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940 the the Bell, !son. Bur- . At- de- this win- col- e Pi rrell ·d of l. """'\ [ _J. I \ , .. I ' . ' \. n ar \ VOL. XXV. NO. 7 WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 PRICE: TEN CENTS PER COPY Holiday Given To Law School ForNCB Meet Faculty '3nd Students Are Present at State Bar REPUBLICAN Goldberg Sets Frosh Election For October 30 ·., Record Number of Nomi· nees Run for Offtice Wednesday DUKE -GAME· IS TOP HOMECOMING . DAY A'TTRACTION FOR OLD GRADS; MANY ACTIVITIES PLANNED TODAY *·----------------------------------------------------* ·MEETS AT RALEIGH Adams and Stevens Chief Speakers· In Capital Convention co-ED Is CANDIDATE Duke Publicist Six Minds with but a Single Thought Frats Sponsor Fall Exhibits By BOB SCOT!' Both the, :faculty and the stu- dent body of the Law School took advantage of a . welcome holiday yesterdaY, to , _attend the annual meeting of the North Carolina State Bar, held at the Hotel Sir Walter in Raleigh. Classes were suspended for the day in the Law School, and large number of students· went to Raleigh to attend the meeting of the Bar. Both the morning and the after- sessions of the assembly were well-attended, they proved of great interes.t to. the students who hoped, at s<Jme date in the not- too-distant future, to attend such a meeting, not as mere students, but as licensed officers of· the court. " .Among the speakers heard dur- ing the morning session. were George C. Green, President of the North Car<J!ina · State Bar, who presided over the meeting and made the address of welcome. Col. W. T. Joyner, <Jf, the R;l.leigh Bar, Victor S. Bryant, of the Durham Bar, and Professor Malcolm Mc- Dermott, pr<Jfessor of Jaw at Duke University also spoke. W. J. Adams, Chief of the Codi- fication Division, Department of Justice, reported on what is per- haps the most vital undertaking to lawyers in North Carolina today: the recodification of the Statutes. This tremendous task of going · through the enrolled law of North Carolina and rec<Jdifying the stat- utes has been under way, under the· .direction of Mr. Adams, for more ·than a :year. ··It is hoped . thaf me recodification will be com- pleted '.in time . for the finished product to be submitted to the next session of the General As- sembly. Other speakers heard during the day included the Hon. R. Allan Stephens, Secretary of the Illinois State Bar Association, Maj. L. P. McLendon, Presicient of the North Carolina State Bar, and the Hon. D. H. Redfern, Immediate Past President of the Florida Bar Association. Delta Kappa Alpha Takes 10 New Men Ten boys the initiation and became members of Delta Kappa Alpha, honorary fraternity for ministerial students, on Tues- day evening of this week, winning the honor under a new ruling pass- ed this year by the group whereby J. Tate Gets State GOP Post J. E. Tate, president of local.Young Republicans, was ted secretary of the state College Republicans when 190 collegiate politicians gathered at their con- vention in Durham last Monday night. Representatives from Duke, Carolina, State, the Woman's Col- lege of the University, and Wake Forest attended the convention. Wake Forest, receiving one dele- gate fo1· every campus member, was represented by J -: E. Tat.:, Frank Brown,· Win Gardiner, Shel- ton Canter, Arthur Vivian, and D. L. Reavis. The program last Monday af- ternoon featured an informal re- ception at the Washington Duke Hotel and a banquet at Robert H. MeN eill, Republican candidate :for governor who will speak here Tuesday, addressed the collegiate Republicans on the preservation of Americil.n democ- racy. Tate was elected secretary of the state organization after the banquet. 1.'he presidency went to Duke University; W. C. got. the first vice-presidency, State second vice-presidency, and Carolina the treasurership. The . local Republican · clui. !iter met Wednesday night to discuss tlie outcome of this convention and to elect new officers. Tate wa> re-elected president; Arthur Vivi- an was made first vice-president and Bill Ayers second vice-presi- dent in charge of publicity. The secretaryship went to Win Gardi- ner and the position of treasurer to Shelton Canter. Tickets 1. Stud!!nts must present only their own student passes in enter- ing the stadium. If any student presents a student pass other than his own it will be taken up and destroyed and the student barred from future games. 2. All students-,-including band members, cheerleaders, ushers. etc.-must present their student passes in order to get in. all students for the ministry :.f 3. Students and their gb junior or senior standing, and .friends will occupy a general sec- transfers after having completed tion composed of the same section at least one semester here, who they have occupied in the past, maintain a general scholastic av- 300 seats in extra bleachers back eage of not less than B for the of this section and 140 seats in time win the privilege of member- the :front rows of the section to ship. the right of it. This section has Bill Phillips, Fred Scott, Bill been plainly and stu- Angell, Jim Vamer, Don Moore, dents must remam m 1t not John McCrimmon, Otis Pruden, attempt to enter other sectiOns. Lansing Hicks, Wilbur Lamm, and 4. Men who have tickets for Paul Early are the .initiates, ac- their girl friends in the student cording to President Bill Poole. bleachers must sit in these blea- These men received their cer- chers with them and not attempt tificates of membership at a meet- to take them into other parts of ing Thursday evening, at which the student section. time Mr. E. Norfleet G1!rdner, Elections Are To Be Held In Old Gold & Black Offices Bob Goldberg,· president of the student. body, told the Old Gold and Black yesterday that fresh- man elections would take place next Wednesday afternoon fr<Jm two to five p. m. in the Old Gold and Black . office in Student Cen- ter. On Wednesday afternoon 450 frosh will elect five officers from a field of 32 candidates, a record number <Jf newish political aspir- ants. Seven seek the presidential post, a like ·number the vice-presi- dency, five each the secretaryship and the treasurer's place, and nine the representative's position 04 the publications board. The thirty-one men and one co- ed were nominated at a meeting called Monday night by President Goldberg, who presided over the activities. Each candidate was nominated with much fanfare, cheers and boos for each candi- date being about equally divided. One candidate, Selma Ann Harris, withdrew, because her mother "didn't want her to run for any campus political office." The seven men nominated for the presidency are Cotton Morriss, Ben Slawter, Paul Bell, Jack Joyce, Dixon Davis, Gerald Wal- lace, and Sam Wheeler. For vice-president are Everette Jones, John Perry, Bill Padget, Jim Justice, Lee Roy Murchison, Sam Barings, and 'Ed McManus. Gene Cole, Rudd Friday, Charles Parker, and Ray Koteski are can- didates for the secretaryship of the freshman class. (It was for this post that Selma Ann Harris was nominated.) _ Seeking the office of treasurer .are Eli Blank, Billings, Bill Starnes, Walter Cashwell, and Gillon Horton. Publications board candidates are Lib Jones-only ca.n- didate for any f1·eshman office- Harold Johnson, Don Flemng, Lee Copple, Melville Broughton, Jim Cooke, Popeye McCoy, John Rob- erts, and Fred Fucci. Candidates are not running on fraternity tickets this fall as in the past, or at least not so mark- edly. For example, Kappa Alpha has two candidates for one office -publications board. Other fra- ternities have signified that each man must make his own campaign and can expect no aid from his brothers, other than advice. Last year the election was radically different in that U!Jperclassmen stood outside the door of the pol- ling place and passed out cigars to voters on behalf of their pledges. The Boss Speaks Everett Dolfermyre, president of the Wake Forest College Young Democrats Club, stated yesterday: that an important meeting of his organization would be held Tuesday night, October 29, at 7:30 p, m. All members of the club are re- quested to be present at the meeting, wltich will be held in the chapel room of the social science building. An important aspect of the coming presiden- tial election will be discussed. pastor of the Henderson First Baptist Church, addressed the group on the subject, "Campus Leaders f<Jr Christ". W. R. Wagoner, vice-president,' McLeod Bryan, secretary, James Potter, Charles Talley, Wayne Oates, and Harold McManus are the old members of ihe group. Visits Post Office, Sees Confusion, Gets Very Confused No Justice By SMUT SMITll While shooting a field full of peas, corn and doves just east of Wake Forest, Dave "Rover" Phil- lips, alias Dead Eye Dave; was nabbed by a warden for target shooting. "Rover" says "I often go out !hooting with my double barrel twelve gauge shot- gun and I didn't see how the war- Hen could doubt my word when there were only forty or fifty doves in the field. The moral of this story is, students, don't go hunting; pardon me, I mean tar- get shooting unless you have either $8.10 or a license," By PAUL EARLY Enjoying the novelty and the nicety of the change and with lit- tle difficulty in acclimating him- self to keys and extra steps to trade with Uncle Sam's biggest business, every Wake Forester turned out yesterday morning to make his way to the first gov- ernment-owned Post Office he1·r for the first time. After the months of building and prepara- tion, a clerk's voice was heard through the high grilled partition saying it took "from 1:30 until midnight last night" to get straight. It was worth it, ail agree. Yes, humorous situations anJ near-tragedies arose as hal..it forms were broken, for one short Vance Dawkins, :finding his box on the top row, which is about a foot higher than in the old build- ing, said, "It's a disgrace to a box way up there!," while six- foot-six Bill Poole found himself "stooping to conquer" a box six rows down! Professor Zon Rob- inson inquired about a demonstrating how he had "to jump up to see in my box on the top row!" Most townsfolk, however, took the use of the new building phil- osophically, and all seemed to be in an appreciative mood for Post- master Wiggins' new depot for "epistolary c11mmentation," and confusion was scarce. Many lata folks were buying keys, for many, as did one senior, looked in their boxes and said, "Say, a Jetter, I'd better get my key, hadn't I?" One of the n1ost popular boxes as usual was Al Dowtin's, but the twenty or so letters had to wait (Continued on Page Two) Writes Feature Devils to Bring Powerful Group of Players to Game ENDS ARE STRONG Blue Press Agent Toots ·His Horn Long, Loud By TED MANN Durham, N. C., Oct, 25.-An- other chapter to one of the oldest gridiron .rivalries in the ·South will be written this Saturday when Duke's' Blue Devils irivade Wake Forest for their annual clash with the Demon Deaoons. Duke and Wake Forest make ready for their meeting, the Blue Devils' supporters are keep- ing · their fingers crossed. tl'he two ti.ght decisions which their team eked out in 1938 and 1939 are vivid in their memories Clemson's smashing win to the contrary, opinion holds t'hat the Deacons have another power- house.· This yeai-'s Duke eleven re- mains something of a question mark. Pre-season dope rated· it the leading candidate for national gridiron honors. The Blue Devils showed plenty of potential power when they stopped V. M. I. in their opener 23-0. But Tennessee burst any dreams of national honors. The Volunteers outcla£sed Duke in ev- ery department and went on to win a far more .. decisive victory than 13-0 score indicates. Duke came iiB.ck in its. next time out to down C<Jigate by a 13-0 margin. Paced by Jap Davis and Moffat Storer, the Blue De.vils played hot-and-cold ball to defeat the Red Raiders. Injuries and a weakness in the guard positions have been the chief problems which have con- fronted Duke all season. Injur- ies to Jap Davis and Frank Kil- lian have slowed these two regu- lars of last year up. When it seemed as though these two might have hit their stride, Moffat Storer, sophomore speed mer- chant, broke a bone in his shoul- der during drills this week and will be out for the rest of the year. Coach Wallace Wade has been experimenting all fall in an at- tempt to fill the holes that the graduation of last year's guards, Allen Johnson and Frank Ribar, left in the Duke line. After the Tennessee battle he shifted Mike Karamazin, second string tackle, into one of the guard berths and moved John Nania to the tackle position. Dur- ing the last week the search for a stronger combination has still gone on. The rest of the Blue Devil start- ing eleven seems pretty well set. For the first time in some years, there is no problem at ends. Dinky Darnell and AI Piasecky provide Duke with two of its best flank- men in history. Captain Alex Winterson and Tony Ruffa, backed by Nania and Bob McDonough, have taken care of the tackle problem and at cen- ter Bob Barnett upholds the tra- dition started by Dan Hill and Burley Bums. In the backfield Tommy Prothro at quarterback, Wes McAfee and Frank Killian at halfs and Jap Davis at full have formed the number one combination all fall. Steve Lach, who rates as one of the nation's leading halfbacks, has alternated at first string most of the year. Saturday's clash the De- mon Deacons should rate as just about a toss-up. It brings to- gether two fine elevens and should go a long way in settling the question of Big Five hon<Jrs year. Howler Pictures DON'T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR HOWLER PICTURE l'riADE RIGHT AWAY. The pictures for the 1941 Howler are being taken in The Faculty Room of Wait Hall this week, and part of next week. Stu· dents are urged to have their pictures taken before Friday of next week. All these handsome young gentlemen are living for one thing only these days: the presidency of the freshman class. They are, first row, Dixon Davis, Gerald Wallace, Sam. Wheeler; second row, Paul Bell, Ben Slawter, and Cotton Morriss. A seventh can- didate, Jack Joyce, could not be found.-Photo by Jack Dickerson. Moot Politicos I Student Editor Strike Raleigh Asks ·Material Twenty· two Men Attend Stories, Articles Wanted Student Legislative By Editor of Local . Assembly Magazine It was announced this week by debate coach Zon Robinson that the Wake Forest Debate Squad of 22 men will participate in the North Carolina Student Legisla- tive Assembly, which will be held in the State Capital in Raleigh, October 25-26. This assembly is an arutual ·event, and 200 repre- sentatives from 20 N. C. Schools will take part in the two-day pro- gram. The Student Legislature is composed of two houses and .fol- lows the example of the State Legslature in its procedure. Bills are introduced by the house, are discussed by committees, and then are acted on by the Senate. T·he Wake Forest Delegation will support Ralph Brumet for the office for Speaker of the House. Brumet, if elected, will succeet.! another Wake Forest man, Bed- ford Black, who has served in this position for the past three years. The local group will also adv!'. cate a bill to place the names of all minority parties on the ballot in general electio11s, thus changing the present system which requires a petition to be submitted before these parties' candidates can be placed on the ballot. Men making the trip are as fol- lows: Ralph Brumet, Willis Ben- nett, Bedford Black, Weston Hat- field, James Leatherwood, G. G. Morgan, George Watkins, Billy Windes, Sam Behrends, Paul Bell, Melville Broughton, Bruce Brown, Lee "Copple, Dixon Davis, Bur- nette Harvey, Charles Harvey, Homce Miller, Bynum Shaw, H. F. Sherill, Vance Swift, Lawrence Weaver, Edgar Wilson. Archie Wins Title Archie 1\lcl\fillan yesterday won the fall tennis tournament with a 3·6; 6-1; 6-4 victory ovet Broadus Jones. An urgent invitation to new po- tential contributors to write for The Student was given early this week by the editorial board of the college magazine which will make its second appearance this yea1· sometime near November 15. With the October issue of the publication already behind, Edi- tor Wells N Ol'ris announced that plans have already been drawn up for the November number. He added, however, that contributions will be accepted all the time and any time during the year. Contributions in the form of es- says, poetry, short stories, fea- ture articles and original humor are sought by. the magazine, spokesmen of the editorial board stated, adding that a continued growth in student interest in the forms of writing offered by the magazine is the aim of the publi- cation through the 1940-41 ses- sion.. Editor Norris that the magazine is ready to meet the prospective writer "half way." Working under the policy that "The Student prints ·the finest from the various fields of literary endeavor to be found on the cam- pus," staff members are seeking to leave no stone unturned in searching out and giving chances to the students who want to write and who will write. The policy of the publication has been to re- turn any conh·ibution which might be reworked to the advantage of the magazine., and the author again will be encouraged to write. The story of The Wake Forest Student goes back over a half century in the school's history. Then it was the publication on the campus. Through years of waxing and waning the maga- zine came to be called a "literary and humorous publication of the college," with the accent on so- ( Continued on Page Five) Second Moot Court of Fall To Take Place October 28 A jury composed of First-Year Law Students brought in a verdict of acquittal on the charge of cal'C- less and reckless driving a'ld failed to agree on the charge of driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor in the first term of the Moot Court, held in the Law Building on Monday night, October 21. The Law and Academic students who attended the trial saw two and a half hours of interesting trial-court procedure, with jurors being called and sworn, v.itnesses called and sworn, and His Honor, 1\loot Court Judge R. B. White presiding very judicially over this, the first court-room. appearance for many of his students. ' Defense attorneys Francis Hol- liday and Earl Shuford expresse<:l their gratification at the way the case was concluded, while prose- cuting attorneys Bob Randolph and Bob Scott commented only that it was a fair trial, that they felt that their <lpponents did a wonderful job, and that maybe next time would see a different result. But there will be no next time for this particular case, which was a criminal action entitled, T'ne State vs. Percy Rose, because on Monday night, October 28, Law Students Jim Randleman, Living- stone Wiliams, Herman Edwards and John Tate pair off as attor- neys on opposing sides when the case <Jf jackson Ys. Dunn is called in the Moot Court. This case will be a civil action, in which the plaintiff alleges that the defendant, while in a public place and in hearing <Jf persons, uttered some statements (Continued on Page Five) Band to Give Concert at Wait Hall at 12 Noon NO ALUMNI DINNER J. :M. Broughton to Accept Stadium on Behalf of College By BOB GALLIMORE Twenty thousand people, mak- ing up what will be the largest crowd ever to assemble at Wake Forest and including alumni, guests and friends of the college, will gather here today to witness the Wake Forest-Duke football game and its attendant dedica- tion of the new Groves Stadium in connection with the celebration of the college's annual homecom- ing day, What brings most of these peo- ple here are, of course, the game and the dedication, which share the limelight ou the day's pro- gram. The game promises to be one of the headliners of the year, with two powerful, only-once-defeated teams, Wake Forest's Demon Dea- cons and Duke's Blue Devils, fighting it out for the position o{ "top dog" among North Carolina's Big Five school. Tickets for the game are practically sold out, only a few for seats in the auxil- iary stands being left for sale. The dedication program will take place during the half period of the game. It will be as fol- lows: _ J.,ero y Martin, of Raleigh, who is now vice-president of the Wa- chovia Bank and Trust Company and president of the Wake Forest General Alumni Association, will welcome all graduates of the col- lege to homecoming. Then Henry Groves of Gastonia, who contribu- ted a large sum towards its con- struction and for whom it is nam- ed, will dedicate the stadium to the college in a short address. Fol- lowing this J. M. Broughton of Raleigh, Democratic guberngj;ori- al nominee for North Carolina, will accept the stadium in behalf of the college board of trustees, of which he is a member. The program will be brought to a close with the. playing of the "Star Spangled Banner" by the com- bined Wake Forest and Duke col- lege bands under the direction of Dr. Nevil! Isbell of Wake Forest and the hoisting of the United States flag on the stadium flag- pole. But the game and the dedica- tion are not the only features of the day. At 12 noon the Wake F'orest College band will give a concert in front of the adminis- tration building, Wait Hall. And the fraternities offer several at- tractions: this morning they will stage a contest to see which one has best decorated its lawn and building for the day, tonight they will hold a pledge dance in the auditorium in Raleigh and dur- ing the entire day they will hold open house. Contrary to custom, there will be no alumni banquet in connec- tion with homecoming day this year, AI Dowtin, alumni secretary for the college, announced. It is interesting to note in con- nection with homecoming day that 1933 was the first year in which the day was officially observed, and the11 it was in connection "ith society day. In 1934 it was ugain observed in connection 'vith soci- ety day but received more notice than it had in 1933. In 1935 it was observed as a day separate from soci<•ty day for the first time. However, 1935 did not 3et a precedent, and since then has been celebrated as a separate day only about half the time. It is also interesting to note that on the onlr two homecoming days in the past on which Wake Forest played Duke, Duke was tied once ( 1930) and won once (1936). Eu Photograph Members of The En Society are asked to be present at The Eu Hall on Monday night be- cause the pictures for the soci- ety will be taken at this time.
6

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Page 1: ~ville VOL. WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 … · 2018-03-20 · 940 the ~ville the Bell, !son. Bur. At-de-this win col-e Pi rrell ·d of l. """'\ [ _J. I , \ ..

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VOL. XXV. NO. 7 WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 PRICE: TEN CENTS PER COPY

Holiday Given To Law School ForNCB Meet

Faculty '3nd Students Are Present at State

Bar

REPUBLICAN Goldberg Sets Frosh Election For October 30

·.,

Record Number of Nomi· nees Run for Offtice

Wednesday

DUKE -GAME· IS TOP HOMECOMING .

DAY A'TTRACTION FOR OLD GRADS; "·

MANY ACTIVITIES PLANNED TODAY *·----------------------------------------------------*

·MEETS AT RALEIGH

Adams and Stevens Chief Speakers· In Capital

Convention

co-ED Is CANDIDATE Duke Publicist Six Minds with but a Single Thought Frats Sponsor Fall Exhibits

By BOB SCOT!'

Both the, :faculty and the stu­dent body of the Law School took advantage of a . welcome holiday yesterdaY, to , _attend the annual meeting of the North Carolina State Bar, held at the Hotel Sir Walter in Raleigh. Classes were suspended for the day in the Law School, and a· large number of students· went to Raleigh to attend the meeting of the Bar.

Both the morning and the after­~~n sessions of the assembly were well-attended, a~d they proved of great interes.t to. the students who hoped, at s<Jme date in the not­too-distant future, to attend such a meeting, not as mere students, but as licensed officers of· the court. "

.Among the speakers heard dur­ing the morning session. were George C. Green, President of the North Car<J!ina · State Bar, who presided over the meeting and made the address of welcome. Col. W. T. Joyner, <Jf, the R;l.leigh Bar, Victor S. Bryant, of the Durham Bar, and Professor Malcolm Mc­Dermott, pr<Jfessor of Jaw at Duke University also spoke.

W. J. Adams, Chief of the Codi­fication Division, Department of Justice, reported on what is per­haps the most vital undertaking to lawyers in North Carolina today: the recodification of the Statutes. This tremendous task of going

· through the enrolled law of North Carolina and rec<Jdifying the stat­utes has been under way, under the· .direction of Mr. Adams, for more ·than a :year. ··It is hoped

. thaf me recodification will be com­pleted '.in time . for the finished product to be submitted to the next session of the General As­sembly.

Other speakers heard during the day included the Hon. R. Allan Stephens, Secretary of the Illinois State Bar Association, Maj. L. P. McLendon, Vic~ Presicient of the North Carolina State Bar, and the Hon. D. H. Redfern, Immediate Past President of the Florida Bar Association.

Delta Kappa Alpha Takes 10 New Men

Ten boys receiv~d the initiation and became members of Delta Kappa Alpha, honorary fraternity for ministerial students, on Tues­day evening of this week, winning the honor under a new ruling pass­ed this year by the group whereby

J. E~ Tate Gets State GOP Post J. E. Tate, president of th~,

local.Y oung Republicans, was ele~­ted secretary of the state College Republicans when 190 collegiate politicians gathered at their con­vention in Durham last Monday night.

Representatives from Duke, Carolina, State, the Woman's Col­lege of the University, and Wake Forest attended the convention. Wake Forest, receiving one dele­gate fo1· every campus member, was represented by J -: E. Tat.:, Frank Brown,· Win Gardiner, Shel­ton Canter, Arthur Vivian, and D. L. Reavis.

The program last Monday af­ternoon featured an informal re­ception at the Washington Duke Hotel and a banquet at ni~ht. Robert H. MeN eill, Republican candidate :for governor who will speak here Tuesday, addressed the collegiate Republicans on the preservation of Americil.n democ­racy.

Tate was elected secretary of the state organization after the banquet. 1.'he presidency went to Duke University; W. C. got. the first vice-presidency, State second vice-presidency, and Carolina the treasurership.

The . local Republican · clui. !iter met Wednesday night to discuss tlie outcome of this convention and to elect new officers. Tate wa> re-elected president; Arthur Vivi­an was made first vice-president and Bill Ayers second vice-presi­dent in charge of publicity. The secretaryship went to Win Gardi­ner and the position of treasurer to Shelton Canter.

Concer~ing Tickets

1. Stud!!nts must present only their own student passes in enter­ing the stadium. If any student presents a student pass other than his own it will be taken up and destroyed and the student barred from future games.

2. All students-,-including band members, cheerleaders, ushers. etc.-must present their student passes in order to get in.

all students for the ministry :.f 3. Students and their gb junior or senior standing, and .friends will occupy a general sec­transfers after having completed tion composed of the same section at least one semester here, who they have occupied in the past, maintain a general scholastic av- 300 seats in extra bleachers back eage of not less than B for the of this section and 140 seats in time win the privilege of member- the :front rows of the section to ship. the right of it. This section has

Bill Phillips, Fred Scott, Bill been plainly mar~ed. o~ and stu­Angell, Jim Vamer, Don Moore, dents must remam m 1t a~d not John McCrimmon, Otis Pruden, attempt to enter other sectiOns.

Lansing Hicks, Wilbur Lamm, and 4. Men who have tickets for Paul Early are the .initiates, ac- their girl friends in the student cording to President Bill Poole. bleachers must sit in these blea-

These men received their cer- chers with them and not attempt tificates of membership at a meet- to take them into other parts of ing Thursday evening, at which the student section. time Mr. E. Norfleet G1!rdner,

Elections Are To Be Held In Old Gold & Black

Offices

Bob Goldberg,· president of the student. body, told the Old Gold and Black yesterday that fresh­man elections would take place next Wednesday afternoon fr<Jm two to five p. m. in the Old Gold and Black . office in Student Cen­ter.

On Wednesday afternoon 450 frosh will elect five officers from a field of 32 candidates, a record number <Jf newish political aspir­ants. Seven seek the presidential post, a like ·number the vice-presi­dency, five each the secretaryship and the treasurer's place, and nine the representative's position 04

the publications board. The thirty-one men and one co­

ed were nominated at a meeting called Monday night by President Goldberg, who presided over the activities. Each candidate was nominated with much fanfare, cheers and boos for each candi­date being about equally divided. One candidate, Selma Ann Harris, withdrew, because her mother "didn't want her to run for any campus political office."

The seven men nominated for the presidency are Cotton Morriss, Ben Slawter, Paul Bell, Jack Joyce, Dixon Davis, Gerald Wal­lace, and Sam Wheeler.

For vice-president are Everette Jones, John Perry, Bill Padget, Jim Justice, Lee Roy Murchison, Sam Barings, and 'Ed McManus.

Gene Cole, Rudd Friday, Charles Parker, and Ray Koteski are can­didates for the secretaryship of the freshman class. (It was for this post that Selma Ann Harris was nominated.) _

Seeking the office of treasurer .are Eli Blank, Gi~bert Billings, Bill Starnes, Walter Cashwell, and Gillon Horton.

Publications board candidates are Lib Jones-only co~ed ca.n­didate for any f1·eshman office­Harold Johnson, Don Flemng, Lee Copple, Melville Broughton, Jim Cooke, Popeye McCoy, John Rob­erts, and Fred Fucci.

Candidates are not running on fraternity tickets this fall as in the past, or at least not so mark­edly. For example, Kappa Alpha has two candidates for one office -publications board. Other fra­ternities have signified that each man must make his own campaign and can expect no aid from his brothers, other than advice. Last year the election was radically different in that U!Jperclassmen stood outside the door of the pol­ling place and passed out cigars to voters on behalf of their pledges.

The Boss Speaks

Everett Dolfermyre, president of the Wake Forest College Young Democrats Club, stated yesterday: that an important meeting of his organization would be held Tuesday night, October 29, at 7:30 p, m. All members of the club are re­quested to be present at the meeting, wltich will be held in the chapel room of the social science building. An important aspect of the coming presiden­tial election will be discussed.

pastor of the Henderson First Baptist Church, addressed the group on the subject, "Campus Leaders f<Jr Christ".

W. R. Wagoner, vice-president,' McLeod Bryan, secretary, James Potter, Charles Talley, Wayne Oates, and Harold McManus are the old members of ihe group.

Ea~ly Visits Post Office, Sees Confusion, Gets Very Confused

No Justice By SMUT SMITll

While shooting a field full of peas, corn and doves just east of Wake Forest, Dave "Rover" Phil­lips, alias Dead Eye Dave; was nabbed by a go~ernment warden for target shooting. "Rover" says "I often go out !hooting with my double barrel twelve gauge shot­gun and I didn't see how the war­Hen could doubt my word when there were only forty or fifty doves in the field. The moral of this story is, students, don't go hunting; pardon me, I mean tar­get shooting unless you have either $8.10 or a license,"

By PAUL EARLY

Enjoying the novelty and the nicety of the change and with lit­tle difficulty in acclimating him­self to keys and extra steps to trade with Uncle Sam's biggest business, every Wake Forester turned out yesterday morning to make his way to the first gov­ernment-owned Post Office he1·r for the first time. After the months of building and prepara­tion, a clerk's voice was heard through the high grilled partition saying it took "from 1:30 until midnight last night" to get straight. It was worth it, ail agree.

Yes, humorous situations anJ near-tragedies arose as hal..it forms were broken, for one short Vance Dawkins, :finding his box on the top row, which is about a foot higher than in the old build-

ing, said, "It's a disgrace to hav~ a box way up there!," while six­foot-six Bill Poole found himself "stooping to conquer" a box six rows down! Professor Zon Rob­inson inquired about a chang~,

demonstrating how he had "to jump up to see in my box on the top row!"

Most townsfolk, however, took the use of the new building phil­osophically, and all seemed to be in an appreciative mood for Post­master Wiggins' new depot for "epistolary c11mmentation," and confusion was scarce. Many lata folks were buying keys, for many, as did one senior, looked in their boxes and said, "Say, a Jetter, I'd better get my key, hadn't I?"

One of the n1ost popular boxes as usual was Al Dowtin's, but the twenty or so letters had to wait

(Continued on Page Two)

Writes Feature

Devils to Bring Powerful Group of Players to

Game

ENDS ARE STRONG

Blue Press Agent Toots ·His Horn Long,

Loud

By TED MANN

Durham, N. C., Oct, 25.-An­other chapter to one of the oldest gridiron .rivalries in the ·South will be written this Saturday when Duke's' Blue Devils irivade Wake Forest for their annual clash with the Demon Deaoons.

Whil~ Duke and Wake Forest make ready for their meeting, the Blue Devils' supporters are keep­ing · their fingers crossed. tl'he two ti.ght decisions which their team eked out in 1938 and 1939 are ~till vivid in their memories Clemson's smashing win to the contrary, opinion holds t'hat the Deacons have another power­house.·

This yeai-'s Duke eleven re­mains something of a question mark. Pre-season dope rated· it the leading candidate for national gridiron honors. The Blue Devils showed plenty of potential power when they stopped V. M. I. in their opener 23-0.

But Tennessee burst any dreams of national honors. The Volunteers outcla£sed Duke in ev­ery department and went on to win a far more .. decisive victory than 13-0 score indicates.

Duke came iiB.ck in its. next time out to down C<Jigate by a 13-0 margin. Paced by Jap Davis and Moffat Storer, the Blue De.vils played hot-and-cold ball to defeat the Red Raiders.

Injuries and a weakness in the guard positions have been the chief problems which have con­fronted Duke all season. Injur­ies to Jap Davis and Frank Kil­lian have slowed these two regu­lars of last year up. When it seemed as though these two might have hit their stride, Moffat Storer, sophomore speed mer­chant, broke a bone in his shoul­der during drills this week and will be out for the rest of the year.

Coach Wallace Wade has been experimenting all fall in an at­tempt to fill the holes that the graduation of last year's guards, Allen Johnson and Frank Ribar, left in the Duke line.

After the Tennessee battle he shifted Mike Karamazin, second string tackle, into one of the guard berths and moved John Nania to the tackle position. Dur­ing the last week the search for a stronger combination has still gone on.

The rest of the Blue Devil start­ing eleven seems pretty well set. For the first time in some years, there is no problem at ends. Dinky Darnell and AI Piasecky provide Duke with two of its best flank­men in history.

Captain Alex Winterson and Tony Ruffa, backed by Nania and Bob McDonough, have taken care of the tackle problem and at cen­ter Bob Barnett upholds the tra­dition started by Dan Hill and Burley Bums.

In the backfield Tommy Prothro at quarterback, Wes McAfee and Frank Killian at halfs and Jap Davis at full have formed the number one combination all fall. Steve Lach, who rates as one of the nation's leading halfbacks, has alternated at first string most of the year.

Saturday's clash ~ith the De­mon Deacons should rate as just about a toss-up. It brings to­gether two fine elevens and should go a long way in settling the question of Big Five hon<Jrs thi~ year.

Howler Pictures

DON'T FORGET TO HAVE YOUR HOWLER PICTURE l'riADE RIGHT AWAY. The pictures for the 1941 Howler are being taken in The Faculty Room of Wait Hall this week, and part of next week. Stu· dents are urged to have their pictures taken before Friday of next week.

All these handsome young gentlemen are living for one thing only these days: the presidency of the freshman class. They are, first row, Dixon Davis, Gerald Wallace, Sam. Wheeler; second row, Paul Bell, Ben Slawter, and Cotton Morriss. A seventh can­didate, Jack Joyce, could not be found.-Photo by Jack Dickerson.

Moot Politicos I Student Editor Strike Raleigh Asks · Material

Twenty· two Men Attend Stories, Articles Wanted Student Legislative By Editor of Local

. Assembly Magazine

It was announced this week by debate coach Zon Robinson that the Wake Forest Debate Squad of 22 men will participate in the North Carolina Student Legisla­tive Assembly, which will be held in the State Capital in Raleigh, October 25-26. This assembly is an arutual ·event, and 200 repre­sentatives from 20 N. C. Schools will take part in the two-day pro­gram.

The Student Legislature is composed of two houses and .fol­lows the example of the State Legslature in its procedure. Bills are introduced by the house, are discussed by committees, and then are acted on by the Senate.

T·he Wake Forest Delegation will support Ralph Brumet for the office for Speaker of the House. Brumet, if elected, will succeet.! another Wake Forest man, Bed­ford Black, who has served in this position for the past three years.

The local group will also adv!'. cate a bill to place the names of all minority parties on the ballot in general electio11s, thus changing the present system which requires a petition to be submitted before these parties' candidates can be placed on the ballot.

Men making the trip are as fol­lows: Ralph Brumet, Willis Ben­nett, Bedford Black, Weston Hat­field, James Leatherwood, G. G. Morgan, George Watkins, Billy Windes, Sam Behrends, Paul Bell, Melville Broughton, Bruce Brown, Lee "Copple, Dixon Davis, Bur­nette Harvey, Charles Harvey, Homce Miller, Bynum Shaw, H. F. Sherill, Vance Swift, Lawrence Weaver, Edgar Wilson.

Archie Wins Title

Archie 1\lcl\fillan yesterday won the fall tennis tournament with a 3·6; 6-1; 6-4 victory ovet Broadus Jones.

An urgent invitation to new po­tential contributors to write for The Student was given early this week by the editorial board of the college magazine which will make its second appearance this yea1· sometime near November 15.

With the October issue of the publication already behind, Edi­tor Wells N Ol'ris announced that plans have already been drawn up for the November number. He added, however, that contributions will be accepted all the time and any time during the year.

Contributions in the form of es­says, poetry, short stories, fea­ture articles and original humor are sought by. the magazine, spokesmen of the editorial board stated, adding that a continued growth in student interest in the forms of writing offered by the magazine is the aim of the publi­cation through the 1940-41 ses­sion.. Editor Norris intimat~d that the magazine is ready to meet the prospective writer "half way." Working under the policy that "The Student prints ·the finest from the various fields of literary endeavor to be found on the cam­pus," staff members are seeking to leave no stone unturned in searching out and giving chances to the students who want to write and who will write. The policy of the publication has been to re­turn any conh·ibution which might be reworked to the advantage of the magazine., and the author again will be encouraged to write.

The story of The Wake Forest Student goes back over a half century in the school's history. Then it was the onl~· publication on the campus. Through years of waxing and waning the maga­zine came to be called a "literary and humorous publication of the college," with the accent on so-

( Continued on Page Five)

Second Moot Court of Fall To Take Place October 28

A jury composed of First-Year Law Students brought in a verdict of acquittal on the charge of cal'C­less and reckless driving a'ld failed to agree on the charge of driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor in the first term of the Moot Court, held in the Law Building on Monday night, October 21.

The Law and Academic students who attended the trial saw two and a half hours of interesting trial-court procedure, with jurors being called and sworn, v.itnesses called and sworn, and His Honor, 1\loot Court Judge R. B. White presiding very judicially over this, the first court-room. appearance for many of his students. '

Defense attorneys Francis Hol­liday and Earl Shuford expresse<:l their gratification at the way the case was concluded, while prose-

cuting attorneys Bob Randolph and Bob Scott commented only that it was a fair trial, that they felt that their <lpponents did a wonderful job, and that maybe next time would see a different result.

But there will be no next time for this particular case, which was a criminal action entitled, T'ne State vs. Percy Rose, because on Monday night, October 28, Law Students Jim Randleman, Living­stone Wiliams, Herman Edwards and John Tate pair off as attor­neys on opposing sides when the case <Jf jackson Ys. Dunn is called in the Moot Court.

This case will be a civil action, in which the plaintiff alleges that the defendant, while in a public place and in hearing <Jf variou~ persons, uttered some statements

(Continued on Page Five)

Band to Give Concert at Wait Hall at 12

Noon

NO ALUMNI DINNER

J. :M. Broughton to Accept Stadium on Behalf of

College

By BOB GALLIMORE

Twenty thousand people, mak­ing up what will be the largest crowd ever to assemble at Wake Forest and including alumni, guests and friends of the college, will gather here today to witness the Wake Forest-Duke football game and its attendant dedica­tion of the new Groves Stadium in connection with the celebration of the college's annual homecom­ing day,

What brings most of these peo­ple here are, of course, the game and the dedication, which share the limelight ou the day's pro­gram.

The game promises to be one of the headliners of the year, with two powerful, only-once-defeated teams, Wake Forest's Demon Dea­cons and Duke's Blue Devils, fighting it out for the position o{ "top dog" among North Carolina's Big Five school. Tickets for the game are practically sold out, only a few for seats in the auxil­iary stands being left for sale.

The dedication program will take place during the half period of the game. It will be as fol­lows:

_ J.,ero y Martin, of Raleigh, who is now vice-president of the Wa­chovia Bank and Trust Company and president of the Wake Forest General Alumni Association, will welcome all graduates of the col­lege to homecoming. Then Henry Groves of Gastonia, who contribu­ted a large sum towards its con­struction and for whom it is nam­ed, will dedicate the stadium to the college in a short address. Fol­lowing this J. M. Broughton of Raleigh, Democratic guberngj;ori­al nominee for North Carolina, will accept the stadium in behalf of the college board of trustees, of which he is a member. The program will be brought to a close with the. playing of the "Star Spangled Banner" by the com­bined Wake Forest and Duke col­lege bands under the direction of Dr. Nevil! Isbell of Wake Forest and the hoisting of the United States flag on the stadium flag­pole.

But the game and the dedica­tion are not the only features of the day. At 12 noon the Wake F'orest College band will give a concert in front of the adminis­tration building, Wait Hall. And the fraternities offer several at­tractions: this morning they will stage a contest to see which one has best decorated its lawn and building for the day, tonight they will hold a pledge dance in the auditorium in Raleigh and dur­ing the entire day they will hold open house.

Contrary to custom, there will be no alumni banquet in connec­tion with homecoming day this year, AI Dowtin, alumni secretary for the college, announced.

It is interesting to note in con­nection with homecoming day that 1933 was the first year in which the day was officially observed, and the11 it was in connection "ith society day. In 1934 it was ugain observed in connection 'vith soci­ety day but received more notice than it had in 1933. In 1935 it was observed as a day separate from soci<•ty day for the first time. However, 1935 did not 3et a precedent, and since then has been celebrated as a separate day only about half the time.

It is also interesting to note that on the onlr two homecoming days in the past on which Wake Forest played Duke, Duke was tied once ( 1930) and won once (1936).

Eu Photograph

Members of The En Society are asked to be present at The Eu Hall on Monday night be­cause the pictures for the soci­ety will be taken at this time.

Page 2: ~ville VOL. WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 … · 2018-03-20 · 940 the ~ville the Bell, !son. Bur. At-de-this win col-e Pi rrell ·d of l. """'\ [ _J. I , \ ..

PAGE TWO

Old Gold and Black STAFF

fERD DAVIS - - - - - - - - - - Editor

ToM I. DAVIS------:- Business Manager

JACK DiCKERSON - - -- - .Staff Photographer Member Carolina Press Photographers' Association

Editorial Staff: Elizabeth Jones, Les Cansler, Fred Eason, John McMillan, Phil Highfill, Paul Early, Rod Buie, Bob Scott, Bill Williamson, Billy Primm, Glenn Miller, ]\{eil Morgan, Bob Gallimore, Wyan Washburn.

Business Staff: Bill Ayers, \Viley Taylor, John D. Davis, Timmy Harris.

Member of NORTH CAROLINA INTERCOLLEGIATE

PRESS AssociATION

I!IEPRESENTEIJ FOR NATIONAL ACVEHTI61NG BY'

National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers RePresentatitJt

420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO • BOiiTCII'I • Los ANGELES • SAN FRAWCUiiCO

Entered as second class matter, January 22, 1916, at the postoffice at Wa~e Forest, N:orth Carolina, ·~nder the act of March 3, 1879.

All matters of business should be addressed to the Business Manager, Box 218, and all other mat­ters should be addressed to the Editor-in-Chief, Box 218.

N~ember

l=hsocialed Cb!!eeide Press Distributor of

Colle5iafe Di6est

The Fun Begins --a-

Thirty-two freshmen placed themselves before members of their class Monday night as candidates for the five elective positions open to freshmen. Each candidate was nominated with all the fanfare that accompanies student nominations at Wake For­est: 1\ long speech, praising the nominator's can­didate, cheers for the candidate by his partisans, and a smattering of boos from the opposition.

Thus was the current Wake Forest political season ushered in, to continue with increasing in­tensity until next June. These thirty-two fresh­men will receive their baptism of fire during this next week; thereafter they will be veterans and will probably continue their various careers politi­cally throughout their four years at Wake Forest­perhaps afterwards, as in the cases of our two gu­bernatorial candidates this year.

The training these embryo politicos receive in their four years here is undoubtedly good. Prac­tical political training is all too scanty for the aver­age undergraduate. At a time when interest in the national political situation is at its lowest pitch in any recent presidential campaign it is refreshing to see interest in politics of any sort, especially the comparatively clean campus variety.

--------,oOG--------

Good Team, Good School -.-a-

Today Wake Forest alumni, in greater num­bers probably than ever before, come back to the campus. The primary attraction, of course, is the Duke game, and probably the first thing to strike homecomers is the vast improvement in athletic equipment.

Many of these homecomers will remember when football games were played on the old athletic field on Faculty Avenue before handfuls of spec­tators. Others will remember the games of more recent years played on the old field with its seating capacity of a few thousand. They will compare this fine new stadium with those former fields.

The new stadium has been equipped to seat around 20,000 spectators today, a number undream­ed of only a few years ago. Perhaps some alumni may raise expressed or unexpressed questions and wonder whether Wake Forest has gone in for big time athletics and is letting the tail wag the dog.

We can assure them that they have no need to worry. John Marshall, an alumnus, now sports ed­itor of the Raleigh Times, recently had a fine col­umn in which he remarked on his pleasure in find­ing that the rest of the college had entirely kept pace with the progress in athletics an~ in athletic facilities.

And, so, homecomcrs, today, while admiring the football team and football field may rest as­sured that Wake Forest is not a good football team ·s college, but a good college with a good football team.

------~OIG-----­

The Chapel Course ---a-

Among the many interesting courses which freshmen are asked to take is one for which no credit is given. It is a three-hour course, M. W. F., attendance is compulsory, and it is probably the most diversified class on the campus. There is no one professor; there are no restrictions as to the topic for the day's lecture. The only limitation is the time.

Every day at ten o'clock in the morning, fresh­men assemble for this class. They ha\'e no outside preparation to make for the class, and the number of cuts arc limited. Each day a professor will speak while students listen without visions of qui;:­zes on what he has to say. Note-taking is not re­quired. This is indeed a unique course.

In fact, it seems almost like their ideal course, with its variety, informality, brevity, numerous personalities, lack of notebook responsibilities. The chapel committee is to be congratulated on the

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

program which has been provided so far, both by faculty members and other speakers. It is to be taken for granted that future programs will live up to the same standards.

With Apologies to Soglow

r-Consequently, we pass the tip along to upper­cla;smcn with intellectual curiosity to join the fresh­men in tJking this course on Mondays, Wednesdays! r~ ~--and Fridays.

------~101~-----­

A Matter of Courtesy --a-

We arc 'way past the age where we turn in editorials about pushing in the halls or writing in the Ia vatories, so let's just make this a story. A story about a plot of grass.

1--1-L '

Now Wake. Forest is situated in a part of the country where the soil is so constituted that grass won't, to put it mildly, grow for hell. For years we have struggled to sow seed and protect it against

Society Day Held Saturday ~ . , . Society Day last Saturday wa.'

heat and erosion so that our campus won t look like almost Philomathesian Day, .r01.

a barnyard. There's peen enough seed sown from out of four events the Phi litera­the blinker to Simmons to grow enough grass to tis won three. George Watkins feed all the sheep in North Carolina. And still and C. V. Northrup won the de­people flyincr over think it's an cmercrency field. ba.te cup for the Phis,. John Me-

. " . " . Millan placed second m oratory Little paths cnsscross from the walks and are, m and the P.hi Flvers defeated the turn, connected with other little paths until a regu- Euzelian Travell~rs 7-0 in a touch Jar labyrinth has sprung up from building to build- football game. Lee Copple of the ing. And the funny part of it is, the walks are Eus took first place in oratory. 1 'd · · h 1· f' ' ']d' The holiday events began in the :u out m stra1g t mcs rom one OUi mg to an- E 1. S - H 11 s t d

. . . . . uze Ian oc1ety a a ur ay other, tne math department Still mamtammg that morning when an audience gath-the shortest distance between two points, et cetera. ered to hear Watkins an{] Nor-

One point in particular we have in mind: the thrup debate Charles and Burnette spot equi-distant from the arch to \\lait and from Harvey, brothers from Tennessee. I h d h · h The topic of controversy was "Re-t 1e c urch to the me · sc ool. Here, where t e 1 d Th t th t' f th so ve : a e na wns o e

paths meet, the architect who constructed the walk Western Hemisphere should form built a circle around the old tree and planted grass a permanent union." within the circle. To protect the grass, barberry Watkins and Northrup won thtJ bushes with spines an inch long were planted debate by proving to the satisfac­around the border. That should have been pointed tion of the judges that a union enough for anybody. But no. It wasn't long be- with South American' co~mtries

would create cultural complica­fore the campus dimwits barged through the bar-berry, and trampled the grass and exposed the pe' culiarly ugly soil of our region.

In other words, STAY OFF THE GRASS!

America." The scheduled· touch football

game was played upon Gore Field at 3 p, m. in spite of the rain. The Phis obtained their 7-0 score when John Fletcher passed to Tut Mye1·s, who ran across the goal line, and when Fletcher passed to Primm, with the same result.

Dr. Basil M. Watkins spoke at the Society Banquet which was lleld before the Marshall game.

Early and Post Office (Continued from Front Page)

a while as he had forgotten his number and tried his key in many boxes. We can bet alumni and other friends are still showering in requests for the much-desired Duke-Wake tickets.

.SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940

Rel'eries of a Janitor i sholy thin~s a plenty · of dese here DEMON DEACON:S, dey might fine ,Young gent'men

an' none of 'em is wea~ uns;

dey started out one Sad' day · a-stealin' william's jewels an' den dey met de tar heels

an' fit some pow'ful duels.

was mighty firm with furman · (at clemson sorter rested)

an' den along come marshall an' marshall it was bested.

though many fol~s is bettin.' on dem dar du~es of durham

i's standin' by my DEACON:S­~aze, win or lose, l'S FER 'EM!

mented "Gee, it's pretty in here, isn't this grand?" found the "Cit~· Letters" slot not exactly appro­priate for this "little town" and was willing to bet she'd lose her key. Only person who didn't ne2d a. key to get his interesting look­ing letter from the box was Stu-

dent Body President Bob Gold­berg. His glass window was brok­en out!

The saying is that it takes all kinds, and surely one freshman was heard to deliberate, ·"Gee·, this new Post Office is going to take all the business from th~ Q).d one!"

T~--.. -.. _b_ .. _;_,._.,~·-·-.. -·-.. -·-·-.. -.. _·-.. --·-·1 I Congratulations -

ON THE .NEW STADIUM!

FOREST THEATRE Wake Forest, N.C.

Sat., Oct. 26-

DOUBLE FEATURE Roy Rogers

"RANGER AND THE LADY"

Wed., Oct, 30- f BARGAIN DAY:-10c-20c i

Marjorie Rambeau

-----oOo-----

Bringers of Gifts -a-

In its current issue The Saturday Review of Literature gives the permanence of print to the mes­sages delivered at the recent publishers' dinner for exiled writers. We do not know what the verdict of the future will be as to the lasting significance of the work of such literary artists as Jules Romains, Sigrid Undset, V..T. H. i\uden, Andre Maurois, Thomas Mann, Franz; Werfel and many others now in this country. We do know that all of them have had significance in our time as literary craftsmen, with something to say and the courage to say it un­der difficulties and in danger. The words which some of them spoke at the publishers' dinner and which all of them, in their various forms and out of their differing philosophies, have written, have a common message.· And this is that the freedom to speak and to write must in this modern world be fought for and is worth fighting for.

tions and defense problems. Also, the~' declared, the union is effec­tive enough as expressed in the Monroe Doctrine; any further steps would be inadvisable because of the political instability of

More delays were noted as stu­dents and faculty had key-trouble. Jimmie Griggs found he had for­gotten his key, looked in his box, saw a letter in a familiar hand, simply said, quite sadly, "Uh-oh, why can't they have combina­tions ? Mrs. Art Adams, wife of the two-mile track ace here, com- also

r:,' +·-··-·~-··-·~-··-·-.. --··--i South America's rep!lblics. The -------------------':. "GIRL FROM HAVANA"

Harvey brothers confined them­selves to an economic argument.

j j Dillon., hTueLs., Oct. 28-29-

I F All Y j f orot Y amour

Alan Hale "TUGBOAT ANNIE SAILS

AGAIN"

Thurs., Fri., Oct. 311 Nov. 1

Myrna Loy; Melvyn Douglas

"THIRD FINGER LEFT I

It seems impossible that we should not have re­ali:cd this fact sooner, ·yet the menace, until recent­ly, had seemed like a nightmare, frow which we should wake up. Now we see men and women '"of good will," to borrow from Jules Romain's biblical title, fleeing from barbarism as our ancestors and theirs fled from Jenghi: Khan and Attila. Holland, Italy, Scandinavia, Poland, France, Britain and America have been in times past places of refuge for those persecuted for opinion's sake. Now Britain is a fortress under fire and only America-or rather the Americas-can freely open coors.

Our native authors need not fear the competi­tion of the newcomers. The market for brave and true words is never flooded. One creative mind stimulates another, and there is no end to the cre­ative readers who can be made active by creative literature. W c can rejoice that the gifts of the lit­crary exiles are not being crippled by censorships or destroyed in internment camps. Athens, drawing the poets and artists of the Hellenic world to its gates, was no more fortunate than we, and if we lis­ten in time to the new voices pleading for freedom we may be more fortunate than Athens. FoPwe are the residuary legatee of a great estate.-N. Y. Times.

---oO'o---­

Veterans of Future Wars --a-

Last week some sixty-five Confederate veter­ans, the last remnants of what was once a mighty Southern army, assembled in \Vashington, D. C., for their annual reunion.

Bowed and wrinkled with advancing age the veterans, nevertheless, voted unanimously to keep on meeting every year just as long as there were two soldiers alive and able to get together.

There has been a great deal of loyalty behind those Confederate meetings. Though those gri::-

Orators were Lee Copple and Stewart Simms for the Eus and John McMillan and Neil Morgan for the Phis. Copple's winning speech was titled "Wake Forest and Christian Culture." He stressed the fact that the college s·hould offer more aesthetic oppor­tunities for its students. McMil­lan's subject was "Tolerance, the Bulwark of Liberty." Morgan spoke on "Our Southern Frontier," after which Simms challenged hearers to "Have Faith in

i or our :_, I Robert Prestan ! "MOON OVER BURMA"

f Building Needs J f HAND" !

.,1 i I · See j !

COMING ATTRACTIONS

James Cagney-Ann Sheridan "CITY FOR CONQUEST'' r! I. I

C• F J & I Gary Cooper 'THE WESTERNER" i Ity ue 'I. Cary Grant "THE. HOWARDS OF VIRGINIA" I ~ . Chas. Laug·hton "THEY !{NEW WHAT T,HEY WANTED" I Supply Co.. i -k--·-·-·-.. _ .. _.,_,._,_,._.,_,_,_,_,_,._.,_,_,_,_, ___ ,_;_.,-+

f i i LUMBER I i I i PLUMBING 1

I COAL I I

J

11 GOOD LUCK,

I TEAM I ~·-•-•-••-•a-•-•-·-·-·-·~-~+

Durham, N. C. '"''"'Y-4 ¥

+•-••-••-•w-••-•-••-••-••-••-••-~t . I l i j Congratulations On i • GROVES STADIUM 1 ! • r !

W. C. Lyon Co. f l

..,. .. ,

Phone 222-1

----· j Textiles and

i Electrical Supplies i . +·-··-·-··-·-··-··-··-··-·-·-·+ +-•-••-••-•~-••-••-••-••-••-••-••-•-•-•-••-••-•-n-~-••-••-••-w•-•+

i I j It Bays To Have Your Laundry j

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WELCOME- OLD GRADS and

GOOD LUCK, DEACONS

FOR THE BEST IN FANCY GROCERIES­

Call

First choice of RAIN FAIR'S

~S¥eBOMtl

~ Smart gabardine to own •••

Showerproofed by CraveneHe

"Convenient,',. ~'smart,'' •ua. ual looking yet dreil.sy" , • , commented members of Rain• fair's College Style Board io voting Ziprain "tops." Ultra smart English knee-length style -Talon fastener 011. tl.y front. ·

I

.;_ .. ·, ; ..

. I :•

~~ ·.:a:

Slash pockets. Railroad stitch· COLLEGI STYLI BOARD ing on cuffs and hem. Bleached Alobamo ....... --.--.............. wuuom Ll.,..,. b 1, ht ,. · · 32 t' Como!L .... ,. _____ ...... Stonley M. Berman

one or tg 011Ve m SJZes o Duke .......... -·--···Andrew L. Duc:ker. Jr. 44. Regulars or longs. tffi':.':.~:::::.:=:::::.7.:::::::~: .. F. H .. :ll:~t'!

lowa .............. _______ ,.Tho R aa Kanua ................ -........................ u

~ " Marquette ........... _ .. ,Quenun J. a MJchJQan State ................ John • umaa

:.. ~- MJnnesot• .................. Lynn Fenatermachcl'

g~::h~~::·.:·:::::::::::::~~~a:f.hA!d~=~~tJ~ ~:rf:~ori:::::::::::::::::::::ROSiiJ:.m~:.O'r;e~~~

n " I N FA I R c . Tennessee .............................. Samuel E. BeaU .~:, 11! O a ts . Tezao ........................................... Boyd Sinclair

-a Washington and Jefferson ..................... . .............................................. Dan Finkbelb.er 'c/ b Wlscoa&ln ................. _ .............. .Irvlnll Miller are SOl' y Yate .................... - ............. Quent!n Mitchell

THE YOUNG MEN'S SHOP

dcd and aged soldiers fought for a cause that was W-1. F ll ""\e orest students are especia y invited to visit our complete

both lost and probably wrong, they were proud of store when in Durham

S. W. BREWER East Main at Church

DURHAM, N. C.

i~~ ~u ~~cl ftilicr75~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ years. _

Right now the United States seems to be on the brink of war. We're hoping to God that it will not come, but if it should, we wonder just how the veterans of World War II. will be taking it around the year 2015. After all, there are so many thousands who are bitter toward the draft bill, our aid to England, the vast rearmament pro­gram-thousands who have firmly set their minds not to fight for the U. S. at any cost.

We wonder if these probable veterans-to-be will be h;lding reunions 75 long years after Armis­tice, if they will proudly boast of the cause which their friends and buddies fought and died for, if they will boast and praise their leaders 75 years af­ter.

Frankly, we doubt it. -Les Cansler.

\

'~ ''

·SATURJ

PI~ 'Our]

Gc: Tonight

twelfth Sl

of the cc the progr features <

·dane<! ha! until this the fall's

The da: in the R: o'clock un be furnish and his 01

All non denied adt

. only thm fraternity

,Wake For sion. Fra er schools members ' Phi Chi, ~ campus p: Five girl

dance: F, McDonald, Chambers, They are j;jvely, Ma: Kappa Pi, cil; Ralph Epsilon, v' riss of Pi chairman; Kappa Alr,

,The ei participatii Kappa Ali ma Phi EI Lambda Cl Delta Sign

SCHOOL

'11he No School Pri: gether wit1 superintend and me!llbE !ina State Instruction meeting a morning, : nouncement

· Charles Er, intendent o of Dr. Clyd tendent of delivered th ing exercise tember.

The meeti Wake Fore! will begin a

On the pl Memory of· deliver the John Lang, Dr. Ralph M sity of Nor1 Cunningham cational Ass• ton, D. C.

Pre-game Devils a slig cons. But it

WALl High Qll Reasonal Experien

H.B c

WELCOl

Glad to:

Make Your

SHO

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~ Toa

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Page 3: ~ville VOL. WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 … · 2018-03-20 · 940 the ~ville the Bell, !son. Bur. At-de-this win col-e Pi rrell ·d of l. """'\ [ _J. I , \ ..

( \ . ' .

PAGE THREE OLD GOLD AND BLACK · ·SATuRDAY, OCTOBER26, 1940 . - ' '

PledgeJ)ance Tonight Honors New Members of Local Fraternities *----~------------------------~--------------~--------------~------------------------------------------~':---------------------

'Durham Heads Gala Program

Tonight's ple'<L."e dance will be twelfth such . affair in the history of the college. In keeping with the progress made by the other features of the college the pledge ·dance has grown · in importance until this year it is the climax of the fall's rushing activities .. /

Lovely Sponsors for 'fonight's Affair ..

The Greeks Have"' a Word for It • •

We are inaugurating, with this the prospect, because virtually issue, a new fraternity column. every chapter announces get-to­In this column the space received gethers, operr-houses, et cetera by each fraternity will be com- after the affair. mensurate with the news which The KA's will top it all off with each fraternity produces. And we breakfast in Brother Walt Lewis's will strive not to bore with too home in Raleigh after the ball is much of who's got how many .legs over. SPE will hold open house at on the quoits cup, or how the Zeta their chapter. AKPi will enter­tat ,just had the cutest kittens. tain likewise. Kappa Sig, Sigma On the other hand gossip, per se, Pi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Lambda is to be eliminated. Any sugges- Ohi Alpha, the Pikes, Delta Sig,

l tions as to how we can increase wEI all hold parties after ti-!'e

I the interest in future issues will dance. be appreciated and, insofar as pos-sible, followed. On the business front, the law­

yers over at the Gamma house

finger broken.

THICK Pl-EDGE CORNER: Wallace Harvey is alleged to have asked Smut at the Shop in regard to the new post offiee if "the ·new one wouldn't run the old one out of business." S'help me, I got it from one of his brothers.

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The dance . tonight wH be held in the Raleigh Memorial from 9 o'clock untif midnight. Music will be furnished. by Bill Vanden Drie1; and his orchestra.

All non-fraternity· men will be denied admission to the event, and

. only those graduates who were fraternity men while in school at . Wake Forest will be given admis-

This week Panhel's belles will plan next week to induct several converge on the campus, along new: members into the ranks of with other visitors from all over the chosen, according to that emi­the country, and to make· the day nent barrister Charlie Jarrell, and gay the fratemities are arranging a celebration is being arranged.

ALL PURE WOOL CREWNECK SWEATERS 1

a program of welcome for them. As to horseplay, the houses have Since this SatW"day is Homecom- been quiet ( ? ) this week, the only ing, old grads are to be treated to contretemps on record being

$1.91 sion. Fratenrnity men from oth­er schools may attend, as may the members of Gamma Eta G3mma, Phi Chi, and Phi Rh1>. Sigma, the campus professional fraternities.

· Five girls are sponsors for the dance: Fay Lindbe11g, Katherine McDonald, Mae Hoffman, Mary

- decoration-festooned frat houses in Gawky Durham's maiming of Paui keeping with custom. AKPi, de- Baker. It seems there was a ping­fending champions of the decora- pong doubles game (the AK's are tion rivalry, are preparing what having a tournament) and Baker they term as· a surprise for the got in the way of a hard drive edification of judges and specta- from the thin man and had his

FINE•s MEN SHOP Comer Fayetteville and

Hargett Raleigh, N. C .

. Chambers, and Martha Buchanan. They are sponsoring for; respec­tively, :Marshall Durham of Alpha Kappa Pi president of the coun~ cil; Ralph Earnhardt, · Sigma Phi Epsilon, vice president; Ray Mor~ riss of Pi Kappa A.lpha, the dance chairman; and Charles· Cheek :.of Kappa Alpha, board secretary.

,T h e eight social :fraternities participating in the dance are Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Alpha, Si~­ma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Kappa Pt, Lambda Chi Alpha, Kappa Sigma; Delta Sigma Phi, and Sigma Pi.

SCHOOL PR.WCIPALS MEE'f

tors and the dismay of the oth2r parti,cipants. Kappa Alpha ain­nounces that not only will their decorations be hand-made this yeaf, but that they have pur~ · chased two no-parking signs for use in front of their house. All the other frats' decoration com­mittees are going around with smug looks on their respective 1

physiogomies and all ann~unce

that this year, it's a cinch for them.

.,. ' .

The main event of the Big Day (aside, of course from the tussle with the Devil) is Pledge Ball, which will be held Saturday night in Raleigh at the Memorial Audi­torium and which will be the eve­ning mecca for all of the tail­coated Greek swains and their dates. A night of merriment is

Tihe North Carolina District- Here are the 6.ve beauties who are the sponsors for tonighfs pledge dance. They are, with their School Principal's Assiciation to- escorts': top row: Fay Lindberg of Converse College with Marshall Durham; and Katherine McDon-gether with the 100 county school ald of Wake Forest with Ralph Earnhardt; second row: Mae Hoffman of Charlotte with Norvell superintendents of North Carolina Ashburn; Mary Chambers of St. Mary's with Ray Morriss; and Martha Buchanan of Sweet Briar and me!Jlbers of the Nor~h Caro- .with Charles Cheek. - Prints by Jack Dickerson. !ina State Department· of Public 1 _____________ __;:..__ _________ --:-------------------------Instruction will hold their annual meeting at Wake Forest this morning, according to an an­nouncement made this week by

That Holiday Petition · Charles Erwin, Forest City super­intendent of schools and brother

The student body doesn't know body the privi.lege of objecting to what it wants. their decision and promised to re­

Of Dr Clyde Erwin state superin-. . .' . Last year the Wake Forest stu-tendent of pubhc mstructlon, who de t b d h d th Kl f delivered the address at the· open- ~ 0 Y a ~e~ ays or . . f th college in Se.p- hohdays at Thanksgt.vmg, But last mg e:xeretses 0 e January the faculty decided to tember. ·t• .,1 b h ld 1.n·the have only one day holiday. at

ThemeeJngwll e e ·· d dd d F t B t" t Church and Thanksg"IVmg an a two ays

Wake ores ap 15 to the Christmas holidays. will begin at 10:30 a.m. ,

On the program are Pof. J. L. The faculty gave the student

tract it if they did so. The student body did not object.

This week there appeared on the bulletin board in the student cen­ter a petition to the faculty to add two days to the Thanksgiving holidays. To date there are around 350 signatm·es on this petition.

Memory of Wake Forest, who will deliver the welcoming address; John Lang, state N.Y.A. director; Dr. Ralph McDonald of the Univer­sity of North Carolina and Ruth Cunningham of the National Edu­cational Assoeiational of Washing­

CONGRATULATIONS ON NEW STADIUM

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Pre-game dope gives the Blue Devils a slight edge over the Dea­cons. But it won't help Duke!

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Page 4: ~ville VOL. WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 … · 2018-03-20 · 940 the ~ville the Bell, !son. Bur. At-de-this win col-e Pi rrell ·d of l. """'\ [ _J. I , \ ..

PAGE FOUR OLD GOLD AND BLACK SATURDAY; OCTOBER 26, 1940

Juniors· and Seniors to. Hold Dance Nov. 9 · at Raleigh We Recommend. the Branigan -----------------------*----------------------------------------------*----------------------------~----------------'*

Chapel Talks "Your attainments in your field

will be limited according to your language," said Dr. H. B. Jones, head of the English department, as he spoke to the chapel-goers on the subject of vocabularies. DZ'. Jones began his address by read­ing a short passage fron1 Genesis, in which is given an account of Adam's naming the different things God had put upon the earth. Adam began the proces8 of be­stowing names and we, the English professor said, are still doing tr.e smne thing as new objects appear. However toda)' we neEd "ven more names than Adam did, Dt'. Jones asserted.

Boys Get Together on Dance Situation

Jim Early, senior chairman of the Junior - Senior dance com­mittee, smiles his approval as Jimmy Cross, junior dance chairman, presents bandmaster Bill Vanden Dries with the contract for the dance, which is to be November 9. - Photo by Jack Dickerson.

BSU State Convention WP~FMayDo Ball Broadcast A payment of $3.00 for a round

trip bus ticket will permit anyone to attend the B. S. U. State Con­l'ention at Hickory next weekend, November 1-3, it was learned from John Galloway, president of the Wake Forest B. S. U.

The bus tickets may be pur· chased from either John Fletcher, Jolm Galloway or Harold McMan­us. The busus will leave Raleigh at 12 noon on Friday and wil1 bring back convention goers from Hickory on Sunday afternoon, leaving at four o'clock.

All those who plan to attend the convention . will be excused from c:asses on Friday afternoon and Saturday and any classes that have to be cut on Friday mom­ing to get to Raleigh by 12 o'clock.

Delegates from all the college campuses of eastem North Caro­lina will leave together f1·om Raleigh in chartererd buses. Other colleges that will have deegates leaving Raleigh at noon next Fri­

tenders of the convention will pay. a registration fee of $1.00, and $ .50 as a fee for the banquet to be held at the· opening session on .!''ifteen minutes and possibly Friday night. a half hour of the music of Bill

Wake Forest will be taking an Vanden Dries and his orchestra active pal't in the convention which will probably be broadcast from is centered around the general the Raleigh armory during the Jr. theme "Conquer With Christ." ·Sr. dance which is to be held there Harold Mc·Manus, president of the Saturd,;ly night, November 9, fol­N. C. State B. S. U., will act a• lowing the N. C. State-Wake For­chaimtan of the convention, and est football game. Rev. Eugene Olive will lead m the music of the entire conven- The news was given the O!d tion as well as leading in one of Gold and Black Thursday that a the conferences to be held on Sat- broadcast for that period has been urday morniJClg.

Infirmary News

tentatively scheduled for WPTF, Raleigh, program director of the Durham Life Insurance Company station. Final decision, he said, will be made after Vanden Dries'

The . _,. h b pe1formance at the Pledge Dance uu1rmary as een exper- t . ht

. . . k 'th' omg . 1encmg a very qmet wee WI · ·

only three patients being confined Contracts._ for the dance were to bed. Miss Vauce is· especially signed Monday of this week by thankful for this because the very Jimmy Cross, junior dance chair­efficient servant is absent due to man, Jim Early, the senior dance sickness in his home. Miss Vauce chairman, and Vanden Dries.

The English head indicated to the audience that as life becomes more and more complex, more and more names and words are needed. Ever the process is going on am.l always will go on. In the Ang·lo­Saxon period before lOGo, he said, there were nevfi'r more than thirty thousand words in all, whereas in Shakespeare's time more than a hundred thousand existed. T<Jday, he stated, there are more than a million words in 'our language.

--------------------;-------------------- day are: Duke, Carolina, E. C. T. said she never realized how impor- Tickets for the affair will go on tant he was or just how much good sale the early part of next week. he did until he was forced to be A brogui.sh, wing-tip style

made of sun-lit orange tan leather. The usual EDGER­TON comfort combined with sturdy masculine stylingmakes this shoe a very desirable model for business or pleasure. !f you try it Oil you'll buy zt!

Dr. Jones traced by charts the development of words in the Eng­lish language. He asserted that Shakespeare used more than twen­ty-four thousand of the hundred thousand words in existence in l1is day.

being patriotic. He indicated that North America and North Carolina were settled for religious freedom instead of ·for wealth, as was the case of South America.

Dr. Paschal closed his address by advising all Wake Forest stu­dents that to be good Wake Fo1·est men they should not only yell ..at football games but be worthy, patriotic men as well.

out a Country" the Law professor asserted that such a man can claim no benefit from any land.

"We are apt to be impatient, he­cause we can't see the end of thing·s," Prof. White ase1ted. To­day, he said, everyone of the total­itarian govemments is trying io destroy the belief in God; they have to do•it to carry out their plans.

The professor declared further "that no people and no nation has ever amounted to anything unle~s they have a faith outside them­selves." The most, he said, is go .. ing thl'Ough life without touching it.

Intellectual ability and vocab­ulary can be measured together, the English professor declared. One's success in business depends largely on the extent of his vocab­ulary. Records, he indicated, have shown that. The effort is to t•each the ultimate horizon as nearly as possible. "During your college career, you are not blazing trail,;; ·you are following others," he said.

Dr. Jones suggested to the stu­dents that a few ways to obtain words are by hearing them, by reading them, by studying foreign languages, and by using conscious­ly the dictionary. One grows up, he stated, thinking that it may not matter how he reads assign­ments, but it is quite the contra1·y. On the basis of vocabulary one can prodict where a student will stand at the end of the year or even ill later life, he concluded.

Prof. R. B. White of the Law SGhool was Wednesday's chapel speaker and talked on the subject, '''fhe Man Without a Creed." A creed, he said, is a belief in some­thing higher than and outside vourself. "The man without a ~reed, the man without a belief is Prof. White did not describe a more pitiful than the man with- creed, because he stated, many out a country," he declared. Talk- others have done that befoN, ing briefly about "A Man With- I probably too many. Instead, he ad-

Dr. G. W. Paschal, Professor Emeritus of Greek, on 1\ionday told the students that "patriotism, as exemplified by Jesus Christ, is one of the noblest passions one can attain." Concerning his gener­al subject, "Patriotism", he cited several passages from the Hebrew poets in the Psalms, from other classical writers, and f1·om Ameri­can writers. Jesus, he said, was the greatest patriot who ever walked the earth.

Discussing the question, "Why be patriotic?", Dr. Paschall cx­presed to the audience that we have a worthy country. He read parts of a sermon which was sent to him, the title of which was "God Bless America". This sermon dealt with the song of Irving Berlin as the writer heard it for the first time sung by Kate Smith. The author indicated that when he listened to it then, he realized a new love for his native land.

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as thyself.' " Eve1·y attitude of life . . . sickness, death or other tragedies . . . can be met witn this creed, he declared.

The tuberculosis clinic whioh was started a couple. of weeks ago gave A7ays to around 80 students whose preliminary tests had shown positive. Of these, some few will undoubtedly show the presence of the disease and will be able to start combating the disease which was revealed by the clinic. The x .. rays will be read soon and a com-I plete t·eport will be made.

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Page 5: ~ville VOL. WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 … · 2018-03-20 · 940 the ~ville the Bell, !son. Bur. At-de-this win col-e Pi rrell ·d of l. """'\ [ _J. I , \ ..

1940.

.f

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1?40

Cansler's Column ***** · T(au) 'n' T(ony)

There's an old saying that "a man's. best ·f1·iend is his dog." 'Dhat might sound pretty far-fetched, but there are plenty of folks

right here in Deacontown that will tell you it isn't so far wrong. Tf ~·ou don't believe them then they'll show you Tony Gallovich and hiR most ardent friend and admirer--Tau.

Tau is an odd-looking mutt, sort of an rutderalung collie or something, that Tony picked .np last fall from off the highway, He isn't a handsome pooch-if you can put dogs in that category -but he does have personality and then some. In fact in one short year .. he has ta'ken his place along with "Confucius'' as a campus legend.

This fall he got lost in WashingtQp. on the way back to school with Tony and the glum that settled over fraternjty row. and the colleg<' in general was astounding. Why even the failure of Gallovich himself to report wouldn't have caused much more of a stir. When he dh come in-neatly boxed· up and with tags all over him-it was just like the return home of a long lost· hero.

There's not a person on the campus-from freshman to profes­sor~that hasn't laughed at Tau following the one-and-only Tony around. He goes to classes with him and meets him when they're over. Meals an.d football practice are the same way. Some say Tony even carries him on hi& dates, but the Gallovich swears it's not true.

When business is slack, or Tony is studying or off on a foot­ball trip, Tau lounges around at the Sigma Phi Epsilon houst, Tony's fraternity, serving in his capacity of official mascot. ~e's the first one to greet any visitor and Gallovich proudly. boasts that "he has more feminine admirers than any dog alive." The Sig Eps like him so much there's a rumor afoot tbat they are going to try to take him into full membersltip-initiation and everything.

. Tau'·s latest escapade has been to crash thll publicity world. He followed Tony to football practice one afternoon and when the time arrived to make some pi_ctures, refused. to leave. So the photogmpher snapped pictures of Tau as well as of the rest of the squad. ,The results were surprising. Some claim he made a better picture than anyone else.

At any r;te, Tau, like Tony, is quite modest about the whole thing. But boy, does that dog get around·!

* * * ** Watch That Line

If all the copy ever written on the value of watching line play in ,football was laid end to end it would probably reach from her~ to Raleigh. But there's still Apex, so here's another plea fo; at of you to take a look at the brilliant line pay in this af.ternoon s gam~-

Our Deacon backs have had their share of publicity and glory this season, but somewhere, somehow, the line has been completely over­

looked.

In my htrmble opinion, Jeit Waivers, Rubino, Preston,' , Kapriva, Givler al)d Pendergast can hold thei~ own wit~ any seven linesmen in the state-even the South. They ve got we1~ht, sp_ced, finesse ,and they,'ve been well-coached. If you don t behe~e they.'re good ,watch them in there t.hjs afternoon-watch them m there Close.

They're taking. some rough knocks in there, those men, but they're giving soine out in return. An.d they ~re openi.ng up , those ho~~s out of which the backfield men are makmg headhnes. 'I·hey dese!~e plenty of credit for their work, too. So let's see that they get 1t.

* * * * * Punts and Passes Today's 21,000 capacity crowd will not only be the largest in

Wake Forest's 106-year' :history, but also the largest group ever .to attend a Deac-Devil tussle ... Don't know how it ~as, ~t to tne Wake Forest student who proceeded to pick Soc (High Pomt Ent~r­

. prise) Chakles apart last week here's one nice, big bouquet of orch1ds

... Some Jetter!

Head Cheerleader Tom Davis wants all aud sundry to know that those noises issuing from out of the south ~tands b~long to the A. K. Pi's organized cheering sedion, somethmg new Ill these

t Delta Sigma Phi wants it known that tl:cy, not the par s • · · -. f b II nl Sig Eps, won last year's fraternity. int~am?ural oat a . I e • · · 0. K., 0. K., anybody else want anythmg · ·

Ye ed's stomach did the old topsy-turvy last week when he, in ~ d, bout way found out that Marshall College would be ot.

very roun -a ' th t' etting up the 1941 Wake Forest football schedule . . . Boy' a s g . . into the football world! . . . Marshall, by the by' meets their btg

rival, Scranton, tonight.

'fhis professional football game sure gets around •.. Ru~pert . Pate was shifted from tackle to quarterback by the Chica~o

Cardinals and Clem Crabtree from tackle to .guard by the ?etrOit L' B th, former Deacons, are running second st~J.ng: ..

lOllS··· : t t all-American Harry (Southern .Ca!Iforma) Crabtree e_a 0~ti' The Crab by tlo,e way, is sporting a Smith for his pos1 on · · · ' big l3 on his jersey this year.

s. I. ·c. RATINGS

- Wake Forest, fresh from a 31-T·he Wake Forest-Duke game to- 19 victory over Marshall, slipped

day will determine to a large ex- back one notch this week in the tent how the teams will finish up Paul Williamson Football Ratings. in the Southern Conference race. The Deacs were in 28 position this Clemson is practically assure~ of week with a rating of 90.8. Notre at least a tie for the champ10n- Dame is in the number one posi­ship since she has only South Car- tion, Clemson in fourth, Duke in olina and Furman to play, neither fourteenth, Pittsburgh. in twenty-£ which is counted on for much seventh, and Navy m twenty-o .

opposition. If Wake F~res~. wms ninth. today, she can go to f1msh In sec-. In the Associated Press ratings, ond place providing t'he Deacons the Deacons gained two votes to win their remaining gan_tes. Duke go into a tie with Texas Tech and will be out to keep their confer- Mississippi State. ence record clean of defeats and to make a bid for a tie with Clem­son for the championship. Southern Conference Standings

Clemson 2 0 ° 65 7 Duke 1 o 0 23 0 W'shingt'n & Lee 1 0 0 3 0 North Carolina 2 1 0 40 26 Wak Forest 2 1 0 31 39

e 2 2 0 64 39 N. C. State 1i 1 0 36 26 Furman 1 1 0 13 30 V. M. I. 0 20 29 Wm. and Mary 1 1' Ri<lhmond 1 1 0 13 10

Citadel 0 1 0 7 ;~ Virginia Tech 0 2 ~ i~ 7 4 Davidson ° 3

0 0 o Maryland 0 ° 0 South Carolina 0 0 ° 0

LOST-

A 1939 Wake Forest Ring. Gold. Initials: J. E. T.

Gamma Eta Gamma letters.

LOST, strayed-Green Cardigan Sweater, in front of Mrs. S. P.

Holding's. See 1\liss Nannie Jones.

• OLD GOLD AND BLACK PAGE FIVE

Wake Forest Frosh Beat Little Sovereigns, 13-7 STATISTICS *------------~----------------------------------*----------------------.--*j:~::::::::::~::::::~

Freshman Grid Roster· Starting Line-up First downs

**** Y ds gained rushing Y ds gained passing Passes Completed Passes int'rc'pt. by Average punts

W.F. W.-M. 5 4

116 . 29 60 75 3 6 4 1

32 29

N,o. N.ame Position Weight

11 AI Druschel .. .. .. ... . .. .. .. .. .. .. T Rocky Mount, Oct. 25 -· The 13 Bob Jordan .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . .. HB

Baby Deacons repeated history 17 E h . h d . 11 Warren Brown ................ '.' ere torug t, and they di · 1t a for milk. 20 John Cochr~n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HB

They passed over the heads of 21 Joe Scheidt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HB William and Mary's. freshmen for 22 Andy Karmazin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G a 13-7 win in the last minute of 23 Rufus Alford ................... FB a game here for the benefit of the 2 4 HB

1 b M.1 Clyde Whitner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rocky Mount . Rotary C u 1 k Fund, to accomplish for the second 2 5 Frank Palman · · · · · · · · - · · · · - . ;·- - . G time the feat of winning from 26 Bob Heffelfinger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . G their opponents hard on the close 2 7 Bernei Martin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FB of the final quarter. (In Septem- 28 Buck Jones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T ber they defeated Duke's Blue, , 3 I h · · ff ~ Bill Beddow ..................... C mps m t e last mmute o oo~ ball play.) 3 5 Joe Hinerman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HB

Wake Forest scored in the first 3 7 Charlie Garrison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C five minutes of play. John Perry, 39 Harvey Garfinkle .................. G halfback from Raleigh, took the 40 Jack Ciccarelli ... .'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E ba~l from ~he . 45h yardd iinHe on a 44 Jim Cox . . . . . . . . .• .. .. .. .. .. .. . HB spm arounu rig t en . e was unstopped and went over for a 50 Frank Baker . · · · ..... · .... --.- ... C touchdown. ,Perry also tried for the 55 John Perry .................... HB extra point and kicked the ball 61 Burnie Capps .................... E right between the goalposts for 62 Jim Copley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E an extra point. G

The ball was passed from Wake 65 Bill Fountain · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · Forest end of the field to William 66 Paul Phillips ................... HB and Mary's end during the second 71 Napoleon Pannell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HB and third quarters. It was mere 72 Bill Powell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E zig-zag and no plays netted not- 7 4 Dave Wells . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HB able yardage.

In the last quarter action began. 75 Carl Grad · · · · · · · · ; · · · · · · · · · · · · FB George Pryor, of the William and 77 Frank Lapina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FB Mary backfield, kicked on Wil- 81 Stanley Finkleman ............... ·. C Jiam and Mary's own 35 yard line. 82 George Owens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T Perry caught the ball, but on the 84 Lawson Brown .... , .............. T next play was forced to kick it

85 back to Pryor. Two plays later Julius Bosse ; · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · QB Pryor passed to Joe Bearoff, back, 92 Charles Cole . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HB but the ball was knocked down by 98 Boyce Brown .................... · T Perry. Pryor passed again, to Tl- 99 Mike Nesteruk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E mo Parr this time. Parr carried

225

170 185 170 175 190 1f5 1'70 190 185

185 225 185

170 160 200 184 185

185 168 200 200 190 170

. 168

160 187 180 170 225

- 225 190

170 175 215

180

Height

6-4 6· 6- l 6· 6· HO 5·8

5-10 5-9 Hl 5·8 5'-llllz 6·2 6-

5-9

5-11 6-5-9llz 6-5·10 6·1 6-2

6· 5·9 5-10

5-9

5-10 5-9 5-9

5-10 6· 6·3 H HO 6-2

6-1

the ball down to Wake Forest's ------------------------------------5 yard line. On the next play Ferd-inan Peuger gained one yard and was stopped by Perry. Pryor pass­ed to Parr, who went over the goal line. Pryor's kick was good. The score stood tied: 7-7.

Bob Jordan, halfback who was playing in spite of injury, won the game for Wake Forest in the last minute. He passed 15 yards to Jim Copley, end, who hopped over for another touchdown. Per­ry's try for the extra }JOint was not good. The final score stood at 13-7.

MOOT COURT (Continued from first page)

conce1:ning the antecedents of the plaintiff, which remarks were, to

I put it mildly, highly offensive and injurious to the plaintiff's good name. In short, the plaintiff al­lcg~s that the defendant in the action slandered him, and seeks damag·es for such slander.

The defendant, in his answer,

WELCOME, ALUMNI

STATION

UNDERPASS SERVICE STATION

DANCE Wake Forest Duke Li!t's make a night of it after

the game at the Carolina Club at the Carolina Pines Clubhouse on Route 15A near Raleigh, N. C. Jack Wardlaw's ROLLING RHYTHM, Joanne Leaux, allur­ing songstress, lloor show, Kelse Carr, from the Swing Club, Hol­lywood, Buddy. Dunn, M. C. Ad­mission, 75c each plus tax. Late entertainment. ·Phone Raleigh 9334 for reservations. No cov­er, minimum, table qr corkage charge.

Jett Rubino

Givler Pendergast Kapriva

Preston Waivers

Pruitt Gallovich

Polanski

Ringgold

... ,., ...........

LE LT

LG c RG R'I'

RE QB HB

HB

FB

Piasecky

Winterson Jett

Bm·nett Karmazin

Nania

Darne\1: Prothro McAfee

Killian

Davis

WELCOME, ALUMNI

Colonial Service Station

PICTURES e • • of your college days will be treasured by you and yours long after you have forgotten most of the happenings of this period of your life. Get that pic­ture you've wanted made expertly •.

Jack . Dickerson Member Carolina Press Photographers' Association

A print of any picture appearing in Old Gold and Black this fall may be obtained at a small price.

• DANCE COMMITTEES: Bring your picture problems

to me.

ASK FOR JACK DICKERSON AT THE GYM

+tt-~+++·!•..f•+tt....: .... : .. ..t••lt•: ... : •• : ... : .. ..:-: ... :.+•!t+•!-+i~·!•i{•(•++!••:+t>!•+++++•l>fttl+tft+++ + t t£1 + + + + i Hello, Alumni ! i + +

f Glad to Have You Back! f •!• - +

* i * WHILE HERE LET THIS BE YOUR t i HEADQUARTERS t + + + +

..---------------;I College Book Store I i ~· +

alleges that the plaintiff also made ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ statements concerning the de- -fendant, but that these statements did much more than injure the defendant's good name. The de­fendant clainms that the remarks made by the plaintiff were made to the employer of the defendant maliciously, willfully, and with no basis ·in fact, and that as a result of this slanderous communication and publication to the defendant's employer, the defendant lost his job. The defendant also alleges that he had held that job for some few years and that as a result of losing it, his wife and five chil­dren have been left without a m~ans of support, since ·he has been deprived of his livelihooJ by this alleged wrongful act on the part of the plaintiff.

"LET'S GO TO MANMUR"

MAGAZINE (Continued from Front Page)

called humor. Last year the Stu. dent staff declared war on clipped­jokes and risque cartoon and placed a new emphasis on the original, literary, and creative side.

The 1940·41 sssion has got off to a start with a varity of con­tributions from various sources. Students are urged to visit the of­fice for further information ..

You Can Buy

CROSBY SQUARE SHOES

The Authentic

Fashions

at

I * "On The Campus" t . ~ +

:1 + ... + + - + j i DRINKS-- i i :!: - SANDWICHES -- t i I -- PENN ANTS !

BOWL AT RALEIGH'S

FINEST-

The South's Finest Center. i * COLLEGE EMBLEMS ~ I Visit ManMur after the game, before ! ! , ... . .. .. . .. .... f

j the dance, enroute to Meredith, i i "The Complete Store" l I at any time. ~: .. • .. .. · .. . . , · £ 'I FraternitY. Men: See Mr. Brooks + B E A T D u K £ •l<

., 1.· t , here and arrange for fraternity ,., + '11 tournaments. +lt·~+t!••:•++•!-}1•}1•:· ·:-·:;-t••:.+~-: .. l>·:··:-·: ... :··=··:.·: ... : ... :··:·.:··: .. --:-·:··:··: .. :...: .. :-...... +++ ++++++

ft<t••)•!•~!•...J.+•:•+o-!••! ... !••!••!••!••!••!••!•.o!:u!••!•~•!H!u·!•O.:•~•.:++!H!• .. !••!+t{H!••!••!••!•to!••!o•lot{-}o•'lo>tio+tfo++.J:'~

i ~ + ., ~ + . + i ManMur Bowling Center, Inc. ! GET OUT and GET COMFORTABLE IN i :.: 2512 Hillsboro Street Raleigh i FORTUNE'S NEW MOCCASIN l i

+ +

~:::;::-;:-;::::-;-;::-,;~::::::;::::::::;~ ~ :~er;;;~er ~~:~~~ ~r;~s:~~f::rts a:~e~t~~ J ; ; ; $4 thenticated custom bootmaker styling in a ; ~· ·:. + M t . f l F + + '!• + os pa1r o t 1ese new ortune moccasins in •l< t COMPLIMENTS t t Styles smart "Cherry Tan." See this style today, £ + t $ and our other new Fortune Shoes. + t + + + + (4 + + ,.. of + + + + + * : t : + +

IW.W.HOLDINGH I + + + + + + + + + +'!• + :t. f~: : + WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA ; ~.. + + +•!ot + + + + + + * t ; t COTTON - t : FORTUNE SHOES * .:.. ++ + '!• ++ + + + + + i -FERTILIZER * i "YOUR FEET ARE WORTH FORTUNES"! t •:0 ++ + t t t StyJing Authenticated by Harry Aiston, Custom Bootmaker $

Lost in front of Gamma Eta Gamma, Hunter.

Geo. ~olus Dept. Store ! BEAT THE DEVIL i 1 B & S D s i i 1 i . . epartment tore i ; OUT OF DUKE ! 11 i Liberal reward.

See PAUL BULLOCK Wake Forest, ~ + + Wake Forest, N.C. +

~ * * * + + + + ~ 11 Ji +++If+++++++ 1 IJ .J •!t I I I•te++++~·t•t !f +4 + l J J -1 IJi +•fo t I 4 +++: ~++++++++++~·lt•:-+++++•l>++~++++~:·+4-•: .. •Ho-++++++++++++~

N.C.

Page 6: ~ville VOL. WAKE FORESJ';,N. C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1940 … · 2018-03-20 · 940 the ~ville the Bell, !son. Bur. At-de-this win col-e Pi rrell ·d of l. """'\ [ _J. I , \ ..

PAGE SIX OLD GOLD AND BLACK SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26 1940. . . . • ~vollar" DriVe

. ' Monogram Club GetS Hundreds of BooSters tn *---------~---------------------------------------------------~·----------------------------------------J-------------~------

Paut Waivers Directs Group

Monogram Club is indeed grate­ful to all alumni and other friends who have rallied so splendidly to the support of the club. We are proud of you, not only for your generosity, but also for the hig;1 and eager spirit of interest which typifies all of you. To all Out Boosters, whether listed below or not, the Monogram Club says, "Thanks a Lot."-Paul Waivers.

Here's Deacons Statistics WAKE FOREST AND OPPONENT STATISTICS FOR SEASON TO DATE

SCORES: Wake Forest 79; Wake Forest 12; Wake Forest 19;

William Jewell 0 North Carplina 0

Furman University 0

RUSHING

Car­ried

Tot. Tot.

William Jewell ... . Wake Forest ..... .

5 4S

U.N. C. . . . . . . . . . . 30 Wake Forest ..... . Furman .......... .

58 50

Gn. Lost 9 5

Net 4

6 505

Av. .8

Wake Forest 0; Clemson 39 Wake Forest 31; Marshall19

PASSING Yds.

Net In· Ret. Att. Cmp Gn. cpt Inc.

14 4 46 0 0 18 15 9 9

9 162 2 63 2 49 1 13 3 3

16 1 10 37 3 13

SCORING

Td Pat Tot .. 0 0 0

12 7 79 0 0 2 0 0 0

0

12 0

Miller's Mess . '

The first official act of this col- ball is giving the smaller instibJ­umn will be to welcome back all tions a break. the many alumni returning IN. The associated press hail been Wake Forest this week. It's really particularly accomodating in this a pleasure to see you back here, respect: Eddie Brietz and others

curred at the registration on 0~ tober 16. Carl Givler, powerful Deac guard, was going through the question and· answer routine. At the end of it, Carl asked, "Is there anything else you want to know?" "Yes, what happened last week at Clemson?" shot back the officia'i.

and we congratulate you on ar- have continually publicized the riving just in time to see the Blue small schools. During the entire The old end around play IS

Devils take a licking. summer and all fall he has been really working to perfection these It's not often that a Duke team taking about Wake Forest, Clem- days. It scored twice last Satur­

is defeated, particularly on the son, Furman, and many others. day just in North Carolina foot. gridiron. As a matter of fact, This means tha.t in the future you ball circles. Severin scored on it they've only been beaten three can look for all-Americans from against State and Waivers against times in three years now. The De- some of the not-so-large colleges. Marshall. A new touchdown pass man Deacons haven't turned the combination has come to the front trick since back in 1926, in the Paragraphia through that play, Kapriva to. day of the unforgettable Hank A very interesting incident oc- Waivers.

James G. Carroll, Hubert M~­Neil Poteat, Dr. H. A. Newell, Basil M. Watkins, John E. Gallo­way, Dr. B. T. Talley, Herbert B. Taylor, Dr. C. R. Sharpe, Dr. D. W. Joyner, Germaine Bernard, Dr. G. M. Billings, Fred S. Hut­chins, Dr. 0. Hunter Jones, J. C. Roberts, J. M. Scarborough, Dr. D. H. Bridges, Dr. D. T. Bridges, 0. M. Mull, Thomas P. Pruitt, Burton J. Ray, Herbert W. Early, Harold D. Parcell, Jackie Hunt, Porter Field, William Burgwyn, Forest Theatre, Dr. Brannson Weathers, J. L. Memory, H. iV. Pearce, Luther Belangia, Bob Randolph, Bud Balmer, Meyers Cole, Dr. R. M. Buie, .. Bernad Spilman, Jim Cochrane, G. F. Hankins, Dr. W. M. Scruggs, Ray Bandy, Brodie Hood, John R. Knott, Wm. C. Archie, Edgar W. Timberl~tke, Jr., Everett L. Dof­fermyre, Douglas C. Walker, Mur­ray C. Greason, F. W. Clonts, I. Beverly Lake, C. C. Pearson.

Wake Forest ..... . 35 58 28 48 54

511 137 359 136 133 276

13 134 40 319 62 74 17 116 49 218 51 40

10.5 4.5 5.5 1.3 3.3 3.9 1.5

8 3 33 1 70 3 1 Garrity. You can see how fortu- iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiii

19 nate you really are. i

Dr. H. M. Vann, Miller Bros., S.

Clemson ......... . Wake Forest ..... . Marshall ........ .. Wake Forest ..... . Opp. Total ....... . W. F. Total ..... ..

191 223

91 186 14 173 378 15 363 744 143 602

1472 129 1343

3.6 6.7 3.1 6.0

9 2 46 3 92 22 8 84 1 0 11 4 6~ 0 0 5 1 '1 1 26

58 15 244 7 118 62 24 294 6 169

PUNTING PUNT RETURNS Yds. Av. Had Yds. Av.

No. Kick Kick Bl.k:. No. Ret. Ret. William Jewell . . . . . . 8 290 36.25 1 0 · 0 · 0 Wake Forest .... ."... 2 99 49.5 0 4 54 13.5 University N. C ...... 12 524 4'3.67 1 · 3 32 10.67 Wake Forest . . . . . . . . 11 403 36.6 0 4 25 6.25 Furman .. .. .. . .. . .. 11 412 37.5 0 5 30 6 Wa)te Forest . . . . . . . . 7 301 43 0 4 69 17.25 Clemson . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 477 39.75 0 7 ·43 6.1· Wake Forest ........ 15 610 40.67 1 0 0 0 Marshall .. .. .. .. .. .. 15 591 39.4 0 5 64 12.8 Wake Forest ........ 10 424 . 42.4 0 7 120 17.1

6 3 0 0 3 1 5 1 9 4

39 It might not be· a bad idea to look over the history of this tra-

58

0 ditional Deacon-Devil encounter. 19 It all started back in the year 31 !889. That was back in the days

when Duke was unheard of, and in its place was a small time school known as Trinity College. 22 9 141

KICKOFF RET. The first game took place in the spring of that year, with the Dea­cons breezing to a 32-0 triumph.

No. 8 3 2'

1 3 1

Yds. Av. Ret. 141

Ret. 17.63

87 29 36 . 18

19 19 61 20.33 20 20

1 24 24 6 132 22 2

0

34 17 0 0

The following fall things didn't I go so well. Duke won 8-4. Dip. Iomatic relations were then sev­ered until 1893 when Duke won again, 12-6. The next game be-tween the two institutions wa~ in 1921. That year, and the follow-ing, Duke .won again.

From 1923 through 1926, the Deacons were right. They regis­tered 16-6, 32-0, 21-3, and 21-0 wins. Fron then on it was too

Forget Y o~r Parking And Traffic· Worries

GO TO THE GAME

WITH· COMFORT

AND ECONOMY-

in

W. Brewer, Dr. R. P. Morehead, Pritchard Carlton, Leland Jones, F. B. Gross, A. Y. Arledge, J. R. Teague, Dr. T. W. Long, George Hookes, Dr. C. C. Carpenter, Ed­die's, J. L. Camp, Jr., Wm. F. Mul­lis, S. A. Scruggs, Dr. M. C Maudrey, Dr. C. N. PeelerJ T. Boyce Henry, J. Henry Le Roy, Wm. J. Conrad, Jr., Dr. S. J. Bla~kman, Hathaway Cross, Dr. S. R. Hedgpeth, Dr. E. White, R:

Opponents' Totals .... 58 2294 39.6 2 20 169 8.5 Wake Forest Totals ... 45 1837 40.8 1 19 268 14.00

WAKE FOREST BACKFIELD STATISTICS TO DATE

. 16 296 18.5 11 258 23.45

bad. With the·· exception of 1930, when the final score was 13-13, Duke won every game. The worst score was 67-0, three years ago. Last year Duke considered them­selves very lucky to eke out a one-touchdown victory. They would oconsider themselves even luckier to do so again.

'TRAIL WA-YS Car·

Against ried JOHN POLANSKI

William Jewell . . . . . . . 7

Tot. Gn.

49

Tot. Lost

0

9 0 2 0

Net Gn.

49

Av. Try

7

Punt Av.

PaM Pass Att. Comp TD PAT TP

3 18 Hail the Small Schools! COACH '

P. Holding, W. H. Wetherspoon, E. M. Stanley, Dr. J. S. Brewer, Soda Shop, W. D. Holliday, B & S, Thomas Byrne, Jim Weaver, Dr. Thurman Kitchin, Ethel T. Crit­tenden, Dean Bryan, Carroll W. Weathers, Dr. J. B. Helms, LeRoy Martin, Ingram B. Hedgpeth, Bea­trice Seago, Robert A. Mcintyre, J. Melville Broughton, Helen San­ders, Dr. M. H. Weinstein, J. C. Eagles. F. K. Biggs, A. P. Rogers.

University N. C ....... 21 Furman ............. 10 Clemson . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Marshall . . . . . . . . . . . . I 9

Totals .......... 64 TONY GALLOVICH

William Jewell . . . . . . . 7 University N. C ....... 17 Furman . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Clemson ............. 7 Marshall .. .. .. . .. .. . 17

Totals ......... 56 ]. V. PRUITT

William Jewell . . . . . . . 10 University N. C ....... 12 Furman ............ . Clemson ........... .

9 7

Marshall .. .. .. .. . .. . 10 Totals ......... 48

MARSHALL EDWARDS William Jewell . . . . . . . 3 University N. C. . . . . . 6 Furman . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Clemson . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Marshall . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Totals ......... 24

167 41 28 89

374

178 84 24 31

233 550

83 77 39 26 35

260

28 31 18 2 7

86

S. C. Tatum, 0. 0. Allsbrook, Dr. C. L. Corbett, H. M. McLean, H. P. Allen, C. C. Ward, Dr. D. E. Best, Herbert Peele, E. M. Johnson, 1\{argaret Honeycutt, Hardwicke's, George Blanton, Dr. R. B. Rankin, D. S. Swain, Ohar· lie Sabistan, Dr. J. L. Bundy, Dr. Guy L. Whicker, Tomas Holding, Dr. James C. Eagle, L. S. Wil­liams, John A. Detweiler, Fred Hood, James A. Bridger, Keely Grice, Howler, Everett Snyder, :br. R. B. Wilkins, Hubert E. Olive, J. Lee Wilson, E. Y. Webb, Dr. Noell, Fred H. Hasty, Ozmer L: Henry, Dorsey Evans, T. W.

·Brewer, Elizabeth Jones, K. T. Raynor, Dr. Criteen, George W. K F I R kinson's, Jess Reid, Bill Fort, A 1 ane. . S. Fu ton, . Hunter P J C G d G Friend, Barney Powell, Kenneth ope, . . ar ner, . M. Beam, h C M W Smit , John 1\L Forehand, Arthur . . all, C. C. Wall, G. T. d Carswell, T. Settle Graham, Kap- Edwar s, Willis Turner, Buck pa Sigma, Grady Patterson, Wm. Mawn, A Frienf!, Dr. C. W. Bailey, E. Speas, AI Dowtin, Jack Euhss, Dr. George E. Bell, Dr. F. A.

11

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158 7.5 ' 41 4.1

26 ' 3.7 89

363

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226 483

82 69 B 20 31

235

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79

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:1.5.5 3.8 1.6 .29

13.1 8.8

8.2 5.75 3.67 2.9 3.1 4.9

9.33 5.2 2.6

'1.25 1.75 3.3

40 44.6 42.33 42.33

49.5 36.6 43.5 30 42.4 40.37

1

5

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1

I

2

2 3 3 7 1

16

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2

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SHOOT THE WORKS

1

5

1

1

12

It's very interesting to note the rise of the small college in the football world. It has· been gen­erally admitted that some of the best players never receive recog-

30 nition because they happen to be at a small college that isn't going any place. A good example o!

16 this is Cliff Battles, who attended 6 West Virginia Wesleyan. While 7 there, he was outstanding, but re- _

12 41

ceived no notice. For seven years after his college career, be romped through the N ationa1 Professional football league.

Things are · looking different 7 now though. The sports writers

are covering the small colleges 6 fairly well. · That combined· with

the emphasis being placed on foot-

13

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I

i.

-

Vol

At ferm: pre.-e· cans Willk ed he bask est back! GOP

En signe sen til tered will I night presi1 crats, ford greet repla' tion l

to th State

Bel footb greeti passh by 1 TodaJ this t dents the g

The night Presic en do~ and p ed s1 breaki

Spe• the st Buildi here i: Demo< wider

DofJ speech Term? that hi tions f that h1 that "1

hands. vant o: lead ar

BillE Young commil tory c and pre elusive! velt an'