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4
,. ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK . . '. " ' ' ' . ' . "etweM.·u. .eih.,tk * * * in==e.=X=X=i=V='=. I=I.=.=N==o=.==2=9===========TI ·· · .r.Jbr.:tf11J.u:• Forest, N. e., Friday, ·March 19, 1943 ; ... ... : Phone 3046, all offices , · · Time· Pre-MedWork Not i:C'i Begin Until Sum.mer Drama Group- Soon to Join APO National .. ,('" · ... .. . .. ( :kuise · Willhims ·· Appoii\ted to· Serve As · · Permanent Secretary . PROGRAM Tuesday night the-local .U s ·o opened for a full-tinie operation· for the men of the Army Finance School at Wake Forest, under the direction of the permanent secre- tary, Miss Louise Williams, -.who was appointed at the . meeting the' local executive committee · Monday night. · · ·: ' . . The schedule will be from 2:30 to· 10:30 p. m. on week day3;' · from 2:30 to 12:00 p.m. on Satur-· day, and from 10:00 a. m. till 10:30 p. m. on Sundays .. Each evening there will be a local hos- tess on duty . in addition to Mis;; ·williams, and on Monday and · Thursday nights local girls wHI be at the club with the hostess. Under the auspices of the U ;:; 0, there will be the week-end dances for the soldiers, with the local girls and those from Louis- burg, Franklinton, and Raleigh at- . tending the dances. Other . social features will be picnics, tourna- ments, discussion groups; parties. and other special events planned by the program committee under the chairmanship of Mrs. C. T. Wilkinson. · Secretary Well-Known Herre Miss Williams is a descendant of Major John M. Crenshaw, who was the first student to matricu- late at Wake Forest College, and until several years ago when it was given to the College, the . Usual Session, Starting June 8, Is Announced By Dean Bryan LARGE NUMBER SEEN Wake Forest will have summer school as usUal this sum- mer, and arrangements for pre- med training under the army specialized program will not ·be- gin until June of July, stated Dean D. B. Bryan this week. The summer session will open June B and close August 9 as has been the case in previous years. Inquiries ha\'e come in from Ca- tawba, Appalachian and Coker r,::olleges, and Dean Bryan says that there should be a good at- tendance at the summer ·session. The current semester will pro- . ceed on the present schedule since no definite action will be taken for placing a pre-med unit herP. immec:liately. Flight training and engineering programs are going into effect soon, but under the re- quest of Paul V. McNutt; local draft bpards have already deferred medical students, and for this rea- son they are already in training. Another reason there is not an emergency rush for pre-med stu- dents is that the maedical schools already have their classes up for this next semester, and there is no need of having more pre-med students than the medical colleges can handle. Dean Bryan attended a meeting Monday in Atlanta of the Fourth Above is Senator Elbert D. Thomas, Democrat from Idaho, who will address delegates at the Southeastern International Relations Club convention to be held at Meredith College next week-end with Wake Forest and Meredith as joint hosts. He will speak on AMERICA IN THE. NEW WORLD. ThomasSpeaks At Convention Plans for Southeastern Meet Rapidly Being Alpha Psi Olllega · Grants Charter To Little Theater INSTALLATION APR. 1 By MARTHA ANN ALLEN Old Gold and. Black Staff Writer A Wake Forest College chapter of Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary dramatic fraternity, will be installed by the Meredith Col- lege chapter officers, and Miss Frances Bailey, director, Thursday night, April 1. Application for membersh!'p was made early this school year, and this week the Wake Forest College Little Theater received notice from Paul F. Opp, grand business manager of the national organization, that the petition had been granted by the National Council. The Wake Forest chap- ter will be designated Theta Ome- ga of Wake Forest College. Members in the Alpha Psi Omega must have a minimum. of sixty points earned by work.with the Little Theater. Those eligi- ble for. membership at the instal- lation will be Beth Perry, Eliza- beth Jones, Arthur Early, Ethel Belle Kornegay, John Williams, Charlotte Easley, John Lanier. Those alumni who will be eligible are Jack Easley, BiltDeLo,ach and Margaret Carroll. At the close of the spring production of the Little" · Theater, other members will be admitted to membership of Alpba bw·sar's book was in her family. She has held dancing schools in These students will be initiat- Harvey. Third row: Robert C. Raleigh and Durham, prior to ed into Phi Beta Kappa tonight .Lasater, Robert W. Lide and coming to Wake Forest"to be with at 8 : 30 in the Phi Society Hall. John J. McMillan. Bottom row: . Army Command to which repre- sentatives of those colleges aP- proved for army specialized train- ing programs went. PLAYERS TO GIVE ONE-ACT DRAMA Plans were strongly underway this week for the annual South- eastern International Relation;; Club Convention, to be held ·at Meredith College Friday and Sat- urday, March 26th and 27th, with Wake and Meredith as joint hosts. Larry Williams, elected presi- dent of the Southeastern district at the annual conference held in Stimulates Interest The charter fee• is $25.00, and the individual fees are $3.00 a member. . her sister, Mrp. T. P. Jones out Neil B. Morgan, • William B. at Crenshaw Hall. She has had Top row left to right: Walter Primm and Edwin G. Wilson. charge of the dances which have T. Carpenter, Paul W. Chapman The picture of John Paul Jones, been given in the past for the men and Edward L. Cheek. Second who will also be initiated to- "The .Valiar.t," a one-act play Atlanta .last year, and pl1asident by Hall and Middleman, will be of the Wake Forest IRC, announc- presented by the Little Theater ed this week that the convention Thursday night at the High School this year will feature United auc.jitorium at 7;30,.with a l.Oc ad- D. Thomas mission charge. as guest speaker, who will be in- of the Finance School, and in her row: John J. Conley, Walter J. night was not available at The capacity as secretary, she will ======:;::;;-- look, after. details in - with the dances. The .. secretary takes care of the business side of the U S 0 and is employed by that organization. The U S 0 made a blue print of the community house some time back, and furnishings are on shipment now. They will include draperies for both rooms, chairs, seats, a radio and phonograph set. two table tennis tabies, and other equipment. Kitchen equipment in- cluding silver and china is also being sent. The USO is paying the light, heat, and water bills as well as employing a janitor to keep the house in condition. The small Reading Room is be- ing completed with book shelves around the wall to hold the 12,000 books which the WPA donated. -See TIME, Page (Departments and organizations de- siring notices in this column are re- quested to notify OLD GOLD AND BLACK by 10 p. · m. on the Wednes- day night preceding the Friday on which they are to be published in the _paper.) Tonight- Phi Beta Kappa initiation in Phi Hall at 8:30 p. m. Public in- vited. Dr. Jay B. Hubbell, of Duke ·University, to speak. EveryDay- · Vespers··in church auditorium at 6:30 p.m. ' Carnegie Foundation Records available from 7: 15 to 8:30 p. m. except Tuesdays in room 305, Wait Hall. Sunday, March 21- Sunday School at 9:50 a. m. Services in church auditorium at 11 a.m. and 7:45 p. m. Simmons Art Museum open in Johnson Building from 3 tQ...5 p. m. Carnegie Foundation records available at 4 p. m. in room 305, Wait Hall. Recital on Donald Pfohl Me- morial Chimes at 5:30 p. m. B. T. U. and Forums at 7 p. m. Monday, March 22- Phi's hold Information Please program featuring four facult.r members in hall at 7 p. m. Eu's hold regular meeting. Tuesday, March 23- Pan-Hellenic Council Meeting at 7 p. m. in Room 31 of the Law Building. Cullom Ministerial Conference meeting in Room 105, Wait Hall. at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 24- Pra! f:r meeting in churctl au ditorium at 8 p. m. Dr .. Hubbell speak At PBK Rites Tonight This play has been acclaim'i!d traduced at the conclave by for- the best one-act play of its kind mer ambassador to. Mexico Jose- ever written. It has won more phus Daniels. prizes· in competition than anv other one-act play. Dr. jay B. Hubbell, of the Duke University faculty;· will be the speaker tonight as thirteen students and two alumni are ini· tiated i&to Phi Beta Kappa. The meeting will be at 8:30 in the Phi Hall and is open to the public. Dr. Hubbell, who is· one of the outstanding American litera- ture authorities in the country, was associate professor of Eng- lish at Wake Forest from l!lll to 1914, coming here after doing graduate work at Columbia University, where he later received his Ph. D. degree in 1922. He graduated from the University of Richmond in 1905 and received.------------- his Master of Arts degree in 1908 from Harvard. Since 1927 Dr. Hubbell has been professor o! English at Duke, where he is a member· of the Phi Beta Kappa chapter. The ceremony tonight will mark the fourth initiation. of Phi Beta Kappa since a chaptet· was estab- lished here in !941. Presiderlt Carlton P. West will preside. Dr. H. B. Jones, vice-president, will act as guide and· will bring the initiates in. Secretary. E. E. Folk will hand out the certificates. Following the tradition started in 1776 at the first initiation hel!l at William and_Mary, the keys will be hung around the necks of initiates with ribbons in the col- ors of the school. Academic Regalia Academic costumes will be worn by both members and intiates (Initiates may obtain these robe3 at the Bursar's office Friday.) Two of the students have been called into service and will be iu- itiated in absentia. Walter J. Douglas, Jr., was called last week-end to the Meteorology School at Chapel Hill and Ed- ward L. Cheek is in the Army Air Forces at Miami Beach, Fla. Prof. J. G. Carroll, director ot: the Wake Forest College defense courses, announced that several authorities on defense work visit- ed the Wake Forest courses this week, and pronounced them high- ly satisfactory. Those visitors have been: Mr. Edward W. Ruggles who is head of the engineering, science and war training courses in the State. He is head of the extension de- partment in war work at College. The other two men were Prof. H. B. Briggs, head of the engineering drawing .at State Col- lege, and Prof. C. L. Mann who is head of the civil engineering classes at State. Is Successful Although two groups failed to meet, the second discussion groups ,sponsored by the Wake Forest Baptist Student Union were de- clared successful by Harold Town- send, president, yesterday. Townsend stated that the at- tendance for the discussions Wed- nesday was below that of the first group, but that interest at all groups was very good. Most of the groups contained from fifteen to twenty students who discussed "Planning fo.._- the Post War World," the second of three topic.s based upon the general theme "The Christian Student Confront- ing Life Today." Several of the groups arrived at similar conclusions. The group -See SECOND, Page 4- Senator Thomas, wHo is one oC Congress' Jeading authorities on international affairs and author of Thomas Jefferson, World Af- fairs recently published, will speak at ihe conclave next week on the subject AMERICA IN THE NEW WORLD Williams. said. He was secured to speak at the con- vention through the Carnegie En- dowment Fund, which sponsorb the convention each year. Senator Thomas has served as missionary to Japan, and is recog- nized in European countries for his knowledge and teaching of political science. He has been in Congress as senator from Utah since 1932. Active In Senate His activities in the Senate have included membership on committees of widely different in- terests. He is chairman of the Senate Commit-tee on Education and Labor, ranking member of the Committee on Military Af- fairs, ranking member of the Com- mittee on Foreign Relations. He is also a member of the Commit- tee on Pensions and of the Com- mittee on Mines and Mining. He has been associated with Senator LaFollette in the L a F o 11 e t t e Thomas Civil Liberties investiga- tions, and is vice-chairman of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Com- mission. A graduate of the University of Utah, Senator Thomas received his Ph. D. degree from the Uni- versity of California. The Uni- versity of Southern · California -See THOMAS, Page 4- Dr. Ros.ser H. Taylor, head o.f the Department of History at Fur-- man University, and Dr. George M. Medlin,, proiessor of economics and dean of the School of Bllsi- ness Administration at the Uni- versity of Richmond, are the twJ alumni who will be initiated to· night. In connection with the present need for students trained in the engineering drawing and survey- ing courses given here, Prof. Car- roll said, "There is more demand for students now than at any time since been running these defense courses here." Students Placed Wake Up, Wake Up, Deacons, It's Time To Stump The Experts Students who will receive initiation include Walter T. Car- penter. Jr.. Paul Wadell Chap- man. Edward Lee 'Cheek, Joho Joseph Conley, Walter Douglas, Jr., William Burnette Harvey, John Paul Jones, Robert Council Lasater, Robert Wilson Lide, John Johnson McMillan, Neil Bowen Morgan, William Berry Primm, and Edwin GravE's Wilson. When students graduate from The custom of these courses, they are given civil will be reversed on Monday night service ratings without the exami- when the Phi Society will span- nations. Prof. Carroll says thot sor a special Information Please every studen: who has completed program featuring the combined either of the defense courses wits of four of the college profes- and wanted a job, has gotten one sors who will have the task of Some of them have been placed at a n s w e r in g student-concocted Glenn L. Martin airplane factory questions. - at Baltimore, ship building yards The four faculty experts whom at Norfolk, Wilmington and Eli::- the student questions will try to abeth City, and the air plane fac- stump are Drs. E. E. Folk, Hubert tory at Burlington. Those who M. Poteat, William Speas and have completed the surveying Henry Stroupe. Serving as mas- course have secured commission!': ter of ceremonies will be Profes- The University of Moscow. in Marines and engineering corps •'}t< Thane ·"Clifton Fadimar" time during the program, Master- of-ceremonies McDonald will rec- ognize a student who will read <t 47-second plug for the Phi So- ciety. The program, patterned on the popular radio "I n f o-r m at i o 'l Please," will be entirely unre- hearsed and the experts will be hearing the questions for the firc;t time. Questions will concern all fields of knowledge, and the "get- three-out-of-four" type of ques- tions probably will be used. The time for the program is 7:30 p. m. Monday, when Phi President Leo Hawkins will raP the gavel, call the meeting to or- der, and turn the course of events over to Professor McDonald. The purpose of the Alpha Psi Omega is to stimulate interest in dramatic activities on the campus, and by means of electing students to membership, serve as a reward for their efforts in the LittLe Theater. The· fraternity in M way takes the place of the regu- lar dramatic organization on the campus. The petition for membership was granted on basis of the work the Wake Forest dramatic grOI,!P has done with "Bishop's Candle- sticks," "Jane Eyre,'' "You Can't Take It With You," "Wuthering Heights." Also take!} into consid- eration was the work done by the group in make-up and staging. More Students Called In Army The slowly increasing number of students on the "officially with- drawn" list in Dean Bryan's of- fice has grown by seven more names, only four of which how- ever, have gone into military ser- vice. Among these leaving over the week-end were coed Jo Henry junior transfer from St. Mary's, who after a short visit at her home in Rockingham will enter the Nursing School at Duke Uni- versity. Phi Beta Kappa iniatiate Walter J. Douglas, senior from Chester- field, South Carolina, has left for meteorology school at Chapel Hill. Arthur H. Adams, sophomore from Asheville, left Wednesday morning for Army induction. B. Wingate Williamson, Jr., another member of the sophomore class from Hamlet, is entering dental school shortly. Bill Gabbert, junior from Lan- caster, Kentucky, has withdrawn preparatory to entering Bowman Gray School of Medicine. R. H. Brantley, sophomore from Zebulon, has been inducted int(l the service. .tames J;>. Nolan, freshman from Kannapolis, has gone to the Army. SV-7 OPEN Juniors and seniors in an accredited college pursuing either an engineering course or a course toward a bacculau- reate degree with a major in physics, naval architecture, mathematics, or electronics are. eligible for enlistment in the United States Naval Reserve, Class SV-7. This classification is exactly the same as the old V-7 with the exception that en- listment is effected through Se- lective Sedvice. Interested stu- dents should inquire of the Of- flee of Naval Procurement, North Carolina State College, Raleigh, N. C. Student Council meeting m Wait Hall at 9: 15 p. m. bombed in August, 1941 by the in the army after officers candi- McDonald who will read out the Nazis, will reopen for the new date school. This training is es- 9uestioi?-s, ring up the cash reg- scholastic year with four new de- pecially beneficial to" the marines 1ste.r (If necessary) and award partments-geoloror. philology, law because of the shore bases which I lollipops and copies of the one- and philosophy-accordin.e: to an this branch of the service builds. volume Encyclopedia Africanus l•l English language broadcast beam- students whose questions stump ed to America from Russia. . -See HEADS, page 4- the experts. At an appropria12 AU students are invited to at- 4;eud and see the fun. Jean Hersholt, film and radi.l actor, recently was awarded the honorary degree of doctor of hu- manities by Rollins college, Win4 ter Park, Fla.

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Page 1: ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK...,f. ll ·s r e rl i r l l, ' ., ) t. ,. ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK "etweM.·u. e~ .eih.,tk ~~,, * * * =V=o=lu~•-. in==e.=X=X=i=V='=. I=I.=.=N==o=.==2=9=====TI

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"etweM.·u. e~ .eih.,tk ~~,, * * * =V=o=lu~•-. in==e.=X=X=i=V='=. I=I.=.=N==o=.==2=9===========TI ·· · ·--~~~~.-~or~•tpou~ee .r.Jbr.:tf11J.u:• Forest, N. e., Friday, ·March 19, 1943 ~ ; ... --:-·-~· ... : '~.'

Phone 3046, all offices

, · · ~::;;;Filii: Time· Pre-MedWork Not i:C'i Begin Until Sum.mer

Drama Group­Soon to Join APO National

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· ... ::~- .. L~~~-~·--~·uso­. 't~c()'tganized.

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• Mi~~ :kuise · Willhims ·· Appoii\ted to· Serve As · · Permanent Secretary . "~.PULL PROGRAM

Tuesday night the-local .U s · o opened for a full-tinie operation· for the men of the Army Finance School at Wake Forest, under the direction of the permanent secre­tary, Miss Louise Williams, -.who was appointed at the . meeting ~~f the' local executive committee · Monday night. · · ·: ' . .

The schedule will be from 2:30 to· 10:30 p. m. on week day3;' · from 2:30 to 12:00 p.m. on Satur-· day, and from 10:00 a. m. till 10:30 p. m. on Sundays .. Each evening there will be a local hos­tess on duty . in addition to Mis;;

·williams, and on Monday and · Thursday nights local girls wHI

be at the club with the hostess. Under the auspices of the U ;:;

0, there will be the week-end dances for the soldiers, with the local girls and those from Louis­burg, Franklinton, and Raleigh at-

. tending the dances. Other . social features will be picnics, tourna­ments, discussion groups; parties. and other special events planned by the program committee under the chairmanship of Mrs. C. T. Wilkinson. ·

Secretary Well-Known Herre Miss Williams is a descendant

of Major John M. Crenshaw, who was the first student to matricu­late at Wake Forest College, and until several years ago when it was given to the College, the .

Usual Session, Starting June 8, Is Announced By Dean Bryan

LARGE NUMBER SEEN Wake Forest Coll~e will have

summer school as usUal this sum­mer, and arrangements for pre­med training under the army specialized program will not ·be­gin until June of July, stated Dean D. B. Bryan this week.

The summer session will open June B and close August 9 as has been the case in previous years. Inquiries ha\'e come in from Ca­tawba, Appalachian and Coker r,::olleges, and Dean Bryan says that there should be a good at­tendance at the summer ·session.

The current semester will pro­. ceed on the present schedule since no definite action will be taken for placing a pre-med unit herP. immec:liately. Flight training and engineering programs are going into effect soon, but under the re­quest of Paul V. McNutt; local draft bpards have already deferred medical students, and for this rea­son they are already in training.

Another reason there is not an emergency rush for pre-med stu­dents is that the maedical schools already have their classes mad~ up for this next semester, and there is no need of having more pre-med students than the medical colleges can handle.

Dean Bryan attended a meeting Monday in Atlanta of the Fourth

Above is Senator Elbert D. Thomas, Democrat from Idaho, who will address delegates at the Southeastern International Relations Club convention to be held at Meredith College next week-end with Wake Forest and Meredith as joint hosts. He will speak on AMERICA IN THE. NEW WORLD.

ThomasSpeaks At Convention

Plans for Southeastern Meet Rapidly Being Compl~ted

Alpha Psi Olllega · Grants Charter To Little Theater

INSTALLATION APR. 1 By MARTHA ANN ALLEN

Old Gold and. Black Staff Writer

A Wake Forest College chapter of Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary dramatic fraternity, will be installed by the Meredith Col­lege chapter officers, and Miss Frances Bailey, director, Thursday night, April 1.

Application for membersh!'p was made early this school year, and this week the Wake Forest College Little Theater received notice from Paul F. Opp, grand business manager of the national organization, that the petition had been granted by the National Council. The Wake Forest chap­ter will be designated Theta Ome­ga of Wake Forest College.

Members in the Alpha Psi Omega must have a minimum. of sixty points earned by work.with the Little Theater. Those eligi­ble for. membership at the instal­lation will be Beth Perry, Eliza­beth Jones, Arthur Early, Ethel Belle Kornegay, John Williams, Charlotte Easley, John Lanier. Those alumni who will be eligible are Jack Easley, BiltDeLo,ach and Margaret Carroll. At the close of the spring production of the Little" · Theater, other members will be admitted to membership of Alpba

bw·sar's book was in her family. She has held dancing schools in These students will be initiat- Harvey. Third row: Robert C. Raleigh and Durham, prior to ed into Phi Beta Kappa tonight .Lasater, Robert W. Lide and coming to Wake Forest"to be with at 8:30 in the Phi Society Hall. John J. McMillan. Bottom row:

. Army Command to which repre­sentatives of those colleges aP­proved for army specialized train­ing programs went.

PLAYERS TO GIVE ONE-ACT DRAMA

Plans were strongly underway this week for the annual South­eastern International Relation;; Club Convention, to be held ·at Meredith College Friday and Sat­urday, March 26th and 27th, with Wake E~rest and Meredith as joint hosts.

Larry Williams, elected presi­dent of the Southeastern district at the annual conference held in

Stimulates Interest The charter fee• is $25.00, and

the individual fees are $3.00 a member .

. her sister, Mrp. T. P. Jones out Neil B. Morgan, • William B. at Crenshaw Hall. She has had Top row left to right: Walter Primm and Edwin G. Wilson. charge of the dances which have T. Carpenter, Paul W. Chapman The picture of John Paul Jones, been given in the past for the men and Edward L. Cheek. Second who will also be initiated to-

"The .Valiar.t," a one-act play Atlanta .last year, and pl1asident by Hall and Middleman, will be of the Wake Forest IRC, announc­presented by the Little Theater ed this week that the convention Thursday night at the High School this year will feature United auc.jitorium at 7;30,.with a l.Oc ad- .s:;~at~s.Sen~tor E~bert D. Thomas mission charge. as guest speaker, who will be in-

of the Finance School, and in her row: John J. Conley, Walter J. night was not available at The capacity as secretary, she will -=D=ou=g~l=a=:s'=J=r=.,=a=n=d==W==. =B=ur=·=n=e=tt=e~·==H=ow=le=r==o=ff=ic=e=. ======:;::;;-­look, after. details in coJmE!Cti.ol~ -with the dances. The .. secretary takes care of the business side of the U S 0 and is employed by that organization.

The U S 0 made a blue print of the community house some time back, and furnishings are on shipment now. They will include draperies for both rooms, chairs, seats, a radio and phonograph set. two table tennis tabies, and other equipment. Kitchen equipment in­cluding silver and china is also being sent. The USO is paying the light, heat, and water bills as well as employing a janitor to keep the house in condition.

The small Reading Room is be­ing completed with book shelves around the wall to hold the 12,000 books which the WPA donated.

-See TIME, Page ~4-:-

(Departments and organizations de­siring notices in this column are re­quested to notify OLD GOLD AND BLACK by 10 p. · m. on the Wednes­day night preceding the Friday on which they are to be published in the _paper.)

Tonight-Phi Beta Kappa initiation in

Phi Hall at 8:30 p. m. Public in­vited. Dr. Jay B. Hubbell, of Duke ·University, to speak. EveryDay- ·

Vespers··in church auditorium at 6:30 p.m. '

Carnegie Foundation Records available from 7: 15 to 8:30 p. m. except Tuesdays in room 305, Wait Hall. Sunday, March 21-

Sunday School at 9:50 a. m. Services in church auditorium

at 11 a.m. and 7:45 p. m. Simmons Art Museum open in

Johnson Building from 3 tQ...5 p. m.

Carnegie Foundation records available at 4 p. m. in room 305, Wait Hall.

Recital on Donald Pfohl Me­morial Chimes at 5:30 p. m.

B. T. U. and Forums at 7 p. m. Monday, March 22-

Phi's hold Information Please program featuring four facult.r members in hall at 7 p. m. Eu's hold regular meeting. Tuesday, March 23-

Pan-Hellenic Council Meeting at 7 p. m. in Room 31 of the Law Building.

Cullom Ministerial Conference meeting in Room 105, Wait Hall. at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 24-

Pra! f:r meeting in churctl au ditorium at 8 p. m.

Dr .. Hubbell ~---to speak At PBK Rites Tonight

This play has been acclaim'i!d traduced at the conclave by for­the best one-act play of its kind mer ambassador to. Mexico Jose­ever written. It has won more phus Daniels. prizes· in competition than anv other one-act play.

Dr. jay B. Hubbell, of the Duke University faculty;· will be the speaker tonight as thirteen students and two alumni are ini· tiated i&to Phi Beta Kappa. The meeting will be at 8:30 in the Phi Hall and is open to the public.

Dr. Hubbell, who is· one of the outstanding American litera­ture authorities in the country, was associate professor of Eng­lish at Wake Forest from l!lll to 1914, coming here after doing graduate work at Columbia University, where he later received his Ph. D. degree in 1922. He graduated from the University of Richmond in 1905 and received.------------­his Master of Arts degree in 1908 from Harvard. Since 1927 Dr. Hubbell has been professor o! English at Duke, where he is a member· of the Phi Beta Kappa chapter.

The ceremony tonight will mark the fourth initiation. of Phi Beta Kappa since a chaptet· was estab­lished here in !941. Presiderlt Carlton P. West will preside. Dr. H. B. Jones, vice-president, will act as guide and· will bring the initiates in. Secretary. E. E. Folk will hand out the certificates.

Following the tradition started in 1776 at the first initiation hel!l at William and_Mary, the keys will be hung around the necks of th~ initiates with ribbons in the col­ors of the school.

Academic Regalia Academic costumes will be worn

by both members and intiates (Initiates may obtain these robe3 at the Bursar's office Friday.)

Two of the students have been called into service and will be iu­itiated in absentia. Walter J. Douglas, Jr., was called last week-end to the Meteorology School at Chapel Hill and Ed­ward L. Cheek is in the Army Air Forces at Miami Beach, Fla.

Prof. J. G. Carroll, director ot: the Wake Forest College defense courses, announced that several authorities on defense work visit­ed the Wake Forest courses this week, and pronounced them high­ly satisfactory.

Those visitors have been: Mr. Edward W. Ruggles who is head of the engineering, science and war training courses in the State. He is head of the extension de­partment in war work at Stat~:> College. The other two men were Prof. H. B. Briggs, head of the engineering drawing .at State Col­lege, and Prof. C. L. Mann who is head of the civil engineering classes at State.

Is Successful Although two groups failed to

meet, the second discussion groups ,sponsored by the Wake Forest Baptist Student Union were de­clared successful by Harold Town­send, president, yesterday.

Townsend stated that the at­tendance for the discussions Wed­nesday was below that of the first group, but that interest at all groups was very good. Most of the groups contained from fifteen to twenty students who discussed "Planning fo.._- the Post War World," the second of three topic.s based upon the general theme "The Christian Student Confront­ing Life Today."

Several of the groups arrived at similar conclusions. The group

-See SECOND, Page 4-

Senator Thomas, wHo is one oC Congress' Jeading authorities on international affairs and author of Thomas Jefferson, World Af­fairs recently published, will speak at ihe conclave next week on the subject AMERICA IN THE NEW WORLD Williams. said. He was secured to speak at the con­vention through the Carnegie En­dowment Fund, which sponsorb the convention each year.

Senator Thomas has served as missionary to Japan, and is recog­nized in European countries for his knowledge and teaching of political science. He has been in Congress as senator from Utah since 1932.

Active In Senate His activities in the Senate

have included membership on committees of widely different in­terests. He is chairman of the Senate Commit-tee on Education and Labor, ranking member of the Committee on Military Af­fairs, ranking member of the Com­mittee on Foreign Relations. He is also a member of the Commit­tee on Pensions and of the Com­mittee on Mines and Mining. He has been associated with Senator LaFollette in the L a F o 11 e t t e Thomas Civil Liberties investiga­tions, and is vice-chairman of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Com-mission.

A graduate of the University of Utah, Senator Thomas received his Ph. D. degree from the Uni­versity of California. The Uni­versity of Southern · California

-See THOMAS, Page 4-

Dr. Ros.ser H. Taylor, head o.f the Department of History at Fur-­man University, and Dr. George M. Medlin,, proiessor of economics and dean of the School of Bllsi­ness Administration at the Uni­versity of Richmond, are the twJ alumni who will be initiated to· night.

In connection with the present need for students trained in the engineering drawing and survey­ing courses given here, Prof. Car­roll said, "There is more demand for students now than at any time since we'v~ been running these defense courses here."

Students Placed

Wake Up, Wake Up, Deacons, It's Time To Stump The Experts

Students who will receive !11~ initiation include Walter T. Car­penter. Jr.. Paul Wadell Chap­man. Edward Lee 'Cheek, Joho Joseph Conley, Walter Jame~ Douglas, Jr., William Burnette Harvey, John Paul Jones, Robert Council Lasater, Robert Wilson Lide, John Johnson McMillan, Neil Bowen Morgan, William Berry Primm, and Edwin GravE's Wilson.

When students graduate from The custom of question-askin~ these courses, they are given civil will be reversed on Monday night service ratings without the exami- when the Phi Society will span­nations. Prof. Carroll says thot sor a special Information Please every studen: who has completed program featuring the combined either of the defense courses her~ wits of four of the college profes­and wanted a job, has gotten one sors who will have the task of Some of them have been placed at a n s w e r in g student-concocted Glenn L. Martin airplane factory questions. -at Baltimore, ship building yards The four faculty experts whom at Norfolk, Wilmington and Eli::- the student questions will try to abeth City, and the air plane fac- stump are Drs. E. E. Folk, Hubert tory at Burlington. Those who M. Poteat, William Speas and have completed the surveying Henry Stroupe. Serving as mas­course have secured commission!': ter of ceremonies will be Profes-

The University of Moscow. in Marines and engineering corps •'}t< Thane ·"Clifton Fadimar"

time during the program, Master­of-ceremonies McDonald will rec­ognize a student who will read <t 47-second plug for the Phi So­ciety.

The program, patterned on the popular radio "I n f o-r m at i o 'l Please," will be entirely unre­hearsed and the experts will be hearing the questions for the firc;t time. Questions will concern all fields of knowledge, and the "get­three-out-of-four" type of ques­tions probably will be used.

The time for the program is 7:30 p. m. Monday, when Phi President Leo Hawkins will raP the gavel, call the meeting to or­der, and turn the course of events over to Professor McDonald.

The purpose of the Alpha Psi Omega is to stimulate interest in dramatic activities on the campus, and by means of electing students to membership, serve as a reward for their efforts in the LittLe Theater. The· fraternity in M way takes the place of the regu­lar dramatic organization on the campus.

The petition for membership was granted on basis of the work the Wake Forest dramatic grOI,!P has done with "Bishop's Candle­sticks," "Jane Eyre,'' "You Can't Take It With You," "Wuthering Heights." Also take!} into consid­eration was the work done by the group in make-up and staging.

More Students Called In Army

The slowly increasing number of students on the "officially with­drawn" list in Dean Bryan's of­fice has grown by seven more names, only four of which how­ever, have gone into military ser­vice.

Among these leaving over the week-end were coed Jo Henry junior transfer from St. Mary's, who after a short visit at her home in Rockingham will enter the Nursing School at Duke Uni­versity.

Phi Beta Kappa iniatiate Walter J. Douglas, senior from Chester­field, South Carolina, has left for meteorology school at Chapel Hill.

Arthur H. Adams, sophomore from Asheville, left Wednesday morning for Army induction.

B. Wingate Williamson, Jr., another member of the sophomore class from Hamlet, is entering dental school shortly.

Bill Gabbert, junior from Lan­caster, Kentucky, has withdrawn preparatory to entering Bowman Gray School of Medicine.

R. H. Brantley, sophomore from Zebulon, has been inducted int(l the service. •

.tames J;>. Nolan, freshman from Kannapolis, has gone to the Army.

SV-7 OPEN Juniors and seniors in an

accredited college pursuing either an engineering course or a course toward a bacculau­reate degree with a major in physics, naval architecture, mathematics, or electronics are. eligible for enlistment in the United States Naval Reserve, Class SV-7. This classification is exactly the same as the old V-7 with the exception that en­listment is effected through Se­lective Sedvice. Interested stu­dents should inquire of the Of­flee of Naval Procurement, North Carolina State College, Raleigh, N. C.

Student Council meeting m Wait Hall at 9: 15 p. m.

bombed in August, 1941 by the in the army after officers candi- McDonald who will read out the Nazis, will reopen for the new date school. This training is es- 9uestioi?-s, ring up the cash reg­scholastic year with four new de- pecially beneficial to" the marines 1ste.r (If necessary) and award partments-geoloror. philology, law because of the shore bases which I lollipops and copies of the one­and philosophy-accordin.e: to an this branch of the service builds. volume Encyclopedia Africanus l•l English language broadcast beam- students whose questions stump ed to America from Russia. . -See HEADS, page 4- the experts. At an appropria12

AU students are invited to at-4;eud and see the fun.

Jean Hersholt, film and radi.l actor, recently was awarded the honorary degree of doctor of hu­manities by Rollins college, Win4

ter Park, Fla.

Page 2: ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK...,f. ll ·s r e rl i r l l, ' ., ) t. ,. ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK "etweM.·u. e~ .eih.,tk ~~,, * * * =V=o=lu~•-. in==e.=X=X=i=V='=. I=I.=.=N==o=.==2=9=====TI

.Page Two Old Gold and Black

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Founded January 15, 1916, as the otflclal student

newspaper of Wake Forest College. Published "Veekly durlnr; the school year except during examination periods and holidays as directed by the Wake Forest College Publica.tlons Board.

BILLY PRIMM ............................. ;. Editor DOUGLAS MciNTYRE • • • . • . . . . . . Business Manager

Herbert Thompson, associate editor, Ken Nelson, ~porta editor.

:Martha Ann Allen, J. D. Davis, John Drake, J. S. Fentress, Jimmy Hulin, Elizabeth Jones, Neil Morgan, H. B. Parrott, Bill Phill!ps, Dan Primm, Betty Stans­bury, J. A. West, Ed \Yllson, editorial staff.

.J. N. Lasiter, business staff.

Member o! the Associated CollegW.te Press and distributor of Collegiate D~eat. Member of the North Carolina Collegiate Press Association. Repre­sented for national advertising by the National Ad­vertising Service, Inc.

All editorial matter should be addressed to the editor, Box 232, Wake Forest, N. C. All business matter should be addressed to the business mana~er, same address. Subacriptlon rate : $1.50 p01t paid tor the school year.

PHONE 304-6, all offices. For Important news on Thursday hights phone The Record Publishing Com· pany, Zebulon, N. C.

Entered as second clus ma.il matter Ja.nua.ry 22, 1916. &t the post office at Wake Forest, North Car­olina, under the act of March 3, 1879.

Dramatic Group Justly Deserves Its Reward

Twice before in this editorial column have appeared words of praise for the Wake Forest Little Theater. Both were justly deserved. Now

Government Prorvides For Fighting Men

Our government has gone one step further in its efforts to keep the morale. of American soldiers and fighters overseas at a peak. The latest move is the instigation of a special news .service-which gets news through to the sol­diers in Africa an; fast as the civilian. in Ameri­ca knows it. This work has been started by the Army Special Service Division, Services of 'Sup­ply, the War Department ~mnounced.

Using Signal Corps facilities, 'a 2,000 word· summary of war, sports, and home front devel­opment is now prepared daily and transmitted to American outposts where soldiers do not have access to United States news.

Following this same line, a second service for various domestic points is expected to be inaugurated soon. Both news services will carry foreign and domestic news, but the boys overseas will hear home front news· in greater detail, and the summary written for soldiers in this country will concentrate on foreign devel­opments.

Such service as this should make us realize the effort which our government is making to­ward winning this present conflict. A most per­tinent suggestion is that each of us make a siin­ilar effort.

this organiaztion has taken another step which CORRE'CTION deserves just as much praise as on previous Last week's issue of· the OLD GOLD AND occasions. The acceptance of the local chapter BLACK carried an editorial which was in error by Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary and greatly confusing to many readers. It con­dramatic fraternity, means a great deal more cerned the inspection of Wake Forest by gov­than just an honor. It means, above all, that ernment officials to determine whether this the students who form this group have worked school is fit to train pre-medical students. The with such earnestness and perseverance as to editorial stated "pre-medical students for the merit acceptance by the national fraternity. United States Navy." This statement is wrong.

Little more than a year ago the Little Thea- Wake Forest has been approved by army offi­ter was in its infancy. Several students inter- cials for the training of pre-medical students

-ested in dramatics banded together with the for the U.S. Army, not the Navy. idea of presenting a play. This move attracted Bow,jlan Gray School of Medicine of Wake little attention· at the time. But when the first Forest College has been accepted by both the play was given and proved to be a success, oth- army and navy, however, for the training of ers began to pay attention. Throughout sum- medfcal students, but no contract has been mer school and the first semester of this year awarded as yet. this dramatic group worked and came forth with several notable presentations. These plays have provided entertainment not only for stu­dents but for members of the Army Finance School here also. Evidence of this is shown by the crowds which attend the plays.

Truly we enjoy these dramas as presented by fellow students and can only say that the re­ward of being accepted is justly deserved.

Phi-Program Shows We Can Still Laugh

The Information Please program which the Phi Society will present Monday night and in which four members of the college faculty will participate should prove of great entertainment to students. Then will be the opportunity to see just how each one of these four professors will react under the fire of questioning, wheth­er they can answer back as fast as they usually ailk questions in the classroom.

Yet this program has another meaning, too. It clearly illustrates that Americans, both young and middle-aged, still possess that rare spirit of humor and merriment which so characterizes this race of ours. Even in these troubled a~d vhy uncertain days, it is good to see a spirit such as this. It's mighty hard to beat a person who is always smiling, who can overlook distant troubles and concentrate upon the merriment at hand.

A word of praise is due the Phi Society and those who have made the program possible. In addition to providing a good night of fun, this program will bolster the morale of Wake .forest students by showing that professors are often times "stumped" themselves.

"Our folk songs grew out of our national life and are a part of its history. We need to learn and sing them, for folk songs are a tre­mendous force in making people 'nation' con­scious. The music capitals of the world have moved from Europe to America, and it is up to us to keep them here. We must encourage and support our serious music, for it, toq, helps to make America American." Dr. Archie N. jones, professor- of music, University of Texas.

Of the 479 colleges and universities which now appear on the·rolls of the Army and Navy training programs as eligibles for use in one or more kinds of programs, 161 are schools with a normal enrollment of under 500 students, 1J4 are schools between 500-1,000 students, 85 have between 1,000-2,000, and 99 have over 2,000 stu­dents.

"The high-strung, intensely ambitious man who may have been driving himself to ulcer in his business may find military life a haven of peace. Others will do the planning for him. He'll relax, forget his personal schemes and presently find army chow goes through his food canal without so much as a whimper, much less of a growL" Dr, Walter C. Alvarez, professor of medicine at the Mayon foundation of the University of Minnesota, says the army can help stomach aches.

There is little danger that war's heavy de­mands will deplete the American forests, says Dow V. Baxter, associate professor of silvics and forest pathology in the University of Mich­igan school of forestry and conservation.

An experimental group of 22 students who have just completed their junior year in high school were enrolled recently at Wayne Univer­sity.

A 12-month basic pre-meteorology course is being set up at Pomona College.

BeiQ(J/Ie t!J/ Me~. diet II~~

There's a panic over at the PiKA house. It all started when business man­ager Doug · Mcintyre of the OLD GOLD AND BLACK saw his fourth roommate since the beginning of the second semes­ter off to the armed forces this week. Now the brothers are falling over each other in a wild scramble to avoid being next. Brother Mcintyre is definitely a jinx.

Doug began · the semester 'with Ned Thomas and Demming Ward. In less than three weeks-on the twentieth to be exact -both Thomas and Ward had received their orders to report to the Air Corps.

Then Lovick Miller and Arthur Ad­ams moved in. But not for long. Miller departed for the . Air Corps February twenty-third. By this time, Arthur had. begun to smell a rat, and this week he re- . ceived his army induction papers.

Finally Pat Geer, waiting for his call 'to the Marines, was .Persuaded to become roommate number five. At the present rate, we give him two weeks. You can't fight a jinx like that.

WILSON ON \WAKE FOREST:

SAMUEL LEARNS. ·A· ~LESS0N IN KINDLINEss,.· HuMILrfY CampusCUnera. .. ByLea C-.berpillar, .

· · · · · Teaches Love . To ButterJii'~s~-~.~ --"

By ED WILSQN _ . · Old Gold Ana Black Staff Writer

FABLE: ·.Once upon a time .· there was a little caterpillar. His .· father .before him bad been a cat:- . erpillar, and his mother before .. him had· 'been a caterpillar . .A:nd all his fifty-five brothers and sis­ters beside' him were caterpillars. Even little Hamlet, his baby bra'" ther, who ·was just a teeny weeny. thing,. . '

His father and mother were no longer caterpillars; for they bad grown into beautiful big butter~. flies. They would fly about from bush · to shrub all the day long and have the best time. They had no worries at all. In fact they had . so little. to bother them that they · just forgot all about theii fifty~ · six caterpillar boys and girls .. And the little caterpillars became ·Very lonely, because they had no parents .to comfort them and pro­tect them. They just crawled from limb to limb looking for grub and watching out for sparrows.

But one by one fifty-five of the little ·caterpillars became butter­files themselves. · Now what fun they had!. They could fly about from bush to shrub all the day 1ong and have the best time. They. had no worries at all. Even little Hamlet, the . teeniest of them aU,

. was a little butterfly now. And he strutted and strutted! -

JUST BETWEEN us " 1111'

One of our favorite "collitch mander's stripes and bars. pals" of the old days drifted back We thought about college boys into the Fourth Service Command (sure, this goes for me!) who can'~ area last week-we won't say just quite make it up in time for a where, for his itinerary of trav- 9:25 ••. who don't get around to ·el, like about everything else, for that shave until Saturday night all we know, is strictly the prop- . . • who straggle over to Raleigh erty of a Naval Intelligence port- for a show and a beer the nighL folio. . before quiz ..•

He wore that Navy blue, and Reminded me of that time tht: he swore as we chomped gloatinr;- other morning when the who1e ly over the last two steaks in company of finance men here in (censored) that for the first time Wake Forest took "left face" from in his four months of Navy life the sarge while marching up th~ he was speaking as an independ- street toward Miss Jo's so wt: ent and self-styled human being, might steer cur jaloppy past.

His manner was changed. He And except for something t'> was a blueprint. His originality, prod us up, we might leave college his initiative, weren't to be seen with the same spineless and lack­-except when he forgot the Navy adaisical disregard :for discipline and became the college buddy. and organized curriculum that we

Some folks call that regimenta- have now. tion. Everybody that's gone in the · It would be just as much the service admits it hits hard and British tea and crumpets as ErroJ fast. Whether your name is Mar- Flynn's strumpets • • • Or sol­eus Aurelius Maverick or John dier who betrayred Captain Easy's Smith, the only question is wheth- commandos in Germany because er you become 975685 or 975686. he wanted to carry along some

Folks don't talk about it. That's American cigarettes , .. the bla~ a necessity of war. That's some- market ... the draft dodger .•. thing that's got to happen to you Military discipline will leave U'l before you can fight a war. "Pri- Navy blueprinted or khaki form­vate" Hargrove caught it on sta- fitted-but when this business is ble "patrol." Most folks think of over, it'll be up to every man lo KP. Or the top sergeant. turns his discipline into a channel

This Navy boy saw it different- of his choice or to abandon it. ly. And he sold me-conclusively. The beauty of it, of course, is finally, and for sure-that service that most of· us probably will training doesn't take the guts out choose to abandon our disciplined of men, tha·t governors can come habit's. But that's democratic just as well from buck private America. And it's worth fighting ranks as from a lieutenant-com- :for.

WITH THE

Greeks (Only news delivered to OLD GOLD

AND BLACK office or to Jimmy Hu­lin by Wednesday noon will be in· cluded in this column,}

By JIMMY HULIN

KA-After a most successful week­

end, we settled down to serious business at our regular meeting Monday and elected new officers for next year. Bill Hollomon, 0f Woodland, is our next president: Bill Phillips, of Philadelphia, Pa., is vice-president; and Charles Parker, of Woodland, is secrt•­tary. We congratulate these men and proudly announce their elec­tion.

Brother Bill Poteat, '40, has been promoted to lieutenant, junior grade, in the navy. At present he is serving with the Atlantic fleet. Brother 'Frank Pruette is now sta­tioned at Gamv. Swift, Texas: pledge Jimmy Jones is located at Camp McCain, Miss. Pledge George Tobey is at Fort Jackson.

Tuesday afternoon the southern gentleman won a basketball game from the Kappa Sigs. This is our third victory and we have hopes for a great season. Coach Tom Burnett is doing a commendable job.

Brother Lowry Mallory's moth­er visited him this week. She was a most welcomed guest of the chapter; she returned to Annis­ton, Ala., this week-end.

PiKA-Everyone has just about recup­

erated :from one of the best. week­ends the PiKAs have ever wit­nessed. Brothers Bill Dunn and Rowland Pittman slipped away from their studies at Duke Med School and added their part to the dance. The dances were such a success that the men .of Sycamore Street are clamoring for .another one in th~ near future.

Word has been received from Brothers Demming Ward, former assistant business manager of the the OLD GOLD AND BLACK, Ned Thomas, Lovick Miller, Joe Hinerman, and Pledge Eslie Mill­er, who are doing fine in their basic training at Miami Beach. Brother Bob Shackelford is in the infirmary recuperating from an injured foot caused by a rusty nail.

The entire bouse is joyful ovel' the success of the basketball team under t)le management of play­ing coach ''Daddy" Behm. Word came this week from Brother Bill Roach, '39, who is a first lieuten­ant in the air corps in North Af­rica. Brother Furman Biggs is in bed with a deep chest cold and asthma and possible after-effects of the past week-end. The broth­ers and pledges plan to staT in town this week-end and studv. believe it or not. The Lodge en­joyed Prof. Carroll's talk Wednes­day night. SPE-

Wallace Banks pledged the chapter last Monday night. New officers are: Roscoe Mason, presi­dent; Doug Elam, vice-president: Dick Griffin, secretary; Graham

-See GREEKS, page 3-

All the caterpillar boys and Jtirls were butterflies now. That is all except the little caterpillar who is our hero. Little Samuel Caterpillar just couldn!t become a butterfly. He tried and tried. H<:. would crawl to the edge of a liuxb and try to fly off, but he just slid around the tree. He would feci every day -to see if he was chang­ing and if he was growing wings, but he was stillnotning but a cat­erpillar.

Little Samuel was sad. He was all alone. His brothers and sister:> turned up their wings at him and kept flying' around, having a good time. And ·he couldn't under­stand why he too couldn't be a beautiful butterfly. He almost cried.

Finally, he decided to go to old owl who lived in the top of the tree where his family used to crawl. · He had been told all of his life that the owl was a very wise and powerful bird and that no one should dare to speak to him. But he liad to' know what was wrong with him and why he didn't become a butterfly. So he climbed up the tree for hours and before long he came to the owl.

The old bird looked down . at him and said "What do you want, little caterpillar?" And he ·had a kind expression on his :face, not at all like little Samuel expected. For he had been told that the owl made everybody afraid of him.

Little Samuel swallowed a few times and said, "I just want to know what's wrong with me, Mr. Owl. All my brothers and sisters have turned into beautiful but-:­terflies, and they fly about all da~ and have nothing to worry them. 'l'hey don't bother about me, and they don't care about each other. But I am just as big .as they are, and I'm still just a caterpillar. They have pretty wings and fine dresses, and they live in beautifUl palaces. But I still have this same old suit, the only one I have, and I just crawl about over this tree and try to help out the other cat­-erpillars who are younger or smaller than I am. And sometimes the ones I help change into but­tex'flies just like my brothers and sisters. But I'm still a caterpillar."

Mr. Owl blinked a few timei and smiled kindly at little'Samuel. "My boy," he said, "you just weren't meant to be a butterfly. All the rest of your brothers and sisters were caterpillars once when they were growing, but now they­'ve become butterflies, and they're selfish. But you're still a cater­pillar, and I guess you'll keep on being one. You're not selfish enough to be a big, beautiful but:­terfly. But don't worry, because some day you'll be glad you're still a caterpillar."

Little Samuel could hardly be­lieve what he heard. But he didn't tell Mr. Owl that, but instead thanked him and crawled back down to the bottom of the tree,

Then one day, a whole bunch of sparrows came from the forest. And they chased the butterflies and killed a lot of them. Little Samuel was safe for a long time, because he lived far down tho! tree. But the sparrows kept get­ting hungrier and hungrier and before long they got after the caterpillars. Samuel had to fight. back, and he gathered together all his friend., to help him. They had to fight hard for a long time, but finally they drove away the sparrows by banding together.

When all the fighting was over, all the butterflies and caterpillars held a big celebration. The but­terflies said. "We sure are glad that the sparrows are gone so that

-see WILSON, page 3-

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Page 3: ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK...,f. ll ·s r e rl i r l l, ' ., ) t. ,. ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK "etweM.·u. e~ .eih.,tk ~~,, * * * =V=o=lu~•-. in==e.=X=X=i=V='=. I=I.=.=N==o=.==2=9=====TI

~ '- ~ ' . .

Old Gold and Black Page Three.

.. B' e/;M,J·. -. -. :JJ.-· ... • p ··• •'

'. . ,' ' . - .

' . .. ' . . . /.:·8·, .. -_E-.-N··:_._·. CH··.

Tommy -Byrne Leaves Wa,ke PIKAsS, KA'S, AND AKPI'S STAY · . Forest to Pitch. for Yankees UNDEFEATED ANDlEAD lEAGUE

... ' ·~· ' . . . ..

' . '

" . ',. .. By KEN NELSON

• : < VARSITY ATHLETICS AT wAKE FOREST . : ': ~1':' . '

:. . With the eiimination of baseball a~d 'track from the spring ·_ ...• :program, Wake Forest's varsity athletic pr!:Jgram has been cut. to ..... / a minimum~ ·It's. hard to believe, but only two Deacon teams­·: ;; : ' fottball and basketball-have· been in action during !he current

. \ school year; If conditions remain .as ·they are now it .will be the .. :. ·;.samenext year; if conditions. become worse it may be necessary

•·: •· :tojrop .one and maybe.both of the two remaining sports.

- • · ·-' . However, this is something that we h~pe can- be ~voided. ,Varsity athletics are needed at Wake Forest and should and will not be dropped unless absolutely necessary •. Baseball was rightly cancelled, but at present we:can see no. r~ason for cutting either

· footba:U or -basketball... ·

In the spring of 1940 Wake For- Each Te~m ~oasts est•s·baseball team· did the impos- Three VIctories In: sible whe_n the Deacons defeated. . FINANCIERS PLAY Frat League Play Duke's rune three games out of REME~"BER'? · 'three. The credit for. these vic- . m • After Wednesday afternoon's tories goes to a fellow named .At 5 o'clock this afternoon games, three teams-Pi Kappa ~~o!~fs~· T~~~it~!!~ ~~ ; on Gore Field !WO .AFS ~oft- One year ago this week- Alpha, Kappa Alpha, and Alpha five hits. and three runs in the ball teams will meet m a Deacon baseball team begins_ Kappa Pi-were tied for the le"ld first game, five hits and one run grudge· battle. The penna- preparation for qpening game in the·fraternity basketball league.

f h · h c 11 Each has won three contests with-in the se.cond, and four hits and nent detachment of the Tae- o t e season Wit orne , out a defeat . no runs m the last. t" l n· · · ill •~1, th which the Deacs won by an Bill Behm nd Ch li G .This "same Tommy Byrne, who lea lVISIOn w UU\.e on e a ar e reen receiv_ed his B. S. degree in Jan- permanent detachment outfit 11-1 score. scored eight points apiece on

F 1 Three years ago this week- Monday to lead the PiKA's to a ,uary~ left W~e. ore~t ast weeK . of the Technical Division. 23-16 win over Sigma Pi. Al Cer-and lS now trammg w1th the New C h. Phil U 1- ill · j1"m Dennt"ng and Tommy · el York Yankees in Asbury Park, oac t ey w umpire nug was high man for the los-

th t t Mt th Byrne pitch· Deacs to 7-1 vic- ers vdth five points. AKPi won ;N. J .. ln other-words within ti:J.rPe e con es. er e game p 1 . U . from Sigma Phi Epsilon, 28_18, in years time Tommy._ has jumpel the losing side will entertain tory over ennsy vama · 10 the other game Monday. John fro~ the colle~e diamond to th~ the winners with a beer party season opener. Blanton and "Doc" Parker each maJor league diamond. - - • F years this" w ek

The first step in Toinrily's two- our ago e - tallied eight points for the win-step jump to the major leagues Wake Forest basketball team ners, and G. C. Ange of SPE also came in 1940 following his sue- . Great results cannot be achiev- loses to Ohio State, 64·52, in had eight to his credit. cessful season with the Deacons. ed at once, and we must be sat- opening round of N. C. A. A. Paced by Tom Broughton who That summer he signed with the scored nine points Kappa Alpha

· · isfied to advance in life as we Touriuiment in P_hiladelphia. defeated Kappa Sig, 32-28, on Yankees who inuilediately sent walk-step by step.-Smiles. Tuesday for its third straight vic-him: to their Newark farm club, a tory. Tut Myers dropped in ten double-A International League points to lead the Kappa Sigs.

· · •· · bl · where he pitched for the The Delta S1'gs broke m· to thew;" _ · In- the case of football,. one pro em might be the lack ·of n::ulaJJ.JLucL· of the season. E H A il } T Q t•f ~ . 1 . li . h" h k Xam ere pr 0 U3 J y column on Tuesday when they · · p ayers, but the recent Squthern. Conference ru ng w 1c ma es . . took a 20-14 decision from Lamb-Army F.inance School.men eligible.seems.to eliminl.l_~e:·that possi- ·. . ....__. da Chi. Jim Camp accounted for

Thenext year· he. pitched the S d F Ar A d N · ~ility. Another problem that.might arise is the question of trans-. whole season with the Bears, and ·tu entS 0·r my n avy. seven points to pace the winners, Po_.rtatl"on. Last fall the· football team, .which playe.d but two home · while Bill Starford was high for , although· his record was none too the Lambda Chi's with six. · iames, had no little .. diffiCulty in traveling. to play their games, impressive, he did some excellent

.. an~ it will probably be wors. e next fal .. I: · hurling, especially in relief roles. The southpaw's only weakness was wildness, and he gradually

In the last issue of OlD GOLD and fill out the application form SPE's Win . AND BLACK an article appeared All qualifications previously an- On Wednesday the SPE's came

. But would it be. necessary to. play such .distant teams? Wake Forest could play an average schedule of games and not have to .travel mo·re than 35 miles for any one of them. State, Duke, Car­

. ·otina, and Carolina Pre-Fiight could. each be met twice-once at home and once away. Of course; the other schools would have to

P.'ained more and more control as the season 'Progressed. ·

Last year Tommy again signed with Newark and became a reg­ular starter. His pitching was_not spectacular, but it was dependable. He was still bothered by slight touches of wildness, but this seemed to increase his effective-

announcing an examination that nounced for acceptance into the from behind to tie up their ball will be given here April 2nd for Navy College Training Program game with Kappa Sig and went men who desire to qualify for the (V-12) continue to apply. on to win in an overtime period Navy College Training Program For the Army all male appli- b 27 6 (V-12). cants in the :following groups are Y a "2 score. Bill Byrd's crip

Since that article appeared we eligible to take the test as Army shot in the final minute of play have received a communication candidates: deadlocked the score at 24-all, and

Ange, who led the winners with that the examination may also be (a) High school and prepara- 11 points, made good on a hook · agree, 'but . why shouldn't they, since they will be in the same

boat? The schools named, with the exception of Wake Forest, are going to carry on a similar baseball league tl:iis spring.

. ness rather than lessen it.

taken by any male student be- tory school · graduates who will shot late in the extra period to tween the ages of 17 and 22 who have attained their 17th but have win the game. Al Alderman and is interested in the Army Program not reached their 22nd birthdays Myers each scored seven points (A-12) provided one is not al- by July 1, 1943, regardless. c•f. for the Kappa Sigs. The same procedure could be used for basketball with of At the end of the season Tommv

E h h 1 · ld 1 h ' . had seventeen wins and only four ready enlisted. whether they are now attending course, more g~mes. . ac sc oo cou p ay a t ree OJ;: perha~s .defeats, which happened to be the four-game serxes With each of the other four. Naturally,· this best record in the_leagl.te. And to ·system· would not be used if it were possible for a regular sche- top that Tommy, wh~ had always dule to be played. · been a threat a~ a h1tt~r, also ~ed

No Obligation college. After losing on Monday, the

**** DEACON BASEBALLERS IN THE, BIG LEAGUES ':1;; ;...;..~'i

- In the last few years no less 'tfi~n four Wake Forest baseball players have made names for themselves in the big leagues. Four doesn't seem to be such a large number until you stop to consider the comparatively small number of ball players, college and otherwise, who ever get !O the major le~gues.

Heading the list from Wake Forest is John Kelly "Buddy" Lewi~, who played here in 1934, went to Chattanooga for a year,

·and J~~~ playe.~ · with the Washington Nationals up until last year when he entered the- army. Lewis b·ecame .one of the best third·basemen in the league and has a lifetime batting average of better than .300.

· Ray Scarborough graduated from Wake Forest in 1938 and pitched at Chattanooga for three years before finally making the grade with Washington last season. He did his best hurling the latter part of last year and may become the mainstay of the Na­tionals' pitching staff this summer.

A team~ate of Scarborough's on the '38 club was Willard Marshall, who went to Atlanta in 1939 and played three years be­fore moving up to tlie New York Giants last year. He started the season playing regularly for the Giants and was one of their leading hitters until he was injured in the middle of the summer. Marshall is now serving with the Unted States .Marines. ·

: The last Wake Eorester to make the grade is Toni'my Byrne, who pitched for Newark in '41 and '42 and is now slated for a berth on the New York Yankee roster this year.

WILSON -continued from page 2-

we can fly about freely again and have no worries."

But little Samuel said, "They are gone now, but they may come back. And we must be ready for them. You've got to forget not worrying and having a· good time. We've got to be brothers again, caterpillars or butterflies. Just like we used to be."

And Samuel made them listen and he made them agree. And he remembered what Mr. Owl had said, and he was glad he was still a caterpillar.

GREEKS -continued from page 2-

Pi~an. historian; Milton Bul­luck, guard. Heyward Smith is the new junior Pan-Hel represen­tative. Pledge brother R. Hood Brantley left for the Army this week. DeltaSig-

Among the alumni returning to the dance this past week-end were Johnny Fowler, Ben Elliott, Lyn­wood Cherry, and John Whitfield. Nathan Cole was initiated into the chapter during the past week.

The brothers would like to sav that they enjoyed the dance and buffet supper this past week-end. The basketball team defeated Lambda Chi last Tuesday. Sigma Pi-

The basketball team journeyed over to Raleigh and defeated the State chapter by a 4:f to 34 score. Plans are under way for a dance with AKPi for the. week-end of the 27th.

Street Jones pledged the cbap­ter Monday night. The chapter congratulates Brother James Gil­liand on his' promotion to lieuten­ant, junior grade, in the United States .Navy.

.AKPi.;... - All repair work has been com­pleted on the fraternity house ~d

all furniture has been moved in. Pledge "Bunk" Jones and Jark Gentry are expected to take their initiation next week. The chap­ter is making full preparations for the dances with the Sigjna Pi's for the week-end of the· 27th.

Kappa Sig-:- . Brother "Ace" Lindsey has

been promoted to the rank of captain in the United States Army Air Corps. Word has been receiv­ed from Brother "Eli" Galloway Chief Specialist, who is now sta­tioned with the navy in Mem­phis, Tenn., that he will enter pr:l­flil{ht training soon.

Jaek Baldwin and Ed McManus took a short trip over the pa~t week-end to Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia. Brothers Warlick and Hill are leaving for dental school at the end of the week.

Lambda Chi-Quad-fraternity dances last

week-end proved to be a huge success. A buffet supper, attended bv Dr. and Mrs. L. Owen Rea and· Prof. and Mrs. Clontz, and Prof. Carroll, was given at the house Saturday evening preceding the formal dance.

Sponsors for Lambda Chi Alpha at the dances were Miss Virginia Council, of Raleigh, with Frank Musselman, president, and Miss Elizabeth Jones, of Salem College, with Ferris Hoggard, secretar.•. Bridge, dancing, and refreshments were enjoyed at the house during the entire week-end.

Bill Gray's father visited the chapter Tuesday.

Adversity has ever been consid­ered the state in which a man most easily becomes acquainted with himself, then, especially, be­ing free from flatterers.-Samuel Johnson. ·

There is no policy like polite­ness, since a good manner often succeeds where the best tongue has failed.-Elias L. Magoon.

Regardless of whether a stu- (b) Highschool and preparatory Sigma Pi's came back on Wednes-

the league's prtchers m battmg with a .369 average.

dent desires to serve in the Navy, school seniors who will be grad- day to win from Delta Sig, 33-2-d. Army, Air Corps or any other uated by July 1, 1943, provided Jack Maxwell and Cernugel each branch of the service, he would they will have attained their 17th, chalked up 11 points to pace the do well to take this examinatio11 but have not reached their 2Znd winners. Camp led the Delta Sig -that is, if he is not already in birthdays by that date; attack with 14 markers . . That impressive record, both on

the mound and at the plate, ha:; earned Tommy a tryout with· the Yankees this year. And since the Yanks are in need of a good left­bander, the chances are that Tom­my will be around when the sea­son opens next month and will still be around when it closes

a reser.ve corps. Taking the ex- (c) Students who will have at~ amination involves no obligation tained their 17th but have not The standing (does not include on the part of the candidate. If reached their 22nd birthdays by games yesterday): he passes it successfully, he may· July 1, 1943, who do not hold cer­decide afterward to enter this ·.>r tificates of graduation from a sec­any other particular branch of ondary school but who are now the Service. One who passes the continuing their education in an examination successfully will accredited college or university.

next September. '

Classes Start:ed For ASTP Soldiers

Soldiers were to have begun

probably be able to remain in col- To be eligible for Officer Can­lege longer, either here or at some didate School or the Army Spec­other college, at government ex- ialized Training Program, a man pense and receive training for spe- must be morally and physically cific service. Those wishing to qualified, and must evidence pu­take it should see Miss Godfrey in tential officer qualifications, in­Dean· Bryan's office ·before the eluding appearance and scholar­examination is given on April 2nd ship records.

classes in advanced engineering at · ten colleges now contracted under College Announces the Army Specialized Trainin~

Program last Monday, .. March 15, Degree Candl·daLes according to a War Departmeut ~

announcement. Candidates for degrees on Ma~q Of the. 479 colleges· so far ap- 24, 1943, are listed below as re­

proved by the Joint Committee leased by Registrar Grady Patter­For: tlle Selection· of Non-Federal son yesterday. He requests that if ~titutions, these . ten were . the there are any omissions, those frrst to have recelved the final people come by to see him imme­War Depar.tment 0. K., plus the diately. accompanymg contracts. There • The candidates are: have been no further releases concerning the signing of ·contracts by any of the other schools under consideration.

The colleges receiving the first groups of soldiers were: Purdue, Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Rutgers, West Virginia University, University of Minnesota, Agricul­tural and Mechanical College of Texas, Oregon State College, Georgia Institute of Technology, New York University, and Massa­chusetts Institute of Technology. The soldiers will be trained in all phases of advanced engineering­chemical, electrical, mechanical, and civil-War Department offi­cials report.

Bachelor of Arts J. W. Allen, B. G. Bass, S. C.

Batten, Jr., E. D. Bergen, L. T. Bridgers, . P. E. Brunner, W. T. Carpenter, Jr., R. W. Chesser, W. L. Coble, J. J. Conley, J. A. Crisp, Jr., H. C. Ellis, R. G. Forbes, A. F. Gibson,

J. E. Hobgood, L. H. Hollings­worth, R. L. Holt, T. L. Jones, J. J. McMillan, D. C. Martin, IL C. T. Mitchell, N. B. Morgan, 0. E. Moye, L. J. Newton, Jr., H. B. Parrott, Jr.,

Mary Paschal, W. J. Patton, W. B. Primm, E. L. Puryear, H. F Shen·ill, H. L. Thompson, M. W. Tobey, Jr., Phyllis utley, J. 0. West, Jr., W. F. West, Jr., E. G Wilson and J. H. Wishon.

Bachelor of Science

Two hundred , soldier-students will live on the Rutgers campus West Virginia will house 400, and the other eight colleges will have about 500 ap1ece. R. D. Abbitt, N. D. Adams, J. __ _:=======-~-~~R~.~B~a~ldwin, M. R. Barnes, Jr., C.

Jm before the orders to comntence firing, our radio station on Mid­waY, was blown to bits. Marine Sgt. Harold P. Hazelwood, the operator, was severely wonnded by shrapneL Despite his serious wonndB, he ~embled parts and 5ellt out the firing orden that l!llved the day.·

Your moneY, is needed to "save the day" everr pq, dar.. · ;)!'J!U've dono yom: bit; DGW do your best-~uy more War Bonds. .,

E. Berger, E. W. Biles, C. W. Bru­ton, E. R. Caldwell, J'r., F. G Chapman, D. J. Cleckley, H. M. Currin, W. A. Dunne, J. S. Farrar. Jr., C. A. Froneberger, F. B. Gross, Jr., E. M. Guest, Jr., R. A. Hare, G. M. Hill, F. B. Holmes, C. C. Hope, Jr., B. W. Jackson, J. R. Jeffreys, J. P. Jones, R. S. Kiger, Jr., 0. R. King, Jr., R. W. Kornegay.

R. W. Lide, C. D. Little, Lucy Lubchenko, J. E. Maxwell, R. E. Nowell, C. H. Overbey, M. B. Pate, Jr., Beth Perry, D. C. Pitt­man, H. ·w. Pittman, R. C. Pope, R. C. Proctor, J. V. Pruitt, Jr., E. K. Reese. W. F. Reese, Jr.,

A. F. Riggs, J. L. Rose, A. E. Rubino, A. B. Sally, H. M. Slu­der, J. P. Smith, M. J. Sylvester, Jr., J. V. Thomas, R. W. Timber­lake, F. L. Todd, D. E. Ward, Jr., M. W. Webb, J. C. Whitmire, L. L. Williams, W. D. Willis and J. E. Wooten, Jr.

DELTA KAPPA ALPHA CHOOSES OFFICERS

Delta Kappa Alpha, honorary ministerial fraternity, has elected new officers. Bob Lasater has been chosen president; Carlton Mitchell, vice-president; and Carl Harris, secretary. DKA has been reorganized on an active basis and now holds meetings every two weeks.

ftidgeway·s 0PTICJAN8

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Reasonable, Appetizing

Team PiKA AKPi Kappa Alpha SPE Kappa Sig Sigma Pi Delta Sig Lambda Chi

W L Pet. 3 0 1.000 3 0 1.000 3 0 1.000 2 2 .500 1 3 .250 1 3 .250 1 3 .250 0 3 .000

Gaines today. PiKA vs. Delta Sig

Kappa Alpha vs. Sigma Pi.

WAKE SIGMA PI's

BEAT STATE 42-34 The Sigma Pi basketball team

from Wake Forest met State Col­lege's Sigma Pi quintet in Raleigh last Sunday afternoon and the visiting Wake Forest club won out in a hard-fought battle, 42-34.

Bud Philipps with 14 points, Dom Flamp1ia with ten, and Al Cernugel with eight paced the at­tack for the winners. Ray Oddo­no, Buddy Northington, Carly1P. Kinlaw, Street Jones, and Johu Narron all played good ball for the Wake Sigma Pi's, who out­played their opponents all the way. Joe Johnson was a State V a r s it y p 1 aye r. as held to eight points by the tight Wake Forest defense.

M.A. YORK .A Good Watchmaker

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(Brawley Jewelry Co.)

Quick Lunches Hamburgers

Drinks •

Magazines Billiards

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your clothes get dirty easily. Take care of them by getting ex· cellent cleaning at

Wilkinson's Cleaners Phone375-1

Opposite RR Underpass

Page 4: ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK...,f. ll ·s r e rl i r l l, ' ., ) t. ,. ·:·:OLD GOLD AND BLACK "etweM.·u. e~ .eih.,tk ~~,, * * * =V=o=lu~•-. in==e.=X=X=i=V='=. I=I.=.=N==o=.==2=9=====TI

Page Four

Around and About

OFF THE CAMPUS By BETTY STANSBURY

The wedding of Miss Mary Alice Garner to Anthony Richard Gallo­vich took place in Norfolk, Va. un February 19, with the Rev. Fran­cis L. Bradican officiating.

Mrs. Gallovich is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Garner of Wake Forest and for the past year has held a secretarial position in Raleigh.

Chief Specialist Gallovich, US·· NR, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Gallovich of Vandergrift, Pa. and graduated from Wake Forest in 1941. While in schoo: he was an outstanding football and baseball star. He is now sta­tioned in Philadelphia.

Captain and Mrs. Walton Kitchin were in town this week. Capt. Kitchin is in the paratroops and is now stationed at Ft. Bragg.

Mrs. E. E. Overton and chil­dren, Roger and Nancy,.were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Dale Stans­bury. during the week, while ")n their way to join Lt. Overton, U. S. NavY. who is now at Sanford, Fla.

Mrs. Fred Eason is spending some time with her husband in Portsmouth, Va. Ensign Eason is waiting to go on foreign duty.

Mrs. Roland Gay has returned after visiting her father, Mr. God­win Jenkins, who is ill in the Norfolk General Hospital.

Lt. Edward Paschal is in town visiting his parents. He just re­cently received his commission at Ft. Sill, Okla. and will leave shortly for his new station, Ft. Bragg.

Mr. and Mrs. John Rich an­nounce the birth of a daughter, Elizabeth McLamb, at Mary Eliza­beth Hospital in Raleigh on March 11.

LffiRARY RECEIVES 17NEWBOOKS

The Wake Forest Library has received seventeen new books this week covering the fields of religion, social science, fine arts, travel and history as well as sev­eral well-known biographies.

Included among the books are Hornbeck's "United States and the Far East,'' "Music and Scriptures ' by I. E. Reynolds, Mason's "Di­lemma of American Music," "Democratic Manifestor" by Reves, Wagner's "Music Drama of Ring," "World Order in His­toric Perspective" by Kohn, Doughty's "Passages from Arabia Deserts." "Valley of Virginia in America Revolution" by Hart, Ryan's "Recollection of Old Musi­cians," "Wagner" by Praegar, and Beloved, Friend. the story of Tchaikowsky Nadejda von Meek, by Bowen and von Mock.

Old Gold and Black

L. ···:'· ... :·~:· rrlie ·G·t~~te~~:::·~ib.'t1~i:·.: ::7

~::·: .. · ·'~ ..

· '::,:::';,.in. ·~1~ 'VJt.ia::. ' ~:. . - .

~;.. ;:;·· : ::..:-.=.:·.:..~· '(

Red Cross Needs $125,000,000 To finance Wartime Program

WASHINGTON, D. C.-Faced with Is confident that all our people will the greatest wartime program In be generous In their support or the history, the A,merlcan Red Cross 1943 War Fund." wiU launch Its 1943 War Fund ap· More than 65 percent o! the fund peal for $125,000,000 on March 1, received by the national organtza· Chairm;.n Norman H. Davis has an· tion will be devoted to meeting Red nounced. Cross responsibilities to the armed

Pointing out that the bulk o! the forces. These Include the Red Cross rund will be used to expand Red overseas club program, recreation Cross services to the men of the and hospital program, the station· armed forces and their famll\es, ing of field directors at all foreign Chairman Davis urged every Amer· and domestic military camps and lean man and woman to contribute bases, the huge surgical dressing to the fund. productiJn program, an·d the blood

THOMAS -Continued from page 1_:_

conferred an honorary LL. D. on him in 1936 and he received ar• honorary Litt. D. from National University in 1937. He is a mem­ber of the Cliinese Political and Social Science Association; the American Academy of Political and.Social Science; the American Association of University of Pro­fessors; and of the advisory board of the East and West Association.

All plans for the convention have not definitely been settled as yet, Williams said, however, they will be released next week.

SECOND

TIME

With the approval of President plasma project which recently was Roosevelt, who also is President of expanded to a total of 4,000,000 the American Red Cross. the month pints 11t the request of the Army of March Is being observed as Red and Navy. Cross Month. Walter S. Gifford, Chairman Davis pointed out that president of the American Tele- the 1943 program will lle vastly phone and Telegraph Company, Is greater than the accomplishments chairman of the Red Cross 1943 of last year. In which the Red War Fund. Cross aided millions of war victims

. FrMay, March 19, 1943 . ·

****** WITH . THE BOYS IN. SERVICE

Virgil Lindsay, who attended served as technician in the Wak•J · Wak~ Forest in 1940 and was <• Forest Medical School. has com:. member of Kappa Sigma fraterni- pleted four weeks of basic 'train­ty, has received the rank of cap- !ng at the 'l'hird Training Genter tain. Lindsay has returned from of the WAACs and .has· been· se­the Pacific war zone where he. was lected for specialist training lri wounded and decorated. He is a Administration at Arkansas ·Poly­member of the famous 19th Bomb technic College, Russellville; Ark. Group which until recently has She is the dau.e;hter of W. M. Ful­been termed "America's · most ler of Wake Forest. honored fighting unit." Lindsay Chief Specialist Eli Galloway, is now serving as a Flying For- former president of the student x~:B!~~~l"~~~~s. at Pyote- Army body here in 1942, and . who has · Brig. Gen. . Frank Armstrong been stationed in Memphis, Tenn;,

flew with the American Flying as a phys~cal _instructor, ~as pass­Fortress and Liberator formations ed e~ammab_o~s and w1ll en.ter. · that dumped tons of boil}bs on. pre-fhght trammg at an earl.v · Brest in the last w~ek of .Febru- date. ary. . James Gilliand, '39, has been

Capt. Morton H. Wei:pstein, of promoted from ensign to lieuten-. Fairmont, is with the Army.Med- ant, junior grade, in the United ical Corps in North Africa. He is States Navy. · in charge of the J,lospital where he is stationed.

Martha Elizabeth Fullei·, who

Sportswear For Spring

Coine .to

Attention! Finance School

Men -.

213 Fayetteville St. Raleigh, N. C.

''Red Cross services to our armed through Its foreign war relief pro· forces and to the needs of dis· gram; gave aid to thousands of tressed civilians on the bll. ttle and prisoners of war: collected 1,500,· home fronts can be supplied only 000 pints of blood for the armed by great expenditures and sacri· forces; produced 520,000,000 sur· flees," Chairman Davis said. "We gical dressings, and aided more are exerting our utmost efforts to than 1,500,000 service'men and their

The legislative council of Rus- accomplish these tasks with the famllies. sell Sage h~s approved . a ;>lan least possible drain upon the re- 'l'he $125,000.000 quota, he said, Fine's Men Shop

We Carry A Complete Line of

MILITARY ACCESSORIES For Enlisted Men

•and Officers whereby g1rls are perm1tted to • "II fi h 1 1 ·1 1 d wear woolen slacks and ski pants so~rces of the feople In funds. time w1 nance t e oca , nat ana an in class. and energy. \\ e must never falter international work or the Red Cross

In our determination to meet th~se for the entire year, barring· unfore· definite obligations. The Red Cross I seen emergencies. Sophomores at Mundelein col-

lege are investing proceeds of their cotillion in war bonds.

Colleges of London's Cambridge university are planning a shot"t course in swing music in April.

HEADS -Continued from page 1-

The present group will finish the course on April 16, and an­other will be ·opened this sum­mer. Those who are graduatinl'( are making application for civil service ratings.

,. ···············- .. Forest Theatre

Wake Forest, N.C.

Friday, March 19-Ciaudette Colbert, Joel

McCrea in PALM BEACH STORY

Sat., Mar. 20-Double Feat. Roy Rogers in

RIDING DOWN THE CANYON

also William Gargan, Margaret Lindsay

Sunday, March 21-Deanna Durbin in

AMAZING MRS. HOWDAY

Monday, March 22-Godfrey Tearle, Eric

Portman in ONE OF OUR AIRCRAFT

IS MISSING

Tuesday, March 23-Lionel Barrymore in

DR. GILL'ESPm'S NEW ASSISTANT

Wed., March 24-. james Ellison in

.ARMY SURGEON

Thurs., Fri., March 25-26-Robert Taylor, Brian Don­levy, Charles Laughton in

STAND BY FOR ACTION

AFS Adds Five New Officers

GLEE CLUB TO MAKE FIRST APPEARANCE

Five new infantry officers hav~ been added to the tactical divi­sion of the Army Finance School, the first additions to this division since the" enlargement of the School.

The new officers are: 2nd lieu­tenants Melvin R. Paproth, Nicho­las J. Pawlina, Virgil C. Perrin, Peter Prezkop and Ralph W. Ris­ley, Jr. These officers come here from Fort Benning, Georgia.

For the last three weeks, a physical training program has been underway, directed by Lieut. E. R. Jones and Lieut. Perrin. This group runs the obstacl~ course, and plays volley ball, soft ball, foot ball, and soccer. The class meets three times a week on Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 4-5: 00.

This week-end, men of the Army Finance School are gain.\! to two out-of-town social func­tions. Friday night the permanent detachment is going to Rex Hos­pital for the graduation dance of the nurses, and Saturday night 40 men from the 47th class are going to Henderson to attend a Wom­an's Club Dance.

The Wake Forest College glee club is making its first public ap­pearance this semester Sunday evening, under the direction of Music Director Thane McDonald.

The glee club is singing Bach's "Jesu. Joy of Man's Desiring" with the flute obbligato played by Prof. John Freeman at the Sunday evening services at the Wake For­est Baptist Church.

CALL TOM'S TAXI At Hardwicke's

Phone 336-1 Trips Anywhere Over

The entire Harvard university \ th C one-mile relay team has joined ~-----e-_a_m_p~u_s ___ __.. the armed force-;.::s~. ______ .:.._ ___________ _

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Helpful Hints to Housewives Serve non-rationed meats such as liver, brain and kidney in tempting variations! Omelets and cheese dishes are great meat-savers and family favorites!

Hollowell's Meat Market OFFICIAL GREASE AND FAT DEPOT

Do your part for National Defense by bringing in your waste fats.

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