~nlh nub 'isturk · the three-act play were ,assign ed to cree deane, sonny bur roughs, and...

6
:9 m td Lb st !d. in as 7. ft lll f- is I' ' •• 1 '' . , '•' ,: ,.•:' . ' . · ....... ·::' .. ''·· \- '\ ·., . ·: ''GHOSTS" CAST I ·; nub 'iSturk '' * Volu.me XXXIV.· N be 20 urn r. ; - . · Seven. Students· "la··:t_aw- ·:s:chool .·:·Receive :A,ards . . Ninet'een Men Make. Last · Scholastics Honor GRADUATES ' '' .A _li;;;t of· prospective cart- . didates for · degrees in May · will be posted on. the btille- tin -board iii .the Registrar's · Office. The list will contain . qnly the names of those stu ... ·dents are. uilhampered by any · conditions. Gonse-. . 't,he list _will not· be cqmplete or final. :::From time to time ·the list - will have .to be Wake Forest, N! C.;. Friday, February 25, 1949 Elliot lawrence:· .. Group. WiJl ·Play: For · Three Dances to Feature Big· Weekend. fol' . Frat Men· · Mr. Grady Patterson One of the prime -favorites of received awards for scholastic hi>n- eyery student -concerne' .. to th Seven Wake Forest law students . . \A e college set, Elliot Lawrence · qrs from the publishers of Ameri- exainine the list · carefully and his orchestra will be on hand can .as the and to report promptly any for th_ e Mid-'winter D.3nces to be· . of the ranking tud t · th discrepan_. cy_ fotind :there. s . en s m . e held March 4, 5 at Memorial Au- · School of Law were also .... ditorium in Raleigh. · affm, .. · ed· by· the ·Dean's office this week: Amer'ican Jurisp1-udence iS. a set . to be sponsored by the locai In- : · of ·books .. designed to be an en.:. N · / d. · M · · , ter-fraternity Council; will , cy(:J.opedia to ·cover 'all of the . ew . . .. ' en . age social affairs for the year. ; American law. i · . · · · . · · · · The biggest name on the The publishers award. each se- Du· ·on·'-· M'ond campuses, Elliot Lawrence has : mester .a separately bound volume ' ay ,appeared at over 100 colleges and ' from this · encyclopedia· dealing · universities since 'he started ·his 1 wi.th. a certain subject. tq. the·stu- , · .band. However,, this·-wm be his : dent· who miuie the highest grade PriZe 'Taking· Short· Story .first here; arid ·the ' · in the subject. · · :Will A · · • . · .presentation of this famous ·.band · · .Winners for the fall semester · · · pp_ear m ·will. do .n:iuch tq make the dances ; * * .• .. :.z- .. . .. MONDAY Telephone 4056 Roberts Chosen To Play Leading ·Role In 'Ghosts' Other Members of Cast Named for·'Ibsen Drama Tillie Roberts, a senior :from Asheville, will play the lead in "Ghosts," forthcoming dramat- ic production of the Little Theater. The major male role went to David Snipes, junior from Mor- The three other roles in the three-act play were ,assign- ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur- roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu- dents tried out for parts and dis- closed that the Little Theater was pleased with the enthusiasm shown · by the large number· who have signed up to work on the va- rious committees for "Ghosts." are: Justice, Jr., · Issue . · :a great success.·- . sonviUEi, . 1n evidence and ci:Vil · ' · . : Elliot Lawrence, perhaps. aptly Rehearsals to Be Daily procedur!:l; .Sam Behrends,_ Jr., Announcement was made this called ·''Keys," .is the youngest' i It was revealed that rehearsals Wilmington, in. debtor's estates; week:-' that th . F b . named maestro in the nation, hav- : will be held daily from 3: 30 until E Murray Tate· Hickory in sales· e e ruary ISSUe ing just turned· 23 on February [ 5:30 in the afternoon. Practices T. Dark, Siler' City, . of _The Student· will &n:ive at the 14th .. His compositions include , . will also begin each evening at negotiable instruments; Charles .Post. Office. Monday, Febx:_uary 28; Suite: For Animals and Falling i .... The leader of one of the most popular dance bands in the 7:30. In addition, plans are be- H. Taylor, Kinston, in personal Of interest this month to many .J?own the Stairs, which was itry, Elliot Lawrence, will bring his band to the Memorial Audi- ing made for several morning ses- . p,roperty; -and C .. 0. Whitley, Siler readers will be the prize-winning done, at the age of six. At the. jtorium, Raleigh, to play for the Inter-fraternity Council's Mid- sions. Williams stated that fre- City, in agenc;r; sh.ort stor;V: in a contest conducted age .nineteen he arranged Ru., [Winter dances next weekend. _quent rehearsals were imperative by the magazine for stl:J.dent writ.:. 11!4nian .Rhapsody for the Benney i _ ' since the cast has only ·three 'Top Ten Per Cent· · ers_. are an:imligi..: orchestra, and since! ·-;. weeks in which to prepare Ibsen's Robert. E. Lee ·listed the nary a Waite Forest time has done,. :•Ap Performers Fo' rty-Four End difficult drama. The small cast students whose weighted scholastic depression by_-Ralph Stowe and an .mg In the, modern classical line. ; makes it doubly hard on those stu- a.verages were in the top ten per !nfqrma,tive ·. article on Bowman The LaW_rt;!nce band was nomi- . ·y· . R I • h. .. . dents with roles. The director cent of their. 'class. for the fall se- Gray' Medic!al ' ' School . by . Walt nated :'Band of the. Year" by Look : ' 0 I Sit . a elg Course at W-a·ke says that the entire cast must mester. . . . Friedenberg. " Magazme, and clauned tpe honor i · .. · . . know every· line of the play by Leroy Robinson, a first year Assuming that an.veterans were ?f being the fusty:oung ban_d be;;, , next Wednesday. student from Candor, : had- the. .to ,pay: 'their meal checks.. at· the :mg __ so celebrated.. This came --as ' ·• The play concerns Oswald Al- highest average .. The third year': restaUrants in town· at the same ·the of many years ; .. Foresters who are mem- In January forty-four Wake ving, a promising young art stu- claSs had highest. average as' 'tiiPe; .. fabricated a ·humerous eco;, -muSical· .. begi.n.riiilg .. of ·the Raleigh Civic MuSic Forest students completed the re- dent who has returned from a group, _ . , . . , catastrophic ru:- a youth of .?r- '4s8.ociation will have the pleasure. quirements for degreeS according his studies in Paris to visit his Students on -the Scholastic Hon-. revolution.. whiah would occur as a _ganiZed 'The Band Busters, . · · ' ·. · . ·. •. . . . mother, who had sent him from ors -List are:· -. ··- · . ·. · · · , reJ?uit. -His: stOr7-is ·accompanied :were· featured. on the. Children's ·two which .to the _list released this week by her home in his early youth in or- . In the tmrd- class,: ThoinaS: .·s:· by- pictUres' sii'bwillg.the financiaL .. ,. ·. . . . · J?roud, Mt._ . · ·Registrar. der !hat he might. come under Johnson; .. Jefj;erson; .·· .C. .of 'locaL-cafe managers be- : Elliots band,- .. whose ages aver- perlpd of. f?ur days. ,_ The January _candiQ,ates Will re- the influence of h1s dissolute fath- .M-itse-,-: 'J' .. cBPloill?S, the grad- er. Now ·a widow, Mrs. Alving Winston-:-Salem; and ·James ; F:' . · . . · -Med S . . . _ ac _:Hunter: . . .tiie . to' ·be '>held-- ·May. .. ;:q.,E7r .. J:l7ck Justice Jr. Hendersonville. · c,:hool Story . two ex-marmes wlio have :re• of the .world·due ,29. · . she prepares to dedicate an or- In the year ,··Walt Friedenberg- who. has also ceived,_high acclaim from such ;fp. his, lovely interpretative qucili- _The following are candidates for phanage to the memory of her uel Behrends; Jr., Wilmingtgn;_ :written the c.' magazmes as Down. Beat and Met- ,t,ies, will be hea]"d in an eveni:hg the of Bachelor of Arts: husband. This ceremony is being C. 0. Whit:J,ey, Sil!'!r.eity; George:, thiS paSt month ronome . . These two stars have .of eoncert piano- music. It is not Willie A. Berry, Jr., Ann.Blanton, ma11a!!ed by Pastor Manders, an M. Womble, Raleigh;·. Marvin R;' to_ Winston-Salem.for- the,purpose- scored hits on many recordings irequent.,.that Raleigh and:vicin- Lawrence J. Bridgers, Iris Cau- ?ld friend of the family. Oswald Wooten, Clinton; .and. Nathan: o{ preSenting to pre-med students made by the Elliot Lawrence.band. :ity are pr_ivileged hear. so dis- dell, Mary Gilmer Cocke, Eliza- 1s attracted by Regina, Mrs.- Al- Cole, Jr., .Wilmington. _, and fl;iends a preview of the Three Dances a personage and so- ac- beth Foster, James H. Hart; Alan ":ing•s maid, · in iftrac-. In the first year class; Leroy academic· requirements,. atmos- 1 ,complishedl_a performer as Mr. Ru- B. Johnston, Ruby Orders Osborne, hon, Mrs. Alvmg sees re-en- Robinson, Candor;·- Garrett D. Bai- phere, and recreation they could ' :With such promising as 'benstein :in person :will ,remember and Lester Stewart. actment of a former relatiqnship ley, Burnsville; James A. Webster, expect at Bowman Gray. His ar.:. this, the Gre:Jts can assurc:d 1his .succe.ssful- in the B chel f S . between her husband and Regina:s Jr. -Leaksville; Charles ,H. Tay- ticle is accompanied by a picture- ,that the best m Ja:I:Z will :motion picture, .. Carnegie Hall." a ors 0 · Cienee · mother. Oswald's return home...-rs lor' ·Kinston; Jesse Brian story on the life of a first-year be rendered at· alL of the 1 Thousands have heard him onlJ Thirty-four students are candi- not a mere visit. He has learned Roclty Mount. · . student. the first· to be Friday ·through tl;le· medium of his re- dates for the degree of Bachelor from a doctor in Paris that he has Donald· S. Riley, Raleigh;; Eu- Associate Editor Bill Mcilwain semiformal, the second an 'markable recordings, so it ,is ·a of Science: James D. Alexander, inherited a disease from his fath- gene J. Moore, ·North . Wilkes'"' who has written the fourth. in mformal dance on Saturday ,af- 'privilege to be able to bear him M. Allen, Gaither M. er which is incurable and that boro· William B; Jr;; series of Wake Forest legends 'this ternoon, and the third, a formal :a' personal appearance. Beam, Ernest W. Boyette, Jr., De- one day soon will make him a High Point; Robert F. ·Floyd, month contributes a story affair the weekend Sat- .. On co!p.ing Monday_ eyen- mar H. Boyles, John V. Burgess, invalid from Fairmont; and Rqbert M. Bryant, a former The Student editor who urday mght. mg_ the P1ttsburgh Symphony Or- Carlos T. Cooper, Jr., Roy Cul- softenmg of the bram. He comes Winston-Salem. roused the ire of citizens of the . L.awrence's organization, con- chestra ·wm make ·its appearance ler; John C. Daniel, Jr., William home to await the inevitable, Hurricane. In that story he re- sisting of_l9 men, ranks high in ·at Memorial-Auditorium under the H. Ennis, Cletus T. Funderburk, which is hastened the burning of Practice · Debates Held ports _the legendary facts the list of in. the band direction_ of· Bernstein, Andrew W. Goodwin, Ellis Dey the orphanage erected to his tath- ing t:ilat editor's mistake and ·how and 1t will mdeed-an Condu.ctor, With plano concerto. Harrell, Ola V. Harrell. er's memory. · With Six Duke Teams he barely escaped a lynching as the occasion when he. s1ts down be- As thiS paper went to press, no William D. Joyce, · Robert J. C result of it. In addition to the ·fore the and leads his fel- copy of the program had been Leatherwood, William ·w. Minton, ast Experienced legend and'.his other monthly fea- in music voted lead- made available. Richard A. Mitchell, Harry- B. Mor- Tillie Roberts, who plays Mrs. ture,- "Letters to the Editor," Me- mg colleges and all Doors for both concerts will ris, Jr., Jackson K. Outlaw, James Alving, has had a great deal of Six teams from Duke debated Ilwain is also the author of "The over the country: one that will not open at 7:00p.m. and the concerts R. Quisenberry, Richard W. Saw- experience in Little Theater work. an equal number· of "Wake: Forest Fray before tlie Frolic," a dramat- be forgotten soon by the themselves . will- begin promptly yer, Jr., Forrest G. Shearin, Jr., Her major work here has been teams here Wednesday afternoon ic'·presentation of the 'conflict be- Deacs. at 8:00. William M._Sherrill, Merle Silver, that of co-director of "The Male in the literary society -halls. and 'tWeen- the rich and poor factions _ .E?-win W. Stephens, James Gray Animal" last summer. She had in various classrooms on the cam-_ of the Inter-Fraternity Council. Bus.·ness A-b:ove:- Dead 'Strupe, Ralph E. Tate, Oscar B. one of the major roles in "H. M .. pus. The debates were all' non:. Newest contributor to the maga- . . Tate, Jr., Roscoe H. Turlington, S. Pinafore" last year. decision contests, _. · zine, Bill Bethune, is the au- Carolyn Twiggs, John S. Vetter, David Snipes, a transfer from The debates with the University thor. of "Food for Thought," a _ I•VI•fy BelOW-_ Constance Weeks, and George E. Gardner-Webb, is cast in the role of Georgia last F-riday evening story concerning cafeteria condi- _ Wilson. ' of Oswald Alving. He had the were well attended by a large au- -See STUDENT, Page 6- -------- lead in "Garden of the Moon" and dience in the Philomathesian and · ( d" ( M d 1 major roles in "Pride and Preju- Euzelian Society Halls. Henry By Nell Gabbert way? are people (ha!) in ar IDi in zenty 5 dice" and "Little Women" at that Huff and Bill Wagoner debated Large Chapel Planned Otd Gold and Black sent me out the chapel basement. And where college. He was a member of the the Georgia ·negative team in the . on a IIllSs1on. My objective was there are :people, there is life Trial- Is- IRC ·subj.ed Gardner-Webb Dramatics Club Eu Hall, while Bob Crouch and For New' Wake Forest to find out all I could concerning (and what a life). I share with for two years and a member of Pete Caudle. This tourney, which the work being done toward you, patient reader, , a poem I the Carolina Dramatics Associa- firmative team in· the Phi Hall. pletion of the ahapel. Well, after threw together in an attempt to tion in 194l5-46. descri'be a few f th ch t · · The "Cardinal Mindszenty .M.- The next big event on the extensive speculation, I now 0 e. arac ens- · Cree Deane, also a sophomore ""' ti'cs f lif · th h 1 b fair" was the theme of the program da for the Deacon debaters is the Plans for a. huge chapel with doubt that the work is even.. be- 0 e m e c ape ase- from Rockingham, plays Regina te ment M th· t · dd "b th , of the International Relations Club speech tournament at Hickory on a grea r seating capacity than ing done ·in that direction. I look- · Y Ir y-o ro ers Engstrand in Issen's drama. She March· 3-4. Preparations are un- any church or auclitorium in the ed in the Old Gold and Black of share with"me the sentiment: which held its regular bi-weekly had a major role in "The Barretts t d t Of th Ch l B meeting on Wednesday night, Feb. f st · derway for att_ ending the meet. coun Y were announce las week January 7 (six long weeks ago) e ape · asement o nnpole reet," wh1ch the b Wak . 16, in the Social Science Build- L'ttl Wake Forest will be represented y e rarest campaign head- and saw the wor¢; "scaffolding Where students are the proudest, ing. The newly elected officers I e Theater gave last year. In by four debaters, Bill, Wagoner, quarters. . . · has been completed and work on Where .the noises are the loudest, for the semester presided at the GHpSTS, Page 6- Bob Crouch Gordon. Kelley. and · The chapel, which will be one the ceiling is under way." Where stud..nng 15· hardest, yet ti Th · ' f th f' t difi mee ng. ey are: Richard Bass, Pete_ Caudle. This attorney, 0 e, Irs ·e ·ces erected on the Yesterday I trotted . up the more fun; president; Dick Newton, vice-pres- will be attended by the leading college s new campus here, has splintered wheel-barrow board in- Where rummy games are ""'eatest, 'd t L J nkins b d · d .,.. I en ; ucy e , secretary; teams of this area is the out- een esigne to seat a maximum to the front entrance of the chapel Where the light bulbs burn the d B b Sh ill, ' f 2 531 an o er treasurer. standing debating event in the 0 persons. It will cost be- to see how the work was progress- lat-est, t $1,00 · The timely program on Minds- Southeast. ween 0,000 anc1 $1,500,000. ing. This is what I found: And radios, at three a. m., still run, zentY was presented by Dick New- According to Jens F. Larson., "scaffolding has been completed" t Af COEDS· Frances Westbrook was elected freshman represent- ative to the Women's Gov- ernment Association in the ele.:;tion held Tuesday, Feb- ruary 22. She defeated Ann ' Blackwell, Sarah Page Jacld;on, -and Ruth Draper in a close contest for po- sition. ll on. ter a summary of the facts co ege architect, the structure -period. Where, when the business houses · d th '"""" will be of the Georgian period . close m regar to e .... pndszenty af- d · What's Going On Here fair and its possible motives and . an will serve a dual purpose in . And all coeds have left beaux·, eff t diff t ec s, eren views were ex- the early life of the college as both After several interviews I fin- And elsewhere, for the students, pressed in a general discussion. chapel and auditorium. ally came to the conclusion. that day 1's done·, · A b · · usmess sessiOn was conduct- The original plans for the cam- nobody knows J'ust what is go;,...,. The bunks. still have thett· covers d b B · hi h all "' ...... ·e y- ass, m w c the pri- pus c e\A for an auditorium on over in the The funny drawn mary issue was a motion that the among the facilities required for thing is that even though there And. still have garments ''B" average now required on his- the opening of the new campus. are no apparent results, something on · t f , ory courses or membership be The Wake Forest Board of Trustees IS going on! I know - because And for the dwellers li!e has removed in order to allow more appointed a social committee un- I live below it! Thia ju,at begun! ' people the privilege of joining the der the ch!lirmanship qf Dr. C. C. brings ·me to a much more pleas- I R c D H s W f Ch 1 tte to tud th th ., . . r. . . Stroupe. facul- arren o ,.ar o s Y e e subject - the chapel base- Where mattresses stacked ty adviser, expressed the hope that possibility of 'fOmbining the. chap- ·ment, : scene of· numerous. "under- three high the organization would spread its el-auditoriwn" functions. in. one ground movemen.ts." Wbo c:ar.es 'And .on them Ured students lie, ·influence more over the campus, building. what goes on in higher places, any- -See BUSINESS,· 6- -See me, 6-- . \ WALSER Richard Walser, ,f English at N. C. State College, will speak at a tea- lecture to be given Sunday in the lounge of the New Dor-- mitory at 4 p. m. by the Wo- men's Government Associa- tion. Mr. Walser will pre- sent readings in North Caro- lina poetry .. Mr. Walser has done extensive research in the field of North Carolina literature and is the editor Of an anthology of North Carolina poetry and a re- cently published collection of North Carolina short stories.

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Page 1: ~nlh nub 'iSturk · the three-act play were ,assign ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu dents tried

:9

m td Lb

st !d. in as 7. ft lll f­is

I'

~ ' •• 1

'' . , '•' ,:

,.•:' . ' . · ....... ·::' ..

''·· \- '\ ·., . ·:

''GHOSTS"

CAST I

·; ~

OJtl·\~nlh nub 'iSturk '' *

Volu.me XXXIV.· N be 20 urn r. ; - .

· Seven. Students· "la··:t_aw- ·:s:chool .·:·Receive :A,ards

. . ,~

Ninet'een Men Make. Last · Scholastics Honor

L~ting

GRADUATES ' ''

.A _li;;;t of· prospective cart­. didates for · degrees in May · will be posted on. the btille­

tin -board iii .the Registrar's · Office. The list will contain . qnly the names of those stu ...

·dents w~o are. uilhampered by any · conditions. Gonse-. qu~tly; . 't,he list _will not· be cqmplete or final. :::From time to time ·the list - will have .to be r~vised.

Wake Forest, N! C.;. Friday, February 25, 1949

Elliot lawrence:· .. Group. WiJl ·Play:

For Mid~Willters · Three Dances to Feature

Big· Weekend. fol' . Frat Men·

· Mr. Grady Patterson urg~s One of the prime -favorites of received awards for scholastic hi>n- eyery student -concerne' .. to th

Seven Wake Forest law students

. · . . \A e college set, Elliot Lawrence · qrs from the publishers of Ameri- exainine the list · carefully and his orchestra will be on hand can JurispTude~e .as the nam~ and to report promptly any for th_ e Mid-'winter D.3nces to be· . of the ranking tud t · th discrepan_. cy_ fotind :there.

s . en s m . e held March 4, 5 at Memorial Au- · School of Law were also releas~ • .... ditorium in Raleigh. · Thi~ affm, .. · ed· by· the ·Dean's office this week:

Amer'ican Jurisp1-udence iS. a set . to be sponsored by the locai In- : · of ·books .. designed to be an en.:. N · / --s~· d. · t· M · · , ter-fraternity Council; will high~ , cy(:J.opedia to ·cover 'all of the . ew . . .. ' en . age light~~ social affairs for the year. ; American law. i · . · · · . · · · · The biggest name on the natio~s

The publishers award. each se- Du· e· ·on·'-· M'ond campuses, Elliot Lawrence has : mester .a separately bound volume ' ay ,appeared at over 100 colleges and ' from this · encyclopedia· dealing · universities since 'he started ·his 1 wi.th. a certain subject. tq. the·stu- , · .band. However,, this·-wm be his : dent· who miuie the highest grade PriZe 'Taking· Short· Story .first app~arance here; arid ·the ' ·

.· in the subject. · · :Will A · · • . · .presentation of this famous ·.band · · .Winners for the fall semester · · - · · pp_ear m ·will. do .n:iuch tq make the dances ;

* * .• • .. :.z- .. . .. MONDAY

Telephone 4056

Roberts Chosen To Play Leading ·Role In 'Ghosts'

Other Members of Cast Named for·'Ibsen

Drama

Tillie Roberts, a senior :from Asheville, will play the lead in "Ghosts," forthcoming dramat­ic production of the Little Theater.

The major male role went to David Snipes, junior from Mor­ga~ton. The three other roles in the three-act play were ,assign­ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur­roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu­dents tried out for parts and dis­closed that the Little Theater was pleased with the enthusiasm shown · by the large number· who have signed up to work on the va­rious committees for "Ghosts."

are: Ja~es.F. Justice, Jr., ~-tender- · Issue . · :a great success.·- . ·~ sonviUEi, . 1n evidence and ci:Vil · ' · ~ . : Elliot Lawrence, perhaps. aptly :~ Rehearsals to Be Daily procedur!:l; .Sam Behrends,_ Jr., Announcement was made this called ·''Keys," .is the youngest' i It was revealed that rehearsals Wilmington, in. debtor's estates; week:-' that th . F b . named maestro in the nation, hav- : will be held daily from 3: 30 until E Murray Tate· Hickory in sales· e e ruary ISSUe ing just turned· 23 on February [ 5:30 in the afternoon. Practices L~nnie T. Dark, Siler' City, . ~ of _The Student· will &n:ive at the 14th .. His compositions include , . will also begin each evening at negotiable instruments; Charles .Post. Office. Monday, Febx:_uary 28; Suite: For Animals and Falling i .... The leader of one of the most popular dance bands in the ~oun- 7:30. In addition, plans are be­H. Taylor, Kinston, in personal Of interest this month to many .J?own the Stairs, which was itry, Elliot Lawrence, will bring his band to the Memorial Audi- ing made for several morning ses-

. p,roperty; -and C .. 0. Whitley, Siler readers will be the prize-winning done, at the age of six. At the. jtorium, Raleigh, to play for the Inter-fraternity Council's Mid- sions. Williams stated that fre-City, in agenc;r; sh.ort stor;V: in a contest conducted age 9~ .nineteen he arranged Ru., [Winter dances next weekend. _quent rehearsals were imperative

by the magazine for stl:J.dent writ.:. 11!4nian .Rhapsody for the Benney i _ ' since the cast has only ·three 'Top Ten Per Cent· · ers_. ~ feature~ are an:imligi..: ·Goodm~ orchestra, and since! ·-;. weeks in which to prepare Ibsen's

Dea~ Robert. E. Lee ·listed the nary a~count.-.of a Waite Forest -~hat_ time has done,. ~':Ch ~ng-. :•Ap Performers Fo' rty-Four End difficult drama. The small cast students whose weighted scholastic depression by_-Ralph Stowe and an .mg In the, modern classical line. ; I'~ makes it doubly hard on those stu-a.verages were in the top ten per !nfqrma,tive ·. article on Bowman The LaW_rt;!nce band was nomi- . ·y· v· . R I • h . .. . dents with roles. The director cent of their. 'class. for the fall se- Gray' Medic!al ' ' School . by . Walt nated :'Band of the. Year" by Look : ' 0 I Sit . a elg Course at W-a·ke says that the entire cast must mester. . . . Friedenberg. " Magazme, and clauned tpe honor i · .. · . . know every· line of the play by

Leroy Robinson, a first year Assuming that an.veterans were ?f being the fusty:oung ban_d be;;, , next Wednesday. student from Candor, : had- the. .to ,pay: 'their meal checks.. at· the :mg __ so celebrated.. This came --as ' ·• The play concerns Oswald Al-highest average .. The third year': restaUrants in town· at the same ·the ~ulmination· of many years o~ ; ~ake .. Foresters who are mem- In January forty-four Wake ving, a promising young art stu-claSs had ~he highest. average as' 'tiiPe; .. fabricated a ·humerous eco;, -muSical· ~pirations, .. begi.n.riiilg .b~.t~ .. of ·the Raleigh Civic MuSic Forest students completed the re- dent who has returned from a group, _ . , . . , n91Dic-~~atise. C?It-.th~ catastrophic ;wh~n ru:- a youth of eig~t,,he .?r- '4s8.ociation will have the pleasure. quirements for degreeS according his studies in Paris to visit his

Students on -the Scholastic Hon-. revolution.. whiah would occur as a _ganiZed 'The Band Busters, w~~h . · · ' ·. · . ·. •. . . . mother, who had sent him from ors -List are:· -. ··- · . ·. · · · , reJ?uit. -His: stOr7-is ·accompanied :were· featured. on the. Children's o~,-)lear~ ·two co~ceJ:ts, which .to the _list released this week by her home in his early youth in or- . . · In the tmrd- class,: ThoinaS: .·s:· by- pictUres' sii'bwillg.the financiaL :Hour~ .. ,. ·. . . . · -~B~d -~~e .'?arne~e_ H~l J?roud, Mt._ Gr~~y . Patter~ori, · ·Registrar. der !hat he might. no~ come under Johnson; .. Jefj;erson; .·· ~homas .C. sta~s .of 'locaL-cafe managers be- : Elliots band,-.. whose ages aver- ;1-Y!J::tlln~,il perlpd of. f?ur days. ,_ The January _candiQ,ates Will re- the influence of h1s dissolute fath­.M-itse-,-: A:Ulamief:f..:.'Rfi"Yf.iFt"~Rl~' '.'~:-·:8na~~"llii\'!akh-~·Arr:B"•·;; 'J' .,~:.~~~Jit"~tlt~~~~~. :~f~~mt;~,..~~gq.~;~~,-~~ ~~iv.~~!h:~ .. cBPloill?S, ~t the grad- er. Now ·a widow, Mrs. Alving Winston-:-Salem; and ·James ; F:' . · . . · -Med S . . . _ ac _:Hunter: Sl?-.a-:-~ . . id',.~atton;:· ;penlitel'l?;_-·--;~ea. lif~-!llant'iaS .tiie . Won-~erc.tses• to' ·be '>held-- ·May. .. ;.~~l!!Oltl_e:;. ;:q.,E7r s~n. .. J:l7ck ~~ain a~ Justice Jr. Hendersonville. · c,:hool Story . two ex-marmes wlio have :re• J:ore~ost-.Picinist- of the .world·due ,29. · . she prepares to dedicate an or-

In the s~cond year cl(\S~,.:Sam-· ,··Walt Friedenberg- who. has also ceived,_high acclaim from such ;fp. his, lovely interpretative qucili- _The following are candidates for phanage to the memory of her uel Behrends; Jr., Wilmingtgn;_ :written the c.' mon~y characte~ magazmes as Down. Beat and Met- ,t,ies, will be hea]"d in an eveni:hg the de~-ee of Bachelor of Arts: husband. This ceremony is being C. 0. Whit:J,ey, Sil!'!r.eity; George:, ~~tch,_journe;ied thiS paSt month ronome . . These two stars have .of eoncert piano- music. It is not Willie A. Berry, Jr., Ann.Blanton, ma11a!!ed by Pastor Manders, an M. Womble, Raleigh;·. Marvin R;' to_ Winston-Salem.for- the,purpose- scored hits on many recordings irequent.,.that Raleigh and:vicin- Lawrence J. Bridgers, Iris Cau- ?ld friend of the family. Oswald Wooten, Clinton; .and. Nathan: o{ preSenting to pre-med students made by the Elliot Lawrence.band. :ity are pr_ivileged ~o hear. so dis- dell, Mary Gilmer Cocke, Eliza- 1s attracted by Regina, Mrs.- Al-Cole, Jr., .Wilmington. _, and th~if fl;iends a preview of the Three Dances :~gui~hed a personage and so- ac- beth Foster, James H. Hart; Alan ":ing•s maid, · a~d in t~e iftrac-.

In the first year class; Leroy academic· requirements,. atmos- 1 ,complishedl_a performer as Mr. Ru- B. Johnston, Ruby Orders Osborne, hon, Mrs. Alvmg sees a· re-en-Robinson, Candor;·- Garrett D. Bai- phere, and recreation they could ' :With such promising d~ta. as 'benstein :in person :will ,remember and Lester Stewart. actment of a former relatiqnship ley, Burnsville; James A. Webster, expect at Bowman Gray. His ar.:. this, the Gre:Jts can ~e. assurc:d 1his .succe.ssful- appe~anc~ in the B chel f S . between her husband and Regina:s Jr. -Leaksville; Charles ,H. Tay- ticle is accompanied by a picture- ,that the best m m~ern Ja:I:Z will :motion picture, .. Carnegie Hall." a ors 0 · Cienee · mother. Oswald's return home...-rs lor' ·Kinston; Jesse Brian S~ott, story on the life of a first-year be rendered at· alL three~ of the 1Thousands have heard him onlJ Thirty-four students are candi- not a mere visit. He has learned Roclty Mount. · . student. d~ces, the first· to be Friday ·through tl;le· medium of his re- dates for the degree of Bachelor from a doctor in Paris that he has

Donald· S. Riley, Raleigh;; Eu- Associate Editor Bill Mcilwain ~ght, semiformal, the second an 'markable recordings, so it ,is ·a of Science: James D. Alexander, inherited a disease from his fath­gene J. Moore, ·North . Wilkes'"' who has written the fourth. in ~ mformal dance on Saturday ,af- 'privilege to be able to bear him ~ Burges~ M. Allen, Gaither M. er which is incurable and that boro· William B; Byerly~ Jr;; series of Wake Forest legends 'this ternoon, and the third, a formal :a' personal appearance. Beam, Ernest W. Boyette, Jr., De- one day soon will make him a High Point; Robert F. ·Floyd, month contributes a story ~bout affair t~ c~ax the weekend Sat- .. On th~ co!p.ing Monday_ eyen- mar H. Boyles, John V. Burgess, helple~s invalid s~fering from Fairmont; and Rqbert M. Bryant, a former The Student editor who urday mght. mg_ the P1ttsburgh Symphony Or- Carlos T. Cooper, Jr., Roy Cul- softenmg of the bram. He comes Winston-Salem. roused the ire of citizens of the . L.awrence's organization, con- chestra ·wm make ·its appearance ler; John C. Daniel, Jr., William home to await the inevitable,

Hurricane. In that story he re- sisting of_l9 men, ranks high in ·at Memorial-Auditorium under the H. Ennis, Cletus T. Funderburk, which is hastened the burning of

Practice · Debates Held ports _the legendary facts conc~rn- the list of bi~ n'a~es· in. the band direction_ of· ~eona:~ Bernstein, Andrew W. Goodwin, Ellis Dey the orphanage erected to his tath-ing t:ilat editor's mistake and ·how worl~, and 1t will ~e mdeed-an Condu.ctor, With plano concerto. Harrell, Ola V. Harrell. er's memory.

· With Six Duke Teams he barely escaped a lynching as the occasion when he. s1ts down be- As thiS paper went to press, no William D. Joyce, · Robert J. C result of it. In addition to the ·fore the ~'88", and leads his fel- copy of the program had been Leatherwood, William ·w. Minton, ast Experienced legend and'.his other monthly fea- ~ows in music voted ·~est" ~;r lead- made available. Richard A. Mitchell, Harry-B. Mor- Tillie Roberts, who plays Mrs. ture,- "Letters to the Editor," Me- mg colleges and uruversi~l~s all Doors for both concerts will ris, Jr., Jackson K. Outlaw, James Alving, has had a great deal of

Six teams from Duke debated Ilwain is also the author of "The over the country: one that will not open at 7:00p.m. and the concerts R. Quisenberry, Richard W. Saw- experience in Little Theater work. an equal number· of "Wake: Forest Fray before tlie Frolic," a dramat- be forgotten soon by the danci~ themselves . will- begin promptly yer, Jr., Forrest G. Shearin, Jr., Her major work here has been teams here Wednesday afternoon ic'·presentation of the 'conflict be- Deacs. at 8:00. William M._Sherrill, Merle Silver, that of co-director of "The Male in the literary society -halls. and 'tWeen- the rich and poor factions _ .E?-win W. Stephens, James Gray Animal" last summer. She had in various classrooms on the cam-_ of the Inter-Fraternity Council. Bus.·ness A-b:ove:- Dead 'Strupe, Ralph E. Tate, Oscar B. one of the major roles in "H. M .. pus. The debates were all' non:. Newest contributor to the maga- . . Tate, Jr., Roscoe H. Turlington, S. Pinafore" last year. decision contests, _. · zine, Bill Bethune, is the au- Carolyn Twiggs, John S. Vetter, David Snipes, a transfer from

The debates with the University thor. of "Food for Thought," a _ A~~f· I•VI•fy BelOW-_ ·:J~mpJ•ng Constance Weeks, and George E. Gardner-Webb, is cast in the role of Georgia last F-riday evening story concerning cafeteria condi- _ ~ Wilson. ' of Oswald Alving. He had the were well attended by a large au- -See STUDENT, Page 6- -------- lead in "Garden of the Moon" and dience in the Philomathesian and · ( d" ( M d 1 major roles in "Pride and Preju-Euzelian Society Halls. Henry By Nell Gabbert way? T~ere are people (ha!) in ar IDi in zenty 5 dice" and "Little Women" at that Huff and Bill Wagoner debated Large Chapel Planned Otd Gold and Black sent me out the chapel basement. And where college. He was a member of the the Georgia ·negative team in the . on a IIllSs1on. My objective was there are :people, there is life Trial- Is- IRC ·subj.ed Gardner-Webb Dramatics Club Eu Hall, while Bob Crouch and For New' Wake Forest to find out all I could concerning (and what a life). I share with for two years and a member of Pete Caudle. This tourney, which the work being done toward com~ you, patient reader, , a poem I the Carolina Dramatics Associa-firmative team in· the Phi Hall. pletion of the ahapel. Well, after threw together in an attempt to tion in 194l5-46.

descri'be a few f th ch t · · The "Cardinal Mindszenty .M.-The next big event on the ~"'en- extensive speculation, I now 0 e. arac ens- · Cree Deane, also a sophomore ""' ti'cs f lif · th h 1 b fair" was the theme of the program da for the Deacon debaters is the Plans for a. huge chapel with doubt that the work is even.. be- 0 e m e c ape ase- from Rockingham, plays Regina

te ment M th· t · dd "b th , of the International Relations Club speech tournament at Hickory on a grea r seating capacity than ing done ·in that direction. I look- · Y Ir y-o ro ers Engstrand in Issen's drama. She March· 3-4. Preparations are un- any church or auclitorium in the ed in the Old Gold and Black of share with"me the sentiment: which held its regular bi-weekly had a major role in "The Barretts

t d t Of th Ch l B meeting on Wednesday night, Feb. f w· st · derway for att_ ending the meet. coun Y were announce las week January 7 (six long weeks ago) e ape · asement o nnpole reet," wh1ch the b Wak . 16, in the Social Science Build- L'ttl

Wake Forest will be represented y e rarest campaign head- and saw the wor¢; "scaffolding Where students are the proudest, ing. The newly elected officers I e Theater gave last year. In by four debaters, Bill, Wagoner, quarters. . . · has been completed and work on Where .the noises are the loudest, for the semester presided at the ~ee GHpSTS, Page 6-Bob Crouch Gordon. Kelley. and · The chapel, which will be one the ceiling is under way." Where stud..nng 15· hardest, yet ti Th · ' f th f' t difi "· mee ng. ey are: Richard Bass, Pete_ Caudle. This attorney, whi~ 0 e, Irs ·e ·ces erected on the Yesterday I trotted . up the more fun; president; Dick Newton, vice-pres-will be attended by the leading college s new campus here, has splintered wheel-barrow board in- Where rummy games are ""'eatest, 'd t L J nkins b d · d .,.. I en ; ucy e , secretary; teams of this area is the out- een esigne to seat a maximum to the front entrance of the chapel Where the light bulbs burn the d B b Sh ill, ' f 2 531 an o er treasurer. standing debating event in the 0 • persons. It will cost be- to see how the work was progress- lat-est, t $1,00 · The timely program on Minds-Southeast. ween 0,000 anc1 $1,500,000. ing. This is what I found: And radios, at three a. m., still run, zentY was presented by Dick New-

According to Jens F. Larson., "scaffolding has been completed" t Af

COEDS· Frances Westbrook was

elected freshman represent­ative to the Women's Gov­ernment Association in the ele.:;tion held Tuesday, Feb­ruary 22. She defeated Ann

' Blackwell, Sarah Page Jacld;on, -and Ruth Draper in a close contest for th~ po­sition.

ll on. ter a summary of the facts co ege architect, the structure -period. Where, when the business houses · d th '"""" will be of the Georgian period . close m regar to e .... pndszenty af-

d · What's Going On Here fair and its possible motives and . an will serve a dual purpose in . And all coeds have left the;~ beaux·, eff t diff t ~ ec s, eren views were ex-

the early life of the college as both After several interviews I fin- And elsewhere, for the students, pressed in a general discussion. chapel and auditorium. ally came to the conclusion. that day 1's done·, · A b · · usmess sessiOn was conduct-The original plans for the cam- nobody knows J'ust what is go;,...,. The bunks. still have thett· covers d b B · hi h

all "' ...... ·e y- ass, m w c the pri-pus c e\A for an auditorium on over in the chap~. The funny drawn mary issue was a motion that the among the facilities required for thing is that even though there And. stude~ts still have garments ''B" average now required on his-the opening of the new campus. are no apparent results, something on · t f , ory courses or membership be The Wake Forest Board of Trustees IS going on! I know - because And for the dwellers li!e has removed in order to allow more appointed a social committee un- I live dir~ctly below it! Thia ju,at begun! ' people the privilege of joining the der the ch!lirmanship qf Dr. C. C. brings ·me to a much more pleas- I R c D H s W f Ch 1 tte to tud th th ., . . r. . . Stroupe. facul-arren o ,.ar o s Y e e subject - the chapel base- Where mattresses ~re stacked ty adviser, expressed the hope that possibility of 'fOmbining the. chap- ·ment, : scene of· numerous. "under- three high the organization would spread its el-auditoriwn" functions. in. one ground movemen.ts." Wbo c:ar.es 'And .on them Ured students lie, ·influence more over the campus, building. what goes on in higher places, any- -See BUSINESS,· ~age 6- -See me, Pa~e 6-- .

\

WALSER Richard Walser, professo~

,f English at N. C. State College, will speak at a tea­lecture to be given Sunday in the lounge of the New Dor-­mitory at 4 p. m. by the Wo­men's Government Associa­tion. Mr. Walser will pre­sent readings in North Caro­lina poetry .. Mr. Walser has done extensive research in the field of North Carolina literature and is the editor Of an anthology of North Carolina poetry and a re­cently published collection of North Carolina short stories.

Page 2: ~nlh nub 'iSturk · the three-act play were ,assign ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu dents tried

Page Two

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Founded Ja.nuarv 15, 1916, as the official student

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

Bob Grogan • . . . • • • • . • • • . . • . • • • • • • • • • • • • Editor Herb Paschal, Allee Puryear,

Walt Friedenberg •..•...... Assistant Editors

l;:ditot·ial Staf£: Alex Biggs. Bill Bethune, Ed Frieodenberg, Neal Gabbert, Elizabeth Gertner, Bob Howrcn. Clarence Lane, Erma La. Nier, Jewell Livingston, Dan Lovelace, Dick Newton. Carol Oldham. Vivian Snuggs, R. T. 'Veatherman, C. B. ·williams, I:.eigh 'Villiams, Ray 'Vyche.

Stan: Photographers , , , .Alex Kiser, Jim Turner Staff Artist ............... .Joseph W. Brubaker Bill Hensley • • . .. • . . . • .. • • • • .. • • Sports Editor

Sports Staff: Dave Clark, Bob Holt, Jack Glenn, Johnny Dillon, Bill Norris, John Gibson, Wlley wa~ren.

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

Staff: Johnny Cameron, Leo Derrick, Ro e 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.

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 .Allrll 5, 1943. at the post office at Wake Forest, North Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879.

Member A. C. P. and N. c:· C. P. Represented for national advertising by National

Advertising Services, Inc., College Publishers Rep­resentatives, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.;

Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco. Printed by Theo. Davis Sons, Zebulon, N. C.

REMEDIED Often those who editorialize lose sight of

the fact that their task is far easier than the job of those who must be called upon to effect desired improvements. It is a relatively simple task to look about for defects in a complex system, and then get to a typewriter and ask that those same defects be remedied. It is far more difficult to provide funds for those im­provements, and to muster the men and material necessary to make the corrections.

Here at Wake Forest, both Mr. Earnshaw and Mr. Holliday deserve sincere appreciation for demonstrating that the material means of the college can be counted upon to keep apace of the editorial page. Both of these men have the condition of this campus at heart, far more than most of us could realize. And yet, in a school of this size, there are so many things that are constantlv needing attention that we could not reasonabiy ask that they detect every fault and move to make every improvement single handedly.

We called for a walk and steps down by the east side of Hunter Dormitory, as well as . a short strip of pavement from the steps to the street at the end of the walk by the Alumni Building. In less than a week one of these projects was complete, and the other is well along toward completion. No time -was lost in providing two conveniences that the students d.esired. Mr. Earnshaw made the appropriation, and Mr. Holliday supervised the job.-

For those students, like ourselves, who feel that their requests should receive some attention from the college authorities, here is proof posi­tive that those pleas do not go unheeded. It is a fine example of the administration doing its part in the campus beautification program, and it is a challenge to the student body to co­operate to the fullest in the same program.

SUCCESS EVALUATED

,.._,' ! '

Old Gold and· Black

-to be the object of flashy newspaper' copy., but just to be a person who has done his very best and has seen the other man walk off with the prize and win ~he goal is· deserving of admira~ tion.

To try one's best and miss the mark, to give all and receive nothing, and still face li~e with cheerfulness, kindness and optimism is a triumph. To rejoice in another's success and be happy in -knowing that he has done his· best is the real sign of victory~

The sin is not in missing the goal; the sin :s in not trying.

STUDY IN GREEN In the spring dogwood flower the campus,

bursting forth in a radiance of pink and white. And the dead of the year, the sombreness of winter is broken by reddened berries on limbs of holly. .

Few spots in the South are so quietly luxurious the year round as the Wake' Forest campus. That is not just a happen-so. It was planned thus. Working patiently and over a long period of years, Mr. Holliday has decked the grounds with seemly beauty that does much to soothe the mind and soul with that one great cureall, Nature itself.

This has been a notable achievement, the painstaking selection and planting of the v:aried trees, shrubs, and bushes inside the rock wall. Of late, however, students have been careless in their treatment of growing things. In the heat of tag football games they have ab~sed shrubbery, some of it wired and bound. In haste they have made paths across bits of greenery that should have been allowed to grow.

The Wake Forest campus is no open range. It is not a stamping ground. There are brick­lined walks laid out especially for use, not orna­ment. There is an athletic field meant to be utilized for sport.

Let us allow the campus itself, however, to remain intact, a memorial to God and a hallowed place of beauty. May it be that way forever.

CAMPUS SCENE While looking over some back issues . of

The Carolinian, student sheet at W.C.U.N.C., we picked up an item that interested us very much. It seems that at the first of the year the senior class migrates across the campus having supper, or parts o_f it, at several dorms on the campus. From all reports, this is an annual affair only, and can't be counted on the free meal docket except during January of your senior year. All of which leads us to wonder if Wake Forest doesn't go the girls at W.C. one better by their own nomadic eating habits. Of course, the students here migrate from meal to meal, from one establishment to the other, but we dare say that during some of these meals we'd like to move, like the girls, but quick! Bread at Brown's. Soup at Shorty's. Fish at Frye's, etc.

Over at Carolina during the past week, the representativ.es of one of, the fraternities in the Big Four locked horns for an all-Big Four conference on a coming spring dance. The idea was that the frat wanted to throw a big blowout in April or May, and have all the brothers under

! . ' J ,'<'-'1:-l,l,~: \ '';· .. ~· ~ ' ~,

· -· :. ,. ,,~rid~y;-;;Februaey ~5;-~1949_ . .-

' , . , I

Startling Discoveries Made in· 'Torri'd Egypt

Unwanted ·Hair? Have it permanently r~moved

>

Mrs. Anne Hartsfield:- Electrologist

115 '!· Syca:Q.tore St. -1. Opposite High School Box346 Wake Forest, N. C.

SOc LUNCH "EVERY ·oA Y AT

Small- Fryes ·Grill ......

0. A. ·FRICK ' Ladies' anc;l ·Gentlemen's

Merchant Tailor SPECIALIZING IN HAND MADE CLOTHES

ALTERING AND REPAIRING

See Window Display

This world of cut-throat competition and dog-eat-dog in which we find ourselves today sees us sending cheers up to the person who has triumphed and won in the battle of rivalry, says· the editorial writer of the George Pepperdine "Graphic."

W , h That ought to get you guys 330 S th S I" b St · t · one roof. e 11 admit t at it sounds good, and through tonight. Monday you'll OU a IS ury .. ree Raleigh, N. C. that it should do a lot to foster brotherhood, have to shift for yourselves. ~~~~~~~~~~ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ but if the United Nations could have peeked into Well, all right! All right! Cut +++++I +•l .. lo+++++++++++>~+f+>Jut+++++++++~<+++~""'U"U++•Jul• the Carolina chapter last Tuesday night theytalong the dotted lines below, , . :

It is .the man who has won the most power over his fellowmen, the man who has obtained large numbers of possessions, the man who has the greatest notoriety that we _pay homage to, and stand admiring his successes.

would have breathed a lot easier. .Their troubles~- -- -- - -- -- - (i l 0 y E R I s : couldn't have been in a class with these boys .. , 1. Immaculate! lmmaculatee! I . : , j Completely captivating! Th + But, they say they ll work out arrangements yet. lilting qualities of the pure in-_

1

- · · + Elsewhere in the tobacco triangle, it seems jstrumentat color~ have a pow RADIO & APPLIANCES

that the girls once they finally land a fraternity erful and pass10nate appeal • . h h' . h . k h . I' 1 I Definitely! I

To the man who has triumphed over his fellowmen, whether it is :i success of athletics, grades, money, position or possession, goes the world acclaim.

pm, ave t e rtg t to• _stic. t e1r cute _Itt e 2. 1 . could not helP but Records_ Appliance Service_ Radios rolled up heads out the1r wmdovls and hsten squeal with pleasure when thei

1 to the brothers of the man who donated his pin I intricate tracery of the oboes AMPLIFIER SYSTEMS FOR REN' T d 1. 1 h · · Th · · · intermingling with the crue ~

o a 1tt e armomzmg. e music IS seldom 1 tessiture the-the neurotic ina-, ~Jo

good, and the girls don't really feel that the tensity ~f the cellos, created +++++++•~<+++++++•t<++++.++t~++++++++++>~+oJ•+otooJ oJ•otut-++++++t serenade is as ·heart moving as it is pictured divine moment of concertanter _

But how many have risen only by pushing a fellow man down? Is the person who has won the "A" the one to be admired when he refuses to aid the friend with the "D"? Is the person who has won the advantage at the other person's expense the one to extol? Is it the man who has won who needs encouragement?

Not to be the apple of the crowd's eye, not

· h · H · I ipieno such I have never heard I In t e movies. owever, we feel that the gals before in all my years of study. have the privilege to listen, and the boys should 3. His appoggiaturas!! Hies I have the privilege to sing. It's a tradition in I passaggios!! lY.lagnifique!! Th

t 1 I ld 11 b . . tocatta of it all. But I can't mos p aces. t cou we ecome a tradition I ·t · t hi· · gu1 1 1 . . qu1 e apprec1a e s sm ar Yf here. No one IS hurt by 1t, and as long as the unromantic interpretations o hours are kept within reason, we can't think what should be the contrapoin­of a better way to put the finishing ·touches tal Flemish tradition. Huh! . I on a budding roniance. Oke, girls? - -- -- - -- -- -

Analysing the definition and in If y ( 1 Sl R d Jh Honest Ed Mcilwain testifies that greater detail one finds that sleep ou an t eep,_ ea is sleep is temporary when he emit-is a natural among college stu- ted a statement saying, "Speaking dents. Just ask "Rack" Williams as a man of experience, I find

"Sleep is a natural, temporary, the rack" all of the time. ers on the campus, verifies the that sleep is only temporary. After and periodical diminution of sen- According to Rack, who says, definition when he says, "After staying up all night to rush sation, feeling, and thought, in "I've been sleeping for 23 years reading THE STUDENT for four through my assignments for the hea;vy slumber an almost com- and find it the most natural thing months now I find sleeping to following morning and after turn­plete cessation of conscious life." I have ever done," sleeping must 'be a natural, THE STUDENT ing out a couple of reams of copy Thus says Mister Webster in his be a natural He says there is no- is a sure-fire sleep inducer. It's, for my next book, I find it a most remarkable work entitled "Thin thing better. "When one confronts that is the magazine, also a natur- difficult problem to convince the Paper Webster's Collegiate Die-·· a textbook without that appeal al. Although I have never been professors that I need a few winks tionary, Fifth Edition, 1936." Pas- that some novels have, I find that able to convince people on this of sleep. What happens? I only sage cited may be found on Page sleep solves the problem. Why campus of the value of such a get a temporary sleep for every 935 of op. cit. (which in a foreign read assignments when you have publication, I can say that it re- time my head hits the desk some language means work cited). plenty of time to sleep. That's quires only a few minutes reading prof fires a question point blank if you don't believe it. Otherwise what I say, suh." before one drops off." in my direction." how do you think that he earned Harold (just call me H. T. P.) Many college students profess (More sleep data next week if that nickname if he didn't stay "in Hayes, one of the local hack writ- that sleep is only "temporary."· researcher can be waked.)

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Page 3: ~nlh nub 'iSturk · the three-act play were ,assign ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu dents tried

,,

• "\'•'". ~d'''" ~ ·- A ,, • • ••

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·I' '

.dskjor it eitlier way ••• oolk trade:.marl!s mean the same thing.

·. Old Gold--and Black ' . .

~ /

E , W · o· · • Capps spoke on production pro­. u. 5 ant ppol1untty cedures, announcing "styles," and

·y (i d . p · f programming. 0 . ra e ro essors After the informal lecture, there

--:.- was an open discussion an,d Capps The Euzelian Literary Society in and a group of ~nnouncers wen~ to·

a mock vote taken at its town the statioz;. fo~ a demonst:atioh t . h ld t . ks . d and a contmuat10n of the discus-mee 1ng e wo wee ago e- sion.

cided twelve to eleven in favor of . In inviting Capps to speak, the giving students the privilege of station inaugurated a policy of ax­grading professors. The. program ranging visits from different pea­was s-!'onsored as an .. l~portant ple in radio. During· the semester phase m the speech trammg cam- the station hopes to hear :from paign the Society. has undertaken. representatives of each phase of

Last Monday mght the program radio work thereby enabling the consisted of four impromptu . staff to be~ome better acquainted speeches. P. A. Cline spoke on with the work of professionals. . "Depression or Continued Infla-tion;" Betty Hawks elaborated- Patronize our advertisers. on "In the Spring a Young Girl's -::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; Fancy Turns Too.;" Rudolph Pru- "' itt talked on "The Future of Re­publicanism and the Current Trend Toward. Socialism in the U. S.;" Emma Brauer gave her views on "Singing Commercials."

Capps Sp~aks Here Jimmy Capps, well known pro­

ducer-announcer of radio station WPTF's "Our Best To You", -lwas the guest of the staff ·WFDD at a meeting Wednesday afternoon.

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Page 4: ~nlh nub 'iSturk · the three-act play were ,assign ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu dents tried

/

Page Four Old Gold and :Black Friday, February.;.·25; ~1949'

Deacs End Basketball Season With Gamecocks Monday Night

Dealing with, the Deacs Blue Devils Stop . Tunney Brooks Is Modest W. Forest 61-51 A d y .1 Dl A hi

Deacs Must Win To Gain Position In Tournament By BILL HENSLEY In League Game n ersat1 e eac t ete

By Wiley Warren

FOOTBALL With Spring comes the addition of several more sports to

Baptist Hollow,_ and at the present practices are being held in football, baseball, golf, and track. Tennis drills will start just as soon as a new coach can be secured for the squad.

If a trophy were to be given to Mueller and McCotter Set the most modest athlete in Wake

}'lace for Baptists Forest, there is litt~e doubt that

In foo~ball it seem that the lineup for next year will run something like this. Ends, Duncan, Bradley, and O'Quinn; tackles, Palmer, George, Sniscak, and Listopad; guards, Cicia, Auffarth, Dye, Reinhardt, Pambianchi, and Garry; centers, Daw­son, Zrakas, and Baublis. In the backfield, Gregus, Miller, Smith, jones, Sprock, Blackerby, Salek, Davis, Roberson, Po­

lacci, Belisis, Stutts, and King. This is by no means a complete lineup. The crystal ball

just reveals a close race among these men for their respective

positions.

BASEBALL In baseball it's hard to tell just who the likely prospects

are this ~arly. Essentially the lineup will· read the same as last year's runner-up in the Big Four. Dick Vander Clute will join the hurlers and wi~l be 11. big boost to the pitching staff. The other hurlers that will carry most of the load. are Vernon "Preacher'' Mustain, last season's Big Four leader on the mound, Harry Nicholas, Raymond "Moe" Bauer, Dick McCle­

ney, and Chadie Kinlaw. Roaming the outfield will be Charlie Kersh, Joe Fulghum,

and Paul Livick from last year, and Ed Hoey, Ex-gridder, has been showing up well in practice.

In thC' infield Wiley Warren, Charlie Teague, Art. Hoch, and Gene Hooks will more than likely carry the Deacons with assistance by Kay Rogers. Buss Batchelor, the old favorite, will start his third consecutive year behind the plate, assisted by Buddy Wrenn and Tommy White.

From Parly reports on the new candidates, A. R. Hardison, Babe Narr, Bill Eller, and Will Eschen have looked outstand­ing along ,vith Vic Matney, who played the early part of last season and in 1947. Lee Gooch, the new mentor, has been holding daily practices and announced that the team is shaping up to his expectations. Tommy Byrne has been assisting Gooch with the moundsmen prior to his departure for Spring training with the Yankees.

BASKETBALL

• guard Tunney BrooKs of Murray In Scoring Greason's basketballers would not

receive such an award. Despite the fact that he was a

Duke's Blue Devils dropped widely known athlete among state Wake Forest's Deacons below the scholastic circles before attending .500 mark in Southern Conference Wake Forest, Deacon coaches siandings when they downed the were somewhat unaware of the Deacs, 61-51, before some 6,000 youngster's 'ability. The main fans in Duke Gymnasium last reason for. that, however, was Saturday night. The defeat left that Brooks· · enlisted in Uncle the basketball squad in a position Sam's Army immediately after re­of having to win their last two ceiving his high school diploma. games in order to qualify for the While in service, Brooks spent conference tournament. one year in Alaska where he play-

Most of the observers gave ed basketball and baseball. lnci­Wake Forest credit for playing dentally, that baseball team won better ball than Duke throughout the Alaskan Division Champion­most of the game. However, the ship in 1947, being ranked with Blue Devils had one "hot" the top service nines in the world. stretch, lasting around ten min- Discharg~ in January of 194~, utes, in which they o"Vercame a Brooks decided to further his seven-point Deacon lead and built knowledge of baseball and basket­up a 12-point lead for themselves. ball at Wake Forest. He lost lit-

The Deacons jumped into a tl~ tiJ:?e in disp~aying his tale~ts quick six-point lead and led effectively durmg th7 op'erung throughout the first half, holding week of basketball pr~ctlce. ~ven a 26- 19 advantage at halftime. Coach Grea~on read1ly admitted Wak F t k t th l d t'1 that Brooks IS a far better player

e ores el? e ~a un 1 than he had expected. the Dukes startmg makmg ~as- This season has been only med­kets from all angles and .Pulle.d mto iocre for the Wilson, North Car­the lead, 32-31, after slx mmut~s olina lad. During the first several and twenty seconds had passed ln games, Brooks showed Deacon the second stanza. supporters as well as opposing

Duke went on to run the count coaches that he was rio novice, and to 45-33, but Wake snapped out that he was not to be taken as of its basket famine and pulled to just another ball player. But, within four points with two min- just as he began to pace the Dea­utes left in the game. con scorers, he was the victim

However, Coren Youmans, who of a bad spill which resulted in walked off with high-scoring hon- a leg injury that has kept him ors for the night with 21 points, sidelined frequently. made three quick goals for the Doctors once thought that an Devils to give them their :final 10- operation would be necessary, but point victory. · the injury improved. "It's still a

Jack Mueller, using a one-hand- little stiff," said Brooks. ed push shot, and Alton McCotter, . High ·school days were some­working superbly under the bas- what glorious for the Deacon ket, paced the Deacs in scoring. guard. He played four. years of Mueller dropped in 15 markers varsity baseball and basketball and McCotter collected 14: -See BROOKS, Page 6-

W. ~· A. Ne~s~

Gamecocks Drop Deac~ns In Early Season

TUNNEY BROOKS

Gridders Finish· lrd Week Drill With Scrimmage

Coach Peahead Walker and his football candidates closed the third week of spring · practice with a scrimmage game yesterday. The team has been shaping up speedily and has been busy readying themselves for next year's 10 game grid card.

The drills heav been emphasiz­ing the timing of plays, blocking, passing, and intra-squad scrim­mages. The coaches have been making several changes in the line and backfield in an effort to find the best combination for next September.

Most of the scrimmages have been held under simulated game conditions using four team!?. No stress has been placed on the use of an offensive and defensive team thus far.

The Monogram Club will spon­sor the annual intra-squad game

Game

· It will be make t;~r break for the Wake Forest Demon Deacons when they meet the University of South Carolina Gamecocks in Gore Gymnasium · next Monday night. The Deacs, with a con­ference record of seven wfus against as many losses, must de­feat the Gamecocks to maintain their .500 average that is neces­sary to qualify for the Southern Conference Tournament to be held in Durham March 3, 4, and 5.

The Deacs will be seeking re­venge for a defeat that the C. .mJ.e­cocks handed them in Columbia earlier in the season. This, along with the fact that the Deacs must win· this one to get in the tourna­ment, goes to make this game one of the most important that the boys from Deacon Hollow have played all year: ,

Hot and Cold South Carolina, as has Wake

Forest, has been a hot and cold ball club this year. Had they played the brand ·of ball all sea­son that enabled them to defeat the Deacs in the :first meeting · of the two teams, the Gamecocks' standing in the conference would undoubtedly be higher than it js.

The pressure will all be on the Deacs MoodilY night. The Game- · cocks cannot qualify for the tour-6' nament if they should defeat Wake · Forest, and Wake Forest cannot make the tournament if they should lose to the Gamecocks. To make a long story short, . the Deacs have ·everything to win and everything to lose in their second meeting with. the Gamecocks .. South Carolina would like nothing better than to .post its second win against Wake Forest this season· and thus knock the Deacons out . of the tournament, and the Deacs realize the necessity of a victory to gain a place in the tournament. ·

1949 Grid Schedule The cagers are still busy working out plans to stop South I

Carolina and gain a berth in the tournament. The loss to Duke meant that the Deacs would have to beat both Furman and the •. Gamecocks in order to travel to Durham next month. At this " writing neither team has been played, but Furman was in Wake Forest last Wednesday night and· South Carolina will be here Monday. If the Deacs drop the tilt to South Carolina, the sea­

son will be over.

By Caror Oldham I Plans are being made for a again this year, and the game will Sept. 17 Duquesne here. . . . . shuffleboard tournament to be be held in Groves Stadium at the S t 24 S M U D ll

GOLF The golf team has been seen driving a few around the greens

and are getting ready for the most attractive schedule a Wake team has ever undertaken. Coached by Johnny Johnston, the team will be the leading candidates for the Southern Conf~r­ence championship. Lost from· last year's team are Fred Hyatt and Tommy Grey. Arnold Palmer, Buddy Worsham, Jennings Agner, Sonny Harris, Clyde Randolph, Bums Willis, and Gene Mills will compose the squad this year.

Palmer and Worsham will carry the two the team against such squads as Clemson, Rollins, Purdue; Michigan, Georgetown, each team in the Big Four twice.

top spots and lead Georgia, Florida,

and Ohio, plus

The teemen only dropped one match last year and that was a one point decision toN. C. State. Duk~ who has long been the champs on the course, were beaten twice.

TRACK Representing the Baptists in the indoor meet at Chapel.Hill

tomorrow will be Billy Wiggs, Jim Billings, Jerry Johnson, Ray jone<>, Rudolph Pruitt, E. Watkins, L. J. Gregory, and A. B. Gwynn. Approximately 25 boys have been running under the watchful eye of Coach Phil Utley in the afternoon rehear­

sals.

SHORT SHOTS

Miss MarJOrie Cnsp, drrector of held at the new shuffle board _conclus1'on of the Spnn· g drills. ep · ·· · · .a as · w n' Athleti Edith Rawls Sept 30 Boston College there. orne s cs, ' ceriter, WRA officials disclosed. The Black and Gold teams will 0 t

and ~udy Fortenbacker att~nded a The· Arts and Crafts lab spon- be evenly divided using every O~t: ;5 ~~~~fe~=li!~e~~ere­mee;mg of the N. C. Athlebc Fed- sored by the Physical Education member of the squad. Oct. 22 William & Mary here· eratwn for College. Women S~t- Club has purchased approximate- Coach Waker announced that Oct. 29 Clemson there urday, February: 12 m Chapel Hlll. ly $50 of new material. Units on the team needed a lot of polish but Nov. 5 Duke here.

At the meetm~, Wake Forest lanyard making, weaving, wood most of the kinks will be ironed Nov. 12 N. c. State there. was elected recor~mg secretary f'!r carving, wood burning, and spatter out before the September rush Nov. 19 Open~ the next year, Edith Rawls, presL- painted have been taken up in the gets started. Nov. 26 South Carolina there. dent of the Local WRA, has an- labs. nounced that a coed from the Wake Forest organization will be appointed to keep in contact with Guilford College, president, as to plans and business of the NCAFC w.

Ten Girls Guests

Paul Bennett Looms ·As Future Deac Cage Star

' . Fri!!~ ' ... ,

Fr•

l

Actl spring da Ch to be J

ular ~ electe4 man, Vice-I Secret Treas1 Barefc to pla the h4

NeVI arrive Rober ovatin plans chaptE color : painti: The C rived! recent Helll'3l Jack. v. HiJ Jim :r: Newh

The quet c ly. 'I J. L.l\ Fores1 ... 'I ther : -

't li

]

,

'

Page 5: ~nlh nub 'iSturk · the three-act play were ,assign ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu dents tried

I

m nt

: for LCOns rsity :s in nday con­wins t de­tltain eces­:hern held

~ re­.lllle­mbia along m'IL8t !rna­game that

have

Wake cold they sea-

lefeat !eting · :ocks' 1170Uld it js.

n the fame-· tour- 19

Wake· annat they

:s. To . the t1 and econci cocks .. >thing i win :eason· 1S out. Deacs ictory nent. ·

ole

e.

tar season.

is floor >ts, and m time· looter.'" 1articu-

s, Ben­on his school

d from the top 1m piled p herer

1e con­an ath­,eahead g_uite a Inpro­!ars, he .enators mpiled, Virgin­leves to ~her, he onsecu-. Wake's: or Wil­Lat club mants. 'aul has· ctivities studies, Alpha.

1g and ~urricu.:..

l. Aside t1e to be ;s, vice­:ouneil!,. ~tion e:f

ion this . weight to take ·baske~

.. Old Gold and Black

' . Fra~ · Begiq ·.Making 'Big How's Muffin? Maybe the column first three teams in each of the

was_ right last week. Hllh! · four divisions will be eli~ble for· ~--..,..-· --- the tollrn.ament, and the elirniD.a-

The Intramural basketball tion method will be used. The

· Plans for Mid-Winters tournament will start March fl, it winner of the tourney will be de­was announced this week. The clared the campus champions. . ·

By Alex Biggs

LAMBDA CHI ALPHA I been chosen as director of current Little Theater production "Ghosts " '

Activities being planned for th~ · . · spring include a statewide Lamb- KAPPA ALPHA da Chi Alpha Founder's Day Ball Last Tuesday night the annual to be belli in Durham and the reg- Lee Banquet was held· in Raleigh ular Spring:Dances .· .. Recently in; the S. & W. Caferteia with w. · elected offices are Jack Over- McLeod Frampton, · Province man, President~ Emory~Sneeder, Commander of the Kappa Alpha Vice-president, Ed Christman, Order, as guest speaker. This was Secretary, anci Jerry Morris, a joint affair with the KA's from Treasurer. Jerry Morris and Pole -=>tate ... Following the initia­Barefoot have also been selected tion, Dr. Hubert M. · Poteat con­to plant a garden in the front of ducted a formal initiation in a Ral-the house. eigh church. Claude Kitchin Jos-

.SIGMA PI ey was the initiate.

SIGMA CHI

Well, the boys are finally set­tled, uncier the steady hand of Brother Grady Friday, who has done a swell jop as "registrar," "bursar," interior decorator, and sergeant-at-arms • . . A Tea will

New furniture is expected to arrive by Mid-Winters. Prof. Robert Helm is in charge· of ren­ovating the, chapter room, and his plans will ·. gx:e~tly beautify the chapter. A definitely modern colcir scheme has been chosen and painting will begin very soon. The Coke machine has finally ar­rived! Hurrah! Ten men were recently initiated: Tony Urbanik, Henry Caddell, Harold Walters, Jack .Koontz, Clyde Mitchell, L. V. High; Bill Martin, Vic Matney, Jim Draucher, Bob Land,' and Joe Newhall. Congrats fellas!

be given on March 3 for the mem-· -----'-----------------------­

THETA CHI

The annual Brotherhood Ban­quet of Theta Chi was held recent­ly. The guest speaker was Prof. J. L. Memory, who spoke on Wake Forest's own Jehn Charles McNeill . . . Theta Chi congratulates Bro­ther Ralph Williams fo~ haying

FOR-QmCK SERVICE

AND TASTY FOOD

it's I . -

Shorty"$

bers, and that night an open house will be held for the entire stu­dent body . . . Congratulation to our eight new pledges: Bob Howr'ln. Lamar Sledge, Bill George, Glenn Reinhard, Jack Graybeal, John Watson, Jim Chamblee, and Bob Sherrill. Pin­ups recently made are those by Gene Wade, George Johnson, and George Phillips. It seems that these boys have good matrimon­ial intentions. Atta way to go fel­Ia:s! Recent visitors were Mr. Daniels, Sig of 35 years, and Dr. Powers, local advisor.

: ALPHA SIGMA PHI

Orientation week is over, and our worthy . pledge brothers are nearing the initiation date which h;is been set for the first week in April. The week's festivities ended Friday night with a "clinlb up" party in. the penthouse. Lo­ren "Keeboard" Knee suffered a broken arm last week but is com- · ing along fine now. Loren, it is reported.· just took the tumble so he could · have a chauffeur. Shep -Hamrick brightened the looks of the second floor with a

~=~~=~::::~~~~~ coke imichine·- all of which has -:= '"""' probably kept Paul "Ted Williams"

Livick from being able to hit a ball pa8t the pitcher in baseball practice .. Dave Hill was married last Saturday to· the former Miss Becky Royall-{)f Hamlet. -Broth­ers Person, · Robinson and Ste~e served as ushers. Ray Royston is making sure he gets a date for Mid-Winters. The fat man has invited three different girls for the three dances . . . Gus Grose has been named as fraternity cor­respondent to tlie Old Gold and

Good Cleaning Saves··-Clothes

For

Quality Work Prompt · Service Repairs, Dyeing

And

Service That

Satisfies

Black. Tlie rest didn't get in entirely ·

but a few lines were wrangled. "Casanova" Birche~te reported that the Delta Sig party was pretty large, and some other unintelli­gible remark. Speak up Johnny.

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WELL, JOHNN~ SINCE I TRIED THE 30·DAY MILDNESS TEST, CAMELS ARE MY CIGARETTE1

TOO. CAMELS ARE. SO MILD -AND so FULL FLAVORED I

~-f!iJacA rl~e! Smoke Camels and test them in your own "T-Zone." •r for taste, T for throat. If, at any time,.you are not convinced that Camels are the mildest cigarette you ever smoked. zeturn the package with the unused Camels aud we will refund its full purchase price_ plus postage. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds To­bacco Co •• Wiaacon·Salem. No <A _________ _.

Page 6: ~nlh nub 'iSturk · the three-act play were ,assign ed to Cree Deane, Sonny Bur roughs, and Don Jackson. . Ralph Williams, the director, stated that a good number of stu dents tried

,. : ' "

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Page Six Old Gold and Black

B. S. U. Notes

will be held ;..; ednesday ni~t,\ I play agains~ more expadenced March 1, in the Social Science players. And, of course, there Building with the program topic are better shots." to be announced. Oh, by the way, getting out

BROOKS (Continued from Page 4)

of the Army was tops among the honors received by ·Brooks, 'That discharge was about the most wel­come piece of paper that I've ever got."

ous, dramas· at that· college. He was a ·member of the Mars Hill Dramatics and Delta Psi Omeea, honorary dramatics fraternity in junior colleges. .

Sonny Burroughs, Rockingham sophon;~ore, ha!i minor roles in "Arsenic and Old Lace," Little Theater fall production and ''The By Alice Puryear

Dr. Harold Tribble, President of and two years of varsity football. Andover Newton Theological In 1944 and 1945, Brooks was Seminary, Newton Centre, Mass., named to the All-State baseball ,

GHOSTS Male Animal,", given last summer.

, He plays the part of Pastor Man­ders in __ "Gbosts."

spoke to the Cullom Ministerial and basketball teams. That honor (Continued from Page 1) Conference Tuesday night in the is rare indeed, for Brooks is one addition she headed the make-up· Little Chapel. Dr. Tribble is a fre- of the few Wilson athletes hav- committee for ··A Living Thanks­quent visitor to this campus hav- ing attained such an award for giving" and did publicity for the ing conducted a week-long 'series two successive years. one-act. plays given during the of services here last year. He was Asked about his future plans, Magnolia Festival last year. She available far personal consulta- Brooks replied, "I'd like to coach, worked on properties and publicity tion by ministerial students con- I guess. I know that I won:t be for "Arsenic" also. sidering entering the school. l1:ble to play ball ~orev~r, so I'd Don Jackson of ~al~gh, is Ja-

The Training Union Assembly like to teach what httle i ve learn- cob Engstrand. A JUmor here at program this Sunday will involve ed." . 1 • Wake F?rest, he transferred from a reading based on Sallman's Brooks was qmck to accla1m Mars Hill, where he had the lead painting of "Tpe Good Shepherd," State's s;unmy Ranzino .. as. the best i!l t;;o ma~~r pr?ductions, -"Reac;: a slide o£ which will be shown. eager he s ever seen. Dtfference tlon and A Mtracle for Mary.

A deputation form the local BSU in college and .h!gh, school basket- He also ~~rked on ~akeup, stag~, visited in the student house at ball? Well, 1t s faster and you and publiCity comuuttee for vari.-WCUNC last week~end. About 17

BUSINESS ( Contmued from Page 1

Recuperating from the night before,·

After having spent the night Prone, and staring up at light Until it was at last turned out at

four.

Where rumors fl:Jr much faster, Within walls that have no plaster, In a room with only pipes and

beams above it-Live these..thirty-odd good people,.

Wake Foresters spent Saturday afternoon and evening in song singing, joke telling (the corniest purportedly told by two Wake Forest students each trying to out­do the other) a supper prepared by the hostesses, and much in-

IT'S A JARMAN-YOU KNOW IT'S. GOOD IT'S ''NU-BUCK" WHITE-YOU KNOW ITSi RIGHT

formal fun. The Christian Service will hold

its prayer meeting Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Minnie Darden.

The general BSU met last Wed­nesday night to decide some ques-tions presented by· the state BSU office concerning sending repre­sentatives to points out of the country.

IRC (Continued from Page 1)

and help its members to learn to speak and express their views more efficiently in formal manner.

The next meeting of the I. R. C.

Here I'll Stay Congratulations

Jo Stafford Capitol 15319 .................... 82c

For You ""' By The Way

Perry Como Victor 20-3099 ................ 82c

I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm

I'm a'Tellin' You Sam Les Brown

Columbia 383224 ............ -82c

STEPHENSON'S MUSIC STORE

Forest Theatre Wake Forest, N. C.

Week of February 24

THURSDAY & FRIDAY -

Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00 Dennis Morgan--Jack Carson

Two Guys From Texas

SATURDA Y-Do'uble Feature­Shows Continuous 1 to 11

Eddie De'e.n in

Prairie Outlaws Roland Winters in

Golden Eye

SUNDAY-Shows 22:00 & 3:45 9:00 Guy Madison-Diana Lynn

TeX~as, Brooklyn and ·Heaven

MONDAY & TUESDAY-Shows 3:15 7:15 &: 9:00

Phyllis Calvert-Melvin Douglas

My Own True Love

WEDNESDAY­Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00

It's $9.95 "NUFF SAID11

SEE MY WINDOW

Sure- Who ·Else? "Ben Wants to See You*1

BEN'S OF WAKE- FORES.T-

' ' • ,-' • • ··'• t~ _·.:.~/-'fo.' ,'-~ '~_.t)

Just below · tha~· graceful. -steeple; ·ear ot the Co~e-_ C~~~&,::l:se~·~~ They don't lea~e the Chapelliase- thune, photographer Alex· 'Kti~W•'

ment · . and John Matthis made a tour. ~ Cause they lo1.!e it! · the Big Four 'c!OUege8, -taDdDg

STUDENT with the .managers of each cafeter­ia. The results of their survey will be found in the article together with illustrative photographs. .

(Continued from Page 1) tions at State, Carolina and Duke in .comparison with the Wake For­~st Cafeteria. Under the sponsor­ship of Mr. E. E. Cummings, mana-

Sherrill cartoons, the· Herring cover and all other departmental · . features will ~ppear in the iSSUe.

Patronize oUr adv:ertisers:

,

. Visit the G. & S.. Department_- Stor~

·EVE.NING. GOWNS -FOR MID-WINTER DANCE$

Just Unpacked

Crisp .Taffetas Soft . Ninons

All Colors

Sizes 10 to 18

$.12.95 To

$]6.50

.G & S Dept. Store . \

Hargett & Wilmington Sts. Raleigh, N. ·C. r

• • t"

Don Barry--Janet Martin

Train to Alcatraz Short & Serial

Collegiate Theatre P MEN of AMERICA'S SPORTS

smoke CHESTER·f.IELD THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SAT.-

Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9:00 John Wayne-Montgomery Clift

Red River

MONDAY, TUESDAY & WED.-Shows 3:15 7:15 & 9~00

George Brent--J' anet Powell

Luxury Liner

... '

R says ••• "Because 'they're MILDER rfields taste better all the way.

Y • H . _ Cigarette.

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