l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - wake forest university · the two concerts were- of...

8
' ', l " '' ' ®lb 'ilark i ·CONGRATS, MID-WINTERS .. TONIGHT PHI BETAS * * * * Volume XXXIV. Number _21.· _Wake Forest, N. C., Friday, March 4, 1949 4056 lawrence·· -- For ·Mid•Winters. This Weekend Dances and Parties Fill .Busy ·weekend For Greeks Tbe first dance .of the Mid-Win- ter dance season will be held to-· aight at the Memorial Auditori- um with music provided by "the band that's sweet with a beat," l!'!lliot .Lawrence, his piano, and orchestra: This dance, a semi- formal affait: 1 will last from 9:00 1111.til 1: 00. The Lawrence band, making its finlt appearance at a Wake For- e.rt dance, promises to be one of lhe finest that has ever played here. .Elliot is the youngest lead- er in the jazz ·world to have gain- ed high acclaim, and it is with much .anticipation that the Inter- fraternity· Council presents rum fOt:" a full weekenc;I of dancing. Second Mfair Twenty-Five Students . Pledged By Beta Tau Beta Tau, recently organized local business adniinistration fra- ternity, pledged twenty-five stu- denta at its meeting held on the evening of February 23. It is the first group of pledges to be receiv- ed into the new organization. The students pledged are as fol- lows: Robert Brinkley, Mac Perry John Pate, W. R. Rucker, .John' C. Yeoman, E. B. Griffin, 'Ham Boyd, Fred P. Mayze, Walter Joyner, Bill Shore, Aubry C. Todd, Earl Byrd, Bob Drake, Wendell Sloan, Jack Bishop, Dale Cooper, Paul, Rogers, .Jim Powell, C. D. White, Stacey Thomas, Bob Mc- Neill, Tom Austin, Ray Burns, Cliff Mabry, and Pel Royal. Labor Conflict After the pledge ceremony, Pro- fessor Allan Powell spoke to the group on the .subject of the con- ilict between labor and ment. Beta Tau is working toward eventual affiliation with Delta Sigma Pi, national business administration fratermty. Present members of the local are William Connelly, Allen C. Coop- er, Leander Hamrick, William Outen, Bernard McLeod, John Person, and Robert White. Dr. G. B .. Powers is faculty advisor for the fraternity. SPORTS HISTORY loca.l Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa Ele(ts 30 Students To H.igh Scholastic Honor Twenty-four' Seniors and Six Juniors Are Selected By Honor Fraternity for Initiation During Month of April By ROM WEATHERMAN

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Page 1: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

·~

' ', l " '' ~ '

®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark i

·CONGRATS, MID-WINTERS

..

TONIGHT PHI BETAS

* * * * Volume XXXIV. Number _21.· _Wake Forest, N. C., Friday, March 4, 1949 T~lephone 4056

lawrence·· Pl~ys -- For ·Mid•Winters.

This Weekend ~ Dances and Parties

Fill .Busy ·weekend For Greeks

Tbe first dance .of the Mid-Win­ter dance season will be held to-· aight at the Memorial Auditori­um with music provided by "the band that's sweet with a beat," l!'!lliot .Lawrence, his piano, and ~ orchestra: This dance, a semi­formal affait:1 will last from 9:00 1111.til 1: 00.

The Lawrence band, making its finlt appearance at a Wake For­e.rt dance, promises to be one of lhe finest that has ever played here. .Elliot is the youngest lead­er in the jazz ·world to have gain­ed high acclaim, and it is with much .anticipation that the Inter­fraternity· Council presents rum fOt:" a full weekenc;I of dancing.

Second Mfair

Twenty-Five Students . Pledged By Beta Tau

Beta Tau, recently organized local business adniinistration fra­ternity, pledged twenty-five stu­denta at its meeting held on the evening of February 23. It is the first group of pledges to be receiv­ed into the new organization.

The students pledged are as fol­lows: Robert Brinkley, Mac Perry John Pate, W. R. Rucker, .John' C. Yeoman, E. B. Griffin, 'Ham Boyd, Fred P. Mayze, Walter Joyner, Bill Shore, Aubry C. Todd, Earl Byrd, Bob Drake, Wendell Sloan, Jack Bishop, Dale Cooper, Paul, Rogers, .Jim Powell, C. D. White, Stacey Thomas, Bob Mc­Neill, Tom Austin, Ray Burns, Cliff Mabry, and Pel Royal.

Labor Conflict After the pledge ceremony, Pro­

fessor Allan Powell spoke to the group on the .subject of the con­ilict between labor and man~e­ment.

Beta Tau is working toward eventual affiliation with Delta Sigma Pi, national professio~al business administration fratermty. Present members of the local are William Connelly, Allen C. Coop­er, Leander Hamrick, William Outen, Bernard McLeod, John Person, and Robert White. Dr. G. B .. Powers is faculty advisor for the fraternity.

SPORTS HISTORY

loca.l Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa Ele(ts 30 Students

To H.igh Scholastic Honor Twenty-four' Seniors and Six Juniors Are Selected

By Honor Fraternity for Initiation During Month of April

By ROM WEATHERMAN

Page 2: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

Page Two Old Gold and Black

Rubenstein, Bernstein Rated High By Newton .

. ~ . . .

Greeks Hold Initiations; Plan _Week-End Pa.rties

.. MUSICAL

The Louisburg College Little Theater presented an original musical show,

By Dick Newton Jack Bracy, asked to comment Worst Foot BackwaT.d, in the XAPPA SIGMA j tion with the Mid-Winter Dances The concert weekend is over. on the two concerts, stated that Wake Forest High School Orientation week is over and~- · · Recently elected new mem-

Just about every Civic Music he enJ'oyed the Friday night af- auditorium Thursday night, congratulations are in orde for bers are Wake Gallant, Bill M h 3 Th 1 I: Simms Tom Roach P li B ticket that could be borrowed was fair more, although he felt no arc · e P ay sponsor- t nine new members. They are ' ' ~ - are-used, but there were still many pain at the Symphony. Ralph ed by the senior class of the Glen . Rowland, Bob Poole, Bob foot, Carroll Sh?emaker, Jae_k unfortunate people who failed to Herring, in co~menting on the high school was well at- Etith Wood Beasley Floyd ~~v_el~ce, and Lewis Barnes. Their find the little green-light card merits of the Pittsburgh Sym- tended. J Ho~es, Gerry CoatE,>;, Harry Imhat~on was_ held last Thurs-through the doors of Memorial phony said: "We bane nat gat ·~:::::~:::~~:::~:::~~:::~,..~· Wright T. P. Nelson and Walt day mght · · · The Brother~ood Auditorium. Both buses were 1 no moosic lak that in old eoun- Green. ' , ' ~ou:-~c~=~~f~~st ~~~k :S~Y h:~~ filled bot~ nights . with _:nusic- .

1

. try." Harold Hayes, ·asked for A (a pella (ho•lr The men have broken out with coming around. lovers busily repeatmg their mu- a comment, merely sighed. softball fever. They have started sical catech~sms (from the Tales Encores by the Symphony in- "spring practice" with high hopes SIGMA PHI EPSILON of Walt Fnedenberg.). eluded a set of familiar waltzes. T se s d of the championship for the fra-

The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality, both completely at the piano was "The Morning had his appendix removed and is

. . -;.. Friday, March 4, 1949

on\) stud~nt -ships released by the_ .. United Maritime Commission or the Dutch il}inistry of Shipping: .

Accommodations -wm be in, stu­dent dormitories, the homes of. students, or .in low priced hotels where necessary: meals will be served in the student cafeteria. Cost includes general . sb,ipp~ard fares, administration and orien­tation fees, transportation costs between countries visi,ted, as well · as room and board.

The National Student Associa­tion. committee on each campus is part of the student government or student council of that college. These pr9grams hav'e been ar­ranged, and will be administered and conducted, by the Interna­tional Commission of the NSA, in cooperation with similar National Unions of Students abroad.

enjoyable. And if anyone wants Dance of the Buffoon:" by Ravel. getting aong nicely ... A formal to know which was better (it's During the program a very The Wake Forest A · Capella banquet is to be held March 5th hard to say), just ask anyone ):loarse-voiced gentleman of Ral- Choir, accompanied by the quar- in the S&W Cafeteria at seven who- went. The Symphony was eigh who yelled his request for a tet, will sing in Memorial Audi- followed by a dance at nine p. m. excellent and thE!ir choice of a form of the "Funeral March." Mr. torium on Sunday afternoon, A big time is expected. program was exhilarating. Mr. Bernstein said he was sorry that March 6, from 2:30 until 3:30, Bernstein, the conductor, was they could not play that. Said he: in conjunction with choirs from

ALPHA SIGMA PHI

Congratulations to new initiates Jack Mueller, Bill ·Hendrix, Bill Moses, John ~elson, Bill McLain, and E. P. Ellis. Last week the chapter basketball team beat the Anyone wishiJ?g information on N. C. Gamma team at Chapel Hill all summer programs and appn-· 65 to 41. Bob Roberts, B. T. Hen- cation f<;'rms should wyifi to the derson, and Bo Davis were high International CommiSSlOn a:t scorers 'with 16 points apiece. USNSA, 18 Brattle Street, Cam-Brother Doyle· Bedsole has left; bridge 38, Mass. ·•

equally excellent and displayed "It's me - I'm uneducated." Shaw University, Meredith Col-I The fraternity is proud to ex-a distinctly individual method of For Left Hand lege, and Peace College. This • tend congratulations tO brothers conducting, with a slight motion of program will be for the benefit Jim Getzen and Mack Parrish on the body and several steps from Mr. Rubenstein played for en- of the Red Cross drive and wi_ll their acceptance by Phi Beta Kap­Martha Graham's modern dance. cores a Nocturne for the left be !Jroadcast b:V: the three radio pa .. Brothers Lin~say Getzen and

Poor Choice hand by Scriabin, and a short stations of Raleigh at the ·same . Mack Parrish were initiated into march by Prokovieff. He display- t• ' -

Many people felt that Mr. Ru- ed his usual magnificent touch Ime. 1 Gamma Sigma Epsilon, national benstein's program was disap- and beauty of interpretation. · The A Capella Choir present-! honorary chemic~l fraternity. pointing in its selections. On the ed a sacred program of music at Everyone is planning a big week-program he included three works A complete list of Mr. Ruben- the Tabernacle Baptist Church in end at Mid-Winters.

Wake Forest' to attend art school1

in Florida. The chapter paper Sig KEY IS SPEAKER Ep Review, is scheduled to come out on April 20th:

Foreign Study Made Available by N. S. A.

A summer program of the Wake Forest students are eligible for the ,

Dr. Carl R. Key, president o1 the North Carolina 1 Council Of Churches spoke to the ~~~ Ministerial Conference last Tues­day at 7:15 on "The Advantages of Councils."

b Ch .

1 . "th th ld stein's program in the order play-

1 Raleigh on Sunday evening, Feb. SIGMA CHI

y opm, c osmg w1 e o · traditional of Memorial Auditori- ed is as follows: "Sonata in F mi- 27- Dr. F. Orion Mixon, pastor

nor," by Beethoven; "Carnaval, i of the church, and also prest·- New furniture and drapes fi- United States National Student nally arrived in time for the Mid- .A-ssociation, it has been recently Winter festivities. A house-warm- announced. This associ~tion ·spon­ing was held Thursday afternoon sors the study, travel, and work for the faculty and students. Big -projects for the purpose of increas- · plans are being ·~ made for the ing individual friendships between weekend with a fraternity dinner students of this country and at Gresham's. Brother ·Grady abroad, and to contribute to a Friday is anxiously watching the fuller understanding between the

um, Opus 53. Two pieces by De- · · b

Opus 9 " by Schumann· "Prole dent of the North Carolina Bap-ussy, "The Waltz that is more ' ' ' do Bebe," by Heitor Villa-Lobos; 1 tist State Convention, extended

than slow," and "The Isle of joy" ll

"Ya Plus que Lente," ·by Debussy; the choir this invitation to make were rea Y added spice to the "L'isle joyeuse," by Debussy; a return engagement. The ,group program. '.Ilhe first two selec-ti f th

. "Ballade in A flat.'' by Chopin; sang at the church about th1"s same ons o e evemng were the "Ap­

passionata," by Ludwig von Bee- Waltz in C sharp minor," by Chop- time last year. in; and Polonaise in A flat," by thoven, and "Carnival," by T-he Wake Forest Quartet sang

Robert. Ch()pin. on Wednesday night, Feb. 16, for peoples of the world~ ·

$_MIT H SHOE SHOP

We Repttt'J' . While •

· You Walt

Call. For and Deliver Tel. 3756

Down By The Station l How Many Tears Must Fall

Tommy Dorsey

The program performed by the the annual Ladies' night of the Pittsburgh consisted of the "Si~th Kinston Rotary Club. The Quar­Symphony," by Tschaikowsky; tet, cbnsisting of Harold Creech, "An American in Paris," by baritone, Loren Key, bass, Gus Gershwin; and "Concerto in G Gross; second tenor, and Charlie major," by RaveL Green, first tenor, gave the en­

front lawn in case the grass comes up before spring. Our thanks to These study-tours will be con-Professor and Mrs. Qlds and to du.cted by the students of the Mrs. Beacham for making our countries to be visited. Transpor­drapes and helping ·us get our ~ation to EurqPe will be prov~ded

Located Opposite Bus StatUm

house in order. ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~i Victor 20-3317 ·····-------·----- 82c

• tire program for the evening. KAPPA ALPHA

Sunflower Once In Love With Amy

Frank SinatTa Columbia No. 38391 ........ 82c

Everywhere The Goof and I

Woody Herman

Columbia 38369 ---------------- 82c

Patronize OG&B advertisers.

:MEET ME AT

SHORTY'S FOR-

QIDCI{ SERVICE AND TASTY

FOOD

Ben's of Wake Forest Wins National Contest First prize of $100 was awarded

to Ben's of Wake Forest, local men's clothing firm, for the win­dow arrangement on display dur­ing the fall.

Congratulations - to Brothers Lamar Caudle, Herb Paschal, and Paul Griffin on their election to Phi Beta Kappa. We consider this quite an honor for our group . . . A big ping-pong tournament is in progress with many able contestants in the chapter. Big news is the installation of a new swimming pool on the third floor.

SIGMA PI

STEPHENSON'S MUSIC STORE

it's

Shorty's Jarman's Shoe Company: spon-

1 sored a national contest offer­ing prizes for the best window display advertising their products. Ben's winning entry showed a

;:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::;:;:;~;;:~~::::::~ football gridiron complete wJth, -c: players in the "T" formation. The

GRESHAM'S IS - .. -11Cr~ating Reasonable Prices

Good Food & Pleasant Atmosphere11

miniature stadium was arranged to give the qppearance of people in the stands displaying cards which spelled out: "Jarman's Got The T-We're T-uff."

At the end of the stadium was the score-board showing the Jar­man team ahead of the Brand X team by three points. The sign back at the bleachers depicted a place kick in action with the slogan: "Jarman never misses those Extra Points."

Sigma Pi is ready and waiting for the big weekend, and if a completely overhauled chapter house will help, then that is certainly to our -credit. Out sin­cere thanks to Brothers Pat Thompson and Bruce Milam for their untiring efforts in seeing the job through. They've really done a workmanlike job. New furni'­ture is now in the chapter room, which completes the redecoration. Many- thanks go to Brother Robert Helm for his time and advice on color selections.

LAMBDA CHI ALPHA ALL MEALS GREATLY REDUCED BUT

THE QUALITY REMAINS HIGH! Final plans have been complet­

ed for the banquet to be ·held at Teel's Supper Club tomorrow night, which comes in conjunc-Ben Aycock, owner of the

firm, has received many congrat­ulatory messages from numerous • other business firms in the nation who participated in the contest. very excited himself, Ben stated that he derives a great deal of pleasure in arranging his win­dows. But, he added that credit should be given Jimmy Anderson and Bill Shearon. He reported that without their work, the prize would not have been awarded to him. Shearon assisted in the car­pentry work, and Anderson help­ed· with the layout of the prize­winning display. Anderson's pho­tograph of the window was the one sent to the Jarman officials.

If you ar.e called by Telephone and know Our slogan, we gladly give you

Your choice of a $1.25 meal

At

GRESHAM'S Between Wake Forest and Raleigh

Phone 3-3727

~~<++ ++ ++ ++++++ ++ *' + +·1-+h.~+--H-+++++ ++++++ ++++ ++++ + +•!• + .

I - VISIT - I Seventeen Are Aided + :t + By Placement Bureau

I THIEM'S RECORD I h.~~.:J~u; •• ~=:~,~: + ~ .,:. s H 0 p + fice, has announced that of the •I- •!• seventeen graduating students in ~ + •:• + January of this year who applied ~ ;i: to his office for assistance in pro--t• + curing jobs, all seventeen receiv-ot• + ed work. Most of these students ! .. : 1st Store on Fayetteville Street · ::.t had more than one offer from

which to choose. ~ RALEIGH, N. C. - PHONE 7281 : The Placement Office has ef-:i: :i: fected a working arrangement

f For One of the Most Dt"versified ;t with the'North Carolina Employ-+ + ment Service, and this has help-~· Stocks of Records in the South + ed the office considerably in its ; :i: services. Eleven students of the + , + January class were placed in mis-:t Popular - Hot Jazz : cellaneous jobs and six were plac-+ + ed as teachers in various schools. t Folk - Symphony _ Opera t Twenty-five teachers were placed ; + m schools dur4'1g the summer of '*' •!< 19'48. + Also New Columbia t Professor Merriory states that + "• the Placement Office is se.nding i Micro-Groove Records ~ out questionnaires this week to + .~ the 375 candidates for gradutaion + R d• R c1 in Jufte, volunteering the services : a lOS - ecor Players . of the office in j_ob-getting.

f Shop here for Christma Giftss ,_ . + ++++«+++++++++++++~++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The friendly mer<;,_hants who ad­vertise in your student newspaper offer you most for your money.

-······ ..... ., The Newest Thing In

SLACKS "JAKS"

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Drop in and See Us at

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KEITH'S SUPER .MARKET All Aero-Wax Mission Catsu~

Can Milk Quart yan 14 oz: Bottle

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Page 3: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

I •

..

Bank . Will ! Move . To .. New Buil~ing

~

W F o· D TUUI FRIDAY 11:00

7 :00 Fulton Lewis• 7 :15 Thought for Today 7:25 So. Conf. 7 :30 So. Conf. 7 :45 So. Conf. 8 :oo So. Conf. 8:15 So. Cont. 8:30 So.· Conf.

Old Gold. and Black

PROGR·AM SCHEDULE SATURDAY SUNDAY llONDAY

Evelyn Wilson•• Dinner :Music So. conf. So. Cont. So. conf. So. Conf. So.·Conf. So. Conf.

Fulton Lewis• Thought for Today Dinner Music· Dinner 1\lusic Inside Sports•

OF MARCH TUESDAY WEDNESDAY

Page Three

4-10 THURSDAY

Fulton Lewis• Thought for Toda.y Interlude Weekly News Inside B,ports• Wima.ns Radio Journa.l Deacontown Var. Deacontown Var.

Within the next few weeks Wake Foresters will enjoy all the Conveniences of modern banking facilities. A new Georgian style 6Uil'ding reminiscent of the College architecture, will house the Dur­ham Bank 1 and Trust ·Co. after i6. years in its present lo'cation. T.he new building is located next to Edw'4'd's Pharmacy.

8 :45 So. Conf. ·So. Conf:

Church Serilcee Dinner Music Dinner Music Dinner Music Church Services Church Services Church Services Sunday Moods Smoke Rings• Smoke Rings• Proudly We Hall Smooth Listening Boston Blackie Boston Blackle Boston Blackle Easy Listening Easy Listening Sign Off

H.hythm and Rimance Deacontown Var. Deacontown Var. Campus Capers

Fulton Lewis• Thought for Today Dinner Music Dinner Music Inside Sports• lilcldie Duchin Show Deacontown Var. Deacontown Var. Campus Capers Music for Dancing 580 Club

Fulton Lewis• Thought for Today Dinner Music Dinner Music Inside Sports• Rhythym and Romance Deacontown Var. Deacontown Var. Here's To' Vets Music for Dancing Teel's Show

1.'lps and Tunes

Consisting of four times the space of the old building, the !lew one has two floors plus a serviceable basement. On . the main floor are four ~eller's cages, a fire proof vault, the safety de­P<>si£ boxes and the night deposi­tory, CompletelY modern in every

· detail, the' main room boasts flourescent lights, air-condition­ing, and steam heat. In the iob­by and the 'office are leather

. chairs and couches for the com­fort of customers.

9:00 · So. Conf. 9 :30 So. Conf. 9:45 So, Conf. 9 :55 So. Cont.

10 :00 So. Conf. 1Q.:l5 So. Conf. 10':30 Deconllte Ser. 11 :00 Deaconllte Ser. 12 :00 Sign Off

B. S. U. ·--Notes By Alice Puryear

The basement contains a second fire-proof vault 'and storage space. The directors' room,· and a large ' atorage room OJ;) the second floor complete the necessary facilities.

Dr. Edwin McNeill Poteat will address Delta Kappa Alpha, hon­orary ministerial fraternity, at an open meeting tonight at 7:15 in the Little Chapel. Dr. Poteat is a former dean of Colgate-Roches­ter Divinity School and is now serving as pastor of Pullen Me­morial Baptist Church, Raleigh.

The opening of the new building has ,been, delayed for several weeks due to. the inability ·to ob­tain materials needed for grill­work and swinging doors. · Upon receipt of these materials, the

- building will be speedily com­pleted, thereby providing the cit­izenry of Wake Forest with big­ger and better banking facilities.

• Forsythe ·Are To

County Grow

Boys Beards

* • * Cullom Training Union had a

party at the home of· Gerald Bridges last Thursday evenfug.

. According to one of the guests it was thoroughly delightful-they just aJ;e.

* * The program of the Christian

So. Conf. So. Conf. So. Cont. So. Conf. So. Conf. ·so. Conf. Deaconlite Ser. Deaconlile Ser. Sign Off

:\1 usie for Dancing Light .tor Living Light for Living Bill Henry• Concert Memoir Concert Memoir Deaconlite Ser. Deaconlite Ser. Si;:pi Ofi

Smooth Listening Bill Henry• lfusicaJ Ho!lda.y Musical Hollday Deaconllte Ser. Deaconllte Ser. Sign Off

. Smooth Listening Bill Henry• Concert Memoir Concert Memoir Deaconllte Ser. Deaconlite Ser. Sign Off

Music for Dancing OG and B Reviews Newa Smooth Listening Bill Henry• Musical Holiday Musical Holiday Deaconllte Ser. Deaconllte Ser. Sign Off

*Indioates Mutual Networl< ••Indicates Dixie FM Network

Phrs Vote ·Prodor

D• j feated. Therefore the honor sys-OWD j tern· will remain in force.

At the regular meeting next

S t I Monday night, the society will ys em hold try-outs for the extempore

I. contest to determine who will "Compete in the Founders' Day con-

"Senator" Dave Clark, of Wake test to be held later in the semes­Forest, introduced a bill to the I ter between the Phi and Euzelian Philomathesian Literary Society ' Societies. last Monday night 'to establish a --------proctor system at Wake Forest and to,abolish the honor system. The bill was debated by members of

INDIAN the society, who were acting as· (Continued from Page 1)

the body of Congress. I taking practical training in Hart-When the bill had been debat- ford, Connecticut.

ed, 'Moderator Pete Caudle call- Mrs: Kukde comes to students' ed for a vote and th~ biJ.! was de-l groups as a traveling secretary of

++•14++4-+++++++++++++++++++++++++tat£-++++++r~t+++++++++ * . . . +

l Beddingfield Funeral Home J + . . + ~ TWENTY-FOUR HOUR AMBULANCE ! :t ,·· SERVICE J

the national Student Voluntee~ I of religious and political matters Movement for Chrisita'n Missions, I there, and also a fellow-student a native of India, with ki10wledge from an American campus.

Make Eating a Pleasure Eat At ·our

CAFETER-IA ·Excellent Food Moderate Priee

Forsythe County boys at- Wake S.erv.ice Group meeting last Thurs­Forest are being urged to grow day evening in the Little Chapel beards by · the Winston-Salem involved four talks on the great Chamber of Commerce. Christian 'leaders St. Augustine, St.

This year the county is cele- ·Francis of Assisi, Martin LutJ::ler, brating the one hundred anniver- and John Wesley.

THE CAFETERIA f Corner; South Main .and Elm St. f I + (• t: Dial 246-6 Wake Forest :

.Gary of its founding, and a Bush- · * * * ,gro.vers League has been organ­ized to encourage all male citi­zens to wear beards in honor of their forefathers who founded the county:·

'Forsythe County boys at Duke, Carolina, State, and Davidson al­ready have a few weeks' start on local beard-growers.

Any student who is interested in joining the League may obtain a membership certificate from Dean Bryan. There are no requirements other than loyalty to th(;l. cause. There will ·be no · penalty for .~;Crawniness or sparse growth.

AIJ.y student wlio wants to go without shaving for a few days can go' right ahead and do so with obtaining a certificate from the Dean.

INTRAMURALS The intramural basketball

tournament in all divisions will begin March 9 and last through the .16th. The champions of each division will be seeded in the second round. ·

Mrs. Chandler Named Dames Club President

Mrs. Ted Chandler was elected president of the Dames Club for the spring semester at its '.regular meeting last month. Other of­ficers chosen were: Bruce Gaines, secretary; Mrs. Frank Mc­Gougan, treasurer; Mrs. Tom Bell, Program chairman; Mrs. John Morrison and Mrs. Bill Bai­ley. Mrs. Bruce McDonald and Mrs. Robert McNeill were appoint­ed to assist Mrs. Bell in planning the programs.

Dr. Oren H. Baker, dean of he Colgate-Rochester Divinity Schciol, will be available for conferences with ·ministerial students next Tuesday.

Hguse for Sale House· in Youngsville. 3

rooms and screened porch. Outside white, inside sheet rock and wallpaper, finish­ed floors, picture windows,

l wired electric stove, cabinet Sil).k. ,

J. E. Hart Youngsville

+++++++++++~++++++++++++ + I ~. + ~-+ + + + + Compliments of ~

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All wives of students are cor­dially invited to participate in the activi.ties of the Dames Club. The Dames Club meets on the first L ENGINES and third Tuesday nights of each 1! :ts~g",gE~s POa AMERICAN TnAsCO,lTD. month. IIWSlRArro aooxm ro n WOSI 42ad Shel. Now Yarll 11

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Page 4: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

Page Four Old Gold and Black

OLD GOLD AND BLACK· Founded .Tanuarv 15, 1916, as the official student

newspaper of Wake Forest College. Published weekly during the school year except during examination periods and holidays as directed by the Wake Forest Publications Board.

Since the end of the war there has been I 1ir-----------------...,.---------· I .,_.,... ...... _........,,_ ____ _. ..... _ .. a steadily increasing competition · for high · !s· N 1 D. E grades. A favorite assertion of old-timers is

1 •

that work which would have gained an 'A' be- W' I P E fore the war hardly rates a 'B' under presnt i By BILL BETHUNB

Bob Grogan • • . • • • • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . • • Editor standards. Tnis. may or may not be true but I students and faculty alike will agree that com-

1. -~_......,. ________ .,:..;

Herb Paschal, Allee Puryear, Walt Friedenberg ..•.•••... Assistant Editors Editorial Staff: Alex Biggs, Bill Bethune, Ed

FriHlcniJerg, Neal Gabbert, Elizabeth Gertner, Dob Ho\\"rcn. Clat·encc L.'lne, Erma La Nler, .Tewell l.ivingston, Dan Lovelace, Dick Newton, Carol Oldlmm. Vivian Snuggs, H.. T. \Vcatherman, C. B. ·wmtnms, Leigh Williams. Ray \Yyche.

petition is keener and more rugged. Spring at Wake Forest; aa wen Thio; rather startling state of affairs has 1 as elsewhere, is ·always a barbing-

been attributed to the return of veterans to the I er of better thingstto come In a sense it seems to offer a w~ld of

Staff Photographers •.• Alex Kiser, .Tim Turner Starr Artist ............... Joseph W. Brubalter Bill Hensley • • .. . . .. . . . . . .. .. . .. Sports Editor

Sports Staff: Dave Clark, Bob Holt, Jack Glenn, Johnny Dillon, Bill Norris, John Gibson. 'Vlley Wat·ren.

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

Statt: Johnny Cameron, Leo Derrick, Robert Walker, Jack Bullard, Byron Russell, Jack Glenn, Mary Lib Westbrook, Edward Best.

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

, campus, who wishing to ·make up for last time, hilVe cast aside the traditional attitude of Joe College and have settled down to make an earnest attempt at getting the greatest pos­sible return from their years at college. How­ever, the veteran element is becoming sma"iler with each passing semester and there has yet been no slacking off in the type of work which the student body has been doing.

new promise, not only to thoae who would like to junk a one lung oil heater, but to miybody

I &.nd everybody that has been but­ti~g heads wi~h hard times all . wmte~ :::nd would like to get away from It. al.i. It'll this sense· Of free­dom that m<s kes spring the pop.­ular season of t"le year that it is. The weather is nice. and, you're a chemistry major. the "open door to Jreedom is swingjng wide. It sounds good, but there's 3ust ·one

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

Entered as second class matter January 22. 1916, and re-entered .April 5, 1943, at the :post otnce at Wake Forest, Nort!l Carolina. under the act of March 3, 1879.

Member A. C. P. and N. C. C. P. Represented for national advertLslng by National

Advertising Services, Inc., College Publlst.ers Rep­resentatives, 420 1\ladison Ave., New York. N. Y.; Chicago. Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco.

The old days of cramming the night before an exam, igncring studies for the first three and one-half months of a semester, and set­tling for a gentleman's 'C' are not completely gone but they have been relegated to a much more minor role. · This is as it should be. Wake

.. , :little catch· to it' all. I Some centurie~s oack, before 1 Ulysses tore the boys away from ! Helen and they all took that slow ·boat from Troy, the gale at home ; were getting a Irttle tired of" the t glory that was Greece. They would

Printed by Theo. Davis Sons. Zebulon, N. C.

BACK TO MUD? Back in the days before the advent of War

and Coeds, agitation among Wake Forest stu­dents led to an "Out-of-the-Mud" campaign to remedy the walkway situation existing at the time. It seems that all the walks on the campus were simple dirt paths. Under the National Youth Administration, Wake Forest men took it upon themselves to lay a network of brick walkways on the campus, under the direction of Mr. Holliday, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. Those studen~s solved their problems and probably thought that they had made a lasting contribution to the beauty of

the campus. Of late. however, in a quite unfathoma­

ble turn of events attributable, it seems, to nothing but the pure old "orneriness" of human nature, a "Back-to-Mud" movement has stead­ily gained momentum. It is just as if Wake For­est students (and faculty) had felt an urge from out the dim and distant past and have returned to the mud whence emerged our ances­tors billions of years ago. As a result of this movement, the campus has become criss-cross­ed with an intricate system of dirt paths, and the use of brick walks has degenerated to a means of torture (so we are told) for girls dressed up in their high heels, and are walk­ed upon only when they thappen to lead con­venientlv in the way in which the student wishes

to go. Thus the "Back-to-Mud" movement has

created quite a problem as far as concerns the beautification of. the campus; it is a problem offering no immediate solution. As Mr. Holli­day pointed out in an interview by the writer, nothing can be done about replanting, etc., until the weather permits. The damage done to the campus has gone to sufficient length to re­quire a great deal of work for correcting the situation. That problem of correction will of course be in the hands of the Department of Buildings anc!. Grounds. However, by the time that work is done we should have conquered our "Back-to-Mud" instincts, so as to keep the same thing from happening again.

Of course, there are a number of ways in which the problem of truant pathways might be solved - some practical, some not so prac­tical. The possibility offers itself of paving the entire campus with brick. Upon closer ex­amination, however, we relegate that possi­bility to the category of, "not so practical." Twenty:-five acres, four bricks to a square foot .. ~ you figure it.

Another alternative was suggested by Mr. Holliday: "Load a gun with peas and fat meat, and shoot the people who take short cuts." That offers good possibilities, but after all, students have to sit down in class, everi though professors don't.

It looks, then, as if we must conclude that the only solution is to mend our ways and return to the straight and brick-paced path. Rose gardens and fertilizer under the trees will do little good if the natural beauty of the cam­pus is to be hampered by a lack of grass this spring.

A'S FOR ALL

The announcement this week that thirty students have been elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa is important news. What is still more important news however is the high scholastic requirements which these students had to meet to be eligible for membership. The fact that juniors and transfers were required to makf! at least a 2. and seniors a 2.5 quality point ratio is proof of the high caliber of work which is being done at Wake Forest.

have hocked the Parthenon and I half of Athens for a better crop. '----------------,-------------........11 of eligible bacHelors. In short the situation was desperate. The ·~in-

~OW IOKE.EP FROM GRI\DUA T lNG

-----------------------·---------

T • 0 H T · s • k ter had been none too kind;- and

Ips n Ow 0 t'c as s;Jring arrived upon the scene · , the;v realized the ne~d for drastic

Forester realize that to be successful in this 1

highly -competitive and complex world individ­uals must be equipped with the best possible training. They do not intend to waste. four vital and formative years in which the knowl­edge and experience necessary to help make their life a fruitful one is offered. Around for Awhilelaci~~- ['a's hit on a slogan that

This apparent resolution on the part of present students at Wake Forest has been re­flected in the scholastic record ·which they have made. There is no reason that this record can not be kept and improved upon and from all present' indications it probably shall.

STRINGENT CAMPUSOLOGY

. has packed a terrific wallop ever 1 since. Th·ey made it kno·wn that

By Irma LaNier · they shouldn't . be in some pool ! !?- t·~" s:?ri"?g a young man's fancy - room racking balls instead of up j should lightly turn to thought!!

Some folks will tell you that here deceiving folks and robbing of l~we, etc. The power of rug­there are lots more ways how the state of so much educational gest!on · worked · wonders; and not to graduate than ~here are ! funds. Also tell 'em you've been whereas the Hellenic draft dod­how tdo graduate t~ · evthl~enbce1.efall told by every prof you've ever gers couldd ~aki-:e · had. a wonderful aroun us suppor mg IS e I : had that you're a student of the su_m:ner rm n~ fermented goat a few members left of the ?ecade- first water-or make it even m1!J... out of their helmet liners, for:-a-Deg~ee gang, captamed by stronger if you like _ and tell t~e boys from Syracuse to Sparta

1 Ph1l Harns, the Candor boy who's 'em 'f th d n't think , t wound up on the wa«on The C 1 h

· f h · th 1 d , I ey o youre pre- "' . ampuso ogy, or t e sctence o avmg a e on y stu ent around who can ty hot on the texts they're strict- women who worked fast even had good time while on a college campus, has for remember when D_r. r:ear~on was ly from hunger. ' a h~band to take them to the

b th b• f h h a young man pourtmg m his then- (5) If that d 't d ·t you Fcu"th of July celebration.

years een e su Ject o muc researc on new now-discarded Buick oesn o I • • the part of students at Wake Forest. However, A' few of the ways how. not to can always try alka-seltzer. I Ba k Dtub~~ cparm limitations have been. so stringent at Wake For- cabplturbe_afdegr_ee in the unreason- Vis-a-Vis yearsc la~ the speell ~~:tsp~ .. ~f~ts

a y ne period of 4 years-and - (6) Tak th 'ttl b ' ' · ....., est that the full and normal development of even maybe not in a lifetime of e e 11 e oy down somewhat_ dub10u~ chaz:m. Except this science has been thwarted. academic head-cracking: for a facts-of-life- conversation for throwmg a shield and spear to

(1) B t and give it to ·him but straight. the ground ·and having the girl

With the approach of Mid-Winters we are ecome 00 attached to the Then explain in your. best conde- put a .; · th · · · . . • . . ' feminine populace of Raleigh. di 1-ng 1n. e1r nose, whiCh was re~mnded once aga111 that dancmg IS not per- (If you're a male) and spend all seen ng manner the mysteries of the custom m those days, the lo-mttted at Wake Forest. This would be but a your'·waking hours over there, ex- Forest Heights. After a· round or cals_ succumb ·to the . spell ot.

. . . . cept fo h t f . b k t so of the old brew, the Innocent spnng, and some pretity SIIiart nunor pomt though If more and adequate rec- r a s 9r sa ari ac o should be ready for a more-uh-ad- ,. o''and - h the · . . . . Wake on the first of the month to . ··.-" a, In muc same r~at10nal facthbes were provtded by the College pick up the token of appreciation vanceci explanation; New Dorn. _:ashiOn.. Today they resist the f · d (7) Just don'-t study anyhow. temptatwn a 1 or 1ts stu ents. that the government drops you I mean, without having to worry d h . s ong as possible,

At present the recreation room of the· Mu- every 30 days for your part in the . . an • avmg no spear and shield, recent, great struggle.. about a good :r:eason. No, I thmk t~ey go spear some gal with a frat sic-Religion Building offers as a contribution · the best way 1s to s~dy veddy, pm. As for the ring in their nose, to Wake Forest recreational facilities two. de- Run a Few! veddy hard, make Phi Beta and well, you can't really see that

. have a nervous berakdown. Then, eitlier, but it's still a part -of the crepit pmg-pong tables and a piano which may (2) Get that old bridge, black you won't make the Commence- act. be enjoyed by the 1800 students. That is, if jack, red dog; seven card stud ment exercises; consequently, Chances are that Joey took Bi­they .can find a time when a meeting is not be- or what have you bug in your you don't graduate. Really now. ology I with the kid and now ing held in the room. systehin: and spend every night Just wh:ere is the problem of n~t he's in Biology II. Bee~ looking at

watc ng a fortune of quality graduatmg? I know. Get a pos1- her all winter with 110 more con-Those students who desire to engage in a points ride on· the flip of every tio_n on one of the publications~ cern tha.n a hound dog watching

more strenuous form of recreation may take card. pncesh st~drt aWth$t5~0-thand tthat st' a. mowi~g machine, and then one th

1 t th h (3) Get that 1-gotta-see-Gra- noug ~a1 . a Is ere o no mce sprmg day she turns to him

1emse v,es o e gym w ere they will find the ble-in-her-latest in your blood and graduatmg? flashing a smile that ·came out of floor occupied by the varsity cagers or a phy- start travelling to far off film The Book Store -0- the straight, moth balls, and says that it would sical education class. Foiled at this they may houses in towns like Durham, narrow,_ and crowded wa_Y not ,to be a nice day to go down to the

Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Char- graduation Of course If o 1 k now move on to the tennis courts and watch the 1 tt d · · ' Y u re a e and look for mud puppies o e an Dead Hav,.rg, just to· ~enous a?out an here, w?hy co!"Ile At first .Joey thinks if he can get tennis team work out. There is left to the stu- catch the newest films. ~n ,the firs~ place, keed. Which the gal in the water after a sala-dcnt the choice of bumming to Raleigh,· go:- (4) _Jump right off on the l_eft Isn t the pomt. mander maybe she'll cat"b tw

- foot With your profs - te!lm~ Wayne-15-year-to-go Masseys Then she could b ~ o. ing to the local cinema, or hitting t~e sack. As them you knew guys in the pool: says there's absoMtely nothing, give him one and t~ generous and a consequence of this condition the movies are roon: bark home w~o knew more: nothing to it at all. Glenn Black- get a ten .hundred~ would b~th always f 11 th b · .

1 phys1cs than they d<d. Maybe tell: and Yellow says follow his ex- added to th . B' 10f a pomt

u ' e ummmg corner IS a ways. 'em you don't even know but what. ample. Example that is. That' h t h. etihr. kio ogy grade. full, and the sacks are always fulL ' s w a e m s at first but

Some professors have been heard to remark .. ~~ . time for the bell he's dead' cer-

r tain that he's been overlooking a

on the fa<it that so many students leave the A . I Don't Know j good thin~ and this little lady campus on weekends. The reason for this can W' • 0 should be h1s partner, for life. b f d · h ' 11 The little lady, pretty certain

e oun m· t e poor facilities the college has ' .• by this time that she is in the provided for recreation. Th , - t h ld th d , 1 d ..,o-ame with a pat hand, rounds up ey re g01ng o o e ances 1 ous o ges, "Fellas, how many

The College and the Student Council work- this wee~end all rigr:t, but there's 1 notes do you want for a penny? a dozen or more salamanders, t.wo ing t9gether should plan and put into execu- been a shght change m the assess-J I know the right figures. You bull frogs and a sand shark down · ment. The assessment was set for I know the right figures but still a~ the pond that afternoon, and to

t10n an .adequate recreational program. The ten skins a thro~, but that, like the

1

some of the boys weren't convinc- cmch the case; fall down in ahout college _plans a large and satisfactory Student March. checks, IS passe. ed. They called another meeting. two feet of water and gets very Center at Winston-Salem but it must not forget Tonight at about ten-thirty, So Jay said, "Figure each num- wet. Joey has to lend assistance. · · don't be surprised if Elliot Law-J ber runs about five minutes long. Takes off his coat, puts it around

renee comes off the band:.stand, . ou re paY!ng - you re al- .,. n Its obhgations to the present students who have I OK? y , · , her, and consoles her all .. ,_e "'ay a right to expect them fulfilled.

1

down onto the dance floor, and. read-y getting; a number for a back to the dorm. · -starts passing a little tin cup 1

1 nick_le. OK? All right, so you're Delicate Sniffle LETTER TO THE ED/TOR around. gettmg, for a penny, one minute By that night she has a very S • • Look. There's going to be three of music, or approximately 3,288 delicate, and very feminine, sniff]~

ometlmes I get earned away by my own dances. Four hours tonight two notes for a penny. Or one minute in her little ole cute nose. Not cuteness. Sometimes I get so· wrapped up in hours tomorrow afternoon,' and for a penny. A~l right." Jay told too loud, mind you, just right .. Tu<:t being clever and snide that 1 f g t h I' four hours tomorrow night. the r_epresenta~lves to ask tpe Kleenex. and Joey is so concerned,

. , • or e w at m · . boys m the vanous lodges. "Fellas, d f 1 domg. That s the way it was with the story t Alhl togethefr dther: WillAbte abboutt hav.• ~any "!linutes do you want an ee s so ashamed of him<:elf

b B'll G . en ours o ancmg. a ou f ?" for lettin.e: her wade around in that a out 1 regus m The Student. What was five minutes per number, that or a p·~nny. nasty pond, that he tens all. Wh~n supposed to be a humorous sketch of Bill turn- makes twenty numbers an hour, ,~ut st~ll s~meT~ the boys w~e- she makes mention of going to ed into a mean, smart-alec, insulting, un- band for tehn hoursthatttwenakty nutwm- ~ee~~~:_mc;h-ey wC::t~ast:n~o~ the infirmary for a sulfa pill and

h . . ers an our, a m es o . a dose of salts, he breaks down. sympat et1c, clever piece, totally disrespect- hundred numbers for the week- h:ow tnany pe~mes they were g:t- He doesn't waste any time mak-ful of Bill's dignity as an i d' "d 1 Wh t end. tmg for a m~kle. So Jay said, intt it plain that he just couldn't . n lVI ua · a "It's easy. F1gure each penny-was Intended to be funny turned out to be cruel. Now then. You can figure for figure each dance costs 3,288 notes stand it if anythine: happened to It was not written maliciously. But l't was about 657, 782 and a one-six- for a band. Counting wear and that little ole l!al. Bless her little teenths t f tvc; h d d ole heart. A B in Biolo!!Y isn't written stupidly • noes or 'O un re tear on the instruments. Figure worth her comin,. down WI'th

. , , numbers for about 3, 288 notes -well huw many steps do you "' Btll sa funny guy. He s a great ball play- per number. The only way _the take in an average dance? Fig- Pneumonia. Mavbe if he got anA it H d • I F c ld t lk th b t would be worth it, but not a B.

er. e oesn t claim to be a great (1) thinker . . .. cou a e oys m o ure you take three hundred steps He's in love with her, that!: what (2} scholar I made him look lik . 1 acceptmg ~ $10 a head assessment during a five minute dance." he is, and from here on out the

· e a c own. was to pomt out, (and these are (Some boys asked at this point The real clown is me. all I. F. C. :figures) was that at about whatever happened to the storv runs pretty much the same.

Bill isn't mad about the article. He didn't ten ~hucks a man for ten hours of ten hour dance he was just talk- The boys see less and less of come look' f

1 h d h . music would be a dollar an hour. ing about Jay pretended he didn't him. He ~roes to the ba.llet when

mg or me. ear t at he felt he Now then. At twenty numbers hear.) "Figure you take three hun- the team is plaving State College was sold down the river. And I'm writing this an hour for ten hours that would dred steps during a five minute in basketball. Plavs bridge when because he wes. make a nickle a number. 'At a dance. That's a cent a second, the rest of the gane: is OTer at

.• . • nickle for approximately 3,288 or one step per 3, 288 notes. Now the Kitty 'R'awk, and so on and I ap_ologJze to you, Btll, for the msult and notes per number, that would be Y?U figure on five hundred :trater- so pn.

1 apologtze to all of you for my lack of feeling. about 657 notes for a penny and mty members, at a step per man, The nin Plake~ +ho tran<;fP.~" with

W It F . d b a.s Jay Carter told the representa- each of whom has paid ... "' little or no tr-ouble. ~nd Snrfng,

a ne en erg tives to ask the boys in the vari- -See WALT, Pag' e 5- . whirh l'hnuln hp TPP'Idnc- ....,.;t,l-t :'Ill I -See BILI.., Page ~

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Page 5: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

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. Old .Gold ~.nd_B_l..:..~.:...ek ______________________ P_a-=g=-e_Fi_._ve

Bensl~y Thinks Be's Funny Too By Bill He1J:Sley Murray Greason, Peahead, Dr .. , It? All you have to do to get

At ane time or another, near- Pearson, Dr. Bradbury, Professor Hayes, Friedenberg and the rest ly everyone that writeS for the Old Shirley, Dr. Cocke and I are about of them is to tell the editor how .Gold and Black has tried to write the funniest men that ever hit this funny ram. something humorous for the paper. campus. The only ~ouble is we I guess by next week there will

. Most of the articles have . been haven't hit it hard enough. be all sorts of fan clubs started about as funny as a broken back, One way that I differ from other 5o · the. ·other day I deciaed it so-called writers on tbis campus called, "The Funny Followers of

. was atiout time I.gave,.the readers is the fact that I'm original. Any- That Funny Man Himself- Bill a break and wrote sometbing on thing you hear me say is just as Hensley." Thanks folks', I deserve

· the wittY (yes, witty) side. I'm original as it can be. ·When I'm not all the praise and recognition I ,perfectly capable of doing this be- being funny .I join heads with Bill can get. Just remember that ynnuf ca_use I'm really funny. If you Underwood.and we think up orig- spelled backwards is "funny," and don't .believe I'm funny just ask inal proverbs, sayings, etc. Here when you hear the word funny iny roommate, .Tack. Glenn-he'll is 'a list of some of our origmal think; of me. Keep 'em laughing, give yoo an unbiased opinion. doings: ."Do Unto Others As You that's my .motto, and what a won-

Before any of you wise guys. Would Have Them Do Unto You," that read my sports column say "A Bird In the Hand Is Worth Two derful job I'm doing. My jokes go that "Dealing With The Deacs" is In a Bqi;h," "A Rolling. Stan~ over like a lf!ad ballon. .

. 'the funniest thing you've ever Gathers No Moss,'' etc. If ~ou read, Jet me tell you something. guys would listen to some of our

. ~at is,n't supposed to funny so sayings and jive by the hidden ' please confine your laughter, and moral in them you would be a lot you .will laugh, to· this masterpiece better off. of journalistic talent. · After all, - I Write Songs · I may not be Hugh Fullerton, buf I try, Grantland Rice can't live I've done a lot of song writing

·forever, and believe me when I too. Here is part of a cute one I get hot on a sports story he bet- just finished. (sing to the tune of 'ter watch out. Over at Chapel "It's Magic") "You smile, your Hill they probably wish that Rice teeth drop out, your liar looks hadn't lived as long as he has. just like sourkraut, it's tragic. Don't you people think it was just Your legs are so divine, they must awful that he left poor little Choo be made of knotty pine; it's tragic." Choo o!f of his All America team? That's just a sample of my ori~-. inality. Another good song IS,

Here We ~o. . !'You Always Hurt The Oqe You

WALT (Continued .from Page 4)

That's the way it went right up until this morning. They tried to explain it to Elliot Lawrence. He said, "Well, we figure,our band plays enough notes for 3,288 steps · during a five minute dance . . ."

Naturally there was a little dis­agreement, and it all wound up by Lawrence saying he'd take what­ever he could get, but that it might mean ..cutting down . on the total number of notes for the · ten hours bf music, or maybe say 3,-021 notes by number.

So that's why there's going to be a little tin cup passed around the auditorium tonight during in­termission.

Please give generously, ladles and gentleman. After all, you're getting 3,288 "

Well, enough of :h1s Idle chat- Love," or ·~The Next Time You ter, let's get on With the humor. Stay out Late I'll Hit You in The I know a lot of jokes but most Head ·With an Axe Instead of a of them couldn't be printed in any- Pool Cue." This is not to be con­thing short of "Memoirs of Paris," fused with "The Shades of Night so just hold your s~des while you Were Falling Fast, But I Got a read the rest of this feature, and Good Look .A:ny-Way." I'll sav;e I'll slip in a few funny savings the rest of iny funny songs for that can be printed. stag parties, Student Council

Unlik:e my fellow colleagues meetings, and faculty get-together. THE. YOUNG LADIES pictured above will sponsor the Inte:r-Fraternity Council's Mid-Winter Dances : B I LL to be held tonight and tomorrow in Raleigh Memorial Auditorium. They are:

I First row, left to right, Miss Betty Jo Pittman, w:th' George Tunstall, TC; Miss Ellen Cooper, with (Continued fr p 4 ) Robert Mauney, TC; Mrs John C. Daniel, Jr., with .John C. Daniel, Jr., ASP; Miss Lee Medlin, with John

om. age Dillon, ASP; Mr&. Dave Stewart, with Dave Stewart, PAD.

Walt Friedenberg, Bill Bethune, I write funny commercials, too. Harold Hayes, Erma LaNier, and Listen to this one. "Ladies· and the ·likes, I'm funny. . I don't go gentlemen, have you tried any of in for all that corn that they tum Dr. Hensley's famous 'Rootin, out. For example, if anyone were Tootin Eight Ball Solution?' It's

. to ask me what movie I h~~ seen good for colds, molds, sore toes, recently I would reply, Oh, I pimples on the face, fits, St. Vitus saw a good one ye~terday. It was dance and convulsions. It's guar­

. Humphrey Bogus In 'Cashablank- ' . ttl t b t ·cheek.',· (did you get it? Bogus. anteed not t~ rip, ra e, rus , us ,

sorts of freedom, JUst becomes Second row, Miss Katherine Dehler, with Jac~ Canady, PAD; Miss Jane Paton, with .Tohn C. Pate, one long succession of waiting, KS; Miss Vi Barringer, with William Walten, KS, lVLss Colleen Brown, with Jay Carter, PKA; Miss worrying and wrestling ... with Marlyn Sherford, with Ryan Shelton, PKA. his conscience. He winds up the Thi~d ro~, Miss Bett!e Ha~l •. with Brownie Wal!ace, DSP;.Miss Ma~ Queen, with L. P. M-;gginson, circuit by getting his pin back SPE; ~1ss Ir1s ~Walk~r •. With :William Early, SPE;· Miss Jane Dickerson with Gene Wade, SC; Miss Betty

Cash · _ a _ blank -. check. Funny, walk, talk, crack, break, ~

and · ·Lou Bnsson, with William Fzsher, SC. · . an Eon BIOlogy_ Next fall he I Fourth row, Miss Joanne Matthews, with W. F. Mcilwain, Jr., DSP; Miss Shirley Parker, with Mark

Wil~ have a chance to tn: both Reece, KA; Miss Violet Pugh, with Beverley Barg~, LCA; M~ss Emily Kimrey, with Elbert O'connell, agam. The women, and Biology. SP; Miss Orene Holleman, with Robert Howell, SP. ·

huh?). down at the heels o!. smell bad, m Those other devils have to say hot weather." Terrific,· huh? I ve

things like this. Take Bill Me- got millions of 'em: This commer­Dwain for exa~ple, (although I cial can also be sung to the tune don't Jmow who would have him). of "They Call Me a Gravel Truck McDwa1n uses such funny things ·c~use I've Got My Rocks." Ah as, ' Glenn Reinhardt can run me it's great to be funny. about as fast ~s it would t~e a Naturally this is just a small one armed blind man to dig a t b t e tunnel under the Hudson · river sample of my talen s, u spac ·with a dish pan." Now I ask you, doesn't permit ;ne to ~0 ·on. I is that humor? Friedenberg is could go on all mght but It would even worse. Get this, "The band just cause you to roll in the isles went out on the field with the and go into hysterics, so I'll end seat of their pants shining- in the this funny article an.d give give sun like their instruments." It's you another small sample later. nothing short of torture to have Now I guess you see what I mean to read stuff m;e that. And B~- when I say that I'm really funny. thune, man, he s hopeless. He s Aren't you glad you read this col- -about as humorous as Shorty Joy- ? It a real treat wasn't ner would be after someone had u_mn __ · __ w_as ________ _ just walked out without paying for a steak sandwich (with lettuce and tomato), a · ·hot dog (all the way), and. a pint of milk (plain, I can't stand chocolate). His lat­

Forest Theatre Wake Forest, N. C.

est attempt at humor (?) may be -------------­found in this sentence. "Appalach­ian College. the place where' Kay- Week of Mat·eh 5 lor played one year of basketball SATURDAY-Double Feature in two weeks."

More Examples I could give you more examples

such as Hayes ar:td his song titles,

Shows Continuous 1 to 11 Johnny Mack Brown in

Crossed Trails "Gretchen,. Gretchen, Please Stop Robert Livingston in Heachin,'' and LaNier's, "I heard Daredevils of the Clouds 'Fore' while I was on the golf course the other day, and there -------------­were four couples here and four SUNDAY-couples over there." Intelligent Shows 2:00 & 3:4& 9:00 people such as you (if you read James Cagney-William Bendix this feature> do not laugh at stuff Time of your Life like that.

Now take nie. It's a shame .I don't live in the days of the other great humorists. Emerson, Milton, Shelley, Abe Lincoln, Karl Marx, and I would have been great if we had all been fUnny during the same time. Now that they're gone it"s up to meto carry on. I get laughs wherever I go. Why people can just look at me and laugh. But that's the price I have to pay for being so funny.

Just llster:i to some of the funny names I've hung on different courses on this campus. Necko­nomics 31, Mathematical Prepara­tion for Inorganic Religion, Hier­oglyphics 33, Physical Aantomy By the Braille System, and What Every Girl Should Know Before She Dates .Tim Cook, etc. I could go, on like this for hours. I guess

PATRONIZE

Old Gold ADVERTISERS

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Return of October

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George Brent-Vera Ralst!>n

_..Angel on the Amazon_ · Short & Serial

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

_Dennis Morgan--Janis Paige

One Sunday Afternoon

Collegiate Theatre SATURDAY-

Shows 7:15 & 9:00 I •

Tyrone Power-Gene _Tierney

That Wonderful Urge

MONDAY, TUESDAY & WED.-Shows3:15 7:15 & 9:00

Humphrey Bogart-Edw Robinson

Key Largo

THURSDAY­Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00 George Brent-Vera Ralston

Angel on the Amazon

JOHN~ . '

HELPS VE.IUIA VAULT TO SAitTOitiAL IMPECCASILITV

IF THESE CUJMSY BELDAMES J.;OP";~~­CAN'T FIT ME ANY BETTER, I WON'T TAKE PART IN THE SCHOOL. FASHION-SHOW

MY DE:AR, YOU'LL BE A PAPHfAN · SENSAiiON I

Behind out playful plot, our intentions are serious: we want you lo discover for yourself the welcome DIPPERENCB in cigarettes that PHILIP MORRIS can bring you. Established PROOF of that difference is too extensive to be detailed here-but pre-medical and chemistry students, who will be especially interested can get it in published form FREE, by writing 0ur Research Dept., Philip Morris Co., 119 Fifth Ave., N. Y •.

PH ILl

Treat-Ponderous Polysyllables Politel~ (i.e., Handle with care!)

BELDAME ("'11-clum)-Ugly elderly female. CIGAREnE HANGOVER - (Don't articulate It -

eliminate it.) That stale smoked-out taste; that tight dry feeling in your throat due to smoking.

CREME DE LA CREME (kre'mm de Ia bemm)­The cherry on the CharloHe Russe.

DIATRIBE (dywh-tribe)-A verbal blast. HAUTE COUTURE (oat-kaa•to'or) - "higla

fashion" to you. HOYDENISH !h&y-den-ish)-Like a tom-boy, o

tom-girl. IMPECCABIUTY (im-p~k-ah-bil-it-ee) - El ..

gance abovJ censure. PAPHIAN (pay-fee-an)-Papho• ble was Venn•

birthplace. SARTORIAL (sar.to're•ee-ai)-Pertaining to the

raiment. XENOPHOBIC (zee-no-f.;_blk)-ln fear of being

choked.

! I

...!

Page 6: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

l : ' .!~ ,, g I

:Page Six Old Gold and Black Friday, March 4,1949 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~~ .~--·

Deac (agers Make Tourney; Baseball J eani Faces Rough Card

Dealing with the Deacs Deacons Opposed Top- Seeded. NCS

-Top.· College, Pro-. ' ~ .

Clubs Scheduled By BILL HENSLEY

In Opening Round ·For 23 Contests Sports editir's notes This is the first in a series of articles on the

History of Athletics at .Wake Forest College (1888-'1949) by. Tom Bost, Jr., Director of the News Bu.reau. and Athletic Publicity at Wake Forest. ·

Put in Bracket with State, North Carolina, and

Maryland

Open Season Here· March 28 with Randolph•

Macon. ·, By Tom Bost, Jr. ; policy among Eastern institutions, Wake Forest College participat- \it was decided to play games in

ed in its first intercollegiate ath-[ the spring as well as in the fall. North· Carolina Stare's Wolfpack, Four contests each with North letic contest exactly four months The championship series got un- again the top-seeded fa-vorite to Carolina, Duke, and N. c. State and eight days before the Durham der way on March 1, 1889, with cap the Southern Conference's an- are the top attractions again. in a Sun put out its first paper. 'Wake Wake Forest playing Carolina, nual basketball tournament crown, rugged 23-game baseball schedule Forest met the University of North the University winning 33 to 0. face Wake Forest's Deacons in the for Wake Forest this spring. The---Carolina in the State's first foot- On March 8 the University and opening round headliner Thurs- I schedule was released early this ~ball game on October 18, 1888 Trinity met and Trinhy emerged at the State Fair Grounds in Ral- the victor, 25 to 17. Then on day night at '7: 30 p.m. week by Lee Gooch, newly ap-

. The Deacons, only team having pointed coach. -eigh. ~d·Iarch d29 '-':'a.kte F35orest met atnhd beaten the Wolfpack cagers in In addition to me~ting their Bfg

One or the most unusual ac- e.feate Tr1m y to 0 so e .. t•t· Four r 1·vals, the Deacons wi"ll also reE:ular loop compe 1 1on, finished counts of a football game appear- championship ended in a three- -ed in the November issue of The II way tie. Even then football was the campaign in eighth place with play Cornell, Washington and Lee,

a record of seven wins and seven and Randolph Macon in other col-Wake Forest Studcmt of that year. 1 almost as unpredictable as it is 1 ·legiate tests and will also oppo"se It was written about that first I now. On the basis of comparative osses. crame and present

7day readers of I scores Trinity was 41 points bet- George Washington's Colonials several leading professional and

.o · and the South Carolina Gamecocks independent teams in this State. the sports pages would probably ter than Wake Forest JUdging Roanoke_ Rapids and Greenville be interested in the story so we from the results with Carolina and opened the tournament at 2: 15 of the Coastal Plain professional are printing it in full. yet Wake Forest beat Trinity by Thursday afternoon. The Colonials , league will be met as will Lum-

"The event of the session, so 35 points. already tabbed as a sure bet to Stan "Sut" Najeway·, hustling Wake Fore~t· forward, and berton· of the Tobacco State far was the game of football be- In the fall of 1889 Wake Forest face State in the finals, wound up James "Buck" Geary, deadly set-shot guard, were named to the League. A contest has also been tw~en Chapel Hill and Wake For- played four games. The Baptists in fifth place in the loop standing All-Southf'rn basketball squad by the Southern Conference Sports tentatively sCheduled with Smith­est, Thursday of Fair Week, at beat Carolina 18 to 8 and Rich- but were seeded fourth by the Writers Association last week. Najeway won a well-earned place field•Seln;ta, another Tobacco State the Raleigh Fair Grounds. Our mond College 32 to 14 but lost to conference committee. on the second team and Geary grabbed off third team honors. Naje- club. Burlington of the Carolina team had had their bali only Trinity 8 to 4 and to -the Univer- Seventh place Maryland plays way was among the scoring leaders in the conference with · 161 League is booked for an engage­three days and were sadly out of sity of Virginia 32 to 4· The third seeded North Carolina at points for 14 loop games. Geary~s set-shots and ·defensive ability led' ment as is the McCrary Mills an practice. Nevertheless, when they games with Virginia· and Rich- the Deacons to many victories, notably the upset triumph over N. outstanding independent nin~ in appeared on the grounds in their mond were played on successive C. State. Coy'Carson, North Carolina, Chester Giermak, William and North Carolina. neat new uniforms, they created days, December 9 and 10 and N. C. State's cagers defeat-a most favorable impression and there was an admission of only ed Wake Forest last ni~ht, Mary, Bucldy Cheek, Davidson, and Sam Ranzino and Dick Dickey, Vir~ Team loud and continued cheering rent 25 cents, a far cry from today's 64-42, in the first round of N. C. State, won first team positions. The season will get under way the air. The first game (quarter) prices· to athletic contests. Southern Conference tourna- here on Monday, March 28, with· resulted in favor of the Chapel Game Abolished ment play. 1 Sl (i d D II Randolph-Macon providing the Hill team, owing to the fact that n)•ur•tes ow ,.. ,.. s opposition. our boys played under two new In spite of the fact intet·est in ; The annual Easter Monday game rules and had the disadvantage in football continued to flourish 4:00 p.m. The last game of the between Wake Forest and N. c. position of their goal. The next among the students at Wake For- opening round which places Dav- Squad Shows "lmpro.vement State will be played on April 18 game our boys went at it with a est, the trustees voted that the idson's Wildcats against William although it does not figure in the vim, caught on to their oppo- sport be abolished in June, 1890, and· Mary, will get underway at Big Four standings. nents· dodges and won the game and there were no games played 9:00 Thursday night. Cornell of the Eastern Intercol-(quarter) in short time. The third during that year. However, the In the semifinals, the winner be- legiate League will be met twice. game (quarter) was simply a rep- students continued to play match tween Maryland and North Caro- By John Gibson I jured knee and Bill Tennant with The complete schedule follows: etition of the second. Our boys games. On December 5, 1890, the lina will play the State-Wake Football practice this spring a shoulder separation may not en- March 28-Randolph. Macon at were favorably impressed with the faculty voted not to allow the stu- Forest winner at 7:30 p.m. Friday. continues to be highlighted with gage in any more heavy work this Wake Forest. gentlemanly conduct of their op- dents to pla_y these match games. The George Washington and South intra-squad scrimmages. Last Sat- spring. "Auggie" Caravello, "Nub" March 29-Washingtoft and Lee at ponents and expressed their com- A week later the students petition- Carolina winner faces the winner· urday's practice was no exception. Smith, Bill George and .J,ohn Gib- ·wake Forest. plete satisfaction with the deci- ed the faculty to be allowed to of the William and Mary-David- The first "team scored almost at son have been forced out of March 30-Cornell at Southern sions of i.\Ir. William Wynne, of plow the football field but the son contest at 9:00. p.m. will against the second team, twice scrimmage for the past week with. Pines. Raleigh, who kindly umpired the :Jetition was not granted. How- The finals are scheduled for via the "air lanes" and four times minor injuries, and Tom Palmer 1l March 31-Cornell at Lqurinb~rg.' game.". (Note: the writer never

1 ever, on _January 16, 1890, the fac- 8:00p.m. Saturday night and many over land. Spearheading the drives re-injured the ankle that has oeen 1 Apr.il 6-Burlington at Burlington

did tell the final score of the 1 ulty dec1ded_ to suspend the foot- of the early guessers were picking I for the first team were Jones, bothering him all spring. (night game) game but Wake Forest won 6 to ball regulations and .allo~ the State and George washington to! King, and Belisis with Backerby Coach Walker has been adding April 8 - Smithfield-Selma at 4). team to play the Un.1.vers1ty of oppose each other for the loop handling the chores under the plays and the-passing attack is at- Smithfield (tentative).

Tar Heels Met North Carolina on February 14, crown. 1 center. The pass attack for the tack is coming along better but, April 9-Duke at Durham. but the game was never played. I Loop coaches named State's first team looked better than it the ball-handlers n·eed some more Carolina Game

That athletic contest between . Only one game was played dur- Wolfpack to win over the Deacons has anytime this spring. work for perfection in timing. The . . Wake Forest and Carolina started mg the 1891 season and that was by at least twenty points. Coach The third team showed up well ball carriers are becoming more I April 1~-North Caro1ma at Chap-teams in thi~ s~ate off to_ a glori- never completed. On October 30 Tom Scott of Carolina commented against the red-shirted fourth acquainted with their assign- el. Hlll. . f~~ hlst~·yd m I~~erc~ll~giat~t ath; of. t~at year the faculty gave per- that he would like to be in Everett team, but when pitted 'against the· ments, but still more polish is Aprll l4-R~.anoke. Rapids at Ro-; ~~~ C o :Y ~ k n~e~sl Y "to I I?tSsion for t~e team to meet Caro- Case's shoes. "He has no worries second team they showed up eve;n needed. A az:oke ~Ids (mght game). N °\h C a~ol"na, St ~ ~ 1~Iversi ~ lm~ at Raleigh on_ November 10. at all," said Scott. better. They managed to keep the The team as a whole should be pril 15-:- umberton at Lumber-

or ar 0 ma a e 0 ege, an Th1s developed into a hotly con- ball away from the second team faster than the 1948 squad, which 1 A to~ (mght g~e) • . Wake Forest, all located within tested game but when the sec- and scored on a long march from ciuld be beneficial in this day of pr~ 16-Greenville at Greenv~lle. a radius of ~5 miles are competi~g ond half was only a few minutes r-- j' their own thirty yard line, match- the "T" formation. Apr:l 18-N. C. State. at Raleigh. on a par ~vlth the best teams ~n old, the University refused to take W R A ing this counter shortly after by Coach McAfee's adcUtion to the April 20-North Carolina at Wake other sectwns of the country m a penalty and forfeited the game • • • recovering a second-team fumble prove the difference in the of- A Foilrest virtually every sport. When any to Wake Forest, although Caro- , and then a short drive. over-worked coaching staff should pr. 23-Duke at Wake Forest. of these teams meet one another lina was leading 6-4 at the time The squad seems to be plagued fensive attack for the coming fall. Apnl 27-:-N. C. State at Wake in any of the leading sports (foot- the penalty was imposed. The Physical Education Depart- 'by more injuries this spring than All in all the team is getting A F~lre2st. ball, basketball, baseball, track, In the fall of 1892 Wake For- ment disclised Tuesday that Bess at any time for the past three better as the season advances and Apr: 8-Duke at D~ham. etc.)' they almost always play be- est played a schedule of only four Abo~ila, a junior from Chadbourn, years. Many of the injuries are barring further injuries the grid- ~~ilJ~-North Caro}ina at Chap-fore capacity crowds. games, all of which were played has been elected secretary of the for a day or so but others may d~rs should be able to porform M A

1· But we are getting ahead of out of the state. With only 13 North Carolina Athletic Federa- keep some of the· boys out most w1th some degree of polish in the ay .,.-N. C. State at Wake For:-

our story now, so w~'ll go back men, Wake Forest attempted tion of College Women for the of the remainder of the. spring annual Gold and BBlack game at ·Maest. 7 M . to those early years ln sports at somethin" that would be unheard coming year. She serves as vice- drills. Mike Sprock with an. in- the end of spring practice. by - cCrary Mills at Ashe-Wake Forest. Enthusiasm for of today"'_ played four games oro. president of the Woman's Athletic M football grew by leaps and bounds in as many days. On October association here. I ay 11-Duke at Wake Forest. on the Wake _Forest campus f'?l- 21 Wake Forest and v. M. I. play- Four Coed tournaments are now a·.ll W81ggs Places 'Sun' Publ.lshes May 14-N; c. State at Raleigh. nwmg that f1rst game, despite ed a 12-12 tie at Lexington. On in progress, Edith Rawls, WRA May 18-North Carolina at Wake

the fa~t that . the fac':lty had a the following day the Bap'tists prexy, announced Tuesday. D h Forest. regula~lOn agam:t pla;rm~ ball _of met Washington and Lee with The bowling tourney, which be- In ~ 60-Yard .as , Baseball p.·cture May 21-N. c. State at Raleigh. any kmd here In this httle v1l- Richmond College and won 22 to gan Monday under the supervis- ---------!age. Students were regularly re- o. Then .came the University of ion of Anne Reams, is being held Play Day Scheduled ported for "playing ball on the Tennessee on October 24 and the campus." often many of them, North Carolinians won 10_6. That in Raleigh at the Man-Mur Bowl- W. J. "Billy" Wiggs, the little A picture of~one. of the great-

d . f' t d ing Center. Thirty-three girls speedster from Fayetteville, fin- est baseball teams ever to rep- For a.·g Fo M. 12 an we:e given . lVe, er:, an I season of 1892 is the only unde- have entered the event. The con- ished third in the 60-yard dash at resent Wake Forest was printed ur ay . ~~~:t~ri~~~ ~~~~~tsit~a~~tif f;~= i~~;~dait~~:!~ %~~= ~vo::s~~e hi~~ test is a "ladder tourney," allow-- Chapel Hill last Saturday in the in the Tuesday edition of the ally the faculty gave up their

1

with V. M. I. ing each person to challenge the annual Southern Conference In- Durham Sun. The squad was the On May 12 at Chapel Hill will fierce determination to have their two persons directly above him in door Games, and thus won the powerful 1913 team whi'ch won ?e hel~ Big Four Intramural Day rule Obeved. Beat Tennessee tournament standing. At the end only two points that Wake Forest m wh1ch intramural teams from • 21 games, lost three and tied two.

In November, 1222, ·wake For- Three games 1were played in bowlers will have a. final match scored against some of the south's . each of the Big Four schools will b hr k t b . k · f" t After winning the State title, the t

est played a second contest _ an 1893 and the most amazing thing of a out t ee wee s, he five top est trac and 1eld s ars. mee for a day of games in vari-abbreviated one quarter affair about that season was an almost to determine the champion. Par- Wake's track coach Phil Utley Deacons beat Clemson and Georgia ous intramural sports. A winner with A.&M. College (N. c. State) unbelievable 64 to o victory over ticipants must arrange their own entered thirteen men in the games, Tech to claim South Atlantic hon- will be decided on the basis of and was defeated. Then on Sat- the University of Tennessee, one transportation to and from Ral- and although Wiggs was the only ors. points much in the way that a urday, November 24, the A. & M. of the top teams in the nation eigh. However, several cars will Ol!)e to score, was well pleased One of the leading members of track meet winner is decided: team came to Wake Forest and during the past decade. In other go daily, and entrants are urged with his boy's performances, con- the team was Lee Gooch, hard- Coach Utley expressed a desire rour games (quarters) were play- games that year Wake Forest to watch the gym bulletin boards sidering the fact that they had had hitting outfielder, who was recent- to see all teams and individuals ed, all or whirh Wake Forest won, ··as beaten by Trinity College 12 for a transportation list. no indoor track on which to prac- ly named head coach of baseball I interested .in participating in such making four points. to 6 and by carolina 40 to 0. ·t The badminton tourney will be- tice, or even an outdoor one for at Wake Forest. 1 a program working out with that

These three games, rather than gin Monday, Pat Smith, manager, that matter. Other members of the 1913 in mind. Though the standout in-More Interest any action of the Trustees, prov- has said. Entry blanks will remain It was a very fine meet, accord- champions were: Gudger· Ed- dividuals on each intramural team

During this same fall there was ed fatal to football at Wake For- posted until Sunday. The badmin- ing to Coach Utley, with several wards, Henry Faucette, Larry will probably be picked to go on d growing interest in the sport on est. There were no games in ton contest is to be a "pyramid records falling, two to Carolina's Woodall, Millard Parker, B. S. May 12, it is possible, Coach Utley the University of North Carolina 1894 and in 1895 only one, a game tournament,". which permits any ,Bill Albabns. alone, who captured Hensley, Phil Utley, J. R. Lowe, said, that entire intramural teams and Trinity College campuses. I with State College, played on the player to · challenge any other firsts in three other events. I Paul Carter, Hugh Cuthrel, L. will go a a unit. Delegates from the three institu- Fair Grounds October 19 and end- player in his horizontal row, and Here is a list of the. boys who W. Smith, George Moore, G. M. Here is a list of the different tions decided to organize and on· ing in a 4-4 tie. On October 18, if he wins, he may challenge the entered the glimes and their Billings, and coach Frank Thomp- e-vents: softball, handball, singles November 29th at the Yarborough the day before the game, the row above him. The person who is events; A. B. Gwynn, W. G. Hen-1 son. and doubles, volleyball table ten­House in Raleigh they met and facvlty voted that no further on top at the end of the tourney ,drix, E. Watkins, an dJ .R. May- Utley is still with the Deacons nis, s[ngles and doubes, badminton formed an Intercollegiate Football match games of football would be will be declared winner. Games nard in the freshman mile relay; as )'lead track, coach and coach of·l singes and doubles, horseshoes Association, with a constitution allowed on the grounds of Wake may be played any afternoor;t in A. ~· _Todd in the 60-yard ~ash; physi~al education. _Billings, who I singles and doubles, and archery like that of the American Inter- Forest. This action really abol- the gym and from 6_ to 7 at. mght. ~- B1llmgs, w~o reached rthe fmals ~<l:ptau;ed the team. 1s niw a phys-~ (two men). collegiate Association and with its ished football for it was not un- The tournament w1ll end m two m the broad JUmp, Ray Jones, low IClan m Morganton and is the ---------rules for football. Davidson had til 1908, 13 years later, that this weeks, after which badminton

1

hurles; Lewis Pate, 440-yard run; I father of Jim Billings, who is a · INTRAMURALS been invited but sent no repre- sport was again an authorized part doubles will begin. B. Pirce, 440-yard run; Audoulph student at Wake Forest, and Gil-sentative. Officers chosen were of the college's athletic program. Peggy Jo ViTeeks, table tennis Pruitt, two mile run; S.C. Murrell, bert Jr., who was graduated last Monday, March 7: Theta Chi vs . .Jones of Trinity, president; W. C. The principal reason for the dis- manager, stated that doubles in 2 mile run and L. J. Gregory, 60- year. Sigma Pi; Bullets ~s. Phi Delta Dowd of Wake Forest, vice-presi- continuance or football at Wake that tournament series 'began yard dash. Thompson was killed in the first Phi; Filthy Five vs. ·chapel Base-dent; and Steve Bragaw of the, Forest and at some other colleges Thursday and will continue for World War. He was a great all- J;nent. University, treasurer. The dele-l':bovt this time was that this sport two.weeks. In the last twenty years South- round atlete at N.C. State before: Tuseday, March 8: Spoliers vs. gates decided to hold a series of had gotten a bad name and too Lib Hellen was appointed di- ern Methodist, whom Wake Forest coming to Wake Forest, and the Skata Fata Yanks; Miss Jo's Boys championship games with a pen- many people regarded it as being rector of the shuffleboard ·tourna- meets this fall, has won the South- present gymnasium at State hon- vs. Pink Terrors. nant to be given to the winning. extremely dangerous. Destruc- ment which will begin around western Conference. footba:U title ors his memory. All the members ---------team. Then they went back home l tive formations like the famous March 10, WRA officials announc- 4 times, taking the pennant in of the team are still living except: Patronize the merchants who to practice. In keeping with the i -see SPORT, Page 8- eo. 1932, 1936, 1947, and 1948. Thompson, Edwards, and Parker. I advertise in Old Gold.

Sl

To: Sigm most year' held fice nual Coac: erts, silon

Fe1 a war the l will the s1 a brc phy. the t aQd · after

Th Nick prodl winn was a war in 19

In cliina caree the I am on

·then centa of th meml Deae: the l 1947. ials 1 40 ya

Th~ respo Fores byBl to o seasol :lor tl: the s erage leadir Chari Deacc the B

Wh Pittsb griddc r--1 i j i

' f l I

I

[

Page 7: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

I '

.. ff,i.day, March 4,. l949 Old Gold and Black Page Seven

. are married. Seven of the new are. Dr. c. s. Black, president; I+-- "------·-·-·----· -·---·+•lo ~ members have attended schools Dr. Henry S. Stroupe, vice-pres- I I :other than :Wake Forest. · 'Mary ident; and Mr. Carlton P. West, j H 0 L M E 1 S I ! Broome, Charles Gantt, and Alice secretary and treasurer. j I

.1 Puryear are former students of -•.. --

1

Mars. Hill College.· P. A. Cline • I SADA AND. oLUNCH SHOP attended the University of San . i.

,Francisco in 1943. Elizabeth NOTICE! j uY.ou•ve Tr•"ed The Rest 1 'Gertner attended Stetson Univer- •1 sity, and Jose Penna did prepar- ·We are now open from • Now T·ry The Best! I

a tory work at Brownsvil_le Junior 8:00 a.m. _ 5:30 p.m. I J ;e~~~~etw~~~:r ~~~~n~a:t ~~ weekdays · • J (Hot Sandwiches of All Kinds)

University of North· carolina. • End-of_F_ac __ u_l_ty·A·v-e at.-C.it·y·-~im .. it_s _ Phi Beta Kappa, -founged in 8 = OOa.m. - 1:30 p.m. j .. 1776 'at William and Mary Col- Saturday .f.--.... a ___ _

lege, is the oldest Greek. letter -------~-------------society in America. In the course And Offer <I• I of +++++++++:.++++++++++++++•H>++++I<+•Z.+++++•:++++++++++ of time the honorary nature of its + l: membership came to be stressed Prompt, Efficient ! We have a complete line of the latest +I so that by the end of the first half + century of existence it became a Service ~ RECORDS, SHEET MUSIC ... _y schblarship honor society much as C b 1 . d ++ • AND BAND INSTRUMENTS + it is known today. From the very aus y s Lau, n ry • . + beginning Phi Beta Kappa has ~ D b d h · 1 k t d ts! + stressed F'raternity, Morality, and WakeA Forest, N. c. ~ rop y an . ave a 00 I s u en ~

Li~~;;~, 0' Delta Chapter. i E. R. Poole Music Co. i

~ 17 E. Mprtin St. - Raleigh, N. C. ~

. /

SPE's Award Tom .Fetzer Most-Valuable · Player ·Cup

. '

Tom Fetzer was awarded the ed the win. The lanky back threw Sigma Phi Epsilon trophy for the three. payoff pitches in the game most valuable player on last and intercepted another aerial that

, · set up the locals' last tally. •· years football team in ceremomes I th All St · · Ch h ld · th Athl t' D' t ' f n e ar gamE~ m ar-.e m e e Ic . ll'ec or s 0 - lotte, Tom was the main cog in

f1ce last Tuesd~y mght. The an- the College All Stars losing cause. nual P~esentahon was made by The Deacon representative got the Coach J~ Weaver a~d Gray ;aob- nod over Vic Turyn, of Maryland, e~ts, pres1ent. of the Stgma Pht Ep- for the starting role and. pitched silon fratermty. the College gridders right into the

. Fetzer was selected for the ball game after the pros had taken award by the football lettermen of an early lead .. Fetzer, who plays th_e Mono~a~ Club. The ~ophy as well on defense as offense, made Will .remain In .the po~esslOx;t of one of the game's most spectacular the school, but F~tze~ will be· given runs when he intercepted a Clip-· a bronze medal In Jieu. Of the tro- per pass and weaved his way down ' phy. The SPE fratermty «;iQnated to the .3 yard line before he was the trophy to the s~hool m ~946 stopped by anotl:).er SPE trophy I ai;J.d the gold cup Will be r:tl.I'e~ winner-Nick Ognovich. • I after 20 years. . · -

The Reidsville quarterback joins After gradu~t10n m June, Fet­Nick Sacrinty, another Reidsville zer may try his hand a~ the pro i product, and Nick Ognovich as end of the footba~ busmess. At : winners of the award. Sacrinty Wake Forest Tom Is a member of. was the recipient of the 1946 the Kappa Alpha Order and award, and Ognovich was honored Treasurer .of the Student Body. in 1947.

P. B.· K. In . winning the award Fetzer cliinaxed a brilfiant .. four year career with the Deacons. In 1947 (Continued from Page I) the Deacon field general finished

law." Mary .Broome plans work among the top twenty passers in .. . .. . . the nati ·- d hi 1 t' an religious educatlon. Fr1eden-· on, an s comp e ton per b G t d centage led the nation for most erg, er net, _an. Pen?a .look Of the Sea ,.. t .11 b , toward careers In Journalism and son., .ce zer WI e re- T Th th · t h membered as t'he h 1 d th wri mg._ e o ers as ye_ a~e

. . man_ w. 0 e e not deciCed upon a professiOn. Deaes m the1r surpnse upset of Of th tl · t t 1 t

Dick Frye's ~Restaurant Wake Forest's Finest

STEAKS-- CHOPS - SEA FOODS

Special Prices from ·5 p.m .. ·- 8 p.m. daily

All Student Waiters

of< 'I 'l•++•l•+++++++++fo++l<+<tofuf•++ofnfofo+tfufufoof +++++ Jo Jo J oJoofoofoo{o>f•++++

A NEW SUIT

SPRING For HOLIDAYS

Come in today and select .one of the many beautiful patterns on display. BEN will surely fit you an? have your suit back before you le~ve for

. the holidays!

. A Suit That Gives Pleasure Is Always Made To Measure

BEN'S OF WA.KE FOREST 11Ben Wants To See Yo4111

SMALL FRYE'S T BONE STEAK

DOZEN OYSTERS

DOZEN SHRIMP

GRILL the highly favored Tar Heels in e liT y, we ve ~are ve -

1947. Tom completed 12 of 16 air- e~r~a~n~s,~b~u~t~o~n~ly~th~r~e~e~o~f:_·~h~e~g~r~o~u::p~============.:.:.::.:::.:::.:.:.::......:_:.:.:.::::._..::_:.::::._.:::.:::::._ ____ ~=~==~====::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ ials that day and picked up over 40 yards rushing.

The past season Fetzer had the responsibility of making the Wake Forest T formation click. Assisted by Blackerby, Fetzer led the Deacs to one of their most successful seasons. Tom did "all the kicking tor the ·local gridders and finished the season with a neat 40.3 av­erage per kick and was one o:f the leading punters in the nation. Only Charlie Justice could better the Deacon quarterback's average in the Big Four.

When the Deacons traveled to Pittsburg to· meet the Duquesne gridders, it was Fetzer who spark-

r~n~;un;i~g. • "i J . The Appointment Of i f Jack f

J Bishop j Your Campus • Representative i f For

I Roscoe Griffin I Shoe Co. J Durham, N. -C.

I

l

I ·•

Flors,eim Roblee

and Portage

Shoes For Men

See

Ja.ck Bis"'op Simmons Dorm - K. A

Room 232

• • •

l

' l j f

.1

I

IM A CAMEL SMOKER

FROM WAY SACK, FRAN.

I~ HOW MILD

AND FULL- FlAVORED

CAMELS ARE!

. YOU KNOW, BOB,

THE 3o-DAY CAMEL TEST

I MADE PROVED TO ME

HOW REALLY MILO

CAMELS ARE!

- _;L,__,,,.,_fAack rti~ I Test Camel mildness for l'Our· ""'"'""''"""'3' · · • self in your own "T -Zone." T for caste, T for throat. If, at any time, you are not Convinced that Camels are the mildest cigarette you've ever smoked, return the package with the unused Camels and you will receive its full purchase price, plus postage. (Signed) R. ]. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Page 8: l '' .. ®lb ~nlb au~ 'ilark - Wake Forest University · The two concerts were- of the A solo encore by Mr. Bernstein 0 lng· un ay ternity ... Gene Funderburke has master quality,

Page Eight _. . . Old Gold and B~

Friday, March 4, 1149. .----·-· --------"""!" f!t!" ...... ____________ ~ I association or the student mana- I Duke four cons~utive years and edge ove~ N. C .. · State, and South I ger. When the athletic associa- broke even in four games with Clemson during the Walker re-La S hool HENSLEY tion did not make it up the stu- N. C. State. Carolina and an even split with

1 W C dent m'""'gor had to ==• . the It - not until 1937 whm gime. Duke b,. been tbe onl;y I MEN ond WOMEN. .., Memorandum responsibility of the loss and''pay Douglas Clyde (Peahead) Walk- Southern Conference team to beat· "Aloride" to stop underann 't ,.. If It · ot until the th t h t k Wake Forest with any degree· of Bill Hensley, junior, from 1 ~11mse . was n : er, e presen coac , oo over prespil-ation and odois~· :Full\.

UNDERARM DEODORANT··

By Ed Friedenberg Asheville, has been named to fall of 1921 that the faculty and the coaching reins that Wake For~ consistency and the Deacons beat strength~ effective, ·pleaHnt. the Durham Heral!f staff as Trustees assumed the financial est achieved fame from· a nation- the Blue Devils only 1~ season. its Wake Forest correspond- responsibility as well as full con- al standpoint. Perhaps the most to use. Convenient to get. A· 'ent. Hensley will report all trol of college atletics, in 'Yhich I important vict9ry from a nation- Large football scores of the 1948 large bottle (year's suppq)

Eleven students finished re- local and college news to the they were to have had full fihan- a1 angle was Wake Forest's stun- season include Wake Forest 41, delivered tO you $1 postpaid. quirements for graduation from Durham paper and asks that cia! responsibility of football ning 19..:5 upset victory in 1946 , Duquesne 15; Michigan 54, Indi- Send cas)l or check to AJ,;,;. the School of Law last semester any person ~ho wishes to for the past decade or more. In over the University of Tenne.ssee, ana 0; Oklahoma A. & M. 60, Kan- ORIDE Box 3035, ArlingtOn,

mencement exercises in May. • ed contct him at Box 426, or penses have grown tremendously at that time. Under Coach Walk- mgton State 48, Montana 0; Sou- ., and will receive diplomas at com- have any local news :r>ubish- recent years revenues and ex- the nation's fourth ranking team ~as 6; Cornell 47, NYU. 6; Wash-~ Virginia. ,

The students are: Allen W. Room 451 Hunter Dormitory. and are now a part of the regula: er's tutelage Wake Forest has de- thern Methodist 41, Texas ~ech 6; .. -Fatkin Rawls H. Frazier, Robert college budget. Many allllnlll feated such highly rated teams 'I,'exas Tech 46, Texas Mines 6;. -------'-------~ Brown' Warren L. Coble, Louis A. now are regular contributors to as Tennessee, North Carolina, Nevada 65,· Tulsa 14; and Wam-1 Patronize o· uradverti·se·· rs L. Gra;es, John A. James, Horace t\+e athletic program. 1 Duke, Georgia, Boston College, boogie 197, Sturgie Prep 3. R. Kornegay, Robert H. Lacey, .;ack from a sport that is manly Wake Forest has made rapid Georgetown, Maryland, Clemson, ;:;:;:;:~=:;::;::;:::::;:~:;:;:~:;:;:~;;:;~:;::~:;::~:=;:;:;:;;;::;:;;;:;:;:;;;;;~~=;:;::=~ W~ston 0. Reed, Fitzhugh ~· :Wal- and clean." strides in football since the res- South Carolina, at least once or lace, Jr., and Richard W. Wtlha'?s. In response to this demand the toration of football in 1908. The more. Against North Carolina, one

All members of the graduatmg Tn:sh'es at theu· meeting in M~y, 1923-27 era was one of the most of Wake Forest's foremost rivals, class plan to take the North Caro- l90, a~thorized restoration of successful periods in the institu- Walker's teams have almost brok-lina Bar Examination on March

1 . '" tion's history. During • those years en even, winning five and losing 15th' 16tll an•d 17th 1• 11 Raleigh. lntt:rcollegiate football at the col-

-. Wake Forest beat Carolina and !.six. Wake Forest also enjoys an Several are remaining on the lege. The students we1·e elated . __ campus to prepare for the exam. over this action and eagedy look-

Justice Erwin of the North Car-/ ed forward to the day when Wake " olina State Supreme Court will be 1 Forest would again compete fav­the speaker at the Wake Forest I orably with the leading teams in Bar Association banquet March I the South.

lOth. . i The 1908 team played five The banquet will be held at the I Club Bon Air in Raleigh at I games,. winning only one. The 7 o'clock. Tickets went on sale only VIctory was at the expense Wednesday. of Warrenton Prep School, 21-0.

Cum Laude requirements in the I Two defeats were administered by school of Law have changed, ac- N. C. State and one each by Car-1 cording to the latest law school! olina and Davidson. The first I bulletin. I football coach after restoration of

Law students will now be grad-~ the sport was A. P. Hall, Jr., of' uated cum laude if the~r cum 1~- Pennsylvania. tive weighted average lS 80 or lf I In those years the football team it is in the upper 10% of their class was supported mostly by the stu­and have an average of 80 or mo~e dents. Only a small portion of will be classified as Scholastic· the cost was paid by the athletic Honors graduates. association and the alumni. At

BULOVA, ELGIN, WALTHAM

WATCHES at

Bosse JeWelers

If

HAVE YOU TRIED

SHUFFLEBOARD .YET?··

You Hqven't, .You're Missing The Thrill. of. A Lile time

Get In On The F.,n Play This Fasc~nating ·Game

GRAB YOUR PARTNER and

HURRY ON DOWN to

r ,,..

The change does not effect the the end of each football season j 107 Fayetteville Street Scholastic Honors List which is there was always· a deficit which I made up of the top 10% of each was eith11e:r~m~a~d~e:_u~p~b~y~th~e~a~th~l~e:ti~· c:_:.~===========================~~~··~~~:::~:::::~:~~=:~::::··~=:~~~::::~:::::··:::::~~~::::~::::~:::::O::: c:lass each semester. · - _

Under the new rule there will be more Cum Laude graduates

Raleigh, N. C •. SHUFFLEBOAR-D -·C-ENTER ..... ....._ .. , ...

tlian previously. Wake Forest law students have

been invited to attend a speech by the President of the American Law Institute a't Duke March 4th.

The invitation is extended by the Duke Bar Association, sponsor of the event. A dance and informal party will follow the address.

The meeting will be held at 8: 00 p .. m. in room 108 of the Chemistry Building. Students without trans­portation should see Dagwood Kornegay.

SPORT (Continued from Page 1)

flying wedge, which sometimes re­sulted in permanent injury to the players, was another important factor in abolishing :football.

Atfer its abolishment, interest in football waned somewhat. and was slow to develop again. Even ten years later these were edi­torials mostly to the effect that the evils still outweighed the good and that it was still far too rough a sport for anyone.

However, despite the strong opposition to the sport, the re­institution of football at Wake Forest was inevitable as early as 1906. Probably the one thing that had more influence on the return of football than anything else was the growing interest in football in the high schools of the State. With increased attendance in high schools it became possi­ble for many of them to have football teams which were per­mitted to play match games with I .other high school teams. Some of these players developed into stars in high school and most of them began going either to Carolina or to State as football was permitted at neither Wake Forest nor Trin­ity. Some of these would nor­mally have gone to Wake Forest, but the college had to look on helplessly while one class of stu­dents, and that the best class phy­sically, was going to other insti-. tutions,

. Intramural Games However, in the fall of 1906 11.

students coming to Wake Forest. from the high schools where foot-1· ball was being played, began to . hold intramural games with teams i developed among themselves. The games drew many spectators and they cheered lustily for each team. The same thing was true but even more so in the fall of 1907. In a fall issue, the editor of the Student declared, "there was an abundance of football ma-~ terial at Wake Forest and that it was a shame that it could not be put into a college team."

In the spring of 1908 Herbert Peele, now editor of the Eliza­beth City Advance and then edi­tor of the Student,_ made a strong , appeal to the Trustees for the re-1 instatement of football in an edi- i tcrial. He· wrote: "\1lhy should 1

~Yake .Forest students be longer: the sissies among college men,

1 tied to the apron strings of a ' too fond Alma Mater and held

uEverybody likes Chesterfield because it's MILDER. It's M_! cig~rette."

/~LJ~ STARRING IN

"A LETTER TO THREE WIVES" A 20TH CENTURY-FOX PRODUCTION

The TOP MEN of AMERICA'S SPORTS smoke CHESTERFIELD BEN HOGAN says •• /'Mine's Chesterfield.

I took to them. right From the tee-off ... "

MAKE YOURS THE M·l LDE R CIGARETTE