Local ODK Chapter Elects will direct the state such as Winston-Salem, ·Holds Bar ecue . ub ··sh...

6
'. Legends of ·Baptist Hollow * * * * Leaders Chosen By ODK Volume XXXIV. Number 24. Wake Forest, N. C., Friday, March 25, 1949 Telephone 4056 Shakespeare's I 1 Local ODK Chapter Elects -As Thespians' Sp_ring : Six Two Alumni George Mallonee to Direct Tragedy by: Little ·'Theater A Choir Carlyle and Hoge Named . Members, 'Honoris Begins Nine-Day Judge Stevens By carol ozdham S . J Rules Moot Case An unusual turn .of events saw pr1ng ourney - c By Ron Weatherman the Wake Forest Little Theater, in ·In Trial ourt Six students and two outstand- Causa' special session last·. Tuesday, ing alumni were elected to mem- March 15, cancel plans for a pre- 1000 Mile Tour· to' :Extend bership in the Beta Alpha Circle sentation of Sopholes "Antigone" Two Southern J h b h of Omicron Delta Kappa, nation- in preference to William Shake- 0 nson and A ernat y al honorary leadership fraternity, speare's "othello." The play will States ' Win Suit Here Over at a meeting which the circle held be presented during the,second an- · · I · · · · : : Defendants Thursday evening, March 24. nual Magnolia Festival as a part Tomorrow the A Cappella Choir . · . . . . · . The students elected were Bill of that event. A definite date for will begin the first lap of a 1000 IN "GHOSTS" .PRODUCTION-Pictured are SIX members of the Bethune, Lamar Caudle, III, John the Festival has not been decided, mile second Annual Spring· Tour, Wake Forest College Little Theater hard at work on the recent offer- Judge Henry L. Stevens, Jr., Dillon, P. A. Cline, Jr., John T. but the annual affair will be which will last nine days and ex- ing of Ibsen's drama on the local stage. of the Sixth Judicial District, Lanier, and Jim Getzen. Each was sometime in the early part of May. tend throughout North Carolina · · presided over a moot court held elected on the basis of outstand- Presentation of the drama will be and Virginia. . in Room g of the Law Building ing achievement in one particular given in the local high school A schedule of ·eighteen concerts Pub·l.tcat·ton R-ow Studen. t Au· thors Tuesday night: . March 22. The field. Many candidates stood for· auditorium. within the nine day period will case before the court was a suit elections, and careful considera- George j.\'Iallonee, senior . from be filled in leading cities of the b p I L against the Ocean Board Rail- tion was given to each. How- Winston-Salem, will direct the state such as Winston-Salem, ·Holds Bar ecue . ub ··sh egends road filed by Martin R. Peterson, ever, the circle saw fit to elect forthcoming production. He was Charlotte, and Morganton. As the plaintiff, for collection of only six, a fact which attests to elected by the executive commit- many as three concerts a day are damages arising from the destruc- th 1 . f th fr t "ty t th L 'ttl Th t fr tfon of the plaintiff's car by the e exc USlveness 0 e a erm · ee of e l e ea er om scheduled for such groups as Seventy staff members of the Th·e Legends of Baptist Hollow defendant's train. Irving E. Carlyle and James among several students who ap- churches, schools, and civic or- three college publications. and by 'Walt Friedenberg and Bill Me- Hoge, Wake Forest alumni, were plied for the position. ganizations, but there will be their guests attended the annual Ilwain has caused a sensation Thomas S. Johnston and J. Car- elected to associate membership Probably no other play select- "breather" days when only one Publications Dinner held Friday ·among the students, faculty, and roll Abernathy were counsels 'for honoris causa. Each of these men ed by the Little Theater has creat- concert is scheduled. J h T , . D alumni of Wake Forest Colle.,"e. the plaintiff, while Glenn Brown has achieved honorable distinc- ed more interest on the campus Mrs. Charles Allen is to serve night at os urnage s m ur- T t' and Henry Huff represented the tion in his chosen vocation. than has this most recent one. as chaperone on the trip, as well ham. he publica 10 n of Legends is an defendants. Kenneth Hite served This is by far the heaviest drama as unofficial music· critic. Ferd and Barrie D.avis, OLD event in the history of the college. as clerk of court and Charles A. President of Board ·ever to be presented to local au- The choir, now in its second sea- GOLD AND BLACK p_rmters, It is the first ti.me that a book Hostetler acted as sheriff. The Mr. Carlyle is president of the diences, and marks the first time son on 'the Wake Forest College the _group a senesf written by Wake Forest students jury was made up of students from Wake Forest . .Board of Trustees. the Little Theater has attempted to campus, is - selected from the of skits B:nd JOkes. which told 0 has ever been published on the the academic and law schools. · Since· his graduation from Wake produce a Shakespearian. tragedy. larger Glee Club of 75 voices and the and of Warn- campus. The publisher that ac- The plaintiff in the case stat- Forest, he has practiced law in I features the "choir within a choir" boogie Institute whlch has become complished this feat is the Delta ed that his car, which was being Winston-Salem. Extremely sue- Largest Number in several ensemble numbers. a legend at Wake Forest. The fer- Publishing Company, For- driven by Jim Justice, was com- cessful, he has been . elected to The largest number of students D · th 1948 th h · tile brain of Ferd Da\lis was. the est, N. C., owned and financed by pletely demolished when struck by the North Carolina General As- un.ngd e 'd f e c creator of this unique institution. the authors of Legends. to try out for parts in a campus receive WI e ace aun rom 1 s J . . . a train operated by the Ocean sembly three times, twice as a production in recent years crowd- more than forty appearances Jack Potter, wearing a Mortimer- The new books conta1mng SIX Board Railroad. He. claimed that senator. Election to Omicron Del- ed into the Little Theater room in throughout the state. This year Snerd face mask, was introduced humorous' tales Qf past days at the car became stalled in a hole ta Kappa was in recognition of the Alumni Building during the the choir .will again favor small- to the diners as a distinguished Wake Forest went on sale last in the pavement on a crossing. his ardent and conscientious work five days on which casting occur- er .. cities in the state as Laurin- alumnus. John Gibson did a hum- Monda!· Buyers eage;rlY_ snapped in the Wake Forest enlargement red·. Mallonee disclosed that burg, Fairmont, Monroe, Wingate, orous ·· .. skit purporting to sho:V up cop1es and are contmumg to do Wider Crossing program. nearly 50 persons read lines at Albemarle, Gastonia, Statesville, Coach D. C. Walker instructing his so. ;After a day of personally The defence replied that the Mr. Hoge was graduated from the tryouts and stated that he was Lenoir, and Henderson. Peters- team. pushmg sales the campus, 'crossing was somewhat wider Wake Forest in 1923. For many "very pleased with th:e burg, Virginia will be visited on Copies of the OLD GOLD AND authors are turrung over the mam thim the road which approched years he has practiced law in New The tentative cast :fo! the· pro- the last day of the tour. . BLACK were distributed among volume of sales to the Book Store. t_he crossing. . ';['hey also claimed York. City. He was elected to .. the _dudion has "Qeen •··· · • · " · . • · ·· · . ·· · "tl'fc{'itiestS· with ·a· fake ·front page· uast ·Mr: Snyder· pre'- that there was enough room on New York Legislature in 1941 and Pllelps, junidr: from Creswell, 'Inclusive Program makeup. Headlines screamed pared a special shelf for Legends, the crossing for the car to safely is one of·the most successful law- playing the title role, Betty Prin- A very inclusive program has "Newspapermen to Eat Tonight." and he sorry that G. I.'_s can't pass without becoming lodged in yers Wake Forest has ever pro- gle, junior from Leesburg, Fla., been prepared, varying from. the A six column story gave an ac- buy copies on the G. I. Bill. ruts. duced. as Desdemona, Milton MB:rney, solemn strains of the Russian count of Campus reaction to the Were Flat Broke The jury, after a short delibera- Bill Bethune, a junior from Clin- graduate student from Harriman, church liturgy to a brighter spirit- visit of the Davis brothers rep- • Hon, returned a verdict which ton, was elected from his achieve- Tenn., in the role of Iago, and uals of our own Southland. Four· resenting Wamboogie Institute at G. I.'s were flat broke but they stated that the railroad was to be· ments in publications and radio. Charlotte Duling, junior from of the numbers .have been arrang., the banquet. managed to scrape together a 'held responsible for the destruc- He is an assistant editor of Old Hertford, cast as Emilia have the ed by Professor McDonald, includ- Members of the staffs of OLD lar to purchase a :opy. The g_lrls tion of the plaintiff's automobile Gald and Black and past sports four leads in the tragedy. ing a version of "Onward Chris- GOLD AND BLACK, The Student, have been especially . and was to pay $1,100 damages to editor. He is also a leading 111 em- Others "In Cast tian Soldiers." and The Howler gathered at the the the plaintiff. ber on the staff of the Student to .The first group on the program well known eating place. · copies placed m Do:nn- Judge Stevens, who resides in which he has contributed several Others listed in the tentative east are Paul McCardle, sopho- more from Clearwater, Fla., as Cassia; Betty Jo Ring, freshman from High Point, as Bianca; Ralph Church, senior from North Wilke$l;loro, as Branbantio; · and Don Jal:kson, junior fro,m Raleigh, as Roderigo. In addition, George Spense, sophomore from Elizabeth City, as Lodovico; Gil Brande, junior from Reidsville, as Montano; Ralph Williams, junior from Monroe, as . .Gratiano; John Gib- -see OTHELLO, Page 6- VETERANS will consist of five selections, Great quantities of barbecue, tory were sold on the frrst Warsaw, stated that the case was articles. He inaugurated sports "Beautiful Saviour," by Christian- brunswick stew, cole slaw, "hush Eustace Norfleet, c:t very well presented by both, sides. announcing on'> Radio Station sen, "Create In Me, 0 God, A puppies," soft drinks, and coffee the oldest student In the hist?ry He commended the way that the WFDD, and at present heads the Pure Heart," by Brahms, "0 were served the guests. of the college, ":as frrst case was briefed. sports announcing staff. He is Praise The Name Of The Lord," purchaser. He paid his dollar vice-president of Pi Kappa Alpha by Gretchaninoff, "The Lord's d even before book came out. Fraternity, an assistant in the Prayer," by Malotte, and Four Plan T 0 A Hen He the tale of the Burney Speaks biology and math departments, a Creation," .. by Richter. beloved Doctor ?ne . 0 f the member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, Next the choir sings· two National ODK Meeting most about rn the. pre-medical fraternity, a mem- Biblical songs, "Hear My.Prayer," collection. But the flrst person Before lawyers ber of the Inter-mural Athletic and "Sing Ye A Joyful Song" by . actually to buy a copy was Jack Council, and past vice-president Dvorak-McDonald, and· then fol- The Beta Alpha Circle of Omi-j Lancaster, who bought a copy of the Freshman Orientation Com- lows a group of spirituals such as cron Delta Kappa Convention will while they were being unloaded mittee. "You Goin' To Reap Jus' What be held at the Atlanta-Biltmore from a car last Monday. Superior Court Judge John J. D b t" p You Sow" and "He Never Said' A Hotel in Atlanta, Ga., April 7, 8, Sales continue to go fast. Sell- Burney addressed the Edgar W. e a Ing rowess Mumbalin' Word." After an in- and 9. ing the ·book is being pushed from Timberlake Chapter of Phi Alpha Lamar Caudle, a junior of strumental inferlude, the men's Bill F. Hensley will be the Cir- the angle of "Be the first in your Delta Law Fraternity Thursday Washington, D. C., was chosen pri- choir 1s heard in "Come To Me In cle's official representative, and field to get a copy.'' For exam- night, March 17. marily for his excellence in ·de- My Dreams," by Cain, and ''De E. Judson Trueblood will be an ple, be the first barber, the first The guest of honor in his bating. He has been a member 0 F b ·1 1949 the VA _Animals A-Comin' ", by Bartholo- alternate delegate. Dr. John W. dog catcher, the first psycho- speech before the pledges and of the debate squad for three years. n e ' . mew. Nowell and Dan Lovelace will analyst in the whole world to get guests in attendance employed va- Last year he contributed much branch offtces The program closes with two se- represent ODK unofficially at the a copy of Legends. The authors ried legal subjects interspersed toward the winning of the South and replaced by distnct offtces. lections "EveryWind·ThatBlows," convention. are now looking for the first deep with witticisms gathered during Atlantic and.South Eastern debate This has resulted in confusion by and "Onward, Christian The convention will be under' sea diver or pearl diver. Either his fourteen years as solicitor and championship. Lamar was elect- among some veterans as to Soldiers." The closing response the direction of circles· at Geor- one will do. . judge. ed to Phi Beta Kappa this month. where National Service Life In- is "The Lord Shall Preserve," by I gia Tech, University of Georgia Sales are_ being pushed by a tre- After an introduction by Dr. I. He is at present the president of surance premiums should be McDonald. at Athens, and Emory University. -See LEGENDS, Page 5:- -see BURNEY, Page 6- the Junior Class, vice-president d of Kappa Alpha Order, and sec- mailed. Such premiums shoul OJ w k F retary of the Inter-fraternity continue to be mailed to the Aunt Ellen .. Be .. oiJeaks e a e orest" Council. He is also a ·member same as before, as the .., .. of the staff of Old Gold and Black district offices retain the in- and WFDD. surance functions of the old fore the Civil War. This was the/ she remembers t_hat her mother I ing chUdren up off the streets and John Dillon, a junior of Ashe- branch Offl ·ces. By George Evans 't d 1 f d t ld" . h t k th . ... h h ville, is outstanding for his work . · w k F t combination dornn ory an schoo i gave oo o so Iers passmg as a en em InLO er own ome · Veterans are warned that if Can you lmagme a e ores building, the foundations of through Wake Forest - to both and has brought .them up to adult- in publications. He is the assist- d d ts qwr . ed leg·al College and the town of Wake For- which the present' Wait Hall now "Yankee" and "Rebel" alike. hood. The old Negress attributes ant to the Director of the News epen en are ac ' est as it was in 1849 or fifteen Bureau and a member of the staff proof in the form of certified years after the college was found- stands upon. This building was She does remember when Pres- her longevity to the fact that she of Old Gold and Black. He was f bli d Of mar constructed in such a fashion that ident Buchanan came through has always tried to help others. copy 0 pu C recor - ed? · "Aunt" Ellen Lewis cannot sports editor of the Howler for riage, birth, etc., ·must be remember quite that far back in the two ends of the building serv- in 1857 on hhistwthay over two years. He has been ac- submitted to the VA. Increased the history of Wake Forest, for ed as a dormitory while the mid- to a elgh, and recalls t a e In to Aunt . Ellen and _tive in the band and was drum subsistence will be effective she was born on January 6, 1849, dle portion was used for class- tracks were made of wooden rails her oplmon of pe9ple m general, major during his sophomore year. 'd · but there are many treasured de- rooms and offices.· Another thing with iron strips on top of the wood. she recalls that many people abus- H . 1 t . b Only from. the date eVl ence IS . . . e Is a so an ou stand1ng mem er she calls to mind is the fact that She remembers the cars as having d the1r slaves before the CIVIl recei 'ved m" the VA. Necessary tails in the memory of this 10 0 d e of Alpha Sigma Phi ·Fraternity. d the college was forced to close its no tops an as mere flatcars. War, but she also says that many fonns are available at 111 Wait year old former slave in regar doors during the Civil War from Her Nick-Name people were very decent to her Religion Leader to the history of both town and Hall. . 1862 to January 1866. After the In order to earn her nick-name people. She recalls that many P. A. Cline, a senior from Gas- On April 1, 1949, all veter- Ellen · relates the war there was a chapel on the of "aunt," "Aunt" Ellen has serv- former slaves stayed with their tonia, is a campus leader in re- ans except PL 1 and those whose story of her life, her primary present site of the Music-Re- ed not only- as a maternal aunt to masters and their families for ligion. He is superintendent of entitlements expire this semes- function through the years has ligion building. I The . Baptist many relatives, but has also serv- many years after the war. As the Sunday School and president ter will be mailed a Certificate been to serve as midwife to hun- church met in this chapeL Both ed as a foster aunt to many mem- far as she can remember, "Aunt". of the Cullom Union. He is an of Intention from the Assistant dreds of. Wake families, the owners of the slaves and the hers of her own race, and for this Ellen maintains that she has nev- active member of Delta Kappa to the Bursar. It is asked that a:&d to serve as nurse to many slaves themselves attended this reason among many others; the er had a "lick" from a white per- Alpha, honorary ministerial fra- of these same families. "Aunt" .church, with the slaves sitting centenarian has endeared herself son in all of her life. She also ternity. Also P. A. is a member these certificates be filled ou: Ellen has worked in many homes in the gallery or balcony. not only to the members of her maintains that she has never had of the B. s. u. Council and an accurately and. comnletely an in Wake Forest, . and many of The Civil War own race, but also to the mem- a cross word with adults in her assistant in the Latin department. returned to 111 Wait Hall not the older families remember her "Aunt" Ellen's recollections of bers of the white race in and life, both Negro and white. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa later than April 10, 1949. for her ability to handle children. the Civil War itself in regard to around Wake Forest. In the field of religion "Aunt" this month.· He was past presi- Veterans are advised to cheek One of the families which the Wake Forest are rather scanty, "Aunt" Ellen has had nine Ellen is a devout Christian, as dent of the Euzelian Literary So- the Veterans bulletin board on former slave remembers most is considering the fact that she was children of her own, one of whom, was her mother before her. She ciety. h "f" t fl rth d f the Holding famllr• and she has but about fourteen years of age Jim I:.ewis of Wake Forest, is still says the Lord has been good to Johin Lanier a senior of Win- •:ali, many fond memories of them. at the time. All of the living, and works at various jobs her, and that she is trying tolston, was recognized for his out- "Aunt" Ellen remembers the she remembers hearing about in Wake Forest. "Aunt" Ellen says I be the best type of Christian that stanciing work in dramatic art as announcements of impor- b were north of 'Wake Forest, but Jthat she has picked many wander- ' -see AUNT, Page 6- -see ODK, Page 6- tance will be posted there. one building on the campus e-

Transcript of Local ODK Chapter Elects will direct the state such as Winston-Salem, ·Holds Bar ecue . ub ··sh...

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Legends of ·Baptist

Hollow

* * * *

Leaders Chosen By ODK

Volume XXXIV. Number 24. Wake Forest, N. C., Friday, March 25, 1949 Telephone 4056

Shakespeare's "Othell~~, Plann~d I

1 Local ODK Chapter Elects -As Thespians' Sp_ring : Pr~dudion

Six Students~ Two Alumni George Mallonee to Direct

Tragedy by: Little ·'Theater

A Cap~lla Choir Carlyle and Hoge Named

. Members, 'Honoris Begins Nine-Day Judge Stevens By carol ozdham S . J Rules Moot Case

An unusual turn .of events saw pr1ng ourney - c By Ron Weatherman

the Wake Forest Little Theater, in ·In Trial ourt Six students and two outstand-

Causa'

special session last·. Tuesday, ing alumni were elected to mem-March 15, cancel plans for a pre- 1000 Mile Tour· to' :Extend bership in the Beta Alpha Circle sentation of Sopholes "Antigone" Two Southern J h b h of Omicron Delta Kappa, nation-in preference to William Shake- 0 nson and A ernat y al honorary leadership fraternity, speare's "othello." The play will States ' Win Suit Here Over at a meeting which the circle held be presented during the,second an- · · I · · · · : : Defendants Thursday evening, March 24. nual Magnolia Festival as a part Tomorrow the A Cappella Choir . · . . . . · . The students elected were Bill of that event. A definite date for will begin the first lap of a 1000 IN "GHOSTS" .PRODUCTION-Pictured are SIX members of the Bethune, Lamar Caudle, III, John the Festival has not been decided, mile second Annual Spring· Tour, Wake Forest College Little Theater hard at work on the recent offer- Judge Henry L. Stevens, Jr., Dillon, P. A. Cline, Jr., John T. but the annual affair will be which will last nine days and ex- ing of Ibsen's drama on the local stage. of the Sixth Judicial District, Lanier, and Jim Getzen. Each was sometime in the early part of May. tend throughout North Carolina · · presided over a moot court held elected on the basis of outstand-Presentation of the drama will be and Virginia. . in Room g of the Law Building ing achievement in one particular given in the local high school A schedule of ·eighteen concerts Pub·l.tcat·ton R-ow Studen. t Au· thors Tuesday night: . March 22. The field. Many candidates stood for· auditorium. within the nine day period will case before the court was a suit elections, and careful considera-

George j.\'Iallonee, senior . from be filled in leading cities of the b p I L against the Ocean Board Rail- tion was given to each. How-Winston-Salem, will direct the state such as Winston-Salem, ·Holds Bar ecue . ub ··sh egends road filed by Martin R. Peterson, ever, the circle saw fit to elect forthcoming production. He was Charlotte, and Morganton. As the plaintiff, for collection of only six, a fact which attests to elected by the executive commit- many as three concerts a day are damages arising from the destruc- th 1 . f th fr t "ty t th L

'ttl Th t fr tfon of the plaintiff's car by the e exc USlveness 0 e a erm · ee of e l e ea er om scheduled for such groups as Seventy staff members of the Th·e Legends of Baptist Hollow defendant's train. Irving E. Carlyle and James among several students who ap- churches, schools, and civic or- three college publications. and by 'Walt Friedenberg and Bill Me- Hoge, Wake Forest alumni, were plied for the position. ganizations, but there will be their guests attended the annual Ilwain has caused a sensation Thomas S. Johnston and J. Car- elected to associate membership

Probably no other play select- "breather" days when only one Publications Dinner held Friday ·among the students, faculty, and roll Abernathy were counsels 'for honoris causa. Each of these men ed by the Little Theater has creat- concert is scheduled. J h T , . D alumni of Wake Forest Colle.,"e. the plaintiff, while Glenn Brown has achieved honorable distinc-ed more interest on the campus Mrs. Charles Allen is to serve night at os urnage s m ur- T t' and Henry Huff represented the tion in his chosen vocation. than has this most recent one. as chaperone on the trip, as well ham. he publica 10n of Legends is an defendants. Kenneth Hite served This is by far the heaviest drama as unofficial music· critic. Ferd and Barrie D.avis, OLD event in the history of the college. as clerk of court and Charles A. President of Board ·ever to be presented to local au- The choir, now in its second sea- GOLD AND BLACK p_rmters, ~n- It is the first ti.me that a book Hostetler acted as sheriff. The Mr. Carlyle is president of the diences, and marks the first time son on 'the Wake Forest College terta~ed the _group w~th a senesf written by Wake Forest students jury was made up of students from Wake Forest . .Board of Trustees. the Little Theater has attempted to campus, is - selected from the of skits B:nd JOkes. which told 0 has ever been published on the the academic and law schools. · Since· his graduation from Wake produce a Shakespearian. tragedy. larger Glee Club of 75 voices and the f_oundi~g and h~story of Warn- campus. The publisher that ac- The plaintiff in the case stat- Forest, he has practiced law in

I features the "choir within a choir" boogie Institute whlch has become complished this feat is the Delta ed that his car, which was being Winston-Salem. Extremely sue-Largest Number in several ensemble numbers. a legend at Wake Forest. The fer- Publishing Company, ~ake For- driven by Jim Justice, was com- cessful, he has been . elected to

The largest number of students D · th 1948 th h · tile brain of Ferd Da\lis was. the est, N. C., owned and financed by pletely demolished when struck by the North Carolina General As-un.ngd e 'd selas~>n f e c ~'?tir creator of this unique institution. the authors of Legends. to try out for parts in a campus receive WI e ace aun rom 1 s J . . . a train operated by the Ocean sembly three times, twice as a production in recent years crowd- more than forty appearances Jack Potter, wearing a Mortimer- The new books conta1mng SIX Board Railroad. He. claimed that senator. Election to Omicron Del­ed into the Little Theater room in throughout the state. This year Snerd face mask, was introduced humorous' tales Qf past days at the car became stalled in a hole ta Kappa was in recognition of the Alumni Building during the the choir .will again favor small- to the diners as a distinguished Wake Forest went on sale last in the pavement on a crossing. his ardent and conscientious work five days on which casting occur- er .. cities in the state as Laurin- alumnus. John Gibson did a hum- Monda!· Buyers eage;rlY_ snapped in the Wake Forest enlargement red·. Mallonee disclosed that burg, Fairmont, Monroe, Wingate, orous ·· .. skit purporting to sho:V up cop1es and are contmumg to do Wider Crossing program. nearly 50 persons read lines at Albemarle, Gastonia, Statesville, Coach D. C. Walker instructing his so. ;After a day of personally The defence replied that the Mr. Hoge was graduated from the tryouts and stated that he was Lenoir, and Henderson. Peters- team. pushmg sales 0~ the campus, t~e 'crossing was somewhat wider Wake Forest in 1923. For many "very pleased with th:e re~ults:~'· burg, Virginia will be visited on Copies of the OLD GOLD AND authors are turrung over the mam thim the road which approched years he has practiced law in New

The tentative cast :fo! the· pro- the last day of the tour. . BLACK were distributed among volume of sales to the Book Store. t_he crossing. . ';['hey also claimed York. City. He was elected to .. the _dudion has "Qeen aDnO.l:U~.£.e4;t:~oja,' •··· · • · " · . • · ·· · . ·· · "tl'fc{'itiestS· with ·a· fake ·front page· uast Wednes~ay, ·Mr: Snyder· pre'- that there was enough room on New York Legislature in 1941 and Pllelps, junidr: from Creswell, 'Inclusive Program makeup. Headlines screamed pared a special shelf for Legends, the crossing for the car to safely is one of·the most successful law-playing the title role, Betty Prin- A very inclusive program has "Newspapermen to Eat Tonight." and he ~s sorry that G. I.'_s can't pass without becoming lodged in yers Wake Forest has ever pro-~ gle, junior from Leesburg, Fla., been prepared, varying from. the A six column story gave an ac- buy copies on the G. I. Bill. ruts. duced. as Desdemona, Milton MB:rney, solemn strains of the Russian count of Campus reaction to the Were Flat Broke The jury, after a short delibera- Bill Bethune, a junior from Clin-graduate student from Harriman, church liturgy to a brighter spirit- visit of the Davis brothers rep- • Hon, returned a verdict which ton, was elected from his achieve-Tenn., in the role of Iago, and uals of our own Southland. Four· resenting Wamboogie Institute at G. I.'s were flat broke but they stated that the railroad was to be· ments in publications and radio. Charlotte Duling, junior from of the numbers .have been arrang., the banquet. managed to scrape together a ~ol- 'held responsible for the destruc- He is an assistant editor of Old Hertford, cast as Emilia have the ed by Professor McDonald, includ- Members of the staffs of OLD lar to purchase a :opy. The g_lrls tion of the plaintiff's automobile Gald and Black and past sports four leads in the tragedy. ing a version of "Onward Chris- GOLD AND BLACK, The Student, have been especially . recept~ve. and was to pay $1,100 damages to editor. He is also a leading

111em-

Others "In Cast tian Soldiers." and The Howler gathered at the For~y-three o~ the ~rrst fif~y the plaintiff. ber on the staff of the Student to .The first group on the program well known eating place. · copies placed m Bostwl~k Do:nn- Judge Stevens, who resides in which he has contributed several Others listed in the tentative

east are Paul McCardle, sopho­more from Clearwater, Fla., as Cassia; Betty Jo Ring, freshman from High Point, as Bianca; Ralph Church, senior from North Wilke$l;loro, as Branbantio; · and Don Jal:kson, junior fro,m Raleigh, as Roderigo.

In addition, George Spense, sophomore from Elizabeth City, as Lodovico; Gil Brande, junior from Reidsville, as Montano; Ralph Williams, junior from Monroe, as . .Gratiano; John Gib-

-see OTHELLO, Page 6-

VETERANS

will consist of five selections, Great quantities of barbecue, tory were sold on the frrst mg~t. Warsaw, stated that the case was articles. He inaugurated sports "Beautiful Saviour," by Christian- brunswick stew, cole slaw, "hush Eustace Norfleet, c:t seven~y-slx very well presented by both, sides. announcing on'> Radio Station sen, "Create In Me, 0 God, A puppies," soft drinks, and coffee the oldest student In the hist?ry He commended the way that the WFDD, and at present heads the Pure Heart," by Brahms, "0 were served the guests. of the college, ":as ~he frrst case was briefed. sports announcing staff. He is Praise The Name Of The Lord," purchaser. He paid his dollar vice-president of Pi Kappa Alpha by Gretchaninoff, "The Lord's d even before ~h~ book came out. Fraternity, an assistant in the Prayer," by Malotte, and ·~The Four Plan T 0 A Hen He recal~~d VlVl~ly the tale of the Burney Speaks biology and math departments, a Creation," .. by Richter. beloved Doctor ~om, ?ne .0 f the member of Alpha Epsilon Delta,

Next the gir~'s choir sings· two National ODK Meeting most ~alked about sto~Ies rn the. pre-medical fraternity, a mem-Biblical songs, "Hear My.Prayer," collection. But the flrst person Before lawyers ber of the Inter-mural Athletic and "Sing Ye A Joyful Song" by . actually to buy a copy was Jack Council, and past vice-president Dvorak-McDonald, and· then fol- The Beta Alpha Circle of Omi-j Lancaster, who bought a copy of the Freshman Orientation Com-lows a group of spirituals such as cron Delta Kappa Convention will while they were being unloaded mittee. "You Goin' To Reap Jus' What be held at the Atlanta-Biltmore from a car last Monday. Superior Court Judge John J. D b t" p You Sow" and "He Never Said' A Hotel in Atlanta, Ga., April 7, 8, Sales continue to go fast. Sell- Burney addressed the Edgar W. e a Ing rowess Mumbalin' Word." After an in- and 9. • ing the ·book is being pushed from Timberlake Chapter of Phi Alpha Lamar Caudle, a junior of strumental inferlude, the men's Bill F. Hensley will be the Cir- the angle of "Be the first in your Delta Law Fraternity Thursday Washington, D. C., was chosen pri­choir 1s heard in "Come To Me In cle's official representative, and field to get a copy.'' For exam- night, March 17. marily for his excellence in ·de­My Dreams," by Cain, and ''De E. Judson Trueblood will be an ple, be the first barber, the first The guest of honor in his bating. He has been a member

0 F b ·1 1949 the VA _Animals A-Comin' ", by Bartholo- alternate delegate. Dr. John W. dog catcher, the first psycho- speech before the pledges and of the debate squad for three years. n e ~ary • ' . mew. Nowell and Dan Lovelace will analyst in the whole world to get guests in attendance employed va- Last year he contributed much

branch offtces w~re. abo~I~hed The program closes with two se- represent ODK unofficially at the a copy of Legends. The authors ried legal subjects interspersed toward the winning of the South and replaced by distnct offtces. lections "EveryWind·ThatBlows," convention. are now looking for the first deep with witticisms gathered during Atlantic and.South Eastern debate This has resulted in confusion by Luc~s, and "Onward, Christian The convention will be under' sea diver or pearl diver. Either his fourteen years as solicitor and championship. Lamar was elect­among some veterans as to Soldiers." The closing response the direction of circles· at Geor- one will do. . judge. ed to Phi Beta Kappa this month. where National Service Life In- is "The Lord Shall Preserve," by I gia Tech, University of Georgia Sales are_ being pushed by a tre- After an introduction by Dr. I. He is at present the president of surance premiums should be McDonald. at Athens, and Emory University. -See LEGENDS, Page 5:- -see BURNEY, Page 6- the Junior Class, vice-president

d of Kappa Alpha Order, and sec-mailed. Such premiums shoul OJ w k F retary of the Inter-fraternity

continue to be mailed to the Aunt Ellen .. Be .. oiJeaks e a e orest" Council. He is also a ·member same addr~s as before, as the .., .. of the staff of Old Gold and Black district offices retain the in- and WFDD.

surance functions of the old fore the Civil War. This was the/ she remembers t_hat her mother I ing chUdren up off the streets and John Dillon, a junior of Ashe-branch Offl·ces. By George Evans 't d 1 f d t ld" . h t k th . ... h h ville, is outstanding for his work . · w k F t combination dornn ory an schoo i gave oo o so Iers passmg as a en em InLO er own ome

· Veterans are warned that if Can you lmagme a e ores building, the foundations of through Wake Forest - to both and has brought .them up to adult- in publications. He is the assist-d d ts qwr. ed leg·al College and the town of Wake For- which the present' Wait Hall now "Yankee" and "Rebel" alike. hood. The old Negress attributes ant to the Director of the News epen en are ac ' est as it was in 1849 or fifteen Bureau and a member of the staff proof in the form of certified years after the college was found- stands upon. This building was She does remember when Pres- her longevity to the fact that she of Old Gold and Black. He was f bli d Of mar constructed in such a fashion that ident Buchanan came through has always tried to help others. copy 0 pu C recor - ed? · "Aunt" Ellen Lewis cannot sports editor of the Howler for riage, birth, etc., ·must be remember quite that far back in the two ends of the building serv- WaRkel~orest in 1857 on hhistwthay Slave~ Ab~ed over two years. He has been ac-submitted to the VA. Increased the history of Wake Forest, for ed as a dormitory while the mid- to a elgh, and recalls t a e In n~g~rd to Aunt . Ellen and _tive in the band and was drum subsistence will be effective she was born on January 6, 1849, dle portion was used for class- tracks were made of wooden rails her oplmon of pe9ple m general, major during his sophomore year.

'd · but there are many treasured de- rooms and offices.· Another thing with iron strips on top of the wood. she recalls that many people abus- H . 1

t . b Only from. the date eVl ence IS . . . e Is a so an ou stand1ng mem er she calls to mind is the fact that She remembers the cars as having d the1r slaves before the CIVIl recei'ved m" the VA. Necessary tails in the memory of this 100 d e of Alpha Sigma Phi ·Fraternity.

d the college was forced to close its no tops an as mere flatcars. War, but she also says that many • fonns are available at 111 Wait year old former slave in regar doors during the Civil War from Her Nick-Name people were very decent to her Religion Leader to the history of both town and Hall. . 1862 to January 1866. After the In order to earn her nick-name people. She recalls that many P. A. Cline, a senior from Gas-

On April 1, 1949, all veter- co~~g~'Aunt" Ellen · relates the war there was a chapel on the of "aunt," "Aunt" Ellen has serv- former slaves stayed with their tonia, is a campus leader in re­ans except PL 1 and those whose story of her life, her primary present site of the Music-Re- ed not only- as a maternal aunt to masters and their families for ligion. He is superintendent of entitlements expire this semes- function through the years has ligion building. I The . Baptist many relatives, but has also serv- many years after the war. As the Sunday School and president ter will be mailed a Certificate been to serve as midwife to hun- church met in this chapeL Both ed as a foster aunt to many mem- far as she can remember, "Aunt". of the Cullom Union. He is an of Intention from the Assistant dreds of. Wake For~st families, the owners of the slaves and the hers of her own race, and for this Ellen maintains that she has nev- active member of Delta Kappa to the Bursar. It is asked that a:&d to serve as nurse to many slaves themselves attended this reason among many others; the er had a "lick" from a white per- Alpha, honorary ministerial fra-

of these same families. "Aunt" .church, with the slaves sitting centenarian has endeared herself son in all of her life. She also ternity. Also P. A. is a member these certificates be filled ou: Ellen has worked in many homes in the gallery or balcony. not only to the members of her maintains that she has never had of the B. s. u. Council and an accurately and. comnletely an in Wake Forest, . and many of The Civil War own race, but also to the mem- a cross word with adults in her assistant in the Latin department. returned to 111 Wait Hall not the older families remember her "Aunt" Ellen's recollections of bers of the white race in and life, both Negro and white. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa later than April 10, 1949. for her ability to handle children. the Civil War itself in regard to around Wake Forest. In the field of religion "Aunt" this month.· He was past presi-

Veterans are advised to cheek One of the families which the Wake Forest are rather scanty, "Aunt" Ellen has had nine Ellen is a devout Christian, as dent of the Euzelian Literary So­the Veterans bulletin board on former slave remembers most is considering the fact that she was children of her own, one of whom, was her mother before her. She ciety. h "f" t fl rth d f the Holding famllr• and she has but about fourteen years of age Jim I:.ewis of Wake Forest, is still says the Lord has been good to Johin Lanier a senior of Win-~~t •:ali, o;:~m ~hue t!ntim~, many fond memories of them. at the time. All of the battle~ living, and works at various jobs her, and that she is trying tolston, was recognized for his out-

"Aunt" Ellen remembers the she remembers hearing about in Wake Forest. "Aunt" Ellen says I be the best type of Christian that stanciing work in dramatic art as announcements of impor- b were north of 'Wake Forest, but Jthat she has picked many wander- ' -see AUNT, Page 6- -see ODK, Page 6- • tance will be posted there. one building on the campus e-

Page Two Old Gold and Black Friday, Mare.ti 18, 1949

.....

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Founded Januarv 15L.l916, as the otfl.clal student

newspaper of Wake .to·orest College. PubUshed weekly during the school year except during examination periods and holldays as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

Bob Grogan • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Editor Herb Paschal, Alice Puryear, Blll Bethune,

Walt Friedenberg .••• , ••••• Assistant Editors Editorial Staff: Alex Biggs, Paul Williams, Ed

Friedenberg, Neal Gabbert, Elizabeth Gertner, Bob Howx·en. Clarence Lane, Erma La Niel", Jewell I,ivingston, Dan Lovelace, Dick Newton. Carol Oldham, Vivian Snuggs, R. T. Weatherman, C. B. Williams. Leigh Williams, Ray 'Wyche.

Stat! Photographers ... Alex Kiser, Jim TUrner Staff Artist ............... Joseph W. Brubaker Bill Hensley • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • . • • Sports Editor

Sports Staff: Dave Clark, Bob Holt, Jack Glenn, Johnny Dillon, Blll Norris, John Gibson, Wiley \Vax·ren.

Paul 0. Moyle, Jr •••.••.•• , • Business Manager Bob Phelps • , •••••• Assistant Business Manager Leo Derrick . . . • . . . . . . . . • • Circulation Manager

Stafr: Johnny Cameron, Leo Derl'ick, Robert Walker, Jack Bullard, Byron Russell, Jack Glenn, :Mary Lib Westbrook, Edward Best.

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, P.O. Box 551, Wake Forest, N. C. All business matter should be addressed to the business manager, same address. Subscription rate: $2.00 per year. Advertising rates furnished upon request.

Phone 304-6. For Important news on Thursday phone 4231, Theo. Davis, Sons, Zebulon. N. C.

Entered as second class matter Janual'Y' 22, 1916, and re-entered Apl'il 5, 1943, at the post office at Wake Forest, Nort!l Carolln~. under the act of March 3, 1879.

Member A. C. P. and 'N. C. C. P. 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.

Printed by Theo. D~vls Sons, Zebulon, N. C.

FABLE

Once we had a pretty campus. It was covered witq. grass.

Hold Your ·Bat, Prol, I 'Life 's Just" One Doggone ·Thing HoUdays Are Yo.ursl Aftll-; Another' In This Business

There is one consolation for I through the park and she acci-By Alice Pu-ryeaT

1 students with automatic baby sit- being an editor - just one. The dently stepped on a turtle. The

Tomorrow you can quit count- ters'? Do they allow unlimited editor gets the opportunity of I turtle yelled, "Ouch, B'e Careful ing the days, hours, and minutes class-cuts with a magnanimous reading some of the best copy in lady.' The girl picked up the tur­until the time. or tomorrow you upping of quality points? You just the world - unedited copy. And tle and said, 'I'm sorry I stepped can stop assuming an air of placid ponder. Let that dol.4ble-edged that kind from 'a group of college on you,' but how and where did indifference toward the whole keenly-whetted mind whack reporters is all the more amusing. you learn to talk?' The turtle matter, which is probably mostly away for awhile. This week the editor penned a said.•, 'I wasn't a turtle always. I numbness from trying to remem- Someone might advance the the- note to the bottom of the weekly used to be a tall six foot hand­her Byron's literary philosophy, ory that spring holidays are for assignment sheet; It read: some young man, but my fairy the formula for sugar, and your the parents and townspeople of "Any staff member having a godmother bewitched me and required list of French, irreularg the students' homes. Along these feature story or other bits of news turned me into a turtle.' With verbs all at the same time. lines let us consider Ql Z. Xtrpjh, is requested to rePort same Tues- that, the young lady took the

But least spring holidays find '49. The past years when he has day night." turtle borne and every night she Y

ou with a mind well-whetted by gone home his father has met him 1 put it on her pillow and ~adual-. t 1 1 Tuesday night comes and the much cramming and with noth- w1th he usua, "Well, gad to see . ly nursed it back to health. One Wh t ' copy readers search through the ing to work on, here is a ques- you, son. a s wrong, you need morning she awoke and what do

?" basket for copy:, to proof. Near th'nk? · h · tion for you to ponder. Why do some more money. - you 1 • R1g t next to her she the top of the basket appeared a f d t 1 we have the doggone things any- In Need of Food . I printed article neatly pasted on oun a a 1 gorgeous six foot how? h t f man. The spell had been broken,

Th th His mother has been able to a ~ ee 0 copy paper. It was but do you know, to this day, her

ere are ree possible rea- manage only "No wonder you labelled ."Feature __:- Rodney sons for having spring holidays. , Q k . , A tt h d mother doesn't believe her story."

came home. You look like you uac mrre. n a ac e note The one which is probably the could stand a good meal." • said, "Sorry, sir,. but this is the Such is the life of an editor or most widely believed, and the most As for the townspeople this only feature story that I was able CO!JY reader. erroneously swallowed, is that ' t f" d 't bl remark is probably characteristic o m , su1 a e for your paper.'' spring vacation is planned entire- "Howdy, son. Good· to see yot,{ Th~ arti_cle followed and appear­ly for the poor dear students who home. So they finally kicked you ed 1n th1s form: are so tired from all that ·study- out of the Army?" When Q. z. ''A beautiful girl was walking ing that they really need time off. explains that it was his older

It's Too Tme brother who• used to be in the offices grading your blotted quiz

B. S. U. Notes How true, how true! Of course Army, the friend of the family re- papers and research themes. Oh

they are tired. Who wouldn't be plies, "Oh, there's two of you is no! The horticulturally ·inclined after surviving the old Wake For- there? I'd forgotten Xtrpjh had will have their horticultural backs est traditioh of mid-term tests, in another boy."· bent horizontally over a horticul- By Alice P_u-ryear

It had no pig paths. The shrubbery was not tron down, tram­pled or just broken. The town people thought it pretty. Our visitors thought it pretty. Our students. They seemed to be of another opinion. That is a shame. Students should be aware of our campus. It could be one of the prettiest in the state or even in the south. It could be. We don't seem to want it that way. Mr. Holliday can't understand why. I can't understand

conjunction with such other old No, students, these are not the tural herb of some sort. Those Shamrocks, Irish tenors, a wish-Wake Forest traditions as Shorty's, reasons. Clenth your fists! Hold who either have yard men or ing well, and a great deal of blar­magnoliaology, bridge, and trips on to ~~ur hats! Bend forward don't care for gardening. will ney w~re the order of the day ta' to Raleigh. expectantly in your seats! (We do wend their merry way to the golf th st p t · k' d t

d · d · course and cuss at the l1'ttle balls e · a rlc s ay par Y last Along about this time of year, not a v1se omg all this simul- Saturday night in the Rec room also, students are subject to that taneously unless you have' had at all hours of the day instead of beginning at 8:00. Entertainment widespread disease commonly least five hours of sleep during only the hours when they don't ranged from watching Joe Barnes known as spring fever, or the ver- the past two days.) Now it can be have to wake up some falsely so- ser'-:e as a lighthouse and the scene nal excuse for the way a number told! called students. And will they of several murders to singi g f of people feel all year long. All Spring holidays are for the pro- have fun'? group songs and participat~g ~n this makes spring holidays wel- fessors! Yessir, there's no two ways There is only one thing a loyal,· potato races, to say nothing of come, to be sure, but can it be about it! You've seen some of Wake Forest spirited student can consuming green lemonade and why.

Moral: What's wrong with students when they won't co-operate with the Buildin~ and Grounds crew and continue to

disgrace o~r beautiful campus.

the real reason? their yards - nice places with combat this type of attitude on the cookies.

(!

PRANKY PRANKS

Do school administrations usual- grass-plots all full of grass, flow- part of his professors with, and it ly arrange things for the students? er-beds all full of flowers, grape is up to every student to carry it Do they build escalators running arbors all full of grapevines, and out. So come on, ·. rally round at top speed in Wait Hall and the even vegetable gardenS all full of everybody, and fox them by beat­Alumni Buildings to help them vegetables. There is your reason ing them at their own game. Just get to c~asses by' 8:30 instead of for spring holidays. Don't think, go on and have the biggest time 8: 09? Do they suppJ.y the married· the professors will sit in their 1 in your power!

* * * Elections for · next year's BSU

general officers will be held ·after spring holidays in open meetings to be announced soon, , according to Bob Winecoff, president in­cumbent.

Back in the roaring twenties, so some of the older alumni tells us, the heyday of college pranks and pranksters reached a peak that has never been equaled. It wasn't unusual to see a boy in a coon skin coat perched atop a water tank when the sun went down. And, it wasn't any more unusual to find that the water tank had a new coat of paint when the sun came up. If a cow were handy, the dean of men might find her grazing on the chapel stage instead of the pasture, and he also might have to console half a dozen freshmen who had lost a head of

hair in a bout with the sophomores. There wasn't any real damage done, and, in spite of a few

hurt feelings now and then, nobody suffered a great deaL Such. were the pranks in those days, but the present pranksters have added some new, if not viciou5. innovations during tlie course of twenty years. Prank playing has become a rather foolhardy

business. Up until a few days back, the State Highway Commission

has been nil but unable to keep a route marker on the cafeteria corner. The sign must have presented some sort of tempta­tion to souvenir hunters. for every day or so the plate was torn loose from the post and a new one had to be placed in its

stead. Recently the department put up a sign that was out of reach

of those who had developed such a lust for destruction, and the kids couldn't wait until they had dug it out of the ground and thrown it on the cafeteria lawn. Just a few days before, the same outfit, or their close mental associates, had hung a dis­tance marker in the church yard on Saturday night. Both acts made the campus look a little more like a dump heap on Sunday

morning. We contend that pranking is one thing, but that vandalism

is another. For those who have lost sight of the meaning of the noun prank, Mr. Webster defines is as a mischievous frolic. Giving an innocent motorist a bum steer in the middle of the nipht doesn't usually turn out to be a frolic. Those signs are public property and are for public use. The Highway Commis­sion has expressed its displeasure at Wake Forest students act­ing like inmates of a prison camp, and we can't. blame them. We hope that in the future those responsible will realize that de­stroying public property is not only an act of inconsideration, but an act that is also punishable by law. -B. B.

THIS COLLEGIATE WORLD

Up at the University of Richmond, our Baptist counterpart in Virginia, the spring elections came off last week with a lot of fancy twists. The All Campus coffee urn, which had been placed at the polls for weary voters, got too excited 'along about ten o'clock in the morning and blew hot water all over the party workers. It was the first time in the history of Richmond elec­tions that hot water had been used against hot air. There wasn't any coffee for about twenty minutes, but the workers went back to the dorm, changed, and were back on duty in five. There was also one loudspeaker, and a "gentlemen's agree­ment" between the two presidential candidates as to use of same. They both must have been mighty nervous, politics be­ing what they are, but there wasn't any report of violence. One of the candidates was jefferson Davis. It seems that he was running for one of the minor offices, and. unlike the jeffer­son Davis of the Confederacy, young jeff wasn't able to get into ofice. He received just two votes. To keep the act running I true to form, both parties kept a close watch on the vote count-~ ing. They didn't even stop to eat or drink free coffee.

----------~---------~~-----------------

. • ,.&1_ ,._.~ HaPS CECIL.E ACHI£VE.ALACRI1Y .,..,,. .... ., AND OBVIATE OSLOQUV

~----------------------~ I

llu~~ the ~oral-frl Cqmpkts Qu,. ?J~ ~ Behind our playful plot, our intentions are serious: we want .you to discover for yourself the welcome DIFFERENCE in cigarettes _that PHILIP MORRIS can bring you. Established PROOF of that difference is too extensive to 'be d~tailed here-but pre-medical and chemistry students, who will be especially interested can get it in published form FREE~ by writing our Research Dept., Philip Morris Co., 119 Fifth Ave., N.Y. .

=PHill

AN ECOYSIASTIC CHAN6E ,INDEED­THAN.K$10 PHILIP MORRIS!

'Use These Words w-rth Tongue-in·'Cheek! (Plan to UH ONE every week!) . . ,

CERBERUS (sir··llur-usl-1he throe-hooded watch• dog of Hades.

CIGARETTE HANGOVER (Never pro-nounce it! De-nounce itJ)-That stale smoked-out taste, that tilht dry feeling In your throat· due ta unoldng. ,

ECDYSIASnC (•k-dl:-eo-as-tik} - a comploto dripping-off pf outer covering.

ERATO (e~)-Muse of Joyous Poetry. OBLOQUY (Obli-lo-1twee)-Heaped-up scom or

abuse. , OIVIATI (obli-.,._!JHo go around or avoid. PEREGRINAIING (paiNa-rin-ay·ting) -Roving

about. , PTER9DACnL (t~-h-dak-tiii)-A prehistoric

winged Dzard., . IE~GANT (ter-m,-scmtl-A nasty nagger. IYCOONUS (tyoolcoo-) -·A .rich Tincl.auli-

ness-Woman. 7 VIRAGO (vee-w-go) - A shNW or cranky

female.

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Old Gold ·and· Black -Page Three

~K11ppa ;·Sigs Plan April '.Fish Fry; Sigma ·pi's to Meet ·st.te Rho

A group of boys from the Pi we are prouci of our fraternity I and "restful" Spring Holiday. Canal Zone, and Brother William Theta Sigma Chapter of Duke -re- basketball team . who won • the Our president, J9hn Person, is "Bill'' Powell pinned Miss Phyllis cently visited Theta Chi to dis- all-campus b~l!ketball trophy, to be congratulated on pinning up Timberlake of Youngsville. Con­cuss plans concerning their forth- plus the all-fraternity basketb~ll Miss Marianna Ne"'!"lin of Balboa, grats, ~rothers Bill. coming installation of Theta , Chi trophy. The team defeated the _______ ___:_ _____ _:_ __ ___:_ ________ _ at Duke. . Kappa Sigmas, a hard playing

Ralph Williams and Cliff Fagan club, 34-29 in the finals last Thurs-have been elected to plan for the day ni{lht. We. elected "numer-

. KAP~A SIGMA 1 his boxwoods are growing by Spring danc;e. _ · ous'' ce1ptains Monday night for Though the best results weren't leaps and b·ounds. ALPHA SIGMA PHI the purJ?Ose of coaching the "num-

. tabulated in our favor in the in- PI KAPPA. ALPHA On Monday night the Alpha erous" inter-fraternity athletic tramural basketball finals, the two Th~ three, new coaches ~e wor- Sigs pledged two new men, Nick contests which we are P1anning to managers; Bill Walker and John- ried; Lynn Kerbaugh took over. Belesis and Roger Melanson. The enter this semester. Best of luck' ny Pate along with the fine play- the job of coaching softball, with fraternity extends its congratula- to all of you. ing of Mustain, Bachelor, Dawson, Bill Bale~ as head volle:yba_ll coach tions to you men. Also, we offer · Brother Jim Duncan was elec~­and the rest of the squad ·certain;. and Lows Joynet handling the sincere congratulations to Bro- ed wesident of the Monogram Iy deserve top honors for· their freshman volley ball team. thers John Dillon and Jim Getzen, Club at the last meeting. Con-

·.·performance., ·_ Due to Jim Patton's present who were recently elected to Om- grats, "Big-Mac"-we wish all the Robert Ferris better known as streak of luck, he wishes to is- icron Delta Kappa. Brothers and Pledge Brothers of

"Poochie" has 1bee~a elected to ·sue "'a formal challenge to all We are happy to say again ~hat Alpha Sigma Phi a very happy

serve as manager of the volley ~tat~smen; horseshoe players, that ball team, Poochie has rounded- Is, Anyti~!'l· anYJ?lace, anybody,

·up a ·team, which under his ex- anywhere, say~ J~. . · cellent lei.;Jership should bring _We now take thi~ opportumty anothe trophy to ,0 collection. t'? congratulate Jennmgs Agnet on

r . ur his pearl studded recovery; Brother Nic Beasley has extend- THETA CHI

ed. an "invit_ati.Qn to the fra~ernity- Th~ following new members ·to. be ~t his noz::;e on April 7th, were recently initiated: Don ·f?r ~fish fry. A ban well _be_g Hayes, Charlotte, N.C.; Paul Wal­t~e should be _had by al~ if It ters, Oxford, N.' c.; Thomas Sneed, equals the one ~ven by N1c last Oxford, N. C.; . and . M Harris, year. Creswell, N. C. "\-

SIG~ PI Congratulations to Brother T~e chapter e~tends congratu- George Tunstall, who was recent­

lations t~ Br~ther George ~aJto- ly accepted at the the Medical nee on hiS bemg _select~d director College of Virginia.

·· of· the f!Jurthcommg Little Thea-. Theta Chi gave a cabin party tre ~reduction "Othello." Saturday night in honor of its

Plans are being made to have new members. · a little "get-together" With Rho George Wilson, one of our bro­'chapter of Sigma Pi at N. C. thers who •graduated lalit semes­State. ter, recently visited the frater-

A.lwnni who have recently vis- nity. "Skinny" Ennis from Salis­ited. the chapter are: . Eddie Folk, bury, N. C., rece~tly pledged.

1 of Bowman Gray, Tom Darden J. c. Fagan and George Tun­and Carl Dickens of the Univer- stall were elected to represent the sity of· Maryland D_ental School, fraternity in the P. F. P. Paul arici 'Bobby Simpson of Burling- Walters has been elected captain ton. · of the softball 'team.

Congratulations go to Brother 1

. Carl !Vlills who recently lost his ' !raternity pin to Miss Anne Boykin of Farmville. Let Us Tune Up Your

·InStall=~~!:!:" was heid Engine ~nd Check Your: at the regular m~eting on Mon-day night. Sincere appreciation · Oil was extended to the outgoing of- * ficers for ~e- fine job which ~ey * L b . t• did this year. . :u r1ca lOll

Counselor Locke of the Kappa . . Alpha Order was guest of tne· * Brakes . Chapter for a while . on last Fri- *. ' . c·I t h day night and many of the broth- . U ~

· ers eD,Joyed talking with him. C'\Ilgratulations to Brother Lam~ * Wheels CauGle, who was elected to Om­icron Delta Kappa last week. Expert Work: at Extra

Low Cost Brother Burden is still receiv­

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Page Four OICi Gold and Black -Friday, March 25,1949

Golds Defeat Blacks,· .23-13; Duke. Game Shifted to Durham/ -------------------------------------~

·~---------~.~-··oavis Shines As Dealing with the Deacs Gol,d Squad Tops

Russ Named Co-Captain Boston · C~llege Tilt . May Be In·

. . . - . .

By BILL BENsLEY · Blacks· Saturday Of Deac Baseball-Team

- Peahead said he was satisfied. Jack Homer of the Durham Herald said the Deacs will be the team to watch next year. Several more sports writers were high in their praise of the two teams in the intra-squad game that was held last Saturday. All in an it looks like a good year for the Baptists when Septem-

Frosh Star Scores Once, Passes for· Two

More

By Johnny Dillon her wanders back to the top of the list on the calendar. A powerful passing attack,

However, football can be a funny game. The top rank- strong running game and good de-. f tt · b t h th ' e fense previewed for Wake Far-

ing teams in the natton have a way 0 ge mg ea w en ey r est's 1949 football show last Satur-supposed to win. 'So goes it with the Deacs. Wake Forest has day afternoon in the Monogram always been an up and down team. Many scribes have often Club's annual Intra-squad game, said that the Deacons win the games they're supposed to lose, Captain Ed Bradley's Gold squad

upset Captain Ray Cicia's favor­and lose the games they should have won. There may be a lot ed Black team, 21-13, before some to that statement. 1,000 spectators in Groves Stadi-

By Wi~~Y Warren Once ln a while you find a col­

lege athlete without any all-state press clippings to his credit. Such is the case of James Russell "Sam­ba" Batchelor of Wake Forest Col-lege. ,

Know -the kind of guy Samba really is? He's this kind of gu.y. Instead of all those fancy clippings to exhibit, he's got fire and fight, and the will to win. And he's gained the admiration of those that have watched . him perform through just •that. But that isn't all. There's rriore, to the, Batche­lor story ..

Groves Stadium Students May, See Deacs

Play In Seven Ga_mes

Athletic Director Jim Weaver announced this week that the football game with· the Duke Blue Devils next season will be play­ed in Durham instead of at Wake Forest as it was 1.riginally plan­ned. Coach Weaver stated· that there is a · possibility of Boston College playing here to offset the transfer of the Duke game.

Barring all bad luck and unfort_unate events, Wake For- ~reshman Dickie Davis paced est can be the team that walks off with all honors when the the Gold team by scoring on a football curtain is lowered. Anyone that saw last Saturday's quarterback sneak and passing to

It all came about in Nashville, In announcing the change North Carolina,· on September 22, Weaver made it ·clear that the 1925. "It's been home ever since" game would still be a home game says Samba. It was here that for Wake Forest and that stu-

RUSS BATCHELOR baseball became the apple of his dents would be admitted with -------------- eye. "I used to go over to Rocky their athletic books.

· kl t II that the passing offense was nothing Ed Bra~ey an'! Francis Scarton game can qwc Y e you for a pa1r of six-shooters. Vet-short of terrific, and the running attack is even better than eran Carroll Blackerby, complet­last year with such ball carriers as Scarton, Solek, Miller, and ing 16 o~ 22 passes, led the Black

S "th dded t th te Th freshman have been a big ad- losers with two. touchdown heaves mi a 0 e ros r. e to Lou Pollacci and John "Red"

dition to the varsity and the talent that was displayed in Groves O'Quinn.

Intramural Notes

Stadium would make any coach proud. The Golds started :their first ·'------------~ C 1 Sna ely had one of the busiest days of his career try- touchdown drive soon after the " . .

ar v . . . second quarter opened. Scarton, The strong Alpha S1gma Phi ing to cover all that went on below him. What he saw IS JUSt taking the ball on his own 49- basketball team captured the cam-a small sample of what he will have to deal with next fall. The yard line, blasted through right pus championship by downin~ the t d e full of scouts so the Deacs didn't go all the way in tackle and then lateraled off to Kappa S1gma team, _34-28, m a

s an s W re . Bouncin' Bill Gregus. who bulled hard-fought contest m the gym their preview of things to come. Even more and better plays his way to the ·Black 31-yard Thursday night, March 17. than were used Saturday make up the little black book that the marker. Bob Stutts was stopped Spf!.rked by "Babe" Narr, who

' after a yard gain by Cicia, but connected for 14 points, and Cap-coaches carry. • • • . Davis tossed a high, looping pass tain Jim Duncan, whose brilliant

The defense m the annual game hit a new stride With such which Scarton pulled in on the backboard work contributed to his former unheralded stars as Ed Baublis, Ed Karp~ Bobby 15 and romped a~ross the goal to team's victory, "the Alp~a Sigs

St t:ts J . z ak T Gwinn and Ed McClure taking the score after seven minutes and 15 f?und themselv_es occupymg the u ' Im r as, erry ' . seconds of play. Bill George frrst place slot m campus basket-

spotlight. Baublis, Karpus and .Stutts were all over the field kicked the first of his three perfect ball standings. Ed Butler, one of and in on nearly every play, and Zrakas, Gwinn, and McClur.e placements for the afternoon to !he big guns in his team's scor-

t t d. • th • defe · play Bobby Stutts is one of give the Golds a 7-0 lead. mg offense, was good on defense were ou s an mg m err nsive • . . . · in the. finals, but was never able the few men we 'have seen that can cover Red O'Qumn con- Score Tied to find his scoring eye, and ao-

The Blacks took- the kickoff on t d f 1 r · al sistantly ' thei·r 30-yard line and promptly coun e or on y Ive p01nts, -

.' . though he shot 17 points against Bestdes the varsity, who all looked well, Salek, Scarton, marched 70 yards to tie the score. the Spoilers in the semi-finals on

Smith, Davis, Price, Miller. Stutts, and Kissell shone on Bill Miller picked up three yards. Tuesday night. Walker and Pate h Blackerby passed to Jim Duncan t d f th 1

their offensive chores. These boys made it known that t ey for a first down on the Black 44_ s arre or e osers. will be a thorn in the side of any team if they're not watched in- Lou Pollacci was pulled down by Handball Tourney cessantly. Nub played with an injured shoulder but returned a I Charlie Roberson after a_ one-y~rd Finals in the men's handball

1 · h «ain but Blackerby passed twlce tour ey WI.ll be played thi"s week punt 42 yards, and caught a 35 yard pass the on y two times e ·""I·n a'row to O'Quinn for 19 and 13 n · A play-off .between Ed Bradley, got his hands on the ball. yards and another first down on B. F. McLeod, and Paul Newton

Dickie Davis Will be a big help to the Deacs. His passing the 24. Two plays fail~d to click, will determine who will enter the . . . f th I uff ed but Blackerby threw m the end · 1 f" 1 · g · t D B ·tt and kickmg will be an ample replacement or e oss s. er zone on third down and Pollacci smg es ma s a ams an ri . Doubles will find Bill George

in graduation. Davis pitched two payoff passes and tallied one made a beautiful diving catch of and .Ed Bradley playing against on a quarterback sneak for the Gold's three markers. Scar- the ball. George Sniscak kicked Oscar Signore and Arthur Al-

• Willi ~ d M f h rf - · th the extra point to the score at 7-7 fred for the campus championship ton repeated his am an ary ros pe onnance m e after 14 minutes of play in the in this division of the tourney. victory. second stanza. Three new intramural tourna-

Miller and Solek run very well and may be counted upon The Golds took the opening ments began March 21, Physical . , · h PI kick~ff in the second half and Education department officials

for extra yardage almost any time they re giVen a c ance. ay- struck for a fast touchdown, us- disclosed earlier in the week. ing first string for the Black team, they were the big guns in ing only seven plays. Davis took These are volleyball, badminton, the ground attack. The biggest surprise of the game was prob- 'Ed Listopad's kick on his 20 and and table tennis singles. Ap-

' · · l E h 1 returned to the 31. Gregus ,smash- proximately 50 men are entered in ably Ed Bradley s outstanding offenstve p ay. d as_ a ways ed his way for 11 yards 'in two the two latter tourneys, while sev-been one of the best defensive ends in the conference, but he plays, and Scarton picked up five eral teams are competing for the let it be known that his offensive ability is just· as good as the in another two attempts. Bradley campus volleyball championship.

, . . then cut across the Black secon- Golf H next mans. Ed captamed the Gold team and was the receiver of dary, took Davis' pass 'in the and orseshoes . several passes from Davis-one for a touchdown. clear on the 42 and charged all In addition to these sports, the

In the Jdcldng department it seems that the Deacs won't the way to the Black 1_7 _before Spring Intramural calendar has

B "d D · h , Bill G Dave Dawson caught him from scheduled golf and horseshoes suffer from lack of talent. est es _, aVlS, t ere S eorge, behind. Gregus fought his way contest to begin May 2. All en-George Sniscak. and Ed Listopad for the placements. 16 yards to the one-yard line and tries must be in by April 30.

Red O'Quinn played his usual good game and gathered in Davis drove over the goal. line on Points will be awarded toward . . a quarterback sneak after only .the individual championship tro--

SlX passes durmg the afternoon. The redhead scored once on two minutes had elapsed in the phy .to be given at the close of an aerial from Blackerby. Bill George, Ray Cicia, Tom Palmer, third quarter. the current semester. Also pqints Dave Dawson, Bill Dye, Ed Listopad, Bud Pickard, jim Garry, Final Touchdown will b~ aw<~:rded toward the team W B G P b. h" Gl R · h dt J" D . t 1 t th G ld champwnsh1p trophy, and cham-cod easley, ene am tanc 1, enn em ar , 1m un- Twelve rrunu es. a ~r e 0 pionship keys will be awarded in-can and Bob Auffarth were all ·superb in their line play. The squad scored their fmal tQuch- .dividual winners ·

' . down of the afternoon when Brad- · · ·- · · • Deacs can boast of one of the best all round teams m the con- 1 t b h" d th Black .safety Softball will begin April 13 an~

ey go e m e a track meet is slated for Apnl ference. The line is strong and rough, and the backs are fast man and took li: beautiful 27-yard 27. Team rosters for the soft-and furious. pass from Davis _on the 25 and ball tournament must be in by

• . • . went across standmg up. A ·1 8 Th · h · hi t t Lou Pollacct stole the show With his crrcus catch of a Black· Thi d t ut more life pn · e c ampwns P ro a -s seeme 0 P ing trophies will be awarded to

erby pass in the end zone. Lou may prove to be one of the most in th~ Black squad as they took the winning teams in t£ese sports. talented receivers on the squad. Only Mike Sprock and Dick the kic~ff and drove 87 ya~ds

. • • • for their second touchdown With Travaghne were nussmg from the _backfield Saturday. Both short ground gains mixed in well are suffering from leg injuries. with "spot" a~d long !?asses, John

Campus Title Taken By Alpha Sigma Phi

Mount sometimes to see the 'Bos- One feature of the change was ton Red Sox play an exhibition to make it possible . for the Dea­game. Guess that\ is why I be- cons to play lhe University of came so interested in•basebali." North Carolina at Chapel Hill-the

In the eyes of local admiJ;ers, same year Duke does. carolina Samba was truly a high school sells over twenty-five thousands star. For four years he worked season tickets ,every year they as a catcher for the Nashville nine, play Duke at home, and it·would being named captain of the squad be to the advantage of both during his senior year in 19112~ Duke and Wake Forest to meet He also played basketball for the Tar Heels the same year at three years and led the teani in Chapei Hill. Carolina also profits scoring while serving as co-cap- by the move. tain in 1942. -

After graduation, Batchelor Seven for ~o was persuaded by his coach to at-· If I?lans for Bo~o~ College to tend Wake Forest. But after a Pl~y m Groves Stadium ;rnateri­year's stay here, he decided that alize, Wake Forest students will he· wasn't quite ready for college, have B; chah~e to see th~ home and enlisted in the army. team m act1on seven · tunes for

A · · C d two dollars. The tentative plans v1ation a et include Duquesne, William and

In June of 1943, he was sworn Mary, Boston College, and George­in as an aviation cadet. "I was town to play here. The three re­soon washed out," he admitted. maining. games available to the "Had a few physical troubles." students would be Duke, at Dur­The baseball teams that Batche- ham; State, at Raleigh; and Nor.th lor played on while in service Carolina, at Chapel Hill. were only mediocre. "We usually Another feature of the change had one or two good baU players," would bring all three teams in the he said. Batchelor received his Big Four to Groves Stadium in discharge in February of . 1946, 1950. The _change was made at after serving two ana one half the request of the athletic offi­years in the states. cials at Duke, and Coach Weaver,

Returning to Wake Forest in the in_ replying with the request, stat­fall of 1946, Sambo quickly de..: ed that Duke has always "play­cided on a physical education de- ed fair" with Wake Forest in ar-gree, and of course, a spot on the ranging schedules. · baseball team. The latter he se- Duke has never asked or re­cured with ease. Coach Murray fused a request of Wake Forest Greason, ·then serving as Dea- in athletics and the local officials con baseball coach, welcomed the stated that they. were "happy to addition of Batchelor to an inex- cooperate." perienced group of catchers.

WRA NEWS During the summer, for the-past

two years, Batchelor has handled the catching chores for Colerain of the Albemarle League. He was . The second annual Coed Gym one of the top hitters in the cir- night, this. year titled "Feminine cuit in 1948, batting above .300. Sports Parade", is slated for 8 "I'm· not sure whether or not I'll o'clock Friday evening, ApriL 8. go back, yet. I might ' go with The event will feature demonstra­Nicholas and Vander· Clute up tions of women's physical educa­North.'' tion activities, according to Miss

When asked of the team's Marjorie Crisp, director· of that chances of winning the Big Four department. title this year, he promptly re- Featured at the affair' will be-­plied, "We should win. If our hit- tumbling and pyramid building by­ting comes through, there is little the freshman classes, and dem­doubt. But then there is always onstrations of various dances by that 'if'. We have a more experi- "the Coed physical education ma­enced team and undoubtedly the jars. Folk and square dances, tap best pitching staff in the loop." dap.ces, and ballet, as well as mod-:

As co-captain of the present ern dances will be included in this Deacon nine, the veteran Batche- event. lor is more serious-minded about ' Another outstanding featUre of baseball than ever. "It's ~bout time the evening will be the play-offs Wake Forest won the title, and of the Coed badminton champion­this year has got to be the year," ship. "Oh yes," he smilingly said, Two games, both ten minutes "studying is my favorite pasti;rne.'' long, will climax ttte activities of I left on that. the evening. The first contest

Cinder Squad Ready .For Coming Matches

· will pit the physical education majors agaiJ;lst the Coed volley­ball' varsity in abbreviated game, · and the latter will see the rna-. jars face the women's basketball! varsity for a match in that sport.

The sporting situation looks good at the present time in Bap- ~~:-g:~~acc\::d ;;~1~~ a~h~~ tist Hollow. The football team. the golfers, and the baseball Blackerby pitched to Duncan, The Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity team all loom as the top contenders in their respective fie,lds. Miller and O'Quinn to pla~e ~he baseball team defeated the Kap-

. ball on the Black 42 0 Qumn pa Sigma quintet 32-28 on March Johnny Johnston's linksmen will be as strong if not stronger then raced down the. right .side- 17 to claim the campus intramur-

The Wake Forest cinder squad will begin its dual meets for the season following spring holidays. The first meet is with the Quanti­co Marines on- their track.

Next on the schedule is Rich­mond there. The Flying Deacons tangle with William and Mary later in the season in a night con­test. Several other dual meets are tentative but are . not ready for release as yet.

During the evening, the Physi­cal Education Club plans to dis­play some of the work of its arts and crafts projects. In addition, girls who have earned WRA jackets will be recognized on this occasion. A group of" judges will pick the two best basketball and volleyball players as well as the two best tumblers and dancers, participating in the affair, and they, too, will be recognized.

than last season's team, and the teemen have the stuff to beat lines, cut back, and took Blacker- al basketball championship. The any team they play. by's pass on the eight-yard ma.:k- Alpha Si~s, V:ith a final record

Th f If h b • • th •t er and raced over for the SIX- of seven VIctories and no set backs,

f h ~ reshm~n go ers ave een gtvmg edvarsh 1 Y a ~ pointer. Sniscak missed the ex-•were the only team on the cam-

or t err money m the matches played to date an s ow pronuse tra point and the Gold team led. pus to finish the season with an of a strong golf team to represent Wake Forest for the next The Golds put the g~me away unblemished record.

four years. Dick Tiddy, the Charlotte wonder, is playing the ~:eB:u~::es b;~~c: ~~~g~en::~ al;f:e ~e a:%!>th~ ~~tsceo~~n-!:!! number one position and led the frosh in their victory over RaJ. Black line to block Bob P.q.ce's not decided until the closing eigh ffigh School. kick in the end zone for a safety. minutes of play. . "Babe:" NB:rr

Running true to form for most paced the Alpha S1g s~onng, hlt­of the regular games the Deaes ting the hoops for 14 points. John­lose, the . Blacks led in all de- ny Pate with 10 points, was high partments of the statistics except for the Kappa Sigs.

Most everyone knows the story about the baseball team. Duke, Carolina, and State lost a lot of men last year. The Deacs didn't lose a man with the exception of Dale Blackwell. With the pitching staff even stronger the added support should carry Wake over the top. ·

The Deacs have a big reputation to live up to in three sports. Now is the time to make a grand sweep of football,_ baseball and golf. The prospects were never better for three champion­ship teams. The way it looks from here it is now or never even though any team on the three schedules is capable of beat­ing the ~aeons.

scoring. They piled up 13 first The victory gave the Alpha Sigs downs to the Gold's 7; completed two trophies, one for winning 16 of 22 passes :for 189 yards the fraternity championship, and against 7 completions out of 15 the other for winning the campus tries lor 186, and ·gained 123 yards championship. on the ground - al~hough loosing -:--------103-to 116 for the Golds. Ownby Stadium at S. M. U. in

Bob Kellogg and Pat Preston Dallas, Texas, seats on1y· 22,500, tutored the victorious Gold squad, but the Cotton Bowl Stadium at while Tom Rogers and George Me- the same city seats a total of 67,-Afee headed the Blacks, 345 spectators.

Things may be looking up jn the Deacon camp as far as the cinder paths are concerned. Led by Billy Wiggs, Ray Jones, Jerry Johnson, Allen Johnson and Shel­ton Bass, the trackmen hope to better the record of the last year's winged turtles. Several fine pros­pects are out for the freshman team and should be able to form the nucleus for an up and coming Cinder squad in 1950 ..

Tommy Byrne, now with the N. Y. Yankees, worked 133 innings in 31 games last year, winning 8 and losing 5 games. · ·

Rae Scarborough of the Wash­ington Senators pitched · 185 in­nings in 31 games, winning 15 and losing 8 games.

Both attended Wake Forest.

Gym night, is open to all stu­dents and faculty members, and everyone is urged to attend.

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If yo are he'1 ColeraiJ orite tl3 elor, he ed Tra: appear;; point tc one Ve leading

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The was u Forest comple· Of the played 12 Of tl loop te or lateJ against lina, or

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Verr for hi: Coler a basket years, last t'i\ with senior

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.Friday~ Ma;rch 25,, 1949 Old. Gold and Black - Page Five

Preacher -Starts Season As· Top League· Hurler

beat his last year's school mate, 2 and 1.

Tiddy-Edens beat Alexander­Duke 2 and 1, and Flick-Yancey licked Powell-Ingle, 21-2-1-2.

Tiddy:, took medal honors with a two under · par 70 for the 18 holes.

They wrote the legends and had I The townspeople of Wake Forest enough faith in their product to dent body. They recall many of back it with their own cash. the legends, especially the one They were confused at times, ex- about the law s,tudent who ate tremely so when confronted with fried cat. And of course, "Fires the ins and outs of postal permits, in the Forest" brought back to mailing regulations, and copy- them those sleepless nights back right laws. They threw such per- in the 30's when a fire bug ter­

picture of the co-authors, along with a story on their work, has ap­peared in newspapers in Greens­boro, Durham, · and Winston. Stories alone have appeared in newspapers all over the state.

Georgetown, whom the Deacons meet here this fall, won 4 lost 3 and tied one in intercollegi~te grid play in 1948 .

plexing problems into the lap of rorized Wake Forest. If you asked him, the chances

are he'd tell you he comes froin Colerain, but according to his fav­orite target, catcher Russ Batch­elor, he's really from a place call­ed Trap. Be all that as it may, appearances of past and present

Frosh- linksmen ~Play Six Games

LEGENDS Jim Cook, . who straightened them In fact, Legel"ds' publicity has out admirably. reached out all over the state. A

A form letter, which includes-------::----------------------­

point to another banner year for A six match schedule for the one Vernon Martin Mustian, the freshman golf team has been re­leading hurler in last year's Big leased by Coach Johnny Johnson. Four race. t Date conflicts have so far prevent-

Behind the appearances lies ed arrangements for meetings such substantial ·evidence as the with the freshman teallls of Car­four scoreless innings he threw olina and Duke, but it is hoped last Monday, and last year's very that both of these schools will be impressive record, compiled in- met on the liilMs. spite of the fact that he was used The freshman team, reported to entirely for relief. The ace fire- be one of the strongest freshman man;· or the "Preacher" as his squads in the entire south, gave teammates and the sports writers the .varsity golf team a real· battle dub him,. had. four wi~s against before losing by a very low score. no losses m Big Four circles, an_d They had little trouble,. in defeat­helped save other contests ~or his ·ing the Raleig hHigh School golf fello_w m~undsmen for whici; ~e team l4-4 last Monday. received no recorded credit m league play. .J Dick Tidd_y, fo~mer North and

The fact is that the Preacher South Carolina H1ggh School golf was used so often that a Wake champion from Cbarlotte, is the Forest ball game often seemed 'in- squads n~mbe~ one man. Frank complete without his appearance. Eddens, Jim Fl~ck and Bob Yancey Of the two dozen or so contests complete the first four. played by the Deacs, he tossed in Coach Johnson has expressed a 12 of them, and in the 13 Big Four desire that .more men come out for loop tests, he too~ the hill sooner the freshman golf team. With an­or later in 7. He worked four times other good man to round out a against Duke, twice against Caro- team of six, the freshmen could lina, once against State. easily win all o'f their matches.

But a strong right arm does not The freshman golf team sched-constitute the whole of Mustian's ule: · baseball talent, as his .~29 Big April 6-Elon, here; April 7-Four batting average will attest. State, there; April 15-High Point, In fact, a base hit featured in last here; April 22-High Point, there; year's performance ·of which the April 25-Elon, there; April 29-righthander is most proud. In the State, here.

·fourteen inning marathon with N. --------C. State in Raleigh, he hurled the Frosh Golfers w·.n last six frames and came through with the knock which finally clinched it for the Deacs. ...

, (Continued from Page 1) mendous publicity campaign. A barrage of posters hit the campus Tuesday morning. The posters are singularly in keeping with the spirit of the book. Some of them read: "Read Hamlet later . . . read Legends of . . . today." Af},­other boosts a review of the book: "Sensational" '-- says Frieden­berg. "Terrific" - says Mcil­wain. "We haven't seen it yet" - says the New York Times. Sj;lll another admonishes professors: !'Professors, final exams are a long ways off. Don't wait for failing students to give you copies of Legends - buy them today." Some of the advertisements are posters written in Spanish, French, and German. The' authors have promises from Ray Greene to do some in Latin translation later. At any rate ... Legends ... Leg­ends . . . Legends . . . note the publicity campaign.

The whole venture was spawn­ed by the fervent brains of Walt Friedenberg .and Bill Mcilwain.

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an application for copies of Legends, has been prepared to be mailed out to all alumni. Al­so ·space has been acquired in the ,Atumni News for advertising the new book. Orders have al­ready been received from alumni in Durham, Tarboro, Greensboro, Charlotte, Wilmington, and Win­ston. At the present rate of sales, the 1500 copies now on hand will not last through April.

The books are jacketed in a neat little mailing envelope so that those wishing to mail copies home will not be inconvenienced. Many students have sent copies to their relatives and friends.

Publicity has not been confin­ed to the Wake Forest campus. have been as receptive as the stu-

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The gentleman from Trap came Wake Fo~est's powerful frosh to Wake Forest in September of golf team, considered one of the 1944 with no scholarship for his State's strongest, topped Raleigh athletic passport. Unperturbed, he High's outfit 14-4 last Monday at tried out for the basketball team, Raleigh's Carolina· Country Club. 1 made it then proceeded to lead· Led by Dick Tiddy, former the Dea~on scorers for that season. Charlotte Central High star and Uncle Sam called in the spring North and South Carolina High semester of 1945, and Vernon was School champ for the· last two off to the wars· however he re- years, made a clean sweep of the turned faster than McArthur and high school club as Tiddy beat September of 1946 found him once Jimmy Alexander 2 and•1, Fra~ again in Baptist Hollow. Still no E~e~s ~eat Dan ?uke, 3-up, J1m, scholarship, he tried out for the Fllck hcked ;r,.ou1s Powell 2 1-2, baseball team that spring, and and the Raleigh boy Bol;l Yancey complied a 1-1-mark. His baseball

GR-ESHAM'S IS . . .

activities in 1948 are already fa­miliar.

Vernon had a good background for his college athletic career at Colerain High SchooL Playing basketball and baseball for four years, he captained those clubs his last two seasons and came through with two no-hitters during his senior season.

After graduation . which is scheduled to take place after the coming term of summer school, Mustian plans either to play pro­fessional ball or to coach; prefer­ing playing to coaching. He, un­usual among good college athletes, is not majoring in physical edu­cation, but is taking his degree in General Selene€. On the- campus, Vern is, of course, a Monogram Club 'member, and is a member of Kappa .Sigma social fr:aternity.

Spare time, which h€ says is practical right now, often finds the squared jawed youngster hupting or fishing, and usually in company of the afore-mentioned Batchler.

Tennis 1ream Drills

The tennis team this week has been having eliminations to find out which seven men will bear the Deacon banner on the clay and lime courts.

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There are four regulars from last year's team with excellent chances to remain in their spots. They are: Buck Bunn, Tinker Williams, Johnnie Hammack, and McNeal Watkins.

Paul Newton, a member of the 1947 tennis 'squad is a likely con­tender for the varsity. · ·

The first tennis match will be the Monday after Spring holidays with South Carolina here.

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Page SiK

BURNEY (Continued from Page 1)

C. Lake, Judge Burney proceeded to point out that there remains a niche at the top of the legal profession for good lawyers but gave warning of the many pit­falls awaiting the unwary young lawyer which can only be avoid­ed by learning in the "school of experience."

was Golden Bough, a local honor society. The circle has sought to add as members those who dis­tinguish themselves in five phases of campus life; scholarship; ath­letics; social and religious activi­ties; publications; speech, music, and dramatics.

As a formula for success Judge Burney advised the students-at­law to stay in their offices be­tween the hours of seven in the morning and five in the afternoon, to read one North Carolina Su­preme Court decision every day for five years, and to give un­divided attention to the prepara­tion of cases for trial.

The officers of Beta Alpha Cir­cle are Henry Huff, president; Dagwood Kornegay, vice-presi­dent, and Dr. Henry Stroupe, fac­ulty secretary and treasurer. Dr. E. E. Folk is the faculty advisor.

In conclusion Judge Burney said that his great love was criminal law and that his happiest years in the profession were those spent as solicitor.

ODK (Continued from Page 1)

He was instrumental in the founding of the present Little Theater, of which he has been stage manager, vice-president, and president. He is now president of Alpha Psi Omega, national dra­matics fraternity. He is a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, Beta Beta Beta, and Sigma Chi. He is also an assistant in the biology depart­J;nent.

Jim Getzen, a senior of Dade City, Fla., was honored for his achievement in the field of sci­entific scolarship. He is an as­sistant in the biology and chemis­try departments. He was instru­mental in the founding. of a chap­ter of Beta Beta Beta, national bi­ology fraternity, on the Wake For­est campus. At present he is president of Beta Beta Beta. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa this month. Jim is also active in pub­lications, Sunday School, and I. R. c.

Omicron Delta Kappa was founded in 1914 at Washington and Lee University. There in the tra­dition of the leadership of George Washington and Robert E. Lee, the founders formulated the idea that all-round leadership should be recognized and that outstand­ing students and faculty members should meet on a basis of mutual interest and understanding.

The Beta Alpha Circle of Omi­cron Delta Kappa was establish­ed at Wake Forest in 1939. The nucleus of the new organization

Forest Theatre Wake Forest, N. C.

Week of March 26

SATURDAY-Double Feature Shows Continuous 1 to 11

Eddie Dean in

The Tioga Kid James Lydon in

Out of the Storm

SUNDAY-Shows 2:00 & 3:45 9:00

Joel McCrea-Frances Dee

Four Faces West

MONDAY & TUESDAY­Shows 3: 15 7:15 & 9:00

Rita Hayworth-Glenn Ford

The Loves of Carmen

WEDNESDAY­Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00 Virginia Mayo-Zachery Scott

Flaxy Martin Short & Serial

THURSDAY & FRIDAY-Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00

Red Skelton-Janet Blair

Fuller Brush Man

OTHELLO (Continued from Page 1)

son; junior from Valdosta, Ga., as the duke of Venice; Ray Jones, sophomore from Elizabeth City as a clown, and Bill Iley, freshman from Harrisburg, and Paul West, as senators.

Mallonee, the director, is an ex­perienced Little Theater worker. He had a major role in "Kiss and Tell," has served as presi­dent and vice-president of the Little Theater, and has been vice­president of Alpha Psi Omega, honorary dramatics fraternity. In addition, he was in "Katherine and Petruchio," an excerpt from "The Taming of the Shrew," which was the first time that a piece of Shakespeare's work had ever ac­tually been presented on the cam­pus. This was given last fall by the play production class. Mal­lonee is active in other campus affairs, is a member of the Sigma Pi fraternity, a member of ODK, and an assistant in the English department. .

Mallonee stated that all possi­ble effort was being exerted to assure the success of "Othello" and disclosed that authentic cos­tumes will be used in the produc­tion.

Collegiate Theatre SATURDAY-

Shows 7: 15 & 9: 00 Robert Mitchum Barbara Geddes

Blood on the Moon

MONDAY, TUESDAY, & WED.­Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00

Gary Cooper-Ann Sheridan

Good Sam

THURSDAY-Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00

Virginia Mayo-Zachery Scott

Flaxy Martin

Old Gold and Black

Final selection of committee heads have not been made. All persons interested in working a committee for "Othello" are urg­ed to sign the committee sheet which will be posted on the Lit­tle Theater bulletin board wme­diately after the holidays.

Rehearsals have already been scheduled. For the first week, the cast will work on interpre­tation of the play, dealing with the whole g_rama. Af-ter that the plays will be broken up' and work will continue by acts. Rehearsals will be every afternoon, Monday through Friday, for the next seven weeks. In addition, two Saturday practices have been slated.

AUNT (Continued from Page 1)

her mother said she should be. She says that she doesn't want

to hear anything evil, and that she loves peace. To quote "Aunt" Ellen, "Every day is a blessing to me," And again, she proclaims that it is up to "the young white people to carry the light as Chris­tians. They, the Negro, were born in darkness and it is up to the young white people to carry the light, as Christians, to them."

In spite of her age, "Aunt" El­len still remains a remarkable character. She cannot read or write but says that if she had

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been able to read and write she at work during the day she tj:!nds would have written a book on the the wood and coal stove in the history of Wake Forest. She en.:. living-room-bedroom which she joys listening to her radio. Re- occupies and answers . tlde door. cently she was very sick, but to- "Aunt" Ellen stays in her house day is able to be up and out all day long by herself while her again and seems to be fairly agile. son is gone, but she mentions She lives with her son Jim that many of her friends come to in a home which she paid for her- visit her in the evening. self after her husband died many years ago. While the son is away Patronize OG&B advertisers.

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