fone.language meet comes april19 . issued by editor ashburn yes· terday. the price for an extra...

4
. , t. \ -.,. 1'· '!- ... ' - ' ,W.AJCE· FOnE. · L\ >J... vV.Ll.J!•· LIBRARY ... . '_.,; .- .. .. . ' -, .. . .. . .". EDITORIAlS- .... ··. . ' - ,- . BRA VERY AND HATS . . . . . . BRAINS FO;R DEFENf)E ·-n:: . .. ' .. - . .-. . .UU ur MONOGRAM CONCERT IS SCHEDULED. FORMARCH15 WAiEFOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, MARCH 7,1941 PRICE: TEN CENTS PER COPY 'Over 30 School TeaJils Will Vie· . . . · Cup · Gov. Broughton to Award Trophy to Tournament' · Winner April .26 · WPTF TO AIR FINALS ..,-,-- Meet to Feature Five Oth- er Contests Besides Debates · Over thirty high schools will contest for the silver loving cup Dr. Githens and Dr. ·Isbell Are Called by Government for National Defense Work Physics Profesor to Leave in Little Over Week for Illinois; Teacher of Chemistry Departs In June For Florida . The national defense program reached home to Wake Forest twice during the past two weeks and enlisted from the college two members of its faculty, Dr. Sherwood Githens, Jr., assistant professor of physics, and !Yr. Nevill Isbell, associate professor of « ·. which Governor J. · :M •. Broughton will personally .award, when · the third annual North. Carolina Speech .and Debate ·Tournament meets here April 24-26, Professor Zon Rob.inson this week announc· ed. . ··· . NG Visions· of a new ·fraternity loouse are uppermost in the minds of Phi Rho medical fraterni· . EARL J PLANNJ . : ty as representatives from the medical and academic :lasses, . shown above! of tentative·new home, the well-lmown P; H. Hanes residence·near the Bowman Gray medical school and Baptist Hospital In. Winston Salem. ·Phi Rho Sigma. representatives who recently went to Winston-Salem in the interest of the ne'!' home are: (left to nght) Earl Hamrick Jr., Bob CUrrin, Jim Coehran, Wyan Washburn, president; Bill Hoggard, H. _M. faculty sponsor; Fletcher Carver, George Fisher, Auley Crouch,, Pan Council; Miles Hudson, Banks Hankins, Bd! Shields, L, F. Hart and John Thompson. Final approval of lease terms IS m the next few days, Dr. Githens goes in a little over a week to the Army Air Corps Technical School at Chanute Field, Rantoul Ill., to become an instructor in aircraft electrical systems, and Dr; Isbell will re· -------------*port for duty about June l to the Stansbury Lists Award Winners 13econd Chemical Company Ser- vice (Aviation) at Tampa, Fla., with which he will do extensive work looking toward the protec- tion of the civil and military pop- ulations of the country against possible chemical attacks in the event 11f war, The high school· teams, at least six more than those who met here last year, will participate in four- rounds of preliminary debate before the final contestants are decided upon, . " Two Queries Med School Starts· Final· Lap Before Moving Away Hurry! A "last·call'' for students who want extra Howlers or printed name on their year book, to file their applications now, was Teachers Invite Meredith Guests Students To Receive An- nual Prizes of Volumes Dr· D. F. Stansbury, Dean of the Law School, announced this week the names· of students who in the past year have earned the awards offered each year by the Lawyer's Co-operative Publillh: ing Company, the Bancroft-Whit- ney Company, publishers of American Jurisprudence, one of the latest legal works of its kind now available. At the present time it is thought that Dr. Githens will serve at Chanute Field for the rest of this school year and all of next only. Should the "national crisis" become more acute, how- ever, it is probable that he will be required to serve for a longer time. Two queries will be argued. . One is the state question "Re- solyed: that the United States should adopt a policy ·requiring military training of all . able-bod- ied men before they reach the age of twenty-three." The national high schoof query may also be used-"Resolved: that the power of the federal government should . Cornerstone of New Gray Building to Be Laid. ·onApril16 *' Language Meet Comes April19 . issued by editor Ashburn yes· terday. The price for an extra Howler is $5.00, o and names will be printed on the yearbooks for fifty cents extra. Students desiring extra books or printed names may see either Norvell K, Ashburn or Business ma)la· ger James Early this week. Girls' Education Class To See Ball Game, Attend Banquet be increased·" · Raleigh's Station WPTF will broadcast the finals of the tourna- ment from 8 to 9 p. m. on April 26 .. It will be in the radio studio that Governor Broughton will present the loving cup, awarded by him three years ago, to the winning team. Sigma Pi Alpha Will Hold Nation-Wide Convention At Wake Forest The Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest College this week moved briskly into the final quarter of work to be done on the Wake Forest campus, be- fore moving into . the $1,000,000 medical schoGl and hospital plant Convention-day plans were dis- The J. Rice Quisenbury Memori- al Loving Cup, given in honor of Wake Forest's former debate coach, will also be awarded to the high school· team which has taken part in the largest number of debates previous to the tourna- ment. Other Contests In addition to debating, five other speech contests will be fea- tured; They are ·oratory; extem- pore speaking, impromptu talks, declamations, and after dinner speeches. In former tournaments only oratory and extempore speaking have been on the pro- gram. . · 'So that high school debaters can observe methods, an exhibi- tion match will be given by the Wake Forest and·· the Virginia In- tennant College squads. "The purpose of the North Car- olina Speech and Debate ToUl'lla- inent," Robinson said, "is to encourage modern types of extempore debating as opposed to the stilted declamatory debate style so ·often encountered, and to extend the area speech activ- ity to include newer types of speech contests." Winners Last Year Judges for the tournament will be college debate coaches and ex- perienced collegiate team mem- bers. The contest was won by Needham Broughton High School of Raleigh last year. Both of the winning debaters, M e 1 vi l I e Broughton and Vance Swift, are enrolled as freshmen here this year. at Winston-Salem after June 1. cussed at a Tuesday night meet- Actual ·moving of some parts of ing of the local meeting of Sigma the school and equipment will be- Pi Alpha honorary modern Ian- gin shortly after April 16 when guage fraternity. The organiza- the corneretone Gf the new Bow- tion's national conclave will be man Gray medical school building- held here on April 19, with Dr. H. will be laid with impressive cere- D. Parcell, president, in charge of monies. Complete plans for the ceremonies. Deacon Debaters In Hickory Meet To Compete In South At· Iantic and Southeastern Tournaments cornerstone ceremony will be re· Decision that Wake Forest be leased in a few days by Dr. C. C. the. 1941 host to the modern lan· ' h h Members of the Wake Forest Carpenter, dean, ;w o was ere guage convention came last for several conferences this week. with the electicm of Dr. Parcell. debate squad, returning Sunday Equipment" Rod Buie, president of Sigma from a tour of western North During the week orders and Pi Alpha's Wake Forest fraterni- Carolina featured b! .a . ble broadcast ongma ng in contracts for thousands of dollars ty, announced Wednesday that 25 · . worth of equipment for the new men had been initiated in cere- Asheville, back early school were approved by ·depart- mohies following the meeting· yesterday mornmg- for. HI_ckory, mental heads here at Wake Forest night. ·The initiation wher7 they are competmg_ m the and in Winston-Salem. Most of took place in the Philomathesian combmed South A:lantic and the equipment will be installed Hall. Other officers of the. group Southeastern Foren:lc dUI'I ·ng the su'.mmer. t F d Eas vice ments· The tourney, m which are . presen were: re on, • rep;esented some thirty or forty 1\<Iembers of the second year president; H. D. Parcell, treasur- · colleges and universities from medical elass are this week get- er; and W. A. Gordanier, secre- ting a real taste of clinical medi- tary. throughout the South, will con- cine as their schedule calls for Weekly meetings will be held tinue through Saturday. work three afternoo.ns per week throughout the rest of the spring Returning to his home town in Rex and Mary Elizabeth hos- in order to prepare for the con- will be Weston Hatfield, ranking pitals and the State Prison hos- vention, Buie said. debater of the squad, who with pital. Raleigh physicians who are Bob Goldberg, president of the teaching the class include Dr .. J. student body, will argue the nega- J. Combs, •physical diagnosis; Dr. BROWNING ADDS NEW tive side of the Pi Kappa Delta Royster, general medi- NIGHT GERMAN CLASS question. Bruce Brown, freshman cine; Dr. Ivan Proctor, ob.stetries who has 'risen rapidly on the and gynecology; Dr. G<lrdon Sin- A new non-credit course in squad, will Jeam with Ralph Bru- clair, surgery; and Dr. Felda conversational German will be ad- met in support of the affirma- Hightower, surgical diagnosis at ded to the German department's tive. The query concerns the the prison hospital. curriculum meeting for the first union of Western Hemisphere na- tions. To Senior Schools time at 7:15 next Tuesday night, Dr. H. M. Vann said most of and every Tuesday and Thursday To Enter Many Events the members of the second year night thereafter, Professor R. . B. Many other events will be en· class have been appointed to se- Browning announced last week. tered by Wake Forest men. Coach nior medical schools, and that "The class is to be limited to Zon Robinson has selected Bruce members of the first year class fifteen meu with an unusual in- Brown to compete with more than are making pians to live in Win- terest in German," Professor a score other speakers in stimu- next yellll". All the Browning said. Men who enter lating group discussion. Ralph positions in the 1941-42 class are t:Re class must also have a high Brumet will enter extempore and rapidly being filled. srholastic average. No conversa- oratory· Dr. Vann is sending out new tiona! class in German has before Hatfield will represent Wake catalogues this week, announcing been offered at Wake Forest. Forest in after-dinner, radio ad- 1941-42 plans for the BoWman Thus far sixteen men have reg- dress, and problem solving con- Gray School and Baptist Hospital, istered for the· non-credit class, tests, while Goldberg is to com- and listing the teaching and in- but several of them will be able pete i:n impromptu, fGrmulating terne staffs of 43 physicians and See GERMAN, Page 4 See DEBATERS, Page 3 officials. They are: The Senior Teaching Class of Meredith College has been invited to be guests of the newly-organ- ized Wake Forest Education Club at a ball game and banquet later in the spring, according to Harold Bailey, president of the local group. and North Carolina's Future Teachers of America. '!'he Meredith teachers, number- ing some 94, will probably come to Wake Forest for an afternoon and evening late in April, it was said at the Monday night meet- ing of the Education group. Seventy-four potential Wake Forest teachers from all classes of the college attended the meet- ing· Dean D. 'B. Bryan and Pro- fessor J. L. Memory, Jr., profes- sors of Education, made brief talks. It was announced that no student hereafter will be allowed practice teaching privileges un- less he shows proficiency on an objecti<;e test given by the Educa. tion department. First of these tests, to become annual affairs, will be given on Monday night, March 10, at 7 o'clock in the So- cial Science Building. ·. Grade On Class Basis "Freshmen, sophomores, jun- iors, and seniors-any men who may possibly become teachers- should take this exam Monday," said Professor Memory. "Work of men of different classes will be g1•aded on an appropriate basis, and freshmen taking the test this year need not take it again." Professor Memory told of the requirements for different types of certificates for teachers. A "C" average is required of prac- tice teachers just as in medicine and law schools. In urging men to prepare them- selves in the fields of mathemat- ics and science, .Professor Mem- ory said: 1'he Bantroft-Whitney Com- pany, the Lawyers Co-operative Publishillg' Company, offers each year, to the student making the highest grade in certain specified courses a bound copy of the sec- tion in American Jurisprudence covering that particular subject. The names of the students earn- ing these awards and the subjects in which they made the highest grades, entitling them to the awards, are as follows: Group Named For the scholastic year 1939- 1940: Conflict of Laws, B1ln Carlin; Constitutional Law, Clifton Ever- ette; Corporations, Ben Carlin; Agency, 1\ielvin Yancey; Bank- ruptcy (Summer School 1940), Earl Shuford; Bills and Notes, Samuel Gantt, Jr.; Evidence, Ben Carlini Contracts, Robert Scott. J. E. Tate, Jr., received a copy of Ballentine's Law Dictionary for making the highest grade in the course in Legal Bibliography. For the scholastic year 1940- 1941, fhst semester: Constitutional Law, Melvin Yan- cey; Corporations, Earl Shufopd; Agency and Partnership, Robert Scott. The awards in the courses in Conflict . of Laws, Contracts, Equity, Evidence and Legal Bib- liography will not be made until this Spring, these courses either running through both semesters or being offered only in the Spring semester. New Awards "There are more calls for men to teach these subjects than any others. Of course there are good chances for men in other fields to receive positions, but there is a scarcity of math and science teach. ers.'' Several new awards are being added this Spring to thooe offer- ed in the past, The Harrison Company of Atlanta, Georgia, is Gffering a free copy of Jerome's "Criminal Code and Digest" to the first-year student who com- pletes his or her first year in law school with the ltighest general g1·ade average in the first-year clru;s. This book is widely used in practice in North Carolina and constitutes a valuable part of ev- ery North Carolina lawyer's li- brary .. Dean Bryan in his talk answer- See TEACHERS, Page 3 Dr· Kitchin medicine; Dr. C. Gulley Reviews Unwritten College History Isbell A Captain As he is a reserve captain in the army, Dr, Isbell will be asked to serve for one year, the period subject to extension at the discre- tion o.f army officials. Though he does so without a. grant of leave of absence from the college board of trustees, Dr- Githens goes with the express permission of President Kitchin, who has indicated that he feels confident of the board's approval of his action, Dr. Githens' work will be di- vided up among the other mem· bers of the staff of the physics· department for the rest of this school year, though an effort will be made to secure a substitute by next Fall. No arrangements· have as yet been made ·for the assumption of Dr. Isbell's work. In leaving to asswne his duties at Chanute Field, Dr. Githens says, he regrets that he will have to give up physical research work which he had planned for this Spling and for which he had ar· ranged to borrow $500 worth of equipment from the physics de· partment of. the University of North Carolina. He also regrets, he says, that he will have to forego for the time being the pleasure of living in his new home, which has just been com- pleted. Wife To Follow His wife will follow him to Cha- nute field . sometime this coming June, Dr. Githens says. It is possible that before re- porting for service at Tampa. Dr. Isbell will spend about a month at the Chemical Warfare School at Edgewood, Md., taking a special air course (he has already taken almost as many aviation courses as the average air corps officer). Dr. Isbell .served with aviation units in Texas in 1918, with the aviation division of the Texas National Guard in the S'UIDmer of 1926, and was attached to chemical units of the GHO Air Force soon after receiving his Ph· D. degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1931. He has received three calls to active duty since last November, but in each case deferment has been granted until this coming June. Though the schedule is not yet complete, teams which thus far have · signed for the tournament are from the following high schools: Lee Edwards High School, Asheville; Central High, Charlotte; Durham Senior High; Enfield Hig111; Fayetteville; Greensboro Senior High; Green- ville; Hamlet; Hendersonville; High Point; Kannapolis; Kinston; Lenoir; Lexiligton; Monroe; North Wilkesboro; Hugh Morson High, Raleigh; Methodist Orphanage, Raleigh; Needham Broughton High, Raleigh; Reids- ville; Roanoke Rapids; Rocky Mount; Salisbury; Sanford; Wake Forest; Wilmington; Hanes High, Winston-Salem; and Gray High, Winston-Salem. C. Carpenter, dean and pathology; Dr. Camillo Artom, bioche.mistry; Dr. Howard Bradshaw, surgery; *----------------------* Dr. Harold Brown, preventive I The American Law Book Com- pany, of Brooklyn, New York, .is also adding to the list of awards See STANSBURY, Page 3 James Gilliland, law student and veteran of the debate team here last year, returned to the DAVIS-HARRIS medicine; Dr. L. J. Butler, pedia- Dr. Needham Y. Gulley, Dean tries; Dr. Tinsley Harrison, Emeritus of the Law School, on medicine; Dr. E. S. King, bacteri- Monday and Wednesday of this clogy; Dr. James P. Rosseau, week has been, to the delight oi radiology; Dr. de Talma Valk, the chapel-goers, remm1scmg clinical surgery; Dr. Herbert M. about the "leaves in the unwritten Va.nn, anatomy; Dr. Herbert S. book of the history of this local- Wells, physiology and pharmacol- ity," relating many of the inci- ogy; Mrs. Herbert S. Wells, dents and interesting facts about' dietetics; Dr. George T. Harrill, Wake Forest College and its sur- I Jr., medicine; Dr. Robert B. Law- roundings in the year 1875, when I son, pediatrics. he entered as a freshman. Other M:l)mbers Dr. Gulley in that year was the Dr. J. M. Little, physiology and only ·passenger from Clayton to Ferd Davis, editor of Old Go\d Dr- Frank R. Lock, I _spent the and Black last semester and the obstetrics and gynecology; Dr. Amvmg wtth ftve other new· latter part of the 1939-40 school ·Roland E. Miller, anatomy; Dr. ishes'' about .eleven o'clock on term·, 8lld Selma. Ann Harris, Robert P. Morehead, pathology; January 15, he stepped off into daughter of Mrs. Jack Harris of Dr. Nelson N. Webster, obstetrics red mud, a result of the January Wake Forest and the late Mr. and gynecology; Dr. William AI- thaw. Harris, were married in Bennetts- len, medicine; Dr. John K. Pepper, The Dean Emeritus then poured ville, South Carolina, February 1, roentgenology; Dr. Frederick Tay- forth vivid pictures of the town it was announced this week. lor, medicine; Dr. W. ·C. Thomas, as it looked when he !lrrived. On Mrs. Davia, who was a fresh- pathology; Dr. Paul Whitaker, North Main Street, which is Fac- man here last fall, does not plan medicine; L. L. Chaitain, physiol· ulty Avenue, there were a mass to resume her studies immediate- ogy and pharmacology; Dr· C. N. of weeds and a narrow wagon ly· Mr. Davis, who received the Herndon, Jr., genetics; Dr. James trail which led north, turning B. S. degree here last year and F. Marshal, surgery and anatomy; northeast diagonally to where wa& working on the_M:. A. degree Dr. John Reece, pathology and Mrs, <:;arlyle 'IlOW IJives. Then last fall, withdrew from 'sChool Dr. Howard M. ,Star. were only two houses on the right daring the past semester; See MEDICINE, Page 4 side of the street, the Simmons DR. N. GULLEY residence where the fraternity house now is, and the home of the Misses Hicks on the site of the present Baptist parsonage. On the left side of the street were a few .dilapidated cottages and the old Brewer home, the "most natural home in Wake For- est-'' The Timberlake dwelling was in a state of construction, the Timberlakes and Dr. Taylor and his wife living in a house farther up the street. West Side Of On the west side of the campus was the home of the widow Wait, whose husband was not related to the first president but who was brought here by him. Dr. Brooks and his family lived on the north- west of the campus, while ·Dr. W ers lived on the other cor- ner ot' he west side. The home occupying the location of the president's home was that of Dr. Wingate. On and on Dr. Gulley travelled, bringing portraits of Wake For- est long before the fathers of most of the audience were born. He remembered the old Battle House and the Raven House; he let his listeners see the hotel operated by Major Dixon and the house of Addison Purefoy. Inter- estingly he asserted that James Purefoy was the largest property See GULLEY, Page 3 BINKLEY APPOINTED FOR PEACE SOCIETY Dr. 0. T. Binkley of the Wake Forest Religion Department has been appointed on a North Caro- lina Conscientious Objectors' Committee of five members, ac- cording to Dr. Howard K. Beale, of the U. N. C. Department of History. Other appointees in- clude Dean Elbert Russell of Duke and Dean Beittel of Guilford College. Members of the commit- tee are to act . as adTisors for C. O.'s throughout the state. Dr. Beale, according to Charles Freeman, · head of a local peace group, is preparing a form letter to send to any conscientious ob· jectors who request it, stating the provisions of the C. 0. act, and advising procedures. As soon as the letter is released, copies can be had from Freeman. :Members of Peace Service Fel- lowship, a group students meeting weekly for discussion of pacifism as an alternative to war, are in toueh with the committee. campus this week-a full-fledged ensign of the United States Navy. En route to China, by way of Wake Forest, Gilliland explained that he had spent ninety days aboard the illinois, training ship at New York, in preparation for his duties as a reserve officer with the Navy-now spread in full regalia in view of possible war-threats from Japan. Scott Leaves Sunday night John Scott, grad- uate of Wake Forest in 1939 and a member of the News and Obser- ver (Raleigh) staff as a photog- rapher since June of the same year, left Raleigh for New York where he will take up the ninety- diaiy training service. Scott will also be an ensign in the reserv- ists ranks. While a student at Wake For. est Scott played an important role in gaining an All-American rank for the 1939 yearbook, which was edited by Carl Dull of Winston-Salem. Scott was pho- tographer for the annual. Only See ARMY, Page 4

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Page 1: FOnE.Language Meet Comes April19 . issued by editor Ashburn yes· terday. The price for an extra Howler is $5.00, o and names will be printed on the yearbooks for fifty cents extra

. ,

t.

\

-.,.

1'· '!-

...

' - '

,W.AJCE· FOnE. · L\ >J... vV.Ll.J!•· LIBRARY ...

. '_.,; .-.. .. . ' ,~.

-, .. . .. . .".

EDITORIAlS- .... ··. . ' - ,- .

BRA VERY AND HATS . . . . . . BRAINS FO;R DEFENf)E

·-n:: . .. ' .. - . .-. . .UU ur

MONOGRAM CONCERT

IS SCHEDULED.

FORMARCH15

WAiEFOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, MARCH 7,1941 PRICE: TEN CENTS PER COPY

'Over 30 School TeaJils Will Vie·

. . .

· ForDe~ate Cup · Gov. Broughton to Award

Trophy to Tournament' · Winner April .26

· WPTF TO AIR FINALS ..,-,--

Meet to Feature Five Oth­er Contests Besides

Debates

· Over thirty high schools will contest for the silver loving cup

Dr. Githens and Dr. ·Isbell Are Called by Government

for National Defense Work Physics Profesor to Leave in Little Over Week for

Illinois; Teacher of Chemistry Departs In June For Florida

. The national defense program reached home to Wake Forest twice during the past two weeks and enlisted from the college two members of its faculty, Dr. Sherwood Githens, Jr., assistant professor of physics, and !Yr. Nevill Isbell, associate professor of

« ~hemistry.

·. which Governor J. · :M •. Broughton will personally . award, when · the third annual North. Carolina Speech .and Debate ·Tournament meets here April 24-26, Professor Zon Rob.inson this week announc· ed.

. ··· . NG Visions· of a new ·fraternity loouse are uppermost in the minds of Phi Rho Sig~a medical fraterni· . EARL J PLANNJ . : ty as representatives from the medical and academic :lasses, . shown above! examm~ tloo~ pia~ of ~ tentative·new home, the well-lmown P; H. Hanes residence·near the Bowman Gray medical school and Baptist Hospital In. Winston Salem. ·Phi Rho Sigma. representatives who recently went to Winston-Salem in the interest of the ne'!' home are: (left to nght) Earl Hamrick Jr., Bob CUrrin, Jim Coehran, Wyan Washburn, president; Nelso~ Thoma~, see~tary; Bill Hoggard, D~. H. _M. ~an~, faculty sponsor; Fletcher Carver, George Fisher, Auley Crouch,, Pan Hell~c Council; Miles Hudson, Banks Hankins, Bd! Shields, L, F. Hart and John Thompson. Final approval of lease terms IS ex~ted m the next few days,

Dr. Githens goes in a little over a week to the Army Air Corps Technical School at Chanute Field, Rantoul Ill., to become an instructor in aircraft electrical systems, and Dr; Isbell will re· -------------*port for duty about June l to the

Stansbury Lists Award Winners

13econd Chemical Company Ser­vice (Aviation) at Tampa, Fla., with which he will do extensive work looking toward the protec­tion of the civil and military pop­ulations of the country against possible chemical attacks in the event 11f war,

The high school· teams, at least six more than those who met here last year, will participate in four- rounds of preliminary debate before the final contestants are decided upon, .

" Two Queries

Med School Starts· Final· Lap Before Moving Away

Hurry! A "last·call'' for students who

want extra Howlers or printed name on their year book, to file their applications now, was

Teachers Invite Meredith Guests

Students To Receive An­nual Prizes of La~

Volumes

Dr· D. F. Stansbury, Dean of the Law School, announced this week the names· of students who in the past year have earned the awards offered each year by the Lawyer's Co-operative Publillh: ing Company, the Bancroft-Whit­ney Company, publishers of American Jurisprudence, one of the latest legal works of its kind now available.

At the present time it is thought that Dr. Githens will serve at Chanute Field for the rest of this school year and all of next only. Should the "national crisis" become more acute, how­ever, it is probable that he will be required to serve for a longer time.

Two queries will be argued. . One is the state question "Re­solyed: that the United States should adopt a policy ·requiring military training of all . able-bod­ied men before they reach the age of twenty-three." The national high schoof query may also be used-"Resolved: that the power of the federal government should

. Cornerstone of New Gray

Building to Be Laid. ·onApril16

*'

Language Meet Comes April19

. issued by editor Ashburn yes· terday. The price for an extra Howler is $5.00, o and names will be printed on the yearbooks for fifty cents extra. Students desiring extra books or printed names may see either Norvell K, Ashburn or Business ma)la· ger James Early this week.

Girls' Education Class To See Ball Game, Attend

Banquet

be increased·" · Raleigh's Station WPTF will

broadcast the finals of the tourna­ment from 8 to 9 p. m. on April 26 .. It will be in the radio studio that Governor Broughton will present the loving cup, awarded by him three years ago, to the winning team.

Sigma Pi Alpha Will Hold Nation-Wide Convention

At Wake Forest

The Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest College this week moved briskly into the final quarter of work to be done on the Wake Forest campus, be­fore moving into . the $1,000,000 medical schoGl and hospital plant Convention-day plans were dis-

The J. Rice Quisenbury Memori­al Loving Cup, given in honor of Wake Forest's former debate coach, will also be awarded to the high school· team which has taken part in the largest number of debates previous to the tourna­ment.

Other Contests In addition to debating, five

other speech contests will be fea­tured; They are ·oratory; extem­pore speaking, impromptu talks, declamations, and after dinner speeches. In former tournaments only oratory and extempore speaking have been on the pro-gram. . · 'So that high school debaters can observe methods, an exhibi­tion match will be given by the Wake Forest and·· the Virginia In­tennant College squads.

"The purpose of the North Car­olina Speech and Debate ToUl'lla­inent," Pr<~fessor Robinson said, "is to encourage modern types of extempore debating as opposed to the stilted declamatory debate style so ·often encountered, and to extend the area <~f speech activ­ity to include newer types of speech contests."

Winners Last Year Judges for the tournament will

be college debate coaches and ex­perienced collegiate team mem­bers. The contest was won by Needham Broughton High School of Raleigh last year. Both of the winning debaters, M e 1 vi l I e Broughton and Vance Swift, are enrolled as freshmen here this year.

at Winston-Salem after June 1. cussed at a Tuesday night meet-Actual ·moving of some parts of ing of the local meeting of Sigma

the school and equipment will be- Pi Alpha honorary modern Ian­gin shortly after April 16 when guage fraternity. The organiza­the corneretone Gf the new Bow- tion's national conclave will be man Gray medical school building- held here on April 19, with Dr. H. will be laid with impressive cere- D. Parcell, president, in charge of monies. Complete plans for the ceremonies.

Deacon Debaters In Hickory Meet

To Compete In South At· Iantic and Southeastern

Tournaments cornerstone ceremony will be re· Decision that Wake Forest be leased in a few days by Dr. C. C. the. 1941 host to the modern lan·

' h h Members of the Wake Forest Carpenter, dean, ;w o was ere guage convention came last ye~r for several conferences this week. with the electicm of Dr. Parcell. debate squad, returning Sunday

Equipment" Rod Buie, president of Sigma from a tour of western North During the week orders and Pi Alpha's Wake Forest fraterni- Carolina featured b! . a ti~ound-ta-

. ble broadcast ongma ng in contracts for thousands of dollars ty, announced Wednesday that 25 · . worth of equipment for the new men had been initiated in cere- Asheville, head~d back wes~ early school were approved by ·depart- mohies following the meeting· yesterday mornmg- for. HI_ckory, mental heads here at Wake Forest Tuesda~' night. ·The initiation wher7 they are competmg_ m the and in Winston-Salem. Most of took place in the Philomathesian combmed South A:lantic and the equipment will be installed Hall. Other officers of the. group Southeastern Foren:lc ~ourna-dUI'I·ng the su'.mmer. t F d Eas vice ments· The tourney, m which are

. presen were: re on, • rep;esented some thirty or forty 1\<Iembers of the second year president; H. D. Parcell, treasur-• · colleges and universities from

medical elass are this week get- er; and W. A. Gordanier, secre-ting a real taste of clinical medi- tary. throughout the South, will con-cine as their schedule calls for Weekly meetings will be held tinue through Saturday. work three afternoo.ns per week throughout the rest of the spring Returning to his home town in Rex and Mary Elizabeth hos- in order to prepare for the con- will be Weston Hatfield, ranking pitals and the State Prison hos- vention, Buie said. debater of the squad, who with pital. Raleigh physicians who are Bob Goldberg, president of the teaching the class include Dr .. J. student body, will argue the nega-J. Combs, •physical diagnosis; Dr. BROWNING ADDS NEW tive side of the Pi Kappa Delta Chaui~cy Royster, general medi- NIGHT GERMAN CLASS question. Bruce Brown, freshman cine; Dr. Ivan Proctor, ob.stetries who has 'risen rapidly on the and gynecology; Dr. G<lrdon Sin- A new non-credit course in squad, will Jeam with Ralph Bru-clair, surgery; and Dr. Felda conversational German will be ad- met in support of the affirma­Hightower, surgical diagnosis at ded to the German department's tive. The query concerns the the prison hospital. curriculum meeting for the first union of Western Hemisphere na-

tions. To Senior Schools time at 7:15 next Tuesday night,

Dr. H. M. Vann said most of and every Tuesday and Thursday To Enter Many Events the members of the second year night thereafter, Professor R. . B. Many other events will be en· class have been appointed to se- Browning announced last week. tered by Wake Forest men. Coach nior medical schools, and that "The class is to be limited to Zon Robinson has selected Bruce members of the first year class fifteen meu with an unusual in- Brown to compete with more than are making pians to live in Win- terest in German," Professor a score other speakers in stimu­sto~-Salem next yellll". All the Browning said. Men who enter lating group discussion. Ralph positions in the 1941-42 class are t:Re class must also have a high Brumet will enter extempore and rapidly being filled. srholastic average. No conversa- oratory·

Dr. Vann is sending out new tiona! class in German has before Hatfield will represent Wake catalogues this week, announcing been offered at Wake Forest. Forest in after-dinner, radio ad-1941-42 plans for the BoWman Thus far sixteen men have reg- dress, and problem solving con­Gray School and Baptist Hospital, istered for the· non-credit class, tests, while Goldberg is to com­and listing the teaching and in- but several of them will be able pete i:n impromptu, fGrmulating terne staffs of 43 physicians and See GERMAN, Page 4 See DEBATERS, Page 3 officials. They are:

The Senior Teaching Class of Meredith College has been invited to be guests of the newly-organ­ized Wake Forest Education Club at a ball game and banquet later in the spring, according to Harold Bailey, president of the local group. and North Carolina's Future Teachers of America.

'!'he Meredith teachers, number­ing some 94, will probably come to Wake Forest for an afternoon and evening late in April, it was said at the Monday night meet­ing of the Education group.

Seventy-four potential Wake Forest teachers from all classes of the college attended the meet­ing· Dean D. 'B. Bryan and Pro­fessor J. L. Memory, Jr., profes­sors of Education, made brief talks. It was announced that no student hereafter will be allowed practice teaching privileges un­less he shows proficiency on an objecti<;e test given by the Educa. tion department. First of these tests, to become annual affairs, will be given on Monday night, March 10, at 7 o'clock in the So­cial Science Building.

·. Grade On Class Basis "Freshmen, sophomores, jun­

iors, and seniors-any men who may possibly become teachers­should take this exam Monday," said Professor Memory. "Work of men of different classes will be g1•aded on an appropriate basis, and freshmen taking the test this year need not take it again."

Professor Memory told of the requirements for different types of certificates for teachers. A "C" average is required of prac­tice teachers just as in medicine and law schools.

In urging men to prepare them­selves in the fields of mathemat­ics and science, .Professor Mem­ory said:

1'he Bantroft-Whitney Com-pany, the Lawyers Co-operative Publishillg' Company, offers each year, to the student making the highest grade in certain specified courses a bound copy of the sec­tion in American Jurisprudence covering that particular subject. The names of the students earn­ing these awards and the subjects in which they made the highest grades, entitling them to the awards, are as follows:

Group Named For the scholastic year 1939-

1940: Conflict of Laws, B1ln Carlin;

Constitutional Law, Clifton Ever­ette; Corporations, Ben Carlin; Agency, 1\ielvin Yancey; Bank­ruptcy (Summer School 1940), Earl Shuford; Bills and Notes, Samuel Gantt, Jr.; Evidence, Ben Carlini Contracts, Robert Scott. J. E. Tate, Jr., received a copy of Ballentine's Law Dictionary for making the highest grade in the course in Legal Bibliography.

For the scholastic year 1940-1941, fhst semester:

Constitutional Law, Melvin Yan­cey; Corporations, Earl Shufopd; Agency and Partnership, Robert Scott. The awards in the courses in Conflict . of Laws, Contracts, Equity, Evidence and Legal Bib­liography will not be made until this Spring, these courses either running through both semesters or being offered only in the Spring semester.

New Awards

"There are more calls for men to teach these subjects than any others. Of course there are good chances for men in other fields to receive positions, but there is a scarcity of math and science teach. ers.''

Several new awards are being added this Spring to thooe offer­ed in the past, The Harrison Company of Atlanta, Georgia, is Gffering a free copy of Jerome's "Criminal Code and Digest" to the first-year student who com­pletes his or her first year in law school with the ltighest general g1·ade average in the first-year clru;s. This book is widely used in practice in North Carolina and constitutes a valuable part of ev­ery North Carolina lawyer's li­brary ..

Dean Bryan in his talk answer­See TEACHERS, Page 3

Dr· Kitchin medicine; Dr. C.

Gulley Reviews Unwritten College History

Isbell A Captain As he is a reserve captain in

the army, Dr, Isbell will be asked to serve for one year, the period subject to extension at the discre­tion o.f army officials.

Though he does so without a. grant of leave of absence from the college board of trustees, Dr­Githens goes with the express permission of President Kitchin, who has indicated that he feels confident of the board's approval of his action,

Dr. Githens' work will be di­vided up among the other mem· bers of the staff of the physics· department for the rest of this school year, though an effort will be made to secure a substitute by next Fall. No arrangements· have as yet been made ·for the assumption of Dr. Isbell's work.

In leaving to asswne his duties at Chanute Field, Dr. Githens says, he regrets that he will have to give up physical research work which he had planned for this Spling and for which he had ar· ranged to borrow $500 worth of equipment from the physics de· partment of. the University of North Carolina. He also regrets, he says, that he will have to forego for the time being the pleasure of living in his new home, which has just been com­pleted.

Wife To Follow His wife will follow him to Cha­

nute field . sometime this coming June, Dr. Githens says.

It is possible that before re­porting for service at Tampa. Dr. Isbell will spend about a month at the Chemical Warfare School at Edgewood, Md., taking a special air course (he has already taken almost as many aviation courses as the average air corps officer).

Dr. Isbell . served with aviation units in Texas in 1918, with the aviation division of the Texas National Guard in the S'UIDmer of 1926, and was attached to chemical units of the GHO Air Force soon after receiving his Ph· D. degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1931.

He has received three calls to active duty since last November, but in each case deferment has been granted until this coming June.

Though the schedule is not yet complete, teams which thus far have · signed for the tournament are from the following high schools: Lee Edwards High School, Asheville; Central High, Charlotte; Durham Senior High; Enfield Hig111; Fayetteville; Greensboro Senior High; Green­ville; Hamlet; Hendersonville; High Point; Kannapolis; Kinston; Lenoir; Lexiligton; Lumbe~on; Monroe; North Wilkesboro; Hugh Morson High, Raleigh; Methodist Orphanage, Raleigh; Needham Broughton High, Raleigh; Reids­ville; Roanoke Rapids; Rocky Mount; Salisbury; Sanford; Wake Forest; Wilmington; Hanes High, Winston-Salem; and Gray High, Winston-Salem.

C. Carpenter, dean and pathology; Dr. Camillo Artom, bioche.mistry; Dr. Howard Bradshaw, surgery; *----------------------* Dr. Harold Brown, preventive I

The American Law Book Com­pany, of Brooklyn, New York, .is also adding to the list of awards

See STANSBURY, Page 3 James Gilliland, law student

and veteran of the debate team here last year, returned to the

DAVIS-HARRIS

medicine; Dr. L. J. Butler, pedia- Dr. Needham Y. Gulley, Dean tries; Dr. Tinsley Harrison, Emeritus of the Law School, on medicine; Dr. E. S. King, bacteri- Monday and Wednesday of this clogy; Dr. James P. Rosseau, week has been, to the delight oi radiology; Dr. A· de Talma Valk, the chapel-goers, remm1scmg clinical surgery; Dr. Herbert M. about the "leaves in the unwritten Va.nn, anatomy; Dr. Herbert S. book of the history of this local­Wells, physiology and pharmacol- ity," relating many of the inci­ogy; Mrs. Herbert S. Wells, dents and interesting facts about' dietetics; Dr. George T. Harrill, Wake Forest College and its sur- I Jr., medicine; Dr. Robert B. Law- roundings in the year 1875, when I son, pediatrics. he entered as a freshman.

Other M:l)mbers Dr. Gulley in that year was the Dr. J. M. Little, physiology and only ·passenger from Clayton to

Ferd Davis, editor of Old Go\d phar~cology; Dr- Frank R. Lock, I Ral:~h, wh~re h~ _spent the ~ight. and Black last semester and the obstetrics and gynecology; Dr. Amvmg wtth ftve other new· latter part of the 1939-40 school ·Roland E. Miller, anatomy; Dr. ishes'' about .eleven o'clock on term·, 8lld Selma. Ann Harris, Robert P. Morehead, pathology; January 15, he stepped off into daughter of Mrs. Jack Harris of Dr. Nelson N. Webster, obstetrics red mud, a result of the January Wake Forest and the late Mr. and gynecology; Dr. William AI- thaw. Harris, were married in Bennetts- len, medicine; Dr. John K. Pepper, The Dean Emeritus then poured ville, South Carolina, February 1, roentgenology; Dr. Frederick Tay- forth vivid pictures of the town it was announced this week. lor, medicine; Dr. W. ·C. Thomas, as it looked when he !lrrived. On

Mrs. Davia, who was a fresh- pathology; Dr. Paul Whitaker, North Main Street, which is Fac­man here last fall, does not plan medicine; L. L. Chaitain, physiol· ulty Avenue, there were a mass to resume her studies immediate- ogy and pharmacology; Dr· C. N. of weeds and a narrow wagon ly· Mr. Davis, who received the Herndon, Jr., genetics; Dr. James trail which led north, turning B. S. degree here last year and F. Marshal, surgery and anatomy; northeast diagonally to where wa& working on the_M:. A. degree Dr. John Reece, pathology and Mrs, <:;arlyle 'IlOW IJives. Then last fall, withdrew from 'sChool bacteriolo~W; Dr. Howard M. ,Star. were only two houses on the right daring the past semester; See MEDICINE, Page 4 side of the street, the Simmons

DR. N. Y· GULLEY

residence where the fraternity house now is, and the home of the Misses Hicks on the site of the present Baptist parsonage. On the left side of the street were a few . dilapidated cottages and the old Brewer home, the

"most natural home in Wake For­est-'' The Timberlake dwelling was in a state of construction, the Timberlakes and Dr. Taylor and his wife living in a house farther up the street.

West Side Of Cam~s On the west side of the campus

was the home of the widow Wait, whose husband was not related to the first president but who was brought here by him. Dr. Brooks and his family lived on the north­west c~ner of the campus, while ·Dr. W ers lived on the other cor­ner ot' he west side. The home occupying the location of the president's home was that of Dr. Wingate.

On and on Dr. Gulley travelled, bringing portraits of Wake For­est long before the fathers of most of the audience were born. He remembered the old Battle House and the Raven House; he let his listeners see the hotel operated by Major Dixon and the house of Addison Purefoy. Inter­estingly he asserted that James Purefoy was the largest property

See GULLEY, Page 3

BINKLEY APPOINTED FOR PEACE SOCIETY

Dr. 0. T. Binkley of the Wake Forest Religion Department has been appointed on a North Caro­lina Conscientious Objectors' Committee of five members, ac­cording to Dr. Howard K. Beale, of the U. N. C. Department of History. Other appointees in­clude Dean Elbert Russell of Duke and Dean Beittel of Guilford College. Members of the commit­tee are to act . as adTisors for C. O.'s throughout the state.

Dr. Beale, according to Charles Freeman, · head of a local peace group, is preparing a form letter to send to any conscientious ob· jectors who request it, stating the provisions of the C. 0. act, and advising procedures. As soon as the letter is released, copies can be had from Freeman.

:Members of Peace Service Fel­lowship, a group <~f students meeting weekly for discussion of pacifism as an alternative to war, are in toueh with the committee.

campus this week-a full-fledged ensign of the United States Navy.

En route to China, by way of Wake Forest, Gilliland explained that he had spent ninety days aboard the illinois, training ship at New York, in preparation for his duties as a reserve officer with the Navy-now spread in full regalia in view of possible war-threats from Japan.

Scott Leaves Sunday night John Scott, grad­

uate of Wake Forest in 1939 and a member of the News and Obser­ver (Raleigh) staff as a photog­rapher since June of the same year, left Raleigh for New York where he will take up the ninety­diaiy training service. Scott will also be an ensign in the reserv­ists ranks.

While a student at Wake For. est Scott played an important role in gaining an All-American rank for the 1939 yearbook, which was edited by Carl Dull of Winston-Salem. Scott was pho­tographer for the annual. Only

See ARMY, Page 4

Page 2: FOnE.Language Meet Comes April19 . issued by editor Ashburn yes· terday. The price for an extra Howler is $5.00, o and names will be printed on the yearbooks for fifty cents extra

P,AGE TWO

EuGENE Brussm - - -- - - -- - Editor ToM I. DAVIS - - - - - - Business Manager

Editorial Staff: Robert Gallimore, .Bill Ayers, N.eil

- ·:;·-

OLD. GQLDAND BLACK ' .: ".'

...

Sandersto Speak to Phi's Monday . Intramural athletie!f crowded ter' are diSC)lSSi~g.tlie possibili- .. '

oth1lr events off· the. "fraternity ties of a large publieation, ·· .: . · · scbedule this week as mid-season · ~ · '· · · Campus Sh~ts Takei{ ,.

-;," . · .. ·' ',.

Morgan, .Bill Williamson, Paul Early, Phil Sawyer, Elizabeth Jones, N.orvell Ashburn, Die~ Gallimore, Wyan Washburn, Robert Scott, Wes Hatfield, John McMillan, J. Dixon Davis, Wells ]\{orris, Phil Highfill, Fred Eason, H. L. Thompson.

ment of discouraging every kind of talent, ex­cept war talent, which policy has caused all the universi~ies to suspend operation and has de­ferred or abandoned all laboratory investiga­tion. Another reason for the shift is the policy of making it too hot for people who do things to enlighten mankind, and since we have open .arms for such people in our country-well, there you have it. By "such people" we mean scien­

Will Tell of Quaker Ef~ forts To Prevent

War of the Greek sports ·schedule was Delta Sigs defe~ted Gamma· Eta StUdent, Acorn's. Fi~st , .. 4

reached.· Pushed inte> the back- Gamma by a 13-17 score in a bas- ~ :, Combined. Issue · · ...... ,,.".'''· ground . W~re pJanS for sprini .ketliall ... game this week;:' !t'II.IUSi ·I . : :. ·, .. • _....;._

Sports Staff: Les Cansler, Sports Editor; Billy Primm; Dan Primm; Rod .Buie.

Business Staff; Wile)' T ay!or, Advertising Man­ager; Ralph Earnhardt, D. E. Ward, Walter Locl{hart, Barry Davis.

tists like Fermi at Columbia, De Bye at Cor- Guest speaker at the meeting'' of nell, and' Einstein at Princeton, all of whom are the Philomathesian Literary So-

ciety at seven. o'clock Monday Nobel Prize winners. Men like these have been . . . . . . night will be J. Olcutt Sanders, a defmlte mfluence m makmg th1s country the southern representative of the greatest promoter of scientific progress in the I American · Friengs Service Com­world, according to Dr. Speas, who has made an mittee. examination of research journals and discover- Mr· Sanders, who has been ac-

. I , tive in world peace efforts since ed that more than fifty per cent of the wor d s h" d t" f th u . . Is gra ua ton rom e mversJ-research is now conducted in this country. · ty of Texas two years ago, will

dances-which, by the way, are Redfern · .and · Gerald · ·Wallace · · · · · ·'··· · · · · · •· rapidly drawing near. Kappa Sig b .. rOke into the realJD. of uitra '<;tl'hUdE~in. ·iti.a.a·s.ntd. joint ·meeting of The • · · · , , .. The ·Acorn :staffs was.· · and Sigma Phi Ep.silon were ac- sports by witnessing a polo cluim- , at ?treridith: Tliursdny. after- · tive; the former in completing pionsmp game in Camden, S. C., · · · · . noon and ev.ening, with The Stu- . arrangements ·for -their District. oyer· th<l". week-end ... Members of ·· Conclave held here today lind to- the . lodge • are planning a po....,, dent beirig represented py tl!e ed­

- ·~ itor and staff members Neil Mer-morrow, the ·latter in entertaining for the· :;veek-end. gan, . R. oYal J.~rinin. g. s, .!lind .Bill lhe assistant to the. National .. · - •· Ayers. ' .····. Grand Secretary. G m Eta. G · • ·"d. · · · · am B. aroma IS C0n5J er- Jeimings ·made: seve:fal campUS.

ing plans for a houSe party March shots for possible co~~:f 'pictUres ' Pi Kappa Alpha of Wake For- 22 They re··c · tl · .; d · · _ · . . . en Y orgaillZe · a dim.· "ng the afternoc:iri,· .. · a_ nd also

est was· host to other chapters b k t b 11 t h" h h 1· as e a · eam w tc as P ay- took spme pictures· in . the· publi-of the state from State, C. arolina, d' 1 d · ·. th · t • e. severa .games unng e pas c_atio·. ns .office .and in the dating . · '· and Duke, at a Founders' Day k PI d · J E T t · J

But while we have been so kindly presented tell of the efforts of Quakers to · h ff find some definite alternative to

w1th these men free of c arge, our own e orts · H "t th t . h. . d Entered as second class matter January 22, 1916,

at the post office at Wal{e Forest, N,orth Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879.

. war. e wr1 es a m IS a -at progress are not to be overlooked m the cal- dress 1\Ionday night he will tell of

wee · · · e ge · _ • · a e, r., re- parlors,· all to . be considered for banquet held in the ballroom of turned. from Tallahassee, Florida, use on .the cover. Hotel Carolina in Raleigh last early this week where he· repre- . : · Copy ln . Saturday night. Celebration of d. h · Wak F I .

culation of the reasons for the shifting of the the Summer Work Camps of the power to American universities. These univer- Society of Friends, and ·wm stress sities are greatly responsible because of their the reconstruction work that the ambition to increase the available facilities for Quakers are carrying on in Eu-

sente · t e . ·e orest nterna- ·Much of . the copy has ah·eady · . . the frat's seventy· -third anniver- · 1 ·R 1a · tiOna . e tions Chili at its na- been turned .m, and' Thursday ey-: .. ·: sary- was attended by over 100 tional t'onvention·::: Cicero . Yow, ening members oi both art staffs ·. men, of which some 25 were mem- Jake Taylor, Rom Parker, and Bill were given assignments. · The:· bers of the Wake Forest chapter. Turner were . in Greensboro last members of the Acorn. art staffs· District President Zeb Long made k d Th t ded h · w ·

J:l~socialed G:>tleoiale Pres> rope. ... ·

Distribo ror of Sanders Writes wee -en ·• . ey a ten t e · are to. make the illustrations for

Colle5iate Di6est

those interested in research. Every large uni­versity now has an atom smasher among its lab­oratory equipment, and such universities as Cal­ifornia, Johns Hopkins, Columbia, and Prince­ton, and such institutes of technology as Massa­chusetts and California, just to mention a few, are getting the best talent in the world in their laboratories. Abo11t eighty of these institutions are, by means of a frank exchange of opinion and a general policy of friendly and zealous co­operation, as well as the encouragement of growth from within these institutions them­selves, establishing many records in research.

"Following in the wake of bombs and rifles throughout the whole of Europe is a quiet, unas­suming, but confident and thor­ough group who is doing its ut­most to bring comfort to the suf­fering and deserted," Sanders writes. "These Quaker groups are attempting to lay a founda­tion for a fair and just peace when the time comes."

the main speech of the evening· . c d Saturd · · h I. . ance on ay mg t. · · n the· stories written by The Stu~ . . ... Orchestras being contacted :for a recent moot . court session, derit staff and vice' versa.

Member of NoRTH CAROLINA INTERCOLLEGIATE

Pru=::ss AssOCIATION

R!PAESENT£0 FOR NATIONAl. A.ti\'ERTI$1NG PY

National Advertising Service, Inc. 0;/lege PubliJhers KepresentaJi•~

420 MAD1BOJII AVF!. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO • 80STtiJI • LOs AttOELIS • SAM fa,Ut:lli:CQ

BRAINS FOR DEFENSE -o--

For some time now we have eyed the na­tional defense program as a system for provid­ing work for the unemployed, as a program which seemed to draw from our midst men who were not particularly essential to any business; we have watched, almost unconsciously, as sev­eral students have been drawn from arocnd us to enter the Air Corps, the Naval Reserve, the Marine Service.

But not until this week has the realization struck home that the national defense program does not draft only immature school boys, un­employed men, or men who generally rate at the bottom of their respective fields. For this week it has been learned that two members of the Wake Forest faculty have been called to the de­fense of America. Dr. Githens will leave in a few days, and Dr. Isbell will leave in June, the knowledge and skill of both these men to con­tribute something to the protection of the coun­try.

Some of the skepticism prevailing in the minds of the people concerning practices of discrimination in the selection of men should now be removed. For the enlisting of these two men, who certainly have played important parts here, is evidence enough that not only is brawn being drafted, but also brains, the two combined to make an impregnable defense against any possible invasion. .

----ooo,----

BRAVERY AND HATS --a--

The bravest man in America revealed him­self this week. He turned out to be Associate justice Black of the United States Supreme Court. In an opinion.handed down Monday he said in part:

"Women do not b·uy hats. They most cer­tainly do not protect the wearer ~gainst rain or snow or cold.

"Virtually their sole function is to make t~e wearer happy in the thought that she has a beautiful thing which is in fashion. Here the emphasis should be on the word 'fashion', 1or no matter how beautify.!, if not in fashion the hat will not sell.

We are constantly heaping a lot of criticism on the heads of the Germans, but in some in-

stances we owe them our gratitude for being so liberal with their "brains." After all is said and done, that is something of which there will never be too much.

--~---,000------

NAMES :MAiffi SAD NEWS --0--

Among other interesting expressions to be found around a newspaper office there is one which goes something like this: "Names make

· news." Sometimes the news is good, sometimes bad, and sometimes the names add a tinge of suspicion to the news item.

There is a great, gradual tragedy in names. Last week, for instance, a delegation of Wake Forest boys went to Tallahassee, Fla. (thank the Lord for Florida), to attend an lnternation-

. al Relations Club convention. In this group were William Angell and Austin Lovin, both of whom reported to us several days ago the diffi­culty they had in "making any headway" with delegates of the opposite sex. "Why," they ex­plained, "when we would introduce ourselves and get around to asking them for dates, they always thought we were kidding them. All just because of our names: Angell and Lovin."

As ·ludicrous as the situation might have been in the case of these delegates, there are many other disadvantages in "not having the right name." For example, jeffrey Zilch enters

. a class at the first of a semester with Clarence Adams. Both men have intellects adjudged to be relatively equal. The stern professor enters the classroom, checks his roll records, proceeds

to seat the men in alphabetical order. Adams

the pring dance to be held in Dur- Pledge Bob Goldberg was adjudg- . Monday afternoon the editors . ham's Washington Duke Hotel ed insane. Recent · ·aCtivities in of both of the magazines are tO April 11-12 are Bill Vanden Dries, several lines, varying- from law to meet at Edwards : and ·;Broughton · and North Carolina's Johnny Sat- basketball, convinced the Gamnia Printing· Co.,· imd a.· dummy. will. terfield and li'reddy Johnson.· .In- brethren of his daffiness. lie drawn up and pictures sent to itiation rituals for ten pledges the engraver. The number . of · will be 1held late next week ... In- Kappa Sigma is· host today. to pages Will probably be limited to

Sanders, in sympathy with con­scientious objectors to military service, will be available for pri­vate conferences and will attempt to guide students who are facing problems in the light of world af-

tramurally speaking, the lodge is brothers · from State, Carolina, forty, although the eXpected copy thoroughly aroused. Many boys Davidson, Wofford, and South is likely to exceed ·this number. are participating in the games; Carolina who are in "\Vake .Forest No definite publication. date has losses this week were to Sig Ep ro· attend the District Conclave. been·. :set. Distribution of the and Kappa Alpha in basketball, Featured speaker will be Con- magazines, however, will come but Lambda Chi was defeated in gressmim Umpstead, Durham some tiiDe before March 29, when ping pong. man and Kappa Sig ... Dance for Meredith begins its spring vaca-

fairs. '" Sanders will also fill two speak­

ing engagements on Tuesday, March 11. A,t four o'clock in Room 103, Wait Hall, he will hold an open forum discussion on world affairs, and at 7:30 Tues­day night he will address , the Wake Forest Ministerial Confer­ence.

Special Series

Kappa Alphas have definitely decided the date for their spring dance-April 19. Place and or­chestra are not yet decided upon . . . Levin Culpepper, Wait Brewer and Carlton Pritchard led the ping pong men to three victories dur­ing the week, over PiKA, Sigma Pi, and Delta Sig ... The basket­ball quint doubled the score on PiKA Monday night by 21-10.

In an attempt to overcome the decrease in attendance which has Sigma Phi Epsilon has schedul­l"esulted , from numerous Monday ed its spring dance for March 29. night conflicts, the Philomathesi- It will be held with Kappa Sig an Literary Society last Monday and Bill Vanden Dries will play. night discussed plans for a spe- The hou.~e .is iu general looking cia! series of programs to fea- forward to Its house party eager­tore important speakers from· ly ··.Mark . D. Wilkins, assistant North Carolin and th South . to the National Grand Secretary,

a e tn "d"WkF d general arnve m a e orest yester ay Negotiations are under way a~d will stay throughout the week

W "th Rob ,.. 1 H b · t With the lodge. He came here. 1 er" . urn er, 1n erna- . , . . tiona! lawyer of Paris and Green- f~om Richmond; he s glVIng ~e Vl.lle wh · . S1g Eps some very helpful adVIce. , o 1s now sponsormg a . . . Federation of the World, to speak .. ·Sigma P1 and Alpha Kappa P1 on the campus at an early date. were defeated by the house in Humber, a graduate of Wake For- basketball games of the week. est's class of 1918, was an ardent Philomathesian and competed in several intercollegiate debates in behalf of the Phis.

Other men are being contacted. The Society plans to hold a smok­.er within the next three weeks which will be open to all students of the college.

AMERICAN MEDICAL TEST TO COME SOON

Alpha l{appa · Pi pledged Floyd Woody during the past week. Prexy Jimmy Cross is in the in­firmary with an attack of flu ... Dr. Sherwood Githens, faculty ad­viser, is leaving school in the near future to take over army du­ties ... the basket ball team lost to Kappa Sig on Monday night while the ping pong playe:z:s were de­feating Kalpha Alpha.

the spring will · c·ome on March 29 with the Sig Eps ·. . . Men in Greensboro last week-end were: Baldwin, Byrd; Cook, Helsabeck, Jennings, Walker, West, and Welch. W. C. was home base.

Sigma Pi pledged during last week Andy Chinchiolo, Stockton, Calif., boy, and· Charles Morris, Baltimore boy ... Quizzes, dance plans, and intramural basketball are keeping the Sigma Pis busy, they claim; · but they a1•e looking forward to putting on one of the

tion.

Chapel attendance has improved greatly since the dean announced thaf over-cuts won't be tolerated .

best spring dances ~ver h~ld. Van. den Dries · orchestra will play- in the. Crystal ·Ballroom of Durham's Washington.· Duke. In a special·· dispatch · to · the Old Gold .and Black, Johnny ·Walker made this notation: "Beautiful · ·women .. to. be present."

Forest .. Theatre WAKE FOREST, N. C.

!-••-··--·-··-·--·---.. -·--·-··-··..:....Q-·---·-··-Friday, March 7- I TU!!Sday, March 11-

.. BACK STREET" 1 Cash Award $25 or $5 Cha·rles Boyer I "The Trial of :Mary Dugan" .

Margaret Sullavan i Robert Young .... --·-··-··-·-·-·-··-··-· i Laraine Day Saturday, March 8-- · j~·--.. -·-----·--·

Double Feature •Wed., :March 12-'The Face Behind the Mask' t Bargain Day-lOc, 20c

Peter Lorre , "FREE AND EASY'' ''WYOMING WILDCAT" I Ruth Hussey

Don "Red" £airy 1 Robert Cummings · -u-•-••-•-~•-·-·-•-•-t I ,.., ___ ,_•-•--••-•-•--Monday, March 10- fThirrs., Fri., :Mar.13·14-

James Cagney· 'j '~SO ENDS OUR NIGH'J!'• Olivia DeHavilland j Fredric March

"Strawberry Blonde'' T Margaret Sullavan ---••-•-• • • ....... ••--•-~-••-••-~~~:-u-111-•.-•-::"""'•-••~-

MATINEE: 3:00 NIGHT: 7:00 & 9:00

usually takes the first seat-or certainly a seat H Dr. . M. Vann of the admis-on the front row, while Zilch must go to the sions committee of the Bowman rear of the classroom. Adams wants to make a Gray 1\fedical School of Wake good impression on the professor; he keeps Forest College today announced awake, smiles at jokes, looks sad in pathetic that all persons who wish to take

the :I.Iedical Aptitude Test of the stories, and is so intent on makjng a good im- Ameriean Medical Association pression that he §Ubconsciously absorbs a "pass- this spring should see him imme-ing" portion of the professor's oral wares, as a d(ateJy. The test will be given general rule. Poor Zilch can't hear half the here in a few weeks, and students time· the other half of the time he sits and 1 who wish to take it the first time, figh;s off sleep attacks, usually yielding to such or others who wish to repeat a

"In fact, these whims of fashion conjure up such oddities from a purely esthetic point of view that women's hats are a constant source of humor to the men of the nation. Nevertheless, as Mr. Justice Holmes has said, 'the taste of any public is not to be treated with contempt'.

Lambda Chi Alpha lost to Phi Rho Sigma but defeated Phi Chi in basket ball. Another even break came in ping pong when the paddle brothers defeated Sigma Pi and lost to Kappa Sig ... A pledge meeting was held last night . . . Primary question con­cerning the spring dance is to de­cide between Fred Johnson's or­chestra from Chapel Hill and oth­ers, including B. V. D .... A spe­cial bulletin from the national tells of the growth of chapter publications throughout the coun­try. Members of· the local chap-

former test, should see Dr. Vann attacks, and the whole world seems to be before Wednesday, March 12. against him. Finally, he gives up all hope of getting what the professor says, turns artist -:.;;:.:::.::;;:::;;:;;:::::.::.;:::.:: .. ;::: .. :: .. ;::: ... ::.::::.::; .. :. ::: .. :::. ;:;:;;:::;:::::;::::;::::::::. ::: .. : .. ::: •• : .. :::::::::;;:::;:::;;;~ and sketches rough portraits of some girl, is caught yawning by the professor and without a chance he is relegated to a "doubtful list."

RECORDINGS AND RECORDS

"Men may joke, but it is this curious quali­ty of 'fashion' which sells hats, and it is, there­fore, of great economic value. A woman buy­ing a hat will buy the hat she thinks to be most 'stylish' even though it be more expensive and of poorer quality than the others she sees. She · buys fashion, not goods."

We'll say, for example, that Zilch by some· miracle does graduate. Perhaps his father owns an apple orchard. He leaves dear old Pollyanna U. and applies at the Amalgamated Steel Com­pany for a job. The company puts his name on a waiting list-which is arranged alphabetically, and Zilch sits down to study his facial features in the reflection of a brass cuspidor in a recep­tion room of some sort. Mr. Rail, ~;~resident of the company, needs a man right off the bat­about three days later. He rushes in and _yells

for the secretary to get out the list of potential steel workers. He hurries down ~he list, know­ing that Amalgamated is losing money every minute. He comes to Horace Burnette, who seems to fit the bill pretty well-though not quite so weti as does jeffrey Zilch. Horace gets the job, and Mr. Rail speeds him on his way. Poor Jeffrey is still looking at the brass

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108 Fayetteville St.

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Maybe, one of these days when one of us may be on the Supreme Court bench, we may have the courage to say what we really think in this way. Until then we can only take off our masculine hats to .l'rl.r. Justice Black, and trem­ble in our socks for even having the temerity to quote him,

----oOo----

THANKS TO ADOLF --o-

Adolf's ambition seems to be overleaping itself and falling on t'other-said t'other being the U. S. A. The basis for our assertion is as follows (and it comes from Drs. Speas and Black and several scientific journals):

During the war industrial research-in physics and chemistry~has become ever in­creasingly centralized in American colleges, uni­versities, and other institutions, and has fallen to naught in the European countries engaged in war; especially is this· true in the case of Ger­many. One reason for this shifting of progress is obviously the policy of the German govern-

cuspidor. Such a consistent difference {with the ex­

ception of the Uncle Sam's grand lottery of 1940,41, --?) might have meant in years past the difference between the election of better lll.en for important offices. Where more than one candidate seeks an office, the names are generally listed in alphabetical order. Millions of careless voters check the first name on the list-for the sake of· convenience.

Names do make news.

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Page 3: FOnE.Language Meet Comes April19 . issued by editor Ashburn yes· terday. The price for an extra Howler is $5.00, o and names will be printed on the yearbooks for fifty cents extra

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· Clel.fisori_·:Ha.rlds:;.Wake- Another Defeat: R,acketmen Will Play - ' ' '·. ~ ; . .. - ' ·. ' . .

::•·,,..>. -~''lit;;.;,·~"n 11111"- 11,.~ . }.Jilf!ra·,ltrira ··.once 'again .clemson .has. hand-:*

. .. .. : . ·, . • .:·, . . . ' • · . .. . ' .' ed W~ke a f~otb~ll defeat.

··toa~lt··uaej;::i:~ourice$ Plans for Sch~I~wiae:1'6u~~ · Th~.'·~~~ however, it _isn't on ·; · . itament.ID:.Pmg. Pong; ·and Han.db~il (' Fo~ . the gl'IOJ.ron, but behmd · the

: . ', ':· . : , SJ,iootfug Contes~ !~ B(Held · .. . ~~;:·MarCh 18, Thomas Tinsley

.. ·.··· .. · .·. · ... · . .· . Rogers,erstwhileliliecoach of the . · , . By ROD BUIE ·•. . . . . Deaeoris, packs . his · grips · and .

. . • . . Si.gllla fhi Epsilon~~-: cllailipioriship •baS.ketball aggr.egatio~ heads for. Tigerto~, where he . '.;added 'another . vli.:tofy. to its rapldly~rising,string this week and .:pull down !his pay checks for. ··· .· tfg~te'ned_.·its .. hoid ori first.placein the Fraternity LeagueJn~ra~ teachii!g · Cle=on's forward Wail

liJliral ': race.:: Paced by Charlie ·Jiarvey and Joe Duncavage; with ··. tricks of the trade. Come

· .i4.<aO.Ii.8 poil}_ts r~pectively the champs pounded Sigma Pi into ri~~~s ~~s~~ -:!e:~~ ~::~ the · :~ubmissiim, 26_. to 11;_ . · . · .. · ; • . . · · In all, it' looks like a sad· day

: Jhe two . liled.' fpiternities •. split their initiation .games in for the 'Deacs. ·Rogers knows the ·.league piay. Ph( Chi, led by Claude Byerly with nine.points; Walker· system ,backwards _and ·.stopped Lambda. Chi 17-11, but Phi'Rho SigiJla fell before the forwar<L:, an? :should have little ·am· · · d ·tS-16 · · ·,• · · · ,. . trouble m deVIsmg a defense that s e. squa , . -11 t · th _, 1 . . . · . . . * m ..s op em . ~or severa years . ··Kappa, 4-!llha; celebrat~g .the · ·· · · · to. come.·.· In baseball, luckily, the return .of .Mel' Broughton tO their. · · _::: ·LaSt. ·Time . two teams don't meet. ·lineu~he had li~; ou:tcwitli a.

.. . :·cold-walked. over Pi' Kappa Al- .,

TOM·ROGERS

* As yet, the local athletic de­

partment has made no announce­ments concenung Rogers' succes­sor. Rumors, however, point to several men connected with teams .in North Carolina's Little Six.

17 Matches This Spring Trips Through South Carolina and Virginia Feature

· Schedule; Five Intersectional Battles Carded For Ambitious Deacons Coach Rogers was born August

26, 1910, in Hinton, W. Va. ,He attended -Hinton High. School, Wake Forest's ambitious tennis team will _play 17 matches Glenville Teachers College and this Spring, according to an official schedule released to the Old Duke University. At Glenvi11e, Gold and Black this week by Coach E. E. Folk . he ·:was an end on the football .. Two long trips are planned for the· racketmen during the team, a guard in basketball,· and seasori, one through South Carolina and another through Vir­third sacker in baseball. At Duke he was varsity end for three ginia, and five intersectional battles are carded. The squad will years and also saw duty at block- also participate in the Southern Conference Tennis Tournament ing back. He was named all- to be held in Durham 1'1lay 8, 9 and 10.

Southern in 1984. His coaching * The feature of the season will career began in 1985, when he be- ------------ be the Deacons' swing through came assistant freshman football football South Carolina early in April. coach at Duke. He came to Wake Besides meeting the strong·Pres-

: Forest in 1938, replacing Ellis Fy- byterian College netmen, state sal· lo'all is a long way off, but and Southeastern ch&nlpions, they

. : .. , .Pha; :'!1•11, and Kappa' Sigma,- · Coac)l' Tom. ~gers, ·. Demon. ·back , ·in· their· .. oid~time .. · ·form, Deacon line coach for the past whipped ·A:. K; Pi, 36c21, «nd Sig- thr~ years, made· his final for- .

T rackJ~ten ·off ·Movie Star May Baseball Squad that doesn't keep Wake Forest will play the. University of South from playing football. The Carolina club, which boasts a girl Deacons are scheduled ·to meet holding down the number four the University of Richmond singles position, Furman, and pos.

· .ma Pi 22~16,. in otl.lei: g~mes·: · · · ,.mal ap~arance . before. Wa~e . ln the N on~F.raterruty loopf the Forest lettermen . . last . night Home Economics.· Boys dropped a ·· when . h~- spoke . at the. special 35-26 decisio~ .. to College Hall ui J'arty iiven by Monog.;a;n. Club

, .the ~nly. game 'reported. · · . · for the college f~ulty •. He.goes . . Here are the'league -standings tO ClelllBon. College· next week,

· · · · · · · · · · where he :Will take o,:v:er line

For·. Two Meets · Feature Concert Opens Practice Adams · Leads Squad On Monogram, . Club Wires Greason Puts Squad Thru

Trip to Baltimore and -Jeanette MacDonald Long Batting Drill On

Washington For Appearance First Day

next Saturday afternoon in sibly The Citadel and Clemson. what should be a pretty good The complete schedule is as fol-practice game. lows:

There will be no kickoffs, ei- Mareh 21-Richmond, here; 25 ther after touchdowns or to -Leheigh, here; 28 - Boston start the second half, but the University, here; 31 - Bowdoin, rest will be orthodox football. here.

. through .Tuesday: · · . . . . .. . · Fraternit;, Leag' ue . ·.· ' , . eoaclrlng . duties· on the football. . . . . Equipment was issued Monday

' . staff, and he&ci ·coach's """ltion • Four members of the Wake That th b 1 t f Team · W . _L: PF PA .. -- - ere IS a possl 11 Y 0 to 35 hopefuls who reported ~o

Gates will be closed to spec- April 4-0pen; 5-Furman at tators. Greenville, S. C.; 7-Presbyteri­

.. Sig Eps. 3 ·0 . 87· 48 for the basebalf team. The party, Forest. ~ack team left yesterday Jeanette MacDon~Id, famous op- .Coach Murray Greason for the Kappa ·Alpha .2 .0 . 39 28 . wh!di featured Southern Dairy . for BaltlmQre, Md., where tomor- era star and moVIe actress, mak- o~ning baseball practice o:f the Teachers

··: : . ' ,' D.etta s;o.s 1 o 31 17 . productS-ice cream no doubt-.:.. row they ,will enter the University ing a personal appearance at the season. .. ,\'' .., ··was heldm · s·tudent'cen· ter. · of Maryland meet, the big event u Cl b rt· k · Phi Ch1' · 1 0 '7 .11 monogram u conce a wee · Coach Greason surprised every-.., · · which attracts teams from all f t · ht Continued from Page One

an at Clinton, S. C.; 8-South Carolina at Columbia, S. C.; 12-­South Carolina here; 15-Michi­gan, here; 19-Boston College, here; 21-N. C. State, here; 23 -V. M· I., Lexington, Va.; 24-Virginia at Charlottesville, Va.; 25-0pen; 26-Washington and J;.ee, at Lexington, Va.; 29-Duke, here.

.. :.

}

Kappa Sigma . 2 1 72 · 63 · · rom omorrow mg was an- one by sending his men through . PiKA ·' . · l. 1 · 33 37 CAMPUS· STATIONS. SILENT parts of the country. nounced Wednesday night by Paul a long batting practice which

G&nlmas 0. 1 . 17 31 Track Coach Phil . Utley has Waivers, ·president of the Mono- took up most of the afternoon. .Lambda· Chi 0 1 .11, 17 Wake' Forest's. ·two radio sta- picked the "cream of the crop" to gram Club. Tharnish, Ray, Vivian, Falkin-

, tio.ns, WSPE and WAKE, have represent Wake Forest in the big· · Miss . MacDonald will , pass b s C 1 k Phi Rho's 0 1 16 18 urg, p_arrow and · on ey too . . . ··sigina Pi . . 0 . 3 39 70 discontinued , regula1· broadcasts meet. Art Adams, number one· through Wake Forest a week turns on the mound. ··. -. . . 'AKPi. 0 3 55 89 and no\v air. their programs only distance man, will enter the two- from tomorrow, Waivers said, and Although the pitchers seem

ed the often-raised question, "Why Teach?" He pointed out the fine opportunities for service to mankind and the openings for enriching one's own personality.

In answering the assertions of some Wake Fo;r;est men who are 1·eported to have said that they would teach if no other . field opened to them, Dr. Bryan said:

May 5-Washington and Lee, here; 7-Duke at Durham; 8, 9, 10-Southern Conference Tourna-

,·,; : . Non~Fraternity League when the spirit moves them. mile rim. John "Eli" Galloway· he has wired her asking her if ·ahead of the batsmen at present, Team · W L. PF PA will carry. the Deacons' hopes in she will not stop long enough to Capt. Dick Hoyle, George Ed-Braves • 2 0 126 45 the· mile grind. E. T. Harris and make a personal appearance. wards, Bob Reid and John Fletch-.C.ollege Ha.Il 1 . 0 - 35 26 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1 i . .500 Leland Kitchen are both entered Tickets ·for the. concert are sell- er have consistently hit the ball

Lambda Chi Alpha 1 2 .333 in the high ·jump, Harris for var- ing fast, Waive_ rs says, and all hard· Yanks 1 1 25 56 · Home_ Ec 0 1 26 S5 Sigma Pi 0

0 .

2 2 .OOO sity competition and Kitchen in students who plan to attend the

Butchers 0 1 0 1 Delta Sigma Phi.·· . .000 the freshman event. concert should buy theirs imme-. Pi Kappa Alpha 0 · 3 ·000 The ·squad is scheduled to travel diately. · Prophets 0 0 . 0 0

· · - from Baltimore to Washington, The concert is to feature the Wildcats. 0· ·o 0 · 0 NOTICE D. 'c., where Monday night they music of Johann Satterfield and

roaming around the vicinity . There was only one building, lo­cated where the Wait Hall now is . Terrors 0 0 0 0

Physical Ed Director Phil Utley will compete against Catholic U. his Chapel Hill ensemble and will The wings of the structure were track men. consist of three parts, the first used :for dormitories, while the PING PONG ..

Kappa Alpha, AKPi and Xappa

Sigma were deadlocked this week tournament ·following the close of for first place in the fraternity the fraternity league schedule. ping pong ·race. Each is unde· Anyone: interested· in participat­feated in league play thus far; ing in the meet is asked to sign with the · K. A.'s. boasting a rec- the list placed in the Student ord of 14 victorie~ in 15 individu- Center.

announced this week that there will be a school-wide ping-pong

a! matches. There will also ·be a list in the The standings through Tues. Center for those persons interest-

day: ed in. participating in the annual · Team W L Pet. Handball Tourn&nlent. Kappa Alpha, · 8 0 1.000 Coach Utley would also like to Alp-ha Kappa Pi 8 0 1.000 find the champion foul shooter in Kappa Sigma 2 0 1.000 school. · Any person· interested in

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trying for this honor is asked to contact him at the gymnasium. The applicant will shoot 50 shots and the boy who ·makes the best percentage of his 50 throws· will be named champ. ·

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~tans bury Continued :from Page One

to be made to the top-grade men by giving that volume of Corpus Juris · Secundum which · corre­sponds with the subject covered in the course in which the prize­winning grade was made. Corpus Juris Secundum is published by the publishers of the widely used Corpus Juris, and is a va.luable addition to any legal library. These awards will be announced in the "Spring when all courses are completed.-

Dr· Stansbury also announced that the· Michie Company, of Charlottesville, Virginia, publish­ers of the North Carolina Oode Annotated, the official publica­tion of the North Carolina Code, has donated to each member of the Law School faculty a copy of the lates:t edition- of thE! Annotat­ed Code. These six donated co­pies bring to a total of ten the copies of this latest official North Parolina Code now available in the Law School.

This is Old Gold and Black's. 25th year of publication.

part to be made up of cl~~~;sical center was utilized as a chapel. music, the second part of semi- Every detail he related to the au­classical, and the third part of dience, ineluding the . fact that swing. there were four columns in the

The Monogram Club has ex- chapel and that that part of the pressed the desire that all men -building extended as far as ceil­who attend tbe concert bril)g ing of the second floors on each dates. The price of admission side. There were four floors on for couples is twenty-five cents, the wings, three in the center. while that for stags is thirty-five. Dr. Wingate, who was presi· - Tickets for the concert may be dent, taught English language and

had at the Book Store,· the Soda literature, history, ethics, logic, Shop, Hardwicke's Drug Store, and other subjects. Professor Holding's Drug ·store, Lewis' Mills was teacher of mathematics· Sporting Goods Store in Raleigh, Professor Simmons taught chemis­and from any member of the try, 11hysics, botany, geology, Monogram Club. zoology, physics, astronomy, and

The concert is to be held in Gore "used his spare time to help Prof. Gymnasium· Mills with mathematics;" Prof.

Mills had six classes a day. Prof. Taylor was teacher of Latin and German. There were five recita­tions in each class a week, none on Saturday. "They were giants in those days," Dr. Gulley. de­clared.

. Gulley Continued from Page One

owner of the town and that Pen­der, the shoemaker, had one leg cut off. The boarding house of Mrs. Strickland was included; here was- the first place where Dr. Gulley stayed when he came.

Across The Railroad

Stayed For Commencement Only two students died during

the four and a half years of the former Dean's stay here and only one was married. It was the general practice to remain for commencement, said Dr. Gulley, as he declared that "there is a substantial loss to the student to-

"We do11't want men like that in the profession. Succ·essful teachers go into the work because they feel themselves fitted for it and because they like teaching·"

A committee was appointed to complete plans for the coming of the Meredith group. Bill Flowe, G. G. Morgan, and Harry Mum­ford were selected.

The examination on Monday night, to be i given without cost, will be held from seven until ten o'clock,

day who can't stay until com-men cement.''

Reverting to the one building here when he came, Dr. Gulley mused, "There were so many things about that old building that when I stood there and look­ed at those smoking rooms, I thought that the college was gone. . . ,As a matter of fact, it wasn't."

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ment in Durham.

Debaters Continued from P'age One

group opinion, and radio news­cast. ·,

Another event which makes the speech meet a triple-feature af­fair is the North Carolina Peace Oratorical Contest which is being held inconnection with the tourna­ment. In a warmly-contested elimination held on the Wake For­est campus two weeks ago, G. G. Morgan eliminated George Wat­kins· in a rnn-off competition for the right to represent the college in the Contest. Most of the other colleges of the state will send speakers who have prepared peace orations.

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On the other side of the rail­road were the railroad warehouse and the Reid hquse. The only other building on that side of the railroad was the Ada= store, where the former Law School Dean made his first . purchase, and where he paid as high as fifty cents fOT a gallon of kerosene oil, which provided the only light of the day· Nothing else but a growth of young pines covered that side of the railroad.

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PartiCUlarly amazing is the fact that Dr. Gulley still remem­bers the names of most of the Negroes who lived in various dwellings scattered over the local­ity. He mentioned John Smith, the bell-ringer and he knew the names of the janitors and others, whether or not they were con­nected with the college.

"All those things are gone and I am left alone. I am sorry for you, but l can't help it," he con­cluded Monday's address.

Turns To College Dr. Gulley on Wednesday turn­

ed his attention primarily to the college itself. Around the campus when he came was a wooden fence, built to keep . out the livestock

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Page 4: FOnE.Language Meet Comes April19 . issued by editor Ashburn yes· terday. The price for an extra Howler is $5.00, o and names will be printed on the yearbooks for fifty cents extra

PAGE FOUR OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Wake Students . Wake Daughters A Plenty Attend Wedding In 1900, b~t Not Any More

Kapp~ Sig Meet Starting Today

Former Soda Shop Official Weds In St. P~auls

Sunday

At a quiet informal ceremony at five o'clock Sunday after-

College Song, "Here's to "\V ake Forest," Survives Forty Years of Spirited Use; But the Words

Aren't Quite What They Used to Be

Local Chapter To Be Host For Two-Carolina

Conclave

noon, March 1, B1ln Elliott, Wake Co-eds at Wake Forest must Forest alumnus and formerly con- have been as big a problem il) the nected with the College Soda early years of the century as they Shop, was married to Miss Dor- are now. othy Kinlaw of St. Pauls, N. C. Or bigger. Now we ;talk and The wedding was in the church at sing about the "sons of Wake For­St. Pauls. est," but it's never occurred to

Fred Williams of Wake Forest anybody to bmg about the daugh­was best man and oth"er Wake ters of the college. l<'orest men-Charles (Duck) Back in the early 1900's, Cheek and Lawrence Rudder,- though, an occasional, straggling acted as ushers. Joe Morehead, co-ed wrought such a profound Wake Forest alumnus, sang dur- impression on our dads that when ing the ceremony. His selections they got around to the business were "Because" and ''Tell Me." of writing a school song they just

Both 1\fr. and Mrs. Elliott hm·e had to include the gals on an attended Wake Forest College. equal basis with themselves. Mrs- Elliott was a student in the The other day an Old Gold and summer sessions for the past four Black reporter was in the library years while her husband received stacks rummaging through some his entire college education here. old, yellowed ])UlJCJ's. Deep down Elliott graduated \\ith a B. A. in a chest he rm1 across a scrap­degree in 1939 and came back the book that contained prized relics following year to receive his M. of older days. On the first page A. degrees. He is now teaching was a fiYe b;' seven sheet of pa­French and History in the high per entitled "0' Here's to Wake school at Rome, Georgia, his Forest," and signed "Charles P. home town. He does not plan to WeaYer, author; original cop;·, continue teaching after this year. 1903."

Preceding the wedding, a num-1 It was w1itten in ~ fancy hand, ber of Wake Forest men gave a 1 and an amateur artist had added stag dinner at the Hotel Lor- his imlll'int with a streak of red raine in Lumberton in honor of paint that ran the length of the Elliott. This lasted until 4:45 and page and was supposed to have caused quite a bit of excitement something to do with red, ruddy by causing the late arrival of Uhcnish. several attendants at the churcl1. The re;1orter had vague, inner

The couple left for points some pulsations that he guessed to where in the South after the wed- mean he was on track of a scoop; ding. They will will retum to and so he scanned the lines of the Rome, Georgia, to make their /song. Everything was natural home. until he reached the third line;

Around 3:30 this afternoon members of chapters at Davidson,

then things began to go haywire. Duke, Carolina, State, South Car-The original version of ~·o," olina and Wofford will gather

Here's to Wake Forest," popular here for a two-Carolina conclave school song, carried a third line of the fraternity as guests of the that went like this: local chapter.

"Her sons they are many, her Following their arrival a bas-daughters a plenty!" ketball tournament for all chap-

Evidently later classes didn't ters will be held in the gymna­like the idea of a female usurpa- sium, and the winner will be pre­lion of even a share of their par- Seiited with a cup. Tonight will enthood, for an insert dated 1906 see a p3rty-featuring a song ruled out tl1e "daughter" phrase fest-in the woods around the col­and put in the words now sung, lege.

"Her sons they are many, un- Tomorrow morning a business rivalled by any!" meeting of the fraternity will be

Only other change made in the held in the Phi hall, and tomorrow original words of the college song aftern,oon the local chapter will is the switching of the word present a model initiation, with "fresh" to "frosh"-a gradual Dave F1iday as the model initi-evolution of collegiate brogue- ate.

A bit of research about the Tomorrow night the conclave author of the document brought will reach its climax with a ban­fourth the information that Wea- quet held at Mrs. Sander's board­ver was a second tenor on the ing house. At this banquet Wil­first College Glee Club ever or- Iiam B. Umpstead, graduate of ganized at Wake Forest-in 1903. Duke, alumnus of Kappa, and During his work with this group, former congressman from North led by Darius Eatman, then Edu· Carolina, wi]J be the principal cation professor, and directed by speaker. Hubert Poteat, then a student, Concerning the Kappa Sigma­Weaver wrote the song which for Sigma Phi Epsilon dance coming many years was invariably the on March 29, it is announced that first selection on any college mu- it has been decided to hold it in sica! program, and which is still. the Washington-Duke Hotel of probably the most sung of any of Durham instead .of in the Sir Wal­our college songs.. ter Hotel of Raleigh, and that Bill

Weaver himself later taught Vanden Dries will provide the English here, then became presi­dent of Chowan College, and is now on the faculty of Auburn Polytechnic in Alabama.

music.

Medicine

1 VARNER TO DIRECT Continued frQm Page One

MINISTERS' FEED ling, surgery and anatomy; Dr. WAKE FOREST MEN ARE WELCOME! H. G. Baity, public health; Dr. w.

Poteat -Also To Speak To L. Fleming, public health; Dr. J.

J. E. Tate Elected To Office For World Relations:Club

Six Wake Delegates Aid Election in Meeting at

Florida College

J. E. Tate, Jr., of Winston-Sal­em, one of the six Wake Forest delegates to the Southeastern Conference of International Rela­tions Clubs held last Friday and Saturday at Florida State College for· Women in Tallahassee, was elected vice-president of the Conference. This position is the highest elective office in the Con­ference, and Tate's election is particularly noteworthy because of the fact that the Wake Forest chapter is yet only a few months old. The president is always ap­pointed from the school who is to

*'--------------~---------were four such forums, at which lR.C members presented addresses on some phase of international peace. The Wake Forest delega­tion divided into four groups, some attending each discussion.

In addition to the luncheon and dance an informal tea and banquet were held, rounding out the social end of the conference. It was de­cided that Georgia Tech will be the host next year.

The delegation returned at mid­night Sunday night, touching Jacksonville, Sa van 'n a h, and Charleston on the way back.

Army be the host for the succeeding Continued from F'age One year. l:ecently he was· awarded a $100

The other representatives from

1

cash prize for winning first place Wake For.\)st included Arthur Vi- in the North Carolina Press Asso­vian, Bili Angell, C. C· Morgan, eiation's annual contest for the Jr., W. A. Gordanier and Austin best news, features, and pictures Lovin. According to Tate, Vivian of the year. Of ·Scott's prize-win­was especially instrumental in ning entry, the editor of NEA manipulating the election, doing a picture service said: "Scott's pic­great deal of campaigning at the ture 'of the first precinct re­dance Friday night· porting general elections in Wake

Schools Represented

The largest number ever to at~ tend the conference was present, Tate said, including delegates from seventy-four schools from Alabama, Mississippi , Florida, South Oaro~ina, Georgia,1 ,North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Louisiana. Miss An1y Jones, di­rector of the United States IRC, representing the Carnegie En­dowment for Intemationa! Peace, which is responsible for the found­ing of the organizations, was one of the outstanding speakers for the occasion. Another special attraction was presented in the address by Count Carlos Sforza, member of one of the greatest families of Italy, who formed the main attraction of the whole con-

County, North Carolina, should be run in every paper from· coast to coast."

The Soda Shop's ..

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Walgreen's Drug Store

I Fl'aternity Meet To- W. Roy Norton, public heatlh; Dr.

I morrow Night M· J. Rosenau, public health; Jef- ference. Dr. William c. Johnstone ferson Beale, physiology; Miss of George Washington University Eleanor Mayes, library; Miss Nola spoke at the luncheon on Friday, The program of the Delta Kap-Reid, secretary and bursar. using· as his topic, "American

I pa Alpha formal banquet to be Inteme staff of the Baptist Far Eastern Policy in a World

TASTY TOASTED

SANDWICHES

COLLECE SODA SHOP I held tomorrow evening in Miss Hospital, all former Wake Forest of War."

Raleigh, N. C. Jo 1\i!liams' Cafeteria at 7:00 P· men, Dr. C. R. Duncan, resident Round Table Forums m. Wlll be d~rected by Toastmas- in surgery; Dr. C. F'. Gryte, resi- Informal round-table discussions ~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=========::::::: ter and Pr~sJ~ent James C. Var- dent in medicine; Dr. W. P. Chand- formed one of the most predom-

Fayetteville Street

~,...,-.-"·-······ .. ······~~··· --···""''·o •. ~_,.,.,, .. , .... w~.-·-·-'~ ~~\:~~er~VI~o~:~~~~o:or::i-~e~~e~ [ler and Dr. Roscoe L. Wall. inant features of the affair. There .. . . · · . . .- ,:::-' ;';'I:}~~~~~::!~~~~;~~~:~~~~:::~~~: M:~~~~~l~~~~~OL 11

r ;;;==T=. 1\=f=. =A=rr=i=n=gt=o=n=====::::::::==:::::T:::.:.:M:::.::A:mn:=· :::gt=:on:::,::J::r:::.

.,· •• :--.-,;_:·· 1 ;;roup with their lady friends, and -- ARRINGTON AND ARRINGTON ,.~. ·. special guests will be the honor- Six Classes To Engage In I Registered Land Surveyors

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· ···:·.; m·y msmbers of the fraternity- Drive Beginnin<r 'Veek . j ~bout eidg·httho'f th~ faculty mem- From Sunday * Phone 281-1 Wake For£st, N. C. P. 0. Box 1066

oers an e1r w1ves. No formal array of toasts and

replies has been arranged, but an The college's six Sunday School I unusual program will be present- classes will engage in a member­ell. Invocation will be by DJ·. J. ship drive beginning on March 16, Allen Easley- Lansing Hicks will as class President Meyers Cole, gil·e the address of welcome to the Wilbur Lamm, and J. E. Ttate many guests. Various musical lead the Law, Bryan, and Reid

_, numbers by some of the girls will classes in competition for total • group membership gains against · be induded.

I presidents DeWitte Trivette, Bill . Pearce, and Howard Berry of the :I INFIRMARY REPORTS Canol!, Kitcl1in, and Bel1.W class-

EIGHT FLU PATIENTS es.

Thcr< has been some slight change in the flu situation on the campus during the past week, the college infirmary reported. There . . are about e1ght cases at present.

Miss Eva Vause, head nurse of the infirmary, was confined to bed this week with sinus trouble-

! Another extra nurse has been ,.. .. ·, ... ·.·•'•·--·· called to duty to replace l\iiss

Wnining team in the drive will be honored in the big Sun­dav Schoo] eocial to be held at I Meredith later in the spring-. Team I score will he counted on the order of a cross country meet, the class I getting the highest number of I new members and increase in at­tendance going ahead in the race, and the group of classes having the lowest sum total of the fin­ishing p!nces will win the meet. Vause during her illness.

J. B. Ranking, first year med­studen t and mumps-victim, is still in the infirmary, but it is hoped

:that he can soon be "released." I

/ II TRUEBLOOD TAKES . JOB WITH JOURNAL

I I Charlie Trueblood, editor of the : Old Gold and Black in 1935-36, 1 has accepted a position with the

1

1 Atlanta Journal and is to begin work there on the fifteenth of thi;; month. He is at present a report­er on the Winston-Salem Journal­Sentinel.

Trueblood's parents are now re-

I siding in Wake Foreot, having on­ly recently constructed a home

[near Wooten's Hometel. I

There arc rumors of war before summer in Europe.

The gold team will be compos-, ed of the Law. Bryan, and Reid classes and the black team will be composed of the Carroll, Kitchin and Berry classes. The B- S. U. cup will be awarded to the class having the highest increase in at­tendance-the number one finish­ing- place in the race.

The basis number from which the increase will be reckoned will l be the March 9 attendance record of each- class. The contest will run through April 27.

AT LAST

"Gone With The Wind," color­ful saga of the South, will be shown at Wake Forest within the next three weeks, acco1·ding to I Bill Glover, manager of the For-

1 est Theatre.

*

FRIDAY, MARCU 7,. t941

German Continued from Page' One

to meet the class only one night . each week. The men are C. N. Boyer, Bill Ayers, Les Cansler, R.. V. Carter, Ben Cole, Lindsey Feezor, Charles Freeman, B. G. Gillingham, Lansing Hicks, AI Johnson, W. A· Powell, Earle Purser, J. F. Sevier, B. G. Shaw, James Willett and M1·s. Kathryn VVyatt. ·

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"The admission will be the same it is everywhere else at present. . . .55c for adults and children at night, 40c for adults at the mati­nee, and 25c for children," Glover said.

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There has been some hint that the movie \\ill begin the re-opera· tion of the Collegiate Theatre, but the manager of the Forest declin­E>d making any definite statement on the matter.

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