beta kapp'a, scholastic frat, local odk's lucile cummings

8
11tr ' , ·.Opera .To: .Appear Here . Thilrsday ·n· '. A 0 ' a ·r··· . . . ' . Phi Beta Kappa Elects 40 Members * * * * Volumne XXXVI. Number 19 Wake Forest. N. c.. Monday, March 5, 1951 Telephone 4056 . . 'Phi Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Picks 40 Wake ·Forest Students; ' 28 From Senior·Class, 12·Juniors Honorary Frat Picks Large Group On Basis Of Scholarship, Character; Special Induction Ceremony· Planned For April 5 Forty Wake Forest College stu- I honor t'he new members on April dents were elected into Phi Beta 5, after which special installation Kappa highest honorary scholastic ceremonies will be held to iaduc! last week. Twenty the new members. This ceremony eight are members of the senior will be open to the public. <:lass and 12 are from the junior F ult b f Ph'· B +'' ac y mem ers o 1 e.a class. The pew sen!ior class Phi D Trt h' D Beta Kappa members join the 13 Kappa are:· Dr. T. · L" 1 c m, r. other seniors who were elected to C. S. Black, Dr. H. G. Britt, Prof. the fraternity in their junior year. D A Brown, Prof J. W. Chandler, thus making a total of 41 s•.:!roior Dr. C. B. Earp, Dr. E. E. Folk, PBK's. Prof. J. W. Futrell,'Dr. H. B. Jones. CHAPEL PROGRAMS FOR WEEK ' Monday-Indefinite, in charge . of. the Cliapel. Plaoinng Com- mittee, under direction of Dr. Budd E. Smith;, - Wednesday...:.Dr. George Grif- fin of the Religion Department, speaker. Friday-Dr. H. Broadus Jones of . the English Department, speaker. Local ODK's Pick Training School Dates Seminars For .Campus Leaders To Be Held May 2, 3, And 4 Beta Alpha Circle cf Omicron Delta Kappa, national leadership fraternity, has set 2, 3, and 4 as tentative dates for a'.Leadership Training School on this campus, according to Lloyd • Abernethy, chairman of the -School planning committee. · ' The purpose of the rLeadership The 12 juniors, their and their college majors were: Training School will be to teach newly elected officers from every 1 phase of campus· life certain bas- ic leadership principles- which will H It E ·. 1 help them with the jobs they .will 0 xamin es do next year. . r Three Seminars Lucile Cummings To Sing Here; I Operatic Star To Be Sponsored By Concert Group This Week ! Talented Young Contralto Will Appear Here Thursday Night Under Auspices Of College Concert-Lecture Committee Lucile Cummings, talented young operatic contralto will pre- sent a concert in the chapel here Thursday night at 8 o'clock. The concert is sponsored by the Wake Forest Concert-Lecture Committee. Besides playing the leading role in the New York City Center Opera Company's production of ''Aida'' and playing Lady Clarinda in the St. Louis World Premier of "Auld Lang Syne," Miss Cummings has been featured soloist with the Oakland and • Mo.desto Symphonies and San Francisco Opera Company. I She has appeared as guest solo- w k Db f Th •d ist on all the major networks. witll a e e a ers lr I the ColUJ:?bia Concert ?rchestra, the Amencan Broacasting Com- At H • k · M f" pany Orchestra and as guest star IC ory ee mg. on the National Broadcasting Com- pany Telephone Hour. The Wake Forest men's debate Appears With Chorale Charles D. (Red) Barham, Raleigh, pre-law; Paula G. Ballew, Charlot- te, English- religion education; Walter Barnard, Camden, sociolo- gy; Ann Jean Blackwelder, Con- cord, French-English; Bruce C. Dr. I. B. Lake, Dr. R. E. Lee, Dr. H. M. Parker, Dr. G. W. Paschal, Dr. C. C. Pearson, Dr. H. M. Po- teat, Dr. A. C. Reid, Dr. W. H. Robbim, Dr. B. E. Smith, Dr. H. L. Snuggs, Dr. W.'E, Speas, Dr. H. S. stroupe, Prof. R. J. Watts, C. P. West, and J.B. Cook. R0 T C U t Current plans now call for three . • • • · • Dl . seminars on both Wednesday and Thursday night, led by prominent M' L . 1 C . II team took third place !honors Sat- She has appeared as guest soloist ISs UCI e we - urday at the South Atlantic in Madison Square Garden and opera. star, pictured above, Forensics meet in Hickory. Two of with the Robert Shaw Chorale. She w1ll appear m concert here at the debaters also combined efforts has made several record albums o'cl6ck Thursday evening in the to gain four first place individual for RCA Victor. She was on the Wake Forest College Chapel. The honors in several speech contests. stage for three consecutive season$ concert is sponsored by the Wake The debaters garnered an aggre- 67 featur.ed Forest Concert-Lecture Committel!. gate total of nine victories to earn lotst m the Rad10 Ctty Mustc HaL 'Cresson, 'history, Lenoir; Ruth R. Draper, Louisville, Ky., Sociology; E. P. Ellis. Jr., Coral Gables, Fla., Pre-med; Dan W. Fagg, Jr., his- tory-governmen.t,. Mount Olive; Wade M. Gallant, Jr., English, :Rale1gh; Carl Meigs, English- French, New London; Robert S. Poole, Pre-med, Smithpeld; ant;l. Frances J. Westbrook, Wilmington, EngliSh-education. Senior· Members Fourteen students from the seni- or class who have spent all four years of their college at Wake .Forest were named to the hon6r- ary fraternity. 'l'hey were Bill Alexander, religious education., Tarboro; Marjorie C. Batson, his- tory-government, Wilmington; E. T. Chandler, Thomasville, general science; Dorothy B. Hilburn, math, Durham; James H. Johnson, Latta, S. C., business administration; Vann Murrell, reli- gion; Joe F. Newhall, Orlando, Fla., biology; Mrs. Emily ·Conrad Nichols, Winston-Salem; J. K. Pen- rY, Denton, general science; Doro- thy S. Raynor, Ahoskie, French- English; Henry V. Vick, C<lnway, _general science; Conrad Warlick, Gastonia, English; Ruth Ann Weathers, Stanley; History-govern- ment; and · Clarence E. Williams, Durham. business administration. Seniors making Phi Beta Kappa who transferred to Wake Forest from other schools were: Janet Me!. Byrd, Erwin, religious educa- tion; Harry P. Klaus, Jr., Balti- more, Md., general science;. George A. Kahdy, Knightdale, education;. Dr. Snuggs Speaker For Language Group ' Dr. H. L. Snuggs, associate pro- fessor of English, addressed Sig- ma Pi Alpha, honorary modern language fraternity, at its regular bi-weekly meeting Thursday even- ing. He spoke on "Germanic, and Norman Influences on the English Language." Dr. Snuggs pointed out the rela- tionship of Modern German with Old English and of Norman French with Old English. He pointed ot the ,large amount of Norman French used by Chauc- er and said that during Chaucer's time certain regions of England were almlist lbi-linqual, speaking both EngliSh and Norman Frenc;h. Army Captain Makes Preliminary Investiga· tion ·Of Proposals members of the Wake Forest Col- lege faculty. The School will be c;limaxed on Friday, May 4, with a banquet at which it is hoped Pres- ident Harold W. Tdbble can be Captain T. M. Holt, 'aU. S. Army engaged to speak. officer stationed in Raleigh, was on the camcpus last week making Each of the three seminars on preliminary investigation fpr the proposed R. 0. T. C. unit here. On March 7, some other Army persOn- nel from Washington, D. C., will be here to make further prepar- ations for the pro·gmm. Wednesday night will be devoted to a discussion of "Problems of Group Leadership," according to present plans; on Thursday. "the topic will be "Characteristics of Group Leauership." Beginning this week, Captain Report To Be Compiled Holt will set .up temporary quart- Each seminar will elect two sec- ers on the campus so that he can rl!taries whose duty it will be to lay the ground work for the new keep a record of the proceedings. unit which will be set up here in From the records of the three September. groups, a genera:! report will be . . compiled and made available to Dr. Eugene Ohve, Public Rela- all h ti · t · n. s h 1 w o par ·c1pa e ID ...,e c oo . Police 'Chief Whitman Assumes New Duties Floyd Whitman, Jr., of Mason- bora Sound has been named police chief to replace Chief c. R. How- ard, who resigned recently to re- enter the Marine Corps, Prior to coming to Wake Forest, Whitman was assistant · chief of :;')lice in Weldon. He states that he likes the town. the townspeople, and the students a great deal and that he is looking forward to serving the Wake Forest community. Dr. Snuggs cited the sources of tions Director, announced that the · · · · such words as 'help, assistance, college will cooperate with the of- ODK set this leadership program Whitman said futher: "We plan stool, folk and people. ficers in findin·g space for com- late in the Spring in order that to cooperate with the students and The fraternity is planning very manding rand the non- all, or at least nearly all. organi- college one hundred per cent in soon to select new members. A commissioned staff, storage space zations on the campus will have anything that they want to do. We list of more than fifty possible for equipment classroom space for their next year's officers elected. expect the same consideration has been compiled from instruction in 'military science and If possible, the individual seminars from the students and I know that sugestlonsdfrofrm bpro- drfll fields No announcement has will be adapted to meet the various we will get it. Any time we can fessors an om uue mem ers. · .,. This list wilt be voted on- in the I been made yet ·as to where these needs of the different groups rep- help. the college, we will be glad near future. . facilities be located. resented. to do so." Ben F. Philbeck, Memphis, Tenn., Wake Club · Gets Wins .social science; Mrs. Lily M. Phil- B "I Cuba, Venezula Argentina was· no match for the Deacons who scored 10 runs in the first inning. 'Dhe goin!! is expect- ed to get rougher when other Lat- in nines are encountered. Cuba, Venezuela, and Mexico all have relatively strong teams. Wake Forest 'was scheduled to play Mex- ico on Wednesday, but bad ;veath- er cancelled t!he game until Sat- urday morning. lips, Raleigh, John w. Over Argentma, razi Phillips, Raleigh, English; w. w. And Columbia Shelton. Jr., Oxford, general sci- ence; Jean C. Shplar, Hopkinsville, Ky., education; Carolyn Timber- lake, Youngsville, English; Mrs. Wanda L. Turner, R-oanoke, Va., religious education; and Earleen J. Willis, Onley, Va., English. · Law-Med School PBK's Three candidates for degrees in June who are either in Law School here or at the School of Medicine in Winston-Salem also were elect- ed to Phi Beta Kappa. They were I;onnie B. Williams, (law) . Wil'- mington; and Edward L. Boyette, (medicine), Warsaw; and Donald lVL Hayes, (medicine), Charlotte. Last year, 13 members of the "Class of '51 were named to Phi , Beta Kappa i'n their junior year. 'They were: Jewell Brinkley, Dur- ham; Thomas L. Clark, Roan·oke Rapids; Cedric Davis, Farmville; Bill Eaton, Winston-Salem; Brooks Gilmore, Greensboro; Allan John- son, Durham; Elva Lawrence, Dur- ham; Nina Martin, Louisville, Ky.; Carol Oldham, Gulf; Marcella Reed, Kinston; Paul (Tinker) Wil- liams. Lexington; and Harry Wright, Danville, Va. South American baseball fans are marvelling at the tremendous power shown in the can games by the sluggers from Wake Forest College. The Dea- cons, Who had won ·two ,games in the baseball round robin in Buenos Aires, Argentina at Old· Gold and Black press time Thlll·sday night, have scored 52 runs-a total that make even the Boston Red Sox envious. Wake Forest Demon Deacons latest victory came over Colum- bia, 7-5 in a 12 inning game Fri- day afternoon. At pres!j,·time no other information was available. Signal of victory for the entiTe campus is the ringing of the bell which means the Deacs won an- other. Information is slow com- ing to the campus fl'om Argen•· tina,. 5,000 miles away from North Carolina, and not in re- cent years has the ringing of the bell announced the actual news .of victory to the Student Body as it has been doing this week. The bell started rinJring at 1:30 Tuesday afternoon, 4:30 Thursday afternoon, and 8:30 Friday night. Tunney Bt:ooks, pictured above in basketball garb, is the Deacons' only 2 sport man. A fine athlete, l1e suffered a broken thumb in the first Pan-American game and was .lost to the squad for the remaind- er of the tournament. John Liptak moved from third base to replace Brooks. 'Doctors have said that Brooks will not play for 30 days. Righthander Don Woodleif start- ed on the mound for the Deacons and was credited with the game. Diek McClenny later took a turn on the hill as did Wiley Warren, first baseman who pitched his first collegiate game. The trio collabor- · ated in a neat four-hitter against the weak-hitting Argentina squad. Brooks was one of the Wake Forest batting stars. Before he went out of the game, he batted in four runs on two hits. Argentina made it easier for the Deacs by committing 10 errors afield. . Wallop Brazil On Thursday, the crippled WakJ Forest team added another lop- sided baseball victory to Uncle Sam's credits in the Pan-Ameri- can Games by walloping Brazil, 23-4. Unlimbering some long- range timber against the not-too- potent Brazilian pitchers, Coach Sanford's crew belted nine home runs in marking up their second ·straight victory. Deacon first baseman and OG&B Sports Editor; Wiley Warren, is apparently really enjoying his Ar- gentine jaunt. In the first game, he transferred from first base to the pitcher's mound to pitch his first collegiate game. He also is writing a column for the state pa- pers about the Deacs' stay in Buenos Aires. New PBK's were notified by mail last Wednesday, The faculty members of the scholastic fraterni- ty on campus elect the undergrad- uate students. The scholastic re- quirements themselves are rigid, but other considerations arc also made in selec:ting candidates for Phi Beta Kappa. Members are <elected each Spring on the basis of outstanding scholarship, charac- ter, and cultural irtterests, from the upper ten per cent of the stu- dents in the ju11ior and senior dasses. In its first game Tuesday Wake Forest ploughed over the dust- laden confines of the Pucara base- ball field to score 29 runs and beat Argentina, 29-3. 'Dhis victory was achieved with only one home run. a cosily victory when Catcher The big gun the free- athletes from 19 competing nations Tunney Brooks was lost to the swinging Deacs was Frank Weh- participated in the ceremonies Wake Forest squad for the re- ner, who connected for lwm- which were highlighted by the'tra- mainder of the tournament. He ers. Other ?omers were .bY ditional lighting of the Olympic . . Bob ColuDl, who had two, and torch and the parade of the teams, broke the .thumb .of his throwmg wack Stallings, Don Woodleif, Jun- among which were the Demon hand wh1le trymg to srrare a ie Floyd and Max Eller with one Deacons. The United States dele- pitched ball. Doctors said he would each ' ' gation, comprising 128 athletes, "Round-Trip" Slugging But on Thursday, the good be out of. action for 30 days. · · paraded past the President's box Max Eller and Stan Johnson clad in white flannel trousers, pitched for the Deacons. with El- white shirts. and navy blue coats. ler beii;g credited with the win. The U. S. delegation was the only neighbors from the South were This loss caused Coach Taylo;: Juniors must have an average treated to some good, old North Sanford to have to shuffle his al- ·Of 2.6 or more to make Phi Beta .A . " d tr' , ti ready skeletonized 12-man squad ' ·Kappa. A senior must have a roun - lP ac to replace Brooks. Third basem:m .quality point ratio of not less Wake Forest_slugged down BraZil, JO'hn Liptak has taken over be- than 2.3 on all work, and at least 23-4 and the fans were treated to hind the bat, with outfielder Kay .a 2.5 ratio ·on all. upper-division ziine home runs,' .three by Frank Rogers moving i';lto the infield. work. Transfer students must have ' . . . One of the four p1tchers, the only a 2.6 average on all work done at Wehner, 0 also chtpped ID WJth available spare· .parts, is filling in Wake Forest. a few innings of. relief pitching. ateRoger's outfield post, with Don A banquet is being planned to Iri the first game. theDeacs won Woodlief getting first call. Olympic-Style Parade group not to salute the Argentine The first Pan-American Games President although a U. S. athlete colorfully and ·ceremoniously got handed Eva Peron a bouquet under way officially last Monday. of floow.ers In the name of all the Th . t' . f th delegat10n. e maugura 10n o e games took . place Sunday night before A 200-man military band played 50,000 spectators at the President martial music as the flags of the Peron Stadium. More than 3,000 partidpating nations were hoisted third place in debate. productions of "United Nations," "Christmas Nativity" and "Glory Wiley Mitchell and Virgil of Easter." Moorefield upheld the affirmative In her concert Thursday night for Wake Forest and scored vic- Miss Cummings will sing three tories over South Carolina. Flori- numbers by Beethoven: "Wonne da, Carson Newman and Davidson. der Wehmut," "Der Kuss" and "Ich Liebe Dich." She will sing two numbers by Brahms: "Von Ewiger Liebe" and. "Vergebleches • Slandch" and ,two numbers by Schubert: "An Die Musik" and "Hark, Hark, the Lark." The negative team, composed of Joe Mauney and Lucius Pullen, gathered five victories by down- ing North Carolina, Davidson, Car- son Newman, Florida and Alaba- rna. To Sing English Numbers honors. we!lt to . George One whole selection of the pro- Washington Uruverslty, wh1lc Len- gram will be devoted to English oir Rhyne, spopsoring college for numbers: "Christ Is Risen" by the event, and the University of RachmanirroM, "Loveliest·of Trees" South Carolina tied for second by Dougherty, "Anguish" by Eric place honors. Thomas, 'File for .Future Refer- · Wiley-Mitchell swept almost half. of ten individual contests by tak- ing first place honors in situation. oratory, radio, radio newscast and second place. ' In the radio address con:test Virgil Moorefield won first place award in problem solving to give Wake Forest half the first placp honQ!'s in men's indiviqual speak- ing events. Brooks Is Lost To Club After Breaking Thumb Against Argentina around the spacious field. After Peron's speech the Olympic flag was raised and the delegations be- gan their parade around the field. Warren lVrites Column Seventeen events are listed and the games will continue until March 8-and possibly longer- due to postponements. Wiley Warren, Old Gold and Black sports editor and Deacon first baseman has been writing a column for the state papers in which he has related various hap- penings concerning the team and their stay in the foreign country. ence" by' Sargent anci "Ecstacy" by Rummel. · Another section of the program will be devoted to the Aria, "0 Don Fatale" from "Don Carlos" by Verdi. · ._, Other selections to be sung by ·, , Miss Cummings are Gluck's "Mon-··,... ologue et Air," Merikanto's "Geli- ebte Du" and Boerresen's "Sing More Sweetly, Tender · Nightin- gale." Pianist At Th:ree Miss Cummings, who acquired her musical education at the Uni- versity of Oregon, was playing the piano by ear at the age of three. When she was six she studied music through a correspondence course at twenty-five cents a les- son. Once when she and her broth- ers were quarantined with pox, she learned the entire scores of the ''Mika9!>" and "Pinafore," Won High School Honors She began to study voice in earnest when she won first vocal honors in a state-wide high school contest. She put herself through college by playing accompani- ments for her music teachers. Upon graduation from College Miss Cummings began to make concerts and radio and oratorio work her career. Gaetano Merola Director of the San Opera Company, urged her to go east and enter the "Metropolitan Auditions of the Air," directed by Wilfred Pellietier of the Metro- polian Opera Company, Her suc- cess in the East began when she was chosen as one of the two finalists. Movies Indirectly Miss Cummings has also appear- ed in pictures indirectly. She has loaned her voice to some of the stars who have been called upon to sing in recent productions. "Ever since I can remember " I " ' s 1e says, music has been the most important part of my life." Student Mag To Appear Before Spring Holidays He reported the team got to Miarrrl, Fla., at 6:03 Thursday evening, and embarked for Argen- tina the next day, flying aboard El Interamericano flights, the first time in history that U. S. Olympic teams have been transported to the Games by air. Warren says that the peacs ha.d to leave their oats at home because of the bag- gage restrictions, but Frank Weh- ner smuggled abroad a bat !hat the New York Yankees' Yogi Berra had given him last summer for good luck. Trainer Ernie McKenzie supplit>d everyone with airsickness pills before the take off. Junie Floyd, on his first plane ride said. "It was terrible taking off, but I felt better after a few minutes The Student Magazine will make in the air." I its first. Spring before . the hohdays, accordmg to editor Sight Seers Jewell Livingstone. In addition to "Latin nicknames have already the regufar sections of the maga- cropped up among the boys-Jose zine, Livingstone plans to feature Johnson, Pancho Brooks, Pedro a different cover layout. Rogers, Alfonoo Stallings, etc.," Warren says. Norwood "Red" Pope, Raleigh sophomore and sports writer for The team is staying at the Na- the Old Gold and Black, is making tiona! 'Military Academy near his first appear-ance in the maga- Buenos Aires. They arrived there zine. Bynum Shaw, who edited Friday night, haVing flown down the campus newspaper in 1947-48 wiih only one stop-at Tocumen and has been on the staff of the in Canal Zone. Latest re- Norfolk Virginian-Pilot for the ports from the Deacs indicate that past three years and is now con- they are going on sight-seeing eluding his undergraduate work sprees and shopping tours, havin!! here, is also included in the list been adopted by three teen-age of writers new to the publication Argentine's who speak English. this year.

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Page 1: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

11tr '

, ·.Opera s~ .To: .Appear Here

. Thilrsday

·n· '. A 0 ' a ·r···

. . . ' . Phi Beta

Kappa Elects 40 Members

* * * * Volumne XXXVI. Number 19 Wake Forest. N. c.. Monday, March 5, 1951 Telephone 4056

. .

'Phi Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Picks 40 Wake ·Forest Students;

'

28 From Senior·Class, 12·Juniors Honorary Frat Picks Large Group On Basis Of

Scholarship, Character; Special Induction Ceremony· Planned For April 5

Forty Wake Forest College stu- I honor t'he new members on April dents were elected into Phi Beta 5, after which special installation Kappa highest honorary scholastic ceremonies will be held to iaduc! irater~ity, last week. Twenty the new members. This ceremony eight are members of the senior will be open to the public. <:lass and 12 are from the junior F ult b f Ph'· B +'' ac y mem ers o 1 e.a class. The pew sen!ior class Phi D Trt h' D Beta Kappa members join the 13 Kappa are:· Dr. T. · L"1 c m, r. other seniors who were elected to C. S. Black, Dr. H. G. Britt, Prof. the fraternity in their junior year. D A Brown, Prof J. W. Chandler, thus making a total of 41 s•.:!roior Dr. C. B. Earp, Dr. E. E. Folk, PBK's. Prof. J. W. Futrell,'Dr. H. B. Jones.

CHAPEL PROGRAMS FOR WEEK

' Monday-Indefinite, in charge .

of. the Cliapel. Plaoinng Com­mittee, under direction of Dr. Budd E. Smith;, -

Wednesday...:.Dr. George Grif­fin of the Religion Department, speaker.

Friday-Dr. H. Broadus Jones of . the English Department, speaker.

Local ODK's Pick Training School Dates

Seminars For . Campus Leaders To Be Held

May 2, 3, And 4 Beta Alpha Circle cf Omicron

Delta Kappa, national leadership fraternity, has set Ma~ 2, 3, and 4 as tentative dates for a'.Leadership Training School on this campus, according to Lloyd • Abernethy, chairman of the -School planning committee. ·

' The purpose of the rLeadership

The 12 juniors, their hometow11~ and their college majors were:

Training School will be to teach newly elected officers from every 1 phase of campus· life certain bas­ic leadership principles- which will

H It E ·. 1 help them with the jobs they .will

0 xamin es do next year. .

r Three Seminars

Lucile Cummings To Sing Here; • I

Operatic Star To Be Sponsored By Concert Group This Week

! Talented Young Contralto Will Appear Here Thursday Night Under Auspices Of College

Concert-Lecture Committee Lucile Cummings, talented young operatic contralto will pre­

sent a concert in the chapel here Thursday night at 8 o'clock. The concert is sponsored by the Wake Forest Concert-Lecture Committee.

Besides playing the leading role in the New York City Center Opera Company's production of ''Aida'' and playing Lady Clarinda in the St. Louis World Premier of "Auld Lang Syne," Miss Cummings has been featured soloist with the Oakland and • Mo.desto Symphonies and t~e San Francisco Opera Company.

I She has appeared as guest solo-w k D b f Th• d ist on all the major networks. witll a e e a ers lr I the ColUJ:?bia Concert ?rchestra, the Amencan Broacasting Com-

At H• k · M f" pany Orchestra and as guest star IC ory ee mg. on the National Broadcasting Com­pany Telephone Hour.

The Wake Forest men's debate Appears With Chorale

Charles D. (Red) Barham, Raleigh, pre-law; Paula G. Ballew, Charlot­te, English- religion education; Walter Barnard, Camden, sociolo­gy; Ann Jean Blackwelder, Con­cord, French-English; Bruce C.

Dr. I. B. Lake, Dr. R. E. Lee, Dr. H. M. Parker, Dr. G. W. Paschal, Dr. C. C. Pearson, Dr. H. M. Po­teat, Dr. A. C. Reid, Dr. W. H. Robbim, Dr. B. E. Smith, Dr. H. L. Snuggs, Dr. W.'E, Speas, Dr. H. S. stroupe, Prof. R. J. Watts, C. P. West, and J.B. Cook. R 0 T C U • t Current plans now call for three

. • • • · • Dl . seminars on both Wednesday and Thursday night, led by prominent

M' L .1

C . II team took third place !honors Sat- She has appeared as guest soloist ISs UCI e u~gs, we - urday at the South Atlantic in Madison Square Garden and

k~own. opera. star, pictured above, Forensics meet in Hickory. Two of with the Robert Shaw Chorale. She w1ll appear m concert here at s· the debaters also combined efforts has made several record albums o'cl6ck Thursday evening in the to gain four first place individual for RCA Victor. She was on the Wake Forest College Chapel. The honors in several speech contests. stage for three consecutive season$ concert is sponsored by the Wake The debaters garnered an aggre- to~ali?g 67 wee~s a~ featur.ed so~ Forest Concert-Lecture Committel!. gate total of nine victories to earn lotst m the Rad10 Ctty Mustc HaL

'Cresson, 'history, Lenoir; Ruth R. Draper, Louisville, Ky., Sociology; E. P. Ellis. Jr., Coral Gables, Fla., Pre-med; Dan W. Fagg, Jr., his­tory-governmen.t,. Mount Olive; Wade M. Gallant, Jr., English, :Rale1gh; Carl Meigs, English­French, New London; Robert S. Poole, Pre-med, Smithpeld; ant;l. Frances J. Westbrook, Wilmington, EngliSh-education.

Senior· Members Fourteen students from the seni­

or class who have spent all four years of their college at Wake .Forest were named to the hon6r­ary fraternity. 'l'hey were Bill Alexander, religious education., Tarboro; Marjorie C. Batson, his­tory-government, Wilmington; E. T. Chandler, Thomasville, general science; Dorothy B. Hilburn, math, Durham; James H. Johnson, Latta, S. C., business administration; Vann Murrell, Jacks~;mville, reli­gion; Joe F. Newhall, Orlando, Fla., biology; Mrs. Emily ·Conrad Nichols, Winston-Salem; J. K. Pen­rY, Denton, general science; Doro­thy S. Raynor, Ahoskie, French­English; Henry V. Vick, C<lnway, _general science; Conrad Warlick, Gastonia, English; Ruth Ann Weathers, Stanley; History-govern­ment; and · Clarence E. Williams, Durham. business administration.

Seniors making Phi Beta Kappa who transferred to Wake Forest from other schools were: Janet Me!. Byrd, Erwin, religious educa-tion; Harry P. Klaus, Jr., Balti-more, Md., general science;. George A. Kahdy, Knightdale, education;.

Dr. Snuggs Speaker For Language Group

' Dr. H. L. Snuggs, associate pro­

fessor of English, addressed Sig­ma Pi Alpha, honorary modern language fraternity, at its regular bi-weekly meeting Thursday even­ing. He spoke on "Germanic, and Norman Influences on the English Language."

Dr. Snuggs pointed out the rela­tionship of Modern German with Old English and of Norman French with Old English.

He pointed ot the ,large amount of Norman French used by Chauc­er and said that during Chaucer's time certain regions of England were almlist lbi-linqual, speaking both EngliSh and Norman Frenc;h.

Army Captain Makes Preliminary Investiga·

tion ·Of Proposals

members of the Wake Forest Col-lege faculty. The School will be c;limaxed on Friday, May 4, with a banquet at which it is hoped Pres­ident Harold W. Tdbble can be Captain T. M. Holt, 'aU. S. Army engaged to speak.

officer stationed in Raleigh, was on the camcpus last week making Each of the three seminars on preliminary investigation fpr the proposed R. 0. T. C. unit here. On March 7, some other Army persOn­nel from Washington, D. C., will be here to make further prepar-ations for the pro·gmm.

Wednesday night will be devoted to a discussion of "Problems of Group Leadership," according to present plans; on Thursday. "the topic will be "Characteristics of Group Leauership."

Beginning this week, Captain Report To Be Compiled Holt will set .up temporary quart- Each seminar will elect two sec­ers on the campus so that he can rl!taries whose duty it will be to lay the ground work for the new keep a record of the proceedings. unit which will be set up here in From the records of the three September. groups, a genera:! report will be

. . compiled and made available to Dr. Eugene Ohve, Public Rela- all h ti · t · n. s h 1 w o par ·c1pa e ID ...,e c oo .

Police 'Chief Whitman Assumes New Duties Floyd Whitman, Jr., of Mason­

bora Sound has been named police chief to replace Chief c. R. How­ard, who resigned recently to re­enter the Marine Corps, Prior to coming to Wake Forest, Whitman was assistant · chief of :;')lice in Weldon. He states that he likes the town. the townspeople, and the students a great deal and that he is looking forward to serving the Wake Forest community.

Dr. Snuggs cited the sources of tions Director, announced that the · · · · such words as 'help, assistance, college will cooperate with the of- ODK set this leadership program Whitman said futher: "We plan stool, folk and people. ficers in findin·g space for com- late in the Spring in order that to cooperate with the students and

The fraternity is planning very manding officer~ rand the non- all, or at least nearly all. organi- college one hundred per cent in soon to select new members. A commissioned staff, storage space zations on the campus will have anything that they want to do. We list of more than fifty possible for equipment classroom space for their next year's officers elected. expect the same consideration initiat~s has been compiled from instruction in 'military science and If possible, the individual seminars from the students and I know that sugestlonsdfrofrm the~~anguage bpro- drfll fields No announcement has will be adapted to meet the various we will get it. Any time we can fessors an om uue mem ers. · • .,. This list wilt be voted on- in the I been made yet ·as to where these needs of the different groups rep- help. the college, we will be glad near future. . facilities ~ill be located. resented. to do so."

Ben F. Philbeck, Memphis, Tenn., Wake Club · Gets Wins .social science; Mrs. Lily M. Phil- • B "I

Cuba, Venezula Argentina was· no match for the

Deacons who scored 10 runs in the first inning. 'Dhe goin!! is expect­ed to get rougher when other Lat­in nines are encountered. Cuba, Venezuela, and Mexico all have relatively strong teams. Wake Forest 'was scheduled to play Mex­ico on Wednesday, but bad ;veath­er cancelled t!he game until Sat­urday morning.

lips, Raleigh, Engl~sh; John w. Over Argentma, razi Phillips, Raleigh, English; w. w. And Columbia Shelton. Jr., Oxford, general sci- ~ ence; Jean C. Shplar, Hopkinsville, Ky., education; Carolyn Timber­lake, Youngsville, English; Mrs. Wanda L. Turner, R-oanoke, Va., religious education; and Earleen J. Willis, Onley, Va., English. ·

Law-Med School PBK's Three candidates for degrees in

June who are either in Law School here or at the School of Medicine in Winston-Salem also were elect­ed to Phi Beta Kappa. They were I;onnie B. Williams, (law) . Wil'­mington; and Edward L. Boyette, (medicine), Warsaw; and Donald

lVL Hayes, (medicine), Charlotte.

Last year, 13 members of the "Class of '51 were named to Phi

, Beta Kappa i'n their junior year. 'They were: Jewell Brinkley, Dur­ham; Thomas L. Clark, Roan·oke Rapids; Cedric Davis, Farmville; Bill Eaton, Winston-Salem; Brooks Gilmore, Greensboro; Allan John­son, Durham; Elva Lawrence, Dur­ham; Nina Martin, Louisville, Ky.; Carol Oldham, Gulf; Marcella Reed, Kinston; Paul (Tinker) Wil­liams. Lexington; and Harry Wright, Danville, Va.

South American baseball fans are marvelling at the tremendous power shown in the ~an-Ameri­can games by the sluggers from Wake Forest College. The Dea­cons, Who had won ·two ,games in the baseball round robin in Buenos Aires, Argentina at Old· Gold and Black press time Thlll·sday night, have scored 52 runs-a total that ~ould make even the Boston Red Sox envious.

Wake Forest Demon Deacons latest victory came over Colum­bia, 7-5 in a 12 inning game Fri­day afternoon. At pres!j,·time no other information was available. Signal of victory for the entiTe campus is the ringing of the bell which means the Deacs won an­other. Information is slow com­ing to the campus fl'om Argen•· tina,. 5,000 miles away from North Carolina, and not in re­cent years has the ringing of the bell announced the actual news .of victory to the Student Body as it has been doing this week. The bell started rinJring at 1:30 Tuesday afternoon, 4:30 Thursday afternoon, and 8:30 Friday night.

Tunney Bt:ooks, pictured above in basketball garb, is the Deacons' only 2 sport man. A fine athlete, l1e suffered a broken thumb in the first Pan-American game and was .lost to the squad for the remaind­er of the tournament. John Liptak moved from third base to replace Brooks. 'Doctors have said that Brooks will not play for 30 days.

Righthander Don Woodleif start­ed on the mound for the Deacons and was credited with the game. Diek McClenny later took a turn on the hill as did Wiley Warren, first baseman who pitched his first collegiate game. The trio collabor- · ated in a neat four-hitter against the weak-hitting Argentina squad.

Brooks was one of the Wake Forest batting stars. Before he went out of the game, he batted in four runs on two hits. Argentina made it easier for the Deacs by committing 10 errors afield.

. Wallop Brazil On Thursday, the crippled WakJ

Forest team added another lop­sided baseball victory to Uncle Sam's credits in the Pan-Ameri­can Games by walloping Brazil, 23-4. Unlimbering some long­range timber against the not-too­potent Brazilian pitchers, Coach Sanford's crew belted nine home runs in marking up their second

·straight victory.

Deacon first baseman and OG&B Sports Editor; Wiley Warren, is apparently really enjoying his Ar­gentine jaunt. In the first game, he transferred from first base to the pitcher's mound to pitch his first collegiate game. He also is writing a column for the state pa­pers about the Deacs' stay in Buenos Aires.

New PBK's were notified by mail last Wednesday, The faculty members of the scholastic fraterni­ty on campus elect the undergrad­uate students. The scholastic re­quirements themselves are rigid, but other considerations arc also made in selec:ting candidates for Phi Beta Kappa. Members are <elected each Spring on the basis of outstanding scholarship, charac­ter, and cultural irtterests, from the upper ten per cent of the stu­dents in the ju11ior and senior dasses.

In its first game Tuesday Wake Forest ploughed over the dust­laden confines of the Pucara base­ball field to score 29 runs and beat Argentina, 29-3. 'Dhis victory was achieved with only one home run.

a cosily victory when Catcher The big gun amon~< the free- athletes from 19 competing nations Tunney Brooks was lost to the swinging Deacs was Frank Weh- participated in the ceremonies Wake Forest squad for the re- ner, who connected for ihre~ lwm- which were highlighted by the'tra­mainder of the tournament. He ers. Other ?omers were s~ruck .bY ditional lighting of the Olympic

. . Bob ColuDl, who had two, and torch and the parade of the teams, broke the .thumb .of his throwmg wack Stallings, Don Woodleif, Jun- among which were the Demon hand wh1le trymg to srrare a ie Floyd and Max Eller with one Deacons. The United States dele-pitched ball. Doctors said he would each ' ' gation, comprising 128 athletes, "Round-Trip" Slugging

But on Thursday, the good be out of. action for 30 days. · · paraded past the President's box Max Eller and Stan Johnson clad in white flannel trousers,

pitched for the Deacons. with El- white shirts. and navy blue coats. ler beii;g credited with the win. The U. S. delegation was the only

neighbors from the South were This loss caused Coach Taylo;: Juniors must have an average treated to some good, old North Sanford to have to shuffle his al-

·Of 2.6 or more to make Phi Beta .A . " d tr' , ti ready skeletonized 12-man squad ' ·Kappa. A senior must have a m~Ican roun - lP ac 0~· to replace Brooks. Third basem:m

.quality point ratio of not less Wake Forest_slugged down BraZil, JO'hn Liptak has taken over be­than 2.3 on all work, and at least 23-4 and the fans were treated to hind the bat, with outfielder Kay .a 2.5 ratio ·on all. upper-division ziine home runs,' .three by Frank Rogers moving i';lto the infield. work. Transfer students must have ~ ' . . . One of the four p1tchers, the only a 2.6 average on all work done at Wehner, 0 also chtpped ID WJth available spare· .parts, is filling in Wake Forest. a few innings of. relief pitching. ate Roger's outfield post, with Don

A banquet is being planned to Iri the first game. theDeacs won Woodlief getting first call.

Olympic-Style Parade group not to salute the Argentine The first Pan-American Games President although a U. S. athlete

colorfully and ·ceremoniously got handed M~. Eva Peron a bouquet under way officially last Monday. of floow.ers In the name of all the Th . t' . f th delegat10n. e maugura 10n o e games took . place Sunday night before A 200-man military band played 50,000 spectators at the President martial music as the flags of the Peron Stadium. More than 3,000 partidpating nations were hoisted

third place in debate. productions of "United Nations," "Christmas Nativity" and "Glory

Wiley Mitchell and Virgil of Easter." Moorefield upheld the affirmative In her concert Thursday night for Wake Forest and scored vic- Miss Cummings will sing three tories over South Carolina. Flori- numbers by Beethoven: "Wonne da, Carson Newman and Davidson. der Wehmut," "Der Kuss" and

"Ich Liebe Dich." She will sing two numbers by Brahms: "Von Ewiger Liebe" and. "Vergebleches • Slandch" and ,two numbers by Schubert: "An Die Musik" and "Hark, Hark, the Lark."

The negative team, composed of Joe Mauney and Lucius Pullen, gathered five victories by down­ing North Carolina, Davidson, Car­son Newman, Florida and Alaba-rna.

To Sing English Numbers To~ honors. we!lt to . George One whole selection of the pro­

Washington Uruverslty, wh1lc Len- gram will be devoted to English oir Rhyne, spopsoring college for numbers: "Christ Is Risen" by the event, and the University of RachmanirroM, "Loveliest·of Trees" South Carolina tied for second by Dougherty, "Anguish" by Eric place honors. Thomas, 'File for .Future Refer­

· Wiley-Mitchell swept almost half. of ten individual contests by tak­ing first place honors in situation. oratory, radio, radio newscast and second place. '

In the radio address con:test Virgil Moorefield won first place award in problem solving to give Wake Forest half the first placp honQ!'s in men's indiviqual speak­ing events.

Brooks Is Lost To Club After Breaking Thumb

Against Argentina around the spacious field. After Peron's speech the Olympic flag was raised and the delegations be­gan their parade around the field.

Warren lVrites Column Seventeen events are listed and

the games will continue until March 8-and possibly longer­due to postponements.

Wiley Warren, Old Gold and Black sports editor and Deacon first baseman has been writing a column for the state papers in which he has related various hap­penings concerning the team and their stay in the foreign country.

ence" by' Sargent anci "Ecstacy" by Rummel. ·

Another section of the program will be devoted to the Aria, "0 Don Fatale" from "Don Carlos" by Verdi. · ._,

Other selections to be sung by ·, , Miss Cummings are Gluck's "Mon-··,... ologue et Air," Merikanto's "Geli­ebte Du" and Boerresen's "Sing More Sweetly, Tender · Nightin­gale."

Pianist At Th:ree Miss Cummings, who acquired

her musical education at the Uni­versity of Oregon, was playing the piano by ear at the age of three. When she was six she studied music through a correspondence course at twenty-five cents a les­son. Once when she and her broth­ers were quarantined with small~ pox, she learned the entire scores of the ''Mika9!>" and "Pinafore,"

Won High School Honors She began to study voice in

earnest when she won first vocal honors in a state-wide high school contest. She put herself through college by playing accompani­ments for her music teachers.

Upon graduation from College Miss Cummings began to make concerts and radio and oratorio work her career. Gaetano Merola Director of the San Francisc~ Opera Company, urged her to go east and enter the "Metropolitan Auditions of the Air," directed by Wilfred Pellietier of the Metro­polian Opera Company, Her suc­cess in the East began when she was chosen as one of the two finalists.

Movies Indirectly Miss Cummings has also appear­

ed in pictures indirectly. She has loaned her voice to some of the stars who have been called upon to sing in recent productions.

"Ever since I can remember " I " ' s 1e says, music has been the most

important part of my life."

Student Mag To Appear Before Spring Holidays

He reported the team got to Miarrrl, Fla., at 6:03 Thursday evening, and embarked for Argen­tina the next day, flying aboard El Interamericano flights, the first time in history that U. S. Olympic teams have been transported to the Games by air. Warren says that the peacs ha.d to leave their oats at home because of the bag­gage restrictions, but Frank Weh­ner smuggled abroad a bat !hat the New York Yankees' Yogi Berra had given him last summer for good luck. Trainer Ernie McKenzie supplit>d everyone with airsickness pills before the take off. Junie Floyd, on his first plane ride said. "It was terrible taking off, but I felt better after a few minutes The Student Magazine will make in the air." I its first. Spring appe~rance before

. the hohdays, accordmg to editor Sight Seers Jewell Livingstone. In addition to

"Latin nicknames have already the regufar sections of the maga­cropped up among the boys-Jose zine, Livingstone plans to feature Johnson, Pancho Brooks, Pedro a different cover layout. Rogers, Alfonoo Stallings, etc.," Warren says. Norwood "Red" Pope, Raleigh

sophomore and sports writer for The team is staying at the Na- the Old Gold and Black, is making

tiona! 'Military Academy near his first appear-ance in the maga­Buenos Aires. They arrived there zine. Bynum Shaw, who edited Friday night, haVing flown down the campus newspaper in 1947-48 wiih only one stop-at Tocumen and has been on the staff of the in Ba~boa, Canal Zone. Latest re- Norfolk Virginian-Pilot for the ports from the Deacs indicate that past three years and is now con­they are going on sight-seeing eluding his undergraduate work sprees and shopping tours, havin!! here, is also included in the list been adopted by three teen-age of writers new to the publication Argentine's who speak English. this year.

Page 2: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

PAGE TWO

Macbeth Casting Completed; 1

Rehearsals Get Under Way Student Director Says

Minor Roles Selected Recently

1951 CATALOG

The new Wake Forest BuUe-tins are back from the press. In

Casting for "Macbeth," spring !ddition to the regular eollege production of the Little Theatre, catalog material, they contain a has been almoest completed, ac- complete list of students regis­cording to Charles Billings, student tered in the College in the fall director for the production. AI- of 1950. though the leading roles of Mac-[ The 1951 catalogs, bound in beth and Lady Macbeth were grey and green,. are being sent chosen at the first of the year, the by the Registrar's office to ap­minor parts have only been se- plicants who \\ill probably be lected in the past two weeks. 1 Wake Forest students in 1952.

Those included in the cast are: [ '-------------...1 Harry Wellott, Macbeth; Betty~-

Jo Ring, Dady Macbetil; Bob ( II (I b T H Swain, Macduff; Harriet Smith, 0 ege U 0 ear Lady Macduff; Cree Deane, Mac-

d~f<f's son; Bill Mitchell, Malcolm; Duo-P"Ian"lsts Tuesday B11l Waddell, Ross; Tom Mezgar, Angus: Herb Huggins, Lennox; Hugh Pearson, Florence; Bill Hen­drix, Duncan; Ray Jones, Porter; Virginia Sanford, First Witch; Lib­by Lou Allen, Second Witch; Eleanor Geer, Third WHch; Bill Cromer, the doctor; Sunny Sny-

The Wake Forest College Club, formerly the Women's Faculty Club, will hear a musical program in the band room of the Music­Religion building tomC>Trow (Tues­day) night at 8 o'clock.

der, the nurse; Bob Bennett, the The program will be presented

New WFDD Executive Council

murderer. by Professors Elizabeth Drake and George Perry, duo-pianists, of the

Billings. states that the roles of 1 ECTC department of music. In-.. . Donaldbam and ~anquo have n?t I eluded on the program will be Miss Above are six of the eight students recently electel to the Exeeutive Council of Wake Forest Radio Sta-been cast but Will be selected m Alice Speas of Wake Forest, tion WFDD. The new officers assumed their duties last Thursday. From left to right, abov~, are:. Harry ·the near future. \daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Bryant, Business Manager: Libbie Lou Allen, Record Librarian: Mary Jo Brow.n, Promotmns Drrector;

Although the cast of "Macbeth" I Speas. Ida Kay Jordan, Continuity Director; Keith Gordon, Chief Engineer; and Jack .Thomas, Manager. Absent . from the picture are Wiley Mitchell, Program Director, and Bill Mitchell, Chief Announcer.

After the program, a~ mform:J.l - -Photo By J. B. Benton. WHY PAY MORE reception, honoring the guest per­

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is a large one. the roles other than . . . . · · M' '-1

S1x new JUmor off1cers took ov-! Jack Johnson, 1s W1ley 1tc"ell, those of Macbeth and Lady Mac- . . y · · h

. . er the execuhve funchons of WF- Jr., a oungsv11Ie sopnomore w c be.th are relat;vely .mmor. For DD on March 1, These officers, was chief announcer last semest­thJs reason no mtens1ve rehersa~s elected by the radio staf.f, are to have been held, although the . d1- serve for the rest of this year er. The chief announcer's post is rectors have had several practlces and for the fall semester of next filled by Bill Mitchell, Youngs-to acquaint the cast with the dif- ville 'law student who has been ficult interpretation of the play. year. · collaborating with Harry Wellott

Students Aid Churches Near Here In Worship

Regular rehearsals are scheduled The new assistant station man- on the Coffeeless· Coffee Shop. 1-------------.J to begin the first of March. ager, to serve behind Manager

Two Wake Forest groups have recently participated in worship seTvices of churches in this vicin­ity. Under the leadership of Wilson Stewart, B. S. U. Extension Di-

Keith Gordon, Conway junior, rector, six students assisted B. E. has taken official possession of the Morris, Pastor of the Gray Stone office of chief engineer, having Baptist Church of Durham, in a acted in that capacity last semes- revival last weekend.

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• ter. Ida Kay Jordan, Elizabeth 0 S d . ht F b •>-City sophomore who is also a staff n un ay mg • e rua::y .,.,, writer for Old Gold and Black, . a group of seven. had ~harge of was elected to head the continu- the regular worsh1p serv1ce at the 't d rt t M J B church of Pastor Warre:1 Turner 1 y epa men . ary o rown, C d p t' · t' Richlands sophomore and worker near. ree moor. ar .lc!p:l wg · th bl' ·t b h ·u h d were. a quartet composed of Carl­m e pu !Cl Y ra~c • :V1 ea ton Cox, Glenn Watson, Tommy

l that staff as promotwn director. Huff and Jimmy Brisson; Virginia

I Snyder, violinist; and speakers Bob

During President Wingate's ad- Auffarth and Tom Young. ministratiun, in the years before the Civil War, Wake Forest College The first building to be erected had freed itself from debt and had on Wake Forest campus with ap­become one of the best endowed proved fireproof · structure was colleges of the Baptists in the Jabez A. Bostwick Hall. The total south. cost of the building was $120,000.

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NEW PHYSICS CLUB MEMBERS

Last Thursday night the Phy­sics Club inducted five associ­ate members and two full mem­bers. The associate members· are Jack Herring, A. J. Parrish. Al­vin Thomas, Kenneth Ward and Thomas Miller. The two stu­dents with full membership <tre Richard Southard and Robert Ausborne, Dr. Parker presentell the program at the regular meeting of the organi'llation.

- .

Y.W.A. Hears Mrs. Maddrey

State W. M. U. Leader Shows- Need For

Mission Work

MONDAY, MAaCB S, lt51

V ....... M .. . Jrglnla :. :en

Honor Kitchin . With Portrait

Alumni Chapter Presents Surprise Painting To

President Emeritus Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin, Presi­

dent Emeritus of Wake Forest, was· the happy recipient of· a sur­prise gift from the Richmond, Va., alumni chapter at · the regular chapel program Friday, February 23.

Dr. Kitchin, who seJ;Ved as pres­ident of the College from 1930 to 1950, was presented with a hand­some charcoal crayon ·portrait of l:imself by representatives of the Rich;nond chapter.

Representing t h e Richmond Mrs. Gordon Maddrey, State alumni were Fred Bateman~ liiW­

Vice-President of the Woman's yer, Class of 1939 and president of Missionary Union, made an im- the chapter; Sam Robinson, artist, pressive appeal last week to local Class of 1925; Dr. Don Bunn, den­Y. W. A. members to volunteer in tist, Class of 1946; Dr. John F. Home Missions work, according to Collier and Dr. M. Theron Rankin, Ruth Ann Weathers, President of Class of 1918, Executive Secre­the Y. w: A. on this camous. tary of the Foreign Mi~sion Board

Mrs. Maddrey, who is also on o.f the S'outhern. Baptist Conven­tile General Board' of the Baptist 1 tJ~n. _Dr. ~an~~ ?resented the State Convention, was the leader J P rtralt to :· ltehin. of the three sessions af a Mission • The portra1t was drawn by Sam Study Program here last Monday Robinson who explained that his Tuesday and Wednesday nights. ' purpose was to portray Dr. Kitchin

On Monday night, Mrs. Maddrey in the minds of the alumni pver talked about the work in general the period of years as he served of the Home Mission Board or- both as teacher and president of ganized in 1845 and now incl~ding the ,College, In an attractive gold 23 states, with particular emphasis leaf frame, the portrait is 22 inch­on the three newest members- es deep and 20 inches wide, California, Washington and Ore- There are many signatures of gon. At Tuesday's session she de- alumni on the edge of the portrait scribed the work on the riverfront including tilose of Governor John in New Orleans, where Southern Stewart Battle of Virginia, wh!l Baptists minister to nineteen dif- attended Wake Forest from 1908.: ferent nationalities. Last year 10, Dr. George Modlin, president Mrs. Maddrey spent nearly ~ of the University of Richmond, month in New Orleans observing Class of 1924, as well as the names tile work there. of many members of the Richmond

On Wednesday night, she siress- alumni chapter. ed the need for more volunteers Many students and faculty mem­in mission work, particularly in bers viewed the portrait and were the New Orleans section, giving generally in agreement tilat it rep­descriptions of the plight of South- resented an excellent likeness of ern Baptists in trying to reach the former president. minority groups living in isolated Inscribed at the bottom of the aTeas. portrait are the words "In recog-

One point brought out w~s the nition of a job well done," ·wake great need for satisfying the re- Forest College alumni, Richmond, quests for Bible ScliOols by the Va.: 1950. · Negroes, not admitted at the White Bible Schools. Much o& the dis­cussion throughout the study pro­gram was based on a book "0 Jerusalem," a story of NeV: Or­leans riverfront work.

Each of three local Y. W. A. of­ficers - President Ruth Ann Weathers, Vice-President Marjorie Macey, and Mission Study Chair­man Ann Kelly-presided at one of the sessions.

PRE-EASTER SERVICES

A special five-day program of pre-Easter services is being planned for Monday' through Friday,. March 19-23, by the B. S. U. The services will be held in the Baptist Church at 7:30 each night. ·

Dr. H. W. Tribble, President of the College, will be the speaker on Monday, 'Tuesday and Wednesday nights. There will be a CommunioJfo service on Thursday night and a pre­sentation of Stainer's "Crucifix­ion" by the Church Choir, un­der the directioJt of 'Professol:' Thane MeDonald,, on Friday tlight.

Books Co{lecfed Here Sent To State Hospital

I A number of books, approxi-

mately two large boxes full, was collected for the patients of the State Hospital at Dix Hill by the Physical Education Majors' 'bub.

The books were given to )\ir. A. R. Carroll, recreation .director of the institute, who visited ~\ this campus last week. While Gn the campus, Carroll spoke to th'e rec­reation class about his progtam at the hospital.

Nancy Hedrick, Pat Smith, Pliul "Baldy" Harris, Jack Sugg and Harold Talton were members cf the collection committee. · The members of the Kappa Alpha and the Deita Sigma Phi fraternities donated the most books.

Students who have books thev wish to contribute are requested to leave them at the gym any time before Thursday. A second collec­.tion will be taken to Raleigh then.

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all-staters back home, eight· got high school all-conference honors, and that a majority of them cap­tained their high school nines.

In last week's practices, the boys concentrated on condi-tioning exer­cises and hitting.

Next week some_of the emphasis will be taken off conditioning ex­ercises and fundamentals will be the order of the day. Incidentally,' Sam, the pitching machine, will be .pulled from the mound for par-t of next week's drills and the freshman fire-bailers will take the hill to show their stuff.

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Inter-Fraterni~ dent Jack 0yerm8 last week for a f1 to be held early ir gram, which will discussjons led 1 fraternity leader schools, is for studynig the pro the fraternity si1 in the moving c Winston-Salem.

The Council a night, May 5 ,for and announ~ed U ditorium in Rale cured for the dar will soon annour which will play j

According to P recent Mid-Win very successful. ter-Fraternity. C express appreciat ity members for Mid-Winter the in the histo!l'y of ternities. Many rnents were repo members from t erones."

The Lambda ( lating Brothers , Bill Young this junior, was nam~ Kappa and-Y ouiJ Ba'I"bara Lake, a Alamogardo, Nev cal chapter part: ·que plan recent! to the chapter at California a ~rock which will be .· struction of a fla The walk will C<

every Lambda ( United States.

The Alpha s number of pros· a smoker in thE day night. Fill and Mary-WakE game were shO'\ Two members, Wiley Mitchell, high posts on station WFDD. : business manag while Mitchell anrt station man plans to hold cerennonies for Wednesday nigl is planned at th night.

Thad Eure, N retary of State, ChU. smoker in 1 of the Music-RE Wednesday nigl i:lvited to the 1

the smoker. ~·peedy recover~ -~riggs who is · Mary Eliza'betl leigh following there.

The Pikas .a1 lowing men to er's Day . Bang Chraorlotte Marc J. D .. Batts, Glenn · Austin Brother . Geor,g initiated· into ~ local pre-meilit week. Among to the fraternit: nathy,_, natiom from Nashville ers Willard K~ ton, two forme ketball captain:

The KAs re following men Charles Ducke Cecil' Horne, S; lie Sabiston an The chapter b vanced to the mural basketb; defeating the I the Alpha Sigs championship. vis was appoin position which Bobby Stutts. to Brother Chi engagement h nounced to Mi Kinston. The place in June.

0. L. Horta Mor.ganton, w! local chapter c week. Guest! were alumni Newton of Ralt Srnithtfield. I hand and Bill recently repor cals but are e:

Page 3: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

5, 1951

;en

:bin • ra1t

esents ~ To tus 1, Presi·

Forest, •f· a sur· Jnd, Va.,

regular ~ebruary

as pres. . 1930 to a hand­

rtrait of 's of the

lichm·ond .an~ liiW­'sident of m, artist, mn, den­John F.

1 Rankin, e Secre­on Board Conven­

'nted the

1 by Sam that his

·.Kitchin nni over 'e served sident of tive gold 22 inch­

. e. 1'tures of ~ portrait n-or John Li.a, who :>m 1908..: president .ichmond. he names Uchmond

lty mem­and were at it rep­teness of

n of the ln recog. e," ·wake :ichmond,

Here )Spital approxi­full, was ts of the lll .by the rs' ·rclub. to '!Mr. A. lrec'tor of d t} this le qn the l the rec­mgtam at

nfth, Paul Sugg and mbers of tee. The ~lpha and :a terni ties

Joks they requested . any time nd collec­eigh then.

Seven tires show ngs were eight· got :e honors, hem cap­nines. ;, the boys ling exer-

emphasis oning ex­Is will be :identally, · hine, will tound for :s and the :1 take the

ich

\

MONDAY, MARCH 5, .1951

. '

DEACS WHO ARE GREEKS- by Wayland Jenkins

Inter-Fraternity Council Presi· until June. Member Tom Gibson nating committee is makin:g selec­dent Jack Overman disclosed plans visited the chapter l'llst week end. tions for offices. The Sigma Chis last week for -a fraternity seminar . lost out in the intramural bask~t­to be held early in May. The pro- The Delta Sigs held their spring ~ll semi-:finaJ,s to the Alpha S1gs gram, which will consist of panel smoker last Monday night. Dick last week. The chapter re~e:•.Hy discussjons led by , speakers and Spoltoir, who enlisted two· weeks heard from Brotlier John W·nson 1

fraternity leaders from various ago, is now at SampsDD Air Force who is receiving his basic train­schools, is for the purpose of Base in Geneva, New York, -Broth- ing at Sheppard Field in Texas. studynig the problems that face er Jef.f Brogden, in dental school • ·

OLD GOLD AND· BLACK

REC ROOM OPEN

The Recreation Room is now open every Saturday night from 7:30 until 10:30, with several games availa)lle and supervisors on hand to aid students, the B. S. U. announced last week. The B. S. U. also announces that the Sigma C~ fraternity will spon­sor the regular Fellowship Hour in tbe Recreation Room next Sunday night after tbe ,church worship service.

PAGE TIIBEII

Law School Moot Court Trials Get Underway Tomorrow Night

B.S.U. Heads To Be Elected

Moot court trials get underway at 7 o'clDck (tomorrow) Tuesday night with the case of George H. Johnson, Jr., vs. the Wake Forest Bank. Johnson is suing the bank for $500 and interest on that amount which he claims he de­posited with the bank. The firm denies that Johnson deposited the

LAW STUDENTS WIN PRIZES

the fraternity situation here and in Richmond, . Va. and Brother The Sigma Pis were recently vis­in the moving of the college to John Morrison of Morganton, were ited by Paul Bayard, natiohal trav­Winston-&alem. recent visi-tors of the chapter. Also eling secretary for the ·fraternity

Brother Lloyd Stewart boas recent- from Elizabeth, N. J. While here

The elections of new B. S. U. money and has refused to pay it.

Clothes Are Wanted . ~:~~n~i~ ~~~~herh w;~d bi8 hi~\~~ Clyde Douglass, Jr., N. c. Su-

o N d Littie Chapel . of the Music-Relig- perior Court judge, will arbitrate

Seven students of the Law school received prizes from the "American Jurisprudence" en­cyclopedia this week. Each se­mester the publishers of the en­cyclopedia offer separately bound subjects from this work to those students obtaining the highest grade in that subject.

The Council also set Saturday ly returned from hon~ymooning in he held a conference with the night, May 5 ,for the Spring Dance New York City. executive council of the local and announced that Memorial Au- chapter and • brought them valu-

F as ee Y the practice trial. Senior law stu-Of verse ion Building, ~t has b~en annou~c- dents. representing the plaintiff ed. The president Wlll be c~?·en are John J. Burney and Garrett on March 11 a.nd the other 0~"1cers D. Bailey. The bank is being de­on the followmg Sunday mght. fended by Stephen Nimcx:ks and

The winners for the fall se­mester are as foUows: Robert 'Leatherwood, Bryson City. in Agency; William Mitchell. Youngsville, in Personal Prop­erty; Robert Langley, Kinston, in Debtors Estates and in Ne­gotiable Instruments; Derb Car­ter, Fayetteville, in Evidtmre; Robert Jones, Huntington, W. Va., in Labor Law; Adam Wayne Beck, Lexington, in Sales; and James Webster, Leaksville, in Trusts.

ditorium in Raleigh has been se- A number of prospective pledges alble information from the home cured for the dance. The Council were entertained at a smoker by office. 'Much work has been· done will soon announce the orchestra .the Sigma Chis last Tuesday on the lawn under the direction of which will play for the dance.- night. The chapter will hold a Brothers John Bleecker and Char­

formal pledging ceremony soon. lie ·Wilkinson. Shrubbery, which Tentative plans are being made for was donated by Dr. and Mrs. C. a Sweetheart Ball· to be held in T·. Wilkinson, has ·been set out and Raleigh sometime in the near fu- work has begun on the re·construc­ture. New officers for the follow- tion of the rock wall. Congratula­ing year will be elected the latter. I tions go tci.- president of the chap~ part of this month, according to ter, George Khady, who is named President Buck Geary. A nomi- to Phi Beta Kappa this week.

II>A clothing drive for overseas countries is being sponsored this week by the International' Rela­tions Club and the Christian Serv­ice group. Boxes tor the clothing are placed in the fraterni1y houses, dormitories and Music,-Religir>n building. On Saturday the towns­people will be canvassed.

Accordin:g to Pres. Overmaa the recent Mid-Winter Dances were very successful. He said, "The In­ter-Fraternity. Council wishes to express appreciation to all fratern~ ity members for making the past Mid-Winter the most successful in the histo'l'y of Wake Forest fra­ternities. Many favoreble com­ments were reported to Council members from the various chap-erones."

The Lambda Chis are congratu­lating Brothers Wade Gallant and Bill Young this week. Gallant, a junior, was named to Phi Beta Kappa and. Young pinned up Miss Baorbara Lake, a coed here, from Alamogardo, New Mexico. The lo­cal chapter participated in a uni­. que plan recently when they sent to the chapter at the University of California a ·rock from this locality which will be .used in the con­struction of a flagstone walk there. The walk will contain stones trom every Lambda Chi chapter in the United States.

The Alpha Sigs entertained a number of prospective pledges a~ a smoker in their house Wednes­day night. Films of the William and Mary-Wake Forest footbal! game were shown to the rushees. Two members, Harry Bryant and Wiley Mitchell, were named to high posts on the staff of radio station WFDD. Bryant was named business mana·ger of the station, while Mitchell was named assist­anot station manager. The chapter plans to hold formal initiation ceremonies for 13 pledges next Wednesday night and a stag party is planned at the house for Friday night.

Board. To -Give Bar

Good used clothing for all-year wear is desired. Along with the customary woolens and cottons, shoes that are at least three incl').ec: in width and have heels not more than one and one-half inches high are wanted. Ha:ts which can be pressed flat are also being solicit­ed. Household articles and sewing materials will form part of the contribution. Although the clothes are destined for general overseas use, the majoritv will be sent to Germany, Japan and France.

Applications for the North Caro­lina Bar examination have been received from approximately 18 June law graduates. These stu­dents who would ordinarily be re­quired to wait until August after graduation to take the exam are being permitted to take the test early by a recent decision of the North Carolina Board of Law Ex­aminers.

The board announced that June graduates who would be subject to military call prior to August

Placement Bureau To Hold Job Interviews Representative of the American

-Insurance Group and the Ralston Purina Company will be in this vicinity soon to interview students who are interested in positions with the respective companies, ac­~ording to. Mrs. Tom Bast, Jr., of the Wake Forest Place Bureau here.

John D. Liddy, Director of Edu­~ation for the American Insurance Group will be on the campus Tues­day, March 13 for interviews. Lid­dy is interested in men who are to graduate in June and applicants should be at least 23 years of age, although men otherwise qualified will be considered. According to Mrs. Bast, applicants should be free to operate in any part of the country.

would be allowed to take the exam on its scheduled dates, March 13, 14, and 15. The board also stated that practicing licenses of those students who passed the exam would be withheld until gradua­tion. This is the first time that the board has ever made such a decision.

According to a statement from Marcella Reed, IRC secretary, the campaign is being conduCted in co­operation with the American Friends Service Committee which

With the June graduates who are planning to take the test under this ruling will be the 20 jltudents who graduated in January.

she says has made one of the most EARLY COLLEGE SOCIAL LIFE substantial contributions to for-

In the period before the Civil eign aid and service.

War the students of Wake Forest----.,----------had very little time or opportunity for social life. There were no holi­days in the colleg~ session. The first notice of anything of a social nature was a party given on the last night of commencement in 1843. In 1845 the Literary Societi­es started giving receptions un the evening of graduation. Thes() re· ceptions were greatly enjoyed by the students. Reporters of these occasions told of the large' number of beautiful and interesting ladies present. They also emphasized the fact' that the order at the recep­tions was good and the entertain­ment innocent. This was probably to contrast with the ltind of be­havior that was displayed at the balls and parties given at the State University and most of the other colleges.

FRIDAY CHAPEL PROGRAM

The Wake Forest Glee Club presented a program of sacred music during the chapel pro­gram Friday morning. The se­lections were "To Thee We Sing," "A :Mighty Fortress Is Our God," and ''God of Our Fathers."

SMITH

SHOE SHOP

We Revair While You Wait

· Call For and Deliver

Tel. 3756 Located Opposite Bus Station

T),le Council will be elected _at I Donald Greene. general meetings after a spewi.l\ nominatincr commi:ttee appointed The second mock trial to be held several w~eks ago has presented on Thursday night of this week its candidates for consideration. At involves a suit of Daniel Simpson the March 11 meeting, there will vs. James Williams. Simpson is also be a general report of the B. suing Williams for $500 damage s. U.'s work during the past two done to his property as a result of months according to Mrs. Ray an auto accident. He claims that Greene: Student Secretary. Williams was driving the auto

The meetings will replace the which, in wrecking, caug~t fire regular opening exercises of the and dtestfro~e~ a Wc?lnl~Jderadble Training Union. a';O-oun o t1~ .er. 1 Jams e­

Philomathesian Society Hears Novel Program The Phi Society followed a novel

plan last Monday night with their program -on "How Not to Make Speeches.'' Members on the pro­gram, 'in making the various speeches, adeptly demonstrated the incorrect methods of speech-mak­ing .

Those participating were Bright­ie White, dramatic reading; Billie Parrish, poetry' reading; John Riggs, oration; Boyce Medlin, im­promptu speaking; and Lucius Pullen and John Oates, debating.

mes that he 1s mvolved; however, a witness claims to have seen him at the scene of the accident.

Judge for this practice court will be John J. Burney o.f Wilmington, judge of the Eighth Judicial Dis­trict. Lawyers representing Simp­son will be Clegg W. Mabry and Hugh B. Holcomb, Jr. ·Williams' defense is being handled by James A. Webster, Jr., and William F. Gray.

These open trials are the tirst in a series of mock courts which are to be conducted in Room A of the Law Building. -·----..,--

In October, 1885, President Taylor set about the task of con­structing walks on the cO;_mpus. It was his idea to place them where the students' footpaths indicated their need. This he did, artistical­ly, and produced a system of walks as beautiful as the campus has ev­er had.

Quick Service and Tasty

Food is Reserved for you

-when you meet me at

SHORTY'S Judson Mitchell was accepted as

a new member in the society and Louten Britt and Aggie Hanzas, old members, were reinstated.

Wake Forest College had a branch of its Summer School in 1925 and 1926 known as Neuse Forest, near New Bern. In charge of this school was Dr. A. C. Reid, then Professor of Philosop~h~Y~---~---_..:~~~::!& ____ _

if,p:itli.fi~[iYL:;t!r.~;:::;_,:;;·<;.tifi~'fi~1J!Ji11Jfii£~i:J::.,,~_,~,,,;:?:t':iiJL}/f;!J}fffJ.Ti!.fr?'«&it!:;<'i1'if:f![i}/1t.i

fi F

\::-;\ Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests ::\ ·,

Number 14 ••• THE BEAVER

' ~'

Thad Eure, North Carolina Sec­retary of State, spoke at the Theta Chli smoker in the recreation room of the Music-Religion building last Wednesday night. The guests were i:Ivited to the chapter house after the smoker. Memlbers wish a ~·peedy recovery · to pledge Ken• :}riggs who is recuperating in the Mary Eliza!beth Hospital in Ra­leigh following an appendectomy there.

Representatives of the Purim~ Company will be at N. C. State and Duke University the week of March 5 to interview prospective candidates for sales positions in the concern. Applica,nts should be between 22 and 35 years of age and have farm or rural experience.

In the Wake Forest catalogue of 1909-10 was found this require­ment: "No student is admitted to any of the classes of the School of Medicine until he has complet­ed two year's work in college clas-ses or its equivalent." 1!..---....;.---------=

The Pikas are sending the fol­lowing men to the annual Found­er's Day Banquet to be held in Ch'II'I'lotte March 3: Bill Golding, J. D. ·Batts, Willis Murphrey, Glenn Austin and · Ellis Ross. Brother . George Ferre is being initiated· into Alpha Epsilon Delta, local pre~medical fraternity, this week. Among the recent visitors to the fraternity were David Aber­nathy,_, national field secretary from Nashville, Tenn. and Broth­ers Willard Kaylor and Jim Pat­ton, two former Wake Forest bas­ketball captains.

The KAs recently initiated the following men into the fraternity: Charles Duckett, Hugh Pearson, Cecil' Horne, Sam Torrence, Char­lie Sabiston and Glen Garrison. The chapter basketball team ad­vanced to the final's in the intra­mural basketball tournament by defeating the Pikas and will meet the Alpha Sigs next week for the championship. Brother Cedric Da­vis was appointed to fill fraternitY pdsition which was vacated by Bobby Stutts. Congi1atulations go to Bro'ther Charlie Larkins whose engagement has just been an­nounced to Miss Ann Flowers of Kinston. The wedding will take place in June.

0. L. Horton, attorney from Morganton, was initiated into the local chapter of Kappa Sipna last week. Guests at. the initiation were alumni members Adrian Newton of Raleigh and Jim Pool of SmLi.th!field. Brotpers Bill Fore­hand and Bill "Whispering" Smith recently reported for their physi­cals but are expecting. deferments

Mrs. Bost, who can be located in Prof. J. L. Memory's office, re~ quests that all men who are in­terested see her immediately.

Math Club lo Select ·New Members Soon

Virginia SmLi.th has been ap­pointed .as' chairman of the com­mittee for the selection of new . members of the Math Club, Alpha chapter of Kappu Mu, honorary math fraternity, Conrad Warlick and Prof. K. T. Raynor were also selected to serve on the committee at the club's last meeting. _,

The organization has selected as its project for the semester the erecting of a bulletin board on the second floor of Wait Hall. Math projects will 'be displayed in the case. Prof. R. L. Gay, chairman Carolyn Von Oannon, George Ed­wards and Freddy Poston are in charge of the construction.

Letters of congratulation for having become affiliated with the national group have •been received by the local chapter, and these were read at the last meeting. One was from Dr. E. R. Sleight, who presented the charter recently. Or­ders for keys were taken also.

New :officers will be elected at the next meeting and all members are requested to be present.

On September 17, 1880, the facu­lty created the office of Curator of the Li!brary and appointed Pro­fessor W. G. Simmons to the posi­tion for which he was recommend­ed by his previous intelligent and active interest in all that pertained to the Ubrary, its building, furn­ishing, and service.

IT'S A BETTER JOB

WHEN YOU. TAKE YOUR · . ..,. 7! " • ·: ::: . '

.. DRY CLEANING & SHIRTS

To·

MILLER CLEANERS

CANDY CARDS STATIONERY

-With-

The "Best" in FOUNTAIN SERVICE

T 0 M H 0 L D I N G D R U G C 0 • Druuist Since 1888

DIAL 249-1 WAKE FOREST, N. C.

Thiem's Of Raleigh e RECORD PLAYERS

e RECORDS eALBUMS

e SHEET l\1USIC e SCHOOL SUPPLIES

107-108 Fayetteville Street Raleigh, N. C.

Hollowell's Knows You'll Appreciate These

FINE FOOD BUYS Sugar Value Coffee .•........... ¥4 Lb. Lipton Tea ..............• Armours Can Milk . . . . . . 2 for .. . 2 Lb. Box Armours Cheese Food .. . 1 Lb. Of Peanut Butter ......... . No. 2 Can Of Turnip Greens ..... . Campbell's Vegetable Soup ...... . 4 Reg. Sweetheart Soap .•...•.••• · 1 Large Riliso ...... ~:;·~ ... ;· '; .....• Junket Fudge Mix ............ ..

79c 33c 25c 79c ·33c 10c 14c 31c 33c .. __ . 3lc

Hollowell's Cash Food Store "SHOP AT HOLLOWELL'S AND SAVE"

"How eager can they get?"

eagerness can be over-done! He's alluding, of course, to all

these quick-trick cigarette tests-the ones that ask you to decide on cigarette

mildness after just one puff, one sniff, one inhale or one exhale! When the

chips are down, he realizes cigarette mildness can't

he judged in a hurry. That's why he made ...

The sensible test ... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test

which asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke-

on a pack after pack, day after day basis. No snap

judgments needed. After you've enjoyed Camels-and only

Camels-for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat,

T for Taste), we believe you'll know why ••• • •• • ! '." . . .. -

More People Smoke C~mels_. titan any otlter cfgareHe!

'"

Page 4: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

PAGE FOUR OLD GOLD AND BLACE MONDAY, MARCH ·s, 1951

. '

®lb ~olb anb }ilatk

Founded January 15 1916, as the official student newspaper of Wake Forest College. Publish_ed we~kly during the school year except durmg exammatlon periods omd holida·vs as directed by the Wake Forest Publica­tions Boarci.

ball and in doing ]t are spreading the name of Wake Forest College in newspapers through­out ti1e Western Hemisphere; that is, unless some of them arc getting the name mixed up and calling it Baptist Hollow, Wakefield Col. lege, as the announcer did over the short wave

Poteat And Earnshaw Mast.ers . '

Of Net Sport At Baptist HolloW By BILL AUSTIN and Earnshaw, .who as students Wake Foresters breezed .through

Campus Parade Woman's College ,·

In an editorial of last , week The­CAROLINGIAN, studen't newspa­per at the Woman's College, says. "The literary societies have ceased to be of vital or even semi-vital worth to the student body. This state of decay . . . is the result of a movement called progress which· ruthlessly marches on, crushing in its path those things too weak to survive." The editorial points out that though each of the four so­cieties has 600 members, the .all­time higll,i\_attendance on any one is 50. Feeling that the functions of the societies could be performed far more efficien'tly by other or­ganizations,· the editor continues. "A decent burial now would be kinder to the societies than would be the long-<irawn-out suffering till death doth them part ... or shall we let them continue to hob­ble along on their broken-down crutches of the past decade?"

broadcast last Wednesday. · Spring has jumped the gun in comprised the most outstandin_R both doubles an~ singles. competi­

At any rate, the boys are certainly fulfill- this Baptist village and old man team Wake Forest has ever claim- tron to emerge as doubles cham-Carol Oldham and Dave Clark ......... Co·Editors-in-Chiel Bob Hollomon ....... , . . . .. . .. . .. . . .. .. Business Manager

. W k F Sol has tempted countless students ed, and, who as coaches, for 20 pions and singles champion and imr the tradition of winnmg a e orest base· Pot t t hen ~ out to a;bsol:'b his rays. A surpris- years sent out teams that came runner-up. - ea won ou w

Wiley Warren .. , ............................ Sports Editor Staff Photographer .......................... J. B. Benton Circulation Manager .......................... Nolan Barnes

Associate Editors: Neil Gabbert, Jewel Livingstone, Paula Ballew Bill Austin and Tom Clark. Editorial Staff: L. W. Pullen.' Dana Gulley, I. K. Jordan. Sunny Snyder, Betty Holliday, Thorn Miller, Joanne Matthews. Luuana Breeden, Bob .Tohnson, Angelette Oldham, A. C. Ga>·, Johnny Bob Johnson, Angelette Oldham, A. c. Gay, Cecyle Arnold, Dowd Davis, Cree Deane, Ann Blackwelder, Bill Greene. Sports Staff: "Red" Pope, Ray Williams, Judson Mitchell, Charlie Darden, Warren Newbom, Harold Powell, and Jo Bunter.

hall teams, and if the past is any indication, ing number of collegians here have close. to but never equaled their tlie pair faced each other in the they're making new friends every minute for bucked J.he laze-inspiring effect of ability on the courts. No single finals of the singles bracket. the United States and for W_ ake Forest College. the sun and have exerted tllem- pair from thed' Wf akedFtohrest tenhnis After they became members of

, . . selves to the extent of overrun- teams ever e eate e coac es the faculty, Earnshaw and Poteat In fact, we wouldn t be surprised If the reputa. rung the local tennis courts. during their 20-year hitch. utilized their love of the game .in tion for friendliness and good sportsmanship - All of w:qich briil!gs to mind. a As collegiate players, Pote~! and coaching the teams. Among ,those

· · b tter day ·nth h'story of Wake Earnshaw -brought even more·ac- · ,,, •·.-· · ''h wh1eh our baseball teams have always roam· Fe t C 11

1 te ~ Ia'm t Wake Forest It was who later won acclrum for t. e

Business Staff: Harokl Walters, assistant business manager:

. . f ores o ege enms. , c 1 0 · . college were Ed·gar E Folk who, m tained wasn't one of the determmmg actors It was a similar day about 33 Earnshaw who arranged the f1rst th f . t ·lJealate play · . . h · ree years o m erco .,.. • in the decision of the Olympic Organization to years ago and the sun shone,.down mtercollegiate tennis · mate I_n won every singles match and tost Shirley Wooten, Dave Dickie, Ray Jones, Fred Malon~.

Buck Gdodwyn, Kenneth Smith, Wayland Jenkms, LoUJs Daniel. Photography Staff: Tom Walters. Circulation Staff: Sue Keith, assistant manager, Bob Loftis, Bill Greene, Taylor Sanford, Jr. Exchange Editor: Joanne Matthews.

send Wake For~st to represent the United on the tennis courts where a dou- North Ca~olina. Earnsha~ and his only one doubles. Jasper L. Mom­bles game was in progress. On one) par.tner, J1m Turner, easily defeat- ory later teamed with John '!ern­

States in the Games. After all, one primary side of the net was the current ed the Duke squad (then called on to c-apture a number of tennis :purpose of the games was to :promote better Wake Forest varsity team which 1 Trinity). Then Poteat b~came the t'tle ·n North Carolina.

had won· /every intercollegiate Bursar's partner and the two had 1 s 1

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, Pan-American relations and where could the match it had played that year. On the state marvelling at theh· rec- Wake Forest has n~t recently Organization have found a club better suited the other side were the coaches of ord of 33 sets won to only four last produced outstanding tennis teams for this purpose. The Deacs had walked off the championship tennis team, El- in three years of collegiate play. or players, but perhaps with the

P. 0. Box 511, W.rke Forest, N. C. All business matter should be addressed to the business manager, same ad· dress. Subscription rate: $2.00 per year. Adv~rtism~;; rates furnished upon request.

Entered as second class matter January 22, 1916, and re-entered April 5, 1943, at the post office at Waive Forest, North Car Jlina, under the act of :March 3, 1879.

liott Earnshaw and Hubert Poteat. In their senior year the pair eli- provision of better courts as we with practically every popularity and good Amazed observers saw the coaches maxed their tennis career here by now have and additional equip-sportsmanship trophy offered at the Wichita beat the varsity team in four con- ! winning a "grand slam" for Wake ment the sport can be given a Tournament in 1949. secutive love sets. Forest at the Southern Intercol- stimulus which will produce better

Kansas State The Kansas State Collegian is a

little jaded by all the queens on campus. It· declares: "Ever stop to count. them? Don't. It takes too ·long.

This was nothing new to Poteat Jegiate Tennis Association. The results .. Sowhefuuilieywinorlo~, andit~rl~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Services, Inc.. College Publishers Hepre­sentatives, 420 Madison Ave .. New York, N. Y., Ch1cago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco.

Printed by Progressive Printing & Publishing Co. Durham, N. c.

'BRAIN-TRUST' FRAT

ly seems at this writing that they're a mighty good bet to win the Pan-American Title, Ws a sure thing that Coach Sanford's boys will have done more than their share toward furth·

Early Stud.ent Here Pictures Typical pay Of Work, St~dy

" ... SiiJ.ce queens are so com­monplace these days, a co~d feels a-ccomplished if she manages to get through school without the honor. The 50 per cent who aren't elected a queen <1r attendant are flattered to think they've kept their indi-

ering hemispheric solidarity.

The Deacs ar'e due to get ltome about March ' The forty students who were named to Phi Beta Kappa last ·week have reason to be proud. The small gold key they will soon be wearing is one that represents years of hard work as wen as ability and certain other inner quali­ties, and it is not bestowed lightly. In fact, it is about as tough to get as any of the keys the <lampus gives, and it :probably carries more prestige on the outside than any oi them.

By DAN iFAGG 12. It seems to us that the biggest reception Wake Forest students have al-

was called and the students set out to the day1s work in the fields surrounding the college.

pardonable pride. · viduality. Evening Prayers " ... It would be better to Jean

in history by the Student Body wou·ld be high· ways worked hard, but no group ly appropriate and a real parade from the air· ever harder than those youn~ m~n

' . who attended the College m 1ts Three Groups

Before sunset the bell called t!le more to quality instead of quantit-.r workers to evening prayers ~n the and thus keep our queens from chapel. After supper Washington getting lost in the shuffle." ·

port to the campus would perhaps be partially early days as a manual labor in-in accordance with this, the most spectacular stitute. George Washington, a stu­sports occurence in Wake Forest history. dent here in 1835, in a letter. ad-

There were tlvee groups, one to says that "we have about half an "fell the sturdy oaks and split hour for amusement before the A number of national sororities them into rails," one to "sweat bell again,calls to study." and fraternities have joined in with heavy bl~e>ws over ·the roots Although' the College consisted condemning the forthcoming me­and shrubs that have been en- of only a huddle of wooden build-: tion picture, "Take Care of My croaching upon the clear rand" and ings ab<Jut the old Jones farm- Little Girl," starring Jeanne Crain. one "to cut do\vn cornstalks and house, her s'tuderits already felt vARIETy the showbusiness take u:p leaves." The letter con- that inten~e devotion to afma weekly, say~ that the show ex-The Phi Bete key represents years of hard

work, we say, because actually it is not always won in the three or four years the student is on a college campus; the groundwork ·for it is laid way back in the grades when one learns good study habits and how to make himself do the work set out. Which brings us to those cer­tain inner qualities we mentioned. They in­volve, primarily, a thing called self-discipline, the ability to make oneself stuc1y when other things seem far more attractive. lt's no less intestinal fortitude to keep on working when the eyelids droop heavy with sleep than it ]s to keep on running the mile when the feet be­come lead weights. Stickability, then, or just plain old-fashioned "guts," is a quality that you can nearly always bet the Phi Beta Kap­pa student possesses.

But the scoffers say, ''Grades don't mean anything," and they'll cite you two or three instances of students who barely got by ]n col­lege, yet proceeded to amass quite a fortune once outside, thinking that such exceptions prove their case, and forgetting to take into considerat1on the majority. An article on page :five, however, points out in cold statistics the r~sults of a survey which showed . Phi Beta Kappa members far ahead of most of their sehoolma.tes in earning power after several years out of College. Thus, 'Phi Beta Kappas, even by the world's dollar standard, have prov­en their excellence.

Yes, that gold key means something; it is a worthy goal on which any student may well set his sights.

A PRACTICAL MATTER

It would seem just common sense for Wake -Forest College to turn out en masse to hear Lucile Cummings, operatic contralto soloist, when she is presented here next Thursday night by the College (Joncert-Lecture Commit­tee. Common sense not only because Miss Cum­mings ]s reputedly one of the country's best contraltos, but also because when a good thing i:. really appreciated, those who provide it will be more willing to come across with other top flight entertainers and lecturers in the future.

All of ·which is a rather inc1irect way of saying that the Wake Forest L_ecture-Concert program in the past has not been adequate for a sebool of this caliber, and that in order to work toward gaining such a program for the College, students, faculty aud townspeople are going to have to show themselves willing to cooperate. The Concert-Lecture Committee here is certainly not going to pay big prices to bring top personalities and :programs l1ere to play before a spa1·sely-filled Chapel.

SCHOOL FOR LEADERS

dressed to "Brother Meredith," editor of the Bi•blical Recorder, de­scribed the student life in those days.

. • h · h h t A typical day began witll the ris- tinues to explain the attitude of mater wh1ch :has cha~ctenzed_ poses certain evils of the col-Omlcron Delta Kappa as come up WJt w a ing bell at dawn. followed by the the students toward this manual ~e Wake Forest student smce that lege fraternity system. The presi­

can be a good thing in its tentative plans for bell for prayers in the chapel 15 labor: ''We students engage L'l time. dent of the National Interfraterni­a Leadership Training School late this spring. minutes later. There was an hour everything here ·that an honest . In tlle st~le of .his d~y Was~- ty Research and Advisory Council. With ·what will probably be ail unusually coafmcelaastses7 .:.3b0e_fuThreebsrteuakfdy~.1s0tuwrshbice~ farmer is not ashamed to do. If mgton descrrbes h1s feelmg about writing. to the president of 20th

we should· draw ba·ck from any- ~ake Forest. "There i~ no place Century Fox, demanded that . young campus next year, the leaders of 1951· gan with·· the students busily en- thing here that is called work, we ~e Wake Forest at mght. Th€ the production of the f i 1m 52 may find that the principles of leadership gaged; "some in reciting, some in should feel that we had disgraced st1!!ness of the graveyard ~assesses be dropped, calling the picture

. h I ··n d h · preparing for recitation." At 12 ourselves. We are cheerful and the whole outdoor establishment. "Communistic inspired propagan-they learn m such a sc 00 "'

1 stan t em m o'clock the dinner hour came and happy-merry in joke and hard to It is· ~ow ~~ht-the ~ale face da" which would give "comfort good stead. Too often in the past, the various then -..~hat Washington called' "the beat in a hearty laugh. Blistered moon 1s shmmg beautifully, and to -the enemies of our country." He or.,.anizations on the campus have started the mental race" began again, to last hands we consider here as scars of all without is silence . . . But continued in a later letter, "It ye;r with inexperienced leaders at the helm·~ unAtitl th3 ot'chlock.th b ll t honor; and we show them with hark there so~ds the, deep notes seems apparent that you have

a our e e rang a as- much pride." Mr. Wait. who was of the. bell-'tls ~ 1~ clock · · · joined the Communists in attack­and have thus weakened themselves :for the semble the students in the grove first president of the College, lead Moonlight and music. but enough. ing the American College Fratern-rest of the -..·ear because of it. before the farm house which stood Washington's group. "Our chief There's no place like Wake FoJ- ity System which has served our-

• . . . on the site of Wait Hall. The roll sets the example," he reports with est. Good night." country and our educational sys-Therefore, we urge the variOUs orgamzabons " , tern for more than a century."

on the campus to be sure to hold their elections w ~ ;, k M' st. d • ' I z • h (From the column "On the before 1\fay 2, 3, and 4 so that their new of· a. e 1''180 u Ies n UriC Carolina Front" in THE DAILY ficers can get the benefit of the School. The TAR HEEL.) __ _

men who will lead the seminars will be some By IDA KAY JORDAN Council, and he serves as Sunday I The camp_ has proved to be a very Akron University of the top thinkers and leaders on the campus, Former Wake Forest student School teacher for the faculty effective way to teaoh the Baptist The Akron Bucketlite, Akron

David Fletcher now has the dis- children. youth in arid around Zurich.'' University, Ohi<1, reports a signi-and time will be well spent in listening to them. Bef t · th · tinction o-f being the first and on- ore en ermg e semmary Fletcher writes tllat there are 18 ficant set of statistics. It seems that

THANKS Iy American Student attending the Fletcher toured Luxembourg, Italy, Yale graduates have an average of Internati'onal Baptist Serrun· ary m' France, Germany, and Switzerland. different nationalities represented. 1 3 child h"l .. , d

"What an interesting collection of · ren w 1 e vassar gra s av­Zurich, Switzerland. He is a native He hopes to visit Palestine, before personalities 1 have had an oppor- erage 1.7 children. All this, com-of Elkin· and was graduated from returning to the United States. He tunity to know-from a Catholic ments the Buchtelite, "merely goes

To whoever was responsible, we would like Woraks. e ForeSt last spring with hen- plans turtller study at Southwest- priest to a former member of the to show that women have more E:rn Seminary when he returns. Gestapo." children than men.''

to express our appreciation for last Friday's Before coming to Deacontown In a letter published in the Bibi-Chapel program. It was simply good to go in Fletcher attended the. University cal Reoorder. the Wake Fprest lie says, ''Sometimes the mold of Utah state CoUege

d . 1 li of North Carolina. Durmg the two graduate says, "I have just return- environment and custom stands The Student Life, Utah State the Chapel for once an JUSt re ax, sten to years as a student here he was ed from eight wonderful days of out rather sharply' and at other College, is beginning to wonder appropriate scripture, ond then to good music. outstanding in religious activities Christian ~un and fell<~wship high times the· differe~ces. · tade aw~y about campus ethics,. "What's com-

. . . and was a member of Phi Beta in the Swiss Alps next to the Aus- .and are not so noticeable. In spite ing over us?" it asks anxiously. It was a program conducive to meditation, Kappa. , trian border. It was a mountain- of our. differences w_e have become "Last Friday night at the game

an aspect of Christian living which Christ UJ)On graduation he conferred. top experience comparable with one big happy family because we one of the Campus Che&t collec­stressed but which we, in our haste, often wi'tb officials., in Richm~nd and anything I have experienced at are made one in Christ an~ serve tion containers that was sent

' . · f was chosen as the Amencan stu- Ridgecrest. The Seminary sponsors the same Master." · through the student sect:l.on. failed neglect. We recommend 1t; not everyday, O dent to attend the International a ski camp every Christmas for Fletcher mentio_ns in the letter to show up. Saturday night four course, but once in a while ·it certainly comes Seminary. His appointment was those who are unable to go home. 1ihat the Forcign Missions Board m<~re were missing after being sent as a welcome and restful change. based on scholarship, character, Winter Sports has recently made a movie about through the same student section."

spirituality, and like qualities. "However, it was more t:lian a the International Seminary and the Likewise, we commend Prof. MacDonald and On Student Council I mere vacation for the enjoyment Girls' School in Rome. The movie . MiChigan State

his choir for the way in w.hich they did the At the seminary he was recently of the majestic wonders of nature is scheduled to be in cfrculation The cautious city manager of hymns Friday, and it seems to us that the seat- elected a member af. the Student and the thrills of winter 'sports. sometime this year. East Lansing, home of · Michigan

State. didn't want to · make any ing of the choir in! the balcony is a great im· false charges. About a dozen stop

provement. From there, they seem to make the . 0 N s E c 0 N D T · H 0 u G H l signs and six parking meters wer~ whole Chapel ring with all the rich fullness by . Bynum Shaw missing. The city manager said he

didn't want to accuse college stu-of their -voices. dents directly, but pointed out that

WHAT'S IN A NAME? This is a story which could only Greensboro, Wilmington, Rich-] to delve into a subject which pos7 such signs had been found in dar­

be published in a college news- mond and Norfolk one company, sitply could offend his employer. mitories and fraternities. Anyway, paper, because for a newspaper it has gained control of both the or to work hard right up to the persons returning the loot to the has something of a suicidal tone morning and afternoon journals. deadline. The moral fiber of the police station would not be p;:-ose-

It's interesting to note how times anQ. ideas to it. It concerns freedom of the In some cases these monopolists paper and its employees conse- cuted. hange. Back in 1916 when Dr. Robert Lee press. also control the radio and tele- quently is weakened.

c There is not a newspaper in this vision stations, Too often these monopolies have Oklahoma University Humber, jnternational·lawyer and sponsor of land which would not raise its If everyone in the world were been gained by individuals who The Oklahoma D~Iy polled some the \Vorld Federalist i\Iovement, was a student voice in a great clamor if the law- honest, there would be no appre- have interests other than publish- male students at random about here, he t.rjed to get the College to establish makers were to pass a measure ciable danger to such a trend, but ing, and the newspapers often are the draft situation and came up a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa then. He even restrictive to that fair freedom. unfortunately there are quite a made servants of the less· noble en- with the following quotes: "\Vent before the Baptist State Con1~ention with Newsmen would dig out the Bill of few citizens who have to be terprises. Owners hav':! used news "I don't know these Koreans his proposal, but he had no luck. :Host of the Rights in hvo shakes and there watched. Many of these news- columns to put themselves in Con- and don't think they know me. I'd members of the Convention. were opposed to would be a cthase .in t~he Supr

1edm'et paper murderers fall in that cate- gress, to put personal enemies out like for it to stay that way. But

h. k 1 f G k I tt d Court so fast e JUS 1ces wou n gory. of Congress. to sell tracts of land, I expect to be drafted in June; anyt :fg 1that sm~c }t~ 0 b 1Je • ,~ ersH an have time to get their robes on , Three Great· Evils to cover Shady deals and for many They'll eventually take anyone accor .mg Y tnrne . nm s own On U~· straight. There are three great evils in other pui\poses not in the inierests who can pull a trigger, I think." her's 1dea. He explamed to them that PBK The le<>islators who voted for this situation. An unscrupulous of the public welfare. They also "I frankly believe that veterans was a strictly scholastic organization, but some· such a la~ would have committed man who owns all the media >~Jf have organized plants an such a will have to go back in. I don't lww they distrusted it anyway. So not until political hara-kiri, because·news- mass communication in a locality basis as to yield large cash profits see how we can get enough men 1941 when Jlrlr. Carlton P. West put in the Col· paper edijors would never give can so censor and warp t:1e news to the owner bl.lt little service to without them." lege's application did Phi Beta Kappa eome the ·blackguards another favorable a~ his l~a~ty that .his r:aders are the community. ... "All-out mobilization is in the t Wak F t line. g1ven m1smformat10n, rncomplete Thus far this trend has been near future. I think it will include 0 e ores ·· Newspaper Self-Righteous J'n-'ormati'on, or no 1'nformat1'on. If " established only in single cities, everyone. I don't expect to finish

The newspapers would be very a stockholder of the paper is in- but it is spreading. In one nearby cGllege." self-righteous a:bout this thing, you valved· in a litigation or a com- sta'te the same individuals own ''If they're going to get me,

But aside from the above purely practical reason for attendance at Thursday's concert, :ru:iss, Gqmmings, who records for RCA Victor, ' is a quite popular artist who should provide a

It will be interesting in about 33 years to look back on some of the ideas we now hold aud see if they will stand the )ight of reason.

can bet your last" newsboy, promising situation. he can rest as- much of the stock of the news- they'll get me ... It looks bad." And yet, the newspaper publish- sured that it will never reach the papers in the two largest cities,

ers of A.nierica have done more to public prints. and are acquiring that of a third. Louisiana State Ullkrersity The statement "Employment is nature's b est alb-rldge the freedom and $ap the A combine which has a cJrner 'I'he individual college student The Supreme Court last week,

medicine," could,be attributed to almost any of our vitality o~ their product than. ~ny on the papers of a town also can may feel that this trend bas little by ~ming a lower court ruling, modern occupational therapists, but it was actually cr~. ?f crooked · and conruvmg wield a great influence, often for effect on him, ,but it Jms. News- made 1t possible for a Negro to en-

very enjoyable evening for the community. · ·::B.t~sides; lll,ent:frolll. her pictures she. appeals to

the eye as well as to the ear. i

POPULARITY AND PARADES

made by the Roman physicEnian, G1 alen, in A. D. !22. po~tic1an~ could ~':er do. , . bad,torif th~.?<>liticsi"~.n~_ ~~~~g.th. e.:" .J!a~rs _g~ne:r~W--~V.~h- 9r this _na.:. ;,e;,. L0_ 0o~i~~Rano"ay'· SWta;;~~nz:iwillv~rsitbyeL_. tahwe· -.

However ;.the :World :Book eye opedia ·reports··.,_.at ~ .:.-:radually,!'the~ o~ers .-o~ -IJ~ m~. ·. P.. 'a:.~Wl,'l! . . • _can ,us~. -~ ,:tion's public; ~®inion, .. and jf .. by =<L .. =v occupational therapy did·not receive ·much attention newspapers-are killing off compe- press as a ·b!ackjack tci get legisla- withholding news or ooloring news f.irs't <it his rare to a~tend that until the late 1700's, and was not called by that tition. They ·have assassinated tion which may not .be desirable. a publisher can create opinion school. name until 1914. . · their l"ivals with dollars. The It can assume a dictatorial policy that is unsound, he is exercising a Commented Wilson: "I am nat-

* * * * * merger is ex'tingui.shlng the lights toward -its advertisers. . most vidous variety· of thought urally gra:tified ·that the Supreme Mica is a mineral having the property of "perlect of freedom. of the press. , Also, the." quality of· such mon- control. , Court ruled as it did, not only be-

• cleavage" so- that when ·it is .struck it splits cleanly N:o Competition · opolized newspapers declines, rap-. Every time another newspaper cause of me, but for others who · along pa~llel line's into flat sheets or layers. It. can In' nearly every large city nepr idly, . Where there is no competi- dies or is absol>bed in :thls coun..: might want to en'ter the, Law From all accounts, the Demon Deacons are s · be split so thinly t:hat 1;000 sheets make a pile only us, there: is .. ~ such. thing as com- ~o~. a reporter lacks the incentive try; a candle is snuffed c;~ut, and chool. WlJS.on is 30, a veteran of

giVing- the folks south of the borde!'· a· lesson im inCh high, according to the .World Book Encycl<~- peti~v~ jo,~~lism.,: .Ralei~h is ~e to dig_ out all the f~cts, to keep his *ere has beeri no Period in his- World Wa:r ·II and a .falnny man or two about that old American game of base- pedia: exception. ut m urham. eyes open :for every speck of news, tory when we needed more lig~t. with a son.· ·

Wes Phi

Page 5: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

CH ·s, 1951

~a de :ge

~\veek Th~ :it newspa­•llege, says. aave ceased semi-vital

10dy. This ae result of tress which· ~rushing in 10 weak to points out

e four so­~s. the .all­n. any one unctions of performed other or­continues. would be han would

suffering art ... or ue to hob­>ken-down 1de?"

legian is a queens on Ever stop

It takes

e so com­co)'!d feels tges to get fue honor. 1't elected ! flattered b.eir indi-

:!I" to lean r quantity ens from ~."

sororities oined in ling mo­! of My ne Crain. v:business ;how ex­the col­he presi­:fraterni-· Council.

of 20th d that e film

picture ropagan­"com!fort 1try." He !tter, "It >u have 1 attack­Fratern­rved our mal sys­lry." 'On the

DAILY

, Akron a signi­

ems that rerage of rrads av­tis, com­rely goes l'e more

lb. State wonder

at's com­lXiously. 1e game L collec­as sent m. failed ght four eing sent section."

.ager of Ylichigan ike any •zen stop ers were r said he ege stu­out that lin dor-1\nyway, 'l to the •e p;:-ose-

ty led some r1 about :arne up

Koreans r me. I'd ay. But in June:

anyone .ink." veterans

I don't tgh men

in the . include to finish

;et me, bad."

I'Sity :t week, t ruling, ·o to en­aty Law

be the 1d that

am nat­lupreme mly be­~rs who ae. Law teran of ily man

MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1951

West Installed Phi Beta Here

. llonorary·Scholastic Fra·

temity ._ Succeeded . Golden Bough

' By CARL MEIGS. Phi Beta Kappa was the first

honor society in the United States to indude more :than one college. Until 1776 when it was establish­ed at the College of William and Mary, ev~ry institu'ti'on had its, own variety; Of honor SQ~iety.,

·The most exclusive honorary fraternity in the country, Phi Beta Kappa selects its members on the basis of personal 'qualities of high character and particular distinc­tion in the field of liberal scholar­ship.

Wake Forest's chapter owes its begi!lning primarily to the efforts of C.· P. West, now librarian '?fhO was then an assistant professor in the Social Science Department. It was in 1939 that West, a Phi Beta ~appa from Boston College, com­piled a general report of the col­lege and ·submitted it to the in­spection of the committee of quali­fications. This report was approved by the committee and Wake Forest was accepted for membership at the national meeting in Se:;nember. 1940.

PBK Difficult to Oiliain It ijl more difficult fur a college

to obtain a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa than it is to gain member.:. ship in any of the recognized as­sociation~ of American Colleges.

January .13, 1941, marked the es'tablishment of the Wake Forest group and the beginning of North Carolina's Delta chapter. In the ceremonies, eight charter members were recognized, including three· men from the medical school fac­ulty. Mr. West and Dr. Hubert Poteat were also included in this group.

or the 20 foundation members inducted at this time, six are now on the faculty. They include Dr: C. B. Earp of the Greek Depart­men1, Dr. E. E. Folk and Dr. H. B. Jones of the English Depart­ment; Dr. T. D. Kitchin, former PI'esident; Dr. G. W. Paschal, pro­fessor .emer-itus; and Dr. A. c. Reid, head of the . psychol<ogy­philosophy department. West was installed as president for that year.

Golden Bough Passes With the coming of Phi Beta

Kappa to the campus, the old hon­orary fraternity of the college, the Golden Bough, passed out of exis­tence. Tihe. requirements for the Golden Bough resembled closely those of Phi Beta Kappa. In March o-f that year, the first election of the Student Body was made, and ten students were granted mem­bership.

The standards of Phi Beta Kap­pa are rigid. In order for a stu­dent to qualify, he must have com­pleted at least 75 hours in the col­lege. A junior must have an over­all average of at least 2.6 A senior

-must have an average of 2.3 with a 2.5 average on upper bracket work. · Membership is, limited ·to ten per cent of any one class. In the creed of the :fraternity are three avowed prin:ciples: devotion to friendship, to morality, and to literature,·

·Senior memlbers elected · last year as·juniors are the following: Jewell Brinkley, Durham; Thomas Clark, Roanoke Rapids; C,edric Davis, Farmville; Brooks Gilmore, Greensboro; Allan . S. Johnson, Apex; Elva Lawren:ce; Nina ·Mar­tin, Louisville, Ky.; Carol Oldham, Gulf; Marcella Reed, Thomasville; Paul Williams, Lexington; Harry Wright, Danville, Va.

Stroupe js President .. The president of Phi Beta Kappa

for '!Jhis year is Dr. Henry S. Stroupe of the Social Science De­par.tmep.t. Vice president is Dr. Henry L. Snuggs, profeS'OOr in the Englis'h department. Mr. Carlton P. West, college librarian, is sec­retary.

Other fa:culty members are the :following: Dr. C. S. Black, Dr. H. G. Britt, Prof. D. A. Brown, Prof. J. W. Chandler, Dr. C. B. Earp, Dr. E. E. Folk, Prof. J. W. Futrell, Prof. R. L. Greene, Dr. H. B. Jones, Dr. I. B. Lake, Dr. R. E. Lee, Dr. H. M. ParKer, Dr. G. W. Paschall, Dr. C. C. Pearson, Dr. H. M. Poteat, Dr. A. C. Reid, Dr. B. E. Smith, Dr. W. E. Speas, Dr. T. D. Kitchin and Prof. R. Johnson Watts.

Debaters To Start Long Tournament Trips Spon Virgil Mo'orefield, Wiley Mitch­

ell, affirmative. and Lucius Pullen and Joe Mauney, negative, will represent' Wake Forest in the Georgetown Invitational Debate Tournament at Georgetown Uni­versity, Washington, D. C., March 8-10, acoording to Prof. Franklin R. Shirley, Director of Debate.

Elva Lawrence, Cecyle Arnold, Virgil Moorefield, Wiley Mitchell and .Lucius Pullen will leave March 20 for a three week debate trip., Jl'he fits't·ctournament·wm 'be art Durant, Okla., March 22-24; from tilere they will journey to ;the National. Pi Kappa Delta Con­vention at . Stillwater, Okla. This tournament will be held March 25~31 on the campus of Oklahoma A.'.and M. University. Then they

.' will travel ro Gainesville, ;Fla., for · the SOuthern Speech Tournament

which will las't April 2-6. .

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

New Phi B~ta

Pict~red above are 32 of the forty ·Wake Forest students wll;o were elected to Phi Beta Kappa last week. They are, left t11 right, first row: Marjorie Batson, Doro­thy Hilburn, Ann Jean Blackwelder, Carolyn Timberlake, Ruth Draper, Mrs. Lily Phillips, and Ruth Ann Weathers; second row: Bill Alexander, Janet Byrd, Mrs. \Van~a Turner, Paula Ballew, Frances Westbrook. Vernell Vick, and ·Kiffin Penry; third row: John Phillips, Vann Murrell, W. W. Shelton, Ben Philbeck, Courad Warlick, and Harry Klaus; fourth row: -Dan Fagg, Walter Barnard, E. P. Ellis, Jr., Joe Newhall, Ted Chandler, and Bob Poole; fifth row: Wade Gallant, Jimmy Johnson, Bruce Cresson, Lonnie Williams, Charles· Barham, and Carl Meigs.

Students not present when the picture was made were: Dorothy ·:ltaynor, Jean. Scholar, Clarence E. Williams, George A. KahdY, Earleen Willis, Edward L. Boy-ette, Donald M. Hayes, and Mrs. Emily C. Nichols.

This . year'!i Phi Beta Kappa selections included 12 juniors and 28 seniors. Photo by J. B. Benton

Do Grades Mean Anything? Studies Abroad Available Is Favorite Question In

Campus Bull Sessions

v1s1ons were made: the first was Recent Survey Of Wake Two· special opportunities for] made up of men in the upper ten F t G d S ~ollege students to J>tudy_ ax:d work Some students of the college per cent of their class, the second ores ra S ilYS m France and Great ~ntam :vere prepared a petition to th~ Trustees consisted of average sh!dents. and "Yes" announced. today by ~e In.,stltute. in 1935 that dancing should be au-the third was composed of tr1e be- J of International Educat1o~, •. Wes .. thorized at the college.

By DANA GULLEY low-average gradua~es or those any other group. This superiority 451Jh Street, New York C1ty. AbOut the time the local Phi Beta who· fell into the lowest .third amoun'ted to a third usually and Up to March 10 the Institute will

Kappa chapter makes its elections scholastically. often as much as a half. receive applications for these

PAGE I'IVII

Appeal Made For Public Aid CARE Help To Univer·

sity Students Needed •

Care aid to a great number of Yugoslavian university students, all of them suffering from severe malnutrition ·as the resuit of an unprecendented drought, hinges largely on the success of a joint appeal by Care and the World Stu­dent Service Fund for funds to ·move U. S. surpl'Us->=foods which have been made available to Care to •help meet emergency food needs of near disaster dimensions in Yugoslavia.

A survey just completed j'ointly by Care, the Yugoslav governmen\ and the United Nations Children's Emel'gency Fund has placed 47,-000 Yugoslav university students in the pri:ority group for these U. S. surplus foods.

Consisting mainly of powdered milk, egg powder and dairy butter. these food stuffs from the stockpile of the U. S. Departmerut of Agri­culture were ob'tained by Care im­mediately on the heels of a recent message from President Truman,

I who urged Americans to aid the I Yugoslav people by individual food gifts through facilities such as Care. The Commodi'ty Credit U:or­poration turned availa'ble food sur­·pluses over to Care with the ex­press understanding that they be used for general relief purposes. However, Care has 'Undertaken to raise funds needed in reprocessing and moving them from their );res­ent stora·ge pla~es to seaboard for loading o n Yugoslavia -bound ships.

To make the distribution of these vitally needed foods possible. CARE, a non-profit, cooperative welfare service, is appealing to the American peole. The cost is $5.35 for each 300-pound package unit of food, containilllg 200 pounds ol milk powder and 100 pounds of powdered eggs. Distributed on the basis of two pounds of milk pow­der and one pound of powdered eggs, eac'h package contains SU'P­plementary food 1lo feed 100 peo-ple for a month.

As the result of constant un­dernourishment, many thousands of Yugoslav students are threaten­ed wrth tuberculosis and ot.IJ.er de­ficiency diseases. Supplementary rations mus't be supplied them by voluntary efflorts if the spread of diseases attendant upon serious malnutrition is to be avoided this winter.

Contributions from American colleges earmarked "Yugoslavia Surplus Foods," may be made either to the World Student Serv­ice Fund, 20 West 40th Street, New York, or to Care, 20 Broad Street, New York 5.

every Spring conversation usual- Careers Surveyed Peak of., Earning wishing to fill positions as assist-ly centers around discussion of the The careers of these men since 4. Men who had average grades ants d'anglais in forty French "Brain-Trust Fraternity" for a few graduation were 'bhen followed. or wh_o were in the _middle third llycees, col~eges and ecol~ nor-days. Note was taken of the importance of the1r class scholastically, ~arned i males durmg the ~cadem1c year I

One of the inevitable subjects of their jobs, of their financial sue-· on the averag~ only t~o-th1rds :.:s 1951-.52. Involved m these posts, of· these campus "bull sessions" is cess, and of their advan<!€ments in md!t as those m .the highest tenth. offermg an ex cell~ ?hance lo get that of the .rela'tion of grades to their respective fields ohndeavor. ~:s was 25 years l!fter they had ~lose to French ~ife.. ·lS the. teach­success in business or professional Each man's recoi:d while in school finished college .. _and when they mg of conversational English for life after C()llege. This matter ls was then checked with relation· to were. at the peak of their .earning abou~ twelve _hours a weo:!k, and

A Miss is as good discussed as heatedly and as ire- his present position power. occaswnal assiStance to .the local quently as are those other favori1e . . . · 5. Those in the l'Owest third Engli~h professor in his classes. topics of collegiate convers&tio::m: ,ComplErte, the s~vey wa~ able to group earned least of all, and in- In many cases, there is suficient sports and women. P:Ov~ se~eral salient and mterest- ~ad·of making more as they_ grew time for study in a nearby French

There· are always those who. 1 g f ~·. . . . . . older, were .almost invariably re- university. Candidates should maintain that the value of grad,es, 1. In a great majority of ca.ses moved to make room for men of have a good academic record, con.: particularlY. go~d ones, is confine! e~plo~ers gave preferen'Ce to men greater energy and ability. versati:onal French, and a bache­to· the ~vy-c~vered walls of the va- Wlth h1gh marks when C'Onsiderinll These statistics have been pre- lor's degree at least by the sum­rious institutions of higher learn- them for jobs. This was ·true al- sented on an almost strictly finan- mer of ·1951. Full maintenance ing. most with.out exception in the cial basis. Of co)lrse one can quite While in France is provided under

Ne'er-do-Wells comm!=rci~l and prof~ssional fie~ds justifiably say that money is not the grant, and some Fulbright J The defense offered for this and even m those busmesses whirh the yardstick Ctf success. travel grants are available to sup-

viewpuint is usually the cla;;sk required extensive physical labor. Jobs of Responsibility plement these awards. Those in-example of the ne'er-do-well who Better Salaries How~er, the suniey also ghowed teres'ted should make immediate spent four (or more) very care- 2. Graduates in the upper. ten quite conclusively that with the application to the Institute. free years in school, received a per cent of their class who started higher salaries went jobs of IU"~at- Up to April 15 the Institute will diploma by good luck and the on relatively equal footing with er importance and responsibility. accept candidates for the British kindly heart of a benevolent dean, men who h;ad l'Ower averages, be- This fact proves that the men wh·J summer schools to be held this and then proceeded to become a gan to earn substantially more rose to these heights must have year at the universities of London, millionaire captain of industry. If aoout their fifth. year out of col- had something more than the :pre- Edinburgh, and Birmingham. one took this and similar argu- lege. In nearly every instance verbial book-sense. They· had to Courses are especially designed for ments seriously, he would be con- that the graduate in the highest have the ability to get along with juniors, seniors and gradaate stu­vinced. that a sure formula for tenth started out at a better salary their fellow workers. So in addi- dents with special interest :lnd success is to loaf throug!J college than his classmates in the lowe:r; tion to being the most practical of background in history, literature, and then reap his golden harvest. brackets. hi:s advar::ce was even the graduates, they were in reality philosophy, art Dr music. A limit-

In order to establish some basic more rapid. also the most cultured. ed number of tuition or transom·-truths on this controversy, an ex- This superiority of earning oow- Perhaps this study will help to tation scholarships are available. tensive survey was made a few er continued for 20 years and t.'f}en answer the freshman's eternal The Institute of International years back. The scholastic records the better students began to for~e question, ;'What's the use of mak- Education, as the central private of a representative· per cent of ahead even more ra'Pidly. ing good grades?" and also to show agency in international study, also each Wake Forest graduating class 3. Men who were in t'he highe~t that success in the business world will provide. material on other from 1900 to 1925 were first ex- third of their class averaged less or in any field of endeavor .is de- study·· 'Opportunities in Europe, amined. To form a complete than those in the top ten per cent, pendent upon and comparable to Latin-America, and other parts of cross'-section, three principal di- but earned considerably mDre th~n tla::isroom \v'Ork. · , the world upon request .

Old Student Magazine Reveals Phi Beta Kappa R~cipe Editor's Note: Th!is story first 15 are frat men; this is about the

appeared in a 1941 Student, but same ratio that exists among the is just as appropriate today. entire Student Body. The fratern-

By IDLL PHILLIPS ity group says that frat activities So you want to be a P!hi Beta in no way interfere with their

Kappa? studies, :that a man can do all the Then you'd better be from · a studying he wants to if he makes

small town. ~his year, 13 out of up his mind to get down to work. 15 of our honor men here at Wake · Forest are from small towns ~h~ non-fratern[ty gr?l!P· although

Also d ki d f · ·k t . 1 1s not as well quahf1ed ro ~peak

work and a time for play. j the ministry . You need not follow in your Wha:t kind of grades do you

father's fDotsteps. The majoritY. of have to make? Considerably bet­the Phi Betas have chosen differ- ter than a B average is necessary ent professi(lns from those of their for membership. The scholars say fathers. You needn't be a city that it is best to get a good start slicker as a large number of the in the freshman and sophomore scholars were born and raised on years toward that B plus average. farms. 1

' Convers'ation ability seems ta be

as a .Mile _, '

-but Cigars are a ..Man~ Smokel

• 0 some n °. wor . 0 on the matter of fraternity inter-.pay. fol:\ Your education . .A:gam, ·reren"""s'c 1· ·· ·..,.. .. .;.,...: ••-" t··'d t ... ·

13 out Oif "15 PBK' h · b · . --~ , a so mlUA:; ... a e ~ml-dl·n1·n·g halls d off. .s avekJO s m nation is the only thing .. needed. ·

an essential ))art of the .. typicaJ member's makeup.:- AlF those'·-to whom we talked displayed an un­usual ability to express themselves and to hold one!& attention.

All this leads to t!hat end of all ends-studying. How m~ch should you study.? .• ;How should . you go about it? · · , -· -

.. -: , ... ' ~ ' .··. -

. , o Ice wor . or are department· assiStants. One spends his week-ends serving as pastor of two near-<by churChes: The con­census among the scholars who V\'<)rk is that aoing such tasks .i;ives tb,em m<lre Incentive to study. ·

The question of joining a fra­ternity Is up tO ~ou. Five . out of

You should certainly participate in some of the extra-curricular ac­tivities. All the Phi Beta's. have taken part\in. religious work, pub­lications, intramural a'thletics, stu­dent club's, or 'forensics. M~y of them stressed the value Of a well­rounded college llie:-:-.a tix:D,e for

The choice of occupalion seems to have nothing to do with the ability to make· Phi Beta K'appa: Two rilern!bers ·are studying medi­cine;_ one, journalism; one, chem­iStry; five. teaclling; and five,· for

Only a few of the Phi Betas S'tudy a specific amount of time each day. Some of them admitted that they study spasmodically. Others said that they do their work as it oomes along, stressing the importan~ of keeping up with assignments. All of them agree

See REVEALS Page Eight

You need not inhale to enioy a cigar! CIGAR INSTlTVTE OF AMERICA. INC.

Page 6: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

PAGE SIX OLD .GOLD AND BLACK MONDAY, MARCH 5, 195L

Seven Deacon Cagers Termin_ate Varsity Basketball Careers By RAY WILLIAMS

When the Wake Forest basket­ball team begins its practice next season, there are seven players who will not be seen sharpenin~ their eye for the approaching cam­paign. Al McCotter, Billy Mason, Stan Najeway, Buck Geary, Jack Mueller, Paul Bennett and Charlie Kersh are the boys who will not return due to graduation this com­ing spring. Charlie Kersh was de­clared ineligible earlier in the past season, but did see some action.

Along with these seniors will go

no freshman team at that time. Let's look at each one of these

graduating •basketeers separately and see what he has contributed to the hardwood game while at Baptist Hollow.

McCotter To Coach Al McCotter, the Wake Forest

center, stands 6:5, weighs 195, is 21 years of age, and hails· from Van­dermere. Before coming to Wake Forest, he prepped at Rocky Mount High School. Al has been on the varsity for three years and has improved greatly in the last two

height, speed, an eye for the bask- years. His play in the 49-50 season et, classy ball-handling and dribb- made him one of the best centers ling, and last but not least. ex- in the Southern Conference. Mc­perience. Most of these boys gained Cotter was an asset to the club be­experience by playing varsity ball cause of his height and rebound the first year they attended Wake [work. After graduation, he is plan­Forest or at least being allowed to ning a career in coaching. sit on the bench since there was Al not only participated in bask-

ALTON McCOTTER Wake Forest Center

.. '.: i =:·_":.· •• :\

........ · .. : . : .. ·: ...... ~- ·····"'~

BILLY MASON Wake Forest Forward

etball while at Wake Forest, but 1 Stan "Sut" Najeway frOiJl Arnold, their games with his lpng set shots he was a member of the Track Pa. "Sut" has just completed four· which were his specialty. team and, also, a member of the years of varsity competition·· her~ Here at Wake Forest, Buck has Monogram Club. at Baptist Hollow, and for his ex- not confined• his talents to athlet-

Billy Mason 'came to Wake For- celleni play, was chosen All- ics, ·but was active -in a ,number of est after playing two years for Southern in 1950. Najeway, before campus organizations. He is a Campbell Junior College and ha:l enrolling at Wake Forest, played member of the Thespian Club and just completed two years as a var- basketball for his hometown high Student Council. When he gradu­sity member here. From Wilming- school in Arnold. He has been on ates this spring, Buck will .leave ton, where he played ball for New the varsity ever since his enroll- with a Bachelor of Arts Degree. Hanover High, Mason is 23 years ment here in 1947. Stan is now 24 old, weighs 190, stands 6:1. years old, stands 6:3 and weighs

He was not a regular starter his 190. first year at Wake Forest, but this past season, Billy improved enough to become one of the first string forwards. In this latter campaign, he showed that he could drive for lay-ups, was one of the best re­bound men on the squad, and his hustle was one of the bright spots of the team. ·

Najeway Looks To Pros

When he graduates in May with a mathmatics major, "Sut" wants to coach, or go into pro ball ..

· Mueller Back •To Indiana

The other senior guard is Jack Mueller, one of the slickest drib­blers and !ball-handlers· ever to play for the Deacon hoopsters. The 5:11 guard, who is 23 years old and weighs 160, came to Wake Forest in 1947. Since that time, he has been a regular member of the varsity basketball team .. His speed and deceptive dribbling will be missed greatly next season.

gree this June, and is planning a career in coaching, most likely in his home state of Indiana. ·

Also leaving, will be Paul Ben­nett, a second string forward. who, like some of his teammates,· has played four years of varsity bask­etball. Paul, who is one of the tall­est men on the sli}uad at 6:4, weighs 180, and is 22 years old. He prepped at Graing!lr· High in Kinston, before enrolling. at Wake Forest. He is regarded as having c;ne of the best "eyes" on the squad.

Bennett is· active in campus or­ganizations and is studying pre­med here at. Baptist Hollow for a career in the :inedical profession. He is president of Kappa Alpha social fraternity ...

·Kersh meligible The other graduating forv."Drd is

Buck Geary, another of the sen­ior basketball players is from Clendenin, W. Va., and also has been on the varsity for four years. A guard,he is 24 years of age, and carries his 155 lbs. on a 5:10 frame. Buck aided the Deacs in many of Jack will receive his F.l. S. De- • Charlie Ker5:h is the other grad-

STAN NAJEWAY Wake Forest Forward

JAMES (BUCK) GEARY Wake Forest Guard Wake Forest· Guard

·PAULBEJS'Ni~TT Wake Forest· Forward

uating basketeer. From Harrison­burg, Va., Charlie was declared in­eligible for collegiate competition early in the past season; he· was ·one of the mainstays of .the club at the lbeginnil:lg of this years~ campaign. A forward, Kersh is 2~ years old, weighs 175, and is 6:~. Charlie has also played on the var­sity four years. He was rapidly developing into a consistant scorer, when news came that he was iu­eligi:ble.

After graduation, Kersh, who is getting a major in physical edaca­tion, is planning a career in coach­ing.

With these seniors go a great deal of talent which will not be too easily replaced, · especially since most of them have played four full years of varsity ball.

CHARLm KERSH Wake Forest Forw~d

SPORTS WARNINGS By "Red" Pope

With warmer weather appearing d-aily, Deacon athletic teams are stepping-up their practice tempo in anticipation of an eventful spring sports agenda. Baseballers are working on the diamond while football candidates scrimmage across the field, and those remaining

Footballers Holding 'Open' Spring Drills

Former Deac Tom Fetzer Returns To Coach

Backfield

Kappa· Alpha And. Alpha· Sigma Phi Play For Fraternity Championship Tomorrow;

Winner Will Meet Independent Champion ,. . . . • . Approximately 50 candidates are

on the na,wnally prcmment lmks squad are courmg the local course k' t d -1 ·n pr-1·n,. foot 1888 FOOTBALL

Black Cats And Hunter Dorm Are Favored To Play Tuesday Night For Campus Title

wor ·m" ou a1 y 1 s o -in hopes of continuing their Southern Conference domination. While I ball d~ills under Coach D. c; all this activity is happening, the Baptist track and tennis squads Walker. T--.venty of last fall's .are struggling to even accumulate enou"h men to make the sports freshmen, two new freshmen. and worthwhile, and the coaches of the tea~s are be"inning to wonder ~um~rous tra~sfers ar_e participat-

In November of 1888 delegates from the University of North Caro­lina, Trinity and Wake Forest met at the Yarborough House in Ral­eigh to <f'Orm an Intercollegiate Football Association. This Associa­tion had a constitution like that of the American Intercollegiate Asso­ciation and with its rules for foot­ball. ·

Of Independent League By JUDSON MITCHELL

. . . . . . ., mg m combmed scnmmage and if therr contmuatwn at Wake Forest w11l be profltable or not. dummy drills wtih the returnees

Kappa Alpha and Alpha Sigma Phi meet tomorrow night for the Fraternity League championship in the Campus Intramural Basketball Tournament. They advanced to the Fraternity Lea­gue finals with opening round victories over PiKA and Sigma Chi.

Last week in Carolina's Woollen Gympasium, one of the most from the 1950 varsity. During the Spring drills, which

cutstanding indoor track meets in the South was being held. Schools will continue until the school re-!from all over this area were represented in the prominent meet-ex- cess for Spring holidays, there will cept Wake Forest. Around the campus people ask the question, "Do be no closed practices since Hw we have a track team?" Little is known as to the team its members, theme of the sessions is to fami­or its meets. For the past few years the only publicit; given to our liarize the players with the dif-. · l ferent formations and plays rath-

Before the days of baseball, football, and basketball,. Wake Forest students obtained physical diversion by walking for mail and taking long walks in the country.

The winner ot the KA-Alpha Sig oattle will meet the Inde­pendent League champion Thursday for the All-Campus champ­ionship. Hunter·met P. A. D. and the Black Cats faced Phi Delta Phi in the Independent League opening round last Thursday. .The two Independent winners will square off in the second game of tomorrow night's double bill. CI~dermen was therr many defeats, and even these were seldom er th'an working on definite pat-

prmte.d. The Athletic Association of the College was fortunate in . terns. The daily agenda includes securing Elmer Barbour as the new track coach for Wake Forest, I pass defense and offense, kicking, this. year, especially since he had one of the best records as a high 1 rusf!ing o.ffense and defense, and school coach in the State; nevertheless, a coach can do very 'little scr1mmag~ng. Each Sat~rday after­·without participants. Barbour who is a former Deacon star himself noon durmg the remamder of the tutored Durham High to thr~e State Championships over the past practices there will be a practice

Alpha Sigma Phi topped Sigma

D · s L d B "B• AI'' Chi 56-33 in the opening gam~ of . . eac corers e y Jg {e~es~ts~~~~~~~~· ~d :::. . while Joe Barnes was runner-up

After winning eight of their first N. C. State 56 72** with 1~. 13 Southern Conference games Navy · 46 66** Kappa Alpha spanked the Pi-!few years, and now that he is on the campus with plenty of coach- game.

:ing ability it seems a shame to waste his time, as well as the time of a few loyal supporters on the team.

Fetzer Back Wake Forest appeared headed for Enka Rayonites 74 66 KA's, 44-27, in the second game Assisting Coach Walker are line 1 one of .the eight berths in the an- Tennessee 77 85 · of the twin-"bill. Sterling Gates,

No one actually knows why Wake Forest doesn't have a strong cinder team. Although the College supplies them with some equip­ment, it is the general consensus of many that the equipment is either antiquated or scarce. Whether ·the members of the team abuse the equipment or not seems highly impro:bable since they continue <to show up for drills each spring. That boils the problem down to a much smaller scope--de-emphasization of the sport by those who ru-e in a position to help the sport grow. Boys who are interested and <:apable of being on the team are hestitant to try out because they hate to spend their time on something from which they get nothing. Oi course, the College doesn't offer scholarships to track members, !but it seems as if they could provide them with the bare essentials with which to build a decent squad, The need for material has be­come great; the boys who took an interest in the past and were able to capture a few honors here and there are no longer here, and new faces must present themselves or the entire program will be lost. If candidates, whether experienced or not would make an honest ef­fort to see Coach Barbour and attempt' to make the squad perhaps with the. enlarging of the team the Athletic Association ~ould fali in line and supply the needs. The success is up to the squad itself, and its prospective members.

In relation to the dire need of material for the track team, i. e. human material, the tennis team should have been abolished years ago. New courts have been constructed and the team has a set of uniforms, yet they still are unable to find people to fill those uni­forms. Each sunny afternoon there are so many people on the courts fuat they have to stand in line to play, but on practice days for the team you couldn't Hnd a prospective tennis aspirant if you comlbed the campus. In this case the equipment is adequately provided, yet there are not enough students who are interested in using their tal­ent.s to represent the school as it should be represented. No students have the right to condemn the lack of a tournament-winning team when the students themselves do not support it.

BROOKS BURT A blow hit the Deacon baseball camp in Argentina last week when

catcher Tunney Brooks was rendered out of action due to a broken !humb. The team took only one catcher, Brooks, in hope that noth­mg wo~ld happen to physically handicap him; however it was thought that third baseman Jack Liptak could fill in if the need arose. This chan~e which ~lad to take place for the second game the Deacs played ~eces1tated a great many other changes. The infield would remain I~taet except for the third sack slot which would be filled by out­flelder Kent Rogers. Into the outfield would go either Don Woodlie.l' or one of the other three pitchers who weren't seeing action.

'·. : . :.,The ~rise of the ffrst game was the relief hurling: of first base.:. man Wiley Warren. Although the Argentines touched him for three hits, it appeared that he did a creditable job. It was comforting to local fans to see the hitting was so well distr1buted. Reports have it that the op~sition was not as experienced at the game as the Deacons, but nevertheless· any team that gets 15 hits off any pitchers of tourn­ey caliibre deserves much credit.

FETZER BACK ODDS and ENDS-Tom Fetzer, former All-Southern bacli: at Wake

Forest a11d currently working on his Master's Degree at Carolina, is

coaches Tom Rogers and Pat ·Pres- ' nual Southern Conference Tourna- Appalachian 74 55 Tinker Williams, and . Howard ton, and backfield coach Tom Fet- TOM FETZER ment to ·be played in Raleigh. McCrary Eagles 77 73 'Dwiggs of Kappa Alpha all toiised zer. All drills are held on the prac- However, the club fell in a slump North Carolina 56 65 in 10 points to lead the scoring. tice field at Gore Stadium. anu dropped the last four Confer- William & Mary 72 50 J. D. Batts led the losers with 9.

Running on the number one ter Tom Donahue. In the backfield ence games to wind up with an N. C. State 45 64 Kappa Alpha led at halftime 16-11. team thus far are ends Jack Lewis are Ed Kissell at quarterback, 8-9 Conference record, not good Duke 65 56 and Ed McClure, guards Bill Fin- Guido Scarton and Larry Spencex enough to qualify for the tourney. North carolina 70 82 FINAL INTRAMURAL ance and Bill Link, tackles Bill at the halves, and Bill Miller, at Wake Forest finally broke its George Washington 80 67 BASKETBALL ST~INGS -G_eo_r_:g:...:e_a_n_d_E_d_L_is_,t_op:..a_d...,:,_a_n_d_c_e_n-_;f:..:u::ll:.::b..:.a..:.ck_.__________ four-game losing streak to beat l South Carolina 70 56 Independent "A" W L Pet.

Buffalo in the final game of the Clemson '?? 72 Hunter 6 0 1.000

Frosh End Season With Win year 77-59. Washington & Lee 90 78 Phi Delta Phi 5 1 .833

The team had its best shooting efficiency of the season in that final contest with 33 field goals in 67 attempts for 49% accuracy.

Clemson 47 57 Chapel Bears 3 . 3 ,500 South Carolina 64 66 Beachcombers 3 3 ,500 Duke ' 64 69 Barbee Boys 3 3 .500 N. C. State 56 78 Deaconteers 1 5 .167 By HAROLD POWELL Univ. Of Buffalo 77 59 C. B.'s Annex 0 6 .000 Last Tuesday night Coach Har­

old Barrow's freshman basketeers played an exhibition game wit..'! Rocky Mount High School. This game rounded out the most ~uc­cesful season ever enjoyed by a Wake Forest freshman basketball squad.

were a pair of steady forwards. Jack Williams and' Ray Lipstas, who respectively captured first and third places among the seoril;g of all the Wake Forest sharpshooters. Williams averaged 18.7 points per test and Liptas got a 12.1 average.

Wake Forest .played hot and cold ** Dixie Classic Games !Independent "B" W L Pet. ball throughout the season. Best ------------- Black Cats 5 0 1.000 performances were near the end of P. A. D. 4 1 .800 the season w:then the Deacs beat Panthers 2 3 .400 George Washington, Clemson, ERNIE TREATS Wildcats 2 3 .400 South Carolina and Washington GIRL ATHLETE Dixie Yanks 2 3 .400 In the 1950-51 contests, the

Babes were able to handle most and Lee. In Trainer Ernie McKenzie's Casto±ifs 0 5 .000 Fraternity "A" W L Pet,

The game was arranged and comers with ease. The team aver- In the scoring department, Alton sponsored by the Rocky Mount aged 65.9 points per game which McCotter was tops with 414 points. alumni chapter, who feted the was over 20 points better than He became the first Wake Forest boys to a lavish steak supper at their opponents' average of 44.6. player in more than a de<:ade to the Rocky Mount Country Club af- 1950-51 SCORING s(!ore more than 400 points in a

1 ter the contest. The game was de- Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 300 season. signed to polish the ~ocky Mount L' t t -193 Scores Total Ave. I Black Birds attack for the AAA Ips a s · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · h i g h school state tournament Lyles · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 158 McCotter 414 13.8 which they will soon enter. Leach · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · 55 Najeway 362 · 12.0

h 1 th Eynon ............. · · · · · 126 Brooks 253 8.7 Duripg t e regu ar season e Q · 58 M

D h d umn ............ · · · · · · ason 239 8.2 Baby eacs, though ampere 3 G . . h th h t Lovingood ...... · · · · · · · · · eary 207 6.9 with inJuries, foug t roug o 9 K Ledford ........... · · · · · otecki 170 5.7 the second spot in the conference, 3 M

th S Stevens .......... · · · · · • ueller 135 5.0 being runners-up to e tate 45 B Wolflets. W·ake Forest had a final Jones · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ennett 55 2.3

12 Allie .................. · 44 C'orey 46 2 3 record of wins and four loses. 44 · Waggoner ........ · · · · · · Hartley 37 1.9

Led By Forwards Kersh 28 9.3 Leading the Baptist freshmen Total · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 1055 Ba h 8 0 8 -=====~~=-~~~~~====~-------------------------- r am , . Mueller ·s 1.2 assisting the coaching· staff as a backfield coach during the spring Alheim 4 0.8, footlball sessions. All-American Gene Hooks, Deac baseball star of Flick 3 0.4 the past folll' years, was married two weeks ago in\!.JGns .. · ton. -Hoo~s G~es WF Opp.

, Clemson · 66 .. 51 ·is to be in Spring training with the Chicago Cubs hi. ;Florida some-. McCrary Eagles 71 56

time this month .... Former out!i~lder Joe Fulghum will assist Elan 73 62 Coach Jack Sanford with :freshman baseball during the coming sea- William & Mary 49 71 son . . . . Bud Pickard, Deac ,guard who was injured in the South Hanes Hosiery 55 67 Carolina football game last f!lll, is not working out in:· Sp:dng drills ~ashingtoi1 & Lee

6 738, 61

. b ill . t . M. I. 60 due to a recent knee operation ut w see serv1ce nex year • · · · West Virginia 63 69 "Red" B~rham, Deac cage guard, not ·only .shines on the court but Duquesne 59 63 also elsewhere; he was recently elected into Phi Beta Kappa. IRhode Island St. 57 53**

long career of "doctoring" ath- Sigma Chi 4 0 1.000 letes, he has never had ma.ny occasions to pateh up girl ath- PiKA 3 1 .750 letes, but last week, Ernie was Kappa Sig 2 2 .500 treating a high school girl ath- Sigma Pi 1 3 .250 lete in an effort to improve Theta Chi 0 4 .000 some pulled ligaments in her Fraternity "B" W L Pet. baott in time for her to play in Kappa Alpha 4 0 1.000 the North Carolina Girl Champ- Alpha Sig 3 1 .750 lonship Tournament, S. E. P. 1 3 .250

Delta Sig 1 3 .250 She was Katie Wilson, who Lambda Chi 1 3 .250

has been termed by several sports writers as the tiottest girl Manual Labor Days basketbaU.player ever to appear jn North carolina. Katie had During the manual labor days, been hitting the basket for more before Wake Forest Institute be­than a 40-point average per· came a college, the students got all game against relatively stiff the physical exercise they needed competition when she injured at their work on the far.m and in her back. Her goal for the year the shop. After the Institute be­had been 1000 points and she came a college, however, and since was only 76 points from her aim intercollegiate sports were un­wnen s.I1.e came to see Eruie last heard of, the students had to find Tuesday; ·Two :beatmenta for their o~ amusements, ·Often they the 17-year-oJd high school jun- induJ.ged in such sports as "run­ior fixed her up so she will be ning, jumping, leapfrog" in the able to play in the state tour- winter. In wanner weather they ney, Katie, who is five feet, amused themselves with marbles eight inches tan, had her worst and tops. Early in the college per­night_ when she made 27 points. iod some of the students volun­Her highest score for one game tarily formed a military companY is 69 poinfa. and drilled on SaturdayS', This :----------....J I helped to keep their health up to

par. . .

B7 10 I

The Sports Day E. Club and L

of Jenny J, the club, turnec

most success! year. Peac

Forest wer• rcJEJan~·~; A. C. C.

the last minutE

Jenny- Sohnson Jerry Turner, Pol gy Jo Weeks and corned the visi-tors urday and showed campus. The fir: basketball game b< and Peace wlth C ing top honors by Jo Hunter and Je1 ed as officials. Wake Forest Turr <>n a demonstra Bridgers perforrr member-and a 1 too!

The shuffleboa: and badminton t lowed, all being time. Connie Har

·weeks defeated C . first place in t

tournament · whil and Pat Smith p1 Black on top in b Johnson represent table tennis; how• winner in that tou

Campbell TakE The climaxing

final basketball Campbeli and W<

· the Campbell gil the winning troph: final game,. the vis ed to the rec roc ments. The. ·pleas~ sipped lime ice pu sandwiches and co Pope and Wiley lY. jazz music. Mary Ba!'bara Saunders, and Rose A!bolila ble for the splend Jnueed the Sports cess and another i for the spring spor

The girls makin1 sity in basketball~: ed by the Intra They are as foU Oldham, King, • Kraft, Ellen, Gl Watson, Roa·ch : Many congrats to : varsity will chall girls in a game an< will duel it out wi :sity coeds. This v eluding game of tournament.

Angel Leads Volleyball. man

Angel, will be th be offered in the program. Ta'ble ~

boara and badmin under way in the

Several member and the physical E attended the Sc Convention of the in Richmond, Va.,

lf'angler Hall lkPaul U niversil)'

Chicago, Illinois

80TTLEil

, THE CAP

Page 7: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

is :a­:h-

eat be lly red

• ,

; .for u.ra] Lea­gma

:nde· tmp· )elta. ;day. ~arne

:igma ne of lutler oints, er-up

e Pi­game Jates, >ward to5iised >Oring. i.th 9. 16-11.

'GS Pet.

•s

1.000 .833 .500 .500 .500 .167 .000 Pet.

1.000 .800 .400 .400 .400 .000 Pet.

1.000 .750 .500 .250 .000 Pet.

1.000 .750 .250 .250 .250

or days, ~ute be­;s got all ·needed 1 and in tute be­ln'd since ~re un­i to find ~en they as "run­' in the il.er theY marbles

lege per­s volun­cotnpanY rs. This lth UP to

.Jo's-· Jots BJ 10 BUNTER.

The Sports Day sponsored by the E. Club and under the super•

of J cuny Johnson, president the club, turned out to be one of

most successful sports ·events year. Peace. Campbell and

Forest were the only parti­cipau,,~, A. C. C. not showing up

minute.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

., PAGE SEVEN

Deac ·Tennis Team Will Meet William And Mary In Opener First Four Matches

Set For Home Courts

Are· considerably over' the last two ' I seasons.

Lewis Was Champion

I Hammack also said that hEr hopes Jack Lewis, star left end on

T~e Wake ~rest De~on ~eacon I the football team, an find time tenms t~am Wlll op~n 1ts 19 ~ ~ch-[ from Spring practice to play with. edule wlth the Indtans of Wllli.am the tennis team. Lewis was state and Mary on April 4. The flrst I high school champion of Alabama four matches are set for the home I in 1949. courts against William and Mary, N. C. State, Carolina, and Presby- The schedule released by the terian. Wake Forest News Bureau list,:;

nine opponents so far. The bureau Prospe·cts for the Wake Forest states that a few more matches

squad have been darkened by ~he will likelv be added. e sc e u e.

Jenny. Johnson, Connie Hll,rt, Jerry Turner, Polly Dickens. Peg­gy Jo Weeks and Jo Hunter wel­comed the visi-tors at noon on Sat­urday and showed them aro.md the campus. The first event was a basketball game between Campbell and Peace with Campbell captur­ing top honors by a score of 25-19. Jo Hunter and Jenny Johnson act­ed as officials. Afterwards the Wake Forest Tumbling Team put on a demonstration with Jim Bridgers performing as a new member-and a pretty good one,

graduation of some of the leadmg l Th h d 1 . performers of last year, but at . . .

- the same time, there are several Apnl 4 Wllltam and Mary Here new faces which may prove happy 10 N. C .. state Here

too!

The shuffleboard, 'table tennis, and badminton tournaments fol­lowed, all being played at one time. Connie Hal't and Peggy Jo

·weeks defeated Campbell· to win first place in the shuffleboard tournament while Jerry Turner and Pat Smith put the Gold and Black on top in badminton. Jenny

·Johnson repr'esented the coeds in table tennis; however, Peace was winner in that tournament.

Ca~pbell Takes Basketball The climaxing event was the

final basketball game between Campbell and Wake Forest with

· the Campbell girls carrying off the winning trophy. Following the final game,. the visitors were invit-ed to the rec room for refre,;h­ments. The. 'pleasantly tired girls sipped lime ice punch and nillloled sandwiches and cookies while Red Pope and Wiley Mitchell provided jazz music. Mary Lou .Tohns!Jn, :Ba!'bara Saunders, Janette Ivloore, and Rose kbolila were responsi-

Ed Butler and two of his Alpha Sigma Phi teammates, Bert Johnson and Babe Narr, carne in the Kappa Alpha House last week and pro­ceeded to inform the KA's that they were going to win. the Fraternity Basketball League Championship in the title game corning up <tiJ­morrow nig~ The Suuthern Gentlemen, ho,wever, took exception and members of the team quickly crowded around the Alpha Sigs to argue the point. When this picture was snapped, both sides had become somewhat placated, and holding a trophy just for effect. Butler and the KA coach, Paul T. "Baldy'~ Harris, shook hands. Looking on fr'orn left to right are Sterling Gates, Ned "Jed" Davis, Bfl't Johnson; Harris. Butler, Howard Twiggs, Jack Lewis, Babe Narr, J. L. Peeler, and Boyd Gwinn (partially hidden.)

Williams, Modest Hoop· Star, I Baseball Drills Start . . . . . .

. ble for the splendid refreshments. Jndeed the Sports Day was a suc­cess and another is in the making for the spring sports.

Is ·Top· Scorer FQr Deaclet~ Freshman From Illinois

Has Game Average health. A slow starter in high school sports, he · was doomed to third-string duty until his junior year when he suddenly became the "Cinderella" star of the team. His last two years of high school athletics were quite dif.ferent from the previous years, for he starred in football, track, baseb:J.U, ar..d baske\Jball. 0£ the four, the- cage sport was his 'best, and his senior­year accomplishments are still the talk of Johnson City, Ill.

By HAROLD POWELL many years the slender Sanford Despite the fact that part of the I burned up minor league circuits,

varsity squad has gone south for 1 and then for three years he played the winter, Groves Field still rings first base for the Washington Sen­with the crack of hickory and ators of the American League . horse hide as this year's freshman crew takes its first swings in the Sanford said last week that e~~:en 1951 baseball season. Some thirty though he had seen the boys in aspirants reported to Coach Jack only a few practice sessions, ~ev­Sanford last Monday. eral of them come here very hlgh-

The girls making the honor var­sity in basketball~have been pick- · ed by the Intramural Council ..

Of 18.7 Points They are as follows: Angelette Jack Williams, like most Illinois Oldham, King, Joyce Johnson, boys, grew up with basketball Kraft, Ellen, Green, Williams, blood in his veins. From earliest Watson, Roa·ch and Saunders. recollection, his first lo~e has bce21 Many congrats to you! Tonight the the hardwood-hoop sport, which. varsity will challenge the town to most kids from the Illini State, girls in a game and tomorrow they is the king of all games.

·lY recommended and, with suffi-At the l;lelm this year will be j cient practice, they should mould

Jack Sanford, brother of varsity ip.to a strong club before the sea­mentor Taylor Sanford. Jack is son is far gone. probably one of the most outstand- Plenty Of Talent ing athletes ever to coach a Gold As for talent, the fros11 should and Black diamond crew. For See BASEBALL Page Two

will duel it out with the non-var- F 11 · f th 1950-51 Ba' y ·t d Th. ·n . •h o owers o e , o SlY .coe 5· 15 WI oe · e con-,Deacs will testify that Jack's ba<;k-cltudmg gtame of the basketball etball ambHions have come true. ournamen · I This season the tall, slender for-

Angel Leads Volleyball ward 'has won the hearts of Bap-Volleyball, managed by Pattye tist rooters with a slow precision

Angel will be the next sport to I type of play which has netted him ' . . . · 300 points for the season. His aver-

be offered m the coed mtramural age is 18.7 points per game, which program. Table Tennis, shuffle- makes him the high·est scoring boara and badminton \vill 8lso get Wake Basketeer for as long as under way in the near future. anybody can remember.

S~veral members of the faculty A "Cinderella" Star and t'be physical educatioa majors Despite his present basketball

. . abilities, Jack says·. that it has not attended the Southern DlStnct always been so easy. In fact he Convention of theN, A. H. P. E. R. showed little athletic promise in in Richmond, Va., last week. his early days because of poor

In that last year of play, h6nors came thick and fast to Williams as he showed a style of play which won for him· second string all-~ state honors. The Richmond M~­morial Award bears his name be­cause he completed more than 150 out of 200 free throw attempts­that mark stands as the all-time record for Johnson City high school.

Relates Funny Incident In spite of honors which he has

won, Jack Williams is still a mod­est, unassuming boy who regards his success as mere routine. He does not Hke to talk about him­self, but gets a big kick out of telling numerous funny incidents which happened to him when h~: · started as an awkard kid trying to make good in the sports w 'rld. Jack chuckles when he tells about how he became. the laughing st.:>ck of Johnson City in the firs: bask­etball game he ever played. "I went in to relieve one of the far­wards," Jack says, "while I wa:;: in there, the man I was guarding scored several times and coach called time-out and sent in a re­placement for me. Well, I was scared and ashamed of letting him score on me," he continues, "so I hung my head and walked to the bench. ·I got to the bench, and al­most sat down," he admits, "when everybody in the gym started laughing at once. I realized then that I was sitting on the wrong bench."

As for the future, Jack is sure of only one thing, that he surely does not want to get in the army. He states firmly, "The only uni­form I want to wear is a Black and Gold one!!'• Jack hopes to graduate from Wake Forest, Eng­lish I included, and ·then coach high school sports~ · "But," Jack reminisces, "before that time comes, I've got a lot of basketball playing to do."

In Chicago, Illinois, there is always

a friendly gathering of DePaul

One of the purposes of the es­tablishment of Summer Schools at Wake Forest was to furnish ·

Uni~ersity students in Wangler l empio;vment for the faculty mem-

Hall th · A d . bers, m order to supplement their

. on e campus. · n • as m meager salaries. universities everywhere, ice-cold --------------

Coca-Cola helps make these get-to­

gethers something to remembe;. As

a pause from the study grind, or

on a Saturday night date-Coke

·belongs.

Ask for it either way ••• both trade-marks mean lh/ same thing.

BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA CO~PANY BY

, 'l'BE OAPITAL·OOCA COLA. BOTTLING 00., INC. @ 1951, Tho Coca-Col" Company

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'

LS/M.F.t-

additions to the squad 12 Carolina · Here · 21 Presbyterian· Here

John Hammack, captain and 24 Carolina There number one player on the team 28 Clemson Here for the past three seasons, will be 30 Duke There back to p}ay his last year of eligi- May 1 N. c. State There bility. Also returning are letter- 4 Carson-Newman Here men Paul "Tinker" Williams, Lloyd Abernethy and Dave Clark. 1 CONDUCT

Four Graduate During the administration of But McNeil Watkins Buck Bunn i President Taylor, students acted

CaTey Mumford and Walter Mer~ i disorderly or ungentlemanly at phis, numbers two, three, four and their own peril. President Taylor fice, respectively last year, have did not let such conduct go un­all graduated and will not be punished. In the first year of his available this season. administration several students

• were dismissed from college be-Captain Hammack, who will al- cause of intoxication or failure to

so proba·bly serve •as coach this improve their time. year, expressed the hope that sev-eral good prospects will turn out The amount of the endowment for the sport this Spring. Paul given to Wake Forest College in Bennett, an outstanding performer the year 1904-5 was over $200,000. when he was at Kinston High In 1898 a ban was issued by the School, will probably play this trustees of Wake Forest against year since he won't have Spring making Bible a required study. basketball practice to conflict. Later the ban was lifted and be­Freddy Poston is another prospect ginning the 1923-24 term, one year who may turn in some good play of Brble became a requirement for for the Deacs. ·He has improved all students.

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~ns Rne To~a«<

Page 8: Beta Kapp'a, ScholaStic Frat, Local ODK's Lucile Cummings

.. PAGE EJGB'r

. College Band To Give Concert At Goldston; March 16 Date Set First Presentation Of New Spring Program

Under Professor McDonald's Direction; Will Be Given Later At Wake Forest

Although the Wake Forest College Band does not have an official spring tour, as does the Glee Club, it is called upon many times during the school year to perform in other towns and cities. Friday night, March 16, the Goldston High School Auditorium in Goldston will be the scene for the first presen­tation of the new Spring Program of the Band. This program, which will be given later in the season at Wake Forest, con­sists of: 1

Dear Old ·wake Forest; Seventeenth Century Composition, arranged by Gillette ('rrurnpet Tune, Aria, and Gavotte) ; Adoremus Te and Sanctus-Palestrina-Harvey; Scenes from the Sierras by Bennett ('l'his work is intended to suggest moods ' rather than to paint pictures, and it develops briefly the ideas presented by the following subtitles which are found in the score: Grey Dawn-Sunrise-Through the Desert-A Mountain Stream-A Waterfall-Majestic Lakes-Sunset-To the Mighty Sier­ras); li1nalc from "Death and Transfiguration"-Strauss-Hard­ing; An American Week End-Morri~ey, which is composed of "An Evening Stroll" and "Concert m the Park." .

Yoder Piece ·

4 Americans To Be Given

'

.Scholarships Students Accepted Will

Attend University Of Oslo

The Norwegian committee of the Summer School for American Stu­dents at the University of Oslo au­nounces that four scholarships worth approximately $350 each will be made available to Ameri­can and Canadian students. The awards are to be known as the Ralph Bunche Scholarships.

Following the intermission pe­riod is the Overture from "Moun­tain Majesty" by Yoder. The mu­sical content is intended to portray the majesty and grandeur of mountain scenery-the rugged out­lines of a mountain range agains~ the sky, the 'tranquility of the mountain landscape on a quiet day. the snow and rain of the various seasons and in the chorale the rev­erence and humility of Mankind in the face of these mighty works of

Local Lady Wins R• g I The scholarships will be given In students on the basis of merit by the Association of Electro-Chemi-on Radio Program cal and Electro-Metallurgical In­

nature.

Mrs. J. M. Brewer, who lives on North Main Street here, was ·the recipient of a diamond ring last Sunday night frdm the "Stop The Music" show. The ring was award­ed her for correctly identifying the title of the song "Schooldays."

Mrs. Brewer said that she was very excited when she found that they were going to call her and ''of course," she continued, "I didn't think I would be able to answer any of the questions about these popular songs."

Next will come the Russian Marching Song "Meadowlands"·­Gussev-Henneman; "A Little Vod­ka,'' Shumaker; "The Little Brown Jug Goes to Town," Bergeim; and 'American Patrol" by Meacham.

Mrs. Brewer doesn't think that featuring a routine by the drum the telep.hone call came directly majorettes, under the direction of from New York Cit but that it Sara Page Jackson. Y. . .

dustries of Norway in honor of Dr. Bunche who was recently present­ed the Nobel Prize.

Scholarship candidates should make application with Dean Nor­man Nordstrand, Oslo Summer School for American Students. St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minn:

The 1951 session of the summer school opens June 23 and closes Aug. 4. Approximately 250 Amer­ican and Canadian students wiLl be admitted.

Students can earn six semester credits for the six weeks course. The main emphasis of the curricu­lum is on Norwegian culture­geography, history, language, lit· erature, music and art. Courses will also be offered on the social, economic and political situation in

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

KAYKYSEB

"Best sandwich I ever tast•, ed," stated Kay Kyser, well· known orchestra leader, be· tween bites of one of "P. D.'s" fam.ous sandwiches last Tues­day. Kyser, on a trip from Rocky Mount to Chapel Hlll with his wife, Georgia. Carroll; his mother-in-law, and his two daughters, stopped at thP.. Col­lege Soda Shoppe for lunch. Toby, "P.D.'s" chef, stated that the uld professor was a little fatter than he thought, but he 'sure has a pretty wife." The Kysers are planning to make their permanent home in Chap­•)) Hill soon.

Operetta To Reveal ... Foster'.s Light· Side By MARY FINBERG

The Opera Workshop, which is preparing the Ronell operetta, "0h! Susanna!" for presentation during the Magnolia Festival, has eleased character sketches of

Stephen Foster and Ann Ronell, the authoress of the musical score.

musicians fiddling their way dO'Wn the Ohio.

Much Research The authors of "Oh! Susanna!"

were anxious to use Foster's songs to carry the story forward, rather than as mere concert numbers. But Miss Ronell realized the necesseity

Most of the ·' Stephen Foster 1 for changing some of ·the lyri~s plays, operettas, and movies have and adapting and dramatizing their Jortrayed the sad and darker side accompaniments. The wisdom of of his existence as a composer. this became even more apparent 'Oh! Susanna!" however, deals when .she delved into research.

Overman: Weathers Speak At Eu Meet

Jack Overman and Graham Weathers were principal speakers 1t the Monday evening meeting of :he Euzelian Literary Society.

with the brighter side of his young, tlirtaticus life. Ann Ronell, the ·.vriter of the operetta, makes it \'ery clear that· a certain Stephen ~'aster lived in the middle of the last century and that he wrote a large number of songs, among ,vhich are some deathless favorites, :hat come· to mind when the name "Stephen C. Foster" is so much as mentioned.

Overman, president of the so- Lived In Cincinnati ~iety, gave an impromptu speech F 1. d · c· · t' t th on ''Fixes" H d' d th oster 1ve m mcrnna 1 a e " b.l e Isc.usse 7 :e· same time as Harriet Beecher .ent trou e concermng the flxmg ~ th t th f "Un -f b k ,_ 1 .:>towe, e grea au oress o -, as et-..a 1 games. He lamented 1 T , c b' " d 't h b n the fact that society had let such c ~ oms a. m, an 1 a~ ee potentially good men become flops. >aJd that whrle she was . trymg to

feed and clothe her family on al-

Among the some three hundred songs written by Foster, Miss Ron­ell discovered a vast treasury of little known music which she wished to revive. But many of the songs with finest music had lyrics which dealt with ·those two popu-­lar Victorian subjects-death and the tomb; others had one or two hauntingly lovely musical phrases buried under a morass of banali­ty.

Solved Problems She solved both of her problems

by altering the well-known ~nd much-loved songs only when the needs of the action demanded it. then combining the best of the lesser known songs and either adapting the lyrics or substituting new ones. 'Dhis made it poss1ble to

Weathers, who. is censor of the [ m'J'st nothing a year, Stephen was ·ociety, delivered an impromptu light-heartedly sparking the girls, >peech entitled "White Columns." turning out comedy numbers for It concerned the future of Amer- his glee club and anticipating ica. Weathers pointed out that un- Western Union by singing musical 'ike the Greek, Roman and Jewish valentines and birthday greetings reacquaint the public with the best ;ivilization. American. civilization to fair young ladies whom he parts of many of Stephen Foster's has yet to inscribe her white col- dearly favored. unfamiliar melodies. umn. The quill. so to speak, is in the hands of the American youth, according to Weathers.

The society voted to arrange a baskeuball game with the Phis. Votes were cast in favor both of a boys' and a girls' game. Other business taken up by the soCiety concerned the membership pins whi-ch will be ordered some time this week, and the speakers' awards to be presented at gradua­tion.

He was a happy-go-lucky chap, who could not keep his mind on the ledgers in his brother's ware­house because of t)1e fascination of

The authors of the dialo!:( are Florence Ryerson and Colin Clem-: ents.

the riverfront, where scraps of r--------------: tunes could always be picked UP! I from passing boa'tmen, camp-

mMin' '"''"'""· and m • .., ... I s E)'/ '· !f s B~HER • it's DlfffRfNT'

This Week's Top Hits

At

STEPHENSON~S

Forest Theatre Monday-Tuesday

March 5-6

"STORM WARNING"

Ginger Rog~rs-Ronald Reagan

Wednesday ... ~larch 7

''I'LL GET BY" • June Haver-Dennis Day

Thursday-Friday March 8-9

"THE 13TH LETTER"

Linda Darnell-Charles Boyer

·Saturday

M3.!ch 10

"REDWOOD FOREST TRAIL"

Rex Allen

"SEA ISLAND"

Walt Disney Ca'l'toon

Sunday March 11

"UNDERCOVER GmL"

Alexis Smith-Scott Brady

Collegiate Dlonday-Tuesday-VVednesday

March 5-6-7

"STROMBOLI" The program will conclude with was a lo~al call ~rom Radro Station

the Wake Forest College fight WN";-O, 1~ Rale;¥h and only. ~ song, "0 J:tere's to Wake Forest." contmuat10n of Stop The Musrc. The band is under the direction of The diamond was given to her Prof. Thane McDonald. by Cramer's Jewelry Store, locat-

the Scandinavian countries. ------------,--- lNK-0-GRAPH · 14KT. GOLD $2·· . PEHCIV.POINT. . ·

FOUNTAIN. PEN .. VVOULD I LOVE YQIJ I,ULLABY OF BROADWAY Doris Day-Columbia No. 39159

Ingrid Bergman

The 580 1Spot By BETTY B. HOLLIDAY

In this week's column you will find a list of the major transcrib· ed programs that may be heard over WFDD.

A newcomer to the transcrip· tions is the program entitled "Ser­enade in Blue,'' which is becom­ing one of the most popular ·trans­cribed programs over all major networks. This light, new musical show is entirely produced and per­formed by airmen and features the 85-piece United States Air Force Orchestra and stars baritone solo· ist Master Sergeant Glenn Dar­win and the Singing Sergeants. The selections that may be heard tonight are: "Love Is Sweeping the Country," "I Remember the Cornfield," "Begin The Beguine," and "The Night Is Young and You're So Beautiful."

Tomorrow night, Walter Gross, a brilliant pianist, composer, and arranger, is the star of the Defense Bonds series, "Guest S'tar."

In a program featuring his new singing discovery, Sam Allessi, Gross plays tow of his own com­positions-the new ballad, "Some­body Wins," Somebody Loses" and the romantic "Tenderly." Gross also offers his stylish arrangement of George Gershwin's "I Got Rhy­thm," and Alessi is heard in the rec'ent favorite, ''How About You?"

Paul Weston and his orchestra furnish the accompaniments. and are featured in a special arrange­ment of Rodgers and Hart's "This

ed in Raleigh, when she presented them with a coupon given to her by WNAO.

-REVEALS-Continued From Page _Five

that no matter how much time is spent in studying, a thorough re­view before a quiz is necessary. Furthermore, they were practi­cally unan'imous in advising the taking of full, complete notes. Many of them refer very little to the textbook before a quiz but re· ly on a complete review of their notes. '

Well, gentlemen, here are the instructions. Simple, aren't they?

Can't Be Love." Dell Sharbutt is master-of-ceremonies.

Wednesday's program is "Here's To Vets," which sends your way the best in all types of music.

Thursday's show gives the 3pot­Jight over to. Paul Lukas, who is currently starring in the Broad­way smash hit, "Call Me Madam." He plays the part of the famous composer Peter Tchaikowski in the story of the ill-fated romance be· tween Tchaikowski and Nadejda von Meek. Titled Our Love, the plot unfolds against a background of some of Tchaikowski's most famous and most beautiful works, including excerpts from his Fourth and Fifth Symphonies, Romeo and Juliet Overture, First Piano Con­certo and Nutcracker Suite.

Friday's transcribed program is given the name "Best Bands, ' which is understandable after hearing one of their shows. Their artists range all the way from Spike Jones to Harry James and Elliot Lawrence.

Let Us Take Care Of Your

CLEANING PROBLEMS

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*' KEJ.f,ft'S '-

The faculty includes several men recognized throughout the world­Halvard Lange, Norwegian Min­ister of Forei•gn Affairs; Haakon Lie, secretary of the Norwegian Labor Party; Dr. Karl Evang, sur­geon-general of public health; Christian S. Oftedahl, editor-in­chief of the "Stavanger Aftenblad" and Dr, Francis Bull, professor of Scandinavian literature at the· University of Oslo.

cursion fee is $20. Application blanks may be ob·

tained from the Oslo Summer School Admissions Office, St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minn.

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Thursday-Friday March 8-9

"GAMBLING HOUSE"

· 'Victor Mature-Terry Moore

Saturday-Sunday March 10-11

"SUBMARINE PATROL"

Richard Green-Nancy Kelly

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Co~ WakE Ties~

AsRt Team Wa1

Yeste·

The Wake ball team was ed to arrive ham Airport ~ (Sunday) frOJ

,. ·, gentina, when tied for secon ball series of can Games.

At Old Go time Friday n tor Jim Wea• not received ; tion of the Coach Taylor received a te the DemonD to the States c

Cuba1 The Deacs,1

February 22, Olympic-style America, finis tournament During the thl the Wake For

· ing the Unite. pressive wins zil, Venezuela, ico. The Dea by the Nicara1 the "dark hor: lost to Cuba. .mark; won th

The Unite< Mexico for se1 the Wake Fo1 en the Mexica

The tourm much as spm lieved that i 1 been given th1 en other team United States game second l

Heavy Sl1 The WakeF

ed heavy slu~ home runs for fans. Averag. meet was 3,5[ games being h1 field,s at varic Buenos Aires:

• r Wake Forest tE

The Deacs c< somewhat ha they had to pl; Another diffic faced was a : Because of th the team coulc ers. The one a the Deacons, T his thumb in had to be re of the tournarr regular third had little pre perience.

Sanf~

"My boys di· Coach Sanford of the games. a good positic handicaps."

Outfielder J move to third to share outfie

The team wa Buenos Aires arriving in Mi day morning Raleigh from t:

Wiley Warre man and Old sports editor, v umn for the st up the Deacs 1 been a grand will be good good old USA.'

CONVERSAT

Conversatio at Wake ForE ttew aspect 1

to an annou1 the German special projec taken wherE professors w1 are invited Ui special tablE Cafeteria. S each Tuesday 12:30 o'clock. spoken at th

Dr. I. C. 0'. R. J. VVatts, the German charge of the