that hit the
tramural Games:
3. Progress of the ball shall be teams in '46 and he made prac- program and noted that one C.
century for 9_7, well look out brother! It appeared that the
1. Any person who has earned a stopped at the point where the ball tically all pre-season All-Ameri- Justice, a former high school star
,
T
d
college varsity letter in football carrier is tagged between the cari teams this year. Justice, who from Asheville, North Carolina,
only way Carolina could have gotten by the exas secon ary
may not participate in intramural shoulders and knees with two scored 72 points to Ie.a,!i the Southwas .on the roster o.f the boys in
for a TD was to have intercepted a Longhorn pass on the
football. However, any Wake For:- hands.
ern" Conference last year, picked blue.·•
on~ foot line and fallen over the stripe. It was Jack Fitch's est student who, in a previous 4. Only shoulder bocks shall be up 966 yards on the ground for an "Wait till this Justice gets in the
year, has lettered in varsity base- used and the blocker must remain average of 7.5 yards, and he com- game," I told my buddies. "He'll.
drive' not Justl·ce's speed that accounted for the greatest part
ball, basketball, golf, tennis or on his feet.
'pleted 19 passes for 274 yards. really siow us something."
of ground gained by the Carolinians.
track, and who has not used up
5. Ends, all backs and the center The lack of blocking, which will
He showed us . something all
his eligibility in the particular are eligible pass receivers.
stop any runner, is given as the right'. He carried the ball twice,.
The Deacs could have looked a lot better than they did. Sev- sport, is eligible for intramural
6. Penalties
reason for his rather poor showing and fumbled both times. The boys ·
eral chances to score were muffed and in our opinon the two- play in that particular sport. . a. For infraction of Rule 4, Sec- against Georgia and •Texas this in blue were fit to be tied.
T"
d
' · d' t (Baseball and softball are· con- t~on II, 15 yards on a 100 yard year. The .lack of blocking, inci. PassDef~
point margin that separated them from the Igers oesn t In lCa e sidered the same for intramural f~eld and 8 yards on a 50 yard dentally, is strongly rumored to be
the real aifference in the two clubs. Once again the team, hamp- purposes).
field.
intentional.
Wake Forest's pass defense
ered by bad breaks, didn't look impressive on the n1arch but they
2. Any person who is-a candib. All other ·penalties shall be
Walt Pupa is another outstand- shortcommgs must not be taken too
G'eorgetown, however,
dl. d show, on two occasions, that they c. ould come from behind to date for the varsity team at the the same as for regulation foo'tball ing backfield ace for Carolina. He lightly.
opening date of the same intra- on a 100-yard field or half the dis- ·is a good runneJ:. and an excellent with an excellent passer failed to ·
win a ball game, which means a lot more to a successful season mural sport is not eligible for that t~nce of the penalty on a 50-yard passer. Deacon fans will remem- score against the Deacons on what
than looking impressive in early games. More hard work and particular intramural sport.
field.
ber him passing 'three times :for was obviously ap. off-night for the
3· Any person who is on inactive
7· The kickoff shall be from the exactly three TD's last year. Jim Baptists. Furthermore - · here
more earnest d etermination has gone into the last six days' drills
statu::; in any fraterzlity is consid- 40-yard line on a 100-yard field. Camp, Tar ~eel wingoack,. is the comes the punch line, kids - the
than in weeks past and we hope this means that the Deacs don't ered an alumnus of the fraternity
8. All rules for regulation foot. main reason for the way Carolina's weatherman at the Raleigh-Durunderrate a fine Carolina squad. We have all ideas that they and therefore· is not eligible to par- ball shall be Jollowed except for fine reverse plays click; He is a1so ham airport has given positive as""on't look to the Carolina game as an easy touch.
ticipate in intramural sports.
the above listed rules.
a very good pass receiver. Co- su;ances that there will be rain
1\l
4. No stUdent may be a memAMENDMENT I to Section I Captain 'Joe Wright. 205 pounds of durin the game tomorrow a'fterAs we said, the Tar Heels should. be on the rebo:und: eome ber of a fratern1ty team and non- Rule 1:
' bone and muscle, at blocking bac"k noon. Even a slight shower can
nd h
fraternity· team.
Any man who has lettered in' a rounds out U. N:C.'s starting back- make a fair pass defense good
.
this Saturday. It's the Deacons that have won two a
ave
5. Team rosters in each intra- J,;~articular sport y.rill not be allow- field. Carolina backfield reserves enough.
As for the Tar Heels bouncing
the record to defend now. If Walker's offense gets in
mural SP••rt must be turned in to ed to participate in that sport in include such standouts as Jack
action and keeps hammering out yardage we·have a better
_th_e_D_ir_e_ct_o_r_o_f_In_t_r_a_m_ur_a_l_A_thl_e_t-_:_I..::.n::..:t.::..ra=m=u=r=al:::......::c::o:::.m~p::..:e:..:t::iti::'o::n.:·_ _ _ _ Fitch, hard running speedster; back, I recall a somewhat similar
a decade or so back. The
..than even chance to hand the Blue and White another surJohnny Clements, star defensive case
University
of Chicago won their
..
wingback; Don Hartig, blocking
prise. One thng the Texas game did show about Carolina, as
back, who will probably start in Western Conference opener, then.
a game to an obscure mid' is true of any team, iS that they can be beaten. ~e i~t
injured Wright's place, and Hosea lost
western
eleven. Th next week they
isn't any such thing as a super team in football; they can all
Rodgers, line-busting fullback.
were supposed to bounce back. In..
Fine Ends
bite the dust if the setting is right.
~
.;
s.tead they developed a losing
Carolina rooters boast of their streak that would probably still
WAKE FOREST ------ OUTPLAYS ------ CAROLINA
fine ends almost as much as they be ~ing strong if the Windy City
Looking elsewhere about the nation, we find that Notre D~me
DUKE --------,-------- DUNKS ------~--------- NAVY
do their backfielders. True-Toe school had not quit var:>ity football
·will have to extend themselves to the limit to edge a great MtchSTATE -------------- STOPS ~------------- CLEMSON
Bob Cox, extra point maker, and compeption.
:igan team for naticmal honors. We pick these two to hot-foot
COLUMEIA -------------- COOLS -------------- YALE
Art Weiner are given the starting
Of course this comparison is unnod at present, but they are-being fair. Carolina has a wealth of mait right down to the wire in November and it's a pity that they
ARMY -------------- EDGES -------------- ILLINOIS
pushed by Mike Rubish· and Ken terial, and a fine coach. They are
·didn't meet during the season. Which leads us t?, ask, "Who gets
PENN ------------POWERS------------ DARTMOUTH
Powell. At· tackle the Tar Heels capable of givin any repeat
the Rose Bowl bid?"
MARYLAND ---------- MAULS ---------- RICHMOND
have Haywood Fowle and an All- team a very rough afternoon. But
American candidate, Len Szararyn. instead of being in :tor an off-gar.ae
The fire isn't burning in Tom Hammon's battle wagon.
'iEXAS _._ ___________ TAKES ------------ OKLAHOMA
The pivot spot will be handled by or two, they are in for an off-year•.
The great N~vy snbmarine skipper came back ~ Crabtown
ALABAMA ------------ OVER ------------ DUQUESNE
George Sparger, a sixty-minute
Back in 1937 the · thr(}e best
man.
Tech last year and to date the middiesghave won Just one ball
GEORGIA TECH -------- WAY OVER~------- V. M. I.
teams n the South were Duke, Ala.
Pre - season predictions gave bama, and the Wake Forest fresh-. game. His record against theN~ is far better than his sHow• GEORGIA ---------- BETTERS ---------- KENTUCKY
North Carolina the nod to capture men. In 1938 tln.e "flaming sopho- ing in recent college play, and this week the charges of
L. S. U. -------- DECISIONS --------'TEXAS A. & M.
the conference championship for mores" did all right for themColonel Wade are out to sink C~ptain Hamilton's crew ~or
SOUTH CAROLINA ---- MIGHT GET BY ---- FURMAN
the second straight year, and they selves, and were picked for greatcertainly have the speed, strength ness in 1940. K spirit of mercy pre.
the second time in as many years. Could be they really lUISS
WILLIAM AND MARY -------- OVER -------- V. P. I.
and especialiy depth to take tl:te vents my repeating some ef the
'little Hal Hamburg more as the yeal"S go by.
VIRGiNIA ------------ WHIPS ------------ HARVARD
Crown. The depth of the Tar. Heel scores ot that season.- The Tar
NOTRE DAME ---------- POUNDS ---------- PURDUE
experienced manpower. is a big Heels aPe not in fqz: any such seaIt's an old story now,. but d'id you ever see a Series ~ike it?
MICHIGAN ------------ MASTERS. ________ :.., ___ PITT
factor in the experts' speculations. son, but they will lose two mort:!
Carolina has not one, not two, but games. I thjnk tomorrow's contest
The scene shifted swiftly from comedy to the most mtense
WISCONSIN ------ WILL COLLAR·------ CALIFORNIA
Ulree fine teams. Of these 33 men is one of them.
·
drama· from horseplay to superb base\tall. Tho Yai)ks, who were
RICE ---------------- RIPS ---------------- TULANE
exactly 32 of them are lettermen.
A visiting quarterback should
clearly' the superior club, regaiD;ed some of their long lost presUCLA ---------- ON TOP OVER ---------- OREGoN
The first string line averages 198, always hedge a bit. He might visit,
the sesond 202' and the third hits
Wake Forest again some time. My
tige, but only after p.last ditch ftght en the the part of the Burns.
WAMBOOGIE __ Takes No.3 Over __ ZULU SOUTHERN
bjg 212. All three back:fielci teams hedging will be confined to the
-See BILLBOA RD, Page 7.....,. .. , ..
-See S;ra:TCHBOOK, Page 7- -See QUARTERBACK, Page 7-
By clo
to the ll
Walker
somethin
everythil
wreak a1
Canny
that som
be know
But, u
sleeve, S
himself.
Ru }es 'R e }eased
B Wh •
y
single w
back idl:
he holds
diurn wi
plays air
Rep.ori
field co
scouted i
week, in
seconds·
may br:
Baptists
'team-rna
Justice.
hard dri'
Tar Het
spark s~
Fitch ag:
cons suc·
lyhooed 1
Texas di
ten er
>
~
...
I .
]
(Cor
·• -~
ouT 9N A LJMB
any
a
Coach
North c~
good loo
tion, Be
morrow.
as the
player ii:
Wake
edge in'
ing 213 I:
and a ba
possibly
the edge
last yea
playing ~
The here
nominate
Goat? In
'
became·~
noon th1
, them loo
of the H
it may, r
put awa~
Partinl
looked li
instead c
thanks tc
'that bloc
Duke sur
ing Tenn
.UP's So1
of the li
freshman
)
..•
·Ql
·•.
(Con
astute ob
can be 'V'i
memorie~
ed with 1
spotted n
3-to-1 !JC
Army g1
turned ot
pe:c cent
collected.
ButmJ
ping 'blot
Anybody
.
i
Friday~ .October 10, l947
••
<
Old Gold and Black
....
Page·Seven
."DEACONS.
FACE
CAR·OLINA
·SATURDAY;
DOWN
CLEMSON
_
.
..,.._-.
__;,·__
..
\
Team is P1:cked
AF3 Un.derdog
Tigers Provide
on
· ·Closed Session
By closing his -practice sessions
to the public all this week, Coach
Walker has shown that lie has
something ·up his sleeve that, if
everything goes as planned, should
wreak at least a little havoc with
Canny Carl's crew. · Just what
that something is, however, won't
be known until tomorrow.
But if Walker has tricks up his
sleev~, Snavely should have .a few
himself. The crafty master of the
single wing was never one to sit
back idly hoping for the best. If
he holds true to form Kenan Stadium will see at least a few new
plays aired by the University boys.
Rep.orts from Wake Forest backfield coach Bobby Kellogg, who
scouted the Tar Heels in Texas last
week, indicate that hard running
second string tailback, .Jack Fitch,
may bring moi:e bad news to the
Baptists than his more celebrated
team-mate, Choo Choo Charlie
Justice. It was Fitch with his
hard driving gallop who gave the
Tar Heels their dim offensive
spark Saturday. And it may be
Fitch again this week if the Dea..
cons succeed in stopping the ballyhooed Choo Choo as Georgia and·
Texas did.
Seated for Action,
Coach Walker' is expected to' let
N orih Carolina fans get their first
good look at his freshman sensation, Bouncing Bill Gregus, tomorrow. Bouncing Bill was rated
as the number one prep schodt
player in Ohio last year.
Wake Forest wil1 have a big
edge in weight with a line averaging 213 pounds frona stem to stern,
and a backfield almost as big, but
possibly the Tar Heels will hold
the edge in experience. Mmtt of
last year's Sugar Bowl club is
playing again this year.
..;
••
BILLBOARD
(Continued from Page 6)
·• .~
)
·'
The hero of the classic? Well, we
non).inate Cookie Lavagetto. · The
Goat? In our opinion the "flock"
. became a herd of goats that.afternoon they let the Yanks make
·them look like the junior varsity
of the House of David. Be that as
it may, no more 'til next April, so
put away the parlays.
•
Parting shots . '. . Jack Fitch
looked like Snavely's golden boy
instead of you-J;mow-who _ .. Our
thanks to John "Red" O'Quinn for
. that blocked kick at Clemson . . .
Duke surprises everybody, including Tennessee_, . . Nick Ognovich,
. UP's Southern- Conference "Back
of the Week" . . . Bill Gregus,
freshman back of the week.
.
-QUA~TERBACK
.
...
:~o.-
(Continued ·from Page 6)
astute observation that anybody
can be wrong. One ot my saddest
mem~ries co~ferns a wager placed w1th a West ·Point colonel who
spotted me 50 points and gave me
3-to-1 9dds on the Wake ForestArmy game of 194!1. &: things
turned out;.he could have done ten
pe:c cent better by me, and still
collected.
But my neCk is still on the cl)opping 'block, and I'll leave it lay.
Anybody got a tourniquet?
..
·.
STATlSTI CS
Busy
Afternoon
..
Coa~h Peahead Walker, :with
two hard earned victories already
on the record books; takes his
·wake Forest Deacs to Chapel Hill
tomo:rrow to do battle on tP,e
gridiron with a crestfallen crew
of
Carl Snavely's Tar Heels.
Kickoff time 'is set for 2:30 o'clock.
.
With hopes for an unblemished
record gone like Saturday's pay
after a big week-end, the Tar
Heels should be out to bounce
back against the fair sons of Wake
Forest in atonement for last Saturday's ''lost" week-~'n~ down in
the Lone Star State. The so-far
invincible Deacs,
the \ other
hand, with a perfect record at
stake, will be ·doing all in . their
power to keep that record perfect,
·and to gain revenge for the· 26-li
licking received at Chapel Hill
rlast year. With these two factors
working at cross purposes, tomorrow's tilt should prove a good deal
more interesting.
At this writing all Wake Forest'
players ·were reported in good
shape. Harry Dowda, fir~t string
wing baek was back in harness after nursing a sprained ankle for
two weeks. . Carolina, however,
·
· of
is bothered
by an ep1"dernie
· k
colds,. no doubt due t o t h e qmc
·
d
t
change i~ clim~te they un · erwen
on the Texas trip. No serious injurie·s were sustained at Austin,
however,
and Snavely's boys
should be reac!y by tom.orrow.
/
·
Charlie .Justice, the Asheville
. Choo Choo, might get under
way for the first. time this s~ason a,gainst the Deacons tomorrow afternoon. The Tar Heel
tailback has· thus far. failed to
fulfill early season. expectations.
c· riSp cr eates
c0-ed_p rograffi
9
•
.
by Dave Clark
"My life . has peen too· dullM for
folks to read about,"· Miss
ard
j?rie C~isp, Wake Forest's, new an_
fll"st dU"ector _of Woman s Athlet.
ic_s, insiste.d throughou~ this inter\,
Vl~W, but all the while she was
:t~luctantl.y giving ~o~h infomtabon that very definitely proved
otherwise.
, Here as teacher-of Physical Education and Health, Miss Crisp
aJI the girls top athletes but to help
all 'of them gain enjoyment and
health from the fu~ of playing,
both in class and in intramural
sports.
i
. "I'll be satisfied,"- says Miss
Crisp, "if I can get each girl to
learn one team Bport and one individual sport."
.
Truly a Tar Heel born and a Tar
Heel bred (not the UNC variety)
Miss• Crisp is a native of Grover,
North Carolina. Unhesitatingly
enough, (honest, we didn't · twist
her arm) s?e gave 1912 as the
dat~ of her. birth. Okay, you math
gemuses, fi~e out. her age.
Fine Athletes.
Coming from a family of eight
fine athlet{tS, it was only natural
that Miss Crisp should also rank
as an athlete par excellence. At
Appalachian State Teachers College, where she took her B. S. degree, she was voted the best woman athlete for two years consecutively She played on: the intercollegiate girl's basketball team
there for four years, during which
time her team was ranked as number one in the South.
After receiving her B. s. degree
from Appalachian, Miss Crisp
went to Gardner-Webs .Junior
College where she taught Physical
Education and Health from 1935
through 1941. During fi'ITe years
of her stay there, her basketball
teams won both .Junior and Senior College State Championships.
From Gardner-Webb, she moved
on to Louisburg College in 1941
where· she again taught Physical
Education and Health. But here
she held 1 an office that possibly
few other women have ever held.
She was head coach of both boys'
and girls' athletic teams during
the war. Although there were
no intercollegiate football teams
at Louisburg ·during the war,
Miss Crisp admitted that her basketball intercollegiate clubs did
"okay". .
·
Taught at ECTC
Last summer, Miss ..Crisp taught
at East Carolina Teachers College,
located -in Greenville, where the
students elected her as their most
popular te~cher.
a
. ..
, Then this fall, Mar.e:e, as she 1s
called by her clos~ fnends, landed
at ·wake _Forest_. ~ere she teac!1es
classes_ m Prmc1ples of Physical
Education,. Team ,Sports for ~omen, a~d five sectiOns ,of P_hysJcal
Edu.catiOn, as well as, bemg o~­
gamz~r .of the iN ?man s At?l~hc
Association.
This. P.>ssociabon
spronsors the extensive mtr:amural
P o_graf!l planned for this year,
which mcludes volleyball, basketball, soccer, speedball, softball,
and track and field sports. Tournaments in table tenn4i, golf, tennis, and archer:; are also planned.
Despite her modesty, Miss Crisp.
seems destined to give Wake Forest's •lovely co-eds an excellent
athletic program. And say maybe we could use her on the basketball team this year, too!
Bynhoom Pshaw, upholder of all
that is right and good at Warnboogie, was .accused by- critics of
bleaching strands of his hair with
xeropide juice to achieve that
''look of distinetion."
PrepaTed by To111. Bost,
Wake FOl'est's Demon Dea·cons
almost fumbled and stumbled
away a Southern Conference football . game last Saturday, 'but finally came through with a fourth
period scoring march that gave'
them a 16-14 · victory over the
stubborn Clemson Tigers.
. . Fourteen thousand, five hundred fans saw the Deacs shilde the
Tigers in their own home round~.
The Deacons were superior in
every depahment of play, HUt had
some difficulty in making their
superiority pay off. They missed
at east three or four touchdowns
with misplays. Wake Forest fum:.
bles set up both Tiger touchdowns.
Wake· Forest . thoroughly and
effectively throttled the Clemson
ground attack except for that 31yard scoring drive. The· Deacons
racked up 18 first downs to five
for Clemson and reeled off 151
net yards on the rushing to only
12 for the Tigers.. They also outgained Clemson in the air - 155
yards to 150.
,
Wake Forest got into the scaring column in the second quarter
with a two point safety, when
John O'Quinn blocked a Bobby·
Gage punt.
Trailing 2-0 at the s,tart of the
second half, Clemson' scored almost iriunediately to put them out
in front. T,..... Deacs howe•··er
"""'
,
v
,
wasted no time in matching that'
touchdown with a drive from their
29-yard line. Clemson got its
second touchdown just before the
end of the quarter on a Deacon
fumble. Wake Forest took the
kickoff and went straight down·
the field to pay dirt, which gave
the Demon Deacons a 16-14 victory over the Tigers.
-"
Player
Di Torno, FB
Lail, HB
Pryor, FB
Brogdon, FB
Haggard, HB
S. Phillips, HB
Gregus, HB
Dowda, HB
Fetzer,. HB
Player
RUSIDNG
Yards
Gained
70
13
97
14,
34 '
28
28.
6
7
11
4
26
107
~ublicist
Yards
Lost
0
Net'
Gain
70
0
13
7
90
0
14
2
32
20
8
1
/61
342
80
Play
4.4
.. 4.3
3.5
3.5
3.2
2.9
2.5
27
5
-9
1.3
-.3
262
2.4
1
52
Av:. P&
--''-.
PASSING
Number Number No; Had Yards Td. Comp.
Attptd. Comptd.
Int. Gained Pass Pctg.
Gregus
Fetzer
Di Torno
Lail ·
22
3
4
2
Totals
31
2
13
0
3
10
244
0
2
100
55
1
1
0
0
6
3
.0
0
33
25
17
3
281
2
52
PUNT .RETURNS
On punt returns Fetzer returne,d 7 for a total of 45 yards, with
an average of 6.4. per return. ··.
PASS RECEIVING
Number
Yards
Caught
Gained
Player
O'Quinn
Haggard
Hipps
Bradley
Ognovich
Dowda
Duncan
Di Torno
Pryor
Totals
4
2
2
2
20
85
51
39
2
36
2
l
19
15
Average
5.0
42.5
25.5
19.5
18.0
9.5
1
6
1
10
15.0
6.0
10.0
17
281
16.8
SCORING
TOUCHDOWNS
Haggard 1, Ognovich l, Di Torno 1.
EXTRA POINTS
Ognovich had three attempts at extra points and made good on
two for a conversion percentagepf 67 per cent.
.
1947 RECORD
Wake Forest 6 - Georgetown 0
Wake Forest 16 -Clemson 14
1
,~~:::~::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::"$
-
HOUSE
(Continued from Page 1)
Deacons Meet ready
have-current."
Bob Idol supervised the carpentry and Ray Green straightened
Colonials Next and
the benHtuffn~s. Ahubrey To~d
Paul
m.e w ose gran all
(Continued from Page 4)
the Unite~ States Army as a s.taff
Serge8;nt m the Wacs, and su;ce
her. discharge has been keepmg
house for her mother.
Ridicuous? What do,...yo~ mean
ridiculous? Why, it's the most sane
thing that has ever been written in
this new;;paper..... And I take pride
in steppmg forward so fearlessly
for such a just cause. . No fear
whatsoev~r posseses me, no fear
whatso-well, ~aybe there is a
little fear-but l'l lface it, doggone
it, as 'long as no one hits my right
eye. It's mighty weak:
-S.W.M.
3
26
4
10
Forest Sp9'rls
PUNTING
·Fetzer punted 14 times for a total of 465 yards, had two blocked, and an average of 33.2 per try.
With a total of 17 teams
entering· l:loth intramural
football leagues and only
three . fields to play ·on, the
Intramural Athletic Council
really has a problem on its
hands. But according to the
~test word received from
Clyde Whitener, president of
the council, action is slated
to begin Monday afternoon
vrith three ganaes scheduled
to be run off.
ROVER
16
'Totals
INTRAMURAL
After the outcome of the Wake
Forest-Carolina struggle has been
·officially recorded, the Demon
Deacons will travel to the nation's
capital where they will meet an
up and coming George Washington team next Friday night. •
Although the Colonials have
appeared on the short end of the
saores with· their first two oppon·en~s, don''t sell the boys of Coach
~eil Stahlt;Y sho7t. One must take
mto conSld.eration . th.at only one
letterman Wlll be miss~g from the
1946 crew, which leaves Coach
Stahley with plenty of experience
hanging around.
Then, . too, all the ~re~s hav_e
gone agamst the Colomals m the1r
.schedule to date in defeats by
Virginia and V.M.I. bY_ scores of
33-13 a~d 1~-7, respectively; ~JUt
there w11l probably be a great lmprovement shown by the George
Washington squ::d _when t~ey meet
the Deacs at Griffith Stadmm.
No one- knows just how good
George Washington really is or
how much better they will be
once they get their kinks ironed
out, but they may have a slight
advantage since they will be-playing on their O\Vn grounds.
The latest word from the enemy
camp has it .that they are out to
administer a defeat at the expense
of the Deacons, which means that
Coach Walker's boys will have to
turn op. the steam if the bells are
to ring Friday night.
No. of
Rushes
~ake
and then the Bulldogs' victory
over L. S. U., who was supposed
to have the strongest outfit in the
South.
Last year the Tar Heels were
tied by v. P. I. and dropped
one to Tennessee, but they downed
the Deacs, Miami, Maryland, Navy, Flor1"da, Willi'am & Mary, Duke
and Vll"'gi·ru·a. Th1's gave them the
Sugar· Bowl b1'd where they lost a
thr1"lling 10-20 battle.
Thi's year, 1'n add1't1'on to Wake
Forest, Georgia and Texas, U. N C.
will take on WI'lli'am & Mary, N.
C. State, Flor1'da, Tennessee, Maryland, Duke and V1'rguu··a.
Carolina wi'll be r1'dm' g as a two
touchdown favorite to drop Wake
from the unbeaten ranks tomor.
row. However, pigskin pickers say
the Deacs will come out on top
IF they stop Justice and Pupa.
What was that rushing average of
Deacon opponents again?
throughout the first half of the
season. Partly recovered during
the latter part of the year he was
shifted to tackle where he starred
in the contests with U. N. C. and
U. S. U.This year, fully recovered from
his back injury, and back at his
old guard post, Bud has played
·
approximately
half of each game.
an d during. the Clemson battle
last week he nearly achieved the
1'meman 's highest
•
ambition-making a touchdown. Tom Bost, one
w h o should know, rates him as an
exce11ent guard . H.,'- says, "Bud has
al1 the qualities a good guard
sh auld have. ~e is smart and ag.:
gressive; fast getting down under
punts; a very hard worker, and he
is sure to see a lot of action therest of the year."
11 b
fathers · ·Once· succes1sfullY co.
t0 a orated 1n usmg a P
un. unger
·
stop a: bathtub dr am were
unam·
t
11
th
mously
e1ect e d t 0 ms a
e
plumbing.
As registration dr~w near, so
f the h ouse.
1 ti
did the comp
. · de ·on t 0 dmini'
t
All ten Jome
m
a
s er
·
t
h
Whil
t
the ·finishing ouc es.
e pu hn
50
.r
0
ck
J
h
t.
ting up s eebroth, erryd
~
one
three up
ro the
ers an
a cousm
who ofmak.e
group,
fell
h
through· the staircase.
Thoug
Jerry was uninjured by the fall,
his rela'tions with the group are
As in high school', extra-curricunow rather
strained since he
lar activities occupy much of Bud's
broke one of the steps on his way
time here at W. F. To name a few
through to the cellar.
he is the senior class representaThe house is in perfect shape
·BUZZ BOY
tive in the Student LegislatUre; a
$OW and the boys are more than
member of the Intramural Athsatisfied. Their meals are one
(Continued froSl Page 6)
letic Council; President of the
of the main advantages of thei:r- completed h's flight training a d Monogram Club, and an outstandhome\ since they ,?ost only tw,;nty graduated in" August of 1944 asn a ing me~nber of Alpha Sigma Phi
cents a ·man..
Of . course, ss Flight Officer. He was then ship.:' fratermty.
Dick Stone sa1d to me "one soon
.
.
t·
bl kb
·es and ped overseas to the Mediterranean
One of the most studioUs mem.
f
ti~f~ 0 ~a I~~ T~c ~rf~
-cost
Theater
of
Operations
as
a
pilot
bers
of
the
squad,
Bud
is
1'1 and for the troop carrier command, in math and minoring inmajoring
0
WI c gop er~.
d" e
educa1
per ·d
man
r 0011
· 1t'10n. H e IS
· a semor
· and plans to
· ' t' Inct ud Ing
t s20
a montb flying ott t of H a 1y, Aft er scrvmg
b 9Tarl 'Is es IX:Ua e ta.: · ·d. advail~ · there a year he was shipped back go into a coaching career after he
1ere are on. 1yP. woe t ISlocat;on·
.- t
·
· a B. S. next June.
o th e Sta t es an d .was discharged
gr:ot d uates with
ages a b ou t tl.leir . res. n
· , ·. in December of 1945.
"'~'
·
their house. 15 adJacent to a mua I
.
"hen asked what he thought of
adobe sloppily thrown toctether 19~:c1 returned to ·wake Forest m the team this year, he replied, "I
Ralph A.
Herring, .Jr~ and
~nd ranked as ~o. 1 left I think \\"e have
good ball club,
fl:iends and from which issues ,u;t'c: m pre-season dnl1s, ~u! he and we should have a fairly good
wild screams
of .revelry all suh~erec~ a s.e\'ere back lllJ~ry season." Bud is noted for making
through the night:
the second w lch kept hnn · out of action; undcrstaten:.ents.
disadvantage is that the· rain al•. -·
u • ·~··
ways washes them just a little
'
farther down the highway which
will eventually result in their being forced to pay Durham city
taxes. ·
°
bv
I" -
a
HARPER'S .SHOE SHOP
Located 1 Block Behind Bank
SKETCHBOOK
(Continued from Page 6)
average around 184.
This powerhouse spells trouble
for any team in any league. That
includes Texas if the game was
played under "normal" circum.
stances. Carolina does have alibi's
for the crushing defeat and tliey
are good ones. The game was
played with the temperature reading 93 degrees and . half the Tar
Heel squad still air sick from their
long plane ride. Furthel;tllore, the
setback is certainly nuffified by
by Carolina's lacing of Georgia,
•'\
""''"
...
,.,,
·····~
'\-VILKINSON CLEANERS
Opposite R. R. Underpass
1924
Phone 375-1
Wake Forest, N. C.
194'1'
. "G. I. TRAINING CENTER"
All Modern Equipment - Experienced Personnel
SEE BILL RUCKER OR BOB BRYANT FOR
EXCELLENT DELIVERY SERVICE
Will glaclly serve you in any capacity and greatly
appreciate same.
··-
..
..
178 Students, Claimin8 Insanity,
J
Make Requests foP JVatePy GPaves
OLD GOLD AND BLACK was THREE DAYS, 'COMMENCING
shocked to learn this week that WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26,
almost two hundred students had AND ENDING SATURDAY, NOsigned a petition claiming that VEMBER 29."
.
they are imbecilic and wish to be
When an OLD
GOLD staff
drowned.
member mercifully tore the petiThe signatures, among them tion down two hours .later, 178
those of campus scholars, football verified names were s1gn~d an(l
stars and student government of- other students were clamonng for
ficials, were appended to a peti- an opportunity to add theirs.
.
tion which appeared fn the StuDean Bryan, asked for a statedent Center Tuesday at 8:00a.m. ment on the circular Wednesday,
It purported to be a request for made no indication as to whether
a longer Thanksgiving holiday, the petition will be gr~nted .~r not
but it read, in part:
• but asked 1.the 51-uest1or:, W~en
"In signing this petition we do and where 1s tl>e execution gomg
further agree that we are in the to be held?" "
,
.
same mental class as imbeciles
Out of \).tindness and sympathy
and should be taken to the near. for the aggrieved petitione1·s, Old
est watercourse and held Uf1der Gold dnd Black is withholding the
for a period of NO LESS THAN names of signatures.
DEBATE
(Continued from Page 1)
School to assist
them in their
speech department. Don Lovelace
will assist Huff in this undertaking.
Meeting of the debate group
on Thursday night was highlighted by a debate with McNeil
Watkins and
James C. Burris
teamed for the affirmative opposing the negative presented by Bob
Croutch and E. M. Britt.
An invitation to attend these
meetings is again
extended to
those who desire experience in
forensic work.
RESEARCH
(Continued from Page 1)
each other and have leaned· upon
each other for support through
the years. Dr. Stroupe's work
will be a study of the editors and
policies of the
paper since its
founding. Most of the work has
been done here at the Wake Forest library which has the best
file of this paper in existence.
The history is expected to be com.
pleted by the end of the school
year.
Dr. Easley has been studying
the origin and development of the
Bible among the Hebr:ew people.
Early work was done at Duke
University and here in Wake Forest. Dr.- Easley attended the second term of the summer session
of the University of Chicago where
he did a great deal of study in
the main library of the university,
the divinity school library, and
the library of the famed Oriental Institute. He has thus far only
been able to explore certain aspects of the general subject al.
though
he
has
accumulated
a great deal of material which
must be organized and put into
shape.
Dr. Snuggs has completed one
unit of his studies. This is in the
form of a paper "Ben Johnson's
Use
of
Minturno's De Poeta"
which has been accepted on the
program of the next annual meeting of the Modem Language Association of America at Detroit,
December 27-31. Research on this
paper was done in
the Folger
Shakespeare Library, the Library of Congress, the Duke University library, and the private
c!ollection of Dr. Alan H. Gilbert.
Dr. C. C. Pearson and Dr. H. M.
Parker who were recipients of
this grant have not yet begun
work on their research problem.
Public 'Speaking Club, and a
member of the ·National-Honor So.
ciety, Quill and Scroll, and. dramatics club. He worked bn student publications and earned letters in basketball.
Thomas Clark, Ro~oke Rapids,
N. C. Thomas was president of
the Hi-y and ·editor of both the
school paper and annual. He was
a member of the Quill and Scroll
and the Monogram Club.
Currie Mebane, Durham, N. C.
Currie was editor of his school
paper, a member of the Student
Council, and held offices in the
literary society and camera club.
MEMORY
(Continued :frdr11 Page 1)
reer was equally spectacular, for
he won in doubles tennis tournaments for five consecutive ·years;
twice playing with Hugh Leiter
and three times with John Vernon. In 1930, he won in the
North Carolma and South Caroli-
na doubles tournaments.
• This active member of the fac.
ulty, whose name will appear in
the forthcoming edition of Who's
Who in America, has given about
three hundred addresses in high
schools in this state and elsewhere.
Owner of the
copywright, to
John ·Charles McNeill's literary
output, he edited a book, The
..,,
~
...
vo:
Enrolled in the freshman class
at 'w amboogie this year are three
polar bears, stopping over during
a trip around the world. .
Selected Prose Of John Charles
McNeill, and 'was co.author with
Dr. J. H; Highsmith <1f the North
Carolina H~gh St;hool Manual.
He is now preparing a textbook
for. the education department on
testing and measurement.
Professor Memory will be relieved of i~se duties which come
.under the administration of Alum.:
ni Secretary when Rev. E. I. Olive '
takes over the office November 1,
but he will still have plenty of
extra-curricular activities to keep
him busy. Although there was a
great deal of work involved in the
office, Professor Memory said:
"I enjoy my association with
the alumni and found it a fasci-
.
Friday; oeto'ber 10~ 1947.
Old Gold and Bl~ck
Page Eight
TUXEDOES and· FULL DRESS
Ready-Made or Tailored
I
Delivery Within Two Weeks
•
L
.,,
\.
•
'•
E.
81
See ·GEORGE ·C. BARRETT
.Tl
Eta
At Mrs. News~in's- Phone 226-1
.....
~.
~·
sum
Tim
Del1
cise:
thu!
olin
tion
... '
Pl
cise:
~~KINGS ¥SPORT~
ofF
.. the
be J
~tive
Ton
• at S
Bro1
t¥1 CHESTERFIELD
Nor
deai
R~b
est,]
Lak
frat<
at 'VI
FROSH
(Continued from Page 1)
Hi-y, annual staff,
and track
written for his school_paper, was
treasurer of the Student Council
and Monogram Club.
Dwight Early, Fayetteville, N.
C. Dwight was valedictorian of
his class at Massey
Hill
high
school and a member of the Beta
Club. He was on the council that
formed the student government in
his last school year.
Eddy Tinsley, High Point, N.
C. Eddy shows his colors in mu·sical and dramatic activities and
in the field of journalism. In his
senior year he was on the executive board for student government.
Paul Williams, Lexington, N. C.
Paul was president of the National Honor Society, vice-president
of the senior class, editor of the
annual and held offices in the
Hi-y, Monogram Club, Quilf and
Scroll. He has earned letters in \
several sports.
Ray
Stone. (Ray · was not
available at press time; therefore there is no information available about his high school or
campus record.)
For secretary-treasurer:
Paul Bennett, Kinston, N. C.
Paul was president of his senior
class, vice-president of the l?tudent Council, president of the
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Sandwiches, Coffee, Ice Cream (All Fla-
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Chocolate, Banana Splits, Plain and Choc)
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Manager: Mr. James Sessoms
Asst. Manager:
Louise Wilson
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