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-I .J:..._ 1 ...... _,. .. ' .... _ .... _, - .. . ' .... . .. . .. ; ', ':_. ,.. ::, ·:.,: ·. '•·· . ;c;, : .. : . ' . -page ' _- ::.· ..... . ·· --- Coimnnist'-Bi1f - ;- .-:_-._:d'·-.- · · it. -.-""'- ar . -- -_,_ · - .:.:; . __ :: __ .. ,,,_ _ -·:- ,_ _ ____ __ : - ·-· · : ·. · · · - · · · .-_ · · · ··· ·· · c llege .:Pa8s Fifteeiti;Man .. : · Board ,• .. ' ' ' .. . . ' ...... · ·, . ' ' .--). .. ' To -Replace_ Former Committee of Five : -By"iul overwhelming "pro" vote; ,. -- :; · ': stu d: e;nt s . ·Wednesday passed .. ; - . -to::-· .theii': governihg :' . .. - changes· caij.ing foi- a . Following an almost unanimous student body approval of a fifteen- man. Freshman Advisory Council, · Choose Thane McDonald As New Faculty Member · · . Publications. Board /. . and· a- Fresrunan ·Ad- stUdent council members t?is week Eleven students five of them juniors, and one faculty selected the men who will serve ... .., ' . . '7- visoryc Committee. Voting the freshman cou,ncil· · ·_ was·- According--· to· the . : amendinent· ·adopted, :this- commit- . -.tee-- shall ·consist of fifteen men in- .. of. five.; :All:members of tl:ie cOmmittee sJ:ian: .be appointed by the-• Student and one ·man on that council for next year. u:temb.er, Professor Thane Edward. McDonald, D1rector of They chose as chairman of the Music, were elected Tuesday night to membership in Omicron Johnny Walker, a rising Delta Kappa, national honorary ieadership fraternity. _senior. · Walker in the The new men are Edwin Rudy Andrews, joseph Anthony work will be frve members of the . . . . . . . - . l . f -- th Duncavage, W1Iev Edwm Gavm, Russell Patten Geer, Jr, Oscar z:rsmg semor c ass, srx rom e . · . . . · .. rising)unior class, and from R. K_mg, Jr.: Ray Augustus .Morns, W1lbam joseph Patton, the sophomore class. The Herbert Leighton Thompson, George Thomas Watkins, III, ARMY AIR CORPS: Pictured are·Major John S. Snyder, left, fifteen-man will. replace Owen Newbill Williamson,· and Edwin ·Graves Wilson. and Lieutenant" Wayne F. who will meet Wake Forest , - shall>be,·designated-to seFve· as students.in'a special- convocation today to explaih the Axmy Air thus Andrews, of Ramseur, is majoring in English. Elected in chairman. All. shall be . . . Th ff' blmg- councrl to do more eifr- F b t Ph. B K h h . . - Corps' _new deferred enlistment plan for-college men. , e o leer_ s cr'ent· wo-rk, s·tu'dent body president _e. ruary o. . . 1 eta a ppa, e as been outstandmg m re- of at least sophomore standing but s 'h 1 t c come to Wake Forest from the Adyanced Flying c 00 -a rarg Joe Duncavage said. hgJOus act1v1t1es. Last semester he was president of Delta ·not more_._than three shall be sbph- ' · ·· · u" b · -th h h 't 10 oo omores. Field, Alabama. The convocation Ll e _m e urc . a :. : _ · Frpm the rising-senior class the Kappa Alpha, honorary ministerial fr'aternity, and is a _. .,_ Purpose ·of.this"change,._Student . ll ld council appointed John Qf the Eu Society, the ministerial Conference, and the BSU . 'council' members explained,. 1ies A . OrJ!i" . l:Z./.. . u;-- . Carpenter, Frank _Kmche- Council. He is· a transfer from Campbell c II . d. . in the that freshman orienta-, fr· - .- . 'i"'e¥_5 rr· t . _CJ.''O_ .' loe Tut Myers and· Mrss Beth . . . . 0 ege an IS an - · " "" 1 ' Per,ry. Mr'ss Perr'y was appointed assistant m the rehgJOn department. He is a senior. tit>n will ·be- stressed next year as · -...-·it has never been stressed before, · · · a.·- · to-serve as advisor to the new co- Duncavage lives in Tamaque, . anbed· r,'ethq·u.eirreefdo_.re, more advisors' il_ . K a·· K_. e-et_ ·ue· ·r.e:. - ·.()·,_-_--._·a· eds enrolling here next year. Pa., and became president of the · · lf.lj 1J'Jj fll From the junior class the council student body when Eli Galloway Votiiig for the fifteen-man pub- appointed' Sam Behrends, Bynum left school a month ago. A mem- lications · board was This . . · - 1 Shaw, Charles Cole, Rufus Red- ber of Sigma Phi Epsilon, he is canS for_ cliatige both . Two Army Air···corps officers, I . MaJor Snyder and Lt. Trueblood fearn Gene Cole, and Horace seeking a B. S. degree in General . - . Majol"·John S. Snyder and· Lieu- come to W8:k.e Forest f.rom·the Ad.- _ sr;ence, which he will get this of the on the board and in · S h 1 t C -- i tenant F. Trueblood, will .vanced _Flymg c 0 ? a . ralg Russ Perri, Horace Kornegay, .lr. ·A varsity football player (Continu_ed on Page_ Two) meet Wake Forest's student body Field, Ala. will- be mtro- and Frank Pruette v,ill serve on r three years, he is a member of at 10 o'clock this morning in the duced this morning bY, ·:J?ean D. B. the council from the rising sopho- the :Monogram Club and has serv- $4 ., Mo. I Baptist Church 'in a specially-call- Bryan, who has been appointed more class. ed on the Student Council for two · : :#c . _ ... · re·: . $ ed all-school convocation to ex- faculty air force advisor. Dean plain to Ai:-my:s de- Bryan has urged that students at- ------------- ,:&. ,:v·- e.n-·_-t-o·•F- nd-- ferred service.pl'an; whereby men tend the mass meeting 'toclay.· Local Gr· ocer .. Gavin Jl .... : . will be allowed to complete their Of Vital Interest To ' t' a[Rises' To education being called. for "Th.e question of deferred ser- active air corps-duty as officers. vice for college men should be of o·.es Tuesday _Set In addition to the- convocation, vital-interest to every man on the · • $750 · - . personal interview conferences will is in com- Gavin, first year law school student from Sanford,- is president · of Pi Kappa Alpha. He was a member of the Glee Club for three years and the Phi Society two. . · · . · . be conducfed all afternoon in the pletmg hrs education, Lieutenant The student ·council announced · . R N L d h · ·t d here - · · · .,. Faculty Room of Wait Hall MaJor · · an o, w o vrsr e tlUs week._!hat step has Snyder and Lt Trueblood an- Wednesday to malre -plans for the been taken m furthermg the Wake · · 1 · d "And now · · swer questions an· day·· and --then conv.oca IOn, exp arne · . _ . Forest defense effort -to purchase . . d t for the first time the Army is · · d t send a cadet exammmg boar o a $1,000 defense bond and ona e W M 8 - 't . making provision for this" ake Forest on ay o give · .blood plasma to the armed forces. d . 1 -. t' In· short he said the new En- Student Body Treasurer Warre'n 1 mental an physica Ions . ... ·. . and complete enlistment of all Reserve plan calls for en- Pritchard sard that $47 more was h . t t d . th rollment of all eligible college stu- - added the bond fund this week; j dent w o are m eres e m . e _new _ . . b · · th t tal - t t $ 524 plan - (Contmued on Page St.:t) rmgmg e o amoun o · , .25; The picture sponsored by. the Monogram Club at the. Forest The- atre- Sunday netted $45.00 to bond drive- proceeds, Pritchard said. Prilceeds from the Dramatic Club production, ",The Bishop Misbe- haves," which will be given Friday, May 8, in the high school auditor- Court Charges Futrelle Guilty, Imposes NO Fine ium, will· go to further the present . "This court finds Mr. Futrelle guilty as charged, but, considering amount of the bond fund, Tickets the circumstances of the case and considering the two hours he spent the production, priced at 25 in jail as sufficient punishment for the violation of law of which he is . cents each, may be purchased from found guilty, it chooses to impose no fine." - .any student council representative. This .was the verdict handed down by Judge Donald Gulley in the Student Body President Joe local Recorder's court Saturday morning at the close of the half-hour Duncavage said that no definite ·trial of Dean Futrelle, sophomore from Emporia, Va., for trespassing :arrangements have made on the property of the Seaboard railway following the wreck of one thus far to secure eqUJpment to of its freight' lrains near here Sunday, April 19 - a_ trial attended by take blood donors, upwards of fifty Wake Forest students. ' Funeral Rites Held In Baptist Church For J. S. Harrison Geer, who hails from Baltimore·, is a Pi Kappa Alpha, president-·of the Monogram Club, and has play- ed football for three years. J. S. Harrison, ·prominent Wake He is a member of the Student Forest merchant, died Tuesday of I Legislature and has served on the a heart attack. 1 Publications Board and the Stu- The o:perator of . ; dent Council. He is listed in Harrison's Grocery had spent over is Herbert 1 Who's_ Who Amo.ng in 50 of his 68 years in Wake Forest. . 1 Amertcan Colleges and Untversi- As a deacon in the First Baptist Thompson, next year's editor of ties, is a senior, and is planning to Church, a' member of the Junior The Student. He defeat New- study law . Order and a vital citizen of the bill -Williamson Bill West King, Gamma Eta Gamma from community he was known to all Wilmington, was recently elected th t 1 for liis position. e ownspeop e. to the vice-presidency of the stu- :Mr. Harrison was b1aried in .the 1 Thompson, elected Tuesday dent body for the coming year. He local cemetery. 1 to ODK, is a Delta Sigma Phi. is a cheerleader, a member of the were held Wednesday at 4 p.m. m 1 Howler business staff, and a junior the Baptist Church. I planning to study law. He was the son of P. M. Harri- son and the- former Miss Vandelia Lake st··ll Ill M . Morris orr1s, whose home is in Ruth- Hart, both deceased, of Franklin County. He is survived by his erfordton, is a member of Pi Kap- The C d·t·o of Beve ly Lake pa Alpha and has been elected wife, the former Miss Efie Con- on 1 I n r , f nT k F t ofes or president of the Pan-Hellenr'c yars, two children, Mrs. Bert Bau- ormer vv a e ores pr s com of Statesville and :Mrs. Beery now connected with the Office I Council for next year, having of Price Administration in been on that council for two years. of Maryland, and his sister, :Mrs. k F Washington, is still critical. Doc- · He played on the tennis team for W. H. Beddingfield of Wa e or- three years. He 1's a J'Unl'or tak- t tors are optimistic about the re- es · covery of Professor Lake, who ing a B. A. ' but that the ":Ill be ov- At the trial Futrelle employed no counsel, conducting his own er- here sometune .durmg next defense. His only witness was Jack Hunt, junior from Louisburg, week. Students are urged to watch who was with him at the time of his arrest p R of. the arrival Ftitrelle was· arrested by City Police Chie{Ben Mitchell on April fe• egiStrabon has been seriously ill, though re- Patton, junior newly elected as suits of treatments will not def- president of the student body, is initely known for a few days. from Morganton. Taking a B.· A. (Continued on Page Twa) . be posted 19 after he had failed to comply with a..request of railroad special on the varrous bulletm agents to get off the tracks while he was looking over the wreck of the announcement will _be Seaboard freight and spent two hours in the local jail, tieing freed m chapel when the eqmp- when T. E. Holding of the local Holding Drug Company put up a $50 ment (Beginning this week, this column or coming events will be a weekly fea- ot OLD GOLD AND BLACK. 'This week it is incomplete, owing to the difficulty of ascertaining the dates of events. To Insure completeness, all department and organization heads bail for his release. (Continued on Page Five) Howler Staff Slumbers; Volume Forty Is Done BY NEWBILL WILLIAMSON are. requested to turn In to the paper A group of bleary-eyed Howler staff members have finally curled by Tuesday night of each week a list 1 _ or meetings and- other they are up in their beds and slept for more than three !;lours consecutively, echedullng for the commg week.-Ed.) for, as OLD GOLD AND BLACK went to press Wednesday night, Monday, May 4: volume number 40 of Wake Forest's yearbook was finished. With Phi Society Meeting ........ 7 pm. the completion of an izi'dex and final proof-reading, another year was Eu Society Meeting ........ 7 pm. ended fol' Howler slaves, another year which seemed at times as if it Wednesday, May 6: would be the last for Editor Royal Jennings and his crew. l.R:C. Meeting .................... 7 pm. Working late in the little office in Publications Row, the EaCh student not graduating in May is expected to consult his advisor and call at the· Reg- istrar's Office to record his plans for the summer and for the en- suing year May 6-7. Instructions and forms are beirig mailed to students this week. This year the plan differs in some respects from that of last year. First, the period has been reduced to the two days indicat- ed ebove. Second, each student is . expected to devote more thought to his plans and is to have his schedule prepared be- fore consulting his advisor for signature. Third, no reservations are to be made now in class sec- . tions, providing greater flexibili- ty, but a foundation for final registration at the opening of the Summer Term and the Fall Term. HARVEY DUNN SAYS: All Work and No Play Makes Me a "Jack-of-All- Trades" (This is the second in a series of i worked fine until two days after OJ,D GOLD .-\::-JD BLACK features b)' I Harvey Dunn, Colored "jack-of-all- 1 summer school had closed. I, was trades" who has b"en with the_ college 'then appointed by the "boss" to for a hlloBt 22 years. The f1rst ap-/ pea red last week and the last will 1 go to a certain classroom and take follow in next week's issue of the pa- tho h · d t th per.-Ed.J I se c arrs up an ge em back to the elementary school. BY HARVEY DUNN which was on the Raleigh road. Dear Friends, Well, I should be Well, that Friday as I, can able to say that. For the benefit plainly recall the temperature was and sportsmanship of those that hovering between 90 and 100 de- may not know, which I am sure grees. I sat down in one of the are the majority. chairs. Within a few minutes I Pre-registration begins .... 8 am. staff has come to know such friends as Snyder and Shorty and the ------------- I will attempt to bring you one was fast asleep, during this black- of the unhappiest times of my life. out moment I was disturbed by Although it came out 0. K. it was footsteps coming towards me and in slow motion. As far as I'm when I finally opened my eyes, concerned I'm willing to forget it. there stood the boss, :Mr. W. D. Thursday, May 7: night'watchman. Without them the nights of writing copy and assort- Pre-registration e1ds ........ 5 p.m. ing pictures and drawing up layouts would have been interminably Sigma Pi Alpha meeting .... ·7:30 long, for cokes (when there were any) and sandwiches and Pepsies p.m. kept the w'brkers going when they might even have played completely Friday, May 8: ·out. · Convocation for installation ofl Average Student Is Ignorant newly elected student body of- The average student is not aware of what lies behind the- scene ficers .......................... 10:00 a.m. any more than editor-elect Ed Wilson was when he got into the fray. Dramatics Club presents "The He found out when he caught himself asleep over his typewriter in the Bishop Mhbehaves," high school :auditorium - ............. - ....... 8 p.m• (Continued on Page Five) ..,_ ' Convocation Some ten or twelve years ago, I Holliday of course, he asked me do not recall the exact time, any- what was wrong. I in a too-tone way when the college first began drawled I, I, I, am, Kinda sick to- to have summer school the custom day, He then said a few more every year was for the college to words and left the room, by that borrow chairs from the public time I had completely recovered school. ThesE!'· were mighty com- from my slumber realing that the fortable chairs. Of course these game of sleep was over. 1 : chairs had_to be fastened to the II Score: Harvey, 1, Mr. W. D. -------------- floor with_ screws, everything Holliday, 0. A special convocation will be held at chapel period Friday morning for the official inaug- eration of next year's student body officials, Joe Duncavage, president of the student body, announced this week.

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.. : . ' . :·::·:.-:~()ii;,;:_:,~;-~:~~iial; -page ' _- ::.· ..... . ·· •~'-- --- Coimnnist'-Bi1f ~- -~- - ;- .-:_-._:d'·-.- ~-· · · H~ it. ·.;~ti;;,:~~~E.zi:L(.,,, :··.pi·,~: -.-""'- ar . ::,::~.:~·':.~~:-~r~u~f:~-~u~Ds'.~_ -- -_,_ · - .:.:; . __ :: __ .. ,,,_ _ ::~-: t-:~·c.-.t'·: -·:- -· ,_ ,,~~~-:-· _

~~~~:· ~~· ·5_$~~1~~~-;~_::·~~~:·~~·-,-~w-~_k~e~J~1-~-~-~-~-~-~-_:_t_~T·~_-_i~d-~~i_·M_a_y_1~,_1_9_~_-____ ~------~-----N_u_m~h-~_2_7 __ : -·-· · : ·. · · -· · - · · · .-_ -· · · · ,~.,,.. · · · · · · c llege Lib~ary

-~ .:Pa8s Fifteeiti;Man .. : · _· .:-',Publications~ Board

,• ~ .. ' ' ' .. . . ' ......

· ·, A«lYisor!~.Council-. ' .· ' .--).

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To -Replace_ Former Committee of Five

: -By"iul overwhelming "pro" vote; ,. --:; · ': stu d: e;nt s . ·Wednesday passed ..

; -,B.B;.em:mi~nts- . -to::-· .theii': governihg :' . .. - ~oristitution, changes· caij.ing foi- a .

Following an almost unanimous student body approval of a fifteen­man. Freshman Advisory Council, ·

Choose Thane McDonald As New Faculty Member

· · fifte~:.riian. . Publications. Board /. . and· a- fifteen.:~an Fresrunan ·Ad-

stUdent council members t?is week Eleven students five of them juniors, and one faculty selected the men who will serve ... .., ' . .

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visoryc Committee. Voting f~r the freshman cou,ncil· ·

·_ was·- 151~9<'- According--· to· the . : amendinent· ·adopted, :this- commit-. -.tee-- shall ·consist of fifteen men in­.. st~ad of. five.; :All:members of tl:ie

cOmmittee sJ:ian: .be appointed by the-• Student Council~ and one ·man

on that council for next year. u:temb.er, Professor Thane Edward. McDonald, D1rector of They chose as chairman of the Music, were elected Tuesday night to membership in Omicron

co~cil Johnny Walker, a rising Delta Kappa, national honorary ieadership fraternity. _senior. · Assist~ng. Walker in the The new men are Edwin Rudy Andrews, joseph Anthony work will be frve members of the . . . . . . . - . l . f -- th Duncavage, W1Iev Edwm Gavm, Russell Patten Geer, Jr, Oscar z:rsmg semor c ass, srx rom e . · . . . · ..

rising)unior class, and thr~e from R. K_mg, Jr.: Ray Augustus .Morns, W1lbam joseph Patton, the ~ising sophomore class. The Herbert Leighton Thompson, George Thomas Watkins, III,

ARMY AIR CORPS: Pictured are·Major John S. Snyder, left, fifteen-man ~ouncil will. replace Owen Newbill Williamson,· and Edwin ·Graves Wilson. and Lieutenant" Wayne F. T~eblood, who will meet Wake Forest , -

shall>be,·designated-to seFve· as students.in'a special- convocation today to explaih the Axmy Air th~. ~oriner co~~ttee, thus en~- Andrews, of Ramseur, is majoring in English. Elected in chairman. All. members~ shall be . . . Th ff' blmg- ~he councrl to do more eifr- F b t Ph. B K h h . . -

Corps' _new deferred enlistment plan for-college men. , e o leer_ s cr'ent· wo-rk, s·tu'dent body president _e. ruary o. . . 1 eta a ppa, e as been outstandmg m re-of at least sophomore standing but s 'h 1 t c come to Wake Forest from the Adyanced Flying c 00 -a rarg Joe Duncavage said. hgJOus act1v1t1es. Last semester he was president of Delta ·not more_._than three shall be sbph- ' · ·· - · · u" b · -th h h 't 10 oo

omores. Field, Alabama. The convocation w· Ll e _m e ~ urc . a :. : _ · Frpm the rising-senior class the Kappa Alpha, honorary ministerial fr'aternity, and is a m~mber _. .,_ ~ ~- Purpose ·of.this"change,._Student . ll ld council appointed John Mc~illan, Qf the Eu Society, the ministerial Conference, and the BSU

. 'council' members explained,. 1ies A . OrJ!i" . l:Z./.. . u;-- . W~lter Carpenter, Frank _Kmche- Council. He is· a transfer from Campbell c II . d. . in the ·fa~t that freshman orienta-, fr· - .- . 'i"'e¥_5 rr· t . _CJ.''O_ .' loe Tut Myers and· Mrss Beth . . . . 0 ege an IS an

- · " "" 1 ' Per,ry. Mr'ss Perr'y was appointed assistant m the rehgJOn department. He is a senior. tit>n will ·be- stressed next year as · -...-·it has never been stressed before, · · · ~-: a.·- · to-serve as advisor to the new co- Duncavage lives in Tamaque,

. anbed· r,'ethq·u.eirreefdo_.re, more advisors' will-·~ il_ . K a·· ~s·· -~-K_. e-et_ ·ue· ·r.e:. - ·.()·,_-_--._·a· y· eds enrolling here next year. Pa., and became president of the · · lf.lj ~~ 1J'Jj fll From the junior class the council student body when Eli Galloway Votiiig for the fifteen-man pub- appointed' Sam Behrends, Bynum left school a month ago. A mem-

lications · board was 152~8. This . . · -

1

Shaw, Charles Cole, Rufus Red- ber of Sigma Phi Epsilon, he is iunenrun~nt canS for_ cliatige both . Two Army Air···corps officers, I . MaJor Snyder and Lt. Trueblood fearn Gene Cole, and Horace seeking a B. S. degree in General

. - . Majol"·John S. Snyder and· Lieu- come to W8:k.e Forest f.rom·the Ad.- Mill~r· _ sr;ence, which he will get this of the numb~r on the board and in · S h 1 t C - - i

tenant 'Yayn~ F. Trueblood, will .vanced _Flymg c 0? a . ralg Russ Perri, Horace Kornegay, .lr. ·A varsity football player (Continu_ed on Page_ Two) meet Wake Forest's student body Field, Ala. Th~y- will- be mtro- and Frank Pruette v,ill serve on r three years, he is a member of

at 10 o'clock this morning in the duced this morning bY, ·:J?ean D. B. the council from the rising sopho- the :Monogram Club and has serv-

$4., Mo. I Baptist Church 'in a specially-call- Bryan, who has been appointed more class. ed on the Student Council for two · : :#c . _ ... · re·: . $ ed all-school convocation to ex- faculty air force advisor. Dean

plain to stude~ts th~ Ai:-my:s de- Bryan has urged that students at- -------------

,:&. ~ ,:v·-e.n-·_-t-o·•F-u· nd-- ferred service.pl'an; whereby men tend the mass meeting 'toclay.· Local Gr· ocer .. Gavin Jl .... : . will be allowed to complete their Of Vital Interest

To' t' a[Rises' To education b~fore being called. for "Th.e question of deferred ser-active air corps-duty as officers. vice for college men should be of o·.es Tuesday -$52·~~5-,:Toward _Set In addition to the- convocation, vital-interest to every man on the

· • (}_o~~c)f: $750 · - . personal interview conferences will cam~us ~ho is in~ere~,ted_ in com-

Gavin, first year law school student from Sanford,- is president · of Pi Kappa Alpha. He was a member of the Glee Club for three years and the Phi Society two.

. · · . · . ,· be conducfed all afternoon in the pletmg hrs education, Lieutenant The student ·council announced · • . R N L d h · ·t d here - · · · .,. Faculty Room of Wait Hall MaJor · · an o, w o vrsr e

tlUs week._!hat ano~er step has Snyder and Lt Trueblood ~ill an- Wednesday to malre -plans for the been taken m furthermg the Wake · · t· 1 · d "And now · · swer questions an· day·· and --then conv.oca IOn, exp arne · . _ . Forest defense effort -to purchase . . d t for the first time the Army is

· · d t send a cadet exammmg boar o • a $1,000 defense bond and ona e W M 8-'t . making provision for this" ake Forest on ay o give · .blood plasma to the armed forces. d . 1 -. t' In· short he said the new En-

Student Body Treasurer Warre'n 1

mental an physica e~amma Ions . • • ... ·. . and complete enlistment of all stu~ ~listed Reserve plan calls for en-

Pritchard sard that $47 more was h . t t d . th rollment of all eligible college stu-- added ~to· the bond fund this week; j dent w o are m eres e m . e _new _ . .

b · · th t tal - t t $524 plan - (Contmued on Page St.:t) rmgmg e o amoun o - · · , .25; The picture sponsored by. the Monogram Club at the. Forest The­atre- Sunday netted $45.00 to bond drive- proceeds, Pritchard said.

Prilceeds from the Dramatic Club production, ",The Bishop Misbe­haves," which will be given Friday, May 8, in the high school auditor-

Court Charges Futrelle Guilty, Imposes NO Fine

ium, will· go to further the present . "This court finds Mr. Futrelle guilty as charged, but, considering amount of the bond fund, Tickets the circumstances of the case and considering the two hours he spent ~or the production, priced at 25 in jail as sufficient punishment for the violation of law of which he is

. cents each, may be purchased from found guilty, it chooses to impose no fine." -.any student council representative. This .was the verdict handed down by Judge Donald Gulley in the

Student Body President Joe local Recorder's court Saturday morning at the close of the half-hour Duncavage said that no definite ·trial of Dean Futrelle, sophomore from Emporia, Va., for trespassing :arrangements have b~en made on the property of the Seaboard railway following the wreck of one thus far to secure eqUJpment to of its freight' lrains near here Sunday, April 19 - a_ trial attended by take blood fro~ studen~ donors, upwards of fifty Wake Forest students. '

Funeral Rites Held In Baptist Church For J. S. Harrison

Geer, who hails from Baltimore·, is a Pi Kappa Alpha, president- ·of the Monogram Club, and has play­ed v~rsity football for three years.

J. S. Harrison, ·prominent Wake He is a member of the Student Forest merchant, died Tuesday of I Legislature and has served on the a heart attack.

1 Publications Board and the Stu-

The ~well-known o:perator of . ; dent Council. He is listed in Harrison's Grocery had spent over EDITOR--Pictur~ is Herbert 1 Who's_ Who Amo.ng stude~ts in 50 of his 68 years in Wake Forest. . 1 Amertcan Colleges and Untversi-As a deacon in the First Baptist Thompson, next year's editor of ties, is a senior, and is planning to Church, a' member of the Junior The Student. He defeat New- study law . Order and a vital citizen of the bill -Williamson ~nd Bill West King, Gamma Eta Gamma from community he was known to all Wilmington, was recently elected th t 1 for liis position. e ownspeop e. to the vice-presidency of the stu-

:Mr. Harrison was b1aried in .the 1 Thompson, elected Tuesday dent body for the coming year. He local cemetery. Funeral.servic~s 1 to ODK, is a Delta Sigma Phi. is a cheerleader, a member of the were held Wednesday at 4 p.m. m 1 Howler business staff, and a junior the Baptist Church. I planning to study law.

He was the son of P. M. Harri-

son and the- former Miss Vandelia Lake st··ll Ill M . Morris orr1s, whose home is in Ruth­Hart, both deceased, of Franklin County. He is survived by his erfordton, is a member of Pi Kap-

The C d·t·o of Beve ly Lake pa Alpha and has been elected wife, the former Miss Efie Con- on 1 I n r , f nT k F t ofes or president of the Pan-Hellenr'c yars, two children, Mrs. Bert Bau- ormer vv a e ores pr s

com of Statesville and :Mrs. Beery now connected with the Office I Council for next year, having of Price Administration in been on that council for two years. of Maryland, and his sister, :Mrs.

k F Washington, is still critical. Doc- · He played on the tennis team for W. H. Beddingfield of Wa e or- three years. He 1's a J'Unl'or tak-t tors are optimistic about the re-es · covery of Professor Lake, who ing a B. A. '

but that the eq~pment ":Ill be ov- At the trial Futrelle employed no counsel, conducting his own er- here sometune .durmg next defense. His only witness was Jack Hunt, junior from Louisburg, week. Students are urged to watch who was with him at the time of his arrest p R • • :fo~ ~ouncements· of. the arrival Ftitrelle was· arrested by City Police Chie{Ben Mitchell on April fe• egiStrabon

has been seriously ill, though re- Patton, junior newly elected as suits of treatments will not def- president of the student body, is initely known for a few days. from Morganton. Taking a B.· A.

(Continued on Page Twa) . of.eqwpmen~they w~. be posted 19 after he had failed to comply with a..request of railroad special on the varrous bulletm ~oards, agents to get off the tracks while he was looking over the wreck of the a~d ~ announcement will _be Seaboard freight and spent two hours in the local jail, tieing freed m~de m chapel when the eqmp- when T. E. Holding of the local Holding Drug Company put up a $50 ment arrives~

(Beginning this week, this column or coming events will be a weekly fea­~ure ot OLD GOLD AND BLACK. 'This week it is incomplete, owing to the difficulty of ascertaining the dates of events. To Insure completeness, all department and organization heads

bail for his release. (Continued on Page Five)

Howler Staff Slumbers; Volume Forty Is Done

BY NEWBILL WILLIAMSON

are. requested to turn In to the paper A group of bleary-eyed Howler staff members have finally curled by Tuesday night of each week a list 1 • _ or meetings and- other ~vents they are up in their beds and slept for more than three !;lours consecutively, echedullng for the commg week.-Ed.) for, as OLD GOLD AND BLACK went to press Wednesday night, Monday, May 4: volume number 40 of Wake Forest's yearbook was finished. With

Phi Society Meeting ........ 7 pm. the completion of an izi'dex and final proof-reading, another year was Eu Society Meeting ........ 7 pm. ended fol' Howler slaves, another year which seemed at times as if it

Wednesday, May 6: would be the last for Editor Royal Jennings and his crew. l.R:C. Meeting .................... 7 pm. Working late in the little office in Publications Row, the Howl~r

EaCh student not graduating in May is expected to consult his advisor and call at the· Reg­istrar's Office to record his plans for the summer and for the en-suing year May 6-7. Instructions and forms are beirig mailed to students this week.

This year the plan differs in some respects from that of last year. First, the period has been reduced to the two days indicat­ed ebove. Second, each student is . expected to devote more thought to his plans and is to have his schedule prepared be­fore consulting his advisor for signature. Third, no reservations are to be made now in class sec-

. tions, providing greater flexibili­ty, but a foundation for final registration at the opening of the Summer Term and the Fall Term.

HARVEY DUNN SAYS:

All Work and No Play Makes Me a "Jack-of-All-Trades"

(This is the second in a series of i worked fine until two days after OJ,D GOLD .-\::-JD BLACK features b)' I Harvey Dunn, Colored "jack-of-all- 1 summer school had closed. I, was trades" who has b"en with the_ college 'then appointed by the "boss" to for a hlloBt 22 years. The f1rst ap-/ • pea red last week and the last will 1 go to a certain classroom and take follow in next week's issue of the pa- tho h · d t th per.-Ed.J I se c arrs up an ge em

back to the elementary school. BY HARVEY DUNN which was on the Raleigh road.

Dear Friends, Well, I should be Well, that Friday as I, can able to say that. For the benefit plainly recall the temperature was and sportsmanship of those that hovering between 90 and 100 de­may not know, which I am sure grees. I sat down in one of the are the majority. chairs. Within a few minutes I

Pre-registration begins .... 8 am. staff has come to know such friends as Snyder and Shorty and the -------------

I will attempt to bring you one was fast asleep, during this black­of the unhappiest times of my life. out moment I was disturbed by Although it came out 0. K. it was footsteps coming towards me and in slow motion. As far as I'm when I finally opened my eyes, concerned I'm willing to forget it. there stood the boss, :Mr. W. D. Thursday, May 7: night'watchman. Without them the nights of writing copy and assort-

Pre-registration e1ds ........ 5 p.m. ing pictures and drawing up layouts would have been interminably Sigma Pi Alpha meeting .... ·7:30 long, for cokes (when there were any) and sandwiches and Pepsies

p.m. kept the w'brkers going when they might even have played completely Friday, May 8: ·out. ·

Convocation for installation ofl Average Student Is Ignorant newly elected student body of- The average student is not aware of what lies behind the- scene ficers .......................... 10:00 a.m. any more than editor-elect Ed Wilson was when he got into the fray.

Dramatics Club presents "The He found out when he caught himself asleep over his typewriter in the Bishop Mhbehaves," high school :auditorium - ............. -....... 8 p.m • (Continued on Page Five)

..,_ '

Convocation Some ten or twelve years ago, I Holliday of course, he asked me do not recall the exact time, any- what was wrong. I in a too-tone way when the college first began drawled I, I, I, am, Kinda sick to­to have summer school the custom day, He then said a few more every year was for the college to words and left the room, by that borrow chairs from the public time I had completely recovered school. ThesE!'· were mighty com- from my slumber realing that the fortable chairs. Of course these game of sleep was over.

1: chairs had_to be fastened to the II Score: Harvey, 1, Mr. W. D.

-------------- floor with_ screws, everything Holliday, 0.

A special convocation will be held at chapel period Friday morning for the official inaug­eration of next year's student body officials, Joe Duncavage, president of the student body, announced this week.

Page Two

OLD GOLD 6- BLACK Founded .January 15, 1916

CAREY J. HUNTER, First Editor Published weekly during the school year except dur­

Ing examination periods and holidays as directed by the \Vake Forest College Publications Board.

BOB GALLll\WRE ........•................... , .. Editor D. E. WARD .......................... Bu!!iness Manager

CONCRETE HONOR SYSTEM

This week the Student Council took the :li.rst concrete step toward the estabiislunent of a real honor system which has been taken in recent years. Yearly there has been talk and talk of

the honor system, but never has it progressed be­yond the stage of garrulousness.

Wednesday night the Student Council appoint-ed a fifteen-man Freshman Advisory Committee, instead of the usual :five-man board. Purpose of

the larger committee will be to stress as much as possible and .throughout the year freshman orien· tation, particularly the honor system.

I

The honor system will be made a reality ta incoming freshman. They will be taught how lt

operates, how it has failed to operate, how it should operate. They .will be required to see that with them it does operate. They will become the fourid­ation of a system which they likewise will stress when they become upperclassmen, for as Joe Dun· cavage, efficient president of the Student· Council, 'said in last week's meeting, "By molding your freshman class, you are molding your future stu· dent body."

ASININITY NEVER NECESSARY Last week a professor at Duke University was

arrested for violation of blackout regulations when this section of North Carolina was ordered to dark­en all of its windows and doors. Immediately the daily press took up the story and made much of the fact that the Duke professor was Professor of German. And immediately we could envision naive housewives and tired business men 'reading the story and muttering "Duke University is fuil

of German spies." While this attention given the fact that the

man was Professor of German may not have been consciously propaganda, it did have an effect of propaganda. Somehow it went a bit deeper ·with us. Somehow it reminded us of how war and dis· agreement causes 'reaction against culture. How in China Chin Shih Hwang Ti · burned· all books

printed before his reign because he did not agree

with his predecessors. How during the Reforma· tion, Protestants destroyed Catholic cultural man· ifestations and Catholics destroyed Protestant cul· tural manifestations. How during World War I German was suspended from college curricula. How during World War II beautiful cherry trees

in Washington were chopped down because they

were Japanese. War may be necessary at times but such

asininity is never necessary.

ODK ELECTIIONS r; When OLD GOLD AND BLACK learned

this week the results of Tuesday night's six­

hour ODK election the sentiments of its staff var· ied from despairing disgust to optimistic incredul·

ity. There were those who thought the results of the election deplorably unjust and would shoot the works in a fiery editorial denunciation of the whole leadership fraternity. There were those who were

frankly surprised and pleased that so few unde­serving men had been elected. There were even

those who thought the selections rather good, all

things considered. It is impossible for those not connected With

ODK to pass judgment on what it does, for only those who are members of the organi4ation itself can be fully acquainted with all the circumstances governing the actions it takes. It would appear

doubtless, however, that there are no small number of men elected to the fraternity every year who Jo not deserve the honor.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK sees in the fail· ings of ODK the failings of all campus elections, the failure to disregard personal likes and dislike.' and political affiliations and elect men solely on the basis of their qualifications-a failure evident in

national and state politics as well as local. The

remedy to this failure it cannot rightly propos.:~ since it is not sufficiently acquainted with the facts, and, in the last analysis, the remedy must come

(Continued on Page Five)

/

Old Gold. and Black

. CAMPUS 'CAMERA by LEA

HEYGUARDl WHO WR!.JI'E • RXJR WALLS DO NOT A. PR.ISOIIl MAKE?"

SEVERAL PRISON~ AT. Al.CA1'RA7.

PRISON, WI·IICI-\ OOUSES1\li: TCXX:,HEST

FEDERAL CRIMINALS, ARE T"KING OORRES­RJNDEI-ICE muRSES FROM 1l\E tNIVER!>IlY

OF CAUfORNIA!

ship fraternity, had sat in the IT WOULD TAKE 50~ room and wrangled over the YEARS' FOR ONE PERSON ·stormiest election Wake Forest TO COMPLETE ALL OF 1HE

. "\JCKSHo/'. . lHERE ARE MORE

PARr 11ME STIJDENIS' ENROLLED AT NEW YORK UNIVE.R,!>!l'( THAN 1\-IERE ARE FULL TIME SiUDEN15: AT !'#( On.IER COlLEGE, EXCEPT!NG .

- CALIFORNIA /

C•.. ' < < 0

< - AO < ...: .~: ~~"-' ,·;;~ =~""·t. ·;·~ • :.·' \_.: . '· . . · : ->·BY Ed . · . _:< , .~:- ·' wu~~ri : Pro . · ..

Henry B~amann;s Kings·.Jidw·"i;;·~h{'J:the most exaggeratedly important bo_oks fu recent years.

• ·. ... : .•. '··;. ·- ,f'

It is little more than a _sordid story- a}?o~:' sex rlife in· a small, thriving town. Ther author must·cJ,iave felt that the more perverted his characters wer~'and : . ,. ; ...... ~ '

the more· abnormalities they were thE{ victiffis~of, .. •Ht! uettt!r tws uouK wowo :;~. ~·or ne nas c'ertain..:·. ·

. .-•' .·.-.; ,_,., --~·· .·" !Y nueu u to tnt! orun wun cneap, ugcy s1tuat10ns- ·: · ~~OJ;, l.llaL me OOOKS lS WltnOUt lts 'metlts:.:"·.l't-'•,iS' unae!UaiJ.ly supenor to niany ot tne run-Cir::itie~milC . voJ.wnes wruc:n llood tne presses of tne .QUblislling· nouses tnese aays. .bUt it is nard to ·see-·ho.w-:any; sane reader cowa ranK n as one o:t tne rea.uy, great modern n~ve.ts, and yet trus 1~ wnat many _cniics have implied. Perhaps they, as well as the public they profess to serve, are attracted by: Kings Row's unbelievable distortion. It has no other Significant drawing card. '

As a moving "picture, Kings ·Row. is not much better. lt has been whitewashed by the nars.Office. until it has lost most of the qualities which;made it popular.,..as a book. -The fragment .-whic~1 IeJ;llains

is adequately ~andled by a quartet of fairly capable . young players, Robert Cummings, Ronald_ .Reagan, Betty Field, ~nd Ann ::?.heridan. It is strong in places, weak in others . . College has ever seen. COURS'£;5' NCM/ BEING OFFERED

4nd though results of the elec- BY YAL£ UNIVERSITY I * * - . * * * .., tidn were supposed to be kept se- Candidate-for one of the most different~niovies cret until officially announced, of the year is the pic~ization of Dalton Ttumbo's

they had seeped out by the next 'LeLte· r To My_ G··rl Each Day' The Remarkable Andrew-. With the ghost ·a,f An-. day and were common knowledge 1; drew Jackson as a leading character and with the to all interested in the outcome. · A spirits of·Washington, Jefferson,~Marshall, Franklin, Immediately there were repercus- Isn't vera·ge Student's Way and Jesse James as incidental participants in the sions. Politics had dominated the - plot, no picture could be termed trite. Yet the election, it was charged, men had This "letter to my girl every lengths merely prove that it takes director and his staff have failed to tqke fulladvan-been selected who did not merit day" stuff is not true. All told, the more space to say nothing than it tage of the story's possibilities. Where there is a the honor, other men were not average Wake Forest student does to say something. . chance for cleverness and subtlety, the m~vie has chosen who absolutely deserved writes a letter every two days, College correspondents use in- freque~tly descended to inanities. Despite these election. and though they aren't all to wo- verted stamps, :which they pur- silly spots, however, the occasional refr~shing mom-

It is these charges about which men, by far the majority of stamp chase at no extra cost, prefer white ents the_ picture- does have succeed ill making it a I want to write, and, since it is licking is due to some female. Here paper for their own annotations better .than average film. . . my opinion that on the whole the is the truth about the matter based but colored stationery from_ girls, * * * * * ,.. selections which. were made were on a per-month average, in toto, blue ink, and abhor typewritten F fair, I feel that· I can honestly do 't love letters (the typewriting only). o: a decade Walt Disney has been un~uted so without having to deal in per- per ~apl a: Girls are more_ prompt in an- ch.ampwn of the cartoon world. As origin~tor of sonalities, something particularly Letters to "The Woman" .... 7 swering than parents, and 'ladies lVhckey Mouse, Donald Duck, Horace Hors:ecollar, dangerous in college journalism. Letters Home ....... _. ___ ........... - 5 Clarabelle Cow, and all the rest, he has demonstrat-

B . 1 write more legibly than men, d hi But I admit that ODK does have usmess .................................. which fact we didn't need a survey eth ·s,. genius at developing characters more real problems in its elections, and, Miscellaneous ........................ 3 to discover. Deacons do not con- . an ninety-nine per cent of. those. created, by the though I may be censured for air- But that isn't all. As a rule fine their literary expressions to. stars of .the cinema. In his Snow White' and the i~g these problems in public, 1 b~-Jnotes- home are written to "Dear one girl but address them to a host Seven !Jwarfs, Durnbo, and Fantasia, he has attained heve that the sooner all ODK IS Folks," and contain two pages. of women. More mail, also more an artistry which no other single individual in the willing to admit these problems movie inaustry has.ever aproached. Letters to Sweet Stuff are begun male, goes toW. C. from here thah Pu hin D' . and. hon!i!stly state that it is will- "Dearest Mary" (in case her name to any other girls' school. Only 5 g Isney for first place in one-reel car-ing to eliminate them, the sooner is Mary and sometimes by mistake those students who have no heart- toons ~hese days, however, is Warner Brothers' Leon they will disappear. if it isn't), are signed "nobody's throb write to their sisters but if Schlesmger, producer of the Merry Melodies. One

First, look at the manner in business" and average three pages is surprising how many sisters are of his la~est, "Rhapsody in Rivets," is delightful. which new ODK members are se- in sweetness. These comparative written to. To a musiCal background of Franz Liszt's Hungarian lected. Before an election, each Rha.psody No. 2, workmen erect a giant building, member nominates ten men whom only to have it crumple before their eyes with one he thinks outstanding. These men ODK Men p.·ck Leaders blow. It's really a topnotch short. . . are then checked on and a list of

(Continued from Page One)

he will serve as president of Kap­pa Alpha next year and is a mem­ber of the- golf team and the Mon­ogram Club.

in journalism at commencement. Serving this year as managing editor of Old Gold and Black;· he is also a member of the Howler staff, this year as associate editor, and the Student staff. A member

their activities compiled, a certain number of points being given for each activity, 10 points for presi­dent of the student body, 10 for editor of a publication, two for membership in certain organiza­tions, and so on. Names of men with at least 25 points are then Thompson, Delta Sigma Phi of Phi Beta Kappa, he is an as-placed before the fraternity for I from Chadbourn, will be ~ditor of sistant in the English department voting. White balls elect; two The_ Student for the ensumg year. and a member of the Phi Society. black balls reject. He 1s also a member of the Howler Wilson, of Leaksville, is a mem-

* * * * ·* * Readers· who have not grown too sophisticated

in their literary tastes received some shock upon the recent deaths of three American fiction writers: Alice Began Rice, who wrote the quaint, nostalgic ... Mrs. Wiggs .of the Cabbage Patch; Carolyn Wells, known to children as the author of the Mar;orie and thePatty books and to adults as a writer. of the Fleming Stone murder mysteries; and- Albert Pay­son Terhune, author of numerous dog stories and all-round authority on canines.

Theoretically, the point system staff and has served for two years ber of Kappa Sigma and was re­is sound. But, unfortunately, men on the Old Gold and Black staff. cently elected as editor of the with the highest number of points A junior majoring in journalism, Howler for next year and served Students Vote Pro are not always elected. The ques- he is a member of the Phi Society last semester as president of the tion is, of course, Why? and the International Relations Phi Society. Ranking among the

One answer which has been giv- Club. first four in junior class scholar-en is that fraternity-non-fraternity Watkins is a member of Pi Kap- ship, he is a'. member of Sigma Pi politics sway the elections, and pa Alpha from Durham. Gradu- Alpha, national honorary modern that, since most ODK men at pres- ating this year with a B. A. in language fraternity, the Interna­ent and for the past few years English, he is secretary of the se- tional Relations Club and the. Old have been fraternity men, non- nio~ class, member of the Phi Gold and Black staff. A junior fraternity men haven't a chance Soc1ety, the track team, and the majoring in English-journalism, of election. However, I have seen 1 debate squ~d. He has served as he is an assistant in the English the election operate, and I have Student Legislature member, and department.

(Continued from Page One)

the method of §electing members. New Men Out

Passage of the amendment means that me~bers chosen in the 1942 Spring election for the old twenty-man board will not take office. Election for members of the new board will' be heid next fall, it was tentatively decided by the Student Council.

Object of the Publications Board am~dment talked "th f t "t · b t has worked on the Old Gold and · Professor McDonald ca·me to WI ra erm y men a ou - . their attitude a d I d t f 1 Black and the Student staffs. Wake Forest this year as drrecfor was to secure on the board only men who are ac-that this is tr~e. nThis :o:~de::_ Twice Society Day and Founder's of music after_having be~n on the tively connected with publj,fations, since, pro­tion does not enter the election, I ·Day speaker, he has _played bas- faculty at Davidson for f1v~ yea~s·l ponents of the board argued, these men are vitally feel. ~et~all and was president. of. the He atten~ed D~ Pauw Umvers1ty I aware of issues before the board, have a greater

The only politics which does ~umor :lass last year. He IS listed a~d obtamed h1s Bachel_or o~ Mu- understanding of them, especially in the selection t . . t d . t f t 't m Who s Who. s1c degree at the Umvers1ty of of editors and business managers and · ill th . en er Is ms ea m er- ra ern1 y . . . . . . . , , w , ere-

p l ·t· W t 1 t th' Williamson~ Kappa S~gma from 1 M1ch1gan m 1934 ape} h1s Masters fore vote with obJ'ectivity Thus "t . b ·u ... o 1 1cs. e canna e ec 1s . . . . . . • . ,. 1 1s e eveu. man d ·t h' "ts b Crewe, Vm;una, IS gettmg a B. A. m 1935. / campus pol1"tics w·ill be reduc d · bl' ti ·e1 , esp1 e IS men , ecause -"'7f-:_ . e m pu 1ca ons ec-he belongs to this fraternity and t!ons. this fraternity already has two H I I F Jl R d d W · V y Previously the board has consisted of editon, men elected. Or we cannot elect ere t: 51 e OWS. ea an eep. and business managers, five faculty members, the this man, because he belongs to president of the student body, and eight men elect-that fraternity and that fraternity SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS ed by students, two from the senior, junior and is too-well represented. . This Ma. y l6-23 sophomore classes, one from the freshman class charge which has been made is and one from the Law School. tr~e to a ·_great. extent, but, even Morning 9:00-12-:00 Afternoon 2:00-5:00 According to the new amendmen~ the following

this, I believE_!, IS not th~ greatest English 2 All sections May 16 Chemistry 2 A11 Sections members shall compose the board: the six editors facto: by whtch a man IS elected and business managers, the president of the stu-or reJected by ODK. . .1:30 M W F CI!UB!S May 18 8:00 T T S Classes dent body, the head of the faculty publications

The greatest _facto: I found m committee, the professor of journalism, head of the the ODK election IS the place 1:30 T T s Classes. Mav 19 10:30 T T s· ClaSses News Bureau bursar of the colleg d f wh'ch p 1 · di .., ' e an our mem-

I . ersona preJU ces, per- bers elected by the student body as · h 1 sonal hkes and dislikes play. This 9:00 M W F Classes May 20 2:30 T T S Classes · Pi ked · . a w 0 e. man may be qualified, but I can- . C on Ment not vote for him. I don't like 11:30 T T S Classes May 21 11:30 M W F Classes . !hes; elec~l~e _members shall be chosen ac-him. That too often is the typical J!Oidmg •0 qualif1cabo~ w~ch shall be verified attitude. Last Wednesday night 10:30 M W F Classes May 22 2:30 M W F Classes b;y: the Student Council. These requirements are I formed a sincere admiration for that two men must be members of the OLD GOLD men who rose to their feet and 9:00 T T S Classes May 23 8:00 M W F Classes AND BLACK staff, one from The Student staff, said, "Personally I heartily dislike and one from the Howler staff, and that each must this man, but I am willing to ov- Chemistry 2 May 16 2:00-5:00 have served on his staff for at least one year.

English 2 May 16 9:00.12:oo (Continued on Page Five) (Continued on Page Five) ·

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FROM ~oast to coast:-in the s~ies over ~eric~­. there 1s a thundermg 'drone of :fighttng shlPJ· The mightiest air _fl.e.et in the history of the world is mobilizing for victory! - ·

·. So fas~ is it growing that there is a place here-an urgent need here-for every college man in America whc:> can qualify for Officer's Training.

; . The U. S. Army Air Forces need Officers ••• Flying Officers . aD:d Ground- . Crew Officers_. And many of -

;them must come from the ranks of today's college students-men who make their plans now for the . necessary Aviation-Cadet training.

Thanks to a newly: created Air Force Reserve plan, men of all classes-within the .ages of 18 to 26, inclu­sive-can enlist for:~ immediate service or continue the scholastic work required for graduation be~ore being called for active duty •.

You must meet the requirements for physiCal fitness, of course. In addition, you take a new simplified test to determine your ability t~ grasp the uaini.ng. A college man should pass it easi_ly. ·

$7 5 A MONTH DU~ING -TRAIIIIG Those . accepted who wish immediate duty will go into traiD.ing as rapidly as faciJi~es per.mlt. As an Aviation Cadet, you are paid $75 per month, with $1.00 a day for subsistence, With quarters, medical care, necessazy uniforms, clothing, eq~pment, trav­eling expenses.

In 8 months you cart win an officer• s commission on the basis of your training record in competition with other Aviation Cadets. You can become one of the musketeers of the ·air-a bombardier,· navigator, or a pilot-and be well started on your way to serve America and advance yourself in aviation.

MAllY BRANCHES OF SERViCE There are also commissions awarded in ground crew service.- College men particularly will be interested in the requirements for Armaments, Communications, Engin~ering, Meteoro1ogy, Photography. If you have ettensive engineering experience your chances of • getting a commission ~e excelle~t.

This past year about 80% of all Aviation Cadets were commissioned as Second Lieutenants-about

THREE EILISTMENT PLANS . FOR· C_OLLEGE MEN .

Juniors • Sophomores- • Fres.,men . •,

· May Continue~The_ir Education

1 •. A new plan allows Juniors, Sophomores• and Freshmen in college, aged 18. to 26, inclusive, to enlist in the Air Force Enlisted Reserve and con­tinue their schooling, provided they maintain satisfactory scholastic standings.

All College Men May Enlist for Immediate Service

2. All college students may enlist as .privates in the Army Air Forces (unassigned) and serve there until their turns come for Aviation Cadet training.

3. Allcollege students may enlist in the Air _Force Enlisted Reserve and wait until they are ordered to report for Aviation Cadet training •

. Upon graduation or withdrawal from college, men will be· assigned to active duty at a training center as facilities become available.

If the necessity of war demands, the deferred status in the Army Reserve may be terminated at any time by the Secretary of War.

Tile new Army Air Foree Enlisted Reserve Plan Is part of CJn over-all Army Enlisted Reserve Corps program shortly to &e announced. This progrcrm will provide opportunities for college men to enlist In other &rcrncfles of the Army on a deferred &asfs and

./ to continue tiJelr education through graduation If a satisfactory standard of work is maintained •. In case of necessity the Secretary of War shall determine wllen tfley be ce~lled to e~ctive duty.

If Is understood that men so enlisted will have the opportunlfy of competing for vacancies In officer's caaclldcrte schools.

This plan hers been e~pproved In the belief tltat continuance of education will develop capacities for leadership. (Reserve enlist­meat wl/1 not alter regulations regcrrdlng

. established R.O. T.C. pions.)

6?% ·as flying officers. Those who do not qualify re­main i.n the Air Forces on an enlisted status and have further opportunities •

As a Second Lieutenant on active duty with the Army f\ir Forces, your pay ranges from $183 to $245 a month.

AVIATION - THE, COMIIG INDUSTRY The opportunities for aviation in civilian life . have barely been touched. You will bring to those oppor­tunities not only the best training in the world-but the executive ability of an Army officer's training aQ.d experience, which have always commanded a pre• mium in business life •

ACT AT ONCE If you want to fight for America, this is where you can strike deadly blows against our enemies.

If you want advancement-years of solid achieve• ment and education that can never 'be duplicated­this is where you belong.

If you want to be up there in the middle of things­when the enemy cries quits-your place is here-in the Army Air Forces.

FLY WITH YOUR FRIENDS A special squadron for training is now forming at this college. You and your friends can share together the work and fun of training. If you plan to enlist immediat~ly, start getting your necessary papers ready_ for the Aviation Cadet Examining Board when it meets in your locality. For complete information, see your Faculty Air Force Advisor. You can take your mental and physical examinations the same day you apply. Get further information 1zow.

* * NOTE: If you wish to tmlist, and you are under ::u,

• ... , ,~

you willtzeed your parents• or guardian's con­- sent. pirth certificates and three letters of

recomme1ulation will be required of all appli· cants. Obtain the forms and send them home today-you can then complete your enlistment before any Aviation Cadet Examining Board.

--SEE YOUR FACULTY AIR FGRCE ADVISOR FOR FULL INFORMATION (Or Apply to Your Local Recruiting and Induction Station)

.Aqny Recruiting and Induction Stations are in the following cities: - Charlotte Asheville Durham Fayetteville Raleigh Winston-Salem

Aviation Cadet Examining Boards are Located in the Following Cities: Wilmington Charlotte Fayetteville The ~pecial Examining Board Will Visit Wake Forest Soon

Page Four - ---- ' Old Gold and Black

Demon Deacons ·Top Heel~s ,1 n Thriller~. · 4-·1 -----------------"7i-----.----;--___:__ __ __:__ __ ___:.__~:__~~~vivla:n,·.~-·id·-·.

I Deacons ·Face Shine- in C.16se FROM THE

SIDELINES Stal:e,Carolina R~leighJ~a~c~ Duke in Finals

BY BILLY PRIMM

FROSH NINE DESERVES CREDIT

For the first time in many years Wake Forest has not ·been Unavoidable represented by a freshman baseball team this season.

circumstances caused the frosh to cancel their games just as the

tt:nnis and golf matches had to be canceled.

But' if you will wander down on Gore Field any afternoon after classes are out, you will find a group of freshm~n b~se·

ball players taking their batting drills and infield practtce JUSt as the varsity does. Johnny Farrar, varsity baseball player who was ineligible this season, is in .:barge of the yearling squad

and has done a fine job.

Despite the fact that no games are schedul~d the f~osh have been issued regular uniforms and have their datly pract1ce. And every now and then Coach Greason calls them over for a practice

game with his varsity squad.

You've got to give those boys credit for going out there every

afternoon and practicing without even getting to play a game as ~ reward. But they've stuck to it. And there's one thing certain --if they had played the Carolina, State and Duke freshman teams, they would have been mighty hard to beat. The fresh have a ~ang­up infield in Russ Perry at first, Herring at second,. McC~am at short and Josey at third. They have a good catcher m Pru1tt and well-rounded pitching staif in Fesperman, Nesbit, Green, and Mc­Collum. They would have been in the thick of the figh~, there's

no doubt about it. ,

* * * * * * MAY BE OLD BUT STILL GOOD

Here's a letter written by a football fan of North Carolina which may be appropriate now that the U. S. has started an of­

fensive of its own:

"Emperor Hirohito, Head Coach of the Sappy Jap Yaps,

Bigshot Building, Stuffed Shirt College,

Tokyo, Japan, Pacific Ocean (temporarily).

Dear Emppy:

I see you scheduled the All-Americans. We haven't played a game in about twenty•four years, and are a little out of condition . . . which you counted on, no doubt.

Remember the China Chugger game? The one you_ con­sidered a practice affair, so you never called for a referee? You're still short of the twenty-yard marker in that affair after all these years, and that is a Class B tussle.

Don't you feel a little foolish in Class A ball?

The Krauts and Spaghettis can't help you. They're play-

mg the Blood Bowl game with Britain and Russia. They're

somewhat occupied, it seems.

Anyway, you crashed the big leagues with reams of pub­

licity when you kicked off before daybreak and took possession

of the ball. Our team was still in the dormitory when you

pushed through tackle at Wake, Guam and Midway, but didn't they carry a few of you players off the 1ield after that play?

Yeah, your business agent was still talking about cancelling the game when you kicked off. They say you worry chiefly about losing face. I think you 'II lose more of that sallow car­cass than mere face . . . and the kimono along with it.

---.. You're gaining a little ground, but we're just passing out the shoulder pads, so don't brag while there are still three quarters to play. MacArthur, Pacific end and a real All-American is lmld~g your running game down to yards. You're not breaking out mto any long gains. You're about to break out though in a long, cold sweat. ' '

Why, fellow, you're playing the game our way! Do you know that? Who originated the dive-bombing formation? :'-nd th~ parachute attack? Who started aU this airplane-mak­mg busmess, anyway? We did. And we'll start some others you never dreamed of.

What have you started besides the "Yapping for Japs" movement and mass suicide? Nothing! In fact, we let you

out of the closet years ago. So don't count on winning. Don't count on Hitler's Huns (the froz;en-footsie boys) or Mussolini's Hyenies (who grow eyes in the back of their heads so they can

• dodg~ bullets on the run).

Three Games Will Determine Title; · Deacs Have Chance

Let~er Group Elects Leaders

At a meeting of the Wake Forest Monogram Club Wednesday night Billy Primm, baseball letterman and rising senior, was elected pres­ident for next year to succeed Pat Geer.

Everett Berger, varsity basket­ball player, gained the vice-presi­dency, and George Veitch, another basketball letterman, was elected secretary-treasurer. John Coch­ran, football and baseball star, and Bob Reid, cap~ain of the baseball team, were installed as sergeants­at-arms.

The Monogrammers plan to hold their annual outing at a cabin on the Durham highway Sunday af­ternoon. Club members and their dates and faculty advisors Profes­sor Carroll and Professor Clonts will be guests.

An initiation will be held before school is out for those men who haye recently wori their letters in baseball.

Hutchins Honored

The taste-good, feel-good refreshment of ice-cold Coca-Cola Is everything your thirst could ask for. It's all you want and you want it all. Nothing ever equals the quality and goodness of,,.. real thing. ---

W•ake Scores Late · To Win Second · · From Carolina:

.. :

';.

We'll get the ball soon, so look out. Get your stomach· stabber sharpened so you can really show_ the world some . guts. -Why? Because the Yanks are coming, the Rebs are coming and (excuse it, please, Honorable Emppy) just ... plain ... hell is coming!

So soree, no washee,

The late Second Lieut. John Archie Hutchins, Jr., of Spencer, N. C., was awarded the Distin­guished Flying Cross posthu­mously, by the Wax Department for his participation in aerial flights of the Harriman mission from Washington to Moscow last September, it was announc­ed by the Depru:bnent recently.

BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA.COLA COMPANY BY

CAPITAL COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., Inc. -5;

You trust its quality HON. WELL WISHER Raleigh, North Carolina

' -! .

. . . ~ - . ' ..... ,,

. . : . ,.~ ..

..

' - .~ .. -

. Old. .Gold. -and. Black .. '

.·Page Five

Ho- . • I" ·st . "" Sl . b w ·' ·k. I. o· . . . . Stu" dents Vo"';. Pro . I This amendmen~ wa_s pr~osed II that when. tw_o or more candidates o.w. er · a· .. · . um· ers,· or . s· .O"'e · · w · · · · · · · ~ · · (C~tinued from Page Tw.o •-; " . ) to the Student Council and the

1

are running for the same .offi_ce,:the . (Continued from Pag~ One) Student body after a general con- faculty members of the Publica-

·. ·ez:ldok this dislike and vote on his Furthermore, to ensure that each stit~tional shakeup by th:. Publi-1

tions Board must give each ~ writ-.alifi.. t· - . early hours of the mornu· 1g. Others found ou't too late to.escape Editor · cations Board In addit10n to ten exam·nat· 0 th b · -qu ca 10ns ... alone." However is active on the staff of which ~e · 1 ron. n e usmess there _are not. enough of these men: J_:nnings. Once they were -!n• they were in: . fulfill the changing its· own form, the Publi-: side, requirements formerly read · Wlia(· can. ODK do. about au of The volunteering staffmen fotind out that choice of pictures is the 15 • a n:ember, . ~e ~ust. . OLD cations Board last week also made that candfdates for business man-

this?riConcretely, little can . be :gtain.thing which gets into tlie hai;: of ·every annulil chief. There was followmg qualiflCahons._ if~ changes in Its internal policy when ager of OLD GOLD AND BLACK done,· l)ielleve, for as long as a a problem· of whether·, Archibald Pendleton Sriodpoop would look GOLD AND BLACK edltor~al st~·j it revised qualifications required and The Student_ must have sold

· sfstem of secret .. bSnoting, which better' in a hell week_picture than J. Z. Pimp. , There-was a question member, he mus~ ba~~ wrrhen ~-!of c~nd~dates for the six campus 40 per cent of local advertising. / is g99d,_Js kept'' no new ··rules are as to what'_is most suitable to introduce the faculty, a pair of spectacles, le~~,~5 ne7~far~cles, ~ 0ha!ee :Old I publications. · This was lowered to 25 per cent·

going to soive. the .prOblem.-. This a Phi Beta Kappa key;· or· a golf ·club. ' y:e ISIDg s a ,d e t~~s . if Th . . No Ad Selling . and 30 per cent, respectively. · $40·worth of a ver 1smg, on e .

problem, condensed, is lack of ob- Editor Jennings was unquestionably lucky, for having been work- Student editorial staff, he must 1 For all three publications, a re- Also add~d t_o the Publications Jectivity. 1· · ing feebly taking pictures since he first received his Baby Brownie h d t least three major I quirement stating that candidates Board constitution was the by-law : 'Tl).e : .<JnlY spiutiqn,: iLseems to frpm Santa Claus; he could come rather quickly to .a decision as to c~::i~io:a~ if on the advertising! for editors shall sell $10 worth of stating that editors and. business

. me, ·. ;ties·._ in· gaining 'this lacking which shot was the one. And when he qidn't like. one, it was a simple staff, he must have sold at least advertising was discarded. Fur- managers shall each ~e_ce1ve 35 ~er , · . .objectivity .. '!'his of course can- matter to get his black cloth, 'his·flash b~ibs, and a freshman to go out $40 worth of advertising; if on the thermore, candidates for editorial cen: of any adverhsmg profits, .·, .. not b~ ~xpressed as a rule of the to take another. . .. · Howler editorial staff, he must positions, under the old qualifica- subJect to approval by the bursar.

fr~ternitY. It . is an individual Once the snapshots or group pictures were made, a layout' had to have written 2000 words or taken tion list, were required to write ~atter", one w.E!ch each member be drawn. There had to be a variet~ ~-arrangement and in material. 40 per cent of snapshots or laid' histories of all campus organiza- Editorial hiinself must solve. Each.Il_lember, Care ha~l to be taken to see that the same co-ed did not.appear more out the equivalent of two signa- tions. This was limiteft to a his­befo;re elect_ions can be totally un- . than eleven times on twelve pages: or that Ziddlebower Pott did not 1 tures; · if on the advertising staff, tory of the publication for which

(Continued from Page Two)

p~a_!;ed, .must pledge himself to dominate the religion section. . . · he must -have sold at least $60 I the man is seeking editorial elec- from within the ODK itself. The vote ()n the basis of merit alone, .The -selections were ~t last made but that was not llll. Where worth of advei-tising. tion. Discarded. also was a ruling problem, however, has been fully leaving ?~t all cons~d~ration of there was· m~~e than one piCture to th: page, each one had to.be num-· ------------------------- discussed this week by Columnist pers?nal ~7s and dislikes, ~a- bered so that they would be-·placed in the right position on .the. page. entij:ely off the railroad embankment and charged him with twice Bill Ayers in "In TIME with Wake terruty · po~hcs, -~d ~at~mlty- ·A yellow slip of paper had to be glued to the back of each one to be refusing to comply with their request. Forest." Ayers, a member of the non-fratermty P~libcs (If this does used, a plate number given, and all information recorded on a special · ~ (Being on railroad property in itself constitutes no violation of leadership fraternity, is perhaps enter~ .. Each member must adopt chart. Then- they were sent to. the engi-avers Jahn and Ollier in law, but being on it after being requested by railroad agents to get off as wep. acquainted with its prob-a -sci~~t~c: ~tt~tu~e. Each mem- Chicago. . ' ·, .· . is·regarded by the law as trespassing.) lems as any, and the paper recom-ber must ~usibe· a n:a~ ~f vision, Once the plates were made, proof was sent·to Editor Jennings to Futrelle brought out as a further point in the trial that though he mends that its readers 'give his ar-·a man with more Idealism than · · · · · t· I ful · · 'd t· ·- ' : · .. · · · . . .be examined and okeyed or sent back if necessary .. If all went well, was the. only one arrested he was not the only one guilty of trespassing. lC e care consl era IOn. . ~~i :. a: t ;an· ·w~o ;ealizesd tha; the plates were sent to the printers, Edwards and Broughton in This point did not hold,' however, since in the eyes of the law the guilt =;;;::;:~~~~~=====~ · · ~ls· 0 onor ~a ers an no Raleigh, where they were stored until· the· Howler was ready for .the of parties not prosecuted does not necessarily absolve from guilt the r Your .Friends or. My Frien~s. Each p/ess. · · · party on trial for violation. I man has a right ··to" his own · · . ·

. . . t h . · And as each prcture was chosen, sent to the engravers and back · · Law students attending the trial were of the opinion that had O~lnl<?~~ t~ ~~;t.frrml~ co~ to the printe~;s, Editor Jennings was still busy trying to get the mem- Futrelle had proper counsel he might have won his case, maintaining vmce. - a -I lS an one ber:s of the Society for the Prevention of Ringworm in Llamas together that his defense was neither properly nor convincingly stated. opinion.

No( ~nly is_ this true of ODK for a· picture or attempting to still a robin for a:spring snap. And all the time the Howler staff was buying Pepsis and sand­

elections. Objectivity should b.e wiches ·and 1cigarettes from Snyder and' Shorty, chattm'g or plajmg

the consideration in all Wake For- - · est'eiectionil. Too long Wake For- ping pong for the night watchman and thinking of the time when copy

est students-have ·voted in govern-nj.~nt. elections, publications elec­tions, organization elections, fra­. ternity elections without stopping to think, to consider, to weigh.

I

The sooner we all stop and think and· consider and.weigh, the soon­er we will choose real leaders, re­ally qualified men in all branches of our student government.

Gamma Sigma Epsilon, honor- · · ary_ chemistry fraternity, initiat­ed ten new men this week, Fra­

. ternity Secretary Robert. Newell announced.

The names of the new mem­bers are as follows: Ladd Ham­rick, ·James Willett, J. B. Cooke, Jr., D. F. Hord, W. J. Douglas, Larry Holt, Booker Dillard, Rus­sell Barns, Hal Pi~tman, and De­.witt .Trivette.

SMITH ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP

Phone 375-6

SHOES REPAIRED THE CEMENT WAY

We Call For and Deliver

-See-PAti'L BELL-Simmons

CLAUDE PEOPLES-Bostwick

Come to

Fine's Men's . Shop

Raleigh, N. C. for

The Newest Young Men's Furnishings

D.C.~ay Painting and Papering

Morgan and Roney Streets

Durham 212 E. Franklin Street

Raleigh

Regular Dinners

had to be started and ·proof-reading begun. ·

Court ~harges Fut:relle Guilty; No Fine (eontinued from Page One)

Aqcording to Futrelle, he was requested by the railroad. agents merely to get off the tracks, which he did, and not entirely off railroad property, and he ma._de this point the main point of his defen~e. The railroad agents, however, maintained. that they requested him to get

FELlOWS! When in Durham, ·C~me 'in to see us ·

/

for -Gas, Oil, Parts and any kind of repair work.

Opposite the Carolina Theatre

Montgomery & Aldridge Ser. Sta. Morgan St. Durham, N. ·C.

--"'

PAINTING AND PLUMBING D~ that odd job you have·

been puttmg off .. A full line of paints and plumbing ~aterials.

CITY FUEL AND SUPPLY Wake Forest, N. ,C.

ALL OF OUR SPRING ·CLOTHING IS NO\V IN

including SPRING SUITS

Large Assortment of SLACKS

Prices Beginning at

$3.95 Variety of

SPORT. COATS Prices Beginning at

$12.50

-'

IMPORTANT! If you want new records in the future, it will

be necessary to turn in your old records

as soon as possible. We will pay 5c

a pound for old records in any

condition . •

" JAMES E~ THIEM CO. Raleigh N.C.

FOR MORE 'MILES ON YOUR TIRES

Let us ch~ck them for you. Care saves wear - Come in for your repairs.

Underpass Service Station · ESSO PRODUCTS

We are pi'OIId to announee the ae­

quisition of America's quality shoe

in the popular price 1ield-Jarman

Shoes for Men. They're known by

millions for their style, quality aDd

fit-and they sell at America's best

price for fine shoes. Come in and

iDspeet the season's newest styles.

Forest Theatre •

Friday, May 1-

Ann Ronald Sheridan Regan

"King's Row"

Saturda_Y, May 2- • Don "Red" Barry

"Stage Coach Express" "

Also ANN AYERS

"Fiesta"

Monday, May 4-Lew

Ayers Loraine

Day Basil Rathbone

"Fingers at the Window"

$40 OR$5 POT

Tuesday, May 5-Jane Edward G .

Wym.an Robinson

"Larceny, Inc."

Wednesday, May 6-Conrad Ann

Veidt Ayers

"Nazi Agent" !j!t.~-~

Thurs. & Fri., May 7-8-Joan George

Brent • Bennett

"Twin Beds"

Important Notice! ·

NO Pictures wilt be held over

at Collegiate

SHORT O!IDERS

GOOD PRICES

B~ & S. DEPARTMENT STORE .EDDIE'S

I ----- --- ----·-.-

Page Six

Air Officers Hold (Continued from Page One)

dents, regardless of their present year, and aims at permitting them to remain in school until they earn their degrees.

While in college, enlisted men will be placed on inactive status, and then, upon graduation, will be taken in for Aviation training in the Army Air Corps. Branches of this training which are offered are piloting, navigation, bombardier­ing, meteorology, photography, armament and engineering. Com­missions are given in each of these branches.

While in training as aviation ca-1 dets, men will receive $75 per 1

month pay and $1 per day sub-! sistence. Also, in addition to this 1

pay, they will receive quarters, i

Old: -G.oia: and- Black

d. 1 'f . I s . . p I me 1~a care~ necessary um or~s, I Wlmmlng: -OO clothing, equ1pment and travelling expenses. I The new· swimming pool,

which was built in connection of Upon' successful completion their courses and reception commissions, their pay as ground officers becomes $183 per month, I and as flying officers, $245 per

of with the community house, will

month. I

not open on May 6, as formerly scheduled, Dr. 0 .. C. Bradbury, town commissioner, announced today. The postponement ~f the

HAIRCUTS Girls demand it - Society requests it - and you need it.

Look good for the week end.-

CITY BARBER SHo-p-

. openmi is: due<to'tbe,:failure:~f' certain . chlorination equipment to ·arrive.

..

Pants·· Suits

Sweaters-and

Jackets· Cleaned

,'Downtown Wake Forest"

I WILKINSON". J, CLEANERS

--~-=-- --1-·--~--~ --· -·--~·--------,

, L,-

.. •,

I

THE RIVIER~· HOTEL .. · · · . N~ar Daytona· . _

Compl~tely­Renovated

"Where the Tropies lh{Jiif'. - ,,,.·

Enjoy the use of genuine enqraved stationery at the lowest. prices ever offered. We will engrave=

• 500 LETTERHEADS • 500 ENVELOPES • 500 BU:SINESS CARDS

ALL FROM THE SAME PLATE

fot only $16.75- and this includes the cost of enqraving the plate. See our samples today.

THE RECORD PUBLISHING co~ + Zebulon, N. C. +

DO YOU DIG IT?

WHAT DO YOU SAY? Send us some of your hot slang. If we use it you'll be ten bucks richer. If we don't, we'll shoot you a rejection slip to add to your collection. Mail your slang to College Dept., Pejlsi-ColaCompany,Long Js1aDd City, N.Y.

*ENGLISH TRANSLATION. This hen is telling her sorority sisters to get busy with the rouge and powder department, put on their high heels and do a quick lipstick job. All be­cause the boys are arriving with Pepsi-Cola-thechamp of the campus.

Pepsi-Cola il nuu1e only by Pepsi-Cola Co., Long Island City. N. Y. Bottled lOCAlly by Auflwrized Bottler~.

Come in and see our .

New Store

. • '. ' . . ;. '. =· ·'I .. . •. Convention and Conference Headquarters the,~._. : · i · '

. · CapacitY 350 Guests. ' ~ o _ ' • •• • ~ . - .._ - . I

Private Bath, Radio and· Electric Fan. In- »very-~ ·. ·Cocktail Lounge, Bar and Gr!ll, :-:- 3 mea7!1~1;1&J1Y. Per: PersGirj - l -· .. · · from $1.30. Golf Links. Artesian Swlmming.Poolm~ ~- · . · Beach. Tennis, Badminton;· Ping Pong, Croquet;' Boreeshc!e · I and Shuffleboard Courts. Ballroom and Conven:tlon BiiiL ' . ~ Banquet Facilities. 1,000 Acres of Spaclo_us Grounds. ·- · ; COOLEST SPOT IN DIXIE, AT THE BIRT.El:PLA.CJ!I ~ ·l

_,.

THE TRADE WINDS: · Where the . L!ibrador (Arctlc)f C1JIIo - . - ! rent meets the Gulf Stream, and Bathing and ~·@81 . . j; Superli. · · ;: .

/~ '

SHORTY'S Write Today for Jl'ree Descriptwe 1Ateri!ttn. · • · :.~<::.; ·:

HOTEL RIVIERA, Box 429, Dayto~a: Beacli,c: Fl&,·.: _ .: • "Mo~t for Your Money in., Florid&" . . · -~- ·-'t '

Phone-1800 on Arrival and Car Will- Meet-'Y•_· · . . .. ,._ . . . . _,. ·, ,-.-"

DON'T. QUIT COLLEG:E\: if you are 1711BUl9 and Want.to

become a Naval Officer!

You can se..Ve your country best· by acting on this new ·Navy Pl~n now! __ . fon\viation will be selected for

train.i:Og to be Deck or Engineer­ing Officers. In that case, you will continue your college program until you receive yoUT bachelor's degree, provided you maintain the established uniyersity standards.

You WANT to fight for your country! Are you willing to

work for it? To toughen yourself physically? To train yourself. mentally for a real job in the United States Navy? If you are, the Navy wants you to eiilist now. You don't have to quit college. You can stay in college, continue your studies to prepare for_ active duty in the air or on the sea.

And your college will help you do it! In cooperation with the Navy, it offers all freshmen and sophomores who are seventeen and not yet twenty, special train­ing that may win for you the cov­eted Wings of Gold of a Naval Aviation Officer or a commission as a Deck or Engineering Officer.

How to Become an Officer To get this special Navy training, you enlist now as an Apprentice Seaman. Then you may continue in college, but you will include special courses stressing :physical development, mathemat1cs and physics. After you successfully complete l}S calendar years in college, you will be given a classi­fication test.

Aviation Officers If you qualify by this test, you

may volunteer to become a Naval Aviation Officer. In this case, you will be permitlted to finish the sec­ond calendar-year of college work before you start your training to · become a Flying Officer. -

However, at any time during this two-year period, you may have the option to take immedi­ately: the prescribed examination for AViation Officer ••. and, ifauc­cessful, 'be assigned for Aviation training. Students who fail in their college courses or who' with­draw from ·college will also have the privilegeoftakingtheAviation examination. Applicants who fail to qualify in tliill test will be or­dered to ac~ive duty as Apprentice Seamen.

Deck or Engin'"'ring Officers. Those who qualify in the classifi­cation test and do not volunteer

Those whose grades are not high. enough to qualify them for Deck or Engineering Officer training will be permitted to :finish their second calendar. year of college.

' After this, they will be ordered to duty as Apprentice Seamen, but because of their college train­ing, theywill-baveabetterchance for raP,id advancement. At any time, if a student should fail in his college courses, he may be · ordered to active duty as an Apprentice Seaman.

Pay starts with active duty. It's a real challenge! It's a real

opportunity! Make every minute count by doing something about this new Navy plan today.

DON'T WAIT ••• ACT TODAY

1. Take this announcement to the Dean of your college.

·2. Or go to the nearest Navy Recruiting Station.

3. Or mail coupon below for FREE BOOK giving full details.

·····------·----·-·----------·······---·-·····--·--·····---------·-···------U.S. Navy Recruiting B~u, Div. V-1 30th S~t and 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn, N:Y.

2

Please send me your free book on ·the Navy Officer training plan for college freshmen and sophomores. I am a student 0, a parent of a student 0 who is years old attendin College at; _______ _

N~~· -----------------------------------------

A~'-------------------------------------.. CitJ! & s,Uife:..._ _________________________________ _