!FIFTEEN MEN ARE ELECTED TO MEMBERSHIP IN GOLDEN

>ai<l tlll'OUgh
Lal of $1.000
Iring a total
e leaving a
~ampaign.
Published Weekly by the Students of Wake Forest
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IIIIIIIIIICIIIIIIIII!IIt~
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TWENTY-FOUR MEN
TAKEN IN BY PH I
MAYO WILL SPEAK
ANNUAL DEPENDED UPON
TO- MEO. SOCIETY
NEW FINANCIAL SCHEME
S e n s e Perception, Especially
s·lg ht• to be Subject of
Address
First Degree of Initiation is Given
by Literary Society; Second
Degree Later
tions, and Fraternities May
Final arrangements have been made
Have Space Without Additional to receive Dr. Charles Mayo, who will
Cost.
make an address here on December 11
___
. under the auspices of the William Ed1
. .
. .
gar Marshall Medical Society, it was
/
Publicatwn of t~e 1Ho·wZe1, college an-J announced today by Troy E. Martin
nual, was made possible just before the of Stoneville, who is president of the
Thanksgiving holidays when the stu- society.
dents voted to submit to a five-dollar
Dr. Mayo is the younger ·brother of
assessment upon ell.ch student enrolled the two famous Mayas who have devel·
this year. This assessment will. ·be oped the Mayo clinic at Rochester,
added to the second semester nmtncu- Minn. While in North Carolina Dr.
lation fees.
Mayo will be the guest of several medNecessitated by the ineffective sys- ical organizations, but his primary purtem used heretofore, and by large debts pose in coming to the state will be to
incurred over a period of years, this address the young Wake Forest doctors
plan was passed by the student body and their friends. The society extends
by an overwhelming majority.
an invitation to outside physicians and
This new plan does not excuse or- laymen to attend.
ganizations from paying debts incurred
The subject of his address will be
during past years, C. L. Davis, editor "Sense Perceptions-Especially Sight."
of the Howler, stated. He said also He will be accompanied to North Carothat all students who have paid to have lina by Mrs. Mayo, and will be the
their pictures made this year will be guests while here of Dr. Hubert A.
given credit for the $1.50 which was Royster, Raleigh surgeon. The address
charged them for the photographer's will take place in the Medical Building
work.
at 'Vake Forest at eight o'clock Friday
"The purpose of this scheme is to evening, December 11.
distribute more equally the cost of the
publication and at the same time to put
it on a stable financial basis," Davis
explained. "By this new system," h~
went on to say, "in two years' time the
'i total deficit accumulated on previous
:
·•· publications of the How'ber should be
HftP.d."
,
Learning that only $300 was avail~~able for this year's annual, Professor
.. Wilson, faculty adviser, and the Howle1· Monday and Tuesday Night S~cstaff decided that unless more funds
tions Have Good Attendanc~
1
were collected, there should be no anIn Pre:Thanksgiving
nual this year. They proposed the asMeets
(Please turn to page six)
Last Monday night, November 23,
the Phi Society initiated twenty-four
new members the first degree was
given, although all the new men were
Every Student will be Permitted
To Appear as Many Times as
Necessary; Classes, Organiza-
:retary
------------------------~-----------------------------@
Vote in Chapel Assembly to
Accept New Plan for Howler
Publication
y
Itation
!FIFTEEN MEN ARE ELECTED
TO MEMBERSHIP IN GOLDEN
BOUGHHONORARYSOCmTY
Appointed Editor
~----------------~--~
~>------------------------------
life.
DU. COY C. CAUPE:XTER
DR. CARPENTER TO ~~:gE~::~~:l~::~~~:.:;~~-~~:;.:~
EU11 1T MED • JOURNA;E1f~~~:~:~~- :ri~:~~ ;ro:.n~:;ve~:
John Fml;,ttor, W. W. Fmlator, V. B.
'
\
Gavin, R. J.: Llewellyns, Carl Lathan,
Will Have Charge of Patijo(ogy S~th. McKe~~- \'jJack Murchison, Ray
.
f "S th
M .i.l•,
0 Bnan, B./!Jj. Peace, J. S. Paschal,
Section 0
ou ern e~l-,
T. G. Pow,e,ll/'W. H. Peterson, J. D.
cine and Surgery" \-l;f', Ro~fJiso~"=~~/w. Stevens, J. M. Wilder,
··,~:~ Jr:, jT-~Ie--;woody, Jr., Harry Wood and
·- ,.~~' 'IC" /_,
Notification was received here last· -Hl-! ~,...:.Williams.
0~~ 1\Ionday night, November 30, the
Wednesday of the appointment of Dr. Society gave an extempore program as
Coy c. Carpenter, professor in the Wake folio:ivs:
Forest College School .of Medicine, to
';"±fie Part That Music Plays in
the editorship of the Pathology section Ronritnce" by W. "\V. Finlator; "The
of Southern Medicine and s1t 1·gery. Pah·!That Music Plays in Social Life"
. .
.
.
by: Thurston Powell; Messrs. Harry
This JOurnal 1s the official organ of the wodd and John Finlator also spoke on
,'l"ri-state Medical Association, ·which thM!subject; "Why I am Opposed to
includes the states of- Nor-th--Carolina,· ··:Mo-onbeams Kiss ·Her for Me';"- by T.
Carl Brown.
,
South Carolina, and Virginia.
liliftempore solos were given by
TwO' other sections of this publicaMessrs. H. W. Baucoin and John
tiOn are' edited 1:& wa::ke :Forest grad•
Finla'tor. An extempbre quartet com'ii.:a.~es, :Dr. Wingate M:. Johniion of posed of Messrs. Jackson, Davis, Avera
Winston-Salem and Dr. Henry J. and McKeel sang, "Hail, Hail; The
Gllng$ All HePe/' and "Sweet :Adeli~."
Langeion-of•·Danville, ·Va.Dr. Carpenter has taught pathology Con.cert singing was then; enjoyed by
the group. A qup.rtet composed of
and. physica{ diagnosis here since 1926.
Messrs. O'Brien, Brown, O'Brian and
He received tli.e B.A. degree in medicine Smith led several numbers.
from this institution in 1922, and the
M.D. degree frotn Syracuse in 1924.
MANCHURIAN SITUATION
.
!
l
.'
1
EUZELIANS GIVE
M
VARIED PROG~
N. C. SCHOOL MEN
\
th;~:o~J~=~~~~n~!!~~~gni~~~::~~~~$!
. U' "AT_I.ON
1EO
of the En Society were well atten{\ed I
lJ
..
CITED BY PROt=. WEST
FRATS
as several of t11e men discussed t'he
question of the requirement of psych,ol·
ogy and philosophy for a degree from I
Wake Forest College. Other featur,es
of the programs included an oration, 1
Dean Wannamaker and Senator comical monologue, and current even~. Superintendent of State School
In discussing the current events of
F• B"l• d -+ 11 f p
John Rob Baggett to Make
present happenings Curtis Killough of
Or In I e S 0 rogram
the 1\Ionday night section and W. s:-_
Pursued at School
Main Speeches
Riddick of the Tuesday night section
--Just why the State Board of Equali- dwelled inainly on the situations in,
Superintendent G. C. Lineberry of
··
zation has limited the ·amount of taxes Russia and Manchuria. Roy Wheeler;·
the State Schooi_ for the ~lin_d, Raleigh,
which local districts may levy, and one of the recen~ly initiated new meni,_ addressed the Kappa Phi Kappa and
other related questions of 'current in- gave to the socie~y- a _eulogy. to the 'Pi i\:appa Mu education fraternities
terest will be answered by LeRoy Mar- second degr~e of mitatwn winch was and their invited guests Friday evening,
tin Saturday evening at Duke Uni~ held home time ago.
Noveinber · 20. Mr. Lineberry was acsersity when the North Carolina TeachA few "high lights of Wake Forest" companied ·!by Mr. Hurst, who is also
ers of Educ-ation and interested school as seen by a new man was presented associated with. the State school.
superintendents hold their fall ban- llY J. D. 'Villiams. _Mr. Williams st~ted
Approximately a hundred !;ltudents
quet.
that although the I e are a few thmgs were present to learn of this stateTl1e program, released Tuesday about the college which might be im- supported institution and its prcigratn
through the president of the organiza- proved, the traditions, customs. pra_c- as the visiting speakers presented, it.
tion, Dean D. B. Bryan or 'Vake l<'orest tices and principles of the college m The superintendent explained t!{a·t
College, includes two other speakers; general were very pleasing to one who every blind student is taught to play
Dean W. H. Wannamaker of Duke Uni- is a stranger.
some musical instrument and to typeversity and Senator John Rob Baggett
The query, Resolved, that psychology write. The boys are taught to make
(Please turn to page four)
(Please turn to page six)
and repair such household articles as
- - - = - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - chairs, tables, beds, and mattresses.
Those who show unusual interest in
music are taught piano tuning. Most
of the girls are taught regular household work. Some are well qualified for
stenographers.
''Our aim is to so equip a child that
he might be able to enjoy life better
and at the same time not be a liability
The 'Vake Forest Dramatic Club Hall.
It was accorded an eager on people about him," stated Mr. Lineachieved a brilliant success on Satur- reception.
berry. "For this reason we lay espeA mystery play "In the Next Room" cia! emphasis on music. To further
day, November 21, at Meredith College
is scheduled to 1be presented her'e realize our objectives we likewise stress
where it presented a three act comedy,
January 15. Tryouts for the different the physical development of each
"Her Temporary Husband."
Over parts will be held at the next meeting pupil."
three hundred spectators attended the
Superintendent Lineberry was preperformance. The gate receipts suf- of the club.
sented
to the fraternities by C. H.
ficed to cover the expenses and repay all
Stroup, president of the Kappa Phi
PROFESSOR WILSON IS
debts of the Dramatic Club.
Special ,credit for the achievement
S. S. TEACHER AT NEUSE Kappa organization.
is due to Thomas Dysard and John K.
One of the largest men's Bible classes DR. ROSS V. PATTERSON
Blackburn, directors, 'and to Misses
Isabelle Kinsey and Rachel Biggs of in Baptist churches in this vicinity is
GUEST OF DR. KITCHIN
the Junior Class, which sponsored the being taught by Judge P. H. Wilson, of
play.
Miss Evelyn Squires, Miss
President Thurman D. Kitchin of
t11e Wake Forest faculty, at the Neuse
Euphenia Bryan, Leon Brogden, Jack
Wake Forest College had as his ThanksHumphery, Thomas Dysard and Wil- Falls Baptist Church. There are ap- giving guest Dr. Ross V. Patterson,
liam Day played their roles effectively, proximately fifty men in average at- dean of Jefferson Medical College. They
presenting good dramatic ability. Dur- tendance. Judge Wilson has been its left SJI'fiday morning for New Orleans
ing the intermission the audience was teacher since early fall, and, while do- to attend the meeting of American Asentertained qy B. A. Sustare's tap
sociation of Medical Colleges,
ing so prevents him from attending
dancing and the tenor solos of F. M.
On his return, Dr. Kitchin stopped
church service at Wake Forest, be finds over in Montgomery to represent Wake
Killen.
On Thursday night "Her Temporary adequate compensation in the interest Forest-a.t the meeting of the Southern
Husband" was presented by the club which the members or his class are Association of Secondary Schools and
before the studt!nt body in Wingate manifesting.
Colleges.
TO MEET Al DUKE
J
'l'en Cents Per Copy
WAKE FOH.EST, N. C., SAT!JHDAY, DECEMBEH 5, 1931
Vol. XV, Xo. 10
Students C9nsent To
j 5-Dollcir Assessmetlt
To Publish Yearbook
n·ranc1-
~cd 1834
Carolina Collegiate
Press Association
and Service
otables
;
North
College News Bureau
d this term
'ice for the
.s IJeen paid
)\'er has acion to attend
text summer.
•nt will take
est wan! tour
Member of
Coordinated With
l
Professor West Gives Nature of
Controversy Between China and Japan
HEAR LINEBERRY
''China asserts that the treaties
granting concessions to J'apan are not
binding," stated Professor West of the
history department in his chapel talk
Monday on the Malichuriau situatio·n.
"In the light of this situation the
League of Nations in its meeting of
Xovember 16 sided with Japan."
According to Professor West, the
most recent attempt to" settle the Manchurian controversy is the Leagrie's
resolution to appoint a commission. in
the riear future, to investigate the ~itu~
atioii.
·
In the Professor's opinion,, the League
or Nations has liot been a success so
far. · Ali. the power of the League except ·,a ,general economic boycott has
been 'used. in an attempt to settle tne
diiipute:'··· Professor West thinks that
ir;:~e League employs this power, it
m~Y: succeed in settling the dispute bel\~e~n China and Japan.
·
I
Dramatic Presentation
Scores H{t At Meredith
YbtJNG MINISTERS HEAR
l 'j CULLOM ON TEMPTATION
II 'i.
B~b~e
Professor Addresses Minis~
.....- terial Class in Its Regular
1
Meeting
Dr. W. R. Cullom spoke to the ministerial class on the "Minister's Temptations" at the regular meeting of the
class Wednesday night. He said that
although a real minister is a true servant of Gcid be is sometimes tempted
even more than other men.
"There are certain superstitions concerning the minister,·· the speaker
stated. "People trust him as they do
no other man. A man is a pivotal man
as a minister."
Dr. Cullom divided the temptations
into three groups; namely, those associated with the flesh, those with the
mind, and those with his office. Under groups he presented a discussion
on the minister's appetite, sex instinct,
and laziness.
"All are tempted to take the easy
chair, but God does not encourage laziness," continued Dr. Cullom.
He
pointed out the sin and shame of a
minister's pride and insincerity, and
condemned the prevalence of selfish
ambition among the modern preachers.
Receives Honor
Members Chosen on Basis of
Scholarship, Christian Char~
acter. and Efficient
Leadership
SENATOR BAILEY MAKES
ADDRESS AT CEREMONY
Leadership in New Age is Topic of
Address; Says There is Universal
Disgust With Things as They
Are; Plea is for Able Leade;ship
Fifteen outstanding men of the student body were elected to membership
in the Golden Bough Honorary Society
Tuesday night. Xovember 23, in the
eighth annual "tapping" ceremony. The
members of this organization are
selected by the faculty, junior, senior,
Medical and Law classes and resident
members of the Golden Bough on merits
of scholarship. Christian character and
efficient leadership,
Senator Josiah ,V. Bailey, class of
DR. c. s. BLACK
. '93, whose address on the needs and
opportunities for present day leaderDr. C. S . Bl ac k·, w h o Ims IJeen e1ec t e d
.
.
'd
(W tl
G
. AI h
.15t) Islup was the feature of the evenmg,
presi ent
~~ IY ra~u
c el'_l
was "tapped" into honorary memberof Gamma Stgma Eps1lon, natwnall h. b W H F d 11 •
h t f th
· 1f t
'ty
s IP Y . . or , 1erop an o
e
1wnorary ch e:niCa
ra erm · _ .
organization.
Dr. Black Is head .of the chemistry
The students taken into this society
de1mrtment. He rece1ved the ;vr.A. deL L B
d
K" t
J A
gree from \Vake Forest in 1920 and were:
· · rog e~, ms on; ·. ·
the Ph.D. from the University of Wis- Harnll, Jr., ~Iooresville; E: L. Smith,
· .
Apex; J. P. Morgan, Raleigh; A. v.
COUSin Ill 1928.
The officials of the local cliapter of Washbt~rn, Jr.', ~oldsboro; J. L. Dupree,
l\" A W'l Freep01 t, Texas, R. P. Morehead, Wel. · E psi.1on are l•.
G amma S 1gma
.
1.
.
I"
f D
· 1 t. C U N
don, ,V. A. Green, Pleasantvtlle, N. J.;
_13\JPS,.: o
unn, ~resH en • · · or- C. H. Stroup, Gastonia; T. E. Martin,
fleet, of Woodville, secretary; and St
.
J H 1
Ch
tt
. ''F II
f F
kl' t
t
onevi 11e; 0 . .
ager,
ar1o e;
Flenung. u er, o
ran m on, reas- R H B
J
Wh't ·n
C M
urer.
\:".
.
. urns, r.,
1 ev1 e;
. 1 .
McCracken, Fairview; G. A. Martin, Jr.,
• Denton; and H. F. Fuller, Jr., FrankEUS DISCUSS NEED OF
linton.
DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC "The world is in greater need of
able leadership today than ever before,"
declared Senator Bailey.
"We are
Deaton, Society President, An- standing in a world where all forces
of political economy have exploded.
nounces Business Meeting
This
calls for some sort of demand
Will be Held Saturday
of where we are and where we have
started. There is universal disgust
Continuing its policy of discussing
(Please turn to page six)
and debating questions of local interest, the Thursday night section of the
Euzelian Literary Society took up at
its regular meeting the probability of
the need for and success of a music department at "'ake Forest.
The query ror the debate was, Resolved, that a department of music
should be added to 'Vake Forest College. D. B. Bryan and T. R. l\litchell
took the affirmative side and gave sev- Non-Division Debates Between
eral reasons why a department of
Wake Forest and State
music would be beneficial at a minimum
Held in Raleigh
expense, while ,V. :\L Grogan and G. H.
Cross debated strongly for the negative.
A modern short story with its charThe 1931-3:? debate season was
acteristic elements ;vas given by C. Y. opened by a series of two debates with
'Vashbii.rn, and L. P. Eagles gave the N. C. State on Xovembet· ::!:1 and ~;;.
meeting five minutes of his wit and These debates were a continuation of
humor.
the annual practice of State and \Vake
Amiouncement was made by the Forest of opening the season with nonpresident, Harold Deaton. of the busi- decision debates.
The query used in both contests was:
ness meeting in general of the society
on Saturday morning. He stated that Resolved. that cong-ress should enact
the meeting was to be of vital im- legislation providing for the <·entralportance to every member an<l m·gecl ized control of industry. On ~Ion<lay
night 'Vake Forest, presenting the negthat all be present.
A report of current happenings of ative side of the query, was represented
local. national, and world-wid':! impor- by ,V. Scott Buck and Harold H. Deatance was given by Hoke Norris anti a ton at State. The \Vednesday conte,;t
short discussion of their importance was held at Apex. on invitation. nnd
was tal,en up by the society.
(Please turn to page six)
DEBATERS OPPOSE
STATE IN OPENER
Glass Case· In Library
Shows Ancient Letters
Two treasures in the form of letters,
one from a former president of the
United States and the other from the
1derstand yours tu l>e. at our literary
institutions eannot fail. if well conducted. ro lle of in('a!culable value."
The erst\\'hi!e President Davis's letonly president of the Confederacy, were ter was more of the business type of
recently found in the library and are letter instead of an a('ceptance of bonnow on exhibition in the gfass case in orary mE>mbership of the so('iety. On
the north reading room of the library. 1November 15. 1872, the date of the letOne of the letters reveals the fact ter. he was president of the Carolina.
that James K. Polk was at one time a Life Insurance Company, in i\Iemph.is,
member of the Euzelian Literary So- Tennessee, and besides the business
ciety of this college. The other letter mentioned in the letter, Davis sugcomes from Jefferson Davis to the Eu gested, "The preservation of the instiSociety expressing his favor of literary tutions founded by our (orefathers resocieties.
quires the highest degree of moral and
The letter from President Polk was intellectual excellence."
written from Columbia. Tennessee, and
Aside from the letters in the case is
,~·as dated June 15, 1842. It was ad- book-plate of the En society before the
dressed to Mr. Wm. Fay, at that time year 1842, and a certificate o( graduapresident of the En Society. A senti- tion to John Graham from the
ment expressed by Polk says, "My ac· academy at Liberty Hall, in Mecklenknowledgments are due your society burg County, in the year 1778.
for this unexpected and distinguished
All these articles are
evidence of its regard.
"Tbe characteristic Hancock
aspirations of young gentlemen and the specimens are in good
organization of societies such as I un- well-preserved.
Page Two
OLD GOLB AND BLACK
I
I was being buried alive·. I tried to· CONTEST IN OLYMPIAD
B. Y. P. U. UNION DOES
cry out, but I could not. I raised myself
FINE
ARTS
NEXT
Y.EAR
EXTENSION WORK SUNDAY
'
up, but blood rushed from ·my mouth
and I sank back again. Then I knew
no more.
· Will be Held Next Summer in Missionary Union Gives Two ProBy The Gentleman 011 the Wall
Slowly, painfully, I opened my eyes.
Los Angeles County
grams at Rocky Mount
A woman was seated by a bed, and I
November 22
this antagonism has tended to inwas in the bed. She turned and I
Museum
crease the student and fan interest i11 ".tl.?ld each in his separate star.
recognized her as she leaned quickly
The B. Y. P. U. Missionary
the contests it has wrought 110 good Shall draw the thing as he .~ees it,
toward me. Mother!
The fine arts competitions of the
.
.
Fo1· tl1e Goa of Thing.~ As They Are."
I repeat, gentlemen, I enjoyed it.
Games of the Xth Olympiad, to be cele- gave two programs in Rocky Mount~
toward promotmg fraternahsm.
!
~ brated in this city from July 30 to- Sunday, November 22, under the super~
There is 110 doubt but that almost
:---------------:-----;
..
f B L D ·
STAFF
L'Ut>THER .•J'''E1"'f. URES OL' THE
August 14, 1932, Will be held in the VISion
avrs.
c. H. STIWUP ............................................Editor' bittcr antagonism which has been so .., 'pERA~IllULATiNG TOl\1-C..,AT
Exchanges
Los Angeles County Museum in Olympic
The first program was given at the_
R. H. LEGRAND ...................... Bu8'iness Ma1lager plainly manifest between the Caro.
I
Park.
Olympic Stadium, the Los Arlington Street Baptist Church.. It
d
D
k
d
t
b
d'
d
I
wonder
how
many
of
you
have
ever
.
I
STAn' O~'FICERS
uw nn
u ·e stu
en· o tes au
Angeles Swimming stadium and tile centered about the theme of "Faith,
I
HoKE Xo&&Is............................ Ma.naui11g Editor
•
.
b
taken ether? I did once-and enDayfdson
H
, Th
d
1
F. B . 1,.AntoNn ...........................a.ssocut
•
· t• Ed't
ope, and Love.
e program opene
' or team reln·esentatn-es WI l la\"e een J·oye·'
u 1-t.
Last night was held one of the big- State Armory (Fenct'ng Pavi'lion) are
E. L.
..............................
Associate
game.
First I found myself in a hospital gest pep meetings in th"" history of the ~lso located in Olympia 'Park. Tfie with a song by the quartet. An inter,v.
,V. SmTn
WASIIBURN
............................
.II"ews Editor lessened on account of this ~
S. L. MoRGAN. JR ......................... J'eatuu Editor "'\..lthough intense bitterness does not bed, with my stomach lying on my school, showing that every man in the fine arts competitions, which include esting talk on the "Chinese People"
G. A. MARTIN; Jn ........... ............. Fratur. Editor
kb
l'k
t hot water b t
L
d Th
D. n. BRYA:::>.... _........ ,..................Sport• Editor
• t
tb
h l
t
hac one 1 e an emp Y
o · student body is keyed up to a high works in painting, sculpture; arciHtec- was given by Charles eonar .
e
E. E. PRtxc>:.. .......................... l:.'.rc/um1,. Etlitvr CXlS a~long
e sc 00 represen a- tie. They not only denied me food, but pitch of excitement. They want resubject of "Faith" was discussed . by
Ds. J. RrcE Qurs}:lmEBRY....... .Faculty .idol8•,. tiYes composing the other team, let's they had given me calomel and salts venge for the following scores by which ture, music and literature by living
·
be under the directi'on of Jack Murchison. "Hope" was the subSTAFF WRITERS
hope a step toward promotmg
a until my stomac h was as 1la t as a Wake Forest has beaten or tied the artr'sts, "'t'll
"
Robert Holleman
A. Y. "'ashburn, .Tr.
h h d 'll b
1 b pancake. What little I might have had 'Cats since 1920: 10-7, 6-6, 6-0, 7-7, 3-3, General Charles H. Sherrili' of New ject used by E. ~- Smith. The subject
o.
E. Srhaible
.r.
c. ::\!urchisou
larger brot er oo WI
e lilac e e, left r'n me fat· sustenattce was gone, 13-12, 25-6, 6-0 and 13-2.
.
"Lo e"
di
d by Carl Brown
J\L H. Tndlock
Haskn Webb
York, member of the International
v
was scusse
·
.Tohn rr. Porter
Cai·t Ousley
fore tltis contest ends.
and I was experiencing that strange
A
b h
t t
1 d d this
F.
P.
covington
H. L. Willl•ms
.
l
.
bl
d
.
tl
t
Olympic
Committee.
Along
with
the
song
Y t e quar ~ cone u e
s. w. Sechrie•t
Zon Robinson
'Vhile this game 1nll 1e sernng feeling of incontesta e esparr ta
·w. H. Peterson
Thompson Greenwood the cause of charity it will also put arises from utter emptiness.
~ompetitive exhibits will 'be amplify- program.
Francis l'nschal
,J. B. Hnmer
A nurse came into the room, anC. ·w.sponsored by ing displays of art from many coun- On Sunday evening a mission pro1\lss. E. B. EAaxsnA\\"............................J.l1•mni
l
1 1 f
t t
A loan fundN. isC. ·being
k
LoursE nor.mNa ........................................ Social t 1c sc 100 s o our s a e on a more nouncing that all was ready. I was the student body to aid certain students tries.
• gram was given at the North Roc Y
:M&s. E. T. CatT~'ENDEN ..........................Librarv friendly standing.
led down the hall, down some steps, who are unable to meet school expenses.
Mount Baptist• <Church. The program
MANAGERIAL DEPARTMENT
through another corrldor and into a The details of the plan have not been LIBRARIAN INTRODUCES
consisted of the following: "Song,"
H. F. Fur.LEB, J& ......... A.sBista.nt Bwriness Mur.
room which smelled of all the drugs
J. w. HowELr.
A.d••ertising Manauer
r.rowLER PLAN SrE.\KS WELL
worked
out yet, but a beginning has
SEASONAL LITERATURE quartet; "A ~ersonal Application of
BLADE HARDIE ....A.ssislant .idverti<ri11g
MaMUe,.
~~
known to me and quite a few others been
made.
BALLARD Noawooo ........ J.sst. A&vertuing Mgr.
FoR COLLEGE
in addition. They had me to lie down
Missions," E. L. Smith; "Mission and
H. D. STEPH.:Ns ..................Circulation Manager
on an ironing board, at the head of
Denominational Schools," Ray O'Brian;
Bulletin
Boards
to
be
Placarded
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE:
There will he a II ou•Tcr this year. which a most beautiful young lady was
$2.00 PER COLLEGE YEAR
A. & ll.
a violin solo, Charles Leonard; "Home
With Literature and Scenes
Its publication, thought impossible seated with the weapons of her proIn reply to "Oh Give Me Something
Missions," Carl Brown; and "Foreign
Of Various Countries
for a time beeau;;e of lack of fession beside her on a small table. to Remember You By," p·layed illy the
Missions," Charles L.eonard.
funds, was ~nade possible by tl1 e They strapped me to the ironing board pledges of Kappa Kappa Psi, honorary
Both programs had an excellent at~
as though I was to be electrocuted, the band fraternity, at 6 a.m., students who
Posters representing the literature tendance. After the program B. L.
students' voting upon themseh·es au beautiful damsel placed a funnel over had been lying in wait for these disand scenes of various coUlltries will Davis made a. 'brief speech of appreas.'3essmeut of fin• dollars per stu- my proboscis, and would I please turbers of the early morning peaceful
·
be placed on the library bulletin boards ciation on behalf of the B. Y. P. U.
dent.
breathe deeply? I did.
snoozes responded by laying down a
from
now
on,
in
a
plan
adopted
by
Mrs.
A curious stinging was felt on the barrage of 21 dozen "strictly fresh"
All matters of bu•lnese should be addressed
Diplomas :ys. Dogs
to the Business :Manager, Box 218. and nll
This new system of financing the inside of my patrician nostrils, like eggs at the psychological moment.
Ethel T .. Crittenden, college librarian.
"College students might· as well be
other m•tters should he ndd!'!?ssed to the
yearbook came ns the best plan by blowing tobacco smoke through your
Editor-in·Cbie£, Box 218.
For the present she has placed on the given hot dogs as diplomas when they
Ad'\"'ertising rates quoted on request.
~dtich
the debts of publication nose for the -first time. My head
bulletin boards posters representing graduate from college, for at least they
Subscription due in ad..-nnce.
h buzzed, and I breathed again-spas·
RBleigh Office: Edwards & Broughton Print·
Duke
French writings and places of interest. could eat the hot dogs, but tliey .
ing Company.
might be lifted. Proposed by t e medically. In the distance I could feel
Play· by play returns from the DukeIn a few days she plans to post can do nothing ·with the diplomas."
H on-! er staff and the f acuity ad- my legs kicking under their straps, and Carolina game were received by a
placards on Christmas literature. After The foregoing statement was given by
.-isei·, Professor Wilson, it was voices faded away in the whirling dark- group of about; 7·5 Duke alumni and the holidays she· expects to post liter- Dr. W. C. Krueger, instructor in psyGraphograms
·
ness. I felt myself precipitated gently
Dr.
passed by an OYer\\'1lC1nung ma- toward the stars. I floated dangerously alumnae at the Hotel McAlpin in New ature on Germa.ny, Italy, and other chology at Detroit College.
York last Saturday over a leased wire countries.
Krueger also deplored the present
near Orion's sword, and left 'Th.rus direct from the stadium. About 15
Congratulations to those fifteen jority of the students.
Mrs. Crittenden sais that her pur- system of required credits, ~nd
The plan used in past years was glaring at me and snorting rings of Carolina alumni were also there.
pose in this is to acquaint the students derided the idea of mathematics and
students who haYe won the esteemed iueffectin'. For its effectiveness it Lucky Strike smoke around the point
with literature and scenes in other the classics as ideal subjects for imhonor of election to membership iu
.of the aforesaid sword. I looked to see
proving the mind.
countries.
depended upon mo11ey receiYcd from if I was dressed in red; •but no, I had
llllssouri University
the Golden Bough.
the publication fees, ad\·ertisiug, on buckskin, and two six-guns dragged
Three minutes is the time limit
· t"Ions t o tl1e at my waist. I was Buffalo Bill!
placed
on conversation between co-eds
b
d
t
d
'.L''
'I'.\J:•·
STO<.'I:
au
stu
en
su
scr1p
.
T[ ·• .. 1 0
·"'
•
Seated astride a datk brown horse, I and men students at Missouri UniHalf the first semester has passed Howler. The publication fees were sped across the misty prairie, toward a versity.-The Parley Voo.
·
collected without any trouble, and low range of mountains. But halfwa~
:md eYeryone is aware by now JUSt
}
d
t' ·
paid fairly across my horse shied at an Austin
how he stanJ.s scholastically. The t Ic a ,·er ~smg spac~-.
.
. which darted from behind a bush and
ll'hicl~ Are Yon~
second testing time of the year is at ~vell. But lt was mosr_meffectlve 111 dashed across my path. My horse
A college education does one of two
hand. Reports will appear shortly. tts method of colleetmg from the stopped still, but I kept going; and I things for a young man: It makes him
didn't float this time. My heart almost a bigger and better man-or a more
t t h e end of the year
bearing record of aehie,·ement or to st u d en t s a·
· ·
escaped through my teeth, but I
complete ass.-Wofford College Old
·
tl1c nee
\ Under the old pian, a student clamped down on it and succeeded in Gold and Black.
.-ersa.
Regardl~ss of the grades set forth might ha.-e his pic~ure in the an- swallowing it again. The earth .leaped
i 11 letters on the report sheet it is nual, yet not subscribe for the book up to meet me. I struck, but felt no
A. & M. Again
.
. · l 'd
at the end of the year. Last year pain. I got up and took an atomizer
surely not au tmpractlCa 1 en to
out of my shirt and sprayed myself.
The students of Mississippi A. and M.
take stock. The professor as well only $I,OOO was collected from The horse had gone off somewhere to College are anxious to change the name
as the student mib<>'ht sllare in this students at the end of the year. The see a man about a dog or something, of the institution. Telegrams have
1 · h h ld h
b
1 and the dark midnight prairie had sud- been sent by the Students' Association
endeaYor. At W ashiugtou and Lee amount w nc s ou
aYe een e~ - denly turned into. a burning, frying to the Senate and the. House urging
recentlY a professor, after announc- lected was much more than this. desert. I started to walk, and stepped that the change be made. They desire
·
· grades of the meu 1· n l us
· Tht's. at1d past debts . account for the on some th'ng
hard · I pt'cked it up and the name of the college to be changed
mg
the
t
".lass, de\·otcd tllc rest of the hour defi. ctt of $2,300 wbwh was left un- saw it was one of the guns. I tried to Mississippi State College.-The
'
j
to put it into a holster, but both were Ohowanian.
talking informally with the stu- patd last year.
.
full of water. My throat was parched
· ·
· OJHUions
· ·
was unfau· • or roasted or at least dry, and I drank
dcilts, gaunng
t h e1r
o f t 11e I The former svstem
•
A trip from Halifax to Esquimalt,
· ·
l
·
It put the burden of the 11 owler ex- some of the water, but there were craw- B. C., by way of the Panama Canal
course and explammg to t wrn JUSt
.
.
fishes in it and one of them bit me in
what -he hoped the meu would ex- penses upon a nunol'lty of the stu- the throat. I tried to cry out, but formed the summer "job" of Thompperience from taking the course.
d~nt body. Formerly, each stud~nt's something was in my throat; soon, .·son Whitely, president of the second
year of the College of Optometry.
Th ·
ll
t t
tl t bill depended upon how manv times though, it was removed and I could Whitely shipped as a Royal Canadian
1s eo ege paper s .a cs . w
I "
breathe.
"some, perhaps, sacrificed honest his picture appeared in t le annua1·
All at onc-e I found myself on a horse Naval Volunteer cadet aboard the new·
est Canadian destroyer, H. M. C. S.
. .
f or th e poss1'b'l'
op1mou
1 1t '" o f ra t'mg A Freshman would naturally have again, ri'ding through some trees. An Skenna. He has sea-faring blood in
107-109 West Hargett Street
a higher grade in the futm·e, for his picture. in the yearbook
Indian warrior stepped from behind a his veins, his father, the late Captain
they immediatelJ· resr)onded that the OJ.Jce or tw1ce, whereas a Se1_nor s Ford truck, took four and one-half W. H. Whitely of Victoria having come
seconds to aim, ··and I felt an arrow tear from a family of Newfoundland seacourse was the best thev ewr took. pwture would appear mauy times. into my throat. I shot him down
men.-The Varsity Erskine College,
Howe.-er many of th; men were The Senior's bill was accordingly mercilessly. I felt the arrow go out The Erskine Mi1·ror.
'd ' ·
tl ·
·
much higher than that of the Fresh- of my throat, fiy over to the Indian's
cand 1
m
teu·
expressions
.
.
dead body, and pin it to the ground. I
and stated definite points on how man. ~lus made It neccssar;y ~or fainted.
they thou"'ht the course should be the Semor to haYe to pay a lngh
When I felt again, I realized that
tau~h t. Sbome said thev thought the price for ~he ~wu_or he had a:!~ im·ed. something was being done to my throat.
"
Th
fl' t
d
f
1 I opened my eyes. I seemed to be on
eourse did 110t gi 1·e e11ough time for
ese uw ec tYe an un au e e- some kind of raised :place, and I could
student expression relati n• to the ~nents of the old plan are eliminated see men gathered around me, looking
subject, others felt that there was ll1 the })lan passed ~y the st~tdents. at me and pointing me out to small
Tl
t
11
1
tl
boys who threw rocks at my shins and
·too much theory :md not ('Hough
le assessmen s "'1 equa tze
te ran. I tried to look down, but couldn't.
40[~
c!)lb w
u
~nb Jj{~ck union, for the first time in modern
"
"
historv,
of
all
the
" B'tg
F'n·e·.,
J
squads. 'Ve haYc been aware that
none too friendly rivalry has existed iu this athletie circle. 'While I
~~~[p)UJJ/l w~~~~
II
° ·· ·
I
Christmas Cards
* Choose
from our offering of
over fifty thousand cards, the
ones that appeal to your taste
and your pocketbook.
We offer box assortments,
loose cards, and cards suitable
for engraving.
Make your selection while
the stock is complete.
Edwards & Broughton Company
?nl!
Without ~dvertising
applicatio11 of the sub,ieet mattC'J' to cost of the a:mual. among the stuactual life for them to feel that thev dents, and wtll reheve the Howler
benefitted themseh·es bv taking· th"e staff_ o_f the trouble of collecting subl
d f l
(•ourse; still others said the,v were scriptwus at t te en
t lC year.
in the right school, bnt the \\TOng
This plan will also make it poscourse."
siblc for the debts incurred by for-
°
This is an index method of tak- \mer annuals to be paid.
C. L.
iug stock and affords ~t good diaguo- "I?ayis, editor of thi~ ;y~ar's publica~is of the circumstances. It might tlon, states t_hat wtthm two years
th t 0 t 1 d fi
f th H
7 1 ld
abo bear out tht' possibility of proge
a e cit 0
e Ole e1• s lOU
res~ from a procedure of this kind. be lifted by the system passed by
the students.
CH.\HITY \"S. ~\..:;<;TAGO:"ISll
The students' wilFugness to ,-ote
A footba1l charity g·ame will be upon themseh-es this assessment
played this afteruoou :1t the Duke speaks well for the college, and
ni wrsity stadium between grouped prons that they are not willing that
teams of the state "Big FiYe" W nke Forest should be the only colelC\·eus. The U niversit,v and Duke lege in the State which does 110t
combinatiolJ will be pitted against publish a yearbook. It shows also
an agg-regation of ap}woximately the their appreciation of the nlue of an
same strength from Dm·idson, State, annual and of the work of the
and ·wake Forest.
· II owler staff.
The profit made from the gate reThe Il owler staff is to be conceipts will go through the welfare gratulated for originating this plan,
organizations for charity purposes and the students upon Yoting in
withiiJ the state.
favor of it with the willingness
aside from the ciiarity pur- which was displayed in the mass
of the contest there will be a meeting just before the Thnnksgh·significance in the fraternal ing holidays.
rr
I looked up, and saw that I was hang-
ing by the neck from a tree. I was
being hanged! I shut my eyes in utter
resignation.
Blindfolded, I was being carried
along a rough street. On all sides I
could hear people shouting. Their language was strange, •but' soon I realized
that it was French-they were cursing
and jeering at me. I was astride something hard and wide and square. Then
somebody took the blindfold off and I
saw that I was in a low cart, sitting on
a long narrow box-a coffin. They
seemed to be waiting for me, and I
was promptly led up a kind of rough
stairs to a pla,tform. They made me
kneel down and a priest mumbled
something and then retreated into the
crowd. I was fiat on my stomach, my
arms were tied to my body, and my
feet were roped together. Someone
shouted an order and immediately a
great swaying took the platform. I
felt a sharp pain in my neck. The
guillotine!
I was conscious of being cooped up
in something, and that the something
was being trundled along like a coffin.
It was dark inside, but I could see
through some cracks in the top of the
box and the sun shone down in my
face. Then the box was gently lowered
into a kind of long ·hole, and soon I
felt something fall against the top and
the cracks were beginning to be stopped
up with something. Then I realized.
YOUR NEWSPAPER
Cannot Exist
· Without your support, advertisers cannot benefit .
Patronize the people who advertise with us-and mention
The Old Gold and Black
LIST OF ADVERTISERS
Wake Forest, N. C.
The Bank of Wake
Dickson Bros.
Hardwicke's Pharmacy
The Circulating Library
Wake. Pressing Club
Barnes & Snyder
Palace Theatre
, Shorty's
Brantley's
Wake Forest Hotel
College Smoke Shop
· Raleigh, N. C.
Edwards & Broughton
State Theatre
Palace Theatre
Capitol Restaurant
Wilson's Cqffee Shop
The Crest, Inc.
Brantley's
,
The East Coast Stages
Foreign Advertisers
. P. Lorillard Co., Inc.
American Tobacco Company
Liggett & Myers Company
Parker Pen Company.
AMUSEI
Haunting romancE
comedy and music a
renee T!_bbett,'s late!
"The Ouban Love :
open Monday ai t:
for two uays.
'!'he hero or "Th
· seen. in modern gar·
ling, singing marine
engrossing romanc1
Velez, fiery little IV
"The Squaw Mall;"
lead, and prominent
· Ernest Torrence an
who last scored as a
Rich-Quick Walling:
.. ley, who played Mari
ter in "Politics";
Mathilda. Comont a
The picture was
van Dyke, who ha:
credit as the memors
"Never thel Tw3lin
"Guilty- Hands."
11-Ian·iage
Tibbett plays a I
Honed in Cuba_ whe
with Nenita, a little
der. The war bre:
called to France. '
girl he left at home,
she sa~es his life a
pels him to marry
·the lu~e of Cub~ fiJ:
derlust and D-e goe:
girl he once loved.
1nouement brings tb
Buster Keaton <
as ever, but in an
of new adventure
Theatre, commenci
cimtber· 10 where "
York," his latest 1:
tlte 1\'Ietro-Goldwyn~:
be shown.
Comical troubles
ter, who plays a m
ing to reform the
tenement district.
tlte process-also i1
gangsters, and tria
galore dog his path
He goes through '
ning a gymnasium
up in a wrestling m:
test next mops him
a hilarious chase
ures in the whirlwi
Joan Crawford,
fresh evidence of
talent with her ev
hicle, is at her dra:
sessed,''. playing at
Raleigh on Monc
Wednesday.
Tlte pi~ture, ba
Selwyn stage' play, '
star her most
"Paid"!....that of•a p<
anxious to better 1
becom'}S involved i
young politician o1
standing.
A Benny Ruben ·
zer," a musical act
a Sound news com
the
Will Rogers, the
famous "unofficial
\ world, has made :
of "Ambassador B
ture, which is co
·Theatre, Raleigh o
and Saturday. S
sophical cowboy-h
sleeve ambassador
European court, it
order for his parti
Seeming· to reali
funster has throw
work with eviaen
the- result that ".A
packed full of thE
funny scenes 1:\VE
screen. , Any one 1
would have be'en s1
, sy.ccess .of the 01
~
picture marks the
point in Rogers' sc
To complete this
will be a Ruth
"Words and Musi<
act "Turn of the
news.
Plenty of actio
mance, a fast-mo
surprise ending, al
raplly all feature
playing at the Pal
and Saturday witb
·Edmund Lowe in
a' reckless border 1
sergeant.
With Conchita
dark cnarmer Wh4
but cares only for o
Lane as the ,llione
~ Baxter risks his f1
lure of the pictur
·ror.
-- Lowe, hearing t:
erating north of th
him. The chase lea
Baxter is making
Montenegro, mu·ch
the local sheriff.
A Our Gang Co:
a Musical Act "H:
Hallelujah Land"
complete this perf
It is a new ,•
cavorts across tl
:'Local Bo:y Make
the Palace Thea1
Thursday.
The new Joe is
Jone, but in a di:ff1
at all in the me
"Hold Everythinl
/
I
\
or "Going Wild."
AMUSEMENTS
ES
IK SUNDAY
Two ProMount
2
~s
ionary Union
:tocky Mount,
der the super-
•
'
given at the.
: Church.. It
1e of "Faith,
ogram opened
:et. An interinese People"
.eonard. The
discussed . by
' was the subThe subject
· Carl Brown.
oncluded this
mission proNorth Rocky
The program
ing: "Song,"
.ppllcation of
"Mission and
Ray O'Brian;
mard; "Home
and "Foreign
a rd.
, excellent at~
·ogram B. L.
ech of appret Y.P. U.
.
Haunting
romance,> tropic adventure,
I
.
comedy and music are blended in Lawrence T!_bbett,'s latest starring vehicle,
"The Ouban L.ove Song," which wlll
open Monday at the Castle -Theatre
for two uays.
1'he hero of "The Rogue Song" is
·seen. in modern garb as a swaslFI>uck·
ling, singing marine who figures. in an
engrossing romance, of Cuba. Lupe
Velez, fiery little Mexican heroine.: of
"The Squaw Man;" has the feminine
lead, and prominent roles are fillE¥} by
· Ernest Torrence and Jimfny Durante,
who last scored as a comic pair in "Get·
Rich-Quick Wallingford"; Karen Mar·
.. ley, who played Mari'e Di·essler's daugli·
ter in "Politics"; · Hal~ · Hamilton,
Mathilda Com011t and Phillip Cooper.
The picture was directed by W. S.
Van Dyke, who has such hits to his
credit as the memorab1e "Tra 'd er H orn,"
"Never the/ Twain Slmll.· .Meet" and
1
"Guilty· Hands."....·
lvfat•riage for Dttty
Tibbett plays a marine wh·o is stationed in Cuba_ where he falls ~n love
with Nenita, a little Cubarr peanut ve?-·
der. The war breaks, out and he IS
called to France. There he. finds tlie
girl he)eft at home, as a nurse. When
she saves his life a sense of ILuty com·
pels him to marry her. Years later,
·the lure of Cuba fills him with a wanderlust and !Je goes back to seeK' tile
girl he once loved. A surin'ising delnouement brj:ilgs the story to a close.
Page Three
Oim GOLD AND BLACK
He is timid, self·
effacing-near-sighted---a victim of an
inferiority _complex. He labors under
the. suppressed desire to be a devil ~th
the ladies and at the same time. a
power among the athletes of the local
college.
Smith. W. Scott Buck and Harold H. j teams are espec~ally urged. to be pres·:Deaton will present the negative. The ent and others mterested m forensics
'
are invited.
two teams have previously met teams
''Goot;l;Mawnin', is F amzliar,_ I
.
Greeting of
''Uncle~'
I
Oscar
"Good mornin'.-Sah! Could I take
yo' washin' this mawnin', please 1sah'!"
I
It was ·only· "Uncle"
Oscar Massenburg
speaking in the customary manner
which has given him the 1·eputation
of being th~ most po}ite colored gentleman in Wake Forest.
"Uncle" Oscar is 92 and still going
strong. As he expresses if, "Yassuh,
I'se been aroun' heah a little mo' than
92 yeah, and I would like -to stay a
good while longer. if hit Is de Good
Lawd's will, I expects to live to be at
least 100."
The old darkey with his 92 years
harks back to the time when all the
black folks were in slavery. "I considered myse'f a growed up man when
tle war wid de Yanks broke out." He
also remembers the Ku Kluckers and
their terrifying practices.
"Uncle"
Oscar thinks that the "har~ times"
which people are going throtj'gh now
are harder than any of those following
the Civil War. This is explained by
the fact that everyone could at least
get something t~ do ~t that time even
if the pay was meagre.
No task is too small or commonplace
for "Uncle" Oscar. He makes a living
doing laundry work and ..odd jobs for
college boys and townspeople. He has
.been ·doing these things for 16 years,
and before then when he was -young
enough to farm, he worked for one man
44 years in succession.
!
the varsity squad meet in a dual clash
at 7:30 in the Phi Society hall. The
query will be, "Resolved, that congress
should enact legislation providing for
centralized control of industry."
The affirmative ~side will be upheld
by W. Herschel Ford and E. Leonidas
In reality he is a clerk in a bookstore and a student of botany. In
his dream wor~d h~ is forevef mooning
over-and writing, letters to .,.Julia
Winters, a co-ed gf a distant university,
whose picture he has seen. These let·
ters, 1llled with avowals of devotion
and exaggerated praise of his· own
athletic prowess, he never mails. Some
one else does mail one of them, however~ ·and thereby ha~gs this tale. To
.ais dismay Julia writes that she is
coming to attend the track meet and
to meet her hero.
The story is from the pla-y by J. C.
and El.liott Nugent. Mervyn Le Roy
has been eminently successful in his
VARSITY DEBATERS TO
direction.
CLASH TUESDAY NIGHT
You must see "Local. Boy Makes
Good."
"Love Tails o! Morocco" Comedy, Smith and Ford Will Meet Deaton
and Buck in Debate
"Bali Island Paradise" Travel Talk and
.
I
Sound News complete this perfect.! Debate season will open on the camprogram·.
pus Tuesday night as four members of
\
from State College In non-decision
debates.
This (lebate will take the place of
THE
the regular weekly conference-· of the
·debate squad
'
· Those competil!g for
places on the varsity and freshman
BANK OF WAKE
WAKE FOREST, N. C.
'
-4%-
I
S-T-A-T-E
MONDAY---TUESDAY···WEDNESDAY
Paid on Savings
J'OAN CRAWFORD-CLARK GABLE
in
''POSSESSED''
Also
_ Benny Rubin Comedy, Musical Act,
and News
THURSDAY-..FRIDAY··-SATURDAY
WILL ROGERS
in
"AMBASSADOR BILL"
WAKE FOREST HOTEL
Board $!6.50 per month
Rooms. · $4.00, $4.50 per month
$15.oo; $17.50 per semester
Steam heat, running hot and
cold water in every room
Also
Floyd Gibbons Act, Ruth Etting Mu·
sical Act and Sound News
Glenn Tucker
, Student Manager
.
·················································'
-- -..
Buster Keaton comes, frozen-faced
as ever, but in an electrifying series
of new adventures, to the Castle
Theatre, commencing Thursday, December· 10 where "Sidewalks of New
York" his latest laugh thriller 'from
the ~Ietro-Goldwyn~Mayer studios, will
lJe shown.
Comical troubles galore' follow Bus·
ter who plays a milli(maire's son tryin~ to reform the small boys of · a
tenement district. He falls in love in
the process-also into tne cfisfavor of
gangsters, and trials and tribulations
galore dog his path.
He goes through varied troubles run·
ning a gymnasium and gets all :Oent
up in a wrestling match. A boxing con·
test next mops him up some more, ana
a hilarious chase with gangsters fig·
ures in the whirlwind climax.
'Ogs
tJ.t· as well be
Las when they
L' at least they
~s. but tliey .
1e diplomas."
was given by
~uctor in psy~ollege.
Dr.
the present
credits, ~nd
.hematics and
ljects for im-
Joan Crawford, who seems to give
fresh evidence of an unusual acting
talent with her every succeeding vehicle, is at her dramatic oest in "Possessed,". playing at the State Theatre,
Raleigh
Monday, Tuesday :and
Wednesday.
picture, based on the Edgar
Selwyn stage' play, "The Mirage," gives
th~ star her most serious role since
"Paid"!....that of•a poor factory girl who,
anxious to better her position in life,
becom~s involved in an affair with a
young politician of wealth and social
standing.
A Benny Ruben comedy "Juluis Sizzer," a musical act "Darn Tootin" and
a Sound news completes the program.
on
The
Will Rogers, the l:lest loved •and most
1ny
~J.:
famous "unofficial diplomat" in the
. world, has made a smashing success
' of "Ambassador Bill," his lates,t picture, which is coming to the, St-ate
·Theatre, Raleigh on Thursday, Friday
and Saturday. Showing the philosophical cowboy-humorist as a shirtsleeve ambassador t!J a tradition.:bound
European court, it is simply made. to
order for his particular brand of wit.
Seeming· to realize this, the famous
funster .has thrown h'imself into his
work with eviaent enthusiasm, with
the- result that "Ambass,dor Bill" is
packed full of the most ·screamingly
funny scenes ~ver brought to the
screen. , Any one of a number .of them
would have be"en sufficient to make the
, SlJ.cc'ess .of the ordhiary :film. This
pictur~ marks ·the latest and highest
point in Rogers' screen career.
To complete this good program' then
will be a Ruth Etting musical act
"Words and Music," a Floyd "Gibbons
act "Turn of the Tide" and a sound
news.
·.I
Plenty of action, a wealth of ro·
mance, a fast-moving stor:y: with a
surprise ending, and gorgeous photography all feature "The Cisco Kid,"
playing at the Palace Theater, Friday
and Saturday with Warner Baxter and
·Edmund Lowe in the colorful roles of
a' reckless border bandit and a cavalry
sergeant.
.,
With Conchita Montenegro as the
dark cnarmer who, attracts both men
but cares only for one of them, and Nora
Lane as the .llloneer widow for whom
, Baxter risks his freedom, the feminine
lure of the picture is amply provided
"for.
'
.. Lowe, hearing that his enemy is operating north of the border, starts after
him. The chase leads to Carrizo, where
Baxter is making violent love to Miss
Montenegro, mu·ch to the annoyance of
the local sheriff.
A Our Gang Comedy .~'Fly My Kite"'
a Musical Act "Hitting The Trail 1\"or
Hallelujah Land'' and Sound News
complete this perfect program.
It is a new , Joe E. Brown who
cavorts across the silver screen in
· - :'Local Bo;r Makes Good," playing at
the Palace Theater, Wednesday and
Thursda-y.
The new Joe is as fum).y as the old
Jone, but in a different way.. lie is not
at all in the mood of "Top Speed,"
"Hold Everything," "Broad Minded,"
.........,.fi ·
·;)
ilder
: I
beeanSe
'
fresh
.
are never parched or toasted!
"Fo~KS
who smoke re~y fresh cigarettes made
from choice sun':'ripened tobaccos never have to
give a· thought to their throats.
That's be~~se such fres_h cigarettes retain natural
moisture
-·a~d
are1 gratefully. smooth, cool, throat•
.
.-'
friendly; mild.
Camels are th~ fresh cigarette- everyone knows
.thal ~ow-they're blended from the finest Turkish
·and mild Domestic tobaccos that money and skill
can buy. '
these choice su'n-ripened tobaccos-that would only
drive off or destroy the natural moisture that makes
Camels fresh in nature's own mild way.
The CamerHumidor Pack protects a fine cigarette
fresh with natural moisture - it could do little or
nothi~g to freshen a cigarette that is dried-out or
factory-stale.
H you smoke for pleasure, see for yourself what
freshness
means in mildness and :flavor- switch to
.
Camels for just one day-then leave them, if you can!
W ~ :would· never dream of parching or toasting
..
"
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY
Winston-Salem, N. f;.
•
R. J. Reynolds Tobac;co Company's Coast-to-Coast Radio ProgramtJ
Morton Dowoey,;fony
Wons, and Camel Orchestra, direction Jacques
Renard, every night except Sunday, Columbia
HOVR.Alice Joy,"Olcl
Bunch," and Prince Albert Orchestra, direc.
tion Paul Van Loan, every Dight except Sun-
BroadeastiDI System
day, N.B.C. Red Network
C&HEL QUARTER HOU!l,
,,
PRINCE ALBERT QUARTER
See local paper for time
Malle FRESH-Kept FRES.H
•
Don't remove the moi&ture-proof wrapping from your
package of Camels after you open it. The Camel Humidor
Pack is protection against perP,.me and powder odors,
du6t and germs. In office& and homes, even- in the dry
atmosphere of wtificial heat, the Camel Humidor Ptu!_lc
tlelivers fresh Camels and keeP-s them right unlil the hut
oue has been smoked ·
Cit Ull, B.l,llenoldo Tobacco CompaDl"
\
.·
I
'
..
ODD.GOLD-AND BLACK
Page Four
I· B.s. u. Reflections IFreshman Makes Elaborate- Commission Makes
Prepa ratio tis F 0 r Picture
Report On Lynching :...st_:_de-~-~,-\-~-~-~s-ee_:_;p_:_o~-~-'th_:_d_:_na-.k-t~--e-F-~-r=~~.
tive and Constitutional Modifications
for the Improvement of Public Educa·
tion in North Carolina."
Over, 100 callege professors and superintendents are expected at this
meeting, which will be held Saturday
evening, December 5, at six-thirty, in
the banquet room of the Union, 'on the
"Do you wish to wear that tie when west campus of Duke University. Din·
you have the picture taken?" asked ner arrangements are in charge of Pro·
the photographer-~nd then it· was no- fessor A. M. Proctor of Duke. The sec·
tlced that the Fresh_man had on hls retary of the organization -is Professor ·
little yellow tie.
W. L Mayer of State College.
"No " he confessed "But I am in 'the _ _1. . . . . . : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - habit •of wearing it' and just forgot.'
I'll see if I can borrow a tie from one
Anyone interested in workof the fellows out there"-referring
to the group. Only one fellow in the
ing 'for
rent, see C. Y.
whole crowd had o~ a tie, and he
Washburn,
at
home of Dr.
loaned this to the worthy ·cause. \
H. Ml Vann.
After final preparations, the timfd
highway by a -destitute young man,
who being unemployed, was hiking
It was Tuesday evening during a peSays That at Least Three lnno- or practically illiterate. This. accord- from a southern 'to~vn ~o -washington. rioll
or calm. All afternoon students
ing to tJJe Oomm ission. suggests tlie I In a tone of heart· I endmg de~ pair the
cen t s Were Lync hed
I
•
young man entreated the student for had ·been drirting into the Phi Hall,
During 1930
I fundamental value of bettet educa- a. small coin, with which he might signing their names to the list, stop·
tiona! facilities in increasing the level purchase something to eat, for he was ping before the tall panel mirror, for
of
public security.
hungry. The student hesitated for a a few moments of final tie-straightenTwo of the twenty-one persons,
moment, realizing the fact that he ing and hair-combing and at last pos·
lynehed in 1930 were certainly inno)lob Leaders
'himself
was a poor boy working his ing for the Howler photographer. At
cent. and eleYen others possibly so, ac·
As a result of careful in\"estigations way through college. But his generous this moment thet·e were no students
eording to the report of the Southern
waiting to be "snapped."' Bill Glenn
Comm il"siou on the Study of Lyncl1ing, on the ground. the Commission asserted aature would permit him to do nothing and "Slim"" Davis were swapping yarns
that.
in
most
lynching
cases,
if
ob-I
else
than
to
gi:e
t~e
traveler.
the
last
a ,;nmnmry of which was made public
with a group of interested fellow· dollat· he had m hts possesswn.
herl' today by tile Commission's chair- seners had the will and courage to
1
loafters when in strolled a typical
ld b
d'ffi It .
The world is not so bad after all.
man. George Fort l\1ilton. Pt·esident and d0 1't th
•
e no 1 cu Y 111 College men are not as devoid of Freshman, dressed in .his Sunday finery. would-be-photographed •boy again a.p-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
: . ere wou
Editor of the Chatlai!OD[!a ~ie1cs. Sum· 1dent1fymg
. .
mob leade1·s and members.
d
•
tl
·
proached the camera. He sat down'"Is this the place?" he inquired.
1
1
marized, the main features of this re· Generally- the mob members made lit· re1lgltdonh an P 11 1bal~
trop ~ as many
~
"What place?" asked one of the at the suggestion of the photographer,'
port. the fntit of a year's careful study tle or no effort to conceal their !dent- wou b av~ us edJeveT.l
ehre hwas a matadors. (A matador is a man who
of course--and cleared his throat. He '
poor
o·y
m
nee
.
tong
e
ap·
by the Commission and its staff. are: i'ty; yet officers and others present in pealed to a fellow man of different throws the bull.}
sat up straight, threw out his manly
1. There iR real doubt of the guilt
"The place where you get taken" chest and looked as though he were
their midst usually testified that they intellectual and cultural status, there
ui at least half the victims of mob recognized none of them. This attiposing as a statue of Wasbington·cross·
.
·
·
was a strong bond of sympathy and answered the Freshman.
violence.
tude. the report: det•lared, could be understanding between them that
After being informed that he was at ing the Delaware. His hBJJds were
2. Le~s than one-fourth of persons attributed only to "connivance or stu- caused the latter to respond ad·
'
the right place, the Freshman pro· folded, his head tilted, a sheepish grin
lynched l5ince 1890 have been accused pidity." This type of local sympathy mirably.
ceeded to primp. He combed his -hair came over his face--then the button
of assaults upon white women.
·
.
or intimidation, the Commission con·
Many outsiders' claim u1at college and arranged his collar-,then -bravely was snapped . or the bulb pressed or
3_ Claim that lynchings are neces· tinued. was largely responsible for the breeds atheists and agnostics.
They marched behind the s!)reen where the whatever it was and the .process of
s~u-y because courts do not convict fact that indictments were returned in
having the picture taken was all over.
camera stood.
Negroes for their crimes is fouml to be only six lynching cases in 1930, and point to modern beliefs prevalent f!.nd
in comparing them with their more
fallacious.
that so far only four of the 49 men orthodox and threadbare concepts, conI Christian agency to cooperate to tfie
thy neighbor as thy self."
4. l\Iob leaders can be identified with· indicted have been convicted.
The cludes that students have no real re·
This college student exhibited a fullest extent in assuming· 'his share
out difficulty, although grand jury in· Negro·s political impotence was pointed ligion. Their standard of judgment
of the burden.
dictments are seldom brought.
out as a factor in the indifference of is fallacious. The day is past when a more genuine christian spirit in being
5. The rate of lynchings per ten officers toward the resistance and prose- man is judged by the creeds and dog· of this small service to a brother in
thousand of Negro population is high· cution of mobs.
mas he espouses. Today a Christian need than he would have if he had N. C. SCHOOL MEN
TO MEET AT DUKE
est in sparsely settled areas.
is known by the reflection in his daily observed all the rituals known throughIlliteracy
6_ There is a direct relationship be·
walk and conversation of the Christian out Christendom.
(Continued from page one)
tween lack of ed ucatiml, low economic
l\Iost of those whom the Commis· graces of love. charity, liberality, and
Our denominational leaders, in put·
status, and lynching danger.
Dr. Wannamaker is
sion·s investigators identit1ed as prob· brotherly kindness. This phylosophy ting on the, south-wide every member of Lillington.
able pat·tiripants in mobs were poorly was promulgated by Christ and ean\"ass, are to be commended. Every chairman of the Board of Education of i
Commis~ion Jiembt>rs
educated. propertyless, and irresponsi- adopted by Paul, but, strange to say, mo\"ement that
help to enlist more the city of Durham. He will discuss z
Associatell with 1\lr. Milton as mem· ble. often tmemployecl and sometime~ men have in their narrowness and of our inactive members in the sup- -"The Policies of the Equalization
be1·s of the Commission are Julian Har- with l'Onrt records. However, a num· bigotry gotten away from it.
port of denominational ,programs is Board as They Affect the Administra-~
ris. News Director oi the .'itla111a Con· ber of those identified ao mob members
The need today is a -wholesale re· worthy of praise. The- Baptists have tion of Public School Systems." Since
he and Secretary Martin are thought
gfitution: Dr. W . .T. :\IcGiothlin, Presi- were found to be members of the
All Suits Pressed Free
treat from dogmatic practices, in so a heavy load to carry, both in local
dent of Furman University and of the churches. while a Yery few had some
far a,s they are of no benefit, and the communities and in the worid at large, to have rather antipodal views on this
Southern Baptist Convention; Dr. '\V. !H'ominence in the community.
application in our conduct the funda· and it should be the earnest desire of subject, a lively evening is expected.
P. King, Book Editor of the 1\l. E.
It was pointed out that officers from mental precept of our Lord-"Love every loyal member of our mighty Senator Baggett will talk on "Legisla·
Church. South: Dr. John Hope. Presi- other' counties, as well as stockade
dent of Atlanta UniYersity; Dr. Ben- guards and other petty local officials,
jamin F. Hubert, President of Georgia in some cases only complicated tlie
State College; Dr. Charles S. Johnson, situation and at. times directly or inDepartment of Social Science. Fisk directly abetted the mob. 'fhe presence 11
University: Dr. R. R. l\Ioton. Principal of curious onlookers often had the same
of Tuskegee [nstitute; Dr. Howard '\V'. effect, the report continued, pointing
Odum, of the University of North Caro- out that in some instances boys ltad
!ina; Alex Spence. attorney, of Dallas. been conspicuous in the crowds, and
'fexas; and Dr. Monroe '1\'ork of Tnske· sometimes women and children as well.
gee Institute. Dr. W. C-. Jackson, Vice In three cases the National Guard,
President of North Carolina College though on the scene, were wholly fn-1
for Women and Chairman of the Com- effective.
1
mission on Interracial Cooperation,
Uominant in South
and Dr. Will W. Alexander, Executive
The Commission found that, in proDirector of that Commission. are ex· portion to Negro population, lynching
officio members. This group was ap- is commonest in thinly settled counties
pointed last year by the Commission and in those with less than 25 per cent
on Interracial Cooperation to under· of Negro population, rather than in
take a careful study of each of the the "Black Belt" and in population
lynchings of 1!130, a work completed centers. In number of mob victims
only n few days ago by the trained since 1889. it was pointed out tllat
investigators of the Commission.
Georgia, Mississippi, Texas and Louisi·
ana led with 465, 464, 364, and 349
Oil'enses
lynchings respectively. But figured on
In regard to the offenses for which the basis of Negro population, the per·
lynchings occurred in 1930, the Com- centage of lynchings was greatest in
mission's statement says: "One man Florida, with Oklahoma, Arkansas, and 1
was lynched solely because he had of- Texas foJJowing in order. The fact was
fended political opponents, and another discovered that lynching, while de·
to prevent his appearance as a witness creasing rapidly during the last three
in a serious court case against white decades, was becoming more exclusive·
-men, In five of the other eleven cases, ly a Southern phenomenon, with 97
it was not clear that the mobs got the per cent of all the country"s lynching
guilt~· persons, and in the other six occurring in the South in recent years,
there was doubt as to the truth of the as against 82 per cent in the South in
charges against the men lynched." In earlier decades.
some cases the Commission found rea·
son w suspect that the victims had
No Immunity
been deliberately "framed" for purEleven of the 1930 lynchings, it was
poses of concealment or revenge.
found, took place in counties which.
"The popular opuuon that most had had none in thirty years. This
lynchings are for the punishment of fact the Commission interpreted as incrimes against women is wide of the dicating that no community is immune
_fact," the Commission's statement de- from mob violence and that good citi·
clared, "for of 3,693 persons lynched 1 zens everywhere should be constantly
during t11e forty-one years ending with 011 watch for threatening situations.
1929 only twenty-three per cent were Many of 1930's lynchings, the Commis·
accused of actual or attempted crimes sion declared, could easily have been
against women, while 77 per cent were pre\"ented in this way. It point!!d out 1
lynched for other offenses." Those that, in the decade ending with 1929,
who apo_logize ~or lynching as a neces· four hundred and forty-eight attempts
sary defense or womanhood, the Com· at lynching were frustrated by the
mission maintained, "in reality doubly prompt action of officers and citizens.
betray the Southern woman, first in
The Commission cited illustrations
making her danger greater by exagger· of what it termed "legal lynchings"ating her helplessness, and second by hasty trials and foredoomed convic'undermining the authority of police tions under mob pressure so great as
and courts, which are her legitimate to preclude all possibility of deliberate
protectors."
and impartial judicial procedure. In
tourts Com·ict
some cases officials had actually barThe claim that courts do not con- gained with mobs, and had "bought
viet, often advanced as another excuse off" the leaders with promises of speedy
for lynching, was equally fallacious, conviction and execution, promises
the Commission said, for its investiga· sometimes carried out to the bitter
tions showed that, in eighteen months end, even in the face of reasonable
ending July 1. 1931, sixty-eight Negroes doubt of the guilt of the accused.
THEY'RE MILDER. It's the tobaccos! The mildest that
were executed by law in the Southern
Higii J,ights
money can buy. Ripened and sweetened in the
States and 470 were given life sen·
Against this dark picture, however,
ten<:l'~.
Eight of the executions were
sunshine ••• cured by the farmer ••• then aged
for rapt>, 57 for murder and three for the Commission pointed out certain en·
for two years in wooden hogsheads.
couraging high lights. One is the fact I
other crimes.
that lynchings have steadily decreased
THEY TASTE BETTER. These tobaccos are put to('rimhml Half-l\·lts
from the high tide of 255 in 1892 to
gether right. Rich aroma of Turkish and mellow
In several instances in which serious the low mark of 10 in 1929, and to an
crimes led to lynching attempts, the average of 17 per year for the past
sweetness of Domestic, 'blended and aoss·blended
Commission found evidence that "the six years. Another is -'the fact that
to Chesteclield's own BEITER TASTE.
culprits were defective half-wits whom the great religious ·bodies, the news·
society, for its own protection, should papers, and many influential individ·
THEY'RE PURE. Everything that goes into Chesterfield
long since have apprehended and con· uals and groups are united in conis tested by expert chemists. The purest cigarette
lined." The report pointed out, how- demnation of the lynching habit.
ever, that practically no public pro·
The Commission announced that it
paper made, tasteless, odorless. Sanitary manufacviHion has been made for such protec· also has under way a study of the exture ••• no hands touch your Chesterfields. They're
tion, and termed this state of affairs isting laws affecting lynching and mob
an inexcusable neglect for which the violence, and that at a later date the
as pure as the water you drink!
public pays the penalty in crime and results of this branch of the work will
insecurity.
THEY SATISFY. You break open a clean, tight-sealed
be made public. One of the aims of
T·he Commission found also a prob- the legal inquiry is the drafting of a
package. You light up a well-filled cigarette. Yes,
able connection between illiteracy and proposed anti-lynching statute wlilch
sir
•.• you're going to like this cigarette! And
crime, instancing the facts that not one if adopted would implement every
of the twenty-one mob victims of 1930 state with legal machinery to bring
right there is where many a smoker changes [0
had as much as a high school educa- effective punishment to those who take
Chesterfield. They Stztisfy!
tion, only one had gone beyond tbe the law into their own hands through
fifth grade. and eleven were totally mob violence.
@1931, l.IGGE'lT &:MYEilS TOBACCO Co.
$
(
'1
I
ALl
·Big
\
UnJ
li?===============m
F~
room
•f
Wake Fore
son SqL
'
I
COLLEGE
SHOP
1
Duk1
CONTEST
BE
1
Outstandinl
Parti•
!
I
This after:
Duk'e Stadiu
played betwe
of this state.
posing one t
allied squad:
and Davidso
line with tl
for the aid
the agency (
outstanding
Governor
meeting of :
Wake Forest,
Carolina, No
and Davidso
ago. This g
Each tean
J>quad of 22
coaches of t
Grid followE
glimpse of tl
may see (
Branch, Slu:
breath or Du
Mason, Adk
stars will b
Quage, MeL:
Dellinger.
Pearce will
tives from I
fighting De
thrill at the '
Cornwell, B
son.
The price
and $2.00 a1
pected. Th•
in charge of
STYLES FOR
COLLEGE MEN
will
I
I ,
•=·---·--<•
I
QUISENBE
A1
Wake Fol
LegioJ
M
WHY
A memori
of the WakE
ican Legion
dress by P01
berry, of th
ulty. The •
.ory of six
text of his 1
We are 1
call of the
glorify war
.of militaril?l
Legion Aux
ganizationsamong the
tions seekin
nent peace.
honor these
of military
read. The
and of their
us that the
men hold II
lives.
These si:ll
besides who
thousands ~
and mangle
and the mil
fered, on o
the late wBJ
or drank its
message for
message. ]
they cry ale
dead; it ca1
mode of exx:
and peace
must ta~e
honor our •
we, in the s
votion, und·
sage the .b
actions in i
internationa
Those wh
generally a
material co
who fight U
fathers, wi
send them
votion to _un
,Human tbil
present no •
must believ•
outside one
the life of
vividly exh
ever may b•
professional
profiteers-!
manlty, his
-outside tl
horrible as
mal minded
do more and more
smokers say:
I
I
BECAUSE ...
I
:::
~
..
I,
...
Page Five
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
llodificatlons
ublfc Educa-
ALL-STARS CLASH· TODAY IN CHARITY TILT AT DUKE
eors and suted at this
~ld Saturday
3ix-thirty, in
Tnion, 'on the
rersity. Dinilarge of Proke. The sec·
.is Professor ·
ge.
e--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
'
;
·Big ~ive Elevens To
'Unite In Season's Best
~ootball Exhibition
.
-
in workC. Y.
t of Dr.
;ee
e----------~---------------
Wake Forest, State, and Davidson Squads Allied Against
Duke and Carolina
CONTEST IS SLATED TO
BEGIN PROMPTLY ,AT
Side Glances and Dope
Br JOHN FULATOR, JR.
STATE CHARITY 'GAME
.ALL STATE CENTER POSITION
TULANE, THE UNDEFEATED
NOTRE DAME SPIRIT
ALL STATE TEAM
2
·Deacons Subdue 'Cats
7-0 in. Thanksgiving
c.
Contest· at Charlotte
ALL-STATE SELECTIONS
By DAN BRYAN
First Team
Second Team
Player-Team
Position
Player-Team
Brogden, W. F. C. __________ Left End ____________~Crawford, Duke
Cobb, .. State ________________ Left Tackle ________ Williams, W. F.
Dupree, W. F. C. __________ Left Guard ____________ Werner, Duke
·Espey, State ________________ Center_ __________ Gilbreath,_ Carolina
Fysal, Carolina --------~--Right Guard _________ Mciver, Carolina
Webb, W. F. c. ___________ Right Tackle _____ Underwood, Carolina
Brown, Carolina __________ Right End _______________ Hyatt, Duke
Branch, Carolina ________ Quarterback__________ ,__ King, Davidson
Laney, Duke ~--------------~ft Half_ __________ Wilson, W. F. C.
Slusser~ Carolina ___________ Righ HalL ___________ Dellinger, State
Brewer, D~e ______________ Fullback _____________ Cumisky, State
Freshmen Present Clean
Record In Grid Contests
-
.
------------------------------e
"NAMELESS" ·cLUB
TIES PROSPERITY
Victory Marks Elev.enth Successive Clean Page in Grid History
With Davidson
BROGDEN SNARES PASS
FROM WILSON TO SCORE
Two Teams in Intramural League
Remain Unbeated; However
Championship Uncertain
Wildcats Put Up Tough Fight and
Threaten Score With Pearce,
Mills, MacQueen, Raker; and
Mathis Leading Attack; Dupree,
and. the Demon Wolfcats, football in .
As the second week of play of the
Williams, Webb Best Deacon
This afternoon at 2:00 p.m. in tlie this State-will die. No more games, ---------------------------e
intra-mural tag football league draws
Forwards.
Duk'e Stadium a unique game will be no more happy cheers, no more gtid
Won Four of Five Games Played; to a close a promise of a good race
Outstanding Players of State to
Well, well, well w'ith the charity
Participate in Postgame today between the Devil-Heels
Season Game
played between the "Big Five" colleges
()f this state. Duke and Carolina, composing one team to be opposed by the
allied squads of State, Wake Fo~est,
· 1·n
and DaVl'dson. 'l'h"IS ex hib"t"
1 10n 1s
"th th e nat"ton·Wl"de · m ovement
.
I 1ne w1
for the aid of unemployment through
f f 00tb 11 games between
t h e agen?Y 0
a
outstandmg elevens.
Governor 0. Max Gardner called a
. r resentatives of
meet ing o f a thl e t lC e'?
Wake Forest, D~ke, Ut;lversity of North
carolina, North "Carolma State College,
and Davidson at Raleigh a few weeks
ago. This group sanctioned the idea.
Each team will be composed of. a
.squad of 22 players, SE;llected by the
coaches of the respective institutions.
Grid followers
be able to get a
glimpse of tpe best in the state. Th.ey
may see C.arolina's Fysal, Brown,
Branch, Slusser', Underwood, and Gil·
breath or Duke's Brewer, Hyatt, Yancy,
Mason, Adkins, and Werner. State's
stars will be witnessed: such as MeQuage, McLawhorn, Cobb, Espey, and
Dellinger. Raker, Mills, King, and
Pearce will be- outstanding representatives from Davidson. Admirers of the
:fighting Demon Deacons will again
thrill at the ;play of Webb and Williams,
Cornwell, Brogden, Dupree, and Wilson.
The price of admission will be $1.00
and $2.00 and a capacity crowd is ex·
pected. The sale of tickets has been
in charge of the American Legion.
heroes for this year.
But this game
today with Brail.ch, Brewer, Slusser,
Mason, Lane~ and Chandler as a back-j
fie!~ for the Duke-~arolina tea~!. Willf
a lme of Brogden, Webb, "\V1Ihams,
_
Espey, Cobb, Stroupe, Dupree, Math1s,
Raker, and_ Duke be ab1~ to sto~ that
Duke-Carolina backfield . It Will be
a game worth seeing and it looks as
the Duke-Carolina team has the best
d f th b
Th · h
en
e arga1n.
&y ave a
str.onger backfield and a stronger forward wall. But one can't tell about
th" t
f
'
0
lS ype
game.
There will be some real football and
fans will receive and perceive first
hand iiiformation as to how these AllState selections stack up against each
other. There is much debate about
the center position of the All-State
team. The merits of "Red" Espey of
State, "Red" Gilbreath of Carolina,
Emory Adkins of Duke, and "Buddy"
Gordner will be shown in this game.
:Probably other All-State positions will
also be decided in this game.
Head Coach
I
will
°
And again it looks like the South is
going to the Rose Bowl and National
.Championship.
"Hurrah" for the
South and Old Tulane.
Football
supremacy is fast coming to the South
and leaving the Nor,th where it has
been supreme for many years. Much
depends on Tulane's showing against
Washington State at New Orleans
~:l~e !ut~!~t ~11 ~1 ~~net ~;~~~~-gi;:
the meantime Southern California has
QUISENBERRY SPEAKS
AT MEMORIAL SERVICE her hands full, playing the University
of Washington today ahd Georgia
December 12. But the Trogans are
Wake Forest Post of American winners.
_____
Legion Pays Tribute · to
Memory of Heros
A memorial service, on November 22,
of the Wake Forest post of the Amer·
ican Legion was featured with an ad·
dress by Post Chaplain J. Rice Quisenberry, of the Wake Forest college faculty. The occasion honored the mem~
-ory of six patriots of the post. The
text of his remarks is attached hereto.
We are met fhis afternoon at the
call of the American Legion, not to
glorify war or mhiister to. the spirit
-of militari~?m; for the Legion and the
Legion Auxiliary are not warlike or·
ganizations--on the contrary Tiley are
among the most infiuential organizations seeking a practical road to permanent peace. We are met, however, to
honor these six patriots whose records
of military service we have just heard
read. The memory of these comrades
and of their sacrificial service reminas
us that there are some values which
men hold more sacred;_ than their own
lives.
These six men and ·the thousands
besides who gave their lives; the otner
thousands who go on in life maimed
and mangled in body, mind, or spirit;
and the millions whose lives were offered, on one side. or the other, in
the late war-all these who tasted war
or drank its dregs, I say, have a simple
message for mankind today, a two-fold
message. If we have ears to hear,
they cry aloud to us: "Idealism is not
dead; it can never die. But war as a
mode of .expression for ideals must go,
and peace through brotherly justice
must ta~e its place." We ca11 really
honor our departed comrades only as
we, In the spirit of their sacrificial devotion, undertake to make· their ,mes·
sage the . basis of our thinking and
actions in inter-class, inter-racial, and
international relations:
Those who niake wars may be, and
generally are, moved by selfish and
material considerations; 'but the men
who fight these wars, and the mothers,
fathers, wives, and sweethearts who
send them to fight, are moved by devotion to .unselfish and spiritual values.
,Human thinking and human conduct
present no other trait so beautiful; we
must believe, as that devotion to values
outside oneself perfectly embodied in
the life of Our Lord-a,· trail most
vividly exhibited in war. But-whatever may be the views of some rulers,
professiona~ soldiers, politicians and
profiteers-to the rank and file of·numanity. history presents no spectac1e
-outside the crucifixion of Jesus-so
horrible as war itself. Surely no normal minded .person who ever speiit a
lt
Le
:d
ow
~d
ld
te
'!'.'·•
.c-
re
ed
~s,
lld
tO
...
could the world believe it? But it
was true, ~otre Dame lost to the
Trojans then to the Army. Yet! those
defeats did not make that Notre Dame
campus down hearted. No, not in the
least. That old Notre Dame spirit, ex·
celled by none, caused 500 students to
.
march from the campus
to the South
Bend station, three miles away to meet
the team arriving from the Army
COACH
PAr MILLER
Who has piloted the Demon Deacons
to a triple tie with . Duke and State
for second place in the Big Five cnampionship race.
Coach Miller is serving his third year
as Director of Athletics at Wake Forest.
· t ant coach m
·
He came here as ass1s
1928 from Loyola College.
Encoutered State Yearlings
for Scoreless Tie
With the close of the football season
a squad of ha1·d fighting freshmen hung
up their uniforms, the uhiforms that
were used in adding more football glory
to Wake Forest College. The Baby
Deacons have a record to be proud
of for the 1931 season. Not one time
in their five games were they defeated
and only one time were their opponents
able to score. In only one game did the
yearlings leave the field with the score
tied.
The first game of the season found
the Deaclets ready to begin their march
to a perfect season's record. On Gore
Field, September 26, they downed the
Hugh Morson eleven of Raleigh by the
score-of 19 to 0. In this game such
players as Wall, Boney, Faulkenberg,
Gold. Rhinehart, and De Angeles were
seen in action.
On October 9 the hard fighting team
froxp Hargraves Military Academy of
Virginia faced Wake Forest Frosh. The
Four Letter Men Start Training;
Webb, Earp, Joyner, and
Barnes
I
cadets walked of! Gore Field with a
defeat of 13 to 0 written on their sclied- ~ll.llllllnllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIJIIntlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiS
ule card.
; ~nmm•mnnmmmuummummlrm''''''m•mnnlmmlammnm•nunnluu•m•tnmmuununmln••mnnnruunrmmu•num•,umnrm,•rurm•nmnu•nt: =
Th
1 h "th Oak R"d
1
= =
==
COURT· CANDIDATES A9Rd::Y~soc:~er
REPORTED TUESDAY
_ ____ '
for the championship cup is sliown.
'l'he Demon Deaons met and conAfter a week of play had passed two
quered the Davidson College Wildcats
new teams, the Dark Horsemen and
the Reds, decided to join the league. by a score of 7-0 in Charlotte, ThanksThe P r 0 s P en•t y Cl u b' s t earn seems to [giving Day before a crowd of about 8,be showi~g a clean air of heels to th 000 p~ople to make the eleventh clean
P
e /page m a row for the Wake Forest
other membe!s ~f the league so far, fteam in the annual holiday tilt.
but -the 'battle has just begun and no f The victory places the Deacons in a
one can tell how it will end.
three-way tie Fith Duke and State for
Three teams have a clean slate to second place in the Big Five standing.
their credit at present, and the mem· Wake Forest is in the same position
bers of those teams are fighting to keep she was last year as the season ended.
a goose-egg in the lost column.
The game was hard fought ana exAs the Inter-Collegiate football sea- citing throughout. It was not until tile
son is now over all games are being middle of the last quarter that Captain
played on Gore Field, and will be pfayed Brogden snared the oval thrown by . ,
there from now on. There ,is usually Dune Wilson to sllake off two woulda game at 3:30 p.m. every week day be tacklers and /dash across th.e- goal
except Saturday, and all students may line with the score. Another pass,
attend the games free of charge.
Hutchins to Wilson, accounted for the
The standings are as follows:
extra point.
(November 30, 1931)
Davidson threatened seriouslY: late
Team
W. L. Pet. in the third period but the hefty DeaProsperit;y ............................ 2
0 1.000 con line proved impossible for the swift
Nameless Wonders ........•... ___ 1
0 1.000 'Cat backs. Pearce, Mills, and McQueen
Tigers •..................................... 1
1
.500 were constant threats to the Wake ForDark Horsemen .................. 0
1
.000 est defense. The left-footed boots of
Reds -----·········---·····-··········-···---0
1
.000 Pearce often served for advantage.
Twitts --·····················--······-··--0
2
.000 Each team scored eight first downs .
Med ........................................ __ 0
2
.000 Davidson gained 139 yards from scrimEn End .................................. 0
2
.000
(Please turn to page 6)
ma~:eed ~i ~:~ ~~
N N 0 UN
ro. ""'"
Williams' Play House
,
Wake Forest, N.
by football fans. The Baby Deacons I~ ~
regarded the situation differently. On ~ ~
but of the Carolinas,
~a~ngdehaRvThin1~n=eh~aer:tl~~oen~ot:heee;,ebFehn:c:hl~~d~u:r:I.rne:g. ~= := ~-= ~=
,
:~:,;=::~:..:"~!=.:,";.~:'00~17,: ~~}fJ:::~~;'¥,1~~]~~;! ~ ~
Espey, State--Center.
Fysal, Carolina-Guard.
is Qll the lDJUred hst, as a result of
injuries received in the Wake ForestDavidson clash Thanksgiving Day.
Four letter men, Cap4t.in "Spider"
Webb, center, Howard Earp and Junie
The secret of supreme pleasure; according to one wise bird, is merely
the ability to make an ass of oneself
without realjzing the fact.
Matrimony is a place where souls
suffer for a time on account of their
sins.
We are surrounded by traditions
that once were living but now are dead.
half hour in· the inferno of even a
deserted battlefi~ld can doubt that war
is born of deepest hell.
The problems, then, for our generation and those that follow, as we seek
to emulate the virtues of tliose departed
MODERN CAFE SERVICE
Daily, Fresh Barbecue Cooked Over Hickory-oak
Coals and All Other Good Eats
;-~= _ ~= =-=
§
§ §
~~
EE
y~~s ter~i:or;a!n~~ ! ~
~:~::.0~:~::::•·;:::::
Cobb,-Statew-~ackFle.
C.
ployod on Rlddl<k Fl•ld at State Col-
.:r~ke
==
Not only the sh,ow place of Wake Forest
Eight hopeful basketeers reported for dope bucket by fighting their way to
a 19 to 0 finish over the big Duke men.
the ftrst drill on. the local court Tues- Led b Y w a 11 , t he f1 eet-footed quarterday afternoon. The workout was di· back, and Boney, . the line plunging
rected by Coaches Fred Emmerson, halfback, Wake Forest Frosh shattered
~~l~~:~:e:.at
t E d
Brodgen,
a e ores - n .
Branch, Carolina-Quarterback.
Mason, Duke--Halfback.
Slusser, Carolina-Halfback.
Brewer, Duke-Fullback.
I
NG
earned. When the final whistle blew
the Deaclets pulled oli their battered
helmets with a victory of 13 to 12.
Th~ Blue Imps of Duke University
It seems a popular thing for people
Miller completes his footto be picking All-State teams so I'll
Coach Miller's attention is held now
pick one and bet that its the right
the entire game. Nevertheless, the
team, player for player.
by the charity grid game whicli is to team held State's yearlings to a score·
Here it is:
be played this afternoon at Duke. 1
t"1
s
St t
· -1 ti
ALL STATE TEAM
Charlie Owen and Bob Edwards are
eFore:;e;:n
~
T H E 0 p EN
A
~~:~..;:~i..::!·~;~'--3: ~~::::7;_~~~~~;.~:::: ::,~~~=· ::::",:.~:.:: ~= H~I
boot ,.,.,
C I
NG
24,
in which every point scored was liard
~~
You are assured of a hearty welcome
intercepted pass, the Deaclets began ~ ~
their forward drives and were invading §
~
. W.
s:~t.:'sfite~ y~~ t~erri~rr ~t t~e so~nd ~ ~
W.
II
- -
WILLIAMS, Prop.
~~
II
o
e na w s e.
s a e c amp1on- § ~lllllmmuuuunnm•urmlmmnuunnluuummmunnunmnmmmuummuuumrn•mlmmnm•munuuunmur•muuumuunuumnmmnummum~ E
ship title_ 'vas won by Wake Fot·est ::;)••m••mmuuunuuunm•mu•m•n•mmnuun•mm•nm•uumunm•nn••m•mmnunn••m••m•n•••muru•u•••m•n••um••mu•mu•nnrmm•""'nun•n•••mu•n'~
.Frosh, the only freshman team that did ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
Barnes, ·forwards, and, Monk Joynerlnot meet with defeat.
are the main holdovers from last year's
The wrinkled jerseys, colored Old
cagers.
Gold and designed with black letters
Hack Malloy, soph forward; Allie will walt for the freshman team of
Hayes; soph center; and Clarence Bunt- 1932. In the meantime the frosli playing and Joe Mulhern, sopb forwards, ers of 1931 will have an important task
are making a bid for a :position on before them, that of securing berths
the. varsity squad this season. Howard on the 1932 Wake Forest college varGoing North, East, South
McDonald, senior, is also out for the sity team.
center position, competing with Hayes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - and West
and Webb.
Next week training will be speeded
up with Owen, Gardner, Edwards, BrogBig Five Standing
den, and Malloy in uniform as well
December 5, 1!!31
aj; other candidates.
and Baggage at the
lr' ' ''
• • • •• • ··-." ••' • • •" • • •' '• • • •• • • • •• • •• • • •• ••
·AL.L BUSSES
FINAL
W.
Why angels are always depleted ln
feminine form: ·
They are always up in the air
They are always harping
They never have anything to wear.
Carolina ............ 3
Wake Forest ....2
State .................... 2
Duke ·-----··············-1
Davidson :........... 0
L.
0
2
2
1
3
EXCHANGE PASSENGERS
T.
Pet.
1.000
·.500
0
.500
2 .500
1
.000
patriots, is to find some way to inten· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
sify and purify all the strong, noble,
beautiful, and unselfish forces tied up
in patriotism and chivalry, and at tlie
same time turn all these forces against
their natural enemy-war. Our patriot·
' "Where the Students Get Together"
ism and chivalry can never be genuine
•
and .mature until they include in their
loyal embrace all nations, all races, all
classes.
Cigar~
Our organization, our nation, man·
kind; must choose between greed,
hatred, and slaughter on the one hand
and unselfishness, love, and the heal·
P. REAMS, Prop.
ing hand on the other. We must choose
between the goi"Y handed god of war
and Jesus.
·
COLLEGE SMOKE SHOP
t
Smokes
Hot and Cold Dri11ks
Candy
Cigarettes
Hot Dogs
Sales and Service on All Makes Radios
0.
Medlin Bus Terminal
:1
0
J
ON NORTH MAl N STREET
WAKE FOREST,
N'.
C.
Any information in regard to the arrival and departure
of all busses will be gladly given. See Mr. A. Jack Medlin, the company's agent, about your ticket home, and
to other points of interest throughout the country.
We Solicit '(our Patronage
THE EAST COAST STAGES
Phone 46
By A. JACK MEDLIN,. Agent
\
'Page Six
FAMED SPEAKERS
· TO .ATTEND MEET
Student Volunteer Convention at
Buffalo Will Present
Significant ProJ)ram
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
pect to be a leader," continued the \Kessler .......................................... Conway
speaker as he explained the significance
.
R. G.
of leadership. "If you seek to lead in
order to glorify yourself you have given Webb .......................................... Whitfield
the ·best sign in the world of your
R. T.
failure."
Green .............................................. Brown
Senator .Bailey intimated that there
R. E'.
never was a rich man who was a leader.
One must be utterly stripped of himself. Hutchins ·····--------Q···B"·-·-·····-·-------··· Kin~
When the world goes to find a leader
·
· ·
~
it will find a man whose heart and Wllso_n -----------------L---Ji----·:·------------ Pearce
sympathy are for his fellowman.
· ·
Golden Bough had its origin in 1925 Peters ------------------R".-~Ji:-----.---------------- Mills
under tile clirechon of Dean D. B. Bryan, Bradley ......... :...................... ::-.. MacQueen
who felt that superior students were
F. B.
just as much entitled to stimulation
Score by periods:
and individual attention as were delinquent students with whom he so Wake ·Forest .................... 0 0 0 7-7
often dealt in connection with his duties Davidson ............................ 0 0 0 0-0
as dean of fhe college:
Scoring touchdown: Brogden. Point
Besides the 15 neophytes inducted to- after touchdown: Wilson (pass).
night, there are eight active members
Subs: Wake Forest, Owen for Kessin Golden Bough. They are: W. H.
ler,
Gardner. for Cornwell. Hipps for
Ford, Wake Forest; Herman Farber,
Weldon; Lewis Morgan, Raleigh; John Wilson, Lawhorn for Peters, Dudley
A. Wallace, Smithfield; Roy Kinsey, fm· Green, R. Edwards for Lawhorn,
Coinjock; Harold Deaton, Troy; Paul Phillips for Gardner, Connelly for
Hutchins, Lexington; and Ed T. Harrell, Red Oak. Faculty members are: Owen, Russell for Edwards. Davidson,
Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin, Dean D. B. Peabody for Pearce, Barrier for C~mBryan, Dr. W. L. Poteat, Dr. Hubert M. way, Flinn for MacQueen, Barr1er for
Poteat; Prof. A. L. Aycock, Dr. George Mathis, Johnston for Brown, West for
C. Mackie. and A. A. _Dowtin.
Flinn, McElrath for Wagner, O'Keefe
Since its origin six years ago 89
men_ have ·been honored with member- fm• King.
ship in Golden Bough. Of this number
Officials: Brewer (Maryland), ref62 have pursued their studies beyond eree; Scholar (Presbyterian), umpire;
the B.A. degree in 13 graduate schools Hackney (North Carolina), head linesand seminaries.' This membership at man; Gass (Lehigh), field judge.
present is divided as follows: medicine,
20; law, 20; ministry, 14; teaching, 24;
college teaching, 12; business, 4; stu·
dents. G.
$i,ooo was paid by students subscrib·
STUDENTS CONSENT TO
ing to the annual. A deficit of $2,300
5-DOLLAR ASSESSMENT
was therefo.re left unpaid.
TO PUBLISH YEARBOOK
.(ContinJed from page one)
EUZELIANS GIVE
sessment to the'students as a possible
VARIED PROGRAM
Speech to the Gladiators," by J. L.
Hardee, and Rudyard Kipling's well
known poem, "If," given by· S. W.
1
Sechriest.
Comics in the form of a modern joke
retold in typical English brogue were
given by Charles Leonard.
way out of the difficulties.
Most of the money taken in this fall
by the bursar for the publication of the
yearbook has had to be spent on a debt
of $2,300. This debt was incurred by
the annuals for the last three years.
DEBATERS OPPOSE
STATE IN OPENER
,
I
Any convention is judged largely by
The assessmen~ will permit _eve~y
the type of leadership it enlists. When
student in school . ere to appe~m t e
Howle1· as many bmes as are necessary
this test is applied to the Eleventh
without additional cost. Pictures of all•
Quadrennial Convention of the Student
student organizations, classes, sponsors,
Volunteer Movement, to be held at
and fraternities may have space in the
Buffalo. N. Y., December 30, 1931 to
annual without further assessment.
January 3, 1932, there can be no doubt
. The indebtedness upon the annuals
that the gathering will be a significant
for the last three years has resulted
one.
from a decrease in advertising, unpaid
Such men as Dr. John R. l\Iott, Dr.
Howler bills, and a small percentage of
Paul Harrison, Bishop Mc(Jonnell,
Kirby Page, and Dr. Robert E. Speer,
the students subscribiilg to the yearbook.
need no introduction to those who are
The 1931 Howle1· cost approximately
active in the Christian student move$5,300. The deficit of. $1,200 incurred
ment. There' are many others who also
by the '29 and '30 publications raised
have their significant contribution to
the total obligation for last year •to
make to the Convention.
$6,500. To meet this bill $3,200 was re'!'ells His Story
ceived from the publication fees, and
Two months ago a man just back
from the interior of China stood in a
----------------plain basement room in a boys' school
in New Jersey talking to the National
Council of the Student Volunteer Movement. His face was thin as from proMONDAY-TUESDAY
longed illness; otherwise he seemed
W~(STAGE)BOYD
no older than some of the students
KAY FRANCIS
in the group. He was wiry of build
1n
and wiry of mind. He spoke with fierce
"THE FALSE MADONNA,
Also
rapidity-with Chinese words crowding
Comedy~Screen Song-News
up whenever the English were too slow.
He spoke passionately yet not fanatWEDNESDAY-THtrRSDAY
ically because the content of his talk DEACONS SUBDUE 'CATS
·JOE E. BROWN
1n
w as
a
sensible, .-unpretentious,
7.
0
IN
THANKSGIVING
"LOCAL
BOY
MAKES
practical narrative of six years of livGOOD"
CONTEST AT CHARLOTTE
ing. He told how his hospital had been
WITH DOROTHY LEE
seven times occupied by soldiers, how
I
Also
(Continued from page five)
Fayetteville
Street_
Comedy-Novelty-News
he had been taken out to be shot, how
he had been offered a commission in mage and ·wake Forest 129. Each team
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
Raleigh, N.C.
the army of a soldier-bandit general, completed three passes Davidson for a
WARNER BAXTER, EDMUND LOWE
1n
how he had lived as the only foreigner total of 190 yards and the Deacons for
"CISCO KID"
in his station after the evaculation of ·a total of 189. Seven Wildcat passes
Also
Where friends meet
1929, how he had fought malaria and were grounded and one intercepted
Our Gang Comedy-Musical ActNews
would have lost 'but for the grit of a while only one Deacon pass was
little Chinese nurse, how a Chinese grounded and two intercepted.
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
family had grown to be his own family
Frosty Peters, Diminutive Wake Forand with what feelings he had learned, est half did some v~ry beautiful tack·
since his own departure, of the cap- ling throughout the game, and seemed
I'
ture of the father of that family by to worry the Davidson boys a great
bandits who would almost certainly try deal. The two very big reasons why
to kill him. When that swift recital the Deacons won was Ed Williams and
was over, it seemed to more than one Elsie Webb. They, aided by tlie splenmember of the Council that nothing we did work of Dupree stopped the Wildhad ever been or done was worth a cats in the third period when a touchcracked farthing.
down seemed inevitable.
·
Dr. Walter Judd
These same "lads" had held like
This man was Dr. 'iValter Judd. masses of iron against the hard, knifeThose who knew him in the University like plunges of the Davidson boys when
of Nebraska from 1916 to 1923, or in they had threatened twice to score in
the two succeeding years of his intern- the last moments of the second half.
ship, or in the year of his travel for Dune Wilson was the most consistent
the Student Volunteer Movement will ground gainer.
not have forgotten him, for he was
The line-up:
then the same compound of zest and ·wake Fo1·est
Daui(lson
sense and humanness, except that six
Position
years of real living have deepened Brogden .................................. Raker (C)
the timbre of all three. Walter Judd
L. E.
4
may or may ~ot be "great"; he would Williams ...................................... Wagner
'1 have always
loathe being called that. He will not
L. T.
used
Luckies
-as
far
as I am con·
mind the simple truth that all sorts Dupree ............................................ Mathis
of students like him tremendously be·
L. G.
cerned there are ne» better cigarettescause he is big enough to be moderate- H. Gardner (C) ...................... B. Gardner
congratulations also on your im·
ly heroized and unassuming enough
Genter
to be counted a good paL
proved Cellophane wrapper with
Other leaders iuclude:
T. Z. Koo, leader of Chinese students
that little tab that opens your
in thought and action; realistically
package so easily."
spiritual prophet of a ·Chinese church;
lucid and kindl·y interpreter of one culture to another; internationalist par
WAKE FOREST, N. C.
excellence-as symbolized by his pres·
ent office as a Vice President of the
World's Student Christian Federation.
Monday-Tuesday, Dec. 7-8
D. D. T. Jabavu, Professor of the
Bantu Languages and Literature;
educator and social server of the rural
In one· blazing year Robert Mont•
Bantu of South Africa; rare mediator
With
between ,black and white in one of the ,
gomery '~corned into stardom -the
Lawrence Tibbett,. Lupe Velez,
deadliest racial friction points in the
answer to many a film fan's prayer.
world; genial, witty, sensible-the best
Ernest Torrence and
admired far his smart acting and boyish
known African today.
C. Darby Fulton, D.D., Secretary of
charm.
The stage's loss was Hollywood's
Jimmie Durante
the Executive Committee of Foreign
gain-and ours. Bob will soon be seen
Missions of the Southern Presbyterian
in 41 Private Lives" for M-G-M.
Wednesday, Dec. 9
Church; for eight years a missionary in
Japan.
'.
Kenneth S. Latourette, Ph.D., ~rofes­
sor of Missions and Oriental History,
With
Yale University; formerly on the
faculty of Yale-in-China; author of The
Anna. May Wong,Warner Oland
I
BRANTLEY'S
have always
used LUCKIE5'
Castle Theatre
(Continued from page one)
and philosophy should not be required
for a degree from Wake Forest, was
turned into a general discussion led by
Wyan Washburn in the Monday night
section. On Tuesday night it was debated with M. C. Carriker and W. 0.
Rosser taking the affirmative and J.
Taylor and J. B. Jones debating the
negative. The Monday night section
seemed to ·be in favor of a negative
decision of the question, but in the
debate on Tuesday night a decision
went to the affirmative.
Tuesday night's program was concluded by a declamation, · "Sparticus'
Coordina
\
College Ne
and~
"
Vol. XV, No. 1:
(Continued from page one)
Wake Forest's 'affirmative was presented· by W. Herschel Ford and E.
I
Leonidiis Smith.
Both debates were featured by ratlter
spirited repartee, though neither school
presented a clearly developed case.
State and Wake Forest will meet in
two other non-decision contests in January and in the customary decision
debates in February.
'
HUNDRED
FIVE NE'
PRINT
• : " - · - - - · - · - - - - -....
,___
_..._.,.
_ _ _ _ _ _.__..,....,._co
One Hundred •
ferent Stori«
For PL
New Books to read during the week-end:
Wa.sJ¥ngton Merry-go-round (Intimate gossip about notables
at the Capitol)
·
.
A White Bird Flying, by Bess Streeter Aldrich, a granddaughter of the pioneers :finds her own way of meeting life.
.... Official System of ~ontract Bridge (for sa~e or rent)
Rent-Members, 3c a day; non-members, 5c ~ day
STORIES TOL
. OF ALL
Each News Stc
Of all Stud
A~ Pursuin1
With Whicl
a ted.
THE CIRCULATING LIBRARY
Located in Barnes & Snyder's
One hundred
newspapers in N1
carried write-ups
Forest College I
members of the
came from the
These articles
approximately 5
newspaper colun
sixty-fi.ve differer
Eacli of these
papers included
students from tl
of their parents
student was pur
organizations
affiliated ..
~lost stories w
pages of the Ioc
lines written by
of these1 headlin
as "Local_Boys .P.
Forest," "Makir
The Ashe·ville
an e~ght-columr
line. The editol
papers wrote tb
of thanks, and
'\ information.
The personne
ganization on tl
among them b
departmental o
the literary f
Council, frateriJ
(Please t1
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~
Ic
-
Fouaded 1832
Chartered 1BS4
. •
I
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE
wAXE FOREST, N. c.
=
~
A College of Liberal Arts, with an established reputation
for high standards, noble traditions, and
c
II
R
,Ia
I
'
EXPE:=~ =~::;ABLE
=
5i
~
•I
For Catalogue, Address •.. E. B. EARNSHAW, Secretary
~
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:
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1
TWO MEl
FOR~
Judges Chom
Students:
*Is Mr. Montgomery's
Statement Paid Forf
~hip
You may be interested in
knowing that not one cent
waspaidtoMr.Montgomery
to make the above statemont. Mr. Montgomery has
been a smoker. of LUCKY
STRl KE cigarettes for 6 or 7
years. We hope the pub-:.licityherewith given will be
as beneficial to him and to
M-G-M, his producers, as
hisendorsementofLUCKIES
is to you and to us.
--
"The Cuban Love Song"
The judges o1
award selected
Raleigh, now
vet·sity of Nor
Dunn, from E
the University
now at Harva
from North C;
ship selection
Ian\a: Twentl
from Universi
thirteen from
from Guilford,
three from N.
Davidson, con
sity December
body of judge
was the Wako
All the con1
formal bauqu
(Please
1
·)
'Daughter of the Dragon'
* * * •••
De~:eromnent
of China. Histo1·y of Christian Jlissions in China, etc.
Dr. Ernest F. Tittle, Minister of the
First Methodist Church of Evanston,
Ill.; one of the creators of the ·world
Peace Commission of the Methodist
Church.
::VIiss Winnifred Wygal, Secretary of
the :National Student Council of the
Y. W. C. A. with special responsibility
for the stucly of international relationships.
With sueh leaders as these students
will be adequately guided in their quest
for a more intelligent attitude toward
World Christianity.
FIFTEEN MEN ARE ELECTED
-TO MEMBERSHIP IN GOLDEN
BOUGH HONORARY SOCIETY
(Con~inued from page one)
with things as they are; that is the
marl\ of a new age.
"Leaders of men are men whom nothing in this world can stop. The whole
human has but one way of expressing
itself and that way is in one man.
Every revolution and every onward
step in the progress of our race seem to
have been wrought by this one man."
Mohammed, • Oliver Cromwell, and
l\Iartin Luther were cited as examples.
"Utterly abandon yourself if you ex-
Made of the fines! tobacco-? -The
Cream of many Crops -LUCKY STRIKE
alone offers the throat protection ·of
the exclusive "TOASTING" Process
which includes the use of modern Ultra
Violet Rays -the process that expels
c;ertain harsh, biting irritan_ts naturally
present in every tobacco leaf. These
expelled irritants are not present inyour LUCKY STRIKE. "They're out -so they
can't be inl" No wonder LUCKIES
always kind to your throat.
and Sessue Hayakawa
Thursday, Dec. 10
"Sidewalks of New York"
With
Buster Keaton, Anita Page
and Cliff Edwards
Friday, Dec. 11
"Heart Breaks "
With
Charles Farrell-Madge Evans
Saturday, Dec. 12,
"Wicked"
are
-
66
It•s
toasted·~
!.!!!!!'Throat Protection -aqalnsf Irritation- against cough
Monday-Tuesday, Dec. 14-15
And Moisture-Proof Cellophane Keeps
that 1 •Toasted" Flavor Ever Fresh
With
An All Star Cast
.. I
/
MOISTURE-PROOF
CELLOPHANE
.
_I
TUNE IN ON LUCKX_STRIKE; 60mo.,;:;.mlm&ta wirh elu:world'alinut dGn01
on:ha1ras and Walter Winchdl,whoaegouil> of today becomes the ouwa of comon-ow,
every T~~e~dcay, Tht&radGy and Saturday c...:m......,.,.. N.B. C. ncCUn>Tiur,
The Unique Humidor Packoge
Zip-~nd
Sp
~---DoctorW.
role of sell
fashioned s]
be held in )\
day e,·ening
The Wak,
Beauty QueE
ing the }lr£
sponsored b
tile local hli
Otller iea
are: A sl
Hugo's "LE
will be 11re:
Sealed 'Fight-Ever Right
With
An All Star Cast
"Flying High"
/
it's open!
iiliiiiiiiii
in Mrs. R.:
Seethe new notched tab onthetopof
the PC!Ickage. Hold down one half - - wlth'your thumb. Tear off the· other half. Simple.
Qul~k. %ipl That's all. Unique I Wrapped In .dustproof, moisture-proof, germ-proof Cellophane.
Cleall'!,prote\ted,neat,FRESHI-whatcauldbe more
madernthanLUCKIES'improved Huri'lldor Package
-so easy to ope_nl Ladies-the LUCKY TAB
class; song:
pt1pils; and
Evelyn Squ
A prize w
and the WOl
ing match.
A small
charged, an
used to buy
materials 1
is-your fin.er nail protection•.
enth grade
grade stan[
\
'