·whit acre house flu persists on johnson h~yes addr~ss ... · f y erwoo w"ll" • rs....

4
. . PATRONIZE OLD GOLD AND BLACK ADVERTISERS Vol. XIX, No. 17 Published Weekly by the· Students ·of Wake Forest College WAKE FOREST, N.C., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1936 . ff AU "FS"REST COLL'EGE LIB! AI y '- ;. · PATRONIZE OLD GOLD AND Bl.J.CK ADVERTISERS Ten Cents Per Copy Wake Forest Asked to Join . Conference Under New Plan ·wHIT ACRE HOUSE FLU PERSISTS ON Johnson In GlEE GlUBBERS TO GUTTED BYTIREHAMPEREDCAMPUS Before LrterarySocrety USHfRATCONCERT · Federal Court Judge the Advantages of Public r------------: Southern Conference Adopts Graham Recommendations and Extends ship to 16 Three-Hour Blaze Last Sunday No Signs of Abatement in Speaking and Cites Numerous Humerous Incidents Music Lovers at Westminster Connnents Does Damage Amounting Sweeping Wave That is as Illustrations; Hayes Has Two Sons Concert Will Be Shown Seats to Over $4,000 Taking Heavy Toll Enrolled in Wake Forest This Year By Wake Forest Men FURNITURE IS SAVED BY VOLUNTEER BOYS STUDENT ACTIVITY AT Federal Judge Johnson J. VIRTUAL STANDSTILL of Greensboro spoke-to the Hayes In introducing the speaker, Dr. Philo- ·George w. Paschal, Greek profes- POPULAR ORGANIZATION WILL APPEAR IN RALEIGH WAVE OF CRITICISM ON HEELS OF GRAHAM PLAN Number Fire of Students Assist As Truck Arrives 45 Minutes Late, Cold Wave Adds to General Campus Discomfort and Boilers Burst mathesian society Monday night, treating the general topic "The sor here, outlined Judge Hayes' Famous Choir Will Be Directed Aldvantages of Public Speaking" in rise to preeminence in legal cir- a delightfully interesting way. cles in this state. Judge Hayes re- By Dr. Williamson Next Wednesday · Dividing public speakers into ceived his LL.B. degree from Wake two groups-those who obtain re- Forest in 1909 and began his prac- The Westminster Chorus American symphonic singers will appear in the Raleigh 1\femoria.l A three-hour fire Sunday burned Caught in the clutches of a wave sult.s and those who speak merely tice in western North Carolina- He Cinemanager C. C. Whitacre and of cold and influenza the Wake for entertainment-Judge Hayes met with such success in his prac- his boarders out of their lodging Forest campus gave no promise of used as illustration Demosthenes tice that he was appointed one of place, causing a loss of $4,000 on resumption of normal activity this and Cicero. He praised Will Rog- North Carolina's three federal the insured house and destroying week, and all student activities are ers as an entertainer, but he ad- judges in 1927, joining two other $1,500 worth of uninsured furni- still greatly hampered. vised modern leaders to follow the Wake Forest alumni; I. M. Mee- ture. At a late hour yesterday the in- ancient Demosthenes. The speak- kins and E. Y. Webb. Five years direction of Dr. John Finley Wii- Auditorium night, Feb- ruary 19, at 8:30 p.m., under the Sweeping Revision Be Made in Local Athletic Setup if Faculty Decides to Enter Conference Southern Conference at its semi- annual meeting in Richmond last Saturday extended an invitation to Wake Forest College to become a member school, membership to be- come effective next September 1. Student inmates are staying tern- firmary was still filled to capacity er mentioned several occupations later this college granted him the Hamson . . porarily at Chi Tau fraternity with a waiting list of stricken stu· in which forensic ability is need- honorary degree of Doctor of These 41 members of America's house and Magnolia Tourist home· dents that are being admitted as ed, but he stated that no field of Laws ' · kl · · b · I · 11 . h' 11 d foremost a, ca,pella choir, always the others ·have movedi into Mrs. quw Y as proviSion can · e made endeavor is without a neeld for n reca mg ISJ co ege ays . . Six schools-Wake Forest, David· son, Furman, Richmond, William and Mary, and The Citadel-were invited to join the conference ranks now numbering ten colleges in Mary- land, Virginia, North Carolina and J. W. Brewer's yellow- painted for them. No official figures of the public speaking at some time or here, Judge Hayes paid glowing smgmg from memory and \mac- house across from the post office, number of could. other. . tribute to the literary societies,, companied, are marvelously trained -;lust east of the filling station. by this but It 18 What was probably the key sen- and placed soCiety work above any and give beautiful interpretations F. B. Wells and J, E. Collette, that app:oximately 75 tence of the address was "A man classroom work in importance I JOHN CADDELL Above is veteran coach John Cad- dell who this week ventured the opinion that the Graham plan to curb athletic subsidization would be successful if officials would spenld as much time trying to en- force the. plim as many of them are considering spending hunting S tudents, are located at Chi .Tau·, suffenng from mild cases. of · of all types of music. They have fl 'th · cannot proclaim something he "My greatest inspiration was to · . . . South Carolina. H. S. Robertson, W. E. Ward, C. W. uenza WI many more nursmg does not believe and practice. Hon- participate in speaking in these won Immense popularitY both m Everett, and ·Philip keel, at the severe colds. . t. d · 't th halls and to see. the likenesses of this country and Europe, and have Coincidental with the extension of invitations was the adoption of the greatly discussed Graham Plan by a vote of 6·4. This plan, calling for a sweeping revision of present Tourist Home. Those moving with C!ass attendance was optwnal es Y an sm,cen Y are e greatest Mr. Wihitacre are Mrs. Annie Un- durmg the first part of the week, essentials of a public speaker." the great old men whose portraits given over 700 highly successful d d M A B B a M and when compulsory class attend· Advises Strict Honesty lined the walls. In fact, my de- concerts. The Westminster sing- erwoo • rs. · · ra.,g, rs. d 't t d Judge Hayes gave some ound s1're to make good 1'n soc1'ety work F y W"ll" mso and h r littl ance was resume 1. was no e s ers include on their program, mu- 1 Ia n . e e that great numbers of men were judicial advice when he said that was the chief factor in keeping me for loopholes. policies, was formulated by Dr. Frank Porter Graham, president of the University of North Carolina. Betty Jean, Jume and John absent from classes. Classroom ac- honesty in life is the only paying in college." sic from all classes that music- -------------- Und:rwhood. b 1 M E tivity is still light in most academic policy. "In all the cases to be tried Dr. Paschal recaJled in his in- lovers enjoy. T e ouse, e ongmg to rs. · departments. in the Durham court at the next traduction that Judge Hayes was Special 75 cent tickets were on L, Hodnett of Durham, was located Extra-curricular activities were session there is violation of the an athlete during undergraduate on' Faculty Avenue between the paralyzed during the commandment, 'Thou shalt not years here, playing baseball and Newsome boarding club and the first part of the week. Religious steal.' . This applies with equal other sports. To pay his board and Magnolia tourist Home. The fire services were postponed Sunday, and force whether it concerns stealing help defray other expenses, Judge CollEGE PAPER Wake Forest, along with five other schools, will go into the con- ference under the Graham Plan sale till last week, but this re- · was first discovered in . a down- various clubs and societies have information on examination, 'lift- Hayes held the position of book- stairs bathroom at 12:25 and the been forced to call a temporary halt !ng' a pocketbook, or house-break- k,eeper in the Wake Forest bank. last fire-hose stopped shooting jets to their work. This publication ing. In words of one syllable, Judge Hayes has two sons now of water at 3:30 o'clock in the af- is going to press this week with a you might as well quit if you can't enrolled in Wake Forest' College- ternoon. greatly incapacitated staff· and is. go Johnson, Jr., and HaJ"(lj!n, duced price is no longer available. Tickets should be bought from ENlARGES GE if they go in at all. Dr. Thurman PA D. Kitchin stated this week that the faculty will meet sometime before Boone-Iseley Drug Store, Fayette- next September and decide whether ville Street, Raleigh, as soon as or not -to accept the invitation. possible, Old Gold and Black Increases Opinion seems to indicate that this Deacons to Usher Number of Columns and institution will enter the athletic Bathroom Burns using much material of an emergen· --------------------:---------- Tony Stern, discussing the next cy nature. Members of the Wake Forest p L h organization. College glee club were honored age engt The Baptist institution has been week's movie program: with Mrs. Abatement in the severity of the Whitacre, found fire from a double weather Wednesday gave promise oil heater creeping through lathed of a diminishing sick list and a walls and lapping at bone-dry up- gradual, return to normal. !neon· stairs rafters. While fiBJlles in the veniences arising from the cold wave 35-year-old Hodnett house were were many. One fraternity house kept under control, the alarm was reported a cracked boiler that could turned in, at 12:28. , not be for several . days, In the meantime, Mrs, Newsome's and many of the bouse .100 boarders . 15 workers and went home in preference to llvmg three (Misses Ada) Lee in a heatless house. . Rivers, Edna Stephenson, andJ Ruth Eva Vause, college Kimball Douglas) were peering at head, reported that t:vo extra-dutl nurses were still workmg and would the fire between courses of creBJll not be released until the overflow o, f chicken and cherry ·ice cream. From windows and roof poured patients diminished. None of the ever _ increasing billows of black hospital cases were serious, how· smoke; · from 'the front door ever· Students are cautioned again to streamed Wake Foresters laden take particular care in avoiding with luggage-R. W. Stephenson, exposure. Local doctors urge cau· Lee ;mdwards, "Bud" WeUs, C. I. tion and advise men to keep away Harns, T. K. Darrow, Herman Ste- from others who are suffering from vena,. Phil Latta, Boyd Owen; flu or bad colds. "Hank" Blanchard, David Morgan and others. FACISM IS A GROWING THREAT SOME BELIEVE with the· invitation ·to act as ush- abiding by conference rules for ers at the Westminster concert. EDITOR SAYS STYLE P.everal years. Those in the left balcony are Albert WILL BE PERMANENT Changes E. Simms (in charge), Jeff Beale, Athletic officials here admitted Hampton Lea, Oscar Creech, Jack New-Advertising Contracts Mak yesterday that majo1· changes in Moore, and Ernest Byrd. Those e athletic setups would have to he on the left side aisle are Hey- Increase Possible Business effected if the college goes into the fORM HOEY fOR JUDSON MANGUM GOVERNOR CLUB .IS BURIED HERE wood Dowling (glee club director, Manager Asserts conference. Alumni Secretary in cha,rge), Vergil Cox, Grigg Foun- Alfred Dowtin asserted that "It is tain, Sloan Guy, Ed Swann, 0. E. In a radical departure from the all blank to me.'' He did venture Shouse, George Stroupe, Gaston the opinion, along .with makeup style that has characterized f{"+ 1 · d c 1 Taylor. Those in the right balcony hC un an oac 1 are Archie McMillan (head usher, Or.o GoLD AXD BucK for several that the Graham Plan would The funeral of Judson R. Mangum, in charge), Wallace West, Roscoe years, this publication presents to· for the. benefit of this institution Wall, Ralph Lewis, Jasper Shields, day a newspaper that is now larger if rigidly enforced. is beginning to boil for the greatest 34, farmer and merchant of Wake 11 , . N t "If athletic officials would spend . . t' · .aunce ew on. in page dimensions than any former slinging campaigns m 1IIS Forest, was held Wednesday after· as much time in trying to enforce , These men will be in the Memo- weekly in history of the college. state in years it seems that Wake noon at 3 o'clock, at his home near rial Auditorium by three o'clock . the Graham Plan that many of them Forest is going to get its share of Wake Forest. Burial followed in the w d d ft t Increasmg the number of columns are considering spending in trying e nes ay a ernoon ° run to find loopholes in it. there is no the campaign. Latest cemetery at Wake Forest. through the ushering routine and from six to seven and increasing the doubt but that it would succeed ad- t t tl ff t th t th Th ·t t th h familiarize themselves WJ"th the ,length of the paper proportionately, men s ·are o 1e e ec a ere e n es a e orne were con- mirably," said coach Caddell. al'e going to be iu the near future ducted by Dr. J. Allen Easley, pas- floor plan. The concert begins editor Charles Trueblood and busi- Dowtin also indicated that 1' 1 1 1 b promptly at 8:30. ness I!Janagei' Fred "'1"ll1'ams ail· b bl til t · w at least two ·po It ca c u s or· tor of the First·, Baptist church of " pro a r many a 1 e es now m ake While the state·wide political pot Withrow and Harris Organize Prominent Young Merchant Group to Boost- Cleveland Died last· Week is .Laid County Man To Rest ganized on this campus. Shearon Wake Forest, assisted by Dr. w. R. , nounced this week that the present Forest will be ineligible to play THIS FELLOW FINDS HIS makeup st).'ie will stay in effect under the Graham Plan. Authorities Harris and W. H. Withrow state Cullom, of Wake Forest College, and through the1r terms of office and will other schools are facing a similar that the steps are now being taken the Rev. S. P. Norr1's of Wake Forest. BEARD IS NOT SO AWFUL C probably be retained by their sue- oach Jess Neely, Clem- for the formation of a "Hoey for Mr. Mangum died Tuesday at Rex . cessors. son College football coach, declared At the same time, Fire chief John L. 'l'aylor and his active squad of 13 volunteers were in a qnan<dary because the alarm persisted in sounding either 11 or 22, when the lowest of the thirteen signals is 12. While scouts were being sent in -different directions, Mrs. Wil- Go\ ernor" club -on the campus. N Y k ( 'CP) The growth Hos.IJital of peritonitis following an Minneapolis, Minn. (ACP)-Los- With the increase in columns, tile to the daily press this week that ew or -"'- .- Harris states that the spirit or • Hamson arid. John Underwood drove up to the fire station to act as guides. , Hosework Starts By 12:48 the two-year-old red fire truck drove up with Frank Beddingfield at the helm, and by 12:56 water at 100-pound pressure was thrown on the flames. Axes were crashing through windows, salvagers were piling their findings on the slushy snow, youngsters were firing Daisy air rifles, shoot- ing snowballs, and adding to the confusion by whooping it up. Red tongues of flames lit up downstairs dining and living rooms, licked hungrily at the tin- covered roof; choking smoke smelling of bubbling paint made firemen gasp thrqugh wet ·handker- chiefs and dash for the dqor. Dirty black water dripped through ceiJ.. plaster and cascaded down the stairs, where only a lady's brown pump appeared over the foamy --stream in the hallway. At 1: 39 a charred trunk came out between Edwards and Wells- the last item in the· motley as- sortment in the front ya1'd: brown rugs, bed springs, ferns in a tin bucket precariously balanced on a of fascist forces in this country, the club will be the same as the operation for appendicitis. He is ing an inferiority complex, finding editorial staff expects a greater range practically his entire squad would be indicated by the Pt:esent tone of general spirit of the campaign. He survived by his widow, the former a broadmind'ed, intelligent girl or of choice in selecting headlines, ineligible. Au official at w·ake For- the Hearst press, seriously endan- and Withrow have direct authority . . impersonating a faculty member and a generally improved front est commented "The same is true at i\hss Ethel Albritton, daughter of are all as easy as gro"'I"ng whi'sk- page r,Jwuld result. News conge$· every other Southern Conference gers Americal civil liberties, ac- from the campaign managers of tlw " Mr. and :Mrs. J. T. Albritton of 1 ers, 1 ·n tile opin 1 'on of Herbert Jen- tion rPsulting from large ciga·rett.•' school. Neely just happena to be cording to a survey made public Hoey campaign for the formation of 1 Calypso, and a daughter, Doris Ann.[ sen, Un1 '"ers1'ty of 1\''I"nnesota sen- that crowd inside an outspoken sort of fellow." by the Council for Social Action this club. In a recent interview ' of the Congregational and Chris- Harris said, "I believe the time has five years old. He was a son of Mr. lor, who is the owner of the school's back pages should be greatly Duke Ollposcs tlan Churches of America. now come that all students should and Mrs. J. W. Mangum, of Wake only undergraduate beard. reuaced. Duke university, violently op- "In America the problem of civil take a definite interest in . state. Forest, who survive, with several "Everyone I meet suggests a rea- . Ow :oLD A:I'D w.as. to the plan, is advocating liberty has become more than a politics. I believe that it is the brothers and sisters. son for my beard," he says. "Just 111 191" lly Piofesso1 Pe1 C) W zlson, withdrawal from the confe: nee ac- theoretical defense of our consti- duty of every student to be well During .the funeral all of the mer- to clarify the situation, let me say [ at cording to the student tutional rights/' the survey asserts. informed on the issues of the coming chants in town closed their places of that I have not been disappointed )\l.o fiGJ.l of that institution. In an editorial "We are experiencing that denial campaign, therefore, it will be the business. in love, I am not trying to e 8 tab-[ l_aculty last ye_ar to devote _all 8l!arply criticizing the plan, a staff of our elemental rights which is purpose of the proposed club to The active pallbearers were: Rey- !ish myself as a campus person- Ills tune t.o a grow.mg la\\: writer asserted that among manv the sign of the presence of fascist study out the issues of the campaign nold Jones, W. W. Holding, Leland ality, and I am not mentally •de- Among the prommen_t filst er!I.ms other things, the recommendation-s forces at work in our national life. and submit the mell!bers to a fair Jones, S. P. Holding, Jr., T. E. Hold- ficient." were Lawrence fm:JOtJS discriminate in favor of state insti- 'Oust the' reds' is the slogan. But explanation of the points in question. ing of Wake Forest, and John T. Al· "To nie my beard has been more war now Ill Etl.uopm tutions. the reality of the matter is that We hope to have 1\lr. Hoey speak britton, of Cal;-pso. than just whiskers. Psycholog- and present editor of Fox Jlovzetone "It must be remembered," asserted the wave of repression threatens to us here in the near future." The honorary pallbearers, in ad· ically speaking, it has been a boon f!eu:s: Cary Hunter, famous journal· the writer, "that these schools (sup- to engulf liberals progressives The club will ·be formally or- dition to the merchants of Wake to me in getting rid of an inferior- Ist recently deceased, and many porting the Gralmm Plan) are sup- and radicals alike/ ganized Tuesday evening at eight Forest, were John Fort, Ernest Sor· ity complex; it gives me that virile other joufirnalists of wide repute. ported by State funds aud have • 1 k · 103 · w "t H 11 rell, Clyde Joyner, W. R. T1'mber- In its Irst form, this publication these funds accessible when needed, The survey cites that today the o c oc - m room m ai a · feeling. d f 1 monied class and the middle class Officers of the club will be elected lake, Dr. R. W. Wilkinson, Dr. Tol· "I'll admit, though, that it consiste 0 ittle more than a mere whereas the primte institutions are have no reason to be worried about at that time and plans for the future bert Wilkinson, Dr. N. Y. Gulley, doesn't exactly please most girls. :eal!etl but d through years it lacking in such facilities." In other the denial of their civil liberties opemtion of the club will be dis· Dr. T. D. Kitchin, Dr. G. W. Paschal, But at least 1 have the assurance tas many tnnes, ahY9ys words, if falling gate receipts as a "The brunt of the fight for freedon: cuss:d. interested are Ray Branson, Ed Fort, J. 0. Albrit- that any girl who goes out with t ff 1 d 1 result of the operation of the plan is borne by the disinherited, the cordially mv1ted to be present. . ton, Mack Perry, Frank Chappell, me is broadminded and intelligent.. Jet prerrs.ent , 1 s a h P anneb t ast affected financial Th th r Club to be Organized J. P. Thompson Ashley Jones Law· ' year o e ec , 1e c ange, u up t1on of the college athletic as- 1 't d th d · '1 d " e 0 e ' ' savs the bearded man who ha not exp e • e un er-pr!Vl ege · . on the campus will ·be a "Mac· renee Harris and Russell Wiggins. ' ' s . to now it has been impossible be· sociation, the state institutions could Chief weapons of the fasmst Donald" club under the sponsorship revea.led the number of such guls cause national cigarette advertising turn to funds that are made avail- .. the survey, .are the of Hartwell Campbell and Hugh WHAT WO at Mmnesota. contracts were smaller than !tad able to them through the state ?ver-n\img of the constitutional Archie Mathews. Definite an· ! MAN WAS BACK "My beard also gives me an been anticipated. However, con- government. Private schools have rights of workers and nouncements will be made" later. OF THE SHARPSHOOTING academic advantage over the tracts for advertising a national no such recourse. through the courts,-the the . smooth-shaven student," Jensen product that has been no advertis· Student opinion in Southern Con- militia, and by vigilantism." Washington, D. C. (ACP)-A argues. "Members of ing this year were secured last week, ference schools, as voiced by stu- . YOU TOO CAN WORK YOUR sharp-eyed, indefatigable 25-year- are to me. and the staff is devoting the in· dent publications, seems to be 011 HE DIDN'T MEAN TO SAY WAY THROUGH A COLLEGE old girl has been revealed as the They nod at me o the street and advertising income to the the whole against the plan. Stu- THAT ATHLETES ARE PAID moving force hehind the sensa- shake hands wiijl _e in the class- l•Uhlication of a larger paper. dents feel that instead of creating three-legged table, a baby's green Chicago-(ACP)-Gov. Martin L. tr?ck CBJlle to. haul rescued Davey's football joke has been of- movie magazme, B.or- fically recognized as such by the Psyc7wlogy, stoves, chairs, Western Conference, and is no ra lOS, and football shoulder pads. longer regarded as a serious charge - Take It Away against Ohio State gridsters Syracuse, N. Y. (ACP)-When tiona! discoveries of the Nye mu- room. .Jffie{ treat me as a col- Advertising rates will not be raised a non-partisan se!UJJ the plan is Paul Schoeder's phone rings in the nitions committee. She is Miss My beard gets the credit." as a result of the increase. going to swing the other way and early morning hours, it isn't a Josephine Burns, former instructor ... of the beard has been result in actual discrimination prankish friend calling to ask if in the department of history and ,' matter of perseverance, explains THIS LADY ASSERTS THAT against athletes. HoweYer, nearly he's sleeping well, or news that political science at Mount Holyok . Jensen. It received a severe set- WOMEN DOCTORS ARE GOOD all student editors agree that the someone's finally died and left him Miss Burns put in a solid y ' r back when only two weeks old-a ultimate aim of Dr. Graham is high- a million. Nine thnes out of ten of research before the muni ons number of his fraternity brothers, New York _ (ACP) _ Women Iy commendal.lle. Disagreement it's·the police, or state troopers, or investigation committee bega its doubtless motivated by petty ieal- doctors have not only accomplished seems to come in the proper "''"u:uu At 1:46 Garner's red moving Following a thorough truck came to haul the rescued tion conference officials announced ·belongings away, with Steve Hurtt the; were satisfied that the Ohio and: Wilbur Jolly taking the lead. govemor was merely joking when At 2:03 Sol Hollling's little black he said, last October, that 15 Ohio truck came for another load, and state football players were on the Garner finished the job at 2:23. state payroll and insinuated that Meanwhile, the predominant skin athletic prowess won them their shade among spectators was shift- jobs. ing from white to black, when The players obtained the jobs on lOcal colored folk drifted by around tha.ir own initiative and through the 2 o'clock to find out wbat all the help of personal friends, the report racket was about. stated, were paid at the same rate The ladies of the house sipped as non-athletes, and did not hold (Please turne to page four) more jobs in proportion. the emergency ward of a bospital, work. Tireless, she spent 15 ours ousy, forcibly removed a consider- some of the best research work in for attaining the end. with a request that Schroeder drop a day in pigging into for/5otten able portion of it. America, but they are doing well in around with the hearse and pick documents, letters, pamphlefs and . . both institutional work and general up a little business. ·· state papers, and the she The Roman Cathohc church IS practice, Dr. w. T·. sanger, president Schroeder, a liberal arts student amassed shocked the natiorj. when the greatest obstacle to cornmun- of the 1\'!ec!ical College of Virginia, at Syracuse University, is official it was presented by the NY,e com- ism, according to the Rev. Edmund said recently in response to a custodian of the city morgue from mittee. Walsh of Georgetown's School of virulent attack on women doctors 6:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. of every It was due mainly to MisJ Burns' Foreign Service. by Dr. Oliver Wendell, Califomia day. The work doesn't hotber him, efforts that the senate in\estiga- specialist, published in a nationallv he· says-he took the job a. year tion was able to prove neither Fraternities at the University of circulated magazine. - ago-and be thinks it may prove to President Wilson nor Secl)etary of California at Los Angeles have Dr. Sanger emphaticallr denied have been a useful experience. He State Lansing were motivated in gone on record: as opposing the the California man's assertion that plans to enter medical school next their negotiations by a sincere de- abolition of Qompulsory military few women ever succeed in becoming fall. sire for neutrality, i training. good doctors .

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Page 1: ·wHIT ACRE HOUSE FLU PERSISTS ON Johnson H~yes Addr~ss ... · F y erwoo W"ll" • rs. mso · and · ra.,g, h r littl rs. ance was resume d 1. 't was no t d e Judge Hayes gave some

. .

PATRONIZE OLD GOLD AND BLACK

ADVERTISERS

Vol. XIX, No. 17

Published Weekly by the· Students ·of Wake Forest College

WAKE FOREST, N.C., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1936

. ff AU "FS"REST COLL'EGE LIB! AI y

'- ;.

· PATRONIZE ~~'It OLD GOLD AND Bl.J.CK

ADVERTISERS

Ten Cents Per Copy

Wake Forest Asked to Join . Conference Under New Plan

·wHIT ACRE HOUSE FLU PERSISTS ON Johnson H~yes In Addr~ss GlEE GlUBBERS TO GUTTED BYTIREHAMPEREDCAMPUS Before LrterarySocrety USHfRATCONCERT

· Federal Court Judge Discuss~s the Advantages of Public r------------: Southern Conference Adopts Graham Recommendations

and Extends Member~ ship to 16

Three-Hour Blaze Last Sunday No Signs of Abatement in Speaking and Cites Numerous Humerous Incidents Music Lovers at Westminster Connnents Does Damage Amounting Sweeping Wave That is as Illustrations; Hayes Has Two Sons Concert Will Be Shown Seats

to Over $4,000 Taking Heavy Toll Enrolled in Wake Forest This Year By Wake Forest Men •

FURNITURE IS SAVED BY VOLUNTEER BOYS

STUDENT ACTIVITY AT Federal Judge Johnson J. VIRTUAL STANDSTILL of Greensboro spoke-to the

Hayes In introducing the speaker, Dr. Philo- ·George w. Paschal, Greek profes­

POPULAR ORGANIZATION WILL APPEAR IN RALEIGH

WAVE OF CRITICISM ON HEELS OF GRAHAM PLAN

Number Fire

of Students Assist As Truck Arrives 45 Minutes Late,

Cold Wave Adds to General

Campus Discomfort and

Boilers Burst

mathesian society Monday night, treating the general topic "The sor here, outlined Judge Hayes' Famous Choir Will Be Directed Aldvantages of Public Speaking" in rise to preeminence in legal cir­a delightfully interesting way. cles in this state. Judge Hayes re-

By Dr. Williamson Next

Wednesday · Dividing public speakers into ceived his LL.B. degree from Wake two groups-those who obtain re- Forest in 1909 and began his prac-

The Westminster Chorus American symphonic singers will appear in the Raleigh 1\femoria.l

A three-hour fire Sunday burned Caught in the clutches of a wave sult.s and those who speak merely tice in western North Carolina- He Cinemanager C. C. Whitacre and of cold and influenza the Wake for entertainment-Judge Hayes met with such success in his prac­his boarders out of their lodging Forest campus gave no promise of used as illustration Demosthenes tice that he was appointed one of place, causing a loss of $4,000 on resumption of normal activity this and Cicero. He praised Will Rog- North Carolina's three federal the insured house and destroying week, and all student activities are ers as an entertainer, but he ad- judges in 1927, joining two other $1,500 worth of uninsured furni- still greatly hampered. vised modern leaders to follow the Wake Forest alumni; I. M. Mee-ture. At a late hour yesterday the in- ancient Demosthenes. The speak- kins and E. Y. Webb. Five years direction of Dr. John Finley Wii-

Auditorium ~ednesday night, Feb­ruary 19, at 8:30 p.m., under the

Sweeping Revision W~l Be Made

in Local Athletic Setup if Faculty Decides to Enter

Conference

Southern Conference at its semi­annual meeting in Richmond last Saturday extended an invitation to Wake Forest College to become a member school, membership to be­come effective next September 1. Student inmates are staying tern- firmary was still filled to capacity er mentioned several occupations later this college granted him the Hamson .

. porarily at Chi Tau fraternity with a waiting list of stricken stu· in which forensic ability is need- honorary degree of Doctor of These 41 members of America's house and Magnolia Tourist home· dents that are being admitted as ed, but he stated that no field of Laws

' · kl · · b · I · 11. h' 11 d foremost a, ca,pella choir, always the others ·have movedi into Mrs. quw Y as proviSion can · e made endeavor is without a neeld for n reca mg ISJ co ege ays . .

Six schools-Wake Forest, David· son, Furman, Richmond, William and Mary, and The Citadel-were invited to join the conference ranks now numbering ten colleges in Mary­land, Virginia, North Carolina and

J. W. Brewer's yellow- painted for them. No official figures of the public speaking at some time or here, Judge Hayes paid glowing smgmg from memory and \mac­house across from the post office, number of s~ck: st~den.ts could. ~e other. . tribute to the t~o literary societies,, companied, are marvelously trained

-;lust east of the E~so filling station. sec~red by this pubhc~tlon, but It 18 What was probably the key sen- and placed soCiety work above any and give beautiful interpretations F. B. Wells and J, E. Collette, estlm~ted that app:oximately 75 ~re tence of the address was "A man classroom work in importance I

JOHN CADDELL Above is veteran coach John Cad­

dell who this week ventured the opinion that the Graham plan to curb athletic subsidization would be successful if officials would spenld as much time trying to en­force the. plim as many of them are considering spending hunting

Students, are located at Chi .Tau·, suffenng from mild cases. of m· · of all types of music. They have fl 'th · cannot proclaim something he "My greatest inspiration was to · . . . South Carolina.

H. S. Robertson, W. E. Ward, C. W. uenza WI many more nursmg does not believe and practice. Hon- participate in speaking in these won Immense popularitY both m Everett, and ·Philip keel, at the severe colds. . t. d · 't th halls and to see. the likenesses of this country and Europe, and have

Coincidental with the extension of invitations was the adoption of the greatly discussed Graham Plan by a vote of 6·4. This plan, calling for a sweeping revision of present

Tourist Home. Those moving with C!ass attendance was optwnal es Y an sm,cen Y are e greatest Mr. Wihitacre are Mrs. Annie Un- durmg the first part of the week, essentials of a public speaker." the great old men whose portraits given over 700 highly successful d d M A B B a M and when compulsory class attend· Advises Strict Honesty lined the walls. In fact, my de- concerts. The Westminster sing-

erwoo • rs. · · ra.,g, rs. d 't t d Judge Hayes gave some ound s1're to make good 1'n soc1'ety work F y W"ll" mso and h r littl ance was resume 1. was no e s ers include on their program, mu-~nn 1

Ia n . e e that great numbers of men were judicial advice when he said that was the chief factor in keeping me for loopholes. policies, was formulated by Dr. Frank Porter Graham, president of the University of North Carolina.

g~rl Betty Jean, Jume and John absent from classes. Classroom ac- honesty in life is the only paying in college." sic from all classes that music- --------------Und:rwhood. b 1 • M E tivity is still light in most academic policy. "In all the cases to be tried Dr. Paschal recaJled in his in- lovers enjoy.

T e ouse, e ongmg to rs. · departments. in the Durham court at the next traduction that Judge Hayes was Special 75 cent tickets were on L, Hodnett of Durham, was located Extra-curricular activities were session there is violation of the an athlete during undergraduate on' Faculty Avenue between the p~actically paralyzed during the commandment, 'Thou shalt not years here, playing baseball and Newsome boarding club and the first part of the week. Religious steal.' . This applies with equal other sports. To pay his board and Magnolia tourist Home. The fire services were postponed Sunday, and force whether it concerns stealing help defray other expenses, Judge

CollEGE PAPER Wake Forest, along with five other schools, will go into the con­ference under the Graham Plan sale till last week, but this re-

· was first discovered in . a down- various clubs and societies have information on examination, 'lift- Hayes held the position of book­stairs bathroom at 12:25 and the been forced to call a temporary halt !ng' a pocketbook, or house-break- k,eeper in the Wake Forest bank. last fire-hose stopped shooting jets to their work. This publication ing. In words of one syllable, Judge Hayes has two sons now of water at 3:30 o'clock in the af- is going to press this week with a you might as well quit if you can't enrolled in Wake Forest' College-ternoon. greatly incapacitated staff· and is. go s~raight.'' Johnson, Jr., and HaJ"(lj!n,

duced price is no longer available. Tickets should be bought from ENlARGES GE

if they go in at all. Dr. Thurman

PA D. Kitchin stated this week that the faculty will meet sometime before

Boone-Iseley Drug Store, Fayette- next September and decide whether ville Street, Raleigh, as soon as or not -to accept the invitation. possible, Old Gold and Black Increases Opinion seems to indicate that this

Deacons to Usher Number of Columns and institution will enter the athletic

Bathroom Burns using much material of an emergen· --------------------:----------Tony Stern, discussing the next cy nature.

Members of the Wake Forest p L h organization. College glee club were honored age engt The Baptist institution has been

week's movie program: with Mrs. Abatement in the severity of the Whitacre, found fire from a double weather Wednesday gave promise oil heater creeping through lathed of a diminishing sick list and a walls and lapping at bone-dry up- gradual, return to normal. !neon· stairs rafters. While fiBJlles in the veniences arising from the cold wave 35-year-old Hodnett house were were many. One fraternity house kept under control, the alarm was reported a cracked boiler that could turned in, at 12:28. , not be rep~ired for several . days,

In the meantime, Mrs, Newsome's and many of the bouse res1~e~ts .100 boarders . 15 workers and went home in preference to llvmg three visitor~ (Misses Ada) Lee in a heatless house. . Rivers, Edna Stephenson, andJ Ruth .Mi~s Eva Vause, college mfirmar~ Kimball Douglas) were peering at head, reported that t:vo extra-dutl

nurses were still workmg and would the fire between courses of creBJll not be released until the overflow o, f chicken and cherry ·ice cream. From windows and roof poured patients diminished. None of the ever _ increasing billows of black hospital cases were serious, how· smoke; · from 'the front door ever·

Students are cautioned again to streamed Wake Foresters laden take particular care in avoiding

with luggage-R. W. Stephenson, exposure. Local doctors urge cau· Lee ;mdwards, "Bud" WeUs, C. I. tion and advise men to keep away Harns, T. K. Darrow, Herman Ste- from others who are suffering from vena,. Phil Latta, Boyd Owen; flu or bad colds. "Hank" Blanchard, David Morgan and others.

FACISM IS A GROWING THREAT SOME BELIEVE

with the· invitation ·to act as ush- abiding by conference rules for ers at the Westminster concert. EDITOR SAYS STYLE P.everal years. Those in the left balcony are Albert WILL BE PERMANENT Changes E. Simms (in charge), Jeff Beale, Athletic officials here admitted Hampton Lea, Oscar Creech, Jack New-Advertising Contracts Mak yesterday that majo1· changes in Moore, and Ernest Byrd. Those e athletic setups would have to he on the left side aisle are Hey- Increase Possible Business effected if the college goes into the

fORM HOEY fOR JUDSON MANGUM GOVERNOR CLUB .IS BURIED HERE

wood Dowling (glee club director, Manager Asserts conference. Alumni Secretary in cha,rge), Vergil Cox, Grigg Foun- Alfred Dowtin asserted that "It is tain, Sloan Guy, Ed Swann, 0. E. In a radical departure from the all blank to me.'' He did venture Shouse, George Stroupe, Gaston the opinion, along .with .t:r't;.lf~ll!;;;-.------

makeup style that has characterized f{"+ 1 · d c 1 Taylor. Those in the right balcony hC un an oac 1

are Archie McMillan (head usher, Or.o GoLD AXD BucK for several that the Graham Plan would The funeral of Judson R. Mangum, in charge), Wallace West, Roscoe years, this publication presents to· for the. benefit of this institution

Wall, Ralph Lewis, Jasper Shields, day a newspaper that is now larger if rigidly enforced. is beginning to boil for the greatest 34, farmer and merchant of Wake 11, . N t "If athletic officials would spend . . t' · .aunce ew on. in page dimensions than any former mu~ slinging campaigns m 1IIS Forest, was held Wednesday after· as much time in trying to enforce

, These men will be in the Memo- weekly in history of the college. state in years it seems that Wake noon at 3 o'clock, at his home near rial Auditorium by three o'clock . the Graham Plan that many of them Forest is going to get its share of Wake Forest. Burial followed in the w d d ft t Increasmg the number of columns are considering spending in trying

e nes ay a ernoon ° run to find loopholes in it. there is no the campaign. Latest announc~- cemetery at Wake Forest. through the ushering routine and from six to seven and increasing the doubt but that it would succeed ad-

t t tl ff t th t th Th ·t t th h familiarize themselves WJ"th the ,length of the paper proportionately, men s ·are o 1e e ec a ere e n es a e orne were con- • mirably," said coach Caddell. al'e going to be iu the near future ducted by Dr. J. Allen Easley, pas- floor plan. The concert begins editor Charles Trueblood and busi- Dowtin also indicated that

• 1' 1 1 1 b promptly at 8:30. ness I!Janagei' Fred "'1"ll1'ams ail· b bl til t · w at least two ·po It ca c u s or· tor of the First·, Baptist church of " pro a r many a 1 e es now m ake

While the state·wide political pot

Withrow and Harris Organize Prominent Young Merchant Group to Boost- Cleveland Died last· Week is .Laid

County Man To Rest

ganized on this campus. Shearon Wake Forest, assisted by Dr. w. R. , nounced this week that the present Forest will be ineligible to play

THIS FELLOW FINDS HIS makeup st).'ie will stay in effect under the Graham Plan. Authorities Harris and W. H. Withrow state Cullom, of Wake Forest College, and through the1r terms of office and will other schools are facing a similar that the steps are now being taken the Rev. S. P. Norr1's of Wake Forest. BEARD IS NOT SO AWFUL C probably be retained by their sue- oach Jess Neely, Clem-for the formation of a "Hoey for

Mr. Mangum died Tuesday at Rex . cessors. son College football coach, declared

At the same time, Fire chief John L. 'l'aylor and his active squad of 13 volunteers were in a qnan<dary because the alarm persisted in sounding either 11 or 22, when the lowest of the thirteen signals is 12. While scouts were being sent in -different directions, Mrs. Wil-

Go\ ernor" club -on the campus. N Y k ( 'CP) The growth Hos.IJital of peritonitis following an Minneapolis, Minn. (ACP)-Los- With the increase in columns, tile to the daily press this week that ew or • -"'- .- Harris states that the spirit or

• Hamson arid. John Underwood drove up to the fire station to act as guides.

, Hosework Starts By 12:48 the two-year-old red

fire truck drove up with Frank Beddingfield at the helm, and by 12:56 water at 100-pound pressure was thrown on the flames. Axes were crashing through windows, salvagers were piling their findings on the slushy snow, youngsters were firing Daisy air rifles, shoot­ing snowballs, and adding to the confusion by whooping it up.

Red tongues of flames lit up downstairs dining and living rooms, licked hungrily at the tin­covered roof; choking smoke smelling of bubbling paint made firemen gasp thrqugh wet ·handker­chiefs and dash for the dqor. Dirty black water dripped through ceiJ.. ~g plaster and cascaded down the stairs, where only a lady's brown pump appeared over the foamy

--stream in the hallway. At 1: 39 a charred trunk came

out between Edwards and Wells­the last item in the· motley as­sortment in the front ya1'd: brown rugs, bed springs, ferns in a tin bucket precariously balanced on a

of fascist forces in this country, the club will be the same as the operation for appendicitis. He is ing an inferiority complex, finding editorial staff expects a greater range practically his entire squad would be indicated by the Pt:esent tone of general spirit of the campaign. He survived by his widow, the former a broadmind'ed, intelligent girl or of choice in selecting headlines, ineligible. Au official at w·ake For­the Hearst press, seriously endan- and Withrow have direct authority . . impersonating a faculty member and a generally improved front est commented "The same is true at

i\hss Ethel Albritton, daughter of are all as easy as gro"'I"ng whi'sk- page r,Jwuld result. News conge$· every other Southern Conference gers Americal civil liberties, ac- from the campaign managers of tlw " Mr. and :Mrs. J. T. Albritton of 1 ers, 1·n tile opin1'on of Herbert Jen- tion rPsulting from large ciga·rett.•' school. Neely just happena to be cording to a survey made public Hoey campaign for the formation of 1

Calypso, and a daughter, Doris Ann.[ sen, Un1'"ers1'ty of 1\''I"nnesota sen- adverti~ements that crowd inside an outspoken sort of fellow." by the Council for Social Action this club. In a recent interview • ' of the Congregational and Chris- Harris said, "I believe the time has five years old. He was a son of Mr. lor, who is the owner of the school's an~ back pages should be greatly Duke Ollposcs tlan Churches of America. now come that all students should and Mrs. J. W. Mangum, of Wake only undergraduate beard. reuaced. Duke university, violently op-

"In America the problem of civil take a definite interest in . state. Forest, who survive, with several "Everyone I meet suggests a rea- . Ow :oLD A:I'D BL.\~K w.as. fo~nded po~ed to the plan, is advocating liberty has become more than a politics. I believe that it is the brothers and sisters. son for my beard," he says. "Just 111 191" lly Piofesso1 Pe1 C) W zlson, withdrawal from the confe: nee ac-theoretical defense of our consti- duty of every student to be well During .the funeral all of the mer- to clarify the situation, let me say [ f,or~ner Frca~h p.r~fess~; at W~ke cording to the student newspap~r tutional rights/' the survey asserts. informed on the issues of the coming chants in town closed their places of that I have not been disappointed Fme~t c.)lle.,~. )\l.o re~Jgnetl fiGJ.l of that institution. In an editorial "We are experiencing that denial campaign, therefore, it will be the business. in love, I am not trying to e8tab-[ tl~e l_aculty last ye_ar to devote _all 8l!arply criticizing the plan, a staff of our elemental rights which is purpose of the proposed club to The active pallbearers were: Rey- !ish myself as a campus person- Ills tune t.o a grow.mg la\\: prac_~1 "~· writer asserted that among manv the sign of the presence of fascist study out the issues of the campaign nold Jones, W. W. Holding, Leland ality, and I am not mentally •de- Among the prommen_t filst er!I.ms other things, the recommendation-s forces at work in our national life. and submit the mell!bers to a fair Jones, S. P. Holding, Jr., T. E. Hold- ficient." were Lawrence Stallm~s, fm:JOtJS discriminate in favor of state insti-'Oust the' reds' is the slogan. But explanation of the points in question. ing of Wake Forest, and John T. Al· "To nie my beard has been more war correspon~ent now Ill Etl.uopm tutions. the reality of the matter is that We hope to have 1\lr. Hoey speak britton, of Cal;-pso. than just whiskers. Psycholog- and present editor of Fox Jlovzetone "It must be remembered," asserted the wave of repression threatens to us here in the near future." The honorary pallbearers, in ad· ically speaking, it has been a boon f!eu:s: Cary Hunter, famous journal· the writer, "that these schools (sup­to engulf liberals progressives The club will ·be formally or- dition to the merchants of Wake to me in getting rid of an inferior- Ist recently deceased, and many porting the Gralmm Plan) are sup­and radicals alike/ ganized Tuesday evening at eight Forest, were John Fort, Ernest Sor· ity complex; it gives me that virile other joufirnalists of wide repute. ported by State funds aud have

• 1 k · 103 · w "t H 11 rell, Clyde Joyner, W. R. T1'mber- In its Irst form, this publication these funds accessible when needed, The survey cites that today the o c oc - m room m ai a · feeling. d f 1 monied class and the middle class Officers of the club will be elected lake, Dr. R. W. Wilkinson, Dr. Tol· "I'll admit, though, that it consiste 0 ittle more than a mere whereas the primte institutions are

have no reason to be worried about at that time and plans for the future bert Wilkinson, Dr. N. Y. Gulley, doesn't exactly please most girls. :eal!etl but d through ~he years it lacking in such facilities." In other the denial of their civil liberties opemtion of the club will be dis· Dr. T. D. Kitchin, Dr. G. W. Paschal, But at least 1 have the assurance tas ~ m~ge many tnnes, ahY9ys words, if falling gate receipts as a "The brunt of the fight for freedon: cuss:d. ~!! ~tudents interested are Ray Branson, Ed Fort, J. 0. Albrit- that any girl who goes out with gr~7mg arge~. t ff

1 d

1 result of the operation of the plan

is borne by the disinherited, the cordially mv1ted to be present. . ton, Mack Perry, Frank Chappell, me is broadminded and intelligent.. Jet prerrs.ent ,1s a h P anneb t ast s~riously affected financial or~aniza-

Th th r Club to be Organized J. P. Thompson Ashley Jones Law· ' year o e ec , 1e c ange, u up t1on of the college athletic as-1 't d th d · '1 d " e 0 e ' ' savs the bearded man who ha not exp ~1 e • e un er-pr!Vl ege · . on the campus will ·be a "Mac· renee Harris and Russell Wiggins. ' ' s . to now it has been impossible be· sociation, the state institutions could Chief weapons of the fasmst Donald" club under the sponsorship revea.led the number of such guls cause national cigarette advertising turn to funds that are made avail-

~roup, .. s~ys the survey, .are the of Hartwell Campbell and Hugh WHAT WO at Mmnesota. contracts were smaller than !tad able to them through the state ?ver-n\img of the constitutional Archie Mathews. Definite an· ! MAN WAS BACK "My beard also gives me an been anticipated. However, con- government. Private schools have

rights of workers and ~armers nouncements will be made" later. OF THE SHARPSHOOTING academic advantage over the tracts for advertising a national no such recourse. through the courts,-the pol!~e. the . smooth-shaven student," Jensen product that has been no advertis· Student opinion in Southern Con-militia, and by vigilantism." Washington, D. C. (ACP)-A argues. "Members of tl!~·-faculty ing this year were secured last week, ference schools, as voiced by stu-

. YOU TOO CAN WORK YOUR sharp-eyed, indefatigable 25-year- are extraordinariljY,•f:~·.:":lial to me. and the staff is devoting the in· dent publications, seems to be 011 HE DIDN'T MEAN TO SAY WAY THROUGH A COLLEGE old girl has been revealed as the They nod at me o the street and t•reas~d advertising income to the the whole against the plan. Stu-

THAT ATHLETES ARE PAID moving force hehind the sensa- shake hands wiijl _e in the class- l•Uhlication of a larger paper. dents feel that instead of creating

three-legged table, a baby's green Chicago-(ACP)-Gov. Martin L. tr?ck CBJlle to. haul th~ rescued Davey's football joke has been of­~rl~erator, movie magazme, B.or- fically recognized as such by the mgd~ Psyc7wlogy, stoves, chairs, Western Conference, and is no ra lOS, and football shoulder pads. longer regarded as a serious charge

- Take It Away against Ohio State gridsters

Syracuse, N. Y. (ACP)-When tiona! discoveries of the Nye mu- room. .Jffie{ treat me as a col- Advertising rates will not be raised a non-partisan se!UJJ the plan is Paul Schoeder's phone rings in the nitions committee. She is Miss leag~~ My beard gets the credit." as a result of the increase. going to swing the other way and early morning hours, it isn't a Josephine Burns, former instructor ... ~ltivation of the beard has been result in actual discrimination prankish friend calling to ask if in the department of history and ,' matter of perseverance, explains THIS LADY ASSERTS THAT against athletes. HoweYer, nearly he's sleeping well, or news that political science at Mount Holyok . Jensen. It received a severe set- WOMEN DOCTORS ARE GOOD all student editors agree that the someone's finally died and left him Miss Burns put in a solid y ' r back when only two weeks old-a ultimate aim of Dr. Graham is high­a million. Nine thnes out of ten of research before the muni ons number of his fraternity brothers, New York _ (ACP) _ Women Iy commendal.lle. Disagreement it's·the police, or state troopers, or investigation committee bega its doubtless motivated by petty ieal- doctors have not only accomplished seems to come in the proper "''"u:uu At 1:46 Garner's red moving Following a thorough in~estiga.

truck came to haul the rescued tion conference officials announced ·belongings away, with Steve Hurtt the; were satisfied that the Ohio and: Wilbur Jolly taking the lead. govemor was merely joking when At 2:03 Sol Hollling's little black he said, last October, that 15 Ohio truck came for another load, and state football players were on the Garner finished the job at 2:23. state payroll and insinuated that

Meanwhile, the predominant skin athletic prowess won them their shade among spectators was shift- jobs. ing from white to black, when The players obtained the jobs on lOcal colored folk drifted by around tha.ir own initiative and through the 2 o'clock to find out wbat all the help of personal friends, the report racket was about. stated, were paid at the same rate

The ladies of the house sipped as non-athletes, and did not hold (Please turne to page four) more jobs in proportion.

the emergency ward of a bospital, work. Tireless, she spent 15 ours ousy, forcibly removed a consider- some of the best research work in for attaining the end. with a request that Schroeder drop a day in pigging into for/5otten able portion of it. America, but they are doing well in around with the hearse and pick documents, letters, pamphlefs and . . both institutional work and general up a little business. ·· state papers, and the da~a she The Roman Cathohc church IS practice, Dr. w. T·. sanger, president

Schroeder, a liberal arts student amassed shocked the natiorj. when the greatest obstacle to cornmun- of the 1\'!ec!ical College of Virginia, at Syracuse University, is official it was presented by the NY,e com- ism, according to the Rev. Edmund said recently in response to a custodian of the city morgue from mittee. • Walsh of Georgetown's School of virulent attack on women doctors 6:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. of every It was due mainly to MisJ Burns' Foreign Service. by Dr. Oliver Wendell, Califomia day. The work doesn't hotber him, efforts that the senate in\estiga- specialist, published in a nationallv he· says-he took the job a. year tion was able to prove tha~ neither Fraternities at the University of circulated magazine. -ago-and be thinks it may prove to President Wilson nor Secl)etary of California at Los Angeles have Dr. Sanger emphaticallr denied have been a useful experience. He State Lansing were motivated in gone on record: as opposing the the California man's assertion that plans to enter medical school next their negotiations by a sincere de- abolition of Qompulsory military few women ever succeed in becoming fall. sire for neutrality, i training. good doctors .

Page 2: ·wHIT ACRE HOUSE FLU PERSISTS ON Johnson H~yes Addr~ss ... · F y erwoo W"ll" • rs. mso · and · ra.,g, h r littl rs. ance was resume d 1. 't was no t d e Judge Hayes gave some

PAGE TWO

STAFF :·. H. TRr>:lll,OOD, .JP. ........... Edil<or·in·Cioiel }'ra:n '\' lT.LIA~IS .••••••••..• BU:otiUf'NN .Jfrlll«f/t'f

BOAHD OF EDITORS A. :'IL ~r)fiLL:\X ............ A.'Io\'Oriflf., t.'.Iitor

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

the Council treasury, if anything." ternity ~aving the best Homecoming all of us. The Colonel w!Jl place Y' l · h DecoratiOns? an application immediately. Wake Forest

Winnowings et, only Wer nesday mght t e Thirdly, under the paragraph

Council Yo ted to pay one-lh ird of\ headed, ". · .. activities and accom-the expense of the keys. plishments of the present fraternity

, . governing body ... ,"comes the "mat· } urther, the Pan-Hellemc head ter of gold keys.'' Mr. Editor, 110

asserts that the Council was 1 keys have been purchased by the founded for the "express purpose" members of the present Council·, and

. . . when they are each fraternity will of supernsmg fratermty dancct:, have the option of buying its mem-and in a following paragraph her a key or not as it sees fit. Only contradicts himself with the state- a small part of the expense of a key

He'd Pot Them in Hell The other day Dr. Sledd was

walking in one of the sloppy ruts By ED GAllffiRELL 1\Iore snow, more cold, more slush,

(known to you as campus walks}, and the weather makes the front and a student approached him and page for a record period and reaches cautioned him as to the danger of its worst outrage in almost a the rut.. Dr. Sled·d told him: "If i century.. For almost two ~onths

now, w1th only the exceptiOn of Dante were alive he would put several days, snow has covered the these walks in hell." ... From the ground in this locale. A few days condition that they get in ever,· of relief are promised-but what · ' . . • then?

A trip to Phi Rho Sigma, medical fraternity, the other day disclosed many friends of the past two years of whom I have seen little or noth· !ng during tjl!s school year, some whom I thought had graduated and gone. It seems as though a fellow buries himself as far as the campus is concerned wh,en he goes into the medical school. And, now, they say prosperous Jaw students are also becoming of a reclusive nature.

With about half the campus in booths and riding pants Wake For· est looks like a mining camp.

•.

helpful innovation this snowy weather when bus schedules have been upheld and automobiles have become an undesirable Il:iode of transportation.

Sixty-two per cent of E.\immons College school of EngllslJ grad­.uates are engaged in som(! one of the writing professions.

Twenty-one professors 3.lld other experts have Issued a book:let con­demning the Townsend Plan as a "delusiol!."

... -------11£. }~. (T.\)liJRt.:LL .............. ll.'I.Y!H'iale- 'Editor ,TM'K )ttrRt'lli80X .••.•.••.... .1N."~Ociaff Editnr A. Jl. Cioowu;, .TR ............. Ax,'l'ociafr }.'dUor

SPORTS 1!.\I.I'H GLl:!-:N ....................... ,."':/1(1/'f

Member of ::WRTll C'AROI,IXA 1:\TERCOU,EGIATE

PRESS ASSOCIATION

ment :."Any grienmec u fra teruity may han• is properly brought be­fore till' Council." Properly?

Properly, when thl' group was founded for the express purpose of supenising fraternity dances?

The Greek-letter leader proba­bly neglected to say that the Conn· cil has enlarged the scope of ac­ti\·ities since its inception. How­eYer, the spectacle that was enact. ed upon its floor some mouths ~go saYored strongly of burlesque ... should haYe n~ver been allowed to

will be paid out of the Council treas· ury, if anything. Further, if it is a problem of the individual member as you put it, why classify the purchase as an actiYity of the Council?

Finally, the Council "graciously" deputizes two of its members to rep· resent the organization at each lodge dance. For your information, Mr. Editor, the Pan-Hellenic Couu· cil was established for that express purpose. Namely, to superyise fra· ternity dances. The members of the Council who attend those dances are acting not as individuals, but as rep· resentatives in an attempt to raise the standards of those dances. The success of the Council in accomplish· ing that purpose is not here in· YOlYed, but in case you should be interested I can furnish you with full data other than by publication.

t1me we have a little ram or snow Clearly do I remember the beauu. everybody around here wonders if ful October weather we had last Whitacre certainly has been this is actually Wake Forest, or January and the first part of last booking good shows for the Wake the Dismal Swamp. . . . I'll take February. There were cloudless Forest theater-goer. This week he the swamp. You can keep your skies, fresh crispy air, and one has shown· four first class produc· feet dry by jumping from crpress walked around with his jacket open tions in "King of Burlesque," knee to cypress knee. or studied with a window thrown "Dangerous," "Thanks a Million,"

New York City's public educa­tion system has receiyed $34,500,-000 from PW A during the depres­sion years.

NYU's five "iron men" b&.ve been the sharpest menace to Eastern basketball leagues this season. Approvtotl by up, admitting a delightful, stimulat- and "Ah, Wilderness," which have

l\lERCI!.I:\TS ASSOCI.\'flON, UAJ,EIGI! 'VIsiting ing breeze. featured no small quantity of ·stars. • Ent<'red ns set:ond d:-.:-;s matter .Tanu­

an· !!2, 191G at the po:stoffit·e ut "'akto }'O'r{'-.t, Xorth Caru1ina, under the :ll't

of 1-Iar.:h 8, 1879.

It snowed, and snowed, and then It seems as though eYery year the snow froze, and then the Theta. the weather digresses in one respect I

The new streamline, air·condi· Kappa Nu furnace blew up and or another so • much that it breaks tioned trains have certainly lleen a busted, and the 0. K. N's. had to a series of records. It is either the

Variations in short-wa\l'e radio signals form the basis o~ a new system of weather prediction. -----------------

.All matters Q( lmsine:;s xhouhl be ad­drt·">~l·d to the Bu~in(':-;S 1\[an:tgt•r, Box ~1~. and all other matters should be :ul· ~lrt·~~t·tl to the Editor-in-Chief. Box ::!lS.

A1ln•rti:,ing rat('s quoted on request. ~uh-:cription due in atlvnne('. Halt.!i~h offiee-: .Edw:rttls & llroug:hton

Co.

1935 Member 193G ~sociated CoUe5iate Press

Distributor of

Collee>iate Die>est

Sinrerest sym}tnthy is ex­tended .Jolin 'l£nngum. nJlOn tile denth of !lis brollll'r nnd to }'red Hoyle n[ton the <lentil of lib fa­tiler.

REBUTTAL

Iu answer to all rditorinl rep·

rimanding the Pun-Hellenic

Council for continual inacti\·it;y

and suggesting a feasible plan for

rench the proportions that were attained.

}'iually, this publication can­not allow to pass uncorrected the president's suggestiYe hint that it is un·fricndly to the Wake For­est fraternity. The editor of this publication is one of the <'launch­

est ndYocates of the secret college society; is a member of a national fr:Jternity founded a dozm years before the outbreak of the Ch·il IY m·; is now residing in a local fraternity house; and be liens he thoroughly understands the aims, ideals, and workings of college fraternities.

The editorial on "Dances" at­tempted to impress the fact that local lodges hold their fate in their own hands--concluded with the prediction that unless the Wake Forest fraternities can real-

Evidently you are not a member of a fraternity. If you were, you would know that the Council acts on· ly as the fratemities direct. It has no original powers. Any grievance a ·fraternity may have is properly brought before the Council. If these

go visiting. The basement was full worst. rain, the greatest amount of of water, and the bouse was cold, precipitation in one hour, the worst and Mab Moye couldn't sleep in sleet, the longest succession of rainy the chapter hall, and Crooner Saturday's on record, the worst Creach couldn't sing in the bath- freeze, the hottest day in June, the room, and Spec Harris got tired 1 hottest summer, ad injinit·um. of the cold weather and took off 1 --- ·

for New York and its balmy weather ....

But the A. P. O's. decided to go to Florida. Junie Mathews cranked up his Chevy and took some of the

grievances be petty and the result fellows and took off for the tropics.

And here's a good one in the "key. hole" \'ernacular: In a Peace parlor not long ago it seems that there was no eminent danger of a dean walking in, so the logical laxity , prevailed. One couple, seated on a sofa with its back to the door, of individual jealousies it is to be j

regretted, hut I cannot find any basis for laying that at the door of the Council. The situation to which you refer in the first paragraph of your editorial was not the result of a petty jealousy, and if you were aware of the true situation I feel sure you would ha\'e made no men· tion of it for obvious reasons.

To sum the whole thing up, l\lr. Editor, the whole tenor of yonr ed· itorial evinces an abysmal igno· ranee of the nature of the Council and its functions, and may I respect· fully suggest that in the future you confine yourself to matters upon which you are more thoroughly in· formed, and in some manner con· nerted witb.

(Signed) Ellsworth Meteer.

Dances appeared particularly engrossed in From the I k f th. one another. They would gaze

oo s o mgs some- · · h f · b d · l' L t , k h' dreammgly, Wit dole ully COW·SICk 0 Y IS a 1~r. . as ~ ee t. IS expressions and amorous oglings,

rag ran an ed1tonal on tbe fallacies drinking of the starry depths of of the d~nce system ~t Wake For- each other's eyes. A few 'preliminary ~st. This week I notlce that there caresses and they were exhibiting 1s an Open Forum Letter, and also their efficiency at that universal art an answer to. the letter. The of osculation, without the lack of Co~onel has th1s to say. Frate_r- restraint that one might use when nit1es at Wake Forest are few m kissing in public. number, and tbe lodge men are in several others around who weren't the minority. To the non-frater- inclined, under the circumstances, nity .man it is difficult to recognize to indulge in such ecstatical intima­the virtues of the Greek Letter or- cies contrived to break the boredom ganizations. In the past lodges of the evening. At a pre-arranged here haYe put on from six to ten signal the group of daters seated dances each spring, and have al- around the door suddenly stood ways issued a large number of fictitiously welcoming the dean to bids to the non-frat group. This their sparking arena when the is true. The loclges here have a energetic couple· was in the furor great deal to offer to interested of its romantic activity. A quicker men. If these men don't, however, parting, it is reported, has never

presenting "set" dances, the pres­ident of the Council this week made a personal reply in a letter that resolves itself into a plll'ely personal attack upon the editor of this publication. Ordinarily,

the letter would be printed with· out editorial comment, but since, the integrity of the newspaper has been questioned, among other things, answer is obviously neces-

izc a degree of sympathetic co­operation greater than has been i evidenced in the activities of their representative group, the Pan­Hellenic Council, they are doomed to eYentual extinction.

The Colonel Bows By A •. P. GODWIN, JR.

take steps to securely bind them- been seen. And on finding that they lir====:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:==:=:==:::::==:::==::===:==:::::==:;===:9iJ sel\'es as a group ... limit non- were the brunt of a joke, the girl,

sary.

Local fraternity leaders seem determined to realize that fact

too late.

Good morning gentlemen! I haYe been threatening to man­

handle Ye Old Editor (yea, I mean that punk Trueblood), all of the year, and tonight I feel more like it than I have felt before. I went to see him to find out whether or not we would put out a paper this week, and he distinctly told me that we would not; and at this late ldate he comes oYer while I am in the middle of my study of the Ia w (I dare you to laugh), and tells me that Fred Williams says that there will be a paper.

fraternity bids . . . forbid needless pale, livid, nearly swooned, wilted, uproars on the council floor . . . her lover seated himself, wilted, forget selfish individual desires, wiping huge beads of perspiration etc., etc., they will find that in from his brow. (Spare your readers, the future the Wake Forest frater- Edward!-ed.)

Taneying himself the spokes­man of the local reading public, the head of the Greek-letter group opens his reply with the assertion

-...::!i~~i!liiatr.;Jlg.~vs articles and editorials appefr~iug i11 tliis publication are

on inaccurate information and "are calculated to give rise to a. spirit of resentment." II n­fortunately, the. writer neglected

to go into specific detail; attempt· ed to com·ey the impression that OLD Gow AND BLACK is habit­

ually incorrect; and in his effort to discredit this newspaper dis­credited himself by failing to

grotmcl his allegations on even a flimsy framework of facts.

This paper has bceu and will he eonservative in policy. To in­stigate campus uproars is further­est from the minds of stat! writers, and in fairness to those writers and some 1,000 readers who should be informed of inaccnratc and t\\'istcd statements alleged to have been published the president of the Pan·llellenic Council should not ha \·c couched his assertions with a elo:1k of mgaries; should have at­tained to a greater degree of ex·

pli~itncss.

In defending the actlntws of the Council, the president ad· mittcd the first of three points, deuied the second as being "flat!~· false'' :111d dismissed the third with a literary shrug of the pen. Al· though thii publication claims no profound knowledge of the inner­workings of the Interfrntcruity

Couneil, information used in the ecli t o;·i:ll of last week was scc:ure<l from a member of that council who adl"iscd us thnt $32.50--n sub~lanlial portion of the "Pledge

n.mee" profits-was used in pur­{'!Ja,ing gold-embossed stationer~·. lnll'l'l'ogated after the Council's r"ply had been placed iu the hands of the editor, the same council member again asserted thai money 11scd for the purchase of station·

!('as securetl from the fali Dance." If that state­

the president of the reproofs

but

OPEN FORUM

nity will continue to be unrecog- The victimized couple, their once n!zed on other campuses where osculatory ardor thoroughly satu­the fellows in the lodges are not rated, spent the remainder of the personally known. . . . By group evening in cold contemplation of cooperation the fraternities here the chandalier, yearning for venge·

NoriCE: In the future no Open Forum letter of more than 300 words will be published.

can bring more fraternity material ance in the form of a wholesale to the college, gain' recognition in massacre. national fraternal circles, and es-

Dear Mr. Editor: I note with a great deal of inter·

est your editorial in the February 8th issue of tbe OI.D Gow .\XO BLACK

tablish themselves as a group to be reckoned with. It is easy to discern whether a

student lias had a course under . Thomas Earl Forbes Dr. Reid or not-especially a stu·

Til' k th C 1 1 k dent who speaks or writes, for he is on "Dances.'' Who runs this rag anyway? (Sir!

-ed.) IS wee e 0 one rna es a always ready to produce a million

very courteous bo~ to Thomas Earl words such as "nature," "essence," ~orbes of Ahosk1e. Earl, a se~- "empirical," "materialism," etc., in 1~r, came here four years a~o and flamboyant abundance or to express \\as pledged by the Alpha P1 Delta some thought Ol' conjecture a la Dr. Fraternity. During his frosh year Reid. Of the four Founder's Day he was elected to the office of vice orators two had bad courses under president of the sophomore class, the philosophy professor, and the

We need copy this week, so a little later on I am going to write an exchange column.

During your occupancy of the po· sition of Editor·in·Chief of the OLD Gor.o .\:'ii> BLACK one characteristic of your editorials and comments on Yarious activities of members of the student body has become apparent to the long-suffering readers of your paper. It seems to be impossible for you to present any idea you might have to tbe school without embell·

Nuffie and was made assistant business difference between them and the The other night I went out to manager of the Howler. The next other two, especially in their

the house and was greeted with the year he was elected by a large rna- terminology, was striking. whines of a very juvenile canine. jority to the office of business man-

ishing it with superfluous remarks You are right. One of the pledges ager of the Howler, and did a •·ery and adjectives calculated to give rise to a spirit of resentment in those had found a pup whose mother had creditable job in: this capacity. ,-------------~

frozen to death, and so he brought During this, his senior year he has directly concerned which completely the thing out here a~d is minis- been pledged by the Chi Phi Mad­destroys what little value those ideas may have. Another characteristic tering to it; its name is Nuffie. It leal Fraternity, Next year he plans fast being accepted over the cainpus seems that its mother owner's name to enter the School of Medicine is the publication of articles and ed· was Nuffbelly .... If it continues here at Wake Forest. Through­itorials that are based on inaccurate to whine all night I am going to out tile four years here Earl, bet­information that twists the truth so resort to the Sandrock Plan. Here ter known on the campus as Rab­as to render it unrecognizable when is the Sandrock plan: Last spring bit, or Philbert, has maintained a published. Did it ever occur to you a cat came into our basement and scholaristic average of 90 or bet­that a newspaper is much more read· gave birth to four little cats. Well, ter .... He has C,!Jnducted himself able and appreciated when it confines these little fellows bother~d Sand· as a gentleman should, and the itself to the publication of news rock's slumber, so one night he Colonel is proud to doff his hat that's accurate, and editorials which could stand it no longer. He got to you, sub. haYe some constructive value, rather out of bed and filled a coal scuttle a publication devoted to various and with water and gently picked the sundry attempts to start an uproar little fellows up one at a time and over eYery subject It deals with? submerged them in the scuttle un-

Competition Walt Kitchin and Bruce White

are on the eve of being sidetracked. Rumor and observation have it that the two campus ·midgets, Felix Bishop, and J. D. Christian are ardently attending Nancy Brewer and Jane Vann respectively.

I feel sure that eYery member of til they were dead, dead, dead. our "lifeless" Council will heutily Then, to be sure that he remem­agree with you that "set" dances on bered his Scout work he revived this campus woulcl be a great step them by means of artificial respira­forward in fraternal circles. We will tion and then, being satisfied with further agree that it would he cheap· his handiwork lie drowned them er to have that type of dance. In the again, this time for good. We Agree statements you've m~de, the senti· __ "The Wingate T1·iangle. in a front ment of many fratern~ty men on the page story about the booing of campus has been vmced. But you I Ruppert Bryan says that the f , d . . d tl . . . . re eree s eciSions, an o 1er un· found 1t Jmposs1ble to set forth your Gral1am Plan has played hell wtth t l'k d t 1 th' t . . . . spor sman 1 e con uc ms 1s o Idea as to ho.w fra~ermty ~nen s.hould ~us plans .. (Was Frosty and Pmky sa : "We ought to meet each other c?nrl.uct ~he1r social affa1rs Without mcluded m those plans? E~se iny good spirit, play the game r~n;'i~ng m your resu_me ~f the ac· where are those boxes of Valentme squarely and honestly, accept the ti~ltles of the Counc1l, w~t~l .appro- candy coming from?} results without .bragging or bitter-pnate _remarks. These ac;tlvlhes are ness, and seek to instill in our three m number accordmg to your Jrapllf Birtbday to You t d t 1 f qu re pi y" editorial. We will dismiss tile first Rumor luis it that Ruth Prichard ~ u en s a ave or s a a . as correct. The second activity had is throwing a !>Urprise party Satur-for its olJject this, "to raise money day night in honor of Jim Dod- You're Telling Us with which to purchase gold-emboss· son's birthday. · · '-.. Patient (nervously}: "And will ed stationery.'' That reason is flatly .... the operation be dangerous, doctor?" false. You evidently didn't know Philbert Forbes has decided· to Doctor: "Nonsense. You could not that sufficient funds c~me into the be a Vet instead of an M.D. Dr: 1 buy a ~~ngerous operation for forty t~ea~ury of the Council at the be· Bryan's pooch has been suffering '(}'\liars. gmnmg of each fall tern~ to cover. with distemper and Forbes has -~ ---the e~pen~e of what statwnery th: volunteered his services. Well, one Sku l and Bones Counc1l nught want. Why, Mr. Ed1· . d th Th Wo-Oo Ala news organ of

h I h b . . excuse 1s as goo as ano er. · • tor, s ou d t e. mem ers of tne Hunt pgton College in Montgomery Council go to the trouble of giV:ing Good Looking Ala., 'cl!rried a rath~r clever column: a ~a~~e t~:a!sel mo~eyl for ~~~t~~~ Some weeks ago a new girl came recently. Some of the girls attempt-

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Shirt

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Studs . . . . . .50 Links .50 Suspenders 1.00 Hose. .50· Collar .35 Buttons .25

Value ...... $30.85 ?t ~ en e~ a rea Jh ~:~~I d 1 to town. The boys stared. They ed an ~nterview with Nelson Eddy I .e~~r ;ccu\ o yo~ a e a~c~ asked, "Who is she and where did who ga:ve a concert in that locality. A A $ ~~g t' a;e. fee~ gl~e~l as a so~~ she come from." i too wondered. They were ?ot successful, but their SPECI L T 24.50 unc IOn Ol ra erm } men on IS , • report is qu1t readable. The column

campus and that it was script so as Heres the answer She IS . SUE . '11 t t d ' VE · f 1s an 1 us ra e one. to avoid as much as possible an as- GLO 'R, and she hails rom ·

sessment on the indiYidual frater· Statesv!lle. This fair maiden Is a n Th nities as such? Did you know that splen!did addition to Wake For- The students at Catawba College ~$-~~e -any profit derived therefrom was to est's sub-deb group. In her short enjoyed a Leap Year Dance recent: be applied to the purchase and en· stay here she has become mighty ly. The affair was carried out in -graving of scholarship cups to be popular. I understand that she is true leap, year style. Some of the S O'P. Fo:t Mea presented to the fraternities this dated for more than two weeks in girls wen,t so far as to send corsages spring, and anot'tJ,er cup for the fra• advance. It is jolly, but not for to their dates. ·--------------

\

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BABY LIMAS 3 Lbs. 19c

BLACKEYE PEAS 3 Lbs. 17c

PINTO BEANS 4 Lbs. 19c

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Wake: cherish a< gram lae cepted i: ence aftE termined acceptan• be the c through a somerad now·and colleges: olutioniz Forest b1 have ace• future h guess .. , Southeas knowledl them to 1

Let's happenh sports w to tame' proved~

by the a1 wet bl;in of 37·34, the cella the earll Deac gm ney an

"heads-u These

by the hi ··.the Davi

the sam< header 1

in a gua ly good doing a Last Sm Ietes am tion aga Phil Ut showed: while"( and yon position: been goi last wet have be bars ancl Jt.seemE the fiu" these p: soon ha' ski tean chills z team w' Accordil Coach J ders in· "L!nemE for the interpre on the· nounced leges of track te instituti taken at sityand while m Randol~ Norfolk Mary at a. rathet early pa con var William Macon ( tra-mur; were th' Thursd! fans we· line poi Univers with thE

DR. R( A

Dr. I Salem 1 alumnu1 been a: Commit ing to P. J. Fl: ident o vention

The i

will be trustees A,ssocia1

"We 1 experiet cine wl importa mendati

Dr. V pre-med

T

\

\ < (

Page 3: ·wHIT ACRE HOUSE FLU PERSISTS ON Johnson H~yes Addr~ss ... · F y erwoo W"ll" • rs. mso · and · ra.,g, h r littl rs. ance was resume d 1. 't was no t d e Judge Hayes gave some

IOWY liave II ave 1 of

nons :rad­.e of

1ther con­as a

luca-500,-1res-

been !tern

radio new

I

,

I

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Sport Jottings Baby Deacons Leave ~ --:By--

By "MAC"

Wake Forest College reached th~ cherished goal in her sports pro­gram last week when she was ac­cepted into. the Southern Confer­ence after years of patient and de­termined waiting ... Of course the acceptance of the Graham Plan will be the downfall of college sports throughout the Conference unless some radical change is made between now ·and next September .... The 'college sports programs will be rev· olutionized not only here at Wake Forest but at all other colleges that have accepted the· plan . , . What the future holds in store is anybody's guess ... We've got to hand it to the Southeastern Conference for ac­knowledging athletics and helping them to a certain extent ....

EPIDEMIC STOPS RANDOlPH~MACON WILLIAM AND MARY GOAl BY MAUNEY LEAGUE'S GAMES TRIPS DEACONS RALLIES TO WIN WINS FOR OEACS Extended Trip In West

Widespread Illness Causes Baptists D~op Fast Game to lndi~ns Come Back in Sec!)nd Local Quint Defeats Florida MARS Hill PLAYS Fres~~u~n G~~n~:t D~::~g Play Coach Utley to Postpone Jackets By 24·21. Half to Capture 41·30 When Gu~rd Sinks Shot With BABY DEACS HERE Next Week

Intramural Contests Score Game From Deacs Mmute to Play ' DAVIDSON SCHEDULED

FOR SATURDAY NIGHT

Let's take a squint now at the happenings iii the local area of the sports world ... It takes a Deacon to tame a Wlldc!lt ... and this was proved when our own basketeers, led by the aggressive Morris, tossed the wet blilnket on Davidson to the tune of 37-34, and thus emerging from the cellar position in the big five in the early part of last week ... The Deac guards in the persons of Mau-ney and Captain Hatcher played

"heads-up ball ...• The sensational Baby Deacons, led

by the high-scoring Waller, trampled

CARDINALS SET PACE IN RECENT ENCOUNTERS

Chi Taus Drop From Place; Ramblers Stick in

Third Position

It was all quiet on the Intra-mural basketball front this past week with no scheduled games. The reason for the let-up was due to the heavy toll that the "flu" has taken in weakening teams to 1a considerable extent. In one or two cases, it was reported, a team has been complete­ly wiped out.

. I The league standing have experi·

enced many changes, and in some cases, drastic upsets. The mighty Cardinal quint has toppled the fighting Chi Tau five from their lofty perch as the pace-setters of the league. With the Cardinals above them it will make a more than ever

··. the Davidson Kittens by a 33-26 score interesting race for the Chi Taus who the same night to make the double· have held the number one post all header all Wake Forest ... Owen in a guard position, looked especial- season. The Ramblers are the undis· Iy good in breaking up plays and puted third place holders while the doing a little seoring himself· . . . fourth position is . a three-way tie Last Sunday's fire saw several atb- with APO, APD, and the Med school letes among the' smoke eaters in ac- all battling for five hundred percent. tion against the elements ... Coach The Philipians along with the ag­Phil Utley led the brigade and gressive Zephyrs five are tied for showed his prGwess in fighting fires seventh place. KA bas the jog of while "Chief" Hood, Edens, Dooney, bringing up the rear, having won

The Demon Deacon Basket ball · Wake Forest's basketball team Wake Forest's varsity basektball team lost the second game of their lost to William and 1\Iary Tuesday team returned to winning ways last

Thursday night when a long shot by two !day trip into Virginia to Ran· night in a game played on the George Mauney just forty seconds dolph-Macon, ha.v!ng lost a game winner's court. The game was the before the final whistle sent the the night before to William and first for the Deacons in their two day of Florida on the short Mary. The game was the second invasion of Virginia to meet Wil· end of a 34-32 score. for the Deacons before returning lfam and Mary and Randolph- Undoubtedly the most heated h . basketball game that has yet been

ome to meet the Uomverslty of Macon. The game was neither won 1 d i th 1 . , . . p aye n e new gymnas urn, a Florida Gators on Thursday mght, 9or lost untll the fiual whistle as see-saw battle in .which the sco~e

The Yellow Jackets seemed not to both teams had held substantial was tied nine times kept a large mind the loss of sleep that they leads at different times during the crowd of spectators in a roaring had experienced the night before course of the contest. frenzy. In the closing minutes of

Th . the contest, Florida forged ahead to when the bus that they were re- e game opened With the Indians . . t 1 d 31 25 b t th

· quickly going into the lead but they a SIX pom ea • · • u e turnmg from Washington on was weren't to hold it long for the Dea- Deacons put ?n a f,ull steam and delayed. · cons came from behind to hold the ove~came the Gators lead less than

The Virginians took the lead at advantage at the half 19-16. a mmute before the game ended. the first of the game and held it In the second half the Carolina After Wake Forest pulled into a throughout the entire contest but boys extended the.ir lead to seven 25-25 tie on a goal by Morris, the Deacons put up a game fight. points and ·held it until the final Gordon countered twice and. ~ur­A last minute rally by the Deacons quarter when the Sovereigns came once to send the Floridians was three points short and the game up to even terms. Then the local ahead by three field goals. And with ended with Randolph-Macon still team showed unusual scoring power slightly less than four minutes to in the lead 24-21. to win the game 41-30. play H~tcher, Mauney, and Aderholt

Blaker, Flickinger, and Elmore sank nngers to knot the score, 31-were best for the locals; Morris. 31.

McFall, high scorer of the game, anld Oliver led the visitors to win; Morris and Hatcher paced the visi· tors.

Hatcher, and Patton starred for Gaither's free throw put the boys the visitors. from the deep South ahead again,

The lineups: but Byrd tallied a free throw for the The lineups: Randolph-Macon G. McFall, f ................ 3 Hickman, f ............ 0 Oliver, c .................. 2 Lepono, g .............. 0 Ray, g .................... 1 Bair, g .................... 1 Boone, g .................. 0

FT. 6 0 4 0 0 0 0

TP. lf. and M. G. FT. TP. Deacs, and the score was once more 12 Blaker, f ........................ 2 3 7 tied. At this point George Mauney

0 Oliver, f ........................ 0 0 0 .who played a bang-up game all eve·

8 Flickinger, f ................ 5 0 10 ning sank his winning shot.

0 Crist, c ............................ 2 1 5 Wake Forest was trailing at half-2 Bunch, c ........................ 0 4 4 time by one point, the score being

2 Casagrande, g ................ 0 3 3 16-15.

0 Elmore, g ...................... 4 4 12 Captain "Goat" Hatcher played

- a great game at left guard and

1 . no games up to the present. and your co ummst held down hose Beginning this coming Monday, . Totals .................. 7 positions ... The motorcydes have Physical Education Director Utley lfake Forest G.

10 FT.

2 3 1 1 0 0

Totals ...................... 13 ~~ Wake Forest G.

15. 41 led Wake Forest scorers with a FT. TP. dozen points. Morris followed with

been going· 'round and 'round since announced the Intra-mural baske- Brunch, f .............. 1 last week-end . . . Many notables ' M · f 2 teers will swing into action once orns, ............... , have been seen behind the na1mu.e·11 more. · Patton, c ................ 1 bars and applying the heavy foot . . . Ma o It seems the reason is that it ''cures Many interesting games have been uney, g .......... .. thilfiu" ... With the weather around scheduled .to give the audiences a Hatcher, g ............ 2 h 1 h •11 taste of both extremes in the art of Chappell, g ............ 1

t ese parts pure y nort ern we soon have to organize a bobsled and basketball OKN will meet the low-ski team ... and ifthe temperature ly KA outfit; the Chi Tau quint Totals .................. 7 chills zero maybe an ice hockey will hit a snag when they encounter Referee-'Wharton.

0 2 five. 0 4 Florida's center, Smothers, paced 5 11 the visitors with seven points.' 0 6 The summary: 0 0 Florida G. FT. TP. 0 2 Eppert, rf ........................ 2 0 4 0 0 Love, If ............................ 2 0 4 1 5 Forsyth, lf-rf ................ 1 0 2 0 0 Smothers, c ..................... 3 1 7

- Burroughs, c ................ 1 1 3 Totals ...................... 12 6 30 Christian, rf ............. - ... 0 3 3

• Brunt, f .......................... 1 4 Aderholt, f ...................... 2 i Morris, f .......................... 3.

Patton, c ........................ 3 1 Bayard, c ........................ 0 .. 4 Mauney, g ...................... 1 2 Barnes, g ...................... 0

Hatcher, g .................... 2 21 Chapel, g ........................ 0 7

team will flash Deacon colors • . . the Med school; the Cardinals will According to the grapevine system probably whitewash the APO's; 'the Coach Jim will enter several grid· Hotel Hares and the Hunter Hoop­ders in track events this spring . . . era will clash in a classy struggle; "Linemen for the 440 and 880, backs the Philipians ought to make trouble for the 100 and 220 feet was the for the Ramblers; other teams will

Important meeting sophomore class Wednesday 10:00 o'clock at the ehnrchr. Be there.

Score at half: W. and M. 16; Beckwith, rg ................... 0 0 0 Wake Forest 19. Referee: Eberts Gordon, rg ........... _ ........ : 2 0 4 (Catholic University). (Please turne to page four)

~:tef::e~~~e~~=:~~ c~~c~e~~~h~~: :~E~~t g~~:~~o::~:c~:n:~~ t~~~: ne>unced to the press that several col· leges of note will be engaged by the track team • . . A!llong those higher institutions of learning that will be taken are in turn: Catholic Univer­sity and Davidson College scheduled, while meets with Hampden Sidney, Randolph-Macon, Guilford, and the Norfolk Branch of · William and Mary are tentative ... Things had a rather sombre hue in the gym the early part of the week with the Dea· eon varsity quint on tour meeting William and Mary, then Randolph­Macon on successive nights ... In· tra-mural basketeers were quiet as were the Frohs basketball outfit ... Thursday night, however, the local fans were given an exhibition on the fine points of the game when the University of Florida 'Gators clashed with the. Demons of Deacon town ....

DR. ROSCOE WALL IS ACCORDED HIGH HONOR

Dr. Roscoe L. Wall, Winston­Salem physician and Wake Forest alumnus of the class of 1910, has been appointed on the National Committee on .Anaesthesia, accord· ing to an announcement by Dr. P. J. Flagg of New York' City, pres-· ident of the S1>clety for the Pre­vention of Asphyxial Death. .

The findings of this committee will be presented to the board of trustees of the American Medical A-ssociation.

"We feel that Dr. Wall's intimate experience v.ith this phase of medi­cine will enable us to formulate important' conclusions and recom­mendations," Dr. Flagg stated.

Dr. Wall's son, Roscoe, Jr., is a pre-medical student at Wake Forest.

The Department of Physical Ed· ucation announced this week that plans were being drawn up to make the forthcoming Handball Tourna­ment a great success. The elimina­tion process will begin .within two weeks time. All those wishing to enter should consult Coach Phil or his assistants. Both single and double champions will be officially recognized.

A · national , academy of public a,'ffairs, government- controlled along the lines of West Point and Annapolis, is proposed in a bill now before Congress.

Textbooks in history have been singled out for attack by "'Red Scare" promoters, according to Dr. Dixon Ryan Fox, president of Union College.

Acknowledgnaent

We want to tlmnk the stu­dents of lV ake Forest College for their ·kindness and help during our fire last Sunday morning. If it had not been for them we would not have saved one thing from the fire and we want them to know that we deeply appreciate their thoughtfulness especially the members of the football squad and Delta Sigma Chi Frater­nity.

· C. C. Whitacre. , Mrs. Annie Underwood

and Family.

TUXEDO OUTFIT

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$22.50 INCLUDING

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BERWABGER'S a

Strong Junior College Team Meet Deaclets in Local

Gym Tonight

The Mars Hill speedy basketeers will invade the Deacon stronghold tonight and will attempt to over­throw the powerful Baby Deac five. The visiting, outfit has been ter­rorizing hardwood courts near and far with their dead-eye shots for the strings. They have gotten the reputation for making their free throws good for tallies which in many cases, have been important In bringil)g victory.

The Baby Demons will put their first string stalwarts against the invading junior collegians and are expected to repell the attack. Coa<~h Phil in depending on the flashy "Jim" Waller to again lead in the high scoring. This freshman for­ward has turned in great work in each of the games the frosh have met this season and has been the high scorer in every one. The other four members of the first team will consist of Rex Carter, Dave Fuller, Stan Apple, and Smith Young, who work together like clockwork.

The Mars Hill aggregation has really a strong team that has lost but one or two games so far this season. The team. is not neces­sarily made up of any individual stars but of five men who play for the love of the game and fight until the last whistle is blown and the last shot fired. It is such a team that Is dangerous and must be watched every minute.

Deaclets Meet Kittens for Second Time of the Current

Season

The fighting Baby Deacons will show the western section of North Carolina just how basketball should be played when they bid farewell

to Wake Forest next Tuesday and begin their scheduled four day tour.

'fhe following teams will be en­gaged on successive nights: Ashe­ville High School (Tues.), Canton (Weld.), Biltmore Junior College (Thurs.), Brevard or Mars Hill Col­lege (Fri.) and the flashy tDavidson Kittens (Sat.).

Coach Utley released to the press the information that the high scor­Ing Walter, R. Carter, Fuller, Apple and Young were In fine physical condition to make the trip. Apple, who has had an attack of the "flu,'' will again assume his guard posi­tion and his continuance of great floor play is expected along with the five mentioned abovQ will be taken five other frosh hoopsters who are ver&atile in playing more than one position. The squruc1 will travel in the1 private cars of AI Dowtin and the freshman coach.

The Utley-coached aggregation have been working hai:<dl to reach its peak of perfection with the goal of their tour the Davidson frosh quint. You remember the score the last time the two frosh outfits met (33-26), next Saturday night will see even a greater scor.e and

(Please turne to page four)

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Page 4: ·wHIT ACRE HOUSE FLU PERSISTS ON Johnson H~yes Addr~ss ... · F y erwoo W"ll" • rs. mso · and · ra.,g, h r littl rs. ance was resume d 1. 't was no t d e Judge Hayes gave some

P.A.GEFOUR OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Views and

tet put over some first class humor­ous numbers; and then a long, gangling bass told a story in music while the lights turned to weird shades of green and blue. Anyone who wants a real treat should drop Boone-Iseley in Raleigh an order

gave steamship and train passes to help Dr. Lake in his leper work, and great men everywhere have paid tribute to his unselfish and successful work in behalf of afflict­ed humanity.

STUDY GROUP HAS OFFICE ELECTION~

been studied with a fair degree of thoroughness, some other mission field will be discussed in a like manner. This study should prove to be very informing and all those who are in any way interested in mission work should join the

Women make better' lawyers than men, according to every com­parative measurement of those characteristics of lawyers studied by the Human Engineering Labor­atory of Stevens Institute.

Heavy protective "armor" is re­sponsible for many football in­juries, according to D. 0. Mc­Laughry of Brown, president of the American Football Coaches' As­sociation.

Interviews for reservations. ~WHITACRE HOUSE Gentry is Named President and Brown Vice President of

Religious Club

group an:,J, avail themselves of this _.:_ ____ -:------------------.,----:

By A. M. McMILLAX If you have several copper pen-

nies jingling in your pocket or a low resistance to enticing snacks, you had better stay away from counters where Malted Milkshake bars are being sold for ·a cent apiece.

The fire here last Sunday ran ac­cording to form in every way ex­cept one. There were plenty of flames, spectators, anld: firemen, but there was only one reporter on hand-myself-and one Photog­rapher, McNair. Local citizens have at least been spared a lot of irritation; they aren't plagued with questions by a ilozen or so free­lance newshawks.

GUTTED BY FIRE

(Continued from page one) hot coffee next d.oor and warmed silk-stockinged feet before the fire.

Inside the burning building an argument about the inevitable de­lay in the squad's arrival was go­ing on, while water and ashes fell all around and a feeble winter sun, timidly filtering in through a hole in the roof, lit up the scene. One of the men went out to continue work in black ·hat, slicker and boots, with a little cut over his left eye from a slight altercation. Another of the men asked some­body to find his coat with the bot­tle in it.

opportunity. New members are cordially welcomed. The next mlll!ting will be held on Tuesday, February 18, at 7:00 p.m.

GOAL BY MAUNEY WINS FOR DEACS

The Wssion Study Group held its regular meeting Tuesday eve­ning at 7:00 p.m. Having decided at the last meeting before the se-mester holidays to elect a new set (Continued from page three) of officers for the second semester, G~ither, lg .................... 1 1 3

2 the time was largely taken up with Rickett, Ig ...................... 1 0

this matter. Tlfe following officers were elect- ....... Totals ...................... 13

ed: President, Walter Gentry; vice "ake Forest G. president, Willard Brown; secre- Chap~ell, rf-rg ............... 1 tary-treasurer, Dwight Ives, Jr.; Morris, If ....................... 1 h . t Le li I" 'tt t Aderholt, If .................... 2 c or1s er, s e co.ew1 ;. repor er, Gl 0 Robert Wilson; program commit- p ~~s, lf-rf ...................... 0

tee, Willard Brown, John Ousley, a on, c ...................... .. d R Byrd, c ........................... 0

an obert Helm. 1\lauuey, rg .................... 2 Following the election of officers Barnes, rg-rf .................. 2

a -very informing discussion was Hatcher, Ig .................... 5 giYen by Luby Fields on "The _

6 32 FT. TP.

1 3 3 5 0 4 0 0 1 1

.1 1 0 4 0 4 2 12

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110N THE CAMPUS11

An estimate of the number of in­fiuenza victims cannot be made ac­eurately. Last week's Old Gold and Black had about five versions, none of which was absolutely accurate. A few had already staggered out from infirmary or dormitory with flu in their legs only, while many more crawled shivering between their sheets, calling for aspirin, hot soda gargles, and sympathy. We extend them full measure of the 1ast named, because there are few more aggravating malru<lies than genuine fiu. We feel some what differently toward the young men who were too sick to take in op· tiona! classes Monday and Tues­day but were quite spry enough to check aut of town.

A newsflash from Sports Writer "Dynamite" Holton states that his little dog Toby and her offspring are doing well More will be beard from the Country Club mascot later on.

Firemen on the joh were Chief Taylor and Messrs. P. M. Utley, Frank Keith, L. Belangia, Tom Carroll, Raymond Keith, H. C. "Red" Cash, Leland Jones, G. W. Saintsing, Worth Joyner, John Underwodd, Frank Beddingfield, B. A. Miller, Herbert T. Knuckles, C. W. Bobbitt, and others. Some of the students who lent a hand were Fred Hood, W. B. Cole, "Tex" Edens, Leo Little, "Red" McCarthy, and Jim Dooney.

Country of India." This marked Totals ...................... 12 8 34 the beginning of a series of discus- Halftime score: Florida 16; Wake ~=========i============i========s;;l sions on India with reference to Forest 15. ' Matinee 3 :00

Night 7:00-9:00 Saturday

Matinee 2:30

With limited hospital facilities and staff it is naturally impossible for illiss Vause and cohorts to give wry much help to victims of the influenza who are confined in dor­mitory rooms. Quite a few boys are doing real good turns by carry­ing food on trays from the <lifferent boarding houses to room-mates and friends.

Our lJasketball team finally came out of the Big Five cellar last Fri­day night when they displayed- a stellar game to take in the David­son Wildcats by a score of 37 to 24. Doight Morris's unerring shots and "Goat" Hatcher's usual bril­liant guarding featured in the vic­tory. A trip to Virginia resulted in two losses-to Wiiliam and Mary on Tuesday night by 41 to 30, and on Wedne&day night by a close 24 to 21 score, with Randolph Macon on top, The Deacon quintet re­turned to home floor Thursday night with an exciting contest against the university of Florida 'Gators.

Mohammed said that he despised two things-the religious devotion of fools and the infidelities of the learned. Another Oriental, ex­president of China Wu Ting-fang, said that learning was like a two­edged sword that could be used for good if the wielder's motives are right or evil if the sword-bearer had wrong intentions. On this campus quite a good balance is kept with classes Monday to Fri­day, experience Saturday, and re­ligious guidance Sunday.

The newest mode of transporta­tion that has passed through since the Burlington Zephyr zipped through at· church time last spring is a motor coach on the regular SealJoard line. At 11:47 every morning its green and yellow body appear around. the northern curve, heading for Raleigh, and it returns every afternoon at 4:45. It is a cross between a bus and train; it runs on the\regular track but has a Diesel engine with a chauffeur at the ~ontrols up front. The

At 2: 45 all was quiet on Faculty Avenue, and at 3:30 the place was practically deserted, except for a few former roomers who were hop­ing to ·rescue stained pajamas, shirts, and school books from drawers blackened with fire. Down in the kitchen the stove, which had continued to warm coffee dur­ing most of the hubbub, had been carried away, along with half­broken cut glass and pint bott1es whose milk left white streams where hurrying boots had over­turned them.

Baby Deacons Leave For Extended Trip in West

(Continued from page three) wider margin in favor of the Deacs. The Wake Forest varsity will also play at Davidson Saturday night in a double-headed affair. It is well to note that both of the Davidson teams fight hard and furious in their own back yard, so the Dea­con squads will probably have their hands full.

.....J~;Iil!!E~-"'oMl--~i!:£!l~S capacity is about 75, and it runs only between Richmon:d and Raleigh. Local students and citi­zens are taking advantage of this way to arrive at the capital city 17 miles south.

The Westminster singers, who Will be heard by several music­loving townsfolk next Wednesday night, make up perhaps the best choral group in the world. The only comparable singers, thinks Dr. Hubert Poteat, are members of the Russian Cossack chorus, with their bull-frog basses, high falsetto ten­ors, and organ-like effects. When I heard the Westminster choir in Shanghai, they sang numbers of many diverse types, and did them all well. A short little bass hit a rich, mellow and full low A; a male alto imitatEJdi the fairer sex with the rendition of "Drink to :i\Ie Only with Thine Eyes;" a boy choir took the place of the women (who will appear in Raleigh WEd­nesday) ; a rollicking male quar-

While we are grinding out copy at high pressure with the deadline just around the corner, a heated discussion is going on about gold­embossed stationery and frat dan­ces. In the words of the illustri­ous Dr. Groucho Marx, "Whatever it is, I'm against it" unless the de­baters can step on ihe soft pedal.

\'/'hen the Laymen's Commission report appeared a few years ago with many bugle blasts of public­ity, a caustic spotlight was turned on missionary personnel an~ many criticisms, just and unjust, were directed toward methods of select­ing them. It is a. boost to the worth-while cause of missions to list among its workers such a mis­sionary-statesman as Dr. John Lake of Hong Kong, China, who is list­ed in "Who's Who in America." He was gtYen an entire island, Tai Kam, by Wu Ting-fang; Captain Dollar and many railroad heads

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BILLIARDS SODAS

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New College Stationery 20 Sheets, 10 Envelopes .. · . . 1 • ••••••••••• 20 cents

Engraved Stotionery . . . . . ............. 25 cents

the mission work there, its needs Officials: Gerard (Illinois) and and possibilities. When India has Hendrickson (Duke).

BRICE'S 5 -10- 25c STORE

MEN'S SOX, regular 20c-2 pair ..................... 25c:

MEN'S HANDKERCHIEFS, 3 for ....................... 9c

18" x 36" CANNON TOWELS ....................... 9c

PLANTER'S CHOCOLATE COVERED PEANUTS, lb ...... 20c

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Admission 10c-30c

Wednesday 10c-15c

MONDAY

Jane Withers in 11 THIS IS-THE LIFE 11

MGM NEWS

TUESDAY-On The Screen Claire Trevore in

"NAVY WI FE" COMEDY NEWS

On the Stage-Marie Purl Presents

. "SAY IT WITH LADIES" Admission-10·35c

WEDNESDAY Bargain Day-10·15c

BETTE DAVIS in

''THE PAYOFF" CARTOON-MUSICAL

COMEDY

THURSDAY .Tessie Matthews in "FIRST A GIRL" A Real Musical Treat

PARAMOUNT NEWS COMEDY

FRIDAY Ka.y Francis in

"I FOUND STELLA PARISH"

Ca.rtoon Musical Comedy

SATURDAY Double Featnre Day

.John Wayne in "OREGON TRAIL"

a!Bo BID Boyd in "BURNING GOLD"

.Coming-" Anything Goes"-:-Harold lloyd in "The Milky Way" VAUD-EVILLE AND STAGE PRESENTATIONS AT THE CASTLE

February 18, "Say It With Ladles"; February 27, Ross Russell Presents "A Night in Ha.vana."; March 5, "Broa.dway Merry Go Round.'' Coming Soon1 Dan Fitche1 s 4 'Dixia.na. Revue."

Volw