·dr. e •. lee three gpads -bi·pi chapel servi ce dean....dr. lee has beim secretary- has been...

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'. ., ., ' WAKE FOREST COLLEGI LT l>:"-' ·" RY ; ; J .... , •• -·-· '. ·RED .CROSs· nniv'E:Now. ·:·.·,n· .. . ·: ·Dr. E •. Lee . .. · .. '\ ' ·· Dean. . - "·',1'. . . · · Of. Law .. ·Schoot· Three l?ecent GPads To .. WedHereln Two Marria8es Saturday - Bi·Pi Dances Will Be Given · On Week-End Noted Writer and-Teacher Takes Qver Legal Divi- · · · . .. Charlie Spivak Will Play .,-osepl:aine Holding Jones '44, and R. H. For PanpHellenic · . sion· of College Bl"lantley, Jr., '45, To Be Principals Spring Hops · In Nuptials Dr. Robert E. Lee, originally of Kinston, elected dean of the Forest' College· Law Three 'recent Wake Forest Col- School, President Thurman Kitch- lege graduates are to be principals in has announced.. in twa '\Veddings tomorrow in the Since 1929- Dr. Lee has been a .Wake F!)rest Baptist Church. They member of thelaw school faculty are Eliz«beth Ann Jones, '44, of at Temple. University, Philadel- Wake F()rest, who will be married phia, and.' has the distinction of to Russell Harold Brantley, Jr., ha\ling five earned degrees. '45, of Zebulon, . and In 1928 he received the B.S. and Holding; '43, of Wake Forest,. who ·LL.B. degrees from· Wake. Forest, will be married to Edgar Nonnan arid· · afterward was awarded the Ricks of Mt. Olive. M.A. in Public Law from Colum- . The fiist wedding will be that - bia ·uniy-ersity, and the LL.M. and· of Miss Holding and Mr. Ricks S.J.D. from Duke University. which Will come at 4 o'clock. Dr. The. Wake_ Forest Law School J. f... Ea<;;ley, assisted by the Rev. which, as a; war..:'time measure, Eugene Olive, will officiate. has been operating jointly with · The bl'ide's father, W. W. Hold- Duke University Law School in ing llwtn give her away, and he!' Durham, will return to the Wake Mrs. W. V(. Hold- .Forest campus in. June. The open-, in? III· be ing date will be June 10. · M1ss Holdmg's only attendant. The· committee of trustees, ap- Mr. Ricks' best man will his pointed to make recommendation .brother, Mr. Nelson Ricks of Mt. . for the law school deanship, .was Olive. l.rshers will be Mr. W. W. headed· by former Governor J. Holding -III, Private Walter H. Melville Broughtor1. Dr. Lee has Holding, Mr. Aubrey Winston, all been · authorized to assemble a of WakE! Forest, Mr. Barton Stev- teaching staff and· a law librarian. ens of Wrenns, Georgia, Mr. Wal- ' . Author f)f Books ter Ch!lrry and Mr. William Bishop·; l,oth of Mt. Olive. · Wedditlg music will be present- ed by o:t-ganist Thane McDonald Tonight Mr. and Mrs. W .. W. Holding III ami Mr. and Mra. ·i. B. H'l\nt, Jr., of Raleigh, will The new dean has just returned from . Europe where for the past seven months he has been in charge of a course of la\l.r studies at Shrivenham American Univers- ity, a temporary university in Eng;- la-nd . that' the. War Department Red Cr' oss o,-.·ya established for the soldiers. At the . ·• . . . " · concliJ§ion of this work, he was ' give -a dinner party in hotWr of -the couple at the Carolina Coun..,. try Club. Later in· the evening Mrs. L. C. Gooch, Mrs. L. S. Mur- ray and Mrs. Rosa Winston will entertain at Mrs. Gooch's home. The wedding breakfaSt, give11 by Mr. and Mrs. Harvey ·Holding, will be held at 11:00 Saturday morning at the Carolina Hotel in Raleigh, The wedding reception, for friends and relatives, will be at the Wake Forest Community House. The couple will make their home in Mt. Olive where Mr. Ricks is in business with his two brothers. Miss Holding is the fourth member of the :family to graduate from Wake Forest. Her grand- father, W. W. Holding, her W. W. Holding II, and her brother, W. W. Holding III, have all grad- uated before her. While attending Wake Forest, Miss Holding was secretary of the Little Theater, president of the Glee Club. She served in three official positions of the Philoma.:. thesian Literary Society. In 1940 she was presented to 'North Carolina society at the (Continued on· Page 6) Campaign Office Fraternity dances capture the spotlight again this week, the Alpha Kappa Pi and the Sigma Pi fraternities having their mid,-win- ters. Five other frats had their dances two weeks ago, .· The two fraternities agreed to have their dances tonight and to- morrow night after the scheduled Pan-Hellenic mid-winters were caned off. The reason for the Pan-Hel decisic>n came after the Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh or other. places large enough to accommodate seven fraterni- ties could not be obtained on Feb- ruary 22-23. The AKPi and Sigma Pi fra- ternities plan for a gala affair this weekend. Tonight the frat men will dance to the music of Frankie Wright, a well-known colored bandleader. Maestro Wright has made a number of appearances in Wake Forest and is known for his "hot" renditions of the song en- titled "Caldonia." The semi" formal dance will be held in ¢-e local Community House at 9:00 p.m. Hotei Is Site Tomorrow night the fraternity men travel to Raleigh, Russ Carl- ton will provide the music for the .occasion in the spacious Vir- ginia Dare ball room of the Hotel Sir Waiter. '11he formal affair will begin at 8:00p.m. In addition to the dances, the tvio fraternities will have a ban- quet at the S & W Cafeteria Sat- nr * * * Meetings Sigma Pi Alpha . will meet Monday night, 8:15. Gamma Nu Iota will meet Thursday night, 7:15. The PubJieatiQns Board will meet in the English Office tomorrow. at 12:00 ' ' _/ Big Talent Night Set For Thursday Half Hour of Recorded Music To Precede Entertainment Final plans were announced this week for next Thursday's Student Talent Night, whirh will include a 30-minute con.:trt of recorded music preceding the program. The show, which will begin at -eight o'clock, March 14, in the high J;Chool auditorium, will in- clude various music, a juggler, a musician, acrobats, a short ora- tion, and a ghost story. The rec- ord concert; will begin at seven- thirty. Harold Coston, master of cere- monies for the eveping and pro- gram director, promises. that this will be "the performance of any kind ever given - any- - professional or other- wise!" He reports that the per- fanners are cooperating fully, and that "the prospects are great!" The proceeds from the show will go into sound equipment to be us- ed by the student body. Tickets will be on sale, sec,.urable from any Student Council or Pan- Hellenic Council member or from (Continued on Page 6) appointea traveling lecturer on ,. t T ·d specialized.clegal topics at various .. ' .. ay army installations' in occupied A . dd 2 N M. u,rday night just before the dance. S ' ew-- en . !Pe_ to be held in the. . . ' ' -Tray Room, will be formal. (h . •. GermanyJ includ;llg Frankfurt, Heidelburg, Nuremburg, and Mun- . rhe !ted Cross drive on the . ich. He has novir resumed his work campus 'ends today .. By Wednes- Pan-Hellenic spring da.'lces ef em1strv Two new members have been April 27 grabbed a prominent .Frat t T 1 u day nigl}t $3-8.26 had been con- a emp e niversity, but will re- tributed at .the booth in the· Col- port at Wake Forest at the begin- ·ning of the summer session. lege Store. Those who wish He is the author of two books, to make contributions may do so "Advanced Business Law" and at the bo()th. No solicitations will "Cases on Contractg'', and has con- be made IJn the campus. tributed leading articles to such In the lted Cross Drive last year publications as "American Law Wake Fol'est and surrounding ter.:. School Review", of ritory approximately $3200. Pennsylvania Law Review","Tem- The goal this year is $2,500. ple Law Quarterly", and ."Current Mrs. William Royall heads the Legal Thought". drive in Wake Forest. The drive Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. , Those iness Law Association since 1941. assisting her are: Sue Marshall, He is also legal columnist for "The Kay Garland, Bettye Crouch, :Mary Philadelphia inquirer" and con- Gilmer Bea Gulledge, Ma- . tributing editor to an encyclopedia. ry Lou and Virginia Kor- _He has been emplt>yed as a legal negay. and business consultant to several Profess()r A. L. Aycock points Philadeplphia business firms, and out that · the need for Red Cross is a of the North Carolina· funds is on the increase. There bar. are more service men in hospitals His wife. is the former Miss Lou- now than there were a year ago. ise Gattis if Louisburg. They have Demands on Home .Service Work two sons, ages 12 and 3. He is a are as gr"lat as they were at any .Baptist an!i a.Demccrat. _ time durtng the war. The Red Cross is game -ser- vices in au hospitals. added this week to the staff pro- fraternity- moting the College Enlargement agam week. And now :S Campaign according to an an- a defimte . .fact that the nation s nouncement by Director c. J. sweet tooter, Jackson. Thomas I. Davis and N. Charlie Sp1vak, w1ll provule the E. Wright, b,oth Wake Forest for graduates, have been employed by m .the Raleigh Memor1al AudJ- the College in a roove designed to tor1um. ... increase the inten-siveness of the Spivak Coming campaign to raise S7,000,000. The question confronting the At the same time, Mr. Jackson Pan-Hellenic Council is that of reports that the efforts of College finances. Spivak has now lower- field representatives have met with ed his previous $3500 "gratifying success" in all the dis- to $3000. 'l'his is a comforting tricts of North Carolina that have word to frat men on the campus. been reached so far. ·The. staff, The Pan-He! is working on a which until this week was compos- plan to lower the assessments still ed of only three men, has made more. They have chopped five extel'lSive contacts with Wake For- dollars from the $16 assessment est alumni throughout the state, fee set some weeks ago, and an effort is being made to at- ' The Pan-Hel plans to issue. tract interest support to the tickets for the dance to the ira- campaign in every community. ternities in order that non-frat Mr. Davis, better known to Wake men may purchase them.' But it Foresters as "Boredface," has since must be stated that all plans are Monday of this week been assisting tentative, and no definite action M,r. Eugene Olive in organizing has been taken: Wake Forest supporters in the A proposal was made to the Henderson and Oxford areas. Re- cotihcil, suggesting that State (Conti?iued oT? Pa!e 6) (Continued· on Page 6) To Be Revived Gamma Sigma Epsilon, the chemistry fraternity, will be re- vived some time this spring, 1 says Mr. J. A. Freeman, instructor in the Chemistry Department. The return from the wars of two old members, Claude McClure and G. T. Hicks, and the presence. on the campus of some eight to ten eligible students makes sible the revival of the fraternity which has been inactive since nearly three years ago when the last of its members went into ser- vice. To be eligible for Gamma Sig- ma Epsilon, a student must have a B average in twelve hours of Chemistry and no lower than C in any other subject. He must also receive the vote of the active members .. Mr. Freeman asks that any stu- dent who is a previous member of this fraternity on this or any other please contact him. k Leaders Summarize Campus Problems om1ng ac __ .. _-:----:----------------- ·--- Strong. clemand for religion em- tion of the Bible and seek the phasizing Christian principles and Man next. The -true test of a The name of Lt. Worth H. spirit ratl)er than external ·fea- man's Christianity is found in Copeland, Instructor in Mathe- tures, and a cleavage between the tl}ese words, 'If a man have not matics, was accidentally omitted ministerial students and the re- the spirit of Christ, he is none of from last week's list of Wake For- mainder llf the campus figure His'." est professors who are still iu the prominently in student discus- Commenting similarly, the Rev. service.- sions, me1nbers of the Religious R. T. Howerton said he felt stu- Lt. Copeland received the B.S. Focus tealh stated Wednesday. dents are seeking "the meaning of and M.A. degrees from Wake Remarking on the many sources human life and its relationship Forest College. He recaived the of evidenee of superficialty of re- to God." The demand, as express- M.A. degree in Mathematics in ligion he has encountered here, ed by Mrs. G. Avery Lee and Dr; 1941, and was· immediately lidded the Rev .. .:Warren T. Carr stated Carl Townsend, is for a religion to the teaching staff in that de- that he prevalent among formulated into a practical, work- partment, where he remained un- Wake stuctents a calling for less able program rather than a the- jiJ November, 1942, when he en- dogma. ll:mphasizing this point, oretical system, a crystallization tered the Navy wit!]. the rank of the Rev. W. W. Finlator named of thoughts out of the theoretical Ensign, and was assigned to as the imPortant feature of Chris- stage. Mrs. Lee summed the quest teaching duties in the Naval tianity possession of o spirit as a requirement for the internBI Training School in Columbia, of Christ--love, kindness, ana in religion rather than the ex- Ohio, and New York, where he creative g()od:will. He said, "We ternal. stayed until ·March, 1945. He was have made a mistake in narrowing Along allied lines, Dr. George then sent to Harvard University down Chrtstianity. Our religion D. Heaton stated he found the stu- for a three months course in radio is not a t:hurch, a Bible, or a dents receptive to the neeli for communications. He went over- creed, but a faith in and devotion thorough overhauling in the edu- seas in November, 1945, and is to a Man,. The others are expres- cation in the church. Mr. Robert now at Pearl Harbor. Lt. Cope- sions of tll.ia devotion. The mis- S. Denny called for a simplification land expects to be released from take have made and of methods of teaching the prin- service next month, and begin the mistake that has caused fac- ciples of Christianity. All religi.: t-eaching in the Mathematics de- 1- tions among Christians is that they 1 ous must keep their dis- partment here at the opening ol seek first tb.e right creed, the right cussions "geared to the under- the summer session. church,_ a_ntt the right interpreta- standing and psychological back- ground of their audience," he ex- pressed, adding that "the test of your message is whether they take it home with them." Scoring the apparent rift 'be- tween ministerial and non-minis- terial groups, Dr. Glenn Black- burn summed the problem as the need for a "give-and-take" be- tween· the two elements. He said he felt that both sides in the divi- sion are -awakening to the fact and realizing the need for break- ing down the differences. Lack of knowledge of Christian history, contributions and pur. poses resulting in jnabi!ity of stu- dents to commit themselves in religious matters lies at the bot- tom of Christian problems, accord. ing to the Rev. Wm. H. Poteat. Elaborating on the campus cleav- age Mr. Poteat remarked that "the students who show the greatest degree of maturity of reflection on the real moriu and spiritual content of Christianity are who are probably least inclined to associate themselves with the religious activity groups on the campus. This is a tragedy be- cause it means that the real Chris_ tian leadership, if thjs trend per- sists, will not come from nor bi! nurtured by the church." Emphasizing the need for more Christian knowledge, Mr. Poteat stated that he felt Wake Forest students he had talked to were too certain they had found the formula for religion. Elsewhere Mr. Poteat added, he found that students more generally realized their insufficiency of knowledge on purposes and contributions. Mr. Howerton described cam- pus recreation as "tragically lim- ited." He suggested creation of a council to "provide wholesome social and recreational outlet for more groups;' citing community sings and group hobbies as possi- ble new programs. Commenting on student reaction to chapel, Mr. Carr expessed the belief that chapel should be so interesting students would not feel the matter as compulsory. De- veloping this idea, Mr. Howerton suggested more student participa- tion in programs and the employ- ment of funds to bring outside speakers to the campus for the ( Continued on Page 3) ONLY THREE MORE DAYS ·: NOW LEFT Phone 304-6 Chapel Servi_ce Tonight Closes .Religious Talks Religious Focus W e e k Ends After Many ·Discussions Tonight's chapel service closes Wake l!'orest's second annual Re ligious Focus Week. Each day this week eleven Southern l;laptist leaders have met classes, ·attended chapel, and conducted seminars ana informal discussion groups with students. .. The Rev. William H. Poteat be gan the week's activities Sunday, speaking on "The Jesus of History and the Christ of Faith" at the morning church service. Dr. J. Glenn . Blacl¢uxn at the evening worship service on For giveness. Both men were heard by large congregations. Throughout the week chapel services have been · held each morning with eager· audiences of both students and townspeople attending. Ten Seminars Ten seminars have been con- ducted by the leaders, each an authority on some phase of the Focus Week theme: "In Quest of Christ for Today." Students have attended these convocations in in- creasing numbers each night. On display in the library· this week have been books and pamphlets being considered in the discussions. Leaflets carrying pertinent information on forei.gn missions, marriage and family re- lations, racial problems, and oth- ers have been distributed through this display. On Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday flights informal discus- sion groups were held in the xar- ious fraternity houses, dormito- ,ries, and rooming houses about the campus, providing students the opportunity to ask questions not presented in classroom dis- cussions or seminars. Practically every class on the college curriculum has been visit- ted bY. one of the visiting leaders. These classroom forums have proven one of the most informa- tive aspects of the entire program. Students who held personal con- ferences with leaders have found them equally helpful. Freshman Dance Tickets On Sale Tickets went on sale this week · for Harmony Hangout, the fresh- man dance to be given at the High School gym Friday, March 22. A. Raleigh orchestra will play for the affair. Pat Pattersoh, of Wilson, vice- president of the freshman class and committee chairman, states that proceds from the dance will be added to the class treasury. Snow Holding, class president, Harry Carpenter, secretary-treas- urer of the class, Crecie Greene, Betty Hubabrd, K:tty Isbell, Dick Letaw, Frances Perry, Stan Vetter, and Wilhelmena Wallace are oth- er committee members. "Alumni News" Cioes To Press The Wake Forest Alumni News, edited by Prof. J. L. Memory, will come out in about one week, The copy was carried to the printers in Raleigh Saturday. This issue will carry articles continued from past issues such as "Campus and Classroom Echoes of Old College Days" and "Inside the Rock Wall." The usual alum- ni articles will also be included. In addition to these, other articles on football, basketball, enrollment increase including the large vet- eran total, Religious Focus Week and speakers, the new alumni chapters being started, and pic- tures of Wake ForeS't co-eds sent to SS Wake Forest crew, will be included.

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Page 1: ·Dr. E •. Lee Three GPads -Bi·Pi Chapel Servi ce Dean....Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. ,

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-· ., .,

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WAKE FOREST COLLEGI • LT l>:"-' ·" RY

; ; J .... , •• -·-· ----------~

'. ·RED .CROSs·

nniv'E:Now.

·:·.·,n· .4~--.. . ·:

·Dr. !R~ E •. Lee . .. · .. ~· '\ '

·· E~ected· Dean. . - "·',1'. . .

· · Of. Law .. ·Schoot·

Three l?ecent GPads To .. WedHereln Two Marria8es Saturday

-Bi·Pi Dances Will Be Given · On Week-End

Noted Writer and-Teacher Takes Qver Legal Divi-

· · · . .. Charlie Spivak Will Play .,-osepl:aine Holding '43,.El~abeth Jones '44, and R. H. For PanpHellenic ·

. sion· of College Bl"lantley, Jr., '45, To Be Principals Spring Hops · In Nuptials

Dr. Robert E. Lee, originally of Kinston, was·t~day elected dean of the W~ke Forest' College· Law Three 'recent Wake Forest Col­School, President Thurman Kitch- lege graduates are to be principals in has announced.. in twa '\Veddings tomorrow in the

Since 1929- Dr. Lee has been a .Wake F!)rest Baptist Church. They member of thelaw school faculty are Eliz«beth Ann Jones, '44, of at Temple. University, Philadel- Wake F()rest, who will be married phia, and.' has the distinction of to Russell Harold Brantley, Jr., ha\ling five earned degrees. '45, of Zebulon, . and .Jasep~nt:

In 1928 he received the B.S. and Holding; '43, of Wake Forest,. who ·LL.B. degrees from· Wake. Forest, will be married to Edgar Nonnan arid· · afterward was awarded the Ricks of Mt. Olive. M.A. in Public Law from Colum- . The fiist wedding will be that

- bia ·uniy-ersity, and the LL.M. and· of Miss Holding and Mr. Ricks S.J.D. from Duke University. which Will come at 4 o'clock. Dr.

The. Wake_ Forest Law School J. f... Ea<;;ley, assisted by the Rev. which, as a; war..:'time measure, Eugene Olive, will officiate. has been operating jointly with · The bl'ide's father, W. W. Hold­Duke University Law School in ing llwtn give her away, and he!' Durham, will return to the Wake sister-in~law, Mrs. W. V(. Hold­.Forest campus in. June. The open-, in? III· \9'~11 be matron-of-~onor, ing date will be June 10. · M1ss Holdmg's only attendant.

The· committee of trustees, ap- Mr. Ricks' best man will b~ his pointed to make recommendation .brother, Mr. Nelson Ricks of Mt.

. for the law school deanship, .was Olive. l.rshers will be Mr. W. W. headed· by former Governor J. Holding -III, Private Walter H. Melville Broughtor1. Dr. Lee has Holding, Mr. Aubrey Winston, all been · authorized to assemble a of WakE! Forest, Mr. Barton Stev­teaching staff and· a law librarian. ens of Wrenns, Georgia, Mr. Wal-

' . Author f)f Books

ter Ch!lrry and Mr. William Bishop·; l,oth of Mt. Olive. ·

Wedditlg music will be present­ed by o:t-ganist Thane McDonald

Tonight Mr. and Mrs. W .. W. Holding III ami Mr. and Mra. ·i. B. H'l\nt, Jr., of Raleigh, will

The new dean has just returned from . Europe where for the past seven months he has been in charge of a course of la\l.r studies at Shrivenham American Univers­ity, a temporary university in Eng;-la-nd . that' the. War Department Red Cr' oss o,-.·ya established for the soldiers. At the . ·• . . . "

· concliJ§ion of this work, he was

' give -a dinner party in hotWr of -the couple at the Carolina Coun..,. try Club. Later in· the evening Mrs. L. C. Gooch, Mrs. L. S. Mur­ray and Mrs. Rosa Winston will entertain at Mrs. Gooch's home.

The wedding breakfaSt, give11 by Mr. and Mrs. Harvey ·Holding, will be held at 11:00 Saturday morning at the Carolina Hotel in Raleigh,

The wedding reception, for friends and relatives, will be at the Wake Forest Community House.

The couple will make their home in Mt. Olive where Mr. Ricks is in business with his two brothers.

Miss Holding is the fourth member of the :family to graduate from Wake Forest. Her grand­father, W. W. Holding, her fathe~ W. W. Holding II, and her brother, W. W. Holding III, have all grad­uated before her.

While attending Wake Forest, Miss Holding was secretary of the Little Theater, president of the Glee Club. She served in three official positions of the Philoma.:. thesian Literary Society.

In 1940 she was presented to 'North Carolina society at the

(Continued on· Page 6)

Campaign Office

Fraternity dances capture the spotlight again this week, the Alpha Kappa Pi and the Sigma Pi fraternities having their mid,-win­ters. Five other frats had their dances two weeks ago, . · The two fraternities agreed to

have their dances tonight and to­morrow night after the scheduled Pan-Hellenic mid-winters were caned off. The reason for the Pan-Hel decisic>n came after the Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh or other. places large enough to accommodate ~he seven fraterni­ties could not be obtained on Feb­ruary 22-23.

The AKPi and Sigma Pi fra­ternities plan for a gala affair this weekend. Tonight the frat men will dance to the music of Frankie Wright, a well-known colored bandleader. Maestro Wright has made a number of appearances in Wake Forest and is known for his "hot" renditions of the song en­titled "Caldonia." The semi" formal dance will be held in ¢-e local Community House at 9:00 p.m.

Hotei Is Site Tomorrow night the fraternity

men travel to Raleigh, Russ Carl­ton will provide the music for the .occasion in the spacious Vir­ginia Dare ball room of the Hotel Sir Waiter. '11he formal affair will begin at 8:00p.m.

In addition to the dances, the tvio fraternities will have a ban­quet at the S & W Cafeteria Sat-

nr * * *

Meetings Sigma Pi Alpha . will

meet Monday night, 8:15. Gamma Nu Iota will

meet Thursday night, 7:15. The PubJieatiQns Board

will meet in the English Office tomorrow. at 12:00 •

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Big Talent Night Set For Thursday

Half Hour of Recorded Music To Precede

Entertainment

Final plans were announced this week for next Thursday's Student Talent Night, whirh will include a 30-minute con.:trt of recorded music preceding the program.

The show, which will begin at -eight o'clock, March 14, in the high J;Chool auditorium, will in­clude various music, a juggler, a musician, acrobats, a short ora­tion, and a ghost story. The rec­ord concert; will begin at seven­thirty.

Harold Coston, master of cere­monies for the eveping and pro­gram director, promises. that this will be "the grea~cst performance of any kind ever given - any­wher~ - professional or other­wise!" He reports that the per­fanners are cooperating fully, and that "the prospects are great!"

The proceeds from the show will go into sound equipment to be us­ed by the student body.

Tickets will be on sale, sec,.urable from any Student Council or Pan­Hellenic Council member or from

(Continued on Page 6) appointea traveling lecturer on ,. • t T ·d specialized.clegal topics at various .. ' .. ergu,-.a.,.~$ ~ ay army installations' in occupied

A. dd 2 N M. u,rday night just before the dance.

S ' ew-- en . !Pe_ ba~9-~et, to be held in the. . . ' ' -Tray Room, will be formal. (h . •.

GermanyJ includ;llg Frankfurt, ·~ Heidelburg, Nuremburg, and Mun- . rhe !ted Cross drive on the

. ich. He has novir resumed his work campus 'ends today .. By Wednes-

Pan-Hellenic spring da.'lces ef em1strv Two new members have been April 27 grabbed a prominent .Frat

t T 1 u day nigl}t $3-8.26 had been con-a emp e niversity, but will re- tributed at .the booth in the· Col­port at Wake Forest at the begin-·ning of the summer session. lege Boo~ Store. Those who wish

He is the author of two books, to make contributions may do so "Advanced Business Law" and at the bo()th. No solicitations will "Cases on Contractg'', and has con- be made IJn the campus. tributed leading articles to such In the lted Cross Drive last year publications as "American Law Wake Fol'est and surrounding ter.:. School Review", ·~university of ritory rai~ed approximately $3200. Pennsylvania Law Review","Tem- The goal this year is $2,500. ple Law Quarterly", and ."Current Mrs. William Royall heads the Legal Thought". drive in Wake Forest. The drive

Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. , Those iness Law Association since 1941. assisting her are: Sue Marshall, He is also legal columnist for "The Kay Garland, Bettye Crouch, :Mary Philadelphia inquirer" and con- Gilmer Ct:~cke, Bea Gulledge, Ma­. tributing editor to an encyclopedia. ry Lou H~:~well, and Virginia Kor­_He has been emplt>yed as a legal negay. and business consultant to several Profess()r A. L. Aycock points Philadeplphia business firms, and out that · the need for Red Cross is a me~pber of the North Carolina· funds is on the increase. There bar. are more service men in hospitals

His wife. is the former Miss Lou- now than there were a year ago. ise Gattis if Louisburg. They have Demands on Home .Service Work two sons, ages 12 and 3. He is a are as gr"lat as they were at any .Baptist an!i a.Demccrat. _ time durtng the war. The Red

Cross is mainta~oing' game -ser­vices in au hospitals.

added this week to the staff pro- pla~e ~ fraternity- discus~io~s moting the College Enlargement agam t~Js week. And now ~t :S Campaign according to an an- a defimte . .fact that the nation s nouncement by Director c. J. numl}~r on~ sweet ~rumpe~ tooter, Jackson. Thomas I. Davis and N. Charlie Sp1vak, w1ll provule the E. Wright, b,oth Wake Forest ~usic for t~e serni-for~al dan~e graduates, have been employed by m .the Raleigh Memor1al AudJ-the College in a roove designed to tor1um. ... increase the inten-siveness of the Spivak Coming campaign to raise S7,000,000. The question confronting the

At the same time, Mr. Jackson Pan-Hellenic Council is that of reports that the efforts of College finances. Spivak has now lower­field representatives have met with ed his previous $3500 agreemen~ "gratifying success" in all the dis- to $3000. 'l'his is a comforting tricts of North Carolina that have word to frat men on the campus. been reached so far. ·The. staff, The Pan-He! is working on a which until this week was compos- plan to lower the assessments still ed of only three men, has made more. They have chopped five extel'lSive contacts with Wake For- dollars from the $16 assessment est alumni throughout the state, fee set some weeks ago, and an effort is being made to at- ' The Pan-Hel plans to issue. tract interest ~nd support to the tickets for the dance to the ira­campaign in every community. ternities in order that non-frat

Mr. Davis, better known to Wake men may purchase them.' But it Foresters as "Boredface," has since must be stated that all plans are Monday of this week been assisting tentative, and no definite action M,r. Eugene Olive in organizing has been taken: Wake Forest supporters in the A proposal was made to the Henderson and Oxford areas. Re- cotihcil, suggesting that State

(Conti?iued oT? Pa!e 6) (Continued· on Page 6)

To Be Revived Gamma Sigma Epsilon, the

chemistry fraternity, will be re­vived some time this spring, 1 says Mr. J. A. Freeman, instructor in the Chemistry Department.

The return from the wars of two old members, Claude McClure and G. T. Hicks, and the presence. on the campus of some eight to ten eligible students makes pos~ sible the revival of the fraternity which has been inactive since nearly three years ago when the last of its members went into ser-vice.

To be eligible for Gamma Sig­ma Epsilon, a student must have a B average in twelve hours of Chemistry and no lower than C in any other subject. He must also receive the vote of the active members ..

Mr. Freeman asks that any stu­dent who is a previous member of this fraternity on this or any other c~pus please contact him.

MathCT~cherB· k Foe~s Leaders Summarize Campus Problems om1ng ac __ .. _-:----:-----------------·--- Strong. clemand for religion em- tion of the Bible and seek the

phasizing Christian principles and Man next. The -true test of a The name of Lt. Worth H. spirit ratl)er than external ·fea- man's Christianity is found in

Copeland, Instructor in Mathe- tures, and a cleavage between the tl}ese words, 'If a man have not matics, was accidentally omitted ministerial students and the re- the spirit of Christ, he is none of from last week's list of Wake For- mainder llf the campus figure His'." est professors who are still iu the prominently in student discus- Commenting similarly, the Rev. service.- sions, me1nbers of the Religious R. T. Howerton said he felt stu-

Lt. Copeland received the B.S. Focus tealh stated Wednesday. dents are seeking "the meaning of and M.A. degrees from Wake Remarking on the many sources human life and its relationship Forest College. He recaived the of evidenee of superficialty of re- to God." The demand, as express­M.A. degree in Mathematics in ligion he has encountered here, ed by Mrs. G. Avery Lee and Dr; 1941, and was· immediately lidded the Rev .. .:Warren T. Carr stated Carl Townsend, is for a religion to the teaching staff in that de- that he ha~·found prevalent among formulated into a practical, work­partment, where he remained un- Wake stuctents a calling for less able program rather than a the­jiJ November, 1942, when he en- dogma. ll:mphasizing this point, oretical system, a crystallization tered the Navy wit!]. the rank of the Rev. W. W. Finlator named of thoughts out of the theoretical Ensign, and was assigned to as the imPortant feature of Chris- stage. Mrs. Lee summed the quest teaching duties in the Naval tianity tht~ possession of o spirit as a requirement for the internBI Training School in Columbia, of Christ--love, kindness, ana in religion rather than the ex­Ohio, and New York, where he creative g()od:will. He said, "We ternal. stayed until ·March, 1945. He was have made a mistake in narrowing Along allied lines, Dr. George then sent to Harvard University down Chrtstianity. Our religion D. Heaton stated he found the stu­for a three months course in radio is not a t:hurch, a Bible, or a dents receptive to the neeli for communications. He went over- creed, but a faith in and devotion thorough overhauling in the edu­seas in November, 1945, and is to a Man,. The others are expres- cation in the church. Mr. Robert now at Pearl Harbor. Lt. Cope- sions of tll.ia devotion. The mis- S. Denny called for a simplification land expects to be released from take Chr~tians have made and of methods of teaching the prin­service next month, and begin the mistake that has caused fac- ciples of Christianity. All religi.: t-eaching in the Mathematics de- 1- tions among Christians is that they

1

ous l~aders must keep their dis­partment here at the opening ol seek first tb.e right creed, the right cussions "geared to the under­the summer session. church,_ a_ntt the right interpreta- standing and psychological back-

ground of their audience," he ex­pressed, adding that "the test of your message is whether they take it home with them."

Scoring the apparent rift 'be­tween ministerial and non-minis­terial groups, Dr. Glenn Black­burn summed the problem as the need for a "give-and-take" be­tween· the two elements. He said he felt that both sides in the divi­sion are -awakening to the fact and realizing the need for break­ing down the differences.

Lack of knowledge of Christian history, contributions and pur. poses resulting in jnabi!ity of stu­dents to commit themselves in religious matters lies at the bot­tom of Christian problems, accord. ing to the Rev. Wm. H. Poteat. Elaborating on the campus cleav­age Mr. Poteat remarked that "the students who show the greatest degree of maturity of reflection on the real moriu and spiritual content of Christianity are thos~ who are probably least inclined to associate themselves with the religious activity groups on the campus. This is a tragedy be­cause it means that the real Chris_

tian leadership, if thjs trend per­sists, will not come from nor bi! nurtured by the church."

Emphasizing the need for more Christian knowledge, Mr. Poteat stated that he felt Wake Forest students he had talked to were too certain they had found the formula for religion. Elsewhere Mr. Poteat added, he found that students more generally realized their insufficiency of knowledge on purposes and contributions.

Mr. Howerton described cam­pus recreation as "tragically lim­ited." He suggested creation of a council to "provide wholesome social and recreational outlet for more groups;' citing community sings and group hobbies as possi­ble new programs.

Commenting on student reaction to chapel, Mr. Carr expessed the belief that chapel should be so interesting students would not feel the matter as compulsory. De­veloping this idea, Mr. Howerton suggested more student participa­tion in programs and the employ­ment of funds to bring outside speakers to the campus for the

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ONLY THREE

MORE DAYS ·:

NOW LEFT

Phone 304-6 ~

Chapel Servi_ce Tonight Closes .Religious Talks Religious Focus W e e k

Ends After Many ·Discussions

Tonight's chapel service closes Wake l!'orest's second annual Re ligious Focus Week. Each day this week eleven Southern l;laptist leaders have met classes, ·attended chapel, and conducted seminars ana informal discussion groups with students. ..

The Rev. William H. Poteat be gan the week's activities Sunday, speaking on "The Jesus of History and the Christ of Faith" at the morning church service. Dr. J. Glenn . Blacl¢uxn ~poke at the evening worship service on For giveness. Both men were heard by large congregations.

Throughout the week chapel services have been · held each morning with eager· audiences of both students and townspeople attending.

Ten Seminars Ten seminars have been con­

ducted by the leaders, each an authority on some phase of the Focus Week theme: "In Quest of Christ for Today." Students have attended these convocations in in­creasing numbers each night.

On display in the library· this week have been books and pamphlets being considered in the discussions. Leaflets carrying pertinent information on forei.gn missions, marriage and family re­lations, racial problems, and oth­ers have been distributed through this display.

On Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday flights informal discus­sion groups were held in the xar­ious fraternity houses, dormito­

, ries, and rooming houses about the campus, providing students the opportunity to ask questions not presented in classroom dis­cussions or seminars.

Practically every class on the college curriculum has been visit­ted bY. one of the visiting leaders. These classroom forums have proven one of the most informa­tive aspects of the entire program. Students who held personal con­ferences with leaders have found them equally helpful.

Freshman Dance Tickets On Sale

Tickets went on sale this week · for Harmony Hangout, the fresh­man dance to be given at the High School gym Friday, March 22. A. Raleigh orchestra will play for the affair.

Pat Pattersoh, of Wilson, vice­president of the freshman class and committee chairman, states that proceds from the dance will be added to the class treasury.

Snow Holding, class president, Harry Carpenter, secretary-treas­urer of the class, Crecie Greene, Betty Hubabrd, K:tty Isbell, Dick Letaw, Frances Perry, Stan Vetter, and Wilhelmena Wallace are oth­er committee members.

"Alumni News" Cioes To Press

The Wake Forest Alumni News, edited by Prof. J. L. Memory, will come out in about one week, The copy was carried to the printers in Raleigh Saturday.

This issue will carry articles continued from past issues such as "Campus and Classroom Echoes of Old College Days" and "Inside the Rock Wall." The usual alum­ni articles will also be included. In addition to these, other articles on football, basketball, enrollment increase including the large vet­eran total, Religious Focus Week and speakers, the new alumni chapters being started, and pic­tures of Wake ForeS't co-eds sent to SS Wake Forest crew, will be included.

Page 2: ·Dr. E •. Lee Three GPads -Bi·Pi Chapel Servi ce Dean....Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. ,

Page Two

·Old Gold and Black Founded January 15, 1916, as the official stu­

dent newspaper of Wake Forest College. Publl~h­ed weekly during the school year except during examination periods and holidays aa directed by the Wake Forest College Publications Board.

Sue Marshall ·Eddie Folk .............. Editorial Council Betti& Horsley Ricl!ard Brinkley Wi!llam E, (BUI) King . . . .. .. • Business Manager

Editorial Staff: Kitty Jo Beasley, Sam Behrends, Ruth Blount, Rebecca Brown, Biil Clarke, Madge Conrad, Kay Garland, Jesse Glasgow, L. R. Gro­gan, Jr., Jon Hall, James Hawkins, Mary I.pu Howell, Mary Lee James, .Anne Johns, !.eldon Kirk, Sarah Elizabeth Miles, Bill Poe, Bill Robbins, Jean Shelton, J o Shelton, Helet1 Tucker.

Sports· Staff: Rock Brinkley, ·Pa.ul .Allsbrook, Herbert .Appenzeller, Frank Gregory, Jim Harris, Bill McSwain.

ed witJt hills and valleys where sonie player's foot had slid; soon the dry lime was scattered in all directions. And· all the time most of the players had to stand back and watch - and wait their turn.

There can be six tennis courts - six good tennis courts there.

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Ex-Marin'e··Has· Lost· 9 Roommates to Draft

A n o t h e r Personality Sketch .of Member· of

Senior Class

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he has seen it before and after the­advent of co-eds), travcling, good movies, good ·speakers;· North Carolina, and dances. He also. likes people. He extremely· · dislikes dull speeches, fish, and the idea that students can't dance on the From· Kannapolis comes Archie

Nesbit, another outstanding se-- campus. ·

Tli.e total value of the propertY •. owned by Wake Forest to:ltege · .... one hundred and nine yearii ago was $2,971: This amount was :the .. ' total. of: an inventory which Dr; :: Samuel. Wait, fh·st president of. Wake Forest College, made -iri · ' "'· ·1837. . . - ..

This inventpzy w:as :among .the:· papers found in a littl~.~-cnmipled, . . . leather trUnk given to the Wake · ··

Business Starr: Paul Canady, Barbee Council, .w. L. (ZerQ) CrumJ)Jer, Betty Duncan, Benj!e .Evans, Howard Forest, Libby Gertner, .Billie Good· win, Gilmer Parrish, Lucy Rawlings, Ralph Slaw­son, Jimmy Strupe, Dot Vaughan, H. H. 'Vard; James Hobbs, circulation.

This lack of adequate facilities has not been experienced by the·tennis team alone. For not only have members of the tennis team lleen handicapped in their practice (the schedule has already been made out and matches planned to be played on those courts - the only ones in school since the site of those on the campus was chosen this winter for a new men's dormitory, now under construction), but those 'interested in other inter-collegiate sports, such as golf and track, by both lack of equipment, and lack of facilities.

nior personality. Archie 'vas born in Charlot~, but has lived in Kannapolis most of his life.

Nicknames Forest College liLrary last week~ . - .. Archie has a tendency to pick by Mrs .. F. P. Dodd, great gi&nd- .. · : · '·

up nicknames . .._ While he was in daughter ·of the first 'President. ·

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, P. 0. Box 691, Wake Forest, N. C. .All business matter should be addressed to the busi· ness ·manager, i!ame address. Subscription rate: $1.50 a year.

.PHONE 304-6. For important news on Thurs-. days phone 2661, The Record Publishing Co., Zebu­lon, N. C.

He was giaduated from the Kannapolis High School in ''41, where he was ori the baseball and basketball teams, the · Student Council and w.as a member of the honor S\lciety .

the Marines he was christened Mrs. Dodd lives in. Wake" Forest. Aladclili and Blind Raider: He has This trUnk containS hundreds of also been called Clockie·and Apol- letters written to Dr~··and :Mis. lo. Wait in .the early .part of the nirie-:- ·• ·· · ·

The most' out-of-place feeling teenth century when waite F..orest · ... he has ever had was· while eating College h~d its beginmngs. in a girls' dining hRll at a nearby · _ 200 Bairels Com college. When he was invited he The•item·of greatest value .:found Entered as second class ma.ll matter J anua.ry

22, 1916, at the post office at Wake Forest, North Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879.

Member Intercollegiate Press Member Associated Collegiate Press

Represented for national advertising by Na­tional .Advertising Service, Inc., College Publisher~~ Representative, •20 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y., Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco.

Perhaps those· affected even more by this dearth of recreational and athletic facilities and interest in such "minor" sports by those who can remedy this situation, are- the regular stu­dents, who are not 'good enough to make the track team, or tennis team, but who 'enjoy .play.­ing tennis and for whose needs any college should provide.

In-the fall of '41, Archie enter­ed Wake Forest. A.s a 'freshman he studied. By now he has doubt­less piCked up tile habit of pro­crastination whic~ is prevalent among most students. He was on the freshman ·bask<:tball team and comptroller ofJhe SPE fraternity. During his sophomore year he played on the varsity team: Lat­er he was vice-president of the ju­nior, class, on the Pan-Hel council, president of the SPE's, and in the

just couldn't say n". in this inv.entory' which Dr. Wait Once Archie phoned a girl whom m~de iri. his own handWriting· on. . .. · ·

he hadn't seen for a long time. He two sh~ts of paper pasted-togeth- ,-_. •· _,,· got quite a shock wl;len the man er was 200 barrels of corn \vhich. .

A Rich Week

Information is that the executive board, which met Tuesday; decided to build efficiency apartments for marq{ed students upon the site of the present "tennis courts" very ~oon, and without first making allowance for the recrea­tional needs of the college students now here.

This week saw Wake Forest's second an- That the college should plan ahead is neces-nual Religious Focus Week. Eleven religious sary. It is wise. It is the natural thing to do. leaders came to the campus and spoke at chap- But in plannibg ahead,· the college must el convocations, held seminars on pertinent sub- not make its plans conflict with the needs of jects, led classroom discussions, held dorm bull· students now 'here. Their, our, needs must sessions, and found time for personal confer- come first. We are the students who will go ences. away fr..,om Wake Forest and make our report of

The consensus appears, as the· week closes, it to the people of the state. Onr report can be overwhelmingly favorable. For some people, a favorable in every respect. religious focus week meant one thing; for Let us make it possible that it be so. some, another. 'Some took it as a time for a little extra sleep as a result of lighter recitation requirements; some went to the extra chapel services, attended seminars, joined bull ses­sions with unusual zeal. .Many took an oppor­tunity to focus sane, progressive Christianity as a personal force - and have gained much thereby.

On the whole, opinion can be well summed up in a statement made late in the week by one man: "I've gotten a lot from what the men have said, but the spirit of the thing has been by far the most valuable gain to me for the week." ·

The bringing of a group of young, intelli­gent, interesting leaders - leaders to whom

-religion is vi tal and desirable and exhib'ition­less - is a refreshing thing, like a fresh breeze from an opened window blowing into a stuffy room.

Fund FoP Drives There have been at least five drives on this

campus in the past year. Some of them have received enough response so that "their quotas were r~ached. Some have not -- probably the majority have not. This is not necessarily a lack of interest or cooperation on the part of the students, for they have realized . that such things as World Student Service,. Red Cr~ss, and United War fund are causes which merit our support. But it does indicate that the av­e.rage student at Wake Forest cannot give to every drive every week. College students are notorious for being "broke", and, since most of them are on definite allowances, they cannot al­ways have extra money when they are asked to contribute to a drive. And, too, it is rather ir­ritating to be asked for money at every turn.

who answered the phone intr!)duc- he said to·be worth ·aueast $400 .. ed himself as her husband. Mor- · Runner up in worth to the .barrels · al - figure it out for yourself. of · corn · was five head of horseS

Education club.

Archie gave a report in Math worth ·$250. Wake Forest was at class once, after which the profes- that tin1e concerned with. farming. ·· sor asked him what he thought of It possessed 28 head of hogs valued . the article. . He replied that it had at $60, 11 stacks of fodder valued . its good points, but that it might at $55, and four stacks of oats at · be improved upon. Later Archie $40. Also included in the inven- ·

Caught, In Draft learned that the author of the ar- tory were 12 fea+l1er beds worth . · In his junior year Archie y;as ticle was a good friend of the $180 and five white counterpanes

drafted. He had been elected ,prof's. fringed, worth $20. There were 17 president of the ~enior class, but His enthusiasm for baseball al; benches in the student's room val:. after serving for only a month his most caused serious complications. ued at $15 and 150 gallon!! of soap ·· · greetings from the President-came. Archie broke a 'boy's jaw while which Dr. Wait consiqered to be He c11me back to ::;r.hoollast year. playing· one day, and the boY's worth $37. On his· return he was again elect- mother immediately tried to make Letter. . of. Advice ed president of his fraternity.. He· Archie's mother pay for the dam-is also a member of the Veterans' age. Nothing came of it, howev- Among the letters found in the Club. er, and the boy got both the brok- little, dusty·trunk is one from his

Archie . will graduate in June en jaw and the doctor's bill. brother-in-law written in May, with a major in Education and Archie's experience. with bor.ses 1830. In answer to a previous let­minors in Math, Biology, and Eng- hasn't been too pleasant. Once ter from ·Dr. Wait in which he lish. . while he was riding his horse ·asked. his brother-~n-l!lw's advice

Archie has had more roommates jumped. Archie :!t>ll off, although as to whether or not to go into drafted than anyone else on the nothing was hurt but his pride. teachiD.g. The~ reply he received . campus. So far nme have gone, Apparently it didn't stunt·,. his from his brother .. in-law was as . and his current roommate is_.in growth any. . follows: the process of being drafted. Must After graduation Archie plans "As to any propnsition to teach .. be a jinx-or something. to teach school. He is doing his. school .for the sake of in part

Archie likes Wake Forest (and practice teaching now. maintaining yourself I say at once ------------------'--------~1 io abandon it; you can do:moz:e

From Other Colleses-The Navy has recently loaned

more than $2,000,000 worth of Diesel engines toN. C. State Col­lege. This collection is regarded as the largest and most modern in the world.

The college has recently ap­proved establishmrnt of a Gradu­ate Department of Diesel Engin­eering and Internal Combustion Engines.

any candidate for sc;hool office:

in the ministzy in one year by giv­ing sour whole soul's strength to it than you can confine to a day school." .

On a small, folded sh~et of green paper dated Februazy 6, 1839, the 'following re_quest was made to Dr. Wait: ·

"You are aware that two litera­ry societies have been formed at this place. The object of these Societies is known to you.

Laudable Pursuits "The Philomathesian Society is

anxious to have your name among those of its honorary members, believing that youc approbation of its object will inspire its members with much energy in their laud-able pursuits." ·

One thing which most of the students have appreciated is the readiness with which the vis­itors ha_ye been willing to face any and all is­sues with sanity and intelligence and apprecia­tion. Thinking college men and women do not forget such attitudes on the part of men who come for that purpose - and they do not soon forget any sidestepping of important issues.

ls there a !>Qiution to this, which at the same time will enable the College to give its

. The 20th annual Engineers' share when it is expected to do so? In most "Ball" was held last Saturday cities we see a plan. whereby the citizens give night at N.c. State College. The only once a year. Their .money goes into a name was changed from The En­Community Chest controlled by a special civic' gi~~ers' "Br~wl" because of a. pre-

First of all, we want to know what training and experience she has had. Then, we need informa­tion concerning her leadership ability; the interc1:t she has ex­hi~ited in the school and in this particular phase of the school's work; her dependability- real evidence of it; her character, ability to work with other people and to get things done; and fi­nally something of the other jobs shj! has done well." •

The letters and papers found in this trunk carry the spirit of· the time in which thP.y were written. The yellowed sheets will be treat- . ed for preservation for future ref­erence.

The inteiiectual companionship and new outlooks which the week has brought are not wasted at Wake Forest.

. . . ' . . vailing feelmg that the engmeer orgamzat10n, whtch d1str1butes it as they see si10wd do all in his power to ele-

Wamboogie Institute, famous African college, has made an in­tensive'study of the tribal customs of the students. Iri some ·of the tribes, notably the F~ahtuh, if a man murders another man, he is required to take and support the wife of the murdered man. A result Of this is that some of the more fierce tribesmen have as

fit'. One or two drives take care of the situation vate himself in the eyes of those for the entire year. This enables the citizens to outside the profession, according

t "d 'f' h b . . to The Technician. Wake Forest men and co-eds voiced their opinions, doubts, ideas, and questions concern­ing a vast variety of problems related to reli­gion, national and world policies, racial bar­riers, wars past and future, and the place of youth in the world today.

se as1 e a spec1 1c amount at t e egmmng, and their worries over drives of one kind or an­other are over.

Questions have not been rais~d unavailing­ly. Skilled guidance and leadership has steered the course of thinking, led inquiring minds to answers through reasoning.

Tennis Court Lack It was a tragic sight this week to se~ fif­

teen or twenty students each afternoon hike hopefully up to the tennis courts. When they arrived at a fenced-in enclosure, they saw only a level field of red clay, covered with a half­inch of dust, and twelve posts, sticking up cu­riously into the air at intervals. No neatly-lined well-packed clay courts with white-taped tennis nets greeted the aspirants for the varsity tennis team, as they did in days before tennis was dropped from the intercollegiate schedule here.

The students lined off 'one court with dry lime, after they found the iron stobs which de­noted the extremities of the lines; they strung up one tennis net which they brought with them.

Then some fifteen men who have hopes of some .day wearing. the Wake Forest letter in tennis, had to line up - in two groups, one on each side of the court- and take turns serving; then receiving; then playing out the point.

Why could not a similar plan be put into effect here? The Student Council could serve as controllers of the money, and also be in charge of the collection of it. Thus, with one lump sum, the student could meet his obliga­tions to charity and the expense and worry of separate drives would be eliminated. The time and efforts of everyone in general would be conserved and the eternal appeals to us to "dig deep" would cease. What could be better?

Sunday At St.· Andrews The altar stand$ witli dignity, The candles flicker silently. A faint, sweet incense fills the air, The people kneel, all wrapt in prayer. The stained glass windows' shining glow Throws colors on the forms below. The tinkling of a tiny bell, A feeling now that all is well. A stillness, solemn and profound, With saintly statues looking down. A rose sunbeam, a dancing ray, Stops near_ to watch an old man pray. With folded hands and head bowed low, He knelt beside the windows' glow. I watch_ed him as he knelt in prayer, And had the feeling God was there.

-Helen Tllcker.

The medical school of George Washington UniveJsity will aban­don its wartime accelerated schedule at the close of the pres­ent term. The university was the first institution in the country to adopt the llccelerated medical study program.

Four students at WCUNC, dis­satisfied with the cutting system at the college, recently presented a new plan to the faculty.

"According to it, each freshman would be allowed one cut ana each first semester sophomore would be allowed the number· of cuts each class meets a week; juniors and· seniors would have voluntary attendance for all classes . . . With such a system the student, per­haps after several days of cutting, would seriously realize just what her classes are for and just what she is here for. She would be at­tending the classes because she is honestly interested in learning -which should be her purpose in coming to college." - The Caro­linian.

Ttiey are optimiStic.

The Mercer Uni\<ersity A Capel­la. Choir made last month a 650-mile tour, presenting ten concerts of sacred music in churches, col­leges and high schools throughout southern Georgia. The music in­cluded selections from Bach, Han­del, Tschaikowsky, a group of spirituals and hymns, and songs by the Mercer ~al.e Quartet.

The editor of The Twig, student ·newspaper of Meredith College,

tHE RED CI!OSS OPEAATES TWO EJ.CUR510M 801\TSi PIIINTEO R.£0, WHITE. ANII 8WE, 0111 THE SEINE ltiiiER. EACH HAS ROOM FOR 300GI S16HTSEUS VISITING PARIS

Mrs; Dodd is the great-grand­daughter of Dr. Wait. Her son, Dr. Benjamin R. Dodd, died re­cently leaving in his will $5000 to Wake Forest College.

many as five wives to care for; all widows of th:!r victims.

• " I £ED CROSS lti!CREATtOM' .• t WORKERS IH MILlTAR'f ~ ) ARRANGE GAME$, PICMIC:S,r · BARBECUES, StGKTSEEIItG :..=­lOUit$,1\llD OTHER. EHTERTAINME"T fOR. ntE PATIENTS

Soon the powdery. court surface was pick- lists what should be known about--......... --;,:------------------.....;;..

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Page 3: ·Dr. E •. Lee Three GPads -Bi·Pi Chapel Servi ce Dean....Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. ,

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P~geTiiree

. '. ;; -~iilitW:-$elrJiDarj · -:-:.· _· Featur~::~t::Week

. its · realization with the . topic ·- Wake Forest students equal the a normal condition on the camillts. "Seekirig tO 'Make Christ Reai." A_ ·U_' pt" lired '-Ducks average stUdents, in their world resulting in a healthier cultur~l .Iii Chapel TUESDAY MORNING··· - - - interests. --.. attiude and ouUook.

hisThs~:~; :ier:· :o~i oit~: . w.·n· F••ft' h -Game Miss Inabelle Coieman stressed All the visitors expressed de~ -This.Week Program as ''One W~rld or Non~" ~e bope that -reliiious dri~es llght in fin~g an openmindedness

_bu(he decided·,to_change his ·&ub~ would not end ~n. the campus with and willingness- on the part of 'ject. : Rev:);poteat . studied at the close?~ RebglOUS F~us w~~· 'students in group discussions.

-In the-seMinars held on .Mon:.. Oberlin COllege and Yale Univer- .· The Ruptured Ducks· won their Opport~~es f~r appl~mg rehgi- Speakers characterized Wake stu-day, TueSday,- WedD.esday, and · sity Divinity School. :fifth straight game on Wednesday ous convlctlo~ ~to ac~IOn~ shoUld dents as "receptive" and "frank." Th- d · ·., hts h - · be made ·avrulable followmg ter-- urs ay mg .after t e eveninlt- .. SUND_ AY M. _.o, _RNING , _ _ TUES-DAY ,.,....n ... G . . night, to take_ a. definite lead in · --,;;;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:::;;~

· ~liapel seryicei . -the : folloWing c tmg passages fr Mark - ..,.v=.u."' · mination of the special servicez . topics were- discussed: ·

1 1 _ .. d P til' fir o;n 1 tt t s Dr. Clarence H. Jordan, an agri'!' the intra-mural basketball race. today. _

, · Rel·t· . gospe - -~n . a . 5 . s ·. ~ · er 0. cultural ·mission,..... in Americus, .In second place w1"th three-· Wl·ns t• - 'Human a Ions 1n Industry," the Cor th ans th R w H -.. Dr, Townsend expressed sa IS-. 1 d b · · D G D H t f -. m ·

1 '. e - ev. · · ' Ga., said that ihe. quest for. God and one loss 1·s· the Yankee Clowti "t d -:· ..... · e Y r eorge. . ea on o Poteat act Y M C A faction with the veteran attJ u e ·· -.· · ~ ~> t-he·- -Mye· rs Park ·Bap· ti'st Church ' mg · · · · -·· · ' secre-: is more an exploration: than an · t d di

. tary at Chapel ~ an~ S!l!l ·of ·explosive experience, quoting qum · . of sympathy an understan ng . f~~ Ch:::::~~i'v~ Qu~=~~~~i~~~ce~~~ .C~lgate-Roc~esters_ Presl~~t Ed- Paul's words as text: "That I On Thursday night of last week ~:a~~~ s~~:~ry· v~!!~n=~pro~~i

. . · ~m- M~eill Po~eat, .'J1Sc~d might know hiril· ;ind the pti\ver the boys from College Hall de- . · d F.KP.~. :legislation, strikEs, and ~_-Th~ .Jesus _.of, Histpr~ and the of his.resuriection,«Dd the power feat~d the Magnolia Vets 33-26 in ._of fin~ng. an. un?erstlanbdmg anb Christianity jn industry were dis- Chr_1st of Faith; _ drawmg a co~- of his. suffering." ~ game which saw plenty. o:f matur1ty In v1ewmg a or pro -.cu5sed.· Many. faculty mc.mbers par~son between the two-w.hil_ e Through suffering one finds J·oy, action. The Vets, battling desper- !ems.

: -attended these forums. t g th t th t t di · f · 1 h . \ · . - ~0 10 a e wo are no Vls- he said, "until you have le!U"ned ately to keep out of the cellar, That the commg 0 ·gJr s , ere

· .Mamage ~eSts lble. to weep; you cannot laug~." were a constant threat to College h~s- improved Wak~ :~~est w~s '''Christanity in EVeryday Life," SUNDAY EVENING Hall, but tailed to keep up with the sugge~ted by Dr: B a urn, w o-

d t db M · G A L · WEDNESDAY MORNING fast-scoring pace set by the win- explamed that guls tend to create co!~ uc ~ Y. rs. .- very __ ee. Dr. J. Glenn Blackburn, pastor Dr. Blackburn spoke on Wed-Mama~e and-- the Christian of the First Baptist Church, "Lum- nesday morrung concerning "Lord, ners.

Home,1

' led b~ Dr. C~rl ~I. rr:awn- berton, spoke. under the' topic of Increase Our· Doubts." . But he .Wednesday night the Yankee send. In thiS .semm~ mimeo- ·a simple word, "Forgivenesl!"· He decided that his prayer had ·a~:.: Clowns· were given a forfeit by ·.g_raph~d_sheets; mcludmg a q1;1es: ·pointed,o]lt various needs for-for- ready been ~nswered-tliat col..: the cellar-bound Magnolia Vets, tionna~e for both ·futurc_husbanct giveri.~ss,_ divine and_ mortal, in lege people had more doubts than while· the Tigers triumphed over

. : a_nd wife, and a general· m~oduc- several :fields, -with_ practical ap-. anyone else, . so he changed hiS College Hall 26,.25. The Ruptured · bon on rules for co~t~:~"np, and plications for. present needs. subject. Dr. Blackburn receivoo Ducks won from the Bransons

tests- of .love, were d1stnuuted to ·, - d hi 36-33. · all members of"the group. These MONDAY MORNING- _his A.B. :Cram Wake.Fores~ an s_

, · 'l'h.M. and Ph.D. degrees trom the . - · outlines served as a guide to the Charlottes Dr. _Ge?rge D. Heat~ Southern Baptist Theological · - discussions ·throughout -the we~k. on spoke concernmg several facets S . . L . ill K

Protestantism of "Our Cultural Crisis," .md held emmary 1D OUISV e, Y. as his thesis that the present'civ~ _-WEDNESDAY EVENING.

"Protestantism,'' conducted by ilizations have· reached the most . Mr. Robert S. Denny, Assocmte ·. Rev. Warren T. Carr, and ·assisted decisive crisis so far and that -it SoU:thwide ·Student Secretary for

by Rev. W.W. ~inlator, A heated is up to this and. the' next gener- ~e Southern Baptist Convention, discussion ·-d~veloped- each night ation to make certain ·that it is discussed the Apostle Anlirew as .on the prinCiples· and practices o.f passed :iD the right direction. Dr. -an illustration of ''Ex~inplary Roinan Cathplicism _as they are Heaton. received his-A.B. at Deni- Living.'' Dr. Denny receiVed hlS directly related to us, our. faith . son Ulliversity ·hiS Th.M. at the B.S. and L.L.R degrees !rom the and universal·religious freedom- Soutlu!rn , Ba~tist Theological Univrsity of Kentucky. The OrigiD, Stru'"ture, and Phil- S~minary in LouisVille,_ Ky,; and THURSDAY MORNING osophy. of the Catholic Church, was given his p.o; degree by Dr. Clarence Jordan spoke on The Psychologx of Cat..'Iolicism, Georgetown University. He is ·at Thursday morning, but ~a diges' The Future.'of Catholicism, were present pastor of-the Myers Park of his ·speech was available at ·some- of, the -topics under discus- Baptist ChUrch m Charlotte. press tiine.- -~~ .

. "The UNO and U,'' by Mr. Wil- MONDAY E~""",.,....~G THURSDAY EVENING ·•=~.u.' Dr. George Heaton" spoke last ' liam PQteat. In these -discussions Quoting the . familiar lines: -

Mx:. . ~oteat brought out . several "Closer is He than breathing, night; his thesis being that man V iewpoints of Man as c•>nsidered N th h d _, t" D cannot be iSolationist. He quoted

earer an an s an ... fee ' r. the words of John in Revelation: by Plato, Luther, Calvin,- and Carl M. Townsend, pastor ·Of the "and· I beheld a new "heaven and Ma~hiavelli. Then, it was agi:eed Hayes-Barton Baptist Church in a new eiU'th, for behold the first that the UNO,- as it stands at pres- Raleigh, _stressed the presence of h ent,- is not a world govermnent, divine spirit and the necessity of heaven and the\ first eart were the problem being to get nations passed away." to give up some of their sover~ TODAY_ eignty. Dr. Poteat . feels that the Scheduled for this morning is U. ·s. must be diminished before land and June Freeman. The the Rev. William W. Finlator; for the nations will recognize this team members competed 'with this evening, the Rev. Warren.T. world authol-ity, since there is too each other iD. t~lling "Whoppers," Carr. much nationalistic feeling. Rich- and the Rev. Warren Carr wo~ -.;;;;;;;;;;::;:;;;::;;::;;::;;;;;:;;::;;;;;:;;;;;:~. ard Bass .gave a report on ·the His~ unanimously. . tory and ·Activities of .the Inter- A tea· was held on Monday by

- national Labor Organization. Don~ -the faculty for the team m~bers ald Bost rep~rted _·oii- The·: Food, ·and another was held yesterd~y

· Air anlf on· Agreements · which by tne Social Standards· Comnut~ we;e made within. 'the natloris of tee of the Women's Government. the UNO. The Breton Woods Pro-posal was reported on by Bill Salmons. ~~i WAKE

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Coach Rhett Dove's Ruptured Ducks found the going plenty tough as they extended their win­ning streak to fi.ve in a row with a- hard-earned win over the Bran­sons. The surprising Bransons held a four point lead at the half but they saw it smashed as the Ducks slowly gained command ot the game, -

PROBLE!\J

(Continued from Page 1)

services. -Mr. Poteat scored the apparent

lack of interest in world politics as evidenced by failure to attend seminars on the United Nations Organization. On the other hanci, Dr. Carl·H. Townsend said he felt ·

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~ ·"Race and. the Christian," con­ducted by Dr. Clarence E. Jordan.

· Dr. Jordan, who is conducting a -social experiment in bi-racial re­lations at. his farm near Americus, Ga., gave in his seminars an ex­planation of the background of Southern prejudices, and outlineri :a plan whereby they may be in :some part, overcome.

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- '!The Christian Answer to Mod­ern Doubt," conducted by Dr. J. Glenn Blackbtn'll. Dr. Blackburn went into this seminar p!anning to advocate ~at young people de­velope more- doubts, but soQn dis­covered that they · already had more than he and they could

hariille. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Christianity. in Higher Educa-ti~n," led by Mr. RobertS. Denny,

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Page 4: ·Dr. E •. Lee Three GPads -Bi·Pi Chapel Servi ce Dean....Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. ,

Page I'OU1.\' .... /

The Team That Made- History

) Upset Champs And Runnersup For Southern Conference Cage Title

• Blue Devils -Kitf~):;_-'''

Deacons'· Hopes A tired Wake Forest quintet,.

weakened by the previous pace . they set in tournament competi-. tion, faltered in the final game to give Duke·~ Blue Devils the coveted Southern Conference championship by a score of 49~30.

A capacity crowd of 4,000 jam­med the Memo~ial Auditorium to see the giant killer, Wake Forest, . battle th~ boys fi·om DUrham. The Deacons tried desperately· to get into. high gear· and start ·rolling; but the spark was lacking, and they couldn·'t match the play of the previous night against Caro­lina.

Duke, on the other hand, was ready for the ·an important con­test, and her players pel'formed· coolly and methodically. Duke con_ ·­. lt·olled the backboards, &nd this factor was decisive in the win.

The Deacons fought hard all the way and several times durin_g the game it appeared as though the Deacons had found their stride and would repeat the performance of the night before.

Here's the Wake Forest DeaeoWI who surprised everyone by advancing to the finals of the Southern Conference basketball tournament at n,~le!gh _where t}ley lost. to, Dake for the championship la~t night. Frida! night, the Deacons scored the t?urnament's . biggest upset by e11mmatmg North Carolma s· top-seeded defendmg champiOns. Left to nght, front row, tney are Warren Hicks, Jim Fleet, Nick Ognovich, · ~ :orge Veitch, Joe Hinerman and Jack Manley. Back row, Coach Murray Greason, Bill Gattis, Hank LQugee, Abe Williams, Deran Walters

· and Jack Mayberry. Gattis and Lougee are Durham bovs ~

Ab Connects Ab Williams, Deacon iorwa1:d

who earned a ·berth on the All­Tournament team, threw in an overhead shot to start th~ sroring. Big Deran Walters, the· Deacon

Covering the Field with Rock

defensive ace, fouled Kaffenberger and. the latter's try was good. Dick

D St tl E t Whiting then threw one in from eacons ar e . xper 5 B;ox SAore·. the circle for Duke, and Koffen- . .. berger, fouled this time by

Lougee, threw in. another from .

By ' Eliminating Phantoms CAROLINA: G FT TP ~~~t~:e a~:~w ;:\:em~:an;: ~~; . Paxton .......................... 2 1 5 tied at 4-4 .

. Dillon ............................ 1 4 6 The Deacons :tried desperately A . . d W k F . Anderson ...................... 1 1 3 to pe1,1etrate the tight Duke de-

n msp1re a e orest team surpnsed the experts and Mc;Kinney ..................... 1 5 7 fense, but the Blue Devils had .set

Wake Forest's Demon Deacons made history last Friday night by whipping Carolina's White Phantoms and advancing to the finals of the Southern Conference Basketball Tournament. This marked the first time that a Wake Forest team ever ad­vanced beyond the semi-finals, and they accomplished it by pul~­ing the biggest upset in the history of the tourney ..

shattered Carolina's championship chances when they toppled Jordan .......................... 2 o 4 up. an almost impregnable defense. the heavily favored Tar Heels, 31-29, in a semi-final upset that White ............................ 1 0 2 Duke used the fast break time and stunned the capacity crowd of 4,000. · Thorne .......................... 1 0 2. again to score as Kaffenberger,

Totals ........................ 9 11 29 working. in the pivot spot, fed the· Wake Forest, beaten soundly by Carolina twice during the WAKE FOREST: G li'T TP ball to t1ie speedy Blue Devils.

regular season play, definitely outplayed the boys from Chapel Veitch ............................ 1 0 2 With the score standing 12-6, Hill. The Deacons reflected the Williams ........................ 6 0 12 Wake Forest called for a time out.

The Deacons weren't supposed to be good enough to hold the Phantoms' warm-up jackets. Yet, they went out on the court and whipped the favorites, and they didn't luck out. They outplayed the Tar Heels, doing it the hard way by coming from behind after the Phantoms had rolled up an 8-2 lead early in the

superb coaching of Coach Murray nation's top teams, just couldn't M~yberry ...................... 0 0 0 Kaffenberger scored . under the Gre~son ~s they shone br1'Il1'antly Walters 3 0 6 basket after Whiting fed the bal', " " click against the inspil·ed Deacons. . ....................... .. in everything they did. The Deacs Hinerman ......... ~.......... 1 0 2 to him on the fast break. George displayed their fight and de term·· Phantoms Start Fast Lougee .......................... 4 1 9 Veitch hit the hoop for ·the Deacs ination, factors which stamperJ The game was exciting to the Totals ........................ 15 1 31 but Dick Gordon countered with them as a threat to all apponents many spectators and startling tc Score at the half: 17-17. a set shot' for Duke. during the season, as they bat- the Carolina rooters. The score Devils Roll·

first quarter. tered the defending champions. \vas tied at four different times .. Just before the half en:ted Wil-l don't know exactly how to explain this upset that surpris- Wake Forest defeated Carolina in the game, and the lead changed B B ~ d Iiams again connected on an over-

ed, but at the same time delighted, even the most hopeful Dea- in the first round of the tourna- hand.> nine times. Wake Forest . raves ounce head shot frOI;l the circle. Jack

L k. · f h t · 1 t d · t 1 ment in 1942, and this year mark- could have compiled an impres- B B Robil).son, Duke guard, thea con supporters. 00 mg at It rom t e rna en a s an pom , s.ive score had they connected on y aptl•st Boys swished one in. from the side b h. k h · f · h D • · h th d ed the Deacons' only appearance t m t e b1ggest actor m t e eacons tnump was e guar · more of. their foul shots. The end the scoring. At th'e iHtermis-

in the hardwood classic since then. ing of Hinerman and Walters. They did magnificent work in Deacons missed seven out of eight sion Duke led, 24-16. limiting Dillon and .McKinney to solitary b'askets. However, Walters Controls Boards shots from the foul line. Wake Forest has been known

Carolina started confidently and Coach Murray Greason's Demon for its ability to come back, and the game couldn't have been won without the excellent play The Deacons were unusually after five minutes of play led th!.' Deacons advanced to the semi- the fans did not give up hope. turned in by Williams, 'veitch and Lougee. Veitch was all over calm as the game began and al- Deacons, 8-5. Wake Forest, paced finals of the Southern Conference The crowd- was stili' anxious to the court, intercepting passes, getting rebounds, and making though the contest grew rough by Lougee and Walters, began to 1 Basketball Tourney with a well- see the Deacs. hit their stride, and'

. N and the action spee'ded up, they gradually draw closer to the Tar deserved 42-31 win over William the Deacons received a terrifi::: life miserable for the Phantoms. Lougee was at hls best. ot never lost their poise. Captain Heels. After a six minute score- and Mary before a capacity crowd ovation at the start of the secona usually a heavy scorer, Hank kept the Deacons in the ball game Hank Lougee played his best game· ·less period, during which time at Raleigh's Memorial Auditorium. half. in the first half with 9 points, while playing a brilliant floor as did George Veitch, who seemecJ both sides fought fiercely, Wil- The Wakes were definite favor- Hinerman scored on a set shot, game. Too much can't be said about Abner Williams, the tall to be all over the court, intercept- Iiams finally sank a ba;;:ket to ites and ably fulfilled the role. and then George Veitch missed

ing passes and setting up plays break the· ice. Both teams hit It was their third win over the the rim, but Captain Hank Lougee man from Indian Trail. He was the one that threw in the baskets Joe Hinerman, sterling guara, the hoop on baskets by McKinney Indians, having beaten them followed up with a layup shot. in the final half that· made the victory possible. gave a dazzling exhibition of floor nnd the Deacons' Lougee . and twice during the regular season. Kaffenberger then dribbled out of

Getting back to Walters, he outfought, outsmarted and out- play and teamwork, while giant Veitch. With Carolina· leading, The smooth working Deacons the pivot spot and scored on a t:. H h . Deran. Walters stole the show 17-15, and 20 seconds remaining, passed the ball well and slipped beautiful hook shot. Ausband

played the uighly rated McKinney. e made t e VICtory pos- from Horace "Bones" ~cKinney Walters' knotted the score with a through the William and Mary broke through the Deacon defense sible by monopolizing both backboards. It was in this depart- as he controlled the baclcboards. long shot as the half ended in a defense time and again for lay-up to make a crip. Veitch .followed ment that he showed McKinney a few things about how to con- In the previous Carolina-Wake deadlock. · shotl!. The trJcky Deacon defense with a nice shot and made the trol the boards. Deran also did yeoman work in getting the Forest game the Tar Heels con- The tension had increased for set up, by Coach Greason proved score 28-22. This was the closest

trolled the backboards and our both teams as they started the too tough for the Indians to crack the Deacons came to the Blue ball to Williams so that he could fire away with his now famous losses could be traced chiefly to second half. Carolina was fear- and forced them to score most Devils in the game. Duke's of .. "high shot". our lack of backboard control. ful of losing the all-important tilt, of their points on long set shots. fense gathered momentum and the

Looking at the game from another angle (I shall call it the Walters, however, could never be while the Deacons under a terrific Indians Take Lead Blue Devils, never again threaten-spiritual side) I think that the Deacons reached a height that matched in th.is game under the strain hoped to keep the present William and Mary scored two ed, went on to win by a large

. . · ' . . . . basket, and hts play was a de~ pace and move into the finals. field goals in -the :first 30 seconds margin. thts particular team wtll never reach agam. They had that mner ciding factor in the Wake Forest Williams Gets Range of play and before three minutes Duke's victory marked its fifth feeling that demands victory and won't accept defeat. · A team victory. Williams sent Wake Forest into had elapsed, held a 6-2 lead. Then SoutheJ:U Conference crown. The doesn't reach this peak more than once or twice and sometimes it Although Carolina maintained the lead on a one-hand shot and Wake's attack started clicking, Deacons played well after the ter­never does. However, the Deacons, as I have said, had this feel- its usual tight defense, they could . countered _with another soon af- and t~e Deacs forged ahead, 9-6. rific game against Carolina. 'l"hey · F · · h · d' f h' f 1. . . ot to the overhead shooting of ter. McKinney and Bob Paxton A field goal and free throw by had the spirit and determination mg nday mg t, and tt was a ere 1t, or t ts ee mg or spmt ·~~ ~ P. . C . sank free thrcws but Williamr Magdziak put the Indians in front to win but the lack of stamina and d

, . h . f d . . d Ab W1lhams. Coach Ben ar- . . ' k 1 oesn t come Wlt out a mtxture o courage, etermmatton, an 1 of Carolina tried des- again hit the basket. Anderson 10-9. HanK: Lougee and Hinerman weariness too its tol. ability. ~:;:t!ly to check the Deacon up-: was fouled by Lougee nnd_ his try found the range fo~ suecessive . Ab Williams once apain led the

It was a great victory and one that was stared by every rising by switching his combina:..; for the fo~l was good, Jrm Jor- field goals and agam the lead Deacons scoring with 11 points. t· stantly The Phantoms dan, replacmg Anderson, then tal- changed hands.. DUKE: G FT TP

Wake Forest man who heard about it. It was a shining symbol ,;,: ~~:quered ·N.Y.U., one of th~ lied an_d carolina was trailing by . At the half, Wake Forest held Seward f ...................... 4 1 9 of Wake Forest's greatest asset, a fighting spirit and a desire to " one pomt. a 22-19 lead. A few seconds after C01·dell f ... _................. o o o succeed. The clock showed that there the intermission Deran Walters Ausbon f ....................... 5 1 11 .

was seven minutes of play ldt in made good on two free throws, Cheek f ............. :.......... o o o

***** It is true that we lost out in the final to a Duke team that played its best game of the year. However, it was a case of just not having enough left after the terrific game of the night be­fore. The Deacons fought with everything they had. They did­n't quit. They just didn't have the spring in their legs to con­trol the back~oards or to cover the floor with the same speed and fight that had brought them victory against the Tar Heels. ,

Duke, on the other hand, played like the champions that they are. When the chips were down, they played the type of game that many fans thought would have brought them victory even if they had been playing the Tar Heels. Kaffenberger and Seward were outstanding as they led their team to top honors.

***** The official AU-Southern Conference basketball team which appears elsewhere on thi~ page may or may not suit you, especi­ally when you see that fellows like Dillon and McKinney are not included· on the first five. However, in all fairness to the men wlo selected this team, we must consider the basis on which the team is chosen. The team is chosen on the ability the men show

in the .tournament and not on the records that they have made dur­ing the season. The team is chos­en before the final round is play­ed, or just after the semi-final round has been completed.

It is a pity that Dillon ~nd Mc­Kinney are not on the iirst honor team, but neither of these boys showed up . well enough during the tourney to replace any of the boys on the firs• five. It was hard to keep these boys off, but I would like to tip my hat to the men who cast the ballots, for hard as it was and in spite of the criticism that was sure to follow, they stuck to the rules and se­lected the team that was most worthy.

The eighth hole of the ·warn­boogie Institute golf course had tc. be closed· for two days until :l giant 36 foot python could be re­moved from the green.

the ball game, as the tired Dea- and the Wakes were out in front Kaffenberger c ............ 3 5 11 cons called for time. When play to stay. After that the issue was Corrington c ................ 0 0 0. was resumed Paxton threw in a never in doubt with the Deacs in Gordon g ...................... 3 o 6: one bander to put the Tar Heels control or the game. Robinson g .................. 1 0 2: ahead. Williams, brilliant forward .Joe Hinerman, wh9 scored 14 Whiting g .................... 4 2 10. from Indian Trail, then brought points, and Deran Wa1t2rs went Gray g .......................... o o o the fans to their feet as he retali- the route for the Deacs and were Totals ........................ 20 9 49 ated with two baskets, twisting all over the floor, contr•.llling the WAKE FOREST: G FTTP all the way around to score. backboard and intercepting pass- Veitch f ........................ 2 o 4

Five seconds remained and the es. Magdziak, who won a berth Williams f .................... 5 1 11 Deacons had a slim two-point on the All-Tournament second Mayberry f .................. o o o margin. The ('rowd was scream- team last year, scored 11 points h' Walters c ...................... 2 1 s ing and pleading for their respect- lead the Indians scoring attack. Hinerman g ................ 3 2 ·s ive teams. Walters was fouled WAKE FOREST: G FTTP Lougee g .................... ~. 1 o 2 and the Deacons elected to take Veitch f ........................ 3 0 6 Ognovich g ............ :..... 0 0 0 possession of the ball out of Hicks f ........................ 0 0 0 Totals ........................ 13 4 30 bounds. The Deacons,- with the Williams f .................... 3 1 7 .. ----:----------deafening roar of the crowd ring- Mayberry f .................. 0 0 ll ing in their ears, froze the ball Walters c ...................... 2 4 8 expertly while Carolina tried Hinerman g .................. 7 0 14 helplessly to intercept it and score. Lougee g ...................... 1 2 4

The gun sounded and the happy Ognovich g .................. 1 1 .3 Deacons had done what. most ob- Totals ........................ 17 8 42 servers had thought impossible. WILLIAM & MARY: G FT TP Everyone of the q,uintet was in- Magdziak i ................. : · 5 1 11 strumental in bringing the covet- Clark f .......................... 0 1 l ed victory to the· school. Bunting f ...................... 0 0 0

Kinnamon f ................ 1 0 2 Holly c-f ...................... 1 0 2 Sudkamf c .................... 2 1 5 Salyers g ...................... 3 0 6 Mackiewics g .............. 1 0 2 W. Williams g ............ 1 0 2

Totals ........................ 14 3 31 Score at half: Wake :t'orest 22;

William and Mary 19.

Page 5: ·Dr. E •. Lee Three GPads -Bi·Pi Chapel Servi ce Dean....Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. ,

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' tio~s; ·.Hinerman, .Wal- _ .. Diamond·. Spo·-,···rt:. .. ~Th~· PiKA•s continue«!, their The Wolverines of second floor · . ters on Second Team . · . -· · : .. · · . . ·wmnmg-. ways in the Fraternity BostwiCk made themselves cham-

.. _.. ~owerlng.. Ab . w. illia' .ms_ ' th·e· .Be·g·. ins;:_ Mo_nd.ay·· -~:~_:::y ~=k~~~ ~~~::~;_ i~~f re:g!:ls~:!:= b:;

. . season undefeated in downing the '· : ' .. : sbarp-sliooting J:>!ianpole,: ~ho · · · :· J · night. At the same time the last of their opponents, the Mag-

paceg • ..WI!ke.- Forest.~in its. ~ex ... · . . . Kappa. Sigs walked off with a ~olia Deaconettes, 27-8. The · pected ~arCh into :the Southern. . The ~a;n !:>od;y; of base~all, can.. hard-earned 20-15 victor er· WOlverines defeated the other C~!rler:ence finalS, ·:was selecte~ didates -wilLre~lOrt .to Coach ..Mur-. th 8: ., · y ov four. teams in the girls' league, but

. . on the 1946 All-Tournament team_ ray Gre~son· on Monaay after- .- e Igma -Pl s. all except the last were by narrow ·: · ., · c~oseJ?-._'for _the_ Asso~~ted ·Press. noon. .Unifof!llS ~ill be i~~ed; The PiKA's are holding down scores .. They beat Little Dorm by

. · ... : by:: coaChes,._ sports writers and of-:· ~li: c_o~~h -Greaso!l plans. to start ·the top rung with four wins ·and five_ poin~s, Hunter Hellcats by . . . · fiClals: _ ·. .. ' · _-_ _" . .- . . . . ; .. .right m on the heavy -work as the no defeats. · Their big test will ·three points, and third :tloor Bast­

-:~: . .- .. ·:.-~·-, -T~e curly~top?ed fo~az:d ~om othj:!r_schoo~_ h~ve been practic~ ·come ·Thursday night when 'they wick by two pomts. ,. ... · _ ~.:. Ind1an.~ail w~pped In· 30;po_m~ ?ut Of doors for over a:week. · tangle with the KA's. If. the The Hellcats from Hunter

. • : .. ·.: ~~ fu:r!!e ~.arne~ to lea_4 the J?emon When.~sk~d ab~ut t_he P~~spec~ P~'s can get '?Y th!s one with D~rmitory took second place in · . '·' ;-: _ .. eaco~: IP~ -the_ ~al .-r.ound .. o~ 'of the team in.the Big Four, coach a wm, they· will· have .a , new the- league ·when they defeated

Page Five

'

' . ;· .. _pia~ for t~eir first ti!Jte m the_.~- Greason stated tha:t··Duke State trophy for ~eir chapter J;OOin, Little Dorm 25-8 last Thursday. ': :: ~o~. of·.th~:annu~l court ~ass1r.. and.-.Carolina shoUld be back ·to but should the KA's pull an upset The Hellcats ,and Little Dorm

. . -Wll~am~ :was. the_lone.Deacon t~ ;their pr~~;w.ar.,level; but .. that 'as there will be·a three way tie for w:re tied-for second place until '.· -~ ·wcopl_t. firs~~ _sdtnJng -hHin~nor~. . D~~n far as the' Deacons' prospects, .he ,first plac~. . this game. Tlieir win over Little ---~-----__:_ __ __:.,. ___ ___:._;__;__~;__-;___

• .. -.-,.- · a ers ·an . oe. erman woo · ' · . ' . - · D · · · b tr'b t d , , ' · . - -. · 1 b·-1 . ts. ~. 'th.. would have to. watt· anOlook- ·over ·The- PiKA's had· va..v -little o;r~ may e- con 1 u e to the Little Dorm; played outstanding · Give ... t-....e Red 1"1..088 .;.--: -~ ;WWeakrees. mva ua ~ . .,m:se th·. to _'• . de the. hitters .. - trouble with the· boy~ ofAxPi as H~cats' guards, who kept their defensive games. . w ll' • . ~c, . . 'we~:e.name~ O!l: . e:-secon Coach'-"Greason: hail ··had the .th . . - opponents . from taking many

. quint-.at. forward anti" 'gtlarc;i, r~-- .pitChers ·~orking out m·the' gym- . ey held a comfort;~ble lead -shots. "Little Buck". Barbour, . sp~~~Y· -~ ~~orge, ';[e~tch · re.; nasium all week, and he is pleased. :~~h~~~ih~Pco~~estihe~h:...~! Hellcat guard, held down Helen

, ce~e .. t .- on~~a It:, on. F . with-~their. progress.. - evenly distributed C~ach "Dad Smith, LitUe Dorm star,, to only war~~~bber :Se~:r~ e::~r,Gu:d G,The ·. ~=- will ;or~. ou; ~n· dy" · B~hm substihtted frequent!; two baskets ..

Girls Intramural j3asketball Standings·· · ·

Wolverines ............ 4 0 Hellcats .................. 3 1 Little Dorm ............ 2 2 Third Floor ............ 0 3 Deaconettes ............ 0 3

68 37 89 42 55. 61 21 50 24 77 '

MEET YOUR FRIENDS

HERE FOR

HotDogs Hamburgers

and

:nick Whiting;· ·members of the. ·b:1~ves ct·· -~ un spr1Dg 00t t- and ~-th~ boys. saw action. The Mrs. Helen Smith, Little Dorm high.,.flyiilg ··DUke . Bllue -D~viJs . ~ pra 1ce_-JS o~er, so as no_ o AKPi's .failed to score until late forward, was high-point scorer of who- ti.iined b'ack Wake. Forest, mterf~e With .. tttsantd bto allodw iri .the second quarter and at. this the league. She ra,cked up thirty-49_30,in·thefinalS~.were--allaward- s~me -lffip~ovemen . o e ma_e time the PiKA's seconci_te~ was one points for her team with bee ed first:stri:Dg.berths.,Harcy Bush- on .. the diamond at the. athl~tic playin~ White, was the big nois~ ability to make crip shots. Kay Experiments in flight were con-

. ka, VPi _guard,.iotinde_d out the field. -~. in the ~i at~ck as he-account- Williams ran a close second, taL- ducted at Wamboogie Institute 38

Soft Drinks ·

· · number one:· aggregation; - • · ed for eight pomts ·and played. a lying 28 points for the Helicats. years before the Wright brcthers ~ .. Koffenbllrg~r Urianimous. . , . . fine floor. game .. McLeod, Nance, Mary Ahn Grainger took third succeeded at Kitty Hawk •. Among ·shorty's . :.Besides-Walters and Hinerman ·All- s · ·. -. W"}} Bol~, and a host of others led hqnors with. twenty-siX points for Wamboogie pioneers in the re- ·

. • _,other. players chosen :on the sec~ -·. :. ' .:... 'tarS · I theThPiXAX 's.· s· , cl . · - . ~!0!~~esHe~?~a~~t =~ search was Prot Mbftd Llrld. ·· · , ·ond team are- John Dillon; for-· . . e appa 1gs ung to the1r ., . , ··=j~~~~~;;;:;;:~~~;;:;;;;~~~~~;:;;;;~~~~~~

d · ·B 'M K' · · t . · second place ·tie with' the. KA's by 'Little . Buck Barbour, Hellcats; • war , . ones- c mney, cen er, 'B D ' • d . . M · F · w 1 · a ancfJimJordan, guard,.all.ef Car- .. e.· -_ ._e_ termin'e taking .a 20-15 VICtory over the A arie ~azier, d MD v~rmeKnis, 'ghant_ olina. -. ' · _ Sigma Pi's Weanesday night. The nne an an ~xme ,

Koffenburger,: the. Wilmington, . g~e was very ~ose at all tim~s, Del., book sliot artist w~o- topped , . . . _ ne1ther_ team bemg able to b~ci the· tourney's individual scorer, ~t has been requested,by the In- up a lead of more than five pomts with '40 points,- was- the . only· tram~al Athletic Council _tlmt. ~e throughout. the contest. The Sigs unanimous selection of· the eight cap~ms o~ the r.frater~ty . and_ '!ere out· m ~ont 12-11 at half vott;rs; Two·. points were.. given ~on-fra~ermty teams ha?d m. a tlme, but dur~g the second half

. for a· fitst-place•vote and one for list of ten playe~s as tpe~r. ch~Ice ~e )ea4_ changed hands seve;at · a second.:.team vote. Kaffenberger. for ~he All Star Team to the Old tlll.les. Both clubs were making

Jack·Acree was high for the Kap­pa Sigs with six points.

Fraternity League Standings: Team: w 1 pf pa

Pi Kappa Alpha .... 4 0 i16 109 Kappa Sigma .: ...... 4 1 124 ii2 Kappa Alpha ........ 3 1 127 71 Sigma Phi Epsiloq :. 1 3 104 71 Alpha Kappa Pi .... 1 4 101 151 Sigma Pi ................ 0 4 65 122

· reclrlved the maximum· of · 16 Gold ana Black office niJ. later bad passes. and the shooting was points. The other -~embers of than 8- o'cloc~ J?·m· W:edn~day, very, . poor. Paul LeV.:is an~ the first outfit all netted 13 points March 13._ This. list of- teil_players· Woo_ciieJ:~oone led th.e Sigma Pi each. . should include a .first and sec~nd attack Wlth four pomts apiece.

Seward, w~o was as hot as that team cl!oice. . . "J=======;;:;,;;;==;;:;,;;;~~=====;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;,;;;;:i\-proverbial firecracker. in the Dev- On ~ednesday mgl\t, .March ~0,

· ils' win over Wake Forest made the wmner of the· Fratermty the tourney dream team for tha League title will meet the _champs

. second time; . -The rebound-mind- of the Non-Fraternity League for ed war veteran· copped first .team the ;eampus_ ch~pionship. 1m­laurels· in 1943 ·but was in the med1ately_ followmg the_ game the service when the 1944 and 1945 Monogram Club Will SPOJl!!Or a tout:naments were. play~d. tilt betWeen the All-Star teams o.f

Veiteh Mentioned each league. Kaffenberger and .. Busbkar pre- -------

Holding Calls

Golf Meeting

viously made the second team. The lanky Kaffenberger grabbed off the honor last season, whereas Bushkar ~s selected in 1944. Williams and Whiting· made the club for ·their -first time. Both were sizzling in the tourney, and there was little doubt in the minds of the railbirds that the two boys would receive first team posts. A second meeting of all those . Jordon and McKinney missed who want to try out for the golf their chances of being on the t~ team will be held Tuesday at for -the second time. Jordan. was Chapel period in . Room 103 of

· a first team choice last season and Wait Hall. McKinney snared the same honors At the first meeting which·. was in '1942 prior to entering the ser- attended by about 12 men, Snow

· vice.- Dillion was named on the Holding was elected chairman of number two club for the second the ·group to arrange a tourna-. straight year. ment. The tournament, which is

Honorable mention went to Joe to be held in about a week, will Ruddell, Virginia Tech, L. S. aecide who will make the golf Hartzog, State; A. C. Reid, Jr., team .. Virginia Tech; Bob Paxton, Caro- The arrangement( i:for 'the lina; Stan Magdziak, William and tournament for practice sessions Mary; and George Veitch of Wake and matches . will be aruiounced Forest. Tuesday morning.

The .1946 tournament, in keep- < The home matches are to be ing with tradition, was a glitter- held. at the Country Club in· Ral-ing 'affair. The All-Tourney eigh. quint was' a well-balanced outfit and would probably compare fav-orably with the stellar teams se­lected in past years.

FIRST TEAM Abner Williams ....... Wake Forest

Forward Bubber Seward ..................... Duke

Forward Ed Koffenberger .................. Duke

CentEr Dick Whiting ......................... Duke

G'Uard Harry Busbkar ... .................... VPI

G'Uard

SECOND TEAM Deran Walters .......... Wak~ Forest

Twenty Begin

Tennis Season

Students FOR TllE BEST IN .­

CLEANING LET US SERV~ YOU

W.I.LKINSON CLEANERS . /

Opposite R;R. Underpass. Come to See Us!

RECENT WAKE FOREST GRADUATES Train for a 'career in Aptitude Testing with the

JOHNSON O'CONNOR RESEARCH - FOUNDATION

11 East 62nd Street New York, N. Y. Fellowship basis - $85.00 a month Good Opportunity for Promotion

WE HAVE A LARGE VARIETY OF DANCE RECORDINGS

the best in Victor, Decca and Columbia Records

/ames E. Thiem Dial2-2913 108 Fayetteville .St.

Raleigh, N.C. ·

Forward John Dillon ...................... ·carolina

Forward · Bones McKinney ............ Carolina

The tennis squuad began prac­tice Tuesday -afternoon with about twenty men going out tor the team. Because the ·courts are not in shape to use, light workouts were held. · The candidates be­gan to work out by conditioning their muscles, practicing serves and getting their eyes on the ball.

Practice sessions brought out evidence that there is talent enough to go ahead with a tough schedule. However, it is entirely too early to make ~Y predictions about the strength of the team.

S Jllighh a·~"· .. o/1 !l' BC Stotio!l§ Center

Joe Hinerman .......... Wake F()rest G'Uaru

Jim Jordan ........................ Carolina Guard.

Several matches have been scheduled with Southern Confer­ence schoois. The dates for the matches are not known.

Registered for the spring semes-ter a t Wamboogie Institute is Due to strikes among the hunt­Tchong Umbrigo, native Of the ers, Wamboogie .has bpn unable equatorial regi<'ns, who came .on to obtain enough caribou meat. foot 1300 miles through the jun- -gles. :With him came his pet kan- The student body of Wamboogie garoo. .Tlie professors have yet to is fighting a faculty order requir-

.. discover how it came to Africa. ing students to mar shoes in class.

7 PM WPTF

&ALWAYS MILDER

(;) BEnER TASTING

~COOLER SMOKING

- THE RIGHT COMBINATION OF THE WORLD'S BEST TOBACC~S

Caprrfpt lP-16, lloom & M- Tawco CQ.

Page 6: ·Dr. E •. Lee Three GPads -Bi·Pi Chapel Servi ce Dean....Dr. Lee has beim secretary- has been organized on the campus treasurer of the American Bus- by Mrs. 1\lary Lee James. ,

' ..

Page Six

Forensics Squad To Begin Practi~e

Practice speaking including a test debate on the national query will occupy the regular meeting of the Wake Forest. debate squad next Wednesday, Prof. A. L. Ay· cock, debate coach, stated this week.

In the first speaking activities of the :;;quaci in almost four years, Dick Williams and Kermit Cald­well will present· an affirmative proposal in advancement of the question of the advisability of the United States directing its foreign policy toward the establ;shment of free trade throughout the world. Sam Behrends and Al Copeland will defend the negative side of the proposition.

Following the debate the team will practice extempore and im­promptu speeches, Prof. Aycock added.

In all probability Wake Forest will be represented in tourna­ments this year by a three man

· combination, one man ciefending each side 'and one man alternating between the two.

In addition to these three Wake will enter~ an orator in competi­tion. Several students have al­ready indicated intentions of writ­ing orations, Prof. Aycock stated.

. . : .:· :'

Old Gold and Blaek- ·. ·. ··:·. · ~dat;-:Mar~h·~s:;i~::~· • • ' ' ~· I '

BriDI Your Rouses With You, Say Vets

Six stUdent veterans came drag­ging their houses behind them when incessant telephoning, let­ter-writing, and pavement-pound· ing was of no avail in trying to find livng quarters for their fam­ilies in Wake Forest. Active ser­vice with Uncle Sam had taught them to meet every difficult situa­tion with a practical soiution, as evidenced by the four trailers and two pre-fabricated houses that solved their housing problem.

The families of E. C. Calvert and R. L. Russell found space for their trailers behind Simmons dormitory. Frank Ausband and Lewis Taylor found a convenient location for their trailers m Dr. Rea's back yard. The families declare that, contrary to their ex­pectations, they find the trailers have adequate living room and are very cmfortable. (No com­plaints were voiced except a small one about the late-at-night-noise~ emanating from· Simmons.)

Compact Abodes The trailers are well insulated

and very compact. Every·inch of space is utilized, contaniing clos­ets, built-in cabinets, and drawers in almost a!.l the wall space.

were demonstration houses, pur­chased from the prefabricating company in Raleigh, now begin­ning production for civilian needs.

Jean and Alex McClellan are both students; here. They ·find their three rooms and ba~h very comfortable and "almost luxuri­ous" after some of the living quarters they had found in army life.

Keep Woddng The same report came from Ell

Galloway who occupies the far­therest house with his wife and seven-month-old baby. Both men have been ·able to test their skill at' carpentry and general "tinker­ing" to their heart's content, as they wallpaper, add a ·shelf here, and a nook there, in adjusting their homes more to their liking.

Rather than give u:p the oppor­tunity to study in the college· of their choice, these stuaents have made emergency adjustments that sho~ld be encouraging tg in-com­ing students who lack living room for themselves and their families.

New N~ C~ State Student Govt~

Raleigh, N. c.;_(I.P.)-'After months of study and work, faculty and student groups of North Caro­lina State College have established a new type of Campus Govern­ment and Honor System. Educat:­ors here agree that the government based upon a new constitution is "no doubt unique among American colleges in comprehensiveness, logical simplicity, and potential promise.'' ,·

- to ""'""' tl)e .,.,..,; ~. r .·. .. . '1 ernment by weght of prOfessorial . -. · > ,- .. _..:,: .-· authority alone; therefore, faculty· · · · . . · - .' .- · · •:-- · ·- .':: · - . .. ,..,...,._ .... ._ lliirliod m ··:ro_ re·st· .. ~_: ' such a way as to keep the Campus . -"" . · Go~e~nment and · Hono~ System · · · · · '·· -: • - -; e .· · ~:~:tely a_ government of the stu- C.oJI·eiiB te

"Faculty participation will mean new faculty intcl'"est in the full life of students, wio;e guidance and friendly counsel for student gov­ernment ·leaders, and a much­needed continuity in the progress­ive development of the Campus Gov~rnment over the years."

·Wives O~ganize

I Theatres I •

Thursday and Friday, March 7-8-. Shows 3:15,7:15,-9:00 ·

Gene Tiern~y,·cornel Wilde, · Jealll!e Crain, in

Leave Her :To ·neaven . NEWS·_· .. __

Held Over Saturday at .CoUegiate

Prof. W. N. Hicks, head of the · Saturday March 9 Eighteen · t · ' · · ' -State College Department of Eth- this week. tov~r~=~ ~~;eV=~ Shows Continu()us. from ~to 11:.00 ics and Religion and leader .of the , w· C . - Double Feature -faculty group which worked with ans . IVes lub. ·The group elec:- · - Wild Bill Elli tt ·n

ed officers and discussed plans for · 0 " .:

the students in the form_ulation of pleir club. Miss Johnson and MiSs ~hantom of the Plams the new setup emphasized that the L "t d · ... also Lon Chaney in impact of college upon the boy or 8551 er serve cokes and cookies. girl is far mare than classroom The following officers were · Strange ·Confession

chosen: presi .. ent, .Mr·s· .. T. ··c. · and chapte~ No 2 of lectures, formal courses, and ac- . . . ~ . . • - • ademic processions. It is student Williamson, VIce-president, Mrs. THE PHANTOM RIDER organizations, _ social functions, Emory Calvert; secretary and These features will be played· on. dormitory life, the attitude of -t~easurer, !~frs. C. S. Bruner; so- Friday_ night' at the Collegiate. teachers, and a wide and exciting Cla~ CO~Ittee, Mrs. Jean McLel- Sunday,-March "10-assortment of so-c<11led extra-cur- land, chan-man, Mrs. F. C. Aus- -ricular activities. band, and Mrs.~- L. Russell. Mrs. · Shows 2:00,3:45, 9:00 .

. "The student government or- ~- L. Aycock will serve as coun- All Shows, Childr£>n .14; Adults .40

illor Joan Davis, Jack Haley, and ganization on the American college c · Gene Krupa and' Orchestra i~ or university campus is recognized The Club will meet ~very 'l'ues- . today as the indispensable and day .afternoon at 3:_00 m the ~~c- George White's Scandals capstone extra-cuui"ular activity. rea.tJo!l Room of ~he_ Religion .H~ld Over Monday 'at Collegiate·

Monday, March 11-Shows 3:15, 7:15; 9:00

' .

If sufficient funds are available, five or six members of the squad will enter the Grand Eastern Tournament in Charlotte the sec­ond week in April. Following that, l!'round April 20, the debaters plus the orator will journey to Georgetown, Ky., for the regional Pi Kappa Delta tournament. Prof. Aycock anticipates strong compe­tition from rival colleges, which will include qualified institution~ in the Southeast and Great Lakes area.

The McClellans and Galloways are responsible for the two little houses · that sprang up all of a sudden, anti caused such <.uriosity among the neighbors' children. They are the pre-fabricated hous­es located on the dirt road neru· the heating plant. The two homes

A trailer camp in the. old stadi­um is being arranged for by Mr. Earnshaw for those new students who have trailers an<i lack a con­venient spot with, trailer facilities to locate them. College building plans include a large aP._artment­dormitory for married students. But before this plan can be ful­filled, adjustments such as those made by these si:x families must also be made by those sturients who wish to enter school now.

Both faculty and administration Building. They dec1ded not t, realize today that the· complex life have prepared programs, bu_t t'l and manifold activities of the mod- get together to sew, play bridge, ern college o:r; university campus, discuss current ,;.vents, re~,iew best with concern for housing, health, sellers, or to JUSt chat . ~hey s,ocial, recreational, ·and religious h~pe that all of the veterans' needs, in addition to things -aca- WIVes who ~ere ~ot P::C_sent at demic, add up to something of the_- :first meetmg-mclud11!g ~o~e such fundamental significance that of veteran teachers-will JOm the mere acaaemic becomes_ abor- them.

Children .14; Mat •. 30; Night .40 , Edw. G. Robinson, Joan Bennett in

Scarlet Street NEWS ·'

Held Over Tuesday· at Collegiate

Tuesday, March 12-

Bi·Pi Dances Campaign Office tive in nature wittout these other ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~ things as base and foundation. These manifold campus activities LOST- BRACELET must be handled democratically, Small gold heart with chipped di­

Shows 3:15, 7:15, 9:00 Children .14; Mtlt .. 30; Night .40 Sidney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre,

Geraldine Fitzgerald; in·

(Continued from Page 1) (Continue~Z from Page I)

if they are to be handled best ... " Prof. Hicks declares.

amond. Family heirloom. -REWARD-

Lucy· Rlawlings,_ Bostwick

Three Strangers -SHORT

!feld o·ver Wednesday at Collegiate·

Bargain Day-Wed. March 13-

Debate members announced that openings still exist on the squaci for any students desiring to enter the forensic field. College fraternities be admitted

to attend the dances. This plan would lower the assessment be­low the ten dollar bracket as most fraternities demand.

cently discharged !rom the Navy where he served for several years as a lieutenant,· Mr. Davis is for the present making his home at Beaufort, N. C. Before graduating from Wake Forest in 1940 he fig­ured very prominently in campus activities, being a member of the debating squad for four years and assisting in ihe work of all camp\:lS publications.

"The faculty here has been granted the right of campus suf­frage, active -membership on ·the Council of Campus ·Goverp.ment, ~;;;====~;:;::;;;;=~ and representation on the depart-.

Shows 3:15, 7: 15, 9:·oo ·• . Children .H; Adults .25 Leo Gorcey, The Bowery Boys in

Two Marriages (Continued from Page 1)

Debutante's Ball in Raleigh.

Many objections followed the proposal of admitting State fra­ternities. 'fheir argument is that it should be an exclusive Wake Forest College dance.

mental and school honor . commit­tees. However, there is no inten­tion that the faculty shall be al-

At 8 o'clock will come the mar­riage of Miss Jones and Ml'. Brantley. The Rev. Eugene Olive and Dr. J. A. Easley will officiate at the ceremony. A program of wedding music will be presente(j by Miss Leslie Fowler, soloist, oE Wilson, and Dr. Hubert Poteat. organist, of Wake Forest.

The bride-elect will be escorted by her father, Dr. H. B. Jones, head of the Wake Forest Engliah Department. Her sister, Doro­thy Jones, will be maid-of-honor, and Anne Flintom of Charlotte, Margaret Carroll of Wake Forest. Betty Stansbury of Raleigh and Wake Forest, and Mary Paschal of Wake Forest will serve as her bride's maids.

fulother proposal intended to transfer the Spivak contract to an agent in Raleigh: However, no action was taken. · What is causing the disagree­ment or disturbance within the Pan-Hellenic Council? That can be readily answered. According to a representative of the council, all fraternities clamored for a name band, a big dance, and a Raleigh -dance floor.

Mr. Wright, who comes orignal­ly from Montgomei-y County, will assume his duties as associat~ cam­paign director on March 9. He is I a 1913 graduate· oi Wake 'Forest and has for the past few years been affiliated with the campaign to raise U.S.O. funds in North Carolina. His duties in that capac­ity consisted of organizing and contacting county organizations throughout the state. According to Mr. Jackson's announcement, he will become director of Baptist Districts 5 and 6 in central North

The Pan-He! did just that. It contacted Charlie Spivak and signed a contract with the maes­tro. This contract provided for a one night stand at the price of $3500, as said before. Next, the Pan-He! representatives presented the action to their respective fra­ternities, causing a flare-up im­mediately.

Carolina. · ·. Another staff member, R. R.

Best man for the bridegroom­elect will be his father, R. H. Brantley, Sr., of Zebulon. Jim Doyle of Petersburg, Virginia, and Washington, D. C., Dave Finch, Wilbur Debnam, Bill Brantley,,.all of Zebulon, ana Everett Jones of Monroe will serve as ushers.

Why should this have caused the frats to object· to the idea? Assessments? Or action taken by the Pan-Hel? Anyway, four fra­ternities voted down the idea of having Spivak after the contract had been signed.

Jackson, is director of the cam­paign in districts 1 and 2 in east­ern North Carolina. He is at pres­ent engaged in canvassing Nash and Edgecombe Counties. Mr. Jackson reports steady progress·in this area.

A number of weekend parties have been planned for the couple. Tonight at 6:30, Miss Betty Stans­bury ana Miss Margaret Carroll will entertain the weddmg party at the S. &. W. Cafeteria in Ral­eigh. Following the dinner, the rehearsal•party and cake cutting will take place at the home of Mrs. D. A. Brown of Wake For­est, with Mrs. W. E. Speas, also of Wake Forest, as joint hostess.

The office staff at Wake Forest consists of Mil'ium Mitchell, in F' 1 M 1 Sh charge, with two auditions~ secre- . IRe S en S op taries, Ruth Smith and Marcelle

The . fraternity vote amounted to nothing. The contract could not be broken except at the ex­pense of never having another union band. Then followed the numerous proposals to lower the assessments.

Milloway.

At 12:30 · Saturday m,orning, a wedciing breakfast will be given by the bride-elect's aunt, Mrs. w. D. Flintom of Charlotte, at th~ Sir Walter Raleigh Hotel.

A reception for out-of-town guests and relatives, to be given at the home of the bride's pat"ents, will immediately follow the even­ing ceremony.

"Lib", who js now a staff mem­ber of the Raleigh Times, was especially active in dramatics ana publication work at Wake Forest. She was p~esident of Alpha Psi Omega, a member of The Student and the OLD GOLD AND BLACK staffs, editor of The Howler, pres­ident of the Publications Board, representative to the Girl's Coun­cil, member of the Y.W.A., the Glee Club, Philomathesian So­ciety, and elected to both Phi Beta Kappa and Who's Who Among Students.

''Hooey'' entered the newspaper field just after his graduation from Wake Forest last year. While on the campus, he was editor of the OLD GOLD AND BLACK, m,ember of 0. D. K., the Little Theater, the Publications Board, and Who's: Who Among Students. He jg a member of Pi Kappa Al­pha social ~aternity. .

Another question of extreme importance is this: Is this the crisis in Pan-Hel dances? This is difficult to answer. Fraternity ideas change rapidly. After the last dances, the mid-winters, the frat men were very pleased with the outcome. The reason was that .seve1·a1 fraternities combined and threw their own dance.

With the mobs of frat men on the campus now, Wake Forest does not have the facilities to accom-: modate a large Pan-Hel dance. This fact compels the council to. search for larger facilities.

Talent Night (Continued from Page 1)

representatives in the girls' dorms until Tuesday night, March 12th. They will also be O'l sale on Tues­day in a booth at the Book Store, at 40c. Student Council member Macon Greene ·rE-ports that sales are going well and reminds the student body that they may not be able to secure tickets at the door · on _the night of the program, al­though any tickets 1·emaining from advance sales will be available at the door of the high school audi­torium on Thursday night, at 50c.

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