Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

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•. - ,, ,• . Volume XXVI. Law S.tudent-s . . ' -- ·Proffer Blood To Ill T eaeher Forty Men . From Law School and Sports V ohmteer Forty law students and three football players vol'!lllteered ·to have their blood tested for trans-. ,fusion this week when it was 'learned P11ofess()r I. B .. Lake . -uf the law school faculty, now on leave of absence for national de- · ..-f:ense work in connection with the Office of Production Management in Washington, is seriously ill, in , Durham's Duke, Hospital with an infection of the blood stream · which as yet remains a mystery to attending physicians. ' , . Of the 43 men volunteering, 16 were found to have blood. which · matches that of Professor Lake, , and are now awaiting the decision . of attending physicians as to . whether will be neces- sary. :n·· .. ' ' .. ar Number 25 Board ·Votes N;ot to Elect Morgan Unt:il Furt:her St:udy . In the. only contested publication position, Robert S. Gallimore last night was voted by the Publications Board editor of OLD GOLD AND BLACK for the year of He defeated Herbert Thompson, the only other candidate to take the positiOn. ' j · For Student, magazine, no was elected. Neil Morgan, present editor, candidate for the positiOn, but the election was postponed indefinitely- until it can be constitutionally whether or not an editor - can succeed himself. The 1 constitution of the Publications I lost, and the elec- 1 t10n will await the drafting of a I ' new document. For all other student publication positions only one candidate for each had filed application, and each was elected with no dissen- Debaters Take First Places In Tournament sion by the Publications Board. Hope, Bell and New editor of the Howler is Ed- Davi's I Yiin Wilson. Business manager is In First ·j Henry Sherrill. Business manag- Places at Winthrop 1 er of The Student is Paul Bell, and Competing against 28 other col- I business manager of OLD GOLD leges and universities, including Al'I"D BLACK is Everett Jones. entrants from all over the East and Gallimore, a rising senior, has South, the Wake Forest debate for three years been a staff rnem- squad last week captured three Malady Unknown ber of OLD GOLD AND BLACK. first places and several seconds at Though the specific ·malady Twice he has been managing ed- the Eastern Tournament, from which Professor Lake suf- FOURTH ESTATE-Shown are more, editor of the OLD GOLD business manager of OLD GOLD itor of the newspaper and this held at Winthrop College in Rock fers is not known, physicians state the five newly_ elected business AND BLACK; Edwin Wilson, AND BLACK; and Paul Bell, yeat· has conducted the column "In Hill, s. C. that if the.l 'nfection is not checked . managers and editors of the va- editor of The Howler; bottom: business manager of The Stu-.. Time With Wake Forest." He is C · bl' t' L ft H Sh 'll b . d C. Hope, Jr., transfer from immediately it might prove fatal. rious campus pu 1ca wns. e enry err1 , usmess manag- ent .. No editor was elected for a pledge of Sigma Phi Epsilon. Mars Hill, emerged first in after Professor Lake has been ill since to right they are, top: Bob Gal- er of The Howler; Zeb Jones, the The Student. He is the fourth editor of OLD dinner, defeating Bynum Shaw, paying a visit to his home here .on ---- GOLD AND BLACK who was sophomore, in· the finals. Shaw April4 G•11 H 1. tK F•t:l c d B born in and has lived for years in and Hope captured all awards in The .request for volunteers for I . eep I . s o-e s e•ng Chiiia. Other editors from China this contest. . blood tests looking toward possible SC· Pres.tdenJ. .G.tven Taken s-y I RC were Archie McMillan, George Paul Bell, speaking on "What transfusions in aid of Professor A Kelley and Bill Ayers. Galli- Americans Believe In," captured Lake came when Registrar Grady more's home is now in Wake For- first in extempore. Bell also won Patterson, ·a personal friend of Large Delegation To Sl.udeni:S Beth Perry ·and est. one round as did sam Behrends. his family's, announced the nature . From Wake Forest Mildred Middleton Thompson, whom Gallimore de- J. D. Davis, sophomore, was f hi il1n d t t d that feated has served on the news 0 s ess an 5 a e ·AttendS' Meeting . Governor• Broughton Become Members named champion in response to matched blood might be needed. staff for two Yllars and is a rnem- the occasion, a form of impromptu Mr. Patterson suggested that those Gill Horton,· sophomore from Speaks in, Chapel The local International Relations ber of Delta Sigma Phi. speaking. who would like' to volunteer for Wilmington, was elected.,Pt:esident Here . -Yeste_MBf . - -- broke precedelft Wednesday Wilson Wins Arthur Adams, freshman from , transfusion leave tlieii with of the North Carolin3- Speaking in convocation here night, in!lucting two co-eds, Beth Wilson, new editor of the Howl- Asheville, placed among the first him or with Seavy Carroll. of Student Governments, at the . Pen·y and Mildred Middleton, in- er, has served on the yearbook three in oratory. Adams delivered thirteenth annual federation con- yesterday mornmg as the guest of The names of the men who have Q . Ch Gamma Eta Gamma law fraterni- to the group. The induction of 1 staff since.his registration at Wake a speech entitled "International- tbus far volunteered for transfu- clave at ueens College m ar- · , · G these co-eds climaxed a two 1 Forest. He has also wr1'tten "Pro ism." 1 1 k ty, North Carolinas overnor J. sion and those whose blood match- otte ast wee · Melville Broughton urged that ev- months argument the club over Humanitate," a critical column, Wake Forest speakers placed in ed that of Professor Lake were of the student council ery student of Wake Forest Col- the question of :-vhether females for OLD GOLD AND BLACK. every contest with the exception not known definitely at press time attending the conclave_ from here lege and every other college and! should be taken mto the club.. His horne is in Leaksville, N. C., of radio announcing and debate. last nigh:t. were Horton, J. E. Tate, _Jr., university in the United States I Initiated along with-Misses Per- and he is a member of Kappa Sig- Ten debaters and Professor Ay- · ------'--------- Horchak; J_oe Duncavage, Le_wlS prepare for service in the national ry and Middleton were Ed Hob- ma fraternity. cock, debate the trip mcumbent v1ce- war effort by making himself good, Walter Carpenter. Charles Sherrill, new Howler business t? Carolma. This was the BSU OEfif;efS Meet pres1dent of the federation, and physically fit. I Allen, Chester Morrison, and, manager, is a member of Lambda f1rst brne Wake Forest has attend- Tut ;Myers. "It isn't simply the armaments; Carlton Mitchell. I Chi Alpha and his home is in ed the Grand Eastern. In Raleigh Saturday The Student Government feder- it isn't simply the material things," Following the initiation of new Wake Forest. Paul Bell, Sigma Among the local squad . ation will meet at State College he said after reviewing briefly members, plans were discussed for J Phi Epsilon business manager of competed . wer.e Notre new ?f the Wa.ke next year, with Horton presiding North Carolina's part in the war a banquet to be held by the IRC 1 The Student, is from Black Moun- Dame, of Fl?nda, Kent Forest BSU will meet wtth over the convention. effort. "There are many other in Raleigh's Town House on May[ tain, and Everett Jones, new OLD Umvers1ty m Oh10, the Un- other new BSU officers from East- qualities which will contribute to 1 with Meredith College's Inter- GOLD AND BLACK business of Kentucky, Duke, and ern Carolilia colleges at the Tab- an American and an Allied vic- national Relations Club as guests. manager, is a Pi Kappa Alpha Flonda-Southern. ernade Baptist Church in Ra- Bond Fund Reaches tory. One of these is stamina, Plans were also discussed at the from Monroe. leigh tomorrow for the annual for which Americans have always meeting for extension programs to Members of the publications, Billy Primm, Johnny Walker, spring retreat. " . . Total oJ $477.25 been particularly noted. You owe be held with other International board who chose the new editors I Gene Cole, Rudd Friday, Weldon :rhe retreat, at which.John . it to yourself to help maintain this Relations Clubs of the State, and and business managers are Dr. E. Hollowell, Lovick Miller, Jr., and Millan, State BSU president, will A total of $17.25, collected m a stamina by keeping yourself phys- another round-table discussion to E. Folk, Dr. H. B. Jones, Mr. E. B. Joe Duncavage. ,preside, is designed to acquaint free offering last Friday night at I ically fit." be given over radio station WRAL Earnshaw, Professor J. L. Mem- The Publications Board at its the new officers with their duties the drama productions of the Lit- . in the near future. This program, ory, Dr. A. C. Reid, Neil Morgan, meeting also discussed the possi- aJld opportUiiities for Christian tie Theatre and Phi and Eu So- Many Programs club president·.r. E. Tate, Jr., stat- Royal Jennings, Bill Ayers, Doni bility of a publications banquet leadership on the college cam- cieties, punched again at the me- d ed, will be similar to the one giv- Bradsher, Judson Creech, D. E. and the awarding of publications puses. morial fund, raising the total to The c?mmen ed en by the club three weeks ago. Ward, Jim Bonds, Bob Waters, 1 keys. John Lawrence, state student $ 477 . 25 . . far-reaching physical secretary, was responsible for Meanwhile, the Student ColUlCil now under planning the program. This will at its weekly meeting held Wed- colleges and umversi- be Lawrence's last participation nesday night, discussed further ties recommended that they in state BSU affaiis because of his plans for raising of the remaining ?e contmued even after the war recent call to the naval reserve. $275. 1S over. . . . Campaign Begins Here For Contributions To·Wake County's Red Cross Blood Bank He is to report at Columbia Uni- Students who have recently .Amencan_ quallty versity on Sunday. Lawrence is\ contr1bute to he sa1d, Plans for a substantial contribu- involved in anyone in normal good ceed, for there's not a real man on a gradaute of Wake Forest and has I cepted the position of state stu- lS resourcefulness. 'When the test tion by Wake Forest students to health donating only three-fifths the campus who will not cooperate been an aggressive leader in the 1 dent secretary nearly two years comes," he stated, "the resource- the Wake C:ounty Red Cross blood- of one pint of his blood. I'm for to the fullest. You can certainly North Carolina BSU since he ac-l ago. fulness_ of. the. American I bank, located Rex Hospital in , it." count on me and, I think, all the -------------------------- and sailor lS to pla.y un- Raleigh, are bemg shaped up by 1 Dowdy has stated that faculty 1 Gamma men as well." I b A portant part m the wmnmg of Clyde Dowdy, sophomore minis-! members are eligible for partici- Publications adviser Dr. E. E; Dramatics c u nnounces this war." terial student from West Virginia.' pation in the project. He has Folk also commended the rnove- Kitchin p t According to the set-up now be- ! placed · at strategic campus spots ment, saying, "Every American is resen 1 ing completed, those willing to co- copies of the petition and pledge willing to give his blood for his Cast For First Production In conclusion he mentioned operate would agree to give three- for students to read and Sii!l, if country, and we at home, who are briefly as other American quali-l fifths of a pint of blood to the . they plan to cooperate in the not wanted or needed at the front .For the first production since its · iness manager. ties which will be determining, bank. If enough donations can be! movement. . at present, are glad to do this orgenization early this year the The cast of characters is as fol- factors the qualities of determina-1 obtained, the equipment for draw-l Faculty members · and students little for the boys who are giving Wake Forest Dramatic Club this lows: Bishop of Broadminster, tion and courage. I ing and preserving the blood i alike have already expressed I their blood not so safely as we week selected "The Bishop Mis- Arthur Adams; Lady Emily Lyons, Governor Broughton was intro-. would be brought here to the cam- 1 wide-spread approval of the idea., can." behaves," by Fredrick Jackson. Elizabeth Jones; Donald duced by College President Thur-ipus, thus alleviating the trouble 1 l Dr. H. M. Poteat, long an advocate Professor M. J. Hagood stated This play ran in New'York sev- Bruce Warlick; Red Eager, J. D. man D. Kitchin, who in turn was I Wake students would be put to. of progressive movements among that the project "would be a wor- eral years ago and has been ex- Davis; Hester Grantham,. introduced by Seavy Carroll, I Dowdy emphasized . the 1 1 says, "Nothing, in my thy contribution on the part of tremely popular with little theatre, ·Guy Waller, Bill Phil-! chancellor of Gamma Eta Gamma I blood would not be used m Ra- opm10n, could be presented to our Wake Forest." and college groups. jlips; Mrs. Waller, Margaret Car- 1 1aw fraternity. leigh alone, but would serve as a which. would them a And, finally, the complete col- Rehearsals have begun, under· roll; Brooke, Bynum Shaw; Col- reserve for the area from Norfolk,! fmer opporturuty of rnakmg a def- lege endorsement and promise of ·,the direction of Jack Easley, pres- lins, Garnell White; Frenchy, Paul Va., to Charleston, S. C. inte contribution to the needs o:[ cooperation in the plan came with :)dent of the club, and the play Garrison. contributed are Willis Jones, Jo Approval of the plan was voiced the moment than the proposed the following statement from Dean -will be presented early in May in The Dramatic Club chose "The· Holding, Dick Glenn, Claude Me- by President Kitchin and Dr. G. blood-bank." D. B. Bryan:- "I warmly approve ;the ;high school auditorium. Lee Bishop Misbehaves" after aband- Clure, George Tobey, Walter C. Mackie, college physician. In J. E. Tate, campus leader, voiced of the idea and hope that the col- ,rCopp1:e has been selected as stagejl oning "The Prince of Lions" as an- Clark, Shelton Canter, Russ Bach- regard to the plan, Dr. Mackie. hearty endorsement, stating, lege will heartily respond to the and Anna Moore as bus- tiquated. , . lor, Hal Olive, Arana Dunn. stated, "There is no danger at alli"Doubtless this project will sue- effort."

Transcript of Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

Page 1: Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

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. Volume XXVI.

Law S.tudent-s . . ' --

·Proffer Blood To Ill T eaeher

Forty Men . From Law School and Sports V ohmteer

Forty law students and three football players vol'!lllteered ·to have their blood tested for trans-.

,fusion this week when it was 'learned t~at P11ofess()r I. B .. Lake . -uf the law school faculty, now on leave of absence for national de- ·

..-f:ense work in connection with the Office of Production Management in Washington, is seriously ill, in , Durham's Duke, Hospital with an infection of the blood stream · which as yet remains a mystery to attending physicians. ' , .

Of the 43 men volunteering, 16 were found to have blood. which · matches that of Professor Lake, , and are now awaiting the decision . of attending physicians as to . whether trans~usion will be neces-sary.

:n·· .. '

' ~' .. ar Number 25

Board ·Votes N;ot to Elect Morgan Unt:il Furt:her St:udy

. In the. only contested publication position, Robert S. Gallimore last night was voted by the Publications Board editor of OLD GOLD AND BLACK for the year of 194~:43. He defeated Herbert Thompson, the only other candidate to take the positiOn. '

j · For T~e Student, co1le~e magazine, no ~~itor was elected. Neil Morgan, present editor, was~a candidate for the positiOn, but the election was postponed indefinitely- until it can be establishe~ constitutionally whether or not an editor

- can succeed himself. The present~------------=-=-1 constitution of the Publications I ~card ~as be~n lost, and the elec-1 t10n will await the drafting of a

I' new document.

For all other student publication positions only one candidate for each had filed application, and each was elected with no dissen-

Debaters Take First Places In Tournament

sion by the Publications Board. Hope, Bell and New editor of the Howler is Ed- Davi's w·

I Yiin Wilson. Business manager is In First ·j Henry Sherrill. Business manag- Places at Winthrop

1 er of The Student is Paul Bell, and Competing against 28 other col-

I business manager of OLD GOLD leges and universities, including Al'I"D BLACK is Everett Jones. entrants from all over the East and

Gallimore, a rising senior, has South, the Wake Forest debate for three years been a staff rnem- squad last week captured three

Malady Unknown ber of OLD GOLD AND BLACK. first places and several seconds at Though the specific ·malady Twice he has been managing ed- the G~and Eastern Tournament,

from which Professor Lake suf- FOURTH ESTATE-Shown are more, editor of the OLD GOLD business manager of OLD GOLD itor of the newspaper and this held at Winthrop College in Rock fers is not known, physicians state the five newly_ elected business AND BLACK; Edwin Wilson, AND BLACK; and Paul Bell, yeat· has conducted the column "In Hill, s. C.

that if the.l'nfection is not checked . managers and editors of the va- editor of The Howler; bottom: business manager of The Stu-.. Time With Wake Forest." He is C · bl' t' L ft H Sh 'll b . d • C. Hope, Jr., transfer from

immediately it might prove fatal. rious campus pu 1ca wns. e enry err1 , usmess manag- ent .. No editor was elected for a pledge of Sigma Phi Epsilon. Mars Hill, emerged first in after Professor Lake has been ill since to right they are, top: Bob Gal- er of The Howler; Zeb Jones, the The Student. He is the fourth editor of OLD dinner, defeating Bynum Shaw, paying a visit to his home here .on ---- GOLD AND BLACK who was sophomore, in· the finals. Shaw April4 G•11 H 1. tK F•t:l 1· c d B • born in and has lived for years in and Hope captured all awards in

The .request for volunteers for I . or~on eep I . s o-e s e•ng Chiiia. Other editors from China this contest. .

blood tests looking toward possible SC· Pres.tdenJ. ~dv·tce .G.tven Taken s-y I RC were Archie McMillan, George Paul Bell, speaking on "What transfusions in aid of Professor ~ A Kelley and Bill Ayers. Galli- Americans Believe In," captured Lake came when Registrar Grady more's home is now in Wake For- first in extempore. Bell also won Patterson, ·a personal friend of Large Delegation To Sl.udeni:S Beth Perry ·and est. one round as did sam Behrends. his family's, announced the nature . From Wake Forest ~ Mildred Middleton Thompson, whom Gallimore de- J. D. Davis, sophomore, was f hi il1n d t t d that feated has served on the news

0 s ess an 5 a e ·AttendS' Meeting . Governor• Broughton Become Members named champion in response to matched blood might be needed. staff for two Yllars and is a rnem- the occasion, a form of impromptu Mr. Patterson suggested that those Gill Horton,· sophomore from Speaks in, Chapel The local International Relations ber of Delta Sigma Phi. speaking. who would like' to volunteer for Wilmington, was elected.,Pt:esident Here . -Yeste_MBf ··~ . - -- ~lnb broke precedelft Wednesday Wilson Wins Arthur Adams, freshman from

, transfusion leave tlieii ~anies with of the North Carolin3-Fed~tion Speaking in convocation here night, in!lucting two co-eds, Beth Wilson, new editor of the Howl- Asheville, placed among the first him or with Seavy Carroll. of Student Governments, at the . Pen·y and Mildred Middleton, in- er, has served on the yearbook three in oratory. Adams delivered

thirteenth annual federation con- yesterday mornmg as the guest of The names of the men who have Q . Ch Gamma Eta Gamma law fraterni- to the group. The induction of 1 staff since.his registration at Wake a speech entitled "International-

tbus far volunteered for transfu- clave at ueens College m ar- · , · G these co-eds climaxed a two 1 Forest. He has also wr1'tten "Pro ism." 1 1 k ty, North Carolinas overnor J. sion and those whose blood match- otte ast wee · Melville Broughton urged that ev- months argument ~ the club over Humanitate," a critical column, Wake Forest speakers placed in ed that of Professor Lake were Me~bers of the student council ery student of Wake Forest Col- the question of :-vhether females for OLD GOLD AND BLACK. every contest with the exception not known definitely at press time attending the conclave_ from here lege and every other college and! should be taken mto the club.. His horne is in Leaksville, N. C., of radio announcing and debate. last nigh:t. were Horton, J. E. Tate, _Jr., Pe~ university in the United States I Initiated along with-Misses Per- and he is a member of Kappa Sig- Ten debaters and Professor Ay- · ------'--------- Horchak; J_oe Duncavage, Le_wlS prepare for service in the national ry and Middleton were Ed Hob- ma fraternity. cock, debate co~ch, rna~e the trip

Ale~ander, mcumbent st~te v1ce- war effort by making himself good, Walter Carpenter. Charles Sherrill, new Howler business t? So~th Carolma. This was the BSU OEfif;efS Meet pres1dent of the federation, and physically fit. I Allen, Chester Morrison, and, manager, is a member of Lambda f1rst brne Wake Forest has attend-Tut ;Myers. "It isn't simply the armaments; Carlton Mitchell. I Chi Alpha and his home is in ed the Grand Eastern.

In Raleigh Saturday The Student Government feder- it isn't simply the material things," Following the initiation of new Wake Forest. Paul Bell, Sigma Among schoo~ the local squad . ation will meet at State College he said after reviewing briefly members, plans were discussed for J Phi Epsilon business manager of competed . ag~mst wer.e Notre

~he new olfiC~s ?f the Wa.ke next year, with Horton presiding North Carolina's part in the war a banquet to be held by the IRC 1 The Student, is from Black Moun- Dame, u:uver~Ity. of Fl?nda, Kent Forest BSU Counc1~ will meet wtth over the convention. effort. "There are many other in Raleigh's Town House on May[ tain, and Everett Jones, new OLD ~tate. Umvers1ty m Oh10, the Un-other new BSU officers from East- qualities which will contribute to 1 with Meredith College's Inter- GOLD AND BLACK business 1ver~1ty of Kentucky, Duke, and ern Carolilia colleges at the Tab- an American and an Allied vic- national Relations Club as guests. manager, is a Pi Kappa Alpha Flonda-Southern. ernade Baptist Church in Ra- Bond Fund Reaches tory. One of these is stamina, Plans were also discussed at the from Monroe. leigh tomorrow for the annual for which Americans have always meeting for extension programs to Members of the publications, Billy Primm, Johnny Walker, spring retreat. " . . Total oJ $477.25 been particularly noted. You owe be held with other International board who chose the new editors I Gene Cole, Rudd Friday, Weldon

:rhe retreat, at which.John M~- . it to yourself to help maintain this Relations Clubs of the State, and and business managers are Dr. E. Hollowell, Lovick Miller, Jr., and Millan, State BSU president, will A total of $17.25, collected m a stamina by keeping yourself phys- another round-table discussion to E. Folk, Dr. H. B. Jones, Mr. E. B. Joe Duncavage. ,preside, is designed to acquaint free offering last Friday night at I ically fit." be given over radio station WRAL Earnshaw, Professor J. L. Mem- The Publications Board at its the new officers with their duties the drama productions of the Lit- . in the near future. This program, ory, Dr. A. C. Reid, Neil Morgan, meeting also discussed the possi-aJld opportUiiities for Christian tie Theatre and Phi and Eu So- Many Programs club president·.r. E. Tate, Jr., stat- Royal Jennings, Bill Ayers, Doni bility of a publications banquet leadership on the college cam- cieties, punched again at the me- d ed, will be similar to the one giv- Bradsher, Judson Creech, D. E. and the awarding of publications puses. morial fund, raising the total to The ~overnor c?mmen ed ~e en by the club three weeks ago. Ward, Jim Bonds, Bob Waters, 1 keys.

John Lawrence, state student $477.25. . far-reaching physical educab~n secretary, was responsible for Meanwhile, the Student ColUlCil prog~ms now under w~y ~ planning the program. This will at its weekly meeting held Wed- ~erlcan colleges and umversi­be Lawrence's last participation nesday night, discussed further ties an~ recommended that they in state BSU affaiis because of his plans for raising of the remaining ?e contmued even after the war recent call to the naval reserve. $275. 1S over. . . .

Campaign Begins Here For Contributions To·Wake County's Red Cross Blood Bank

He is to report at Columbia Uni- Students who have recently ~other .Amencan_ quallty whi~h versity on Sunday. Lawrence is\ ~ll contr1bute to v~ctory, he sa1d, Plans for a substantial contribu- involved in anyone in normal good ceed, for there's not a real man on a gradaute of Wake Forest and has I cepted the position of state stu- lS resourcefulness. 'When the test tion by Wake Forest students to health donating only three-fifths the campus who will not cooperate been an aggressive leader in the 1 dent secretary nearly two years comes," he stated, "the resource- the Wake C:ounty Red Cross blood- of one pint of his blood. I'm for to the fullest. You can certainly North Carolina BSU since he ac-l ago. fulness_ of. the. American sol~ier I bank, located ~ Rex Hospital in , it." count on me and, I think, all the -------------------------- and sailor lS go~ to pla.y ~ un- Raleigh, are bemg shaped up by 1 Dowdy has stated that faculty 1 Gamma men as well."

I b A portant part m the wmnmg of Clyde Dowdy, sophomore minis-! members are eligible for partici- Publications adviser Dr. E. E; Dramatics c u nnounces this war." terial student from West Virginia.' pation in the project. He has Folk also commended the rnove-Kitchin p t According to the set-up now be- ! placed · at strategic campus spots ment, saying, "Every American is

resen

1

ing completed, those willing to co- copies of the petition and pledge willing to give his blood for his Cast For First Production In conclusion he mentioned operate would agree to give three- for students to read and Sii!l, if country, and we at home, who are briefly as other American quali-l fifths of a pint of blood to the . they plan to cooperate in the not wanted or needed at the front

.For the first production since its · iness manager. ties which will be determining, bank. If enough donations can be! movement. . at present, are glad to do this orgenization early this year the The cast of characters is as fol- factors the qualities of determina-1 obtained, the equipment for draw-l Faculty members · and students little for the boys who are giving Wake Forest Dramatic Club this lows: Bishop of Broadminster, tion and courage. I ing and preserving the blood i alike have already expressed I their blood not so safely as we week selected "The Bishop Mis- Arthur Adams; Lady Emily Lyons, Governor Broughton was intro-. would be brought here to the cam- 1 wide-spread approval of the idea., can." behaves," by Fredrick Jackson. Elizabeth Jones; Donald Meadow~>, duced by College President Thur-ipus, thus alleviating the trouble 1l Dr. H. M. Poteat, long an advocate Professor M. J. Hagood stated

This play ran in New'York sev- Bruce Warlick; Red Eager, J. D. man D. Kitchin, who in turn was I Wake students would be put to. of progressive movements among that the project "would be a wor­eral years ago and has been ex- Davis; Hester Grantham,. Hel~, introduced by Seavy Carroll, I Dowdy emphasized th.~t . the 1

1

st~d~mts, says, "Nothing, in my thy contribution on the part of tremely popular with little theatre, Crutc~ield; ·Guy Waller, Bill Phil-! chancellor of Gamma Eta Gamma I blood would not be used m Ra- opm10n, could be presented to our Wake Forest." and college groups. jlips; Mrs. Waller, Margaret Car- 11aw fraternity. leigh alone, but would serve as a s~udents which. would off~ them a And, finally, the complete col-

Rehearsals have begun, under· roll; Brooke, Bynum Shaw; Col- reserve for the area from Norfolk,! fmer opporturuty of rnakmg a def- lege endorsement and promise of ·,the direction of Jack Easley, pres- lins, Garnell White; Frenchy, Paul Va., to Charleston, S. C. inte contribution to the needs o:[ cooperation in the plan came with :)dent of the club, and the play Garrison. contributed are Willis Jones, Jo Approval of the plan was voiced the moment than the proposed the following statement from Dean -will be presented early in May in The Dramatic Club chose "The· Holding, Dick Glenn, Claude Me- by President Kitchin and Dr. G. blood-bank." D. B. Bryan:- "I warmly approve ;the ;high school auditorium. Lee Bishop Misbehaves" after aband- Clure, George Tobey, Walter C. Mackie, college physician. In J. E. Tate, campus leader, voiced of the idea and hope that the col-,rCopp1:e has been selected as stagejl oning "The Prince of Lions" as an- Clark, Shelton Canter, Russ Bach- regard to the plan, Dr. Mackie. hearty endorsement, stating, lege will heartily respond to the llll&D8J~er and Anna Moore as bus- tiquated. , . lor, Hal Olive, Arana Dunn. stated, "There is no danger at alli"Doubtless this project will sue- effort."

Page 2: Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

Page Two

OLD GOLD & BLACK Publllihed weekly during the school year excepting

uamtnatlon periods and holidays as directed by the Wake Forest Colleare Public:s.tlons Boa.rd.

BILL AYERS---·---------- Editor D. E. WARD - - - - - - - - - Business Manager

Bill Primm, sports editor; Bob Gallimore, Newbill 'Villiamson, managing editors.

Old Gold and Black

ACP'e Jay Richter Repoztl b:om Waab.ingtoa

Jobs . . . are seeking ties in with the war S t · f W St' · effort. . ecre ary o ar unson bas .

·. ':. •.. :'

Friday; April17, 1942

By Bjrnum · .Shaw:

Sam Behrends, Seavey Carroll, Lee Copple, Elizabeth Jones, Santford Martin, Jr., John :Mcl\Iillan, Nell Morgan, Donald Britt, Herbert Thompson. Ed Wilson, editorial staff. John Conley, Ken Nelson, sports.

J. D. Davis, Harrel Johnson, Zcb Jones, Demming Ward, business staff.

1 announced that 100,000 men War . . . .: · · . .· JUl~...ll.-...::::"....:....\!!~:;...iiiii•L~ ; and- women will be trained for ci- · · ·

vilian war jobs-inspectors at . M,ore than 5 per c~nt of t~e ~- The Down of ·the Moon Government factories, depots and bon s 20-year-olds .who regl_Stered ll:!ember of .Associated ColleKiate Press, distributor

of Collegiate Digest, member of North Carolina. Collegiate Press Association.

Entered as second class ma.l! matter Januar~· 22 1916, at the post office of Wake Forest, North Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879. -----------------LEW AYRES STANDS 1UP

This is a problem we have to face every

time we have a war. It is a problem that is

mixed up indissolubly with why we periodicallr

fight, or why we think we fight wars, Involved is not only the question of individual civil liberty and the inviolability of man's mind, but how far we, as citizens responsible not only for prosecuting a war, but for rebuilding a world, can allow ourselves to go along the path­way of intolerant hate.

In conjunction with the national con­scription laws, passed some time before the I war began, a provision was made by the gov­ernment, through the office of the Attorney­General, for the disposition of cases coming under the category usually known as Consci­entious Objectors. These objectors to military service were examined by qualified boards se­lected for the purpose and cases were passed upon according to their individual merits. Within the ranks of the objectors were peopie of many sects and creeds, and from all walks of life and culture-levels. The "Conshies" as they were called by some military men, were sent to labor-camps, old CCC Camps, which were equipped by the war department. Ad­ministrators were drawn from volunteer soci­ologists the nation over. The men were ordered to pay thirty dollars a month for their board and room, and, in addition, must do their own work plus conservation work for the govern­ment. In addition, as a class, they were sub­jected to the scorn of their fellow citizens for sticking up for what, right or wrong, were their sincere convictions. It was no easy road to follow .... and no road for cowards.

Recently the news-services carried the first big "juicy" story about a conscientious ob­jector. A nationally-known man had joined the untouchables. His name was Lew Ayers. Not only was he a man whom everybody in the country had heard of, he was An Actor. Not­withstanding the fact that he had been a rara avis among screen actors, in that he lived quietly and conducted himself corcumspectly and with dignity, he was An Actor, and, there­fore, public property to everybody who reads fan magazines.

Since Lew Ayres decided to follow his convictions he has been the target of many publications and organizations dedicated to making life miserable for those who do not con­form in every respect to their conception ot patriotism. We think this is unfair.

The facts in Ayers' case are simple: He is a small-town boy who chose acting as !l

profession and went to Hollywood. His initial success came in All Quiet on the Western Front about a dozen years ago. It was about this time he began formulating his views on war and objection to war. Since then he ha:; had his ups and downs-more downs than ups, and it has been only recently that he has en­joyed a comeback in the Dr. Kildare series. With financial and artistic success again within

·his grasp, he has done what very few of us would have had the courage to do. He has asserted his convictions and followed them, knowing full well that it meant that he could never appear on the screen again, never make a public appearance again-in short, that he is blowing his last chance to succeed in his way of life. We do not hold with his beliefs; we are no conscientious objectors. But we say here, for the record, that we admire his stand.

BONDS FOR SCHOLARSHIP

Wake Forest has not yet reached its goal in purchasing a $1,000 defense bond. Still $300 are needed. But students have already begun to wonder how the proceeds of the bond should be used. The University of Iowa has adopted :1 plan which Wake Forest could do well to

imitate.

After World War I, as veterans can teU you, few of the students who enlisted or were drafted into the army returned to finish

(Continued on Page Five)

witk WAKE FOREST

arsenals; production ~orkers, in the last draft are co~ege stu- Into two hours of pleasant r~a. d_ ing Joh'n etc.-in Govemment and State- dents-some 136,700 of them. They

By BOB GALLIMORE

Week ago when Lambda Chi's Thomas Lee Jones was elected Poet of the senior class by 83 votes

owned schools. Students will be were assigned order numbers Steinback has packed an age of human truth paid $900 to $1440 a year while-in ¥arch 17 and prospects-of ~n :ar- H. is ne. west work, The Moon Is Down,· r~veal" t · · (M ' tr · ly military ·career are very real ..,

to 82 for his opponent, Bob Holt, .. ~~·~g:, Selent· amsed ~_ust be for most of'fhem. · . that highest. innate political urge-the desire junior transfer from Mars Hill, no .. 1 e ec 1ve erv1ce re- · . . . one was more surprised than I quirements.) .The War Department says that to be free. Upon browsing through th~ short · Lambda Chi's Thomas Lee Jones. Civil Service here in Washing- beginn~g J~e 1• ~uot~s will book even a casual reader would realize that

., j probably call for men m both the No poet, Lambda Ch1 s Jones was ton virtually assures stenograph- f" t (21 35) . d tb wrapped up within the the pages is a po"'erful heard to remark day after elec- ers a 3' ob within one week of filing Irs d - age gro(2u0p an ldse d f d · . "I d'd 't t . secon age group. -year-o · ose 0 ynamite, and a bit of concentration tJons. I n any more wan an application. Within the next d 36 45 ld ) , will reveal the omi"nous ti"cki"ng of. a delayed to be elected Poet than I wanted few weeks Civil Service must fur- anL " al- byeard 0 hs ·· b .

,, . oc oar s ave een m- action !lomb. Though surely a glimpse is bt::-to fly. msh 1,000 stenographers to Wash- structed to mail questionnaires to

Cracked Jones, doubtless mean- ington war agencies. registrants in the second age held on first reading, the full impact of ·stein-ing to use the word plagiarism: Typing and shorthand skills .are group ·in. "sufficient.m:imbers to ·beck's mesage does not strike one until he "If I handed in a poem I'd prob- an excellent entering wedge if insure filling of the June· call en- has considered the entire present world scene. ably be accused of protoplasm!" you are interested in working for tirely from this age group if ne:- F .

Uncle Sam and can't discover any cessary." . or 10 the book he sees .a little town, any M. Johnson Hagood vacancies in your field. Your According to an OCD survey ·ofl httle town, betrayed into the hands· of a worlJ

The English department's M. chances of transferring to the 400 college newspapers, more than oppressor by a small town Quisling, store­Johnson Hagood has the reputa- kind of work for which you are half are sending the school paper keeper Corell. F. C. (Fifth Column) Corell tion of being one of the toughest especially trained are termed free of charge to former students has' arranged for the t fi h · d instructors on the campus, is also "very good" if the specialty you I now in military service. . mayor 0 go. s mg an known to have liberal·and pro- for the army of twelve to be away _at a shooting gressive views on college educa- y M k o· rr match· on the day of the occup_ation. From tion. 40 ears a e a lrrerence the zero hour onward the growing heavines~

One of Toughie Hagood's cours- of the soldiers' feet is surpassed only by the es is American ii'Lerature, a course JOHN ARCH McMILLAN writes friends of· long ago. We actually growing discontent of the downtrodden P4:lO-enrolling many inasmuch as it is in Charity and Children on old care little for the shaded campus 1 S ·

d W k F p e. tembeck paints the contagious fear of necessary for an English major. gra s returning to a e orest. and the old buildings. The most,

Attendance in American litera- Full forty years have passed ·unhappy man one will meet in a the Leader's men which mounts as they wai't ture is not required. First day of since we and thirty-eight others day's travel is the- old grad back for the d~y when that discontent will span­class last Fall Instructor Hagood graduated from Wake Forest Col- on familiar grounds surrounded taneously burst into bloody uprising. It is remarked: "You've paid for this lege. Our fortieth reunion is by unfamiliar faces.· It is not the this question which the author is posing. Will -course in American literature ov- planned for May 25 at the college. ~cenes of our childhood but the old not the worm finally turn? At the last he in. er at the bursar's office. Every All indications point to a good at- gang that we long :for. The scenes · Monday, Wednesday and Friday tendance. Six of us have gone•on without the old gang are depress- timates the answ(;lr by drawing a parallel with at this time (8 a. m.) I'll be here to the other world. That is not a ing. However, to go back to the the Phaedo. The Mayor, going to his death, -­to teach it. If you want to learn costly toll in numbers for forty old scenes and meet again the very says, "I owe a cock to Asclepius. Will you ra · something about American litera- ye~s but considering the quality 1 ones who make the memory of member to pay the debt?" To the small voice · ture, well and good. I'll be glad the loss is great. The old boys of .

1

those scenes sweet is a rare privi- of Doctor Winter in reply is added the tumult-to help you out as much as I can. 1902 are growing enthusiastic ov- lege indeed. The love for the old But whether Y?U do or .not doesn't I er the prospect of striking bands j school has led many groups to do ous shout of all oppressed and sympathetic make a particle of difference to again. Some of us have not seen foolish things as the bat-infested pe-ople, "Yes, the debt shall be paid!" me. No roll will be checked. You each other for· all these years and school · plants all over the south can attend or not, as you like." the prospect , of meeting again is prove. No school or college has Strung throughout The Moon Is Down are

Whether or not they want to pleasant indeed. We have asked I the right to exist one day longer a host of usually commonplace observations learn American literature cannot 1 ourself why this growing longing than it is meeting a definite need. which against this. Steinbeckian backdrop are be accurately judged, but fact is I for the old college campus and· That question is not raised about recognized as the trademarkes of free people-·­that seldom more than half the why the growing enthusiasm over Wake Forest and therefore the old the five room "palace"· of the Mayor, the doc­members of the class attend-ex- the thought of the reunion? The grads of 1902 can go back and give cept on quiz days. One member reason is the thought of meeting sentiment free rein. tor's marveling at the intricate roll of hi.~ for a period of over a month at- thumbs, or the cook's utter disregard for .mili-tended class only one day. Those i d tary authority. Most impressive, perhaps, is who make a habit of not attend- Galloway Writes Stu ents the idea put across by the doomed Orden: "No," ing Instructor Hagood fondly calls · /' . " he said, "they can't arrest the Mayor._ The his proxy students." ELI GALLOWAY, ex-president to our country which at present is

One day not long ago Toughie of the Wake Forest student bod at war. .M.ayor is an idea conceived by free men. It Hagood announced that the class y, will escape arrest.''.

ld t t th t . d who was forced to leave school to Wake Forest has meant a lot to wou no mee e nex peno , d I'll f t the days at the same time requesting those I enter the United States Navy me an never orge f t th

, . I spent there. I'll never orge e present not to pass on the word to 1 physical education program, wntes people I met either. I honestly those not present. Came the next I Wake Forest students-Dear fel-l th'nk t t b"g help · d d b t h lf th t 1 every con ac was a 1 per10 an a ou a ose no ·

t t th t lows, The job you gave me about I to me. presen a e announcemen . . h d T h" H d a year ago IS one I'll never forget. I hke the Navy and the work I

sth. owe b kuph.. h oudg le d agRoo It was certainly a privilege and I am doing is fine. I'll be here -un-rew ac 1s ea , roare . u- . . . . h I'll

h 't h t h 1 an honor to be president of such til some bme m May-w ere mor now as 1 t a e p ans h t I I d 't kn henceforth to shift the meeting I a akstudent body as we atvhetal J' go thenk, on. f ~~h . U place of the class eve da that W e Forest. I am sorry . a Than s agam or e pr1v ege ·t · d t ry ty was unable to serve the remamder' you gave me and I assure you I 1 1s suppose o convene- o con-found thos f h. t d t of the school year, but due to cir- always tried to, do my best. The e o IS proxy s u en s who should, now and then decide cumstances I was forc~d to leave. best of l~ck to all of you. to attend. ' I felt that I was best suited for the Yours m the true Wake Forest

Duncavage and Coun~il I position I am now holding, and I, spirit, feel that I will be of more value I Eli Galloway.

Whatever other qualities SPE's -------------------------­Joseph Anthony Duncavage dis­plays as president of the student body, two things cannot be de­nied: 1) he gets things done; 2) he doesn't pull his punches when it comes to plain statements of I fact. Meetings of the Council and i the Legislature, frequently iri the past bearing marked resemblance to a three-ring circus on kiddies' day, now meet with an order and dispatch seldom known before. Impatient with muddling and horse-play, President Duncavage, though ever ready with pithy side cracks, makes things.hum.

Difficulties confronting the Council this year have, in the main, been three: 1) Lack of knowledge of the student body constitution on the part of Council members, making for inefficiency in the consideration and solution of current school problems; 2) lack of system in the keeping of Council fiscal accounts, making for waste in student government expenditures; 3) the inadequacy of the present student body con­stitution to meet the, current de­mands of student government. Though the Council has been con­sidering these difficulties inter­mittently throughout the entire school year, only with the assump­tion of office by Duncavage, ex-1 cept in the case of constitutional reforms, has it appeared that thor-

CAMPUS CAMERA by LEA

CROOK WEEK

Ar "0-IE BID a: lliE YEAR., SEN­

IORS A1 PJ..ABNM COI.l.EGE I·IIDE AN ANCIENT cm>KEO

STIO< ONll-\E CAMPUS. JUNIOR'S 0\N NOT GAIN

SENIOR PRlVIl£GES ~-111 .. THEY FIND1HE ~K

ALE~ FIDLER .. COE CX>LLEGE 1RAINER~ 1-\,AS REfEREED 6000

OOXING MAltHES I

ough-going solutions might be I -==~=~~=====~==========::;_~ proposed in the immediate future. ·-

Plaudits to Mr. Steinbeck for his treatment of the Nazi (he never said so, but-) soldiers. He depicts them not as beasts or drudges, but as human beings who have .the same passions, fears, and hopes of all men. He points out that their actions are not directed by their own de­sires, but by the wishes of some higher authori ty. Only when their ends are frustrated do they resort to brutality.

Musings Idle

Despite recent repudiation by·the departed Pegasus (may the worthy dead re~t in peace), the Classics Club has managed to survive and is distributing free to prospective members a complilation of Shakespeare's works.

Marjorie Kinnan Rawling's girlish attempt, Cross Creek, is- well, Edward Shenton's illus­trations are appropriate, anyway.

The Wake Forest High School junior class play, Don't Steal My Penny, to be presented tomorrow night, may be strictly above the _ju­venile average. Instigated by 'Superior Rating' Murchison, it promises a. pleasant evening's en­tertainment. At least, the ads ~ay so. And the title is timely, too.

Musings Not So Idle

After the Glee Club musicfest the other night, Dr. Reid challenged his philosophy class­es to show him a better men's chorus anywhere in the land. As a general rule, the scholarly philosopher does not hand .out posies. One more clipping for your scrap book, Mr. McDonald.

Orchids to Ed Wilson far the high literary level he has maintained in his column, Pro Humanitate. The refusal of many coUegians to read it is ample proof of its value, and to thosz who enjoy the more wholesome things it repre· sents a weekly renewal of interest.

Buy War Stamps!

' . '- ~

..

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Page 3: Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

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· .. ',,1'

,... .....

·Old Gold and Black .,·

Page Three

·GEG, Sigmq Pi's-TYill Hold Big Dcz~~ l;lere

First· Frat Spring ,_ ·.,...---------,-~·''+-.­Dance -Ever ·Held

. Iri Wake Forest ~~~-~sr~.~·.Ji.:e:~.;.. i~~ .. a~!!{J

BSU t:o lns~all New Officers

Professor Reid 'To Be Speaker; Carver To Preside

The first fraternity spring dance ·to be held in Wake Forest will be staged in the Inca!' Community· House tomorrow night from 8: oo­o'clock to 12:00 o'clock by Gamma ~ta. Gamme and Sigma Pi fra­ternities. Johnny Satterfield and his UNf: Music 'Makers will furn­ish· . the rhythm for the affair, which marks the formal opening

Newly - elected BSU Council members will be formally installed Sunday night at the regular

Tolliver Davis, member of church services in an impressive Gamma Eta Gamma .Jaw fra- candle-light ceremony at which ternity, defeated Tut Meyers, Professor George A. Carver will Kappa Sigma running independ- preside and Dr. A. C. Reid will ently for the position of law speak.

school representative on the After the installation service student council Tuesday when there will be a joint council meet-the only run-off of the annual ing of the old and new councils

of the Community House. Spring law sc,hool elections was held at Professor Carver's home. held during chapel period. A fellowship period will follow Davis defeated Meyers by a vote this.

The presidents of both fraterni- of 25 to 11. The men being installed in the ties stated that the number ofl' Davis, a native of Forest City, various offices of the BSU Coun-bids issued will be limited, be- is a second-year law student cil are as follows: Harold Town-

cause of lack of space to.accommo..:i here. DANCE SPONSORS-Shown above are the sponsors for the Gamma Eta Gamma-Sigma Pi send, president; Warren Pritchard, date the number of people who Spring Formal to be held in the Community House here tomorrow night. They are, left to right, enlistment chairman; Carlton Mit-would attend a local dance. top row: Inez Robbins of Harris, with Tolliver Davis, vice-chancellor of Gamma Eta Gamma; chell, social director; Elbert Weth-

Tonight Gamma Eta Gamma is BankS/ Bryant· Join Elizabeth Coppedge of Thomasville, with J. E. Tate, Jr.; Lucy Lubchenko of Harrissburg, with ington, devotional chairman; Bob holding a banquet in the Raleigh I · • Dave Reavis, Gamma Eta Gamma recorder; and Sarah Philhower of Gastonia, with Johnny Walk- Lasater, secretary; George Tobey, Woman's Club with Robert L. Navy W1ng Forces er, Sigma Pi, chairman ·of the dance committee-!JOttom row: Marjorie Shepherd of Fayetteville, treasurer; Lawrence Highfill, BTU Humber, noted alumnus ,as guest (' · · with J. T. Nichols, treasurer of Sigma Pi; Irene Hudson of South Hill, Va., with Norman Adams, director; John McMillan, college speaker. Sig!lla Pi is planning an Atlanta Ga. - Wal.ter Rudolph {- secretary of Sigma Pi; Sally Lathrop of Lois, with Seavy Carroll, chancellor of Gamma Eta Gam- Sunday school superintendent; informal party for tonight. Bryant and Thad Milton Banks, rna; and Patsy ~rews of South Hill, Va., with Buddy Northington, vice-president of Sigma Pi, Rob~rt Forbes, editor Deacon Bea-

students at Wake Forest college, con; Ken Nelson, reporter; 'Bill Steak Fry have joined the growing list of . Craig, music director; George

- young Americans who have signed Bradshaw Scheduled cent above. Florida, Furman, Georgetown, Sparkman, Christian Service T~~orrov.: afternoon. ~oth fra- up for trainfug 'and active service ' . • All fraternities are above the Georgia, Georgia Tech., Hampden- Group president; J·. w. Allen, min-

termties \\!1ll have a JOmt steak in the winged forces of the Navy. For D.D. Dtes .. all m_en's average rating on the Sydney, Howard.'. ~ohn B. Stetson, isterial conference representative;

fry., and climax the week-end's _ · ' f 11 c t K t k L st t M entertainment with the formal Bryant, 21-yea:;:-old son of Mr. o owmg campuses: en enary, en uc y, OUISiana a e, er- John Farrar, extension drrector dance tomorrow night. and Mrs. Walter Bryant, of Lasker, The Rev. W. R. Bradshaw, who· Davidson, Millsaps, and Transyl- cer, Miami (Fla). Millsaps, Mis- and magazine representative.

. N.c., is a student of Wake Forest was to receive t~~ ~onorary degree vania.. . . . sissip~i, Mississippi St~te, North -------------_The ?a~ma Et~ G~mma-S1g~a University. He eniisted April ll, of Doctor of D1vm1ty from Wake ~nstitut10n m this area ~re: ~a- Carolma,. North Carolina State, Southweste~n (Te!ln.), Tennessee,

-pl affair IS the thrrd m the sprmg at the Naval Aviation. Cadet Se- Forest College at commencement bama, Alabama Polytechnic, B1rm. Presbytenan, Randolph Macon, Transylvama, Tulane, Vanderbilt, ·dance s~ries, leaving the remain- lection Board in Atlanta and at this year, died at his home in ingham - Southern, Centenary, Richmond, Roanoke, South Caro- Wake Forest, Washington & Lee, ing three fraternities, Kappa Sig- the end of his. current school year Hickory on March:!!.. Centre, Davidson, Duke, Emory, lina, University of the South, William & Mary, and Wofford. ma: ·Del~ Sigma Phi, ~~d Sigma will_ be ordered to active du:ty to Mr. Bradshaw, A. B., '92, had

:h1 Epsilon to hold a JOmt da~ce begin preliminary training at the been· active in relig!ous work for NAVY. AN N 0 u N c E M E N T m Dur~am nex~ week-end, ending Naval Reserve Aviation Base in 50 years, serving as principal of the serJes. Atlanta. the MoraVian .l!'alls Academy and

Banks, 21-year-old son of Mr. as pastor of churches in Moravian "' , ,

G. Miller, Kulthau Given ·Fellowships at the Naval Aviation Cadet Se- Hickory. He held office at the

Crayton C. Banks of Cary, N.C., Falls, Wilkesboro, North Wilkes- TO COLLEGE FRESHMEN enlisted for flight training Apr. 11, boro, Reidsville, Morganton, and . .

lection Board, 607 Mortgage Guar- Baptist State Convention for sev-Dr. William E. Speas, head of antee Building, Atlanta. On com- eral years.

the college physics department, pletion of his current school· year It is not customary to announce AND SOPHOMORES 17 19 announced this week that Glenn in June, he will receive his orders honorary degree candidates before . . , THRU Miller, . se1;1ior from Bethesda, I to report for active duty at the U. commencement, but the circum-Maryland, and Alden Kuhlthau, I S. Naval Reserve Air Base in At- stances cancelled this policy. senior from Milltown, New Jersey, lanta, to begin preliminary train­

per cent, .and Mississippi with 10 per cent.

have been awarded teaching fel- ing. lowships in physics at prominen~

Leading in this area of the coun­might be due, Dr. Duerr points try are the following with their out, to disturbed conditions result- respective percentages: Alabama ing .from the national emergency, Poly's Tau Epsilon Phi chapter as no previous survey had revealed with 57 per cent above, Mississip­so many complete reversals of , pi's Alpha Tau Omega chapter form between semesters on the with 41 per cent above, South­part of individual chapters. western's Alpha Tau Omega chap-

universities for next year. Miller has been awarded a fel­

lowship at Cornell University, and Kuhlthau will teach at the Uni­versity of Virginia. Milller and Kuhlthau are both members of Phi Beta Kappa. .

, The outstanding record for gen- ter (Tenn.) with 35 per cent era! fraternity scholarship was · abov(O, and the Delta Chi chapter made at Washington College in on the same campus with 32 per Maryland, where the group aver-

Frat Grades · Good (Continued from page four)

graduate members or the 2,389 age was 23 per cent better than chapters belonging to 60 national the all-men's. Gentenary College fraternities established at 180 col- followed closely with 22 per cent. leges and universities. When fra- At Transylvania, Davidson, Ala­ternity men passed unorganized bama Polytechnic, Furman, Mis­men in scholarship for the first sissippi State, and Mississippi Col-

Forest Theatre , time in 1929-1930, there were only lege, the fraternities were ten per

125 institutions which furnished cent or more above the all-men's! Friday, April 17~ scholastic records covering 60,000 average. Robert Preston Nancy Kelly fraternity members. In the Southern States 28 of the "Parachute Battalion"

The average rating of all frater- 40 fraternity institutions listed are I nities throughout the country fori above the all men's average rat-the academic year 1940-1941 is ing, outranking the other sections I Saturday, April 18-. 036 per cent above the composite of the country. Among these the all-men's average of their institu- leaders are c;entenary College with 1 ROY ROGERS tions, states the report, and there- 22.7 per cent above, Transylvania i "South of the Santa Fa" fore propohionately higher than with 17.6 per cent, Davidson Col­the average of all non-fraternity; lege with 15.2 per cent, Millsaps men. The margin, however, is the : College with 13.3 per cent, Ala­narrowest since 1929-1930. This I bama Polytechnic Institute with 12

MARGARET LINDSEY

"Tragedy at Midnight"

-=======----==--=-=-=--------c:---:--=- 1i Monday, April 20-

ALL OF OUR SPRING IS NOW IN

including:

CLOTHING

SPRING SUITS

Large Assortment of SLACKS

Prices Beginnipg at

$3.95 Variety of

SPORT COATS Prices Beginning at

$12.50

Edgar Bergen -Charlie McCarthy

'Look 'Vho's Laughing'

Tuesday, April 21-

John Payne Randolph Scott

"To the Shores of Tripoli''

Wednesday, April 22-

Chester Morris Jean Parker

'No Hands on the Clock'

Thursday, April 23-

Pat O'Brien Brian Donlevy

"Two Y !3nks in Trinidad"

Friday, April 24-Dorothy Lamour Betty Hutton

"The Fleet's In" T. Dorsey and his Band

Notice: All pictures will be held over at the Collegiate

You want to serve your country! Why not serve where your college training will do the most good?

Under the Navy's newest plan, you can en­liSt now and continue in college. If you make a good record, you may qualify within two years to become a Naval Officer-on the sea or in the air.

' Who may qualify 80,000 men per year will be accepted under this new plan. If you are between the ages of 17 and 19 inclusive and can meet Navy physical standards, you can enlist now as an Apprentice Seaman in the Naval Reserve. You will be in the Navy. But until you have finished two calendar years, you will remain in college, taking regular college courses under your own professors. Your studies will emphasize mathematics, pnysics and physical training.

Mter you have successfully completed 13--2 calendar years of work, you will be given a written examination prepared by the Navy • This examination is competitive. It is de­signed to select the best men for training as Naval Officers.

How to become an Officer If you rank sufficiently high in the examina. tion and can meet the physical standards, you will have your choice of two courses -each leading to an officer's commission: '1. You may volunteer. for training as an Aviation Officer. In this case you will be per­mitted to finish at least the second calendar year of your college work, after which you will be ordered to active duty for training

· to become an officer-pilot. Approximately 20,000 men a year will be accepted for Naval Aviation.

2. Or you will be selected for training as a Deek or Engineering Officer. In this case you will be allowed to continue your college work until you have received your degree.

After graduation you will be ordered to active duty for training to become a Deck or En­gineering Officer. Approximately 15,000 men a year will be accepted. If you do not qualify for special officer's

training, you will be allowed to finish the second calendar year of college, after which you will be ordered to active duty at a Naval Training Station as Apprentice Seaman.

Those who fail to pass their college work at any time may be ordered to active duty at once as Apprentice Seamen.

Your pay starts with active duty. Here's a real opportunity. A chance to

enlist in your country's serv.ice now without giving up your college training .•. a chance to prove by that same training that you are quali1ied to be an officer in the Navy.

DON'T WAIT ••• ACT TODAY 1. Take this announcement to the Dean· of your college. 2. Or go to the nearest Navy Recruiting Station. 3. Or mail coupon below for FREE BOOK giving full details.

· U.S. Navy Recruiting Bureau, Div. V-1. 30th Street and 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y.

1.

Please send me your free book on theN avy Officer Training plan for college freshmen and sophomores. I am a student 0. a parent of a student 0 who is_years old attending College a~----~ lVame _______________________________________________________ ___

s~-------------------------------------------------------cw.v&sm~------------------~------------------

Page 4: Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

., ' .. - •, ••'" .· ' } ' ~~ '·

Page Four Old Gold and Black Friday, An.rit 17~ 1942 . '

Deacs Face Hart:ford Today, Duke Saturday

FROM THE

SIDELINES BY BILLY PRIMM

MARSHALL AND EASON COME THROUGH The baseball season has hardly started when two Deacons 1

break into the headlines "with their hitting. Willard Marshall! and Fred Eason, former Deacons, slammed home runs this week 1

for a fine beginning. 1

Playing his second reg'Ular game as a member of the New York Giants, Marshall came up in the fifth inning· and found lhe bases jammed. He sent one of -Kirby Higbe's pitches into the tipper tier of the right field stands to clear the bases and give the Giants the ball game, 6-4.

I I

I Eason, playing with Chattanooga of the Southern Associa-!

tion smacked a homer in last Saturday's game against Atlanta' ' .

to enable the Lookouts to win, 4-3. Eason played with W1lson, N. C., Class D ball, last year, and is making a big jump into Class A-1 baseball. From the Atlanta journal comes this account:

"Fred Eason, Chattanooga right fielder and a right­hand batter, pushed one clear over the third tier of stands in right field for a home run in the fourth to tie up the game. He was all but mobbed at the plate by ecstatic youn~· mates who swarmed off the bench like third-graders leaving

school for the holidays."

To get ba~k to Marshall who really had a ''grand-slam" homer, he was not even considered an outstanding prospect by sports writers when he went to spring training. But .Mel Ott saw his possibilities very soon and in an interview made this

statement:

"Marshall's the outstanding player in camp this Spring. The kid's a natural bitter and his ability at the plate is re­flected in the records which show he's been our most con­sistent threat at the plate. He knows how to play his posi· tion and has a great throwing arm. He's young and fast. What else can one expect from a kid?"

Checking further on Ott's opinion, it was discovered that the Cleveland ball club regards Marshall as the find of the Spring season. Harry Eisenstat, Indian lefthanded hurler who has had the misfortune to hurl against Marshall on one of the Atlanta graduate's hot days, said:

"Marshall knows what's what when he's up at the plate. He's an excellent fast ball hitter. For a while we had him figured as a pull hitter, but he crossed us up, showing he can hit to all fields:'

Considering that Willard is down in Ott's book as the Gian~' new regular leftfielder, the youngster' has been well worth the $30,000 the Giants paid for him.

HORCHAK TO LEAVE TUESDAY To add to the woes of the .Deacon baseball team, Pete Hor­

chak, regular thirdbaseman, leaves school Tuesday in order to enter the physical education department of the United States Navy of which Gene Tunney is the head man. Horchak's depart­ure is going to leave a gaping hole in the right side of the Dea­con infield which will be hard to fill.

Coach Greason hasn't ari experienced man to replace the re­liable Horchak. Cotton Morris, Johnny Smidt and Bill Starnes, reserve infielders, are all sophomores. Morris has been drilling at the hot corner spot in practice sessions and may get the call. Whatever the solution, Coach Greason still has a mighty big problem on his hands.

Handbook Bids Requested

All men wishing to bid for the Student Handbook ad­vertising contract are requested to see. either Glenn Miller or Warren Pritchard of the Student Council immediately. Final bids must be in by Wednesday, April 29.

Any member of the student body of Wake Forest may bid for the contract. The handbook will contain approxi­mately ten pages of advertising, which will sell at around $7.50 per page. A certain percentage of advertising rec:eipts will be paid to the holder of the contract, whose duty it will be to sell all advertising for the Handbook. The contract will go to the bidder who is willing to take the lowest per­centage and who is acceptable to the Council.

STARTING PITCHER-The last time the Deacons faced Bill McCahan he was a guard on the Duke basketball team. But tomorrow over in Durham McCahan will have on a base­ball suit and will probably be Coach jack Combs choice to pitch against the Deacs.

Cardinals, Lambda Chis Win; Play AKPi and 'Combers

Vivian Likel_y ·_Pit~_hing .Ch.oic(! Against Bl·u~--Devils T~morrow

/

Stung by their 4-1 defeat by the:-. -----:--Tar Heels of Carolina Wednesday, 1-------------­the Wake Forest nine· takes the I field this afternoon against the 11 Hartford (Conn.) team, a mem­ber of the Eastern Professional , League.

Though they are facing top­flight competition this afternoon, the Deacons are looking ahead to j tomorrow's game with the Duke Blue Devils. A· win over Duke would put· the Deacons back into the middle of the Big Five race and bolster their hopes consider­ably.

Nevertheless, the Wake team will have its hands full this af­ternoon. The Deacons already have a loss marked up against them by a professional team. They'

Softball Program Since' the intramural soft~

ball schedule is ~ate in get­ting underway due to the postponement of ihe basket-. · ball tournament, Coach Phil Utley. urges every softbal~ both fraternity and non-fra, ternity; to get in their entries as soon as P!JSSible. . _Team captains . should tum in a

_complete list of his squad to-Coach Utley so that a sched· ule may be drawn up im­mediately.

lost to the Elmira, N. Y., team, an- ------------­other member of the Eastern· League, last Saturday, B-3, dis- T H J lll...l•p playing none of the heads-up ball a r ee 5 I~ I . which they had shown earlier in w k ..,_1• wins over Cornell an~ State. And a e ·~ In e this Hartford club holds an B-6 -

victory over Elmira. Faiiure To Hit Pitcher Unknown · In th Clutch

I Just \~ho will pi~h for Wake .

1

Brings on Loss Forest this afternoon IS not known. · Coach Greason had to use RIPple Failure to hit with men on base and Pierce. against Carolina Wed-1 cost the Demon Deacon. b~seball nesday. He has Vivian, Tharnish. team a 4-1 loss to Carolma s Tar and Fineberg. to use in this after- Heels Wednesday afternoon on. noon's and tomorrow's games. Gore Field. This was the first 'I'harnisli will more than likely ·southern Conference, Big Five imd start for the Deacons. also collegi~te loss for the· Dea­

Tomorrow's contest is the one cons. for which the Deacons are point- The Deacs left nine men strand­ing. Not since Tommy Byrne beat ed on the sacks, and their only the Blue Devils three times in run came as a result of an error. 1940 have the Deacons held the Meanwhile, the Tar Heels made advantage over Duke. Last year their seven hits count for four · the Duke nine took two games un

1 r s. from the Deacs, 8-7 and 6-2. Car Ray pitched Wake Forest to an Jake Pierce started on the B-1 victory in 'the second meeting mound ·for the Greason-men and of the two teams. fared well until he lost his control

Coach "Lefty" Berger's Alpha Kappa Pi quintet advanced to Hitting Weak in the fourth inning. In that the semi-final round of the intramural basketball tournament by Lefty Vivian will probably start frame Morris led o~f with a walk,/

. · h s· Ph" E ·1 f" f · 1 h f th D b t ·ght now. Myers took two strikes, then dou-upsettmg t e 1gma 1 ps1 on tve, ratermty . eague c am- ;r h ~ eaco~s, u :1 t 1 bled off the bank to score Morris. pions, 33-19, on Wednesday night. The Cardinals, Beach Comb- .o~c urr:! ~~a~~ngls::t :~:~~-Benton singled to center, but. ers, and Lambda Chis also won t-heir opening round games and ~~: w~": sh~w~~\:~ich his bat-'jCochran's fine .throw nipped will play tonight. I · ters have displayed at the plate. Myers ~t the plate. Hearn. and

Herman Parker, with 16 points,! In the last two games the Dea- McCaskill drew walks, but Pierce d J . B "th 10 1 d th d M · forced Johnson and Reynolds to' an 1m eaver, w1 , e e Sun ay OVIeS cons have amassed only four,,runs d t

third place AKPi team to victory. and 12 hits, which doesn't demon- groun ou · Joe Duncavage kept the SPE's in The Wake Forest Monogr~m strate much power. Hayworth Homers the game with a 14-point perform- I Cl~b has compl~ted plans for Its . Even a change in the batting ance. jdnve to help ra1se money for the order in Wednesday's game failed In the next inning one of

The Cardinals, co-champions of $1,~00 National Defe~se Bond to give favorabl~ results, and the Pierce's pitches was just a little the non-fraternity league, contin- wh1ch the student body 1s purchas- ·Deacon coach may be forced to too good, and Hayworth slammed

1 ued to play winning ball by down- ing. bench some of his regulars if this a home run over the left field in~ Kappa Alpha, 47-32. Charlie According to plans the club has batting slump continues. fence to score Hus:ey, who had Giles and Max Crowder paced the 1 scheduled a movie to be shown walked, ahead of him. winners with 19 and 12 points re- · ill . .

. h' · ' on Sunday, Apnl 26. There w conserve all possible matenals. It Charlie Ripple took over for the ~p~ct~ve~. w -~~ 10George Tobey be three complete performances- takes five pounds of p~per to pack Deacons in the fifth and held Car-e · e s WI · two in the afternoon and one af- an ordinary artillery shell. The olina hitters to three hits and one

Harris Leads Team ter the church hour ori Sunday military appetite for rubber, met- run. Hearn opened the eighth In the closest game of the ini- , ni~ht. . The regular admission als, textiles, leather, etc., is vir- with a ground single to left, went

tial round, the Beach Combers· pnce Wlll be charged. tually insatiable. Every business to second on Gersten's sacrifice won over the Redskins, 25-20.1 Though the film has not been -and every _i~di;id~a~ - l!hould and came ~orne as Reynolds pop "Ace" Harris was the high-scorer selected at the present, President emulate retailing s unve to pre- _fly ~ack of frrst fell safe ~~rely out for the winners with 10 markers, Pat Geer stated that a recent, vent waste. of frrstbaseman Bob Re1d s reach. and Jim Calflp had 7 for the los- popular film will be shown. After loading the bases in the ers. Production Up sixth inning with oQe out and still

Bill Starford chall{ed up 23 I ~ failing to score, the Demon Deacs: points and George Ecker 19 as 1 don't waste food. Don't burn or This country is at last winning put together Reid's walk, a single' Lambda Chi's five handed the Gas' throw away paper. Save scrap "the battle of production." We by Cochran, an outfield fly and! House a 58-34 setback. Don Hipps metal, old rubber, rags, etc. Give haven't lived up to all our hopes an error by Morris to pick up their led the losers with 14 markers. this salvage to your favorite char- and forecasts. But the instru- un r .

Of the four teams that are ity or sell it to the nearest. junk ments of war are rolling out of . scheduled to play in the semi-final\ and waste paper dealer. the plants in a steady gaining' Clyde Whitner led the Deacon

I . 0 I assault with two singles and John round, which will be played to- U ff" r . 1 stream. That stream w1ll so n Fl t h h d d bl B R

night, two are fraternity teams· G tse 0 . ICe supp_ les fsparmg yh. reach flood proportions. e c er a a ou e. 0 e~-d t fr t ·t Th , e max1mum serv1ce rom sue Th t . b . t . "th b t olds collected a couple of safetles an wo non- ·a ern1 y. e t· 1 e nex JO 1s o wm e a - t th T H 1 .

. h . 1 common ar 1c es as paper clips, tl f t t t' , W , o pace e ar ee s. Lambda Ch1's meet t e Cardinals 1 • b b b . e o ocean ranspor a 1on. ere . . . pms ru e r ands envelopes . ------ ---tomght. while AKP1 takes on the · ' 1 . ' ' trymg to keep the· actual combat

Beach Combers. The winners of '1 s~lratc 1t pape~,t seal~g tape, pen- fronts away from this. continent, Frat Gr~ades . . . c1 s ypewn er nbbons carbon

these two games w11l f1ght 1t out : ' t Th d . 'il but we can't do that unless we can Better T}lan Are Average on Wednesday night for the school I ~ap~r, e c. es~ :m Slm . ar art- produce the vast .amount ·of ship- -

championship. IIcles have .a defimte and _1mport- ping that is needed to transport Fraternity men rank higher in a~t. ~lace m war. production, and I and serve and supply United Na- scholarship than non-fraternity Clviha~ consum~tiOn must be re- 'j tions' troops on all the far-flung men in the United States for the

Salvage Plans duced m many mstances. warfronts of the world. twelfth consecutive year, accord-At the·direct request of the gov- Take extra-special care of me- This isn't simply a matter of ing to a survey covering institu-

' ernment, retail stores are carrying i chanica! equipment. Inspect it, producing enough ships to offset tions of higher learning which has: on aggressive campaigns to pre- i clean it, and oil it frequently. Re- losses. Our rate of production just been released by the National: vent waste and save materials of II pairs and replace~e?t will become must be far greater than our loss Interfratern_ity C?nference. all kinds. constantly more difficult. Save on rate, especially in the matter of The nabon-w1de survey made

The Institute of Distribution, fuels. tankers. So far, ship production by Dr. Alvan E. Duerr of the Man-which represents a number of im-j Retail industry knows what it l has been under the schedules pre- ufactur~rs ~rust Company of Ne~ portant retail organizations, offers is talking about. The chain stores. viously laid down. Strenuous ef- York C1ty mcluded the scholastic some excellent advice. Summed and the organized independents; forts are being made to bring it records of more than 75,000 under-up, that advice amounts to this: 'are studying ways and means to up the the necessary level. (Continued on page three)

HAVE YOU GIVEN LIBERALLY TO

..

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'

..

OJ ·pou Ta~ Jl"Ql

·ByNl

The MondaJ of .the l posed , after c board.

Acce1 organiz; bers of itor of and R1 of the • argume retainin Ayers'· ·posed a

The faculty, mend t: into the elected publica1 present specifie ing nor. man bo elect eo ers of tions."

The l resenta1 tors· a! faculty other rr The th;

be fill with b< perienc4 the staJ eligible

The board il itics, t represe:J provide most (

ness rna Rudd

in faV4 _board, the pro: cratic a even:t:n4

Decis: when i1 20-man proved there 1 tion or tions t revision

The represer two sop seniors, tative, 4 sentativ· student be elec will be from t: of classe take the presider.

The night v system ,

Edi1 (Com

college. tell YOl

fortunat4 period ~

tendenc3 importar

The U designed this un World VI each stu. buys a 1

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Page 5: Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

.·-

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.. ·,,' '

Old Gold and cBhtck Page Five

:.Fllculty A.Jlk~(J'f~~Plan.·. Swimming Pool To Open;~::~~::,:: ····• ·&. ·· P~blicaitOits._ .. :.·. BOard .. On May 6, Owens Says ~1.:~~='f?.=i . J _ . ' . elude foiding chairs, floor lamps,

. ' .. •:. George Owen Is small tables, andirons, a piano, a ·. Politics To Be Taken Out of Publications Posts

· · ' · · I'~· · . Chief Life Guard, under the supervision of 0. M. corner cupboard, mirrors, sofas, Dea, =···n_ '.: ·. ·S,:p";' e, "_·a.·. _KS' McKaughan and George Owen. heaters,· draperies ,shades, pictures,

. By:~WBlLL ~~ON· Manager of Pool Sub~ life-guard- is Dilrant Bell.

1 and all sorts of kitchen equipment. ·

T,, ' L ' c· I ' b' The new wake Forest swimming • Others who will be employed to Rooms to be furnished are the 0 '' aw ' ·u pool, completed together, with the assist in the care of the pool and main room, the men's club room,

. · . The ·college . ~~ulty ~pproved · community bouse, will open to the the house are Buck Jones, Pat the women's club room, and the Monday the plan for the.revision · Courses in Law public May 6, George Owen, bead Preston, Pat Geer, Johnny Perry, kitchen.

·of the PUblications Board, as pro- ·Are Streamlined life guard and manager, announ- Cedric Squires, Bill Woltz, Sonny --------''-------po~ed Tuesday ,night of last week For Wa:r Stude~ts ced Wednesday night. The com- Harris, and Larry Ball. Position after a special meeting of the munity house was opened this is now open for a cashier, who is board. Addressing members of the" Pre- week and will :frrst be. put into requested to be a girl.

.. . _ . . . Law Club Tuesday night, Dr. Dale ' to 'ght when . service morrow m B'd t b I d b A il 27 Acceptance of the ne widea of;F. Stansbury, dean of the Gamma· Eta Gamma and Sigma 1 s mus e Pace Y pr

organiza_ ~ion ~iill.l~ aft.~r ~o m~m7 \- school, told listE!ners th.a.t a new . . . d at noon for the lease of a conces-FRAT AD~nSER-Dr. H Pi present therr sprmg ance. .0 t d t th t Th . hers of the Board, Bill. Ayers, ed- system has been devised in the · .,. ~ · s1 n s an a e cen er. ey ' ~ itor of OLD G?LD AND BLA~K, I law school set-up, accelerating M: P()tea.t, pictured above, is Unique in the construction of may be submitted on a basis of

and Rudd )f~ld,ay, representative. graduation and ·putting the law· att~n~i:~g :the Raleig~ Fra- 'the swimming pool is the virtually base pay with percentage or base of the sopho~ore class, ~resented\ school on the same basis the col- ternity Con~erence. new 3-tank automatic filtering and pay alone, arguments for the new 1dea and · lege is operating on for the dura- chlorinating system, Owen said. The pool will be open every day retaining ti;l.e old, res~tively~ tion of the war. Contrary to public rumor, there from 2 p. m. to 10 p. ni. and on Ayers'' su~g~$tiOJ?- yvas th~t com- According to Dr. Stansbury, p: o~,e. a, . ~~-' ' Rea will be chlorine .. There will be Sundays from 1 to 6.

SMITH ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP

Phone 375-6

SHOES REPAIRED THE CEMENT WAY

We Call For and Deliver

-See-PAUL BELL-Simmons

CLAUDE PEOPLES-Bostwick posed ahd ·voted· by the board. special· attention will be given-to private lockers and a checking sys- Requests were sent out this week

The resolutiOll passed by the those students ente:fing their law 'A· _L_ 'F' .-r' at Me' ' eJ. tern for valUables. Towels will be .;;;;;;;;;;;--------------------.;~ faculty. is "that the.~e1culty recom- stuaies in the summer. Schedules ~ -.; furnish~d at five cents each. I mend that the sh!.d~nt bQdy write have been arranged whereby a Admission price for adults is 20 into. the new constitution tl;lat the stucient will be allowed- .to enter DJ.o,. Poteat Is cents a swim, 15 cents for chn-elected· members of the 14-man during any sessio~ of law school 'Key1.1oter at ;Meet dren. A ticket providing for 50 publication board authorized in· the !.:_£an; spring, or summe~. Under In Raleigh y; swims, the use. of which can be present constitution meet clearly the new set-up the course· in legal · · . . made by several persons, will cost specified qu~ical;io:qs befo.r:e be.- education can be completed in 90 D.r:. L. Owens Re~, dlStrlct grand $6.50 for adults, with transferable

· ing. nominated, :md that this 14- weeks. Heret9fore, an average of master of Kappa S:®.na and form- and detachable tickets. Such a man board be g1ven the power to 100 weeks has been necessary. er faculty adviser of the Delta ticket for children will be $4•50, elect editors aQd b!:lsiness manag- Contrary to the policy ofth~ past, Omeg~ cl;lapter, and. Dr. ~ubert the ~ystem ilVeraging 13 cents for ers of the ~hree college publica- no courses will be continued from McNe~ Poteat, faculty adviSer to dl,llts ;md 9 cents for children. tions." · . · the Tau Kappa chanter of Kappa a .. · ·· one seme1>1:er to. another.

1 t' . Ticket!l for ;l~ ~wims can a}so b~

The l~~man board calls for_re~- ~~Any Time A p~, are representmg Wake procured, costing $3.75 for adults resentat10n c~mposed of the ~- .. The dean ~1mphas~ed, the fact Forest ·. at the Under-g:aduate and $2.50 for children. All men~ tors and busmess ~anagers, .five that it will be possible for a stu- Fratermty Conference, which be- tioned prices are without towels. faculty representatives, and an- d t t b ·. t. · d if gan yesterday at State College and Th · . . en o egm any semes er an . , ere are no season passes. other man from eac;h pub~cat10n; h has.t dr t f h 1 b ~ w1ll last through tomorrow. T. h 1 h . ~ 1 f Th thr el t' · 't' ill e o op ou o sc oo CLOre e poo , avm6 .a vo ume o I b e fill e: fr ec lVe P.OSllonsh w completing his course, he could re-

1 Dr. Poteat opened the session 52,500 cu. ft., will hold 350,000 gal~

~th be. omal'f~omtimees cdosen sunw his studies at any later time. last J1ight ·with ·~n address in the Ions of water. Eleven feet deep at' w1 as1c qu 1 tea ons an ex- . . : · · ill 1 d · . Onl th k' Of special mterest to freshmen Y. M. C. A. Dr. Rea ·w ea the center, 1t has a 3-meter and a f:1e~c;f f Y blios~. wor 1r;{i ~n is the fact that students maY be teh discussion panel on inter-fra- meter diving board. There is a

· 1~ .bsla ts 0 pu ca lOns w e admitted with a completion of 62 ternity. relations. small pool for children, all of eigleorun. h Udthi 1' h · h d · f ill . • ours. n er s new p an ires - Delegates to the conference w om un er s1x years o age w

To Cut Politi~ . men of th,is year could take ~o:ugh come from the southeast region, b~ admitted free, when accompan.,

JUST RECEIVED Shipment of

D·r. A. C. Reid's Latest Book

"Invitation To Worship" A book every student should read

On Sale at

COLLEGE BOOK STORE The . new. plan for. th~ 14-man l work in summer school and the ilicluding st11te~ ;from Tennessee to ied by adults. ~~ard lS d~slgned to ehmmate pol- fall semester to enab~e them to Texas. Others wbo wiU take lead~ The new center is unde1: the di-ltics, to gx;;e the facU:ty stronger! enter law school next January. ing parts in the meet are Dean rection of the City C-.o:.m:m::::is::si~~o:ne::r:.:s~, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ repr~sentat10n,. and, 1~ short, to Dr. Stansbury pointed out that R. B. House ot th~;~ 11piver:;;ity of · --provtde for. ~arrer .election of t~e the new plan of the law school is North Carolina, Robert C, deRos­most qualif1ed edltors and busl- in accordance with th~ general po- set, banker from Norfolk, Virginia, ness mana~ers. . !icy of all institutions of acceler~ and Rowland B. Parker,. assistant

Rudd Fnday, speakmg for those ating education. This ·will enable dean of students at Carolina. The 1n favor of retaining the ~O~man the student to get as much as pos- meeting is under the direction of J>oard, expressed . the behef that. sible of his ,legal education porn- State College's Dean· of Students the .proposed plan 1.s too. und~o- pleted before entering military E. L. Cloyd, director o:f region two cratlc and would gxve fraterrubes service. of the conference. · f even 1)10re the upper hand.

Decision for the change came ------------ ------------­when it was discovered that the donates it to a fund to be invested scholastic ,..average during that 20-man board had never bee,n ap- in government bonds. time. They also must have been proved by the faculty. Since Students :eturning to school af~ in school at the time they were en­there had to be some sort of ac- ter the war will be eligible for listed or were drafted. tion on the matter, the publica- scholarships up to $200 (depend~ That, in es£ence ,is the plan. tions board undertook complete ing· on need) to be taken from Wake Forest could easily adapt it revision. proceeds of the bond. Returning to conditions here, solve the prob-

The proposed board eliminates soldiers must have spent six lern of what to do with its defense representation of one freshman, months in the service, must have bond . proceeds, and at the same two sophomores, two juniors, two been enrolled in school on or af- tinle materially help men who seniors, one law school represen- ter October 15, 1940, and must otherwise might be unable to com­tative, one medical school repre- have maintained a satisfactory plete their college education. sentative, and the president of the· ' · student body. The three men to be elected under the new plan will be chosen as representatives from the publications, regardless of classes. There is no position to take the place of the student body president.

The pu.J?lications elections last night were held 'by the existing system ,the 20-man board.

Editorial (Continued from Page Two)

college. And as veterans can also tell you, this was especially un­fortunate because the post-war period saw the beginning of the tendency to attach considerable importance to the college diploma. 1

The University of Iowa plan is I designed to eliminate repetition of this unfortunate condition after World War II. There, every week, each student enrolled in the school buys a lO~cent defense stamp and

Get .Out The Spring SUITS Fellows

• WILKINSON CLEANERS

Add to Its Life ••• And Add to Your Own Fun !

There's still fun to be had with your car • . • if you keep it in good repair. Drive in for a check-up now.

Let our skilled mechanics completely overhaul your car. They are equipped to repair or re­place any· worn parts ... to giVl! it added years of service.

·mrm1 SWDCHID

. WIIILI U WAll

·Special Offer: Let 1LS switch the tires

of your car to distribute wear evenly.

Miller Motor Co. Ford Sales and Service

DO 'YOU DIG

WHAT DO YOU SAY? Send us some of your hot slang. If we use it you'll

. be ten bucks richer. If we don't, we'll shoot you a rejection slip to add to your collection. Mail your slang to College Dept., Pepsi .Cola Company, Long Island City. N.Y.

IT?

*ENGLISH TRANSLATION This dilly is giving the hurry-up sign to l1er girl friends because the boys are taking them dancing and Pepsi-Cola's on the menu. (me·n·u, get it?) Just the thing for .a college man's budget, too.

Pepsi-Cola is made only by Pepsi-Cola Co., Long Island City~ N. Y. Bottled locally b;y Au.thorized Bottlers.

Page 6: Law S.tudent-s N;ot to Elect Morgan To Ill T

Page Six Old Gold and Black Friday, Apri117, 1942 · II lows: Jack Baldwin, president; I

IJ./. Billy Primm, vice-president; Ed! J~ 1 McManus, secretary; Dewitt Triv-:

I et!e, treasurer; AI Alderman, ! -------------------------1 Theo. Hill,· sergeants-at-arms; I By JOHNNY WALKER Elections for officers for next ; Stoney Hill, house manager; i

·. I year will be held at the next regu- Ralph Brumet, sprrng sports Alpha Kappa Pi lar meeting. coach; Billy Craig, historian; Tut

. . . Myers rush captr.in· Ed Wilson AKP1 elected officers for the Pledge brother "Russ" Poole ts. bl' ~t d' t .. 'w C '

· · J' · s· . pu lCl Y tree or alter ar-commg year Monday mght. tm the f1rst man at the 1gma P1 t J' H i· P H 11 Wilkerson was elected president; house to receive his draft ques-; ~encer, unilmy u m,tat~n- e end-

. 'd t L. · L' • h 1 h th t h tc ounc represen 1ves; an Ed Aydlette, vtce-prest en ; m- •JOnnatre; e on y opes a e D N C t di ney Ray White, secretary; Amos will not be the first to go. ewey ye, us 0 an.

Stone, treasurer; and "Doc" Har- • Lambda Chi Alpha vey, Pan-Hellenic Council-repre- PI Kappa Alpha 1 sentative. After a week end that was a real. The Tri-Frats are over and ev-,

The boys gave a farewell stag week end, the PiKA's have settled ~ryb~dy at t~e La~bda _Chi house party Tuesday night for the "de- down once again to some concen-! IS ahve · · · mcludmg J1m Turner fense boys," who will be leaving trated study. All of the boys de-! and Tomm~ ~riffin. Turner tried soon. clare that each big week end gets to warn Grtffm about those Gear-

Walter Woodward and Walter better and better and that the Tri- gia women. Seriously though, Gerard were initiated into the fra- Frat was the finest yet.. ! from all .available evidence, an ex-

d · ht B th S B hr d 1 t k ' cellent time was had by all. The ternity last Tues ay mg . ro er , am e en s as wee . tt d d h G d E t F , brothers were glad to see Brothers a en c t e ran as ern o- ·

. . ' Castlebury and Early back for the Kappa Alpha renstc Tournament at Wmthrop, d 0 h'd t E 1 f h' , ances. rc 1 s o ar y or IS Everuone had a swell time last College and reported that every-. . . . ft di h

• J • • • • • mspnmg a er- nner speec , say week-end at the dance, and all thmg down at Rock Htll Is JUSt. th b th It . d th t f' , e ro ers. IS rumore a of the boys are now looking for- me. ! Brother Castlebury added the ward to other s?ring dances. The Gamma Eta Gamma j laughter with a little embarrassing banquet precedmg the dance Sat- . ! incident at the banquet table. j urday night was one of the KA The lawyers are rounding out i . ---e-

brightlights of the year . . . offic- plans for their annual spring , ers for next year will be installed 1 House-Party. The annual ban- FOR SALE officially at the next regular 1 quet will be held on Friday night' meeting. at the Woman's Club in Raleigh-!

Sigma Pi with Robert Humber delivering I the principal address. The Gam­

Chief event on the program for mas \\·ill hold their Spring Formal the Sigma Pi's this week-end is on Saturday night with Sigma Pi. the annual Sigma Pi-Gamma Eta Thes: :wo fraternities are joi~tly I Gamma spring formal. A big pubhshmg a paper, The F1fth week-end is planned by each Carbon, under the editorship of J, and every brother, and since it is E. Tate, for the occasion.

New

Royal Portable Typewriter

See

Kemp Reece ftt

Mrs. Sanders' probably the last dance to be held K s· by the Sigma Pi's for some time appa Igrna :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ to come, all the boys plan to make Kappa Sigma's new officers, ,. it an event to be remembered. elected this past week, are as fol-

OUR 5TH ANNUAL

F I N·E' S MEN'S SHOP

Raleigh, N. c. Something New and

Different in

Loafer Jackets

with Save • • •

. - . '-

You know tile &lory ol :his "dleiitonliip"-die Ieason ~.there for aD to read: Sehools and eoUegeS _closed-or turued.into breeding'grounda for lies and hate.

Freedom of . s~~rboteRI Freedom to choose your friend.e--11erboleul " .. - • ..41l you need to learn_ is to obeyl'' /

Now they would attempt to put tlie yoke on ue-on you. It must not htJppen herel Whatever the , eost,-the Axis mut· be smashed. Your part, as a 'eollege student; is clear. 'You may not be behind a gun today, but YOU;·ctD& helP, today to· give Q1U'

IOldiers, sailors, and marines the :weap:ona they need for Vietory.

' Put your dimes 'and dollan inao fighting uniform JIOID by buying United States Savings Bonds and Stamps. You'll help notoDly your country, but

•; yoursel£. because you are not asked to give your money, but lo lend it. You ean start buying Bonds by bll1.ing Sa'rinp Stamps for as little as 10 eenta. Start ba,:hlg ~ ~.e il up}

I

ana ·save America

U. S. S a v I n g s B 0 N D S * S T A.M P S This space is a contribution to Amedca's ALL-OUI' WAR EFFORT hy

NATIONAL

HARDWARE WEEK SALE

~AL~L$~;~:ORS~_O_LD GOLD & BLACK

April 16-25 Everything You Need

JONES HARDWARE Wake Forest

Ice-cold Coca-Cola is re­

freshing ••• refreshing as

only Coca-Cola can be. In

· its frosty boHie dwells the

quality of genuine good­

ness. And taste ••• a taste

delicious, ex~iting. Thirst

asks nothing more. You trust its quality

IOnLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IY

CAPITAL COCA-COLA BO'ITLING CO •• Inc. Raleigh, N. C.

ore i.;: .....

51

'

There's satisfaction in knowing that the 6Y21 revenue tax you pay on every pack of twenty cigarettes is doing its bit for Uncle Sam

And Chesterfield's superior blend of the world's best cigarette tobaccos has everything it takes to satisfy a smoker. It gives you a smoke that is definitely MILDER, far COOLER and lots BETTER-TASTING. Get yourself a pack of Chesterfields today.

Smoke the cigarette that SATISFIES. ., CHESTERFIELDS follow the flog. On every front you'll find them giving our fight· ing men more pleasure with their milder, better taste.

RUTH HAVILAND and SUSAN CLARKE, of the Women Flyers of America. With the alert young women flyers of America who are doing their part in the Na­tional Defense picture ... it't Chesterfield. They Satisfy.

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