n!! wai(e forest college alumni news · paul danieb is "lll'l'l'inkjhlcut of...
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100() GOOD ~fEN IN SEPTEMBER! LOOK OVER TilE ENCLOSED "Ol.D GOLD" AND GET YOUR ~L\N!!
WAI(E FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS ~rAKE FORE ~T COLLEGE ~rAKE FOREST~ N. C.
.\PUlL. 1!):3:!
Commencen1ent Plans Completed for 1932 .. fuch lt1tere t Shown by Alumni
n undav . .)fa,· 29, 19:12 R ,·erend Lutbrr Littlev Pao;;t "r· of the Fir_t Hnpti t Chur ·h barlott .... Torth nrolinu. will op n th 19;J~ Commenecm 'Ilt Program whc·ll he will pr a<'h the Bac •a laurent Sermon to one hundred and twentv-five senior-. Elaborate plan have Lccon v completed for the program and from the intere~t .:howu thu~ far by the .\lunmi 1 tl11•re will be a good Home Coming.
The program la~ t year was very succe -ful, and thi year-we hope to make it a better one.
On Wedne day, June 1, at :00 o'clock, Judge Fred B. Helm of Charlotte, North Carolina, will deliver the Alumni Address in Wingate Hall. This address will follow the Alumni Dinner which will be held at ix o'clock in the Gymnasium.
On Thur_day, June 2, Doctor William E. Dodd of the Department of History, Univer-ity of Chicago, hicago, Ill., will make the annual address at which time th • diplomas will be awarded.
The following clas es will be extended sp cial invitations to return to the campu- for the exercises: 1882, 1887, 1892, 1 !)7, 1902, 1907, 1912, 1917, 1922, 1927, 1932. If you are a member of one of the e clas es~ then make your plan to he pr S<mt.
The program as outlined will be followed to the letter and between special occasions, there will be plenty to do-renewing old acquaintances, walking through the: campus, and for those who like sports, there will be swimming, golf, tennis, base-ball, etc. Every alumnus is extended an invitation to return and we sincerely hope for a great Home Coming this year.
SuNDAY, M.AY 29 11 :00 a.m. Baccalaureate Sermon
By Rev. Luther Little, Pastor of the First Baptist Church, Charlotte, N. C.
WEDNESDAY, JuNE 1 6 :00 p.m. Alumni Dinner 8:00 p.m. Alumni Address
By Judge Fred B. Helms, Class '22, Charlotte, N. C.
TnuRBDAY, JuNE 2 10:30 a.m. Annual Address
By Dr. William E. Dodd, Department of llistory, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.
Addition to Law School Faculty Beverly Lake, son of Professor J. L. Lake,
and a recent graduate of Harvard Law School hail been added to the 1932 Law Faculty. Mr. Lake received his B.A. degree from Wake Forest College in 1925, and his LL.B. from Harvard University in 1929. Since that time he has been practicing law in Raleigh.
The Wake Forest Law School is now meeting requirements for entrance to the Association of American Law Schools. Dr. N. Y. Gulley and President Kitchin have spent untiring efforts in getting the Law School up to the standard demanded by the Association. Entrance is practically assured.
2 WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS
Teachers' Assembly Dinner Very Successful
The dinner held in connection with the State Teacher ' ~l. embly in Charlotte was the most ucce ful one to date. Eighty Wake Forest men
engaged in public education work in North Carolina gathered in the banquet hall of the Selwyn Hotel and enjoyed a real get-together. The pirit and enthu ia m wa fine and e tabli hed firmly the cu tom of the dinner. Some of North Carolina's highe t officials in public education attended. Dr. D. B. Bryan, Dean of the College and head of the Education Department, was present and made a -very encouraging addre s to the gathering. :Mr. A. J. Hutchins of Canton acted as toastmaster. :Mr. M. B. Dry, Cary, :g, C., was elected Pre ideut of the As ociation for the ensuing year. J. I~. :Memory, Jr., A ociate Professor of Education, attended and "·as in trumental in the uccess of the dinner. Se-veral men were called on for a few word and many others were recognized.
Formation of Alumni Associations Progresses Rapidly
The ~l.lumni A ociations are gradually taking form and during the pa t two months around fifteen a ociation ha-ve been organized, or in some ca e reorganized. In e-very meeting the spirit of enthu iasm has been fine and the alumni ha-ve enjoyed the meeting . The following counties haYe organized a sociation : Wake, Columbus, Cumberland, For yth, Iredell, Burke, Buncombe, Haywood, Jack on, Henderson, Tran ylvania, Bladen, Brunswick, and Davidson. Plans for meetings in se-veral other counties have been completed, and by June, we hope to ha-ve at least twenty-five active associations. It i hoped that every county will get the spirit of organization and reorganize. We only hope that the work will progres in the next two months as it has in the pa t two. Write this office for information regarding your county association.
Wake Forest Professor Honored At the meeting of the P. K. D. National Forensic
Fraternity which was held in Tulsa, Okla., March 2 to April 1, Wake Forest College was represented by Messrs. H. H. Deaton and E. L. Smith a a debate team. These boys won three out of five debates, winning from Centre College of Kentucky, Baylor University, of Waco, Texas, and Gustavus Adolphus of Minnesota which was the national champion of two years ago. Dr. J. Rice Quisenberry who serves as debate coach accompanied the team and deserves credit for the fine showing the debate team made. Wake Forest College was honored in the election of Dr. Quisenberry as Governor of the South Atlantic Province of the Fraternity. There were 102 colleges represented in the men's debate tournament.
John Charles McNeill's Poetry Back in Print
il-ver ~l.nni•er ary editions of the poetrv of John Oharle MeR eill, distinguished Wake F~rest a~umnu\ ha\e ju t been released by the Uni•erIt~ of _North Carolina Pres , Chapel Hill. :g, C.
L;vnc~ From ~otton ~and" and "Song-. :llerry and Sad, for which Pre Ident Roosewlt pre ented Mr. Me~ eil~ the ~~tter on Literary Cup, ha•e appeared m gift editiOns at $1.50 each. They may be ~ad ~ t local book stores or by addressing the Umversity Pre sat Chapel Hill.
Among many outstanding appraisals of these books, that of United States Senator J o iah William Bailey, which follows, is especially ignificant: '· ... ...ilthough volumes of Dante and Shakespeare or Browning and Tennyson may be on our ... helves when the mood strikes we must dream a littl~ by the fireside with our own heart's interpreter and sweet companion John Charles ::llcN eill. In such a nook shouid all the critics gather around and all the great poets protest, we ~hould hamele ly confe s the hunger of our henrt and declare fm: }[eN eill .... By and by an awa~en~d ~-orld will peak tenderly hi name the "'hile It huger lo•ingly upon this or that heart-nlO\ing line of hi , a North Carolinian do now.
" ... H e wa the mo t natural being that I haYe _kn0\\'11, the mo t un elfi h, the most unselfronsciou.. H_e expr~ ... eel. life in terms of beauty; he explamed It to hi fnf'nd from the unfailing Yiewpoint of humor."
News Briefs . Her chel Ford i now pa tor of the Fil·st Bap
ti t Church, Hendersonville, N. C.
Biven Helms is practicing m~dicine in ::llorganton, ~ orth Carolina.
----Lamar Caudle is practicing law in Wade 'boro,
X. C.
Irving Carlyle is practicing law in Win tonSalem, :g, C.
Bill Holding is a cotton broker in Wake Fore t N.C. '
Money Stamey is practicing law in Waynesville, K. C.
Dr. Coyette Sherrill is located in Statesville, N.C.
Hiram Hunter is President of Western NOrth Carolina Teachers' College, Cullowhee, N. C.
Henry Faucette is in the real estate and insurance business in Raleigh, N. C.
George and Burgin Pennell are practicing law in Asheville, N. C.
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS 3
Bill Veczor is pa.._f.,r of tht' TnhL•rnacl Raptist l burch in Rnlcigh, ~ T.
Frank IIu:ffman i' in the mnnufal'furing lmsilll~- in :llorgnnton ... T.
Paul Danieb is "lll'l'l'inkJHlcut of public chool in Rnkioh, .... T.
Y. H. ( ..,proek) Duck tt i~ practil'iug medicine in C:mton, X.
Dr .• T. H. Gon '11 wa · initiated into the l 1hi lkta Kappa ,cholar~hip fratcruity, Fritlay, April 1, at \Yn,hinatou and Le Univer.·itv. Dr. :torrell wa' graduated from Wa hington ~mel Lee with the B._\. degree in 1 and the .. L. .. \. tl gree in lu90. He ha' been Profe ·or of Modern Languages here . ine receiving hi Ph.D. degree from John.., Hopkin lT11iY 'rsity in 1 "94.
New Student Drive Progressing Satisfactorily
Thl' llriY•' for w:w tuJcut for th .::c- ·ion of lfl:J2-lfl:l3 i · progrP :iing ati fnctoril:· according to a stalt'lll 'llt j..,:-,lll'cl h~ the Regi,trnr. Thi driYc is heinp: put nn h.'· all \Vake Fore t men and ev ry 1Jearcr of the Oltl Uold and Rlack i , urged to makt' :;omc effort iu ending new men to Wake Fnr<' .. ·t. Memhei" of th • faculty ar out in the field ; the stnuell t' ar 'Yorking anu lllO t of the alumui, so there i- no rc•n on wln Wake For ,~t .;;honltl not look tn :111ntlwr Gnullel: year in 1fl:32-1 f);J:J.
President Kitchin Attends Alumni Meetings
Prrsitleut Tbunuan D. Kitchin, after a full Wt>Pk of tr<n·d through the western part of the Stat(• where he addressed five alu111ni meetings in a· wa11y ev<'niug. expres ed hiru · 1f as delighted with the pirit and intere t of the Alumni, :mel wry much encouraged over the outlook for the Collcg<'. The Pre ident enjoyed c' ery meeting and waking the acquaintance of o many Wake Fore t men in We tern North (i:uolina. Tie requested that his appreciation of the 1vay he '\Yas rcccin~u be exprcs'ed to each and evrry member of the association through the Alwnni Bulletin, and said that he looks forward to meeting with <•ach one again.
The recent Alumui meetings held throughout the 'tate will stimulate quite a great deal of interest in the new student campaign. The meetings were very successful everywhere they were held. Quito a few high school seniors attended the meetings and were favorably imp1:essed with Wake Forest men and the spirit shown in their Alma Mater.
Professors Have Field Engagements During th<' pa 't week twelve Wake Forest col
lc·ge faculty member ' had a total of somC' 20 speaking- c11p;agemcnt .
Prc,·~dcnt Thurman D. Kitchin accompanied hy _\lumm ~ erretar~ ~\lfred ~l.. Dowtin spoke at . \1umni dinner at five centers in western North ( 'aroliua.
_\t the ~am tim<' Dr. W. R. Cullom aadressed <J group of Boy cout ExecutiY<'S in i~Iontclair, XC\\' J cr c;v, and Profe sor J. L. Memory appeared at the ZPb Vane High School in Render on before the lligh chool seniors of Vance County. J uclge P. H. ·wilson di cussed the unemployment ituation oYer WPTF. Raleigh. •
Ou :F'riday, Dean Daniel B. Bryan was attending the tate Teach r ' .... l. embly in Charlotte.
On Wednesday Dr. Hubert )f. Poteat spoke to ihe 'lac; ical Teachers Club, of Detroit. The three da.Y following, he attended a ID<'eting of the Clas. ica 1 . .:\. ot'ia t ion of the Middle-We t and South. Dr. Poteat i vice pre. ident of this a sociation.
Profc> ·or Edgar W. Timberlake, Jr., was reeellth- in \Vin. ton-. 'alcm, where he addres._ed the For. ~·th Cmmty _\lumni .. \ sociation, while Dr. G. \V. Pasdwl ,..,.a· di.::cu~·ing Bapti t history at the "!arnleigh ··lnn·d1 in RnlC'igh.
Home Baseball Schedule Cut Short 'l'he hnme l~asehall ~chednle has been cut short
thi · year tn "'in~ time for the playing fiehl to be plo"·Nl autl turfetl for the fall footbnll game. The fieltl i in c•xcPllcnt hnpe, and with a growth of gras it will offer n good turf for football in the fall.
Wake Forest Wins Postponed Easter Monday Game
The Eastc•r ~Io11<lay game which was postponed on account of hntl weather was played in Raleigh on Saturday, .... \.pril :!. The Deacons turned the Tcchnieiau. back to the tunc of 5 to 3. J unie Bamc pitc·hcd a gout! game for Wake Forest and wa given gootl ~ uvport by his tenm mate · . ongratulation·! to Coach John and his boy ..
Football Schedule Complete, 1932 ·.Sept. 24-U. of N. C ...... ............... ...... Chapel Hill, N. C. Oct. 1-Qpen. Oct. 8-U. of S. ' ................. .................. Charlotte, N. C. Oct. 15-N. C. State ............ -....................... (Undecided) Oct. 22---<Duke University ...................... Durham, N. C. Oct. 29-University of Delaware ............ Newark, Del. Nov. 5-Catholic University .......... Washington, D. C. Nov. 11-Carson-Newman ............ Wake Forest, N. C. Nov. 19-0pen. Nov. 24-Davidson College .................. Davidson, N. C.
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS
Wake Forest College Alumni News Published in October, December , F ebruary, April and
J une during the College year by Wake Forest College
at \Yake Forest, N. C.
Entered at the Postoffice at Wake Forest, N. C., as
second class matter.
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
ALFRED A. DowTix, Alumni Secretary
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, BOARD OF TRUSTEES
G. E . Lineberry, Chairman W. R. Marti n W. L . W yatt R. E. Royall
J. M. Broughton D . G. Brummitt J . A. Campbell
E XECUTIVE COMMI'l"l'EE, ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
H . H. Groves, President Bruce Benton Guy T. Carswell Paul S. D aniel
I. B . Hudson Rober t T. Allen Thurman D . Kitchin
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE Summer Session, 1932
N ine-Week Session, June 13-August 12. Six-Week Session, June 13-J uly 23. Law School, June 13-.A.ugust 22.
Adaptation The session meets the needs of teachers apply
ing for the Elementary A; the Primary and Grammar Grade certificates A, B, C; the High School, the Principal's, and the Superintendent's cer tificates. Also the B.A. and M.A. certificates - both men and women.
Credits Cour c credits count both on certificates and de
grees. Women may now receive degrees from Wake Forest by completing requirements in the summer session.
Freshmen May begin their college course in summer. Three
summers equal one year, thus the college course may be shortened and expense reduced.
Degrees Twenty-four men and three women received de
grees last August.
Fees The fees of the summer se sion will be payable
as follow : Matriculation fee-one-half at time of matriculation; second half, August 1st. Room rrnt in the dormitories, November 1st. Discount for tho e who make payment in full. The fees are: Nine weeks, $22.50; Six weeks, $15.00; Law School, $35.00; Room rent in dormitories, $1.25 a "\veek.
Board The item of board can be more satisfactorily
arranged after one arrives. Prices range from $3.75 to $5.00 a week.
Rooms The Bostwick and Hunter Dormitorie will be
reserved for women; the Eu and Phi Dormitories for men. One section in Hunter Dormitory has been set apart for families. Make written application for room in dormitory now. No advanced fee required. Students furnish bed linen.
Departments Thirty-two profe ors offer a total of more than
lilO courses.
Law School Sixty emester hours of college work required
for entrance. No opportunities for special students. Fee $35.00, room in dormitory $1.25 a ·week, payable at time of matriculation. For more detailed information write Dean N. Y. Gulley.
Recreation Music, orchestra and chorus; Dramatics; Ten
nis; Golf, and Swimming offered by the college without extra charge.
For particulars write D. B. BRYAN, Wake Foret, "N. C.
Notice If any alumnus knows of some one who is not
receiving the ALuMNI BuLLETIN, please forward his name and address to the Alumni Office: a.s we are always anxious to locate alumni whom we do not have on our mailing li t.