~' 0 hpjaas·dranup faculty club hea·rs ·dean …..... ciassrooms, offices, and a a~enltlar i...

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. ' .. . ··- ' .. - ... PRESERVER AND. CREATOR . '- !"- ,.. .... - _ .. _._ .. .-. .......... ····· ... . --=-·- SPRING IS JUST A.ROUNJ> TBE.'C9RmlR:.i... · . RAIN,AND Vol. XXIII •. ·No,.J9 - Z..538 , WAKE FOREST; NORTH CAROLINA, SATUROAY,.lr\ARCH 2, i940 PRICE: TEN CENTS P,EltCOPY 0 .• , •"" "'••" ' HPJaas·DranUp B y For New. Chapel 1 .,..,...,...,._ ·_; 1Two Spacious Assembly Rooms Included On · Ground Floor Faculty Club Hea·rs ·Dean ·Praise StJident ·Progress Citizens Indicate Their Approval For Pool Project · . *n B ·· c·te Ch · ForMed School r. ryan 1 s anges COMMISSIONER Made, Largely Due .'1'o St.udent Uovernment Seventeen years ago Wake For- est College had five buildings, 400 students, freshmen. wlio were afraid to show their faces at night, and government by faculty policing. Today Wake Forest College has tweive buildings, ·1050 students, freshmen who stay out nights Carpenter -Predicts New Board of Commissioners Unit WillrBe.In Nation's Sees No Opposition To Upper Ten Per Cent City Plan PLANS APPROVED cosT-.··To BE LOW Prospectus For Work At Community House To Be Wiitston·Salem Reviewed Included In New · .At. MedicatAssociation PWA Group POET ProminenfPoet - Wiii_Give Programs·,HeJ.e John G. Neihardt Will1Be On Campus And TO SPEAK IN Writer To Give Evening And Talk;J; Hold Open Forum · with upperc_lassmen, _and legi.sU'.- . The . Bowman Gray School of An indication o.f enthusiasm Three special appearan. loave , Administration official& of Wake · · .,.., tion by student governors. Medicine ,of.·W.ake, Forest College and approval was noted several been arr_an ged for the benefi• of r i Forest College gave plans for the r Dr. D. B. Bryan, on the seven- will be in· the--upper ten· per cent days ago, :when members of the Wake Forest student&-of __ --_ali .-1;.a 8 , ,, !new . convention-sponsored chapel -r- b teenth anniversary of· his dEan- of medical schools of the na- Wake Forest town commission es and departments w.hen._T_.o'h" G. t.. : uilding preliminary examination 1 "' -r Tu . ship, portrayed this cavalcade of .tion, Dean C. C. Carpenter pre- voted to have engineer& draw up Neihardt, prominent A_ .. m. e'"'can 1: 1 e..... y, when the college archi- · "T 1, ,teet, William Henley Dietrich · · · · change <to· members of the Facul- dieted. today, if .plans for- the new final plans for a proposed! poet, lecturer and-eminent-acho,Iar, ty Club when they met last Mon- .unit.at.·Winston-Salem. develop ac- munity house and swimming pool. comes to the campus Mondav iand :. tRaleigh, . brought the first draft , · JOHN G. NEIHARDT , :_,,here. day • night at Miss Williams cording. to· schedule. Opposition to the issue has not Tuesday of next week, March j4-5, for their monthly banquet. Dr. Ca·rpentter .. made the predic- been felt, apparently, in any man- Beginning with the pro ..... ..m to .pll\ns, cWhlch _included the · s ck H o•--r ., .architect's scale drawings of Tin Stove Days tion following.his return from Chi- ner to date; howeve1·, it has been mu ·er ere be given in the church auditozium In retrospect, Dr. Bryan eom- _cago,. where he attended the an- suggested that any townsman at 8 o'clock Monday night, !Dr. ,. ,botq the _exterior and interior of pared the days when Wake Forest nual ·.Congress of the American who might be opposed to or in I p s . Neihardt will read and lectur·a to . the. -structure and blueprints of STANLEY WINBORNE , . 0 eace e " ' the "iloor pian, call for a building ------------ WM heated by <tin stoves to the Medical .. .Aissociation (luring which favor of the project should let his nes his audience-,-which. is open -tO aU --. of typical colonial design Jike Wake Forest of 1940, giving an meeting plans for. the Bowman expression-either way-be heard· student& and 'Visitors. No admis.. ,, :Wait, Hall. ·.· Re.J bcic.k' and white Winborne Opens insight into changing attitudes of Gray School were reviewed by by . either Mayor Harvey HoldiJJg sian charge ·will be made for the ,, stone' •of same- kind of which students and faculty dul'ing that de'ans of various medical schools or. any one of the city commis- Youth Secretary Fellow. program. _;the - administration building is Lect' ure' Serl·es period. and by officials of the Associa.- sioners, including Dr. c. S, Black, ship By Reconciliation Chapel Period : be used.· There is now little left for the tion. Ray Harris, Sam Sidenberg, Wal- To Be Here Friday A.gain on , h'l.. ;will Dean's office to do in student Doctors Approve Plans ter Holiday, or Dr. G. W. Pas- speak, with special attention be- . --Two Assembly. Rooms control, Dean Bryan said, as he "If . plans for the courses of chal. ing given to members of Ellgiiah Wl 'th a gro··->• and " Uti•Iiti·es Comnu·ssi'oner To · As a follow-up t«> Dr. Chalme1·s• ' praised the Student Government, stu•dty, -the faculty, and other ar- classes which have- been. studying raised main flwr,. the chapel will Address Young Dems. When the dean first came to rangements for medicai teaching Plans Require $30,000 addreS$ to the student body, Don h.is poems, primarily "The.- ;Song cGntain two assembly .. :rooms on M d ·N· ht Go Smucker, youth secretary of the · on ay, Ig Wake Forest, the Student v- develop according to the outline According to the latest esti- of Three Friends" ._and_ .. "-.l._h_ the mlll ·n floor and at ground - · Fellowship of Wl'll . .m- ---- .:· · ernment had been in effect for a presented in Chicago, full approv- mates·, a total of $30,000 will be .. of Hugh Glass.." Advanced--stu- . el -will have classrooms and stu- 1 ed d 1 · be on the campus Friday, March · --- , · · · Th b' t' ··t 1 ed b th sh()rt period·. It was P ann ' an al bv the councl of the assoc1a- requ 1 'red to complete the plans dent& will also be adm"ted to tbia ; .dioo ·for the music depatment and ' e Jg ac lVI Y P ann ' Y e b ' · 8. He will apeak in chapel in the Y D t ' Cl b f w k its constitution was drawn up Y tion is assured," Dr. Carpenter and of <that amount about '"20,000 lect.ure, which is to take· the- piace .. ciassrooms, offices, and a I oung emocra s u 0 a e I f 'I' morning and will speak in 103 · · F t f th 1 t' I Professor E. W. Timber ake o said. might be advanced through WPA of a regular chapel-service·-at:9•,"0 room for the department of reli- ores or e e ec Jon year 0 Waite Hall at 4:30 and 7:30. All " · · 1940 'II t und a M d the Law School, who was dean of A compa-rison. of the facilities fundis, thus leaving the town with A. M. Tuesday• . Both of these departments WI ge er w Y on ay · who want to know more about war · · ht t · 1 k h H the college from 1919 · to 1922. promised for the new school with about one-third of the total costs At 12:30 Tuesday. a special .. evnanded their work this mg a seven oe oc • w en on- "' resistance after hearing Dr. Chal- · · · _, bl Stan! bor Pub!" Responsibility Sobers Students those of other J.OUr year schools to bear. Varied comments luncheon has been arranaed_ for Y ear. in anticipation of the increas- ora e ey m ne, IC D C b 1 . h mers are invited· to these pro- · , • .. · Ut'l't' Co · · f N rth The Student Government gave leads r. arpenter to e 1eve t e heard here and <there, regarding the poet, sponsored by .the En,.\i'sh .. ed space which will be theirs. I 1 IllS mmiSS!Oner 0 0 grams. At the end of each of the .. · Ca 1' 'II b th f' t f students responsibility and this re- Bowman Gray unit will receive a the completion of plans for Department 1111d devoted p.;;- ...:. · ·The .la-rger assembly rwm will ro ma, WI e e m! 0 a se- D . He afternoon and night programs .......... · · · · · f · t kdr to ad sponsibility sobered them, r. high ranlqng. made the com- pool, and without exception citi- I" to the students of co_ n•·mp 0 ., ..... , seat 2200 persons and has a stage ries 0 P•vmmen spea • 8 f there will be a period for ques• ' "" -- .. · --- · th Bryan pointed out. o . parison with other schools on the zens seemed to express hearty ap- literature and <those interested ia U_lJOn w_ hich 300 p'ersons may be w:ess e group. tions arodt discussion. . B'll B 'd t f t" this there has been little need• of basis of an American Medical As- proval of its materialization. creative writing. Wooten's, Home- ·.!!. eated_ ·, _The_ ._ s_ pace will be ample 1 urgwyn, pres! en ° ue , Following graduation from· · · · ·• · .. · ._-for commencement . exerci·ses, Young . Democrats, "We are faculty control from the dean s soclation report entitled, "Medical An estimate from authentic tel has been chosen as the scene - '' h · h U Bluffton College, Ohio, in 1936, · · · .... · d d f rtu t · h · M office, for as the college as Education in t e nited States, sources has been taken as to the of the_ luncheon, after which there ce · Wake Forest gr8idiuating 111 ee 0 na e m avmg r. Don E. Smucker began graduate W. b 'th H · ·orne of age, so has the student 1934 to 1939", which :ranks the value of •'-- pool and the length of will follow an open . classes have not exceeded two hun- m orne WI us. e 18 a man " "'"" study at Yale in the field of so- •""'" --dr--ed Behi who '---, for been outstand- body .come of age, he demon- schools on endowment, income, time which would be involved in He's FrGm. MiBBouri nd the mal ·n aud•to - """ - cial ethics. In the sun1mer of · · ·• n- 1 "trated. plant andi e_quipment, clinical ma- paving for 1'tself. A very liberal Coming to Wake Fore•t :um. will be a smaller one with 250 ing in No!!th Caro ina.' •· 1937 he directed the Yale Indus- . - ' M ti Be • Earl As a definite example of stu- terials, staff and other items. estimate indicated that "the pool home in Branson, M. o., Dr •.. · "M_ ei- . seats:. · ·This room will be used for ee ng gms Y trial Research at the Ford Motor .. · · Off' · 1 f th rgan1' ti·on dent pro""'ess, Dr. B_ryail told of Carpenter At Maryland should· pay for 1"tself in from sev- hardt will be accompanY--'· by .his such : meeti""'S as those of the !Cia s 0 ' e 0 za .,. · · · - Company. As a member of the . · ""! .... t th f t t'--t th ti the abolition -of hazing at Waka On the way h'ome from Chicagoo en to ten years"-at the most. son, Si""'"'d, who -will pla.,· piano cam, pus organizations, .for 8 ressew e ac .,.. e mee ng · · - _,_ Bureau of University Travel sem- ,_ · · · -,:,ch ·· . - will begin at .7 p. m. in the Social Forest, this reform being instigat- Dr, Carpenter iuspected the new. That . includes an allowance selections during the of w... more is · ed .. .._,..- ·S'""'dent Government pilam : 1 , of tKe""Uiffw_ · · 'p'·-;;-;;;t' 1 ;eii"'"I·e--s··. of ·or addi· inar in the summer of· 1938• Mr. readings and I·""ures.- elder .... ,_. Plans . Science Buililiilg·'and 'will··be con: "• "'' ... h . h .•¥ . n -a Smucker traveled through eleven """ v Pl. · f. · th · · clud·ed in ample time for all of working with the faculty, Coac l1111d MediciJJ · ·sc ool, one. of the tions to the former plan. Neihardt has spent the winter, in · ans or e .st"'•nture which - i h L A European countries, mving special ·.. .... _.,. ·.. · ..... · d' t J1 'm Weaver was ""ven credit uy most modern n t e nation. . . ... New Mexico, workin"'. on· ." ... th · d b the Sta B Mr. Wmborne's au lence to a - ... · be h Year Around Pro""si't1'on stud" to Germany, the Soviet .... onze Y · . · te ap- ,tend the lecture of John G. Nei- the Dean for greatly assisting m O'Brien, a mem r of the are i- "v ' Song of Jedediah Smith," which- '.-Coovention in its . annual · hi d Union, and the Scandinavian · .. · - h dt hi h 'II b · at 8 p m bringing about this change. tectural fU'IIl w cth t'W the plans As the show, the combina- when completed-will be the meeting' ",.in_· Raleigh last N DVem- ar • w c WI egm · · . · 1 __ ._ 1 h countries, He became youth sec- · I t . f the xe ut1've Dr. Bryan al.<lo spoke of admim- for the medica *<•OO - ospital tion pool and community house third narrative poem- of "The Epic ber, mu. st be oonsidered by the n a mee mg 0 e c h · retary of the Fellowship of Re- 'tt f the y De stration . changes·. The e ief unit at Winston-Salem, joined· him will provide a year-around propo- Cycle -of the West", and will mark College Bo, atd of Trustees_and al- comml ee 0 oung mo- conciliation, an organization of re- t 1 t M d · ht t nt·· change during the seventeen years in inspection. sition. Summer will find the ""O! the completion of .the·, cvele , "pun so by an appointive committee of era s a.s on ay mg • a e "- rv ligious pacifists, in 1939. ' '" the State Convention. The two tive · program for the year was has been the centralization of de- Construction on the $750,000 an adequate and appropriate place which he haso been at work for ap- . d Meeti g of the organ partments, he said. addition will begin early in June, for bathers, while winter, fall, and Lecturing In South proximately out of groups will work in ad,- rawn up. n s - -a ministrating building. plans: ization will be held every two Departments Are Unified' and· it is expected that the school spring activities will not be ham- Nt present he is lecturing to the last twenty-elght. . ' " .W ,will _ begin . on the new weeks, featuring addresses by out- In. 1923 departments were scat- will be ready for occupancy by the pered, since the community house students through the South. From The story behind the poet &lid t d . · state polJ"tJ"cs Sec tered in buildings over the cani- opening of school in 1941. will be equipped in such a man- Februar" 26 to March '10 he is man Neihardt is one .. which. eould after, the .. dra.wings ,receive san mg meTL m . - ' -of. the. two bodies. 1·etary of State Thad· Eure has ac- pus with no binding factory. Since ner that everything from lodge speaking at twelve colleges. Hisl be Thus it is entirely poosible, evim cepted an invitation to speak lo that time <they have been unified in DebaterS Speak meetings to movies may be staged. theme for the tour is "Pacifist ter writers of -today. , ,,es- probable, tliat the building may be the asaembledt club, although the one place and under one head•, The setting will provide a com- Youth in Action", and the organ!- tablishing .his reputation.aa a po.. ready . for occupancy some . time date of his talk has not yet been The DeaTL's office has adminis- At L • Rb munity center. Grounds and sur- zaiion of peace terms is his con- et with the three volumes of lyr- t tered tllil Wake Forest summer eDOJI'• yne rounding areas will be landscaped D · h' talk h h nex:t.year, se . tw t D B cern. urmg IS s ere e (Continued On Back Page) LUillberton. Talk Cooley To Speak for en Y years, r. ry- and the spGt in general will be will probably stress the religious · Representative Harold Cooley of an said. The entire enrollmen<t turned into a park, amply-spaced basis of pacifism and: the power Fourth District may also be se- during this time has been 10,000, Five members of the Wake For- and furnished to take care of of non-violent resistance and oth- cured to addfess the organization. while the budget has totaled ap- est debate squad! left early Thur"'" children and adults alike. er methods of pacifist action. If Young Democrats extended an proximately $275,000. day for Hickory where they will Included in the plan for the enough students townspeople invitation to Governor Hooy to In the pll<St seven years the Na- participate in the annual South community house is a la:rge room, who want to do anti-war work speak, but the governor was fore- tiona! Youth Administration has Atlantic Forensic Tourney held si:x:ty by feet, com- are found, a new peace team may Dr, 0, T. Binkley will be the speaker when :Wake Forest Night is observed tomorrow at the Lum- berton First Baptist Church, with Professor AI Martin, Professor ed to decline tbh.e invitation be- paid/ $70,000 in aiding 500 men, this year at Lenoir Rhyne Col- pletely furnished and applicable be organized, cause of ill health which prevents the Dean declared. · lege. to varied occasions. Huge . fire- All townspeople and students him from scheduling any talks Dr. Bryan graduated from the Professqr George Copple, debate places at either end of the room who want to know more about the this .spring. University of North Carolina ·in c9ach, accompanied the delegation will serve as a heating plant, and pacifist movement are invited to _ .. Memory, .and the colll>gc .octet on the program. Social events are also included· 1911. He took his M. A. at Colum- which consisted of Bob Goldberg a preparation rwm will adjoin 103 Waite Hall at 4:30 and 7:30 (Continued On Baek Page) (Continued On Back Page) and Ralph Brumet. affinnativc, the main floor. Friday. _ and Aadai Hoyle and Jim Gilli- ------------------------- land, negative, T. I. Davis ac- eompanied the team as after-din- Plans for this service in recog- nition of the college were made by :Dr. Charles Durham, pastor of the . church, and Professor.Memory. "Growth of Christian Person- . ality" will be .discussed by Professor Clonts Attentiveness of His Class : Binkley, head of the religion de "Queen Elizabeth had all the , partment. ·. Scripture reading l-ove of power and all the egotisti- . prayer will be made by Pr«lfe:!so:r 1 cal selfishness of her father, but ::Martin of the philosophy depart- she recognized that the desired ,.ment. Several numbe1111 will be absolutism.,_" And thus the ,·sung by the octet under the direc- student in English history contin- t-tion of Professor DGnald Pfohl. ued his oratqry. · ·_Prof. Mlllltin, <Jf the 'cq(l!lge The audienc.e of scholars lis- ' philosoP,hy Will· leilq tened with rapt 11ttention as the ,,.the devoP.oll!!-lB' at the. speeja! voluble lad turned on an eloquent . spiel, Sol!le .sti-ained their ea,rs, others -w:$hl.ed their foreheaqs, Following .sel'Vice, !1, disC1lJ!- and some so far as to sit on : .!li!!n will lie l(!JIL b;v Proff;lssor the edge of their seats, ostensibil' ,_pf;lr Memory Qf the Edttcation in an effort to hear every word , partment <!!rector of the !!bout Elizabeth. One . lege News Bl!l'l!au, youth was f;lVen seen to plug one After $in¢ng :for the ear up with a blackened forefing- at the Fayetteville Baptist Church er, apparently -to F.hut out all on Sunday morning, the will sounds coming in the oppGslte di- go to Lumberton for the Wake rectii>n. Forest Night. Sacred aelections Professor Is Amazed ,_will be sung. An arrangement or .the Lord's Prayer by Mr. Pfohl, "Into the Woods My Master .Went", by Nevin, and "God So · Loved the World", by Stainer, will be included. And to say that Profes.sor Clonts, seated in the back of the room was awe-stricken, perturbed, and baffled would not be an exaggeration. He furrow- ed his brow, stroked his. chin, and over-enthusiastic radio lll.lnouneer_ was audible. The book store clerk <had probably turned to station where the "true-to-life storv of Hardluck Harry" was to broadcast. Now the words of the announcer were be- coming more vociferous-but still unin'telligible. The haranguer on the platform before the history class sang out louder and louder, as· if competing with the scream- ing announcer. Grins With And still the students' atten- •tion was scholarly indeed·. Pro- fessor Clonts grinned with pride. Now tile words of the radio de- claimer were . becoming more lu- cid. Several students ensconced themselves in the chairs, and many dropped their pencils into their pockets. Professor Clonts was .ddsturbed. Then a few words of the lll.lnouncer were heard·: "Cline is speeding down the court. He passed to Davis, •.• " Emmett Davis will accompany octet. Members of the octet . are Bell and Talley, seoond ten. · or.s; Stinchcomb and Winders, ·:.first tenors; Parker and Tobey, ,-baritones; and Ellington and Bau- .-.com, basses. The group was 'Chosen from the glee flub for spe- :. cia! concerts where a small nu·m- :;ber.of llersons is · ' the ends of his mDuth turned up- The student who was reciting ward· as if an incipient smile. could scarcely be heard above the His students were truly scholars uproar. And Profll$sor Clonts to perfection today. But still he I (who also loves bBI!ketball games) could not account for it. Howev- declared smi!iiJgly: "J sha11 not er, it did not lilt long as attempt tD contest riy!il any his class Jistene4 with atten- longer. Class dismissed," Ah: tiveness as manifest n!Jw· That tournaments were ·like Sat- Soon the Ii!S.tant V<'ice o:f urday.s and every weeki ner speaker. Last year the tournament was won by Wake Forest with Wor- rell, Hoyle, Gol:d!berg, Brumet, and Davis taking top honors in their division. · The State-wide Peace Oratori- cal contest was held last night at Lenoir-Rhyne, with speakers rep- resenting every rollege for men in North Carolina. Bob was the Wa]{e Fo:rest representa- tive. So far this year the Deacon de- baters have won the major hon- ors in the Dixie and Appalacltian tournaments. As yet, !l'esults of the after-din- ner speaking and the Peace Ora- torical contest have not been an- nounced. MOREHEAD NAMED TO HIGH POST R. P. Morehead, associate professor -of Pathology in tbe Med· ical School, was this week named as one of three counsellors for the Tri-State Medical Association which recently met in Richmond, Va. Other counsellors were named from South Carolina and Virginia. While at the meeting Dr. More- head discussed papers. read by Dr . G. C. Cook on '!Chemical Aspects of Surgery" imd by Dr. R. B. Da- vis of Greensboro on "Diagnosis of Appendicitis." A Charlotte physician, Dr. A, G. Brenzier, was elected president of the three-state aasoclation. Dogs, Dogs, To Dogs We're Going Doggone Fast .According to a Staitelllent in the "Who's Wllo in the More Fonni- dable Kennel Circles," the town of Wake Forest, N, C., located six- teen mUes northeast of Raleigh, on U. S, Route Number one, and on the Seaboard Airline Railway, has more dogs per capita than any other town in the entire world, That, our friends, is a broad statement. TJJ.en !there must be some expla- nation for all of the sudden and persistent influx oi doggery. In investigating the most logical sources for reasons, United Press, Associated Press, and the Inter- national News Service were stump- ed: but not the Old Gold and Black. Upon studying the situation from all angles, (including from a hy- drant point of view), we have col- lectively and undisputt'dly come to a mass agreement. The dogs hang out at Wake Forest because they can find so much company. Now don't take this tJ!e wrong way. That doesn't h11rt t-hose to whom it doesn't apply. It only applies to those whG around barking, biting, and growling bones, There are many anecdotes at- tached to the dogs' persistence m pervading the Wake Forest cam- pus. One comes from the Govern- ment class. The story goes that one day a shaggy dog lumbered in about the time the lecture be- gan. The class was studying (theoretically) political - parties thlllt day, He stayed for one class period, and-so the more infonn- ed circ!e,s have .sworn-ran for Senate the next election. Then there comes the one about the literary hound that invaded an English class one day-literature it was-and kept his girl-friend howling with Byron's poems for three days. (Another one sat in on a seminar group and· came away with a stomach ache, un- doubtedly derived from Snyder's sandwiches.) In the way of continu1111ce, it has been said that several dogs attended a meeting of the minis- terial conference one night, and the following day, it was discov. ered that every chicken-house in town had been raided!. 'I1he moral of this story is less than the sheer story-value involved in its telling. But there is one more thing to be included, and it, incidentally, affords a little relief; according to rumors from the town govenunent, there is soon to be a hunting season declared open on dogs. And in order to save the space of further advertising and in har- mony with a statement made by Dr. Pearson, any one who wants a dog of any description can find him at a moment's whistle. Officers Chosen ByGolden;Bo!Jh The quesrtion of the position which the Golden Bough will oc- cupy on the campUS< if a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa,. national ,lJ9D- orary scholarship fratern).t,., .!n· stalled here next year the election of new o1ficers ibis week. · .. The selection was made early, it was said, so that _the new 1 will have plenty of time for .. ing plans before assuming· office at the beginning of next term. John Avera was· chosen preai· dent, Alan Scott vice.president and Edwin Woolbert treasurer. Avera . and . Woolbert are at present academic &eniora and will enter the medica( schOol next year. Scott is a :firat year medical student. Hayes Makes Statement James Hayes, president of .. the Golden Bough this . year; that the nature of the Golden Bough next year will be Jarrely determined by whether .or not a petition for a Wake. Fo.rest, duip- ter of Phi Kappa is granted. If it is not granted, he. :Gi?ld- en Bough will continue to oceupy the position it now occupieS. : If it is granted, Golden Bough's -poei- tion will be changed ··. aomewllat and its membership requirement. altered in such a way 'lluit · bership in Phi Beta Kappa ·and Omicron Delta Kappa, ailothel' na- tional honorary scholarship fra- ternity, of which here is already a local chapter will be .l*eaiaey for eligibility. · · .. -- Golden Bough now occupies a "top" position on the campus aad has standards as high aa the na- tional Phi Beta Kappa. In case a local chapter- of .. Phi Beta Kappa is bistslled, . GOldoen Bough's posittion will become-.an- alagous to t'hat of the Red Jirlan, of l)Qke. ·

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Page 1: ~' 0 HPJaas·DranUp Faculty Club Hea·rs ·Dean …..... ciassrooms, offices, and a a~EnlTLar I Y oung D t emocra s u ' Cl b f 0 w a e k its constitution was drawn I up Y f tion is

. ' .. . ··- '

.. -...

-~~ PRESERVER AND. CREATOR

. • '- !"- ~ ,.. .... -

~~~~-,'fflE./l'PWN

_ .. _._ .. .-. -· ~' .......... ····· ... .

--=-·-

SPRING IS JUST A.ROUNJ>

• TBE.'C9RmlR:.i... · . RAIN,AND p()~-TPP.AY

Vol. XXIII •. ·No,.J9 - Z..538 , WAKE FOREST; NORTH CAROLINA, SATUROAY,.lr\ARCH 2, i940 PRICE: TEN CENTS P,EltCOPY 0 :.:...~.w.~~""!"''"''"'~"· ,,.,.,~,,.. .• , •"" '••~--• "'••" '

HPJaas·DranUp B y ~ArChitects For New. Chapel

1 ;TRUS_TE.~~ .,..,...,...,._

·_; 1Two Spacious Assembly Rooms Included On · Ground Floor

Faculty Club Hea·rs ·Dean De~fcn~ecast! ·Praise StJident ·Progress HJ~hestRankmg

Citizens Indicate Their Approval For Pool Project · . *n B ·· c·te Ch · ForMed School

r. ryan 1 s anges COMMISSIONER Made, Largely Due .'1'o

St.udent Uovernment

Seventeen years ago Wake For­est College had five buildings, 400 students, freshmen. wlio were afraid to show their faces at night, and government by faculty policing.

Today Wake Forest College has tweive buildings, ·1050 students, freshmen who stay out nights

Carpenter -Predicts New Board of Commissioners Unit WillrBe.In Nation's Sees No Opposition To

Upper Ten Per Cent City Plan

PLANS APPROVED cosT-.··To • BE LOW

Prospectus For Work At Community House To Be Wiitston·Salem Reviewed Included In New · .At. MedicatAssociation PWA Group

POET ProminenfPoet - ~ Wiii_Give ~Three

Programs·,HeJ.e John G. Neihardt Will1Be

On Campus M~~~ay And Tuesd~y

TO SPEAK IN CHUR~

Writer To Give Evening And Convocat~<m. Talk;J;

Hold Open Forum · with upperc_lassmen, _and legi.sU'.- . The . Bowman Gray School of An indication o.f enthusiasm Three special appearan. ~- loave , Administration official& of Wake · · ~.. .,.., tion by student governors. Medicine ,of.·W.ake, Forest College and approval was noted several been arr_an ged for the benefi• of r i Forest College gave plans for the r

Dr. D. B. Bryan, on the seven- will be in· the--upper ten· per cent days ago, :when members of the Wake Forest student&-of __ --_ali .-1;.a8

, ,, !new . convention-sponsored chapel -r-b teenth anniversary of· his dEan- of the-~ medical schools of the na- Wake Forest town commission es and departments w.hen._T_.o'h" G. t.. : uilding preliminary examination 1 "' -r Tu -~- . ship, portrayed this cavalcade of .tion, Dean C. C. Carpenter pre- voted to have engineer& draw up Neihardt, prominent A_ .. m. e'"'can 1: 1 e ..... y, when the college archi- · "T

1, ,teet, William Henley Dietrich · · · · change <to· members of the Facul- dieted. today, if .plans for- the new final plans for a proposed! com~ poet, lecturer and-eminent-acho,Iar, ty Club when they met last Mon- .unit.at.·Winston-Salem. develop ac- munity house and swimming pool. comes to the campus Mondav iand :. tRaleigh, . brought the first draft , · JOHN G. NEIHARDT ~ ,

:_,,here. day • night at Miss J~ Williams cording. to· schedule. Opposition to the issue has not Tuesday of next week, March j4-5, for their monthly banquet. Dr. Ca·rpentter .. made the predic- been felt, apparently, in any man- Beginning with the pro ..... ..m to The~ .pll\ns, cWhlch _included the · s ck H o•--r

., .architect's scale drawings of Tin Stove Days tion following.his return from Chi- ner to date; howeve1·, it has been mu ·er ere be given in the church auditozium In retrospect, Dr. Bryan eom- _cago,. where he attended the an- suggested that any townsman at 8 o'clock Monday night, !Dr.

,. ,botq the _exterior and interior of pared the days when Wake Forest nual ·.Congress of the American who might be opposed to or in I p s . Neihardt will read and lectur·a to . the. -structure and blueprints of STANLEY WINBORNE , . 0 eace e " ' the "iloor pian, call for a building ------------ WM heated by <tin stoves to the Medical .. .Aissociation (luring which favor of the project should let his nes his audience-,-which. is open -tO aU

--. of typical colonial design Jike Wake Forest of 1940, giving an meeting plans for. the Bowman expression-either way-be heard· student& and 'Visitors. No admis.. ,, :Wait, Hall. ·.· Re.J bcic.k' and white Winborne Opens insight into changing attitudes of Gray School were reviewed by by . either Mayor Harvey HoldiJJg sian charge ·will be made for the ,, stone' •of ~~ same- kind of which students and faculty dul'ing that de'ans of various medical schools or. any one of the city commis- Youth Secretary Fellow. program. _;the - administration building is Lect' ure' Serl·es period. and by officials of the Associa.- sioners, including Dr. c. S, Black, ship By Reconciliation Chapel Period .'J;'u~y : ·-~~:will be used.· There is now little left for the tion. Ray Harris, Sam Sidenberg, Wal- To Be Here Friday A.gain on Tue~ay , h'l .. ;will

Dean's office to do in student Doctors Approve Plans ter Holiday, or Dr. G. W. Pas- speak, with special attention be-. --Two Assembly. Rooms control, Dean Bryan said, as he "If . plans for the courses of chal. ing given to members of Ellgiiah Wl'th a gro··->• fl~r and " Uti•Iiti·es Comnu·ssi'oner To · As a follow-up t«> Dr. Chalme1·s• WW~. ~ ' ~ praised the Student Government, stu•dty, -the faculty, and other ar- classes which have- been. studying

raised main flwr,. the chapel will Address Young Dems. When the dean first came to rangements for medicai teaching Plans Require $30,000 addreS$ to the student body, Don h.is poems, primarily "The.- ;Song cGntain two assembly .. :rooms on M d ·N· ht Go Smucker, youth secretary of the · on ay, Ig Wake Forest, the Student v- develop according to the outline According to the latest esti- of Three Friends" ._and_ .. "-.l._h_ e,~ng the mlll·n floor and at ground - · Fellowship of R~nl'liatJ'on, Wl'll . .m----- .:· · ~ ernment had been in effect for a presented in Chicago, full approv- mates·, a total of $30,000 will be ~w .. ~ of Hugh Glass.." Advanced--stu-

. el -will have classrooms and stu- 1 ed d 1 · be on the campus Friday, March · --- , · · · Th b' t' ··t 1 ed b th sh()rt period·. It was P ann ' an al bv the councl of the assoc1a- requ1'red to complete the plans dent& will also be adm"ted to tbia ; .dioo ·for the music depatment and ' e Jg ac lVI Y P ann ' Y e b ' · 8. He will apeak in chapel in the ·~ Y D t ' Cl b f w k its constitution was drawn up Y tion is assured," Dr. Carpenter and of <that amount about '"20,000 lect.ure, which is to take· the- piace .. ciassrooms, offices, and a a~EnlTLar I oung emocra s u 0 a e I f 'I' morning and will speak in 103

· · ~- F t f th 1 t' I Professor E. W. Timber ake o said. might be advanced through WPA of a regular chapel-service·-at:9•,"0 room for the department of reli- ores or e e ec Jon year 0 Waite Hall at 4:30 and 7:30. All " · · 1940 'II t und a M d the Law School, who was dean of A compa-rison. of the facilities fundis, thus leaving the town with A. M. Tuesday • . gi~n. Both of these departments WI ge er w Y on ay · who want to know more about war

· · ht t · • 1 k h H the college from 1919 · to 1922. promised for the new school with about one-third of the total costs At 12:30 Tuesday. a special --~.ave .. evnanded their work this mg a seven oe oc • w en on- "' resistance after hearing Dr. Chal- · · · _, bl Stan! w· bor Pub!" Responsibility Sobers Students those of other J.OUr year schools to bear. Varied comments luncheon has been arranaed_ for Year. in anticipation of the increas- ora e ey m ne, IC D C b 1. h mers are invited· to these pro- · , • ..

· Ut'l't' Co · · f N rth The Student Government gave leads r. arpenter to e 1eve t e heard here and <there, regarding the poet, sponsored by .the En,.\i'sh .. ed space which will be theirs. I 1 IllS mmiSS!Oner 0 0 grams. At the end of each of the .. · Ca 1' 'II b th f' t f students responsibility and this re- Bowman Gray unit will receive a the completion of plans for Department 1111d devoted p.;;-• ...:. · ·The .la-rger assembly rwm will ro ma, WI e e m! 0 a se- D . He afternoon and night programs ..........

· · · · · f ~- · t kdr to ad sponsibility sobered them, r. high ranlqng. made the com- pool, and without exception citi- I" to the students of co_ n•·mp0.,....., seat 2200 persons and has a stage ries 0 P•vmmen spea • 8 • f there will be a period for ques• ' "" --.. · --- · ~-- th Bryan pointed out. ~cause o . parison with other schools on the zens seemed to express hearty ap- literature and <those interested ia ~ U_lJOn w_ hich 300 p'ersons may be w:ess e group. tions arodt discussion. . B'll B 'd t f t" this there has been little need• of basis of an American Medical As- proval of its materialization. creative writing. Wooten's, Home-·.!!. eated_ ·, _The_ ._ s_ pace will be ample 1 urgwyn, pres! en ° ue , Following graduation from· · · · · • · .. · ._-for commencement . exerci·ses, Young . Democrats, ~aid, "We are faculty control from the dean s soclation report entitled, "Medical An estimate from authentic tel has been chosen as the scene - '' h · h U Bluffton College, Ohio, in 1936, · · · .... · d d f rtu t · h · M office, for as the college as Education in t e nited States, sources has been taken as to the of the_ luncheon, after which there ·,·_>~n.·n ce · Wake Forest gr8idiuating 111 ee 0 na e m avmg r. Don E. Smucker began graduate

W. b 'th H · ·orne of age, so has the student 1934 to 1939", which :ranks the value of •'-- pool and the length of will follow an open fo~·-. classes have not exceeded two hun- m orne WI us. e 18 a man " "'"" study at Yale in the field of so- •""'" --dr--ed Behi who '---, for ye·~s been outstand- body . come of age, he demon- schools on endowment, income, time which would be involved in He's FrGm. MiBBouri nd the mal·n aud•to - """ - cial ethics. In the sun1mer of · · ·• n- 1 • "trated. plant andi e_quipment, clinical ma- paving for 1'tself. A very liberal Coming to Wake Fore•t fro~·his :um. will be a smaller one with 250 ing in No!!th Caro ina.' ~ •· 1937 he directed the Yale Indus- . ~ -' M ti Be • Earl As a definite example of stu- terials, staff and other items. estimate indicated that "the pool home in Branson, M. o., Dr •.. · "M_ ei-. seats:. · ·This room will be used for ee ng gms Y trial Research at the Ford Motor ~ .. · · Off' · 1 f th rgan1' ti·on dent pro""'ess, Dr. B_ryail told of Carpenter At Maryland should· pay for 1"tself in from sev- hardt will be accompanY--'· by .his such : meeti""'S as those of the !Cia s 0 ' e 0 za .,. · · · - Company. As a member of the . · ""! -·

.... t ~- th f t t'--t th ti the abolition -of hazing at Waka On the way h'ome from Chicagoo en to ten years"-at the most. son, Si""'"'d, who -will pla.,· piano ;~rger._,_ cam, pus organizations, .for 8 ressew e ac .,.. e mee ng · · - _,_ Bureau of University Travel sem- ,_ · · ~ · -,:,ch ·· . - will begin at .7 p. m. in the Social Forest, this reform being instigat- Dr, Carpenter iuspected the new. That . includes an allowance selections during the pro~ of

w... more ~ace is · ed .. .._,..- ~'-e ·S'""'dent Government pilam :1, of tKe""Uiffw_ ni~-','&f•M · · 'p'·-;;-;;;t'1;eii"'"I·e--s··. of repn~- ·or addi· inar in the summer of· 1938• Mr. readings and I·""ures.- ,Th~ elder .... ,_. irriUiteii&~to'Gei Plans . Science Buililiilg·'and 'will··be con: "• "'' ... h . h .•¥ . ~~~~- n -a Smucker traveled through eleven """ v

Pl. · f. · th · · clud·ed in ample time for all of working with the faculty, Coac l1111d MediciJJ · ·sc ool, one. of the tions to the former plan. Neihardt has spent the winter, in · ans or e .st"'•nture which - • i h • L A European countries, mving special ·.. .... _.,. ·.. · ..... • · d' t J1'm Weaver was ""ven credit uy most modern n t e nation. . . ... New Mexico, workin"'. on· ." ... '~'~"B th · d b the Sta B Mr. Wmborne's au lence to a - ... · be h Year Around Pro""si't1'on stud" to Germany, the Soviet .... :or~ .,wa!-·:~u. onze Y · . · te ap- ,tend the lecture of John G. Nei- the Dean for greatly assisting m O'Brien, a mem r of the are i- "v ' Song of Jedediah Smith," which-ti~ '.-Coovention in its . annual · hi d Union, and the Scandinavian · .. · - h dt hi h 'II b · at 8 p m bringing about this change. tectural fU'IIl w cth t'W the plans As the p~ans show, the combina- when completed-will be the meeting' ",.in_· Raleigh last N DVem- ar • w c WI egm · · . · 1 __ ._ 1 h countries, He became youth sec- ·

I t. f the xe ut1've Dr. Bryan al.<lo spoke of admim- for the medica *<•OO - ospital tion pool and community house third narrative poem- of "The Epic ber, mu. st be oonsidered by the n a mee mg 0 e c h · retary of the Fellowship of Re-'tt f the y De stration . changes·. The e ief unit at Winston-Salem, joined· him will provide a year-around propo- Cycle -of the West", and will mark College Bo, atd of Trustees_and al- comml ee 0 oung mo- conciliation, an organization of re-

t 1 t M d · ht t nt·· change during the seventeen years in th~ inspection. sition. Summer will find the ""O! the completion of .the·, cvele , "pun so by an appointive committee of era s a.s on ay mg • a e "- rv ligious pacifists, in 1939. ' '" the State Convention. The two tive · program for the year was has been the centralization of de- Construction on the $750,000 an adequate and appropriate place which he haso been at work for ap-

. d Meeti g of the organ partments, he said. addition will begin early in June, for bathers, while winter, fall, and Lecturing In South proximately ei~"'teen y~n...; out of groups will work tog~er in ad,- rawn up. n s - .,~ -a

ministrating building. plans: ization will be held every two Departments Are Unified' and· it is expected that the school spring activities will not be ham- Nt present he is lecturing to the last twenty-elght. . ' " . W ~rk , will _ begin . on the new weeks, featuring addresses by out- In. 1923 departments were scat- will be ready for occupancy by the pered, since the community house students through the South. From The story behind the poet &lid

t d. · state polJ"tJ"cs Sec tered in buildings over the cani- opening of school in 1941. will be equipped in such a man- Februar" 26 to March '10 he is man Neihardt is one .. which. eould c~apel after, the .. dra.wings ,receive san mg meTL m . - ' c~l_lfi,~;n~\ltion. -of. the. two bodies. 1·etary of State Thad· Eure has ac- pus with no binding factory. Since ner that everything from lodge speaking at twelve colleges. Hisl be char~teristic on!y.-of,~e"l)et-Thus it is entirely poosible, evim cepted an invitation to speak lo that time <they have been unified in DebaterS Speak meetings to movies may be staged. theme for the tour is "Pacifist ter writers of -today. , Af.~ ,,es-probable, tliat the building may be the asaembledt club, although the one place and under one head•, The setting will provide a com- Youth in Action", and the organ!- tablishing .his reputation.aa a po.. ready . for occupancy some . time date of his talk has not yet been The DeaTL's office has adminis- At L • Rb munity center. Grounds and sur- zaiion of peace terms is his con- et with the three volumes of lyr-

t tered tllil Wake Forest summer eDOJI'• yne rounding areas will be landscaped D · h' talk h h nex:t.year, se . tw t D B cern. urmg IS s ere e (Continued On Back Page)

B~eyToMake LUillberton. Talk

Cooley To Speak ~chool for en Y years, r. ry- and the spGt in general will be will probably stress the religious · Representative Harold Cooley of an said. The entire enrollmen<t turned into a park, amply-spaced basis of pacifism and: the power

Fourth District may also be se- during this time has been 10,000, Five members of the Wake For- and furnished to take care of of non-violent resistance and oth-cured to addfess the organization. while the budget has totaled ap- est debate squad! left early Thur"'" children and adults alike. er methods of pacifist action. If

Young Democrats extended an proximately $275,000. day for Hickory where they will Included in the plan for the enough students <~r townspeople invitation to Governor Hooy to In the pll<St seven years the Na- participate in the annual South community house is a la:rge room, who want to do anti-war work speak, but the governor was fore- tiona! Youth Administration has Atlantic Forensic Tourney held si:x:ty by thirty-sev~n feet, com- are found, a new peace team may

Dr, 0, T. Binkley will be the speaker when :Wake Forest Night is observed tomorrow at the Lum­berton First Baptist Church, with Professor AI Martin, Professor

ed to decline tbh.e invitation be- paid/ $70,000 in aiding 500 men, this year at Lenoir Rhyne Col- pletely furnished and applicable be organized, cause of ill health which prevents the Dean declared. · lege. to varied occasions. Huge . fire- All townspeople and students him from scheduling any talks Dr. Bryan graduated from the Professqr George Copple, debate places at either end of the room who want to know more about the this .spring. University of North Carolina ·in c9ach, accompanied the delegation will serve as a heating plant, and pacifist movement are invited to

_ J;~aper .. Memory, .and the colll>gc . octet on the program.

Social events are also included· 1911. He took his M. A. at Colum- which consisted of Bob Goldberg a preparation rwm will adjoin 103 Waite Hall at 4:30 and 7:30 (Continued On Baek Page) (Continued On Back Page) and Ralph Brumet. affinnativc, the main floor. Friday.

_ _::=.:=:.=...:..:::..::.::_~_::__:__.:__:__________ and Aadai Hoyle and Jim Gilli- ------------------------­land, negative, T. I. Davis ac­eompanied the team as after-din­

Plans for this service in recog­nition of the college were made by

:Dr. Charles Durham, pastor of the . church, and Professor.Memory.

"Growth of Christian Person­. ality" will be . discussed by D.~.·.

Professor Clonts Reme~:rks Attentiveness of His Class

: Binkley, head of the religion de "Queen Elizabeth had all the , partment. ·. Scripture reading l-ove of power and all the egotisti-. prayer will be made by Pr«lfe:!so:r 1 cal selfishness of her father, but ::Martin of the philosophy depart- she recognized that the desired ,.ment. Several numbe1111 will be absolutism.,_" And thus the ,·sung by the octet under the direc- student in English history contin-t-tion of Professor DGnald Pfohl. ued his oratqry. · ·_Prof. ~I Mlllltin, <Jf the 'cq(l!lge The audienc.e of scholars lis-

' philosoP,hy dep!!~ent, Will· leilq tened with rapt 11ttention as the ,,.the devoP.oll!!-lB' at the. speeja! ser~ voluble lad turned on an eloquent '~~: .· . spiel, Sol!le .sti-ained their ea,rs,

~U!!~i!l!l others -w:$hl.ed their foreheaqs, Following t!J~ .sel'Vice, !1, disC1lJ!- and some w~nt so far as to sit on

: .!li!!n will lie l(!JIL b;v Proff;lssor the edge of their seats, ostensibil' ,_pf;lr Memory Qf the Edttcation in an effort to hear every word , partment ~d <!!rector of the iter~ted !!bout Elizabeth. One . lege News Bl!l'l!au, youth was f;lVen seen to plug one

After $in¢ng :for the se~vices ear up with a blackened forefing­at the Fayetteville Baptist Church er, apparently -to F.hut out all on Sunday morning, the o~t will sounds coming in the oppGslte di­go to Lumberton for the Wake rectii>n. Forest Night. Sacred aelections Professor Is Amazed

,_will be sung. An arrangement or .the Lord's Prayer by Mr. Pfohl, "Into the Woods My Master .Went", by Nevin, and "God So · Loved the World", by Stainer, will be included.

And to say that Profes.sor Clonts, seated in the back of the room was awe-stricken, perturbed, and ~ompletely baffled would not be an exaggeration. He furrow­ed his brow, stroked his. chin, and

over-enthusiastic radio lll.lnouneer_ was audible. The book store clerk <had probably turned to som~ station where the "true-to-life storv of Hardluck Harry" was abo~t to b~ broadcast. Now the words of the announcer were be­coming more vociferous-but still unin'telligible. The haranguer on the platform before the history class sang out louder and louder, as· if competing with the scream­ing announcer.

Grins With Pri<f~t

And still the students' atten­•tion was scholarly indeed·. Pro­fessor Clonts grinned with pride. Now tile words of the radio de­claimer were . becoming more lu­cid. Several students ensconced themselves in the chairs, and many dropped their pencils into their pockets. Professor Clonts was .ddsturbed. Then a few words of the lll.lnouncer were heard·: "Cline is speeding down the court. He passed to Davis, •.• "

Emmett Davis will accompany ~the octet. Members of the octet . are Bell and Talley, seoond ten. · or.s; Stinchcomb and Winders, ·:.first tenors; Parker and Tobey, , -baritones; and Ellington and Bau­.-.com, basses. The group was 'Chosen from the glee flub for spe­

:. cia! concerts where a small nu·m­:;ber.of llersons is ~erieil. · '

the ends of his mDuth turned up- The student who was reciting ward· as if an incipient smile. could scarcely be heard above the His students were truly scholars uproar. And Profll$sor Clonts to perfection today. But still he I (who also loves bBI!ketball games) could not account for it. Howev- declared smi!iiJgly: "J sha11 not er, it did not :lllllt~r lilt long as attempt tD contest ~11-r riy!il any his class Jistene4 with s~ch atten- longer. Class dismissed," Ah: tiveness as manifest n!Jw· That tournaments were ·like Sat-

Soon the Ii!S.tant V<'ice o:f som~ urday.s and ~ every weeki

ner speaker. Last year the tournament was

won by Wake Forest with Wor­rell, Hoyle, Gol:d!berg, Brumet, and Davis taking top honors in their division. ·

The State-wide Peace Oratori­cal contest was held last night at Lenoir-Rhyne, with speakers rep­resenting every rollege for men in North Carolina. Bob Qold:be~g was the Wa]{e Fo:rest representa­tive.

So far this year the Deacon de­baters have won the major hon­ors in the Dixie and Appalacltian tournaments.

As yet, !l'esults of the after-din­ner speaking and the Peace Ora­torical contest have not been an­nounced.

MOREHEAD NAMED TO HIGH POST

D~. R. P. Morehead, associate professor -of Pathology in tbe Med· ical School, was this week named as one of three counsellors for the Tri-State Medical Association which recently met in Richmond, Va. Other counsellors were named from South Carolina and Virginia. While at the meeting Dr. More­head discussed papers. read by Dr . G. C. Cook on '!Chemical Aspects of Surgery" imd by Dr. R. B. Da­vis of Greensboro on "Diagnosis of Appendicitis." A Charlotte physician, Dr. A, G. Brenzier, was elected president of the three-state aasoclation.

Dogs, Dogs, To Dogs

We're Going Doggone Fast

.According to a Staitelllent in the "Who's Wllo in the More Fonni­dable Kennel Circles," the town of Wake Forest, N, C., located six­teen mUes northeast of Raleigh, on U. S, Route Number one, and on the Seaboard Airline Railway, has more dogs per capita than any other town in the entire world, That, our friends, is a broad statement.

TJJ.en !there must be some expla­nation for all of the sudden and persistent influx oi doggery. In investigating the most logical sources for reasons, United Press, Associated Press, and the Inter­national News Service were stump­ed: but not the Old Gold and Black. Upon studying the situation from all angles, (including from a hy­drant point of view), we have col­lectively and undisputt'dly come to a mass agreement. The dogs hang out at Wake Forest because they can find so much company. Now don't take this tJ!e wrong way. That doesn't h11rt t-hose to whom it doesn't apply. It only applies to those whG g~t around barking, biting, and growling <~ver bones,

There are many anecdotes at­tached to the dogs' persistence m pervading the Wake Forest cam­pus. One comes from the Govern­ment class. The story goes that one day a shaggy dog lumbered in about the time the lecture be-

gan. The class was studying (theoretically) political - parties thlllt day, He stayed for one class period, and-so the more infonn­ed circ!e,s have .sworn-ran for Senate the next election.

Then there comes the one about the literary hound that invaded an English class one day-literature it was-and kept his girl-friend howling with Byron's poems for three days. (Another one sat in on a seminar group and· came away with a stomach ache, un­doubtedly derived from Snyder's sandwiches.)

In the way of continu1111ce, it has been said that several dogs attended a meeting of the minis­terial conference one night, and the following day, it was discov. ered that every chicken-house in town had been raided!.

'I1he moral of this story is less than the sheer story-value involved in its telling. But there is one more thing to be included, and it, incidentally, affords a little relief; according to rumors from the town govenunent, there is soon to be a hunting season declared open on dogs.

And in order to save the space of further advertising and in har­mony with a statement made by Dr. Pearson, any one who wants a dog of any description can find him at a moment's whistle.

Officers Chosen ByGolden;Bo!Jh The quesrtion of the position

which the Golden Bough will oc­cupy on the campUS< if a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa,. national ,lJ9D­orary scholarship fratern).t,., ~- .!n· stalled here next year .pr911J_p~ the election of new o1ficers ibis week. · ..

The selection was made early, it was said, so that _the new1 ~ will have plenty of time for .. ~­ing plans before assuming· office at the beginning of next term.

John Avera was· chosen preai· dent, Alan Scott vice.president and Edwin Woolbert -~retary­treasurer. Avera . and . Woolbert are at present academic &eniora and will enter the medica( schOol next year. Scott is a :firat year medical student.

Hayes Makes Statement James Hayes, president of .. the

Golden Bough this . year; ~til~ec! that the nature of the Golden Bough next year will be Jarrely determined by whether . or not a petition for a Wake. Fo.rest, duip­ter of Phi ~ta Kappa is granted. If it is not granted, he. ~id, :Gi?ld­en Bough will continue to oceupy the position it now occupieS. : If it is granted, Golden Bough's -poei­tion will be changed ··. aomewllat and its membership requirement. altered in such a way 'lluit · .~m­bership in Phi Beta Kappa ·and Omicron Delta Kappa, ailothel' na­tional honorary scholarship fra­ternity, of which here is already a local chapter will be .l*eaiaey for eligibility. · · .. --

Golden Bough now occupies a "top" position on the campus aad has standards as high aa the na­tional Phi Beta Kappa.

In case a local chapter- of .. Phi Beta Kappa is bistslled, . GOldoen Bough's posittion will become-.an­alagous to t'hat of the Red Jirlan, of l)Qke. ·

Page 2: ~' 0 HPJaas·DranUp Faculty Club Hea·rs ·Dean …..... ciassrooms, offices, and a a~EnlTLar I Y oung D t emocra s u ' Cl b f 0 w a e k its constitution was drawn I up Y f tion is

PAGE TWO

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Collee>iafe Di6est

PRESERVER AND CREATOR. -o--

ln the coming of John G. Neihardt to the local campus Monday and Tuesday, Wake For­est students will have the privilege of hearing and talking with a man and writer who knows the real America. In the writer Neihardt we have a man who has become recognized inter­nationally for his work, especially in his Epic Cycle of the West. Early he established his reputation as a writer, giving literary America three volumes of lyrics, A Bundle of Myrrh, Man Son, and later The Stranger at the Gate.

The story chronicled behind the purpose and first love of the writer is one which deals with nineteen years of work out of the last twenty-seven of the poet's life. Here is a man who turned to the West, the native West with its Indians and true color of the real America. Being familiar with this country from early boyhood ,he wished to preserve and glorify the traditions of a land which he loved. When the word "epic" is used in connection with the work which he is doing with the history of this coun­try, it is used merely to describe the nature of the material under consideration.

Embodied in the very heart of his work is a love for this section which is only exceeded by his strong desire to preserve its beauty and re­alism. Here is a land which today has been in­vaded by peoples of all nationalities; here is a land which possesses only fleeting traces of its former life and color.

And Dr. John Neihardt, who has lived among and associated with the natives of this country for ·thirty-eight years, has in his last work- the Epic Cycles of the West-made an enormous contribution to the permanent preser­vation of the only native Americans.

Other nationalities may come and go after he has completed his work. New invasions may sweep America from one corner to another, but a story in technicolor will have been placed on the shelf of American and world literature by that time-the story of the later existence and exit of America's most colorful peoples. Sword and civilization may strike from our liv­ing records the habits, wars, and normal life of our predecessors, but all the powers of creation can't deprive the smallest of students the right and privilege of studying the lives of these fascinating tribes-from the pen of a master­ful writer and an understanding man.

We reiterate: Wake Forest students are fortunate, indeed, in having the opportunity of hearing John G. Neihardt on Monday and Tues­day.

----000---­WE COMMEND THE TOWN

--o--There is a certain amount of civic pride

which can't be kept down when there is such a pleasure involved as being a part of and being associated with a township which is bent on progress. In this light we commend the Wake Forest commissioners in their plan for a con­stant and steady progress, as indicated by in­structions to have engineers draw up plans for the proposed community house and pool.

First of all they have taken advantage of an opportunity which might have never knocked again. The WPA, as the plan has been set forth, is scheduled to pay about two-thirds of the total costs of its construction, this leaving the town but one-third to put up. But this is not the foremost thing to be complimented: there is the fact that the commissioners of Wake Forest have recognized the need of such a project.

Assuming that all would not be benefited by the swimming facilities offered by the pro­posed pool, there are the programs of definite assets which may come under the head of activi­ty in the community house. However, the first of these-the pool-would be worth the entire plan, in our way of thinking, not to mention the other invaluable features embodied in the project. It has been not only a matter of ques­tionable sanitation, but one of embarrassment yhen :Wake Forest has faced summer after sum-

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

mer without a creditable place in which its citi­zens may swim. Nearby excuses for such plac­es hlive proved to be not only dangerous but ex­tremely undesirable.

In short, considering the plan of self-li­quidation, there are recreational, health, and fi­nancial assets on the way to realization when. the commissioners made their gesture of having the plans drawn up. A year-round proposition which bids fair to contribute another reality in making Wake Forest a most desirable communi­ty in which to live.

-·.·

THE GREEKS HAVE A WORD FOR IT

The -past week has seen ali the Chi Taus. Roy P. Truslow is quiet on _ the Grecian front. The turning his face toward home in flare of Hell Week activity -baa Leaksville this weekend as an an­largely &ubsided, and excepting ticlimax to the Solstice frolics. one or two fralternities which have Jim Ooehran and Olin Reid, hav· not yet had initiation, only a few ing missed the Mid-Winter's sa­dying embers are left to tell the tiated their dance fever this week tale long to be remembered by the by going to a squali! dance. new fraternity men. Sigma Pi. Several activities will

As 01' Man Winter dons his icy attend the Fo!Wder's day Banquet cap and bids farewell and lthe froz- tonight all; the Sir Walter Hotel en ground begins to thaw out, in Raleigh as guests of Rho Chap­dances, banquets and ~arties whiCiil ter at State College. Sage -Murch­corne with the advent of spring, ison will be one of the speaker&. are the sources of conversation Hell Week began last Friday for

Now On Display_ ::; ~- >. -::::: ' ARTCRAFT _ .~~

White Vests-Easter Gifts-Frat Specialt~ Room 15 Wooten's Hometel ~-

Saturday, Sunday, Monday,3lia~l. ; . E. WILLARD- K-lN.'G •·

FOR THE BEST OF'EATS Try

SHORTY's . . -- '

• ·~ '::::·::.:~:.'w'~i

As part of the college, and as such a most likely and potential patronizer of the proposed plan for a pool and community house, we again commend the town commission of Wake For­est. Guided and protected by the alert instru­ment and progressive organization that they are, all of us are proud to proclaim Wake Forest as a hometown-temporarily, at lea~t.

and planning among the Greek Sigma Pi pledges with the follow-l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~S~~~~~~~ letter clubs. ing neophytes going through the II

ordeal: Bill Kellner, Roanoke, Va; .- .. · .. --- -_,_

----o·Oo ·-COACH JOHN AND SPRING

--o--While doctors have been doing their share,

along with the support offered by numbers of his boys in the form of regular visits, we be­lieve there is still one thing which will assist greatly in the realization of our sincere hope that "Coach John" Caddell will soon be back to normal health. That element is the approaching

springtime.

Bill Riddle, Pittsboro; Jim North­ington, La Crosse, Va.; Forrest Stevens, Broadway; Jim Smith, Wilson; John Walker, Brevard; Lurk Newsome, Hartsville, S. C., Monk Critcher, Wllliamston; Frank Kapriva, Joibnston, Pa.

Saturday night the pledges will put on a program in Raleigh for the amusement of the members.

REROOF FOR SPRING(' .. '· . . . ~ ;;. ... _

- . . ·~

Somehow there is something about Coach John and spring which have been inseparable for a score of years. That, no doubt, has been baseball. And he has been baseball at Wake Forest for a number of years. As regularly as the mild-weathered months rolled around, we have seen him here and there, checking up on "his men'' in physical and mental workouts, and making sure that nothing is slack as the Deacon Diamondeers would launch out on an­other season.

Several of the fraternilties have decided upon the dates for their spring house parties. Gamma Eta Gamma's big affair comes on the weekend of April 12 and 13, while Sigma Pi steps out on April 20 and 21. Kappa Alpha will enjoy its affair on the 26 and 27 of the same month, and Alpha Kappa. Pi aJJd Kappa Sigma will have their patties on May 4 and 11 respec­tively. The Tri-Fraternity of Phi Chi, Lambda Chi Alpha, and Pi Kappa w!11 CGme off on April 5 and 6 at the Washington Duke Hotel in Durham.

Capt. Bill Kellner states the frat basketball team is rounding into shape after several practice sessions last week, and- that his team will be ready for adtion when tourney play begins next week.

Starting of baseball practice Preparec, '_-_:f_o_: -'_r_'_ "_'th' :e"'-'-. finds several Sigma Pi's active-

Pi Kappa Alpha. Wake Forest PiKas are helping out fraternity brothers over at State College this weekend- when the fratel"nity celebrates- its Founder's Day, The banquet was held last night.

Jess Tharnish and Jack Williams R . -s· ., .. _,,_. ' working out with the squad while amy . eason.'. Jim Smith is manager, and John , _ ... --._. , Walker his assistant. -

is ~:p:~!~~:· ~;~;~~ ~:: :::: ~~C~IT~Y~-F~U~E~L~-~a~n~d~S~U~P~P~Ls:Y~_.;~C~O~·~ set as the time for the spring ·dance.

A nomadic artist chanced upon .. .;

--. • '7'

. -~ ..... ·-It's not that we fear that Wake Forest will come home without the baseball crown this year. There is something much more impor­tant in that the absence of Coach John would leave a spot which has been filled with the tra­dition attached to his name and ability as a coach and captain of enthusiastic men. If spring will do the trick, we wish for an early spring. And irrespective of any season, we sin­cerely hope that he will soon be back to check up on the men in each of whom he has a devot­ed interest and lasting affection.

Intiation officially end& next Tuesday night. After the final rituals on Tuesday night, the fol­lowing "goata" will become full­fledged PiKs; Ben Conley, "Bus­•ter" Currin, Bill Dunn, Fred Hay­wood, Ray Morris, Bill Scales, Jim Simpson, and D. E. Ward. Several other pledges will take their ini­tiation later in the year.

Chi Tau. The Mid-Winterg, seem­ed to have done things to some of

some of the KA's the other day and got his brush busy. The results were side-splitting, teclmicol{lr portraits .of MeN eill, Pruette, Mackie, Hill, Walker, Poteat, Bland and Burgwyn. The pictures are arranged in .colorful array-a scintillating gallery in the chap- ~~: 14 /i e • • ter room. /J. VI

----------------------*----------------------

----1000----

FLA'ITERY BY 11\UTATION --o---

We knew that The Howler for 1939 was good, but we didn't know it was as good as it was, even though it won the All-American award. Word reached Wake Forest through printing circles that the pattern of last year'$ annual is being followed by some fifty colleges

in I 940. This speaks well, of course, for last year's

staff-Editor Carl Dull, Business Manager Jess Reid and Cameraman John Scott, in particular. But it means more than just praise for one or two individuals: it marks the improvement in our college publications in recent years.

Good as the publications of past years may have been, we sincerely believe that all three college journals are on a higher plane as a whole than at any recent date. The Student is being written for college students this year and The Howler is being copied far and wide. Modesty forbids us to say more.

And so we toss a spray of orchids to Wake Forest publications men, with an especially fragrant one for the staff of The 1939 Howler.

----1000----

Paddlemen To Vie In Tourney

WHO SAYS "CRIME DON'T PAY"?

The following was clipped from the Raleigh News and Observer:

City Coullt looked a lot like a style show yesterday morning. Of

Wake Forest's second annual 13 women arraigned for operating table tennis tournament will get or inhabiting immoral houses, under way some time next week, three wore full length fur coats with a field of approximately for- and two others short fur jackets·, ty expected to enter. The others were wearing _beeoming

In addition to the regular sin- Spring outfits, such as I!UIItehed gles Jtournament, there will also be tr.ree-piece suits in a herringbone

1 held for the first time a doubles green tweed and a blue woo! suit tourney. 'l1ll4 will :be a ivery in- .with a dusty pink hat. Practically teresting innovation, beeause most all wore glov~, willked on new ( of the players have already paired !looking shoes and carried stylish,. off, and the competition is getting handbags. There was a good hotter every day. amGunt of black an absence of

The singles contests will ~ind over-painting and ~o blood-red nail II a much larger and stronger f1eld p(}\ish. There was only one chem­than that of last year. The stand• ical blond. ard of play has improved about 50 percent over that of last year. Electroplating a black coating on Probably the owtstanding newcom- metals is accomplished by a new er is John Conl~y the West Hart- process which plates a composite ford Connecticut Yankee. John film of nickel and molybdenum ox­-has a very aggressive style of play ides. The coating, of special value and the necessary fighting spirit. in optical instruments, is a lustrous

Eason Good deep black said to be superior in Two other contestants who were color .to any previously used. The

not here last year and who Bi'e ex- process is rapid and the result per­pected to make good showings are manent. Both illickel and molyb­Vance Dawkins, a transfer situ- denum are important metals used dent, and Broodway Jones. Prob- in modern alloy steels. ably the moot improved player around 5Chool, however, is Fred hard fight, however. 1 Eason, slugging right fielder of The first several rounds will be· the baseball team. In the space played in the sub-gym. The clos-

MOD"'ST of one year Eason has improved ing matches will probably be held THE DEAN TOO · "" from J"ust about the worst " vu in the main gymnP.sium. All

-o--- probably the best player in school. boys interested in entering please Dean Bryan this week reviewed with un- All of these boys are expected sign the paper on the bulletin

'. . '.: :·: · .. Taste is the charm of

Coca-Cola. It _ never loses the delightful appeaLcthat first attracted you.· And it never fails to give -you a happy after-sens,e ofciun .. plete .refreshment. So, join the millions who enjoy the delicious taste of Coca-Cola and get the feel of refreshment.

PAUSE THAT REFRESHES Jkmlocl Wldot autboriq of Tho Coca-cola Co. b7 -< -

CAPITAL COCA-COLA BOTTLTisG- CO~ iNc. RALEIGH, N. C. . .· . _ :. :.

feigned modesty the progress made by the col- to give last year's champion, board in the sbldent center.

lege during the seventeen years he has been in Glenn Miller, plenty of trouble ~;R~ul~es~Wl~-l~l~b~e~p~o~s~ted~· ~la~t~er~.Oiiiiiiiiiiii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;. Miller's game has gone down con-office. He gave generous credit to the student siderably this year, and one of the body and the faculty, and to individuals. In men mentioned above will probah-fact, he offered praise to about every agency ly take over the crown. except the dean's office. TJJe newly organized double.>

We ordinarily don't like to disagree with tournament will probably give the spectaJtors a chance to see plenty

the Dean, but in this instance we must. While of action. This game requires not taking credit from any of the others he much more speed and coordina-mentioned, we who have watched the quiet ef- tion than singles, and is much ficiency with which he has filled the position of faster to watch. The leading dean know that his personality and far-reaching doubles team is Conley and Hicks,

and this combination will be hard qualifications have loomed largely in the sue- to beat. Eason and Miller are

WE ALWAYSHAYE --DELICIOUS BUTTER-TOASTED SANDWICHES.-·

ALL FLAVORS MILK SHAKES ~.: _ SCHOOL SUPPLmS

' .. . { ~

COLLEGE SODA SHOP re~whkhheh~made~ringilienea~~ore~e~Q~e~~~d~to~~~~-~v~e~fu~~~a~p~~~t~y~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ of years as dean of men at Wake Forest. I

If we were to fall back and mention indi-vidually the many contributions which he has made in the college's most progressive age, we should have a momentous task. There is one striking feature which may be directly related to all his work, however: that is the fact that he is the sincere friend of every student. The respect with which the students have looked up­on his person and position for these years is the basis of our saying that-we disagree with him in his praise for others-and none for himself.

Of course, the Dean is the type of man who excludes himself when it comes to praise, but we take this opportunity to point to the invalu­ability which he has been and still is to Wake Forest.

--------~·Do--------WHOOPS - One Raymond G. Twyeffort,

New York tailor, (sack suits $160, $220 for ev­ening dress,) recommends brilliant colors in men's suits, such as red, bright blue, yellow and green, "They give one intestinal fortitude". We'd need a darn sight more than I.F. to venture out on our streets in a pair of green pants and a ~arlet coat. Or are we just an old fogy?

>: .· .. _!.

Do You Need Money? ?

My Friend. could you use $1000, a brand new Hoover cart, a Meredith co-ed, a picture of State- College,­and a diploma from Shaw?

Well Here's You~ Chance, Mister!!

To the first person who gets a leg on Dr. Pearson, steals Chamberlain's umbrella. and proves that the HOWLER and THE STUDENT aren't making a killing, Frank J. Hester, Jr., will give $1,000. Fin!aruJ··· will supply the Hoover cart, Dean Baker will supply the co-ed, the FBI will give a likeness of State, and Joe Louis will sponsor the Shaw diploma.

(This Ad paid for by the British Propaganda Office) - '-

- ,.·

Page 3: ~' 0 HPJaas·DranUp Faculty Club Hea·rs ·Dean …..... ciassrooms, offices, and a a~EnlTLar I Y oung D t emocra s u ' Cl b f 0 w a e k its constitution was drawn I up Y f tion is

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, . . .

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hat lit 11 a 1m• [)in joy of eel

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•• c' OLD GOLD & BLACK

PAGE THREE

BULLETIN! TBE~DEACONTOWN ------

...... ;SPORTS PORT John Caddell, retired baseball coach, who is a

patient at Rex hospital in Raleigh, was reported much better last night, after a blood trallSfusion earlier in the morning. Tommy Byrne, star pitcher on the varsity baseball nine, was the donor of the blood. ~WHIRL.• ====================================--==============================

;...···~·..;.;....,;.--~------BYLES CANSl.ER

~+M+H+H~~M+~H+H+H*~~~~+H+

An Editorial Headache The week-end of March 2 is a bad time to write a sports

column.

LES CANSLER, Editor "FOLLOW THE DEACONS"

<> . incfaCt, the week-end of March 2 is one heck of a bad time · tQ write a sports column. The copy goes in before the Southern -------------------------'* c6rirer~nce "Basketball Tournament, and comes back'out right Rogers To Remar·n Walker. Pushes "smack-dab" in the middle of it. I j

. But diJ littl~ ( ?) thing& like that stop Old Gold and Black spo~ . • c h Passmg Attack ~olumnists? Why, no-siree. We just take a stack of newspapers, a II Take Lrne· .. oac In Sprm· g Drills pair of scissors, a pot of paste, top it all off wilth a good bull session, rr 4 and ·give you what comes out. Quite a. system, eh what?

Ithinkso,too. * * * * For Another Year Team Works Offensively And Defensively

The Old Gold Gives An Orchid . .. 'l1liia typewriter puncher laughed long and loud the other week

over a cli11toon drawn by Russell Henderson, appeating in the Char­lotte News. · lllustrating Sperts Editor Burke Davis' feature on '1940 :footbail prospeet,s at State College, Cartoonist Henderson got off il:he.se two gags on State's Country Boys:

Said 'one player to another: "TWixt .halves I figgered on ·.runnin' home an' working them spuds." Said a third player to a

· :f~: ''That's the last of them fiu-riruira'! (lie refers to Co­:Captain Pat Fehley) Ty Coon, Lazier, Di Yeso, Savini, Sabo-lyic, Retter, Rooney all gone." .Said the fourth player to the t~:. "Suits me! We can at least call signab in English this yNr."

'Hot ~lggety! Ye Ed giveS the News one orchid. Now watch . c those · Raleighites start throwing off on our Trunzos, Polanskis, and

Pendergasts-which will phase us not one mite, for our Yanks ~earn "Dixie" along foth Freshman EJ!glish and root for Duke over Piltt.

**** · A Wake· Forest March Song?

Freshlnan Hazen Booth, of the Batavia, N. Y. Booths, recent­ly. showed me a copy of a Wake Forest Marching Song that his

. Cather wrote in his spare time for the college. It's quite a ditty, : imd this column casts a quiek ballot for its in.troduetion into Deacontown musical circles. We 'have a good drinking ll()ng and

· tiro_ good, slow alma maters, but nG marching melody. Here's a. · good chance to get one, so_ let's hope the college !doesn't pass it up.

If you ever want a good, solid· thrill:, go. down to the gymnasium soine day ililmediately after the two banks of bleachers have been re­moved· from the place. Honestly, the place seems to increase in size about four-fold;

· And. speaking of f<1ur, Coach Phil Utley declares the gymnasium ,should . be . just about four times its present size and should contain a 50-yard .s.Wimming pool. Then, says the coacluna:n, things will be re­

·ally·perfect. Yowzahl And you might incluclie a victory over a Dw football: team in there for me somewhere.

**** John Donald Tells Another

. Sports Scribe John Donald vows and declB.I"es that George Whltted, formerly· of the Durham Bulls baseball team, told him this one.. .

Two baseball tesms were playing on an unusually grassy field in Tens. In the outfield grass was knee-high, _and the fielders were

. having plenty of trouble finding -the hard-hilt balls.

Suddenly a batter slammed a :double into deep center field. As he rounded second and headed for third and home, the hustling center !ieider picked up a small, whlte object and flung it high, wide andJ handsome to !the catcher just as the streaking batsman slid into the plate.

"'Out by a hair", yelled the umpire.

The eatcher pulled a l!!mall white rabbit . from bill mit.

**** Do:ts and Dashers

If folks around here il'ead newspapers any· at _all, they should, by now, know t.hat R.ichmond has been in every cDnference tournament since becoming a member ...... But how many fans knew that Washing­ton and Lee's Generals have qualified every year since 1933? ... To "Bostwick Reader": The Deaoons landed in the tournament in 1937

-but not in -1938.- ·Duke kept them out the latter year. ·-Fraternity in­,terest . in · intramural basketball should reach all kinds of peaks this year with lthe Pan-He! council donating a $25 loving cup to the lodge that finishes the season atop the standings.

Tbe tennis team is almost rel!ldy to roar. Workmen have al­ready begun to get· the courts in shape ••• Hot dawg, it's the DeaCODS versus Pennsylvania, 1:-ittsburg, and Cornell! ••• Nope, Dot a football schedule, but a few of the early gamea on the 1940 baseball slate ••• Aeeording .to certain r'Umors reaching this of­fiee,. freshman baseball is going to be greatly de-emphasized this spring. This corner goes on record as approving sueh a measure. A warm-uP. high school game allld a brief schedule of Big Five opponents should be enough.

John Thomas l Call Me Tarzan) Hughes is getting to be quite a newspaper personality. He cra.shed the News and Observer sports page twice last week ••. ..John Thomas, by the Wily, was worried last week because he was afraid Coach Gress-on wouldn't take him to Ra­leigh with the team •.. Don't worry, Tarzan, your grin is worth ten good points in any game.

DO YOU REMEMBER?

Five :Years Ago This Week­Deaeona lose to Davidson 81-U to finish poor campaign.

Three Years Ago This Week­Ratid aa the tournament "dark· hone" Wake Forest clashes with • the :U niverslt:t of Rich­mond in the Southern Confer­ence tournament. Jim Waller, Turk Apple, Rex Carter, George

Mauney and Capt. Doyt Morris ro open arainat Spiders.

One Year Ago This Week­Favored to cop Southern Con­ference basketball champion-

- ship, the Deacous are upset by Banks McFadden and his Clem­son Tigers, 30-28. Jim Waller is high seorer with 14 points.

*----------------------- On Aerials Line Coach Stops Rumors

That He Has 'IIaken Virginia Post

Despite recent mmors that he will accept a line-coaching. job at the University of Virginia next fall, Coach T.om Rogers said to­day that he will definitely remain at Wake Forest for the coming session.

"Virginia ihas a good athletic set-up, but I am sure I will stay at Wa.ke Forest," he said.

Rogers, who holds the line­coaching position here, ·has done well in the two years he has serv­ed. The lines of the past two sea­sons have functioned! as good as any line in the nation, !holding such powerful offenses as that of Duke, N<1rth Carolina and Clem­son well in check.

Coach Rogera came to Wake Forest in the spring of 1938. He is a graduate of Duke University, where he made all..southern end, and played on the baseball team.

NOT LEAVING

Coach Tom Rogers formally announced yesterday that he planned to remain another sea­son as line coach here in Wa-ke Fo!'fllt.

POLANSKI TO REPORT

With over .two weeks of strenu­ous training behind them, the grid prospects for the 1940 seaaon are bearing down in earne~ under the watchful eyes of coaches Walker, Walker and Ro-gers.

Fundamentals such as block­ing and tackling cspped off by lively scrimmages were the pac~s for the past week.

Considerable work i~ being done on passing, both offensively and defensively, with J. V. Pruitt do­ing most of the tossing and Geer and V andendries receiving.

In scrimage sessions this week, the number one team lined up something like this: Waivers and Vandendries, ends; Rubino and Preston, -tackles; Givler and: Ka­priva, guards; Pendergast, cen· ter; Mayberry, quarterback; Ringgold and Gallovich, halfbacks, and Edwards, fullback. An al­ternative backfield was composed of Duncavage, Horchak, Manim•i, and Welch.

Eighteen Games Racketmen Face For Baseballers Heavy Schedule

Men showing up well in this week's skirmishes were the diminutive Ray Manieri, and Red Mayberry in the backfield, and Tony Rubino, and Pat Preston in the line.

Wake Forest's. 1940 baseball team will play eighiteen games this Spring, ten of which will be against other Southern Conference foes.

Coach Murray Greason, who has succeeqed'.Joljn C"addell as baseball coach, says a few more contests might be added to the slate later.

The schedule is as follows:

March 21-Pennsylva.nia, here. " 23-West Chester T., here. " N. C. State, Raleigh.

April 3-Pittsburg, here. " 4-Cornell, here. " 6-North Carolina, Roanoke

Rapids. " 9-N. C. State, here. " Duke, Durham. " 13-William and Mary, here. " 20-North CaroJ.ina. here. " 23-Willism & Mary, Wil­

liamsburg. " Duke, here. " North Ca.rolina, Chapel Hill.

May 1-Davidson, here. " 3-Randolph-Macon, here. " 4-N. C. State, Raleigh. " 6-Davidson, Davidson.

Captain Bub SweeL scored three field goals in a little over lOa seconds against Richmond.

Vinnie Convery failed to scratch until late in lthe second half of the Richmond game, but it was two baskets by him that tied the score.

Duke's Blue Devils are the only team in tbe Southet'!l Conference which can show a margin of vic­tory over the Deacs for the last two years in basketball. Wake Forest ~s now loSt four in a row to Duke.

The Wake Forest tennis' team released a 25-gam.e schedule !this week that boasted such opponents as Michigan State, Boston Col­lege,_ ':Dartmouth, ·Amherst;- and

Big John Polanski, who is now retained by basketball, will prob­ably report for practice next week. With Polanski's return, the squad will number 40.

Cornell. -·- Utley's Trackmen Action begins on the 18th of Go Out-of-Doors

March when Guilford's Quakers invade Deacontown for a warm-up match, and heavy work gets un­der way five days iater when Dr. Folk's proteges tackle the U-niver­sity of Richmond on the local courts.

Two trips are scheduled for the local racket wielders. Besides the northern invasion during tho:> Spring Holidays, there will be a shorter journey about the middle of April

The complete schedule follows.

is as

March 18, Guilford, here; 23, Richmond, ·here; 25, Michigan State, here; 26, Boston College, here; 27, Loyola, here; 28, Col­by, here; 29, William and Mary, there; 30, Richmond, there; 31, Hennitage Country Club, there.

April 1, American University, there; 3, Dartmouth. here; 4, Cornell, here; 6, Lafayette, here; Amherst (date indefinite} ; 9, N. C. State, there; 13, Washing­ton and Lee, there; 19, Duke, there; 20, Guilford, there; 26, Elon, here; 27, William and Ma­ry, here.

May, 1, Lenoir Rhyne, here; 2, N. C. State, here; 4, El(ln, there; 6, Duke, here an-d 10, George Washington UniversiJty, here.

Coach Phil Utley's cindennen took to the out-of-doors this week as track 'season officially opened.

With several oUJtstanding men of last year's fine team back, the Deacons should be well-represent­ed in the sport this Spring.

Candidates who are daily work­ing out are: Co-captains Taylor Braswell, and Claude Byerly, Earl Hart, John Donald•, Ken Smith, Henry Day, Austin Lovings, Wal­ter Byrd, Walrter Lockhart, and Art Adams.

Golfers Held Up By Bad Weather

The Wake Forest golf team will begin daily outdoor workouts on the local golf course a1t the ear­liest- possible date, weather per­mitting.

Prospects for a good team look bright with three veterans return­ing from last year. Bill Poteat, Glasco Butts, and Bobby Harrell return this year, and Jack "Smil­ey" Starns is being counted on to fill the fourth position.

No matehes have been schedul­ed to date, bllit the Deacon links­men will probably meet Duke, Carolina, Catawba, and other North Carolina teams.

Here's Rod Buie's Dope On lntramurals *-------------------------~------------~-----------

The Southern Conference ba.>· ence. Future schedules will be chison; De1ta Sigma Phi, Bob ketball season is over, but th~ posted at the Book Store and gym- Cowan; Chi Tau, Harry Mum­season is just starting at Wake nasium. ford; Alpha Kappa Pi, Henry Forest. Coach Phil Utley's Inltra- Monday: Vigilantes vs. Proph- White; Kappa Sigma, Gaston mural Leagues swing into action ets, 7; Sigma Pi vs. Delta Grimes; Kappa Alpha, Claude Monday night in quest of the Sigma Pi. 7; Chi Tau vs. Alpha McNeill; Pi Kappa Alpha, Frank school championship. Kappa Pi, 8; College Hall vs. Hester; Lambda Chi Alpha, Bill

Two - leagues, Fraternity and Home Ec Club, 8. Holding; Gamma Eta Gamma, Non-Fraternity, e~ch consisting Tuesday: Kappa Sigma. vs. Jim Clontz; Phi Chi, Jack of ten teams, are ready for the Kappa Alpha, 7; NaS&iff Boys Crutchfield. court wars. vs. All Stars, 7; Pi Kappa AI- Vigilantes, Stuart Benson;

Due to the fact that a high pha vs. Lambda Chi Alphs, 8; Prophets, John Fletcher; College school tournament is to be held in White Phantoms vs. Managers, 8. Hall, Lem Raynor; Home Eco­the gym the last of nelllt week, Wednesday: Gamma Eta Gam- nomics Club, John Snow; Nas­play will be held only on the first ma vs. Phi Chi, 7; Braves vs. Ar- sif Boys, Frank Nanney; All three days. After that, it will be gonauts, 7; Sigma Pi vs. Chi Stars, Ford McGowan; White continued. regula.rly. Tau, 8; Vigilantes vs. College Phantoms, Ken Smilth; Managers,

Here is the schedule for the Hall, 8. I Joe Butterworth; Braves, Broad-week, and a list of Jthe teams and The managers of t.he teams are us Jones; Argonauts, Walt~:r Ses-their managers for future refer- as follows: Sigma Pi, Ellis Mur- son.

GLENN MILLER, Assistant

43-35

*-------------------------

T H A T

Choose Your Own All-State Team

In accordance with the cuatom established by lthe Old Gold and Black, the Wake Forest student body is again being given the OP­portunity to select its own All­State basketball team.

Prmtd below is a ballot with spaces for both the first and second team selections. These ballots should be filled out and placed in the ballot box in the student cen­ter not later !than ~ursday.

First Team p ___________________________ _ p ___________________________ _

I s c ___________________________ _

(} ___________________________ _ (} ___________________________ _

Second Team A L L

F----------------------------p ___________________________ _ c ___________________________ _ (} ___________________________ _ c; ___________________________ _

F 0 L K s

Deacs Take Spiders 40-34

Raleigh Memorial Auilitorium, Feb. 29.-Trailing six points at half-time, .the Wake Forest Dea­cons put on a second half spun and defeated the University of Richmond Spiders in the .first game of the Southern Conference '!'ournament here today by a score of 40-34.

Approximately 3,000 fans look­ed on in amazement as the un­heralded Virginians overcame an early two point Wake ForeSit lead and gradually built up a 20-14 half-time advantage over the fa­v.ored Deacons.

Three quick field! goals by Capt. Bub Sweel at the start of the second half tied the seore up at 20-all, but Richmond again found the basket range and built up their six point margin.

Pete Davis and Herb Cline found the range midway the pe­riod, and at the fourteen minute mark the Deacons were trailing by on~goal. Vinnie Convery sank one rto tie the game up at 33-33 and a minute later Davis dropped in one from the foul circle that put the Greasonmen out in front to stay.

Pete Davis, Herb Cline, and Cap­tain Sweel paced the late-coming Wake Forest attack, while Bob Burge was the outstan-ding Rich­mond threat.

Both sides were very much off in their shooting. This Wlls evi­dently caused by the strange glass backboards used in the tourna­ment.

In the second game of lt.he af­ternoon, Duke's Blue Devils came from behind to take a 40-35 de­cision over a scrappy Citadel out­fit.

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Page 4: ~' 0 HPJaas·DranUp Faculty Club Hea·rs ·Dean …..... ciassrooms, offices, and a a~EnlTLar I Y oung D t emocra s u ' Cl b f 0 w a e k its constitution was drawn I up Y f tion is

.PJ\GE FOUR OLD GOLD 'AND BLACK

GRADUATE SCHOOL . GRO:WS STEADILY AS APPLICATIONS· REACH NEW HIGH THIS YEA.R

fond of therll as human beings. March 13. Brough:ton, ,officer: ?f. +.++~U+,f.+.l,l,~.+,t~~.~··~~-~~>J:t~~t,•t+ Many of his SJhbrt stories have In- the college board llf trustees, Will ~ ·~· dian themes. \, spea~ on a non-P:Olit:ical_ subject in_ . SMITH'S SHO--f.: ·8-,H ... O· p''

In addition to this work, Dr. the mterest of student work · ' u · · . Neihardt has served several news- D.r. Hu~ert Poteat, profes~or of + • F . ~; papers as literary editor and crit- Latl~, will . present· -his selected ; . ·Or :• ic. Since 1912 he has been ac- readmg of _Green 'Pastures in a t Expert-Shoe Work :. tively engaged in literary editor- general ·meetmg of the Euzelians + '· . · ship, and! from 1926 until last Au- ~hursday evening, March 14, at ~ , Phone 375-6 gust, when he resigned to devote seven p. m. This. meeting will be · all his time to the writing of the op~n to all who wish to attend.

*~-----------------------*------------------------*------------------------ final volume of his epic cycle, he ++++++++++++i I+•l•++t.++,:tt++

Record Reveals Education Field Is Most Popular

Eight Students Now In Graduate School; More

Expected In Summer

GRAD STUDES LISTED

The Wake Forest Graduate School is growing - not noisily and with incredible rapidity, but slowly and soundly growing.

There were only two graduate students in the fall and winter session here laSJt year; this year eight graduate stuu-ents are work­ing on M. A. and M. S. degrees and there are two applications be­fore the Graduate Committee for entrance into Graduate School by two other students doing post­graduate work here now. Last summer session there were six­teen students enrolled in the Grad­uate School. Dr. A. C. Reid, chair­man of the graduate committee, expressed' himself as confident

. !that, judging from the increased number of inquiries and pre-ses­sion applications, "there will be a considerable increase in the en­rollment of the Graduate School thiS summer."

Records Combining the records for the

last summer sessi<>n and the fall and winter sessions of the present school year, !the education depart­ment leads all others in its pos­session of the greatest number of candidates for the Master's de­gree. There 1are eight g'lja-duate students with majors in education, five in English, four in religion, two in history, two in biology, one in chemistry, on~ in philoso­phy, and one in biochemistry.

Those who are doing work in the graduate school here now are:

C. N. Allen, major-biology, mi­nor-physics, who was graduated here last spring with the B. S. degree. He was an assistant in the biology department his sophomore, junior, and senior years; an as­sistant in the education depart­ment his senior year; and a mem­ber of Chi Eta Tau his junior and senior years. He is now a teach­ing fellow in the biology d-epart­ment.

Another One E. J, Davis, majo,.-philosophy,

minor-religion, who was graduat­ed here last spring wi-th the B. A. degree. He graduated from Mars Hill prior to his entrance at Wake Forest. He was Glee Club accom­panist and assistant church or­ganist his junior antl senior years, and director of the Student Choir his senior year.

J. A. Freeman, major-biochem­is;try, who was graduated here with the B. A. degrQe in the spring of '3B. He did, graduate work here last year. Freeman made one of the highest grades ever recorded here on rt:he medical aptitude test. He was a member <Jf Gamma Sig­ma Epsilon his junior and senior years and last year.

N. P. Howington, major-religion, minor-philosophy, who was grad­uated here last spring summa cum laude with the B. A. degree. He was Vice President of the minis­terial class his senior year, a mem­ber of Delta Kappa Alpha his jun­ior and senior years, and an as­sistant in the religion department his junior and senior years. Until recently he was pastor of the Cal'· aleigh Baptist Church in Raleigh.

F. H. Scofield, major-religion, minor-philosophy, who was grad­u&Jted cum laude here '36. While here Scofield was a member of Chi Eta Tau snd president of Del­ta Kappa Alpha. He is now a resi­dent of Youngsville, pastoring a group of churches in that region.

R. T. Stancil, major-religion, who was graduated here in '36 with the B. A. degree. After he

THR~~lc~~t~~KA Chalmers Says BRISSIE SETS DATE lt'OR .NEWS BANQUET

·has been literary editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatt-h.

Proof of his successes as ·an American poet and his interest as a student of world literature since boyhood have been demonstrated in several ways, one llf which was the honor placed upon him as Po­et Laureate of Nebraska when he

Ryburn T. Stancil, W. R-. Wag­ner and McLeod Bryan were elect­ed recently into membership of Delta Kappa Alpha, honorary min­isterial fraternity at Wake For­est, and a "B" subject average requirement of membership was set up by the group.

Stancil, who is a graduate stu­dent and a graduate of the South­western Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, Wagner and Bryan, who are juniors, make en­roliment in the fraternity nineteen. President Henlee Barnette stated th•~t the purpo.se of the group was "'to foster fellowship among ministerial students and to ele­vate their ideals and seholastic standards."

Scholastic minimum of a "B'' subject average will be the pri­mary basis for membership in the future, according Ito vote of the group. However, there is a waiver clause which may admit, by group vote, others particularly worthy,

POTEAT TO GIVE SPRING RECITAL

The campus concert association announces that among the forth­coming spring concerts will be an organ recital by Dr. Hubert Me­N eill Poteat. The recital will probably be given about the mid­dle of April.

This group is also p!mming otll­er concerts and musical programs to be given during the spring.

left Wake Forest he took lthe I\1. A. degree at Bay lor and the M. It. E. degree at Soutliwestern Theo­logical Semniary. He is not pastor of any church at the present.

J. D. Webb, Jr., major-chemis­try, minor1physics, who was grad­uated here in '37 with the B. S. degree. He was a member ot Gamma Sigma Epsilon while an under-graduate here. Webb is now teaching fellow in the chemistry department.

E. S. Benson, Jr., major-Eng. !ish, minor-history, who was grad­uated here last spring with the B. S. degree.

B. H. Elliott and A. 0. New­berry have made applications ·io the graduate committee for en­trance into Graduate School. El­liott and· Newberry are both do­ing post graduate work he1·e now, Elliott majoring in educa:tion with a minor in French and NewbelTy majoring in education.

Those who did graduate work here last summer are:

G. I. Carricker, major-education. minor-philosophy;

Mrs. B. F. Dunn, :uajor-educa­tion, minor-English;

Fleetwood, major-his-tory;

Miss M. A. Gatch, major-Eng­lish;

Miss Ill. III. Glazener, major­history, minor-education;

E. A. Gunn; major-education, minor-history;

}liss J. Hoyle, major-English;

B. Laney, major-educ~tion, mi­nor-English;

Miss D. Long, major-English, minor-religion;

Miss B. M. Moore, major-educa­tion, mnor-English.

Miss Wilma Morrow, major­English, minor-library science;

1\f. V. Parrish, major-education, minor-English;

C. P. Parker, major-religion; !\Iiss I. Ragan, major-biology,

minor-ehemistry; I. B. Shive, major-education, mi­

nor-English; Miss N. Stinson, major-educa­

tion, minor-history.

Realism Needed By Youth Today

Pacifist Emphasizes That Nothing Is Settled

By War

ADVOCATES PEACE

Dr. Allan K. Chalmers, pastor of the Broadway Tabernacle Church of New York City, appeal­ed to college students to be realists in facing the world-wide situation of war an~ turmoil in an addres.~ made to a Wake Forest College convocation in the Baptist Church Monday morning at 10:00 o'clock.

"We hide our real difficulties with unrealities," the pacifist lead­er said in beginning his twenty­minute address. Following up the reference that the world began its transition in the time of Adam and Eve and is still in such a process today, he pointed out that peoples of all generations have been in­clined to be sentimental toward their p1·oblems-rather than look­ing at them realistically.

World Saves Decency

The Wake Forest publications banquet and dance on Saturday, March 16, will be held in the l{aleigh Woman's Club building on Hillsboro Street, Eugene Bris­sie, president of the board, an­nouncec> this week.

was. in that state.

EUS PLAN TO MAKE NEffiARDT MEMBER

Cost of the affair will be one dollar per person. The business managers of the three student j publications are to collect the fees I J oh G N .h dt ill b . .• along with the names of the

1 n · el ar W e mvt.-

guests of the attendants. All ed to become. an ih~norary me'?ber nle b f th P bl. ti of the Euzehan Literary Society. mers o e UlCli'Ons .

. If Dr. Neihardt consents. he will Board who are not act1ve mem- b . d ted . t h . bers of one of the three staffs e ~n uc. m o t e society on

ked t t th . f llfonooy mght .at the regular seven a1·e as o urn eir ees over , 1 k t' . o c oc mee mg. to the secretary, Ferd DaviS, A 'al tif' t f spec1 cer 1ca e o member-

WINBORNE OPENS

(Continued From First Page)

in the plans of the Young Demo­crats. A program of Jocal talent is being planned, as well as a social at East Carolina Teache1·s College. A membership drive is to be begun next week. Beamer Barnes was made chairman of the program committee.

Winborne From West

ship has been prepared by the so­ciety· and if Dr. Neihardt agrees to become a member, this certifi­cate will be pr.esented: to him Mon­day in the society hall.

Other Notables Here Recognition of Dr. N ei,hardt by

the society is the first of several coming activities of the Eus in­volving notable men. J. M. Broughton, prominent Raleigh lawyer, candidate for the North Carolina governorship, Wake For­est graduate, and former Eu, will be sponsored by the group in a regular college convocation on

l an· a-n-d . w,hite

~PRING STYLE LEADER --Tan-and-white is RIGHT this Spring -and we have a eomplete seleetlon of new .Tarman Sports in this eombl· nation. Here's a wingtip brogue-and there are. loll! of othen In 'i'OUR mel

·s·"NDU . . '5'o , . I '0'7" MOt! SU'LII J

B~- & S. DEPARTMENT STORE WAKE FOREST; N.C. "We went across the seas in

the last war to make the world safe for decency," the speaker said, in drawing an illustration of how inclined youth is to meet all conflicts in a sentimental man­ner. "The world which we give you today is the same world which was given us in my college day. It is a world which is still fight­ing to preserve decency in the same manner which it has tried

Mr. Winborne, who will speak l\fonday night, iSi from Ruther­ford County. He is recognized as one <Jf the outstanding speakers ·of the state, and has taken a sin­cere interest in Young Democrat Clubs· throughout the state. He was instrumental in gaining the approval of the Interstate Com­merce Commission on the Caro­lina Coach Company's petition for a franchise to operate a bus line between Durham and· Rocky Mount via Wake Forest.

Chesterfield's Twin ·Pleasures are

for centuries." Dr. Chalmers went on to em­

phasize the belief that "war set­tled nothing." He illustrated his point by stating that whjle there was hatred behind the lines among the people back home, there was a love which exists between the men who face each other at the front.

Soldiers Better Today. In linking peace mo\'ements with

religion, he compared the soldier of today with the soldier of a hundred years ago, when every reiterated, "for we must Ieav~ shoot."

"That is impossible today," h~ reitered, "for we must !~ave Christ behind when we look down the barrel of a Sprin~c,ofield rifle."

To end his message to the youth of America, who are and must be concerned with the European sit­uation, Dr. Chalme1·s offered as his advice a statement that he "would never invoke blessings up­on nor support another war of any description."

Chalmers For Peace Coming to the Wake Forest

campus from Raleigh, where he has been engaged in a special se­ries of peace services, Dr. Chal­mers' motive has been definitely idenified with other work as a pacifist. Although he served in the late World War, he is a leader and member <# two prominent peace-promoting organizations, the War Register's League and the Fellowship of Reconciliation. He

FACULTY CLUB HEARS

(Continued From First Page)

bia and his Ph. D. at New York University. For two yea.I~S he was a Helen Gould fellow at NYU. Dr. Bryan •taught for five years at the University of Richmond be· fore he came to Wake Forest. When he first arrived here he was a professor of education and psy­chology. Dr. Bryan became d.~an in 1923, succeeding Professor· E. W. Timberlake.

PROMINENT POET

(Continued From First Page)

ics, A Bundle of My.rrh, Man Song, The Stranger at the (;ate, he began work on aB Epic Cycl~ of the West, designed to captm·e the realism of the old west while it might yet be found. This cycle was planned to consist of five he­roic narrative poems of book­length, each complete in itself, bur all related in a large scheme.

N eihardt Qu~Iified Dr. N eihardt is well qualified

to write about the West and its innumerable fantasies. For thir­ty-eight years he has had intimate association with the plains Inai­ans, particularly the Sioux. He did not seek them by way of gain­ing "local color" for his writings, but became acquainted with them apparently by accident, and grew

has been pastor of his meropoli- J The Tragedy of Ineffective Prayer, tan church since 1930, and as a The Commonplace Prodigal, and writer has published three books, 1 Give Me Another Ohance.

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•.• 1

I

'

-->·

·· EDITOI

~we

Vol. XX

SeatillJ Ac

Gro nesday l

Secretar project.

The been ac shortly versity c

The will ha• 16,000, ' bleacher the two which 1

the play bleacher! seats wi 20,000 SJ

(

The J

called GJ ry Grov• nate anc alumnus. ated in erally tc well as program' the new nasi urn Claude (; for whol named.

Forma. dertakinj by G. E. ecutive tive co1 board o with the a! supel" in the group, committe Brewer, Secretlirl Earnsha1

Ro• Site of

ravine kt eated b• ments o plot is· a north o: pleted pr Universit Kenan : the most A new 1

probably ball field

Much in the college-.: president College: ber of ye Wake Fo

I Plans 1

drawn UI Company are not at the pi let Ito tho pany, al Sherwood ment of I wiring. been mad of o!he ne

The f' the neces nicipal 1

Major ga for the ~

with Fu and Du~ strongest south anc Forest in

Ori1 Origins

for the ~ to be con· horseshoe into abo to have side of creasing 1 eluding the south

The bo: sidered of the B Winston-f f<Jr all '\\ played i the offer that the body sho1 matter .

The Joe revealed . Jug bird, early yes The strar by the tl the Wishl dinaire.